HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-21 - Orange Coast PilotTOllOMOW:
FAIR
Serving Newport Beech. Coet1 Mna, Huntington luch, lrvlnt, Laguna leach, Fount• Vllllly.., .._ OfMll County
C AUFORNIA NEDNE SOAV AUGU<;T;>I 1'l8S .''.•Cf NT':>
1 upervisors hiketheirpay22%
: oteiiieans salaries would be $55,000 ~next year ; ~ieder votes against raise
I By J£FF ADLER ary l IJ86.
0t1t1eOe111"'4twt Only Supervisor Harneu Wieder I The Oranee County Board of· voted a11unst the 22 percent pa)' hike
: Supervisors tentatively voted 4-1 which 1s scheduled for final approval 1 Tuesday to raise their $45,612 annual next week. I salary to SSS,000 begmnang in Janu-In a related move, supervisors also
Cout
A one-year moratorium
has been placed on all
requests for rezoning and
other amendments to
Costa Mesa's General
Plan./A10
CallfornJa
Tickets have arrived for
the state' a future lottery,
but residents must wait
and·watch New Yorkers
take chances on $41
m llllon Thursday./ Al
Nation
Black leaders take Issue
with Rev. Jerry Falwell's
calling Bishop Desmond
Tutu a ''phony."/AS
Reagan Administration
says testing antl-satelllte
weapons would push
Soviets toward nuclear
armsban./M
World
Assassinated Sikh leader
Is cremated In Ind la./ A4 •Saturday Matinee'
approved r11sci. for the county's each earn $88.046 per year.
elected office holders. top appointed County Administrative Officer
IJCOCY directors and department Larry Pamsh is not included 10 thlS
chiefs. The raises avera1e about 8.6 years schedule of' increases.. He was
percent. took over as County Adm1nastrative
Under the new salary schedule, the Officer in June at a salary ofS90,000a
county's highest paid employees will year
be Distnct Attorney Cecil H1eks, Wieder 5aJd she voted apmst
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and ra1S1ng her own salary or those of her
Environmental Management Agency four coUeaaucs because [no uniform
Director Murrav Storm, who will · method or formula for sttllng super-
v1soD' salanes was recommended b)I
the Grand Jury __ or the County
1 Adm1nmrat1ve Office
"Until we aarec on a melhod to
adjust (the supervisor's salines). 1
will be a no vote,·· Wieder explained.
"h's a matter of pnnCJple. We need
some son of process to set these
salanes. I can't give )OU an honest
answer on the (dollar) value of this
offic:e."
In a rcpon to the board on
cxccut1vccompensataon, P rrisb told
supervisors that the recommended
SSS.000 per )ear annuaJ sa~ 1s .. ,till
below LosAniclesandSan Dicao. bu1
more reflective ofthc responsibilities
of semna as a board member for tht
second laraest county Ul the itate ...
The Orange County Grand Jut)
also iss ued a repon 1h11 ytar Uf'&IDI
(Pleue eee 8ALAJlY /A.2)
Alleged
weapons
smuggler
sought
HB man wan ted for
trigge r sale tn Israel
misses start of t rial
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .... °""' ........
Electronics manufacturer Richard
Kelly Smyth rcmamed missing this.
week, forcing a fedcraJJud.JC to dell>
his tnal on charges of smugghng
atomic bomb tnwrs to Israel.
Meanwhile, fcdera.I 11tnts ha-.e
made 11 a top pnonty to find the SS.-
year-old Hunlln&ton Harbour man
wbo missed two coun appcaran~s
last -a.eek and failed to shov. up
Tuesday for the first day ofh1s tnal
Smyth. owner of a small electronics
firm an Huntington Beach. and his
wife Em1he varushcd more Lh3n a
week ago. sparling concerns that the
couple ma) have fled the counlr)
War between Coke and
Pepsi goes lnter-
contlnental./ AS
Local ~ Beach arttat Sally Strand created the water
colorpufel on,lnal from which th1a P-.aeant of the Muten
re-creation wu adapted for the atage al I.nine Bowl. Still-
llf~-~· from left. are Judy Jacbon. Patrick Berkoe,
WllllaJp WUkenon, Gaye Whltaey an~ Rorr ACaUera. The
Paceant of the Muten nm• nlChtlJ tJaroaCJl Aue. 29.
Ernest Sm)'\h. one ol their five
children. said he last saw tus parent~
Aug. 9 before they left on a Wttkend
tnp to Catalana I land
U .S Dlstnct J udcc Pamela .\nn
Rymer 1s ued a no-bail arrest v.arrant
for the elcctrontcl. engmcer last week
after~ failed to appear for an ~u&-14
hearing Hov.ever. Smyth's tnaJ date
remainctl scbcJuled for Tues4av m
ca~ he tl.howed up
lllnd&:Body
This station offers radio
Rx for those who are
alllng./D1
Irvine delays vote on smoking controls \\1th the lat~I ahsence R' mer
l')rdercd a surus mecun@ lor · nt\I
Monda\ 10 deodt v.helher to ~1·
pone or ~bandon Lhe tnal v.11hout
d1sm1ss1ng charge) he has alread)
ruled against tn-in& m\ th m ah'>t'nt1a
on the '0-couni indictment delne1t"d
Ma \ 16 b\ a tederal grand Jun
Food
Wine snobbery blamed
for sc~rlng consumers
away from buylng.C1 ,
Variations of creative
fruit tarts are as endless
as the lmaglnatlon.C1
Sporta
By PHIL SNElDERMAN
Of IM Oelf1 NM &119f!
Hoping to a aven a 2-2 deadlock on
a proposed smolong ordinance.
Irvine City Council members post·
poncd their vote Tue\day until all
local businesses have had a chance to
re\ 1cw the measure
City staff member\ toJa\ ,,ml
copies of the proposed ~moking la""
will be mailed to the 6.800 hcen~d
businesses in Irvine -at a cost ot
about $2.500.
The smoking ord inann.· will be
reconsidered by the cou n<.:1 I on <X. t X
Tuesday's dcc1s1on was madl· ahcr
council members appeared headed
for a deadlock Two members 1n-
d1cated the Cit} should impose new
\moking replauons on local bust·
ne'iscs. while two others leaned
toward encouraging business groups
tll develop \Oluntal) smoking poh-
CIC\
1 he l11lh wunul memher Mayor
DJ' 1d B.ikcr remo.,ed himself from
the \moking <l1c;luss1on and vu1e.
c;a>,ing h1'.> law firm works for the
tobacco industry
.\t 1s4'uc was a proposed cit}
'>making law modeled after an ordi-
nance approved earlier this year b>,
V-.e Laguna Beach (II} Couoc1l.
fhe mca~ure would proh1b11 smok-
ing in public areas such as eleva1ors.
aud1tonums. restrooms and indoor
service hncs such as m banks and
grocery stores Restaurants with ca-
pac11y of 40 or more patrons would be
required to designate at least one
quarter of their seating (e:\clud1ng bar
and patio areas) as a non-'imolung
area
If the measure 1s appro' ed. I rvme
empl oyers will have 90 days to
implement a wnnen smoking policy
Employees would be allowed to
designate 1he1r 1mmed1ate work area
as a non-smoking zone Smoking
would be proh1b1ted in conference
and meeting rooms and in at least hall
of the emplO}'CC lunchrooms and
lounges.
The issue did not d1 v1dc the four
remlrlning council members accord-
ing to their personal smoking
preferences.
'"I must state for the record that I
smoke and I smoke a 101... said
Councilwoman Salh .\nne "41ller
'"But I do not ha'e ·a problem with
1h1s ordinance ··
Miller descnbed 11 as '"rcs1nct1\e
and nccessal) ·· She said 1t might
e\en prompt her to quit smoking
Councilman David Sills sa1d he" a
non-smoker who does not permit
(Pleue 1ee SMOK.ING/A2)
.\ssl\tant l \ .\aorne\ \\ 11l1am
Fahe\ said Tur,d.i hl· \\Ill sec~ 111
collelt 1he SI LIO.OUU bond p.1\ted h\
~m\ th ""ho u\t'J h1 .. ( C•tu11 ( 1rck'
home a'> 1.'.0llateral Fahl"\ ..aid thl
hou~ \.·ould t'll' ~11ed 11 thl" bond I'
forfeited
Huntington HarhOur Real1~ th1\
morning confirmed a rcpon that th.e
v.aterfront home has been pul up lor
'-elk Hov.c\er agenh lrom the reah\
(Pleue eee M.ANHUl'fT /A2) The Dodgers go 11 ln-
nlngs before putting
away Phlladelphla./81 . '
A Colt baseball team
from Huntington Beach
has reached the finals of
the Colt World Serles./81
Badham still opposes offshore drilling
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Hor0900pe
Ann Landers
Mlnd&Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publlc Notice.
Sports
Televlaon
Weather
04
A3
86-7
0 5-7
04
06
08
02-3
C1-10
0 7
02
01
A8-9
~J
07-8
B1 -3
03
A2
congressman, coast coalition meeting
today to work together agai~st ofl rigs
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .... °""' ,... &IM'I
U.S. Rep. Robert Badham R
Newpon Beach. "cleared the 31r" al a
press conference Tuesda) O\cr h1'I
position on offshore oil 1!lsues.
Badham, who opposes dnlhng 1n
federal waters off the C,ahfom1a coast
sajd critkism dfrccted at him because
of his hands~ff approach to a
compromise proposal to aflow ex·
panded oil and~s exploration 1s due
to his beana "ab sed, misunderstood
and maligned" y some members of
the pre s.
"l have been mahaned and m14'·
quoted by elements of the prc!is." he
said wbilc mect.tn& wtth reporters a1
his Newpon Beach office
Badbam 111d statements attnbutt'<l
to him have a;iven local leaders and
the publk the incorrect 1mprcu1on
that he is not an opponent of off ho re
l>ll dnlhng
· M} pm1t1on. a'i 11 hac; been. as 1t
v.111 remain to be, as (to) oppo~
ofT'lhore dnlhng off Orange Count" "
Badham said.
The con.sressman said he will meet
Interior Meretary ~ drtll-
lng plan m.•Y be hard to aell.
SeePageA3
today with memC:: ofa coahtton of
Orange County coastal caues 10
'iuggest they work toeether in the H&ht
to keep Oii nas at bay.
Two key coalition members. Rot>-
ert C,entf) of Lquna Beach and
belyn Han of Newpon Beach. say
they are famahar with Badham's
po'i111on on offshore oil and welcome
him as an aUy
Han acknowledged bemecntical of
the tum of events that has resulted 1n
local c111cs having to fight to keep the
011 industry out of Orange C'o\Jnty.
but she said her crit1c1sm -whether
directed at Badham or other lcgJ\-
lator who may have kepi him out of
compromise negotiations -did not
result from reading press repans
'"I don't know 1f he's been mis-
treated or not by the press. It appear"i
we were JUSl not rcpre~nted (an thr
ncgouauons) and the press JUSl p1d,-
ed up on that "
Gentry stud be did not want to
cn11c1ze Badham's role in the com·
promise hammered out b) some
members of ihe California con·
grei.s1onal delegation and announced
July 16.
'Tm sorry he's not been hca\11\
involved in this 1 sue over the
yean Whatever the past has been
let's clear 11 and build a tron~r
coalition."
For the last four years. offshore 011
opponents have suecttded 1n aetllng
Br-0th er hood focus of murder trial
Member of ·ruth1ess' prison gang on
death penalty trtal in Orange County
"f or an AryAn brother. death holds
no fear,
Vensuncc wtJI be hts. throuah his
brothers sull here,
For the brotherhood mean JU '
what 1t implies
A brother's 1 brother. till that
brother die ." 1-
-ftWD IN CrHd o/ ct• ~ a,..,....,,
that operates in&ide and outsJde the
walls of Califom11 pri n notably an
the Ora.nts County and Lona ~ h
areas.
Oetcribcd U .. Nlhl " by Sl.llC
prason officials. the Aryan
8rothcrbood ha become the f ocu of
a deatb·penalty murder tnal that
bqan last ~k· in County
uecnor Cowt.
Tb Aryan Brotherhood is a
owy, ~hite suprcmad t prison
oant member J ph Mich cl
d· "UttJe Joe•• O'Rour'kc, 37, as beina
tned for the l 977 ho un layma ot a
... ,
Lona Reach dn.ia uKr believed to
have been involved in the robbery of
a 11na-run drua d1stnbut1gn nn.a.
Richard Wayne Helt wa found m
the park1na lot of the Hunllr\Jton Beach Central l ibTary on Talben
venue "ith hi chest blown open by
I hOlJun bla t fired It CI05C ranac.
H11 naht kneecap also had bttn
blown olT, the calhna-card that mark~ Heh u a v1ct1m of the. Aryan
Brotbtthood, accordtna to pro
C'<'UtOA.
The "f 1 believed to ha""e
formed unn1 the late 196()1 in n
Quentin and Fol m pnson1 to
proY1de white pnr.on inmat fety
pui ta ult whtlc promotina white
racum inside the state pnson wstcm. a~rd.ina to a t 978 state repon on
pnson Pna.I
Today, tfie POI ou.mbcn about
200 members and affiliates 1n 1de
pnson "4U1 and unoounlCd memben
on tM trcets Gana members. who someJuncs have the double lllhtn1na
bolt that marked "Adolph Ji1tlcr's
elile troops dunna World War II
i.atoocd on their MC art 1n\iolved
rinwiJy in drua trafficluna both 1n
out and of prison. uplained Al Reid,
I tUor pttial nt wtth lht $lilt'
Dqlenmcnt of omcllon SJ)CClll
~l unit.
But the p.na's scope of cnminal
1n"'olvtmmt also include nk rob-
Mesa, Irvine join drilli ng fight
By PHIL SNEIDERM.Alll
aad TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .... 0...-,,.... .....
Costa Mesa's and 1rv1nt'·s c 11~ council a IT J111nmg tht' dl11n 11111ppo'it' till'
propoSt"d conunuauon ol offshore oil n;plorat10n off the< lr:rn~l-t oun1' uM\l
Co'> la "vtesa's ( 11-. Coum. ii 'oled 4-1 on \.fondJ\ 11 h.id. he litiht "'
,."leWp<>n Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach 10 lr..C'ep 011 •IP .1v.,\\ tr.1m thl
Orange l ount)' coast
( ounc1lman Donn Hall rcluS<'d to \Upport tht• re"1lu11on, e\plJin1ne thst
he d1dn 't bchc-...e Costa Mesa should get tn\ oh et.I
In a related action. the Ir\ inc (II\ <. ounlil earl~ tcxia\ l£Uth11n11·J ~1J' •H
Da\ld Baker t04,:0n'e' the c1ty's oppcl'l1110n to offc;hore dnlhn& plan., .ti th
public heann1 'iCheduled Saturda)' . .\up. 'I at Ntv.pon lka~h <. '" Hall l \
&cretarv of the In tenor Donald Hodd" 111 hi.' h\tt'Oln!!-II• ._,)mmrnt'> on th(
federal offshort' 011 dnlhn& proposal
In me 1s a landlocl ed Cit\ but otli n ah ..aid 11' boundam·<. u 1uld
e\entualh eitlcnd to the ocean at 11 .innc.:~n a rxinion 111 thl'." uninu•rp<..,rJll'<l
coastal propcny bctv.een Newpon Bea1.h and Laauna Rca~·h
con&re'>s1onal appro\al tor a dnlltn~
morat6num that proled'I ~~ 140
square mile\ of Cahfom1a coac;thnc
.I Jm
ADLER
NEWS PERSPECTIVE
bcrin. ~1tkntial robbcri 1n which
victims arc a ultcd. narcotics of-fen~. poueu.1on of weapons and
UP,l<W"'ts and conltact murder.
'Thl'R \nchvtdual comm at scnou
cnmC'S on a m~or ~1c:· the 197
pnwn aana rtpon conduded.
"t would dcscnbe them a\ be1na
ruthless,.. id OU) Net n. a \pokes.-
man for tht \tate ~ment of
(Pta. ... UOTB&ll/ A.2)
Bui c;uppon for '-ontmu1ng thl'
moratonum ~a" m1,~10~ th11o H'ar '>C! •
(Pleue ~ BADHAll/ l )
Bandit beats
anti-crime
activist's son
8)' TE\ E tARBLE
()1_0.-,. .........
The \On ofa f ounuun Vallq miln
"ho luH-rusadcd lt>r 1n'-1ta~ pohrt
patrol\ aro und ht\ buMncun w&\
tnJumi late 1 uod•> b~ a bandit
anncd ~1th a tc~wdnvcf and a bttt
bottle. 1«0rd10 to police
Randall Wampler. a ckrk al hu
father' hquor 5tOl'l' near Male Square
Parle. •I , found b-. poh~~ lumped on
tht noor of the ''ort and blttdt
lrom the head
(Pl Ml8 VlCTDI/ A2)
.. ----------~
Al * Orange Cout DAILY P.tLOT/W9dMldly, Auguwt 11. 18815 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiim~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii __________________ __
.
SALARY HIKE FOR BOARD ••• Prom Al .
lhat 1upervisor1 receive hlJber
saJar\C . Su~rv1sors in Los Anact County
W'D $73,769 per year while San
Ditto County 1upervisors are paid
SS6,348 annually, accordina to Paf'-
rish and the Grand Jury repon on
supervisorial compensa'\ion, wlucb
was released last May. •
However, Pamsh uraod that the
board not move forward with similar
SI0,000 increases an 1989 and 1991,
as recommended by the Grand Jury.
If those raise were appr<_>ved, super-
V150fS would earn $7S,OOOannuaJly, a
6S percent mettasc: over their current
salary level.
In recommendina a S7S,000 an-
nual salary level. the Grand Jury
noted that supervisors now earn less
than 4S9 county employees. mclud·
ina top agency directors. departme~t
manaiers and. an some cases, their
own aides.
"Current com pensat1on levels tend
to d1scouraae applicants for tb1s
pos1t1on who arc not retired or
financially independent," the Grand
Jury rep0rt on ~urrv1sors' com-
pensauon conclude "Adopuon of
our recornmendauons will serve to
open the pos1uon to top caliber
people m mid-career who want to
make available their services to the
county wnhout suffenng ma,,or
financial sacnficcs "
Supervisors voted to immediately
increase the pay scale for agency and
dcpanment chiefs and elected office
holders af\cr Pamsh reponed that
"although Orange County 1s the
second largest m the state, most of our
agency-department heads rank be-
tween third and eighth in compensa·
llOn."
In expla101ng the salary d1spanty,
Parnsh cited the examples of county
Fire Chief Larry Holms and Sheriff-
Coroner Brad Gates. Both officials -
the former appo1n1ed, the latter
elected -run the largest depanmcnts
County officials' salaries
' ELBCl'ED AGENCY OR DBPARTMENT HEADS
Dtstrict Attoruer Cecal Hicks
Shenff'..Coroner Brad Oates
Tu Coll~tor-Treasurer Bob Citron
Assessor Bradley Jacobs
Auditor-Controller Steve Lewis Clerk·R~rder Ltt Branch
PREVIOUS
SALAJ\Y
SS0,496
$67,392
$68,182
$66,269
$60.570
S59,426
NEW
SALARY
$88,046 40
$79,019.20
$72,779.20
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
!Ary deferred
pendina
reorganiuton)
APPOINTED AGENCY OR DEPARTMENT HEADS
County Coun1el Adrian Kuyper $78,832 $88,046.40
Environmental Man-.cment Aaency $78,1 46 $88,046.40
Director Murry Storm
Public Health Director Rex Ehlina $73,112 $79.497.60
Public Defender Ronald Butler S70,S54 S79.0l 9.20
General Services A&cncy $71 448 S76.273.60
Dtrector Bert Scott
Social Services Aaency
Director Larry Leaman
Fire Chief Larry Holms
Personnel Oim:tor Russ Panon
County Probation Officer
Michael Schumacher
Community Services Aaency
Oircctor William Baker
John Wayne Airport Manaacr
Murry Cable
Oeril: of the Board Unda Roberts
Agricultural Commissioner
Bill Fitcben
of their bnd tn the county, yet earn
less annually than several' city fire or
polioc chiefs employed elsewhere in
the county, the CAO said.
The structural change m the salary
schedule is designed to correct that
inequity, he said.
However, in approving the revised
salary schedule, the board also opted
10 requitt appointed managers to
acknowledge they serve at "the sole
pleasure of the board."
$63,419
$62.878
$62,795
$64,91 7
$55,266
$54,434
$48,818
$48,693
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
S70,907.20
$58,988.80
S58,l IS.20
SS2,1 04
SSl ,979.20
The waiver aU executive managers
arc expected to sign to obtain the
salary increase requires they sur-
render their rights to appeal and agree
to be dismissed by the board "at any
time without notice, cause or hear-
ing."
The new salary structure is ex-
pected to remain in effect until a more
comprehensive pay plan, based on an
1ndividual'!1 job performance, 1s
drafted.
SMOKING LAW REVIEWED ••.
Jl'romAl
smokmg in ha!> law otlice. his home or
his car.
But Salls said he wanted to consider
a voluntaf') smolung policy program
that could be supervised by local
busmess assoc1at1ons. He also ques-
tioned whether Irvine's major em-
ployers were aware that the council
was cons1denng a new law that would
impose smoking regulations on them.
Coundlwoman Barbara Wiener, a
smoker, aJso said she wanted to
review a voluntary smoking policy
proposal presented by a representa-
tive of the tobacco industry.
''I feel uncomfortable dictating
company policy when 1 don't know
what the specific needs are," she said.
But Councilman Larry Agran, a
non-smoker, said be behcved the city
should impose the guidelines.
'Tm convinced a voluntary P.ro-
gram is not particularly worthwhile,"
he said.
BADHAM OPPOSES OFFSHORE OIL ..•
From Al
a compromise was "'orkcd out be-
tween the L S ~partment of the
lntenor and certain members of the
California congressional deteeat1on
that would. 1f voted rnto law this fall,
open up 1.350 square miles for
e'lplora11on "'hale extendmg the dnll-
1ng ban on the rest of the moratonum
area through the year :!000.
Reps Leon E. Panetta. O.Carmel
Valle;,. Vic Fazio. 0-West Sacramen-
to. and Bill Lo"'ef), R-Sa!l Diego,
were primary negotiators for the
congressional delegauo n.
Most of the ocean floor to be
offered for lease to 011 companies as in
'1onhern Cahfomaa's Eel Raver
Basin where residents welcome the
industry as an alternative 10 their
unstable lumber trade.
But 54 square miles also proposed
fo r exploration are off the coasts of
Newport and Laguna Beach -square
1n Badham's d1stnct.
Badham did not sign the com-
promise proposal or part1c1pate in
final discussions that resulted in
Orange County's exclusion from the
moratorium because of his oppos1-
11on to offshore 011 dolling.
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach,
Huntington Beach and San Clemente
fonned a coaht1on to block future
exploration. They have raised
money, hired a coordinator, con-
tacted legislators and other Orange
County city councils. and orgamzed
c111zen opposttion 1n the form of
rallies and pet1t1on dnvcs.
Badham, meanwhile, has been
trying to arrange a meeting between
the Wh11e House officials and the
state Congressional delegation to
discuss the compromise which he
believes 1s a poht1cal dilemma
Orange County as a politically rich
area, Badham said. Its Republican
base helped make Ronald Reagan
president and he doc\ not believe 1t
wise to offend them. Badham said.
The meeting may take place the
week of Sept. 9 after Congress
reconvenes. Badham said. He's
hopeful that Reagan h1msclfw11l meet
w1th the congressional delegation.
BROTHERHOOD FOCUS OF TRIAL .•.
From Al
Corrections. which carefully tracks
the five ma;or pnson gangs and their
member<;
But Nelson said the gang's in-
fluence has waned smce its heyday in
the 1970s. "The Aryan Brotherhood
1s not a ma;or d1srupt1ve force as
much as 11 used to be " he said.
The other ma1or pnson gangs arc
the Mex ican Mafia, nominally allied
with the >\ryan Brotherhood: Nuestra
Familia a second predominantly
Hispanic gang, the Black Guerilla
Fam1l;,. and the Cnps, thc newest and
largest of the pnson gangs, which
draws its membership primanly from
the ranks of black Southern Cah-
forn1a strect ganp,s Nelson said
1 he Aryan Brotherhood requires
that ats members be while and
hardened prison veterans, sometimes
recruaung from the ranks of Jailed
outlaw motorcycle gang members.
ltivesugators lookmg into the gang's
act1v1t1es also fo und there 1s a close
affiliation between gang members, us
sympathizers and while supremacist
orga01zat1ons outside pnson walls.
Membersb1p and leadership an the
gang arc granted to tho~ persons with
"strength and cnm1nal ab1hty," often
those wtth a great propens1t;, toward
violence. according to state pnson
officials
"A. strong ant1-au1honty theme 1s
commonly demonstrated by the
membership.'' the report on pnson
gangs add<.
Just Call
642-6086
Instead of a membership hst, the
gangs photograph themselves and
circulate the photographs among
fellow gang members in other jails.
That way, gang membership can be
confirmed when inmates arc trans·
ferrcd from one pnson to another
In the O'Rourke case, Deputy
D1stnct Attorney Thomas Goethals
has told;urors O'Rourke was running
a gang-sponsored heroin distribution
ring on the streets of Long Beach to
raise bond mo ney for gang mem ~r'
DanAy Cavanaugh. w~ was in
federal custody on bank robbery
charges.
True to 1ts credo tt\at "for a wonhy
brother. no need 1s too great," gang
members· on the outside often en·
gaJcd in 1lhc1t or illegal activities to
raise bail money for their jailed
brethren. Goethals said.
In fact, after the drug nng was
robbed, O'Rourkc allegedly turned to
fellow gang members for help 1n
tracking down and punishing the
culpnts. the prosecutor said.
The key wnncss in the tnal as
expected to be Kenneth "Tree"
Watcnnan. a fonner gang member
now held in protecuvc federal
custody, who said he flew down from
Oakland to help O 'Rourke find the
culpnts and admits he was present
when Helt was shotgunned to death.
Other witnesses expected to testify
dunnJ the trial -under heavy
secunty because of gana-relatcd
threats on their lives -include
former gang members o nce
numbered among the leaders who sit
on the Aryan Brotherhood's council
They arc expected to tell Jurors that
O'Rourke admitted k1lhng Heh dur·
mg a council meeting held at" the
California lns11tu t1on for Men at
Chmo dunng the late 1970s.
Already. one former gang member.
Stephen Barnes. has testified that the
gang ordered his father murdered in
rctahat1on for his rcnounCtnJ his
membership and becoming a Wltness
1n other tnals against other gang
member~.
In both state . pnsons and local
county JaJls, officials attempt lO
segregate Jang members according to
thetr affihauons to m1nim1zc prison
gang violence. Aryan Brotherhood
gang members, for instance. arc sent
to either San Quentin or Folsom
pnson when POSS1ble. Nelson sa1d
One reason for keeping the P,ngs
segregated is that they keep long 'hit"
lists naming members of rival ga.nas
that have been marked for murder
Tbc need for kecpmg the gangs
separate 1s pointed out by thf. 1978
rcpon on pnson gangs, which docu·
mcnts the killing of a Nuestra Familia
gang member marked for death by the
Mexican Mafia:
"The contract was filled by two
Aryan Brotherhood members ap-
proximately one hour after the victim
was transferred to the California
lnstituuon for Men," 1t say5.
Whal do you like about tbt Dally Pllo&? Whal don'l you like? Call lbe
number al left and your mtua1e will bt recorded, transcribed anctdellvtred
to Ult appropriate editor.
Tbt 1amt U ·bour u1werln11ervlce may bt used to record lettera to tbe
editor on any topic. Coatrtbuton to our Letttn column must Include their
name u d ttlepboat number lor verification. No circulation eal11, please.
Tell U1 wba1'1 un your mind.
ClrculeUon 714/M2-4333
Detty Piiot
Dell very
la Queranteed
~A,.~~E Daily Pilat c i. .. lfled ectvertl•lno 714/M2-Y?I
All other department• 142-4321
MAIN OPPICE
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ClrcutaUon
TtltphoMe
Kar~ Wittmer
General ManaQe'
Frenk Zlnl Aoaemery Churchmen
f d1tor O"ltroOer
Robert L. Centrelt Dontld L. WIUleme
PtOdVG1•0n C•rculat!()l'I
Manager Man..-ger
Howerd MuU.nery '-VOY ai.vtn•
AOYtrtlS.4ng [)rec1or C.tu lied O.recaor
l )O WWI lley II Cc. 11 ..._.. ~· ...... •Odf-"'' 1~00 Cool• .... _ C'JI i28'e
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"-OI C.OOJ•>OM C#r••
VOL. 71, NO. 21S
•
Summerweatherdue ·o return
Summer tems>ef'tur11 are pPeeted to rttwri to Sout,,.,.n
Callfi>mla and laet Into the wtttc..-id, u warmer temperatur• rtvwM the coo..., Mather of the paat ftw d1ye, fortca1t.,.. uld
today.
The aunriy 1k1 .. wlll ,.,-naln. Ind clear 1ki. art prot-ottd for
tht mountalnt 11\d deMrt•. Mid tht Nauonal WMthtw &etv~.
The watmer temperaturM are the reeutt of a htgh preuut•
aystem o~ SoYthwn Ctllfornla
In thtcoutal areu, low cloud• ere expeoted along the coaet late tonight and Thurlday morning, OthtrwlM It wlll be fair
through ThurMSay with hlgha In the lower 70t at tht t>NchM and
,,.., 90 In lht warmer Inland arMI Lowa of 57 to &7 ~,... wtr• predicted.
Tht mountain r9glon1 were ax~ed to be fair through
Thu rid av
U.S. Temps I.It\ .. ~ ., ..
I.~ 74 IO
~ IO .,
1'4191' IOW fol 24 ~ 10 t UI\ MIMI! hec:ll .. IO
M..._..M u St "' L• Ml)lt4t '-ut • M Alffny IO '° Halllvft .. IO 93 At~IMM 14 ti H.-~IMM to ,~ All\W llO ll .. ...... ---tot.. Yotll to 17 AhOl'tot• 57 41 HotiOlll,Ve 17 .,, ~•O('lrl "9N ''"f ' ._ ... •'~A• AllN\ta 1 1 70 Honfl Pl•ll• IO .. Aoantic City to 71 ()lcl9/IQIN C.I) ., 74 ~Ill 102 71 Ofl'\tlla 71 14 hlt~mot• u .. °'1eflclo 12 73 ltrmlflQllMI .. 70 ea .. Pl\Nedelpllta ••-Ck 76 ,, ,.._,,. .. 11 Calif. Temp• loita 16 " Pitta~ 72 67 loaton to u 1'0<1 ..... 74 M lul!alo 73 N PortlMld. 0. 73 6A Hlgll, 10i1r mt 24 "--~ at II ~__,. et 67
CMP9' 11 ~ SN\ 8ell'IWOll>O 90 17 ,.,~ IO to am . CNiti.ton,ac 8' 76 =~1y 17 .. llfllUltetlelcl ,, 93 &en Ch0t ... " 67
Chforteaton.W V 72 .. 11 1111 f:urella 94 51 aan.io.. IO IO CllWIOll•,N C 97 70 R<lno 17 48 ,,MllO 13 116 ltnle Ane IO IO =:"" M 11 AICll'lll\OllCI t1 12 ~ at 82 hilt•°"'' 70 64
71 112 81 lOUilt 11 12 ~ 81 ... T .,_ Ve.liey ,, ,,
~j 74 56 St~Tlt"'P' n 77 72 6t V-lle Vly 93 .. ea...-s 70 IO ..., l ••Olty ... ,, "-~ .. 112 ~°" 11 " Sen AMOlllO 17 T7 fted lluff " 13 eo.-d.HH It 11 ,.,, .NMl,I' " ,, n "9dw004 City Te 114 o.1 .... ,1 WOt1!\ 106 74 S..11 .. . .. 61 Alllo 87 48 Oeytofl 74 56 = t7 76 leoi-IO 88 H D911• 12 IO 71 '° .... " M Tides O.Molr\M n IO Spoil-16 ... .... °"VO 74 ... o.trOlt .. 5t ~ n .. 1611 FtencMoo .. at OUlutJI .. " Topeka 18 a Senta ..,,,.,. 73 51 TOOAT
lll'MO .. ., T-IO 73 8\0eliton 97 at Fnl lllgll 1 13 a m 43 ,..,_, 84 41 TlltM .. 73 Mlgll, tow lor 24 "°"'' *'4tnQ II 5 pm '"''°"" 1 OT a m 1.4 ,.,.go .. M hool)(1~0" , 4& 0,., a.• WUl!lnglOll .. 88 fUMdey . "'eM•fl .. 47 Wlohlta 71 Ill llel'llOW 102 94 Secoft(l IOw 8 42 Om 12 °'""' Rec>IO•
., llo3 WHl< ... 8'n9 79 M Big ..... 12 37
Ot•t '•* 75 " 8lltl09 12 •2 ntuf!IOA't
Hentord 7. .. ~ 106 11 F1tal FWQll 2 41'111 u ....,,. IO 51 Extended Catflllna • 1 1 fltel low T•lla.m 2,
Honolulu ., ,. LongllMcll ,. .. 8.oonO lllQll 2 42 om 55
l'loue10ll " 74 MOlltO'M 11 SI Second IOW 10.20 om .., oa
llld~lt I: ~ a-l8t9 "'°"t Ind momno '°"" MOlllWfY •• M Sun Nit 1oday ., 7 33 p m • ,, ...
JllOklOll,Ma 12 cbide Ftldty tlv~ ~. otMr· M1 WI'-' n eo Tllureclay al & It • m en4 Ml• ag.in '1 JIOll-vllle 12 74 ..... fair tlV'OUGll WMllend '""" ~--. 70 IO 7.32 pm JI-. 52 47 ~ renglno ll'orn tM 70lt -tNt Ol'otflt!O " .. M_, NII IOOr, 11 10 58 Om ,_
K-Clty 7t 12 ~toto.-toe lll•~lrlllnd p...,, lptinOI 104 71 Thut9day al I 18 Om and NII agatn al
Ult Veoae 1~ Tr ~~..-tl)'NtoU 1 ~ M 67 11 37 pm
MANHUNT BEGINS FOR HB MAN ...
P'romAl J ·
firm would not co mment on the
house or bow long 1t had been on the
market. The five-bcdroomhome is
listed for $925,000 tn a local real
estate c-atalog.
Prosecutor Fahey refused to dis~
cuss the scope of the manhunt. but
said, "There arc a number of agents
out lookmg for him. It's a case that
has a high pnoraty wuh the U.S.
Customs Service."
Smyth. president of M1lco Inter-
national Inc .. as accused of 11lcgall;,
shipping 810 krytron switches to the
Heh Corp. in Tel A VIV without
special approval from the U.S. State
Department.
Whale the t1mmg devices can be
used to tngger nudear weapons. they
also have non-mahtal) apphcataons.
such a'i for oil dralhng equipment,
a1rpon strobe lights and photo-
copying machines
Smyth faces I 5 counts of' 1ola11ng
the Arms Export ( ontrol Act and IS
counts of makmg talse statements on
go"ernment sh appmg forms between
January 1980 and mid-December
1982
Fahey said each illegal export
charge cames a maximum penalty of
two years imprisonment and
$100,000 fine. A five-ye.ar jail
sentence and SI0,000 fine is the
maximum penalty for each false
statement charge.
Fahey said he would be per-
iodically updatina.Judgc Rymer on
t.he search for Smyth, who pleaded
innocent on the grounds thal he
didn't know a special license was
needed to sell the krytrons to the
Israeli company.
Heh Corp. owner Aman Mitchan
mamtams the krytrons, small glass
bulbs with four colored wires
ponruding from the bottom, have not
been used for nuclear purposes.
Defense attorney Alan Croll as well
as Smyth's relatives said they haven't
heard from lhe misstng couple, ap-
parent!;, last seen by son Ernest, 29.
"l have no idea where they are, I
JUSt hope they're OK," said Ernest
Sm>1h. in a bneftelephonc interview
last week.
The Associated Press quoted Fahey
as saying that he was told by family
members that Richard and Emilie
Smyth left for Catalina Island on their
30.foot sailboat. However, the bott
was docked behind their house this
week, whale Ernest Smyth said his
parents took a commercial boat.
Fahey claimed T ucsday that he was
misquoted. He added that, "a lot of
family members arc telling a lot of
people different thtnJS."
Smyth was vacationing with his
family ond attending a North Amen-
can Treat¥ Organization conference
in The Hague, Netherland!> "'hen
U.S. Customs agents announced the
indictment.
A member of NATO's comm11tee
on aerospace auadance S}stems.
Smyth holds a government top-secret
security clearance and was recent!>
honored by the U.S. Air Force for
mcritonous service
He as a lecturer at Universlt) of
Southern California, where he re-
ceived his doctorate an engancenng..
and he was part of a government·
sponsored scientific excursion to the
South Pole.
In earlier interviews, Harbor Mu.
nic1pal Coun Judge Bnan Carter, a
board member of Smyth's company,
described his associate as an "honest,
moral and patnot1c guy."
Carter said Smyth, who faces up to
I OS years 1mpnsonmcn1 and S 1.6
million in fines. was depressed by the
indictment but vehement about
clearing his name
VICTIM BEATEN BY BANDIT ...
Jl'romAl
Wampler whose mother thwaned
a robber last year at another of the
family's busanesse!'> near the county
park, as lasted in stable condition
toda> a1 Fountam Valley Community
Hospital.
Police said thev were unsure 1f
Wampler was attacked because he
tned to foil the robbery.
Curtis Mack. 25, of Santa Ana has
been charged in the 1oc1dcnt He was
arrested near his home on suspicion
of armed robbery and attempted
murder. He 1i. being held at Orange
County Jail.
Clydc Wampler the v1ctun's
father. said his son was stabbed w1th a
screwdriver, hit on the head with beer
bottles and avoided further injury by
fighting off the assailant.
According to police, the robber
cntercd Mile Square Liquor. 16567
Brookhurst St., shortly alter 7 p.m.
and attacked Wampler, 25, with a
scrcwdn vcr.
''The guy apparently was swinging
around wnh the screwdnver and he
(Wampler) put up his arms to defend
himself. He was stuck a couple or
!Imes," explained Capt. Bill DcN1s1.
"The suspect then grabbed a bottle
and hit Wampler over the head," he
said.
"From what I've been able to
determine, the suspect is known by
the victim. He was tracked down
quickly because we had a name to go
on." said DcNisi.
Wampler's father, who owns sev-
eral businesses clustered around Mile
Square Park, has previously com-
plained to pohce about the need for
mcreased patrols.
"The police have been better but
it's stall not enough," said the busi-
nessman today "You get out-of.town
types from all over the county at the
park and that tends to cause prob-
lems."
The businessman's wife, Helen
Wampler, was confronted by a robber
last year as she worked in the family's
Mile Square Gift Shop.
Though the 6·foot tall bandit
claimed he had a gun. Mrs. Wampler
reportedly PllShed him out of the
shop, telling ham to "get lost,"
accord mg to a witness.
When the man protested and said
he needed money, Mrs. Wampler
reportedly replied, "No. you don't
need our money."
Police later speculated that the man
didn't actually have a gun. However,
they said in most cases 1t 1s good
advice to c:omply
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Pygmy goat show
at C-air grounds
A two day PY&mY aoat show will be held at the
Oranae County Fairarounds in Coua Mesa on
Saturday and Sunday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
There will be a PYamY aoat competition whioh
will inoludc oateaories for bucks, does, and wethers.
Awards will be presented to winners. Grand
champions will be put on display and entries from
across the country wiU be shown.
Admission 1s free and open to the general
public.
Newport bike tour .et
Tbe Cuy of Newport Beach and the Bicycle
Tralls Citizen's Advisory Committee arc planning
the first annual Great Newport Beach Bicycle Tour
for Sc{>l. 22.
81cychsts will meet at 9 a.m. at the Newport
Beach police station on the comer of Santa Barbara
and Jamboree, where a demonstration of bicycle
safety and laws will be conducted. From there riders
will travel five miles along the Back Bay.
The purpose of the tour is to promote awareness
of the bicycle trails that exist within the cn y, and to
hi&hlight bicycle safety and traffic laws. The tour is
open to all aaes. and 1s free of charge. Refreshments
will be available, and members oflocal bicycle clubs
will be on hand to answer questions about the1t
activities and membership.
JU.Ullng work•IJop et
The City of Irvine's Performing Arts Program
will sponsor a juggling workshop on Tuesday, Oct. 8,
IS, and 22, at Turtle Rock Community Park, from 7
to 8:30 p.m.
No experience is needed to join but participants
must be at least eight years old. The cost is $20 for the
three classes.
Rcgistrauon will begin August 31. For further
information, call 660..3928.
Crl•l• IJotllne volanteen
The Laguna Beach Free Clinic is seek.mg
volunteers for its 24-hour crisis hotline. ·
Volunteers will answer calls to the hotUne;
providing crisis intervention in the areas of rape,
su1c1de and domestic violence. Hotline workers will
also refer caJlers to emergency aid and for on-going
counseling.
The clime provides volunteers with 40 hours of
training. Classes arc held on Monday and Tuesday
evenings at the clime, 364 Ocean Ave.
Fun.her information is available by callipg the
clinic at 494-9429.
Bereaved parents to meet
The Bereaved Parent Auxillary Group is
sponsoring a· day-long conference entitled "Gnef is
Okay," on Saturday, Sept. 7. at Orange Coast
ColJege.
The conference will touch on problems caused
•by the loss of a child or sibling, the loss of spouse
through death or divorce, and the loss of a parent
through agina or death.
The fee 1s $30. For more informauon. call
838-7377.
Pareatb:Jg claaea
A four-part series on parenung skills t>egins
Sept S at the San Oemente Community O:nter.
Sponsored by San Oemente General Hospital the
series featured author and pcd1auic1an William
Sears, M.D~ and Glen K.au, M.D.
Each or the programs 1s free and runs from 7 to
9:30 p.m. Registration 1s required and may be made
by calling Lori Drew at 661-4448.
Day at the races
The Exchange of Saddleback Valley wilJ holds
its I 3th annual Day at the Races on Sept. 8.
Chartered buses will leave for Del Mar Race Track at
noon from the Mission Ve1jo National Bank
building on Puerta Real off Crown Valley Parkway.
Information is available caJling 945-0137 or
859-9133.
Wedne8day, Aug. 21
• 7:30 p.m .. Coa1t Commwty Colle1e Dl1trtct
Board of Tn11tees, Disuict Board Room, 1370
Adams Ave., Costa Mesa.
Po ucE Lo e
Orange Coat DAJL Y PILOT /Wedrtnday, Augu.t 21, t98S * A3
Council leaves mall bridge hanging
By TONY SM \IEDl\A
Ot .. Dlllr,... ...
Developen won't have to build a
pedestrian bfidac tn order to expand
bullock'• department 11ore at South Coast
Plaza.
But they will have to tudy potcnual
u·1.mc problems an1ina from the expansion
aJ well as from a mall annex under
construct~oo across Bear Street, the Costa
Mesa CitY. Council dedared Monday
Council members unanimousl)' ai>-
proved a conditional-use permit for the
plan to add 90,300 square feet and a two-
level park.ing structure to the three-story
Bullock's store, one of the mall's major
tenants.
However, the council tagged on a
Helping to find Laura
provision that pcdc<itnan and veblde
traffic be studied at least one year after tht
upaimon is opened Ocvclopen musr also
submit plans to remedy any trafflc prob-
lems or safety hazards to pedestrian
Plans for the expans1on ~re staJlcd lasi
month by duqreement over whether
Bullock's and mall-owner C.J. Seacratrom
& Sons should provide a brid,e Unkina
South Coast Plaza to the unfinished annex
Seaerstrom was prcvtously ordered by
the council to submit conceptual plans for
the bridge, as well as for another overpass
on Bristol Street and a wallcway throu&h the
maJJ parkina lot. Whale Se,erstrom de-
livered the desiP.ts. no deadline wa.s set for
bu1ldina tt\e bndaes and concourse
Planning commissioners deadlocked 1n
July over a sWT rte0mmcndauon to
nqwre \hat developers at ltast add the ~r trttt bndac to tbe Bullock's proJcct. Ho•evcr, the commission later approved
the e•panaion and dropped the bridit
rtquircment after ti"• plaonina staff had a
cha nae of bean.
In the latest 1WT report, planners said Jt
would be premature to build the walkway
now because pedC$trian patterns between
the main mafl and South Coast Plaza 11
have not been establJshed.
The bridae would be bwlt lO encourqe
shoppers to walk rather tJ.an dnve across
Bear Street while travelina from one mall
to lhe other.
Staffen said the bndae could be built 1n
the wrona place 1f ll i• reQu1red now
-
Don Wllll•ma, circulation man&Qer of the Dally
Pilot, preaenta a check to "1Ute and Patty Bradbury
of Huntlneton Beach for the fund to help fin d their
4-year-old daqbter, Laura, who wu kidnapped
lut October. Pa.rt of the proceed.a from Dally Pl.lot
aubacrtption• are donated to the Bradbury fund.
Hodel admits off shore oil plan
harder to Sell than he realized
From 1taff and wire reports
Interior Secretary Donald P Hodel said
Tuesday a proposed comprom1~ on 011
and gas explorauon off the California coast
may be harder to sell than he'd first
thought.
Speak.In!' in Aptos, his third stop of an
I I-city scnes of town hall meeungs, Hodel
promised there would be no dnlling off Big
Sur, Monterey Bay, the Farallon lslands.
San Francisco Bay or Point Reyes even if
the proposal falls apan.
fercncc. sa1d he will not offer up an)' tracts
in h1sdistnct. He said 1fthc agreement falls
apan; he would ao back to Congress
fighting for moratonums on the enure
coast.
State Assemblyman Sam Farr. [)..
Monterey. and the enure Sant.a Cruz
County Board of Supervisors spoke in
suppon of the agreement at today's
meeting.
Hodel will vist Newport Beach Aug. 31
to gauge Orange Countv's reaction to the
plan The pubhc meeting will start at 9 a m.
in the council's chambers at City Hall
Most Orange county rcs1dents appear to
oppose more drilling off the Orange
County coast. Four coastal c1ues have
organized opposition to the lntenor Dc-
panment compromise.
The pact. which sull has to be approved
by Congress, would bar explorauon and
drillina in 56,800 square miles of ocean
water on the outer continental shelf until
the year 2000.
Addition lly, co11ncit memben uprellled
tame doubt Monday that an ovai-u may
be the ansv.ier 10 potential pedestrian
problem•.
In olher act.ion, the counal dedded
Monday to ettate a cuy n~ WI
otfk1als bol)e wiU broldtn rdation1 witb
f'CSldenta Council mem btts., votina 4.1,
•tressed the qu.a.nttly mailer would not be
uted to promote thcmsel\.·ei. but to infonn
the ~mmumty about city is.sues and
ICtJVIUet
Councilman David Wheeler araued that
the newsletter, co tina more \ba.o SS,700
per l!sue, could easily be abused by the
council
However, the letter Will be rqulatcd by
the city manaacr's office as a precauuon
Wife says.
doctor
didn't
kill sel-f
Wife of pathologist
wants new probe
in shooting death
By i•e AtiOelated Pl'ftl
The wife of an OranJe Coun!y
pathotoaist said she will call for a second
1nvesupuon and medical opm1on on tus
shooting death, even as police re-cxamme
their first invcsuption.
Ins Fischer said she does not beueve her
husband. WalteT, committed suictde, as an
autops) concluded. However, she said she
will not seek a second autopsy.
Fischer was found m his car tn a vacant
park.In& lot JuJy 8 wnh rwo buJJet wounds
m his hean.
Police refused Tuesday to make pubuc
their reports on Fischer's death, aJthou&h
Chief Deputy Dtstnct Attorney James
Ennght said bis office told police Capt.
Jerry Graves to release the information
Friday. ,
.. "We are sull researching and invesngat-
>n.&Jhe pubuc's access to the records. SQ we
will not be releasing any information unul
we are through," Graves said. "And I'm
SOIT) 1fth1s has caused any inconvenience
to Mrs. Fischer "
"We will also be ask.mg some quesuons
internally about our own 1nvcsup11on .
quesuons about pan of 1t," Graves sa1d.
bu1 declined to elaborate
He wd he could not comment on Mrs.
Fischer's allqauon that Fischer dJd not lull
himself.
"We understand her concerns. But ngbt
now we wouldn't even allow her to have a
copy of our rcporu;· he S&Jd. "We arc
concerned abou1 exposure and the unwar-
ranted mvas1on of pnvaq "
Mrs Fischer and Walter Goode, a
pnvate 1nvesnptor httcd by the family
sa1d the} also want 1nformauon on a
leather bnefcase conta1rung man) of
Fischer's personal documents and two
guns.
Both said they believe investigators hav<'
the bnefcase and weapons.
Poliucal leaders told Hodel at the public
hearing thai locaJ residents are in unani-
mous support of the agreement, which was
worked out between Hodel and a group of
California conaressmen led by Rep Leon
Panetta, 0-Monterey.
Clerk-Recorder's Office split
Oil industry representatives say there's
little oilpotenuaJ tn the 150 tracts that have
been offered under the proposal.
After the hcanng, Hodel told reporters
he's bcginmng to find that the compromlse
··will be harder to sell" that he first realized.
Asked 1fhe was sayrng 11 would be hard to
sell to the president, he reponded. -1 would
welcome my boss coming in on this. but 1t
1s my responsibility:•
He said the selling would be to the public
and to Congress.
Panetta, sitting in at the new'i con-
By JEFF ADLER
Of 1M D4llty Ne4 IWI
The Orange Count) Board of Super-
visors moved as eJtpected Tuesda) to spht
the count} Clerk-Recordef's Office into
separate operatJons beginning January
19U
Without comment. supervisors voted
5-0 to separate the offi ces followtnj the
recommendation of both current Oerll.-
Recorder Lee Branch and County .\dm1n-
1strative Officer Larry Pamsh
However. the spill might become effec-
uve before 1987 1f Branch, as c-<pected,
resigns has elected post and 1s appointed
count) recorder b> the board
lf Brtncl't docs not resign. the splu
cannot occur before 1987, v. hen a scpanue
county cletk and count\ recorder elected
in November 1986. arc schcdukd to take
office
Pamsh told the board each office: would
benefit by the presence ot a fu!l-llme
department head He also pointed out thal
since the otliccs were combined 10 1978
office operations have rcma10ed separate
and the combined office has not resulted 10
more effic1enC}
" count\ audit of the Oerk-Rccorder'<,
Office eariier this \Car v.as cnucal of
operations_ and found staJf'morale to be
low ~sides the audit, the office has been
the target b! cnt1cism b\ supervisors and
the county'~ Supenor Court Judges. who
want to rtxert greater control over
courtroom clerks attached to the Clcrll.'~
Office
Unconscious jail inmate
dies at UCl-Medical Center
missing. The loss was estimated at
Sl,.SOO .•
Irvine
Using a large: firecracker, vandals
blew up a mailbox outside a home
along Mallard early Wednesday
morning • • •
Huntinaton Beach
Chnstmas ornaments and \k1
equipment worth $500 v.ere stolen
from a storage shed of an apartment
1n th<' 18800 block of \.fora l\.a1 on
Tuesda} • • • .\ burglar stole a '1deoca!lsclle
rt'pC>rtC"d stolen from m front ot a
condominium m lh<' 9500 block of
Berke!} on T uesda) The scooter wa!>
valued at S400 • • • A ~alletconta1mngS .. ~ 1n ca'ih and
An Oranae County Jail inmate who
was found unconscious in his bunk
Tuesday afternoon, died three houn
later at UCJ Medical Center.
authorities said.
The man's name was not revealed
because relatives have not been
notified of his death, said Oranae
County Sheriff Lt. Dick Olson. ln-
vcstipton declined ns discuss tbe
possible cause of death until an
autopsy 1s completed.
The de.ath will be 10vcst1gated by
the Orange County D1stnct At·
tomey's office.
Four Los Anaeles Rams season
11ckets worth $1,000 were reported
stolen from a home in tbe 400 block of
Orange Blossom on Tuesday • • • Forty-three micro computer chip!>,
recorder "onh S600 from a home 1n
the 20400 block of '\llpol"\,on Tue~-
day •••
Sometime 1n the past eight days. a
S 1.500 outboard m·otor and S '\ 15 in
dcctronic equipment "'ere \tolen
from a boat moored at a docl tn the
3200 block of Falkland
S30 in prescnpt1on drugs was re·
ported ~tolen from a beige I QT7
Dodae A.spen parked at the comer ot
Beach and 4-tlanta on Tutsda)
Pedestrian hit
by alleged
drunken drlver C-tall-
Tbe rear bumper of a motor home
parked in a storqe 101 in the 1900
block of Newport Boulvevard wu
removed Saturday. • • • An employee oftbe Water Factory,
34S McCormack, reported Tuesday
that someone bad siphoned S8s~· paoline from flve of the company'
trucks.
James OouaTa: Swk. 29,
armted and SOOked at the Cos
Mesa Police Department foralleae<11y
committina a lewd 1exual act iol a
South Coast Plaza restroom on Mon·
day.
J'OGDta.ln ValleJ
An sao cordtcsa telcfhone wu
stolen from a home in the 7700 block
of San Francisco on Tuctday. • • • A thief stole a leaf blower won.b
$299 from 1n ftont of the Kina of
Glory Lutheran Church, IO'laO
Slatcr1 on Saturday. Police repon.a
said tne prdener waa in the back af
the buildint when the theft occumd. . , .
The maoqcr or the Travel Travel
.
travel qency, 18436 Brook.burst,
reported Tuesday th.at the aaency's
janitor threw out 200 blank, oeao-
tiable airline tickets on Monday. ~ . . . ...
A resident in the 10400 block of
Marprita reported that someone
called bis home Tuesday momina
and threatened to bum hi• house
down. • • • A but&lar stole ,auns valued at S 11,.S}O from a home 10 the 9200 block
of Mallard last weekend. • • • A resident in the 16200 bJock of
Mount Baden Powell reported that
hi1 boat and two three-wheeled
motorcycles were stolen from his
praae la11 Wttlcend. The lo wu
estimated at $23,800.
LapnaBeacb
A tbid' broke into a Volkswqrn
bus parked Tuetday on Oak 1t1d Glenne~ streets arid stole $4,SOO
wonb of fools. the victim told police. • • • A Summit Drive resident beard ciaht cuMhots Tuclday momina in
lhe nclabborbood and called poli~.
Officen ruPQndlna to the call, how·
ever, found lfle area qui~t.
Newport Beach
A resident of an apartment com-
plex ln tbe 2100 block of Intrepid
reported Tuesday that a burglar stole
$500 1n cash and $1 ,800 10 Jewelry
from her home. The thiefapparently
pined entry by chmbina up the s1de
of the bu1ldina and then forcina open
the screen door. • • • A bronze historical Landmark
plaque worth $500 was reponed
stolen from in front of the Cannery
Restaurant, 3010 LaFayette. on Tues-
day. • • • A resident in the 800 block of
Halyard reported TUC$day that some-
one nole SJ,•70 an camera cqu1i>-
ment Crom bis Pfl.le last week.. • • • Vand&l punctured the front nres and ICl'ltcbed the p&int of a cham-
i>qne<Olored 1977 Porsche 911
Tarp par cd ln the carpon of an
apartment in l.be .SOO block of n
Nicholas on Tuelda)'. The dllmqr wu estimated at $1,SOO • • • A re ideo1 ln the IOO block of
Baywood found hi pey 1978
Merttdcs •SO L 'ttina OD oranae
crates Tuclday. with its four •bcd.s
I•
valued at $16,2S4, and a Son)
walk.man, valued at SI 00, were stolen
Last weekend from a .branch of
Pnntronix. 11421 Derian. Pohce
reports said that no forced entr) was
detected. Stolen from another Pnnt·
ronill branch, l 7SOO Canwnaht. last
Wttkend was S 1,296 in camera cqu1i>-
ment
• • • Guns wonh $400, radios worth
SJOO clothing v.onh $400. and
painungs worth SI 00 were reported
stolen from a home in tht 6400 bloc~
of Cornell on Tucsda) • • • ~ nev.. black mo1or ooter wa\
Costa Mesa trio arrested
for alleged cocaine sale
Three Costa Me~ men wctt at·
mt.cd Tuesda) in Ncwpon ~ch
when they allqcdly told four ounce
of coca.ane to an un<krco"er narcoti~
officcn. pohcc rcponed.
Officers said they also found a
loackd handiun and lhrtt additional
ounces of cocaine whilt tearduna a
car and a (' Mta Mesa house The tota 1
n.lue of coaine was put at S 10,000.
said S&t Tim Raley
Micbcl R. hephcrd, 34; Bill)
Wayne Pcrry, lS and Wilham Wh1tc-
hom, 39. were am ted JU t before 7
p.m neu the 1ntcr1«t1on of C\upenor
and P1a«nt1a avenue . pohC't ~1d
" loaded hand1un and an oun~ of
man.1uana v.as found 1n 1 tar ov. ned
b) Wh1tthom, 'Officen \Std 4-sub •
quent ~rch of PerT)·~ home on
Town Strttt 1n Co ta Me\l 1urned up
t ... o add1t1onal ount<'• of tht drua.
pohct w<i
4'LI th~ att bt-1n held 1n heu of
SI 0,000 bail t~h Tht) Art' "hcdul&J
to be arr&1Jncd f nda) 1n Harbor
~unmpal C'ourt 1n ~e ... wn Beach
on drua ulcs charaei
The arttst uhed from a one-
month 1nves11ptt<'n h\ <'fl1u·n from
NC'~port and ( o\ta \1ty
•\ 4 7-}ear-old businessman wa.,
\Cnousl} injured Tuesday 1n ~cw
port Beach wl\en he was knocked
do~n bv an alleged drunken dnver
and pinned under the dnver's car,
police rt'ported today
Denni~ f Connolly. a rcs1denl of
Dublin ~ufTef'f'd a broken leg. numer-
ou~ cut and hru1~ and chipped lct'th
in the ~ p m mishap on Pae1fk ( oa t
H1&.hway nt'ar Marauente A.venue.
tral'fic inve5t1aators said.
C'onnoll) wa!t unlockina tht dn"·
er'1 door ol tu parked car wh<'n
MiJUcl .t.nael PtT'llta, 24, of Dana
POlnt lo t control of his 1972 Ford
LTD and plowed into the bu11-
nc man's car.
The impact of the colh ·on th~
onnolly to the pavement and befo~
he could set to hi' feet, he became
p,nntd under Pcralt1'1 car, police
$11d Paramedics utracted Conno~y1 who was N•hcd to Hoq Mcmorw
H pita!
~ltawa,am:stcdon lpiaoaof
ftlon drunken drivi~ and htld ''
the cit) Jiii in liru ofSl0,000 bad
1
• A• Otenge Colet OAILY PilOT/Wedneed1y, August 21, 1915
Nurse ends
AIDS trek
DEA TH VALLEY NATIONAL MONUMENT (AP)
-Patty Rott chlllenacd President Re•n u sbe finished
ploddj n1 134 md across Oath V~y in J 19-dqrce heat
10 raise funds and public awarcneu for AJDS vicunu.
"I( I can walk acrou Death Valley in thJs heat and
dod&e ~~1on then the ptttident can at lea t say the wor3 AIDS. u ROR. 34, uid Tuetday af\emoon.
A happy crowd .,eeteo the wary nune, douaina her
with flve-oUona atcold water and_Jpnnk.tina her With
confetti. Three of the people were AIDS vtctim~ said PauJ
Boncbefs, cootdJoa&or for the San Franet1CO-based
Mobihutio,a..AP1nst AIDS.
~rteet Wh'fa~tor. net \ Toe and Arc.h
t of &un\ons. Hee Mec\\dne \nfant Treat~~ rro\jerf\S· ~f m\t\eS. \~\ur\eS pain. n's foot De or
and Ch\\dre d foot.
of the Ankle an Po o' Al R '< GR our
H ARBOR M N £. w r 0 RT Mcc.ARTlR o.P. .
GAR'< S. C\\ff Or\ve ,901 west #3 •
su\te NeWP<>rt &each
(lt4) 631-4099
She 1taf'1e~fh~r journey Friday Ilona Hi&hway 267 at
Scotty's Junction, Nev., ancS walked along Jtipway 190.
Grand Opening
/ AUGUST22
A T••t• ol Old lt•lv
Aat6entlc ltallaa Dlaaer•
L-e• JJ A.•. to 4 I'.•.
DI• .. , 5 · I l'.11.
0.llcateeMa
E•ropea• Stille Pa,triu -a .. _ ..
C.k•• a Cookie•
SANTIN0•9
Bakery Special
Party CroleNnt.e
5 for *1.00
(Limit 10)
Elq>lru A111u.at Sl. 1915
964-3555
--------------~---
Anti-satellite weapc>n
testing encour~ges ban?
ByneA110ClaC~ '
LOS ANGELES -The Reapn administration contends that test101 an
anti-satellite weapon in space wiU not iputc a new arms race, but will instead
prove an incentive for the Soviets to qrcc to a ban on such weapons. But cnu. cs
fear President Reapn ·s dcc111on -announced Tuesday -to condu~ the first
three tests of an anti-satellite, or ASA T. system wall only pu h the Sovtet Uruon
into a new contest in the heavens and endanaer any hope for a permanent arm
cont:rol U'Clty. It 1190 would burt chances for proaress in the November sum mu
between Reapn and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbac~cv, the <.>~pone~ts say.
. However, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the dccmon to mform
Conarcss that 1.he administration would ao ahead with tcsung was made
because "the Soviets~ well ahead of us m tc tang" a s1m1l1r system.
Probe lbJt& ao bua for crime. by IRS
WASHING TON -An invcstagauon by an Internal Revenue Se.rv1ce
inspector has found no evidence to support charges the agency ~stemattcall.Y
false-dated refund checks to avoid interest {>Dyments. The probe found no basis
"to conclude that a crime has been committed by any aovcmment official or
employee," Edward Dennis, a U.S. attorney, said in a fetter to Sen. John Hetnz,
R-Pa. The investiption, focusing on the IRS' Philadelphia service center,
followed statements by Heinz that the IRS may have mtenuonally defrauded
taxpayers by back-datina checks to May 30 or before. Such a scheme could have
enabled the agency to avoid payment of interest required for refunds dated and
mailed 4S days after the Apnl I 5 fillng deadline.
LtM AIJ6ela, Ne• Yor~ gro• the ma.t 9108 Adame (at Magnolia)
Huntington Buch NEW YORK -Los Angeles and New York gained Lhe most .people
Oosed Mondav• between 1982 and 1984, while three of the nation's other Largest ett1cs lost ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ popu~tio~a~e~Mudy~yLTheMudy1soneof~ver~donepcri~ically
" Hm go"W to get
u whole pie w take home,
or a slice to eat here?"
'~/alumy, I tvtd you
w .~o hf/Ore
Wt' .~M in line."
\
~.
r
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
-.•
"Wow! 19 flavors. What'ya going to get?"
-----"Pecan, I think. Or maybe German Chocolate Cream.
No, no ... Lemon Meringue. No, wait ... make that French
Apple. On second thought ... "
"I hear there's a new display fall of
fash-baked Mother Butler pies in there."
SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER --,
FREE
SUCEOP MOTHERB\Jl'l.ERPIE
WITH THIS COUPON
Good only at Denny's in Costa Mesa at
105 East 17th trcct
I
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"Where'd ya get
that coupon,fella?"
I 011<· (nup"n pt·r pct'Cm Exp~ Scrtm1bc I, IQt!'i I
that helps determine aJlocahons of federal aid. For example, New York
estimates that it gets $32 an federal aid for every person counted by the Bureau
of the Census. The study is based on complicated staust1caJ projections, rather
than actual population counts. The new survey concludes that between June
1982 and July 1984, New York City grew by 78,646, to 7,164,742. The next
Iaraest pin was recorded in Los Angeles, which was estimated to have grown
by '?4,474, to 3,096, 721 . Chicago, Houston and Ph1ladelph1a aJI were estimated
to have lost population.
PralclJooJ m oJatatloa trial opens
TORRANCE -A former preschool teacher's aide aJlegedl y molested fi vc
female students in a bathroom and threatened at least one of them into sJ!en~.
a prosecutor told jurors as the young man's tnal began. But the defense claimed
the bathroom molestation, and other alleg.auons of abuse on the playground
and in a classroom, would have been difficult to commit because parents were
free to drop by tbe school any time. Attorneys presented opposmg opening
arguments Tuesday to an ei&h t-woman, four-man Superior Court Jury that will
_ decide whether Michael Ruby, 18, is guilty or innocent of 17 child molestation
counts involving six girls.
Former teacher pJeada 1aaoeeat
LOS ANGELES -A former Lo' Angeles school d1stnct teacher pleaded
innocent to 45 felony and misdemeanor counLs of child molcstauon at has
arraignl)lent in Superior Court. Eighteen new counts were looged Tuesday
against 'Terry Bartholome in add1t1on to those he already faced. The new
counts emerged from information that developed during his preliminary hcann~ which ended Aua. 5. Banholome, 47, of Newbury Park. as accused of
molesung 17 girls while be taught at the 68th Street School in south-central Los
Angeles. The district attorney's office is investigaun~ repons that school
district officials heard about the teacher's alleged activities but made no report
to police for more than a year.
'I Juror: Supreme Cbart reversal erred
SAN FRANCISCO -The state Supreme Court's rc verw of a murder
conv1ctJon, on partial grounds that aJI blacks had been eliminated from the
JUry, was mistaken, says one of the JUrors - a blaclquror. "I ~ughed when I
saw that story, because I'm black and I sat on that jury," C.arol yn Pratchett told
the Oakland Tribune Tuesday. "1 was the only black person there, and It was
easy to spot me." The newspaper said one of the prosecutors and appellate
attorneys who handled the case for the state may ask for a reheanng involving
35-year-old Edward Motton of Oakland. He was convi cted of second-degree
murder in 1981. The Supreme Court issued its decision Monday, ord~ring a
new trial.
Deputy IJeJpe actrea racae Infant
MALIBU -A sheriffs deputy answenng an emeraency telephone call
gave life-saving anstrucuons to actress Olivia Hussey, whose 211J-year--0ld son
had turned blue after falhng into a swimming pool. Miss Hussey, 34, best
known for her role as Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's 1968 film "Romeo and
Juliet," made a frantic call to the department Tuesday afternoon. "My baby 1s
drowning!" she screamed as her call was recorded on the 91 I emergency line.
The child, Max Fuse, had fallen in the swimming pool. Timothy Edwards told
the actress to stay calm and bring the baby near the phone. Edwards then
proceeded to give instructions in cardiopulmonary resuscitation. "By the time
the fire department arrived there the baby had has color back." said ~gt Kevan
Mock.
Retrial for Hedlecock open•
SAN DIEGO-Promising that logical explanations wtll prove has chent's
innocence, Mayor Roger Hedgecock's defense attorney wrapped up a day of
opening statements and cleared the way for the first witness to take the stand
t~y in the mayor's retrial on pel)ury and conspiracy charges. Las Vegas
attorney Oscar Goodman responded to the {>rosecution 's ope.rung statements.
which he called a "roadmap ... filled with mines.'' and discredited anticipated
testimony of (>toSCCution witness Harvey Shuster. "For every fact you will
hear, there will be a reasonable explanation consistent with innocence,"
Goodman said.
A .. wln•ted Sl.klJ Jeader cremated
LONGOW AL VILLAGE India -The body of a slajn Sikh leader who
had uicd to mak.e ~with lndia's central government was consumed an a
funeral pyre today tn his home village. Throngs of mourners wept and prayed
for calm an tr-0ubled Punjab stale. The remains of Harchand Singh Longowal,
the ~chcr who was gunned down Tuesday, were wreathed in roses and
mangolds as thousands of bereaved Sikhs marched 12 miles an a funeral
cortqc from San&rur to this villaae. LonaowaJ S7, Jeadcr of the main faction of
the Sikhs' Akali Dal party, was shot as he addressed a religious gathenng in a
Sikh temple near Sanarur.
284 ~ed Ja Jatat roaad of clvU •ar
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Christian and Moslem mililiAmen rained artillery
and rocket fire on Beirut and surroundina towns for a third day today, and
police said tbe death toll in the la\est bout of the cMI war was 264 killed and 77 s
wounded. Twenty-<>ne civilians were killed and 65 wounded in ovcmiaht
artillery exchanges in and around Beirut that set many buildings ablaze.
Amona the dead were two women in the scenic Christian mountain resort of
Brummana. Radio stations broadcut appeals to the civil defense corps and fire
bripdcs to rush to bumina buildings
Rlot.·mark SO dlly. ol emeJ¥eacy control
JOHANNESBURG, South Afnca-Police ~ported sporad1c nouna 1n a
half-dozen black c:ommuntttcs and the slayin1 of one black man today, one
month after the fOVemment imposed a state of emcracncy to cont.rot protests
qainst apartheid. A Jobanncsbura newspaper quoted the dauP.'ter of
imprisoned black leader Nelson Mandela as saytn& be ttJccted the idea of a
national conventioo to neaotiatc a future form of aovcmmcnt that would
include aJJ races..
Relatln. clrcle JAL cruJI mte
TOKYO -Sobbm1 and praytna, dozens of bereaved relauves tn
chartered belicopt.en circled the fomted mountaintop &oday where a Japan
Air Unes 747 jumbojctc:ruhed 10 day~ qo, k.alllfta S20. Rainy weather tilled
at midday to pemut the first ohevttal lll&hts by 1.ht helicopters, chartered by
the aJrtine at the requnt offamUics o(vlCtlm1 whose bodies have elther not t.n found or 001 been identirled. • •
ftlJpm• man:ll oa Aqa.lao annlveru.rr
~ANII:A. Ph.i1Jpp1ne -More than 40,000 FlUp1no' took to the sttteu
today in 1nu-.ovemmeot demonstrations to mvk the 1«ond anniversary of
tbe I uioauon of oooe>titiqn Ind.er 8en'4"o Aquino Al the or«idcritial
palace, President Fcrdh\and B. Marws dismissed demonstrations apinst his
aovemment as 1 waste of ume .
............ , ...................... __________________________ _._~~::....-~~c-..__._
L.
Blacks
attack
Falwell
quote
Criticism prompts
reverend to Insist ----he opposes apartheid
By Tiie A11oclated Preti
The Rev. Jerry Falwell, areeted by
waves of cnucism for b.is remarks on
South Afnca and Bishop Desmond
Tutu, tnslsted today in a debate with
Lbe Rev. Jesse Jackson that he is
against apartheid but said he believes
economic sanctions wilt harm South
African blacks rather than help
chan&e the government.
Black leaders are up in arms over
Falwell's remarks characterizing
Tutu, a Nobel Peace Prize winner. as
a phony. One called Falwell "a racist
demagoaue."
Without sanctions. "We do at least
have hope for change in South Afnca.
We have hope to cut out the cancer
and not kill the patient," Falwell said
on ABC-TV's "Good Morning
America." ''We have hope not to
starve little children, minority chil-
dren .. by dasinvesting, closing down
the Ford plf nts. closing down the
various American investments."
The Rev. Jesse Jackson appeared
with Falwell and said his trip to South
Africa was "an insult to those of us
who are Christians and who care."
"Falwell, you supported apartheid
an southern America until it was over.
Now you're supportinj apartheid in
southern Africa wbile it's still alive,"
Jacks-On said.
Jackson. speaking from Boston,
charged that ~alwell acted as an agent
of the Reagan administration, rep-
rescntina the government's views on
South Africa and apartheid.
'Tm sorry Rev. Jackson still thinks
whites arc bad people. Reagan did not
send me and I went on my own,"
Rn. Jerry Palwell
Falwell said from Lynchbura. Va.
"I don't believe any Christian
co uld support segreaation,
apanheid.," he said. "I do not support
that policy of the Botha government.
any more than I support the t-OtaJ
discrimination of the Soviet Union's
policies on red China, Cuba or most
of the African nations outside South
Afnca.
"However, I bebeve we can cut out
the cancer without killing the pauent
and handing over to the Soviet Union
one more nation," Falwell said.
Falwell also appeared on the "CBS
Morning News, saying "There is no
debate between myself and the per-
sons calling for sanctions as far as
apartheid. We both equally condemn
that policy as I dad in mceungs with
lhe government."
He said that dunng his vistt to
South Afnca be visited black and
mixed-race communiues and found
"the entire nonwhite public 1s saying
sanctions will kill our children .... "
Falwell met with President P. W.
Botha during his five-day visit to
South Africa. and said he had been
assured the country was malung
progress tow~!ds change. -
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/WednMdtly, AUQUll 21, 1MI M
,
Ml\DDwalk SAN DJEGO(AP)-About 40 people took pen lD lbe
San Di~ tea of a• 02S·mllawat bcina ~by Motbm
Apitut Drunk Drivina ud aim.ad at li~ nauonwidc
anentioft to the arou:p's effon1 to tet drun off Ow: road.. • continuing .. We w.nt toaet the mnsapacrosalhatdrunkdriviaa
will not and should not ht tolc:ratcd." said Norma PIUlliP1,
touridCT of the San Di MADD d:alpter wbolo ton wu
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Water subsidy:
Was $1.5 billion
p~id illegally?
,,,,.,_ ·$100
I
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
federal government has pa1d S 1.5
billion 1n illega.1 subsidies to g1ant
farming tnterests to keep water pnces
anificially low in California's huge
central valley, an environmental
group charged today.
In a report submitted to Interior
Secretary Donald Hodel, the Na-
tional Resources Defense Council
and che California Rural Lcaa1 As-
sistance Foundation alleged that the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has
illegally provided massive subsidies
to the CentraJ Valley Project and the
Wcstlands Water D1stnct in the last
40ycan.
The subsidies arc scheduled to
continue 4ntil the year 2030, the
NRDC saad.
The year-long study, called "Turn-
ing Off the Tap on Federal Water
Subsidies; The Central Valley Pro-
jett The $3.5 Billion Giveaway,"
found that Westlands farmers alone
receive an average water subsidy of
$500,000 a year.
"Unemployment in rural Cali-
fornia is among the highest 10 lhe
mation, approachina the levels
reached during the Great De·
pression," Ralph Abascal of the
CRLA said m a prepared statement.
"Yet a handful of farms owned by
corporations or wealthy individuals are at the same time illeplly receivina
billions in government benefits.••
About one-third of the total S3.5
bilhon subsidy-$2 billion of which
Cash Rebate I
~ ~ ·~;:ii!)·
-...
Hurry' C*>h rcbiilc offer expim. A1J!! 31 IQ8.5 I
Mumraun 1oan IU1lOW'l ot s...cm ~ I
Great American
Your advantage bank.-One Ctih rebate per loan Rdae paid • wne of fuoJ.&ng
~ appbes 10 new loam fu~ August 5. 198.5 or after. I ~
IC-.l Ye Jr. nl ~ti~!\ • A~L' Q\.er \ 7 B1li1on
has Congressional mandate-goes to ... .... , . ~ CaU the Financial Linc for details and today' rates. I
Westlands, where growers pay an 1 ON\ A23 BANK I average $9.45 per acre-foot for water • .. ,.... ~ -
compared with the unsubs1dJZed cost ,... •' ....... ""' ..... I
ofS97, the report said. 1~========================-==-=-==-=-~~-~-~~-~-~-~~-~-~~-~-~~-~-~-~~-~-~~-~-= Westlands receives an unintended
~~~~~~~~ $4()() million. the study The Tlwee D Pr1·ce Diet "These subs1d1es can no longer be
even superficiall y JUStiticd as ben·
cfitting the family fann," said NRDC !~t~o~~nt~!t r~;: w~~g~0~~~1tf~ Get your pocketbook 1· n shape economist Dr. E. 'Phillip Le Veen. I
"Nor can they be justified on the r e
groundsoffeedlngthenallon.sance I .c b 1; t hool savings' ~~~Jn.0:r:~~ ~r~:sr vrs°:;iu:.~.ch as 10raCKO SC •
The report said only $50 million
has been repaid of the $931 mil hon
spent on CVP irrigation facilities in
the last 40 years because of ynproper
extension of repayment periods
beyond the 50 years aP.proved br,
Con~; misuse of "ab1hty to pay •
proVlsions that illegally reduce the
growers' obligation to repay their full
share of costs; and lo ng-term, fixed
rate water contracts at low rates that
cannot begin to pay fo amgation
costs.
The study recommended that the
Bureau renegotiate existing contracts
to eliminate the unintended subsidies
and that no more money be spent on
the CVP until arrangements have
been made for payment for existing
facilities.
•.• I l 1 111 1. Ip \•Ill 111111 \ttlll ,, "I..
• 1.~,1 bud.:• I t lur 111 h, ''" t
,·,111 11 11 '"'" 11 t>nt. h 11h ,um
l..1l1 li.·11 tt1 Ill' .ut JO'• 11(1' < loY.t r th.111
dt·1Mrtmt•nt .. 111n•., \nd .11 I hll •' 11. \nu
dun't 'ti.t'• 111 '·" rthH n.1111t· t11.infl, 11r
... ~·k·d1on llur I 1r ~t UIH nton 111..lu<J,.,
J v.1de \Jnl"l\ 111 toµ •k'll.'fh 1 .111tl
minul.ht·•r"
...,., II \ltll It It .tlf\ l I tUllllllll ~.Ill •• II
'" •·l11n11wt1111( "'" ., ... ~·ndin)!, '""'' '" 1
"' .1rb\ lhrt·•· 11 •lort \\, ·11 ... ho"A ~"" h""
t'd~~ II 1~ lO rt·dun· ~our wask.
,----
Value
$ 1 8 00 If Perteet
Our Pnce
7.99
Coke, Pepsi war
intercontinental Inhe ritance Towe ls
h\ F1l'IO. f\'"'' \ i..'Tt·al .idd111011 to .UI\
b.11hr11om. th1·'t lu,unuu' -,.111 k1op..·J
h'rr~ lttY.t•I.., •Ill IOI)' .. tollt•ll 1nd ol\OllLth'o
111 \'our l.l\ofllt "'h•l ,·,ol.11 .. ''\I /•• J.-1 //••"" "'' 1/ f,. t~ "' 111111 I 1 rt/ •Ji,,,, "'" f,r-11/11 •11/
11 ''" I>" , ,,,,, 1/ll • U1l~1· ••I "I tJ/ 111. IJ l ,,,, ''"I /,/ llfj 1to. ,,,
Soft drink giants
swap charges about
new can In J a pan
By TH Alaoclated Preti
Embattled Coca-Cola, fresh from
its tactical withdrawal over new
Coke. was fiahllna on new fronts and
takinapnsonenas theireat softdnnlc
war with arcbrival Pep 1 went inter·
continentaJ.
There were these developments
Tuesday: .
-The son drink &Jlnts swapped
cb.araes about the mean1na of cola
cans marked "New Pepsi" that were
captured 1n Japan by Coke officutla.
-COiee vowed not to knuckle
under to ajudac•s order that it reveal
its formula. secret for 99 years.
, -And LO 16 fottllJ'l Clti~ Pt'ps1,
sayina iu Illes in the United States ~umped I~ percent in May after the
1ntr0ducuon of new Coke, trotted out
it competitor'• prOduct at news
coofercoces, ~ to see it on sale
evet)"*bm.
.. Tbe new Coke is about to roll out
wortdWlde, and we at PC'Pll could ool
be ha1>1>1er," Peter Kendall, Pepsi'a rqionaJ vice pre tdcnt for nonhem
Europe, said in Lo"don
Cote offtciaJs said the Japancse
cans proved that P~i was doing
somethillj n bad chided Coke for
earlier this year -changina its taste.
Dick Detwiler. a Pepsi spokesman
1n the company's Purchase, N.Y ..
hcadquaners, said that wb.at Coke
claims is "New Pepsi" is actually a
"Iona dead" product that bad "a very
limited test marketina in one city 1n
Japan ... a couple ofycan aao."
But the Tokyo sales offico of
Pepsico Inc. confumed that it i
seUina "New Pepsi" in H1rosh11na
and other areas of Japan. The product
has not been introduced in the Tokyo
area but the company is runnina
commercial• uflina cola dnnken to
compare the old and new ~is.
And Tuctday niaht. a Coke official
provided The ASJOciated Press with
an empty can of "New Pepsi." The
bottom or the can wu stamped
"850620t which the Coke omci&l
said in01catcd a June 20. 198.S,
marketda~.
Randy Donaldson. manqcr of
public relations Mees for Atlanta·
bued Coke, said, .. What it amuina ..
that this procluct is on th market,
clearly idc:otifted u new, at a time
when tq)RSCDtativa of Ptpsi said 1t
11 10rntth1na tboy would never do. ,
"Pt~ took OUI ads in newlplperl
1dcnufyina Pepsi as the wte too &ood
to chanp. yet this ii on the matket..
and &1'1 a completely dJfferent for.
mula." /
Bath
Hand
Wash
Value
$11 .00
$7.50
$3.25
Our Price
5.99 4.99
2.49
,, , """ ,, /'•h< ,,,., /11 7),,/1 ,,., "'''' tl(f,(11', ,,,,, .,,
1111 •/'o lld111i; \1111 II/\ ,..'14-1 //•1"' f,.,4, /tR1 ti i/li//11•11 /i11 Ir ' ''
. \/, /n1<1 '1 11·111 -
S \ \" E l . P T< > .)~ »' , ( > \
F\SI II(>\ t'( >'IF( >HTFH '"'F lS ~
Cordurov Bedrest
f', r Ir • I 1111 " " 1:: n Ll\111~ "" luum,1111,1. 1•-.. ~ t"TtTT!mTn ~~ -m-"Tntt
hi. 1t ~I""'...,~,
Value
$25.00
Our Pnce
12.99
L TORO .?Ji JO ~ I 1nro Road (:'l:t"'' 1n l·d111o rd Cm~ma) ll SS 9136
fOl NTA I. \' Llf'\ 171 'll \h.cnolu1 "tm•t 4 l 1242 •
OSTA ME . Rfl .. till ..,unfln~~r Ill ~ordi.tnim lhck 7!il ·:'l~Ol
Tl' TIN 1204 °'H" lrnnt Rl"d 7 10 H l
1
Lottery bills progress
SACRAM£NTO (AP) -I.esblatort bave advanced Oilroy. But ScientiBc Games' printer, Ditt.ler 8.rotbcn,
meuurtt dcsi&fted to require the printina of 1tate lottery won a lepl bett.lc tetai.nina u excluaive riabt to pn.nt the
tickeu within California lDd to ~cnt UJO of video pmes ticket1 in Atlanta.
that award tickett. Atciu Mid be introduced tbe bill in an attempt to
The Senate Oovcnunental Orpnizatioo Committee tran fer ticket production to Gilroy, thetcby briQlina
sent a mJld version of A.8799 by AaemblYD18!1 Rutty additionaljobt to hi• district. Areias. D-Salin&ei to tho Senate Approprtatioos Commit· Areias 11y1 be wu unaware when be bepn plllhina
tee on a 6-S vote Tuctday. . the bill that Saent.iftc Oamea bad made a Sl,000
The commitite amended the bill to make it a contribution to bia campaisn committee. The oomp&ny
misdemeanor, not a ftlony, to manu&cture lottery tickeu purchued tickeu to one of the aaemblyman'a fuod·raiaerl
outside &he state. In addition, Areiu &lf'CCC1 to an in Sacramento.
amendment of the bill that would postpone iu effective Dittler Brothers oppo1e1 the bill.
date until Jan. l, 1987. The committee also approved, on an 8-2 vote an
"' ,r
Some committee membe"1 dwina nearly an hour of amended venion of AB17l 7 by Auemblyman QaiY
deliberation on the measure wd that they feared the bill Condit, 0-Cera. which would prevent the state Crom Ulina
in iu oriainal version miabt delay tbe ope1lln& of the lottery video loncry pmea that award lottery tickeu or numbers.
in late September or early October. Conditl&idheinuoduoedthemeuureasapm:aution u~
The state's lottery ticket suP.plier, Oeoraia-bued ap.inst youths playina the lottery. People under aae 18 are Thia~ a COf11 of the type of cautonala State IOld to cautornlau 8tartlDC lD late Septem-
_Sci_· e_n_tifi_c-=G=am=es==lnc.:::::'=eec:re===tl=y=b=uil=t=a==pnn=' =tLDI=· ==plan===t~in~· ~·~berred==fi'o=m~puU:..___· a...:.· Pl_tina~i_o _th_e..:..p.m_es_. ______ .='n=•:..:.=n:::.t.:......::Lot~..:.. ..... :..:~ry~Gam::.::;;~•-tl:.::.ck~eta=-; tbat wUl be ber of eulJ October.
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--
Tickets here,
but when will
games begin?
Director expects to
set a specific date
within a week or two
SACRAMENTO (AP) -"The
Tickeu Are Here" procfaimed ban· ners on the bia trucks u they rolled
into the lottery compound, escorted
by police.
Lottery Director Mark Michalko
unsealed the doon as employees
cheered, clapped and joked with each
other. News crews jostled for the best
view.
But the start-up of the lottery -
now five months overdue -remains
a vque five to aeven weeks away.
Micbalko, on band Tuesday to areet the tint two trucks carrying 40
million tickets, told reporten the
arrival marked the beginning of a
countdown to the as-yet un-
determined launch date.
The director IAid he hopes to set a
specific date "within a week or two" and plans to ask GOY. George
Deukmejian, a Republican who OP.:
posed the lottery, whether he will
parti~~ in the kickoff. Mi o said the difficulty in
determining the opening is c11le to the
"sheer loa:istics" of the coming lot-
tery expected to be one of the largest
in the world. The other four states
that have started lotteries this deaade
pve about two months advance
notice of a specitic start-up date.
Micbalko said the delay in fixin.J a
date i1 aimed at us wing that SCC\1fl ty,
ac:countina and distribution aystems
are in place, but acknowledaed that
the situation is holding up other areas
aucb as promotional schemes.
Lottery Deputy Din:ctor Chon
Gutierrez said last week that a kickoff
on Sept 27 mi&ht be p<;>ssible, but
other top lottery offiaals immedi·
ately minimized the sianificance of
the date. The months-old prediction
of late September or early October
remains the best official Cltimate.
The initiative that voten approved
. Last November ordered that the
lottery beain by last March 22.
Two otfier trucks t~j~er carrying another 40 million " · ornia Jack-
pot" ticlceU were expected to arrive at
the Southern California lottery wan-
bouse in Whittier at 10 a.m. today,
said Lottery Public Affain Director
William Seaton.
Both shipments of tickets for the
tint ~e arc traveling from a
Scientific Games' printillJ plant in
Gilroy, where they arc bc1D1 stored,
Seaton said.
$41 million prize
due in New York
NEW YORK (AP) -Vendors
braoed for IODJ lines or players betting
their luck &p101t 6-million·t~ l odds
for toniaht's $41 million lotLery
jackpot, the largest ever in North
America.
With tickets sellina at a rate of
19,000 a minute Tuesday, state
lottery director John 0 . Qutnn or-
dered outlets abut an hour before the
normal 10:30 p.m. cloaina time.
"We want to be sure that we can
restart sales at tlle usual time in the
momina and the volume of sales will
ta.lee extra time to process," Quinn
uid. He warned tbat sales miabt end
before today'• scheduled g p.m.
deadline to allow time to handle the
expected 36 million bets before the
10:30 p.m. drawiq.
"Our sales have been un-
believablez" said Quinn. On Monday
be raised tne prize ttom $28.S million
to $33.S million, sayioa be doubted
the jackpot would top Dlinoia' record
1984 fiawe of $40 million. On
TQCSday, be boosted the pot to $41
million.
By 4:32 p.m. Tuesday, 8.9 million
S 1 tickets bad been sold, compared to
6.6 million on Monday, said lottery
spokesman Georae Yam.in .
From-the R &: R newsstand at the
World Trade Center in Manhattan to
Tom McManus'1 drua store in the
upstate town of Tannersville, would-
be milliona.ins stoically endured long waits in humid weather, sustained by
dreams the number chosen might be
thein.
"We never have a line here," said
McManus, whose town bu 1 popu-
lation of about 800. "I don't know
where they're comin& from. They're
coming out of the woodwork. People
are plaP,na Lotto who never played
before.' . People like . Kim Guest, of
EnaJewood, N.J., who said that if
Lotto makes her a millionaire, she
will "spend it on a few bou1e1, 1 yacht,
a plane, and a long vacation" before
returning to her job selling sport.swear
in Manhattan.
"I'dbuythe(NewYork)Yankees"
Mid the voice of the fan. '
Dinner
Music.
r/
l\\\1
'111, ...
~111
Just listen to th8t Incredible crunch . lt's,e prelude Ii
to the best fish In town-our famous
better·dlpped fish fillets.
loNGJouN ~tr'
'· SILVEl(S. fl 'fWJI ,,.
---
3095 Harbor Blvd.
Coeta M-
(Acroea from Fedco)
"
Orang9 Coa1 OAll.Y PILOTIWedneeday, ugut121,118!
$13.5 million shared by
121 county care agelicies
reed
elays
'85tax
lieform
ByPHILBNEtDERMAN
Ot .. D.-, ..........
Social service orpnizauons alona
the Oranae Cout arc a.mona (be key
recipients of a S 13.5 million f\lodina
allocatioo for 1986 approved by
directors of the United Way of
Oranae County.
Whogets United Way funds
The followin& 11 a hat of 1986 United Way allocauo" for qtnetCJ bated
m Oranac Coast cities: COSTA MESA
Amcncan Canocr Society-S669 7"3 ldwater doubts
Congressional OK ---In the near future
By &be AHoclated Pre11
People zealously ~uardlna thetr
ravonte loopholes wtll prevent tu
reform from p1n1n1 Conaress1onal
approval in the near future, Sen.
Barry Goldwater says.
Endorsina the recommendations of
a review panel consistina of 200
volunteers, the United Way board
recently decided to fu nd 121 Ora.nae
County health and human care asen·
cies dunna the comLDJ year. These
include medical facilities, youth
clubs, counselina centers and senior
citizens prOlflms.
Boys Qub of the Harbor Area-S232,580.
Center for Creative AJternauves -17 ... 394
Child Guidance Center of Oranac County -$92,619
Fint Step House -$34,lSO.
FISH-Harbor Area -$4-4,987.
Glrl Scout Council of Oranac County -$560,151.
Girls Oub of the Harbor Area -$90,521
Youth Empl~yment Scrvtcc-$25,126. HUNTINGTON BEACH
Boys and Girls Oub of HunUDJlOD Valley -$96,000.
Girls and Boys Oub of Fountain Vallcy-Huntinaton Beach -SS8,8S5.
Hu.nungton Beach Commuruty 01n1c -$22,000.
United States Llfesav1n1 AsS0C1aton -$3,388 LAGUNA BEACH
Boys Oub of Laguna Beach -SS0,826.
C.S.P Shelter -$22, I 37.
Girls Oub of Laguna -$36,809
"It's the old idea of'Hooray for me,
the hell with you,"' Goldwater, R-
Anz., told 400 auests at a Republican
fund-nuser Monday in Orange Cou11-
ty.
The senator said he has received
l 1.000 letters on tax reform from
,t\rizonans, with only 200 favonng 1t
and the rest seeking protection of one
tax break or another.
0.-. .... .-...,.._..~
Loe .Anielea County 8apentaor lllke AntonoYich, Rep.
Bobbi l'ledler, Sen. Barry Goldwater and Tom Fuentea,
<>ranee County Republican chalrmaD chat at fund-rat.er.
Amona the reap1ents arc: tht
Newport-Mesa YMCA m N~rt
Beach, the Laguna Beach Free Cbruc·
the Huntinaton Beach Commun1ty
Oinic; and 'Boys and Girls clubs 1n
Costa Mesa, Hunlln&ton Beach,
Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach
The 1986 allocation represents a I 0
percent increase over the S 12.3
(Pleue eee UMT&D/ AlO)
Laguna Beach Free Otn1c -$63~ 753 NEWPORT BEACH
Newport-Mesa YMCA -S 154, 925 MWION VIEJO
Saddleback Community Entcrpnses -$23,234 SAN JlJAN
CAPISTRANO "
If special-interest loopholes sneak
back into the plan to simplify the tax
system, tax reform "won't be worth a
darn," Goldwater said.
The work.load Congress faces when
it returns to Washington next month
also will hamper tax reform this year,
he said. And as for 1986, "getting a tax
bill through Congress 10 an election
year isn't all that easy."
Goldwater, who says he plans to
retire after this Senate term, his fifth.
favors Vice President George Bush
for the Republican presidential no,ni-
nation in 1988.
Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N. Y., a likely
opponent of Bush for the 1988
nomination, 1s one of the new
conservatives whom Goldwater
likes. But Goldwater said that Senate
Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-
K.an., another presidential hopeful.
has llloomier prospects.
"fie ran for vice president one time
(in 1976). He. sort of ~hot his wad," '
Goldwater wd.
INS, Del Mar operators aim I
to keep stablehands legal ··
By the Anoclated Preti effort at this point. But 'of course we wouldn't rule out a
raid We hope 1t doesn't come to that."
U.S. Border Patrol officials say they hope to work with Trainers had complained they couJdn 't find lepl
Del Mar Race Tracie operators in weeding out ille.pl aliens residents to work as grooms or stablcbands, poor-payrng I
employed as stablchands, but added they haven't ruled out Jobs that include mucking out a bone's stall and making
raiding the facility to solve the problem. frequent moves to the vanous race meets.
"Right now, we're in a m~e of cooperation," Bor~er "Any track has problems with (undocumented) 1
Patrol spokesman Ed Pyeatt ~d M~n~y after a mect10g Mexicans. They arc willina to do the work. and they have betw~n track operators and 1mm1grat1on officers. The an empathy with horses," trainer David Bernstein said.
meeung wa~ ~rompted by an e~us of track employees -.. The closest most (Americans) get to a horse is on the '
who ~ed their JO~s after hearing the Border Patrol planned merry-go-round."
to raid the tracks backstretch., . . . The Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Associa-
Joscph Harper, the tracks executive v1ce prcs1d~nt tion, which represents trainers, is placing ads in area is
a.od g. eneral manager, said as ryt.a!ly as 300 grooms, exercuc newspapers to fill the vacant positions and bas set up a
nders and handlers fled their JObs dunng the weekend, hinng hall in a trailer behind the track. leaving tnuners scrambling for help.
"T think we've seen such a large exodus of backstretch According to the Border Patrol, as many as 50 percent
workers that it IS close to affecting daily operations," of the 3,000 backstretch workers at the traclc arc 11legal
Hafl)Cr said at a press conference Monday. "We're faced aHens.
with a very serious threat." Ronald Bonaparte, an anomey for the Horsemen's
Follow10g Monday's meeting, track spokesman Dan association. said the problem would be solved 1f the '•
Smith and Pyeatt said a plan had been worked out whereby Imm1grauon and Naturalization Service and Department
trainers would set up a binng ball to screen new-workers to of Labor would allow thoroughbred bandlen the same
replace stablebands worlc.i~g m the country illegally. temporary res1dency status available to similar part-time ,
Pyeatt said he was confident the trainers wouJd be able workers.
(Pl-..e eee WBO/AlO)
.....
I
As of July 26, 1985
;
I regret to inform you that 11
11
I
is no longer associated '
'•
with Baby Carter.
I
Sincerely,
~ £Jtuc {!lk h,e_
to find plenty of help once the new hinng program was 10 "A sheepherder can get a temporary visa. but not these
place. ~y~"hesa1d."Ifa handle~ortraine~ofap~~ss1on~ ~~--~~~-~---~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~-~-~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~
"We're goinf. to personally morutor the s1tuauon in a athlete can get one, why can't a handler of a thoroughbred I
low key manner. • he wd. "We're 111tssmg a coopera11ve wonh maybe $6 million?" M
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holds 6-pack1.
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~ IANTAANA COITA MalA ALL IA.LE ITEMS
ism c.tt• °' <11'1 as1.9m 1m r!Abll ~ .. m•i ~2--41•~
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n.ao tta111ot ~ 110 s• m~ LIMITED
TO QUANTITIES
HANO.
~M•l•-l
(
' .
"There ts no en eofthe theatre when Igo Into the kitchen (unle I
one of slapstick comedy). I do not feel 'on stage. ·If eel 'on the spot. • •
Fair board claim
may be the lever
to shut off noise
Does the Orange County Fair Board reaJly intend to
evict concert promoter Ned-West Inc. from the Pacific
Amphitheatre?
Not likely. But the threat -coupled with the
board's allegation that Ned-West is a ninc·time violator
ofits 40-year lease on the 18,000-scat outdoor theater -
may be enough to get someone's attention.
If it docs, it will be a major step forv.iard in a
proloneed and nasty battle over residential noise that
has driven the leaders of both camps to defensive
positions behind their respective battlements and left
the fightif1$ to lawyers and legislators.
Since 1t opened two years ago, Pacific Amphitheatre
has presented all manner of stage entertainment. Much
of it has been welcomejn Costa Mesa, a city that works
bard to be known as a center for the pcrfonning and
visual arts.
But some of it has been rock •n· roll, loud, rollicking
music that draws capacity crowds of young fans and
spills into the College Park and Mesa del Mar
neighborhoods that adjoin the amphitheater. On warm
summer evenings, when the Pacific Amphitheatre
featured such boi~erous rock celebrants as Tears for
Fears, Tom Petty and the Heartbrcakers and Rod
Stewart, the concerts could not be confined to the
fairgrounds; they were uninvited guests in the homes of
people who would rather have been sleeping or reading
or talking or watching television. Some folks' entertain-
ment was other folks' nuisance.
Ned-West has, to its credit, made some effort to cut
down on the escaping noise. But concert promotion is a
business, after all, and many rock fans think the music
isn't loud enough unless it hurts. And the good bands-
the ones that attract the sellout audiences -are finicky
about their sound systems; if someone tells them to tum
it down, they tum ll off.
Being discriminating about
AIDS ought to be our right
So for completely logical reasons, Ned-West has
been uncooperative and intransigent. When Costa Mesa
tried to respond with similar toughness, it found the
issue complicated by the amphitheater's unique location
on a state-own.ed island Wlthin the city limits. Costa
Mesa's noise ordinance was, therefore, unenforceable.
The county's noise ordinance seemed equally impotent.
Lawyers for both sides headed for court, with Ned-
West feeling that time was on its side. Meanwhile, state
Sen. John Seymour launched a legislative assault on the
amphitheater. But Ned-West will have at least another
season under it~ belt before the bill -which would give
Costa Mesa the nght to enforce its noise ordinance at the
amphitheater (but not throughout the fairgrounds
property) -gets through the Senate.
Through it au, the promoters have had things pretty
much their own way and the beleagured citizens of two
Costa Mesa neighborhoods have suffered.
Ned-West. through a lawyer, denies it has violated
its lease. However. the lawyer admits there are minor
problems that can be resolved. That, however, assumes a
willingness on the part of the landlord to have the
'problems resolved. r the Fair Board can substantiate its
claims of lease violations, it may decide to become as
rigid has Ned-West has been in the past. It may decide to
force the issue and force the promoter to compromise or
close shop.
Turnabout seems hke fair play.
Tough luck f orLA if it turns out AIDS
is transmitted in now-unknown way-s
WASHINGTON -We hear a lot
about "dJsinformauon ·• these days-
deliberately planted phony facts that
get into the bloodstream of public
d1scuss1on D1s1nformallon is not
innocent and inadvertent, like m1S1n·
formation ; ll serves malign purposes.
By the same token, maybe we ought
to speak of "disconccpt1ons"· false
ideas that are intentionally spread to
make us m1sconcc1ve pubhc issues m
ways that w1U help cert.am interests.
One clear case of d1sconcepuon 1s
the notion of "gay nghts .. -a bogus
co ncept whose purpose 1s to beg the
whole question of whether homosex-
uality 1s warped or wicked behavior.
Obviously homosexuals have the
same nghts as everyone else, for the
simple reason that everyone has the
same rights as everyone else. Whether
homosexual conduct 1s among those
11ghts is another question. conve-
niently confused by the phrase "gay
rights." Jcfywalkers have rights; they
ha vei-he nght of free speech, the nght
of religious freedom. the n~t tO a (air
tnal, and loads of oth er nghts. As 1t
happens. though, they don't have the
nghuojaywalk. This will be absolute-
called "discriminating" was a com-
pliment: It meant you had m-
telligence and discernment in telljng
things apart. But now the idea of
d1scnminating "between" has been
nearly submerged by the idea of
discnminaung .. against." lf yo u d1s-
cnmmate between the sexes, for
example, you are thought to be
discriminaung against one of them
Which bnngs me to the incident
that has provoked this outburst. The
City Council of Los Angeles has
(unanimously!) passed an ordinance
banning discrimjnation "against"
those who have AIDS -in JObs,
housing, all that. This applies even to
dental services and restaurant!i,
among other things.
The City Council is very proud of
itself. "We have an opportunlly to set
an example for the whole nation,"
said Joel Wachs, whose brainstorm
this was. The deputy city attorney,
Maureen Siegel, said she believes Los
Angeles 1s the first maJOr city to pass
such a law. Counc1lman Emani
Bernardi says the ordinance will
"educate" the public.
ly clear to everyone unttl the day Th e fact 1s that we don't really
some bird gets the bnghl idea to 1c·now all about AIDS. The hospital
affirm "Jaywalkers' nghts." Then we that took care of Rock Hudson in
will start heanng pathetic complaints Pans was extremely careful. Nurses
that jaywalkers are discriminated who tended him burned· their pr-
against ments after each shift. His bcddmg
Ah -"d1scnmmated against." was destroyed when 11 was changed.
Check Your gun be·-'-ore There's anotherone.Therewasati~e He was fed with plastic forks and 1 C .I 1 when 11 was undemood that dis-spoons. which of course were then
cnmmauon 1soften a necessity To be disposed of.
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
Jn short, the people at that pres-
tigious hospital weren't taking any
chances. They weren't wa1tmg for I.be
Los An,eles City Council to
"educate' them Under the circum-
stances. 11 takes some gall for the
council 'lo deny people the nght to
decide whether to associate with
other people who have AIDS. And if
1t turns out that AIDS can be
communicated in now-unsuspected
ways? That's JUSl tough luck.
If you Oip through a book caJlcd
"The Joy of Gay Sex" -and pause a
httle at the section on venereal
disease -you'll find ample warrant
in a pro-homosexual text for the view
that homosexuality 1sa set of foul and
filthy habits. But of course the gay
militants call this view "bigoted." To
hear them talk. you might think their
role in the spread of AIDS has been
merely passive.
The truth 1s that they are feroc1ou~
ly aggressive. With total contempt for
3,000 years of Jewish and Chnstian
moral tradition, they would forbid
the practical expressjon of moral
disapproval of their pervenjon. Now
they would even forbid us even to
protect ourselves against the diseases
they spread.
Jo1~pll Sobru I• • 1yadlcated
colamaJ1t.
you give the bride a kiss , Th~ lav. of f.g.r>l nov. rrqum:\ ()1dyoublow yournose256t1mes What s a nice robot like lTOU
wedding gue~I\ trH hcd..: their ttun'> at last year? That's t;pical say th e J .
~~dd~rbeT~!~ ~/ (;·:;~!~ .. ~.:~~~~d Kleenex makers do1· •ng 1•n a ki• tch en 1 •k th1•s? . ~~~~~~·~~rt~~n~~~d~l~e~/~k:I [~~t.>h Tn the ear(\ Scots. oats were 1 e .
JUnfire v.ac, nullJv.ed o.iltcr 76'1 kill-· rnrn " To the early English, wheal
1ngs and 3/JlP wounding\ was "com·· To the early Teutons,
Q. Arc .1lb1no 11gc" \Ao hill Jll oH·r'
A No the u<1ual g.ra)'·hrown ,tnpt.~
ar(' still gra't-hro~ n bwt m<>tead of
orange 'itnpe'>. they have wh1t('
C.) \.\>hat s the ('p1taph on Wilham
Shakespeare·s tomh''
A. "( urscd be he that n111\ co; m\
bones··
To wa-m your undt"rw~ar 1n -,.our
birdbath 1s spcc1ficallv outla\Aoed 1n
Dunc.an. Okla.
Q Whut animate; in the 11xl'i dr~1w
the mo t people''
A The big cats
How Iona do )'OU thin~ It will tah·
yo u to become immortal. young
felloW? Shakespeare"• c ,1 r('er only la<>t
about 2S year~
Q What'\ th(' nJmt• ol the h1ghe~1
lake 1n the world"
A. Has no name. But 1l .. 111 I 1het
ORANGE COAST
DailJPilai
..and salt and gunpowder were
"corn"
() lc; 11 true )ou'll turn yellow 1fyou
('at too many carrots?
A. If man y too many, yes. Carotene
poisoning. Otherw1~ known as .. hy-
percannost'i ·· Not dangerous. JUSt
weird
The weather. always eastbound,
travel f'Ulcr in the winier than in the
~um mer.
Q How come people over the qe
of 30 don't get mononucleosis?
A. Because almost all have already
had 1t by then Without evi<knt
symptoms. But sufficient to im·
munize them
Four out of five a1.res m Wyoming
is for gra11na
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yodlc•ted
col•m•I".
,,.ntl ZJnl
fCllllW
Tom Tlllt lol8MO!ftO r-Doft,..,
~..-.
t-1'~
I read two articles recently abour
my least fa vorite room -the kuchen .
Two-cook kitchens are becoming
more common for career-onented
couples. according to kitchen de-
signer Ellen Cheever. She gave a I 1st of
suagesuons for such a set-up
Two sinks are recommended be-
cause 1t is the hardest appliance to
share and the one most used. I can't
agree wtth that I will share my c;1nk
with one and all at an y time -even
tum 1t ovcrto them c:Ompletely
he also recommended add1t.Jonal
count.er space. One of her real
concerns i~ -;eeing that men have a
proper counter he1aht. The¥ should
not have 10 work at ihe trad1t1onal 36-
inch counter hei&ht d~igned for
women. Ha1 Neither should some
women. We come in different sizes
too, and all men arcn 't 6 foot 2 inches.
Cheever cllJms that an many c.ses
the man is a spccualty cook and need'
his own space to pursue ha~ spttJalty
Sm~ man learned how to tum on a
microwave oven, kitchen des1aners
be_.n turn1na themselves 1ns1dc out
tryma to custom-desllfl a kitchen for
his comfon.
If both the husband and Wife are
aounnet chefs and think of cook.ma as
"theater," then, space and money
pcrm1uma. both should have their
own tnan&Je of s1nlt, stove and
refhacrator m which to pcrfonn.
There is no sense of the theater
wheo. I go into the kitchen (unlcu at's
one 1'f lla~tick come<b'). I do not feel
"on n1ar:··1 fttl "on tbc spot" And
ANN
WELLS
my husband goes into the k.atchen
only on his wa y to the garage. _
The second artrcle. titled, "There
Ma y Be Little Future for Kitchens."
sounded more promising.
This was also slanted toward the
career-oriented family. The theory
here 1s because of different schedules,
different diets, fast-food restaurants.
and packa&cd meals 11 ncar-1ourmct
level, the 1'am1ly dinner has almost
disappeared.
The author. Edward Comish. pre·
diets that future houses will have a
sin&Jc "areat room" which will in-
corporate the f uncuons of the
kitchen. d1nin1 room and liv1na
room. Docs ttlat rins a belJ? Sounds
like the one-room cabins our pioneer
ancestors lived an. Ah, prosrcu.
This put room m our future
houses will hav~ food \lOrqc .. nd
oook.tn.f areas. be\'crqc bar, and
audfov11u1I equipment surTOundina
the conven.ation area h could even
include • arccnhouse where fre h
produCf' 1s arown.
MtcrC>-COmputer appliaocct will be
prop1mmed to perform multiple
funcuons in acquenct. AU of lbcle
sman machines will be tied into a
compu1criud control svstem. Thcv
'
wtll not onl y be able to accept spoken
directions and confirm them in a
synthesized voice, but they will talk to
each other. After all, we can't have a
great room full of lonely apphances,
can we?. •
Comish said that while we are out
of the house, the control computer, if
proarammed corrcctly, will order
food ~nt to the house, monitor its
receipt, and direct 1t to storage
cabinets. Robots may do everythina
from retrievin1 frc h vegetables from
the &rcenhousc to clcanina. cooking
and servina them.
You can even call this robot from
your office or your car to tell him what
you want for dinner. when you wUI be'
home and how many 1UC1ll there will
be
It sounds enticina enot1.h to make
me ooMider a cellular phone set-up
for my car, but I do have a few
questions.
When the robot retrieves the msh
vegetables from the a;reenhouae. will
be be propammed not to put the
celery stnnas down the aarbl&e
d1 poser'/ Will be peel the tomatoes?
And Wlll he recoanize a tomato worm
or will it be al.iced and served atona
with the tomato?
Will be blow 1 fuse if you top on
the way borne and pick up a pit.z.a?
And what about famUy tcerets?
Will he ncbanac 10Mip with the
other robots in ttie nei.&hbotbood? t nttd the aoswm 6cfore t dtdde
bow arut thiJ .. put room" will
c.1..... .... ,,,. 11.,. ..
wi-Nlpd.
JACK
AIDEISOI
and DALE VAN A TT A
Jig's up
for grad
school
in scam
Ag school forced
to pay the piper for
'helping' agencies
WASHINGTON -In Wasb1n1
ton, it's hard to come up wit.b •sca1
that someone hasn't already ;.fiougl
up. But the inventive adm1phtrato1
of the Graduate School of the U.~
Department of Agncul e manage
to do i .
For the pas years, thi
obscure institution has been provid
ing services and personnel for variou
agencies and cbarg.mg commission
to do 11. If you worked for .
government agency that needed extr:
personnel, computers or fumituf'I
and you wanted to avoid th•
cumbersome procurement channels
the thoughtful folks at the Gradual•
School were usually willing to help.
It was an ingenious bit of flim
.Oammery that deserves at least ar
Honorable Mention in our HaJI o
Shame.
We first broke the story two week!
ago with a report that two Washing·
ton-area Army installations spen1
$235,000 over a two-year pcnod or
equipment -including a microwave
oven, a bar stool. slide projectors and
an exercise machine -throua.h
"inter-agency agreements" with tfie
Graduate School. The purchases were
disguised as "educational services" to
bypass the regular procurement pro-
cess.
A few days later, the Agriculture
Department's inspector general re-
ported that I.be Graduate School had
acted as a "pass-through contractor"
to purchase supplies and equipment
and to hire employees wanted by
client agencies. The Graduate School
collected commissions of up to 30
perc~nt, which were concealed as
"overhead fees ."
The school, which offers adult·
education courses, receives no ap-
propriations and is supposed lo
subsist on tuition fees. But with a $30
million contract income, lls annual
budget soared from $4.9 million in
1980 to $23 million in 1985. There
was so much money cominf m, said
one insider, that the school • couldn't
handle it" and began to have billing
and accounung problems.
It will be a few months before the
scandal runs itkourse. One Graduate
School official, Director Edmund
Fulker, has resigned under pressure,
and a federal arand j ury is looking
into the operation. Other investiga-
tions may be in the offing. ·
Our reporter Kenneth Reid has
learned that a federal grand jury
probe of the Army's contracts with
the school has already snared one
individual, who pleaded guilty to
filing fraudulent claims. "There's a
lot more to come," said a source 1n the
U.S. Attorney's office m Alexandria.
Va.
The inspector general at the AJcncy
for International Development 1s also
auditin.g tbe $11 million in contracts
his agency signed with the Graduate
School. In one case, an AID official
requested that a panicular individual
be hired by the school and assigned to
a foreign aid project. "We would like
to have him report for work on or
about Sept. 8," the official wrote in a
letter to the school's head of inter·
national proarams on Aug. 22. 1983
Federal regulations Datly forbid
a&encies to designate who is to be
hared on contract jobs. By using
"inter-agency agreements" with an
entity that is not a federal agency, the
foreian aid officials were able to
circumvent the rules.
The Graduate School'S" former
business manager. Kenneth
Dickerson, repeatedly warned hts
superiors that the deals they were
mak.ia_a with other government aacn·
cies were not on the up.and-up
In a Dec. l 6J 982, letter to Fulker,
for example, Ulckcrson questioned
eitpcnditure1 made for an Army ~ucalio11al center at Fort Bclvoar,
Ya. "J suspect a Jood many of the
purchases do not simply comply with
fcderaJ procurement rqulations," he
wrote.
Footno~ Fulker said his school
had actually .. saved the government
money," not the other way around.
The overhead fees were ICSJtimate, he
said, and often nC«M&ry because the
aaencict he dealt with took so Iona to pay.
. UNDER THE OOM£: SpeaaJ
1otetttt arou1>1. as well u averqe
cili:i.en' are apparently tatina lhOle e.xhonationa to "write your con ..
arcuman" tcriously. Last yea/, 200
million P•ccet of mad ~ tent to
Capitol Hall, that's a fiyc-fold in·
creue 1inCC1 1973,
Jad AamiN u4 0.M VM AU.1
•n ,,-.lbl# t»lrlmalm.
t,8
lat --.
I
,.
n
1t
'S . ..
j
s
LETT ERS
oops, there goes case;
awyer llsts the~goof-ups
To 1he Editor:
The bia pot bust 1, rapidly b«om· a known 1n the tcpl community as
e "whoop " c.r.c, and with &ood ason.
As both Judae Bomom, on the
ord, and your rcponer in his anicle
oted, the first officer had "aood
stincts." But aood in1uncts 1n the
w arc known as "hunches" and are
ot an acceptable reason for deuunma ~1hzen1 much less i,carctuna any· m1. Wnoops.
So the officer te,t1fics the boat was
n violation of overtime parking. But
he officer testifies he knows there
ust be a sign posted before the
rkma law 1~ effective Whoops.
So the othccr says he saw the Sl&Jl.
ut then he admits on croswxam1n-
t1on he never looked for the sian and
ever saw the s11n. Whoops
So another officer testifies he saw
e sign that n1&Jlt, and he tells the
udge exactly what the sign S8}'S. But
c forgot he had earlier testified he
ad not been there that night.
oops.
So the Judie goes to the scene to see
if there is a sign and what 11 says. But
as other prosecution witnesses testify,
they "can't make out a single letter of
the sign," Whoops.
So the JUdac orders the "sign"
photographed, but less than two
hours later and before a photovaphcr
can act there, d)c city of Newpon
Beach has the "sign" repainted.
Whoops.
So now the evidence of the con-
d1t1on of the sign 1s permanently lost.
But as the city has wilfully destroyed
the "sign," the law may require the
case be d1sm1ssed on completely
separate grounds Whoops
So the Judge. clearly unhappy and
angry. has to d1sm1ss the case. and the
Chief of Polu;e blames the Judge,
cl11m1na the Judac is biased But
Judie Bostrom has the best record in
the court for holdina in favor of the
Police Department. Whoops.
Now, even your reporter gets into
the act. He says officer Freeman is
beina inves11aated by the Grand Jury
for possible perjury characs. That
may happen, but the contempt af-
fidavit sent to the Grand Jury
specifically alleaes Detective David
Szlcaradek as the ofTendina party.
Whoops.
And Judae Bostrom said in his
affidavit he beheved officer Free-
man's contradictory testimony was
possibly a result of the officer's
1nexpenencc. Whoops.
Your reporter quotes a "lawyer
close to the case," but then fails to
1dent1fy the lawyer. Whoops.
Then your reporter states the
officers never got a chance to explain
theiT contradtctory tesumony. But he
doesn't mention It is the d1stnct
attorney who caJls the witnesses and
asks the qucstJons, not the Judae. Whoops.
And this district attorney had four
months to call any of the officers
before the case was over but never did. Whoops.
And while Deputy District At·
torney Johnson says the sign was a
"non-issue," he was the one who
brought it up. The judge doesn't put
on the case. He only listens. Whoops.
And if the sign was a non-issue, then
without it, this was a non-<:ase.
Whoops. Whoops. Whoops.
Thank you for your courageous
cditonal oflast week. Shame on your
reporter, and cheers for someone hkc
Jud~ Bostrom who had the strength
and insight to sec through all the "whoops."
JEAN A HOBART. Attomc>
Newport Beach
Freeways are a poor legacy
To the Editor
The Orange County Supervisors
have voted unanimously to approve
revised developer fees to build 1hrec
additional freeways in Orange Coun-
ty. These TURKEYS (and I do not
use this term loosely, stupid birds one
and all) refused to read the hand-
writing on the wall when voters
defeated Propos1t1on A. They have
persisted ever ~ince in m1Heading
that vote
We DrD NOT WANT THAT
FREEWAY' It was never a quesuon
of WHO PAYS. but simply NO
NEED. NO FREEWAY'
The work mg!> of minds so bound by
handshakes on the golf course. so
incapable ofv1S1on, other than dollar
signs,, arc wonderous to behold
Of cour~ we mu'it ALLOW the
Irvine Co. 1t, freeway and tt!> rape of
pnsunc wilderness. Of course these
fees may or may not be passed on to
the homcbuyer Of course 1hcy will.
ProjeCttons of the cost of JUSt the
San Joaquin Comdor arc grossly
underestimated. Will we. the tax-
payers, then be forced to come up
with the additional millions 10 fini sh
this disaster when 1t deadcnds some-
where behind Corona dcl Mar'l
If the proposed referendum by the
city of Irvine costs that municipality
even one penny. I say. forget 11. Who
listens? Ccrtamly not those dinosaurs
who sil in county government I
I 1nv1tc you to come down El Toro
Road. and as you aproach the
mtcrscct1on with Laguna Canyon
Road, note the .. MODEL" houses
being erected there, Jammed together
with views onl} into the next dwell-
ing. Then conunue to the can)On
Observe the beauty of 1he natural
unscraped and bulldozed landscape
Is this the hentage we leave our
children and gntndchildrcn? Free-
ways to NOWHERE? Wall-10-wall
tacky dwellings? Do they not deserve
better'?
You, the supervisors. 1f you con-
tinue this course, leave a legacy of
desecration which can only be at-
tnbuted to GREED.
MARY LOU RIPLEY
Laguna Beach
Clearing up clove controversy
To the Editor;
Steve Marble's article on clove
cigarettes (Daily Pilot July 26), while
attempting to provide a broad over-
view of its use, contains several
inaccuracies. Since -Orange County
and ne11bonna Los Anacles account
for nearly ont-th1rd of all sales in the
U.S. oflh1s product. I want to set the
.record Stra.lahL Mr. Marble states that the Centers
for Disease Control released a report
(in late May) which documented 12
cases of persons who developed
respiratory complications af'ter
smokin. clove ciprenes, and he
ac1ded: 'Jn two cases, the smokers
died." This ii a preposterous con·
clu1jon that was not brouaht up in the
report In any form whatsoever. In
fact, there has never been a medical
repon published which has made this
claim.
In fact, the chief re~rehcr states 1n
the CDC repon that further tcstma
would be needed to prove any d1rcct
link lo clove c1prett'1 and the
respiratory illne sea 1t has been ac--
cused of causana. This 11 a far cry from
the beadhne an your artJcle: "Pres ure
moununa to ben sclltna of clove
ciaarette : Respiratory 11lment even
death1 blamed on tndonC11an 1m·
pon,'
Also. Mr. Marble reports that
Federal Health Officials say there 1s
growing evidence that tnhahng the
smoke ofbumma cloves can result in
scnous respiratory ailments I ask.
"What officials, what evidence?"
The article also states that Flonda
has banned the sale of clove
c1prtttes. A law WIS passed July I
and ovcnumedone weekJat.e.r_
Colorado 1s not on the verae, nor
arc its lawmakers cons1denna ban-
nina the Ille of these products as was
rcponed in the article.
ln conclusion, 1 hope your rcadas
looked closely at the comment• made
by the most vocal critic of clove
Cl&arcttes, who clearly It.id that the
clove ciprctte industry ii auilty until
proven innocent. What an absurd
comment, espcially since thi1 11 an
established product. Dr. Frederick
Schechter WIS quoted IS sar·na: "If
they (the industry) fee clove
c1prcues arc safe. let them prove it."
I say: "If be feels clove c1prcttes
cauae the problems he 11 acxu11na
them of. let him prove it"
After all, this product ha nearly
100 years of usge behind u
CHARLES R. ECKER
Dtrcctor. Information Center
pecialty Tobacco Council
Los An lcs. CA
NEWS ~ .
from all over California is rounded up each day
In the DliJJ Pilat
..
y' ... ----
Oranoe Coat DAILY PILOTIWedneeclay, Augu 21, 1985 A8.
Antl-.aake forces unblooefed
To the Editor.
Your editonal was the best or the
media outp0urina about the atomic
bombtf\& ofH1roshima and Napsak.i.
But the naive protesten wavull
their banners with little k.nowledac
and no expericn« of any kind of a war
make me nauseated. And the
mawlush, sentimental media ~ no
better.
As one of the million Americana
who were saved by the bomb1nJ
(accordina to Gen. Gcorp <:.
Marshall, who knew somethina about
warfare) and considerin,a the un-
counted Japanese hves saved by the
two atom bombs, it wa a practical measure .
M one who spent three out of four
yean of WWII an the New Guinea
and Philippine JUnales fiahtm~ a
ruthlns aniS autl mcmy. oa bcb&lf of
solders maamed and dead to mate the
country safe for the prestDt rutJen
protcstm and 1elf..,iyled uperu who
now feel t~ alom bombs WetO' not
needed, I tu ta trip for e1peru to·
A(J)\amstan to Stt the horron of a
conventional war. Then they will learn that wav1n11 protest banner is
not lhe same u facina a wavtn&
bloody bayonet ih~n. their. wilJ have the n&ht to
talk. They Will have earned it.
If an the intenm they must talk. I
su&Jest talk.Jn& to Kadafi or Kho.
me1n1. I think the protesters will find
that tbeK' people arc as fanatical a.s
they arc. and a ircat deal touaher.
Meanwhile, I'm wtth Reapn
LA DISLA W REDA Y
Newport Beach
. >
Education on the abuse of children
appropriate topic for the clasSroom
By LINDA ALGAZI
Phyllis SchlaOy disapproves of
cducat1na children 1n their
classrooms about incest, physic.al and
sexual abuse. alcoholism and
domestic violence.
I read SchlaOy's syndicated column
in this week's newspaper w11h horror
and indignation
She wntes, "The child 1s led 10
believe the g1gan11c falsehood that
these evils arc typical, nonnal or
common to most homes. The figures
gtven 1n the course itself (an educa-
ttonal program offered m our schools)
indicate that only one ou1 of five
households cxpenences seltual ause.
domesuc violence, or fhys1cal abuse.
and only one out o three homes
experiences alcohohc abuse."
Her logic escapes me. Wh > bother
publicly talking about a problem
which affects ONLY "one out oftive
households?" Indeed.
Perhaps we should also eliminate
all public information having to do
Wlth the dangers of drunk dnving,
cigarette smoking, drug use ... and
even nuclear holocaust. After all.
we've only had two nuclear bombs
dropped in all of our history.
''One out of five households" -
that means that the hves of more than
20 percent of our children have been
impacted as a result of psychological
and/or ph ysical domestic dangers. I
am appalled by this statistic. ·
My way of thinking says that when
20 percent ~f our population 1s
touched by any kind of senous and
dama&1 n& abuse. we've got a national
emergency.
Protective Behavior Anti· V1c11m
Trammi for children seems real
appropnatc under these conditions.
Schlafly, I'm sure, is also concerned
about abused children She says so
But she 1s apparently more con-
ccmed ... and seems genuinely ap-
palled by the idea of pre ventative
education 1n the ~hools
Since most children come frt.m.
she \S ys, "normal homes where
parents observe standards of morah'ty
and courtesy and do not indulge in
violence or abuse of their own famtly
members," wh y should they be
bothered bX information which may scare them .
I'd ltke to assure Mrs Schlafly that
children who live 1n loving and
Jack LaLanne's
supportive environments know
it. .. and aren't easily fnahtencd by
appropriate educauonal provams.
On the contrary, teachin_g little
children about their nghts 1s their
right -and should indeed be
supported by taxpayer funding.
Schlafly cntically notes that "The
child is taught to expect that his
parents Wlll probably not behcve him
1fhc tells them h1s fears. So the child 1s
required to set up a network of mostly
non-parents in whom he 1s to con-fide."
Come on now, Mrs. Schlafly. thts ts
hardly an anti-parent conspiracy If a
child -or an adult for that matter -
1s beina abused at home, he most
ccnainly needs to look elsewhere for protection. Wouldn't you.,
Someumcs it's easy for even lo\ 1ng
and supportive parents to lose sight of
the tot.al reality of the world o(the1r
children. If 20 percent of the children
in a classroom have been scarred as a
result of their own parents' al-
coholism, physical or mental child
abuse or domcsuc violence, then it's
naive to assume that the other 80
percent arc now somehow affected by
their classmates' pain.
Directly affi1ctcd ... or JUSt somehow
affected ... we aJJ need to be concerned.
We owe 11 to our cb.ildrcn.
Dr. Al1Hl J1 • marm1e II lamlly
1ber•pl11 la Col'OD• de/ M•r.
Keepflylng
that Old Glory
To the Editor:
I am wnung 1n regard lo Pete
W1essman ofFount.a.m Valley Mobile
Home Parl"
I defimtcl} think it's wrong that he
can't Oy ht~ flag. Maybe he should fl )'
a Oag from a communist counU)
That would make everyone happy
I h"e in a 'e~ nice neighborhood
and there are '>Cvcral people Wlth
flagpole flags l don't know them. but
JUSt seeing the Oag flying, I am sure I
would llke them
Let's pick on someone who doesn't
hke our country, not on Pete
W1essman Keep flyrng Old Glory'
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Co~ta Mes.i
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i
I
ar.,. Coes1 DAILY PILOT/Wedne.dey. Auguet 21, 1915
·Mesa halts all zOne changes
City Counct also agrees to replace
street median on Golf Course D-r-iv_e __ .
I JTONV A.AVEDRA °' ...............
A one-year moratonum hu been
placed on a1J requests for mon1na
and other amendments to Costa
Mesa'• General Plan, efTccuve Sept.
13.
The temporary ban, approved by a
4-1 vote of the City Council, was
aniuated to 11ve lawmakers a chance
to review Costa Mesa's land.use
pohc1es.
The council, as one of 1u &oal for
the nc~t two years, will update the
city's General Plan, a blue·pnnt for
land dcsianauons 1n Costa Meaa
Vice Mayor Mary Hornbuckle,
who \Ua&Cltcd the rczonana freeze.
aaid she didn't want to be makin.a
ma.JO! land·use decmon' while the
plan was betna overbauJtd
Councilman Donn Hall vottd
apmst the ban, sayina developers
should at leut be allowed 10 request
their propeny be ~oned. Whether or
not the council arant.1 the amend·
ments Is a different story, Hall aa1d.
The moratorium will not aflcct
applications 1ubmjned before the
mad-September deadhoe. .
Jn other action. practicality took a
back seat Monday to a lonptandm&
promise by the counal to provide a
landscaped street medan on Golf
Couno Orive~tbe small roed leadma mouaJy rulinalhat tbemedlao maybe
to the Coata Mesi Oolf and Country ampr.ctical, ·but the city's credibility
Oub. wu more imPoNnt.
The council lnadvcnently broke
that pact ln ~Y when the di vMSer was
tom down u pert of a project to
rebuild the de'ltrionlina street.
A oeiabborbood fiab"t ensued be-
tween nearby bomcownen wbo
called for tbc median to be ~laced
and apartment-dwellm who •rsued
the divider would hamper emergency
vehicles and was butcally unneeded.
Dunna the three hearinp on tbe
median, the council •arced to rebuild
the divider at a cost of rouahly
$50,000, but then froze the action
when apartment dwellers com·
plained.
Finally, council members ended
the lenathy debate Monday by unaru·
"II we pt to the point of where q
11.art to chanao the ~menu mlde
by previous counals. it may lead to
an unnable future," sad Hall.
The city about 10 yean aap llJ'CICld
to build lhe median aft.er residents in
a tract west of Oolf Course Ori ve
compl11ned about the apertment
compleitet ris1na alona the street. The
dividerdiscouraaedcan from drivin.a
directly from one of the complues
into the housina tract.
Additionally, homcownen main-
tained the median prevented motor·
ista from-speedin-. aJtbouah city
traffic enaineen said there was no
factual balis for that idea.
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,
PREMIER DEALERS
PRESENT
GE 'S ELECTRONfC
RE EBIGERATOR WI TH A
crushed ice,
cubes and cold water side-by-side with !'.. beverages, snacks and
Big
23 .5 cu .ft.
Refrigerator
with
8.57 cu.ft .
Freezer
Section
••• ..... c If I H
'I serving shen.
Electronic
Monitor and
Diagnostic
System checks key operating
functions at a touch!
It~. nol iust another refrigerator It gives
1c;u ins tant access to often-used items 1n
thf· door shelf. without opening the main
door and offers a bu1IHn counter to provide
11'1f•f JI serving space Features four
ad1ustable glass shelves and food-saver
c,ystem which keeps foods fresh up to
fifteen days
µ11r;f!ci ''~""''' t m~te1llat1on and color charge,, option I with dealer a All models may not be 1vell1ble at 111 dealers
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for neere1t locetlon 1013 8. M1ln St.
call: 7141848·11 10 or HOWARD'S I AD AAY'S
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LAGUNA Mii.Li Pl.ACINTIA lllL a DAVE•s APPLIANCE conAMllA . 10M7 leech ll•d .
OAVIS·BROWN CO. SADDLEIACK APPLIANCE IROWNION APPLIANCE
411 E. 17th St. 22112 Orenlte Way 1241 E. Yorbe Unda llYd.
El Toro man gets
lOyea-rsin bid ..
tb !Juycocaine
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An El
Toro man who auemptcd to buy
$62,000 wonh of cocaine only to
discover he wu dralina with an
undercover federal drua aaent was
sentenced Monday to I 0 years in
prison.
Ali Rcu Naim1 Mobases. 34, was
arrested in April after he was ol>
served by undercover aacnu of the
federal Drua Enforcement Adminis-
tration invesbplln& dru& traffickina
sn Orange County, Assistant US.
Attorney laune L Levenson said.
lnvest.11a1on 111d Mohases
purchased two k1loar1ms of-
purported cocaine from an under·
cover DEA agent for S6~000 and was
arrested at a home in 1:1 Toro after
makina the purehase.
At the time of his atrcst, Mohascs
was free on $300,000 bond pending
his scntcncina in a federal money·
Court date set for
accused molester
By tbe A11oclated Prell
A junior high school teacher was
ordered Monday to face a Superior
Court anaianmeot Sept 3 on aJJeaa·
tions that he mole1ted a I 2·ycar-oJd
girl student.
The rulin• came at the end of a
len&thy Municipal Court prcltm1nary
hearin& for Herbert Okamoto, 53, of
Tustin, said Orange County Deputy
District Attorney Mark Scv1any.
Okamoto, who has been suspended
from his Job as a math and woodshop
teacher in Anaheim, 1s charged with
five counts of molestallon and re-
mains free on $7,500 bond
He was arrested by Anaheim police
May 31. •
Police say the Okamoto's alleged
victim has been the t.ariet of haras~
ment by students who supported
Okamoto.
laundenna ca~. Ltven~n said.
In lhedruJe&IC, US. Di trictJudae
James M. ldcman alw fined Mohucs
S2S,000 for conspiracy with mtent to
distribute cocaine.
Before sentencing. Mohases, who Is
from Iran, blamed his trouble on the
1978 Iranian revolution. rdeman
scoffed at the oouon "Most people (who flee their native
countnes) become good Amencan
citizen ," ldeman said ... You come
here and tum to cnme. You plotted to
d1stnbutc lulos (of cocamc) to the
Amcncan people "
Once in custody on the drug charae.
he was subsequently sentenced to ti ve
yean in prison in the moncy-launder-
inJ case by U.S. Oistnct Judge
Richard A. Gadbois Jr.
Meanwhile, a federal jury in Los
Anacles contmucd to deliberate the
fate of a San Clemente man, Mark
Steven Mcfarlane, 30, who was
arrested with Mohases in the cocaine
conspiracy case
At the lime of his arrest wtth
Mohases, Mcfarlane was free on bail
pending appeal of a 25-year federal
prison sentence he received 1n
another drua case, authonties said.
0 BITUARIE S
Florence Mccumber
of Costa Mesa dies
Funeral services were held Monday
for 6~year-old Florence Lorraine
Mccumber, a former Costa Mesa
resident who recently resided in Santa
Ana.
A homemaker Mccumber died
died Aug. 13 at her home She wa'I
interred al Oak Hill Memorial Park 1n
Escondido
C)he 1s ~urv1ved by daughter. Lor·
ra1ne and Beverly, as well as sisters
Helen HaraeH of Co5t.a Mesa and
Arlene Knauss of El Cajon.
UNITED W AY ifJNDs ... ,
FromA7 ~ '
, I
million disbursed by the Orange
County Untted Way in 1985
But United Way officiah officials
said tocaJ agencies' reques1' for
additional money in 1986 totaled
$4.3 million or 34 6 percent more
than the 1985 allocauon
Since February, more than 200
volunteers have '>pent more than
7,500 hours reviewing the agencies
and their requests, United Way
officials said.
Review panel membcr5 considered
the agenc1c~· growth 1n operations
and programs. Also considered were
cnttcal and emerJ.Jn& community
needs, including child abuse, help for
the handicapped, child care and
senior programs.
The large5t single allocation -i 1.4
million -was approved for the
Orange County Chapter of the Amen·
can Red Cross.
Other large allocat1on'i for coun·
tywide aroups included $835,678 for
the Boy Scouts of Amenca; $669, 743
for the Amencan Cancer Society,
$335,001 for the American Heart
Assoc1at100 , $472,820 for Catholic
Community Agenc1e~ $335,833 for
Children's Hospital ot Oranae Coun·
ty, $267,897 for Family Service
Assoc1at1on, $560, 15 I for Girl Scout
Council of Orange County; ~344,337
for Goodwill Industries. and
$346,846 for United Cerebral Palsy.
Untted Way officials said the total
1986 allocation of S 13.5 million 1s
dependent on the organization reach·
mg 1t~ S 18 4 mil hon goal for the fall
fund-ramng campaign that beams
Sept 14
The fund-dnvc total exceeds the
allocauorrbecause United Way of-
ficials anticipate S 1.5 mtllion in
pledae losses. Funds are also set aside
for emergency agency needs, new
admission\ and grants to 1nnova11ve
community organization\.
lJn11ed Way olfic1als say about 15
l.Cnts of every dollar coll<.'(.lcd ~oes
toward \he organ11.at1on's admin1~
tratlve cost\
WHO GETS FUND S •••
FromA7
Community ( ounschna C cntcr -$44, 981! SEAL BEACH
Interval House -S3 I ,SOO. SOUTH LAGUNA
Human OptioM -$37,920. ------
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I
I
! I • I I
I • I • I • I • I
I I • I • I ·-·-·-
. llily WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21. i915
Th• ruah I• on to atop the Super Bowl Ch8mplon ••re. 111.
Player ftnda emplorment llne h8rder to t.clde Ihm tln11 II.
Yanke~e colors
are very clear,
a sizzling red
By CHRIS MONAHAN
~Ne4C..1 ......
To see the New York Yankees play
on the road, you note that tbcy•rc not
much to look 11 1n thw dnb black
and grey uniforms But don't be
fooled. nght now the Yankees, W1n-ners of 13 of their tut 14, arc red-bot.
The Yankees. the best team tn
baseball at home (40-IS), came to
Anaheim Stadium Tuesday naaht and
had no trouble malan& themselves
riaht at home.
New York put on 11 power thow to
rival Southern C.ahforrua Ed1son,
hJtling five home runs, 1ncludina two
by Don Matltn&ly. as the Yankees
beat the Angels. g_ 5, before a crowd of
38,791.
"We've played well at home, but
have struggled on the road all year
(29-33)," said Mattingly "On our last
tnp, we won tn a couple ofti:>u&h ball
perks (S-1 tn Boston and Cbac.qo)
and WC)USt hope 1t cames over."
Mattin&)y's two blasts (21 and 22
for the season) exiendcd has huuna
streak to 18 games. the lonaest
currently 1n the maJorsand made ham
the first player to reach 100 RBI m
1985.
than 10, htt penonal power o urput
this year has been more exl)CClOd.
.. Last year was a surprise when I bit
the 21, but th.t year r tnew rd be
around 20,•• said MattJnaJy. ••t have
worked a lot with (bi«ina coach) Lou
Paniclla on my we1Jbt &h1ft and
aetuna the ball to~ more." "I expected Maujn&Jyto bea a&ood
hatter, but I didn't expect power out of
ham," said Yankee Manqu Bally
MArttn.
S&Jd P101ella, .. He has chaqt:d tu1
mechanics (since I.he m10or leques)
He has a good quick t.t and is settina
good extension of bis arms. He is also
matunna and &ettinJ stronaer . .,
~ ..... ,.....~~· ..... For Mattingly, the 22 home runs
represents the second consecuuve
year he has broken the 20-mart (1984
being the first) After a minor lcque
career tn which he never hat more
Also talon& part m the home run
derby was Dave Winfield (20th),
RJckey Hcndenon (19th) aod Mike
Paglaarulo (1 3th). It was 1he JCCOOd
ume this year that the Yankees have
hit five home runs in a pme.
Even wtth the b11 win, the Yankees
were not able to pin around on
(Pleue Me A!IGEL8/112)
Umpire Da•e Phlllpe rulee Bob Boone Kie ander the ta.a of
Yanllea •hon.top Bobby lleacbam ln third tnntna. Bo&by
Grieb (lnaet) 1eta a IUCh-fi•e from Rod Carew and othen ID
dacoat after •laaln& a two-run homer ln the filth lnnln&.
It's a whole Dew ballgame: Name-that drug abuser
And tt'sgotngread like
who'swhoofb aseball
•lftheX really call Raider quarterback J im
Plunkett 'the Plunker," do they call Marc
Wilson "the Plopper?"
•What the Dodgers have going for them as
the fact 1t 1s tough to blow good sized leads
when you arc gctti ng aood p1 tch mg. Nobody came an o n the noon balloon from
Saskatoon and asked me, but ... •What the Angels have aoing ap1nst them
is their tradition ofblowtng leads. . rcprdles~
of size.
•The New York Tames says 1l wall take an
entire sen es of articles to cover the baseball
mvolvement in the celebrated Pittsburgh
cocaJne case and has stan cd ment1ooing
names iocludang Dave Parker and Dale &rra
... Dale BcrTa 's daddy will tell you th as case
won't be over unlll il'sover.
•lfSM U 1sau1ltyaschlll"&Cd by the NCAA,
don't tell me we w\11 hear ofrecnu u ng
v iolations by the likes of Notre Dame and
TCU ... I asked you not to tell me that.
•Well,Joc Namath swcarsupanddown he
took voice lessons. •Old fiahterand new playera&ent Ken
Norton as Teanhna the basics oflhe flesh
pcddhna trade .. Norton advisedclaent Enc
t>iclccnon to tell the Rams, "J will sit o ut the
•Members of the Los A ngclcs Pohcc
Department assiancd to LA Ra1ders games do
not Jet hazard pay ... eveA 1fthey work the
Cohseum parkinalot. season.''
A catch the Dodgers
won 't soon forget
Marshall's big play
overshadows rest
in LA ' s 5 -4 victory
PHILADELPHlA (AP) -Malec
Marshall, who has never been known
for ha s defense, made the play of the
evening as the Dodgers cdacd the
Ph1ladelph1a Phalhes 5-4 1n 11 an-
niop.
The Los Angeles outfielder's body-
punishang catch agaanst the nght field
fence Tuesday n1aht protected a 4-4
tie tn the ntnth. lhe catch came on a
high dove by pinch hitter Tam
Co rcoran with runners at first and
S«Ond and one out.
"I thought 11 was a home run," said
ManhaJI, who two years aso used to
be taken o ut an the sixth innina to
improve the team's defense. "If it
wasn't the best catch I ever made at
was the m ost im portant."
The Dodacrs snapped a two-game
losing streak and ended a two-pmc
Philadelphia win streak.
Manhall bruised hls right knee,
which has caused b1m problems SU)oe
11 was o~rated on years a,ao. He lef\
the rme for a rinch hitter ID the I 0th.
.. knew was aoinJ to act
oflcf\ fielder G rC$ G ross.
"I was coming 1n and saw I wasn't
aomg to get lo at. lt was too late to pull
up, catch at on the hop," Gross said.
"It was just a mistake 1n Judament
and at cost the game."
~ Los Angeles Manaacr Tommy
Lasorda said he thought t'tie ball game
was over two innings earlier, 1n the
ninth.
"Then, all ofa sudden it isn't. And
we win tl It wu one of the finest
catches I've seen in a Iona time," he
said of the way Marshall raced over.
leapt, caught the bal) and cra5hed into
the wall.
Marshall relaye~ the ball to second
baseman Sax, who threw to second to
double up er Luis Aauayo.
Marshall th o fcl o the turf in p&Jn.
The Ph d en a 3-0 lead on
DodJCrs s r elch1 who was
seekioa bis ninth 1traiaht victory.
Jeff Stone sinaJed and Juan Samuel
tnplcd· hun borne, Glenn Walson
walked and Mike Schmidt doubled,
Samuel IClOrina. Walson came ho me
on an mfidd out.
Buo
TUCKER
•Dept of wretched excess· NauonaJ Foot-
ball Lcagueexh1b111on -oops-"prCICaSOn
games.
•The training camp of the USC. h oJansat
UC Irvine may be the most lavish-Jn alJ of
collcae football and, therefore, at t'l surpnsana
tbereisnotsome kJndofan NCAA rule
against it.
•Incidentally, the Trojans open agaJnst
llhno1s which is rated No. I by several
autho nt1es .. If you think the use people are
not taka ng the game seriously. old coach John
McKay wall address the troo~ before the
game.
• If the Rams 1J ve m to Enc Dickenon, they
ate wnhout backbone and prinetple ... If they
don't g>vc in to Enc DickCTSOn, they arc
stupid.
•Horse racing as about to tall into second
place be hand football as lhe leading spons
wagenng vchaclc.
• lt asamazang that more people don't get
kJlled by foul balls but more surprwn1 lS the
small num bcr of people who go nuts tryina to
ht t gol f'ba1ls
•When San Franasco ~9en Coach Bill
Walsh was stopped for spcwhna the other day,
he was rccocnizcd by I.he CH P ... recogruz.ed
as a speeder
•The California lottery people arc tallona
about copyang pro football by puttina their
game on telcvts1on.
•W1lhe Shoemaker had a mad-50-1~
b1nhday this wttk and 1fhc isn't the best
athlete of the century, he certainly 1s tn the top
10
• Bcttma on football bwJds as much
ch&nllCtcr as bettana on bone nana. but not as
often
•To bear a staru na pi t.cber tallc..
•Many stad1umsa.nd arenas have an-
nounced restncuons on the sale ofbccr but
very lmle has been said about cockuuls.
The worst thtng be can do as lSSUC a walk
The worst th1n1a quartcrbeck can do,
ls fumble the handoffon thtrd and two.
Rose: Just another
-'1ay on swing shift
He isn't concerned
with specifics of
b reaking record
(I (_ INNATl (AP) -Ctncinn.it1
Reds player-manager Pete Rose uy~
he isn't concc;mcd about when and
where he ~ts the h11 to break T\
Cobb's maJOr-lcague re"ord of 4 191
Even the prospect of inJury docsn 't
conam ham
"I've never dreamt about It l'"'e
never womed about 1t," Ro~ \did.
"If you get hun, budd) you g<'I hurt
That's all ther<' 1s to 1t, and with lhe
career l'H had. wh) <ohould I 'AOrT)
about getlln& hurt·>"
The 44-year-old switch-hatter
entCTcd Tuesday's game at Pmsburgh
needing IS bits 10 b~lc Cobb''
record.
Rose has been on a hatting \!real
lately, collect1n1 e1aht Ct')O'leCUl1H
hats u a nght-handcd belier wh1k
ra1stng his avera&c to 27 \
"C..etttng the h1t\ I'> m)' 1oh
Thtnk.tna about how, or wh~. (')r
what kind of1hit1t will be thert' \no
c;cnsc 1n doing that." Ro~ ~1d
games 1n the l'oa11onal League West.
return home Fnd.t~ for a I 0-game
home\t.and
Marge Schott, the owner of the
Reds. has ~1d she very much wants
for Ro~·s rccord-brcak..ang htt to
occur befort a ho metown crowd at
C 1nc1nnau·~ Riverfront tad1um
But. Schou said Tuesday, ihc doesn't
1h1nk 1t would be proper for her 10 as k
Ro~ to bench himself on the road in
order to ensure that he breaks Cobb's
record in C'1ncinnat1
"I don't rtaJI) fed that would be my
place to ilSk him to do somethma hke
that I don't 1h1nk It would be
proper " Schou paused 10 chuckle
and added It would be a good idea.
thoulth
"That'\ really up to Pete urc, I'd
hke to sec him do 11 here." Schott, a
C'inc1nnat1 bu,1nesswoma.n, said
from huoffice "I thank everybody in
the country, deep down 1ns1de, would
Il k<' to~<' him do 1t 1n (1ncmnatJ
"I JU51 hope 11 work!> out for
C'veryh(x1v', \akc 1ha1 he geu 11 hrrc
~u~ I think 11 \ ahout the hlf'C\1
thin& e"er to happen 1 n \pon\' 'ihe
\aid
"If 11 can 1 lx in ( inc1nnat1 " Ro~
\aid "I'd like 1t to be in Ph1ladelph1a
!>«au~ tho\C' are thC' two ctt1c\ that
'lupported mr the ml»t
crunched, but I don't think about
that, Just catch1na the ball," hua1d. "I
aot the ball in the &love just before I
hat the wall. h 's tMnardest I cvu hit a
wall. Lucky th11 wall aivcs a little."
The Ooc11ers went o n to win on a
two-out triple by Mariano Duncan, a
drive to n&Jlt that drove tn Steve Su
from first after bouncina ofTthe knee
Tom Niedenfuer pitched three
ann.inp in reUef to cam hi 11xth
victory in 10 decisions, wbtle Rick
Hon~tt worked a tc0reless 11th
for bis 61'$1 . aavc.
,,,.......,.__
Ill.Ile Schmidt .Udee lDto .econd for doable u ~en·
Steve 8u awaJ. .. throw. bat play of the aame WU ln rfCbt a•
Mille Manha11 (lnMt) 1oee down after a 1a.me-aTID1 catch.
"\ ou d like at to be 1 hit thert' 1 no
doubt about a clean hit not som~
thinJ off somebod>'s glove, and
obv1ou"I)'. I'd like 11 le) bc in
( anc1nna11." Sllld a~ a ( 1nctnnat1
native who played from 1%' to 11n
tor the Reds before departing tor a
live-year hitch Wlth the Ph1lad<'lph1a
Ph1lhes and Montreal E:xpo'> He
retumC'd to the Rech 1n \u&U'>t I 9R4
as player-manager
"But 11 v.e are 10 the middle ofa tx·
da' road tnr .ind I'm close. I
YrOuldn't take 1ho~ daH off I know
all the ~pk 1n < 1nl inna11 v.uuld hkc
to ~ 11 ~ I kno'A the' 'd rather itt a
pennant "
"J'm OUI &01na l<l \It here and Y )
when I aet tht h11 I v.111 hr the an-at~t
h11ter that ever lt'ed," Roc;c ~•d . "I
will have more htL\, that'' 11
W1nnma game\ 1~ probabl) the b11·
ge"t thtng 1n m) lUt'er "
Rams Pare roster down to 60
Fri ay'sCx tbitlon a me
~~l go live on Channel 2
The bm1 peted down to tbc NFL'1 mandatory
6().player limlt TuClday by cuttJna five playel"I,
placina another on the i~urcd raerve l1si and puiuna
two veterans on the did•not•repon list
Eric Dickerson. 1 holdout, and I S-ycar veteran
Jack Younablood, 11t'ho hat been held out of 1ra1n1na
camp, were put on the did-not·f't1)0ft Jin.
Rook.le tackle M1kt' Shinrr, a tree qcnt from
Notre O.me, wu put on tho •n.Jurod l"CIU"C l&Jt with
1 wained calf. ,,.
S«ond·yetr center Tony laton from uthcm
Cal, rookie quarterbrlCk tt Tantley from ulhcm
Cal. rook.It wide receinr R cky Martln (rom New
Mnico. rooki Unebecker Otry wan n '" "'Cal Poty Sin Lul Obdoo and rook.e ruoruna beck 8'11
tone f'rom Adam• State Mre put on waivcn.
Nut k all Nation.al Football 1.Qaue nu
i
must cut thetr rotten to )0 players, and by Sept, 2 I.he
rosten must contain only 4S name • four fewer than
last year.
Friday'• p~e at Columbus, Ohio. api~st the
Phaladelptua fqkS, Wlll be tcle\'ited hve, tqinnins
at 4:30 wsth Jtm Htll and Pat Haden m1kcsidc.
Raiders release 15 'r
OXNARD-Tbc Los A_oadc:s R.aidcn rclcUcd J' playc,.. and placed ctaht otbm on injured raeTVC
Tuetday to reach the Nauonal Football incue roatcr
hmit or 60 playcn
Amona th0te rck&lcd re \'e\Cfan 0010 tackk'
Rick Ackerman and lincbeckcn Mart Memll and
Oer'r)I Byrd. Ackerman joined the Raiden la an the
.... IUIOft after th.-tc:UODS It n Dicao. Memll .vu alto a &at n acquisauon an '14 and bu
played (or ti• Nft team• over seven at.a10n1 Byrd
was a two.y t kup and aal tums pla)'Ct.
..
.\f\er lhrtt pme in Ptll\burgh the
RC'ds, who trail Lo AnaelC'' h' e1aJ'tt
Ocean View team in fi n a ls
l.Af A YETI Ind -Ocean View Colt ba"°ball team from
Huntanaton Bea h will face Lafaycue, Indiana 1n the C olt World ~nes
finals here th1 af\emoon
Ocean View's 1eam ot IS and l~year-<lhb o;ct a ( olt Wofid ~ncs
record for runs scared l ue5day niaht on the •'3) to a 7-3 win over
Hoosier Nonh (Indiana) tn the 11Cm1final1. In the KTtcs, Ocean View
ha1 umulatcd .. run,, su~ana the old mark of39.
Mille Romine t"lf Fount.a.in Valk), v.bo will be a Kmor at Oa-tn
Vaew Hilb in the fa.II. wH the Wlnnan p1tchcr Tuc'Jday, wtnlf' ~'
Knacken of Huntinaton Bc-ach ddC'd rchefhtlp 1n the seventh 1nn1n
Ckun Vitw, the Wot Zone champio n. !oat lh first pme of •he
tournament and had to Ln cntnnce into lht 1nat "'* t I r'1
bncket Ocean View defeat~ PutTto Raco M1am1, and H '" Non.h
to e•m the f'i&ht to play for the cha.mp1onltup.
La )Ctl has not le ta pmc (.l-0) If n Vll'W wtn toni&bt. at
wtll tac.e Lafayette 1111n on Thul'1day for the champi Mb.19, .
Make f)hnt a(W tm1n11t.cr wall take the mound fi rOc.ean View
tbae ena
•
Better to worry
about fines than
eDlploynient line
P'l"OID AP ..... khl
Tack.le Dean Mira.ldt won't have to EllJ pay the SI ,()()().a-day fines ~ aneued
apinst him by the Phdadelphsa &ales.
That's because be won't be playina for the £aales any
lonaer. . Miraldi, the EaaJes' No. 2 pick in the 198 l NatioAal
Football Leaaue draft, was one of 14 playen cut by
Philadelphia Tuesday -one day after he had reported
to the team's trainina camp.
Mirald!e:;o .., .. in the option year oftus contract,
wanted the es to reneaouate his &Jl'C'Cment, which
caUed for S l l OL..OQO per year. He had reJ~ted the team's
offer of a $20,uuu raise.
Mi.rald1 had offered to 10 to camp lut week if the
Eaales ,..ould fo~t the daily fines ofS 1 ,000.a-da~ey were imposina upon bim. The tam ret\ued. The es
said they expected MU'l.ldt to pay the full amount o the
fine when be re~ned.
Tuesday. es General Manaaer Harry Gamble
wd Mtraldi wou dn't have to pay the fine. after all.
The cutuna o(MiraJdi came as a surprise. because
Coach Manon Campbell had appcatt<i conciliatory
Monday when the 6-3, 285-pound veteran rtported to
camr, 'Dean doesn't want an imqe of a bad JUy, a M
that's holdtna out," Campbell aaid. "He bates th.at IOnd
ofamaae."
Later. Campbell amplified those comments.
"l don't want to a sassinate Dean's character by
any means," Campbell aaid. "He came in and was very
open and honest Wlth what he wu tellina me. l think the
imaae be has nght now ofbeina a bard holdout disturbs
ham"
Quote of the day
Dave Con~pclon, Cincinnati shortstop,
telhn& teammates th.at he had planned to go home
to h1~ cattle ranch in Vennuela if the playen'
stnke hadn't been settled quickly: "I'U work out
wt th the bulls. You have any idea bow much of a
workout you can act when one geu mad and
chues you? One th1D& is ror sure. It is M>t like
facing Dwlaht Gooden."
Detroit dowu Oalrland, 4-1
LarrJ Bud• and Tom Broeka1 hit • home nant for Dctrott, which made the
mOlt of ftve hlts Tuctday niaht to beat
OUlud; 4" I, tn an Amenean Leque pmo
... Ellewbere, pinch runner Seon Pktcller scored the
wmnina run from third bl.le in the mntb lnnina when
second bueman Praak W~t• booted Lall s.luar'1
around ball to ~vc the Chicqo White Sox a 2·1 victory
over Kansas City ... J\19 Mualq sin.aJed home the
winni nan to cap a lhreo-run ninth innina rally as
Milwaukee cdacd Minnesota, J.2
... Toay Ptraa.Ddn scored one
run and drove in two, includina
the debrealcer in ~e aeventh
innina. to afve Toronto a 3-2
v1ctory over Cleveland .•• Toby
Harrala lead off the ei&hth ionina
with a home run into ihe left field
screen to break a scoreless tie,
helpma knuckleballer CbrUo
Uoa&b and Texas to a 3· I victory
over Boston Red Sox ... Gormu
lleradoD 11aoma1 walked with the baJes
loaded and one out in the bottom of the runth innina to
lif\ Seattle p&Jt BaJumof!1.4-3, snappina tbe Orioles'
six-pme winruna streak. with the score tied J..3, Jack
PereoDte sinaled wtth one out tn the ninth qainat
reliever Nate SoeU, 3-2, and took third on PlaU
Bradley'• s1o.aJc, his \hird rut of the pme. After Al
Coweu walked on four pitches to load the basts,
Thomas walked on four pitches to force home Perconte
with the winning run.
Bowa •ten• contract wt.th Meta
NEW YORK -Th' possibility of • ~. na in one more World Series bu lured
Bowa back into the m.;or leagues for
o nal pennant race.
'Tm very happy to be here, even ifl don't play a
game." Bowa said Tuesday after be sianed a contract
With the New York Mets for ttie remainder of the
season.
The 39-ycar-old Bowa, who has the highest career
fieldina average of any shortstop in history and has
played more games at the p0sition than anyone in the
National Lcaaue, was put on waivers by the Chicago
Cubs Wt week.
On Saturday, Bowa's aaent told him that the
Naoonal League East-leadina Mets wanted bis services,
and the deal was announced before Tuesday's game
between the Mets and San Francisco. Bowa did not play
ID the game.
PETE ROSE
COUNTDOWN
Cl~ 1.noa
Ty Cobb
Wba t Rote did
Tuesday:
He was 0 for 3
1 with a walk in the
Reds' 3-2 loss to
the host Pit·
tsburah Pirates.
Paulaon win• driving crown
AK.RON , Ohio -Costa Mesa's l!I Dennis Paulson, a member of the Santa
Ana Country Club 1n Costa Mesa, won the
national lona-dnvin& championship Tues·
day with a dnvc of 323 yards, 25 mcbes at Firestone
Country Club.
Paulson, a 22-year-old senior at San Diego State
and the NCAA lona-dnvina champion, used a meJal
dnver to become the first amateur to win the $25,000
event sincc Andy Franks in 1979.
Paulson's winnlD&S of$7,500 were donated to the
PGA Junior Golf Foundation. He makes has pro-
fessional debut Thursday at the Queen Mary tour-
nament.
Aatro. embarrua carcta, 17-2
Houston catcher Marll 8ailq clubbed •
his ICICOnd arand slam of the seuon. and
DlckJ• ftOll drove 1n rour runs Tuesday
niaht with a tnple and home run to
tliahlJlbt a 19-rut attack that lifted the AJtros to a 17-2,
National wauc victory over St Louis. Mike Scott,
lJ.6 who pitched seven inntnas, reurcd 13 batten 1n a
row trom the first to the fifth, but lost his shutout in the
tuUh on Sttvt B~u'1 sacrifice flr and Tom Herr'•
double ..• D•lpnlooden won hts 3th straiaht pme,
1truck out a major leaaue seuon
haab 16 batters and pitched a
&even-bitteT in leadm& the New
York Meta past San Fra,,ciaco.
3-0 ... Juoo Tlaomp101 hit a Ile·
breakina home run and RJck
R111elleJ woo for the first tJme in
more than a month as Pittsburah
beat Cincinnati, 3·2 . . Ryne
Saadbtr1 hit a two-run homer an a
three-run ei&hth innini to aive the
CbJcqo Cubs a 5-2 victory over
1'laoD Atlnata . . . uft-hander Dave
Dravocky tcattered eiahl hits over seven inn1nas and
&.via McReyaold1 drove home Terry ltUDedy with
the lone run u San Dieao edat<f Montreal, 1-0.
USC adda Notre Dame to alate
SOUTH BEND lnd. -Southern m California has been idded to Notre Dame's
l 98S-86 basketball schedule, replacing
Louisiana State.
LSU was unable to adjust its schedule and could
not play in the Jan. 18 slot that NBC bad marked in to
televise a Notre Dame pme. ~
Instead, Southern Cal's Trojans will play at Notre
Dame's Athletic and ConvocatJon Center, wtth game
time tentatjvely set for 2:30 p.m.
Televl•loa, radlo
TELEVISION
4:3S p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Pbiladelphaa, Channel 11. , -
S p.m. -BOXING. Bill Costello vs. Lonme
Smith for WBC Superlightweaaht champ1onsh1p.
RADIO
4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Pbtladelphaa, KABC (790).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL New York
Yankees at Anaels. K.MPC (710).
The rush is.on to raze the champion 49ers
[il was a distant second to Montana ID the 35,000 yards an an I I-year Canadian 1-ootball
January showdown. Leaaue career, could push Kemp into the NFC West teams hope
to end SF'sdomtnance
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -After winnang
15 regular-season games, a National Football
League record. the San Franc15CO 49ers wer.e a
marked club in last wrnter's playoffs.
"It won't be_ easy. Every week, whoever we
play will consider the pme a bag one, and
they'll all be ready for us." says offensive
tack.le Keith Fahnhorst, the senior member of
the 49en.
1Tle Rams, New Orleans Saints and Atlanta
FaJcons, who finished 1n that order behind
San Francisco in the National Football
Conferencc West last season, will get two shots
apiece at -the-· 49ers, who outscored their
opponents 457-227 in the 1984 regular season
and 82-26 in three postseason aames. The
49ers swept all three d1v1s1on nvals last year
but got at least one touah game from each of
them.
agafost a defense that affowed an average of
only 322 yards per game in the regular season
and held the Dolphins to 314 in the Super
Bowl.
"Marino's the best thrower in the lcaaue. backup role this year. Ferragamo. the Rams'
Mo~tana's the best quarterbac~ ... said Roger Super Bowl quarterback six seasons ago. i~
Craig. the fullback who ended his second NFL now with the Buffalo Balls.
sca~on with a tbr~e-touchdown performance ' Al New Orleans, the Saints' most ex·
against t~olphtns. . penenced quanerback 1s Richard Todd. 31 ,
Montana should be ~tter this year, ~d the now that Ken Stabler has retired from the
same goes for the 49ers offense, accordmJ to team that went 7-9. Todd's competitors arc
Walsh. The quarterback ~me a full-time Dave Wilson a first-round draft pick of four
starter in 1981. the team s first Super Bowl Dars ago a~d Bobby Heben one of the
Joe Montana of the 49crs was the NFC's
top-ranked quarterback last season. throwing
for28 toucbdownsand 3,630yards. He missed
one game because of injury, and backup Matt
Cavanaugh delivered 252 yards passang ID a
victory over Philadelphia. '
champ1onsh1p season. s' F Le • • · At 29, Montana probably will be the nited tates ootball ague s leading
yo unsest starting quarterback. as well as the passers for three seasons.
best, m the NFC West this season. Steve Bankowski, 32, as back to handle
"When the pressure was on, we were
dominatang. Our defense gave up only two
touchdowM in all of the playoffs, which as
absolutely fantastic," Coach 8111 Walsh said
after the 49en finished with an overall record
of 18-1 by destroylD& the M1am 1 Dolphins
38-16 1n the Super Bowl
This ~.a.son, the pressure wall be on from
game No. I, Sept 8 agamst the M anncsota
V 1Jc.1 ngs, a team the 49ers embarras!Cd 51·7 ID
Lhetr biggest SC-Onng outburst of 1984.
The Falcons, last 1n the d1v1s1on at 4-12,
pve the 49eM the most trouble. Their losses
were by scores of 14· 5 and 3 5-17.
Atlanta's offense outgaJned San Francisco's
in both games, totahna 418 and 414 yards
Montana was at bis best against M1am1,
setting a Super Bowl passang record with 33 I
yards and also contributing 59 yards rush1Dg, a
re<:<>rd for a quanerback. to an attack that
totaled 537 yards. M1am1's Dan Manno. a
rccord-scnang passer 1n the regular season,
The Rams finashed 10-0 last year and Atlanta's passm~ He suffered a knee IDJUfY
earned a wtld~rd playoff bertb, going with last season, massmg fi ve games. and threw for
yo ung Jeff Kemp at quanerback after Vince only 11 touchdowns but stall was the NFC's
Ferragamo was injured. But 34-year-old third-ranked passer, behlDd Montana and
Dieter Brock, who passed for more than Neil Lomax of St Lou1)
49ers will
stick with
their field
~.\:-. FRANCIS( 0 CAP) -The
San Franc1..co 49ers and Mayor
Dianne Feinstein announced an
agreement Monda) on a $30 mallton
plan to expand and renovate
Candlc\ttdc Parle keeping the world
champion football team there unul
past the tum of the century
Both the 49ers and San Franc1~0
C11ant~ have threatened to abandon
(..andl~lJlk, which 49crs owner Ed·
ward J C..>t:Banolo Jr once called a
"p1gst\.
The pact must be appro.,.cd by the
Board ol ~uperv1\0r'l It would keep
the 49cr~ at ( andlesttck until 2008
'-"1th an option to stay until 2023
Feinstein. 5upcrva~or Quentin
Kopp and DcBartolo were among
those who signed the aarcemcnt at a
news con ference before Monday
night's Denver Broncos.-49ers game.
"It'~ very good for the city and very
good for the 49crs. ft will help us keeP.
a competitive team on the field,·
DeBartolo said. "We will actively
promote and try to get a Super Bowl
for ~.<lndlestick ...
The plan call\ for 9,250 new seats.
bnngmg the stadium's football ca-
pactl> to 71.000, but the $6 m1tl1on
cost of 10\talltng those seats will be
paid through a S 160 surcharie on
~ason-t1clcet holden' $200 tickets
The surcharsc on season uckets
was proposed because "the general
public isn't goma to have to pay ~
football fans can en~oy pmec; at
Candl~tick," Kopp said.
Other improvements, to be made
over five years, mclude refurbished
bathrooms. en1&11cd comdors, and
SJ m1lhon ID road and parlung
improvement\
Accord1Dg to Kopp, the city would
pay a third of the S30 m1lhon
renovation Another $6 mtlhon 15
expected from the ticket surch111e.
and S 14 milhon would be collected ID
addluonal revenue from 130 luilUry
bo~cs to~ built over five ycan
Claudell Wuhlnfton
Washinf:ton
case staled
WALNUT CREEK (AP)-Atlan-
ta Braves nghtfielder Claudell Wash·
angton's manJuana possession cac;e
was put on hold today to allow llmc
for him to cxplam to probation
officlA.ls why he should be placed in a
drug diversion program.
Waslungton represented by al·
tomey James Giller. was not present
when Walnut Creek Munactpal Coun
Judge Jose_ph Lonpcre contJnued the
case until Oct. 23. At that ume. be will
rule on whether Wash1naton can
enter a d1vcrs1on program rathtr than
face tnal, ac.cordang to Paul ~ue1ra
of the Contra Costa County dJstnct
attorney's o_ffice
Sequeltl said Wash1Daton would
have to meet with probation
authonties, who will prepare a report
on his suitability for the proaram.
which includes classes o,, the perils of
drua use.
Wuh1D&ton was arrested Feb. 19 in
Walnut Creek about 2S miles cut of
San Franci11GO and JUSt five miles east or his home ID Orinda. He WU
chaf"ied wtth one masdemeanorcount
of man1uana pos.snsaon.
ANGELS ...
From Bl
Toronto, who also won. They remain
in second place, four games back.
The beneficiary of all the home
runs was relief pitcher Rich Bordi
(4-4), the third Yankee patcher. Bordi
threw 3,,,, innings. gjvang up only two
hits.
Dave Ragheni retired the final
batter, Reggie Jackson, who rep-
rcsented;1he tying run, cam1Dg his
23rd save of the season.
'11 Lhrew him fastballs all the way,"
~td Righetta. "I was trymg to throw
the ball h1Jh because I know RC$&Je
hits the low ball so well. l was JUSt
trying to keep 1t away from his
power."
Power and hitting that has been the
strength of the Yankees all year. They
are currently second an the AL to
Boston 1n hmang and fif\h an home
runs. The key for them has been gu ys
"feedang" off of other hitters.
"The people on this team have
talent and they are playang well.'' s~ud
Winfield "There are teams with
talent who have off years. but that's
not bappen1ng here.
"We're on a hot streak and,
although I think these guys would
play anyway. that helps."
* AHOIL NOTH -Ano .. l?llrel O.MM•ll Owe DeClrlcft mf•MG hi• 1111re1 oe,,,. In a row Tu.'4av. 1o11o ..... 1no 111e •llen1 rtcurrtnee of '111
l>Kk Of0Cllttn'l1 Salurcs.v 111tn1. O.Clncm Clld
1a•a -oe11lne P<e<:llet and -trouncft>eM• o.fort Ille H,,,. He remains on 1 day-to-Clt Y lleal1 VenkM llrll lleMmill OWi .....,.,,
wl\o won "'• ArMrlcan ~ balllne crown In
1"4. ,,,, "'" lull .,, .. , In 111e l'lltloo, COlllCI De on
n11 wev lo an AL Mo\I Veiu.lllt Plli'IW I WVCI In
IS Man~ la •MOtlCI Ille 100 1111 In 9fetlt offensive CAI~ .. ,. lnctudlne Ille loti 1001 In •11, CIO\I01t1, eeme•wtnnlne •11. 10111 baMt lllCI
••"• l>tM hlla He la 11ao ~ 111111", tlllrel In i1uo11ne -cant911e, rovr1,, In !Mfflne • .,.. ... .no 11111'1 In on-blM ~,... 400
Mertl,,.iv Hit llOIN rut1 In Ille fhl lnnlnt
n1ane1ec1 l'tlt llfrtlno """' to ll ..,,,.., currenttv
Ille IOntttl WMll In Ille melon . Actor "~ ,..,....,.., oe.1 •now11 for Ill• rOIM Ill
Ille movlfl, "The Nerur..-· 111d "TIM Gr..,
11'011,'' e llencleel Iha .. IM T~v 11191\I et I
tuetl cM Cllalrmer1 cM !flt loerd .... """'°'
!'trn•WOl'lh WH lllffOCkleed to l'NHW cM the .,......,, Ind l>y flf l'tlt t>lffetl ten WM oulflelOer
...... JH811M, WllO ttOOCI IOI' MYWll l"l\lnl.lltt
rlCtlltne tCi9rlft from "Grev ll'ow" , A elev IO
Cllellr1le Not onlv WH "'ielltt' Ul'lilllle L1191 rKl lleel lrOfTI ldmolllOll T""4av, Dul,_ 111d lltt
.... SIN1na NCI tMlr llrtl Cfllld, • 1tn. Jennifer
Sllvllll Tiit A,,..i•' NIM Wltfl lflt o.trott
T!Mf't $tl~Clty wit De• 12.201.m. •llrt tllO wlll
De IM NIC "Oerne o4 tM WM4t "
Six area triathletes to compete
1Jl atta lnathlete W111 be amon-
50 of the world's top profe 1onal1
pan1etpauo11n 'he World's Toua,hcst
Tmthlon Sept. 7 1n South Lake
Tahoe.
Dave JOKph ofCoata Mesa, Wade
Trotter of Fount.aJn VaUey and
Hunt:Jnaton lkaeb's Jeffery ()rviue
and Scott Cheesman have rqJstercd
for the compct1t1on
Also on tht h~t of rntne~ art Tnry
Ltt fvct of Sen Clemente, and
Gre.ory ~rns or an Juan
Ca_p111nno.
The 149.1 mile tnathlon has the
nche1t pune 1n the United State, sso.ooo.
Tnathleta WJU test the limm of
endurance in Lake Tahoe beJinn1na
with a 2.4 mile SWtm tn the icy lake
water The btk.e course of tbe rlCt
fe.turts climbs over three mountaJn
patles, up mott than 8,JS3 ¥eftlcaJ
reet dunna the 120.mile ride.
The marathon pan o(the tnathlon
bouta a 2,910 ven1cal climb over
26.7 miles.
The compctJuon will be included
an the Auociauon of Profc sonal
Tnathlet.es Super Sena of Races and
tt sanctioned by the Triathlon Fecier-
auon U A as the We tern Regional
C'hamp1ondup
Fl•blng tournament
The first area quahfymg tournament in the western d1v1s1on of the Yamaha Military Bass C1rand Nauonal Tournament C1rcu1t will be
held on ukc Hava,u on Sunday, Sept. 8
Au:ord1na to tournament coordinator urry Walthall. the tournament 1s open to all
1n1crcs1ed fishermen who have earned at least
100 point~ 1n qualifying tournaments at the
d1~tnct and/or state levels A compcutor may
fish u many area tournaments u he wuhes. but points may only be accumulated 1n the eastern
and western d1v1S1ons with the M1ssiu1pp1 River
hem& 1hc d1v1d1n1 hnc The tournament ClrCUll has a auaranteed
S 160,000 an cash awards to the four divisional
winners from the 200-penon field at the Grand Nattonals whu;h will be held 1n November
Rciistratton at the toumamcn.t s11e wall remain open from 3 to 7 p m. on Saturday, Sept
7 w1th a mandatory rules bncf\llf and drawma for panncrs set for 7:30 that cvenini.
To JOIO the c1rcu11 or for mon: informiuon. phone C2 I 4) 380-2656 or wue: Military Bass,
P 0 . Boit 796908, Dallas. Tex .. 75379. You may
use MasterCard or Visa.
gJtmbJatloa bo1lfnl toamey
California State Wcltcrwe11ht ( t\amplon Ikmck "Humcane" Kelly, unbeaten at 13-0-1.
will meet New York. state champion Nelton Ortiz in • scheduled 10.round chmanation tournament fiahl 11 the Forum Tuesday n1aht at
7
Makin& his fift.h consecutive appearan« at the
FoNm, Kelly. of Loi Anaelcs, h.u limply dominated every opponent he's faced and 11
clearly I.he fabontc to wtn the Stroh'• tour-nament and the $50,000 ch&mp1on~h1p check In addmon to the Kclly-On12 matthup, two
other bouu art achcdulcd for the card.
In another wcltc~1&ht ehmanauon tour-nament bout. Alphonto Lona. 16-2 of Lot
Al\&elcs, will meet Mannina Gallowayt ~S..9-1, of Columbus, Ohio. Galloway, r1nkcd NO. 10 by the USBA. 11 a rcplaecmcnt for Sanford Ricks.
· ln a m1ddlewelaht 1pec1al attr1ction, Stroh'•
Ch1mp1on Lindelf Holmcs.1. 24-3, of Detroit. will face Mardo Roybal , 28·"'· of V11lc10. in 1 achcduled I ().rounder.
Ticketa for the card arc available 11 thc Fonam
box office and aJI Tlcketmaater locations. For
mort informauon. phone (213) 673-1300 For ticket informauoo. phone 7~2000 or (213)
480-3232
Oller for,,.. tlum
ACll\'e Wcst Bowhna and Recreation Cc-oien
tt pt0\'td1n1 a frt!t ti<!w to a l'.>odpr or Al\ld
pmc lo anyone •ho bowie three ~ltMue. oon·loumamcn1 pmcs The offtt, .tllch IUt.i
thro~ Labor Day, ia "altd a1 any of the 23
pertlC1P1tln& Active Wnt cxnien tlltoueb<>ut Southern llfi m1a.
lntemat:loaal •urf tournament The Stubb1c$ Pro lntemattonal Surfing Tour·
namcnt talc.cs to Oceanside Harbor Beach Sept
24-29 and features more than 200 of the world's
top men and women surfers.
Oceanside's Make umbrut IS ranked eighth.
Cambna's Dave Parmenter 1s 10th and Cap1sirano Beach's Jim Hopn 1\ 13th 1n the •
Assoc1atton of Surfing Profcrnonals' ratm&,\
\urfina beain• Sept 23 with the pro draw.
while the men'1 tnal1 be&Jn Tuesday a16·30a m Compcutton continues throufh the week. wtth
M1cbclob Cup quahfy1n1 runni na Saturday from
7 a.m to 2.40 p m
LaRn .occer tryout.
rhc L.ot Angeles La1er11 will hold o~ tryouts Aua. 31 at the Forum. All pan1c1pan1s trying out for the team arc asked to rqistcr between the
hours of7 and 8 1.m Tryouu begin prompt!)· a1
9a.m. AJI pan1c1pants an: required to bnna proper
1den11fica11on and wtll be asked 10 '111\ a form
that will t.aJcc the Luers and the Forum away from any l11b1hty due to injury during tryout~
All part1c1pants are required to wear the proper clothes and shoes. Oeata ~ not allowed.
Jfat:lonal C.lJam.1>loaM.1p bcNlr.
l'lle lntcmat1onal Hotlk>at Asioc1at1on (IHBA)
will hold the 198.S IHBA NauonaJ Ch1m-p1onatup Boet Races pt W at Pudd1nast<mc Lake. near Pomona.
PuddanptOOC Lake It part of the 2,0QO..acrc
Frank O. Bonelli Los Antclct County Rcaional Park, located In San Dimas, near 1-10 and 210 Frttway interchange.
T1cketa are available at all Tlckctron oullcta For more Information, phone .S92·36U.
,_....,. WCNll' camp
The Lof Aftltlet Lazcn of the M~or Indoor Soccer Uq\le will hold their nm Indoor Soccer Camp Monday throwah Fnday 11 the Forum 111
loalewood. The camp ...ill be d.itocied b)i I.al.en' head coach Peter Wall, This )ctr'• MISL Coecb o(the
Y~ar. -The cam911 dalpcd for the youth player who wanu to im both tcchnic:a.I ability and
&ac11cal k110-tcidp or tb pmc 11ndcr a pro~ tOD&lly aupcrviMd propam. ~ mom· Ina n la ror children aaa 5-10 and pa ft'Om 9 a.m. t0 noon. Tbt ancnwon ion" f'rom 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. aod 11rorctialdttn11·16.
~ . ' • •
MAJCMl L8AGU• STANDINGS
AmerkM LMtue
Wll'T DMMON
W L ~ o• .. SI S7l ....... KtrtMa Cllv
O.kltlncl
Chieffo
S..11141
Ml-.c>le
TtxH
.. S2 S52 ,II'»
'2 57 S21 • •11 504. $6 ., .m 12
$J " .... 14111 43 74 '* 14
IAJT DfVIMON
74 4S U2 T0tOt1to
Ntw Yori!
Otlrolt
t altlrnore
to1ton
Mltweuk ..
CleYtltlld
" • .$t0 4 .. ~ .$42 f ll'»
'1 SS .SU II""
S1 '° 1117 " M '2 4'6 , • .,..,
,, 'It 331 M'h -~·ac.... Hew Von I,~ S
T 0ton10 J, Cen.i.nct l
Ttxe• 3. lollOl'I 1 Clllateo 2, KMM• Cllv l
Mffw.ukM ), ~la 2
SMtlle 4, a.ltlmort l
Ottroll 4. Oelll•nd I
T .. V'aO-Hew Yon (Cowltv 10-S) al _,.....
(Candelarla 2-01. nL.
Mlnn.ot• teivtewn 12· m at Mii·
waullM lt urrlt 7·fl
o.troll (hf-2·JI al Oalllancl
ICodlfoll 10-IOI TOfonto (AleHnder 17·71 al CleYllland
(HHlon •·Ill, n
THH (Hoitt 4.,, el aoston (h'J'd
11-10), n
Kanaaa Cll'I' (Lelb<andt 11·•> et Cnic.oo (8eMltlef S-10), n
Balllmor• ID. Mtrtlnez t-7) et S.atti.
8"111t S-5), n
n--MtY'•O-
New VOfk al ~. n
Tex11 et Bo•ton, n Kenaa• Cll'I' et Chk:aoo. n
Baltimore et Sttttlt, n
Detroit et 0.ktand, n ....... ~
WIST OtVISIOM w L. °"""" 70 4' Sen Dltvo .., S5
C lnctnne ti '1 S5
Hou a tOtl S5 '2
Atlante 50 U
San FrenclKO 4S n
IAJT OtVIMOM n 45 •u
Ga
• ' U'n 20 2s•,..
Ntw Vork
St L.oula
McMllrM I
Chk:aoo
Ptllltdelonla
Plni.ouroh
70 4' 603 l'h
" S2 5'J • S7 St '91 w ....
St ., 462 " 3' 7' .313 JS
Tv.MllY'a Scer9' .
Ded9W\ s. Ptllla09lollle 4 111 lnnlll9\)
Sen oi.oo 1, MontrHt o
N-Vor11 3, Sen F renclK.O 0
PltttOUr9'1 >. Clnclrtnetl 2
Chluoo S, Atltnle 2
Houaton 17, St. L.oull 2
T .. Y'a o.mtt
~ (ll11tn1uel• 1'·1) al Plllladel·
Clflla (ICoosman 6-)), n
Sen Frend.co (LaPolnt S-11) et New
VOfll IL.vricll IO-•>. n
Stn D141oo (Show 8·7) al Montreal
(L.H lllV 5·12), n
Clnclnnell (8rownlnv 11·9) et Pllhb\¥oh
IWalll 0-0), n
Chlaoo tEnvlt 0-2) et A11tn11 (JohnM>n
l·O>, n SI L.oul• lFOf\Ch S·S) at Hou"on
(KntoPtr 10-9), n
ThllndaY't Gamet
DtOlllrl at Plllltdtillnla, n
San Dltvo at Monlrtal, n
San Frenclsco at Hew YOf .. , n
Cincinnati at PUIJl>uf'Oh, n
Chieffo at Attantt , n
St L.oul• 11 Houlton, n
AMalttCAN L EAGUE
Y8'*Mt I, Ane1b S
NllW Y°"I( CALl!lOltNIA
alHlllll Hrlllll
RHnc1111 cf
Mtnotv lb
Wlnflalcl rt
Grlfftv If p'"'"' dh SaVIOf"" ltndlon 2t> Wv~r c
Potrulolb
~"
S 1 I 1 ,..ttll cf S 0 0 0
S 2 2 2 c.r•w lb 5 0 I 0
S t 11 DowNno lf 4 02 0
5 0 0 0 JACIUft rt S 0 I 2
I I 0 0 JICHowt 31:> 2 0 0 0 0000 OtCncallfl 1 0 00
4 120 Scnoflld" 1000 l 1 1 2 ltJontt Clll 3 2 I 0
4 1 2 2 Grich 2b 4 I 2 2
3000 Gtrberu 1100 Btnlwl :I& , 0 0 0 aoon.c •tl l
U I f · I Tl'llb l1 S It S Sc_.,..._
Ntw Ytn 1lllO 500 100-I
C....... 000 Ml 000-S
Game WIMlllV RBI -~ttlnotv ( 16).
E-111 Htndtrton OP-<allfo<nl1 I
LOB-f\lh Vork S, Catlfornla I 2~1ndOIC>f'I, Wvneoar Hlt-Mtttlnol'I' 2 en>. Wlnli.td (20). P•o11arulo 113>, Grleh
(6). R Htn04trM>n ( 19)
New Yn
Wlltlton
S/lll"Mv
Bordi w.•·4
ltlohettl S,23
CallMr'llla
tit H • 111t ea so
' 4 I 3
32 J 3
I J 0
• • 2 •
I I I t
0 0 0 4
0 0 0 1
Staton L.,S· 10 S S 2 0
L.Sancht1 3 3 I 2
HOllal\d 2 l 0 0 2 1
Siiton oltcMc:t to J t>ettef• tn the •th,
Whitton lllteh9d 10 4 t>ellef• In Ille Sth.
Slllrtev 11ltc'*I to 2 Detten In Ille 6th T-3-00. A-ll,7'1
a.tllOUtl
oownine car-
Jontt
Jac:kllOI\ Sconltn
Howell
Narron
Pttlla
O.Clna• Boone
Gerber
Grich
Sdlofltld ~llfono
Htndrk:li. T ......
... .._......
8ATTING
A8 It H Hit
313 40 t3 ' 374 5' 102 ••
JI) •.5 t5 I
2'1 5' 7' It
"' 4' " 20 .. 10 17 1
6211 1' 2 11)1229 s
lOO •.5 ,. ~
l4J 40 M 13
m " 12 4 74 ' 11 0
J.4' 41 M ' :mi2'3 • 200 -13 '11 4
17 2 2 I
.... S2I 1006 Ill
mCHINO
lt91 ,ct.
" -'3 m 2f m Sf .171
" 2'I . "' ' .251 13 141
" j (7 Sf .245
17 ..243 ) .24l
S4 241
34 200
12 115
2 llt
.. .251
If' H H SO W·llltA 6711) S1 14 4? 7·• 1 74
7111) 61 24 )4 M 1.n
10 ' 5 7 0-0 ...
""" '" 73 176 10-7 l.21
'' IS ' 13 7·0 UI I,,_,,, 166 Sl U 13-• U1
Moor• CllbUrn
HOiiand
Wiil
Cendtlarle
Rom.nk:ll
Corbett
McCa\11111
Slaton Z..ttn Sanc:tltl T .....
~ 40 lS It M l.'3 m 1a1 .. " .-1 411 l"'h 1)7 56 C S-10 U.2
J1 .. 14 14 2·t .... ~·tv, • n 2s 1-0 U2
la77 MO Ja ..... 11 M6
Moore 22, C~ S, SancMI I, S.ves
SlalOll I
NATIONAL L8AGUa
DMllf'Sl,~4
L.OS t.NOIL..81 ..... UDIL'HIA •rlllil •rllll D\ln<.tn ll 'I 2 0 StoMll • l I 0
tailor • ' 0 I 0 """"' • • 0 0 0 Lanon&Cf 4 O 0 I COl'Cnlllf't I 0 0 0
OUll'rtr " 4 1 ' 0 Ttllutw • 0 0 0 0 l rock lb • l t 0 Vlrtllllf't 1 • 0 0 ~l rt 4022 lemulltlt S 7 22
WNtfld llf't I 0 0 0 OWlltoft rf 4 1 0 0 MldnclO rt 0 0 0 I Sdvndt lb S 0 t I
klot<la c J 0 0 0 VHayn cf 4 0 I I Sax ,.. 5 I J 0 0.Ulton c S 0 0 0
Wtldlt 2 0 00 Sdlua S O IO MlllHll lltl 0 0 0 0 ,_,,, M J 0 ) 0
HO"tWtll• 0000 "~" 1 010 lt"flldt llf't l 0 0 0 KGrOt.U I 0 0 0
Nleclnfvl' J 0 0 0 0 AnderM o I 0 0 0
t"u1ll llll I 0 0 0 00nM• II I 0 l 0
Montvclto 0 0 0 0 MWd•llll I 0 0 0
T.-41 I ti t ,.._ 41 • II • le-. .......
'--~ Ill al -II-I .......... . .... ._.
Gemt WIMlnt "t i -°'**' (S), 1-K Oro&a, ,...., ~ ......... 1. ll'llMI Uffi* 2. L.09-L.oe A,..._ t, ..... . ....... • ~. flelrf. Dulafl, 8roctl, .., • ~.,.... ldlmlltt ......,..,
DurlQn. H~ (IA) ........._ (11) '
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P H ltUMto ua-...-
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!COAR s ' 4 ' 1 t
""""""' t I • • ' I
G.rrt*I t 1 • • • 1
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lrlllM ~ftt'M4 T-U t •..m.
Celt wen. s.rtn
(et&MI ............ ) llFO 't OcMft Vlt., 7, ~ Neftll (I~) J
TMllV't ,... 5~ J .11'\ -OcMft llltw v• L•lt 'l'tllt,
lncl'-"41 (" 0cetn View Win• a ftnel cNm• lltoM/llo Mint ICNGUl9d Tlllnelev I
LMeU..U.W... ..... (et ................ ,
T ..... V't ""' ....,... Mt•IUM '· Staltn 1aland a s.oul (ICOfM ) l:t, MMKllbo (lltn
tlutla),
T .. Y'a SdliMuM
Morrl•lown (ICentUdlv) "''· MIMttonk• (Mh'llMKOlt )
81nbrooll (Onl•rlo, C:a nMtl vt. S."°I
Ar111ta
,,_,...,., Stmllll•
Mt11lull va Morrlalown•MIMtlOlllle
wll\Mf' Seoul Vl, t lntlfOOll·Seudl ArlDI• winner
Us ...,....
TUISOAY'S ltlSUL. TS ,.ST lt.ACI. Ont milt
"um Sandll IS.lier) 11.10 7 20 7 00
Sodel S«laatloft IValtndlnlllaml S 00 UO Ha Bnll•t CH• IMarehtndl 20 40
Time: H».
$l •XACTA (7·S) M id 110.50
SICONO llACI. On1 mile SW.net (Buer) 13 60 00 )00
F-Flrit (Plefc.) 3.00 2 40
Hidden Chip (Otaantl\l J 20
Time: 7:0).
$l I XACTA 14·11 P91d ISUO
THIRD a ACE. Ont mite PH Phantom (Mac0oueaH) HO 310 2 40
Draam Of FOf1une (Wiik) 7 IO 3 20
Hiii Cad9t (Pttl"Mn) 2 40
Time: 2:02 l t S
$l IXACTA (4·1) paid '60.30
.. ~TH ltACE. Ont milt AndV't Quell (Wine) 7 20 7.'10 UO
Star OW1ld (TOdd) 7 20 7'0 UO
8uwas Girl (Slttlh) 4 40
Time. 2:01 4/5.
"'l'TH ltACI. Ont mite
Smollln WhO IMtrchendl "IO 4.40 U O
Anoutf EndtYO\H" (Vltfldlnonm> 2 '° , 10
Solo Fll9ht (Plano> U O
Time· 2~ 115
5l IXACTA 1•·6) paid 163 '10
SIX1'H llACI. Onl mllt
511'-alrlt (IC'*>letl 1240 400 U O
Jadttes Jet (CtOOllan) 2 90 UO
Arwtn Mav (Partltrl s.lO
Timt 2:00 4/S.
$l ll XACT A l,_.9) oeld 15'. 10
HV•NTM RACE. Onl milt
T1Rls (Sleeth) 3 IO l 40 ? IO
Soclat Klno (OfMnllll SAO J.IO
AmV\aM Arnolef (Saker) UO
Time. 2':00 2 / s
5l llXACTA (l·tl P9kl UI 20
lllGHTH llAC•. Ont mite
Evt Otntlfv (Ple<ot) S 10 3 40 , IO
It ao ao (Stl«ren) o&.00 3 00
FIV Ftv Flt\llv (Otfanlll ) U0
Tlmt: l:S9 l /S,
5l I XACTA (1-21 lleld 12' II.
NINTH ltACI. Ont milt
Como Siar (Pl«ot) S.00 2.10 2 20
lltuelt (Flsconl 4 00 U O
Mtcfln' Pl'ld9 (Sherren> 2.60
Time· l:SI 3/S.
U IXACTA (4·l ) oald Ill.JO.
12 ll'tCIC SIX (l·•·J-1 ·7·4) paid '31900 to
l8 wlnnlnv tlcllets (flve l'loraat) Carrvover
114,026.91.
TllNTH llAC•. Ont mtta
Ttr-1 (Plano) llO 2IO HO
Nuevo Zip (Todd) l 20 3 '°
FIV Men Ftv (Aubin) 4 00
Timt: 1:59 3/S
U •XACTA (2·3) oeld 11' 20 \,.
Att~ncr S,20'.
,,.,.,, ...,,,.,....,
(etMeMll. ONt) l"lllST ltOUND MNGL.IS
Vllav Amrllral (lndlal dtf Henri L.acontt
(Frence>. 7·6, 6·•. Sttlan Edbar11 (Sweden)
Off JoM Flt1-11d IAUltrtllal, ••4, .->.
Joeqlm N~trom (Swtdan) def ~ PurQll
lU SI, 2·•· 6-l, 7·6, Jimmy Brown (U !.) tel. Jollal\ Kriek. 7·6, 6·4, Ken Flad\ (U s )
def. Guv Foroel lFrence>. 6·•· 6·•. &ud
k!lulll ( U .S l def R•"""' Krl\llnan
(Inell•), 6-l, 6· I, JOlln Sadri lU $.) def
Ubof' Plmtll (CJtclloJlovekla), 7·6, 2·6,
6· 1. 8111 SUnlOn (US ) Off Henri DeWtl
lSoulh Afrlcel. 7·S. 6·7. Tom Caln lU S I
def 8en T111erman IU S > 6·2, 6·•. Bred
Orewell (Au"''"'' def Merlin Ja ltt (Ar·
'""""''· ,.,, 6·2. 6· 1, Pt Ytl SIOlll lCzecno· 1tov1kl1) def. Mlthall ltoo.<twn !South
Atrlct l. 6-4, 6--4, Tarrv Moo< (U SJ def
Amos MtnlCIOr'f (laretl). I·•. 7·•. .-1.
David P•lt IU.SI Erick llkertll'I' (US ),
6·4, 5·7. 6·3, ltk:¥do Acune (Cnllt) def
AOOt<l S.OUMl lU S l. 2·6 6 •. 1·•. Tim Wilkison (US ) def Mall AllVef lU S ), 6-3,
6·3, Otnle Vluer (South AfrlCI) def Mar1'1'
Davi. lU.S ), 7·6. 6·3, Hank Pflater (US I
def Steve Otllrlft (US ), •·•. 6·3, Tlflk
a.Mablln (A~la) Off Johll L.IO'l'd
(8 rllelnl, 6·3, 6·1, 111009<1 Gr"" IU S ) Off
Mlcl\aal L.Hdl (U.S ), l·•. 6·4. •·I, Met•
Wiiand« (Sweotn) def Vinet Vt n Patten
IU.$ ), .. o. •· 1 Andert Jerrvo ISwtdtn) def Miki OtParm. (US I. 1·• 6·4, Yen
nldl Noah (Frel'Ct ) dtf Mlkt Ba~ (U s I
6·3, .. ,
W9'Mft'at9umament
(et Mertftc .. , H.. Y.)
l'ht ltW1141 SIMMS Deoble ~ (U.S ) def Anne IYt n
(U.S.), .-4:1-2; Svtvla Hanlka (Wt1t Ger·
manv) def. Marianne Wwdttll lU.S >. ••2.
7·S, Haltll Ktlfll (C.nedal dtf Sare Gomer (Enolendl. 1-.. S-1, .-4. Kareflna Mtttva
IBullitrte> def. Anne HobC>t (l!noland), 6-4,
• .. 2; ll-UVI (Soulll Africa) clef. MellsM
GUl"lltV <U.S.>. '"'· 7·5; larbara Potter (U.S.> def. Joanne ltutaell (US.), •·4, •·3;
Helena Sullova (CtechOllOYakle) def. Anne
Mlntw (AU.lrt ll•), 1· $, 6·2.
.......
( .......... , .............
~ldl KelV (U>I Anotlttl Otc ~ Ortl1 (I.OM lalancl, N.Y ), 10 ~ Mannino ~wev (Cok#'ntlut, Ohio>
dK. A~ I.OM (Loi All9tlftl, 10
rOUftdS.
NPL ..........
"*V't OWN llMftl VI ~ at (°"'"*11,
Otllo (Channtl 21
Cllldnnell at 0t1ro11
New IReland 11 Wa.ntnoton
Plllabur9ft at St LOW. s.-....v-ae.me.
Miami" ......
kn DlttO et San FranclK"O
c~ e1 tuff•lo
Allenla v• Ortt11 ta'I' at Mllwauk"
lndla naPOlti et o.t!ver
NY Jett et NV Olent• T'"'" .. .,, el New Ortatn\ S..tltt al Mlnnttota
Kt nMs Cllv et Houston
~ N$SA NATIOM.AU
(tt "_._... a..dt) Mm\
I Olno Ancllno, S.n Ctamanlt. 2 Douo
Mlve. So4ano 9ttcll, i CIVIi Craven, C0tta
Mew
Judtn
1 Jeill Booth, LAouna BMcll, 2 c;," lh an. Hunllnoton 8ttch, 1 COlln Srnllh.
C.rlSOad. ...,. 12·"'*' I IClltv Sitt«' Cocoa Baach. Flt • 2 Shant 8ttcfttn, San Cllmtole, 3. ltatttl l..IOmHn, Puerto Rico.
K-ltldln 1 Chf'l1 Conctl(.ao, Hunt1nolOt1 eaecri, 2.
Dtv• Kt llt.• Hunllnvlon 8aach, l. Oelt Mc~ttle, Palo\ Verde\ w-1 Chrl"ln• Glllerd, Hewell, 2 a.cc.a
Well•, ~nl\atten &t ech. 3 Ll\I C11u1t1.
F~lde.
Watwoote
JUN!Oa MIEN
TillN WMll~ llt .. ..._ Twtey) ..........
U.S 21, Kuwait 4
US 12, JaH n 1
U S 7. SHln 1 ~ ... tuftd
United Stai.. rnumtt .,...,. Tnuocsav
Tu.adaY'S .nnuc11ons
8ASl8AU.
NtlleMI LM_,.
NEW YORK METS--Slont<I Larry
Bowe. &l'lorllloc>. to a contract lor tn•
remelndtr of Ille Mt M>n
"OOT9AL.L. N1tleMI ....... L.HeUt
ltAMs-Ptac.cs Eric Ok:kt<\On, runnlnQ
t>eck, encl Jldl YounQOIOOd, llnebectu1< on
'"' dlO·not·r-1 "" I ncl Miile Slllnet ladllt, on the lnfU<td rHt<v• llst Welvec
Ton'I' Slaton, canter. Scott Tln.i.v. <JUar tw~. ltick'I' Martin wide r.ctlver. Ge,.
SwanM>ll, tln.tbaaer, 1nc1 811 Stone, run·
nlno be~
ATLANTA FAL.CONS-Tre04tel Don
Srnlln. dtf9nslv1 lft<I, to Buffalo tor en
undbC:IOMd orett chOlc:t walveo Miit• Morotlll, QUtrtert>tclt Placed 8re111
Marlin, canter, ano Erle 8a ltev. tlOht end
on Ink.red ,_.,.
t UFFALO 8IU.S-Trt0t0 Preston o.nntto wlOe r-4ver, to the Green Bav
P.c:1110 iw en undlKtoMCI onh \411Khon
Wetvtd 5-dY Nial, luMbeek, encl &rlan
Plltmall, linttlacller Plac.d Maril 8rem· "*" llohl encl encl Rodntv L.Vlft. Hntbac:kef'. on lnl\H ed ttMrY•
DENVER 81tONCOS--Walvtd JflM
M '(ltl, runnlno oack, Scott Sllnk•Vt9f, -ntrbadl, WMSA Mtnnlno Mid Oarvl
Smith, corntr1>Kkt , 8oO Swanlll end Del·
It• c:.m«on. no1t tecllll\, St~• Boaowav,
Crelo Scllefttr end Erk Scoggin\,
Untbckefl , Gerv Rolle. wkM recelvef, Oave
Hfltera. llollt end, end Jeck Sims. oftlnslve
oaurd. F'Wlctd JOhn Saw'I'«, tlUll• end, Oon
Ja mtt. no" lteklt, Mike Freeman, ouaro,
Ran<l'I' Robt>lm. comarbtck, L.erry WIHI\,
wide receiver, 8rl1on Manor, dtftnslve
end, end Eric ltllav, cornert>ecl<, on lnlurtd
reaerve DETROIT L.IONS-$1Qned Wllllt Curren
wkM rtctlvef Welved Jt iOll Grime•. wide
receiver Moved lllMv Sims, running btck,
ancl 11100 Rul>kk, lloht enc:t, from tri. ectlvt>
Ph'l'tlctllV·unaott·lo·Pef'form "'' 10 1111·
r•ltl'V .. PllVlbll'J'·untlllt to perform list
Pltctd ICltll Ooclvt, llntl>aeklr. Mlkt
MKhurlk, ouarler1»cil, Jim Browne. FuM-
l>ee)I, and 0on L.a"tr, offtnJIYe lee.kit Otl
lnklrtd ,._.,.,end Cltvton &Mufotd, wide
,_,.,.,, on the non-foott>a" lnksrv llst
G"EEN BAV PACKERs-RtllaMCI
Br ad T ubtK wide rtc:9htl". encl Don
Jlffeoon, defensive bad! Annoonctd that
JOhn Jtfftn on, wklt rtctlver I• Dttno
olaCtd on the oto·not·r-1 11•1 Placed
T onv OtLuca deftn\lvt enc:t on "" non·
loolba• lnlut'v '''' HOUSTON OtL.ERs-RMCMd _. ...
menl w1111 ltlcnard JOllnllOn. ~1,,. oeca, on a tour·veer contrec:t
l(ANSAS CITV CHIEF~ 81Mv
Jac:kaon, runnlno back, on the lnlurtO
r•Mtvt 1111
MINNESOTA Vlt(INGS--W1lvt0 Jed
COlltf, Otftn\h1t becll, 8'1'1'0tl "'°'*· d9·
fenalv• lineman, Rick Hechlnoer. olttnslvt
11-n. Gaoroe Revnotda, ounter, Jaime
Covlnoton. runnlno Mc:k, 1nc1 Mark Rutfl.
1111111 tncl. Placed Stevt Rltev, ofl..Wve
ltc:klt, on tile re.arve·rttlrta 1111. Placed
Allende Smith end Wtlkl" L.et Mllltv,
llnet>edlera, ~vln Brown, corntrbac:k,
1nd Jim Gualafaon end Tom McCon·
nauonev. wloe r~IYtf\, on Injured r•·
aarve. and Ow'9hl Cotllm, wide rtulver, on
r-ve·dld nol r_.t 1111 ~ that
Tim L.ono.1, !ftlnalv• 1ac:1ti.. ,... left CMN>
NEW Q'lllL.EANS SAINT~ Earl
Johnton, corntf'baek, Mlll• Otlloc-and
Sam talltv, wlM rectlv«a, and 11100
a-ti and Oennla ICulthe, ltollt lfteh, on
'-ed r-Yt NEW YORK 0 1ANT5-Slont0 Eric
5dlulltr1, kk:ller
,HIL.AOEL.PHIA EAGL.E$-Pt.ced
w11t1tr1 Montoornerv rum"" badl, DeMb "''"'°"· Otl9MJV9 encl, Jw rv lloCllMoft, llMCltcllef. Mid Mill• Ouldt. •IOe r.ctlvw, on Ille ,_..,..,.Old not ,._, ht We!Wd °"" Mlrtldl and ""''"' """"'· ~ 1t01t1. Htrvn Annstrono, noM twck•, Dtan ~v. _,,ert>a<tt, ~ w..ms,
runnlno bactl. Tim Cri.mben, dlttMlw
Dack, Dt11ler EdmOnch. l)Gltlt tftd, TOfl'V'nY
Fltmon\, nose ttdllt, Mike Htl'th alld
Todd au..... cornertlack•. Cliff Wtlltrl tnd Ot,,. Pealtv, tlnebe('k«•. Ired Smlttl, dlftMI,,. tfld, 1nc1 Al vueu-, llldl.-
lllac:ed It~ Oclotbv end Kt'<llll °"""'1e,
wide ~. encl lo4V selliull. llMbaclltr, 1111 ~ ,...,.,,..
MN DllGO C:MAltOIE"S-Tnicl9d ~I/IN t utord. '""''·· lo Cllbeo for 1111 undltdOMCI 1"6 draft dlolce
SI A TTLE SIAHAWK$-$19ntd Ot,,.
trown, «H'Ml'Mell. ~ Frants s..ur.,-.
qi>arltll1Nlc:k, Sid A~ltJ, offwnt.lvt
ttelllt, Met1t Hldtt and JU1o CoNM, tlntCMICl!tn, Adam Hay....,, wldt ,_..,,,.,.
Paul MtrttMeittft, noM Itel .. , and Oer'l'tl
~. cot~ ~ l.ct1trv
Olaon, runnino IMICll. °" IM -OflV\lcatlV unelll4t to oerlorm Ill, Chrla
Cattor, wide rtctlvw, on lfl!Ured l'eett'M
and ''"' JollM, Wldil ~, ff\ "lf'8 ,,_...., did not t'"'1 lat
WASHINGTON RIDSKIN$-Wa lved
lofts ,,_,...., tlt•t, --Moorll MCI ~
H.arrl1, w• ~. ,i.,,.. ~ •
'"'' ~ -Oen c:.i.-. ~ ..... tect1i., IC-Y Fot41 ~ S~. IM Jttff ,,.,.., ......_. __ , ~ a.Ir ..
T-ICflflMM, ~. Gtn'Y K~. cor'*1NIO. O.vicl ....,._, lllflt ""· Oen .....,._, ~ . ....,. .........
~ .... Dall w...... Nftter, .....
M9l'l16 TOWfl\. "'9clM ..................
IKtUI, 1111 IM llfl~IO U llfm
It! "'9cM Merta McOr"•ltl, T'"°' A'*'1tft •ncl Ptl'Y OW11, ..... ,..,.... ltOfl ....... tltflt ... K4llW n..-. ....,.... I~, o.rNI o.;t;Y, • l ct•, UtMI
VII "1nC*lt H .. llld T flf'rf Orr, rUIWlllW
Mcb, Kurt tm, ..-.V. ltvc9 ltlflll•
Ml, 1U1f'41, _,. OW1t OU ... ~.• ....,,... ,...,...
Orange Coat DAILY PflOl'IWedMt<tay, Auou-f 21, 1MS •
Life in the
Faust lane
has slowed
SOUTH BENO. Ind. CAP) -Coach~
Fauai lS lO I.be fifth and float .ason of his firtt
Notre Oa.me football coouact, but be finch
himself more relaxed than ever.
O ne reuon i that g\131terbadc Steve
Beuertein and tad bl.ck Allen Pinckett both will be
NOTRE DAME
ready to ao wbeo the Irish open their season at
Mictup,n ~t. J 4
Beuerte1n and Pinckett both arc comma off
sho ulder 1uraery. Pmkctt hu reco~·cred fully. but
8cuerleio II Sull mending.
There ts no pain or llTltaUoo, but Fausl
would rather have bis No. I pa$ser bu1Jd hfs
endurance p-adually
Faust, who has a 25-20-1 record in bis four
ycanatNotrc Da.me, hashadacarecr w1th its u~
and do wns
The lnsb woo their flrst four pm~ under
Faust 1n Ins second season ID 1982. They won five
stnughl 1n the middle of 1983, and last year, faced
wuh disaster after a 3-4 nan, the Irish won their
last four reJUlar season games.
T he v1ctones came against such powers as
Lou1siana State, Penn State an4 Southern
California. wu h an exciung come-fro m-bebrnd
triu mph against Navy
The Jnsh were hampered by inJunes early
last season.
Bcuerlein and Pinkett both missed the
annual Blue-Gold p me last spring.. as did
another dozen players, including ICJcker John
Carney, linebackers Mike Kovalesk.a and Rick
De Bernardo. centers Ro n Plantz and Jim Bau~s
and offensive tackles Tom Doergcr and Make
Pemno. All have been proclaimed healthy this
fall.
Two pos1t1ons -fullbac k and nght end -
remain quesuonable Frank Starns bas the inside
track at fullback, and Tom Rehder. a converted
defensive tackle, 1s the top candidate for light
end
Their d rawbacks are a lack of expcnencc.
But elsewhere. lhe tnsh ap pear to be seL Gerry Faut enters the ftfth of a ftYe-year contract.
BYU's p~fect year wasn't
enough to silence critics
But.Cougars will
face muc h toug her
team s t h is season
LOS ANGELES !AP) -Should
Bngham Young repeat 1ts nauonal
champ1onsh1p this year. cnucs will be
hard-pressed to say the Cougars
didn't earn al
BYU was the country's o nly un-
beaten maJor college football team
last year, but detractors pointed to
several Items an 1ns1Sl1ng that a
nauonal champ1onsh1p wasn't de·
~rved.
For one thing, the C o ugan play in
the Western Athletic Conference.
certainly not amo ng the natio n's
stronger leagues.
For another, BYU didn't play a
particularly strong schcduk
For a third. becau~ of a conference
agreement, the Cougari had to play in
the Holiday Bowl where the) met a
M1ch1gan team not up to tb usual
standards.
BYU still plays in the WAC so that
hasn't changed. but 1he Cougars open
the season against a tno o f strong
opponents -Bosto n College. UC LA
and Wash1nato n.
And. perhaps most s1gn1ficantl}..
the WAC champion won't wm an
automatic berth an the Ho liday 8Qwl
freeing the Cougars to consider play-
ing an a New Year's Day bowl where
they'd undoubtedly meet a stronger
- and ht~er-ranked - opponent
BYU will begrn the season trying to
extend m 24-game w1nntng streak.
Quarterback Robbie Bo!.Co. who
passed for 3,875 yard' and 33 touch·
downs. returns to lead the 8YU
offense. Hts favonte receiver, Glen
Kozlo wski. as also back However.
Coach LaVell Edwards has only o ne
offensive lineman back, offens1ve
tackJe Dave Wn ght
"At this point, we're not as iood
now as at the end of the last year,"
Edward, ..aid "We're at about the
sam e point as a year ogo
"Hopefully we can conttnuc to
ma ke the program get better ea ch
week and !llay healthy ..
The top challengen 1n the WAl
fi•urc to be Air Force, Hawa11 and San
Diqo tale
Air Force has 14 tartcrs back from
a team that ~ent R-4 and wh~pcd
Vu1Jma B-7 1n the lndepcn n~
Bowl The Fa.lco n'l, who run a
Hun tington Beach
wins surfing title
HunU1\4ton Beac h Hi&h wu the
overall points Winner in tflc Natio nal
Scholutic Sl.lfiina Auoc11t1on "•
(NSSA) Nat1dnal$ laM weekend at
Hununatoo Beach
Dino Andtno o rSan nemenlr Wa'i
the men's dtvt11on Wlnocr. while JeO
Booth of Laauoa Beach took the
JUn1or class Cbns Co nce1f ao o f
Huouna1o n Beach wa fint 1n knee·
nd1na competiu~.n. while (hmta'!e
G allant or Ha9il1J WI.\ the wo men s
d1v1s1on winner.
BB •wimmer wiil•
C'n'n I luah of HunlU\tton Be ch
look fi rst pl.let 1n thr wo mt'n·,
dtVl\aon of lht t«OnJ annual Rull·
froa-Hall', Cr na Wlm Au& ti in
Bullfros 8a'1n, Utah The 3.2 mile
race a Lake Po ti from 8 ullfma
manna to Hall'" Crou101 ma nna
featured 27 ,wtmmen
LaVell Edwarda
wishbone offense, were second in the
nauoo 1n rushing last year and return
quanerbacks Bart Weiss and Bnan
Knorr and fullback Pat Evans
Hawau m ust find a com petent
replacement for graduated quar·
terback Raphel Chc-rT) San Diego
State has a fine quarterback returning
in Toad 5antos
T he Pac1fic-IO ConfcrencC' ..-.111
undoub1edly be much better and
more compct1t1H· than the WA.(
Washington \outhern (al ctnd
UCLA were ranked an the Top I U
1fter wtnntng "-e"' Year\ Da> bo"'I
games. and as man) as three other\
could contend for the champ1on .. h1p
this vtar
"The con k rTncc is up, no qut:\·
t10n," said UC LA Coach fcrT)
Donahue. menuo ning Wuhmgton
State, Anzona State and A.ruo na
among the Pac-I 0 teams who fiaurl to
be better th.an in 1984 "And 1 t wa\
pretty good tut year "
The Bruins were No 4 allt•r
01pp1og M1am1 39-P 1n 1hc f ll'\ld
Bowl. M eanwhile Y..a\h1n1ton v.a'
Sl'Cond tollowtnf It\ 28-17 'tl tor.
over OUahoma 1n the Oran1e Ho"' I
and Southe-rn Cal waco li sted 1 O\h a fter
beating Ohio State 20-17 an the Ro~
Bo..-.1
FARWEBT -[i].
· All three had been underdogs
Southern Cal rebounded fro m a
4-6-1 campaign to finish 9-3 and win
the Pa<.· l 0 m le,
"\I. e re-cstabh'ihed our crcd1-
b1ltt) :·said Coach Ted Tollner "We
want to conunue to improve, be ooe
notch better We feet hkc we have a
tine football team We'd lake to get
back to the Ro~ &w . I "'e think 1ha1·,
a rea lt'lllC goal ·
The probablt' kt'.-. 111 q ua rterbacl
~an Sah~bul) a fifih-~ear senior
who has ne-.er qu11e lived UP. to
expcctauons Salisbury tore cartilage
an ha\ ngh1 k.nC'e in the S«ond game of
1984 and mm.ed the rest o f the
9CaM>n Wa~tungton wt'.nl 1 1-~ las t year,
losing onh· 10 \outhc:m < al and
return\ fhe stanen. from a defense
tha1 led the nauon W)th 51 inter·
cep11on., and fu mble T't'<V-.enes
L1li.e ~uthem { al the H uskae~ w1ll
ha'e an e'penenced quanerback 1n
'lC ntor Hugh Millen
• \l.e have reason to e1t pecl a lot
\\ ashmgton Coath Don James \aid
'l th1nk he's got to mo\.e the ball and
throv.. v.ell I thmli. he's got to ma.kc
good dC\:1s1ons I think he's got good
abtlll\ I think he can do that "
l (LA. q.3 last .. ear 1s v.1thout an
e 'penenced quarterback but
Donahue sull has h.lgh hopes Among
the returnees arc A.II· I\ mcnca
placck1cker John Ltt a nd sopho mo re
tailback G aston Green who ran for
144 yards m the Fiesta Bowl
"Y..e'rc gomg into the '><'ason with a
lot of q uC'st1on m arli.s. · Donahue
said. "We have a real challenge ahead
of u . but I th.ink we're capable of
ns1ng to 1t and hav10g a good season ..
Wa)h1ngton State Wtll field one of
1hr nauon'" hccot backfields quar-
terback Mark Ryp1cn p.l\S('d and ran
tor l ~02 'l'ard!) .ind ~O touchdov.n\
last ~uon R ueben ~a)e\ $"'tncd
I 617 )llrd!) tn rant... "lo ~ 1n tht·
na tion 1n ru h1ng and ..._l·m Poner
v..ho sat o u1 m~t of last ~a\On
b(ocausc of an tnJu~. picked up I 0011
yards on \he ground 1n l Q83
~~~--~~~~~~~~~
-
2 Months $125
Unllmlted Use • No Dues • Full Time
cw
70°/o Off All Initiation Fees
, A
THE SPORTING HOUSE
• t,,. !.ptn t "'f H w•t
•.,. •' "Cl 'DI.I •t1od •a
\t• yow•bodt•••""
rM•wt fut
• ••tv• no • .,, .... .a.v~
. •• r,t. •• • t •• q.,.rn,. 11 .., h
•V •f!Ht lrW!
•t d •<4N• I•• c \.41
• o0''""' •\•w • $1••'91 J • 1
•L\lll VHCIUt \ •• J ·~ 1 Ill"• ...... ,1).
. ~ ..... ~ • u-l •
ltn t 4 "M" Oft• •l ia"f1 VdfWtbil .... " .,.
•C. •"' ~c.1""" T v •'h'<' ' • • .... , .•. ,, . .., .. "'
•Cll eCt •• . .....,.. ... _,o ..
Co.oorat• M~w.r.. ,. •JM
H .. 5po"'"" """" .,,..,. l •eu• '"' . . .. "
-----------
• .
M Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Auguat 21, 1085 .J
• ' I ---
-
--,
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
• ESCORT • LYNX • MUSTANG •CAPRI • EXP •TEMPO •TOPAZ •LTD •MARQUIS
. •THUNDERBIRD •COUGAR •LTD CROWN VICTORIA •GRAND MARQUIS i. LINCOLN TOWN CAR
• MERKUR XR4Ti • FULL-SIZE PICKUPS • ECONOLINE VANS • ewe WAGONS
---
.. -
•
' .
OrMQ9 Co DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Auguat 21, 1N5 •
"Plus'' because only Ford makes available 3 different
ways to buy the rleYI 1985 car or F-Series pickup truck
you want : A reduced annual financing rate, a cash ·
allowance, or a red~ced lease rate. "Plus'' because
t hese plans are available on eve!}' Ford and ' Mercury
car you select. "Plus" because you can choose from
full-size pickups, Econoline Vans, Club Wagons~ even
the Lincoln Town Car.
..,
7.7°/o APR (48 MONTH OR
8.8°/o APR (60 MONTH FINANCING
Your participating Ford, Lincoln-Mercury and Merkur deaJers allow you
the option of 7. 7°/o financing for up to 48 months or 8.8°/o for 60 months.
Financing must be arranged through Ford Credit. You must take delivery
from dealer stock by October 2. Qualified retail buyers only. Dealer
contribution may affect customer savings. Limit one. An example:
PLUS#2 CAS
Here's a choice you can't get anywhere else. If you choose
your oon financing or pay cash , Ford will write you a check for up to
$1 ,000 if you take delivery from dealer stock by October 2, from a
participating dealer. You may .keep your allowance or apply it to your
purchase . The offer is limited to one purchase per retail customer. These
are the cash allowances available to you . Dealer contribution may affect
customer savings. . ....,.
/
8111 Down Amount
1985¥2 Ford Escortt Price Payment Financed
7.7% APR (48 Month) $5,856 $600 $5,256
8.8% APR (60 Month) $5,856 $600 $5,256
1985Y2 Mercury Lynxt
7.7% APR (48 Month) $5,986 $600 $5,386
8.8% APR (60 Month) $5,986 $600 $5,386
'Manufaciura."s Sugges1ed Retail Pnoe axcludlng lltle taxes licinae and destination charges
LLOWANCE
CASH ALLDWANCE
Escort $400 Thunderbird
L nx 400 Cou ar
Must 400 LTD Crown Victoria
Capri 400 Grand Mar: uis
EXP 400 Lincoln Town Car
Tempo 400 Merkur XR4Ti
Topaz 400 Full-Size Pickups
LTD 500 Econoline Vans
Marquis 50Cl Club Wa on
Montttly
P1ym1nt
$127.57
$108.59
$130.73
$111 .28
$ 500
500
500
500
750
1,000
500
500
1,000
PLUS #3 RED CARPET LEASE
Here's another choice you may want to consider: Ford Credit's Red
Carpet lease Plan. Ford Credit has n<:JN made available to participating
dealers attractive lease terms, a.5 shown in this example.
Lease Payment is based on the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price.
?ayments shown and total amount due may vary depending upon the
options you choose. All lease calculations are based on a 48--month
lease. Total mileage allowed during the lease period is 15,000 miles
per year. A mileage charge of $.06 per mile is charged for all mileage
over 60,000 miles at lease end. Lessee is responsible for excess wear
and damage. DeaJer contribution may affect customer savings.
As a lessee, yciU may have an option, but not an obligation, to µvrchase
the vehide at a· lease-end price to be negotiated with the dealer at lease
inception. Your leac)e, of oourse, is subject to approval and insurability
as determined by Ford Credit Your first month's lease payment and a
refundable security deposit are due in advanoe. You must take delivery
out of dealer stock by October 2, 1985. See your Ford, Lincoln·Mercury
or Merkur dealer soon to discuss price and terms .
Monthly Refundable Total Amount Total of
LIHI Securtty Out It LHH Monthly
P!ymenta Deposit Ince tton Payments M.S.R.P
19851h FordEscort $114.54. $125 $239.54 $5,49792 $6,164
19851h Mercury Lynx $114.72* $125 $239.72 $5,506 56 $6,294
'lncludeS freight and dellYery chargM Does not irdude uSMlles tax and lloense tees wn.cti may vary trom start to
stale See your dee* b hie payment 1ncludlng lhese amounts
. fer Ends Octo
Mf-H CU RY FORD LIN CO LN
---------
I I
..
CoD8tracdonander way
Worken for the 8a.Ddt COrp. ol lntne ban
9tarted conatractlon OD & $7. 7 mlllton
medical oftlce balldtnf at t 77•2 Beacb
BIYd. In BllllliaitoD Beach. The 58. 700-
9qa&l'e·foot ball~ wtll houe mecUcal
oftlcee for Beach BlYd. Medical Amoci•tm,
a teneral putllenblp of B•m•na lloepttal
.taft pbJalclau. Completion of tile balld-~. Dest to Ba•1n• Bo.pjtal, la Kb.edaled
for llarcla 1988. Tile ~ balldlJll wu deetOed by SOth Street Arclaltecta ID Keyport 'Beach.
Fluor division wins contract
Daruel JnternauonaJ Corp., a unit
of Auor Corp. of lrvme announced it
.l'\d been awarded a contract by Fort
11oward Paper Co.
Daniel, based in Greenville, S.C.,
will design and construct Phase I of a
paper mill nonh of Savannah m
Effin&ham County, Ga. Value of the
contract is about $210 million.
When all four phases of the S I
bt..lhoo facility arc complete, it will
produce appro,umately I ,SOO tons a
day of ussue, towel and napkin
products from recycled waste paper.
Using recycled paper will eliminate
the odor associated with mills
producing products directly from
wood. •••
Amencan Pacific Corp. of Irvine
announced unaudited results of oper-
ations for the thne months and rune
months ended June 30.
Revenues for the quarter ended
June 30 were SJ 1.6 million, com-
pared with $22.2 million in the thud
quarter of fiscal 1984. In the nine
months ended June 30, 1985 and
I 984.t revenues were $49.6 m1llion
and ~56.3 million, respectively.
Net loss for the 9U&11Cr ended June
30 was S4.l million or 67 oenu a
share, compared with a net loss of
$393,000, or 6 cents a share, in the
year-earlier period. For the nine
months ended June 30, the net loss
was S5. 7 million or 92 cents a share.z
compared with a net loss of SI .J.
rrt1lhon or 21 cents a share, in the
year-earlier period.
The company reported losses from
continuing operauons in the three
$258 million tax break bill
advances in Sacramento
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A S258
million tax break for mulunational
C01J>Oranons, ooe of the mo:;. heavily
lobbied bills of this lcgislauve
session. has cl~ the Assembly tax
committee.
The measure was approved by the
Revenue and Taxation Committee
despjte opposition from U.S. firms
µtat complained the "unitary tax"
mca.sutt would &JVe their foreign
compeutors an advantage. Other
opponents said California taxpayers
wouJd have to pick up the loss of
revenue to the state.
The bill. SB85 by Sen. Alfred
AJqujst, 0-San Jose, was sent Mon-
day to the Ways and Means Commit-
tee by a 9-4 vote. ft passed the Senate
in a slightly different fonn.
The Capitol hcanng room was
packed with lobbytsts and corporate
executives pfead.10g on all sides of the
comphcatcd issue.
"Japanese and other foreign fums
have made substantial investments
in California," Alquist said. "But they
are bea>ming incrcasin&ly concerned
about this (tax) met.bod. Foreiin
companies arc threatenina retaliation
against California and the United
States because of such actic5ns."
He called his bill "a balanced
course of action with a reasonable
price tag."
But opponents differed. Robert
Wayman af Hewlott-Packard Co ..
representing 90 U.S.-bascd finns,
said the bill would "grant tax relief to
our (foreif?) compeutors while refus-
ing to avoid unfair double taxation on
American business plaoes."
1:1tt11!iiiirlJ•Ul,fLl-....._-------
women managers meet
Women in Management, Orange County Chapter meets at 6
p.m Thursday at the Sheraton Newport. 4645 MacArthurBlvd ..
Newport Beach Tickets arc $22 for non-members. RescrvatJons
required Call 636-1702 or 371 -1650.
Judith Segal Ph.D., Paetfic Oaks Corporate Consulting Services
Director will explain how managers can best conduct employee
evaluations. • • • Irvine Valley College (formerly Saddleback College North) 1s
offering a number of late afternoon classes for local residents and
persons that work and have to commute to the Jrvine(Tustin area.
These classes are offered dunng the late afternoon, typically from 4
p.m. to 7 p.m. • • • Real Est.ate Practice 1s offered on Thursdays. The class 1s
required for obtaining a Real Estate Brokers License in California.
Call 559-9300. Ext. 3 I 0, for more information.
N011CETO
AT&T LONG DISTINU
AND WATS CUSTOMERS
AT&T Commumcauon!> filed
with the Federal Communica-
t1ons Commission on August 16.
1985. for an mcrease in the price
of an Interstate Directory Ass1st-
anre (IDA) call from 50 cents to
60 'cents. The proposed change.
as a result of a 10-rent increase in
ac.cess charges to AT&T for Direc-
tory Assistance by the Local
Telephone Companies, has been
requested to be effective October
1, 1985. Customer5 will continue
to receive two free IDA calls 1n
any billing period in which they
make at least two interstate AThT
Long Distance calli.. Other long
d1sUra c.hatge are not affected
by th1. filing.
CllE ..• ,....., Rrw, &L .....
CEOIGE £LllllS co•
MORTGAGE BA•EIS
Fixed rate as low as
11.25°/o
construction
& fixed rate financing
Otfite Buildlngs, Warehouse/
Industrial Retail and
Special Use
LOANS FROM $200,000
TO s 100,000,000
OR MORE
DIAECT LOAM COllA£$POMOENTS LIFE leSUMNCE ANO PEMSOI FUNDS
Call 642-•321
to ~ubscribe
and nine months ended June 30 of S l.6 million or 27 cents a share, and
$2.9 million or 48 cents a share,
respccti vely.
In the nine months ended June 30,
1984, the c:omeany recorded a loss
from cootinwna operations of
$370,000, or 7 cents a share, while the
third quarter of 1984 produced a loss
from continuina operations of
SI S4,000, or 2 cents a share. • • • Helionetics Inc. of Irvine an-
nounced a second-quarter loss of SS
million of which S4.3 million is oon-
recu.rrlna, c:ompared with net income
of $5S6,300 for the same period lut
year. Revenues for tbe seco2d uarter
were $4.4 million com with
revenues ofS6. 5 million or the same
period last year, a decrease of 32
percent.
OTC UPs & DowNs
~-·-~....______.. -
NYSE UPS & DOWNS
•
...
Sanford Sigoloff: He's the
toughest retailer in America
By th AIMctahMI Prat
Sanford SiaolofT, who bwlt a repu-
tation on turnina around nearly
doomed corpontiona. left a stable of
Ponchn at home each day durioa the
Wickes Cos. rcorpnization and
drove a Konda to work mstead.
It was one of many sena.itive
ptures by the man with am~
described as the "toughest retailer m
America.''
.. , never wanted anybody to con-
fute my a.ucts and the compeny's, ••
explains Siaoloff, who now drives to
work in one of his I 5 Porsches or a
Mel'Qcdes.Bcnz. "J didn't want any-
body to think poor1 ailioa Wickes
bouaht off' Siaolofl' with a Porsche."
Wherever Si,aoJoff goes these days,
be gets recogruzed. The private man
was thrust into the limelight with his
no-nonsense Wickes' Builden Em-
porium oommercials bearing the
catchy slogan, 0 We got the message,
Mr. Stgoloft'."
In less than three years, Sigoloff
pulled the Sant.a Monica-based
Wickes throuah a tough Chapter I I
reorpnizatioo. He previously had
steered two other Los Anaeles-bascd
companies -Republic Corp. and
Daylin Inc. -through similar sue-
8anford 81Coloft
cessful reotpni.iations in the 1970s.
Sigolotr, S4, is now taking Wickes
into a new phase, having repaid all the
company's SI .6 billion debt, by
buyina the consumer and industrial
products business of Gulf & Western
lndu11ries for SI billion cub. The
acquisition should be completed by
Labor Day.
"For the Ont time we're in the
luxuriou1 position of det.enninioa
how fast we can grow .... It's probablX
a atranae chan&e. but it is cxcit.ina. •
wd Siaoloff'.
Edmund Kaufman, a lawyer who
bas known Siaoloff for 20 ycan,
described him u "one of the most
orpniud persons l have met.,
"He ii the kil\it of j)Cl"IOD who, ifhe
bad 1one in P diffuetu direction,
would have been a te:rrific five--star
aeneral in charge of different troops in
different places. But that is not to say
he is arbitrary or dictatorial," Kauf-
man said.
ln tbe past, Sigoloft' bas been
portrayed as a touch, demand.jog, no-
oonsense executive.
The ambitious Wick.es savior ad-
mits be could be lured into another
corporate rescue if the troubled ~mpany bas $7 billion to SI 0 billion
in sales. "Is there a limit in the size of a
business rqenerationr· be asks. "I
would be 1e1entifically curious to sec
if it can be done."
~·.
i fs
I 1 •
-'1
d
Orange Cout DAil Y PILOT/Wed~, Augul1 21, 1118 * 87
NYSE COMPOSITE T RANSACTIOtCS
Ol\I ~ ... L.t:t• a. ... --'!; 1
",_. 11
M~ket shows gains
NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were broadly
h1&her in af\cmoon tradma today, allhouah most
o( the market's key musures showed only
moderate pins.
The Dow Jones average of 30 indu5tnaJs,
which rose 11.20 points Tuesday (or ll5 best pl~ t0
Sl.ll weeks. was up 2.80 to 1,326 . .SO two hout1 before today'~ closina bell.
Advances held nearly a 2·1 lead over declines
on the New York Stock Exchanae. whose
composite index rose 0.36 to 109.28.
Bi,g Board volume totaled 67.89 mtllion shatts
at 2 p.m. EDT. compared with 60.68 mtlhon at that
hour Tuesday.
Chun::h's Fned Chicken fell I to 15 and topped
the NYSE's acuve list after a 2 37 million-shatt
block crossed at 141"2
The Dow Jones tramportatJon average soared
14. 7 5 to 694 29 laraely because one of 1u
components, Transway lnternat.1onal, surged 81h
10 421/a after rcce1v1na a takeover offer from
Nortek.
At the Amencan Stock Exchange, the market
value index rose 0.42 to 232 26.
)
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om
NEW VORI( CAP) Aug. 20 T1 ,
AMEX LEADERS
1 METALS Quo1Es
NfW YOAK IAPI -Soot _..,_ "'9181 OtlCM
w~~ ~ • 44 t5 centt per PQUncl NY Come• liPC>C
month-Tue · c...., ........ _.u•PQYnd.U8 -I~ C...., . ff~ c.nl• pet l)OullCI. NYC-IOOI
month C10MC1 r.,.
LMd · ,, cenu • PQVnd
ZIN 4 1 ~t• • PoUflO -.0
1'1111 -sa 2ou1-....*• w .... ~· ~ -111 1 n-· U 290 per_..,. Hllflay a H-
...,_ M M2 -110)' -·NYC-tp04 monltl
010NO r.,.
__,.,. a,)20 00-1.»0 00 .... '' '"',.... -"~ ,.,...._. S3i' 00-tJU 00 oar-tic ~ troy
-NY
NEW VOAI( (APl Aue. 20
T1 '
NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famous la b<Z..l,.s
r
••
•
-Orange Coett DAILY PILOT(WednMday, Augult 21, 1985
..
• • e convemence
e more ci arettes per pac •
.,, -....
~ ..
. --,_ --., ..
. --. ·~ --, • ·-
-
• '4 •'·
.... .,,_ .~... .. .
.... ,j ... --..
. , . ,
Warning The Surgeon General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
... .. r . .. "' :. 1l. I,~:
. 'I.,. .
' f /'.I
Lights 10 mo "ta c 0 7 mg nicotine -Kings 16 mo "t•r:' I 0 mo nicotine 1v per cigarette. FTC Repon Feb ·~& ,,,
r i
Not available in some areas.
-·-.. ,.
::::>:t ' ,. ..
,
•• lailf Pilat WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 2t, 1985
-
Serve kidney bun ulad beked lnatud of chllled.CI
Now there'•• Ca1Homl8 koeher wine tMt'• 18w1111 C:tO ·~~------------------------------------.;....~;..._--------~llllm!li~~~.....il.. :Country .coo kin .... updated
I
I Variations of classic make 22h cups hqu1d. Add liquid to
side dishes are lighter ,
convenient. n u tritious
Nonb, South, East or West, every region
of the United States bas its own distinctive
heritage of heany, home-style country
· foods. These classics, rediscovered by
, innovative cooks, are appearing on menus
in adaptations of the originals to better fit
today's lighter food preferences.
They're usually created with nutrition,
economy and convenience of preparation
as main considerations. ·
Rice is an integral pan of many of these
1 new-style classics. And because we've
beco~e such a health-conscious nation,
brown rice frequently forms the basis of the
dish. Those with an eye toward nutrition
like the fact that brown rice provides mucb-
needed food fiber, protein, B-vitamins and
iron. Those who simply enjoy its slightly
' chewy texture and nutty whole-grain flavor
find that brown rice adds zest to these
dishes.
I
Pilaus and purloos are a popular pan of
the cooking heritage of the South. Make-
Ahead Party Purloo is a flavorful update.
It's ideaJ for special occasions, because it's
· prepared the day before or early on the day
of serving.
, No matter where you live, Southwestern-
' style Brown Rice Fire and Ice Casserole is
an ideal barbecue accompaniment, whether
the entree is steak, poultry, pork or
hamburgers.
Pacific Coast Brown Rice Salad is a salute
to the state of Washington's famous apples, ~
luscious cherries and crunchy almonds. A
• yogun-based dressing adds a California
touch. -.
MAKE-AHEAD P ARTY PURLOO
4 bacon slices, dlced
"' cap cllopped onion
Z garlic cloves, miDced
1 cap select brown rice
1 ca.a (U ounces) tomatoes
i caps diced cooked tarkey or cllJcken
14 to "" poud cooked sbrtmp, as desired
I cap coanely cbopped green pepper
lit teaspoon salt 'I• teaspoon cayenne pepper
Pepper rings (optional)
Fry bacon in saucepan until brown and
crisp; remove and reserve. Drain off all but
2 tablespoons drippings. Add onion and
garlic to saucepan and cook over low beat
until onion is tender but not brown. Add
rice; cook over low heat, stirring constantly,
about 5 minutes or until rice is lightly
browned.
Reservingjuice, drain and coarsely chop
tomatoes. Ad~ enough water to juice to I .
saucepan; bring to a boil. Cover tightly and
cook over low heat until all liquid as
absorbed, about SO minutes.
Combine ri~ turkey, chicken, shrimp,
areen pepper, reserved tomatoes, salt and
cayenne pepper in 21h-quan covered dfsh.
Cover and bake at 375 degrees for 30
minutes, or until heated through. Gam1sh
with pepper rings, 1f desired. Makes 6
servings.
PACIFIC COAST
BROWN RICE SALAD i"' caps water
1 cap select brown rice
1 teaapoon ult
1 tablespoon batter or mar1arine
'la cap plaJ.n yoprt
3 tablespoons bo11ey
% te&1poon1 lemon jaJce
t red antes. dlced
t caps fnsb biDg. cberrles, pitted and
halved, or 1 can (11 ounces) pitted bing
cberrles, well-drained
'la cap touted sliced almonds
A"le slices (optional)
Bnng water to a boil in I 1h-quart (8112-
inch) skillet. Add rice, salt and butter.
Cover tightly and cooi. over low heat until
aJI water is absorbed, about 50 minutes.
Transfer to large bowl; cover and chill.
Blend yogurt, honey and lemon juice.
Add to rice; mix well. Chill. Stir apples and
cherries into ttce mixture just before
servin'; garnish with almonds and apple
slices, 1f desired. Makes 8 servings, about 7
cups nee salad.
BROWN RICE FIRE
AND ICE CASSEROLE i"' caps water
1 cup select brown rtce
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon batter or margarine
1 cap dairy soar cream
1 cap shredded Colby, Cheddar or
Monterey Jack cbee1e
1 can (4 ounces) chopped green cbJlle1,
drained
'la cap sliced ripe olives
5 green onions wltb tops, tbtnly sltced
'la teaspoon salt
Avocado and tomato slices (optional)
In l 1h-quan saucepan, bring water to a
boil. Add rice, salt and butter. Cover tightly
and cook over low heat until alJ water 1s
absorbed, about 50 minutes. Transfer to
l 1/i-quart covered dish and chill. Add sour
cream, 'h cup of the cheese, the chilies,
olives, green onions and salt; mix well. Top
with remaining cheese.
Cover and bake at 350 degrees for 45
minutes, or until heated through. If desired,
garnish with avocado. and tomato slices.
Makes 6 servings.
Homemade fresh fruit tarts
rewarding for baker, taster .
By JOYCE SCHERER-BODLOVICH
Dlllly l'tklC CefN IP D .......
In Spain. 11 is called a flan; an France. tane: 1n
Sweden. tarts: in the United States. tan.
The open-face, single-crust mut treat was the topic
ofa cooking class hosted by C'est Gourmet cookmg
school in South Laguna.
San Francisco author Pamella Z. Asquith. creator
of seven cookbooks, including "Pamella Z. Asquith's
Fruit Tan Cookbook," led students in a step-by-step
formula to crca le their own elegant tans at home for
summer and holidayentena1n1ng.
"Tans differ from pies," explained Asquith.
"because a pie as usually baked with a fruit filling
(prepared with plenty of sugar); a tan 1s made with
uncooked or poached fruit, and 1s not as sweet. Pies may
feature fruit fillings, buta tan features the fruit nself"
Asquith said fruit tarts must be assembled at the
last minute for perfection of texture and subtlety of
fla vor. So they need to be homemade, thus being an
excepuonally rewarding subject for the bale er.
For her demonstration. Asquith prepared l"-O 8-
inch tarts; one colorfully filled with k1wt, papa) a and
mango and lightly brushed with apricot glaze: the other.
a combination of raspberry and boysenberry with a
raspberry glaze.
Asquith, who for the last I 0 years, has been a
professional cook, pastry chef, baker and culinary am
instructor, began the class wt th a few handy hints for
proper dough preparation. .
ball). covered an plasuc. and retngerated for at least
three hours.
"The dough should be rolled gently from the center
'Outward. It will beaboutan inch b1ggerthan Che
diameter of the tart tin."
Asqu1thsa1da p1etm ma) be subsututed fora tan
tm, however the tan un wt th the rcmo"able bottom 1s
her preference.
... "Don't forget topnck the dough scveraJ ttmesonce
you have placed 1t an the tan . That allows the steam to
release dunng baking to keep the nice shape of the
pastry." she said.
The result 1s a lovely golden shade with a crust that
is light and flaky
A~u1th'sclass1c pastf) cream 1s then la)ered on
the bakea shell.
"Tho rec1pecalls for either vanilla extract or a
vanilla bean. Personally, I prefer a vanilla bean because
ofits rich fla vor I cut the bean in half. shce 1t lengthwise
and scrape the vanilla from the pod. •
"Store the other half of the bean an your sugar
conuuner because It gives a delicious vanilla flavor 10
the sugar." she said.
There 1s no doubt. afterwatchtnJAsqu1th e'<penl)
arrange the bnghtly colored fresh fruits on the pastf)
cream, that she 1s indeed an an15t rn the culmaJ) field.
"fruit tans arc one of the most creative and
beautiful dessens you can make, the vanatJonc. are as
endless as your 1magmatton." she said
Herc 1s her recipe for Kiwt Tan
-. "Bough must be handled with a fairly light touch... KIWI TART
she said. "Remember. it's not clay." Baked Flaky Pastry Tart SbeU
. For a speedy, easier method of making the dough. "" cap Cla11lc Pastry Cream (recipe follows I
Asquith sugests using a food processor. It takes about '4 pond kiwi fruit taboat3 larce)
15 seconds to mix the dough to the desired "sandy" 14 cap Apricot Glaze (recipe follows)
consistency. I to l tea1pooa1 klnd1wa11er or Grud Ma rnltr Orange Buttercups --T-he_d_o_:~-IS -·~-en_p_f'CSSCd __ '"_t_oa·d-1sc·s-ha_pe_(_no_t __________ (P_•_--_.ee __ TAR_TS_/C_l_)_Pam_·_e11a_z_._Mq_ul_tb ___ _
treat to remember Wine snobbery hurting Sales
The Valencia oranae is unmatched for use in fre h fruit dishe and
fruit decorations and is justly famo°\ls for it.sjuice. Ora.nae Buttercups makes a deliabtful dessert A en p but delicate lace
cookie acts as a ahell, boidina a rich vanilla ice cream that's topped with a
delicious oranae sauce. The peel contributes a dash oftest to the cookie and
the perky bow that embellishes the d ish, while the fruit's juice and
1qments make the sauce sina with citrus aoodnw .
Ol.amPllfte Chicken Valencia lakes a cJ.usic dlSh -chicken breasts
po1ebed in cbampqne that bas been sweetened with oranae Juice -and
1CTVes it with peoachc with fresh ora.nae sections in a luscious creamy
sauce.
ORANGE BVTl'EllCUPS
B•llelftP CMkMt:
~ C9P Upt browll Mpr
(Pl ..... Ta AT/C3)
SAN FRANCJ 0 (AP) -A dnnkers only," a '4-CIJ known New
movement 1 fcrmentina in the York rewler recently wrote Leah
wine industry to reduce the 1n-Knowles Jr., cba.Jrman of 8-:auheu
Ouence of a small but powerful Vineyard of Napa Valley.
cadre of wane-snobs who e Says Knowlt1: •·we must deaJ
trademark is to broud fhebcveraae · with non-nob consumers and JCt
in obscure jaraon and trendy, them to a level of wine knowltdge
usele adjectives, scanna most they can relate to."
Americans away from it. . Not Iona aa~ t wine publication
ls it helpful for potential con-repeattd an instruction on the
sumcrs 10 hear thi or that Wine propcrwayJodrinkwine:squcc1cit
described as truculent. wtinaoftca tothcroofofthe mouth and allow it
lcav fip, arapefruit; no lake .,to dribble down the aullct. drop at
toast, stale popcorn, tobacco, and · a time.
plummy-smoky ... jamm) raspber-Wbat pep. You could get a
ry _soapy? hcm1a.
"All that jau makes non-wtne One of the cnucs ofth1s twaddle
1s winemaker Robcn Mo ndav1. the
great 1nno\.-ator of Napa Valle) a
man alwa) on the move to en-
courqe Americans to include wine
as an everyday, healthful bcvc .
"Ou.r elite must stop makln&
consumers think that wtne 1 onl)
for them:· Mondavi pre>' tcd 1 few
month o. ''Wine ts not an eht1 t
~"cragc .•
Without u 1ni name1 -nobody
wtll -Mondavt dehvered a broad-
based pankina to his colluaue for
faihna to faaht wtnc-~nobbcry.
U S con umpuon of wmc as 2.3
aallons per capita -the lowc t
amont the v.orld's ma1or Wlnc·
producers
The 1ndu5try burdened b~ cheap
imports and a JOvernment' do ing
httlc toaet wt~1mponcqu1ty from
foretgn stat~. is con 1denna that
some of tts market1na 1ahts may be
turned in the wrona direction
Wen m. ~k out. fancy tastin -
arand Wine-banquets and wine
fcsuval a~ held all over t.he
Amencan &rape world. And for
}'cars, sales ha"e been avef811na out
flat With a few e'CC:l>llOn., the
indu try is 1n trouble.
Wint apprttiat1on 1 hkc the law
or people 1n love: • matter of
(Pleueeee 0 /C2)
C2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedne.day, August 21, 1885 •
Curried fruit turns chicken
salad into sophisticated dish
Cri pchunksof1ccber&lettuccand curried fruil
lum chicken salad mlo a soprusticaled dish.
Pineapple, dale . coconutand onion are 1ntnau1ng
inclusions lo this salad favorite, wbtlechunks of iceberg
lettuce add crunch and fr hness.
CURRIED FRUIT
ANDCIDCKEN SALAD
1 bead ol lceber1 Jenuce
! cups cabd cooked cblckea
1 Yi c1ps trail plDeapple cbunka (reservejalce)
~ cup c•opped oaJon
~ cupcboppedda&e1
Yi cap t bndcled COCODll
~ cap 10ar cream
! tablffftoont reserved plneapple Ju.Jee
~ leupooa curry powder or to taste
Core, rinse and thoroughly dram lettuce: chill in
plastic bag or plastic crisper. In large bowl, rnix
chicken, pineapple, onion, dates and coconut.
ln small bowl, combine sour cream, pineaplejuice
and curry powder. Stir into chicken mixture. Ref nger·
ate until cold.
Cut lettuce crosswise into inch·thick slices, then
cut into bite·size chunks. Gently fold into chicken
mix tu re. Makes 4 servings.
Top Slrloln
Steak .......
Fresh
Pizza
..
Boneless Safeway Quatrty
Beef loin Steak. Broil & Serve.
$ 99
Turbot
Fl I leis
Greenllwld Defrosted
Grouz:cl Beef
Regi;w Qrowld Ft'99h Ollv. Fwnly
Sae ~· 5-tl 01 larger (U1der 5-«>. .!1 09)
~89c
.........
Fryer Breasts
Grade A Fresh Frwg Chicken
~$1••
Fryer Legs Callotnei:o..~ci.c .....
RUlllp -•I Bot-. Beel Aool10
IJ 79c Fiiiet Mignon r.=..u.isi...
ID • 1• •••• -· 8cJnelMe ~FWsno..«lel
Pork Chops Rib Steak
Assorted Fresh Center Safeway Quality Beel
~ Si4• ~Sf•a
1s1£mw.1~
I -°"'"'--~
'
-.. ---.. ---.,,--.. -I .. __ ,..._,__-·--_ _,,Sol
I ~-=--.:-..::::-..::,::=.== I , ... --... ,,,. -·---.. ..._~ I .... --~~~~-JSIIB;i'i. id _°'"',.. __ . , ......... ___ .,. _ _,.,._.,, __ .,._, ,_ __ ,...,_,_,,._ -·---~IU I ______ .,_,,.,...., .. _--= l --_...,....., __ L..w----._ .... 1---°""""'"' n n ..... ---.. -c:-.. I L~ -~----==-------J
ed Fla•e
Grapes
Or Thompson Seedless. So
Refreshing. Great In Salads. c
. Large ....... ,.. •..• Ripe __
Tolllatoes
Wrapped In Celophlwle.
6 Ct.
"'•
Avocados
..
'
Naturally Sweet FO< callfofnla Hua. SmlM Size. ~29c ~·jc
Skinless Franks Scotcn Buy :.i: 79c Burritos .i.m• F,,_.,
Frosted Flakes K~·
Fruit Drinks c.,,. &ti
5 ~ •100 Ro111alne Lettuce °*"'
Cole Slaw ANoy Pk
IMlch ·39•
~··· 6 '~=···
Beef Brisket F~,: ~n.~~:-o· 2~'1"
Round Stea k 8ot>elesa Beel 10 Ct 'I" """ . lslns s...M.o a \f!)
Heinz
Tomato Ketchup
32-oz Bottle
··~·
Velveeta Loaf
~teurlzed Process
~339
Fun Fruits
• Sunklat • Onvige • CherTy
• Grape • Strawberry • 6 •-oz Pkg $149
Cheddar Cheese
Mild "' Monterey Jack
Best Buy RandOm Weight&
~ $·1••
Peanut Butter ~ ... ~
Star-Kist ~::::Ot•
Collage Ch••••~
..........
Selad Oreulng • Thoulend llllnd
• Fl'9neh • ltllatl • 8-oz Bottle 79c
FRIE
One (1) 2•..oz u.t. Mrt. Wrtght'a
Multl111eal
lareacl • AounCI Top • ~
BUV 1 GET 1
FRll
• '0001• -°' _, .. ~
•'-lt,. "*• Ltll"""~
f-;\
\::;_)
Com Oii Low In
Ctloleaterol 48·0Z Bottle $249
·~·1· l ~'IH
·lie: 59•
SNOBS •••
From C l
op1ruon. Find a way to convince
Americans it's okay for them, as
indjviduals, to be the sole Judge of
wrnes they drink, and the country's
biggest winemaker (Ernie Gallo)
will personally pop for a glass of has
best white.
Most of the populallon 1s m·
timidated by wine, setthng for
water, soft dnnks, beer and hard
liquor. No one talks about those
.bevcraaes as. they do wine -in such
terms as nose, legs, acescence,
malolactic and astringency -not
to mention fence-posts, v1ole1s,
asparagus and coal tar.
Ask winemakers what they
would settle for from the consumer.
Odds arc that it would be quite ~ood
enough if the reaction were, ·Say,
that really tastes good. Wrap up a
few cases."
Leon Adams. Cahfom1a wine
author and philosopher, and a
potent mfluencc on the American
wine scene for more than 50 years,
is working on has founh book. in
which he plans to attempt to
demystify the dnnk.
Adams said his new work will be
"almost explosive ... my job 1s to
produce a book to solve the in·
lim1dation of Americans by wrne
wtthout destroying the charm ...
He indicated he also intends to
take on the big restaurants, who,
without shame, will take a S 10
bottle of wine and charge a ridicu·
lous $40 for it; and the bars who buy
the cheapest jug goods they can
find, at perhaps $2.50 a gallon, and
charge an insane $3 a glass. Off with
their heads!
TARTS •••
From Cl
(optional)
Put the tan shell on the serving
plate. Spread the pastry cream on
the ·tan shell. Peel the kiwt fruit
with straight·bladed knife. Slice the
luwi fruit into 14·inch segments
across the width. Discard the end
piece with the pip.
Arrange the slices o n the pastry
cream, stan1ng at the outside edge
and working toward the center,
overlapping slighlly. Brush with a
little glaze. Serve within 2 hours.
CLASSIC P ASTRY CREAM
1 cup beavy cream
3 tabletpoon1 augar
2 e11 yolk•
1 tabletpoon cornatarcb
l·lDcb piece vanllla bean or •1,
te11poon vanilla extract
Warm l/4 cup of the cream in the
top of a double boiler over simmer·
ina but not boiling water. Stir the
sugar into the egg yolks and add the
cornstarch. Split lhe va01Ua bean
with a knife. Scrape out the sticky.
brown, inner specks and add them
to the yolk mixture, or add the
vanilla extract.
Add the yolk mixture to the
warm cream. Cook, mixing con·
stantly with a wire whisk, until the
mixture thickens and the whisk
marks keep their shape ( 160
dearees). Scrape the sides of the pot
if the m ixture is sticking.
Remove from the heat and add
the remaining 1/4 cup cream. Whislc
occasionally until cool (this pre·
vents a skin from forming on the
top of the pastry cream). Cover
with plastic wrap and store in the
refriaerator for up to a week. Makes
I V2 cups.
APRICOT GLAZE
1 ~ cap1 apricots, washed,
}ltted ud cat lDto Yi ·lncb cabet
1~ cap11a1ar
~ Put the apricots and supr in a
heavy saucepan. Mash with a fork
until all the sugar is dissolved.
Brina to a full boil while stirring,
beina careful that the mixture does
not boil over.
Turn the heat down to a simmer
and cook about 20 to 25 minutes or
until a spoonful of the mixture
becomes set or jellylike after S
minutes in the rcfriaerator. Skim
off the foam.
Strain, without squeetina,
throuah a jelly baa or strainer. The
pan that dnps throuah is the glaze;
the rest is jam. Seal in sterilized jars
or store 1n the refnJerator or free2~r. Makes v. cup &Jue and v.
cup thick J&m.
No me tt er .what
yOlf r~ doing your
homel o w n
newspaper
The Daily Pilat lits in
TREAT •••
From Cl
Ya cup butter or mar1artne
Ya cup U1bt corn 1yrup
Ya cup flour
Ya cup 1rou.nd macadamla nut1
1 tea1poon grated oran1e peel
Ya tea1poon 1roud cinnamon
Oran1e Sauce:
l l/• cup1 oran1e Juice
3 table1pooa1 Upt brown 1a1ar
Ya cup oran1e Uquear
1 Ya table1poon1 corn1tarcb
1 quart vanllla lee cream
I Valencia oran1e1, peeled and
1ecttoned
In small saucepan combine
brown sugar, butter and com syrup;
bring to boiling, reduce heat and
keep warm. Mix together flour,
ground nuts, orange peel and
cinnamon; add to brown sugar
mixture; stir until smooth. Keep
warm.
Drop by heaping tablespoonsful
o'nto greased baking sheet at least 6
inches apart. Bake in a 325-degrce
oven 8 minutes or until golden
brown. Cookies will spread to
about 6 inches in diameter.
Remove from oven, let stand 15
seconds and lift off pan, using a
wide spatula. Place over bottom of
upside-down 5-ounce custard cups,
allowing edges to drop down over
sides forming a cup. ~I com-
pletely. Reserve.
To prepare Orange Sauce: Com-
bine orange juice and brown sugar
in small saucepan; bring to.boiling,
reduce heat, simmer 5 minutes. In a
small cup mix together liqueur and
cornstarch until smooth; blend into
orange mixture, stirring constantly.
Brina to boiling, simmer 2 minutes.
Remove from heat, but keep
wami. To serve, place cookie cups
in serving dish, fill with scoop of
vanilla ice cream, top with orange
sections and Orange Sauce. Serve
immediately. Yield: 8 servings.
CHAMPAGNE CHICKEN
VALENCIA
Ya cup flour
Ya tea1poon lalt, dJvlded
Ya tea1poon pepper, divided
3 wbole cblcken breut1, •kin·
ned, boned and 1pUt
1.4 cap batter 'I• cup vegetable otl
1 Ya cup1 dry cbampape or
wbite wine
1 cup orange Juice
1 cup beavy cream
4 Valencia oranges, peeled and
sectioned
In small bowl mix flour with I/•
teaspoon salt and I/• teaspoon
pepper, coat chicken breasts com-
pletely with flour mixture. Jn large
skillet heat butter and oil; cook
chicken until golden brown.
Remove from skillet and arrange
on a baking sheet. Bake in a 350-
dcgree oven 20 minutes. Mean-
while, discard excess fat from
skillet. Ad.d champagne and orange
juice; bring to boiling and reduce
liquid by half.
Add heavy cream and reduce
over high heat until sauce measures
about 2 cups. Place chicken breasts
on heated serving platter, top with
sauce. Garnish with orange sec-
tions. Yield: 6 servings.
CllSPYPlllD PlllLllp.1n &tcd ftsh Is
yourfonc', he~ lsouraood Nieto
follow· ni. lsh should cook until the
skin Is browned and crispy .. never burnt.
If the ftsh l1too moist and th« oil
splatters. cOYJtrwlth a collandu-Newr
cO\lltr with 1 lld or the skin will not crisp.
When the fr-/tn8 ls complete dra.tn the oil
• nd ftnlsh with bull«r
CAVIAll!OIAGLWhen purchaslnt
caviar males su.rt It I• es fresh as
posllble Proper stores« of caviar susm
the vu y moment you purchase It Maic.t
IUN each berry ts whole. Qll•t•nt.na In Its
own Cat You m"'y want to tum the can
fttqucnlly so all the fat doun t ralR 10
the toi>
Onal\fl Co .. fa Only Award Wtnntna
' Su!ood Rattaurant
~
(714) 675-2586
1Aa1rrl nn tht ocun fTon1
acrou from ll'lc N«WP011 ""•ch pter
,
* * * * * A world of fine cooking
FREE
RECIPE
*****
Introducing our new Flvt Stir
MHt Recipe Collection. Pick
up our first recipe, Slmpeon'•
Roast Sirloin of Beel with
Yorkshire Pudding
Youra Frff In tM M.1t
Depertment at Luckyl
Sirloin. Tip
Steak 187
BONELESS BEEF LOIN LB
***** Pork Shoulder 89 ~E~H~!C~IC STYLE LB • "
***** Cross Rib 177 Roast
BONELESS LB BEEF-cHUCK
Ravorlul 39 Peaches
JUICY ANO SWEET LB •
Honeydew
Melons
EXOTIC FLAVOR
1"Sklppy
ct Peanut
Butter
CREAMY OR CHUNKY
18 0 Z. JAR
149
~Wesson ct Com 011
•a oz en 267
rCaprl Sun
Drinks
5 FLAVOAS, 10 PACK.
8 75 0Z OTNS
195
Longer
Store Hoursl
Weekday18 1.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday 8 1.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 8 1.m. to 8 p.m.
•
Orange Coat DAlL Y PltOT IWedMMJ.iY, Augu1t 21, 1915 CS
Serve ltidney bean salad
baked instead of chilled
l olllon, ct.opped Daab red pepper aa11ee At casual outdoor feasu, beans in
some form or other seem to be a
favorite side dish. For your next
barbecue, why not try a variation by
bakina rather than chillina kidney
bean salad?
1 are.a IMP,.,, coarsely
cbopped
Oram fruit oocktail raervin1
liquid for another use. Heat oven tO
3$0 dcaree1. In 3-Quan 11ucepa11 or
ovenproof cassero.le, melt butter.
Stir 1n drained fruit cocktail, onion,
pepper and curry powder.
1 tea1poo1 CIUTJ powder
After bakina, duri.na which
flavon are blended, the salad is
equally delicio~11erved hot or cold.
i cu1 (U'4 oucea eaclt) red
kidney beu1, drained
BEAN SALAD BA.ltE
i f reab tomatoes, cbopped
~ cup browa 1a11r
1 tableapooe vtne1ar
Ya bay leaf
l can (lt oucH) fnlt cocktail,
ID Jalce or extra Upt 1ynp
~ teaspoon dried tbyme leavea
114 teHpooD Nit
Cook, stirrina con11.1nlly. until
veaeiablcs arc tender. Stir in ~
mai.nina inatedicnts. Bake, u.n·
covered 4S minutes or until kidney
beans arc tender. Gamiah with
pepper· rinp if destRd. Makel 6
servinas. '.4 cap butter or mar1ar1De ~ tea1poon pepper
***** Large End
Rib Roast
FIVE STAR QUALITY
***** Bottom
LB
187
Round Roast 159
BONELESS LB
***** Whole Beef 119 Brisket
7 TO 9 LBS LB UNTRIMMED
***** Lean
' Ground Beef 117
ANY SIZE PACKAGE. lB
DOES NOT EXCEED 22°" FAT
Large 3 9 !?!!!~!oe~B •
FLAVOR
Bell
Peppers
CRISP ANO SPICY
!Heinz
Ketchup
TOMATO 320Z BTl
125
,,.._ ... ~r~~=uet
• FTWa.~ 'Chicken.
CHICKEN PIE. TUNA NOODLE
CASSEl'IOlE CREAM CHICKEN --L--0A FETTu¢1NI ALFREDO , FROZEN 10 OZ BOX
135
*****
Frying 59 Chicken
WHOLE BODY. LB •
SOUTHERN GRADE A
*****
Fresh Fryer 99 2~~a'!!.stlcks LB •
14 TO 1& PIECES PER TRAY
***** Lady Lee
Sausage Links 189
MEXICAN STYLE LB .r
*****
Fresh Roasting 89 E~!f,.~!n LB •
!Blue
Bonnet
Spread
32 OZ CTN
129
WHITE. BEIGE OR
UNSCENTED ASSORTED
6 PACK 330 SF PKG
119
pit Bounty
ct Paper
Towels
77 SF ROLL
.85
pit Pepsi
ct Diet Pepsi
PEPSI FREE DIET PEPSI FREE.
PEPSI LIGHT SLICE DIET
SllCE OR MOUNU.IN DEW
8 PACK 12 OZ CANS
149
r Los Hermanos
Light Wines
WHITE CABERNP CHA8US
FRENCH COLOMBARD OR
CHENINBlANC I SLTR Bll
299
***** Farmer John ~9 !!~!'!RTION LB • , ~
COOKED BONE IN
***** Hoffy 1 ~~0 149 Bacon
*****
Fresh 229 ~~If/~ 9,od LB
***** Fresh
Butterllsh
FILI.ET
,.229
pit Budweiser
ct Beer
rLake to
Lake
Cheese
SHARP CHEDOAR OR
1..CINGHORN. 9 OZ P"C.
159
.. .\MERtCAN CHEESE FOOD
•1 OZ PKG
139
MEA OR BHJ
16 OZ PKG
149
P-Key Buys mean
cL extra savings.
Key Buys are items prtced below the" everyday
tower price n a result of manufacturers
tel'T'porarv promot1ol"la1 allowances or
ei.cept1ol"lal purchaMs
C_...,.., 1.-.a, L-t -... _.,.... _ ,_..,.._ .. i: __ _
'
C4 Orenge Coalt DAILY PILOTIWednMday, Auguat 21, '1086
.
Low cholesterol a healthy hab~t
Sodium, saturated
fat also modified
in recipe collection
To many, staying fit means
~uJar, exhaustive exercise on a
daily ba&is. A Danish study, how-
ever, has shown that relaxed, cn-joya~le exercise can significantly
improve cardiovascular health.
The objective of the study was to
eumtne the health benefits of
moderate exercise an middle-aged
volunteers during a four-year
period. The fitness program con-
s1sted pnmarily of "enjoyable. re-
laxed" exercise with one or more
friends in which normaJ conversa-
tion was penn 1 tted and encouraged.
The men and women joged 6 to
8 males or walked 3 to S miles, three
times a week. Exhaustive exercise
was discouraged.
Participants who also wanted to
alter other aspects of their lifestyle
were encouraged and counseled to
do so. They . were advtsed to
moderately limit d ietary fat, with
less saturated and more poly-
unsaturated fat, and to cat more
fruits and vegetables and less meat.
Strict low-calorie dieting.. however,
was not advised.
According to a report of the
study, most of the 84 participants
improved their cardiovascular
health while reducing their risks for
heart disease by 33 percent.
The moderate exercise was
beneficial not only m itself, but also
as a "common denominator" for
reducmg high blood pressure, high
bloo<i cholesterol, obesity and other
risk factors for heart disease, the
report said. ·
As a result of the exercise pro-
gram. almost all part1c1pants had
greatly mcrcased their ability to
exercise. This occurred more so m
women than men.
The researchers concluded that
"improved quality of hfe 1s in-
disputably obtained by relaxed,
enjoyable exercise and dietary
changes .. " With this study in
mind, the followrng recipes were
developed to be modifying
cholesterol, sodium and saturated
fa t, and substituting poly-
unsaturated com oil for saturated
fat
SKILLET FISH WITH
FRESH VEGETABLES
% tablespoons con oil
1 cup coanely cbopped onion
1 clove garlic, minced or press-
ed
:i.. pound zucchini, cubed (3
cups)
2 medium tomatoes, coarsely
chopped
·I green pepper, cut lo thin 1-lncb
strips
I te11poon dried batll leaves
1 • te11poon pepper
I pound fish fillets, 1ucb as
flounder, haddock, sole or turbot
3 tablespoons lemon juice
In large skillet, heat com oil over
medium-high heat. Add onion and
garlic St1mng frequently, cook I to
2 minutes. Add zucchini, tomatoes,
green pepper, basil and pepper.
Surring ocl:as1o nally, cook I 0
minutes.
<;pnnklc fi'>h fillets with lomon
Juice Begrnnmg with tall end, roll
each fish fillet lengthwise. Place in
zucchini mixture. Spooning veg-'
etables over fish occas1onally, cook I
8 lo 10 minutes longer or until fish
flake<> easily Makes 4 servings.
Each ~rvmg provides: 200
calone'i 20 grams protein. 14 1
grams carbohydrate. 4 grams poly-
unsaturated fat. I gram saturated
fat. 60 m1lhgrams cholesterol. 80
m1lhgrartl\ o;od1um
CHINESE CHICKEN
WITH ALMONDS
I tablespoon cornstarch
2 teaspoons sugar
If.I cup dry sherry
3 tablespoons reduced-sodium
soy sauce
3 tableapoons water
3 tablespoons corn oll 'I• cup wbole blancbed almonds
% tablespoons thinly sliced gr~o
on Iona
2 teaspoons ml.need ginger root I
1 pound boneleu sklnle11
cbickea breasts. trimmed, cat ln
aunuies or until chicken turns
white
Rest1r cornstarch ma~ture; add to
skillet. Sumna con tanlly, bri°' to
bOil over medium heat and boil I
minute. Sur m now peas until
glazed and heated throuah. lf
desired, serve over nee Make 4
serviOJS.
Each serving wathout n ee
provides: 340 caloncs. 30 grams
protean. 13 grams carbohydrate, 8
grams polyunsaturated fat, 2 grams
saturated fat, 65 milligrams
cholesterol, 370 miUigrams so-
dium
EGGPLANT PARMIGIANA
Tomato Sauce (recipe follows)
Z pounds egplant, cut ID 14-lncb
• 12 pack
NATURAL
POPSICLE JR. or
FUDGSICLI JR.
•llcet
'4 cap corn oJl
~ cap anted Parmesu clteete,
divided
11/• cups akrtdded part-aklm
milk Mouarella cbeeae, divided
Prepare Tomato Sauce. Arrange
eggplant slices in single layer on
baking pan. Brush ea&Plant slices
liahtly on both sides with com oil.
Bake in 400-degree oven l 0 to IS
minutes or until lightly browned.
Arrange v. of the tomato sauce
over esaplant. Sprinkle with I/• of
each cheese. Repeat with remain-
ing eggplant, sauce and cheeses.
Bake in 350-<iegree oven 20
minutes or until heated through.
Makes 6 servings.
Tomato Sauce: In 2-quart
saucepan. beat J tablespoon com
oil over medlum beat. Add Yl cup
chopped onion and 1 clove prlic.
minced or pl'CSICd. Stirrina frc.
qucntly, cook 1 to 2 minutes or
untiltendcr.Stinn 1 can(6ounces)
tomato paste, l can (8 ounces)
tomato aauce (no salt added), 1 cup
water, 1 teaspoon sugar, Yl tea·
spoon dried orepno leaves and V.
teaspoon pepper.
Stirrina frequently, brioa to boil.
Reduce heat; cover and simmer l S
minutes. Ma.kes·about 3 cups.
Each serving provides: 270
calorics, 12 grams protein, 20
grams carbohydrate, 7 grams poly-
unsaturated fat, S grams saturated
fat, 20 milligrams cholesterol, 200
milligrams sodium.
,._
• S1DQ1-roll
• Decorat-4
SCOTI'
TOWELS
64 OS. bottle
SNUGGLE
UQUID
FABRIC
SOftlNBR
'fa -Inell eebes • -
~ pound snow peas
In small bowl. stir together
cornstarch and sugar GraduaJly j
stir m sherry. soy sauce and water
until smooth. set aside In large
slullet or wok, heat com oil over
med1um-h1gh heat.
Add almonds; stir fry I minute.
'· Add onions and g.mger, 'illr fry 30
seconds. Add chicken, 'illr fry I to 2
BANANA ROY AL
Whisk enough brandy with
apncot preserves to thin. Spill
bananas le ngthwise and cro-.sw1sc;
arrange m sundae dishes or on 1 dessert plates Top wnh scoops of
vanilla and strawberry let cream
Pour prc~rvc mixture over ice
cream Serve at on~
ln•ex•pen•alve •
• "" 111 1l)9t'I 11vl not 111gn
'" proce re11on1 bltt
t1Hllft9<1 ..., _,..
Advert111ng r...
Clessrlted Advert1.ing ~2-5&7A
• Rall gallon • Ya:nil.a or Chocolate
ORIO COOKIES
'N CREAM ...... . . ......... ':":-:-: .. ODO COOKIES 'N IAVll'' CRUM SAHDWICH ................ ~~.. IA.
·6 cowi• I St ORIO COOKIES 'N JAR
CREAM BAR ... . ................. ~~.. IA.
GHAT AMDICAN CHILLYun 125
POPS • TROPICXf POPS .... ~~~... u..
'=179 -
······ •. IA.
20 Oii. bQlt
POST
RAISIN
BRAN
147 Oii. be&
Cili& 14 • bota. ~or lllckorf
CHiii' •Iii I I u,a ..... IAOCI DITIRCUNT IA. --. '
BEEF
RDIYE
STEAK
CdirmoN
CO##U.-llATI
-... -
•
IA.
-
•
-
-,
I:
~
=
• • I
-
•Beef loin
T-BONE
STEAK
7.2& oa. pkg.
KRAFr
MACARONI•
CllllSB DINNER
•?IOI low
09CllD II OIUOil
• 6 6 OI &Joht itiDIGi.1•5
POTATO
CHIPS
••••••••••••••••••••••• m . THIS COUPON ICDCEMAIU: ONU A.T ~ SOUTMUN a.urOtHlA AJ..PHA H'TA MAllm
DOUBLI SAVINGS.COUPON
'""lllll'IU C8'.lp0tl ~~"'1111 •11f-lllOll\lllGC1"'°'" IHlf CO\lpoa OM ... DOU9U M IAWfliol Wbea fDU ~Ille..._
onH MOT TO ntCUJDI llTAILH OI 1111 COWONI OI cowe>M'I ovn •1 oo UJ'UMI> MAJ MOT DClll) VALOI or my IVIJICT TO ITOC% 01' 11.UfD DCUJDU UQDOt.
TOU.CCO AMI> DAmY llODOCTI •
MO MDflMUY "1ICllAla llQU!DD. war on nna 111 MAMWM:NMl'leootON AJfD war 1'"tfO DOVIU COUIONS fll C'UIT'CMI• ~-•Wlliii I& &Dlr,!&5261 ll 1118'i'.l-WllWM*",!WSS•i 11. lMI ....................... --
Ofange COMt DAILY PILOT/W.sn.day, Auguet 21, 1915 Cl
Exotic triangles team ease
of preparation, convenience
•Beef loin
TRI-TIP
STEAK
1A cupboard well-stocked with
canned foods ia only the be&innina
of numerousqujek meals, includina
navorful dishes from around the
world.
With much of the preparation,
::uch as peelina and cboppina,
already done, cann~ foods allow
you to create unusual re<:ipes in a
fractton of the time.
Thia exotic but easy dish pairs
canned food convenience with a
recipe u versatile as its in&redients.
Savory Casbah TrianaJes is easily
adapted as a main course or
appetizer, and ts appropriate on a
family table or an elegant buffet.
Canned Veattablet, IJ'OUnd Jamb,
cheese and at0m1tie spioet are
stuft'cd ID unu uaJ crete1Cnt-sbapod
paitry. When served u a main
course, inaredients are layered in-
side a l~. trian1uJar pocket that is
sealed and oven-browned with an
ea-yolk alaz.e. .
Served hot with tomato sauce
and a marinated vqetablc or areen
salad, it is a quick, exooc meal.
To make appetizen, combmc
canned veaeiables, around lamb,
cheese and spwes before stuffma in
douah, then crimp rnto quarters,
glaze and bake until aolden. Serve
these unusual hors d'oeuvres wath
yogun dip topped with chopped
acallioo1.
CASBAH TIUA.NGl.a
1 cu u• oaees) mb .. vec·
etabln
l CU (lt Oueet) splu~
1 tabJapooa cooklal oil
~ poud poad lamb
I cu (I oacn) tomato u9Ce
1 ~••poo11 prllc powder
1 ieupooa C9ID.lll
~ CUJpoM ~ corla4er
•;. teaspoon 1ro0ct sta1er
'4 teaspooa sroad dovet
•;. ceupooe cayeue
I cua (I oaces} tdrt1erated
creteal cUuer rol.11
1 pewee ( • oaces > nrectded
dMdarcMese
1 ea yolk
1 lea.spoon waier
Drarn vqetables and spinach
thoroughly. Heat oil to. a frypan,
add lamb. Break up lamb and cook
unul browned. Add mixed vq-
etables. tomato sauoe and season· inas. Heat.
Roll half the crescent rolls to
stretch slightly. Place on baking
sheets. Spoon meat mixture over
rolled out crescents. Top with
spinach and cheese. Roll remaining
crescent to fit atop filling. Pinch or
press with a fork to seat edges. Beat
egg yolk with water. Brush egg yolk
over triangles. Bake tn a 350-degree
oven for 20 minutes. Makes 12.
Makes 6-8 servings.
Note: May be served with ad-
dtt.tonal tomato sauce, 1f desired.
To serve as appeu.zer, mix fillina
angredlents together before stuf·
ting, seal and cut each tnangle to
four pieces. Serve with sauce of
plam yogurt mixed with srated
cucumber, chopped onion, lemon
Juice and salt to wte. Makes 48
pieces.
Artichokes
versatile
vegetable
_ ByTOMBOGE
7 to 10 oa. box
NABISCO
SHACK CRACDRS
90L AHDi GILi
TORTILLA
SIRIPS
u .
IA.
········----··········-~ ADh nns COUPON ltDRMAl&.I ONl.T AT 1' ~ IOUT'MUN CA.L.IJOIHlA A.I.."'-' UTA MAllm
DOUBLI SAVINGS COUPON
~I 11* COllpoll Ol<>tlQ "1111 OllJ-_,.\lloe1\ll« I 11'1 Cf -..,... ....... DOUIL.& nll "'VIHG.I Wbl1I 1'0Y 11WU..... • orna MOT TO DfCUJDI ll'TAD.U OI Piii COOK>NI 0 1 COU'PONS OYH ti 00 11PVND MAT MOT DCUJ) VAl.U'I OP mw SVIJICT TO STOCI ON llAlf1) UCUJl>IS UQUO
TO&ACCO AJfD IWIT PllODOCTS. "° tiaNDn1M IVlC1IAD llQOIRD
LIMIT ONI ITDI JU MAMVPACTUID I COVPON A.MD J war TWO OOOl&.I COUIOMS PD C'USTOMll
~DfiCilfl IWi-.ARml'IJ
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DnmiiN IAVI 119 ORAHGI JUJCI ....... IOt IA.
~ ...................... ~ ... ~
i.OU!sJUCa un 189 VAIUIT I PAK ............................ ~... IA
~~ ................. ~."~
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iDQGi• Aii8A •mA 'It: 219
MD D ClllDDAR CllDll ...... ~.. LI
., .... ---.-......
A versatile vegetable with
gourmet oven ones 1s the artichoke.
a leafy delight tbat bas Iona been
popular in Europe.
You can boil or steam the artichoke~ stuffed, It makes ~fine
vegctanan mam course.
This tnm httk plant. which
resembles the thtstJc. as also used
Wldely to side dlshes and goes well
in tossed salads.
The heart of the artichoke 1s
particularly good and 1s tasty
dipped in batter and deep fried. The
heart has also become popular
mannated and served as a cocktail
party appetizer.
Now artichokes arc being cooked
together wath wrne and served as a
dinner appetizer or side dlsh. l tned
at and was quickly won over
It as uncertatn JUSt when the
anachoke came to .Amenc:a. One
account 5a)S at was brought to
Cahfom1a b) ltaltan 1mm1grants
I late an the 19th century Another
I 'el}1on says the Spaniards brought
the vegetable to Caltfomaa nearly a
centul) earlter
H1stonans also say that French
settlers brought artichokes to Lou-
1s1ana dunng the 18th century
\\e do kno~ artichokes arr
lhn\ang an CaJ1fom1a today Mott
than I :! 000 acres of the vegetable
are unde r cult1va11 on near
Montere) Ba) about 75 mal~
south of San Francisco.
ARTICHOKES WITH WINE
4 articbokes
'• cup olive oil
11 • cups California wblte table
wine
Jult'e of one lemon
'• cup onion, finely chopped l' teaspoon salt
1 • teaspoon groand pepper
'• tea1poon oregano
Cut o ff up and span) pomt ol
1 each artKhoke leaf about '• inch
do~n. Also cut off stem so
I anachoke wtll stand up Spread to
I open Remove inner small leaves
and the choke Place vegttable
upnght in a li.ettJe small enough to
keep an1chokes 1n pos1uon whtle
cooking.
Combine all remaining ingre-
dients and pour an to open top of the
artichokes Boal covered about 45
minute or until tender adding
more wine if needed Serve tn a
small shallo~ bowl Use the sauce
for dtppang Serves 4
PEACH AUCE
l 1caat pond ( 3 mediam) ripe
~ac a.. npMlley
l tabletpooe1 •llJte ram
Prcl peaches and \hce -there
should be a scant 2 cups. Purce 1'>
cup of the peach hces . In a
mcdtum saucepen, WTina con-
itantly. brina i>cach purer and
honC)' lO I &enlle boil; add mnatn·
ina pe ch shoes and he.at throuah.
OfT heat, sur LD rum. Scn-e at
onc:c. Makes a.bout I YI cu Ot-
licious SttVcd over 51>01Q11:
tquam topped fith vtntlla icr
crc.am.
C8 Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT /WedMlda~. Augu1t 21, 1045
There'snoneedto bemelon-cholyin summer
potassium but very little sodium. Also look fora cream-colored because they have less pronounced yield sli&htly to moderate pressure taloupes gnerally arc the ~st buy.
The liahter-colered melons sucb net tins that completely coven a odon. of the thumb, panicularly at the Because ey •S:C prodh ucedh m By DOROTHY WENCK
"'9ellll .. .
UCC1; ..... .........
isn't it fortunate that the melon
sea10n coincides with our hottest
weather? When ap~ti tes laa in the
heat, a cool, watery, flavorful melon
really hits tne spot.
11 honeydew and casaba also arc creamy ycUow or creamy white Honeydew melonsshould f~I blossom end. And the aroma a,reater quantities t an ot er .
low in calories but have much less bacqround and a smooth, round-smooth and velvety when ripe, Wlth should be pleaunt. Their salmon· melons, their price per pound ts
vitamin A than the deep-oranae ed, depressed area at the stem end. 1 creamy white or yellow color. A pink Oesh 1sjuley and delicious. lower than that of the leas popular
cantaloupe. · Avoid melons that have 1 pro-rind that iutark white tinacd with Cauba melons. which have melons.
Half a cantaloupe with a scoop of nounced yellow rind color or soft arecn indicates unripe honeydew. white flesh and no aroma. arc ripe QUESTIONS WE ARE .UltED:
cottqe cheese, some cri1p rye spots, especially at the stem. You may have to allow it to ripen at when the ridaed rind is 1olden Q. Coald you IJve me aome
Melons arc natural liaht foodJ.
Tlle1r calorie content is low; their
nutrient content is bi&h. for just 30
calories, one-founh of a cantaloupe
gives you more than your day's
need for vitamin A and half your
vitamin C1 plus small amountsofB
vttamins, 1ton and other minerals,
and a sianificant amount of
crackers, and a ~ss of nonfat milk Most melons are quite firm when room temperature as long as five to yellow. pldellaet OD wiicb fnaU• wlll or
would Jive you a fillina lunch (or freshly displayed at retail stores. seven days. When you can hear the Persiaq melons resemble larae wlll Dot rt pen alter yoa b•y t~em.
breakfa't) for just about 300 While some may be ripe, most have seeds rattle, you know it's ripe and cantalou1)CS, wei&hina about 7 A. They include straw~rr1es.
calories. Another plus for such a not yet reached their best eatina needs to be refriaerated. pounds. Their dark arcen rind is cherries, arapes, citrus frut t, an.d
meal is its ease of preparation. stage. Hold them two to four days at Ripe crenshaws have smooth or covered with pale yellowish nettina. pineapples. If they don t look npe,
A frqrant aroma isa aood sian of room temperature to allow com pie· sliJhtly ribbed rind that should be a As the)' ripen" the rind turns liabter don't buy.
quality and ripeness. But because ti on of ripenina, then refriaerate. deep aolden yellow, sometimes arcen. Their uesb is thick, fine· Fruita that will ripen at home
display melons are often chilled, the The "smell test" doesn't work as with small areas h1vin1 a liJhtcr textured, and ore.nae colored. include tomatoes, peaches, n~
odor is not very noticeable. well for other types of melons shade of arcen. The surface should From a cost standpoint, can.-tarines, plums, some melons,
--------------------------------------------------.. apricots and pears. If you keep~cm
THOMPSON
SEEDLESS
GRAPES
Crisp end Crunchy • Greet For Summer Snocks LB.
PRODUCE DAIRY
HONEYDEW MELONS
..,_..'°"'II·~ -.po., f..ot.t1>
PINK GRAPEFRUIT
... 1.4,. L ~tot. 10 Fn ()() L~ .39
~~Cl~. 9~·2~~ 5 ~ 1°0
FR~~MOSHROOMS EA .79 ·-
TROPICAPIA J69
ORANGE JOICE <MO.-. CA'10fl -KNUDSEN YOGURTS ~· .. ~ ""'"" llottom o• p,. Sm~ 1101 u"°"
VONS MARGARINE Soll r..., llO-C..po
NESTE.A ICED TEA u....... r""""' ""'9t• ,._ 160.....~ unOtl
COITAGE CHEESE
.49
.59
.99
159
7 -UP J49 !E~~*DIET
or Sueer "'" 6-Pac:lo:. 12 Or Can1
POTA10 CHIPS p.;"'*' ... __ lletlellel u o. (.,,
SEOO DIET DRINKS -'~l~C...
POST CEREAL ~ .... ,_ 100utu ao.
119
.79
179
~ ~~qs~~ lllOt Sc. .89
PAUL NEWMAN'S 89
DRESSlftG • Oii c. v......,. Sel..i 0..-111 ~ llottle
NICE 'N SOFT TISSO E
Zoe S..hroom. • "°'' ~
HEINZ KETCHO P r-J2-0wo &om.
LINDSAY OLIVES
--P.n..S 6-0unce Can
.99
129
.99
~~~~~~~~9.ID SOAP 139
SLIM PRICE® J89
PAPER TOWELS
·~ ~
E~b.~9fil TOMAlOES .69
CAPRI SUN FRUIT DRINKS 189 10 '*cit 67 '~Pee~ ,,_ ,,...,,_
l~~~~R FREE 149
LIP'TON SO<JP MIX Onion n.-, 2 P.ec-. 2 7~ Ol...et Peclwl(lo
JELLO OEL.ATIN $ugilr ,,_ 6-0unclo p...._ ,....,,,.., f '""°"
.75
.77
VAN CAMP·s·
BAKED BEANS
28-0ura c:...
.79 £9t:tS~FW....9.~~~ .a • 79
~~£.? ~~ POTATOES4 ~ 100
krMyrN.d F11me1 Scyle 0< '-"'" flt l20r Ctn --------------dll~~~--------~
~:~!~~~(A 999
DELI
FISHER ag
SINGLE SUCES.U
p-~·<'n 10.~~
VONS CREAM CHEESE
80..-P1Kiuo'1"
BALL PARK FRANKS ~ ..... IJ( ~' ,.,.,,~~ ,f, o",.,. Pee~
MOZZARELLA CHEESE
If< "°'t '• • t.t,• I! 11 ... Q J"}9 801 ~
.69
1s9
119
yo~.s.on~!i.~P~~~sSl1~~f5!199
y~1~ ... ~.1~1L}~ISKLES 119
.89
~~~EP9.~P .c!i~!?£AR 219
LOUIS RICH FRANKS .,. ,. . . . ,,, .........
VONS SLICED J39
COOKED HAM
'.J' a"O Per"4Qf 80.."<• P., Yi~ V. ~ LB.
LIQUOR BAKERY SEA FOOD
LITE BEER
12-PACK 399
~~L~.,~ ~v~y~~C~)~~R 249
tt~~~t~tf.i. ~E~!\,..~ 389
S~9,~~BY SCOTCH 1 Q49
~Jtl..C?~ .. ~2,~I CHABLIS 399
IVORY SHAMPOO Ot • ~ ,, .... ...... o"" 0 " '( ftoc:h ""( urlf>' •i,,
SCHICK SOPER II
C•n•ld.,. 9 Cou"' P•u• I ~~ff
149
3 .29
SERVICE DELI I HOT BAKERY
'''""" •v•n""'' n~n• "' "m•111 a n""'" •••t•• o • •u•vut ru11
~~~~I!°t.~~y BRIE 11 459
£~~f~ .~.q_,NJzONS 00/ 159
£~n!'tt?~ S:!!ONKYBREADl 29
Von• WIU a.deem All Southern
C.llfomla Superm.ar .. ta' CW'Nnt
DOUBLE COUPONS
O• TRIPLE COUPONS o-....-. ..... .... ... ....... .. 4r ..... ...,_, ..... .kll•
• f>,t, .. ..,, .. -..... ...... ·-.......... ..
........ ""'9 .... .,. ....-·-~~·--..... ;f • .....,. ~ ... ................................ ~·"'· ~. .... _, """'"' .... ~... ... ........... """. ,...,. ...•. ,..., ................ .
=--~ ... ~~:--.. ~~== :·.::;'..·~";:,."'·:;..:;:_tt, ........... ___ ~
X2NS SANDWICH ROLLS. 79
X2NS PECAN TWIRLS .99
KINGS HAWAIIAN BREAD 129
I Pond Lo.!
!!~}~t.~9 ~Ss>2~1ES • 99
VONS S&JOO LEMONADE R ll~Qular
6 Our•« un•
CITRUS HILL
MRS. SMITH'S CREAM P1E ,.,.,...,.. r"..... .., Ol"0~1 ) Ou~ &,,
OH BOY GARLIC BREAD 8 rJi;f•"'t" 8f,.
VONS VEGETABLES
itt ~ • ., Qll"M ... "" }'(. "'"' "' ht
ICE CREAM SANDWICH
"""'-" 1 •• • ,. !"I~~ &~
VAN DE KAMP'S FISH • ·•• <\(1 ,,,,1.,1to, &• t19t.•(,C11tp,
TREE TOP FRUIT JOICE
, , "• y r I ut t:i•11tU-l °"""• C..."
119
119
.79
.79
115
299
.85
CRYSfAIJlSWIRL
I>') 1.Hw-1
THI') WEEKS FEATURE ITEM
~!~Y.~~~~I~-~~h~&':i L8 198
~~ T~INBOW TROUl.179
r,:~~!;i_ CRAB MEAT Lil 298
L& 189
JUICE
.49 You dOn't pay more.
You just get more.
~!lit ,,(K M•"' "lllNI Pflll("H4!ir
5 5 s an ,,
BONELESS 229 RIB STEAKS ~1ge EN. Tetm Kine 8eef lB. ~ llib Eyt Sleek• L9 )29
~~ ll~R£~~5 .. E,~ Lil 129
~£f""Ek.ESS CUBE STEA~219
!!!7!;.~I,~~~ 11~0~ l8 189
W .. ':4!~~ ll~~CK RO~t 59
~~~"'~~ee'£!NLa 2 98
H.eo~~~ CUTLETS ..& 698
BONELESS HAMS 93~ Fiii ,._ Wtotor 'ldcled 1-King
WILSON'S SA<JSAOE
Smoked Polltl'I or Srroo!Md Wiii\ Ci...
SLIM PRICE~ BACON ~ ...... lt.Ounao PecMe<
~·--~·~-~~~:......---~~~~~~..:...~~~--
(
in a closed paper baa or ma plas~c
ripenina bowl, ethylene ps, which
they produce, ~I accum ulate and
hasten the ripcnmg .
• • • Q.11 tbere 11ood way to freeze
caataloupe aad otber melon•? My
reaaltt 10 far bave been poor.
A. Melons tend to become mushy
after havina been frozen and
defrosted because the ice crystals
rupture the delicate cells. They are
best used while still frosty rather
than fully defrosted.
Choose melons for freezing that
are fully ripe, but not soft. Cut
peeled melons into slices, cubes, or
balls -don't try to freeze them
whole. For best texture, cover
melon pieces with cold 30 percent
syrup (2 cups supr to 4 cups water.
heated tod1ssolve sugar, then
chilled).
An alternative methodis to
sprinkle melon with sugar, using l
poundsuprtoeach S pounds cut
melon (21/• cups sugar to 12 cups
melon). Allow sugared melon to
stand a few minutes, then mix
aently before packing for fteezing.
Melons frozen with synlp or
sugar can be held for up to a year in
the freezer. Unsw~tencd melons
will have a less desirable texture
and should be eaten within a
month. • • •
Q. Wbeamuinatin&meat,doetlt
matter wbat type of conta!Der yoa
use, ud uoatd meat be marinated
at room temperature or la tbe
refrt1erator?
A. Since marinades contain acid
(lemon juice or vinegar) and the
process may take several hours or
longer, use a container that won't be
affected by acid such as plastic or
&]ass. Don't use metal trays or
&owls.
Do marinate meat in the refriger·
ator. The acid in the marinade will
slow bacterial growth, but not stop
it entirely. Thus, anythina to be
marinated for more than an hour
should be held in the refrigerator
and notat room temperature.
Carrot juice
is not only
for drinking
By TOM HOGE
,., W1M Md, .... ,...
Those who rebelled against eat-
ina carrots durina childhood might
be surprised to learn that the
daiquiris they enjoyed at a recent
neighbor's party were seasoned
with a slug of carrot juice.
This is one of the latest vegetable
extracts featured in supermarkets.
The 12-ounce can found in the
veaetablejuice section contains the
JUJCC oftwo pounas of carrots.
Many take carrot juice straight
with a little lemon, over ice. Others
combine it with such fruit juices as
orange. apple or pineapple.
Carrot juice plays other roles too.
It makes an excellent base for soups,
stews, sauces and salad dressi.na-
But what surprised me most is
that the juice can also serve as the
tiqutd used in ma.king cookies,
cakes, pies and other sweets.
Carrots arc known to be good for
your health. The juice is an excel·
tent source of Vitamin A, which
helps maintain healthy skin tissue
and helps your body fi.Jht off
disease and infection.
Carrots play an imponant role in
makina other dcsserta betides calces
and cookies. In Italy, chefs arate the
vegetable raw to make a li&ht.
flavorful torte. And the French fill a
tart shell with a sweetened puree of carrots blended with custard.
As for carrot juice I recently
enjoyed a creamy salad dominated
by it and found the mixture de--
licious. Here is the recipe.
CREAMY CARROT DRESSING
¥1 c1p carnt J.ice
S tablHpooDI fretll lemoa Jalce
S tablespooa1 tam.wer eU
.,. cap diced f reiai tomato
"" cap 1Uced ICalUODI
'4 teaapooD baall leaves,
Cl'Hlltd
~ tea1pooa ta.It
l/H teupooa l"MM black
pepper
In the container of a_n electric
blender, mea1ure carrot and lemon
juices, utnower oil, tomato,
scaUions, besil, ult and black
pepper. Blend mixture until
smooth. Serve over salad arcens.
Refriterate any rem1unina dres
1na in a covered con tamer.
Approximate yield, 1 cup
Pork loin roast vers&tile
Tostado with plum
sauce appealtng
con tern porary-d.;;:;-1-sh-
Bccause It is so accommodatini. por~ loin roast rr~uently plays a
lcadana role an many homemade meals.
Like most any f rcsh pork cut
these days, loin roasts arc well-
trimmed and arc among the leanest.
Cooking takes many forms, rana-
ma from oven roasting to &rilling
outdoors. Cooked whole, loin
roasts require from 30 to 35
minutes per pound m a 325 to 350-
Lilias. SpnnkJe cabbaae. cheese, and
areen onion atop. Garnish with
cilantro, if destrcd. Makes 4 s.er-
vinas.
TEXAS-STYLE
PORK BARBECUE
'H pound bonele11 cooked pork,
tbtaJy sliced
'4 cup coarsely cbopped onion
1 clove garlic, minced
2 tablespoons butter
iv. cup cbJll sauce
1 tablespoon eacb brown suaar,
vlne1ar, mola11ea and water
l teaspoon each lemon juice and
prepar ed mustard
14 teaspoon liquid smoke
degrce oven. .---------
To be sure the meat is done,
check the internal temperature with
a meat thermometer (it should
register from 160 to 165 degrees),
then let the roast stand for about 15
minutes, dunng which time the
temperature will continue to rise
reaching the recommended 170
degrees, and the juices will set
making carving easier.
Once cooked, the roast can be
served whole as a main dish, or as
the bases for soups, salads, and
appeuzers among others. The fol-
lowing reci pes arc only two exam-
ples of its hidden virtues. It lends
itself to an astonishing variety of
other preparations as well.
PORK TOSTADO
WITH PLUM SAUCE
1 pound bonele11 cooked pork,
chopped or shredded
1 ll o/•-ounce can whole purple
plums
1 clove garlic, minced
2 tablespoons brown sugar
Z tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon lemon juice
14 teaspoon ground clnaamoa
14 teaspoon groaad ginger
4 floor tortlUas
1 cup shredded red cabbage
14 cup shredded Monterey Jack
cbeeae (3 ounces)
~ cup dJagonally-sllced green
onion
Fresb cilantro (opttoaal )
Drain plums, reserving 1/• cup of
the juice. Remove pits and discard.
Coarsely chop plums. Place plum
JUice, plums, garlic,' brown sugar,
soy sauce, lemon juice, cinnamon,
and ginger in blender container or
food processor; puree or proce~s till
smooth.
~.56
C&H
Granulated Sugar
~ tea•pooD eac• iroa.nd red
pepper ud QI&
4 oaloa rolls, t pllt ud toasted
In medium saucepan saute onion
and garlic in butter t1ll tender. Stir
m chili sauce, sugar, vinepr,
molasses, water, lemon JU1ce, mus-
tard, hquid smoke, pepper and salt.
Bnn1 to boil; reduce heat and
simmer. uncovered. about IS
minutes.
Place pork in a 325-degrec oven
for 10 minutes or fill heated
throu&h. To serve, place pork on
bottom half of roll s: spoon about 2
tablespoons sauce over pork. Re-
place roll tops. Serve e.dra sau~ on
the side. Makes 4 servings.
~.26
Ralphs
Super Bread
.......... ~rul I ~~ ......... ..
~~= .. e ~~!~
laY• ,,,,
The Natural
Ice Cream
Cone
pkg OJ J1
Ralphs
All Natural
Ice Cream
In a large skillet combine pork
and plum mixture. Bring to boiling
over medium-high heat. Reduce
heatand si mmer. uncovered, for 30
to 40 minutes or ull sauce is
reduced enough to JUSt coat pork.
USDA IDsp ·Gold•n Prem1um·S..I Loin
Meanwhile, place tortillas on
ungrcased baking sheet. Bake an a
425-degrce oven for I 0 to 12
minutes or till cnsp.
Spoon pork mixture onto tor-
Preparation
can soften
chewy foods
Eliminating hard or crunchy
foods because they threaten chil-
dren's braces or hurt them too
much to chew, may leave potential-
ly harmful nutrient gaps, warns the
California Dental Association
(CDA).
But these foods, some vital to
good nutntion, can be prepared in
ways that won't hYrt braces and
keeps nutrition intact, according to
William Comport, D.D.S., chair-
man of CDA ·s Council on Dental
Health.
"Com can be scraped off the cob,
apples and carrots can be cut into
bite-sized chunks and the strings
can be stripped from celery making
these otherwise prohibited foods
easy to eat and harmless to braces,"
Comport said.
Or softer foods c.an be substituted
to ensure your child gets the fiber
those foods provide that is necess-
ary to keeping teeth and gums
healthy.
Save
1.10
'per lb.
Fresh Fryer
Drumsticks •
Zaellr Tarms.Ca.JJJ Glown·Famllr 'aell
s.~~e 89 per lb. p
per • lb.
•• -·· ~--' "' ! ••
-4)~\,
Tree· Top~
Apple Juice -
' I
Save l 49r ,.a )
C64o&
b U. •
Save
1.40
2ooct. II pkg.
~~~~~
l ,.. ... -.::.._,,. ....
'f i ,,. ----~I\
-•.
Ralphs 2 lti.
Soft Drinks
Save
JO
2 ltr
btl
AUor1•d naYon
. I
Buddig ---====
Sliced Meat
~11N Van•r1•1
Save
.10
Dakota Farms
Mild Cheddar
or CoJbr Longhorn or Mont•rer Jac:k CbH,. Savel 49 .40 I
~:; .
/
-~·-Fresh tiA
Casaba
Melons
,or/I SwHt t Sow Ch.Jc:.ll•D C111eh n
Alu&ll.room 01 CbJell•o T•nrall1·Fro••o
UC11 cans
Ralphs S~c1a1 Low hie.
2.49
!Au 50 MaJ!·ln Coupon Of RaJplJs
'b~:7 19n
ack • ~ The bes.( nutrition insurance.
according to Comport. is eating a
balanced diet from the four food
groups -milk, meat, vegetables
and fruits, breads and cereals -
which provides the calcium, pro-
tein, vitamins and fiber necessary
to dental as well as overall health.
Special Values Special Values Special Values Special Values
Vitamin C, found in members of
the vegetable/fruit group, mam-
tams healthy gum tissue to support
teeth. And calcium, fou nd in milk
Jl"OUP foods, is essential lO dcvclop-ma teeth up to about aae l 9 and
keeping bones strona throughout
life not just in youth.
CDA offers the followina list of
casy-to<hew foods safe for braces
separated into nutrient-based food
aroups:
•Milk aroup: milk, yoaurt, cot·
taJe cheese. ricotta cheese, lhin-
shced Cheddar or Monterey Jack
chee,se (children need three daily
servinas)
•Meat aroup: crumbled around
beef. thin-sliced turkey. roast beef,
ham' or chicken. flaked tuna or
chicken, caas. cooked bean• (two
dail SttVi l eVeact~ es/fruits aroup:
steamed 1quash, 1uocbini, pcu,
cooked broccoli, mashed potatoei.
banana , 1ccuontd oranJC-:
mashed strawberries, bite-sizeo
chunk.a of apP.lcs or pears, apple
sauce (four daily acrv1np)
• Brcad1/oercals vc>up: oatmeal!
pasta whole wheat bread, teameo
rice (tour dail y rvinp).
zour rarm..C4UJ Q/owa-FamJJT rac11 99 Fresh Fryer Thighs "= •
USDA Cholc• 9 Fresh Leg ol Lamb "= 1. 'J
1N9'1owll ~o-Alcnhm 2 d9 Halibut Steaks "= •
noptcana-CbJ.U~ JOO" l 89 orange Juice .. ~ .
Rolph.l·N•w 6 9 Light Sour Cream i:::: •
~ FJc:rron 45 Johnston's Yogurt :.:, .
Free
c..,...... , ... .,_..,..._..,~ .......... ,.._ .. __ ....,. .. -... -....... ~-..--.._c...., .... --.. -·--... -... .._ c....tt ~· .• ,. •• -.. ·-,,._ .... "'-.,....,. °""
~: 1.79 'Yub~Coltee ,krtn~~n
Lasagna
IC•UOfM ..
Frosted Flalces Sara r...no..a.ao cu pllg 2 89 Black Forest Calce .
M~hrooms ~ 1.39
~ters ~o 1.49
, 2.99 null"'' Carnations
-------~~ -____ , __
... ' ............... ·-
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/WedMeday, Augul121. 1985
FRUIT SALAD CHEESY
aOUllD STEAK
oa aUMP aOAST
BONELESS 3
BEEF I 7 ROUND L& •
I lb Voe Pod<
WILSON SLICED BACON ....... LB 1.69
BRAWNY
TOWELS
OfSIGN~R
ROll
U S No 1 Pot01oes
BAKING RUSSETS
.69
5.67
LB .25
ii ........ ..,. ....
5 5-0 z Assorted
AL8lll'IO
MOUSA
2-Pocil
VOS HOT OIL
7 Oz Non Aerosol or 8 Oz
VOS AEROSOL HAIR SPRAY
Cheese often turns salads into a
ma.in di b for lunch or dinner. Try
any of these recipes for warm-
weather dinina served Wlth some
chewy bread and a refrc ban.a
beverage.
FRENCH FETA FRUIT SALAD
Combine orange and grapefruit
segments, seedless grapes, quar-
tered cherry tomatoes, diced
French feta cheese on a bed of
lettuce. Sprinkle with chopped
filbens. Serve with a light dressing.
Lemon.Sberry Dreaslng
14 cap lemon jaJce
LB.
••• cap sarar
i table1pooD1 dry aberry
\t teHpooD salt
Mix t<>1elher 1n a blender until
smooth. Makes 'h cup.
CABBAGE SALAD WITH
GREEN GOOD~ DR~JNG
Combine chopped ham and cab-
bage with diced fresh or frozen
cooked vegetables and fresh
chopped onion. Add sliced apples
dipped in lemon juice to prevent
discoloration. Top with diced feta
cheese. Serve with a tight
Grffll Godde11 Dre11lDg
FRISll POllK
SllOV' "• snAK
... SH PORK
SllOU' "II aOA.ST ••••u•• Tiii TIP aOAST
JAsr,..1R sun "JOlf,. PORTION L& 1.69 ~RNIR PICNIC 79 "'JOH" POff'TION L& e
~ •• 8.8.Q or Fry 5 98 ..... PAClflC .......... sn&Ka ................................ L& e
IMO ........
16-0 Z
CARTON .69
MAZOLA
CORN OIL
48·0Z
BOTILE 2A9
UNTRIMMED I 57 BEEF LOIN L& •
Foster Forms 'tbung
TURKEY WINGS OR DRUMS ....... l8 .55
l KllAn
SALAD DRISSlllGS
9 16-0 Z I 59 .. -' ASSORTED •
24·01 Assorted
COTIAGE HEARTH BRE..4:0
Sunk1st, 8-Count 6-Pock, 12-0i Cons, Tob or Sprite ........ 89 STRAWBERRY FRUIT ROLLS ............. IA9 COKE OR CHERRY COKE.. .......... 1.79
Tender
FRESH GREEN BEANS
THOMPSON
SEEDLESS
SWEET
JUICY
GRAPES
c
LB.
Sweet
LB .• 59 HAWAIIAN PAPAYAS. , L& .79 Extro Foney Washington
RED DELICIOUS . APPLES .. . ....
~~""" ( •llll•Rll R J
l8 .• 39
2s•
2.59
2.1•
l-~~9l111 ~TY 7
LIBRARY '"\ ~JI/
'-ONLY / •
lA.2-0z .. Assorted ::a. ..................... 59
...... "°" 2 ~ 2s• .., Get Vol. 19 -KM1 -
I -llOrH -FREE //'/ \/"~'-
6.n .Oz. Box
HOUSE MUGICHA·TEA. • .............................. I.ff
10-0z. Menm1 ........ .... )-~
Hl .. IW NATIONAL
fllAllKS
OR I 99 KNOCl<WURST
170Z PKG •
Random We19h~
HUGHES SWISS CHEESE
13 Oz
GALLO SALAMI CHUB
Precoous 8 Oz Cheddor or
SHREDDED MOZZARELLA
Fos•er Forms I Lb Pkq
CHICKEN FRANKS
.
LB 3.29
EA 3.29
EA IA9
EA •••
KIKKOMAN SOUP BASE ............................... ff
--···-di •• •COM80M~ .._ .. PIZZA
10.lTO 99 10.8 oz • , .....
PIZZAllOUJI
6-0Z PEPPERONI & CHEESE 99
OR SAUSAGE & CHEESE e
a....-
ICI ClllAM WllWICll
3-PK CHOC.
OR '*'NIL~ 1.69
WI ACCIPT DOU8LI, TlllPLI and PRODUCT
COUPONS FDOM ALL OTHI• su•••MADIC ITS CllOWN ......
1.J.S UTlll VODKA
UMllAM'S
WU.C'00'-
...... a.o•ox •LIACll
INCWDlS
5C off ••• 80 698 PROOF
86 Proof
4PK 170Z . 259
CANS & BOTILES
1 75 LITER SCORESBY SCOTCH
11 Oz Bollle L19ht or Dorio ••••
3.89 6 PACK HEINEKEN BEER
.................. , ... .....,._.... .......................... .._,. .........
I C-pGft ,.,.......,...,.,, whot+t .-.rr -.d th• •Olu• ol "'• ''"'"' PvrtNned no1 O«•p•ed
) f •O"ed Covpn"' no• IX<~ l Co"'''"''IV ptO'l'Ol>0.,1 nNt q<O< .,., pvtth<>••
I OU-\ nc)4 t'Jt(...-cl • ()o,ly mqt\uf')C lut•• \ fOUj)O'\\ ol •• 00 Of le\\ <fll' ... 0ov
b .,.j $ W..111.,1-o1 ·-•Of" ........,1,.1ur.,, r~ r.~lb·ted by f<>w (I .,,.,.,.
el '"" ,,....,, ""•••<>••.,' '°"'"°"' cl••••m·~ by°"' •"-' II'"• 1 M -do no• •to.I. '"-"""' 'l'ft(1f1.-d Ott'*'"''•'' covottn .... w tlt ,ub,f1tvtw (If" nem of eQut.-ntent voh1• e L•qYOt IOIKMto I doory Ofodv<lt ••tluded t \,;b1.,1 •o ''""''-'"'P""'ed II" ..,.h ""IP'l'l IO OH.< toOd ""'Ou•• n ...,,, """"" ~ ~ n uni ..... ..i .,.,.... coo..,..
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MAY M A•M.118 nt IACll ..alAM
uuu···· .......... _
INCWDlS
I 00 Off 2.78
------------------
•
'l4i cap yoprt
14 cup cbopped panley
I tablet'°°u v1.De1ar
l tabl"pooa lemon Julee
'ii teaspoon Nit
'1' teaapooa basil
Mix together in a blender untt
smooth. Stir in 112 cup mayonnaise
Makes I cup.
FETA GARDEN SALAD
Combine chicory with variom
kinds oflettuce. Add diced French
feta cheese, broccoli flowerets,
sliced mushrooms, sliced
cauliflower, tomato chunks and
seafood, if desired. Fresh shrimp,
scallops or tuna wouJd all be
deljghtfuJ additions. Serve with
Sesame Dressing:
Sesame Dre11ln1
'1' cap mayoD.D&lse
"' cup oil '1' cup toaated sesame 1eed1
8 tablespoons lemon juice
'1' teaspoon sa.lt
Mix together in a blender until
smooth. Makes l 'h cups.
Apples now
harvested
year'round
By TOM HOGE
U WIN end feed Wrtlet
Time was when apples were
regarded as an autumn fruit, fea-
tured on Halloween and
Thankspving.
That is still the peak season when
such well known types as Golden
Delicious and Mcintosh are at their
best.
But many others ripen all
through the year. Winter is the
season for the red Yark Imperial
and the Winesap, especially suited
for making pies. Spring is the time
for the deliciously tart Rome
Beauty. Summer ushers in the Juicy
Yellow Transparent and the red-
striped Graven&tein.
for centuries, peoP-le have eaten
apples, mainly beciusc they liked
the taste, but als°'1e@ause they were
said to be good for the health.
Today, research has supported that
belief. Apples .are virtually fat-free
and high in vitamins. They are also
claimed to be a digestive aid.
The fruit dates as far back as the
T rojan War and the mythological
dispute among Greek goddesses
over a golden apple.
Homer praised the apple as a gift
of the gods. And Solomon made the
cryptic comment in his song.
"Comfort me with apples, for I am
sick of love."
Emerson once commented that
"every fi nished man must eat every
(type of?) apple once." A tall order,
since there are more than 6,000
types grown around the world.
Apples got a big 'plug in 1800
when a youn$ man named John
Chapman cnnsed down the Ohio
River with a boatload of apple
seeds. He scattered them along the
way and was nicknamed Johnny
Appleseed.
Apples are eaten all during the
day, but are especially popular for
breakfast. Here's a recipe I like for
Apple French Toast.
APPLE FRENCH TOAST
1 apple, 1Uced
~ cup epple Juice
1 eu, beaten
Daab vanilla
% allcea bread
1 teaspoon cornstarch
Daabaalt
Da1b cardamom
1 tablespoon cold water
Poach apple slices in apple juice
about 8 minutes, or until tender.
Combine egg and vanilla and mix
well. Dip bread in egg m ix until all
the egg is absorbed. Cook quickly
on both sides in a non-stick skiltet.
Remove apples from juice with
slotted spoon and arrange on toast.
Combine cornstarch, salt and
cardamom and gradually blend in
water. Stir into the apple juice; cook
and continue to stir until thickened
and clear. Spoon over apple slices.
Makes 2 servings .
CUCUMBER MOUSSE
l envelope uflavored gelatin 'I• cap cold water
"' cap qJ•YOD.IUllH
~ plDt plalD yopn
1 teaapoon Worceateralalre
uace
l '1' capt coanely rrated, pared,
· aeeded cac11mber
-. Salad flffDI
Sprinkle 1elatin over water and
allow to soften -about S minutes:
stir over hot water until dissolved.
Whisk together mayonnaise,
YOIUrt and Worcestershire sauce;
stir In the dissolved gelatin, then
the cucumber.
Tum into six 6-0unce custard
cups. Chill to set Unmold · and
garnish with ~ arccns. Makes 6
servings.
•
,
Orange CO.I DAILY PILOTIWednetday, Augu t 21, 1185 Cl
Chicken salad variat~ons as easy as i ·,2,3
Marinated fruits and vegetables ready
to serve when you get home from work
bine vinepr and hme peel. Allow
flavors to blend while preparing
noodles. In 3-quart saucepan, heat
2 quarts water to bo1hna. Cook raw
noodles 3 to S minutes or until al
dente. ln colander rinse noodles
WJth cold water; drain well.
Elegant ch1ckcn salads make an
ideal dinner main-dish for working
people. Often some wonderful
chicken salad ideas arc overlooked
because we tend to think ll will take
too much lime.
Herc arc threl!~~u1ck salad ideas
that arc ready-to-serve when you
come home from work. Actually
they improve when left to mannatc,
as the flavorful dressings blend with
chunks of tender chicken and fresh
salad makings
You won't be bogged down in the
same menu night after night, be-
cause each recipe makes JUSt two
servings.
The same dishes arc perfect for
toting to work or a picnic as a
change from the usual brown-bag
fare. And you can put them together
qu1ckJy enough to prepare them
fresh the same morning.
For Cold Pasta and Chicken
Salad, spinach noodles and chicken
are dressed with a refreshing dill
and mustard vinaigrette. Th'1s cold
pasta salad is simple. ye t elegant
enough to share wtth a special
fnend.
If yours is a sweet tooth, Chicken
and Fruit Salad is nght up your
alley. A tangy dressing of mayon-
naise, yogun and cranberry sauce
provides the perfect foil to chicken
and chopped apples.
Substitute another fruit such as
peaches, pears or grapes for the
apples to vary the salad ln different
seasons.
Oriental Vegetable Salad boasts a
colorful1 combination of carrots,
zucchini, bamboo shoots and
chicken. Sesame oil flavors the light
dressing that sets off this lively
salad. Serve it on lettuce leaves, or
tuck it into pita pocket bread for a
heartier meal.
COLD PASTA AND
CHICKEN SALAD
3 tablespoons rlce vlne1ar
2 1trlp1 lime peel ( % by !-tncb)
i ounces raw freab 1plnacb
noodles or about 1 cup cooked
noodles
1.4 cup dt11onally 1llced onions
1;, red pepper, cut ln 1trlp1
a;, cup peanut oil
2 teaspoons Dijon ma1ta.rd
1;, teupoon dried dill weed,
crushed
1 can (5 ounces) chu.nk wblte
chicken
In small measuring cup, com-
Remove lime peel from vinepr
and discard. To make dressing. in
small bowl, beat toacther vinegar,
oil, mustard a nd dill; reserve 2
tablespoons irecn onions and
chicken. Cover: refngeratc at least
2 hours.
Jn medium bowl, toss together
noodles, 2 tablespoons green on-
ions, red pepper, and remaining
dressing until noodles arc well
coated. Cover~ refrigerate at least 2
hours. To serve, arrange noodles on
serving plate: top with chicken
m ixture or toss chicken with noo-
dles. Makes 31/J cups or 2 servings.
CWCKEN AND FRUIT SALAD
1 caa (5 oUDces) chunk wlllte
cblckea
Yi cup chopped peeled apples
% table1poon1 mayonnaise
% tabletpoon1 platn yogurt t tablespoons wbole berry
craaberry saace
Lettuce
In small bowl, combine chicken
and apples. To make dressing, in
cup or small bowl, mix together
mayonnaise, yogurt and cranberry
Open sesame to
accent Bartletts
It's that time Of the Ytar again.
Wonderful Bartletts from Cali-
fornia are overflowing the shelves
in produce markets, crowdmg the
baskets of summer bemes, compet-
ing with fragrant melons and piles
off resh peaches.
California, the state that leads the
country m Bartlett producuon gets
a Jump on the market with its
Sacramento River distnct pears -
the season begins on the Ri ver mid-
4.ugust and supplies are available
into November.
General!>-pears are a fruit often
associated wtth five star European
cuisine. The Banlett, called Wil-
liams' Bon Chretien in France, has
an elegant image. often appeanng
on gourmet magazine pages photo-
graphed on an cxqu1s1te plate of
china with a wedge of good French
cheese.
Actually, Bartlett pears arc a good
old-fashioned American fruit,
grown commercially in California
smccGold Rush days. Pcarsareone
of the oldest commercial fruit
·enterprises in California and some
of the first Bartlett pear trees
planted along the · Sacramento
River still produce abundant crops.
Pracucally spealung, Bartlett
pears are good food. One pear
contains vitamin C, iron and mag-
nesium, dietary fiber and onl y
about I 00 calones. With all the talk
these days of lowenng fat intake
and increasing fiber. non-fat, high-
fiber fresh pears are right m step.
So is this simple, low-fat chicken
salad, Sesame Pear C hicken. The
spicy ginger sauce and crunchy
sesame seeds enhance the flavor of
the chicken.
And the fresh Bartlett pear
1
wedges take the heat out of the
sauce. This delicious, yet low-
calorie, fresh summer salad can be
served either warm or cold.
SESAME PEAR CHICKEN
1 chicken (3 poUDds), quartered
Lettuce, flDely 1bredded
t fresb Bartlett pears, cut tnto
wed1es
Ginger Sauce
Toasted sesame seeds
Minced 1reen onion (optional)
Place chicken in pie or cake pan.
Set pan on trivet or rack in large
kettle. Add boiling water below but
not to cover chicken. Cover and
steam 40 to 50 minutes or until
tender. Skin and bone chicken;
coarsely shred meat.
Line platter with lettuce. Arrange
chicken and pears on lettuce.
Drizzle with Ginger Sauce and
sprinkle with sesame seeds and
green onion, if desired. Serve warm
or chilled. 4 servings.
Ginger Sauce: Combine 111 cup
water, 2 tablespoons soy sauce, 2
tablespoons sugar, 2 teaspoons
cornstarch, 1 to 2 teaspoons ginger
root, finely grated, and 1 medium
clove garlic, minced, in saucepan.
Bring to boil; cook over mcdium-
hi~ heat, stirring constantly, until
thick and clear. Cool.
Note: To steam chicken in micro-
wave oven, place it in shallow non-
metallic dish. Pour in 1h cup water
and cover loosely with transparent
wrap. Cook with high power 18 to
20 minutes, turning once halfway
through.
~nut.,,... Coupon ElfPI* F«itvwy 28, 19M
~ C Al:·1[ 2"'1 ~ ~ next purcha-.e of .JJ-\V ~ ORE-ID>: Cheddar Brown•"'
"' er :r c
CONSUMfA.. ,.... ttCllMI Ille COii!*' f/ttt Ill*' INkill\) Ille rt
_.. purclll• Only.,.. COii!*',...... per purcllaM Any otMI 0
UM COM11Mtl fflUd. MiTAll.(11 blcll '°'* lllC . rt/l"ltlut• ~ ll~IMflcilVlluetltflltc...-•k~.prMMl!yw ~
•• Ille_,...., ~ .. Ille .... " ... oouPel' s. cu
----~~ ...... ,,......, ..... ,.trlt Cltll nlw 11t00t ............ ~ly 111 °"e IOA• Cl\tlllfet
....,_"' llllllWOr•ldaftodt.lnG..~Otn•.'O It•
IOm, El ,._ TX,_
I
I
I
I
I ,. Oi.-•,... Ille ----~~~~~~~
..
I
sauce.
Gently fold dressing into ctucken
mixture. Cover; refrigerate at least
2 hours. Serve on lettuce. Makes I If•
cups or 2 servings.
"" cup bamboo 11loot1 cut lD ba1f
lengtlawlse
% table1poon1 peanat oll
'4 cup rice vinegar
'i'I teaspoon sesame oll
carrots. zucchm1 and bamboo
shoots Tomalcedressing. mcupor
small bowl, mix thoroughly peanut
011 , vinegar and sesame 011.
In l.quan bowl, place chicken:
arrange carrot mixture around
chicken. Pour dressmg over all.
Cover: refngerate at least 2 hours.
Serve on lettuce, sprinkle Wlth
sesame seeds Mak~ 2 scrvinp.
1 can (5 oucet) cbw wbite
chlckea
ORIENTAL VEGETABLE
SALAD
1 tablespoon toasted sesame
1eed1
1 cup 1bredded carrots
1 cup 1bredded iuccblDJ
Lettuce
In small bowl. mix together
Pear-yogurt blend
fit for refreshment
Although the French and the
Italians were the first to populanze
ice cream in the 17th centuf'). we
Americans have since proved
ourselves as connoisseurs
Pear Yogurt Sherbet 1s an exam-
ple of an innovat1uve Amcncan ice
cream -the perfect blend of fresh
California Banlett pears. yogurt.
cream and honey with a hmt of
cinnamon and lemon JU ice.
In keeping w1th the country's new
attitude toward fitness. the fat
content of the sherbet is lessened.
wtth part yogurt/pan cream.
Bartlctts arc an elegant and
versatile fruit. The subtle flavor and
melting, although firm, texture
make them ideal for culinary crca-
uons from salad to mousse.
When select mg this summertime
pear, choose well-formed frutt fret
of cuts and bruises. Banletts do not
.. .
npen on the tree and must be picked
green
PEAR YOGURT SHERBET
4 to $ fre1b California Bartlett
pelN
l cup yogart
l cup wbipptn1 cream
"I cup boney
1, teaspoon clnnamoo
l tablespoon lemon juice
% eu wblte1
Peel, core and puree pears in
blender Jar to make 2 cups In
medium bowl, sur together pear
puree. yogurt. whipping cream ..
honey. cinnamon and lemonJUtce.
Whip egg whites until frothy Sur
mto pear mtXture Churn-f recze m
hand-crank or elcctnc ice cream
maker according to manufacturer's
instrucuons. Makes I quan
• Meat dept. to a ccommodate boat orders
• Fresh produce • Fruh fish & salads
• Barbequed meat cooked to order
• Large selection of imported beers & wines
• Open 8 :00 AM to 9 :00 PM dally
500 South Ba yfront • 673-8580
For years HoneyBaked brand hams have been a proven performe• on the roaa For many traveler~
1t s the perfect take alongN idea Bring the dehc1ous taste Quahty and easv e•v ng wherever you
may go Be 1t a weekend picnic. or an extended family excursion. HonevBakeO brand hams have
truly been road tested We can also have our de1tetous hams Oehverea nat•O™•de ts a tam11tlH
taste of home that everyone will greet happily
• Baked for 30 hour• • Spiral allced for euy Hrvlng • Honey glazed • Party trays
• Gift certlflcetH redMm.c:t netlonwlde • Natlonwtde 1h1pptng "°'' Ot!HI Mofttylah~ ... ,. ••
ANAHEIM
'"' Vlil1g1 Ce111e1 1172 So Broo•hurst
9280. (ti 8111 Aotel)
Ptlont {714) &JS 2461
CORONA Oil MAR
3108 £ Cot t H11Wy 91825
Pncne (1'4) &13 9000
ll T~O
24601 R1,rni:ne1 Way
2 18tll fowttr Plue
North •• I I Toro ROI ) 9~630
Ph • ( 1•) 137· 21
MUNTI OTON llACtl
I 9 a tn Blvd 976•1
(Next to Ralphs M1rltl tt Girt• Id)
P!lont (7141 848 em
OllANOl
1419 N 1u\I
(at lll!Pll•) 97b5 T
Pllonu 7!4l 99i g b
RANCHO MlllAGl
11 634 Hwy m nr
Ptt.i11• (fil9) 346 38 ' ..
HON ·YBAK ·D lM
J
ClO Orange Coat DAtLY PtLOTIWednaday, Auguet 2t, 1985
,,
Weinstock 's making-flawless kosher wines
-
Ordinaril~, Stones on ko her wines are wntten around one of the
Jewish holidays, and until ttttntJy -
thatmadeacreatdealofscn . The
wiocswereaoldbecau thcywere
kOlbelj oot because they wtre &ood
wines ror lbc table.
The wines produced in Amen ca
werealmostcxcluStvcly very ~wee•
and made from Concord and other
Eastern grape varieues.
JEllY
lw
WhilctherereaJlyaresomegood
wines being imported from Israel
today. most people are stuck with
imqes created by experiences simi-
lar to the ones I've mentioned.
Some wine imported from Israel
were drier and made from tra-
ditional winearape vanette), but
the flavors were dull and most of
them tended to be oxiducd and
lackJngin fruit.
Many people have made a false
assoc1auon -since ko her wines
aren't very aood. it must be their
ko hcr-neu that makes them bad.
Nothina could be further from the
truth.
Ko her, as it relates to winc.1 is
little moretban a~teeot
cleanlineu in ~u~on. Since
most Cabforru.a wineries a.re fa natl·
cal about cleanliness and would
automaticaJly meet Kosher require-
ments, the only difference is super·
vision by a rabbi wbocananest that
kosher requirements have been
met. Production techniques are
really no different.
In other words. bad kosher wines
are bad for reasons other than beina
kosher.
..
Proofoomes from a new Sonoma
County vintner named Weinstock
C.ellars.. Weinstock off en three
c~c:eptional varietal wines tltatjust
happen to be kosher. There is a
Johannisbera RieslinJ. Sauvasnon
Blanc and White Zmfandel all of
which are not only flawless but
possess considerable special ment.
But then why wouldn't the wines
beaood?Tbc Weinstock vineyards
are in two of California's best
growing areas, the Dry Creek Valley
and Alexander Valley, both in
Sonoma County.
The wines were custom-<:rusbed
under the direction of Rob
Weinstock at a fa mo us and highly·
t't&lfd:ed Sonoma winery, a _policy
that wall continue until the family's
OW!\ wi oery facility as com pletcd,
probably in 1986.
Jf dnnldna kOJher is import.Ant to
you, remember the name
Weinstock because the ko her sym-
bol appears only on the back label.
That is because the wines arc bema
sold for their vinous qualities, not
to satisfy a captive audience during
a few holiday periods.
If, on the other hand, kosher
draws urtho~ visions of the
dre dfu wines of yesteryear, don't
let it stop you from trying three very
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater's Low, Low Prices!
f! CHUCK CENTER CUT
14-0Z.
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen F'ood Favorites
Rainbow Trout ,~E ...
Roast ~&".'t.:«
Clod Roast l~?liit
Bacon ~:~o
Beef Liver m~~!i
Hot Dogs f:Jpt·~
Frank N' Stuff .~~,.,El
Chicken Nu€Jgets .'.!~
Pepperoni Pizza ?:.:t:·
P• •a SALUTO OfLU•l IZZ JA[SHBAMf
Shr•m c.AAHAllON I p ~~~D
Apple Juice $[NEC•
Apple Juice TAEEIOP
Red Raspberries •EAN~
Eggo Waffles ~~,{':
l2-0Z s1 .65
»Ol S2.59
"'~1 S4.39
tOZ s1 .79
t20Z sgc
·~01 ggc
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
PAl.MOUVE
Charmin :r~tl&SUE
Shasta Soda ;~~ED ~Dish
Uqulcl
SZ.29
-Imperial Light ~ .. ~1~~(
Hawaiian Bread ~~=~:~·l
Snack Crackers 1SJ,
Oreo Cookies NABISGO
Coke ALL vAAtfTI(\ lll~All Ot(I
D • age "••'llOIC '"tf OA l~f NEW ressl n~ "'~"!! '•I CHIMIVCOK[
7 ~•til•ft F'J 4 M. M ustar ~a!.~ age 1xers :s~:r~a
Ch k T .. , .. ~ .. ,,, '$1'' 35 Seven Up "'0UU"0P un una ~:;~ ·: .. l • Int • P ....... L'°'" ~:..,A(,
Dog Food l lli( "OUNlA" 33c eps1 Doll l'IPll 'llll ILICI C>tET Sll« C" C:•lN •fll lr., " "ISh ! lltl 0CW a.i0t "'"'' SIFw ·~•~l•Mt• ••' 14~01
S h tt • s AGu 'llA01flL~A s1 69 i~""'H'l'S p~g e ·' au~~e :.~~~:: ~·· ~VI • SJL•I• Fr~1f ~,Fibre .·:~:,, .,., s1.69 Ti ate
Wisk a:~~ ... ~· ... o, '2.99
Lemonade ~·::::f','~r
Orange Juice ~!~~·
...
u
.....
•
..... ... -.,.... ... u
2!I • .
Garden Fresh Produce
80 PAOOf' 80 ~
Gllbey's Old Crow
Gin Bourbon 99.99 ,~ 99.99,~ER
Lucky Lager !lri.1m
Champagne ~~~
Gallo Wine ,m1"""
J & B Scotch -~
Ronrico Rum :w~QotD
Budweiser Beer CA ...
... ... u u
;.....__. -------------~---------...:..__ ____ _
•
aood wmes. W~lD1tock 1H4 WlalieZlofandeJ
($4.SO): A bn&htcoralcolorwitb •
rich aroma ofitrawbemes and
peaches. Lots off nut 1Dtensaty, and
a sltahtly sweet sensation fin1 tuna
refrcshmgand crisp. A aood sum-
mertime sapper.
Wehl1tock 1H4 S.avlsnon Blanc
(about SS): Wbata baraa10. Com-
pare to wines selling for 50 percent
more, and you may like this one
better. lt'sanooakstyleand it isn't
grassy, but still manages a subtle
complexity
This serious varietal wane bas
near perfect balance offru1t and
acid, malung It a super mealtime
companion.
WelD1tock 1984 Joba.DDJaber1
Rletlln1(about$5): My kind of
Riesling. A very appley aroma w1 th
more apples in the flavor.
The mouthfeel is very Light and
delicate like a German or New York
Riesling, with a very crisp fini sh
and no awareness of the over 2
percent residual sugar that
enhances the fruit. One bottle of
this one will not be enough.
Should you ha ve trouble findrng
these wmes, contact Weinstock
Cellars, P.O. Box 740, Geyservalle
95441 (707) 433-3 186 for ret.a1I
information. -
SUCCESS STORY -How suc-
.cessful as White Zinfandel? Well,
AJmaden, which owns lots of acres
ofZinfandel grapes, had previously
used the variety as its red wine in
the anexpensave bag-in-box format.
The firm has recently announced
that Zinfandcl will be replaced by
more expensive Cabernet
Sauv1gnon m that package, and
surely you've guessed the reason.
All the Zmfandcl is needed for
produ,taon ofWhi te Zinfandel
under the Charles Lef ranc label.
NO FRESHER-Wine country
visa tors may want to stop by two of
only three brewery pubs m the
whole U.S. A brewery pub 1s a small
brewery that basically sells all its
brew nght on the premises, a
tradition m England but a ranty
here.
Obviously, we're t.alkmg beer
wtth character, not the watery stuff
offered by most of Amen ca 's com-
mercial breweries. ,
One of these brew-pubs is Buffalo
Bill's Brewery in Hayward. where
8111 brags that the beer travels only
62 feet from the condition tank to
the tap, plus another 18 inches to
your mouth.
The other wine country brew-pub
as an Hopland,Just south of Ukiah
in Mendocino County. It's on the
highway, so you can't miss it. Both
breweries, by the wa y, make beer to
the high German standard, using
only barley malt, hops, water and
yeast in its production, and both
allow you to see how beer is made
DO IT YOURSELF-If you are
mtcrested in home wine or beer
production (a great hobby), you
should know about Home
Fennenter's Digest, a pubhcataon
that covers everything from pro-
duction techniques and recipes to
where to buy supplies. Also covered
arc other ferment.ables, such as
cider and vinegar. For a sample
copy send SI to: Fermenter's
Digest, P.O. Box 713, Hayward
94543 .
Cookware's
versatile,
fashionable
By Tbe A11oclated Preas
A producer of plastic storage
containers recently introduced new
microwave cookware that can also
be used in convent1onal ovens, at
temperatures up to 500 degrees.
The new product is sym ptomatic
of an industry that recently has
begun seelong new products to
stimulate demand. As a result.
cookware has emerged as a fashion
item and addnional emphasis has
been placed on new constructions
that produce better-tasting food.
Glass manufacturers, for exam-
ple, are cxperimentma with new
formulations to alter both coolong
and cosmetic chanacterist1cs. New
plastics formulations are amprov·
mg microwave oven cooking per-
forniance. And there is research
among metal cookware manufac-
turers to develop new multiple1
constructions to improve cook.ina.
Yet, despite these innovations,
most cookware pans on the market
today are made from two old basic
formina methods for metal
cookware: st.amping and casuna.
StampLDJ is a process that remains
the same regardless of whether steel
or aluminum is used. The metal 1s
rolled to the proper gauae and cut
into disks; then 1t is placed into a
stamping press to be fonned.
In castina. molten metal as
poured into a mold and cooled. As a
rule, c:astina is the more expensive
proc¢SS. Another iml)Ortant tech-
nique is spray1n1. sanc:e chem1cals
are applied for non-stick coating
and enamel is sprayed on for
fashion. After they are sprayed,
porc:clain ceramic exterior-coated
pieces are baked 11 a hiah
temperature to provjde. a lastina
finish. ·
A survey taken by a hom
furnishings trade publication
centJy dildosed that amona today'
better known chefs, stainle s steel
with an inner layer of aluminum for
fast. even heati!if is pref cncd for
everyday cookin-. Porcelain ..
coated coolcware 11 also liked
especially for oven cooki na. •
llllJ Piii WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1985 m
ANN LAiloERS D2
COMICS D4 ~--:
Rx radio adviceforwha·t's ailingyou
Orange County medica l advisers give
isteners answers they need on the air
By EVE C. LASH
0.-. ..... Cen'llJ ,,.,,
For those plaaued by an aching
back. sore feet or other med1cal
ailments -help may be as close as
the radio dial.
That help could come from a newly
created daily call-in medical program
on radio KPZE-1190 AM where Or-
HELP YouRSELF
anae County medical experts address
various medical topics. The show,
called Inside Health Care. is au-ed
Monday lhrouj.h Friday from 5 to 6
p.m.
Show producer Sylvia Telson said,
"Inside Health Care is a proaram
desianed to educate and inform the
public on health-related topics. Each
----------
day oft.be week a health care spec1ah 1
will address a subject orimportance.
concern and interest to the health care
consumer.
"Llstenen are invued to caJl-an
durina the propa.m to ask q\Jestion
that the doctors may be able to clanfy on tbe air," she said.
The number for oo-tht...air qu~
lions is 84i.2442.
Podiatrist Dr. Craig Lowe is a
frequent speaker on the program. He
said most foot diseases in this country
stem from mechanical dysfunction of
the toot and hmb. "Underst.andana
the mec;banlCS IS o( pnmaty tmpor1·
anct an underst.and1ni foot and leg
deformilles.
"Most pcQple feel th.at n's natural
for lhetr feet to hurt. And many of
them fail to seek treatment because of
two factors; one they arc not aware
anytluna can be done. And, second,
they've heard of horror stones offoot
surgery. But, an the last decade there
have been tremendous surgical and
medical advancements to better treat
foot disieases "
Freedom also means right to fail
1 spent the day an the county Jill. Two
setsofsltdingbars opened and shut to
aJlow me to enter the room where I was to
meet my female inmate-client. We sat
across from each other at a long table,
separated by a chest-high divider. LINDA
ALWI My client wore the jail unifonn -
jeans and a bright-colored T-shtrt. cov-
ered an part by grey sweats. Both the sbJrt
and sweats had bold jail markings.
She was sax months pregnant and had already been incarcerated for 90
days. Her husband lives 3,000 miles away with her young son. She talks to them
twice a week.
Now, aloni with 36 other women and one telephone, she hves in a donn-
hke room surrounded by bars. Security regulations allow her physical contact
with only her dorm-mates.
Prison officials speak to her through glass. The worst i;>art ofher dilemma,
she says, is that she feels a total loss of control. Her qnly daily choice has to do
with which available booksJ.o~dand bowmucMlvailable food to eat.
She is serving time to pay her pncc to society for her come. She 1s
appropnately remorseful, repentant and determined to hve life differently
1when she is free. Almost like the man or woman who has had a brush with death
i-and ~ins a new appreciation for hfe-this prisoner has gamed a new
-apprec1auon for freedom.
She says that she's learned that f rcedom is a package deal. It comes both
with rcsoonsib1lities and consequences.
WALK IN THE SuN
She's smart. And her tlme behind bars bas helped her to understand that
freedom has to do wt th choice and controf over minor bad ha bats too ... hke
procrastinallon and over-indulgence. I hope she always remembers.
Afterall, it's choice-as well as chance-that dctenna nes the course of
one's life.
• J met another, more privileged woman. She 1s a succcs!lful business
person, owns her own home, has fnends and plenty of money She also says she
feels out of control.
"Make som~sitive choices and carry them out," I suggested. "For
example, you ma tdecide to<:ommll to losing the 15 pounds you've gamed an
the last few mont s ... and your succeSS.Jnay just carry over to other areas of your
life."
"I love to eat," she replied. "Isn't there anything else I could do to get more
control in my life?"
"How about the overflowing an-baskets that you sa) HlU have
accumulated both at home and an the office?"
l bate that job," sbesaad. "What else?"
I was searching for any idea "You told me that your hvangroom couch
needs to be re-covered."
"Then I'll need new carpets and I can't make that decision unul I decide
whether or not to move to another home," she said w1 th great final 1 ty
Freedom has to do with the right to have all ktnds of choice. When you
havetheri&htand theopponunaty to make achoace -and you don't make 11
-that is afso a choice.
I guess freedom also has to include the rig.ht to handle )Our affairs poorly
Dr. Alsaz11s a mamage and f8m1/y rherap1st m Corona de/ Mar
He estimated that of the approx-
trnat.ely 80 peiunt of 1nd1v1duals
with foot problems, in this country
onJy IS percent seek proftssional
med1caJ help.
Dr Leon Ste1nbcri. an Oranae
County pbarmaast. who addresses dru.i intcl'IClioos, satd ma.ny drup
shouJd not be taken in comb1nattol\
wtth each other. He said, "Some
interactions to drugs and birth con-
trol pills may cause d1fficuJues with
patients on therapeutic mcdtcauons
Quio1dane (a bean regulator) can
BACKTALK
cause elevated ten iuvity and tollic
re&CllODS In elderly Pl-Uen\S lb.at ate
on DiaoJUO (• heart sttta,1hener).
A spann 111 tttf ercs with anu-coqulant
therapy al\d ant.tcid therapy 1ntcr-
f eres witb ab1orp1100 of
Teuacychnci."
Dr. Caroline Nelson. an emeracncy
cart sptt1alist, who '.oeaks on urient
cart needs, offered advice on what to
do wtien a chlld swallows poison.
"First make sun: the pauent is
bttathmg. lfthe child is not btea!Juna
(Pleue ... ax/D2)
Here's some t ips
for those who sit
In our last column, the-------------
Monday-Fnday Syndrome was
dtscussed and some helpful btnts
for people who stt for long penods CARY were g.a ven. The Monda> to
Friday Soluuon 1s easy· you can
use these simple back care ups an R
a.nY ktnd of cha.tr. at work or at OTHENBERG
home. These are the basic toots
for Lmprovana your situna pos-•••••••••••• ture and preventmg backache. suffness, faugue, and 10Jury.
Wherever you sit. try to keep the three natural curves of your back
tn m10Q. and use Jood posture to support your three curves. Try LO shift
your saha ng pos1ttoo frequently to take the strain off your lower back as
you sat.
Sitting an yourchatr: No matter what ktnd of chalryou use, you can
adjust the way you sit to reduce the strain on your back. A lumbar
support and scat wedge help keep your spine ahgned, so that when you
do even simple tasks, you can reduce back.ache and faogue.
(Pleue eee BAC1t/D2)
Rhino reasoning: Gettiriga 'charge~' ou~of your life
"I am a RHINOCEROS. charging
through thejungJeand you may be a
rhinoceros too!" said Scott Alex-
ander. Then he emitted the scary
"ERRRROOOGGGH" call of a bull
rhino.
("Well." I said to myself, "here's
anotheroneofthosc F-U-N inter-
views.)
BETTY
PORTER
Alexander.
cowgrazmg-with doing nothing.
seeing nothing. feeling nothin~ ac-
corn\>lishing nothing and having
nothing (including money).
"To convert. you must (orget your
lazy cow friends and get out and meet
new rhi noccros friends (obvious! y.
rbinocerosofaihom-likc birds of a
feather-dodtarge together)."
odds. They are ready to nsk losing 1n
order to wm. They arc the fighters. the
overcomer.; (survivors) and.the
happy achievers."
"If you att not a charging
rhinoceros, then you arc a wimp>
shiftless uh potent cow who wans
watches and procrastinates .. Ale~
andersaid
Wouldn't cbargi ng through the
jungle get ttresome?
Alexander bad the answer" i\t
Alexander is the 29-ycar-old author
of" Rhinoceros Suc.ccss."
"Rhinocerotic Relat1v1ty" and "Ad-
vanced Rhinocerology" (Rhino's
Press. Inc .• Laguna Hills, Ca.)-all
designed to help one through the
jungle.
"ihert are two types of people -
the rhanosand the cows," explained
"Ifyouareacowand you want to
becomearhino,Jou must get up early
onemommgan ~etMAD(hemay
mean "indignant,· but who am I to
argue with a three-ton rhinoceros?)
You have lobe FED UP with lazy
"Working9to5asa DRAG and 1f
you don't love your work. QUIT IT!
and do what you want. Success 1s
creating your own corporation.
(Rhinos don't need a dcvcc and
netther docs Alexander.)
"The rhinos of the world an: two-
anch-th1ck skinned charger.; who
enioy the excitement ofbuclong the
• least twice a year, take a week and go
lay in a mudhole and do nothing but
rclcu ... tben. when your week is.up.
explode out of that mudbole and C-
H-A-R-G-E1 (Mudhole? I don't even
hkecampang ... )
PAPARAZZI
~ ~-~--
Moss Point's an inspiration
for LB art college supporters
By VIDA DEAN
D.., Nol •'149 Ullor
0 You could call this the first Western White House."
Coanle Mortbland was explamang to artist/sculptor
Tom Vu Sut that the compound at Moss Point has an
historic background as welt as the maJOr role it was playing
an the fund-raising party for the Lagu~ Beach College of
Art.
The antemat1onally acclatmed artist, himself a maJOr
contributor, was in Laguna Beach for the Des1gn1ng
Women's annual party benefiuing the school.
Pointing to one of the four houses she and husband
Andrew have on the poinl she said, "Woodrow Wilson
stayed there for a week in 1919. There's still a Woodrow
Wilson room an it." (The 20..room house built by Col.
Edward House, Wilson's diplomatic aide, is currently
being redecorated and A.rchitecturaJ Dag.est is intercstcd 1n
at, according to Mo rthland.)
featured an numerous museums. most f'C()CDtly an an
exhibit at the Smithsonian lnst1tut1on.)
As each couple left the party they were presented a
Van Sant hmitededit1on sengraph. The remainder of these
serigraphs will be on sale at OC Galleries for $250.
Earhcr, the couples had the op~rtunity to b1.d on
silent auction items prior to the gnlled salmon danner
which was followed by a liv~ aucoon with fast-talking Lyn
Wilder keeping the bidding high on their favonte tt~ms.
One ofMutel Reynold• "favorite thmgs" since 1961
has been the Laguna Beach College of Art. She raised funds
to build the school that now has approximately 1,600
students. In 1973, she helped with the formation of
Desiping Women to assist the school financially and
physically, and to increase public awareness of the campus
facilities. Since that time the I 00-member group has
donated approJUmately $858.000 and thousands of
volunteer hours. In honor of her contributions, the board
of directors presented her with a plaque of appreciation.
How dad Alexander come upon aJI
ofth1s "wisdom" at such a young age.
He had a role model.·
.. I worked for a millionaire who
broke all of the estabhshed rules for
success. He had no wrinen goals.. he
was unkempt, he dranlc and cursed.
but he charged hkc a rhmoceros-a
traJt I have observed in every suc:ccss-
ful person I've met.'' reported Alex-
ander.
When Alexander tsn 't charging
through the1ungle(1n bu Banana
Republic safan suit) with has wife
K.Jm and thearone-year-old son, Paul.
h. e aschargingoff-not to mentton
laugh mg aJI the way-10 the bank.
We also lectures (for a bandsomt
fee). conducts Rhino mollvatJonal
scmmars, sells has books. tapes (in-
cluding songs he composes and sane
himself) and rhino parapbanaha (I d
Rather Be a Rhmoccros?"' ).
Aleundcr takes l'us rhtno
philosophy scnously, as do his fol-
lo-.ers, 111clud1ng Mary Kay (as 10
Cosmcucs) Ina recent "Tame"
Magazine an1cle. Kay reported that
she not only reads and quotes
"Rhinoceros Success" but that she
encourages all her~lesforcc to do
hkew1st. "Don't satbaclr..and ~a
cow ~a 6 000 pound rhmo and
charge'" quoted Ka)
The1ob of'the happiest rhino an the
(Ple&M eee IUIINO/D2)
--------'
The some 400 auests were certainly interested in
1t...during the cocktail hour they strolled the grounds and
soaked in the inspirational ocean view (an easel and an
unfinished oil on one of the decks testified to inspira-
tional.)
H1&h surf crashed into rocks and beaches on both sides
of the point as Dorl Del.nlf remarked"( used to swim
down there when I was a youoptcr. I always loved this
great spot."
.. Ouraoal this year isS75,000," said Be tty Kemp, OW
prcsident, who was receiving guests along with husband
Tom. the Morthlands, and benefit committee chairman
Joleae Panam Qookina terrific in a gown of yellow made
with hand.kercluef hem). "With the sale of the extra
scriOll'IPhS, we will probably 10 over our goal."
commented Parham.
Others there included committee members; Pam
(with Sam) Geld1tela and Suu (wtth Mite) McFaddea,
auction; Jou St.eveu, caterina (with husband Dick and
Beverl)' T. and Horace Coll); JoAu KJW..pwordt and
Mary IM 8"*1u Donaby (with Scott), public relations;
Jackie J~. Qa.lre Robla... and Hllary lmn ,
decorations: eu.1,. Ackermaa. mervati<?ns and Fay
S.wmu, invitations (featurin& a Van Sant lithottapb).
In top pbotoe from left. Dorl and Jack
de Klulf; Tom Van Sant and Joleen
Parham. Below from left, Kuy and Jlm
RooeeTelt arrlYe at the fe.th itiee;
Chrt.tlne Ballcmberg a.rm-lD-arm with
Chuck Blzler.
The partygocrs found additional beauty in the tented
dining room erected o n the tennis courts ... 90 feet of one
of Van Sant's Oriental kites scrpentined biih above the
tables and in the spotlight over auests as they dined and
danced to the Joe Moshay music.
"This 1s only part ofa kite .•. an entire kite is 200 feet
and a person can fly on it.." said Van Sant. (lfbe is ever told
to go Oya kite, he can do it with 1 lot of cJua. His lcitcs are (Pleue eee 11088/02)
~ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, August 21, 1986
Like decaffeinated coffee?
Drink all you want -safely
D~R ANN LANDERS· My
wife and I used to be bi& coffee
drinkers. When we bepn to read
about the bad effects of caffeine
we sWJtched to decaffeinated cof-
fee. Now we read that the decaf is
worse than regular coffee because
of the chemicals used to take out
the caffeine.
ls there any truth to this? -
Awaiting Word In Willmar,
Minn.
Dear AwaJtin&: Tile "ord la -
foraet u.
Several yean aao It wa1 dh-
covered tbat trlcbJoroetlayleae, a
cbemlcaJ aatd to remove caffeine
from coffee, caused liver cucer
in mlce. The coffee manuf ac-
tu re n 1wltclaed to other
cbemlcaJ1, the principal oae
MOSS POINT ..
From DI
Others partying and listening to the
entertainment by the Ink Spots were
recently mamed Gloria Bradeaoa
and husband Howard Ha11ett, Delila·
da and Barney Barnett (she's been in
LA a lot lately recording), Jodie and
Richard Bllli.D11; Ollie and Stu Hill
I they had entertained guests earlier at
the R1tz-Carlton), Mary and Jamea
Roo1evell, Pat and Dick Allen, Juet
'
ANN
UNDERS
bein1 metbyleae cblortde. Alter a
fe" years, one 1tudy 1bowed that
metbylene cblorlde also callled
cucer in rat• and mice. Fear
a1a1D l!iPped tbe lud.
Tile Food and Dru1 Aclm1Dl1-
tration decided tblt cbemlcal was
OK becaaae tbere wa1 10 little of
It in a cup of coffee tbat a peraon
would bave to drink 1% mllllon
cups in a day to set •• mucb a1 the
and Donald Corban, Aihahe Clarke,
Ann Cohn escorted by her handsome
son Cbarlle (the Newport Harbor
High grad is lcavina soon for UC
Santa Barbara), Mary Lee and WU-
Uam Beck, the Robert Mclntyrea,
world-iraveler Jerry Rlcbarda (re-
cently back from everywhere), Jeu
Tandowaky, Buuy and Jeff Pero,
Mar1aret and l~oward Rlcbardaoa.
rat• 1ot lD tbe te1tiq laboratory.
So drlllk up and doa't worry.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1
have read your column since
junior high and learned a lot from
It. Now, will you please help me
with a problem?
I am planning an anniversary
pany for my parents. A few
months from now, they wiJI have
been married 25 years. I need to
know how l am going cover the
cost of the affair.
I plan to invite between l 2S and
1 SO 'uests. I want it to be a
beautiful formal dinner at a hotel,
with loads of flowers and decor-
ations.
Sho uld I ask the guests to send
donations -\whatever they can
afford? If so, how do I word the
in vitation? Thank you. -Inex-
perienced In Montreal
Dear Inexperienced: The 1eatJ·
ment la lovely ud I bate to rain oa
yoar parade, but It "ould not be in
1ood ta1te to Hk 1ue1t1 to pay for
your party. •
Wby aot take your parent• to
dlaner out of your own 1avlng1? If
yoa have none, auggeat that you be
paid for doing certain chores
around tbe hoaae and tben 1eek to
do extra work for extra money.
GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ...
Sperry Top-Sider w1tn reg1s1ered ant· slip so e
Put t~ef""' ,..,,11th O\Jt great se'0C11ori of actrvewear pants and st"I rts
&~§~~&~~
56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644 -5070
SUMMER
c ·oNSOLIDATION
Thurs., Aug. 22-Sun., Aug . 25
UP TO
75%0FF
4 DAYS ONLY
We ore consol1doting spring a nd summer merchandise from stores
throughout Sou thern Col1forn10 to offer on extensive collection of
fashion merchandise at sovmgc; of up to 75•1 •.
The savings continue an our shoe deportment with reductions of
50% and more on on assortment of sum·mer shoes. including styles
from Bernardo and Beene Bog.
Newport hach location only: 15 Fo1hlon f1land Shopping Center
..
Author Scott Aleunder and frtend.
BACKTALK .•.
FromDl
A lumbar support: To supportJour lumbar curve, you can make a
lumbar support from a towel rolle to 4 to 6 inches, or use a prcmadc
support. Position 1t in the small of your back.
A scat wedge: Tipping your pelvis forward wuh a scat wedge helps
~store your lumbar curve. You can either sit on a towel rolled to 2-3
inches thick, or use a premade scat wedge.
Suung over your work: You can tlelp prevent slouchinB by sliding
your chair under your desk as far as possible, so you're s1tung directly
over your work.
Keyboard in': To help prevent slouching in your neck, try angling
your work matenals up toward vertical. so you don't have to lean over
your desk.
Reading: Holding your r~ading matenal vcrt1cally, rather than
leaning over it, helps keep your entire back aligned. Resting your
elbows on you r deslc-supports your upper back.
Moving in your chair: Staying active in your chair can help prevent
a back in1ury, since stiff, tense muscles make your back more prone to
in1ury. But move safely: sud<,jenly bending or turnang is the most
common way to 1n1ure your back when you're sat ling.
Shifting pos111on: To take the strain off your back and prevent back
fatigue, find two or three safe sitting positions you can use. Alternate
throughout the day.
Back exercises: Easy back exercises can help release the muscle
tension caused by sitting. Just a few minutes a day, every now and then,
can make a big difference in bow you feel.
Bending: When you bend over to pick something up, first shde to
the edge of your chair. Thep~ your back with one hand on your
desk and one foot in front l'.Jf you.
Turning: When you turn, try moving your body as a single unit,
rather than twisting. Try to keep your hips and feet pointed in the same
direction you're moving.
Phoning: When you're on the phone, support your "phone arm"
on your elbow to keep your neck aligned. Or you can use a phone
support. It also helps to swuch sades often
Or. Cary H. RoU1enber1 la a cblropractor wltb offices l.a
Huati.D1toa BeacJi.
£££ £ 22
RHINO •••
rromDl
world' ia still open," Aleuneler told mo "decide riaht now to be ajoyout, che~rful, exuberant, (nendJy, lovina.
smihna well-aroomcd rh1nocero -
eharaef ERRRROOOGOOH!"
Remcmberina those "mudholc"
v1cations11111 could muster an rcP.IY
w11 a mooest "MOOOOOOOO! •
RX RADIO •••
FromDl
or in dj,trcss call 91 I to send
paramedics and beam ·mouth to
mouth rc:suscitat1on. Cont'inue
mouth to mouth un11I paramedics
arrive. If the child 1s awake and
talltina, call poison control at
63...,5988 for immediate advice.
Syrup of Ipecac is frequently 11ven to
induce vomiting. And at least one
bottle should be kept in the home.
"The only absolute reason not to
&ivc Ipecac 1s when the child has
swallowed a corros1ve, such as,
alkalines (detergents, lye), acids
(sulfuric) or petroleum products
(psotine, paint thinners) or when the
patient 1s semi<0nsc1ous. convulsing
or in shock.
"Other groups of pauents who
should not be given Ipecac are those
who arc very drowsy and unable to
swallow well. Continue to observe the
child after given Ipecac to make sure
that he docs not choke when he
vomits."
The schedule for the next week is as
follows:
Toni&ht -Podiatrist Dr. Craig
Lowe will discuss foot and ankle
problems.
Thurs. Aug. 22 -Emergency
Services specialist Dr. Carolyn
Nelson
Nelson wall discuss urgent care
needs.
Fri., Aug. 23 -OtolarynfologJst
(car, nose and throat spcc1ahst) Dr.
Stanley Lowenberg. Lowcnberg will
speak on chilhood car infections,
sleep apnea and adult nasal problems.
Mon. Aug. 26 -Pharmacist Dr.
Leon Steinberg will talk about drug
interactions.
Tues. Aug. 27 -Psych1atnst Dr.
John Schwaru will talk on a vanety of
psychiatric topics.
Wed. Aug. 28 -Podiatnst Dr.
Craig Lowe will speak on spons
in1unes and foot and ankle problems.
Thurs. Aug. 29 -Internist Dr.
Michael Fitzgibbons will answer
questions related to infectious dis-
eases.
Fn. Aug. 30 -Tox1colog1st Dr.
Phillip Edelman wall discuss
poisonous drugs, t>CSUcides and en-
v1ornmental chemicals.
Tclson said for those who have any
inquiries or health related subjects
they wash to have addressed write to
Inside Health Carcc/o KPZE, 11 90 E.
Ball Road, Anaheim, Ca. 92805.
August Super Saver Sale
Half Price plus • 1 oo
Shop Early for best Selection!
Something Special feminine fa shions
Wt' Spec1al1ze in fashions for the Missy f1ffurt' Sizes 4. 18
250 E. 17th Costa Me sa 645 _5711 L_~~!!!liil!!!~----=H=i=lg=r=en::::S=q=u=ar=e============::::::::::::=======~
divorced
age42
real estate agent
Abnormal or antisocial behavior
is usually a cry for help. It can
mean the person is experiencing
a mental crisis. But, every situ -
ation is different. That's why you
need to know the different treat. shoplifts COSJD.etiCS ment alt~matives. The
In formation Center
at Capistrano by the Sea Hospital
has a free booklet on mental crisis.
It (\Utlines the many options
you have available. Hospital·
ization is only one of them.
Call (7 14) 831-1787. You 'll
receive this useful book·
let in absolute con·
f.idence . We've helped
people cope with
the problems of
today's society for
over 25 years. We
understand.
Howro
Harx:lJ a
Mental
Crisis
................................................................................................... -.....-__....___...___,_~~~~~~-~-----------
\
LTV LISTINGS
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.RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
for The Rest ol Your life
1922 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA-5481156
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Tom Hanks and John Candy
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Cl) MOVIE * t 'o\ Rampage {1963) Robert
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-Mlkt Oark. l'~A TODA\
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DIRONAJll VACATIOft (P0-1S) J : JI 7 141 ~IUI
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CEOTURY CIOEDOmE 0 IJ4 ZS!ll/C1t1,m1n & S.nll An1
Stint In TI« altlDE ~1S1 1 2: 1 0 2: 40 I . I 0 7:4 0 .. 10:10
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aOf"nte ORA Ul) SHOWS AT 11 :lS 2 :20 l iOS 7 ·50 10•2S
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Plus Co-Hit ~erfect (A)
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Family show~ pu
to top of Nielsen
NBC
in gs
LOS ANOELE..s (AP) -NBC,
rclyina on rerun~ instead of summer
show11 to retain vtewen, conlinued lo
dominate the N1e1'en rauop wt
week with .. The Cosby Show" and
"Family Ties" fint and 1ceond and
five other shows in tbe top JO.
Three summer show prem1eTe ,
"oceanQuest," "I Had Three Wi ves"
and lhe fl.ashy news show .. West'
S7th" were rated as No 23. 29 and 40,
respectively, 1n the A.C N1el1en
ratmp for the penod end inf Aua. 18.
NBC led the overall ratmp with
12 8, mcanana an averqe of I 0.8
million households watched the
network durinJ pnme ume hours for
the week. CBS followed Wlth a 12.0
rating. or 10.2 m1Jlion households..:
wuh ABC traihnJ third with a 11..1.
rating, or 9.S m11l1on households.
Here is the Top I 0: "The Co by,
Sbow," NBC. first; "Family Ties. '
NBC, second; "Murder, She Wrote,"
CBS, third; "Cheers," NBC. fourth;
"Facts of Life," NBC, fifth, "Nia.ht
. Court," NBC. sixth, "Dou&le
Trouble," NBC, ~venth, "Miami
Vice," NBC, caghlh; .. Moonhghung."
ABC, ninth; "'tripper John," CBS,
tenth.
··occanQuest," which premiered
Sunday on NBC. featured fonner
Miss Universe Shawn Weathcrty
bei ng lowered into the sea m a
protective cage as great white sharks
attacked. "I Had Three Wives" on
ABC follows lhe exploits of a pnvatc
eye who calls on h1!> three ex-spouses-,
a lawyer, a reporter and a
stuntwoman to help in his 1nvest1ga-
t1ons It was broadcast Wednesday
"West 57th" was CBS' contnbu-
uon to the summer pack, a TuCJday
niaht news 1how wtth styh 1~ d~
repontn covenna such su~ ti a
proarc rcpon on the rec191ent of
dead actor Jon-Erik Hexum'J
donated hean
Tbe Top 20 shows for tbe week of
Aug. 12-Aug. 18·
r "The Cc»by Show," NBC, a
ratana of 21 7, or 18 4 m1lhon house-
holds.
2 "Family l 1es. ·• NBC'. a rauna of
19.0or 16 I m1lhon households.
3 "Murder, he Wrote," CBS. a
rating of 17 8, or IS I mllhon house ..
holds
4 "Cheers." NOC . a raung of 17 .6
or 14 9 m1lhon households
5 "facts of life," NBC. a raunguf
17 3. or 14 6 m1lhon households
6. "Nii)lt Coun," NBC, a rating of
17.0. or 14 4 m1lhon hou~holds.
7 "Douhle Trouble," NBC a
rating of 16 9, or 14 3 million house-
holds
8. "M1am1 Vice:· NBC, a rauna of
16.6. or 14 I m1lhon households
9 ... Moonli&hting." ABC, a raung
of 16 4, or I J 9 mJlhon boweholds.
10.''Trappcr John,.. , 1 rat" I
of 16.2. or I l. 7 milhon houscholdt
11. ··2020." • a n1tina of 16. I or
13.6 million hoUJtholdi
12. "60 M1nutd.." CBS, a rauna of
IS 6, or 13.2 million bous.ehokh.
13 "H11hwayTo Hea,en, .. NBC.a
raun.a of r. 2, or 12.0 m1lhon house·
hold~
14 "Kite: & AJhc," <.:BS, a raunaof
14.0, or I l 9 million bousebolds.
IS. "Who's The Bos ?"' ADC. a
ratma of 13. 9, or I I 8 million house·
holch
IS T1c~"Th~''A Crowd."' A a
rauna of 13 9, or 11 8 miUon bouse·
holch
17 "Newhan," CBS, a rauna of
I 3 8. or 11. 7 mdbon hou~holds.
18 "NBC Sunday N1jht Movie ·
Hunter." NB\, o ratin1 of 13.8, or
I I 7 m1lhon householdA.
1 Q "Magruder and loud "ABC, a
raung of 136, or 11 .S mdhon houie-
holds
20 '''\BC Sunda)-N1aht Movie -
Superman" a raung of 13 S, or 11.4
milhon
Skaggs vies for country music awards
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -The
Country Music A~~tallon named
s1oicr Ricky likaw a finalist in five
--catcgones Tuesday for ns annual
awards, while l\labama became a
finalist for rntena1 ncr of the year for
the founh straight time
Skaggs' band al!>O was among five
finalists 1n a s1itth category
Alabama, a four-piece band that
has had I 7 stra1Jht No I sin&Jea on
the country music charu, was chosen
a finahM for four award\ -enter-
tainer of the year vocal sroup of the
year instrumeotal group of the year
and album of the year
ALL SEATS182.00 AT
IESA (DAILY)-WESTIRDDI (DAILY)
WDODBRIDliE (TUES. I WED. )-UllVERSITT (WED. I THURS.)
CllEIA WEST (TUES. )-LIDO (WED. )-HUITllliTDI (TUES. I WED.)
FDUITAll VALLEY (WED. I THURS.)
edwards NEWPORT 644·0760
Nt WPOR' Ct.NTER BETWHN JAMBORH 6 MACARTHUR
edwards SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546·2711
BRIS 'Ol & SUN Fl OWE~ COS TA MESA
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t1M,11M, 1•H J: ,., "ti, 1 ..... Ill
"YEM Of "WE•
TMf .... " IQEIC(" (N-111
IJt 11. t 14I, lkM 11141.IM,eM
"'-1:11, 1•11111 l : ... IM. '"JI ~
''fWUll
UtA&, 1111. .... I "IT. RSI Fm'I!' "RftUll" (Pl· 111 ·'llJCI wUI~!!""••·
tM. l:ll .. '
.,.. ~Tll • .:•, ·-· ..,._.. ~-~ -
l'l-111 • Uftlllm" (Pl-111
, ... J'2t, Ml tNI. Ml, Ml, Iha, a.11,
llll. ,.,, ......... 1• .. ,,., ......... 1 ..
edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 49S·6220 so rwv IQ CAUW'-~A,,l• SETWHN ROB1 ... SOt.iS ' lotA • :Q
,... .... ''Ila Tl
flllm"INI
lttM, .....
..... llJt
edwards sour~.:o A ST LAGUNA 497-1111 ~o\J· ... c:,~··•t.i • 1 ·9 ... ·~tfwA t • lttl L'l A.-4
_ _.
·1 •BY•"
11111, 1 ....... lldt, ,,, ..... ,..., .. ,
-
• &
'
\
04 Orange Coal1 DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Augutt 21, 1985
PUNKY WINKERBEAN
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"I'm glad they put the shallow end
closest to the beach!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
l.OST ct-FOUND
"No way you're turning yourself in here!"
DRABBLE
~OU~ l.l.OU!>f. \..00"6 6aAT
~~f. '40l.J Rf.Ofa>RA D
NE.IL '
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
1 &.f.~ 10 ~i\\lf.. A. 6ti::r
rn~ IKiEl<IOR OE5t6N
I V.. A 6MA~ ~PE.R r----., 100 I r
l':)
t
A PL.Al€ 'fO HI OE !
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
I F~==::====:::::::,..--
J
j
I
"
=
.. I'll just put your bags up here at the end
of the bed."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham -
t ~
I .
• a
f
'l ~ ~ iO &LOW OUT CANDLES ~
You OION'T ~VE.TO SHON Mf ~'
0f.Llf.Vf. IT CR ~T. I
&OT 1"4fbf ~M'f.~ ~O~
'f01o ~~I
by Kevin Fagan
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Harold Le Doux
SHOE
~L.4... EV£fl.'1'eoDY, I JlJST , WON!
eo.>GMT M"I ~CIGAR 1 11.JA r~
PEANUTS
I KEEP READli-.6
THAT OVERPOPULATION
IS A PROBLEM
BLOOM COUNTY
GREA11
.. -
by Garry Trudeau
by Jeff MacNally
by Berke Breathed
11£Y .sqy I'M ~
~,!If' THI~ ., TH/fJ /j
A PE>lf:MN?
IWPA '1ZAIU ~
C~ nl5H /.Ut11"Y tW'
~ WITH lff:1€ llkt
0
~
II f!N! CH6t6€ >'!"'~ IW91Elf'X I llM ()I( M1
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
MJT: ~1}{/N(J
f('tMlffN6 CEJ(TAIN
c~
0
SOLD rr: HUH say,
IT'$ GONNA Be. t-MD
10 I MAe1..e. SOMEONE.
e.LSE IN \f<J<.JR 1-\0USE,
YE.At-\ I ~
WHO'S GONNA GEi
by Lynn Johnston
I HPDRLOIOF
GOOODREAMS
LPW~CE.. )--
~~
TUMBLEWEEDS
·o
ROSE IS ROSE
~·r <.oo LM. TO
HAVE-~ ~O O£ffi
AND N~ W(£ 1liE.
~MIW ~ DYHA5TV ?
-~~ ~~~(.~-
~
BRIDGE
MY BEDR.OOM lt-1 HERE
by Pat Brady
~--~~-~ A SLUFF AND DISCARD!
North South vulnerable. South
du ls
NORTH
•987$2
"AO
O K90
•J H
WEST EAST
• Q J 3 •Veld
4\:) fC Q 10 9 7 52 I:;? 8 3
0 7 5 0 QJ1082 •a •KQI0984
SOUTH
•AK1064
? J•
0 A43
•A U
Tb4' bidding:
8oat• Welt N9'1Ji Eut
•• a ~ J• •• 4 • Pue Pua Pau
Openinr lead: Three of •.
Btlns end pla7ed on two tut
t Hive trlclt1 i1 rather like 1ittlll1
In your own lap. WHt wu fore d to
perform tbil unu1ual feat with the
help of 1ome eirc.Utnt dumm7 pla7
t.chnlque by South.
Ea1t·W.,t'1 preemptive UctJca
pu1htd the oppontnU Into a
theoretically unmakablt tOntract.
The bid w~ Ukt m0tt 11 £.ut'1 lead·
directing four dubs. H• w11 quite
prepared to retreat Lo four hearts,
so it cost him nothing to hlghUght.
his side vaJues en route.
Weat.'1 three of clubs wa1 ob-
viou1ly a singleton. and when dum
my appeared the mlM'or diatrlbu
lion made It seem t hat the contract
OMAR
SHARIFF
wa1 In jeopardy. Matter• sot. worse
when. after winning the at• or
clubt, declarer led t he kJns of
trump• and diteov Nd lhat ht had
a trump lottr lo tbt b&rpla.
However, Wt1t'1 pr .. mpt ran
declarer • slimmer ot hope. If w .. l
held 1even heart• h aded by t ht
ltinr'.Cluen. ht could bavt only
thrM mtnor 1uit card.I. Ht bad
atr.ady 1hown up with three 1pa.dH
and he had led a club. eo he could
h&v• at mott two diamond•. That
•ould permit deelar r to 1tl'lp WHt
of all hlt nit CJtdl.
· O.clar r eaahed tb a ·kins of
dlamonda, led a heart to the ac and
r•turn.-d a heart to the jack and •
queen. Weat exited sarely with the
queen of 1pade1. but declarer woo
the ace and tucked 'Neat back on
lead with a trump. Now Weat was
truly end played.
He had nothing but hearta to
lead. On the first heart, declarer
CHARLES
GOREN
1lutfed a club from dummy and a
diamond lo.er from band. W e1t wa1
1tlll Mddl d with th• lead and had
to tonUnue another heart. Oedarer
rutred the heart continuation In
hand u he dlKarded the bo&rd't
l11t club, and lht defenden had no
more trlckt to t.&kt. The only triclta
they scored were two heart.a and a
trump!
• 4 Linn 5 Doe l o Dol1a • Ada 1 · • r . ,. mo t'lnCt' u rh . but no f'Orll<ln of P" !'n4'nl II ttfunJable .• Additioml linee ISllY be p1A.rchued for n 00 ~ h Call 642-5678 ''"'' mull hf incl!Jded '" lllt' ad • ~. no1·apph ru tht rul ratah• rrntal. or hrlp •a111td ctu.11kall0nl or automobl~• pr1ud o~rr l ;!OO<J
• haJablr onh t(I prt~•lf 1iart• 1J~rrllt!!n ~lhn1 m.rchandlle.
THI DAIL V 'ILOT CLASSIFl(O OfFICC HOURS
Teleollont ~ M r I OO AM fOOPM
.....,_ Courlter M J
IOOAM ~OOllM
D•ADLINlf ~IC..4'~ !) 1· ... " ,,~ f -.... . ~ .... w;; •'" T"W,\ t ;::: ,,, I •m
~-...... --~--1 • ........ lilt
....,......,....___....:.1.:.:00:.:2
1
ltattal 1002
'"'" ltr lalt IH11t ftt Salt '"'" Oafualtk In'" Oafaral.... ...... lal•ral•W Atatat•tt, Oaf. W-t•, Val. ........ ......
ltatr!I lOOI ..... ,, hack 1111 ...... rn1., HU ..... Au Ult C11t1... 1714 c........ 1714 ~ ·n• * Tll ILIPPI* . IUWIJll wmt fllW ......... U07 T~~ L 2 ~: !!'!o!'~ Juaifor an Q "'· 26r "15. HR. MW cpworpe. LA1'0! 111DRM '1 IA 18' Ult DupletL. o.r_..
Bdrm t Donut. Auume OH OCNn"°"' 36f 26& communlt 0:0. Sm•H bHlnt etptd decOf qdlat R.rrlg. No '*'· patio SqUHICy ClMft. On Vlo-Yrty H50 & M75. -to ·~~~';t~rk''Spao3B~ ht UHK. Owner hometrplc2gatmodklt petOKAyall~AQent uoure at•• tool 731AW 1lth.17S-?187 totl1nrNwptAvt ~" bch 0y9 ~.0212 Of
Mldom' ott!":d~1~E" 075-4753 or 780-97111 I 1100 tufty you rt 875..a17o ~ 984-SJ'f! 53M180 hat Alty fM 291 2aa. 2 car 0., F-"' No I*• H0-2"2 731:1411 f'W'M $39-1190 8Mt Rlty ,_ ,.,....,
w/pvt ort yd entry Orto· Tiil 1111 Xlnt conoo 2br w. ba ta mlOfo, w.10 . oatinflr. Senior c1112en Rell~ tam a 8' 1~ be, patio,..,,"'
ownr S249,000 Incl land 11&1 IT &LU 01tal 41 u UPf*, air, poo1a t700 lt!Ptt , UH :.~ 11~1 ~11 pr.t, t 8d A$1t In du~ Hoeg, 1velt. 8ept. 1.
llttl1p I h. t ...,,,, dtfflc:utt to tlno a 2ir 1L l a;;;, epactou1 830-7084 876-1557 HIM'IX In 8 X HelotiG or 1250/mo 142.0547 S750 mo 731-05H
MO-IHO hJff•tl Nwot Bch NEWER MOD-enc;t. patio, St05o mo .,.. Call b«WMr\ l-6 211R 2b• condo. Frplc ... -21r 1h W/D QOM to
ERN pool home at • Gu/Weter pd.175--1295 IHI Mon-Fri 756-U11 WaMler/dry«, trio. llr, 1725/mo 2'::• 1·~ be bctl Yrly 2 Cir gar. lllPMlt~ .-... 1007 ='•=-tf;:, 1:,.: mlltH HI IU 2~ cott=. :10t'i; ftrtlltalt ua 1 =~ t~~~lty twnt1ae. w1 get, lndry nooimo. 11Mt12 _....,una ... ....,..__..--.... w/QOOd tehoOlt, good L~ w/111 amen111.. ~~/ut11' •K-211 t 28r 28• •·-•....._ T~"" rm. patio, Ill bit-Ina "'81 mLll 1111 •• , ....... "'IW ooalAh....... d "NII 11sn + $300 FM#75i1 ~-......... 783 w. 19th .... -.... -•7221 ---n ·-v .,.,,.. an a '' ng -. -Cute 2Br 1B1 cott Qui.I tooetton MOO Cati TSL MQMT 1:42-1803 ·-· "., .. ., CJIW. -New cuttom 3 •tOtY 4 llR, of pride of OWMl'tnlp f()f •• -..OT 111-lllO w/gar & lg yrd. 4 blk:ro Cerna ... llar llU Dick Hl-4000 Oya, 2 llR t•.t&A nLDllT 111-1111 :a::.~°7kr~~r =:·~:.~:.fE~ 2Br/2ba ~ICUllt oen bdl. 1 yr IN 11000/mo M0-2428 EYM/wkndt Qt9tt drpe bl~tr,-= •28r 1Be Nwpt Htt r>ptx
THAT HOME 104' you and view' patio, lrplc, 2 c:er 49&-8375 or SD-t705 2Br new decor. 0., ae20 ~d .;/pltlO Wi t« paid lrplc. bMCOny, ca~
IHH • IJ I your !amity to enJOy thOM get 1550/mo 7'°"8382 Lovely 3Br 2b• home No~· Ht new~ 838-4120 Call 1·5PM m5 Ho pet• 722-I011
&lb 2 Iota w/Frencfi N04'-rew¥da rn a MOO!RN &Wlllll IH 111H oc:Mn/Mtn vua, patio c enter l r•wu M7 Vlctotla · E" le35 •CUTE 1Br 111 yrly
mandy plane 1blk2 bch I large 3 bdrm + Oen. Pf<>-H1199 aundecic. trplc, Oat 11300/mo. 419-1868 ~117/(818)7 71 243t Orange 'O" MS0 H25/mo. S11 t·A W
1335K ea. Agt 759-9070 teulonally decorated l gardner pd FM 15182 rQll.ffl • Yll t 18r 18t. lndry fee i520 Utll Pd Becn-18R Aval! BalbO&. 87Mt12
DUPLEX 1Bd 1ba H ~w/~ h~ ~t.~~! RLIHIT Ila.IMO ~· 2br + epe, tundeck Jo~:i.rt~ ~f_:.:27 Sept ~534N·lll\kr No 1HIVE ON WATER•
l 210,000717FERNLE.AF pool, 1pa +much moret EXEC Hm JBR/fam rm I &garl1:400fM #4974 . ~a. 1 20'8oat1Mpevall Ctlat'M-
84():.8112 by Owoer Only 4 yra new. an pool l 19°1. P"1 l>Mett .. : ANY MORE AVAILABLE •31r 28a. new Oecof, YIW -..n Ing ~nt 1br, no C>«•.
New llatlngl Dramatic rite ABSOLUTE VALUE tor 12250/mo, 873-5364 Agt RLDlll lll-lllO. rtlo,Jar, datiwtnr. frplc Spectow ~ta 29r 1725 1'9fa req d, ut~, older on ocn vu. 4Br 3B•. FA only 1399,995 w/TERMSt t25 o Pttt M0-2485 Comp19ta cMcc>r Gu l pref. $850. I 145
11. 135K 759-9070 Agt For pertonal Pf.Vie .. c:&ll Fii Tiii L11•a1 llllt I * Lrg 1 & 2 bdrm, newty wet• pd No pete J ... llft.01111
§uperb whitewater view PetrlcHenor• 831-12ee. DISOllltUTlll OILYI •Lm OllH 1121 r.ciec:. quiet.pool ~9'-up 2323 Elden A\19 548-7864 Cler. NW bctlltM #5420
3Br+Oen 1890,000. Ra-Jaamlne CrM k 2Bdrm, 2-+Pool, oar t/1. fM#77C>e 18M Monrovia, 648-0338 VILLA MADERA Famlly RUlm 171-1111
modeled. Agt 759-9070 lam rm, library, 28•· Jae. HLIUIT l'll·lllO •Nr SC Plze, S.A. 211r 28• com plait 2BA 2ba, 1--------
Expantlva graanbelt Condo Poot tpa c:etpOr1 dOWnltlllra OIW cptl &11111 n• •••-
Ctttl •111 1024 Adltt pref'd. No peta. 1 yr L11aa1 IJ~MI HH &700 No pei1122~8011 dtl)t taund factl cio..o -WANTEDI BIO Cenvon IM min. $2000/mo. Cell --· 3 Bdrm 2ba, upper unit llU YllH IUUll Condo w I a r 1 '•, 780-8850 or 494-3387 NI UEL SH RES 2Br I •SHARP W•talde 2Br gar. Mo to mo Gu /wtr W/O hkkp, lge bale, trptc,
Befutltul 48drm. 1V. Bath IN/opt. Mary ~1-71i4 dan. 2ba.Jarden hm. 1B•. encl g11 Fncd yd, pel, no pet• t 7ootmo. gar. Mutt Mel IHO/mo
on cul-de-UC. Large yard LARGE 3BA 21,tba. atep1 Gata guard . I 1250/IM patio. W/O room N9W MOO Clap 232• Elden 211 Oevld
with patio. Attlum court t• It tall l to ocean. S1•85. no peta, 499-3838 or 811·155:4 ~t• l drPt Tiie kitchen Apt 1 142·5155 TSL MGMT 142-1803 960~229.880-4228 yard entry. Price r9duced C.M 1295/mo ap rent Nonhvtew 3bf 2ba I 1300 l bth No pet1 Mull WI lfRI l 0"901 BACHELOR epanment on
to $189,800 for tut Ille. Lovely ptk, new cpt, lge SPACIOUS & Immaculate mo Incl. gerci.net. water. ttano Cr9dlt Cnecil le75 Want a Mlectton of gr•t golf courM U1111tlee pd
Call Patrick hnora rma lor kng. az turn. Only 3BR 2'-tba. Walk to beech & pool uM. 499-2018 •MC d9P 770-~29 llYlng? we can o"er tfl'f· '395/mo. 145-3411
Furn 2 Br. 16G. rental. ,.,... bike to OC'Ml'I. Avall
Sept 4. Patio, eri· ltlun-dry rm 1795 A L utU pd
No pe1t 175-3437
?Bdrm , •.. view .
11000/mo. a blocQ to
bMetl. 17M9"
DESIQ NER'S lurnlahed
TownhOUM. Frplc l pool
I 1195/mo e1s..oe11
OCEAN BLVD-VIEWS. 1
Br. den, 1t>a. Furn or un-
turn I 1300/mo.113·11595
C..t1l111 1114
OAUHlll ALL UTILITIES DAIO
Compare bef04'e you rent
Newty deeorat.ci c:uatom
dMlgn ... tur ... pool,
bbq, cov'rd gacage, k!r·
rounded with pluah land·
1eaplng . No peu
Furnlthed 1 Bdrm end 831-1288 117,895 Cal1113&-7870 $1•95/mo 844-1721 I L •STUNNING Lg l,2&3Br thtngtrom1amaHaptto Band 28r 2Ba ...,.1 II llOI -·-: ••• ,.. ---Obi ··"d """I .. ··--... •21 llllT 101111•"0 !!l!.rt IC• 2Ba Grdn A.pt POOi 1525 a 48cl hM II loolllng In r new .._ a , .... LITTll -• ...., a .... """""' .. ' -wdfC[jff lbr 21/\b: "25 & S725 710 W 11th CM.NB.Of HB think ol ut for rent 505 St. Andr9WI. Beach & PCH A-10 owner Utlla, PoOI uM 1••840:4 fc dbl · · llrlt tor tl'lat cnOlce ot Aalt tor Scon 211·2211 IHTI Timi $76,000 538-5742 TILllllT 171-lllO :~ nO pe1°:..,,,~:::;-r 380 3ba 2 car gar. no Ideal tMng ·--.. m In the hlltt on 112 acre Of --------lao. fr t 2b 2be d 113 3757 837 pe1t.n-amkr S7751M • ..,, TSL MGMT &42-1803 -•wrw ground II thtl 2 llory I II + r&I, II, 42:"or~~. ~h~ Cf1ta 1it11 2U4 l· or •1458 9/1 142-75281790-1418 NB RE.ALTY 87~1&42 28d. 1 bt. wood burning
Cape Cod home 3 Bdrm• ----Ha{dwood ""· llfeplece, PCH 175,000 536-5742 s11601mo 28r 28. Huna S 1~ Bayfront 38r 28a tp, bit~. get, no doge
Fumlahed Bac:hel04'.
385 Wiiton 142-1971
Baat. leack 2141
lllTIUOl'IFlmlT QUIET RESORT LMNG
• SplflcHng heltad i:: and den or 4 Bdrma lam-new dahWtr/kltch r•• mttr kilt• Gld 0;~-.ao tllp l300 extra 21 3 br. U 75. new carpet W'llde 4-91• ctean 2Br 532 lrvtn.-1750 •Court yard view d nlng
• Vlgnet1e BBQ ar... . lly room and large bonul llWPllT ...... Co9P« plumbing, new UllU llLLI r•tvMO. 2 rA• gar Want' Balboa Cove 873-148:4 new paint Cotta M... Patto/Lndry 1595/mo 2100 HaV'llll P$-l715
room •11 I t I hi 1211000 rool ('l3) Encloeed patlO -··-.... 979-8209/2"1·7383 •• 1~273 •"1.3••1 M&-97"4 ,. UI rH Y .. ,,.. ' ' BEST BUY IN TOWN lmpec:cebte tenant Agt, 3Bd 2ba. aec:l'd patio -..., ..., •Twt~ dine In court yrd
gen painted and vacant For thoae wno IOve the bl()(lk wan fence A very 24x80oneorner lot 8:45-9181or 497-7139 wlape, comm poo1 & ten, S5B7Rll/A~f Cou0u~t Vt~t2 "''T"t••y1-·---•....,.
Enjoy a 1w1m In the beach but want avery-good buy S 124.750 Large Ill/Ing rm. dining 6 ......,. ... -·-· - - -inr --• -...,.. apartcllng pool 2700 aq tt thing In a home! Ex· llY ltO&llLI ILTR. kitchen areawtth family LUX CONDO AVAIL NOW nr bch Av! late Sept 142·1803 or M2·3153 2Br 28a 1000 'Cl h, gar Nr bch, 1 peraon
• Spaclou1 Apartmenll
•Your own pvt patlO I of living apace. Excellent pand9d & remodeled 3 Ml·l'121 rm. Young adulta 2Br 2Ba. Over pool, ll600 yrly e.4~881 dy• 1ac. Radeeorateel No f ... 14ee
vllu• et S235,000. BR 3 BA home. Lot• of _________ 1 wetcome.129.500 Agent ttreama & fall• Dbl ear 1 ILi Tl IOll 211 S~~~1r·~~o ~~· b~~: pet• 1895 855-0885 TILDllT HI-IMO •Gourmet kitchen
•New Clove tan orpt
• Lrg walk-In cloteta wood & atalned glue PllTlllll OIYI 540-5937 ~ar wl opnr Micro. W/O, Op.tx. g1118711. FM#5420 frptc Mutt ... Daaa Pt'at 21•• CONDO w/poot, apa, tee •Gat.ci covered prkng FM land. lllOITIYI TOWIMlll pit lv1 1950 549·2••7 TILllllT 171-1110 381 Avoc:ado I ... guard. wane to botl.
' 14'-~0IO 1 Vr new 1Br 1 ba exclt ltwttn lolt ltlltf 2Br 1Ba tg Oplic No pell TSL lllT U2 1IOI ~TTRACTtVE 1 Br nr LUX Pentriouee 18r 1750 lrl·levet ' prof decorated Over 1bOO aq h, flreptace 1950 'A.' Meyer S700+ 3Br 2ba trptc D/W, tpa • MARIN A $00 /mo A;t 131~"°
#/ltorage
ALL.UTILITIES INCLUDED -=====~tlti featuring mlrr.or.ci formal & pvt encl yrd. N1ar . MC $750 548-3484 gardnr S1400. Drive by All utll• pd. Lart 1Bdrm, 49&-9•82 noon-5·30 pm ,.,,.,,..._ 2br 2 ... _ 2 ..... _, . Ruben E LM 129,995 for 2001 Htghlend. 848-4511 t I ti 450 N ..._.... -· ,_ -· 100. 2Bd & 2Bd TwnhrM
& T•-• Of · d•n111ng arH Gbrutc1 1 I01th datall1 c:all 838-7870 2Br 1Ba. gar. no pet• Call btwn 1pm-!pm re rg, pa 0 0 Ut ltlck 74 new peln1 & carpet neer
--• wa paper, mar • rpc, 2178 Plaeentla Apt E pett. 2011 Charle St.; bet\UOO F 557-4373 1&11 PUIOllOO plus h whit a erptg, SPACES AVAIL for new 1625/mo. 546-7983 · 4 Bdrm 2'n ba, fpr1C, 1 blk teo-3728 or M&-.8277 2Br 28a. pe1lo encl. gat., · ran
Thlt quality 3Sdrm 30th w1hr/dryr, 2 car gar. mobile homn buyer• In beh,commpool&1ennl1 newcarpet.no petaMSO Large~oceenfront
hu a great one of a kind pcot. JUST GORGEOUS-Cotta M .... Hunt Beach 2Br 21n81 2-tty Twnhm• 2 Car gar 11500 mo , n Dolor.. 8.40-5504 dul)U. •Bdrm 21>•. flrlt
muter bdrm tulte with Show Ilka a Mod.ti & Laguna Hlllt For Frple, d/W, pOOl~g~ Sml w/8 mo IN, avail 811 mie8tiBnU •ARLINGTON APTSit ct au coneltttot1 . a lt
cozy ftreplac., vaulted S 104,500 detallt call 836-7670 pet Ok $775 87:>-4912 Stuart, 8:42-5358 att epm TIWl-ll Spac:loua. clean. qule1 I' amenltl.. I HOO /Mo
cetllnga. lky11ght and lt'1 Broiler 850·853• I p l S 28 •·· AA --"""" clOM 10 beach yMrty Br<*er Al7~ own MJn deck Ollel'·IOOll-,_,_ 4 act•• "'~ r e .... n. r ..... ec:orated. AT l'STI ...... ,., .... 2Br ;;~Ba TwnhM le75 LI DO DELUXE
Ing park-Ilk• Hltlng .. Tit OU,, unmt 2 Adds~. c.b :~~:.P·~~Gu:~ r~~~ " • Frplc, vauned ~ling•. dbl Sorry. no pet• ~90 2Br OR. rrplc, patio
Furnlahed
Vlt ll our model Dally 9-6
Sorry, no pats
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
18211 Pariltlda Ln. HB. .. , ..... , •;;rt INck Jiii
Communltypoolandapa Above Newport Hatb>r. Xlteond lnc $195e0 15% fut&dep Askf0tSaral\ <•tl11t1l garpOOl&tpa Nope11 11295 87s-63&9
1158,500. 751-3191 lnc:r9dlble vtew. 4 Bclrm. dn 1159.500 497-8287 MerrHI L'""'h. AXant ' ,,_._, y11 Ou 18drm 1720-17•51Nr bch 2Br 2ea. bltln•.
W R-Aveif. 671. 26r 1
bt , gar, Wlh/dryr, fri>k:,
ttepa to bch 1850 111. 4 ,,... ...... .....,.. __ ... ,... n.. 2ecsrm 2,,..Ba 1915 patio encl gar 1725 OCEANFRONT St\al'p 28r.
IHI. $ 1~0 CIH nlng C:::. SElECT Naed":'tfi~i.hl;;g ';'~: IEWNRT 10011 552•111• ()( 951• 121 '""' h•• wttti eee w 1atti e.45-2139 Ou'-t 53~21 gac11ge No P9tt winter ..... PAOPERTtES 1345.000 w E.utllde 18rtiM1550 1 •ARLINGTON APTS• 873-78ee
109 27th St. 2 Unite ra p peJaon only No TELERENT Quiet apac1ou1. PENINSULA
Unda. 850-2012
lliliil() f 1-<CAotl'S S30KGroaalnc $350K pell Agt, 831·2242 ""2atf1eld l/ery clOM to t>Mc:n Small 1 Br apt IUSt 1 l\M P I 11 I & I I I T Reeltora. 875-:6000 21 I 28th St,2 Unite 2Br 1 •.,Ba l y,nl\M 1875 to t>cn 1525/mo yrty l)tll
Winter nice 3Bd 20' to
bch, view. pa110. W/O,
a11aiy111 Ir Jiii --------120,280 Gro11 1315K lPUTllm Sorn. no pe11 536-0•90 1nct. no gar no .... 11 . .,,, -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IPAlllLllll 112 E Balboa Bl 2 Unit• . , .... -.. .l&L llT&TI
.'
Like brand MWI All UllltlM --adult pref 1oe-1• 29th
3Bdrm 2Ba Monueello • Wld .. I Selection twnhme Wthr/Clryr, gar. • Updated Dally
g:r~· 11200/mo
t O lv. 548-3535
patio $850 Agt 550-1 15 • All Ar ... & PrlOM S25.300 Grota l295K paid. Poot. gar no pell 28clrm l JBdrm Unit• avl St Agl Weyne M&-.181e
llLTl·llLLlll I lllOREOLIFFI 28drm,2ba +Den Laurel 910WBalboaBl2Unlt1 1Bdrm S585-1585 lmmed Prteed tr S700-
PllllOll. O&LL Traditional -canyon tide Model In Turtle Rock S25,800Groaa $315K 2Belrm 18a S890 1850 975.9173
3Br 2Ba, dbt gar, nic. •Open 7 Daya 9am-7pm
yard no ~· 906 W 675-8860
Afllt•tata, Ual. ...... YllWlf UY home on huge lot. Boatd Hlghland Townhomat 301 AVOCA.DO .l&otll IULn
P&TllOI Tlllll on bat exterior. ahak• Lower1 unit, quiet locatlon 2•1."!1 ~:~ON SE•Wfll YILUIE
Wllt0n. S9 5. 54~ 7983
Or Stop By ......... 2701
111·12H roof. Iott of uaed brick, wth view and prlvac;y "" ...,...., •
t>eam.ci cet11ng1 -•real $168.700
3 BR 2ba, famlly rm, no
pets, kids ok S 11001mo HIO l••••rt llYtl 1 BR. c:&rport, new drpt 1
crpta. 1124 w. Balboa
NON-SMOKERS ONL V
EHtblulf Stunning. lrg .. cutlet Jutt $349.000. lnlH 0111t l11tty
Submit your terma. 18124 <AJlv.r Dr, trv
Wuy OT' 2Br 28a twfll\M floor Wetlt:field 11 I plan Frptc lg patio Lov•
Iner gard~ 2737 Fre-Balboa Penlnaula F
mont Ln 854·87•2 BAYFRONT ~Ofge®I eu ..
Btvo $800 mo. 873-5198 RFIMr.l<"
711-7100 Liv• wl\er1 you have ly environment Poot No
r&llL' &P&ITlllTS • Spectacular apts pets s 1075 LM 840.0349 3BA 2b•. no pet•. kid• Ok tom bullt 3 r • Den Hm•
S900/mo Includes gar-INl40' dock IVI 851· 1853
den«. 806 Joann SI
2BR lba. w/garage. 1750
mo. Bay View. Wrk
979-8371, Hm 873-8278
I <I ; I I ,.
lt!J!rt ltac• Sparkling clH n large • 1 & 2Br. 1 & 2Ba 1uttn 1St1t• Wf•H 7 I 1111 llGHlllE T UYOlllT·IY IWlll ... atala, Apt1 lor famlltel w/ 1 or 2 •Spaclou1 townhou... 28 26 Submit What you have to children near park l:i••t •Flreplac.. '· •· qui.I MOlullon
trede tor equity In deluice 2 StOtY Ivy covered. clap-ltttrt 1490 RLIHIT Ill IHO paid No pet• *Private 1>a1con111 or on water w/24 '" aecur·
IUOllUY 854-8742
l&Y llllT TO OWll
3Br 38a, prlv comm Beh,
tennlt acceu S 1800/mo
llllllllUllll Gar l ocean vul fM#875&
2BR 2ba condo on beaut ~rd & llon• Engllah ForeoloaurM In Blg BMr C ---------23~rm 28a ... !!~03 Garden patio• 'ew 8:~~·8:~o
fut Kunapell Buch, ~~~ou:,;. ~ ~~m~ Lek• Realty Wortd atlatra.. 1 •0 w Wllaon ...,, • .,.,.. WMY IOT!
l\.lrnl1hlng1 lnclucled llb ,,, b 1.. h Sawmill & Reaort Ren-· a.ae~ 21111 •3 L'ghtAA i-nl• count l;.;l'liPM"i•iii!o•..,.""'!'"--...-..-
2Br +get h75 IM #l501 IH (714)770-8237 or
flLIHIT 111-IHO (918)927-5856
.
.. , , rtl ... rery, " ..... uo• lalt. {714'"'86-7531 ' ..... -· ,., iff "' "'' ti playroom, lend Included '° OUlllll Ill llll mfe81iBJIU *2 Swtmmlng pool1 MB-Student non-amoker
LE.ASE NOW, CHOOSE Belcourt Hiii: Large 3BR
CARPET COLOR 4ba, 3 c:&r gar Delu••
3 Br 2B a Twnhta condo Sec PoOI. etc •II 1177 &1..tl•t 1880,000 148-3580 I. Waat.. 1 S I •Stream• & pond• own room. nr l>Ncl\ • '" Gar. Fncd 4 ~· '" •7808 UllTllm •Sorry no pell $300/mo 8ee-8067
llWPllTIUH ITW ~~.'::llMI D~~~=.s:b~e.r:,tt,~ WANT OUT? JILllllT 17 .. lllO 1mmacu1a1e, large Garden •Furnllntng• avan Room • rent with bath 1n
11200/mo 87~812 Catalina View Bltln1 tnel
TVt 13250/mo 873-3180 M ... Verda 3Br OI." SAVE With fhta bargain 852-2418 or 778-1081 '. cereaa •·• •u 2122 1 Aptl Beautifully land-WHY NOT CALL Dlft home walk to bMch --------y g age 1 c 1 p a d g rounel t Hunt ~ IJ80..21S1 Plan II In Vl01 Bat~ Two pric ed Coat a Meu 1&1111 llHI Wa bUy oondot, hou.... w/elec:t opnr gor rnc1 no 1mrn.ci avall S2500tmo 1 UIYI OllU Olm poot/apa patio/deck No 111·1111
muter auttM, IP~• condo. Spaclout noor Oita~ , .. _,1 ""• lttt 1.intt1 Negative c:uh now '*' s 1 1501~ lit, lut I yr IM 780-0347 Fabulou• 2•2 tri>lc. gar pet• Btttlt,Jltttla
2B•. auper clean Baaultlul lllG CANYON CONDO
ard F/P 2 c:ar ar 3BA. 2·~B• Great view
IMnn roornwtth fir~. plan. Comfortable IMng _. •• ok. forec:loaur .. ok. Your 1150 d ,..,. .. ,.3,. It ,,, ..... ,. F 1..... $""'5 • .,.. IUWlll YILUIE -large aundec:k Owner araat and half-beth Pilati FRENCH COUN· price, our term• ap -;rvu "• " EHtbluff Condo 3 Br •teal 4 _ .... • •8810 28d'm 2Ba .... i7s0 llALAll llTll
motivated Auumable down. 3 targe bedrooma. TAY TUDOR, more than (714) 873-8818 ~ 3bdrm 3ba retr .. t 1'•B• Oulel area Encl 2 TILllllT llMllO rm l5555 Huntington "111• liNkty rental• now av111
financing. 1 170,000. 2 bathe up Community elegant. 6300 aq tt-, 11 ICely td 2 c:ar gar No pell LM 2250 Vtnguard 5:40-Ge2e Lane from San Diego s 1401 & 2274 N
MARIA BERCOVITZ or pool & tennll Excellent rooma Ooeen & City ltatalt ~750 5~~190 a:: 1::r S1075/mo 874-1299 or l&IUll 111111121 2Br 1'>t8a le95 Wlhldl'Yf Freew•1, north of Buc:ti port B:, c~ 84&-7::'s
LI NDA TAGLIANETTI locatton Nr South Cout Llghtl view Miiie. 837-•725 Garaoe Sept 1t t #8731 dlhwlhr 3020 Fiimore to Me addan #91! on
Plue. Cell now 5-48-2313 Mull liquidate fOf' out of Btalll hraltk.. llPLD W/NIL flll TILDllT lla.HIO No~· Agt 648-5605 McFtdder SU I Ill LOllE
THE REAL 1
ESTATERS '
let U1 Ilea, Y"
Sell y • ., ,,...,.,t
Ctn ClaeslfW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
'::~~~, S(C~c{}lA-4 ~~s·
-----,....., r, (LU I rOU.AM
0 • ..,.,.. i.n.<t "' ....
'""' '"'""bi.. ~· lie ""' 19 1 .... '~· ....... _ ...
EECERO
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r .... P_.o ........ o .,..T_H~j ·, .• . I I' I r .
.... ....
l ~__,L.....,.E _K ... L......,"....-11 : Oo yvii ~ wMn IM
.. _,_l'__..l ........ l__.I ........ ; ::-.. ''°' ~~co:.:
------~--,I Ms"-? L G ti "1f pl '1 , .... '-'" ~ ......... t:. I : "' I ..;1.;. ~ ";.., "'t!'
rrrrrr1
I I I I I I I
IM'"LITI .... .,. Ill ........... 1211
trea ..... Sacrifice I t 2Br. frptc. 9/1 ... , 573 DOLlllYI IUT&LI 2 8d 11>a. c:IMn & con..,.. oen m111 u11 lmat 2144 )028 w Cout Hwy New· ~~:0,800~11~ LU:,:~a1~: Lgua ..... 2141 RLIUIT 111-lllO l/ILLA BALBOA: 2 Bd ni.nt So of hwy 1850/M Carport & morel ,;6403 28R f el 1 ur gar new s ~ti.. S:::i '~~~~.
For f*ton•~review call a!XUtiFUL condo. Fum. 2112U lllULIW Condo w/frptc, MOUrlty 850-8292/e.4&-3176 TIUHIT 171-HIO crpllpatnt Nr Hunt Har
Patrick Tenore 831·1288 2br/2be, 1pa, garage. e S875 Gar, rrptc.1•#"48 bl~ Sl1~/mo YflY 2Br lba trple, aunroom. BACH U lO & lBR M tO bour ':J~.12~11 Pat• ltatah tt
04' 7I0--8702 month ta ... '1360/mo TILIHIT Ill IHO LID ISLE. Charming 3 Bd klndec:k. 3 bike to beech. PRVT patio ~*'port S"-~ 2-•
I OS.259--0943 after 8pm. • home with IOUth patio, 1850. mo. 876-9115 • .... • ·~~~\:· au. _. SHOUTS VALUE trplc Sl800/mo yrly . POOL, SPA quiet, no I*• 4 , ,: lBR ocN nfront apt NB Rf1Mr.l<11
l<I " • j •
ltntt l1fllral1ltttl Newport Hit• 1400 g-hM LIDO ISLE Large 2 Bd on Will T0WOl1110 TOP ARE.A M ... Pinet ~ Stir w1F•m1tatMI No
ltatral 1202 garden Mttlng m.,low water wl~allo ' fire-Large 2br amall complex 2850 HA RLA 549-2441 -~--· p1rty l\ou.. SH>O --------lXNbloRBs/RtxttoR§ area other• avall detail• wp•ace, 1 1 t ./mo I Pool & d'Mf\t. FM •8508 OLIAI UITllH Oren~,... 2-•tory Condo ,. 1111 Call btWT' 8·8 --------1 Falt frM tenant provtora •IH·t1IO* I lrnH t•tt H. RLHllT lll·IHO 2 Borm1 With DfW btHna 2Br 1 '8• all amanillu am1pm 875-7500 Ct1ue11 "Ull llW" Info 538-t194 Beet Al1y Ott Newport artlatlc 3br H1· 1400 171-1100 NMr beaeh, entire l•t In amall compte11 ' ~~~1 1~~:: ""1'1 la..cntront riome NB. prof
IUlllLPRT tJI0,000 PROVl!N RELIABILITY 2bl tam hm kid• S725 no noor 2 Bclrm. den. lrple, * 2 batht ul)ttalra at 353 c. decor clean non-amkr
QuaHty built, 1 V"rt new, love ly lg 3fJR/ttudy ... t!!_t ~~r~38-~190 fl'ab 2BR 2BA. 2 car ger, gar. t 1•00 720-M22 Agt Hamilton 1725 ~HI 111=••1 152 1550'mo Wint•• 87S-9e29 lamtty home with Mvel'•l GrMt tocatton, clOM 10 .... , ty ·-• 1 bath, wood btwnlng - -~ -----deckl f04' Water and ntght pl tpa No P•t1 1 1400, Fp &ger3ll E 18thln 5 M NARO~ Condo .,dM 2bt 2ba to 1hr beech New cpt1, dtepM, 181 I at IM/gronr 409 12nd St c .. ta .... 2124 848-979' 1 2br 2ba no pat& non-~ non-amkr S!I 18 mo llOhtt vt.wtno Many eu.. etc Call 213/547-te24 873:-1732 Of 831·12M amkr U 50 mo 9 111 873-7•39 ev.
tom luturea. antique lft.JT•Lml. l +I LUX CONDO AVAIL NOW EASTSIOE 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath I "91-47,. or M 1.3u 6 -----,,--....,-,~-t talned glaH. bullt·ln l!xecutlve Condo, large Lotti Hllbot view ~ l HARBOR VIEW 3brl2ba 28r 28a Over poor qu .. t .,.. U 75Jmo NO COM · OCEANSIDE
veo. l aafl 3 Bdrma. 3 new t Bdrm In South Gar 1850 mo FM #4937 S1450 mo w/grdnr Mark ~trMml & fall• Obi c:ar PETS 131-a 155 l~rt ltac~ 21 t S375· 13 uttl Avail 9 1
ba, & den, 1 WOnderful Coaat Sprlnga. gated TIUlllT 111-1111 W/113 t-12M H/8«-0793 g~ w/opnr ~lero w 10 1-,-18 c Y & 675-8503 or 87~8885
top of the line kitchen oomm. PoOta,etubhoUM. Spit 1v1 SHO 649-2«7 lllf&IT fl I • • .. r •vrn rty with .i.nnalre renge, 2 ape, 1¥1 lmmed .. 50 yrty. 2 BR 1~ ba + tam rm HVH • 28r Den 2h la Win tar No tee 8kr ~M 11\r •Pl $432 50 mo wet bera p1ua many .ci-.. &Olll IUl.n Frptc Cul de MC Avail kltch I 1550 ttt, laat I 1 Bdrm upa1alr1. c:atl\ cell-S585/mo 2 9d 1~tl0 675-4808 12200. mo 1ncoma 114190ed
dltlonal ernenltlee Price ... mid Sept Call 4K.o77t NC. Avl 9/ 1 831-3915 Inga. Clec:or trplC pool pool, lndry rm E IOC, 10 Quallly 780-!287
lnctudet the land "'" l&UlllllT Lg 38d 2ba w/prtv end 1535/Mo 381 Hamilton CIOM t~~: :"~ I 'i.p1,1nu' ""91' nn• Cti'niiiin t9male ""mt to
71•/171-1111 taatala andk, 1 blk to bch I 1:400 210.1llL11&1 TSL MANAo:l..ENT {i, two bfdioom .tpt\ 1hr 31>1 l\m In C M l 2eG ~ATI HI HO'lll 1.._ 1 0 Vall~ Wt yt1y a.vt 9/1175-1173 ,1'-0 l&alUll 142-1to3 I mo 1ne1 uut 831-5883 A~(!~~~T~7i South LY#oni ™• fj;;;;(f AF.lux 36f 269 tam .1&1111 IULn 180 1ba t ger vacant, Lrg 28r 18• clMn upper llUYllY PD•
la1·1a upper of c1Upte11, 2 Bdrm ~5"~:-~,~==• Not fer to OCMn 2-.lbdrm nice 1.550 M 75e-8557 Unk No p.i11St51mo • For dry cteenen. gd drl'o/·
--------3 bl1h + tm•ll den. tncludee loh nrep1eoe and 2 Bdrm 2.,_ l!utilde '400 dep. 141·1352 1ng rKOld 875--7080 mag
12800/mo Yrty (turn?). Ht. yard 1780 rental hutry 1726/Mo-1 M · dwnltalrt Lro 28' tBe Nr 8 A CC I Empty d ,,.,, .,,, ntcety
NEWPORT Terrace Condo Elellator l b091 allp §Ir, 26: co;;ao, quQ a3t.-e180 Beet Rlty ,_ wlcerpcn I xtra priu~o Upetalra, ~. encl on ht ytlr S rent furn 211r 1't81 TwnhM
End unit, 2 tty 3 br, 2~ Lore ~~=ltort ., .. , 2 oar ger, Pool. OCEAN,RONT h.ixurlou• apace No ~· 541-1572 l&OO Avt 1110 Mt-1tfe' FURNISHED or •lpool 1350/mo vtll•pd
ba, ger, pool, Jtcual, 1950/mo Ml-HM 3000 aq tt. hOIM, 8 Hr t'it8a USO e10 Eutalde new d.cc>f air UNFURNISHED 546-l200
famtry.pet welcome. YMl'ly 1925. CUte 2 bdrm --•• montha ..... 178-M2t Joann St Aelltt pref M20 38r 1720 l U ~emalea to lhr apec NB
Open Fri (213) 591.2918 houM, Av•ll S•f.1 21. --IRTlllt OCl!ANP:RONT RENTALs I Smalt pet o+c &45·1453 POot.' No s-1~ 142.511g w tcllff home w/PQOI &
OCMl\ftottt Dplic Lit toe. Ptt'kng, edulta 87 3083. H~=~ ~\, 2..,'J.:' Avt Wlrltlr~ ZBr lie 571 J'*'n 2 !>«• POOL Patto, frOIC X-!Qe nTHSS Ju l:400•U111 &41-4100
Xlrtt 1no l great ftno 1404 Call todt y & ltart pedtlnQI hlb09 I 11 /Mo aona mu 1510 No ~· 1 a 28dnn Ao1• Eeettlde ~ TllllS. Fem 1t1r 28' 1 Ila CdM w OcMnfrCM'lt tn-1113 ll!JNt ...... lMI nua•-11• •-• .a&.a IUln ,..,.,. Momt 550-1015 we a Up &S1-2a.a t S ... I. ,e.. tront ,, .. ~11mo 41)1•• - -... , ....... 87&.el70 _. -" Strry, to bch 720-0125
Old town Ha cleaa6G.~ llnale M ~tfa ConciO a • ,.ca. .....
1111•m1m11
LJdo 8-yfront next to grMnbeft on 40'
tot-fMtur1ng 3 bdrm plut maJd'1 quar·
tett, 4 bathe. Ind d9" o" mutet w/ftple, large eouth patio wtth apa, IO' boet .up,
F1ntutlo bey ~ from mutet bdrm,
den & IM!\Q room. ... TlllU
11 ....... ILiid.§» ' . ,· •1)t)
I 1 0,t , t t '• A '
c'lt."· dahwt.flr oareoe IA/d«', 2 bt. pehO DOI WOODLAI• VILLAGI .... .., t.. •. Fem anr *'Ml!'le .. bf c M L~~90~,;c,:.rM i-:2W,,:.:t~ A•UTMlllTI /!LJ~_.JAA) Z.:.;r':ookM~.7~~;
at •~ to W9Wll eac 3tw Coftl• ' •ll!OY Ollf Pl*" sty9 lftl QMt. c.,nfottaOie 1, ~~n•· 2
:.
2:n1': a.a~~ 2&1&:Gi rr3,911,gym, tba t1t1 yrt~ auao ctovtotr a11 i So c.at,._..we , n411n "' ~...... u •'Hrtll~ tennll:.~. jo,patrol, kldt l peta muat aH '*Kii C1t " ab!& NO ms~ no pett st1 . 7l34 63t-t tto ._ Nty ._ N~port ludl So. Fem, to * bOe latO
* ~UITat • .._ .._ v ILLI M lecMf1y ··-· ,_, •IHI • UWt -l 700 I t.lh 'irr~tr Z:,~1~ ~~~ CA~l ,. =~HOlll Condo. 1 IO w/mlnl 1 -::: :: l~t Oovtrl wen. tn.IHt"""
IRVINlllASU crp & Zo. ri:.:;: I Im n• ; -.e111 642'5111 rem to 111r IQ eiot on via lntM .... IMllJ int 100 11U/fM Ml. IUT I llT W&Tll -. N~pot1 ltMI! No UdO Mttf Cldm\tbe l .. ,.. MYCA ST lpel:loua 3 ad ..... ,-(J 11'¥\!lf Awtmi• • lat 113471 t lft I ~ wl"orr.'lel dlnlnQ I Ill I tittl! Lg 2111r11t»e -•
tam '"' A wt IOo kl an Ta ICC' •t ,......, '°''"' 6""' o _.. ~ AIJ yo&K .,,_. •Int .. t l•&Otmo Agt .. ,.IJ 4 Pref 14"1'\ ltof1I09}gar .!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l..!-:~~lllooolno::;~~~'·~·:;;_jl..::.~~~~2 ,..lll!l .. iiiPlilll .... J~==:·~t~~~sn~1~.
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... .=.. IHI lntal nu ...... • HH .... ...... .... .... ...... llM ltlt !u!!f "" ••• , ...... 1101 .... W•!'!!f .... •••• ...... 1111 •••• ...... 1110
M• -.,, ..... ott rum ieoFUSNx btt QXA; IUYllllll ...... _ •• II aa 18,11111 1AL11A UY a• cwar OlmDll AIYIOI Front.!_tt1<itw '*'°" want· IUfAU.11/WAllllt .... ,... -· .... ._ ,..; 1500 aq ft. rttell apace -.., WHEI\£ OAAINO •T IMW OLIU PAIT Tiii eel '"' holltUo Health FM O.C. lntf'lor Plant RAPldl'/ expanding ~ ::';"~~8~ Patklng &)'NflMMwltl'I Eatab 09mel0Ute. Pett~~=~·~~ ISTHECUSTOMI iyptat.PITl:3C).1;30M-fn Cllnkl. Panonab~ro-Company~tdrtv-neallh aoancy ,, .. d.
. • optlotl 11875/rno llm. anon HIQh ,...ld'M 0 OIUn{JTOf P•11 ·se.60 plttr. !I() WPM. call The Dally PllOI tlu Im-~lduaall~lht~t'o~ lngracotdNq'd.657-0150 A.N '8, l..'7.N.'t , C.HA'• Mlfc • M 11P1 25 UJ.. . J_, N Local --. Wiii train· ltt AO Servlc9I Dept. * BILINGUAi. PERSON· Ola,,.,btwn 2·~ M-F. mectJate QPenlng f0t eu. "" .., ., .. ...,_ 1• l Homtm•'*-tof' pr!Y "'° tetltuHMIQOO + 11111. f!)()Wfla <U1 vnai Fltxl\tt. NoQdown. Piy Retoonllblllll• Wiii In· N&L CLERK 948-3Me tamer s~ ctertt to flot aklllt. EllHn Liv.In Cara for Eldel'ty duty nurtll'lg it homt.
N-clnntcet.72'24211 QP,.,,J.~14· forfromprot1t •• c.i1Sun-elude pick up •net dt-*INCOMEAUOfTOR -wortc ln ourbueyClrcula-499-1133 lady°" l>Moh In w .. t OOCTORS&NURSES.
Ml 1-aAwv "1"'• Wi day 12-5, Mon-frt ,.5 Mr llvery of •de, pulllng * F & 0 CASHIER ILlll 11PtlT tlon Department Muet be llllUL •Ml Nawbott. Dan, work 4000 81rd'I St .!.":r~,:r~'tC'tf W!!lf' fil:J-81/9" Wolfer114/83 .. "2o ~~~•h:'J'·a P::::'"o, ::~~~~1is~'b"~K IOtt~lagaldtpt loNtltt ~=a=a~~ :::n!: p ..... nt Phone manner, 85 1-~31,..,..645-7237 Newpon8aaeh851-2712
hom. $400/mo 5"'8-t&63 MOJ l c.t ...,._ ca Kitchen fOf catering or othtr dutltt. Candfdata * CAFETERIA HeLP!R 1').!.yplng, flllng and other with 8 p1a...,,1 i•lephone flllng, v•rlou1 o1flca IUllll OAIYAI p /T llflll &UllT.
M/fl n-tmkr, nn In 3bt apt. Du$1nw. ~ & tuttv mutt be extr~ Of• 0 ·lul dutl•. Typing 60 voioe 20 Hours pl..it dutr.., FfT, non-wnotc«. Fitter• a Awnl~ lntlallort. t •llll 1 Ill bc:h-Bal ~. avail 52~":~~~~=•· =Pa;' )197 ~wport ~· :::":'..~ = F:;1~~t1 ~~a~!::O ~~ t ~aqc ;>;rn Jc~/ Monday -Friday. CaJI ~~11~ar~t~~aphJ~i Exp . .,.aptul. 845-224<1 12:30.-4:30 dally. car req.
9111339. p/mo. 915-1014 C M ... C 2 832--41"" . ( 14 4 203 842-4321, •xt. 318 for 642-4321 for appt Mk E-5 Cotta M. ....... Mlle4tga pd. 631-0<ll& • . .., I OlMra. Oll'T flll TUT tor Trec;ey • •••. ...... . MIF' nnt•-fOI s.pt. 1, N9, amtanl Send ~ Attn. u.. ~pt. . SAO-Oe88 expar. In br!Qll A bloctl, enlOl 111.P
acron ttom und. teratt OJrrt•altltt tlll Smith. to: llllT .lllt llAlll ll&IT IEUYEIY PDlll -UIEIAL IFFIOI ~ .. ~·c~tr:! SAT/SUN 9 fo & Apply In ~=m: ~12~~v IUTl,MllO:"'-'iaUI *•11111111* ~f~T i•-•••• T l&ILYPl.IT f~lro!'c7:ay ~'~'::: fuU or part ttme. t4.oo tor ... 93:tt23ii". &pm. ~· 2332 w eout 8454420 or &tl-34141 •IUIUI* -,..... _s... OLlll lJPlll 27&0 Harbor Blvd, C.M pthr. 505 30th St. Suite wy, Npt BMch. BS~Ys'107~ •vmll.onl.AtGh;. Xlnt tax write.off. flamlly P.I. lta fllO Permanent PIT • ..,try,...... 0 A 203, N.B. 873.791 I llllOAL FlllT ''° lfflOE/Lm P&OllU M/F to lt\r Sbf 2ba Hunt, " '" c:; f ftt bl Gitt.... A-A It 0 tff•t SILi If poatlon w/chanca for Im-O.Otel/ rtho eoept IUf••• R*>8Ptton. lnauranc•. or-le 8Meh hc>uM, non·amkr 300 E. Cout Hwy, Npt 8ch un, pro a e, ax .. .., _.,, U, a, a "i medlatt advanc.ment In Bernt!lt•. 4'~ Oya. Exp ...., WFIOI thop•dlc Hper. de-Full time fema .
S300 mo. 96&-0t 18 111· 1H 1 83 t-0435 ett 4• wtlday.. TILIPlllll 8 t>eautlful, motlvalll'IQ at· Req d. NB ~2-2820 P /time. Job Include• tlrable. talary open (de-945•45'40 8•5
N.B. 2bf 2be n~tmkr,eiean NEED STORAGE SP.ACE? 10-10" TU IUllRt AIDE F. IJw..ln PIT, atalt1 PIT Of FIT. Choice of mospnere. Call 951· f838 tlJYll =~~t~'.rl; non..-mkr pendlnyac:;18:xper .). If PICI IUUIEI
quiet M/F poof, tann.lt avl Flllf IOITl'fllff Buy property 20% to 40% luohef In wl'llCtlr. rm/brd hO\lre It yourt, Call T. H. for Interview Now lllrlng full a part time Com"* Interior Design ~. $392. aft 4. 646-544 7 under marht. G,..t In-+$250 me 645-2357 A I T 1 drivers to the South lllL FlllAY /UIPll MEDICAL Front & Back of-Co. Nik• energetic pw-Safe Harbor Se4f Storage .,..,Of termt. Nead pwt· 1 •0 0 a 1 e • • • • OILLIP r p part time, for cuual office. floe. experlenoe pref.. son with good eecr•tMY
Npt 8ch Male rmmt lhr
3br, 2ba apt. 2 blk1 to
beh 1475/mo. Inc utll &
w/d. Quiet. non-amkr. w/
All atz ... Info 775-2307 '*'With cuh or UNta. ANS SERVICE Exp« pref, marketing, 953-8070. F.D.l.C. la Mtltlng fuH time ;=~YP~:~~j~/~;. u':I-Mutt be axper. 942.0850 w111train.631 -4099 aklll• a bookkeeping Aaa 11 You put up the money Cofdboarda. Immediate Ulllll collector• In the Irvine forma a..25 p/hr alert. knowledge. Aak tor Jane, Hanan and 1•11 do the r .. tl opening, dav-. 790-8305 All ahlha Full time/part trea to perform contlnu-85g..9115 HAIRDRESSER & MANI-IUIOAL IFFIOI 13t-6MO
SPiRiTOAL READINGS 530-7 t4 t aH•-m IUUlll time. AP""' In pwaon. dou91a1nqc?'_!!Cttl~ouattnot,.a ~. CURIST w/cllentfle, C.M. Group practice, Falhlon ·-IL Advloe In All Mattets & "'"-'• Arco MP&' G. 2100 S.E ...... ...... • " HIYH P/T aalon-70/30. 4 Day week. Island. Aeeeptlon /In· lfFlOI Pll-"
N/tmkr prof shr 28, 2Ba CounMtlng 1815 So El Mtrtf'-11, 21 Unit•. Co.ta MeM. No an.tot. SA Htl, EOE partof ourllquldatlon you & mite. duties. 2 Days 645-.692"' 1urance, Part time. Part Time. Ev.nlngs +one
Fff Job & rera. 015-9010
CdM hOme, Nr bctl 1500 Camino, Reel, San Clem. '.D. I fOZI :~~.:.x:r~~· Mml>-will be Involved with con-p/wk. 759·9022 aft. 6pm HOSTESS/CASHIER PM &4<4-1025 weekend day. 751-8822
u111t pd. Bob 759--0281 lied. 492-7298 widow has money #or oaa.1 .. __..WI ttct1ng borrowers by ahrtt. t1m11y cottee shop. llll"a• llGn IPIUTlll
R Wit FtaU 3004 TO'a. Sl0,000/up. No Apt Manager Couple F/T PI T Permanent . phone to resolve delln-lllYEll Call George 850-5735 .,_ PBX a Comnut .... Con-
oommate n/amkr thr 2Br '";iiiiii===-== ....... ~1 C 11 wtexp for beautiful 98 Crown Hir-"'··ar• "-·ona Quency problem•. You $CASH DAIL vs ............ frt,.. tft FIT ...-... 2Baept,lndry.Gar,$400 11 D:ni'~A~:~731~ Unit Garden Apll, CM delMar e1'3':2s0o""" wlllrevlewbotroweraflles Apply g..5 Mon-Sat. 128 HOUSEKEEPER, 2 •dtyt •t••• "' 1 ver1lon1. All lhlfta. FIT.
+ 'n utll, Biii, 47&-8220 Salary+bonut+Apl. No & recommend 8011on u Cebrlllo, Costa Mesa. par weelt, Mon & Fri, S5 l1tf lt4 • OI. ltk tft Join our family. 5-40-1777
dayt.831-235hves Btlt Wut.. S pats842--'491o4Wkdyt9-<I OUIJD neoesaary. You pouea1 par hour. Must ti>Nk •ll"tfMl·llll cuaromerServlce -<>~ponalb'-a __ .__ knowled-of contumer DRIVERS. crots country. Engllah ""uper'd & REFa ,,
On t~Mnd NB. neat prof. FOUND s •&1n1n1111• ammtl ITllllTI clous ~ n:d';dt~ Gredlt coiiect1on practice No •xp. nee. Callf. lie. Call evM 7eo-t580 . ID. w OllllD SAUi lhr lux. quarters, gar.. AD Productlon/Medl1Cootdl-O.C.Co.haapoe.forOgu cuhler & atock high & proceduree aa well as req. MacGnigor Yacht•. AM & PM ahlht. Hourly ov.rttlecountlf'&phonet
S800 winter. 875-9629 ID£ f~[E nator with ettlmatlng. stations In local area. 14 -r a ah Ion Euro Pe• n famlllarlty wltl'I collectlon 1631 Plaoentla. C.M. lnaurance plua mileage 964-2581 for drafting/graphic•
Rmmta wanted to mr 2Br M print production and tref-S6 p/hr ~5-5760 aft 2pm ~Iqua. Good pay. Aa-lawa. Thi• poattlon re-lllYIH IEEHI Ill. TEOl A OLlll ltTIL UlllT&IYI :Cir~io e:.rn nf~=~ ::o~r:.1~9\~~; Bell. cau.\· ~==--g~ng=! &m llTAIUH becca, 644-2652 ::r:11~~~;~.ai:~~= IWI O&l IEOEll&IY The lrvtne office of the Couple to a..iat Motel ant. Full ume. Staft -.....
eflta. S.Od background Exprd. lmmed. opening WllEI Ing or nnance exper. a Ill p 14 Federal Deposit In-Menagera, Newi>Of't Beach p/hr. Apply Master Blue-
Shr arnl 2Br 11>• NB apt nr
beh. N.emkr S258/mo. +
utll. Eves &46-9M8
IU-HJI 1n1orm11t1on, aalary re-FIT. Good pay 645-7448 specialty 0rug Store seek-plus. Salary will not ex-•ac• a auranoe Corp. has Im-area. Exper. helpful. Re-print, 23"' FllClhef Ave,
) qulremenl to: Leland Oii-alTllllUllO Ing cut'tler with talent ceed S19,000. p/yr. 0111 Frt4tt41J mediate openings In our tired welcome. Phone Cotta Meea. 540-9373
Shr 2 Bdrm 2ba CM Apt,
11vl 9/1 $370/mo + 112
utll. Call 759·7342
ver Co .. 2107 No. Broad-• with merctlandlM & dis-Pleaae aend your reaume (l1•)112'11l71 Insurance Dept. The 8-12 noon. ~2-8252
303 S A c A Wheel Alignment Brek" F D 1 c p entry level INSURANCE 11111 llPT · way# • anta .. na, ,. rte U N • Tl ' play to ualat In our photo to . . . .. ann: eraon.-I HST ITIOl I CLERK requires the IOI· MOTHER'S MARKET & Four .._,pie needed to flll 92706. Tu p. ewport re & boYrtlque dept. Part nel. P.O. Box 75-49, New-I Ill I I l<ITCHEN Is no ,.,.,,,.,..t .,..., Ctr. 3000 e. Cout Hwy, time up to 30 hr• p/wtt, p 0 rt B •• ch . c.. llUYllY Wiii ow ng exper: w -.. -openings In Santa Ana of-i:ound: Apprx 8 moe. old •SALES: Belboa Island Corona def Mar 9265 .. 7 •• 5•9 EOE • Typing 40 wpm Ing appla for flee. No ev ....... nee. S920
Shr 3Bd Mobile home w/ l
other. Ooean view. quiet
M/F $350/mo 497-6461
fem Ault. Stlep/Sheltle T-Shlrt lhop needs full-· no aves & wknda. .... .... .. part&fulltlmeavall.S5.50 • FamllfarltywlthpoOclea FOOD SERVERS mo Wiii iT.i~ For appt
Mlx.Harbor/Warner,FV time Retail Sales em-AITITilllEIYIOE s.w-7330 COMPANION live-In p/hr.Lag Hlll•.766-3784 &premlumt. . KITDCEHLEINPEC~SOHNIESAS cai1 Mr. Chandler:
979-915"' ployee. Mgmt poaltlon and light repal,.. Newport OlTlllER wkndt. Fri 6PM-Sun 6PM EASY ASSEMBLY WORKI · • Xlnt verbal & com-" 682 5843
Found BHHtl Hound avallable. Exp In Retell Tire Ctr, 3000 E. Coaat Nwpt Bctl area. N-tmkr, S600. per 100. Guaran-1, munlcatlon akllla Health oriented. conaclen----------Shr 3br furn Ilse w/trplC,
gar, lge yrd W-slde CM.
Fem prel S250. M5-oao9
8/17 brwn, blk & whl vcty nee Gerl 857-2606 Hwy. Corona def Mar. ~B. !_'f· ~anege k1t8cnend trans req'd. 548-3025 teed Payment No Ex-• Must be coneclenelous clous people, pte11e PART TIME
Magnolia/Yorktown H& BABYSITI'ERIHSEKPR o ... tat iuPnctOlona•· 1en26 -1~1 IPE T parlenoe/ No Sales. De-& attentive to detalla. apply 225 E. 17th St., For F.V. Skating Center.
Shr 3br hae on 1/2 ac.
horse prop. w/pool.
$450. plus. 852-9259
988-6570 * llOlnllY/ I need TLC for mychlldren r..u, Dme,toP11' . PoOx B ' -,..,5 U II tails aend self-addressed A1 a TECHNICIAN In our Costa Meaa. Floor Guarct., snack bar . . lllElll IFFIOE c o a ot. . . ox Career motivated, good stamped envelope· El.AN Insurance Dept. you wlll Bob or Terri. 647.0022
FOUND: beaut. Alaskan &myhom•.9-5tummer, 15eOC .. CA92626 working conditions VITAL 903 '3418 bereaponaiblefor· pa•tTJIE
Husky, fem. Nds gd hm. The Jolly Roger Corporate 2·30-5 atart'g Sept medical & dental In• 5 -· • Verlflcatl t IOTOll n Vic Anaheim. 635-2280 office Is look Ing for an ex-759-0703 or 834-1199 . omit/ bUst d weak Se d . Enterprise Rd, Ft. Pierce, on o Shr. a.,..., large 3Br Cor---------Newpt 8ch FIT & PfT •Y . n resume FL 33482 lnauranoa on all raat llOITE ·~' he F 0 u n d fem m 1 x e d perlenced secretary for Banking · PO Box 1188 HB 92647 estate loana
one de! Mar ome. New Shep/Baasett Hound, the 099<11t1ona depart-11--H•aM'a-av~. TyplCg & phonea Attn: Don Down~ mO. llOlln&IY W' Placing comprehenalve Available In Newport
opts,cloaeto beaeh.Xlnt Motly. Nwpt Island area ment. Thia positions re--·-·-• ak • ~ all 240-.6073 forprlvateacttool.Muatbe llabllltylnauranceon Beach. Experience ~~~~~~4~3 75, call 650•3861 qulresgoodtyplngSkllls, "'llUTlll or<1~7-4 titvmag OlllSELO•S highly organized & re-F.D.l.C.ownedproperty preferred, but not a pleasant phone man-TE•IOUI n fined. Must have good • Review of property for necesaery. Must heve de-
•-,;;••;;.t;;•.h;..;,Wo.;•iii•ilit.,H.,_-.;,;:;,;; FCouonsdta: ML!~.:.. tyFrpel-ddly~· ner, and general office A setf·atarter to usltt In Part time carrier counsel-typing al(Jlls & work well adequate coverage. pendeble transpor111tlon.
... ...... ... • o knowledge. Prior word the development & con-ors wanted. Help boys with people. Coate Meae • Maintaining tlcklera and be over 18 years old.
positions available at the
Dally Piiot newspaper
working Saturday and
Sunday mornings. Earn
$4.50 per hour plua gas
allowance. Must have
large car or plek-up and
be 111 reut 18 yeara old
Call Bruce 842-<1333 Male 33 etra~f w/dog, yellow. 650-5797 prooeaalng & on llne trol of budget fOf owned and glrl1 aollclt new area. 642-4908 In 11 current 1tatu1 Seven day delivery With
own furn & W • wants to Found Lg male German computet akUJs a definite Real Ealata propertlel. aubscrlptlona on their • Preparation ol monthly no collecting. Call lOAM -,-a•T_TI_l_E-~-·--... -1-1-1-
ahr hse or apl 650·17&4 Shepard nr Pomona & plual Xlnt benefits & Needs to Independently paper routes. Muat enjoy FOOl!EllYICE reports. -4PM Monday _ Friday. --..
Mature, prof fem w/cat unf Victoria CM 5,.8_3952 working conditions With a research & control of Needed for New Homes working with 10-13 yr Aaslatant 1 & 11 • Computer Input 6<12..-333 Great Job for housewife
room/guest house to 848_4 148 growing company. Apply budget for owned Real and Rec r u It men t olds. Earty evening hour• Subatnute) Candidates must have ap----------helping school photogr11-
$300/mo 831.,..220 In person b t w n Estate properties. Needs Advertising Sales at work days/ flexible hrs. Personnel needed by proprlate experience. llllY pher on locatlon. S28-0f~li_c_t~l-t-a-t·_,_11_..,,46~l~f FOUND: small female 8:30am-<1:00pm to Independently re-rapidly expanding local Commlaalon only. SH~~OOltlng1Dlonstrl~.acS5h."~1t4y 8anklno 11 a plus. Maxi-for 3 chlldren (2 school S35per day. Call for Inter-
.. 111' Beagle, Vic. 23rd & TIE....._, IHER llC. search & compile dat1. d a 11 Y news P •Pe,. Call Bruce EmsJey ..,..1 '" -mum salary la S 18,000.. aged) Uve-ln pref, prlv rm. view 5"'5~9470
Elden, C.M. 646-7378 1lOU lllftttt IH, You'll lllao bereaponalble Agrualve, Hlf-dls-942-<1321ext. 206 S5.63 p/hr. Apply at p/yr. The F.0,1.C. offera a 5 day wtt. Ute houae-* mGl'TIYI Simi F d S II fl ffy wtil for astabllthll'IQ llcklef & clpllned lndlvlduala may 20451 Crelmer Ln, H.B. great benefits package, keeping, aome cooking,
t MONTHS FREE RENT doun : F ma, uHB te lm1t fllinn ayst ..... s for the earn excellent Income IUllE OIAIT 984-8888 Dfidllne for Including Dental & Vlalon driver pref. Sale'r:w" 881 Dover Dr Suite 14 og. eme e. area. l .. "0 ··• ..... (salary + commlaslon) I"' 8/23185 "
PUTTIIE
TEUPHll Ill.ES
SI00.+ .... ,1 .. Ev.... 536-5123 or da"" 1•12..,... H 1 budnat -...artment. • a.a11y "LOT app ,.ng coverage. If you would plus board. Call ary N~"""' "-ft-h 631-365 t .... ,. .~ ..... .,. ...__flt• and advance _. Ilk I f I .... ,.v. · °"°" 542 6030 • Minimum 2 years bank-"""'"' • FRIDAY TYPE WORKEA e more n ormat on, 549~5"'8 W1Trtl1
0111 llt .. tt411
(71•) 112-1771
572 Sq Ft S630/mo. -ACCOUNTING CLERK fng expertence In a note ment opportur-lty. Agen-Detail oriented. lite ptease ea11 per·sonnet, at -------
3975 Birch Newport Found: Young Black Lab-Expel' In posting, manual dept. or loan dept. ' cy ,°' c"ewapaper ax-bkkpng,flexlble, n-smkr 975-5400 EOE lllSEIY
Beach 541-s032 Agt ~a~~~ 11~ev"':~ 9NB ~a3 ~~·f~~=~t aging • Mutt be conaclentlous & ~der~men:~~~~~ OHITEI IELP /F·tl•t M-F 8-"4548-9326 IUTALLEll-llUR Indoor Plantseaplng Maln-
9 t 6 Sq Ft Ge n· 1 548-0229 attentive to detail Blevins. Bakery on Balboa Island. I 1111 tenance, FIT or PIT.
l ""••m paJ&IU • Strong verbal & written De-. Call appt 673-8686 Cadlllaca to 'lo-Carta exper. on y, w ng to work Foliage Designs 546-9585 ofc/Medlcal, grnd fir No _... • comm"n'-·tlon •"Illa. ,. Whatever the Fed overtime. Must have own
C.M s9t6/mo 832-4 t 6t Lost: Cat White fem. 1 Detallmlndedperaontorm """' "" -a-1-aay t k • t 1 GOOd hly bl / 1 Vl • E.x~ In flllnn, ._ -COUNTER HELP PIT, re-Roll 'em off tM market rue ca 00 s. r , ue green aye. c Aocounte payable 'pos-..,....,.,._ ··• aaaLJftLIT & ii fl CdM's best offices. $425· H v Homes 644-6923 ltlon In busy Orange sorting & gathering In--llable. Payless Cleaners With a Clasaltled Ad CP8Y1 Rm ~A8,,~ $1100 incl utll, A/C, pkg, County Ad Agency AIP formation Is a must. 110 W. laJ It, Call 7 ·2Pm 842-2671 call Now! &42-5678 •I ay, -~
Janitor 2855 E Coast Lost: CdM F/Cocker Span experience required. 10-•Good typing skllls. Otst It OA
Hwy 675-6900 anytime buff puppy 'Buffy' S200 key by touch, typing a For more Information 1 11•
Reward. 759-0853 please call F.D.l.C. Per-~~~~~~~~~ Executive desk spaces! must Excellent fringe = CM business center s 150 Lost· Dog Brown/wht benefits. Send resume to· sonnel (714) 975-5400
mo. 650-2290 anY11me. Springer Spaniel. Kahlua. Mrs. Breck&, PO Box Banking Clerleal
Ftn VI~. Reward. Days 8710, Newport . Beach, f OlUI TYPIST
O C. AIRPORT AREA 632-7921. ev 848-2709 CA 92658 LI llllTill 11 you're 8 Ml1-starter and Unrtiaia B Cl ai
180'-225' SQ. '1. Iola of G TEOlllOl.&I flexible about )ob aulgn-"'iiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiii ;;.;.;;; .... ..-----°';...-1 Hit 11 •I
prkg, lanit'I, utll pd, Loat olden Ret-Large ICCOllTS lllCEIYAILE The lrvlne offloe of the ments, the F.D.l.C. has a 11 Lie. Prlv. Home for Elderly. Wiii clean model homes & J.O. INT /EXT PAINTING
mo-mo oil. 852-9366 63Ma,i_e21R84EWARD Vic CM Must have experience. Federal Deposit In-Job for you. Our df·"slon $217 d W k/M h A b . c::u
'
_.. 37 h ..... C "' per ay ee ont · m · or Top.,..,./removed. Clean-8P! s. ""'perlene41 & have Houses & Apt. Reu. rates Offloe space Sublet In p I lO 2 ,1 "1ne are!;.," "7r2i ... 7 ... · 811 au ranee Corp. has of bank llqulda11on cur-• non-amb. 54()-4101 Kathy up,7ew lawns. 761•3416 ref a. 496-7604 Valerle Quality work. 895-5755
NEWPORT CENTER. trlOal I 1 or appt.""""" lmmed. openings lor pet'· rently has openings for That's ALL you pay for Free prkg Low rise ff ... sons with the lollowlng several clerk typist wllo 3 llnea. 30 days ltat MJiat. C&B LAWN SERVICE JaaittriaJ PAINTER NEEDS WORKI
ocean vu ~/pd uclllttes: Fii SI US OIL Yt lllll -IST exper. average typing 19eed• In the ltmce Mow-edge twtoe mo. S20-JANITORIAL CLEANlNG Int/Ext. oelllnga. refln cab.
1800 stf or 600 s/f wtpvt GREAT EXPECTATIONS For West Coast advertls-•Min 2 yrs banking exper. 50WPM. The F.D.l.C. ol-DAILY $25. 645-5737, 873-5126 SERVICE Free est Greg (26) ~exp., work guar.
entrance 3 yrs starting Dating Club Membership Ing office of SAIL Maga-in II note dept or loan fers II great benefits We HwlAllRhBaOuRI oMuAt A!~Ean & c•-an Ups•Tr .... Trlmml"" 63 l -5661.818/33S:588.4 . Davis Painting 964-3637 at 51.67 s/f 760_9779 for sale at a savings. Ask-line Need creative. non/ dept package Including dental • """ ,.... ...... ... tng $700 Call Carol smkr exper sailor for • Ablllty to type min & vision coverage. If you PILOT paint any l>Oat bottom f<>< Yard MaJnt.•Haullng JANITORIAL CLEANING SOUTHERN PAINTING & l•IUlll 818/302-2526 days. varied duties from typ,ng 40 WPM would Ilka more lnfor-$10/per ft Incl. paint & all MIKE 650-3263 Commerclal-RM!d'I Bldga DECORATING. Int/Ext
213/692-4638 I I ti t--' I & _, N Good I 63 9 . Lie. Insured. 63 t-8-430 Reatalt 2916 eve to lunct on organ ia on. •Strong vetbal & written metlon Call personnel. at SERVICE ma ""a• c.onca. o Complete Clean-Up gen'I · re a. t-61 4
400 sit Zoned C:2 A/C Lonely w/m coll teacher Mary~r Ian 645-7 104 communication skllls. 975-5-400 EOE ~6:':p~~~.g:i3~';;~ :~ malnt, tree trimming, free A.A.A. Malnt. LOWEST ::.P'!ia~ti!riiiiaiii!1h _____ ,
pvt bth Covered patio' wants to meet mature ADMISSION ADVISOR tor Banktng exper. ls required DIRECTORY us about pick up/delivery. esta. Mauro, 631--4997_ PRICES. Commerelal & -FXRTAMd INTERIORS
Water & !rash pd woman for love & compa-lrvlne Retirement Center lor this poaltlon. Maxi-Clerlcal n.1 lrtH Sctat Residential. 882-3235. HANGING/STRIPPING
$225/mo Ste p 130 E. nionsh1p Into 60's but Full-time. short term pos-mum salary will not ex-FILI c• rr•11 c lrl••• •• VISA-MC 673-1512 17th St, CM 548-7817 I actrve, leanlten. muscu-r Ilion. Experienced In ceed $20.000. p/yr and .,s; ALL TODAYll • Lawn-tree-shrub Install. Lla•1c11ia1 Send Ph. 1,t name etc to sales. meeting publlc & will be based ttrlctly on The Federal Oepoelt In-All FIR LOii ltr'1ct Tree trim & Removal "'LX""N"o"sc..,'A•p111g"'JJ""'A""'s•o-N""'R•Y ANDYS WALLCOVERING
March to your phone 101 Roger, Ad130. Daily Piiot worklngwttholderadults. prior exper. & education. surane41 Corp. has lour YourDailyPllot BRfOAL MILLINERY. Lawn main. & Rototllllng Landscaping, all phases lnstallatlon & Removal
place a last-acting clu -PO 1560 Costa Mesa Work Saturday through TlleF.D.l.C.offersagreat openln04 lor file clerks. SefvloeDlreetory Hats, tlaraa. vella & ao-Sprinkler Install .. repair. done. Brick, block, stone, Int. painting. 5"46-4013
silieci ad 842-5678 Ca92626 Wednesday 854-9500 benefits package lnclud-To qualify you mull have Representative oeuorles. 639-t 186 Free estimates 548"8065 tree est. Mike 499--4072 Expe~ Wallcoverlng In
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Ing Dental & Vlslon pack-2 yrs exper. In flllng, sort-8 age. If you would llke Ing & checking llll forms M2-4H 1 tit. IOI 1Qtatry aa•~ Rick 66 t-958'4 atalla IO!J. Reu. Consult-
more Information, pleaM of documentation. Exper.1•-------• °'Eil...,.per1.-iiiCiila"rpe-nt·ry-s""'ervtoe--•A""M""e .. RiCXN"'1--H~A.,N .. b'""v'""M-A"'N''"1 ADD PIZAZZ to homel bt.ta. ant Aaalgnmnt 581 ·8590
c a II p •,.on n e I at In a batik's note dept. ls a 1..,,---------Repalr-Remod'l-Addltlona Carpentry, fencing, win· cuatom ext. potted plant PAPERING & PAINTING
975-5400. EOE Plus. The F.D.l.C. offera a AcctaatiaJ Doors-etc. 546-4980 dows. plumbing, merllte, arrangements. 875-1522 Qual. work. Rau. Ref's.
.. l' .. n .. ,&Im. p,reat benellta package ""*--.e•o•o'IP!!'lk~R"e"e"'P~IN!"!'d"""""b-y tub~ hau11ng, etc. I. L 1 . John SJ&-7330
ncludlng Dental & Vision Marge & Judy. 15 Years BUILD OR REPAIR And Yes Jesus Is Lord IC. tJ met -=o.,..,...,."."":':=TY:c:""::,..------1 Shock Boats, 2900 La coverage. Pleaae call exper. free 911. 969•1967 Walla. atalra. railings (llc#30405) ~82« [ock DOCTOR UALI Paperhanging at '-------------------------.......J Fayette, N.B. Apply In personnel. EOE 1,,,_ __ • ------doora. wlndow1. moldings All Key Serv!QeS reu. rates. Work Guar., person. Wl(dys 8-4 975-5400 Smell Business Bookeep-#476106 Don 962-8202 DECKS-WOOD COVERS. 895_28 ... 3 call for free eat. 963-7531
ACROSS
I 1(1ndolMll
!I Began"'
10 Otsllgur&
14 Tnoc~ carpet
15 Serita
t6 ElbOw bone
1 7 Promise llO!'llty
20 Oelea1 m or1oge
21 Current mo
22 Stocltholmers
23 Canad,en Indian
24 Rotter
25 Ttra part•
28 MalOn
32 Grad•enl\
3'.l Banquat ~
3• Boxer
Mut-amm•n
35 Adam s
grandsor
36 Attach 37 Natworl<
38 S1mu1a1A
39 Oaughl.,r ot
Saturn
40 Candia
41 Scotch""
43 Swappe,
•4 Days t>elore
•5 Tallgrau
46 Marbles
49 M1adee<1a
'i-0 Greet< letter
53 Sp0<ad1ca11y
56 lri1h 11les
57 Encomium
58 We&ther word
59 Winnow
60 Cut to aize
61 Masking -
DOWN
1 01a1nt
'JGape J Abrade
4 Voungsl tlf 5 Vottat
6 Chummy
7 Vlluperlle
8 Metric un11
9 "Le Cid
10 ~~r,oser
110omwl1
12 Por entry
13 Cheers 18 Encircles
19 Su111no 23 S.9 lellar~ 2• Makes more
1ntenM 25 Med1c;a1to
· 26 Hec1enda
27 Storm
..._EV10'11 f'UZZL.E IOI. V£0
28 Urtocaria
29 Cllallenged
'.JO T"e t•eam
31 Roomier 33 Weapons
36 Res• oe"ods 37 Alum
39 Want b101y
40 Wave top
42 Color anew
•3 Under ttra1n
45 H09bac1t
46 Oown Ml" Ft
q 7 Service ciuo
memti-er
48 wayoll
49 Ski 1url1ce
~ A111n canoe
';. t Organ pArt
52 Capri e q
5,. wino
55 0Pftt'a part
Ing * Payroll * Taxes. Competitive Prlce1. • ' I ·1 ,.1 "' Franklln Aoct. 543-0345 Complete p11t101. Covera. 10 yeart exper 754-1620 M Technique Paperhanger• . I Y I al Oecka. Concrete walk-IM8.!I. Chooee the belt f<>< your
•••••••• ••• • (:omputerlzad payroll, waya. Block wells Room •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. eRlcRwoRK. Smatl )Oba home or office. 640-.6288
• • accta rec./pay, Inventory add'n. 15yr exp 848-4634 Pait ntG. D~~i51. 5c2a7rpen7 PTtryL Newport, Coata M .... p•-attr It 1 e • & others, Darla 979'-o551 • c. ary .,.. -Irvine. Ref'a. 875-3175 ..
• e HANDYMAN LARGE and Custom Brick-Stone nt. t. pat ut ng, : OILLEOTOI w1m1 .: , ............................. 11--1ma11. I DO IT All.I Block-Concrete-Stuoco ;:~~::~~~N~"t~~i-
lemal #328864 554-7831
•. Part time opt'nin11 in La11una Beacb •. ---------------~--" " Home or Apt' a. lnt./Ex1. • area. Earn up to 16.00 per bour for • Patchwork. Lie. & bonded.
• collecting for monthly aub11criptiona. • #140607. 4o41-t42o4
: Experienct' preferred but not re· :
• quired. Must be at leaat 18 yean old. e
: Call 10 AM 4 PM. Mr Kirkland.' •.
e 642-4321. Ext. 207. . • • • : OllOIUTIN HPT. :
: 142·021 EH : • • • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT e
• 330 W Bey SlrMi eo.ta MMe CA 92921 e
• AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER • • • ' . . ;:: ~ ::: ::tiiiJ.Piiii· .... ~ ... iiiiioiii-iiiil .... _.:~~---------=:-:-:=,..,..,..,,=---
: Ml'ilTEUI :
e mu lMml FM 1.-a "'' e e -WIU., I.Ill • r•TlllJ •
: IC you are in High School or Jr. High:
1 : and would like to eam $25.00 to•
I
• $50.00 in comma I.ems and more each :
• week-gjve us a call. You can work •
: PART 't!ME in the afternoons and •
• evenJnp and still have time to enjoy :
• your s:ummer. We off er complete •
; training and provide U'anspo.radon •
• plus great prir.es, trips, and plenty of I
• MONEY! Thia ii not a peprr route I
: and at is not le'V'Cn days a week. Came e
•help us get new customers for our •
: newapaper and have a good time:
• while you're dOing il CotM out And •
: .what we are talking about and :.
•you iJ be glad you did. Cill tQday and •
Thank-Your ~ 114
RAINBOW PAINTIH<r°
NEW/REPAIR. Quality. No
JOb• to tmall, reaaonable.
Free •t.. llc'd. 631·2345
•rl
Ouellty le ow oolkw 1---------1 ~8 JEFF lie 8688
•start t.omot:row! Call Mr. Earl • ............ • ~8-70:S8 or 241-8432 • =a Home & OftlCt Clelntno by Lie f425t24
• . : 2'4 Hr Uc Aeald'I Clf't fOf JOOf. Pi... catl '°' lf.e can Anytl~ 11&4·2011 Ing For IC*tlllna & Cl .
: ORANGE COAST DAllY Pl~T : the Eid.tty. Lux enVlron-'fll 111111111 •lm.t .. lo42.t7... lnttt/~tr Cuetom/t9111d& ~Cd 54ot21
• no w ~~ ...... CA 1 ment Doctor on call Lawn I O•den Malttt lj HOU°"ttcletol09. HoMil. comm'I. 30 Vf1 ~ l"llOlo SCOTT S.w Ceff ,.o;r-
AN rov L TY EMAoY£R •· o.llGlou. IMWa, 760-l943 m«t OOllilge tralMd In de~ndebf•, etntl•nl, Olte>aldlled, 81 t\c •7'620 ..,oo. Window w.-.na
•• •••• e •••••••• e ee •• ee •• HIGHLAND SHOAU CCIM l.tncs.caplf10. "9-21~ ~2 after l9CMft flw 91tlma a 951-4093 Baltoe 1M 11Wti!
Help W11tt4 ll I t W .. o,_. CoMt DAILY PILOTIW~. ~ 21, 1116
SYDNEY
0MARR
Thurtday, Augasl Z% t ARIES(March ~I Apnl llJ)· Check ltccnscrequirements, beawar.c
of tax bencfit'i, \tnvl' IO hroaden honzons and to reach larger audience.
Empham on universal appeal. marketing, advertising. pubhc
relauons. L1hra piny" key role. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Break from tradition indicated.
Stress 1ndcpcndcncc, crcauvaty. wilhngness 10 rely upon your own rJJI~~~
talent\. Accent on style. method, legal documents, marriage. You'tl
make new start, obstacle will he removed. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Rely upon first impressions. Family
member make) ml\)Or conccss1on. Focus on security, residence,
lifestyle, reunion with old flame. Sense of direction is restored. decision
will be made conC'crning career or investment.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Diversify. keep options open. be
rl"ndy for change, travel. variety. Member of opposite sex spcalls llC::l;ti~
!.<:riously concerntnJ love Gem1n1 plays ro1t. IJ
DIMES
-A
LINE
WANT ADS
LEO (July 23-Aug 22): Read between lines, be aware of fine print.
4ipotl1aht centers on land, home, property, basic values, long-range
prospect,. Tauru . Scorpio 1nd1v1dual& play outstanding roles.
VIRGO (Au~. 23-Scpt 22). Emphasis on dialogue. movement,
writing. ~hort trips. new' conccm1na relative in transit. 01sc:cm
mou.,,cs, d1l deep for information. One you art attracted to will return
the favor. Libra figures ~prominently. LIBRA (Stpt 23-0ct 22): You'll be aware. alen. ready to take
action at s~c131 moment Romance is featured, secret 1s revealed,
you'll be &lven benefit of doubt. Answers arc found behind scenes.
Pisces native figure!. prommently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2~): H1Jhh~t diplomacy. study Li~ra
message. be wilhna to make m1.1or domestic adjustment. Clandestine
meetina relate, to special amnaement, romance. You'll have rare
opportunity to cul c~pcnscs. mcamhne procedures. SAGf'M'ARllJ (Nov. 22-0cc. lJ): What had been hidden will be
revealed. Focus on pres~ure, deadlines, responsibility, strong love
relationship. lnd1v1dual who appears indifferent could actually be a
secr~t ally. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You aet almost cverythina
rtqucsted. Spo1haht on rotnancc, friends, powen of pertuasion,
financial pin thr.ouah business or career. People wtll relate co you,
many ~nons wall seek )'our aid. Anes plays top rote.
AQUARIUSJJan 20-Feb. 18): You'll have chance for new scan.
focll also on in ,ependencc, clanty, s~arp outline of ~ltimatc 1oal. lndlv~uaJ 1n pos1t1on ofau1honty dcctdes co lend belptnt band. Leo
plays outscand101 role. Pl (Feb. 19-March 20): Focus on travel, education.
tCCOJniuon of spiritual va_lue Hu~~b payt dividend You'll kno .
what to do alma t by intt1nct. lndiv1dual who .auaht you 1n i-st 1s
qain 1v11l1blc. IP AlJOUSTll lS YOUR Bl1\TKDAYtb.11ca.o be your power year.
Focus on authority. law, invcstmentt. fina.odal pm, 1trona k>\·
rtlationshlp If suwl. you could marry. If' ~ed. Ul~re cou~ be add a ti on to family \1 •mcd or 11n&)c, you are lik.c)y to IO into busJ.DCA
for )ourttlf, to take poler cha flt of your oYt-n dtstin)'. ll i1 llkely that ~~,;ere .eparated from 1 partnt at rcl1th·ely early qe. Tau.nu-Leo. lo pert0n1 play important rol.e:s 1n your lifo. Seplcmber 1U be
oum1ndJn1 for )Ou In 198~,
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
s.11 your lt«n1 for $50 or ,_, In 1
our f•mou• DIMl!S-A-LINES pub-
1/a/Nd Moh Saturday In tM D•lly
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE •d• mu•t b•
p,.p.Jd .a mall or bring tMln Into
,,,. o.J/y Piiot offa. s. "''• to
tnclut» your piton• number or •d· drea tn )'®r ad, h•v. a prtce on
Nett lt«n .t no •blHwVl•t(Ons.
Bony, no commert:IM IKU, QM.
....._ pnxlvt»,. plan,. or ~
,,,..~,.,..
DEADLINE:
11 NOOft ,,.., c ......... Offici
llOWeetlnltrMt coataMu .. ca. ...
, •
THEODOH
ROBINS
fOAO
lilMl tlAl lOI II V 0
C O\IA Ml \A 1'>41 00111
CHICK
IVERSON P\8.IC f«>TICE
I
s
De Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT/Wed~. Augua! 21, 1985
Ml.JC MmCl w ll>nc:E Ml.£ fl>nrl NlJC JIOllC[ ::.i.u.: ,.::c::r-n: TNe ~ ... oon-~mm = Count)-on ~ ---------~-.....-NllC=-..11>--.Tl.;.;ICE..;;.. __ , ___ .... __ IC_llJ_na;_._ __________ .., ______________ , _ _,,;,.;;,,;;;,;;;.m _______ emount .. M.871 27 • Of dluetecl by •• garw• S*t• --------P'--
AC1'fnOUI IU ID IH • T.. ll-11111 LAM. MOnCI MOTICa °'·-1m1aa, and will 1nu .... ,...,,.p ncnnoua .,.... l'ub!Wwd OrWIQI CoMt U.ITAW MOnclOf' MnwmlT )n '90f'C)l9.... ~-untl)'OU'90CCl!Mfl1..,,._ TNe -~, W911119d NAlmlTA,....NT ()ely"90t.Jl;ly5';~7. n. ~ ,.,.,. .,.. ,...,..... uu ...._. " ~ ...,_ ~ "°" u.ac °' our'9nt You,.,.,. not~ to wttll ttie CGIMltv Oiar11 Of Or· Tiie ro11owtne1 s-eona .,. 14. 2 t, tM& ~ea: T'"'"'• .,., .... , tM4 • cJtlltl • ,.... uw 81ACH AUnlONn ~ the entll'• ~ Pot· ~ County on M 24. OolnO bWlltlW ... w.ao
[N PlHANC&Al ""'" I.OMO _.., ..... • u.a ... ..., ......., ,., IOUTH lllf,AIC Dl· ltoti °' 'J'O'I l!Cdoun•, --' ltM CA"Ll10 .. NlA COMPUTlft ---------2)11>..,. lhd. Oii I pl au 4, ,_ .. II .. ..._. .. C.... ..._ eaeoo&. NTNCT Vfl<>'MlNT COM'ANY. a 1'*°'M~--· ~~ COMt7 COHSULl'AHT&,82t1Mldl-•-w> W\nH ~ ........ eo.t • ....._ 11oa, Colta W. Cel• 1 t a t t A ,.._DI!::• \ C.... TMUiaunale9ClflUnlflld Olillfomle)Otntverttln."°"" IMneled, but Y'O'I l"lll.lat ~ o.t1y,..,..,._y)t,~ , lgwl A~1-~tt MMe, __ ..;,,._,...;;;.;;.;-...;;..;...,~'"""..;..;;..--Odlor11Ml2MO tom .. t2t2t ...........,.._.._ h· ..._.a..._,., • ...,... Scftool Dlttt'lct Of'OCIOMd •tJna ol 80U'Tt4 PIAI< As. u. etnOUnt 11..., 9tbOll9 14, 21, ,... Cutomi. tna
J.._ Ill. Wem4rlaton, Mui.. l3'0Hlin>cw ...... _ ..... ~J • ...,.. 'J C..t•-_. budDeC lot I .... _. be IOCIATP.•c.ltoMleO--ttowww. yo11 and~ W·llt OiMd ~ Troutt, PIC'1T110U9 • 3 a
IOIO "'*"-" eir.. er.ta 81Yd. '102, Coeta Meaa. .......,, I 1Utlm 11 C-. ...... • ,., • -. ........ tor public ll'9C*> ar•I putnetelllp, •nd ~ ot mortoaoee fUlJC 11)11C( SH 1 Mlcfllo•n AVenu., J':r'~= ... ....... ~ttat Celltomlat2t2t I H ta• c .. _..,, Aa C .. ta ..... Celtfwa .. tl0rllll~9Mc:l\Unlflad IOUT~P!AK,L.TD,acalt-1N1Ymu1UllllY..,.._lflwnt• Coatt M•H. California
'flll9 ~ .. oon-TNe butt..... .. oon-TrHIH ., ......... , .... ,,.. ...... .... School Dletrtct Offloe, 6IO lonl:I• lll'nltad S*'MflNO. Ing~ to the lime tM l'IOo ACTmCM.M IUIMU t202e ~~:t WINDOW aactw 1by:., ~ :ed lby: en tnGMdUll """" w lllMthtttM ,..._J. ,_ ......_ .. 11 elumont, ~na hech and wl*ll llm oertlad on It.I tta. of Mil le Poe*ad (Wtllctl MAm ITATDllNT Dianna l.yM Qolna, t200t HAVICU 3tt I tftll ;-:-..:.:,.,~ontllad ™' :.,~~~"*' =.. .... T:!..':::,:?t :Ct.i:~C--....... -t :t'f.:a ~ =-~.'~":°';~~ ::f':~-:'~':'o!': ~::=::''°"'.,. ~~1;:;05a.irt• Ana. Pteo9. Cotta......_ C&l-
wfttl the Ooun~ c.11 of Of.. wtth tt1e County C*11 Of Or· TttOMAI J. flAMll AMO ... e.-'*"'-h0ur1 oC 9:00 e.m. and 4:10 LaouM IMd\, e.tttomla periOd '111«1 ~) to. A & N AS80C1ATtS 1939 Thl9 buelnMt ta oon· tof:.C "t:~Miw ~ 3 tt .,... eoun~ on .My 14, ange County on My 21, IU8M D. ,....., ..,.. eewt 1111 _., • ....._ p.m. '2UI, -dltlllOMld .,...,_ MIOn9 othe+' lhl119e. Cti Whittler A~ Suitt,.., duel.S by•• O'l'*'al Ptlf'I· D tetll Plaee Coet• M...
ttlS tN5 8AllD A.MD ..,._ _. ,. .. 11W••llil1 ..... ler llllil TM pul*l ~on tN live tt·H P tn . .Jut; tS, pnMde adc1t1lon.i time In Coate M•u. 'Calltotnle ner9hls> Cllltornl m27 ' ,_,. t'm ...... UMAJMY O, 1111 ....... _... ...... tile Pe:t.::•d budo•t for 1N$ wtlleh 10 Wr9 tfla dtfeult by t2ta7 OAVID L. TROUTT a
tl\lblWled Orllfllt CO..t PubfllMd Or~ COMt • IMltWMM Mo .... "' ......._ AeM4 111 a... 1 wUI b9 Mid al 550 8. Attar that dl1' no,,.,,. ,,.,,..., ol tha property °' Oeor p Rani! l$00 Th .. etetament waa filed Thi• bualMM •• con· DeilvPllot~S1.Auguet7. OlitYPllotJUly31,AugUat7. lllMl ~r:--l. .. ' • ~ DNf ...,,,.... ~ 11umon18t., &..eoun18allOll. '*In tlle Joint wntur• hM otherwlw. (2) ietll>llth a Adama~tl~09t• 'M..., wtththllCoontyClerilofOr· duelad~'.r~
14. ~1. 1tlS 14-~1 1NI lllAll af o....te ........._ fl.O.. ... '--CA onhptembal' 9, tit& .. 1uthorlty to bind the Joint achedu .. of ~ti In Calltofnll 92027 anoe COu111y on July 1.8, Th · flt.d
W...01 • • W-H! Cow.ty, c........... .... ...... .... Cattferala 7:30 O'GIOc* P.M. 119111Uf9, ··~I '°' SOIJTH Ol'W to OUl'9 .PK default; or Jemee w NuOenl 2N43 tN' -"tll ~·~amenty ti::-of Or
WAl&&R
Allee S Walker. lorll
lime retldent of
Southern c..JJfomi.a,
bom ln MH.cheU. So.
Dak.oia Patled awey
Auaust 14. 1985. She
~ ..... .-tlllill .... 111711. a ...... _.. ..e Publllllled orange Coeat Pf.AK, L TO .. which llal tha both ( t) and (2). Narborna fit Lomtt' Call· 1'18119 .., n • ttoeofo.f•1ilUM.,........., of..__ 1111IM o.llyP!iotAuguet21,19U au1tiorttytowtnduptllajolnt Attat ttw• montht ttom tornla 92717 ' •· PubllaMd orenoa eo..t r.n County on Jufy 2e.
---------to lalt IMrMfl4iaf ,... """' af • ....,._ at W-010 11911lura &lfelft. the date of reoordatlon of Thi• bu•IMN te con-O.lly PllOt July 31, ~ugutt 7, 1 5 ,__ "8..IC NOTIC( ~ .,.,. ~-• ..,...., ..... ~ ...,.. O.tad J~1 198& this doeurnant (YlhlCh data oC dueled by: a Joint ventuni 14, 2 1. 1t84 Publllhad Or.noa Coel1 __ ....., ...... ...._ ...... -.. __ =-:=c~:-:. =-.:=..~D•_:,,,.,_J .J:r':owANYOCV:-~":i. a:= ~1ga"r:; ..::::-W NuOent. Paga W-8l7 DllllyPllotJuly31.~7. ~A~ CMfttJ, ... ..., _, ....,, .. -...... .. rt8JC NOTIC( .... ~ ""'--· .,, I fotadc>Md upon Of • Thia llt&lement -· flied 14, 21. 1985 W-tM
The fOllOw4ng pet90na ....-t lo ..._ DeM af ....., a, 1tM. All ......... IOUTH 'NM, l TO., •eel-M991ata written 11Qf""*11 with I/la County Ctetk of Or· "8JC NOTICE dolnCI ~ea; .,. 'rrwt ... at ,,......_._ ., ,...... .., lila•tlM "' UCM&. MCmca ....,. ........, ...,.._......, betWe9I\ you and yOur cradl• anga County on July 23 F1CTTT10UI IU ... a
D l 0 PAIHTINO ~ .., ..._ ._.... ,,...., af .._., •..., llllM. Other-"'= ,.....,_ ,,..... ~ er. 14.JiM tor patml1e • lon9at l*!Od. 1N5 ' MAm tTAT'llmNT • tM.,.... ltMM af ...,._ .... h ,..,.n, • Illa _. O.VU CO..O. )'OU ~ oniy the legel right ,.,. !Mt~~;· Of· ca. .. h....,.. trent -...,.....,...,.., '-f•..., ... PORT .. U Anott,ac.....,.....,,.,. toetof>thollMofyowproP-Publlahed Qranga co..1 dolTM~~-...CTITIOUl lUIMU anoe. ~ truce ,. .... ••utr ,........ .. ,. u.a.c.. 1-1. ..,....., ........ OIMf9I .,.,._, .,, My by paytno Iha an111'9 o.lly Piiot July 3' A ........ 7 ~ ,,... u . NA* I TATI.....,,. ti IWVlved by mttt, P..ic Ha VICIOfla Korzelc, CHrt hOllH , 7ff Clwlc and .. M •1; 111111 ti -8CHOOl CN8TNCT olaM F. ll!wMkef, ,,..._ amount demanded by )'OU' 1-4, it 1tt5 • ....--· • p OTOORAPHIC PRO-TM folloWlng penone.,. OorothyS Borlltkoof 252 E 20ttl Str•. Coat• CeMar °"" w-. ._.. _.,.. ...... 111• 111111 Tha~MaMUnfftad .._. aradltor • • w -t28 DUCTIONS, 270? Pat.non dot butlnaeau·
n...1.1 __ _. r~ ..., -Mau, Cellfornla 92t27 AM, ~ .. lhet == -.. a= 8c:t1oo1 Dlttrlct pr~ I Y• IOVTH NA.It ..,_ To .. nCI "''I the amount Place, No-20 f, Coate Jng S H U A O T ~~IU, ...... • .... i..... Thie bUllnMa It con· --.. ~IOf IN~ wlll be • " ..... Meta. callfOl'nll 92827 ' 0 Alice T Ma y duel«l-an~ .......... .-...... oefto 1wl11hn• • ....... ........ ....___ IOCIATEI._. Cattfamle youmuatpey,OflOllfl'llllge .. -·c W\Ttrr CatiH FleckeMteln 2700 ENTERPRISU. '"' Or·
• v1 ~eo .--Mfldtrr lt llf..,.....""" l'9 ,..._ '"' pu ....... "....--.....,.. ,..,....,.._.,... forP9'1"*"ttostopthef~ ,-uuu nu""' p '20-1= chard Santi Ana HalQflte s au s. I 1 t 0. ca. PEAK HA VICTORIA Uftdllr ..... Deed .. T,..111 ""' .,..., "' CW•• tlon .. ~ ~ uni-VaM\nf, er. ..... 11ROWN cloau1'9 Of If yOUt propatty.. etweon Plac'A, No. . Ct>llfom.. 92707 .
nephew H.C Tum· KORZAK h '"'*°" tlWllM Iii pw-.t .. 11U.1.C.1'11 !lad 8choot DWtrlct Olftoe, tNVHTllll .. T CO'"" a In foredoaura fOf any other '1CTITIOUI .,._.. Colla Mau. Ctlllornla Pamela Pan1n ttltt Or·
ley Oakland Ca. ~·~~a:.·Of~ M6d ~MdltMa• and t1 CMtltt.T1·111t.11 14101 81Xl..Otfl, Newport Callteri.I• .. ,,oration, rauon,contact: NAMllTAn..NT 92~~Cllnton 1927ANorth cnard, Santa.,..,;. ~te. . . ., ..,,...._ ""'*" ................. 8-dltromAugu9t26to30. o.nerel,.,....,llJ:l1-AMERICAN SAVINGS l'Mlollowlngpareon1at• • Callloml•92707 Mn. Walker gradu-County on .JtJt; :I•. Loi ti .. TrMt No. nm. oeet llloncL 1985 ~ lhe houra of ... '"""',,. ...... t AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, doing bu..,.. u : H~land, Orange, Calttomla Th .. b1.111n ... I• con at.ed from Milwaukee , ,..... "'tN Cttr af lntne, •,. "••Idol A1u• '" 7:30 Lm end -4:30 pm .,, THI NCK MUaR 15725 EHi Whittler EXECUTIVE CATERINO. 9 Thi b I I d\Jc:l9d by· an lndlvldulll
Downer Fini1hlng Pubtilhed Qr.,.,.. Cout ~ reoonlad !ft._ 271, c....,,. The Pllbldtc hMl'lngb d ton flht COW-ANY, IMC., a c ... Boulevard, Whlttlat. Call· eeoolw amar Avenue. 'ct08, d\Jc:I~ b'/ue an~~ Pc:;:. PAMELA PERRIN
Sc th U . --.-, .... I, 2, ' aftd '-lftlao CaM: RO-l5-0033 p~o U ge or '°"* ~ 0..-et tornta 90607 Talaphona Hunt noton 8aac;h, all· · .,....~ Thia etetament w .. flied
hool and e ruv PllOIJuly3l,Auguat 7, ....,.o••lftaP'lilhOf. Oet• A1.1ou1te, 1INI& 1 will b9 llald at f'anw, er. Moll.....,, (714) ns.1134, Loan No. tornlat2e-47 narel'llp wlththoCountyClal1lot0r· of Southern ~lif 14.21. 1985 ftoeofthe-IJ"•Hrdtf Publllhad OfMga eoa.t Harpat Community Cent&I', ,,....... 81·206253-3·74(E) Kathlaan M. l(lng, 5000 CAALH.FLECKENSTEIN Count on July 23
She was married IO W~933 of Mid Cowlly. Dally Pllot Auguat f4, 21, 28, 425 E. 18th St .. Coat•...... .,, TMI JACK DAMCMILO If '/OU have any Qt>Mlton•. w.,,.. Avenue," ioa. Hunt· wt r,,"'~"t!,afMll6.;:•o1fl~ = y •
Paul M Walker de--TM 11Nat ..._ Of 198& CA on Septamb« 4, 1986 at COWANY, ..C:., a Cati-you lhould contllCI •lawyer lngton Baach. ualltornl1 t t Coon ntv J "' 2~ ntt•1 · • ..._ ~ d1 •ltMttoft w~ 7:35 o'C'lock P.M. tom1a ocwpcutton, Otner., or the goyemmant agency 02e...1 •ng: ty on u., • Publt•t'ted orange Cout oeated, prominent So. f'tlll.IC NOTICE of aald ptOIM(ty: IOtt Publl9had Oranoa Coaat ,_.,_, iy: acll Deftt!MO, whlCh may have loeurad your Tlltt bualntH It con· 19 5 Dally Piiot July 3 I Augu1t 1
Calif busineasman DOANOICI . UlYINI, CA PlBl.JC NOTICE Dally Piiot Auguat 21. 1986 ,,......t loan. NotwUhi1andlng tt\11 ducted by: an lndlvldual P1.1bll9hed Or ~ 14, 21• 1985 • ·
and owner of Sterling FtCTfTIOUI IMJIMU ta"1A W-011 Publlehad Orange coast lact that your propafty ta In KATHLEEN M. l(INQ Dally PllOI July 3~ugU9t 1 W-919
n......_ Sh ta ht f N.-ITATIMINT ...._.,......,..._.._ LIGAl.WJCAT'IOM O.llyPllotAugu112t, 19a& rorecioaure you may of1-Thie 1ta1«nan1 wu lllad 14 21 986 • • n-.. e \.lg or The toltowlng parlOnl ar• M11eftdafy at "'-,.... WJCAT'IOM NOTIC• PtllJC NOTICE W-020 your proparty for "'•· with the County Cieri! ol Or· · · 1 w.92 .. 1---------l 0 yean lll £1 Rodeo dot119 butlneaa u : _...the .... • bM'9 otifl-°' •GATIW provided the aa1e 11 con--ange County on July 28, PtlllC NOTICE
School, in ~erly CENTERPOINTE PART· ducted: 9UKILIY '8>-DSCURATIOM LIGA.L. NO'TtCI P\8.IC NOTtcE eluded P<lor to the coo-1985 P\B.IC NOTICE '1CT1'T10U• ., ..... ~· Ca • she dld ex· ~1~~8u111!1lC:1. I~~ :~~~z=.~J,0':. Ml~ H~ P,?e"PA~~gT: flRCMIOUD lllMI '9CTfTIOU9 ....... c1u.=::i~: for~:AY Pubflel'lad Oranga ~ NAMR ITATDmff
lln11ve volunteer lornll 92715 HIGHLAND AVll*M, IAN NEGATIVE DECLARATION .::='"~o NAl!m ITATllllNT LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS If Oally Piiot July 31, Auou•• 7, ,tCTITIOUI eu:• The followlng '*'°"' .,. work. bel.tli active in Gary J Huson, 19n2 ••RNARDINO. CALI• FOR THE IMPROVEMENT 8CHOOL DeaTMCT TM loMowlng pal'ION .,. YOU DO NOT TAl(E 14, 2t, 1985 NAJlll 8TATI olng boeiMU •:
the L oa Ange lea MacArthur 81Yd . Sult• 101, ,~A t:M04-Of THE SANT.A ANA.DELHI Tl'la INIM Unl1lad Sdlool doing bu.in.aa u PROMPT ACTION W-~ The lollowlng paraone ate OECORATING TRENDS
Phil.hannonic Society Irvine. Callfomta 112715 Dtreci61Mllll to tN ..... CHANNEL STORM DRAIN Oletrtct propoaed bueso-t '°' c 0 N c E p T NOTICE IS HEREBY ·-1c W\TICE dolo"8E~HEAD .. GARAGE NtvTdE.RIOHRSun~·, 11,01~1 .. ~. Robert Colllnt, t9172 pt°'*1J IMf M obtalMd FROM ORANGE COUNTY 1986-ee wlll be available IOI' ENTERPRISES. 2MO Elden GIVEN That SUNKIST SER-,-wx. nu ... for years and was • MacArthur 8tYd . Suit• 101 . .,, ,...,..tlftt NIM"'-"'· FACILITY FOi TO TRINITY pubflc lnapec:11on •• IMna AV9 fl tot Coal• Maea CA VICE COMPANY .. now dl.lly ---------DOORS. ~72 Hyannle Port cllfornta 9 1 founder of lhe De· lrvloa. Callfomla 92715 Inf trOM tM ~ DRIVE Unlllad Dlltt1ct omc. 5050 92927 · ' appoint9d TrullM under a f'1CTIT10Ul IUltNfll onv. .. Huntington BMch. Timothy Webalar Flan· b Cha ter Qr. CentatpO!nte Propertlea, wlttlllllO.,.fnMloltMflm FOR FURTHER INFOA-8afTanca Parlwway, 'irvtna J.-nM(l.eonlHayaa.2880 Dead ol Truat dated NA*ITATl•NT Calllornta92&48 • t0131 Aacol Clrcta,
usay Ph lph • • Cetttomla ltmtted partner· pulllultoft ....... flOttoe. MATION, PLEASE CALL lrom ~ 2e to 30 1tt5 Eklan AV9 ft01 Coat• 10121m executed by' VIN· The followlng ~·.,. Mary L Paga. 9472 HyWt-Hunllngton Baach. Call· ange I armonic ehlp, 111n San Vicent• .............. ,_. THE PLANNING DEPART· between-!lie "°""' of 8'00 Maea CA 92827 • CENT L KONTNY, AND ~ bu$lnaM ... nil Port onva. Hunt~on lornla 9264&
Society She was a Btvd., Suitt 636, LOS An· without -· Of • .,. MENT AT (714) 75+&245. • m and 4:00 pm Thli bu11n... ,, con-JOAN D KONTNY HUS-Jo Sl~ESSS EXTENS•=· Baech. Callf<><nl• 9264& Sherrie Lynna o.ioroa
former chairwoman gelel,CallfOl'nla90049 ranly, • .,..... • IMpllad. PublltNd Oranoa Cout 'Th.putiitc:,...e,.;.,gonthe duct9dby-an lncfMdual BANDAN6WIFeuTruator. 1 1 th trMt, • • Thi• bualn••• 11 con· Gray, 15273 Cadl1, Wast·
f th Fuv Ans Aux Thia butlneas 11 con-• to ttti., pu1111lo1t • Dally Piiot August ~1. 19815 propoud budget tor Jamee Leon Hayaa 10 eewri obHoatlona In ~ Baech, Calttomla ducted by an tndMdual mtn81or. Call1omla 92883
0 e ducted by • gene<al part· aMumbr-to -~ W-Ota 1986-f8 ... .,. Mid a1 5050 Thi• 1talamenl WU flied tevor ot AMERICAN SAV· .. MARY L. PAGE Thi• bullnnt II con-
of Aasiatance League nenl'l(p IN~ WaMt ....,_ Barranct Pnw.y Irvine With Iha COunty Clatlt of Qr· INGS & LOAN ASSOCIA· Toni Jean Rlehard1. 1808 Thi• ltaternant WU ftled ducted by: • oon«al pan.
of Southern Calaf GARY J HASSON, gen. due Ofl tN not9 MCUNd bJ CA Sep\ mbef 3• 19815 ai llllQe County on Auguat 5 TION aa Banallciary Port Shaltle ld, Newport with tho County Clark of Or· narlhlp and wa.s active in lhe eral partner M6d Deed of Trutrt to wit P\llJC NOTtcE 7.30"':,.~ M • 1985 · RaCord.cl on 11122J17 u Baecll. Calllornta 92MO ange County on July 23. SHERRIE QRAY ThJ1 atatament wu flied •.000.00 ptu1 the ,....... · Publlahad Or · Cout ,...... document no 28920 book Tiiie b1.111n .. e le con-1985 Thie 1tatoment waa !'*'
S pastic Ch1Jdrena wlththaCountyClar1lofQr· Int Mttmatiad ooeta. ••· NOTlCICW OallyPllotAuguat"'r, 1986 P bolhed Orange Cout 12485 page nt ol Of1lcllll ductedby:an lndlvldl.lal '211112 wtththaCountyo.rkof or. League. She was a ange County on July 25, ,_... end actv...-at NON ~TO..Y 'w-013 Oai~ Piiot Auguat 7. 14 21 ~di In the of1lca d'l Illa TONI RICHARDS Publlsh41<1 Orange Cout ange Covnty on July 22, member of the El t985 the ttme of tt1a tnttW puW-lllOUCY Al TO 28, 1965 · · • Recorder of Orange County, Thi• 11talernant wu lllad Oally P~ol July 31, Aug1.11t 7, 1986
N1.,,, .. 1 Coun Cl b f2112147 cat1o1t of tttla Notto. of I TUDeffl w.982 CallfornlL Including 1 note with the County Clerk ot Or· 14, 21 . 1985 ,211t1Ma '6~ try u · Publtahad Orange Cout teta: aattmatad truat"'' Sunlhlna Community Nur· for tha sum of S 165 000 00 ange County on July 23, W·922 Publllt'ted Orange Coeet In l.teu of flo wers Dally Piiot Auguat 21. 28. '"' and oost1 In Ill• MfY S<:hool admit• atudante •-ll' MnllC( that the baneflclal inter9.t 1986 Dally Piiot July 31, Auguat 7,
memorial contrlbu · September 4, 1 t, 1965 M'OUllt of t1,221U1, pfV9 of anv r~ eolof, national ,-~"" mlDt 'C unnCE under Mid OeCld ot Truet tied Of ~-Pla.IC NOTICE 14, 21. t965 tJo ns may be made ID W-022 lftterelt Oft the~ ptlft.. end att'tntc origin to all the 1(.1-n1111u nu and lt'te obltgetlonl MCUl'9CI Publls anoa HI W·916
cfpiM ....__at tho,... of rlghta, prMtegea. pr~ama --1-ruoTfTIOUI ••--11 thereby are eaently llald Dally Piiot July 31• Auguit 7· ftCTl'TlOUl IUllNlll your favont.e chanty. 11..25~ ,_ a1tnum fnlm and actlvltlaa Q91*• ac-...,,_ vr .. ,.. --b the ~lary that 1 14, 21. 1985 NAMe ITATDIWNT
--SCANLON --211/M to dato of ..... ptui CO<d.cl or med• tvall• 10 ~~':.:..,. r=.o!.~~ are b~aach ol, and detaull In, tho W·930 The tollowlng pereon1 are P\8.IC NOTICE Pl&JC NO TIC[ • n' • d • • "c • • t "• -ludant• at the ICtlool. It A.MD°' HtON obllgatlon for whlcfl Mid dotng t>ulllnau u · FtCTIT10UI IUltMlll A.lJce C. Scanlon . age banatlcta r, ''"Y Ito doaa not dlaorl!Nnat• on the "' d~ bl.ltlneu u : -. Dead ol Tru11 ls eecurlty hu P\8.JC NOTICE (A) BRUCE JOSEPH NAMI ITATWMINT
77 A resident of NOTtCI ....u-tud cw obfltatad to be.tit of race, color, netlonal .. ~~~~ 20~8~Ll~~y~~·~r;e~'. occured In that the payment POOL CONSTRUCTION (B) The foll<Mlng pert0nl are
Norco, Cahf , for· INVfT1NO 9ID9 ,_, Pf'°' to .-, plw .... and .:""4 °';tgln ~= To 9" lltitl.. ~ Banta Ana Haighte, Call· nu not bean macM of: ftCTITIOUl IUWll SHORELINE CONC~(C) doing bulllnaaa u :
merly o f Newport NotlCelshertbygNenlhat ~ °'' UlT ~~~~ ............ credltora and cont1noan1 fornla92707 Falturatomakethe811/85 NA•ITATl•NT SHORELINE POOLS 205 ELECTRO REP DATA tho Boerd of Trust-of Iha YOU AM IN A ""' · .....--et ......... lt-__ .. .......,_ wt1o Ro .. -rt •Bryan Gatalw peymant of pt1ncipal ancf/or The lollowlng l*'aor'll ate Uncoln Avenue, Hu on COMM PRODUCTS. HITEK
Beach. pal8ed away Cout Community College UNl>E" A MlD °' TMllT and other ectlool-admlnla--~~.;;.;;-;;~ 2008'2 Bayvlaw StrHt'. lnuwwt and all 11.11>oaquent d()jng bullneea u : 8Mctl. Callf0tnl• 92646 PRODUCTS, 375 Bay vi-.
August 20, 1985 Born Dtt1rlet of Oranga COunty. OATID JAMJAltY 11, 1111, t..cl P<C>Qratnc:, Cout ~ wilt end/Of attate ot: Santa Ana Hatghta, Call· paymante. togathel' with lite BOOKl<EEPINQ PLUS, Bryce Mel<• JOMJlt't, 205 Coita MaH, Calltornla
an Colorado Mrs CalttOfnl•. wlH rocelve INI-~ =J~1y~ Dat~~uouet anr, t985 LOUIM A. Kroaaen aka lornla 92707 chargH, Impound•, Im· 19735 Saacllff Lana, Hunt· LlncOln AY9nu., Huntington 92827 Scanlon ts survwed eel bid• ·vp to but no later T10M MA y H 1 'w..o 19 LoulM Allen Kroeaen Thlt bl.lelnao• la con· povnd depoalll, U any. Ing ton Baach. California Baech, Callfomla 92e-48 ~· Jo Henwood. 375
M than 10.00 Lm.. fr'd,ay, "'°"'""• rT A p«ltlon hU" .,._, fllad duetad by an lncflvldual unda< Iha term• of Mid not• 9264& Thi• bualn .. 1 le con· s..,. v~ COlta M-. C•
by son. atthew Sac>t 8 1985 •1 the Purch ... IOU) AT A "'*..IC IAL.I. by Tp ... A. Smith In the ROBEATBRYAN GATELY ()(Dead of Trust . Jana Th9l'H• Quarto, dueled by .,.. lndMdu•I tornta 9 827
ScanJong of Norco, Ing Oepartment of aald cot-• YOU ~D AN lXPl.A· PtllJC NOTIC£ Superior Court of Orange Thia lltatament wu filed f&llure to pay r..i •t•te 19785 Sedfl Lana, Hunt· BAUCE JOSEPH Thi., utlnaN 11 con-
daughter J e r etta taga dl1tnct locat.O at 1370 ::~1°' ,~c::r.= County requHllng that With tho County Clerk of Or· tax• and/or ..... ,manta lngton Beach, Callfornl1 Thi• etatamant wu flied ducted by an lndMdual o-·--th b h Adams Avenue Cotta K·tt791 Thereu A Sml1h 1>9 ap-.noa County on July 2t lor total reported dalln-92648 wtlh the Couoty Clar1t of Qr. KEUENA HENWOOD
n&UL> ree rot en1, Meu, Cllllornla at whletl AQAINIT YOU, YOU ADVlftTlllMbfT pointed u ~al rep.-1965 ' quenl, and all 11.11>MQuant Thie butlnaH 11 con· ange County on July 2-4, Thie itattment wu ftled
throld Hansen, of time ~ bldl will be put>-IHOULD CONTACT A Nolk:a II lwtby g!Y9n thlt r-.rtauve to administer tile ....,,. paymante Which beeama dUC1ad by: an Individual 1985 wttll the County Clatlt of Or· San Bemard.tno· Paul lk:ly ~and read for . LAWYER. on July 25, t985, $2.435.00 •tata of the decadent Publllhad Orange Cout due tharaatter, lnc1iudlng 9"Y JANET, QUARTO fmGa ange County on July 24,
Hansen He.met PRINT ' BIND '88 D.ATIO:JU\.~-. us currancyandh,100.00 Tt't• petition raQl.IHI• DallyP11otJuty31 August7 .. ,. ctl•O-or other eumt Thi• ataternatl1 ••• filed Publllhed Orange Coe.It 11185 Geo Hanae f SPRING CLASS SCHEO. hMIMft/A C •· tn American Exprtn authority to edmlnllter the 14. 21. 1985 ' ' payable under tha term1 ot with Iha County Ciani ol Or· Dail)' PllOt July 3t, Auguet 7, faaos7
rge n , 0 ULE. ORANGE COAST DIS-~her~= Tr~I Checitt wu Mlzad aatate under the lndapen· W·H 1 uld Note Of Dead of Trvat ange County on July 24, 14, 21 1935 Publllhed Orange Coat
ThoUMnda Oaka. 81.S· TRICT • at Iha Fullerton Poltce 0.. dent Administration of ea-That by rauon thereof. 1985 W-939 Delly Piiot July 31, August 7, t.er Helen Johnson AH bid• 111• to t>e In ac· I aero• Compan,, H partment, Fullerton. Call· tatea .Act. th• pre11nt btnaflclary F2a041 14, 21. t985
Lo• Be h S h ' cortlance With the 8ld Docu-T r 11 •I a•• 0 • •" A· fornla (Oflotnally MWMI at A heaflng on the petition uncfaf tuCll Deed of Trullt, Publllhed Orange Cout mm•ic NOTICE W-t3e ng ac · e waa mant1 Which are now tn Ille C~ AMlataftt vtoe Fullerton. Callfornta on June llWIH b9 held on SEPTEMBER P\BJC' fl>TIC£ hu executed end dellvafad Dally Piiot July 31, Auguat 7, t"UUI.
a member of the St. and mey be eecurad In tile Preeldent, 1201 '-' ....,..., 14, 11185, by Fullerton Pollc9 11, !985 at ~30 AM. In 10 Mid Truatae, a written 1;4. 21, 1985 -,-tC-TITIOU---1-1-U-IM--1-,-•IDI •c unnCE
James E pis cop a J offlca of the Olractor of I•" d A • •" 11 • • •" trom Jamae Cllll Waldon) for Oept. No. 3 at 700 CMc FICTfTIOUI MllM18 Daciaratlon and Demand for W-~ 1 ,-uuu nu
Church where she PurehUlng of lald collage ~.._CAtMCM,(~) vlolatlonof21 USC681.Any Cel'lt« Drive west, Santa NAMI ITATIMeNT Sala,andllladepoeltadwlth ntDllC 111\TICE T:.~io!,T,!~ are -,-.,.....; ..... ...-.......... ,-,-IU-l---1-1-, dlllrlct .... 7151, 71t1,HI .•• ., paraondealrlngtoplacethe Ana CA92702 Thofollowlngpar10na11ta aald Trullee, IUeh Dead of ,-vu.. nu .. .,,....~. "'"'""' ,.....
formerly taught S un· e.c11 bidder muat eubmlt rr7 matte< In the Unlt9d States IF, YOU oe.iECT 10 tha dotng buelnau u : Tru1t and all tlMt document• dotng t>ulinau u . ~ ITATIMINT
day Sch ool A grave with hie bid a caeh1er'1 Publllhed Ora~ Cout Dt1trlct Court tn order to granting ot tho petition. you PERFORMANCE BMW, evidencing the obllgatlone FtCT1'T10Ul IUltNlll EDUCATIONAL STUFT. The tollowlng ~· 11111
side service will be . C«tlfled checll, or Dally Piiot Augult ... 21.g27a7. cont•• Iha probable cauM lhOuld either~ •• tlMt 728 W, 18111 Str .. t, Co•t• MCUred tllefeby. and haa NAIE ITATIMaNT !~! ..... v'c• JIQt ull.o, 92N .. ~port dolnQB &~T",,...COUNS: ULTING.
h Id A .,. '"l 26 at bidder'• bond made payable l986 W· f<>t tt'tla Mlivr•. m1.111 Illa wtth nearing and etat• your ob-M .... CA 92627 CS.Clarad and does llafoby The tollowlng paraoo1 ar•I ....,"""" • orn • ....., BA",.,. ,.. e Ue.-. · to tt'ta <><der of the COM! ntlDllC MnJtCE tha Ra1tden1 Agent In iectlona or Illa written oblec-John William Oenemora, daelat• all eum• eacured doing bullneu u : Virginia Ann Pareon1, 109 555 Paulatlno Ave. #l207,
lPM at Harbor Lawn Community Collage DlltrlCI t"UU&. nu Charge, Drug Enforcement tloni With the court befora 2802 NftP0<1 Blvd , Coat• lha<eby Immediately du• BUD'S TRUCK TIRE Vla Oulto. Newport Baactl, Costa MeH, California
Memona.l Park, Costa Boero Of Tru11-In an NOTICE OF '1UNQ Of' U · Admlnl1Hatlon, P 0 Box tile hearing. Your af>9M'· M .... CA 92MO and payable and hu etacrtad SALES I SERVICE. 104 Pe<· Calltornla 112ee3 112826
Mes:a Onmes C.Orona amount not feel Ulen five ,UCA T10N TO INCMAH 12809. Santa Ana, Catlfomta inc. may be 111 pereon or by Tt'tll buelnau 11 con· and doaa hereby t11aet to elmmon Street, Santa Ana.1 Thi• bu1lnH• la con· Laatey Patrtcla Cl'lol. 555
H paroenl (5%1 ol the 11.1m bid ACCOUNTI OF AN IN 92712, a claim and COii 'fOVr attorney ducted by .,, Individual ceuM the trullt propatty to Calllomla 9270'4 ducted by an lndlvldual Paularlno Ave. fl L207. Funeral ome, In as 1 guarantee that the bid· ~TY" ' bond of '85-4 00, In the torm IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR Jonn W. Oanamora be IOld to .. tllfy Iha obll• John 8 l<lng, Jr, 104 Per· VIRGINIA A PARSONS Co1ta MtH. Calttornla
c harge of arrange· der wlll enter Into tht Thll la to Inform Ille nubllc of a caahter'1 Of C*1111ad or 1 contingent e<adltOf of Thie 1tatamant wu mad gallon• eecurad thereby. lllmmon Str..e. Santa Ana, Thie •taternant was llled 92826
menu 737.3771 ,)ropoaed Contract If the thal. under Section 563 22 cheek made payable to tho the deoeaMd, )'OU mull flla wttll Iha County o.rtc of Or· DATE.. 7122186 Catlfornla 9270-4 "11th Illa County Ciani of Or· Thl1 bu1tneu 11 con·
_ --aame IS awardad to film In 01 the Rulal and Aegulatloni u S Dapartmant ot Jutta. 'fOVr claim with tha court °' ange County on August 5, Al'Mf1can .. ....,._ and Thi• bualnau 11 con = County on July 23, ducted by' an lndMdual DURKI N tho event ol tlllure to ante< for lnturanoe 01 Accounta or approved auraty on or i>r-'t 11 10 tho pereona1 1965 _ &..oen ~ u . tw· ducted by an Individual 19 5 ,..,... LESLEY P CHOI
M I c h a e I J o s e p h Into• euc:'1 contrac•. th• Pacific Savings Bank 190 i before Sac>tember 3. 11185 '99'teanta1tve ~ad by ,_ '*"'· Mat. Vice ''"'d• nt T .. JO.!:.N,~lt~~Rtt'-"' Publllhad Or-Cout ...... ~:_.•Countatarnenty 6: of~ prooaed1 of Iha Chedl Win be 'eo.t An tndlgancy p.illlon may the court Within four monttll Publlehad Oranga Cout Publllhad Orange Cout .... •• -·-· --_, -·..-..... Durk.Jn a resident of torfaitad orlnthoc:aMola ~all~~.,~·u~ be flled In uau or a coat from the date of first i.. o.11yP1totAugu117, 14,2t, OaltyPltotAugu117, 1'.2t, w1thtt1aCountyClerkofOr·1 0.1tyPllotJuly31,Auguat7, anoa County on July 28,
Coat.a Mesa Passed bond the tuft sum thereof Savt ·. and Lo! AllOCla· bond 01herWIM, the P<<>P-tu~oflett.,.Mprcwlded 28. 1985 28, 1985 anga County on July 23, 14. 21. 1985 1985
away August 18, wilt be lorlalt.O to said COi· tlon "& WM't SIX1h Str .. 1, tf1y wlll be admtn111rattve1y In Section 700 ot th• W-981 W·9'n 1965 W·931 Publlthed Orange":
1985 Beloved hus· lage dlstr'ct LOI Angeles, California haw forfeited pu1euant to 19 Probtto Coda of CatffOfnlL Publlahed Qr~~ Dally Piiot July 3 1. Auguet 7. No bidder may wttfldraw ftled an •l>Pltcatlon tor P«· us c teoa, and win M di .. The tima '°' filing clalma will •-'C MnDCE m-.,. MnTll'r P\B.IC NOTICE band o f Mlldred L hllbld foraperlOO fOflorty-ml .. ton 10 lncra ... ac· poMd of eccordtnQ 10 law. not e"'*8 pr!« 10 four ,-~ nu ,.~~~.w.· ~PllotJuly31, t7, ---------t4,2t, 11185 W-94:1
Durktn, Coat.a Mesa, b rive ('5) O.ye after the dlt• oounta of an ln1Yrable type lntor .. tad partlaa may Ille• rnontn1 from the date ot tha ,tCTl'TIOUl IU ... 11 ftc:TIT'IOUl IMJIMll . 1, 1985 ftc:TJTIOUI 9U8Ml.I
( f P tr k Dura.. Ml tor Ille opening rhefoof Ion petition fOf romlulon or '-'Ing nottc. aboYa ... ..-IT"TI._..,. Tl NT W-928 NAllll I TATIMeNT o a IC l'Un, The Board of Tru11-re-In conjunct with a Iran .. mitigation of for1all1.1ro with YOlJ MAY EXAMINE the .N-.. _,., NAlllllE ITA ME The loffoWlng paf90r\I Illa
Tex as Ruth Ann eervea lhe prtvta-.. of r•tect· ler of aavlnge accounte be--1111 RHldant Ag ant In The followlng P«aof'I• ara The toltowtng '*'°"' ara dot"" butlneM u : __ ....;P\B......;..;=.IC;.....;.NO~T-tc(.._ __ ' H 1 n... ...,,.... ~ Nlac1ad branch of. file kept by tha court If you doing bullneee u doing bullnau u · · .. Hu,.,aong, e ena VlX, Ing any and all bid• or to llcal 01 bOth uaoclatlont Cherge pureuant to 19 are • '*'°" lntatattad tn 0 AR R U N 1 NT ER . LIFE EXCHAN.OE. 383 C NOTICE (A) THE ARISTOTLE RE· MOTICI °' t
both of Dayton, O hio, waive 1ny lrragularltlel or In-Speclftcatly, Pacific Saving• USC 18 ta and 21 CFR the Mtato, )'OU may ~ NATIONAL, 41 Sunlight, Broolchollow Dr1ve, Santa P\B.1 PORT (B) ARISTOTLE SER-NC)N..IW~819t&JTY
and Mary Durkin. formallllel In eny bid or In wlll tran1f« aJ1 .. v1ng1 ae-131871·1318.81 without ftl· upon the axacu10f Of edmln-trvtna, CA 92715 Ana, Calltornla 92705 f1CTn'IOUI 9\JIMll VICES, 242-4 NftP0<1 Blvd, Notice 11heftby Qtvafl that
I Iha bl0dlf19 counll on depoalt at '11 ol· ''l • clalm and cot! bond lltrator or upon tne at· Ian GlllfUn 41 Sunlight Mlohele Speach Mlkan, MAIM ITATIMINT Colt• MaH, California the undatltgned Win not .,. Oklaho ma , a so L.H A. l-nvtN8, vio. floe ai J3t p ... Avenue, ••ldanl Agent In torney 'tor the executor or lrvlna,CA 92715 · 23 Balllany, lrvtna, Call-ThalollOwlng~iara 92828 reaponelblatOl'anydabt1or
survived b y six Cll•~ • ._._ Af· Burbank California to Illa c...,_. admtni.trator, and fl .. wtth Thi• bu1lnff1 la con-fornla92715 d<>tngbutlneuu: Richard Bartrand Gaber, llabllltleacontr.ctadbyany·
grandchildren Mr faire, Coael Community Llncoln ' Saving• Olflca Cue. RQ·M-0034 the court with proof of Mr· duatad by: an lndtvldual Th11 bu11nau 11 eon· JEN ROD COMPANY, 2424 NewPOf1 Blvd, ea.ta one otlww lhan myaall. on or
Durkin was a n"lem· ColfeVe Dl•trlct located at 3800 Ve<dUOo Av-Dale:~ull 8· 1965 vloo, • written requeet •tat· Ian Qariun dUC1ad by: an lndlY'ldual 11ee 1 Sampeon Lana, Hunt-M .... Calll0tnla 92828 after tt'tl• dale
J h Th Publllflad Orange Coa•t enu. Burt>&nk California Publl Orange Cout Ing that you cMll,. epacial Tht1 11atement wu flied MICHELE SPEACH 1ng1on eaacn. Ctlltornla Thi• buelnH• 1' con· Dated tt'tte Auou•I t9, ber of St o n e Daily Piiot Augull 21. 28 Alao.' Llncoln Savings will Dell~ Piiot Augu11 f4. 21, 28, nollee of the n11ng of an ln· with Ille County Ciani 01 Or· MAKAN 92647 ducted~: an Individual 1985
Baptist Cathol ic 11185 w --014 1r.,,.f«a1t .. v1ngaaccount1 198 W-006 ventoryandllc>Pflieemantol anga County on July 31, Thi• 1tatement wu fllad Joaac:>h J. Martin, 4022 Thl•R•t~=?~~Rlllad RotlandTOWM,2121.«fl
Church. a nd had on depoalt at 111 ofltc. •• •tat•....._°' of the J*I· lt85 with the County Ctetk of Of· Morning 81111 Qr, Huntington with the Count" Clerlt of Of· It., '°"'°"9. CA.,.,.
lived in the Harbor 1613 North Vetmont Av· lion• onccount• manttonad ,_,.. ange County on July 2.4, Baadl, Celllom•• 92649 = ,..~~ ... 'on Ju"' "'3, Put>llehad Orano-COMt enu.. Loa Angelaa, C•ll· P\B.IC NOTICE In Section l200 and 1200.6 of Publllhed Orange Cout tteS Edw d J Harding 111 ...,._,,, '' .. o.llY PllOt Auguat 20, 2 t, 27, arf"a atnce 1968, he --1'\&.--IC_NO_Tl_C_E __ tornta to the Pacific Stvlngt tllaCallfomla Probat•Coda. 0e11y PllOt Auguat 1, 14, 21, fll2040 20551 .,v .. Verda, Covina: 5 1988 was a Third Degree office loeatad •• 1700 North '1C11TIOUI eu ... H ~....._, ,,c. 28. 1985 Publlehad Oranqe Cout Calllomt• t1723 ,.,_ T-792
member of Krughta of K·1-Vermont Avenue. Loi An-N .. ITATIMINT c . OMll,~"= w-eao Deify Pilot Ju!y31. Auguet 7, lllonald J Mort. &4 8 ~Pl.It>,!~.,~~-~~ ---------
Col b c 1 ADYPTIH~ gelaa, Cellfomta The tOllowlng '*''°"'are '°' ·1 1 14. 21. 1985 BtOld su.i. Miiford. Con-., -·-PtlllC NOTlCE um us, oun t'1 Mota her9bJ .,_ Anyone mey writ• In favor doing bUelnaaa II ,.,_., .... 190, ~ w.e.40 necttcut ~ ' 1, tte&
no 4398. Cost.a Mesa tNt Oft•,!:,...., ~ ()( P<otaat of Illa appllcatlon E )( p L 0 R E R ...... CA -Tt)I• bulinau •• con· W·t2' K·11'7C7
Rosary ·viii be rec1k'd U.8.ClfffeftCJ ••Mtndet F~ copleO mull.,....,, lo TECH NOLOGIES. 3303 Put>lllNd 0r:r,, Cout ouetlld by. • Oafl&'el pert· ---------ITAT'lmWT °' Wednesday August Garden Grove ~ 0.-th• "SuparVllOfY Agent, Harbor Blvd •F4, Colla = ~ Auguat t, n . 21, fltB..IC NOTICE PtlllC NOTICE ,,.,.,,.,, PWlJC NOllCE AMND01111'l11' °'
2 I 7PM M f pel'trMnt, Gerdefl Qrowe. federal Homa loan Sri of MM& Callfornla 92828 198 W'Th-ol5 f'ICT1TM>Ue IMJ..... JOSEPH J MA"TIN Ull Of P1Cnnoul • at a!! o C.momta (Oftg..,., NWMf San Fr~. 800 Call· Gregory B Thagard, 3304 ftc:TmOUI .,...... N~ ITAftmNT Thlt etat-1t wM fllad ftCTmOUI IU ... a ........ MAm
Chnsuan Bunal wtl.J on 7·10-U br O.rden fomta Streat. P 0 8oJ 7f41, HarbOr 81Vd •'4 Cotta M.U. ITATDmNT The rollowtng ~1 .,.. wOt't the County C~ °'Or· MAm ITA..,.....,. Tile follow!}'? pareone
be C't'lebr ated Thur· Owon ~-from JeM Mo-San FrencllCO. Cellfornla. Maea C.ltfornla 9262e Tiie lottowlng l*'tOlle are dolnO tlullnMI u anga County on .My 23, The tonowtng l*'aof'le.,. 1wtve at1t1odoned the Ult of
day Aum•!r.l 22 at IOltto Coeto) lof ~ °' ~ 120 . within 10 .s.y. of the Thi• l>Utln... 11 con-doing butlnoaa .. Na1lonll ,ROM THE HEART OF 1985 doing ~... Iha ,IGtltlOUI Bueln•H
e.-• tt UIC .. 1 AnJ ,._. publleallon of 11111 nofloa An dUC1ad by an lndlVldual Pl8JC NOTlCE Coln I Gold Exettanve. -4700 ~ AOUA Cl.IA". 25781 La Nam« lVCNINO STADIUM 9 30AM at St John *""I to~ ttie llWtter In eddltlonal 7 days to WDmlt OREGORV 8 THAGARD Neptunt, Stt 8, Newport ~N!~~n!°°:ee W ~ Publllhed OranQe CoNt Pare, Sutt• 51, E Toro, C... ANIMAL. CL.IHIC et 11M2
Tht' &pt.uJt Catholic .,,_ unnect It• ... Dtetftct comment• may b9 Obtained, Thlt 11a1ernant ... flleO NOT1C9 °' 8-dl, CA 92ee3 eeaCti Callfornia'o2883 Dally Pttot July 31, Augutt 7, tornla tff30 South AnehlfM eout.vwd.
Church PtPrce Brot Court lit 0tdat 10 OCMtM1 prOYldad ll.ICfl req..-t l1,... #Ith Iha County Clerk ol Or· DlllOUITIOM CM' Bart Ot Boa. WOO Na9-Bon~ .. I( ~Mlea 2005 W 14, 21. 1985 Aonald Dtan Martin, Orange, CA t 2tM
Be 11 8 road way ::r:'~.C:.-.: = =;:..:.v ~"f W:tn = = County on July 28. PUJc~ IWM>y Q . g1• 92~' N.•w~ort :=::., 8~ Su~o!.~i W·925 ~=~. J_uaiJ:,,! a?"eio 100, N~ ,==:! .::":
M ortuary, Directors ~I Aganl 1t1 CNrwe.', 10..day period f"2IDt4 gtY9'I tllat INCi R Miine Thie buelnaN It con· 92~ ' •-II' MnTll't .1aty11 p,-.. 1on Hendrix, ftled In Orange Coutlty on 642 91~ DNt IEnfOfoament ~ Anyone tewldlng • prot•t Publllhed Of•nga Coe11 and Harry s..no, -. ducted !by: an lncftvld\lal Tiit• bl.lelnat• 11 con· ~ nu1rw. 2e1et LA Pare .01. El Toro. October 7, 1N3 FILE NO
li traUon, ,,0 . lo• 1-. ~ aut>etentlll by tne Deny Pltot July 31 Auguat 7. totora dolitQ buaio-under 8111'1 0. Boe duotad by· an lncfMdutl aTA fl1lllDIT °' California 92f30 '22et2t
PACIFIC VllW
MI MORIAL PARK
C•,.,,.tery • Mortuary
Chapel • C rematory
3500 P&elll<: View Driv•
Newi><>rt Beach
844 2700
HAA80 A LAWN-
MT OUVI
Mortuary • Cemfllflf'Y
CrtmatOf)'
1825 Gtaler Ave
Cost• Mesa
!>-tO 5554
"flftCI IROTMERI
NU P OA.DWA Y
MOftTUA"Y
h 1tta Ana, Ca llfOtftla Ptlnetpal 8uparvtoory AOaf!t 1<1, 21, 1086 Ille fletltiout firm name and Tllll •telaiMnt waa hied 80NNIE K. HAINe8 AIANll!Of-NT CM' Thie ~eln ... I• con· Qeorga Yotnotalan, 317
m 12, a ct.Im and ooee m1y raQVMt an «ti trOU-W-1<14 atyte of The Other Qwt a1 wtth the County Clatk Of Of· Tiii• etatOtMni W1U ntect Ull °' "9Cnnou8 duct.S by • ganera.I per1· London Place, Anaheim, CA
bond et n.-.oo. tit tt.. mant on the •l>Plieellon 1630 Plactntl• Aw .. City of ange County on Jul'; 23. with lt'ta County Clarll of Or· 8U9MU ...-'*"'Ip 0280f
form of a tnhler'• or provldad IUCll ,..quellt la,.. "8JC fl>TIC( ~ e.ctl. County of 1915 anoa County on JUiy 24, Tiie lollowlng per•ona Aonatd D. Martin Mike Adem, 441t Btu.
Olftlftied checa ll'lade ...,.. celvec:t tn wrttt119 by ,,... Orenge, 8t•ta of California. "91111 1916 ~ bandoMd tne UM of Thlt 11a1emen1 waa filed weter Clrele, ANNltn, CA
abtato theU.I . D~t SYpaMaot"y ~ dul'lng U GA.L. NOTICI did on IM t4th day of Publlthed Or~ Coaet ,_ e wltll tl'le County Clarll of Or· 92807
of M tio., cw •"'"°"" the 10-d•Y. per1od 'or • ~ 1..... Auguat, tN5, by mutuel Dally Pelot July 3 t. AUOutt 7, th• f'lctltlou• lueln•H tnoa County on July 2t Thie bullne9e ... oon
•.. -.... _ ............_ ..... .., "'Ot•t to .,_ oonaldtrad _ _.......... ......._., .........._.._ ......, NHS t-4, h ttu Put>llehad Oftnge Colet NIW'll« D & 0 PAINTING, tN & ' ~ ~ ·~ _,_· •••• , ...,._ ..._. .. _....... ... It -· ... ..,.. ....,._,. ..._...... """ Oell';PllotJuty31,Augutt7, lt()4..D EMt Chaom9n Av· _ -· • r7, 1m. An ~llWIJ ,..._ eubtltantlal, It,,_,.. be wr • COAsn.M MCMONAL partnar'INp and t.,-minata W·t73 t.t, at, 1985 enua Orange t allfOfnla r-eh IP, 0 M & YOT • "°" iNJ be ....... leu of a ten end ~ on time, OCCUl'ATIOMA&. tllalr nutlona aa '*1r*• w.01" 9-~ ~ C0Mt NO~llAH
coat lilJoftd. ~ .-, tN IM raMOftt IOI' tf'e PfO'Mt fl'lllOQRAlil ll'lar9tn. The flctltloua lullNM Delly l'ltot J\jly 3 t, Auguat 7, Tiiie at~ WM lll9d
wt11 a..........,.... muate.coneltWttwhlltl'le TM eo.1lna Aeglonal Sald~ln!MMuf'e .... IC..,.~ .... .,.W\Tl/'I[ Nafne~to et>ow 1-4,21 tN5 .ttt!tl'leCouMyOlert!OfOr. ~ted ,......... ragul.t1ory b ... tor~ of Qooupat~ Program o... wtt .,. ~ad by 8r\l08 n111L ""'·~ ,._ .,.,,_ ftlad In °""*' Coun~ on W-t42 = ~.on Jutt 11.
1.c ,.., -.. Iha llpPllC•llon. ~ trtct propoaed budg9I '°' A Miine wtlo .:..c Md ,,... ITATDmft °' o.c.rnw u. 1M6 FlLI ..... y~ ...
M •l9111pip•111a1dd of aooot61t ~ot.:: In~~ ttlMt will be..,...,_ tor diaCNrJ:.. ':;::: Riii _, .,_. f/1Mli MUIDCI MT Of NO. '263597 "8JC fl)TlC( ... ,.,..., ti AD.YI I
,. .... .....,__,...,.. by ton~2(•X4JOf f.S· public lnepactlon a t oeot1 tllellmund , .. ,,.,...,., ff••hr· u..cw;iecnnoue ~ NlerMytr, tSMO YonlOTllAll
1f141f fie a,._..,._,,.. 11'1:-e'~t~ COMt1M ~ ~ 0$-ell moniel ~to the ... 1714l1·T,...._ .. .._: .,_ .. ..._ TUltln ~flY· Tu.tin, PWJHllOUa• ..... PvtlWJad 0rwnoia Co.et :":'.~.::'.':; .,Youm.yl0dla111'11~ ~11':!..'=°.= """~ not1oa 1a ~ VRMttttM, "•'•'•""i TM foflowlno penone ~w. KAwnlc.. 212 I. ~~':,! .. ~PllotA~ f4,21,n , AfMt lit CMr9o ,__.. cellOn and II ~ to W ao 1 ... .,.._,. jlN9\ tMt IN uitdll__, ....,...._ NY9 9IMlndOMCf lie _,.. cl 8 Cotta Mw. ~ .. \Ml
.. 11 u 1.c. 1411' .., 11 filed .. the 1.0.• HolN """°""" af't-00 .,,.. Md ..er not be ~0Met9. "°"' ~MT MCn'ICI fht ,iet1t1ou• luetne .. =~27 *t9 ~OW:TISIHO 1 W-111
C,R t11t 11·tl1t.11 LOW1 8anllof89nFr-.it= 4 30pm 1Nedeyon°toreflf~ ,C:.'::..'::~= ~·:.:,, cr7lMa:n~~I~:. Ttlll ~ -con-MAAAITINO, ,_, tMne
"""'-.... a ....... ..-:::-..,!! ._-:, .,":, · The putllc '*'1nO Oft IN lrlCurr9d by"':,!'~,.::: YOU AM -...0 .. YCMM tntna. c:.ldomla t2114 ~ t17 • • ..,_.i Ave, It• UI. Mewpor' ..e MM. ,._,.,.,.,., = propo .. d budget tor own nerM. OI ..... ,A~ rr MA The "'*lloue luaAneia ,_.,. 8Mclt, CelMomla l2teO
"91lda11t A9ut In lie ~ If~ *'" 1M&.-wtllbel'll'CJ.t 1001 lhaflrm IOLD WITHOUT',.~ .....,.,...,.,adtoabo¥9_. fll9I e.tt.te!Mnt .. fllect lytvta o.pointe. 3901
c-.. ::.. QIM!~J Pretldlo lquer•. Co•t• O..S •t ,.~ A~•:J °""' AOTIOll, ~. )'OU llled In 0ranoe County on wltfl Ul9 Countr a.ti Of Or· P#k-.. L..w I 16C. lnllne. C-RO..u.-0032 Pf' ' MIN. CA Oft leptember I, c.llfornla. t -F fle¥9 the 1tQe1 f'IOllf to 1127/IHlll tf() '21Mai 1nG1 County Olt JA/l'f 2•. ~ 12715
091a Jl#t i5. 1N5 ~':,_':*"~ ~ 1"5 9' UO O'ctodl PM "'z:. :ea.. ~ ~t In '° ff.SI ~ 27 lend-1916 Thi. t>va!Mll ti con· 1 tO 8ro10W1y
Cott• M ....
6-42-91$0 ~~.~.,. 1~ 14 151313 1250 C0Mt ~.:..·it f:' ~ =rt~ :.=!,.! Cr,;'4 f~lne, 0.llfoml• 0::~~~1 --;:v:=='-
A t969 DeJ~~,gi,:r, ltll W-012 Oallr "°4 ,,.._ 1 ~~I ad coete end U • Joe Thlef1unl, Htt Peo11 t4, tt, Itta • Tilil Ital~ .. tlled --------w.toe ., 'w.fJ 11 ~ u-w.. monit1e .. ..,. 1..ono liltd\, ~ w...,a wttn the CJauAt¥ o..... o1 Or·
• -
I .
UH AN(_,f L, 1\JN J'
Cout
A one-year moratorium
has been placed on all
requests for rezoning and
other amendments to
Costa Mesa's General
Plan./A10
Callf ornla
Tickets have arrived for
the state's future lottery,
but residents must wait
and watch New Yorkers
take chances on $41
mllllon Thursday./ Al
Nation
Black leaders take lasue
with Rev. Jerry Falwell's
calling Bishop Desmond
Tutu a "phony." I A5
Reagan Administration
aaya testing antl-aatelllte
weapons would push
Soviets toward nuclear
armaban./M
World
Assassinated Sikh leader
~a cremated In lndla./ M
War between Coke and
Pep,. goes Inter-
continental./ AS
lllnd&Body
Thia station offers radio
Rx for those who are
aJllng./01
Food
Wine snobbery blamed
for scaring consumers
away from buylng.C1
Variations of creative
fruit tarts are as endless
as the lmaglnatlon.C1
Sporta
The D~ers go 11 In-
nlnga ore putting
away Phlladelphla./81
A Cott baaebafl team
from Huntington Beach
has reached the flnals of
the Colt World Serles./81
INDEX
Bridge 04
Bulletin Board A3
Bualneu 88-7
Clualfled 05-7
Com lea 04
Crouword 06
Death_ Not.Ices 08
Entertainment 02-3
Food C1 -10
HorOICOpe 07
Ann Landers 02
Mindi.Body 01
Opinion A8-9
P.patazzJ 01
Polloe Log A3
Pubtlc Notices 07-8
Sporta 81-3
T"9Yt90n 03
W•ther A2
~ .
TOMOMOW: ,-#. -FAIR
'0MCUT80NAI . ---~ -~ --
lenlng Newport leech, Coeta lleu, Huntington leech, nine, Legunelelch, FOUft!.lln Vlltf ...S loUlh Onlngl C1 a •1J
C Al Ir-ORNIA 'NF O N£ SDA 'f AU(,U'> T 1 I l"IH'. .· f '-4:
e erv1sors
'Saturday Matinee'
Local ~ Beach artbt Sally Strand created the water
colorputel ortclnal f~~ which thJa Paceantof the lluten
re-creation wu adapted for the U.Ce at Intne Bowl. Still-
e . -1ve se ·ves
e . increase
life poeen. from left. are Judy Jacbon, Patrick Berkoa.
WUllam Wllkenon, Gaye Whitney and Rory ACuUera. The
Paceant of the lluten nana mpdy throqb Aq. 29.
Vote means board
salaries would be
~5.000 next year
By JEFF ADLER ~
Of ... ~ .........
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors ten1.auvely voted 4-l
Tuesda} to raise their S4S.6 I 2 annual
salary to SSS 000 bcginnmg in Janu-
ary 1986
Only Supervisor Harriett Wieder
voted against the 22 percent pey hike.
which as scheduled for final approval
next week
Jn a related mo"e super.1sors also
approved raises for the county's
elected office holders. top appointed
(Pleue eee SALAllT / A2)
Smuggle
.suspect
no-sliow··
in court
Manhunt urlder way
for Huntington man
ln Israel weapons sale
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... 0.-, ..........
Irvlne postpones vote on smoking controls
Electronics manufacturer Richard
Kelly Smyth remained missing this
week. fo~mg a federal Judge to delly
his tnal o n charges of smuggling
.llom1c bomb tngers to Israel
Meanwhile. federal agenu have
made at a high pnont} to find the 5S-
)'car-0ld Hunungton Harbour man
who missed two coun appe"aranoes
last v.eek and failed to show up
Tue~y for the first da) ol has tnal
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of!MO.-, .........
H.opmg to a avert a 2·2 deadlock on
a proposed smoking ordinance,
Irvine City Council members decided
Tuesday to pastpone their vote until
all local businesses have had a chance
to review the measure.
City staff members today said
copies of the proposed smolong law
will be mailed lO ~he 6,800 licensed
businesses an lrv1he -at a cost of
about $2,500.
The smoking ordinance will be
reconsidered by the council on Oct. 8.
Tuesday's decision was made after
council members appeared headed
for a deadlock. Two members in·
d1cated the c1ty should 1mpo~ new
smolong ~lat1ons on local busi-
nesses, while two others leaned
toward encouraging business groups
to develop volunury smoking poli-
cies.
The fifth council member, Mayor
David Baker. removed h1m~lf from
the smolung discussion and vote.
saying his la firm works for the
tobacco industry.
At ISSUC was a proposed Cit)'
smoking law modeled after an ord1·
nanc.c approved earlier this year by
the Laguna Beach Caty Council.
The measure would prohibit smok-
ing in public areas such as elevators,
(Pleue eee SllOJallfG/ A2)
Smyth. owner of a small electronics
firm an Huntington Beach. and his
wife Em1ltc vanished more than a
wed aRO. sparking concern\ that the
(Pleue eee lilAJfllUNT I A2)
Badham still opposes-off shore drilling
By LISA MAHONEY
OftM~ ..... ....,
U.S. Rep. Robert Badham, R·
Newport Beach, "cleared the au" at a
press conference Tuesday over his
position on offshore 011 issues.
Bad.ham, who opposes drilling in
federal waten off the Cahforrua coast,
said criticism directed at b1m because
of his hands--Off approach to a
compromise proposal to allow ex-
panded oil and gas exploration 1s due
to his bei.na "abused, misunderstood
and mali.aned" by some members of
thefress.
" have been mali&ned and mi~
quoted by clements or the press, .. he
said while mcetina with reporters at
bis Newport Beach office.
Bad.ham said statements attributed
to him have aiven local leaders and
the public the Incorrect impression
that he is not an opponent of offshore
oil d.rillina.
"My positioq, as 1t has been, as it
will remain to be, is (to) oppose
om.bore drlllina offOranac County,"
Bedbam said.
The conaresaman said be will meet
today with members of a coalition of
Oranp Count).' coastal cities to •uaest theywort wsether in the fiaht
to keep oil rip at bey. Unless
opponentt ••proceed in a coo~tive,
coordinated manner, (we re) not
aoina to act anywhere wtth this
issue," Bad ham wd.
Two key members of the coastal
coahuon. Robert Gentry of Laguna
Beach and Evelyn Hart of Newpon
Beach. say lhey arc familiar with
Badham's position on offshore 011
and welcome him as an ally.
Hart aclrnowledged beingcritJcal of
the tum of events that llas resulted in
local c1t1es havina to fight to keep the
oil industry out of Orange County,
but she said her criticism -whether
du-ectcd at Badham or other legjs.-
laton who may have kept him out of
compromise nt1otiations -did not
result from reading rress reports. ,
"I don't know i he's been mis-
treated or not by the press. It appears
we were Just not represented (in the
neaotiations) and the press just pick-
ed up on that."
Gentry wd he did not want to
cnticize Badham's role in the com-
promise hammered out by some
members of the California coo-
lfCSSional deJeptton and announced
Ju1x t6
• We need him and he needs us -
that's the onJy way," he said.
"I'm sorry he's not been heavily
involved in this issue over the
years ... Whatever the past has been,
let's clear it and build a stronger
coahllon."
For the last four years, offshore 011
opponents have succccdcd 1n getting
congressional approval for a dnlhng
moratonum that protects S8, I 40
square miles of California coastline.
But support for conunumg the
moratorium was missing thas year so
a compromise was worked out be-
tween the U.S. Department of the
Interior and certain members of the
California congressional del~tton
that would. if voted into law this fall .
open up 1.350 square mllC$ for
exploniuon while extendina the dnll-
ina ban on tbe rest of the moratonum
area throuah the year 2000.
Most or the ocean floor to ~
offered for lease to oil companies 1s m
Northern California's &I River
Basin \\there residents welcome the
industry as an alternative to their
unstable lumber trade.
But S4 square miles also proposed
for exploration are off the coasts of
Ncwpon and Laauna Beach -square
in Badham's district.
Badham did not SIJO the com-
prom asc proposal or part1c1petc in
final dt5CUSSJOns that resulted in
Oranae County's exclusion from the
Mesa joins fight
against oil rigs
Costa ~c-sa·s Cat) Council vo1e-d
4-1 to back the fight b)' Newpon
Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach
to keep 011 ngs awa) from the Orange
County coast The beach c1t1es are
battling a federal plan that would
open S4 square miles of ocean floor
off the Orange Coast to potenual
dnlhng as pan of a compromise with
011 producers
Councilman Donn Hall rcfuse'd 10
support the resoluuon e\plainanp.
that he didn't ~hevc C'osu Mesa
should get involved
moratonum beau~ of has oppos1-
t1on to offshore 011 dnlhng
But other lepslato rs say a com
promise was necessary to maintain
protection for most of the coastline. If
the monuonum is allowed to e'p1re
this Sept. 30. the enttre coast rould ht
offered for 011 and gas exploration.
i\nd Han ~hcvcs Badham'!> lad
of pan1c1pat1on m romprom1se tall\
-whether due to a lack of 1n1e~t on
his pan or b«ausc he and others -.ere
shut out b) kc) neaouaton -
resulted an Ora nae Count) 's m-
clusaon among the ~an floor tracts
10 be offered to 011 compana~
"We wert' not represented when
negottat1on were going on ""lov.
something mus.t be don(' 10 tum at
around ..
~ewpon Stach. Laguna Stach,
H unu ngton Btac h and Sant 1emente
formed a coala11on 10 block the
proposal The\ have raised mon('\.
hared a coordinator. conuictcd legi\-
lators and other Orange County ctty
councils. and organized Ctttzen op-
pos1t1on an the form of ralhes and
petition dnve'\
Badham meanwhile. ha!i been
tn mg to arrange a mectina ~tween
the \\ h1te House officials and the
state Congressional delegation 10
d1~:uss the compromise which he
bcheve1 as a "poh11cal dilemma "
Orange C'ounty 1s a poht1calh nch
area, Badham said. Its ovcr-
whclminah Republic-an base helped
make Ronald Rcapn president and
he does not believe 11 WISC to offend
th('m "About l -1 the people of th1\
pohttcJlll) nch area arc definitel)
opposed to tha proposal That's
co 11\ polmcall} ·· he -.aid
The mecun may take place tbe
v.ttk of Sept 9 after Con~
~onven Badham wd H e'1
hopeful that Re n h1m~lfwlll meet
wnh the oonatt~ional delepuon.
Brotherhood focus of murder'trial JEFF
ADLER'
Bandit beats
anti-crime
activist's son Member of 'ruthless' prtsongangon ----eat pen ty trial in Orange County
"For an Aryan brother, death bolds
no fear,
Venpnce will be hi" thouah his
brotbert still here,
For the bt'otllethood mean JU!tt
what it irnphea,
.\ brother's a brother, till -that
brother dies.·· -tnm et. er.I ., et. Af71MI .. ,.,.. ...... ,.
n. ~an Brotherhood 11 a lhad· owy, white supremacist ori n aana
that o~tcs 1n1tde and outside the
walls ofCa11fomla prit0ns. notabfy in .
the On.nae county an.d Lona Beach
~ Oetcribed u .. Nth1e .. by state
pr aon officials, the Aryan
BrotherhOod bas become the f4 of
• death·pcna.lty murder ttiaJ that
belln last .eek n Oran County
upcnor Coun. Gana member J h M ichael
''Little J~" O'Rourtcc. 37, 1a bcina
tried for the 1977 ho&aun layina ofa
Lona Belch drua user ~hevcd to
have been involved in the robbery of
a p~·run drua distnbution nni. Riclwd Wayne Helt wu found 10
the oerkana lot of the Hununaton Bcad1 Ce-nual 1..JbrJ,ry on Talbcn
A venue with bjs cbe t blown open by
a sho.,~n blast fired n close ranac.
His ri&ht kneecap also had been
blown oft". the Cillina-card that
marked Helt u a victim of the Aryan
Brotherhood.; accord.ins to pros-
CC\lton.
The P"J is believed to ha~
fonncd dunna the late 1960s 1n San
Quentin and Fobom pri ns to
pro-vid '*hJte pn n inmates fcty
apinst a ult while promouna v.-h1te
-
racism uuide the state pri10n system,
accordina to a 1978 state report on
pnsonpnp.
Today, the PDI numbers about
200 members and affiliucs inside
prison wallsand uncounltd members
on the strtets. Oana immbcrs. *ho
sometimes have the doubt li&htnln&
bolts that marked Adolph Hitler's
elite SS troops_dunna Wond War II
lltoocd on their n are 1nvohcd
pnmarily in d:Nt traffi ·OJ both an
out and ofpriton. CApla1ncd AJ Reid.
a ICnior special t With u-e talc
Department of :orrttuo n pccial
ICrVlCCS unit •
But the pna's tc0pc of rnm1nal
invotvcmrnt also 1nclude1 bank rob-
NEWS PERSPECTIVE
buic$., rnidentJaJ robbene 1n which
victims arc usaulted, narcotics of-
ren ion of apons and
U£loS1vcs and contract murder.
'Thctt 1ndiv1dual commit senou
en mes on a m.;or sale." lbc 197
pnson pna n:port concludtd.
"I would dncnbe them as ~ina
nsthlt "sa•d Ga') Nelson. a 'poke,..
man for the \talc Ofpertmcnl of
(Pl--... BROTBSa/ A.2)
Al OrMge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. Auguat 2i. 1885
VICTIM BEATEN BY BANDIT •.•• F.-Al
WamJ)Jer. wboee mother thwarted
a robber last year at another of the
family'• buaicaaa near lbe county
park. it listea in 11able cond.ltaon todaya&fowuaio Valley Community
Hotpital.
Police aid \bey were unsure W'hcther WatnpJ,er wu attacked be-
c:&Ult be tried to foil the robbery.
A Santa Ana man. tdcntafied u
Cwtlt Mack. lS, bu been cbarscd an
the ancident. He was arrested rtear bj1
bome on suspicion of anncd robbery
and attempted murder. He is bein&
held today at Oranac County Jail.
Acoord.tn& to pohce, the robber
entered Mife Square Liquor, 16567
Brook.burst St., ahonly after 7 p.m.
and uuulted Wampler, 2S. with a
1CTewdriver.
'111e IUY apparently Wl.S SWlfllllla
around whh the ac:rewdri ver and be
(Wamp_Jer) put up his arms to defend
himstl!. He w11 stuClk 1 couple of
u~" explained Capt 81U DeNisi.
"The IUspcet then arabbed I bottle and bit Wampler over the head," be
aaid.
The band.It took WamJ>ler'a wallet.
which contained about SI SO io cashl
and 1Ded away from the commerc:ia
complex in a blue Chevrolet sedan.
Mack, dnvlJll an 1denucat car, wu
arrested by Santa Ana poboe several
hours later.
"From what J've been able to
d~termine, the suspect is known by
thl victim. He was u.cked down
qwckly because we had a oame to 10
on." said DeNisi.
Accordin& to police, Wampler suf-
fered laccrataons on his arms and
head.
Wampler's father, Clyde Wampler
of Hunun11on BcaC'h owns ~veral
bus.ancue1 clustered around Male
Square Park and has previously
complained to pohoc about the need
for.inereaxd p&LrOI •
The businessman's wife. Helen
Wampler, wu confronted by a robber
la&t year 1s 1he worked in the f.amaly'1
Mile Sauare Oif\ Shoo.
Tbou&h the 6-foot taJI bandit
cwmecfbe bad a aun, Mn. Wampler
reportedly pushed lum out of the
shop, telhna tum to "act lost, ..
accordma to a witness.
When the man protested and said
be needed money, Mrs. Wampler
reportedly replied. "No. you don't
need our money "
PoHoc later speculated that the man
didn't actually have a aun. However,
they said 10 most cases it is &ood
advice to comply walh a bandit's
demands
Summer weather due to return
Summer ttmP91"ature1 •• •icpect9d to r9turn to 8outhetn c.uromi. and tut Into the weetclr'd, .. Wit"* tempwatur.
NYWM the cooler WMther of the put f9w d9y9, forecutere Mid
today.
TM eunny aklee wtll r.maln, and ctMr .... .,. PfOJ9ct9d for
the mountain• and dettrt•. aald tht Natlort., w .. tl'let a.rvto..
The wanMr t~turee are tM r.ult of • hlgfl pr...Ura
eyetem OY9r Southern Callfotnla.
In the coutaJ ., ... , low cloud• ar• ~9d atono the cout
late tonight and Thurtday morning. Othatwtaa It wtll be fair
thrOUOh "Thurtday with hight In the loww 70t et tht ~and
near 90 In the warmer Inland ., .... Low. of 87 to 87 ct.grMa
w.ra pr9dlct9d.
Tht moYntaln region• w«• axpect9d to be fair through
Thurtday
U.S. Tempe
HIOfl, IOW IOt 2• hou<t to 6 • M "' IO ...
13 57 .,
u .. 74 IO
IO 17
It IO .... ....
IO 13
IO U IO 17
17 11 IO .. ,, 7•
MANHUNT BEGINS FOR HB MAN •••
IO
102
13 • 74
t5 80
7) .,
71 ..
"11 " .. ... ,
12 41
7• II homAl
couple may° have tled the country
Ernest Smyth, one of their three
sons, said be last saw has parents Aua.
9 before they left on a weekend trip to
Catalina Island.
U.S. District Judae Pamela Ann
Rymer issued a no-bail arrest warrant
for the electronics enaincer last week
after be failed to appear for an Aug. 14
beariQ&. However, Smyth's trial date
remained scheduled for Tuesday in
cue be showed up.
Sayina earlier that Smyth probablX
"absented himself \..roluntarily, '
Rymer ordered a status meeting Aua,.
26 to decide whether to postpone or
abandon the trial without dismissin&
charges. She bas already ruled against
tryina Smyth in absentia on the JO.
count ind1ctment delivered May 16
by the federal grand Jury.
Assistant U.S. Attorney William
Fahey said Tuesday he will secJt to
collect the SI 00,000 bond posted by
Smyth. who used b1s Cotuit Circle
home as collateral. Fahey said the
house, worth about $500,000, could
be seized if the bond is forfeited.
The prosecutor refused to discuss
the scope of the manhunt. but satd.
.. There arc a number of agents out
looking for him. It's a case that has a
high pnonty with the U.S. Customs
Servic:e."
Smyth, president of Milco Inter-
national Inc., is accused of illegally
shippina 810 krytron switches to the
Heli Corp. m Tel Avw without
special approval from the U.S State
Depanment
While the timing devices can be
used to tnager nuclear weapons. they
also have non-military al>plication~.
such a.s for oil drillin,g eqwpmeot and
pbotocopr.· na macbmes.
Smyth aces 15 counts of vtola~a
the Arms Control Act by exporung
weaponry components and l S counts
of making false sutements to the U.S.
aovemment.
Fahey said each iJlegal export cha.rac c.an:icsa.mu.unum penaJty of
two years imprisonment and
SI 00,000 fine. A five-year jail
sentence and S 10,000 fine is the
maximum penalty for each false
statement charge.
Fahey said be would be updating
Judge Rymer periodically on the
search for Smyth. who pleaded inno-
cent on the p o unds that be didn't
believe a special lic:eosc was needed to
sell the k.rytrons to lsrael, which
maintains the cwo-inch-lofli timer
has not been used for nuclear
purposes. l
Defense attorney Alan Croll ~swell
as Smyth's relatives said they haven't
beard from the missing couple, ap-
parently last seen by son Ernest, 29 .
"I have no idea where they are. I
Just hoi,>e ~·re OK," wd Ernest
Smyth. 10 a bnef telephone interview
last week.
The Associated Press reported
quoted Fahey as saying that be was
told by family members that Richard
and Enulle Smyth left for Oital1na
Island on their JO.foot saiJboat.
However, the vessel was docled
behind their house this week, WhiJe
Ernest Smyth said his parents took a
commercial boat.
Fabeyclaimcd Tuesday that hewu
misquoted. He added that, ··a lot of
family members arc tellin& a lot of
people different thinp."
Smyth wu vacauoruna with his
family in Europe and had planned to
attend a Nonh American Treaty
Orpnizatio_n confc~ooe in The
H.,ue, Netherlands, when U.S. Cus-
toms agents announf'Cd the indict·
ment.
A member of NATO's committee
on aerospace iuidance systems,
Smyth bolds a aovernment top-secret
security clearance and wu recently
honored by the U.S. Air force for
meritorious service.
He is a lecturer at University of
Southern California, where be re-
ceived bis doctorate in engineering,
and be was pan of a governmcnt-
sponsotcd scientific excursion to the
South Pole.
In earlier interviews, Hatbor Mu-
nici~ Court Judfe Brian Carter. a
board member with Smyth's com-
pany, described his associate as an
"honest. moral and patriotic guy."
Carter said Smyth, facinf up to l OS yea_rs imprisonment and S .6 million
an fines, was depressed by the indict·
ment but vehement about clearing his
name.
. .
'
... 72
87 ee
71 ,.
70
71 .,
10$
74
t2 n
M
5e .,
"' 811 ..
87
75
71
IO
" 911
71 .. •2 52
78
103
Ta " IO IO
17 ..
It 16
17 .. 11 11
Tl It •a n '4 11
'' n tt n • 11 •1 11 11 to .. . n .. Tl Ill
IO 1J .. n ... .
1t ..
71 M
"'-'tlClt .. 17
..,, ltnwdlno IO t? ...~ .. 57 ....... IO IO
..... Nw IO IO ~Cf'\11 10 ..
T.,_V~ .,.., ,,
y~ .., ..
Tide.
TOOAY l'lrethltfl 1.11 a.ft\. "·' l'1rll IOW 1:07..,,. 1.4 hootid hlgll t~p.111. u ~tow •·•apm. u
TMUMDAY
'"" lllgll 2 • , &A u Arlillow 7 ... a.m 2.1
~.. 2"42 p"' u
a-'CI tow IO'.JO p.m. 0.1 aun .... •Odey 11 1:13 p.m.. ,... TIM~ m I . 11 t m end _.. tOtlrl ..
712pm ~ -~ .. 10.11 p.m..,...
TlllnMy el I 1t P"' end .... aeMI 91 t1·110111
SALARY HIKE FOR BOARD •••
homAl
aaency directors and department
chiefs. The raises average about 8.6
percent.
Under the new salary schedule, the
county's highest paid employees will
be District Attorney Cecil Htclu.
County Counsel Adnan Kuyper and
Environmental Management Agency
Director Murray Storm. who will
each earn $88.046 per year.
County Administrative Officer
County officials' salaries
ELECJ'ED AGENCY OR DEP A.RTMENT BEADS
Thstrict Attorney Cecil Hicks
Sheriff-Coroner Brad Oates
NEW
SMOKING LAW REVIEWED ••.
~ Parrish 1s not included in this
years schedule of increases. He wa
took over as County Administratjve
Officer in June at a salary of$90,000 a
year.
Tu Collector-Treasurer Bob Citron
Assetsor Bradley Jacobs
Auditor~ontroller Steve Lewis
Oerk-Record.cr Lee Branch
SALARY
$88,046.40
$79,019.20
$72,779.20
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
PREVIOUS
SALA.RY
$80,496
$67,392
$68,182
$66,269
$60,570
SS9.426 (salary def erred
pendina
reorpniz.aton) From Al
audltonums. restrooms and indoor
service Imes such as an banks and
grocery stores. Restaurants with ca-
pacity for 40 or more patrons would
be required to designate at least at
least o ne quarter of their seating
(excluding bar and patJo areas) as a
non-smoking area.
If the measure 1s approved, ITVlne
employers would have 90 days to
implement a written sm oking pohcy.
Employees woutd be allowed to
desianate their 1mmedaate work area
as a oon-smokmg zone. At the least,
smolang would be prohibited in
conference and mectmg rooms and 10
at least half of the employee lunch-
rooms and lounges.
The issue did not d1vide the four
remainm& council members accord-
mg to their personal smoking
preferences.
.. , must st.a~ for the record that J
smoke and I smoke a lot,.. said
Councilwoman SaJly Anne Miller.
"But J do not have a problem WJth
this ordinance ...
MilJer descnbed it as "restnctivc
and ncc.cssary ·• She said 1t might
even prompt her to quit smokmg.
Councilman David Sills said he is a
non-smoker who docs not permit
smoking m has law office. his home or
has car.
But Sills sa1d he wanted to consider
a voluntary smoking policy program
that could be supervised by local
business associauons. He also qucs-
taoned whether Irvine's ma1or em-
ployers were aware that the council
was considering a new law that would
impose smoking regulations on them.
Councilwoman Barbara Wiener, a
smoker, also said she wanted to
rcv1tw a voluntary smoking pohcy.
Wieder said sht' voted apinst
ra1S1ng her own salary or those of her
four colleagues because no uniform
method or formula for seuing super-
vasors' salaries was recommended by
the Grand Jury or the County
Administrative Office.
"Unul we aaree on a method to
adJ ust (the supervisor's salanes). I
will be a no vote," Wieder exphuned.
.. It's a matter of pnnc1ple. We need
some sort of proc.css to set these
salanes. J c,an't give you an honest
answer on the (dollar) value of th1s
office."
Jn a repon to the board on
executive compensation, Pamsh told
APPOINTED AGENCY OR DEP A.RTMENT BEADS
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper $78,832 $88,046.40
Environmental Management Agency $78, 146 $88,046.40
Director Murry Storm
Public Health Director Rex Ehlin& $73, I 12 $79,497.60
Public Defender Ronald Butler $70,SS4 $79,019.20
General ServicesAaency $71,448 $76,273.60
Director Bert Scon
Social Services Agency $63,419
Director Larry Leaman
Fire Chief Larry Holms $62,878
Personnel Director Russ Patton $62,795
County Probation Officer $64,917
Michael Schumacher
Communitr Services Aaency
Director Wllliam Baker
S5S,266
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
$70,907.20
$58.988.80
BROTHERHOOD FOCUS OF TRIAL ••. homAl
supervisors that the recommended
SSS,000 per year annual salary is "stall
below Los Angeles and San Diego, but
John Wayne Airport Manager
Murry Cable SS4,434
$48,818
$58.Jl IS.20
>52.104
Correcttons. which carefully track'
the five ma1or pnson gangs and their
members.
But Nelson said the gang's in-
Oucncc has waned since its heyday 1n
the 19705 "The Aryan Brotherhood
i'i not a ma1or d1srupt1ve force as
much as It used to be.' he said.
The other ma1or pnson gangs are
the Mexican Mafia. nominally allied
wtth the Aryan Brotherhood; Nucstra
Fain1ha, a second predominantly
Hispanic gang; the Black Guenlla
Family: and the Cnps, the newest and
largest of the pnson gangs, which
draws its membership pnmanly from
the ranks of black Southern Cah-
fom1a street gangs. Nelson said
The Aryan Brotherhood requires
that Its members be white and
hardened pnson veterans, sometimes
rccru1trng from the ranks of Jailed
outlaw motorcycle gang members.
Investigators lookrng into t~ gang·s
act1v1ties also found there 1s a clo~
affiliat1on between gang membc~. its
sympathizers and white !>upremac1st
organizataons outside pnson walls
Membership and leadership 1n the
~naarc granted to those persons with
'strength and cnm1nal ability, .. often
those with a great propensity toward
violence. according to state pnson
officials.
"A strong ant1-au1honty theme 1~
commonly demonstrated by the
mcmbenbip," the report on pn$0n
pnpadds.
Just Call
642-6086
..._., ,_,. " 'f°" °' "°' ,_. ,.,, 1)109 "' • JO p"' CAii WCY• 1 o "' *'° 'l'Oll' caoy .... .. --911
Instead of a membership last. the
gangs photograph themselves and
circulate the photographs among
fellow gang members 1n other jails.
That way, gang membership can be
confinned when inmates arc trans-
ferred from one pnson to another.
ln the O'Rourkc case, Deputy
Dtstnct Attorney Thomas Goethals
has told1urorsO'Rourke was running
a png-sponsored heroin distribution
nng on the streets of Long Beach to
nusc bond money for gang member
Dann) Cavanaugh, who was in
federal custody on bank robbery
charges
True to tts credo that "for a wonhy
brother, no need is too great, .. g.ang
members on the out.side of\cn en·
ga$ed an 1lhc11 or illegal act1vit1es to
nusc bail money for their Jatled
brethren, Goeth.aJs said.
In fact, after the drug nng was
robbed. O'Rourke allegedly turned 10
fellow gang members for help m
track1na down and punisbm& the
culpnts, the prosecutor said.
The key witness 1n the tnal 1s
expected to be Kenneth "Tree"
Waterman. a former a.ana member
now held 1n protective federal
custody. who said be flew down from
Oakland to help o·Rourkc r~hc
culpnts and admits he wu nt
when Helt was shotgunned to th.
Other wttnesscs expected to testify
durin,a the tnal -under heavy
sccunty because of png-related
threats on their hve!I -mclude
more reflective of the responsibilities
former gang members o n ce ofsemnaasaboardmemberforthe
numbered among the leaders who sit second largest county an the state."
Clerk of the Board U.nda Roberts
A~culturaJ Commissioner
B11J Fitchen
on the Aryan Brotherhood's council. The Orange County Grand Jury
They arc expected to tell jurors that also issued a repon this year urgjng noted that supervisors now earn less
O'Rourkc admitted killing Helt dur-that supervisors receive higher than 4S 9 county employees, includ·
1ng a council meeting held at the salanes. ing top agency directors, depanment
Cahforn1a lnsutuu on for Men at Supervisors m Los Angeles County manaters and, in some cases, their
Chino dunng the late I 970s earn $73, 769 per year whale San own udes.
Diego County superviso"' arc ""'d "Current compensation levels tend Already, one former gang member, ... ..--
$48.693 SSl.979.20
holders after Parrish repo~ tha1
"aJthoujh Oranac County is the·
second Carsest in the state, most of our
qency~partment beads ra.nJt be-
tween third and eighth in compenu-
tion.''
Stephen Barnes. has testified that the $56,348 annually, according to Par-to discouraac applicants for this
nsh and the Grand Jury repon on position who are not retired or However, in approvina the revised
gang ordered his father murdered 10 supervisorial compensation, which financially independent," the Grand salary schedule, the board alao opted
retaltation for his renouncinJ his was released last May. Jury report on supervisor1' com~ to require appointed mah.qen to
membership and becoming a witness However. Pamsh ursed that the pensauon concluded. "Adoption of acknowled&e they ltf'Ve at "lhe sole
in other tnals against other gang board not move forward with similar our recommendations WJIJ serve to pleuure o(the board."
members s cal"ber In both state~mom~ and local 10,000 increases 1n 1989 and 1991, open the position to top a as recommended by the Grand Jury. people in mid<arecr who want to The waiver aU execut1ve manqera
county jails, 0 icials attempt to ff those !1Uscs were ~&}gved, surv:r· make available their services to the are expected to sip to obtain the segrcgat~ png members according to Id $7 uaJ t ""thout s ffien'ne ma•ior •• 1._, increa--"""'Uirea they 1ur-thc1r affihataons to man1m1ze pnson visorswou cam • ann y,a coun Y -· u ... .., ..... , -·-:id
gang violence Aryan Brotherhood 6S percent increase over their current financial sacrifices." render their riabU to appeal an qree
gang membe'rs, for instance. are i.ent \alary level. Supervisors voted to immediately to be diuniued by the board "'at any
to either San Quentin or Folsom In recommending a $75,000 an· incrcuc the pay scale for qency and u1.n·1!1~. without notice, cauae or bear-
pnson when oossiblc. Nelson said. 1~n;:u;:a;;;l;;;sa=Jary;;;;;;;;;;;;;le;:v;;;el;:. ;:t::h::e=Gra=::n=d=J::u::ry==d::e;;part==m::e;;;;n:;t::c;;;;h:;1e::fl;;:s :;a::nd=e=lected==o=ffi=c::e==:;;: .. ===========~
One reason for keeping the enas I
i.egrcgated as that tbey keep Iona 'hat"
lists naming members of nval gangs
that have been marked for murder.
The need for keepmg the ganp
separate is pointed out by the 1978
repon on pnson gangs, which docu-
ments the k1lhng of a Nuestra FamiJia
gana member marked for death by the
Mexican Mafia:
"The contract was filJed by two
Aryan Brotherhood membe,., ap-
proximately one hour af\er the victim
was transferred to the Cahfornaa
Jnstltullon for Men." it says
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