HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-14 - Orange Coast Pilotl
I ' I
O RANGE COUN TY .
Judge may· limit jail's capacity
·1 do not want them herded like pigs
in a pen.· jurtst declares in warning
Union dunng a hearing 1n Santa Ana
that he w,11 mue a new order
concern ins the J31l within a wttk.
Although Gray dJd not specify
what that order mi~t include, he
qucsuoncd Jail officials dunng the
heating about the potential effects of
an order that would bar the Sheriffs
Department from accepting prisoners
arrt$ted on misdemeanor charges 1f
there was no bed for them.
Gray did say he was con,1denna an
order that the main Jail population be
limited to I ,SOO inmates. with no
inmates permitted to sleep on J•il
Ooors, after Dec I That limit would
aaa1n be reduced beaJnnin& Apnl I to
1,400 inmates. he said.
By JEFF ADLER °' ""'°""' ,.,... ..... A federal judge 1nd1ca1ed Tuesday
he may impose a population cap on
the number of inmates permitted in
the crowded Orange County Jail after
Coaet ·
" A Newport Beach woman
received a speclal 40th
birthday gift: She won
$250,000 at a Las Vega~
slot machine./ A3
California
Los Angeles City Council
votes today on an ordl-
nance oannlng dls-
crlmlnatlon against AIDS
victims./ A5
Nation
Researchers announce a
breakthrough In liver
cancer treatment./ A4
World
Vietnamese return the re-
mains of 26 MIAs to U.S.
authorities In Hanoi./ A5
Mlnd~Body
Aerobics fans can now
dance at work, and their
bosses like it./81
F ood
Cheese is turning up in
new guises and as super-
stars on the summer
partymenu.C1.
Sports
Angels lose, but they' re
still up by 2 over Kansas
City In American League
West./81
Entertainment
The world premiere of an
orlglnal musical, "The
White Arrow," hits the
target In Newport./ A 11
Dec. I because he 1s concerned that
the inmate population again 1s on the
ml_rcasc.
0.S. Distnct. Judae Wilham Gray
told attorneys represcntmJ, the coun-
ty and the American Civil Liberties
Having • ball
Thad Chilcoat, Yiatttnc from Btc Bear
Lake, &eta a kick out of a beach ball on the
lr&My area of llalD Beach Park In Laguna
"I do not want to run theJatl, but on
the other hand, I have a responsib1l1ty
10 make sure my pnor order 1s earned
out -it was made seven years ago,"
Beach. With e•en warmer weather on the
way, thl9 kind of acd..tty ahould become
e.ven more popular.
Gray wd. ··1 do not want to sec them
herded in there hke pip 1n a pen I
infer the dormuones arc not better
now, but wof$it (than dunna tus June
tour of the Jail) "
Following the heanng. Gray made
a 20.minute tour of the jail. He later
said thejad indeed was morccrawded
than when he last toured It in J.une.
The most recent inmate count at
the Jail, conducted Sunday. reflected a
to~I popula11on or 1,694 inma~ . 39
of whom were forced to sleep on the
floor, according to Lawrence
Grossman. the court-appointed
special Jiii monitor
Jail Capt George K.ma tcsufied I.be
number ofmmates forced to sl«i> on
the floor averages about 30 inmates
per night
A( Lt auomey Richard Herman
(Pleue eee IIOIAT&/A.2)
Coast oil foes
band together
to hire PR firm
'
Cities coordinating promotion of views
for Aug. q 1 visit by Interior secretary
By LISA MAHONEY °' ... .,..,""" 81alt
The coalition of Orange Coast c1t1e~ oppo<ied to e\panded offshore 011
drillin' has hired a pubhc relation~ ti rm to promote m \ 1ews and coordinate
activiues leading to an Aug. 31 v1~1t b) I ntenor Secretar) Donald P. Hodel.
Denny Fre1dennch ofFrc1dennch and .\ssoc1ates ofNewpon Beach will be
the coaliuon's coordinator. it was announced Tuesday Freldcnncb will
represent thec111esofNewpon Beach.
Hunllngton Beach. La1una Beach
and San Clemente in their efTon to
reverse a tentative federal-level de·
c1sion that could put more 011 ngs off
the Oran&e Coast.
Under a compromise worked out
between the In tenor Depanment and
certain California congressmen. the
federal iovcrnment would of
The six nine-square-mile lraCl~ an
pan of a larger ofTcnng along the
Cabforn1a coast tentauvel) exempted
from an existing 011 dnlhng mora-
tonum covenng 58.140 square miles
ofcoasthne
Coah11on members believe that
allowing more 011 ngs off Orange
County would endanger the
tlounshing tounsm indu<>try b)'. re-
ducing the coastline's csthcuc appeal
and increasing the chance~ of an 011
spill.
The coahllon h~rpnu.ed pubhc
forums anQ pllhes 1n add111on to
lobbying area con~smen and Cl!\
councils to oppose funher dnlhng
Members are 1canng up for an Aug
31 public heanng 1n Newpon Bea'h
dunng which Hodel will lmcn to
c1112ens· comments about the com-
promise proposal
The group has ra1~d SI J.O<Xl '>O tar
to pay Frc1dennch and finance other
publici ty act1v1t1e'> It has estimated 11
will need $25.000 10 l3rT) out m
campaign
Frt1dennch an Orange Count}
resident for IS ... ear'i lOOrdinatcd
local fund-ra1~,..,-for state school'>
Forum on oil
set Thursday
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of Ille.,..,,.... IWf
The Newpon Beach City CounC11
will conduct a pubhc forum Thursday
night to discuss a federal proposal to
allow 011 dnlhng off the Oransr
Count) coastline
The meeting will begin at 7.30 pm
at ( ll) Hall 3300 Newpon Blvd
A 30-minute oven 1ew of the
current proposal will be presented at
the ~nnmg of the meeting. said
Councilwoman Ruthcly n Plummer
.\ slide show and maps will be used
10 pinpoint the loca11on of six mo~
mile tracts propnscd for off hore 011
e"tplorauon
( 1t\ Counltl member; al'i<l w1U d1scu\~ tht' terrm of the comprom1~
and "'hat coast.ll c111cs an: doing to
light the pro~sal worked out la~t
month b\ Cahfom1a congrt'ssmen
Jnd lntenor rttar) Donald Hodel
(Pleue 8ee FORUM/ A2)
ch1cl 8111 Hnnig\ ~Ulu·~stul 1982
campaign H1'.> firm ha' ~en em
ploH•d h' thl' "-it>wpon Harbor <\n
\1u~um <tnJ a hie tele' 1">1on lOm-
p4n1es 'K.'eli;mi rranlhl~) 1n ')anta
.\na and (1:irdcn (1ro'e Fretdt'nnlh
..aid
INDEX
Bridge A12
Murderjury zeros It takes a teen to find where
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1J _,, AOUR .......... _""""' _____ _
Thi Inner wot1dnge of a white-supremacist prlaon gang that
~•• l»oth lnllde Md outlide Callfornla prlaona wm b&the focus of
an Ot-lnae~8uPer'tor Court Jury that began conaldertng murder char~)'~.-.. •former gang m...ber.
Joeeph'Mlahiil O'Aourke, 37, a former.convtet and member of
the Atyett BrolMmOod, II ~ wtth flrst::deQr .. mur.der. end
.,.,.., ~In ttit OCt. e. 1977 kldtWPPtng end murder 01
Rlcherd w_.. Heft. 29, of Long &Mch.
Helt WM lhot once tn the kn11cap, the prleOn..;gang'a mark, ~hit ce.t wa blowl'I C>P4Nl with a 12..g-. awed-off lhotgun.
, ......... ~AJlfT/.U)
•
Futurist believes
home ·is Wh.er~
wo!k ought to be
As a self-described futunst, Jack
Nilles often ponders the unhkcly, the
fanta uc. the seeminaJy absurd.
1 n the early I 970s, the phy icist set
a idc hi work in the aerospace
tndu try !O study an 1.0lfiau~ ques-
tion· '"Wfiat would bappen tf nobody
drove to wort anymore?"
Think of it. N1Ucs sa1d Pcopl
could live and work in the aamc
community. Instead of tcwina in
traffic jam1, workers would leave
their cars in the driveway. Instead of
uhaust fumes chokina the skies,
1m<>1 would be reduced. We would be Jcu dependent on th~
world'' limited cnCf'IY resourtes.
Wi1h people worldnt 11 home
dunna the day. rt jdcntaal cnme
would drop.
T1k1n1 hi• VI 'on K\'Crll StCpt
further. Ntllcl saw chtldn:n &rowina
ROBERT
HYNDMAN
NEW SMAtH RS
up with mom and dad workina at
homehrather than beina away for 10
to 12 oun each day.
A man's home v.-ou.ld not only be
his castle, but bi' office as well.
It WU thi1 bu.mint idea or how to
unite the home and the workplace
that spurTcd Ntll to launch h1 mcan:h .
, .......... ~U1'UU8T/il)
teens their best Weapon in Crackdown "The 4ue\11Un ol t'Olrapment
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IN 0 .. 1 '°""' lteft
Liquor store owner' ma} ~all 11
entrapment but police on the Orange
Coast are discovering that teen-agers
ma} be the best weapon for cracking
down on sal~ of alcohol to minors
Ls1ng a husk). 19-)ear-old police
ct1dc1, Huntington Beach poltce ar-
re ted 14 liquor store cmploy('Cs last
week for 11lcgal alcohol sale
"He \\cnl to 15 store on two
d11Tercn1 davs and wa\ 5old beet at 14
ol them " Sgt JelT l\.Jnlt said "\\ C'
thought we'd du 11 to sel' "hat "ould
happened and trankl} Wl' "crc
surpnsed ··
Fountain Valle\ pohl'C u'K.-d an 11!
)Car-old 10 June to \Cl up thl' arrest'i 0 1
Sl'\Cn liquor \tore dcrk\ in that nt~
"~ml" of the clerk\ would giggle
and sell 11 to lhl·m · C\plamed
Fountain \ allc\ LL Richard Da' en-
pon afkr h1\ depanment's sv.'Ccp rif
31 retail outlet~
1'.ent t-.elh. an .\lwhol and
Be' erase ( ontrol \upernwr in Or-
an~t' C ,,uni\ estimated that mon.·
ul"a~" come' up. Kelh said "It's
Ix-en put to the te-;11n thl· (ouns more
11nw' than \O\J t:an -;hake a st1lk at
,md the an \\\er "alv.a"" the ~me It's
not enlrapment ·· ·
"\1111 the •\fl( docs not ~ under-
age teen' to l hCl k out liquor '>lores or
b.l!"'I becauo;e depanment official\
~he' t• the pra~ tile 1s underhanded
·we dun't paruopate m a deco)
progr3m hut --c: don't tell pohct"
depanmcnts nut \<}." 9'ell~ satd.
That'\ lOm ph.•tel) up 10 them "
~1ne -.aid 10 h1~ l nowled&c last
(Pleaee 11ee ALCOHOL/ A2)
Walking s tick's
back in hands
of No. 1 owner
By USA MAHONEY
OllNl)elly ..........
"'lo I L nnamC'd \l'\:hc:r. l .aguna
Beach's ~It-appointed &rt't'tcr. rt-
ctl\C'd a ~1al dch¥C"n from the
police department 1 unda~ -ht'>
~'1lk1nJ \llCk
"Officer Janet -I don't lno"' her
la\l name -~turned m) 'ud. 10 mt
she dehHrcd 11 do"'n to 1h1·
comer. · No I \11d
Th' pttter ha'> ~n "'11huui h"
walk1n1 \tick 1nce 11 "'' ~•okn h) 11n
allqcd "\t1cknapp(r" a he \lood on
h1' fa"onte artttina comer at the"
1nttl"'IC('t1on of Pacific Coa\l H 11hwa'
and Fornt A "'cnue a v.~l a•o
unda)
' "-lcJ I wa do1n1 hi\ h11 -
'*a"'"' to can and •Ntlu\mma ', ....
1torulona Coa t Htah ) -a \oun
man ara~ the tK~ and ran \t
lea t that'' v..hat o I claim\.
"lo. I likd a lnmphunt ap1n!lt the
u01dcnt1litd \Oun& m.an and police
Jtt1dC'd after a prellminal'\ tO\C'\llp
t1on to t\t.1ld the ,,.rr :i<. C'' idem{ -1n
a PQ'~•blc hath'n ca~ aptn t the
&fttlCr
Pohl<' ._., the.' 'ouna man·~ c'pla·
na11on lor 1altn1 the \ll\:l didn't Jibe
v.1th No I\ i.tory. Ht told an
ln"C t1ptor he lOnh~ted the v..all·
101 \llcil tleuu~ the &rct"ter u~ It to
mp a lncnd nl h1u., the\ w~rt J 'na
,io\\nlo .... n
C'onccmtd that the all cd petty
1h1tfm11ht a tu II" be a v1ct1m of No
I police decu.1cd to k~p the \tJC
until the matter "'u. ~SOl\icd..
Pohl'C ~tlll hue no an\ a to
~he. did v..hat to whom In~ t tor
\tan k1p'tlionh td l ucsday. "'
--•th mort P"' 1n, c:nme ht
pe>h c offi 111 decided to •• ahead Cl'...._... T a /A21
•
J.A.2~·*-=0-range..:iiiiiiiCO..iiiiit•OAiiiiiilmlVmPmlmLOmTm/Wm;edneld;;;;a~y-,A·ug~ua;t;14;,;1;98!;;. .......... _. ................. ~
Banker free after second mis tri al
LOS ANG LES (AP) -Chatae
ap1nst1 baM.erand fonnerauoc11te
or0n., County fireworks m~tc
W Patnck Moriany will be dropped.
Pl'<>*Utors s.a1d af\cr the man's
second trial ended an a deadlock.
Nelson Halhdy. 61. was charged
wilh failure to file currency trans-
act.Jon report on more lhan $310.000
in. cash withdrawals by Monany
Juron dchbented only sax hours
Monday. durina his ~trial before
tellina U.S. Otstnct Judge Edward
Rafeedie they could not reach a
unanimous verdict.
Rafeedie declared a m1stnal and
jurors were sent home.
After the iury's announcement.
Aumant U.S. Attome>-Richard
Drooyan said no further attempt
wouJd be made to prosecute Halhd).
"We're 101n, to dum1ss the case.
We had our hou and we're aoina to
move on to someth1~ else," he u1d
Drooyan said he didn't upect lhe
mistnal~ to effect a contiouina in-
vcstiption on alJ~ed political pay.
offs and laundenna of campaian
contrlbuuons centenna around
Monarty
Moriart)'. co-founder and former
director of the Bank of Irvine, where
HaJlidy worked, pleaded 1u1lty m
March to pohtical corruption charaes
and altttd to testify aaamst elected
officials who alleaedfy received bnbes
from him
Morian) has yet to be sentenced.
The bank m Orange Count) wu
closed b) state authont1cs over a ~car
a~o. Monart) wa~ then forced into
Chaoter 7 bankruptc) by crednors
\
ltekt".'J to hqu1date h1 a ~t~
Hall1dy was 1nd1cted 1n Max on 10
counts of conspiracy and f11Jure to
flled required reports on fin1nc1aJ
transacuons over SI 0.000
In July,. a jury acquitted the former
banker 01 the conspiracy charae and
deadlocked on the nine other counts.
Monarty. called b) Drooyan to
testify in Halhdy's first Ln I, was not
called in the second.
After the jury's announcement
Monday, Halhdy said, "I'm de-
li&hted. I'll probably be able to put m)
life back t<>acthcr. ft puts an end to a
very traumat1c cxpencncc.
"Obviously, I c•n't call it a verdict
as such but the actions speak for
them~lves. I didn't do 1t I told you
that at the bc&tnmng."
DEFENDANT, PRISON GANG LINKED •••
homAl
Heh was killed m the parking lot of
the Huntington Beach Central Park
Library.
O'Rourke's tnal began Tuc$day
amid heavy secunty m Santa Ana
courthouse. Deputies scr~ned those
entering the I I th floor counroom
wuh metal detectors to prevent
pomblc secunt) problems. s.a1d
Deputy District Attorney Tom
Goethals.
In his opening statement. Goethal~
told jurors that Helt was killed while
O'Rourke -known as .. J..1ttle Joe"
-and two other gang members were
trymg to obtam mfonnation about a
drug robbery involving O'Rourke''>
girlfncnd.
O'Rourkc. smiling and dressed ma
conservauvc gray suit at the 1nal's
opening, faces the dealb pcnalt)
because he 1s accused of kidnapping
Helt dunng the commission of a
murder.
A second defendant in the case.
Tercn~ Cosgroya. 35. of Brea. 1s
scheduled for tnal on Oct. 7 on a first·
degree murder charge stemming from
Hell's death. He has not been charged
with death-penalty special circum-
stances.
.\ third man. Kenneth "Tree"
Waterman. who has admitted he was
present when Helt was killed. has
been granted 1mmun1t}' 1n the case
and 1s expected to be a key pros-
ecution witness. Waterman. a former
gang member now sen ing a 15-year
federal pnson term for bank robbery.
never was cha!'led in the cnme.
G~thals said O'Rourkc wasn't
charged 1n Hclt's I 977 murder µnt1l
December 1984 bccausc mvest1gators
lacked corroborative evidence tying
him to the crime That evidence is the
test1mon\ of two other former gang
members'. Michael Thompson and
Ste\.e Barnes who are expected to tell
Jurors that O'RourkC' ad milted tolling
Hell dunng a meeting of the .\ryan
Brotherhood's leadership council.
Both Thompson and Barnes were
gang leaders and council members.
Defense attorney Roben Chat·
tenon told Jurors that Thompson and
Barnes arc attempung to frame
O'Rourkc for the k1lhng. He said their
tcst1mon) "-111 be unbelievable be·
causc 11 "'as nearly 1mposs1ble for the
gang·~ council meeting to have taken
place behind pnson wall~. a~ the)
claim.
Chatterton al<>o said that Water-
man much more hkely was the one
who blasted Helt with two ~hotgun
blasts from close range.
The prosecutor told jurors that
when O'Rourke was released from
prison he was directed by the png to
sell heroin in order to raise SS0.000
bail for another png member, Danny
Cavanaugh.
L1vmg in various low-rent motels
along a stretch of Pacific ,Coast
Highway in Long Beach, O'Rourke
ran the heroin operation. while his
girlfriend, Oaire Gardner. and others
sold the dtuas.
DurinJ the summer of 1977, Gar-
dner claimed she was beaten up and
robbed Goethals said. O'Rourke then
set out to find the robbers, tum1na to
fellow gang member Waterman, who
then was living in Oakland, for .
assistance. -
Eventually, O'Rourke and Water·
man were led to Hell. who they
believed either had information con-
cerning the robbery or knew the
robbers, Goethals sa1d. He was killed
when he no longer was useful.
"He (Waterman) was ready, will-
ing, able and even Inclined to kill
Helt. but the defendant wanted to do
it himself," the prosecutor said.
INMATELIMITPOSEDFORJAIL .•• ~
From A l
told the court the Ja1l 1s more crowded
because Jail dormitories rated for 56
inmates are holding 109 in mates The
Judie authonzed a 90-inmate ca-
pac1t\' dunng a June 24 hcanng
Asked to explain the sudden up-
surge m the Jail population, Deput)'
County Counsel Edward Duran said
the jail population decreased in June
only to increase m July and August, a~
1 t has in each of the past four vears.
"Unfortunately, there 1s no one
answer why there are more inmates
than there has been," Duran said. "It
looked hke a real sure thing to meet
that (July) date We had an increase
(of inmates) we didn't count on."
Dunng the June 24 heanng. Ouran..
told the coun the co unty expected t~
reduce the main Jail population to no
more than 1.500 b}' early July He said
FORUM ON OIL DRILLING •..
From A l
"We'll open the floor up for
questions and comments and
hopefully 1dem1fy those people who
would hke to testify dunna Hodcl's
VISlt ... Plummer said this mom1na.
Hodel has promised to attend a
public mccuna 1n Newport Beach on
.\ug. 31 to discuss the oil dnlhna
proposal and to listen to people's
opinion on the plan
"We want to let Hodel know that
wc'rt not an isolated area down
here," Plummer said. "People who
hve inland also depend on the
recreation at the beach."
The Newpon Beach meeuna fol-
lows a s1m1lar forum held July 30 in
L.aauna Beach. Since then, Laauna
Beach residents have formed volun-
that tents erected at the James A.
Musick Honor Farm 1n El Toro
would be sufficient to ease crowded
cond1t1ons m the main Jail.
Gray fined th~ county $50,000 in
March for failin• to heed his 1978
order to reduce o"'ercrowdina. Two
months later, he ordered the county
to pay a S 10-pcr· night fine for each
inmate forced to sleep on jail floor.
teer aroups to oppose the offshore 011
plans by staaina rallies and and
petition dnves.
Plummer said she hopes s1m1lar
efforts be&Jn an Newport. .
"We want to make people aware of
the proposa1.1.: she said. "With
100.000 or 2w,OOO people v11itina
our beaches on weekends. there's a
gold mine for s1anatures."
ALCOHOL SALES TO MINORS •..
F rom Al
week's sweep of 15 rtta1I liquor store5
marked the first time in Huntrnaton
Beach that the pohce dc~rtment
used a decoy to tnp t!tabhshmcnts
that sell beer wine or liquor to
minors
He said 1n each case. the youth
walked into the store. camed a s1it·
pack of beer to the counter and
bought 1t without being asked for hi\
1dent1ficat1on, which clearly showed
he was onl) 19
clerks. though, weren't actually taken
into custody.
"We heard a dozen d1fTerent Cit·
cuscs," Kina said. "Some said the}
had seen the kid befort and knew he
was 21 . Some said he looked 21 Some
said he was a regu lar customer
Everything m the book "
The alcohol v1olat1on cases are
turned over to the ABC which ha~ the
power to fine or even revoke a ~lore's
license to sell alcohol. A first offense
can cost a hquor store S300to S1 .500
in fines. Kell) \a1d
first·offense and other have only been
fined on their fifth," Kelly said.
J<Jng said Huntington Beach may
beain using decoys arc a regular basis
because 1t 1s a cheaper and quicker
wa y of checking up on liquor stores.
"The conventional method 1s
surveillance.'' he said. "You sit
outside with bmocular• and watch. If
you sec someone buymg who looks
youna yo u stop them but if they tum
out to be 21 . then you've blown your
cover and your case."
·. ....
SoutMtn Callfornta wilt heat up a f.w d90r ... Thurtday
afternoon due to high pr ... ure t>ulldlng acroa northern BaJa
California.
Tht condition wlll lower the marine layet and reduce ooa1tal
ctoudlneu, tht National w .. tti.t hMe. aald Along the coast.
patchy nlgM and M1'1y morning low cloud• wlll be ~•had aald•
by meetly tunny lk!M Thurtday
Along the Orange Coatt that'• wllf be patehy tog tonight with
Mrly morning tow cJoudL Sunny Thurlday afternoon High•
ranging trom the low 701 at the beloMt to th• mid 80110 low 001
Inland arMI. Lowt 57 to S..
From Point Conception to the Mexican Border and out 80
mllN -lnntr water•. wlndt wait to .outh~t 8 to 18 knot1
tonight and Thurlday. Southwatt ~I 1 to 3 f"t. Ci.tr 1ki.t
tonight Ind thurlday
Outat watera, moatly wett to northwe11 wtnd1 8 to 18 knoMI
through Thuraday with combined .... ) to 8 '"' Clear aklea tonight and Thurlday
U.S. TeinP8 N-.o $1 &2 1(-Ctty ., 88
~· VllQM 102 72 llllle l"OGll 12 TS
"' Le L0111•"1tle t3 14
\
:& et Mempl'la. 9' 11 •1 :~ ~:="~" :: ~Calif. Tem pe 91 50 M.,.._11 p..,i 78 64
.. 73 ~ N 12 H•O/I -IO< 2• llOu<I enG•nq at '
'3 7' -<>nMn• · t 1 74 a m L0<19 Bea.;11
Monro•••
Monterey
18 ...
.. 57 .. 57
71 •t ee es es ea toe ea •1 59 H 57 u n
12 50
11 sa 10 .. H 60 n ,,
'7 71 -"°'" t5 78 ·--.., .. 92 e2 13 Pnt·~· I& 73 £11<•• 91 &3 e2 71 P"-41 ICM 71 ,,_ to IM
et •3 Ptnt1M9ll 92 68 l-.1.. 88 82
t.4t W•leOt> N-t8ell(f,
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FUTURIST AND TELECOMMUTING ...
From Al
For if necessity 1s the mother of
invention, perhaps imagination is its
father. And from that marriage. Nilles
delivered telecommuung to the,
world.
Telecommuting, says its founder,
51mply means working and com·
municating with the office without
lcavinf home. Where roads were once
the on y link, now the telephone and
computer connect the home and
office.
Born tn 1973. telecommutina ap-
proaches its adolescence today with
businesses readY. to give it its first
part-time job. Nilles is heading a two-
year research project with nine com-
panies to sec if the scenano he has
1ma;ined works in the business
world. .
"In the early 1970s. I was work.ma
1n the Los Angeles area but found
myself commutinf, quite a bit to
Washinaton, O.C., • Nilles said dur·
ina a recent interview in Oranae
County. "But I kept askina myself
why the heck I was traveling so
much."
Nilles p vc at some thought and
realized most of what he did at work
was on the telephone. He also realized
he had a telephone at home.
That's when the hght bulb went ofT
above his head.
With backina from the National
Science Foundation, Nilles started a
proaram at USC to investigate how
tclecommutmg could be used ,, a
substitute for transportation.
Nilles and other researchers would
conSJdcr how to let one's finacn do
the walkina and how one's computers
could do the talkina.
But 1t was no mere academic
exercise
"Despite the research aspects, I
knew that if something was aoina to
affect the world. there had to be
practical reasons for it to come
about," said N1llcs, now the leadina
researcher at USC's Center for Fu·
turc's Research.
Ten years later, Pacific Bell and
other phone companies, JBM , Com-
putcrland and General Motors, are
giving Nilles' idea a try to dctennfnc
how successful telecommuung will be
under real workada,Y cond1t1ons.
One of the most important aspects
of Nilles' ~Ian it to rcal'lc that
telecommuting is a new form of
business management. The tech·
noloay -the telephone and. if
needed, the.computer -are readily
available.
But telecommuting will not suc-
ceed 1f business managen do not
embrace it.
What telecommuting entails is
employees working at home or at a
nearby satellite office and eom-
municatma with their bosses in the
downtown office only when necess-
ary. That commur1ieatton can tYl)t·
cally be done over the phone, or on
computers connected by telephone
lines.
Occasionally, face-to-face meetinas
and staff conferences arc needed.
Employees could commute for those.
But whether those events occur once a
month or once a week. the amount of
commutina on the freeways to the
office wourd be reduced, Nilles said.
For employees, workina at home
frees them to work durina the time
periods best suited to their per-
sonaht1cs, Nilles said. Some people
work better early in the morning.
Others think more clearly late at
ni&ht.
l>csp1tc added conveniences for
employees, Nilles knew that for
businesses to chanae their manaae·
mcnt styles. he would have to prove
that workers were also more pro-
ductive at home.
H11 studies say telecommuters are
indeed better workers.
"When you work at home, you
have time for uninterrupted. deep
thouaht 1f you need it to sol ve a
probfem," Nilles said. "That's not
always possible in the office where
there are plenty of distractions."
Even so, Nilles said. manaaers still
have fears of havina employees they
can 't sec They fear 1h1:' art· losing
control
"The~ have to adJUSt to a new
method ofcommun1cauon.' he !><lid.
"In tum. they arc more productive.
which 1s somcthmg busmes~s can
unde~tand ."
Nilles said manage~ may meet
with an employee ~t the beg.innintt of
the week, hand out specific assign·
mcnts. then await the results Because
their mccungs arc infrequent, the
manager 1s forced to be more conc1<;(
wtth his or her 1nstrucuons and. an
tum. more producuvc.
Such mecttngs ehmmatc the fol·
low-up conferences that are so easy to
conduct when employer and em-
ployee share the same hallway
With companies doing business.
over the phone ltnes, cxecuttvel
might be expected to be con~med
about secunty and the Ion of com·
pany secrets.
But the companies Nilles has dealt
wuh arc not nearly as concerned
about the security aspects as are
Nilles and his fellow researchers
"They tell me lhat It's hard to make
any sense of this 1nformat1on m bits
and pieces," he said. "It's probably
easier to bur some auy lunch to get
any secrets.·
More than anythina, Nilles said,
the lime is naht for telecommutma.
Pacific Bell conducted a recent
survey that determined from 30 to 35
. percent of small buSJnesscs m Cali·
fom1a use personal computers. They
understand the technoloay and are
comfonable with it.
In addition. the number of mfor-
mat1on workers is arowina-three of
five Californians are involved with
collcct1na and oraan1z1na tnfor·
mauon. Nilles said
"Look at the Jobs around you. Look
at how many Jobs can be done alone,"
Nilles said. "Do you really need that
face-to-face contact or can the work
be done at home?"
Nilles 15 finding that people prefer
to work at home sweet home. The >outh ~as photographed
beforehand so there could be no
argument that he looked older than
h1$ )Cars. Kmg said.
"There arc a lot of "anable~." he
said. "If the clerk sold 10 a 14-)car-old
that's considered more scnous than 1f
he sold to a 20-year-old. We always
look to see 1fthcre are any agaravaung
factors
King admitted he has shght m1saiv-~==============::;;-;:===:::::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;:;;;:~~~~~~~~~~
1ngs about the fairness of using
Kmg $31d officers staked-out the
stores and watched eac h transaction
Afterward, police would move in and
place the clerk under arrest. The "Stores ha"c been clo\Cd on their
deCO}S.
"But 1t serves the purpose," he said.
"You're not forcing anyone to break
the law. you're JUSt supplying the
opportunity."
GREETER HAS STICK BACK •••.
F-romAl
and release" the suck IO 1b owner
No I lacks a telephone and h1'i onl)
fi~ed addre,s 1s Greeter's ComC'r. '>O
pohce sent cnme lab technician Janet
C11lhan 10 return the staff to him
"Jo I , who appeared m town about
three years aito to fill the shoe, of
Just Call
642-6086
Deify Piiot
Dell very
I• Ouarentffd
~y , '°'· " , .. J I n<ll "-YO>•• l'•I.., 0>
!lOP"' ~~'"'a '"~
-'(°"" C()f•y ""' IJ>O ........ '6
former unofficial greeter Eiler Larsen
was ecstatic about the stick's return
Kind souls had offered him other
walking \licks. but none could replace
Mr Suck," he said
"(t'~ pan of me It's an citten'l1on -
a pan of the cha ract('r "
No 1 ·~ Jubilation at geu1na tht
stack back C\.Cn led him to for11vc the
"~coundrcl" who took at
"I really don't even hold any mahcc
toward to the youn~ man. I JUSt ho~
h(' leaves me alone. · the greeter said.
Wbat do }OU llkt abouc cbe Daily Plloc-> "'hac don 't you Jllce,:t CaJl cbe
numbu at left and your mttsagt wlll be rtcordtd, tran1crtbed and delivered
to tlle appropriate editor.
Tbt same U -bour u1wertn1 service may bt u1ed to record lettert to tbe
tdltor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column mast Include tbelr
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls. pleue.
Tell u1 what's on your mind.
Keren Wittmer
'"'"nfr11 M•,.. gfl•
ClrculeUon 714/M2...Q33
C .... lfled ednrt .. lne 1141142-5171
All other d9pertment1 M2...a21
MAIN OfFICI
1lQ W"t 11ay 'I C.O.e M-Cl\ M••tdd•-lo• I~ Gott• ...... C-41 ~
Sa•..,oet a"Cl ~. '
yo,. do --""" COPY OJ 1 a "' 1Mt1ort
Frank Zlnl ROMmery Churchman
W9r'~ ,..., o..,... ~ .. ""°""""9 ~ No ....,.. -or• -..., •. .,. eoiil)l-1 NI'., or eo.er .,..,. .......,, ,,.., .,. ··~ """'°"' -* --~~-
•O 1 ,,. -rw rco,. • !Mt ..,..,
Cltculetlon
Tel1:p:tonN
Moll!
()l/\Of C-tr .,_ -.am L.,.. ,.,.,., .......
f~ I 1r C .t'ltr t•
AObert L. Cantrell Doneld L. Wllllam1
Prodi..i-1 on Circu1a1o()(l
M•n•o•r M11n1toe1
Howard Muflenery Peggy lfhln
Advetlt11r.a CitectOt I •rn.d f)recfOf
econo llC*•~ 09tO •• Cot11 "'-c. '°""" v-S 1 ~1 M io!~ t11 01,,,., s~ '' """'!l'lly uy ,.... s, 00 lftOl'""1
VOL. n , NO. 221
•
Gem
Talk
ByJ. c....H/JMPHRJES
Certified OemologitJt. AGS
"Estate Jewelry" 11 commonly
thought of ae being Jewelry left by the
death of a family member. Actually,
the term describes any Jewelry being
sold by a middleman to someone
elae. Usually, estate Jewelry 11 clual-
fed according to the period during
which" waa made. Jewelry that has
been In a tamlly for some time may be
from th• "Art Deco," period. for ex-
ample. Thia waa a period during the
1920'a and 1930's, when Jewelry (and
other artletlc creatlon1) used In·
trlcate. geometric designs. Later. In
the ie~o·a, Jewelry de.lgnt featured
large pieces of aweeplng, elegant
curve8 and heavy UM of small
diamond clu1tert. Older dealgne
(from the Art Nouveau period, for
ln1tance) go back to the turn of the
century. To tSe claulfled as "An·
tlque." Je"lry muat ~ at leut 100
year• old. What Should you do If you
have aome estate jewelry that you
would Ilk• to tell? Flrat, take It to a
reputable Jeweler and have It ap·
pralMd. You may want to conalgn It
to a teweler to Hit for you. Any rate, If
you heve 11t1te Jewelry Jn your poi·
aesalon. It 11 • good Idea to find out
what It 11 worth. You may have a amall
forlune tucked away In that old Jft-
elry boxl
J. C. .JJumphrie6 J.ewefe r6
M!MB!R AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @~
1809 NEWPORT BLVD , COSTA. ME9A ,-,
SINCE 1i4G •
BankAmer1card-Muter Charo• PHONe 54 0'
l
' .. -
I BULLETIN BOARD l~--=---------- --" -
Mesa hospital to
unveil Care Unit
~osta Mesa Medical Center Hospital will host a
pubhcopen house of its new 30-bcd CareU nit Friday
from 2 to 7 p.m. at the facility, located at 301 Victoria St.
The CarcUnit will provide a three to four-week
treatment program, including medical detoxifica-
uon! psychotherapr· group therapy, education s~ss1ons, individua and family counseling and
lifetime aftereare. Call the hospital at 642-2734 or
the CareUnil at 650.1090 for more information.
Chamber mi.er tn LB
The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
mixer will be from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. today at the
Laguna Mereado, ~100 South Coast Highway.
Food, drink, prizes and a no host bar will be
featured. The mixer is $3 for chamber members, $5
for non-members.
Stras control program set
· Saddleback College will offer a stress manage-
ment program beginning Tuesday al noon in Library
Room I 05 of the Mission Viejo campus.
The sessions meet weelcJy and explore medi-
tation. hypnosis, yoga and self-actualization
methods of reduci ng stress and tension. The course
is led by Dr. Joh n Flood, a gu idance professor at
Saddleback. For more information contact Dr.
Flood at 831-4571.
Mensans study astrology
":Y-he History of Astrolo~( will be the topic of
the Orange County Mensa s Speaker's Forum
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Orange Main Library.
Speaker John Edwards will discuss how
astrology originated. what astrologers believe and
teh mechanisms by \lthich it could work. For details.
call Darlene Boord at 639-3791 .
Stop-smoklng program set
The internationally known Smokenders smok-
ing cessation program will be offered, beginning
Tuesday, at Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital.
Free introductory meetings are scheduled for
7:20 p.m. Tuesday and Aug. 22 in the conference
room of the hospital, 30 I Victoria St. Call 642-2734
for further infonnation.
Artl•ts' busmen cJaues set
The survival of artists. who often arc not
educated in business matters. in a Limited and
unpredictable marketplace will be the focus ofa new
series called "The Business of An." beginning next
Wednesday at the Irvine Fine Arts Center.
The series, to be conducted Wednesdays
through Nov. 13. will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the
center. 4601 Walnut Ave .. Irvine. Admission to
indi vidual programs 1s $5 and $4 for members of the
center. Series tickets are $20, and advance regis-
tration is requested. Call 552-1078 for further
infonnation.
Lupus Support Group meets
Dr. Jordan Weiss, a Fountain Valley psy-
chiatrist. will s~ak to members of the Orange
County Arthrius Foundation's Lupus Support
Group next Wednesday.
The talk is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
auditorium of the Medical Center of Garden Grove,
12555 Garden Grove Blvd. Patients arc invited to
bring family and fnends.
Oajls to mar..t anniversary
Oasis. a Newport Beach senior citizens center.
will celebrate its eighth birthday Aug. 24, with
speeches by Newport Beach Mayor Philip Maurer,
OaSIS Supervisor Judy O'Shaughnessy and the
President of voluteer support group Friends of
Oasis. among others.
Cake and punch will be served, and volunteers
of the center wi ll be recognized. There will also be a
hobby show by members on d isplay, and a low-
priccd lunch will be served from 11 :30 a.m. 10 I p.m.
\Vednesday,Aug.14
No meetings 1cbeduled •
Thursday, Aug. 16
• 7:30 p.m., Irvine Plaonlng Commlulon. Cny
Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
PoucE Loe
t
Life really begins at 40
Newport Beach homemaker Joann e Pam, eel-check by hotel vice president Dennla Gome.. Her
ebratin& her 40th birthda...Y a t the Laa Vegaa Hilton plan• for the money Include a trip to Italy for .. the
Monday, won $250,000 on one of the hotel'• alot ldda, parenta, ln-lawa, everyon e.•• She la the 14 th
machines. In keepln& with the event, the payment penon to qualify for the H.Uto n•a S-1 million pot-o-
la made ln. the form of a birthday cake replica of a,. .. &old tournament, acheduled for n ext Aprll.
Family says county man killed
in crash to be buried in Japan
By the Aasodated Press
Ward Wallach had a love affair w11h
Japan. and his family intends to honor that
affection by having his funeral and burial
there.
The 26-}ear-old graduate student from
Los Alamitos was a passenger aboard the
Japan Air Lines jumbo jet that crashed
Monday in mountains west of Tokyo.
k1llingall but fourofthe 524 people aboard.
luneral arrangements 1n Japan The fam11)
may hold a memorial service here. but no
arrangements have been made
"We are going to have Ward buried back
thl.'re. He really loved Japan. It was his
chosen place." he said.
Stuart said his brother's enchanime"nt
w11h Japan also may have been enhanced
because "11 was his first real adventure
awa} from home
1he tam1I) gathered after recel\ mg word nf
his death.
Everyone saw him in July except his
brother. Brad. who 1s studying in Ger-
many
"It seems so far awa). 111s kind of unreal
\et."' Stuan Wallach said.
· Wallach's father 1s restaurant critic and
author Paul Wallach, host of a radio talk
sho"' on KIEV in Glendale. and author ol
the boolo... "Paul Wallach's Guide to the
Restauranls of Southern Cahforn1a:·
County
puts last
touches
on budget
Te-ntatlvely OK spending
forOC's special districts.
revenue sharl~ fund s
By JEFF ADLER
Of -DeillJ "°' .....
With the same lack of controvetly that
marked two previous bud~t heanngs last
week. the Orange County Board ofSupcr-
v 1sors Tuesday put the finishing touches on
ns1 I. 2 billion 198 5-86 speodi og plan.
In less tban 20 minutes, supervisors
voted to tentauvel} approve proposed
budgets for the county's many special
d1stncts and finalized the d1vis1on of
federal revenue shanng funds.
In both cases. the actual spendin&
allocauons were settled upon several weeks
ago, when supervisors held separate hear-
ings on proposed funding levels, as
required by law.
La~t week. supervisors zoomed through
the bulk of the budget dunng two days of
hearings. conducted with the aim of
maintaining current service levels while
bu1ld1ng in a S20 milhon reserve fund to
handle any emergency that might ari1e.
Supervrsors are scheduled to fonnally
ad~pt the I 985-86 budget Aug. 28. m<>1t
prc>babt) witllout funher modification.~
Board Chaimll.n. Thomas Riley noted
that many agency and department requests
for additional personnel or programs were
sutm med to the board for consjderation,
but most were w1thdra'°"n voluntarily.
"Whtie the proceedings have moved
c;moothl> thts year. J believe we're all very
aware of the fiscal challen~ that are ahead
next ~ear." Riley said. referring lO the
expected cutoff of federal revenue sharing
funds next year.
"I believe the acuon we're taking now to
do whatever is necessary to maintain our
contingency for emergencies and to cut
back on budget growth, even in the face ef
growing demands on county services. 1s
good planning and good government,·• the
chairman conunucd.
Riley also said he ts moving forward with
plans for the county-to initiate a strat~c
planning program aimed at providing
··cn11cal information about the impacts of
toda}' 's decmons on tomorrow's needs.·•
He ~1d such a planning process would
offer a ··ne..C perspecti ve" that will make
future budget dehberauons easier. A Japanese studies maJOr at Cal State
Long Beach. Wallach had been accepted as
an exchange student and assigned to a
family in the country. He planned to teach
English there and had been teachin~ the
language 10 employees of Japan Air Lines.
"He really loved (his assigned family) a
lot and (they) were very good to him. He
liked the people and culture in Japan He
was very 1ntcres1ed 1n Japanese
philosphy ··
Ward Wallach. a graduate <;tudent at thl'
Uni vcrsily of Tokyo, had been teaching
JAL employee'> and was on his way to a
special J.\L seminar when tht' planc
crashed. his brother sa1<l
Elderly man·kills ailing wife, self
··we've talked to Japan Air Lines and
they offered to fl}' everybody back there,"
Wallach1S brother, Stuart Wallach of
Anaheim, said Tuesday. "But I don't think
there 1s any point 10 11. It would be harder
on everybody."
He said he expected JAL would hl'lp with
He had been home 1n Jul\ to u:khratl'
his birthday, his first v1s1t in fM months. his
hrother said That cekbrat1on 1ook place at
hts mother's home in Lo'> '\lam110\. "here
.\n ch . .krh El Toro man apparentl y beat
h11, \.\lfr "ho was suffenn.g from
\l1ht·1 rncr's disease to death and tht•n tool.
hi'.) own hie Tuesday. police. ~•d
Reid Log;in. 78. "as d1scovert'd around 7
a m al his mobile home w1th a gum;hot
"'ound 10 h1'\ head His .,.,,re E:d11h Reid,
78 ~as found w11h 50evere head tnJunes.
said LL Rolxrt Benson of the Orangr
Count)' Shmtrs Dcpartmt'nt
He descnbt>d the dt'aths as murdc.-r-
'>U1cide
The uiuple\ bodies were tound 10 the
bathroom of the moh11t' horn!.'
Disneyland lifts same-sex dance ban
By the A11oclated Press
' Disneyland has liftl"d a rull' 1mpo'>ed ~8)<."ars ago that banned partners ofthl" c;amc
sex from danci ng togethC'r in lhc amusemenl park.. A \pokesman denied that a la\~c;u11
won by two gay men led to the action.
The ban was -'nded in m1d-J ul} because of requests from tcen-agt'rs going to
Videopolis. a dance club that opened June 22, spokesman Al Flores said T ue-sday.
"We try to be responsive to feedback we get from our guests." Flores said. not1rfg
that "we see a lot ofs11ua11ons where twog1rlsrome togc lhcr and want to dance and ask
to. We have always said no. but we changed our minds ...
The park imposed lhe ban tn 195 7 when dancing was lir'it allowed. In Ma' I 9!1.i.
an Orange County Superior Court ruled in favor ofa ga) couple"' ho had been e' ictnl
from Disneyland four years before for dancing toeether.
"We continued to enforce the (same-sex) pohC} until about a month ago," r lorl·'
said. He said an appeal of the case is still pending. .
The amusement park has maintained that the rultngapplted onl\ to the pla1n11fh
in 1h1u r11'le. Andrew R. Exler and Shawn El hot. When the court ruled tn I %4
D1sne> landattornt'\ 'N 1ll1am M B1t1tng said ··\\ t"ll.abide h~ the order. but ll doe'>n 't
apph to other<; lftwo(othcr)mcnshow uptomorrn\.\ n1gh1 tnJancl' D1snc~land
"'on 't let them on the dance floor ..
Exler. however. saw the change as a '1ctol"\
··11h1nl. it's fantast11. but I'm extreme!\ surpn~d. ·ht• ..aid ··1 th1ni... the dee 1s1on
wa' defin11el\ made in response-to our "'tnntng our la" suit
··That and the internallonal atten11on 1h1scase ha..recc" ed dd1n1tcl~ had an
impact on the1rdec1s1on ··
D1sne\ land imposed the same-Se\ proh1b111on ·a., J ~ ro,,d 'ontrul meJi.ure." to
ensure the Sale\~ of women on the dam:c tloor and ~~~-~me patron.. might find •
partners of lht-l>lme SC\ offensl\ e. Flore) 'ia1d --
··we ah.\a\S tll' 10 avoid even kind of s1tua110Mhat "'ould utu~e a disturbance .. Flort'~sa1d "\\1edon'tsenealcotiol WeenforceaJresHode It ~thereasonmostot
our policies were created to maintain a peaceful. ha pp\ atmosphere th:u won 't ot1end
an~ nlourgueSl'I ··
Twice-stolen car 'copped'
=and recovered after chase
Someone stoic a $350 1 V set lrom
oule & .\ssoc1ates. Ci3tl2 Bolsa. earl~
Monday afternoon • • • t\ burglar stole a $750 l)'f>ewnter. a
S66 calculator anQ..SJ4 1n_casb from...3
home in tht" I) I 00 hlock of P1onl't"r
Sunda} night
"''rth ot damage to the dash hoard of a
brown T mota Cress1da rarked 1n the
carpon o(an apartment in the 10\55
blot k of Slat<."r Tut'sda~ • • • ...\. -burglar M~ .$1Lm a!ld10
McGa". Tuesda' The loss ~as
estimated at $716.
Newport Beaeh
.\ diamond nng worth $475 was
-st6kn-...from a storl' at 113 Fashion
Island OVC'r the weekend • • • ••• meone stole a S 1,000 car sttrl'o
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ......... ployees were accommodating, ac-
cord.in& to reports.
his hands," said Bergstrom. "When
he threw up bis hands I guess he
tossed something on a roof of a school
buildiJl&."
Someone broke into a black I \)"1>
Volks ..... agen Scirocco Monda\ and
stole the car 5tereo worth $400 The
car was parked 1n the lot of \ \\
Doctor. I c; 182 Bolsa C'h1l.a.
l.'qu1pment and $1 I b I in m1<.·
cdlant•ous 11ems from a bus1ne'>s at
I· 2 '\' 'c""hope Tuesda\ • • • ')oml·one stole SI .\Clo 1n camera
equipment from a home 1n the I 7MJU
bloci... ot 'ian \.1ct:nte la~I ...,,ed
')\~tern from a black l 983 Saab QOO
Turbo parked 1n front of a home m
the 500 block of Dahlia Monday
night The thief also dtd $200 damag~
10 the dashboard
If nothing else, Huntington Beach
police are willing to credit Michael
Albert Lopei with beina persistent.
The 28-year-old Shennan Oaks
man, apparently fascinated with a
white 1983 500 SEC Mercedes Benz,
allqedly stole the luxury car not once
but twice.
The car, reaistered to a Garden
Grove man, was djacovered early
Monday outside of Hunti~n Hu-
. mana Hospital where pohce were
investiaatina an unrelated dis·
turbance report.
The Mercedes was towed to Man-
die Motors, a Main Street auto shop
where police freciuenuy store stolen
and abandoned cars. ·
The same day, a man showed up at
the auto ahop and, flashing a police badac. asked to see the car. Em-
Laema• S.cla
An unknown suspect threw a bottle
throuah the windshield of a car on El
Toro and Laguna Canyon roads, the
victim told police Tu~y. The
damaae was estimated at S 182. • • • Seven auns were rcpon.cd stolen
Tuesday from a Meadowlark Lane
home. • • • Jewelry valu~ nt SlOO wu re-
poned stolen TuC'!day from • Laguna
"All of a sudden they look. around
and the man is drivina off' in the car,"
said Jo Anne Berstrom, a
spokeswoman for the police. "They
knew they hadn't aiven him a key."
Police, alerted to the twice-stolen
car, tp<>tted the Merced.es traveling
welt on Heil A venue and bepn
cbasina it. But the driver didn't give
up that easily.
Berpltom said police pursued the
car to Rhine S~t where the
Mercedes took a sudden left tum. Too
suddenly, Berptrom A.id
The car plowed into the curb,
jumped the sidewalk and knocked
down a sip, the said. The driveT &ot
out and ran teadina police thn>ugh
1everal ya;ds and around a play-
around at Sunview School.
"He finally stopped and threw up
Cuyon Road home. The victim told
police the jewelry ha been m1 sina
since las\ C'hnstmas. • • • A La Brta Street resident told
police that a prowler was seen near the
home Monday niaht.
Bundn&toD &eac.b
A thirsty buraJa.r drank a canon of
milk before ransackana a home in the
1900 hlock of Newland Tuctday
Police called firemen who climbed
on top of the school and recovered the
polioe badge. It was a real badae from
a Central California polic.e depart-
ment.
Lopez, who is not a policeman, was
arrested oo suspicion of 1mpersonat-
i~ a police officer. hit~and-run
dnvina. evadin& arrest, rcceivmg
stolen property and, of course, two
counts of grand theft auto.
A final footnote: the Mercedes was
stolen from Garden Grove but the
license plate belonas to another stolen
car, this one belongma to a Sant.a
Monica resident
"Wbat does it mcanr' said
Bcntrom. "Your auc s is u tood u mine."
momina. ccord.Jngtopoliccreporu.
he entered throu&tf ll°'kcd kitchen
w1ndo~and got away wuh 1 SS7S
color Tv and a.SI 00 stereo • • • Thieves stole a $2,000 piano from a
home in the 19300 block of
Ma1d'litonc Tuesday. • • • An u~mplo)'ce of the Burger Kina
at 19 00 tk.tch dmitlcd Tuc'ida)
that he embcultd $600 tn Juoe and
Jul) • • •
• • • t\ resident in the I 7100 bl-.x·I. <'I
pnngdalc reported Mond.t) lhjl
'iOmc time tn the pa'it t~o month'
someone \tole his 44-cahher
Magnum wonh $400 from his h<lmr • • • .\burglar, using 11 cast iron rr-..ing
pan to smash the window ~tole· a
S250 camera from a red I QIO llondJ
Civic parked tn the 200 lalod. of I l1th
Monda}' night • • • OmtOnt' Stolt $~()() 1n '>Urhng
t"qu1pment from o1. l'~r parked di the
comer of 3rd and PiH 1fi, < oJ)t
Ht&h"'ay Monda>
Fountain Valley
The owner nf I 1)unt.i1n \. .1lln
tauonar" s nd <"ft' I XO" I
Mqn"Oh&. ~ned 1 u~.n thnt .1
total ofS370 1n ca\h "'a" '"'ll'n lrnm
the \tort on two CX'\otl'lhln\ cnt•1 tht•
weekc-nd ' ••• <\ ~•dent an the 16200 hlr)\. i... nl
~ats rcponcd fu~ay that ,t,mt·
one \tale tl\e propeller and the hdttrt'
from his boat ,torcd at a Stort' ~ I <x l
flc1ht ), JOSOS Garfield, d1.1n n1t tht'
pa.it t~'O month~ Tht lo ~ w.i~
c,uma1C'd at S2~S • • • n unlnown SU\l)«t \tole 1 S400
car \tc~rco and 1n 1hc pmc; 'dtd 11xi
Irvine
\ 1 ar \tl'reo "a\ tak<'n from a
\ ,,11. '"'a gen parkC'd in front ol .i
l111mc 1n 1he J"CIO blod. of Parl,1ew
\1 11nda~ n1gh1 Th<' lo'>ll wa\ esti-
mated at 11\ tr \400 • • • T"-1'nt,·four tt'kphonl'' \alued at
11' n $400 \\t•rc rcpont'd talen from .t
bu~1n1''' at 2 '81 MoN 1n the pa't
"rt•!. • • • I \H1 ix1rt:1 hie T \. ~t' 'a I ut"d oi t ,1, <'r S4llO "'t'rt' reponed \tokn lrom :i
hnme Jlon1t TrnHI land O'er the
\\('C'lC'Od • • • T 01.11' .lnd a 1001 ho~ '"'CT'l' '>tokn
frnm l nmphantc fngm~nn1t. I ~1
Ei -boylrlend IJeJd
for marder, •-alt
LO .\-..JG EL ES ( <\P)-"woman
hid in a do-.ct "'hile her mothe
l'lrothcr .md a fam1h rnend were $hOt
and anotht'r man wa'i llllled OUl~1de
her hom<'. pohl·t said Wednesda}'
Her blood--.patte~d <''·bovfnend
wa~ arr<''>tC'd houn later
( ,t"orge Dom10. 28. was bool..C'd for
1nH''\llttat1on of murder toda and
hrld "tthout bat I police Detective
John Bunth ~1d
M ouse fancier a r eal rat
\ kn1fc·"'1cldintt l\anJ1t mhhc.'<.1 :l
< o\t \ Mc"WI ptt ~tore cleri.. 01 het
ruN' Tue~;,\ nip.ht al\cr lint il!>kintt
to,('(' ~ mo11'C polite.· \atd h"-la-r
l 1 Tom Ourham ..aid th<' rohher
de\• nhed a\• mi1ll' H1')~ n11 ~111J.\'t1
1nl<l tht \anllbar ~t ,.torc. 1 lN'-Park
\' <' aoout l Sp m and a\,J.C'd c:krl
\u1ann(' Tl\lor, 10 tor a ,mall
rnou~
\\hen l &\IOr pv<' htm th<' rodfnl,
--
the bandit d1splnH'<I a ''x inch kntte
~1th a mJ handle and ordettd her into
,1 hacl room ht rt-turned lat(f to
tind her pune mi!t\tnl. fhe cnh
rtjl,\t'f h:.d not bttn cnured
r>urh m \a1d the-rt wb no mone)
1n lht' pu~. 1~1dt from 1wo $ l silver
C'C:rt1fkatt'\ Ht' was un urc whether
the rohhtt ah'IC'I. nded wtth \ht
mou~
_,I
-I
.4
I
AA 0tange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Augu1t 14, 1985
If Ar"L.trong
GARDEN CENTERS
SHADE CLOTH
Heauy duty fabric -great /or
shading plants or couerlng patios
Comes In 6' widths.
Om.It}/ R~ular
55~ J.39 run.ft.
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13~ J.69 run.ft
NOW
79e age
99e
Attendant recalls
a •btgnotse' before
Wild yawing by jet
FUJIOKA, Japan (AP) -An off.
duty fl1Jht attendant who survived
the Japan Air Li nes disaster said
today there was a "big noise." a
sudden drop in cabin pressure and a
wild yawtna before the plane wtth 524
people aboard crashed, the airline
sa1d.
Yum1 Och1a1, 26. told two JAL
directors from her hospital bed that
she saw damage to the ceiling above a
rear lavatory, but did not know
whether a fuselage door blew out
prior to the crash.
Ochiai was sitting 1n the rear of the
JAL Boeing 747 when the jumbo jct
went down Monday in a remote
mountainous area in central Japan.
She is one of only four people
known to have survived the crash,
history's worst disaster in volvi ng a
single aircraft. JAL officials made her
comments public.
By mid-afternoon. I 09 bodies were
delivered to a school gymnasium in
Fujioka, about 25 miles from the
crash site, where more than I, 700
relativ~s and friends brought 1n by
JAL waited to identify them.
A police spokesman at Uenomura,
command post for the recovery
operation, said there was only the
"remotest chance" of finding more
survivors.
Searchers today found the plane's
two flight recorders. and mant1me
officials announced two more more
pieces of aircraft dcbns had been
found off the Japanese coast.
The so-called "black boxes." actu-
ally painted bnght orange for v151b1ll-
ty, keep track of cockpit convcrsa-
uons and flight data. They could help
determine why the Jetliner plowed
'nto a mountaintop while on a flight
from Tokyo to Osaka.
Ochiai, who has been a JAL flight
attendant for about two years, suf-
fered pelvic and arm fractures.
According to JAL spoke$man
Geoffrey Tudor, she told the officu1ls
the crash itself was a series of "three
jolts," accompanied by a swul of scats
and cushions. She said the next thing
she knew, a helicopter was flyina
overhead.
She said oxygen masks came down
and a "white cloud" swirled through
the cabin. Airline officials suggested it
was conden¥'t1on from sudden press-
ure loss.
There was no announcement from
the cockpit but a purser made an
"emergency announcement, .. and a
stewardess instructed the passengers
to put on life jackets and assume a
"crash posiuon," Och1a1 said.
The pilot reponcd Jo Tokyo air
controllers he had problems wtth a
"broken" door 1n the rear of the
cabin. a loss of pressure. and could
not control the plane.
Yoshinubu Sh1bakawa, a spokes-
man for the Gunma prefecture (state)
police, said the two recorders were
found this afternoon in a valley below
the crash site. They were impounded
by Transpon Ministry officials.
Shibakawa said.
A Maritime Safety Aiency spokes-
man in Yokohama said the debris
fou nd today in Sagami Bay south of
Tokyo included an air-conditioning
duct and a small plastic-and-metal
fitting, evidently from the tail scctton.
Tudor said a venical tailfin fished
out of the ocean Tuesday was
positively identified as having cpme
from the JAL jumbo jct.
In vestigators said loss of the tail
sccuon might explain why the pilot
reponcd losing control of the plane
before it crashed.
Spokesmen at Uenomura, the op-
erations center near 5,408-foot
Mount Osutaka. said of the 109
recovered. eight were identified.
There were four survivors, and three
of them were listed in "relatively
stable" condition. according to doc-
tors. A founh was in good cond1t1on.
About 4,500 workers, including
2.500 soldiers, dug through the debris
and churned-up dirt and loaded
bodies aboard 30 military and civ-
ilian helicopters.
YumJOchtai
Jet's tail
damaged
earlier
TOK YO (AP) -The Japan Air
Lines Boeing 747 jetliner that crashed
in mountains in central Japan was
involved in a 1978 accident tn which
its lower ta il section was damaged, an
airline spokesman said today.
JAL spokesman Geoffrey Tudor
said the plane sustained .. minor
damage to the rear lower f usclage, a
section under the tail plane" when
landing at Osaka Airport in June
1978.
A tail section of the plane, which
had 524 people aboard when 1t
crashed Monda}. was found floating
1n the ocean 80 miles away from the
crash site a day later.
Tudor said the portion damaged tn
t 978 had been "completely replaced"
by the Boeing Commemal Airplane
Co., makers of the jumbo Jet.
In Seattle, Boeing spokesman Bill
Melian confirmed the tail of the plane
was damaged in 1978 when it made a
"nose up" landing. Thirty persons
suffered minor injuries in that inci-
dent. But Mellon said the plane was
repaired and put back into service.
5 gal size t
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He declined 10 speculate on
whether the incident contributed to
Monday's crash. the world's worst air
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Mellon said tail-scraping incidents
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A section from the front edge of the
ve rtical stabilizer tail secuon was
found floating in the sea off Japan on
Tuesda~. and two smaller pieces of
debns were found today, the Japan
Manume Safety Agency said.
Tudor said there was "no poss1·
b1ht~" the 1978 incident co ntnbutcd
to Monday's accident. "This was
seven years ago. and after the repair
was made, ll was the same as a new
aircraft," he said.
New help found
for liver cancer
Treatment ls ·nrst
eff ectlve remedy for
late stages of disease·
BALTIMORE (AP) -Re-
searchers at Johns Hopkins Hospital
say they have developed a treatment
I
for hver cancer which one sc1en11st
calls the first effective means of
dealing with advanced stages of the
usually fatal dtsease.
Dr. Stanley Order, chief of rad•·
ation oncology at Hopkins, said the
treatment, whi ch involves radio-
active isotopes, shrank the tumors in
48 percent of I 04 patients treated for
primary liver cancer. The patients, at
Ho{>kins and at the U niversity of
Cahfomia, had tumors which were
too large to be removed with surgery.
Order said that in what he called "a
strange phenomenon," most of the
successfull y treated tumors have
reached a plateau. neither shnnking
nor growing. while seven of the
patients ba ve.becn rid of all traces of
the disease. Two pat1cnts were re-
poned to be fret of liver cancer ancr
more than a year, one of them after
31h years.
The researcher said that while even
better results should be vigorously
pursued, he felt no qualms about
assening that "we have the first
effective treatment ofliver cancer."
Among those treated in the study
was a 28-year-old pa11ent who had a
tumor we1~hmg more than five
pounds which was red uced to less
than one pound so 1t could be
surgically removed. Order said.
In add1t1on to its e1Tect1vcness. the
treatment ha s no side effects , accord-
1 ng to Order. Patients do not ex-
perience hair loss. nausea and other
side effects which accompany other
cancer treatments. he said.
He first used the treatment on
patients in 1979 and said he expects 1t
to eventually be used to treat several
types of cancer.
The treatment uses radiolabeled
antibodies which seek out and de-
.stroy cancer cells in the liver. Order
said. The antibodies. injected into the
patient every few months, look for
~rritm, a substance produced by
many tumor& -as wctt 11-s-1>y some
natural orpns in the body.
The success rates achieved by some
patients are a medical first, Order
said.
Degrading verse
is second to nun
CHICAGO(AP)-Agrcetingcard
company beina sued by a Roman
Catholic nun says it has pulled cards
bearing her picture from the market
and has offered to donate its profits
from the card to her order.
However, an anomey for the nun
said she would pursue her lawsuit
aaainst the company, California
Dreamers Inc. of Chicaao.
"lftheythinlc they can commcre1al-
ly exploit someone, embarrass them
and lauah it off by sayina. 'Now we'll
isvc you the money we aot wronJ-
fuJly1 they'vcaounotberaucss," said
William Linklater, attorney for Sister
Candida Lund of the Dominican
order.
The card feature, a black and white
photoanph of an unidentified nun
seated m chair, Wlth the words, "h's
all n&ht 1f you kiss me."
Inside. 1t adds, "So Iona as you
don't act 1n the habit."
In her Cook County C1n=u1t C oun suit, Sister Candida contends the
photograph i~ of her and was u~
I
without her knowlcdae. She descnbcs
the words on the card as a "filthy.
seamy and degrading verse, appealing
to prurient interests."
The lawsuit charaes Califomia
Dreamers with invasion of pnvacy
and misappropnatina the picture;
prescntina istcr Candida in a false
lia)\t; defamation. and intent10MI
infliction of emotional distress. Dam-
ages arc unspecified, but Linklater
s.aid Sister Candida is .. entitled ta a
substantial monetary award."
Jim L1enhart, creative dutttor of
the company, said Tuesday that
d1stnbution of the card had bttn
halted pcrmanentty
.. We wo uld never have released it if
~c'd known it was a real nun " sad
Licnhart. "It's not funny '
"We a urned this parucular photo
(in a portfolio willed from one
photoarapher to another) was of a
moder In 1 nun's costume. We with to
ciitcnd our decpc t apolOI)' to the
nun "
r
Viets turn MIA reniains
over to U .s. authorities
By n A11odaaect Pr•••
f:IANOI. Vietnam -A U.S. Air Force plane flew out of Hanoi today ~arry1na what arc beheved to be the remains of26 Americans missana smcc the
Vietnam War, U.S. officials said. Officials of Vietnam's communist
aovci:nment met U.S. forensic experts at a Hanoi afrport and turned over the
tcm11ns to a team from the U.S. Joint Casualty Center Rt110lution Center
based in Hawaii. U.S. sailors, Marines and Air For<:e personnel salured as the
remains, packed in separate Oaa-draped crates, were carried aboard a C-130
transPort plane to be flown to the Clark Air Base mortuary near Manila
Philiepinca. Identification procedures would start Thursday at Hickam Air Base an Hawaii. ·
Bul.JJea ala •after 2nd Jargat drop
Business sales plunged 2.1 percent m June, the second largest dcclmc on
re(;ord, the aovcmmcnt reported today. The Commerce Department said sales
It the rctatl, wholesale and manufacturing levels plunged to $419.2 billion in
June after nsm& 0.4 peroent in May. AU business segments were affected it
said. The decline was second only to a 2.8 percent drop an Man:h l 9h.
Commerce Department analysts said. The downturn resulted in business
inventones nsing 0.4 percent m June, following a 0.4 percent May decline.
Hotel magnate Marriott dla at 84
WASHINGTON -John Willard Marriott, whose worldwide chain of
elegant hotels sprang from the small root beer stand he bou&ht after the
bankruptcy of his father's stru~ing Utah sheep business, died iucsday. The
hotel magnate, 84J. whose Mamou Corp. chain includes restaurants, as airline
a.nd i~stitutional rOod services, ~ied at his New ~ampshire summer home. A
titan 1n the hotel and food service world, Mamott was still chairman of the
board of the 140,000-employee Marriott Corp. But in 1972 he turned over the
post of chief executive officer to his son, J. Willard Marriott Jr.
One of Top Tea fugitives captured
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. -A man on the FBl's "10 Most Wan ted" list for
more than four years was arrested by police who chased a speeding car to a
roadblock, the FBI says. Gilbert James Everett, 46, was being held without
bond Tuesday at the Hot Springs Jail pending extradition procccdinp,
according to authontaes. "Where to is much in question," Dan Kelly of the FBI
said today. "There are so many charges against him all over the country for
armed robberies and auto thef\s." Everett has used the alias William F. Schell
since his escape in 1980 from ajatl m Knoxville. Tenn .. the FBI said.
E•tea charged with •eraal aba.e
ABILENE. Texas -Swindler B1lhe Sol Estes was charged with raping his
housekeeper the day a court wrapped up its probe of the 1961 death, originally
ruled suicide, ofa man who had been investigating him. Estes, 60. was released
on SI 0,000 bond Tuesday followtng has arrest on allegations by the 38-year-old
widow and mother of six that he raped her tn an office buildmg July 26. Also
Tuesday, State District Judge Peter Lowry ruled that the 1961 death of Henry
Marshall. a U.S. Department of Agnculture official invest1gattnJ Estes' cotton
allotment dealings. was a murder, not a suicide. According to earlier
statements by forme-Robertson County District Attorney John Paschall, Estes
told a grand jury last year that then-Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson had
ordered Marshall killed to prevent him from exposing· Estes' fraudulent
business dealings and his ties with Johnson.
1,800 arrated Jn 3-montlJ drag s weep
LOS ANGELES-More than 1.600 people have been arrested in the first
three months of a program aimed at wiping drug dealers off the streets of
central Los Angeles. pohce say. "The operation will go on as long as It takes for
_ us to retake these streets and make them safe for the people who hve ~re."
Deputy Police Chief Clyde Cronkhite said Tuesday. More than 1,000 of the
arrests were for invest1gat1 on of dealing cocaine. herom or marijuana. The
others arrested were alleged drug users. he said.
2 captives of NJcaraguaa rebels return
SAN FRANCISCO -Two Bay Area men held by U.S-backcd
Nicaraguan rebels for 29 hours blasted the Reagan administration on their
return to the United States. Tom Caulfield, 58, and Bob Heifetz, 53, spoke
Tuesday after flymg from Mexico to be met by cheering friends and family at
the San Francisco International Airport. "I did not feel my life was in danger
because our citizenship protected us." said Caulfield, a manne cn~inecr from
Berkeley. Asked if he held the Reagan Adminstration responsible for ats
financial support of Nicaraguan contra forces, Heifetz said "absolutely.
There's no question about that."
Ban sought for AIDS dlscrimlaatloa
LOS ANGELES -A proposed ordinance to ban discrimination against
AIDS '}ictims in employment, housing. health services and other areas was
approved by a Caty Council commiuee after deletion of a section calling for
criminal penalties. The proposal, unanimously approved Tuesday by the
Public Health, Human Resources and Senior Citizens Committee, was
scheduled to go before the full council today. It would ban discriminauon 1n
housing, medical and dental services. business establishments and public
accommodations.
CalJfom1aJJ• evenly spJJt on apartJJeJd
SAN FRANCISCO -Cahfom1ans are almost evenly dlVl~ed on the
question whether or not this country should take stronger actions agarnst South
African apartheid, the Cahfomta Poll reported today. Figures. compiled the
first week of this month, show 42 percent believing that the P.res1dcnt and
Congress arc doing all they should about the racial policy, while 40 percent
think the aovernmcnt should take stronger action. The opinion sample
consisted of 516 adults statewide.
Reward offered for n'6ht •tal~er
LOS ANGELES-County supervisors offered a$ I 0,000 reward Tuesday
for the capture of a nighttime attacker believed responsible for at least six
sla yings and under investigation for 30 rapes, beatings and murders. "There 1s
currently a countywide effort by all law enforcement agencies to arrest this
person to stop the fear and terror he is presenting to county citizens;·
Supervisor Pete Schabarum said. Headina the task force, the laraest since tHe
Hillside Strangler killinas an the late 1970s, is sheriffs Sgt. Frank Salerno, a 10-
year-veteran in the homic1d( division.
Car bomb bl a•t klll• 12 la Beirut
BEIRUT. Lebanon -A car bomb exploded today outside an apanment
block m a densely populated suburb of Beirut, ~~ng 3t least 12 people and
anjunng 75 others, police said. The Christian ·o station, The Votce of
~banon, said three children .were among the dead, but u1d rescuers had found
a 9-month-old ~irl alive m the debris ofa devastated Clght-story buildina. The
fate of the baby s parents was not known.
Student mob trla to .et teacJJer a.a IJre
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Hundreds of black students today
mobbed a teacher accused of beina a aovernttlent informant and tried to set
him aflame. Authorities said a railroad politf!man shot into a crowd throwin.a
firebomb at h11 home, killing a man. In Johanncsbura, an explosion ripped
throuah an elevator shaft at the mainly wMte Unjvenity of the Witwatersrand,
where 32 students were 1nJurcd this week iti clashes with police. The ei1plosion,
which the university said was caused by at\ "incendiary device" caused mmor
4amaac and injured no one.
Pope ad• for fl6ht agal.n•t corruption
BANGUI, Central Afncan Republtc -Pope John Paul ti btouaht his
African pilanmaae to this landlocked, amPovens,ttcd country today and made
a strona plea ~qr sclf-rchancc and a fiaht ~ns1 corruption. Armottd can ped
atona both sides of the runway s the pontafl'SJcthncr arrived from Cameroon.
Crowds were barred from the airport, which was rinacd by comblt·ready
French and national troops After a s1it-hour v1s1t the pope was for fly to Za1re
Fre'61Jt trabJ• coUJde, J 4 dJe
ISTANBUL. Tur ey -Two frc1aht trains collided head-on today an the
eastern provinet of Mafatya, k1lhna T 4 ~pie and i~unna five olhen. the
Km1-oflic11I Anato'ia news llCl'I~ reported. The colh11on at the Uluauney
1tatlon in the towr ,lup of Heka.mhan touched off a fire 111he scene. Anatoha
rcponed the vic~s ~ere all Turks ,
\
_.._. --
Poison
,output
cutoff
INSTITUTE, W.Va. (AP) -
Union Carbide Corp. has announced
it is temporarily suspendina pro-
duction ofaldicarb oxime, lhe poison
pa involved in a chemical leak that
mjured I 3S people, and aclcnowl-
ed&ed its computerized safety system
never was proarammed to track the
chemical.
Meanwhile, a non-toxic chemical
leaked Tuesday night at Carbide's
South Charleston plant five miles
away. dnvang some residents from
their homes, Kanawha County
Emcraency Services Paramedic Jerry
Brown said. No health threat was
reported, but Mayor Mike Roark
compla1ned that Carbide had not
notified him of the leak.
The trackina system erroneously
told workers that Sunday's leak was
contained over the Institute plant
site. Carbide has blamed tracking
system for a 20-minute reporting -
delay that allowed a toxic chemical
cloud to senle on nearby homes
before wamina sirens sounded.
"I am sure if we had used the
system correctly, it would have
worked better," Carbide spokesman
Thad Epps said. "We substituted a
chemical with close to the same
components. We got reasonably good
programming."
Gary Galenas, president of Safer
Emergency Systems in Westlake Vil-
laac, Calif., which manufactures the
trackina system, said there was no
problem with it.
"How could it work properly?" he
asked. "It wasn't programmed for
aldicarb."
The tracking system. which detects
chemica-1 leaks with electronic
weather sensors. projects a picture on
a screen that shows where the leak is
comina from and how large the cloud
will be near an affected community,
Galenas said:
The system was installed in In-
stitute in February and was pro-
grammed primarily to detect leaks of
phogenc. chlorine, or lnethyl iso-
cyanate, the chemical that killed
2,000 people in India.
Galenas said Carbide later sent
data on several other chemicals to be
proarammed for detection, but that
aldicarb oxime was not among them.
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8 STEAM ANO SAUNA WHIRLPOOL
8 OVERSIZED DRESSING ROOMS wit'"
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• NUTRmON ANO WEIGHT CONTROL
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..
Irvine Co. withdraws proposal
for Corona del Mar apartments
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of IM Dellt "9t aid
The lninc Co ha \\llhdrawn
plam for an apanmcn1 comple:a. in
Corona dcl Mar following oppo 1tton
from local re~tdt'nts who ~1d the
propo~d project was too den'it'.
Company offic1al bkt'd tht' New
port Beach Cuy Council on Monday
10 drop its review of the plum. and
allow time for new de\1gn!. to ~
drawn, ~1d Da" 1d Neish. a develop..
ment con\ultant for the Irvine Co
The propo~I culled tor a 96 un11
apanment complc1t. called Bnsa del
Mar. to be built on a 61'2-acre p.irccl at
the comer of MacAnhur Boulevard
and \o:i t H1ghwuy. Of the apan-
ments, 84 of tbe 96 were to sattsfy
affordable hou~ing needs. based on
Ncwpon Beach development gu1Je-
lines
Rut when the Citv < uunc1I con-
<;1dercd the propo~al la'>t spnn_g.
residents and council members ~1d
traffic created b) the project would
make local roadways severely 1.:on-
~~!.~~~:,~ans ·~~:~:~~=~i.
Tv.o potcnual Rcpubhcan can-.\nd. Rep Dan Lungren of Long
d1date'I for the l \ ~nale 1ra\clcd Beach plans 10 make his dec"1on by
from Orang~ ( ounl~ to the Freo;no earl} 1986
Repubhran A~~mbh ·., annual luau Both Danneme)cr and Lungren.
looking for !>uppon O\Crlhc v.eekcnd Y.hose d1stnu include~ pan of H unl·
Rep \\ 1ll1am Danneme)l'r of Full -ington Beach. said the} think agncul-
.:rton !><llLI a1urda) he"' 111 dt:udc b} lure marketing orders hamper the free
Ot1ober "'hc1her 1u !>t'Ck th1: pan~ market system but added that the}
nom1na11un ne\t .lune to run again~t are aware farmers ha ve problems
aested A smaller proJCd was ~
ommended.
Councilman Bill A.ace argued thal
the h1Jber denslly was needed to
make the projec1 affordable. Aaee
al!.O s~ud more apanments arc needed
in Newpon Beach.
Bui Neish said widespread opposi·
lion to the plans prompled the Irvine
Co. to withdraw the proposal.
· "We arc considerina reducina the
density and makina a for-sale proJect
rather than rental apartments,' Neish
said
fhe Irvine Co. will present new
plans for the site when the counc1l
meets Sept 9.
In other acuon Monday. the City
Council
• Gave final approval of the 10
p.m curfew, which will take effect in
JO days.
• Postponed until Sept. 9 cons1der-
at1on of an ordinance that would limll
the hours of operauon for restaurants
located near residential areas.
• Passed a resolution reaffirming
the council's opposition to oil explo-
ration and drilling off Orange Coun-
ty's coastline.
South Cout lledtcal Center Aa.z:lllary
Tolunteer Peay Fablll, rlCht, con-
1ratu1ata mem'ben with the bJChat
namben of .errice hours gtven: Belen
Lyon•, left, E velin Alle man and Stina
Wolf.
Medical volunteers honored
More than 200 members of the [F~==l•4==~~F=~=w===~F;;;;;;::w:::==w==~~===iF~=w==;:;;;:=w;i:iii=mMjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj"i South Coast Medical ·Center Aux-
ahary were honored at the recent
Ax LINES annualawardsbreakfast.Over60,000
hours of volunteer worlC was given
last year by auxiliary members.
Helen Lyons. Sttna Wolf and
last July.
Lyons. Wolf and Alleman. all
former auxiliary presidents, are ac-
tive 1n the "Silver and Gold" branch
of the aux1hary -the fund raising
group which has contributed more
than SI . 14 million to the hosp11al
since its inception 25 years ago.
re,·ord 25 )Cars, Wolf and Nell Blake
with 23 yea rs of service each, and
Kann Blyth. Belle Fleener and Bess
Wangler for becoming 20.year mem-
bers.
SHOE CLEARANCE Evelin Alleman were reco~nized for
the most contributed service hours.
each giving over 14,000 hours since
Six members were honored for 20
or more years of service: Lyon~ with a
Information on the South Coast
Medical Center Auxiliary 1s available
by phoning 499-131 1. extension
2740.
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\
SALE ST ARTS THURS. 8-15 THRU 8-18
HOURS ARE:
M-F 9:30 - 7 • Sat-Sun 10:00 -6
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. rX:. / ~.
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P.S.---lf you can't begm in Augusc "late starting" classes
will get underway in September and October.
• a
'
Officjal hedges on lottery startup date
~Al RAMENTO (AP) -Lotter}
public relattons officials insisted
Tuesday that although Sept. 27 has
emerged as the "conceivable" open-
ing for the overdue games. late
September to early October remains
the closest they offic1ally can come to
setting a firm kickoff date.
In an interview w11h The As~
sociated Press on Monday. Deputy
Director Chon GuuerreL said that "if
all our plans work ... and 1f everything
converges by the 20th, with a week of
testing, we're conceivably looking at
the 27th."
Lottery Public Affairs Director
Wilham Seaton said Tuesday he fears
that Sept. 27 will now be used as a
yardsuck lor measurani ollic1als'
performance. even though 11 has not
been established as a formal target
date.
Seaton said Lottery Director Mark
Mschalko and lottery comm1ss1oncrs
may~ unable to ~ta firm date unttl
September. due to the myriad tasks
that must yet ~.completed.
The kickoff date. a key point of
interest to those anxious to play the
games. remains one of the most
politically sensitive issues regarding
the lottery. ·
The initiative voters approved 1n
November ordered the kickoff by
-
March 12 -nearly live months ago.
But Gov. George DeuJcJTlejlan, a
Republican who opposed the games.
adopted a cautious app~ach that has
stowed lottery organlllllon.
Dcukmejian has defended his
stance by poinung to the monu-
mental task of organizing the lotter},
which 1s expected to have sales of up
to S2 billion annually. One-third of
that will go to public educ~11on.
An unsuccessful lawsuit attempted
to force the governor into staning the
games because the delay is costing
public education more than $1
million daily.
Dorothy Glover
of Newport
Former IRS mall sorter gets
probation for taking mall
Graveside ~rv1ces were scheduled
toda} for Doroth~ D Glo,er of
Newpon Beach. who died Frida)' in
Costa Mesa. She was 77
Born rn Redlands. Mrs. Glo' er had
lived tn that area un11l 1930 when she
moved 10 Newpon Beach She had
been the manager of the Newpon
Beach City Water Department, retir-
ing in 1955
She 1s survived by her husband,
Earl F. Glover, ofNewpon Beach and
two sons. K. Stanley Bell of Ncwpon
Beach and Donald D. Bell of R1 vcr-
s1dc. as well as five grandchildren.
Services were conducted at the
R1ver!>1de National Cemetery. Ar-
rangement!> were in charge of Pierce
Brothers Bell Broadway Monuary of
Costa Mesa
By the Auoclated Press
LOS ANC..ELES -A federal Judge
sentenced a former Orange ( ounty
Internal Revenue Service mail soner
to three years' probation for taking
home 40 bags of taxpayer co r-
respondence he couldn't get to at
work.
Michael J. Baker, 20, was hired last
year al the IRS' Santa Ana office He
pleadedgu1l1yJuly I tofourcountsol
concealing records.
Defense attorney Wilham Monroe
likened Baker to the apprenttce role in
··Fantasia" in which Mickey Mouse
donned the hat of the sorcerer but
coutdn 't cope with the ensuingmagac.
He said Baker al first intended to
return the mail. "but he JUr>t got
fun her and fun her behind."
GRAND
OPENING
Saturday
August 17, 1985
10am to 6pm ...,
I----
Exciting, Educalloul •Ml O.nlopmenl•I
Toye, llook• Md Twhlng Aid•
lrom ArouMI nt. World
Toys for Fu~ Learning, Tool
MISSION Vl~.10
Baker concealed about 11.000
pieces of mail ~tween Apnl 1984 and
May 1985. Assistant U.S Attorney
Craig De Roy said. Among them were
checks to the lRS totaling $800.000.
a,lthough Baker d1dn 't try to cash any.
he said.
'Tm very sorry," Baker told U.S
D1stnc1 Judge Richard Gadbois on
Monday, "It was my vel'} first JOb I
thank I tned a little too hard."
El T oro fl igh ts_teday
Manne Corps Air Station. El Toro.
will operate Its avfield through
Thursday midnight due to personnel
and a1rcralt returning from unit
deployments.
27000 Crown Yeller Par~:r.· Suite 511
Minion Vlefo I
t
(Upper levet next to Bullock'•)
(714) 314-2094
'
~ Coeli OAJLY PILOT~. AUCJU11C 1-4, 1"' .,
...
Surprise! WoTJQ 's cl.ieapest reslauran t 'sin Paris
If you can get to France. have
dinner and win e for 75 cents
87 SUIY PATrERSON
before &oin& to market on the rue des Martyrs;· swd
Spanish-born Ballestros as she prepared for dmncr
Age 76 and a lf\\Ddmother, ~be is the lSOlc worker -
chief cook. dlshwa het, manaaer and waatl'C'S -11 Qua
Miauel, perhaps the world's most famous "el cheapo"
eatery.
"l~m ootconcenttauni," shewd. e)eina t.be .. plats du
Jour" -COUS()OUS with mutton. chicken and nee, aruS
noodles in aravy.
resemble a Jumble sale was Mi ftnt G u1nneu ccrtlfica~
for qualifyiaa as F taOCle's lcut a~ve tts\lul'Mt. It wu
awarded m 19 1, the year M•SUCJ BaJJesuol died.
His plucky wido canicd oo alooe pct was ia\iled to
Spain in 1982 to appear on a televu1on I.how, her firlt Lime " ............... .....
PARIS (AP) -In a city of expensive restaurants,
C,asa Miauel is a phenomenon.
The propnetress 15 uny and b1rd-hke with sharp blue
eyes1 a froth ofwh1tc ha1rand a will of cast-iron btncath her
d1m1nutivc frame. .
A comer of the chaouc knchen ports 1evcnJ old
brooms. 8alltstros washes dishes in a cracked old basin
topped by a.n ancient water heater ...
"My daupter, ROSOi once belped, bul she's J()t a new
baby," said 8allcstros. She lives with Rose, a toereW)' a\ a
popular m-aazme. and her son-in-law in their flat near the
Oare du Nord.
back ict 43 yean. ,,,, •
"11\e thank.ina thms as slill n:wded,0 Jhe aid
cryptically, Jookina toward the dutina ~m. .
Outs1de, lhe molley'croWd pteUi.QI DotC$aal1llJl last month, the Oumness Book of Records rated it the
Western world's least expensive restaurant for its price of
five francs (about 75 cents) per meal
f:or the past five years, diners have paid this pittance
for a three~ourse menu, with wine and tip included.
At 48 rue St. Georges, about halfway between Pigalle
and the Opera, the little green-fronted restaurant has been
dispensing nearly-giveaway food and drink for 36 years.
''I do this for fun." she sai as he rushed back and
fonh between the closct-s1z kitchen and the dining
room. She was preparing stack.mg smatl plates of hof1 ·
d'oeuvres -tomato b s. fragments of lel\-over rabbit
head, rosy sausage slice from plasuc packets, plus chunks
of cheese and bruised s '
Ballcstros and her husband Maguel eules from SJ>'lln,
started the little restaurant in 1949 -after bavina lived in
Paris lOyean. Fervent Republicans, they Oed Baicelooa in
1939 at the time of the Spanish Civil War.
They held clencal. not cooking jobs. But when they
acquired a modest spot on the rue St. Gcories, they
decided to establish a restaurant that was soon frequented
by other Spanish refugees.
the door. Tbe oc~re-uerned wallpapef' an t.he din.1~
room has not ch for yean. Nor bu the Ltblc seM1p:
riabt tables with o· cloth and four sJaac$ each, a carafe of
water and bottle of nd table wine.
BallesttOS opened the door and held bcr around u
hunary clients poured in like faru beadina foT a ruabY
match. Some .,.eetcd her atnictionatdy u .. Manti.. or
It's not for the foie-gras and champagne set. But when
owner Maria Codino-Ballestros opens up at noon sharp
and again at 7 p.m. crowds are already lined up for the 32
available seats. They are jeans-dad students and tourists,
·and a few shabbily-clothed faithful patrons.
"1 don't make much money," s~ud BaUestros,
estimating her daily profit at 120 francs, or about S IO, a
day.
"No problem," !the said chccnly, shcmg the bread.
counting it as she put it in baskets. "I can live."
Granny. .
"Get your hors d'oc:uvrcs. Slt at tabl~ four each."
commanded lhc tiny lady with a humorous &leam ln her
eye.
"I begin my day at 6.30 a.m. when 1 get here to tidy up,
On the stove, several pots were starting to bubble
over. Judging from the streaks on 1he old gas stove. they
must have bubbled over many times before.
"Today, all nationalities come," said Ballcstros. She
doesn't speak English-onl¥ French, Spanish and Jtaltan
-but she is proud of the English and German tran$lattons
on ber tattered plastic menu.
Displayed Ul her kitchen-to-dining room passage that
"No more:• ~he said, pusb.ing the s~rs out when
the 32 seats bad been filled. "One ituna per meaJ. That's
the rule of the house."
Remembering
Will Rogers' wit
By GO.. BROYLES
~"'-•rttw
CLAREMORE, Okla. (AP) -It is
as though Will Rogers still saunters
down Claremore · sidewalks, bands
stuffed into pockets, adding to the
millions he befriended in a life ended
in an Alaska plane crash 50 years ago.
"He was a great band to visit up and
down the streets of Claremore,"
remembers John F. McOellan. 71 . "I
didn't know he was famous. I like to
never got that lhioup my bead."
McClellan is a volunteer host three
days a week at the Will Rogers
Memorial, a sprawling rancb-st).'le
building packed with memorabilia
from th~ cowboy humorist's several
careers.
Born to a prominent northeastern
Oklahoma family in 1879, the part·
Cherokee Rogers ("My ancestors
didn't com e over on the Mayflower
-they met the boat") resisted formal
education. -
Instead, he became a master roper.
Eventually, Rogers' lariat-twirling
act in cowboy garb made him a
Ziegtield Follies favorite. His comic
routines led to silent movie roles and
a move to California.
As bis fame spread, Rogers' home-
spun views of politics and popular
cplture made him an internationally
known columnist and radio commen-
tator. He played polo with the k.ing of
Spain and kidded presidents.
He told Herben Hoover, who had
presided over the stan of the De-
pression: "You were vr.ry un·
fonunate .... You just happened to be
the man who was left watching the
dam when the dam busted, and we
expected you would put the water
back."
. Upon being introduced to a dour
Calvin Coolidge, Rogers leaned for-
ward and said, "Pardon me. I d1dn·t
catch yo ur name."
The president smiled, and so did a
country battling hard umes.
Rogers never forgot his start as a
cowboy on the family ranch near
Oologah, Indian Territory. He booed
his country image of Oklahoma drawl
and crinkled, weatherbeaten face
with rumpled clothes, slapdash
~peech and intermittent punctuation.
-"Grammar ~and I get along like a
Russian and a bathtub," he said.
Rogers is buried here in a tomb
overlooking eastern Oklahoma h111
country. Inside the memorial, the
base of a bronze statue of Rogers
bears his best-known saying:
.. I never met a man I didn't hke:·
It is Rogers' universal appeal as a
vaudevillian, an actor who made 71
14ltll l.Jll)ll~S Ct~TJ..Y
Our Gal's Dept. First-Tim e
Summer ~
~Ji ~ ~ ~ 1otorr zsototo
Hurry! Tomorrow (Thursday)
is our Last Day.
Special career Hours For Gars Section Only
7 :ODam to 9:00prn.
Our Men's and Boy's Sections will be Open regular
store hours and all of their great merchandise
1s at regular pnce.
Newport Beacn • 44 Fashion lslaoo · 7'41644-5070
IM!stwood Village· 1001 \'tkstwood Blvd· 213/208 3273
Pasadena · 525 South Lake /we • 818/304 9333
~g. Ston:> Hours. Mon thru Fn. 10 to 9. Sat 10 to 6 a. Sun noon to S
THE
SALE
YOU'VE
BEEN WAITING FORlll
SALE
ST ARTS fllDAY AUi. tW •A•-•PM ALL SPRlllO & SUMMER -·
CLOTHlllO REDUCEDl
SAVE so~·
t ar) 1
w
~
< "' z
0
w en
Q
~
•
-' < z
.
Sports injuries decline
emergency rooms last year. Moped or m inibike accidents
are exceptions to safer trend
The nationwide estimaies arc based on mformation
collected by the National Electronic Injury Surveillance
System from a sample of hospitals that it considers
statistically representative of the nation. The system 15
WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans are injuring operated by the Consumer Product Safety Commiss1on.
themselves less often in many major sports and The system estimates the total number of 1njunes
recreational activities, new government statistics show. 10volved with each act1vtty ·
The number of bicycle-related injuries, for example, However, the system does not mclude a means of
declined by nearly 17,000 between 1982 and 1984. estimating the number of participants tn any sport. Thus.
accotding to figures collected from hospital emergency spons with more people talon& part may have more
rooms across the nation. injuries rcponed than a more dangerous acrtivity that has
Injuries associated wuh basketball, baseball and fewe=1·r~:;!~ncrally held second place m numbCrof football were also down -although basketball edged 10to -second place on the in•\lry last, replacing baseball. 1Djunes. foJlowmg bicycling, but in the-1914 r:ep<>A
'J basketbaJI was number two, recording an estimated There was a sharp increase in accidents with mopeds 440,293 injuries, down from 458,276 in 1982.
·and minibikes, -the statistics showed. During tbe same period, baseball-related injuries
Will Rogers Consumer Product Safety Commission Chairman dropped from an estimated 507,794 to 423,126.
Terrence M. Scanlon attributed the widespread decline 10 Football held its regular Spot as the fourth most
injuries to two major reasons -increased public common source of sports injuries with 390,267 last year,
films, a columnist and a satmst that awareness of hazards, and improvements to sports down from 432,656 m 1982.
made has death at age 55 a national equipment by manufacturers. The increasing popularity of three-wheel. all~temun
tragedy. Despite the injury decline. bicycling, which is widely vehicles and other trail and minibikes was reflected by I.
Rogers and fellow Oklahoman popular among all age groups. retained its position as tbe sharp jump in mjuncs associated with the system.'s
Wiley Post died' Aug. IS. 1935, when most common source of spons or recreational mjuries. moped-minibike category. That climbed from 75,136 tn
their seaplane, nose-heavy with resulting in an estimated 556,682 visits to hospital 1982 to 142,610 last year.
specially fitted pontoons, crashed an .----------------------------------------shallow water off Point Barrow,
Alaska. lt was an ironic end for two
men whose fervor for aviation helped
make commerc1al air travel routme.
ATTENnON, UNIDIW' CORDLF.SS TELEPHONE USERS.
Post. a barnstorming pilot from
Maysville, Okla .. twice made around-
the-world flights and set new altitude
records while weanng the pressurize~
suit he had invented The suit and his
airplane. the Winnie Mae, are at the
Smithsonian Institution. He was 37
You may be eligible for a free handset modification.
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UPHOLSTERY INC.
For The Rest of Your lift
Uniden announces a nationwide program
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Llniden is offering this free modification
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ringer so und level
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2333 E. Coast Hwy
Corona del Mar
Tues-Sat-I 0-6
If you own any ot the following Uniden•
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Best Wishes tro m :
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Dr. W. Ronald Redmond & Staff
Kristen Berg
Jeremy Gratzke
Patricla Grignon
Ricky Whipple
Stephanie Turley
John Armstrong
Nikki Garris
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Art Coleman
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Elizabeth Hunter
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181 AYenlCSI V.cjuete
Sen~
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Music.
(114) 412·2141
WOULD YOU LEAVE ME UNATTENDED? * Hav. you named a guardian fOf 'fOAR ~? '* Who Wiii m~ ffMtl tor your ~ren and grandehlldren1 * Do you know that. withoul a trust your ehlldr9n and gran<ScNldren mu1t btl
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Just listen to that incredible crunch. It's a prelude
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SILVEl{S w~ ...
3095 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa·
(Across from Fedco)
0
A.a Otlngt Coat DAILY PIL.OT /Wed~. Augutt 14, 1885
Can democracy
survive without
' P.R. folks ' aid?
It's a wonder democracy survived before there were
public relations people around to announce it&
preservation.
It seems these days you need a P.R. type to
accomplish anything, even to fight the impending
proliferation of oil wells off the Orange Coast.
Four Orange Coast cities -Huntington Beach,
Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and San Clemente -
along with the county have banded together to try to
dissuade federal officials from rolling back a mora-
torium and opening up 54 square miles off the coast for
oil and gas exploration and drilling.
The local officials are aghast at the "compromise"
cooked up by some members of the California
congressional dele$-8tion. ·
While they might agree with the Reagan adminis-
tration's policy of reducing U.S. dependence on
undependable (and expensive) foreign sources of oil,
they can't agree with a proposal that protects other parts
of California's coast at the expense of the scenic Orange
Coast. ,
They worry about unsightly wells discouraging
tourists from spending their dollars here, about the
odorous wells polluting clean coastal air and about ugly
spills fouling our waters and beaches and killing fish and
wildlife,.
They have reason to worry.
But they don't have reason to pay a public relations
firm thousands of dollars to handle the protest, as
Laguna Beach City Councilman Bob Gentry says they
must. According to Gentry, within the four cities
opposed to offshore drilling, and in the hallowed halls of
county government, there isn't one person -let alone
five committee members -to take on the task df
fighting the oil barons.
No, Mr. Gentry said that for Orange County to be
succes'sful, each city would have to d ole out $5,000
~ apiece, match it up the county's five grand and spend
$25.000 for outside help in coordinating the anti-oil
campaign.
It seems that in all of Orange County. where the best
and the brightest work and play, there aren't any people
-whether they be public-spirited ci tizens or paid
government workers -who are either willing or able to
do their share to stop further oil drilling off our shores. At
least that's what Mr. Gentry and the anti-oil coalition
would have us beheve.
They would tell you that public relations is vital to
this effort and that public opinion must be shaped and
mobilized. They would like you to think that the
professional city staffs to whom we pay professional
salaries la~k the expertise in these sorts of~. that a
P.R. agency will make the difference. ·
And if you swallow it, we've got a bridge we wilJ sell
you -for $25,000. .
Can you imagine our founding fathers sitting
around Philadelphia waiting for the media campaign to
st.art before beginning work on the Declaration of
Independence? .. Gee Benjamin, don't you think we
ought to hire a P.R. person to set up a press conference
a nnouncing this thing first?"
Certainly public opinion is crucial to any chances of
altenng the compromise and the public must be
informed at every step. But, just as certainly, there are
able, qualified and alreadi-well-paid city and county
employees available to do the job; the job they were hired
to do.
Given a choice between a gooey oil well and a
slippery public relations coordinator, we'll take C -
none of the above.
The anti-oil folks would have more support if they
weren't in such a hurry to grease palms with taxpayers'
scarce tax dollars.
No. we're not suggesting anything underhanded.
The good people of the Orange Coast elected good
people to represent them and look out after their best
interests. And that's exactly the point.
Taxpayers pay taxes to municipal governments
expecting to be served. From the mayor right down to the
guy whQ drives the street sweeper, we expect an ho nest
days1 work in service to the community: government by
the people, for the people ...
In matters of politics, we feel secure in expecting
members of the city council to draft policy that best
represents our mterestsand for the paid staff members of
the city to carry it out.
Dally Pilot welcomes
readers' comments
Th• Dally Piiot we~mea your comment• on luun of Jnt8feet to
our reader•.
Letters and longw ertk:Jee of com"*'tary mutt b4t 9iQned. Ttiiey
ahouJd be typed or ci.arty written and eent to: LITTD8. to ...
I DtTOR. DeMJ Piiot, ._ 1•, Coe.t8 ..... , 12121. P6NM tndUde
your addr ... and teter>hone number.
If you prefer, you may can your comment In ta our epecfat We.,. Uet•"'ne telephone numbet: e.u--. Pleae do not can In tong
tettera or artle ....
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
,,. Zlnl
fCll\or
Tom Telt
MINQll!t IOllOI' °°"'.., City f4'1or
Cr ... IMf'I
!tl)Otft flll!Ot
· • ... 6. 8 million Issues of the National Geographic, each weighing two
poupd , ~malled tosubscrJbers each month. Not one l~ue has been
thrdwn away since the publication began 100 years ago.
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
AlfNWBLL8 -cohunDJ•t
'Hive'
makes a
cause of
S. Africa
WASHINGTON -South Afnca
has provided the Hive with its
greatest rallying point since Vietnam.
What? You don't understand what I
mean by the Hive? I'd better explain.
Whittaker Chambers once wrote
that "soc1ahsm almost always enters
into coalition with communism,
dragg.sng along a whole fluttel'" of
people who arc not even as well-
dcfincd as socialists. These arc the
vaguely humane and progressive,
somewhat articulate as a rule, in-
We 're sunk unless we burn
old National Geographies
tellectually and politically rather gen-
derless people that perhaps every
civ1hzauon an collapse breeds as a
symptom of waste product.''
I mysclfhke to use the metaphor of
a beehive, in wtuch di~rent sons of
bees serve complementary funcuons
and cooperate by instinct. No bee has
to know how the whole hive's system
works in order to play its part. It
knows its fnends by sight. and the
whole hive sw~nns together against
common enemies.
Weight of hoarded
magazines may be
ticket into ocean ·-ANN
WELLS Have you ever thrown away a
National Geographic? I'll bet you
haven't.
Wh) would you., The articles arc
timeless. educational, and the photo·
graphs breathtaking. And someday
you are going to read every issue all
the way through.
So you put them on the coffee table
until after the next two issues amve
and then the old ones go into the den.
and finally to the garage or the alllc.
Do )OU realtze the potential damage
to the country you -and m1ll1ons of
other subscnbers lo this magaz.we -
arc causing.,
Sc1cnllst George H. Kaub made a
study ofth1 s s11ua11on and published
an article in 1975 in the Journal of
Irreproducible RcsuJts, the official
pubhcauon of the Society for Basic
Irreproducible Results.
According to has study 6.8 m1llton
issues of the National Geographic,
each weighin& two pounds, are mall·
ed to subscnbers each month. Not
one issue has been thrown away since
the publication began I 00 yea rs ago.
This article was published I 0 years
ago. Think how our population has
increased since then -as well as
L.M. Bovo
subscnpt1ons to the magazine. Each
year 120 million magazines are
mailed out.
Kaub's premise 1s that the coun·
lry's gcolog.ac substructure wall no
longer suppon the load; great faults
will appear, the continent wall sink
and will be innundated by the seas.
He quotes the earthquake act1v1t)
along the San Andreas Fault to back
up has theory The population con·
tinues to increase an Cahfom1a and.
subsequently, the subscriptions to the
National Geographic.
Has theory has been challc~ed by
another sc1e nttsl. Victor M1lstc1n.
who says the continent wall not sank.
Most of the populauon 1s located on
1he East and West Coasts and most of
the magazmcs arc delivered there
M1lstcm believes fhat JUl>t the 1wo
coasts wilt drop off and the center of
the U.S. will nsc.
You may. 1n an effort to vindicate
yourself. say that you do discard your
National Geographies. How and
where? Be honest. You take them to
th~ library. the hospital. give them to
a ne1V)lbor or the Goodwill -
wherever, they arc ne~er thrown
away. JUSt rcdistnbutcd.
If you can't bnnf yourself to throw
away the Nationa Gcogra{>h1e, you
probably hang on to The Smithsonian
too. It weighs almost as much and has
a yearly mailing of 24 million.
Something has to be done. I'm not
suggesting you cancel you r subscnp-
uon to either of these quality maga-
zines. You jusl have to steel yourself
to dispose of them properly.
At least four tames a year you must
bum the accumulation. Scatter the
ashes on the library grounds 1f that
will make you feel better. but get nd of
the ma~incs permanently. Canvas
your neighborhood to be sure no one
else as hoarding them. As a c1t1zen,
you must do your part to keep our
coasts firmly attached to the rest of
the country
The timetable for this catastrophe
-the entire population of the U.S.
living in the Midwest -ranges
(depending on which sc1cnlJst you
believe) from 3 billion to 25 billion
years from now. But that doesn't let
you off the hook. If )'OU thank you
don't care wha1 happens that far in
the future, remember -our
ancestors felt the same way only 200
million years ago.
We're depnvcd of the presence of
dinosaurs now because they didn't
consider them an endangered species.
The politically provess1vc Ha ve
incl udes communists. fellow
travelers, soc1ahsts, l\.berals. "moder·
ate" Republicans, campus act1v1Sts.
feminists, gay activists. civil nghts
workers, civil libertarians, anti-nuke
·types, and so forth. Somehow you
know, for all their surface d1vcrstty.
they're playing on the same team
And they dimly know too. They can
spot each other across a crowded
room. and they almost never attack
the Queen Bee an Moscow.
A tew of the bees have grown up
within the Communist Party. Other~.
the great majority. have had much
more nonnal backgrounds. Ma ybe
they were radicalized by Peter. Paul
and Mary 1n the '60s. or had the old
consciousness raised more reccntl>
by subscnbing to Rolling Stone
However 11 happened. they inhaled
the vapors of the progressive scns1-
b1hty somewhere along the line. and
today they tum up at the bag peace
marches. ant1·aparthe1d demon·
strations and gay rights rallies. For
every bee who adopted socialism as
an ideology, there must be a thousand
who were absorbed into 1t by a sort of
etiquette. Nobody ever told them that
communism was actually good; they
just gathered, subliminally, that anti·
communism, even if it doesn't lead to
Columal1t Ana Well• /lve1 La nuclear holocaust, is in -well. bad
La1uaa Nl1uel. taste. That's why Ronald Reagan, in
calling the Soviet Union an "evil
empire," was guilty of a "gaffe·· - a
social blunder. And as Samuel John·
~on observed, "Every man of cduca-
Even prisoners have stan dards uon would rather be called a scoun·
drcl than accused of deficiency an the
graces ..
Most of the bees in lhe Have aren't
working for Moscow. an> more than
the bees in one of nature's ha ves are
working ''for" their queen bee.
They're working for themselves.
Moscow merely serves as the hub of
the cntcrpnsc. whether the liberal. aay and feminist bees know 1t or not.
In England. a rock band st.aged a
benefit concen for pnsoncrs in
Northumberland"s Acton Jail. But
the pnsoners walked out to protest
the foul language.
The Central Amencan Indian typi-
cally goes by some common Spanish
name such as Juan. He doesn't
disclose his real native name. More
than a convcnien~ this. Jfknown by
stranacrs. his real name would gave
him away somehow. he fttls. He 1s
taught from the outset to preserve a
guarded anonymity "I am special,
but I will never let you know bowl am
special."
In some commun1ttes an the Hima-
layas until recent years. a wife to show
respect for her husband's guests
greeted them w1th her breasts bared.
Q What's the average annual
temperature worldwide'>
A. 58 degrees F
Dad Isa> Louisiana as the onl) state
that's getting larger'> Volcano watch·
ers in Hawan say that's. wrong,
wrong, wrong'
For instance, liberal bees arc sin·
ccrcly indignant about South Africa's
apartheid system. It never occurs to
L.M. Boyd J1 • 1yadlcated them that they could ~ct equally
colamaltt. indignant about ··~xtsm • in Saudi
Arabia. It's much more fun -much
more natural -to join the swarm in
front of the South Afncan Embassy
than to be a lone picketer at the Saudi
Embassy.
J It's as if(to chanfe the metaphor for
Teamsters Presser not _yet -~~g:~t~~4.~~~~~1~i
fl•n1•shed w1•th leg.al hassles lettuce boycott, or the~~ or El
Two senators skeptical of innocence.
while information suggests ties to FBI -
lntcmauonal Teamster President
Jackie Presser, a man ofamiablc bulk,
has escaped from another tiaht cor·
ner. For the second time the Just1oc
Ocpanment has closed an 1nvestip·
t1on ofh1m.
But ttle hamed Presser may find
himself in still anotbcrcomer. Two of
the Senate's most respected stalwana.
William Roth, R·Ocl.. and Sam
Nunn, D-Oa.. arc rtv1cwina the
Jusuce Oepanmcnt's action with a
skeptical eye
Prtuer presides over a union on
the cdie of ~ndal He solemnly
promi~ a Senate committee three
)Cars qo that he would clean at up
Instead he Ooundcred on the slippery
ilopcs and wound up in the \wamp
h1m1tlf
Labor Department 1nvcst1pton
probed charae\, first.. that he took
kickback• from a Las Yeps public
rtlauon, firm hired by t.be Tcamstm
and, Inter that he authorized pay-
menu to "aho't cmployect" 1nclud-
m1 h1\ uncle In both c~. the
Justice Department dcaded the
ev1dt-nct "'" 1n ufflOtnL
The mvcst1ptaons were dropped, a
source close to Prencr told our
associate Tony Capacc10. "because of
Jackie's basjc Innocence and good
lawyerina."
But a Los Anacles newspaper has
reported another startlina possibility:
that Presser may have been an
informant for the FBI, which may
have authonud him to pay "ahost
employees" from union funds in
order to mpliate himself WJlh
Cleveland mobsters.
In the kickback probe, 1n·
ve1t1pton interviewed two allqed
mobst~. Anthony L1benore and
Thomas Lanc1, who were Cleveland
•acnts for the Las Yeps public
rtlauont firm. Accord1na to an
internal 1nvut11111ve report,
L1benort told Labor Ocpanmcnt
1 n veslJ&I tors that .. J ackse Prester sets
a pi~ of evmh1na" romina to 1hem
from lhe pubhc rtlat1on1 firm
Our PttueT 10urcc dismissed the
alleaataon with an uplettve. "At that
lime 1n bu hfe." ht said. "Ltbtrtort
wat try1n1 to hu11 Jacloc:· Llbenore
and Lana were rac1n,conv1ct1on1 for
t.beu 1nvol~cm~nt "' a pnaland
J1c1
AllUSOI
and JOSf Ptt SPl AR
slayina and tht bnbery of an FBI
clerk.
Spec1fically, Ubenorc "advised"
the 1nvest1ptors that .. Thomas Lanci
pve h11 money to Jactie Presser.
Lanc1 told L1btrtort that he was
aeuina $2,000 per month and that ht
was k.ecpina S600 for h11 trouble and
a;v1na the ~lance ofS 1,400 to Jackie
Presser ...
Meanwhile, the PrcJ1dent's Com·
mi ion on Orpnized Cnme 11
investiptina chars« raised by Rob-
e11 R11po. a defcndant-tumed-aov·
emment ..-itncu. Thouah he ha1
sjvcn numcrou' intervic"-'S and has
te-suficd in open coun. R1spo ncaJcct-
cd to mentJon the story he is now
tclhna. that he once dchvertd a cash·
filled envtlope to PrtsKr
Footnote: Preucr not only has
denied any wrona.cto1na but ha.s
boutcd that he has ncwrcomm1ttw
amme
J•d Aa4ft'fM aH J.,,,. Spur
ar 1194lc:-•til col•m•l1u.
Salvador. (You can bet It won't be
Afahanistan: Note the Moscow post-
mark.) Every member gets the ap-
propnate slopns. bumper stickers,
playint cards and inmuctions.
The Soviets have cynical stratCIJC
reasons for beina interested m South
Africa, whereas the liberals are
altoaethcr moralistic. Nevenhelcss.
the Soviets and the liberals work
toaethcr, in popular fronts and broad
coalttions. You miaht think the
Soviet Union itself would be objec·
tionablc, on liberal moral pnnciplc .
But the liberals have an answer for
this: The Soviet Union is a "reality,"
which "we have to learn to Jive with."
Maybe "we don't like it," but when it
comes to a "reality" -as distinct
from. say. South Africa -our moral disapproval ts in'Clcvant. _
The Hive is adept at selea~ve
moraUsm and the concomitant
suspcns.aon of moral judtment. In all
the liberal press'1 discussion of Al DSs.
have you accn a sinaJe word OT
dmpproval of homosuu.l acu?
Heavcn forbid! That would be "juda·
mcn"-1" And .. judamcntaJ" IS on.co(
the Hive's most seve~ly ~udamental
word We mustn't 'be Judatncntal
toward bomotuu.ltty, or ~m·
mun11m. 0.d wtc, you know. Of
course 1l'10lt~ bcjudamcntaJ about
uth Africa 'fl\lt'a called .. pcakin1
out." and It 1ho nctllcnt &a\le
--T
(
E111ployers now bring
exercise to workplace
Office aerobics reduces health costs,
absenteeism & increases productivity
BJ EVE C. LASH
Delly Net Cetl"l ltl 1 •nt
Many Amencans put off aerobic
Qerc1sc. Excuses mount for reasons
not to ao the gym or not to JOm a &Y"'·
But, all that may change. For many
people, the dilemma of having to
dnve to to a health club, change.
workout, shower, dress and drive
home has been ehmmated entar~ly.
Employers are bnngmg the workout
to the workplace.
Company fitness as no lonJer
merely confined to the executive
club. More and more corporations are
offering free or low-cost aerobic
sessions at the office. Employees are
now working out an company
cafeterias, lounges, conference
rooms, auditoriums and even
hallways if need be.
One company taking advantage of
the idea 1s Union Bank with 19
branch offices throu&hout Cahfom1a.
Bank Vice President and Senior
Operations Officer Carole McK.mney
of the Irv ine branch says the concept
has worked very well.
"Each office has the opponunny to
pan1c1pate.'' At the Irvine sate ap-
proximately 16 men and women take
pan in a one hour routine offered
twice a week after work b) Office
Aerobic Services. Inc (OAS) of Los
Angeles
bacs, cool-down and relaxation C\·
erc1ses.
Bankmg executives. tellers and
administrative personnel replace
their suits and ues or dresses for
leotards or shorts every Tuesday and
Thursday evenini.
Actording to OAS president. foun-
der. dancer and fitness expen Ruth
Prodan, corporations arc ofenng
fitness programs an order to keep
escalating health insurance costs
down, reduce absenteeism and in-
crease productivity.
She cites a recent presentation
made at the United States Council on
Wage and Price Stability heanngs on
health care costs. "Dr. R. Keelor
notes that the introduction of an
em ployee fitness program by
Goodyear an Norrkoping, Sweden,
caused a decrease in absenteasm of
nearly 50 percent.
"And. according to the President's
Council on Physical Fitness and
Spons. 'pbys1cally fit cmployec!I arc
directly related to higher production.
pos1uve problem solving, cooper-
ation. creative thi'nkmg and reduced
absenteeism.'·" j
She says. ''These results ma} be
exceptional but even a modest reduc·
uon would yield very substantial
savings. Absenteeism an thee~ecu11' e
branch of the government alone costs
Sl.34 balhon and accounts for 25
mil hon lost workdays evef) year ..
employee loyalty, improved em-
ployee morale and greater recruit-
ment incentives.
Approximately 100 other com-
panies arc taklna advantaae of the
fitness proaram offered by OAS. They
include Columbia Savmp, Irvine,
First Interstate Bank ef Costa Mesa,
Bectel, National Medical Enterpnses;
Rapid Tranm Distnet, Transamenca
Insurance Co.. Geity Oil Co.,
Wmston Tire Co. and the LosAnaeles
Police Depanment.
McKinney says the bank offers the
fitness proaram as a fnnge benefit.
"People really do enJOY it. They
consider It one of the benefits of
worlung here. And I love tt. lt relaxes
me and I'm forced mto exercisms. I
know every Tuesday and Thurs4ay
I'm going to workout. I do feel bener,
I eat less and stay on a diet better. We
are very pleased with the Office
Aerobics instructors. They vary the
music and rouune and we have a lot
of fun."
Prodan, a former dancer, has
appeared in such films as "Saturnday
Night Never" and "All That Jazi".
f
Oranoe Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedn.dey, Augu8t 14, 198& ••
The "pretty rigorous" workout
consists of a warm-up. stretch. aero-
She says other benefits include
\fewer disabaht} claims. im proved
OAS ts a Los Angeles based
Employee Fitness and Wellness
Company dedicated to improving the
health, well-being and productivity of
office workers. Serving numerous
Fonune 500 firms as well as smaller
corporations. OAS provides aerobic
e'\erc1se instrucuon 1a1lor4d to meet
the needs of aill employees at a cost of
approximately $50 a session. OAS
serves 60 corporated clients at ap-
proximately 100 locations through-
out the state of.California For more
1nformat1on call ( 213) 208-8607
cwr
Pam Spence lead.a an aeroblca clau for employee. of Union Bank in lrrine.
Friends go Helping women climb corporate ladder
all out for
wedding party
)'·ALL COME' Often. second wed-
dings are small and pnvate. But that
was not the case when Barbara
Stewan was mamed to Terr) O'Neil
at the Newport Beach (Dover Shores)
home of their long-ume friend'i .
Horace and Beverly (Thompson)
Coal.
BETTY
PORTER
while husband "Ho" ga ve the bride
awa}.
HEARTS & FLOWERS. The C.01ls
rolled out whne carpets (after rolling
oul most of the home's furniture) for
1he wedding of a lOUple the' in·
1roduced 1hree years ago.
They stretched white tan\ a!>
canopies (covered \I.Ith whne light\.
··Barbara in vited 300 of her pink bows and hundreds of whale
·nearest and dearest" friends and . "P.S. I Love You!" balloons) from the
society wraters from local news-curb, across a courtyard 10 the front
papers." said Thompson-Coal who door.
served as Stewan·s matron of honor (Pleaae aee WALK/AlO)
PAPARAZZI
.\re you a woman who is determined to climb a mostly-male corporal('
ladder., Everything you've heard as true There are trick\ )OU can learn to
mall1m1ze your chances.
The shclvesofevef) bookstore and hbral) are \tocked \I.Ith' olumes ol
advice Some of it can be very valuable. Fore\ample "Hov. to Go 10 Work
When Your Husband as .\gainst It. Your Children .\ren't Old f nough and
There's Nothing You Want to Do An>wa> ·· ( 1mon &. '>chu~ter 19721 This 1s
the llllc ofa real book v.1th good ideas for real women
"Games Mother Never Taught You." CRav.<,on I 977)outhne~
management problems which ma) indeed be unique to v.omen and then offer<;
strategics for solving them.
I agree with 'llll the adv ace-givers \I.ho encourage ad1' e listening. Keep
'our ears open as well as youre)es man e'\e1.:utl\e~ol both se"<e., knov. that
\ef' pov.erful people can bequ1e1 an their mo\e'i
I applaud the idea that being poised for succe~-, 1 mpht''i \UrrounJ1ng
oneself with power people Leaming from av. inner ha\alv.a,., heen good
ad' ice for men as well as women
I champion the process of creative problem-'>o h 1ng-and 1ha1 mean~
ask mg bas1cqucs11ons Wh ) arc we here? Whal s1eps ~an our team tal.e to help
1 reach company goals" Is 1here }Ct another ~trateg\. v.e ma\ not ha\ e
con'i1dered.
Woman. i an attempt to prove compctem.t• an: mor\.' hkel\ than their male
colleagues to accept an am po5s1ble work
load
Suppose '.1-'0u're asked b> your bos~ to
doaJob wnh an 1mposs1ble deadline
\'. ould }OU sa)
.\.Sure. I can do 1t
B Nowa}.l'mgo1ng1ogocrazy.,...llh
all the work you've al read} loaded on me
C. l need add1t1onal resources before
I can accept this assignment.
D. What you're asking Sttms un·
reasonable Can you talk about 1t"
LHIDA
At.w1
Both (eland Cd l art' assertave ans\\.ers - the best ansv.er 1'\ 1dlJust beau~
11 sounds nicer. Yeftoo man> women ""ould choose (a).
\'.omen ofte~t stuck an mad-management positions be a use the' allov.
themselves to become the com pan) dumping grounds
Leaman~ how to sa) NO. means 1ncrea~d pov.er
Sometimes management training book\ for v.omen m1'>S 1hc1r mark
Dr. Al&atl Is a marriage & family therapist ill Corona del Mar.She
welcomes your responses. If you wt1b •reply, pleaJe enclose a stamped, self·
addreued envelope. Write to Linda Algui. Pb D . c o Daily Pilot. P o. Box
1560, Costa Mesa, 9t6%6.
250 friends help pay tribute to Harriette Witmer
Costa Mesa businesswoman
praised for community sevice
By VIDA DEAN 0..,,........, .. 1..._•
.. There are two women in the world that l reall}
admire," said Sandy Ventura WbJtman. "The) are
Kathryn Hepburn and Harriette Witmer."
"No one has m ore heart than Hamette." said
Pe11Y Sbedd, former neighbor.
"She almost single handedly raised $31/2 million to
build SCR. You're all heart. Hamette," said Judge Don
Smallwood.
.. She's the finest business woman I've ever come
across," said Banker Lance Blue.
"We love you m1ght1ly, Harriette," said Martin
Benton of SCR.
Words oflove and praise were heaped on Hamette
Witmer Thursday evening at the Westin South Coast
Plaza as more than 250 gathered to see her presented
with the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce's '85
Heart Award.
Repeated "Oh, mys" were uttered by the honoree
all evening as roasters and toasters from her business.
social and community service world had their say.
Jue and Paal Breebt, vacattonmg in Europe. sent
a basket of orchids that decorated the head table, and a
letter referrina to Hamette as "the lady with the bi&
heart".
Praldent Rea1an and Gov. Deakmejlu sent
letters of cona.ratulations and Supervisor Tom Riley
sent a aold card makina the 30-year Orange County
resident and honored citizen.
Then, there were the jesters ... Barbara Gradf,
kidding about trips to New York and visits to an exotic
baker). presented her with twin cakes (eat }our hean
out. Doll> Parton). and actor~ from SCR Richard
Doyle and Art Koustik with a roa~ting skit staned b)
Jerry Patch and poem
Witmer of Corona del Mar. chamnan of the board
and CEO of Deepwater. Inc.Costa Mesa. seemed to be
enjoying thoroughly the evening often getting in her
response lO the guests' comments.
Earlier dunng the cocktail hour. W11mer (weanng
a white stlk dress splashed with blue. ~old and green)
said "I've known about this for some ume. but I kno"
they have a lot of surpnscs There has been a lot of
wh1spcnng going on in the office."
Two of those surprises were g1ant-s1zed checks for
St .000 each presented by the chamber 10 Harriette's
name to SCR (accepted by David Emmes) and
Orangewood (accepted by Bill Stelner) "She kicked off
the campaign to build Orangewood wtth the first
donation. The ded1cat1on is set for Oct. 17." ~1d
Steiner.
For dinner. guests were seated at pink and lace
covered tables centered wtth mult1colored flowers
where they were served a veal and beef dinner-topJXd
off with heart -a chocolate hean-shaped one filled
with white chocolate mousse and garnished with
raspbemes.
Beside each plate was a program hsung all of the
organizations to which Witmer has given her time and
"hean", and the numerous awards she has been gi ven.
"The pnnt 1s so small you can hard I> read at." said
Marlune Rodrt1aea, VP of administration at Deep-
Jlm Benwood and Bob Secldelmeyer, left photo, helped plan •roaat'. Hamilton andJla.ren
Catlin were amonc tribute pa yen.
v..ater .. I guess 11 had to~ ~mall or the~ v..ould not h~' t:
been ahk to get them all on one page ·
hanng the C\enana "1th \.\ 1tmer "ere ht'.r '~m~
Jim (president of Decp.,...ater) and h1~ "1fe Annette.
Rlcbard and wife Gall anJ Jack.
Other) were Marian and Gartb Bergeson, Leab
Marshall, Fred Sonabal (cmc«). Arlene Scbafer
{cha1rmnn), Pe11Y Relaert, Doo B1tt1 (Cott' pres1-
.
dl·nt 1 baron jnJ Jim Henwood, Bob eddelme)tr.
Ken fo"ler. Diane anl1 "t ruer El<.'btr, Jim Cooper,
Ka) Browt1, Hf'dda and tev~ Marosl, Walter and
Pb) Ills Pavlos. Trudy Brackea, Jobo Robinson, Pegc
and Millon bedd Jnd Frank and Bob Gard.Der
( ostJ \k'i3 l~lalkd the( 1t\ of the .\ns It should
be ~hnstened a-, the ( 11' of the Heart\· ~1d \.\ 1tmcr as
she thanked the gut'sts
heel Sonabal, left, a Doti Battll wttb tbetronoree. DaYlcl Emm•. center photo. Barban Otady, John Robln.-on a Lealle Emma arrtn. Tile Wltm
AlO Orange Coal DAil. Y PILOT /Wed~, August 14, 1985
WALK IN THE SUN •••
homA8
Whitr·ltnen draped lable!.. copped
by whuc umbrcll (lhe unden.1d~ of
which were ..:ovcrtd w1lh while
bl mma maanolta branches and
-for aroma whuc prdcnias)
dotted the front pauo and marched
around a swimming pool (wub float· ina candle and wuter hhc ) in a rear
prden overlooking the Sack Bay
Addina to this romantic settina wc«-
tbousands of fhckenna votive can-
dles and stnng upon stnng of white
"twankhng" ltghcs. (All decor was by
Jcrrol Chne of Chris L1nd!>ey
F1onsu.)
SCARLETT 6 RHETT. "The wed-
dtn& was shade of 'Gone Wuh The
Wind'." reported Thompson-Coil,
"the bndc wore a hoop-slurtcd ofT-
wh1te organdy dress, tnmmcd with
organdy leaves on nbbon streamers,
and a three-foot-wide organdy hat"
She earned a bouquet of cascading
white gardenias. pnmroses and lily of
the valley and around her shoulders
she wore a huge lei of whue Hawa11an
orchids
The bnde's attendants wore "Gone
With .. .'' aowns and hub 1n mauve,
pink and lavendar.
The grpom was a Rhett Butler look-
alike in a pale-gray (made an London)
tuxedo wt th ascot and tail~. (Ben
Harris was ~st man.)
DA·DA·DE-DA. Scotlic McKa}
Disco provided 1he mu.sic. rncluding
a recordma of wedding music by the
Morman Tabernacle C'hotr
SB.ADES OF IRELAND~ The arch.
under which the couple were mamed
by Judge Mark Soden was covered
wi1h curly willow, roses, gardenias
and tock turned upstde down to re~mble wistena. The Judae con·
eluded the O'Nc1l's ceremon>-wuh an
l nsh prayer ...
"SOUL" FOOD! Wtucc canvas
umbrellas-rcach1'.'$·lhe-<e1hna (the
undersides of which were covered
with flowers and hanail'l8 candles)
centered two JS-foot buffet tables qf
"plantation" food, including barons
o fbeef strved by white-capped chefs.
Twenty-four wcddinJ cheese cakes,
displayed on cascadinJ crystal fish-
bowls filled with floatina white aar-
denias and water lilies, were served by
26 white--jacketed waiters. (Whatever
would Scarlett O'Hara have thought
of cheese cakes shipocd nol from
Atlanta but New York!f-
"lt was a 'bubbly" weddtng (shade
o f Lawrence Welle?)," re~rtcd the
fun.-lovina Thompson..Coal who re-
ferred not only to the cases of
champagne but to "speaaJ mactunes
(in fountains and poois) which
produced millions of bubbles "1ha1
i.oarcd upward and drifted inco the
moonlit Back Bay."
Among the guest were Pilar
Wayne, Dick and Joan Stevens.
Roger and Sassy Luby and Barbara
Hams (wife of the ~st man).
A few days later. the bnde and
groom departed for a European
honeymoon. with (arc you ready for
1h1s?) Ho and Beverly C'otl!
"We'll ~JCtllng off for a v1s1t with
Prince Ranier and Princess Caroline
a1 the Palace of Monaco" confided
Thompson-Coil, "but the rest of the
lrip 1s a secrel.... ·
Suffice tt 10 say 1ha1 they were
"Gone With The Wind."
UIXIJltY THfATltfS
WALK· INS * ~':,'( ·li1.frti~1SJi,::f *
CITYCEnTEA Q
SUMllElt ltDITAL (N) SHOWS AT 12.00 2,00
4•006 00100&.10 0 0
134zm 1 uo1 ) OAANGl I Mt11opolrt1'!
ltEAL GUtUS (N) SHOWS AT t :35 3:40 1:4S 7 so .. t :SS
LT. T... ,.ltl8HT NIGHT Cll) btnTwvwbM (PG) AT l :40 &. 7 :55 /Rambo SHOWS AT 12 45 Patt 2 l"l AT t :40
J ·OO S ·U 7:30 a. t 45 S:SS & IO·I O
GJtUIJ;ijjhU •r•iutj 6 l 6l4s!~~~:.·,~~
NS WE&'S... wtlllD SCllDMZ A4vw_,. (118) AT (N-laa SHOWS AT
12:00 2 :00 4 :00 · 1:35 3 :40 S:SS
&·OO 1 100 &. IO·OO I OS & 10:15
N1tlonal 1..ampoon's RUlt~ VAC.ATION ~1S) 1 40 l :.U 1 :50
10; 10 /$neak •l I 00 PM
SIL.VEaADO ~-1S) II l02;t5S:l>07:4S .. to 30 In 70MM
aAClt TO TH£ Wilt Dlslll}'~I at.ACK
trUTUltll IPQ) 1 IO CAUL.DllON ~) J lO 5 ·50 I 10 & 10 JO 12 00 I SS l SO S ·4 S 7 lS t .25 I 70MM
Wl!lltDSC~ (P0-1SI Plu1 ellc:k
Cauldron (PG)
ltEAL ~NIUS (PG)
Plul Co·H lt
Suportlrl (PGI
llADMAX ...... T• fl fl-(1118-1• Rambo Fl"t •1ood Part 2 IRI
,.LiTCH (PG)
Plus Co·Hlt
Bowerty Hiiis Cop (RI
DRIVE INS Open 8 00 Wkd1vs 17 30 Wkends I Under 12 FrH Unlm Noted
DO YOU HAVE
HYPERTENSION?
We are investigating
a new medication shown
to be effective in
treating hypertension.
Participation in this
study includes M.D. Supervision,
lab testing, E.K.G.s, ·medications,
and is free to all participants.
For more information Call After 2 PM
640-7412
The doqr w,r, .tlw<1y·, upP11
uni 11 •,lie .ic,kp(j for It 1e kf y
. . .. ·f .
. .
Cable TV a 'purveyor of trash'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Cable
TV came to our city several months
••o· My husband and I weredehghted
with the prospect of seeina some
unusually fine entertainment that
had been denied us before.
Th1rtyday1ofcablc had us teanng
o urhauout. We would 001 have
believed such filth could be trans-
mitted into the homes of decent
people. Wccancelt:d our subscription
but through some fluke we still get 1hc
channel.
What sickens us is that our chil-
dren, 8, 12 and 14, can see the most
explicit sex scenes by merely flipping
the dial. It ts nol possible to stay at
home every night a nd pohcc their
viewing.
We have discussed this problem
with friends who are as Olfra&ed as we
are. They claim nothing can be done
because the First Amendment
protects these purveyors of trash. Can
thisbetruc?Pleasercply. Wearc-
EVERY PAR ENT. USA
"
A11
luDERS
DEAR USA: Tbl1 uted to be &ne,
bat ao loa1er. Coa1rea1 pa11ed &lie
Cable Commllllicatloa1 Polley Ac t of
lHf, wbJcb 1peclficaJly pro11Jblt1
cableca1tlll1 of ob1ceae pro1ram1.
Write to Attonaey Ge-.eral Edwlo
Meese ID. Department of Juatice,
Coa1tJt1tloaAve.& lOtll St., N.W.,
W11blllpD, D.C. HUO. Complain
aboat tlle 1arba1e tbat 11 being
damped Into yoar Uvta1 room and a1k
llJm to'la1tract tbe United States
attontey1 all over tbe country to
rtlldly enforce tbe law.
~ oa can al10 encoura1e tbe parents
lo yoar ael11tborbood, PT A, cbarcb
"Enjoy! Until further notice,
your as,ggnment is to see
'Real Genius'."
-Gen~ ~lsktt, CHICAGO TRIBL ~f.
llUUA'W COITA•IA llUlmllOTOll ~ OflAltO( 1·1 r.ill:Et OIWIGE
UAloloYlllS UAClnemas EdwMllS~ City C4nter ·~s.....110... SUOium llnvll In
~"981 S4G.Q5e4 ClntfN 840388 634 2M3 IWflU'W 6)9,8no
COITAMEIA EL TOllO lflVltl( WUTWITUI l'lcil'lc s 8uella
[C!#iro1 Mt$I EOW110s~ [dw¥05 UMmtlY UA Mii 893-0646 PiflO Or111t In 821 ~
~~ 581 5880 8SUSll ~-...c-...-... -1
ALL-DAY KINDERGARTEN
Kindergarten thru 8th grade.
• Door·to--door transportation avalab61
• ltt1sonable twtlon
• Artthmttic, R11clnf, Spelnr < wtth Phonics> '"""m•d
• Befort 1nd aftlf school cart for
studtnt1 of wortlnr parents
• Daly pray11
• Good~
EDINGER AVE.
An
Elementary
Private School
of
IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY:
16835 Brookhurst St. (N. of Warner)
Dis tine hon
Founded
'" 1942
714-962-3312
Call or Writ e. for f urther Information WARNER AVE.
THE
IJ'OllPI. ec.c .• to IMlmbard Ille cable
compu)' wl" com.Plallt1. Th cable
comp&Dlel an motlvaaed by profit. If
complalata ucl cueellalloa• bep 10
pou 18, &hy wlD ckaa •P &llelr act. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently
l became involved in adjscussion
with fricndsasto whether it was in
good taste to tell a person about some
minor imperfection in his or her
appearance.
Foreumplc, what ifa woman has
lipstick (or spinach) on her teeth? Or
ifa man's fl y is open? How about
pointin,out an unsJ&htJy spo1 on a
woman s blouse or a man's necktie?
Wbatdoyousay,Ann?-SPLIT
DEClSION IN CINCrNNA T l
DEAR SPUT: I wollcl certahaJy
appreciate bel81 told lf It.ad UpsUcl
or 1plaadl OD m)' teella. Aad I CUDOI
lmacine a mu wlle woald Dot wua to
be told tr.at 1111fly11 opeD. (Better die
new11uald come from uodler
male. bowever.)
Polat1J11oat1pot1 oa bloue1 ud
tlet 11 ... DO, ~1 CHM tmbl.rrat•
mut aboat aomedl1D1 daa& CUDOI be
remedied! • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I Just
learned that my wonderfUl physician
isa drugaddictand cannot practice
until he is rehabilitated. To say l am
shocked is putting it mildly. How
docs such a thing ~appcn? Please
explain. -UNDONE IN DETRn JT
DEAR DETROIT: Too many doc·
&on treat tllem1elvet. Slace tlley CID
write oat preacrlptlona It 11 very euy
to "overprescrlbe.'•
Tbe llfe of a plty1lcla.a CID be
extremely 1t.retdaJ. ID ID effort to
cope, too muy play1klu1 leu OD
alcohol, plU1 ud coat.rolled
aub1taaces. Before tlley know It tbey
are la troable. Happily, plty1lclu1
are poUcla1 tllelr owa a lot better
tllu tlley ued to. There are now 1elf·
belp group• for dJubled plly1lcl1D1
and tbey do a terrific job.
Mr. and Mn. Palermo
After a wedding tnp to Puerto
Vallarta and Europe, the couple are
res1den1s of Costa Mesa.
GE RADO-LOVELESS
Huntington Beach residents
Danielle Loveless and Anthony
Gerard Gerardo exchanged wcddi ng
vows in Mammoth Lakes on July 27.
Thirty-five guests attended a reccp-
11on ac Tamarack Lodge following the
ceremony.
James R. Loveless and Liliana
Loveless. both of Huntington Beach, f
arc che parents of the bndc. Her
hu~nd 1s the son of Mr. and Mrs
Prank Lopez Gerardo.
After a wedding tnp to Cancun.
Mexico, the couple are residents of
Huntington Beach.
Submit your wedding news
To help you submlf the requu-ed weddmg and engagement informa11on.
forms are available at the Daily Pilot oflice. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa .
For weddings, quality photos of the bndal coup/.: or bnde only an.·
accept.able.
£nga$ement i nformation must be submm ed st least seven weeks pnor to
the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped off at the office or mailed to the
Wedding Department, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626.
It's all
in the name
of science.
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Original ·'White Ari-ow'
hits bullseye in Newport
The aood news for 1hcateraocn 11
that Kent Johnson'• oriainal muttcal
"The White Arrow," is a rouaina su~j the bid news is that it's only
1n re11ocnce for two more weekends
at the Newport Theater Arts Center.
Johnson, who's been d1rectina mu •
sicals for probably more years than he
caret to remember, finally has written
one of bis own -or "adap1ed" mlJtit
be the better word, since h11 subJect
matter Robin Hood, bas ~n
around for a few centuries.
Johnson and composer-musical
director Tim Nelson have taken the
bare bones of 1he Sherwood Forest
leacnd and fleshed them our with a
Toi
TITUS
musical score that fits the story like a
velvet glove. h's 1n the midst of a
three-week shakedown cruise 1n New-
port, and hopefully will be headed
elsewhere afterward since it's a show
that deserves Orange County's atten-tion.
Geor•e Champion and Tricia Griffin •tar lD "The White
Arrow•• at the Newport Theater Arta Center.
The score 1s somewhat derivative
-a little "Camelot" here, a little
"Man of La Mancha" there, ilnd one
threesome comedy number that's
straight out of "Once Upon a Mat-
tress." But it's the nght stuff at the
nght moment for tne show, and
bolsters the acuon admirably, par-Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 ucularly the "merry men" numbers b I d I cd b h I p.m. and Sundays at 2.30, but 1f
the cast and aud1encc .... call 995-411 3
for details .... ~~o~~.y e iver Y t e strong ma e there's any just.Jee this arrow will find
"The While Arrow" is presented on another target and a wider audience.
as full a scale as any traditional Call 631-0288 for ticket mformat1on,
musical with a sizeable cast of 23 to the event it's not already sold out
CALLBOARD -South Coast Mu·
s1cal Theater will bold auditions for
Its fall season Monday and Wednes-
day in the dance room of Un1 vers1ty
High School, on Campus Dnve at
Culver Road in lrvme .... actors. sing-
ers and dancers arc needed for the
group's oroductaons of ··oracula· A
Musical?" and "Cinderella," as well
as a pops concen .... more information
1s available at 640-6306 ....
performers and a s1x-p1ece orchestra BACKSTAGE -The Westminster
tucked away bchmd the back curtato. Communit)' Theater wlll present a
ChoreOJraphy (by Kysa Cobb) and readers' theater production of the
costumtog (by Sandee Strand Kerr) comedy-drama "Vanities" Saturday
arc both first rate , and the production at 8 p.m. to the theater. 7272 Maple
could command attention in an St., Wcstmmstcr .... the reading will be
auditorium twice as large as its followed by a discussion penod with
current home. fiiiiiiiiiii;;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~==========::::.iiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiO;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Castin& 1s splendidly ac-
complished, with most of the princi-
pals veterans of many a Kent Johnson
show. One exception 1s George
Champion in the central role of
Robin Hood, but he plays the charac-
ter as thouah born to It with a
convincinJ mixture of s~er and
vulnerability. HJS poi~nt solo,
"Rainbow of Has Love,' suna while
in pnson, conveys a hauntina sense of
impcndiOJ doom and his love scenes
with Manan -beautifully played
and suna by Tric1a Gnffin -are a cut
above the normal musical theater
standard• for reahsm.
'THE STORY Of A REBEL
AND HIS BaKE.
PEE·WEE HERMAN .. "
·p1E-WflJ
tlG
#Vl~TUll
rac..•~Uallu. ...... ,,.. 'llltrr.l(At•o.t :()Ill••,, ... ...._ .... -......... .__ .... 9'J 11111
SlAIUIDl.fl MIC f AMOll SQUMI ,.,mt (ZIJ) Ul-003 _., ... -""' UM, .. DI.fl lD'lllMOS WI.JO
121-4t70 r..•JO.mO ..... , ... ..... 1 ......
UA MIM[S I lD'lllMOI~ .,, .. ", IM-tHO
John L Mof1'no hams it up
notously as t.he puanacious Fnar
Tuck, while Steve Sloan renders a
flashy Will Scarlet and youna Jeffrey
Holland enacts a tenacious miller
(known here as Midae rather than
Mutch). Tim Johnson sets a poetic
tone as the narrator-character Alan-a-
Oale and Mary Sullivan Slack has
some wonderfully comic moments as
Marlan'1 maid1 panicularlxarompof ---NO PLAYING --
a duet with Moreno called 'Good Old ~:.;:,:m ~=.~ _..., =::,~ .....
...,._
lD'lllMOS TO'lllW coon 111 .. 1 ...
.....
CllDOlll
t-J4·lllJ
Fashioned Chivalry." eu-. "' oee. f.11.tno
Th '11-l f h • COITA MllA LAGUNA HACI! "'"JUAN e vt ... ny o t e piece 11 con-~o-e.-'-•"""c-c.."""•llO veyed with relish -not to mention a ,,...," '" '"' '11c111C111o-
• I~ TOllO OUllOI °""'"'" ~ ... little mu1tard and ketchup -10 the 1-•...._• ~°"""'IN au, ...... 1killed hands of Jeffrey Schlichter 11 .. ,.._ 111~ '"'"'" 1
eA,.O«ltttflOYI OllA ... I ~IMI the malevolent, &)assy eyed Prince l-•·-• ..-~c-. wu ' .. '"'""
•Tiii *IUTW1U
IDWMOS ll TOIO lD'lllMOICIDIA
stl·HOO •ST llMU5
John and Mitchell Nunn a1 the ••..o "" .. ,1111:-~ ....... ~:;""..,GM
forest'• prime evil, the Sheriff of l~-;~~-~~§~~~~s~m~~!~~CitJ~Q~~ Nottin&ham. Gifted comedienne P.1A."IFIC W'•LK INTHE A.TR'rS * M~ Murphy ha1 a riotous cameo as "'-" -"' 11:: ~. ~m~:fn~1~7 ~~t,~~·~d ~~-?.~a ~o~~=~~!.~ ~~I~~ '=~-=:=v * man, LutJe John.
Elsewhere in a cast bnmmina wt th
depth, Scott Ratner contnbutes a fine
bit of physical comedy as the Tinker
and youna Erik Contreras does an admirable JOb as the younpter who
spies on the palace. Pattric Walkerisa
punt presence as the old IYJ>SY
woman, while Cammy Greenfield
punctuates her scenes with eanhy
sexuality as the dancer with desians
on Robin.
Nelson's musical score 1s, in a
word, outatandlna. The numbers arc
well balanced, hi&hly literate and
vinually perfect for their place in the
action. Amo~f.~~e more memorable . are the rolli · "The Miller, 1he.
Friar and Scarlet' (borrowed, at least
fo tone. from "The King, the lest.er
and Me" in "Mattress"), followed in
stark contrast by Schhcbter's omin-
ously avaracious "A Loon 1s Cryina."
Pan1cularly deh&htful 11 the "Bn&ht-
en Your Day" seament with Murphy
and the palace maids moppma up on
the comedy.
The numbera are bolstered by an
excellent, unseen orchestra -fcatur-
ina the throbbina percussion work of
Bob Ferrera -which steeps the
entire show an profe sionalism. Play-
aoen withou1 such forcknowledae
would find It well naah imposa1ble lo
believe that the production ta a home-
arown elf on. Two more weekends remain for
"The White Arrow" at the Theater
Aru Center, 2SOI Oiff Drive, New-
port ~ach, with performances
Marni keeps
voice 'alive'
LO ANGELES (AP) -Marru
Nixon as 1 rcd-hau-cd opumast who is
more of\cn hurd than seen.
N1~on was the abost-votee who
sans off-camera for 1ucb movie u
"The K1 and I," ''West Sade Story"
and "M~air Lady." Now SS and a
SBndmotber, 1hc 1t1ll maket concen
appearances around the country.
Nixon 11.id 1h1 never sto~ workina
on her voice, becau1e • linaina is d~fini~Jy an athletic Ktlvlt)'.
I
..L
LAKEWOOD
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Orange Cout DAILY PllOTIWedneeday, AllgU9t 14. 111& A ll
, TV L1 s1 1NGS
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Marlo Tbomu and
Krta Krtatoff enon
•tar lo "The Loet
Honor of Katheryn
Beck" to1U4bt at 9 on
CBS, Channel 2.
Sway?• C ThOmls Howell -•30-.. DOU8lE TlllOU8U
(!)MOVIE * * * 'The Pape1 Chase t 19741
Timothy Bonomi Lll\dsay Wagner
-1~00-.. a! HEARTIEAT =·= G FANT MY ISlAHO
• EVEMltO AT POPS
CB .IACl<80NVIU.E AHO 4ll THAT
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NCWPORI ClNTlR BETWEEN JAMUORH & MACARTHUR ,, ... ..,.,non
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All 0nnge 0out DAILY PllOTIWednoeday, August 14, 1985
PUNKY WINKERBEAN
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
BIG GEORGE
DOONESBURY
by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE
~~~NG
&A~~ wrm LEtJw AGAJtJ?
--~~~~~~--.
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
by Charles M. Schulz
0 I used to think
you were a qreat
engin eer," she said.
" Once, I even
loved you ... ,.
"But you've gotten
too biq for you r
bridges.''
.::!T'n.V~
_ ... c.,.... .....,_ r.
"See if we con get one near the
ice machine."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson -
"Knock off th•t anortng! None of ua can
get to afeep up herw."
1 -141
BLOOM COUNTY
~~~HE'S '*" Ht /f!t571N6 6tf(,x, #DI, N£'5 m .
f 'W I ~. IUll r \
( ~
/j
r/fltataY JO«t_NO.
I
(IOl_tlJOK M
11£-NN'YM~ =:=:mttP
#HJ Alf I f 6"IRlt
6'l:JI(
/
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE bv Lvnn Johnston
"Godiva's puppies are getting smart at
nap time they get to the master
bedroom first! ·
DRABBLE
MR. ~-.Bel£. ~OV ~f.
~o Of ~rew1"1G
GARFIELD
OONT ~ING AN'/ DIRf
IN t"\ERE ! PICK UP
IHoSe S\oe.S '
'1 TOL\J HER WE'RE SKINNY !J!/JPIN'/ TUMBLEWEEDS
by Kevin Fagan
by Jim Davis
1"0VA'fS ~ecr, ME:PJ:
~ftS5 i-Of{I! !
ROSE IS ROSE
IT'S COQUILLE 5AINT-JACQUE'!>
GARN15HED WIT._. Ml.GIAN
ENDIVE AND LACEP WrTH
~R(NCM TROfFLf?
MOON MULLINS
BRIGHT FELLO W F
Y I.JS .1 -µ'S I •lA'vl 1 5
F ... ~s,... G~T ~CHARGf.ABLE
IS t<APUT ! ! ,.
JUDGE PARKER
-' PEPMAPS IT'S JUST As-WEl..l:'THAT vou ~Heo ""' IMPASSE ,...R ORavER ' n·s POSS1eu ~T lFY()U WERE AeL..E T'O L.fc~N TI-if IDENTITY OF
Wt!NOV'S NAT\JRAL. PAAeriTS
IT ~·T 6E >-H"'P'P'Y Ot9COVERY ~ ~EP '
I~ BRIDGE
'------------J Both vul nerable. South deals.
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
NORTH
•A.JU
C:;:1 KJ75
0 873
• A.J
WEST EA. T
•' • sa <:>842 ~QlOt
O A.962 O QJIO
•KQlOU •t7543
SOUTH
•"QI0872
<::>A. ea
0 Ke'
•8
The blddlna:
S.•tll Weat Nwtlt £ut
· J • Pua J • Pue by Harold Le Doux 4 • Pua PH• Pue
-~ Opening lead: Klnir of •·
&JT' f THINK SHE COULO WITH WHATEVE"
THI! "ESU\..T WAS, W.9 LAG~~· SH!'91'
'Y'Ol.JN(J WOMAN I IT'LL eE MUCH WORSe ~
HER TO $Pt!NO THI! "'-EST Ofl' MER UFE
WONDe"IN<;, l-IOPING TM.AT SOMEDAY ·u. fr1NO n-.e ~UTl-4 1 ,.:::..;......:~~""l'~~:;;:]
Acea wtrt madt Lo capture klnp.
Unleu. of courM, you have a bett•r
UM for them.
Nol'th-South al'l"lvtd In thtlr nor-
mal contract In quick tlmt. .(~ "
thoush South'• h.aod wu 1l1fbU7
btlter than mlnlmum, he had no
where near 1nou1h Lo make an7
aort. or move over hi• part ntr"a
jump ralH.
W11t ltd the kins of duba. To the
uninitiated It ml1ht 1 m that
=<iW yc:r: f\NO
~D'/
rr'sNDTMY
HoJSe:
by Tom K. Ryan
He K~ f"'Am{I~
11\l ''HANt'ICAPPE:P''
SMCE:S'?
by Pat Brady
COMBINE YOUR CHANCES
declarer would need either the
heart rlneue or the ace or diamond•
onaide to make hia contract -com·
blned odda of 76 percent. However,
declarer found a way Lo improve the
odds. He made hla firaL clever play
when he allowed Weal to hold the
OMAR 0
SHARIFF .... ·,t
trick. Wf•t could do no bttter than
contlnue1 with a club. Declarer won
the ace and alufftd a heart from
hand.
After drawlns trump• In two
round1, ded&rel' pt.Jed off the ace
and ktnr of t..ana. Wbtn tht qu"n
dld not drop, d6Ciater ruffed a
heart. and tht 8-8 break h1 the auf t
tel up a heart for a diamond 1luff.
However, had the heart1 been' 2
dtclanr would 1tlll havt been
uevrtd of hl• COftt.r&ct II Wttt btld
tht lonr bun.a. DtcJ.rtr would
aimply have croued back lO dumm7
with a trump and led a fourth hea.rt.,
1luffln1 a diamond from hand Wut
would bt forced to wf n and would
either have to concede a ruff and
sluff or else lead a diamond up Lo
South'• king. And if East. turned up
with the fourth heart, declarer
cou ld alill (all back on leadina a dla
mond up to his king. which would
bring home the game if Eaat held
CHARLES
GOREN
the ace.
Han JM -.... nauJas t.tt 4"·
ltle U.Mle7 Let Clu.rlea c ... ~ '" ... ,.., .. ,~ .... ...
el DOVI for ,..altJee .... t.
takeHt. Fer • H'1 ef ~II
DOUIL M.klet, .... 11.15 tt
"Gtrta·De•t.lt1,.. u.re et tkl1 .. .,,,.,.,,P.O. 1 .. en . Pamyn.
N.J. OIOeS. Make ~a ,.,.w. ..
N1w1,.,.rt.Mka.
.... Piiat ~~~ r:t. ~i...m .. llJ . WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 1'4. 1985 L:I
Dale Murphy taka Steve SU out of the
play, raultlng ln a ru.n-ecorlJ11 error when
,., ... ~.
the doubleplay ball got away, but DcMblen
win 2-1 to a .. ume an etcht-aame bulce.
Lerry Bowe bid• • teerful ferewell to ha. pleylng •re-112.
I
Chergera' Alex lpenoa uya he went• whet h•'• peld for.112.
'Tub of Goo' g~vesup
2 to Dodgers' Marshall
Lead now 8 one up. The ball JUil Jumped ofTthc ames bu .. 1 W t aft 2 ] Toaf61tt'• Ge.me And into the left field pavihon. his n es er -14th home run.
1 -Ate.ma (llaft{er 1·5) 81 Ood.gete "That's the first h1t l'vc ever iot off win over At an ta (WllOha-1) Forster, spnna trainsni. anywhere,''
Time: 7:30 p.m. said Marshall. "He's bad very 'ood
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles Dodgers have stretched their
lead in the National League West to
eight pmcs, their biggest advantage
in nearly seven years. and the widcs1
ofany of the four divisional leaders.
They did it with a 2-1 victory over
the Atlanta Braves Tuesday night
while Ci ncinnati was edging San
Diego.
"h's hard to believe. perhaps, but
we've earned it," said Mike Marshall.
"We're doing what al takes to wan.
We're doing alJ the little things ...
And the big things. 100.
Such as Marshall's dramauc two-
out, two-run homer in the bo11om of
the eighth inning.
And Candy Maldonado's on-hne
throw from left field and catcher
Steve Yeager's tag at the plate that cut
the would-be tying run an the top of
the ninth.
"I don't think anyone an baseball
ha&-a stronger 1hrawing arm than
Candy Maldonado," said Marshall.
who observed the play from his nsht
field position. "It was a great play, bu1
a greater play was Yeager's tag at the
plate. He had to short·hop the ball,
then make the tag."
TV: None. su~ss against me."
A9dto: KA8C (790~ Haai ~d there was never any
thouiht to punina Marshall on baac
Even then. bag Tom N1edenfuer and bnngina left-han&:d batter M1kc
had to come on and retire the final Sc1osc1a to the plate.
two Braves. on a pop fly to shallow "You can't put the wmmna run oo
nght and a stnk.eout, 10 preserve the ba~ ... he reasoned.
Dodgers' fifth win an a row and 24th But the Braves wettn't through JUll
1n thc-ir last 32 games. yet ·
The lone run the Braves scored wa!> In the 1op of1he iunth Carlos Diaz,
unearned, the result of two throwing 3-1. who reltevcd staner Orel
errors, thus the Dodger streak of not Hersh1ser and emerged with the win,
allowing an camcd run reached 43 surrendered a leadolT single to
innings. Claudell Washington. That brouabt
But until Marshall unloaded in the Ken Howell in from the buJlpen.
eighth it appeared lhc one run might Washington immediately stole~
stand up. The Dodgers had been ond, then Howell walked Ken Ob-
blanked on five hits for six innings by erk.fell.
starter Steve Bedrosian. and Gene Gerald Perry batted for Rick
Garber retired the side an order in the Cerone, and he hned a san&Jc to lei\.
seventh. Maldonado charged the ball and
But in the e1~th, Ken Landrcaux fired a stnk.e to Yeager. who pinned
led off with a single. Pedro Guerrero the tag on a sliding Wayhsngton,
flied out and Atlanta mllnager Edda· cutting off the tying run.
Haas summoned lcf1-hander Terry Nacdenfuerthencamcon toget the
Forster. Maldonado went to the plate final !WO outs for his M lb save and
as a pinch hatter and grounded out on · S«'ond an as many games.
a h1trand·run play. sending Land-Forster. I ·3, took the loss.
rcaux to second. In the third game of the four-game
· Next was Marshall. scnes tonight Len Barker, 1-5, wdl
"Terry threw the two sliders down start for Atlanta. Bob Welch. 8-1. for
and in," said Marshall. "then he got the Dodgers.
Angels, Romanick battered; lead cut to 2 games ..
Ma r in ers' Langston
recove rs from injury
with a n-11-4 victory-
SEA TILE (AP) -For the last three
months Seattle's Mark Langston has needed
medical aid or relief help. Tuesday night he
didn't need either and it felt great.
"I think it's the first time all year I've gone a
whole game without pain, .. said Langston who
tossed his second complete game of the year
and led the Seattle Mariners to an 11-4 victory
over the Ani;tels.
Langston. 6-9. scattered 10 hats. but walked
JUSI two and struck out 1wo as he snapped a
personal six-game losing streak. His last win
was May 15.
In his rookie season of 1984 the Manner
left-hander won 17 games, but this season he
has been hampered by a sore elbow. He was
forced to go on the disabled ltSt June 7.
"It felt real good. It has been a long tame:·
said Lan$ston about has victory. "I felt strong
an the ninth. I've had enough of thi s and
hopefully I can write 11 off and start pllching
again."
Seattle made Langston's JOb easier b>
rcachin~ Angel starter Ron Romanick. 13-6.
for 12 hits and I 0 runs 1n the first 3 2/3 1nnang!>.
Romanick grew up m Bellevue. Wash .• a
Seattle suburb, but dismissed the thought that
he m 1gh t be su ITen ng hometown Jitters. "I'm a
pro. That shouldn't affect me and 11 didn't," he
Toda7'• Gam•
Ane-t• (Zah11. 2· 1 and McCuklll 8-7) at
Seattle 1Moore 10-7 and Young
(T-13), doublehead•.
Time: 12:35 p.m.
TV; None. '
Radio: KMPC (710).
said.
Al Cowens drove in two runs with a bascs-
loaded single and J !m Presley aqded a sacnfice
fly to give the Manners a 3-0 lead tn the first.
Dave Henderson singled to drive 10
Gorman Thomas and Jack Pcrconte added a
two-run single m the third for a 6-0 lead.
Geori;te Hendnck collcctea an RBI single.
Mistake may aid W illiams
Proseclltors' errorc ould
give ex-T ulan e st ar edge
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Playmg out a
complicated legal strategy, lawyers for former
Tulane basketball star John "Hot Rod" Williams
capitalized on a prosecution m1staXe to gain an extra
chance for victory in his sports bribery trial.
Williams is accused of three counts of con-
spiracy and two counts of taking bribes to cont rol the
poin1 spread in games
aJainst Southern Missis-
sippi and Memphis State -
allegations which could
mean 17 years in prison and
$35,000 in fines, if con-
victed.
The defense strategy
adopted Tuesday apparent-
ly g.aves Willia ms a certain
chance for a new trial on
appeal. if he should be
found guilty at the ongomg
trial which goes into its
third day today. In gainang
that apparen~ advanta$e,
the defense rejected a mis-
trial. which would have
required starting the
proceedings over apin. Gary Krants
-st:atei}rstrict JUdfe ;tjvi ~1yangued.
declared the .mistria Tuesday evening when a
witness referred to a tape-recorded statement 1hat
prosccl!tors had not made available fo r the judgt's
m&pecuon_ ~ -_
Weeks ago. Oser and the state's 4th Circuit
Court of Appeal o rdered prosecutors to produce for
inspection all evidence and statements, so Oser
could decade whether the people working to convict ·
Williams miiht have evidence that could help to
prove ham in~t. °'1'Cn~awycr Mike Green of Chicago com-
plained frequently that the district attorney's office
was slow in responding.
G reen had just begun cross cxamana1ion of
W11hams' former 1cammatc. Jon Johnson. when
Johnson mentioned that he ga ve a tape-recorded
statement to Assistant Oastnct Attorney Eric
Dube her.
him 1f such a sta1emcnt had been taken. and when
Dubehcr said the tape existed Oser ordered the
mistrial.
"I have never. an 26 years in the legal profession,
seen anything like this," Oser 1old Dubeher and
Bruce Whittaker. another assistant distnct attorney.
"I think that Mr. Green 'scllent's const1tut1onal
rights have been violated by lhe state," Oser said.
Oser then called lawyers for both sides anto his
chambers. Back in the courtroom after a fo ur-hour
meeung. Oser told Green he could either object to
the court-ordered mistrial or acquiesce.
"If the court please. we respectfully refuse to
answer the question.'' Green responded.
At the close of I 31h hours of Tuesday's session.
however, Judge Oser explaaned 1he complicated
legal strategy involved 1n the reversal of the mistrial.
If defense a11orney Green objected and Oser
'ti.ere upheld by an appeals court. then Wilhams
c'ould be tried again . If Green accepted the m1stnal.
tnen William's would also be tried a~an.
But Green refused to take either position.
As 11 stands now. Williams might be reheved of
the poss1b1lity of being tned again -because of
double Jeopardy -only 1f an appeals court
overturns Oser's rulang of a mistnal.
Green reserved the right to appeal. 1fnt'ccssary.
on the grounds of the prosecution's failure to
produce the tape recording as ordered
Oser then vactn ed hts-mistnal order 1tnd ~•d
trial will continue today.
·Johnson and former Tulane teammate Clyde
Eads testified against Williams Tuesday under
grjlllts of unmunit-y.-
Both said Williams was a walling part1c1pant in
shaving points in games against Southern Miss1s-
s1 pp1_ and Memphis State, but they aoo said lhey dad
not sec Williams get any money for doing his part.
They also denied anythang more than rcc-
reaµonal use of cocaine, which other wunesses
testlfied was the opening wedae 1n the conspiracy.
Both said lhey lost their enthusiasm for the plot
af\cr 1he Southern Mississippi pme and took part m
lhin,a the Memphis State game only at the urging of
Williams and two other teammates. Bobby Thomp-.
son and David Dominique.
his first American League hit, an the fourth to
cut the lead to 6-1 , but Seattle came back with
four runs in the bottom of the anrung to chase
Romanick. Henderson and Bob Kearney had
run~scoring si ngles. and Spike Owen greeted
reliever Al Holland with a double to score two
more runs and a I 0-1 lead.
Brian Downing belted his 13th homer in the
fifth to extend his career high hatting streak to
15 $Imes. Jack Howell doubled and scored on
an an field out by Dick. Schofield in the eighth.
Alvin Davis led offtbe eighth with his I I th
homer for Seattle's final run. George Hcndnck
scored the Angels' final run in the ninth with
his first home run.
The Angels' loss left them JUSt two games
ahead of the Kansas City Royals m the
American League Western D1v1s1on The
Royals defeated the Boston Red Sox Tuesday Ron Romani ck
Agents of d estiny
deliverin g despair
,., .......
An 1 nspired bard oncC\Hnle. "I
would rather have a sister tn a house
of ill repute than a brother who 1s a
sports agent ...
Actually. the flesh peddlers of
professional spomare not all that bad
an the eyes of some Dallas Co"' bo} ~
superstar Ton}' Dorsett. for instance
has two of 1hem.
Well.oneishstedasanad\lsor .\n
advisor1sagu) whog1vesad\.1Ce
Dorsctt'sad v1sorisa fellow b) the
naO"e ofW11t Stewart and he is \.Cf\
fret with advice. most of 11 financial
With the contracts Tonv Dorc;en
has signed with the Dallas C owbo} s.
Amenca's team, Tony should be all
set up to rca l 1zc Amen ca'!> dream
which 1s one of these days to sho"'
laborthe back ofh1s neck and rt'tin: 111
a" inc-covered cottage
Unhappily. the grass 1s growing
through the floor for Tony.
Not the leasi ofDorsc:11's prob~mi.
is one wonh $414,000 which the 1 RS
wants after disallowing a ta>. shelter
Dorsett claimed for t 919 and l QRO
Furthercomphcat1ng Dorset l's
financial picture was an oil deal
orchestrated by S1ewart which dis-
played a loss ofa halfa m1llon dollars
or thereabouts. Stewart says 1t ma}
takea ftwda~s but he will reimburse
Dorsett for his losses on the 011 deal
Meanwhile, advisor tewart ad·
'1seschtnt Dorsett that 11's reall) lht.·
Dallas management thai 1s respon-
sible for Tony's distress and the
Cowbo) people hould do some1h1n~
about ll Presumabh. the \owboH
should takt' care ofT ony's obhga11on'
or trade him toa team that wall
Pend ma one or mon· "iU(h solu·
11ons. Dorsett l'I hold1naout and tht• Co"' boys arc worktng without him .tl
their encampment at T hou1and
Oaks
Cowboys general manager Tex
!x'hramm 1sa match for Wm Stt'WBrt
wh o has upped his hand as to his big
gun which 1s poised to fire
"Ton) as prepared.·· ~•d UO\.tsor
Stew an. "not to pla\ football tht!t vear ..
<>t cour'\C that would soh e all of
Dor'>t'tt's problems
.\not her mismatch an the field ol
flesh peddling might e>.;1st in the case
of Enc D1 ckcr..on. the celebrated
runnangback. and the Rams More
specaficall) Ram\ negotiating
spt"cialtstJohn Shaw anc.l Dickerson s
new agenr and tinanc1al ad' 1sor Ken
'\onon
Yc:s. the same 1-..cn Nonon who
gained some rd..nuwn as a hca' ,_
we1ghtpuf!l1St
Where D1ckcr~un cnrnuntered
'-lonon is not t. lcar hut the uld
wa"1or waHtuick to l hallengc the
Rum.,1oenterthcnng Hrad\.1sed
Dit. kcrson w 1gnorc 1hr 1 ontraci he
has signed"' 1th thl' Ram' and to
demand an 1mmrd1.ue 'i<.°'i\1<m of
re ncgot 1J t mg
\hav. '>lated \1mpl\ that tht• Rams
ha"e a pohn agnin\t rcncgot1ating
, Dnlra\ h Jnd that Norton \hnuld
tJkc .i h1kt' 'llrtun .ind h1' group a'°" ,,,11,pamnp.Jnd 1abh1ng and \elhng
.11 '\haw ICI put up ht., dukes and fight
ltkr .i man hut \hav. tum., lht"m a
draf car
Oser called Oubehcr into the courtroom, atkcd
Thompson as t~stifying for the prosecution an n
pica barpin, end Dominique is scheduled for tnal
later. John "Hot Rod" William•
The 'IU\p1c1on pt'rs1st\ that the
Dalla\ forces ma\ be an a tntle deep
here It'" OIX'n to que<st1on that
Mran\\.h1k. D1t t..er,.on 1!> not in
\.amp and thl Rt1m' are suing througtl
ihr motion'> 0 1 ~clltn@ read\
Henrie LollC
Long-short of being satisfied
OXNARD (AP) -Whtie de·
fensive end Howie Lona of the Los
Anaeles Raiders has come• lont way
an a snort time -from obscunty to
All-Pro -he says he's far from
satisfitd.
"1 don't thank I'm cvcrre11ly hnppy
with the W1l)' J play:· Lona sud
recently at the Raiders' summer
tra1nin1 camp. "There's a.Jwa~ a lot
of room for 1mprove~nt tl'I a lot of
arc11."
Lona. 2S. wa 11 four-year starter as
a colleaian I\ Vtllanova. but the be t
he could do in terms of notoncty wu"
cam All·Amer1can honorable men·
t1on honors. an accomplt hment hun·
drcds can claim every }t&r. The Raider. labbt<t1hc 6-S. 270.
-l.
pounder in the second round of the
1981 NA. draf\. By early 1n his rookie
ycac. u was obvious hewn somethan,a
special.
By 1983. he was an All-Pro, and tut
ytar he was vottd 1he NFL Dcfenltve
Lineman of the Year by the NFL
Alum01 ASJj()(tataon. He has been a ~wter in e•ch of the last tw-0 Pro
Bowls.
"l f you had told mo when I came
into the leaaue that I'd be an All·Pro
and mnbe be ca.lied the best tn 1ht
busine s by my fo unh )car. I'd havt
called you cnuy," he ~1d. wuh a
,mile:
l bna frowntd when asked about
what happened to the Raiden I st
year. Thty entered the 19 '4 tcason as
.
I
lhe defending uper Bowl l'ham-
p1ons. but af\er ao•na 11 ·5 &he) "'~re
beaten I 3-7 by Seattle 1n the Amen·
can Football Confercna's W1kH ard
pmc.
"wt ycar wa~ very d1~ppo1n1· '"f·" he i.aad. "We fin a hed round
third in the leaaue 1n defense, but sull
I felt 1t ~•a ~f')' unsu fut )'Ur
"The defense should be pl1~1na at a
dom1n1ttn level at all t1mts. we have
that kind or talent around hm. This
team's St)'le 1s to bud.le 11 up and play ~k 1n and Wttk out. espec111ly
when the mon-cy's on the hne. When
the money. was on the hnc 1.,t )C1r,
we aot run over t was embanus.cd."
What hao~ncd to the R11dc:~1
, CPleue ... LON0{82)
r
Brock set for firs t half;
Rams cut rookie F isher
The Ram~ 1;.ut ~C'ond->ear roolot· ~nrnt"fh.1d.; Rodcm i. f1\hC't
Tue1da~ panna their tra1n1ng-omp ro~t<'r to in plavcr'
Fisher. a product ofOldahoma ~l te. 11>l)d1af1ed 1n the l~th round
by the flams la\t ~c~r and spcn1 tht ~ll'°n on tht' 1n1urt',t rc~rve h\t.
Coach John Robmwn announ~ that C>ietcr Rrcxk ~111 play \he
fint halfoftht Rams' St"Cond c'h1htt1on pme wuh St l o u1\ Thundav
night at Anaheim tadium. 0.c.,up quarterhed.\ JefTJr..cmp and Steve
0,1, will \hart playina umc 1n the V'C'Ond half
Rohin~n al~ s.aad that ttght end l ony t luntn hkel) will not play
due to a bru1\Cd 1h1ah and out,.de hnebarkcr <•ea And~ will
make ha preseaton debut nd~""'' \ptnt the ofl·wason rthab11lt.atina
h•s lef\ knee after iuriery
.-
' ...
J
~-----------~~·-----------------.-------------..................................................... ..
Ot9nge 0out DAILY PILOT/Wtdnaday. August 14, 1985
Riggins surfaces, tells of antics
Hts off-seaSOn drinking
~ctdeiits are explained
CARLISLE. Pa. (AP) -Al\er two C\:1-
tbrated off·st3son drinkina 1nc1dcn&s. Wuh-
•naton Red IC1n running back John Riutn
spent his fir5t full di)' at l.l'lmina camp Tuesday
and told reponer . "I've bttn a bad boy."
In a rare 30-minutc news conference,
Ria,a1ns fielded almo t as many questions about
• the news he bas made since January 1han about
the comina football season.
Ri&Jins. who s1aned a onc-yca"contract
Monday for a rcponed S8SO.OOO. said he as 1n
&ood shape, ellcttcd about the coming season
and cager to battle Gcorac Roger>. acqu1ml
from New Orlcan for playing lime
ihe 13-year veteran said the only dn nking
problem he has as "when I'm hanarna from the
raf\ers by my kne«. other than that 1t aoe~
down JUSt like for everybody el~."
But R1g&1n~ said he wa~ embarrassed b> the
drinking incidents and prom1~d that "there
won't be any more ... as Iona as I wear the
burgundy and gold.''
Last winter. Riggins told Supreme { oun
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor to "loosen up.
ndy baby" and then fell asleep on the Ooor alt
Va~'C President George Bu'ih delivered a ~~h
Last mol')th. in the midst of contract talk)
v.a th team owner Jack Kent C:ooke, R1gg1ns was
stopped near his home by fu1rfall'. Count\, Va ..
police and charged with beina drunk 1n publtc
Riggins told reponers befo~ practice
fuesda) that he happens to be "a 1uy who likes
to have a lot of fun' and that the incidents were
gettinf more exposure than the)' deserve.
" ha,re a certain im &e that I suppose I
ha"ecamcd with me tbro~ the year . rm not
1nerl) concemed by it," R1uins said.
R1gg1ns. known s a frec--spinted rebel.
stud he never dnves after drinkma and ha~
ncvl'r "!>ufTered on the football field from my
ac11v1t1es offof 1t."
"I don't think that if everybody grew up 10
bt' hke me at would be the worst thing that could
happen 10 the United States -maybe the
second thing. but not the worst," R1gins 531d
"We would need a lot more pohce though,
\\Ouldn't ~c? ..
R1U•ns has never publicly commented on
the incident involving Bush and O'Connor and
dcchned to comment again Tuesday.
Rigins rcponed to the Redskins camp at
Dickinson College Monday niaht. He lifted
weights Tuesday mominJ bef'Ort lhe news
conference which pt'C(C(led the afternoon
workout.
The fifth -leadrng ru~her in NFL hi tory,
Riggins w s hampered by a back ailment la11t
~ason. when he ran for 1,239 yards and 14
touchdowns. l 0 touchdowns less than in 1983.
Risains said he was thinkin&about rctmna
but became cxcned about play1na apm afler talkin~ with Coach Joe Gibbs about the
Kedskins and their prospects this season. . -
SPORTS BREAK : FoorsALL -------
After 16 seasons
Bowa bids adios
to playing career
From AP dispatches
C'H ICAGO -A tearful Larry Bowa. •
his \.01cc cracking with emollon. Tuesday
reluctantly agreed that his playi ng days arc
over. But the shon stop cut loose by Chicago Cubs said
he hopes to remain in baseball.
"It has been my whole hfe," said the 16-ycar maJor
league player. who earlier this season broke Rabbit
Maranv1tlc's National League record for games pla}'ed
by a shonstop and finished with
2.212.
Bowa made his remarks a\Jl
.. Tuesday news conference after
-----the Cubs announced late Monday
the 39-year-old veteran had been
released and that rboloe shortstop
.. Shawon Dunstqn had been re-
called from their Triple A Iowa
farm club.
Bowa finished his career. •lilill._ __ ..J '11ghlightcd by his playing for the
Bowa world champion Ph1ladelph1a
Ph illies in 1980. with 2.189 career ~its.
.. I want to be remembered ·as a gu.Y who worked
hard, did not ha"c a lot of natural ability but did my
best." he said
Bowa said he wasn't surpnscd at the Cubs' move,
but .. I was surpnsed at the liming.
"( thought It might happen September first when
the rosters are expanded. Bu t this 1s a s1tua11on where
you have to worry about the ballclub and not one gu} ."
Looking ahead. he said: "l have managmg in the
back or m) mind I defimtely thmk I kn ow what I am
do10g and rm sure I can help kids."
Bowa said he would talk to Gordon Goldsbel1).
the Cubs' director of the minor leagues and scouting.
later in the day but would r1ot make an> earl}' decisions.
.. I'm nm sure 1f I want to manage." he said ... I can
motivate and inspire and work with people. I want to
sta} an baseball -1t has been my whole life."
General Manager Dallas Green and field Manager
Jim Fre)' both said malung the move no"" g1' es then a
chance to see more of Dunston.
lronicall). Bowa had raised his average to .246
alter a very slow start this season and ~•nee July 3 had
put together a .307 average
.. , don't want to go from team t9~eam. I don't want
10 be team hopping." said Bowa, penod1call> w1p10g h 1<;
tears with a towel. "I've had a preny good career. I
d1dn·t cheat myself. I gave my very best.
Bowa was rhe starting shortstop last year when the
Cubs won the National League· East title. their first
champt0nsh1p of an) kind since 1945.
Quote of the day
Terry Forster, armed w1th sandwiches as he
arnved for an appearance on NBC's "Late Night
With David Lenerman" telcv1s1on show to refute
earlier .. tub of goo .. comments b}' uuerman
about the Atlanta pitcher's g1nh: "I was passing
b}' my fifth delicatessen of the day and thought 1
would pick up st>methang for the show. Th as is rhe
David Lenerman sandwich ll has a lot of tongue
an it "
USC gets standout receiver
LOS ANGELES -Al Washington, Eil
the 198~ Los Angeles C11y Player of the •II•
Year an football whale attending Carson
High. has transferred from Long Beach
<.1ty College 10 the Univers1t:r of Southern ( ahforn1a.
the school announced Tuesda)'.
Washington. a 6-1. 180-pounder. will play wide
receiver at Southern Cal. according to Coach Ted
Tollner. Washington played quarterback at Long Beach
('('last -.ear and Mde receiver an 1983.
.\s a high school senior. he played quarterback.
passing for I. 779 >a rds and 23 touchdowns and rushing
for 400 ya rd!. and eight TDs As a high school Junior. he
pla)ed w1dc recca ver. ma lung 44 catches for 918 )a rd)
and nine touchdown s.
Royal• pull to within 2 games
Kansas City continued thechaseofthe •
.\merican League West-leading Angels
with a 6-3 victory over slumping Boston
TJesday night. a result which leaves the
Royals 21h games offthe Angels' lead following Seattle's
11-4 victory. Darryl Motley capped a four-run Kansas
Caty fifth inning with a three-run homer, and George
Breu collected four hits to take the AL lead in batting
from Boston's Wade Boas at .358. Bret Saberbagen,
14-5 was the wmner and Dao QaJsenberry got his 27th
save as the Red Sox lost their fifth
stra1Rht game. Elsewhere Tu~
day. Toronto turned Texas back.
5-3. as Lloyd Moseby and Rance
MulUDlks hlt consccu1ive homers
and Ende Wllltt hi t a two-run
double in a five-run first inning ..
. The New York Yankees lost a
4-3 decision to the Chicago White
Sox and fell seven games behind
Toronto in the East as pinch-
hittcr Reid Nlcboh bit a sacrifice
Brett fly in the eighth inning to score
Onie Gullle11 Minnesota put Oakland down. 8-1. as
Frank Viola, 12-9, fired a six-hitter and Mickey Hakber
capped a six-run third inning with his first home run
smoe Apnl 11 ... Detroit topped Milwaukee. 5-4. as Lou
Wbltaker hit his 17th homer leading ofTthe 13th inning
for Detroit. Aflcr Whitaker's homer off Bob Gibson,
6-6. broke a 3-3 ue. Lance Pan1sb doubled and Nelson
Simmons singled to make i I 5-3. The Tigers needed the
insurance 1n the bottom of the 13th when Ted Simmons
hit his ninth homer off Willie Heroudei, who picked
up his 23rd save in relief of AareUo Lopez ..
Baltimore's Mike Young hit two home runs to pace
Baltimore to an 8-4 victory over Cleveland.
Mets just keep right on rolling
The New York Mets, blessed with iii outstandingstaning p1tchmg headed by the
phenominal Dwight Gooden, got another
fine perfonnance from rookie Rick
Aguilera and an all-important save from Jesse Orosco
as they won their ninth straight game. Aguilera. 6-3.
hurled seven strong innings, got two hits and drove irra
run as the Mets bear Ph1ladclph1a 4-2 with the help of
Orosco. who got his 13th save. New York tied 1ls own
mark for the longest wanning ltlreak in the National
ll League this season. Elsewhere. St.
le LoUJS edged Pittsburgh, 6-5. as
Terry Pendleton 'iingled home
the tie-breaking run in the sixth
inning and Darrell Porter fol-
lowed with a two-run double for
St. Louis. Pittsburgh lost Its
seventh game in a row and 12th
straight on the road ... Montreal
trimmed Chicago. 4-1. as Andre
Dawson doubled in two runs and
Roble Brooks tnplcd twice in
Reardon suppon Joe Hesketh, I 0-5. who
pitched seven strong innings before ma1or league save
leader Jeff Reardon came on to collect his 30th ... San
Franciso dealt Houston a 4-2 loss as Mike Krakow
pitched a fi ve-hatter, strut·k out a career-high 12 batters
and hit his first home run of the season for San
Francisco . Ci ncinnati downed San Diego, 3-2. as
Dave Parker homered on the first patch of the founh
1nn ang to spark a three-run C'in cmnau rally as the Reds
snapped a four-ga me losi ng streak.
Chargers cut veteran safety
LA JOLLA-Veteran safety Tim Fox Eil
was among three players cut Tuesday by •II t
the San Diego Chargers. who also an-
nounced that promising defensive lineman
James Lockette had tom knee ligaments and would be
lost for the year
Other pla}ers released by San Diego were running
back Billy White, a free agent who played two seasons m
the Umted States Football League. and cornerback Bill
Yancy. who also played two years in the rival league.
Fox. a nine-year veteran acquired by San Diego 1n
a 1982 trade \\ 11h the New England Patnots, started I 0
of 1he la!it 11 games for the Chargers at free safety in
1984. The third ofthredirst-round pttks by the P3tnots
an the 1976 NFL draft. Fox was hampered by ankle
anJunes for much of the 11me he was with San Diego,
which sent New England a second round draft choice in
1982 and third round choice in 1983 in exchange for
Fox
He's looking for a return
With 88.5 million spent for n ew talent,
Spanos wants big things from Chargers
L.\ JOLL.\ CAP) -San Diego
( harger owner Alex Spanos, impa-
tient for a wanner, has discarded the
frugal WS\S o ( hlS predecessor and
comm11tcd al least S8.5 m1lhon for
ne"" talent
The figure reprc\Cnt'i the comhaned
value of the contracts awarded to the
14 players selected by the Chargcr11 an
the 1985 National Football League
draft
San Otego al\o ha~ !t1gned t""o hagh-
pnced refugees from the l nated
States Football League. wide receiver
Trumaine Johnson and running hack
Tim pcncer. and Spanos 1s trymg out
a do1cn other plaven with lJ~Fl
backa:r-0und dunna the team·\ trntn-
ing camp at C San Otego
"I've comm11ted my..elf to filling
the voids of this balltlub." ~1d
panos. who made m1llion'i an tht
construcuon 1ndu'itry 'Tm a man of
dcc1s1on I'm not very patient ' aet
th1 np done 1'nd att them done fast. If
I can eic~d11c someth•ns and 11°'> a
fair deal. I'm go1na 10 do 11."
When panos 1>41d Gene Klem i42
milJion for a controlhng intcre•ll in
the Charaers 1 ;,ear qo, he mhentcd 1
thell of the club that advan('('(f to 1he
pla)ofls four Mra1ght \C<•,on~ bC'tween
1979and 1982
o\ scncs of cala m1t1e<; marked the
Chargcrf decline 1nclud1ng the fail
ure to sign two fir'it-round draft
choices an 1981 and 1984. drug
problems. tnJune~ to key personnel
and the trading ol d1'igru ntlcd vet-
erans Fred Dean and Gar) Johnson
Both went nonh to San Franc11Co.
where the> helped the 49er'i win the
upcr Bowl.
Spano<; u1d he assumed control of
the Chargers too late las1 vcar to makt'
any radical chanacund he watched tn
silence a\ the team ~tumbled throu$h
a 7-9 ~ron S3n D1eao wa'i 6-10 1n
1983
This }'Car Spano'I moved qu1ckl >
to take control He agrt-ss1vcl>
pursued talciu from the USFL signed
all the draft choices. 1nclud1ng No. I
pick OfTen51Ve lineman Jam lachcy OI
Ohio State. traded awn> drua·
troubled runn1n1 back Chuck Mun-
cie. cul nine veteran\ in one day and
encouraacd thrt:c-11me All-Pro guarl.I
Doua Wtlkcrwn. a 15-year veteran.
to rcurc to make room for a )'ounaer
pla)'cr
"When vou Mve two lo'inl!
seasons. then it's about umc you step
1n and make some changes,'' Spanos
said. "Obviously, I've been very
actavc m making these changes You
have to make them. You have to get
wme young blood in there."
The changes could very well extend
10 the coaching staff. tncluding head
coach Don Coryell, depend mg on the
Chargers' performance thu, )'car
"I ""ant a w1nnmg season," Spanos
says. "f'm not ellpecting miracles
from my hallclub. I know a lot of my
ballplayers arc rookie~. But we have
some areat talent and I feel 1\'s up to
Don Coryell and his staff to bnng the
bC' 1ou1ofollofthem
"If he doc'! that. which I know he
will. we could act 10 the ployom.. And
once you get to the playoff$. you can JO all tht way That's the way I look at
at."
A son of C.rt:ek 1mm1gran1s who
bepn workm1 in his fi ther's Stock·
to n bakery when he was 8, Spanos
said he purchawd the Chara.crs out of
a love for spon~ and ... an invest·
ment
"I huy everythinJ. a~ an invc~t
ment. but buy1n1 this ballclub is not
the best anv~tment I've ever made."
he sa1d. "J'm ipendinaan awful 101 to
build tha ' balklub .. but the end
rcsult a'i whar counts
PETE ROSE
COUNTDOWN .
Clo.Ing
lnon
Ty Cobb
Wbat Rose did
Tuesday:
He . went one-
for-four as the
Cincinnati Reds
dealt slumping 1 San Diego a 3-2
loss in the Na-
t 1onal League
West.
Life ls rosy for peanut vendor
LOS ANGELES -Just when 11 • looked ljke his throwing days were over,
Roger Owens has been allowed to resume
his flamboyant style of salesmanship that
has made ham the city's most celebrated peanut vendor.
Bags of peanuts were flying once again Tuesday
mght as Owens waded through the crowd at Dodger StadiUQl~rling bag~ OT peanuts from behind his back
and over his shoulder with the deadly accuracy that has
made him almost a celebrity at sporting events
throughoul the caty
"He is ectstat1c. I've never known him to be sad
and blue. But when he wasn't able to throw his peanuts
... He was suffenng psychologacally," said Mayor Tom·
Bradley.
Bradley deli vered a wntten opinion from District
Attorney James Hahn to Owens in a ceremony Tuesday
night at Dodger Stadium before a Dodger game against
the Atlanta Braves.
After becoming a novelt y over the years at local
ballparks for his long-range ~osses of peanut bags to
awaiting customers, Owens had been forced almost two
weeks ago to cease his peanut-throwing ways.
The Los Angeles City ( ouncil had passed an
ordinance proh1b1ting those attending sponang events
from throwing anything under the threat of cnminal
prosecution.
Yankee clubhouse man dies
CHICAGO-Long-time New York •
Yankees clubhouse man Pete Sheehy died
Tuesday night an a New Jersey hospital.
team offi cials confirmed afier the team's
game with the Chicago Whi te Sox.
Sheehy, 75. had been equipment man and
clubhouse attendant for 59 years. The team·sctubhousc
an Yankee Stadium 1s named after him.
According to Y:i1~kees public relations director Joe
Safety. Sheehy died in Pascack Valley Hospital in
Oradell. N.J., where he was ad r!11ttcd on Friday.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
No event~ scheduled.
RADIO
12:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at Seattle
(doubleheader). KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at
Dodge~. KA BC ( 790) .
THURSDAY'S RADIO
2 p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Dodgers.
KABC (790).
L -----
Auto mishap
gave him look ·
at alcohol's
side effects
ROCKLIN (A P) -Booze gave Carl Monroe a hard
tame. but the diminutive San Francisco 49ers running back
and punt returner thinks he's beaten 1t and saved a
promising career. Two days before the NFC championship game on Jan.
4 Monroe was involved in ttn au10mob1le accident and
si>ent a night in jail. Without that incident to jar him, says
Monroe. he might still be dnnkang and his football cattcr
could be over.
lnste:id, the 175-pound. 5-8 third-year player out of
Utah says he'! been dry for seven months.
··1(1hat (arrest) hadn't happened, I believe I stall
would bcdnnkmg. and the same thing would be going on,"
he said.
Monroe and his brother-in-law had been dnnkmg at a
an Jose nightclub. About midnight, they climbed into
Monroe's remed car, has brother-in-law at the wheel.
··He took ofTkind of fast," Monroe recalled. "When he
turned, his door came open and he fell out."
Monroe tried to stop the car from the passenger seat.
but 1t slammed into a fence. Police thought he'd been
dnving. and thought hjs brother-in-law was a pedestnan
run down by the out-of-control ca r.
Monroe was booked for investigation of drunken
driving and spent the night behind bars before things were
cleared up.
"At first I was scared." he said. "I didn't know what
was going to happen."
But something had to. and 11 tumed out to be an end to
drinking.
"I knew I had to do something with my s1 tua11on," he
!>atd at the team's training camp. "I felt 1f I didn't do
something now, maybe something really bad miRht
happen next time to somebody else or myself. Eventualfy I
thouf.ht I pr@ably would end up losing my JOb or m'r
wife.·
Monroe was allowed 10 play in the last two playoff
games. scoring the first touchdown in San Francisco's
38-16 victory over the Miami Dolphins in the Super Bowl.
then checked into Peninsula Hospital in Burlingame south
of San Francisco for a 35-<iay stay.
Monroe feels better about himself these days, but has
a battle on his hands on the field. Due to the cut in National
Football League rosters from 49 to 45 players. the '49ers
plan to keep onl y five running backs. and four of those
spots probably alre.ady are spoken for by Wendell Tyler.
Roger Craig. Bill Rtng and Derrick Hannon.
That means Monroe is competing with third-round
draft pick Ricky Moore. who fumbled twice 1n Saturday's
28-21 exh1b1tion victory over the Los Angeles Raiders.
Monroe doesn't think has alcohol problem will be held
against him when it comes time to decide between him and
Moore.
GOLF
-=-----=------'
Greer grabs 2-shot
lead at State Open
v ENTU RA (AP)-Brad Greer of Huntington Beach
fired a 5-under-par67Tuesday to~aba two-shot lead after
the first round of the $45.000 California State Open.
Greer played the front nine an 35, one under par, and
played the back nine in a 4-under-par 32 at the 6,600-yard.
par-72 Buenaventura Golf Course. The field was spht
between Buenventura and 6,603-yard, par-72 Olivas Park
Golf Course. '
Heading the list of four golfers two shots back at 69 is
former PGA tour player Frank Beard of Palm Dcscn. Also
at 69 were Ron Stclten of Santa Monica, Ed Luethlce of
Clovis. and Santa Mana's John McComish. Of the four
lied at 69. only -Beard played has opening round at
Buenaventura G.C. -·
Ten players finished the firsl round at 2-under-par 70,
with eight tied at 71.
The players swi tch courses for the second round, after
which the toumamcnt field will be trimmed to the top 70
professionals, and low 10 amateurs.
LONGWAYTOGO. • •
Alu Spanoe
"I bouaht this ballclub because It
was a drum come true for mt I don't
know a man an th1s world that is
involved in spons that ha~ not at one
tame or another thouaht what a areat
thin& 1t would be to ov.-n a ballcl'l~·
My whole hfe ha been laltc thaL"
H•~ ultimate drc.em of course, 1s to
\Ce his team make 11s first uper Bowl
appearance
"Give me thrtt )ean..'' he \a)''S
"Thrtt )C'a" ... I'm a winner ..
From Bl
"I really don't know. If I did, Mr.
(Al) Davis (the Raiders' Managing
'General Partner) would be coming to
me fe>t-edvicc. I concern myself with
taking care of my respopsibilaties.
I've got so much to learn and take care
of. that's my responsibility."
Long beheves 1985 will be a much
better year.
"To sum it up, I'd say it seems hkc
decades aao WC played 1n the Super
Bowl (when the Raiders beat Wash·
tnJtOn 38-9 on Jan. 22, 1984)," he
sud. "I feel like we haven't been in the
playoffs for years.
"Another team would think of la'it
year as being a pretty good )'car. The
feclin& l have a~ave is that
we lost every pfne. It's all or nothing.
That's the way they look at things
here. That's the attitude here and I
think that's one of the reasons why
this franchise has been so successful.
"I w(1uld like to be known as the
most versatile defensive lineman
ever to play the game," he said. "My
title 1s defensive end, but I play all
pos1t1ons (in the defensive line) every
game. Not 100 many people reali1.c t~at. Whert 1 play depends on thC'
s1tuat1on, the defense we're in."
Raiders release five players
OXNARD (AP) -The Los An-
aeles Raiders "'leased fi ve playen
Tuesday, mcludtna a fiflh·ycar vet-
eran and a draf\ choice.
Running back Chester W1lhs, who
had been with the team four sea ons
pnmarily as a special teams r.laycr,
was the vetcra.n released. Wtl 1s was
oniinally an I I th round draft choice
out of Auburn. lie earned the ball 32 umes 1n four scasont, gainina 73
yards and scionna one touchdown.
Half of those came came in 1981 ,
WJlh~' rookie se•wn Al~ released wa dcfcnsa"e beck
Raymond Pol • the Ra1dt1'1' t l 1h
round pick this season from O~la·
homa tatc.
Others n:lcascd we~ free ..aents:
tiaht end Kevin mitb (Utah State).
linebacker Ken Rote (Nevada-Lis
Vcp.s) and nose tackle Rickey
Haaood (South Carolina). Hq.ood
had pla)cd It) two sames for Tampa
Bay a year o.
Those cuts ten the R11dcn' r<»tu
at 83. with more r ter trimmin1
expected 1h1s week 1n advance or
Sunday'ssameap1nst Wa hinaton at
the Cola um. The Raiden and oth r
NFL teams must cut to 60 pla
ow Tuesday.
..
MAJOll UIAGUI STAMDtNGS A"*"WI .......
W•ST OM1'0N
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11· 111, Cnl
De troit (Morris 11·61 el MltweukM
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Tues et 8•111mort , (n)
SHlllt el Mlnnttole, (n)
ClllC:.90 el Mllweul\M, lnl
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Naftlnal L .. eue
WUT DtVISION
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o.dew1 " « Clnclnnell SI 52
Sen Diego S9 SJ
Hou11on s 1 60
Allenle ., 61
Sen Frencltco 43 "
Ntw York
SI Louis
Mont reel
C111c190
Plllledelol'tl• Pilllbllrgll
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67 ., '3 .,
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T""411't'S Scent OedeW1 2, Allen•• 1
Sen Frenc!Ko •. Houston 2 MonlrN l 4, Clllcffo 1
New Yon •. Ptlll.a.!Oflle 2
SI Loula '· PlllM>ur9fl s Clnclnnell l , Sen Dlffo 2 T .. .,., Gemft
611
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Plllst>urgll CReuM:l'lll l ·S> •I SI Louis
CKeoslllre 1·61, In>
Clnclnn•tl (Tibbs S· 121 el S.n Diego
tDreveckv 9·7), (n)
T'llurMIY'I G-
A llanla al ~
PlllsOUrOfl et SI LOUIS
MonlrN I 11 Ollce90
Houston I t S.n Franc11eo
Clnclnnell al Sin 0 1990
PlllleOtlof\I• 11 ,.. ... Yorll., (n)
AM51UCAN LEAGUE
Mal"IMn '1, .,,.... 4
CAU ,OllNIA SllATTLE
nrll bl •llrllbl
Downlno It • I l 1 Pwcon1 2t> l I l 2 Wilfone 2t> o o o o R vnolch 2t> 1 o o o
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DtCncs dtl • t I 0 GTl'lm1 Oii • 'l 1 0
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JKHowell HR-Downlno I 13), AD1vll Cl ll.
Hendrick Ill SF-Prn ltv
f~ H R IR 88 SO
CalHwnie
Romenlck L, 13·• JM 12 10 10 2
Hollelld 4 l·l 2 1 1 3
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Lengston w .•·9 ' 10 • • 2 'l
8K-4tomanlck T-2lS A-9 ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
~ 2,, 9reves 1
ATLANTA LOS ANGILIS
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laltor 311
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7.ll A-ll,'2•
~\.-... IA TTING 1110 t i bet1>-aret1, K.,.ses
c11v. ise. lc>ffs. ao.1on, 356, HtllOtrlon. Htw YOfll, )41 Mattln!llY, New YOtll., l2t,
L,C:V lell1mor1, m
RUNs-Hend«IOll, N-Y(l(ll., ... Wlllt•
ell«, 0.1ro11, n. 1110!\en, l•llltl"IOft. 1e.
Wlnf\lld, .... w Yorll, JS, Mtlitor. Mii·
waukM, 14
R8 1-Milllnolv. Ntw 'l"orll:, 92, Munn. &ellltnOnr, '7, Winn.Id, New Yortl, 71,
ll~t11. 1a111more, 11, Ftlll, c111caeo. 1•
HIT$-aooo1. loston, 1571 tMlllngl'f,
Ntw York. 1.S. WllMNI, Kenses Cltv, 13',
Wlllltlltr. 0.Jrolt, l>I; lrell, K•nuit Chy ll4; lutlllf. Clevet•nd, lM
DOUI LE$-Metll11gty, N•w vori.. 3~.
l!loftt, l otton, 31, lllcilner, t o11on. 32.
Coooer, MllwaukM, 1t, O W1tl\ar, Clll· ceoo, 21
TRIPLES-Wll1on. Ken1u Cll11, 1,, 8ul
Jtf, Cllv••nd, tl, Puck•tl, Mlnne,ole, 10,
Cooe>1r, Mllw1ullM, I, Fernendt1, T0ton10. '· HOME RUNs-f<llk, Clllcaoo, 31. o.
event, o.1ro1t, ,,, TllOme•. s..111t is.
klt>onl, KenMs Cllv, 2•. Pr .. lev. SMtllt, , ..
STOLEN IASE~endtrlOn New
Vorll., S3. l"enls, Aftelt1. ll, 8un ....
Clt\lllelld, ». WllMMI, K•nu' Cllv, )3,
Mo$8bv, Toronto. 2t
PITCHING 19 dechlon1l-8irt111, 0.11.·
land, 9·t, l 2l, Guldrv New York 15-4.
l 01, Sebertwtoen. Ktn111 Cllv lt·S 2'2,
Howell, 0.klelld, •-• l ts. Kev. Toronto, .... , "-s TRIKfOUTS-8 1Vleven, MlnnelOle,
143, Morrl1, O.lrOll 137, lurn1, C11fu90,
1)0, 8annl11 ... Chicaoo, 177, Witt, .,..._
l:M
SAVE~lsenblrrv, KenM11 Cllv, 17,
Hernencle1, 0.lroll, 23, Howell. 0.lllend, n, Meire, A"91b, 2i 111ot11111. N-York, ,.
LITTL• L•AGU• ALL·ST~IU
MalOn (11. t 2·veen tlld >
WHT•RN 1t•GIONALS ( •• Saft lemltrdlM)
Tuescll'l'S ~
Ulell •. Monll l\e 3
Northern Celttornle '· New M•••CO O T .. V', ~met
S:JO 0 m -Arh\>118 VI ColoradO·
Ottoon winner
I 0 m -ldaNI VS WHlllnQlon·H•w•ll
winner
Tlwr1cleY"1 G-
S:30 om -Ul11'1 v1 NOflhtrn Callf()(nla
I om -WVomlno·AleMI• wlnntr v1
Soutl'\lrn Celllornl•·Ntvade wlMer
""-Y'S Gemes
UO, I o.m -SeM!fu..i. S.lllnllY"s ~
I om -Cllemolonltllo
NOTE Menv conM>lellon oreck11 eemes
wilt 8110 DI 1118\led Nell Oev
,,..,,,, '9umament
(It Oev•nd>
l"tlU T ROUND
8rad Draw111 (Austrell•l def Jaro
Nevralll ICzecNltlovakle ), 6·2, •· 1, Merlan
V•lo• <C1tcl'I011ov1kla) def Mer111 Davis
(US ), 6·•. 6·7, 1·6, Terrv MoOr IU SI dll
Scoll MCC1ln (US I. 6·3. 3·6, 6 1, Btn
T9'1erman IU S l dfft D•n Goldl• <US l,
6·•. 7·6, RlcerdO Acuna (Cllllt) Oaf Sliva
Me111er CU S l 6·2. 6·•. Rtckv Brown (US)
def Jonn Frewtev IAullrella ), •·•. 1 6. 1 s.
Brad Gllberl IU S l oaf Pe•• Doo11an
IAUllrellal 6·• 6·3 01vlO P111 CU S I def
Eric Korlte IU S l 3 6 7·6 6·)
~nedtan Open
(et MefltrNI)
'l•ST ltOUNO
St11>llane BonnH u IC•n101I Clef Tomei
Sm•O <Crtcnos.IOv•kl•I ' ) ) ' 1 i. Nets.on Aertl 18railll def koll Dav"
IU S I 7·•. 6·2-
H COND ROUND
Wah M1wr (Aus.1re11a1 def Vtllv
Amri1re1 (lndla l 1·6 •·2. Glenn MICllibal•
ICanaO.l oat L••rO Ounloo IC1nadal ' J 6·4 S11111er P ... 11.IU llWHll dtf Tom
Gulik~ IU S l 4·6 7·S 6·2 Di n Cul1dy
IU S l Clef Oenoe Vf\Hr ($oulll AlriceJ 6 ·3
1·5 Tim Wlrtr.1l0n 1u S) def Grant Connell
1Canedel 7·6 6·3, Anov KOllll>ert def
TllomH H<>lttladl <Swl'Oenl J·6. 6·• 6 J
Jav LIDIOUI IU s I di! Ken FH Cll IU s )
6·1, 6·• SlobOdan Zl1101lnoclv (Well Ger·
manvl oaf F'evar SI01il IC recl'IOsloveklel
6·3, 6·3 Vilas Geru1a1111 I US) dtf v1c1or
F>eccl IF>ar111uavl. 6-3. • 6. 6 1
U.S. Amatour ChamOlonsttl.,.
l•t Kllmew Lelle, N. Y.)
SECOND ROUND
Jecli. Griffin (LeJoll•l Otf Mere
PoOcestro (H01moe1 NJ ), 7·6 6·7. Palrlelt.
hvlOr (Hous•onloef Fran!\ C.re111111 IS.n
Diego). 6·4. •·6. 6·2 Scoll Mlfvlllt <S•n
Merino) def Kevin Belcner (Roouv111
N v l 6·0 6-0 Wooo11 Hunt ITorrancel
oat C.reo Hatecv < Dovles.lown. Pa I 6 •
6·2. Olli Smllll ILot Angele\) def Cra•o
Kennedv IC.01111n N v ) ,. S. ' • LOUii
Cu lro·Ma leaga CPerul oe1 Scon Mors.e
IL• JOiie) 6·2 ,. I
WOMEN'S SECOND ROUND
01an1 Ooe>ion IAu111n Tak CMI A1111on
C0004r IGranaoa H1l•s.I ' 1 6 I
Wom..t'' tournal'Mftf
(•t St. Leuls)
"RST ROUND
Su\tn MeKarin IU S.l def Sul8n Slo1,,.
IU SJ 6·l 3·6, 6·3, 8onnls. C.tduHll IU SI
dlt Anne Wllllt (US I 6·• 2·6, 1·S, Merv
Ja. F.,.nano.1 IU S > def Anoree Ltla no
IU S I, 6·4, 6· 1 Liu Bondtr (US l dtl
Virginia Ru11c1 IRomante ) 6·J 6-J
Wom..t'I tournament
11t Mallwn, H.J.)
'1RST ROUND
Cllrltll•n• Jollu11n1 (Swll1tr1ano1 ci.t
G1g1 Ftrnenoei tU S ), 6·2 6· 1 Marcell•
Muker (Nlll'ltrlends.l oaf e111t Burgin
(U.S ), 6· 1, 6·2, PHcelt Per•dll (France!
oef Robin Wlllle IU S I, 6·3, 6 I, F>em
C118le IU S ) dtf Jennv Kll1c11 IU S ), 6· I
6·1
HCOND ROUND
Helen Klllli <C•neda) def Anne Mlnllr
CAuslf•ll•) I·• 6·• 6·3, Steffi Gt'1I (W811
Germ1nv( def Amtllda Brown (8rll1lnJ
6·1, 6·1, Kaltrlna Melftv1 C8u11Mtr1tl Ciel
Lori McNeil IU.S l 6·•. •·2 Kelll\I Jor01n
<U S l dtf S.b!'ln• Gaits !Yuoostevl•). 6 l
6·0, C•lerlne LlndGvl11 ISwldtfl) dtf An
nebtl Crot1 ( 8rlla1n) •·3 6·4, Htltnll
Sukove IC1ecllo110v1ki1l dtf Ad~l•ne VII
la~•n IAroenllnel •·• •·1 Ke111v Rlne ldl
CU S l def hllnde Cordw11 IN-lMlelldL 1·•, •·2, SvM• H1nlkt (Well G ... mtnv)
def. Tenv Ptlefo1 IU '). •·4 ,.,, •·>.
G•O<lle s.oe11n1 tAr11111tlnel dtf e11aat11111
Minter 1Au•lreli411 •·l •·1 Anorn JMOtr
cu S l dtf Jo Ourl• t8rlle1n) •·2 rtllreo
Misc.
Vlctwla llrlmbMtd Cenmt
(•t Albe ... di)
IS tfllll llMll'
1 WIU WUtrnen. L.eoune 8MCfl, , O\llln
llllfodll\. Leoun• 8N cll. J Mell Cr0\111,
L•oune Inell, 4 Kun Rldtl, Sen Juen C1ol11rano
IMllr---19
Tom Tre.-. L•""'9 9"cfl. J &rid
Olckev, A1111111lm J Ive" All'lluer, L"""8
Inell, 4 J.illen Ctrrofl, SM! IHCll •· .,...,.. ,.
I Scott Manley, ~ t K't'tlt
Trte1W1v L'9Ulll ... ell. , ~UI Kral,
l.."""8 H~J • JMn Ger•um NlwllOrt heel ts •-,,
(IW•t Henderson t..eouna eeec11, t
C..., Ware, L.et\.lfle, ) Tim '1111en,
L""nt tMcll. 4 Tim ll9!1n1, Mlllbu, l J_.. Httfrktl n LffUllll a..Cf\
-L
Women's golf results
'"""'" GeH T.w Vlvtct Wevoe 74 Jt-ISJ L M KIWI 11·11-15'
(et L.ee~ ICeMeO Sherri SteW\euer 7'·1)-152 J ... 1('*"811 tM ... 15' leek y H«ller1 7'·1)-IU a ltllld•YllN ,..,,_,,,
J•"'CI Gibson 7<>-.,_1,. Kerin~ eo-n-1n I( Antoioca 11'1.,_1S1
Mldlele l«teollt n-n-1 .. o-CllellCtlOf I0-71-151 ~Wt!t~ .,., ... li1
Sue Tonkin 7l·7'-14S I( lmOertV Dlr1l• I0•11-1St hlnlC..f-. ..,_, ..
HM tll« l"err 7'·11-US Oeftl .. h!Owlll eo-n-1g ~M.IOn 13·1S-ise
Jtl Jereulcl 7'·7'-1 .. C>wttfl U OoMt •7>-t5l 1.0tl.,OC!l 12·76--19
GI"""' FUholl ,,.~, ..
O.OllllietWCI 7•·n-1t6
T •ll'Vl'llt Or"" 1•·1>-l47
Jene 5irMOn• n-1s-1•1 Lvnn HurC1·$t0111 7t•7t-141
l erll>Muelle 7'•7t-141
Joov Rosenthal 77·11-141
Krl1tl Arrl"91on 7•·7S-l"9
Terri Lyn C..ritt' 1S-1-14'
Julie Colt 7Mt-t4' Ctllly JOM11on 7'•1)-1"9
O.b McH1ltie 77·D-1SO
NlckvLtROUll 71·1>-lSO
l(JMll UW 17·7t-1S1
Lvlld• lrown 77·7t-1SI R elllllee Bradley 71· 7)-IS I o Kortoerrd 71·13-lSI
LuLon11 lllltOltr 11·1t-1S2
Nenc11 Ho<n1 71-JS-152
llams uMcMe
·~
NI~ Tonilcfl o.ni .. M.rtlnea
ll'eltv JorMll
Kn Lolltn
MM.MarWll
PetOom1IH
Julie LArMll
H"8n..,_lns
lec:kv I.Ir.on
L118 Kluvtf'
Gra.ce S.•err
Nina Jou• 1 SueC~n
Gina HUM
Julle Kln11
JennJWGrett
toMo C•v•neuon Sue l(rotftt11
Danbe King
Thundev, AU9 lS ~SI Loula lllOmel 7
Frlo1v, Aug 23 -vs. Plllladt!Dnl• 11
C01umt>u1, Onlo. •'.JO
S.1urd1v. Auo 31 -New E119leno
(Nlmt). 7
1111_,..r SNMn
Sundev, S.01 I -Dlnv.,. lllOmel. I
Sundav. s.o1. 15 -•• F>1111e<1110fll•, to
Mon<ll V, S.PI. 23 -al Setttlt. 6
Sulld•v. S.01 1' -Atl1n1e lllOmel. I
Sundev, Oct 6 -Mlnnesol• (llOmal I
Sun<ltv. Oct ll -et Temoe Bev. 10
Sundev. Oct 20 -al Ka nsas Cllv. lO
Sundlv Oct 27 -San Frenc11eo
(l'tOml), 1
Sund•v. Nov 3-New Orle•nslllOml), I
Sundev, Nov 10 -el NY Glenl\, 10
Sundev, Nov 17 -el Allen1e, 10
SuMt v. Nov 24 -GrHn 8a11 lrtome), I
Sundev. Dec. l -•• New Orieens, 10
Mondev, 09C 9 -et Stn FrenclKo. 6 Sundlv, Dec. IS -SI LOU•\ (llOml), I
Mondev, Dec 23 -LO\ Anoelll RakMrl <nome>• (AA nmes Peciftel
ll•idlrl ICMcMe ........
Sundtv, Auo la-Wall>lt111lon lllOmll I
S.lutOlv AU9 l • -Miami (home), 6
Frldev. Auv lO -•I Clt\llttlld, 00
._.., S.Mft
Sunoav Sept • -NY Jtts (llOml). I
Tllurldav, Stol 12 -al Ka"'H Cltv. S
Sul\dav, Stol n -5en FrencllCO
(l\Oml), I
Sundav S.ol 79 -., ,....., enotend. 10
Sundev, Oct 6 -Kanses Cllv (llorne), 1
Sundlv, Oct l~N•• Or1t1ns (l\omlL 1
Sundav, Ocl 20 -•• Cltvetand, 10 Mondav, Ocl 2' -Sen Dlevo (llornll. 6
Sundev. Nov 3 -11 Su ttlt, I
SUndev, Nov 10 -•I Stn Dleoo, I
Sundlv, Nov 17 -Clnclnnell (llornll, 1
Sundev, Nov 2• -Denver (llornl) I
Sundlv, Dec 1 -a l All•nta. 1
Sundl v, Dec I -at Denver, 1
Sunoev. Dec IS -S..lllt ll'IOrMI, I
Sund•v. Dec 23 -11 Ram\, 6
(AU llmH F>aclfk)
NFL exNbftleft KhecMe
THUlltSOAY
S> Lout1 al llarM
,RIOAY
DelrOll 11 S..ttlt
SATURDAY
Allen•• •• Temoa Bev 8uff1lo al Ml1m1
OaUu al San Dlavo
GrMfl Bev al Hew Vorll Giant\
Houston et Hew Or81's
lndianaoo!ls 11 Clllceoo
New Er19lend el Kenses Cnv
New York Ja" al C1nclnna1
Pntlactelllfl•• al Clevetano
Plllst>urQfl at M1nneso1e
SUNDAY
Wun1m11on •I Raiden
MONDAY
Dtnver al Sin Frencltco
l'RIOAY, AUG. 2l
1tam1 '" Ptllledelonl• •• COlumous. Ohio
Clnclnnall 11 Detroit
New EnglanG II WaltllnQIOn
PllllburlJll at SI Loull
SATURDAY, AUG. 24 Ml1ml 11 R11dtr1
Allanl• vs Grffn 8av at Mllwaul<ff
Ciavetand •• 8uff110 lndlen•oolls al o.nv ...
Kansas Cllv al Hovi.Ion
New York Jth al New York Gtani.
TamDI 81v el Ntw Orleanl S•n Diego II Sen Franciico
S.anle 11 Minneso••
MONOA\',AUG.1'
C111cago a l DallH
THURSDAY, AUG. 29
Detroil al Pl'lltedllonra
l'RIDAY, AUG:lO
lleldtn •• Cltvelano Cinclnne11 11 1no1en10011\
M••mt " Allen!• Minnesota el Oenv•r
N•• Orltens al Sen D•ego
Ntw York Giants. 11 P1lls1>urg11
S.n FrancllCO I I ~•Ille WHh1ng1on al T am11e 8av
SUNDAY, AUG. Jl
New E r>ollnd al Rems
8uff•lo 11 C11tca90 H0<.o11on el Oellu
Naw YOf> Jel• al Grftn Bev
SI Lout' el Kan\41 Cllv
tflS ABC·TV scMdu ..
Mendn, S.01101t11r t
waf.l\lnoion 11 D•lle6, '1>.m.
Thursdlv, S.oteuio.. 12
LO\ AnQtlH R•lcters. ., l(e11sei Cllv 5
om Mllldlv, ~ 1•
Plllsourgll 11 Clev ... no, 6 om
Tllun cl..,, '"""'"* It Cnlc190 et Mlnnes.ole, S 11 m
MelldlV, ~ 2l
llll•m• 11 S.11111, 6 om MoMly, ,..,...., ... )0
Cincinnati •• F'lllst>urgh, 3 om SunMy, Odieel« •
Dalles •• New York Glt11t' 5 om MMcllly, 0c-.r 1
SI LOUI\ •• Weslllngton. 6 0 m
Mtf*y, Odieel« 14
M•tml at N-York Jiil, ' o.m Mtl*v, Oc'1Mler l I
GrHn lav 11 Clllcato. 6 om
Meflllly, Oc'1Mler ll
Sen DilOO •• Los AnOIMs Raidef'I •
om MeNIY, .. _,.,.._ 4
Oa•lt\ el St Louil, ' Pm ~ .......... ..,... 1i
San Francisco •I Denver, 6 om
MM!llv, ,..,~ 11
New Yon. Gltnlt •• We..,lnoton ' o m ,,_...,.., .... ..,... 2S
S.1111e •I Sen ;rencl•co, ' om M9ft1Mv, December t
cnic•oo •I Ml1mt, 6 o"' ~v. O.C.tftMf s
Pt11.ourg11 11 Sen Oleto. ! om
M9ft1Mv, o.c.nllw ' Rimi ., Sen Frenc:IJCO, ' 0 m Mtftdly, ~ ,,
New Erioi.114 ., Ml1ml, ' 0,., ,,...,, DlumlMf IO
Denver et SMttlt, S om
MIMIY, O.CttNMI »
LO\ Al!Mlll lteldtfs 11 "'"'' • 1 l"!I
c: ............. cat' 1 .. TV SCHIOU~•
!Ifft 1' -No!Tt Deme et Mlcllleell
'"' 21 -~.le ., a.m-s... fl -THts at SlllllWCI
Ocl S -I yflt "-llOl\ll) MlcfliMn Stell
et loWll. Arttone S•• .. el UCL.<
Oct lt -1...i netlenell. Mlclllean •• IWchietn S1a,. UCL.A •t Slentwel
• Oct It -l"ur*-el Oftlo Statt , Allllwfl et 0-t,. Tedi
Oct ff -Uwe oll t..,._), ONo Stel9 11
~· et UCLA Ftona Slt lt el Ngrlfl ~
Nov I -....,. 11 C»W Sf• ... UC~ 14
W1tf\1!19IOll '
No't 9 -la.Ill N lllNI) MiMll et
Mer'l'ltftG. We\NMIOft •I AtltOM $1119
Nev I• -tlllllt natlOMI) tow• ••
.-U,fue. M.t nd 11 '"""'°" ...... t> -Ofllo $tt t' It MlcNeen
N9'1 1' -Vlf'ti.nle et Mttylll'ICI
...... >O -"°'" Oe"'8 ., Mleftll ~ J -A/'tflv ..,... Ne11v
1f 1 15) s"~ n ·N-ISI
n ·1 ... 1s.> Nt/IC'V T IV!Of 11·77-111 n.1.-11» c; Meltock ao-1t-IM ,..,._,,,, ll'elTI Allen J't-7'-ISI , .. .,._,Sol l..uev Cesl•ntO• ,. t l-159
76-71-lW Anne Helh•we v 13 7t-ist 77·77-IS. Ctvlatv Drl"v ., 71-15'
11·76--lW Juctv Funl ,. . .,_,,,
71•1r-1W Olene Leno 9'•7a-ltt 7t-7t-1W C•lllYLM 14·11-161 Jt•IS-1$4
11-7>-15"1 ..... "''""'°" lo-12-162 13-n-m ltoo Thornton 17• ..... 163
IHt-IU Jotll Delk M·1t-16ot
I0-7S-ISS Cllrl1t1 T-U·IO-IU
7'·76--IU I HIPOtn"tll IS-11-1'6 ,,_,..,_IS5 1111 o«>ill" Auoer 14·'2-1'• 77·7t-IS.S Llnoe Melone •·n-166 tHS-15' a·TenlTatum '3·14-1'1
L" ~
TUSSDAY'I RHULTS
(tOlll .. •l·nllflt 41U8'19tW .. ~)
'"'ST RAC• . ..0 veros.
R•oet• George (Lewis) "IO It 60 ll 40
Trlool &onus (CrH-l 6'0 HO
SlrMI Smert (Gerti•) 6 20
Time n.06
ll UlACTA (Ill 01ld W 1 SO
S•COND RAC•. lSO verd'
Ct ll Me Volcanic (Giff) 110 4 60 4 00
z.1a1an (Mu fleld) 33 tO 11 20
8901bo1t1 (Figueroe) I• 60
Time 11.31 n •XACTA (S·ll 11elO IS«IO
THNtD RAC•. lSO verO\ Goll• Polkv (Ftguaroet 9 20
Dark lvorv IH•rl I
Nulllado Two I S.Vllle I
Time 11n
,OU.TI4 RAC•. 440 varOl
LUCll.y Ha" (8Udl 9 60
SlrFllrtln.Arlld (Oldt<1Cksat1)
Cl'lk:'lll P11'8"' A• IWlll•U'1ll
Trine not
400 400
400 420
l IO
00 •40
• 40 '40
ll 40
'2 •XACTA 16·71 oa o \I 11 40
""" RACI . lSO varol &ens Go• It CCruoer • 60 2 60 160
Quall! (Eowaro11 ._ 2 40 2 40
RN I lk>l>v (Oldtr1Cksat1 3 20
l ime II 10 st UlACTA Cl SI oa d l9 40
Sl){TH RACI. lSO vard\
Perteet Tra<lllloti (Mvi.11 'IO
R•I .. Him EH\I (TreHUrt)
Maller Blue I Harll
Time. 1795 n •XACTA 11 )I oalo ,,. 20
HV•NTH RACE. 110 verOl
Olckt yAllN lk (Flor") 21 40
Mr K•lll• (Harin)
Cuolds 8ov 10 1oerlcksenl
Time' 45 71
&2 I XACTA ( l·l J oa10 Vl 60
•tGHTH RACE. JSO varos
K1011M110 CTrtH urt) 4 60
RIOel C11en1r1u (Cruger I
M1 Fire Foa (Herl)
Time 11 7S n •XACTA 11·3) oelo 137 '°
l10 uo
•20 400
S60
120 600
4 00 710
320
4 00 260 s..o 300
•IO
2 l"tCK SIX 17-6-l 1 1 I ) 1>eiO 11,tn IO
willl ~en wlnntfl (SI& lloritl) n Picll SI•
conS01111on D•id 1176 IO w1111 '" wln111ts (five llorlt')
NINTH RACI SSO varOl
C111 Cale«> (Harl) 7 20
Soeed Galore tGarcl8
C11a un1 8avou IC•••ot< > T me ,, 71
llE.XACTA t71 oao 1llOO
TENTH RACE 3SO varO\
Tiii Hlvllwav M¥I 18erdl SIO
Dt+-Mlglllv Runner (P•nl
OH-TorlUOO Sa ior IArrNlr,,g )
Time 110'1 n •XACTA rt I 01 0.,. 60
12 I XACTA 9 41 11810 lSI 20
Allenclenct 6 401
~ ... flltllnt
HO 260
320 140
) .cl
• HO 300 •
•OO 600
760 760
DAVEY'S LOCl(lilt (Nlw"'1 ... di)
-213 ano11r1 S t>arracuo• 16 vet1ow1e11
113 rock l11n 1 llahbul 524 OHi '26
mact,erel I ve1towl1n lune II a1oecore
TuesdeY'I trenMctlonl
a ASll8 ALL
A~n LMtut
BA L TIMORe ORIOLES-Announcl<I
111e1 Lenn Sall.el• 1ec0t>CJ baHman, will
ol•v lor Rocllt lltr of 1111 ll'lltrne1oona1
LHgut
MILWAUKEE 811EWER$-Cellld uo
Rev S..••CI" P<IC!llr eno Cer~ Pon«,
1nfllldlr. from Vancouver ol Illa Pacific
CoH I LHgue S.nl CllUCk Porter 11ltcller
IO 8e101t ol '"' MlawH I L••oue SEATTLE MAlllNERS--Ol>lloned Jim
LtWll, 111tcner IO C11gary of 11'11 P•clflc
Coes.1 Lueue F>urcllesed 1111 contract of
Jac:k Lu orko, 011c111r, trom CalOlrv
aASl<ITaALL
Nt llenal a. UilftNI A 1wcle tten
NEW JERSEY NE TS-Named Dave
WOii lll•d coac:l'I and Boo MacK1nnon
.... , .. ,,, COICfl
,OOTaALL
Na!llMI l'Mtbel LMIUI
LOS ANGELES RAM$-Cu1 Root•<"
F s.ller COfl!lttMIC:li.
OETllllOIT LIONs-PlaU<I Homer E •H
ott1n11v1 ltnemen Ktv•n Marr11 and Ron
Cron u telit\ Garv Mutllfl •kll re·
calv.,. Kav•n So1111; •no Oweyne Rooen
•ine08Ct.tn al'd TOI"\ K.•nk• dlflnitve
tackle on """".,.' Si9Md JarT'lft Herrell. ••neO.Cklr P1ac:eo W1hl1 m 0 1non, rli/ln•1111
oacll. 111<1 Kevin Mancock •ntbl<kar on
Illa ln~ld •Herve '" GlteeN 8AV ,..CKEllllS-Annou<l<'ICI
1111 re1lr-1 ot Lerrv McCer~en c.<1ler
NEW ENGLAND PATlllllOTS-Wa1vl0
&i Cowltv wide rac.t•er anci Hlo
Mullalllv goero
NEW YORK JE TS-Watv.d PM E11<1
klCkft, O«rlcli. Frtnklln corn«llKk Erl<
K•lte• 01Jnllf Jonn McCarTllv QWr
lerble" •nd Tom Scl\lefer cen1... PIKld
G'°'" F tovd. cttilnM llt<'ll. •no Ronnv
Cone ruMlnll Deck on 1111 lnwred •••.,."• 1111
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Cul Ollo
Kelhl Jalro ,.1ner1nde end Mike 1rv1111J
rUf'nlnt beCU
ll'ITTSIUllllOH STEELEllllS-Cul Jef1
\encflla 1efttv Mlkt ~, ... , center eno
Jim ~I, def9nilVI lfld
ST LOUIS CAROINALS-S•ontd Pel Tlot., wiot recelv.,. 10 • _ • .,.., con•
tree I
UN Ol(GO CHAltGll!R~u1 Tim
'O•, Mlltv t lll\I W?ll.. ru•1111nt MP. llMI
I llV YeftC\' cet'M'llKk $AN ,RAN(ISCO tff!llll,_._Md
O«• ~ "'"· -Gan. T"*"-,~ TAM,.A I AY auCC •NEElllls-<u• ,.,,.... °"""'' ''°"""'"' Md! Dw•V'll Ollllll MCI ledl TPltml~ wtoe 1'9Qi•tn
.... C>erM ..-• c~ .-s ...
...-. Deir• auru. ~""' M<to. w .. MMrt, llnllecUr eiN Certten GUN', ~at
t tOV
1.."°A-4-.0 ,._ rtllf"'*'' ol
Tern l..uOhunt
MOQt.sY .............. i..e..
N W YOH U.HGlltt-~ U o· ow.,er C'lflt ...
Q\I H C NOltOIQUI '11114
0 '· """"' " • fl'lijflt , Ultft t
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIW~. AUQWt 14, 1111 •
Wasia1'. lie's
king of minors
after 36 years
ST. PETERSBURC... Aa (AP) -
Stan Was1ak, nicknamed luna of the
m1rors after winning his 2,000\h
aamc a a minor teque mana4er m
1978, i o n 'the verge of makan& 11
official.
The 65-year-old s~1ppcr of the
Clas~ A Vero Beach Dodaer\ of the
Flonda State Ltaaue needs but a
handful of v1c1oncs to surpau Bob
Coleman's record of 2.946 career
tnumphs.
Onl> Connie Mack and John
McGraw, who managed H and 33
)'tars in the ml\jor leagues. f'C\pccUvc-
ly. have won more.
·-rd ·be lying af I said 1t wasn't
important to me," Wasaak said dur-
ing a recent road tnp to St
Petcrsbura ... And I'd be lying if I said
I ever dreamed that somethma hke
this might happen ..
Wasialc beaan managing 1n 1950
after bouncmg around the manors for
10 ycan as a pla )'Cr.
He has been associated with I 7
clubs in 13 states smc:c Branch Rickey
offered him a position as player·
manager with the Brooklyn Dodgers'
Class D Valdosta. Ga. farm club.
"Rtght now, I'm not gcttinJ 100
excited about this. The recogmuon is
nice. but I really don't win the $Imes
The boys do," Was1ak said. "I
1magme that on~ If.Cl w11h1n three or
four (victones) I ll start to f~I
something."
This 1s Was1ak's 36th consecuu"e
season as a manager. another minor·
league record. and his sixth at Vero
Beach, which he guided to the Flonda
State League 11lle an 1980
A year later. heart surgery and a
subsequent bout "1th hepat1t1s
threatened to end his streak one
season shy of Coleman's 35 straight
campaigns. •
The Dodgers ordered ham to takC'
the 1982 season off. but Was1aJc:
talked the front office into allowing
him to manage one game to keep has
goal ahve.
··wC' won 11. I may ha' e been the
first manager to go through a season
undefeated," he joked.
Terry Reynolds. Vero Beach gen·
cral manager. recalled the difficult> of
convincing Was1ak to take time off.
"He b)' no means wanted to Sta)
away," Reynolds said. "It was a
precautionary thrng more than an)'·
thm~.else. But I know it was tough on
htm.
Was1ak and has wife of 37 )'ea.r"S,
Barbara. spent most of that season at
their home 10 Mobile, Ala. They dtd
some tra,ehng. but 1t didn't keep hu
mind off baseball.
"I'm aau)' who wasalwaysafrald to
take a day o.ff. I never saw m¥ \jds
araduate and those lunds of th1n.,s.."
Was1ak sa1d. "f was home for the first
ume and think I drove my wife~·
Now I Jeno\\ wby some people die
when they QUI! working."
ThC' hst of cumnt and former
maJOr leaguers who once played for
Was1ak includes StC've Su. Fernando
Valenzuela. Jerry Royster. Alejandro
Pena, Mike Marshall. Ken Howell.
W1lhe Davis and Roger OJ.ig.
Two ofh1s former pupils -Bobby
Cox oflhe Toronto Blue Jays and Bob
Lalhs of the Houston Astros -arc
managers in the m&JOts, a level
Was1ak ne,er reached as a player or
manager
"h's dasappoinung that I nev~ gen
a shot. but 1t gives me great sattsfac-
uon wa1ch1n1 those le.ids do so well.''
he added .. h doesn't remove the
hun. but 1t gives you a aood feeling
that you helped them along \be W&)'."
The closest Wasiak came to man-
aging m the majon was a four-year
stint with the Dodgers' Class AAA
i\lbuquerque afftliate fro m 1973-76.
The btg leagues. he thought, was the
next le>gJcal step. In 1977, though, he
headed back to Class A at Lodi, C.ahf.
"Yoo don't manage all these years
wuhout lcnowmg what you'rcdoma."
Wasullc said. "If nolh10g else. I
thou&.ht I deserved a chance to be a
first base coach "
Where there's
Hope there's golf
Comedia n takes it
pretty serious ly.
in any s itua tion
By HAL BOCK
'" Sp«i• Wrfft<
NE~ 't ORK< .\Pl-The manage·
ment of the staid ~aldorfTo"'ers on
fashionable Park .\ 'enue ma' be
1n1erested to kno" that onC' of us
frequent guests occas1onalh pracuces
his folfgame tn his suite
.. t's perfect for 11." Bob Hope said
"Just look at 1ho!>r high ce1hngs ..
Before passers-b\ pan11. 11 should
be note that "hlle Hopc-'s clubs
al"'a's check in \I.Ith him he limits
his hotel golf to non-<iangcrouc; puuc;
across 1he plush carpet
The comedian has been addicted 10
1h1c; sport for 55 )Car<> "and l'\t hated
<.'\Cr-¥ minute of 11." he said
Not realh Hts home 10 Burbank. 1s
fi"e mmutes from the tirc;t ttt on the
neighborhood course and he pla's
every da) he can "I ne'er get better.
though." he said
Then he offerC'd some ad' ice .. ) ou
kno" how to gC'l better at golf'
Pract1ct" There·s nothing hlce prac·
uce Take some lessons Then break
the clubs and gi'e 1t up "
Is lhert a good c;1de Ill this
demanding unforgl\ 1ng 'otten
humbling game"
"\\ell. golf ts pren> tunn~ ·· Hope
otltred "at lea'it the v.a} I pla' 11 •
\nd ti 1.an get \OU on the b(-t·
<,eller hst.
Hope's current book about h"
lo' e-hate relattonsh1p with the pmt
tlllt'd Confes~1ons of a Hooil.er dC'
1a1ls his hfet1me on the hnks "II\ 'o
<l this "etl .. he said proudh "It
<iurpmed me Ifs my c1Jhth boo~ and
none of 1he other'\ v.ere u popular is
th1!> one ..
Hope started" llh $olf. tcmponmh
at lea'it an I 'ff' "l tned to pla\ I wa'
sn bad three four-.om~ pla'cd
Bob Hope
through on m( I ~1d 10 mv~lt ·~ho
nee-d<. this hum1ha11on~· •·
Th~e \.ears later. Hope was on a
'audC\llll" Nang 1hrough ~tern
Canada "hen he got hool..ed on goll
aaain. tht\ lime permant"ntl~
··Thert "'as an -acrobat act the
Diamond Brothf'rs The~ thrtt gu'..,
v.ent oul e'en da' The\ 100~ mt·
along t "as prett~ bad ..
He J..ept at 1t. though. and b~ I q, I
Hope had his hand1l.ap do" n to .£
manageahle 4 and felt good enough
.i~ut h1c, game to pl,l\ in the 8nt1\h
\mateur
l '<" ph1bkm' and age ha' c
t'l'lhwnC'd Hopt'·~ handicap up to an
I nl'" He ront1nues to battle at -
de11h "l 1h1n~ T can get lx-tter •
Thai·, "hat the~ all~'
ome of Hope fa"onte pla}1n
p:inner\ h:n(' ~n prntdent\, from
()" 1Jht F."cnho"'er to (1t>rald Ford
SMU appeals penalities
BO TOJ\. (\Pl uthetn
Methodist. a freQucnt w1nncr on the
football field. tned loda) 10 l\oad an
off-tic-Id lo ~ "'"'l h could lhJ"C'4tlen •
prom1!.1na ~uon I~ than a month
before 1l ~ns
.\ heanna ~as ht'duled before the
C <\A Coun 11 on the una\C'nlt) ·~
appeal of a dtc1\1on which ~portcJI~
would cost ML. football ~holar·
Ul1p<> and bowl and 1elev1\1on appear-
ance~ btc'au~ of 1llqed m:n11t1n1
v1olat1on$
The council Y..I n't c•~cd to
announce a dccaSlon unul Ill thrtt·
da~ mcetmt end n F ~ l"'M
~nal11ei be1n ap~aled 11tere
auc: ~ b) thC' • A's lnfra~uon
t ommrtttt. according to the Dalla~
T1mc1 Herald
'\1'1l • "'h1ch hu bttn on probauon
ll'C' umc.., \IOC"e I Q~8 ha bttn the
llbjt('l of I 1b-month tn"C ll&lllOn
that bcpn ab<lut the ume 1u prt,1ou'
1v.o-\car probatton t'nded in June
IQ ' The lnfracuon Committee's dt·
Ct\ton 1f upheld, would bar Ml
from 11'"\I football ~holanh1P'o
nt:\I )tar and from 1ppc.ann on
tek 'L 1on or an bo"I pmcs fort•~
)C'an. the Tim Hcrald reponcd
The nc paper aJ satd Ml
p&a Hl bri a chaJ 411
around lhlt ll hli been dl\•
cnm1n1tcd insL
-----------...-----~~------..-.. ........................................ .-. ....... -.. .................................... ..-..-..---. .... .-..-. .... -.-.-. ...................................................... -..-.. ........................ __ ~~~~---~ ...... .......
,
Newport hotel names
director of DJarketlng
Deul1 E . Flttpatrlck has been appointed d11"«tor of marketing
for the S•uatoa Newport Hotel. I le comes to Sheraton from the
S&oaffer Madl10• Hotel in Scatth:. where he held the same posl. He 1s
rclocatin& from Seattle to Orange Count}. Besides muketing the
hotel. fillpatnek will generate room. food and beverage revenue • • • Nanene Macbe~ has been named to the board ofd1recto~ oflhe
Pataam GoldH Scale Coa.acll, a national assoc1al1on madr up of
FJTZPATRJCK MACBETH CATON
brokers who maintain quaht~ profoss1onalism wtlhin the investment
industry She IS assistant vice president or the Fullcnon office of
MerrlU Lynch, Pierce, Feuer & SmJt11 Inc. • • • Sandra P. Ca&on has joined Irvine-based Accelerated Computer
TralJ1lng as customer relations represen tall ve. WI th respons1 bil It y for
mainta1n1ng contact Wlth ACTs clients, the communtt} at large and
trade and professional organizations. She comes to the firm from
Insurance Educational Association. where she designed and
marketed classes and seminars for the tn'lurancc industr) ACT
teache'I ~ftware to corporate personal computer u'lers • • • Westar Auoclates of Costa Mesa has annouoced two employee
appointments. Richard H. Carr has been promoted 10 assistant \ICC
FITCH PILLON CARR
president of finance having ~rved as comptroller for the past three
)Cars Charles W. Piilon takes Carr's place as comptroller He comes
to Westar from the Newpon Beach public accounting firm 6f Peat.
Marwick, Mltcbell ud Co. Westar develo~ nelgbborbood sbopplng
centen in tbe Western United States. • • • Dorl Fl&cb hai. Joined Coopers & Lybrand in the ncwl) created
pos111on of marke11ngcoord1nator for the Newport Beach firm Fuch.
who bnngs Ii vc years of e~penencc to her new post. 1<; a mem bcr of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce board of director'\ and
first vice president of the women's di\ 1s1on, The Dolphins.
-1 :1111m111a1•1!1,tL•---------
l>
Connections ~ets meeting
Couectloa1, a woman's networking group, will present Lakle O'Keefe,
financial consultant, as the speaker for tbeJI Thursday mceung.O'Kcefe's
.·lop1c is"Ca1la Flow Muagemat."The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. and will be
1 held at Great Amertcu Savllag1 Bank, 601 Nonh El Camino Real, San
Oemente. For funher information call 498-146 7 or 492-4345 evenings
• • • Bert Hathaway. president of the Orange County SCORE/ ACE chapter
announced that a business seminar will be held Aug. 22. from 8 30 a m to 4
p.m 1n the community room at Republic Saving•. 2400 Ea.-.t 17th St . Santa
Ana
The program 1s des1ined to prov1(k information to people \\ho plan to
'itart a bustne\<, or rcccn1h eit.abltshcd a bustnC\'\.
Topics to be discussed by the speakers will be Marketing problem ... s11e
location. borrowing money rccordkecping. increasing saleo; through advenis-
; 1ng and promotion and legal procedure~. The ~10 fee include'\ coffee and
"matenal'i
( O·\pOn'>or lor th1.-, \em1nar arc the Service Corps of Retired Executives
. the Active Corps of Executives. and the U.S. Small Business Admlnl1tratlon.
FULLY SECURED
Interest Paid Monthly • Government securities
Fast Liquidity • 12·36 montns
Bonus 'fates on Jumbo Accounts
Ratts Wbltet to cnangtt
NK(i FIMANt:l ,\I~
(714) 759-8484
• c w ' 0 $ f
MCSmoveeln
MCS Inc. ln lnt.ne recently moved Into it.a new $4 .5
million, S8,000-9e1uare-foot headquarten on 2.9 acrea
In the Irvine Eut lnduatrlal Complex at Alton and
BUSINESS NOTES
~ ---
Monthly newsletter started
Mike Ferry. a Newpon Beach·
ba!oed author. lecturer and "sales
mot1'-at1onal trainer," has started a
monthl> newsletter called "Going
OH·r The Edge."
The newletler 1s a digest ofbusincss
commentaf) and other news ri:lated
to the business world. • • • The Newpon Beach accounting
finn of Coopers & Lybrand has
produced a "Handbook of EDP
Auditing," intended to fill what the
company calls an "information pp"
in the EDP auditing function within
publicly held corporatJ'ons.
The I .~page book is the product
of 11 years of"planning, tesung, and
refining," according to a company
press release. • • •
OTC UPS & DOWNS
NEW YORK CAP) -Tne tollowlno list
'hows the Over -the • Counter slodts and warrants that have gone uP lhe most and down the mo't be5ed on ~~U~rffl:S'Tra~fno ~~ab or 1000 shares ere Included. Ntl end percentage Changes are the difference between the previous closing
price and IOdav'' tf~ or bid price.
N'-me Last et1g Pct ~ Wli:hir:.~n 1~ :t ~ 8~ n:~
3 TerraMinE• g 5· 16 + ~ UP ·i 4 ~tegGenet ~ ~ Up . S llllngsCp 3~ 1"1 UP 6. 6 tew~ndwh 2~ ~ UP 15
,1 lagnstk un 4 'h Up U. MlllsJenn 3 ~ UP u 3 Azttcl'll!lf 211• 'I• Up 1~.,
l
llI M1,1tualO I l't. •!• Up 1 . vlProvBost ~ ~ UP 1 • lmfnmd un s ~ ~ UP 11. ~ellBnc un 1 1 UP 1 1 14 rlllngR• un 1it ~ UP l 7 IS ~nRlb un 'I• 11> Up ·1 6 ~Pl Svsl ~ 11• Up 17 ucldall ~ 11• UP 1 .
9 hY_t(!>J:ectl 34 'I• Up 1 118 El Minn t'h 'h UP 1 '
l!s
i"n~'l'r'V"~ ~ l ~ !~ 8~ :1 lmmunomd s 21/t ''• UP .
Kevlln 1~ 'h UP 9. Vlragen 7!t ,,. UP 9, Kennlngtn ),lo l4 UP 9.4
DOWNS Name i MartznMur Jo1>1nAlr VlsleFlm un 4 LaHrPhoto S Prexls un 6 KaslerCp •
1 Fjlghll'C'I ~ b~~kl
10 ~opak
Ji ~as~;1~
1" 1=~~ ~ ll~ domb ;11 s
' l~lnl Corp
11 Mr1~~h~' ~ ~SchHkEI
oi. Y~~:iiov LaO~lllt un Adv ;nellc ~lPS vs "'°" arm no.11h1Am Ws1wldCom s
Lall C'\,
4 ~ -1311• ~ -211. ~~ -''"' w; -r ... \~ -4~ 2l'h -rh 1: = ! 1~ -21h 11~ = 2~ -•1. ~ -•;. v .. -~ 1 1;. -11/J ~ -~
i'h = ,.,.,
'I• -'I• 1 'h -1'12
( o~ & Burch Ad,cn1sing Com-
pan) of Newport Ekach ha'> btm
appointed lo handle ad'-Crt1S1ng and
publJ<: rl•lat1on'> for The Ncwporter
Rcwrt hold in 1'.cwport Beach
· OvER THE CouNTER
MUTUAL FUNDS
·--~------······· .... a a o a o ft -0
a o o a o s a a 2
...
Toldeo &Tenua. The complex wu da1-ned for the
aoftware manufacturer by the architectural ftrm Gilbert
Aja Auoclatee.
FCA forms task force
By the Alsoclated Preu
A task force has been formed to
help Irvine's Financial Corp of
~menca to drspose of its bad 103n~
the firm announced.
Chairman Wilham J Pope10> said
Monday that turning non-performing
loans "inlo productive assets a~
qu1ckJr as possible 1s the h1Jhcst
operattonal priont} we have at this
llffiC." _
He ~1d FCA may tum a profit in
the last two quaners of J 985 after
losing S56. I m1llton m the first half
'1
..
o... .. ,_. L&st Ole OW"._. Utl Ole 01\I l'C ~ L.IJI Cll9 :t.tf~ -, ... ,, -~ 'l' I "' :~I ~ ·~
m 1 ~R ~1: • !:
t~
l ·..11 l. \Or ...
] ".1.1 d ..
i oil:.
,
~: ,,. . +~
,.
I
OW .... w.t LAii C• rJr-o-n--.u.i~ ON ........ LatQe
.~-f -.. ,..
... t7 ~!·1 .. .,•
·1~·
Stocks mostly higher
NEW YORK (AP) -Swck prices firusl\ed
mostly higher Wednesday in a qu1ct scss1on. llftin&
the Dow Jones industnal avcfllF to anotMr
modest gain. •
Trading volume picked up from T~Ys
pace. however.
The stock marlcct rcceatJ)' has struggled to
stistain any sort ofupturn amid 1nvcs1or una:rtatn-
ty about the outlook for the econom)' and mt.erest
rates.
Wall Street hoped 1ogctacleareTp1cturcofthe
economy this week from several govemmesu
rcpons on bus1ness activity an July. But some
analysu are now saymg it appears the repons will
do little to give the market a strona sense of wbett
the cconom)' as headed.
WHAT AMEX Orn WHA T NYSE DID
'
AMEX LEADERS
METALS QuorEs
---
l 11 lO
NEW VOtUC. (AP) Auo. l•
T' '
NYSE LEADER S
HEW 'l'MIE (API -.S.., ' ~ W.CSnftdeY price and Ml ct\anoe of the IS most ectlve New York Stock El(.c:NMe
Issues, trecllng n1ione. 1 v et more thlln Sl N.me Vllume I
Rev10n • j' •5VJ + 1~ MldS'ouUt , lOV. -~ Prirta EIK , 1 , 1 ~ -i,..
Coro P•lm lt ,7 II• -""' Amtr T&. T l,737, -'Ao
OcQClel\l P•t 1 ·m· ~ -~ UnEnRtt 1, , 3 -11• Pen Am 1. , 7~ -1~
2n Cerblde , y~ -+ ~ ea trice • ~ ...
atM.CSEn 1· , d1.4 -I PantrvPrlOe 1 , + ~
JoMsJn ,Hi·i • ~ -'"" BallSoutn ' , ~ + i..-MorgenJP' 6 1, 4~ + 1
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
famous la bel.s ..
' ' \
\
\ • \ \
\ . \
' \ ' • ' \
\ . • \ . \
nrwwt bi.och ~ lllfihion l'.Mard, il .. /M; 5070
\lo.Ul'-OOCi ....,\~ IOOl ·~ ~. 2\}'2(& ~7~
~~~\hi.-..... '9m
roon Um~ Ch l0to9. ~'~ IOto6 &. a..ndoy noon to ~
--------·---·· ....... -...... ·-·-·-.... -.... -... -........... --.................... -..... a111a ... ••011s•a111s•sll90•a .. a• .. &•s••s•t•s•a•t•s •s••s••s•••••s•s•s•
-Orange Coa1 OAJLY PILOTIWednelday. Auguat 14, 1085
• .i l.!nt-... ~ Oa~t. JO Dollars • \d Ill•\ 1 iot1<tl "•trh hut nn f'"rt1011 •II V·" mrnt " r~lund.lb • Additional I.II* may be purc:haM'd lor 12.00 rteh
• Pml't must .bf indudf'd lll the' •ti • p,,. .• 11111 .ivph I<• 1li1 11• 11 •"\11111', rrnt11I, nr h,.lp wanrtd clulificttionl or au1omobiln prtr!'tl o~l'r 12000 Call 642-5678 ...
• \\,.1l11lilr 1111h 11. p 1\_., .. 1>•t" .11hf'l11"t"11 ,u,"I ~rehandilt.
;;L __ .,. --
Wll•llN
DEADLINES
"V• l(Af<Qll OL4f '4 ...... h .... "~· flt/titflA. "'"" ~. ,.,.. .. ,.. ........ ,.. .... ·r:· t' .... "-"'·.._~ r •"" ~. ,, •rft
C:ICCI( YOUlll AO
Tllo 0.~,.:~J,~:y ... ttf <....._., .,.. ~(UfM." ~ ...
ot.c.a~ •ron oo l((lilf ,...M "'~ •f'liet\ YOUf .ct I•
'U4 N<>. al'O Cllect. "°"' aO O.>IV It-I t<IWI lfnlMO-. ... v 10 ...,.,_,. T ... O.•IV P•>Ot a<•
(.,ptt M ~,., .... •IW P tOf •n .Ill 60~~1411f"neiN tor .,'\l(l'I • me• De ,~ t1111l.ol 'Ot "'t CO\! OI .... ,_. ........
O(C"'°"" OW' •ht fil''tl (r .. I f •" ~ .. •towed •ot ttW ''''' ---An¥ •"-""'' "'Ot M•tl w1tf'I~ )0
dil'f'\ ., reGultff •* tM '~' 'O but NM I ""'..0 .frO f1~t
,.,.,_. c .......... tld al I ~' OI "'°
....... ~"'· ... "'O"tf\ •• "'41 ................ ~=-=: ·= ~., '"'°" .....
1 ..... ,., 1.a1. • ..... ,.., 1a1t .... v ... ,...... .. .. ,, , ........ ,,.,, ••••• , v.i. ,,.,, ••• , •• ua1. ••:•r 1 Jiff
c .. n11 1002 1 .. 1• C111t litre c..11 Ina 2Z24 wi••• 1t1c• wa laat. •• c..11 Ina HR laat. hac• 2no oc:J! 1 : iBdrm t irn
" R e E M A R I( E T IMS 1BR don, 2 batha, largo 28 COttage m ;;;;, IRT 11111'1 fllllT lWtmo ~ l>MU1. 18d 18t. ~ balCOOY. encl i:.. Slce9t c:' $4751\Mcly Avi
ANALYSIS 0' YOUR •U iiiii yatd. New P•lntfopt1 fplc, g•rege. Wiik to bCf1 QUIET RESORT LIVING 1ba all bit· t , frpk: $82 , Oolore. 8.40~& 8/11·Sec>I 631-052"
REAL ESTATE BY G t North CM loeatlon Very elHn $875fmo S1000w/u111 499·2181 •Sparkllngheatedp()OI Mutl.... 28r2Ba.p•tlo,9nel iar .1_ I
MULTI-MI LLION I hrN 3 8d aJ HOO Seeal243E 22ndSt 538 38 •Counyerdvtewdlnlng 3&eAvocedO newc&rJ)¥1,nopelll 50. tal11te
PA 0 DUCE R CALL tq~. ~":n.iri'i:~&n<le 2Br 1'.~Ba Condo. Avail A;:,~ Hiii~ Oce~~ •Vignette BBQ.,... TSl •IT U2· 1IOI Dolor" 840-5504 ... ,. atOI PATRI£~ 12~NORE yard, ••parctc tamlly 8/19 No pett. S725fmo nit• Ute vu. 1 yr IM. •Tw11Qhtdlnelncourtyrd --•ARLINGTONAPTS• 3BRhOUM F;piC),lrgyrd.
• room, ape Ind fruil t,.._ Call Agl Mary 7eo--0807 12100/mo. 4~58 OS&Zebot ......._.~-.... Out.I, &p9Cioul w/d N.., bMCM¥ Ffm
As« Ing S 168 500 --I O • PKloo• AJ>W1"*"11 ~ U~ Very clOM to bNCh prcl $275fmo 9e0-oa88 · 2Br9501~ '9 Dpht. No,pc1•. La1aa1 lill1 S •Your own pvt P9tlo TIWllllll 28r 1•1iea Twnhae $875 -·
_T_r_a_di-.-t1-. o_n_a_l_ !.c s1~ ~?.s•8• too+ PilL 1111 ti llllll :~:r=. k::":'pt •fer lilt sorry. no pe11 53e-0•90 F~~,~~ 3~~~~· ~!
lalka Realty •Eaa11Rrr18"'9¥ $550 1 2+2 P•nor:;i:1~sls'f .. •ug wllk·ln clOMt• Fr~ed oe111ng.1. dbl SUWlll YILUIE utllltlct COM 875-MS~
P1aia1•la 1007 resp perton only No IP•. more •Gcled covered prtcng ~, PoOI & epa ~o peta M•ture lorn stir w/w.me 2 631-7370 pets Agt, 631-2242 TEUUIT 111-.... w/ltOfage 18drm 1770-1795 WllllT1 br. 1'..\ ba, Nlt9'd• C.M t1af~ LMaflt• hw . •3Br 2'~8• E'ede twnhM !WJ!lt ltac• I ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ~~~~I~ 645 ~~~: Uve '#Mre you have twnhae. oloM to thops, eaau:1~11~~~o:bath •!~il~Bt•n HOO ~1J~C:· ~a·7:2b'eo~~r ~LIFF3br.~«6.. l8d 28d & 2Bd Twnhme • •Spectecularao1a ~~~~· ~aJ~5~1ce~ ~~~
horM. 3 car gM. S...oo t/11 5* PARK. 2 BR 2ba, Fir• 0 .,....a • d..,, otc, dbl gar. g91dencf ' Furnished • 1 & 2Br. 1 & 28a aulles 64s.3379 Eves.
total Baal quality bUllt pl•ce, air. akyllght1. •MESA VEADE lrg •Br $1300 no pel, avt lmmed Vllll our model Deity H \\tt!wlfield 11tSpac;tou1 townhoo... Ovr 45trmmate ltlr ntocly house on point St~ 10 MUCH MUCH MOREi 38a Exec home $1200. 850-8504 or 637-1458 S<><ry, no pc1a ;itFlrepl~
Bay a O<'een Cati to... SSS,OOOfobo 857-1445 Call Larry 646-5380. Agt .,1650 "A• .. ront 38r 2Ba FUlllY &PAITlllm •Prlv•te baloonlea or furn 2Br 2ba apt. cul de
F '1 1 ---• ... 7 ' • LA QUINTA HERMOSA Sparkling clean large Garden pattos sac. Reas rent. Mu11 hove or in ormat on. C M $295fmo sp rent 3 Bd 2ba, boat atorage 40' allp S300 extr•. 21 16211 Parkside Ln, HB. Apta. lor famlllcs w/ 1 or 2 car Poot, close to Hnt
Lovely prk, MW cp1, Igo tatflut S1095fM. Reply Balboa Cove. 873-1464 141 11441 hlld park HNt WMY llU bch SmollcraOK, no pet
rms for kng. oz fun\ Only to An1wer Ad 1218. •Old Nwpt Hta 3er t8a, • ~9kt r::;, = •3 LIOhled t..,nll coons Aet. 2131894-6073 &.m
$17,.995 Call 63$-7870 &42-4300 24 hrt. w/d hkupa. Yrd No gcr l!!plt 1t1e• 2111 28drm H•Ba . $&95 11t2 Swimming p()Ols to 8pm keep calllng
Dbl·wtde Driftwood 421': 3 Bdrm 3 ·~ba. brMd now $950 No peta 722-80f 1 B.i£HAPT 2 drs 10 bOtl. 1 2Bdrm 2Ba $720 11tStrum1 & ponds MIF Resp/mature Pvt rm
BMet1 & PCH A-10 owner largo E·akle home. 2 car 3Br 2ba frplc O/W •P• perton Lid kl(ch UUla ~8 w Wiiton 631-5583 •Sor~, no pets ba,lndry Step to bch Avl
175,000. 536-57'42 gar, fr plc, micro. 11300 gardnr 11400 Ori.,:. by pd $450fmo 9 mo ren--•Furn 1h1nga avall 911 5325/mo 646-8328
Oceanfr'ont 2br 2M, den, a:R~~~~llD~~ AL-2001 Highland· 846-4511 tal Avl 918 845-7051 Wc:&tFaeld WHY NOT CALL MfF yno adlt, snr 2br Vee·
421 Driftwood, Beach & Call btwn 1pm-5pm Extra lg •ttract dplx 28, 111·1 ltl salllcl condo Bay view, =---o.-:--=--.....-==~ PCH $75,000, 538-5742 3Br 2B•. dbl ~r. nice Acx:ullom to luxury 3br w/lgc pallo . .,,C1 gar 2nd &PUTIEITI $415 ~ w: NB 650-7872
lllHllUf P&ll t:,d· 19rs1~4~8~ 2b• not tar to ocean al hse from bctl, 45th 'at. 1 Like brand newt All uliltlea SUWlll YILUIE Nwpt Hta hm 10 .nr wtprol
A beaut ARLINGTON 1900· $875 ·won't last detalls yrly &. 1 winter only P91d. Pool, gar, no pels 15655 Huntington Vlllege Fem 25-35 1brfba tum.
24x80 Lgt lntr. Raised 4 BR, 1Vtba, lg tam rm 539-8190 Bes1 Alty,.. 642-8305, 2131430-2108 1Bdrm $585-$585 Lline. from San Dleoo w/pvt cnt $400 54~7
dln'g &.. lge llv rm wf1am w/wet bar & frplc. OIW, BaycrMt 38', lam rm. lrg Winier nice 3Bd 20' to 2Bdrm 1Ba ,S690 Freewcy, north of Beach Prof MfF 40 vr + • clean 5
rm 2BA 2b•. appll Incl drpa, new lnlr paint Nr kltch, encl yrd. Gd IChls bctl. view. patio, WfD, 301 AVOCADO to McFadden, west on Br nr 405 & "SCP $325 +
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FLEETWOOD. Hlghly S.C Plan, IChl & shops S 1350 f mo Dy I g•r•go $12001mo 241 W WILSON McFadden $50 dep 432-7388
IHtn fer Salt BtllH fer Sale CdM fio1s w/Frenctt NOf'-upgrcl. Lge mSler bdrm s 975imo. 557-4886 835-7001, EvH 873-0877 1oe Ollve ~8-3535 631 -0960 Townhome 2br 2ba, den . .;,;;.=:.;;;;;...;;.;.;..--.-...-~ mandy plans 1 blk 2 bch w/ba Liv rm. kltch area. AT LASTI --f •EASTSIDE• lam rm, pvt patio, dbl Res°P fem ahr lovely CdM Gtattal 100% Geatral 100% S335K ea Agt 759-9070 Doll Houael Ag1640-5937 • WOii UY Ar1t•tat1, Ua • 38r n~B• u 85 & 2Br tB• gar, stove dbl oven. d/w, nme Pvt bth. trplc In
,EUTEI IDUPLEX 18d-1"bi"""' ca -.--rt .. ~ I .... a I I 38r 3Ba. prl\I comm Bch, ,.,_ 1 2702 $660 2080 G•rdcn Ln lrash comp wood burn· Bdrm Fully furn S500 *IEI * wl!r llPlD $210.000 717 FERNLEAF ·~ •••• , • ••• ..... tennis acceu. s 1900/mo _ • .,. No pels Agt, 546-S605 Ing frplc pool, 1ac. lennll mo• • .., utlla 84~282
"' Over 1 tq 11. fireplace Stnlot YH CH lse (7 14)770-6237 or 041 llllT &PT I* BACH S510 & 1BR S& 10 cr1, small pel or child ok lt1t1b W11tH Fii Limits! COlllll lfl Mill 640-8182 by Owner ~utf.~ E ~ s";~.99~~~~ fHI At lt•t Wittl (916)921·5655 Utlls paid LM #6404 ,.. PRVT patio, car""'t $1075 847-4414 We've Sold Oul1 We have !Warmington built duplex Jasmine Creek 2 Br & den Belc t Hiii La 3BR .--· 2 Sr 2 ba house, dln·rm. ' ad\' S$ lo spend & lime completely redecoraled Asaume tst 81,.,•t.. Re-detall• c•ll 636-7870 oor : rgc HLHllT lll-1111 POOL. SPA quiet. no pell. IT.l;rt ltacla 2761 yrd tor small d"", gar ~ TEL ER ENT 4ba, 3 car gar Delul(e TOP AREA Mesa Pines -~ -. lor Open Houses Lei us with 3 bdrms & 2 baths 1n duced 10 $275 000 Call SPACES AVAIL for new 1 condo Sec poot etc lalka ltlaa•' 27M 2650 HARLA 649-2447 f, , & 1 49( furn Yrty & Refs 646-2885
be your dedicated Bkr EACH unit The down 831-8638 or &40-8188 mobile homes buyer1 In Catahna View. Bltlns Incl Winter No fee Bkr Cnrtstlan 1am11y· motll«/3
lastilJl I Ce. stair!> unit nas a palto & 1 Cosla Meca, Hunl. Beach • Widest Selection TVs $3250/mo 673L6160 306'h Coral-upper duplex, EASTSIDE 2 Bdrm. 1 Balh, 675·4608 chlldren nd hmefapt CM 148-IHO AIJtiatl yard upsta1<s a prtvete New llsttng Dramatic rne & Laguna Hiiis For • Updated Dally yrly airy 2br 1ba, frpht, qylet arN S575fmo. NO _ __ I sun dee~ Both untts h•ve on ocn vu 4Br 3Ba. FR details call 638-7870 • All Areas & Prleet LUXURY TOWNHME stvflrlg $895 mo. Shown PETS 83 t-6155 1Br & 2Br Duplex. Garage ~~e~ui~~. al~~~~lt dN:::
ASSllAIU LOll private 9arages tire Sl 135K 759-9010 Agt -•Open 7 Dayt 9am-7pm 2Br 2b•. frplc. Pool1 spa, by appl (2t3) 277·2120 Yrty S650 & $875 Blk to
This former moclel has UP·' placu duluxe bll '" , S•ngle Family Ho;:ne and At1rt•tat1 11 SO 675 8860 tennis, no pets J 1300 •-tLa-Eaatslcte 28' 1ba, gar, beh Oya 642-0292 Of Help! 646-9461 Alta
grades galore PaveH1le lutcnens c:aroe tS I) 45 Slip Tfade for Comm UNIQUE Hist 29 Unh Apt • mo 633-7890 wkdys ~-5650 mo 385 ~ 1*1• 731-6488 Eves Mature Med Secy. IOeal
floors. Ill• and t>rtCI< drapes indUSI or ? Try cash• Agt HO\Jse AND 25,000 Of Of Slop By Don't paaa upl Poot charm Ptaia1al1 2707 laat & Clep 963-5 CIZT m111 $110 lenant wants 1Bdrm apt
patto, dramatic celllngsl (7 l 4}67l-'400 63 1-432 1or631-4341 commercial rentals 21101 rtll 4 5rmt>ungalownotfarto fBR,carport,newdrpt l tllTAITll StepatoaandaJ.-8759198 CdM, Newport. Co11a
and use Of skyllghts plus I $300,000 Gross asking •• ,. ' ocean $650 others avail crpta 1124 w. Balbo• S595fmo 2 Bd 1ba patio, nLllllT lll-1110 Mesa. Approx ss5 o two master bdrm suita Cotti Jiff! 1024 2 2 Mil Bkr 953-1220 Balboa Penln1ula Fee 539-6190 B4ls1 Ally fee Blvd S600 mo. 873-5198 pool, lndry rm E-alde loc, ___ ___ 642-5380
Locatecl In convenient I -, -~ 1350 Beam ceilings accent -B----close lo to alll 2br 1ba. gar, mdry, gd loc iJw Mec:h9t'llC 32yrw IMka So Coasl Matro area JIST LfSTEI acO•t HJ E.aatalde hse r..,tal aoplS 3 r 2 ba, frplc:, gar, yr1y, 1 149 E Bay 1800 Cl•y St S750 mo Hse/apt Jo stir w/1t•ble
$139.900 751-3191 Cnarm1ng 3 Bdrm fOfmal 2 HOUSf: , CM & ballc decor $450 Info DCllSIYE UITW 1188 to bch, Lndry, bltnt, TSL MANAGEMENT 646-8318 °' 497-6478 person By 911 857·2232
I dining area large ltv rm XII cond Inc S 19,560 15% 539.,e 190 Best Alty fee UDO ISLE: 3 bed. home, S 1000 mo 875-5306 CYca 642-1603 __ _ sp SELECT many e~tras A "mutt dn s 159 500 497-6287 --flrepla<;t $1900/mo IN LIN IS''I 111Wel 2Br 2Ba. "Near-Hoag Garlftl lor ~ I see · Mesa Verde area ' ----Beautiful 38drm. 2e'a. NEWPOAT BAYFAONT "' •s;ws; Lrg bachelOf' apt wflrg Dshwsnr, W/D rm. gar. I 2112 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiin~iiiiiiiiiiiiRiiiiiiiiiTl.IE•S• $144 400 Bkr 840-2678 By Owner Npl Bch frplc, dbl car gar wlauto condo Latge 2 bed ~ Magnificent 2Br + Oen P•llo In gd local S3851mo etc No pcla $575 ~ 191, tat I•-------• · ----Duplu Musi sell I openr Lois ol ttor9Qe. cten. dock Security, vtew Frpl, gat S1295 #8758 ,.. 859 W 19th C.M. last 548-0390 GARAGE-CORONA bE[
I.In •rw-•r ClllO llESA YHll UIUll $30.000 befow appralsal. cathedral ceilings 2 CO\/· $2450 yrty nwm 111-lllO ••. SJ .... m! ...... ... EAST BLUFF deluxe MAR S80fmo. 441-28&2 ~""vn 'Beaullful 4Bdrm. w. B•th Postt1ve cash flow erect patios Beautltully VILLA BALBOA 2 bed -~ " 21 harp 3 Bdrm Condo 2 on cul-de-aac Large yard w/summe< rentals Prime landscaped Pvt bcckyrd condo, flreplaoe. MCUr· 4 IHSll Tl IUOll Frplc, utlla pd ,.6461 fee TownholJM Apt. Com-Otfict ltat1ll 14
111ory, 2'' Betl'IS Sunny with patio Atrium court rental area. Panlal ocean Good neighborhood lty. S1100fmo yrly 2Br 2ba Duplex wfgar TELllllT 111-IHG ~~lely r!7~= :s~v~ 3006. 1368. m. 592 1
wood P,Sllo 11ndoor ~llllty yard enlry Price reduced & bay vu Upgrades, xlnl Walking distance to all W ... rfrtllt .... t IH $900 E2 uwma •8508 fee MYI ti MWI mo "mown by Appt Only 209 sq ft 1817 w .. 1c11n. ~= g';~~g~c:e,. 1~r;;;o ~a~117~~1~r '~~~~·. ~c:d 1:.:i~b~~~ o;J'p :~:-~~~: or'~rN1~0 111· HOO lll-lloO LllEIT lll-lllO S575fM 2ed 1ba. 911 bit· Call alter 8pm 644·4258 NB 641"5032 Agt ~;~!c~trv~ht:~~~su~= 631·1266 ~30.000 673--0125 CHECK THESE Ina. laundry room, near AGllSS Fiii IUCI $~50ftp~~~~':°: s'!
ocmH Pll.JECT sumable 11 75•9 hnanc Lots for S.11 1400 Home style abode 1645 Fab 2BR 2BA. 2 car gar, beach7~dv:h~~h 3 Bdrm 2ba. uppef unit retarltl Service avt ll
Brand new In Olde CdMI Ing $127 500 Call 12a Apet1mcnt site w/1..,1 2br w/gar patio & bltlna spa No !MIS $1300. TSL MGMT 642•1803 W/D hkkp, lge balo. lrplc, 848-8629
Counlry English Con· ANN BRIZOLIS 32 .._...._x loll,8K unit JV kld1 fine acnls/1h0p1 nr lse/grdnr 409 82nd St gar Must see• $1000/rno --
domlnlums 3Bdrmand2 ....... l"I lllO 673-1732or631·12&e Newly redecorated 2Br 211 David Execuuva office IP•Ce
Bdrm • Extras. dect!a, 3 t• •&11 U San Bern .,ea 778~ 17 * • • * $620, JBr $720 & Up TSL MGMT 642-1803 WctlchH & Irvine, N B " + r I • -~ w a.I 1&25 Touch of class 3br 2b• nr STllllH ••IHI p 642 5210 Call 631·3180 8am·4pm patios. and dec:Of From Hardwood flfa. flreplKe, l .11. 1atn Newport Bch lelsure ~ No pets. • _ Beaut1tully decorated 1Br -5229•500· new dshwsrfkllch r•nge. Genuine Investor wul pay patio S725 call 539·6190 ~:!;:~~.:.·~:s':a°:ee Nwpt Hgt• clean Bach 4 Condo, ocean/bay VIEW. b72 Sq Fi $630/mo L ~l()lJf 11( ~ti Copper plumbing, new cash for your proper1y for Best Alty lee TELUEIT lll-.UIO bike to BluH1. Stove. trig. Incl WID. relrlg, OfW. 3975 Birch, Newport
Realtort. 875-6000 ·roof ('83) Enclosed patio, right prtce or terms No crpta, drps. pvt yrd & AIC. Vllta Balboa 1975 Beach 541-5032 Agt --------1 ICUIFlllTTllPLD block wall fence. A very gimmicks Patrick Tenore OlllTYlllllULIW lllYlfW .. ES patio Sml pet Ok 1 pef· mo 640-4772 ffi Sq Ft. Gen"I
'
An unusually large prop-good bvy St24.750 631-1286. 2Bdrm +garage, P9tlo & 10 aon onty$445 lnct •II utlla Brand new choice area olc/MedlcaJ, grnd llr. No
erty Wtlh loads of room HY loCUIU ILTll. 1 ~~~\ .I' Verd 4 pet S600 #8642 , .. 4Br. Furn av! B«-8592 + dep. 213/927-6772 3Br 3Ba, lrplc, wctbar, C.M S9t8fmo.632-4t81
and 3units10 enjoy rental HI· ll2t~J: TELllEIT lll-lllO 4 + 11111-ISTATE PLUSH CONDO 2Br 28a, lndry hkupa. auacn 2 car CdM'a best offlcel. 1425. ff V HOMES income with . pride of I _;~~.:... EASTSIDE 1BR + denfofc. All amenltlea Prvt ofc ear be.ch, entire 111 Den Upgr•ded decor. rr $1350 No pet• $1100 Incl ulll A/C pkg
• • ~:~~:C:h~;pet!ie~r.n~~Y IJniH 1044 I l New paJnl/cpts, gu & & St300 •6508 ti()()(, 2 Bdrm, den. trplc, Over1 11 0PoOlbl · ••ream,• & 57-1778 <>< 760-1713 1an11or 2855' E C:oui
C A R M E L e#' .. ..._. Call for details I tltl I water P•ld No peta TELUllT lll·IUO gar. S1400 720-9422 Agt • 1 car ~r w opnr Brand new choice arN Hwy 675--8900 anytime ............... $6751 546-9950 Micro, W/D hkupa. S 1000 · 1 -l.IODEL FOR -mo LIE·LIE lmtl ory, small turn Studio. AVAIL Sept 31549-2447 2Br 2Ba, lrptca, pat 01• EXEC OFFICE; Co1ta IVl v." 11 Hf H<>' r I e ..... Farail~H Helghll area 2 + ton lotsa Pool. Emplyd lam only deluxe kllch, vaulted cell· Mesa 01098 to Frwya SA LE. Super 110"H.., 1"<· character romantic lrplc H:~~o;B~~e,-11;~~r~: Nfamkr 1400 1oc utll 111. POOL Patio. rrptc, X·lgc lngs $850-$950 No pell Appx240 sq tt. lncld• otc
COnditlOn REAL ESTATE lmae 2144 upgraded kltch S7SO 911 S 2 5 0 0 f mo Mary last, dep 640-4999 1 & 2Bdrm Apt1 Eaat11de 857-1778Of 160·1713 fum $300 mo 558-3900 131"1'°° Wooobrlge t>eeutlfUI •Br 539-61~ Seti Alty fee 751·7884 or 720--0454 S555 & Up 557"2841 -Cm mttl tilO Lovely turn office +~
C A R M E L --------• 3Ba houaa $1800 mo Mesa Verde 3Br 28•. 2Bdrm 2Ba + Den Comm C11t1 Mna . 2724 Sml I Br 1 parson~~ 1 yr IM. u1111 pdl 87591.. lbly ahr FIT Secr.iary In
MODEL FOR 662-2482 or 552-4684 super clean Beaultful pool • Steps 10 bch. 2 Bd 1bc e .• ra; NewCrpt, ~:;"~~!1.=r~S-9291 TELEIEIT lllalllO locrg RAeol ~o"...!' .. B·h N,r ,_ • .,._.._._ ....... _ WHIT I IUYI .,-I -L--2169 yard St tOOlmo 1st. last, $1100/mo Agt 642 3850 fresh ""I lndry lac up· -r...,.,. •· .... , I L E A S E . ;t•rt tac. $150 dep 545-6035 all 5 • ..... · ' -LIDO BAVFRONT fr" 756-8100
I VERSAILLE Full Security atalra. No pela S575imo SPAOIHS 2brtden 2ba sandy t>ch ~ --$ 1 4 0 0 IM 0 . Almost 1800 aq It ol living 3 1 ba wfnt9f renlal New E-alde 2 mstr M 2 C Bd I I 271-D E 18th Pl. Drive by, $725fmo 2 Bd 1'~ ba lrp!C Yearly S 1800/mo' Office lor beginner " No pets. apace In this 4 Bdrm $850tmo 645-3757 or • .,ba gar WfD hkkp 0:::..0 v~. new wp~n~'. then call 844-0452 twnhae, encl gar, lndry 675-0120 or 673-0289 Adame I Harbor ,,... 2 ~ba townhome In (818) 355-7749 $1tOO/mo631-4092 2Br l '"'B• 5850. 6,-0 rm, p•tlo, all bl1-ln1 __ ___ S200fmo Call 882-7702
I Smoketree Air cond . S -C --2 -------crp & window C0\19flngi. " 763 w 19th LIDO DELUXE -------Call: ..__..,.,._.. close 10 pool Lovely an lt•tnlt 176 SHARP & clean 4 BR near xlnt loc 1795fmo Joann St Adltl pr•f TSL MGMT 842_1603 28r, DR, frplc, patio Deak apce/lonc Mf'Vfmlnl
640 LONG SIOHCUFFS large yard and a two car DESIRABLE PENIN pf So Coasl & OCC Wkly BAYCREST Spaclooa 3 Bd Small pel ok 845-8453 __ s1295 875.,e359 storagefmatlbOXCI ldMI
• ••ll,OOO garage you can 1 ~at Lite airy 5 Bdrm Sept 10-gardening service $1175 home w/form.i dining & Newer 2Br l'~Ba TwnhM Sparkllng clHn 2Bdrm --_ -loc 850·2290 Anytime
•• this for the price June 10 Avatl unlurn per mo 546-9950 lam rm A neat loc In •n 1916 W9llace #102 1'/•BI $&65 All utllttlcl NEWPORT HTS 2BR Iba, ----Perteet starter home .n 1m $ 13<1 000 s -xlnt area $2000/mo Agl paid, rtfrlg, g•r.gc, 1 pool S860fmo 738 Ct••trcl1l maculate cond1tton with 2000/mo Agl 675-1771 3Br 2Ba widen & bar New I 844-7211 1650 No peta 875-9291 chlld ok, no peta Tuatln Ave. 842-7658 ltattls 2tll
0 NG S large lot tor pool and tor I lnlH C.11t R11ltJ 11111111 l1f1r1l1h1tl crp1 & drps, palnled VIiia Bal ... -A 'Ar~ 1 bdrm-2Br 1ba lge living area & 1960 Wallace &42-4905 1•••1111 lllYE l""'!'*"ll'!!W't"""'A-.i ___ _ expansion 3 BR 3BA 18 n 4 Culver Dr. Irv G I 2202 lnfO\JI New stove & oven """' ... patio, encl oar No pet• ~
.. _.. Private beach lll· llOO I Hell Obi gar cove<ed patio condo. aecur ty bldg. S600 plmo 854-2711 Tll YIOTMIAJI $850 yeerty. 2 br. no 1500 sq It ret•ll tPeCe 144-IOIO l ake Elsinore hae for rent Lrg fncd beci<yard Col· $850 mo yrly 641-3873 ------2 BR t'nBA w/gar $635 pets. C9rport 648-5682 Parking 5 ycat ie... with NEWPORT N 3 b 2 b d lane Park area N••r --2Br 28a, 2 car gar. Fr""'. ' 1 • option S1875fmo i le t I la 1069 f!IW r a air con -• Westctlff 3Br 3Ba. PoOI. micro WfD dahw;h; new crp1a, drpt, bit na. CONDOS wfp()OI IP• aec rp ( N Qf ,--------• wrr tlC vtew ot lake $700/mo t Schools St t75fmo 24 10 frplc, 2 car gar, grdnr Poot '•P• S&So A\11 911 fenced yard, water P•kl. ~uard Walk to bcti. · rri<.>'W1W <fR, v 1fa1
67"7761 or 640-LONG Classlfled Adi 642-5678 2331 VIII" H·ucrta l'Bd lba 12-"pm 33229 ••acy SI 645-8690 or 780-9811 . L x enthOUM 1Br 750 ~ J • I -I ILIFFS •122100 sec Open hse Sun 8/18, COiiege Dr 645-8453 $1375 + IHI & d•P · · 867 E VICTORIA p $ lJ'+
J-u 2 ~ "" Spaclou1. a1traotivc 673-1734 --83M120 Mon-Fri 1-5PM STUNNING 2Br $975 •• ifU'~
let U1 Ht1, Y"
Sen Y • ., Pttpert,I
C111 Cla11lf1t•,
642 -5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
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Owner constder terms LANDLORDS IREALTORS Twnhme 38r 2Ba. 2 car .. A 2-2Br 28a Easttldc Twnhac •nt .... 1 4,.,.,, p YRL Y 2br 1 .... 1 car gar. Quiet loc9llon S800 c.ti WI lffll l-~.. ..., · wvu f)'','J-8~.'J~ roperty Mart M0-9019 Fast free lenant pro\lldrs gar. patio, utll hkup, frplc blk• to .. nd. $900. mo Dick 888-4000 Dy1 Want • Mtcctlon of grNt !iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilml '/' Bb Owner lov"""· 5Br 3ba info 539 8194 Beat Alty 1060 tq ft $975/mo Av! tnctda all "111 No ro!' · ff II 3407£ Coaat "'9y C.. '"' YEARS OF RELIABILITY noWI (213)258-5479 ' 640-2428 Eveafwknclt. llVlng? W• can 0 er any· . .. vr ShfBaycrest Quick Open HouM Wed S-pm, ------thing from a amall apt to
sale S245K 646-1273 2Bdrm 4 3Bdrm Unlta FHatafa 302 35th St. Nwpl Bch 2Br 2Ba wfvaulted cells, a 49d hae. If looklng In 62~h=~~~~~~=-DIST~ESS SALE Npt Hgll available lmmed In Hunt· VIJii! 2234 Yrty 28r 18a, g•rage. view, dbl gar w/09nr. Frptc CM,N8,or HB think OI Ill C Mcea C-2 832 .... l90
3Bd den 2ba $210.000 1ng1on Beach Prtcei;I • dec:k Bc:h ~ bill S800 28' lBt,, .bHm flrtt for tnct cnotoe of
852-24 lt or 718-1081 1rom $700 lo USO Elegance on 8 budOet 3bf $8501mo 875-&29 cilll. frplc:, gar S875 2 ldMI llvtng 111111 JACllS IUL n 2ba PoOlfleconJ c1bl gar pereon1, no peta. 1at, laat TSL MGMT 642· 1803 !~~~-~~~.....;---;.;;;;
IT'S l COOL-STULi I MCUre yrd klda $876 luta Aa1 & MC $22&. 650-1798 NB REAL TY 875-1&42 I UHi, OAllPlll UI
Bach Condo Lux & sec Lo PROP lllllElllT ~90 Beat,.. nohl s:;ag;,7 Rent thla •3Br 2Ba. new dCCOf, ..... ••1111wa1 I IOTll ....
down owe BkrfOwnr l14/171-11U 8ut. luc 40 2br quletla.wrc 1420 p•tlo,J"· dahwatlr, frplc raR.s5;~MO I $55-$75. month
$69.900 639-1822 l11Ma ltla.. 220& 3Br, 26. condo, qu't kldl 53H190 Beet 1.. $950 o peta 840-2495 POOi & Sp&. No peta f'URNISHED or BAYSIDE VILLAGE
IEWNITIEllm aa-u•••tPlDlllO are•. 2 car ~r. PoOI. A,artaata r1ral1 ... •NrSCP1u.S.A 2Br2B• 845-8122 833..a917 UNfURNISHED 1300 E CloulltHwy111'1Npt9c:h 1Prteed •t tot value, 11111 11H1&4 S950/mo 846-115e Condo Pool. spa. carport •
older but Culo 1 bdrm 3 • aundcck & akytlgh11 $700 No peta 722·8011 UTAUU YllW flTllSS if2 with studio nu now cop-Frpl Bell •rea1 #2772 fee 3Br 2Ba. tam rm, ''81c:, 2Br 2~ 1000 aq ft gat CHTllS TllllS ~r p1umb1ng. 11rcp1ac. TIUllEIT lll-1110 !?~tUdt~' bCf1 'a lal ... Pala Jiit ";~~:C:. ::n~~d ~ 1ac. R9dccoratf' • No •••. ,._. · ~~I~ 1~r J:fy s;:9 ~ Ctrtaa ••I Mar 2222 achla No peta $1025/mo ll&IT •mt a.II patio W/D room. ,..._ pcta $895 631-8 07 _.. .....i Sfryy,
caif S'*YI 631 12'ee 29r 18a I den apac:tou• &45-0398 or 990·2463 Duptcx wttrple. o.,m ~rpt• a drP• Tllo ktt~ a tlat " "'*· llMtts
1 \:.~ «lCI. patio. s'10&0 mo •Br. 3ba. t•m rm. din rm, Nr bcil '800 9tn25 t.. at~~hcr~~t c!::ic seu,'~ llUI a •II YJIWll .,.. ..., t te I. 11 a YK£k G11/wa1er pd 675-8295 big kltch. gar, huge l>Kk TELllllT tll-1111 + M(; deP 710-5e2t 29' 28a 8Mch Hou• ~ d _niil!f. 2 Br, 2 bl apccttc OCMn ~:::~ ~::' ~':'28:1 be IU lbr •STUNNING Lg 11 21 38' Frpl 1750 mo #4 ....... 930 fte W\ llii,_.;.piio.;.;;;.;;;;;.-..-~-.; v~ P•llO ff'tllC 2 car h\ bfiCa io OONn 18 moe 289 Grdn Apt. Poot $625 llUlllT 11 VV
IEWNIT IDlm ~r 118501mo 780-8382 241111 lllUlQ rent-' •vall a.Pt 4, 2BA. S&25& 172& 110W 18th AUracttve 1 Br nr Ap1ftmtnl\
1111,000 Entertain In 1ty1e Jbr lncla Frpk:, gar & ocntral alrl patio, gar, lndry rm S850 3Bd 3bc 2 car gcr no MARINA. C•ll 4ge..g482 Newport Buch So
3Bdrm frcneh door• lo" 2ba appl1 too! S900'a Jog to~ Small '" Incl .it utll+cable TV No P¥t• n-amkr 1175/M '•vt noon to & 30 pm ~---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
largo yard Skylight• cati kldslpc1S 539-8190 TELllllT Ill-.... pett 7141863-2123 9/1 M2·1528/180-1418 ------1700 161h Stmt
Rao Aao-a 63H2&e &es1 Alty IM Low high value 15 jutt 39' 289 w/ln qui.I Com-Caclfflec:. to Go-Cat1• (at Dovtr)
4' pool & •P• P\11 beachea, kid welcoMC 539-8190 -Sept &th 84M8&1 Roll 'em°" •ht mntt Ntwport Buc.h No ! 12250/mo, 873-5354 A.gt 8-t Rlty tte ALL UTIUflES PAID _ #.= rnw With a C~ Ad f MEAE[D I I' I I I
I •ii~~~-~ EXEC Hm 38R/lam rm, blkl to OONl'I 2bf rctrcal ••••. -plb. lndry htc: 1750 AVI WMte¥et ui. fed 64 l Sil)
~ --Compare before you rent Apt fOf ,_,, • 1 St .-.,. Celt NoW'I &42·54171 8RO Irvine Avfnu .. e-;,;;o.--"' Ip--~-~ S --LAAGE 3BR 2'.\ba. atec>e laat aOnr 2 ~ decof•* cu.tom CIOM to SC Ptu Cell l~t 16thl r•tlg UUYWIO t\()t .. b•y 10 ~ $1495 no pell ' f Bob 556-1117 114-a • -·.41 1 vu lab 5br 41>9. S625K 9e0_..229 990-4228 • NILml ~ 1111 delign ... turOI' pOOI, ""'ta tu ••-645-1104
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SPACIOUS t11gt11y up-IAISIYI l +l Tllll t.. 1c:•plng. No pet1 WOODLA• UM•· •GI 1-------
gradcd Townhomc 4 At>ove. CdM St••• e.Kh nuUIT tll-1111 Furnlah9d I Bdtm and =----= ...... ..... IHI 'ound b bYbik!Wf'lt"Cai
bdrm 7"1b11 pool tarin11, Exqulatte S 1500 ~8441 ,.. -.--Furrn.Ncl hcMIOf a• a •1•1111• iL! v-Z room "'c: t y N -"'t H 0 It. wa11c10 l>Gh ~ win TEUUIT tlMIM H.rt>or"' perfect 31>r 21>9 365 Wl&aon &42-1111 .... -......... ..,.
I MC Pnnc"""' 813·2929 • • lem/atngtee frptc gcr "-·' ....,.,., ... ,~~, ... A •I"'" -ts n..-t c •··ta ... • It ~:.mo &42.o312 D•Y' °' S49°16'e fvu C..ta.... 2a24 ci.tc:ony vl9W S77S al """"" .. ,..y.,,,. -a, ..... """'· Olll""' -' .....,...flt Founo-eatGr-Jwl\llit _ PL SH CONDO 2a; 'L 639,..190 a. Atty,.. r.tose to 11 •m So Coast Plalawt11turtty 1n11111tu 141 l•bl>y. "ea ·colter
Trt leve4 condn lor ta•• by u . -~ Dally Piiot btacll Car 1oi4blt HO rn, Pl{AS( •••••• ~..... zaa.. Flora/P..n .,..... • A"' cw~r Moving mutt Mil Den UPQrlded deoor. lnlat 6644 .... • lf&I • ...._, -~·· ~ -.....
'2 IJ• 2"• b• Ir~ Poot Ovtlf poo4, atre•m• a ''IT&ll classlf leds •M •mm lkh •N-OU•
J t•,..50Ct 7t464S-2,1e 11111 Ot>lcar;arw/opnr **"" ** workfor II-· ....... Wll!Y ,_.,.,. l'OW • .,a11 FOUNDQ06dr1nQ ~ICro W/Ohkupa 1 1000 CALLUS AEOAAOINO I 11•1111 ....... St40J-'i&up ~t14N• al~lw:f!
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MCI(• tam1lltt are ~lhng AVAIL,,..,, 31 549 244 7 IRVIN LE~.SE.S vou. Ca I • ....... .......,.. '*' 11/d CM Ml-7445 MM7n,
9 •> '•1 " "'~'''!) 11 r••~ ' lilt c;ftl"l!OlnQ 'I.lug 1t111 lU>< CONDO AVAii.. NOW lnlat 0Nlt lealtJ 642·5671 US. •.IT a llJ wnu-. W 1111' -..I f~UND 1~tn1, DI .1 • ...,,, PY!IH yur 11 yo1.1 h•v• 1 29r ,.,. Over pool lll-llOI for quick .. ,..,. ..... -._ .,,..
.,.. .. .,.. r • vf '"'' I tamPltf th•I • n0t gamng •tr .. ma & lalla Obi ~r C"" .... •"'I-. ~W-CoMt?e:,..._ UfWJtf~.~•iw -.
10 r.f ''•\hlf uMd Mtl II "°"" ""'"' • oar wlopnr Mao WIO, Hcw eome,11\lng to ..,,, .... -..... TR .... ~ ~· IU·•• port ,,.. • TV C•t•••ne I TMlla. L-e ..,. le Olanfflo•h•I II 11 c 1nt11!fld AO 6p11 '"' S95'l $Al»24'7 ~ aoa oo u .,.. '~+ wti IQf, no t BcM07 • ~!!!!!!!!!!!~--~--~--~~~LI~=====-.:-:--
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Orange Coast DAILY P LOT/W~,Augult 14, 1118 117
Mlt a,.... JOM 1111 Wy!!f 1111 •11 ...... 1111 lel1 WutM 110! 19 Wu... lllO l •lt Wu... 1111 l elt Wu t!f
FOUND ladlile jewetry, Vic lllftmll•W&ITIU
of ~eo: ~ .. eo,. u111M11 ~ eo p.,, um., .., .... , .. , ......... ..._. P&lltm 1rm 111m 1111n u 1 one ., l1Ge The Otana-Coat o.ny $4 39 ol tv plu1 11pe. ..... PUT Tm '1T PIT. f4 hr M/F c.11 New1p•oer dellvery, Do ~"OU,_.,.• goad bp'O maturt 80111•
Found vwy ~ ug1y ooo. P001 a.~ 11.ip m AP94Y "' penon. 2111 hdl t-& lo«--2410 2~. 111e van nee phoM VOIC* a un 1,pe1 cs• -..i-... w •UIB WWfl to Skragle9, Of• Ill Ad O.Ot Co•t ~. CdM TN 04llly Pilot ha. Im-Xlnt money N•wporl A l)fogr ... ~ growth w0t ·pt~... com• , .. ....,._
ll'C19 hair. 8eylkM °'· AeeoonllbilrO• Wiii in-med • ~ '°' Cv Ila "' UlllT I .. c II ., • • • c •II Ol*lted .. .-..... neeci. put• ' ll'IOttl\anO ptel'd w .nab ~ ~ llrm Cd\A 7to-.0410 elude pick ::f. anct a.. MDI•-•-tom« ~ C*-to ~ f0t tldmlnl!l1rat1Ye ~·~·1 A E 1n119tment1 1 .-. ~ h:-T"":"'l""'::~=~::::-=--':r',..; 11 f _.,_, ~inovrbueyClr~ OfficieelnNewporte.act1 7~1n11ime • perton ~ hM the aon office Soar weM =:·"-"•100CIM..-LOlt BlllfOld w/~ 'n Yff'I o e I , pultlng lotNng Mfg neecil Acct = ebo\19 Seiaty plue tom• S~ N 0C Al
CM on -....... b...'... teanll .. te, Proe.ealng Rec. .._.lant, manual 11°" "*'1 Ml4t be We •• ...icino 911 lndlY. PUT TIIE PlnY paod ~i. Cell ........ :Z:1'oo r ' COf"Pl"Y IUPCdi9d • ...,._ ...... • ..... -'•· and • van.cy ot ct able and abte to with nlOe front omc. •P· N J 1 ....... • No Clald ~ a.--~r=-==---~-22nd/bdl.,... 875-1171 otheif dull• Candidate system now, leern c:om.-handle hHvy phon.. ~ance l OOod per. poeitlOM Die e1 the anc'I or o., I 14) Qreat ,.., po1 oon
orS48-7137REWARO mutt be ex1rwne1y Of• puterlatet.Duti..-.ofn. wlthapiMUntteiephone tonality who po .... • Oalty Ptlot n ... sp~r 250·1M010tperl0f\alln· llllOU l avall, c:t1y1 & •v••·
LOST Calico Cat, Nortii ganit.d, retpe)Mible Ind ~~~,,r1c::::.~lll'a: :.:o .H~.:.e'~ =: .. ~:-.:=.wt= =,, .:::;y ~~ =:,:E to C¥e l0t ~-::,inoNC~:~y w~: ::= 1~~i;;;• ont
l. I g u n e • R e w a r d abtt to wor1t well with p/hr 11.0 North Colla 642 4321 fOt ..,Pt, Altc phon'.. Pr•v rtceP· 14 50 per hour plus 0&a infant •1 OVf COM horM. DookU11C)tt\g ~per Muet t..---~,-----
41M..f713or831·2490 ~~eeurne Attn LIN M•aa Mlul & Son1, for Tr.cey tlOnlll IXI*'. l)feleff9d. allow1nce Muel have 3 day wit. 130 to 5.30. type 90 wpm, with the ma.I IALD lliliit!~~:---------
L.OST Gold M..,.. BraQelel Smith, to: 966-1510 Kat.,, S • n ct r u um• t o let~ cer or Pfeil-up and own 1ran1 840-tlMI ablltl) IO oro-ntie of'flOe Big Money In NR. If ~ ~-=\~'!'ct~~~':' IUlllOIAIT IUTUIMlll 'u'~~~~~~. Klndercar• LHrnino ~~:a,=t~~~ Old R!STAURANT ==·~~~~ow1no = ~iz;h!:~ .:.~o~ ~~~;~;~~"'mnm?
REWAAO tOf' !oat lllkl"" l&ILT PILIT ltc. minor repaln tor 10·key Oull• Include 8::::::' 0:.~0 Su~:w~~~ Rio MECHANICl.L. TECH lllLL ... /Pd 1'1111 the t91eptione Yf>tlf fu-
pe.rrot Boys' .,.1 0·,·wn P.I. lea 1H0 Hllboe~.~n7a1r00t•r flNt Order Entry, Invoicing, Newport Beach. Ca Part tll'M, LC>Oklng fOt r• E11per Pfef Mon ll'ltU Fri· U•nUT llH It w1tn tN moet t&JC>-
1\Md. ,...... "--'""'" Dal• BIM Maln1-lanoe 92MO, attn. Sue 11r .. NM0110 be tamlltat c:t•y only Kitchen l Matur• (Udy 'riday) t c;eutul Sport• Adlllsory
w/ytw · Vic ot Uni· vntl •aa, le. IH21 O&l'T Fiii 91Hf S7/hr, C.M 5M-2030 --w/PfOlotype fabrication counter help P/tlme, per.on onioe Con11Ullant Servic:il In Amene. call
lltltalty Prtc. 12 Fo11glove, •-llUYllf AIR DRESSER, MAKE· & UMmbty, also INllng MontlltuFrlday, 11am1o bu= '•notexoed· Stoth, 790.1&13
lrvtne 733-045'T AIDE F ll~n PIT, uslat lllJT .111'1 UP ARTIST, MANI-of ume Cont11c:t Don 2 pm Call Geor~ bef lllQ t-5 5 deya ---~==~=~~=j .tf ... ·'a 3 12 tNCher In whlctlf rmlbrd Newspaper dellv•ry. CURIST wlfOllowlng. •t• Davia, L 'Garde Inc t 1am or tfl 2 pm oniy C M Phone• typtng, 'f'YPtl1 N
8j 1250 ll•llllll T 2am-8am, lite van n.c: 11on rental, ldfl1 COM foe: 645-4880 Mon lh Frt '32o0e70 M9d auto. ••c: 642-3144 Pieee wOf\ fOfm IYP'no tn m WhO woulds; Inter· + mo &45-2357 Xlnt money N•wport Call 875-9703 for 8')91 OUI' oftic. Atlsnoont
.. ,., In b9glnnlng • UIWlllM lllYICE IEU ., Be.ch Ir. a ca I I .. UYlllS PUT nm l n lll UIDT ua.a New~J'JIJTER 12 30 on 2"'4 Hn p/asy
1tudy lf'I prac1ic.1 Telephone operatort 11.n. 76&-oe30 anytime ~ l&llJ C M I N B .,.. Wtl train t trvlne ., .. C.U l'Ot llPC)t 1,,,_...,.,.....,...~-=--....,...--:
Christianity bued on the ous 1Mt1 25431 Cabot RUPlllllJ H• NllJ-a•,,;;;-IP UIUIU • ._ &42-0571 1 1~t=t~!,~~ &&0-0727
unity tMChlng by an or-Rc:t, wioo, Lag Hilla •n.n n -LOAN PROCESSING •-·+, ... •In an •u ... _ II SSll dtlned unity mlnl119f tn Nwpt Bctl ar.. Pert llme FFlCER, lmmed open. W• Trele --. wpm, enioy deta l>fO-I
11\e ,,.., tu1ure, ple&M APUTllm ll&Ulll PIT 0t FIT ChOlce 01 Call c.roi 120-1CM2 tng. mtn 2 yr1 P<ooesalng Olll INl ......... t.4 Lm fT&.UAI F•1 c:e111no. troni office po-. l1"""..,..l""'rg-ois .. 1""'m""'oy-•d"""'"""U
call ~2 21 Units, Coata M ... No houri II yours Call T H --& cloelng loans ...... IJ II Fornalo. an Italian ltlon oC*'I Satary ap-l>VPP'I Pecllgre "'°'* 1--.,.,.,----=,...-..,....-=....,..
pell Experienced Mml-As 1 ocIa 1•1 Ta I e . HIT&L ftlllm CLERICAL • poeltton (11•)112-1111 Bakery & Cate tn Fashion pro• I l lOO • S t500 842-3030 111 mag Ed ladanltl retired 855-0M5 · m&/11etlng, 053«6&7o Pteaant buly group P<ac-. vallabl9 also El Toro ot· p I llll0111 laland need• ener~lc &40-5'°° Ryland or rm 27 or
fer late ~012 Apt Manager coupl• USllU..-UWAlll :=c,: ~~ c;,: ttc:. ;:_r1~5~~ harc:t ~Ing agr .. 11.,. ~~7,Ts= ~~ IUTY/1111'1 1-303-2sa..7979 '2i5 ..,,,..,..,.,....,__, _____ .,...,
One of Otano-Counties w/exp tor beeullful 48 FI T PI T Permanent Ex per preferred Publtc: Rel•tlon1 Dlrec-call Suean 840_;279 • hneet Auto Dlsmantllng Unit Gatden Apll, CM Crown Hardware, Corona 640.1122 OUSECLEANER needed ton Med9d fOf' demand-~-__ _
Yard IO< Sile Long leue, Salary+ bonus+ Apt No del Mar 873-2800 ------Tue.-frl $5.00/hr, mint 1ng Orange County firm RetaJI Salel
xlnl variance Contact peta 642-4914 Wkdys 9-4 CASHIER • ParHlme Wiii Oental·Ortllo h8v. own car 85()..4' 10 Aeqvlr• knowledge of
Ernie or Ray, 898-4343 am ln&JLfl train S4/hovr Mrt UPI/Um llOLUIEIS National Media & ablllly ••IT FUCIUTI•I learn-on-th• job En SCRAM·LETS
la1lan1 OJ!· 40 4 wlll train lnteNtewa Mon· Camp 645-0032 Oen~~~/~:08~1 eeded. Good houri, ~ ·~~~~a~~: w111 1r11n personable ~~:~~ 1~~~= ~A~i1Eg1~~;:~1~1:D87~ au OUI llllllltll day 492-2005 ---OllU IAll .. 111 ' oood pay Call Robbie's preaaur• Housing lndu.. POl .. d appllc:ant with Hra 9-5 Mon-Fn Call Mr CAGE. 759-1802 ·NSWERS
Yl •• I ••• lo.I.Es AUTO MAINTENANCE Co-Educational, reslden· Beneflta. 4 ~ Dys. Exp Aag & Mop 546-0757 try expe< a mull Xlnl sales exper for Bridal Gonulee 549-9~5 appt "el tronl '"M'";ON P·-01. R9deernft ·W0¥1n Req'd. N~ 842...2828 pay & .._-1111 ., __ d R• Consultant Xlnt ... ,."' ' "' "' -· Part-time fleet vehlchle 1181 treatment program· UUL llOlnllY ........ ....,., .... -, Eatab. game route Part maintenance postlon ex· shl" work; tor Interview IEIT&L llOIPTlllllT for lltlgallon & tax 8t· aume 10 Ad. 118, o.11y opp1y for en1hu11ullc llClnUY /P. TI•• hand lamed, talka, nlG• Queea. L.anoer
time effort H~ returns. perlenoed Individual· re-call 631·9938 Pleuant busy group l)rMl· torney Non-smoker . Pllol. P.O Box 158-0. motivated person C.M. Musr be experienced l*Ch/cage 497-SJ.2.3 $0048 ~:·~ra~.: SS d~~ntr~~Y gq~~~al f~W:1~hg. :,~r~ Clerlcal ----tree In Newport c.nter Nwpl Bch Send resume Cost• M .... Ca 92828 859-5559 546-3995 =~~rf~d ~~A .,n~l!!ioia~a~ctt°'!i-~!"!"!'~~--l •:,::in '°'Jnct':t : ::
f<>< from proflta Call Sun-& lruoka. 7"-"'-·8601 llOl--llT NMd lull time front office to Hiring Partner, 5000 IUl EITATI WT llTICllln nice appearance 5 days I llY &"'-"-S beM. the ,...., ftnalty
day '2·5. Mon·Frl 8-5 Mr .,.. '""-peraon. Must be dental Birch St Suite 2900 SUCCMSfvl RE Agt Me6cs lnAJL NSmOI per W.-(11AM to 2PM) LES 957-8t33 Uld, ".uy I l*P ~·
Wolle< 714/838·5620 am•EOl&llO UllUllW experienced. &o40.1l22 Ne wport' Beach. ca' agoreu!W lloenMd !)Ir· apPly In person, 2407 E Call Unda875-2311 My youno ~ ,..... ••1v1as 92660 IOn to au.._.... .. office Coas1 H--CdM 9 to 5 WEEKDAYS I* p It . d ti 0p.f"11 y • Consignment Shop wilh Wheel Allgnmenl, Brakes, Requlr" typing of 45-50 " --- -.,......, . -,. --"SODAS?" •
.. tab happy cti.tltele Tune Up Newport Tire wpm knowledge 01 offlOe Irvine Bue Detlvefy Set·. LIU PIOOHSll ~;owti.,.:11 ·~ f.°! SAUi SICllTAIY 1129 & Up "'=~-:-:::--:----=~,.--
Good toe Ful\ bollMSt Cir 3000 E Coast Hwy, proc9dures and good vice Meda contract drlv· Eap'd Loan Processor Iller/QC, 181ary 11000 • People with Herballte. PIT, 3 days p/wll Wun.a 590 & Up
Terrific terma Musi Miii Corona def Mar telepllone Mlllls for our era with small P·U or cat needed for growing boous s.nd r..ume 10 Shaklee Amway, ate, e;c. must~~ ~77/Lvno«er l°""Tu_ci:;'~~J Up
714/&48-7975 Alli Till SllYllE Crown Valley Claims of· within So CA Musi be 21 Financial Co Xlnt salary Dally Pilot ad• 122 PefleOCe to join Nattonal .....,..... ..,
and llght repairs Newport flee. yrs old CA drivers lie , be & comm1ss1011 for the PO Box 15&0 eo.1a Mesa Company In sales C8o-SECIRm 11••1 ,., lwMt-4 lll'T Wlll Ible to WOfl< long hours. right person S4H\d re-CA 92828 pactty Prove yourself tor All I btelltllt 011 ... TIU IT TIO UTE Tire ~tr 3000 E Cou1 We offer an excellent Pay baaed on mllage & sume 10 Ad • 125 C/O a f-months In manage. 536-9402 UHtOoe-RJRNfTURE
If you are unhappy and Hwy, O<ona del Mar aalary, and t>enellta If lloPS Apply at 1"692 Dally Piiot PO Bo11 1650 I ·~i~ , menl or C«porate pos-1947 S MUI SI
wanl 10 gel out on your Auto lnte<ested, pl.... call Cowan lrvlne M0-1500 Costa Mesa. Cal 9262(1 ~ mon Will t>e OU s M SUYICI STL am11. Santa Ana
own, our firm has • pro-TIUP•E IPEUTIR (714) 241·2195 EASV ASS EMBLY WORKI LllCI llSTllS!j Hudson 752Jao~ r EJiper w/reta SS hr• llme Btwn Ed1nget & Warner on LA PREMEAA I t.2:5.
0 r • m I n I • I • • Full urne. tome training S800 per 100 Guaran-.. d ..... F d ----& 112 Sun off Unoon 76 Mlln St See Ille Bear! 65().-6299 call attar 6pm communlca11on1 right n~ lnsura~-& good STln FOi p ... on •Y trnu ri ay 11_,,._IST •••fS/P Tiii( Nwpt Bc:h &44-7151 -........ teed ayment No E•· Paradise Cafe &44· 1237 I -. IM-1221 r--1--/ tie<• In So Calif Poten· benefits Call Tracy llSll&IOl OlllPAllll perlenoel No Salee 0.. for busy medleal front 0 1· M11ure woman, amt Lido Service Station Open 1~ Sun 12·5 ~
11a1 in 11x figures flrat 842·2000 3333 Hyland Avenue 1a11s send Mll·•ddressed llllC&L ASSISTAIT flee Full time &46-8824 g1tt shoP ApPni 25hr wit Full SeNice lslaod Atlend· I iil;~·!!;~'m,.!l~UI;
year You need $ lOOK ----Costa Meu, CA 92626 stamped envelope, El.AN With limited X-Ray Perm•I llOl_..l••T • Call 10-lpm_ 675-2425 ant Self·l«VlCe Cut11er Montgomety Ward'17 O Ii:
650·2482 for app'I Pan-Time Driver for well Equal Opportunity • · for busy Onhoped•c Of· Perm part time NB RMI SALES TIAllU / 1 • Apply viak8f gOld co6or $150 ul• unit~ tuml1'n and qual1lleatlons Call Aulo v 1 TA L 9 o 3 3 4 1 8 I '"11• N M F F T p T ~ tt ~ngeratOf wtloe
establllhed Co Hours M· • Employer ~~,~~~'; Rd, Ft Pleroe. ,..flee full time 646-8824 Es 111 e fl rm see II s e are Meklng aggress1ve Chevron Station 2590 964-2111 Gr .. 1 '°' CPA'a. 9'9-lltrllHI, F 1-SPM OMV Report re--IEllC•L 8f11hualastlc rehable team men & women t8 & over Newpon Blvd. CM - -near•. new bV9lfl 111 n . r. CLDl ,,..,...ST " LI h WHIRLPOOL wuNlr & -c Mo~. must .-i ' • I 4021 quired Apply In person 'trl HUii PIRSll BACK OFFICE player g I accurate We Will lraln you In an , .. ,,. .. a 11cm. •.
0 2582 Newport Blvd CM Coate Meta Architectural $7 50 p /hr (f-paid) lyplng 55 wpm, n-exc1t1ng n-career Vou Warehouse aulatant Dfyer llke new gotd cir S-t offef 10 TR ST DEEDS ----Good growth position In ....., smOkef prol aP"'"'"rance f $~ .. 54&-~14 •---------We ~Y Trust Deecla BABYSITTER Tues lhru Operations Dept 81 Cor· firm seelllng errand per-Bl-ltn~ual. mornings · """" must be a sel starter, Mon-Fri 1 30am-4 30pm · Century tan file ceblMlt.
F I h C M son to work 20-25 hrs 830·130 Mon-W..,.-F'rl lo handle varied otfice wllh desire fOf success $4 75 p/hr to start North C.•J•ltll Mll :rs' size 4 dr..., w/lodll •Aa•o. Fl•••· Sem r • m~ ome porate Office of ree· """ dulle1 Including some N Call _ ~II W~ne Matth-645-186'8 if no ans att 5 laurant chain. Position p/wk Pref Arch stu· Orange area Call o exper nee btwn Costa Mesa Ron or Dan. APPLE 1iC f2" Amber S 5 645-14 t4 ..,. ....... dent Dependable car a Ruffin Group Agency boOl<keeplng luncllona 9-3pm 641-0690 966-1510
1 -611211 IALll& IAY CLll requires xlnt typing skllla. must Ovtlea Include er-23278 So Pointe Or S5·S6 per hr and hrs. are MonOor, softwwe. etc.
--WHERE CARING exper. w /word pro-rands, flllng, Ille ottlc;e S1e 218 Laguna Hiiis S1 to 5130 PdM. CS days W.ll Tl&lltf IHP llLP/llWH S600, call 67S.-$312 ~i;iiiii~pji~~J9-!~~ BtlJ W1at.. 5100 IS THE CUSTOMI cesslng a plus Varied work 549--0M4 38().7815 tart mme onl acl some office wOf11 770-0102 * lllYllS * rnerat office dulles. Oemae 7141478-02112 Call Bill 549-8181 hmhlrt M2J
Fun a pert ume ~11ons PHlllHL J.j~~~~~'~ ~11•::, *Fill CUH * IHIC&L IECEmlllST IECPT/l&TA tmY atea STITlllE-RY 2 b., stOOii 110 .. 6xi2
Slarta al 14 50 p/hr OUll nPIST position A ... ,,;., In.......,.... Mull have some typing ••• Career opportunity, full Manaztne publisher Maks ··-1n1w•llTR• Store In CdM needs Salee beige .,.. rug $35
M h ..... _., ,....... ~· · perlence. wlll also have time Internal medicine -.. "'• 11 "'1" Person FIT 5 0•""' Xlnt Wardrobe mirror S 10 ust •11• nMt. c ..... n •P-9am-4pm, at; b 111 St enlry lev.i peraon to lh car IOf wiciter baske1 · ,. 1::::---:--.,.,--..,,...---.....,,,~
pear Must be 18 yra of busy office, needs people T1ll ... • Y IHll 110 ' ~ resp arts at Salary commensurate wllh answer phones. entet lunctl service 8 30-1PM, working GOn<11 Especielly F1rep1aoe screen S fO Hm ~~=1==~~g~ age 0 M V Report r..,, oriented blllngual lndlVld· ~ • S4 /hr 751·2880 with exp 650-4322 .. rcutallon dala lntocom· Mon Fri Earn appro~ line ctientele 87!>-1010 120.1a99twtl 418-2800
751-2880 &-5 Mon-Fri-.... ual wilh xlnt 1-'-'llone 11M2 IHlette AH. "' $150. •200 w"ly .. u~st -•w ••y ..-a ex 18 * llClnAJIY I lutW.lfFICE
... ...., Ill. W CllllEl puter and fill orders. -.. " ,.., ••--... ._.. -l-.Lanl'I skills ind accurate typing lnlae AM & PM stutta Hourly 1 714/281·7192 Irvine be neat. personable and need• malvni peraon for 8 ft couch etrtped
al 55 wpm, !Of a variety of 11•12H-GH 1 FllllCllL plVs mileage 964-2581 IEO--1111... energetic Apply btwn AM or PM pt11me Also ..,,ht ones $99 obo 2 * * .. * *
cleraldutl9$. Plelsecall UYERTlllll '"' 'Oam-\2pm or 2-4pm po11uon IOf AM pltime wroug'1t·lfon bit stoots lft-1111.·Ta.
for Interview 645-5000 CUii nPtST STIClllQ 1n Costa M... ( 11· 1 Plus Lon s Kitchen 3077 So Maintenance man For S20M 1n1K 720--1457 IHll1 1l I ll
The JOiiy RC>gef Corporate ext 52, M·F 9am-4pm lor the legal dept 10 Ulll1 I AOOltll WllTIYf ReceMng & marking new Mex()llp ·nF~ P.h05/nehr ~!'2~3P1ng Harbor. Santa Ana 8'>PI 963-9175 1Couch & Loveaea1 -r-h-tA'lfW()I .. of 8" omce ta look~ng '°'an •x· BAN ING ---'" typfng. flltno and ou·ter merehandase ~ • """' 99& 979-074 7 -- --Gd cond O.n.ng r~ .,~; "s~ds~ cow.. nn.
i>«lenced secretary'°' clerlcaldullel Typing60 Needed for dlsplay IELIYllYPllSll I fTUCIUull l'me .·PltECESCIMlun111.,,, S35 842-5937 optics gunsmith on
lhe operation. depart· TELLER wpm req Own car • adllen111ng sales •I rapid-J •1y p•1 ' " ..., rMnl This poaU1<>n1 r•· m u 1 t C 811 Jud Y ty expanding local dally U•• Ir~, 1111 . I 1 11-,.. .. --Ethan "I'-" AntQ """*· 13 premtaea 0 C F1tr • I ~tun.I 161111 A prnr, Ins ,,_._11.1, r&IMI .,. gounds CM Enter II qu res v~ .,,...ng s 8'42-432' ext 316 tor MWSpaper gQf..aMt. 11 118 e •••••••• vacauons Al90 part time drwr tr1p1e dresser GATE 5 off ,., ........ ,on a pteaaant phone man-GREAT WESTERN SAV· appt ' Self·dlsclpllned lndlvld· I AIDE $4 50 p/hr Hunlg I hutch Raga to A.en. · -""
ner, and general olftc. INGS one ot CallfOfnla's llW•i-••y ual1 may u.rn Hcellenl WIJ-.lffSEIHPl11 • • Beech 847•528" c:llm palchwrk cov· Wie
knowledge Prior word leading financial lnstltu· -Income (nlary + com-live-In & care for • JOIS Fii TIEii • enet dull ruffle & pillow J. '
proc .. alng & on fin• Uon1 has an Immediate IAILY PIUT mlulon), beneflll and newborn.NB 548-3607 • ITIU LMllll fH 1 .,_H *' • shams oec:or pillows l!'P!'!.,l""'ttretOlml!P.t----·!"'ZJ_I
comptiter •klll• a definite opportunity for. Teller In CLUI mm advancement oPportunl· • -WILL, l ..... fllTlllJ • SUMMER Traci towseat & sofa 2 plusl Xln1 benefits l CM Costa Mesa branch ly Flnancl1I, newspaper 00111(1 a lf, lfC, • • end cott .. tbl tamps 2
worlllng condlllona with a P/T, travel <><Hinted bull· or agency experience PFf 1 lAM·3PM wkdays. e If you are m High School or Jr High e JOBS roc~ers Misc: aooeu All show $600, S<ta-2900
growing company. Apply Vou ahould have cash ness nds gen'I olc clertc, necesaa;y No phon ear req Miieage pd •and would ltkt> to earn $25 00 to • e•c:el cond Ev 586-3082 INtl "'"·atr·• In parion btwn handling experience, good typing & phone calla Send resome to 631-0415 • e ., .,
8 308m.4 oopm preterabty In a llnanctat sklll• euentlal. 675-2250 Attn· Howard Mullenary · ' • $50 00 in comm1ss1ons and more e4'!ch • EARN Girts Camopy Bed $125 A ew
TIE JILLY IHH llO ln1tllut1on and you mull OlllnlLHY OFFICE ASSISTAIT j • week g1vt-us a call You can work • wtdr8Ulng taole s100. 2 Sac S400 VOLVO Prata
' enjoy extensive public 0•••110t••y lor chlldrens wear S4 • PART T IME th ( d • MONEY S1mmon1 o~ sz Hies. ... Lo.. 1"'; ••28 110•21111•"• IH. contact Light typing and ASSISTANTS nMd9d for .._ -p/hr lull time no exper • d mll he a temoo~ an • •·beds S 140ea Custom ... .,... ....,....~ lmH 10 key are required. busy hair salon In l&ILY PILOT req 575.4411' •evenings an st1 ave tame to enJOy • i PRIZES made llbfary 1abte $135 nu INtl 7 I
114/HOAOll1 We II reward your Newport. 648-7197 HOW. laJ Strfft 111111 Ollll : your summer We offer complete • 964·2117 8' 8«tram f:tn &;,Ofi
Ulll •... IST enthusiasm with an excel· 0.1t1 le11, Ca. 12121 lfor U1e counter & phonefor • training and provide transporallon : 1 TRIPS I llY F•Ulllll Otesels itlnl cond. loedec,t-
For w .. t co'!:' adverlll· lent compensation p.ck· ClllSELIRS drsf11ngtgraphlcs sup-• plus great pnws. trips, and plenty of • S LES 957-813.1 1 w ewtru PI P 544-9220
tng offiOe of SAIL Mag•· ~JI: ~~~1 ~uP~.':. Part tll'M carrier covnMI-Fill Tiii PAY 11 ~g1es10~~~o\~~~~:· : MONEY' This t~ not a paix"r route : THI MUST SELL Sola. 10.,.. 81 17 Bayt1r1« Voivo 110
zlne NMd creauve. non/ fffllonal growth If you re ors want9d Help boys p••y Tilll Wiil SI rt s• th ~ • 1 • and tt ts not seven days a week Come • SUMMER 91!81 chair & ottoman Full c:anvu & trlr XJnt
smk • per lallor tor ed le ty and glrla aollclt new -• .. P r ,..pp Y • h I l ( e collee & 11 nd11b1e cond $7000 759-tll90 v~ d~tles from typing lnte<est . P aae •PP subacrl llon1 on th•tr OpportunlllH •v•ll•Dle I Master Blueprint 234 • e p us ge nf''-" t:uslo mers or our • hliferlq ... Earthlone coto,, Xlnt ~i-..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
10 function orgenllallon tn person 10 paper r!it .. Mull enjoy with the LOS ANGELES I Fischer Ave Costa Mesa • newspaix"r and h<.ve d good llme e cono S250 tor 811 Ou.en Pan of the Charect_..
Mary or Ian 645-7104 ~REIT wortilng with 10.13 yr TIMES Ctrculatlon 0.. 540.o373 I • whllt' vou 're doing tl Come out and • IAIU PtllT bed w 2 nigh111ano5 &.. 9oat Parade Aug 18tt'ttrl
9 olds Early ev9fllng hours pertmenl In our door lo Pllllll ATTllHITS • se<> what w a t' talk bo d • len ,.,.r. l'ldboard S 150 Xlnt cono Th8 a ..... d winning Ship
fo'a~t Rl'\ull "'n 11 ,.
d1rt'<'lon \our
l>t'rYl<'l' •~ our
'Pf't'lally
("all 642 5'>711 t>~l 112
$2.17 per day
That's ALl. you pay for
3 Un.. 30 days
In lhe
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
CALL TOO~ll
lllfll Liii
Your Delly Piiot
SeMce Dtr~ory
~tetl\11
u2..a1111t.an
WESTER. work deys/ n.xtble hra door newapaper sa1.. • t' r mg c:t ut an • II VOi.i are 1ool11ng lo• ••Ira Wainut l1n1shed wall untt HOl.IM 15 for uie GrMl
CommlMIOll only program Guaranteed lthtetlc: girls needed lo • you 'll bt' glad vou dtd CJl/ todav .md • se>end•ng money or Ilk• S50 6i'5-6762 -1 Fam"" Fun" 87s..e 181
E hourly .,.,8,,.. plus com-11ale1 lor upt>eal Newport • '" • , ''··ti M Earl • "' Slyl.~s Call Bru<;e ~ H..-PM Beach Restaurant Good • \wtrl romorrow ~ r • 10 go placa llke Magic OFF WHITE 'l " SHAPED --------·
• 642-432 l •• , 208 ~~':°" T ~~~I~ g :~ pay great way 10 Slay In • 548· 7058 or 24 l -8432 • MF oontain Knopttl Berry SOFA & LOVE SEAT I ·-·--3200 Park Center Drtve shape Call Kim days • • 1 arm or win rozea and n 1 c • c 0 n 0 s 150 _., -- -Colla M .... CA 92628 11&11( OIUf provided Potential to 644•2652 or ·Beth e ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • 4wardt Call u5 now• We 548.5314 leave menage !Must Miit 18 Duffield 78
au1 y "Lil earn $300 plus per week • uo w a., 31rM1 \;011•.,..... CA 920;• • have several openings '" Obi El\der Elec. boat Xlnt -For an Interview, call 897-4346 eves
1
• ""' EOuAl OPPOIHu'41T., £MPLOVEll •I c M H a or F v Sota & Lo11e1eat match cond. final cash priee
957-2381 exl 1204 Sellldlellem1-6i2-5&7e •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-433J 1 ~art11toneS 100 498-t657 S7000 645-7515
~--------------~--:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_-_-~-~---~----~--~---------.~--~---------.---~---------.--~~---_-_-_-,:-_~~---,::_-_::_-_-_-_-.::-_--_--.----------1.~
____ .__...~----~---~~-----------..... ._.. ............... ..._ .................................................................................................................. 11111 ................... ~ ... ~
•
CAl 27 1910, fully equip. I tucycltt/ r":t_,,,.. av':· ~~ =. lcM11n 1111
on.r. 2131.St-Hst or 11H Harley Davtd1on
213n74o-7410 m '3M Sporet•r 1000 X1ra
MontgQfMrY 17 tutiy ~ olMn. low ml. $3500 or
tomlJ:ed, ioeded. • au10 bMt off«, 946-4959
pllot, dln9hy, furllng '79 Puoh 8Pof1. 2 IP. onlY
head'tl, lmmac cond. 40ml, i.avtng country. sasoo firm. 875--3741 '325/0b0, '40-4838
U~ '79 Yamllh• YtlO S350 X()liloo;l In NWPf ArGr OBO. ·eo Honda 125 En-s ia ooo '1()( det•ll• calt duro S700. oeo
• (I 19)234-3041 5-41-9118 aft. &pm
For ..W.45' mooring, •ltlt •tttr ..... 1020 NB loc S11,900. (714) ;1 875-3351. (2131828·1874 73 21 w~ Craft, 81K ml, 175001 Nwptr II
Slip AvaM • No llW Aboerd &42-0795 ~ 541-8823
Up to 32' S3301-----·----
Up to 42' $«1 a t •· i Hll Side ti. to 25· S225 "1 I -}! 08lly 9-5 5-48-I 501 l~ .. fti.Ri·!"ii·iliii. flNTSIW'I~.~
SWALES ANCHOAAQE .. TIJITI SLIPS AVAIL 25 & 30'
Newport Arehea Matlna
542-48«
ALLMAKESI
S19900WN
Dflli*9 Any L ....
WANTED. Dock f()( 40' llL-Uflll LUii
CllrllCl'aft Mr Lauder IOO/JJ• ••11 542-4335 or &31-31110 .-..
WANTED: SLIP, side 11e or __ l_1. __ f..,...,41~1·.,,...1...,..11..,.,.1..,.....,..._
mooring In N.B for ff LOOllll Tl LUii
aa111>oe1. 875-3748 l UIYILD PlllltT't
:-::.:l•p.;HMliiiiiiniii•ii-ri~~ Jiil te ll llltehll ter ·92 v@PSX 1608 fNtt .,. ...
675-8333 HUNTINGf ON BEACH
Wlnd1urler. S400 obo CHRYSLER/PL VMOUTH 67~ &42-0631 5-40-51&4
DIMES
A
LINE
WANT ADS
,--
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
' PRIVATE PARTIES
~I your Items for $50 or less In
OUf'1amous DtMeS-14-LINES pub-
/la/Hid Melt S•turday in the Dally
Pflof. -..
• ftHI Ddttt 9030
·79 foy. a.a. 12288 u ls.
needs ~ W()(k Ask
lor Richard 9&4-9432
tl07
'll 100LS
LARGE SELECTION OF
PORSCHE
AUDI
CHEVROLET
HlthHt Quality
S.lu a S.rvlu
CHICK
IVEaSON
H S f Coett H"'v
N••por1 S.ach
673-0900
DIMES-A-LINE ads must be
~d .a malt or bring them Into
the o.Jty Piiot offlce Be sure to
tnt:lu<M your phone number or ad-
dreu In your ad. ha..,. a pnce on NEW & USED BMWSI 1!:=======·~:;:::-!i\:::::::Ar.::--llll IUCl lff VOLUME SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
3670 N Cherry Ave LONG
Kattlla at 57 FrMWay
NCh Item & no abbreviations.
DEADLINE:
12 Noon Friday
Coate Meaa Office
3IO W•t Bay Street
Coeta MMa, Ca. 12821
BEACH
'No Cherry exlt-4051
(714)11 .. lllO
Tr1d•ln1 Welcome
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
HPAllJI HllOPUI
DELIVERY DEPARTMENT
McLAREN'S BMW
M-F tlll 11, S·S 1111 6
826 S Euclid St
Fvllenon,CA
714-680 6300
213·691-e701
SYDNEY
0MARR
/ 7
·so Carotla, 5 spd, 53,000 76 SeVllle. Orig ownr. 10
ml, air, CHI deck. ml, $3200 obo 545-3141
$3300 080 875-3097 Costa Mesa
NABERS '82 Celie. GT llftbaok. 5
spd, look• and rune
Gre1tl S8500 875-8557
83 Blacit CresSlda 5 epd, CADILLAC
tan lthr Int low mlles LARGEST SELECTION
Beil otter 645-8008 ol late model, low mileage
'83 CAESSIDA, black, tan Cadlllacs In Orange
lr1hr Int 5 spd. tow ml Cour:ityl See us today!
best otter 645-8008 540-1860
Find w hat you want In
Dally Pilot Classifieds 2600 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOll
0£AfH Nur1cl s
HA"IOR LAWN· MT.OUVI
Mortu•ry • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Olsler Ave
Coste Mesa
5'0·55s.4
,..ERCE aROTMIRI
HLLaROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Bro.oway
eo.11 MeN
842 9150
I
Oranoe CO.t DAILY PILOT /W~, AUgl'9t 14_, 1N5 -
Nltc llJT1C( fltBJC llJTICE NIJC llJncE NllC' llJTU • ....C llJTIC( fWl& all
T W INOl1CI TO 8 .,._ • .,.. I( .,. ITAW OP NOncl TO Aennout ...... PM:FITIOUl-M fiCft-wtltJ9 • I II
MOTICI Of' C~CTOM ......... IW p .... ~ 1111"-~ MAllDOPM'SW'I' Oft COWTMCtOM ..... ITATW NMa eTAW ..... 8TAI f ~MU CAU.M POtt.. MOTICa TO CMDfTOM lult••ul M••'•" HotlOlle,_.,.,l!MntMt UMCW"'hllOW c......-l'OftlNOe TN~....,_ .. Tfle~..,_ .. ..,._ ............... .. LC~·~.,N .. MOJ1 ~ty=c:=t =~~~ ....,.,.1;T,.... ........ on.Myl,, 1"6.12.'3500 lll•P81.W. lcl\ool Dtttrict Cout OOlnO ........ M a oa~~ 17,1 oo:J~.: .. °" .... ', .. _. lid~ too Vlltlh .... : ..... , .... : u• CIUlf~endMtOOGO TM Joltowitnl ,.,-.Ollt COlnmuM)leoteoltOllttlat CONT"A LOWA A . -... • ..... CA-• t A II o'ctoctc ~·" ALCOMOLt C .....,..,.. In Am.,loen hpi .. t tie¥t~IN~ot 81do.dliN 200o'dodc IOCAATU, 2Ht WMte Clwtotd DrM ~ *-'*'......._' -~.!..!...iAllMfteM b ~ 0:, 1:S 27tn d~ ~ •VMAGI LICl•N(8) ~MTMOTICa Tie,,.,_CtledllMUllUd th• ,lct1tlou1 lll•IMtl PM of tt1e ttt.h day o1 e.. AoN ~ m , ""'9, CA 9Mdl ~9*' •-*' ... ~ ':! ..... c • 1.: (.... t1t1 .. 1'7 u.c .c . • YCMalll IW'Bn ... at "'-FUiierton POllC9 0.-NarM 0 ' Q l'lfbNT1NO, ittnMt. 1916 tt714 l<tm Alli! ....... ",, ... lllh Ch.,.....,_
,,_ I ... ..,,_,, *-of lid "9oefpt OI• 8M/era.nMP) l'OMQ.~ llCAum ptrtrNnt ,ulwton Cal• N04 0 (ut ~Av. ..._,,of Bid Aeolipt Ot• Ai9t._.~llt Moo. Bhd, 8llbo9. C4lf. t2ea ..........,,...,.. C:-.. fleeofDnc;10t,lettyKal1n. NoUottt'*"YGMn• 'tOUAMWllYOUIR tornla ( ·= ..i:aN enue Drano• C1llforn11 taof~rd1M1n9Dlrectof •• A c.itt ~td PettNrlNo. fCWNlt21Q n. ..,_.,.... 19 ~ ... ,.. c •• ,u,. Al Purchbl!!:_~OUI eom •• bl'* traneflr ol ptf90nll •AWi. " MAY .. r Of lt nl at 92eot e.1t Kalin. Cout COM-Iha-eower. Inc. o.n.r• KatM .. n Montoo,,,.,Y. dUeted by. en llPdittdulf ~'•:::: ;: :u':~~::•~ ~=~~•trlet, 1310 Pf°'*1Y ll'ld • lfWfet of IOLD W .. fMOUT ANY 1t,r~;11y,:.Jc!",: Thi '1ottttou1 llltln111 =tyColteaeOistnct 1370 Plrin. Hit ~ M . 1111 Chatford °'""Hunt• "°" .._, ~ ., "'-' ..,.:.. •2 • .,6 A~ ta~CA llCIUOfllcanMll.Oo11oot1e COU«T ACTICM&, Ind~ tromJam11Ct11WlidOn)fOf Nemer•redtoabcMlwet A:dtm1Ave,tOS1.1...._CA Mte2S6.IMl'\l,CA 1na1on .. • Celltomla --~Or
"" !l'lao. ~ MW ,,.,. leQtl rtol'l1 to vto1auon of 21 U$C 11 I Aff'I fli.d In Orenoe County on tzelt Tltls bualn-.. oon-tZ64t _. h COUl'ill' a.rt "' • ~~-nr-,:::•:.= Project ldentuloetlon Tllename, Sodll~ bf1no ~ 9000Ul\l In OOOd pereon dMIMg lo~ the Dec«nber IC, t"5 '11.l ProJKt ld•nllllcallon duettld Dy a 0IM'9I pen. Tiiie bl.I .. II ~ W9 ~ Oft .»J It,
, ,_.. Ntrne 810 I 126t • ~ Of ,._ .. Tu Number, Ind •t.andlnQ by paying 91 of ~t In llW Onl1ed IW. NO ,H3&t1 H.,,,_ Dtatrtet Admlnl•· Nr9'\tp ~ ~ I oanerW Pl't• t• ~~~MW-ANOOMf COA$T COlL!O! melliflQ ~. tind DP your~MPl'f'l*\tl ... Olllr:i Coutt In «0. 10 Oelltd .....,,.,..,, t6580 tr1toonHYAC·8id f1H4 JS.N.t netSvc> ,_
-... __, ,. H f ECONOMICS MECH-Code ""'91ber, ot IM UW. l*'"lltted coe11 Ind U · oontee1 1,,. Pt0blbi9 C*lll Tuttln ~ Way T\lltln, P-. PUin1 w• on fie Oi· TtD IWM!etll -tiled K£H'T All.LH AIAAOA ~ er.. ~
....... UMUMY 17, 1111 ANICA:l PAOJ!CT9 • leror• er•. HOLIDAY peMe1 wlthln tnr. montN torltlllM!ilKe. INlf1 flle*'ttl Clltt0tnll 112MO ftc!Of of Phy ,1111; ~. wltll t!W County C11tt1 of Or· Tllil l\IMlnlfll WM Ned ~ P'llot ~ l . t•, 11. ::-..:.:. ~ a:r-: =~~l!RADEFERREO MAINT HOUSE UOUOM, INC a trom tnt dlll tN1 noUCe o1 the A .. lde nt Agent In Hlf'Y W Konalt. 2'2 I Eugene F HatM, Cout erige Courtty on J4if St, with tneCount1 o.11 of Ot-28, tM! ... ..._.. M Callfomle oorporetlOn, By: deftult wu r9QOfO.CS. Thll Ch~ onio lntorcement 20th Stre.t, Coel• Mwe. Commun1ty Co11e9e O.Vlcl, 11N ltl09 COunfy on M 23, • W
..... ...._. of Or... Pita P&an11te on 11111: Of. ~ '· Van HM, Pree. amoun1 It at.SJ 1.21 u of mfnt' , po 8 x Clllfo<n11 92t27 1370 Adatnl Awe, Cotte ,_,. tMS
CowttJ, c.ttt.f'ftte. and no. of Dlreotor. Eugene F. anc1 0t MllY l-van Hee, 11ar1111. Ind w111 IF'O'MM ~:eoe'~!:"M..~ Tl'lls 1>1111n.-w• con.. ,,. ... mat. T91t'C>holl• Put>lllMO Orenoe CoMt nnm "8lJC llJJU ----:::-..:=:; ~i..t !!!!.!.~· PfennCo111no. hey. au.. 2937 I! Peclfto untll your 90Ci0UIJI ~ 12112: 1 ctM'ft Ind COM due11d b)' • • gen.r111 ptrt· t7 14l '32·5101 Ody Plk>t ~ '· 14 21. Pu.,..._ OttnQll COM! -""..--• 1 n• ttoe .. DI ...,,,,.nunlty C ltQe COMt Hwy, Coron1 Del currtnt Voumeynothewto b0ndoflt&400 lnttwtorln ~ NOTICI IS HIAllV 28 198.S OlltJP*>tNJJ1.A~1gu1H, ~ -to .... tltlfMM• , .. Olttrle1, 1310 Ao.tn• A.,., MW, Ce t2W pay ttw tniw. uncMlid !)Of• of a calNer;I 0, Oll1lflad Thie ltal'9mllnt WM tl*td OIVEN that t"-1bove-W__, 14, ~1. ,_., lilAm ITAW
_.... UM. 1' 1-II Trallllr Fdty. Coeta Mell The 1111M. 8ocAll Secunty lion of ~ eooount ...,,.,. cheCic made ~ to Ille with l"9 County Clettl of Or· n.tMd School o.tnct few W.fa7 TM...._.. --.,.
lnetnl l 1t -.. ... , ... 12828, TeleS)hOM (714) or Fadltll Tu Numt>ef. and tt1ouQf1fullpeymentwu69-U 9 ~tot Julttce MOe Collnty on .My 24, ~ County. CellOtftll. PtalC llJJlC( dlDlriO ~ -., ~ "90ltd9 o4 Mid '32-6707 malllnO eddNll. and ZIP mandtld bf.II you m1111t pay • · O¥td • 1MS ec11ng by end through tu "8JC ll)TlC[ T..-1 Q.OCK aHOP'
Countf, ... .., IM NOTICE IS H!AUV Cod4I Numt>ef of ll'le lrtlM-the emoUnt eteted above :..::'~etyS ~..: ~lltled Orange Cout GoYemlng lowd. '*-'"· '.C11'10U8 Mlll .. I Ha E. a.r -A. co.la ......
..,....,.. .. Mid DeN of GIVEN that th• ebov.• tw.a ft: KONO H. YIN, H~ you end yo11r lndlgenoy p-tluOn • 0.Wty Piiot Juty 31. A11gU1t 1 eft• ~ to 11 "DIS-..._ 8TAW FtenTIOUe IUASll CA ~'f \"Net ... It~ ---named School Olttriet lor SUSIE H. VIN. 3001 VllltV ~er;· or mor'tOIOM ~ tlled"" In 1*7°0t a = 14, 21 , 1985 . . TAIC'T'", will reoetwl up to, The f~ pareona 11e MAim ITATDmlt'f MICMll L: ~ 141
few Ollll. ........ ......., °' Orange County. Calltomle, °'·· Manl'laltan 8ffol'I, Ca. may mulu.tty -0'" In Wftt· tiond °'---"'-"'°"" W·t32 ~· llOI l•ter lhlltl tl'le lbOYe-dOino bllstne. -The talloWlng penona .,. E. 8-y • A. c... ...... CA .,_. untlM ltatee ol A....,.,_ acting by end through tt1 90298. 1nO Pf'lor to the time tn. no-erty wtn be admintstrtll'\lelY ttated time, MMd blcll tor CAAOL·MATH£W8 AS· doing bu1in1e1 .. 82t21 oa. at lM Notttl tr.it -Govefnlng 8oatd, l'letlln· That the pet90tlll !>foe>-tlot ot .... ll potted~ fofMtted ant to 1t rtaJC fl)TIC[ tn. llWINI of 1 contract for SOCIATES. INC~ 08A M J KOiLLEA OEVEl.OP· TNe bUelMle lie ~ treno. , .. tfi• eovntr etter relefrecl to u "DIS-erty to be traMf9rred It a. mey not be Wiier ttlM the u 8 C 180r:d wlll tie dlt-111e •bo'le protect BEl.ZANO a CO . 20l2 8uti--MENT. en 1 l8lport Drive, duc:t.d by. Ml~
courtheuH, 100 Civic TRICT'', wlll recel.,. up to. ~tied In genw11 u ma. end or tl\9 thrM-monlh ~ of ~-10 ._ Bids lflell be reoe!wd 1n ,..... c.n1er orr... 8ulte Huntlnoton IMctl, C•ll· MlcNet L. ~
C...-DIM Weet, lanle bl.It not later ll'lell 1119 •bo'te-tertall, ~ mercflen-petlOcl 111ttld 1.bOve) 10, Int.,. .i .. "' ft1a a me pt.ce Identified llw4. a..6, IMN. CA 927" ~ t2e46 Thia _...,.,. -.., Aftet ~ Mt thet ttated time, IMled bid• tor din •. equipment, or emono other UllnQa, (1) :::: .:"' ~ or UM OFACmlOU9 end lh8ll be ~ Ind Cu~l-M1thew1 At· Cl'l•tle• l(0411*. 8131 wltl'ltt.Coumya.tl .. Ot-rteM. tJdil -.t ..,._... _... tl\9 -d Of • contrKt IOI' f u, n It u r •. f I 11tur•1. prOYicJe eddhlonel flme 1n mltlgltton of lorf9ttyre with ~ .. ..._ publlc:ly read 11ouc1 et tile IOCllt•. inc . • Cllltornla SalC»Or1 om.. H\lnllno~ roe CouMv on ,...,.. 2. v9rM .. .-I MW htiW br " 1119 •t>ow protect trldentme, QOOdWlll, ...... which 10 cur• the defWt by lh• Aetld•nt Aden I In Tiie fotio.lng pertont 1bo11•·ttll•d time and oorporatton. 22901 Bergen-a.en. Califoml• ~ tNJ _ ~Mid DMd ot 'rNlf ln Bl<ll ltlllll be reQeiV«S In leH ehold lmpro11em•nl trenat. of tile Pl'~ or Char Ut1i1tnt to 19 Nlve •bendoned the ull of pl-tin, Mitlioft Viljo. CA 82~ Alfred D Koelller. tM 16 r-••
tM """*" ...... lft tl'le plec. Identified •boll9. mercMnctlM ~·Ol'Y end ot'*""" (2) •t.eb41th • us~ tl11 end 21 CFA th• FlctltlOUI Bu1ln••• nw. ... " be. S10 00 0.-Thll bvllMll " con-C<Muh ~ci.. HunUnQton PublllMCI OrMQll ~ Mid c-tJ end 81* ... and Shall be °'**' and bull,_ known u: HOl· te:Mdulll of peymenla In 13187MStt11 wtlhoul Ill· Nam•. CHEM·DAV OF POii• ,.quired fon•c:h Mt of ducted by. corporetlon e..cn. Celttoml• 92949 o.lt'f Piiot Al'QUIR 7. 14, 21, ...._. _ publicly reed aloud at tilt IDAY HOUSE LIQUORS and Older toaureyourd9111Utt; or Ing 1"c:191m en°d COit bond IRVINE, 21 Sandpiper, bid Clocumenls lo guerent.. CarOl•M ti hew I Al· Thie butlnest 11 ac>n· 28, 1t85 Lot 1f ol TtMll No. 10a. abo11e-1l•t•d time ind It ioc.ted at: 2937 f. Peclflc bOth (1) and (2~ RHl4'ent Atnt In Irvine, Cellfomla 92114 their ,..um In good con-IOClll•, lnC . M J 8elutlo. dl.IC1tld br I 09"*11 1*1· W..et:J
lft ""'Cltf ol trvtM, II P9f piece. Coeat Hwy.. Coron• Del Atter thr• monll'll trorn C'*"9 Tilt Flc1hlout Bl.lllnlll dltlon wllhln ten (10) deye Pretldent nenhlp ·-Ill' lllft1'1C(
IMP ......... In .... t11, Th«• wlll be I S 10 00 • Mat, Ca. 929215 togettitr tl'le d•t• of recordallOn of c... R045-0034 N-relefred to above -lfter IM blO opening date Thia ltalemlnt .,.. filed ALFRED 0 l(OEU..fR ~ ""'
,.... 1, 2. I Md 4. .,.._ POii• required'°' Mdl Mt of with the followlng deecrlbed tf161 ctocument (wttlcfl dat• of De : 8 1985 llled In Orenoe County on Eectt bid muet conform wl1fl ll'le County ~ of Or-Thie au11ttnen1 W9I lllM u M1M:tu1m..-.llli ttie 0f-blddoc:umen111oouwantM llcohollC t>ewrege llcenll: recorCS.tlOn IPC)elft ...., .. Pu~~ Cout 6127/ISFllEHO F218539 Ind be r9l(>Olllllle to Ula Mge County on Jlif 31, wlttlllleCountyCWkotOt-l'IC~A~IT ftoe., tM oountr "9oordlW lhllf ,..um In good con-Olf Sale 0..11 Ucenee No. on). untw the ot>llQlltJon Delly Pilat A:uQult f 4 21 28 Fred B Ruuell. 27 Sand· contract dOcumenll 1986 anoe County on J4t/ly 23, Thi ,......._.._ pw.-. ..
of Mid~. d1tk>n within ten d1ye 1ner 2t-'6713 now IMued fOf being tOlec:loeed lolPO" °' • 1915 · · · plPlf, lr111ne. Callfornla E8Cfl bidder 111a11 eubmll, P'm'1M 11165 ~ .-
TM l&rMt ~ °' 11111 bid opening date Mid premlsea. tor prem!Ma MP9fll• Wfltten eoreement W-OOe 92714 on tile torm lutnlthed wllll Publlllled Orenae Cout ,_,._. ~ BAUCE JOSEPH otMr _,_ deeltnettoft £eeh bid mutt conform loceted at Mme eddr.... ~you Ind your credl-Joe Thlefjung, 5291 PllOll tile contrlCI docUmenll, a o.i~ Pik>t Augull l, 14. 21, Publltnecl Or~ C099t ~)
ot Hid l'OP9flJ! IOa1 end be rnponlllle to lllt Thal tl'le total contlder· tOl'permll••lonoWP«lod. l'lll.ICNOTICE N11.Long&eao11.Celllornla llatottn.propoeecltubcon-28,1985 DellyPllo1July'1.AuO\lt1. 7, SttO~~~fm DOANOK , UIVINI, CA contrect <Socumenll. etlon for Ille trans,_ of llld you n1.,.. only tl'le leg811 right 90803 tractors on lhlt project u W-992 t4, 2t, 1ta5 SHORELINE POOLS 206
11'7'4 Eich bldd« lhall IUbmll. bull,,... end ot Mid llcente to atop tilt .... of your Pl'oc>-IT A TUlllNT Of' Thll bull.-WH con-required by Ille Subletting ·-te W\TU'C W~29 Unc;oln ,.._,.,. Hun~on twM Md eddr9M ot Hie on tile lorm lumlahed with le the tum ot $487,000.00 erty by peylng IM entire AIA*>Of .. HT Of duc:1ed by 11 general pert· and Subcontrect1119 Fair • ,..~ nu1.-8eectl Celifornie t2t4I beMf'lclairY et wt1oM ,.. tl'le oontrec:t documenll, • lnC111dlng lnv.nlory .. u. ernount demanded by your UN Of ACTTTIOUI netll'llp Prectloel Ac1 Govt Code flCTTTIOUa 8UtMU P'UBUC *>TIC[ enxie ~ JoMph 20S ...-t tM .... II belnt oon--1111 of the propotild tut>cort-mated It SI0,000.00, wl'llc:h c:redltOf _...,, .. .._ Tiiis tt•tement -lll9d Sec 4 too el eeq . ' MtN: MMn.n R D-trec:t0'9 on Ihle P'Oleci u oonellts of the lollowlng: To 11nc1 OU1 ttle amount Tiie fottowlng perton1 with the County Clettl of Or· Eactl bidder must eublntt MAm ITA~ ACTTTIOUI IUl•EU Uncoln A--. ~on '"AL IAvtNGI AHO LOAN requited by the Sublett Clftlitk depollt•d Into you ,,,_, pay, or to arrenQe have ao.ndoned tile UM Of anoe County on Ju.tot 24. With Merl bid Cet11fted ()( The::::::: ::-.on.... ...... ITAT'lmWT ~· c:.:::. .. -
Al80CIATIOM, 1201 I . and Subcontracting Fair eec:rowbyt>uyer$48,000.00; forpayment101topthefore-the Flclit1ou1 Bualne11 18M c:uNer"t cl'ledl peyeble to ~INOUAL LANGUAGE The~oertonl-dUCtedbylf'I~
HtGMLA.., AVIMUI, I AN Practlcel Ac"!. Govt Code Demand Notr To be re-cloture orltyQlJl'P'or>ertJll Neme COMMERCIAL Publllned Or~ Coett llleDISTRICTOfabldbond · dolngouaineeaM ELT£2S, BAUCE JOSEPH
l lE .. NAllOUtO. C ALI· Sec:.4100e1Mq. placed by c:uh ttlrcxigh In foreeloeure ror eny otl'let LEASING SYSTMES. 4000 DaltyPitotJuly31.Augutt7, In lhe form Nt '°""In ll'le ~ATE~ ·~Al~ 19302Won:t1911erLn .• ~ Thie IWtwnent"" Mid
FC>MttA tMO&. Each bidder mutt eubmlt eee:row, S 129,000.00; Prom-, .. IOfl. oontect: MllCArthur Blvd., Suite 130, 14, 21, 198g contrlCI docurnenll In en w • · Bch ·CA 9:l&48 with tile County a.1l of Of·
OINCUoM to the aboYe with each bid certified 0< l11ory note· ln1tellmenl AMERICAN ..SAVINGS ~l>O'I e.acn CA 926&0 W-1134 amountnolleMthen l~of 92~ Cetot Stockl'lem Lit• Jani White. t= W'99 Couflty on JAJ/l't i 4 '
ptOPl'tY ""' tie olM.en.d c:alhlef'g Cllee:k P•Y•b .. lo Not• P•Y•bie to ...... NO LOAN ASSOCIATION. Flc:tltlout eu11n9.. N.,,,. r.. the muJmum amount of bid 4912 Rivet Aw Newpo,1 WOl'cn.ter Ln . Hunt. • 1t86 •
by .....-*'8 NIM In wtlt· the DISTRICT ot I bid bond $292.000.00 I 512 5 E 81 t W h 11 t I er 19rtecl to 1bove wu nled In U a guarent• tl\al ll'le blct· ' CA t264e ,_
Ing from h beMftcWJ In 1119 form Nt lorth In tilt Tl'l8t It h11 been -oreecl Boulevard, Whittler, Calf· Ofenoe County on Jeunuary PtllJC fl>llCC der wlll enter Into lh• ~iaC:: ~ee3Stockham TllOmll Bnldl9y Wl'llt• Publlehed er.,. COMt
wftNn10dey9fromlMftret contrlci document• In en~ Mid tranlfer-lornl• toe07. Telephone . t98t FllENO F-153338 P1'09<>Md c:ontrec:t It IM 49t2 Rlwr Ave ~ l!Md. 11196 Senta ~ o.ityP16otJulyS1,,..._.,, ~Mcdoft ol tMI nottoe. emount not .... ll'len 10% of end teld trentferora tha1 (7t4) nJ..1134, loen Ho. Gt-. inc., 1 Clllfornla NOTICE TO Mme la -ded to euc:h 8eectl CA 12e83' Fount81n Vtlitr/. CA 92 14 21 lM5
h6d ...... be ,...... ll'le mutmum emount of bid c:on.IOer11on tor tl'le tranefer 81-208263-3-74 (E) pc>nllon 1030 W PIClflc COMTRACTO..I bidder In 11111 evenl of llllure · 1 Th11 bu~neu 11 con· . . w...-
wlttMMlt --t or war· u 1 guarani" th•I the bid-of aald bu..,,... Ind of Mid If you ha.,.. eny QU4PllOl'll. Coatl Hlo~•y. Harbor Ctty. CAU.INO fo.. llDI 10 ent., 1n10 Mid contrlCI, ck!"'~ ~u~ ~ C::; c:tucted by • oen-11 1*1· 1---------,.,..,, •XJM"I or lmpMed, der Wiii enter Into Ill• llcenM II to tie paid only )'OU tl'lould contlCI • i.wyer CA 907 lb Scnoot Oltlr1ct· COHI lud'l MCUftty WIH be I«· Leslie c s ocllhem nenhlp P\llJC llJllC( .. to tttte, pouaulon ot propoMC:t oontrllci If Ille •ft• trenater llu been ap-or tilt oovemment egenc:y Trill bullneae wu con-Community College District felted. Tl'lls 1111~1 wa flied Ull Wl'llt•, Tom wtllt• 1---;...;;.;..-..._,.._ __ _
-umbrllrl099 to Nttetr Mme 11 1werded 10 IUOfl proved bL:•rtment of AJ. wtilcll may ll•ve lntured your ucted by a a corpor111on Bid OeadUM: 2 00 o"c!Ocil The DISTRICT r...,_ h lie Cou 1 Cltnt of Or heed l'IC1TnOU8 8'.llH•• IM unpMd W-belanc9. bidder In ll'le event of ftllllre oollolk: ege Conlrot. loan Notwtlh11enc:llng tile Thie 1te1emen1 wu flied PM of 1119 27th day of 11111 right to reject any or all ~1 Coun; ~ AUQU9t ·i Thie tlaternenb;:' of~ ,.._ tTA" rr
due Of1 the note MCUl'N by to enter Into Mid contrec:t, purM.tant to Sec: 24073 9t f.ct 1ri1t )'OUf' property le In th 11111 County Clofk of Or· Augult, 1985 bide or 10 wllve ll'IY Ir· 1985 • With lllt County ...... 24 The fo1owenO .,.,.... .,..
Mid Deed ol Truet to wtt IYCh NOUrlty wlll be lor-MCI· fon1c:lolure, you mey offef County on July us. Place of Bid Receipt Ot· regui.rltlle In any bicla or In ,___ Mge County on ...... , · ~ • •.000.00 ptue the to8ow· tllted That the ,...,...n deecnbed your property tor 111•, 19 5 flee of OlnlciOI', Betty Kalin. tne bidding Publllned Or .coat 1t85 E EN AHANC1AL ID'-1 lltf "tlmetld coet.. H • The DISTRICT reMf\'91 ,,.,,...,_ere to tie coneum-prolllded tilt .... II con-Publlll'led Orenge Coul Purcllui~Cout Com· Punuant to tile prOllts6onl Dal Pllo1 A :'r 14 21 23ao HlttlOt 81\td.
penMt and advMOM et ne right to reject ll"f °' 811 mated. tubject to tilt ebove c:IUded Pl'IO< to Ille con-Deity Pltot July 30. Augu116, munlty District. 1370 ol Sec:tlon 1n3 of Ille Llbof 28 ~985 ugue · · Pu~_2'3-.1 • ~ •t02. COltl ,,_, Ctl-
tM U-of Ute tn1tSe1 ~ bids or 10 wllw 1nY Ir· pro11i1lon1, 11 SERVICE c:1u11on of tilt f0<ecloeure 13. 20. 1985 AdlllM Ave, ta M-. CA Code of tilt Slit• ot Cafi.. ' W-984 C>slly Pllol -·1 · "UQUI' 12e2t c.rto.. ot tfttt Notte. of regularillellnanybld1orln ESCROWCOMPANV.34&5 Remember, YOU MAY T·7S9 92626 tornla,llleOISTRICThelob-14.2t 1985 Wt38 MuE.Die.23IO...,_ t.w. .. ttm.tN tnm .. 11 the bidding W. Elollt SI . Lot AngetM. LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF Project lden1111c1t1on tained lrom Ille Director of PUBUC NOTICE • BNd, #102. Colla ......_
, ... encl COltl In the Purtuanttollltpt'Ollllionl ca. 96oo5 on()( •ft• Sep-YOU DO NOT TAKE P\llllC NOTICE Neme. BID #1261 • OR-llle°'9eftmentoflndult~ ~29 ~nt o1 '1,221..21, pfw of Section 1773 of the Llbor tembet 5, 1985. PROMPT ACTION. ANOE COAST COLLEGE Relatlon1 the gener•I RCTITIOUS .U..... TIM Tl'lle bueinMe .. COA-
lnt-t on ttle unpMcl ptt,._ Code of Ille Stal• of Cell· All Oll'ler buslnees namet NOTICE IS HEREBY K·117S1 TECHNOLOGY AND ART pnwalllng ,.,. ot I* diem NAa.ITATl.wf P\BJC ,.,,~ by.art~
dpel INtlanc9 ....... , r1lt• of f0<nl1, tile DISTRICT huob-Ind llddr ..... Uled by lhe GIVEN· Thal SUNKIST SER· AOVUITlllMl!NT CENTER MECHANICAL waoes and '"• gen«al TbeJolloWin9 pet9()1'19-ACTITIOUt 9U81MEU MAX e. !UJ9 11.21°" ,., annum ffom talned lrom the Olfec:tor of 1ran1fe ror1 within tnree VICECOMPANYlanowOuty Nottoe le ._..,, ttveft PROJECTS -STATE 0£· Pf'9\lalllfl0 rtl• tor holfday dolnobull,,...u Tl'lle ~._fled ' 211/U to date Off ..... ptue Ille Department ol lndultr\81 tnree yMrl lllt.put. IO far appointed TNllM under I thet on Julr n. 1111, FERREO MA.INT PRO· end overtime wortl In Ille~ c AME l 0 T & As . ..,... ITATEmlfl .. th the~°"" ol Or I
anr edwan c aa I ll• Relatlona the generel uknowntotransfer•.are: DHd of Tru1t d•l•d .,.,_,00 U.I. c-1 JECTS cekty1nwttld\lhl1wor1lt1to SOCIA.TES 17110 Los d ~~~Menge County on Juty 25
lt•n•flclarJ ""' b• prevllltno ral• of per dl9m None. 10127177 eJ1ec:ulecl by: VIN-WM ......... Coete..... Pl8ce Plans-on Ille Of. be petfctmed IOI' MCtl Cl'lfl ModelOI Fountlln Valltly. ~~lndow ,..._:,,,, ..... 1985 authotthcl or~ to wlgff and th• generel N8tM Ind eddrw of CENT L KONTNY. AND ,okie D•.-rtn-t. Ceeta nee ol Director. Eugene F or tyi>e ol wor1ler !-*I to CA 92708 --... P'mDI
,_,Pf* to ..... pfw .... p<evalllng rite IOI' llOlld~ escrow ho!<* SER\llCE JOAN D KONTNY, HUS. ...... ~ {IM .... lliflJ Herrte. Pl'ly Fee: P18nnlng, execute the contract Theae Atmand H Camelot, ~~~IO~~ PutMbNd Orange C-' dwlr9M. Ind overtime work In Ille lo-ESCROW COMPANY. 3465 BAND AND WIFE as Trutlor. Mlucl by Coe•• ..... CoNI Community Colleg9 r••• .,. on file II me DIS· 171'0 LOI Modeloe. Foun· .. ...,. Delly Plot Juty 3 l. ~ 7 YOO AM IN OEFAUl. T callly In wtlldl tl'llt wortl 11 lo W. Eighth St, LOI Ange6el, to eec:ure obllg1tlon1 In ~ on J"'1 20, ,_, It Olllrle1, 1370 A:dem1 Ave, TRICT oftlc9 localed 11 Ot· teln \lllley. CA 97208 tnbUUng US A 'D) Sun9Nne 14. 21. 1"5
UHDE" A DEED M TIIUIT be performed for eech craft Ca. 90oo5. ttllO< ol A~ERICAN SAV-Cott• Mete, Cellfornla Trill« Fecillty, Coeta M ... flee of Ptiy Fee: PlaMlng. Thl9 bu11n .. a 11 con· :n~~ ;::· ~ W-445
OATID JANUARY 21, 1•1. O< type ot worker needed to Deted: Augull 1. 1985 INGS & LOAN ASSOCIA· from Fttnll ,,,..,. ..,_ 92626, Telepl'lone: (714) ,, ... ., Facility C091M mey ducted by. an lndlvkSIMll ~ 110-B 3':h s~-1---------UHLEll YOU TAKI AC· nec:ute Ille contrllci. Th... Holldly ..._. L..-., TION. u Beneflcl1ry. ,_) fof vtol•tlon of 21 432·5707 be obtained on request A A:rmaocl H Cemelot ,_ .... ,,, '
TION TO PflOTICT YC>Uf' ratet are on nle et lhe DIS·~ a caiet. Corp.. I r: Recorded an-n12211111 UIC111. AnJperMndeetr· NOTICE IS HEREBY copy of !hell rat• 91\11 be This ll•tement was tiled ~~ ~ 1 __ .;. .. ,;;;lB;;;-;;;JC.;;..,;fl).;.;;..flC(;.;.;;.--.-
"'°""1'Y, IT MAY H TRICT otllce loceted 11 Phy flofteld '· Van Hee, "-· document no 28920 boOk "'9 IO place IM melter In GIVEN that the ebov .. poetecl al tl'le )Ob alte with tl'le County Clerk ol Or· J t10.B 351h St ~
SOLO AT A PU9UC IALI. Fee: Plennlng Trlller Coplel ...,., l. Veft ..... a.er .. 12465 pege 1'1.1 of Olflcl8I ... UfihN ...... Otltnct nam«I Scl100I Olllrict tor ln1llll bemandllOtyupon Inge County on July 31. , •
If' YOU NIED AM EXPLA· m•y be Obtained on reQueet. Trwtwon Recofdl In tl'MI 0oftlce of t!W C-1 1111 ontef to C41ft'"t Orenge County. Ctllfornia. the CONTRACTOR to wt'lorn 1945 8Md\ CA 92063
NATIOtol Of' TM! MAT\Ma A copy of,,,... rates.,,.,. K0ft9H.Ylft,lwteH.Ylft. Rec:orelerolOrenoeCounty, ltiepfl'lll'b'llcwfoofttlll ec:ltng by •nd tllrougtl ltl theoontrec:tll-arded.and nan1 Thi• bu••-,. c:on-or THI 'ftOCIEIDINQ be potted It th4t job alte. T,........... Calttomla lnc:lvdlng 1 note eelruN, ntUlt ... wtttl tM Governing Bowd. ,_ .. n-upon 1n1 tubc:ontrector Put>41atled Orange Cout ducted by an indMduial AOAINI T YOU. YOU ltshall be mandetoryupon Publlehed Dfenoe Coat lor lhe tum of $1M.OOO 00 fteeldent Apnt In c ....... lft• reterred to .. ··0ts-under tud1 CONTRACTOR. Deity Pilot Augutl., 14 21. RonMd J Dlnlels. Jr BAAATA CONSU~TING,
I HOUlO CONT ACT A the CONTRACTOR to wt'lorn Deity Pilot Auguat 14. 1985 trial tile beneflclll lnl-t 0Nt lnlofow.lilftt ...,.,._ TRICT'". wtn rec.Ne up lo, to pay not._. than ll'le Mid 28, 1915 wl~~~11~6a::' ol ~ ~ .. ~--:= A(!~llf~~ &.AWY&". the contrec:t le awarO.CS. and W-001 under uld Deed of TNlt IMttltloft. P.O. 90ll 1,_, but not .. 1., tl'lan tile•~ 1pecifled rat• to ehwOf11.,. W-t&e 26 •
DATIO: JUt.Y M , 1111 upon •ny •ubcontrector •-IC NOTIM and Ille obl1Qetl0n11 secured ••"'• An•, Catltornl1 11a1ed lime. -led bids for amptoyecl by them In Ille •ll· 11111-•c 11111\TICE : County on July ' 9~ P 1 ICll ~ ~ 1""'9oft/Amertcln h · under sue11 CONTRACTOR l"UUI.. ~ thereby ate preaenllY lleld 12112., • c1a1m Md coat tile award ol 1 contract for ecuuon ol ttle contrlCI ,..~ nu Fa2149 P 1 1 • ~ ,.:207 ,, __ l.orow Compen1. lo pay not""' than Ille uJd 1<·11714 by the ben9tlci1ry. that I bond of a.soooo. '!' ... the lbolle pt'Ojecl No bidder mey withdrew ACTl'TIOUI .,..... Publllhed Ot9n09 Co.st c:~.:' ':: ...... c .morn•• tormerfJ, 84Mldtem CIHM 199c:llled rlt• 10 all wortt.,. brMCh of, end oetaull In. Ille •-of • caefllier • or Bids lhall be reoa!Yld In eny bid lor • perlOd of llxty IT ~ Delly Piiot July 31 Augut1 7 9~
licrow Compenr. •• employedbythemlnll'Mttll· 0,:>~:,.~oOf obllg•llon lor whldl l9ld -uftedttie~c:.=:,.,; Ille Piece Identified 1boYI. 1601 days •ti• tl'le d11e Mt ~~ penone 1te 14 21 1985 Th .. bu••-11 con·~
T , 111 t • •. Q w • n A. ecullon of the contrec:t IUUC ~" Deed ot Trust le MCUffty hu ..,.. ~~........ · ""!';. and S1'1811 be opened end lor Ille opening of bid• doing bullnell 84
1
w-935 OVC!ed by 111 lndMdual c......,,., Aaatetant Vtce No bidder may Withdraw oc:cuted 1n tllllt Ille payment ot _.,_, Of ...,ov-publlQly read aloud at the A payment bond end I T & CHOI
"9eWent.' t201 l•I Htgh-any bid lor • perlOd of llxty (~ ~1g1, ... 101 11aa not been maoe of'" eurMJ, °" °' befote .... above-atated llm• •nd petformenc. bond wlll be CT~ ~~OP~~~ESCc!~ TlllS ~!~, -filed I• n d A., en u • a• n (60) days ener tilt dll• Ml · • • Failure to melle tilt 611185 tiemb« S. 1115. An lndleM-Place requlr9d pnor to eJ1ecut1on • • · • CE Cllrll Or ..,.,,.,dtno CA .,,.0. (114) tor ttMt openlno ot bid• Notice 11 lleret>y given 10 payment ot prtnc:ipal end/or er petttton INf tie llN In There will be • S 10.00 de-of the con1rac:t end et\all t>e Mesa. CA 92627 Pl&.IC NOTI with tile County of ... .,.1 ... 7111 .. ·, 111, A payment bond Mes • credltort ol Ill• within Int-I ind all eubMquant lleu of • coet boftd. Otller-posit required for eecl'I Mt of In Ille t0<m Mt fOl1h in the Tllomu Ward J9welt 140 ~ County on July 2t m • • · perlormaf\Ce bond wlll be named tt1n1feror{1) that 1 peymenll together wllh 181• wtM, ttie pnipeftf •II be bid document• 10 guarani" contrac:1 document• Cabrllto St. • 28. Cott• Ftc:TTTIOU• au.,._.t 1 5 F.na
Publltlled Orange cout required prior to exec:ullon bUlk lrenaler 1• •bOUt 10 be charge•.· Impound•. Im· edmlnletr•t1¥91y fort.tlN their return In good con· Pureuant to Section 4590 Mesa. CA ~2627 t NAm ITATDENT we Or CoM•
Deity p1101 Auousl 14. 21, 28, of ll'le contrlCI 1nd 11\111 be ::.,~ ~ ~ti!;'openy PoUnd depo11t1, 11 1ny. pww:'t •o:,.• U.1.~·.:o" dlllon Within ten daye •It« ol ttMt Governmen1 Code 01 Ca~':'st~~gC:o,: ~::::::;:: ~ o!;:~ty 3':'T"919' 7 1985 In ll'le form ... forth In \M n• Of d ....... under the term• ol Mid not• end. belflGU -the bid opening dall ,,,. St•I• of Calltornla. the • ..___ CA 12621 . HIGHLAND ORCHARO 14 21 1985 ~ ~ 'Jlr.977 contrac:t document• The ,,.,,_ en .,....,_. or Deed of truit ccwdlnt to .... ln'-tM E.ech bid must conlotm contract wlll con111n ......_. · Pursuent 10 Section 4590 eddl'MMI ol Ille Intended Fellur• 10 pay real •t•I• 09ftM mey ... • ~ end be ree;ponl!W to Ille Pf'OYISions permitting the Tn1s bu11neu II con· ASSOCIATES. 2699 WNI•
of Ille Government Code or lf8flrferora are: CHANTRY. tuH and/or ..-nenta hw NfftlMaoft or mftttetton contrlci documents 1uc;cesalul bidder to duded by • generel part-Roed SUit• 255 ll"W'le CA1---------
lhe Sl•I• of Calltomla. the LTD, • Callf. corp .• 3303 lor total reported detin-of tort.ltunt with""'....... Eld! bidder shalt IUbmit. bltllute MC\HIU .. '°' lrty nershlp 92714 l'tB.IC M>TlCE ,,,_ contract wlll conteln Hert>or Bllld;,r. Suite t<-4, quent end 111 eut>Mquenl dent A9ent In Charge on the IOl'm tumlahed wori mooeyswltllheldb)'llleDIS-T~WerdJeweff I Ru.y ~ Apertmellt•1--.:...;.;=.;....;..;..;..; __ _
NOTICI OF prov111on1 perm1tuno Ille Coeta M..a. \.OA 8282&. pavmen•• wtilcn bec:•m• punUent lo 1t u.1.c. 1ttl 11111 contrect documents. • TRICT to ensure per-This st1temen1 wu nled u. a Callt Ltd P11t1nerW11P. flClTTIOUI IU9*Ell
INTENT TO 1ucce11ful bidder to The toc:llllon In Calllornla due ttl«Nfler. lncludlng 1ny end %1 C"' U 11.11·1'1U1 1111 of Ille Pf'opoeed tubeon-f0<manc:e under the con-with ''C County~ of~-~lley ~ ~,,;t~ NA• t TATEMDfT
TilANl,lft ANO S1Jbatltute eecurltlM fO< 111y of Ille chief exec:utlve o(floe Ille c:narges 0< other sum• without fifing • dalm and !rectors on this proJect u t,-ac1. ~ ounty Ot'! uey · ~~ CA 92714 The tOll<>lollng persona.,.
LEAH IACK mon• wltllheld by Ille DI~ or principal bl.lelnett offloe payeble under tlle term• 01 coet bond. required by the Sublettlno OOVEAMNO 80AN>, ly: 1 • · rv;ne. S«Vlce doing ~ u
NOTICE IS HEREBY TRICT to eniure per· of Ille lntencl9d lrentfef'Of It' Nld Note or DMc:1 of TNll "••ldenl Agent In tnd Subcontr•cUng Fair h ence llor Dnld A. Pu Or F= c::s 7:;,°':,.a,:.:: Pl San HOTLINE LfJ\StNG CO
GIVEN that FILENET COR· formance under ,,,. con-~!~1 Wtemeron ... ..:.~I~ .. ' I09. Thal by reason thereof. Chergec R" "5 ""33 Prac:tlc.ee Acl Go'olt' Code pownetl r.. ,. ___ , Deltybl~~ ..... .:r 14 21 Fr~ CA 20082 B1y11tew Str•ttl PORA TION. 3530 Hyland tract nvrn ng ,,_.,, · the preHnt benet1c11ry ue \#"O -vv Sec 4100 el MQ ublllhed v-tnge .....,... ...,.-Santa Ana Height.I Call
A...,,ue. Cotti M .... Call· QOVE.......0 I OAM>, ly: Afr other bu*'-namee under IUCll Deed of Trust. Dll• August 6. 1985 Eac:tl bidder must IU!lmll ly Piiot AugUll 14 21, 28 l985 w.gu T~ls !Iv•~ ... I~ :;;: torn•• 92707
fomle, u Tr-f9for. ln· Chancellor Onld A. ~ add~L* by the llU aJ1ec:uled end dell'ol'W9d Published Orange Coast W1tn Md1 bid Cle'llhed or 1985 cNc: ed ll'f ~ Ro~rt Bryan Gllely
tendlloeetloertalnpettonll •-nett intended tr-or within 10 Mid TrullM. 1 Wt"ltt11t1 DellyPtto1Auou1114 21 28 cuhlOf's ctMtck payable lo W-997 PlaJC NOTICE nenh~R• P of RI 20082 Blyv1ew Strfft.
pt'operty to SECURITY PA· Publlehed Orenge Cout thr .. Y99'I lut )'Ml'I lut DeQlarellon end Demand for t1185 Ille OISTRICT ot I bid bond JS tey re;.,. ley 811111 Ana HetgMI C.·
CIFIC EQUIPMENT LEAS· Deity Piiot Auou1t 7, 14, peat'° flt u known to~ Sile. end hu dec>Ollled with W-005 In tne t0<m Nt forth In 11111 Pl&.IC NOTICE F.cTmOUI .UINU 8r;: ~~t-=t -rlitJCI torn11 92707
ING , INC., Four Em· 1985 Intended treniferM are. Mid Truat•. IUCh Deed ol 11111111,IC NOTICE contrect documenta In an F1Ctinoul autMll NA.Ml l'TA~NT Coun Clerk 01 Or· Tl'lll bus1ne11 •• con
barcadero Center. Suite W-971 none. TNll and all the document• ... -. amount not ieu 1n1n 10'\4 ot The 1o11ow1no per90M are Witt! trie 1y 1 ducted tl'f" .,, lndMCluel
1200. San Frenc:lsc:o. CtU· ne-IC NOTICE Tiie name<•~ bu= 9\lldencing the obllgallons 1(.19779 Ille maximum amount ol bid T:!'1:io!,.TATIMINT doing t>usl,,... at ~;x: County on July 3 ROBEAT BR'I' AN GATELY
loml1, Intended TrtntlerM ,..~ eddreu ol Int MAN NCUted thereby Ind nu FtCTI'TIOUI IUltNell ts a guarani• thll lhe bid-dol bUll ng o-tont ere GREENER LIVING 1264 FmT» n1 .. 1111ement wu filed
and Ltu0r. Ind 11'181 llld In· K·1f747 g·~~~·~-:~8":r•· t6'3 declared and d0es hereby NAM! tTAT!MPfT der will enter Into the G"i AR~~ u l NT ER . Wataon Cotti Mesa CA Publlehed Orenge Cout with tilt County Cltwil 01 Or
tended Tran1ferH encl t TATt•NT Of' FIA.,.~ ' Mc:f9tieeo declare all IUITll secured Tl'le lollowlng person II proposed contract lf tilt NATIONA L -41 Sunllglll 9~ 0..ty Ptlol AUQVSI 1 14 21 ... County on July 2t L...or lntendl to ..... b8cll ~Of cZ 90840 venue. · tM<eby lmmedtttely du. 6olng bUsl~ as.: uma 11 1nrded to IUd\ lrvtne, CA 927 ,5 · JI.II L•ll• vogeie 12&4 28 ,985 ' 19&5
to H id Tren1teror ind UA!. _ ~•t , end P8)'1ble Ind hes eMcied JACM COMPANY 893 bidder. In the event of lallure len Garrun 41 S n"""'t WalllOfl Cotti Meta. CA W·"4 F'IDQ4 L ..... Mid per90n11 oroc>--.,... .. ...,.,.,._ Tl'l8I Ille property P«t.-end d09I hereby e1ec1 10 • to ent., lr'llo Mid contrlCI · u . ...,.. 92626 Put>htned Ofenge eo.
erty. • gener•I dMcftpllon ol IU .... U NAME nent l'lerelo la detctlbld In c:eu• the tru11 propef1y to Plumer Str .. t, Co$t• Mea, IUOll sec:ur1ty Wiii be for· Irvine. CA 927 '5 This t1u11nu1 11 con o..iy P11o1 July 31 Augu• 1
which tollowl The lollowtng pet1on1 Q«*ll u . lumllllfe, fix. be IOtd 10 11t11ty tilt obtl-Ctllf 82626 felled This bu11ne11 II con-ducted by .,, lndlviduel P\llllC NOTICE 14 :l t 1985 O.•• Proc:nllno Equip-neve •bendoned ,.,. UM of tur ... equipment, goodWlll. Qallonl NCUted lhereby Jeck Motley, 693 Plumer Tiie DISTRICT r.,.,.... ducted by tn lndMdull .. w 961
menl tne Flctlllou1 B111ln111 trlldenelM, ...... IMMhold OATE: 7122165 Street, Co111 Meu, Calll. tne rlgllt 10 rejec:1 any or all l1n GlltNn f~.,U:::~, -nled F1CnTIOUI .,.....
Th• abolle-referanc•d Name: EVENING STADIUM lmprovemenll, tnd I• ~ SawfntJ• and 92626 bid• or 10 waive any Ir· This 1tatemen1 w11 n1ec2 wttn tile County Clerk ot Or· .. ,.... tTATIMlNT
equipment being localed in ANIMAL CLINIC at 115e2 loealtld at: 4911 WtnWll, L ~ 0 ...,, Thie bu1lne11 11 con· regul1tllles In •ny bids or In wttll the County Clerll of Or· Mge
5
County on Ju.tot 31. Tllll lollowlng ~ -ptBLJC fl)llC[
Ille City of Colla M ... South Mthlme ~. Sult• 1011, Hununoton ,.:, A.Mt Vtce ,.....;...,-ducted by 1n lndMdull tilt bidding. = County on July 3t. 1965 dOlnQ ~.._ u -----------
County ol Orenge. Call-Orange. CA 929&8 8Mch. CA Publllhed ()range Cc>Mt Jedi Mociey Pureuanl 1011111 pt'Olllslonl 19 5 F-.:zns JEN ROD COMPANY. '11CTITIOU• .......
foml• Til9 Flc:tltloul Bu11neu The Bll8lnela name UMd Diiiy Pttol A •1 7. 14 2t Thal llltement WIS hied o4 Section t113 of I.he LlbOr Fmnl Publtllled Orange Cout 17681 ~ L-. Hvf>I· .... ITATE...-r
A detailed llsl of ... IM HMM referred to abolle... b1 tekj 1renateror1 at Mid 28 1985 ugvt . . • Wiii\ lhe Coul'ty Cletl( ol ()r. Code of Ille St.,. ol c.u.. Publlslled 0re;,-Coul Delly Pilot Augull ., 14. 11 1n9ton 8"Cl't Cettton'I•• The~~.,.
equipment to be IOtd end llled In OrenQe County on loc:etlon II. l.ACEES . W-972 11'99 County on July 25, forn1•. lhe DISTRICT h .. ob-Detty Ptlot Auguet 14 21 28. t985 92647 "°'"9 ~ u lNaed beck 18 avellable •• October 7. 1913 FILE NO. Tl'let Mid bullc trtntfer .. . tt85 lllned "°"' the o+reclOI' of 28, 1985 W-99.t ~ .1 MAtt.ln.. '°22 CALIFORNIA COMP\/TER
tile offloel of tt1e 'l"renefenlr F~~ 10 b9" COf'ltum' Pllll.JC ~ -na:nt the Dep8rtment of lnduatrill W-~ Morning Star Or Huntington CONSULTANTS 3~ 1 Midi
end L...or George Yotnotllen. 311 mattld et tl'le office of'" Bur· Publllhed Orange Coett Ra1 111on1 th• generel flta.IC NOTICE Beech c.i11om11 92649 1gan Avenue. Cost• M.a
Tll•I th• uld end London Plaoe, Anll*m. CA row E.ec:towCo., 1157 E. Lin-ft·1-Dally Piiot Augutt 14· 21. 28. p1ev1111no rel• ol per diem PUBLIC NOTICE Edward J Herding 111 Celttorn11 92826
..... beck 1r111uctlon 11 to 92110e coin Avenue, Orange. Cell-AOVIJn'IUlllllT September 4. 1986 wege1 and the g•n•r•I FlCnTIOUl IUllHlll 20551 v11 Verde Covina Devtd L-enc::. Troutt
be coneummttecl on Augull Mike Adem. "418 Blue-tornta 92"6 on 0< alt• Mottoe II ._..,, ~ W-008 p<evllllng r•I• tor llolld1y FICT1TIOU8 MlllM!!I , NAMI ITATl•NT California 91723 3261 M1c:ntgan A11enu•
22 l985 In 111e office of tile water Cira.. A:nlhetm. CA AuQult so. tH6 .,._. Ofl 74'-til. ...._. ..,_ ,C NOTIC[ Ind owrtlrne work 1n 111e 1o-NAiii ITATIME... The lol6owlng ~.,. ~ J Mort ~ s Co111 M .. 1 C•llfornl• vJCa Pr~l·L.... Set· 92807 1'hle' bulk lrMStlr II ....,. U.t. owretlGf ••...._It ,..~ c:ellty In which !Ills work II lo The::::::: per90N ere dOlflQ ~ u 9roed SlrMI MlllOl'd Con 92e29
vloae Group of SECURITY Ttlls bullMal WM con-ject to eeufornla IJnffonn ca..left Qr..,. ,..._ 0.-K11'm be per1onnec11or MCh c:rlfl dolnO u PAO BOBCAT 89$1 nec:1oc:ut ot4to !Mnne Lynn Ooinl t250 I
PACIFIC EQUIPMENT ducttld byageneralptrtner• eorntn.'clal Code Section ~ ~ are.a. ACTIT10U8 .,...... ot type ol wortll« needed to P(AFORMANCE BMW Wente/I Aw Sutt1 400. Thit butin ... 11 con· a.n-Mt L-$Miia AN
LEASING INC FOU< Em-ehlp, ADAM 6 YOT· t1ot Celt•Mfl.......,._._ .....-8TATlmMT execute 11111 c:ontr.ct Theee 128 W 11th StrMI Coste Hoot Bc:h CA 92947 ctuc1ed by a generel pan. Ctllfomta 92705 bl~LCenter. Suite NOTSIAN Tfie MtM and addf.-of ... 1·1 .... , '' Oetfffi The folloW1ng penona .,.. rat• ere on flle 11 the DIS-,,,..... CA 92927 Roff JoMf Sl91n 271! N ner1lhlC> Tl\11 tlul•MU II COi\·
1200 Sen frenclsco Call· Thll llltefNtlt WU filed Ill• S19nOn with whom .._,......_. .... Alt-bUelnMI... TRICT offloe localed II Pl\y John Wlllllm Densmore Conc;ord Stnll Ana. CA: JOSEPH J MARTIN ducted by • gener1ll pen.
fornle .. 120 • With the County Ctwk 01 Or· Clelml may bl filed " lktf· .. C .... ) tor........, Off ~EA s 0 N DAN c E Fee: PlllMIRg Trtller Copiee 2602 N9wport Btlld eo.ia 92703 Th•• 11aterNnl w .. filed nenl'llp
Dtltld Ille 611'1 day ot ange County on July 18. rowe.crowCo .. 1M7E.Un-'1UIC•1.AftJ.--• THEATRE 1404Vle8alboe m•ybeobtelnedonrequetl Meea.CAlnee<> Wllli.nlR Taylof,21!>VI• wttllll'le CO\lnl'fO.IColOr OAVIOL TAOUT"T
AUjUl1. 18'&. 1986 ootn A~. Orange. CA ..... ,._. .... ......,"' PlacWltla 'c1111 92170 A copy ol ,,,... r•t• lh•ll Tl\11 Outlne11 II ,;on· Dijon ~ e..c:ti CA 11'1991 County on ""*' 23. Tllll tlllemet\1 ""99 ,.., "'1 AM M. °""'91f, VIM 0...,,. Y~ t 2el6 bcrOw no. 4117 LA "'9 ~ ...... Oll4ftot E~ o.M. Tl'lealrw be potted 11 tile jot> llte ~ed by an lndlvldu 026M 1986 wltl't the Covnl'f Clw1' of Or
,..,,,. ..... , ...... ,:,..~~~ .. ::: ;;'~~., AO • ~ttltb)' ~ ~r:, :I ~ ,,.:.::" _:. ::= ~,'t!_~1;29~~1bo•' ,,! ~~~·~.: = ~ .. ~~ llled ~~!:, b~~"::t!,. con-,.:.,..an.cs Orenge ~ ~ County on .M't II ~ ,~i~-Pullllehld Orange CoMt tie A:uguet 29. 1915. wttldl le ......., .....e .. """ IM TNt ~11,,... ltl con· tfle con1rec:1 II 1Wlfo.d anct wtttl t"9 County ~ ~ Or· Rott JoMf St91n ~ Plto4 .My 3 t A:.,a1 7. ,.,_
amNT LaA..O. INC. Deity Plot Augult 14, 21. 28, Iha~ dey blfOre the ~ ..,..,. 1111t C::: ~ed by 1 oorponitlon "pon 1ny eubcontrectcw fee County on Augue• !> Thia 1titemen1 ,.... 111ea 14, ~1 1 S PuOlllNd °'1ln99 ~
PublilNd Orenga C099t 8-itember 4, IMS conNM111)0l'I dltie ..,.0. Df'll bftf......... Aober1 ~ Ptelldtf\t under audl CONTRACT<>I'. 1 ,_ wtlll the Coun'Y C1wto of ()r. W-112$ Ollil) Pilot NtY 31 AyOUtt 7
Da:lly Piiot Augu9t "· 1"5 W·nt lltJCI ~ ......... ''°· ... 1Jlll. Thll ttatlilNl\t ... ftled lo s>a't not .... tl'lltl N Mild ~ .,.. C<lvnly on Nty It. 14 )l. 1~ w..002 •-te NOT~ o..d: Auouec I, 1916 •Ht• Afla, Calll•u111 with ttw County Clerk of Or tpeCllled,..,.. IO el workers P\lltlolhed Orange Cout tM& w -tt7 --------n-. "" MAM>Mlt ... a c:.11. 11711, • t4IMI 8M .... 30 ~bytl'lem lntheP Delly PllOt August 1 .. 1•, 21 ~UtO P\B JC fl)TlC( P\alC NOTICE tTATl•flT Of' '*""' 9r. llli L••• ...... 2lteM • a.--. • lfle = County on July • eoutlon of the oontrltCt 28. 1985 Publlthed Orenge Coeat I--;..;.;;;.;;;.;;....... __ ..__ __ Aa~MDOP Eirr OP .......... ,, .... ,. ttenft .. 1 ........ ., . r.-1 Ho t>kkW may -411\df• w 981 Deity Pilot Augu111 t4 2t l'ICTmOUI .,..... f'\BJC fl>TICl f1C~A=I u:.c:::·:-~~~.='~lfle~D=-'=' ~=:!~~tc;o;: ;Ji~'°'.:~c::: 28 IN! W·tft :='!!!:.,. ~-=·
Thi fo4IOWlno per90tll If• Tiie lottowl"9 peraon1 W-4)04... .-.... • 8" ••• _..,,,., 4 1tl5 lor the ~ of blda P\B.IC ll>TlC( "°'"9 ~-.,. doing butlln9lt.. ~IM...,. of "8JC fl)TIC( ....,............. ' W..001 A peyment bOnd and I OE'CORATtNO Tllr!NOS The toliow'nG par90ftl
Ttof! OAOOM. H 1 he FlcUOOlll lutlne.. 17, ..._._... IJ..... perfof1MnCe bOnd tit ~~-~M "8.IC 11)11C( INT£Al0AS 17t71 leecfl dolnO bUllnW •
8aylMOa Ot'M. Sult• 5, HMf· Im t D 0 NA L 0 H • J1CTlnou9 W81 .._..... ....... ... ..... PlaJC M)1lC{ ~ prW)r to •.cutlon Thi ...--.. Pettona .,.. ACTTnoue .ueM.. 61vd HunhngtOfl le.ct! AOUA CLE.AR ~?I ' L.a
port leech. CA 112tf0 AA Vi&. L TO • 4000 ..._ 8'fAW .... ......_ 0 ... 1.... Of t"9 oonlrec1 Ind ltlllfl be dOlnO;;:;;;;.: c.idomia 1*7 Pwc, ~i. 5t, £1 Toni C..-
Tl'le Brtde. lnC, • Cell-,.._ ...... l)() New-The............_ __ .,. ~· • ......... fltCTITIOU8 W81 1n tile 1onn ..c IOl'tll W\ 1119 C 0 N c• E P T MAm I TATlllaWT Tunottir ¥rebe1• ''an· IOl'fll8 t2'30 fornl• corporation. 111 '""' ...,,. • ~~;a-·· ..,...... ,., •• , NAm IT4TlmllT conll'act dOCumtfttt. l"l'lil tallawlnG S*llON.,. NQen 10131 A:.ooc c.-oie. i.on110 Dean Martin
North B1ylront. ltelbO• BMch. CA t2te0 l"'x , l 0 " £ A .. tt c. ... -.. ,.,.,. followlliO pereonl... P\.ll'IUtlnt IO Section 4$80 ENUAPAISl!S, 2tlO Vdln doing butNnell Nltioflal Huntington a..cti. Cell· 13811 Tuatln ( °' 00
ltlend, Ct\ 12ee2 ,._...___._, The Fletll!Ollt lvllMM .. c 0 OG E8 Hoa ...... ,, , • ., ...... doing buWllM •. of tilt~· Code of Ave, •101 CO.I•,....... CA Coln• OOld .. [s<ll···· 4100 tarma 1*6 'Tustin, CeilfON'lll t2t80 Tiie lride, • _,_ ,...,Ndtoabo¥1wM ~N ~ ~,..· Coal• ............. w ...... llCVCLll PACIFIC . tM ..... o4 C.tcm1a. tfie t292f Hept~ Hewpor1 &tMtrr .. lyftM °"'°'°' Jeryl PNeton Keroclrlx
oorporetlon, 1924 Tlhune In ~~l't~ M<lail.CelfOf'Nllim IMlf .. • ,..._.., ~ 101otMamlA.,.,Ha .CA contract wlll eo11111n .,.,._lleclftlHe'fill 2etO ~CA1Mt3 Gfey 15213 Cadll w H1ti l.•'~ •&t,l!IToro
Dri'le.1. Cofone def Mat, CA 7 0NoorY8. TNawd.SSCM .......... -· ...... l'H4I ~ 1*""1Uno Ille Vdln ..... •101, Coaa .., 0. .... '1'00 .... ,..._., Celltomiet2t83 ~t2&30
l2t211 ~~1ti1n9.•Cal-~ llt..o 1f•. eo.t.....,. .. 9'I .......... .. T.na, 2tl21 1ucceutul bidder to MaM. CA l2t27 '""•· St• I '"wpon Tl'lll ou1•neu .. con· Tl'lll tw.lllneu le ~-
Thia bUllMlil II COft· tomi. C«POflflon, 1030 ...... CaMorNI.. ..... .. C-..--..! ........... H .... CA.,.... ~~-*"'I~ .... ,,,..~.~ e.;:-c.:.::: II con ..aid"" I..,...., pert-.,.... by; ............. Mt.o Cly:-• ooriicw111on ac1'e CoMt HIGhw9Y n... t1uat 11 • tt u.a.c. .. _. .. n. 11111 11 ~n-moMy'I....., °" .. , ·-= · ,_.,.. MnNP
fhelride.Owendottl'IW ~City CAll0110 • due:t.ctW,an~con--c•" 1111.11-utt.tt duet•ay:enlndl~• TAICT 10 •"'"'· Hf• #:.*:~ llled "'::::.tndMdual SttlAMOlll.AY f'oNIOO ~.., '*Jr·::::.=_. llled Tilil ~ •• QOn-Q 00..VI THAOAN> :-......... 1 ..... eM ~~wee ftled =--...-0. con• wtlhl"9eo::"a::9otOr• Thia IS191Mftl wee Ned .tth~llel~~ot"::. ~1.!*-':o::"a::'afOJ.
wi111 ttw County C*1I ol Or· Clueled by 1 corporetlOn ~ ........ ™!_ '!.'!9!!!'~ofllld0r "Hltlut A1ut '" .-t11 ,,.,. County Cletlt of Or-OO't'IN•fll 90AN), 'r. eflOI Co.dy on AllOu*I S wl" m. ~~ Cltl1t of Or· ~ Coul'll't on ~ ta, Counoty Of\ .My "· ,.. .. _... J•"'-.,1 Thi• 1t1temenl WM ,,_ '"'" ,..., ......,...,, ..,...,. • ,.......,. Coun .......... 6 I 196$ enot Cc:M!tJ on .My 23-1 r.G """'"' on ... , ., . wltfl ttie Collnty Clll'll of Or· .,. County on Jttjy 241. -c.:a: A~ ~ ty on .. ....,-. , CllHnt •r Dultl • ,_ tt&I 1 ~ ,_
,_ ange Collnty on M 16. 1816 DI,. .Ml tS I ,_ ~ Or Collllll -~ 0.1r9 Coatt ,.._, ~ 0r.,. COIM l"uobll8W Otlf'll" 009!
"' kaNc1 Orante eo..1 111N ,_. ~ er._ Cout flu.~ Onrol Coelt 0.1ty Plot ~ y 14. DtlJ No4 A.ugutt Y. t4 11, ~ 0r-. Collet ~Mr 11. ~ 1, o., IJtoC M J1, ~ T.
Dllf'y Piiot Augult 7, 14 21, ~Juir~c:: 0:::::-~at'r..C:::: DetttHClt ..... 1l, 14, 21, OalyNot~i f•,,t 21. 1teS 2 · l W ~~.My)l,Aowoull 7 '"' I 1 14.h IMS
21 1 IS. 20 1ttl 14.11, I 1MS 14MD..,,..., 4. I llll·UQ • W-173 W ttl '#
W lllO • , T·1'7 W..... W e-«>l ------
P\B.IC NOTICE
-----.... ..._ ....... ' .. • • \p Cs e -•• ., ••• a n a •• a • ft a. a 0 a a • . o a e a • a a b a a a a a a ..,, ......... ---·--------~-
I
.._ ........ ~.~,-.. ..... -~-,-~....-....... .....,._.__....._, .............. ~¥~~~~,-r:'""•,.,....,·~·...,_~~·r-:-•~· ..... """"'""9'."~·r--11$~~··~··1111¥!•~· ..... ~ .......... ~.,.. .......... l!-.i,~4 ...... ~,~s~e~z~: .. c~&""191 .. ~2!~3!1191•t"''llll!~S ... S ... ,C.C ... Sllli ... llll•B ... L.2"92•4 ... ~4 ...............
810 OrM09 CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Augu1t 14, 1085
PtalC *>TIC£
lllOYihOUIMJH•• MC"'10ueeu••u PlCTJTIOUaeutNll ...... 8TAW MAm ITATW ~ ITATW MAim ITA,.....,.
l1le = Ptt90fl9 .,. T"9 follOwlf'9 l*'ION .,.. The folowing l*'IOfle .,.. n,. f<*OWtng percot1e w• ~ • ~.....,,.... ClolnQ buliMM.. doWla C)utj,,... ..
lot • .._ ATIONAL •run, llJD'S T"UCK TU'I O~EAHIAD OAfllAOI! IOOKKEl'""o PLUS.
•• Qufto, Hewpot1 IAl.H&SDMC!.104...,_ DOOM, 1412 ~Pon 1t7a5 hKll" LAM Hunt·
.._,V ~ Ntl3 '*""'°"·ltrwt, a.nta Ana. Ot'tYe. HuntlnQton 9udl, lngton hach, Calllornla .,,.,.. AM '...one. tot ~ WO. Calltom11 tH't HMI ~~ •• ~ IMcitl, JoM e. Kina. Jr, 104 P9r· Mwy L. ,._ t412 Hyan-J~ Ther .. 1 Ou1rto. ,,_,...,.._ .. _.. elmmon ltrwl. 811111 Ana. nll Pon Dttw, Huntington 19115 S..Cllff Lene. Hunt·
... ~ l>vllMM II COii• Callfomla t2104 9Mch, Cellfotnll t214t lngton hec:h, Calttorn11 --IW: 111 ll'ldMOulil Thtl buclneu 11 con-Thi• l>trtlMN It con-t2t41 wi.ofHIA A '"MOHi Mt.CS bY 1n lndMctl.lal · duet.CS by: en lndMduel Thia bualn... la con-TNt lt9ternent Wll tlled J~N 8. l<INO, JR MA"Y L PAOI! 0Ucl1ed by, en lnOMdual
-'ti\ tfle Col,nty Cllwtl of Or· TNI llltement wu fll9d Thll ttat.,,_..t •• tllecl JANE T QUARTO :S: County on ~ 23, with "'-County Cllr'k of Of· With the COunty etertc of Of· Thlt 1111ement wu flied
,. enge County on July is. anoe COunty on July 23. wtth the County Clefk or Of. .... ...,...._.. ,.!~ 1HI 1t85 enge County on Juty 24, ...., _ _, C>fenoe co.. "9191 fllllm 1tes
Dlllty Piiot JUiy 31, ~ T, PUCllltNd Qfenge ~ Publlllled 0r.noe CoMt ,._,.,
14, h 19N Deity Piiot July 31, Augu9t 1, Delly '"°t July 31, AUQutt1. Put>Mttled Ofenge Cout
-------W-·'3_1 14, 21, 1t85 1C, t1. 1t85 ()ally Piiot July 31, Augutt 1.
ftCTITIOUI llUltNIM MAm 8TATW•NT , ,... folowlng !*eon. .,.
CIOlng bueineM •
GOLDEN WE.ST WINDOW
SERVICES. 319 I 1ltll ,,_., Coeta ....... Cell-I
fomllt 92821
Mwtt M1ttllft rauto, 31t B 11th ~. Coeta MeM,
Calltotn11 t2t21
Thia bullnM• 11 con-
ducted by: Ill ln<IMduel
MARK M PU"O Thia 1111~1 wu flied
with the County Clerk ot Of. ange County on July 2t,
1915 ,.,.
Publllhed Orwlg9 Cout
Dally Piiot July 31. Augult 1,
14, 21. 1985 ·-IC MftTll'r W·t28 W•t22 14, h tt85
.--""'~ W·IM1 --------
fltCTIT10U9 .,..... "8.IC NOTlCC llftftl'C •-------MUt NOTIC£
W-MS
NAtllleTA,.....,, ~TITIOUl9UIMll PtlllC ""'""' PUBUC *>TIC( -------Tti. foltowlnO penone.,. NAMl 8TA,....,,., ~TmOUI ..,..... '1CT1110Ul IUIMll dolno ~II: '1CTmOUI M.llMll NAMe ITATl•NT YACHT SPECIAL TV The ~ng pettona .,. NAm eTA,....,,.,' NAm ITAT'llmNT The fo11ow1ng per.ona are
CREW 3150 Kerry Ln d<Ma ~II: The lollowlng l*tonl.,. TM,--.......,_'°"'.,. dol"" bullnetl w
Coeta M.aa. CA t212t ., LIFE EXCHANGE. 383 doing ~ • doirlQ ~ K {Al THE ARISTOTLE RE·
Todd Anthony l M, 3150 BrO<*ho410w Ortw, Santa EXlCUTIVE CATERINO, D l 0 PAINTING, 3804-d PORT (8) AR.ISTOTLE SEA· Kerry Ln • Coeta MeM. CA Ana. Calltomla 92705 MOO W"'* AYenUe I 108· East Cf\aofnen A~ Or· VICES. 2424 Newpott BMS.
02828 23M1ctwite ~ ~ =?~r 8Mch, Call-~. ~ 12819 Co1ta Meta, California
Thie bu91nen le con-torma ~· ' Kathleen M l<lno. MOO P.-He Vlctona Komik. 92828
ducted by an lndl~ Thia bu1lnas It con-Wwn.AYenUe •tol Hunt· 252 E 20th Street, Coeta Rictlard Bertrand Ot.ber. Todd LM .. ___ ' C 't I Mela. cautomla t2e2T 2424 N9wp«1 Bllld, Coeta Tilll etetement -Ned duc1ed by: an lndMdual lngton -11. all orn e Thl9 bull.,... la con-M-. Caltfomla 9282t
with tM COunty Clet11 of Or-MICH 'i,.LA~: p EACH ~ butlnat la con-ducted by In ~A Thlt butlMN la con· rex: COunty on July 11, Thll ltatement ... fled dUcted by an lnOMdull PEAK I(~~ IA ductedR:3°.:'RO~~
,.,., with the COunty a.ti of Of· KATHl.EE~M. l<INO Thie atetement ... liled This atetement ... fllld
Publllhed °':T. eo.t lf\09 County on July 24• ™-atat9mlnt wea filed with the COunty Clarll of Of· wttll the County etertc or Or· 1915 with the COUnty Cterk of Of· Dally Piiot August . 14, 21. ,_ ange County on Juty 28 ange COunty on July 24, anoe COunty on July 23,
28, 1985 Publlahed Orange Coat 1t85 1t85 1915 W·H 7 o.11y Pilot July 31 Auglm 1 "9DIO ,_ ,_,_
--------14 21 1945 • • PubllaNd Ofange Coast Pubtlehed Oranve Coat Publlthed Ofange Coast "8JC M)TIC( ' ' · W-940 Delly Pllo1Juty31 August 1 Dally Piiot July 31. Augu9t 1, Delly Piiot July 31, Auguet 1.
-·· ---.. 14 21 1985 . • 14, ~1. 1985 14. 21. 1985 r,..,,,....., ----.---.,.-llftftl't'----1 ' ' W-IM8 W-933 W-921
NAMI ITATla.NT n1uu" nu I""' The followlng per90nl are
doing bualneea u : '1CT1TIOUI 9UIMll
ELECTRO REP DATA NAm ITAT'llmNT
COMM PRODUCTS, HITEK The lollowlng penon8 ant ftCTITIOUI ..,..... AC"1T1~;~11 PRODUCTS. 375 81y View. doing bu11MA ea; ' NAm ITAW -•
Cotta Meta, Calllornla FROM THE HEART OF Th9 followlng pertOnS.,.. ~r:=:!-
92827 HAINES, 2005 W. Balboa doing bullrlMI II: doing bullnem u: SER-Kellenl Jo HenwOOd, 375 Blvd, Suite 165, Newport BUSINESS EXTENSIONS, AANO APARTMENTS 3090
Bly View. Cotta M .... Call-BMch, c.llfomla 92883 1880 18111 Str9et, #E308, Pullman Street Coe1e M...
fomla 92827 Bonnie I<. HU-, 2005 W Newpot1 Beach, Clllfomle Caltom41 t294io
Thia bu1lnu1 11 con-Balboa Blvd. Suite 165. 92~ Jamee p Warmtnaton.
ducted by 111 Individual Newpot1 , e.llfomla Toni "-1 Rlcherda, 180t 3090 Pu-St,_. Co.ta KELLENA HENWOOD 92N3 Port Sheffleld, ,...._port M-. Cellfornll f2l2e
Thi• 1te1ement waa flted Thl1 lneas 11 con-Beech, Cellfomle 92te0 Tnfi buelMM la con-
wttll the County Clef1l or Of. ducted . an I~ Thil bualneu i. con-ducied by an lndMcklll
Inge County on July 24, 80 E I<. HAINES ducted by .,, lndtvldull J-p W'"'*'gton
1M5 Thl1 ttat W91 llled TONI RICHARDS Thia 1tai.m.nt ... tlled
f1aOS7 wllh the Coun of Or-Thia ltat_,t ... fled wtth the eoumy a.ti of Of.
Published Qfange Coe11 enge County on 24, with the COunty Clel1' of Of. ange County on ~ 24 Dally Piiot July 31 August 7. 1985 -ange County on ~ 23. 1915 ·
14 2t 1985 .1965 fllll1•
w.939 Publllhed Ofange CoMt Fa18D Publ•ahed Orange eo.t __ llt_IDt_IC_W\_T_IC_E__ Dally PMot July 31. Augu.t 1, ,.,. ..... 11~,..?'3 .. 1 lgeA eou,t 0.tly PMot .My 31 August 1,
fltll.IC ftOTICE
!"Opie tHd
clnslfied
Cycle of pain
Patricia Baker of Lacuna Hilla grimace.
upon completion of her winning ran In a
cycllna race at the Mutera Gama in
Hockley Vlllace. north of Toronto.
l'"UIK. "" 14. 21 1985 ..,_,, _, • ugut1 • 14 21 1985 . W-937 14, 21. 1985 ' ' W-t51
W-930 --------flCTmOUI 9UlfNlll
NAiii ITA TIMENT rtaJC llftTIC( The lollOwlng '*'°"'are
1
__ Pl&. __ IC_NO_T_IC£ __ 1 ________ 1 _____ nu ___ _
dolR, ~~:~ES. 1835 ftCTITIOUI llUllNEll P\B.IC *>TICE ~A~M
Walsh whips49ersintoshape
WhllUer A....nue Sult.t, F-& NA• ITATllRNT Coita MHI 'C1llntrn1i The followtng persons are FtCTmOUI .,_.. The foltowlng ~ are
' doing bualneu u N.U. ITAT'lmNT doing bua1neat u 92627 p ~nk 1300 S D ADVERTISING & The toltowlng petlOl'll are J 0 S H U A G · T Geor~1e~oatl ·M ... MARKETING 3300 Irvine doing bualnele aa. ENTERPRISES. 1891 Of. ~~ft"o:n1a 92827 ' Ave. Sta :fas. Newport THE WALNUT , 1527 chard, Santa Ana ti4Mghtl.
Jtmee w. Nugetit, 2!>a.3 Beach, Calltomla 92660 W1tnut l<v . Qfange. CA Cal"omt• 92707
9 L It Call· Sylvia Depolnte, 390 1 92887 Pamel• P«rln, 1891 Or-~~':'9~71"1 · om 1' Parklllew Lane It 15C, lrvlne, Marie A. Cook, TruttM for chard, Senti An• Helghta,
Thi• butlneu 11 con-C1Jllornl1 9271!> the Merle A Cook Trutt Callfornlt 92707
duet.CS by 1 Joint venture .toll bu1lneas 11 con-Thia bu1lne11 11 con-Thia b~1lne11 11 con-
J amet w NuQent P9g41 ducted by-an Individual ducted by-an lndhlldual ducted by an Individual
A SYLVIA OEPOINTE Marie A Cook. Tru1tM PAMELA PERRIN ·~ 111t_,t wu tiled Thia 1tat1ment wu flled Thlt atatement wu Ried Thia lletement ..,.. fllecl
with the county Cl«ll of Of· with the County C*1I of Of. wtth the County Ctent ol Of. with the County Clenc of Of.
ange County on July 23 ange COunty oo _July 23. ange County on July 28, enge County on July 23,
1985 1985 1985 1985
f211-"211.. Fmm Fa1•1
Publllt\ed Orange Cout P\Jbltstled Orange Cout Publlatied Ofange Coast Publllhed Orange Coast
Del"1 Pllol July 3 1 l<ugult 7 Daily Ptlot July 31 , Aug.ust 7 0.ly Piiot August 7 14. 2 1. Dally Pilot July 3 1 Augul1 7.
14 21 1985 14 21 1985 2& 1985 14 21, 1985
W-928 W-920 W-985 W-919
-~
ROCKLIN, Calif. CAP) -Disappointed w11h his
team's slack performance tn Saturday's 28-21 victory over
the Los An~eles Raiders. 49ers head coach Bill Walsh
roared his displeasure during Tuesday's workout.
Walsh aired his d1s5311sfac11on JUSt before a grueling
two hour and 15 minute practice session with pads.
Originally the workout was scheduled to be an hour-and-a-
half without pads.
"He mentioned the lack of mtens1ty in every meet mg
we've had smce the Raiders game," safety Tom Holmoc
said. "I believe he 1s concemed because we had a high level
of 1 ntcns1 ty last season 1 n the playoffs and Super Bowl ...
and then 1f you stop and remember wnat happened after
this team won m last Super Bowl championship."
In 1981 . the 49ers went 16-J overall and won Super
Bowl XVI, then came back tn 1982 with a 3-6 record.
"I thtnk we talked about not being complacent so
much tn 1982 that we thought somehow b} simply saying
so we had overcome 1t," Walsh said. "We saJd 11 so much
we devalued the importance of what we were saying.''
Meanwhile. the team prepares for i.ts na11onal pnme
time Monday night scrimmage against the-Denver
Broncos. the second of four pre-season games.
"But, if you aren't careful, you can lose..mtensaty in
training camp and not get it back," Holmoc said. "You just
can't go through four pre-season games playing flat and
then expect to tum tt on."
Added Holmoc: "Things like ti viing are not going to
come. but tntenstty ts different. It isfa defender m1ssin& a
tackle and an offensive lineman missing a blOQk ... stuff
that could have bttn taken ~with more intensity."
As for Tuesday's longet and tougher tMn usual
pracllce schedule, Walsh denied 1t had anything to do with
the team's lack ofintcns1t}.
"The weather was JUSt cooler than usual a nd the
playe rs all had a day off Sunday ... Walsh sa1d. "h had
nothing to do wnh intensity."
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ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST &
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Fall Term begins
Septe mber 11
Grade• K-1
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121 S. Citron
(714) 774-1052
Grades 2-8
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1667 W. Marble St.
(714) 774-1052
Oradea Pre-School-3
Yorba Linda Campus
47&7 Valley View
(714 ) &24-8181
Pacific
Travel
School
2515 North Main,
Santa Ana. Ca. 92701 a ----
ORANGE COUNTY'5 ONLY PR/V ATE
ACCREDrrED TRAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
Atn«1can Alf'llne Sabre Come>uter Training
MOANING, AFTERNOON. EVENING CLASSES
Call (714) 543-9495
Call (714) 837-1200
For ~er information
regarding advertising
placement ln the
Schools & Instructions
Directory · call
SUE .I_
642-4321 .,,,~
Ext. 306 /
CARDEN OF HUNTINGTON BEACH .
a print• echool emphHlllng academic•
Carden Currlculum
Pre-School -Grade Eight
Open the year around 8:30 A.M.-8:00 P .M.
721 Utica
Huntington hach
53&-1441
Edith Hanlon, Director
Call your school now to register for Fall.
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.......... , 1111• ... "'
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MetlH 1111• S.•HI
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~~,~.:.~-~•i....1&...;•:li...IL.....,;,..;.; • ...-..oiaa..i6i..iiz.Oaiiii..iio..-o..lft&...1• ... +&..111i..1t&...i6.._.c._l.,.;,1.,ii..ia ... aito.ia .. +.+...1&u+ ... • .. .iiis...,.a ... aiil.il'..,• .... •~o ... e..,.a ....... -• ..... + ....... + ........... ·-• ... • ..... •.....,•;...--...+~• ... • ... ---............ __ ............. _ _..~ .. ~--.-.~-----------_1._ ---- -
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1985
CeJuncm:::._.,•telllnpeeomelet~ F•vortte t fl8von.,. comblMd In Cl
' ~ .
Say 'Cheese' and win s~ileS
MakeBrte,Cam-embert
stars of your next party
Every hostess with real party clout knows
that French cheeses come to all th c most gala
occasions. Bric and Carncmben especially add
luster to festivities.
Soft, satiny and smooth as sil le, these
cheeses at peak ripeness have an interior that
runs like thick honey, a bouquet that is fragrant.
and incomparable taste that recalls cream,
mushrooms, Cognac and truffles.
They are ellceUent served sm 1ply with
sliced French baquettc on cheesehoards. But
now, Brie and Camembcn are turn mg up in new
guises as supentars on the pany rncnu.
A simple fruit pmish.t for ins.ta nee, turns a
wheel ofBric into a visuaJ rantasy with
strawberries, kumquats and grap :s.
Save a one-pound wedge for Brie and
Grape Crepes, a light, delicate ma in dish for a
garden luncheon or buffet supper The foolproof
recipe has been devised especially for parties-
thc crepes may be made a day or two ahead.
At pany time, fill with cheese':, butter and
Armagnac, a French brandy that's heavenly
with Brie. Halved seedless grapes are added, and
the crepes arc topped with more c beese mixture.
Salce for about five minutes, gam ish with
slivered almonds and grape clustt !rs, and you
have blue-ribbon party fare.
In the unlikely event you ha' ·c leftover
Bric, use it for a savory spread. Itt.eams with
butter, white wine. than black olh ·cs and herbs.
Serve it chilled with slices of red a nd green
peppers, or spread on toast point! .. or ready-to-
serve French biscotte toasts and warm in the
oven until the cheese Just begins ti:> melt.
Camembcnsimalarlyserves asa topping
for slices of tangy G ranny Smith t1 pplcs. You
need one wheel to three apples; spread the
cheese on the slices, heat forabou t three
minutes until the cheese melts, and garnish with
a walnut half. Arrange on a plane 1· with sprigs oL
watercress for an horsd'oeuvreo r cocktail
nibble.
Another hot appetizer-Ph ·;!lo-wrapped
Camemben-providcs a quick~· nd easy
altemative to plain baked cheese.
With such an array of cheese offerings, crisp
chicken wing appetizers provide .a pleasant
texture complement. The bony w ing tips are
removed, and the 01eaty sccondj• )intsare rolled
an seasoned biscottecrumbsand I >aked. They
come to the party golden brown, c rusty. and
sassy with a Dijon mustard dip.
CAMEMBERT AND APPL lE SLICES
1 8-oance wbeel Camembert
3 firm, GrUDy Smltb apples
% tablespoons lemonjll.lce
~cap water
Walnut balves
Watercress 1prt11
Cut Camemben into 8 wedges; cut each
wedee in half crosswise to make 16. Cut apples
into l 6crosswisc slices, about 114-inch thick;
remove seeds and hard fi ben. Brush cut
surfaces with mixture oflemonjuice and water.
Place apple slices on ba.king sheet; top each
with wedge of cheese. (If desired, cover liibtly
and refrigerate until ready to heat.) Bake in
preheated 400-dqree oven for 3 to 5 minutes,
or until cheese begins to melt. Garnish each
slice with walnut half. Serve on tray garnished
with watercress spngs. Mak:es 16.
WARM BRIE AND GRAPE CREP~
1 cup'all purpose Oov
l"'-' caps milk
iew
i &abfespooas batter, melted and cooled
1.4 teaSpooD aaJt
~ teatpooD pepper
BrteFilllng
1 pound Brte, room tempera tare
i tablespoons batter, sof teaed
1 ~ tablespoons Armapac
1 cap 1eeclle11 snpes, balved
'4 cap toasted slivered almonds
Seedle11 grapes (garnJsb)
For crepe batter. Combine all batter
ingredients in food processor or large bowl wtth
rotary beater, blend until smooth, cover and let
stand l hour. Lightly grease 9-inch skillet with
melted butter: place over moderately high heat.
When hot. remove from heat and quickl~
pour in scant 1/4 cup batter, swirling to cover
bottom of skillet. Return to heat. Brown on
both sides, transfer to large plate. Continue
with remaining crepe batter, greasing skillet as
necessary and placing sheet of wax paper
between crepes.
Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate
until ready to use (up to 2 days). Crepes can be
frozen; thaw l hour before using.
For Brie filling: Cut Brie into medium
bowl; add 2 tablespoons butter and Armagnac
and mash together until well blended. Mixture
may be refrigerated until serving time.
To assemble crepes, divide Brie filling
among crepes, reserving 1/4 cup. Place several
grape halves in each, pushing grapes slightly
into cheese. Carefull y roll up crepes, enclosing
filling. Place seam side down m au gratin dish;
dot with reserved filling.
Bake in preheated 450-degrcc oven for
about 5 minutes, or unttl chccsc begins to melt
(11 will continue to melt when removed from
oven). Sprinkle wt th almonds, garnish wtth
clusters of grapes. Mak.es4 servinp.
For a flavorful variation, add 'h teaspoon
(Pleue .ee CIUJt8Jt/C2)
Aspartame safety: Sweet news
By PAT REMMELL, M.S.
Four years aao aspartame ap-
peared on the market as a non-su1 ~
sweetener that is safe as well as
acceptable in taste.
Today this low-calorie supr
substitute is familiar to millions c 1f
consumers under the brand nam1.:
N utraSwcct as both a tabletop
sweetener and an in~icnt 10
dozens of commercial products --
from cold breakfast cereals. chew .
inggum and dry desscn mixes to
instant tea and coffee, fruit-
flavored drinks and carbonated
beverages.
Aspartame's safety 1s owed to i 1'.S
chemical makeup, essentially a
combination of2 amino acids,
aspartic acid and phenylalanine,
which occur naturally m protein
foods. In the digestive tract
aspartame breaks down into these
components in the same manner as
they would if they were naturally
present in food.
Extensive scientific tests provide
evidence that consuming
aspartame is no more hazardous for
most of us than eating protein in the
diet There is little information
available, however, to judge its
safety for children under 2.
In addition to the Food and Drug
Administration's ap~roval, the
World Health 0rganWltion and
regulatory agencies of more than 3 5
countries have reviewed and a~
proved aspartame.
Consumers have blamed
aspartame for cenain unpleasant
physical symptoms after eating it
but in no instance could the adverse
reaction be pinpointed as an effect
of aspartame.
Last year the FDA stated that 0 as
with any food going into large-scale
use, there is the possibility that
there could be an occasional
sensitivity to the substance or to the
food sweetened with it."
"To date, however, FDA 's re-
view of the actual use of aspartame
has shown no surprises, and no
reason to question the original
decision to approve it"
A statement by the council on
scientific affairs of the American
Medical Association in July su~
pons the dietary use of aspartame
for most people.
As is true for all foods moder-
ation in consumption of
upartamc-containing products is a
good rule of thumb. How much
aspartame is too much? This is not
known exactly.
But for a person weighing 130
pounds, about 11 softdrin.kssweet-
ened only with aspartamt or 60
packets of table sweetener provtde
the daily IJlllimum amount of
aspartame approved by FDA, be-
cause this quantity was thought to
represent the very most people were
likely to consume in a day.
A reservation in the use of
(Pleue .ee SWEET /C3)
Sparkling
dessert ·
shines at
festivities
Nothina says "celebration" faster
than champqne. Whether the oc-
casion is the pthering of JOOd
friends. the arillina of the season's
favorite ovcr-the-coe.ls meal or the siabtina of the prden's 6.nt home-
grown tomato, "bTCak out the
bubbly" is a time-honored way of
commcmoratina an event
Another hallmark of a special
oocasion is an elcpnt dcsscn finale
on the menu. When the recipe
boasts champqne as an insredicnt.
it adds sparkle to the conversation
u well u \)leuurc to tbc Palate.
lmptCSSJve u they are, desserts
prepared with champqnc need not
keep the cook in the kitchen for
Iona. When time is precious but the
occasion is even more so, Raspber-
ry Cbampaane Sherbet can set the
ttqe for celebration 'With miru-
mum fusa.
With a flavor that Sll1P of
summer, it requires no Lut-m1nute
dforts ex~ for 1COOpn11 and tcf'Vina. Un.like ma.ny other fro7.co
~ it requires DO pecia.I
equipment or tin»tuina in~
&ration.
IUSPBEl\RY
CHAMPAGNE SllEUET
'e-.eUID,...e
(Pteue ... SP Alt.KLB/C7)
Fruit ice's simple
and plum delicious
Historians trace ice cream's transit aero the Atlanttc to that noted
Early American gourmet, Thomas Jefferson. who brought back an 1ct
cream recipe from one ofhis trips to Franct Noted among the Earl>
Americetoe cream afficianados wcte Gcol"lt" Wash anaton. Dolly
Madi.son and Mrs. Alexander Hamalton
Today illsa rare soul wbo docs not en.JOY 1oc cream. pamcularly in the
summer. Perhaps one of the best summer treats as homcmadc1occrcam
ustna the at.a.SOD ·savatlable fruits. These t,..o aces use the fresh Cahforrua
plum, in ~n throu&b September and currently at its peak. Fresh Plum
and Strawberry Ice and Quick Plum Freeze can both be made 1n your
rcfiiattator's treczina com panment. . Liabt Plum Strawberry toe iSJUSt fruu .. suprand water, while the
Plum Freezc1 ncbcrbcause1talsocontatn wbippinaand uraam.
The flavon and Ion of these plum ices will vary liahtly aCcordina to
the plum variety you ~.
FRESH PLUM AND
S1'RA WBEN\Y ICE
1 tna pt.ms< 1 \', ,....,,
(Pleue ... P1lurT/C4)
~------~~~-----'-·! -
r
.............. ••••+ • 4VUW co ZU04¥ f SQ GUO 0 $0¢$ aeessuseassa 2$3556606005336536 SS S&C a
ca Orartge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Auguat 14, 1985
. . ... .. ,,. --
Cajun chefs eggs-:aggerate
simple, spicy omelet recipe
ABBEVILLE, La. (AP) -Take
5,000 eggs. Add 420 medium on-
ions, 15 green peppers, 52 pounds of
butter. 61/• gallons of mat~. four
gallons of geen onion tops and two
gallons of parsley. Cook gently an
11/l pllons of vegetable 011.
And don't forget the seasoninas:
50 bottles of Cajun Power Garlic
Sauce and a few cups of Tabasco.
That•s what makes it a truly CaJun
omelet.
Chef Paul Prudhomme used that
recipe Sunday to serve a aiaantic
omelet to feed revelers at the second
annual French Market Festival in
Abbeville, deep in the heart of
Lou1S1ana's C9Jun country.
Prudhomme and other Lou1s1-
ana chefs cooked his recipe in a 12-
foot-diameter cast-iron skillet held
over an open fire by a forklift. He
was watched by chefs from France
and the French South Pacific island
of New Caledonia.
The French chefs also produced
their version of a 5,()()()..cgg omelet,
a tamer version seasoned only with
salt and pepper. Both were served to
the crowd with French bread and
homearown cane syrup.
The Louisiana chefs were made
honorary members of the Knights
oft he Great Easter Omelet, who stir ~p giant omelets each sprin' at t.t_le
Great Easter Omelet Fesuval ID
Bessieres, France. Dumbea in New
Caledonia has a similar omelet
tradition.
Maris Cackars of the "Guinness
Book of World Records" says the
5 C)()()..eu omelets were the largest e~er coo~ed in this country, and the
second largest in the world. The
biggest was a 20, 117-egg omelet
cooked up June 27, 1981, on a 30-
foot skillet in Calgary, Alberta.
~-~-----------------.
Buttemwd has
butter baked throu.di
and through for delicious
taste you won't find in
ordinary whtte or wheat bread.
And now you can use dus coupon
to save 2()¢ on Buttemwd. It's
baked fTe~h by Weber's
Save 20¢ on a loaf of
CONSUMER One coupon per pure hue Good only on
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Wlna ____ -
POOL OF YOUR OWN or $25,000.~
from@RalSINBRa~
TURNA~30UP
INTO A SJi~LAD
Tum a soup in to a salad? Seems lake c ulinary wizardry, but it's simply
a creative twist on Gazpacho, the renowned chilled Spanish soup,
otherwsie known as "sal~d soup."
Ideal for a summer gathering, Gardc1:i Gazpacho Salad fills a hearty
bread bowl with a colorful mosaic of man nated harvest vegetables. To
season the vegetables and soak the bread with zesty fla vor, a simple
marinade is prepared with convenient b< > ttled 1 ight Italian dressing.
Simply combine with tomato juice to ere nte gazpacho pizzaz without all
the work.
Light, refreshing and an excellent source of vitamin C, Garden
Gazpacho Salad captures the qualities of its flavored soup ancestor.
GARDEN GAZPA CHO SALAD
1 cup ( 8 ounces) U&bt Italian dre11tn1:
11, cup tomato juJce
I d11bes bot pepper 1auce (optional)
% medium cucambert, cbopped
2 medJam tomatoe1, cbopped
% medJum IJ'ffn pepper•, chopped
1 medJum onion, ebopped
1loaf11D1Uced rolllld bread (aboat t.!ucb diameter)
Lettuce leave•
In large bowl, blend Italian dressin@,, tomato ju ace and hot pepper
sauce. Stir in vegetables; chill at least 2 h·c•urs.
Cut lengthwise slice off top ofbread. Hollow out center, leaving 112-
inch shell. Just before serving, line with lettuce leaves and fill with
vegetable mixture. Serve with bread wecl ges. Makes about 8 servings.
CHEESE ST ARS9 •••
From Cl
Herbes de Provence to crepe batter
and use Brie flavored with herbs.
BISCO'M'E CHICKEN WINGS
% pound• chicken wlng1
I tableapoon1 (II. ltlck) butter ,
melted
t te11poon1 ln1tant minced on·
lon1
1/• tea1poon 1alt
14 teaspoon paprika
~ te11poon cracked pepper
1 cup F rench bl1cotte crumb•
Dijon Dip
~. cup 1our cream
t;. cup mayonnalae
14 cup Dijon muatard
Remove wing tips from chicken
wings: reserve for another use.
Halve wings, Combine instant
minced onion. salt, paprika and
cracked pepper and stir into 4
tablespoons melted butter. Brush
wina pieces with onion butter; roll
in biscotte crumbs.
Place skin side up on cookie
sheet. Drinle with remairuna 2
tablespoons butter. Bake 1n
preheated 3 7 5-dcaree oven for 30
to 40 minutes, or until aotden
brown. Serve warm or at room
temperature with Dijon Dip.
Makes 6 appetizer servmgs.
For Dljon Dip: Coml>ine all
inaredients in small bowl until well
blended. Remaerate until servina.
BRIE SPREAD DE PROVENCE
1 po•Dd cllllle4 rtpe Brte
'4 cap (\'a 1Uck) batter
\'a tea1pooD Herbel de Provence
i tabJetpooD1 dry white wlu
'M cap (aHel H) tlay black
Nlcolse ollvet
FreRly sroad pepper
Tlny black Nlcolae oUvet
Bl1eotte coa1t1
Remove nnd from Brit with
sharp In ire; cut ch -into chunks
(there should be about 2 cups).
Pl uce ID medium bowl with butter;
le't soften to room temperature.
Meanwhile, soak Herbes de
Pi·ovence 1n white wtne for 10
minutes; add to Brie mixture. Mash
together with pastry blendel' or
fork. Cut olive meat away from pits
directly into cheese mixture; mash
in ; add pepper to taste. Transfer to
sna all bowl. Garnish wtth ad-
ditional olives.
:Serve with biscotte toasts. Refri-
grute leftover spread. Can also be
·St 1-ved warm. Spread mixture on
biscotte, heat in preheated 375-
d<~Jl'CC oven for 3 to S minutes, or
ju!.t until cheese starts to melt.
M :akes about l th cups.
P H Y LL O-WRAPP ED
CAMEMBERT
1 8-ollllce wbeel Camembert
'I 1beet1 pyllo doup
',', cap melted batter
C hill Camembert. Fold 2 of the
sh t!Cts of doufb (placed one on top
of the other) into halves crosswise
arud brush with melted butter. Place
ori greased cookie sheet. Top with
chuese and wrap douah around
chc.."Cse. Brush outside with butter.
Turn cheese over.
Place another 2 sheets folded in
thf' same way on cookie sheet and
brush with butter. Place cheese,
f o Lded side down, on sheets and
fold apin. Turn cheese over,
folded side down. Brush with
butter.
Cut rcmajnina 2 sheets (place
on.1: on top of the other) into 4
lenathwisc strips. Gather up strip
to resemble a rose and place on top
of cheese. Drizzle with remainina
bu1ner. Bake in preheated 400-
dcnree oven for 15 to 20 minutes or
unttil aotden brown. Strve warm,
cut into wedges. Makes about 6
se:rvtnss .
. ~, . . -a + •• :...i:.:..:.·.·.~ ~~--~-~--~ ___ .. ___ - _,_ ,.,4 ... , , ......... - -
SWEET ...
From Cl
aspaname concerns the one 10
l S,000 persons with an inherited
disorder phenylketonuria (PKU)
who arc unable to disp<?se of '
phenylalanine whenJt is eaten, and
to avoid phenylalanine buildup
must restrict the intake of thls
amino acid from milk. meat and
other proteins .
. To help people with PKU control
dietary phenylalanine intake, all
food products with aspartame must
bear a label stating that they arc a
source of phenylalanine.
Keeping consumption within ap-
proved amounts, you can make a
sizable reductioe m daily calories ~y substituting aspartame for sugar
1n some foods and beverages, for
the quantity of aspartame sweet-
ener equivalent to the sweetness of
l teaspoonofsugarcontainsonly
l / l 0 the calories of sugar.
For the calorie-conscious person,
a 12-ounce soft drink contains
about 140 calories with suaar and
one to 4 calories with NutraSwect,
and a 'h-cup scrvin' of gelatin
dessert has 80 cal ones with sugar
and 10 calories with this sweetener.
While you may not be watching
calories, you may still welcome it as
a replacement for sugar, stnce
aspartame docs not cause tooth
decay.
If you have diabetes and need to
mirumize the use of sugar,
aspaname may be included in meal
plans to expand food and beverage
choices. Studies show that
aspaname is well tolerated by
diabetics, whether they do or do not
take insulin. provided it is not used
in excessive amounts.
Allhough NutraSweet can be
used in many food products that
traditionaUycontatn sugar, it is not
a perfect answer to sugar replace-
ment on all counts.
Aspartame loses its sweetness
with high-temperature baking,
broiling or frying. Therefore, add
the sweetener after foods arc
cooked.
Apan from its beat instability.
aspartame, unlike sugar, does not
contritSute the ncccssary bulk and
texture needed in some baked
goods.
,
Home show
to feature
food experts
Food preparation, wine tasting
and trends in the restaurant indus-
try will be the topics of three experts
during the Southern California
Home and Garden Show in
Anaheim Convention Center.
openinJ Saturday.
Jackie Olden, host of KNX
radio's "Food Hour" will talk about
recipes and food preparation and
answer audience questions on
opening day.
Vern Lanegrasse, newspaper,
television and radio food and wine
personality known as the "Holly-
wood Chef," will conduct tastinas
of California and imported wines
on Aug. 23.
Radio talk show host, author and
cntic. Paul Wallach. will discuss
current trends in the restaurant
industry, give dining tips and
recommend special occasion
rest.aruants. He will be featured on
Aug. 24. The show closes on
Sunday.
For information, call 635-8330. • • •
Fresh fruit desserts wtll be taught
by Tarla Fallgatter at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at Cest Gourmet, 14
Monarch Bay Plaza, South Laguna.
Frc-1s S35. For information, call
493-2888. • • •
My Favorite Thmgs coolung
school, Irvine, will present Roy
Ping at 11 a.m. Saturday His topic
will be the Brunch Bunch; fee i&S20.
For information. call 5S2-022 I. • • •
Renee Carisio will lead a pan1c1-
pation class on sauces at 10:30 a.m.
Friday at Ma Cuisine, Fashion
Island. Fee 1s $45. For 1nformatton
call. 759-68 18.
Ice rings easy
Beautiful ice nnp are easy to
make and add a colorful touch to a f punch bowl. Justadd bottled lem.on
Juice from concentrate to a nng
mold to 'h. inch. Arran~ fruits nd
mmt leaves tn mold. Freeze
I
Add water to fill mold. Freeze
until solid To unmold ice nna.
quickly dip m hot water. "'Tum into
punch bowl.
Ot1nge Cou1 DAllY PILOT/Wectueeday, Augue11•, 1M5 Cl
Barbecue fun wrapped up in one
for lei urely, warm weather din-
ing. try Seafood Wrap-U~. a
delectable. foil-wrapped barbecue
idea that combines fish fillet!>,
prden fresh vegetables and a lt\t)'
sauce of tomato-opmon soup mix.
mustard and ginger. This ha.ht
recipe adds shced pounocs, carrots.
zucchini. pea pods and water
chestnuts to the fish and sauce for a
subtle Onental fla vor.
Individual servings are tightly
wrapped tn foil bundles, then
gnlled 1n minutes to perfection -
the fish moist and flak y-the
vegetables brilliant in color with a
.~----------------------·-=p~lca:.=.=sa~n.:.:.tcnspness ____ _
On~ you've added this n:t1pe to
your repeno1n:. keep u handy for
indoor cooking, too •mply bake in
the oven as dtrttled.
Thi all-in-one meal makes cltan
upa breae-no mes\ygnll or pou
and pans to wash -c-.peciall~ 1f
you eat nght out of the foil packet.
SO next time )'OU fin: up the gnll,
save preparation and cl~an up time
with Seafood Wrap-Ups, a great
way to play u cool m the summer
heat.
SEAFOOD WRAP-UPS
1 envelope tooiato-onion or gold·
en oDlon soap mlx
l cap water
t tea1pooa1 Dtjoe .. tyl mutant
~ teaspooa pou4 Plitt
4 tlaHtt U I z 11-lacMI eadl >
tauvy-4llty aJ•mlD•m foll
I poud f~ I ~ fillets, or 1
pooad froiea flt~ flll1t1,
daawed•
i mtdJam carrot1. eat lDto
pieces (abo1t 3 lDchl & 14 lacll)
! medium po~ton, cut 1111.o ..
lDch tllces
1 medium 1Dcclal.nJ, sliced
S ounces snow peas (aboat ~
c•p>
l CID (8 ounces) water
ckttHts, clraiaed
In mall bowl, blend tomato-
onaon rteipe soup mix, wat.tr.
mustard and s,iqcr.
For each .KTViq. on loYm" half of
foil hcet, ectuatly place ftsb and
\egrtables; 101> with •,~ cup soup
mixture. Fold upper half of foaJ
over food to meet bonom edJt..
then seal all edgn ainiaht with
double fold. •
Grill or bake at 4SO d.qrCC$ 8
minutes: tum and cook an r S..
dst1onal 7 minutes or until ft h
Oakes and "C&Ct.ables a.re tender.
Makes 4 ~rvrngs.
• ubstnuuon· Use I pouod un-
cooked medium hrimp, deaned.
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater's Low , Low Prices!
POST ·naran
Meat Dept. Savings
Beef Back Ribs La 69C
Italian Sausage ~;T. 100Z ,.0 '2.49
Beef Rib Steaks E~~E l. s1.89
Beef Cube Steaks _ELIS& LI s1.99
Cooked Ham ~~0"" (A s3.29
Turkey Breast :~~mu l. sa.49
Hams =~ ~· 53.49
Hamburger Patties ~l:rTL~,,.aS3.79
Compare these Low Prices
_..,..
EXTRA FANCY SEEDLESS THOMPSON . ~,Sweet
LSBURY BUTIERMILK
Jack
e ·Mb
Frozen Food Favorites
ID l~ t) '<.o'.>Z 52.98
Marquez Burritos m~ET•H
Fish Sticks ~~Z!,~~"~
Pound Cake ~,~u
Grocery Specials
Cascade ~~!15, OETtllOfNT
64-0Z.
Garden Fresh Produce
Cucumbers ~~;.w.
Potatoes ~~
Onions ~
LARGE VINE RIPE
Sweet Hon~
EXCELENT QUAUlY & VALUE
i-,LB. ...
Schaeffer Beer AN'
Dos Equis XX L AP• Mt"
Inglenook E:~: ::· .....
Jim Beam := ...
J&BScotch
Malibu Rum ~"
KESSLER ~ PROOF
American
Whl8key
tfl.69
1.75-UTER
Golden
Poth•
92.9'
6" POT
PIUC&I uncrrVK 7 ft1U. DA ra .... .... "'-,... ,,._ ft'I ... ..... 15 •• 17 •• •• 20 21
W( RESCAVt TH[ ~T TO U~.tll <:>" Fl.JS{
SAi.ts TO OOMMEAO.t.l DUL.tRS CIA wt<ll.CSALEAS
,\O\'f:RTISt I> lfl"
Gl 'RA;\'TH
"" "'1\r ..... ,r Ml..._. '""9• .,_. ""'l,,.. _.,,.,..,
•• _,..._.,, • tt• • ·-· W•""" -,_,.,. ., --....... ,~ ............ , .......... ,.._ •IWllllllot -........ .., -.. ~rfft"_.,.. fll'9'f' •'-_..... ••• .... ....,., .. ,~ .......... ,,
..
• J
---,_.----...-~---......,,....----_..-w-9v4w ay YV• +s 0#44 y;; SC 0¥4##4 • 4 $ cc use a uesceeoocs4 sos•••• •<•••
06 0renge eo.t DAILY P1LOT/Wedneedey, Auguat 14, 1985
r ' Barbecuesaucesrealtrea$ures
LARGE
YELIDW
PEACHES
Clossic Deserts
Peoch Gloze 16·0unce packagel.19
/
Can you unagine a barbecue
sauce that lS made with onl)' fJve
inaredients, needs no peelina or
cboppina of onion and prtic, nor
any other pre-preparation, aocs
toaether in three minutes, and 1s
absolutely delicious?
The two recipes for barbecue
sauces that follow are just such
treasures. The first, a Tomato-
Oranae Barbecue Sauce, uses a sjx-
ounce can of tomato paste, a s1x-
ounoe can of frozen orange juice
concentrate (defrosted, but not
reconstituted), onion and garhc
powders and a bit of salt. That's it.
Just brush over chicken pieces
dunna last 20 minutes of gnlling
(or, 1ndooon, bakmg or bro1hna).
The sauce actually helps crisp the
chicken plus a1v1na areat flavor.
The other sauce has a bit of
Chinese influence. It's made with a
Jat of apricot preserves, some fresh
or bottled lemon jUJce, onion and
prhc powders and ground ginger.
Brush over ribs or chicken pieces,
basting freq uently as above.
Dehydrated onion comes in
many forms: Instant minced, pow·
der, instant diced, instant chopped
and onion flakes. Garlic is available
in the instant minced and powdered
forms .
From a seasoning standpoint the
00 FRESH
GROONDBEEF Doeo l'iol Eceed ~ Fl!
TalMe lllno Beef • .).l.b Chubo
BEEF FAMILY STEAKS 169 ~ T-King l 8 _,,
1/4 PORK LOIN CHOPS 149
1'\1-Notl#'M ~-UI
FRESH CHICKEN BREASTS 169
v.Juo Pkl<. SoutM<n Lii
dehydrated products offer the ad-
vantage of consistent strength and
flavor quality year 'round.
TOMATO-ORANGE
BARBECUE SAUCE
1 can (f ouocea) .tomato p11te
"1 can <• oUDcet) frozen oren1e
juJce concentrate (defroated)
1 tebletpoon onion powder
i te11pooa1 1arllc powder
'4 teeapooa salt
In a small bowl combin~ tomato
paste, oranae juice concentrate,
onion and garlic powders and salt.
Brush frequentl y over chicken or
pork during last 20 minutes of
barbecuing, baking or bro1hng
FROZEN FOOD PRODUCE ~.8.Yc~ CORN BEEF 18 139
wrntoar COOPON 1.39
MINUTE
MAID
Ore~ JutOP 12~C.n
MINUTE MAID
• 89
WITH COOPO"
~'U,. 0ru'te.~ , Sf'lf'<if"d Va'•t°itf'' 11 U t l .af' .55
~!~.~.E.~ .. ~,91~~ 219
~~'?~.,~!.~ S22~ul•WH I P 119
h~~~~r.:t.~ I ~!!!.fi~ES 249
.79 EGGO WAFFLES
II '>..wt<• Bo•
=.,~.8 .59
s-ti-v-For .....,..,.. .,,,....,
A .25
UI .49
~~S.J~ PINEAPPLES EA • 99
HONEYDEW MELONS °'9"1)f~U> •<l
FRESH BROCCOLI G--. ·-·'Ind c.,...,
FRESH BLACK PWMS 69 Ct--~ Lii .)9 Ul e
GOLDEN SWEET CORN Sl> 100
f tt11 61lQ SI•"' II
CRONCHY COCOMBER~A 6100 ~<lftC..,...r..i..nU. 69 -....II
£E~£.12c~S APPLES UI .39
SERVICE DELI HOT BAKfllY ,,, ........ """'01<1""•'"'""'" ............... ~··· .. '" '.
Y2t!~ S~l~.e, CH EDDA~ 299
~~~ING CAKES 129
~EJ,:~t~<?!?D CAKE 109
BAKERY
VONS HAMBORQER BONS 49 °' Hot Ooo llYtlL a Po •
100% WHEAT BREAD 105
lllt.cH ''"""""l..ool ~~~ ... ~t4r!~ON ROLLS 105
FRENCH ROLLS ..... :: ;.. • FREE
&.PKll (f~ 8'Md I Lb 0Wwr IGll.t 'I I'll I
DAIRY LIQUOR
SH EDD'S SPREAD , P """ r "i"'" ~., """'f 1r \ t t •
ORANGE JUICE
-\f'~4 ij , ... J f" ""''
MINUTE MAID
• , ' ,, ,.. t~ '.
VONS BCJlTER
O<k189
149
.79
189
WITHOUT' COGflON 3 POR . 99
JERSEYJlll.AIDA Fgg !2GURTS._,
ll Oun<"r C."on wnw COCDOft
You Wlll ... ...,. All Southern
Callforala 9upermarbta' Current
DOUBLE COUPONS
OR TRIPU COUPONS ,,,... ............ .,,......,,....,.... ...... "'"' ............. _..~t...-..... ~~~· ........ ~ ................. ~ . .-...... ..-
..... "' ...................... ~,.,...,,... ~ .,.. .... -----,, tWl _., •• ~ ~ .............. ~ ,.~._.,....,.,..._.,,, ~. ,._~--
""'~·-.. --_ .......................... ""' ...,.....,..., ...... . ,.., ...... ,...~""" ........ .Z... ............ .,,,. . .,. .. .,...~ :::"":,.:: ,:::..-: :::,:., ~ ...... , ~ _....... ~ .....
f:'J.~E~--~~E~wt~etL .. 1005.!!
~RJ"~~~CA BEER 199
~CL,~. ~C?,.CJNTRY COOLER 289
~~m~p,1,~~.~~11• 1 Q49
F,h~!~£t1~~~~ ~!!iur•t 1'!:!
TAYLOR CAUF 289
CHABLIS
lllline '""°"WI~
I ' I.lie< lloui.
HEALTH f, BEAUTY AIDS
I DENTAQARD POMP
'llbethpMM .,~
DRY IDEA ROLL,-ON l•o, ~-... ..._.
EXCEDRIN ANALQESIC eo.c-T..._. °' «l-c....nt C-..,. ~ ~
CRYSTAL-SwlRL
I~ l.lhbirt
fHIS WE.EK S FEATURl ITE.l'I
~t..Sg~~~S La 239
SHOULDER J29 CLOD ROASTS UI =~~19::'
GROCERY
KRAFT
DDVIER "'---C.0-7~h
ROYAL GELATIN _.., ,,,_,.,.. 6-0untt 11o •
HINODE RICE LO<IQ o..... ~ ~ !leg
.49
149
~-~ ~ .. O<JSE COFFEE 458
SUNLIGHT 98 DETERGENT e Liquid. ~ng
lncludn ~ Off 22 Oun<1' Botti•
1!iq.<i ~~v~!TI~~<JCE 149
GLAD KITCHEN BAGS 139 ~ TM! Tall 20 Co.mc Pac~
.99 NORTHERN TISSUE llelM>om. .._..,., Pklle9e
~~y PAPER lOWELS .65
~
GROCERY
YOBAN GROUND~g
COFFEE ... -
"" OMftdo I Pt>uncl C...
~~~y COCKTAIL 169
~~PINEAPPLE JUICE .89
MISSION TORTILLAS 99 SI~ ~ °' Necncl 16 °"""' 11.g •
CLOROX 88 BLEACH e ~Bo4t ..
HEINZ SWEET REUSH 10-0unct ....
WEIGHT WATCHER ~)2~-
HUNT'S 8.8.Q. SAOCE
All Nolt.,...~ ~ Ywle<oa. 18-0un<T lloltle
SEA FOOD
.59
129
119
~~tt BOlTERFISH 1.a 198
E~fSH BAY SCALLOPSttt )98
E~ ... ~~Jt.E;gVER· SOLE lll 198
~ESH SHARK FILLE~ )59
ROCKS You don't pay more.
YoU ju~t get more.,
) ~!!;;;;;t::.:.~~~----~-
r Yidd: about I cup.
SWEET AND TANGY
BARBECUE SAUCE
1 jar ( U oaacet) eprlcot
p"'"rvet (1 cap)
S tebletpoom lemon Jalce
! tea1poon1 oaJoa powder
t ¥. tee1poom 1arllc powder '
1 teespoon 1roud 11D1er
In a small bowl combine apricot
preserves. lemon Juice, onion and
garlic powders and ginger. Brush
frequently over chicken, pork or
ribs during last 20 minutes of
barbecuing, baking or broiling.
Yield: about 11/• cu ps.
Cukesauce
tasty fillip
for salmon
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
"' 'eod ldltor
When you plan this summer's
company meals. you may want to
center at least one menu around
fresh salmon steaks. This summer
that glorious seafood is in good
supply and chances arc it wilJ cost
less than at other times of year.
One of the easiest and best ways
we know .of preparing salmon
steaks is to poach them and serve
them hot or cold with a cucumber
sauce - a classic accompaniment
Here are basic directions for this
traditional twosome.
SALMON STEAKS WITH
CUCUMBER DILL SAUCE
4 cupa water
'r\ cup lemon Juice
1 amlll onion, quartered and
1Uced lengthwise
I teaapoon salt
10 whole peppercorns
4 6..ouace salmon steaks
Cucumber Diii Sauce, recipe
follows
Fresh dill sprigs
Add water. lemon Juice. onion,
salt and peppercorns t9 a large
skillet. Bring to a boil: add salmon
steaks. Poaching liquid must cover
salmon: add additional boiling
water if necessary. Return to a boil:
simmer, covered, allowing I 0
minutes per inch of thickness of
salmon or until salmon flakes
easily when tested with a fork.
Remove steaks and dram. Scrvr
hot or cold with Cucumber Dill
Sauce. Garnish with dill spng.s
Makes 4 servings.
CUCUMBER DlLL SAUCE:
Peel cucumber; cut 10 half
lengthwise and scoop out seeds.
Slice thmly. Sprinkle wi th I tea-
spoon salt: mix well. Set aside for
15 minutes; drain liquid from
cucumbers. Stir together well the
drained cucumbers. 1 cup plain
yogurt or sour cream, l teaspoon
grated lemon rind. 1h teaspoon
lemon juice, finely chopped fresh
dill and salt and pepper to taste.
Makes about 2 cups.
FRUIT ICE •..
From Cl
1 plat stra wberries, b11Hed
I 'r\ c11ps sugar
'r\ c11p water
1 tableapoon lemon Juice
Halve plums and remove pits.
Combine plums, strawberries,
sugar and water in saucepan. Bring
lo boil, cover and simmer 5
minutes or until plums arc tender.
Cool. Whirl with lemon juice m
blender until smooth. Pour into 6-
cup freezer container and place in
freezer unti l finn. Makes I 'h
quarts. - ---
QUICK PLUM FREEZE
I fresb plams, quartered, pitted
(1 pond)
Sa1•r
1 cap whipping cream
I eu wlllte
'4 teespoon vullla
1 cap daJry aou cream
Combine plums with· l cup sugar
in saucepan. Let stand until sugar
dissolves and.iuices form, about 8
minutes. Bring to boil and simmer
until tender, about 5 to 8 minutes
Pur~e in blender. Chill.
Combine whipping cream, eu
white, vanilla and 2 tablespoons
sugar in mixer bowl. Beat un til stiff.
Fold in sour cream and plum puree.
Pour into plastic freezer con-
tainer. Freeze until firm. Makes 11/J
quarts.
I FRESH FRUIT BOMBE
1 plat vullla lee cream
I phlt oruae aberbea
1 pt.t mixed cat-up frail fnJt
Into a 1-quan melon mold
tigh tly pack ice cream, then sher-
~· Cover and freeze. At servina
tsme unmold on 1 servina plate.
Surround with fruit -oranac
sections, sccd.Jess grapes.. sliced
peaches or necta_nne1 and betnea
make a deltghtful combination.
Make 8 servinas.
..
Labeling
will aid
sodium
watchers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Many
Americans seeking to avoid the
silent ~tiler. high blood pressure,
are trying to reduce the amount of
salt in their diets -but knowing
how much 1s in each food isn't easy.
Starting next summer, the Food
and Drug Administration will re-
quire that many food packages state
on their labels how much sodium
the product contains.
Currently only about halfof food
makers include such 1nformatton.
Sodium is the ingredient m salt
that seems to cause high blood
pressure
There are ways fol' the cauttous
shopper to learn the sodium con-
tent offood. thanks to the efforts of
both government and pnvate
health agencies.
The Food and Drug Admin1s-
trat1on and the Department of
Agnculture have issued helpful
booklets, while the pnvate Center
for Science m the Public Interest
has a poster available.
"Sodium ... Think About It," ~s a
free FDA pamphlet that d1scus!les
how sodium works an the body and
what the dangers are.
And "The Sodium Content of
Your Food," 1s a more extensive
booklet, costing $2.25, in which the
Agriculture Department hsts abOut
800 foods and tells how much
sodium each conUsins.
Both of those booklets can be had
from the Consumer lnforrnitt1on
Center. Pueblo, Colo., 81009. "So-
dium ... Thank About It" 1s Item
No 531 N. while "The Sodium
Content of Your Food" 1s Item No.
137N.
Vanous popular foods and their
sodium content are also listed on
the "Sodium Scoreboard," a col-
orful poster from the non-profit
Center' for Science in the Public
Interest.
It sells for $3.80 from the CSPI,
1501 16th St. N.W .. Washington.
D.C.. 20036.
According to the National Re-
search Council, the ty\)tcal adult
should have a daily sodium intake
of I, I 00 to 3.300 milligrams -an
amount tha~ can easily be eaten at I
breakfast.
For examf le, there are 1,200
m1lltgrams o so\iium an a meaJ of
three frozen waffles , three slrips of
bacon and a glass of orange JU ice.
At 2,000 m1lhgrams of sodium
~r teaspoon, table salt 1s an easy to
identify source of sodium, and the
easiest to remove from the diet.
But sodium 1s hidden in many
processed foods also. making It very
hard to avoid.
Some products are especially
made for persons on tow-sodium
diets, and a label that says "Sodium
Free" means the food has less than 5
milligrams of sodium per serving.
Products labeled "Very Low
Sodium" must have 35 milligrams
~r serving or less, and those called
'Low Sodium" mean 140 milli·
gram per serving or less.
Consumers should check the
a to e ermine wniflhe ma -
facturer means by a "serving" of the
product -it isn't necessaTily the
whole package.
If a label says "Reduced So-
dium." the sodium used 1n pro-
cessing the food must be reduced by
75 percent from similar products.
Also. some products are labeled
"unsalted." That means thert was
no salt added an processing them,
but the food itself may still contain
SoJium. Lookina for foods that are nor-
mally low in sodium can help, such
as fresh fruits and vegetables and
some juices and grain.
Many processed items such as
sausa1e, bacon and canned so~J>$
have salt added as a preservauve
and thus arc hiah in sodium.
fresh meat and poultry also are
generally low in sodium. but cooks
often add it to them. This can be
avoided by usina flavorinas uch as
aarlic Powder. which contains one
m11liaram of sodium per teaspoon,
instead of prlic salt, which has
t .800 milliarams per teaspoon. Soy sauce is also an item to.avoid
1f 1rym1 to reduce sodium. sin~ at
contatns 1,000 malliarams per
tablespoon.
Ot1nge Cout DAILY PILOT IWedMad'f, AUGI'* 1•. 1185 C8
Breakfast muffins ·r a vored
for flavor and convenience·
Or~Safeway
Oualty Beef Loin.
Take 11l·timc favontc breakfa~t
flavors-apple\, cinnamon. maple
syrup, bacon. and whole whc.t -
bake them toa.ethcr to '>lcam y
goodness, and 5ervc what promises
10 become a )car-round pcc1al
mornma menu request Summer
8rnkfast Muffin!>
Truly a unique blcnd1na of veat
textures and 101red1ents, the muf-
fins art hearty cnouah to be a quick
meal alone. piping hot with hone)'
butter, or as a brunch ao-atong with
scrambled eus and f~sh fruit.
•re•h
Grou11cl Beef
. Rcqu1nna vtry hulc ttmc 10 the
kuchen, tbc muffins art cas) to
make by merely comb1ninJ butter,
CSP.• maple 'yrup and da1ry-f rc h
milk with cinnamon. chunks of
fmh apple and en p~ bacon.
SUMMER BREAXFAST
MUFFINS
'4 cup butter
.,., cup maple 1yrup
! e111
1 C\IP...QlU k
! cups wbole wbeat flour
l en peoa a powder
l t po. duamM
'' tea.apooe aal I
l cap apple, peeled uct cl!Mtppd
I 11rlps baco,11, cooled ud
cbopped
Cream butter: beau io maple
iyrup and esp. Stir in milk.
Combine flour, bakina powder,
cinnamon and It. Stir into cu
mum,1rt Fdld in apple and bacon.
Spoon into wetl..grc.ascd muffin
unsr Bakc at <425 dearces for I .S.20
minutes. Makes 12 muffins
DOUBLE
COUPON
29 ~ ~ Fresh Oaity Femily
Size f>lilQ 5-11 OI LMger (Undef 5-b b 11 09) c .. 89c
........... ........ .... ....
·ar1•e1 Half Ham ····-·· Whole ·1n The Bag" (Tr1mmed lb. '1 49) ~-A·Aoma c~ Should« "Croes Alb" .. 99c .. $169 .. $169
U•kSausage ~~~()t
Conlecl ····~
................
AJaslQw1 ~I' Aoeal
Just Broll And Setve.
.. $199
Fresh Fryers =~
Sk.l•I••• Praab Scotcll l!oy
Rouacl Steak 8onelMe 8MI
~ '\V
~ 59c Grou•cl Clluck u!:2~ Ftl
b •129 Fryer Legs · C*>rn19~CNcllen
NEW!
~ Dog .....
Piimpen
Ooa Food New! Better Tasting. 40-1>. Bag
Regu'8r 48-Ct Medium $ 3'<>99
..
.
Q
'\t!)
• 1IOO (o~ A11e . Huntongtoo Beien
• 297& H11bor 8IYd Co1t11 M
99
Cream Pl .. P9I ~a
LUce111e Y09urt AuorteO
••••• .. •• lbwn ~
FRIE
One (11 24-oi I.Del, Mra. ~ra
Hou11estyle
•read ·Fbm~·S..~
BUY 1 GET 1 ••••
• 1000 8aY"tlde DI N.-.~)Ofl 8@•C"
• 138 N Coatt Hwv l Q\11\a C t•
10 ... -
Large
Mushrooz11s
.. ...
To111alo••
~In~
6~
tl •1• Gree• Giiion ~
111 79c PIRIO BeaM
.. ..
--~-oOc -•A At • Ao A JO. ....... ,. e ••..... :.::,,:>:::::::;? 3 a 2 a 2 a o 2 2 2 a 2 0 e a en a • I $ 2 99 bSPISS 0 °Ct 2 Pn
C8 °'lnO' Cout DAILY PlLOT/Wedn.ctay, AugUlt 14, 1985
Nutrients
retained
with care
When tryting to eat nutntiously.
a little extra care in prepanng and
storing foods w1U go a Ion~ way to
retain the expected nutnents in
most foods.
"Heat, air and light can rob food
of its nutntional value," says Susan
Magrann, registered dietitian and
nutritionist for Vons Grocery Co.
"for example, many people may
not realize that if shelled lima beans
are refrigerated at 40dcgrees for two
days, they will lose 20 percent of
their vitamin C, and if they are kept
at room temperature, the loss leaps
to 70 percent.
"However, if the refrigerated
lamas arc kept m their pods, tJ takes
much longer -about four days -
for them to lose 20 ~rcent of their
vitamin C content,' she said.
Vegetables: Most will retain their
nutrients best 1f refngerated
promptly m ughtly scaled or
moisture-proof bags.
However, says Magrann, lt lS best
to purchase frozen vegetables rf
they are going to be stored for any
length of time. Frozn vegetables are
picked at the peak of freshness and
processed immediately, which pre-
vents further loss of nutritents.
Fruits: For the most part, fruits
don't lose nutrients as easily as
vegetables. Whole fruits are the best
at retaining their vitamins, since
their skin protects the nutrients
from being destroyed by air.
"But be careful wt th bemes since
they arc the most highly penshable
of fruits," warns Magrann. "Handle
them with care. because simple
bruising can cause a quick loss of
vitamin C. •·
Milk: In order to conserve
nutrients and fla vor. mil~sbould
always be kept cold. covered and
away from strong light.
Calcium and protein are easily
retained in mtJk while nboflavm
and vitamm A make their escape
when ex~sed to direct sunlight or
to artificial light.
Also, check when buying low-fat
or nonfat milk to make certain that
1t 1s fortified with vitamin A. she
recommends.
Grain• and Cereal Products:
When choosing grams a nd cereal
products, whole-gram items are
generall y more nutritious than
white refined products because the
milting process removes the germ
and outer layers of the gram where
the 8 vitamin and mineraJs are
concentrated
When buying refined products
such as white bread, pasta and nee.
make sure the labels say "enrich-
ed." This means four of the missing
nutnents loss during the refining
process -thiamine, nboflavm,
niacin and iron -have been added
back into the finished product,
Magrann said.
Meat, Poaltry and Flsla: "The
saying, 'If you can't take the heat,
get out of the kt1chen,' is advice that
the nutrients thiamine. ribonavm
and niacin follow. Dunng the
cooking process these vitamins
disappear. w11h th1arrime. being the
first to be destroyed.
"Br~1smg and stewing causes a
~ter loss of nutrients than roast-
ing, broiling and frying cause the
water soluble vitamins transfer into
the stock or broth. But, 1f the
cooking Juices are eaten W1th the
meat. as gravy 1s, then vi tam an loss
1s minimal."
All 1t takes 1s a httle extra care
when stonngand prepanng foods to
keep them n ch m important vit-
amins and nutnents.
For more information, contact
Magral!n by wntina to her at P.0
Box 31'38. Terminal Annex, Los
Angeles 9005 J
TOMATO SALAD
4 medlam tomatoes ( l \'a
pouds)
I cap cotta1e ~eete
~ cup finely diced pared
cacamber
1 scaWoa, f lDely diced salad
greeas
ff necessary, cut a thin i llce from
bottoms of tomatoes to have stand
mai&ht. Cut a thin shce from top of
each. Scoop out pulp and seeds to
rnake shells: turn upside down to
drain. Mtx cheese. cucumber and
9Ca.1Hon: fill tomato shells With
mi.xture Cool and chiJI until ser-
ving time. Serve on salad ireens
and pm1sh as desired. Make~ 4
... ~rv1n . ..,_
. . ,
Spark11n-g'coolers put punch in parties
An offering of a sparklina fruit
punch, traditionally served m a •
decorative bowl, is a clas•"c wel·
comina gesture. It 1s tho 1 ·al
beveraae for a largt: gathenng and a
prerequisite for any succc"ful
warm-weather celebration.
Punchc arc more economical
and convenient than an open b:lr or
serving wane. They also have be-
come popular allemau ves to ~r
ving liquor.
FROTHY STRAWBERRY
PINEAPPLE PUNCH
l (ct-ounce) can pineapple
jaJce, cbllJed
~ cop lemoa Jlllce from concen-
sweettaed strawberry navor
drblk mix
14 cap su1ar
% (U-oaace) bottles 1tn1er ale,
cldJled
I quart plDeapple 1berbet,
scooped lnto balls. or presaed
loto I .quart rta1 mold, rroien
soUd -
Freab 1trawberrlea
In larae punch bowl, combine
pineapple juice, lemon juice, dnnk
mut and supr; stir until sugar
dissolves. Just before serving, add
ginger ale, sherbet and straw-
bemes. Makes about 31/1 quans
trate FRUIT MEDLEY PUNCH t (%-quart alie) packages uo-Della Robbla Ice Ring, opUooaJ /----
I
•Red Ripe
WHOLE
WATERMELON
18 OS.
! (lt-ouce) pact11et rro1ea
1trawberrles la ay,..p, &Uwed
S cups apricot atttar, cbllled
S cap1 cold water
1 Clip lemoa Juice from coacen·
trace
1 (1-ouace) cu froun oraqe
JaJce coaceatrate, &Uwtd
1 cap Hlar
l (3%-oaace) bottle 1ta1er ale,
cbllltd
Prepare ice ring in advance. In
blender container. blend straw-
berries well. lo punch bowl. com-
bine pureed strawberries. apricot
ne<;Jar, water, lemon jui~, orange
j uice concentrate and sugar; stir
until sugar dissolves. Slowly pour
m ginger ale: add Della Robbia Ice
~~~O!! ........ W.. 21.!
KRAFI' BADICUI SAUCI
~~J>~~ .............. W. ... 11.P.
.............. w..S9i. • 6 count
BIG mcxs ......... .
~~~·:.~ ............ ~ ... IS!·
IAVI I'' ..•.•..•........ ~.... llA. WMGt 24 O& Loaf
llrAGICll AUii& aTA
lfl,ITTOP
-AD
Rina if desired. Makes about 3'1>
quans.
r ' Della Robbla Ice RIAi
~ nps 1ta1er ale, cbUled
~ cup lemoa Jalce from coactn·
trace .
Caued apricot blves, dra1Ded
Seedle1s 11ee.a lflpeS
Strawberrte1 or mar11cb1no
cberrles
Stripl of oraage peel, curled
Mlat leaves
In I-quart measure or pitcher.
combine ginger ale and lemon
juice. Pour 2 cups mixture into 1-
Quart ring mold; freeze. ArranJC
fruits, peel and mint leaves lD
mold. Carefully pour remaining
liquid over fruit in mold. Freeze.
CRANBERRY RASPBERRY
FROST
1 (31-ouce) bottle cranberry
Jalce cocktaU. cbJlled
l (10-ounce) pacu1e froien reel
raspberries in synap, partlaUy
tbwed
~ cap lemoa jaJce lf!m coacn-
trate
14 cup1u1ar
J quart pineapple sberbet
1 (a!·oance) bottle lemoa-Ume
carbonated beverage, clallled
In large punch bowl, combine
cranberry j uice, raspberries. lemon
juice and sugar. stir until sugar
dissolves. Just before serving,
scoop sherbet into punch bowl; add
carbonated beverage. Ma kes about
3 quarts.
'
•Beet Round
LB.
LONDON
BROIL
Washington State
Extra Fancy
RED
DELICIOUS
APPLES
llh._am
Regular or Drtp
YUBAN corn1
j .
IA.
120.. ·~ IMHNp ,_....
rumc IOl'l'M1al coc+•a
r·········--------------.. cu. nus COUPON HDEEMIJIL£ ONLY At '1
.......................... ICU. ~~wt~,.rc,.?:rr: WJIUTS
I oouBu SAVINGS COUPON
••••••••••••••••••••••• MANUFA.CnJRl:l'S COtJPON
1 DOUB.;~;;~~5c~~~ I "-Ill llUa C'O\lpo• 0101111-ittl •llY OM -llWOC1W9t. <•fltt Oii C'O\IPGll
I aTld gotl 1)()(111.1 THI U.V!HGI WMD 90\I pwcJwbe OMI II••
oma NOT TO INCl.UDI UTIJUI 01 FDI C0010NS 0 1
COUPONS OVll Sl 00 unnro MAY NOT IXOID VALUI or
I mu suaJICT TO STOCK ON KAND na.tmn UQOOI
TO&ACCO A.HD DAtlY PIODOCTI
NO MDnMVM PUICllASI UQ.UIDD I war ONI ITDI PD MANUfAC"IVUl'I COOJION A.HD
I LIM1'T TWO DOU'lt.I Cocm>HS '" CUSTOMJ• J I OOWOll UiiCft'tl ftlVm)U AIJlllUl'T II
l'DOUa WIJ)MllDAJ iiiiiii 11 '"' .........................
. .. . .
I "-11111111C'ovpt'naloag•llhcrny ___ 11~• «-•111ton eovpo11
I nd ~ DOCJILt ncr ~ wa.11Y'OllSM11'"-1119 U.• oma NOT TO fMCWDI llTAJLla 0 1 nu COUJOMI 0 1
COUPONS OVll S 1 00 ll1UllD MAY tf01' UC'llD VAl.UI OY mu SVIJICT TO STOCK OM IAMr> DCWDll UQDOI.
I TO&ACCO A.HD DAll'f PIODUCTS
NO MDmlVY PUICllAll UQUlllD
waT ~rTIM PD MANWACTV111·1 Cocnc>N AJrD I TWO DOCJ'ILI COO'PON1 ,.. CUITOMU
I UiiCiifi '9"=:-' 11 1-+.-Wll*'RIO, II, IMI . ...................... .
~ UDl£MAll.I A'l ALL SOUTHlltN CAUPORNlA ~ ALPKA ll'CA MAID11
12oz.CA111 ~ orr llZMCS 80 ILC. ~ :::g COLA ~ 12 01 c.un
UMJT on COVl'ON AH1) ONI Ill PAC'.I n1 CU'ITOMll
fl 1111~ '~Cf ... lwtr ... c.,.., ........ t.ltlntl wlll Al .... ,. ...... ••111~11111 e111tliUC.t.ie.,,.....-.; .. _ ..................... ----·==-: ............... ,., .. ...... .,. ,.,..... .......... """' ~-" ... ~&:111111. ••'11>4 OOatOll UfiCI iii WAT AIMVST 11 ..... 1mia IW-WllMIFSD, iiiiii II, IHI aaa -----·····---·········· \
--..:.~.-
Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT IWednMdmy, 1•. teas C1
Italian appetizers
pep up pasta salads
Wilt-proof salads made with
pasta or potatoes are perfect picnic
choices. and when they're pepped
up with zippy ltaban..,tyle ap-
petuers they're dehc1ous and e~cit·
in,gly new.
Pepper Pasta Salad is made With
fusilli or rotelle macaroni twists, or
an y corkscrew pasta -these hold
the dressing best. To make the
dressing. a jar of roasted peppers -
plus the hquid from a Jar of pepper
salad -are combined with spices
and wine vinegar m a blender or
food processor.
The drained pepper salad angre-
peppen and this is tossed with lbe
cooked put.I until it's well eo1ted.
The aalad may be served no or
covered and refriJCt&ted acveral
hours or overni&hL ,
Another winner is Potato-Olin
Salad, df'CSICd with a jar of ohvc
salad (ohve cond.ite). This salad
should be allowed to marinate
overnight before servina.
All of these Italian appeUZen are
available full y prepared and Jarmi
at your local supemwkct.
PEPPER PASTA SALAD
_~~~~~~~~~~~~----..::::::::::::::::=:=::::::::~~~~~~~~~~==~====~~:::::~~=======~==~~~~d~1e~n~u~are~~tb~en cbopped and m~ed with sliced celery and the pureed
1 paeka1e (I ouces) fuW.l or
rocelle maearoai twist• ( S
C11pt) I aceoke4
1 Jar (I~ oacetl ,ewer ......
1 jar (7 oaces) routed peppen
1 lalpo .. npr
• Boneless Beet
ROUND STEAK
Twelve Pact
12 oz. cans
BUD LIGHT
BEER
41os.
EA .
• Six pack 12 OI. cans
R.C. COLA
FREE
WITH MANUFACTURER'S COUPON AND
ALPHA BETA DOUBLE COUPON BELOW
PRICI WITHOUT COUPON Sl.60 IA.
• hQ'Ular. Diet lite Of RC 100
1 os. BBQ or Sour Cream
7.5 OL hgular 01' Dtp '---
J.AURA ICUDDIR'S
TWINPACK llAZOLA
CORN OIL u.. POTATO CHIPS ~---------------------------"
a inch . Whit•.
Marble, Yellow
or °"11'1 Food
UVl4.00
. -. .. . -
8·1NCH TWO LAYIR OR
1A SHEET ICED CADS
ATatlable tn
s.mc.~U/
Bak•IT 1tore1 • ..
only.
IA.
"' ahMt • Whit•. Mmbleor
Dntl'I Food
IAVI 6.00
\
72 oz. King
Reaular or uns<»nted
Includes 50¢ ott label
TIDE
DETERGENT
99
TROPICANA san • ~ ca • 100% Pw'9 I st
ORAHGI JUICE ........... : .... ~. ... IA.
• llb IU~ 5At
MIA.DOW LI.A SAVI ., :., llARGAJIDfl ....................... ~~... IA.
~ SAVI 119 ~
AMDICAN SDfGLES ......... ~~~.... IA.
WiiA UTA SAVI I'' DAHJSll KAii .................... ~.... IA.
• ' ca A..orted OCJ'fOll SAVI I"' SICMICIS ALPHA UTA ICM .,,,
IVROPl.A.H STYLI YOGURT..... IA.
•l2ca LAt
SK.MIGS ALPHA UTA SAVI VYR~ CHOCOLATI vnx ............ ~... IA.
I
~ teupooe ult
~ leupooll carllc powder
Z cablespoeu red wine vt.epr
1e11p1Ueff celery
Cook macaroni aCCOTd.ing to
package dmctions; rinse with cold
water and drain. Meanwhile. drain
hqu1d (11> cup) from pepper salad
into the contatner of an electnc
blender, reserving peppers for later
use. Add roasted peppers---ilnd
liquid, sugar, salt, garlic powder
and wine vinegar.
Cover and puree until smooth.
Pour mto a medium bowl. Add
celery and ifscrved maca i>na.
Chop 'h cup of the reserved pepper
salad; add to bowl (Refrigerate
remainma pepper salad in covered
Jar.) Toss to coat. Cover and
refngerate until ready to serve.
Yield: 6 to 8 portions, about 7111
cups.
POT A TO-OLIVE SALAD
1 jat (t~ onces) olive salad
(olive coM.lte)
! tablKpOHt red wtae viDega.r
! cablespoou olln on
3 C9pl peeled. cooked po&aton,
C11t .. ~ ·i.Dda C8bn
Z &ablespooa1 sliced tcallloa
(green ollion)
Drain mannadc (about 112 cup)
from o hve salad into a medium
bowl. Chop 1h cup of the olive salad
(refrigerate remaining olive salad
1n covered jar); set aside.
To mannade add vinegar and
ohve oil; mu well. Add potatoes.
scallion and reserved chopped
olive salad; toss to coat. Cover and
rcfngcrate overmght. Before ser-
ving, mu well. Yield: 4 poruons..
about 3'h cuos.
SPARKLE ..•
P'romCl
1 7...ace jar llW"UmaJJow
creme
l lkuce package fro1en
raapberrtes, ibwed, CTDOed
Z e11ps "8wed wklpped topplq
wtdl real cream
Gradually add champagne 10
marshmallow creme, IJllXlllg with
electric mix.er or wire whisk until
well blended. Add raspberries; mix
well. Pour into a 9 x 5-tncb loaf pan:
frcett mixture unul almost firm.
Coarsely chop m.Uturc; spoon
ioto chilled bowl. Beat with electnc
muer unt:U slushy; fold ID whipped
topptng. Refreeze unul firm 6
SCtvlDg.S.
Varladoa: Subslltutc •;, cup dn
wb.Jtc wine for champagne.
Preserve
nutrients
Ealing lots of "egetable~ •~ good
for )OU but. according to the
Cahfom1a 01etet1c .\ssooat1on
(COA.), you mav get more nutnt1on
from dnnkmg the water the) 're
cooked m l "The vitamins found m most
• vegetables-----B I . 8 2, 86. ~
folacin -are wa1er soluble .. 'Mt1d
Cher) 1 Loggms. R D . president of
the CDA
.. If vegetables are cooked for a
long time 1n largt" amounts of watt•r
they'rt l1kt"I'.> to lose most of these
"1tamms ..
Potatoes arc nch in \ltamm l II
boiled or baked with the s .. m kit
on. most of tht" '1tamm C l!i
reserved. howc"cr. 1f pa~ herore
cooking. potatoes can lose some ol
I their \1taman C
Over-steamed and O\er-bo11ed
vegetables. such as broccoli
"-I asparagus, amchokes. cauliflower
Brussels sprouts or carrots art alw
hkely to lose most of thc1n 1tamms
A. good rule of thumb, acrordm~
to Loggins, 1s to opt for raw or
lightly cooked vegetables with a
en pas opposed to mushy te>.tu rc
The less tamt" vegetables spend in
water, the ~w-er nutnents are lost
"One wa\ to preserve otht"I'\\ 1~
wa ted v1tamms 1 to make soup
from the tock ... she said
•• hce the vcgctablM and add
p1~ and chunks of chicken or
bttf Served with fresh bread and a al•~ of milk.you have a hot lunch
prov1dina sem~ from each ot the
nutnent-bascd food groups-m1llr.
meat. vegetables and fruit\. breach
and cercah."
Vegttables and fnuH ~nt
one food aroup bccau of the
important nutncnts lhC) contain
To make urc )OU ct the ~t
nutnuon from th food ~
mcmbtt that nw 1 bc,t, then
\tt"amtd. braktd and finall) ho1lcd
•
I
I
.. ------- --~-------~--•• 4 ••• 0 • .. • • -4 ' • • 4 co • • ? • as a a a; ¢ o # e pap JS ea ;:as ; o s; ; O O z z as P > = • • 0 ·-
Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, A~t 14, 1085 •
By DOROTHY WENCK ......... ,..
UC c •• , I rtlltft a......
Freezing is a Quick, easy way to
preserve summer fruits and vea-
et.ables. The foods look. and taste
more like fre h than tho that are
preserved by canning or dryina.
Another plus 1s you don't have
the worries about safety that you
have when you can, especially
vegetables that are low in acid.
Botulism is an ever-present danger
when homecanning. but it's ex-
tremely unlikely to be a problem in
frozen food.
Freezina inactivates the or-
gan1sms -bactcna, yeasts, molds
-that cause foods to spoil or
become unsafe. It doesn't kill them,
however. So when the food 1s
defrosted the orpnisms become
active agaio and ·may cause the food
to spoil if it's kept at too warm a
temperature for too long a time.
Freezing does not inactivate the
substances m foods called enzymes
that cause undesirable "aging''
changes in flavor, texture, and
color. Thus, a brief beat treatment
called blanchmg is usually given to
vegetables to destroy the enzymes
and preserve the quality of veg-
etables.
Fruits are not blanched, but sugar
or syrup on fruits help to reduce
the enzyme action ~nd preserve
texture.
Enzymes also cause light-colored
fruits S'bCh as peaches and apricots £o tum dark or oudize when they're
fro2en. To help prevent darkenana.
add uoorbic acid {vitamin C) to the
syrup or sugar. Ascorbic acid is an
antioxidant.
walls. Foods that partially thaw and eauna quahty depreciates u time and flavors buy aood qualJty peck·
then refreeze are es'*ially likely to aoes by. Veaetables that have been asina material; ~se mo1sture-vap0r
suffer from this type of damage. blanched and fruits frozen with resistant wrappina. . 'd 1.-:
The faster a food freezes, the S\JPr or syrup, properly packaged, Olau, metal, and ngi p..-uc
smaller the ice crystals and the less and stored at zcrodearccs should be containers, heavy (freezer)
damaae to cell walls, so don't try to used in 8 to 12 months for best aluminum foil, plastic wrap or ~f f
freeze too much at one time. And 1f quality. are all moisture-v1p0r proo 1
yourfrecz.erhasafast-freezcsctung, Veaetables that have not been properly sealed.' For very ~~ort·
use it. blanched (for example, if you freeze tenn atorye you can use plutJcized
Once the food is frotcn, the sweet com in the husk) should be cartons for milk, cottqe cheese,
temperature should be zero or used within 3 months. Fruits frozen and the like. LiJhtweiaht materials
coloder to maintaining good quali-whole and unpeeled or packed such as wax paper and liaht~eiaht
ty. For every JO degree rise above withouuuprorsyrupcanbestored foilorplasticwraparenotdestrable
zero, the keeping time of a food - 3 to 6 months at zero dearecs. for freezer wrap.
for best quahty -is cut in half. To protect foods in the freezer When packaaing, remember to
While foods kept solidly frozen from loss of liquid, flavor, odor; leave enough beadspacc for ex-
wtll be safe to eat indefinitely, their and from absorbina foreian odors pansion. To expel air from plastic
- - -----------------------,freezer bags, try to press the baa close to the food, or partially close
Freczina causes another type of
texture chan1e: fruits and veg-
etables generally lose liquid and
become mushy because the ice
crystals formed from the water
inside the cells puncture the cell
the bag and then use a.straw to suck
the air out before sealing. • • •
QUESTIONS WE ARE ASK.ED:
Q. 11 It po1tlble to aae vltamiD C
cap1ale1 lD place of powdered
ucorblc acid to keep fn lt• from
darken1D1 lD tlae freezer? U ao, llow
many 1bo1ld I 11ae -my reelpe
call• for' ~ tea1pooa r:wdered
ascorbic acid per qurt o 1ynp.
USDA
CHOICE
NEW YORK
STRIP
97
A. Vitamin C is another name for
ascorbic acid and vitamin C tablets
can be used in place of ascorbic
acid. However, the powdered form
is more satisfactory. Tablets do~'t
dissolve as easily and filler used m
them may make the syrup cloudy:
One-half teaspoon of ascorbic
acid would wei&h I ,500 milligrams.
The number of tablets you use will
depend on their potency. To de-
termine how many tablets to use,
divide the 1,500 milligrams you
need by the number of milligrams
ascorbic acid in each tablet. (This
will be on the label.)
BONELESS
BEEF
LOIN LB. • • •
fAMILY STIAK NIW YOllK S'l'lllP
SnAK
...... ~ PAMILY-PACK
~WHOLI PRYI• LIGS
Q. We're trylDg to eat let• 111ar
eo I'd like to free1e fra.Jt1 wltlaoat
1yrap or 1u1ar. Will tbey be
11tilfactory?
A. Sugar or sugar syrup do help to
retain the texture and color of
frozen fruits. An alternative
method is to use on unsweetened
fruit juice in place of syrup such as
p1 neapple or orange j uicc., or make a
puree/water mixture 01 the fruit
you're freezing.
OR CLOD ROAST
_..._............. BONELESS I 79 er~~
CHUO. La. •
1 ·Lb. Vo--Pock
BAk M Sl!CED BACON LB 1.59
SHASTA
•
:'t 6-PACK
REC OR DIET I 09 1'2 OZ CANS •
1 liter Assorted
CANADA DRY MIXERS
rr•r
\ ,,!~ ~
11-<n. Botti ..
1~ACK
LUCKY 811•
Chablis Blanc. Red Rose or Rhine
3-LITER GALLO W!NES
Silver or Amber
1.75·l!TER BACARD! RUM
.55
BONELESS 3 99 BEEF LOIN L& •
ITALIAN SAUWI
SWEET
OR HOT L& 1.99
Boke. Broil Of' Fry ...... ,., ....... -.... .......,., ................. . • .. ........ LB. 1.99
L
KRAn
8.11.0. SAUCI
18·0Z.
ASSORTED
THICK & SPICY l 29 .99
COTTAGE
CHEESE c
HOU.YWOOD
PIAllUT OIL
2A·OZ.
BOTTLE 2.39
-
'IOSIP FRESH CALIF 79 ~-CHICKEN ~ W1TH Rla. .• La. 1.39 L& •
Coclque lrond, 14.0z. Pkg .
RANCH ERO QUE SO FRESCO . . . EA 1.89
.1.64 32.oz Jor
WELCH 'S GRAPE JELLY
7 25-0r. Dinner .............. 1.38 KRAFT MAC & CHEESE.. ...................... 39 18 Ot Jor
JIF PEANUT eunER
s ...... ,
PERS!AN MELONS
LARGE
CANTALOUPES
~--i i ~~
WHOLE
SWEET ....
MELONS
~j
c
Whole. Toity Whole, Sweet ·
tB .• 39 CASABA MELONS ......................... LB. .10 CANARY MELONS ......................... LB. .21
The latter may be preferable if
you have enough fruit because it
will enhance rather than mask-the
flavor of the fruit.
A111erican
cookery
spiced up
By TOM HOOE
U Wine Md 'ood Wtlter
What is the key ingredient in
American cookery? I believe it is
the endless list of spices used in our
food It stems from our fondness for
spicy cuisines around the world-a
list that features the specialties of
Mexico, India. France and China,
to name a f cw.
This passion for spices goes far
back and has affected cuisines
everywhere. It moved John Ruskin,
I the I 9th-<:entury English critic, to
comment that cookery in large part
means a "knowledge of all herbs ...
balms and spices."
Our fondness for seasoning con-
tinues to grow. The American Spice
Trade Association reports that this
country is now using more season-
ina than ever before. In 1984, the
report said, spice consumption
reached 622,393,000 pounds.
It added that our average intake
over the past five years has been 514
million pounds annually, a 33 per
cent increase over levels of a decade
earlier.
n•1••••••11w
This represents a rise in both the
hot spices and the relatively bland
ones. Since 1981, the report says,
our use of hot SP.ices! especially the
red pepper family, b ack and white
'==::~~:============:=::::;:_ ___ .._-i-.;pe~ppe~r and ginger, has averaged 1 Oft then I~ minion--pounds-a-~· l .S.Or. Con year, a 45 percent increase over the 21•
3.89
. 9.98
~ ~lllU 5 5 previous I 0 years.
"-8A ..... SMOO'l'S ......... • The biggest gain was scored by
1.0z. Auort.d • • the red ~pper family, ranging from
CHIKARA NOODLES ................................ • FOlt I mild chili powderto the torrid little
Sapporo, 3.5·0r. Pkg .. AatOned ,.9 chilies .
tCHIBAN RAMEN ............................................. ·•• These increases arc all the more
R I
DA NOLA
SLICID HAM
cgo;:o 2 89
PKG •
AUllT .llMIMA ........
10.0Z PKG 69 BlUEIEltRY
Ott aunEltMllK •
Hughes 16-0t Oreu1ng 1..
UTE BLEU CHEESE .,.,-. 1.29 •••• 1.2•
Oh loy lwm Pak
PEPPERONI P1ZZAS
Fomlly Size 8 Ch SwtH Almond Ot Jolop.no
MERKT'S CHEESE SPREAD ~RA LEE POUND CAKE ...... 2A9
1~0! Medium Ot 1-iot ,., ........ ..
-=. ·;:-~ _ . a..u ""a ROJOS ~LSA
~Ch Meo! Ot a... -FARMER JOHN BOLOGNA ••• -~ ·;: 120Z 59
-w --CAN e
WI ACCl•'f DOUall. 'flllPLI and PllODUC'f
COUPONS FllOM ALL O'fHlll SUPI QMAlllCIYS
-.. ....... ..., ....................................... .........
I (_,..., (~h ... t ........ •Y( .... ,._. "9f11e ...... ,, • .,. ""<NHH .... OU~
) f ·~ ~' ,_.. «Ut"ed J Co-.t.n.,,~ ,._.,..,, tlftCI .. O<.-Y ll"'fillH•
.... ~ .... CW-<41t"ed • °"'' ... Gl' .. l1Kt11••• t '°""'" "' •• 00 ...... (9"1 ~ ... b•-.f S M1•11w•IOft ol .,...,, 0" ,,,_,°' ,.,,.,' rovjlllltl ,...h111M•ed t1of •-• ,....,.
el Ill•, .. ,.., Oii re<t01let t <OU,nn• 09,.,,..,~ by°"' oh.If,..,. t II -do llOI t!llK ..
!NI I,..,. ttMW•he>d 9"' •-·I., t COvlllO" -will t..tltl•lu .. on,,..., qi -., ... ,_ ¥Olt1e
I I~ tellot<o I !kl·"' .,e41K,. ••tl"6ed t $.i41<~• ,. t•f'll•" _,.,._. e;1 -"
-IO Olf9o _.. ..... IS lfwv ..... 71 ,.., II Uftk...,,._. o.uM.""'"" ~ ,...Git'(..,.. ........ .,..n .. •c•••• llAT .. a....-19 aaa ••WA81
impressive when you realize that a
single ounce of black pepper will
season iome 1,440 fried egp.
It is also estimated that per capita
consumption of spices in aeneral
amounts to 42 ounces a year, or 10
ounces more than a decade aao.
One rarely associates any of the
peppers with dessert, but here is a
recipe for pumpkin pie that calls for
black pepper. It appeared in "The
Spice Cook Book o(l 964," publish-
ed by David White Co. of New
York City.
PUMPKJN PIE
1 ~, .... ,
1 tablet~a n omr
l tea1pooa ult
I tu•,... pMIM1 cluamoe
l tea1pooa IJ'OUd P.aer
1 teu,....,..... ••tmer ~ teu,... blftk ~r
~ iea.,1M pMM CloYn , .. ,.. .....
i ~ e11p1 muW ,...pkt•
1 e11p Upt cream
•·met! ubaktd loC"n1t ple 1tieU
Mix first 8 i~dienu. Beat in cus Stir in pumpkin and cream.
Pour into &bell. Ba.kc in pttheated
.coo.dqrec oven for SO minutes, or
until knife inaened in center oom
out clean. Cool and serve.
'1.._ __
' .
• .• • 0--0• .:,.,.: _.·,:,. 0 L o· Q .j a ¢ a .... + 4 4 4 # 4z d Q" t• Id O 0 o • 4 ,4 4 d d ,,f d .~ • cf d •• _... d < * 4 -4 • .4 • 4 • ,,,,_.,.~ .. -.-,,~·-~-+-_,-----_.... -.. ..,. _. ~ _.. --- -
Meat pies
longtime
favorite
By TOM HOGE
~ WIM llM 'Md W,,._
Color this stir-fry dish uJiusua~
To Van Goah. color wa every-Colorthi1d1shanodeto1ummer. NECl'ARINE ANDSNO Thinly slice nectarine to
lhina. The srcat Dutch 1m-The pure JreCD of the snow peas in PEAS ORIENTAL measure 1 'h cups. In l1DalJ bowl,
preuioni1t painter used color sym-contrut to the briabt red skins and i frn• CalUonta Hdatlaff combine water, prlic, soy au.cc,
bolicall¥ to create mood, from the yellow flesh of the fre b nectarine i &Ulupoeat coY waler vinegar, comswch and JUJ&f. Heat
loud pamtinp of the red flowers at is as stnk.ina as the color play J larle ~love 1uUc, m..tacM oil in wok or (tyi.na j)&D untlf it ii
Aries to the ~u1eter brown, yellow between white sand apinst the blue t cablnpoou toy saeee very hoL
and blue studies of his room 1n the waves on a sunny day 11 the i &eatpooat dt1WJ .. T....,
same French town. seashore. Nectarine and Snow Peis t teatpooa conutattla Add snow peas. water cbtstnuu
Oriental is an exqutsttc summer i tea•--• t•••r and necuriDe slices and ltir-fry l to We arc all sensitive to color -----2 mmuca or until heated tbtou• ... th ft · a.. f t 1· t palette of nature's colors. • ••bl---• -••1t or •-r .., e so PlDA o a sunse e ic1 s a 4 -.... ....,....._ ,_ -·· Add soy sauce m1xtutt; continue to feeling of nostalaia, the stark white Thts dub is easy to prepare. It is etable oll itit-fryfor l01CCOndsoruntil sauce
ofa first snowfall, edulatatJOn. tnexpensive, low in fat and Wlth the l paCUlt (t OUCH) ftoUI ii ala-wad.
add1tJon of cooked ham, can be now peat, tbwed ..-
The importance of color as not served as 1 one-dish meal. The l cu (I ouces) iUced water Transfer to heated aervina dish;
lost in the art of cooking. either, contrastina textures, tastes and ctinta•t•, dra.bled prrush with minced ham, if de-
where the rclauonship between eye colors combsne for a dehc1ous. 14 cap cooked bin, m1Dced sired. Serve immedately. • to 6
and taste bud is criti_ca_l_. _____ P_re_1_1y_di_· s_h. __________ _..;..(o;£_.t1_ou_al--'-) ________ servinp.
*****A world of fine cooking
FREE
RECIPE
That old Amencan standby, the Introducing our new Fl¥ti Star
MNt Reels-Collection Pick ***** meal pot pie, has a long history. up our,,,.., rec11>9, &mpeon'•
Back in the days of the Roman Roa11 s1rtotn or a.er with
Empire, these pastries were served vor1c1t11re Pudding.
at banquets, sometimes with live Youra ''"In the -.t
birds under the crust, which must ,__ _____ o..,e __ ,_•mem __ .. _L..__Y_I ~-,,....
have startled unwary guests.
In the 16th century, the English
gentry revived the ancient custom
of meat pies. The fad soon swept the
country, moving a Bntisb food
writer to comment that his coun·
trymen were especially fond of deer
meat "which they bake in pasties,
and this venison pasty 1s a dainty
rarely found in any other king-
dom.''
In fact , Bntons dunng that era
consumed meat pies of all sorts,
including pork, lamb and game.
They were especially fond of birds,
and during the reign of Elizabeth I,
English cooks made pot pies using
"chicken ~pers," which consisted
of tiny chicks stuffed with gooseber-
ries.
Around the middle of the 16th
century, one cookbook included a
sort of telescopic pie in which five
birds were stuffed one inside the
other, then wrapped m dough.
This trend toward the grotesque
reached its peak when an English
food writer took a page from the
ancient Romans and featured a
recipe that began "to make pies that
the birds may be alive and fly out
when it 1s cut up ... "
This fondness for meat pies soon
spread to the New World. fn the ·1
19th century, Amencans became
enamored of a p1e that featured
robins.
The settlers who came to Ameri-
ca took their pot p1e recipes with
them when they moved westward.
By the present century, chicken pot I
pies and meat variations have
become as Amencan as com on the
cob.
The recipes usually called for
inexpensive ingredients or leftovers
and the pies were popular not only
in the family d101ng room. but in
moderate-pnced restaurants.
Today, they also appear on the
menus of fashionable mns.
Here's a recipe using leftover
chicken.
c mCKEN POT PIE
% pounds potatoet, peeled and
dJced
1 cap heavy cream
I tableapoont butter or margar-
ine
Freshly ground pepper
Salt to latte
Pinch ground nutmeg
1 cup cbopped tca1Uon1, tender
part• only
~ cap cbopped celery
% tablespoons Oour
1 cap cbtcken broth
3 cup1 cooked, cboppedcblcken
a;, teaapoon thyme
4eu1
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Grease -me pie plate. In
saucepan beat potatoes to boiling
m enough salted water .to cover.
Reduce heat to low and cook until
tender, about 15 minutes. Drain
and mash, adding 1/4 cup cream, 2
tablespoons butter, 'I• teaspoon
pepper. and nutmeg .and salt to
taste. Cover and set aside.
In large skillet over medium
heat melt remaining butter. Saute
scallions and celery 3 minutes.
Whisk in flour and cook 3 minutes.
Add broth and rest of cream, and
hcaL Stir in chicken, thyme, salt
and pepper to Wte. ,,.,
Spread chicken mixture on bot-
tom ofpie/'Jate. Pipe 4 potato rinp
on top o pie mixture. Bake 15
minutes. Remove from oven and
carefully break eaas into the rinp.
Sprinkle with salt and pepper, 1f
desired. and relum to oven another
15 minutes, or until ew are set to
desired doneness. Serves 4.
DELIDRELISH
l ~ Clpl flfflJ cllopped OllloD
·~ C9P rtaely dMtpped lfMG
pepper
S cablespooat coanely cllopped
rdlt~
I tablupoon1 lemn J•lce
Salt ud cayeue pepper .. latte
Paprtb
Mix totcther onion, sreen pep-
per, radish, lemon juice and salt
and cayenne. Sprinkle wtth
papnka. Make about 2 cups.
***** Whole Beef f 19 Brisket
7 TOii LBS. LS TEXAS STYLE BONELESS
***** Boneless
Rump Roast f79
SIRLOIN CUT LS
***** Sirloin ,.219 Tip Steak
BONELESS
Red,Rlpe 06
Watermelon
(CUT, 08 LS I LS •
Jumbo
Mangos
SUPERS EA TING ~-49
pt Tree Ripe
&Juices
P'Nlblets
&Corn
:45
I'/:::
COMe!NATION OA
ll'IPPIAONI, FAOZ£N,
103 OZ. Pl<O
~.99
Longer ..
Store Hoursl
'Mlekdayt8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Slturday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
***** Large End
Rib Roast
FIVE ST AR QUALITY
***** Lady Lee
Bacon
SU CED
***** Croas Rib
Steak
LB
f 87
1 ~:. f 77
80 NELESS.eEEF CHUCI( L'B
f 87
***** Fresh ·-s9 Beef Liver
LB . SLICED
Seedless 4 9 Grapes
RED FLAME LS •
Large
Cucumbers
OREA T FOR SALADS
pt Lady Lee
& Grape
Juice
6'& OZ 8TL f 79
pe Frisk/es
&Buffet
Cat Food
I VARIETIES. I OZ CAN
.33-
L
***** Beef
Back Ribs
FROZEN DEFROSTED
*****
Whole Frying 55 Chicken
SOUTHERN GRADE A LS •
***** Louis Rich 349 !~:;~ey Brea~t
SMOl<EO 8 8 0 OR OVEN ROASTED
*****
LadyLee -99 Braunschwel~~-
ptW/ndex
& Glass
Cleaner
AEGl.L'R OR LEMON
220Z 8TL f 49
F\ pi-Yes Liquid ·· 1~ .. ) & Detergent
pt Hearth
iFarms
Bread
pt Lady Lee
iOrange
Juice
GAL 8T1. 299
pe Harvest Day
&Margarine
111---'------'-STICI(. 1& OZ PICO ----.....49
Fresh 87 Ground Beef
ANV Sill PACKAGE LS •
DOES NOT EXCEED~ FAT
***** Ground f!Jeef ~~ Patties ~·
LADV LEE FROZEN DOES NOT EXCEED~ FAT
***** Fresh
Dover Sole l8 269 FILLE'T
***** Fresh
Butterflsh
FILLET
,.219
P' Ga/lo
&Premium
Wines
TABLE • VARtE'tES
J L TR 8TL 3s9
!" Callfornla
A Blush Wine
FETZER 1S() ML 8TL. 299
P' Key Buys mean
i extra ~vlngs.
l<ey 8uv• .,. 1tem1 pr1ceO below '"'-'' evet)'d•V
tower pr•c• H • retull ot m1nulac1uret1
temporuy promotional allowanoes or
t•ceptton purct\1 ..
... --....... ...--...... ---..... ...... -~.----• .......... -.. ~~--.... -Ulllt ____ _.,...._
.. -
1
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------___ .,.__............, ---~---__. \
Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT /WedM//llday, August 14, 1885
Seafood salad a Tefr~shing men u selection
Take advantage of abundant supplies
for next light. nutritious main dish
Main-dish salads are a perfect
choice for warm weather menus.
They arc light and nutritious and
easy to prepare.
One of the most popular is the
seafOOd salad, accordina to the
California Fisheries Association.
When accompanied by fresh
sourdough bread and summer
fruits, seafood salads make a com-
plete and satisfying summer meal.
To prepare fish for salads follow
this procedure: Season whole
dressed fish, steaks or fillets lightly
with pepper. salt (if desired). and
lemon juice, and wrap them tightly
in foil. Place the foil packet in a 350-
degrcc oven and bake, allowing
about lOminutespcrincb thickness
of the particular fish. Unwrap and
check to sec if fish is done: rewrap
and continue cookina if needed.
Allow to cool. Gently remove
meat from bones and chill in a
covered container. Add chilled
flaked fish to any of your favorite
salad recipes. Note the fish can be
baked the night before and set to
chill during the next day.
If you do not want to prepare
High tech moves
into veggie field
CINNAMINSON, N.J. (AP}-High technology has ventured
mto the vegetable fields as scientists try to put more snap and
sweetness in carrots, find the perfect tomato and create celery with
no strings attached.
In the laboratories and greenhouses of its sprawling
headquarters. DNA Plant Technology Corp. applies plant genetics
to develop vegetables with desirable characteristics such as
resistance to disease or improved texture and flavor.
Using nutrients to promote cell growth in tissues placed in
laboratory dishes, the scientists can obtain up to I 0,000 plants from
a single leaf, and then identify and breed the ones with superior
traits.
The company's process, called "somaclonal varial1on," as
s1m1lar to the centuries-Old use of crossbreeding to obtam a vanety
of plants. but 1s much faster and has a somewhat different aim an
mmd.
"Most of the plant breeding in the past was forthe benefit of the
farmer, 1mprovang thlDJS like crop yield," said John Marsden, the
company's executive vice president. "Our work is mostl y for the
consumer ..
The company plans to put its first product on the market early
next xear. three-ounce paclcages of celery and carrot sticks called
··veg1Snax." Marsden saad the scientists tailored the vegetables to
consumer preferences by making the carrots sweeter and talung the
annoyms stnngs out of celery.
Veg1Snax wall be test-markeled under an agreement with Kraft
Inc. and will be sold 10 pack.ages designed to give the snacks a shelf
life offive weeks, company officials said.
"The snack food industry is a booming industry, yet the"
consumer trends are toward good health," Marsden said. "We
thought we should be able to combine them. This is something that.
could go in your bnefcase, go 10 your purse, go in your lunch box ....
It can be eaten on the run." '
DNA Plant Technology started ID 1981 the same way many
hi~h-tech electrontc firms have sprouted. with a pair of enterprising
sc1ent1sts tradmg the security of regular paychecks for the chance to
test their skills ID the marketplace.
When Wilham R. Sharp and David A. Evans submitted their
res1$nauons to Campbell Soup Co.. their bosses were more
antngued than upset. Campbell invested heavdy in the new
company, prov1d10g a 32-acre site for its headquarters in exchange
for stock and signing a $2.4 million dollar contract for researchers
to develop improved tomatoes, -.
baked fish for your seafood salads.
you can use seafood leftovers with
equally good results. Poaching 1s
another method to use when
temperatures soar and you do not
wish to use the oven. A final option
1s to buy smoked fish, which
requires no cooking and can be
added to any salad.
In August, there will be an
excellent selection of fresh seafoods
from which to choose for your
salads. From the Pacific Ocean.
there are good supplies of Pacific
snapper, petrale sole, Dover sole.
sable fish, hng cod. halibut and
Pacific perch. Swordfish and shark
availability are inconsistent, but
salmon 1s readily available.
'sOnUs
\\e'll give you the bread free*
when you Duy the Underwood:
The Great-Tasting
Underwood Summer Sandwich:
Deviled Ham 'n Egg
I c.an (41h ounces)
l NDERVvOOD• Deviled Harn
1 hard cooked eggs, chopped
:1 T mayonnaise
3 T chopped onion
2 T. pickle relish
12 slices bread
6 lettuce leaves
In a mechum bowl. mix together chopped egg, deviled
ham. mayonnaise, chopped onion and pickle relish. Spread
mlxture on 6 slices bread; top each with a lettuce leaf and
n•maming bread slices. Makes 6 sandwiches.
-~~,,_.--,
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r ,. c;~ :*Saveupto
: [n.1""'1 "' ~,~,:! ~ ~ tx:ioo1 hom I 'n<l<"T"'ooJ Mt"al Sprc.1d~ Plra\t' -.end a (htck draft
it<'<x.I for SI on an\ onc hrcad 1rcm I M 111 h l UnJ er'AooJ Frce Brrad
I r.o. Bm, N&."171-
EI P .is->. TX i'Nii
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1~·""'"
L ) ""-- - - - - - - - - -J
PACIFIC SNAPPER LOUIS
! cu pa naked Pacific supper,
hallb1ll .. f rub tu.oa, talmOD, liq
cod or otber flaked flsb
l bead JeUace
! bard-cooked cu•. sliced
! tomatoes, sliced
1 small cucumber, 1Jlced
Lowa Dre11lng
Louis Dre11lng:
'fl cup mayonnaise or salad
dre11lng
2 tablespoons half and half
cream
2 tablespoons chill sauce
2 tablespoon• chopped green
onions
t table1.,1oos chopped green
pepper
1 cablespooo cbopped olives
Dasb ult
Dasb pepper
Combine all inared1ents and mu
thoroughly. Chill.
SMOKED FISH
VINAIGRE'M'E SALAD
1 pound smoked wblteflab or
otber smoked fl•lil
1 quart 1b.redded cabbage
14 cup chopped oaloa
14 cup chopped parsley
% bard-cooked eu1. chopped
Vlna.11rette Dret1lng
Salad ll'HDI
Remove skins and bones from
fish. Flake the fish. Combine
cabbage, onion, parsley. egg, and
fi5h. Add dressina and mix
thorouahly. 5erve On salad areen.L
Spnnkfe ~th paprika.
Vtnalsrette Dres1laa:
~ cap olive or talad oU
3 cablespooa1 vtae1ar
1 teatpooD talt
14 tea1pooa paprika
Da1h caye.ane pepper
l tabmpooa chopped snea
pepper
1 tablespoon chopped pJmleato·
I table1pooD ckopped IWefl&
pickle or drained pickle relln
Combine oil, · vinegar, salt,
paprika, and pepper in a smaU jar.
Shake jar until mixture is
thoroughly blended. Add remain-
ing ingredients.
Totables stack up
hearty-ingredients
Have the blue sky and greenery of a warm summer's day put you in the
mood for a frolic? Once called "frolics," the picnics of early America
consisted of music, games, tlinations. and, of course, lots of good food.
To keep your picnic spirited with the same ingredients as those of
earlier days, take along WaldorfStack.s, a new sandwich idea.
These multi-layered totables feature white a nd brown breads with two
delicious fillings, each perfectly seasoned with a base mixture that starts
with convenient instant onion soup mix.
The first layer uses half of the seasoned base to blend a savory chicken
salad that is topped with crisp sliced apples. For the second layer, the base
mixture becomes a spread that unites shredded carrots, cho pped nuts and
plump raisins.
To help you get outdoors faster, the base mixture and the fillings can
be prepared a day ahead, then assembled and wrapped just before your
outing begins.
WALDORF STACKS
t envelopes l..aata.ot onion soap mlx
1 cup mayoD.DaJae
~ cup soar cream
14 teaspoon black pepper
% ~ cups cut-up cooked cblcken
11, cap chopped parsley
14 cup fl..aely chopped celery
· % cup 1bredded carrots
~ cup rai1ln1
~ cup coarsely chopped wain a ta (optional)
! apples, cored, quartered aad sliced
l 61Uce1 pampernlckle or wbole wheat bread, crusts trimmed
8 allces white bread, cru1t1 trimmed
In medium bowl, combine instant onion soup mix, mayonnaise, sour
cream and pepper; reserve 1/i cup and chill. Into remaining mixture, stir '
chicken, parsley a nd celery; chill.
In small bowl, combine carrots, raisins and nuts.
On each of 8 slices pumpemickle bread, spread 'h cup chicken
mixture; top with 4 to 5 apple slices, then I slice white bread. Spread 2
teaspoons reserved onion mixture onto each slice white bread; evenly top
with 2 tablespoons carrot mixture.
Spread 1 teaspoon reserved onion mixture on each remaining
pumpemickle bread slice: place, spread-side down, on carrot mixture.
Makes 8 sandwiches.
ON A N Y ,osn • ,A.MS. DfU SUCIS. OH ANY ,om• , ... MS.
•IAOY-10.IA1 MIAt -·..----.... ·-.. ---··-... __._,,. .... -:=...-·-"' ' , _-::-:: &::::,r Cll!m _.,, .........
==·~c= r-........ ,_
Creativity turns
simple salad into
something special·
Some of the simplest salads are the most interesting and delicious. It
just takes a little preplanmngand thought to add yourown touch of
creative flair.
A combination of greens always adds interest. Pleasing to the eye, as
well as the palate as a combination of dark green spinach, light green butter
lettuce and the new, deep red radiccao . If you can't find 1t. use red cabbage
for the color.
Tossed m adressingofhghtaJmond01l and raspberryvtnegar. hghtl)
seasoned with mustard and herbs. the salad takes on your own touch wt th
the addition of garl1c-011led almonds.
Easy to roast, whole blanched almonds arc seasoned and cooked
before adding to the saJad . Better make a double batch-they arc
wonderful for snacking too.
Almonds not only add av.eat crunch and a reaJ flair, thcyadd
nutrients, too. High in fiber, nboflavin, vitamin E. magnesium and
phosphorous, they add the creauvc touch to a simple salad.
WEST COAST SALAD
1 cabJe1poon batter
1 cap whole bla.Dched almond•
1 '4 teaspoons dill weed
1teaspoon1arUc 1alt
14 tea1poon 1arJlc powder
14 cap r11pberry wine vinegar
'4 cap almond oll
1 table1poon Dijon mu1tard
1 clove carlic, minced
'4 te11poon IHIODed lllt
'4 te&1poon paprika e caps torn butter lettuce, radlcclo ud 1plnacb
Melt butter in 9-inch pie plate. Toss almonds with butter. 111 teaspoon
dill weed, 'h teaspoon garlic and garltc powder. Bake at 350 degrees. 25
minutes, tossing occasionally.
Remove from oven; toss with 1h teaspoon dill weed and remaining 11~
teaspoo n garlic salt; cool. Combine raspberry wine vinegar. almond 011,
Dijon mustard, garlic, remaining 'I• teaspoon dill weed . seasoned salt and
paprika; mix well.
Place lettuce in large serving bowl, toss with.dressing and seasoned
almonds. Makes 6 servings.
Save s1 .00 and try
NEW PRELL CONDITIONER
and PRELL SHAMPOO
for beautiful, full-bodied hair
"It's my Dody-Duilding System!" 8' _,L,
, C'-" ~
I 87SOPO
•• I Ui
I
I NEW I CONOlTIONER
I
I ·
..
Orange Coatt DAILY PIL.OT/Wedneeday, ~ 141 1"6 Cll
Finger food perfect party fare
Advance planning
can help hostess
enjoy the pa rty, too
Hos uni a pan)' can be fun and
done w1tb ease if a few minutes arc
spent tn pre-planning. OrpntZc
your checkhst and enhst a helper.
Since you don't want to spend
time in the kitchen while your
guests arc enJOYtni themselves.
select pany food that can be
prepared the day before.
Two recipes that allow the host-
ess to cn.ioy the pany are Fresh
Vegetables 1n Phyllo and Avocado
Salsa Dip. The phyllo dough 1s cut
and wrapped in the shape of
triangles around fresh ingredients
such as broccoli, Jinger, peppers
and sunchokcs. This recipe can be
also be prepared a week before your
party and frozen unhl the day of
your affair.
Easy to prepare, Avocado Salsa
Dip has as us base a delicious
combination ofavocado, onion and
tomato. The dip can be served with
a wide array of fresh vegetable
dippers offering varying colors,
textures and sizes. such as snow
peas, yellow or red peppers, zuc-
cb in i, cherry tomatoes and
kohlrabi. ·
A vanety of fre~h summer fruit
included on your cheese board 1s
also an easy party idea. Or, fresh
pineapple chunks. apple wedges.
honeydew melon and cantaloupe
balls. strawberries and bluebemes
can be served an hollowed-out
pineapple shells.
FRESH VEGETABLES
IN PHYLLO
1 medium bunch broccoli,
trimmed ud coarsely chopped
wllb 1tem1 included (about 4
caps)
Va cap water 'I• cup 1oy sauce
1 t,;i lablespoon1 cornsta rch
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
Z medJam cloves garlic, minced
4 teaspoons finely chopped fresh
g,lager
1 lar1e red pepper, 1eeded and
finely chopped
Z caps pared f resb 1anc boke1
(Jerusalem ardcbolles), flnely
chopped or 1 can ( 8-ouces >
water cbestnat1 drained and
chopped
1 package (6 ounces) pbyllo
doap
1 ~ cups butter or margarine,
melted
Drop broccoli into bo1hng water
for I minute. Remove dram and
reserve. In a small bowl or cup stir
together 1 '>cup water. SO) sauce and
cornstarch. Heat 011 in a large
skillet. cook garlic and gmger I
minute, add peppers and stir-fry.
Add broccoh. sunchokes and soy
sauce mixture and stir I mmute.
Remove from heat.
Cut phyllo sheets ,..mto four minutes or until heated throua,b.
lengthwtse strips. Keep covered Makes 48 appetizers
with a slightly damp towel while
working on the dough. Remove I
strip and brush with melted butter.
Place another stnp on top and
brush with butter. Top with one
more stnp and brush wt th butter lo
make three layers.
A VOCAOO SALSA DIP
1 medJum-1lie ripe avocado,
1kiD ud pit removed
3 medlum-1lie ripe to.m.atoet,
finely cbopped
Place I tablespoon of vegetable
filhng at one end of stnp. Fold
comer over at an angJe to form a
tnangJe. Continue to fold (hlce a ~
nas> until you reach the end of the
1 med lam oaioa, fl.Dely dlo _.ped
3 tablespoons cbopped fred
coriander
I medium serrano or oiffr llot
chill pepper, trimmed, seeded
and finely cbopped stnp.
Repeat with remaming dough
and filling. Arrange tnangJes seam-
s1de down on baking sheets. Bake m
a 400 degree oven 10-15 minutes or
until gdlden brown.
To make appetlters ahead: Ar-
range filled tnangles on baking
sheet: freeze until firm Remove
tnangJcs and store in an airught
container or plasuc bags. To bake.
place tnangJes on baking sheets and
bake 10 a 375 degree oven 20 to 25
t tablespooa1 fresllly tqHttetl
IJm e jaJce
I clove 1arllc, minced
I.It teaspoon u lt
In a medium bowl mash
a"ocado Sur m tomatoes, onion.
conander pepper, lime JWCC, garhc
and salt Cover Chill until ready to
scn-e Serve Wlth cut-up fresh
"cgctables Makes about 311. cups
dip
Coconut adds pizazz to fruit dessert
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Layer · half of the peaches, combinauons of fruits dtfferent plus bananas
bananas and strawbemcs m a fro~ the ones given Here are two Honey Cream: \\ b1slc together 1
Fanciers of coconut someumes serving bowl; top with half of the suggesuons: cup sour cream. I tablespoon
use it to advantage m easy-to-make coconut; repeat. Chill. Serve with Orange sccuons. sliced straw-hone) and I tablespoon lemon
desscns. Honey Cream. Makes 6 servings. berries and halved seedless grapes, 1u1ce Chill Makes I cup. Serve
(Recipe may be doubled.) plus bananas. · with Fresh Fruit Coconut Com-
Thc late Jim Bea.rd. wbo had such Note: You may wish to use Sliced peaches and blueberoes potc.
a sa 1 u ta ry i n flue n cc 0 n American fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
cooking, loved a dessert I served to
him on occasion. It 1s a simple
Spanish Cream made as usual with
unflavored gelaun, eggs, sugar, milk
and vanilla to which I add flaked
coconut.
In summer other fans of coconut
enJOY tt teamed Wlth the season's
fresh fruits. Pe!iches and straw-
berries plus bananas. for example,
make a luscious combination when
layered and topped wt th coconut. If
you hke, you may accompany this
dessert with Honey Cream as
suggested an the following recipe
FRESH FRUIT
COCONUT DESSERT
3 peaches, 1ecdoned
Z medium banan11, sliced
1-quart container strawberries
1 'i°'I cap1 (about) Oaked coconut
Honey Cream, 1ee recipe
'
Bonano
Chowlate Chip
...
t
,
Cl9 ~ Cout DAILY PtLOT/WednMday, AugUll 14, 1885
Callaway debuts wi~es and th~y win medals --
Just when r think I know every-Helmuth managed to kcc{> quiet
thinagomg on in the wine indu try. about 1t, shppma It mto theJudama
someone or wmethina surpnscs and allowing the aold medal to
me. As ch mnan of the Orenae announce it existence.
County Fair, l have the privilege of Helmuth also debuted at Pinot
beana among the first to know who BJanc at the same event, and it won
lbe winners art, and also have the a silver, which happened to be the
responsibility of making ure the top award in its class.
results att vahd Since I only supcrv1se at Orange
JEllY .
MEAD
I tbou&ht I had discovered a CQunty (only winemakers are al· ~or boo-boo over one of this lowed to judge), I hadn't tasted the Callaway 1914 ~wan&ramlner
year's gold medalists. CaJlaway wind and had to wonder if they (SS): Fans of fruity , dtlicious, JUSt
Oewuritramtner? .. Cal laway were really "that" good. l received sliahtly sweet wines like
doesn't make a Gewun," I said, my answer at the recent Summer Gewurztraminer and Ric ling
"someone must have made a ma!>-Wine and Food Festjval at Long should not miss out on this ~raain.
lake in this computer entry." Beach, where l made a point of Ther~ are many wines of this
Well, Callaway does make a tracking down the two mystery breed selhog for SO percent more
Gewun. and winema~r Dw_!yn_e_wi_·n_e_s. __________ tha_t _arc_n't half as good, so I have to
D'SDA Imp -Goldeii Pr•mJum.a..t alad• CUI
Save
.40
per lb. .........
II
qucay~ J
llCD>od ri...~.'~~ -----r ~V~.L&
Alaskan
Salmon
!l 2.9~
Meat/Seafood
-RJbEye
Stealrs
Mission
Tortilla Strips
OrlgtnaJ, UOMZ/*1 ot Naebo
Save
.JO
1201
p kg .9~
7
Save
.20
Ralphs
Sharp Cheddar
Cheese
Sav• 69 .JO p
16 O&
loa1 .
Grocery Values
aive it .. be t buy .. ~tatu . Beauuful
ltchcc-hk.c aroma. gobs of fruit that
hint of the swccteSt grapefruit and
zingy, refreshing acidity. I like thi~
wine a lot and you probably will
tOQ.
CaUeway 1914 Plaot Blanc
($7. 75)! Proof that Monterey Coun-
ty isn't the only place this irapc
does weU. Done tn a vc:ry frui ty. but
not iiimphsuc style, the w10e 1s dry
and suitable for the table, and will
work. with most of the same foods as
Chardonnay.
The " wcctness" of lobster com-
bined with the fruit of this wine
sounds hke an irresistible combina-
tion. ft did see three weeks in
" French oak. which dad httle more
tho,n enhance the bouquet, and
ccmS JUSt the ri~t amount.
Pinoc Blanc 1s a vanety that
deserves more attenuon, so try this and other examples from J. Lohr.
Jekel, The Monterey Vineyard and
Mira OU
GOLIATH SUR RENDER -
The "Btu h" story has reached a
pleasant conclusion. As mentioned
here some months back, a tiny
Sonoma County winery, Mill
Creek, trademarked the name
''Btu h" in the '70s to descnbc
white. or slightly pink, wanes made
from red grapes.
Giant distiller Seagram then
----.... ------
C:211r.
bU
Honeydew
Melons
.87
Fresh
Mushrooms
Meister Brau--j;·
Beer
Uo .. CCZDI
~3:6~
Produce
OSDkQrad• A ·FtOUD
Comish Game Hens ~ . 79
mz>A /Dip Qold•D h•mJum ... , C'lluct
7-Bone Roast ": .89
Haii'b~t'sleciic ~ 2.69
~AJauan Salmon Steaks ';:: 2.59
~ 1.89
W'WJboa•hg ~~!Ml '1MN#)
Salad Dressmg ·=
A#Otf~ Van.a ..
Cup O' Noodles 1::;
'1a.tsc:·'9 oa 10 ct or JO Oii 11 cf Solo Tumblers
Coton•t-4 101/ p t g
Bathroom Tissue
-,,..,,
.69
.49
.69
.99
.63
,39
Beecli.N'utSkigeJ J/Sl
p;;;CQ.ie M1x ~~ .89
Crave Cat Food ~ . 99
Hand1-W1pes ::; 1.09
hWh HcrwoUcrn 29 Pmeapples "= •
Al.I~
Wh1te Rose Potatoes"= .15
Ode• 2.49 nwll C:Vt·"B°'"2Ucm" Allthu.r.lums
Ba leery
ro:p.r TO•ell
ScotTowels
•U os~w
Fresh Trou t
~ .89 lll1ftJ si..
IJlebouy Soap
Dairy/Deli
~ llacattln.t Of
Potato Salad ~~ 3.89
~·U me. rt>OO ~:; 1.49 American Cheese
~,,...,,
.89 Sour Cream -""' ,.._ CoaJda,.,.,b .99 Salsa Dip ••• ....
~-·M~ .89 Marga:r1lle , . ...
~'--~-.c-. .. ,..,...._..,.... .. _ .. ....,. .. -·-·-.. ·-----. ='-_____ ....,.." ........ -~ ...... . ................... ._ ... ..._. ,.... °"' Oolt
.... o e rt n m 7 Cd
~ Ol l'UU·lto#JJ Ralphs Lemonade 11..: 3 /Sl
AM«ftMf v~°""'Ph'9a
Budget Gowmet ~ 1.29
•.
a t H
Fm~·~c';htr= l.79
Po.r'd8;'daonuts ~ l. 09
App etite Shoppe· "
IWtlf ~ IU,,.re.au 2 99 nuiey Breast·· --'= •
lelf /foclw 1ok1mJ OI 2 89 Bologna·· .r. .
--~ 2 Bartle•&Jaymes ... : .69
et'OftJU.. Vodka 6.98
Kotbeiebcimpagne 6. 98 .... ........................... -.............. ,,,.. _ ................ ___ ,,__..,.." ____ .. _ .. _,,_. __ ................. _ ........... ,.,_...,..,.....,. __ .,, ___ , .. ..,, ............ --
came albna with an announcement or ll .. &kash .. wine under ltS Taylor
California Cellan label a few
months back, and anno~nced t~e!r
intent to challen.ae Mill Creek s
trademark ri&ht1. rt ~to be a ease or New Yor\: ~rporate attorneys
against Sonoma farmers. Not a
pretty scene.
Whether yielding to pubttc
op1n1on, or simply deciding they
couldn't win the case, Scaaram bas
done the honorable thing by asrte-
ing to pay Mill Creek for the naht to
use the name.
Feuer i1 also Jicen1ina the name
from Mill Creek., and several other
wineries are also neaotiauna for the
nght to use the now popular term.
Hooray for "David" and a small pat
on the back to "Goliath," too,
whatever the reason for makin& the
settlement.
GOBBLEDYGOOK -You
ma y recall a few years back, when
"hght" wine first came out, some
news stories about the government
denying the producers the ri&ht to
draw attention to the lower afcohol
m light wines in advenisina
messages.
The ruhng was based on an
outdated regulation installed nght
after Proh1b1tion that prohibited
woducers from braS&ln& about
'high" alcohol content, but the way
It was worded, it banned any
mention of alcohol in advenisina.
even to the possibility of mention-
ing lower alcohol in this day of
interest an moderation. No one ever
accused the government of being
smart.
You may have noticed an recent
TV commercials for a product
called "Dubonnet Splash," a prod-
uct designed to compete in the wine
cooler market, that one of the ad
claims as "half the alcohol of
normal wane."
Since table wine is cons1dered to
ha vc 12 percent alcohol, one must
assume that Splash ha s about 6
percent alcohol.
Still, this is an alcohol statement
an an ad, and I wondered how they
were getting away with 1t.
A "Quick call to the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
the government bureaucracy that
stopped the alcohol clajms of hght
wine. brought an answer that one
might call "sobering."
A TF only regulated wine prod-
ucts contaanang 1.percent alco~QI or
more. anythanJ that below that asn 't
considered wrne and is therefore
regulated by the Food and Drug
Adm1n1stration, which has no rules
against alcohol claims in advertis-•
I ing.
Both of these entittes could solve
all this confusion by allowtnJ any
truthful statement to be made an the
advertising of any product. To do
otherwise seems a restriction of
First Amendment rights.
Fruity marinade
dres ses up lamb
LAMB KABOBS
1 tablespoon veae&able oil
1 tablespoon floor
1 ~ tea1poont Upt browa sagar
1 tablespoon e11rry powder
1 ~ tea1pooa1 pepper
11. tea1poon turmeric
tf• cup cider vlaegar
1 cap water
1 ~ poands bonele11 tender
lamb, cat la 1 ~-lacta cubff
i 1mall oDJoa1 (each abo11t 3
OWlcet), floely ctaopped
1/• cap dried aprlcot11 1Uvered
11• cap ralslD1
In a small saucepan heat 011: over
low heat stir in flour, sugar, curry
powder, pepper and turmeric; off
heat gradually stir in vmcgar and
water, keeping smooth. Cool this
marinade and mix with lamb,
onion, apricots and raisins; cover
and refrigerate overnight. lnscn
lamb on skewers.
Meanwhjle simmer mannade.
Grill lamb over charcoal. Aecom·
pany lamb and mannade with rice
and peanuts. Makes 4 servinp .
CAUJIODIA AMl.OW'l.."hlh and
IW'lftl has been 1 lwontc dcllcacy (Of
Malood low rs as wd 11 lhc local Ml
OUt rs BtcauM o(Chc dcmtnd (orltl
lncrtdtblt I.Nor the supply o( frtlh
abalorw ha• ~d f cwr the
cha net 10 optritncc frcah
abalone oom
GllUll> IOUl'IL''ll you low
IJrtlcd lobttcr Ida tty lhtt one Uttnf
lhHt1CUI lhc beckofllhc lhcl
.. ~ .. Pull Che meat OW6dc ....
wl not ckiad*lt It from Ole tn.I
tlael Tht mut wtll K'tUalv be lidlnC
on top of N lhcl P\aQe on a
rnodtf'MC tr11 lhcl Md« down and
•• wtf\ h<) bullotf hqu,ndy "
Onan,« Coa.c • OnJy Award WlMlni
s.tood b«aurant
~
(714) 675-2566 ..
l.oc tli.1 on ttw oc t1n front
e TOii from ltw ~ 8'1 h pn
'
Serving ~wport ~h, Cotta ...... Huntington leach, lrvlne, Llguna Beath, Fountain Valley and South Orange Couft'7
OHANGE COUNT Y. CALlfORNIA WEDNESDAY. AUGU ST 14 . 1985 2S CENT S
.. .
it e
1 tea tens
e on1n ates-in
Cout
A Newport Beach woman
received a special 40th
birthday gift: She won
$250,000 at a Las Vegas
slot machine./ A3
Callfomla
Los Angeles City Council
votes today on an ordi-
nance banning dis-
crimination against AIDS
victims./ AS
Nation
Researchers announce a
breakthrough in liver
cancer treatment./ A4
World
Vietnamese return the re-
mains of 26 MIAs to U.S.
authorities in Hanoi./ AS
lllnd&Body
Aerobics fans can now
dance at work, and their
bosses like it./81
Food
Cheese Is turning up in
new guises and as super-.
stars on the summer
party menu.C1.
Sporta
Angels lose, but they' re
still up by 2 over Kansas
City In American League
West./8 1
E ntertainment Having a ball ..
The world premiere of an
orlglnal musical, "The
White Arrow,'' hits the
target In Newport./ A 11
Thad Chilcoat, malting from Big Bear
Lake, 1eta a kick out of a beach ball on the
gruay area of Main Beach Park in Laguna
Beach. With eTen warmer weather on the
way, thl• kind of activity should becom1
~ven more popular.
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Food ·
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
A12
A3
84-5
86-9
A1 2
88
88
C1-12
It takes a teen to find where
alcohol is sold to minors
88
Police along the Orange Coast discover
teens their best weapon in crackdown
Play Review
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
A10
A~ A8
A9
A11
A3
93, 9-10
81-3
-AH
A 10-11
A2
By STEVE MARBLE
OttMO.., ..........
Liquor store owners may call it
· entrapment but police on the Orange
Coast are discovering that teen-agers
may be the best weapon for cracking
down on sales of alcohol to minors.
Using a husky, 19-year-old police
cadet, Huntington Beach polioe ar-
-r~sted-l 4-Hquor store employees-las
week for illegal alcohol sales.
"He went to 15 stores on two
different days and was sold beer at 14
of them," Sgt. Jeff K.init said. "We
IFu~turist believes
-home is where
wor,k ought to be.
As a self-described futurist, Jack Nilles often p0ndcrs the unlikely, the
fantastic, the seemingly absurd.
In the early I 970s, the physicist set ROBERT aside his work in the aerospace
industry to study an tntri1uina ques·
tion: "What would hapl)Cn if nobody Hy.NaAN
drove to work anymorer' """'
Think of it. Nilles J.aid. People
could live and wort in the same
community. Instead of stcwina in
tnffic Jams, workers would leave thear cars in the driveway. Instead of up wath mom and dad workina at
• exhaust fume choltina the kics. home, rather than bcina away for 10
$mOI would be reduced. to 12 houn each day.
We would be Jess dependent on the A man's home would not only be
world's limited cncray resource . his wtle, but his office as well.
With people workin& at home ft was thi bumina idea of how to
durina the day. residential mmt-:> unite the home and the workpl1ce
would drop. tbit spurred Nilles to launch his
thought we'd do 1t to see what would
happened and frankly, we were
SU rised.'' . ~ountain Valley police used an 18-
year-old in June to set up the arrests of se~n liquor store clerks an that city.
"Some of the clerks would giggle
and sell 1t to them." explained
Fountain Valley Lt. Richard Daven-
port af\er-h-~epartmcn.U s.wccp_.o{
31 retail outlets.
Kent Kelly. an Alcohol and
Beverage Control supervisor in Or-
ange County, estimated that more
Talcina his vision ve~I steps rttcarch.
funher. Nlllci llW children arowina (Pl ....... f'UTVIUST I A2) hta.rt.t Jack RW•
than half of the police departments rn
Orange County have conducted s1m1-
lar operations.
"The question of entrapment
always comes up," Kell y said ... It's
been put to the test in the courts more
times than you can shake a stick at
and the answer 1s always the same· It's
not entrapment."
Sttll. the ABC does not use under-
age tedns to check out .llquoc stores...or
bars because department officials
believe the practice 1s underhanded.
"We don't participate in a decoy
prQ&ram but we don't tell poltce
departments not to." elly said
"That's completely up to them "
King said to his knowledge, last
(Pleue ._ALCOHOL/ A2)
e a1
·1 do not want them herded like pigs
in a pen,· jurist de~lares in warning
By JEFF ADLER
Of IM Oe11J ..... ltan
A federal judge indicated Tuesda>
he may impose a population cap on
the number of inmates permmed 1n
the crowded Orange County Jail after
O«. I because he 1s concerned that
tbe inmate population again is on the
increase. ·u.s. District Judge William Gray
told attorneys represenuni the coun-
ty and the American Civil L1bert1es
L'nion durmg a heanng 10 Santa Ana
that he will issue a new order
.oncernmg the Jail w1thm a week. ,,,.
.\hhough Gra> did not sP'ccifyr
~hat that order miiht include, he'
..iuesuoned Jail officials dunng the
heanng about the potential effects of
an order thal would bar the Shcrilrs .
Department from accepungprisoners
arrested on misdemeanor charges if
there was no·bed for them.
(Pleue Me ll'fllA TE/ A2)
Coast oil foes
band together
to hire PR firm
Cities coordinating promotion.of views
for Aug. 31 visit by Interior secretary
By LISA MAHONEY
Of -°""' "°' .....
The coaht1on of Orange Coast ctt1es opposed to expanded ofT.shore-011
dnllin~ has hired a public relations firm to promote 11s views and coordinate
act1vi11es lcadmg to an Aug. 31 v1sll by In tenor Secretary Donald P. Hodel.
Denny Freidenrich offreidennch and Associates of Newpon Beach will be
the coalition's coordinator. 11 was announced Tue'Sda) Fre1dennch will
represent the citjes of Newport Beach.
Huntington Beach. Laguna Beach
and San Clemente in their effort to
reverse a tentative federal-level de-
cision that could put more 011 n~ off
the Orange Coast.
Under a compromise worked out
between the Interior Department and
Forum on oil
set Thursday
. certain California congressmen. the By ROBERT HYNDMAN
federal sovernment would of
The six 01ne-s.quarc-m1le tract'i are
pa~· of a larger offenng along the
California coast tentatively e'lemptcd
from an e'l1st1n g 011 dnlhng mora-
tonum covenng 58.1-lO !>(Juare m1k~
of coastline.
Coali11on members behe'e that
allowmg more oil rigs off Orangt•
County would endanger the
flourishing tounsm industr; b) re·
ducmg the coastline's csthetic appeal
and increasmg the chances of an oil
spill.
The coaht1on has orga011ed pubhl
forums and rallies 1n addlliun to
(Pleaee eee OIL FOltS/ A2)
Of -0..,.,. ..... tteff The "le"'pon Beach Cit} Council
~ill condu( ta puhhc forum Thursda}
night 10 d1c;rnss a tederal proposal to
.tllo~ uil dnll1ng oil the Orange
l ount\ coas1hne
The meeting will bt:gm di 7 30 pm
at C11~ Hall. 3 '00 t-.ev.pon Blvd
-\ "l-minute mer" 1ev. of the
~urrent propo'kll ~Ill tx· pre-.ented at
the beginning of lht• meettng. \81d
Councilv.oman Ruthe!\ n Plummer
.\ slide <,hov. and map\ will be used
to pinpmnt tht· ltx-a11on of SI"< n1ne-
m1k tralt<. prupo'>ed tor off'ihore 011
e\plorution
(Pleaee •ee FORUM/ A2)
Murder jury zeros
in on prison gang
By JEFF ADLER
Ot the Delly ...... llefl
The mner "'ork1ngs o1 a "'h1tt'-
supremac1st pn'ion gang. that 1)perall·'
both inside and outside < ahlurn1a
pnsons will be the focu" of .in< )rang.t•
Count} Supcnor Court 1un th.it
began cons1denng murder \0 harg1·'
Tuesday against a former gang nwm
her
Joseph Michael 0-Rourke r .1
TOrmer conv1cl ana memt•N or t1'1t
.\ryan Brotherhood. is charged '"th
first-degree murder and \penal , 1 r
cumstances m , the Oct K I"'
t.1dn&1rp1ng .ind murdt·r nl R11.hard
~ J\ nl' Hl'lt. ~4 ol L nng 8ea1.h
Hl'lt \\J~ o;hot ome in the.-kneecap.
lhl pm11n-gang.\ mark before h1<,
, ht'' I"' a' t'lli1" n 11pen "'1th a 12-gau~e
..a"ed·t)ll 'hntgun Helt "'as l(Jlled 1n
the purlun~ lot of I.he .l:f11011ngton
lkalh < l'Ot r,11ParkI1hraf\
<\'Row 1-l'' trial began Tue\da\
Jmtd ht'•l'' '>t't uni\ 1n \an ta A.na
u1urtlhl11\l' l'kputll'' \crccnt•d tho!>C
l.'TTTI'nn~ rhr r tnr tloor rounroom
\\tth nwt.11 Jt•tl"dOf'I to pre\C'nt
D<'''1hll 't'tunt' prnhlcm\ said
(Pleue aee DEFENDANT I A2)
Walking stick 's
back in h ands
of No. 1 owne r
By LISA MAHONEY
Ot!MO..,. ..........
No I Unnamed i\rC'hC'r l agun.i
Beach '!t ~lf-appointt"d greeter n-
~1ved a special dehvel) lrnm tht•
police department Tue\da\ -h1.,
walkana stick
"Officer Janet -I don't l..nov. her
last name -returned m) 'lid to mr
.. ~he dehven'd It down to lht'
comer," No I \aid.
The ll'ttttr ha' h«n v.nhout h1\
walk1n1 suck 1ncc 1t wa~ stolrn h) an
allcacd "tit1d:na.ppcr" a he Mood on
his faV'onte pcettt}a comet 11 the
intersection &f Pi 1f\c; Coa\t H1ah'Ml}
and Forest .\venue a ~tt( ago
unday.
.\s No I was do1n1 hi\ hit -
wavi na to <'a" and wtkom1n \1'\
1tors aJona \oa t lhahway -a yount
man arabbtd the 1\t<'k and ran At
least that's "A<l\at No l claim.,
~ll I llk'J a u>mpla1nl 8&a10!>t the
un1drn111tC'd \.Oung man and poh<'t'
Jt"lukd .itkr a prchm1na1' 1n-.c·st1ga·
11on to hold the 'itatl a\ l'\. ltknn· -1n
a po\\1hk o.Ht("f\ Ul\C' again.,t the
itr('('tcr
Pohtt· -.a\ thl· \\Hang man·, e~pl ·
nation tor 1.1kmg th<' \lick didn't Jibe
~1th 1'oo 1 ·, l\tO') He told ,an
1nW',flf&tm ~ cnnh"'--atcd I~ w~I
1ng \tlCk h<-t. U\t' the &recter U'Cd II tO
tnpa fncnd ofhl'I a\lht") ~I'(' J na
dov.ntov.n c onlc-rnc,1 that the allc•('d ptll)'
thief might ttuall be a v1et1m of No
I. Ptlhl't d«'1dw to kttp the u ack
untal the matttr wu resol~ed.
Pohcc ttll ht1''t no an•wcr '"
who did ~hat to whom, lnvc t1ptor
'tan \lnpworth ..aid Tu~ay. &1y
with more pres in C'nm he S&Jd
police o01c~al• d 1d<.'d lo •• o aM8d
(Pleue ... OUST&a / .UJ
. ..
-Oftlnoe C:O.St OAfLY PILOT/Wedneeday, August 14, 1985
DEFENDANT, PRISON GANG LINKED •..
hoaaAl
Deputy Oistnct "ttorney Tom
Gotlbals. -·
In his opcnil\I statement, Goethals
told JUrora th.at Heh was k.iUed whde
O'Rourke -known as "Linle Joe"
-and two olhupna members were
tryma to obtain information about a
drua robbery involvina O'Rourke·s
lfnend .
'-<>'Rourke. m1hnaand drc!Std in a
nservalive &raY suit 11 lhc tnal'
penina. faces the death penalty
because he is accused of kidnappana Heh durina the commissioo of a
murder.
A second defendant in the case.
il'trcnce Co irove. 35, of Brea, is
scheduled for tnal on Oct. 7 on a first· dearce murder charge stemmtna from
Hell'sdcath He has not been charged
w11h dcath·penahy special ctrcum-
siancts.
j A third man. Kenneth "Tree"
Waterman, who ha admitted he was
~sent when Helt was killed, has
been aranted immunity 1n the case
and 1s upected to be a key pros-
«:euuon witness. Waterman, a former
pna member now servina a l 5!)'ear
federal prison term for bank robbery.
never was cha~ in t!lc cnme.
Goethals said O'Rourke wasn't
characd in Heh's 1977 murder until
Dectmber 1984because1nvesu11tors
lacked corroborative evidence t)'1na
him to the cnme. That evidence 1s the
testimony of two other former 111\S
members, Michael Thompson and
tevc Barnes, who arc expected to tell
Jurors that O'Rourke admitted k1lhn1
Helt durina a tnecllllJ of the Aryan
Brotherhood's leadership COl)ncil.
Both Thompson and Barnes were
aana leaden and council members.
Defense attomey Roben ·Chat·
tcrtQn told Jurors th4t Thompson and
Barnes arc attempt1na to frame o· Rourke for the k1 II tnJ. He sa1d their
testimony wall be unbelievable be-
cause 11 was nearly 1mposs1blc ror the
aana's council meeuna to have taken
place behind pnson walls. as they
claim
Chatterton also said that Water-
man much more hkely was the one
who blasted Heh with two shotgun
blasts from close ranae
The prosectltor told Jurors that
when O'Rourke was released from
pnson he was directed by the ~na ~o
sell heroin 1n order to raise SS0,000
bail for anotherpna member, Danny
Cavanaua}l.
Llvina in vanous low-rent motels
alona a stretch of Pacific Coast
Highway in Lona Beach. O'Rourke
ran the heroin bperat1on. while h1s
11rlfnend, Claire Gardner. and others
sold the druas
OunnJ the summer of 1977, Gar-
dner claimed he was beaten up and
robbed Oocthal s.a1d. O'Rourke then
set out to find the robbers. tumana to
fellow aana member Waterman, who
then was hvma an Oakland, for
as 1stance.
Eventually, O'Kourke and Water-
man were led to Helt, who they
bchcved either had tnformatl()n con·
oem1n1 the robbery or knew the
robbers, Goethals said He was kaJled
when he no lonacr was useful.
"He (Waterman) was ready, w11l-
tn., able and even inclined to kill
Heh, but the defendant wanted 10 do
1t himself," the prosecutor said
Cheese taint cause
remains unknown
LOS ANOELES (AP) -Health
offictals say the listerios1s cp1dcm1c
that cl11med SS lives statewide is
ovtr, but oonccm remains high
because it is not known what caused
bacterial contamination in cheese
linked to many eatts.
INMATE LIMIT POSED FOR JAIL ••.
l'romAl
Gray did say he was cons1dcnna an
~er that the main jad population be
hmtted to 1,500 inmates. with no
inmates penn1tted to sleep on Jail
floors, after Dec. I. That limit would
qain be reduced be&inn ina April 1 to
1,400 inmates, he said.
"I do not want to run the Jail, but on
the other hand, I have a responsibility
to make sure my prior order is c-arried
out -11 was made seven years ago,"
Gray said. "l do not want to see them
herded in there hke pip in a pen. I
infer the donn1tories are not better
now, but worse (than dunna hu June
1our of the Jail)."
Following the hearing, Gray made
a 20-minute tour of the 1111 He later
u}d theJa1l 1ndeed was more crowded
tnan when he last toured It 1n June.
The most recent inmate count at
1heJail,conducted Sunday, reflected a
total populauon of 1,694 inmates. 39
of whom were for~ to sleep on the
noor, 1ccord1na to Lawrence
Grossman, the court-appointed
special Jill monitor.
Jail Capt George Ktna testified the
number of inmates foreed to sleep on
the floor averages about 30 anmatcs
per night.
ACLU attorney Richard Herman
told the court the Jill 1s more crowded
because Jail dorm1tones rated for S6
inmates arc holding I 09 inmates. The
1ud'e authorized a 90-inmate ca-
pacity durin& a June 24 hearing.
Asked to explain the sudden up-
!Uf'IC tn the Jill populauoo, Deputy
Countr Counsel Edward Duran said
the jai population decreased in June
only to increase an July and AuRust. as
1t has in each of the past four years.
.. Unfortunately, tl'lere ts no one
answer why there arc more tnmate
than there bas been,·• Duran said ... lt
looked like a real sure thin& to meet
that (July) date ... We had an increase
(of inmates) we didn't count on."
Ourina the June 24 hearina. Duran
told the court the county' ex~ted to
reduce the main jail population to no
more than l ,SOO by early July. He said
that tents ~&ed at the James A.
Musick Honor Fann in El Toro
would be suffic1ent to cue crowded
conditions in the main jail.
Gray fined the county SS0,000 in
March for failina to h.eed hia 1978
order to reduce overcrowdJna. Two
months la\ef, he ordered the county
to pay a SI 0-pcr-niaht fine for each
inmate forced to sleep on jail floor.
FORUM ON OIL DRILLING ...
From Al •
Cit)' Council member, also will
discuss the terms of the compromise
and what coastal c1t1es arc doing to
n,ht the prop..>sal worked out last
month by Cahfom1a conaressmen
and lntenorSecretan-Donald Hodel
'We'll open the· Ooor up for
~ucsuons and comments and
h09tfully 1dcnt1fy those people who
would hke to test1f} during Hodel's ,,,at." Plummer said this morning.
Hodel has promised to attend a
pubhc meeting 1n Ncwpon Beach on
Aug. 31 to discuss the 011 dnlhng
proposal and to ltsten. to people's
opinion on the plan.
"We want to let Hodel know that
~e·re .,not an isolated ara down
hcrr. Plummer said. "People who
live inland also depend on the
recreation at the beach "
The Ncwpon Beach m~tang fol-
lows a s1m1lar forum held July 30 en
Laauna Beach. Smee then. Laguna
Beach residents have formed volun-
teer groups to oppose the offshore oil
plans by staaina rallies and and
pct1t1on drives. .
Plummer said me hopes similar
efforts bqjn in Newpon.
.. We want to make people aware of
the pr:oposal " she said. "With
100,000 or 200,000 people v1s1ting
our beaches on weekends. there's a
gold mine for signatures."
OIL FOES COORDINATE EFFORTS •••
From Al
lobbying area congressmen and cit\
councils 10 oppo<te funher dnlhng.
Members are geanng up tor an Aug
31 public heanng in Newpon Beach
dunng which Hodel will listen to
citizens' comments about the com-
prom1St' orooosal
The group has r.used S 13.000 so far
to pay Fre1dcnrich and finance other
publicity ac11v111es. It has estimated 11
will need $25,000 to carry out its
campaign
Frc1dennch. an Orange C ounl)
resident for I 5 years coordinated
local fund-raisers for state schools
ch ief 8111 Hon1g's successful 1982
campaign His firm has been em-
ployed by the Newport Harbor Art
Museum and cable television com-
panies ~eking franchises in Santa
~na and Garden Grove, Fre1dennch
said
ALCOHOL SALES TO MINORS ...
From Al
week's sweep of 15 retail liquor stores
marked the fir,t tame an Huntington
Beach that the police department
used a deco} to tnp establtshmcnts
that sell beer wine or liquor to
minors.
He said 1n each case, the youth
walked into the store. earned a "ilX-
pack of beer to the counter and
bouaht at Wlthout bc10g asked for h1'
1dentificauon which clearl) showed
he was only 19
The youth was photographed
beforehand so there could be no
argument that he looked older than
hls years, Krng said
King said officer'! "itaked-out the
stores and watched each transaction
Afterward. poltce would move 1n and
place the clerk under arrcS'\ The
clerks. though.weren't actuall) taken
into custody
"We heard a dozen different c>.-
cuses." Kang said "Some said the)
had seen the lod before and knew he
was 21 Some said he looked 21 'iomc
said he was a regular customer
Everything tn the book "
The alcohol v1ola11on case~ are
turned O\ er to the A BC which has the
power to fine or e\Cn revoke a store's
license to ..ell alcohol A first ofTensr
can cost a liquor store S300toS1.500
1n fines. Kell} said
"There arc a lot of vanables · he
said 'Ir the clerk sold to a 14-year-old
that's com1dercd more senous than if
he sold to a 20-year-old. We alwa y ..
look to see 1fthere are an~ aggravating
factors
"Store\ have been clo~d on their
first offense and other have only been
fined on their fif\h ," Kelly said.
King said Huntington Beach may
beg.in using decoys are a regular basis
because 11 1s a cheaper and quicker
way of checking up on liq uor stores.
"The conventional method 1s
surveillance.'· he said "You sit
outside with banoculars and watch. If
)'Ou see someone buyrng who looks
young )OU stop them but 1f they tum
out to be 21 then you've blown your
cover and vour case ··
King admitted he has shght m1sg.iv-
1ngs about the faarnes~ of using
decoys
'Rut 11 sen e\ the purpose," he said.
.. , ou're not forcing an)'one to break
the laY., you're JUSt supply1na the
opponunll} "
GREETER HAS STICK BACK ..•
From Al
and release" the \tick to its owner
No I lacks a telephone and his only
fixed addres\ as Greeter's Corner. w
police sent cnmc lah techn1c1an Janet
vtlhan to return the staff to him
"lo I. who appeared in town about
three yea~ a~o to fill the shoe~ of
... Just Call
.. 642-6086
D•llJ Piiot
Def Ivery
11 Ou.erentMd
former unofficial greeter f tier Larsen
wa'i ecs1a11c about the \llck'' return.
Krnd <;nul\ ·had offered him other
Y.alk1ng \ticks. but none cou ld replace
·Mr Ste( k.'' he ~•d
"It''> part of me It\ an t•x tens1on -
a pan of the characttr •
No I's Jubilation at &ettlng the
111ck bac.k C' en led him to forgive the
"~oundrel" who took It
"I reall)' don't even hold any malice
toward to the young man. l just ho~
he leave'! me alone" the greeter said
"bit do you hke about Ille Dally PJ101? Wb8t don'& you llb? Call tlae
numbtr 1t ltft and yo ur me1 .. 1e wtll be rtcordtd, tran1crlbtd ud llelJvered
to lhf' appropriate editor •
The same 24-bour answerln11trvlce may be u1ed lo record letters to tbe
f'dltor on any topic. Contributor• 10 our Leu~ra column must Include tbelr
nam.-and telf'phbne number for verlflcallon. No clrculatlon call•, please.
Tell u• whal'• on )'our mind ~
Keren Wittmer
,,,..,.,. ~II• aor
Clrouletton 71•1M2-4m
Clnlffled ~taint 114/IG·11'71
AH ottMr d9p9rtment1 MZ-4321
M 0'11C• m 'hr It Cott•.-... CA MU 1"01 • llO• tMQ Cotti ...... CA t;l11
Frenk Zlnl
E ''
"°"mwy Churchman c ' f''
COCIY'o0"1 ... , o..-. ~ .. , ~ c.omo.,,., ~ -··-11··-~ .. ··•""Ill ~ ... ..,,. -.... , ....... ~ ... *"'"°"' ~ '* -Of~'ll'llO-
Circulation
T1l1p:tonee
•
AoMrt L. C1ntrell
Proou 1
M11neQ'"
Howard Mullen1ry
Advertiatnq D•••r. 101
Oon11d L. W1IH1m1
C1rcv1111 "
MlrtllQ"'
• PfOGJ ... Vine Cl f,e<j 0.tPCl?r
..
l
VOL. 71,NO.m
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tonight and T'hurlday
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FUTURIST AND TELECOMMUTING .•.
P'romAl
For if necessjty is the mother of
invention, perhaps imaaination is it~
father. And from that marriage, Nill•.
delivered telecommuung to the
world.
other phone companies, IBM. Com-can't sec. They fear they are los1n1
puterland and General Motors, are control. '
aivin& Nilles' idea a try to determine "They have to adjust to a ne
howsucceuful telecommuunawill be method ofcommun1catton," he said.
under real workaday conditions. "In tum, they are more productive
Telecommuting. says 1ts founder,
simply means working and com-
municating with the office w11hout
leaving home. Where roads were once
the only link. now the telephone and
computer connect the home and
office.
One oflbe most important aspects which as something busanesses can
of Nilles' plan is to reahze that-understand.''
telecommutmg is a new form -of-Nilles said managers may meet
business management. The tech-with an employee at the be&JnninJ of
nolOJY -the telephone and, 1f the week. hand out specific au1an
needed, the computer -arc readily ments, then await the results. Becausci
available. their meetings are infrequent, thd
Born in 1973. telecommuting ap-
proaches 1ts adolescence today with
busmesses readY. to 11vc 1t its first
part-time job. Nilles is heading a two-
ycar research project with nine com-
panies to sec if the scenario he has
1magjned works 1n the bus10ess
world.
But telecommuting will not sue-manager 1s forced to be more conc15C1
cccd if business managers do not wnh his or her instruct1ons and, 1n
embrace 11. tum. more producuve.
What telecommutin& entails is Such mceungs ehmanate the fol·
employees working at home or at a low-up conferences that are so easy to
nearby 'satellite office and com-conduct when employer and em·
municatma with their bo53CS 10 the ployce shatt th~ same hallway.
downtown office only when necess-With companies doing busanes~
ary. That communication can typi-over the phone Imes, executi ves
cally be done over the phone, or on mtaht be expected to be conoemed
computers connected by telephone about security and the loss of com·
"In the early 1970s, I was working
an the Los Angeles area but found
myo;clf commutmf. quite a bit to
Washanaton. D.C..' Nilles said dur-
ana a recent 1nterv1ew in Oranac
County. "But I kept asking my'IClf
why the heck I was traveling so
much."
lines. • pany secrets.
Occasionally, face-to-face meetings
and staff conferences are needed.
Employees could commute for those.
But whether those events occur once a
month or once a week, the amount of
commuting on the freeways to the
office would be reduced. Nilles said.
Nilles gave 11 some thought and
rcaltzed most of what he did at work
was on the telephone. He also realtzed
he had a telephone at home .
That's when the hgh1 bulb went off
above has head
With backing from the National
Science Foundation, Nilles started a
program at USC to investigate how
Lelecommuung could be used as a
substitute for transponauon.
Nelles and other researchers would
consider how to let one's fingers do
the walking and how one's computers
could do the talking.
But 1t was no mere academic
eiterc1se
"Despite the research aspects, l
knew that 1f something was going to
affect the world. there had to be
practical reasons for 1t to come
about," said Nilles, now the leading
researcher at USC's Center for Fu-
ture's Research.
Ten years later. Pacific Bell and
Gem
Talk
B~ .J. C'. H UMPHRIES
Ct;tifit>d Gt!mologist, AGS
E TATE JEWELRY
For employee , working at home
frees tllem to work durin& the lime
pcnods best suited to their pcr-
sonahtec'i, Nilles said. Some people
work better early in the morning.
Others thank more clearly late at
night. •
Despite added conveniences for
employees. Nelle'> knew that for
businesses to change their manage-
ment styles. he would have to prove
that workers were also more pro-
ductive at home.
Has studies say telecommuters arc
andeed better workers.
"When you work at home, you
have time for uninterrupted, deep
thouaht 1f you need 1t to solve a
probfem," Nilles said. "That's not
always possible in the office where
there arc plenty of distractions."
Even so, Nilles said. managers still
have fears of having employees they
"E•tate Jewelry" It commonly
tnought of aa being Jewelry left by the
death of a family member. Actually,
the term describes eny Jewelry being
sold by a mlddleman to someone
else. Ualllllly. estate Jewelry It eletSI·
fed according to th• period during
which It wu made. Jewelry that has
been In a famlly fOf some time may be
from the "Art Deco," period, for ex-
ample Thia was a period during the
1920's and 1930'1, when jewelry (and
other artistic cre1.t1on1 uMd In·
trlcate, aeometrlc c:fatgnt. Later, In
th• 194 '•· jewelry de1lgnt featured
large pieces of sweeping. elegant
curv.. and heavy uM of amall
diamond clu1ter1. Older dalgnt
(from the Art Nouveau period. for
lnttanee) go back to the turn of the
century To be clualOed H "An·
tlque.' jewelry mu1t be at least 100
year• ofd. What thould you do If you
have tome e1tate Jewelry that you
would Ilk• to Hll? Flrat, take It to a
reputable jeweler and have It •P·
pralMd. Y~ may want to conttgn It
to• )eWelet to Mii fOf ~·Any rate, If
you nave •tat• jeWelry•ln your/a.
... .ion, It I• a good Id .. to fin out
W'lat It la worth . You mey have a small
fortune tucked away In that old Jew·
etry boxf
• (
But the companies Nilles has dealt
with are not nearly as concerned
about the security aspects as are
Nilles and his fellow researchers.
"The)' tell me that it's hard to make
any sense of this information an bits
and pieces,'' he said. "It's probably
ea11er to b~y some guy lunch to get
an} secrets
More than anything. Nilles said,
the time 1s nght for telccommuung.
Pacific Bell conducted a rceent
survey that dctermaned from 30 to 3'
percent of small businesses in Cali•
fo rnia use personal computers. They
understand the technology and arc
comfortable with it.
In addition, the number of infor-
mation workers IS grow10g -three Of
five Californians are involved w1lh
collecting and organmn& 1nfor·
mat1on. Nilles said.
"Look at the 1obs around you. Look
at how many JObs can be done alone,"
Nilles sajd. "Do you really need that
face-to-face contact or can the work
bc done at home?"
Nilles is find1na that people prefer
to work at home sweet home. •