HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-07 - Orange Coast Pilot\
----Tent at iv: e SP.Cora reac-i!ed iii baseball str11'________....
• • •
..
~·--
ORANGE-. COUNTY. CALIFORNIA WfDNESDAY. AUGIJ$f I. 1 98~ "J'_, <JL N1 '->
Rumore -· ostage re.lease iffy ~
,
Huntington Beach man hoping report-to hope." saad the son of David t>.
Jacobsen. 54, the hospatal ad-
manstrator kidnapped May 28 whale
walking to work in Moslem West
Beirut.
of freed om for father isn't a false alarm
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of It. o.lly ,... ......
HuntinJlOn Beach resident Enc
Jacobsen is riding an emotional roller
coaster following reports Tuesday
that Moslem terrorists were prepar-
ing to release his father and other
BB split
• on senior
complex
By STEVE MARBLE
Ofltleo.lly ..........
The Huntington Beach C 1ty Coun-
cil failed Tuesday to derail a S25
million senior citizen hotel-type com-
plex that would have such touches of
luxury as maid a nd limousine service
and an in-house travel agent.
The four-story Palm Court project
would be built o n an abandoned
railroad right-of-way at the inter-
section of Lake Street and Atlanta
A venue, only blocks from the beach
and the city'~ agjng downtown di~
trict. ,,
The project. approved last month
by the city's Planning Commission,
reached the council Tuesday after it
was appealed by Mayor Ruth B&iy
a'nd Councilman Don MacAlhster.
Both critized the development as
being too bag and not providing
enough parkmg. They aJso sajd at was
out of step Wllh the guideltnes the caty
has established for renovating down-
town Huntiniton Beach.
The senior citizen complex, to
include 192 apartments and a ~bed
convalescentcare fac1hty. would be
Western hostages held an Lebanon.
After a disappointing false alarrn an
June. Jacobsen said this morning he
and other hostage families were tryJng
to keep their emotion~ harnessed.
"It's pretty difficult to temper those
kinds of feelings. It's impossible not
Jacobsen 1n1t1ally discounted an
unco nfirmed Kuwaiti newspaper re-
port that six or e1ght Western hostages
would be released by Syna today to
divert att,.nt1on from an Arab sum-
mit conference opening in Morocco.
Following on the heels of that story
the first major downtown develop-• , _______ ..__ __ __,.!..-;...:;.c,~ollL.l ...
ment in more than 10 years.
The council splu 3-3 on the vote to
stop the project. The split means that
the Planning Commission's approval
stands. Councilman Bob Mandie
abstained from voting. ,
(Pleue eee SEPfJOR/ A2)
Freeway accident
An accident that apread a truckload of plaater board atone
the ahoulder of the southbound 55 Freeway cloeed two
lana durlnf ruah hour traffic thla m~ming, alowtnc traffic
to a crawl aa workera tried to clear away the debrta and
were radio and telev1s1on reports that
an anonymous Amencan. working
through the Syrian government, had
paid a multi-miJhon-dollar ransom
for the release of all seven Amencan
hostages. Ten kidnap victims. includ-
ing two Frenchmen and one Bnton.
are reportedly being held by the Shiite
Mostems. Reports saad the money
was delivered Saturday by a U.S.
officiaJ.
Nancy Beck. spokeswoman for the
State Department, said government
officials were aware of the Kuwaau
newspaper article and had only JUSt
learned through medja anquines of
the S.tparate ransom report. They
could not confirm e11her story.
French and Lebanese officials also
said theycoutd not venfy the report an
the newspaper Al-S1 yasah that five
Americans and three Frenchman
would be released. apparently before
the openin~ of the Arab conference.
remove a truck that ·akjdded around to face oncommc
trafflc. l'fo one wu lnjarect in the 7 :30 a.m. accident. The
truck, drl..-en ~y Anthony Silva of Loomla, Ca., la owned by
O.terbmp Trucking Inc. of Orange.
Mlnd&Body Airport pact protest fizzles
Surgeons use unique
technique to literally suck
fat from the body of
overweight patlents.181
Food
Food tasters are trained
to detect numerous
flavors.C1
By JEFF ADLER
aad ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of the D.., "°'Ii.ft
McDonnell-Do uglas employees
who showed up at an Orange County
Airpor\ Comm1ss1on heanng to
pfbtest terrns of a proposed settle-
ment over the expansion of John
Wayne Airport walked away empt)·
handed Tuesda> naght.
The Airport Commassaon, which
advises the Board of Supervisors on
airport matters. dela)ed cons1der-
at1on of the proposal that would settle
several suits blocking airport e:it-
pans1on because the complicated
legal documents had not yet been
completed.
The aircraft workers wanted to
protest any settlement that might hun
their com pan> 's future aircraft sales:
The company's MD-80 JCt!> are
built at a Lonf Beach plant and are
used by severa of the a1rhnes operat-
ing at John Wayne Airport
Jn a telegram addressed to super-
\ asors la'il month. employees union
President Robert Berghott saad
worl ers "cannot afford to sat 1dl~ b~
whale the.. Orange· Count~ Board of
Supen1so~ e'pons thousand'i ot
Orange Count) JObs out of the state ..
Berghoff saad the pro~sed agree
ment could Jeopardize 1 •. 000 count~
Jobs because se"en airlines are an the
(Pleue .ee AIRCRAFT/ A2) ,,
according to the AssociatCd Press.
The repon dtd not explain why all
seven Amencans were aot men-
tioned, nor why one extra hostase was
lasted from Fra~.
With tbe ludnap v1cums still in
captivity ttus morruna.. Jacobsen said
he was fighung to prevent ano~
bitter d.Jsappo1ntment. He b.ad been
duped once by a faJsc report that the
hostages would be re eased with the
(Pleue eee B08TAOE'8/ ~)
Mother ·
of slain ...
NB man
grieves
Saysru Bearktller
'should pay with Ufe '
for 'senseless crime·
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Dellp,... ....
' The funeral is over and so is the
wake. Bu t for Joan Howe, the bun
goes on.
Herson Ross~shot todeathJuly
26 outside a hquor store m Big Bear
where be was spendinJ the weekend
With fnends. Poh~ said he unknow-
m$)y crossed paths Wltb a former
pnson inmate who alleg~ly had a
gun in his hand and robbery on bas
mind.
A smg)c shot was fired throuah a
W1ndsh1eld. and Ho"'e slumped
across the front scat of his truck and
bled to death before param~1a
could get him to a hospital.
"Toda) as his butllday," Mrs.
Howe sa1d Tuesda}'. pausing and
adding. "He would have been 32 I
have difficult> thinking about it let
alone taJlong about ll."
Howe was buned at Paofic View
Memory Park an ~orona del Mar last
week The cemetery overlooks the
ocean and the Balboa Peninsula
where he grew up and attended
K hoo I .
"He can·see mv house from up
there .... said the mother. ··And he's
buned near his idol -John Wayne ...
The woman srud she wants 10 see
her son's alleged lu,ller punished.
"I don't know how at sounds. but
what 1 want 1s \engeancc. I want to
see this man dead ... Mrs Howe said
"What happened was senseless and
he should pa} the ultimate pnce. His
hte ..
Daniel Yv alhamson. the 38-\iear-
old man charged wath Howe'ssla)mg..
(Pleue eee MOTHER/ A2l
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Food
B5
A3
86-8
05-7
B5
07
08
FreeWay fee funding plan
wins tentative county OK
'"Mesans guilty
of steel fraud
· Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Opinion
Pollce Log
Paparazzi
Play Review
Publlc Notices
Sports
Televlson
Theaters
Weather
C1-10
06
B2
B1-2
A9
A3
B1
83
04, 7-8
01-4 a.
B3-4
A2
Sllpervisors schedule public hearing on plan
to finance half the cost of three new freeways
By JEFF ADLER County Transportation Commission
ot111ieDe11J1111et•Yft and representatives from 11 cat 1es
A wide-ranging proposal to levy during the past year. Su¢rv1sors
development fees on newly con-scheduled a pubhc beanng and final
structed homes and commercial cons1derat1on of the plan for Sept 11
properties to pay about half the cost of The plan. af ultimately adopted bv
three new county freeways won the county and the 11 cities closest to
tentative approval Tuesday from the the three proposed freeways, would
Board of Supervisors. finance about 48 percent of the
Board members voted 5-0 to ap-estimated frteway construction costs.
prove m prmciple the rt'v1scd fee However, the plan will not become
schedule developed by the Orange efTect1veunlessasufficient numberof
the 11 ClllCS and the county asree to
form two Joint freeway authont1cs to
collect the fees and administer the
plan. Cons1derat1on of the con-
troversial plan by those affected 1s no1
e~pected to be completed for several
months.
OCH planners place the cost of
constructing the San Joaqu10 Hills
Freeway. which would course
southeasterl) 15 males through the
coastal foothills from the Corona del
Mar . Freeway to the San Diego
Freeway. at approx1matel) $14:?
malhon
(Pleue eee P'UEW A Y / A2)
ProtOcol 's ·no Mickey Mouse job
Disneyland's manager of community affairs -J
becomes the county's first chief of protocol -. -
Mary Jones ha the ideal tnumna
ror ffCC1ins f'orciJn heads of tatc.
ho1tm1 v1s1tan1 dtlf'ii.nes and pres-
ent1na Oranae County an a f'avorabJe
liaht. Yet be' not a State Depart-
ment employee. veteran of the ford _,,
aervice or member ofthe Ciiplomat1c con; the e-t 2l ~rs. she ha
worked at Disneyland.
Jo11 ' work as man r of com-
munity affa1n at the Mai>c Kin,dom
isn't taken h&htly. For years, the
M1ucrhom and the Monorail have
been tht m t visible landmarks in
the count).
Ten million visiton pa throuah
thcAnaheimamu ment park'saatc
each year, includina hundmJ or
thousands of sue ts f'rom fom&n
couniri Jones would i.kc chaJF. of
tours by top foreian lc*n , workina
with presidents, am dors and
ki
'ro;manyofthegucsts. Di ncyland
i their firJt -and 1bJy only -
&Jim o f~hat Orange County hu to
offer.
It come a httl urpnsc that
whea Oranac County lead rs d 1dcd
la t C.U It was hiih time the county
projected a mo~ v1 1blc profile. they
ROBERT
HYfl>MAN
Pf OPll IN THE NEWS
called on Jones to lead thai effort.
Ma~ Jones 1 Orange County'1
firJt chief of protocol.
.. We're uyina to tabh h an ident-••x fl r Ota County," Jon said
from tl\e protocol office 1n the count)
Hall o f Adm1oi ll"IUOO Ahhouah he
plans to retire from Di neyland th1~
year. for now, she splits her tame
between the M &JC Kingdom and
Santa Ana.
"A' a county. ~e·rc unique." Jones
said. "We don't really have a pnnc1-
pal Clty People from here u'iually SI)
they're from Orin c Count\. not
Anaheim or . nta Ana "
Jone1 Y1d it's important that Ora.nae ounty be considered a
separate community wtth unique
f'caturn that parate 1t from 1.DS
n~t s and sum>undina uthem -
Cahlbm unu
At Di neybuw Jo of\eo was
called o n to h t fi man d'IO•W1cs
and 1ntrod c them to th comrnuni-
1)'.
"The uatly ~n·1 awart of
(Pl-.-... PltOTOOOL/ A2)
• l I
From staff and wire reports
The pre~1dent ofa < o ta Mesa ~tecl suppl .. com pan) and his son.
the firm's\ ice pre~1dent. plcadt'd gualt\ Tuesdav to charges of sethng
anfenor steel to the government
· Donald R 81galke. 5 l of Garden Gro' c and T 1mothy D.
B1galke. 30. of Newport Beach pleaded guilt) in l ~ D1stnct Court 10
Lo!. .\ngeles to five counts of mail fraud
.\uthont1cs ~1d the Dt<.tncl lntemat1onal ~upp1\ ("rr. sotd the<
go,emment steel that was not treated with certain .illo)s required b)
spec1ficat1ons 1n the defe nse c-ontracts awarded 10 the firm. The alloys
~ould ha\ e made the steel more durable
The infenor teel was da<;<.'O\ crt'd dunng heat t~ts conducttd b\.
the mahtan '
.\lthough th<' 10tttl ha not led to an~ accidents o r damage to
• (Pleue eee STEEL/ A2)
State funds
forOCJail
workOK'd·
I
A.a• "Or.not Cout OAILV PtLOT/Wedn91da)'. Auouet 7, 1985
AIRCRAFT WORKERS STYMIED •••
ham Al
process of •dcct11111 f)e\~n the
MO.SO and tht &orig 737·300 to meet 1irpon aoise ta.ndards. 1
The oounty"s spcciaJ eirpprt coun-
,tel, Carlsbad ,attorney Michael
O.u.k.e, ta.id Tue$d.ay's delay was
DCClCSlatY because the anomeys and :::"' tbe various ~es involved in the
• 1ettJement still bad not given tl.nal
County moves ahead
ori SA Helghts p1an
•·"'4--~val to the Jettlement papers. ·we need staff and attorney con·
BJ JEFF ADLER .,. .. ~,... ....
'Freed by a 1late appeals court ord(t to resume plannjna for the expansion
of John Wayne Airport1 th Oranae County Board ofSuperviiors took Jteps
Tuesday to advance the proposed redevelopment of Santa Ana Hei&hts.
•
J
I
· IC'l\IUS on tnms of neso~tions and documentation before •t i1 pres.-
ented.'' oa.ne wd.
AirJ>ort comminionm expcessed
hope the matter could be addte sed
durioa a special htMina Monday, one
day before the Board 6fSupervison 11
1eheduled to consider the wide-
Supervisot'1 unanimously authorized tho birina of a ~velopment
oonJU1tint. flnancial adviser, bond counsel and attorney to develop a financing.
packqe to fund the rtdtvelopment proaram.
L&sl February, supenison a_pproved a redevelopment plan for the
community, which 1s situated underneath the airport's prjnpipaljet path. The
plan calls for distinct residential~uestrian and busjness park areas in East ranglna settlement.
The ~ment. between \he coun·
ty, the city of Newport Beach, Stop
Pollutinj Our Newport and the
Airport Working Oroup, proposes to
end all airport-related fitigllion in
return for ptacina limits on airport
expansion for 20 years.
Gatzke said he and various at-
torneys involved in the complex
negobations planned to meet both
Santa Ana H.eiahta. .
About 386 existina housing units would be retained under the board's
plan, while 188 homes eventually would be eUmioi.ted. Homeowners who
remain within the contours of tbe atate-desiinaled noise area are eli.gible to
insulate their homes throuJb a counl)'·sponsored acousticaT insulation
proaram or sell their homes to the county through its purchase assurance
program.
County piano~ hope to hire the consultina team and develop a financin&
plan in the next six to 12 months.
today and Thursday.
Molester sentenced
Planning on the Santa Ana He~ts land-use plan and the related $150
million John Wayne Airport expansion were allowed to resume last month
after the county, the city of Newport Beach and two community groups
tentatively agreed to settle a host of lawsuits that blocked the county•s
expansion plans.
The 4th District Court of Appeal in San la .Ana lifted the b~n after all
parties in the lawsuits agreed that plannTna efforts could resume while the A 71-year-old man called "Grand-
pa" by the neighborhood children he
treated to snacks was sentenced to
five years in prison for molesting six
Jirls between 1979 and 1984.
proposed settlement was being finahzed. .
County planners .were ordered to halt all plannin-last April 26 after an
Orange 9>unty Supenor Court judge found the county m contempt for failing
to submn the expansion and land-use plans for court review as an earlier court
decision required. Newell D. Smock of Westminster
pleaded guilty in February .
MOTHER GRIEVES FOR SLAIN SON •••
From Al
was arraigned Tuesday in San
Bernardino County. He's charged
with murder, robbery, assault with a
deadly weapon, evading arrest and
violating parole.
At the time of the shooting in Big
Bear, Williamson was technically a
fugitive. A lifelong criminal with a
history of violence, Williamson viol-
ated parole in December by skipp ing
Out ort his parole officer. accordmg to
Robert Gore, a spokesman for the
state Department of Corrections.
A warrant for his arrest was issued
but authont1es couldn't catch up with
him.
Records show that Wilhamson was
charged with burglary and robbery in ·
I 966 and served time in prison until
,1971 when he was paroled to Long
Beach.
That same year, he was arrested in
Los Angeles on suspicion of killing a
nquer stor~lertnturing a robbery. A
jury found him guilty of second-
dcgree murder. .
. Five years later, Williamson was
paroled again but in only a few
'months he was back behind bars
serving time for armed robbery and
assault with great bodily hann.
In late 1984. Williamson was
paroled from Folsom State Prison to
San Diego County. In December, he
failed to report to bis P.8role officer,
Gore said, and a no-bail warrant wu
issued for his arr~
Seven months ,ater.t Williamson
all~yshowed upir>rrontofHart's
Och, a liquor store/delicatessen on
Big Bear Boulevard. Witnesses recall
the man•s erratic driving as he pulled
into the parking lot, blockinf two
parking stalls with hls car, said ames
Bryant, a spokesman for the San
Bernardino County Sheriff's Dcpa~
ment.
At roughly the same moment,
Howe walked out of the liquor store,
carrying a six-pack of beer. His
friends were nearby at a public
telephone, calling home to check on
their children.
Bryant said that .Williamson al-
legedly brandished a pistol and de-
manded that Howe hand over his
money.
"Don't move or )'.Ou'tl be sorry.''
witnesses quoted Williamson as say-
int.owe apparently dropped the beer
he was carrying and ran to his truck,
started it and put it in gear. Wil-
liamson allegedly walked up to the
. JAILFUNDSOK'D •.•
,romAl
according to Board ol Supervisors
Chairman Thomas Riley. The county
must pay the remainder of the $66
: million project to expand the
crowded main J&il in Santa Ana.
U.S. Distnct Judge Wilham Gray
·fined the county $15.000 in March for
not complying with his 1978 order
that required each prisoner to be
provided with a bed.
Built to hold I, 18 I P..risoners, the
Jail's population has sometimes
swelled to almost 2.0<X>.
truck, raised his gun and fired once,
Bryant said. .
"'Then be(WilJiamsoo)calmly, and
I underscore the word calmly, walked
to his own car, got in and drove off,"
Bryant said.
Howe slumped across the seat of
his truck, which was still in aear. The
truck rolled backward across the
parking Jot and into. a ditch. Para-
medics made a futile effort to save hls
life.
Williamson, meanwhile, drove to
nearby Running Springs where a
Torrance oouple and their I l-year-
daught.er had been stranded by car
trouble, Bryant said.
According to reports, William.son
walked up to their car, demanded
money and hit the man on the head
with the bun of a gun. Bryant said the
l l-year-0ld apparently pleaded for
her fatber•s life.
Another couple passing by, rcsi-
de,nts of ~ig Bear, stopped. Bryant
said Wllhamson allegccf turned on
them and fired one shot, which
missed.
Sheriff's deputies arrested Wil·'
liamson early the next morning after a
lengthy chase that ended when Wil-
liamson lost control of the car and hit
a tree. Even then, said Bryant,
Williamson climbed out of his car
and tried to run away .
Williamson, who is being held
withou& bail at San Bemadino Coun-
ty Jail. has pleaded .not guilty to all
charges. . _. :r
. San Bernardino County Deputy
Distnct Attorney Ray Haight Ill said
he will seek the death penalty. A
preliminary hearing to determine if
Williamson must stand trial is set
Aug. 15.
PROTOCOL NO MICKEY MOUSE JOB •••
From Al
Orange County. They thOu$ht 11 was 'needed a s1 m1lar office.
-part of Los Angeles." she said. "I was aware of the great number of
, But Jones and o thers point out that businesses in Orange County that do
,Orange County is the second lar~t business overseas, yet l also knew the
county 1n California and the sixth county was oftentimes overlooked,"
largest county in the nation -far too she said.
large 10 be overlooked, even on an While the office was created by
internattonal scale. Wieder and her staff, she said it's impo~nt that business leaders de-
Bctween 1970 and 1980, the coun- velop 1t.
ty"s population increased by more "There's always interest and sup.
than 500,000 residents -more port. The response for all its activities
growth than 39 st.ates experienc.ed has been just tremendous," she said.
during the same period "But I've tried to wean myself from it
Such growth made an Office of and let them (businesses) take over."
Protocol necessary, county officials When the office was established
determined. La!lt year. Orange C'oun-last November, the county Board of
ty Supervisor Harnett Wieder took Supervisors proposed that 1t be run
steps to create the office Wieder and 1ndepen~ently, supported by pri·
other~ saw it as a means to draw vately raised funds.
foreign visitors to the county'~ bus1-Local businesses responded to the
ncsses, as well as to tourist attrac-challenge Nov. 15 wtreTI They helped
tions. raise $40,000 to establish the office.
In addition, the office coordinates Volunteers were appointed to serve
efforts to properly extend hospitality on a 15-member Protocol Advisory
when foreign dignitaries visit. Committee. which provides advice
"You have to remember, you do and guidance to the office.
attaches from nearly 50 nations
attended the event at the Westin
South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa
Mesa. Speakers included Orange
County Supervisor Thomas Riley;
state Sen. John Seymour, R·
Anaheim; Irvine Co. President Tom
Nielsen; and Don Mill er, chairman of
the World Trade Center Association
of Orange County.
The speakers painted a rosy picture
of the county for the foreign guests.
"Orange County now has its own
identity and it's unmistakable," said
the Irvine Co.'s Nielsen. "We're no
longer in Los Angeles' backyard. In
fact, some of us refer to Los Angeles as
our backyard."
Business leaders in Orange County
arc anxious to attract inter.national
trade. They boast that from an
economic penpecrive, Oranae C<mn·
ty as a nation would rank 40th among
the world's I 90 nations in terms of
gross national product.
About 2S percent of county busi-
nesses engage in foreign trade. ln
addition, one of every seven jobs in
the county depends on intemationaJ
trade. • ·
Ski.. Wiii contlm.141 tol>i mottlyefMr Odf Souihetn Callfoml1 through Thurldty, wlth llttt. change In the dry weetMr
th11 ha kept t«nl*'•tu,... In the Noh eot to low eo. u. ..-.
forecasttrt 111<1. TM dry WMtetty flow of llr wtn c.ontlnue for the nut IWtr.,
dl)'I u 1 wet1her dlttutbenoe p.... through the PIClflc northwtt, haVlng llttl• .rtect on Soutf'lwn CIJlfOrnla •OIOt to
lncr.... dtMt1 Wfnd• tonight up to 30 mph, the "-'lonll
W•th« 8ervloe reported. A~ ooeetal eddy olroulatklrt lhst
hu developed th<>uld llto J*'•t, lncrealng the night and tow
c:IOudlMle In the aouth co.tat .,....,
Along the Or~Cou1 thetewlll ~ IOw c:loud=ht tnd Thursct.y morning •peolllty eouth portion•, ot .. fair
through 'Th1Jrtd1Y.
U.S. T~mpe .. L• I.Ollie ...... 11 • ·-~~ ,,_ONTI· AlbMY ... ... M4lmplllt ., 14 z::t:ewt ... •• .. MlemlllNCh to 7t W•m-coio ...... " ee Ml~----.. .. MdtOt• ... 48 MPlll-Si Peul " .. Sl'IOwtt• Aain ,l!Jtr1tt Snow OCc:ludtd ..,. SllllOl'ltfY Ay 15 70 ,...,,.., .... .. • AllMtl
Atletltlc Ctty IO 10 NewOllMl'll t1 72 ~~ ... a-c· AA US 0tot OI C--.Jt
AUltln 100 11 New'l'Otll a11umor• t2 15 HotfOlk,Va. 12 70 Calli. ·Tem1>9 llfllllllOllAm e:s 13 OlllM>o!M City " 70 Surf Report 9111nerc:ll ... 65 OfMha If f7
80IM 93 15 OfllllOO e:s 74 Hlgfl, tow, l0t %4 llOurt ~ 11 5 loft on 12 eo ~ 12 11 l.OC:A"°" llD ......
luffelo ... 17 PllcMntx 107 17 a.m, Huntlflgton IMoll 2"" = 0.,. '° 51 Piii= 1' .. 811let911eid t1 .. Al¥w JtitlY. ~ M
Ctttll1991on,8.C ee 78 POtll .M9 fl 57 !Well• 15 17 40thll1 .... ~ 3-4 ~ ChMIMton,W V 12 ... ~.Ot .. II '""'° " 17 22nd ltrwt . ......._.. 3-4
Ctwlott•.N C: 84 ee PtO\'kNll()e 11 58 l..einoM!tt " 12 ..,l)Ojlw~ 3-4 ,.,,
~ 83 55 ==rChy 12 .. L.OeA ..... 11 .. ~ei..= 2·3 , ..
~ 17 ~ " 58 Oeki.nd 71 .. 24 ,..,
~IJ t3 10 Aerlo " 41 PNOROl>lee It 53 .. ,., tll(np: 15
CllMltlnd 78 14 Alcl\mond ee 70 ""llluff " .. ·~ dltectlon; IOlll"-l
ColuM«>...a.Oll 80 61 81 \.oult 11 71 "90wood Olly 13 57
Concord,N H .. 57 81 ~ .. T.,,,pa ta 75 89Cf9"'*1to " 80
0911 ... Ft Wonll 101 80 8111 LAii• City u " 8allnu 11 151 Tide• ~on •1 70 s..w. '·· 80 17 Sen Di.oo 7t ..
°"'-11 57 Slit~ N 75 8anl'r~ 73 51 o..,,._ t2 117 Spok-84 511 Sente a.rt>et• 711 51 TOOAY Sloellton ta 11 O.Crott 71 ee Syr-... .. s.cono "'°" 24tp.m 4.1
Oulutll 84 57 TOC)lke 117 13 Hlgtl. tow '°' 2 .. ,_,, Wldlng •• 6 p.m. Second tow 1000pm a 1 ...... ow 106 tlO EIP-" 118 T-102 78
F*'>enk1 77 51 TulN 92 72 Ilg lher 82 37 ntUfl90AY
F•OO 81 55 Wutllngton 14 71 8lellop " $ol Flfll hlgll 3:28em 30
~ 115 55 Wle!Vte ta 17 =. 108 71 Ekal IOW l :ttl• m 2.-4
()(end R9pk!• 12 M W"k•llar,. 711 IO 71 57 s.cono Moll !Ulp.m. 48
Orti&t Fella 12 53 ~9Mcll '5 82 hconcllOW 11·3tpm. 1.7
HMIOrd t2 eo Eztended == 17 et
~ u ~ ... Sol $un .... 1001)' ., 7.48 p,,.. -
Honolulu 97 Mt W"-78 ,, Tltulldey 11 l .Ot a.m llnd Nie .... 11
Houtton I• 75 ~8Mch " 51 7;4tp"' -J
lnCllW\llpOll• 81 SS ~ dityt lltld CINI "'Oflla uoapt Ontlltlo 97 f4 Mpon rl-IOdlY 11 11.37 pm. Mlt
Jticll-.M• 91 71 -low Clloud• tllld fog llong I ..
Pelm 8ptinge 110 72 Thundeyet 12 33e,m 111<1n-ag11H111
Jedt90tWlll9 .. 75 p....,.,,. ., tit C089t In ,,,. .... nigllt Md .-ty ~lld9 " tlO 1:30pm
.i...-85 41 t'llOfnlllg lloura. Hight In mid 70t 8t tr. ~Cfty 85 83 ~ to ~ eo. wwmer lnlMd Slit! 8-tWdlnO 17 tlO
Lat V'9tlf IOI 78 ~ Lowll the llPC* 90e 10 ~ hn OabtMI 93 59
Utile Aoolt 80 72 eo.. SenJoee .. se
SMllAne 13 82
SENIOR COMPLEX OK ST ANDS ••• From Al '
Council members alternately
praised and lambasted the proposed
development.
Mandie, who didn't vote because
his family owns property near the
development, said the alternative to
senior housing probably would be
apartme.nu. "Do you want 136 units of beach
bums living three and four to an
apartment?" Mandie asked. .
··we could end up with a bunch of
groupies movin_g in." added Coun-
cilman Jack Kelly.
Don Slavin, whose Alabama Street
home is near the planned senior
complex, said the project is too big
and represents bad _planning. He said
planners appear to be creating a "surf
ahetto."
Tom Winfield. a Los Angeles
attorney and a partner in the firms
that wants to build the project, said
Palm Court will attract affluent and
refined senior citizens. He said most
will have annual salaries exceeding
$60,000.
Residents, who would pay up to S 1,500 a month for hotel-style accom-
modations, would be provided maid
and limousine service, said Winfield.
Council members have two weeks ·
in which to reconsider their tie vote.
HOSTAGE'S SON HOPES FOR BEST •••
From Al .
39 Americans taken from a hijacked
TWA jet in June.
"I was pretty excited last night,"
said Jacobsen. "Today I'm trying to
act like it's not really a possibility."
Jacobsen said be talked by tele-
phone Tuesday night with Peggy Say,
sister of hos~ge lerry Anderson, 37,
and other relatives of the kidnap
victims. _
"I think everyone learned a lesson
from that (TWA) hijack crisis. We
learned to approach these reports
cautiously,'' he said.
Jacobsen also said he found it hard
to believe that the 'fundamentalist
Moslems reportedly holding hi~
father and the other hostages would
settle for a financial ransom .for the
political kidnappings. The terrorists
had earlier demanded the releuc of
17 comrades imprisoned on bombing
charges in Kuwait.
"The more r trunk about the
ransom, the more far-fetched it
sounds," Jacobsen said.
FREEWAY FEE PLAN GETS THE NOD •••
From Al
The cost of the interconnected
Foothill and Eastern freeways; which
would form a T-shapcd rrceway
system, is estimated to be $5 t 6
million. The Eastern Freeway will
meet the Riverside Freeway in east
Orange County and run 13 miles to
the south, where it will connect with
the Santa Ana freeway.
The Foothill Freeway wiU begin
along the Eastern Freeway, between
Santiago Canyon and Irvine
Boulevard, and will provide a 32-mile
stretch of new freeway joining · the
Santa Ana Freeway below San
Clemente.
As proposed, developers in areas
closest to the San Joaquin Hills
Freeway would be assessed an extra S 1,305 for each new new home built
in the zone closest to the freeway,
while commercial developers would
ST·EEL FRAUD.~.
Prom Al
equipment, military authorities contend that such use could
jeopardize Jives. The military currently is investigating how much, if
any, of the steel has been used.
According to court records, about I 801000 pounds of the steel
was intended for use in the jet enpnes of military aircraft, including
the B-52 bomber.
The Bigalkes agreed Tuesday to pay more than $236 000 in
restitution to the government for invoic.es fraudulently .submitted for
the steel, most of which was shipped in 1984.
U.S. District Judge Richard Gadbois Jr. will sentence the
81ga.lkes Sept. I I. They face maximum sentences of25 years in prison
and $5,000 fines. · -'
be assessed $1 . 7S per square foot.
Jn all, the development fees would
raise about S 165. 5 million toward the
freeway's construction cost
Along the Foothill and Ea11tem
sections, tho fees proposed for the
zone closest to the new freeways are
Sl,29S per -single-family residence
and $1.80 per square foot for com-
mercial property.
Representatives o( the county's
Building Industry Association con-
tend that developers won't nccess-an~·1 pass along the fees in the form of
hi er bousina prices.
ities beiilg itsked to join the new
freeway authonties are Costa Mesa,
Irvine, Newport Beacb, Orange, San
Clemente, Anaheim, San Juan
Capistrano1 Santa Ana, Tustin and
Yorba Linaa and Laguna Beach.
Strong opposition to the plan
already has surfaced in Lacuna Beach
and Irvine. Laguna Beach City Coun-1
cit memben voted against partici-
pation last January; some Irvine
residents want the issue placed before
city voters on the November election
ballot.
SHUTTERS SPECIALLY
PRICED I
business socially as well as in the In addition to fund-raising, the
office." Wieder said. "It used 10 be a · office has a promotional role as well.
PfOlocol office was all pomp and ___!!is d~~gned to boost foreign in.vest-
---etreu~t-now I gue~s yo~ ment in flie'C6unty.4'u-ttntt e\ld, the coul~ say 1t s a suppon for. busmess. office last month hosted its first
_.,We have 10 put our compames-t·-+-e-----
touch with the people who want to
meet them," Jones said. "It starts as
an educational process, but could
become a wonderful opportunity for
Orange County.''
Wieder, who worked with the Los Orange "tounty economic briefing
Angeles Office of Protocol for 10 conference which Jones hopes will
years while working for the mayor. become an 'annual event.
said she realized Orange County Consuls general a.nd commercial
Just Call
642-6086
Wbat do you like 1bout tbe Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you llke? Call tbe
number at left end yo1ime1111e wlU be recorded, tr1necrlbed and delivered
to Ufe approprtat'e editor.
The aame U -boer 1D1werln1 tervlce may be uaed to rtt0rd letters to tlte
editor on aqy topic. Contrtbators to oar Letters colama 111111t l~lude tltelr
name and telepMne number for verification. No drcul1tlon cal11, please.
Tell u1 wllat'• oo your mind.
DeMyPOot Oeftwwy
le Quer.nteed
Clrcutenon
Telep:. ..
Mo.
I ~(;l'll)my --
. -
''•nk Zlnl
Ed11or
Robert L C11ttr•U
PrOdlJ<:Oon
MenllQef
ROMmMJ Churchm1n
Controller
Doukt L. Wllllan'8
Crcu1111on
Ma~r
,..., lllMlnt
C1aM1fltd Olrtctor
i
ClrculatlOn 71UIG-all c .......... ~.,.. .. 714/"°"'1t
Alt other dapartmente Ma.-1
MAINOfACI
»0 Wfll lay II Co!te MeM C-'
Mtl .oot-lloll t&eO COiia ""-CA t182t
VOL. 1'1 NO. 211
The time Is right to
enjoy the cool
comfort and beauty
of these attractive
moveable shutters,
.. .In the colors,
sizes and
styles you want!
C.11(714)548~1 or 548-1717
HEJIWGOD MAIUFACTOIY
1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627
. '
32 Yeara Experience
Manufeoturtng Quality Shuttera
..
Orange Coat DAILY PllOTIWedneeday, ~ 7, 1"9 * Aa
Oilwell • UCI field trip to
Catalina slatea bias~----~
9~1den "':'est Colleae bioloay professor Hayden
R. Williams wlll eohduct an "adventure in a natural
laboratory" t~afi lJC" lrvine Exten ion's field
study at the 1.:-~tllina Island Mirine lnstitute at T~yon Bay, m lpnvatecovetwo miles from Avlllon,
tltis month.
A preview of the 2112-day tnp will be of'f'crcd at
two meetinaa neiu Tuesday and Thursday from 7 to
I 0 p.m. in Room 204 oftbe Humanities Hall at UCJ.
The trip is scheduled from Aus. 23-27 at a fee of S l 8S. Call 8S6-S4 I 4 for registration and further
anfQrmaiion.
Newport cl ... •lgnaJM .et
The Newport &ach.. Parks, ~chit and
Recreation Oeparyment will hold rqistratlon for fall
recreation acuv1tics beainnina Aua. 30. Activities
range from special interest classes to courses dealina
with dance, actina. exercise, sailina. tennis and other
sports.
Ma1l·1n reaistration can be sent to tbe Parks,
Beachcsand Recrcauan.Departm•nt, 3300 Newport
Blvd .• PO Boll 1768, Newport Beach CA 926S8. For
more inforn'lation, call 644-31 SI.
New •tudenm welcomed
'
hampers
bu liters
Condominium plans
..for oil field tn Mesa
to get city rehearing
By TONY SAA VEDR.A
ot1MD411r .........
Developers are fcrlina the repercuuions
of Fnday's oil well uplosion and fire in
Newport Beach as they attempt to revive a
plan that would bnna J 60 condominiums
to a Costa Mesa otl field.
Saddlcback College will welcome recent high
school graduates and new students to 1ts Mission
Viejo campus for an orientation program nTuesday
at 9 a.m. in tbe Fine Ans Complell.
End of a perfect day
Andrea Robln80n of 111.ui on Viejo and Cory M&nn
of Newport Beach take an eTentnc •troll aloq the aa.nda on the Newport beachfront u they wind up a
aa.n-filled weekend.
Despite renewed concerns over the
hazards of capp1na 011 wells, the Costa
Mesa City Council voted 3-2 Mondiy to
grant another hearina for the prol)Otll to
build a rcs1denual comple~ amid et&ht oil
pumps and some undersround storqe
tanks at the west end of I 8th StrccL
The plan by Denn Development Co. of
Costa Mesa was 1n1ually blocked July I by
council members who believed that \he
project's environmental impact report did
not co ntain enou&h measu~s to offset the
potential noise, odon and safety buards.
Colege counselors will assist new students with
class selection and schedule plannina and will offer
information about the reautration process and
college life in general. Call 8314571 for additional
information. Psychiatrist's benefits nixed Calhna it inadequate, the oouncil re-
JCCted the study. which must be accepted
before the project can be approved.
Bitten coane scheduled
A three·session baby sitting course designed for
young people 11 and older will be offered Tuesday
from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at Humana Hospital in
Huntington Beach.
The proaram teaches youngsters what to do 1n
case of such emeraencies as chokina. electrocuuon
and fire. The chruc also will be held Aua. 20 and 27,
and prc-regJstration may be made by calling the
hospiul's nursing office at 842.J 473, ext. 186.
MotlJer-dllaglJter fete •et
The Saddleback Communities Christian
Women's C ub will hold its annual mother-daughter
luncheon Tuesday at the Holiday Inn in Laguna
Halls. ., 1 fashion show of "custom creations" by
mothers and dau&hters will be presented with music
provided by Bedy Thayer. Luncheon rcscrvationS'
arc $7.50 and must be made by Friday by calling
Susan at 831 ·9682 or Kit at 496-4262. For free
nursery rcscrvauons. call Leslie at 49S·8584.
HB newcomen to meet
The Huntrnaton Beach Newcomers Oub has
invited au newcomers in the area to a coffee session
Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. .
For those interested in learning more about the
club's activities, caJI 964-8073.
Playgroun~ op:eiJ ..
Jury declares mental
illness not a disability
in claim for insurance
By JEFF ADLER I
Of1M~Noc9"" I
A jury has denied d1sab1lity benefits for a
former Costa Mesa psychiatnst who
claimed he was entitled to the benefits
because he was mentally 111 when he lost his
license to practice medicine.
An Orange County Supenor Coun Jury
voted I I· l to reJCCt Georae Prastka's claim
against his insurance company Tuesday.
Prastka. whose once·successful private
pract1cc included patients such as Sen.
Edward Kennedy's former wife Joan, sued
the Massachusetts Casualty Insurance Co.,
claiming the firm failed to pay the $3,200
per month in disability benefits his policy
allowed in the event medical problems
rendered him unable to continue his
practice. He lost his license after admittmg
he engaged in sexual relat1onsh1ps with
some of his patients.
Besides the monthly d1sabllrty benefits
covenng more than four years. the former
psychiatrist asked the jury to award him
S500.000 an punitive damages plus an
unspecified amount for general and special
damages
But it took the s1x·man. sax.woman JUr)
little more than a day to reach the
conclusion that Prastka's men.tat cond1t1on
dad not enutlc him to thcd1sab1hty benefits
he sought.
"Everybody felt, rcaJly. that Dr. Prastka
had problems, but to describe it as total
disability was quite difficult for aJI of us,"
said Jury foreman Mareva Mu!'J>hy, a Santa
Ana resident, after the verdict was an·
nounccd.
1ihe said only one ballot was taken by
Jurors after the evidence and the court's
legal instructions to the jury were di s--
cussed.
But th~ Jury's lone holdout, Tustm
school teacher Esther Brown. ~id she
voted 1n the former doctor's fa vor because
"no one in their right mind would so
violently throw away their career·•
Brown added that although she believes
Prastka was mentaJly disabled, ··1 would
not have voted that he was totally
disabled" as the instructions to the jury
required.
As opposed to criminal trials in which
unanimous jury verdicts arc required. only
nine of 12 j urors must agree to reach a
verdict in c1v1l cases.
Prastka. who was in the Santa Ana
counroom when the verdict was read, said
lhat he rcahzed his was a difficult case. "I
really have no comment. I'm living one day
at a time. I'm trr,ing to cope with hfe and
stan over again, • he added in response to
reporters' questions.
The former psych1 atnst LS employed as a
n1ght·shift assistant in a local veterinary
clinic. He took thcjOb after unsuccessfully
scelong employment wnh the Orange
County Transit Dtstnct a' a bus dnver.
"Naturally, I'm dasappomtcd," said
Prastka·s attorney, Mark Edwards, after
the verdict. "I feel George 1s a sick man and
I had a tremendous amount of difficulty
reach.Ing him carrying on an every day
conversation " -
Edwards claimed d unng the two-week
tnal that Prastka lost touch wtth rcaht)
because he was disabled by a narc1ss1st1c
disorder that allowed hill) 10 "put bas needs
above those of his wife, kids and patients ...
Prastka admitted during a 1979 state
Board ,of Medical Quality Assurance
hcenst·rcvocat1on heanng that he had
sexual liaisons with fi ve of his female
patients The revocation proc~1ngs were
1n1t1ated three years after he had been
placed on probation for over·prcscribing
drugs to patients.
His attorney told the Ju ry during closing
arguments Monday that even ifh1s client's
"unethical conduct" resulted m the loss of
his medical license, he sull w~cnutfcd to
the insura nce benefits "as a result of his
sickness··
On the other hand. the attorney rep-
rt'scnting the lnsureJ, Da vid C'hodos. told
Jurors the central Quesuon was not whether
Prastka' had problems. The question LS
whether he 1s medically dlsablcd by a
mental illness. he said •
Chodos added. "'Wt' re not talking about
mental illness. we're talking about lack of
c.onscience ··
However, the in~ ttsurfaced Monday
after c1!}' Oevelot>ment Services Oittctor
Ooua Clark remanded council membcrt
that the $30,000 study was prepared by a
city-hired consultant.
Therefore, lhc city was obhged to either
reimburse the developer or fill an the
unanswered qut"StJons m the environ me~
tal report.
Despite oppos1uon from council mem-
bers David Wheeler and Mary
Hornbuckle, city lawmakers scheduled
another hcarina for Sept. 16 and ~ to
send the report back to environmental
consulting firm EDA W of Irvine.
In a separate 4-1 vote. the council alt0
agreed to set up a nctahborh.ood mcetina
wat)'i a rerrcscntauvc from the state
D1""1s1 on o 011 and Gas to dtSCuss the
dangers of hv1og on or near an oil field.
Wheeler dnscntcd, protcstana that the
cny was "talking about brinJ&ng.a bunch of
cllpens m to try and ~onv~ce nei&hbon that the project is safe."
Hall disagreed. sayma the city was
merely taking advantage of pponurut~
to ellplort the hazards creal by the 011
field. which bas been in operation for more
than 40 years. ·
Concerns heightened last week after a
long·abandoned well exploded and cauaht
fi rt on Balboa Boulevard in Ncwpon
Beach, spewmg crude 011. water and flamci
1n10 the air
4. buildup of methane ps apparently
caused the explosaon, 1ro01cally wtule tht
well was bema recapped. Officials said the
well had been improperly scaled 1n 1932.
Laguna Beach youngsters can take advantage of
two supervised plar.a.rounds t.hil year. Recreation
Department staff will be on hand from I 0 a.m. to 5
p.m. through Aug. 30 at Thurston Junior High
School and Riddf! Field.
Crafts. table top games. pang pong, basketball,
volleyball and other actJV1ties will be offered. The
rt'crcataon program 1s Jointly sponsored with the .
Boys Oub.
County divides clerk, recorder usan Bemis. vice president of Ocean
De"elopment. said that the 1 l·acrc Costa
Mesa 011 field could not be compared with
the dormant Newpon Beach well.
For one th1na. 011 production will
continue at the field for up lo -I 4 yean
\.1eanwh1le. the unus will be ttnted as
apanments for at least a decade, because of
pla03 to fi nance tht' $12 mllhon project
through county bonds.
By JEFF ADLER
Of tM 0..., Not .....
One week after Orange County Super-
visors ordered a study into the feasibility of
splatting the Clerk·Recorder's Office. the
board tentatively voted to divide It into
two offices.
If Branch were to resign. as as expected,
the splat could become efTect1 vt' 1mmed1·
a'tcly and the board would appoint a new
county clerk and a new recorder.
cons1derat1ons. •·
He added that the ac11on "sa,ed the
~lary of one depanment head. but had_ no
other apparent cost sav ings or program·
ma tic just1ficauon. ·• ·
Wednesday, Aug. 7
With httlc d1scuss1on. supervisors voted
5-0 Tuesday "to take the necessary steps to
separate the clerk's and the recorder's
office at the earliest date possible."
Branch. 1n a lettt'r to board members last
week suggcstina such a split. said he would
resign the post if he were reappointed
recorder. the pos1t1on he held pnor to the
consolidation.
"That's what we anticipate happening.··
said County Counsel Adnan Ku} per
following the board meeting.
In add111on. a 1985 county audit of the
Clcrk·Rccorder's Office found that smce
1978 there "had been no combination or
centrahzat1on of functions or shanng of
resources The Clerk'\ Office and the
Recorder's Office ope ra te as two entu~I)
~parate depanments 'lhanng a depan·
ment head.'
Bemis said that contanuina 01l~uon tht'orcucall} prevents the me c p s
from building up to a dangerous p ss~
level But even when the pumps arc
removed and the wells capped. Bernas sa1d
tht'rt' would be hnle nsk ofellplos1on on tbe
Co'ita Mesa field ·becauS( It has a low
prcssure range
• 7:30 p.m., Coe•t CommanJty Colle1e District
Board of Truttet11 District Board Room, 13 70
Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa.
• 7: 30 p.m., Irvine Comm11nlty Services
Comml11lon. City Council Chambers. I 7200 Jam·
borce Blvd.
The action came after County Adman1s·
trative Officer Larry Pamsh filed a two·
page repon with the board recommending
the two offices be separated. as they were
pnor to a 1978 consohdat1on.
In moving to separate the Clerk-Re·
corder's Office, board members tentatively
approved an ordinance that would split the
offices on Jan. S. 1987 unless Clerk·
Recorder Lee Branch should resign his
elected post in the meantime. The ord1·
nancc as scheduled for a final vote ne't
week.
Branch could not be reached to com·
mcnt on the board's action.
Once the offices are split. the separate
oflkes of county clerk and county recorder
would appear on the June 1986 pnmary
ballot and the subsequent November
general election ballot. Whoever 1s elected
tQ. the two offices would assume office in
Jan·uary 1987.
Pamsh concluded 1h111 problems with
office operations 1n both dcpanments
indicates each offict would benefit from
ha ving a full·tamt department head
"In fact. we have to use steam generation
to add enough prer,.,ure to pump the 011
out ·· wd Bem is
Her comments were backed b} a Clt)
~tafT repon quoting state 011 and
gasrcp~ntat1ve E. R Wi lkerson. Thuraday, Aq. 8
• 6 p.m . .z. Irvine City Council. City Council
Chambers, 17 LOO Jamboree Blvd.
Pouc£ Loe
Pamsh. in his report to the board. stated
that the consolidation in 1978 "was based
as much on convenience as on practical
The Clerk's Office as charged w1th filing
all coun documents filed with the Orange
Count} upenor Coun and coun clerks
must work closel y w11h the councy .. s
Judic1ar) The county's Supcnor Coun
Judgc'i recent!\ have e"<prc'l~d d1ssausfac-
t1on w11h offict' opcr.1t1on'i
;
Wilkerson. in the report. also Su!JICsted
that sound anenuat1on walls. wtndoY..
glazing and fire protection systems could
be used to reduce the potenttal danaers a
writ as noise. odon and visual impacts
Park campers arrested on
narcotics charge in Mesa
yard at 1974 Charle t .. bctwe-en 6· lO
p.m. Fnday and 9 a.m. Saturday ••• Cash totaling $20 was rcportt'd
stolen from a car that was towed off of
Pacific Coast Ha&hway U1 Newpon
Beach about 8:30 p.m. Monday The
vehicle was taken to a Costa Mesa
storage yard.
Lapna Beach
.\gold Rolex wns1watch. valued at
S 3 500. ~as saokn from a business on
Broad~a~ the 'icum told police
Tue\da~ • • • .\ radio wa~ rtpontd stolen from a
IOI. ked car parked T ue"1a}" on Second
and Mermaid o;tret't~ The loss wu
c~t1matt'd at $400
Bandntton Beacb
.\ thief stole an elderl} lady'~
handbag contam1na $250 cash Mon·
day whale she was waJkinahomc from
her bank located-on the comer of
Oxford and Nomnan.am. Acxonhna
to pohcc. the suspect. described as 1
tall. thin, white man tn his early 20's,
ran up behind the 71 ·ytar-<>ld vieum.
\natcbe<f her purse. bopped on t~e
back of a motor'C)d e dnven by a
fnt'nd lDd SOt away Tbe VIC\Jm
chased the su pcct but tnppcd and fell
cutt101 her hands and less u she hll
the around
Two people llcepi.QI in a van early
Tuetday momint ai a Costa Mesa
park were &nelled after officm found
thousands of barbituate tableu in
their vehicle.
John Fit.qerald Ward, 21, of
Pasadena remained in custody at the
city j~l this momina in lieu of
SI 01000 bail. Ward and Oin,er Joyce
Maiaaon, 35, of HuntJnat0n Beach
arc faclna charaet of poqeuina
narcotlcaforaale. ' Malaaon, who wu booked Into
Oranp County Jail, wu to be
lntne
A K·9 unit patrolina a business
complex interrufted a buralarY in
pro,rns about a.m. Wednc1day.
Ban the "Wonder Doa" collared one
w1pect, but two othcn aot away, S,t.
Dack Bowman said. Rene M. Aauirrc
waurtettcd forcommcrclaJ buralary.
His aae and addrcu are unavailable.
~ulm is allqedly one of three men
wlio were removinJ televisions from
a Fitch Street bu tnc . When con·
fronted by a pohoe officer with Ban in
tow, the men took off an different
directions, Bowman saJd • • • A man suspected of atetlina car
stereos was amsted Tuelday at •
Lona Stach motel after pol cc omoen
tracied him down throuah an ~pircd
' \'chicle reii'tration .. Camtus H. Van-
leer HI , 24, was taken into custody on
\u1p1cton of car buralary. Police sa
,
arraisncd in municipal coun today.
Offlccn on routine patrol became
suspicious after 1pottin1 the van
about 3 a.m. at Vista Park, i°'-
violation of city laws that prevent
people from linaerint in parka
throuaJlout the niaht. Accordl~ to the police repon.
offlocn initially anntcd Ward for an
outatandlna trlftlc warrant. Police
lat.er ditcovcn:d the drup after
Malqon knocked over a bq while
looldna for her identification, the . .
Vanleer was first stopped by officen
Julr 31 after a restdcnt reported
sccana someone steal her car stereo.
Vanleer wu stopped in the area but
out ran officers after he constntcd to a
search that turned up two stereos in
his vehicle. Vanleer also tried to
escape from omcert who appeared at
hi• n'IOtel Tuesday, poUco say. The
man allcaedly broke 1 window, dove
throuab it and started to run, but t}us
time l\c was not fut cnou . Vanleer
was booked into Oranae unty Ja.il. • • •
Police armt.ed a l S.ycar-old boy
on 1uspic1on of buraJ&rWna 1 home
In his nelabborhooct About$ l SOO in
jewelry, a video camnc rccon:ler and
cash was taken rtom a Batkwood
A venue home over the: w~kend1 polJce 11y Tbe youth is bcina hoUJeO
at Oranat owuy Ju"cnilc Hall. • • •
report said.
Confiacatdi by officen were sev·
eraJ pharmaceutical bonJes, without
prescriptions, conuinina
chorpromazine hydrochloride, re-
1erpinc, phentenninc bydrochlonde,
pbenobarbitol and tetracycline, an
antibiotic.
Since the amount was more than.
could be u.aed by the ~ple, police
ctw,cd that Ward and Malqoo
Intended to 1ell the drup. the repon
said.
Two apartments an the same com·
lex were burglarlted Tuesday, police say. About $7,000 an icwelry wa
taken f'ro,n a Topeka m1dcncc while
a camera vlllued at $400 was removed
from an Austin trect apanment
Coeta.._
Cash totallna S80 was rcponcd
stolen from Mr. Buck's Liquor. 2989
Fairview ROid. about 4 a.m. Tues-
day Entry wu pParently by pulhna
apan the aluminum framed al
doors. • • • O.v1d Oanuon Heath. 42. of Costa
Mesa wu arreat.ed by an undm:o\ier
officer Monday aftc:moon on u l>i·
cion of indcceru uposure at
Te Winkle Patk. 970 Arlinaton Drive. • • • A U SO stereo w ttported tolcn
from an unlocked ~chicle 1n an auto
Newport Beach
Someone caused $200 an damage
by_shcang a telephone cable inside the
office of Ncwpon Beach's feneral
1Crv1ce director Police said the
damage was caused by a vandal ••• Four hubcaps were stolen from
Mercedes Benz barked on the I I 00
block of West B&lboa Bouet vard •
A man rcportCd losina bts wallet on
the 8QO block of East ~~front The
wallet contatncd S327 1n cash • • • Someone took SJOO an cash from •
locker at the Mendian Hotel. 4SOO
MacA nhur Boulevard. • • • A lhJcf took $6.287 wonh of
computer bardv.-arc and software
from the offices of rta.r y\tcms.. Inc .
1300 Dove Strttt. A pa kc> ap-
pattntly was u9cd to p in entry to the
office. • • • Five sails, 1 hand ~nch and thrtt
tum buckl were 1tolcn· from a
SlOf'llC shed on the 1 SOO block of
Monrovia. The los' c.me to S6.800 • • • Son'lconc tole an S 00 stcftO un11
and a bloux from a Yolks""•"
Rabbit pelted at Fa h1on ltland. • • •
Vandal1 broke into Corona del Mar
Hlah School and took rour m1~
••ave ovens and a fire ut.1nau1sncr
wonh a toe.al ofS 1,2SO. Police 1d the
vandals also u.nnatcd on wall' and
defecated in a hallwa)'.
• • • Pohce arrested C1eorie Rogcn
Kelly. S5 on suspicion of dnvina
under tht' 1nt1ucn~ of alcohol Kell)
was stopped at 2. 30 p m Tue~y on
Bc'erl> \trtt't and "lorth C oa'it
H1&hwa
Fountain Valley
'\ mln and a woman from
nahc1m were arrested m Fountain
'valley Tucsda} after the> allqcdh
tncd to ,teal men:handise from the
Home Club. 1606 1 Brookhunt St
The t'll>O rcpon<'dly tncd to take
propen) out o( the stort us1na a
rt('(1p1 from an earlier purcha~ • • • A resident of the 10000 bloc k of
fall River Cou.n rcpo.ned Tucsda}
that someone entered has clotcd b}
unlocked Prast and tole a Mont·
tomef") Ward air compreuor worth
3S9 • • • P05sabl y antcnd1na to buralanze the
vehicle, ~mcone smuhccf the f"iaht rear window of a lf'IY. 19 I M11da
OLC parled on the 17900 blocli: of
Euclid • trttt. a m1dtnt rc1>0ned
Monda) The t-ar appa~ntl) wu not
entered. The w1ndo"' dam e wa
c.-nrnated at SSO. • • • Sometime t1ncc Jul} 19, '°mconc
stole thrtt ~~ ~pcekers from a
'oeaktt bo\ on the sta t at the (,uat Houw l"e'Staurant, I lO v. am.er
.\ve .. the mana r rtpt')ncd Monday. TM ICM'\ -.u C11tm11~ at S40 .
• • • .\ burgJar stoic a larae $400 t old
nuqt't and SI 00 1n Stiver coins out of
a eoan collec11on ftom a home in the
9300 block ofWoodcrcst Tuaday
County jail
inmatedies
•
/
I
--'(
M Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIWednaday. August 7, 1985
wtth ad. Evety E\lenlng. SpeclallzlnO In Manc:letln,
Szechuan Shanghai Culalne
Highly Kcienn.d muter chef
luncheon• e Coc:tttalla •Dinner
Elegant Dining
( 714) 852-0900
PIANO ENTERTAINMENT BY
CONFREY PHILLIPS
3950 Campus Or., NewPort Bch.
Between MacArthur & 9rtstot
LA
Near John Wayne Airport
Oii« e•l)lr• Auguet 2 lat lAM CHUEN CHOW
RUFFELL'S
UPlllLITUI
• fttTilelelttfY•~ lid'lilM llW .• cena IW -MJ.llll Astronauts: 'Engine crisis
CONVERSATIO ... N-Al;-JA_P .. AN ... E ... SE-· --1 held attention at launch. -.
Aiming to cultivate tht ~tudent's listenln' ind speaking abilities for By Tile A11ociated Pre11 ·
personal or professional needs, a course in Pr•ctic.-1 Convtr~tional · SPACECENTER,Hou ton-Challenger'sutronauts.safeontheif'OUf'!d
Japanese will start at Japan Cultural Association al 2130 N Cr~nd after a successfltl ciNit-day mis 1on, 1d a heart-stopping enpne s~utdown in
Ave., S.A. (Northsilic...Church of Christ) .. the first minutesaf\erlaunch "held our attention," b1,it thcy'reaJii) 1t h.aP.pened
'Cla .. •tart• Au1u•t 15, and will m"t every Thunday. when I\ dtd. "I felt very lucky we didn't JUSl iet a quick tnp lo Spain.' space
To res'later and for further Inform ation call 547-7733. shuttle pilot Roy Bridge said Tuesday niaht after the ~rew returned fro.m I !~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-~ Edwards Air Force Base where Challenaer completed 1ts 3.3 m1lhon-~1le It voy&&e. The shullle could have been forced to land in Europe or the ocean if a
second main engine shut down as at had lhrcatened. Instead, Nauonal
Aeronautics and Space Adm1n1stration officials said the mission-turmounted
its disastrous start 10 firmh a spectacular success.
Gunman shot out.Ide conven'lence •tore
OKLAHOMA CITY -A 24-year-old man remained in ~ical c~nd1t1on "-
todat after advancina on officers ringing a convenience store and being shot
when he refused to drop has aun. officials said. Randy Keith KuteJ, of
OJflahoma City, underwent several hours of surge!)'. Tuesday for "a number.of
wounds." said Police Capt M. T. Berry,. The sh~tang. by a bar:raae of special
weapons team members nngina the store 1n a middle-class neighborhood an
southwestern OkJahoma City, ended a four-hour standoff that began when a
delivery man spotted someone holdanga gun on ~tore clerk John Panezaddleby.
39, who was unharmed.
• Reporter fa¢es 18 month•, appeal pending
NEW YORK -~he federal Judge who ruled 11 was illegal for a former
Wall Street Journal reporter to use advance knowledge of the newspaper's
columns for his personal gain has sentenced R. Foster Winans t<? 18 months an
prison. Winans remains free on bail whale he appeals his conv1cuoi:i on charges
of conspiracy. securities fraud and w1rean.d mail fraud. But U.S. Dastnct Judge
Charles E. Stewart Jr. ruled Tuesday that if Winans' appeal fails. he must go to
pnson. fay a $5.0<?0 fine and then face five years' probation that includes 400
hours o community service.
Spy suspect 'wanted Mana-type family'
NORFOLK. Va. -Arthur J. Walkcrsaad his brother John tried to run his
family lake a Mafia godfather. enlisting his brother, son and best friend as
Soviet spies! an FBI countenntelhgence agent has tesufied. Walker, 50, a
retired submahner. adm11ted passing John Walker Jr. classified documents ~e
knew would be funneled to the Soviet Union, FBI Agent Beverly Andress said
during testimony Tuesday. Walker told Andress. betwee11 has brother's May 20
arrest and his own nine days later, 1ha1 John Walker wanted a .. godfather-type
family .. a Mafia-type family where everybody was close-mouthed and loyal.··
she said.
Cargo shlp on nre In Aleuttans
"Hey, look, it's OtU' oftlww great ,iew pies
they 're senmw at ben~'' ~ /~-....
JUNEAU, Alaska -The crew of a ship loaded with Japanese cars
conunued today to pump water from the North Pacific to fight a fire that spread
as the Coast Guard rated to help, authorities said. The CG cutter Monroe was
expected to reach the burning Coral Ace. about 500 miles south-of Unimak
lsland an the Aleutians. tonight after a 6()():.m1leJourney. The Coral Ac.e's crew
of 24, refused to leave the 500-foot ship and pumped sea water on the names
after fresh water and firefighting foam were exhausted. the Coast Guard said
"! dont know why, hut Jin suddenly himm
filY apple pif ."
"&~. 1nukt.• a U turn nght now
at1d f.O to Denny's."
Denny's proudly announces the
arriwJ of Y. baked Mother Buder
pies. .
What makes these pies so spcoal?
Mother Buder says it's the people who !:g her make them Bcc~usc they
~~cc every banana and c.-very
scr:awbcrry by hmd. And when they
mix the dough, they actually count the
trokcs. They use only gtccn Pippin
apples in their apple pies. They use only
pure vanilla and pure ciruwnon-nevcr
urutation. And when they apply cream
toppings, they do~ old-fash.toncd
way-Wlth a hanCt-hdd pastry bag.
Finally, they check the moi ture
of the flour and th~ tempttarutt of
"Daddy, there's ah(~ pie follmvmg us."
/-
the ovens and the freshness of each
ingredient f:ller:y cby.
And that's what makes all of
Mother Butler's 19 flavors look and
Wte so pccial.
So drive over to the Denny., in
Costa Mesa at 105 East 17th StrHt,
and tast.e pie that was made bygeople
whocare. · · .
Same acld 'found on vlcttm, suspect'
SAN BERNARDINO -A crime lab specialist testified tnai the acid
poured on a 15-year-ofd girl after she fought off a sexual assault was the same
kind found on the clothing of the man accused of attacking her. In 'testtmon}
Tuesday. Hiram Evans showed a Supenor CounJury a blue nylon Jacl<et with
a fu r collar and white pa a ts that he said had been burned with sulfur~1d. He
said the same acid was poured over Cheryl Bcss's head, shoulders an8'hands in
the Oct. 24. 1984, attack 1n the MoJave Desert. Bess, now 16, who was bhnded
b}' the acid, testified Monday that the man who offered her a nde to school.
then drove her to.the dcscn and attacked her. wore such clothmg.
Arms cache, $6 mUllon In pot seized
SACRAMENTO -The first day of stepped-up raids on manJuana
• growers netted more than $6 m1lho n 1n plants, six arrests and an arms cache.
officials say. Monday's sweep of seven counues began Cahfomia's response to
1he call by U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese lll for nat1onw1de raids to
eradicate the""gateway narcotic" that officials say leads u'lCrs to harder drugs.
State. local and federal officers plan to continue the stepped-up r.ndtng for
~veral days using up to ..cven teams of a do1cn office~ each operating
helicopters and four-wheel-drive vehicles.
Spy defendant faces more charges
SAN f'RAN("ISCO -A former Navy code man and longtime friend of .,r
John A Walker Jr. has been indicted again by a grand jury. o n charges he passed
war plans and communications secrets thrOuJh Walker to the Soviet Union.
Jerry Alfred Whitworth, 45. of Da vis. was indicted Tuesday on 12 new counts
of spyine and tax eva!.1on in volving his alleged connections with Walker. who
authont1es say also enlisted h1~ own brother and son 1n the ring. Whitworth was
charged with fa1hng to pa y taxe'i on $332.000 he allegedl~ received from
Walker for the m1htary 5ecrets
LA City Council votes for dlvesttture
LOS ANGELES -( 1ty pension fund'i would be withdrawn from
companies doing business wllh racially scgrea,ated South Afnca under a five-
>ear plan approved by the Ci ty ( ounc1I The d1 vest1ture, approved 14-0 on
Tue!>da>. requires the consent of the city"s pension co mmissioners Ma~or
l om Bradley. who proposed the apartheid pohcy an May. has threatened to fire
any commt'>Stonero; wh o rcs1o;t 1t The plan plan empowers the city lo begin
withdrawal of Its deposits from tianks that lend to the South African
govcmmcnt or to South Alncan-bascd pri vate firms
AIDS boy to be taught at home
R EDON 00 BEACH -The foster parents of a 3-year-old boy suffering
from AIDS have agreed to have ham taught at home rather than 1n a special
cducauon etas~ where other parents fear he might infect their children. The
guardians agreed to the home anstruct1on fo llowing a conversation Tuesday
with Marilyn Armstrong, director of special education for the Los Angeles
County Office of Education. "There wall not be contact with children 1n a
classroom situation." said Bob Grossman. spokesman for the office . . -·
CASABLA NCA. Morocco-The Arab summit o~nang today represents
a test of strength between pro-Western states 1'ilce Jordan. which as
spearheading an attempt to revive U.S.-sponsored Middle East peace talks.
ap1nst Syna. which 1s boycotting the meetana. One of the topics on the agenda
will be JO•nt efforts by Jordan and Yas5er Arafat's wing of the Palestine
L1berat1on 0'l8ntzallon to begin contacts with the United States. eventually
aamcd at open111a peace talks wath Israel.
Un1JeUOnable •torm• .till 8, •plll oil
Storms pack1na high winds, heavy rain, funnel clt>uds and snow inundated
Europe from the French Mediterranean coast to Denmark, killing six people
and 10Junna 18 others. On the island of Laesoc between Denmark and Sweden.
bards soiled by an 011 spill were bcina !hot by the hundreds Tuesday, and
experts said as many as 20,000 bards n'l1aht die. Htah wands awavatcd the spill
of fuel oil from a West German tanker that struck an automitcd liaht hou~
three days earlier. Three deaths were reported an Austria, which was pummeled
for the second day T\.lcsday by hiah winds, dnving rain and snow.
SoatlJ Paclnc declared nacJear-f ree
RAROTONGA. Cook Island• (AP) -Etaht Pacific nations ancludang
Au<itraha and New 7aland ••1ncd a treaty cfcclanna the South Pacific a
nuclear-free tone. and 111d they would a k the United tatet. France and
Bnta1n to1b1dc by its terms. Thc.a1111n11ook place T uelday, coinc1dcntallyon
the 40th anniverury of the atomic bomb atta<:k on ll1r~ti1m1. Japan.
Ra6an 'dependable ally' to Africa
JOH~NNESBU RC1, South Afnc1 -Pollet today fouJht street battle\
with black )'Outht near the pon city of Durban. an area previously unaffectC'd
by monthsofblack not1n1. Meanwhile, \lite-run radio today praised ~ident
Reapn's comment that South Afnca's state of cmefltncy rtflccu 1 need to
curb v1olcnc:c. and Mild th<' 1ovcmment hu .. no more dc])Cndable ally" than
Rcapn. The wife of South Afnca' top Jatlcd black lcad~r Nelson Mandela ha sane into h1d1n1after1 poller raJd left h r home 1n tht fJranlL' Frte tale 1
~hambte1. her I W}tr \11d.
---~...._ __ ,, . .,
-
All'• well that end• wel-1-1-1
In what loon like the perfect day'• end durini a beat wa•e, two anldentlflecl per-aon• jump into tbe ocean from a cliff ln
Corona del Mar for a coolln& dip at •an.et.
All Mattresses
Lamps
Mobiles
& Toys
~-"l\Hnlnt•
litld • w11m1 lloney llM llnlt/l INlle
!Ille~ •""-'·
~JDS·
-lambs & lvy-
San Fernando Valley
18238SHERMANWAY
RESEOA, CA 91335
Orange Cout OAll.. Y Pll..OT /WednMday, Augutl 1, 1985 M
Blin4 flight 'fan tas_tic'
MARSHFIELD. Ma <AP) -Lake: many other no"~ r>1lot • Karen Pfendcraa t' firs1 I ndina wan huk
bumpy.
But 1n her ca~. the Oiaht 1nmuctor had 1odC1Cribe the
scenery
"l;m sure I fclLJUll hkc any olhtuu.ku£Q1ni up," ~•d ·
Ms Prcndcrpst 36. who ha~ been bland for91/1 years ··The
thnll The adventure of 11 all " .
The Dull.bury re 1den1, whose dream to fly was first
realized Saturday, made one repeat fliaht on Su1'day and
two more on Monday with flt&bt instructor John
Marchellctta. mana&cr of Marshfield A1rpon.
"Hopefully I can chanae some of the ant1Qu111cd
feelin&~ of some people that handicapped people can't do
anything." Prendera,a11 said. "A stranaucalled me ton~1
say1n&. 'You really changed my auatude about bhnd
people · That's what 1t's alf about."
She had control of the Ces na 172 about 80 percent of
the time Sunday On Monda) she made two fl111m. do1na
"everythrna from takeoff to land1na" under the direction
of Marchelletta. .-
"It's a wonderful feelt"°g." she said. "The only thing I Karen Pren4e:rpatpc.ea ateontrola.
did man was sec1na tht' actual sctncry."
But Marchelletta dcscnbcd the v1e-w as llt had n~ arm to prove 11.
descnbed the controls to her before her first fliahL He talked her through landing the plane on S1,1nday
• "ReaJly. there's no reason why any person can't fl y a The landang was &ood. bul ~t bumped once. she said.
plane wnh a ccrufied anstructor hke John." she said 'He .\ crosswind made Monday's landing a hllk mol'\"
says I do as well as a phys1c1s1 or a plumber " troubk\Omc
Marchelktta. s11t10g in the co-pilot's seat w11h access "I had 10 I.I~ all m} stren1th JO k~p the plane Imm
10 the dual control yoke and rudder pedals, led Prendergast lipping over" she \aid adding that she wa n't afraid
thro ugh various maneuvers to fam1laanzc her w11h the becoausc i.hc kntv. "1fsometh1ng were to io .,.rong he would
sensations ofbankang. d1v1na and climbing. be ablt 10 gel mt o u1ol1t 1n a tenth ofa second ··
She said she refused to believe she had sole control of She said her shghtl> rough fl ying did not bother her
the plane until Marchelleu a put both of his hands on her ~cause ~he could not ~e the honzon
Sassy
Seat
Gerry ...
Bear SW Ing
U M•nu•••01
Conl l,,,.nt'
~ll•nl A11w1nd
1 Po••llOf\
MolOl<tS.••
Orange County
602 S. HARBOR BLVD.
SANTA ANA, CA 92704
(714) 537-4.301
LA Mid-.Cities
12555 LAKEWOOD BLVD.
DOWNEY, CA 90242
San G~brlel Valley
8930 E. VALLEY BLVD.
ROSEMEAD, CA 91 no
(818) 288-6220 (818) 881-'4441 .......... --(213) 869-1505
(
. -
Ae Orange Coatt OAJLV PILOTIWedneldey, August 7, 1185
Seat in back of plane: HOW'rriuch safer is it?
•That's f oily; laws of chance
play heav:Hy in this ~ttuattoli'
NEW YORK (AP) -All the surv1 vors of Delta Air
Unes l'Uaflt 191 were m the wt ICCtlon, but aviation safety
experts aay there is no statistical proof that it 1s safer to fly
in the blek.
Still, there is a common perception that it is safer to fl y
in the !'Qr.
"If you 10 to any newspaper file (of crash photos, you
will tee tho b1gest piece left 11 the tail,""' said Wayne
Williams. president \)f ~e NatjonaJ Trinsporation Safety
AS$0Ciatton, a pnvate, non-profit consumer aroup.
Williams, a former Air Force pilot, always requests a seal
in lhe tail.
But Tom Lindemann doesn't thank lhc evidence
back.s up the perception.
"For almost each accident you can ciJe where 1hc
people survive in 1he rear, there is one to con1rad1ct 11,"
sajd Lindemann, fonner head of lhc Accident Surv1vab1n-
ly Committee of 1he Airline Pilots Association.
"I don't thank 1hcre's enough hard statistics to say
whether you should sit up front or m 1n back."
The f roQ.t of the plane absorb most of the fon:e in o
head-on crash. That 1s why the National Transportation
Safety Board requires airhdes to place the "black box"
fliaht recorders in the re&(. "It's Jess likely to suffer impact
damqe," said Bob Buckhorn, a spokesman for the NTSB.
Although theteis-01\en less damaac irrth~ rear, there
have been no studies to determine whether or not it is
actually safer to sit there, Buckhorn said.
And Jbhn GaJipault, president of the Aviation Safety
Institute, said, "it 1s folly to even think of the ~roblem. The
laws of chance play heavily in this situation. • .
The Delta Afr Lines jet crashed Friday evening as it
•P.proachcd the DaUa_s.Fort Worth lntemataonaJ A.atpon,
k.illina 135 people. AU 31 survivors were lll the tail section.
But each accident is different. Survivors were in the
front of an Air C..nadajet that made an emeraency landina
in Cincinnati and'then buAt into names an 1983. And most
of the SO people k.illcd when a Spanish jct era hed while
taldna ofrat Mafap in t 982 were sJttina tn the tail section.
"Not every accident is the kind that occurred Friday,"
said GaUpault. "Sometimes the aircraft skews sideways
and the tail takes a lot of it."
"There really is no safer ~lace," said Dan Smitjl, a
spokesman for the lntemataonal Airline Passcniers
Association.
Tragic end to driver's new start .. Survivor
oflcrash,
diesrn2nd Hts only mistake was
route he chos e to go
h ome for celebration
By SCOTT McCARTNEY
A 11 1 '111 • "'-Wrllet
DALLAS (AP)-It looked as iflifc
had finally dealt Bill Mayberry a good
hand.
He had left Vicksburg. Miss ..
landed a better JOb within two days
and planned to move his wifeand two
children to a new life in Texas this
week.
But last Friday, his 28th birthday,
William H. Mayberry became one of
the 133 victims of the crash of Delta
Air Lines fljght 191.
He wasn't even on the jumbo Jet.
His only mistake was the route he
chose to drive home.
Aight 191 bounced across Texas
Highway 114 as it crashed short of a
runway at DaJlas-Fort Worth Inter-
national Airport in a violent thunder-
storm. and . attencd Mayberry's
Toyota into I' waist-higb heap of steel.
He was the only person killed on the
ground.
Relatives said Mayberry was feel-
ing good on Friday, anxious to get to
an uncle's house m Grapevine near
the airport and Wilt for a birthday
telephone call from his wife of 11
years. Terri.
"Hegotoffwork at S:30and I called
at 6:30 to wish him happy birthday. 1
couldn't get him," Terri Mayberry
said Monday. "He wasn't adnnkeror
a partier and be always went stmaht
home so I knew something was
wrong."
Mrs. Mayberry said her husband
had become dissatisfied with his job
at a small Toyota dcalc,rship in
Vicksburg, which paid only the
minimum wage of$3.35 an hour.
After recovering from kidney stone
surgery, he decided to look for a job 1n
Dallas. He drove m Sunday, July 28,
found a job as an auto mechanic the
following Tllcsday and started on
Wednesday. The job started at a
~aranteed $4.SO an hour, with
incentives that could raise his pav to
about $650 a week, Mrs. Mayberry
said. -
··He was extremely excited." Mrs.
Mayberry said. "He sai~ 'It looks hkc
1f~ all going work.' that we were
finally going to ttavc a good hfe and
hve comfortably."
Fred Barton hared Mayberry at
Toyota oflrving, a Dallas suburb. He
had good credentials as a Toyota
mechanic, five certificates for techni·
cal achievement and a lot of
enthusiasm. Barton recalled Mon-
day.
"What happened is hard to under-
stand." he said." It came as a shock to
everybody here."
Maybcrry's uncle, Derry! Price,
said ·he was watching television
coveraae of the disaster when a
camera zoomed in on the demolished
car.
Little was recognizable, except for
the license plate from Warren Coun-
ty, Miss. Pncc knew the car belonged
to his nephew.
Mayberry usually drove home
from work on Texas Highway 183,
which runs south of the airport. Pncc
said. On Friday, however. he ap-
pare-ntly ran into heavy traffic and
decided to talce HiJbway 114. which
runs north of the a1rport.
"It makes you wonder when 1t MfAMl(AP)-Amanwhodiedin
happens 10 someone like him." Price the crash of Delta Air Lines Flight 191
said. "He was a Jood boy and lived was the only survivor of a private
right. He loved his family to death." plane crash eight years ago that killed
Mrs. Mayberry said her 8-year-old six members ofh1s family.
son, William Jr., won't believe that "We spent the first hour after
his father is dead. hcarinf the ·news figuring what the
'"Today he wanted 10 know when oddso something like this could be,"
Daddy was coming back. He thank,s said Bob Guterma, 33, brother of
he's still in Dallas at work. I've told Marc Gutcrma, who was among 132
him and told him and told him, but he Delta passengers who died in Friday's
doesn't want to believe it." crash. ,
She planned to fly to Dallas today, "We came to the conclusjon that it
after Tuesday's funeral. was impossible," he said.
"I'm coming to Dallas to sec my car Only Bob Guterma stayed behind
and sec where it happened and try to when seven members of his family
understand," Mrs. Mayberry said. flew to New York City aboard a
"AnytimeJou put your money on / Mitsubishi turbo-prop m 1977 to sec
the table an get an airplane ticket, a circus. The plane crashed four miles
you are taking a risk that plane may from LaGuardia Airport in light rain
fall out of slcy. Anytime you get in a and heavy fog.
car, you talce a risk that you'U get hit Marc Gutenna was the sole
by another car. Who on earth would survivor of the crash which killed his
get in a car and think they'd get tun '-' .._plloto father, mother, and four brothers and
over by an airplane?" Bill Mayberry sisters.
-------"'....._--------------------------------------------.-------------------. In both crashes, only the tail of the
Kings. 17 mg. "tar". 1.2 mg. nrcottne: Menthol, 18 mg. "urr". 1.2 mg. nicoune:
Lights. 10 mg. "tar", 0 .8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.
1-
...
.
$
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
\
198SB&WTCo
00
You always get 5 fr'Ce cigarettes in every pack of Richland.
And 50 free in every carton.
Available in Regular,
Menthol & Lights.
SAVE
ON A PACK OF RICHLAND 25'8
Available m
Regular.
Menthol
& Llghts
Richland
~s~ ~==:::.
Based on manufacturer's suggested retell price.
Pricing optional to retallera. Not av•llable In ell areas.
AvaHable In Regular. M.,,thol & UQhts
ON A CARTON OF RICHLAND 25'•
..
plane remained intact.
In the 1977 crash, Gutenna suf-
fered a broken arm, leg, neck and
shoulder. Doctors didn't tell him for
two days that he had lost most of his
family.
Then 14, Guterma healed, went on
to finish high school and moved to
Colorado and then Utah, pursumg
interests in music and computers.
But Friday, Guterma was killed m
the crash of the Lockheed L-10 I I
TriStar that went down in a heavy_
thunderstonn while attempting to
land at Dallas-Fort Worth Inter-
national Airport.
Will IRS
cure loan
defaults?
Future tax refunds
of 1 million studen ts
might be withheld
W ASHJNGTON (AP)-Secretary
ofEducarion WllllamT.Bcnnett said
today his department will ask the
Internal Revenue Service to withhold
tax refunds for nearly 1 million
student loan defaulters unless they
start paying their debts.
Another I million borrowers wiU
Jet notjces from state agencies warn-
ing that they will be denied tax
refunds next year unless they make
good on their debts, Bennett's agency
said.
"This is a major step which should
show loan defaulters that we are dead
serious about collecting thcx debts 10
American taxpayers," Bennett said in
a statement.
Starting this Saturday. his depart-
ment will mail the notices to nearly I
million people who defaulted on
Fedcrallr Insured Student Loans or
Nationa Direct Student Loans.
State loan guarantee agencies will
dun I milliolT others who defaulted
on'6uarantecd Student Loans.
If the recipients do not beain
repaying the loans within 60 days, the
department will aslc the IRS to
withhold any tax refunds up to the
total amount outstanding on the
loans.
Bennett's department recently
acted to blacken the credit ratinp of
student loan defaulters by turning
their names over to national con-
sumer credit bureau$. h also has
referred the names of 16,000 de-
faulters to the Department of Justice
for prosecution.
The Deficit Reduction Act of 1984
pve all federal agencies the riaht to
JOin forces with the IRS to collect
mone.Y owed t'he govcmtnent, stan-
ina with tax year 1985.
Judge Carter
raising funds
--~----------~--------.... ---------.------------------~-~~~-----.-.--~
, ____ ........... __ ...._ ___ ............. ________ ..,.. ________ .._ ________________________ ___
Or~ Coat OAILY PILOT/Wedn.day, A141* 1, 1116
·UC Irville s~og tudy shows
higher risks for Childi;en
thenC'akulated th doseach1ldwould
receive' buod on tht amount of
pollutant depoJ1ted in~ AC*
cordin& to body weiaht. ll .-. Children breathe more air per untt
of body wriabt to mainwo proper
metaboham and body temperaturt,
' Phaltn said. Alto; be pointed out. the
developina twia bu far fc,r..er ~ ~ !he ptacet ~hereioxY&Cn it uclwlpd
tn the lunl!_ r
The UCI at-udy was funded by the
Califom11 Air ~utttt Bcieid, and
re ults were pd6hshed in 1 "taufic
...
Researchers conclude that children recCfVe -
atx ttmes as much pollutants thanadults
UC Irvine researchers have con-
cluded that amoa may pose a sianifi-
cantly arcater health risk to children
than to adults.
A two.¥ear $I S0,0<¥> study in-
dicates children may Fecei ve more
than six times the dose of airborne
pollutants than adults.
"It has been assumed that children,
the elderly and the ill arc more
susceptible to air pollution," said Dr.
Robert Phalen, professor of com-
----
mun1ty and environmental med1c1ne
and director of UCl's Air Poluuuon
Health Effects Laboratory.
"l don't think that n's been known
that children receive much hi&her
doses than adults," he said. "ft is
quite likely that children are going to
suffer more than adults.''
Researchers used computer-
modeling techniques and replica cast-
ings of human air pas5'8aes to p~1ct
the doses of air pollutants inhaled by
children. 'The cam used in the study
represented 20 subjects from 11 days
to 21 years old. The cam were made
from children who died as a result of
accidents or diseases which did not
damaae their tunas. ·
The most 11gnificant health impact
was predicted for newborn and infant
children. Older children showed less
evidence of air pollutants deposits,
with the lowest imt>1Ct prcdjcted for
the 21-year-old subject's lung.
Researchers simulated low, light
and hea vy physical activity and
tested with pollutants as small · as
automouve lead particles and as large
as those of plant pollen. Researchers
Volunteers to help teach
about ethics ofhealth care
By LISA MAHONEY
Of ti.Dlllr ........
A forum on the ethics of health care
attracted 230 peoP.le to the Costa
Mesa City Council Chambers last
week, more than a third of whom
volunteered to help educate others on
the subject.
Health care professionals and
interested Oranac County residents
listened to a discussion on ethics and
the role it should play ia the alloca-
tion, cost and quality of health care.
California Health Decisions, a
newly formed aroup created by the
Center for Bioethics at St Joseph
Hospital in Orange and the Oranae
County Health Plannina Council,
sponsored the forum.
The goal of California Health
Decisions is to educate Orange Coun-
tians about ethical questions sur-
rounding who gets health care, bow
much and at what cost. Du.rina its
planned two year existence, the
project will require volunteers to help
lead community forums and develop
policies to assist insurance aaencies.
health care providers and govern-
ment deal with the challenacs of
providina medjcal services at a tim'e
when costs arc spiraling and demand
is biah.
About 80 individuals volunteered
to be aroup leaders of small dis-
cussion aroups aimed at creating a
conscasus on such eth.ioaJ questions
as who should get organ transplants
and bow much money should.spent to
k.ccp a premature infant alive.
Training sessions will start m
October.
Interested volunteers may contact
Ellen Severoni, director of California
Health Decisions at 832-1841.
Sunken boat raised, moved
A JS-foot cabin cruiser that sank Monai'y near
Huntington Harbour bas been raised and moved to
a nearby boat yard, officials said.
Oranae County Sheriff's Lt Dick Olson said investipton have not determined what caused the
boat to sink. He said a half-inch opening leading to
the boat's bait tank was found unplugged and may
have been the cause.
No one was aboard the boat early Monday when
a jogcr spotted tt listina low in the water at a guest
dock at Sunsctj\cquatic Park. When it sank. the l'ioat
spilled about "50 pllons of fuel mto the marina
police said. Authorities evacuated people living o~ nearby boats because of a fire hazard.
A marina spokeswomap said that the gasoline
bad been cleaned up and the' vessel bad been moved
to a nearby boat yard. Its registered owner is Frank
Kent of Nol'V(.llk.
Section
1 COHSUMER TIPS-Whit you tlHd
10 know to buy products i nd 1«Vic.1
w!Mty an<! u ve limt rnon.y and
aggr1111allon when you shop
s.cuon
11Tlils Book
CanSaVe\'ou
Preciowlftme .~.And MOney!'
o.vid Hotowttz, Qwum.,~·
"Hen$ a book with information fN9fY
consumer needs. .. the Better Business
Bureau Consumer Resource Book.
tts packed with timely buying tips. sug·
gestions and articl8s to help protect
you and ~r mo~
"This infctmatlon can help you
be a better._ponsumer. .. and best of all,
its free!
"But you have to use It to get the
help you need!"
... And Its Easy to Use:
a.ctlon
2 MEMBERSHIP ~-A ht11ng
of aD Bureau ~ 1n your .,..
1t t1me of pu1>11e1uon_ with I00'91tt1
Ind telephone numbefl
3 ClAllW1ED IECTION. Al bue1neMM
and ~-. lllted he\19 be«\
ICIMMCI by Int Betttr Buslnea
BufMu and IUPPOf1 Ill commitment to ~
,.. .. tlhiel QOOd CYStomef rtlat.or. and
truth 1n ldvtf111•ng
FREE DELIVERY SOON TO HOMES AND BU81NE88E8 IN
SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY. LOOK FOR ITI
'OAVIO HOAOWlTZ IS II CONSVMl!R INFORMATION CONSVlTllNT l'OR THIS PVllLICA"TtOH ME DOES NOT ENDORSE ANY llOVl~ISfllS Of' OAGANIZA"TIONS
Coast. stud en ts are
Colorado graduates
Jack LaLanne 'f
MER/CAN Health & Fitness Spas.
Several local students were among
2,900 graduates to receive degrees at
University of Colorado, Boulder.
commencement exercises.
Graduates from this area include:
Vernon H. Kaufman, Irvine; Karen
M. Carr, lrvine; Lupi D. Fenner,
Huntington Beach: Amy L. Carson,
Laguna Beach; Vicki M. Ueberroth,
Laguna Beach; Christine M. Carter,
Newport Beach; Shane ~· Glass,
Newport Beach; Matthew J. Ray-
mond, Newport Beach; Amil B.
Legume, Mission Viejo; Lisa U.
Moreau, Mission Viejo; Steven R.
Bein, Corona de! Mar; Bradford T.
Flagg, Costa Mesa; and Lisa Ham-
bura-Reasoncr, Huntington Beach.
Butneu detree
Courtney Bowman of Laguna
Niguel received a certificate of honor
during summer commencement ex-
ercises at National Umversity, where
he graduated maiina cum laude with a
bachelor of business admin1strat1on
dcaree. Bowman, a purchasing manager for
Acromil Corp., was one of 660
summer araduates of National Uni-
versity in Irvine. /
AJJeflJeny lre•Junan
James Brady of Newport Beach has
been accepted as a freshman · to
Alleaheny Colleae in Meadville.
Penn. for the 1985-86 academic year.
Brady, a 1985 graduate of Corona
del Mar Hiah School. was a member
of the soccer team, student aovem-
ment. newspaper staff, key club and
also received the Huah O'Brian
Leadership award.
Fullerton pad
Teresa Lynn Beckwith of Hunt-
injton Beach and Am y Chnsune O ay
of Irvine were amona recent aradu-
atcs from Fullerton Colleae.
il.cuand• dean'• ll•t
Marpret Traber of San Juan
Capistrano and Mark Johnson of
Fountain Valley were named to the
University of Redlands dean's hst for
the sprina semester of I 98S.
Traber, an undeclared junior, and
Johnson, a senior bioloay mtJor.
·received the honor after eamina a
&l'lde paint averaae of 3.6S or above
for a semester of full-time course
work.
BaJJook'• board
Ten local hiah school students were
recently named to reprtse_J\t the
Bullock's South Coatt Plua Campus
HiJh Board for the 1985-86 tchool
year. Tbe one-year proaram includes
bollil'\I events for u.nder-privilqed
chlld.rcn, field tripi. work el,i>cricnce
lnvolV11'\1 fashion rnerchandi11na and
in ... tore modelina and a compllmen·
tary Bullock•s charm and modellna
coune.
The students chosen are: Catherine
Oine of Woodbridac H~. laura
Eilert and tepharue P1lmer of
Saddltblck Hiah. tad Frevert. Patty
••
Friedman and Nicole Ludwi~ of
Westminster H~· , Kerry Martin of Mater Dci Hi , Jeff Newton of
Laguna Beach iah, Melinda Poctes
of Jiuntington Beach High and Tma
Royce of Newport Harbor High.
DartmoatlJ lntem
John Hueston, a Dartmouth Col-
lege senior from Corona del Mar, has
been selected to participate in
Dartmouth College's admmistrat1ve
internship program for the 1985-86
academic year.
The program enables students to
get involved with the admin1strat1 ve
processes of the college and to
de velope their own project within a
department.
Besides serving as an adm10 1s-
trat1ve intern, Hueston is a member
of the Sigma Alpha Epstlon f ratern1ty.
where he served as social chairman.
He has also received an academic
citation for oulstanding work 1n
comparative literature, and has par-
tici pated in the college's foncgn study
progntm in Greece.
Ne• KnlflJt.
Cathy Kennedy and Debra
Hua.hes, Costa Mesa residents and
students at the University of Idaho,
were both named to the Inter-
colleiiate Knights. a honoraryservice
orpnization.
Kennedy, a junior political science
major, and Hughes. a sophomore
accountin& m-.jor, were selected to
the Kni~ts on the basis of service.
leadership and academics.
Computer draft.man
John N1sb1t.a01 of Costa Mesa
received a first place award for his
computer-aided draftina project on
display at the Cahfom11 State Fair 1n
Sacramento.
Nishitani. a student at Estancia
'Hiah School, was one of more than
900 entrants in the Industrial Educa-
tion Proar&m·
Os1 r UARll s
Services today f trr
Henry Pemberton
Funeral semces were scheduled
today for Henry CharlesPembcrton
of Huntinaton Beach. who died
Saturday at Santa Ana Medical .
Center. He wu 69. '
COME ON AMERICANS!-
Fa ·l'mlr MUStleSI (,
-.
We're jlaing ours!
With the greatest offer at
the grandest health spa In
NEWPORT/COSTA MESA: ..
In a few short months, American
Health-& Fitness Spas wlll be open-
, Ing Its doors to the publlc. At that
t ime, the price wlll soar to Its
highest level.
But right now, and for a llmlted time only, you can
j oin this prestigious spa at our pre-opening price.
•16:\1onth
for Z4 Months
S25 down First v1s1 t 1ncent1ve
That's a savings of
44°10!
~UR OPERATORS ARE ON DUTY
NOW TO TAKE YOUR CALL.
CALL TODAY
I•
Americans from all walks
of life are choosing the
American Way to health and fitness.
NOW YOU CAN SOON
ENJOY THESE SAME PRIVILEGES!
• OVER TWO MILLION DOLLARS IN
FACILITIES. the most magn1f1cenr spa
you will ever lay eyes on
• CO-ED WORK OUT AREAS wtth pro-
fessional-on the floor-instructors so
men and women can exercise together
• NAUTIWS MACHI NES. one to ~Ip
you develop every part of your body :
•THE WORLO S MOST ADVANCED
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT.
• FREE WEIGHTS for the ~nous body
bullder
•AEROBIC DANCE CLASSES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN with musK and
supe>M~ by prof~s1on.ils
•OLYMPIC STYLE SWIMMING POOL
• STEAM ANO SAUNA. WHIRLPOOL
• OVERSIZED DRESSING ROOMS With
private lockm
• NUTRIT1oN AND WEIGHT CONTROL
Mr. Pembcnon, who was born in
Chieqo, was a retired painter He had
been cm ployed for l 1 yea rs by l he c1 t y
of Newpon Beach. He is survived b)' three son -
Lloyd, Michael and Steven. Also
survtv1nt are three sinen -June
Johnston, Louise Pappas and C'lan
Alexander -U wclJ II two arand· ch1ldttn, Robcn and Dawn
650·1600 ..
• CHILD CARI CENTER f0< busy Pimlts
W INOOOR JOGGING TRACK.
All THIS, ftl.US THE INTEGRITY AND
REUA8tUTY ANO EXPERIENCE Of
THE NUMIER ONE HEALTH SPA
ORGANIZATION IN CAUFOftNIA.
Services were to be held at 2 p.m. at
the Pierce Brothen BtlJ Broadway
Monuary Chapel in Costa Mesa.
Interment Wl1 to follow at Padtk
View Memorial Park.
. ..
1877 HARBOR BOULEVARD • NEWPORlCOSTA MESA•
--
r
/
_ ...
Or9ng1tCout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. August 7, 1985
. ~ .
Mothers Embracing Nuclear Dlsormoment
F~rst MEND walk for Peace
• U!Mefpflete MEND founder L_lncla Smith, third from rlCht, leads marchen in San Dteto.
Marchers rally for peace
40th Hiroshima anniversary
prompts anti-nuclear demos
By ne A110dated Preti .
Californians gathered at vigils and demonstrations,
painted symbolic human silhouettes on Los Angeles
streets and blocked Golden Gate traffic to mark the 40th
anniversary of the atomic bombing of fii'roshima during
World War II. . l..
About 3.500 people turned out Tuesday evening in
San Dicao for the Mothers Embracing Nuclear Disarma-
ment walk. They were sjvcn postcards addressed to
President Rcap.n and state legislators urging them to end
the nuclear arms race. ·
Jn Los Angeles, about 3,000 people including actors
Make Farrcll;-.Patty Duke and Tyne Daly lined Wilshire
Boulevard with a section of the "Peace Ribbon" that
encircled Washington last weekend.
Earlier Tuesday at least 15 protesters were arrested
earlier on the Golden Gate Bridge while trying to block
traffic. I
.. Two, four, six, eight, we don't want to radiate," they
screamed.
Three people were arrested f9f investigation of
trespassing and obstruction at La'wrencc Livermore
National Laboratory, where nuclear weapons arc de--. ed.
Sl&Jl Anti-war activist Daniel Ells berg, of Pentagon Papers
fame, was one of33 arrested at an cntran.cc to the Nuclear
Test Site nonh of Las Vegas, Nev.
"There is no other place in the world I would rather be
on this day," Ellsberg said before stepping ~cross a
boundary line with six others.
Noontime rallies were held in Sunnyvale, followed by
a march to the nearby Lockheed plant where missiles arc
manufactured, and in the San Joaquin Valley community
of Visalia.
In Los Angeles, unfurling of the peace ribbon aroused
spirits of motorists and passersby who honked horns and
waved. Cheers greeted the International Children's Choir
performance of .. Let There be Peace on Earth" at the West
Los Angeles Federal Building. . Applause greeted . an
airplance that flew overhead wtth a banner reading.
"Remember Hiroshima."
Jn Los Angeles and Oranac counties, the anti-nuclear
Alliance for Survival painted white human silhouettes on
sidewalks to represent victims of the Hiroshima blast .
Two were arrested for vandalism.
Le Concierge
.
A personal desk diary which offers a wide range of rnformot1ve services, as well as interesting
1nformot1on, from rhe basic to rhe esoteric.
Le Concierge is on on-go1ng process in which we 1nv1te your portie$ot1on. Now at 1ls fourth week
deadline before publ1cot1on, we ask 1f we hove overlooked your unique service, gourmet shop,
reslouront, hotel, night club, florist. etc., please feel free .!f coll 17 141 720-0837
SUMMER COLOR
GARDENIA
VEITCH II
F wrblotJm1119 Gardt>nid
Compdct plant Proltf1c bloomer
rt?l1dble grower Extrt!mely fragrant
1 GtJllon size
Rt>yular $4 49
NOW
2.99
'204-.CP
PEAKY PET'
Hummln'1bird Feeder
32 Ounce Flower Feeder
•Bee guard•Dripla.s
Reqular $9 99 ·
NOW 8.99 ~~:E.
INSTANT NECTAR
Simulated natural /lower nectar
for Hummingbirds
8 Oz size Regular S 1 79
NOW 1.29
SPECTRACIDE 6000
LAWN a GARDEN
INSECT CONTROL
· ' · For use on gr as!>, Dichondra
and Sr Augustine lawns ••-1111--. Controls ct11nch buQs. Ilea
beetle•. sowbugs. cutworm .
ant$ and o then
101 Bag covers 6 ()()()sq h
Regular $12 99
NOW 10.99
KALAN CHOE
Beau11f ul, 1ong lasting cluste.cs. of pmk
urange, gold or red flowers
CRAPE MYRTLE TREES
Specially hybridrzt>d varieties.
chosen for the" pl!rlormance
A1tract1ve.Prulu!>e hloom1ng small
tree for lawns or pdlto.,
5 Gal/on !>W!
Regular $JH 99
If .AJ.Jl(lltrong
GARDEN CENTERS
SERVICE and QUALITY
SINCE 1889
6• por size
Regular $6 99
NOW 3.99 ....__,_,-
OLEANDERS
HanJ~mmt'r and fall
blo()mer' 'Choo>t> from red.
wlute c..r pink var1et1t>!> •
1 Ga/Ion SUI! Regular $.3 99
NOW 1 .99
SHADE CLOTH
Heavy duty fabric -great for
shddrng plants or coverrng
H •Os 6 ' widths
Den11ty Regular NOW
55% l .39iun. h. .79
63" J .49 run. ft. .81
73,g J.69 run. h. .91
.... ... '~-=: ::--.di
"·'"' t .,, •• , ..... ~-, ... ~ "41
/' IRVIN! IA.NT A ANA
/Hm c~••H Of . (114) gs7.9m 1819 Tuittit Att . (114) !>4Ul45
\
Did water
t8.nkshClp
stop crash?
GRAPEVINE, Texa (AP) -Two huge water tank~
that pan1ally blocked Delta Air Lines Flight 191 's path
may have prevented a worse disaster when the jumbo jct
crashed into a field and came apart, a federal investigator
says
Jfthe tanks hadn't been there. 1he Lock.heed L-101 l
might have kept going, smashing mlo planes on 1he
ground at Dallas-Fort Worth Jnternationill Airport or
hattan& nearby warehouses, Patrick Bursley of the National
Transportation-Safety Board said Tuesday.
Terr)'. Armentrout, lhe NTSB's director of accident
mvcstigalion, said 1n interviews, however, that the main
body of tbe plane might have emerged intact 1f ll had
missed the water tanks.
"Had 11 been a level. flat. hard-surfaced terrain field
-no water, no rain, no obstrucuons -an ... aircraft as
strong as the 747 or the L-1011 could sustain that,"
Armcntrdut said.
Contacted today, Bu~ley said he didn't challenge
Armentrout's comments. "but I'm not certain I would
accept the context that nakedly. That plane was on the
ground in a place where 1t 1s not normally going to be."
He saad it was true the tanks caused the plane to break
up. But on the other hand, had they not been there. the
aircraft could bave hit two or three other a irplanes parked
beyond the water tanks or a warehouse where people could
have been working, said Bursley, who has been acung as
the spokesman for the investigators studying the crash.
The Lock.heed L-1011 jumbo jet bounced off the
ground during a thunderstorm Friday and smashed a car
on a highway before it clipped the water storage tanks and
exploded. The crash killed 132 people aboard the plane
and the car's driver. Almost all the 3 I people who survived
were in the tail section. which snapped off when the jet hit
the tanks.
Bui all the passengers could have died, as well as more
on the ground, 1f the jet h~d hit 1he warehouses or the
airplanes, Bursley said T•.:esday.
"It's not impossibl.: the catastrophe would have been
worse 1n terms of fire and so on af the ' ks hadn't been
there, and the 31 people who surv1vcu vould not have
survived," he said at a press conferenre. .
The jet bounced off the ground and smashed a car on
a highway before it clipped the water storage tanks and
exploded Friday nipit.
''If they had hit two parked airplanes with their fuel
load. the fire would have been perhaps worse," Bursley
said. "If they had continued into the warehouse ... the
damensaons of the accident could have been even larger."
Newlywed John llalloy, a hero of tbe Delta
plane cruh, relazee at home with hi.a wtfe.
Family calls
hero of flight
FORT LAUDERDALE, Aa.(AP)-When Delta Air
tines Flight 191 crashed and crumbled in a Texas
thunderstorm, passenger John Malloy of Redon40 Beach
responded to the screams of a trapped and injured Piabt
attendant. pulling her to safety.
To the family of Jenny Amatulli, Malloy is nothing
less than a hero -they spent several days after Friday's
crash at Dallas-Fort Worth lntcrna1ionaJ Airport trying to
locate and thank him.
Amatulli's husband, Tony, who lives in Fort
Lauderdale, finally reached Malloy on Monday.
"He was just very thankful." Malloy said. "What
more can the guy say? ,
"He said he's gomg to. come sec me some time and
buy me dinner and get me drunk or somqthmg. I was very
relieved to hear she's going to be OK. They saved bcr foot
and leg and the whole thang."
Malloy, 29. who escaped with scratches from the
crash that killed 133 people, said the 35-year-old flight
attendant was panned in her scat several rows ahead of
him.
"She was screaming to get us out of there because she
was afraid of a fire or an explosion," he said. "I released my
'seat-belt) buckle and fell. I I.anded in the seat just in front
o( her."
Served from 2PM to IOPM Everyday
NEW:YOBK s
Complete Dinner include~ Large Cut New
York Steak. Broiled over an Open Flame. Soup of
the Day or A Cri~p Green Salad . Your Choice of
Potato (including a Baked Potato). Apple Pie and
Beverage (Coffee. Tea. Soft Drink. Milk . Wine
or Beer). LIMITED TIMI:: ONLY . f "-00 .. ~ Huntington Beach
16572 Beach Blvd. near Edinger
~ · • OPEN.24 HOURS
Another hot
number from the best
name in fish.
There's an exciting new taste from Long John
Silver's ... called Kitchen.Breaded r"' Fish. Breaded
and seasoned right in our shoppe, it's light ... fresh ...
incredibly crunchy. If you love the fish that made us
famous-come taste our newest-
, f \ \.
Kitchen-Breadedr"' Fish
Only from Long John Sliver's.
'LONGJOHN"
SILVEl{S. -
'r;d ~~TM
3095 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(aero.as from Fedco)
~--· -
Sheridan Edwarcla
,
Confessed
thief sues
priest who
reported
BELVEDERE (AP) - A woman
who has filed a $5 million lawsuit
against an Episcopal priest says she
went to him seeking absolution for
taking $28.000 from a church guild
and was stunned when the clc~man
turned her 1n
"I was having_ a tremendous
anxiety ab?ut 'uilt an~ I went to sec
my pnest, ' saad Shcnda·n Ann Ed-
wards, 38. "Now I feel terribly
betrayed. He had a responsibility to
me as a priest. I knew he had taken
certain oaths and had a responsibility
to not say anything to anyone.
.. I was hoping to gain absolution
and forgiveness. He didn't give me
forgiveness," she said. "He was a nary
and shouted at me that this was a case
of grand larceny and what I needed
was a good anomey."
Her San Franc1sco Superior Court
suit contends St. Stephen's Episoo~I
Church Rector Wilham Rankin viol-
ated her privacy, caused her emo-
tional distress and committed fraud
and conspiracy.
Rank.an said Tuesday that Ed-
wards' ad mis ion did not constitute a
confession. When the issue was raised
at Edward's theft trial in June, the
judge aa:rced, Rankin said. The priest
declined further comment.
Edwards said Rankin reported the
theft from the church's womCJl'S
guild, where she work~ ~s a vdhin·
teer bookkeeper, to cohgreaadon
members and police an the affiuent
community about IS miles north of
San Francisco
At her tnaJ, Rankin testified
apinst her. he was sentenced to
perform at least 200 hours of volun·
teer work and spend acvcn months in
Jail. bcg1nn1na Aua. 21. Most church
members have turned their blacks on
Edwards, acc:ordin1 to her attorney,
Patnck McMahon.
"The lesson to the public out then'
is if you do it, keep it to yourself," he
st.id, add.Ina. "A lot of people 10 to
their pncsts because they can't 10 to
anybody clac btausc their confidcn-
taahty wtll be breached. h's un-
fortunate 1r the only people who can
10 lO confo \ion arc thOK with
oothlfl& to confi •• ..
1
Strike thi-ee
and out for the
baseball fans
Major league baseball players bit the tight fist that
feeds them yesterday, launching a strike apparei'ltly
intended to prove that the national pastime 1s really
played at the bargaining table, not between the white
lines. ·
Neither side is likely to get much sympathy from the
fans, who will be the only true victims of this dispute.
The fans can't empathize with the owners, all of whom
are wealthy, regardless of the profitability of their
respective1'ranquses. If the California Angels or the Los
Angeles Dod~ers lose money this season, Gene Autry
and Peter 0 Malley will not meet Joe Fan in the
·unemployment line.
Neither can the fans feel too bad for the poor, abused
professional baseball play_er, the poorest and most
abused of whom earns $40,000 for about six months
work. The average guy in the stands earns somewhat less
for substantially more work. In fact, by national
standards, pro baseball's minimum salary places its
recipient among the affluent
Specific issues in this strike are said to be salary
arbitration and television money. The owners want to
make it more difficult for players to take their contract
disputes to outside arbitrators, who last year awarded
salaries over $1 million to several players. The players
like the present system just fine, thanJc you very much.
On the demand side, the players want a big chunk of
the $60 million' year the owners have squeezed out of
the television networks, who will in tum squeeze more
than that out of advertisers, who in their tum will build
that cost into the prices consumers pay for their
products. The money is supposed to be earmarked for
the players' pension fund.
Both sides assume that a pension fund, requiring
substantial infusions of cash, is necessary for people who
average $300,000 a year. The notion is, of course, absurd,
but no more so than expecting the fans to care what
happens to the grecdheads who posed, po~tured and
pretended to negotiate for nine months before taking
away the summer game.
Any fan who bas any sympathy for either party in
this dispute docsn 't recognize that both sides are playing
with bis money.
If the fans are to be spared future strikes, they must
make a statement of their own. They must realize that
they control the one thinJ both sides want: the money. If
they are to get back the1r game, they must show all of
professional baseball that they have power over it.
If and when the seasqn resumes, the fans should
withhold the money they would spend on tickets and
they should refuse to' buy the products advertised on
aseball broadcasts. If the fans would take a stand,
organized baseball might get its priorities back in order.
T he fans should make it clear, baseball is their game
-and it is not negotiable.
Is San Joaquin Freeway
really necessary or not?
To the Editor:
I remember an Irvine Co. spokes-
man before Proposnion A saying we
don't need the San Joaquin Freeway.
People let it pass, thinkana that 1f it
were true, they'd hear no more. But
lhen did come Prop. A and Irvine Co.
poured thousands into its campaign
to penuade voters to authonze
money for new freeways.
Proposition A was overwhelmingly
defeated. People didn't want new
f rccways -or more taxes.
Now returns Irvine Co. spokesman
Nielsen to the scene. He indicates
Irvine citizens' ri~t-to-vote petition
is illeaal. In fiahtina to deny Irvine
citizens this right (to tax themselves
for freeways) Nielsen says nobody
"opposes people's right to vote. It's a
technical matter."
Is o ne to believe the Irvine Co. as in
there helping to prove to thousands of
petitioners that they arc illegal? Or
was the "no need freeway" comment
unreflective of real Irvine Co. plans?
Or does the company now want the
San Joaquin Freeway? Or is the
company still not interested. And like
a valiant Sir Galahad in corporate
garb, simply trying to protect the
people from themselves? Which is it?
TOM ALEXANDER
Laguna Beach
war time killing sel(defense
To the Editor:
I would like to reply to the letter
(Daily Pilot, July 24) printed from
Sarah Ludwi1 of uauna Beach.
Murder is the unlawful and ma-
licious or premeditated killinJ of one
human beina br, another, ~~· any
killin1 done while committ101 some
othcrfelony,urapcorrobbery. lfthis
is done in war time or peac.e time, it
would carry the aame punishment.
The azia were tried for such crimes
at the end of WWII. I
If you kill someone in defense of
yourself or loved ones. this as sell
defense, not murder.
Killin& in defense of one's country
is not murder, but is, and should be,
self-defense.
KEN BAZAR
Fountain Valley
Thanks for the honesty
To the Editor: I would like to publicly thank the
person who returned my lost wallet
containina a aubstanlial amount or
cuh aa weU 11 ID, credit carda. and
personal iu:ma. I had lost it at a public
phone booth in Huntinaton Beach
and wu sure it woukf never be
returned.
OAANGE COAST lllilJ Pilat
But the finder. Mr. Joh~Lcw11 of
Huntinaton Beach, trackc me down
and returned cverythina i tact. l am
hC'l"e viaitinaon a trip from Japan, and
this simple act has restored my faJth
in aood old American honesty.
OARY D. SMITH
Foreign Service Oflker
,,..a.. .....,
T .. T ... ..._... .... g:-.:•• =-=-
~T~~ rr~."
j OOnge CONt DAILY PllOT/WiOneeday, ~ 1. 1085
"Death ts a black thing, an ambush, a nast}'.ileal, whenev~r It come11.
no matter how It looks to the young. ·;
•
Today's
kid's not
·all TV
junkies
Some choose to pass
leisure hours wtth
a ood book in han d
When I was lD the library the other
day checkin1 out books and ,ettin,'
one of the new computerized c&rds.
saw something I bad never seen
before.
Just as I approached lhe desk with
m y three books, a airl about 8 ycan
old, and ber big brotha, probably 10
years old, ~ up. The gjrl was
carrying seven boolc.s and her brother
We have one life to live
..-yet waste so much of it
· bad a much larser stack. MotbeT was
trailing with JUSt three boob.
From the time .& was 6 or 8 and
chcckina out books from our local
library. I was told I co,ukl check out
only three books at one tune. I beard,
"Only three books at a time, YOUDJ
lady ..... so many times all throuah
elementary school and bish school
that I haveoevcrsinccchaJlengcd this Death: "A moment
of supreme anxiety•
that we fear greatly
NEW YORK -Youonly h~yeone
life to live, if thJt. Co,t\SiderinJ the
way we waste it, why are most of us so
afraid of death? A cab driver pointed
out to me this afternoon that it's a
beautiful day. And it is. I just hadn't
noticed. I complain when it's too hot,
I complain when it's too cold, and
when n's perfect 1 don't notice. Or I
complain that 1t won't last. I have a
bad case of human nature.
Against this background. considM
the case of poor Rock Hudson. 1t was
a shock to see those pictures of rum.
suddenly frail and wasted, because
the good looks of Rock Hudson were
among those lh1np one assumed
were beyond the ceach of tame and
decay. It was less of a shock. as far as 1
was concerned, to hear that he had
AIDS. While the fashionable world
buzzed about the disease and the
inferential scandal. he was being
carried o n a stretcher from the plane
from Paris into a California hospital,
too sick to join in all the posturing
around him.
AIDS seems irrelevant. The real
shocker as still death itself. Some·
limes it comes home m you more
when you learn that someone as d ying
than when he actually dies. ''Thou
knowcst 'us common: all that lives
must die, passing through nature to
etemny," says Hamlet's mother.
"Why seems it so particular with
thee?" Because 1t as. It 1s panicular.
Except for ex-schoolgirls of a
ccnaan age. there's no reason to have
taken much interest in Mr. Hudson's
hfc or career. Thoup he was a fine
comedian. he was never a great actor.
and he kept has pnvatc life pnvatc,
where we should be content to leave
1t. H~ wasn't Richard Burton in any
sense of the word. He was just a steady
presence in Hollywood, as Ronald
Reagan used to be, a seeming incarna·
tion of am table American normality.
And now this. Suddenly we learn
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
things about him that were never
suggested by his pleasantly masculine
demeanor (thouah there were rumors
that apparently everyone had heard);
and we learn them because he's going
to die soon -too soon. in a way that
was not onl y unforeseen but utterly
unpredictable when he was flic"ering
across the screen Wlth Dons Day. The
scandal that surrounds his imminent
dcpanure from th1s hfc only serves to
point up the way death really 1s, for
each of us.
We go through hfc 1maaimn1
ou~lves livinJ fully, achieving salls·
factions. wmding down, tn content-
ment. and tbcn fOing quietly, pain-
les,ly1 naturally, lake a falJing leaf. But
at sclaom happens that way. Death is
a black thing. an ambush. a nasty
deal, whenever it comes, no matter
how it looks to the young. Samuel
Johnson said we spend all o ur lives
putting off the thoughts of 1t. We
sense what It really as, a moment of
supreme and fully warranted anxiety,
and we surround tt with evasions and
euphemisms and other psychic buf-
fers that conceal its sheer horror.
I met death 10 years ago. when my
best fnend d ied. He was 32. He had
cancer. He fought It off as long as he
could, wnh cobalt tre.atment and
chemotherapy and ~urgcry that left
ham )Carrcd and mutilated. But
finally he knew. "I'm lookrn& into my
grave," he s~ud. I didn't know what to
say. It was no use lytng. and I couldn't
imagine what he was going through
well enough to offer any sincere
consolation
I have a better idea now. It wasn't
going 10 be the end he'd va1uely
assumed, but somethin• dreadfully
specific. cruelly unique, 1mpcriousJy
10vad.lnl bis life before he'd ac-rule. .
comptished the tbing.1 he'd planned, My first thought when I watched
and making further actiVlty, like the kids pale their books on the
reading the books he loved, seem counter was how embarrassed they
pointless and absurd. Soon he could would be to h~ve to c.arry most of
no longer possess anything. not even them back to the stacks. My next
bis own thoughts: even they would be reaction was what were they goifll to
taken. He would be abandonina his do with all of them -read them now
wife and two small sons who mi&}lt -durinJ summec vacation?
not even remember him. Everythina The librarian offered to check me
he did in the short future be had left out first. "Thi$ will take a tittle
was bound to lose its purpose; all his while," she said, noddin& at the stacks
habits of self-improvement now look-of books. She didn't shake her bead at
ed bitterly ironic. eight of them and say. ··Three books
And of course I lost him too. We arc all }OU may check out at one
kept pretending he was going to last a ume."
httle longer, so I never even wd a -"No. I'm in no hull). Take care of
proper goodbye. t\ever collected my-the younptet'$ first, ... and I bcaan to
self enough to tell him how much he count the boy's books -22 or them.
had meant to me. In fact I didn't Then r turned and looked htm over
reahze I'd carry on our fncndshap, in He was not the typical bookworm.
a way. after his death. I went to the Husky (~ would have to be to carry
hospital to visit htm and when I saw that many books), tanned. hair
ham I thought I'd walked into the bleached from the sun. he looked as
wron• r~m and backed out. He had thouah he spent most of tus ume on
tubes 1n his nose and arms, and there the beach on his bake and on the ball
was hardly anything left of him. He field. '
said, ''Hr, -toe:~ in wmeon~ etsc's He sawme--couming the books. ··22
voice and I nearly collapsed to think It of them," be said.
was him. He was too urcd to talk "Looks lake you'll be bus) the rest
much, so I left, with relief. I went back of the summer."
to my car and cried. The next nl&ht, "Naw, ru be throu&h by Wedne~
with. hi~ parents beside h1.m, he oorted day" This was on a f'"ciday. I looked
up an his bed and yelled 1ocoherently at his mother Sbe smiled and
for a long time. then fell back and nodded "He's a fast reader."
died. "Some of these are shon -and
.Has famil~"s loss was ~ar worse than eas}. ·• sa1d his littJe sister
mine, but mane was temblc. He was a "I don't thi nk I've ever run an to an}'
wonderful friend. I finally decided boy your age who lakes to read this
that I should be grateful for having much," I 1old ham.
known him for 11 years: and l The labranan laughed ... He's my
wouldn't have enjoyed that ume best customer -both of them arc."
nearly as much 1f rd known It was she said. 1ncludmg his sister.
going to cod so soon. It was more When the lengthy procedure was
merciful to be shocked over and I started home Wlth my
When I consider that I am going to inadequate supply of thltt books. I
dte, someday, a thought that occurs to felt a new ht&h. This was the first
me more often now. I feel a sad 10d1cat1on I've had that 10-ycar old
affection for people who otherwise boys don't grow roots an front of the
1rrJ'.atc me. I begin to appreciate them TV. He was rcadtng because he hk.ed
a1\4 to think of what I have t11 to read. He was also setting a good
common with them; sharp d1f· eumple for has younger sister.
fcrcnces soften. Maybe ~ should The mother must havt' encouraged
begin our fare""'ells a httle earher than them, even 1f she dad have only three
we usually do. books. Wben she was growrna up she
Joupll Sobraa /J • 1yrldk•IH probably did business with the same
col11ma11t. typ_c of hbranan I dad and. hke me.
~till couldn't break the thtt.ie·book
habit.
Bases outflank rules and
If that kid can get by wath 1t. so can
I On my next tnp to the library, I'm
ao1n1 to be brave enough to check out
fhe books.
I don't know how this little boy will
turn out or what he will be when be
gro"' up. but I'm aJad bt's in m)' pay more
WASHINGTON -Applying the
Anny's talent for camouflage. two
military posu in the Washington area
hid some purchases that might have
raued eyebrows. These ranged from
personal computers to a coffee maker
and an excm~ machine.
The purchases were disguised u
"educational services" to bypass
proJ>Ct procurement channels.
Why did mmtary officials liJtOr'C
rqulatJons? Because it was ··easier
and faster," Armr. auditors were told
by those responsible. It was also, the
auditon added, more expensive.
The two baea that tampered wtth
the rules were Walter Reed Medical
Center in Wuhinaton. D.C .• and Fon
Bclvoir in nearby Vifainia. Jn fiscal
1982 and 1983. the years covered by
the audit, the ba9CS ~t about
S23S,0001n cqwpment witM>ut fOint
throuah the rcqwred compeutive-
b1dd1na proceu.
The auditon' rtport, whid'a bas
nc~tt been made publjc, concluded
that the educatiotl.al teMc:a ~ "not COit eftecuvc" and included ..ul'l~ admuu uative fori" -
not to mtnuon lbc tttuJaLion that
weft outflanked. T queauonable equipment
~re \ttJ't made throud an
·antt'r coq aarttment'· wtih the
AaricuJturc Dtpatt~nt't Gradu.sc
-for purchases_ neighborhood -
School But the school. which 11 sclf-
supportma and thus docs not &et
funds appropnatcd by Convcu. 11 no
lon~r allowed to make such mter·
aaenc) agreements. acc.ord1'.'J to a
General AccounllnJ Office ruJmt. All
its agreement esumated as htah as
S30 million over a foUt:)'eat period.
will be tcnninated u of~t. JO
~nd 1f ~ k~~~"' \Mt man~ book back and fonh every
v.eck. he'll be a natural for the
Wheaties c-om merc1al when Man·
,, Lou Retton' contl'1lct 1s up.
In fact, the school's inu:r.qcocy
aareements were the subject of a
three·year invntiption by the Avi·
culture Department's in pector sen·
~I and now a IJ'lnd jury is 11udyin1
the school's operations. The school's
director was rttenlly a kcd to re ian.
Accordma to the Army audit
report., which was obtamcd by our
reporter Kenneth Reid. Fon Bclvolf'
paid the G raduate School $2 I .68S for
word-proccssina eq~!Pment an 19 2.
and $77,000 for office tq_u_apmcnt.
furniture and suppli in 1982..&3. It
&bo purchdd data~ from the ldiool u pan o ilttdUC.uonaJ servi<t.
The items purdwtd •~haded a
micro .... ~ oven, a bar stool, a coJftt
m kcr, slide projectors. tampa. a
belt mas~ or cum macb1oc,
two 12-b;i.S-foot C'&J"PCll and l®
tables &Q.d chain. A Graduate hoot
spokeanan said the ~ or lM
bth rn.utatn" an "mor:· ~bar
ltOOI WI~ uted IS • cla m pcrth
Jaca
AIDEISH
and DAlf VAN A Tl A
tor a teacher.
The auditon, not1na that 1he
·orattuate School charscd ovetbead
ftt1 of anywhere from 6 pt1'CC'n t to 30
percent, said the school made 1
S49,4SO profit on 1t1 Arm) con1racts
1n 1983. The aud1ton recommended
that the fees be returned. ltut the
school pokuman 111d 1t has no
1nttnuon of rc1umina the S49,4SO.
.. Tbcat fen~ not a profit," be
said ... It costtbat much to do bu 1n«s
with the Arm)' ...
As for the rcuonina bch ind the two
po u· camoufiaaina their equipment
pun: the audit 51at.cd ·•Respon~
'b!e pmonnel ... told us lhaJ lbcy
used the ~ to 11«1U1tt llcms
because 11 · ' and Wier than ~uirioa them throua.h normal 1t-
qu1s.ition ChanMI ..
But t.be shoncut c rt} v1olat~
Anny rqulatio
Jlld Aallk»w u4 0.M Va Ate.
are f1'11dhlf'tl ~eJDJlffCI.
Col11mJt11t Au Well• U"Vn bl
LapuNllW-1
L.M . Bovo
'Genuine stolen'
Items -or not?
lf offtl'C(.1 ··scnuane stolen costume
Jt'wtll') ··when an Muaro. bt advited: ~ l0t of lhote pcddlcn a~ d11honcst
-much of that ~welry 11n 't stolen at
alt
A whale'~ hp VOO'" arc u
1nd1vi4ual u human finp::rpnn
and u·s now behncd wbaks re-
cocnuc ot~r whaks b) thal ma..
llnctt~ charactenSllc.
,,-
{
I ·
I
Orenge CoUt OAJLY PILOT/Wtdneeday, August 7, 1945
Radio archive houses voice of struggling nation·
LO ANGEL~ (AP) -. 'fhe. voice of a nation Nancy Anaeto said. in a ~nt inte~iew. "We provide movement reecftcd out from UC Berkeley. the tape . The Nauonal Endowment for \he Humanities
"TICkcd with conflict ovtr c1v~l riJhts, .war, poht1cal pco~l~ a~s to potn~ of v.1ew that differ from tho~ on Dr Unu Pauhna and Dr Edward Telle debated the contnbuted S 122 000 to the pTOJC:Ct as well. sc::and&l and 3S years of o\her l ues watts quietly on traditional, comrnemal l'Mho." ,. r' · r . ' . . . shelves of the Paafiaa Radio Archwc. The atth1ve contain• a blend or news, sound u.scs.o nuclear powerand w~pons on 8 tape n;tadc dunng But volu!>t.ccrs, hke Louis punoff •. a retired Los
The archive on Venice Boulevard is the oldest ctualities, interviews lectures, performances and rea~ the s0s., and f'.rank U?ud "%naht framed his vision of Angeles elcctnc1an, to index archive entnes. Dunotf ~as
collection of pubhc radio proaramming in the United ings by social, political and entertainment faaurcs. Amenca s architectural uturc '"another. spent a d~de rcv1ew1na tapes for content and t.1111n1
\ate home to more than 20,000 audio recordinas When the Rev. Martin Luther Kint Jr. cried out for . Pacific Radio, which now consists of sax. ~Ultaons detenorotma or da'!'aicd tapes thot need to be re-recorded orodu~ 11ncc 1949, when Lew Kill founded Pacifica civil rights20 yearsago;triaenna marches in the nation's including KPFA-FM and KPFB-FM in Berkeley, KPFK-before the11 sound lS lost
llachott K.PFA-FM in Berkeley capital, Pac1fica-'1 WPFW~FM in Walh.inaton. D.C . was FM in LosAn&eles, KPFT-FM an Houston, WBAl-FM in "I'm particularly lnteresied •n preserv.ina_tapet wtth-
"Our tapes contain h1Jh-mtercst, s~alty provams there to cover at New York and WPFW-FM an Wash.1qton D.C., educattonal or political content," said DunofT, 17 "I do ·
with a tot of cultural d1vers1fication.' archive director And KPFA-FM was present when the free speech contnbuted S 100.000 to fund a four-year project tocatalot this because I enJOY It and learn."
•
-
5e0\ed
-
====----
I '
S\g 5.3 cuit. -
freezef
s\x pad<S
Model TBX20ZG
Buy a selected GE Energy Bflclent Refrigerator and get a Big Rebate
from GE plus ano1her Big Rebate from Southern Callfomlo Edison If you are
one of their customers. Offer good from July 1 thru August 31 , 1985.
Prices, delivery, lnstallatlon and color charges, optlonal with dealers All models may not be available at all dealers
"ATA STORES"
Callfoml•'• largest
(see your yellow page1)
PHIL I JIM'S
HUNTINGTON llACH
HOME SERVICE CO.
17242 leach Blvd.
LAMA.MA for neaNat locatlon
call: 7141141-1110 or
2131889-1011
-,. -HOWARD'S
901 E. lm.,.rt•I Hwy.
COITA MllA
DAVIS·IROWN CO.
411 E. 17th St.
LA•UNAHl.U
8AOOL£1ACK APPLIANCE
22112 Or1nlte W1y
LAKIWOOD
DON I TOM'S
4234 Woodruff Ave.
ot.AN••
ADRArs
1701 W. Chapmen
PLACIMTIA
IAOWNION A'PLIANCE
1241 E. Yotbe Linde llvd.
SANTAANA
A I 8 IUDOET APPLIANCE
280I S. Harbor Blvd.
JENEE APPLIANCE
1013 S. Mein St.
ITAHTON
111.,L I DAVE'S APPLIANCE
10M7 hech llYd.
Singed whiskers a clue
Smokey, 10-week-old tomcat, amulnlfly aurvlved tbe
recent 80,000-acre Bia( Sur fire, aaya Carmel Valley
veterinarian Gerald Petiua. He found the feline aurvivor.
barely able to walk. ln tbe uha of a burned out houae.
I
Most in survey
favor bounty
• • on terror.1sts
But such a policy
would upset U.S.
foreign relations
One possible problem of such a
.-policy 1s it could result an reprisals
against Americans by militant or-
gan1zat1ons, said Robert H. Kup-
perman. an expert on terrorism ill
the Georgetown Center for Stra"tegic
NEW YORK (AP) -Amencans and International Studies.
are d1v1ded over how the govern-"I think there are a lot of mixed
ment should deaJ with terronsts. but feelings.'' he said. However, the
a clear maJonty favors the offenng of American public may see the off er-
a bounty-dead or alive-for those . ingofa bounty as "a cheap way out,"
hketheh1JackersofaTWAjetlinerin a way to avoid direct American
June. a Media General-Associated intervention and possible reprisals,
Press poll indicates. Kupperman said.
Forty-four ~n1of1..517 adullS. "In a way .. we'd·like someOD.tll
in the nationwide telephone poll said to do our dirty work. and a bounty
the U nited States should negotiate says, we'll give you thee one thing we
for the release o f American hostages can g.i ve you -cash," he said.
"even 1f1t means giving 10 to terronst Kuppennan said many Americans
demands.·• who believe in negotiating wnh
Forty-two percent said the govern-terronsts hold those beliefs because
ment should not negotiate "even ifit "the image of the Israeli reprisal,
mean!) some Americans taken counter-reprisal. counter-counter re-
hostage are IOJUred or killed... prisal cycle is not what America
But two-thirds said they would wants.
favor a "substantial bounty" for the "I 1h1nk that the media have
capture or lotlm-g-of Jc1dnappers and explained enough dunng this period
murderers such as the hijackers of of time to suggest to America that to
TWA Flight 847. the poll found. not negotiate may very well lead to
Only 24 percent said they thought a that type of situation.
bounty was a bad idea. "I think America has a desire,
The Reagan admin1slrat1on as almost an isolationist desire. to stay
cons1denngofferingS500,000forthe out of all o f this," Kuppennan said:
capture of the Shiite militants who "And 1t can't fully."
took over the 01ght and killed one-of Respondents in the poll included a
the passengers .. White House spokes-random, scientific sampling of.1,517
man Larry Speakes said last month. adults across the country. As wath all
Speakes said he did not know sample surveys. the results of Media
whether the bounty offer would be General-AP~e~ephonepollscan.vary
available to someone who produced from the op101ons of a~I ~me!1cans
the hijackers "dead or alive." because or chance vanatton 10 the
The poll was conducted July 5-13, sample.
shonly af\er Speakes made his . For. a poll based on about. 1,500
announcement. The hostage siege 1nterv1ews, the ~suits are subject to
0 an error marg.in of 3 percentage
ended on Jun~ 3 · points either way because of chance
A .congressional subcomm1ttce 1s variations in the sample. That is, if
cons1denng leg.islat1on that would one could have questioned all
allow the ~nned States to capture Amencans wtth telephones, there is
terronsts m other countncs and only I chance in 20 \hat the findings
bring them to trial here 1f the h~st would vary from the results of palls
country failed to locate and extradite such as this one by more than 3
them. percentage points.
But State Department legal ad-Of course. the results could differ
v1ser Abraham Sofaer warned Con-from other polls for several reasons.
gress last week that such a policy Differences in exact wording of
would have "grave 1mphcations for questions, in the timing of interviews ·
the effective conduct of foreign and in the 1nt~n:iew methods could
affairs." also cause vanataons.
Dolls recalled as
choking hazard
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Sesame Street Honkers plush (lolls
are beina recaJled by their manufac-
turer because they could p<>K a
choking h11.ard for smaJI children, the
Consumer Product Safety Com-
mission announced today.
The reca ll wa.s beaun by Aviva
Hubro, Inc., of P W\ucltct, R.I.. af\CT
after commission tcsu indicated that
the doll ' eye, could come off -ac-
Cldentally, and mit)\t pose 1 choluna
luzard to small children No mJuncs
have been rcpon.cd, however.
The doll arc ma.de of deep pink,
oransr or purple plush fabnc with a
larac pink or yellow plastic nose and
black and while eyes, yellow plastic
can sh.aped hkc horns and 1 bl c\
fabric mouth. The doll 1 about nine
inches tall with a sewn-on label
rcadina "Ha bro lndu trie Inc.,
Sesame Street ... 1983 Muppets Inc ...
I 00 percent p,olyester fibcra. Made in
Chana H-15.'
About 144.000 of the dolls hive
been sold since June 1983 na-
tionwide. In addition _pubhc tele-vi~ion stations in New York. Phila-
delphia ind Boston distributed some
as promo11onal ittms.
The company uf'lcd ~rcnu to
rtmovc the toys from u~ immedi-
ately and retum them, for a full
refund, to Aviva Hasbro Inc .. P.O.
Box 1060. Pawtucket. R.I .. 02862. People necdln,a more infonnation
can cont ct Has6To 1t 800-SS6-6S IS
or tbc safety comm1 ion at 800-631-277 l .
. .
..
..
liljPlil WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 19851:!
) -
Surgical procedure •sucks' off excess fat
--. ~
ByEVEC.USH lion or suctton·ass1sted lipectomy,
and plastic surgeoM across the
country arc performing this form of
body contouring with great success.
called a cannulA Elam sa)'1 he .has
developed a thinner caMula -
called a cobra cannula -which is
now used by many physicians
worldwide.
1s someone under 40 yean of a
with &ood k.Jn tone. "Someone who
doesn't have slun hangins. so the
s.lun shrinks naturally ...
0.., .... c.r • ., ......
So many women and men com·
plain they exercise until they arc
almost half dead -but still don't
lose unwanted inches or excess fat in
the ri&ht places.
We figured out how to send a
woman into space, and now a
Newport Beach surgeon says there's
a way to get rid of fat-easily safely
and permanently.
The technique is called liposuc-
BACKTALK
Dr. Yves--Gerard lllouz of Paris is
one of the foundin& fathers of this
type of surgery. And cosmeuc
su.rgeon Dr. M1chael Elam of New-
port Beach, educational director for
the American Society of Llposue?
lion Surgery, has studied under
lllouz to perfecl the procedure.
Tbe surgery. acoording to Elam, 1s
performed with a long instrument
--~--~-
Elam SAid the secret of the lllou,z
technique is the honeycomb1n1 of
the fatty tissue creating a .. collaps-
ing lipectomy" of the tis5Uc. This
pr<>cess is unlike earlier attempts
which remove alJ the fatty tissue in
block between \be muscle and skin.
Or. Edward Domanskis of New-
port Beach says a perfect candidate
The procedure is normally done
in the offa.ce. or as an outpatient
under general anesthesia. A patient
can return to work in two weeks or
less, in most cases, said Dom1mSkis.
Both doctors maintain the pain is
minimal, with some sv.-elling and
bruising at\er SUJlC:ry.
Domanskis wd. "I think that
patients feel better about them-
Tips for Monday-to-Friday Syndrome
..../
From the breakfast table to the
evening news, we're practically sitting
all day long -especia.lly those of us
with sit-down JObs. With all t~at
sit ting, year in and year out, the strain
on your back can mount. But by
followrng some simple back care tips,
you can help reduce the everyday
strain of sitting.
CARY
ROTHENBERG
help prevent back strain and inJury
and help you feel healthy on the JOb
and enJOY a healthy back.
After an ac11 ve weekend, your back
may feel fine. But by Friday. after
workmg at your desk all week. your
back can ache, become ttred, and be
prone to injury. The Mon~y-to
Fnday Syndrome as ca used by long,
unrelieved periods of sitting in one
position -especially slouching. h's
not the office job itself that causes the
Monday-to-Fnday Syndrome. it's
how you treat your back, on and off
the job.
When you use good s1tting pOsturc.
you're supportin' tbe thrtt natural
curves of your spine an their normal,
balanced alignment. Good sitting
posture is also the most comfortable
posture. When you slouch. the strain
on your back can multiply and
damage the sensitive structures ol
your spine. This unnecessary strain
can lead to backache, stiffness, mus-
cle fatigue, and even injury
You may not know it, but 40 hours
of sitting can put more strain' on your
back then 40 hours of standing -or
even lifting -making you one of the
unsung heroes or heroines of the
workplace. But you're also a prime
target for the Monday-to-Friday Syn-
drome: backache and fat1gue from
slouching over your desk all week.
Since you sit most of the day, it makes
sense to learn simple back care tips to
Dr. Cary H. RoLhenberg 1s a
ch1ropractor wuh offices in Hunt-ington Beach.
W ALK IN THE SuN
Hiroshima horror .shOcks visitor
A PAPER CRANE . I went to
Hiroshima (meaning .. far
stretching islands") with a small
group of U.S. Marine Corps
aviators -World Wtrr II vet-
erans all -in 1971 .
The memory of that melan-
.
BETTY
PORTER
Japanese men. women and children we met. Wa.lk.Jng through the
H1rosh1ma Peace Memonal. we seemed to avoid each other's eyes and
those of other tourists -and especially the sad, dark eyes of our young
male Japanese guide. lt was an unsettling experience and 1 had the urge
to run or to scream... -'
choly visit is one I wall not forget. ••••••••••••• We left lwakuni, Japan (in , •
The photographs, enlarged for detail, were almost unbearable to
view and too horrible and painful to dcscnbe. Words Sttmed
inadequate and some of us cned. I recall the slow, poised movements of
the Japanese guide as he poioted to or described the graphic
photographs tn greater det.aa.I. He spokc;....precise English in a slow,
monotone voice. Southern Honshu Island on the Inland Sea) on a cold January morning
for the approximately 30-miJe drive through the serene, rural Japan
countryside. stopping to sec the Torii of the ltsukush1ma Shnne on
Miyajima (where we had lunch) and arriving 1n Hiroshima via one of
the many bridges traversing the Raver Ota. The city nestles against a
mountain on one side and extends into Hiroshima Ba y (in the pattern
of a human hand) on the other
I remember also how pale, even stunned, the tounsts looked as
they filed past the rooms of photographs. They reminded me of people
I had seen at barbaric funerals I had attended as a child.
Viewers extted the museum in haste and gathered in a counyard.
A few held hands and whispered· among themselves.
The waJk to the nearby Children's Memorial was a rehef. The fresh
a1r(although I remember wondering how ''fresh" at really was and-an
my ignorance -whether any trace of radiation remained) and the act
of walking helped to reduce the tension.
All I had known about Hiroshima was that on August 6, 1945. at
8: 1 S p.m., the U.S. Air Force (at President Harry Truman's direction)
had dropped the first atomic bomb on the city, destroyi_nj_it. killing an
estimated 260.000 people and iniurin2 rvore Lhan 160,000.
I had assumed that thectty would be blackened and a totally barren
desert but, in factj the_peqple had reconstructed 11S_bu1ldin&S. 12lanuois
grew profusefy and the pre-war population had doubled.
We were a friendly, even jovial. group, usually. But on that
occasion. we wa.lked very litt.le wt th each other and ncnJat all with the
At the memonaJ - a statue of a child reach mg upward -we were
greeted by a smiling, pretty, young Japanese woman. She handed us
small pieces of paper. And then she taught us how to fold 1t (Ongami).
making-a-crane. The uny woman's-hand-was.small beside Jr1ine-81'1d
beside the hands of the middle-aged Marines. All of us chatted and
laughed at our ineptness in paper-folding. ·
..., ....................
(Pleue Me W ALK/82)
Prager's 'P'utting
on theRitz'forOC
Rehab supporters
By VIDA DEAN
Delly ,._. ltyte Edlter
The Sunday sociaJ was somewhat
like an old-fashioned garde n
party ... guests were wearing summer
fashions. sipping coot drinks. listening
'to music and mingling. Classic cars
ringed the area.
But. instead of green grass, concrete
was beneath their feet...they were at the
fourth annual ,Rehabilitation lnstttute
of Southern California fundraiser
which begin in the outdoor area
fronting The Ritz Restaurant.
The £) Toro Marine Corps Air
Station band was providing the music
and as the color guard came forward.
played "The Star Spangled Banner" the
All-American Celebrauon theme of the
party was a cinch.
Betty Hogan and Marlie Scbag co-
chaired the RIO fundraiser sponsored
by the Newport Beach Chapter. "Our
chapter sponsored the opening party at
The Ritz, and today is our fourth
fundraiser here," said"Schag.
"Hana (Pra1er ) docs most of the
work. Wit~out him there w6uld be no
pacty," added Hogan.
All membersofPrager's 130-member
staff donate their time and purveyors
donate the food, so the there's very little
of the $125 paid by lhe 200 there that
does not go directly to patients at the
Oranee rehabilitation center.
New York steak anl eggs (cabemet
sauv1gnon) and for dessert (what could
be more American) apple cobbler a la
mode with a lighted Fourth of July
sparkler in each servJng.
Also. at their red, white and blue
balloon decorated tables, the guests saw
fashions by American designers and by
European designers much loved by
American women.
Kitty Leslie fOOrd1natcd the show of
styles from Fashion Island stores -
The Broadwn. Guy Laroche, Apropos.
Jea" R yan, C harlies. Bullocks-
WLlshate,.NeUy's. Sot'1!ee and N~unan
Marcus (confirm) with furs from M.
Jacques. Charlene Prager provided tb,e
commentary in one room while Leslie
dtd the same for other diners.
Attending were Marianne (and Jack)
Garner and Barbara Campbell (these
two have done the previous benefits),
Sban.noa Stewart (Marianne's daughter
who comes from Hawaii for the event
each year), three of the OC supeTVlsors
-the Ralpb Clarks, Tom (and Emma
Jane) Riley and Burien (and ln)
Wieder -ShJrlee and Bob Gq·
geD.belm, Deue and Nick Doolla, Rita
and Geae Tlltt (he's the architect who
desianed the RIO building) and the
Lucas family. Jeu and Bob. dau&hter
Dana and husband Gue Seaecal and
son Keat with wife Mary Pat.
Also, Diane (she's on the board) and
Ruasell (he's on the foundation) Dlffl,
a1lt and Nd1oe Gro11, Saru Sida·
man (daughter of Marate and EnJe
Scu1). ltlt and Steplaea Toda ( be wa
Plaotoe, olockwUe from abofti .,,,,u aad
. Diane Dlelal: Tmll Herbert wttla 11antJ
1 ... clMD: Ke.18on aad hale Orae9 olaeck oat
'SS Packard; ......Se ec• .. =t) wttll
buMDd Srnle aad"' .... etma-
"I don't even have to ask the staff to
volunteer. I ju t put a nouce on the
bulle\in board and they come an on
their day off. Toni&ht we will llll be
goina out· on the Pav1hon Queen for
three hours, relax and eel bratc our
third year in business here," said Rit.<
owner Praacr.
hielded from the sun with a pretty lace
parasol). Mardy Sv1M1e11. Miile and
l.aarie Hard~ DeuJdo Pdleller and ·
MtcHle and &eve Ma.rptlc (who were
J(ramna RIO. Thc1rdau&)\tcr. no flve1 wa there for therapy for th rec years anu
i now walkaoa and ancndin 1ebool.
.. When he entered treatment. she
could not "'"'n turn over:· M1cbetc maaa Marl&lul• Oerd.Dert Bau Prat• aad
BettyBopn.
r
Inside the restaurant. th RIO up-·
ponen were treated to a C2roud of
ummer frun rved with champagne.
cold poached lmon (chcnin blanc),
----------------
SIJd)
selves after the procedure -better·
IClf-coofide~. on the job and with
their interact1onns with people.
Better look.JnJ people are usually
more succcssf ul.
"Society " so beauty conscious.
Wlth skimpy ck>tbe1 and thin being
very in. Beauty 1s basically pmpor.
tioned ... and that's what we are
tryina to achieve." ·
Elam claim~ the suriery has
shown tremendous promise not ..........................
(Pleue 11ee SUJtOltRT /82) Dr. lllcbael £lam
Cocaine's a killer
... you don't need it
Some people run marathons. some
complete a novel, become corporate VlCC
prcs1dent, or actueve some other pcrso~
Ltfe-goaJ.
It's usually other people who use
coca ine. l.J111
AlcaD Yet they all have something in
common. Feelin~ of control, power and
~uccess come wtth achievement. Those •••••••••••• postt1 ve feelings can also be sunulated -
1f not stimulated -by snorting a IJne or two of"cokc."
Cocarne as a sexy drug. Almost instantaneously and like magic, It can
produce a sense of nothing-Olft-stop-me-now boldness and sensuality.
Somewhere around $50 billion a year is spent on it -in the Urutcd St.ates
alone. Over 25 million havcalrcadycxpcruneoted, and the number11arowina.
Cocaine knows no social class. But because tt's so expensive. uscn tend LO
be upwardly mobile folks who seemingly have the most to lose.
And cocaine-users ultimately do bCc:ome losers. One danger a socuncd
wtth the drug is that 1t feels so safe. Twent,Y to 30 minutes afler use, a.I.I euphonc
effects arc gone. I Coca1ne has been compared to the peanut and potato-chip syndrome. -It's
hard to stop after JUSt one.•• The out-of-<:<>ntrol after-effect kind of sneaks up on
you. ls cocaine addtctivc? You bet it is. The onginal reports dcclanng the drug
as "non-narcotic and non-addictive" have been thrown out.
There 1s still some question as to whether cocaine addiction as physical or
psychological, but either way -watch out. In a futile search for the onginaJ
drug effect. cocaine users are famous for escaJauon .
The feeling-good euphona is too soon replaced by depression and anxiety
The drug-induced illusion of success becomes replaced by chroruc fatigue ,
social wtthdrawal and an inabihty LO sleep.
Chronic cocaine sniffers have too many bloody noses. bcadaches ... and
they're not even sexy.
While inifially cOke offered the glamour of the aphrodcsiac. lDcreased
and/or conunued U5e can result in a loss of sexual mcerest. :
One self-proclaimed "rccovenng addict" admitted that "coca.me had
become my wife and my Life. I wasn't even aware that tt was happening, but
pretty soon my 'coke' had become a substitute for sex."
And what about the cost? At $2,00Chn ounce. a moderate habit c:ao~
$200 a week.
Financial irresponsibility is a given. That's what they told me when I
called 1-800..COCAlNE. the National Drug Rchabilitauoo hot-hne Wou.ld
you believe that over 40 peroent oftbc1r callers report the loss of aJI fina~
assets because of cocaine?
Some people a.lso die from cocainc--rela1cd problems
Decade for >Ourself tf you're worth more than that -but not until you get
some tnformauon. Ca.II 1-800-COCAJNE 1f there is-something you need 10 knowabout~oldrugs._ _
As for me, I think I'd rather wnte a novel.
Dr. Algazi is a marriage cft family therapist m Corona ~I Mar. She
welcomes your responses. If you wish• repl}, pl~ enclose a stamped self-
addres5M envelope. Wnte to Lmda 4lgazz1, Ph.D .. c/o Da1/) Pilot. P.O. Box
1560. Costa Me$.8 92626.
(
..
112 Or •
.
·cM c ouple fi r st .
... ~to haY:e s u t gecy----..
Parents guilty
of abduction$
'
that removes fat
By EVE C. LASO
~ .... c.. ......... ll---
K.arcn and Tom Stewan of Costa
Mesa W"ete the first husband and wife
team in this country to have hposuc-
llOn surgery performed to remove fat .
The Stewarts went to Dr. Michael
Elam of Newport Beach to have their
suraery two years qo. Since then they
have appeared on Merv Griffin. A/M
Los Ariaeles and Eyewitness News to
talk about it.
And Karen enJoys tallcina about it.
··1t changed my hfe for the 6ctter, I'm
much more confident."
T<.aren, 36, haaher aDaomen and
wajst done. She says she has shed
about four ancJtcs from the area and
has gone from a size 11 to a size S.
Tom had his "love handle" area
done.
support. He asked the doctor what he
collld ~<>for liis problem area ancf the
doctor wd, 'I coutd d6 yours in a half
hour, yours is a piece of cake.'
"So my husband sa1d, 'areat ru do
it too.' And we were tbe first husband
aod wife team to do it tQ1ether.''
Tom. a 42-year-old safesman said,
"I never could Jet rid of it. It really
feels areat. And 1t hasn't come back. l
would highly recommend tt to some·
one."
Karen, .S feet, 4 inches and 117
pounds. sa1d she had no problC}lls
with the suraery, and was back to her
old sclfin four to five weeks. "Tn sfx
weeks I was back to Nautilus and
wind surfina. I could see a dramatic
difference in about a month. What
was rcaJly fun was I could wear my
dauahter's clothes. And she was only
12 and a half then." J •
DEAR ANN LANDERS; How won·'
derf'ul it is to sec the phot<>lflpbs of
missin1 children on milk cartons. But l
wonder how manypeol)lerealize that few AMII
oftbese missing children were abducted II
by stranaers. Some are runaways, but I • ..
most have been snatched by a divorced LARD£1$
parent. . . . . I spent two years mterviewtnJ vic-
tims of parental kidnappinft for my book, "Children in the Crossfire. 'I was stunned to dtscov~r t~at many boys and girls
had beeo physically and sexually abused by the "loving parent who had
abducted them. . Some children were forced to dye lhetr hur and ~han1e their names. The
fortunate three out of 1 O who arc found almost always s~fTer lona·t~nn trauma.
Surprised? Read on: It is 1 O times more likely that the kidnapper wtll be a
mother ora father and oota stranger. -SALLY ABRAMS DEAR SALLY: Tllub for u eye-opener. I 11r1e uyone wlao Hti)fftt tllat
a clllld 1J1 yoar nel11tborllood may be sacb a victim to report It to tbe police at
once Of tea llaese clllldru are told, "Voa_r Motber (or Dad) died (or didn't·~.'
yoa or 11 la jaJI or oa dope) ud I wut to muea laome for yoa ID uotlaer city.
I alto ar1e uy abdacted clilld wlao may be readla& till• to d)al 0 and aay,
"I am ID rroable u d want to mate a collect loa1·dl1tuce calJ to my laome.
Please belp me." • • • "I used to work out on Nautilus
eqwpment, run one mile a night. But,
I couldn't sttm to get ad of those
problem areas. There seemed to be no
flat remedf." she said.
Karen, a native Californian, cau--
t1ons that having the surge'J done is
not a license to eat. "I m very
conscious of what I eat. I watch
everything I put in m y mouth.
Somehow sJncc the fat cells were
removed I doo't crave junk food as·
much. Evcrytime I put something in
my mouth I think what I went
through-and I don't want it to vow
back somewhere else. If I ate and ate
and ate l'<fhavc fat legs al\d anns.''
Dr. llicbael Elam (left), and Dr. Berlr.owit& mark patient
prior to aaraery to remo-.e fat from tJdCba.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read with interest the column fr9ID .
.. Dep~labama" about the high school kids who were ptnmtte~ to .
share a bedroom when the boy's parents threw him out. (The mother said she d
rather have her 16-ycar-old dau&hter sleeping at home with one guy than
making out in parked cars with Lord knows how many.) . . "Then heard from a girlfriend
who went to Dr. Elam for cosmetic
surgery. And he talked to her about fat
suctton. She came for dinner.
SURGERY REMOVES FAT-••• How do you feel about divorced women whoslecpw1~h the1rmen fncnds
when their teen-agers arc at home and can hear the bedspnngs creak and
"That night I told my husband, this
1s the answer 10 my prayers. The next
day I called and made an appoint·
ment. I went an a couple days later."
Dr. Elam said she was a perfect
candidate, with good skin tone.
"My husband went along for moral
Sometimes we ignore a
problem and hope it will
go away. We associate
hearing loss with old age,
when it usually haa
nothing to do with age.
Don't give up doing the
things you love to do. A
free, "easy hearing test
takes only a short time
and we're equipped with
the most modern testing
equipment. Call for your
appointment.
She admitted thtre was some pain.
.. But. you forget th~ pain. Actually, it
was nothing. "I'd do it all again."
!!I FAMILY HEARING AND SPEECH
M -F8-~ 786-6800 8at8·12
18124 Culver Dr. U niver sity Park Center
Corner of M~chelson & Culver, Irvine, CA 92715
From Al
only as a cosmetic operauon. but for
the control of obesity.
"The American public is indeed
fatt!r that the average European
patient. This is probably because of
the higher fat content diet in the
United States," said Elam.
He said recent findings by the
National Institute of Health (NIH)
show ttlat I 0 pounds of excess
adipose tissue, or fat, on the body is
detrimental to one's health. This
conaition. according to the report,
of mild obesity subjects a patient to
an increased risk of heart disease,
liver disease, high blood pressure,
stroke and heart attack.
Just how much fat can be re-
moved depends on the patient and
the area of the body beinJ done.
According to Domansk1s, the
number one fatty area for women is
the inner and outer upper and
lateral thighs. with the second most
fatty spot being the stomach. For
men, the "Tove handle" area is the
number one spot, with the neck
area. the second most fatty spot.~
He said a women having her
thighs done may lose about three to
four pounds of fat, or 2.000 cc's.
This translates to about two inches
of fat removed on either side of the
thigh.
Other areas of the body can be
treated. such as, the abdomen, hips,
knees, calves. ankles. upper arms
and the face. Elam was the first
American physician to do facial
50%
No money nOw. ·
off annual renewal dues.
Now you can finalJy gee the body
vou want without exerting your bud·
~et Becau~ now you can join on a
re~ular 1-vt.•ar member~hip without
pa~ mg a c<:nr fo r thirty <lay~ Plu~
you'll save 50" 11 on annual dues when
its time to renew you r membership.
We'll hapc vou up with everycliing.
From the latest equipment co swim·
ming. From Lifecydest co joggin.&-
Jusc call or come bv any I Iolidav pa Health Club for a free guest .
tour today.
Offer available at parti cipating loca-
tion~ Not all fucilitieo:; at aU location~
r
~Holiday Spa Health Club
for M:en and Women
ANAHEIM ~10 <;o M.1.11noh1, l block So of Lincoln, (714) 952·3101
CERRITOSILAK EWOOD 11881 Otl Amo Blvd at PaonC'er. 3 block• Ease of '10~ frttway. (213) 924-1514
COSTA MESA 2300 Harbor Blvd., (Sthand Thrifty Orua). (714) S49·l368
MISSION VIEJO 14401 Alim Pkwy•« San Dieao frttWi, (714) n0-0 22
OR.ANG2 C>22ca\t Katella AvC'. Wt\! of Tustin Aff., (714 6l9·2'441
WESTMINSTeR (17'7 Wt\IMIOJltr A'tl tl Goldtn Wt>st 714) 894·.3W
Ow Mm1un VtC'jo Clul>" onl lC> minutes from San CIC'mtn1c
liposuction.
A frequent question is whether
the fat wdl vow back. The answer is
no, according to Domanslcis. He
said the deposits are gone forever.
"They don't regenerate. Fat cells
can grow larger or smaner, if a
patient gains a lot of weight, or loses
a lot of weight, but they can't grow
back."
There are some drawbacks. The
complication rate for the procedure
is 2 percent -loWCT than most
surgical procedures. But problems
such as infce.tion, skin waves, blood
clots and lung problems can exist, as
with any 'Surgery. the doctors said.
Domanskis said the waviness rate
may be higher than 2 percent.
Both doctors claim they see a lot
of stars and models. but a majority
of their patients are "plain old
housewives." Phyllis Diller had her
latest face lift done by Elam and
photos of the .comedienne fill the
walls of his posh office.
The cost of the surgery varies
from doctor to doctor. ranging from
about $1 ,200 for isolated areas to
$7,000 for total body procedures.
The American Society of
Liposuction Surgery does provide a
list of .competent surgeons. lnfor·
mation may be obtained by writing
to the society at 222 City Line Drive,
Philadelphia, Pa., or by calling the
American Board of Cosmetic Sur-
gery. at 1-800-824-3042, in Cali-
fornia.
everything that is said? . I hope you'll print m y letter because there's a lot of tt going on in -
TORRANCE
DEAR T .: Same u1wer. It'• terrible -des tractive ud aacl. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I moved from my hometown a year ago but I
still keep in touch with family and friends.
My best friend(l'llcall her Brenda) writes at lcasl two or three letters~
month. She was always very pretty and had a great figure. Yesterday 1 received
a letter from Mom. She enclosed a newspaper picture of a sm~l group of my
pals at a social event. I was amazed to sec what Brenda looks hke. S.he has
gained at least 30 pounds. I'd think she was pregnant but I know this cannot be
true. . ... k. I will be going home ina month and I need to know 1fl should s.ay an,uung
to Brenda about her weight.1 am sicl'. about the way she has let herself go and
don't knowhow to deal with it.-TONOUE-TIED IN N.Y.
DEAR T.T.:Tbecamenasaallyadds lO pouds.Alsotlaerelt tile
po11lblllty that tbe photo wu &Ikea at u odd angle ud Breada 1ot tbe wont
of It. I
If, however, 1be lla1 ladeed put ou a sreat deal of welpt, abe l1 surely
aware of It u d aced not be remladed. Be klad u d say not\iug.
WALK IN THE SUN •.•
From Bl
We wrote-<i,Ur names on the little
white cranes and at the young girl's
bidding, we walked to the monument
where we placed them -one by one
-amona thousands of others put
there by people from all over the
world ...
In 1971. the warheads were so
many times larger and more powerful
than the one that leveled the sprawl-
ing city of Hiroshima. The bombs
today arc more destructive sllll ...
A "LOSS LEADER" Yob read 1t
here first. Yes, the Ritz-Carlton Hotel
IS staning a "FA TTY FARM" re-
portedly fancier than the famous La
Costa or the Golden Door. But it's
possible that a participant in the
program could part with more pen-
ni~ than pounds.
The cost for a four-day stay.
including a hotel room w1th meals,
y~ on the beach, exercise clothing
(w1th a Ritz-Carlton logo), massage
and every other pampenng im-
aginable, is (arc you ready for this?)
S 1,200. Assuming a weight loss of a
pound a day, that's a mere $300 a
pound ... (Herc's a hint: If you arc a
hotel guest, you may use the hot~l
Fitness Center for SI 0 a dav).
FINAl-CLE·ARA.NCE
-.S#m111ee '7MltitHtd
Select '.1alt '.1a.1,itJJ1.1
• Jones New York • Joanie Cher • J.G. Hook
• Berry Brlcken • Nlpon Boutique --new Hero • Um1 Oresaes -.-MlOOYL.ondon
NOTRbPLAC~ Sizes 2-12
~-Friday 10 10 4
Satu<Oay by Appoln-t
170 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Ste. 21 (upstairs above Noack Trophy) 548-3035
• . 1:L/ fl)-fA.:. . •
> Discover the BEST in
Educa tio n At the Coast Community Colleges
Orange Coast
College
Coastline Community
College
Golden West
College.
The Coast Colleges Offer Convenience, Affordability, Diversity, and QUALITY I
WCShmo1STfl!
-You Get the BEST in Transfer ...
Programs, Job Training and
Career Advancement
Regiatration i• Underway Now
Fall Claaaes Begin
AUGUST 19
Call Today For
Registration Information:
Oranse Coaet (114) 432-5772
C oaatline (114) 5"-7Afl
G olde• W eet (114) 8f5·8306
P.5.--·lf you can't begin in August, "late-starting" classes
·will get underway in September and October.
·Albee's 'Garden' blooms
in sdetti1ng Irv1De <lrama
By CURI CRAWFORO.· Oellr,,.... c ... ...,....
The Irvine Commumty Theater
has produced a real winner 1n it~
current productton of "Everything 1n
the Garden."
First mounted nationally 1n I 967,
Edward Albee's potent two-act drama
explores timeless themes that relate
equall~ "'ell to hfe m the E1ghties as
they did 10 hfe in the Sixties. Jn fact,
this play -unlike the phtywright's
more expenmental or absurdist
works -appears to have been based
on a real-life ept1ode in American
suburbia.
In the early Sixties, the subu(ban
town of Mineola, NY., made na.
t1onal headlines when its pohce
discovered that a local prosutut1on
nng WJI!. composed of housewives
whose motives were to keep up their
fam1hes' i.tandards of living.
A few }ears later, Albee's .. Garden"
opened on Broadway and introduced
P • .-h .. rrl """ lenny. a couple who
.;
' TURN TABLE TIPS
--
nl!versccm to have enoua}l money to
..keep up with the Joneses" in their
soc1al set. If anything shahtly dates
the play, 11 is Richard's absolute,
adamanc insistence that Jenny may
not work in order to supplement their
income.
Jenny acccpcs Richard's dictum
until one day when she is paid a v1s1t
by Mrs. Toothe, a very Enghsb, very
rich madam who invited Jenny to
1010 her group of local housewives
who make very good money for pan-
11me work.
After that, the die ts c.ast for thr rest·
of the drama. which proceeds to
explore to what extent avarice becom-
es the root of all evil.
With strong direction provided by
ICT managmg director Tom Titus
(who also staged the theater's 1973
production), his well-blended cast of
performers gauge the tone of the play
wub point-blank accul'1lcy as they
deliver Albee's spectrum of feclin1t.
nan11n1 rrom satirical humor in tnc
play's hghter moment to help-
lcs nes and horror later.
The performances of Lenore
St.Jcme and Patllck McGinnis as
Jenny and Richard are superb.
Stjeme gives us the complex per·
sonalily of the wife who would never
have cheated on her hu band except
for the mouvat1on of money Yet
Stjeme's portrayal -of Jenny very
convincingly shows that she 1s
capable of changing from prim house-
wife to paid prostitute.
Only 1n the scene where her
husband is yelling vicious ep1thcts'9t
her does Stieme's Jenny seem a little
too undisturbed and matter-of-fact.
But later. during the tragedy of the
final sccoe. her emouonal rcactlons are right on target.
Tears for Fears high
on single, LP charts
McGinnis delivers a very natural.
likeable Richard who moves from
easygoing to devastated and dis-
traught in his powerful. emouonally
moving scene at the end of Act I.
Later, when his grief turns 10 dis·
1llusionment. wrath and· finally ac-
ceptance. McGinnis ponrays, with
forceful realism. the mixed, churning
emotions of a father-husband caught
in events that have careened out of
control.
Mary &nton, who made her stage
debut 'as Cynthia tn ICTs 197 3
production of "Garden," is excellent
as the e!'ioyably evil Mrs. Toothe.
&nton 1s totall y consistent m her
upper~nrst Enahsh accent and man-By the Assoclated Pre11
The lollowing are Billboard's hot record
h11s BS' they appear 1n next week's •!lsue of
Billboard ma~rne.
H-OT SINGLES
I .. Shout" Tears for Fea~ (Mercul)} 2 "[\l'ryume You Go Awa)'' Paul
\ oung (( olumb1a)
3 "If You Love Somebody Set fhem
Free" Sung (A&M)
4 .. Never Surrender" \orey Hart (EMI·
.\menca)
5."The Power ol Lo,e" Hue\ uw1s &
The News (Chrysa las)
6 "Wh'o\ Holding Donna No"·· De·
Barge (Gordy)
7 "Glory Days" Bruce Spnngstcen (Col·
umb1a)
8 "Frtt'W'a)' of Lo,c-.\rctha Franklin
( A,nsta)
9 ··Gel• It On" The Power Station
(Capitol)
10 "You <il\C (iood Lo,e" Wh11ney
Houston (Ari.Stal
11 "St Elmo·!> Fire" John Parr (Atlan·
llC)
12."Summer of '69" Bryan Adams
IA&Mf
13 "People >\re People.: .. Depeche Mode
1S1rel . l 14 "We Don·t Need .\nother llero"
Tina Turner !Capitol)
15."'What About Love"" Hean
IC ap11ol)
16 ··You Spin~ Me Round.. Dead or
.\llH (Epic:)
·17 "c;cnumcntal Street" N11,hl Ranger
(Camel-MC A)
18:· R<Xk Me Tonight" Freddie Jackson
(Cap11oll
19 "A V1rw 10 a "-111" Duran Duran
((ap11011 20 .. \ ou·rc Onh Human .. 8111)' Joel
(C olumb1a)
-TOP1.P1
I "Reckless" Bryan Adams {.\&Ml
2."Songs from the Big (hair'' Teaf'i for
Fear~ (Mercury)
J."No Jacket Required" Phil <. olhns
t .\1lan11c)
4 "Thr Dream of the Blue Turtles"
S11ng(.\&MI
5 "Born in the l '> .\" Bruce pnng·
~teen (('olumb1a)
6."The Power '>talion" The Powrr
Station IC:~p1tol)
7 "Thea1er of Pain" MotlC'y (rue (Elec-
1ra)
8.''Around the World 1n a Day" Pnncc
& The Re"oluuon (Pa1~ley Park)
9."ln1.as1on of Your Pnvacy·· Ran
(Atlan11c)
10."Brothers In Arms" Dire Straits
(Wamer Bros.)
11 "7 Wishes" N1&h1 Ranger (('amel·
MCA)
ll."Wh1tnry Houston" Wh11ney Hous·
ton (Arista) t 1."Be Yourself T on1ght" Eurythmics
(RCA)
14 "Greatest Hits Vol I & II" Bill" Joel
!Columbia)
15."likr a V1!'1in" Madonna (Sire)
16.''Make II Big" Wham (Columbia)
17 "Dream lnloAcuon" Howard Jones
(Eleklra)
18 ···Beverly Hills Cop· Soundlrack"
(MC.\) I 9."Wor1d W ide Live-ScorJ)1ons
(Mercury)
20."Llllle Creatures" Talking Heads
(S1rc)
THIS VfAA. lHE FUNNIEST FNllA.Y
IN AA1ERICA...INVADES EUROf'EI
-·· in.Wt ........
Ill lllOlll1 •
Ml-4ttl ..., ...
OIWAMIS CIOIA
$iM.)112 ...,, ..
~IMM
COUl PUlA
Mf.1711
....
°"'-~ ·Ml-Im
u.u ., .... ~
<ZUl '9l-1Ql
u ... r.ant CAl'lWU
SlJ.llll
u.. ...
OMllS SOUTll
COASl UGlllM
•'1·111l -CRIClill
u..lW
aTmt •1w1• WS.OACI "'8•TJI ,,t _ •••l·JllJ
fmTlll QUIT
~rOUlftUI --llf ·••
"THE BEST Dlsrml'
MOVIB IN YEARS:
t
,..
WILl ~~-Tl1'11UO<~ ..... ---.. -...-~---· -on n.c-o1..,..._1>tu.on>AU:MNlOI -otW'Wl'~ p(). ______ ., ,_~ ....
·----·---~ •• t .. a ...
__,,.,,.,. ____ .. ..,._ ___ _
....... ,,,_ .......
ooow.o llUDI. a. -~ .. ~fiiZ§J(!_,.,...._
A-ClillliMJ.~ ~·~·
NOW PLAYING
MISSION ltlE.lO. W£.Sl MtHSJER
Edwalds ViejO Twin Edwi1105
COSTA MESA IAVINE
ECIWards TOW" Cen1e1 eo-os UO•vei sity
ORANGE t &»-5990 Clntmii Wesl 891·3935 C•neooint ORANGE ~
63' 25~ ~ \ Sl40 um Ot ~e-11> 6.19 81 ~ 7SJ·41&4 854-8811
( 1 8AEA BUENA PARK c .f, MMVl BtN Pim UA MovlH
__,..
El TORO t Edwaids El Toro I «:All T14EATllES FOii SHOWTiltlES I ·. \
I ~ m5339 952-4993 Sil 9SOO •
-------~ Disneylond.------
~~a:m *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* ... wm.i-....:~
BAAGAlf4 MATINEES I FIRST 2 Pwformencas Mon•v
Tiwu S.m•v (Except Holi•vs a Spec. E•ttmtnts)
LAKEWOOD
(enter
.P1m11>1 nn1r-1tt a.~·•
IACK TO
11tl "'1VU CNt .. ...., ... .......... , ..
tMI II.ACK
CAULDllON"' .. ,......., ...
1M1M1we .... M1 1M1
THI OOONIU CNt ........ ,_
IXPlOttftl .... ......
PLITCMCNt , .. _ ...
11t1 MUKJAIT c1u• ... ....... " ..
LAKEWO 0
lr""'' So\Jth
!IU!IM 1!!1/f-"Y •.Oii ""''
Lt. ntl IXTaA.
,:=~=-
MAD MAX UYOND
ntUHDIW>MI .... .. ........ ,... ... u
PRIOHJ NIGHT 111 .. ...., ... ............... ,, ...
LA MIRADA
'. '·. ..
lllNM """' ,...,,.. Pot.LOW THAT lllDiet lMIMI ........ , ..
HAL GINIUS (f'G)
ltlS, 3:45, 6115, 1:4$,
11105
PIUOHT NtOHf 111 .. ..., ...
Ii.II lll» ........... 11 ...
COC00Nc-11t ,....,., ...
1Me .. Wl .. I ...
GATEWAY
IUllOnAN VACAftON
i-111 . 1• a.u ••• 1.u ,.,..
ST. ILMO'I PIUt11 ·---'"' NIAKJAIT ciua 1111 --·-
TMI IMlaALD POUIT 191 --,AU RIDIR ftll .............
IACK TO
TMI PUTUU CNt .. ...., ... ,_ ........... ,_
WllRD ICllNCI '"°'•• ......,-, ......... u ....
*PACIFIC DRIVE· IN THEATRES•
* CINE·fl SOUND! At dMM sytn_.. ••t ••11• ltirlCt 10 Ytltf AM w * rMio. If no rUio witlt ecc.ory polition, llfil!I yovr own AM por1111ft.
N '" ... ,. Dutil C....._.UM.r 12 ALWAYS FREE
ANAHEIM '''::S-. "*.''l L . ~ ... , ..
"90IOCOL.,.
PllOHT Melf'I • ._..
lMINIW"*•
....... Im' ... .... ,, .......... ,, .. , ....... .
,....__ C• 1114~1M UM
•llONT ....., ... -THI NIW .......
HAL OINIUI (f'O)
P\UI
SU'llOlll <f'O>
PAU RIOIA 111 -ltlVllADO ......
WlllO ICllNCI .,.. • .,. -DUHi ....
.
Patrick McGinnla Crtcht) lnternapta a
clinch between Lenore Sijerne and ltd
Reder ln .. h~ lD tile Garden•' at
the tntne Com.ma.lilly Theater.
ners, a deliciously ironic ponrayal of
a woman who is. superficiall y, the
epitome of proper behavior
Ed Reder d4:ltvers a strong per·
formance in the demanding role of
Jae~. who funcuons as a character
within the play -and also as the·
narrator. Reder's Jack is an effective
characterizanon o~ the idle nch
pla>bo> who already knows that
money can't make his hfe complete.
scnous role. From his well-paced
initial entrance to his panic1pauon in
the adults' party dialogue towards the
end. young Tu us ts naturally effective
as. often. the only voice of reason
Cheryl Brose's props, Jim &It's
sound and hghung and Tanya
Fatum's stage management all con-
tnbutc to an auract1ve. smoothly
presented prodUClJOD
"Everything in the Garden" oon·
tinues at the Irvine Community
Theater in the aud1tonum of Turtle
Rocle Community Parle (Sunnyh1ll
Road at TunJc Rock Drive) fndays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Aug.
24. with a Sunday maunec at 2 p.m.
Aug. 18. Call 857-5496 for ticket
information
Tim Titus. last· seen on the ICT
stage as the son 1n ·'Cnt1c's Choice,"
is back again as the son, but in a more
The supponing cast, three status-
hungry couples (played by Barbara
Bruderlin, Chris Rosander. Lisa
Locke. Lee Prickett, Elizabeth
Bnndley and Steve Leffier Hansen).
give fine ponrayalsas membcnofthe
local country club who like to play
··ncher than thou" toward the local
tradespeople and minonttes. ----------------------------------~
-All SEATS 82.00 AT:
IESI (DllLY}-WESTllOOI (IAILY}-WOOllllllE (TIES. I WEI.)
~110 (WO.)-lllYEllITT (WEI. I TlllS.)
FOIOAll VALLEY (WEI. I Tllll)-llmllTll (TIES. I WEI.)
llTIOllL UIPOOl'S EllOPUI YlCITIOi WILL IE FILL PllCI
....... ~
"UCI 11 TIE film''
111.11. .......... 1•11 .....
........ .,..
IUUlllEUllV" .... 111 ·111a, 1111, .,., .... ...
edwards LIDO 673·8350
NEWPORT Sc>D A' ,1QO L DO
''IT. BSI fW" 111 ... ,_ ... ,_
ldl IJ.M •1~111121 ~-----GT/9IUI1'L NI ____ ..,
edward s TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184
BR1STOL&A"''Ll"' .l,l<Q:,<.H•(:Ol,IS -1.lt.,'P:.ll.l
• ' ' • f ., , , '•' ' • • IPWIL.m
"lllftUll"
IPC-11) 1Mt, "11. • " , ... ,.ti 11••,_...,.,_
"Tlf ... , ..... .
11111,NI. .... ....
'111,Ml(N)
edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546-271 t
BR1S'Ol & Sc "'~' J"Ef. :c 5'A1,1[$A
J ,-.-. ,,,,,,. ',.···1·.······i
111'\ ......
''f I Em
f ICATS'
1 ..... , ....
.... 11111 (Noll)
11•11-n~•
tpl-1111 ..... ..........
......, ____ _.,__ ... TL la_.._ ____ ,
edwards BRISTOL 540-7444
BRISTOL A' ... ACAR'HU~ ~Al\t TA &l\tA
"11811 'f.T. (N )
saacl" (pt..11,•2•11"' ,.. ,..., "'' 1N1. Mt. w .. .,. Ullat" (Pl)
...... 1... ltJoll, .... 11!1
edwaros HARBOR TWIN 6Jt ·3501
HARSORB01 dVAllOA' lo c~O"' COST A ... [~
• "RftUll" "'° 111 1111.•1 .. ltll,MI
.....
ICBC(" '""111
. { ,,,., we. ,..,. ...... ,1 ..... .. ,,,... .......... ( .. )
''fflmlf mlr' (II)
1 .......... .... ''"
ed waras '4E SA 646·5025
"'l"'PcR'!I,, .!.A'", A " ,.& ... f'>A ..... .........
NI
eawards UNIVERS 1T '( 854-88, 1
:a1.1Pv5:JR ... e.:· ,· "" • -·--1
IJ.111'L.. .....
"fllCIT ..-r· (I) .a., --·· ft.111 IMI, Ml. ... ,_, 111.a. NI, ..
,.., .... 11• PM ·we.we...-
"Plll_.-111
t:i41, .... .._m_r ........
''f.T." (N )
wt.l• ' Cl I Ill" ftL
1:11,.a ..
.. "..__.. ·1 rrm
JICllS" .. ~ .... -llll, 1tlll (N-11)
eawaras SAODLEBA CK 581 ·5880
£, · _,R-,, ROAO A ' wQCic.~1E,: " · -
"f9ll _.,..(I )
12!al.WI. ... , ........... ...... ,, ...... .
INl, ... 1111 "TIE EJBl.f .... 1.-. 1111. , ... (pt.1J) .. .,...~
''fmlfUI HCITS'
1 .........
•II. INl(pt.11)
"f.T. TIE
EllUlW'lllUl H (Pll
11111,.,,., ... l iJI, .. ..... am---... ,..,., ,,....,.. ..
....... 1 ..
edward s EL TORO 58' ·9500
( • • .~.. •. ' A • : •..... E_ A II ·• • • •
IJll., ..... 11• .. *-. ,.., .. .... llU..." f'N-11J' l lt •I YMm lalT S.-
...._ m -r · 111-. .. , ......... , .. ,... ... ... .... ,... ________ ...,.
....... "Tlf ..... .._
FWsr' <•l c.u~ .. ,, c~~INI
hit, Ml, 'It. 11111, 1111, ••
.... •11.,... ... Ill ............
edwards VIEJO TWll'; 830-6990
~A"' DtEu•:J J"'' · . A PAZ & .'11l•SA,., • .l I.I · ~.,
"t.T.'' lNJ _"",. ......
"TIE I I w I " IPIJ ICHCI" ft.111 ...... .. .......
edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 495·6220
S :J <\Ii• • ~ !IC"'"' VALLE• 8£'WEEI\ ROB"'~-.. ~ ' YA
U .M -IMOWI N. , ...
"UCI T1
mm''IPIJ INI, Ml, ..
... ltiJt
'1'&Lm
l'llf .... {I } , . ._ ..
~C">
edwa rds SOUTH CO AST LAGL,~:. 497 1 71,
:,QUI" C OA:-"·11> • .l' Blll•AOVI A• • •,. · • .
f
· 1
I
, .,.
-
84 or-. Coeet.OAILY PILOT/WednMday, Auguet T, 1815
.
Jon Voightbac.kona roll rmM
-t:OO-18H1Mltc:ea
MJUf1' IUNMTM8 ·.wltlJ .tbree straight fl.le.ks · RL~ ~ ... IQUADf'ON
nNn Cl1W#tr
ITMU~JAZ'l '
• MOV'll
By 108 THOMAS .......... ,..... .
LOS ANOELES -After a rocky
year a~lJrom mms, 05car Wlnncr
Jon VoiJht has returned to actina
with two succc sive movies and
another comina.
Voit.ht recentJy Bloom .. in Tucson . ...;.:.::.:;.;..:::;::;..,...:;.;;;;;:.:.;,
Anz. It's 1 project
that came out of
Robert Redford's
Sundance In-
stitute, and Voiaht.
JoBelh Williams
aod Ellen Sarkin
worked "for no
money" bcc-.i.a e
they believed in
the project. Jon 'Volpt
Now Voight 1s engaged in a far
different film. "Runlfway Train,"
based on an Ak1ra Kurosawa script. 1s
being directed by the Russian Andrei
Koncttalovgky for the Israeli
productrs. M~nahem Golan and
Yorum Olobus.
The cast 1nclucks Vo1a.ht, Eric
Roberts. Rebecca DeMornay,
Wallace Shawn and ~K~nneth
McMillan The plot has Voiaht and
Roberts makinJ 1 d.anna escape from
a northwest pnson. The> find them-
selves on a train hurthna out of
control. with the authont1es tn
pursuit.
After locations 1n Montana and
Alaska. "Runawa)' Train" 1s filming
close shots of the railroad race an
Hollywood's Pan Pacif1~
Auduorium, of all places. That's the
lona-desened art-de<:o palace that
once housed auto shows and hockey
m._tches. Now 11 is used by film
companies while awaiting promised
restoration.
Vo11ht, looking rugged with a Fu
Manchu mustache and wind-bum
'"WEIRD SCIENCE' m A RJNNY AND
EN I EAtAINING MOVIE ...
makeup, chmbed down from the
cnainc cab dunna a break in fllmtn~
His last film was "Table for Five, •
produced by his own company 1w-0
years qo.
"It did not do ~at business," the
actor said, ''thoulf\ I'm not sore wby.
But 1t has performed well in video
rentals and on pay television."
"Table for Five" paralleled
Vo1jht's own situation as a clivo~d
father tryina to maintain a . rela-
uonsh1p w1th his children. Voight has
devoted much time to the children of
his second marriage, Jamie, 11, and
Angie, 9. At umes, his actihg career
had to come second.
. ~oi&ht spent last year aettina hi s own lire in order.
"I don't remember how long it was,
bul I decided 10 quit workin.a for a
whjle and do so(lle hard work on
myself," he said. "J needed to get
some things done in the psychofojjcaJ
area. work through some areas of my
life that needed help.
IUQ( .....
---~ NIW UTIRACV: AH
TOCOWUTIM
ICllNIWl-•NlWS ~THOTUNI * t •; "EcflOll Of A Summer'' ( 1979)
Ridllrd Hime, JodM FOiier .®MOYIE * t "Sevwt Megnfficent Glldtaton"
(19831.LOU F•rlgno, SybH Denning,
(l)MOYE
• • '" "Sktrtt ~" ( 1852) Etther WllMtml, VIVlltl Blaine -tao-
IHICNEWI
HAm DAVI AGAIN
ONlDAYAT A TM MACHa l WWR
NEWIHOtJR Ir.aw 8WHm OF FORTUNE ID IN 'M LANO OF THE 8lllf
GVIDEOZOO
-7:00-
8088NEW9
..
·Tve dealt with psyctuatrists ~---------------------------t before. and I've always found the
-Roger lbert, 11AT THI MOVID" I (fl EHTERTAINMENT TOMGHT
HAPPV DAVI AGAIN
AICNEWIQ I~
Lauren Tewee •tan u a •mall-town beaut-
lclan with two children (Leaf Phoen~ and
CluUta Denton) In •• Anythlna for Lo•e .. •
tontaht at 9 :30 on N'BC. Channel 4.
.....
........ "m ~
MllA'Allll "1oflC 1 Mflf PW'
°""''"1214070
llU(llA rAM
UA~ 152..,
•COSTA ... u .. -h!All S40 74'14 -
A lNVWAL PIClUR£ ·--~-.....oi···· .. -....
•llMlll I.A lillMllil l>K!llt I -~ E-~ ~run.1111 ar...i...ano
_. .. ,, ....... •WiWIM
•LAllllM £ow-V•I-~0-..Wlll A>IC f MhoOtl 5'luM1 83o.e8IO •1 ...
•1<133 •OMlll~&l41$$J
• "'DiE"fTl:D '"
WORLD'S
BIGGEST
POOL PARTY
Fridays
From 5:00 PM cill sundown, and will resume
each Frid~y chrough August 30, 1985.
• Free Hors d'oeuvres •Cash Bar
• Live Entertainment
expenencc helpful. There are all sorts
of techniques, and I used one that
worked for me. I was helped as a
hull\An being. and I think it has
helped my work, too. I think I'm a
more di~iphned person now. I'm
certainly mo~ cheerful."
"Runaway Tram" has had a
cuAous journey to the screen.
Kurosawa. the highly acclaimed
Japanese director of "The Seven
Samurai" and other classics, wrote
the scnpt several years ago but was
never able to finance the film.
Through his American friend,
Francis Coppola. Kurosawa was in-
troduced to Konchalovsky, whose
''Sibcnad·· epic had impressed film-
makers in the Western world. The
Russian had let\ the Soviet Union to
make films in the United States, the
first be!ng "Mana's Lover."
Kurosawa and Kon chalovsky con-
cluded that the allegoricaJ "Runaway
Train" needed rewntingasan Amen-
can film . Three rewrites later. the
script was ready.
e WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I IUIN88 AEPORT
p .M. MAGAZIHE ...
IEMNO'f GD PMJ8E 'M lOAO
(a>MCME ,
t t •;, "Sixteen Candia" ( 1984) Mol-& ~·Anthony Mk:hlel Hflll
t t t "The Man Who Loved Wom-
en" ( 1977) Charles Denner, LISlle
Caton
.... 1:ao-
• 2 OH THE TOWN "G 8 FAMILY FEUD I THAT'8 INCAEDl8lE
EYE OH LA. ew•A•t•H
elfMAWJY
• WILD, WILD WOAl.D OF ~ I~ DEGO AT LAAQE 1:1'8COURT
"That Night With Yoo" ( 1945) Fr111-
chot Tone
®MOYIE t t t "The Muppets T Ike Mlllhlt·
tan" ( 1984) Voices of Jim Henson,
Frw oi
-l'00-
1 ()) STm OOU»t MAN
~AYTOHEAVEN
ttt\4 "Tiit Hluntlng" (1"3) RJctl..
ard Johnlon, Julie Harris. • 0 AOaC 'N' AOU.~
ACT10N
GJOKa&WllD
•NEWS e MONTMUX GOlDEN A08i l'OP fUTIYAL • 8llTH80NIAH WON.I> I~~
(C)MOYIE
ttt "HOC)ICO(ctl'' (1980) Wiit•
Mtllhtu, Glenda Jlickson.
(I) WEIN> ALY AHl<OVIC: M
COUPLEATAL
-UO-~ ~AC DOUQH
• P .M. MAGAZINE
-toO-(
8 Cll MOYIE
tt "The Crldte WiM Fall" (1983) Lauren Hutton, Ben Murphy,
G 8 FACTI OI UFI
lUJUWf THMTHS
f"1t Two Mltl-lllow1ft1S * ONLY S2.71 Ullttu Notti DRIVE -INS m~C.:
•RAL eaeeus (NJ SHOWS AT t 1H 31°'0 1 :41 7110 .. t ill
llAlll90Plrll~ fWt a Ml AT 1140 J 140 l 14b 7 140 .. 1140
...._Tao .... 1111("8) SHOWS AT U 14I 3:00 l 1tl 7 :30 .. 1141
n•Kr-NT'JRI IHOWI AT 1111 :ti 1 131 7141 .. 1 :11
STAi)IUm ~
m 111a11511111t "'" s11••vm S
IUIAL 8 ... IUS tllill) "u• Co·Hlt Sup•rtlrlJ."G)
POU.OW THAT ••D (8) The Nt¥or lntllnt Story (N)
l!C
I NC)N.llCTK)N TELEVISION
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
PRAISE THE LOAD I~"
t t '" "The Stone Boy" ( 1984) Rob·
"1 Ouvllt, Jeson Presson
MOYIE
t t t,; "Streets Of Fife" ( 1984) Ml·
chMI Pare, Olano Lane .
(Z)MOVIE
t t ·~ "The A<lvtnturea Of Buclcaroo
Blnui Act06S Tho 8th Dlmonllon'
( 1984) Peter Weller, John UthgoW
-t.ao-~ LANYTHIHO ~LOVE
ttt "13 Aue Mldelelno" (1~)
JllMI cagn.y, Annlboltt.
CHl NOT ~Yl"HE HEWS
-10:00-• QI ST. EL8EWH£AE
I~~ ·~ATPOP8
CISTRlll TtO 8' ~AIU'lfll. 1111.0I ".,..,Ill~ ...... "'O.fC'Cllirl""-""' ·------..... -~
t t '-' "Sltlllt Of Fn" ( 1"4) .,... ... ,.,.. Dtlnt LIM.
MOW
H ~ "~ Of Thi Nord•"
(1984) RoOtrt Cattldlnt, Anthony
Edwwdt --•11r--GD MUOIOUI~ -10:ao-.
I INDEPENDENT NEWS GOODNEWS
-11:t»-
• • Cll 08NlW8 TAXI
ll1AME ~ IUNl<Sfl P\AC(
IAIMY~
TMEIOUNDIA
CAL.UNO Dlt MffT AKER .a.l.Sf8 COURT
MOYIE
• "I Uk• To Watcn" (19831 Don
Hlt1~11e Monti ~ .. -, .... , ...........
t F:':uors" (1983) Jamie L~ ~~:. Jarnt1 Keach
-11:SO-
G Cll MOVIE t • t "Ticket To Heaven" (1981)
Nick MlllCUSO, Saul Rublnek.
1 e~r~ l·~:-
LATBIBHT AMERICA
PRAJ8E THE LOAD · .(!.
PAUL RYAN
AOONEY DAHOEAFE.D HOeTS 'M YOUNG COME.Dlt.NS 8P£CtAL
-11:40-
(t)MOVIE
t #"The HOiiywood Knights" ( 19801
Roben Wuhl, Tony Danu
-1~
• EYE OH H0t+ YWOOO
CJ) INDEPENOENT NEWS 0 MORE REAL PEOPl£
G700CUll
-12:30-D 8 LATE NIGHT wrTH DAVID
LE1TEAMAH 8 TWlJOHT ZONE
8TMEMHO D DAVE DEL DOTTO 8HOW
CJ) MOVIE
t * t "Flight Of Tiit Pnotnlx" (Plft
2 of 2) ( 1~1 James Stewart Poter
Finch. at MOVIE t t t "Three Godlathel'a" (1949)
John Wayne, W11d Bond
. ' cenTURY cmeoome tJ IJ4.ZHJ/Cll1tm111 llM•AIMf
WalRDSC:tDICS
(1118-1• "u• Oun1 ('°·U) IOW IHOWllll
•
NENftJ~~)r.~l!!!!; l Ii
~)() 'ewpon Center Dme, Sewpori Beach. CA 92660 • 71416411-4000
wmao.caaec:a (N-UI IHOWI AT 11H J 1401111 1 101 .. 10111
llAD llAJl • ..,_. n. • ••• llNHll AT t :OI J :20 l :JI 7110
Ii 10 11.o/ln 70 MM
~: .. w.~10 J 1JO 1:1011).0 ~ tO:JO
THE STORY OF A REBEL AND HIS BIKE.
PEE·WEE HERMAN ,,,
/'1E :. Wfl:t t•G ADVl~TUll
~ , ..... llU YACAT109il ('19-1., 1 1i'O J 1_4I I 110 tO:OI INIAK 1t 1100
a&.VSRAD0 .... 1a
t 1 :JO 2 111 l :DO 7 141 Ii 1 0 1 JO. In 70MM
llllAD MAX re T••• •••• 1a lhml:lo ~Int tood
"'" 2 (It)
Walt Dl1n1y'1· 11&.ACll CAUU>aOfl ,..,
a1t1y (N
PL.rfCHlN)' "u• Co· .. lt aever1y Hiiis Cop (It)
... iJt.1770
· SUDUll 111-11
lllU tl0-4021
UAllMS 4
-Plll t52 ... H3
UA MOWlll I
eerra mu 540.osu
UA SOUTH COAST
MEET
CHRIS KNIGHT,
THE EINSTEIN
OFTHE80's.
He can turn
the simple into
the simply amazing,
and now he turns
revenge into
high comedy.
REAL
L{B:NIUS
When he If/a m•d,
he doesn't get even ..•
he gets creatlve.
"" ASPEl\,I rtL \1 SO( If n ROBERT SHArlRO r>"1!1111fl1•11 r>£E WEE HE.R"v11\~ Ill PEE·\.\ EE s BIG AO\. (lllTURE.
11,.sllm••l(I ELIZ.ABETH Do\ll'v · \11\RK HOLTO'll • OW1o[ So\Ll"-GER · IUDDO\I['\ 11111s•1 ''""WW'i'l'V DA""'' E.Lf\IA"
d1rr<lor 1'1/ pl1C1toqrai>lru Vt( TOR I KE.Ml>ER,A '> C 1'\cYtrl111' 1"111it111•1 \'-ILLIAM £ McEUEN
wr1rtr11 l>t1 PHIL HART\11\'\ (. 111\UL REUBE~S t \.11(HAE.L \.ARHOL
prodtl(t'fl btt ROBERT SHAPIRO 1111rl RICHARD <..II BE RT \BR o\ \ISO" 1fo1"tlt'1I l't1 Tl\.1 BURTO"
. CI)(IQ.9t'~J '~ I.I WAll"'Ell 8110t ft • ~·hi~ " '~ •t .. M f•'I ... .. ......,........... \JY t ., •••• j ... 1•· .......... ,,.,... ., ------
OUTI IEIA 751·4114 mwuos TOWN COOER
OUlll 634-2553 c..,.
BltlSTOl AT ANTON & PARK CENTER CHAPMAN & S.A. FWY
REGULAR ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 9TH
MU,. corr a Ml.IA a TOflO
UA Mo¥4tt UA ClnetnM C...
IU41 640<0l5l4 SM~
COITA MllA EOwarda ..... Me-sm.5 111 .0
~
.......... 5J0.4.401
EDWMDS WUTllOOll
•NI 55l·OIS5
EDWMDS WOOlaal
Ullll II.LI 711·H11
EDWMDS SO CAL
I.MUM HI.LS MAU
-134-2553
SY\fl cm CBfT9
UIYI n ..-S 523.1310
LAmADADI· ..
WUIWTD • MUDS CllJllA ET ltl-ltlS
\
~··-----
FVNKY WINKERBEAN
1 snu.. ~l'f Gi£'1' ~YAC.e.~ =ii'r
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
-ntkr'!> ~ t 601'
R>ft ~BEING
6PECtFtlJ
BIG GEORGE
_. r e
.,_
\._, '· ... ... ·-'• ... ...... .. ..
e ' • f . •
I
J
i
~ ~
"~
I\\
"You enjoy them even more when you realize •1 hear aupennarketa are having a heck of a
this childhood mini-series wo~'t time keeping track of tho•• thlnga." BLOOM COUNTY • be rerun ."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
• .-by Hank Ketcham
Ii&~~
I
16N~E MIM .. 6VT n.115 15
A POSLIC Sl.IOPPIN6 MALL
SO If ME'S SOTMERIN6 YOU
REACM UP AND PUNCH ~IM IN TME NOSE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
~a-E'S ~S JUSf DON'T""
~ Blf;~.
g.7·=----~
"Would you care to chase It
around the block?"
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
~~ ~
~~ET ~YS l Lroc S\1AATER IN GLASSES 6o AHEAtl
ANU ASk ME sa.1~THIN' I OON'T USUALLY !<NOW •
l'M ~COMMON
CQ\M\M~l.I. t'M A
. D\R'f~~
by Kavin.F _agan
TUMBLEWEEDS
ROSE IS ROSE
by Jim Davis .
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Harold Le Doux
BRIDGE
Neither vutnerable. South deals.
WEST
NORTH
•AU•
<:7 K 75
0 AK2
•ua
• KQJ 102
<:> Q se
EAST
• 97 5
<:> I
0 Q8
• Q101
OUT B .,
O J IOtt S • •u 11
<:7 A 7J 10 14 S
0 75'
•A71
The blddinr:
Sou~ Wut
1 <:> 1•
I <:7 P111
Pue Pa11
Nortai Eut ·I • Paaa
' <:> , ...
Openinr lead: Kini of •.
When you flr1t ltarn how lo
fint t , It Memt at It you are
cnatln1 trlcka out of thin air. Thto
more dillkult t.uk ts to re&lilt that
you ahould tau a fln.&H only if
thtN fa no othtr t uonablt play
available.
North·South uMd a atralshltor
ward auction to reach their optl·
mum contract of four htar&.a. North
showed hla power w1th a cu .bid of
by Tom K. Ryan
~O GUE -1DO~i FISESSEI
the enemy 'u1l. but South rould do
no more than make a m1n1mum
rebid an huru
Wut led the top of his spad• If'
quence and. when dummy came
do~n. declaru saw that he had no
way to a void losinir one diamond
OMAR ,~~,
SHARIFF ...
trick and two dub The fate or h1•
contract, therefore. h1npd on h11
not losing a track to t h• queen or
trumpa
On• way II to ruts• which d•
f~nder holds t.he quHn and Ont •
him for lt. A 1li1htly more 1<'1tnt1tlc
method ts to presume that., 11nce
Wtat. 11 marked with Ions 1padt1.
he l• ltH lilt ly to have hHrt
len,ih. ThtrtfoA, hn Eaat for
tht quHn of t t umps. That. would
not be a conap1cuou1 tutteas on th1a
deal.
Thto corl't'ct way 1• to dalm lh
contract If WHt has two diamond
and a club! Win th• act of 'pad
and rulf a &pode Cr;0s succu11vel)
t 11 the acf' and k 1ng of diamonds and
rufl two more \pades, then cash the
ace uf rlub'l '\ov. imply exit with a
minor u11 rard
fh• dt'ltndl'rs can t.akto their
thrt•t' tru·k, 1n the manor suits That
CHARLES
GOREN
rf'dUt'H t he hand to thrcl' cards
rarh \ ou havl' thrl'l' trumps to the
k1na on th• tabl• and tht A J 10 in
\nur hand !'l.o mattn whtch
defendtr h .. tht lud. you mun
make the la l thrH tr1ck1I If you
ran't v1.1uallH thl' end poailion, lay
ou\ \M hand and try It for yourself.
F' r laleraadu ~ C...,.
Gor •'• eew h w.S.U. ,_ .....
plar.n. writ. o .....• ,.... Leu..
llOI Cl• ... l•M• An •• C ........
...... J . n .
I
'.
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, B8
Orange Coast College
na1nes buslness dean
Orange Coast College's Robert W. Ml&cMI, associate professor of
b.niness educatjon, has assumed a post as actina dean of OCCs
business division for the l98S·86 school year. A 2S-year member of
the Orange Coast faculty, the Costa Mesa resident has designed
certificate programs in insurance, escrow man~ement, purchasing
management. retail store management, supervision, real estate and
sales and marketma manaaement. He is a consultant for business and •
industry and has conducted management workshops and scminan.
The division 1s one of the largest of OCCs 10 academic divisions,
enrolling nearly 7,000 students. • • • Milton E. Naylor and Kay Co•p.11D, seruor" vice president and
vice president of relocation. respectively, have returned from a
national conference of the Homeric• Reloeatloa Ceater broker
network ill Dallas. Tiit coafereace foeaaed oa muqemeat ud
eouaellDg tecluaJqaes. Homerica la a utJouJ broker-to-broiler
referral system. • • • Jolla Towson of Newport Beach has t>cen elect(d president of the
Orange County chapter of the Aaaoclad• for Corporate Grewtll. He
1s a consultant to and former group vice ofBeUotrolltcs in Irvine. and
had been vice president of arrangements for tt1e ACG. The newly
formed chapter is one of 22 in the the country. • • • C'11rta Foran has Joined ADdtnoe CommulcaUou Co. as
assistant account executive for the Newport Beach publi~ relations
and advertising agency. Foran is a resident of Huntington Beach. • • • May Jue Foster of Corona del Mar has joined Saddlet..cll
CommanJty HoapltaJ m Laguna Hills as assistant director of public
relations and development. with responsibility for coordinating press
relations and writing grant proprosals for the SaddJeback Be.aid!
Fouadatlon. Foster comes to Saddtebac;k from the Lot Aagela
Herald ExamiDer, where she served as special sections supervisor
and as South Bay and San Gabriel Valley editor. She is a forrnerwriter
and editor with the Dally Pilot. • • • J.J . 'Chip' Allen of Fountain Valley has been appointed
corporate public relations director of Pacific Bealtll Syatema, lmc. of
Long Beach. with responsibility for -marketing the company's
afcohol/drug recovery and'eating disorder programs. • • • Costa Mesa resident Tom Hoffmu has joined the Newport
Mascia headquarters
M•a.da Dtatributon Pacific recently dedi-
cated lta new headqaarten ln the Irf'ine
Spectrum. The headquarten facillty ln-
cludee 244,800 aquare feet of warehouse
apace and a 26,053-.quare-foot office
ba.lldln&. The_ company la the-dlatrtbutor of
Mazda can and prodacta for a network of
120 dealen ln the weatern United Statea.
BUSINESS NOTES
Irvine
firm buys
famed
·bordello
From ataff and wire reports
Nevada's largest legal brofhel, the
Mustang Ranch, has been sold to an
Irvine company.
Joe and Sally Conforte sold the
world famous Mustang Ranch for$ 18
million to Strong Point Inc.. the
couple announCed this week.
Strong Point is a publicly traded
company whose president 1s listed as
John Davis.
Davis said in a prepared statement
that he believes ifs the first ume a
publicly traded company "has en-
gaged m this very profitable and
provocative business."
An estimated $7 million to $7.5
million of the sale proceeds is
expected to be used by the Confortes
to pay back taxes and penalties sought
by the Internal Revenue: Service.
• • • The 600-acre Rancho Niguel pro-
ject m Laguna Niguel has won a Gold
Nugget Ment award for The Buie
Corporauon, m a join"t venture with
Home Capital Corporauon.
The "Best Residential Site Plan
Over 125 Acres" award was granted
to Buie by the Pacific Coast Bl.Mlders
Association.
Beach office of Daum BDJlDtaa Properties as a sales associate. He is
responsible for leasing retail space. sell ing commercial properties and
representing various commercial tenants for the Atlanta-based firm. • • • Diana Ellla was named top salesperson of the month for June at
Coldwell Banker Realdentlal Real Estate Services' Huntinston
Beach office. Ellis has been with the firm for one year, and received l
the award based on a combination of saJes and service to clients
dunng the month. ·
It's getting harder to buy a home
• • • Katharyn E. Sllermu has been appointed director of catering for
the new Irvine Hilton and Towers. She comes to Irvine from a
position as head of catering for the Panlppuy Hilton in Parsippany,
N.J.
MONEY SENSE
By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.,...._AMIJwt
NEW YORK (AP)-Home mon-
pge rates have fallen and the vanous
indexes of affordability have im-
proved. but it still will be harder for
many families to buy homes later this
year.
The reason: a nse in mortgage
delinquencies has made ~ny
lenders wary, especially of those
seeking to buy homes with very low
down payments.
The delinquency rise hasn't been
what statisticians would call dra-
# •
matic. but the slow upward creep of
the numbers has put some of them
into record-hipt territory. And other
statistics arc giving off signals.
Those signals have been sufficient-
ly strong for the Federal National
Mongage Association to raise its
standards on loans made with down
payments of I 0 percent or less. And
thost' standards are likely to be
adopted by others.
Under the new rules, a borrower's
monthly housing expenses cannot
exceed 25 percent of gross monthly
income. and housing expenses plus
(Plei.ee eee BOMES/87)
One income plus anotherdoesn 't always add Up to two
It 1i. certainly true that two incomes paychecks may bring. Two salanes
are better than _one. But a working still seem impressive -at least on
couple may ask how much better as; paper -but two-income couples
they watch their com baned salanes."' :must also spend more.to support their
shnnk to a fracti~n of the originat size ~"lif~tyle.
after they've taJhed up their expenses. With career responsiblities cla1m-
The shock that many two-income 1ng the lion's share of their time.
couples feel after they realize that -many couples find themselves paying
so far as thcu finances are concerned others to take. on household duties;
-one plus one does not always equal child care. housecleaning and mam-
two stems an large pan from still tenance. cooking and laundry.
ha" Ing yesterday's view of how far And then there is the marriage tax
money can go. penalty.
Another part of the problem is the ·, Although the U.S. government has
false sense.. of secuat} that two taken steps to correct the imbalance,
~w tlw · J
• ~ef. ~
I
€ii3
Iii AMERICAN !~~
@Ymw
~· e
GLORIA
WIENER
$3.000. on the first $30.000 of the worth and average cash fl ow. Discuss
lower-paid spouses e;uned income. If each other's job-related beAefits, such
current tax reform plans al'!· passed as medical coverage. Arrange cov-
mto law, this two-earner couple erage so that you get the biggest
exclusion will be repealed. refunds and the broadest coverage. Be
But two-income couples who plan sure to take advantage of tax benefit
can stretch their combined assets plans where possible.
much funher than those who don't. •Expand yourdiscuss1on toexam-
The follawmg ti~ can be u~ as +ne-your shared goals. How important
gu1dehnes that will help two-income is owning a home? A vacation place?
two-income couples still contribute couples sharpen the focus on Do you want a second car'? Wh;lt
more to the IRS than a comparable financial goals: about travel? Establish short-and
single-income household. Two-•Make time 10 your busy schedules long-term objectives. Use your
earner married couples are currently to assess your collective f~nancial canceled checks and other records to
allowed to deduct-up to-IO percent, or __!!!!us. Calcutate your comb1ned"'--"'n'"""et.:,...__d_ef_e_rm_in_e_w_h_er_e__,_y_ou_r_m_o_n_e...:..y_has~
---19-
_sl _______ I
•
YOSl(MITE ENGRA VINO, CIBCA 1860
,,
Interest checking just got more interesting.
Now thn >ugh Oct< >her, the An1erkan
"mings Maximum ChecktnJ(account
otl~r . .., even more than imere.st income
and one o f the lowest minimum haJarKL'
requirement\ in the ..,wte7
Becau"e. 111 rl'cognition of our cen
tenniaJ here 111 C.1J1fom1a. ·we're offerin~
nevv and cxistin~ int~ checking account
~ cu~tc >mers 100 free check.~~· FSLK: But 11< >C j~st any c.:heck..,. 1
· . Amen can Sav1 ng." ha:
·sc;oo minimum
commis...,ioned ;:1 ~crie~ of four commem
< >rative check", featUJ:\n~ 100-year-old Ii ne
art enw-J\ing~ of important landmark.\ in
Califon1ia's °'rl>..,c.:mite National Park TI1ey
"}Tnbolize the m.tjor commitment that all
of u~ at Americ.m ~avings have made to
help rest< >re °'rlJsemite to it.., onginal cate
\X~· re abo maki n~ available a speciaJ
edition Yc • ice po~er hy celebrated
nature photogrJpher George Fiske. It\
youf:" at American -s~1vin~~ for n donmh >n
< )f S2 < >r more, which in tum \.vill he
d< mated to die Yosemite Return o f li~ht
rcstomtion campaign So thaL you,_toa,_can..
help kct..11 the ROlden state shining for
~uiothcr 100 vears. And that's certain I\· of
wcm 1mcrc~i to all Californians. ·
gjAMERICAN CENTENN~L SAVINGS
Ar'40 LOAN ASSOOATION
.................................... .-................................. .-----------.-.--------------------~~--------~~~~~~--~~.....;.....-~~----~-~~-
been s~nl 10 the last 12 months.
Then you can cut back where you
think-you're spending 100 much.
•Work together to devise a re-
alisuc budget. taking into account
your cash flow and basic hv1ng
expenses. fixed monthly payments
a.nd 1mpoaant future expenses, such
as taxes 3lid vacations. Don't back
yourselves mto a tight financial
comer by underestimaung your
needs.
•Stnve to sav~ 10 to 15 per~filpf
Pleue eee TW0/87
\
Ted Turner
buys MGM
NEW YORK (AP) -Turner
Broadcasting System Inc. agreed to
acquire MGM-UA Entertainment
Co. for $29 a share. or a total of S 1.5
billion. the companies announced
today.
However. the companies said that
once the me~er is completed, they
would 1mmed1ately sell MGM-UA's
United Artists Corp. film-production
subs1d1ary to Tr!cioda Corp. forS470
million .
Tracinda 1s a holding company
controlled by financier Kirk
Kerkorian and currently is MGM-
UA's largest shareholder with SO. I
percent of the stock.
Meanwhile, Turner Broadcasting
Chairman Ted -Turner also an-
nounced that he had officially drop-
ped his earlier proposal to acquire
CBS Inc.
Turner Broadcasting and tittGM-
U A said their definitive agreement to
melJe was approved by both com-
panies' directors, but remains subject
to approval •by-MGM-UA's stock-
holders and government regulators.
"The acquisition of MGM rep-
resents an excellent opportunity to
improve the strength and stability of
TBS,'' Ted Turner said in a . state-
ment. " We think ihe business of
MOM is highly compatible with TBS'
existing operations."
Atlanta-based TBS operates
WTBS-Superstation. a nationwide
distributor of sports, movies and
news to cable-television systems.
The assets of MGM. based in
Culver City, that would remain after
the United Artists divestiture include
a vast film library of about 2,200
titles, the MGM.Jtlm sLudio, and
distribution and syndication oper-
ations.
The companies also said that after
their ?er is completed: }racinda has a to offer other MGM-UA
stock oldel"I the opponun1ty to buy
United Artists stock.
"By its action ye terd1y, the
MGM-UA board of dittctors h11
confirmed the view of m.anqemcnt
that the proposed transaction will not
only perrmt our stockholden to
realize substantial apprtciation on
their investment 1n MOM-UA, but
wdl alw offer them the opparturuty,
throu&h United Ani ts. to remain as
shardioldcrs of a major motion
p1ctu" company ... Fnnk RolhtNn.
chairman and cbicf ex utive or
MOM-l l.\. id in a statement .
r
Or nge Coat OAtlV PILOTIW~y. Augu117, 1te5 .,
WO-INCOME FAMILIES •.•
omPaC•88
our lfOSS utcomc. You should ha\lc
equatt ready ca h to meet emtra·
ncies. Many e~pcrtS recommend
hat you build a cushion equal to h~ to lix month take-home pey in
1Quid rncrves Amona vehicles that
a1ntain liquidity~ money market
nd1, pvin&s ceruficates. sav1nas
coounts and U.S. aovernmcnt se-
urities. As busy people. you should use payroll deductio11 • central assets
accounts and other automatic plans
to make savina easier for you.
•Typically, two-income house-
holds borrow far in ucess of slnaJe-
income households. Tbere may be
ptet temptation to overspend
simply because more money is av111·
able. Credit counselors consider debt
to be ·•comfonablc" if monthly
payments (not oountm& mortaaae) are 10 percent or less of take home
pay. Monthly debt payments that
climb to 20 percent, or more. 1ianaJ
claftJU. Mtrthmnore. when you11eied
to borrow, make sure ~ou borrow
from the least expensive source.
Credit card borrowina is probably the
most expensive and a secured loan is
probably the cheapest.
•Don't pay any m~ tun I.ban
you have to. Oaim all doducuons
you're enutled to. 1neludma cbdd
care, if eliaible. Fund your IRAs early
for the ireatest tu advantqt, l.od
start a Keoa,b plan if you are telf·
employed or work. frttlancc. Work
with your financial and WI a<lv1'K'rs
on tax-saving stratesies.
•You can butld an educauon fund
for your childttn and may save wes
at the same time. Examine the ~ariou~ trust •!td ain opportumt1ei.
tncludina settina up a custodial
account in your chifcf'J "lllme at a
bank or brokorqe firm. Each parent
can Jive up to SI 0.000 a year ($20,000
combined) free from federal git\ tax to
each child; interest earned will be
taxed at the child's lower tax rate.
Before a>vina a ~ft to your child.
however, check with your tu ad visa.
The tax·statusofpf\s to children may
change under current tu reform
plans:
•Look ahead to retirement )'~n
and your family's future needs. Both
of you probably need a retirement
fund in addition to your Social
Secunty and corporate pens1on plan.
St.art bu1ldrn1 a portlolt<> or tocks
and bonds by 1nvcati~ some of your
S1\11n now and add•OJ to n when
you receive boou tu refunds or
other sizable sums. Make sure )Ou
both bave adtquate life ·in urace.
That's lpecially important if )Ou
have chtldren.
You should bOth have wills.
Without one, state law -not your
w11hcs-maydkt1tt how yourenatt
1s distnbutcd. With two people con·
tnbuti.ni to bu1ld assets, p1anninacan
be complex. It's a &.oc_:>d idea to (hscu.u
with a lawyer which sp0use should
own what assets, whether to bold
property jointly or separattly. and
related matters.
With,..\,houghtful, open d1scuss1on, tw<>-a~r couples can better pasp
the reality of their financial s1tuauon
and set plans for achievina their
shared aoal
It's .unponaru for 1bt t\l!.0-m@me
couple to period1call)' reassess where
they tand and revise their iovest·
ment plans aocordlngly. Two in-
comes don't guarantee that you will
meet your financial objectives but
establishma a plan -and stick.mg
with 1t -will make the difference.
HOMES HARD TO BUY ••• FromPaae88
Glori• Wleoer & • vltt pf'ffldeat
ud VHP m&a1er, MuteU.1 Com· maJcatlou Merrlll Lyacb, Plel"Ce,
Fa.oer 4 SmJ~ &c.
installment debt cannot go higher
than 33 percent.
The old standard of 28 percent and
36 percent, respectively, still applies
to home loans made with larger down
payments.
In spite of the mortgage associa-
tion's action, the concern isn't shared
universally. In fact. William
O'Connell, president of the U.S.
League of Savings lnstnut1ons bas
issued a statement seeking to down·
play the issue.
"There is no s1gn1ficant increase in
residential mortgage payments 60
days or more delinquent at the
nation's savings mstitutions." said
O'Connell. This, he said, 1s "contrary
to the misconceptions created" by
other reports.
One of those reports 1s from the
Mortgage Bankers Association of
America, which surveyed 9.28
million loans in the first quarter of the'
year and found a 6.19 percent
delinquency rate, highest since ~·
cords were t>ecun in 1"953.
That percentage. which represents
a moderately sharp increase from
5.47 percent six months earlier m the
third quarter of 1984 includes all
loans 30 days or more ovtrdue. a time
· period that O'Connell feels is too
bnef.
"Circumstances may result 10 a
borrower forgenina or beina unable to
make a payment on time for one
month. but the true test of mo~ting
delinquencies would be an in
in loans 60 days or more past due. e
said.
"That's not happening," he added.
The U.S. League's own survey
showed a delinquency rate of l .82
percent for June, up from 1.68
percent 10 May but, nevertheless, the
second·lowcst monthly rate this year.
In January its survey showed a 2.22
percent rate.
The league's survey differs in
methodology from that of the mort-
gage banker's. It is based on loans
overdue 60 days or more, rather than
just 30 days. And, unlike the mort·
gage banker survey, whose per·
ccntagcs arc based on the number of
delinquencies, the league's figures are
based on dollar amounts.
NEW YORK (AP) -Tile followlng lltl
11'C)w1 the over • the • CoUnler
If a 60-day standard were used, the
mortpge banker survey would show
a dehquency rate of 1.98 percent. not
greatly different from the league's
findings, but stilJ higher than a I. 78 ~
percent reading a year carliier. 3
A third survey is maoe by the 4
Federal Home Loan BanJc Board, ! which each month analyzes the dollar
amount of mortgage loans dehnquent
60daysormo~. ltsJuneratewas2.61 I
percent. up from 2.02 percent a year
earber.
An interesting and perhaps not l
thoroughly understood aspect of the J
league survey shows a delinquency ·
rate o( 2.05 percent for fixed-rate
mongages, but only 1.30 percent for
adjustable loans.
One obvious but perhaps in-
complete explanation is that the
expenses of adjustable loans have
tended to decline over the past year. I whereas fixed-rate mortp.,&CS. made
when rates were considerably higher.
haven't budged.
The practice of compiling per-
centages by dollar amounts rather
than by the number of overdue I!
accounts. was begun only in January l
of this year. The earlier surveys, by ll1J
the numbers. often showed figures a
bit above or below I pcrccnL
c~
I~
I'll Ill • 1'12 I
•14 ~ ~ 2JO. ~ IVJ 'h ~ l'h l 2 ~
34
I/• "• I'/•
'·• ...
1. .,.,
-I ' -.,,
-2''>
Pct. ~·· 17j
1' ,r.t li 1 . 1 I . 1 I . H·
lU
Form 'our ov. n opinions on mat
ll'I"' ,,f lo('al, ~t ..tte and nat10nal tn
lt•r t.•..,t h\ reading the thoughtful col
lJ.Ti ns Jn<.l ~ri al-. an the Dall~ Pllot
I
I
mt
I
Whatever the merits of the three ~; surveys. and despite differences tn
methodology, all have one thing 1n
common. That is, the latest reports
show higher delinquencies than were
shown earlier, even if increases aren't r.~=~=========db======:;:::======================================j sharp. 'r I ·I -'•
Daily _ Pilat
•
Great rates plus a $100 cash rebate if you act now.
Your kind of loan. Fast! For a car. boat, R~
mobile home, even an airplane. For installing a
pool. spa, or patio. For home improvement. M~1
any loan you need.
Your kind of rate. Low! Call our Financial Lmc
today, 1-800423-BANK. Fmd t about our low
Great American
mt~ and affordable terms. Choo~ a h \t.-d-rate
plan. or a controlled variable rate loan @ --lf .. O(W ,-------------------, I Take tbh coupon to Great mcriatn now for a I
! $100 !
l Cash Rebate I
I """" · c:--"' ~ offc. c I ..Q. ,
1
M • lnllTI k ~ 111uR111 (( 1
1
__
1
CW ~pcrh.n
)buJ-8'1vantage bank.-
I c I
I I
, --. "-".-. .... ~-.....· ~,~-... .....
~ ........... ........,._ ... _...._ ._._.,_..._. (\ --'"-__ ._...__ . L ' L....----------------:------------ -_. - --- - - - ----- - ----- -',
ers
U\C
Lht,
nia
'~ IJY
p11
yet
\It
..-e
ft.s
le:
: a
ha
ny
do
nd
;it,
or
oa
is
:at
ed
ur
to
te.
ch
!S.
:r.
ld
lo
e
;c
JI
I)
•
0
t
•
,
I WllllUlf'I OLlllll .....
Market losses continue
NEW YORK {AP) -Stock prices showed
some scattered losses Wednesday m the aftermath
of Tuesday's sellofT. •
Analysts said traders were watching wanly as
the Treasury contanues 1t$ record sak of $21.75
billion in bonds and notes.
WHAT AME X DID WHA T NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Auo 7 NEW YORK <AP) Auo 7 T~, .,
AMEX LEADERS
tt ., • .. .. •
Dow JoNE S AvERAGES
..
1
.-----
•
~---.....
DlilyPlat WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 ... 1985 •
BHI up aummertlme ••leda by adding bral1d et11k.CI
Win brownie polnta whh a trio of .chocol ... lr1a•1 C•
tdgoF €J1 _:tertaininJ!lma
All scream for i _ce C:feam
By JOYCE SCHERER-BODWVICH
OllMJ
was a 29,000-square-foot
h aven for ice cream lovers who
en usiastically filled the Dis-
neylan • Convention Center
for the first All About Ice Cream
Celebration.
With 40 major ice cream manu-
facturers represented, some 30,000
devotees had ample o pponud1ty to
sample their favorite navors to
their stomach's content during the
two-day exposition in Anaheim.
Gaily Jaynes and daughter Tania
Griebenow of Huntington Beach.
munching on a European bit-
tersweet chocolate bar, admitted to
being ice cream freaks.
"I'm a cake decorator at a Baskin-
Robbins store," said Griebenow.
"and do I have problems not
overdos111g o n my favonte: peanut
butter/chocolate."
Jaynes said her family consumes
about a gallon of ice cream each
week. "I usually buy something
low-caloric lilce frozen yogurt or ice
milk."
While a theatncal troupe of
mimes representing Baskin-Rob-
bms built a .. human ice cream
sundae" every hour. people weaved
in and o ut of display isles intent on
tantah1ing their taste buds with as
many Oavors as possible.
George and Angeline Van Pelt of
Tustin. enjoying a respite from all
the goodies. admitted they were
tasted out. .. I've had enough," said
a conte nted Angeline. Husband
George. listing pralines and cream
as his favonte navor. said he has no
trouble eating a half a gallon a week
The Van Pelts' granddaughters
Kathy and Jennifer, visiting from
Redding, however, still had room to
sample a few more flavors, includ-
ing their favorite: "anything choc·
olatc."
With so many manufacturers
represented. uniqueness seemed to
be the most repeated descnpuo n in
selli ng pitches.
Allhough Leonardo Sudman.
owner of Tartufo ltalelatena: says
his product 1s an Italian delight.
"you certainly don't have to ltaltan
to enJOY the ins tense Oavor."
DoveBarisonablitzcampa1gn 10
introduce its hand-dipped dark
chocolate bar with a vanet) of
fillings to the West Coast. said Mark
Da). director of marketing.
.. Dove Bar has been on the mar-
ket for 20 years. however. it's onl)
been sold on the East Coast."
explai ned Day. The ace cream is sort
of a ··designer dessert."
For the diet conscious. man)
manufacturers were advert1s1ng
low-cal but tasty treats. Tofu-
T1me's logo says ··our ice cream as
guilt free. n ch and creamy dessert
that 1s non-da1f) ... not everything
that tastes good has to be fattening."
A luscious highhght was the
construction of a 35 ma.lhon calone
sundae by Knudsen orp. with
7.500 pounds of Smucker's top-
"ang. Documented for the G uinness
Book of World Records. the giant
confection took about seven ho urs
to construct. according to T om
Fulcher. Knudsen markcttng assis-
tant.
As Fulcher quoted tht" calone
rontent. Dennis Pass1s. pre 1dent of
Trans World Exhibits toe .. bor-
rowed a calculator to figure how
long tt would take to bum off that
amount of ice cream.
(Pleue~ IClt C~All/C4)
Innovative do-ahead recipes, portable
barbecue ~eal traveling companions
Entertaanma in arcat style, whether )Ou're by a lake. ocean, rivc-r or
stream. a few feet or many miles from your back door. can be a breeze witb
a portable barbecue.
This tempuna menu of sparkltng warm colors. contrastina t~tura
and tastes howcascs 1nnovauve rccapc:S using versatile avocados, icebe11
k.nute. lUlyah and soy sauces and a .new tcnyaki beste-aftd aJue.
All the recipes can be prepared ahead ofttme, wt th easy la t-minute
assembly at your destination. And a real bonus. they casjly serve ciaht,
and can be halved or doubled to suit your guest list.
Begin ..yqur innov~tion in outdoor entertaining wrth California
Temaki-Zushl, a new version of hand-rolled sushi. Crisp icebera lcttuce ·
leaves replace tradltJonaJ .dried seaweed and are rolled around tanl)'
seasoned rice. slices of npe avocados and crab meat to create a cornucopia
of complementary colors. textures and tastes. •
Barbecued Tenyaki Pork Loin makes an elegant.end dutincuvc yet
. very eas) en tree. Boneless pork loin roast 1s cut into three equal stnps that
are 1hc perfect ~Lzc for marinating and gnlltng.
Versatile iceberg lettuce offers endless salad poss1btlities. We've
chosen a spccLal and deltc1ous one. Colorful Avocado-Cantaloupe Rafts
arc si mple to assemble on-site. •
, Core, rinse, thoroughly drain and refrigerate lettuce ahead of time.
Just before serving, slice it crosswise into inch-thick rafts. AtTan,ae a
colorful spiral o f avocado and cantaloupe slices on top and drizzle with a
tangy-sweet dressing. •
For a new and delicious taste. <\ vocado Bread with Creamy
Vegetable Spread fit s the bill. The subtle )'el d1st1ncu ve flavor of avocado
1s complemented b) the creamy spread made w11h iceberg lettuce and
cream cheese an full)' seasoned with parsley, onion powder and SO)' sauce.
CALIFORNIA TEMAIU-ZUSBI
1 large bud iceberg Jettllce ·
1 Ya cups ancooked 1•1 graha nee, wullecl U4I dra.l.Decl
•;, cup dlatillecl wllJCe viDegar
3 tablespoons aapr
% teaspoons nit
Ya pound erabmeat or lmitatio" erabmeat
% large ripe avocad.,.._ __ _
Soy sauce
Core, nnse and thoroughly dram lettuce: refngeratc m plasuc bag or
crisper. Combine n ee and 2 cups water in mcd1um-s1ze saucepan; brina
to boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer 20 m inutes or until water is
absorbed. Remove from heat and let stand 20 minutes, covered.
Mca nwh1lc, combine vinegar, sugar and saltmsmall saucepair,heat
over low heat only until sugar dissolves, stirrin.gconstantJy. Tum cooked
rice out into large non-mctat bowl, separating kernels with fork. Pour
vin'egar mixture, a litt~ at a time. evenly over rice; gently fold 1n to
combine after each addition. Cool rice mLXture to room temperature.
Cut lettuce in half lengthwise. Carefully separate leaves; set aside.
Cut or shred crabmcat into bite-size stnps. Just before serving, cut each
avocado in half. seed and peel. C u't each halflcnathwise into 8 \htn slices.
Arrange avocado shecs, lettut:e leaves "Ind erabmeat on large platter.
Fluff n ee mixture with fork.
To make T~-Zush1: Place lettuce leaf in palm of hand. Spread
I to 2 tablespoon nee mixture m center oflettuce. Top with I avocado
slice and small amount of crabmeat. Wrap lettuce around filhng in cone
shape to enclose. Serve wtth soy sauce. Makes about 8 servings.
BARBECUED TERIY ill PORK LOIN
% boaeleu pork Iota routs, ! poudt eadl
a,. cup teriyakJ marinade and aaace
C ut each roast lengthWlse mto three equal stnps. Pierce both sides of
stnps with fork; place m large plasuc bag and pour an tcn)'ak1 sauce. Press
air out of bag; tie top sccurel}.
Turn bag over several times to coat pieces thoroughly with sauce.
Rcfngerate 8 hours or ov~ght, turning bag o ver occas1onaJJy.
Remove pork and grill or bro114 inches from hot coals or heat source
35 minutes, or unttl tender. Tum pieces over frequently. To serve. cut
each stnp cross.wise into thin slices. Makes 8 servings.
(Pleue He OUTDOOR/CS)
TESTERS' T AST-ES TRAINED
~
Educated tongues
can distinguish
numerous flavors-
VALHALLA, N.Y. (AP)-The
12 housewives m Linda Haicnah's
clas 1ns1sted they could not ta te
the shght bitterness in the cola, so
Haaenah threatened to take out the
~lcry seed apin.
"Oh no!" the cla s cncd in
um son.
Once was quite enough for celery
seed. H14Cn1h, a sensory sc1cnust
for Pepsi-Cota.. had made them
taste 11 to understand what "bitter"
mean .
Toa trained ta te tc trr. cola may
not only be shahtly hitter. but
~~~_,......_... ______ __
..
I
musty, metalltc. 1mtat1ng or astr-
ingent. An educated tongue detects
the Oavors of citrus. brown spice,
cherry. prunc-raiun, vanilla and graln.
Tasters sip and sup and consider
throuahout the food industry.
Pepsi-Cola ha pcc1ahsts for cola
and lemon-lime; McCormick &
Co .. the p1cc maker. ha paghetll
sauce and spice testers; Consumers
Union feeds trained ta tc testers
coffee. hambu,..ers, ice cream and
other foods for it onsumer Re-
pons maaazinc.
Tc tcrs 11 Pepsi can tell how soda
from a an diffcn from soda in a
bontc. They can w~ chanatJ due
to aae or a new Wtt{cncr.
"We u the pcopl to measure
our product much the way ou U5C
a thermometer to measure
temperature. They arc actual
analytic tools," said Mike Bass.
manager of sensory evaluation at
Pepsi-Cola.
Taste-testina received nauonal
attentton 1n April when the C'oca-
Cola Co announced a new Coke
forumula That tcsttn& involved
200.000 untrained people -a ·
m\\Jonty sa)ina they preferred the
new formulation to the old.
trarncd taste tc tcrs. ho~cver.
have to de ribe what someth1n1
tastes hkc
At Pep 1, months will pas before
Ha cnah' eta will be read) to
work. Fir t, they need uandard •
they ta tc i variet)' of prod~ct :
catn c1d solution suaarsolution
of v ryina tn:nath arape soda for
its a trin nt ancru tc, and the
h ted celery d.
C. oca-CoJa also cmplo) s trained
taste testers, but the rnmpan)
dechncd to reveal any detnals ahout
ats evaluation proc
Lenm1ng to taste food as much
lake learning to appreciate music.
said Manannc G illette. head of t he
en or) evaluation unit at
McCormick &~o "As ou learn ut mu\1'-. \Ou
learn a~ut van in trument. in
the band You pick out the oboe
and clan net and trumJ>(t )' ou can
pull each one out and h ten to 1t
1nd1v1duall). then put them back
into the S)mphony and h ten nd
when you act really aood. )OU can
y 1f ifs flat or hao> It'~ the ume
way with flavor."
In a rtttnt da., at Pcp\1'•
uburban ~arch fa thty, 30 mile\
(Pleue ... TASTta /C7)
Jocelyn Lee with an array of confection•.
Hotel chelaward:~
Her just dessert~
By CHRIS CIUWFORD
0.,NMCw; JI ... I
Joccl>n Ltt's ~1tchcn crcat1' 11\
has brought her rapid success an J
trad1llonally male dominated pro-
f~ ion
When the lrvaM Mamou Hotel
opcntd t~o years o. Ltt then 23.
was himi M head pam; c.-htf.
101mna a ~~ff of '' other l'hef\, all
mJ1lc.
"In tht hcatnnang. t haJ a hat ofa
..
htrd time," she recalled recently
··~use 1 ~• female and youni.
me ~pie thought I would nc' c-r
ma~e 1t."
But ~hcn1hc hotel held 1t &rand
opening hortly ancr her arriva~
c;hc produced a fun t.ation de n
table. "I had a 1111ntic cake, a lot of
pct1t lou~, and over 2,000 Fttn h
m . It wa really a srand
opcnin "
(Pl--... PUftT /C4)
• 1
-r
I ,.
.. -1::8 Oiange eo.:.1 DAILY PILOT/W"1netaay, AugU9t 7, 1085
ON
. COLOR PRINTS
WITH EVERY STANDARD
SIZE ROLL OF 110, 126, 135
OR DISC COLOR PRINT FILM
(C-41 PROCESS ONLY)
BROUGHT IN FOR DEVELOPING
AND PRINTING WE WILL GlVE
YOU A . SECOND SET OF PRINTS
-·-
Offer does not include reprints, enlargements.
Yl frames or film requirtng special handling.
~-···························-WITH THIS COUPON AT ANY OFFER 800D 01 AU
I ~ CALIFORNIA ALPHA BETA OR ITAIDAllD C-41
SKAGGSALPHABETASTORE rr.~':f~Yl~a
I $ o·o ON ANY ~r~,TC:l~E -I ~ · 1' PIOCJll-IPiiiTl "tl = #.... FOR . . . ~-=~El 1.t •• :11
II PLACETHis OFF FILM ORDER U/c'tlf llrl~ COUPON IN t EM~~~~~E COUPON EXPIRES FRIDAY. AUGUST 16, 1985 · 12 ~ ................................... ..
• ' J
Flsh grilled ln mlnute8-
The Japanese must be the masters of fish cookery.
from sashimi to teriyaki and tempura, skilled cooks
know literally hundreds of temptina ways to prepare
fish. In fact, Japanese cooks teU us they have more than
30 ways to p;ll fish alone.
They also recosnrze the importance seuonina
plays in temptina and satifyina the palate. To
traditionalists, seasoning ts ttfefintstcpin preparation,
not the last.
Herc's a deliahtful Oriental Fish Steak recipe that's
euily pteptred and cooks on the &rill in a matter of
minuta. An excellent source of protein, eeafood a1IO
baa aood quantities of B vitamins and aeveraJ minerals,
includina calcium, with few calories ~ eervina.
To cook fish on lit. outdoor Jfill, ute a 9ep1r1te
binJed &rill that makes the fish easier to tum. Or, lp'IY
the arilf well with a non-stick cookina ~Y to help teep
the steaks from 1tickina. Fish ateab take only minu~ so keep a clote watch to prevent over<OC>kina.
GRDJ&D ORIENT AL
FISlllT&AU
' .... 1teak1 (laalib•t, ..i...--.......... ,, .... ,
,. • ._. tMck 14 C9J> low IMl1lill Jil't MJ a11ee•
I UMetpooa1 mt.eed oaloll
1 taMetpooa dM,.ed freQ. pqer net
1 taMelpH• lelalDe HH, toute4
~-........... ,·
Rinse fish 11eab and pat dry; place in sinaJc 1-yer
in shallow po. Measure soy salk:e, onion, sinler.
lelAJlle teed and aupr into blender container; whirl on
low speed 30 seconds, acrapina aides down once. Pour
uuce over fish; tum over to coat both sides. &rill 4 inches from moderately bot 001l11. Cook S
Marinate 30 minutes, turning fish over oo-minutes on eac)\ side, or until (15b flakes easily when
casionally. Remove fish from marinade and place on tested with fork. Makes 4 servings.
----··--~~~~-., .Gerber.
Chlldrenw Centers
'PM.-~ Eilaiaa1bu
Our Kindergarten Program
-Provides New.Ghallenges
and Successes For
Your Child
Small Ch~p to Teacher Ratios
State AJ:>'proved Teachers
. Extended Day phild Care
Learn more at.lM apecl1I PARENTS' INFORMATION NIGHT
AUGU~T'14, atartlng8t7:00 P.M.
1891 San Miguel Drive In NEWPORT BEACH •
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL PAULETTE BOHLEN: 640-8820
•
r-----------------1
OUTDOOR ••
Jl'romCl
AVOCADO-CANTALOU P E RAFTS
t lar1e bead1 lceber1 lettuce
"' cup ve1etable oll
'ii cap tertyUJ ba1te and slaze
1.4 cap elder v1.De1ar
1 tablespoon boney
1 tea1poon dry ma1tard
% tea1poon1 minced fretb 11.Dger
roqt
% rtpe avocado•
1 1mall cantaloupe
Core, rinse and thorouahly drain
lettuce; refrigerate in plastic bags or
crisper. Meanwhile, measure oil,
teriyaki baste and glaze, vinegar,
honey, mustard and ginaer into
screwtop jar with lid; shake
thorouahly to combine and set
aside.
Cut each lettuce head Crosswise
into 4 "rafts" 1 inch thick. (Store
remaining pieces m plastic bag for
later use.) Place rafta on large
platter or individual plates. Cut
avocados and cantaloupe in half,
remove -seeds and peel. Cut each
half lenahwise into thin shces.
Arrange avocado and cantaloupe
slices equally on rafts. Thorouahly
shake dressing and pour over each
salad. Makes 8 servings.
AVOCADO BREAD
% cup1 all-purpote flour
~cup sugar
1 'ii tea1poon1 baldn& 1oda
1 lft te~1poon1 1round111.Dger
-_.If. te11poon bakiD& powder
If. teat poon ult
t tea1poon1 1rated lemon peel
~ cap m11bed ripe avocado
(about 1 lar1e one)
t e111, allptly beaten
14 cup milk
t table1poon1 ve1etable oil
1 table1poon lemon jaJce
Creamy Ve1etable Spread,
recipe follow•
-Sift toaether flour. sugar, baking
soda, &inaer, baking powder and
salt in larg~ mixina bowl; stir in
lemon peel. Thorouahly combine
avocado, eggs, milk, oil and le mon
juice. Add liquid all at once to flour
mixture, stirring only until flour is
moistened.
Turn into greased 9 x S-inch loaf
pan. Bake in preheated 350-degree
oven l hour, or until wooden pick
inserted mto center comes out
clean. Cool in pan on wire rack I 0
minutes before removing from
pan. Cool completely before slic-
ing. Serve with Creamy Vegetable
Spread. Makes I loaf.
Creamy Vegetable Spread
t cup1 ~bopped Iceberg lettuce
(about "' small bead)
t packaJH ( S ounces each)
cream cheese, softened
\'a cup ml.Deed freab parsley
1 tableapoon 1oy 11uce
2 te11poon1 onton powder
Place lettuce in steamer basket,
colander or large strainer placed
over, but not touching, boiling
water. Cover and steam 3 minutes.
Drain and cool to room
temperature. Thoroughly combine
lettuce, cream cheese, parsley, soy
sauce and onion powder. Cover
and refngerate 3 to 4 hours for
flavors to blend. Makes about 11/•
cups.
BUCKEYE BEEF
3 tabletpoonl Oil
1 c11p chopped olllon
3-poand beef brlaket
Bouquet OarDI: t bay leave1, i
cloves aarllc, parsley 1prl1• ud
\'a teaspoon dried marjoram
tied ta a clteeaeelotll bas
'4 cap wlDe vtae1ar
t beef boatlloa cabff dJ11olved
ln 1 ~ CUpt bolllDI water
t teupoon1 Worceaterthlre
aaace
Heat oil in a Dutch oven. Add •,.
onion and saute until liahtly
browned. Add brisket, bouquet
pmi, vi neaar. bouillon and
Worcestershire.
Brina to a boil, reduce heat and
5immer, covered, until tendeT -
about 2'h hours. Remove to warm
planer and allow to stand I 0
mmutc before carvina.
Reservcbqu1dandcht.JI. Cut beef
across pain ipto thin slices. Reheat
any leftover beef in the re1erved
liquid. Makes 6 servm ·
Rath
Bacon
~ "'°~ SU<»dlMlot la1labwy ...a.no.a
Sen-•
.26 •
40&
pkg.
-.... . .
•
Oranoe Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday,~ 1, 1-«:m
Beef up summertime salads
Because most Californians enjoy to your recipe repenoirc. French~. per 1de for !"1C or until ~
eatina ouldoon, alads are a natural STBil ALAI> WITH do • • . Ke ~ Kl"Oll dril choice for aummertime en ten.a in-Entice your iucsts waffi U\is HERRY VINAIGRETl'E ara1.n U1t~ lhlck slic:a; PlKC hi illM
ina. unusuaJ Steak Salad with ShtrTY. 1 41 bed nw teak balUna dt h.
There's nothina as reluina as Vuwarene. The ni&ht before, broil I ~le1poo•1 !1aue wlae Pld ~-v nqar, ah~rry. pitic, talt
leisurely savorin& an elepnt salad a 611\k steak until rare. Cut the vlHpr an 1111.C pc~ m ~ coe-
at the end of a hot day. Salads arc steak across the anin iMo thin 1 tabl..p;o.• tlaerry w , CO¥er._ M~ u.nu ~•11111
euy to make and most of the slices, then marinate it in a sherry 1 clove prlle flDely elaoppercl Gradually add otl. blendiQa ua
preparation can be done ahead _ vinaisrene until aervina. 14 teupoM ~t . smooth. Pour over steak
an added plus for the busy summer When your auesuarrive, arranae ~ t.upooD ~te pepper co;erii . 1 3 ho
hostets. . the marinated steak slices on a bed 14 cap H &•table oil e natf8lb at east i\lrl.
Beef u1ually appean on the of lettuce. Sprinkle with areen Mixed salad p eat (romaiDe, lon~r Uan 24 ~~un.f f..°!
barbecue dunna wann weather onions and crumbled blue cheese. batter·or red leaf len.ee) ~ina. arranae Y4 '! UM;
enteruinina. but it is equally tasty Use the extra marinade as a 14 cap allced oaloa sh~ on bed of m1x.ed
as the star of a summer salad. If dreasina-t oanc8 bl••=. crambled Spnnklc ~h dnabltb OI
you've never served a cold beef Accompany the salad wtth a . fi fl • sreen o~on an . . ue c_--..u
aaladenme, thisistbetimetoaddit bottle of chilled white wtne IJ'ld Tnm excess at rom steak. Broil Dnzzle with remaiDtf\I mtnD81Mj6 -~-----------------------~st~eak~3~1~n~ch!.!!es:.!..!fr~o~m~b~~ 6 minutes Serves'· ' ---';...;..;.......=.__._ ______ _,.._o"N[j
UO&can
~2.39
Fresh
Tomatoes
~1.t .89
PurtnalOO
Cat Food
Prices Effective Auguat 8 thru August 14, 1985
.10
Ch1c.ten ol the
Sea Tuna
~~-85 ·'
Call I 2-5111. • P~I 1 few words
to work for ou
c_..,.1•" ..... ._'-............
.....,. ______ .. _______ ...., __ _
,_._ ............. --... .. [ .. ...... _......._ ... _.,_ ... _,... __ ... _ --:-..=--=. ... ..., ....... __ I L 0 ---::.=. .......... -.. -----· ...... c:-.... ____ _. ...............
a-01opC.....a-
-
C4 O,.,. Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Augutt 7, 1985
Scramble f dr f resh~ness, flavor
Florentine Scramble can help
you celebrate the unique joys of
,.. ummcr. This dassy ma n dt h 1 a
combination of creamy scrambled
eaas. fresh-from-the-garden-or-
supcrmarkct spinach and lender
mushrooms with sour cream add-
ing a rich flavor.
Just as )OU stnve to protect the
flavor and nutnenl value of fre b
vegetables by carefully storing and
preparing them. egg freshness needs
your protection. too.
While most commercially
produced eggs reach supennarkcts
within hours of leaving the laying
house. they'll lose cooking quality
rapidly if improperl y handled. So,
81AOf
.. YIR
it's be t to rush them home for
storqe tarae-end-up m their
canons in thc-mllin che t section or
the rd'naerator.
And. you'll preserve more
nutrients by cooking eags at me-
dium to low temperatures and
usula careful timinJ to avoid over-
cooking. When cooked just until
thickened, Aorentme Scramble has
a moist. velvety texture which
complemeru, its marvelous medley
of flavor~.
After a busr morning outdoors.
the djsh is a cinch to prepare for a
refreshing lunch. Multiply the
recipe for a delicious and cconom1-
cal entrec to serve family and '
friends for a weekend patio brunch.
FLORENTINE SCRAMBLE
! &ablnpooaa butter
! capt c~opped fretb 1plnacb
(al)out ! OIGCff)
1 cap 1llced frttb muabrooma
(about 2 ouaces)
4eus
l &abletpoon1 mllk
'4 teaapoon marjoram leaves,
crusbed
'4 teaspoon nit
•;. cup dairy t our cream
In 10.mch omelet pan or skjllet
over medium heat. cook spinach
USDA
C.HOl ·CE
and mushrooms 1n bltCter uhtil
tender but not brown, about 4 to..S
~minutes. Mix eggs. milk and
seasonings until blenoed. Pour
over vegetables.
As mixture begins to set, aently
draw an inverted pancake turn.er
completely across the bottom and
sides of pan, forming large ,soft
curds. Do not stir constantly. When
eggs are thickened but still moist•.
remove from heat and gently fold
in sour cream. Makes 2 servings.
•1t 1s better to remove scraJTlbled
eggs from pan when they are
slightly underdone. Heat retained
in eggs completes the cooking.
LEG OF • 87
LB. ..... ..... LAM8
0-80NIGION ..... MP 11,0ASr
~ Zacky CALIFOAN.IA 89 ~ farniS CHl~EN I& • USDA ~J~ER 2 69 CHOICE AMERICAN I& •
---USDA GENUINE I A9 CHOICE AMERICAN I&
----
8-0z Pkg .. Sktnlen Pot1t SouM>ge
FARMER JOHN LINKS .. .. .. .. . EA .• 59
RED FLAME
GRAPES
SWED
SEEDLESS c
LB.
••••••• ..... llOAA
~D I& 1.57
S_. Juicy Lorge _ Sfici T~
CRENSHAW ~ELONS • :LB .29 LAR~E CUCUMBERS ......... FOA'I ROMAINE LETIUCE
6-lnch Pot
EA .29 NEPHTHYTIS POLE PLANT .............. 3.ff
~... Ill .... • • • ••• ~~:f~·,·~·ii•!i·~-~~·-~~· ~~,~· ~ .-.------~ ~ . ~·: .
' ~~
8--0z R.g 54>per or Unsc•nt.d
STYLE HAIR SPRAY
Extra Strength 60-Count
TYLENOL TABLETS
HUOHIS
INOLIM MUP•INS
6 PK ROUND
REG OR
SOUR DOUGH A9
1.19
.. 3.89
INOUI
PllC)OUa PICKLING
DI"· cucu•••• L&.39
JFC Tomo1h1~090. 16-0z
SOMEN·NOOOLES
Dynasty, 8·0r. Con
SLICED BAMBOO SHOOTS.
I-OUNCE
ASSORTED
NIW SIZI .......
CON~~ENCE 8 5 ,9
32 lO 66-CT. •
. ..__.,
750-mf.
PLAIN LABEL CHAMPAGNE. . ~ ..................... 1.19 ............ AS
.................... A9 l.7S·Liter, R.cl or White
ROBERT MON DAVI TABLE WINES .................... •A•
HUGHES
YOGURT
F
0
R-
LIMIT
2
$
......
OIL
64-0Z. 3 ·79 ;~~Ac:E •
Knott's 16-0unce
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ••
Stoge 1 & 2 (Or 4.25-0z. Jule•) ,1 (>.flock, 12-0z. Con, AalOrt.d I 'f•
• BEECHNUI BABY FOOD ........... 5 FOR COKE, TAB OR SPRITE .................... •
~Oz. Cupt. Soft ,.
MEAOON LEA MARGARINE ............ •
CRIST
1001 HPASTI
··~ .t.6-0Z
. All
FORMULAS
..
9·0UNCE IA9 PACK.t.Gt
·" .... 1.39
···" S.M
DOWNIYRAKI
( ,-:;.-::.. WAl'l'US
" ~ .,,._ BUTTERMILK 99
-L -.... 19.oz. PKG. •
Stouff9f's. 8-0z Cheese
FRENCH BREAD PIZZA
llf'dy's. 24.()z
NEW YORK CHEESE CAKE .............. 5.19 ...._ •••11•un ~ •&IW
Dbl".fB/lt ASSORTED I 39 ~ .. ~tllETIU e
WI ACCIPT DOUDLI, TRIPLI and PRODUCT
COUPONS FDOM All OTHIA SUPIDMADIC ITS
---.---·-· ... ---·--' c~ u .. .,..,_,._ ,...-<.,•«Md..,. ..oi... o1 lhe '"""Ill"<...,_, -ou~
1 l•ll"-.1 c~, -•c._..e l c-""''"' lll"Oft'et-• 91\4 ., .. .,.. ~ ..... r~ "Of o<C~ 4 Only monvl.,,.., .. t c~t Ill II 00 Of !flt ,_. M ....
...... i \wt>•'•'"''°"°' ,._, ... -4ot1 ...... , ........ ,,......_"" '°"" • ,_,_ °' .... '"""' ... ,_..,, ·~· ............. ..., -"""Ill''<• 1 If -.......... ltM ,....,. ,,..,.,..,on,_..,,.,•,....,. -••" 1...0.M11te on ,._ el ..,,....,..,, -ot ...
• l~ *-'<• & .,.,,, ... ~ .. ••fl\ldM t ~Ml .. ""''" .._..,,_ Ofl -" ~ 10 Offer...,.. ~I e lhtv....,.. 14 ,.., II ~ ~ c....,o.i
~not'"".,... -.T-•UG1nM•C1••• MAT• ....... ,. IAOI t•at•ll
2•~ACK
MILLIRS
-~~N ·L~2CAlll
PASTRY.~
From Cl
If there were any remain11
skeptics at that point ... I prove
them wrong," she claimed.
Most recentl y. L« has bee
honored as the hotel's Chef of ti
Year. "I was surprised ... she said.'
know I do good work .. but I nev
thought anything like that wou
come along."
A nat1 ve of FiJ1. Lee moved w1
her family to Honolulu when st
was 7. Her interest in baking beg2
at home. where she made cookies 1
cak'e for her family . "ifl didn'tgo ·
the beach instead ... she recalled .
Lee received her formal trainir
in commercial baking at Honolu
Community College and vegetab
carving at Kapiolani Communi·
College.
She first served as a bakery ch
for a firm that catered pastnes an
nd airline
About a year later. she started!
head baker for the Maui Marriot
and soon was transferred to Irvin
Assisted by a staff of five , pll
some terrific labor-saving device
including a huge mixer. a pastr
rolling machine and oversn
ovens. Lee daily prepares around I
pie"s. 30 or more loa ves of bread, s1
or seven dozen cookies and"at lea
90 dozen other m1sccllaneol
baked goods. such as Frenc
pastries, rolls, croissants, biscu1
and donuts .
.. That's just an average day
baking" she said. "When there 1s
special function to prepare fo
there 1s more. At one point, I we
doing a wedding cake every weel
end. Once in awhile. I will have
challenge: someone will want some
thing unusual. so I have to thm
about how I'm g01ng to make 11."
One such assignment, she re
called. was a cake that looked like
real pineapple.
Another was a cake. six 'feet 1
diamater. that looked like a giar
·•taco pizza." The basic cake w2
strawberry. covered wnh chocolat
popcorn to resemble taco mea
strawberry sauce for the pizz
sauce, a}1d lots of melted whit
chocolate for mozzarella.
.. It was the most unusual cake
ever made."
The-most popular des5erts at th
hotel,.she said. are her Macadam1
Nut Chocolate Pie. Pumpk1
Bread. Honey Almond Bars. an
mousses of an navors .
Here 1s her recipe for Hone
Almond Bars.
HONEY ALMOND BARS
1 pound butter
8 OUDCH sugar
1 pound 8 ounces pastry flour
I egg
Cream butter and sugar. Ad·
pastry Oour and egg and mix unt
blended. In a paper-lined 18 x 24
inch baking pan press dough ever
ly. Bake 15 to 25 minutes in 35(
degree oven until light brown.
Fllllag
% pounds batter
% pound• sugar
8 ODDCH boaey
4 pounds almonds, sliced
Bring butter. sugar and honey t•
a boil. Remove from heat. ad•
almondsand mix. Spread event
over cookie dough, and press dow1
firmly. Bake 350-degree until gold
en br?wn.
ICE CREAM ••.
From Cl
, ··As closely as I can calculate." h·
sa id. "ll would take around 70,()()1
hours of continuous bike ridin@
averaging around IS to 17 miles a1
hour -about eiaht years of neve
getting off the bicycle."
Joni Panizza. another ice crean
lover and president of Pinnae!·
Production. said she got the idea fo
the show after she learned about 9:
percent of Amencans .enjoy 10
cream. It was easy to persuad•
manufacturers to participate in th•
exhibition, she said. -,
She said a ponion of the proceed
will be donated to the Boy Scouts o America, Orange County Counc1
in celebration of the diamonc
Jubilee.
NOVA SCOTIA SPREAD
4 onces cttam c•eese, aofteae.
'if c•p (scut) flnely dlcet
1molled salmoa
t teblespooas aoar cream
I,\ to I teaspoo• flDely chppet
free• &arra1oa (or drtecl ter
ra10• to taste)
ln a bowl stir together crcarr
chce~. aalmon. sour Cftam anc
tlfl'liOn. Cover and chill. Makes Y.
cup (1encrous) .
'
-
-
1g
d
n
1e .,
IS
I.
lS
'S ,_
e
0
x
;t
s
h
s
s
a
s
a
k
a
ll
l
s
~
a
e
y
•••
Orange Coa t DAIL~ PILOTfWed"*ay, AuguJt 7, 1985
Acacia achieves excellence
From first releases onward
Acacli'of'Cimeros. Napa-Valley; has strived ror excellence, ,nd, in,
most instances, chieved It. And
smart marketing has helped' the ·
winery in maintafoina its stature.
Jn that1trst year, wfien tberewas
far too little supply to satisfy
(lctnand, it would have been easy
and economic.al to sell every drop in
northern California, near the wine..
ry.
Instead, the few cases available
were judiciously aliocatcd to key
markets all over the U.S.,and as
production grew so did the alloca-
tions, but always toa broad base.
Acacia is situated in the coolest
growing area in the valley, the
Cameros District that is at the far
south endofthe-vattey, clo~sno
the bay. ~use of the cooler
climate and the interests of the
partners involved, Acacia has
focused on Burgundian varieties,
specifically Chardonnay and Pinot
Noir.
Acacia is also into vineyard
designations, having demonstrated
with a number of different bottlings
that individual vineyards do
produce different styles of wines.
While this can be confusing to the
novice consumer, it really is valid
for the serious collector and is
certainly in keeping with the
Burgµnd ian tradition of wine-
making.
Eve n thou~h the winery was built
in 1982., this 1s the first time I'vt
devoted a colum n to it, primarily
because J had never got around to
tasting all the wines of a given
vintage at one time. Shame on me.
Acacia 198% Madonna Plooc Nolr
($15): My favorite in the entire
collection. and, while rice not
J\AINBOW FRUIT
1 cutaloape
l plaeapple
I plot 1trawbentes
J plnt blaebeniet
50 1eedJes1 1reH 1:rape1
60 1ffdle11 reel arapu
OruaeJalce
Cut cantalQupc (rind and seeds
removed) and pinca~plc .<nn~ and
core removed) into bllC·St'Zc pieces.
Halve or quancr strawberries, dc-
pcndina on their si7e, and add to
cantaloupe and pineapple with
blueberries and grapes. Mix well.
adding enou&h oran1c juice to
moisten slightly. Chi\I. Maxes
ahout 20 servin&.'·
.. _
t.alk!ngexd uslvell about fairly
expensive wines, feel compelled to
give you a couple-of real bargains to
maintain my value-onented image.
McFarland 1 HS Cabernet
. Sauvlpoo($3.75): Unbelievable
value, and don't be put oflby the
youth. The-winemak~r knew what
he was doing, and gave the wine
add1t1onal fln1na to make it en-
joyable al Uiis teDdcra&t: -
All the character an<fcomplexity
of the best Montereycabcmets, but
with softnetS and roundnc and a.
li ttleli&htcr.body for immediate
dnnkability.
Don't miss this one. Buy 11 by tht:
case and drink it everyday. That's
whattl'smeant for.
McFarland 1983 House Wblte
($3. 7 S): Before you make the as-
sumption that this 1s another ordi·
nary cheap white wine, let me tell
you that it really is an extraordinary
cheap white wine. There's no
Thompso.nSeedless in this baby.
Try it blend of22 percent
chardonnay, 14~rotntsemil1011
and thebalancewliite Ri lfoa,.fon.
I 00 _percent flnc winc-arape blend.
lfJ were the Mcfarlands, l'daivc
1t a dJfTerent name, though. I'd call
it "Chameleon,•• becau•<>f' a YefY
straniccharacteristjc the wine h .
At warmer temperatures. the
chardonnay and semillon flavors
come out, mak.in& the wine dt1 nlc
bkea fine whited1nnerwintor
white bu.-gundy. ,
The more you chiU it, the more
tbt Rieslina 9ualities show them· selv~. espeaallyin the aroma that
becomes quite fruity a~d floral.
-Drink it cool for dfoner, oold for
aperitif.
Fryer Legs
Foster Farms FreSh California
Grown Frying Chicken
~69c ........
Fryer Breasts : ,_S1"9i
, ....
Dole Pl .. apple ~ ~= 2 ~ 89 ..
Mayonnaise l(ralc! ~ 33: 'T"
Ka• ·Ka• Dog .....
Clll'ls' & Pitt's a.-8-0 s..uce
... c ...... ~~~ 2a:..•s00
--
This Is The Last Week To Play
''Win For Life''
~ BINGO· GAME
~ •• '1000 A-Motrn1~ -
•
FOR LIFll --fl.....-.-.---..------....... -.,.,.... ...... ..., ......... ...-.._. .... _ ... ..._ ..... ----··--...... ·-~·~-....... --...._ .. _____ -----~------·-·· . ...... , .. ___________ .. ___ -=-w _,. = ~ ........................ _._._ Wt ~ to Ml OU! ol = ..... = . .. ........................ _ ._ ...... ~ tlil:llela on or ,,_,.~ -----"·-------·.-...· lO 118$~----... ....... ..... . .... .... -.. ... ~ ................ -.... ....._...,,.u_.. .... ._,, • .._,._
NI Cll.'t ol "" Glf'le ..................... ___ -·-_ ...... ·-. .... -·-It~~~ .. ... . .. .... =~:.:.::-.::=::.:..-: '""1 lift! "' ~· LI I' ( , .... . ...... _. ..................... ,,..._.. to fflMf ht """ ---·--------"':SO by Auilvtt 21. • ,,_ ... .. . . __ ....._ _____ ._.._. -.. ...-. .......... ,._ .. _......,._ 1 ~ ... ~~ -...... .. .. ••ti ... .. ,...._, .............. ._.... .... __
21 ' !to ~~ --·--------·--_, .... -· ... ==::.~=::::.~~·--,...,..,., ~'"" ---.-------....... ______ _.. __ .
-~-----
• Meet dtpt. to accommodate boat ordeu
• Fruh produce • Fr uh Oab le 1elad1
• Barbequ•d meat cooked to order
• Lare• ••l•ctlon of Imported beera lc wlou
• Opt n 8 :00 AM to 9:00 PM dally
.,•17•
10•1-
C·
500 South Ba yJront • 673-8580
_()fW,,,__ I
I -.. ------~-.,,--,,,,.-I .. --..... -... -""'.,...,...._.._~,.. I __ ,,_ ....... _ .. _.,._., .. _~--, ' :::=..-:.-:.o-;.~ ;-s.::w-..:~c;:::-l a.1. ___ ... _f -----------------
c ..
Ripe
Tozaaloes
Wrapped In CelophMe
~99c
or.ea .0n1oa.~
Plato BeaM ~r:
l
Miki or Monterey Jack Besl
Buy AIWldom Weqi~ $' •• -~ I
Gatorade ~au=:
Grapefruit Juice r~.,
SwlssCheeM ~~
~:,79c
4~; 99c
ll••t's Ket ml up
~Mel Rictl KlllllllQ..--
KetchuP 32-oz_ Bo* 99c
• 1000 Bly\ JI O!, Ne-#C)«I BMcn
\. 83G N Co.all Hwy Laguna Beacl'
• 386 1 So Bt1ttOI Slnta ANI
• 14 MaNrcJI Bly Plera lltQ\'"• Np
• .I.;: '
..
Freeze own
· refreShing
ice cream
On a hot, summer day, who can
resist a scoop of tanay, orange
sherbet or fresh strawberry ice
cream?
It's easy io please ~very member
of the ·family ... from the kids to the
grandparents, the dieter to the
• §.rmet. This summer's abundant
· f~t can · be the base for ice
ms, sherbets, froz~n yogurts
· and sorbets. · -·•
,,
Heallhful aruucfrcshina.
· • ·are low in calories too. Therea ,...re-no~ . . . . l . additives or pr:eservatives in home-
made: ice cream becauae you control
the-ingredients.
Why not try these · refreshing
recipes? On a hot summer day, they
C'an't be-beat. I
· STRA wBER~Y JCE CREAM
· Z ca pa f reff'-o~ f ro1en 1traw-
berrtes .. • ·
t cup1 wblpplng cream
1 cup ball and balf ~
1 C9J> 1u·1ar
t tea1poon1 vanlll~ extract
1 drop red food colorlna
Place strawbe'rries in blender-
contamer. Cover and process at a
low speed until chopped. Pour into
cream canister. Add remaining
ingredients. Stir until sugar is
dissolved. Assemble ice cr~am
·· maker. Freeze as directed. Yield:
1111 quarts.
RASPBERRY SORBET
~cup wa ter
"'l cup sugar
2 teaspoon• grated lemon peel
I quart raapberrles, fresh or
fro1eo
2 table1pooa1 orange juice
2 table1pooa1 lemon juice
Combine water, sugar and lemon
peel in small saucepan. Bring to a
boil on medium heat, st1mng
constantly.
Remove from heat and allow to
cool. Place raspbemes. orange
juice and lemon juice into blender
container. Cover and process at a
medium speed until smooth.
Pour both mixtures into cream
canister through a fine strainer or
cheesecloth to remove lemon peel
and berry seeds. Sur well. Assemble
ice cream maker Freeze as
directed. Yield: 1 'h quarts.
TANOYORANGESHERBET
l e11p1 mUk
t e11p1 oru1e Juice
Tea
Blade Cut
BEEF
CHUCK
STEAKS
~ gcdloD lqUGN
IJt.\GGS ALPHA llTA
ICICRUM
6 Cov.Dt
WW A~WWW .• °"PJ or awn.,.... c!locolat•
ICI CRIAM BARS ......... ..
i2 c:o.aa1.
DIDISY
lllAPI POPS ........ .
• couDt wa.cll'I . QQp9 or .rvaau ·~·~
~ COUDt • IDIUDISN • <>n:ma. or ~ PUSH UPI. . .. ..... .
6 COUDi •~ex Cboc:olat•
WiiGIHT WA1'Ch&Ri
TBAn .......................... ..
·-= 119 . IA.
-= 1'1
'= 171 .
ar:: 109 .. IA.
a:: .. 101
':::I" .................. IA. Combtnc 1naredients 1n cream
canister Stu unuJ supr has dis-
iof ved. Assemble ice cream maker.
Fruuasdlrected. Yield.1111 quaru •••••••••••••••••••••••
PEACH -o·ZEN YOGURT m THIS COUPON U DH:MAJU 0"1.Y At r ni ~ SOUTHtlN CAJJFOINlA A1.1MA atTA M>.aUTS ;,.: o:•=rcbea, rreab, DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON
J --••r ~1111thoupon_t11ongwtlllOt1y_OM...on~1 ~nltOll ~'""' --r ·--0"4 ... DOUIU Tiii IAVDf<U wtt.en f'O\I pwcllaM IM 119111 J 4IUl1 afiavored yopn orna MOT TO Dfcun>I UTAD.11 01 ma COU10HI 01
P\aa peaches and 1upr in COOPONIOVIUl 00.UPUWDMAJMOTIXCllDVAUllOr
blender container. Cover and pro-mw IVIJICT TO ITOCI ON UJm ucwo11 uGOo•.
-·It a bl ..... 5-.A until ·--ooth. TOIACCOAJf'D DAJl'fflODOCTS --._., ""'""" • .. " MIO MDfDICJM PUICllAll UQUJDD Pour into cream can1sier. Add LDGT on rTDI PD MAlfUPACNDl't C~N .um yosun Stir until m1itcd AsJemblc LIMITTWO DOUl&.I C~HlrnCU1TOaa1.
1ce cream maker Frenc as I CC9tm D»Wilfl ••-•.AD&• . . aw•• .... , ... an. ,., ,,..
ditccted. Yield: I 1/3 quaru. ..•••••••••••••••••••••••
Slmple paSta sala_ds add
color, elegance to menu
Crcatina a pasta saJad ia an
tleaant, colorful and tastefuJ way to
help create a special meal, whether
it ia brunch, lunch or a liaht dinner
dish. What makes it work is its
variety.
Pasta, of course, can be found in
many flavors, shapes and sizes.
Inaredients can be made to blend in
with other courses in a meal or
stand alone. And sauces used to
coat pasta offer the cook a chance to
experiment with new flavor com-
binations.
Perhaps the best part of preparing
pasta salads, thouah, is that they are
simple.
• Twelft pack
• 12 Oii. CCIDI
PIPSl-
110V11TA1H DIW OR ILICI
Beef Chuck
BONELESS
CROSS-RIB
ROAST
100% Pure
64 os. carton
Jn the recipe that followi, pasta
mixes with chicken, veaetables and a zesty auce flavored with Oijon-
style mustard.
CHICKEN AND SPINACH
FETJ'UCINE SALAD
I 011nct1 aacooked 1plnacb fet-
tuctae
I bait cbtckea brea1t1, cooked
and abredded
1 lar1e red pepper, cat ID 1trtp1
I medlam yellow crootneek
aquall, 1Uced
BaaU V1Da11rette•
Lettace
Cook pasta as packaae directs;
rin~ thoroughly with 0014 water;
• Loln cutl
• r.o.n or detlolted
Federally
Impeded
HALIBUT
STEAKS
. I OS. jar
·TASTER'S
drain w~. ln larae bowl, combiJ
pasta, chicken, veaeiables and Ba1
Vinaiarctte. Toss to coat evcnl
Serve on lettuce-lined plates.
servinas.
•Baall Vtutantte
"4 cup aalad otl
'4 cup wbtte wlDe vJae1ar a table1poon1 Dijon muacard
1 clove 1arllc, cn1lled
I cablHpoon1 water
1 ~ teaapooD ball)
1 teaspoon aalt .
~ te&lpooD IDl&f
~ teaapoon cncked pepper
Combine inarcdients; mix we
About I '14_CJWS.
..
SKAGGS
ALPHA Brl'A
ORANGE
JUICI
. -CROICI. ~.:;J:.dM
IA.
....................... .ntEll:ill;p TKlJCOVPON HDHMAll.I ONl.Y Ar ~I 111111r S<WTMDN CA1JIOIN1A AUMA HtA MAnm
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON
"-n1 11111covponcr1011gwtlh•111-.-.11~1 Mtlfloff «O\ipoe
Olld ... DOUILI T1fl IAVIHU WM9 f'O\I owcllow the 11..,1 om• llOT TO DfCLUDI llTAIU1 OI ,.. COOPOWI oa
COOPOJfl OVll Sl 00 UPUMD MAT NOT UC1IJ) YA.LUI or
JnM. IVIJICT TO ITOa Olf IWf'D DCU1DU lJQUOI.
1'01ACCO AJf'D DAJl'f flODVCTI
MO MDllMVU IUIC1IAll DQUIUJ)
1JMJT ONI lTIM ... MMVPACtvm I COVIOR MD
UMJT TWO~ cocnon PD CUITOIGa
I Cl090llUllCllii I I •,AR. I
• 1-.:l Im WE 13 DAI_._ Aft •• ._ ltll ·······---···-·········
'DllTAHT conn
PA'MOLIVI
DllllWAllllNGI
IJQUID • n •· botG9
• •
•
,
IC
1U
~· 8
I.
I
I
• 1
--
Ezpertto teach tart-makJag
Author Pamella Aaquttb
-
RID
FLAME
SEEDLESS
GRAP IS
.lPQQ
CIRDN
SPOT
DRINKS
. CllWNS
PRDllUll D'AD.
Usina summer fruit in elcpnt
tarts will be demonstrated by
Pamella Z. Asquith or San Fran-
cisco durina a pankipatton class
Monday in South taauna.
The author of a cookbook on the su~ect will stan '1te classat I 0 a.m.
at C'est Oourmet cook.in• school in
Monarch Bay Plaza. Fee 11 $3S.
Asquith has written 1ix other cookbooks and received the Pick of
the Year Cookbook Award in 1983
for her "Ultimate Chocolate Cake Book."
Also 1chedulcd at the school will
be Paul Onishi, demonstratina his
Franco-Japanese concept in cook-
ing, at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Cost is $SO.
For reservations, call 493-2888. • • • James J. Kilpatrick, a syndicated
political columnist, w11l keynote the
Western Restaurant Convention
and Ex~tion in Lo Anaeles
Saturday-Tueld.ay.
Sponsored by the California Re~
tau.rant Associatiollt the exposition
is the laraest reaionat restaurant how of ita kmd in the nation.
• • •
Michael Stroot, chefat the famed
Golden Door, will lead demon-
stration classes at 10:30 a.m. Mon-
day and on Aua. 19 at Ma Cu1sine'1
cook1n1 school, Fashion Island.
Included in the $I 00 Class will be
Mexican-style pilaf, erudite aalad
with lemon dressina and feta
cheese, leek and peanut soup, and
lentil soup with veaetables.
French pastry will be the topic of
Claude Coberly's demonstration
classes at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and
on Aug. 17. Fee is $110. For
reservations. call 759-6818.
12 os. package
ECO NO
BUY
POTATO
CHIPS·~
2..Ja't'er
8 lnch 1cm
CADS
PHOTO DEPARTMENT
... ~ ..... ---
,
------
Twelve pack
12 oz. cans
BUD
UGHT
BEER
16 a.. • Cut or IUced
D'.MICll ALPHA llTA
CIP**N HAHS
64 •· • NCll\UIClll or lleG'WClr lltMIGll ALPHA UTA
APPi.i JUlCI
•ca ccaa
IKMICll AURA llTA
TOMATO IAUCI
16 ca plD; • A90ltled ~-
IKMICIS ALPHA UTA
MACAllONI
ltca.• ..... ot~
RMICll ALPHA lftA nunrn
•
•
s:::Sfl.
't:: 111 .. ... ....... IA.
~ ..... I St.
.. 'f:l .. R .
TASTERS •••
•romCl
north of ~cw ~rk City, studcnu
sat around a conference table and
tasted two samples of cola. The
auignment: see if there were dif-
ferences between them.
Each student swirled cola in a
plastic shot alass. sniffed, then
sipped. They looked at the table, or
the ce1lin1, their thou&hts concen-
trated on their tonaucs.
Beakers of water and bread sticks
were available for clearina the
palate.
They sipped again, then marked
their .. cola scorecards" -a scale
from .. none" to "pronounced" -
for each taste component.
Then they compared their
scorecards with a consensus card
marked by expens. The students
did very well. All noticed that one of
the colas had more citrus. less
carbonauon and was slightl y more
musty than the other -all signs
-that one was older than the other.
For the students, all recruited
locally by-word of mouth, mark.ina
their scorecards correctly one time
means tittle. They've got to be able
to reproduce their results time and
time again.
When the~ iraduate, the> move
next door. where a dozen taste
al enclosed eeuntertops. Testers ne ver sec the faces of the
technicians who pass them samples
-only an arm ma white lab coat as
a tray 1s passed through the wall.
Nor can the\ see otber testers.
There is no tafkmg.
At Pepsi. tramed taste testers
make SI 0 an hour for an hour or
two of work each week. At
McConmck and Ccr., :'..employees
who volunteer for tasti'"Testina arc
rcwal'ded with parues or sma.ll sifts.
At Kansas State University, where
food researchers learn thetr trade,
taste testers take a one semester
course for the privilege of eamma
$2) a week. .
'"I get absorbed in it:' said
Pauline Malosk1, a taster-m-tram-
1ng at Pepsi. "It fascinates me. You
never reahu or appreciate what a
compan} d~s for a product."
A different
brunch finale
By CECIL V BROWNSTONE
OEA\R CECILY: I oftenentertam
a pan1cular group of friends at
brunch for whom I hke to vary m)
menus. l also enJO} serving an
appropriate brunch dessen.
Not chocolate mousse or pecan
pie because I thmk the~ 're far too
sweet and nch after a noon break-
fast. I've often served pecan buns or
coffee cake with those last cups of
coffee. but no" I'd like to offer
something different.
.\n)' suggesuon7 -TUR "l-
ABOL'T
DEAR TURN-ABOUT· A des.
sen we tned recently, Nectanne
Custard Tan. struck my fancy and I
thml.. 1t appropnate for a summer
brunch You make it early m the
morning and chill 1t, then JUSt
before sen mg 1t at noon. top 1t wt th
the nectannes I have a fechna you
ma> find 1t JUSt "hat you wish. -
C.B.
FRESH NECARTINE
CUSTARD TART
1 cap stirred all-parpose floor.
scooped lnto mcaaare and
leveled
'• teaspoon bakJn1 powder
..._cop 1ugar
,., cap batter
t large eu yolks
l cup soar cream
l teaspoon vuUla
4 or S mediam-stze fresh Dtt-
tartae1
In a mec:hum bowl stJr together
flour bak1n~ powder l'ftd "• cup of
the sugar~ Wu.ha pastcy blender cut
m butter until m1,ture 1s a crumbly
consistency. Pat evenly over bot-
tom a_nd half wa> up sides of a 9-
1nch square baking pan, make su~
edges betv.ccn bottom and lldctare I fairly thin. Bal..e ma preheated~•,
dqrtlC oven for 10 minutes.
Meanwhile. beat yolks with
• rcmainina '• cups , 10Ur crca.m
I and vanilla JU t until ltndcd.
:>prcad o~~r bot etvst and at
400 dqree1 for another S minutes.
Ctnll uncovered.
)~t. before 1UV1q '19" cu.ou
occunn to make l cups and top
chilled tard tan with tbc bee
. M es b '°""'
... ,
I
. l
f
1
I
l
C8 • Or.nge Coat OAILY PILOT/Wedne9dl!!__AUQU.t 7, 1985 ., .. .
I • Serve alternatives to costly thirst quenchers
'
BJ DOROTHY WBNa ...... ucc ' ............. Hot weather lS thirst~ time. And if ev~one in your family hits the
refriaeratorof\cn forcold drinks it
could cost you plenty-especially
ifthty're drink1ng canned or bot·
tied sodas or thirst quenchers.
Chcaperalternauv¢Sare iced tea
and drinks made from flavored.
powdered products, including
lemonade and other fruit flavors.
Cheapest of all, ofoourse, is plain
water.
You can improve the flavor of
plain water by adding thin slices of
lemon or orange. Chill a pitcher of
water with citrus fruit slices in the
refrigerator, and replenish the water
as needed, reusing the fruit.
HeAlthwisc, the cheapest is best!
Plain watcrhasnotb.inadissolvcd
in it to im~ being absorbed into
younystcm so it can quench your
thirstquickly. Itleaves thcstomach
promptly in contrast to drinks with
supr and other substances that
cause the body to draw body fluids
into the stomach to dilute them.
Suprin soft and flavored drinks
also adds lots of calories, which
mostadults don't need. A 12.ounoc
soft drink contains an average of
l 50 calorics.
Children don't need these .. naked
calorics .. either. "Nak.edcalones"
providCCMIJY but few or no other
nutrients such as vitaminsand
minerals.
On thcotherhand.aivinachil-
dren unlimitedaccesJ to artificial.
I y-swectened beverages is not
necessarily the best altemati vc to
suprcd-drinks, and certainly not to
·water.
NutraSwect is the brand name for
the oommonly used sweetener,
aspartame. Aspartame llas over-
taken saccharin in popularity be-
cause it does not give drinks the
bitter aftertaste that many people
***** . ***** Boneless
experience from sacehann .
Also, aspartame i believed by
someiobe ferthansacchann.
Becauseofrescarchcvidencethat
saccbann may cause bladder cancer
inJ'Jlt.s.. lhe sweetener must carry a
warning label describmg this poten-
tial hazard,. Howcv~ the safety of aspartarpe
has not been proved to the sattsf ac-
tion of all.
For example, the American
Academy of Pediatric's Commmce
on Genetics and Environmental
Hazar.ds does not believe the Food
and DrugAdministrat1on(FDA)
has enough valid data to establish
the safety of thi sweetener for small
children and prqnant women.
Aspartame is composed to two
aminoacids.oncofwhichis
phenylalanine. When aspartArne 1s
broken down in the body dunng
met bolism, phenylalanine is re-
leased and can be found in the
blood.
Foods and beverages containing
aspartame arc required by law to
include information on the label
about the phenylalanine to alert
those concerned with PKU. PKU,
phen ylketonuria, is a rare genetic
disorder in which persons must
restrict their intake offoods con-
*****
Freah Whole 69 Err,rrt'!fl• LB • Round Steak f 5S Ground Beef 369 Patties LB
I.ADY LEE. FROZEN 3 BAG
DOES NOT EXCEED~ FAT
***** Top Round 17S Steak
BONELESS LB
*****
LadyLee 89 Braunschwelger
LB .
***** Pork Loin f 39_ Roast "
SIRLOIN CUT LB
I ""
Honeydew 19 Melons
RIPE DELICIOUS l B •
Fresh 39 Broccoli·
RICH IN VITAMINS LB •
~I
~ f
·' 7 6 MmuteMa1d ,.
• OllANGE JUICE .. -
----l
-1 ~'~I ~\. ~
./
!Orange
Juice
MINUTE MAIO
FRO ZEN CONCENTRATE
2 VARIETIES 12 OZ CAN 10s
!Hansen's
Apple
Juice
Fil TEAED ~OZ BTL 13.S
rDel Monte
Cats up
OuEEZABLE 28 OZ BH 11s
Longer
Store Hours!
Weekday18 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday . 8 a.m. to 8 p.M.
•
PIECES PEA TRAY
***** Top Sirloin 1s1 Steak
BONELESS BEEF LOIN LB
***** Armour
Turkey Roast 17S
BONELESS. FROZEN LB
***** 17S Cross
Rib Roast
BONELESS LB. BEEF~K
Fresh 69 Mushrooms
GOURMETS 8 OZ PKG •
DELIGHT
---
rLady Lee
Tuna
CHUNK LIGHT MEAT
WATER OR OIL PACK
12!.0Z CAN 11s
r Velveeta
S//ces
qEGULAR OR EdRA
IHICI< 12 OZ PKG rs
FULL CIJT LB
-***** F~ng , .• 55 C lcken
WHOLE BODY,
SOUTHERN GRADE A
***** Lady Lee 1 ;:~16s Bacon
REGULAAOA
THICK SLICED '
***** Fresh L8 21s Butterllsh
FILLET
r Harvest Day
Bread ?I BUTTERMILK OR POT A TO.
' 240Z LOAF :, .89
~Inglenook
&Nava/le
Wines
4 VARIETIES 15 LTR BTL ass
I Hiram
Walker's
Bourbon
TEN HIGH. 80 PAOOf
17HTR BTL
8S9
***** Boneless 1ss Rump Roast
SIRLOIN CUT LB
***** Fresh
Ling Cod ,.a1s
FILLET
***** Fresh
Turbot
FILLET LB
11s
I rSchaefer ~ RE!~OGHT
12 PACK. 12 OZ. CANS ass
r ScotTovvels
Junior
SOS F ROLL
.49
r ScotTlssue
Bath Tissue
~ WHIT£ OR ASSORTED, ~-..--at-~-~··~~~
rPurex
Detergent
147 0Z BO X 41s
rKal Kan
Dog Food
~VARIETIES, 14 OZ CAN
.41
...
!"Key Buys mean
i extra savings.
Key Buys ere items priced below their everyday
tower pnce u 41 result of manufacturers
temporary promottonat 11tow1ncet or
excepttonat purcnaje• ......... ...__,, ___ r::··-' .._...,, ....... ,_,_..,....,.,,...
~·-•f l_, __ .. ,...._ ....... ........ ..__ .. c.-.-
tainina Pheynlalaninc.
The Amencan Academy ofPedi
tricscommiu is nolconvinced
that bloodlevcJs of phenylalanine
now considered safe ( 40 pcreent
below the level that leads to toxicit
m the fetus) are actually without
hazard. Thus, theuseofa pa.name
sweetened foods and beverages by pregnant women isespeciallyqucs
tionable,t and they should never be
fed to inrants.
lt isn •t Hkely that small cbild/Cn
will consume levels of aspartarhc
tllat exceed acceptable limits. A 3-
year-old, for example, would have
to consume more than three full
cans of diet soda to exceed the
acceptable daily intake.
However, from the standpoint 0 1
good nutrition, it would be more
appropri.alcfor smallchildren to bf
consuming ordinary beverages
such as milk, fruit juices, and water
During the early years when
eating habits arc being established,
habitual intake of excessive
amounts of sweetened foods can la!
the groundwork for a sweet era vi ng
The taste would exist whether the
taste was from sugar or a syntlletic
sweetener.
Thus. for young children, it
might be better to use ordinary
foods sweetened with ordinary
sugar, but to limit the amount they
consume. The assumption that
consuming syntheticaJly-swcet-
ened foods give carte blanc he to
eating unlimited amounts can lead
to inappropriate food choices, es-
pecially for small children. • • •
QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED:
Q. My cbUdren, Sand 5, bave
developed a ta ate for cola
bevenges, aad drlak diem 1everal
dme1 a day. My motber-ln-law bt
clalded me aboat tbJ1 -Ille uya tlae-
kld1 ue getting too macll caff elae.
lttbl1tne?
A. Your mother-i n-law is correct.
Cola beverages, and other fla vors of
soft drink, unless labeled "no
caffeine," contain considerable
amounts of it-35 to 55 milligrams
in 12 ou nces, compared to 65 to 115
milligrams in a 5-ounce cup of
coffee. One can of caffeine-containing son drink (cola or other flavors) to a
small child can have the stimulant
effect of four cups of coffee to an
adult Most youngsters are nat-
urally active enough and don't need
the additional stimulation of caf-
feine. .. . .
Q. Y earsago hwltcbed to deca-
ffelaated coUee. Now I've been
reading tbat tile cbemlcal tlaey ate
to decaffelaate eoffee may ua1e
caacer. If tbl1 l1 trae, wby are tbey
allowed to sell decaffeinated cof-
fee?
A. The most widely used
chemical to decaffeinate coffee,
methrlene chloride, is in the same
chemical family as other known
carcinogens. ln 1982, it was re-
ported that researchers found that
methylene chloride caused liver
ca ncer in mice.
H~owever, there were flaws in the
research soi t is not considered
reliable. Also, only trace amounts of
methylene chloride arc detectable
indecaffcinat.edcoifee._
Some manufacturers have
switched their processing to what
they feel is a safer method. The
most popular altenative uses ethyl
acetate, a chemical found naturally
in bananas and pineapple and
believed to be safe.
Water ex traction is used by some
foreign decaffeinated coffee
producers, but their products are
not widely available in the United
States. • • •
Q. Recently I dJ1covered u -
1weeteaed appleaaace ud am try· me to penaade my Jam Uy it ta1te1
.. cood •• "e sweetened ap-
ltleaa.ce ud will uve calories.
bey waat to bow J-.1t bow muy
calories tbe~reAvlng.
A. Sweetened applcS8\l(:C has ~
about twice the calories-97 per
half-cup-compared to 53calories
per half-cup in unsweetened ap.
plesauce. That's equivalent to
abouta tablespoon of sugar.
Fish simmered
in bean sauce
FISH WITH BLAClt
BEAN SAUCE
Seaameon
1 knob freab glacerroot (walaat
1lze), peeled and c•t la fl.De
1trtp1
1 larce clo~e garlic, finely
cllopped ·
3 tableapooaa aalted black beans
1 tablespoon lemon jalce
! tablttpoom aoy u.ce
t tea1poom ••a•r
i,c, cap dry 1laerry
1 ~ poand1 wllll&e·Oea~ fltla flllet
(aac• 11 cod), cat la t truck
pieces
• lar1e scalllou, c•t dla1oully
la ftae atrlpt
ftla 1trtpt sweet red pepper
Heat a little sesame oil an 1 wok
and stir·fry &i nacr, aarlic and beans
for a few minute!; star ln lemon
juice. soy sauce. supr and hcrry
Lay fillets in the sauoc nd
immer un~il cooked lh[ouah -20
to lS n:unutcs. pnn~ with
tcalhonnnd simmera few minutes
tonger. Garnish wnh red pepper .
Serve at once. Make 4 sen-in
•
•
Come fl.11 the tomilt(> cups
With c~.ptra,st,ng_t8J.avo_!'s
When in Rome, do as the -etable oll . tomatoes vertically. Remove pulp
Romans do. Eajoy the pleasure of i tabletpooa1 c'~ fr11la with melon baller. or with knife, mreshina salads 10 ldd crisp tex-batll or i .-. teupoou.-drled cuttina into ~-inch' dice. Reserve
ture to your meal. baaU tomato shells.
And when in America, do as I clove aarnc, mhlced Jn bowl whisk ~inegar and oil.
trend-setting Americans do. Ertjoy 14 ceaspooa salt Mix in basil, prlic, salt and pepper.
your sala<S with crunchy California ·~ tea1pooa pepper Add ·tomato pieces and cheese;
walnuts! 'ouces mo1urella claeese, cat toss.
Walnut Tomatoes Romany takes tato ~-lacla cabet Cover and chill 1 to 2 hours. Mix
its inspjration from the Italian love ~ cap coanely cbopped wabaats •12 cup chopped walnuts into
of salads, with such traditional WalDat laalvea aad pieces, for tomato-cheese mixture, then fill
ingredients as basil, mozzarella 1anal1b tomato shells. Garnish with walnut
cheese Ind tomatoes. But introduc-With small knife, remove stem halves and pieces. Makes 4 ser-
-
in1 the nuttY·&ood taste and texture ends from tomatoes. Halve vinp.
of walnuts -that's a deliciously r------~-------=-----------=::::::::;;;::;:::=============::;:================:::;;:::::::::::::======================::::::===
Californian invention!
Salads are wonderfully versatile.
Ypu can serve one as an appetizer,
side dlsh, main disll or as a separate
course before dessert. Walnut
Tomatoes Romany, for example,
makes a lovely antipasto course to
start off your meal or a light main
course for lunch.
The chopped walnuts, along with
mozzarella cheese, help to boost the
protein content, as well as provide a
wide variety of essential vitamins
and minerals.
WALNUT TOMATOES
ROMANY
• tomatoes (about 3 lncbes ID
diameter)
3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons' olive oU or veg-
Stuffed
potatoes
a favorite
Today, people are moving some
traditional side-dish foods into new
roles as entrecs. Witness the popu-
larity of the entree baked potato.
Herc's another version - a
baked potato with the interior
removed, mixed with chopped
broccoli, Cheddar cheese and a dab
of mustard and refilled. The twice-
baked stuffed potato, once a staple
for the formal dinner, becomes a
tasty and easily prepared entree.
Frozen, chopped broccoli helps
make this recipe not only one that
requires just a.few steps to assemble
but also adds colorful nourishment
to the finished dish.
While the potatoes bake, run
water over the broccoli in a col-
ander or strainer to thaw, grate
some cheese and_ then sit back and
relax. When the potatoes are done,
simply combine the few simple
ingredients with the interiors of the
pot.ates and rebake to heat.
Serve tl:}is entree with salad and
French bread to round out a light
but satisfying menu.
STU FFED BR OCCOLI
POTATOES
3 (about 1% ounces each) nt11et
potatoes
OH
-14 e•p-mtlk
2 tablespoon• butter or margar-
ine, melted
2 tea1poon1 Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon onion 1alt
"' teaspoon peppe~
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
cbopped broccou. thawed and
drained
1 cap 1bredded Cheddar cbeese,
dJvided
Scrub potatoes; rub lightly with
oil. Pierce several times with (ork.
Bake at 400 degrees SO to 60
minutes or until tender. Cut baked
potatoes in half lengthwise.
Carefully scoop out centers, leav-
ing shell intact.
Mash scooped-out polafo. Add
milk, butter, mustard, onion salt
and pepper; btat until smooth and
fluffy. Fold in broccoli and l/• cup
cheese. Mound filling into potato
shells. Sprinkle tops with remain-
ing.I/• cup cheese. Return to oven 10
to 15 minutes or until thordughly
heated. Males 6 seMnas· l . _
FISH& -Jk
TIPS ~-I~ . . . . rt
ln10111Wl'Dlll& When
~htl\W! OMW9'(youcan
dcttct howtdl It 11-1.ook lftn the~·
'The cye1ahOIJd be dear.~ and
~notdoudy.
ar10t111omaW1111,..
~ meUlodof cktcnnlnlnt.
lth'•hlhnatltdonc bv.~
the .... They lhoUld be pl:r\lc In color
and t-... dMn tmtl
-...OCOllNlm Howmuchbh
lh°"1 you b4J{1 ~It\ undrUecd
bl\ hat Iott otWMtc. Mf:NI about2/3to
3/4 h. s-r pcrtOnOf tlhc llh ..
dRteed (drawn. ec.-.kd end ciun9d)
dow•bout 1/l lb. pc penon.
aranei Coetlf• OnJy Aw.n:I W1Mtnc
Sutoodlta...nnt
~
(714) 675-2566
Loc•l'td on the ot~.an front
ecrou fl'Qin \hf N«wpof'l &.ach per •
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater's Low, Low Prices!
.ND BONE-IN CORNER CUT
s:.oz
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Chuck Roast ~ ..
Sliced Bacon ~~"°
Sirloin Tip Roast .~ELUS
Smoked Sausage l~y
Chuck Steak ~
Alaskan Cod ~m:n°
Snow Crab ti.~~
Red Snapper = ...
L.l s1.49 Dinner :~·u•1vs~ ~ .. ~'2.49
IA 81.19 Enchilada Dinner E"~~~ 82.19
L.I s1 .59 Party Snacks ~~~=..au. &-OZ ggc
L.I s1.$.9 .Entrees =s ,ooz s1.49
L.I s1.59 Morton Dinner ~:~,,.~ »~ s1.sg
LI '1.89 -. Banquet Chicken =~ ·~ 82.89
LI s1.99 Cheese Cake $!~0!4 ,, .. ~ 82.59
• L.I '2:49 -Waffles ~~r~'ovu~~ ,~age
JWples ~3
Casaba Melons :.."':':~so"
Potatoes ~~~0~
lAAGE FREsH HAWAIIAN ....
PlneaPPJe
2cr r~
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
MINUTE MAID LEMONADE OA
Fruit
Paneh
9r
T 0mato Sauce HVl<tS
Noodle Roni E.
·whlpps =.?
Wheat Chex t:::lf"
Grape Jelly =~a.·
Peanut Butter ENY
Bath Tissue e.~1
Splllmate Towels ~.
Orange Juice ~ .
•&-OZ 7gt; Bac~rdi Rum :!}~:0~
,.oz sec Budweiser ::T
•01 s1.75 CC Vineyard 1'.:r ($
c'>c Bourbon =~ M)l ~~ -~
4-0l ggc . Rhine Bear Wine
..,,~ s1.59 Crown Russe ~"?·
•tntoz S3.29 CANADIANLordlO PAOOf'
ftfte . Crown
811111 ~·-~ Calvert
•.at 92.3S Sft 1118
»OZ '1.89 -~·I~~ fil'J-49 _
J'llJCa UllCllft 7 J'UU. DA n .. .... ..... ,.,..
' ~-
ll u Q 14
,,_. • '' -.
... • ...
10
AO\UTI ED ITEM
G AlllA~TEE
1
. ' -
-or_,. COMt DAILY PtLOT /Wedneeday,
SWEET
SEEDLESS
GRAPES
Summer Favorite
Great For Snack
PRODUCE FROZlN FOOD
~~PINEAPPLE EA 149
SWEET RED PEPPERS . 79 s..edF-I.A •
2i_~E!it...~r;!;LDW CHILILB .69
~~a_~~CK PL<JMS Lil .69
~~~~~AS Lb .69
~492<-'~!PLES LB .39
~~GREEN BEANSt.a .59
!i<:!..~~ft:~~ 5~79
DIEFFENBACHIA 6 ~ POr 299
Of llunch ~ £,.,
BARTLE1T 3 9 PEARS LM~ S1~r l B •
Summrt Trut
DAIRY
ORANGE
JOICE · .99 ~ 6'~CMton WITH COCUON
ffiYSfAIJJSWIRL
bv IM>ef
THIS WUI< S FEATURE ITEM
BEVERAGE
~,.49
WTni t,00 ~ PURCHMF.
--
~=:o ]69
!:'-o.11o11 c........ \
PICSWEET VEGETABLES
Oel Sor.~ °' OP~. 16-0unce 8"11
VONS FRIED POTATOES ~ c... ... Ct1n1<1t eu.. l2-0unot a..
VONS VEGETABLES ~ or Btocml1 ~· IOOuncw !loo
WEIGHT WA'TCHERS
Fllh, .).s.i.-d ~ 6.~9~ ea.
CHICAGO BROS. PIZZA ~ 13-0I Oolwot I~°"""" &..
.99
.99
.55 -
1"
299
STOOPFERS
ENI REES J29
Ch~ Al• King. 9.75.0L Bo..
Cl( Swedlth Mutbllls. 11-0t. 8cM
LIQUOR
KESSLERS BLEND
1 ~Liter &oltlc 9"
~~~~2~t CHABLIS 399
HEINEKEN BEER ~ °' 0.~ 6Pock l!loltlt
POPOV VODKA l~l!lol1i.
399
749
BOD UGHT
12-PK. BEER 429
12 .()ura Ceno
s-"'°
FARMER JOHN 69 !!JENERS e
16-0unce ~ """ COCIJIOfll
VONS COOKED HAM 139
$1-S ~~S-Or 020• P"9 1991
VONS SINOLE SLICES 139 W._.s a-,,_, 12 0-. PllCMgo
WILSON "JOST FOR US" 499
IWn ~ 0t Honey I"-'. 2 Pbund Peclotgr
HOFFY DINNER FRANKS 179
lM V.0-~yt. lf>O.-. Pee~
!,<~.~~~HEESE 139
VONS J99 JACK CHEESE Ul w1...,...., ~·~ Jeck F-lty Pecti (~ S... UI 204HS... ~LAI
--
Trio of treats win brownie
points from ~ny age g~oup
Who doesn't love ll chocolate
brownie? Fudscy, chewy and choc-
olatey, brownies are an all-Ameri-
can ·favorite chocolate treat.
Although particularly popular
amona the teen-age set, adults love
them too.
colic aues.
There's rtally nothing hkc a
brownie made from scratch.
FUDGEY BROWNIES
~ cup1a1ar
i tab1eapooas butter
% tablupoons water
Brownies p:tck more sweet satis-
faction in one square than most
other baked treats and, they are so
transportable. as they travel well to
picnics, poolside. backyard
barbecues or for toting off 10 the
office to win "brownie" points with
1 ~ cups semi-tweet cbocoface
mlnl chips
2 e111
~ cap 11.DJUted all-purpose nour
1.4 C.HlpooD baktnl toda
1/e &eupoon salt
1 teaspoon vanJlla
GI.OB!! A-1 9ft CMll!I •,,.on ..
1!"CAR0N1f1R EE
•~a.. wmeco...
HEINZ CUCUMBERS 79 ...... Sica 16.ou.-.. •
159
189 A·l STEAK SAOCE 160unao l!loltle
DAWN UQUID
DEIERGENT ~L ..
~98
SWANSON CHICKEN Ou* WNle, ~ c..
"CREAMETTES l..ASAGNE ~llaa
DEL MONTE BEANS """*' a.-,, 16-0unat c..
CAft\PBELl.!S JUICE .,._ 6-hd<. ~ P"9
SHREDDED WHEAT N-~ SI-. 19-0unc'P &.
SUNSHINE COOKIES ~17-0unca~
IVORY SOAP REALL
Llqwld. le.°""'11 8oclte
KRAFT
JlllAYOPINAISE ==-~
129
149
J59
DON BATHROOM CLEANFR1 39 17.0W.-Owl -• .l
WINDEX GLASS CLEANESM 29 l2.0W.-lloUle •• .l
· WITllCMIT COOJION 1.99
!!!!!tGENT J 59
tnctudet ~Off. 42-0unce Box WITH COOPON
BONELESS J39 RO<IND STEAKL8 T4ll>k l(lng
8ed
k.~<1~9..U~~~EF IA 129
BEEF SHORT RIBS L8 149 r-PUng °""
f<?~'"\,!.QIN ROASTS LB 119
f.2~u!.-9~ ]J~ CHOPS :-1. 89 ia ~~--LDIN CHOP~ te 149
~~!t ~1~ISK~~.!HIGH~ .89
WILSON'S SAUSAGE 198 Smoloed,~ °' Chttw ~ t.6
FARMER JOHN HAMS 198 Goldtn Trao.uon. 9cwwlML w. ... Addtd La
HOFFY SLICED BACON 159 Hlclcory SmoMd UI
FRESH CORNISH J09
GAME HENS · L8 ........ ........
SEA FOOD
SILVERBRITE SALMON 239 \llldt or ~ F"""' ,.......,, (Sieeb L.11 2 9111 LA
$2~~0CJQHY ALL~ 398
WESTERN OYSTERS 229 Fmh. 8.()ulQ J.t EA
HEAL TH {, BEAUTY AIDS _ . sr.Rv1.cr. DE.~I . ~~T .~.~-K~R.v ...
TYLENOL EX. STRENOTH ICJO.eo...t~ .
AQUA FRESH roont!Nn 6,«>uta (1ndudo .JO om
COREL LDTION
-urbw 6-0ura
BONEI.ESS-
'IOP SIRIOIN
STEAKS
Table King
Beef.
---
WILSON D<J'R:H LOAF 299 a-. "°' ~cs-.JO Ul) I.A
SONOMA JACK CHEESE 299 s.o... Sllcld (S-.JO I.A) I.A
FODGE S<JrIDAE CAKE 299 a-. a.. WMll Im c-
cup cbopped natl (opdoaal)
Line an 8 or 9·mch square p r
with olummum foil; arease foil, se
aside. Combine sugar, butter a.nc
water in .saucepan. PJacc .ovCJ
medium heal, sllmn1oocasionally
unlll mixture boils.
Remove from heat; add min
chips stimng until melted. Ade
eggs; beat with spoon until wel
blended Combine flour, ba1dn£
soda and salt; beat into chocolate
mixture. Stir 1n vanilla and
chopped nuts; pour into prepare<l
pan. .
Bake at 325 degrees for 25 to 3C
minutes or until toothpick insen ed
in center barely comes out clean.
Do not overbake. Cool; remove
from pan. Frost. if Ctesircd, with
Easy Brpwnie Frosting and top
with pedln half. Cut into squares.
20 brownies.
EASY BROWNIE FROSTING
3 tablespoon• butter, softened
3 cablespoons 11n1wee&ened
cocoa
~ tcaspooll vanUla
11.4 cups confccUooera' aagar
t tablespoons milk
Cream butter and cocoa in small
mixer bowl; add vanilla and con-
fectioners' sugar. Blend in milk;
beat until mixture reaches spread-
ing consistency. About I cup.
Cbocomln& Fro1tlog: Add 'I• tea-
spoon peppermint extract with
vanilla to frosting.
BR&WNIE BARS
Brown.le Base (recipe below)
% cap baUer or margarlDe,
softened
1 cup sugar
3egg1 I
114 teaspoons vanilla
% cup anslfted all-purpose Oour
~ cup unsweetened cocoa
1/, teaspoon baking powder
14 teaspoon we
~ cap coarffly chopped walnats
Cbocolale Glaze (recipe below)
Prepare Brownie Base; while
base is cooling. prepare brownie.
Cream butter in large mixer bowl;
gradually beat in sugar until light
and fluffy. Beat m eggs, one at a
time. Stir in vanilla.
Combine flour, cocoa, baking
powder and salt; -blend into
creamed mixture. Stu in nuts;
spoon batter evenly over brownie
base.
Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 35
minutes or until wooden pick
inserted I 1/i inches from center
comes out barely moist. Cool
completely in pan: frost with Choc-
olate Glaze. Cut into 25 bars.
Brownle Base:
1 cup qulck-cooldng rolled oac1
~ cup unsifted all-purpose Ooar
~ cap packed br-0W11 Atar
•/, teupoon bakin& soda
14 teaspoon sale
I tablespoon.-melted baUer or
margarine
Combine ingredients except but-
ter in a bowl. Stir in melted butter.
Press 1ntoan even layer in greased 9
x 9 x 2-mch square baking pan.
Bake at 350degrees for 10 minutes.
Cool on rack 15 minutes.
Cbocotace Glaze: Melt 1/• cup
semi-sweet chocolate mini chips
and 2 tablespoons butter in top of
double boiler over simmering
water or microwave o n high about
40 to 50 seconds. Stir until mini
chips and butter are melted. Spread
over brownie.
BLACK AND WHITE
ICE CREAM SODA
2 to 3 tablespoons chocolate
flavored syrup
1/, cup chilled glogerale or club
soda
% 1coop1 vanilla lee cream
AdclUlonal cblllecl clab soda
Mix syrup and 'I• cup club soda in
12-ounce glass; add scoops of
vanilla ice cream. Fill glass W1th
additional club soda. GamiSh with
strawberry or cherry. Serve with
long-handled spoon and straw. One
12-ounce serving.
Spicy en tree
takes ribbing
BARBECUED RIBS
i racu of 1parertbt, abo•t t
pottnclt eacll
3 tablupoon1 Hain soy sauce
1 tablespoon dry 1beny
4 table1poon1 kctcbap
1 tablespoon concentrated or-
anse Jalce, anclll•ted
4 tablespoons sagar
! tablespoons Hney
l table1pooa Hiila IHCt
Ya teaspoon five spice powder
t clrvps red food color1a1, lf
detlred
Trim any fat from ribs and
remove any overlappina piC()C of
meat on bony idc. Lay ribs ftat in a
shallow dish Mix remainina invc·
dicnts and rub this marinade on
both sides of ribs; refnacrate for at
least 4 hours or ovcmiaht.
Plaoc marinated meat on a rack
over a pan filled wi th l inch of
water to prevent sticklna and
burning. Ro t in a preheated 37S·
degree oven for H minutes. In·
creast heat to 4SO degr«u nd roast
for 10 more minute . rvc 1m-
mcdi1tcly. Serves 4.
•''
" '
* Diiiy Plllt WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 7. 1985
Coata Meu'a John MOffet awlma to win In u)ng Coune. D2.
Athletea from U.S., U.8.8.R. to mMI In Goodwlll G8mee. D2e
D.itr ,... ,.... .., llldwd .....
JW (left) and Alme Bender of Newport Beach abare an early-International Surfing Auoclation atandinaa. and are only
momlna wave. They are currenqy rldlng up the Women'• one of a handful of aurflng alaten ln Soutliem California.
Baseball strike is over
Player s , workers
a t Anaheim get
wishes fulfilled
By CHRIS MONA.HAN
D.., ,,.. CetTI IP o ,.,,,
If the missing stadium workers an<l
the empty park.mg lot didn't convey
the message clearly enough, the
recording that came over the
louClspealcers in ront of Anaheim
Stadium certainly did.
"Ladies and gentlemen, the Major
League Players ASSuC1at1on has Hl·
siructed lls members not to be 1n
uniform for tonight's game. therefore
the Cahfomia .Angels will not bi able
to play ~flni~ as scheduled," re-
peated the voice over and' over.
Indeed. eight months after their
current contract had run out, the
members of the Angels. as well as the
other 25 teams. were out on strike -
although today it was settled and play
resumes on Thursday.
With the strike now cntenng 11s
second da)'. the Angel clubhouse 1s
quiet and nearly deserted. only equip-
ment manager Mickey Sh1shito and
several of the clubhouse boys re-
mained to break the silence.
"I'll come in every day to clean up
the equipment," said Sh1sh1to. "I'll be
ready when they come back ...
Would 1hc prospect of an empty
Players
rlde the
inagic bus
clubhouse bother him? ··No. because
I come and-do it (work) after the
season."
Said Rand) Candias. one of the
Angels' bat boys. 'Tm JUSl gomg 10
take it day by day. I'm luck-y, I have
another Job as a publisher's represen~
tative."
Candias said the stnke hH him at a
~an1cularly bad ume.
.. I was going to go on on the road
lnp (to Minnesota and Sca1tle). my
one and only road trip of the year.
"twas-hoping that this-year.I r.oul<t
use the money I made to help pay for
college. but that may be shot now.
''I've been an Angel bat boy for fi~e
(Plea.e see ANGELS/02)
Angels begin
7-game trip
The Angels' scheduled game
with the Seattle Mariners was
scuttled by the brief two-day
baseball stnke, but they'll make
those two postponed games up at
a later date, sunn1sed an Angels'
official.
Today's announcement that
the dispte between the owners
and players' association had been
patched up sent AnJcls officials
into a flurry of act1v1ty, trying to
contact their players and get them
back for a fl1Jht to Minneapolis
where they begin a four-game
series with the Twins beginning
Thursday night.
All four games arc scheduled to
be televised - Channel 11 beam-
ing Thursday (5:35). Friday (5:35)
and Sunday( 11: I 5a.m.), Channel
4 airing Saturday's game at 10
a.m.
The Ao~els are al Sca1tle for
three beginning on Monday
before returning for a lengthy
bomestand, including series with
Oakland, New York. Detroit and
Baltimore.
,,.......-..
Bueball Commtaaloner Peter Ueberrotb, ahown on Illa Ont
day of the job Jut October, spearheaded today'• ded.aion.
Oh,_ bcothe
Surfin 'sisters
Newport Beach 's .
Benders making
waves on circuit
By SHARON FRUTOS
CM IN 0.-, ,... IUllt
Women surfers can be seen a1 many
Southern California beaches these
days, but it's not everyday surfing
sisters can be found. Especially goofy-
surfin.g sisters.
Alme and Jill Bender of Newpon
Beach, however, arc malun& waves as
amateur surfin$'s latest chart-
cbmbcrs, and their prcsen~ 10 area
waters is as common-as the tides.
Aime. 18, and Jill, 14. took up
surfing at different umes and for
different rea~ns. but they share
boards. wetsuits. and waves. And
both surf wath their bodies facing the
direction the wave breaks -goofy.
footed.
The Benders arc sure-footed.
though. when ll comes to paruc1-
pating in their favontc watersport
They grew up with a pool in their
backyard. and were taken out to sea
often on their parents' boats.
Alme ~tarted skateboardan& m her
early teens, and prOll'CSscd to
boogeyboard1ng.. She would watch
suners, surfing films, and sports
programs to orient herself wnh the
sport, and took to the waves when she
was 14.
Alme said Jill was less enthusiasuc
about sports m general "I was
excited." Aime sa1d of Jill's interest.
"I never thought she'd get into it.
~Her arms were all squiggly, and
she was JUSt frail. When she started I
thought it was just a phase."
Jilf's interest in surfing wasn't all
that took off The Women's Inter-
..
oa11onal SurfinJ As ociatioo's
(WISA) compnauon at Church's
Beach at Camp Pendleton July 21 saw
both Benders surf well.
Jill finished second in the amattur
junior women's divwon Aime was
fourih.
"Thett's no rivalry," Aime aatd.
"It's ruce to have someone to io out
and surf with."
Jill and Alme surf t()ICthu at
Newport Beach's 36tb Street almost
every day, mornms and evenm•
"I knew how to swim," JiU Wd. "l
would watch people and try to do
what l'd seen. But you can't JUSJ
watch." she added.
Leaming to surf was easier . for
Aime than for J111. Aime went in cold
turkey. She had one lesson in Hawaii,
but wa!> too embarrassed to 5ttk help
from local surfers. After finally ge\·
una up on the board, she pined the
coojjdcocc to continue. and even to
ask quesuons.
..We're always Learnill.J new
lbang.s," Alme sajd. "In surftnJ you
never really reach a peak."
The Benders arc also find.in& social
benefits to surfing.
.. It makes you meet a lot more
guys;· ·Alme said. Jill agreed and
added women arc gaining l"C$pcc1
from their male eountft'parts.
Neither J1ll nor Aime tooJc or-
ganized spons senously, but found
the need to JQID WISA m order to
network and compete against persons
of their own abilities. They've found
the compeutaon beneficial. even
when they're outmatched.
As far as the dan~r of the spon is
concerned. Jill says: "It's ufer than
SaraJeVO bobsledding.".
The Bendersistersaren'l.sure when
or if they'll tum pro, but they do have
long-range goals in mind.
··1 want to surf for ltfc." Aime said.
Ueberroth
Commissioner goesto
ba t to b ust stale mate;
But Fehr won't verify
NEW YORK (AP) -A "tentative
understanding" was reached t~y 10
the day-old maJor league baseball
stnkc. Comm1ss1oncr Peter Uebcr-
roth said. A union source said the
~ckage included_change~ 1.n cligibah-
ty for salary arbitratjon, a form of
revenue sharin& for financialJy
troubled teams. increases 10 owner
contnbu1ons to players pensions and
no salary cap. Strike
A spoke man for Ueberroth said a
news conference would be held 1~
New York at 5 p.m EDT and ne11hcr • _ ... """j ...
stde would ha~ an}' comment before
then.
Fehr. who said he would meet
shortly with MacPhail. saJd ofUcbcr-
roth's announcement, "The com-
missioner's office can announce
whateveril wants. rm not confirming
It or denvmg ..
.. Yes. absolu1el)', pos1t1vety.
baseball is back ··said John Scvano of
the Angels' pubhc relations del>art·
mcnt.
There was no formal an-
nouncement of terms But a uruon
player rt'presentauve who asked not
to bt-1dent1fie-d. said the tentauve
agreement rnnta1ncd
-No cap on 5!1la1Y arb1tratJon
awards
-Increase in ehgib1h1y for arb1-
trat1on from two )'ears ma.ior lea&uc
service 10 three, but the 1oc~
would not take effect dunng the first
two )'ears of the contract.
- A $40 m1lhon-a-ycar conmbu-
tion from the o.wners to the players'
pension t und. up from S 15 5 million
The pla,ers ongmall)' had asked for
$60 million a )ear.
-Rc-direcung pan of the dif-
ference IX-tween the $60 m1lhon and
$40 m1ll1on to financially troubled
clubs
PlaH·r reps were pollina their
Batter up!
teammates h)' phone 1n a rauficauon
vote in hopes of resuming play
Thursda)
The announcement came 100 late
to saH at least four of toda> 's 12
scheduled ma1or league games. The
Cincinnau Reds.-San 0.ego Padres·
game an C'incmnatt. scheduled to stan
at 12·30 p.m EDT. was called otl
earlier in the day. Tonight's Balli·
(Pleue Me BA8EBALL/D2)
Note: Rich Dunn, a part-time
wn'ter with the Daily Pilot for Lhe past
rhrce rears, is cu.r:re.nUy.., playins
profe55ional baseball with Idaho Falls
in a Oass A league. His views on life
in the mmor leagues follow in rhis the
:;::::::: ·Greed makes them not-such-good sports Padrelf 'play',
and beat Reda GREAT FALLS. Montana
Since four of the scheduled seven
games last week were postponed
because of rain. the main topic of this
diary will be what our players did
durin& the rainouts.
To bcain with, though, our
baJlclub's finally on a wmninas streak
and I completed m¥ fourth straight
p me -all victoncs -at Butte
Sunday night. An intercstina adven-
ture for me occuf'ed before that pme
at Butte -but more of that lau-r.
On this trip we were fonunatc to get
a bus dnver who would take us
anywhere we wafltcd. So when we
were rained out, the joke was that the
bus turned into an "urban assault
vehicle" the roundaround motor-
home vehicle used in the movie
"Stnpes".
Everywhere we went, the bus dnver
seemed to find a nice isolated par1una
spat for a couple of hours.
Af\eT one wa hed"'8way rme. "
dozen of us went to an ol movie
theater 10 downtown Butte. It
funny to ICC the bus parked. takioa "f.
several parkma places o~ 1 tecp hil .
It mu t have been funnier sce1na u
, ......... 8 08/02)
Baseball. football players stayingilw ay
from fields to sow seeds of disconte nt
Nobody came in on the noon
balloon from skatoon and asked
me.but ...
•Whatever the results oflabor-
managemcnt disputes in baseball -
or any prof; ionalspon-thc
common denominator 1s always
greed.
•J1mmytbeGrttk nydersaidall
the people involved in the baseball
hassle were "obnoilious" ... How's
that for the Pot callina lbe kettle
black? •
• lnterc uni cerebral matchup an
the Enc Dlclcenon case. • 0co'1Ja
Frontiereand Ken Norton.
•lfthcAnacls' ROdC'arewsnll
thankstbc mcdiadocsnot treat him
fairty, heshould check the repomof
hi J,OOOth bue bit at the B11A last
Sunday.
•I fKen Nonon can be a ports
a&ent.can theo.J>Cninaofa 1m1lar
office by Jerry Quarry be far behind?
•Even thouah ABC's new com-
mentator for Monday Niaht Football
1sa famous form« quarterback. he
should have done his homework for
his first broadcast.
•One wonders 1t theOiJ)pers·
aampy Bill Walton reallyCJtpectcd to
act picked upa a frceaient.
•So lottery uckets Cln 't be sold at
race1racks1nC'ahfomia. ·~they an
be sold naht aero s the street •Chee\ 1t out ... The bcsi horse
rac1nasonpwcrewnttcn bytuys
hold1nawinn1nat1cketsat Del Mar.
•The best baseball wnp wcrc
wn tten by guys dunn.a ptnods v.hcn
the playel"l were not on tnke.
•Aauyc.ryinauhcwalksoutofthe
race tn k probably ha a bid day at
thewindo
~ •The Umttd taics football
l..aaue has tivech.an<'C'S to urvi~e ••.
ltm, none. fat, C'hinama11 und
nowbaH in l}cll.
•Baseball salanes could be based
entirely on 1ncent1ve clauses bccau~
of the 1nd1V1dual nature of the game
but such a plan would not work in
foo1b3ll or basketball.
• l fbaseball owners read the recent
senes on Olympic bo Peter Ueber·
roth, they might be womed about the
new comm 1ssioncr of the srand old
g.,mc.
•It 1s said Los Angeles Raiders
m.U n man I Oa vis has no sense of
humor But chcd. out the way ht'
drcssn.
• Hurry up suddcl'\lhouah t. The
Anaets' RodCarcwstall hasn't pla}'ed
ma World Scncs.
•Enc Dickerson ha n'1pla>cd1n a
uperBowl
•The rank.sofbachclorhood are
fac1naa temble loss With the an·
nounCcd wcddana plans of Rams
auard Dennis Karrah ... But "H crk"
proma to act mamcd an the
mom1na so if it docs not ~ork out. he
v.ill notblowtbewhol day.
• Tht ittlly nttt JU>'S oflhc
N llOAal Football [cu~ were cheer· 1na wildly for a bastbaO sfrik't.
•Almo tm1sstd"'•sthe~t1~
tluD
TUCll_I --
ment annou~ment of former Anatl
rchevcr Andy Hassler
•lfyou rc~Jlyfoel 1he urse toarauc. ~ugcst that the Ram · 40lh an-
n1vcnar) aU-umc team coutd not win
1n today's Pro Bo..,I pmt'. •
•The Rams' new quant'rblct.
Dieter Brock from lbt' Qnachan
football Lc~aue, \l~s he wiU qiia the
12thmanbutd n tsay,,..hcthcrbe
., tallonaabout offense or dtfcnse.
•Thcbandblcwtheopcn1 Ii k. ~rcltrttblC"trfi rpf.al .
Our n:tum man ble_. ibc openint
klck
We alwa)' tan that wa~
..
(
..
+'
•
Biondi (48.96) sets the pace
World record in 100 free;
Mo fetretumtngtofor
Re.m•fnl'W llCIJedale
ToelJllt
6 p.m. -finals 200 ftteStylc, 400
individual medley, 800 freestyle relay
..... ~f BJ BRIAN UNDERWOOD 9:30 a.m. -prebmUUll}' heats 400
fttestytc, 200 1ndividual mecJiey, 50 free-
style, 400 fteest~le r?Jay.
o.llJ ..... Cefy "• .... ,, I
Whoever coined the phrase that 'records wer?
made to be broken. must have been speakina rather
prqmatically. And without any knowledae of a
youna man named Matt Biondi, whose 48. 9S in the
l 00-meten freestyle establishes a new tandard for
others to shoot at.
6 p.m. -finals 400 freestyle_, 200
indjvidual medley, SO freestyle, 400 free-
style relay.
Friday
9:30 a.m. preliminary heats 100 The U.S. Nauonal Long Course Swim Cham-
pionships kicked into full swtna Tuesday, a
capacity crowd of 4,000 at the Mission Vtcjo
International Sports Complex was treated to world
cla performances throu&bout the day 1tnd into the
early evening pnor to tfie the showdown in the
men's 100-meter freestyle event between Biondi
and fellow Olympian and 200-mcter freestyle
American record-holder Mike Heath.
backstroke, IOObreasmroke, tOObutterfly,
400 medley relay.
6 p.m. -Ona.ls women's l,SOO freestfle,
I 00 backstroke, I 00 breaststroke, 00
butterfly, men's l,SOO freestyle, 400
medley relay.
h's different not to have someone like Steve
(Lundquist. American record bolder) there On the comeback trail from a pulled aroin
muscJc suff~ at the Olympics last summer,
Ncwpon H¥bor High product John Moffet
showed the form whicn aavc him the 200-mcter
breaststroke world record briefly last summer,
setting a pool record of 2: 17."4 I to teach the swim
class of 1988 a lesson in respect to thei r elders.' If not
in years, throujh experience.
• "It feels le.ind of wierd to be the senior, Moffet
commented. "For so many years r was tht punk.
pushina me." _,,.. J
Motivation c>nmrule quaUty still remains.
·•1 felt decent today. I felt the best I've felt in the
200 fora long ti me. This year the 200 seems to have
come around a lot more."
One of the members of the rising band' of
oestarts who are gunnina to ao 'out with old and in
w1tb the new' is Steve Bentley of the Golden West
Swim Club.
I SPORTS BREAK ,, ---
Goodwill gesh:tre
gets Soviet,.U.S.
athletes.together
From AP dlspalcbes • MOSCOW -After the two countnes
took turns boycotting each other's Summer
Olympic Garn~ the.ii rnted-States-and the
Soviet Umon have taken steps to mend their athletic
fences. The heads of the Soviet and U.S. nauonal Olympic
committees met an Moscow Tuesday ior wnat was
believed to be the first such bilateral meeting si nce
Moscow announced its boycott of the Los Angeles
Olympics an May 1984. The U.S.
boycotted the Moscow Games in
1980.
In a separate acuon, Amen·
can and Soviet broadcasters an-
nounced that athletes from the
two nations will panicipate 10 a
world class mult1-spon event next
summer.
The announcement, at a
joint new~confcrence in Moscow,
London and New York, was '
Turner made by Atlanta-based Turner
Broadcasttn$ System. Inc., the U.S.S.R. State Commit-
tee for Television and Radio (Gosteleradio) and the All-
U nion Association SOyuzsportobcspctshco i ye
(Soyuzsport). (7 Officials with the three sponsors said they hoped to
hold the Goodwill Games once every four years.
In Moscow, Tass. the official Soviet news agency,
said Soviet NOC head Marat Gramov held talks with
Bob..Hclmick.. president of the USOC. and George
~illcr. secretary general of the U.S. committee. I Tass said the men .. exchanged views on topical
problems of the international sports and Olympic
movement and discussed possible ways of developing
sports contaca between the Olympics committees of
the two countries."
Ted Turner. clwrman ofTBS.wd in Atlanta that
the first Goodwill Games wall occur P.rinc1pally in
Moscow d.unng July 5-20. 1986. and wtll feature top
male and female amateur athletes .representing the
Unncd States. the Soviet Union and other countnes
which are anv1tccl to panici pate. Winners will be
awarded gold medals in approximately 160 events.
Quote of the day
The Ansels' Rod Carew paraphrasing
Struther Manin m the movie "Cool Hand Luke"
to fit the bMCball strike: "What we have here is a
failure to negotiate."
Georgia'• Henderson eligible
ATHENS, Ga. -The NCAA's m eligibility committee ruled Tuesday that
University of Georgia basketball player
Cednc Henderson as ehg1ble to play in the
1985-86 season
Henderson had been dedared 1nehgiblc Ma)' 23
when the Nauonal Collegiate Athleuc Assoc1at1on's
mfracuons committee found he was involved 1n a
recruiting v1olat1on
Henderson appcaJed . and the appeal was heard b}
the ehgibhty committee Tuesday 1n a conference
telephone call. Georgia's faculty chairman for athletacs,
Wilham Powell, part1c1pated 1n the conference c.all
along wnh Kent Lawrence, an attome) for the
uni versity. and Ed Tolley, Henderson's attorney
Georgia athletic oflic1ah. who announced the
committee's d~1on after re~~.1v1n~ official word from
the NC AA. said Hender~on '41 chgibilny was restorca
effective 1mmed1atcly
Moffett<back at Raiden camp
OXNARD -Tammy Moffett. the [!]
third-round draft choice who impressed 411 •
the Los Angeles Raiders' coaching staff
early in training camp. returned to full-
. time dut}'. Tuesday-to the lOY of Coach Tom Flores
Moffett. a wide receiver from M1ssiss1pp1. suffered
a bruised back two weeks ago an a scnmmagr with the
Dallas Cowboy~ and had not been 1n,olved 1n conta ct
work since then
"He did everything in practice today for the first
time, and wasn't ,hyina away because of pain," Flores
said Tuesday. "lf hc conunues to feel good. then we'll
try and get him a lot of action Saturday night "
.~
Donett claim• double crou ... .
DALLAS -Holdout running back EE Ton)' Dorsett of the Dallas Cowboys told II
the Dallas Times Herald in a front pa~ c •
story published today that he felt "double-
crosscd" by club management and is prepared to retire
or ask to be traded if his contract demands arc not met.
ln a telephone interview from Los Angeles to
Times Herald staffer Jim Dent at the Cowboys camp in
Thousand Oaks, Dorsett said he was promised by club
president Tex Schramm two YtalJ ago that his contract .Ml~~tcd.
He accused Schramm of not
fulfillina several promises and of
·-spreadina mr, financial business
all over town. '
Dorsett said: .. Right now.
• I'm prepared to sit out for as long
as I have to sit out. ff that means
retiring, I might have to do that if
the Cowboys don't pay me what
they promised."
Dorsett, whose problems in-
Donett elude an Internal Revenue Ser-
vice clajm of $400,000 in back income taxes and a
S2SO,OOO divorce settlement, hinted that he might ask
the Cowboys to trade him "so I can bargain 1n good faith
with another team."'
The athlete said that Cowboys vice president Gil
Brandt told agent Witt Stewart last year that Dorsett's
contract was going to be renegotiated and that he would
get ihe same amount of money as defe nsive tackle
Randy White. who signed for some $650.000 a year
after holding oufprior to last season.
BASEBALL.STRIKE OVER. • • From DI
more-Toronto, O eveland-Ncw York rc~t of 1981 , when a strike
and the Seattle-Angels day game also eliminated seven weeks oJplay. "The
was called off. ~ • object now is to find a way to end it as
The full J 3-game slate Tuesday, the fast as we can," Fehr sajd.
first day of the strike, was wiped out. Ncgotiaton ·for the players and As ot!ioc workers and shoppers
owners met for 11 hours, their busiest broke for lunch on the East Coast. it looked as if Fehr and MacPtWl had day of the 8'h-monlh-o1d bargaining accomplished that feat. Instead of SO talks, on Tuesday, but could not reach agreement in a dispute centering on days, it was one ~Y-
-salary stTUCtUre, and the-~nd Bascball;-,t seemed, woutd soori be
midseason strike in baseball in four back.
yean was called. ..> Fehr and MacPbail squared off for
The)'. .continued talking Tuesday about 10 hours during four separate
niJ)_lt. but broke up shortly before mcctinas Tuesday -by far the most
dn'lght, with the union sayina they intensive ~raair,ting since both sid~s
remained far apart on arbitration. t>cen mccung nine montns ago.
Today, at 10 a.m., they met again. Lee expressed the opinion that
An hour later, the commissioner's they had made some progress, not
office announced that the two sides overwhelming, but some progres.s.
were meeting together with Ueber-especially in the area of salary
roth for the first time in these arbitration and the benefit plan," said
negotiations. And. shortly after noon, Bob Fishel, a spokesman for
the "tentative understanding" was MacPhail, after Tuesday's final meet-
announced. ing ended around 11 p.m.
The commissioner last week of-"I think there's an attempt being
fcred a set of seven proposaJs to avert made, but we ought not to minimize
baseball's second plaxcr walkout in wnerc we are, and where we are as
four years, but his suggestions were we've got a strike," Fehr, appearing
critictzcd by both sides. tired, said shortly before midnight.
And even as late as Tuesday night, All day the central issue remained
there were signs that a settlement salary structure, particularly the rules
miff.t be far off. soveming salary arbitration. On that
•We are hung UJ? stiJI," Don Fehr, issue, "at the moment, I don't see a J etladWtoesn't slow Seguso head of the players-association, said way out," Fehr said during the 86._ Tuesday night. "If the matter evening. "We've tried every avenue."
STRATTON, Vt. _·Robert Seguso. proc~s very long, the players won't .Ballard Sm1th._president of the San
who only had amvcd 12 hours earlier af\cr ~ be willing to sc;ltlc fi r ":Yh~! they Diego Pad!'fs, said management was
playing for the United States in the Davis w&Wd ha~e set~ . arher. prepa~ to lose the rest of t~c
Cup 111 West~ermany, ousted No. 4 seed 4"\'c stnkc WJ~ !111 13 games. sca~n rather. than abandon us
Johan Krick 7-6 (7-3) .. 7-6 (7-5) Tuesday at the Volvo . e .-'.fuesday, and this l!lomang the R~~s1t1on on tbc issue. .
International Tennis Tournament. · ann.ounced that. their aftcrnoo~.aa The twC! top ncgotJ.ators t>cpn
Seguso, who as better known as a doubles specialist. against,. San Diego also was ~ v · Tuesday with an 8:4S a.m. mecu~g,
provided the first major upset of the weeklong poned. Alrea~y. some playerJ,9' e .....one that W~S .Prompted by the urging
tournament at Straiton Mountain resort. cleaned out their locken and begun to of Com~1ss1oncr Peter Ucberroth.
No. 3 seed Jimmy Connors blitzed Bob sca tter. . . ~c meet~ wau.u~sed ~ be an Blazekovic who was playing 111 has first Nabisco Grand Butrelu and Lee MacPhail, c.h1ef informal one and neither side .said
Pnx tourna1nent 6_2 6•2. of the. owners' Player Relations at expected to present any new
· · Committee, scheduled another ncgo-proposals .
C wt P t tr t h tiatin$ session this morning. And "lt could all fall apart in two oz • ma 0 omac • e c both indicated they were more con-minutes or it could last all night,"
ccrned about salvaginJ the rest of the MacPhail said before it started.
season rather than losmg a day or two As it turned out, that first meeting
of games that could conceivably be lasted about three hours and started
made up~at . players, owners and ream officials on
WASHINGTON - A 28-ycar-ol<t• a Los Alamitos woman completed a swim of
an 8-m1lc stretch of the Potomac Ri ver
Tuesday as part oflaher-effort to promote
"world understanding."
Lynne Cox took about four houl'$ to swim from the
Belle Haven Marina to Memorial Bridge.
Distnct of Columbia Ha l'bor pohce said Cox was
"fine" after completing the swim.
"l'mdoingascricsofswimsaround the world in 80
days to promote world understanding," Cox said.
She began her series Aug. I wtth a swim in Long
Beach, and plans to fini sh Oct. 19 with a swim around
the Statue of Liberty an New York "because it
symbolizes fnendship."
"I want to swim among the coldest and most
difficult waterways in the world," she ~id.
Cox plans to travel next to Iceland to SWlm Lake
Myvatn. ·
Frenchman wins bike race
TRUCK.EE -Bernard Hinault. five-Ill umc winner of the Tour De France, cruised
the I 02-mile fi f\h leg of the I I th Coor$
lnternationaJ Classic and stoic first place
b} a bike length m the la~J 1.00 feet.
The 30-year-old Frcncnman beat Amencan star
Davis Phinney of Boulder. Colo .• and Steve Speaks of
Waterloo. Ind., m a three-man sprint into Truckee,
about I S males cast of Reno, on Tuesday.
Hinault's winnin~ time of 4 hours. 36 minutes, 49
seconds vaulted him into fifth place overall from 30th
in the 16-day competition. His victory also protected
teammate Steve Bauer's first overall position.
In contrast to his performance in prior events.
Hinault was aggressive from the start .
Televialon, radio
'TELEVISION
No events scheduled.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
The idea. they said, was to avoid a a day-long seesaw.
ANGELSREACt. a .•
FromJ)l
years and I really thought that this
would be the year that we couJd ao all
the way to the World Series or at least
to the playoffs. All the clubhouse
workers wanted to share 10 that. We
all have dreams ef the World Series."
The club's Director of Publications
John Sevano said his day would not
change that much, except for the fact
that there would be no game to work.
"We (the publicity staff) arc here
every day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
anyway and then we just stay for the
game." Sevano said. "Now we'll just
go home at {jvc. I'll get to see my
family more."
On Tuesday, the Anaels did..1how
up at the stadium several t\purs
earlier than normal, but it was just to
pick up their personal belonginp and
talk to felJow players for wnat mlght
be the last time for a whiJe.
Some players were willing to talk
about the strike, while others were
deeply affected and banished the
media from their lockers.
One such player was pitcher Geoff
Zahn. Zahn 1s normally very affable,
but not on this day.
''Get awa¥ from me, I'm very
frustrated ngnt now," snapped Zahn
at several members of the media. ''I
don't know anythin~ except th.at there
is no game tonight.'
First baseman Rod Carew lashed
out at a photographer, though he
would later talk very calmly to the
press. And all the while Manager Ocnc
Mauch and several of the coaches
could only stand there, helpless, and
watch the players l o about their
somber tasks.
"If there is not baseball dunng the
summer of 1985, it is a wasted day,"
said Mauch.
Mauch said he was sure the P.laycrs
would keep in good shaJ>C while they
were away and could be ready just a
few days af\er a strike ended.
"Baseball is so lucrative and the
stakes arc so high, that players take
very~ care of themselves.
.. It s aaainst the rules (set up by the
National Labor Relations Board} for
me to ask them to do anything. But I
might say it to that pillar over there
and they might hear me." Mauch
said.
* ANG•L NOTaS -Wtlfle Ille atNkt PVI t
damper on 111t tnllrt dav tor moat of Ille Anotl•.
It did altrf 0\11 wllh t lltlle tnlOVmtM fO( Pitelltr• RM Rtl'Mllktl t nd l(lf'tr Mceatk.. Tiie M ir ''*'' ,,,. mornlne l•olno tlltlr ount t-rtncit on Ille NIC sot1P Olltrt "Dtv• o< our ~lvn."
"Wt wart llltrt fO( tOoul ttw'tt llOYrt.'' Mid
McCt alllll "Wt did l'lllo drtH rtflMrMll t nd
-1 .. 1 Wt flt llw'OU9" tltfOf't tfM tmotlno Wt dlCI jl In OM ltllt btcaUM lhel WH t M Wt wtrt
oollfo 10 tit 01111111." McCu•IU Mid 111t1 Nth ol
tl'ltm 11ec1 lwo llntt Hdl lllua lhtV lltd 10 •lno _.,of "T .. t Mt 0vt IO IM lellotmt'' tnd ltltl
IMY •Cfl rtetlved tall PIV, which It t l>Out noo. ~ ttlled tbollt '"' POufbllltv 01 1e111119
ovtr ~' rolt CIU!'lno tilt slrltlt , llt l'teMltcr,
"I ouaranttt vou llltt lhOM ecton lltlft llOfhlno 10 -rv t llOut t l'IOPt llltl -. never lltw 10 Clo
Ille! ... In • , Anet! rtllevtr OW. c.n.tt, WflO
unc1trwt111 trthrOKoPie aurwv on his left """ MoftdtV, WH Wtllllftt troun4 Iha dul)f\OUM
Tllttdtv with lllllt ti' no trOIAllt wtien ... m.
mtlt 0.... MMl't txlH'euecl 141f Pf'fM t i his ouldl recovtrv. Corl:lttl teld '''V«"V· "No DI'~"
Will another PGA ChampionshipmoVe North?
" DENVER (AP> -And} Nonh, who~ two
of three Tour v1ctoncs ha ve been U.S. Open,,
has retumcd to the scene of the fint Open
tnumph, rehvmg some fond mcmones hut
reluctant to be 1nstaJled a, the favontc in the
61th PGA Champ1onsh1p which bqJns Thurs-
day.
to ~ar the burden of man-to-beat here this
week
for this tournament; Curus Stranac, the Tour's
lcadma money-winner, Corey Pav1n; Hal
"If you bit your ball into the fairway, you
can stop it on the arcen," North 111d. "If you hit
into the rouah, you have no chance.
. The PGA coune 1s the '8me Cherry Hall\
Country Club layout on which North
1Cramblcd to a one-stroke victory in the 1978
lJ S Open -the last Tour event \tqed bcre
H&vinJwonaootherOpcn title in June and
• ~1na for founh la t Sunday in tht Western
Open. Nonh has to be con11dcrcd a threat.
But North. who finally seems to have
sunnountcd the naaaana physical prohlems that
rNde ham an also-ran dunna thr \C\<tn }ea"
between hi! two 0~ tnumph\, 1•n 't an~IOUS
"I don't know if you can put a favonte taa
on anybody," he $4Jd Tuesday followina 1
practice round. "This as a very hard aolf course,
and there arc a1ot of very good players out here.
"(fl knew who WIS JOing to do well I'd be
dmna somcth1n1 other than play1n1 aolf"
Nonh, however. will concede that he is
"playina reasonably well. I feel tood about the
way I'm play1na. and I have 1 lot of fond
thoU&htt about this course"
Others who figure to be factors include
pain's Scve 8 llcsteros. who alway• ~m5 to
play ~tll in tl'lf maJO", tw<>-t1me t J Open t1th~t Hale Irwin. a Colorado nat1vt who ha,
playtd 1h1!. cour'iC frtqucntly and who rec·
ommcndcd some mod1fica11om of the course r
utton; Tom Kite: Matters champion Bc.mhard
Langer, five-time PGA champion Jac:k
Nicklaus, and Tom Watson, sufTcrinJthrou&h a
disappointing season but anilious for hia first
POA crown.
A' 1n 1978, Nonh, and most of hlS
colleague , wHI be kcep1na their dnvcrs in the
bag. Cherry Hills mca urcs 7,089 yards, but at
an clcvauon ofabout ooc mile it plays more hke
a 6,500-yard C9,Urte: i.e., short. .
Deep rouih will put a prem1um on hittlna
the fairway otTthe tee. The fairways have been
cut !tort. and players h'lVt round even 1liahtly
errant ttt shots boundanJ anto the rou&h. The
arccns '''°are fi nn. malbna them difficult 10
hold from out of the rouah.
.. I'll proMbly use my driver only four or
five times a round. Distance Isn't a pr0b1cm
here, but keeping the ball in the fairway ls ...
Out of a sense of nostalaJa, POA offic:1als
have decided to use the so-called Arnold
Palmer tee on the fant hole From that tee.
Palmer drove the fint pn en route to a final-
round 6S and hit only Open title in 1960.
In 1978, omcaals moved the tee beck and to
the lef\1 takint away any chance a player could
dnvc tne arcen. But now It's apan a 346-yard
1tra1&htaway par 4
l>almtr. now SS, lned to dnvc the arccn
Tuesday, but waa bout 2S yards short.
Donald J'elir
BUS RIDE ...
From DI
get off -a-group of young men
bubbling with enthusiasm ... acting
more Jikc elementary kjds on a field
tnp.
That's because the only time you're
ever on the bus is for a long trip or to
go to the hotel or to the ballpark. So
any time it's used for a djff'crent
reason it seems like a much more
enjoyable experience.
Anyhow, for everybody waiting in
the lirlc outside the theater, we
suddenly became the mai n attraction.
All \he looks and stares we received
that night sterned to never end. Inside
the theater we heard people
munching on their popcorn. On our
row, the sound was of guys spitting
their dip into empty cups.
They didn't have to ask -every-
one, It seemed knew we were
ballplayers. And in a smaJI town like
Butte, an old oopper mining com-
munity, that means you're a celebrity.
So naturally we took it in stride, so to
speak.
Our next stop af\er the show was to
a restaurant in a nice hotel. then we
miraculousJy found ourwa( lo a night
club adjacent to the hote . When it
closed, everyone of course fled to
their cars, and of course, we climbed
into the urban assault vehicle and
became the center of all eyes.
That night on the bus was fun. It
was like one bil happy family. And on
rained out days like we had last week
it seemed to brea.k up some of the
monotony. I
There was no monotony in that
doubleheader I mentioned earlier.
During the first_pmc I witnessed m y
first contest from the stands. I
couldn't help but watch the fan1 and
·see bow tbdY reacted to situationt. ll wasn't 1nythina like Anaheim
St1d1um -these people in Butte
WCI'? brutal.
They literaJly aot their money's
worth. Those people were cruy. They w.. more run oul of naaina on the
players and tcreamina obscenities
than watchina the pme.
In any case, our l~o Falla O ub
has won four atralaht, ftvc out or the
last SIX and SU or the last tlaht. My
complete pmc victory the~ pvc me
the Pioneer Leaau lead for complete
aamcs with four.
Althouah the 70.:pm hcdulc ts
the longc t t'vc bttn'involved with, it
has so far been the quic~eat tta'On of
my career Naturally, l'm in no huny
to c:omc home.
. -....... -.
Tracy Painter checka out her unln'rited pe8ta at her Huntington Beach re8ldence.
SpleiJ.dor on-the grass ----Seahawks' gir ls' baskefuall-.. Our neighbors kind of looked at them and said >Oh1 1t'sjust the Painters ... don't worry."'
five celebrates champion s hip Painter said his team, which 1s close-knit, had wanted
to have a slumber pany all year. He thought 11 wou1d be of
a more-<:onvenuonal method, however.
"They said they wanted to have one, but they sa.Jd they
By SHARON FRUTOS wanted 11 to be m the gym. I wasn't real worried," he said.
Ol llMO.., "°'awn Painter's summer team, which includes all but two of
Ocean View High's girls basketball team took us his Sunset League champion Seahawks of 1985, finished spl~ndor to th~ grass Sunday night, surprising coach Kelly 9~ in the summer league. He said his I 985-86 team 1s a
Painter and his wife Tracy with a garden pany of sons. particularly hy_ilgry one, ·and Monday found evidence to
Th prove it. , e team. whiCh recentl y toolc the Costa Mesa I d d h h d h 1 · Summer League champ1onsh1p, celebrated by adorning .. went outs1 e an t ey a t cir s eepmg bags. and bags of Dontos and Winchell's doughnuts. Their regular Painter's Westminster home with toilet. paper and JUnk-food breakfasts," he said.
proceeded to decorate his lawn w11h sleeping bags and Seniors-to-be Dana Douty and Julie Hounsell
themselves. . organized the grass-roots affair, whale Dalene and Christa
When Painter awoke, he gazed out his window to see Lawson, Cyndi Hurzeler and Debbie Orr Joined in the
the work of an. It loolc him a few minutes. though. to .. festivities.
realize six members of his team were asleep on the job. The girls then concluded their party much as they had
.. It was kind of a k1clc.," Painter said. "J looked outside their summer season.
and said 'Tracy, someone tcepccd our house.' .. They cleaned up," Painter said.
Slumbering ln the euburbe were (rear from
left) Julie Houneell. Debbie Orr, and Dalene
Lawson and (front from left) Dana Douty,
Cyndi Hurzeler and Chrlata_ ~wson.
What's all .the fuss about?
If everyone's doing
well in baseball,
why ls strike here?
By HAL BOCK ,,.., apon• Writ.,
The baseball strike barely had
begun when an interested third pany,
attorney R1ch1e Phillips of the um-
pires' union, offered a penanent
observation.
"Let me ask you a ques11on," he
said. "The own en are doing well. The
players are doing well. So how come
there's a strike?"
How come, indeed?
Part of it 1s Power. Part of at 1s
postunng. All of at as a dreary replay of
what happened four years ago.
And this af\er they said they had
learned.
Perhaps what they didn't learn "':as
th e danger inherent an
brinksmanshi~ On the eve of the 4'tnke, the urgency
of the situation &enerated one brief.
informal, rjlornm& meeting.
On the <Tay of the st~e. ther found
the time ancf need to talk for I hours.
It was the lonacst neaotiating session
an nine months, but 1t came too late to
avoid the strike.
"I'm fnntn11ed.'' Rod Ouew satd
"Why do they have 10 get this thin&
down to the last minute1? ..
ft ., especially frustrat1na in th1 ~car of Carew and has 3,000th hit, of
Tom Seaver and his 300th wm, of
Nolan Ryan and his . 4,90Qt.h
strikeout, e pttaally frustrattnf 1n this ~ear of Pete Rose's final pursuit ofTy
Cobb's hat record. of Dwiaht
Goudcn's mouod mastery
It as about as frustrauna as the way
the 1981 stnke evolved The 1 uc
then wa1 eompensallon to teams
lo inJ frte aatnts. The players saw the
man gemcnt proposal a a heme to puni h 1eama for s1anin1 free 0;icnts.
an attack on player flttdom -JU t as
,urcly as the salary arbitration i ue 11
no .
Marvin Maller. then executive di-
rector of the players assoc1a11on and
now a union consultant. offered a
formula fol"scttling the dispute -a
pool arrangement, with all teams
contributing replacement players.
"Never." management roared.
"Strike:· the players replied.
So for 50 days and 712 -games.
baseball -shut down, innicting
enormous economic damage on all
sades. And then the settlement came:
frte agent compcnsauon for manage-
ment, through a player-pool concept
stanhngly dose to Miller's ongmal
offer.
Couldn't they have saved a lot of
umc and trouble, not to menuon
money? Not really, the union said.
There were tables ID be pounded,
power to be established, posturing to
be done. The owners. with their SSO
million wonh of msuance, wanted
this strike. the players said: they
forced the issue dftd sought to break
the union.
Both sides were bloodied. Both. we:
were told, had come away with
increased respect for the other If
there was a benefit. that was it.
The respect lasted until at came
time to barpin ap1n last November.
and suddenly the same signals sur-
ANALYSIS
faced -power and postunng.
For nine months· they haggled.
much of the time over just how much
money management was losing, just
how rtrrible an investment thi'i
baseball business really 1s. And much
of that 11me was spent with 'managt.'-
ment 1ns1sting the players acknowl-
edge those economic facts.
Never mind that baseball draw\
well over 40 million fans a year and
that attendance is running 12 percent
ahead of that pace this year. Never
mind that the network telcv1s1on
contract zoomed from $250 malh on
toSl .1 balhon
That TV revenue bonanza
fascinated the players. It could push
their pension plan to the federal lim11.
$93.000.
Just why athletes making averaae
salaries of $363,000 a year need that
much puzzles some oldtimers. "If I
made SI O malhon for six years lake
some of these f,U)'s, I'd take care ofm)
own pension. · noted HaJI of Farner
Early Wynn, who collects $6.000 a
year from the program.
Waldorf leads Pacific Amateur
LO ANGELES (AP) -Former
UCLA star Duffy Waldorf of
Tarzana. fired 1 ).under-par 68
Tuesday to take a 2-stroke lead af\cr
the first round or the 19th annual
Pacific Coast Amateur Golf Tour-
nament.
Waldorf. one of lhttc mcmtxrs of
the Unttcd talcs Walker Cup team
pan1e1pat1na in the 1nvitat1onaJ tour·
nament. had to scramble all day, hiuina only 13 arctns in rqulation. ·H• had four birdies and onie bogey,
Two strokes off tht ~ce at 70
entcnna Wednesday's SC('Ohd round
of the 71-hole tournament bean
played on the North C'ounc of the Los
Anaeles ( ountry l lub were detcnd-
1na champion Kurt Bosen of Boun-
tiful. Utah, and Ed Cuff. Jr., of La
Mesa. Calif.
Carding even-par scores of7 I in the
first round were ou Massenaill of
Payette. Idaho. and Greg Bruclcner of
Manhattan Buch.
1Jt players were next at 73 -Jim
Caner of Mesa, AnL; Lee D:lVl of
Thousand Oak~ Tracy Naknak1 of
Manhattan "9tach; Bnan Hcnningt'r
of EUJ1tnc, Ote.; Tim Robtn!On of
Palo Alt(), and Gerry Norquist of
PonJand, Ore.
The tournament runs through fn·
day.
Ot nge Coast DAILY PILOT /W~need y, Auguaa 1. 1985
..
,\
,.,ebotud CllAJneOD•IJJ,,. -The 1x1~ annual MOf~ Bodybomt
' l?ro/ Am c llamptOnshl!>' ... ~1 be cld AllJ. 3 I II
the Ocean •de Harbor BHcb Some of the
countr)''' Ontst profcu1onal and amateur nckn
wall be compelln& be&Jnn1n1•t 11 7 am.
Selected amateurs from one of 11 qgabf)1na
rounds held on both the Ea11 and Wttl Coasts
and Hawaii .• will compete '" 1hc follow1na 11c
aroup d1v1~1ons· ,boys 12 and you naer: 1r men
13-16. mrn 17-29: men 30 and older. and women
The lwo rcma1n1n1 quahfyina rounds wall be
held Aua. 1711 uguna &ach's Main Beach. and
AUj. 24 II San D1cio's Pac1fil Bc.ach
CHOC over-tbe-Une tourney
An O\ICr-lhe·hnc \Oflball toucnament wall be
held Aug. 18 at Hununaton ~u11e Beach 10
benefit C'h1ldrcns Hosp11al of0ran$C Count)
The tournamen1, 10. 11.i ~~ -
refined version of the San Diego toumamen1
lhat"~ paned national a11en11on and populant)
Ovcr-1he-lrne 1s beach 'l<>flball pla)cd by a
team of one woman and two men
A SI 0 dona11on wall suppl) .ill the hot dop.
soda and becr a pel'SQn can cat and dnnk, all da)
Janlor teani. cbamp lon91J1JM
A panel of npcm wall ~peal.. at the Gifted
YounaA1hlcte'i}mpos1um .\ug. 14and IS from
7 lo 10 pm .it the \ •C' Braden Tcnn1\
College/( 010 de ( a1d Rc'><m an Trabuco ( an)On
the symposium. co-sponwrcd b)' the follcge
and Walt D1sne) ProdUCllllnS will feature the
na11on's lop cxpens 1n the fields of
b1omcchan1cs. onhopcd1n l'h1ld psycholog).
spom psycholog~ and card1ol<>g)
The symposium 1s open LO the pubh1.. and 1s
comphmentar) Seating 1s limned and ad-.ance rcg1stra11on 1s rcqu1rcd
For more 1nforma11on phone 8S8-92 I 1 .__
• Mutcn ltOftball. toanYai__...__ __
1 ht Mum1 r ournantcnt Club, compnNd or
10nba11 l>b>m 39 years and older. ••II hQst a ~o~·Pll h tournament at Scrippt Park an
C lattmont this Saturday for upper divmoft
team\ and c11penc~ pla)etl
No' ice d1vmon-wall pit) unday.
Team and 1nd1v1dual reai trauon as thn>Ulh
the Master\ Club. I nd1 \llduals r'tlJ)tcnna will be
au1ancd 10 a team 10 play.
for funhcr informauon and "&n·Ups. phone
981-IOOOaf\cr Sp m.
C.t.aJJna water •ti race
More 1han I 00 teams arc expected to compete
an 1hc 3 71h annual Lona Beach to Catalana water
ski nKt Sunda) ill iA.m.
Thc counc as S::? nauucal m1lt'f. o"er one lap
bqinnina in Lon& Beach harbor II conooues
acrO'>s open sea 10 1us1 outside "\•alon harbor,
and returns to finish 11 the Queen~way Ba)
H1hon in Lona Beach harbor .
5pccuuor adm1ss1on 1) free
Llstbr.e/6b t boat In Irriae
1rl'e1s Perez of Santa .\na v.111 box Jnsh Paul
Banon uf Ponland. Ore Aua 26 a1 the Mamou
Hotel 1n Irvine
Peret who has a 27· I record suffered has only
sctbad:. ap1nst Hector Camacho two years a10.
Sanon has a 17·2 record and 1i. holder of 1he
Pac1lil t-ionhwcst hghtwc1aht utlc
T umas Perez, the you naer l'lrother of lrk•s.
14111 00, ron) Thomas of Ponland LO a
supponing I (}.rounder
• PUBLIC NOTICE
t111t1r11v Of Availability ·
Final Environmental Impact StatementApprovel
for Reconstruction of the Route 5 and Route 55 Interchange
-Cl)
SANTA
ANA
Edin er ·
What's
Being
Planned
What's
Available?
Where You
Come In
in the Cities of Tustin and Santa Ana
• N
St
TUSTIN
The Cal1forn1a Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway
Administration have approved the Final Environmental Impact State-
ment tFEI S) for the proposed reconstruction of the Route 5 55 Inter-
change The recommended alternative includes widening the free-
ways. relocating and upgrading connectors ~d on· and off-ramps
and constructing aerial connectors
The Final EIS ~h1ch describes the~ecommended proJec& 15 now avail·
able for publid cev1ew n 1s being distributed to those agencies which
made substantive comments on the draft EIS or requested a copy A
Notice of Determination per CEOA and Record of Oec1s1on per NEPA
will soon be filed
You can look at tho document or purchase 1t from the CALTR ANS
Environmental Planning Branch 120 S Sprang Street Los Angeles. on
weekdays from 7 30 a m to 4 00 p m There are also copies available to
read at the following libraries in me pro1ect v1c1n1ty
Santa Ana Library 26 C1v1c Center Plaza
Tustin Library 345 East Main Street
For more 1nformet1on concerning this pro1ect. please contact:
Aon Kosinski C !trans Senior Env1ronm htal Planner (213) 620-3755
I I
I
{
-
~ • I ". .
MA.J0tt LaAGU• ITANDfNOS ~L ......
WDTOfYWON w L ~ •• ..... •• ... •1 K111ta1 Cllv u .. SU s
Otlltel'IO .... w 5
ClllCHO " to 510 1\.'a
S..lllt 4t 5' 461 1' Mlnntt011 .. 57 .447 1• THH olO ... .3H 20'~
IAST DIVISION
Toronto ,, H '10
Ottroll 51 47 Ml • NtwYorll 51 47 Ml • halon SS 4t "' II
a11t1mor1 SJ 50 m m ... Mllwl ultM ., S1 '" 20
Clevtlancf 34 70 m 32
T ... Y'I Gtmlt
NOflt (1>1.-cielt 1trlk1I
HefteMI LMtue
WIST OIVISIOH w L. fllC1. CH
ON9WI " ., 511
ClnclnNll ~ .. S3I s
S." Olaoo n II Sit 1 Hou11on . '° ,. 47' 12 Allante .. y "1 u Sen Frenctaco 41 '5 ,., 71
IAST DMlfOH
New Yorr.. 62 42 St• .51. Loult " 42 m ,,.,
MonlrH I s• •1 S57 4
Chlcl OO 5" so Sit I Pllltl dtfOll•I 4t SS m 1l ,.ltttt>urori ~ 10 :no ,.,..,
Tldlll'tO-
Nont (CleHCleN llrikt )
Antlf IVtrlfH
aATTIHO
Aa ' It H Hit ital Pct.
Mllltr 25 s • 0 0 .:no
Btnlouez 299 3t .. s H 1'1
Jona1 250 " 10 11 so 180
Jeckaon m 41 79 17 51 2U $c0<1ltf'I ... 10 11 I • 2 .. c.,. ... 212 31 11 t 21 2•1 P1tll• 24S 31 ., I I• 251
OtClnee• '°' 37 n 13 52 2SI
Oow11lno 327 " ao 11 .. 241 Grlcll 311 42 76 s 31 , ..
loone m 21 n 4 33 243
Gert>tr 6l s IS 0 3 231 N1rron 100 ' 23 ~ 12 230
ScllOfllld 21' 29 S3 I 21 I ..
Wltfol'lo .., tl JS 4 II 117
Hanorlck • I 0 0 0 000 TIWI J,Sll 4SJ 11• 100 02 .241
fllCTCHING
"' H al so W·L.•ltA HOfll nd 1\;) 0 I 2 0·0 0.00 Moore 6J S3 u 44 H 143 Cllt>urn '2~ SS ,. 24 6·2 2 " Zahn ~ 29 10 ' 2·0 2SI lllom1nlck "' 10 43 42 ll·4 302
Wiii 17• 1•7 •7 11 7 t·1 3 OS
CorDtll ~ 40 IS lt 2· I 3 t3
Slaton 111\1) 122 52 olO 4·t •.JI McGallCll 11~ llS 3' S.5 1·7 439
Sanct1a1 Jl•.-a tO 17 17 l·O UI Cel'l(Sllarfe s 3 l • o-o 7 20 T.-.S fS1'1) n 2 U2 ~ 61·44 W
S.v11· M.oort 21, Cliburn 2. Cttmenl1
MAJOR LIAGUI LIADl!AS
A"*1can leetue
IA TTING (255 II Clel1l-looos, 801ron.
.35", lrtll, IC.lnws Cllv, 350, R Hendarton.
New York. .l4f, &octltt 0.kllnd. 327.
l.•C'I 911tlmor1 311. Mettl111>l11 New
Yotk 311
RUNrR «rM)n, Ntw Yon. 92, Rll>tlen, ll1Jll 75, Wnlt1ktr 01troll
75. Motltor, I Ukff, 71 M Ot vts
D1kl1no. 6', Wlnfllto, New Yor~. 6'
11181-Mllltlnolv, New York, 17. E Mur·
rev, 8•111more, to, RIPktn. hlllmort 7'
Fl1k, Chlc.100, n, G 8111 Toronto 71
HIT~OOOt. 8oaton, in Melll!lillv
Ntw Y~. 131. Wllaon, K1n111 Cltv, 130,
Wn1t1ker. OttrOlt. 12t, GercJ1. Toron10
127
OOUBLES---M1nt1191v, New Yot~. JJ
l ucknar , 8011on 31, 80091, ao11on. 30, G
WI "'· Clllcaoo. 26. c-. MllwaukM, 25.
Tl'tlPL.ES-Wll1on, 1(1n'11 Cllv, l•. But·
llr, Cleveland, 11; Puckall, Mlnne1011, 10,
Cooeltr, Mllw1ullN . a. Griffin, Olkl1nd, '
Htnldon, DatroO. 6. P Braorty St•lll• 6
HOMI!: •uNs.-Tllk, Cn1caoo. 2'. DI
Ev1n1, Oatroll, ,4, G Triornts Stalll• 24,
~ .. i.v. Stallla. 24, lleibotll K.enHs Cltv
23
STOLEN BASES-R HtnotrM>n Ntw
York, 50, Burlar. C1tv11ane1 32, ll'tnl1,
Alltilfa, l2 •. Wiiton K1nH' City. ) I.
Mo1tt>v. Toronto,, 26
PITCHING I' OICl1Jon1J-Blrt111 Oa~
!arid, 1·2, 3 oa, Gurorv New York, U·•.
3.DI. ,..,\ellldt, All9eta. ll • 4, J.02.
S.l>trheOan. K1nst1 Cltv 12· S. 2 U J
How9ff, Olltltnd, 9-4 l.,S, Krr TO'Ol'llo
t-4, 2"
STltlKEOUTS-Blvlevan MiMllOlt
Ill, Morris, Oltroll, Ill, F llt nnllltf'
Clllc•oo. 121, Burns, C11lr.aoo. "' Wlft, A119911, 117
SAVES-OUIHnt>trry, KentH Cll,,., 24
J Howall, 01kland. 73. Hern1ndtz, Dtlroll,
2l. 0 MMrt, Anettt, 21 RIOhlllf, Ntw
VO'k, 19
Nlttonel LN911a
BATTING USS al D111>-McGH St
Louis JU, Gu«'rl!'o, Dadelr,, XII Herr
St LOUii , )13, Gwynn, San D•toO, 307, Perl\er, Clnclnn111, J03
RUNrMurpnv, All1n1e, u. Guarrar1,
D9d9tta, 7S, Coleman, S1 L.ou11. 7•, Rein·
" Mo1'lr111 72, McGee St Loul1, 69 S1no1>erv c111caoo 69
Rlll~erM! Clnc1nne1 IO J Clerk S1
L.oul1. 79! ..-ronv Al1an1e 71 Herr St
L.oull 7' Hornar A 11en11 61
HITr MCGff St LOUii 1)1 Gwvni>,
St n Diego 127, ,..,.tT Ctnc1nne1I, 123
Htrr SI Lou•l , 120 Garvev S.n Ottoo
I ti
OOUB1.ES-Wlllaci1. Montre11. 21:
Ptrktr, Cfnclnnell, 25, Htrnenoei. New
York, 24, Gwvnn, S.n Oltgo, 23. Herr. St
LOUii 23. J Cl1rli. SI L.ouls 23
TRtPL.ES-McC-.ff St Louts 13, Col·
.,.,.n St l.0\111 9. R1lntl Montr11I, I.
S.mv.4 Plllieo.loni. I GledOtfl Sen
Franciaco, 6
HOME RUN~we, o.deen, 2',
Murt>hy Attanll, 27. "•rktr. C1nc1nna11, 71
Hornar Atlanta. 20. J Clerk St L.oula 20
STOLEN IASEs-<otem1n, St Louis,
74, LOPH. Cl'llc.eOO •••• MCGH . SI Louis,
'1, R1Jna1, MonlrHI, 39, lllt<tus Clnclnn1ll.
39
PITCHING (9 ctec1slonu-Frenco C1n
clnnatl, t· I, 1 J), Goooen N•w Yo11< 17 3
I 51, Hawllln1 Sen O•aoo l•·l J 12 HerV\t .. , o..n. 11.1, 1.o e ~1111
Monlt H I, 1' • 2 If
STRIKEOUTs-<;oo<ltn Nttw Vor. 119
$oto, C1nc1nn11t, 156, ll!vtn, Houston 154
VIMl\lu ... , Dedelr,, 142 Oe rllno N•w
York, 117
SAVEs-4tHroon, MontrNI, ?I, Lt Smllll, Cl'lluoo. 23, Gosaeve, S.n 01eoo ?I.
Pow« Clnclnn111 It, D Sn-11111 HouatOt>
"
UTT&.:I LllAQUE ALL·STAAS
Mlf*s (11-17-VMn ttd)
WISTll•H lllllOIONAU
fa1 Safi 9-r_,..)
J SatwOlv'• o.met
S JO p Jn -Cotoredo va Oreoon
I II M. -W11lllno1on "' H•••lf
"MtillitMV'• "'"'" s JO p m -Wvom •no 11s AIHl<.1
I 11 ,., -~.O. v1 $oull'llt" Ca lqrn1a
T.,....y, Aue. U Glft'IM
S lO 0 m -ur.fl V\ Mont eN
• jl t'R ,..... Mt•ICO "' Northern C1•1torn11
~....-.,, A.,._ 1• 01!'M1
S )0 11 m -ArltOM vs C61or1CIO· °'"°" •Inner t D itl -IOM'IO V1 WHlll"ftM litwtll
Tlllln4Jay, Aw. IS C~
S 10 a"" -Utaf'l·~lena _.,,,,,... •a
i'f0ttllt!'" c • 1ornre · NaW Meli 1C6 ••M«'
1 11 m -wvomino AlaP • wlfWltr vt
-Soulf1t~11 Ce 1.,..n 1·Hav•da w111"8r
111"-ly, AU..,, 0.,,..
S .JO I a m -'r"'",,."
S...,....y, All9t 11 0.-
t D"' -C111m1>•011alll11
NO AAattv COll\OietlOll bflO'el ''""' wll e•\O M .. a~ H CI' v
u w a e a
Hf'L tlCNllmeft ~
lllUDAY'I OAM• ClllutH •t It. L.oull
IAT\NU,AY'I OAMIS
HO\lllOf'I 1t a11n1, 1 D M
Sall llranclKO ., ~ .• t .M
tulf1lo 11 0t1ra11
CllYl!lncl t t San Olaoo
Oreen au t t D1lla1
K111&1• Cllv at Clnclnn1ll
Mlnntaota •I Ml1m l
Ntw Ol'laan• t i Ntw lno1a110
Haw York Gl1nta t i Otnvtr
fllttlledttof'lll 1t N-YO'll Jtl\
flllll1t>ur1ll 11 T11'1\H tav
s..111e ar 1nc111naooua
WHlllneton I I Allen••
THURSDAY, AUO. IS
St L.oul• ., ·-· I l'llllDAY, AUO 16
Dttroll tt S.tttlt IAT~DAY, AUO. 17
At11nt• at Ten'loe lav
aufftlo e1 Miami
Otlle1 11 Sen 0"9o
Gratn Bav II tftw York Gl1l'll•
Houaton 11 Nlllt Ot'ltan•
lncllaneoolfl II Cl\lcffO
N-l!nolancl 11 K~t Cttw
New York Jara 11 Cincinnati
Pt'lllaNlllt'll1 al Cll\ltltncl
PllttOutotl ti MlmetOll
SUNDAY, AUG. 11
w11111no1on et It....,..
MOtllDAY, AUO. lt
Oanver 11 581\ Frenclaco
l'•IDAY, AUO. U lttm• VI PflllaOMlfllt ,, COlvmDUI,
Olllo
Clnclnnall 11 Otlralt
New Enoi.nd a t Waal'IUloton
Pll l11>Urth 11 St L.out1
IAT\HlDAY, AUO. t4
Mllml at"'*"'
All1n1a vt Graen ''" 11 Ml1w1ukM C1tv•l1nd at aut11lo
1no11naPOll1 et Dtnv«
K1n1t1 Cllv a1 Houaton
New York Jtll 11 N-York Gl1n11
TamPI ...... NIW Orteant
$1.n Dleoo II S.11 FrentlKO SHllla 11 Mlnnnot1
MONDAY, AUO, 16
Cn1e100 II Ol llH
THu.tlDAY, AUG. 1'
Ott t I t PnlleclllOlllt
PltlDAY, AUO. JO
1t1!4ln 11 C1tv1t1n<1
Clnc111111tl 11 lndl1nar>ot1a
Ml1ml at All1n11
MlnntlOtl al Oanver
New Ol'ta1n1 11 Sen Oleoo
New York Gl1n11 11 PlllU>uron
S.n Frtnclaco al Saalllt
W11nl119ton 11 Tampe l1v
SUNDAY, AUG. JI
N•w E"91end 11 Item• luHalO 11 Cnlcaoo
Houslon 11 DallH
New York Jira 11 Gr1111 81v
51 L.oul1 11 K1naH Cllv
9t•ld4tra a<MdUte
• )(lllbmtft
!.arurotv Auo 10 -S.n FranclKO 11\0m tl • pm
Sun<law Aug ti -WHlllnvlon (llOma) l pm
S.1urd1¥ Aug 24 -M11mo lnomtl. 6 pm
Frldtv Aug 30 -II Cltvliano. 4.)0
P m
A...,Ur S..a41n
Sundav S.or I -New York Jelt
(PIOmtl. 1 Pm
Tnurso1v Sept 12 -11 K.tna.1 Cltv S o.m
Sun<lev S.01 22 -Si n Frtncls~ lnomtJ I p m
Sund1v S.Pt 29 -11 N•w Enol1no, 10
am
Sunoav. Oct 6 -K1nt11 City tnoma> 1 p m
Suno1v Oc1 ~ -New Or111n1 U1omeJ, I Pm
Sundav Ocr 20 -er Clavt1an<1, 10 a.m
Monoa v Oct 2t -s.n Olailo CllOmal, 6 p m
Sunday Nov J· -er !.e11ti.. I om
Suno1w Noy 10 -al San Oteoo I o m
Suno1v No11 17 -Clnclnn111 111oma1 I om
Sundav, Nov 1• -Dt nvtf' Cnomtl om
Sundev, Dec 1 -at Allente, t p m
Sunday, Dec I -11 OtnYer I o m
Sundav, Dec: rs -S.11111 (nomel 1 pm
Sund1v Oec. 2:J -11 L.01 Anvtlfl
R•m• •om
I An Hmtt Pacffkl
M«I'~ tournament
(at St'1'1tten, Vt I
SECOND llOUHD
Rob4'rt saouso <U S > oei Joha n Kriek
US I 7·6 7·6, Jonn McEnroe IU SI def
P11rtc11 McEnroe tU S ) 6 I. 6·2. lv1n
Lt nOI Otf Mlkt 8euer cu s I 6·1 6·3,
J1mmv Conno" (U.S.> dat'::Jtvo-&i11n11ov1c
cu s I. 6·2. 6·2 Tim Mav.prre fU s 1 Oef
Ktn Fitch IU SI 6·4 6-3
THm Tennl• Dtlvoff\
(at lfltW#aad)
ST L.OUIS 11, L.OS AHGIELllS n
W_.s Dtlltlte\
Sendv Collin•·C1n<1y Rtvno•o' Sr
L.oull) Otl Anna Whllt ·P1m TN0uu det1
!LOI Angtlt\), 7·6 (S-n
Women'• SlntNs
Anne Wl'lllt (Loi An91le11 oer Sanov
Colli"' !St Loulsl. 6·S CS· 1)
Meft'I OOUblt\
JOM Mellkl Ttrrv Moor ISi LOUii! dl1
ll1nu Vt n P111en·SltVt Dt nton CLot An·
llt 't\} 6 l
Men'' SlfttlH
Terry MOQr SI l.Oulll Oef "'"'' Ven Pallt n !Los Anl)l't•I. 6-1 CStt Yt Denton
tuDslliutld for Ven Pallen a1 3· 11
MIJ!ld Daublas S""' OtMOn·Anne White IL01 Angtlt\) Ott JO/In Matlke·CendV Reyno1os ISi
LOUI\), 6·4 0Ytrtlmt · Jonn M•ll•• C1ndv
ll!111no101 CS1 Louis! Oii Sieve 01nton
AMt Wllil1 (l.O\ Anoalttl 1·0
LA Lalrer1 I~
Sat Oc• 26 -at San Anlon10 TIA\
O<:• 2' -•' De 11 Tnur1 Oct JI -a• "'-"~ S•• Nov 2 -et GOiden Slet1. Tue Nov
S -"' C14••iena tno,,,.J. fnur Now 1 -
•' u1e11 Fr Nov I "' Otnvtf' nomtl Tut Nov 17 -"' UI•" (llOme). Tnur Nov
14 -¥\ Poriland fhom•I Fri Nov IS -II
L. A Clil'PI''· Sun Nov t7 -vi Ntw Jtrstv (llOme) Wt<1 Nov 10 -VI L A Ctl~rt fll0mt1, Tnur Now 21 -11
O.nv•r. Sat Nov 23 -•' Portland. S.t
Nov 2l 11 Po-tta"O Sun N0>1 24 -II\
S.1' A"le>n•O I llOn'll I Frt NOY 1f -YI S.11ttt lhO,,,.)
SUl'I Dae 1 -" C111ceoo lllOtl"ltl weo
Ote • -., u1111, Fr Dtc ' -VI Hou•ton
1nome1 Sun Dt! 9 -v1 D111aa lhomt l
Tllur Otc 11 -•• PJIC>tnf)( liwn.> IFri
DK 13 -11 Ot nver, Sun Dae. IS -""' Oerroll (t1omt1, Tue1 Dec 17 -at New
Vork , Wld Oat It -1t Milwavkft, Fri
Otc 10 -'' CltYtland Set ~ 21 -11
Wun.nfton Thur Ot< 2• -., S•n
4*1Qfl-o Set Dae 1' -t i S.Cf'lmll'llO ~
DIC 1' -"' GOI~ S1e11 {l!QmlJ
-"' Golc*I Slate. (llOMtl, WM. Mar S-al Utan, Tllw' Mtt 6 -at Ootdeft Staie;
Sat Mar. I -o S.Ctamento (l!Omf), ~
Mer. t -at S..tllt. Tua Mar 11 -n L. A
Cllootn (llomtl. fllur. Mar ll "' Martie
lllOl'llt), Siii\ /!Mr " -w• Holl•lon, Tua• Met 18 -wa fllotl .. nd 11\0tnt), W.c! M#tit
It -at L. A Cll-•, l'rt Mer. 21 -e t Un
Antonio, kt Mllt n -at S.Cremt1110,
Mon Mat 24 -"' San Ant1111lo (llOMfJ,
Tut Mat. 2S -at Otnv1r, Stt Mtr 2' -
at Stallit, SUI\. M#tit 30 \IL ~ Slate T~ At;r I -"' kaltlt (home), Tllur.
Aw 3 -"' S.Cremento (llomt) ~un Aor ~ • -11 HOcnton, Sat At;r 12 -a1
S.crwnei110, Sun AW ., -vs Oari.a 11'Mltr
Wtmen'a Ametotur CM~lp
tar~,_,
MHanort. JaHn
C StKV, fitlncflev, Ohio
I( McCartllv, FrHno, c 1111
M.Morrt1, Mlddltfown, Olllo
T SdlrK k, SCIOllant , Waall
L. SllanllOft, Pl«nt1tton, F11 K WIMltrn1, letlle101, Md
L..Snlltl'I, Snvdtr, NY
J OtWN1t. lllOCMtltr, NY 0 Dickman, Modfflo, Cant
L. Kttn, PalnMvlllt, OfllO
C.Scllrtvtr, Ptacntre Ctv, G
M.Mlcllanowlcl, Plllat>uron A.lllaao, Otntv, UL
0 Pt11ptr, G1n1tYOOH, NY
I( t<lno11on, Eatt Pl Ga
ft Cornett, Grtt11~ac, Call!
a Corrie, OOll"I lllt~bltc
D Ammacc.pane, Pnollx, Afl
M.Fovtr, Cermet tnd A L.ukken, Tutw , Okie
T.KtrCIVk, Certtl Gebtn, Fta
M.L.ttCll.S.Yannan.Ge
K Ktnltr. Cnario11 .. .-iue. v
P OunteP, S.resore, Fra
J laxftl', Normal, Ill.
C.klloltfltld, LOI Al'IOelH C.Dolal), Oafll'lerst>uro, Md s uoaltt, L.oa A11011t1
G.Qulntena, V-zuela
J Keno, l!IVrla, Olllo v PamarCI. F<anca,
K lllooanon, 1no1a"', P•
C StmPll Thmp111, Swcklv P Ill W1ttrllou1t, S.nlbtl II , Fl
&.Frv, A°"9tll, Md. C~n-L.vford, Slrtflon, VI
S OakrH v, llleclnt, Wla
C.McCaln, Crockall, Tent
J 111a111. 111.c1monci. w .. 11
J lrllai, ,.aorl1 Hit 111. v .lrennan, Qulncv. Ill. v M«an, Falrmon1, w V1
L. Mevt, Auou1t1, G1
,. MMIOll, Akron, Olllo
I( Lotvt. Venlu, Al. !(.Herl, Miami laedl, Fie
W LIWMll'I, D1PMt, Ale 111.t<lrt>'I, Slou• Falla, S.O
C t<aool, Mldcl1.iiurv, Conn
N.l owt11, Tlflon, G1.
K.Oerdntr, Frence
N Ktnltr, Por111no, Ore
C.llluffer Conroe, Tu
J Lldt>ICll, ll11on Rouoe, L.t M Mecl<1H, l(lfttlnolon, MO
A S111dtf. Stallla
J Floltv, AllQUI-. P1
L. NIOode, f>ltnllllotl, Fii
C O'AI~. Frenc:t
J Mannie, Au1trella
J L.ooan, S.ndu1kv, Oflto
9 ,.lctor ~ P1lmt llo, Ge
A Hautennadr, Smll'llwl'I, N v
I( V111dtfll, H®'Clela, Man
L..Marlno, W Allen Prll, Mcl'I
N 0 1ona. Dacatur, Ill
Ill Head•noa. S11v10P, ,.,
... Itel .. OulllfY
N Stt·Merlt L1kt City, Ftt
R SCtl1fer. Grenoar. t"'1. T Tow111, Tllu1vlllt, Fla
S.Klllt en, Slfllwlltr, Okie c Edtltn, Mr Srtrllno. Kv
T eowm1n, L.onowooo, F11
J llerlllOIOmw, Snd1 Pt NV s Rull. Enoltwooo. COio
O Mou , Ju11ller, Fie
O L.oft1no, Oxnaro, c 1111
M ,.1111 E1m1toro, N Y
J Otl wtr, Sawlcllltv. Pa L L..cll>ttltf' lllOCJlvllle. Md
S Kalt. Svtvenl• Olllo
8 W1rd, Herrltt>uro ,.,
A Gllmt rlll'I, Porf Wlh , N Y
S COll>Ornt, Powtv, Ceflf
N M1ceo110nt, CtH rw1ler, F1
O Scnwet>. t<alftrll'IO, Ohio R Mofln, Au11ln, 1t•H
M Wllaon, Ptnweole, Fla
J Calln Eorna, Minn
P.Pruill. TulUloow,Ale
S Tnom11. Wllmlnoton. 091
M Dr·nkerd. Cullm1n, Ale
M Miller DI VIOQ, C>nto
T Wlt\ner, Fl Worlh, Ttu1
M Hutcntn1, Clnclnn111
L Hemmeck, Oki• Cltv, Oki
K Seiki, WtJlmlnaler, Celi! Ii Wtlil, GJover1vlllt, N Y
J GrHnt, 8errtno1on. R I
L. Rev, Rock Hiii, s c
I( Koi.cny Grenet Juncrn. Cl
0 Anctrt<#l, l.Vncf!O\n'O, Vt
L. Cornallul ScOllldlle, Arlr
L. Wllkt1 llertow. Fie
J S111ner "•101 Vtrdtl C1llf
F ,.rono Nortnrlooe, C•lff
C Cook, Akron, C>nlo
K 81Ctr., CherlOtlt, N C
M 8entv, ,.ltt1ouroh.
S JoM1on, Henover, N H
T Wrtont Melt>ourM, Fie
M OotMk ChkoC>N, Man
M Slutrl SllrtVtPO<'I Le
S Hl•drttr> C1n10.
I( KOllH Palmo.It. Celi!
J Ruma Lak.wOOO, Coto
R RtlllY Cermel, In<!
K Ertck1on, Ovtrtnd Prk, Kn
L S1ttttn1, Ntw Vernon. N J
J Crto1, Virginie 811ch, Ve
D Rlver1, Monroe. Le
8 Frv Bet Air, MO
S Mercn1tt. Omane, Ntb
L. Brown Cnerlone N C
S Let>run. Owl1191 M1111, Md
C Mff~I Grffnwooo Miu S McN4!ov lt1<11ena Pt
8 Wn1hTortn ColO Sor,,g1 Ct
,. L •\CO, San Dleoo
S TomllnM>n. OO lt no Ce111
C Htrllon. Tvltr, Te. ... ,
S Jecot>Hn, ,.orlltnO, Ore
,. ,.elm1rrl, MIN Vllltv, C1llf L Dtnnl1on, Marton, Otllo
A DVI, Dtlrev Btecn Fie
E Let>e111, S.ct1m9ftlo Caltf
B Tyler Gr-ten CO<ln
.. -17-163
IO-~t6l
IJ·IC>-1'3
7t·a..-16l
11·12-163
tl·l?-163
IS-79-164
'2·0 -IM
14·1C>-1 ...
15·79-1'4
11·t?-16A
1t·U-tM
lt-~IM
U -12-1'4
14·11-16S
tl·l2-16S
17 11-16S '3·U-16S
H-17-IU
l~·U.-16S
lb·eS--16S
13·11-16S
M·tl-1~
tl·12-16S
11-~16;
u -1.-166
M·IC>--166
IS-11-161
10·11-167
13 a-167
13·1-167 11·1«>-167
13·1'6-161
12 IS--161
.. 13-i.7 u 13-16'
.. -1-161
17·11-16'
M·l4-:-16'
" 17-168 13·IS--16'
l•-l.a-161
.... C>--161
12·17-169
80·19-1'9
13·16--169 17-~170
... e.--170
U ·IS-110
17·1-111 12·19-111 es-11-112 8'·16-172
13·19-172
10·97-172
'1rll-172
,. 79-17)
13·f0--17l
19·1-m .. 17-11)
16·17-17l
90-1-17•
fl l'6-17S ... f0--176
90•16-176
17·8'-176
11·9-176 H ·N ·177
90·17-177
11·97-171
P'OA cMtncMonlND
(It o.rw.r)
!'ACTS AHO ,.IGU.IS
Al Sl1kt 67111 F'GA N11 lon•t Chem ·
P•on1'1IP
Dire.· ,Aug 8 1 I
\lit Cl'llrrv Hiiis Country Club cours. Yards 7,0lt
Per lS·l6-11
F'ormel 11 hellts (ti Oelfy I slroke Play
Pievott tff nte11wrv afltf' n no,.,,
!>vooen dtalll Auo 11
Cut Low 70 w:oran and 111 111<1 '°' 10th PllCI 1fttf' 1' l\olta Clutlolv for 11"11 rwo
rouno1 Saturd1v end SUll<l•v
F•t!O lSO
Oeitridlno champion· l.H Trevino ,.
Former r.ntml>lona Jn lllld Htl ~Hon,
Rav FIOvd Lt rrv NllM>n, Jeck NICk ll UI ,
Oevld Gre111m. Jonn MlheHev1 I.Anny Wadkins D•ve S1ocJ1ton, Garv Pl1v«, Al
GetDttoer a ot>Dv N ichols. Oow F1nstt rw110
ll'w " '700 000 w1nner·1 ~,. l l?S,000
L•v• lltltwtslon ABC l )0 1 p m E OT, ~llurel•Y I nd Sundtv
,.•clflc <Nat Amat.ur
Ill Ul A ....... I
[)ufly WaJd<)n
Kurt l o..,,
!d Cl/fl Jr ~011 ~u•no111
G•ao 8r110ntr
Jim Carttf
Lff Oev"
Tra<y HlklUk•
l nan Hennlf'IOlr
Tim 1tool111on
Gtrr'I' NOfCIUftl
M11t fllolltr
JO'ln lkdlNmmt•
9rldC-.r-
~ .. 01vn
'rl Jen 1 -w1 Ult!\. SYft...Jan S -vs
WHtll!IOIOll lf'IOml) Wtd Jen I -Vl
Pot111nd tllomtl, Fr J•n 10 -"' lncllana
C"<>mtl Sal Jen II -1t Seattlt , Tue Jen
14 -vs "110tn1s lllomtl. Tl'lut Jen 1• -
vs L A C11...,.,, ll!Ome), Sun Jen It -al
0trro1t (l'lome>. Mon J111 20 -1t Chicago,
W.c! Jen 11 -II Boalon, l'rl Jen ,4 at
L..A Cllootrs Sir J111 lS -va O...vtr
fl'IOMt), T.,._ Jen 21 -va Mltw1ullH
(l!Omt l fl'l<!r Jan lO -el Portiend ,,
Jen l I -•• '°"'leOt'Pfl•I fl'IOl'l'lal s..n rao ' -"' Hew Y~tr 111omt1
T1Jt1 l'tO 4 -vs Delltt llaomfl, Tlluf\ 'et> 6 -t i Hovttllfl, Tun Fee 11 -er ~ Stl lf, Wld l!tO " t i l'ttotnl'tt,
l'rl ,ft> I• -vt Atlt!'llt {l'IOmt), Sun
JoMlt• -Jae• ""'It
11111 '" -11s. •o•lon 1nom.1, Wld '"° ,. -a1 ll!ffl1111, lrrl llat> 11 -11 Naw Jet1t1•
S4#I rtt> U -•I l\llent•. WH ,_. 14 -
at 01~11 Itri FtO 71 W\ ,.,_,,,. ll'IOmt)
ill MM I -•' ~ •• MOtl Mer )
Sit Vtt\
Mar\ ~""°"J1me1 Mv•n
Gerv LOllOl•llow
.Joftll AOtndrolh
artlt lrlClllOfl
J_..Wllton '''"°' J1)0e !taut Cemot>t
Josef'll Kant
u.a. Lent ceu CM"""'""i..
(et M111Mft ""tel
Women't 200 arttat-1 SuMn .IOl'lnton
1M1u1on VlaloJ, t:>6.00, t t<1tllv lmltn
(t<lrkllnd, WHfl.'}, t:U l lJ , Cl'laMon
Httfl!tl•cl (Ml••IOl'I Vlalol.1..2J7 U1 ._ Twrl .. •tfr (P•IO AltO), 2 Jll 441 I. Kllllfl
McCllJrt (SI 1..9'1 a, MO.I, tJI H , 6. Dotaev
Tlarntv (Loul•vllte, Kv.), t •If
Mtn'I 200 lraeit-1 JoN! Moffat (CO•I•
MtM), 2:17.•I, 2. Oa\lld L.undwt (W•J.nul
Crffkl, 2.lt.77; 3. Gtorff t<ocl'I (l'Oftl•nd,
Ort .I, 2:11 IM, .. Stm kllwarl1 (Ml" Vel• laV), "fl 2l, S. llllCl\ard l(orl'lammar IEHI•
on,.flle ), UI,.,; • Sttvan ltntllv (fitoun·
rain VaHavJ, 211tl.
WOl'l"len't 200 aultarfl'f-1 Met'Y T
Maeoller CL.oubvlllt, t<v ), 2~ Ot. 7 lrlk1
H1n1tn (t<lno of Prutala, file >. 2 IUI. t
Temt l ruca (San OllH>. 2-100, 4.. Petti Klnt (NHl'IYllla), 2'l•Jt, S K111 McGrell'I
1•1rmJ1191'11m, Mlel'I ), 2 1S 121 •· Keri
Davlln (Ntw C1na1n, Conn.), 2,15.93
Mtn'• 200 l uttMflv-1 fll1t>lo Moreltl
IStnr1 Clerel, l:D. IS, 2 Patrlcll t<annaclv
(Mtnderln, Fla.I, 1,00121.) Cnrla llllv11
(HoualOn), 2:0111; 4 111111111ew i.1nkln
lfllortland), 2.01 '4, 5 Merk Ot1n lt<1n111
City), 2 07 11. 6 CllflS 01llv IMlrlton, NJ ),
2 02.3'
Woinan't 200 alCkalrOk-1 Anorff
Hay" lfllen~Oll, Fla.). 2 12 65, 2 .. ,,"
MltClltM (Mlirlttll, OlllO), 2·14.19; 3.
Mlclltlll Oonanua (Portland), 2 14.U. 4 .
Tori TrN I (LouMllt ), 2 17 11. 5 Hoity
GrNll (Gtlnflvlllt , Fl• I, 2:17 IS, •· Am'I'
W'111• (Mlulon VltloJ, 2'17.tl
Men'• 200 91ck1trok-I Rick C1r1v
(Ml, 1(1.co. NY.), 2:01 "· 2 P1ul Youno
(SI Loula). 2-05'2;. 3 llllch Hue,,.Y CAiian·
t•>• 2-oS,•, 4 Kevin Cra l9 l()lel), 20. 23, S
Cnarltv SlrOkv (Pno.t!UI), 2-ot olO, • Doue
Glen.Jen (~Jon}, 2.:01.33. w-·• 100 FrMalvlt-1 Carri•
Sl•lllMlfar 1s.ra1001. C•I""· 5' •I. 2.
Mlcllallt Grlollona (All11ndrl1, V1 >. 5'.72;
l Janna JOhnaon IL.a H•w•>. 56.IO· 4
Marv W•vl• !Mercer 1111nc1, W11n.), 5'.12.
S Lt urt W1lktr (Concord), 5'.19; 6. Oare
Torr" (Min ion Vlalo), 57.11.
Mell't 100 Fr-1 Miii llondl
<Mor•oe>. 4t ts (World record, t>rttkl111>
m1rk of ff 2• set t>v BIOtlCll Tllffdav
morl'llnt); 2 Mike Hffll'I (01ttea), S0.37, l.
Scoll McCldam (Wetwloo, low1), S0.70, 4
Ptut Walllce IMl1ml), '°"' S. Richard Oe>Pll 10 .. Molnta, 1ow1). 50to, 6 Jim
aorn <Lercl'lmont, NY J, so "
llllMAIHINO SCH•DUl,I T._.
6 11 M -flnala 200 lrNalvla, 400
lndlvldual m9dla11, too lrM•tvlt ralav Tllv,...v t 30 1.m. -oretlmlnarv naa11 400
frM11vtt. 200 lndlvlduel madltv, SO frM ·
llvtl, 400 lrHllYla rllav
' pm -llntl• 400 ""''""· 200 lndlvldu•I madltv, SO frNatvla, 400 frNllVla rltev
lllrtdly
9:30 a m. -orellmlnerv n11ta 100
OICIUtrOk1. 100 t>rt1at1tr0k1, 100 Oulltl'lly, 400 madlav rel.i v
' om -11na1a wornen'1 1.500 frN1lv1t.
100 1>1Ck1trolla, 100 t>rttllttroh, 100 llUI·
1ar11v. men's t.soo lrN11v11. 400 madlev
retn
o.. ........
OAV•Y'S L.OCKll (Htwl*'t ... d'I)
-llS lf!9ltr'S SO t>ervacuda, • llonllo, 1'
vt110wt1ll, 3 rock COd. 40 cellco Dau, 317 Hnd OIU, .510 medlartl, 3 aola.
DAHA WHA.lt .. -l3l 1ng1trs 151 l>lu.
• t>trrtcude, 2 l>Onlto, • vt110wl11l, I roc~ll11'1, IS mecktrtt, 5 lf11f11l'I. I 11Jvei aelmon.
HIWl'O•T L.AHDIHG (Nawptrt ... d'I> -96 enoiari I cOd, n 11on110. S.t
Mtn<I btu, I• cellco Din, I carr1cud1, 14
vtt110w11ll, ) "'"°'"Hd, 4 tCVlc>ln, :ll7 mac1ter1t, 1 wnlltllan. I t>lul perc11, t
rock flan
LM AllmttM
TUISDAY'S llllSUL.TS
('4lfl ti ti ·"'911t --~ tnllflne) fllttST lllACI. lSO' vero1.
Mini Marcus IBtrdJ:: ,11.0 .. S 00 3'0
Roll o L.ong (Odl 1160 10 20 Jtts N11ure (CrH S 60
Tlmt 17 fO. n I XACTA ( \lo ll6S '°
HCOHD ltAC verds
K.ono Utron (SvN) ISOO •IO l .olO
Suotr Tooltn (Pauline) t 40 4 40
Joviul &rtCI IWtrdl 2 40
Time 1129
U •XACTA (9·71 Paid 110120
THt•O lllACI. SSO verdt
ScOQtln Scoltv IBrOJ 4 60 3 00
Amartll1 Ber (Cree~r) 7.60
Sis N Six IL-ls)
Tlmt 27 39
lllOU.TH lllACIE. 350 verdt
HO 2 to
300
On Tme ~rlr IWltrn1) 115 60 J I 40 11 IO
G1ovenn1 Jtt (Werol 4 60 2.10
N0rvoro IMedltlOI s 60
Tlmt "lt
12 IXACTA 17·4) 1>e10 1432 00
"llllTH llACll. 350 verdt
H1no Bum c Edwroo 30 00 10 00 s 80
Cnant Dt11rt Glorv IMvle1l I 40 460 'Rul'lnfno RIPPO<'I (Gertie ) •IO
Time 1122. n IXACTA 16·4) oald U'3 40
SIXTH lllACE. 350 vards
G111ro1 Glrl (GlllJ 7 20 S 20 4 00
Roro1 To Ct Ir (L.tll'I') 3' IO 13 IO
Cutt Ber L.tQtnd CL.twls) 3 20
Tlmt ti 20 n IXACTA (3· 10) oeld 1223 20
s•v1HTH i.Ac1. >so veros
Go Mat Go CM111t1I I IO
Oullltc1te Pollcv (Mxfld)
Fer E Nuff IMUCl'ltlfl
Time 17 ..
12 •XACTA (6·•> i>eld Ile 00
llGHTH ltACI. no veros
8CR 1(1119!111, (Plril t to
Tougn Guv• (Gercle l
Htmotns Jtt !Flouaroal
Time 11 79
U IXACTA f?-1) peld "'4 00
s '° l .60 uo 340
660
•OO HO
5'() 3'0 , '°
U PICK SlX (7+•·3 ... 21 PllO M,71M 00
to •Ix wlnnlno lfck1 lt fll o
llorael) CarrvoYtr. U2.224 S7
NINTH lllA-"l, 550 'l'erds
Saini Slnnar <Garde) 1120 • 20 • 00
c narro11 .. suo IL.tw••l tl 40 7 IO
Tht F11t1v11 (L.llCktvl > 40
Time 7127
t2 EXACTA (3 11 lltld 1151 to
Alltnd1nc1 S,9',
a
u,..,...
Packln1 the dud•
<>akland A'• HCond baeeman Donnie Hill, a produc1
of ltdlaon w.Ja School In HunUnaton Beach, pacb hit
•ear ln the t>akland locker room wtth the bueball
atrlke delaylna American W.,Ue ohamplonahlp race
Ueberroth seeks way
for quickie solution
NEW YORK (A P) -Fonner Commissioner Bowie Kuhn was
sharpl y criticized in many circles for playing a passive role 1n the 1981
baseball players' strike whi~ claimins neutrahty.
Peter Ueberroth, who took over for Kuhn less than a year ago, says
he advocates the fan's point of view in this year's dispute, and his role
has been far from passive.
"The fans deserve the last ounce of everyone's eneray to resolve
the current impasse," Ueberroth said in encouraging the two sides to
resu me talks after an icy day of negotiations Monday.
On Tuesday, the owners and players' representatives met for
abou1 11 hours. th e most an any day since the oorrent talks bepn last
November. By all accolfhts. they were also the most productive.
Uebcrroth repeatedly has said. "We cannot allow these
ncgot1at. ions 10 fail." He has not been direc tly in volved in the talks.
although last Friday he submitted proposals aimed at bridging the gap separating the two sides,
Ml.JC N()TlC(
~I....... FM:TmOUI ....... l'ICTlTtOUI .........
MAim STA,...,.., MAim ITATl•NT NAMI ITATDmln
The foMowlng pert0n1 are The foltowlng pweon1 are The followlng P«tont trt
dotng butlneea u : doing bu..,,_. u : doing bulln ..... :
BOOKK!!PING PLUS, KOELLER DEVELOP· BILINGUAL LANGUAGE
19735 hflclltf Lane, Hunt· MENT, 1131 hltPof't Orl\le, MATERIALS. 4tHI River
lngton 1 .. cl'I, Callfornla Hunt1ng1on a.acn, C•ll· Ave., N9wPof't a..ct'I, CA
92"648 loml• 92941 t2M3
Jana That... 011arto, Cflettff Ko.tier, 1731 Laelle CerOI 8toc11111m,
19715 a..ctlfl Lline. Hunt· 8ellpon Ortw, Huntington 4t12 IVWt Ave.. Newport lngton hlc:h, CellfOf'nlt 8"crl, Celtfomla 92948 8"crl, CA 92"3
92941 Alfr.o O Koen.r. 18616 Wlllfem H 8tockllam.
Thie bu11n... la con· Cotult Clrcte, Huntlnaton 4912 River Ave., Newport
ducted by: an ln<fMdual BNcti. C.llfomla 929491 -a.ach, CA 92183 JA~E T. OUAATO Thi• bu1lnt11 ,, ll'Oft-Thi• bu1ln•H ,. con-
Tl'll• 1t1temen1 wu flied ducted by: a ~11.J>•rt· dUC1ed by: l'luaband and wtlt
with Ille County Ol«tc of Or-Ml'ahlp L..ile C. Stoc:tcl'lam
•ncie County on July 24, ALFRED 0 . KOELLER Thi• lllttnient WU ftlecl
11185 Thia llaWnent WM llled wltl'l tn. County Cl«ft Of Or· ,,_.1 with the County C*1I ol Or· ange County on Augu91 2.
Publlehed Orenge COMt MD9 County on July 23. 1118&
Deity Piiot July 31, Auguat 7, 11185 ,_
14, 21, 111e5 ,.,.. Publl"'-d Orenge Cout
W-e41 Pub119hed Orange Cout Oally Piiot Augu1t 7, 14, 21,
Dally Pilot July 31, Auguet 7, 21, 1915
---------14, 21, 1915 W•tl4
Pta.IC NOTICE W-929 1-------
l'ICTTnOUI MllMll NAMi ITATl•NT PWltC NOTICE
The following penoot .,. flCTmOUa Ml ... 11 flCTITIOUI .......
doing bualneet •: NAMI STATaMlffT NAm aTATl..wr
THE CLAMBAK!RS, 816t The fOllO'tlltng P«IOfll ere Tiie following l*M>f\I era Chlrlord Ortve Huntington dOlng DulfneM u EL TEES, doing blJelMll U : 8Mch, Calltomia 92941 19302 Worehet'« Ln . Hunt R & H ASSOCIATES, 1836
Kent Allen Rltnda, 1t13~ Bctl., CA 92MI Whlttlet Avenue, 8une F-1 .
S•lboe Blvd, Balboa, Can. Utt JllM White. 19302 Co111 Mtll, Celllornla
lornt• 92M3 Worc:hett• Ln , Hunl. Ben, 9282'1
l<•tlllHn Montgomery, CA 92948 George Page Rank, 1300
117111 ChatfOf'd Ortve, Hunt-Thomu Br9dtey Whit• Adamt 118, Cott• Mtiat..
lngton hacfl. Cellforn11 heed, 17198 Santt Lucia, California 82827
92Me Fountain Valley, CA 92708 Jatnea w NuQent, 25843
Tiiie buelneH It con-Thtt butln... I• con-Nerbome .t9, Lomlt1. Call-
ducfed by· e general pert· ducted by a ~II Plrt· fomla 92717
Ml'llllp Ml'lhtp Thia bu1IMH It con-
KENT AL.LEN RIANDA Ula White, Tom Whit,_ dUC1ed by a lolnt venture
Thia 1tllertW1t wN filed hMd Jam• W Nugent, Page
with Ille County C,.,k Of Or· Thia •t•t.ment w .. Ried Range
ange COunfy on July 23, Wtfll file County Clerk of Or· Thie 111tement wu ftled
19as anoe County on July 24, with Ille Coun1y Clef1c of Or· ~ tH! •ncie Cou11ty on Juty 23,
Publlthed Orenge Cout ~ 1H5 OIHY ltllot JV#'f 31, ~uvuet 7, Publlehed OrlnQe Coett ,_1_
14, 21, 1Ha Delly ~t JUiy 31, Augu1t 7, PublltMd Orange Cou1
W-927 14,21, 1915 0allyPUotJ\lly31.Auguet7,
W-931 14, 21, 1te5
Ml.IC NOTICE ----------W-928 NlJC NOTICE
'temnOUI Ml..... 'M:T1TIOUe ......... MUC NOTICl ~ ITAT'llmNT NAm ITA'R•NT '1CT1TIOUI .......
The lollOWfnO pet90nt.,. The f0flowlno,,'*9Qnt are NAm ITA,......,. doing bUllrleN •: doing Du1lne11 u : A) The folloWlng l*IOnt .,,
E X P 1. O " E R 8uneNM Window O!Mnlna. dOlnQ ~ u ·
T!OHHOlOOIH, 3303 8) Pure tmeoe Automobile exrcUTM CAT!"ING H~ BM ,,4, Cotta Oelalllng, CJ KIMM DI• MOO Wtl'Mll A.,._ 11 109'
MtN, C4llffomla t2t2t trlb\ltlng ~~8unafllne Huntlng1on 1 .. ch,' Call: CJf'IOOtY I . Ttltg1rd, "°4 Window l.td • () fofnta 12847
HlfbOi' Blvd #F4. Cotta Wh.yt• WIQrd Fine Auto 0.. KltnlMn M KlllQ, eeoo
.,_., Ca11tom11 t 2bo '~· 110-1 SOth llr..,, WttnerA~ ,1ni Hun1-
il'll• bu11neaa 11 con-NewPaft 8Mch, CA 92oe3 lngton 8Hcl'I: Catlfornla
ducted b)t: Jn lndM<tu.I Ronald JOMDfl o.ni., 02841
OMQ<>fft' I . THAO.ARO Jr., t l0-8 16th &t., N9wpor1 TIMI bu•lllffl It con· ""9 lllwnent WM Ned '-di, CA t2te3 dUCted by an lndMcMI
with the County CW1I Of Or· Ttllt DullneN 11 con• l<AfHLfEN M KIHO = ~IY on Mt H , ~ ~~ ™' eta*'-'t ... ii.cs
..... Thia atatement ... Med wtth the County CW1I Of Or Pu~ Orange CoMt with ttle County 0... Of Or· r.I: COunty on My '28,
Deity Pilot JVly 31, ~UQU111, = County on July 26, ,_
14, t1, 1986 1 Pubtlttled Orange Co¥t
W-144 "'~ Oranoe ~ Dally Pilot July 3 t, Augutt 7,
--------Deify PllOt July 31, Auguet 7, 14, 21. 1915 rtaJC NOTIC( t4. ~1. 1NS W-Mt
LieM.lllOTICI ~--------W-431-----------------IWOID ..._ Mlle NQTIC( NI.IC NOTIC(
coi=.:"..-n "°TmOUe .._.. ~., .......... Tl __ ,
Cou.t• Dll'TMCT NAm ITAft_,. The ,. _, n
tne Cottt . Community T"9 followlno pettoM ere dOlno = ~
College Dlttrtct Pfopc>Md doing but!'*'•: Natlonel 8lll1NEll 1Xl!N8t0NS, ~ fOf 1HS41 Wiii .,. Coln. Gold laellange, 4700 1880 11th lttMt. ''*' ~..,.. '°' Pllbflo ~ ,..WM. •.•. ~ ~ leeeh ,,....._._ tlonetCOMCComm. 1eeC11. CA t2t13 12M3 ' ........,,_
Dtatrtct IOetCI Room, 1J 0 lett Ot Boe, 4100 Ntp. Toni ,i..n ~de, 1IOI
A.dMlt Ave .• eo.t. Meaa tun•. It•. I , N•wport Port llMlffl.id N.wpott
ltom ~ 14 10 Ai'll* hecn, CA ttta 8Mct\ ~UNO
llO, 1111 ~ lfle houn Thlt ~neu 11 GOn• Thia b MM II CQn<o Of I 00 a..m lftd 6.00 p.rn ducted by: en lndMdUal ducted by .,, lndMdual
The pubic '-int on the lett Ot Boe TONI AICHAM>e Pt:n:•d b=cl •I for Tiiie Malerntint w• m.d Tt\19 1t1t1MM11t wet flled 1 Wiii .,. at 1170 With 1"-County Olertt of Or-wtth IM County a.tr Of Or· Adami A~.. MeM. 11199 COunty on Mt ti, ange County on My H CA. In lfle lolrd "'°°'"-on 1... 1Ma Al4UM l_t1 1111 IM t.JO ,__, ,__.
t'oiodl ,. M, fl'Vblahtd °'llftOt C... P\lbllthed Orlnge COMf ~ °'MOt co.. Dtlv l'tlOt Mt at AUOU9' 1, Olllfv 1t11ot .M'I 11. ~ 1 Delly l'tlOt Al.IOI* 7. 1115 14. h 1 14, h 11U •
W-t71 W-tn W•tJC
-
l
...
-
V.-~Tt HfROt\tT
HOMl., lac.
REAL ESTATE
131-1400
WUTIYllW
Of OONl'I, IUl'\Mtl, jetty,
extr• large lot. SO' tron-
taige bY 162' In Olde
COM Bulld your dream nome. $860,000
,_.I() I t<{JMf S
Reallor1.e1s..&00o
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
Let Ua Helf y ..
Sell y .. , Preptttrl
CIA ClaulfW,
642-5678
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
R&'M~ ..
'I • ., •
Traditional
Realty
831-7370
Call 642-5678
..
fOlH) ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
142-1111
...
\
• •
D8 Orange Cout DAILY ~lOT/Wednelday. August 7. 1MS ~
1111 .. 1-W 119 1t1f..... HM lelf W•• llM le Wu... I 1!11 !u... 1111 ltlt Waalli 11• lelt W...W llM l tlt Wut.. -IHI !•11 !pa ...
Am.wa ~ OttlLOQAAe! NANNY LOCKER ROOM PIAIOff IUl DTlTI l&Lll llTllL IMO 11•1111 11u1m 1101 I """
OOOd, "°"'· good IMY· Mawr.. edUcetied ~ ....... -fll'•llL Men• Cl"b Wknde . •• a.d ... c:tothlnQ ltOf• Entry~ poelt1on for~ 531-9402 I Pa11 time 12~ ,.n
P ~but not tocwetor1yroldlnSo. Pvt'::..,~ • ..,..,.... Ma..,.N·••llu.C.U "*lfflllWI~·-· ""~· M•·...t -•...., -• wl ' ......... cao •-req,MllleorferMle.a.n &Aguna.UYeout.~• ors.,,... Hell>~ -•s••... A17'2-7903 s~o.11fu1 •crent w11 ume '*P toa1-a 011-typ1no 1k11ta. WOtG prq-RIRfn..... 147.11•1ct-5J
-"-'c..t 49341• ,_~.M1-tl:lel end Qlfta 0161lclt ,._. illllllllltll~ 111.llPT. r-~I~ netd,f't.Vly,"4-2340 c-:it::1:,'= 1525plhr. WAJTEA.WAITRESSES
!W!!.LL(I --~~ •.. ~~:,,~ NHded ror dla~ptay MllWTll ..... t.nt"loc.uldeloe,.._tilh* ~ P"1 tme Poet-Unarmectomc..atorC ~50tw).~ -·-h FIT,ldnt ........ , __ ,..,..,. ;;;._ wtth 10-13 "'.! 9CMr1llUIQM6eeet Newpott ~ tn~t· hlahl'/ profitable CA uaz Ible. Call Debbie. :'~,,2m111taty .... 50hf).~~~:.., ~ eo.ta ~ pt1onu•c111e. 24CM073 Of Old9.·~'?.....--i-~ ly exptinding toc.i m•nt Firm r•qulr•• Ml1tng real •tat•. aw •• •-75t-t2'22 .,... "'91• ctub. ., _, ofb n.da ltChltec:tlnl •11""111 Iv mtG ....-.... "';;::!.;...:::.::!... .. _ !Wit~ Aoareeetve. malUf• lndlv. to eo0tdl-tlnuoua eupply of bUYtR ,...,._I--°'Jew enfOfcement exp. end~ ehlfta lnd4r
dl'aftamen in ....... _,_ .......... ..... M1f--d1ac1p11Mcf -1nd1vld da..I"' tion. ' ancs direction swolltded , ._ •umn. 1111n111 pret. ~Ired peraone en-""' .-endl •M-s111.
t1"411 v :n~t=on. •DtUL un ~~ onty~. uell M4lY ..,,, excenent ::'.: d;p •. ~r!v ~I Selery • c:omm. IWume .. tooklng tor • "'" tllM E.xper eec:fflaty ft>( in.-courllg4ld to 9')pfy. Apply •••• --ar-~ Pr°'*1Y Mgmt of.. ..,.. --Income (aallwy + lone to· Petrlel< Tenore, c/O StlM P4l"0n/ AHllt. ll::r.· bll8Mr Mutt ha~ In penon, Pedul Sec:utny -~ •lary commenaurat• flce.4lntty ......_ eccurat• &t2-4321 ••1 1..io ) benefl ~ dept operet 9XJ* Aemu. 23• E 17tf\ St .. Mnf Oppty for edvanoe. ah-hai\d & 1--'-ServlcH, 228 So. todteetotP<!Vate~
wl•Xf* Cllll 850-5175 typlno & ~ omce *'.. M1•1---:W~t ~uni-~~ncstv~&::-: St• 117, eo.ta MeM, good hourJ, run •t· etcllla xJ;;t oppty tOr",: QIUMll. orange, Ca. PIT & Frt ~lonuvelt
ATT NOANT&-THIA ~u1f'9d. Cell Marcie -• ty. Fln~tl, newap IUl*'l/lloly etcllla. Poe-12927 motpt\ete Salary+ com-ture Otowth. Attr.ctl~ ltn. 1t1tft11 &ttttt~. ~I ""fo;.(pm 21f-o74&
C11hl•re·8nactc Ber. before t2PMt57..S191 IAIUPILIT °' ·~cw experience ltfon repJ"llNnlt pivotal m~. PleaM oome In offto.e fn lrvln•. Call FuU Of p/tJme. ~ty et JUI,.._
A"*1 Stlldlum DrM-k'I CLl!AICAL nec.Hary. No phon• potntw tor deity oper-to ~ly. 752-M7• Frt11WIY CtleVron S198 tor cont1ructlon company. •
TIIMter 1501 W. KaMl!a, calla. Send tMUtne to: atlona. Xlnt company l&HJll lllTllOTH llOln••y HarbOf Blvd at S.D Frwy Dutle1 varied. ~lie. Or~ Aft• 5:30PM CLERI nPIST 1152181111 Attn: Howard Mullenary. benlflta & wortclng con-nMded In Newpor1 BMcll. tJEWPORT O'ENTEA S•PP•I I ,..q. 833--2130
lftl llfll.ll C'EST SI BON Betcwy, -·-·----dltlona. Send reeurne to-QOIPTlllllT weetcende only. 25-27' II ~. can t--, want to J1L-Wut .. / T , • .___ ..........,. ni.u fA1 S Wine & Chleee 8hop9 _,... _, P.O. Box 2600, Newport f""• n ••• Eitate firm ,~ ,,.... , p•111•••1H n ,.,._, _,......,u "7 ..... GrMt W•tem eytngt, need full & p_art tl!M ••Mf PUT 8Mch Ca m&tAttn·S "'.,... · Crul1lng ullboet1. teatn abOut the stock _.._ Dt ti SI01 advllnCltMflt .... toe fleet ......... Of c•INAlnla'• .......... _ t ..... ..~........... ..... c..__..' . . . Light typing and flHng. 645-7100 mar"-.......... data pr""-Reep. !*ton, male or fem. •• c
oper1tion.18yraorovet. ~ t1nan::;i-,,,..1t~ =~a~I~ ... ~· f'r'i;~·1;: IHW.llrltrHt ·-t AM 10" PM. Conteet ~ ~eallforM 10t1ut111rneJOb.Wll1tra1n. RsEkeiPIAdoFFtAEb
Mr P~er ~6' hM an lmmedl•t• ~ French apeel(Jng tlelpful. ..... lta, k UIJl lllll1llWIOl/IPl1 Jilnnlter •1875-8922 UUI 1ntervteW a1 8•0·5500 &t&-3350 exeh rm pv1 blVentr,em Al1111Tll.ll Ing for• Cieri< Typist In but not nee. call Jequl, MalnttntncA penon for IUIPTlllllT Toy Store SC Plaza. FIT-Salary approx. t1100. lllP IW/HIYll utllt F/stdnt ~57
Exper dePend lmmed °"' eo.ta MeM branch. &13-2754 Mon-Fri. 138 luxury Apta Muat be Gen. ofc fOf buey eom-PIT Expet 754-1561. 11nnlll 770-0102 &ti
,.,_.i"'l. M&-7;..8 · Thll 11 .,.. ant""....,............ ••TD_• um.u..,,. exp',d In all phaMe ol peny 11 typing & ming Salee 0 , ... Of Lt ~ ................ . , .......----maintenance lnel A/C, Non imo11er pref. Nr o .c· IElllll NOn Agency 1 "' c. lllPHI Hlmalayan/.......ne CFA AUTO MAINTENANCE ltlon. You will IMtn IM PIT Mon-Fri. Super s.ncJ,. Cr~I 1 In T~ln l'laaf ~ & plumbing. Own •tr p 0 rt, 8 5 l. O 5 1 7 P/T WI.,..... typlol nQ. AIP, AIR. all pey-f~ ..,.. lu."""' y.._..l, xlnt reglater9d, $150 eecti. 2
Pen-time llMI vehlchle v4 tr,: ~ ,io:;; wlch. 875 Paularfno, Im .. _, a. ~nnge or lrensponatlon a tool• Mleh•ll•. NEWPORT ··-r I, local.,.. company. ~ , .. -~~ Full female9 a 1 ,,,... klt-
m•lntenenee poatlon. ~ta ~~~de-Cott• Meea. ~7 ~~,!ci":,~rnu:: req'd. Benefit• • eom-WESTERN CORP. $400 MO 754-e822 urne. mutt haw 5 yrs teM-10 Wka. 875-M54
exp'd lndMdual requlred pert t ni. Al well a .... I ID"• well OfOAnlled With good penutlon c:ommen1Urat• It••-.,, 1 •-ngy (boaNOttlnga ex1perlve· Re8bfloa~rd). &-a.t .. H for wah, wu 6 general men ·• attention to detail. Excel-wl•xp. Call 6'"-0509 _ .... _, 95-• -u?: . _
MNtelngofcan&trudc•. ~ther ~~ral d't!I... llmPllTTm lent hMlth a dental In-Ocyaonty. for buay Coata M•H. Your Area PartTlme.No•xP.~d. 897-9580 Freneh X rmolr• ~ Aepfy ,to: 3457 Biron St. yPI~ wpm r• CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE •YourOwnHoura relllble.hr1flex.751• 997 matehlng Vanity pd
SUit• I 125. Nwpt Bctt qulr . The Ody Piiot hM Im-IUl'ance benlftta. Appty llltUI. USllTllt Muat be hard working & • Exciting new product aoanun ITITlllEIY s 1850 ,.. '975. lton
9285&-1708 We offer competltlv• :=tS:::Vo':.tc~ ~.:::,'Or~~ ~~ ~ ~~:O:~ good w/people 850-2273 thel relieves C.ln In piu.n ortlce. good pey, Stor• In C<IM need• Sales Braaa & whit• Queen hd &ITWTlft IYIYIOI t:=· end excellent wont In ow busy Qrcula-Cr•dlt Union, 1HO1 flee tull tl!M 14g.u2, IEOlmlll••y Mr Simi, 973-17 air cond. (11•) 07a..eo93 Pereon, FIT. 5 D•~· Xlnt pd $800, talc• "400. a II hf L FOf Interview tJonOepert-t. u........ R9dhlll, Ste. 101, Tuatln. · r•t N ea1 rsTaa1•1tf -~..t.t,.,, conds c.---aa11y Tables & tea Cart n"d• runn•r '" g appointment. pteaM call depend-·~ ';b;'; ea. (714) 259-4144 Meclleal FIT, phon. ord.,., dicta--1•-eeslve llOUT&IY!nPSST fi;"eii:ntele. 816-'1010 650--8491 ~~9m2 Laguna Leticia T~ et: handle hH "" phonM GENE .. '"L o~EJsouE UTA llPIT lion, type '5 wpm. 10 key We.,.& ... ng ~ RHJ E1tate AppralHI llaa--I
•7 "" r r..... "" touen. &42·7870 Wmenwtlwomenl I aln OU lOV9rn .. .; forma. $8.00/hr, near hi........... ···LY ftLIT =il"i5.iiiii-----··------(l1.) 71M7ll with a pleeWlt telephone DRIVING for Auto ~ 11500 p/rno tee paid Diana Of M1tllyn a r y .... , .... '"' _ - -Auto vole.. 20 Houn p/...ec lhop, CM, 84e-n31 RVS BJnlng & CollectlOn exciting new career. You Alrpott 833-7&50 Jim Frigidaire Retrlg. 18cf, TIMILE 1111111 (lH) 71MTI1 Monday ... Friday. <*I exper. • mU1t. Newport IHIPTlllllT mull be a NH starter, Hm-IH lfO If you are looklng for extra white, frost free frrr top,
Opportunity for lndustrl-wj M2-4321 for eppt. A9k MWAl lfFlll Loe. High en«gy level. 4 fOI buay medleal front ofM with ~Ire fOJ. aueoeaa. ShOrthand or ape•d· 9Pe1'1dtng tnOMY. or ttk• WOf'ks lrinl, cleen. $96.
ous young person In ex-GREAT ntSTERN for Traioey full time poeltlOn In amall Day work week. flQe. Full time. 6'6-8824 No expel'. nee. Call btwn writing typing 50-80 to go plaoee Ilk• Magic 979-8277
pending auto fleet <»-••T& llTlf but booming Cot1a Mae Ruffin Group Agency 9-Spm. 841-0690 wpm g;ow with our c:om-Mountain, Knotta Berry --. -
partment. Repld ad-SAVINGS -compeny. Call '*'niter, 380-7815 HOEnlllllT WAITll ' & k u With a Farm, Of win Prizes and GAS STOVE. w/2 oven1,' vancement. muat haV9 Full time, mu1t tyi • 751--4810 Dulle• Include heavy s;L£S-Two R~t~te g= bou~h~ld have Awerd1, Cati ua nowl we t>Yrner, whit• S200. Gu
valld drlvera lie. Equel Opportunity ~o:~·p,:!' N'; ••••un IEICUllllf .... phones & llght typing. I·~~:. G or 3-5 yrl exper Salary have Mveral openings In Clothes Dryer, $100.
Mr.Hunt53•441M O.C. AlrpOrt. 851.0S17 Local voung= PartorfUlltlme. Cell Ma. Vote for ~t. ~m1s:on1P,11:.*~~ commensurate. w/exp. C.M .. H.B. or F.v . Both xlnt. Tommy,
IALIU IAY OLll OUll TYPIST Mlche lle . NEW PO AT man nMded for Via Lido Drugs. Nwpt Bch 75'-6218 Properties 873-5'10 979-6375 ASk for Nency. 642-4333 645--3007
Is now hlrl"": Good gr ...... h """"t'-In WESTERN CORP. H•bof. co---·t ..___Cal_l_Dean __ s_7_S-0_150__ lfCn/llm .... v... ....... ""' <XI'•........ ,-fOf' 1-"'~ M-..... ,.... or-IEOlnUY /CURI IELLnl•PIT OP8fatlon10ept.atCor· llUlllllDIBI exper.nec.875-4704 IEISEHEll ....... .... ..• T ' ...AAA Ith m •• ••1 ""'•t• Offl-of res •••• gan•··tlon. Must have YP ng a mull. """'"' w lfOll "" t_;;,ant cf'l,i; p~ Full end Part Time. Weeti-HAIRDRESSERS want9d full time, 8-5, drive own prof':sJt>nal pnone man-flgure1. learn date entry, FlllT lfll requlr .. •Int typing al(JU.: end•, wlll treln. A"*1 at: to fill new Hair Studio In car. Call Stephani• ner. front orno. appear-good working conditions. UUI OLUI exper. w/word pro-2651 lrvtne Ave .. Coe1• COM. Station• to be &4T·17'47 (8-5) enoe, type 55wpm ae-Call Foster Shannon
Pleue call &45-5000 ceasing a plus. Varied Mela. 8 to 4. ltvlne Ranoh IMMd. Richard Day• Miil 11111 PIT curately, xlnt t>eneflta. 6-44-5885
ext 521 M·F Mpm. general ottlce dutln. Fannera M111tet 7sMi33/EY11'4&7-1212 11:30-7:30AM 558-4781 Uf/p.Tf ..
BE PART OF OUR FAMILY 20-30 Hr1 p/Wte to start. DELI HEl PER Hotel Appty Newport VIiia, Restaurant Mu1t be experleneed.
7 Yr old need• loVl"f Will develop Into full time Mon.-Frl. 8:30-2:00. Call 111 llYm 642-5861 IEIDll IELP Have good typing lkllll.
N'"NNY. prof Mom poaltlon. Apply In peraon btwn 8-10:30. 642-5287 ····-11TD. p • I d Be petaonable and ha .... ,... 9-"pm et· -• • erry 1 p zza nee • ,_ Ded need houletteef>lnG, -·~ • • --&&. llA nu 11n lmmedtat• Qpenlng PlllJll ITTUIAl11 lmmect .. full & PAii time. n...., appearance, 5 days
benefits lncld new car. Tll '*1.Y 11111 llO. Ct_...!-"'""""' fOf a. •thletlc girls needed to Must be 18 yra old. 2108 per week <11AM to 2PM)
paid vecellon1. good 11042 IJHtfte.lYI. Nwpt r ,.._,., ...-vvtl Umin··-valet'°' upbeat Newport 3/H)ceanfront, Npt. Bch Call Linde 875-231 t
salary Live out, flex. hrs lntH IEIT&L IYlllmT Good communication Beectl Reataufent. Good 9 to 5 WEEKDAYS
Refs. req. Nwpt Bch 7141211-0U 1 for L..eguna 8Mctl general Miiia & eec:urtty police °' pey, greet way to ltay In '
556-8080 Lois 9-5 prectlc:e. Wedldays, ex-mlNtary •xper. h91pful. ehape. Call Kim. deya
11snas11
accepting appllcatlona tor
FIT l>Ya peraon. Fine din· Ing exper. Apply btwn
10em-5pm. TREES, 440
Heliotrope CdM 873..()910
111n1111
CU.I,........ pended dutlee not nee. Full time & pal1 Ume. 60 -2852 or Beth,
1 ....... , 494-3538 Grawy11d 11pm-7am. 897~ evel. Coste Mesa based ~
Ironies co hu apenlng IM LlftU ~ 1~ In r.-:'1 ... UUI
tor an entry le vel Kennel VAiet _ dOQ bather. 9am-i2noon Thul"ldey Guaranteed S-4. p/hr. Xlnt =:=bl~1::_~: Kennel nr OC J:alrgrda. •:30·8pm. '1 900 Von ~=th~~ w!':a:.
II Wiii train 5'9-8799 Karman A~. Irvine. CA Quality "'""""""' .... 11 ha-tlon manuals, ma Ing .......,,..... .. , ...
llterelure, typing quo-llAFTlll&I EOE M/FN/H oppty tor adVanoem.nt.
tatlons, letter. telexes. Needed FIT Of PIT for Elle llllPTlllllT Call aft 2pm. 631-3339 or
and answering tele-Engineering firm nr oc Automoblle Oealerlhlp r• 631-7909 DIMES
phones. The successful Airport. Call 281·9" 1 quln~• reeeptlonltt tor P/TI•• ..__,,.._:"Jo candltdete must be able wt Chbo d ,....... & ... n• to type eoouralely and lllYEl/lllP IELP t 1 er · '7.,.ng, Lido VIiiage. Approx """...., & neat al"\l\A&r. clerleal. Ofc •xp. req. hrs I* W.-M It be
aecepllng applleatlons
for FIT bus person.
Flne dining expel'
Apply btwn 10em-5pm,
TREES, 440 HellotrQPe
Corona del Mer 673-o910
Cll'T Fiii TlllT
lllllT .... .,
.. -~ .....-..--770-0102 -645-5287 eble to WO_._ :.._:!.._,,, •. anoe. Relponslbllltlee wtll '" _.,...., "il:~5~ a1ao 1nctud9et teat 1 t1r a lllYIU/1.1. FUlllT 673-7377 °' 759-0854 n
A
LINE
WANT ADS
dey hendllng receptlO(I J\lll oc p-Ume M5-76'5 LUI,......
area & telephones at EASY ASSEMBL y WORKI Exp·d Loan Prcx:e11or To paace your m••IOI
tunctl time. Send resume $600 per 100 Guaren--needed for growing before the
to Ad 200, Dally Pilot Box teed· Paymeni No EX· Anenclel Co. Xlnt salary reeding publk:, 1650. Cotta Mesa, CA · & c:ommlulon '°' the phone 92826 pertenc:e/ No Salee. De-right pereon. Send r• Pllo 1
SEU., CUii mm := =:~~ IUrM to Ad ' 125 C/O ciu::r. 642~5678 I TEl(PlllEI lor the legal dept. to assist VITAL· 90 3 , 34 18 Delly Piiot P~~6~~ I
MOIEIOlll1
-.J. .• In typing, flllng end other Enterprbe Rd, Ft. Pierce, Costa M ....
PfT or Pff. enotee ol clerleal dutlee, In the FL 33-482 -, •1 p•1 -
hOUra Is your•. Call T H clualfled public not.Ice ---.-m--,-"-.-m--' I J I •
Ass oclet•S' Tele~ d~. Typlng80wpmreq, m ••·•••••••• I marketing, 953-6670 aome word procesalng FINANCIAL PLANN ING.
d__,.ab'-bu1 not $18.000. plu1 annually. • • Carl Room Attendant exper. _,. "'· Good aecretartal 1klll1 • .... FH. TtEIS • needed. Private Country nee Own car It al90 --
Club. Wiii train. <49&-5787 n e c e 9 s a r Y . C a 11 Z:.'fi:~'mu~r~=~=~ e lTR.1 L--Fii A ..... Mt e
CAlllEll-IHIEWUU F /T P /T Permanent·
Crown Hardware, Corona
def M_fr. 673-2800
6'2-4321· ext 318 tor ground dfllred. lrvlne • -nu.,~• rm1lll1 : app~•-i-•rr loc. Actual 111ary c:om-: If you are in High School or J r . High •
._... -• mensurate w/akllla & •and ~ould jjke to earn $25.00 to •.
l&ILY ftLIT exper. Send reaume to: .• $50.00 in commissions and more each • Ad 312, Dally Piiot, P.O.
CLIPPI NG NEWS,PAPER Box 1580, Coeta Meta, • week-give us a call. You can work .
• ITEMS, EarnS2 10 s1o Ca. 92626 •.PART TIME m the af•~moons and .• each. Experience un· --------vc:
necesaerylll Offer·detalls F/O lllllUPll •evenings and still have time to enjoy •
OUIFFEll , Other du11ee, male college
student. PfT, non·1mkr.
dark ault req'd. 640..5335 rueh •temped addr898ed AIP. payroll, r•taurant .• your summer. We offer complete •
envelope & 2~ eervk:e exper. nee:. Avall. lmmect. • training and provide transporati·on .• fee-(Your name). Dept. 675-6577 CIEF M. (your address), Darrell --------• plus great pri:zes, trips, and plenty of •
Ead1, 10.5'n E. Ray· •. MONEY! This is not a paper route .• Wiii develop recipes. pl•n mond St, lndpls, Inc. FILL 11111 PIY
menus. & prepere ,8203 PUTTl•Wlll e anditisnotsevendaysaweek.Come e
Nouvelle Frenoh, llallan & • h } J.. .~ f • Conllnental Culllne dis-,. _ _..__-..&.t_1 Wt~tr OppOftunltlea avalleble e p us get new customers or our •
.. __ I di A be & -......... ,. with Int LOS ANGELES .·newspaper and have a good time . ·-Inc u ng em Roofing tlxp pref, Skytlght TIMES ClreuletlOn 0.-~ltpervlc"-18 ~~~~ 0k:, Specialties MS-8645 penment In our door 10 • whue you're doing it. Come out and•
" ''"" ...... ...., .. ,.... d •. see what we are talking about and •. quires 4 yrs experience & OOf' newspaper aale1
tam111arlly with this IPPll1'llllY program Guaranteed • you'll be glad you did. Call today and e
cu isine Hours 8 knoctt• often wtlen you hou1_!!!_waigeH Plulp~ : start tomorrow! C.all Mr. F.arl •.
AM· 10PM split 1hllt uM reau1t-oett1ng Dally m ......,.... ours: 4 ... to • 548-7058 or 241 -8432. •
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
5611 your Items for $50 or less In
our famous DIMES-A-LINES pub-
lished each Saturday in the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ads must be
prtt-pald so mall or bring them Into
the Dally Pl/pt office. Be sure to
Include your phone number or ad-
dress In your ad, have a price on
each Item & no abbreviations.
Sorry, no commercial ads, garage
Nl•, prodUC6, plants or animals
are acceptable.
DEADLINE:
12 Noon Friday
Coate Me .. Office
S 14/hr Senta Ana, 1end Piiot Claulfled Ads 10 9 PM T ra In Ing I 1
thl9 ad & your resume to react\ Iha Orange Cout provlS300ded. Potential to : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : 330 W•t •-v Str .. t JOB tt 1056. PO Box market earn ·plus per W.-• 330 w Bey s1.-, Co111• MeM. CA e2e21 • IHl1 9560, Sacramento. ca Phone 642·5678 For en lntetvlew, cell: • AN EOUAL OPPOATVN1TY EMPLOYER • Coea. Meu, Ca. 12929
95823-0580 957·2381 ext. 1204 •••••• ••• ••• •• ••• • •• .. •• 11 • .._ ______ ..,.
$2.17 per day
Thal'a All you pay for
3 lines 30 days
1n the
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL "!JC?DAYI•
&SI FOii LOIS
Your Delly Piiot
Service Directory
Representative
H2·4U 1 ed. IOI
l
SYDNEY
0MARR
Tblll"sday,Aago1t8
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): You locate what had been missing -
could mean more money. Focus on payments, collections, m oome
potential. You'll be asked to consider what amounts to a .. lucrative
contract:• Scorpio native plays outstanding role.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Scenario bighhghts excitement of
discovery. closer relationship with memberofopposite sex. You'll gam
through written word, ideas hit mark. Shon journey might be necessary
to complete mission. Gemini p lays role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Family member fights for your cause,
possibly behind sceq~s. You '11 get what you want, funding will be made
available. Stress diplomacy. remember special anniversary. Taurus.
Libra, Scorpio natives play roles.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Define tenns, avoid self-deception.
protect interests whale an "emotional clinches." Spotlight on dreams,
romance, illusion, wishes that come true. Powers of persuasion are
heightened. Pisces plays significant role.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on added rcspoMibility, chance
for greater rewards. Additional funds are obtained as resutt of business
or career. Love relationship intensifies. future prospects arc clarified.
Cancer native figures prominently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Emphasis on optimism. ability to reach
beyond usual expectations. You'll overcome odds.. more people will be
drawn to you. you·it-strikc chord of um venal appeal. You might be
asked to appear before the media.
LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stress independence. creatlVlty, abthty
to "solve a puzzle." Element of mystery is present. romance flourishes.
you'll learn more about character and financial resources of others. Leo
plays key raje.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Follow through o n hunch! Learn by
teaching, realize that one who previously ignored you is now
enthusiastic. Focus on publicity. pannership, cooperative-effons.
marriage. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquanus persons play roles.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-0cc. 21): Some of your most "promis-
ing" qualities surge to forefront. Demands will bC made on your time.
People will seek your opinion, many will compliment you on your
physical appearance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Unusual relationship 1s accented .
You'll take greater charge of your own destiny. you'll rebuil~. you'll
also revamp lifestyle. Break from red tape is imminent, and you]( have
greater freedom of thought, action.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): Gain indicated through writing,
reading. travel. You'll learn more about where you live. how to
eliminate safety hazards. Older individual lends benefit of experience.
becomes valuable ally. Vu-go plays role.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Family member confides "secret."
Could involve travel. lifestyle, domestic adjustment that includes
change of rcs1dcn~ or manta.I status. Money picture is bright, you
could hit financial Jackpot.
IF AUGUST 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you work well under
pressure, you arc productive, you arc capable of meeting deadlines. you
are intense. sensual. sentiment.al and passionate. Taurus, Cancer,
Capricorn persons play important roles in your life. You seldom do
anything halfway-for you il 1s all or nothing. You'll travel this year.
you'll be more popular. you'll be frte of unnecessary burden. expense.
You could be having a "weiaht problem." September will be exciting
and rcwardin for ou in 19g5,
·----------
AC,.011
1 Kindness e O.lralned
10 UMedlrk
14Wl~ewake
15 Fr-ev pert
11 Welghl unit
17 ~odlel
18 Typetlze
19 Competently
20 Hur11
22 Time P9'iod
24 Wood meuure
21 Promi1lng
77 Aellll •tore
31 lord
32WHt~ole
region
33 Smell change
35 Get eround
38 OYt of • 11orm 39 p,..flnal
rMtCh ..
'<>CIYUM
• 1 Eur n111on
42 Thinker
43 OodeleH of the
'°'"' u 81ennvm
45Med
•1 COffee dr901
51 l)mp'•call
52~
•
S• T ermll bull
SS Copvc.t
59 Commodity et W111t much
62 Withered
63 Spun 11mp
6• lndlln home es Scor11 ee Ori.tllal tauces
8 7 Prophets
DOWN
t Some lood1
2 Allrlngent
3 e lndl•n
lt11trumlfll
•Conquer
5 Put beck
6 SW1t1 pelk
1 Placed
8 Bring on
9 Flo-1
10 Rink devOtM •
11leg~
t2 Apportion
13 lrtlfl rtvet
2 t Hl/\Ou 11111
23 Salel)nrlM
25 City lypel
27 Modihed
0<9en11m
28 MIN Fr ebbr
...
29 ,.,,,.
30 Acted
34 Boga down
35 Fell guy
36 A Bronl•
37 Pelr
39 MllClll1neou1
"""' 40 ROiin touroe
42 Sk1tt tvoe
43 FleWI
44 Senere nomad
46 HutblnCI
•7 Cenn11>11
48 Fend off
49 Mueical so Scteo
53 Tum down
55 Ticket -se Etttl\llly
57 AtllUltM
ao ~ldey flWlf
THEODORE
ROBINS
fORD
J()l\11 '4All~OU lllVO
(0\IA M"A (>4/ 01)10
UI
173 FOrd Ven ale. "'"* grHt, looh grHt,
oerpllt/loel)o1', • 1"9 pp
4t4--M32
·n ooooe MAXI X-<iond.
Wlf'I o1een. sea ena. S3800 173-1331Of5S1·2•21
Cliak. IMI
US:Tb, 112 &JO. C:
etoted. S. °' Trac:t.. •11.300 080 ~14 ....
,
CHICK
·IVEllSON
CHICK
IVElltlON
441 C:-, Hwy ,.._,..., Se4Ktl • ,,, .• , ..
Orange Coat OAILY PILOTIW9doeedl"tt~ 7, ,.
• .De Orangeeo.tt OAIL;Y Pll.:OT/w.ctnMd ~. A~t 7. iNS
-·-... ......_, ~ IN OISTRIOT Of'. bid tlofid --~----~---PtaJC llJltC( P\IUC fll)TIC[' ~ IWJ~ fWUC ll)llC( PmlJC M)TU "8JC N011C( Pl8JC ll)QC( P\alC llJJ)C( In 1n. !Orm 9lt ~In IN PWlJC MJ1X( ----------~·----------------------------__ _.....-......... -....-,___.__....,..._ ...................... ~ ~ oonuact ~~In :9" ~ 8TATWOf .~ ~~OOOUIWM -~fllCTrl'IOUallfll•M-• ._ If·--= ~ '"'1 OfftCW: NOCll.DlltQI tlOTIC9fO ttnOllftHIOl ... ttlM1~al MOTICaOP .-
'l'•ar 41'0f MAMlatATllmfY -,.........,..._"•"' rr -lllOTICllCM' .............. n..,... ti .. "NO-OITMlltOAADOflWD-~ tt1emuimumemoun1of~ DIATHOf
UMOl'ftCYmoue ~~S*90N .. Thi.,_.~.,. N'PUCATIOMPOlll ~t~.:::t." TtCr' .. ,...,._ • YllORI 0, ORANOI CAUaeca'°"llllHl Maouateni.elhatlMbld-Ot.Mla.llAllTIN ~-um d'*'8..,..,__ clic*'IOtMIMM... OE"t!~·-""":f.wr. ............... COUNTY, CAlH'ORNIA, SthOOI Olttr'ICll. CoHt oer Wiil tn11r lnlo th• •Of.NI~ Tll• tolloWlllQ ~l'SOnl GOLD£~ WEST WlNOOW . BA'MTA CONSUL TINO, -...... ..... Ho. A 117906 .... .. ............ ~ c....,,. ~munlly ColNfl Dlltrlct propoeed ~trlld If fl'MI
hew llbendontd IM~~ lfAVICH, Stt I ltth 5SS P~ A-.. IU01, ALCOHOUC lllYIMM In Ille ~ Coun of ,__. ti '9111 o,_,.., A ~lar mMllnQ of !he Bid OMd 2.00 o'etoca MfM le ewerdld 10 tllCh AM> CM'
11\e Flc1lt1ou1 lu1ln1H Piece, co.t. Meu. C.... Coata MtH, Callfo.rnla UCW ~State of~ 1or c.MJ.-11.,.... lwdot~ofOr· PM of ltlt f11t1 cS9Y ot blddlf,ln!N~oflallurt TOUZI t•
Nam• CHIM·ORV OF fomle tat21 •Hat 1. . 1-ICMI •rie"COl.WllY of OM.NOE T.e.-. on .,,~ COUl'lty, Celrfornta, ~ IMS ..... lo 91\ter lnlO uld oonttect. UTAft NO. A18111
IAVIH!. 11 ••noptp•r. Mn Matthew Puto, 31t Lea6e¥ PetrlCI• QIOI, 115 To Whom" M9y eonc.m: In CM Met• Oflhe (Mete ........ ~ tlao ••tttno U ltlt Gov9rnlno Pl9ct ot .... AeoelptK ... ~· lllCll teeutity ... .,. IOI· To Ill Mitt, beiNflcl•* !Mne.~t2H• 8 tfOI Piece. COett t.MM, Pt11tarf110 Ave. •U01, HAAAYS QAEOf, INC & of KINNETH DILAOV ~MTMOTICI ito.rd ol the OtalftCU MO bot Olr.ctor. Betty "'• 191tect er9Ctltora lftd• conllnci-~ Ae11tlOUI lll*NM calrtcmt9 t2ti7 • Coet• M"•· ca.1110111la HAl.L ' OOHIM Al· ROS& ..... Oeotuad. •YOUlllPWG«n ... AUthoritlMOOwl'nec:I by the Pwrcl\t'=, Coatt Com· Thi DISnucT ,......... cnldltcw.. ..0 penone -
N9lne ~to~... Tilll bwllMM .. oon-t:lal_ 80C:lATE8. INC. It IOOtitno Mota le Mr.oy aMwl that flOMQ.OW llCAUU 8olt0 of ~ WM ~ Ollttlot. 1S!~ Int tight 10 ~ 111'1 Of .. ~ IM otn.rw!M ""'.,..~
Ni9d _, Oranoa County on duc*1 by an lndMcMll TII'* bvtlMiM 11 con· to the Oepet1ment · o.-Ai: he uooerllooed Wlll 11111 tt YOU AM llHMD • lOUtlt htlcl on JA.ity ~. 1NI, at _, .. AllW, M9M. .-bide 0t to w.MJ 111'1 Ir• in the wll llld/Of •late ~
t/27113 FILE HO F2tt53t MAAK M. PURO ducted by: en~ COftOllc le--otControl for Prfvet• ..... 10 t!tl t11Qn.11 'AvtmWTS. rr lllAY II t 30 AM TN toltowfno m2t r..,.tl• In q b6dl or WI OLIV! I MARTIN att Fr«I I ...,_.., 21...... Tl\tl 1tattment -Ned L!SL!Y1P. CHOI "41" OH SAU: QENEAAL itnd 9-t blddtf, tubjal;t to IOLO WITHOUT AMY named 1Mml>tf1 bt.lnt Protaot ldtntlfloallon tf1a btdGlnO Ol.IVI lfll! MARTIN
Pit*. Irv ,,., CtMl01nla with the County~ of Or TM1 "'*"*'' ... ftMd (Pub hi Pt} to ae11 ... conftrmetlon of Mid Su• COURT AC11C*. and you f)rlMfll Thelma '· Al19y, NtrM: 110 11115' • Of'· Purtuant to tn. ptOYlllOna A l*ltlOn Ilea be1M1 •
1271• #IQll County on .My 2t, wltb the County Olettt Of Or· OOflolc Cle'I~ ., 1'1'01 petiot Cout1~: entt IM may NW tn. lagel right to Ctlalll!WI. ROQtl'· A 8ttn-ANOE COAST COLLIQ[ °' e.otlon 1711ol ttial.atlot' by AOltfn' fl HUtilWff'l ~
• Joe Tnter)uno. 5201 PllOll t916 lllgtl County on """' 2t, Qolf CoutM DrtW. Cftla tllh.davOl • ''"· •• bring~ toOOUnt tn .0000 Ion. H11rl•n M. Wltdtr, ~OMNICe.£COHOMJCSL ft•O ··cMTeaCH· ~of the Stat• of Qel.. Chi 811$*10t Court Of Or
Hey.-Lono &tad\, CllttOtnla '~ ,_ 1M5 MeM, CA. t2e28 the otftoe o JUL!S L atand ng by P•)'lng ell ot 8n1C* NtltlnM and Ralph "' " " ., "' • IOfnlt.. tM DCSTRlCT "-of>. anQe _COllnty etha
90803 Publlahed Or.noe COUI ,.._, Pvblltned Ortna9 CO..t QAtENIERG. 401 CMc :Wmt:tdileptymenl1pua B. Cl_,. Convntndatlon Sl'ATE DtFERAE!> MAINT .._, trom the D1rec1or of ROHM A. bi
Ttlla ~ -oon-DallY PllOC July 3t, ~ 7, ~ Or-. eo.t DaltV Plot Auoutt .,, ,.., ~ DfMt Weet, $ulte ed co.ti and ... WU medl Trac1 IMlltrl ftAOOAAM IM ~rnent ol IMUWltf ~led .. ,.. ~by• a ;entrW pan-14, ~1. tMI 09'IYPIOt JUiy 31, ~ 1. W·tM 1000. Sente AM. CA '2701, l*lMI wltt\ln ttire. monthl _.. IClPl'OYad T1ewil ,. P'-OePtenunon,... Of• Rete11on1 U1• o•n•r•I rtaen'9tMtoadfntl llt•tftl
netlhlp W-tee 1•. ~t. teas !County o1 0r.,,._ 8111• o1 lrom tM <Sett tnll nota of QuNll wtr• 1uthofl1td. floe of Direct«. ~ F prtvalllng rete ot pis diem atatt ol ltlt M1d1nt
Thie atattment wu "*' w.943 111_ 1 ..,,.TICE Cllttornla. .a tlQl'lt. tlti. encl d«autt wae rtcOf<*t Thi• A.QJ-"*lt with lhe city ot Harrie, Pflv ''°· Prenntng. wag•• and en. qentrel TM ~ltton requ••"
i the County Cltfk of Or· "8JC M)TIC£ r~C nu ntll'llt of Mid deOUUd at amount JI S 11. 128 52 PIU1 Vllla Pwk for Lew !nforGeo g:-~ ~r~~ pttValllng ralt tor ho41dey M11W1Y co c.dmlnlet• the
County Oii juty 24, 111-II' _,.~ • K ,._ the tlmt Of ~ end ell the ~ti & ~ lnourred ment Sttvtoee wu IS>-tt • I 0 AW, and owntme WOik lft the fo. aatft• undtt ltlt ~
' ACTITIOUS .,..... r~ "''"-. ~-•• • it19ht. tllte and ln*-1 \flat • ol JUiy t&. 1115, and wlll proved AHFP Admtnl1· Trdet F.cllty. Costa Mte4I Cellty tn wfllch ltlll work le to dent Admlnlatratlon of &
Pvblllfled Onno9 Codt MA.Ml ITA,.....,, ACmtOUt IUllNUt • =-..:.=~ tM •tat. of Mid ttec ud ~ untll your aooount 1ratlonAgr""*1t1wtthClty :~2f707T~one. (714) Cle pertONNCI rcw MOfl craft 111• Act
Dally PllOl .My 3 1. ~uouet7. The folowing penon .,, NAm IT A TlllmNT '"9ni .. t\encqulrtcl by opetttlOn qt CleCOmee CUT'r9flt. You mer ol lrvlnt wu ~ovtd • onypt ol wonier needad to A tieerlno on tM PMltlor
W, 21. tNS bullneae aa: 1 The tollowlng are ... [law Of~ .. other tNn not 1141\'e lo pey the .ntlrt Agretmtnt with The lrvlnt NOTICI 18 H!A!8Y 111tc1.1te tM ciontraat. l"'-wtll Cle lleld" on AUGUST 21
W·o.34 doj"8 9 H u A Q . T . doing tiullneu ~ In ,,:o ~~,, 01 ~ In tddltlOrt to chat or Mid unpaid portion of your tc-company wa1 approved. Cl= ~~ lh~11~ov,:; fatee .,. Ofl Ille at the 048-1~5 et 9',~ AJA. In O.Ot
fNTERPAISES. 18111 Or· HOTLINE LEASIMO CO, tt\41 Stat• of c.morni.. for • t1 tM tlMe Of count. even though Nil pey-HICO Block Giant Cot'llnict ~ County Clllfomle. l'AICT olftoe !oc:41ted It Pny No 3 et 700 Civic C..t•
cherd. a.tile Ant Height" 200112 Bayview Scr .. t, IM Couf'ITY ol 0r.,. ~th. In and to .. the otl'· m411\t wtll ~. but with HUD -appr0¥ed. act-.::-by and 'ttwouon It.I Fae:. Ptem4nQTraller. Coplee OriW Weet. Santa Ana. C~
Callfornl• 12101 Sente Ana Helgtlt-. c.ii. In IM Matter ot Int &cai. teln real property lltueted tn )'OU muet pey lbe trnOUnt Agr.-nenl with ~--OOYer a-8owd hertln-may Cle obl.rntd on ~L t2702
---------Pt.1M61 ,._nn 188t Or· lotnll tf707 of SUMn Wetenka SotlOerl IN City of w.tmlnl1er, tiated a~. ~.)'OU CClnaultanll fof Edleon ... n""' • .. A OOf1'f ol ttleae rtt• th.ie IF YOU OBJECT to th4 rtllUC NOTICE en.rd. Senta M. Height., Ro!Hrl lryan Glltly, o.cuud • !County Of 0r.,._ 8tatt Of and your beMllelary or lardlng BUln end Pump St• ;~rh!~:.-,.:..: 0t1s. Cle patted a1 t"9 lob alta. gtanttng of tl'le S>Ml110n, Y°'
c.i11orn1e ~707 20082 Bayvltw Strttl Notice .. hereb iwn !hat ICellfOtnla. panlOUlatl'f 0.-mono~ may mutually !ton and Talbert Channel • up o, It ehall Cle mandatory VPOf1 lhoukS elthW appeer ac t"4
NOTICf Thi• bulln•H •• oon· 8ent• Ana Helghtl, c.i1; IM underllgned y l1 aall tt IQllbed .. followl. lo-wit: llOrtt In writing prlOt to IM WU approv.d. HICO ~ buti:I ~.,.,="'Jc,~ lhe CONTRACTOR lO ~ Meting and ltltt your ot> 1NV1T1NO llC>I dueled by" 111 tndMdual 1orn1a 92701 Prllt ..,. he lllOMat Lot HO, T rect 2803 u Plf time tl'le notice ot Nie .. tract with Oeyll Mclntoafl •«• IM. 1 tht contrec1 1a .-rded. and jtctlOnl or flll wrlt1tt1 ot>ltc·
NOTICE IS HEREBY PAMELA PERRIN TNe blaln... .. con-and ·i:.. ~ t eubltct to mep ~<*' In lo<* 11•. posted (wt\lctl may not bl Center tor Che bi.Mbled)wtm lhe ewll'd Of.!_. oontttct for upon any aubcontraccor t,lone wtlh tM court betof•
GI v EN Iha t • a ••• d Thia 1111ement ... flltcl clue1'ld by" ... lndMduel conflrmellon ot' Mid 8v-P909i t-• lnclu""9 of ml• Mttler then IN end of the apprOVed HICO conlf~t the ~pr..,_.. under lllCll CONTRACTOA. the' neet1ng YOUt ~· !::, a.all tor fuml.lhlng all with ttit COuney Clant of Or· ROBEAT BRYAN GATELY l*b Coun on or in. tn. ,~ mepa Of ltlt 04· lhf .. moncn Plftod atated With Trtnt Hoflttbet·Ann 1~_!..,!!'~~t::=.!' to pay not._ tllM'I the Mid ~ml)' be Ill Plf'80ft orb)
• ma1er1a1.a. equlpmlnl. County July 23 Thie t tement .,.. ftlad • NS nee ol !ht COllnty Aeoofdtr ebove) to, among otn.r CM1toph, • Joint Venture ,,. ........... ..,., · epeclfled tlltl to all wotkera fOA1r attorney.
trat>apor1atlon. and auch ~ on • wllh the' ~ty Clerk of Or· t'~. d~ff:. A':r~1~11ui.~t of Mid cOunty. lhlno-. ( 1) provldt eddlllon•I Wal amended. Agreement ~..!.,'.!: ::'o*!t 4:: employed by them In ltlt.... IF YOU ARI! A CRl!OtTOR
othlf factlltl• .. may bl ,.. ,..1•1 ~ CaunlY on Juty 2t a & Pl leeO more oomrnonly known llmt In whlcll to our• tM o.. .wt1h SOuth Cout MIOCl•t• pu .... , r acutlon ot the contrlCt. or a conlfnotnt «editor oe
quired tor ttltt CONSTRlJC. Publl9htd Orange coast 1185 • ~O::'"plfit :::.· 12th u: t5041 EDEN STREfT. fault by tranaf« of lhe prop-Ltd. WU approved c.taln tbOV•·•l•t•d tlm• and Ho bldd« may wtthdf-the deefllld. )'OU mutt flit
TION Of THE FOLLOWING Dally Pttol July 3 t. AuQult 7, ....... Floor l.o. Ano...:. CA rNEBTMINSTER. CA. t2ea3 erty or Othetwlae\ (2) tl1ab-constructlOn contract• --~ """ be '10 00 Cleo MY bid tor • ~ of Mitty 'IOIJI clelm wM the COUf1 or PR 0 J EC T FLOWER 14 2 t t985 Publlahtcl Orange Coatt eooe7 Coun of L.o9 ~ Terms of .... Oalh In tew-lletl a ICMdule of peymer1t1 awarded. cn&noed. com· • a · [80) deY8 alter tM oett ea« pr...,,t " to ttMt pwaonll
STREET SEWER -PHASE II, ' ' W·t1t Delly Piiot July 3 t AUOI* 1. • :1 ful money of the United In orOW 10 cure your default; jtleted and QOnftnued • No-potlt required'« Mdl Mt ol tor 1111 op«11ng of blda. ~tat1Ye IPC)Olnted b~
PROJECT NO 11121()().85 14 21 tMS · S:-4tt~~le .:;t,':::;.·,:; Sta• on cionnrmetlon ot or both (11 •net (2). tJct tnvltlng Bid• for 8Mfitl blo docUmenta to~entM A payment bond encl • ttltt court wtttltn four month•
Sida wm be ~I/Id by • · w-M1 1 a.· aale, or part ceah and bel· After thr.111 rn0hth1 from Ptatol Range S.tecy Modi~ their retum In .--c:on-perlonnanoe bond will be lrom the dttt of ftrtl , .. lhe Cotta Meaa Sanitary PlB.IC NOTICE Mid =••••d at the llmt of anc:e rMerlcld by not.t ... U'\41 d.1tt ol r~datlon of llcatlonl w81 conllnl* 10 dltlon wlthl11 ttn da~ alter requir.ct prior co execution auanc.otletttr1upr<Mded
Oletrlct, II tile olb of the 1111_.,. Mft'N'C ::tt.:::..ell :1~.:.:= C\lr.o by MQf1Glgjt Of TNtt thlt document ('1l!lllob dll•ol October 2t, 1985. ~ ~~ ~ dai.. f ortl\6 contract and ahall be In Sec:Uon 700 ol th•
City a.1t. 77 Few Dl'M. f1CTITIOU9 ..,._.. ~ nunw. Deed on lhe property ao rec:ordellon appMfl her• ot lnd1Q9nt• by prtvat• ccun-._.., ""' muat con orm 1n ll'le form ..c for1tl In the Prot>et• Code of Callfornl&.
C:O.ta M .. Celltornll unlN ..._ STATPIPIT l1MI ~~ .... ':::J If ~ "g; aold Ten P1f oent of amount oo). unleM ltlt obligatlOn 111 wH authorized E and bl teeponefYe to 1119 eoncrect docurMnla. Thi time tOf fll1ng e1e1m1 will
the hOur 01 11:00 a.m., T-TM tolloWlng penona .,. ..--vr 1011 bid to b9 cMipotlted 'With bid belno torlcioted upon °' • TttomH Uram wH •P· ~tract OOCYf'fl9ntt Pvreuant to Section ~IO not expire prior to lour cMJ, ~ S. 1• 11 dOlng ~ aa: lh a 1 dad Detll 1~ othttWlae other than or In 81d1 or offefa to be In writ· MC*ll• Wf'l«en agreement pointed •• Director of HCA Eedl blddlf Shall 1Ubmlt, of the Government code ot montn. from tile dete ol the wt11cnt1m1theywntblopen-JE'NROD COMPANY, ln•tru"'."11 NuitlUr. addition to that of Nici°"' Ing and wtH be l'IC4llwd at bet#Mnyouandyour«edl-and L.ocaJ Mentel .... elth on IM IOfm fvrnlltled with tn. Stace 04 Calltomle, tile 11tatlnonotlceabow. edpubllclyendl'Mdel~n t788tSampeonL.ane,Hunt· =::~~·=== :::'i:'.:.hett!.in;:,:.,C::-,!; lhe atOf'IHld o1flce at any t0tpttmlt1af()ng«P1flod. ~ Pr()90led hearing ::rr:~":'i::o,: contracl wlll conteln YOU MAY EXAMINE IM en. counclt c:namt>er1. • 1ng1on e.tctl, Clllfornla 1,__,-o140 · property altWlted In the etty time alt., the llra1 publf-)'OU hew only the leoal rtgt\t ror private 1treet name pr tllla i.... .. provttlona permitting INI Illa kept by ttll OOUf1 If you
Id pt~ shall bMI the 92847 -....... ,...._.. of INlne Coun of Or cation hereof end blfor9 co "op th9 IOtecloeUl'I by ctiange wUntn Tract 118411 tractor• on pro,_. aucceuful blddtr 10 are a pw90n lnter•ted In ttti. of tM work and IM JoMcJn J Manin, 4022 ~ '...,' .... ' -• ty ange. dale of Nie. paying the entire amount 0.-waa Mt lor Auoust 2 t. 1185 •eqult.o by tNI Sublentng tubltltute MCUtttlel lor erry Iha tetatt, you may ..,.,,.
nlm9 of lhl bl<kSer bUt no MorntngStwOr Huntington •YOUlll"°"'*"l'fte• St.ate of Celltomla, perttou-0.ted thla 2nd di)' of mandedbyP'fcrtclltOf. PurctlUlng m•tter1 were ind Subcontracting Fair money1wtthheldbytheOIS-uponlheewec:ucororadmln-
olher dlltlngullhtng mark Beech. ca111oml9 92649 fOMC\.OMN •CAUM ~t~bed aa folowa. AU0\111. tt85. To find out the •mount eporoved. Report• on t988 Pracl~ Ac:1 Govt. ~ TAICT co en1ur1 par-1a1rator, or upon the at·
Any bid recelYlld aftet tM Edward J Harding 111, :~"':r~~~O: 1.0t ·~ 01 Traci No 8573 J.,... L ~ • .01 you mutt pay, or to arranoe Ovwall Economic DI~ ~.:.~~~ ... e.!__MCl· t bmll lormanoe u~ the con-1omey for the exeaitOf or
eeheduled ~ng lime IOf 20551 Vie Verde Covina • · • CMG c.new Ott.. w .. t. for payment to 1top Ille tor• "*'' Program. Ph... VIII ~· ""'"""' mtJt au tract adrnlnlatre10r. and m. wtttl Ille r~pt ol bldt ahaH be Cellfomla 91723 . ' IOLO WITHOUT A NY Percel No I, u pet mep 11000, leftte A"•• CA c:loeu<e, or If~ property le Ind 1985 Muter Plan for #fttl ~ bid C*tlfled or OOVIRH*O 90AIH), ly: 1119 c:ou'1 wttfl proof of Mr·
returned 10 11'19 blddet un-Ronlkl J Morl. e.a s ~ve"f~.a~~ ;~:-'341n~~ a701, A"°""Y IOI ~ti-In foreclolur• for any other ~nty FacilttlM .,.. r• ~OIS~RcnectllCT ~~ Ctlucellor De,ld A. lllce, a wntten rwquat 1t•t· C>Plf*'. It 1t1all t>e tl'le aole Broad StrMt, Miiford, Con-...,.. ..... • • ti..-reuon. contact: Ring cel'Wed. ~tenmenc of i.... Of• lfowMfl tng thet you dealre ~
reaponllblllty of 1119 bidder nec11cut 00480 ~~:;;'rby~ln ~ ~::~~ IC._.. o.tro, "-•Jr., Btolhert CO(poratlon. 501 Cun 04ffereno. Funda and 1n the form Nt fortn In IM Publlthld Or~ Coatt nottce of tn. f11tna of en In~ ·~thathllbfdtarecell/ld T.hll bualt\11.1-.lt-COO· ..... orfta .. CSU.1£.,._flPIUI llicf"oounty Adlll ....... ottM-.W 8-lte -Monica Blvd .• 7th ShOftlgel WU autll0'1?ed. '»f'ttrect d~·1~: Dally Piiot Augual 7, 14, ¥entOfYandappraletmerltof In P'®" lime ducted by· a 0-111 part. ,..,.,, . ..-• ,...,,c~· · of ..... Decledeftt Floor, Santa Monica, CA. FY t98~11 Electronlc Dell 1mcxml not .... tnan 1985 •llt• uaata or of the pet~
A NI of pten1. Special nerahtp pttmltted coall and ••· ~ oommonty known Pvbllahed Or.nge Cout ~01, Attn: o.vtd Rev\!<*. Pf.oc111tng Plan """ rne mulmum amount of bid W-970 tlonaor acc;ount.a nwntloned
ProYllk)ne Ind additions lo JOSEPH J MARTIN pen.-wttllin.,,,.. montlle ... 29,.._~~ WMt, J)elly Pltol Augult II. 1. 13, Eaq .. (213) 393-1278 adopted Apartment 0.-u. gu11antM that the bid· In Section l200 and l200 5 01
0-al PrOY1910oS to IM ThlS eta1emen1 was tiled trom the date thle notice of lrvtne . ....,,ornie 92 14 '1985 If )'OU t\111'9 erry queettona, ~I Sondt. laeue 0 of :ler wlll entlf Into lh• IM c.it1omle Probate Code.
Standard Sp1clflca llon1 with the County Clerk of Qr. Clefault1 ~Ma;i,~ n: tulTwma of~::"~~ TW-787 you lhould contaet a lawyer 1985, RtverBend A~•r1· propoNd contract If tl'le P\lltC NOTICE HurwUa, Ramer, a
may bl obtained •• cne ot-County on July 23 amoun · · a money 0 or the government agency menta Project Yorba Linda same I• aw1rded to auon NOnCI Dfvlnoerlao, AttomeJ• et flee of IM Olrector of Publlc = . 1122185, and wtll Iner-StatM on conftrmetlon of Which may have Insured Ille ~llOClel• we autl'IOflled bidder In Iha ....int of taltur• LaClA.1. Law llO ~ Cefttw S«vtc.e. Room 419, 77 Fair ,..,. untll your eccount bloomel ule. or part c..n and b91-PlllJC fl)T1CE loan. Notwtthatefldlno tM FY 1985-M Locel ~ to lflter Into NJO.c:ontract, Pf'~MD ~ ~ • ....._ 1-. ~
Drive. Coata Mese. Celt· Publlllwld Orangt1 Cout CUffenl You mey not n.... to anQ9 ~ by note ... ftlC1 thet your property It In Spec;llll Olatrtc:ta euao-1 Re-9YCtl NCUrlty will be for-llUOO«T fOR ...._,CA ...
tornle upon • non-retvn-Delly P11o1July31 A Utt 7 pey the enth'• unpeld por-cured by Mortgeoe or Truat ACTinOUa IUllNIU tOf'eck>lurl you may offer queatl ...,. apprOYad .. r.lted fOUNTAIM VAU.IY Pvbflltled Otanoe Cout
deblepeymentolS10.00 An 14 21 1985 ug '~.!:' ~·· 9: =:'Ton the~~ ...-STAftMfWT your proP.rty for HI•. f'900mmended.Ct.imlorr• The DISTRICT r...,..... ri::~n~~!lley o.tly Piiot July 31. Auoutt
additional el'l11ge of S2 00 w.925 .. .....,... payme11 wu "'Plf ;;;;;.; .;tt,i,bid The lollowtng peraona .,. pr<Mded the .... la oon--llJnd of tuet wsnuttl0!1Hd the right to retect MY Of 111 1 7 1985 WIM be made If handled by mended, but you must pey bid lo be depoeited with . doing bullneaa u: eluded pr1or to the con-lor Continental Land Tiiie bid• or lo waive any Ir· SchOol Oletrlct propoMd • . WTh-1!64
mall (Ptlone (71~) 754-5301 Che amount llated aboYI. Bldt or often to IH In writ· c o N c E p T e1ua1on ot the for.cloaure. Compeny A6glonel Pa,_ "9gllletltl• 1n any bid• or In bUdoet for 1986--8e wilt bl --'°' purc:hulng lnlormatlon ) f't.a.IC flll1C£ However. )'OU and your Ing and wfll bl 1'9Ct1¥ed et EHURPRISES, 2880 Elden Remember, YOU MAY Polle ... and F ... ,.,., r• ttltt blcldlnq evelfebll lor publlc ln:lpeoo fltllJC fl)TIC( Eacn bid shall be mllda on beneflelery or mortg~ Che aforeuld of&. at erry Ave .# 101. co.ta Meu. CA l.OSE LEQAL RIQHTS IF I/bed Couta.t-8arr1er Re-Purauant to the prOYllllont tton at Fountain Valley
the PropoMI Form ~I STATOIE.NT Of ITl9Y mutually IO' .. In writ· lime alter lhe Int pu~ 92827 YOU DO NOT TAKE tourC.. Syaien • 1mp11c:a. ol Section 1773 of tM labor ~ Dlltrlct BualntM Of. flCTI'TlOU9 IU8INRat
P-t through P-8, prOV\dad 1n AIAHOOlllllDfT Of Ing prior co IM time the nc>-cetlOn hertof and before JM*(Leon) Hayee, 2&80 PROMPT ACT!~~ tlont IOf Or Coun Code of tM Stele of Clff· ~. 17210 Oak, Fountllln NAllll ITATE..wT
fM contract doeumenca. USE°' ftCTITIOUS tloe of ...... potled (wtric:h dat• of..... Elden Ave.. • IOt, Coat• NOTICE IS HER£BY Coutllne WU angtl ol/ld l romta. ll'le OISTRJCT 1111 UC>-Valley trom Auguet 12 to The folloWlng Plfaonl .,.
and 111811 bl accompariled au11••• NA• mey not bl Mrtter than en. Dated ltlla 24th day of MeM. ~ 92827 GIVEN: That National For. recommended ~eport ot telned from the Otr""or of August 18, t985 betwetn doing t>ualneu u :,
by a certified or cuhler'• Tne loll<;:.:!:f peraon1 end of th• ttlree-monttt July. 1985 Thi• bu1tnaH 11 oon-Clolul'I Service. tnc. 11 duly nnanctng • SOctel Servlcee lhe Department of tnduetrlat the noure of 8·00 e.m and 5 T & B PROPERTIES. 140
ohecit or• bid bond fOf not heve at>and Ille UM of period stated abOve) to, Alac:hutet. Clroaaman & dueled by an lfldtvtdulll appointed Truatee ul\der a Agency Intermediate Cit• R1l1tlon1 the g•n•r•t P-m. Cabrllto Sc . #28. Cotta
lea tllan 1~nt the F1c1111ou1 8u1tneH among other Chlng1, (1) Pin.. 1880 Cerltury Parti Jarnea Leon~ OetclotTrint deted Mey 31. Faclllly wu apprOl/ld Con-prevalllng ra1e ol P1f diem TM publlc heiring on the Meta, CA 92827
of the bid meo. peyhl9 10 Name o & G PRINTING, pr0¥tde addltlonel lime In Eeet. 12111 At . LOI AngelM. Thia 11atement wu lllld t983 executed by uni-Cai tract negoctatlonl f~ a.. "'llO" and ctta general propoHd budgll for Thomel W11d Jewell, t40
1119 Cotta M ... Sentcary 38().4.0 Eul Cn.pman Av· wnlctl to cure the def.ult by CA 90067. Attomeya 10t with 1119 County Clerk of Qr. Ftnanotat Corporation aa dren'• Intermediate Card prevalllng ratt for hollday t98S-811 will bl held at C.brlllo Sc . 128. Coeca
District No propoaall lheH enue, Orange California 1ran1ter ol cne property or Rlc:herd L Walantta ange County on Auguet 5, Truttor. to MCUte oertatn Faclllty wai aU1tlorlHd. and ovef1lme work'lll tne to-11210 Olk. Fountain Valley, Mela. CA 12827
bl conaldered unleu ac-92689 othlrWIM: (2) .. 11bllah • Rlch11d L Watanka. Ex--1985 Obllgatlona In fevor ot Ring RefVgee Str¥1oea Cenlrel In-callty 1n wnlch thla WOfk It to CA, In IM Board Room on Brandon Roaent>erg, t40
compen lad by au ch Tn. Flc:tttkXA1 ButlMH achedui. of peymenta In ecutor of 1ne Estate ot ~ .J'2S2MI Brother• C<>rJ>Ofatlon, u telce Unit PropoMI wee IP-be perfonned for eec:ri craft ~tember 5, t985 at 7:00 Cabrlllo St .. ,.128, Cotta
cashltlr'a check C8M1 or bid· Name referred co abo111 wu order to cure your def8Ylt, or Oaoedenc Publllhed Or~ Coat benlftolery, reco«MG June prOY9d wer-. of. llNno ,_ oc ~ ot wcrter needed to o C10Ck PM Meu.. CA 112827
o.r·e bond bled.111 Orlt!QI County on bolh(.Uaod 12) Publtlhld 0renge COUt Daily Pilot Auouat 7, t4, 21, 3 t983 11 tnstrument No for Capistrano Bey l»arttt axecut• the conclact TileM Publllhad Orange CoMt Thl1 bu11neu ta con-No bid lhall be ~ad December 14. 198& FILE After thr .. monlhl lrom Dally Piiot July 31. August 1. 28. 1985 f3.233$Ge, of Offid.al ,.. and Recf .. 11on Otatrict .... ,., .. .,.. on tu. .. 1n. C»S-Dally Piiot August?. 1185 ducted by • general pert·
unlell 11 ts made on a blank NO F263S97 tile dm ut ttiOOicletton of 7, 1985 W-982 cords In the omc. of the~ authOtlled ACC11Ptanoe ol TRICT olnce toeeted et Phy ~ W·97• nwVllp
lomi turnllllld by tl'le Cotta Dal/id N1etn1yer. 155&0 chis documlnl(Wllicll d•I• ol WTn-953 corder of Orange County. non-monetary gilt• by the Fae P11nnlng Traller. Coptee Thomu Wild Jtwefl
Mesa Sanitary Otttttct and 11 'hlsttn VIiiage Way Tuetln, r~atloo appear• tier• nH~HIC unnrr: Callfor111a. OMcrlblng land Probation Oepertmenc wH may be obtain.cs on requeet. P\ISUC fl)TIC( Thi• 1tattmant w• llltd
made In aecordanoewith tM California 92880 on>. unteu the obllg1t1on Ml.IC NOTICE r~ nuuw. therein u . MORE PAATICU· autllortzed ~. Jean-A coc>y ol llleM ret• lhalt with tM COunty Cterx ol Or·
provialonl ot the Proooaal Hwry W Kon.al\ 252 E being fOfecloMd UP?"' or. • f1CTTUOU9 IUllNl.. LARL Y DESCRIBED IN THE nettt and AllOClat•. Inc. bl poated at the job alta. It..... • ~ County on. July 30, ~-la.. ~.h Street,.. Cotta MeM. ~II wrltten~t K·~--NAmaT'A~Wf rJf80Vt! 1'~~1!11fC! .... wu-,ICJ~Crown .,_.bflmwldrt-,v,..... NOTICaOfl 1985
Each bldd... mull 1>41 Cal1fornfa 92811' l>itwiian you aM Y04lf credl-.._.Ice of ... ot Tha 81'• DEED OF TRUST. uld obff. Valley Library Con'Sll1*r-the CONTRACTOR to wttorn o.ATM Of ,_,.
licensed and also pre· This bullntM wu con-tor perml11 • longer Plf10d, ,_... ~opwty et dOI :::::;::: ~ getton1 Including One no1• atton of llMfldmenl of Qrdl-the contrect 11 ewardtd, and 'ATIY EWS WLION Publlal'led Oraoge Coul
quatlfled asrequiredbyta'# ductedbyllgenetelp•n-youheveonlytMlegaiflOhl Prlvatea.ia C~NTRA LOMA AS· fof lh• Prlnctpll sum of nancea307land3150relat· upon any •ubconlraccor ANOOflNTJTIOH OallyPttotAuguat7.14,21.
A c .... A M C42 contrac-nersntp lo 1top the ea141 of your prop-No A 127906 SOCIA TES 2899 Wnll• ·~.000 00 lllet • brMCh Ing lo acOool I ... -· con-undtr IUCh CONTRACTOR, TO ADMMISTIA 2e. 1985
tor'1lloenN11 required Thi• etacement w91 ni.cs arty by peytng 1"'-entlr• tn tM Superior Court of Road Sult•' 225 lrvtne CA of, and ~fault In. the obit-ctnueo 10 August 2t. 1185 co pey not Ila then the Nici HTAft NO. A.·12922.4 1------~---·-_,-_.W,..!iff ....... ·
The Board ol Director• of with the County Clerk of Of· amount demet\ded by your Che State of C.llfomlt. lor 92714 • • getlonl lor wlllct1 IUCh Deed The<t WU no atatut rtpOrt specified rat• to ell wotk•• 1't> aH 1111,.. blnellellllM. P\B.JC NOTIC[
the Coti. M-. SanlllfY •no6 County on July 24 creditor chi County ol ORANGE Riley ao-Apartmentl Ill of Truat la NCUrtty ttu oc-on tabor negotlatlona employed by''*" tn IM••· credltore and contlnoenc 1---------
Dtstrlet r~ 11'1e right to 1985 To find out Chi amount In tM Matter ot t"9 E.atat• A Celil Ltd Partnerlhlp cuned In that peyment hU Propoled Httlement of ecutlon of tM contract creditor•. end peraona wtlO ftCTTTIOUa IU ... 11
retect any Of all bids ,-Pul>llaned Orange Cout )'OU mutt P•Y· or 10 ar~ ot YVONNA EMMA ROSS Riiey ao-Inc Genetai not been made of: Santa Ana Mountain• Coun-No bidder mey withdraw may bl otllerwtM lnter .. ted NA.Ml •IA.Ulll#T Tile ·Contractor 1tta11 Dally Pllol July 31 . Augull 7. forpeymencto acoptnefor• DeceuecS. 1 • Plrtnlf' 2e9i White Ad f AJWRE. TO PAY DEUt+-tyW.. Olltrict-v Orange eny.t>ld IOI'• ,,.,.iod ot atM'Y 11rn11e wm ~"lefal• ol:,_The 1o11ow1ng peraona .,.
comply with ttle l)fOVl110nt 14 21, 1985 'dosutl,odfyourpropertylt Notloll1heret>yglwnthat Suite 2M trvlrie CA ' QUENT REAL ESTATE Count)' Flood ~trol ~ [80) deye alter the dete NI PATSY ELLIS WILSON.AKA dOklQ bullneu 11:
of Section 1770 to 1780 In-W-932 In foreck>lufe f?' .,,y ottlet the underllgned will .... •t Thi• bualn•~ 11 oon· TAXES REQUIRING THE trlct. oc:sc No. 46-4~9. for the ()Plfllng of bld9. PATSY E. WILSON. AKA G~EENEA LIVING, 1284
ctutlve. of tl'le CelllOfnla reuooE~I~ S NOS Private Nie to "'9 hlglll9t ducted by 1 gener.i patt· SUM OF Stll, 128.52 HERE· was eporoved Thi &o.d A peyment bond and a PATSY WILSON Wetaon, Cotta M... CA Labor Code. IM prevaJUng AM I A AV I and belt bidder aub)Kl to nerahlp fOFORE ADVANCED BY AdjOtlmed In ~ Of per'f9ffllanol bond w{M be A petition hU been n1ec1 92828
rate and aca141 ol wao--f't&IC NQTJC£ ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION. c:onllrmatlon of Hid Su· JS Riiey fHE BENEFICIARY, ANY JeN Divis. Thi Boetd r• required prior to u.avtlon by PAUL M ILSLEY In INI JIJI LNINI Vogele. 1284
labhShed by the Costa M... 1 5 7 2 5 E... w ti I I I I• r perlor Coun. on Of after the Thlt statement W81 rited ANO ALL OBLIGATIONS OF cesaed to Closed Seulon at of IM contract and shall bl Supertor Court ol Orange Wateon, Coat• ....... CA
S.,,ltary Dlalrlct wtltch are FICTITIOUI IUSJMl8 Boulevard, Whittler. Call· 16th day of AuoUS1. 1985, at with the County Clerk of Or-fHE TRUSTOR AS THEY 11·.55 A M • returned at 1 t:30 In tM form NI forth In .,,. Couflly requHllng that 92828 ni.cs with the Aa.siatant Sec· NAME ITATDIE.NT IOfnla 80807• Telephone Che offlG9 of JULES L ange County on July 31 BECOME DUE. ANY FU-AM Monetary lnct .... to eonuact document• PAUL M JLSL.EY be ap-Thia bualnaaa la con·
retary ol Nici Dtsl[lct and Tiie loltowlng per.ona 1r• (7141 773-7 l34, Loan No GREENBERG, 401 CMc 11145 ' T U R E A 0 VA N C E S Purch ... Oroer No. HX382 t ~I lo Sec11on 4590 Pointed 81 per~al rep-ducted by an individual
1natt forfeit penalllu doing buSiness 81 ~ 1·208263-3-74 (El Cerltet Otive West. &.lite "9211S NECESSARY TO PROTECT wntt Pllllbury, Madllon and of tM Clowrnment Code of r-tallve 10 ldmlntater the Jill LMl!e Vogela
preSGrlb41<1 therefore for ELt<EN FINANCIAL SER-II YOIJ have any queatlons. tOOO, Sante Ana, CA 92701, Publl$had Oran Cou1 THE SECURITY OF THE Su1ro tor prepetatlon and tM Stete of Callfomla, IM .Mlltl of Ille deoldeot. Ttit. alllement wu filed
noncompliance of said code WCES 2380 Harbor 9t¥d you lh<>ukl contect •lawyer County of Orange Stall of Dally Piiot Auguet r. 14 21 LOAN, DELINQUENCIES defenN of tM lrvtne Com· crcrnlracc wm ~011ta ln Th• patllton requ11t1 With the County Clerk ol Or·
Cfated· August 5. 1985 ,, 102. ' Coeta mete, Cell~ or the OQVel'nmenl agency California, all right: title and 28, 1985 ' . ' DUE ON PRIOR ENOUM· pany A.....,,,.,,I Appaal1 provl1lon1 rrmlttlng Iha authoflty to edmlnlater the ange County on July 31. IY ORDER Of THE rornla 92826 .. wtllCh m•y have lneured your 1n1er1tt ol NJd dec;MMd at w.193 BRAMCES, IF ANY, OELIN-was approved H rac· auccu1fu bidder lo •tate under 1119 lnctapen.-1985
•OARD°' DtR.fCTOfllS Of Max E Ellll 2380 Harbof '°'" Notwithstanding the the ttme of deeth and au the QUENT FIR~ INSURANCE ommended The Boer. d Ad-11,tbtlHull NCUrltlas for any denl Admlnlstrallon of Ea-1 nana
THE COITA MESA IA..._ Blvd • 102 Costa Mese flC1 thal your property 11 In nont tltte and lnter•t lhel PRE~IUMS. BON OS & joumed at 11 35 AM m0MY9withheld by IM DIS· tat• Act Publiahed Orange Cout
TA.RY DtSTIUCT CaHIOfnla 92626 loreotoaure, you may offer ~9'1ale or Mid deceuad Pta.JC ft()T1C£ A$S£SSMENTS, IF ANY; LINDA. D. ROHRTI, TRICl to •nture Plf· A llMOng on tile petition Dally Pltol Auguet 7. 14, 21,
Publllflld Oranoe Cout Tt11a butlness 11 con· your property lor Hie, has acquired by operation of NOTIC<£ ,,_ that by reuon lller90!, IM Cleftt of ttt. Sc>Md of l0<mence under the con-wtH be held on AUQ. 21. 28 1985
Deily P1101July31 Augu11 7, ducted I> an individual provided lhl sate 11 con-law or othl<wiN ocher thin -·~;:; pr-I blMflclary under lllPlfVlaoA tract 19115 al 9:30 A.M. In Dept. • W·l91
1985 ~A)( E. ELLIS eluded prior to IM con-or In addlllon to Chai ot Nld .,_...,.,... such Deed ol Tru1t h81 de-(SEAL) OOVPNINO IOARO, 'l No. 3 at 700 Civic Center
W-967 Thll 11a1ernen1 was fli.d Cluaton ot the forectoaure deceued, at the time of DAVID I. "'HMAN C>Ollted with NJd duly IP-0"1CIAL ftROCllD· Chencellor Onld · 0!'11/1 WMt, Santa Ana, CA Pt.a.IC NOTICE
D N wun the County ClerX ot Or-Rem•mt>er. YOU MAY death In and to all Ille c:er-AND ()fl HTJTION pointed Trust•. alCh Deed INQI Of THE •OAM> OP Stowftlft 92702 1---------EATH OTICES anoe County on July 25. LOOSE LOEOGAL oRi°Hi!KIEF lain r .. I property sllueted In ... 'T~~ ...... :mi1-:>f Tnm and all documentt IU,ERVISORI Of OR· ~bllahed Orange coast IF YOU OBJECT lo IM flCTITlOUl IU ..... 198~ y U N tne City ot Westmlnater, "' .. ,,. '"" -avldenctng Obllgatlonl ... A.NOi COUNTY, CALI• Daily Pltot AUOUlf 7. 14. granting ol tM petlllon. you NAllll ITATOmNT'
f21Z22) PROMPT ACTION County ot Ofange, State ot To alt helrl, beneflolarlel. cured thereby, and th• FOfllNt4, Sent• Ana. c.... 1985 lhoukl 411ther appear at the The lollowtng Plfaon• .,. FONT AGNERES Pul>Ushtd Orange Coaat NOTICE IS HEREBY Callforn1a. particularly d• credltore •fld contingent undetllgned doea hereby lomAll W 971 Nlerlng and 11•1• your ob-doing bualnete •:
Plerre Bertrand For Dally Piiot July 31, Auou1t 7, GIVEN That SUNKIST SER· sc;rlt>ed es lollows. to-wtt· credllOft, and peraona who declare all sums MCUred A regul11 mMtlflO of tl'le jectlon1 or ftte written. o«>jeo. PAO BOBCAT. 8951 14 21 1985 VICE COMPANY Is now duly lot 290 Tr.at 2803 u per may bl ocn.nwtae tnt.,...ted thereby Immediately due Board of S\.tpervllon of Qr. tlonl with the court before l/tlern« Ave • Suite 400.
tagneres. born Feb W-~5 9P901nted Trustee under • map recorded In ~ 114. In the wlll and/or •tat• of and peyabll and doee hit.-ange County. Calllornl•, PtBUC fl)TJCE the '-'Ing YOUt 8'>PM'· Hunt 8ctl • CA 92841 25 1896 in France Deed of Trust dated Pages 1 91nclut1veof mla-DAVIDE FREEMAN by elect to~ tile trust aleollttlngutheGovernlng NOTICI ~o anoemey beln petaon or by Rolf Joeef Stein. 2713 N
Passed A gust 10127177 executed by VIN· oenanaou1 map9 ot lhe of· A petltlOrt hae been med property lo bl told to Mlltfy Board ol the Olatrlc:11 and '' your ettorney Concord, Sent• Ana. CA
away u 1---------CEtolT L t<OHTNY, ANO nee of the County Recorder by Daniel W BetM In IM lh• obllgallona aecured Autllorltlee Governed by Ille CONTitACTORI IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR ~2703 3, 1985. Costa Mesa. CE JOAN o KONTNY, HUS. ol said county Super10f Court of Orange thereby Board of Supervlaort wu CAUJNO FOR 9101 or • contingent creditor of w1111em R. Taytor. 215 via
Calif Mr For· Ml.IC NOTI BANDANDWIFEHTrustor mOfe commonly known Counly r•quHtlng thet ...a IROTHIRI COfll· held on July 31. 1985• 11 School Dlttrlet: CoHt IMdeceaNd,youmuatfllebfjon. NewpOft ewin, CA
tagneres is survived 10 sacure obttgatrona In aa 150• t EDEN STREET. Oenlel W Bet• be IP-ftORA.TtOM, • leftefteWy, 11:30 AM The lollQWlng Community ColltOt ~rlct your clelm with the court or l92eeO
by hJS wife Ruth, FIC'=~: ~=~· tlVOf of AMERICAN SAV· WESTMINSTER CA 92883 pointed .. peraonlll rec>-ly: Oevtd Rlanlok, ••• named memb•ra being Bid OMdllne: 2.'00 ° c:lodl ~· It to Che Plf'.onel Tilll bu11neu I• con-NA A INGS & LOAN ASSOCIA-T flfmt 01 Ille cull In I-· reeentall111 to adrnlni.ttr the ~ Vloe ~· prlMfll' Thomas F Alley PM of ltlt 27th dey of repl'IMntltlW appointed by iduc:1ed by ~
daughte r Beverly TN! lollowlng '*aons "'' TION u 89neflclary IUI money ot lhe UnlltNI 111ate of the decedent. 0.1ed: July 10. 198~ Chairman, Roget R s~ Auouat, 1985 . tMcourt within four rnonthl Rott Joeef Stein
Western, Texas. d°E~E~SIR~saA:·P DATA Recorded on 11122177 u States on connrmalion or The P9llllon requHt• Publllhtd Orange Coe.It ion. Harrle1t M. Wled•r. PltlOI ol Bkl Aec»ipl. Of· lrom IM d•ll Of n..-t 19-Thll 1tattment wu flied
daughter. Manon & co PRODUCTS H TEK dooument no 28920 t>ootc tale. or part i;a1h and bat.. •utttorlty co admlnlst• the Dally Piiot July 24. 31, Bruce H91tan<M and Ralph nee of Olfeclor, Betty 1<11111, 1Uaneaollel11rt11prov!ded ~h the County Clerlc of Or·
SOn G ilbert of Chl· PA~~UCTS 375 ei ~lew 124&5 page 771 of Offlct•I ance evidenced by note ... "tat• under the lndapln· Auguat 7. 14, 1985 B Cl•rk Weed Abetement Purcflu=, Coaal Com· In S401ton 700 of the~ Coun1'( on Juty 18,
Cosll Me~• Ca1Ytorn1e Records In Ille olfa of lhl cured by Mortgage or Truet dent Admlntttretton of Ea-W-910 Cost Rapot1 •aa apprOYad. munlty Olatrict, 1370 Problt• Code.of Cellfoml9. l1985 cago. sister. Blanche 92627 Recorder ot Orangt1 County. Deed on ,...._ propeny '° tetes Ac:1 New prfveta ttr• name, A.ctama A\19, •Ma&. CA The Umt for nttng clllme wttt ,.,.,.
Mouc hcboe uc; of KetienaJoHenwood 375 1Catifornla Including 1 note 90ld Taol)efc:«1totamount AhMrlngonthepetl\IOn C•l .. Mtdfkl.wuapprovtcl. 1282e not expire prior to lour Publtahed Or~ Cout Santa Ana. brother. Bay v-Coat• M ... c au-t0< th• aum of 1165,000 00 bid to be d91><>1lled wctn bid. will be netd on AUGUST 2t. mini IC _,.TICE Private ett .. t name ctlenge Project ld1ntlflc11ton mon1ll1 lrom the d•t• of 1119 Detty Piiot Auguet '· t4. 21.
I 92'"27 that the t>tnettctal lnterllt 81<11 Of Ottflfs 10 be In writ· 1185 at 9•30 A.M. "' Dept. ...~ ....., to Buena Viet• WU .,,.. N•mr. BIO '# 128 t • OR· hMrl"" ~la tt>ove. 28. 1985 Albert o{ C hicago, ornia " under sekl Deed of Truat No 3 at 700 CMc Centll' • ANGE COAST COLLEGE 0·.., E W-979
brother Lows and sis-This butlne51 11 con· and tl\9 obllgatlona MetHed Ing end wlll be received at Oflve W t S I Ana CA ., ·1-proved Special Oltlrlct TECHNOLOGY AND ART Y U AY fXAMIN IM ----------ducted by an Individual thereby are pr--.11y Mid the afOfBMl<I office II any 92702 .. . .,, • • • ADftln'llCMf.NT ~titian Fund WU ap-CENTER MECHANICAL Ille kec>I by tM court ~ .. _IC 111\TV'C
ter Celeste Boutf't. t<ELLENA HENWOOD by ~he beneficiary Thet a lime alt• ine first publl· IF YOU OBJECT to the Nolto9 II ....._, fl"" proved 81 recomrntndtd by PROJECTS • STATE OE· are I l**>n lnl-1 In I"~ nu1ww.
Chicago Mr For Tn11 atatemenl wu 11*1 breach of and defeult In IM callon lwnot &nd blfOfe ol 1119 .....,111on """' tMt on 1-n... -.-.00 CAO. with ftnlll dlltr1bUllor'I FERREO MAINT PRO· Che •tilt, )'OU may HfYI ----1(------wtth tne County Clef'! of Or · dale of Ille granting ,...... • ,~ u I CurrtftCY w• Mlllld at ol fvfldl for 1985-88 to bt · upon the tlfeculOt Ot edmln· .,..
tagrieres was a mem anoe Coonty on July 2•, ~·~~ru~':'ia =~ ... ':!: Dated 1h11 2n<I <111y of ~~ou.,1'! ct!!!!-d .~:--' • .,,...~1 !~ ~ °'°" ftoieo. o.-med• on Auouet 13. 1185, JE~~ Plana.,.. on flle· Of. latrator, Of upon tht at-flCN~IT"'~I ber of the M asonic 1985 ., Auguet 1965 ..... ... -· •---• Gard9ft Qr..., 9:30 A.M. UM of Corr.c-torney kW tM uecutl>r or -,.,,.,_ .. , Loci f G d F2S2037 occvred In that !tie peym«11 .Iv* L OrMnMf9, .01 ject1on1 °'file written obJec-C~ (Ofttlllllly ..ea.ct llonet omc.ra end/or o.pu.. lloe of Olfec1or. E~ F ad~rttOt, tnd Ille wttfl The followlng l*eoM 111
ge o ar ena Publlllwtd Orange Cotti nas not been medl of CM!: Ctnter Ortv• W"t. tlont with tl'le court blfore •" 7·10-U. .., 0.tMft IY Slwlltl In County J ... Hetrll, Ptly Fae P1annlng. ll'le OOUt1 with ptoof of ... doing bualMM • 8ER.-
and Chef''l of Cu1sine OallyP1totJuty 31 ~uou11 7 ~:~';.".:.;:~,~ •tOOO, ••"'' Ana, CA en. nea~,Y~ ~ °"'"1'941ottNm.-...Aft-,. .. epprovtd. Euttr ~~-eoi:: ¥a,awrtttenrequett'1t1· ~HOAPART't.(ENTl,3090
of Crucago Memonal 14 21 1995 Interest and an aubltQutnt n101. Atlnmey for ,..u. enc. n;_•Y n Plf80n « t0ft6o Coelo)..,........,. ti Traneportallon Corridor Trailer ,aclllt Colt• M-lno ltlat you dellre ~ c.mman18t1,...., COit• Me.a,, servu:es WtlJ be held w -938 lloMf your • orney 21UIC111 Atty,_....-. Aout• Locetlon Study w11 y, notice of IM tlllng of .,, In-om• Hee> paymantl, IOQl1her with tat• l(lftMttl o.tror Ao. .. Jr IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR eltlftt lo .... h m.ttel In ~proved SlllUI Report on 92U8. T.i.c>tlont· (714) '19'\tory and appralaerntnt of Jtl'nM P. Warft'llnQlon,
Wednesday August 7, I---------Ghargee, 1mpound1, Im-AdmlflletretOf of the Mtet; 0r a contingent oredltOf OI IN Uftfted 1 ..... Dlttrtot Ltbor Negotiation• for 432-5707 ••t• MMtl Of 04 the petf.. 3090 P\illlMl'I Slf9tt. Coate
t2noon at Pac1f1c DllDIJC NOTICE pouno dec>o1111. II any. of..WC>ecedeftl tM deoteMd.)'OUt!Wttni. eewt 111 _., .. oeMaat EllblNty wcnn and Flt• NOTICE t8 HEREBY uonaoraoeouncamentlOntd Maa.Ctlltorl'llll2t2t
Vaew Chapel Pacific ... _ under the l.,"'9 of Mid"°'' Publltlled Ora~ Coest YOtK c:lettn wttn the OOUt1 or .._ ,.,.-... ._.., 11111 llgl'lter Unft ...,. ~OYad GIV!N 111•1 th• above-tn Sectlol\ 1200 and !200.e of Ttit. b\lllMM le con·
V iew Mortuary d1rec· NOTICE Of Oeld of Truat Dally Pilot Augutt 8 7 13 prlMOt It to tt\41 per'IONI ......., ..._. •.,.. h Treat mauera "'' IP-named School Olltrict kW lheCelttornle PtobateCode. dueled by 1111 lndMdutl Fellure lo pay,.... eetet• 1985 rlC)f'Mlrltt!lvl llPt)Olnted by c-... i>rOYad Couf'lty Clertt·R9-Or.,. County, Clllfomlt. ....,. 1 ......,,9'aNt Jt!Ma ft. Wermlngton
tors, Newport Bear h Tht INd=y ~~llallon taxH andlor •N11menta TW·7tMI the coun within tour montha ~....,AetM "'• ,,_... ?ord«'t OfflCt Sludy WM ~lno by and tflfOUDI\ llt ......., Attenwra .. Lew Thia itat~I WM filed 644-2700 Olttnot• of Or•""" County, for lotat r•ported ~In· lrom ll'lt da1t ol llf'lt ~ ;~ .,':": 1_ IP(>f'OWd The Board ad· Governing Boatd, herein• '* WIM A"'-..... ..: wtth en. County Clant ot Or·
HARBOR LAWN·
MT OUYE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
-..... q11e111 end 111 1UbMqUen1 wenceottetttrt•provldtcl .. ....., • · ~ _, .___. t t1'0$AM iattar '*"'*'to u "()41. .....-.-n._.,CA-lllQtl County on .Mt 24
"I Cellfoml• WIH r-4Ve -I· paymenl1 Wiiiett became In Section 700 ot tht leitla ""•• Cellftrflle ''''[j;;D: O ROllRTI fRICT', Wiii reoelVe up to. "-'bliahed ~;out 1115 . .
ed bid• unlll Tue1da)' d\Hltheraafter.lnc:ludlnoany Probe1•Codtolc.llfomM.. t:l71I. •..,.. __. _.. left! ti t1" ~;, bUlnotleterltlanthee~ oa.yftlol a..i..31 1 ~
AAIOWt 20 tta5 at 11 00 tele chll'O-or other NM rta.JC NOTICE The ttm. tor f111nO dalml Wiii IMftd ti 11.-... lfl h C wteted time, Mtled bid• for 7. th& -7 • • Pvbllltled Orang,a Coul
t625 G1.._r Ave
Cos•• Mesa
540-555-&
PIERCE IAOTHEAS
BELL BROADWAY
MOffTUAAY
1 10 Brotdway
co,11 Mesa
642 g 150
PAClflC V1EW
· MIMOAIAl PARK
Cem61ef'lt • Mortvtlry
Chapet • Crammory
3500 Pacific. V11rW Orl\19
Newl)O(t e.ac.h
&•f-12700
~ M11'1e81d~:'~.':'t ~=~ payable undW the terme of f1CTITK>Ul IW9MSI not •JtPtr• prior 10 lour =...: :.:=,• ., ''(l~ tn. awerd of• contract IOf ' WTh-152 Dally Piiot My 31, Auouat 7.
Ir.I .... ""'~-lw tn. date Mid Not•°' Deed of Truat ..... -An•NT montl'lt !tom Che date of the .................... D ...!!!: Pubttahad °""'" Coat IM eboYt proi-t. • 14. 21. , ...
on• VII ...... -1 That by ~ tnaraof, •• n.artng nottoe •b<NI. ---•....-W• 0\'91 'f. NS Bid• at\111 be~ If! W-t$1
•nd time ner.inabOVI Ml lh• prtMnl btNllcterl d~Thl ~ pWtona .,. YOU MAY EXAMIHI IM .. ......... ., " .... Delly ftttot Augu.t • 'w .. 11 the p4ece ldenllfted •b<Mt. ·-.,. ---1----------torttl. t1 ~lime tMV wlll und« euch Deed or Trve . --• m. k• by ll'le court If )'Oii ...eJ, • • 1Mtate..... *'° lf\tl tie ~ and r-nu1-. Pla.IC MJ11C( bl publlety ~ and hla axtc1.1tad and Oll¥ertcl CO~TlNO TRENDS If•• l*IO#I IM•wted In ~. 1-.M=IFllY,.. publkily tMd tklllld ti tM ,_
eumtnedetlheofftoeoflht lo Mid Trvtl9t. • wr1tt9" IHTERIOR:t. t7171 8Wh tM eltatt. 1°" fNJ atrw .__,. ........ P\llJC ll>11CE 1bove·1tettd Umt end PICTmOUllUH•ll l'IC'nnOUIWM
Dlatl'lcU, 10844 Sll9 A¥· DederattonandOemafldfof BIYd, Hu=ton Btach. upon1Muecutor0tadmln-.... ..._ -. ..... ttle ot.,. I lllAllllTAT.-rf lllAlll8'4~
tnue. llountlln v.a.r. Celt Sllt.andhaldapOelttdwltll Celltoml• 7 tatr.tOt, Of wpon ti. at·~ .. -......... flCmlOUI.,....~ ~wlMbeaSI0.000.. TMIOllOwlngptr'llOMft Tlltfollowtngpenona .. fornta. kW tn. lollOwfng NICI Truat•. 1UCt1 Dead of TIMollly W.t>•tar Ft1n-torneiy for the oecu1or or ..,_.... ,_ .... ,, NAiii ITAW ~ '*"""ed IOI MCl'l tet of Oolna bUtlnell M: 001r1Q bualMll M '
Pufc:ll ... of~ • ..,.,..,.. TrvetandalllhedocMMrll• nagen. 101a1 MOot Cwme. ldmtnt9tretor encl Mt wtlfl .. tt ,c. ....... ThlfOIOwlnOptnOl'ltll'I bld~i.toouarM* C AM&LOT & Al· Ol Q PMmNO -·~
• F1t1~. ~Ion No ~ IM OOl!glltorw Huntington a.acll. Call Iha Court with proof of ..... -... 111 ti .. 111 ... dolr'O ~ •• ,...., ~ In OOod. cron-90CIATE8. 11110 LO• Ea8I Cl'laiPmtrl A*'-Ot·
P.()8 t MQ"9d "*•by. and Ml lomte ·*' lllce. • wttnen ,.,.. .................. ti ....... QA" Ru N I HT I A. ~Ion wttflln 19" daY9 ..,., ~ '°""'..,, v...,, .,., C1lfltomla ~
8id• must bit IUbmrtted dldared and doee hertby Stlerl'le LyMe o.toroe Ing Chat )'Oii ~ IPtC&tl .., •• ,...... "" ,. NATIONAL • 1 ~ntlght, ll'le bid ~ date. CA t210I ' PW Ha Vlctona Komill
on 1,.. torm ~by tile dldlr• 11 auma aacured Ora,,. 15273 CtdlZ. Wemt· nottot Of the 1111ng d.,, In-,........., • •z:•• tlW. !MM ~ t211s .L. l.ecfl bid mu.i conform Armand H. Camelot, 252 ! 20tll llfMI oo.t.i
Oletrtct• WI acootdaN» with thertby lmmedl•lety due mlM'ltr. Ct.ltfomle '2883 ""tort"'° appraltement 04 .....,. """ ......_. i.n' Otmin 41 Mf9ll w Cle ~ to •he 17t10 L4t Modeba1 '°""" Mtu. c..on,.. tMa7 all prOV'ltlOM of Int ac>tdfl· and pey•ble encl,,.. aleeted Thll bUllnall fl COt'I• •tat• ...... or of IN .,.. ,,.... • c.... ,._,, Irvine CA 1271& • • :iorttfaet clocMMntl tlln v.,, CA t720I Tllla ~ .. ~
cetion. • • and dote tlereOy ... to ducted by • ~ patt• oon. « eccoum. mtnltontd .. 1t U.&.c. .... t1 Tl* OU.IMea le con-bcfl ..,., lflel IU~. TNa butlnMa .. COf'>-~tad by ., ~
S91cJfltiatlOnl, bid~· C*'99 the tNet prot*1Y to ntnfllP tnSectlOnl200endl200.lal Cf" 1119•71•11'•·" ~by en~ :wt ... form b'nWlad wlftl dotted by'. an~ PEAIC HA VICTOflUA and~ lnformatlOn m.,. Cle IOfO to utltfy Iha OClf.. SH<Al'IE OAAY tneCelltoml&fll'r'obala~ ...._ .. 1 ..... _.. left Oarr\11\ .,_. OOfttrtict dOCurnet'IU, a "'"""'°tot.~ KORZAK .,_ ot>t•-== &bowl e0-oatlOna MCUr9d thenlby ™' etaMrnetlt ... "led _. ...._. c...., ,,,.. .... !MM. n. ~t _.. llltd 1._ 04 tn. pnlpOMd euooon-Tiiie ttattlfttnt -.. ftlad Thia *'*" wee tlled ~. 540·2910 DATI 7122115 wtttl the County Cttf'll 04 Or· ......., M ,a ..... , _, .... r~ue Att"l lft with the County ClcWtl Of Or· trlilOl°'9 °" !Na e>tOjtot ta ..tth t~County CWlt 04 Or· wttb ltlt ~~Cltr't of Ot•
or H241t u . AilMftoeft ._.... _.. foTs Cov"ty on July 22, CMe c..... °"" •• °"=. RO II 0032 .,.. County on .tuty a'· requfrecS bf lftt 8utletttlno fll: Coumy on Mt n ll'IOt ~ on "'*' 2• 111ta J. ...-. ...,..._.,, &.Mil •11•0'1'*" O . Mat· nt1MI l4lltl • ....._ AM. ClllJo. 091 July 21 1111 1tas and l11bcofltreot1no ,.., ' ,_,., IN&
.... tlotrUUPli.C.. .t..ft,u.t.V\111"9t1ltl1Pt "-'b(llfled Or C<*I .... a111 ... ..!-...... o; CC*t Pmnl Pf.UC. Ad QcM C00t -.~Or C.... ,_ ~ ......... Dlllrtlll Publ!INd Or.noi CC*1 .. ~ PublWled Orangia COMt .---:r ~ ~ c...e Seo 4100 .. aaq .---:r. ~ Or-. .co.I f'ubltMd OfaWt CoMI Dally Piiot Auguat }, t4. 21. DeltyPflo4 July31,Augu917, 0. Pt1ot A119U" t . 7, II. Delly ftlot AWOUlt • t•. 21. D11!Y "'°1Augue1.7,1•.11. ledl lllitlder ""'91. ...... DallY Plo1 Auouet • tt, 21, o.trfll04,Julf,1.,,,...1. ~ ~ AVCJUllll 7, 21. ins 14 ~1. 1m ttd 1• ~ u .-·uaa ....,. Md\ bid oettllltd or 11;'111 R )t ttta •
\... I .) W·013 wo n W-t1t fW·71t w.tea W.-0 CIMNW'• ... _.. '° W4ll . ' w-m ....:::::======-~--~' ~-----~-----,__----~---~~-. . -
'
-¥
. -
TOfltC>fUM>W:
WARM
FOMCASTI ON A2
.___,::::;::-==~...-------.~"'-Senl~ Ntw~Btlch, CoetaMeu.Hun~OttlMCh~
'
'i t '•t-t l\f /. l•'-'•Nt '"' t' /... • '-' ·~t.· _____ -___ .. •4 ....... ~ ...,;..J..,,,J-..1 , .. I. ' I ...... I.
ree ent
ase st·ri eto
Coast
UC lrvlne researchers
have reported that smog
may pose a greater health
risk to children than to
adults./A7
California
Peace vlglls and anti-
nuclear power demon-
strations helped to mark
the 40th anniversary of
Hiroshima./ Al
Nation
Astronauts ret urn safely
to Houston with their
version of engine crisis at
takeoff./M 1
World
Unseasonable storms kill
six persons and spill oll In
Europe./A4
Mlnd&Body
Surgeons use unique
_techntqueJoJlteralb' sue
fat from the body of
overweight patlents.181
I
-Food
Food tasters are trained
to detect numerou9
flavors.C1
Make-ahead dishes aAd
portable barbecues
make good traveling
companlons.C1
Spotts
Baseball's delay of game
Is penallzlng players and
owners allke./D1
Costa Mesa's John Mof-
fet swims to victory In the
Long Course Cham-
plonshlps. /D2
Ted Turner gets Goodwill
Games rolllng./D2
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualness
Claaslfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Food
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Opinion
Police Log
Paparazzi
Play Review
Public Notices
Sports
Televtson
Theaters
Weath«
BS
A3
86-8
OS-7
BS
07
0 8
C1-1 0
06
B2
B1 -2
A9
A3
B1
B3
04, 7-8
01-4
B4
83-4
A2
--------------------------------· ._ ................ ... .-=~~~--:--,~~~~~~~~-==----=-~-.~~~~~~~~------~~~~--.'Playe rs,owners
, '
Freeway accident
ace tfent that l}tread • tnlcklaad ot p1Dtft board ato-iic
the 8houlder of the .outhbound 66 Freeway cloeed two
lanes d11l'ln& rub hour traffic thla mornln&, alowing trafQc
to a crawl u worken tried to clear away the debrt. and
., at understand~ng
em~ a-traek-that-ekW484-ueend to face onco~
traffic. No one wu injured ln the 7 :30 a .m. accident. The
truck. driven by Anthony Silva of Loomla, Ca .• la owned bj
Oaterkamp T rucJdnC Inc. of Orange.
in day-old walkout
NEW YORK (AP)-A ••tent.atJve
understanding" was reached today an
the day-old major league baseball
stnke. Comm1ss1oner Peter Ueber-
roth said
No details were revealed A spokes..
man for Ueberroth said a news
conference would be held in New
York at 5 pm EDT and neither side
would have any comment 0ef0re
then
The announcement came too late
to sa"e one of tod2y's 12 scheduled
(Pleue .ee BASEBALL/ A2)
Mother .
of slain
NB man
• grieves
Says Big Bear killer
'should pay with life·
for senseiessc.....r.:m==e~----1
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot _O..,.,... .....
The funeral 1s o"er and so 1s ~
wake But for Joan Hov.e, the hun
·Hostage's son crossing fingers goes on
Her son Ross "'as shot to death Jul}
26 oub1de a liquor store an Bag&ar
whC're he was spending the weekend
with fnends. Police said bC' unknow-
1n,1~ crossed paths wuh a former
Huntington Beach ma n hoping report
9f father's release ts n 't a false a la rm
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IN DellJ "°' •tefl
HuntinJ tOn Beach resident Enc
Jacobsen 1s riding an emotibnal roller
coaster following reports Tuesday
that Moslem terrorists were prepar·
ing to release his father and other
Westerri hostages h~ld an Lebanon.
After a disappointing false alarm an
June. Jacobsen said this morning he
and other hostage famahes were trying
to keep their emotions harnessed.
.. It"s pretty difficult to t~m'f'.r those
kinds of feelings Ifs 1mposs1ble not
to hope:· said the son of David P
Jacobsen. the 54-year-old hospital
adminstrator kidnapped May 28
whtle walking to work 1n Moslem
West Beirut.
Jaco bsen inaually discounted an
unconfirmed Kuwaiti newspaper re-
port that sax or eight Western hostages
would be released by yna toda) to
d11iert auenuon from an .\rab sum-
mn conference opening 1n Morocco
Following on the heels of that st Of)
Freeway fee funding plan
wins tentative county OK
Supervisors sGh edule public hear ing on plan
to finance haifthe cos t of three new freeways
By JEFF ADLER
OtlMDellJ ..........
A widt"-ranging f>roposal to levy
development fees on newly con-
structed homes and commercial
properties to pay about half the cost of
three new county free ways won
tcnta1ivc approval'Tuesday from the
Qoard of Supervisors.
Board members voted S-0 to ap-
prove in principle the revistd fee ·
schedule developed by the Orange
County Transportation Comm1ss1on
and rcprc~ntatives from 11 c1t1es
during the past year. Supervisors
scheduled a public hearing and final
consideration of the plan for Sept. 11 .
The plan. if ultimately adopted by
the county and the 11 cities closest to
the three proPC>Scd freeways. would
finance about 48 percent-of the
estimated freeway construction costs.
However, the plan will not become
effective unless ll sufficient number of
th e 11 c1 1es and the county a~ to
form two Joint freeway autbonties to
collect the fees and administer the
plan. Considera tion of the con-
troversial plan by tho e affected as not
expected to be completed for ~'era I
months. ocrc planners place the cost of
constructing the San Joaquin Hills
Fretway, which would course
southeasterly IS miles through the
coastal foothills from the Corona del
Mar Freeway to the San D1eao
Freeway, at approximately $342
mtlhon.
The cost of the interconnected
Football and Eastern freeways, which
would form a T-shaped freeway-
~ystem, is esumated to bt' $516
m1ll1on. The Eastern Freeway will
meet the Ravemde Freeway an cast
Orange County and run 13 niiles to
th e south. where 11 will connect with
th e Santa Ana Frreway.
The Foothill Freeway wi ll begin
along the Eastern Freeway. between
an11ago (an .. on and Irvine
Boulevard. and will provide a J2-mile
stretch of new freeway JOining the
Santa Ana Frcewa) below San
Clemente
.\.s proposed. developers in areas
'closest to the San Joaquin Halls
Frttway would bt' assnscd an t'<tra
$1..,305 for each new new home built
in the zone closest to the frttwa)
while commercial developers would
be aSS(s~ SI 75 per square foot.
In all. the de"elopment fees would
(Pleue eee FUE WAT / A 2 )
were radio and tc.>leu"-Onreport.H.hal pnson 1mmatc who allqedl)' .had L
an anon}-mous American. working gun an his hand and robbt'n on his
through the Synan go\emment. had mind ·
paid a mult1-m1l11on-dollar' ransom -\ single shot was tired through a
for1he-releMe-of1tll ~"'ffi -'\fftff1e1m -~mdshld.d. .and tf2._we sl umped
hostages. Ten kidnap \ 1c11ms. includ-ado~s the front ~at of his truck and
1ng two Frenchm en and one Bnton bled to death bt'fore paramedics
are reportedh being held ti' the Sh11te lOuld get him 10 a hospital
Moslem) Repom )J1J thl· mllne) "l oda~ 1s his banhday," said Mrs
was deh..,ered \aturda\ b\ a l S lfowe Tuescia) pausing and adding.
official · ··He: \\ould ha' e been 32. I ha1it
( eee HOSTAGE 'S/A 2 ) (PleaM! eee MOTHER /A2)
Mesans guilty
of steel fraud
From staff aJ>d \\ ir~ r~ports
The pre~1dc:nt ot a ( Cl'ita Me\3 'iteel suppl' mm pan~ .1nd his son,
the hrm ~'ice prc!>1dent pk.1dl·J guah' T uesda' 10 charges of selling
inlcnor steel to the go\crnment
Dof)ald R B1galke, H ol (1ankn (1rme and T1JTIOth)' D
B1gali..e. 30. of"'lcwport Beach pkadc.-d gni.lt\ in l S D1stnct C. ourt 1n
l oo; .\ngcle' to li\e count~ of m:11I fraud
.\uthont1l·\ ..aid the D1~tnll lntcmataonal ~uppl) <o sold the
l?°' emment ~tt'1."l that Wll\ nlll treate'd \\1th certain allo's requlrcd b\
"Jll·nlica11ons 1n the deten~· u>ntral'I\ awarded to the ti rm The allo'ts
would ha'e made the \tt"el mml· durable
The tnft'nor \Itel was d1\t 1h t·n·d dunntt heat tl·-.t., conducted h)
thc m1h tan
.\llhough the 'ileel ha\ not kJ It' am at·l·1den1s or damage to
equipment m1hlat;) authonlll''> u intcnd that ~u'h US(' l'Ould
1eopard11e "' t<' Th<.' m1htan l urrcntl\ 1\ '"' e'illg&llng hov. much 1f
am of thr steel ha"' b«n uo;cd
.\nordang to coun re-cord<. .1bou1 I 0 000 pounds of the st('('I
"a-. intended for US(' m the 1et l·nFlnl'' ot m1htaf) aircraft
The B1gallt.t". agrttd T uc\da' h' pa) m!,lre than S23b 000 1n
fl'<.t11u11on 10 the government ll'r tn\ <'ltC' fraudulent!\ "iubmmed
l '°I 01stnl·t Judge R1thard C.1adho1<, Jr v.111 sentenl't' the
81galles ~pl 11 The} fa~ ma\lmum 'l(ntenre!> of25 years
_Protocol's no Mickey Mouse job State funds
forOCJail
workOK'd Disneyland-OS manager of community affairs
becomes the county's first chtef of protocol
ROBERT
HYM>MAN
Mary Jones has lhe ideal traanina
for f"'CltnJ foreiJn heads of state,
hostJna vi 1tan1 d1anitanes and pra.-
tntlna Oranae County in a favorable
haht. Yet afic's not a State Oci-n-ment employce~!,etmn of tbcfotei~
ICl'Vl(% or memoer of the dlplomattc
co?o; the put ;3 ran. he has
worked at Dls~land.
Jones' work IS ma~ o( com·
munity affairs at tho ~c Kinadom
im1t tflien liahdy. For ~cars, the Matterltom and the Monorail have
been \be mott visible landmarks in
lhe unty. '
P£oPL£ 1N TH£ New s
Ten million vtsiton pus throu&h
Anaheim amutemcnt puk's ptes
eacb year, includina hundred of
thousands of aucsts rrom fore1an
countn Jones would ta.kc charac of
toun by top rorclan ICidai; wo'rkina • bt.b snsidcnts, ambastado~ and
?o;maoyoftheau~ts, Di ncyt.a:nd profil~ they called on Jones to lead
is their first -and ~bly only -that cnor1 aHmpee of Y<that Ori nae County has to Mary Jon I Oran County's
ofru. fint CJ\icf of proJ.OCO)
So n comes as hulc 1urpnsc that "WC're U')in11ocstabli h an idcnt· when Oran,e County leaden dmded ity for Oranv. County.~ Jon id
last year f&ll u wu h•ah hmt. the from the protocol office an the-count)
county projected 1 mOt'C vt · le Hall of dmini '"'ion. llhouaJ'I !he
• •
plans to ret1n: from D1sneyland tha~
year. tor now, ~he sphts her 11me
between the Maiac K1n&dom and
nta Ana.
.. As a count). we·re unique," Jones
said "We don't really have a pnnct·
pal ctt) Ptople from here usuallv 'l) they"~ from Oranat Count • not
Anaheim or Santa Ana ••
Jones ~1d it's 1mponan1 that
OBn e County be (()n idercd a
~nte commu.nit with uniQUt'
features lbat scparttt' 1t from l..o$
Anielc and urroundin uthern
Califomia count1 .
At Di C}tand. Jo ofttn ._,.
alled on to h ro~lP nnm
and inll"Odutt them to lhe cion1 muni·
ty.
"Tbev usually wcttn't I" re of
(Pl-...'" PROTOCOL
'
llaryJoaes
From staff aod ..,,,. ~port•
\fleT th~ ~ran of lobb lnl tor a
$50 m1lhon •uate bond to pa) for
e\pandm& the C'ounty'' crowded
main Jail, Or:angt' County supervtM>rs
wttt told Tu~} .. tM check ts 1n the
ma11.··
.. It n:all) wu not finn untJI toda)
ht'n c sot tbt' .,;~from Saaamen-
to S&}tnl our contraC1 for tht mont)
had been approved." ndmbcriff
Raul RamOJ id T y. u Cat
u ~:!T cona:rned, the check 1 tn lbt
mail --The SS0.2 m ,. bond will covet
7.S ~nt Of c:on ion nd
cm.t5 ot tbc J&d addition.
~-JAIL/.U .
"'
..
....
A2 Orange Coaat DAil Y PILOT /Wedf'Mdey, August 1. 11
Reagan v eto threat enough
to stave off a tax increase Sklet wlll continue to ~ mo1t1Y Cltar over 8outh4M'n Callfornla through Thurlday. wtth ltttle change In the dry ~th«
that h .. kept ttmptlf'atur• In the high 801 to low 80• thle W'Mtl, torec:ut.,. Uld. By JlM LUTHER
AP Tes rlt 1
WASHINGTON ow-that
Conpcu hu approved a 1986 budJet
with a lc:n-than-hoped-for effect on
the record federal deficit. 1~ 1t tuT)c for
·•the last resort?" Is a tax increase on
the way>
Here'' the latest from President
Rcapn
"The economy 1s in aood hulth ...
The road ahead fooh ckar 10 a mona
Job rnarket with no new LAx increases
to slow us down and no dark cloud~ of
inflation on the honion "
At hts news conference Monday,
the president eitpresscd disappoint-
ment that the budaet outline passed
by Cona:ress last week didn't produce
all the savings he had wanted. But he
praised his administration and the
lawmakers for holding firm to the
pnnc1plc that deficits mu~t be cut
"not by reducing the people's earn-
ings but by reducing aovcmmenl
spendina."
So, docs 11 really mailer 1ha1 House
and ~nate ~mocrauc lcadcn, 1n·
cludm& Rep Dan Ro tenkowak1,
chamnan of the Ways and Means
Commltfec. and a number ohentor
Republican ~cnators, including
Budae1 Committee Chairman Pete
Qo.memct, thJnk a tax 1ncrtasc 1s
necessary?
Apparent!) not -so. Iona as
Rcap.n stand~ finn against 1t. Even 1f
the House !lnd ~natc voted a tax sncrca~. Reaaan has a sianed pledae
from 147 Hou~ Republicans that
the) would uphold h1~ ve to-enough
to give the prc!".1dcnt a veto-proof
Congre~s
Ncvcrthelc~~. ~ays RostenkowskJ, a
ta:-. increase 1s snev11.able. Former
Senate MaJOOt) Leader Howard
Baker says one is overdue. And 11 1s
difficult 10 find a staff member who
works w1t.h the budget or tax-~nt1ng
committees ~ho does not expect
Congress to ra1~ taxes on grounds
there 1s shght prospect of more
s1gn1fican1cuts1n government spend·
ing. •
But1f1tcomes. outy~11farmorc
hkcly than this year. Two faeton arc
involved: . •
-The public is not floodina Wash-
ington with mail demandina that
1.ucs be nuM:d to slash the bud.et.
True, polls sbow voters are becomin1
concerned. But 11 Iona as unemploy-
ment is not riSll'\I, inflation is in check
and interest rates are fairly steady, the
pubhc apparently will view the deficit
with less alarm tfian do some poli-
uculn&. -Reagan and ~narcss are read)(
to devote the remainder of 1985 td
overhaulinJ the mcome tax, even
thou&h odds arc •$&inst final passa•c
of a new plan this year. lleapn 11
ins1stina the bill produce no more and
no less revenue than the present law;
Democrats, who control the
House, arc corflmitted to passin• a
tax-overhaul plan by about m1d-
Octobcr, if for no other reason than to
watch the majority Senate Re·
publicans battle with Reagan over
what goes into the bill.
The dry ~etty flow of air will oontlnu. for the next MWl'at
dayt 19 a wea\h_, dlaturbence Q ... WOUQ.b the Pecttlo
nortftwesf, n1vlng llttle •fleet on SoYth«n Callfomla exoept to
lnor.... c:tMert wind• tonight up to 30 mph, the National W..ttlef Service report9d. A WMk coutat eddy elrculatlon that h11 d9Veloped ltlould atto pertltt, lncrMllng the night and low
cloudtnaa In th• aoutn coa1t11 trM&. Along the Orange Coaat there Wiii ~ 1--cloud• tonight and Thvrlday morning .. e>telally aouth portion&, othetwfM fair
through Thvrlday.
U.S. Tempe
... Le ~O\fl~
I• 64 Mell'lj)llla
91 N MIM!lheGn "et Mllw...it" 64 41 Mpffl·l1 PllUI
16 70 NMll"'"'
17 et
11 74
to 11 ....
II N 14 .. •t 72 IO 70 ~ OrlMnl
100 76 NawYM 12 71 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
12 16 ~Olll,V•
13 73 Olc19'1orllll City M 6e Of\'1&111 ta 16 Orlando
12 10 ~ .. 17 .._....
90 $1 Ptttlltlutllll
81 78 l'OftllM'ld',Me
82 &4 PonlMd,01
1M N Pto;.~
13 65 llMloll • 7 12 A..,icf City
13 70 '*'° 78 84 AIC:rwnond 80 89 8tLO..ll
u 70
II 70
17 87
13 7&
12 " 107 11 ,. 116
Calif. Tempe Surf Report
LOCATION
iwn1ington 8udl
~ "-'IY, Newpclrl
4011'1111"'· Nawpol'l 22nOl1reel.~I
lalt>Ocl Wedge
LaglillllMcfl SM0-19
••1er1wno e& Swatl Otrecllon ao..1,,_11
MOTHER GRIEVES FOR SLAIN SON ••.
IS 61 11 "91• T.np1
10 I 80 hit L•• City
It 10 s.a111e
It 57 Sllrevec>on
fl 17 Spoa-
79 N Syr-a. 57 Tooei<a ... , __
1& 57
.. 81
11 69 12 ..
14 58 t5 •• ae 10 111 71
ff 75 t2 .. eo e1
.. 75 IM 51
14 .. ., 83
102 ,.
12 12
1M 71
93 17
11 eo
Tides
TOOA'I' 24&pm IOOOpm From A l
difficulty thinking ahout kt alone
talking about 11 ..
Howe was buned at Pat.1til \ 1cw
Memory Park 1n Corona de! Mar last
week The cemetet) O\ erluoks the
OCC<in and the Balboa Peninsula
where he grev. up and .mended
~hool ·
"He can SCl· m) hou\C from up
there." said the mother .. .\nd he's
buncd near his idol -John ~a\ne ··
The woman ~1d she wanh to ~ee
her son's alleged le.Iller pun1~hed
"I don't know ho"' 11 .. ounds but
what I want 1s "cngcancc I "'ant lo
sec this man dead," said Mrs. Howe
"'Whal happened was ..cnseless and
he should pa) the ultimate pncc H1~
hfc."
Daniel W1lham!">on the 38->ear-
old man charged with H O\H: .. Jay1ng,
was arraigned Tuesda~ 1n San
Bernardino Count) He\ ltarged
with murder. robber)'. as.,,ault v.11h a
deadly weapon. l:\3ding arrc~ and
parole viola11on
Al the 11mc:. ut the shooting in Big
Bear, Williamson was technicall) a
fug11ive. A lifelong cnm1nal with a
history of v1oknce. Williamson viol-
ated parole la~t December b) \k1p-
pina out on his parole ollit.cr accord-
ing to Robert Gon::. a spokcc;man for
the state Department of Correcuons
A warrant for his arrest was issued
but authon11es never managed to
~upw®h1m-
Rccords show that~ dhamson v.a\
charged with burglary and robbery in liamson sayin~. ''Don't move or
1966 and served time in pnson unul yqu'll be sorry.'
1971 when he was paroled to Long "Howe apparently dropped the beer
Beach. That same year, he was he was carrying and ran to his truck,
arrested in Los Angeles on Sijspicion started it up and put it into gear.
ofk1l hng a hquor store clerk dunng a Bryant said Will1amsoo alleacdJy
robbet) A JUry found him guilty of waJked up to the truck, raised his gun
second-degree murder in that case. and fired once. .
Five years later, Williamson was "Thenhe(Williamson)calrnJy,and
paroled again but in only a few I underscore the word calmly, wafked
months he was back behind bars to his own car, got m and drove off,"
serving time for arqied robbery and Bryant explained.
assault with gr"Cat bodily harm. Howe slumped across the seat of
11 !Ill ru1 ..
11 56 WINhlnQton
IS 66 Wtelllla
12 16 w111c ... 91,,.
12 63
:~ :g Eztended 81 78
9~ TS
11 ~
91 71
18 76 ea o
16 83
106 71 IO 72
Second nrgn
Second row
'1f11 r'91'
Fwtt ro...
T"""IOA'I'
S.C:oncl high • 8-dlow
3 28am e 11• m
l3fpm
11 39 pm
•• 2'
30 24 ..
I 7
Sun Nit IOClly •t 1 •• p m ,_
Thuftoay •• e 09 • m •nO Ml• llQtln el 147 Pm
Moon rt ... IOdly 11 11 37 pm Ml• rnu114•1 •t 12 33 • m and rl-flOllr,.I 1 JO pm
In late 1984, Williamson was his truck, which was still in gear. The
paroled from Folsom State Prison to truck rolled backward across the
San Diego County lo Dectmber of parking lot and into a ditch. Para-HOSTAGE'S SON HOPES FOR BEST that year he fa.tied to report to tus medics made a futile effort to save his • • •
parole officer. Gore said. A no-bail life. From A 1
"'arrant was issued for his arrest. Williamson. meanwhile, Q.rove to Nancy Beck, spokeswoman for the scven Amencans were not men-
Scven months later, Williamson nearby Running Spnngs where a State Department, said government tioned, nor why one extra hostage was
alle$edly showed up in front of Hart's Torrance couple and their 11-year-officials were awar"C of the Kuwaiti hsted from France.
Och. a combination liquor store and dauahter had been stranded by car newspaper article and llad only JUSt With the kidnap victims stlll 1n
delicatessen on Big Bear Boulevard. trouble. Bryant said. learned through media mqumes of captivity this mornina, Jacobsen said
Wnnesses recall the man's erratic According to reports, Williamson the separate ran5om repon. They he was fiahtina to prevent another
ph one Tuesday nt&ht with Pegy ay,
sister of hostage lcrry Anderson, 37,
and other relative!> of the kidnap
victims
"I think evet)Ont learned a lesson
from that (TWA) h1Jack cnm. We
learned 10 approach these repons
cauuously." he said.
dnvmg as he pulled into the liquor walked up to their car. demanded could not confirm either story. bitter disappointment. He had been ~tore. blocking two parking stalls with money and hit the man on the head French and Lebanese officials also duped once by a false report that the tu~r. said James Bryant, a spokes-'with the butt of a guo. Bryant said the said they could not verify the repon in hostages would be released wt th the
man for the San Bernardino Shcnff's 11-year-old apparently pleaded for the newspaper Al·S1yasah that five 39 Americans taken from a hijacked Jacobsen also said he found 11 hard
Department her father's life. Amencans and three Frenchman TWA jct in June. to believe that the fundamentalist
Al roughly the same moment. Another couple, residents of Big would be rcJeascd, apparently before "I was pretty excited fast night," Moslems reportedly holdina his
Howe walfccd out of the liquor store, Bear, stopped when they saw the the opening of the Arab conference. said Jacobsen. "Today I'm tryina to father and the other hostages would
carryinga six-pack of beer His fnend!> commouon. Bryant said Williamson according to 'the Associated Press. act hkc it's not really a pouib1hty." settle for a financial ransom for the
were nearby at a pubhc telephone. alleged turned on them and fired one _ The re.port did not explain why aH Jacobsen said 1lc talked by tele-political kidnappings. c~~h~~~~~up~~ir ~~wffi~~n~~a~~~ca~ ---~-------------------------------------children occupants.
Bryant said that W1lhamson al-Shenffs deputies arrested W1I-FREEWAY FEE PLAN GETS-THE NOD lcgedl~ hrand1shcd a p1r;tol and de-ltamson early the nex. t mom1~f\er a . • • •
mandcd-Wl .J:io~ha.1uLo~...bu -1cn&lhy car cbasc-~.o.d ~-p Al _ ---...... · -mone" Wi tnesses quoted W1I -Wifliamson lost control of the vehiclc ~om ---:--- . and hita tree. Even then. wd Bryant, raise ab?ut ~165.5 million toward the Building Industry Assoc1a~1on con-Capistrano. Sant.a Ana. Tustin and
Williamson climbed out of his car freeways aonstrucuon cost. tend that developers won t neccss-Yorba Linda and Laguna Beach .
and tncd 10 run away. a~ly pass along th~ fee.s m the form of Strong oppos1uo1.1 to the plan
Williamson. who is bemg held Along the Foothill and Eastern higher housing pnces 1fthe plan wms already.has surfaced 1n Laguna Beach
without bail at San Bernadino Coun-sections. the fees 'propo~d for the final approval. and Jrvme. Laguna Beach City Coun-JAIL FUNDS OK'D ...
t} Jail. has pleaded not guilty 10 all zone closest to the new freeways arc c1I members voted apinst part!Ct· charges. S 1,295 per single-family res1dcnce C111es being asked to JOtn the new pat.ion last Janu~ry; some Irvine
From A l
according to Board ol l.,upen 1\ur\
Chairman Thoma"' Rrl~y 1 herounty
mu-;t pa} the remainder of the SM
mtlhon project 10 e\pJnd thC'
crowded main 1a1l 1n Santa \na
not complying w11h his 1978 order
1ha1 required cacti pnsoner to be
pnn1ded with a bed
San Bernardi nu County Dcpufy and S 1.80 per squar~ foot fur com-fTccway-authoriries are Com Mesa, residents want the issue placed bef?rc
Distnct Attorney Ray Haigh\ Ill said mercial property. Irvine, Newport Beach. Orange. San cit y voters on th e November elcct1on
he will seek the d~th penalty A Reoresentauves of the county's Clemente. Anaheim, San Juan ballot.
lJ.S D1stmt Judge Wilham Cira)
fintcl tht' COUtil\-t2Y.UOO in \if arch for
Built to hold I 181 pnsoners. the
Jail's popula11on has someumes
~welled to almost 2.000
preliminary heanng tb determine 1f
_}Y1lhamson must stand tnaL1.S SCI
Aug. I ~.
PROTOCOL NO MICKEY MOUSE JOB ...
From Al
Orange ( ount) rhe) thought II \.\.U\
part of Loe, Angeles·· c,he .. a1<.l
But Jone" and other'> P'llOI <Jut that
Orange C ount\ 1\ thc \CCond large\l
count) 1n ( altlorn1a and 1he !W<lh
largc\t county 1n the nation --tar too
large lo he overlooked l H'n on an
1ntcrnatwnal !>C'all'
fk1wccn IY '{)ant.I l'IK!J lhl" ,oun-
l~ 's population 1n1. rr:a\ec.1 h' mort·
than 500 ()()CJ rc\1dent'> -mon·
growth than '\Q sLalt''i t'\IX'rtt:m.ed
dunng 1hc <oamc period
'>uth gTO"-lh madc ;.in '>tfia· ot
f'rotocol nc1.e.,,ar\ l•llJOt} olliual\
detcrm1m•d I a..i )'1.·ar Or;inge C oun-
t}' ()urx•n 1sor Harncll V.. 1cder tool>.
\teps lO l reatt" lh\ otli<.l Wieder oind
others \aw 11 <l' J m1:am to dra"
foreign v1\1tor" to tht niunl) ·, hU'iJ·
ne\se\ a' v.cll .1\ to tournt attr.u
tlOM
In add1t1on thl" office 1.oord1na1<.•s
c;fTons to propc:rl .. extend h1~p1taht~
v.hcn foreign dlgn1tann 'l!tll.
''r 1Ju haH to remember, \oU d(l
hu\1nec,\ \OC rail) a'> "'cll a\ 1n the
ufli<.c \,\ 1edcr c;a1d · It u\Cd to be a
protocol ofli<.c wac, .tll pomp and
circumstance Rut now I guesc; vou
could \3) 11\ ii <,uppon tor bus1nc~s "
Wieder who worked "'1th the Lo\
Angele' Offi1.·e nt P1:.otocol for I 0
)Cars "'h1k \.\.orktng lor the mayor,
~Id ~he r~al11('tJ Orange Countv
Just Call
642-6086
OallJ Piiot
O.ttwery
It OuarantNd
~1 r ' ' ' '°" °' ftOf "'*"" '°"' 1?ar,.. lh ' lO p ,,, u ~"'-, " ...
llNI '°"' OU'f A 0" --94 ,., .. ,.,.., •nd i>;.....,.., ' '°' dO,,.,. _ ..
CClflY '" 1 • u<1 ~•nr•
needed a s1m1lar office
"I was aware of the great number of
bus1ne\ses 1n Orange Count)' that do
busine'>' O\crscas. yet I also knew th e
counh wa<; oflen11mes overlooked,"
r;he ..aid
Whtie the office was crca\ed b)
v.. 1eder and her staff, she said it's
1mponant that business leaders de-
vdop 11
"There's always interest and sup-
pon fhe response for all tts acth 111es
ha\ been JU St tremendous," she said
"Hut I \(' lncd to wean myself from 1t
and let them fbusmeo;~s) take over."
When the office was c~aablished
la\l ''"ember the county Board of
\upcn t\On> proposed that 1t be run
1n<.11.•f>C'ndcn1ly. \upported by pn-
' ateh ra1\Cd funds.
Loc'11 bus1ne~ rc\ponded to the
1.halknse Nov 15 when they helped
ra1\e S4tJ 000 10 ec,tabhsh the office.
\< nluntecrs were appointed to serve
un ,1 15-mcmber Protocol Advisor)'
( ommrttet" which provides ad vice
and guidance to the-officc.
In a<.lll 1 t10n to fund-raising. the
oflltl' h;l\ " promottonal role as well
It "de\1gned to boost foreign invest-
ment in the county To that end, the
oflice IJ\t month hosted 11s first
Ornnge ( ounty economic briefing
conferenle which Jones hopes will
become an annual C'\C nt
C nn\ul' general and com mercial
attaches from nearl)' ·so nations
attended the event at the Westtn
South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa
Mesa. Speakers included Orange
Count) Supervisor Thomas Riley:
state Sen. John Seymour, R-
Anahe1m: Irvine Co. President Tom
N1ehcn. and Don Miller, chamnan of
the World Trade Center Association
of Orange County.
The-speakers painted a rosy picture
of the county for the foreign guests.
"Orange County now has its own
1den111y and 1t'\ unmistakable," said
the Irvine Co.'s Nielsen. "We're no
longer 1n Los Angeles' backyard In
fact. some of us refer to Los Angeles as
our hack yard."
Busi ness leaders in Orange County -
arc 1.1nx1ous to attract 1ntemat1onal
trade They boast that from an
economic perspective. Orange Coun-
ty a\ a nation would rank 40th amona
the v.orld's 190 nations in terms of
gro~' national product.
.\bout 25 percent of county bus1·
nec,se\ engage in foreign trade. Jn
addition, one of every seven jobs in
the county depends on international
trade
We have to put our companies in
touch with the people who want to
meet them," Jones satd. "It starts as
an cduca11onal process, but could
become a wonderflJI opportunity for
Orange ( ounty"
What do you llkt about tlte Dally Pilot'> What dod't yoa lllle? Call the
number at ldt and yoar me11a1e wlll bt recorded, 1rao1crtbt'd and delivered
to lbt approprlatt editor
Tht 1ame U-boar an1wertn1 service may be uted to record letters to tbe
edlto~ oif any topic. Contrlb11tor1 to oar wtters column mHt Include tlltlr
name and telephone number for vertrlcatlon No tlrculaUon calla, pleate.
Tell u1 wbat't oo your mlad.
Ket•n Wittmer
0f'Oetll Ml1'11Qtf
AOHmery Churchmen
C OflllO "'
Clrc:utaUon 714/M2...tm c1 ... lfled edvertlalng 7141M2-M71
All other department. 142-4321
MAIN OFflCI
no w ... l•y It C:O.•• ..... CA
U1 144> lo• !MIC) Col•• 1.1..a CA t~tl$ •
(<)! y•>Q"' •Ml 0.1ngt C:0.. P.,~ ~"I' Ho .._ "°',.. -•·•-ec111or .. 1 _,,.. Of 14Wn,..
II ,,....,, -y tit ltpoeluejld "'~"""' ~ ~ -o!cco~-
lO •m *"" f!'l" C'CIY • De -a
Cfrcutatlon
TIMphonel
Robert L. Centrell
Prorlut;.11011
~aneg r
Oonelcl L. llll•m•
Ctr Gull It
Manager
How11d Muftena.ry
4'rJvrrl ng Dtr.-,tor
• I
BASEBALL STRIKE MAY END •..
From Al
major league games. The Cincinnati
.Reds-San Diego Padres' game in
"Cincinnati. scheduled to stan at 12:30
p.m. EDT. was called off earlier 1n the
day. The full 13-game slate Tuesday, the
first day of the stnkc, was wiped out.
There was no 1mmed1ate word
whether the remaining 11 pmes
tonight would be played. g egotiators for the players and
ners met for I I hours, their busiest
day of the 81h-month-old bargaining
talks. on Tuesday, but could not reach
agreement in a dispute centering on
salary structure. and the second
m1dscason stnkc in baseball 1n four
years was called.
They continued talking Tuesday
n1Jl:lt. but broke up shortly before
midnight, with the union sayrna they
remained far apart on arbitration.
Today, at 1011.m .. thcyrllet again.
An hour later. the commissioner's
... ~
office announced that the two sides-
·werc meeting together with Ucbcr·
roth for the first ume in the9C
negotiations. And, shonly after noon,
the "tentative understanding" wa~
announced.
The comm1ss1oner last week of-
fered a set of seven proposals lo avert
baseball's second player walkout m
four years. but his suggestions were
cri11c1zed by both sides.
And even as late as Tuesday nt&ht ,
there were signs that a settlement
mi,,ht be far off.
' We arc huna up sull," Don Fehr.
head of the players association, said
Tuesday night. "If the matter
proceeds very long, the players won't
be willing to settle for what they
would have settled for earlier."
The strike wiped out all 13 aames
Tuesday, and this mornina the Reds
announced that their afternoon aame
against San Diego also was "Post·
poned ··Already, some players have
cleaned out their lockers and beaun to
scatter.
But Fehr and Lee MacPha1I , chief
of the owners' Player tlelations
Committee. scheduled another neao-
uattnf session this mornrng. And
both 1nd1cated they were more con·
ce rned about salvag1n_g the rest of the
season rather than losrng a day or two
of games that could conceivably be
made up lalcr
The idea. they said, was to avoid a
repeat of 198 I . when a strike
chm1nated seven weeks of play. "The
obJCCl now 1s to find a way to end tt as
fast as we can." Fehr SB1d.
As office workers and shoppers
broke for lunch on the East Coatt, it
looked as 1f Fehr and MacPha1l had
accomplished that feat . Instead of SO
days, it was one day.
BaJCball, It seemed. would soon be
back.
SHUTTERS· SPECIALLY
PRICED
The time Is right to
nJoy the cool
comfort and beauty
of these attractive
moveable shutters,
.. .In the colors,
sizes and
styles you wantl
Call (l14) 548-6841 or548-17:1~ ~
HElllWOOD MANUFACTORY 32 veara Ex rlence
19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA '¥iffl1 Manufacturing Quality Shuttera
•
I
I
I ;.
·--