HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-28 - Orange Coast Pilot~~:. ~~-• .. ------t
.
....
i-,~TOllOMOW: . -...
I"
-WARM ,
FOMCAITI ONA21
Serving Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Huntington lueh, lnlne, Llguna leach, Fountain VtHtJ and loutlt Orlftfl CouMy
-
~, P A "' r .> -. r J , .._. r f (.AL 1F(1RN IA 1J• ·.~1F -.~,,,., :. .•.. • /1 · 111. • , '"..: ~.·.
. I ~ . Stalker patrols.beefed up
Many county residents repor~sighting
elusive suspect wanted in 14 killings
creased 1he1r hehcop1cr patrols over and their families." said Hunung1un
unancoporatcd communattcs hkc Bea h Police Chief Earle Robauulle
Mmaon VaeJO and El Toro. who ~ad he stts nothing wrong w11h
Nearly 100 people contacted the c1t1zcns keeping fi~arm\ as long as
shenffsdepartment late Tuesday and • 1h~ are 1ra1ned 10 u~ them By STEVE MARBLE
0. .... .,.., .........
Three days after the N1~t Stalker
struck for the first tame in OranJ.C
County, fear continues to build while
authorities step up efforts 10 trac"
4own the unpredictable killer
In Irvine-. police have increased
patrols and have ass1jncd pcrsiohnel
to handle the Oood of telephone calls
Coaat
A city traffic report con-
cludes that the flow of
sun-worshippers flocking
to Balboa wlll soon be-
come too much for tt\e
limited streets./ Al
California
A commuter plane has a
rough landing In Fresno
after a propeller becomes
Im bedded In the wing./ AS
Nation
Actress Ruth Gordon
dies at her home In
Massachusetts./ A4
Mlnd&Body
What's In a name? Ask
· colul!lnlst Linda Algazl In
Help Yourself./ Al
Food
Do-ahead recipes help
takethe laboroutofyour
holiday menu.C1
Sporta
'-The Angels do unto Balti-
more as Orioles did to
them./81
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Food
Ann Landers
Mind & Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televlson
Weather
A 14
A3
A12-13
84-7
A14
86
88
A 11
85
C 1-14
A 11
A9
AB
A9
.A3
88
Bl-3, 8
A10 A2
from womcd cllazens and those
cla1m1n1 to have spotted the lanky.
curly-haired man responsible for 14
n1ghtt1me slayings
"Everyone 1s paranoid:· LI. Pat
Rodaers said today ··1 can't blame
them."
Orange County Sheriff's deputies
are s1opp1ng susp1c1ous cars dunna
the prc-<lawn hours and have an-
early today 10 report prowlers and The N1a,tlt Stalker manhunt has
susp1c1ous-lookin1 persons. Lt. Dick resulted an more than 2 000 UJX or
Olson said reports by c111zcns who claim 10 ha\.c
Police in Huntington Beach have seen the killer. said a spokc!>man for
been besacsed by c111zcns wanting to the Los Angeles Count:. 'iheraffs
form Neaa,hborhood Watcl'\ chapters ~partment 1ask forl:e estahhshcd 10
and seekana ad111ce on S«unng 1he1r truck 1hc mass \oiler
homes Although po!1ce and depullC'> ~1d
··1 certainly can't fault anyone for they are 1reat1ng all leads a'i 1op
having onccm!> about themselves pnonly. most 1f not all the calls ha"e
Peace lnalde a hangar
Newport Beach Mayor Phlllp Maurer. left. •ten• hlatortc 9ettlement between the city
a nd <>ranee County over J ohn Wayne
Airport u Superriaor Tom Riley and Gary
Proctor. c halrman of the Airport Com-
mlulon, look o n . Story on Paae AS.
OC Fair Board seeks an end
to amphitheater noise bill
ByTONYS~VEDRA
Of !tie Deity"°' Ii.ti
The Orange ( ount) r aar Board
asked state Sen. John Seymour 01i
Tuesday to drop has Pactlic
Amphitheatre noise ball and lei the
state Attome)' General\ office work
on lowcrina the volume at 1he
outdoor arena.
In a letter sent to the Anaheim
Repubhca,-,, fair officials po1n1ed 10
the board's recent demand that the
amphitheater comply w11h ( osta
Mesa's noise hm1ts or be found an
v1ola11on of 11s 4().year lease
The 18,()()(kapaUI} rnncert arena
I\ pmalcl} o"ncd b> Nl'd-Wcst Inc
ol Los Angeles, whKh rents the land
from the slate-owned Orange Count)'
Fairgrounds.
.. II 1<; lhe board's an1en11on through
tht• .\llorne> General's otTice 10
d1ligentl) pur<;ue the enforcemt>nl ol
the language of tht> lease v.ath the
Panfic .\mph1thea1re:· board pres1·
dent Clinton H OOS(.' \lated 1n the
letter
The letter also said board members
unan1mousl} agreed Senate Bill 125.,
which would allow the Ul} of C o~ta
Mt•sa to regula1c amph11hl'atl'r no1..e.
'-"as .. no longer nel:l's..an or rc:-
4uircd ·· .
Fair -;po~e\1Auman Jill Llo\d 'klld
the aL11on v.a' taken b} a board
un"ilhng 10 \hare II\ authoral~ "Ith
the Cit\ which ha\ no 1un'>dac.:t1on
o'er 1h·e fairground~
\t'~muur\ b1ll 1'> strongl> opposed
h\ offiual'> from olht-r stall'·O'-"ned la1rground~ 'AhO afSUC II '-"OUld <>et a
precedent lor allo"1ng local go ... ern·
mcnt 10 regulate lhem
In an apparent efTort to head-01T1he
(Plea.e .ee FAIR/ A2)
been dead-ends
•Pohce an founuun Valloy were
told that the N1gh1 Stalker wu h1din1
1n a department store
•Shenffs dcput1C$ wcrt asked 1f 11
"'as true that the N1Jht ~thlker had
ta1all)' shot semeone 1n Cosui Mesa
•~umerous c111ans contacted
ne1Aspapers thanking that a hom1c1dt-
an .\naheam was the v.ork. of the
Stalker
•San ( lemente police rcce1..,cd 19
reported s1gh11n15 of the Night Stalker
'-"htk Inane rece ived 9
(Pleue eee JlflGBT I A2) Sketch of killer
1 ;900 in limbo
after Sg~. York
cancellation
Ford Aerospace tyaits
for Army instructions
o·n what to do next
By SUSAN HOWLETT
OllMD.-y ..... lt.ft
.\bout I 900 '-"Orker!I at ford
~t'l'Ospacc & Cornmun1cat1on ( orp
an Newport Beai;h arc uncertain of
their future employment 1oda)
Secretary of ~fc;n')e ( a\par
Weinberger on Wcdncsda)' canceled
1he Army·s SI IS balhon contract '-"Ith
Ford 10 produce the Sgt. York batik
gun -a major project an Orang~
Count >
-Man ~ of the employee~ first h..:ard
the announcemen1 on the radio a\
thev drove to work Tuesda\. E:.arh
news repons lold lhem that 1he
mass1' e defense project the)' beg.in
seven ~cars ago at four loca11on'i 1n
Orange Count) was being tc:rm1n-
a1ed.
Managers at the Newpon Beath
plant on Ford Street. the Ford
-\erospace test site east ol ~n Juan
Capistrano and two ol. the Ford
.\erospace !DIVIDI loca11on\ an
Irvine held samultaneouc; mcc11ng.!>
Tuesda\ altemoon with the cm-
plo)'ecs' v.ho were working on the
proJect Ford Aerospace rcgJOnal
spokesman Don Flamm said. He said
su pen a~rs are stall awamng word
'rom the .\rrm on what to do nnt .
.. ancc II was an .\nny project.
"'e're v.attang fer the .\rmy to issue
formal instructions ·· Flamm said. He
)lad the employ(es v.ere amvmg for
v.orl.. 1h1s moman_& ana that they w11l
lOme to work. as usual untal they arc
t'1ther transf~rred or dismissed.
Ford Aerospace spokesman Tom
Momsse)' fM!ld the workers ass11ned
Ford Aerespace worken
still In shock by their dla-
pl&cement Story A3
to the battle gun project .. are a bat 1n a
state ot shock" an the aftermath of the
lederal announcement
.. This "hok thang has not been
v.eU-coord1nated The people really
don "t I.no~ an}tntng ,about ,. bat"s
going to happen ··
.\lthough the dec1<;10n to hall the
anu-aarcrafl s~ '>tern orders as a s1gn1fi·
c.tnt mo' t' 1hat ,. all have certain
(Pleue .ee SGT. YORK/ A2}
Officials a wait word on
pair held in Nica rag ua
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IN D.itr l'llot llefl
l '> olliuals "ert" Jnx1ou'h J\\.J1t1ng \\111d 11i1Ja, nn thl· fall' of
former ~ngl' Coast ( ollegt' 1m1rut tor L cul a.lt·unc'-.c JnJ h1'> "1fc1
Dolore'> lour da~' alter 1he' rrpont"Jh "t'rl' '>t'I frn· tH "1caraguan
offic:aab
Tht'\ rnuplt' had Ileen ht'ld pn,onl."r \!Ott" tht· tJpturr 111 aheir
disabled 65-loot I.etch ~ah1nt' on ~ug ~ ~t 1ht• t1mt• ol 1hc1r ~1Lurc
the' v.erc sailing from Florida lo< >rangt· < uni~ '' hcrt LaJcune~\t'
intended 10 re'>ume hie; ~urat1on larc:t•r
'orma Harms a l \ \tall' IA.·par\Jnwn1 .. 1lic1al said from
~ ash1ng1on D ( toda' thal \ht: "a' great I\ tontemcd· IX'cau~ the
LaJeunt''>~'> had nul Jrtl\ed in 11on h' l uc"4fa' n111.ht alter
(Plea.e aee COQ1»LE'S/A2)
Reagan rej~cts
q~otas of shoes Oil oppon~ntS tour pJatform
·SANTA BARBAR~ (AP)-'Presi-
dent Reagan today ref used to impose
quotas or raise tariffs \0 protect
America's beleaguered shoe in dustry
against low-pnced imports Ooodina
the market. 1
lntcad, Reagan said he would take
steps to put pressure on forc.ian
governments to open thetr markets to
more U.S. &oods. To accomplish tha1.
Reapn said he wotJld invoke a
section of trade law allowing the
government itself to file unfair trade
complaJnts against offenders an spcc1·
fie instances.
The U.S. tanff on imported shoes as
now 8.8 percent. ~
The pre ident's action s im-
mediately auackcd by re sen1a-
uves of shoe-producma states.
Badham, coalition update perspective:
Irvine Co. joins off shore drilling foes
By LISA MAHONEY
Of lMDeltf ..... 119'1
Proponents of offshore oal drilling
on Tuesday took 1he1r political enem-
ies on a tourofEdath. Che-..ron·~1att'·
ot:the-a n oal platform ,
Chevron officials and represcnta·
uve<; of the Western Oal and Ga\
A socuuaon 1ook U.S Rep Bob
Badham. R-Ncwpon Beach. Boh
Gentry and Evelyn Han. two mem-
bers ofa coastal coahuon opposed 10
expanded dnlhn,i-and Chns Towns-
end of the Stean-BnefGroup around
the hugr otl dnlling platform which
stands oil the l'ua'>t 111 H untangton
Beach .81115<.hrcahcr J Radham aade.
said to<la>
Meanwhile the lr\lnd tl hro~e ats
-;1lenc1: on the olhhl>rl' oal 4uc.,11on
and oppo!>ed drallang oil the Orange:
C oa'>l \ letter ha'i heen \t.'nt tu l 'i
lntrnor ~rttan Donald P Hodel c;a~ ang that the · 1irm suppons the
~tretan ·, effon'> to 1nc:rea\t' urallang
opt'rat1'10' nil the < alifornaJ ll>a\I.
hu1 c:ompan\ ollil1JI\ hche'e Orangt'
( ounl\ \hnuld he ~epl clearul further
011 ng'i T ht• ktter '3\'i lnl rea~·d
drtlhnir .('c.wld '"thn.•aten the en\. lfl)n
Sort '_s injuries a living nightmare
Mot h er wan ts driver w ho delibera tely hit
bicyclist toknow the dam ehe h as donc
Lois Rufer awakei. every mom1n1
al\d recall o nce apan that 11 wa n't
JUst a bid dream.
IC dawn on her ap1n that her son
wa dchberately k.noc:ked off his
btqiclc la t month by• pa 1n• car in
lf"anc and that he 1s st.au an the
hospital. leamina how to walk and
how to talk.
he recall• httk thanp. hke sttina
her son svetchcd out on has h01p1tal
bed in an 1ntcn l\le care umt tr)1n. to
pronoun« the word "b~e" ond'IJvtna
up the effon 1n fru trauora
Wall he be OK? he dotsn't know
He he suffered hraan dama e" 'ihc
a_n't surt.
1"--=
Will the pohcecvercatch the dnvcr
who purposely swcr.cd into the back
of her son'' 10-spttd bic)de? Prob-ably not. _
.. , don't -.int \lenicance,.. l\e 11.1d
rttcntly at her Fountain Valley home.
'Tm not an an I, I do think Ftomblc
thanpofthcm, ut n'sdone h 'so"er.
"I do w1$h I could to talk to them
and sholf them what thcy'\>c done.
Take them to the h p1tal. \O the
1ntcn ave care ward and say. 'loo!(
what you'"e done to my n.
.. That's *hat I rqrtt mo 1. I
wonder 1f they will even know what
they did. Do th~_y JU t th1nk , 'tlcy. we
JU\l knocked offi baker tod y'r Ord~
STEVE
MAIBLE
Nf ws FoLLO WUP
o l .1 rqlular "orkout On Mal \nhur
Boule,arJ 1ust \outh ot the trec"a\.
a ml·tallal blue u1r pulleJ behind
Rukr
.\llord1ng 10 pohc:e. the t ..... o men an
lh\.'~M hei3n \elhn1a1e11her Rurl•ror
h11t: l('male lnend Rufer' mother
doc n'1 Jouh1 that her \On P'C' the
dn\('r anJ ha, pau~n r ··\Orne hp ..
Th<' car spc-d up. \v..ened into the
markeJ balle lant and chppt'd Rufer.
wnnt'~ told polu.·C'
the_y thank about 1111111'!" • "from C\('t)thana f''e heard. I
Tht momma or July 29 taned hl\c oodouht that the 1n1cnt1on.-lh .
ruullnely for Ja.me"t Rufer. a 3.S·)car· put~o\tll rammC'J ham w1\I\ 1hr1r
old t)pt tttrwhohadmo\ltd kin t:ar. ·Inane OcttttnC' Peter Lanton
wath hts mC>thtr this e-ar 1fkr \81d "'It wa n't 1n acradC'nt ·•
chan1>01J . Ruler was throv..n from h1\ t'ia~e
Ruftr. an ardent baqch \, ll"fl 'itnkana ha\ head on the paHment
home early "Ith a fnend and rode hn T ~o mot<'lmt\ v.ho Qv.. v..h11 h.ip
I ().,peed h1c}clc 1ov..ard In int n part (Pleue ... CTCL18T / A2)
mi:nt .rnd 4uaht\ ol lif(' '-"hllh hl'lp'
~uppon this ctlunl\ ·., vthr.tnl grn"
mg cconom\ ··
BadhJm got rx·rm1'>'>l<ln Ill 1t1ur lht•
nal platform I\\ gel \Orne rx•r\flt'l ll\l'
on thl' qm•\t1on ot c'panding Jnlhn11
''P'-'ra111)n' off the Orangt c 11a,1
\chre1her \Jad
\llhough Badham rt'111J1n., 11p·
po'Kd 10 alln" ang tht-otl 1 ndu,tr. 111
ma~c funhc:r inroad\ an nrangt•
C ount\ 5.:-hreabc'r c;aad lht• '1\11 lll lht•
pla1lnm1 IA.t\ U\C.'IUI hct3U\C' II g.l\t'
lht' t11ngrc-.-,mJn and t>thi:r' 1ln lht
1our J first -hand look al lht• tl'\ h·
nolng\ u~d 1n Cll:lral·lln~ 1111 and @.J'
trom underwatrr tral ''
.. I thin~ 11 ""'" help \\ht n prt·~·
l'ntan~ tlur l11~ 1ln "a1u1dJ' ·
'X hrt•itx·r ...itd
Jama Rufer
Radham "Ill Join with a ho')I lll
other 'ifX'.1~( r\ hoth tor and against
npandt'd ml e,plorat1on at a meeung
\\.1th I ntcnor Sctrt'tar. Hodel ~hed
ukd tor 11 a m \a1urJa, at ~cv.pon
Beath<''' H.ill
Hodd " anunng I I l alafom1a
, llll'' II' h11ld w~n hall ml't'tinp,s on
v.hl·thn tht· kderal go,ernment
\hould dap deeper into offshore oil
rr"4·n c'\ "h1\ h ha' c hc.-en pmll'\. teJ
IH J t11ur·,ear dnlhng moratorium
\I\ ol the I)() tract\ 1cnta11' ch
prupo<,t•d tor e\pandl"d l \fllOrat1on
an '\<''eral mile" 111T lhl' Orangl·
( 03\I
Badham '"" m\."t·1 "''h Hodel tor an hour or more praur In lhc · turda~
ht•annit \chre1her 'iaad Bac.1ham will
(Pleaee eee OIL/ A21
Arrest ends
cri111e spree
8)' ~l ~Al' HOWLETT
DI IM o.a, '"11e4 11 ...
.\ 1l•t•n-.1t(t' ullllllt v.h1). tailed
thl·m,t•h l'' Ronn it•.\. C hdl' rc:maanc:d
in li)l.lll lU\tr~h tn<la\ after an allegoJ
natann" 1c.1l· l I lml· Sflrt"t.'. ,,r more than
'10 arm('J rohhem.'~ finalh <:au1h1 up
w11h them an Huntanftlln Bea<:h
R1,ht'n l harll" \\ind. I 11. and hts
17·\ear-old 'irllncnd allcacdl)
hrou1h1 thC'ar anlan1 dau tncr alona
during \h<' \( urt\ 1lf, nme" The> are
\U\P<'\ \l'd 111 an,wht•rt from SO to 100
armed ro~nt'\ 11nd other cnme•
.. oCTumng all o'er tht-United "tate
ac1ord1n1 to Huntington Rc~h
P1lltu· \&\ Patn1 k Ciildca
\\ 1nd Ind ha\ t1r1ft1Cnd WC'tt Ir·
JT\IC:J ial ~ D m .\ . 17 foUowma an
CPleue -·ab1mm1 d)
...
...
A.a* Onnoe Coat CWLY PILOT/W«Jr-..day, Augutt 2a. 1985
NIGHT ST~KERPATROLS BEEFED UP •..
holDAl
•A Huntsnaton Bach ~oman tolu
pohcc she re«1ved 1 telcphon( call
from • min cla1min1 to be the N1&ht
Stalker. telhna her she. would be Tus
Stolen car discovered i n LA
out v1ct1m. A stolen car rtponedJy dnven by the N1&)lt St.alktr when he iruck 1n
Dunna a Tue!d.ay afternoon pre s Orao1e County early Sunday wu round this momma abandoned on a Los
cont'trencc. hcntTBnd Gates asked Angeks street Just west of the downtown area.
~tt«n~ to prol«t \hemtclvcs by The oranic-Toyota 1tation-wqon. stolen Saturday in Los ~Jes tnd
lock1na all doors and windows 11 then ~n later m M1ss1on Viejo. was impounded about 7 a.m. after a c1titen
maht. lcavma on porch and backyard notified pohce. s~ud Los Anaelcs Police spokesman Sc!Jio Diaz.
liahts and tnmm1na shrubs and The car was moved to Oranae County where 1t 1s betn& ~tored by the
bushes that could be used as a hidin& · Orange County Shentrs Depanment ll 1 lot in Santa Ana.
place by a prowler. ... Authorities said investiaators are performina a battery of tests on the car.
.. We want todoeveryth1ngposs1ble . Dia~ said the car is the same vehi~le that police thr~u1hout. Southern
to decrease the chance of a second Cahfom1a have been searching for since 1t was seen ,n M1ss1on V1CJO.
incident .. said Oates who aJso Police said at least one witnes~ saw the car in the area of Chrisanta Drive
announced that his dcPartmcnt has where 29-year-old 8111 Carns was shot in the hc;uJ IWO times and his fiancct
been stoppina su1p1c1ous cars dunng raped ~arty Sunday.
pre-dawn hours since the lateit N1Jht The car was stolen Saturday m Chinatown. police said. Dia? said the car
Stalker attack. was found today in the Rampart d1stnct. one of 19 reporting districts in Los
"We don't know how or when he Angeles. m1aht stnkc next," said Gates. who Authont1c~ did not say 1f anything was found inside the car or whether
descnbed the attacker as a cunning the) have been :ible to lift finaerpnnts from the vehicle.
but unonhodox scnal killer who may • ' -By Steve Marble
thnvc on the fel\r that has spread 1n
his wake.
The Night Stalker 1s blamed for 14 cond1t1on today at Mission Com-
lull1ngs and 21assault&.1ncludm1 the mumty Hospital in M1ss1on V1eJo.
kidnapping of four youngsters who His 29-year-old &Jrlfnend. who has
v.ere molested. The stnn.g of violence not been 1dcnt1tied. 1s bean& guarded.
began m February and now stretches by dcpuues. Gates said.
from San Francisco to Orange Cuon-Members of the Los Angeles Task
ty. · Force on Tuesday issued an updated
The latest 1n the Night Stalker's sketch of the Nilht Stalker. The new
stnng ofk1lltngs and attacks was earl}' drawing adds a black baseball cap but
Sunday on a quiet, residential street other features hkc the man's gapped,
tn Mission VieJo where Bill Cams was stained teeth remain consistent with
shot twice in the head and his ftancec an eadier composite.
bound and raped. Los Angeles County shcntrs Lt.
Cams. 29. remained m critical Dick Walls said the killer may have
'BONNIE & CLYDE' ...
From Al
armed robbe7 at the Radio Shack on
the comer o Beach Boulevard and
Talben Avenue. Gildea said!
Three officers 1n the area said the>
amstcd Wind after he was found
crouchtn& 1n the back scat of a parked
car with his 8-month-old daughter
near the scene of the robbery. Hts
girlfnend was behind the wheel,
Gildea alleged.
"They spotted him 1n the back with
the baby." ytldca said He said the
officers ·recovered a four-inch. blue
steel revolver 1n what police believed
to be the getaway car that was parked
1n a lot near the Radio Shack where an
unspecified amount of. electronic
equipment was stolen.
Wind told investigators at the
Huntington Beach City Jail that he
tho.ught he had killed someone in
Georgia. Gildea said.
"He admitted to what he thought
was a murder 1n Georgia where he
kidnapped a guy to stcal"h1s car, shot
him in the chest and left him for
dead," Gildea said, "Then they went
on a cnme spree all bvcr the United
States.··
Further mvestlgauon turned 1 up
information revealing that there was
a warrant out for W1nd·s arrest for
robbery. kidnapping and aggravated
soqom-v in Georgia. Gildea said.
the. BaJdwm Park couple 1s
suspected of armed robb!:nes 1n ~tlanta. Ga.. Baltimore. Md .. St.
tou1s. Mo .. J.ackson, MISS .. Odessa.
Tex .. Las Cruces. N.M .. and San
Bernardino, Or:angc and Los Angeles
counues within the sta1c.
"They referred to thcms<lves sev·
er~I times as 'Bonnie & Clyde,'"
Gildea said. "lt'was like they were
proud of1t."
left a s1m1lar baseball cap behind
where he 1s believed to have killed his
first v·ct1m. Dayle Oquk1 on March
I 7 tn Rosemead.
A navy blue cap found at the
murder scene had a silver patch
embroidered in red, with a lilhtning
bolt and the letters "AC-DC," the
name of a J?<?PUlar heavy metal rock
band. he said.
Gates said his officers will dis·
tribute to Orange County dentists the
dental charts believed to belong to the
Ni&ht Stalker.
Supervisors' pay
h ike gets final OK
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors. as Qpected. voted Tues-
day to gJ vc themselves a 22 percent
pay ra1st beginning in January.
W11h the same 4-1 margin by which
the pay hike was approved tentatively
one week ago. lhc board avecd to
raise ns five members' salanes from
'$45.612 per year to SSS.000. The
matter was adoped without com-
ment.
Supervisor Harriett Wieder was
again the lone holdout, opposing the
incrcast bccaµsc the board-ftiled to
est:abhsh an outside method or for-
mula for setting board salaries.
The Orange County· Grand Jury
first sua&estcd supervisors increase
their salaries earlier this year after
determining board members earned
less than their counterparts in both
Los Angeles and San Diego counties.
FAIR BOARD SEEKS END TO BILL .••
From Al
bill. board members noufed Ned-
Wcst this month that the company
had allcgcdl) breached nine
prov1s1on~ m the March 1981 lease.
Most of the alleged violations deal
wnh bu1ldmg complaints as well as
the reported sale of alcohol to minors
and the concert noise spilhng into the
nearby Mesa del Mar and College
Park neighborhoods
The amphitheater has been given
until Sept. I 3 to correct the alleged
violat ions or face legal action. Fair
officials would not comment on
whether the state would attempt
ev1ct1on orocced1ngs.
Seymour's proposal was in·
troduced 1n March on behalf of the
city of Costa Mesa. which has fought
unsuccessfully over the past l 1h years
to harness the noise allegedly flooding
neighborhoods adJacenl to the S 12.5
m11l1on amphitheater.
C1t) attempts to prosecute Ned-
West under Costa Mesa's noise
ordinance have been stymied by the
arena's 1mmun1ty from local laws.
Sc)mour. who has not yet recei ved·
the letter. said this morning that he
has no mtcnuons of wttbdrawtng the
bill -at least not yet Rather. he will
monitor the board's cffons to solve
the noise problem over the next few
months.
.. I applaud the board for recogn1z-..
mg that a probfcm exists. It's a
pos111ve first step." Seymour said.
''I'd like to see them follow through."
City Manager Fred Sorsabal said
this mom mg that Seymour would,.not
withdraw SB 12 57 without ~ta
Mesa's consent, which will not likely
be givtn anytime soon.
"We would not be supponive of
that until there 1s some action
accomplished by the board's nouce of
default:· Sorsabal said. "We're con-
cemed Ned-West could take the state
and the Fair Board to court over the
lease and it could go through another
(concert) season."
Scheduled for a Senate committee
heanng last week. the bill was P.ulled
by Seymour and held ovcT unttl next
year because of fears that 11 would be
defeated. t While the proposal survived
scrutin) by a Senate ag"ricultural
panel. tt 1s having problems getting
through the Appropriations Commit-
tee. described by a Seymour aide as
the "strongh ol d " of the
amphitheater's lobbyist James Gar·
ibaldi.
Supporters are also fighting a claim
that the arena may have to close 1f
forced to comply with Costa Mesa·s
noise ordinance. costing the fair·
grounds $200.000 in annual revenue
from its share of parking fees and
other charges.
CYCLIST'S INJURIES A NIGHTMARE ...
From Al
pencd tried to chase the metallic-blue
car but lost 1t 1n traffic
Linton said nobod) thought to
wnte down a license plate number
.. , came home at about 4 pm. and I
remember the first 1h1ng I nouced was
that Jim's bike "'asn't 1n the garage."
Mrs. Ruftr ~td "It sounded an
alarm I knew he should have been
back
.. I opened the door. walked inside
and almost 1mmed1atcl> the tele-
phone started nngine It was the
hospital. They said Jim was 1n an
accident I asked them. 'How bad.is
he?' They said. 'Real bad ·
"l picked up the phone and threw ll
across the room. It was msttnctive. I
guess. There's no wa y I can even
descnbd rhe shock "
Rufcr'was 1n a coma for nearly four
da) ~-The skull fracture caused his
brain to swell. pushing the two
hemispheres toaether and causing his
body to all but shut down
"T remember the da}' he wiggled a
toe." his mother said ··You can't
bchevc how eitc1ted a famtl) can ~et
over something like that It was hkc
watching a baby m slow motion ..
The accident caused a chain rcac·
lion of events 1n the woman's hfe Her
a1ltng 83-year~ld mother. who was
ltv1ng 1n a Newport Beach con\ale~·
cent hospu.al. had to be moved into
Mrs. Rufer's condom1n1um.
"There juSt wa,n'l enough time to
v1Sll Jim two or three ttmes a day and
then dnve down to Ncwpon Beach to
1Ce my mother She was being
o.u, Piiot
DellYery
I• Qu.,antMd
Mot>oer ,,.., " '°''
r'OI ~ '°"' 1)110.-Dy !. JO 0 "' , •• °"'"'' 7 0,., ~ '°"' CtVy • ci. ,......,..,
depnved of ~In$ her daughter. so I
moved her here w1th me.'' Mrs. Ruf tr
said. "Now I have to care for her ··
Her youngest son was mamed in
Philadelphia m June and Mrs. Rufer
had planned a reception for her new
daughter-in-law 1n August.
··we had to cancel ll," she said ... 1
feel homblc My new daughter-in-law
1s out here watching after my mother
and trying to console the rest of us. It
wasn•t supposed lo be that way."
Mrs. Rufer. who was widowed
several years ago. said the series of
upsets illustrates how. "one stupid.
brutal act of violence can demorah£e
a close. loving family ...
After showing signs of improve·
ment. Rufer contracted a bacterial
infection that appears to have stunted
his progress. His speech has im-
proved and he 1s able to walk •··
haltmgl}' He sttll recalls nothing of 1
the accident.
"Thcrc·s a question of permanent
damage to the bratn. The doctors sa)'
he should get back 80 or 90 percent.
but 1mag1ne losing I 0 percent because
1~0 hoodlums knock him off his
bicycle," Mrs Rufer u1d. "Wh y
should he ha ve to lo~ I 0 percent')'•
She said her son w1 II have to enter a
rchab1l11atton ho\p1tal when he
leaves Fountain Valle-. ( ommunat y
Hospttal
"He doesn't know that yet. and I
hate to even tell him." she added.
Mrs. Rufer said she doesn't care
particularly if poltce ever catch up
with the men who 1n1urcd her son.
Lota Rufer
"Bui 1f 1hc> did. my recommen-
dation to a Judge would be for them to
\Crve ttme at a place where people arc
phy"call) and mentally handi-
capped. I'd hkc them to sec m}' son
trying to pronounce a word with four
nurses hangmg over him.
.. I'd hkc for them to feel the pain 11
cause\ me to \tt my '50n walk1na
down the hall. dragging one foot
behind him. -end then realm~ that
somebody did this on purpose ...
Circulation 71.,M2-4333
Katen Wittmer
General Manage•
I
CleNtfled adv.rtltlng 71•1M2-M11
AH other depertmenta M2'""'21
MAIN Ot'PICI
llO w ... Ser S• C.O.t• "'9N CA
loll Id«-lo• '!o80 Coe•1 M.-CA 9?9411
'"'0.' --0 , " '°" -'° "O! ~ -rllUI c:«'Y o., I e ,.. c • c..i!!rt
Frank Zlnl
Ed•IO•
AOMm•tJ Churchman
Controt•er
c~ 1913 o-,.. c-1 ~ ~ NO
-ttl)r... tll-..,.,Or .. I -'!• 01 ..,_.,,,..
-· '*'.,.. "'*f ~ ·-oo.ic«I """'°"' 909( W ·
-fl/I M11'1<'91" -
• 0 a ,.. r,.,. COO'\'
M 9CI
Clrcul•tlon
Tel•~•
A~ L. CentreU
PrOCUCll()(I
Ml"ltQe'
Donald L. Wllllame
Circu11tl0r'I
Mll"l•Q•'
..,..-0'!0 c;I•• ooe•1111 o-<0 •• Coe•• i.w.. Ge·~·
(Ii,.. •U IOOI ~""'°"Of-·• I& 1' _.""'v 111' .... troo--,
..,,,..
Ch"OI Co..nt, ··-~
Howard Mutlenaty •c ,.,,, ng 0.1eei0t
Peggy IMvln•
CteU.l Id O.rte1or
l ..,J.4 "<>A' ..... VOL. 78, NO. 240
...
SCX1th9fn Calltorne Wiii remain hot Ttwrtday, with 1111 nloht
and Mrly mornlng low cloud• burn nq off to hlgh1 tn the 801 and
DOt. Except tor• lllght eooltno tt9nd, llttl• change In the weelh•r
pattern II upect9d OY9f the next MV«al daya, lhe National
WMt~ Servloe Hid. The mountain• will warm to high• In the 80t aft., Iowa In the
mld-501 and upper 801 TM dtMft• wlll rano• from lowt In the
UPS* 40t throuoh lowet 801 to t\lgha from the 901 to 114 Frorn POlnt Conception to the Mulcan bordtr: lnntr watera -light, vartebl• wtnd1 throuoh Thurtday tile.pt tor eouthwe1t
10 weet a to 18 knots In tht t.,.ntng hours. Southwest ewell 2 10
3 fMt. Low etouda tonight and Thur1day morning t>ecomlng moatly tunny Thurtday alternoon.
107 eo
•
U.S. Tempe 1. .. Vtet•
Lllllt Rock .. " •O~~ ,,_ONTS
Louievm. 82 eo
Wtt"' -Col<!~ HIOll, IOw lqr 74 P>ou<• IO •• M t.MMOll<• .. ..
"' Le MIMll IMGll 85 ,,
0CCIVCltO -yy Slt"O"I'~ &.r AIOMy 19 •• MilwtultM ao 63 S"Clwt•t s:la " " 111u Sl'IOw z..~qu. t4 " M~81P1ut 79 15 "'."'' w .. ,,,.. s.<-.,,... t ,..O•• v S C..c Cir-• • " 10 43 ....... ¥\llt " MefW. .. 41 """"°'IMN 13 7J t7 u BilllOP Alltnte 71 IWwYo-1! 14 .. u Calif. Tempe Allenttc City .. oi.i-...cu., t2 .. Bl\11,,. tot t4
A~tin ~ 1S C•t ... ,,. ,, .. O<Nhe 12 13 a.nmor. 13 64 Ollel\clo 87 72 H'9fl 10w 10< 2• hOutt 9nclt119 at S lOtlO ~II .. 8t
81ttni11QtW9111 IJ t1 1"1111~ 14 '4 t.loNOVt• t01 .. ..__ ,. ee P~• lot .. em MO"I~ ee 51 ._ M H "" .. c::t;: ,. 5! 8&lltttl..icl " 87 MIW-8$ 81
loelon t3 .. PO<ll .Me t3 S9 ,.., .... 92 52 ""-'hK" 19 ...
lkl"elo 15 ., P0<11tnO,OI re S7 Freet!O 101 et Onteno 100 10
CM!* 83 55 l~•t• 101 et Palm Spn11ga I~ 19 Pt<MOtnot 8$ 64 91 70 Cbet•ton,S C 93 71 = .. ee Loa A~ P...0-" ..
~on.W V ti 12 Clly eo eo Olk19ncl 71 St ....... s1c1e 101 ..
Cl\tnolle N C 83 .. Reno 81 53 PNO 11011681 100 56 9111 kil\arOino 100 .,
~ 83 56 AocllMono .. 91 A.a'""" M 56 ,.,, ~ .. .,
IO 83 $1 louit 81 93 R.OWOOO Coty 75 54 ,.,,_ 77 St
Ci!IOlnNll 1t M Sll'tl•T9"'tP9 .. 78 ~ 99 53 Senta Cru1 73 64 e....._, 78 SI sec;1-10 92 S6 T-Yallty IO 4l S•" Lelle Coy 97 • Col..rnbue,Oll 78 $7 •• S111nu 74 55 'l'~t•V!y Ill II SMAlll-ll4 San otego 84 Ill C-d.NH 14 " San Juen. P R 81 78 9111 F1anc1aco 97 ~1 Otlll-FI WOt111 OS ,, 9"111t 6ll n Santi aaroar• 81 57 Tides 09yton 78 57 81\rewpo<t 03 88 Slocklon 80 t3 °'"* 8ll eo SIOUX Ftllt 78 ee .
OM Molnee 82 113 Spoic-.. 92 HIOll. IOw IOf 24 110\IU et1dlng et 5 p m
Bartlow 105 73 fOOA'I' Ottrott 17 eo Syr~M ,. 64 ''"'low 3 tO a m ~7 Oulutll 74 43 TQplllte 82 91 I)
1!1Pet0 " ee Tucaon 102 74 F1111n1n 830t M 4&
,llfl>&M• 57 40 rui .. 91 ee Sec;on low 2 40ptn 2 I
Fargo 75 48 Wetlllngton 84 97 Surf Report Second n1gn 848pm 94
FleQttatl 13 50 Wlet>lla 80 87 TttulltOA'I' Otllld "8c>ldl 18 64 Wltlt ... Batre 78 59 flltt IOW 3q.,., ·00 OraetF1111 LOCATIOH llH IHAP11 13 $1 HertlorO 13 68 3·11 , . ., 10 07 ."' 4 1 Hlillllngton IHcl'I f111:;:yl\
Helene 83 " Extended R•-.i.lty. NtwPOrl 1·10 ljOOCI Sec low l 19 p"' I e
Honolllfu 90 77 40lllSlrMt ~ • 10 gOOd S~OlllQll 9 25 0"' 83
Sun Mii IOOly II 7 24 P f'I Hc>WtOI\ II 72 22nd SlfMl ,,._l>O'I 1.tO QOOO ··-lndJ4Npollt ,. 5" Fett 111roug11tneWMkeno ••ceo1 iete 8tlt>oe W.Oge . 12°15 QOOO Tnur.aey It e 24 a m and Ml• agtln ti
J ICll-.Mt LllOU'llBeecll 2·• ,,,, T 23 p"' \ 17 M nignt eno morntng tow GIOuda eno tog ~1· 2 ... lair Mooa llMt lodly at 8 5e p M Mt• II Jac:ll-vtle 90 72 _, tile COM1 Htgl\1 renglflg lrotn 1,,.
~ mtO 70. It Ille~ IOe w.,mer .... 11., temo eo 5 31 a m T""'.Oay and ,_ age.ti II ,,..,_. •• 1(-Clty •1 84 lnNltld •tlleyt '--tnOllly In Ille IOI Swell dwecuon. eo..tn 7 29ptn
OIL DRILLING FOES TOUR PLATFORM ...
From Al
use the breakfast meeting w1th Hodel
lo be sure "he clearly understands the
m_compatability of t~e oil drill!ng ..
with Orange Countr, s ocean views
and tourist industry. 'Schreiber said.
"We feel confident that we can
convince Hodel this is an improper
placement of drilling ri~ ... he added.
The Irvine Co.. with vast un-
developed landholdings· along ,the
coast between Corona dcl Mar and
Laguna Beach. is the second develop-
ment fi rm to come out against new oil
exploration off the Orange Coast.
The Stein-Brief Group of Laguna
N1suel spoke against more drilling at
a Congressional sut>committec hear·
,mg in Washinaton D.C. last April.
A.fter months of study. Irvine Co.
ottic1als determined that more 011 ng'i
off Orange County's coast would be
undesirable. President Thomas H
Nielsen said . _
The company's stand..:... hke that of
the c•tal coalition -supports
1ncrea~ dnlltng but questions the
wisdom of including Orange Count}
in the deal.
"While we do not question the
intent of this compromise. we do
question its equity in light of Orange
County's prime coastal resources."
the Irvine Co.'s letter says.
"The current proposal nghtfull)
recognizes that some coastal areas are
such siJnificant resource that no
drilling 1s appropriate at this time. We
believe that the Orange Counl.Y coast
is an equall~ s1gniticanl resource and
11 should be treated equally 1n the
compromise plan.'' it said.
The compromise which resulted m
the 150 tracts which were chosen for
renewed explorauon. ·was hewn by
the Interior Department and mcm.
bers of the California Congressional
delega11on.
The compromise protects Big Sur.
Monterey Ba y. the Farallon Islands.
San Francisco Bay and Point Reyes
from drilling.
Nielsen. like coastal coaht1on
members. believes Orange County·s
coastal re\ources arc cqual:y precious
and should be included in an ex-
tended dnllmg moratonum.
SGT. YORK CANCELLATION ...
From Al
impact on the f uturc of the large
aerospace firm. "it 1s not a closc-the-
busmess type of dectSJon." Momssey
said. Flamm said that Army officials
held meetings on the mauer late
Tuesday in Washmgton. D.C.
Officials at the Newport Beach
plant had not yet heard anything
about those meetings this morning.
he said.
About 1.900 of Ford Acrosoace·s
6,0000rangc County employees were
workini on the gun that the Arm)
Operation Test and Evaluation Agen-
cy concluded was inadequate for
growtng military demands
Flamm said 64 of the guns have
already been delivered. The govern-
ment originally ordered 146 of the
Sgt. Yorks. he said.
The Sgt. York battle gun. named
alfter World War I hero Sgt. Alvin
'l ork. 1~ d~~1gned to protect armored
column\ from air attacks. The
weapon 1s made up of two 40mm
chassis and linked to a computer and
a rad~r S}Stem. Flamm said,
In the prehm1nal) plans to order
the systems. the .\rmy had hoped to
order 618 of the guns. but early
independent tests indicated thert
were some problems with the weapon
that resulted 1n a reduction of the
amount oidcred 1n the copt_ract.
COUPLE'S SAFETY DOUBTED ...
From Al
supposedly being set free Saturday.
The voyage to Puerto Limon m Costa
Rica was estimated to take about 55
hours.
Harms exprened doubts that they
had been released.
But a spokesman for Rep. Robert
Badham. R-Newpon Beach. "d1~-..
closed repons from an cycwttncss
that the couple had depaned Satur-
da) afternoon but intended to sail to
Panama instead of Costa Rica.
Badham's spokesman said that
By J. C. HUMPHRIES
Cert.in«/ Gemoloriat. AGS
I AM A DIAMOND
.AND I-m v~ry proud
My Ufe began deep in the
"womb'' of blue rocks hun-
dreds of feet down In an ex-
tinct African volcano. Men
and machines blasted many
tons of rock and sent it to the
surface, where other ma-
chlnes cruahed lhe rock until
they found me inaide.
After my "birth," there was
little chance that I wou.l(j
someday arace a lovely piece
of jewelry. For, you .ee, 80
percen t of all diamond.a are
con1Jdered not aooq en0ugh to
be gemstones. My lesser "rela-
tives" t-nd up ln lhe sharp
too la of mduatry. (We
dl.amonda ~ the h.arde.t of
all n.tural 1ubltanc:n, you
know ff I may brq a btt.)
OrK'e I made Lhe lfade ., a
mston•. I wQ cut, faiceted
and poliahed until 1 wu lovely
enough to be ~nted to 1()-
dety ., a brUllant reflector
;nd bender of God's Uaht
rays How proud I am now. to
have ~n found wol'th)' of
Lhe name DIAMOND! I know
I shall make tomeOM ve:ry
happy Only th n will I have
~allud my d lilly!
Amcncan cmbass> officials 1n Ma-
nagua reported that a Nicaraguan
national told them he saw the couple
leave. They told him they were going
to Costa Rica. he said.
But embassy officials won't be
satisfied until the LaJeunesscs arc
found safe. Badham's representative
said.
Nicaraguan officials refused to
disclose the radio frequency on the
boat. Harms said. and declined to
1tive information on the status of the
craft. which had encountered engine
1rouble pri or to being boarded by the
Nicaraguans
..They told U\ "'e ~hould be content
that they told us that (the LaJcu-
neucs) had left." Harms said.
Harms also said It 1s "ludicrous"
that the Nicaraguans detained the
LaJeuncsscs 1n the first place and
then refused to permit US. Embassy
officials to v1s11 the couple to de-
termine their well-being.
made unusually
~ diamond
with a 83 · pt center
diamond and 36pi. In
iamonds lnlaJd In the ,
mounu.na 136~~·
J. C. JJumphrie~ Jeweler~
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY ~~) 1809 NEWPORT Bl\10 , COSTA Ml!SA
SIHC! t946
BankAmtr1Ca1d-M11ter Cl'lerge PHONE,.. -~1
ti -.
BuuE TIN BoARo
--------=-----
Red Cross spaghetti
cook-off at El Toro
One hundred teams arc e1tpected to ~rtlciP.tc
in the American Red Cro soaabeu1 cook-off
planned Sept. IS at El Toro Manne Corps Air
StAtion. Onnd pl"\7e 1n I.he competition is S l ,000.
Be ides spa~etti, visitors to the cook-off can
sample the ltahan bread, delicatessen items and
sandwiches, Italian ices, pizza slices, beer and
, sondrinks offered by vendors.
Tickets for 9 a.m. to S p.m. event arc SS and will
be a va1lable Sept. l. Children under 12 ycan of•
will be admitted for fne. Additional infonnation is
ava1lblc by callif\I 1he Oranae County Red Cross
Fundnusing Department, 83S-S38 l, extension 3SO.
Mulcal enmme. probleiu
"Httops," a comedic musical dealing with peer
pressure, fear of reJcction, drua and alcohol abuse
and sexuality, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. ~Y at lrvine Meadows. · Th&: story was written by arammy nominees
Ernie and Debby Retuno and Robb and Valerie
Rigg. The Reth nos, aJso produocrs, have wriuen and
produced 1he "Kids Praise Album" series, and Robb
Ria 1s a 1eacher at Dana Hills. Collaborating on the
music W1th the Ret\Jnos was C. Barny Robertson.
The fiu perfonnance is sponsored by the
Calvary Chapel of Cosa Mesa. Gates open at 6 p.m.
Communication tnafaf'W
Las Olas Chapter of International Training in
Communication will meet Sept. 10 at the Grinder
Restaurant in Westminister. The orpnization is
devoted to 1mprovina communication and guests
are welcome. Additional information is available by
calling 848-7430 or 842-9569.
Folk dancln6 Satardayw
The public 1s 10 v1ted to Israeli and tnternationaJ
folk dancing every Saturday night at the Seal Beach
Community Center, 3333 Cloud St. in Seal Beach.
Cost 1s $4.SO. Call Manlly Brame at 859-8344 or
Beth Brown at 533-7667 for funher information.
Clul•tbm Women
Saddleback Commumues Chnstian Women's
Club Wlll hold its monthly luncheon Sept I Oat noon
at the Hohday Inn in Laguna Hills. The theme
"Spm~ing a Yam" WJll feature a demonstration on
homemade sweaters Swallows Needlenest of San
Juan Capistrano.
Luncheon and nursery reservations must be
made by Sept 6. Call 364-3201 or 49S-4263 for
luncheon reservations and 495-8584 for nursery
care. The luncheon costs $7.50~ nursery care is free.
CPR work•llop .et
Eam cardio-pulmonary resusc1tat1on certifica-
tion following a four-hour workshop Sept. 28 at
OranJe Coast College.
"CPR for Citizens" prepares part1c1J)ltnts to
take action in unexpected emeraenc1es and those
complet1na the session will receive a certificate
inCPR from the Amencan Hean Association.
The work.shop runs from 9 a.m. to l p.m. in
OCC's faculty house. Fee is SIS per person.-and $20
for two. For more 1nformat1on, call 432-5880.
HantJDgton cl ... ol 1~55
The HuntingtQn Park High School class of l 95S
Wlll bold its 30th reunion Oct. 19 at the Grand Hotel
in Anaheim. [nfonnation 1s av1tilable by calling
(213) 928-6772 or 923-4222.
Unlvenlty women
The American Association of UnJVersity
WomenJ.. Huntington Beach Branch, is planning a
brunch ;)Cpt. 7 at the Huntington Landmark. The
brunch o~ns the group's new ycv, with the theme
"Womens Work/Women's Worth," and the year's
program wiU be presented.
The AA UW 1s 1he laraest and oldest national
organization working for the advanocment of
women and education. It promotes equity for
women, education and self-development New
members are welcome and additional information 1s
available by calling 846-4226 or 962-3504.
wectneeday, Au&. 28
Pou cE Lo e
I w
J
Ford A:ero~pace workers 'in shock' .JI
Com pan officials say
they Will try to relQCate
the dJsplaced emplo ees
By SUSAN HOWLEn °' ...............
Still confused. frustrattd And JU•t plain
shocked, Ford Aerospace workers reponed
to their jobs today -the day after Secretary
of Defense Caspar Weinberaer brouaht the
fedcn.J ax down on the S 1.8 billion project
they have been worlung on for &he past
1even years.
"It's not the most thrillina day of my
life," satd one employee who has devoted
three years to the S&t. York battle aun
proiect.
"People are still laterally wal.k.m1 around
in shock. This project bu been terminated,
but nobody knows what that means," said
another Ford employee who asked to
remain anonymous.
ThewordaotaroundquickJytothe l,900
Ford Areos~ workers tn Ora nae County.
Many on thenreven heard the news ofthar
possible layoff's while listenma to the radio
on their way to work.
"Ri&ht now .it's juit business as usual.
.. It was a bricfina. t gucu that'• wha1 )OU
would call it. They read UI the \CXI Of
Wcinbertti'• statemeni but that really
didn't teU ua m~ H1erc were three
oorporatc suys up there that l d1dn'1 even
le.now."
Aeconti"q to Ford ~pece cl Com·
mun1cations Corp. spokesman Donald E
FlAmm, the manqement officuab who
called the simultaneous mectanp 111 the
four plants in Oranae C,ounty that wen:
wotkina on the S,t. Y otk told she workers
that the company "will do its be11" to
relocate the displaced employees.
"Manqemenl infonned them that it will
try to establish placement locally wt thin the
company." Ramm said. He added that the
workers were "disappointed when they
heard, bul they WC1"C comehmented on
producina a quality product. •
Those rcportina for the ruabt shtf\ werc
also told of the order cancellation dunni a
similar manaaement mectins, Aamm wd.
He added that most of the people bad
t)ready heard about the situation from news accounts durioa the day.
But the worken at the mecuna said that-
"disappointed" hardly summed up their
feelings. He said tbe ~ York project
workers wen .. still walldn1 around in a
daze" after they gatbcred for the mectina.
Stopping The Sgt York
•Th• O.fenM Otp1t1ment II '1oppang the Nmy 1 eHort to filtd 1 new
llr-<f•f•n• gun. tn. Sgt York
Who k.nowsr· the Ford employee said.
Manqement held meetings Tuesday
afternoon to brief lhe employees working
on the anti-aircraft weapon.
"It's not like we are aoillf in to pick up
our tut paychecb or anything like that. ~------------....--..:.l...---
We'll go to work; but as for the real world,
we could be laid off' next week. or even ~· ,
Po.rd Aeroepace bu spent ••en ., .... OD the set-Tork b&tUe pa. Friday," he said. \
Airport battle ends inside a hangar·:
By JEFF ADLER
OflM~ ........
In the end, the long lcpl battle over John
Wayne Airport was resolved not in a
courtroom, but in a steamy airplane hanpr
at the atrport's west edge on a sweltcnng
Auaust afternoon.
Three members of the Orange County
Board of Supervisors Joined three Newport
Beach City Council members and represen-
tatives from both the Airpon Working
hangar was situated so those pthcred could
watch as comme~iaJ jets or private aircraft
raced down the airport's main runway and
soared skyward. On several occasions,
speakers' comments were interrupted by
the noise of departin1 atrcraft.
City Couoc1I members were threatening a
fi&ht af effon s a.re made to reV1ve the
Manne Corps Au Station, El Toro as a
possible locauon for an add1t1o nal rq.ionaJ
airport
fn a letter signed by alJ council members
and dchvered to supervisors Monday, the
council advised that It would op~ efforts
to · cortven the ne1ghbonng atr station to
Joint c1v1ltan-m1litary use and would
"intervene 1n hugauon. if necessary" to
block such a move. .
Tenns of the agreement between New-
"Today 1s the day that peace descended
on John Wayne Airport after two decades
of controversy over the airport's future
development. Today 1s the day that the
county of Orange and the city of Newport
Beach and its resident$ settled their
differences in an unprecedhitcd settlement G~aand Stop Polluting Our Newport on
T y afternoon to formally exchange l~docum~ts~tarccx~ted~~d ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
nearly 20 years of airpon-relatcd litigation
and turmoil.
The compromise settlement -ap-
proved by all parties in the past three days
-offers Newport Beach residents a 20-
year c.ap on airport growth, seu passenger
Until the termlnal ls completed Jn about 1990, a
max/mum of 4. 75 million passengers will be
permltted, ·an increase from f hls year's 4 .1 mllllon.
limits and alJows a scaled-back terminal 1agreement" Ne"1>0rt Beach Mayor Philip
expansion project in return for guarantees Maurer proclaimed moments before sign-
that they no longer will resort to legal means ing the settlement papers.
to block atrport operations. Board of Supervisors Chairman Thomas
The agreements, a dozen in all, will be Riley said the settlement "balances 1he
submitted to bath the FederaJ Aviation impacts on the netghbonng community
Admmistration afld a Los Angeles federal (Newport Beach) with the demand for air
court judge for approval. That approval 1s transportation in Orange County."
expected 1n short order. accordina to the Airport Working Group President
attorneys who completed the settlement. Clarence Turner added, "It's not a perfect
The atrport ceremony, complete with document, but it's a document that wtll
champagne, was held 1n a pnvatc hangar serve the people of Orange County."
owned by M11Jion Air, fonnerly Tower · However, while county and Newport·
A v1ation. The large, una1r~onditioncd Beach officials were declanng pcaoc, Irvine
port and the county will permit the
construction of a new terminal at John
Wayne Airport that will accommodate 8.4
mil11on passengers per year. Until the
tenninal is completed -about 1990 - a
maXLmum of 4.75 mtlhon pa.ssengen Wlll
be permitted. a shght increase from the 4 I
m1lhon passengers expected to ~s
through the aging terminal th11 year
The number of flights pemutted by the
&&fttment 1s limited \0 39 daily departures
of no111cr commercial Jethnen, such as the
McDonnell Doug.las MD-80. wMe un-
hm1ted n1.1mbers of01ghts arc permitted by
newer tccbno l<>&)' J CU such as lhc 8S-
passenier BAe-146 -as lof\I as the
passenger cap 1s not exceeded.
The settlement was worked OUI atn<>na
the attorneys rcprescnnll$ \he vanous
JTOUps In tcercllVC DCIOUlllODS that bepn •
1n June. Talks ~n two months after a
Supenor Court Judsc ordered county
planners to ceuc l work on the expansion
unttl the proJCC't rca1ved the state court''
certificauon
In the mcantlme, the county b.ad filed a
pre<mpuvc lawsuit m fedcraJ coutta1mcd
at winnma approval of the proJect. 'fha1
lawsuit. which names Newpon Beach.
SPON. the Airport Worktn.a Group as well
as the FAA. McDonneU Douglas an4-alt the
airhne' now serving the airport or those
hopina to win landing nghts.. stiU 1s pending
1n US. Dmnct Coun.
How the settlement will affect the st.alus
of the remaining defendants in that lawsuit,
mainly the airlines scrvmg the airpon.
remams unclear, according to the attorneys
representing both the city and the county. ...
The county rcntwcd its efforts to expand
the .airport. appr<>Vl ng a revised, SI SO •
m1lhon expan1ton project tn February.
after an carher expansion plan was rejected •
by a Supenor Court Judge 1n 1982 The
Jud&t's ruhna th.at enVll'onmcnt.aJ unpact
reports prepared b)' the coun1y wctt
inadequate came in ~ponse to a lawswt
filed JOtntly by Newpon Beach and SPON
Hodel ~giees to exclude 2 more Frustacl baby . ~ won'tleave areas from 011, gas exploration hospltalyet
From staff aad wire reports
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel said
Tuesday he would exclude the· Monterey
Bay area and the Cordell Bank from oil and
ps exploration because of Opinions CX·
pressed tn a series of town hall meetings.
Hodel. who has been holding the pubhc
bearings to collect comment on a proposed
congrcss1onaJ compromise on the explo-
ratlon, also satd he remains o pen to further
changes in the plan.
Hodel 1s scheduled to ~old another
publk hearing in Newport Beach at 9 a.m .
Saturday in the council chambers at City
Hall.
Wednesday's comments came m a
speech before the Cahfom1a and U.S
chambers of commeru and 1n a subsequent
news conference.
"I ex~l. w~n we get back to Wash1ng-
1on. both sides will have a shopping hsl of
things they'd like to do to the preliminary
agreement." he said. noting his own list
would include finding tracts wtth more
potential for developing oil and gas
reserves.
"Perhaps we can change some of the
tracts and im{>rove the resource side of the
ledger," he said. "I have aslced the staff for
guidance on which tracts would be most
useful from a resource standpoint."
Six of the nine·squarc-m1le tracks
proposed for expanded offshore Ot\ explo-
rauon arc located off the Orange Coast,
sparking a coalmon of area City and c1V1c
groups to oppose the move. The coahuon
centers around the efforts by the cuy
governments of Newport Beach, Laguna
Beach, Huntington Beach and San
Clemente.
The secretary, who 1s headed for Ha wa11
for a meeting of Western itovemors. will be
back in the Los Angeles area o n Thunda)
for more town hall mcctmg.s.
The Cordell Bank, an underwater ndge
near the Farallones, and the Monterey Bay area were added-to Hodel's exclusion hst
because of tesumony at the meetJnp, ht
said. He said no finaJ decisions Wlll be made
until after he attends sax more mecuogs in
Southern GaJ1fom1a.
PreVJousl). he promised that Big Sur, the
Farallones thcmsdve~ a nd Pomt Reyes
would be protected. but wo uld go no
funher, saying: 'Tm not willing tosacnficc
the national secunt~ or the Cahfom 1a
coast."
The sccrctal) and a group of Cahfomaa
reprcsentat1vC$" had agreed in the proposed
compro~·~ that 150 tracts could be
explo red and dnlled for oil and gas "lint't)'·
nme of the tracts are ofT Eureka and only
three are between that area and San I u1'>
Obispo Count) 1
By cite AHOClaled Pres•
Pla ns tor the first of the three surnvang
Frustac1 septuplets to go home from th--c
hosp1al today were C1llCCled bccau~ the
httle g.irl born Ma\ 21 has not gained we1Jht
as quickly as expected, a hospital
spokeswoman said.
Phys1c1ans at Ch1ldrens Hosp1t.aJ of
Orange Count) ha"c decided to .keep 3-
month-0ld Patnc1a 4.nn Frustac1 "a hn le
tonier .. spolces'-'oman Laura Johnson said
Tucsda~ The bab} 's releas.c was postponed
for about one '-"CCk.
Doctors usually don't release premature
babat'S from the hospital until the) weigh
.i• to 5 pounds Johnson said PatnCl• Ann
"1\ clo'iC to the ~u1red we1gh1 ..
Patnc1a 4.nn's bro tht'rs.. Stephen Earl
and Richard Charles, a lso remain hospital·
11ed \II of the babtes we1ghed lesco than ~
poundr, when the) Wt're bom
Irvine hotel arrest breaks
national narcotics ring .
b\lrglar alleg(.(lly stoic S330 in1ewelry
frbm a home 1n the t 7SOO block of
~raldme on Tuesday afternoon • • • A resident tn the I 7000 block or
Stanley ,on Sunda) reported !hat he
observed a vandal slash the tares on a
ne1&hbor's car • • •
equipment, and $2CXl an Jewell) v.crc
reported stolen from a homt· an the 700 block of Wll~n Strttt on
"tonday. ,.
Newport Beach
The night watchman for a constfUl"
uon site at 290 I Ocean Bhd rep()rted
that tour or five Latin men ~truck. ham
in the he~ with a rock and hit ham 1n
the back of the neck \>.1th a .h4 v.halt'
he wa'\ on dut" earl\ Tucw' mom-
1ng He \Nl\ treated at Hoag Hospital • • • o\ S40U color TV wa reported
c.tolcn from a home in tht I 00 block of 'I \t 'itr«"I on T uc~a~ • • • o\ San Oaego rc\1dcnt reponed
TuMda\ that t~o \.11tcascs won h
S.:!.000 ·a \houldtr bag worth $100
and a radio ""onh S 160 were stoic~
from her I <no C ht'HOlct C amaro
part..ed in a 101at1he l·omcr ot Salb<~
Boule"ard and :!6th Strttt
By tM A.uoclated Preti
Undercover o fficers who
purcb&Jed JI pounds of cocaine from
a Maam1 man at an Irvine hotel later
arrested seven others and 1Ciled S 16
milhon worth of the 1llepl subtance,
break1n1 up what they detenbed as a
nalionwtde narootics nna. officiaJs in
81T.l said.
In all the officers confiscated 125
pounds of cocaine valued at Sl6.2
million.
The 1nvestiption ~n when an
informant &old Brea poltoe in about a
Miami man who could IC1I lal'JC
quanuues of cocaine, Detective
Martin Needham said Tuesday.
Brea poUoe, the U.S. Dnaa Enfora>
mCTll Adm1niscntioo and lbe sate
JustJcc Dcparunent's Bureau of
Narcotic Enforcemeot officials met
Poa.ntal.D van.,
Three hundred doU&n \llOrtb of
cools and a tool box wttt ttported
\tolen from tbe o~ P"IOOf a home
an the 16000 block of Hwa on
TUC$d.ay ancmoon. • • • A $325 btcyclc WU reported stOICTI
from the locl«d ~ of a home 1n
the 11 SOO block of Aquam•nne on
Tuetday • • • A bookeepcr al a Baker's Squan:
Restaurant, 16205 8roothura1 Ave,1 rcoontd Monda~ that tameone h.a
the man Aug. 8 in Las Veps and
bepn ocgotia~ buy 20 to 25 k.tlos
of cocaine. Need m said. The Del~
tiations resumed Aua. 20 at the
Marriott Hot.cl in Irvine.
Lut Saturday, qents purchased 11
pounds of cocame from the man tn
his hotel room and immediately
&n'CSted four men. Needham said.
"There ~ no P.Os, no fights and
no _mjuries," he said.
Other qents tecured a aearcb
wamnt for a Hacienda Heiabts home and found more tha.o I tO pounds of
cocaine st.uhed lheR. Needham said.
Tbn:e additioiW men were ane1ted
at the home, and one more was
apprehended in Wm Los Antiel.el. be
said.
Held in federal custody~ Rkh-
ard AJlan Jarvu, 42, of Miami;
Antonio Tona_ "'· of Miami; .
liken $2,319.67 in cash and tte:c1pts
tomw.mc since Thurlday. .. . ..
Jesse O~t, 22. of
Midwa}' C.ty wq tnutCd and book ...
cd II oranae County Jail Monday
everuna on suspicion of poacsuna
more than an oooce or marijuana.
Pohoe ~ said the officer noticed w ~uana a.fta he had t~
Goodnilht at the comer of Walnut
and Elsol for 1 traffic violation. • • • A tot.aJ of $SO ln Cash and $400 1n
J""lry wt~ stolen from a 1Hvcr 1979
BMW 320i o.f'Ud In rront oh bome
C\
Vlad1m1ro Renteria, 36, of Studio
City; Fernando V1eua, 31, ofTampa..
Fla., and JofiC Luis Soto-Ol;acio. 2S.
of Hacienda Heiahts. Nc:cdUm said.
Three othcn were released by a
federal magistrate m Los Angeles.
wd Needham. who dochncd to
disclose lhe names.
Jarvas was held on a complaint
alleaang distribuuon of cocaine; the
other four we~ held on a com~laint of
aidtna and abctt1na the distnbution,
wd Amstant U.S. Attomcy Fred
Fncdman.
Renteria and SOto.pcacio were
scheduled for a bail hcarina, Tbun.-
day; the othera CaClCd heannp on
Friday, Friedman said. The hcarinp
were ICbcduled before U.S. MIPt-
trale James McMahon.
The federal srandiury Will con.sider
the cue next week, 'Fncdman said.
Jewelry valued a1 S 1.800 \>,as
reported stolen from a home in the
9000 block of Rhodesia on Tuesda}'
The burglar also ransacked the resi-
dence. the v1C't1m told police • • • Two miniature schnauzer dogs
were reported taken from the )'&rd of a
ho me in the 20800 block of
Beachwood on Monday m&ht • • • 4. $500 antiq ue bicycle was re-
ported stolen from the Recycled
C'yclc \tore. 600 Pacific Cou1 H ash·
way. on Tuesdav ' . . Guns 1 valued at $2,075, iewelf)
va.lucd at S 700, and movie equipment
valued at SI , I '3 we re reponed stolen
from a home 1n the 900 block of 4.lh
on Monday n1aht ••• Someone ~tole $2, 00 in computer .
equipment from the Talbert School,
91 01 Bnadham. over the Wttkend
eo.taYma
an the 17200 block of Newhope Stttiet An unknown su pees pumped SS an
las1 Wed.naday. gas II • Mobtl K rvtee nation. JI 9S B-tlaftoa B•c• Harbor Blvd . and dro~e o fT v.1thou1 T~ay.fivc lllver dollars and S.S = the att~t told polttt on
injeweJry ~ stokn from a home in y. • • •
the llOO block o( Dolob.in on Tues-A man looluna 11 1d11mond at
day, the victim told ooli~. Kub Je,.tlrv tore. 2300 Harbor
• • • . Blvd.. on T~}'rcl)Of1edly ran out A thief stoat S24 1n fish.int ttar oftbc store wtth one .,onb Sl.4SO ft-om • ytUow 1972 v~ •••
P9(k.ed an front ofa home in lhe 2TOQ J A resicknt an the 1100 block of
block of Hunti~n U"eCt early 8o WayrcpontdthctbeftofaUOO
toda)', the Y\Cllm IOk! . I &om wbedroom on Monday • • • • ••• Entenna thtouah a beck wta.dow. a A S600 color TV. S 1,500 1n stttt0
•
Dean's involvement
in crash confirmed
8)' LISA MAHONEY
Ot tM 0.-. "-" ··-
The ( ahfom1a H1&h'*•> Patrol
con finned today that a man invoh ed
an a 1hrtt-ar accident on she San
Diego Frttwa) tn lrvtnc wu John
De.an III, Richard Nixon's former
adv~r d unna the Waterpte afT1Ur
De..an. 46. of Be"ert> H1Ui v.'&S not
inJurcd 1n ·the Mo nda) accident an
.,.,htch a Coua Mesa man ~-.
eJected from her car on I.ht toulh·
bound side of the ~nd t<>lltd
1n front ofDean'l Me 8en1 that
' tra,.eltnt 1n a nonhbou.nd
Nona L Wol~rton, 26. rtma1n 1n
m t1c:al conctlt1on thas mom1 ••
Founain Vall~ Communn H~i>t·
tal With hcad. lq and pelv.c 1nJuncs. a
hosp1ta1 ~pke!WOman u1d
Wolvmon wu t0uthbound on tht
frttv.-a) Just south of MacAnhur
Boulevard when 'ht tned lO chansr
lanes 1n front of a trUCk, CHP
ipokcs.man Paul C.aldwtll md
, .
The truct... which also wa~ try1n,g to
ch.anal' Ian~. cli pped the left bumpttr
of '-' oh crton \ Volk~wagcn con·
'crt1bk The c-ar ovenuined. CJCCtlng
the woman on10 the other side of thc-
fn't'way he said
Wohcrton wa~ c.truct.. ~Dean aftd
draged aboul 100 ft't't bttore he v.--a'
abk 10 stop his car. ( ald-..cll u1d
either Dean nor the trud. dn,er.
Keith 4. \.11), 32, o(V1sta . ...-eTC med
m the acetdcnt. a hlJhwa' patrol,
dnpetcher wS
Dean WJS an ad' 1~r 10 Pfcqdent
Richard . t~on dunna the Wattrpte
ndal th t~entua.llv acd to . ixon·., ~ ion to tt'Stlll 1n i974 in the face
o f 1h~a1cncd 1mpcachmcnt procud-1
' in&s. I Dan W"n~ four month~ 1n pnson1
for h•~ rolt 1n the co~tt-up · ~
He bro e open the Waterptt 1 Vf'htn ht tcsufted about tM CO'¥tr·up,1
rtt1una SJJCC1fl datn. convcnauom•
a nd action\ in dc1.a1l. befort C *
a nd a nat•on'liidt ttlcvi a aiad.
-
• . J 3 ar-rested for $an Salvador raid
SAN ALVA OOR E:.I Salvador
(AP) -Authontaes have arrested
thrte men they sus~l of bean& pan
of the let\1~t terror squad that sprayed
a cafe with 'unfirt. k1lhng 1 l people
includlna SIX Amenc.an'\, Pre11d~m
Jose Napoleon Duane 'iatd.
A fourth suspect wa'i wounded 1n
the June I 9 attack and died 1n a
hospital, Duarte ~1d Tuc'ida)' at a
news conference.
He said sccunty fo rces still were
huntina seven other suspects, five of
whom have been idcnt1hed.
A statement iuued at the new'
co.ofercncc identified all 11 su)~cii.
as members of the Central Amcncan
Revolutionary Worker's PaFty which
claimed rcspons1b1hty for the attack
I he gucmlla VOUP IS the mallc t
ot the or,an11auons mak1na up 1hc
Farabundo Man i Nauonal Libera·
t1on Fro nt, which hat been fl&hting
the lJ .S.-~ckcd aovemment (or the
-paSl 511') ydn. Known by lt'i Spanish
m1ual~ PRTC the group recently ha
been mounting urban raids
Duane's announcement came a
da)' af\er Attorney General Santiago
Mendoza Aguilar said he was rcopen-
ang the anvestiptaon mto the 1989
assassination of Archbi shop 0 car
Arnulfo Romero No arrests have
been made an the case. in which
human nghtsacti v1stscla1m a nghust
death sq uad was in volved
Mendoza A.guitar also has been
reopenang in"est1gat1on) of other
Diplomat to attend
Samantha.'s rites
AUBURN, Maine (AP) -lhe
State Department ha~ granted a
Soviet diplomat special permission to
travel to Augusta for a memonal
service for 13-ycar-old peace ad-,
vocate Samantha Smith, who was
killed with her father an a plane crash.
lnvesllgatots. meanwhile, con·
unued to look · for the cause of the
crash of the Bcechcraft 99 that went
down less than a half-mile from
Auburn-Lewiston airpon, killi ng all
eight aboard
The service for Samantha. 13, and
her father, Arthu r. was scheduled Jor
toda y in St Mary's Roman Catholic
Church an Augusta a few miles from
Samantha's hometown of Man-
chester
Samantha auracted antemat1onal
attentio n when she wrote to then-
So' 1et leader Yur.1 A.ndropov about
her fear of nuclear war and ancptcd a
tour of the Soviet Union a\ An·
dropov's guest in July 1983
Her fa ther had left his J.Ob as an
English instructor at the Uni versat) of
Maine tq manage her budding career
as a telev1s1on a~ress.
Actor Robert Wagner, wh o 5tarred
with Samantha 1n a new AB( -TV
series. planned 10 fly to Marne, said a
spokeswoman for .th( producer
"Lrme Street." but 1t was not known
whether he was plannang l<> attend the
service .
Samantha had been in London
fi lm mi episodes of the scnes and was
retumang to Maine wrth her father
.,.. hen the)' were killed
In Washington. a spok<esman for
the So .. 1el Embassy said Fa m Sec·
retar) Vlad1m 1r Kugahn planned to
attend the memonal \Crv1ce
Not
alcoholicS
th
to
~'nH· do
it \\ilh Vilf)·
.... 111, ... , and pill .....
s, ., I a l i ' • .....
lranq11ilizc ·r .....
h~ priol j(" ..... na I'·
f'ol ic ...... a rn phdc1-
rr1 irw .... ar11I
a ri t i ., I c · 11 n ........ ;i r 1 I~.
•·
·\II of tlw111 c·a1 1 lw a lH1 .... •·d lo tlw po111I of
addirtiun. \11d . \dwn takc·11 alorlf' or\\ ith a
d 1 a .... · r. ' ·a 11 l w I 1 ·ti i; ti a ... " c ·I I.
B111 tfu ·n : .... a \\<l\ 0111.
f(.., C'all··d ( :an·l .11i1. ( ::1n·l nit .... 11r1·1· ....... f11lh
tn·at..., n1on · 1wopl'· fnr :d1 ·11l1ol a11d druµ
prol•lc·rn ... thari illl\ otlwr pri\all· prog ra111
a\ a i I al, I c ·. \ n d 11 ·.... a' a ii" h I 1 • t1 I ; 1 I• w a I < ·o 111-
m 11 nit~ ho .... pit .d n1 ·ar .'1111.
But lwtc,r•· t1:•·a1nw111 •·a11 lw!!in. \ou ha\.•·
lo ("(lf'f' c·11011: . .d1 ln t"all. \11d 't11 do lliat \Oll
lia\C' lo n ·•·nµriiz1· d 1:il \011 o r .. 111t11 ·1111•: \Oii
lo\.C ' rwc·d ... I wl p.
If \011 d1111·1. \.0 11 1·;1n lw "'111°1 ' 111 ~1111 · thi11µ.
Th,· 1'•rnl•lc·rr1 \\~II w1h µ•·I \\or''"
're. talk rwr ... 1111alh \,\ ith a ( :an ·l 1111
(·ou11 ~•·lor. c·all ,,.... lrnltn at tlw r11unlwr li~t1 •cl
lr ~lo" or "all 11 .... t11ll-fr1·•· at HOO-H.) 1-0JIH.
CAREUNll
ohod ycare.'1lh '~a. w clo:
(71 .) 65()-109()
CO.'TA i\IE. '.\ :\fEUIC \L CE~TER HOSPl'fi\I.
JOI \ I( J'OHr \ 'THf ~ f
•
laymp, some mvol"in& Amencan
\ 1ctims. Rl&hnst death squads or
ruembtr of the m1htar> arc
5Uspc<ted in most of the casts.
In the cafe at1.1ck. PRTC gue m llas
drove a truCk TO l wo siaewallc car-es 1n
the capital. Jumped ofT and opened
fire with automatic wcapops at cafe
patro n . 1 Among those killed were four off.
duty U.S. Embassy Manne guards,
two Am~ncan businessmen, one
Guatemalan and a Chilean At least
IS other people wert wounded.
The Pentagon identified the
Mannes as Sgt. Thomas T. Hand·
work, 24. Beavercreek. Ohio; Cpl.
Gregor) H. Weber, 22, Cincinnati,
Ohio. Sgt. Bobby J. Dickson, 27.
Tuscal00$1, Ala., and Cpl. Patnck R.
Kw1atlcowsk1, 20, Wausau, WIS.
The Amencan bus1neumm were
Gcorae Vmey, 48, of Miami; and
Robert Alvidrez. 47, of leXJngton,
Miss. Both worlced for Wang Latsora-
torie , a computer company.
The fam1he of two of the slam
Marines said they were alad the
suspects had been apprehended. but
their rcacuon was sober.
"I'm glad they caught them but 1
don't set where it 1s ao1na 10 do me
any good," !Ml1d John Weber of
CinCJnnau, father of Gresory Weber.
"If it is the ones who dad it, I guess
I'm pleased," said Trudy Handwork,
mother of Thomas T. Handwork . "I
don't know how r feel. ..
Ruth Gordon
dies at home
EDGARTOY/N. Mass. (AP) -
Actress Ruth Gordon. whose stage
and screen career spanned 70 years
an~ included a supportang actress
Oscar fo r "'Rosemary's Baby," died
today al her Martha's Vineyard
summmer home. police sard. She was
88.
"She passed awt'y peacefully in her
. sleep," said state Trooper James
Mettaliano.
She was found by heir husband of43
yea.rs, Gar!ion f\anm, a proquccr and
author.
Her screen credns include "Inside
Daisy Clover," "Where's Poppa."
and "Harold and Ma1Jde," about the
love between a teen-age boy and an
old woman. which attacted a de voted
cult follow1ni. She was the fnendly
neighbor devil worshipper an "Rose·
mary's· Baby" and she played Chnt
Eastwpod's mother 1n "Every Which
Way But Loost" and ·· A.ny Which
Way You Can "
_ _.. \ She·won an Emmy award for an
appearance on the TV show"Tax1" in
1979
The finest
·personalized cutting
·I and hair design
possible
for today's
professional man.
20 years
custom haircutting
experience.
By appointment
645·6288
ALL-DAY KINDERGARTEN
Kindergarten thru 8th grade.
• Doof-to-do« tramporu'tion available .' • Before and after school care for
students of wcnlnc parents • Rea1«11bie tiitlon
• Daty Pf ayer • Arlttmetic, Readinc, Spt.,, (with Phonics)
tnJ.>hasiled • Good els~
An
[lementary
Private Sc hool
of
01":1tinct1on
rounded
1n 1942
IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY:
1683'Brookhurst St. (N. of Warner)
714-962-3312
Call or Writs. for Further Information
EDINGER AVE.
WARNER AVE.
RESULTS
YOU ALWAYS GET RESULTS
IN THE DAILY PILOT'S
CLASSIFIED SECTION
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 642-5768 M-F 8AM-5PM
ORANGE COAST
·Daily Pilai
Suspicious fires disrupt
Grand Central Terminal
By TIM A11~llied Prnt .
NEW"'YORK -Susp1c1ous fires 1n (our j unk~ nulroad cars spew~
smoke throup Grand Central Terminal today, cutu.ng off commuter ra1
service used by 60 000 people at the height of the momma rush. Denae cloud1
of black smoke ~ured into the air from .vcnt.1lauon ducts at the no.nnaU)
busllina station and alona Park A ven1.&e, which sits atop the tunnels lead.ma ou
of the station. Eme~ency equipment lammed the streets a~d ma~tow!
Manhattan traffic was badly cong°'ted. More than 40 peopl~, ancludm,a 1.
firefighters. were treated at Orand Central and 29 were sent to hospitals
suffering smoke inhalation or heat exhausuon.
A•troJiaat. having bJ ea•y day
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. -Af\er a frantic f~t day i~ space tha
included an u~planncd doubleheader satellite .launch, q1scovery s astronaut!
took it caty «>day, chcclung out electronic gear they ~ use in a spa~raf
salvage effort Saturday. That rcscue·and-repalr effon mil.ht be complicated
however, because the "elbow" on \}le shuttle robot arm does not respond tc
computer dirccttons and must be operated by tedious manual sw1!ChC$
Officials said the 11lment should not block the salvage but could tum 1t into 1
longar task. •
Jadg~ clear way tor Tia-1 re11tart
PHILADELPHIA -A federal appeats court b.as appro_ved the restart o
Three Mile Island's Iona-dormant Unit I reactor. saying .tJ:ie Nuc~ea·
Regulatory Comm1ss1on adequately examined the ri.sks po~ by _1t~ operation
The panel of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, 1n a split decision rclcaSC<
Tuesday, denied petitions by the state of Pennsylvania. and ~hree ~ther lfOUPI
to block the restart. However.Judge Arlin M .. Adams. in a dJSsentJng opinion
said the NRC needs to further examine allcgauons that leak rate data from Uni
t 's sister reactor was falsified and that an internal report on the March. 197<
accident at Unit 2 was doctored.
Chemical leak brltates Penn•ylvanlaa•
WEST CHESTER Pa. -Federal and state officials today 111vcstigated a
runaway chemical reaction that spread initating fumes from a suburban plan
20 males east Into Philadelphia, tnJunng 27 people a~d threl\_tenang a mas·
evacuation. Al one point. authonttes 1n a 12-square-mt1c area stood ready tc
evacuate up to 40,000 residents. The emergency ended at 3 a.mA four ho_ur
after about 2 000 ga.lloos of chemicals 1n a reactor at the Sarto mer LO. chem1ca
plant.reached a "very, very high temperature" and tnggered a safety vent, sa1c
company President Nicholas trainer.
Delta cra•IJ death toll reac1Je11 135
• DALLAS - A Aonda teacher has become the 13Stb person to die as .
result of the Delta Arr L1neSJumboJet crash at Dallas-Fort Worth lntemataona
Airport earlier this month, officials sard Kathleen Wnght, 49, of For
Lauderdale, died Tuesday at Parkland Memonal Hospital. Sfie suffered bum:
and fractures an the crash, and doctors amputated a leg on Aug. 16. She d1ec
after developing pneumonia. Wnght was a Nova Un1vers1ty professor and the
w1feofBroward County, Aa., JudgeZcdebec WnghL . _
CALIFORNIA
Seven dle In KC-135 on training pilulon
MARYSVILLE -Seven men 1n an Air Force KC-13 5 air tanket
practicing landings. and takeoffs at Beale Air Force Base were lolled when th(
plane crashed about 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, officials said. Capt. Joseph Saxor
said names of those killed would not be released until relauvcs had beer
notified. There were no reports of inJ uncs to anyone on the ground, but the
crash staned a brush fire on the base. about SO miles north of Sacramento nea1
Marysville. ._
Crocker otncl•l call• ml•take 'IJ01Je11t'
SAN FRANClSCO - Crocker National-&tlk-'-s-adure-tO repor
approximately $4 bilhon in cash transact1ons ·involvmg ong KQng anc
Mexican border banks wa s ··an honest mistake," a bank o d. "There
w~ every reason to believe tile transactions of currency w re not out of the
·ordinary," said Harold P Re1chwald, Cracker's general counsel, at the bank'!
San FranC1FO headquaners on Tuesday. The comment came one day after the
U.S. Trcasµry Department announced 1mpos1t1on of a record $2.2S m1lhor
fine again$t Crotjctr for 7.877 rcponsng v1olat1ons from 1980 to I 98S
Rtaehwald said ~ mqney represented a settlement rather than fine
TIJoaMnd• ol letu•es will be burled
LOS ANGELES -Af\er three years of argument between abortion foe:
and stlpportcrs, the county Board of Supervisors h.as decided tQ bury 16.SOC
;tbotted fetusc5 found in a container at the home a man who ran a medica
laboratory. Supervisors voted Tuesdato send the fetuses to Guerra-Gutierez·
Alexander Mortuary of Los Ange es for bunal, said Toby Milligan
spokeswoman for the Department of ealth Services. A long end emotiona
battle over what to do with the fetuses had pitted religious and other anti·
abortion groups aga.snst a feminist group represented by 1he American C1v1
Liberties Union .
Baby •natclJa $8,000 ll'om Brinb guard
LOS ANGELES -A couple was arrested after 1he1r 2).month-ok
daughter picked up a pouch contammg $8,000 from a Bnok's guard's cart a
Los Angeles lntem1lllorTal Airport and gave at to her father, police satd. George
Arias. 36, and Joanna Anas. 22, were booked fot investigation of srand theft
The toddler was placed an the custody of juvtQttc authorities. The armored ca
guard was making a pickup from a cashier Tuesday and did not notice the cha le
go to his handtruck, said Police Department spokesman George Diaz. 8ut the
cashier wld police she saw the airl pick up lhe pouch and walk over to he
father, who allegedly t>ut 1t under his coat, Diu said.
.......
Corporate 7 -Eleven• won't .ell ticket.
. SACRAMENTO-Comptny-owned 7-Eleven stores ha ve drop{>Cd ther
bad to sell lolltry tickets because of complications over the corporation's tai
fraud conviction in New York. The result may be confusing for some lotter.'
players:$ I instant-winner tickets Wlll not be available at the company-owne(
convenience stores. bul will be on sale at franchised 7-Eleven markets.
1V. German bJtelll6eirce cJJJef t~be l1red
BONN, West Germany -Ghancellor Helmut Kohl will fire the head o
West Germany's 1ntelhgence agency as a rcsylt of the country's spy scandal
h1gh-rankin11ovemment sources said today The sources told The Assoctatcc Pre~s tha~ ~obi informed Heribert Hellenbroach, the ant~lliaencc agency chief
ofb1sdcc1s1on dunnga meeting this morning. Hell~nbro1ch has been in charge
of the agen9 for l°'s than a month He was fo~erly ip chal'JC of Bonn'!
countcr-esp1ona1e service, where Hans Joachim T1~ worked u 1 .sectior
chief in charge of counter-spy activaues apinst East Germany. Tiedgc dcfcctec
to East Germany last week. and smce then rePQrts of a series of persona
problems have surfaced. Kohl also face~ growutg S>re sure to fire the anteno1
. m"inister becau~ ofT1edae's defection
I11raell• releaH l 13 more pr1.0nen
A TLIT, Israel -A total of 113 Arabs who were amon1 the prisoner. w~osc release Wat demanded by h=cr• ~fa TWA jet in June left a milita~
pnson 1n northern Israel today for orrt an Lebanon; The detainees cnterc<
Lebanon at the Rosh Hanikra crossing i'lear the Mediterranean Sea after a two
hour bus ride throu1h northern Israel. said a U.N. official at Naqoura u
southern Lebanon. They wer~ expected 10 be turned over to the lntem11iona
Red Cross and then set free in soutftern Lebanon.
VUl~e nld bJUat In two monta
BErRUT, Lebanon <AP) -I rub sold1e'1 led by tan~• and hcJicopt~
1unsh1ps stormed a Shiite Moslem villaae 1n the U.N.-patrollcd ione u
southern Lebanon before dawn today in their biuett sweep in two modtha
pohc:c and U.N. officials reported. Senior pohcc IOUt'Cle'S aid 1evcn t1Jika. 2<
armored ~nnel camera. two aunsh1p1 and other n'ulitary vehicles wen
involved 1n the raid on Qebrik.ha 1n the mnse of l11aer security zone i1
aouthem Let.non.
· Arm7 cJllet u.am• prt*denq m lfJtem
• ABIDJAN, Ivory COUt -The N11enan anny•s clucf of 1taff whe
assumed the presidency 1n • coup ap1nst another military aovemmenl
plcdatd to improve the economy. review the c:utS ofprisonen 1wa1lin, tnal
and reform the sccrct Police. Ma,J Oen. Ibrahim BablQ&inda, named prcsidcn
Tuelday nlaht af\cr the Ww African nation•• sixth coup aioc:c pin1.ni
independence from 8ritain in J 960. made the plfdtea in a 14-minute addM
on N11 rian Radio
l 1 ------------------·-
}.
I •
Defiant
African
march
routed
Protest\Vaslargest
sho\V of mixed races
op sin apartheid
CAPE TOWN South Africa (AP)
-Tbouand1 of SOuth Africans of all races defied the law today by
mardlina to demand freedom for
jailed b~k leader Nelson Mandela,
but police broke up lh~proceuii
with whips. tear ps and rub r
bulleu.
J
., ..... ., ......
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /W.ct~. Auguat 28, 1985
Fresno plane crippled -.
Five passengers hospitalized
after an off-balance landing
FRESNO (AP) -A Los Anaeles woman tho t 11\c
was ioina to be yanked out a three..foot psb 10 the
pa11enaer compartment of a commuter plane after a
propeller picn:ed the aircraft's metal skin
· "I beard a loud np, and then all l could feel was wind,"
liid Jac:Queline Mendelson, dcscribina Tuesday's incident on Wlnp Wm Airlines A1abt 602 at an altitude of 16,000
feet about 23 miles west ofFresno.
Five puscnicn sou&ht hospital treatment for minor
ui,1uries after a safe but off-balance land1n1 at the Fresno
Air Terminal.
••My purse aot sucked out into somebody's cow
'pasture, and my jacket sot cau&ht tMhc engine, and 1t was
pullina me out,.. wd. ·•tt was c:ruy-the ecarint tllina
I have CVC'Tence>utertd ."
Mende n •id she ml.fttltd to remove bet JICktt
and upttn her lt*t belt bcfon: touchdown about five
minutes later.
The p1 ot. Ca1>1. lJarry lC.fn&.\Old be "'i1.iJbt'• Ii-•
pautnaers that be had to restart the ~nwl\il)COQC?lblc
eQsjnc on the Fairchild Metro 2A a numberofCunet'bcforc 1
land1na. /
One propeller blade apparently new off inti'·
send1na th. e enainetoffbalance. pulhna 1t out of the ne
eowhnt and Uito tl\e side of the plane w1th1n a t; of~
pauenaer wfndow The plane lan~ with the n&sne
dan&lin:;rom its mount and the pr0pcller embcddc<I in
the ruse c.
Ron tou. Wlnp West operauons d1rect0r, IPCCl,u·
lated after in1~una the a.ircraft ttiAt metal fausue in ~e
propeller may have been to blame.
FAA ordering engine check
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe Federal A viauon
Administration said today It plans to ordct alrlinC1 to
-namine cftlines of the type involved in the ex.pl.oston.and
lire of a British charter 11rlmer th.at killed 54 people.
the Boc1n1737's cnaincsbroke apart, ruptunna a fud tank
and caus1na an explosion as the plane was ta.kin& off. Another march to the re11denet
President P.W. Botba was haJted
peactfully by police order.
The protests were the laraest show
of multiracial opposition to
apartheid. the white-minority 1ov-
~mment'1 raciaJ separati<?D policies,
an a year that has seen pcmstent black
riouna claim more than'"'120 lives.
8oatll African police comer a man who 'fled a charae by
ofllcen which JllC&ttered 200 marchen bl cape Town. Last week's accident 10 Manchester, England, 1s
believed by fovestipton to have been caused when one of
FAA spokesman Richard Stafford said today that no_
order has yet been wucd to eunune the enames. lhc Prau
& Wh.tt.ncy modtl JT -80, which 1s the most widely used JCt
enpne 1n commercial av1auon and 1s used in about two-
thuds of the 3,000 Jetliners 1n U .S.service.
1l was impouibte to immediately
obtain an accurate casualty toll or
determine the number of people
arrested in the marches .
. At IQ a.D\.., police with whi~ and
m&bt sticks broke up a march windipg
U .. s~ .filing protest ·
of Boes8k.'s ilrrest .lOtopbeautie11 .
confidtlsecrets·
from the mixed-~ suburb of WASHINGTON (AP) -Rea_,n
Athlone toward Pollsmoor Prison, a,dministration officials, condemnin&
where Mandela, leader of the . the arrest of the R"ev. Allan Bocsak in ~ullaw~ African NationaJ Convcss. South Afri<>a as an "unhealthful
1s 1e~1na a life te"!1 on charaes of development,". ~d they have filed a
ploruna sabotale. ·formal protest· with the Prctona
Sc?me of the crowd. suffered bruises, govcmme~t.
but It was not clear 1f there were any "We beheve the detention of Rev.
serious iruurics. • 8ocsak and other leaders can only
A separate crowd of 2,000 people of exacerbate the current cycle of
allflOCS bcpn marchin& from Hewat polarization and tension," State De-;reac~ers Collcae toward PoUsmoor, partment deputy spokesman Charles
some l Smiles away. E. Redman said Tuesday.
They walked five abreast for about White House spokesman Larry
l '5 mjnutcs before riot police blocked Speakes said the administration was
the_ir _path !lJld ordered them to concerned a~ut Bocsak's arrest on
a:isptrse. The marchers sat ctown"i:h -(ife eve of a march he was to lead
the road while the march leaders, a today to demand release of 1m-
gro\&pof cleraymcn ofaJI races, locked· prisoned black leader Nelson Man-
arn;ls. . dela.
The PO>tcsters broke into the hymn.. "We have protested immediate1Y.
" bide itb Mc," . l to the South African government.'
Speakes sajd in Santa Barbara. "We
rtCOJOize that things like t~1s increase
tension wheq it is a time for reduction
of tensions an~ a time for people to
start talking to each other ..
Speakes also said: "We recognize u
is an extremely complex situation tn
South Africa, the result of many,
many years ·or apartheid and many.
many years of increasing tension 1n
racial relations in South Afnca. We
have to understand that as a nation.
but at the same time we have to make
our views known to them and that's
what we arc doing."
Chester Crocker, assistant sec-
retary of state for African affairs. said
today of Bocsak's arrest: "We thank
it's an unhealthful development " He
said Bocsak is "an important church
leader and has a certain vo1l.t: 1n
South Afnca."
.Harper's Bazaar's
list includes Tiegs,
Evans and Walters
NEW YORK (AP) -EJterosc.
caung .vegetables and avo1d1na too
much sun arc some of the beauty
secrets cited by the women lauded as
the world's I 0 most bcauuful b)
Harper's Bazaar mapnnc. .
Singer Diana Ross says freeing the
mind ofbmcrness 'is her key to tnner
and outer beauty.
Rebecca De Momay, of "Risky
Business" and "The Sh1Mer's Wife:·
says working out helps Jrer keep her
good looks, Catherine ·fuenbcrg of
"Dynasty" eschews red meat and
alcohol, while Connie Scllccca of
.. Hotel" stays out of th« son lo keep a
clear compleiuon. · . ·, ·
"Dynasty" star Llbda Evans says in
the magazane's Sept.ember i5Jue that
she stays ~ttraCllve by mcditaUpJ.
Model Cheryl T1cp says dally wet&b-
ins remand h.er to kccp·stim, .and TV
JOumahst Barbara WaJ~cn ·is ...Ud
about very h&bt pink nail poli~. .
Isabella J{oue.lltn1. daua;h\t;'I' of.
ln&nd Bcraman-and •floberto
.Rossclhni, plays makeup tncks, such
as doang "a very strong red mouth and
nothm& at aJI with· my e~.. · 1 T ecn-age actress Molly Ringwald.
Cheryl Ttec•
~~..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:----i~--------'--------~------------------------------~
@)~~@@)~@ :
SW of "Smccn Candles" and ''The
Breakfast O ub." says her curly red
locks come "nra1~1 from th~bottJe.~·
Fonner '"Charlie's Ange~" star ·
Jaclyn Smith recommends. an .over-
ntght trcauncnt of castor oil or
petroleum Jelly on eyelash~
I
~ b:zbth ~ fbehlDl'l el8rd, 7\'t/fTt'l ·5070
'MUlt-.-.xxi Vll\ogi. lOOI ~ bl-..tl, 21~~U:H27~
peeodcine 52~~thle~4""2. ,818/30't·9~33
mon thrufh.10t.o9. Mt.urdoy lOtof>C. ~noon to!>
Italian Fall .Classic
Enzo Angiolini
updates this classic
T-strap just for you .
Soft, woven calfskin
will flatter your every
step.Jn Navy, Black
or Muahroom.
$64.00
FROM THE SHOt DEPARTMENT AT LANZ.
N&WPOJlT llACHs U JIMhlon &.land. 6'Moft1. ..
Jack Lalanne's
'MER/CAN Health & Fitness Spas •..
-·COME ON AMERICANS! . . .
F~ four MUSclesl
We're jlMng ours I
With the greatest. offer at
the grandest health spa In
NEWPORT/COSTA MESA:
In a few short months, American
Health & Fllness Spas wlll be open-
ing Its dpors to the public. At that
time, the prlte wlll soar to Its
hlgh~st level:
But right now, and fot a limited time only: you can
Join thlJ prtstlglous spa at our pre-opening price . . . .
•16:\·Month
for Z4 Months
· S25 down Firsc v1s1c 1ncenc1ve
That's a savings of
44°10! I .
OUR OPERATORS ARE ON DUTY
NOW TO TAKE YOUR CALL.
CALL TODAY
650·1600
..
Amerrcans from all walks
of lrfe are choosing the
AiTiencan Way to health and fitn ess.
NOW YOU CAN SOON
ENJOY THESE SAME PRIVILEGES!
• OVER TWO MILLION DOLLARS IN
FACILITIES • .,,. rn st mcl9n1f•cent spa
y 1.1 " eve •'¥ ey~or
• •CO-ED \I/ORK OUT AREAS w1tn pro -
,_...,., r ,1 , u e f1001 -1nscructors !.()
mer .m<l womt"n can ell.em~ togetner
•NAUTILUS MACHINES. one to help
you oe-veiop Pvery .... .vt "' your D0<1y
•THE \l/ORLO S MOST ADVANCED
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
• FREE WEIGHTS 1 r " e eriou~ 00<,J..,
Ou 1oer
•AEROBIC DANCE CLASSES FOil
MEN AND WOMEN With mu\tC "nd
WPf'fVl'it'<l ny l"IOf P\~ton-'IS
•OLYMPIC STYLE SWI MMING POOL
• STEAM ANO SAUNA. Wt-JllRPOOl
•OVERSIZED DRESSING ROOMS wilt>
priv.itf' orktr\
•NUTRITION ANO WEIGHT CONTROL
•CHILO CARE CENTER fOf busy Pdrt>nt\
• INDOOR JOGGING TRACK
All ?HIS, PWS THE INTEGRITY ANO
RELIABILITY ~O fXPERtENCE Of
THE NUMBER ONE HEALTH SM
ORGANIZATION IN CALIFORNIA
1877 HARBOR BOULEVARD •NEWPORT COSTA MESA• · · .. · ·
...
..
..
I I
I
'
M Ow•ioe c.. OA1LIPfl.oT~. A-2e. 1885
Beachtrafficexpeetedto
.ezc edBalboa'scapaCity
By SUSAN OLLETT
Ot ... Oll!r ._.... •
Althou1 / a few chanaes have
reduced oonaeslion created by
bcachaoe 1seekioa Newport's sands,
a city tra repon has concluded that
the flow f tourists flockina to the
beach area soon will become too
much for the limited thoroughfares
goioa to and-from the BaJboa Pen-
n1nsu.la.
Newpon Beach City Manqer Bob
Wynn said that a ttaftic sip program
tnfonnioa people on alternate routes
to and from the Qalboa Pennisula and
the modification in beach-area traffic sianals have eased traffic-snarling this
summer, but problems loom in the
future.
"With the volume of traffic we
have, we still have some df the
problems with congestion," Wynn
said. · .
Accordina to a recent public works
department rep(>rt reviewed Mondar.
by the Newport Beach City Counci ,
"additional tourist demand simply·
al
exceeds the p~nt capecity of the
roadway on summer weekend~"
The si&nina proaram now in effect
starts on Balboa Boulevard cast of
20th Street, where sips have been
posted advising motorists that the
boulevard may be followed to ,et to
the Costa Mesa and San Dieao
freeways.
"Some of the tourists that come
down here to JO to the bcacb mn 't
aware that there arc other waya to ao
thanj~ down Newport Boulevard, ..
Wynn said. He added that if utilized.
the Pacific Coast Hi&bway is a helpful
way to case traffic conaestion ltad.ina to the freeways.
A modification an many of the
traffic sianaJs at the beach baS also
been implemented to 1mptove the
dreaded weckenl:l and summertime
auto snags, Wynn said.
The lnlffic saanals at 28th, 30th and
32tb streets have been uppadcd and
replaced with electronics that lm-
provf the timing devices, Wynn said.
However, future plans to alleviate the
THE
back-up problem 11e muc:b m0to
druUc;
The re~ lllclicated lbat die wideni~ of Ncwpon Boulevard,
slated for 1987, ia Deeded to iecreue
the road'• caPICity, Wynn laid.
Preliminary eQlinemn, ...._of
the consuucilon of a t.llinS llOlth-
bound lane from IOUtb of Jlnd a.t
to nonh of tbt Atcbes bridle Mve
been oompleted,Jnd tbe-Mnlt Ulted
as a "loq•tcrm IOIUtiOD" for the
traffic meu raidenta and aouriatt
now e..<perience.
With most of tbe awn mer now put,
Wynn said &bat there should oalY be a
few weeks left until the snake ol can
creepina down Balboa Boullvard
reduces to a fl\inimum.
"We have a,potbu week or 10 left..l.
and then tho trafftc ~ llacb on
after Labor Day," be said.
BEST MILEAGE·
·/NCALIFORNiA ~~!!£.
9'!'••w;n==:~
ISACHEVY ,
IMPORZ . I
$5341:*
• 4 l EPA EST MPG Use for comfUrtson Your m1le•9e m•y d1ffe1 * * trl•~ut.tcturer'l wwut~ 1et•1I pflce for• Splint 1nc/IX#s
~1n.rion Ch•r~ •nd de•ler prep T•x. l1cen~ and ot(>er options addition•/ ..
LABOR· .DAY SALE!~
~" · . GERBERA DAIS-.', , ~~ 11
•11~~~ Perennial from South Africa that · '
\'J ~ . l I •. ,:c•• l:-i.:!bc arr:uiug nexr weelc',
Se/-.ct Tulips, Hyacinths and
Cr::>c11s, • hen refrigerate for S
' w~ :ks 1 ric:-to ,;lnnting for
o .1ts. 'lnding results
BEARDED
IRIS
Now in Bud&
Bloom!
4" pots
Regular $1.99
1.19
SHADE ClOTH ....
.'-feavy duty fabric -great for ••••
st t?C:ing plant~ or covering patios
6' widths '
D~nslly Rf9ular Jl'OW
5!1• J .3~ run. h . :i9
63" IA9 run. h. .89
73" J.69,tun. ft. .09 .
;. .• •· ... ;:.: l (--\di ,, ........ ,. .. ~ . -
• .. .. p ..
tRVINE mas Cvlttr Or C114) 85 19278
. .
liF"'V
17t'1 St
lf.Aninmng
GARDEN CENTERS
SERVICE and QUALITY
SINCE 1889
HALF OAK
WHJSKEY BAAftEL
PLANTERS
uRADE 11 BARRELS
Resular $15.99
NOW
11.M
Oel1""9t,.... .. ~.,
Soropttmlat honon . ,
Tbe Rn~ BettJ Ba..ett and Ban~n Beaoh Maror Rath BallJ were the Ont reclplenta of the Women of Dlatinctlon
AwUdpl'eMDted recently bf the Han~n Beach chapter
of 8oroptlmJat lntemadonal. The Re•. lla.uett. mlnlater of
the Bantlqton Beach Cha.rch of Re1JCiou Science, and
Balley, wbo b.u 1'ened ttro terma u mayor. were honored
for their leadenhlp and achle.ementa In their commanltr
and careen.
Water board executive named
James Bennett has been selected
executive officer of the Santa Ana
Regional Water Quality Control
Board. succeeCling James Anderson.
The water quality control board is
one of the lead aienc1es protecung
water quality 1n the Santa Ana River
w,Jtersbed. including Newpon Bay.
Bennett's appointment will be ef-
fecu ve Oct. I.
Bennett has served as ~upcrvisi111
engineer for the regional board for the
past two· years. He has had five years
of statewide experience through his
work an Sacramento with the State
Water Resources Control Board.
Anderson, the current executive
officer, resigned after 12 years with
the agency to resume legal practice.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
John Albeno
Ted Corbell
C.Mty McBr•v.,
S-0 McC11i.t1on
0o1 .. Ronui11
Ana Robena
Tre110f 011rha111
Stacy Wacku ,
KarHllky
Olr1et1H P1tur
-Best Wlshes from:
Or. W. Ronald Redmond & Staff
Marc Mo.me11-
.IH L11l•·l>oll ...
Blll118ur9ua
Brian Murphy
Sare lAnnoa
Kiele Sledlauek
.lwlle D1.11no11lch
Donna Rathman
KrlaUM Pelle
Rochelle G ... rclado-
UN Bryan
ISrlirten Bera
Jeremy Grauke
Paulcla Grl9n•n
Rlcli.y Whipple
Stq>llHle Turley
John Atmatrong
Nikki Genta
Aady OuleOc
Deena CrouM
An Cole., ..
Jim Boltoe
l<oleM Bed
Atay Herdman
.IHalca 81evl111
EllulMth Huattr 1 Marv Dickie
30111 N1auel Road • Laauna Niguel 181 Avenida Vaquero • San Clemente
(714) 415-oeoG (714) 412·2141
LB schools
reject
claim by
ex-director
By USA MARONEY °' .. ...., ......... Tile t.aauna Beach Unified School
Oittrfct bat rejected a claim ~m ~ts
f'onner hi&b tchool _athletic di~tor
that seen lS~.ooo m oo~penuuon
for ''inaccuracies" about him allqed-
ly included in a letter circulat~
amona Ora.nae County ICbool das--
tricu.
Superintendent Billy Barnet aa.id
be tent aform letter to Walt Hamer..
who ~uit as athletic dirctor a year ~o. ~his claim and advilina.ham
he has six months to file a lawsuit.
Hamcra. who uill teaches Ena)ish
at the school, filed the claim Aµa. 5
after be learned the school boa.rd on • )..2 vote bad ordl;ted Barnes to ~nd a
letter rebuttiq a Los Anaclea Tun~ article about the school's athletic ~ to all athletic direc\On and
bilb tebool principals in the county.
The .school board took the action
because some of its members ~re
•OlfY that the Times bad d~leteci ats
references to Hamera when al printed
their rebuual as a letter to the editor.
Hamcra said in an interview Aua.
13 that references to him contained in
the letter were inaccurate and could
hurt bis chances of findiOJ a teachioa
or coaching job outside the Lquna
Beach school district. .
"I just want to clear my reputation.
Who knows what effect (the letter)
bad," Hamera said. .
Neither Hamera or his attorney
could be reached for comme~t Tues--
day.
Harnera was one of several school
district Pc:rsonnel inte~ewed for~o
Times stories that examined the h~
school's financially ailinJ athletic
program and the hiring offormer San
Francisco 49er's lineman Cedrick
Hardman as football coach.
Hamera blamed the school board
and parent-run booster clubs for
disillusioning coaches about the
sports program by tbei.r . unu~ual
funding methods and admm1strat1on.
· Stung by Hamera's comments and
the stories generally. the school board
issued a rebuttal to the newspaper
which trustees Jan Vickers, Carl
Schwarz and Charlene Ragatz or-
dered to be circulated among Orange
County school districts.
State law ~uires that claims be
filed with public agencies before the
qeocy can be sued. This aives them
an opponunity t~ settle the matter
without going through the expense of
a I~ cballengc.
Since the school district has rc-
JCCtcd Hamera's claim, he must file
suit within six months if be wants to
pursue bis complaint.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTEIY llC.
. For JM Rest of Your Lite
1922 HARBOl aW .. COSTA IEA-548-1156
Things You Might Not H·aye
Considered
When searching for a mortuary, there are things you
might not have thought of, yet they are important.
Choose a mortuary that offers comfortable facilities,
ample parking, a convenient location and a proven name.
-SERVING ALL £.AITHS-.
Harbor l~awn ·Mount Olile
~1en1oriaJ Park ·Mortuary· Mausoleums · Crematory
1625..,.Gisler Avenue
Costa Mesa, California 92626
(714) 540-5554
0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0. 0
• 0 0 0
0 0 0 o 0 •0 0 o
0 0 0 • 0 0 • 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 • 0
'o o o
0 0 0 J
f OCUS SPORTSWEAR
An .... 4ft off: the ticketed pnce of already·
'reduced misses swimwear and cover-ups. 0 .
148. . . . . . 1.M to 11.98
.. ,,. 20%: On our Fenn Wright, & Manson
over-~zed v·neck sweater D. 243. Ong. 39.00
. . . . . . . 29.99
I .. ,,. n%: On career and casual separates from
your favorite woman designer. Skirts, pants,
jackets, vests, shorts and tops. Focus Sport·
swear. 12/198(456. Orig. 37.00 to 74.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . 23.99 to 48.99
SPORTSWEAR BO'S
lewe 21%: On Sasson stretch twill jeans. D.
262. R6g. 34.00 . 25.50
lave 21%: On CM I paisley shirts in rayon D.
252. Reg. 34.00 25.50
.. ve 21%: Sync cotton twill gabardine
trousers. D. 252. Reg. 34.00 .. 26.50
a.ve 21%: Our own cotton plaid shirt D 252
Reg. 29.00 . 21'.75
.... 21%: On selected silk blouses from Clio,
Casis, Fenn Wright and Manson Workshop, and
others. Sportswear 80's. 125. Reg. 19.99 to
34.00 . . . . . . . 14.99 to 24.99
V.I P SPORTSWEAR
&eve 33%: On challis print skirts with coor·
dinating sweaters from The Villager. In berry,
spice, green and blue. V.l.P. 272. Orig. 56.00 to
72.00 . -1· .31.• to 47.•
WOMEN'S SHOES
Spedal·purchae: Nike's nylon/suede iogging
shoe, "Reflex." 0 . 101 . 11.81
$pedal purchase: Fashionable mid-heel leather
boot. "Mistie" in fall colors. 0 . 75 &9.99
Spedal purchase: Leather latticed flats from
Bandits. 0 . 181 . . . . . . . . . 24.11
Save 26.00: On Nina's open toe leather pur.-p
"Wendy" in fashion colors. D. 249.
Orig 65.00 39.99
Spedel purchaae: Naturahzer's comfort sandal.
D 222 . . 34.99
Special purchaae: Cobbie Cuddlers' flat moc
D 87 24.99
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Save 50%: On our entire stock of sunglasses
Includes Anne Klem.· Bausch & Lomb,·
Tropic Cal,· Roberts,· R1v1era' and more
~unglasses. 174 Orig. 4 99 to 96.00
. 2.49 to 48.00 ...
MEN 'S SPORTSWEAR
S.ve 21%: On French and American designer
sportswear collections Includes knit and woven
sportshirts, sweaters and slacks D 2151423 _
Reg. 38.00 to 100.00 21.50 to 15.00
S.v• 21%: On Haggar's top pocket polyester
belt loop slacks. D 182 Reg 21 9::>. 18.49
Save 25%: On long sleeve wovert sportsh1rts
from Axiom, Sasson and Arrow Brigade
Stripes and plaids D 417 Reg 20 00 to 23.00
11.00 to 17.2&
&eve 25%: On designer denim 1eans. D 290
Reg. 36.00 to 42.00 27.00 to :>1 .50
&eve 23% to 33%: On short sleeved woven
sportshirts. Find Arrow yarn dyed patterns and
'Sea Isle solids and patterns D 213 Orig. 15.00
to 21.00 9.99 to 15.99
Save 21%: On sporty Arrow striped kn1t'shirts
D 50. 'Reg 20 00 . 1'i.OO
Spedel velur. Our own heathery classic •
Shetland wool sweaters Crewneck or v neck
styles . 20.00 and 25.00
Save 25%: On pur entire stock of leather and
suede iackets lb 217 Reg I 00 00 to 185 00
75.00 to 131.85
Save 26%: On Robert Bruce nubby knit sh.r's
in stripes and solids D 50 Reg 28 00 21 .00
Save 31%: On updated knit shirts from Neil
Martin and Cadaz D. 212 Ong 25 00 15.99
Save 20% to 33%: On famous maker class1 ..
and updated slacks in poplin or duck Dept
126'245. Or!g. 24.00 to 30 00 15.99 to 19.99
WEST COAST KIDS
S.ve 25%: On our en11re stock of sweaters for
toddlers and girls 4 to 14 Dept. 44/83/90/234
Reg 10 00 to 28 00 . 7.IO to 21.00
Save 25%: On Carter's high-energy playwear
For newborns. infants. toddlers and girts 4 to
6X. Dept 83 9011371234 428 Reg. 8.50 to
25 00 . 1.37 to 11.75
Save 25%: On our entire stock of dresses tor
girls Dept 47 90 96 137 /428. Reg. 14.00 to
40 00 10.60 to 30.00
Save 25%: On fast track fleece jog sets for tod
dlers and girls 4 to 6X Dept 83190 234. Reg .
16 00 10 23 00 12.00 to 17.25
Speciat purchau: Plush bears in assorted
sizes Dept 102 . 5 .• to 21.•
FURNITURE
150.00 off: Trad1t1onal vinyl wing chair and '
onoman Ong 449.00 . . .~
200.00 off: Trans1t1onal queen convertible sofa.
Ong. 599.00 .. Jll.00
301.00 off: Contemporary sofa with !oose
cushion back Ong 699 00 •.oo
300.00 off: Matching loveseat
Ong 679.oo .· . m .oo
301 .00 off: MaJch1ng convertible sleeper. .
Ong. 899.00 .•. 00
51.00 to 231.00 off: Contemporary bedroom
modular pieces.
Save 21'Mt: On linen-like trousers and pleated
skirt from Counterparts. In white, navy, black,
cream. taupe, pink and blue. 0 . 443. Orig.
38.00 and 40.00 27.99 and 29.99
Save 20%: On all famous maker )o'.VOrkout tights
Shimmery, support. stirrup. footless and footed .
From Danskin. • Flexatard, more. Bodywear.
Save 20% to 26%: On all elastic back waist
casual slacks. Dept. 126 195 Ong 24 00 to
26.00 18.99
Save 25%: On French designer logo sweiHers-tn
Orlon· acrylic. Dept 292 Reg 35,00 28.25 Oj;jg. 149.00 to 649 00 •.OO to 49t;GO -
lave ·21%: On selected cotton I ramie sweaters
Pullovers and shells from Jeanne Pierre and
Fenn Wright and Manson. Sweaters, 40. Reg.-
42.00 to 48.00 . . . . . . . . 30.99 to 36.99
PL AZA SPORTSWEAR
.. ,,. ~:On Campus_ Casuals "Candy Wrdp
pers" georgette se jtarates. D. 133. Ong 30.00
to 42:00 . • 21.99 to 29.99
lave 21%: On polyester crepe de chin~ camp
shirts. D. 66/1 001169/297. Orig. 19 99 14.99
leve 13%: On Krush print challis separates:
jackets, skirts. shirts. D. 135. Reg. 20.00 to
34.00 . . . . 12.99 to 22.40
~ purehne: Sportsphere French terry iog
set in many colors. D. 162. . . 39.99
•v• 21%: on· Russ corduroy coordinates in
dusty colors. Misses sizes. D. 133. Orig. 36.00
to 42.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26.99 to 29.99.
Also available in More Woman sizes 38 to 44.
0 . 132. Orig. 33.00 to 56.00 . . 24.75 to 42.00
LINGERIE
~ ~: On selected Maidenform bras.
bikinis. camisoles, half-slips, and full-slips from
Chantilly. Sweet Nothings, and Cotton Delee
tables collections. 0 . 258/63.
lped9I ~·: Olga camisole and half-slip
in selected colors. 0 . 63 . . 8.91 each
leve 21%: Our entire stpck of Miss Elaine
sleepwear. D. 232. Orig. 20.00 to 40.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16.00 to 32.00
leve 30%: Deena's stretch lace daywear collec-
tion. Camisole, half-slip. and full -slip. D. 63.
Reg. 8.00 to 16.00 ......... · .... &.80 to 11.20
lev• 21% to •%;,W1;1rner's and Vassarette
bras in selected styles and colors. D. 19/258.
Orig . 13.60 to 16.50 . . , . . . . . ... 6.99
a.ve 21% ta 50%: On all Bali bras, last 5 days.
0 . 19. Orig. 1.f.00 to 25.00 . 9.99 to 11.99
lpec:W purchfM: Cotton flannel tartan plc•id '
robe. 0 . 51 . . . . . . .29.99
leve 20%: On our entire stock of loungewear
from Barad, Komar. Gilligan & O'Malley, and
more. 0 . 07. Reg. 14.99 to 58.00 11.19 to 41.40
lew 20%: ·On our Vanity Fait nylon tricot
travel group. O .. 24. Reg. 15.00 to 22.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. , . . 12.00 to 17.IO
......., pwd111e: Olga long sleepgowns ii"
P1Stels. D. 24. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... 31.81
ll/NIORS
223 Reg 6.95 to 11 00 5.80 to 8.80
Special offer: With any purchase of Dim pan
tyhose, we'll give you a pair of sheer light
control-top Dim, a 4 25 value Offer runs
through Septemtl>er 15 Hosiery. 3
Save 50%: On our executive datafax business
planner from Mund1 Fine leather binder con
rains yearly planner address book, graph paper.
color maps. restaurant keys, income conversion
tables, more Small Leather Goods 142 Orig
100.00 49.99
Save 30%: On our exclusive vinyl briefcases
Lots of handy pockets Handbags, 37 Ong
35 00 24.50
Save 30%: Gn faux stone earrings from Bi1oux
du Jour A large selection. Fashion Jewelry, 20 ·
Reg. 10.00 -7.00
Special purchase: Leather trouser b¢1t with
gold-tone buckle. In black, red, gray.I navy and
winter wh1tEf Belts, 86 4.99
Special purchase: Stretch cord belt with
crinkle leather clasp In black. royal. berry. pur
pie and red. SM ML Belts, 86 12.99
Special purc hase: Cubic Zircon1a nngs, ear~
rings and pendants 1n round. oval. pear and
marquise shapes. from 25 ct to 5 ct From
G1ambelh Fashion Jewelry, 141 6.99 to 19.99
Special purchaae: Clo1sonne earrings trom a
famous maker Drop and button styles Fashion
Jewelry, 141 7.99
Special purchase: Leather handbags and
clutches from B H Smith In fall colors
Handbags, 422
YOUNG MEN'S
24.99
Save 37%: On Campus Le Tigre polo knit shirts
in solid ~oiors . Dept. 411 . Reg 16.00 9.99
Save 26%: On Levi's 501"s, the original shrink·
t~fit indigo cotton denim ieans. (B~ack , grey,
natural and white 501 's not included m sale. I
Dept. 123. Reg. 19.99 ... : . . . . . 14.11
Save 28%: On J .J, M cWJJys strip'ed polo knit"
tops. Dept. 53. Wltl be 14.00 on 9/3 . . 9.99
Save 50%: On Modz lightweight nylon sw1n
trunks. Dept. 185. Orig. 10.00 · 4.19
Save 25%: On Saturdays contemporary pattern
ed sweaters Dept. 5. CX1g 34.00 25.50
Special purchue: W est Coast Ways cotton
rugby jersey with contrast chest and sleeve
stripes. Dept 53 . 15.99
Save 30%: On Stubbies rugby corduroy shorts
in solid tones. Dept 185 Reg 19 00 . 13.30
Save 25%: On Modz fall outerwear in modern
sdhouettes Qept 189. 0 (1g . 50.00 to 60.00
. 31.50 to 45.00
SpecW purchue: Shah Saf an pinstriped 3 4
sleeve sportshirts in cotton Dept. 183 J4.19
&eve 21%: On narrow-wale Levi's corduroy
jeans in classic colors. Dept. 123. Reg. 20 00
. . . . . .. . . 14.• In• 2fM» to ~ On Sasson 5-pocket and Spec._. pwcheM: Lone sleeved Kennington
drop yoke jeana, and Calvin Klein made-to· woven shirts in fall-colored plaids DeR.i. 183
meaaure denims. O. 236. . . . . . . . . . 12.11
Reg. 2it99 to 30.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . · · · · ti... Save 21%: On cotton denim jeans from E
MEN'S CLOTH/NC ANO FURNISHINGS
Save 30%: On Arrow's Trump, short sleeved
broadcloth dress shirts Dept 7 Reg 16 00
. 11.20
Save 30%: On Arrow's Dover oxford lqng
sleeved dress shirt Dept 7 Reg 22 00 15.40
Save 30%: On French designer striped or dot
signature ttes Dept 122 Reg 14 50 10.15
Save 30%: On famous maker dobby stripe silk
ties Dept 225 Reg 16 00 11.20
Save 30%: On our entire stock of suits· better
sportcoats and dress slacks Dept 9 48 61 192
·Suits are 1n selected stores Reg 57 50 to
335 00 -40.25 to 234.50
Save 26%: On French designer hosiery Dept
281 Reg 4 00 to 6 50 3.00 to 4.87
Special purchase: Americdn designer
sunglasses 1n lots of· styles Dept 105 9.99
Save 30%: On contemporary narrow neckwear
in silk or silk linen Dept 122 Reg 10 00 to
15.00 7.00 to 10.50
Save 25%: On colorful Jockey fashion
underwear Includes Elance Axiom and Micro 3
styles Dept 432 Req 5 00 to 3 13 50
3.75 to 3110.12
Save 20%: On smooth walking Deer Stag shoes
for men D 57 Reg 54 00 . 43.20
Save 25%: On cool Centura short sleeved dress
shirts D 431 Reg 11 99 8.99
Spedal purchase: Van Heusen short sleeved
tone on tone dress shirts D 7 1 i .99
~ve 30% t~ 38%: On French designer revers•
ble leather belts D 104 Will be 21 50 to 23 50
on 9 3 14.99
Save 25%: On Munsingwear classic white
underwear Briefs T shirts and v-necks D 91
Reg 11 00 to 13 00 8.25 to 9.75
Save 25%: On Jockey's colorful classic
under'f"'ear 0 91 Reg 4 75 to 5 003.56 to 3.75
BOYS 4 TO 20
Save 30%: On Jay Jay sweaters and sweater
vest. Sizes 4 to 7 0 459 Reg 8.00 to 20 00
5.60 to 14.00
Special purchase: Jay Jay corduroy bush
ieans Sizes 4 to 7 0 74 9.99
Save 30%: On famous maker logo l<nit rop~
Sizes 4 io 7 Dept 74 Reg 17 50 12.25
Save 30%: On 0 P Cordurgy shorts 1n solid
colors Sizes 4 to 7 Dept ?iS Reg 14 00 9.80
Special purchase: West Coast Kids solid knit
tops Sizes 4 to 7 Dept 74 1.99
Save 30%: On Our entire stock of sweaters for
s1zes·a to 20 Dept 240 0 1g 16 00 to 22 00
11.20 to 15.40
Save 30%: On our entire stock ot casual pants
for sizes 8 to 20 From Complex Bugle Boy
and more Dept 98 Reg 20 00 to 24 00
r 14.00 to 11.IO
Save 30%.: On all screenpnnt T shirts for boys 8
to 20 (Except Ou1ks1lverl Dept 241 Orig 9.00
to 14 00 8.30 to l .IO
S.ve 30%: On all woven sportshirts for sizes 8
to 20 Dept 26 Orig. 6 99 to 16 00
4.IO to 11.20
WEST COA ST KIDS a.we M.: On floral knit dresses. In tash1on J1 Jovefl, Jordache and Sergio Valente. Oept:.1 94.
0 85 I Reg. 22.00•to 40 00 II.II to 00
colorl. · · Save 20%: On uhconstructed cotton shHt ng a.v'e 21~ to ~ On outerwear for all the Orig. 38_.00 to 40.00 . · · · · · · · 21.• to 21. 87 .. 2T blazers from a famous roaker. OeJjt. 1 neg. luds NewborM 3 to 9 months. toddlers to left 2IPM.: On• summer collection from a 42 oo '13.IO 4T, girts 4 to 14 and boys 4 to 20 Dept
lf>frfted famoua meker. O. 446. •ve 33%: On y'iuoe i ng sJeeved ~~aged 47190 96£ 137 234 4281446!459 Rf'<J 14 00 to
Orig. 19.00 to 41 .00 · · · · · · · · : · 13.lt to dress sh rts in IOlid colors. Dept. 183 Reg. 60.00 1.10 'o 46.00
178.00 off: Country French 5-pc dining room
set. Ong 1675 00 •.oo .
801.00 off: Matching chtna, onQ 2000.00
130.00 off: Arm chair. ong. 325.00
11•.oo
. 116.00
DOMESTICS
11.00-50.00 off: Woven f ash1on rugs from
famous makers 20x40" and 30x50"
Reg 26 00 60 00
11 .00 to 31.00 off: Assorted beach toweJs.
9.lt
Orig 18 00 to 40 00 . 1.91
3.01 to 23.01 off: Famous maker sheets. 'twin
to king. std and king cases
Ong 11 00 to 31 00 7.91
15.01 to 68.01 off: Any size wrap mattress
pads Orig 32 00 to 68.00 16.99
10.01 to 18.01 off: Concord bed pillows 1n std ..
queen and king sizes Ong. 20 00 to 28 00 9.91
80.00 to 240.00 off: All Croscill comforter sets.
Twin to king Ong. 160.00 to 3.20.00 71.19
HOME ENTERTAIN/NC
20% off: Stainless flatware service for 8 42 pc
and 46 pc sets Reg 99 99 ....., 79.91
50% off: Madison crystal g1ftware ,
Reg 20 00 to 40 00 10.00 to 20.00 each
30% off: M ikasa Georgian cut crystal platters
Reg 7 95 5.91
50% off: Stonehenge white 45 pc dinnerware
set by M 1dw1nter• for Wedgwood •
Ong 150 00 89.91
50% off: Vogue 20 pc dinnerware set from
Mikasa Orig 140 00 19.99
4.01 off: Soave crystal stemware
Reg 6 00 1.91 eech
CEIL/NC FANS
40.01 off: W1ndsong Supra ceiling fan from
Codep Orig 110 00 . 19.91
40.01 off: Woodwind ce1tmg fan from Codep
Orig 11000 19.•
80.01 off: Windsong Tempo ceiling fan from
Codep Orig 130 00 89.91
40.01 off: Strat0sphere ceiling fan from Codep
for Atmosphere Plus
Orig 110 00
ELECTRONICS
50.00 off: Panasonic VHS VCR
Orig 449 00
50% off: Panasonic VHS VCR
....
Orig 549 00 491.00
210.00 off: Magnavox 19 • diagonal remote col
or monitor telev1s1on Orig 599 00 la.GO
50.00 off: Zemth 25 diagonal remote color
table model Orig 599 00 541.00
40.00 off: Magnavox 13" diagonal remote color
portable Orig 329 00 211.00
10.00 oft RCA 19 diagonal color portable
Orig 319 00 241.00
50.00 off: Sony compact digital disc player
Reg 299 00 249.00 (Optional digital stereo head·
phones 59 99 Optional battery pack 49 991
20.00 off: Panasonic dual cassette stereo-to-go
Reg 179.00 161.00
10.00 oft: Sanyo AM FM stereo cassette
recorder Reg 99 99 . ••
F15her 100 wan audio system 511.00
Yont compact stereo system ........
LUGGAGE .... J11M.: On regular priced casual pants (ex. 18.00 . , • • • • • .. . • . .•. 11.• leve ~ On our own Cradle Crowd blanket
C9Pt Eaprit, Generra and Santa Cruz). O. 129. a... 2l'Wt.; On 1Hctc sateen twtlt ptuted lladc1 ~end pr ll\$Ulta. Dept 42. Reg. 10 00 to 8" off: Famous maker 1md dGQner lugpagtt
Aeg. 30.00 to 34.00 .•....•.•... 22.11 to by John Peters Dept. 187 Orig. 34.00 .. 27.21 1! 00 • • • • • 7.IO to 1.00 !8nc:. R~. 20 00 to 120 00 .... IV ...
NO TILlllHONI Ga MAit ORo0a. PLEAU. llLicnoN MAY YAIWV ITOfl)iTO stORI. NO SPECIAL OIU>£RS. INTERMEDtATf MARl<OOWNS MAY HAVI llDI TAKEN.
.,... AU, AYMAeLI WMA..I QUANTmD LAIT.
J
t -
'
..
-.
I .
I
An ti-aircraft
war~ draws to
a conclusion
Twenty years of civil war -Orange County style -
ended shortly after 10 a.m. Tuesday when the Board of
Supervisors put its impriJpatur on a compromise
~ment establishing limits for the expansion of John
ayne Airport. .
The parties that had successfully used court
challcnaes to block airport growth-the city of Newport
Beach and two citizens' action ~oups, Stop .Polluting
Our Newport (SPON) and the Airport Working Group
(A WG) -signed off on the deal Monday night and
Sunday afternoon, rc5pectively.
· The agreement, hailed by Newport Beach Mayor
Phil Maurer as "historic," un~ses ceilings on the
al{.Cfage number of the noisiest airliners taking off daily
over Newport Beach, the total number of passengers
served and the size of the terminal.
The agreement is significant not only because it
makes history. It is significant because it frees a large
number of people who have been living their lives. on
opcrty owners under the takeoff pattern can now
rational decisions about their property. They can
onably sure, for instance, that the noise problem
get no worse. If they can stand it now, the odds are
will see it improve in the future as airlines introduce
e quieter jets which are allowed more flights under the
agreement. If property values in the noise-impacted
areas have been hurt, there should be some solace in the
knowledge that the slide probably has ended.
Business, too, will benefit from the very existance of
an agreement. It is now possible for business people who
require a subs~ntial and reliable volume of air travel
service to plan their futures around the airport. If the
new deal appears to them to be too limiting, they can
plan locations and expansions elsewhere. Those who
may have shied away from Orange County because of
the uncertain nature of air travel may now be able to get
on with business. In this regard, any agreement is better
than none.
Newport Beach has been proJeeted for another
generation. But the agreement seems to include the
unspoken hope that technology will save the parties on
both sides from.a similar dilemma around the turn of the
century. I fit fails, the demands of growth and the quality
oflife will once again become combatants.
Alrport pact described as
s ellout on Newport's part
To the Editor .
If the City Counl1l of Newport
Beach approves the JWA settlement
proposal in its current form. 1t will be
the greatest sellout since Benedict
Arnold betra)ed his countrymen
increase jn noise! Black magic! ft jUSt
goes lo show what lies can be
perpetrated with estimates of esti-
mates. and a mathematical noise
model
"' Last Janual) the city handed out Now the 55 flights are here. there 1s
1taflets advocating "The Workable nc, need toes11mate The reality of the
.Airport s91ution .. ~5 commercial jet noise 1s revealed by the world's be-;t
Oepartures ma\lmum "wcct and noise monnor. two ears connected to
i imple a brain The 55 flights are s1gn1fi-
cantly no1s1er than the previous 41
St' en month" later 1r appearsready Ask anyone under the flight path I
to approve a ~nlement that would found 41 tolerable. but 55 ha~ allo~ w1th1n fi\C~ ~ear<;, a~ man) u 75 compelled me to wn\e this letter to I 00 departure\ per day That
quantity of an) model JCt a1rcraf\ will A vote for tlus settlement is a vote dnvc everyone nut\ who lives near 'the airport to destroy the -.anity and the propeny
' I en a large portion of Newport Beach
Ma~bc C 1t' C oumil actually ix-residents. Those voting for it should
lte,cs the count\ propaganda cm-becondemnedtohveunderthefltg.ht
bodied in m projected noise con-path for the next 25 years.
tours Look at the EIR In 1984 the
covnty projected that 55 departures ALAN SMITH
would have about thi: ~ame noise Newport Beach
impact as the prev1ou\ 41 . EDITOR'S NOTE The settlement
Just think :ihout 1t Doesn't 1l has won approval from the Newport
wund phon-. a 34 percent increase Beach City Council. the Board of
in fhg.hts (m<>'ltl> MD-80'1) with no Supervisors and two utuens' groups
,. K eep Grand Ol e F lag up hlgh
To the Ech tor
To inform you concerning Viet·
a.am veteran Mr Pete Weinman·~
• 'Mand on h1' nai and the ';upenor
"Court rule to forbid hi\ .. pole 'for fleg
,.. Oymg
A\ another plumber 1rr.11rl·d I and a
veteran of World War II, let 11 be
known He I\ not alone'
Suggestion .-. jU\t a\ 11ne Orange
County car dealer docs -secure his
Amencan nag beneath a small
surplus helium weather baJloon and
hoist It no higher than ~1d outlawed
pole Get an cagk (small) cloth
banner and keep that <1rand Ole Ana
on High'
TH PARRY
Costa Meta
Post reward to end vandalism
T <>the Editor
•Have we tried pmtinit rt·ward \lgM
~hooh, pubht rc\lroom\ etc to > Jtop th1' vandah\m'l
'· Maybe only $50 but anyone with
.~the mentality of a vandal, no cJouht
followen Wlth even lower I () "
t would like SSO cHy money the\'
't have to work for
ORAN<3F. COAST
~ailyPilat
tl'l.iClltl'1 -~ Qoly Qi '''" .,_. •t I)() Wtt< ~ 81 ~ AM--C"'•~· I • 'VI. • ..._ c• "x~11
•
I'd be glad 10 ~ 'iome of my tax
dollu5 going toward 1uch a plan and, 1r 1t worked, 1t would 11urc he cheaper
th11n the monry required to rcp1unt,
rcplumb etc
Oten money 1alk5 when all else fa11., MR~ ti() KINC1~BlJRY
Newport Bcach
Franti ZJnt
fdl!Ot
Tom Teff
........... dll!I' Deft,_._
1:>1, r.,.;;~
c, .. .....,
IJo«il'rdllllr
"Wecanseleclanewcarqulckerlhan wecananewdog. weexpectto ..
getthesameamountofmlleageoutolboth, but more affection from the dog.
Dismantle apartheid, urge
liberals, no matter the cost
Lincoln himself
pref erred slavery
to ruining Union
NEW YORK -"My paramount
object in this struggle. is to save the
Union, and is not either to save or to
destroy slavery. If I could save the
. Union without freeing any slave, I
would do 1t; and 1f I could do JI by
freeing all the slaves, J would do it;
and ifl could save 1t by freeing some
and leaving others alone. I would also
do that."
So Abraham Lincoln wrote to
Horace Greeley during the Civil War.
Hardly anyone do ubts Lincotn•s
hatred of slavery, but to his mind the
task of conserving was prior to the
task of reforming,. He didn•t think 1t
made sense to improve the Union at
the cost of destroying it.
How different his attitude is from
that of American liberals facing South
Afnca. For them the onJy issue is to
destroy apartheid -and if they have
to destroy everything else too, well, so
bell.
Herc is a wnter in the current issue
of Newsweek: "Even now com·
mumsm is not the only aJtemati ve to
apanhe1d; a democratJc compromise
still seems possible." Possible'? Is that
all'? Can the white South African give
up apartheid only at the risk of losing
all his own freedoms.: possessions and
-possibly -his Lire?
The tacit concession in that
sentence is staggering. I would like to
talk with the man who wrote it. I
would ask him a fonple question: "If
)'Ou inhented a slave in chains who
hated your ancestors so much that his
first free act mi$ht be to kill you,
would you unchain him?"
The liberal view is that the
slavcmaster sho uld be guided in such
c1rcumstancesonl y by the principle of
abstract JUSt1ce. not at all by
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
prudence. Slavery 1s wrong; therefore
release the slave, though it destroys
the union, or results in tne immediate
"lmurder of the master. Apartheid is
wrong; therefore dismantle it at once,
no matter what violence and injustice
ensue.
A key problem here is that the
liberal can't admit that communism
is itself unjust. He is always willing to
urge, or even demand, that others
take the risk ofhavmg to live under it.
Notice too that once a country bas
fallen to communism, liberal moral
indignation is quelled. The liberal
community has been successively
mdianant about Chiang Kai-shek.
Batista, Thieu, Lon Nol, Somoza and
Ian Smith; and virtually silent about
Mao Castro, the successors of Ho,
Pol Pot, the Sandinistas and Mugabe.
If apartheid gjves way to a com-
munist reaime and a bloodbath, there
will be neither bbcral outra&e no~
liberal remorse. -
The pattern 1s clear. In any com-
munist-backed insurgency, the Sov-
iets supply the auns and the liberals
supply the moralism. As soon as the
pro-Western regime falls, the m oraJ-
1zin1 stops. Morality becomes
strangely irrelevant, and the liberals
tell us to re'8.fd the new regime as a
"reality," with which it behooves us
to come to terms and "normalize
relations," without seeking to "im-
pose our standards" upon it.
The two realms of liberal at-
titudinizing -the realm of morality
and the realm of "reality" -cor-
respond to what communist
stratqjsts call the ··zone of war" and
the "zone of peace." As Iona as a
country remains outside the soc1abst
camp, oommunists regard it as up for
grabs, and liberals regard it as eligible
for moral censure (which has ooncrcte
results, such as economic sanctions
and aid cutoffs); •t is in the "zone of war." But when a "prasressive"
Marxist reaime takes power, it enters
the "zone of peace" and pins
exemption from liberal criticism; in
fact liberals WJe benign policies
toward it at that point, includ101
diplomatic recognitJon and various
forms of foreian aid.
The double standard is J8 longer a
flaw or abemtion of liberalism; it has
become the very essence of liberal-
ism. Liberals get indignant exclusive-
ly with pro-Western governments·
the exceptions are few, sporadic and
brief. Their conduct is designed to
destroy pro-WestC(D regimes, no
matter what concomitant destruction
follows. If you doubt thist review the
recent histories of Cb10&., C uba.
Europe's Afric an colonies,
Nicaraaua, Iran, El Salvador and now
South Africa.
It is silly to suppose thlt Amencan
bberals are working for Moscow, but
it is futile to deny that they are
working with Moscqw, in Lbe1r way.
Whatwea.renowseeingisa lar&erand
looser venion of the old Popular
Front of the '30s. Liberals and
communists acree. in a pratfical way,
as to which ~mes are "pr~essive"
and which are' reactionary,' and that
is enough of a consensus for a workina
partnership.
South Africa is not an isolated case.
It is part of a larger pattern, the latest
installment in an old story. The new
Popular Front •arees on what to
destroy. It sees nothing worth fiahtina
to conserve, if that means delayina
"reform." The West. forgetting the
past, continues to repeat it, as the
"zone of war" keeps abrinkioa.
Jo1epA Sobru I• • •yadlc•ted
cols.aul•t
Noendtojoboffeeding --
forpeople, plants or birds
Even sugar water
for hummingbirds
has to be boiled
I never intended to have a lasting
relat1onsh1p wuh a kitchen, but we
have no control over our destinies.
When a husband moved into m y
orbn some years ago it marked ~
end of my open1n1 a can of "up and
makrng a sandvhch for dinner.
Babies, J djscovercd later, will not
hana on to that bottle indefinitely.
They soon move on to the pepp~ stuff
and then araduatc to somethina they
can sink their few teeth into. From the
time they 'ct all their teeth until they
leave home, the stove never cools off.
They expect to be nourished on a
rc&ular -and irreaular -bas.is.
Four-leaged memben of the family
are even more demand.in&, probably
because they can't cruise down to a
fast-food emporium and fill up be-
tween meals.
I've never cooked for a cat. Friends
who are owned by their cats have
given me rcci~1 for tidbiU that,
supposedly, wall make... a cat rub
11111nst me and putT. J'U do without
the rubbina and the purrina before I
touch some of those 1clcy iqredients
Ii ted in the recipes. ft'sall I can do to
fish them out of the interior of the
turtey {when they're wrapped in
paper) at Thank11Jv1ni.·
We have never &one out deliberate-
ly aod l(lQUtred a cat..lf a cat roamina
tht ne1af\borbood decides to mo~e in
witb us -wb1cb has happened -be
eitbcT cats out of a can or takes b1s
thanca on food JUst like the rest of
the family.
Dop are a ddfcttnt matter We can
tclett a new cat qu tcltcr t,M,n .e can a
oew dot-We expcet to"' the ame amount of mtk:ap out Of' both. but
m OR 1ffttt1on from the dot.
ANN
WELLS
.Feedina dop isn't too much of a
problem except for schedulina. A
clock, accurate down to the second, is
built into the stomachs of au dop.
This clock cannot be chanaed becau5e we switch back and forth from
standard to dayli&ht saving time, and
it doesn't slow cfown or ao on. hold
because the phone rinas or suests
drop in.
At Ion' as she 11 fed on schedule,
our d<>s 1s happy with canned food
and dry treat,. She is happier with
leftoven -1f it isn't spaa)letti or
pizza. My conscience huns me when
they•rc on the menu. I'm aoinf to be
sure out next dot has an taJlan
ancestor or two.
Somewhere alona the line a mem-
ber of the household 1ugc1ted we put
out a birdfceder. He assured me there
would·be no cook.in, involved and no
dashes. Not unless we wanted to
include hummh\&bird1.
We uy not to practice discrimirw-
L.M. Bovo
tion in our nei4bborhood, so up went
the humminab1rd feeders. They come
down to be washed and reftlled every
other day. That is a lot of 1upr water
which has to be brought to a boil -in
other words, cooked.
Humminjbirds will not eat lef-
tovers; they feed on nectar from the
planu, supr water and bup -
mostly 1upr water, which I cook.
You can't cheat and put honey in the
water to avoid the prooeu of boilina
because it will rot their beaks.
I've finally accepted the fact there is
no end to thls feedina proeetS. I still
remember the shock l aot ycan aao
when I took a plant to the nurxry to
be diaanosed.
"Alf m y houseolants look like •
this •• I said. "Wliat's wron1T'
"What are you feedina them?" the
nurseryman asked.
"Feedina them? Ptant1 have to be
fed too?" And not just any olt (~
orchids need one type ot food.
African vjolets another ...
It was probably a woman allersic to
feedina everntuna that moves -
someonelike ·rile -wbo started tbe
artificial plant bu1ineu. lf 1 had
thouabt of at first, rd be loaded by
no.w and oould hire a full-time cook.
C.l•mal1t AM W•U. /Jn. la U.-NJ,_
A plape on .wild rablflts
lo 19 .51, an elderly FRDCb doctor
decided to aict rid of the wUd rabbi ta
on hit cstatt1 !O lnnocutated two wi&h the dlteue i-.yxomatolla. Nou lOO twift. that feUOw, but the d.1-le WU
fwtt\. lD turned lnto a _.... that
JPrad from France ecrOia<ille Low
• Countnes thro.uab Germany. ~ntral
-
Europe.{ and even om-the clwlnel to
Grat urit&il1. Milliont and milliont
of rabbit.I died, ud a few tadu.tries
wm Nined. ind~iot m\dl of the fb:r trade ud a lot of h,llnten' raona.
L.M. ··~ I• • 1,a4kalH ~
..
Al'f1' 1RLLS coJamnht
JJCl
AIDEISOI
,tnd OAI£ VAN A If A
Death
sqµ.ads
in South
Africa?
Government said
condoning killings
by such squads
WASHINGTON -As the death
toll in South Africa mounts, disturt>-
ina charges have been made by anti-
apartheid groups: They claim that
many of the killinas were not random
acts of v1olence, but the work of
"death squads" sanctioned by the
white-minority government
The South African government,
through its embassy in Washinston,
has objected "sternly" to the allep-
uons. "All cases of unnatural death in
South Afnca are 'investiptcd with
every resource," the embassy stated.
Here 1s what our associate Vicki
Warren has learned, nevertheless,
about the alleged death-squad ac;
uvities:
•The assassination of Victoria
Mxenge, defense lawyer for 16 black
activists on trial for treason in
Pietermartizburg. stirred rcporu of
government-encouraged death
squads. Mxenge was gunned down
outside her home by four hooded
blacks believed to be policemen. The
lawyers Comminee on Civil Ri&ht.s
Under law has written to Secretary of
'State George Shultz and to Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chair-
man Richard Lugar, R-lod., askfog
for an investigation into Mxengc's
murder. .
Jn addition, Amnesty International
has called on the South African
aovemment ~ oonduct an indepen-
dent inquiry into attacks on black
opposition leaders.
•The Detainees' Pa.rents Support
Committee, ori&inally formed in
198} to help the families of jailed
disstdents, has now bqun to 1ccep
track of the number o( individuals
who arc rounded up by the police, and
the nuinber of those found dead and
believed to have been assassinated.
One youn1 leader of the Conarcss of
South African Students, Eddie
Maluleke, was taken off the train by
police on his way home to the blade
township of Soweto on May 10. He
hasn't been seen since.
•The u!'explajned deaths of Mat-
thew Goruwe and three other mem-
bers of a black activist aroup called
the United Democratic Front led to
'l.iemands for an investiptioo of their
killinas.
•In neiahborin& Namibia, oc-
cupied by South African troops. the
Bar Council of South West Africa two
years ~o asked for the appointment
ofa Judicial commission "to consider
the probkm of security lqislation
and pm:fices; the abuse of power;
deaths in detention and other ir-
reaularitici and tnalpractices rclatina
to detention without trial; ways and
means of protectin, citizens qajnat
abuse."
This lawyers' group also disclosed
the e~iatence of a death squad caUed
Koevoct, which is Afrikaan for
"crowbar." According to ju.Ucial
proceedinas and news reports
Kocvoet aunmen tortured and killed
presumed opponents and burled the
victims in unmarked araves. A leader
of the detainees• support aroup said
there is a suspicion that Koevoet wu
diabended but that some of its hired
aun1 are now opcratina ill' South
Africa.
•Actina on reporu that victims of
official violence we~ beina buried in
a cemetery in Zwide Townah1p,
memben of the United DemocratJc
Front uncovered 1 m us arave con-
tainina · the remains of three adults
and 47 chil~n. Authoritiet said the bodies~ th05e of 1>1upen. .
• ¥emben of the black opposi11on
aroup claim to have obtained a death
Uat drawn up by the Soutb African
1ovemment. Acc:ordina to a M>~ in
µie detainees~ lu.pport aroup, .the hit
tncluclet Nobel Pace Prize winner
Bishop Desmond Tutu, .u well ••
United Democratic Front official Terror Lekota, now beina tried for hiab treuon.
Amnesty International bas written:
"Events have OClCUrred in the context
of many alleptfon1 that other recent
attack.a on known opponent.I of
apartheid have been carried out by or
with the knowledle o~ the police,~
of reportl suaallna the W.tence of dcat.b.li1ts. ..
MINl·EDITORlAL; Too oftca, we ~hi:!, =~ 'Who 1 .... ~ w paid a borrib&e prb
-rece.ived bN-1 t.NM«l\lna or ewn
datb ftom IOJDCOAe who ~
lhcl"n up. Acrote theCO\lntry. t.bere1.rt 1eanaect mtetou biddeo ln tulled
lhtckell, •ubmerpd in twampa. and
buried under chunpe of ~
*bo ~ once cbetrf\&1 hi~
lWVCly UDCOooeriMd about the
bih&y of daQll:r. Titink befoft )'OU
thumb
JMJt A.N•w W ,,,._. VM Al .. .,..,,....'-' ..............
-
-_,
Staytrig out of the sunshine comple~ly
just denies the reason we all live h ere
thesu
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
Considenna that Huntinatoo
Beach is just 33dqrces north of the
equator, smina on the sand there isa
hot proposition. says Dr. Rodenck
McDonald,.adenna\oloaist in Hunt-
ington Beach. If you followed the 33
dearec Une ona11tude around the
aJol?c. you'd wind up somewhere near
Marrakesh, a ctty 10 North Africa
You'd think twice about bak.an11~ the
sun th~. he commented. You
shoul<fthink twice about baking in
the sun along the Sou them California
coast too.
that on a nationWJde basis is ques-
tionable. According to the Amencan
Academy of Dermatoloay, youna ad~ltsand t~ns are increastn&ly
aomg too far in the sunbumina
direction.
Sunscreens:w1thaprote<:tion factor
of 1 Sare best, McDonald points out.
You can tan riaht tbrouah them
becauaethe1un's UVBrays, thclUnd
known tocauscikinca.ncer.set
blocked out. UV A ra~s 1bioc throu&h.
B\ltUVArayscan tbecompJetefy
dismissed either. In larscquantitios,
they may even caUJC more damqe,
doctorssay. The place to act them in
abundance is a 1.annina salon. For that
reason, Mc Donald advises people to
use the sun instead. If you used a
aalon once in a sreat while for a pany
you'd be OK. he explains. It's tbe '
Exposure to the sun is cumulau ve.
A mother who forJCU to put a hat and
sunscreen on her 3 year.old may be
prcdjsposing the child to danaers as
an adult. salon rqulan who expose themselves
to harm. Sure, UVB rays.never reach
the tanning booth. But UV A rays in
But even the blonde and blue<yed ,
don'thavetoberidiculousabout
staying out of the sun, McDonald ' hcavydosesdodecpcrdamaie. be
Findin& the happy med a um be-
.tween ~inaa paleface: an~ getting sun damaa~ what cruoyang hfe here isall
about. Whether people arc achieving
says. lfyou'rea windsurferora
volleyball player or a swimmer who
spends a lot of time outdoors, no
sweat. Just have yoursunscrcen on
the breakfast table next to your bowl
~fWheaties so you won't foraet to put
1ton.
says.
Skin cancer as ina sense a scary
misnomer. If you lived on a desert
island and got a case that went
untreated, you could die. Around
here, skin cancer is more of a nuisance
than a heaJth oroblem. You can
"How many
d ifferent names
ha ve yo u
answered to an
your life?" I asked
John.
.. What do
you mean?" he
said.
l.11101
Atw1
father bad trouble &grcelnJ. on very much. John Sr ..
expected Junior to be just hke his dad -only better.
John-John, he remembered, was 17. An AU-
American bi&h school football player with the prettiest
girl in town. Re also had acne and a gnawing feeling that
he wasn 'tqllite up to snuff. He never really understood
how his girl could like him. ·
'"You know,
like wftat did your mother call you when you were a
"Crash" was a bully. In college he cheated on
exams, broke lots of hearts and worried privately about
his future. He befriended a teacher who managed to S«
throu&h bis "Mr. Cool" facade. To this day that man
remains John's mentor. kidT' .
"My mother called me Johnny, and my father
called me Junior. Oh, and I had a girl friend in hi&h
school who called me Joh,n-John," he laughed. "Is that
what you mean?"
"Perfect," I said. "Keep going."
John married the woman who called him "John-
Dcar." .
John-Dear was apparently successful at work and a
disaster at home. Mrs. John-Dear was way down on the
list of priorities and it was no-surprise to anyone other
than John, himself, when their marriage fell apart. _ .. My nickname 1n college was 'Crash.' I was a
linebacker on the football team." "Things would be different 1f I had it to do again."
"My k.Jdscall me ~ddy my colleagues at the bank
call me John. My children's friends call me M_r. Brown
and I'm not aoina to tell you what my ex-wife calls me.':
"What did she call you when things were good for
you two?"
be said. .
.. Who's Daddy?" I wondered. "A guy who has
manqed to redeem himself," be said. When j'llS kids
were small, Daddy was someone who appeared on
weekends and a couple of evenings a week.
"John-Dear." he said. ··1 almost fora..01 ~~one.''
"Each of these name-labels implies a diffe~t part
of the "real'' John Brown. Tell me about your mother's
Johnny," I asked. "What kind of boy was he?"
"He was a cyJe k.Jd'.TVeryonc told ham hQW sweet
Now Daddy has fixed all that. Since his divorce. he
has designated specific prime time to his teen-aged
children ... I'm lucky. l thank I reentered their hves
before it was too late."
Will the real John Brown ever reveal h1mscU? He
already has through the name-game. And his new
girlfriend has added another dimension. She calls him
her "Main-Squecie" and when she's in a playful mood,
she's Likely to introduce him as her "Book-of-lhe-
he was." ,r
It was my tum to smile. The httle boy, Johnny. was
evident in this strapping full-grown man sitting across
from me. He obviously felt good remembering the part
of him that remains Johnny.
And Junior. Who was he?
Month Oub Alternative." ·
How many different names have you been called in
your life? Junior was angry most of the time. He and his
-' CdM Sherman Library
turned into paradise
for Spur and Rose gala
By VIDA DEAN
0.-. ..... .,.. • ._
In the old song. "they tore down
paradise and made it a parking lot," but
at Sherman Library and Gardens, they
turned a parking lot into a paradise for
the Spur and the Rose gala.
"This is a fairyland," exclaimed one of
the SOO guests looking out over the area
surrounded by li&hted trees and dott~
with multi-colored covered tables
centered with a variety of bright flowers
and twinkling candles.
Three ycan aao1 Lacllle Adam a had the
idea for the "oceanside prden" type
party when she was benefit chairman,
and Au Wells jokingly remarked Satur-
d4y evening. "Don't fix it, 1f it ain't
broke."
"We started workina on this year's
party in February, but things really got
rolling two weeks qo," said Ora)'H
Prtce, chairman of the event dubbed "an
evenina reminiscent of early California
rancho days." "It was a labor of love."
The caterers (Rococo) moved into the
area at t I :30a.m., set up .-kitcben atcaob
end of the black Astro-turfed dinina area
and bepn barbecuing lamb. Western and
• casualfy clad pattyaocrs dinina under the
stan, were also served jumbo shrimp and
anichoke in remoulade, baby Potatoes
and aquuh, 11parqu1 and a deuen of ict
1 • ..
cream heaped with raspbemes and
chocolate.
· Life on "tbe rancho .. brings on big
appetites ... the dinen had already been
treated to 20 ditfercnt Mn d'ouevres in
the garden durina the social hour. Tables
(in Pepper Tree Patio, Tea prdeo.
oonservatory and Centlal patio) laden
with everythin& from Mexican quiche to
caviar were beinf visited while mariachis
strolled to proVlde the early California
atmosphere.
Music followina the dinner hour that
had the aucsu dancina off the calorics
was decidedly western. E4~e o.aa sana ,.
accompanied by Rane7 WAiker and his
band ... rve known Eddie Dean for a Iona
time. He's one of the put old cowboy
singen," said CUdl Gilbert, wbo admits
to beina a country western music fan.
Committee m em ben usistina Prict
with benefit arranacments were Adams,
Wells, Jami• s,arua1. PllJIU•
Orl1teua, Marprel Corkeu, Pal Cox,
Paala Earl, , ..... Jeu1, Nora Jor-
1euea. Lert wara1a.-and Heatlter
0..1.
"This year we are fonunatc to have the
Irvine Compe.n_y and the te;on Ranch (in
Kem and I..A Counties) fund .. The Spur
and the R•." Thia means that all of the
proceeds from the donations (S 125 each)
will 10 to support the operauons of the
Library and Gardena.'' said Price.
f
resume an outdoor bfestyle n&htafter
treatment.
You should have lt treated naht
away thou&h. Wa1tin1 too Iona could
mean d1sfi1urcmcnt once the bump''
removed.
What bothen McDonald as not the
people who aet tan as a by-product of
someptberact1vuy, but the h1&h
number of female teen who bake an
theaun for that reason alone. Jt'sonc
thma to be ouuide for a purpose, be
says. If that's the case, lhcn too much
sun as )ust a cost of en,oyi ng your
favontc sport. If you're roasuna
yourself for no reason except appear-
ance, however, you face the possi-
bility of premature wnnkhng and
skin cancer Wlthout hav101 much
compensation in the fun depanment.
A lot of 11rt teens these days.
however, are out in the sun for
athletic reasons, McDonaJd points
out. This may be the main reason that
skin cancer rates have increased.
W ALK 1N THE SuN
HIGH·FLYING PARTY
Phtlanthrop1st Pilar Wayne, who has
wnuen newspaper editonals oppos-
ing the expansion of John Wayne
AJrport (named .for her late actor
husband) as opening her Ncwpon
Beach home, "La Roca." on Septem-
ber 21st to the AJrport Working
Group, headed by Barbara L1chman
and Clarence ("Bun") Turner.
"The fundraiscr (and what might
have been a protest party) may tum
into a celebration," L1chman told me
on Sunday. She referred to a "Just-
signed agreement" (limiung lhe &Jr-
pon's size and scope) between the
Alrpon Work.mg Group and Stop
Polluting Our Ncwpon. and lhe
Ncwpon Beach City Council wtth the
Orange County Board of Supervisors.
Called "An Evening Under lhc
Stars" (and also under the John
Wayne A1rpon flt&ht hne?) the black-
t1c optional party (or 400 to 500 auests
will Sl)tll over{from the 6'"~~ foot Wayne home) to an outs1 e patio
(where the SWlmmang pool II be
covered to proVldc a dan r) and
onto an adJOantng., elevated tennis
coun.
-A bounuful buffet by amst-tumcd-
catcrcr Juda Traspon wt II include all-
Amencan home-cooked food
For funher 1nformat1on. you may
call Donna Le Yeck at 631-3678.
J. ••• rLANE TALK. I ran into Lady
Patricia Spielman (sponang a new red
and black David Hays sutt) on
Wednesday. She was having lunch at
Orange Coul OAIL V PILOT /WedMMJay, August 28, 1985 4f
"When I wasakidl wasaJwaysoutof
doon. But pis were usually 1ndoo~
lea mi na how to be future mothers.
Now they seem tolbeoutdoora
ltamma how to btJock.s. ''
You can spot a c:aK of lun cancer
by not1c1n1 a sore that docsn 't heal. he
sa1d, or by detect1n1 some lund of
bump on the face that has no other
eitp\ana11on. Dr. Charles Madman, a
dermatol<>IJSt an Newpon Beach,
pointed out th.at 1fa bumpdoein't
heal an 30 to 60days, it should be
looked at. You can telhfit's
c.anccrou.s by watch.ins what happens
when it's scratched h&Jltly. "With
m101mal pressure," be sa.ad, "ll
bleeds. oozes, or scabs."
Sunscreens that block out both
UV A and UVB rays are available,
McDonald says, but be doeso 't thank
they're such a bot idea to '4ear an the
umc. lfyou wall:daround with a.very
pa!c face and somebody says, "Hey,
let s go to tlle Dodger game." you
BETTY
PORTER
the local bistro with Dorothy Tum-
bulJ
Spielman and Turnbull were plan-
nmg a chnstenang party for -arc you
ready for this'> -Spaelman's newest
acquisition. a twrn-c'ngmc Jct C1ta-
t1on, reqwnng not one, but two pilots,
and costing a mere S900 an hour to
operate.
Planning a part)' was no problem,
but 1t was absolutely U RGENT that
the plane have a name ··speedy
Spielman?" No. "Sp1clman's Space
Ship'>.. No. No. Ho""' about
"Spiclman's Satellite?" Heaven~ No'
Ths hst of suggestions went on and
on
Fmall). all of us agreed that the
plane should be called "The Flying
CaFpet.'' "fttr "Bll, t>nc of Spielm•n's
many acqu1s1uons, including two
homes wtth posh addresses. and a
··Rolls.'' 1s her vet) own carpet
company .A-h-h-h-h. dcc1s1ons. dc-
c1s1ons ... • • • BEARING UP Let someone else
defend the seals and the whales The
fun-lovtng socaahte Gana Danage r
(wife of Ray Damger. Big Canyon)
m11lUJUSt once f<>flet youuUlllCt'teO.
If )'Ou do, lh05e three hours in the
si&nds wdl caux you far mott
dam&ae than they would tbt person
with a bttofcolor.
The other al~mauve, stayin1 out '
of the sun completely between the
hounof IOa.m.and 2 p.m. t1ahoa
dumb1dea 1f1t bccomeu ri&i<lpobcy,
he saya. Southern Californians who
recommend 1t, 1D McDonald's
opinion, ··are denying the rcuon we
all ~ve here ''
wanu to preserve the trad:itiona,
stuffed Teddy Bear. . ~
Last Tuesday, DaniF .mvit.ed ~
of her fnends -including me -for a 1 "luncheon for no parucular reason,.
at the prest.1gaous Big Canyon Coui>
try Oub.
Guests were greeted by -you
Juessed tt -masses of Teddy Bears.
.mcludlnj three or four which wert
one-half hfe--slZe. Stuffed Teddy
Bears of various sizes adorn~
baskets of flowers, printed plact
cards. napluns and balloons.
Why the Teddy Bears'>
"Everything around us 1s chan~
mg," cxplamed Daruaer. -now, the
people who manufacture the Ca~
Patch dolls arc coming out with a new
bear which they U\SlSt will replacnht
old-fashioned Teddy.,
··So I wanted to honor the Tedd)'
Beat Wlth which we all grew up, wb.Jlc
It as still around.,.
After a sumptUous lunch, Damgcr
introduced the dignified l)laniit
Gertrude Cain who played a ptant>
medley of clus.acal music. A.nd then
Cain suddenly SWltehed to a load
rcnd1t1on of "The Tedd} Bear Pic-
nic ..
o\mona the aucsts (aJI ~u under
75) v.erc V1J1Jn1a K,nott Bender
Athena Puchcss, Betty Thann, Man
4..xelson. Melba Yack.. Annie Lou
Pierce, Bernadine Ullmln, Bnta
Tehch and Ra} Damgcr's daughtcn
Barbara Schannerer and Gann~
lrgang
Or-. OOMt DAILY PILOT!Wedneectay. August 2e. 198!
Anthony Andreln and Deborah Raffln help
police to determine whether a 90eta11te•a
tleatb wu ma.rcler or aalclde ID AC•tha
Cbriatte•• .. SparkJ.haC Cyanlde.•• The made-
for-telemlon moYle wtll be rebroadcut
toJllCht at 9 on ChaQnel 2. , r
I atJ HtBHWAV TO H£AVEH
MOVIE I
• • • "Golll Digger• OI 1933"
( 1933) Joen Blondell, Ruby Keeler 8 111 AOCK 'N' AOU. SUWER
ACTION G ~.MADMEN ANO
MAQNS
(f) lWlJQHT ZONE
I :V.s P£OPtE
.• Ci) MA.AK AUSSEll Gl)~M LOAD
MOYIE
••• Leave Ern Laughing \19311 Midi~. Anne JICXson CB) twtOEMElD HOSTS
THE YOUNG COMEDIANS SPEaAl
A CASE Of LIE.
-8:30-
(f)CANNON
• P.M. MAGA2JHE e 11> COMEDY wrTH MOHTEmi
&fWI>
* *'It ''$perkltng Cy1nlde" ( 1983)
Anthony Andrewa, Deboflh Altlin D QI FACTI OI' lJF£ -8 9 DVNASTY
atMSWONmN eFAONTUE
Ci) NATIONAl OEOOfWMC m> PRMSE THE LON> •
mBARETTA
IOMOYIE •• ·~ 'Ya ~· ( 1982) Seuon
Hubl&y a.,., SWll\son
OlMOYIE * * , The ~ Expen-ment ( 19M) MIClllll Pwe. Nancy
Alleo
ZlMOVIE
• • ' Cloak And Digger' ( 1984)
Henry Tl'lomas Ott>ney COler'l\ln
-·.30~ m MOYIE
t * * 'The WOfld In HIS Arms"
t 19S2l Grtgorf Pecil Ann Blylh
Sl MOVIE
• • r Unlit September" ( 19M)
'Karen Allen Th+e<ry Lhefmltte.
(C)MOYE • * • "Ughln1.ng Swords Of o.th"
(19H) TOtnlsabuto Wakayama. Goh
Kato
-WIO-e ())MOYIE **'" "Uncle Joe Shannon" (19781
8ur1 Young, Doug Mc:Kton 8 mON HOUVWOOO
(f) INDf'Jl9CJENT NEWS 9 MC>AE AEAL PEOPtE
l~CUJI
**'~"The Wom1n In Rad" 11984) Gent Wilder, Kelly le&OCll
-12:.IO-D a LATE NIGHT WITl4 DAVID
lETTEMIAH 8 TWlJOHT ZONE 8 THAEEM& 0
'
Solo chaperone.takes pn ,
too much responsibility
anythjna? Please hurry your answer. -JUST CA LL ME
"MlKEl'f
A111I
I.AIDERS
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I am 29,
unmarried and work
for a hi&h-tcch firm.
Throuah coUeaaues
at the omce 1 became
an adviser to a~
irou p, ages I 4-18.
They an: terrific luds. •••••••••••• Two months
ago, l accompanied 14 of them on a weekend trip. We
stayed in an inexpensive motel. The other couple that was
supposed to chaperone had to cancel at the last minute. I
hated to disappoint the kids so I took them alone. Thc:y
behaved beautifully. The motel managercvcncom-
phmentcd them when we left.
Last week one of the Jirls who went on the trip came to
speak to me. She was obviously ll'oubled. ApparenLly two
of th~ motel roomsadjoined. Her room (three girls)
connected with one shared by four gu ys. Oneofher
roommates suaiested they aU play a "strip" game that
ended with onetuy totally naked and most of them less
than fully clothed. They then coerced one of the-other guys
into taking a showerwbJle the&irls watched.
She was terrified that someone would find out and it
would act back to her parents. I told her what they did was
grossly stupid, very disappointing. and not "ba<1 ••And she
should forget about it with the promise neverfo do
anythin1 like that again.
Driving home that njgh11 got the shakes. What if they
had been caught? What ifher parents find out? I was the
only adult present. Could I be criminally guilty of '
DEAR MIKE: I cu't see laow yoa could be c1tar1ecl
wl~ uy..._1 "crtmtul." la fact, llace yoa were
com,-.tely uawart of wltat weat oo, yoa .,pear to k
blamolet• to me. Nex• tlDI•, doa) offer &o cbperoee 1 t khb wlUaoat
ltelp. Aleo, clM!ck tile room arru1emeat1 ucl mah tare .
die coueett.a1 doon art Jocked. AH one more aaueattoa. It'• aot a bad Idea to look Ill OD tbe Uttle darll.D11 oace
darta1 tbe aJpt to make tare everybody It wbere be oa&bt
tobe. • ••
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was rccentJy asked to serve
as a bridesmaid. I went to school with .. MarY but we wett
never close friends. I was quite surpnsed;ofecc1vc such an
honor. / Yesterday Mary called to say the dress would cost
SI I 0, the shoes to match are $30 and lhe headpiece is~ I 0.
The last two weddings I have been asked to participate
10 were also costly. l paid SI 30 for the ~ss and shoes for
one wedding and although the other bndc paid for the
dress 1 had to buy shoes and fly to Ohio at my own expc~se. She djd, however, pay for my hotel accommo-
dations. d .. d All three of these dresses look very "bridesma1 y an
l will not be able to wear them again.
How do I tell this person that ljustcanno.tafford the
honor ofbeing in her wedding without offending her" -
HONOR POOR IN IN DIANA
,DEAR IN: Tell ber jHt like yoa told me. Aod lD &be
future doa'& airee to serve at a brldeama:ld before you
know all tbe delalla and laave tboa1bUl over cuefolly.
1.
COLEMAN-CAGLE · ARNOLD-COUZENS The bride-elect 1s a graduate of
Corona dcl Mar High School and UC
Irvine where she was affiJiated with Pi
Beta Phi. She is cmpl6ycd by AHC'al
as a flight attendant.
Cathleen Mary Coleman and Den-
nis Scott Cagle, both of Newport
Beach. have announced their plans
for a 1986 summer wedding at an
enpgcment party in the home of the
bndc-t~be's mother, Mrs. Mary Col-
eman.
The bnde-clcct, also the daughter
of the late Mr. Dale Bond Coleman, is
a 1985 graduate of Newport Harbor
High School and will be attending
sccrctanal school this fall.
Her future husband 1s the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Cagle and isa
1982 graduate of Newport Harbor
High School.
' St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
will be the setting for their marriage.
A December wedding an Our Lad§°
Queen of Angels Catholic Church 1n
Newport Beach is planned by Kelly A.
Arnold of El Toro and Robert J.
Couzens of Newport Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Arnold of
Dyrango, Colo .. are the parents of the
future bride. She is a graduate of
Corona del Mar Hifh School and
attended Fort leWlS College in
Duranao and Orange Coast College,
Costa Mesa. Her fianoc is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Couzens of Binn1ngham.
Mich. He is a graduate of Brother
Rice Hi~ School and Michigan State
University.
-DRAKE-BARRACLOUGH
Dr. and Mrs. Abe Puz1ss of
PortJand, Ott., arc the parents of the
future bridegroom. Heisa~duateof
the University of Washmgton, in-
terned at UCLA Harbor General
HospitaJ and was a resident in
Orthopedic Surgery at UC lr\tine. He
as in private practice in Portland.
An October wedding is planned.
lllLBURN-STRICKLAND
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Milburn of
iiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fl Glendon and Jane Drake of El
• You Store It
• You Lock It
• You Take the Key
DO YOU HAVE
HYPERTENSION?
Cajon have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter, Julie Ellen
Drake. to Douglas Campbell Bar-
raclough. a fonner Costa Mesa resi-
dent.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of Valhalla High School in El Cajon
and a 1983 graduate of Cal State San
Diego with a bachelor's dcgrcc an
psychology. She is cumntly enrolled
!Jl the tcachina credential program at
Cal Staie San Diego.
Westmfoister have announced the:
engagment of their daughter, Rose-
ann Elizabeth, to Jordan Aoyd
StrickJand. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Aoyd E. Strickland of Hunt-
ington Beach.
The future bride is a senior at
Leffingwell Christian School and her
fiance is a graduate of Marina High
School, attended Coastline Com-
munity College and is a member of
the National Tool and Machinists
Association.
RESIDENl MANAGER ON
PREMISES
Your J*IOnel belongmga ate~
hind lndlvtd\Jal1y lock~ dOO<S
OFF
CONVENIENT Rent only the apace
you need, temporary or long term
Open wry day except major hot-
tdays Easy in and out
LOW COS-T One monthly
fee . . Free9 el(penslve spaoe at
your home or office
8EOOND
MONTH'S
RENTAL
offer
good at
this
location
llllVtld
177•2 COWAN ••>-lO.O
We are investigating
a new medication shown
to be effective in
treating hypert.ension.
Participation in this
study includes M.D. Supervision,
lab testing, E.K.G.s, medications,
and is free to all participants. . I
For more information Call After 2 PM
Her future bridegroom 1s the son of
Robert and Jean BarraclQugh of
Costa Mesa. He is a 1978 graduate of
Estancia High School and recieved a
·bachelor' of science degree in physical
education at Cal State Fullerton m
1983, where he is working on his
master's dcgrcc in sports medicine.
They will be married next June 1n
the First United Methodist Church m
San Diego,
HUGRE8-PUZI88
The engagement of Kim Ellen
Hughes and Dr. Paul Marti n Puziss
has been announced by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hurwitz of
Cor~na del Mar.
An August 1986 wedding in the
Garden Grove Nazarene Church 1s
planned.
BOBBY-DIXON
Dr. and Mrs. Ric hard P. Hobby of
Huntington Beach have"announocd
the engagtment of their daughter.
Ann Marie Hobby of (f'\'ine, to
Michael Cameron Dixon of Hunt-
mgton Beach.
They are planrring to marry Oct. 12
m the Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church.
The future bndc graduated from
Loara High school and attended
Chapman College.
Her fiance. son of Dr. and Mrs.
Howard Dixon Sr. of Costa Mesa, is a
graduate of Santa Monica High
School and Loyola Marymount Col-
lege.
aS:~1~06t 640-7412 Submity'ourweddingneivs
~~~~~~;;;==~~~=-;-;-;-;;-;;-~;d!!.).:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.---;;;;;~--;;;;~!!!__~~~~~
single
age38
-TV anchorwo:man
Self destruction is one response
to a mental crisis. A demandin~
career or a stressful home life
can drive fllmost anyone to harm -
ful action ~. But, every situation ·
is different. That's why there are
For Ad Action
Cal a
Daiy Plot
AD-VISOR .
642-5678 .
To help you submit the required wedding and eng.agemenr
information, forms are available at the Daily Pilot office, 330 W. Bay Sr ..
Costa Mesa.
For weddings, quality photos of the bndal couple or bnde only are
acceptable.
Ensagement information must be submitred at least seven weeks pnor
to the wedding. •
Forms and photos can be dropped off at the office or mailed to the
Wedding Department, Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo" I 560, Costa Mesa, Calif.
92626.
P11 ... ~ ... to po.a ... ~ herself different w~s. to help. ~&D . ~.&I. The Information -,
Creative Cuisine Recipe Contest
Enter Your Favorite Recipe And Wini
CATEGORIES
a a
Center at Capistrano by the Sea
Ho-,pital has a free booklet on
mental crisis. It outli nes the many
options you ha ve availab le .
Hos pitalization is only one of
them. Call (714 ) 831-1787.
You'll receive this useful
booklet in absolute
confi dence. We've
helped people cope
with the problems
of today's society for
over 25 years. We
a t j a a a 0
understand.
Howto
Harxile a
Mental
Crisis
7. QUICK AND EASY/DO-AHEAD DISHES-Redpes fo~ooks on the so or those causht with
unexpected suests.
2. REG/ONAL:::-Recipes featurins Amerian cuisine from the East to the Southwest and parts in
between.
J. MASCULINE TOUCH-Men who are enjoyins the kitchen, share your favorite recipe.
4. GOURMET-Recipes you use when yo~ want to Impress the epicurean in your life.
..
t
ULES
Ent""" muJI ~ prlv1t• lndlvldul./s. No eotntrtMCMI ffltf#ft wlll be ~rttd. All enrrlft mUJr "-~ ,doclble tp«ed, Ettt11MU mutt be 11 or owr, Otlly '11ot •mp/Offtf ,,. fl()(.,.,,,,.. ,,,,,,., ~ /KOPMlf ol the Dlll/y /'llot Md ClflftOf be
returned. Entrln must be fl(Htnwled by Seotmekr 11rh, 1Mf or delivered ro f'!H!y
l'llot, c/o C.IATM CVISH ircw COHmt', "° w .• ,, COlftl ~ CA f.H1' b)r J:OO 1.M. ~premt.r 1lth1 1flS. Wlnn.n wlll be t.tured a10f1f with thff rec/pf In
the 0-.tlve C~ HIC'tfOfl runnlllf In the Otlly "'°' on W.ctnetdty Octo6er l. fHS. Winners nuy .,,,., -. thin one atNf«)' &di Mtry must be KcOlf'l!»n'*1
br. '" entry form or Cf1P.Y al'" entry /olm n Welt-. • typitd ,,.. ,,.,1p1i ewplalnl,,, Why ,,,. .ntr•nt l/Afd tlifl r«lpe Ind w'-1 lte!Ut« Ultw ro UM ,,,. redpe r1tr .. 11Mllftl wllt be dtof«I 10 nkli te In tooll-olf Tuadl , r u 1j,5,
CREATIVE CUISINE RECIPE
CONTEST EHTAY FOAM
NAME OF EHTRY:
CATEGORY:
ADDRESS:
DAY PHONE #!
EVENING PHONE I :
'
.. f
I •
Orange Coaal O,A.IL Y PILOT /Wednuday, Auguat 28, 1845 A 11
I
Springfield concert-'most fun-filled' ofseason
Bl RANDY JAY MATIN .,..., .... c .... 111111 .......
Aa..aa-nd Nooow, LIVE from in-
side your tclcv1 1on! .. It's the Rack
Spnn.field show! ...
While many rock a.hows this season
bear the heavy 1mpr1nt of MTV, Rack
Springfield's elaborately staaed pro-
duction Thursday niaht at the Pacific
Ampitheatrc was pure video, com-
plete Wlth a credtt roll at the end.
As the curtain parts we find a
"The most entertaining
movie this Summer."
l \A TOO-\\ \11~t tlur~
PR-~ HERMAN •
/'1E-WllJ trG
#Vl~TClll
...... UA MOWS 4 "° .021
*HIUPUI
UA fllO¥l.S I
ts2-4tt3
... TllUA CDWAIDS HARD
TWll
lll·l501
....
CDWMDS
M>ODmMil
5510.S5
-UUllA
AMC f AS1t011 SQllM(
(2U) "1·0633 ....... ""' CDWUO$ WI.JO T• IJO-'ttll ..... Cll'.J)(K
U4.ml
...,.... ....-rwuna
CDWMDS TOllM CDWUO$ CllMA
COOtl lllUT
751-4114 ftl·lUS
• Tiii .,,..,_m
CDWAIDS ll TlllO ,ACl'IC II-WAY >t Dl-11 Sll·tsOI ftl-lH) ...unn1 • .,, nun
1anuor Ucbl.O& Ult. Accdcn1&lly .M
comes across two monumental tele-
v1Ston screen1 and t JJ.tnt remote
controller. Ptusina to flap throUJh the
channels, he discovers a medfcy of
.Sprinafield's video hits. Then Sprina-
ficld is followed hvc on camera, from
the dressina · room whale two d-
ditional cameras project the show on
the aiant TVs.
Perhaps we have producer Allan
Carr to blame for all of this, having
cast rock stars in "dramatic" role$ for
LIFT 15 A 0£.A(H
.J 1HN C.ANDY • RICHARD CR&IOIA
PO ~ A PARAMOUNT PICTURI ft . "' ~ ...
MO'#'PLAY1MG
IRU MilOn Brea ll TOllO OllAHOf
Pl&I' S29 ~ EOwlrds El 1010 C•l1 Cente1
IUEllA PAlllt 581 9500 634 25S3
UA Mo.tt!S • IMITlllGTOll llACll m:.mml
9S2•991 E0wita1Hun1inq1on _..,,•!Mo
COITA lllEIA Cent1111 548 0388 OMltG(
E ONl•Os htol Mf · Paclftc s Orange ~ 7.W.. Edwirds Un"ltl'lll~ Onvf.111
COIT Alllf IA Ss.t 8811 634 93& 1
Eelwlros C "'e,..~ IMUM lfAQ4 WUTWTBI
<Atltt• Eowm South Coast PICltc I ~IY ll 979•••1-•971711 ~ .,., .... -----·i!!!!I
1hdilm vcmon.of"Sc!lt&_l!t P~.. Cu.,y Smith (Gary Myn
sevcrt.I ycan beck. The prol) emthen Tumclfcl. But there WO I Qlmnrr
was that the director had to spend the confhct of pu~ On the untempo nm full month just tryinf to &et Peter sonas pnnaficld ovcr-hammod tt
Frampton to stop po 1na. Posing and on the eerioua numbers you could
bernt the key distractina clement in all but see the tcan rolltna from his
Sprintfield's show. poutma face. .
Spnngfield spent most of the His career as a soap-opera doctor
followma two houn cneraeucally rcall)'. shot the bell out of bis
bouncing across the stage shakin~ hjs credibility· with ttie m11nstream rock
hair and dcrriere, doing hand spnnas ' audience. So Snnafield now finds
and ascending two h1ah tech posing himself playing to crowds of 8,000
platforms. scrcamin• tcen4JC airls.
Now don' get me wrong. this was But Spnngfield was• record-maker
one of the most fun-filled concerts of Iona before his tclcvisaon career and
the season. Sprinafield plays quite not• bad one at that. Oct pate pos1t1 ve
dcmand1na and respectable rock cntica1 notices bas music career .never
music wtth a tt&ht backina band took off until the sona "Jessie's Gari"
1nclud1n1 the hara worlcina drummer gained mass exposure on the soap
lUXU•Y FHIAT .. S
W'ALK INS * F1m r ... '*""" s.., .. "" * "" • 0 Ill I. V 12..15 Ulllflt 1111111
cnvantER D 1'4 21U f lto1 . I OAAlllCf I Mt110 !!!llLJ
QttOITalSTElllS ... , 1 .os s:n e. t .so
weird Sclenu (~0·1 l)
3 20 .. 7 40
SUM._lt ltafTAL (fllll) IHQWS AT 12:00 2 •00
4 r001100 1 :00 e. 10:00
EUltONAlll VACAT10ll (P0-111 ): JS 7 .4$ ~IUI
Frltllt Nltlll (A) I :25 5 ,. .. t :41
1teAL eueeus CNJ SHOWS AT 1:35 3:4 0 S:41 7:SO • t ,SS
CEOTURY ctneoome 0
Stint In nc •••oe •~•a, U ,10 2:40 S:10 7 140. 10:10 ...... "$_ A• w-. C"'QJ AT U :OO 2 :00 4 :00
1 :001:00& 10:00
Of" TM& DltA !Al SHOWS AT 11 :H ~·20 i :OS 7 :SO 10 :21
SILV'&AADO (118-1a 1 I :30 2 : 11 S:bO 7•41 e. 10:JO. In 70MM
• WKTOTMa Walt~~Ck rvru•• tN> 1 , 1 o CA " > J :JO S:SO I : IO a, 10:30 12:00 1 :SS 3 : 5•45 7:31 t .21 / 70MM
DRIVE -INS :~:~';
STADIUm [;J
ntK ...... ,.,
'9u1 Co·H tt
VHr 01 Tl\t Ora9on (Iii)
Na WES'S•G
ADVDn'Ull• IPGt ll'lu1 ~ollce Academy
~art II (ft0·1 3)
llADllAX9e7 ...
T•1fr ••-<flla·1JI flt.amDo l'lrat lt1ood ~arl 2 (A)
DRIVE.CNS D111n I 00 Wkd111v1 / 7 30 Wktnds I Under 12 Fr" Unlm Noted
opera 1how. But by that umc the -dama&tto hitim ...... After .. Jeuic's irl'. came a few
other udy poP. cbettnuu aucb u
.. L1v1nf. 1n en .. Now wnb his latest
album ·Tao," Sprinafield is tl')'ll\I to
UP,!nd his audience.
'Tao" tnes hard to meet the studio
standard' set by Todd RundJrCn but
like his show tbc album 1uJfera from
too much production. The content 11
cuttan&fy personal and c1Cpreaed wub
much antelliience and surpri11n1
power. The recordina 1txlf .is top
notch but most of the songs feel hke
an odd JOtnina of three or four ideas
with Iona dutances between books
wh1ch SpnnJfield fills up Wllb tons of
lyncs. Frequently the$e are no more
than space markers supponina the
whole of the we1ahtY mut1caJ struc-
ture
As a balance only s1x JOngs from
"****'Real Geruus'
as a genuine comic gem and
a Jolly good time."
ll.11kt Cbrk, l.i~A TODA'
Olll'TAllUA
I ~C-"" -~ .....
-lllllTC. MAUI
I •Ar.b"""""CF"'
~
w ~•
""""' ... ..
COITAasA ""' _..~ ~IUOI
')otl'.",l'I' ,.,. ... ~Ledl
fl IOllO ..
........... ~.'A~
.. .
'-" l">~l
~ ..... .,_
··Tao" were prncn~ 10 concc:n.
Herc the arranaements were pUed
down to a hard rock foundation -t
around a whole ~ of fun
1ndud101 an 18-foot inflatable rocktt
th.at the audience aeU a chance to .y
wt th 0 th.er neat toys 1.qeluded a dint
acnal situated behind the band ul a
collCC'taon of hghtnin1 bolt~
platforms wtuch cQIUlfed them .
Spnngfield demonstrated mu'1bl
abahty as well as his talent ~ n
enten.amcr playingguiur.i ha:rmo
aod keyboards. And so tar be i
only singer I have seen who doctD't
look l1k.e a lost puppet while weadna
has cordless headset microphone.
'"t1l tuesday" who opened l('C ~
of a developing mellower ae~ ID
rock that includes such diverse new.
comers as Mr. Mister and ~IC\a
Cns1s It 1s nice to sec that watb bldds
lake these there as a return to~ 0 on quahty wnung as a cntc
record comparues use in sign.in,
new act.
*PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* Lead sanier Aunee Mann is
* parucularty toulful thouah she tfK
ALL SEATS 82.00 AT
MESI (DllLY)-WESTIROOI (DAILY)
WOODBRIDGE (TUES. I WED. )-UllYERSITY (WED. I THURS.)
CllEll WEST (TUES. )-LIDO (WED. )-HUITlllTOI (TUES. I WED.)
FOUITlll VALLEY (WED. I THURS.)_
edwa rd s TOWN CENTER 751 ·4184
BRtS lUl 6 ANTO N ACRQ:,5 f RO\l '> (.OAS I PLAZA
' f • • tt . • ...
OIUIM m'MIWT "lW ... ~
If CUlY" '"' 111M, I ..... WI. 1111, NI
S MT&MI I "tallrtlll"
~.::.·,= ~ ~1il:'t;:"
rUiiiftiiitiiACAWiTIM'ir• na · II FR BTll."
1111. •11. 1MI hit, ....... ,.
"WEmW"IN-11) 'llllllMIEa''IPll
11111, •11, "" ., .. 1-1...... .
... ''Rftllll"IPl-111 ... ._.. 1111, ...
11 ..... 1......... "fWUl.I fWIT"
lill,Ml ... tll 111M,Ml.1 ....
edwards WOODBRIDGE 551 ·0655
ftA.fffl/tiP41 Ar•A11 .. ,•,;,.fA I•• .. t· ••.••,t
'1.T." IPll TWl.1 "C•llU' ,..11)
• 1111. ....: WI '!'!I-a 11 11, ..,., ..... "ftuJW TUT_.. -...., 11111
"IACI Tl Tl 1W fVTWf" 11111 • ..., 1•111 I IUI ft&. JIOl-------4
11111, ......... ,1.11111 ,,.
edwarcJs SOUTH CO AST PLAZA 546·271'
OR1',"J1 ''>UNHOW[H COST A\IE\A
I • ,, .. , t t • t •"' '~ • '
"ftAI. .......
1 .......
lill, IMl!ll
.. .,. ....
(pt.11)
ll1H.J,llJI
.... 11121
11•111Mt . ......
(N-11)1111, .....
... ... ,Ml
UY• IUI" (I)
hll, 1111, ...
lll .... , ...
eawaros CINEMA 546·3102
MAR£j(JR80Ul[l/AROAI AOA!lot'> '-"''Alll['>A
''1111 • m .......... S2 SO ft 3:00 lllUlm •11 NII =.-::..-::
ed wards ~!ARBOR TWIN 631 ·3501
MAflOORBOU,[VUlOAI l\ltl 'lON • oc,:Al\IES.t
........... 111 .......... , .... "PH Wft'I -~ ..
edwards MESA 646 ·50 25
Nl~Pl)R'll0Vl(~&ll(JA' ., . .,.,. 1'-'A\ll\A
All
llATI
•2.00
"" ..... "IRUJ•Rll''
Ml
edwards HUNT INC. TON I ·0380
fH Al •• I ' .. j • h1.. I ~·
"THIWtlf"
11 .... 1141,WI .......... 1WICPll
\..
... ._ ....... , ...... l,l,1MI
"PH llH'I • UYflTlm" ,,.,
lllJl, 1121, ...
.... ltll, 1llJI ~
edwards SADDLEBACK 581 ·5880
El TOROROAO&l ROC.Otfl(J E. rut:1u -. .... IJ.10 M JIOO ..... a.:l"
"1&11 9.f" lldl,*11..alrtl
1111,~ ·-TMIEa''
llll,Wl.1 "1 l 1tl, 1111.1•11
''lfAl '1.T." IPll ......... , '"ftUIW TUT _.. 11121, llll, WI.
Wl,llJl,1•11
"ftAI. ''lllWI•• ......... UW91 IUI" Ill
11111.a..we 1a.-.Mt.WI
lilt. ., .. , .... ........ 11111111 ~
edwards VIEJO TWIN 830·6990
\A .. 01[:,1 l (WY "J A1'A.''C"'R" ... '4TA 1A1C,SiQ11;,,[JC
''PH·WH'I•
UMIM"INI
1111. ..... , ...
"YUll • lW ...... (I) , ...... " , ... ....
edwards MISSION VIEJO ~ALL 495·6220
S [l ,...,, ' I-IV"°' .A .. ( • 81 't.![t; ll.,18 t;',(Jt;) & \AA1 ~~ ......
''ltlllTElll"
11111. bll,MI , ..... "
''UCI" Mm""J 1Nl,Ml,WI .... 1.,.
~",.. "THIWaf" IN) 1,....,.. .. ...............
edwards SOUTHCOASTL AGUNA 4 97·17 11
I•
·,u1i1" &·)·••If\• A I'' A, ~i• A, ~AH[A ~
•• ??Blal" ...........
·~t.aTS' ............ ... ._ ..
11111, 1111, ...
""' ..... ,,, .. 11111
eawards c1Nl V,A Wl s r 891 .3935
'tlitf ( ........ 'f IJ ', ....... t\ I ·, ' II N' 'I " ..... ". Ta:
_.._ ..
mmr·" a• "Tiii war
lMl. ......... 1 .. 11111 ... , 1~ ..... .... , ...... -nL •• •'fll4ft'I• "YIM•
AIU&IM'r ....... ........ . ti, .......
"' .......... lia•tt
,,.,. ., ..... j '"' ua..--. •' • ,,, t 'I
·'""· o.i1..... 1 •c 1•au11111~-.11: .,. .. ..... _ • .......,_1tl __ _ .,....._ .......
"'*"" , .... .. . , .. , ... ...
......
BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST Z Pwformanc.a Mon•)Y . Sut herv01cc and writinaa.rep~
Thnt Set.div (Except Holidlys & Spec. Ent11fl'Mfttl I an a mid-tempo sort of way. MU
-
calls to mind a relaxed Annie Lenqpn~
~ ~ (Eurythmics) mi.xed Wltb an cul) T 1m 1u1 em;;.a!......,.. 1m1u 1 1 wr *' -T Grace Slick less the passion.
LAKEWOOD
lr•nler LAMIF:ADA
' . . .. ~
----SUMMH llNfAlCMt _.._. Mann who writes most of Jhe
SACK TO TMI ·-- -- -matcnal rhclud.lna the popalar PUTVU'"' ~~~INI Y~~· "Voices Carry .. and .. Over the 11
•• 'i!.t11J.C '"" '141 1•" Shoulder" Cbuld 10 one of two ~s YU.c;;" from here. ~
TMI DllMOH 1111 WAJININO llON ie Keepang the Jan&ly. space ndtar
1we Mt .... •u ,.,.. 12•• ws ..,. wa ws •wt ...-"' -sound populanzed by Aock o1 ~-
-~ 11 •• '!:.N~..':"1we <iulls .. Mann could mellow the wbtlc
IUMMll UNTAl !'NI •""' _, than& out lake an '80s version 1of ,,. we.,.,,..,. 11• II.AC~,.~~ <Nil Spanky and Our Gan' or alian h~f
wAlf--. llNllt~=:,.111 wtth a more dynamic gwtangt
THI II.ACK .,. ,, .. ,... ..-.-MOOOMIU • drummer and concentrate on wn a CAUlDllON IN! _..._, ..__ ,,.,. "".,,..,. ,., .. ,,. , .. -.... more uptempo pop numui;1a..
LAKEWO 0 UAL CMNIUICN1 '"'~.!':'111 entJysbe 1sdo101a1J.oftbe work.
c .. n ier Sou1h
PltOMT NIGHT C1111 1---ntl IMHALD POUST • . __ , ...
lMIWI ......
'" .......... , ...
-·IUl--·-COCOON 1 ... .... 11~ ......... ..
-----UCKTO
THI PU'T\IU rNt
!Ml lrU t.U .. lldl
W11U ICllNCI , ... ,., , __ _
NAnoNAl~
IUIOPIAN VM:AnoN ,..., .. -·-1-* PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES•
IU,111 fflA' Mill hort ltt• ..... Ao• S."4ty ,,_ 1~111 11 Jflllll , ........ u.. c.ii 11141111 llll
ANAHEIM
1714)111 ntfllmr !!.ll!lft 'm
11N1H Of TM1LMNIDWI 1111
OHOITaUlnD IN!
WARNING llON 1111
llUCW000111t
1. VOlUNTllU 1t11
· 2. IT. IUM>'I P1a1 ... >. TMI llUOAIT CWt 111
ORANGE
111-itM m11JFm • o,,..,, ---IACK TO THI PUTUU'"'
TMI WT ITAIMMT8 '"" ··~~11} su~~'d::i <""
SU,.11 IWA' lltfll 1-v l'fl. M
h4 su..; ,, ... JAlll t• )fllllllh•
lolot91oti .. CM! IJl4)t,;i. 41U
e:1q·11 II"'"' 1m11•M.u ,..
* * "' Wll'l llO AIMNNll '"'
llYINOI Of TMI Nllllll 1111
UNIN Of ntl LMNO DWI (Ill
COOi Of' llLINCI ~
SUMMal UNTAl '"'
VOt.UNTllU 1111
WlllD KllNCI ~•a1
lai.9W'S
1191.11 fGlll1M-1a1
•m:,tJ;tMB
1114)111 1 fa,. ....... '"""'
MICMAll J. !OJI
n1N WOlP 1N1
NIOMT Of M COMIT ,.,..,.,
MICMA& J l'Oll
nlN WOU t-
HtOMT Of TMI COMIT , ... ,"
I "ONE OF THE
YEAR'S FUNNIEST .
• ' ' • _,. ,;. ~ ... ~ ,/. • ... f ! •
·Hanks and Candy
are the best so een
team around:' l
-Pat Colins CBS MORNING NEVVS
--... ---..... .... . ,_.., .......
Ill• .... -....... -u--...... .....-.i:..-.. rw-~ ....... ...... .. -ca.ta•u --· ................. t ;r ··-~ ..... -. ... ........ -fOUlll' .. ,-._ ,, """1' , ...... '"" ... ......... . ·-IC "ll -..-~ :::: 11':'1. --... ~t .. Aft5 --» .. ~ • I ""'9•• ..... ... JI ·~1· ,,,_ .
• ••
(RL'ff·H E\\
GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL. ..
~lh Pu """''" 0001 ond lto1 Ot\l a 1MJ
&~~(!)~
56 FASHION ISlAND · NEVv'PORT BEACH· (714) 644-5070
WWJa.m LY•.AlrCal'• cbamnan and chief e~ecuuve officer,
• UU'IO\lnced the apPointment of Peter M. DeJser as senior viet ~dent, administration, and Fred voa Hueo as senior vice
president, operations. ,
• Both will rcf:rt to AuCal's president and chief opera ti"' officer. DaWl It.. Baaml r. Dt1ser will bo responsible for all administrative
l\&Dctions of AitCaJ including purchasing. fuel management.
propenies and facilities, labor relations, personnel and uavel
leT'Vices. A native of New York, Deiter ~ived tus 8.A. in Ph1losoph}'
fiom C.W. Post Colleae and master's in Industnal and Labor
Relatlons ft'om Cornell University. He served in several man.-
ment positions with Pan American World Airways prior to joirung
AirCaJ in l 978, as director, emplor.ee relations.
V• BeMD assumes rcsponSJbility for all operating areas of
AirCal including technial services, maintenance, flight operations.
operations control, crew plan'nina and scheduling. inflight services
and station serviCC1. A native of Hamburg, German¥, von Husen
received an A.A. in Aeronautics from Washington Umversity and a
B.S. in Orpnization Management from Notre Dame. He served in a
• number of management positions with United Airlines prior to jouu~ AirCal in 1981 as vice president, Technical Servioes.
AuCaJ, headquartered in Newport Beach, is a Western RCJional
Airline tcrvina 14 cities in California. Nevada, Oregon, Washington ~ British Columbia, Canada. • • •
M.lcMeJ Swacll bas joined Marketiq DtreetlOD• as part of an
opended copy team. He had been a technical writer for Traiaex
1 C., .. an international· subsidiary of Baxter Travenol Plaann•·
e.dealt. and a fO@let free.lance copy writer in Tel Aviv, Israel.
J.,lacky winner
,..,, Wlalte, left. woa a .Sdeo CUHtt.e recorder lD a
E ld by Wenmn Bmplre S..tq• ud Loan. Joell
, m~ of the aa.tqa and loan'• Intne pre.ent. te with a PanuOnlc Omnl.Ulon.
NaW Y~A~ -ft: ~Ing lltl :J: ~ <rt ''I: xchenoe ~ W".f:OH ... , .. -UP ~·.~.i::·~
edl~ befow 12 .,.. ~ ~oer~it0e~~f . uesde.,M P.~ •· no
Heme Lest C~ Pct. ~· r ' Uo M If Cp ¥% ~ UP
,'l u: H I ~ Up 1 UP .4 t ,It 8: :i ~ YI Up j ,,.. uo .
'
j Fenst"' 4~ ~ Up
r Col es 2'"2 Up Ne~f~t\19s ~ ~ Up
~..:~·"' ltt UP ~ UP J Ya Up ~w"' Ya UP ~ "• Up =~ ~ ~ UP :~ iv. Up ::, UP ~' ~ ,,., UP ~ QaSCo .~ 8: 114 UP
,4
'I• ~ Up DOWNS
Lef h~ -'~ Pct . Name j ~tee: s[o~ n' 4 LI Co pf
·~ 11 HOo ..... S9' 6 HO<-lrlh a9 lO Hytirltc ~~IMS t
l -1' .... ~ ,.f Ii) -'I• 1;, -2·/• J
3 UP 'I• Up 'h Up 'I• Up '.4 Up 1 Up 't. Up 1~ UP ~ Up
-UP 'h Up ~ UP 'h Up
1'1'J UP 1 Up
'I• Uo '!. UP
0
15-year loans gain popularity
By JJM HATHCOCK
Delr .... C•t llJ • I
Homeowners can now pay off their
monaqes io half tht time at nearly
half the oost or a tradjtional 3().year
loan.
trade group says the I 5-year
mortgaae, almost unheard of a year
loans. we've found." said Robert J.
Spiller, pmidcn1 of the Mortgqe run Bankers Association.
.,a. accounted for one in seven loans
made by some of the nation's largest
mort&a&t bankers during the first
week-of August.
"Th01e homebuycrs who sec retire-
ment down the road, or fac.e substan-
tial outlays for ch1ldrcn's college
educauon, often choose early payoff
An "Equity Growth Home Loan,"
offered by Far West Savings and
Loan, is an example of I S-ycar loan.
By payma sJjJhtJy h1aher monthly pa~l)'ents, the real cost of buying a
SI00.000 home is reduced from
$384,000 lO S2 I 6.000.
Far West offlcia.ls said lh11 two
factors make tli(_f'Ca.I cost of the I 5-
COMPARISON CHART
year mortaage J better .value: . •Sm~ tbe investors money 1s ttcd
up for only half the time, the interest
rate charsed is 12 percent instead of
12 S.and
•The hihtly h1&,her monthly pay-
ment en3bfer. a greater percentage of
each month's ~yment to apply
toward the pnnc1p1e:
Under the new i»-&n. the buyer will
\.ll1tmately save S 168,000 m interest
payments with a St 33 per month
increase 10 the payment, said Larry
Oxenham, mortaaac banking man·
ager for Far West Savmg's Newpon
Beach office. ·
Ion.DOIG IQVITI TaaOUGB QutCDa PA10n Buyers m their late 30s or 40s who
chose a 15-year fixed rate loan can
own their home free and clear before
retirement. The early equity windfall
provides young and old the op-
portunity to re-invest their money
said Oxenham.
7 • 8 10 11 11
TUil
+ 1s n rm 11.•
13 1• us
Lower interest mortga.~es have one
negative aspect, there 1s a smaller
interest deduction at tax time, Ox-
enham said.
"We're convinced that...EQu1ty
Growth Home Loan 1s one o( the
most sound financial·scrvices we c,an
offer our customers:· said Oxenham.
"and the rates arc generally lower
than the 30-year loan."
For example. m early August,
lenders were willing to offer a 15-ycar
loan at about th~ig,bths of a
percentage point below die rate for a
30-year loan. said Spiller !>f . the
Mortgage Bankers Assoc1at1on.
Lenders were offering 30-year loans at
an average of 12.24 percent early in
August.
The assoc1auon provided these
figum for companng a $75,000, 15·'
year loan at 12 percent to a J()..year
loan at the same rate:
• •Monthly payJT1ent would be $876
Opposed to S 77 I for the longer term
mortgage.
•Interest costs over the hfe of the
loan would be $82.680 as compared
to $202,560, a savings ofS 119.880. I ,
Debate over pi'otectionism to be hot
By JOHN CUNNIFF ., ...... ~
NEW voRk (AP) -Conarns
soon will have 90me IJ'C8l orator)'
opportunities.
lt will, for example, be forced to
deal with the issue of the federal debt,
a traditional affair that causes various
memben of Congress to raise the roof
and then raise the debt ceiling.
This rqularly oocurrina action
provides at least two beneiits for
orators:
It allows them to have their say
about the evils of spending, a safe
subject on which there is almost total
aareement. And it disposes of a nasty
matter, clean colllciences and per-
mits them to get on with .,ndinJ.
Howard Ruff, the financial adVJscr,
put it succinctly recently when he
r!t r~I@ ':.I -1'.4 t -Ya , = \t rlton ~rJr~p -2V.
14 -'"" 1 -1Ya Ya -Ya ~°CoeMTf ! •flm u~" ~ ~ f. Inc 1 P~ nv ~ U Home
4.3
stated that m the last election the
public got what 1t wanted:
"A president whose conservative
rhetonc says what we want to bear,
and a Congress that will not cul any
federal {>TOV81DS that affect our
ptt50nal income or subsidies." l
lfthat is so, there is no wpnderatall
why some of the arcatcst oratory has
been on the subject of protecuonism,
which 1s making an tmpnnt on the
agenda deeper than at any time m 50
years. It is an cmouonal subject, and
the pros and the cons have never been
more ready.
Stri~ of the strings and threads
that disgui~ it. this issue is mamly
one of whether it is wise to protect
domestic industries through import
restrictions or leave them naked to
fight for themselves.
If you arc a hard-nosed cap1taJist
you might be inclined to the behef
that economic society renews itself by
allowing the weak to die off. leaving
only the fittest to compete.
The truth of that observation bits
home when you substitute the em~
t1onal word "jobs" for :·industries" or
"companies." When Amencan com-
panies are undcrpnccd by foreigners.
1t means that JObs have been ex-
ported.
NL. PrecMI 4M U7 LG Gvt 10.0 1104
NL Stock lt-5' 17.4' Mui 8tn 11-'1 2.32
Gv1Sc 10 . .0 Gt~~ :~ ~f~vOo l'
NL. i . NL s.lect OI U1 Mutuel of ~•:
~
ll.09
NL. a X ~t u~v•' NL Str.i.olc F NL. Capll
~--....;..,,.. ____________ ...__,..._._ ........... _....._.._ ___________ .:..... ____ ~------------~~_.:..,~~~----------
l
, t \
Market turns upward
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market ,
turned upward Wednesday in a quiet session
marked by suenJth in a few blue-cb1p issues.
Analysts said it was difficult to read m~
significanc.e into the market's meanderi.np, WI.
many inve:ston on vacation or waitini until~ lh
Labor Day to ict a bcner readtna of the i.oe of cb ~ economy. _.._
Many opumuu in the fina.naal world "~
thcrr cue on an expecu:d pickup m businftl m 1 activity th.rouah the rest of the year, and possibly
into 1986. In the skeptical camp. analysts arpe L~
that those hopes miJht not be fulfilled., leaviQg the •th
market vulnerable to a letdown. 2 )
Tbou&h the week before Labor Day
tradJuonafly bcc'B a quiet one iD the ~ u •
al.so often produced some pms in stock pnces
traders look ahead to the "business New Year." l
For th.at panern to bold this time aro
analysts say. tt would be helpful tf the iov~ c;,
mcnt's index of leadiria eoonom1c ind:ical ,
carries a pos1uve mcssasc when it is n:poncd
Friday.
WHAT AM £X DID
+ \: NEW YORK (AP) AuO. 21
~~ ~ T1
NYSE Lr ADE Rs
" ,
GoLo QuoTE S
Dow Jo NE s AvERAGE s
METALS QuoTES
Al•
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
by Brad Anderson
"You shouldn't have said having a dog in
the house is a pain in the neck!"
DRA BBLE
'4ou ~f.ARO
IT ~l~i ~~.
W~El>TUMG rAN?
GARFIELD
NORM~ ~~m. r~ ~~·1~~
AA~ CHERW $ IQOOO ro ~"'~\&MO CAN ,..___ UA1 ~IM~
AS TME NEW 51P(KICK O~ T~E
CAPEP AVENGER, '1'00 NEE PA
NEAT NAME. wµAT f>MALL I
, CALL YOU?
MOON MULLINS
PEE PRESSURE ...
E;AI ~!JR CARRoTS, KAYO··
IT WILL HELP You SEE IN
~ ~~ IHE D,ARK.
WHO 5',A'IS?
JUDGE PAR.KER
;
1
by Garry Trudeau
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) SHO E bv Jeff MacNally
-;r;::E"31E!.=----__ --... --
111 made It out of old beer c•ns.11
• JF l £VER GET MAARJED, WILL YOU
COME ANO COOK FOR ME ? '
f. "/.C.U!£ U!7 I' 0 L..I \(£ 10
AAV€. A \l.kJRO W\'t~
M"' M~~EQ.
by Kevin Fagan
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
WELL., &,ACK :THEN
I
You HAD To EAT
C,ARROIS--NOW we HAVE
FLASM Ll<it4TS !
~~· q-~,~~~ cul O~Njo;.J
by Harold Le Doux
THEN WE'LL WAIT OVER
TMERE IN ~AT
LITTLE S~EL TER ...
by Charles M . Schulz
~e-0·~~ .. ··ti_-
BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed
--~~~~~~--
Ml'{(¥(~~.
l:t1 I Hln6 6IXXl "Tllsrt
N ~~ llTrT« ?..
()!{~~,
!/..M.Y. THE iTMH l(EM5 ,,., fl6Ct IENl. ..
~4111111iii6~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
HeUD,aJZABETH! 1·M
MtSSL'{ON, ~
KINDEf'.GARTEN Te.A~.
TUMBLEWEEDS
ROSE IS ROSE
BRIDGE
Both vulnerable. North dul1.
WEST
• 10952 <:>l QJ' OA
•t8H
NORTH
+II
~A•
o KQ107•32
•A&
EA8T
• QJ8
<:> eu
0 9815
•QJ2
SOUTH
• AK14 ~ 10982
OJ
• K lOf J
The bidding:
NortJa Eut Se.di W..t
l 0 P... l • Put
I 0 PUt INT Put
3NT PUI P111 ....
Openlns lead: Klnf of ~.
Yt1ttrday'1 tolumn reat.ured an
unuauaJ 11f tJ play by dtclater.
HeN'a anot.h r rare kind to ld4 w
your collect.ion.
South wu an old·fuhlontd b dder
-tbe modern t.ndeney would be to
re1pond on• bean dupite t.be rrut
dilparltJ lft ault qullt1. Had utb
reaponded ont ~Hr\, ht •oul ve
known that no ,_.. majot ftt wu
avalJabl . Now h wu faeed wlOt a
DtCLARER'S RIGBt HAND
rebid preblent, and two no trump
was a practical solu\lon. North car·
ried on to game. .
Weit led the king of heart.I and
declarer, of courH, woo the ace -be
had a aurt Mcood 1t.opper in the
suit. It rnt1M Ntm that declarer
OMAR
SHARIFF
had no ptobltm, but ht •11 not
bleued with aecond 1ight. If he led
a diamond to t.he jack, he would not
be able to enjoy the 1ult 1hould a
dtftndtr be able to hold up the ace
of dlamonda for one round. Tb rt
fore, It mlsht Mtm that the per·
t ntase play would M to l•ad a dla·
mond honor ftom the tabl. to iob-
ble up tht jack. However. that
would fall 1hould the ault divide '·l.
Tht dtftndtra •ould then have a
NCOod 1topper In the ault and
d.clater •ould be an antry 1hort t.o
HtabU.h and run tbt ault.
Dtcl&rer found a prttt.7 way to
ruard aplnat tht poqlbUlty of w .. t l\avlnr •tarted with tpedfte·
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
ally a •Ingleton ace of diamond1. He
came to hand with the king of
1padea and led \.hat jack of
dlamood.a.
Had West followed with a low
diamond. declarer would have gone
with the odds and overtaken in
CHARLES
Go REN
dumm7 In the hope that the tult
would "'Ut 8-2. Hls cart wu
rewa_rded, however, •hen WMt produ~ th ace. tbe cS.fanden
eould uke no more tb&n two heut
trlc.kl, for u to0n u declarer
pt.MCI th• lead ht would Cl'Oll to
aumm1 with th• ace o( clubl to take
elx diamond ttlcb.
Jt I• ttu• that th• odda fa•or a 3-2
dlvltlon o~ fl•• mluln1 cudt. But
th•rt 11 oo bann lfl playinr for an
enra cha.~e.
~---~--:'-__ ___,~
...
Reggie:_
M urray's
th·e best
l"rom AP d.11pa&Clilet
Who is the best player in basebaJl
today?
Certainly, players like Rickey Hen-
derson, Dave Winfield, George Brett,
Cal Ripken, Ryne Sandbera. Pedro
Guerre"? and DaJe Murphy would get
aubs1'ntial support for such an ac-
colade.
But not from Ot1tfielder Reuie
Jackson of the Angels. He lilCes first
baseman Eddie Murray of the Balti-
more Orioles.
"I said he wa.s the best player in the ga~e three. four years ago,' Jackson
said after Murray destroyed the
Angels by hitting th~ home runs and
driving in nine runs Monday night. "I
still say it.
"Who doein't? That's why he gets
paid $21/z million a year."
Murray's big night in the Orioles'
l 7-3 destruction of the Angels -he
also ha'1 a single and drew a walk -
Jave the 29-year-old switch bitter 24
home runs and I 02 runs-batted-in
mis season and a . 297 batting avcie.
One of his homers -off ri t-
banded Angel reliever A~n Fow kes
-was a grand slam, his third of the
season and the 12th of his career.
Murray also blasted a three-run
sbot and has now hit three homers in
apme three times as a big-leaguer.
• Murray had done all of his damage
by the fifth inning, causing the crowd
of 25,805 at Anaheim Stadium to
temporarily shift their allegiance
from the Angels to the hero of the
night.
After the grand slam. the crowd
stood in appreciation. and kept
llS)plauding when Murray went into
the dugout. Murray then came back
QUt to acknowledge the cheers.
"It's not every night you get to
knock in nine runs.'' he said. "Other-
'kise, it was just another game. It was
lfice to be cheered by the other fans
and to have them rooting for you to
liit another."
Murray had two chances to go for
fo.ur -a feat accomplished by only
IO players in major league history,
and just seven times in a nine-inning
pme. However, he flied to deep
center in the seventh inning and
walked in the ninth.
After laying off an outside pitch to
end his night., Murray gave way to a
pin€b runnCT as the crowd gave him
the last of many st.anding ovations.
"I've respected and admired Edd1e
Murray since he first came into the_
league," said Angels Manager Gene
Mauch.
-~---~ -
-·
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1985
A boxer anawera the bell efter • alx-day retirement. 112:
The Raid•,. rel•-two veterena to cut roater to 50. •
Ortolee Manacer Earl Weaver (upper left)
•atchee while Juan Benlques la held back
0.-, ........... bf _.,. UpM
by Anael• Coach Mooee StubinC and um-
pire Dale Ford thumbe out Doug DeCincea
l ltlwell good
are Angels?
l~ad u ·p to 2 1/2
By CHRIS MONAHAN .,.., ..... c.n .. ,,. _. .. ,,
Since Auaust I 7. when he left a
game with discomfort ui bJS back.
Doug DeCinces' appearances in an f iJel uniform have been very hm-
Hts "appearance" Tuesday con-
sisted ofbeing ejected by Dale Ford in
the top of the tint i.nnm&, arguing a
No pme scheduled
THURSDAY'S GAME · .
Aqef1 at New York Yankees.
Time· 5p.m.
TV: Channel S. •
Radio: KM PC (710).
check swing call from the bench.
That meant DcC1nces wasn'i..__ midst of a 2-for-26 slump 1n bis last
arouild to sec bis replacement., rookte eight games before Tuesday. His two
Jack: Howell, do hts impression of hits accounted for half of the Ange •
Baltimore fint baseman Eddie Mur-total.
ray. Was Howell doing his part to help
One night after Murray hit thres, t.he crowd foriet Murray and the
home runs had nine RBI, HoweU hit a previous mght's 17-3 loss'> •
grand slam and a solo home run, ··No, I was JUS~ U')ing to Jet a hit,"
powering the Angels to -a 6-3 win he satd. ·-rve been stru&Jling a btt
before 30.357 at Anaheim Stadium. llltely. I went with (bitttng coach)
The win mcrcased the Angels' lead Moose Stubma to the cage to work on
in the Amencan Lca~ue West to 21h a problem yesterday
games over Kansas Cit) as they begin "I was lunginf for th~ ball and I
a l~game road trip Thursday, travel-too aggressive was trying to do
mg to New York. Detroit and Balt1-much."
more . "\ He wasn't too aggressive tn those
Howell, hlce Murray the night two at-bats. waiting for a 3-2 pitch the
before, received a curtain call follow-first ume and takmg two stnlces the
mg the grand slam (the first of bis second.
ma1or league career) But unltke 'The first one was a fastball that
Murray, Howell received a second was 10 a hule bit and the second was a
call after his second home run. slider up h was a &ood pitch to hat."
The performance was espcc1alf}' Howell came up in the eighth with
nice considering Howell was in th~ (Ple&M .ee Al'fGIDLS/82)
Duncan proving his rave notices [
Dodgers take a day off one Will replace Ozz_1e Smith, but Mana no Duncan 1s gomg to make his after sweeping Mets. own mar1c ... Tuesday night, Duncan scored Phtladel phla co min both runs in Los Angeles' 2-1 victory
over the New York Mets, allowing
NEW YORK (AP) -Shortstop
Mariano Duncan was supposed to be
a fill-in, but he's filled-in so well that
he's beginning to create a little fallout
in the National League West.
"When you begin to compare
players," says Los Angeles Dodgers
teamma1e, pitcher Jerry Reuss. "you
have to compare them with the
standard, and that's Ozzie Smith. No .
Reuss. 12-8, to break a personal five-
game losing streak agatnst the New
York club. Reuss worked 81fi innings,
g.iving up seven hits, mcludin1 Darryl
Strawberry's 21,,ft homer with two out
m the ninth inning.
The victory allowed Los Angeles to
maintain its 71h-game lead over the
San Diego Padres in tt\e Nauonal
League West, while the Mets fell three
baclc of St. Louis in the East.
The Dodgers ~ off today before
opening a homnt.and against Ph1la-
delptua Thursday night with the first
of four games.
In add1t1on to sconng tW1cc and
stealing two bases for the Dodgers,
Duncan also short-c1rcu1ted a poten-
ual game-ty10$ rally by the Mets W1th
his defense Wtth two out and runners
at second and third an the sixth
innin&. Keith Hernandez hll a bounc-
ing ball over the middle.
Duncan raced to his left, snared the
ball on a high bounce and threw on
the run to get Hernandez at first ba~
by a step.
"Ifs not an eas) play for me,"
No game scheduled
THURSDAY'S GAME
Philadelphia at Dod1er1.
Time: 7:3S p.m.
TV None
Radio: KABC (790)
Duncan said. "tt•s fiard. But I make a
lot of plays hke that "
Duncan came north from spnng
trammg wtlh the Dodgers as a sccond-
basc replacement for the in1ured
Steve Marla.no Duncan
Clock runs out, praise doesn't
Youngblood leaves
l:lniform a nd m a n y-
m em or ies b ehind
By JOSEPH OUDEVOIR
OflMO.-,"°'IWI
Dl:lilr .... Corr I 8" I'*"'
For most people. he ep1tom12ed
everything you'd want m both a man
and a football player. He was hke
John Wayne in cleats.
And just hke the ·tough, b1g-
shouldered hero in a John Ford film.
r ap'n Jack broke down the door and
took no pnsoners dunng his glonous
14 years in a Ram unifonn.
But lilce all sports heroes, there was
one villatn Jack Youngblood couldn't
vanquish -time.
"The clock had run out." was the
way Youngblood put 1t when he
announced his retirement Tuesday
morning.
Youngblood had been battling a
bad back since last season but had
hopes of pulling out one last year at
his defensive end slot. When he felt he
wasn't up to bts standards, be decided
it was time to hang 'em up.
"Before a game, I utcd to look over
at number 85 and know everything
was 1oing to be all right," said tackle
Bill Bain. "It'll be scary without him
around. He was m y hero."
When the Rams' seven-time Pro
Bowler made his anouncement. the
6-4, 300-pound Bain could be SC'Cn
weeping in the back of the room -
Taking a high wave
Joee ltehno of Brasil takea to the eurf
Tueaday on opentna day of the U .s. Pro
..
Surf Championehlpe at Runttncton Beach.
Action con tinue• th rough Sunday. •
Hot Rod Williams off the hook
"1EW O RLEANS (AP) -Sports bnbel') charges
against former Tulane basketball ,tar John "Hot Rod"
Williams were thrown out of court toda' bv a state
Judge ·
Judge Alvin Oser. in a scncs of rulings nemm1ng
from an earlier m1stnaJ motion. $a1d Williams could go
free because It would amount to double Jeopard}' to
start the tnaJ over.
Oser said he was 1ssu1na 16· pages of reasons but
they were no t 1mmed1ately. made public He gave the
d1stnct attrorney's office two Wttks to take the cast" to
the state 4th Orcutt Court of Appeal
"The people of th1\ st.ate have resix'C't for th1<; court.
resix'C't for this Judge and respect for evef') detendant
Defense la~er Mike Green of Chicago said he
fetl~ \\ ilhams 1s no" fi'tt to sign with the (It'\ eland
Ca' a hers. the ttam that picked him 1n thr <;ewnd
rou ndp ng b\ 0St"r that said assistant d1stnc1 attorneH
deliberate!\ ~1th held e., 1dence to pro.,olr a m1\ln.1I
T 1lda' 's decision upheld the language ot th;u
earlier dtc1S1on. wt\tch tracked a l Supreme < 1>Un
dec1s1 on that both prosecutors and defense la" vers o,a 1d
would lead to \\ 1lltams being set trce without a tnal
/# ...........
Jack Yoa~lood recel•ee a farewell klM from Ram• owner Oeorlla FrOndere after ann01UlciDC retirement Tae9da)'.
"Yeah, I was crying." wd Bain
"We were all pulling for him to get
over this th1n1. It JUSt didn't work
out."
(Plee.M Me YOUNOBLOOD/82)
D1stnct Attorney Harry Connick. arguana after the
rulina. said 1t was never has office's mtenuon to win the
case bv tnclcery
\\ ilharm . .:!3 of Sorrento. La was accu~d of t~o
counts ofspons bnbt'I) and three counts of consp1nng
to fi\ games Con' ict1on on aJI charges camed a
mu1mum oun1shm~nt 17 years' 1mpnsonmen1
Ralderemay
acquire Smith
OXNARD (AP) -The Los
Anaeles Raiden' apparent youth
movement at wide receiver is a
smokncreen for a trade '° be
anno unced over the. weekend. a
newspeper reponed.
Jim Smitht a one-ttme star
receiver with t.ne Pittsburah Steel-
ers, will be aiancd br the lUidcn
followina the team s finJJ e,xhi-
bition pme Friday ni&ht at
Cleveland, The Daily Breeze in Tom.oce reported Wednesday.
The trade for mith was de-
layed until af\er the final exhi-
bition to that he could pin the
National Foothill Leaaue•s two-
week roster exemt>tlon for players
ffbo rruucd train1na camp.
In pay-for-play businesses, money's getting tigh t
EDITOR ·s NOTE -The lports money
boom rs comilll to an end. This last of 1 throe-
pin ieries looks 1t the fin1ncill future.
By BRUCE LOWITT
1#---Wttw
More is 11vina way to less 1n a new,
emeraina economy aimed at rc1torina 11.1~
ill~~ sports. competilion rrom rival lequcs. Le 1n
saJary inete1tet and otbct costt. Less rehancc
on telev11ion for money and fan auppon. 1
Partly by deslp and D&ttlY by nat utal Prosreuion. the cbanae ii already under way:
...:.salaries art! levelina off, and •hllc
super1tar11ike bukelb•U's Pat Ewina will still
act the bia conincu. owners and ~ym
piWict that overall i~ucs wiU conunue tO
decbne. · -The Un1tod tates foo\blll t..aaue. af\cr
1 two-year salary war with lhe National
Football LeaaUe. ha dropt>ed out of thcl
b1ddtna for most college stars. eas1na pressu~
on the NFL.
-The N-tiqnal Ba kctball 1\ssoc,at1on
operates under a salary cap hm1ung team
payrolls. The immediate re ult last season:
While 10 teams still lo t mone)'. that wu
1even fewer than the year before.
-BasebalJ's new coUCCU\'e barpanu11
qJ"CCment calls for revenue shanna to help
1tn.111hna. teams, and owners e ltmate tbeJ
will 11ve S«>0,000 a ycar,per team, start1111 in
1987. from salary arbitration cbanaes.
It is a lf&dual tran formation deemed
ncccs.sary af\ci un~llcled srowth led to
unperallelcd spcnd1na ov~r the la'lt dttade
That doesn't mean sporu will co broke. only
that it won't ~t much ncber
"Maybe tJus la~ t Colden aat of sports 1\
oominJ to an end," 111d former baseball
oomm1 ·onCT Bow\e Kuhn, "but 1t'5 not
tumina to lead."
The ub1tratton chanacs in b&K'ball 'lhouJd
be no mort than• ltmporat) ~tbac~ for most
pla)cn..
A pla)tr wtll need thn:t ycan' maJOr aauc
ttt"r1c.t 10 ttad of two to be ch11ble r ·
arbitration.
And pla~n w1th thrtt to fhc )t'U\ of
major·tcaauc upcncnc.t no loncer wtll be ahlc
to utc 1nflatcd contract of player.. wtlh 'II>. or
more ~cars· c~pericnot ut mak1na their catn
at arbitration hcannp. h means that ""hen
Kttina one pla)'C'f''s salary an arbitrator can't
con,.idtt the pay of othtt pta en Wlth similar
tall ~ ..,ho "IJ'.\Cd tnflattd contrac\l • cau~ the) y,.crt free nts or ~uld ha~'t
bc\:ome ti'tt agtna
.. .\ pla'tt'r could he hurt for une 'rat ·
Houston .\\ros S('('Ond ha§t'man 81 11 l)\iran
said "But the &ood pla\c~ wlll make their
mone\ 1n the Iona run "
"One or two ye.ti"\ do not make 1 carttr •
add('d ( harhe Housh. 1 T na' Ran f'f'\
pitcher in ht~ 13th sta\On "The ov.ner' II u"'
1f )OU pla\ Ion&, thc\·11 ~' •
"Tf)OU put a couple of )'Qn ba l -to-bad ..
>ou'll ct the monry," ~ud Mt c Aanapa. a
Balttmo~ Onolt1 pitcher ''This "-«P .\he ~
one-\car flasfHn-th('-pan from m•lun 1t • ..
.. , ... c h..,td thmu h lhc dem1tc of the World
Hocke' "'mciauon, the World Foo II uaaut, the -\mcnc.an 8a ketball A
uon." ~port~ nt Bob Woolf said .. , t
rerrcscntC'd • lot of pla)'tn ,..bo had won<kr-
fu contran that ..,crcn•t fulfill d . There' no
~nw havt 1 srat rnnll'K1 1f you've. p
pta~ to play. .\nd more nd more plaJ
~hlC that.' • :\-
-. _.:>
)
-
ONngii Coel1 DAILY ~LOTIW.an.dey, August 28. 1985
off et strokes to second go-d
Univcniade l'tQOrd Unit in lbc 4 x 100-
mefer freestyle relay.
Soviet aymnast Nataha Yun:henko
also v.on her fourth as she added two in
specialty events -the noor C.'\Crases and
uneven paraltel bars -to ao with her
&olds in the women's mdwidual all-round
and 1eam cvc:nta.
second an lhe all-round here.
Japan, wh.ach bad bttn struaHna in its
native spon of Judo, won the aold 10 the
prestipous opeo class Wednesday wben
Yosh1mi Mastti beat Xu Ouoqifl.l ~f
China !or the title. But in ei&bt we(&ht
dms1ons. Japan ended up witll only two
,olds, ltnh~ for SoUflf.lCOrea, two for
North Korea and one for the Soviet
Union.
JaJ\na Tlll'Oulnakova o the Soviet U ruon
won wtth S22.27 pc:>ants, With Li Yihua or
cruna aecond with S19.48 and Tnstio
Baker of Provo, Utah, third with 493.0S.
Michelle Mitchell of El TOTO, Califom~1 the °c'l.":!ic silver medalist and Woria Olp pion 1n platfonn davin&; was
fifth with 476.21. Her specialty eveot
comes later in the pmes.
•
,, .........
Ecatenna Szabo or Romania won tbe
golds on lbe bl.lance beam and vault lo
the 1984 Olympics, which the Soviets
boycotted, she won the aold an the vault,
balance beam and noor exercises and the
silver m the all·round She alse was
North Korea's Pak Hak Vona won the
132·pound division &old WednC1day,
beating Koji Ono of Japan an the final.
In the women's sprinaboard diving.
The Soviets added another aold in the
men's individual sabre fencina competi·
tion, where Sersei Mindirpso beat Hun·
pry's Laszlo Csonarac:Si in the final. John Moffet won the 200 breut lD 2:18.SS:
Bozer returns to
·answer bell after
.6-day retirenieDt
PNmAPdJ~
KINGSTON, N. Y. -Saying he m .. co~ldn't go out a loser," fonner World ~:un.g .Council super tightwciP't cham-
pion Billy Costello ended has six-day rctii'emcnt
Tuesday.
. "I've got to fi'1't again." Costello. 29. told the K.iapt~ Freeman ma telephone interview from his
New Ybfk City aJMVtmcnt. "lt was vef)I hard for me to
accept. rm goinJ to win my tide back, then ru retire."
Costello rctlred immediately af\er losing has WBC
140-pound title to challenger Lonnie Smith of Denver Wed~~ by stopping him m the ctghth round at
Madison ~uarc Garden.
The K.inpton native, who was unbeaten in 30
·professional fights before losing his crown to Smith,
expcc:ts to return to the ring in Novem~r. He hopes to
meet either three-time former world champion Alexis
ArJuello, who is also coming out of retirement, or
iormer WBC junior welterweight title-holder Gene )-iatchcr.
Costello said he then wants a rematch with Smith,
if the new champion successfully defends his crown
qainst No. I challenger Ronnie Shields early next year
''I don't need the money," Costello said ... I JUSt
want to prove a point. I know I'm sulJ the best out there.·'
The shock oOosing to the hghtly regarded Smith on
national television contributed to his dcc1S1on to retire.
CosteUo sa.id.
ltJ just couldn't believe I lost to that guy," he said.
••1 checked with my manager and trainer and they said
no way was I shot. I just took a step backward. It
happened to the best of them. like Joe Louis."
Costello captured the WBC super lightweight title
on Jan 29. 1984 by stopping Bruce Curry in the I Oth-
round at Beaumont, Texas. He successfully defended it
in Kingston thru times against Shields and ex-
champions Saoul Mamby and uroy Haley.
Quote of the day
Rams tackle BW BaiD on the rettrmcnt of
teammate Jack Youngblood: .. It'll ~ scary
without him around. He was my hero ...
N1UlD etope Geraldo in fifth
LOS ANGELES -Michael Nunn m extended bas unbeaten strcalc to eagbt with
a fifth-round knockout over Marcos
Geraldo in their scheduled eight-round
middleweight bout Tuesday night at the Country Club.
Nunn, who weighed 163 pounds, put the 165-
pound Geraldo down at the end of the first round with
a left-right combination.
During the second, third and fourth rounds, Nunn.
ofNonh Hollywood, gave Geraldo, of Sonora, Mexico,
a beating as Geraldo stood in his comer and waned for
Nunn to come to him.
In the fifth round, Nunn caught Geraldo with a left
to the body and a nght cross to the chin to drop his to the
canvas. Referee Robert Byrd stopped the bout at I: 18 of
the round as Geraldo rose.
Nunn improved his record to 8-0. and Geraldo·s
record fell to 60-21-1.
49era waive third-round pick
REDWOOD CITY -Fullback Ricky Eil
Moore. the Sa n Francisco 49ers' third-c II•
round draft pack_, was waived on Tuesday
along with six oihcr players
At a news conference after the announcements,
coach Bill Walsh explained that releasing Moore was "a
difficult dec1s1on. but one of those decisions that had to
be made."
He said that players retamed by the team, notably
Carl Monroe and B1Uy Ring. are more "aluable on
special teams •
Although Moore was chosen an the third round of
the Nallonal Football League draft, he was the 49ers'
second pick since they t.raded away their second round
choice.
John galna 259th victory. 3-0
T•mmy Jou pitched three-hat Ill
baseball oycr seven annings for the 259th
v1cto of bis career and OakJand A's total~ eight hits off Nc.w York ace RoD
OaJdry to beat the Yankees, ),..(), Tuesday night. The
loss dropped the scconti-placc Yankees five games .
behmd American Lea&ue East leader Toronto, which
beat Minnesota 8-0 ... Elsewhere, Matt Yous toSfCd a
five-biner and Doule.SeoU'a two-run.double.capPed a
three-run sixth inning as Seattle snapped a four~pme
losina s~ak Wlth a 3-1 triumph
over Detroit ... Harold BaJaea
and Bryu lJtUe each drove in
two runs and the Chicago White
Sox defeated Texas 7-4 for their
third straight victory. Little hiJh·
ti~tcd a· four-run third inmng
with a two-run single and Baines
singled home a run in the third
and another an lbe fourth . . .
Rookie Steve Davis, talcmg over
after starter Tom FUer left the
Jolla ~e with a sore elbow, pitched
four 1nnin~ of one-hat r~lief and won his first major-
leaguc decision as Toronto held Minnesota to three hits
and beat the Twins 8--0 ... Toay Bel"Dll&l'd'1 three
singlt1 keyed a 16-bit attacic and Cart Wardle pitched
eight strong annfogs before needing relief help as
Cleveland beat Boston, 6-2 for their sixth victory in
seven games.
Carda lead Meta by S games
Willie McGee'• two-run tnplc in the Ill
eighth inning Tuesda}' night hf\ed St. Lou. is
to a 6-4, National League victory over
Cincinnau, extending the Cardinals' wan-
ning streak to seven games. McGee hat his league·
leading 16th tnple off reliever Ted Power, who came in
with a 4-3 lead an the eighth and failed to retire a batter.
The victory gave the Cardinals their longest wanning
streak of the season and boosted their lead in the NL
East to three games over New York ... In other NL
games. Bob Horner'• three-run homer with two outs in
the last of the ninth inning capped a five-run Atlanta
rally as the Braves beat Pittsburgh 7-6 to hand the
ParatcS their 16th consecuti ve road loss ... BUI Doran
hll a triple and a double. drove in a career-high five runs
and scored the wrnning run to power Houston over the
Chicago Cubs I 1-4 ... Maril Tlaarmond struck out a
career-high eight batters in 7 2-3 innmgs as San Diego
snapped a three-game losing strcaJc wath a 4-1 victory
over Phtladclph1a.
Fans campaign to buy Giants
SAN FRANCISCO -A .. grassroots a movement" called .. The New Giants" on
Tuesday announced a c.ampa1gn to buy the
San Francisco Giants. who responded
immediately by saying, "We0re not for saJc ...
But Patrick Shannon, who announced the cam-
paign at a news conference. insisted he plans to go ahead
with his project to interest 25,000 or more Giants fans
in buying the team, "possibl y for $60 million . but we
have information (owner) Bob Lune might consider
$40 million."
Shannon said Lurie WTOle him a few days ago
saying the team was not for sale, and "he told me to stop
using the San Francisco Giants trademark."
A'• profit from eztra innings
OAKLAND-Thethirdextra-mning Ill
me in a week was a charm for the
gakland A's, who continue to bum the
midnight ml an the Amencan League West.
Dave Colhns ended a 4-hour, 44-minute marathon
with the New York Yankees Monday night when he hit
a two-out single down the third base line to bnng home
Steve Kiefer. giving the A's a 3-2 victory. Most of the
42, 1l8 fans, the A's third largest crowd this season,
stayed around to see 11 aJthough the game ended at
12 27 a.m. Tuesday
Television. radio
TELEVISION
11.30 p.m -TENNIS· U.S Open h1gh-
hghts, Channel 2.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
Rogers named SCC baseball coach
Former minor league manager Dennis Rogers hac;
been hired as the head ba..eball coach at Southern
Cahfom1a College. the school announced Tuesday.
Rogers, 3.3. had mana'ed the Medford A ·s. the Clas~ A
affiliate of the Oakland A s. for three years before ta long
the position at Southern Cal College He replaces Rach
Emard. who resigned last month for personal reasons
He led San uorgon10 Htgh School to the CIF 4-A title
1n 1977, and as an ass1'1tant coach with Cal Poly Pomona in
1983. brought home the NCAA Division II Cham-
p1onsh1p. Rogers wu named professional baseball's minor
league manager of the vear in 1983 at Medford
Rogers was an assistant coach at C.al Poly Pomona
from 1980.-1983 before taking over full-time at Mt.'dford
He graduated from Cal Poly Pomona in 1974 and wa\
drafted by the San Francisco Giants the ..amc year An CH'
1n1ury cut short ht, playing ca~r.
Rogers has co mpiled a 283-96-3 perwnal coat hing
record at the high school. college, and professional le' el\
In 1984, <;outhem Cal College went 45·20-4 and
advanced for the first time to the NAJA World Scnes tn
Lewiston. Idaho, fin1sh1ng fourth overall.
''We had a large number ofapphcants for the pos1t1on
hut after much time 1n the selection and interviewing
pre>CC1'1, I fct"J we have the ~st man for the Job," said
Southern Ol 1fom1a College's Athleuc Director Ron
Prell} man
UCI names swim assista~t
Anteaters choose
Marshall as aide
or Schober & Co.
Former ColleJC Park and Newport
Sltorcs had swimming coach, Bruce
Marshall. wiu named assimnt men's
and women's sw1mm1nacoach 6t UC'
fl'Vlne. the ~hool annou~ Tues-
dav.
Included in h1\ dut1e\ will be
1upcrvmon of the UCI ma'lter''I
twimm1ng proaram
Pnor to 1ccept1ng the po'lt at
. Irvine, Marshall coached five years,
anclud1n1 stints al Collcsc Park and
Newpon Shores < ommun11y As.-
soc1at1ons 1n Southern ( alifomaa
Mar$hall swam at the colle&Jate
level at Oranae Coa'lt C'olleae and the
Un1vers1ty of· Ma'i~un While at
Oranac Coast, he ~t the ~hool's
record 1 n the 400 IM and I 00 a.nd 200
butterfly. He also ~t conhncc
records for both butterfly events.
"We're very lucky to have t0meone
of Bruce's knowled&e and abihry," ~1d U(l's head men's and women's
swtmmana coach. Charhc Schober.
"We had an exten,1ve ~h for
thl~ po mon, and Bruce proved to be
tl'le b(>" qualified "
MORE SPORTS 8-8
Illegal allens ar.e
Jn valuable to track
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Recent
1mm""1t10n ra1dsat the Del Mar race
track cost trainers mpch of their btst
nable help and showed the impon-
ancx of 11lcpl a hens to Califomaa·~ SI
bllhon thorouahbred ~1na industry.
After two weeks of threats, which
~ enouah to send hundttd.s flee·
ing, the US. Border Patrol raided Del
Mar's backstretch la t Friday, brealc-
in& up what the agency called the
laracst concentration or un·
documented workers 1n San Diego
County. •
Bor<kr Patrol spoke man Ed Pycan estimated that a many as hAJf
or the 3,000 vooms. hotwa.llccrs and
c:xercite nden on Del Mar's
backsvctch were 11lepl ahcns .
----~··· •• ••••••••••••• a a
ANGELS TAKE TO THE ROAD WITH WIN ••• ~
F~mBl -
lbc basC1 loaded once aptn and with
a chance to match Murray's RBJ total
from the nia,ht before.
"ft was aoina tbro~ my mind that
it would be sensational ifl could have
hit another grand slam, .. said Howell.
Instead Tte JfOUnded out to short to
end the innmg.
Of his curtain calls, he said, .. 1
didn•t know what to do. It's a little
early in my career for that. (Bobby)
Orich had to push me out there. l
haven't had that too many times in
my career."
"We knew 1n spring training what
that young man was capable, so
having him do 1t doesn't surpnse
me," said Manager Gene Mauch. ''He
was so reluctant that they had to
throw him out there the first llme
(ovation)."
Howell said the last time he hi1 a
arand slam was has junior year 81 the
Unive!lit.)' of Arizona. And the last time~ hat two home runs in a game?
• "J can't remember the last time, he
replied. "It must have been in L11tlt
Lea&uc."
Howell's output made a winner out
of starting pitcher Mike Witt ( 12· 7).
Witt threw the first six innings,
aJlowing IO bits and walklog six, but
allowing only three runs.
"He threw 130 pitches at 93-94
m.p.h., .. said Mauch. ··He's earned
his pay the last two times out."
Tuesday's perfonnance was a
strong follow-up to his last outin~ a
complete game eight-bitter against
tl\e Yankees 1n wluch he threw 176
pitches. Donnie Moore relieved Witt wilb
runners at first and third in the
seventh and retired nine of the last 11
to face him, to get bis 23 rd save and
his first since August 13.
"The whole game centered around
Witt takina a bold ofhlmself witb lbe
bases loaded and Dick Schofield's
double play. That kept it under
control,' said Mauch.
The play Mauch refers to took place
in the 6eCOnd inning with one out and
the Onoles leading 1.0.
After Rieb Dauer doubled, Witt
wAlk.ed Alan Wiggins and Lee Lacy to
load the bases. But he coaxed Cal Ripken to hit the
ball oh the ground up the middle.
Schofield fielded the ball, stepped on
second and whipped the ball to first to
end the mnang.
"I went af\er it and the ball hopped
into my glove," sai~ Schofield. It was
a do-or-Oie play. The ball ended up 1n
mv alove and I made 11. ..
Witt had also gotten out of a bases..
loaded, two-out situation in the first
by striking out Doug Sheets.
Longtime Angel nemesis Scott
McGregor (I 0-12) took the loss.
McGregor, who 1s 17·6 against them
lifetime and 10-3 at Anaheim
Stadium, lasted~ust I 'h innings. or
just long enou to watch Howell
circle tho. bases a er the slam.
He gave up only two hits. but
allowed five runs.
YOUNGBLOOD RETIRES. • •
From Bl
Bain wasn•t the only Ram to use
Youngblood as a rallying point.
Coach John Robinson remcm~red
the way he felt being near the captain
before a game.
''It was an honor to stand next to
ham in a tunnel beforea~meand say,
'it's -you and me, ba~ , " saad Rob-
inson.
While it may h"-ve sounded like
culogization, Robinson and the rest
of the Rams think Youneblood wilJ
make a suc.ocssful transition from
player and hero to businessman and
legend (remember t.he '79 pla~ofTs
when the Rams' captain d1dn°t mass a
down all the way to the Super Bowl,
despite playing with a broken bone in
his leg?).
"It will take him a few games away
to start adjusting," said former team·
mate and now Ram assistant de·
fens1vc hne coach Larry Brooks.
"Jack and I have been good fncnds
for a long while and I'm sure we'
continue to be." said the th rce-ume
All-Pro defensive tackle. "He's a man
and knows how to deal with real life.
I'm sure he sat up a lot of nights
thinking about this. It's a difficult
thing to face, but every player who's
pla yed as long as he has knows what
he's going to have to eventually face.
"When I retired I stall staYtd
around the organization a while. It
made it easier on me. I was J.Iad I
didn't leave cold turkey. rd hke to
think Jack wiJI stay around for a long
time."
Brooks was already Jealous at the
prospect of Youngblood's newfound
freedom. "Just think of all the
hunting he's going to get in while I'm
here working," he said.
Another Ram defensive hncman of
some reknown, one Roosevelt Grier,
added has views on Youngblood's
retirement.
Robinson releases
Grant and Farmer
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
It's been no secret that Rams Coach
John Robins6n has been less than
thnlled with the play of his wtde
receivers. So Robinson thought it
ume for a shakeup, which came to the
surpnse of no one.
What did come as a surprise.
however, was the manner in which he
did the shaking.
On Tuesday's hst of cuts, which
brought the roster to 50 players, the
Rams·reJeased two veteran receivers
-Otis Grant and George Farmer.
That leaves only Henry Ellard and
Ron Brown as the only receivers with
at least one year of service under their
belts.
"J thou~t it was tame for a
change," said Robinson. "It was a sad
day to give them the news. but I think
a new stan might be best for them ...
Robinson doesn't plan on standing
pat with the corps he has right now
either.
"We have an incxP._Crienccd
group," he said. "We'll sec 1fthey can
rise to the standards.
"There is also the possibility of a
trade being worked out ~fore the
season starts, too. We'll be looking
around the league to sec if we can find
something."
Grant was in his third year wtth the
Rams, while Fanner was eotenng his
fourth season with the club.
"We're all victims of decisions,"
said Farmer. "Obviously they think
they can win wath the &UYS tbey have.
I wash them luck."
Robinson didn't rule out the poss1-
b1hty of bnnajng Grant or f'.armer
back 1f the Rams fail to work
something out, though.
NFL teanis whittle rosters
to 50, final cuts next week
Veteran punter Dave Jenninp was
cut by the New Yotlt Olants and
Reaie McKcRZJe, a sparlcplua on the
Buffalo Bills' Electric Company of·
fensive line, was drorped by Seattle.
National Foothill Lcasue teams
have to cut their rosters to 50 men th as
week and 4S next week before the
reaular season starts.
Jenninp, the New York Giants
punter for more than a decadt. was
rclc:Ucd in favor offonner Balumore
Sta11 punter Scan Landeta. Jennmp.
33, averqed 47.6 yards per punt on
fi..,e attempts dunna the prncason,
competed to 38.8 yards per punt on
five attempts ror landeta, who ignQd
a b1& contract with the Gia.nu bcfort
traanan• camp opened "I thank l punted well tn ctamp."
id Jcn.nioas, a Pro Bowl punter four
• --.., .-..
limes. "But 1t did not urpnsc me
The most important thin, as I have
had 11ood 11 yean here.·
McKcn1ie was cu1 by the Scahawks
alona with defensive end Mike Fan-
ning, center John Hill a.nd defensive
end Mark Bell
McKen11e was traded to Seattle 1n
1983 by Buffalo, whe~ he had
become famous as a blocker for O.J.
Simpson ... Th• Electric Company,'" it
was said, pve the JUioe to Simpson.
In other camps. the Dallas Cow-
boys traded veteran linebacker
Anthony Dickerson to Buffalo for an
und1sdoscd draft cl'loioc.
OickCl'IOn, a starter the last two
~ns, said ht knew he was a,oina h>
be an n-Cowboy 9oheD ht dad not
play Monday niabt in Dalw' 1 S-IJ
pre:aeuon victory o"er Chicqo
He got into trouble 1n the ~n~ ~
walk.in& Gnch to lead off the annuq.
George Hendrick then doubled. 0
out later he wulked Gary Pettis to loat
the bases. :
But unlike his counterpart W.itt, ~
then walked Bob Boone to f orcc honiC
Grieb and then led himself to tic
showers. g.1V1ng up the grand slam~
Howell.
* ANG•L NOTU -Wll,, ell ,,,. Clf'obiemt 1'91
tne Anoelt have l\ad wll,, tMlr Pltctllno recen!ft,
t1'141v eelded OM more Tundev "'9flt Aiiift
""""'"· whO wet luir ourdlaa.ct lfom E~ ton TtwtW.v. w11~on11 ... U-dav dludiid
"'' wllll a ttreu lfecture In ,,,, r'9f\t elbow l!!t
Anetll lleve not an~ whO ...,... r-6
Fowtktl on the ecllvt roster T,,. Geelston -made after Fowlkn w11 exemlned Nrll« In I& oav tlv Dr. Ltwlt Yecum Add 01tcnilil8.
Manaoer o-Maudl ,,., u ld tlwll Ill "mllllt
swllc:,, 1111 (oltclllnol roterlon etound • Niii•"...,
1111 .-.~· ucicomlno l~me roed lrl9. tDI
main d\enon er• ,,,., Jtflll ~ w .. ._
moved oul of t11t rotellon In New Vortl end t!lt•
RM Reinellldl, WhO ,,., l>Hn tlruootlno In ~ .. ,, four,,.,,, (en 11.17 ERAI, mav eel en •J\lPI
oev l1ff Ht It tCMduled lo Piich TlllK~.
"Romanick It r .. ov ro otrc,,," uld MAvdl. ~f
evervllllM ~ H lllc:ll 11 t'va iMenntd :JI.
Cendelarla wlM 1>1 In Ille tlYlloen In New vci;a ..
Pltdl ("arr) In O.troll, tie In Ille NII In a.ttl,,_
end ll'len c:omt DKk 10 ,,.,, •oaln•I K91Wl
Clrv." Tiit 11ronoes1 POsslollltv for now toolls ...
1wltc,,l119 Romenlcll eno l(lr1l MeCaslrW, ...,,,...,
tehecluled for Frldav . Oranet Coell Coli6
product O•rvl S<tnlen, wll<> ,,., l>Hn on tM
dlutlled 1111 tlnca Jutv 2S wllll IMn 1'11emenl(ln
1111 rloM wrltl, ,,., rttuNllCI lo Ille AllWI •Mer
1~lnv '°"" rtflatlllltatlon time wit,, Eomt)· ton. "He I\ 9(11119 on Int roed trio wit,, 14 lfld.M
wlN tie rH OV to otev on Sec>lember l." .mo
Maven Deot ot Strenea Record1. In lie
Orlolfl or1-111ma notes, lllev cle lm 10 llOld me
rtc0rd for llonw run1 In conteeutlvt IMlllO--
HYtn Tiie ()(lo4eJ ~ed In t,,. IHI !BO
lnrlnos of ,,,.Ir 111me •PlMI 0.klend Suft4iv
end Jn Ille 1lr11 five Mondev eoaln11 Ille A"91f> -
---
"Jack was a tremendous forc.c ajd
we all regret he had to quit. But in ~~
game you have to know you~
eventually going to have to give at llP
and learn to adjust :
''When I retired l thought I \QS
going to have the greatest year of ray
life. Then I lore my Achilles' tend.an
and It was not to be. That's what life3s
all about. , :
"But Jack's a winner. I'm sure .le
won't have any problems." -
Y oun,gblood has said be would Hie
to remain in the organ1zauon, bUt
wasn't sure what capacity he wouldic
used in. Several teammates ga'!e
credit to the two-time NFC Dcfensi,ic
Player of the Year for the play~
Youngblood helped them become ••
"Seventy-five percent of my leatP·
ing on the practice field came frc:n
Jack." said I 0-year offensi ve tack'e
Jackie Slater. "He beat me a lot <DH
there, but I wouldn't trade U:Dt
experience for anything. :
"He epitomized what a great pla)ltr
1s all about. We have some ~o6d
young talant that I'm sorry won t Ft
to be around Jack's innucncc. He ..,s
loaded with pride, and thal°s Wft1lt
makes the difference ma player," ,.,d
the Ram co-captain. =
Bajn, who earned All-Pro hon~
last year, also cited Youngblood'~
teaching ab11ty :
"I remember the first ume I went
uragainst him in practice," said~.
" went t'o pass-block him. He we!ht
through me so fast I felt like l wal a
revolvmg door Jack took me aslZlc
and told me to do this and that aid
showed me how to play the nght sRk
of the hne. f> :
---Raiders §
-~ cut two
veterans .
OXNARD (AP) -T)le Los ~
geles Raiden released Reggie Kintlw
and Od.is McKinney, both fromincnt
veterans of two Super Bow games.;:as
part of their cutdown to 50 playlrs
Tuesday.
They also cut two free agents, CKle
draft choice and placed four pla~rs
-three df thcm drat\ ch01ccs -~n
1ajured reserve. :
Kinlaw, a seventh-year nose taolle
from Oklahoma, was one of the
heroes of Super Bowl XVIII on J..an
22, 1984, when tie was credited with
hclpana nullify Wasl'linaton's
va unted ground game.
He was also a m'10r factor in the
Raiders' victory over Philadelphia
three years earlier in Super Bowl XV.
He was on&inally a 12tb-round dpt\
choice of the Raiden in 1979. ·
~cKinney, a backup safety and
"nickel" back, was an his eiahth
season. He was ariginaJly dra.ftld on
the SCCQnd tound by the New York
Giants. He came to the Ra.ideri in an
offscason trade in 1980.
Also cut were llth·round dfaft I
choice Steve Strachan, a runnin1 biok.
from Boston Collcae\ ofltn11vc taokle
Warren Bryan~ • ru.nth-year .,.,
oriJinally draf\id on the fiflt rollDd 1
by Atlanta, and Dami Byrd, a f'1ee
aacnt linebacker •ho hid been with
die team two ICUOns. Byrd 1:\Jt
last wtelc but later recalled
"h's pankulatly touab to cut
players like Rcaje and OdiJ~ .aaJd
Los Anselcs Coech Tom t'IO
"You'tt taJldna aboU& peo~ who
wtte rttJ Raiders. who ~te &0U&h.
but had c ..
-~._... -~._.............-----~-------• _J ___ -----
.
MA.JOit LIA.UI ITAJtDtHG5 ~ LAetllle WHT DCYIStOM n s. .!71 .. M .Ji53 1~ .. '° $24 '
" '2 .... ·~ • 61 MO 1' SS 61 40 IS~ .. ,. .371 25
I AIT 04V\S!Off W L ~ 01 n 47 m
73 51 .. s
'1 SI $3' 11~
'5 SI .S2I It~ • •s .4n ''""
S7 " ."3 '°"" 4$ IO .360 S) II)
TYfNIV't le-~ 7, IA11Tltnore J
ClewlMd '· to.ton 2 O\IQeo J, Tu .. 4 Twonto I • .W.V-te 0
Mlw•uk• I, Ke11M1 Cltv s 5"1111 #, Detroit 1 0.io.lelld J, N-Yorlt 0
TMltY'• o.met Toronto (Stieb 12-t ) •• Ml111'14tSOI• ISmltNoll 12-ltl, 1 loelOft (L..otler S·t l II Clevtlelld (RuNt
M),(11) r, .. , <Stewert 0-41 ,, c111c.19o ('"'IOtl 7·1). (n) K•n•H City (OultMcte ,.,, ., Mii·
weuk" (VUCkovlctl 6·91, (n)
0n1v o•mei KMduled TWMeY'•~ Alllllhet New Yorio., (nl
l(enM1 City el MllweultM 0.ltlelld II Detroit, (II)
ao.IOft " c ....... nd. <n> S..llle 11 h ttlmore, (Ill T11tH .. Clllceeo. (II) Only oemet K'*luled
NaftoMI LM.U.
WHT DtVlSIOM
W L
0Mlw1 " 49 s.noi..o " SI Cincinnati 6' S9 Housron S7 67
"'""'' Sl 71 Sen Freocltco 49 7S
•AST Dtv1StOH
ltct.
60'2
~
S20
460
.'23
39S
GI
71'1 10
171.'J ' n 2Sln
Sr Loula '
New "f'Mk Moo Ir HI
Clllceeo PTll!Aldelonl• PlttaburOll
n " ,,,
75 50 '°° l ., S7 .w .....
'1 62 ..,. 16
SI 6' t6e 191.'J I
39 13 .320 371..,
TuetdllY's Scenl DMeert 2, New VcYk I
Se" Frenc:lsco 6. Montr .. 1 1 Sen Ole9o 4, PTlllldetoflle I SI Loul• 6, Clnclnnell 4 Atlante 7, Plll\Our911 6 HC>Yllon I 1, Cl\lceoo 4
TldlY'I Gamet Clllceoo (8eller l>-ll ar Houlton !Nlekro 9·10) Plll\DIKoh (TuMell 1·1) et Alllnta
!McMurtry 0-3), 2 " SI LC>Yla (AnclUler 20-71 el Clnclnnell ISoto 10-ISI, n
'Tllun49Y'• ci-PTllll<letllhl• et o.dliln. n .rAllente •t Critcaoo New YOl"ll et Sen Frencltco Moolr"I at S.n Ole90
Plltsburotl " Cincinnati, "
AMEIHCAN LEAGUE A"98fs 7, ~ J
&AL TIMOtll CALll"ORNIA
Wlnlna 2b Lacy rf
lllllllltn " EMurrY It> MKYng rt
si-11 dPI Revford c ~ycf
O•utr lb Gron lb
MHlllll ellrlllll • o I O Oownloo II 3 O o O
•OO O Schoflklu 4 000
4 I 2 0 8AlnlGUl lb 3 0 I 0.
• 0 2 1 ltJoMt rf 1 0 0 0
4 1 l 0 Grlcll 2b 2 2 0 0 • 0 0 O Henctrcll rf 2 1 I O
4 0 1 0 Car-It> 1 0 0 0
4 1 2 I Jeck.all dll l 0 0 0
l 0 I I Penl1 cf 2 1 0 I 1000 Boonec 3101
JIC.Howl 31> • 2 2 S » > 12 > r..... :it 1 4 1
•SC..bv .....
l"""*"9 011 100 --l c......... ..,. llO 01•-7
Game Winning RBI -JKHowell t2I E-Wlooln1, EMurrev D~ltlmor• I, Cellfotnlt 2. L09-8eltlmort 12, CeR· for"I• s. 2t-O•utr. Hendrick, MKYouno. EMurrev 'MR-JKHowell 2 <•I.
II' H R IEJt 19 SO ..,,.,,..
Mc:Grt90< L. 10-17
I l·l 2 S S l 0 Dillon 6 2 1 I 4 4
$1'911 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
~ Wiii W. 12·7 4 10 l 3 6 S 0. Moore S,23 3 2 0 0 0 0 Wirt oltcried to 1 belltrl I" Ille nn WP-Witt T-l'IO A-JO..JS7 -
NATIONAL LEAGUE
ONlar'I 2. Mm 1
LOS AHG•LIS NIW YORK
Duncan u Cet>tll 3b Rltenlch If
" Guerr., lt> Merwtrt
Mldndocf Lendrx cf
Sclotcle c
Se• 2tl lttuu o Nlednfur P
•rlllll ebrlllll
4 1 I 0 Bckmn 2t> 4 0 I 0
4 0 1 I Paclork rf 4 0 2 0
4 0 3 I Hrnnctz lt> • O O O
• O I O Carter c • O 1 O 4 000 Strwt>rvcf 3111
l 0 0 0 FOlltr If 4 0 0 0
I 0 1 0 l(nloflt 3o 3 0 0 0
3 o I o Sentane " l o 2 o • 0 I 0 Fmdez P I 0 0 0
4 0 0 0 HJontn Pl'I I 0 0 0 o O O O McDwll o O O O O BowtPll 1000 Oroscop 0 O O O
lS 2 t 2 T..._ J2 I 7 I
Scer'a ltV ......... LAii,.,....... ltl .. --2 MewYn .. eot 001-I Game Wlnnl1111 lt9t -C.Clell !SI.
OP-LOI •noetes , 1.0&-l.OI AllOtlel
I , New York S 2&-Scl4kle. 3&-0unceo Hlt-Strewtierrv (21) 59-0unan l <n>.
LAlndrM U• (I•)
If" H RIR aa SO L .. ,_,,....
lt-iW,12-t U ·l 7 1 1 1
NlectnfuW S, 14 1 l 0 0 0 0
MeWY9"
Ftrnendel L.S·t 6 I , 2 2 1
McDwM 2 1 0 0 0 0
Orosco 1 0 0 0 0 I WP-4ttuu, McDowell T-N2. A-
Cl.76'
ANGEL AV•RAGU
Benl-J Downlno
Cer..-Sconltrl
Jonn JK'ltlOtl
Petti• DeClllC*I
~,lctl
O«bef
loone
Ntmlll
Howel SCflOflfld WMfonll Hendrldl T .....
9ATTINO
41 R H Mil
339 4' 100 7 m '° 1oa 11 l3S 51 ti 2 ... 10 17 1
310 st ti "
)63 " n 20 lit JO 71 I
l'3 40 " 13 no S4 '° 1 1' 6 le 0
M ,. a •
122 11 11 S
" 14 20 7 ,. ,. ,, I * 14 ,. • 13 J l I
4,m Mt MIS2 llt
Rll ,.C\ nm
" .273 l2 2n
' .JU 5' 2'1
" .25' ti 2'S s• 2.s ,. t'3 , 10
40 .2:19 1a no 12 ns ,. "' 12 l91
2 IJO m _,.,
Bleacher beach
Work c.....,. erect bleacben at Bantiqtoa,..Beacb for
Pro 811Jf Cbamplonablpa "wldcb nm tmoqb Sanday.
lttTCHING
lit H 11 SO W·L lltA Hoffend 1"h t t 11 H 1 10
' N\ool't n V> 63 IS 4' 1·1 U2
Clltlu'n IS 7 I JS )f 1·1 UO
Witt 202'°l "' a 141 11-1 , 11 ltornenlclt 161'h 111 SS •1 IJ·6 l.7' Lueo 70'h 73 24 n J·4 1" Corbett ~ 40 IS It 2· I ),fl Siiton 132 IM SJ S2 S-10 00 McCHklM 1'2 139 46 7• 9-t 4.37
ZtM » 4' 1' 14 2·2 4.lt S.ncnt1 $.1 SI t6 1' l ·0 •.lt Ctnclelerle lf'h 2t t 1' 2· I 7 ti Fowlllet 7 I S • 0-0 t 00
T..... lltl'l\(40 424 5'7 12·54 JM
S.vet: Mt/«e tl, Cllbum S, Sanc:het I, Sleton 1
MAJOA L•AGUa L•AD•As
American L•tue BATTING !300 el bell~. Boston,
lSt, lrttl, Kanu1 Cltv, .356, R H~.
NAtw Yon, .337, Mtttlnoiv. N-York, m .
LAICY, h ttlmore, 313 RUN5-4l ~~son. New Yort.. 106; lllPlltn, h lllmote, fO; E Murrev, h lll·
mote. N . Wllltektr, Detroit, M , Wlnti.14, New YO(k, IS. llBl-Martlngtv , New York, ICM; E Murray, S.lllmore, 103, Wlnfleld, ~ York, •. to a.ti, Toronto, 11 ltk>ken. Belllmore. 17 H1Ts-6ovlla. &oalon, 175, Mattlne!V, New Yorll. 165, WlllOtl, KanMI City, 1SJ, p Bra<lle'/. Seattle, 152, Brett, Kanwa City,
1'9. OOU8LE5-Martloorv. New Yori!;. 39; Buciu.. Boston. 34, 80091, eoaron, 31. Cooe>er. M.ltweukM. l2, Brett, Kenae1 Cttv.
ll TRIPLES-WUIOtl, K1nae1 City, 19, &ut-
ter, CleYN lld, 12. Puet<ett. Ml!l!lnOta, 11;
8•rfleld, Toronto, I, COOPer. MllweullM, I,
PBredleY, $aettl8, t HOME ltUNs.-Flak, ClllceOO, 3J, Even1. Oetroll, 29, G 8911, Toronto, 27, BelbOlll, Kenaaa Cltv, U., G ThOmH . Seattle, U; Klnoman, 0.lllalld, 26 STOLEN 8ASEs-fl HenclerlCHI. New Yorll. S7; WlllOtl. Ke"su Cllv. 40, ~
.,_., Jt. Burler. Cleveland lS, ~. Toronto, ll SAll E$-Oul"'1berry, Ken~a Cltv, lO, Herne!l(M1, Detroit, 27, D. ,,,...., A,...n,
1:11 J Howell, 0.klend. 23. ltlottetll, New York, 23
Na"°"81 L•tue 8A TTING '300 at beta I-McGee, Sr LDYl1, ..l61. H ... r. SI Loul,, J2S, ~.
Dedlen. .l111 llelnea, MonlrMI, 3\0. Gwvllf\, Sen Ole90, 308. RUNS-Murp!ly, Attenle, 97, llel1141$, Monlr .. I, '2; COleman, SI Loul1, 19.
McGM. SI Louis. 17, ~. o.dliln • ...
R8t--Mu<onv "''-"'•· "· Herr SI LDYIS, 17, Perller't.Clnclnnell. 8', J Clerlo. SI Loula, ... G Wllaon. ~lladelol\I•, II HITS-McGM, SI. LC>Yla, 162; Gwynn S.11 DllOO. ISi, Herr, St. LDYli, 1'7; Reloes, Montr .. 1, 1'3, Perk.,, Cloclnnell. 142. OOU9LES-Herr. SL Loula, ll, Wall6dl, MonlrHI, JO, Park.,. .. Cincinnati
1'; Het,,."°91. New YorY., 21, G Wll$00, ..,_,tedelOtlle, 11
TRIPLEs-McG", St Loul1, 16,
Samuel, Pllhtdelllhla, I I, COlttmen. SI Lou!,, 10; ltelnta, Monl,...I, 10, Glidden,
Sen Fr~laco, 7 HOM!: RUNS-Murllhv. Allanta, 3', G_,.,., DMews. >01 Parlier, Clo<:f!l"4111,
13, Scnmldt, Prlllede!Pl'lle. 22. Horner. At-lante, 21, J Clerk, SI Loul1, 11. Strew·
t>trrv, New YOl"k, 21 STOLEN BASES-COiemen, SI LDYI,.
17, Reines, MontrHI, SO, LOC!ft. Clllceoo.
'3, McGM, Stk Louts, '2. Reoui. Clncln· netl, o. S.ndt>trg, Clllcaoo, '1
SAVEs-ft .. rdon, MonlrNI, 32, L Smith, Ollceoo, 21, Golsaoe. Sen 01-. 21, Sutter, Atlanta, 20, O Smith. HC>Yllon. 19, PowM, Clnctnnetl. 19
U.S. Otleft (tt"-Yertl) MEN
!tint fteuftd JP1'111 McEnroe (U S.l def Sl'tlomo Gllck1· teln (lareell. 6-1. 6·7. 2·6, •·l. 7·6. Andert Jarrvd ISwedelll def Mlkael Ptrnfora CSwectenl. 6-l, 7·6 (7·41. 6-•. Borla Becker (Wett Germany) def Peter Oool\en (Au1·
trella). 6·•. 6·1 t-2. Joekim Nvstrom def ClllP Hoooe!' CU.SI, 6•4. PS, 6· I, Jone" Kriek def Paul McNemM (Autrrelle), 6·•. 6·2. 6-4, Tim MaVolle (U.S I def Terry
Moor (U.S.), 6·•, 6·2. 6·•, Tomea Smid def Mere Flur (US I 6·3, 1·S, 6·2
WOMIN ''"' ...... Hane Mencllil!ove ICact>e>llOvelllal def .t.melldl Brown (9rltelnl. 6·2, 6· I. Cleudl• Kollde-Kntcll def Nlaee 0111, 7·6 (7·4), 6·1, Helena SukOlla def. Jenntter Mundel (South Africa),,.,, 6·0; Manuela Mll ... n
def su .. n Mes.cerln (U.S.>. 6·1, 6·1, Wendy
Tur"bull (Au•tralle) def. Vlrotnl• Ruzlcl tRomentel. 6-4. 6·1, Bonnie Geduaek def,
Giel Femancttz ('"'*'10 lltlcol. •·2. 1·S; Cerllno 8eaMtt <can.o.1 def tve 8UCSerova
CCt~akll), 6-0, 6-7 13-71. 7·S. An· dr" Temeaverl IHuneervl def KtlMlne
Mllteev• llulllerle>. 6-2, 4·6, 6·•
o... ... tbNnt
OAVaY'S LOCICI• (........, leed\)
-120 envters 1'9 berrewcs.. M Donllo, 21 vettowten, 2' roofti!I, >01 ban, IOO mecltMll
LOI A&emtfM
TUISOAY'S •ISULn fllllST •Ac•. One m11e. Alelewoo IPerlttr) J.40 UO 2.AO Social s.nt.elb\ (Vllfldnonml 4 00 )00 SIV Horllon (Wloel 7 40
Time· 2-Gl 1/S.
U IXACTA Cl-ti t1eld U340
SIC°"D llACI. One mile. Mltolwnv (Vllrlclnohml 25.IO 10.00 S.40
Adr-1111 (Merrlem) t '° 6.AO 81l William (Anderton I 4 00 Time 1:01 2/S
U IXACTA ( .. 21 t1eld llOUO
THlllO RACI. One mite
ll eo 80 (Sller'ret1) 7 40 3 '° 2 20 Wiid Joktr ($!Miii) 3.60 2.20 EV• Oent!fv (Pierce ) , 10 Time-2:00.
U IXACTA !4·1) H id Ml 10 "°""TM ltAC•. One m111 Hlln C.. (P9ttrwnl S IO 4 00 3 40
Or .. m Of Fortune IWll\el 6 60 HO Ple>e1 landlt (Wlrwl 12 40
Time 2:0S.
"'"" ltACI. One mile Englf N Ovr (Vllndn6tlml l 10 2 IO 2 20 AndVl Needle (Sleetlll l 20 3 00 Tiie Cenoldele (Kuebler) J 40
Time· 2:01. U IXACTA (l·S) H id SIUO
SIXTH ltACL One mile Alldya Gale !llllndllOMll l IO l 00 3 40
OoC$ SllN (Plano) lt.<10 100 Wiid And Crezv Guy (Sn.rren) 11 40 Time: Hl 3/S
U IXACTA CHI paid 196.JO
S•VIMTM ltACI. One mlie Privy COUllCll (AnOef~l 16 60 •IO 2 IO Lord Kevello (T~) 12 60 7 IO Heiden N (CrOOllen) l IO
Time• l:SI llS.
U UtACTA !l-21 cield '17970
llGHTH •ACI. One mire Salvador (Plano) s 00 l 00 2 40
StNrt Koela ($prloOll 3 40 2 40 ACl\lance SHrk ICrOOllenl l 20 Time· 1.S9
$l •XACT A (5·9) Paid '22 50
NINTH RACE. One mite. Como Siar (Pierce) J 00 110 Out Allllude (Kueoltrl ?.20 Out Marlins Pride (Sllerren) Out
Time· 1:59 4/S.
U •XACTA IS·l) Pelc! st.«>
S2 PIClC SIX <l·l-l·l·S-SI cield W90 SO to ttS wlllf\11111 llclte" (lb 11ones). Pldi 1ta conaoletlon Paid Sll 40 ro ?,OSI wlMlno tldleh lllv• llOnes)
Rams~
Eimlbftleft S.rurdav Auo ll -New Enolelld
ll'IOmel. 1 om •...-r S.Mfl
~IV. $191 I -OenYtr (llOme) 1 om Sul\dey, $191 IS -et ~lladelJ>tlle, 10 e m Mondtv. S.ot n -at Seattle, 6 om Sutldav. Sec>t ?t -Atlanta Cllomel. I om Sulldn Oct 6 -MlnMaore Cr.om.I. I om Sulldlv. Ocr 13 -•• Tempe a.v. 10 em Sundtv, Ocl 20 -et Kensu Cllv, 10 e m Sund•v. Oct 11 -San Freoclaco !l'IOme), I o.m Sunoev Nov l -New OrlHnt !l'IOtnel
1 pm Sulldlv. Nov 10 -at New Yoo GI•""· 10 e m.
Sund•v, No• 11 -11 Atranra, 10 • m Sulldev. Nov ?• -Green 8n er.om.I. 1 om Sundev, Dec 1 -et New OrlHna, 10
em Mondev Dec t -ar San Francia.co 6
om .
Sundev. Dec IS -St LDYll (P\Omel 1
.>m MoodaY 0.C 73 -Lo. Anoelel Reldef'a (l'IOmel, 6 om (AH t1me1 Pacific)
Raldtr'I ~ . .,..,...
Fr10.v • .t.uo JO -ar c1everalld, • lO
0 m It"'*"' S.Mfl Sulldev, Seo! I -NY J9t1 ll'IOl'ne), I
Om Tllundev. S.Ot 12 -" Kensaa Cltv, S om. Sulldev. Seol n -S.n Frenc:laco ll'IOl'ne), I om
Sundav S.01 29 -el New Enotend, 10
em SUndev Oct 6 -Kenaa1 Cltv ll'lomel I
om. SU!ldev, Oct 13 -New 0r ... na tl'IOl'ne),
1 pm Sundev. Oct 20 -at Cleveland, 10 • m
Mondev, Oct 2t -S.n °*'° (l'lomel. 6 om Sundev. Nov 3 -at $Miiie, I om Sundev, Nov 10 -et Sen Ole9o. I o m Swndev Nov 17 -Clnclnnetl (l'IOme), I
o.m. Sunday, Nov 2• -OenYW ll'IOl'ne), 1
om. Su/\dev. Dec I -et Allenra, 1 om Sundev. O« t -•I Oen,.., I pm
Sundt.,, Dec IS -S..trte (llOmel. l
o rn
SuncMv. o.c.. n -•• ll-. ' • m (All lllT'lft PKlflc:)
........ u... PHIL.AO!L.llHIA ltHIL.Uls.-tt~ Fr«I Toll•, lfldW, trom Oen-Of !fie
.AINflcM 4Hodeflon to ~ an
W iier trade wt"' IN Cllldnnttt lttR
f'OOTIAU. --.............. u...
ltAMl-A~ "" rerir-1 q1 J.c:k Y~. dtf9nllve end Cut a-ea ,..,,,_ end Olla Grant, wldt
rec:leY9r\, C:lltlt l'eulkntr elld JoM
l(emene, !ltflt "*• Joe 5'1Mftft. c.Mw. Jltft l.eulNlll, ~-, Hel S,.,_,
~" end, .no "°"" JtfWIMll, cor-'*111Ck.. ""9ced A.IVllt Wrletlt, 110M ledlle, on IN lntl.nd r...,..,. lltl
LOS AHOliLE$ •A•Deu-........ It ..... Kinlaw, ftOM lec:kle, end Odil
Mtl(IM9V, M1-lv, Slev9 StrKllen, runnrno ~. Wttrtfl lrvenl, offWlt.lve ledlle, end
0.ft'YI lvrd, llMOedtw. Plead Jllmle Kimmet llnetledlw, Nlcll HAiden, centw,
Marti P91tllon, Wide reclevtr encl Jeff
McCAii, lltfll encl Oft IN lniurtd '"""" "''· ATLANTA FALCONS-Cul LYM Caln, runolno Dectl. FIOvd Hodoe, wide receiver.
~•kl Sme" end Renie Pleewnt. de· fentlve bedu, Vlretl S.y, wide rede-.
Ari Pflce, KneMdl•, end Wlllerd Goff defensive ttdlle. BUl"FALO llLL.$-Welved Ltrov HOw·
"· oefeM!ve ltld, Jam. l"wr'vYMn, ..+etv. &ooclv '*'"· wide receiver, encl Andre YOUl\ll end 9leneheld Monteomerv,
llnebecaefl. CHICAGO BEAR$-<u1 Dave Fl111er,
pynfer, Donald Jorden, runnl119 beck, Torn Andrews. ~ve teckte, Jedi C.met'on
alld 9rlftf Ouflon. wide recelven. Cllertes
BeMett. ~end, MIU SIOOClt 0.-fenalve IMldl. Joe $cll,,.all, euard, Don K.lndt ,.
lkllll end, end Jeff KecmMek, defemlye
tlldlle. CINCINNATI 9ENGALS-Slllned Rou Browl'ltf. defena1... end. WtlYecl WY
Freiler. llntt>ecker, Garv Smltll, ouerd Anll'IOnY TU99141, defenilve beck Eric
StOk ... 1.0.le-<*llet, Kim Loekllft, '""""'° beck, Herold SIMfleld, 1'9111 ltld, elld Keltll
Cn.IM, defeMlve end. P\ececS JOM Fanev
rUNtlllll beck, on IN lnlurecl r--.,e llar CL~VELANO BROWNS-Welveel Oler.
.t.mC>row. Davkl Maran.II. II~"'·
Sllene SwenlCHI, wide recel¥tr·PU11ll re·
turner. Jon Crevw, 111\ebecker. Pieced on
the tnlured r_.... na1 Pieced Greo &flt, aai.tv, .._men F0ttteftc>t, running oeci.
o ... 1c1 ~rill. oef9nalve n-n. on '"" lnlYrecS r-dat DALLAS COW&OYS-Traded Anll'IOf\y OldltrlOtl, llnebeektr, to Ille 8uftel0 Bib
tor fu1ure Clreft ~. DENVER 91lONCOS-Wtlveel Well
Bo,..., defen1lve tnd. Pte<:ecl Rick Perro' runnl"9 IMldl on Ink.ired ,_.,. Sionecl
Scott Stankaveoe. -rttro.c>. DETROIT LIOHs-<ut Steve Doto
II~, >oe MclntOlll, runnl1111 Deck Sten $hor1, "'9fd, Tonv Stt ten, (1)1·
ntrbeGk, Greo Jt00tr11, ouerci. Wiiiie Cur· ran, wide recelvtr, end Scott Barrows, OM
MonlOtl, tec.klH. Placed Oeve D' Addlo. fullbKll, on IM lnlurecl rntrve 1111 · GREEN 9AY PACKERs-<ut Ellet
HOOO, defentlve tlect<. Ron Ce111dv. wide rKleY8', Dela Mar1Ulem, OftenilYe IKkle
•nd Ke•lll Edwarch. runnlno bKlt Pieced Merk L-11 end Ton¥:oomos. 11o111 ends. on 11'18 lnlurecl rnervecl 1111 HOUSTON OtLEllS-Walved Joe c-. klcll.,., 8rlen Renaom quar· rtrt>eck, Art~ Wlllttlngton, runnlno beell, Mell Hartlen, offeMlve -rd, Reovle Lewis. deftnalve tecllle, Tom Lvnd\, of· ten1lve tac.kla James Mertl'lewa, running
t>ecll •lld llot>ert White, cornert>ectt Pieced Miiie Gollc, ~Ive tnd, end Joe Kra1t.011t.I, llMOKktr, on ttte lnk;red r--..e
1111 INDIANAPOl.IS COL n-stvne11 w.d· dell Smltll, wide rKlevtr Welveel An«• PIMWll, noM lacltle, Teel ... ltrMn, l.c:kle a.en Ble1ucc1, lllC'ktr, Gerv Ped.en, WneOecktr, VllJOM Wllli.t'nl, defentl.,.
DeCll Metil Broolla, ~. •lld ~
arown, runnl119 t>edL Pieced BlalM Winier. defen1lve tnd, end Rk:llv Nletlcm. Ollver Wllllem1, end Jemes Hert>our, wide re-celvtr1, on Ille lnlured rnerve 1111 MINNESOTA lllKINGs-<ut Eric lloO· ll\IOtl, kk:ll returner, and Carl LM. oe-i.ntlve oedt Pieced -ro Wet Hemlilon iNerd, Sernmv Wl'lll• and Kellll Kidd. wide re<:e!Ytrl, Ind K ..... Mo,,..etl. ..fetv' on '"" inlurecl reMrve llat NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTs-<ur lllclo. S.nford, .... , .... Peul Oomt>rot•I. UlelY, Smlle'f Cretw"4, defenalve end, Paul Rick... 119ht end, Miiford Hodoe. noMt tac.kle, end Tonv Mumford rUMl1111 tlKll
Pteced Derry! Hetev. r!Otll lectlle on IN
non-toott>el lnlurv reserve 1111 NEW OllLEAN~ S.t.tNTS-P\aced Tvrone Youno alld Keonv Oucu tt, wide raclevers, and Joe KOl'ltt>rend. • defensive
end, on lnlurecs rewrv• Moved Loul1
Out>re, iNerd, from '"" llhvllcallv unable 10
perform llat to Ille Inactive Uat NEW YOftK GIANTS-R .... aecs O•v• Jennl1191, ountM NEW YOtlK JETS-Wetveel 0ouo "!ten. Nick &ruck'*', wide rece!Ytrt TOOd
C.ml>I*!. defen1r... IKkle, J.tt Oeelon guerd, Kevin McArtllur, ll~tr. •nd
Don Newman, aaletv. Pieced Steve AUGUat, Oflen11ve tec.kll, Dennis Blloen, runnmlno t>eck, end LtilcY L Vies "letv. on IM lnk;red rtMrvt Ii" Waived Mike Dennis
corneroeck PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Pieced
Owavne Jllet end Tom Pottev 11"9C>eekera and Leon Evens, oefentlve encl, on lnlured resef'vl WalveQ 8rven Celdwetl. defe!lslve
end, Joe Hevet. rullf\11111 beclt, Marti. Ktls.o aetetv. JUdlous Ltwla, wide recla,,.,, Nell Maune, guerd end Rowland Terum.
llnec.ci< ... PITTS8URGH STEELEltS-We1nd Wevoe Ca-1, wld9 rec.etYM WoodV Pl-i, NMlno ~. •lld lluuell Holmes llMC>ecktf'
ST LOUIS CAftOINALS-Cul Curtllnd TllO•NU, wide recel•er Traded O.ve .t.llr-. llMC>ecll;.,.. to Ill• lndltneP0111 COiia for en undlldoMCI lulun drt ft cl'IOlcAI ~ SAN DIEGO CHARGERs-<ul \lemon Me•w.. llnetleCtl... encl JoM Turner
Mfety TAMPA 9A Y BUCCANEE ltS-Welved
Fred Acor". defenil'141 beck Cer1 Wl•lems, wide recetvw. end Ob9d Arlrl, OIKekldter WASHINGTON REO ,KINS-Tra~ TOiiy Z.tndelel kldl8', lo Ille HOUiton
Olltra for en undllCIOMd Clrell Clloke In I* Wefvecl Mlk• Nelm1 kldl rerurn t0eel•ll•I Cut J C Pearson end tc.evlo Wllllern1 cornertMH:ka, R-'9 Branctl runnl/19 t>ecll Mike WOOten. centw. Brvent WIM, l~tr. end ~ 9r00ka. de-ei9nalve ta<1cl8 ~ Oen1ell LM. llellt
end, Oii t.'llured rtMrvt Announced ll'le
retlr-t o4 Georoe Starke, tactele HOCKIY ,..__, "9dln ""'""9
HARTFOttO WHALERS.-Sleneel JoM Ne<#Mrrv center. end ......,. ow-cie--
ien-n. IO ---CGnlr'Kll
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/WecfMeday, Augult 21, 1185 a
Norrie will st•----
at QB ·for UCLA:
Donahue picks senior
redshlrt over Stevens
of Fountain Valley HS
LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA
Coach Terry Donahue annou.nced
Tuesday that fif\h-year seruor David
Nome will start at quanetb9ck for the
Bruins tn thetr l 98S football seuon-
opent:u.t...Bri&b&m Y ouna on SepL 7.
Donahue cnose Nome over Junior
Matt Stevens, a product of f ountain
Valley Hiah. who started th1U pmcs
for the Bruins la$t season while fint-stri.naer Steve Bono wu iojl.&ted.
"FU"lt of all. I want to emph.u.J.U
that I feel both players are a pable of
playing the position "'Cll for us ...
Donahue said. "Thtre &S httJe separ·
ating the two (>layers. but I fed J have
to make a decision so we can be&in to &w.re for our seasoo..openeT apinst
"Dev1d ts a fifth-year senior and be
has proven to me that he deserves the
chance to start because of bis hard
work. That docsn 't mean I am
displeased ~th Matt's effom, be·
cause I feelche bas do ne evcrythm1 I
have asked of tum, but someone has
to line up and take the first snap and I
have decided it's going to be David.
He's earned that and l owe him the
chance.
"'I plan to use Matt ILlce a relief
pitcher off the bench against BYU
-t.nd then stt who 1s able to &ct the job
done."
Norrie. a 6-4, 212-pounder, has
thrown only 19 passes as a collegian.
He com plctcd one of two passes for 1 I
yards m 1982 and was seven of I 7 for
46 yards last yea·r.
Stevens, a 6-0. 191-poundeT. tut
43 ofhls 34 throwi last season for
yards. •
Donahue told the team of
deo1100 at M o nday afternoon's
t1~. sa~mg Mo nday ni&ht.. "'I
down right DOW, but rm loo
forward to pressunna tum (No e
apin"
Fifth-year seniors have f.Wlkd UCLA to New Year's Day bow -pme
v1ctoncs the last two yean.
Bono did the JOb in the B · s'
39-37 triuknph over Miafi\i. Aa,., tn
the Fiesta Bowl last Jan. l. and k
Neuheisel was at the control• as
UCLA overwhelmed lll1no1s 4
the-Rose Bowl game on Jan. 1. l
Trojans, as usua
have lots of talent
ready at tailback
LOS ANGELES (A.P) -Southern
Cal may not have a Hc1sman Trophy
candidate at tailback this )car. but the
Trojans do have an abundance of
talent there.
"We're very fonunate to have a lot
o fabihty a1 the posnion." Coach Ted
Tollner, whose Trojans are ranked
s1lth 10 the nauooal prcseason poll.
said Tuesday dunns the Pacific-10
Conference Slcywnters' stop at
Southern Cal.
"'We have five guys With different
bods of strengths. J think over the
course of the season. aJl of them will
play." the TroJan coach said.
"'We don't have a gu) nght no"'
who's a He1sman W)nner, but "'e ha' e
guys who can help us wm in this confercn~."
Senior Fred Crutcher a 5-10. 195-
pouod senior who bee.a.me the stan-
ing tailback dunng the 1983 season.
again Wlll open at the pos1 ~hen the
defending Pac· I 0 champion Trojans
begin their 1985 campaign ~pt 7
against lllmo1s m C hampaign
Lrutchtrgamcd Ll5hardson 30~
carries last year as the Trojans went
9-3 and beat Ohio State 20-17 m the
Rose Bo\\I
More steady than spectacular
Crutcher could~ pressed for the JOb
by an) one of four other talented
runners -sophomore Ryan l ,
senior Zeph Ltt rcdshin an
Steve Webster and rncormog
freshman A.a.ron Emanuel.
The three underclassmen all ap-
pear to have potential u brca.kl }
threats m the mold of former T
tatlbaclts O.J Simpson and
Garrett
Crutcher. "ho rcdstuned m lt 2
after a lmce IDJUry, said the com.peu-
uon at uulbadc keeps him sharp
.. h helps me. malces ccrtam r, 't
get laz)." Crutcher said ... I lmowrve
got to compete for the JOb. and I lc:lro"
when I get into a game I've got lOJCl
the Job done or someone cl~ · be
m there U\Stcad "
Crutcher acknowledged that the
tailback postt1on at Southern Cal tan
car.; some pressure ("'People e~
>Ou to gain :!00 yards t\.e~ pme,"1
but he sa.id he's become 1mmuoe 10
the compansons
"I tell m)sclf that ifs just hke
plav1ng ta.ii back at an) olher school .
It used to affect me. but I JUSt don't
pa)' an) attention to 1t an}mori I
think f'm m' own biggest critic.
An)\\8\ 11.no~ wben f"ve playcd-.ell
and when f', e pla}ed poor!) ··
Tollner. wh1le feeling confident
that the Trojans will~ able to run the
ball conunues to~ concerned ut
their passing game
Girls won't be barred
from boys' progra!Jls
CLINT ON TOWNSHIP. ~ J
(AP) -The supcnntendent of the
Nonh Hunterdon Regional ~hoot
D1stnct said Tuesda) he v.111 rec-
ommend to the school board that 11
shelve a proposal to ban girls from
part1c1pat1ng tn oo~· spons
Supenotendenl Ro~n "Jeumann
said he will also recommend that the
board plead ··no contest" at a ~pt Q
heanng before a Judge that the board
and 1u employees unlav.fult~ di!.·
cnmmated against I 5-year-old Ehza-
~th BaJsley by refusing to allow her
to sign up for the pre ... 1ousl\ all-male
football team at Nonh Hunterdon
Regional High School
"The issue 1s something tngger than
the school dtstnct ... Neumann said tn
a telepho ne mtcr .. 1ev. .. lfc; not JU'it a
local ISSUe. ••
.\dmin1strat1ve Lav. Judgt' (}3.n1tl
\.icKcown on Aug ~O 1sc.uc-d a
temporary rest.raining order hlcxkmg
the dastnct from enforcing 1t\ unv. nl·
ten policy banning girls from tn tng
out for bo~s· spons teams
The judge said his o rder w m
effect unul a full heanng on 1he ue
~P' ~
• State Educauon Comm1s'i.oner
Saul Cooperman on Thursday af.
firmed the JUdge·s order ...
"eumann said he thinks the d1s-
tnd and. its emplo)'ecs should llb1dt'
b) the Judge's ruhng and drop its light
aaa1nst a lawsuit filed on Bals.le\ ·s
behalf bv the Amencan C1vll L1~rt1es (1 nion of Ne.w J crst)'
"It's not our tight anvmorc We've
had a landmark dte1SI0°n" asa10• the
d1stnct. ~eumann said. adding that If
'" t'\ptnSI\ e to hire medic.al e\pcnc. to
1ec;uf\. about the nst.. ot tnJUr\ to girl\
He ~1d he wo uld make his. rec·
ommendauons to the 11-memhcr
board at us m~un~ m the hhran at
the h1&h school in .\nnandaJe
The d1stnc\ propoSt'd the pohc\
at\cr 8alsJe-. who IS \-foot· S and
v.c1ghs 127 i>ounds. tnt"d out tor the
bo,s· lacroMC team and was, ut
-McEiiroe nearly eliminated; _Becker wins easily
Israel's G lickstein just misses u psetttng
·U.S. Open'sNo. 1 se~din the first round
NEW YORK (AP) -Dcfendma
champion John McEnroe totteml on
the brink of elimination Tuesday
before capeurina a fifth-set ticbrea.ker
10 cd&t Israel's ShJomo Ohckste:in
6-l, 6-1, 2--6, 6-3. 7--6andldvanceinto
the ~nd round of the U.S. Open
Tennis Champ1onshipt.
With the viClC>ry, McEnroe narrow-
ly etcaped becomm1 the first No. l Iced since 197 l and only the SIAth in
the 1()4.year history of Amcnca·s
premier ttnn11 event to fall in the o~ina rou:nd. Tbe victory kept alive
tns bid for • ftf\h title he~ at the
;National Tenn" Qnter in seven .
1
But Olictcstcm also walked off the
ooun as a winner before the crowd of
2 t ,008 as he battled McEnroe on even
tcnns t.hroU&)tout the lime-hour, S l-
minute match.
The st~ky Israeli matched
McEnrocshotforshot.&aameforpme
and 1e• for set. In the urw tiebmkCT,.i.
the aecood of the match, be fouaht on
four match points bcf0tt Mcbroe
cracked a blc.k.band ~un that
Ohckstdn fttbly put 1nto the net.
M cEnroe won the ttebtcaker 9· 7,
then raised hi hand tti&h into lb~ air?.
obviously pluscd witb the result -11
not his pray.
'"It urpri me bow Rat I wu
today," McEnroe said. "I lost m y
coocent.rabon qu1ckJy. He JeTkcd me
around and had me on the defensive.
I don•t remember when I was ever
that flat.
"I've oevubttn IO happy to wan an
openina round match ...
Earlier, Wunbltdoo champion
8ons Becker 1ly captured bas fint-
round match. dirp1tch1n1 Peter
Doohan of Au t.raJia ~. 6-1 , 6-2.
Also rJiOViq Into the 9'C'Ond round
oftbe mt:o's sift&les wett No. 3 Maas
WUandtr of S~, a 6-2, 6-41 6-4
winner over lodll's Vyay Amn~.
No. 6 Anders Jarryd. No. 10 Joakim
N)'StrOm of Swtdtn, No. 12 Johan
Kn.ck. No. 13 Tim Mayotte and No
16 Tomas Sf1\i.d of Ctecha.lovllta.
Winnen tn the women's ficld
TUC1day included o l Hana Man-
dhko¥1 of Cztthoslovak.ia. No 5
Oaud11 Kohdc--K.ilsch of West Ger
1!1•n}. No 7 Helena ukova of
Cl.echoslovakta, No 12 Wend)
Turnbull of Austraha. No 14 Boonie
Oadusek &nd No. IS C'~rhna Bassett
of Canada.
Andrea Jaescr, once ranked second
ID the world bU tJUSt ~tumi~ from I
self-1mpc>IC'd. one-)ear LayofTbecause
of uuu.ncs, defeated Ptna's Laura
Anaya Oildcmcnter.
Mary Joe Fernanda of M.am1,
Fl.a.., became the you.naat ptayer an
U. ()pen tustory t.o wio a match
"°bcn lhc stogocd Sara Oomtt of Otat 8nta1n (>..°I, 6-4 Ft~ at
14 yea.n. I da)'S. broke the record 1tt
last year by ~un.a's Oabnela Sabati1u. who wu 14 yttn, 4 months
old wbc'n ihe tUC.btd the third round
in 19M
McEnroe "81ltd thro \.bf open-
1na ~t wtth ease, and u appcAred a'i 1f
he would cnusc into the S«ond round
1n near-record time. But Cihcl 1>tc1n'c.
tcnacaou.sneu and M cEnr0t>'s own
errors almost proved to be fat.al
G hclcsttm captured the ~ond ·set
ucbreaker 7-J. then took the third ~l. bnnama hlm JI.lit one set • ..,.~ from
thc bagcst vtc:tory of his ~l"tt't' and
one of the b t UP'CU 1n tennis
history.
But 1t wa not to be. attho\lih
Mc Enroe helped hisopponent'1cautt
cons.1derabl) with slopp} p1u and 10
do1.1blc--fiulb
Tbe left-hander. v.-ho has "-On 11
leaSt one Ot'lnd la.m tournament
1tnalcs tide c"~t')' year 11nce 1979.
held h11 !ef"'t an the I 2th pmc of the
final ttt to fortt the ucbttaktt, then
U'Qktd out to a 6-J lead .11vu11 tum
tb.rtt match point
lihcl..\ttan ~on t.hc ncllt t.hrtt
point • pulhna to b-a, bt'forT
\1cEnroe put awa' a smuh 10 lake a
~-ti lead and another match point
~1n the l neh pulled even. But
McEnroe slammed 1 ~rv1ce winner
to reaeh match po1n1 for a fifth time
nd this time Cihckstem had no
~t~ men·\ No ~~Ivan Lendt
o f Ciccho IO\&lia., and the two top
womrn, Chn E'\ien Llo)d a.od Qe..
fend 1n1 c hampion Martina
•' nurova. an Khedultd to pl.av
their fint matchc\ on WedncJda). is
wtll fourth~cd Jimmy Connon.. 1
fhc-t111)e U. Open champion.
"La t ~ttk I ,.on Cinaonau. ~oct;t
was onl~ m ) thanS ha.rdcoun
~m~nt.. · Betker 1&.1d a.ftct his
VlCt.OI} bcrc at \be Na Tcnm Cmtc1'. •
..
• 1 Lin"•· ~ O.u. 16 Dollan. • ._di> mt\ • •n• .. 1 "•rh 11111 m• l"'mmr 1111'IHru•n1 11 rtl1111clabh • AdditioniJ N ma1 be pur"ht""'d for 12 IHI t11ch
• Pn<r mut1 be inlluded m thf ad. • n.~b not •pph 1(1 1h,. ,,,1 ... 1a11', rf'nral or hl'lp wanted dulif'1C1rione « automobl prrrf'd (l\f'r 1:.moo
• \-.atlabk nnh to 1•m111,. p•rh ••hl'rt~r• 'tllmg merchandilt.
Call 642-5678
---------, ...... ,...... ••Mlt ... 11 lllt ..... aaJarab• .. 1 ..... h........_. A,.,...nrua11w.....,ea,111. •• VaJ.
lteral lMI c.U IH!/mo IP rent. Cella.... UM lmat UH Cella.... llH C..ta .... iil4 lauc:.:1.= .. = .. ~.s.::::.:..~~11~::~-~,r~~~~.°"'n,:'!t= •.
1Wt 11&11111 ~ ~. :W11.1r~'o= wx eoAbO XVXIC Now 26r 2& iCd y;a, ow. gym, 1W M -aaa:mt1Go t.oe ,,_,t, IUWl•I YILLAll Acfutti on1y ~7to W81k to IUe from tl~lt 111.095. C.1183&-7110 Hr 28•. O._er pool, tennl1, pool, paUo, p11rol, All UTIUTtES PAID 1lkl & 28d all blt-lne. M
hlghly upgraded 1rv1ne 1 ••1U •w 1trMm1 & f1lla. Dbl car no peta $975. 6*1234 Compere Wont you rent. trptc. Mutt.... WIY ltTI C~o/~r ru~er,..,,prkg.
home with pool ape Ind .._ GV w/op<1r. Mlcto, W/D, lllT -Newfy <*:Orated cuetom 3M Avocado . Re k
tennll Prloed . rlgttt at 20'1l90' OOLDENWEST Spit M 1950. IM0.-2~7 I * * II.I** dealgn i..tut... pool, Tll mSJ Ul· 1IOI wM<e ou mi.,. fg. No kltch, no"" J·
8148,500 751-~t9 1 ~me. ~~~~niblo~ 28R 1ba. avllll Sept 1. No CALLUS REGARDING bbq, COV'rd getage. tu<--•S~ecur.r apt• S~5~;~~ln~~~lartll~ci
$SELECT -ner L pet._ Lg bcity11d 1825 r IRVINf I.EASES rOUflded wMtl Pluth !Md-* t & 2Br 1 & 28a Nt• 75~ 1383 appllancH Included mo, Agt Ur 84e-3827 lmtt hat ltaltr 1c1ptno No pell. ..,...~•"IJ •S ~1 townhouMe ----,-~-,..--~~ PROPERT IES I !:,~~ ~ S3~o;;J ll ... lllO Furnlahed 1 Bdrm and ~---*,:-C~ Prof. male 32 Mekl ,..,tal
cell Agt ~937 Ill I~ IATI tlN Fumlahed 8ac:helor TIWllllll •Privet• b1lconle1 or In Lag. Behl N.B • ., ...
'
111 • a I I IT _ Trlplex wlfrpto, g11 & L11u1 IHC~ I 4 385 Wiiton 8'42·197t OtM.tPerltlt Garden P•lloe Pr9f. ocean view.
• ......... ....., bufttln19/1 ledtMe 29 Frptc:, vaulted otlllnga, dbf •94-7081 ut 2.-0
AULTlll " YHI <>vwr 1'bOO IQ tt. 1trep1ace Tl1DDT 111-IMO 1p1c:~=· ~o"'= But. ltaQ Zltl ger poo1 & epa. Nop-. WIT HTt ltttb ..... b !!ff IHL HTAH IY & l>VI encl Yfd. Neer 2er 1ea i.. Opbt No P9ta 11000 inc& utN 499-2181 mt IUOl'I fllD1 18drm 1720-1745 •3 IJOhted tenn11oou111 aU-lll _... llLTI llLLlll I Ruben6LMl29,995f0t 950 .·~~. ~ --OUIETRESORTLIVINO 28drm2~Ba S915•2Swlmmlngpool.I ____ ,_ ..
• detalls call 836-7870 1 ~ M0-34M * 1Br, Pffvate & qU!et. •Sparllllng heeled pool e&6 w 18th 945-2739 •StrMl'l\I & pond1 Wkl)' ,.,,tell now tvtl. Plllllll, IALL s CES NC. · Ranoe & rMrig Gu & •Cour1 yard view dining --•Sorry. no pet• 11.-01.-a up 2274 New-PUllll Tlllll ~~LO::..~ 2Br 1Ba. gar, no pet• ;:• pd. OoNt'I view •Vignette BBQ areas •Furnllhlng11vall PQf1 Blvd. C.M 646-7"1
111· 12H eo.tta Meu, Hunt. 8Mc:tl ~~: P1"=1~~t I! 5 11t • MC'<49M237 •Twt1'! dine In cour1 yrd ~ WHY NOT CALL IU 1111 L•E
• ~t~:':.:·1:% Imo. 2B~~,~~ .\~1Apar1men11 APAIMITI 111·1111 3029W.Cout~New •----=----......... ~ *-E-elde 1Br hN w/n<J g11 Wilk • • '\:': •Your own pvt patto Ulte btmnd newt .All utlltlea port 9eac:h. TV aac ... ·~ l HO $525. 1 resp peraon only to bMch. •18241 •Gourmet kitchen paid Pool. gar no pell IUWlll YILLllE I 140+ wt( lgl, no • . --------2 HOUSES C Q No pell .. Agt, 831·22•2 TWUIT Ill-IHI •New dove tan crpt 18drm tse5-SHS 15555 Huntington VIiiage ...--------
Xlt cond:lnc 11t,seo: 15% IPLIT·lmLHI Lgaaa ll1_atl S :t:£•alk-lnctoeet1 28d'';o1
1
8:vocADO S61M> Lane, from San Otego .. an ltll
Ptaia1al1 1117 dn. $159,500 •97-e287 bath, gar S775 fM1'7601 NidOet sAoAEs 2er l w/11:1.o. OOWN'ed prkng 2•1 w WILSON ir-:•ti·d':"h ~~'"'* = 11•.....,"!""!'~~"!""'! ...... ~-6 Unit•. CdM, 2 blk1 to UllEIT llMHO den, 2ba, gvden hm. 631--0960 ~cFa~d!i, en, L:~ =R~~:~~al llllJHTlllAlll watat, 1harp, 4-2br +•SHARP Westlld9 2Br Gateguaresec:t.$1250/IN . ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED . 744 675-8118118t 8)281-eoe2•
2 yr old 2·1try, 3 f/pl1, 2 2· 1br, will trade, 1795K lBa encl gar Fncd yd •99-3638 or &e1-1554 1Bd 28d & 28d T h ....-..me ._11 mat ~~iv1com!~~m. 38~ Licata Invest. 631-8611 patio. W/O room. Nft "SHORES" 3Bec:t 2ba hM. • Furnl1hed wn me ~liJllW r·5•,-.,.-.. , .. , .. -1"e""r •c·on .. d!"'.'o-. Vacatlta cemng~ wtoid~toned llYEITlll Cl'pta &· drp1 Tiie kltcM!l Guard tenn11 pool buch. Vl11t oor model Delly 9.~. APUTlllTI on 11ream, $575. p/mo ltata11 2tO'J
emb<>aMd panel• & r• V I ble • .,.., a ;.• ___ h & bth. No pets. Mu1t S 1200/IM ownr •"-3338 Sorry, no pets. lmmacul1te lat-Garden 545-63-40 aft 5pm NWPT PENlN 2 l 38( Hr a ua -vn ......., 1tand Credit Check $675 ' ..-• ' ceued llghtlng, oak property lor aate. Apar1-+-NC d no-sez9 NIGUEL SHORES 2Br & LA QUINTA HERMOSA Apia. Beautllutly land-l""!ft ltlC oceanfront. Reduced
kltCltt. No buOdlng COllS men!• & 1torea with ep den. 2ba. garden hm. 19211 Parkside Ln. HB. • c. p. d g ( 0 u n d •. 1 rn • 4Br furn YriY 1 Wk!y rat• over Labor
IP•red. Great view trom coaat Hwy frontage. 1110 lllST·Hlll Gate guarded. $1250/IM. Ul N.cl pool/apa. patlo/dedt No Winter No lee Bkr Day 875-•912 Bkr
an windows. $695,000 Stepa lrom beach. ory decor equlpt kltch 499-3833 or 861-1554 • P91• 875-•sOe · I tab 1
• - . . 49:! ' . _ ....
WMtal<R
I • t :, ' ' ·~ ~ e
$675,()()().owner moll· huge yard lncdtpvt ut111 I It L z"•t •;;rt leac• t tbdrm $595-$605 ta 1
.... ._ •-•--vated Exclualve Agent lree 539-e190 Belt f.. !WJ!ft IC• ..,* 28drm 2Ba $750 1& & 2Br Duplex. Garage. 1~111 2* -...,. ...... fer la1t Jim Morris 752· 1100 llTSf&lllll YAl.11 OC FRONTPSharp182Br, 2250 Vanguard M0-9928 Yrty 1850 & '875 Blk lo 1275/mo ulHI pd Hunt ..... 1aa.. "---• Bdrm 2Ba Monticello garage, No et• 26 bch Oya ~2--0292 or · -• __ .. •Hatala Dntrt twnhme Wttir/dryr gar 3+2+ trptc, dbf gar & pet Winter 67J..7666. 731 8-488 E Sch loc/PCH requlr• 14-1-... liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii ' · · o1c s 1100 9115 F•.t9423 , • vea 111. 1as1. NC dep. ~ ~ ~-ed:-, •:be unltL •S&ftmJITNf lntrt 1498 paUoS850AgtSS0.1 1~ nLElm Ill-IMO WINTERRENTAL Fanlu· Wczs~field 2Br 1',..,ba,patlo,gar,nr in 1825. Avt nowl
Uc d Fo;;cJ090r• tn BIQ a; 3Br 2Ba. dbl gar. nlee tic 3Br 2',..,Ba upl1rs Unit FAML y APUTlllf!S Hoag av all Sept 1 5~33 otc, uM tor Ban
-. a~lnoe In Sen 11Jl,IOI Lake Really World yard, no pets. 906 W. 75Yrd1from8Mch 2BR onaandnr •5th Sl.1yr S ktl S750 'mo 73i--0595 2BR2baCdMhometoatv -nar · A.19ume 0 · Bargain price on a Sawmill & Reaort Ren-Wilson. 1975 ~5-7963 2ba, den, bulltlna. new old. All upgrades & dee-par ng clean arge -------i.ttng fln•nclng ind IP**>us home. Prime C.;=rHl==.:;;,;:::l;;:•:-r-l:-r::=2 tall (7 14)866-7531 drp1/crpt1, II replace, orator lum. $2500 mo. Apta. f0t famlllel w/1 or 2 Spacloua 3Br 2Ba. oar. with M °' F n-11T1kr Prof.
QWC. ~ thlln 2 yra old. .,.. Sound vallle Four 3BR 2ba. no pell, h:ld• ok. back yard s 1026/mo yrty Agt S«-2494 M·F l>-5 ehlldren ,,..,. pl{k Heat frplc. CloM 10 bCh Vrt-J SA 75/mo 759-0281
FUJI price $170,000 bed;oom1 plua den 2~ *.IASMllE OllEEI ltatal1 .$900/mo lncludel QV· Dy1 7 52· 647 4 or A 11 f paid No pet• $1350/mo 67~912 or 5 evel Condo $325
bath1. Large bacit yard Plan 1. 2Br +Oen Guard· ~74F Joann St 9VM/wttnd1731-3128 fl!!!tall, a • ~~~::: J~~Ba r,~ 7~·1792 Bkr ~. H B a..cht Ad.,;
raditional
0 Realty
• 631-7370
.ir11ElllfFS* "On The Pn'' Spec: 3BR,
ffl. Sptt M e11er PoPUlat a aetiofn ottered Ptan "E"
wPpvt Oft yd entry. Orig
ONtW S2A9.000 1nc1 •~cs. =··· I ..,.._,
t.J·.:...~:. ' • • t ,., , ,. . rrn::rn p-.~
f f:'1 .. ''"
call lor thowlng. ed gala, pools. tennl1. ltHll farail•t4 •NEWPORT HEIGHTS* ..... hla.. 270I 396 W Wiiton 831-5583 UDO ISLE Lrg 3Br 2Ba. 250-Ml• or 960-e717
5'&-2313 $10,000 Redecorating 3Br hee, air, grdnr Incl, 3Br 2ba fam-nn 2 lrplct lrpk: New decOf Bay Stir
THE REAL
EST AT&: RS
Bonul Aul.Im 8',..,% 11t la)Ma petl Ok. No ctllldren adu1t1, no pete $1 150'. N Bayfront:0reat VleWf ~ hr .. r ....... view Nr pvt bCh & tennt1. B~B~sld Waterlr~t. G
$279,500 Oell831-8638 p , I 2117 $850 557-6063 8'46--04~8/(213)473-77l4 2br1bal1200mo.yrty,no 2Br +garl575.fM#8319 Yrly $1250 No Pell. lurn ~sm::'1500,,:;
DUPLEX 1Bd 1b taaua I •Br 3ba Meaa Vetde, . --gar , Incl utu. 67J..~29 <nr• R•m llalHI 540-6187/(619)753--0719 lnol utll '"7 .. 1•10 • • •• ~ 3Br 2 ba, 2 trplcs. hot tub,•==--=--------,._.. .-"' -" $210,000 717 FERNLEAF WINTER. Fum. 2BR. frplc, bltns, grdnr Incl 11300. <Mn. mk:l'o-wave, child & lalMa r--------*2Br 1Ba Nwp1 Hll [)pix. Bal Penn 112 blk to bch,
M0-8182by0wner byB~y 9/1to:;30S750. 631·5207or 553-~2~ petOKl1•50 Me-1378 Ptaiasala 2707 ~~~8510&1BRl810 lrplc, balcony. carport bd w/pr1v ba. lndry lee. IEIA YD• llLllW. • mo all ev.. 1·M97 . . petlo, carport 1795 No pets 722-8011 SA50/Mo 673-8127 .J .. .,.. NII Ill 1 4 I t lqc• I AT LAST.I 3Br 2ba frplc D/W, spa 1 BR, carport, new drp1 & POOL. SPA quiet. no peta. ,._ 11 ... -~I galdnr 11375. Drive by crpta. 112• W. Balboa TOP AREA. M ... Pinet **Brand nu custom 2Br
Neatled In a Quiet cul d9 -n:IH IUIAll ~nyon condo: 28R A I••• ltttal 2001 Highland 949"4511 Blvd. S600. mo. 673-5198 2850 HARLA 5•9-2~7 2Ba choice area. Frplc,
tee thll 5 bedroom home Beautllul •Bdrm. 1~ Bath 2 a pool apa tennl• Call btwn 1pm-5pm I gar, patio $900 No pet1.
boast• formal dining, oncul-d•llC. Large yard $1'So/mo'yr1y ~51-3398 S.nlOt , .. a.. ----snn" IUJ 211 OlllOI USTllH 760-1713 or 857-1776
cu1tom pool Ind ape. with patio Atrium court __ Fttl lt llt•t W1A.1. Accustomed lo lu• 3bt 2Br durn• nr Balbol Pier. 2BR 1BA w/btnreplc d/ --~----0-~ate 400 ..... tt bonU1 yard entrv Pr!Qe reduoed DESIRABLE PENIN. PT. wnw 2ba hm 2 gar huge lrptc Only 7"" mot 1 .... 1167.,. ' w, •CUTE 1Br 1Ba yrly ..._ ...., ., I 00 ..., ...... "° pvt patio, glr. 361E.18th $800/mo 3711-A W. building IUltable fOf an to '169,900 lor feat sate Lile airy 5 Bdrm Sept 10-• TELERENT ocean cla 11 kid• nLUEIT Ill 1110 St 1725. M&-9794 Balboa. "7" ~912 office Of rec. room. Cell Call Par rick Tenore June 10 Aval! unfurn 539--6190 Belt Alty fee • " .,.. ..
ua to IM. ~2313 631-1266 , $2000/mo Agt.875-t771 BAYCAEST Specioua3 8d YEARLY by beact1 wt OLUll IPIOllll •Wlml llEITAJ.I•
THE REAL
:ESTATERS ' I ·~i·~\·P LIDO ISLE· Lovely turn • Wldelt Selection home wlformal dining & ooean view 2bf, deck,gar. Eaatlldeup11a1,.., 2bf2ba, 3Br 1'},Ba $1050 t~ r ;p 3BR 2b1, eVI Sept.June • Updated Dally lam rm A neat loc In an $800/mo Inc utll. 87J..5429 dtw, Pvt deck, In q.Jlet 3Br 2Ba C>Qeanlront S 1675
1 I•,!!!!!!!!!!!••• $2200/mo 675-5068 • All Areas&. Pl'l<:e$ 1dnt area S 1850/mo. Agt trtal ••I •u -6-plex 353 Harntlton at 2Br 1ea $895 bo S •Open 7 Daya 9am-7pm 944-721 t P' •• Thurln. $725. 943-9794 38r 2'h8a Ocnlrnl $1395
111 + Flll II • LI I LE 675 8860 - -28r 1ba oeJCOnY new Newt)' decol'ated 2Br 1Ba 2Br 1Ba $650
CdM lhr apt $432.50 mo
s22001mo Income needed
to qualify. 780--8267
Don't . want to five II\
motel? 1 mo rentlt ev1
Sept. $275/M •32·7384
Fem. lhr lovely •br hie on
Bal Pen P1 N.-amkr ~.
+ dep 875-7•19 att 9
F lo stir w/same. Beevt
3br 2lty NB condo Alt
lacll Exe loc 1326
760--8818 •• llT--·mu H • • Winier 2 Br 2ba, dbl gar, • BAYFRONT gorgeoua cu• crpra & • ~ nO pet• ""-75/mo. NO PETS. "'-•1 2Br 2Ba $770 ... w11• ardwood nre. llreplac:e, frplc, patio no pets lorn built 3Br +Oen Hme $850 I 1 tll &.o-.o30 · .., .,., tlJUll MTUllll FM lllt.IOO ,...,, dlhwsr/klteh range 11200/Mo 675-4143 Or Slop By w/40' dock aVI 851·1653 nc u after 3pm 631-e155 Prope<ty House 8-42-3850 Hrbr View Hma: Beaut. rm
Oaot the ong&nal homee Spanflh 1tyte Wtth-a com-Copper plumbing, new ---2U01t.,.rt lld BAYRtOOE CONDO Pl Dupfflx. 3bf/2ba $1~75 & E'llde 3BR 2ba duplex 3Br 2 ba OPLX. 112 blk 10 pvt ba, n-amkr $400 Incl -
,,..,. High School qui.t plefe remodei Inducting ( roof('63). EndoMd patio, hnet hfweisltff Balboa PeniMula Fee B 28 28 2 an 2Br 1ba'850. ~· Pvt W(S beam cell, gat, bch, toe upsaJra unll. utll. Pool. 720-0376
..... good -mabfe bedrooms. IMd«I gl.... bb:JI waH lenoe A very Geatral 2202 Bell E'akle neighborhood ~ S117~ 7~~i ~ 424 Polntettla. 673-M76 W/O hkup, D/watlr, yard 11050 Oownatalra unit Immediate Fe roommate
IOant. MIY ~ to wood floors, French good buy S12•,750 2Br, w/d hlWpt. lrg lat· 859-5608 Iv mtg Large 3 Bdrm 2balh, lir• Quiel $975 631-~9 S900 535-7106 wanted, 3 bd hM nr OCC.
llCl, lhopa and tranapor-door. and llland kitchen. llY ltOUIU IL Tl. tlced rear yrd wtprlvacy p I ace , au n d e c k 11.ARGE 1BDRM 1BA $850/Mo 1 8d lba, encl $275, 1/3 utl. 241--0852
tatlon. 1172,500 An appeallng corner 141-1121 DILlllYI HIT&U S8501mo. Call 873-2791 IU. UY 11325/Mo 759-1353 Squeaky cie.n. On Vic· gar, cloee to beh. nice Lnaroom, nlcehOme u..-1
I () f ._. 111: property with large pool-3Br 38a prtv comm Bch 1 18 .....-. A •~ ,. let I .,~ .... .., V,_., . • 1 ~I"_, aired yard. Try 10% down WAI.I Tl Ollllltlf CORONA DEL MAR· 2 CHECK TH ES Et tennl1 acceu S 1e0o/m~ Near beach 2Bd 21:18 den, or nr .... ..,1 ve, ..,.9.., qu oc. Htl, kltcn Pf'lv. $350 mo
RMttora, 97~ and a.uome a 12 5% loan 4Br •tale rtra lrg lot bed lownl\ouM, tome Not far lo OCC big 2br lae (7141770·6237 or Ip, patio gar. S 1295/Mo No peta 990·2992 TIL1 .. 48011TMonUr2o~1alO• Incl utll Dlcti ~258
of 1238.000 A1klng OPEN HOUSE DAILY ocean & bay view• bltln• yard upper f500'a 19 t6)927-5655 AVI 911 720-9422 Large 1 Bdrm gar no • Male prof. lhr Mme 38r
$289,500 2921 Java Ad C M 115501mo kids manyother1 avatl --C t • 7 pet1 1980 Anaheim 0 -· 2ba hae CdM Ga (UUIOE II Call Rk:k 957--0008 LIDO ISLE 3 bed tiome, •Hl-1110* 2BR 2BA, den, IC)a. trench ti I Ill . . Sh~n by IPPt. $486/Mo A lw-Hll WOI W/Dry. Se25/mo+12 U:,: "'811M 01(11 · -"-1\TI IURONT 12•9.500 flexlabte terms patio. fireplace. new Tasteful 3br 2ba w/jacual doora Decorated In all LUX CONOO AVAIL NOW 545-32291631·7279 3 Bdrm 2ba. upper unit. Avall 9/,5. 551-6394 hirM Bdrm Plan 4. Formal ttOMI '> ltK. paint S t900/mo yrly e ul 1 kltch encl Ir white S t300 mo. •09 2Br 2Ba. Over pool, W/O hkkp, lge bale, frplc,
model home. Interior by REAL ESTATE l!!J!rt ltac• IOI LIDO ISLE 2 bed apt with 5~7f kids weleome g at 62nd Street. 975-0595 stream• & falls. Dbl car Lrg 28r tBa clean upper gar. Mu1t ... , 1950/mo Male lhare 2 Bdrm 1bath
noted daalgner Anne 131·1400 *Ill mG NII* Spallo & !!replace. 539-6190 Beat Alty lee HARBOR VIEW 3br/2ba gar w/opnr. Micro, W/O, Unit. No pets 1595/mo +-TSL •~G1M1 DT~"1d2·1603 hooM COM S375/Mo uttl N-IMf of Fraser HooH 1800/mo Sl•SO mo w/ rdnr Mark Spit IV1 $950. 5•9·2~7 $400 dep. 841-9352 ,... .,.. Incl. 720--0263
Prof ... lonallandacaped Eastblull beauly • Sold PENINPOINT.Ooeanlronl EASTSIDE 3Br 1Ba, new W/631_1266 ~164.4-079-3 Eaatslde d 28VERSAILLES 1a 2Bdrm M/Fettrt..__"t.~ .........
1 lurnllhed or untumllhed comer 5 bed 3b1th crpta/palnt Lg yrd Sml 18r 18a. t920 Wfllace, new ecor r .,._., .. .,. " ~. !~o ~ 0 otte[1~2 D ~ IEllOEI HI g h I y up 0 r. d. d par11y '1urnlshed: IM op; pet ok. Uttls pd Grdnr lmmec 3Br 2'nBa Condo up1tr1. Frig, no pet• "460 :et:· N3Br s1:2 &52 ~g 1750 to s 1080 lrvlne. 85 ... 'It utll. a
TAGLIANETTI wt"Home. & Garden" poss S3500/mo, 9 moe. s1o251mo. 645..a.53 Nu decor. pat, gar. pool, Sierra Mgmt 550-1015 • o pats. • 831-~960 Agt dep Avall 9/12-857·23&4
Large Corona del Mar lulh land~lng w/I~ leue E-llde 1 3B 28 spa S 1150/mo 846-3879 1Br Apt E·llde. aundecil, POOL Patio, lrplc, X-lge Large 1Paclou1 ocee.nlronl N.B. 2bf 2ba n-amkr,cfean ~t~=x ~~~ ~r=I~~~ r~~ + t:r o53at~ ~I Wlftrfrtaf lt .. 1111, yrd, frp~. ~r g~r A~ Leaae Newport Shorea avail 911. $450. mo. utll 1 & 28drm Apt1 Eutalde duplex. •Bdrm 2ba, llrst Quiet M/F pool. tennl1 1VI
EACH unil plu• fire· Call P•t~lk T';~~e 111-1400 111-tlOO 9/1 Kida Ok $1125/mo 3BR 2ba, llreplaQe, gar lncld8'46-6065 s555 &up 5s7-28•l ;~:~ltl~~~d~t~~~O/~~ 9-3 S392 alU.94&-~7
places. beamed oetllng1. 631· 1266 Call 645--0968 fOf IPPt S 1300/mo 950-8839 28d 1ba gar., Quiet. pvt •tBr 1918 Wallace llC yearly Broker 875-4e06 NB Apt Mate Rb. 28d 2ba.
GE 759.9100 ---------
t>llln ~ltctlen and MP8'· l&llUM o••• RT 1111 Lg 38d 2ba w/prlv encl small pet okay S600 mo. 1 peraon. New crpt & pain I pool, pref Pf Of 30 +. $400
.-...... ____ ate garages Beau1ttu11y I•~,, «
1
~-LANatORDSIREALTORS -• sndk, l btk 10 bCh 51400 673-6336 0< 642·9666 "4•5 No pet• 875--9291 LIDO DELUXE + $200dep 8-46-019• decorated and In excel-Iii F 1 Gar. Nr beach lee#7705 ... 91 87" • 73 2Br, DR. lrplc, patio NB.,..,"-~.__ lent condition Reduced tr . ut ree tenant provldra nu1m 111-1110 yrly .... 1 ..-v1 2 Bdrm 2ba Eaatslde IPAOIMS $1200/mo 975-6359 ....... ,,.. ......... n·srnlcr. t $335 000 lnlo 531>-6 1M Belt Alty JACHS IULn $725/Mo-1 M eswn11a1rc1 1725/mo 2 Bd 11;, ba Bdrm & ba. $385/Mo + 0 • HARBOR RIDGE $342K OPEN LABOR DAVI Mesa Verde 3Br 2Ba. -w/carport & xtra prl!ng twnhM, end gar, lndry *LIVE ON WATER• u111. 849-2109
COLDWeLL
BANl(eRO
(714)673 4400 . 9V.%mtg8elow ..... val Ofl Newport 2-3br 2ba iuper clean. Beaultlul ~1Exa~~:2Br. apaoe No petsM:f=8572 rm.patio, all bit-In• 20'Boaullpavall Charm-N-Smkrlhr5BrhMltepe
__ ,..,..._,. Spectacular view, AIC. trplc dlhW9hr den gar yd yard F/P 2 car garage $1eOO/n! lae 831.-0~ 2Br 1'hBa Studio" encl 783 W 19'h I~ quaint 1br. no petl, to beh. Gar, W/D, ktd'I •••Ill llHE 2Br, 2ba, den 760-e755 kld1 pet $880 tlat w/elect opnr, gdr Incl no _ gar'"""' $700/mo ' 2025 TSL MGMT 942-1603 r 'req59~~ utll paid, Older pvtg $.400+uttl 650-3231 -539-611M> Beet Alty ree peta $1150/mo 111, lut, Oceanfront 2br home p -.-646-4559 -pref. ""'· 850-81'45
••ti 000 IUIH llMI S150 dep ~5-6035 art 5 llyllth decor apple omona. Studio, prlv entr. no kit SlllU-_ Oceanalde furnlahed "' , OI :f!l .... _ TL I AA Executive Condo, large dthwshr more 1700 yrty 2Br \Ba. 571Joann.2 per. 1275/M Incl utll 111/laat. ..r~ ltOO luxury condo. Muter Br 6-gant 2 BR -+ den view. I ._,.••I ••• new 1 Bdrm In South MESA VERDE llld ok 539-8190 Bal I aon1 max $510 No pet1 E·lide CM MB-1291 2Br 28a + frplc gv & new avall. 1650/mo. Hm Caalefully decorated Pelatla FRENCH COUN· Coaat Sprlng1, gated FAMILY HOME .. Sierra Mgmt 550-1015 . 2 BR. 1'hBA I New carpeting! IM#557• 631-e722/work 557-1300 lhroughout hardwood TRY TUDOR. more than oomm pools ciubhouM 3Br, 2Ba, lrg yrd, quiet Oceantrt/yrly S2500/mo w ger Tnllm 111-lllO
floor1, plantatloo Shul· elegant 5300 IQ 11, 11 a .• ~ lmmed S850 · street Remodaled Alli 9110. 4BR 3ba. Fi rm 2Br 2Ba, 2 car gar. Frplc, crpta. drp1, blllni, lenced Ooean View Pnthle 28d
ter1 Private seltlng. --------room• Ocean & City ap yrty $1050/mo Incl grdnr Call 640-8960 975-7673 micro, W/O, d1hw1hr. yrd w/patlo. Water peld. PENINSULA 2ba all amenttlea Prof'•
brack palto Immaculate, WATERFRONT CORNER Light• view •tale .IACIU IUL.n Valerie 281-7953 --• --Pool, IP• S950. Avt 9/1. :,M~rr:" '~E~.P~35 Small 1 Br apt, lust 1 hM only. n-111\kr. 67l-7550
eneertul and sunny Lovely 3 Bed, 3 ba newer Must llquldate f0< out of PllP IUUlllllT MV EXECUTIVE HOME 2 SIPH YllWJ 21HI 5•5-8890 or 760-9611 2439 Ot .. 0 .... 1850 to bch. $525/mo yrty Utll Rmmt 28d q ,.. /orptt
H•·IOIO hm Aefs/Credltapp1.req area teller Sacrlfloe at 11•1111 ... 111 1ty4Bd3b&+ap1.Gar· Duplexw/lrplc,g•r.BBQ a-Rm111··-anoe ... lncl,no gar,nopet1,agl NrSCP1iuul31~/Mo t -==~~~~~~!.!__:S.:1800==:..:/m~o~.~6;73;·;54~7~0~A~g~I 1999,000111 Last Of the denlng MrVce & waler '815 yard 4 JJ9t. IM#~20 -.-VILLA MADERA. Faml!y adult pref. 109 29th St. 112 uttl 549-023'4
1 -Harbor Ridge bargain• 8-IMl lslaa• pd. Sl•50t Mo 54g..9950 TEUHIT 111-QIO Patio, nr beachl feet9405 complex. 2BR 2ba, Agt Weyne 943-6818 =--.,...::-·-==-..,.....--
For personal preview call an TIUIOT 171-Mll down11alr• O/W opt• .. Rmmt Fem-38d hie w/cpl
ltt u .... ,, YH
Sell y,., p,.,.,.,1
Call C1a1111W,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
Patr1ck Tenore 631 · 1286 S925tnly. Charming old« Npl Hght.a area oleen 2Bd a lllT NIYAOYI drp1. laund. lacll. cioeec:t .. .. • ., m tbk to bch $350/M & uttlt
or 760-8702 2 Bdrm + gar 1Paoe. 1ba, yd, pello. $735/Mo Br neallad In He!Qhll only 1Br 1Ba $520 ~ $350 MC. oar. Mo to mo. Gaa/wtr 2br Iba, t>.-m cell., MlchMl/SuM 646-•912 ~ ~ Patio 876-3063 NO PETS ~~ 1875 mot fee#6'5-4 28r 1Ba $815 + $400 NC. pd, no peta. a7oo/mo, w/b/lrplc, RIO, C'· 1795. V 111 48drm Corona I .·•~ '1;r;. Lovely 3 Bdrm 3ba newel' SHARP & clean 4 BR near TEUHIT 111-1110 No pets. 631-8427 seoo dep. 2324 Elden. 2100 Haven Pt. 9-979• :r M.rhome to lhr. *'-'~ home Ref• & cr~dlt IPPf So ColSt & occ Wkly 2Br, attached get, lncd Apt 1 8-42-5155 Unutull Cennery VIiiage, cptl cloea to bMctl Xlnt ~ · . r eq 'd $1800/Mo gardentngaervtce 51115 lmed rite treat! paint patio, re deco<ated. 2 wt••n&-• 1Br plul, partly fl.Im. 1ocet1on. S375, 'c111
HARBOR VIEW HOME 87J..5•7o eves .-g1 per mo. 5-49-9950 enhanoae ocean eta 2br people, no pet• $595/mo. -l860. 975-e622 21,...74-tM2
3200 IQ 11. • Bd, 4ba, all aunMt patio l800'1 hUrry 368 W. 8-y. 8-42~ 1 Want • Mteotlon of GI'•' ltp~ililiiiiiiliii·;:.,..,.--,..,...,.,,------upgracsea. comp r•· 8-IMI IU lllUUW 1111 539"'611M> Baet Atty IM 2... .._~ 1820 IMng? We can Off« any-Wam M/F to hele> ftnd 4
od_,__. 75n ...... P1aia1al1 2207 G t I --... new ..,_..,,. gar thing from a emall 1Pt to co-ren1 SBA C.M. hM ..... m ......, • ..,,...,.. eves arage, op arM. ... A .. Ill araJ No P9f•. Nr new ahoppfng a 4Bd hae. If tootcl In 9/ 1 r.-i.. 546-4990 vi Tiii Ill Ly view aooen11 5 rm hm ~67 center & rec park CM N8 or HB thlnl< ~ UI ...... _
ua IT aiu( w/~ 1-hkups & gar nUlllT 111-UIO •-•L--p _1 •aa7 640-3t871(819)75J..-0719 ""'8t r<>f that choice of Working Maie lhr 38r 28--$750 avail 9/ 15 W , _._ t .. 1 ..., lc:t.l IMna N'#l>t Ben ~. nr bch.
It IMml dltlk:olt lo nnd a 53M190 Baet R1ty lee ~~ manbu~~:7bf5 oc;;;;front !Br Wlntet •3Brtlo 28a,d·~ .. ~lr..._: TSL MOMf 8-42-11103 1202+ u\llL 131·702• Nwpt Sch NEWER MOO-_... ''lt-"'~ .., A c-' pa • gat • .,, .. .,,., ...-ERN pool It a rna ..... , kldl fine othWI avall YI ..._t 15. 1975 utile $925 No P9fl 940-2•95 NB REAL TY 876-1942 U
r-.aonable tn a mw-m"TI 53M 190BaetRltyl• _ lnCI 873-472• •STVNNINOLg1,2&3Br WMtalde 1Bdrm Untum. UeturePi'OflUMmlretlf'·
QUIET pr .. 1 ar• Stat• 8Mcf'I 2& oar & 81 p t 2' ttr .. ••I •u 2ea Grdn Apt. Pool 1625, utt11 Incl No pet• on 1st yur's rent ed n-amkr,oommutee trO'll ~ aetlool1. good morel s 1000mo1 .. 119150 w•• •Tl ........ , besldReA's #urnl1hed 1825 & 1725. 110 w 18th ssoo1mo. 8-46-4392 UFNURNISFURNHISHEOEoOr. deaer1 to coneutt on 3 'If •--vhbor• and • leellng I -----Townttouae F p6o & """" W tilde 2Br 1B New' contract • dy wtt Sht hM of pride 01 ownerlhlp lor m.DDT ll-1111 2Br 288 $750. fMIM13 11195,mo er~_.... 3~ 3~~ 1car775GV1M· -~ crp .. 19 drpa naO tat °' ept. to $350. iM-3S37 thoM that have earned ... Ba Du .,_ ft'I --Ill 1110 _ •• ,,,...,,.,., e... .,..,,.' ·, ~ Well HERE 18 2 ... t ptex, '":'fsace. ,_.lllUll • STUDIO Uttle pd xl(lt loCl 9/1 8'42-7528n60-1418 ........ depoelt. Watet '
THAT HOME fOr you and ~=· :=: 5irno ftntal1 No ~. R«1'. '475+' 1&25. 1BR, a..n. carpet, 0• pefd, 548-2582
your 1am11y 10 en.toY 1hoM _ Vall!f 2234 def>. 873-5799 csrpe, retro. no P91• 124 l&T&UU Y11W
reward1 In a MODERN 2~ apec:t.cular ocn -Jamee St ·D 873-7717 2.Br 28a. 1000 IQ fl ~
letge 3 bdrm -+ den, pr~ patio, trplc, 2 car UY Im Tl IWll What a Wonderfl.lf World ' ' Jao "-decorated ' N0i IH•lonally decorated 11550/mo 973-7197 2·~ 3+2 frplc:, gar a or Shopping. right at 29r t~811895 W9"1/dryr, peta UH. 855-0ee&
hOme In a pr•tlgloua Cl ole hi cloM 312 poofl~ mo FM,9iM3 your llngert!Pe ev.rydayt dlhwahr 3020 Fllmore.1ii:""_ .. T-::---""'lll:'.Onnr
arN wta huge yard. taro• ;, wlio~ ;,.,.. galley TIUIUT · 171·11• Dally Piiot C1a11lfl•d No peta. Agt, 546-~5 -.•~aamP_.,.afitp..,...p.~ pool, SJ>• • muCl'I morel kid 1,_, 1970 5SM 190 Ad• To plac. your Id T
Only 4 yr1 new. an a..~ Atty·•,_ HI. ltic call 142-5171 and let j Cedlllac:a to Go-Carta
....
ltat IHI
1 CXA iNSC&tb Clllt!
AGE MO/~. 649-9040~
209 9th SI lelboe Penfn.
aula. small dbl 1126/Mo
878-()708/87&-3002
ABSOLUTE VALUE l0t ---CIUalfted Ad·VllOI help ~tever IM Fed
f
only '399,995 w/TERMSI Duplex 3bf/2be 11275 & W Tl llmJ l +I you Roll 'em OH the martlet N I A LL E For perwnal preview cat! 2& 1baS850 Ollhwthra. G1t,bttln1$195.feel7311 Wlth I ci.a.ttled Ad 1 j 'I j I' J Patrick Teno<• 831-12ae 424 PolnMtti. 87)-9476 Tllllm llMlll 1 Cetta .... 2724 Cell Nowt 8-42-5971
'
LAROE 38R 2'hba. 1tepa PRIVATE BEACH CONOO I I H 0 B Y E l to OOMll S 1•95, no peta, 38R 2be, 2 cat gar, ale, WOOD'..A.1• YUAGI ; r 1 1 r 1 , IHI0-4221. M0-4229 end Unit ~ .• ,,75
ua !f!._ OConEA3~,~8dONrmT ~E.,,s =t~ .. 5~0Mt DA•TMIMTI
I H o c u P 1.: "~"°'°"'• o.c~ io "'"°' 3en. IQ h ot b:UtifUi 8&r e11c1u:.:. A;-;,m. IR ULIW • 1U• = 1! ::!.°;; f'~°"' C::,: Qulft.o::i!:::: ~::. . I I I' l . l.t •rO< "'"0tOl'1"4•4" """°' on • IOt :411':.n: mun1ty •1 /Mo COzy28tM50 fMf"34 wac• Git n&ifaoit HO.P'£THltASt
rtlefl m -IO -~ ~o=.1e RV "'"~~TY TUJalT ... .,...... ..... ... u·~J-t-1-..,~~Y,-f'~,'-'..,o,~,L-,.--11 0 " ................. "' :;:..• .!.~: '°;· = Oen a b9Y w DuP6U 2er w_:;6 ~Ida-~ 2:, ~~ ...._. .... .. , I . . . . . h. I ., ......... , _di gWa encl ape patio • .n 2'.tB&. IOtc dblp S1550 Of 1 .... ...... .. ......_......_....__.___..__._,' ,., • .-.. '°'"' ... ... .._ u~1tra l downitatra t7i-.37U 0rM2•t21M = 3=~ a:°' '1i:5 1-1-.....,,,.
patio make for con1-... .. ....,.. au -·T e "' 91-fortable pr1v1t• tMno WAY ... -.TI 53..., 190 a.t Y ,.. - -•••-..
"425,000. No Skr. ,,,. L~S+2+!Tl*, 98' /4Iw 8 y1 1 1 a I; tn .. ,..._
aumable loan e Bfown 0NylttOOl/15hta.#W3 clual'*'"'e.ad 111e •CS• 1 Tll "'"tm.IT .,.....,
H7-<M39 or 730-5228 Tll.Dm 11....... ...-y ~ 142·M11
ro IU·lfa• IOIAl·Lm ..... ,. l• Oln1fft1lflff 1211
,.
. . ... ~ ... ~
~-~~ ............ ~-~..:.... ....................................... -... .... __ _... ....... ~.-...-....... -............ __ -..._ ....... ,,_.~---..... -. ._ ......... ..--..----------------~--~~-------~~~~
•
Offflt .. tilt Ult I I W Orange Coall DAILY PILOT /W9dnMday, Augwt 21; 1N5
CdM'a ~ Ofb9 1A25-lerftNt Jilt I...... llM ltlt !aa... llM ltlt ...... llM !tit...... ... ..... llM 19 WMl!f ='iw:a::·~C::i iiiJ!~'-am umMD ~--llU.ll'W nnNrD 1:HA:r::RSTY:=~L.18T:::-:,:°'~....,::11.i:=~~----~~ ~
Kwyl7MIOOMy1Jme ~~ T~~ COiet o.uy 1ll•IRI• ttyou~_.;~Md b~ Pf".._ bly UIUILft ProeludaOnl HO lhfl n.•~Jo...,.o., =it~~U4._. rv•c ,· ........._ to ..._ 11.-
1
...,. ,.-,. ~ hefPrtln ..__ ,_......._ ~ -• •-rt.xR* ......... Joi)__.__ 417-7'57. )(Ins ~ _... at I Colla .... 641 14•1 , ~ ....,.. ,.., ,,,. .... ,. ..,,_.,. v.. ......,.OIC-p the~...W.~ -~ww-INlplll e.d•t&l Oepotll lit· MU>ICAl
Ftw'fS, Ai>Px IOO 9Q ft l1dw lft. tilt ~--Fed•t•I Depoell In-"*''*·Irle F IC ha• ~ tk>t1 H4*t tot• Jul Ume ....., ...,...., ...,... C.., ,_ ~ ........ Ii ... [: l/IClde ofc ~ S30o mo a.a 1 ••--CIUde Pldl up .;;;,j c»-IU r en ct Cot p II U )Ob fOf ,OU Ouf dMllon f 0 IC Jul t1m9 -,,._.... ..... WI Oll I• If f9 t481 w ..... Suite 3, ... __ .,.,.. 16a lmmed °'*" I • of'** ltquldatlon cur· colllct ~ =..io...,,~t!:*~ wm.t lnM.tt~ 0.pt. TM fl/th.-•• bUIJ of Co.ca Meea. ca. t2Ut R MID MWI ttvwy of • • pulling UI ~°'~ rently het opentnge1 tor ., .. to pwtorm oontlnU-tn. ~ t;".,.. J;; m1n.s~ru11per.lncumnt entty -.. ~ 12·130 •d1t ~ * ~ * High Profitt Local Arel =-'='' • p=~ ;:wt 1
ng ..,.,_, oler1c lyple( ~ ow ~ 9'tof'I Of\ W•YM IJtPQl1 APP*-CUI, Cdcw, S*"' tilldl-CUJU( ,.._ the fd. 04fW S.. bplr.
Fl'MI us Polt•o .. tempet Wll Train Pert Time other dUtia Candid• • Mln2 yra bMl(lng exper. ever;ic ~ ac>eeda dehnquen1 eocoun\a, /4 cantt mutt ti. peop'9 n~. Wottl wm1 or IOw6nt....,.,: 88042'71
Roll (100) 22 '*''' for No Elr.P'OyMe No • mutt bt ~ Of· in a not• ca.pi or loan 50WP . D.I C of• S*1 of ow ~hon you ot..-d l ,.,. ., lOnt ~ Nlo.i.19 Dli8tl • ~ ~.....,.. ""-""'"Jiiiiii~--
S21toOct11t Nollnaal ~ No8elllng. OW\lr.ed ~titeand dtPI *•a 9' .. 'H ~It• Wlllti.ln~wtttioon-df'Mnorecicwo 6elofl,l40-1to0 .,-~ pClldll 2158 Newpot1 B!Yd. CM Gr .. t Tu a.n.llt.9 ab'-to' WOt1c well with • Ability to type min ptdcegie lnC:IUOlng denlel !acting botro-..rt by Appty ~ per'IOn • T Uldaty-HA N 0 CA AV I A • & pretnU'M.
Mr Wolfef (7 t4)838.. ott.. .0 WPM l V1elon OOll9tegi9 If~ phcww to twotv. delln. W.csn.cs.y e.12 noon Fumttur• ""O In 08tden e )Qnt Wltbll & ~
lu!Mta c,,,.,.,, U'a p &.nd '99Ume Altn: LIN • Strong *'* l wrltt9n ~Ion ~ ;:!~. at ~N _.._!>'~· !~ ~ 4-30-epm Orow now ~ ,.. """'1loMion .-.. lftfaJ Zflf ,.._, "" Olltl!O' •lampe.l 8m1U\ to· comm1.1ntcoatlon "-..., fOE ·-'" r...,_ ""''OW9rl ·-1800 Von Keinnen 1rY1ne ""'*-1 yrlfiii' iiq'd Vt e Mull! be «Iii--~ L Roll (100) 22 cent• tor •UI' ..... -8enklngexper.lt~ulred t'1'S-S.COO ~mencty .... ~ E"QUllOppty~ fa.tsofl•i«:aftlwt, ,..•a ttTrrouNICt~~-... 400 "'· Zoned c-2 Xie 121 to Oct 11t. No llne91 - -__ .... , for tt1l9 POettlon Mui-. ._..._....., ...... ..-.., ... "'"'" _,. ... -
b h C __.. \ 215' ~ Blvd CM ••11 y ... -aa1ary -II CLERICAL knowt--Of cont0mer EASY ASSEM8L. Y WORK! Mutt ~ proof Of c»-~ n-. ..,.., w411 ~ t . ov.r-petlo ............. • • -. r .... , mum '20.00o W1 not .. _ credtt~Jon l)f'ectlo9 $800 I* 100 auW.n-•Ion •bllllty for both bt ~·,ci::~ ~~:no'st!';~h1Jt ll'fllllLPUlll•ll ~-!:..'!'l~ftt'•t :rbll~ia.d'afr~ly.,,~ Cl.DITTPIST &PfooedufW9UwellM t.-d Peym.nt.No Ell-fvrnltu,.. l m.aNnery ever1ftoetlonot • 111.--T •••-... ,. ---. .. • ..... & lamllltw'J"-wttl\ coli.ctlon l*lencel No S.... 0.. ~ 3 Y'• ~1 lneunwioe on al,... mt1 st, CM. M&-78t7 ""' -~"" eJIP*. .s~11on. 1awe ri:ia P<*tlol\ r• 1a11a lend Mtt·eddr....s t1tp a mu.t. a12.eo1tw _. ... io.ns
P .. ~ NB ....... ..._. fr--M1jof Food FrtnonlM now MF D.l.C. offer•. Ol'NI Great Wc..Wn 8tYlnga, ............ ~ ,.,,,. l writttn '"',. .,.,.,,,..._ ...... avallable fCJI top I tlon · '**''' paick.,,.. lnclud OM Of alltorn1•'• IMdoo qulr• Xlnt ¥Wbel & writ-stamp«:1.,.._,_; ELAN r~-no 18._ ___ • Piecing ti1C01~m11111ip1,,,.,,.,,,._,,....,.,.._,,.
lage on Vie UdQ WON In Newpon BMet\~urn Advertlalng Ing Derita! a vitiOn peck-Ing llnanc:lel IM!ltutlont ten tallle. PrwYiow bank-VITAL-IOS, 34 U -·-,., .. _, llat>tllty ~on
lrom HughH Pine. K9Y <IP«•tlon. FlnanQing OUlllFID 809 11 yeu would Ille• hu an lm~lat• °'*"" Ing or llneno. ..,,.,. 1 Ent..,,_ Rd, A Pierce, lO/t/15 to Job ti 1382. 11.0 1.C owned P'°'*1Y
750-1000 -ci ft, AIC, In piece. S20,000 cuh. llYll1lll• more lnlonnetlon. ~ Ing '°' • Ctetic TYi>llt '" plue. 8111aty wt1t "°' U • FL ~ PO loll~~. Sectlll'Mn-e 1'9WM ~ property for
parking Mr Lawton toquallfledpettyonflttt Clll P•tlOMel " ~eo.taMeaabtanctt. C:Hd 111,000 p/yr EXCELLENT INCOME :~~::~ lfu~e adequat•COll'er ..
' 873·7300 come b • t 11 C 111 Fvfl-UIM Ttlephone 8.... 975.5400 EOE T PIMM Mnd YfNI teeume FOR HOME ASSEMBLY Clt12~ req'd ' • ~ uek..,_ C.-ti I ''ancttlM Dir.at«. Position. hlH ••· hit la an en.,2....,.. pa.. to F.D LC., attn Petton-WORK FOR INFO CALL In• curr11nt .Utue .,. n 1 800/528-0297 p•rl•nea preferr•d NAT... Ilion. You '-"' tn. '*· P 0 Bo• 7541, New-(504)648-0315 ~ M38 IUUI.. • ~ ol monlNy .. lnuh 2111 Typing 45 W1)M Good T!:eotery production varlola typee of IOena, P 0 r 1 Buch· Ca a......._ repotta ii
SJIOO/StOllQl/OL ta~ Wutt4 t 8*ty p1u1 Commltelons • QeNtal Mndyman, Pf~,.., Mtat• loetl 92651-7~5411 !oe F1ll a ., •-• • eompu1• ~
621-cift/S315mo.rw i!BO:o&J -164( lnt=-t and S.n•flt Progr•m c.onst & II«. Peld on ::":'~~":; MTlllllllW• MllidPDm P::::".rw.'= ~oprl•~•must••P.,ha¥9le,,!P"• •,v:~~l.e ~n•PN•ewtl•poft!•' C M ... C-2. 832~190 eecurld with potential Call KAltl'lleen Olton for up. 873-11317 tM 1 d lea lot flatl manttit fletl M 85Jtw 844 •884 .. "' "" "
Shhft/St-,~ , One Miiiion .............. t 1n Interview appoint· OT , 11,ener• ut ouu Piil Tm a e'-~ Britno ... ptue. Ma»-pr•f•rr•d. bllt "Ot . ....,.. .... age.,,,,_ """ -· t llATW&llll yplng o 50 wpm It r• req N ,,,.11" Hoepftel mum ..iaty le S1t,OOO .. nec11r y . .._....,. ..
529 9Q rt/1315 mo 120 E Y'Ml"I (1l4l7~1393 ~IOl&IT Full-time APP'Y In P«90fl qulr9d TM Delly PllOt hM Im· nu tmP&f -...-.a.a pfyr TheF 01 Coner.a pendebie ~.
2'•d 81 #Unit 20 & •rlf"l" Nll.l'l'UT ot2200WCoMIHwy.NB "'.! .•. ~•• compolltl•• :=•-.::.,..,.J:,."":; PllT---llMlllS C'-""O:T..or:.:c ~~':!:;
20+21 Mgrtn no T.D. • ' 4021 330 w a-s1-... u---1••m --and exc.11en1 o t it1 JI bte ... , ,....,, "n• -benenU FOi lntlNlew WC>B In our t>ueyCiraJle.. ppor un es •v• • mW•aDI OO'fer'09. If '°" WOUid "° c.I lGAM lttr,t TlllJ IRIS e<>.ta ~CA IOI N 8. Law Firm. M~ appolnt.Mnt pleW ea1i lion Depert"*"t Mutt b9 With I~ LOS ANGELES Colle M•H Medlc:el IMll mot9 lnform.i.lon, _.PM • ,..__ llATI, u.tll&ll W• buy Trust Deeds (714}842-4321 hav. law otnce HP9f Leticia Tam 'a at: dtPend•Di. end •* to TIMES Cln:ulallon 0. Cent• Hoep., 301 ~ peea.. oell pereonMI. at IM Mfll MIS bHt, fllU, s.,n 8ar>y91tttng 933-3107 P handle hHvy pllones partmen1 In our doOf to torla s1.. Co.ta Mta. 976-5400 EOE
SSS-'7hmontl'I CallW9YM M•tthew9 E1tp•rlenc• Chr11111n (114)111-4110 ~~~~ ~~~r•~an:= 642-~J:M • •••• l ........ i.iiiigiiiinnr.•iiiii4iniiiii1ii1•iiiil
BAYSIDE VILLAGE 7M-&929 Chlldcare worhr l1"ded IUD/ .... lllOI (lH) llJ.4111 Monday -Friday Cell hourty wage pl\n com-... ...... i.cty need.s, fMI, d9pend. needed by Hunt~
300 E. Cout Hwy, Npt 8ch Widow hu money 10, ~~~ct;"::~~//:.:~ B::a,~lc ~~~ lliral WEST•ll 842-4321 ror appt Aak zi1u1on Hou,., 4PM to *Wll'Tllt• l ,...., Nwpt Bdll C.M. ~ .~3~ .. ~., ... . 111-1111 TD'a. St0,000/up. No ... _ ... .,.... ~ 5 lor Tr1eey. .PM Trat,,lng Is '5/h _.___ M t ., .. l-W-54118 p"t"' .. ':. ~~· ,.. -. .... . credit..,. /no nAft•Mu c 11 ... ••• UT Olll llre to mue mon.y Call llYllll provided Potential to r + .... ._. ua "' ..._..., •• ......, , NEED STORAGE SPACE? ,,....9-·1• ' --Dick at ·Econo Lube & IATAllTIY earnS300 pkJ•pe<week h•v• own cert Call tlAllTlllWUTD Cralm•r Ln. HI FlllT •ITI Piii Oenlaon ANOC 73-7311 WHERE CARING Tune, 1550 Newport Full 11me. Mull IYP• F0< an Interview, call. · CMltle 731-6232 Permanent Part-time "4-8811 Deadline r.r
Sit. HarbOr Self Storage ltlf WHt.. l IS THE CUSTOM! Blvd, C.M 831·91 48 Equal Opportunity 50wpm Expe< helpful 957-2381 •Xt. 1204 HouMC:leanlng builne" 7-9:30am M-F Co1t1 ~ 8/30116
All lizea. Info 776-2307 XcooONfXNf • BILINGUAL Employer M/F/H N·smkr pref. Hr oc Air· need• en«g9tlc women ....... (818)679-38&4 ....
S I bu I 2 3 h CLERK TYPIST ltl/llll lftOl&LJIT Clefical Port Call 7141951--0517 lllY IT& I Call ~"Y 548..o821 . KENNEL HELP FIT • PIT. al ~ .......__ AaatUCtaHll 2 m 1 neu -rs mo. * SECURITY GUARD (2 .....,.. ... ) wlll train. Gooa 0Ull 9Watl-Mlehelle Newport I &TTDIUTS Hou--'--.--u-~ wttndt, cu11oc11a1 duty_ It :.....~ ~.,~41:--
SPIRITUTL RifiDINGS~ lnaurance Agcy 553-1115 * HEAD DISHWASHER ~ "rMI w .. t.,n Cot""' et Ion .. ~ •5 /h All -.. ltt 2600 -----.... ..,,,_.. ,_ .,._ "" "' ~ opprt Dick 831·9t48 llyoo're1Mtt·startw111d ""' -· P r ... 1· manfOIPf'ofeeelOnalman 557-8020 ·VILLA EST831 · Advice In AH Mattera & ,...., ouu Econo Lube & J,µM 1550 flelllble I.bout job ualgn-DELI HELP San Joaquin Rd. ltvtH(I Newpon 8-dl
CounMltng. 1915 So. El last paced NB reat.wrent For appl PIHH cell Newport 81, CO.ta M... ITl9f'ltl, the F.D l.C. haa a Mon -Fri 9 30-2 oo C0<ona del Mar 644-5053 Refilr~ncH required U81UPI All lllT N\nlng
Camino RMI, Sen Clem needs bade otlloe I*· 6-45-5000 ext 521 M-F Job f« you Our division 6-42-5297 GENERAL ACCOUNTING I Must dr...,. & ~ Eng-Immediate oper1lng wla BJ, II --
Llc'd 492-72" son. chall9nQlng poaltlon. 9am-4pm OAl'T Fiii TllAT ol bank llquldatlon cur-Entry level poe11.1on eva11 .. 1 lllh. (2t3)59S-t820 Lucy ~ architect~~ Pert llma 7--3:30, a.n:ao
FrMI US Postage iternpal Must b9 able to handle Banking IUllT JOI! reotty hu oe>entngs for HUYllT able 10< enthullU11c lndl-
1
rm .,, ~ ......, l 3:30-7:30 C°"""Y
Roll (100) 22 Clnll lor streu,prehxp __ CallCol-UNnWllTUT MVetal clet1t typist Who FITopenlngl01dellvery& vlduellnexctutl'Yeprlvste HOUSE PARENT(S) mgmt poeltlon Varied Club Conv Hoep.
12 1 to Oct 1st. No 11"8111 19Ct (213) 924-~23 I .. , ... _.. NOIElllll ! evetage typing 9')Mds mtsc other work Op-club in Npt 8ctl Balle needed for Chrlstl•n r"ponllbllltl.. Salary S49-3081 2 5e .... ,_,_ 50WPM The F.D IC ol-pottunlty to turn wood· acct lllllls 10-«9Y & dll1a home with DIMb4ed commen8lKlte with u-1,.,...-------.. 1 Newpor1 Blvd, CM &DOTS 110. TIOlllOl&I le<s a great benellta w0<klng lrade with pou-9ntry exper helpful, wtll-children 957-e190 l*lenCe Contect Wm Nut9lng Lett Ftad 304H Accounts receivable & A Mii-starter to aaalll In SEU IY Pedtage Including dental Ible future edvenc•· 1ng to trlJn W• ar•M96t· Patrictc 7141546-1282 U.'I
WOfd procenlng exp for the deYelopment ' con· nLEPlllEJ & vision coverage If you ments GOOd .d{tving r&-Ing. t>ond•ble. energ9tic -d~ -"' LIUl llmTAIY ~Q. ~ c... buay office. Full tl!TMI. trol of budget lor owned would Hke more lnlor-cord • mu.t .$4s-ean person MO« 10 learn & I \•CP.-· 1\p• em.g:;: Rm. or c.. fOlJND ADS Lag NIQuel 495-0eOO Real Eatete propertlea PIT FIT Choice 1 matlon call pe<tonnel, at -----grO'# Withe new & spark!-'·~'~ 1~,~~lga1y io:;0 :_,::,k::· Unit ..._.......,
14 I a •• t.11/111>• • .J-I Need• to l~tty or 0 975-5400 EOE HUYllT Ing MAGIC ISLAND u'\ tl• Cent• Holp, 301 -.
ARE FREE • 1 ..... , '"'""'' r...arch & control of hours 11 yours Call T. H -Part t11TM1, 111uat ha.,. Ood Appty 1n pe<ton OI call '' N9WPOf1 Beedl ~ r• ton. St, eo.c. .._ F/tlme position 8Y811. budget IOf owned RMI A •• 0 c I•'. I Te I e -Clet1Cal driving record, '°' N,. B 875--0900 M-F 10-7PM eume to Hlt'I, Part,,., 642-21'34
C NOW at busy N.8 CPA Eatete propertlee Needs marketing 953-e870 flU Olftll florist 833•1887 M·F 9_ 1 5000 Birch I. Sult• --------al• nrm for an Admln Aulst. to lndepend•ntly r•· CARET AKER-ret car• hm The Federal Depoalt In-l(l(Ul lfffOI 2900, N9wport Bllch. ..../......,
• to perform var1oua duties eearctl &' oomplte data llve·ln lit• hHkpng' aurance Corp. has lour 11\.IYllT PEllllS pleua t h C. 9ZNO Full tllM High School 142·H11 lncldg phone relief, Yoo'llatsot>erMpOnslble Meturefem432-7829 · openings lor fife clet1t1 Part/full tlm41 MOO p/hr filing~ :.r~sm~~~ USITHE LIFEGUARD (certllled) GredueWwntl good~
----lypl?O· llllng, errands a '°' establllhlng tlcilkW & To quallfy you must have plus mlteaQe. Must have d 11 F T DAILY PILOT S5 00/ht 1oam-gpm Cell Ing r..:iord.,Apply In Pl'"'
Found: Bird call to d• gen I ofc ma1n1 Former llllng sy1111m1 for the CARPENTER. apply 2 yrs exper In n11ng. sort-car 497-2172 O~~E I Ph~=.:: Byron or 8111 64S-OS50 IOn to Mr_ F'*ltea. •
eorlbe. Vic S1.n10 Thomas ofc exper. req. Sal~ budget department ecGregor Yachts Ing & cl'l4lcillng all lorms 3303 H bo Blvd .. FAST Robert Bein, W~
CM 9125 842•9621 $5.50 to S&.25 hr to llart • Minimum 2 yeara bank· 1631 Placentle, C.M of dOCYmentatlon. Exper •llYI TIOI• E. 5. ~roa~a Me~~lt llSULT"' ll&llTllAICI Froct & AaeoclatM, 1401
w/revlews every e mos.&. Ing experience In a note CARPET SALESMAN In a bank's note dept 111 Un<Serwater Boat cleaning 540•0668 .... Quall St., Newport 8Md\ FOUND: bwn/Wht Shettle, opportunity lor epvanc&-dept. or loan dept drapery EX!* helpful. plu1. Tne F D.l.C. oltef• a Must t>e Scuba cert'd Wiit SE.IVICE Current-fun ttf.N oppty 92860
Vic. Mesa V•rde Goll ment. Apply In P«son • Must be oonaci.ntl<>Ye & Draw commission call great benefits package train 673-3830 llMUL IFFIOI DlllCTOIY exist to join ll'le lnQlneer -..,..---/-------
CourM, 5•0-9938 NOW; 5020 Campus Dr at1enttve to detall 'Biii 549-8181 Including Dental & Vision HWllS Coate Mesa company . Ing dept Of lhe 500 r~ Y9ltd Cllllf. C::k.'N
Found: Female Kitten ep-Newport Beech • Strong verbal a written ----coverage Please cell needs per90n to answer lrvl~ Metrlott Hotel time, .o hf wtt. Gen! of..
Pro x 2 mo o Id 7141752-e&l& communlc:atlon skllla crlld Care, Agee 4 &C7 ~ personnel. EOE be lnd9'*1denl. drive a Phones. do light typing & Knowledge ol boll•r. ftce & dellYery
Blk/gr•y/drk brown AIDE F 11.,..1n PIT. ualll • Experience In flllng, I te hsekppg M~ dM 975-5"00 tul cab OMV printout misc , ore work Hrs For Result ci'lllkW, weldlng. & r• Fr~ Brown~
llrlpe. GrMn 9Y9'· Vic teache< In wl'llchr rm/brd• sorting & getl'ler1ng In· home Pit, altnoons only req Apply 1401 So Cit 8-.C 30 or 9:30-5 Mon lhr lrtg«etiort ~erred In-852-91115
Eutblulf Shopp I no +$250 mo 6-45-2357 lormatlon I• 8 IYl\nt Mon-Thurs 640-108t CLIU nPtST Hwy, Lag Bch (Upstairs) Fri S5 hr 842-9980 Service Call d!Vldual must be NH-Contact'*"" EDE
Center 9128 640-16-49 • Good typing lkllls 10 ualat In typing, flllng llart• APUTIHIT IUIAIU !For more Information Ollll4 Oart bthtut •nd other Clel"lcal duties. So your old 1alopy flnalty GIRL FRIDAY wanted Pit. Appty In per90n lueday-
FOUND fem. bm/wl'lt Bull 21 Units, Costa M ... No pleue call F.0 .1 C Pe<· R.eponllble per1or1, com-Typing 60 wpm req. Own conked out end lef1 yoo lle1t hOu,.,ltart lmmed Wedn41ed9Y 9-12 Mon Terrier, Vic. S111t1 Ana petL Experienced. semi-sonnel (7141975-5400 forteble w/cl'liklren; In-car • must. Call Judy, with a los.a ol dnve? Find LY9 meaa 850-1530 Thurld9Y 4.30--Spm
Canyon Rd & Royal Oall. ti_,. •5,. ,,,.,_.5 lant1 to 7 yrs, to ualat In 6-42~21, ext 316 lor a dependable car 1n 1900 Von KlllTnM. IMM.
Anll'I Hiiia. 97•-4280 r• r...., " .rvvv Banking deycerepr~amp/tlme. appt ctasihed 6-42-5678 Want Ada Call 6-42-567S Equal Oppty Empfyf
Found Gotden R9tr fem Apt Manager Couple nLLEll nexlble hrs s-.325 IUlll OIUT
w1 .. p for t>Mut1tv1 96 CllU ··-l .. LY -er Mix. East C.M 9/28 Unit Garden Apta CM P1rt Tl•t '-11 In IOI • rq,
P1eaM calll IS4S-4a45 Sa1ary+b0nus+Apt'. -n-o ·Exce11ent opportunity 10< FIT l PIT avail. 2A0-8073 CLEllTTPIST
Foond grey/wht kitten, pets 842-4914 Wlcdy8 9-4 reep&ntlble lndlvlduala lo Of 497 -491 t Ive mtg Permanent PIT, entry level
vcty t6th 4 ltvlne, CM ART/GRAPHIC GALLERY work 20 hour1 P9f week P<>Stlon w/cl\anee I011m-
Brwn flea coll 845-2088 manag« + tale$ Send Previous banking H · OUUIFIH mediate ldvanoement In ..... C1tul!t
FOUND· mai. L.ab/Plt Bull, resume to Box 131 Dally pertenee preferred Com· UftlllStll a t>eautllUI, motivating •t· liiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiii &II II J O INT /EXT PAI~
t>lk/btn, 1yr old nds""" Pltot PO Boll 1580 CM petltlv•. ulary Please • ._,...11 DIOITIY( mosphere Call 957-1838 --------85 II"' call p sonnel Dept ---'°'Interview $2 17 d HARBOR MARINE Topped/removed Cteen-for • clean ,,.. 733-1413 HOUMI ' Apt. Rea. rel hm. C.M. 50' 1939 _ &m llOUlfC (ri4) 760-600() , per ay We will tleul oot, cleen & up, MW i.wna. 751·3'76 Home & omca otetntng DY Quality woB 995-5755
Found· MONEY NHr 17th Wheel Alignment, Bralles. ~~ h°'e c ~~I~~ CllSTllOTllll Cl That's ALL yoo pay for Pllnt any boat bottom 10< Clean Upe•Tr .. Trimming JODI p,_ c:all lor tr .. PA™TER NEEDS WOAKt
In Coat a C4ese Call Tune Up. N9WP<)l'1 Tlre Interviewing By 3 Hnes. 30 day mmlmum mS l90t~alsft Inc;& 1 }?~~I &Nalol Yard Malnl •Hauling Mtlmate 842-8746 Int/Ext, <*hngs, reiftn cao 6-46-2238 Ctr. 3000 E. Coast ~. Appointment Only Advertising SalH et IHll T&ll PEllll I he .,., "''..,. (28) VU xi> wortt .... -Corona del Mar '·-i rapidly expanding local arled duties. Mu11 have n 1 Htra charges PleaSe call MIKE 850-3263 _ Houaeclean1,;g--Hones1 Davia PelMnti ....... r;;;,.7 FOUND· small blk/wht ~ d a I I Y new• P • P • r driver's llcenae. Call DAILY for apptm. 873-6320 Ask Complete Clean-Up, gen1 dep•ndebl•, etllclent, ng .........--..
Dog, lhorthalr mill. Vk: _&_IT_l_TI_ll_l_l_l_l_Y_I0-1 ~ Agreulve, ••II-dis-(11•) 111·21'0 us about pick upldeHwty. malnt tree trimming, free 843-8-402 aner &pm SOl/THERN PAINTING :ii-55~:' Plz, C M . and llght repairs. Newport ........__......., ltmk clpllned lndtvlduals meyt::tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PILOT . : -ests Mauro 831-4997 J j • J DECORATING t"t/Exl Tire Ctr, 3000 E. Coast Ii ... ~ earn excellent tncome 111 ln•al · aa tm1 Lie ll\9Ured 83t-&430
Found wht male MeJlmu1e Hwy, Corona del Mar. t lf ='J11 • en':"a~~S::,~ SERVICE ltmct TllE UllEIEIS 3UJIT6Klll CLEANING Pa
or Husky w/Wht Ilea col-N•w In town? Cla11lflecl ~('\\ port ment opportunity Agen· COUISELOIS 8Ri6Xl UlttiNERV lawn & Garden Malnt By Commercial·'-ld'I Bklgl. I ~~~ s~C: 8~~~ CMl help you meet many cy or newspaper ex· Pert tlm. cattier counsel-DIRECTORY Hats, tiaras, velll & ac-men college traJMd In GOOd r•fa 831-e194 HANGING/STRIPPING
6-42-5&88 ol your nMda 642-5678 Equal Oppty Empl mlflh perlence neceuary ors wanted. Help boys oeuorlea 839-1188 landscaplng. 969-2120 A A A Main-, -LOWEST VISA-MC 67:l-15t2
Send rfMMJme A1tn Peggy and girls sollcll new CALL TODA.VII C ! Malnt. ciea,,_ups, mowing PRICES CommerolaJ & ________ _...,,
SYDNEY
0MARR
Bl9\lln1 subscriptions 011 their ISi FH Liii !!Jll tree trim Frw Esttmates' Rnident1aJ 662-3235 FARTHING INTERIONI Expert a......,try Servlc:e Mr Estrada 6'5-339 1 HANGING/STRIPPtHG paper routes Mus1 enjoy .,...... VISA-MC 673-1512 HllllOl&IT
IAILT"LIT
llO •••• , •••
Otataleu,Ol
working with 10_ 13 yr Yoor Delly Piiot Repalr-Remod't·Addmons JANITORIAL CLEANING
otda Early evening hOurs ~Directory 0oor .. 1c 5"6-4980 Tltt lr1tl letlt SERVICE Fr .. est Gr90 ANOYS WALLCOvauNQ
wor1t days/ tlexlbte hrs Repreaentallve BUILD OR REPAIR LtwrHre&-lhrub Install 631-5661 9181335-586-4 lnstdtltton & ~el ••2 ·•"21 td IOI Tree trim & Removal --,.~. £" Commlaslon only ---• Wans .• , .. ,,. r~i Lawn main & Roto11111ng LldtCl~ll Int pa1n11ng -~ ~~1":,e ~~ --------~~·;~"~962-e~? Spr1nkler Install r9Pa1r LANOSCXf>t.aXsoNRY &pert WettcoYWl.ng In Free at1mates 548-6065 Land9CaPlllQ all ~ stallatlon_ Rea CoriiMlt-
The lastHt draw In th• llllll OIAIT AccHati•J Com~· pltlOI CoYers a • done Bnctc. tMc>dl. stone. .,,, Au6gnmnt 581-eelQ
Wast a Dally Pilot IHlf "l69 * BOOKKEEPING by Oecila. Concrete walk· H ~H tr .. est ~"'• 499-4072 EXPERT p~ _, Clullfled Ad Call Today M •• Marge & Judy 15 YHrs ways Block wall$ Room AMERlCAN HANOVMAN Rid! Mt-9584 Rea Rat• wonc Gl9 .
Tbunday, Aup1t tt 642-5878 exper , free Mt 969-1967 add'n. 1Syr exp 6-4~4 c::'~m'::~~r; Spr1nki.rs AN types Incl c.&I for" .. -' 983-7531
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) You wake up with the answc~ I •1 Franklln Acctg Servtce Custom ~tlal WOik tub~. heullng, •tc lira prevenllon lie Pluttr~ E h · d • I y ,1.,01.. aus & Persona11ncome P11io.o.ck1-Remodel1ng And v .. Jeau• ••Lord •«2874 495-3268 _ mp as.as on me 1tat1?n •• temporary ~.lus1on, basic insuncts. psychic ••••••••••• •. Tu Preparatlori 549--0345 RCCon1tructlon84M001 (Uc•3040Sl 836-42« -----Int /Ext pet ~no. 1mprcss1ons. Romanuc 'involvement proves refreshing, revealing. • ----Ltcli Alty lemct custom tuturtng, q~
rewarding. Pisces fi~ure'I prominently. • • State or t~ Art t>us acct QUALITY FINISH WORK DECKS-WOOO COVERS toci<W+& WOfll Problem.-No Proc>-
TAURlJS (Apnl 20-May 20): Wish comes true, reality replaces e • aoftwer• modules. Cartk Entry & French Doors oor ComP9tlttve Prion All K9Y Se<vlOM Iiams' •326984 5S4-7'3t
fantasy. Plans mntcnahze, especially where finances are concerned. • • & co. 979-0550'0551 c=~~~~s ~o years e•pe< 75-4-1620 895-2993 Horn9 or Apt'• lnt./EJct.
You'll discover missing link. You'll have reason to celebrate. : COLLECTDll WllTEI • Actutlul C.W.~ Ranatr-Ooor•Alteratlons •GEN HOME REPAIRS ..... ~ Paten~. Uc & bonded (~ . t . I t I • ...,. Paint Dfywlll Carpentry tr 140607 4" 1-1424 apncom na 1ve pays paramoun ro e. • Part time opening in Laguna Be•<'h • ExQultlte A.couatlca R.model~P•nel-Lockl-4tc etc_ Gery 64s.,5217 PTL 8Aick Kk small IC>& =-=---=~-----
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Cycle high. Project is completed,• area. Earn up to s6.oo per hour for • 1P'9Yed0<r.move Dry-Wlndow-Fen<lel-Cablnet N.wpon, Coate M...., Pla.W., ;!~~~~ ~~fi:!S:su~~ebe i! ~~~;~~· ?~~·!~~ ~~~~J ~:o:i~~~ : collecting for monthly 1ub1criptions. : :;:::1~;:-;.:;, ~:;-JR;x~=-64h2--0567 ~~:U~.h;;~ · ;..rvWtellllR9fY 1's 1
9
1
7 ... ~5_ 1~·~2.~00d~.,-loti.~D:_11.11fdonel"!T~ll-~Cim~19IJP"
could be asked to ap..-r before the media. • Exprrienre preferred but not re· • --~ --· water.._-•~--.. .,.... I d M b I 18 Id * NEED TO REMODEL 1 PO EROSA Cl NERS HANDYMAN LARGE and New,/. repair AN tYPe8 ._,.., • .._ CANCER (June 21-July 22): Stress independence. creat1v1ty, • • qu rf' · u•& e al uat yeen ° · • Fr" estlmat.. CIMrt this am. entertain small 1 00 IT ALLI Ouattty Low ptlces DRAINS CLEAR From 115
willingness to take nsks to achieve goaJs. Focus on distance, language. : : Call 10 AM · " PM Mr. Kirkland.' : l00% Financing thl• pm 731·1538 531.S579 Pat or Ive mag Llc 831-23"5 Fauoeta. Ol9poael. .._,.,,
communicatton, possible publishing project. Leo, Aquanus pc~n • · 642-4321. Exl . 207. • -. QUALITY WOAK Ct•nt C..cll.. Hou e REPAIR C.,,._try •mat -951.9904 M&M 722-tOee
play paramount roles. • • Beecn c111ee ~1ng ~ -..-· -LEO (July 23-Aua, 22): l nlu1t1ve faculties arc honed to ruor· • OllOIUTill •PT. • Ptione 8734122 ' o;;;;:;;y1, patloe. pafha rencee & get• tr• tnm. t Ill..... 3~ exp~~ll~
sharpne s You'll know wuhout formal knowlede~. Follow throu"" o n .• • Uc 207461 etc No IOb 100 am.ii dump Nf1.I c M & N 8 OUICK & CAAEfUL Lie ,,409035 ~11 -.,., 142-4121 EH • -RMI Micil9Y 53&--055G et• Jim Whyt• 842 7.'106 LO RATES, T138046 instincts, trust your own feelings. Money is involved and so 1s a very • • Cu•tom Relldenllal woni C"'n~ C Plumb E1ec:t -Carl>entry 112 •• 11 NEW1 PAIR Oualtty No
intimate relauonsh1p, e e Clean· Tunety-R.alonable UHi Ut Palnt·;tc O.pendable .._ fObt to.amall, ~ VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22): Kev is to d1vers1ft, lo k~p options .• ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • 751-e!MJ 11eu.41543 WZe myhOtM. nr 0C Reu-Paul 720-0t3919119 ,..1..... F1'9lt Ml -tie'd 83"1-~~ < ~ W .8ey Str-eo.i. .._ CA t:!677 e ·• .., 8 & C • • 1111 r 111( open, to communicate and to maintain sense o balance through • AN E~Al Of'f>O•'ITUHITY EM~OVEA • •REMODELING .. rpon, .,, ... .,... CLUN & EXPERT
humor. Emphasis on publicity, contractual obhgations. marital status. • • •RESTORATION reap. refa 152-9539 o.... 25yweraupenenc:. lectttuial -
Geroini n111vc figures prominently. I · • •REPLACEMENT Ct4IU>R£NS COANl!R L ue T 't8,421 730-tW ltnicn UBIU~Sept. lJ-Oct. 22). L<>w-key approa<h help you emerge .. • ~ • •• .. , ...... ~ 'U • •u ' RE•••AS •-... • o._. '" a.._ lY.,. """"'" u •BC MOVING 1~x,._1C,...m;;Q--... ~s:;;--c,. .. ~_
v1cton·ous. o slow, check dcuuls. be ~iuvc concern1ne ~urce _ •1 PDDI~ tFr• •tlm••• 2.c "''1 my l'lo!M. 20 vu np ret• ,ion 845-9192 o !Ck ~ T13804t ,.,.., ~ r9POft&. -~ . II J I 1 pra for ~n. plen•. •vall loc ,,.., Placenll• • c· rruro u materi~I You may be as~ed 10 revise, rev.icw, pos 1bly to io1t1atc • •••••••• I •notneerlng, construe· a vlciona 122~1 • ~ * LO RATES, S52-4410 9'e Ptea9a c:.116'6-MM
rebu1ldtna proaram. Scorpio plays role. . • • 11on can .. 11e you W --eteen~ H*'ttng IT&lflll ~ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ); Emph:u1ze willingne~s to make • • • 831 3o•5 542-0288 EAi* Chlktcere my Home Fr• •1 • 730 Jol\n ~
changes. Scenano h1ghltght~ crctitivny, end of status Quo. 1ntens1fied : 111.L J:':. = ,':. ., : ,.,,!:ec:~EJ!~;::ora ::18'::;,9:s..T1~ p,:~~,=~v~., ~~Co·~-~==~
roman lie relationship. Oain md1cated throuah wntten word Oct ideas • --• , _. • ,.-• ~-Ct ---OuAUTY chi"tc:ICaN 1 yout Lfttll s.o.1eee Student MoYere TMUIPWd u.L. aipproYICI Monttot1ng
00 paper. Vlrao play role. • ... ._ -·-• AJr dltltalal · n Y • 1.1e T12443e 8414427 #00034t S4$-4I030
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 2 1 ): Oomestic adjustment ftaures :If you are ln Hlgh School or Jr. High • c x s Sva co a 21127 =~n= ' I L~~ ,:.~~ NEW ~....nou .. storage
prominently. Emphasis on lifestyle, residence. property. lon.a-ranie e And would like to earn $25 00 to : ~::.1~~~~ .. ~~ all 1a•~0.....84&-111e ••ale ....._1 .,Al ...
prospects wh.ich could affect marital st.ttus. Money transaction • $~.00 in commi ions and mo~ l'8('h • ·~-al _ TRASHBUSTERS Pl;)[...,,,, id IHI ty OfC A
requires special atudy. Libra plays role. • • week-l(lve us a caU. You can work • ,.. t Spec:IQ 1n Comm 1 Conet. l Reelcf'I o.n-uc1. Satori ci. MU9iqu9 Price Newpor11C M
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Shon tnp plays sianificant role :PART TIME m the afternoons and : p 1ng x;; • Ae;);lf'; end 1 Frw .. , tree •t Vlc 722-6240 u.. A l.ecdlinl 8 A .,. .. N""'*"131...,10
RclAtJve in trao it communicat°'.• ma~es offer or ~ucst Define .. eveninp nnd still have ume to enpy • Aeeun~ • f\ooflno • 541-a23 llc:dt3924 TU.
tenns. danfy mea,n1nas._8c venattl.e wuhout scattenn )'OUr forces. • your ummer We offer complete . Wawprooflng• 4131~1~ a.utal Ital .. _ .~ .... ~
You're due to tteetve unique comfhmenl-• nd d • .... .. e__.., p;;;j umxm TQ-FILE pf d«EA s:: ll!r_ MM16ent11i1eommerclel AQUAJUU (Jan. 20.Fcb. 8): Empha 1s on respons1b1ltt)', • tra nlna a provt transporauon • '' .wTM ~-Pll ... ILllTI• tor air-. l'le9d & blell-:-• '" .. "' ,._. -• ~ BIG J08 CA~LS>
prasure deadlines. monetary pin, inten ified love relationship i plus grHt pt1ZA • tripa. and plenty of • Loee we!Oflt NOW1 .... '" <NalltyWOttt, ,,_., • adl8a M0-111M cwote :!1!::.11~ ~ ~ Pno. IM.2-2011
Article that bad been Iott, mi '"'or lolcn can now be fe'COVCred. : MONEY! This not a paper route : lorewr .... ~ .. 4251 '3 981-7.0l T'Nnll-Youl ..,_.114 j~~~~~h8inmmin1l
Older 1ndlvidual does care. and you'll soon be 1 re of at. • and lt at not n daya • w k. <:om!'• ~ C:.~ 0
M.81D1COMM'LJtN0-"2i° l! ..... =~fJ:=•""'_. AA1Neow PAINTtNG Ii 1 PISCES \~b 19-Marcb 20): fintsb rather than 1rutiJtc Pf'OJC'Ct. •help t n cu.st.omen Cor our • ~ On my own wortt Uc °"8my ta°"' pCtUc:y StAVCES• For .. JOAlf
nario hlth · t timtna.Ju~nt, 1ntu1tton.1bsht)' to win lhroua,h : ~wapeptt and hav a &ood UJnl' S •278061 Al ~121 SEfMC! • ~ eso-~ J Ff Uc 1611 ~ neacts 67~1 CD~UI K\IC)ft, love pl1~1 m~r rote. tmotional JtCUrity ~ult1 • while you're dotna h . O:inr out and . uw_ oc Gd'I c;;; G """s.m.. dMn ~ 64.M7•t
Anes at m PJ(tutt. • what w art! talk.Lng about and • °"' ~Lua ~ •&1 • Ulllll. LTL D' AUOU TH . YOUR BIRTHDAY )'OU '!': aRhnc.ave. a natural : you'U ~ ilad you did Call rocJ.ay and : ~ °' Of\tto-1~ H':(;tl •8odyguer'Oa
t.eadlet and psytbolosist. you alJO arc lof&I. ser:u1tJvt', f&J\11)'-oncnted • ...,., wmorrow' CUI Mr. Earl • HIGHLAHO 8"0M& CllM •"',,... Conlut\ant•
e'fC'n tboqh unorthodox. c.&nttr, C.pncom, Aquanus prrsons pl.a)' • 3 • a-. •Dr1*'t 4tt-4U& impon.ant rol in your lift. You are-drawn to the ununw, rnAO)' • ~8-70SS or 24 1~84 2 • ... 1 llalaL
to def )'OUr baunt, you have aounncl apptt1te and posll.blc : OAANGl! COAST ~ILY PILOT : _..,.. ___ ..._ ___ _
diJati"c problem. Your mother ha had st 1nnutn("t., )au can he • w. -·~~~GA 1m1 ·• MARINE a.... Mtd\Mk: INPlll'l,..1911P.,...,."'!'-,. moody and lonely in 1 crowd. You could chanac residence or m1n1.&~ t < A .. lOUA4 ~,,_..... ov1.• • 'AST PAOf SEAVICE.
atatu this )ftJ' No\lcmbcr 9'111 be memorable foryou tn J 98S. ~ •• •• • • • • • • •• • • 41 ! • ••• •• • • Roger P ., 11 ~~~-:-~~~-1=-======!:=---------~.....;.========.&==========~-==~~ ..... ~ ..
;
I
--~ ....
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACA088 S!i Foca1 point
1 F0<ma1
S8 Home< epoc
60 Rendered 6 Portllgnt aaunOe<
10 Engine no18" 6 1 Jatot'I s snip u 011pa1eh 62 R1a1a end
I!> Kmg of Jud al' 63 Natural 'ub HI Venezuela ttancet
copper town 6• Atrocan
17 Get 10Qllher 65 Great dog•
18 Enterl-1ner1 DOWN 20 Belly leugh
2 1 Comoauoon 1 Carnage 23 Came out
2• H11roe1 '1 shant.,r
3 Play!ut -26 Feline • PouesStve 28 Nol 5 Be bk.le 30 Stout th•"'•" 6 Alllanc:es 3 t Ottoc111ee1 7C'11nMep0rt 32 Ftag creator 8 da plume 38 Artocte II Compau pt
37 French 1rt1•1 10 Art11t
Ctaude 11 Ch~r1c
38 Vtllhly 1:> lmprope.
39 Ct naries remarks
4 2 T!>e Forum e o 1J Qaoeca1e.
19 Hello I 44. Pu.ugeways • 22 -de Franc;. 45 Stings 25 F emele nar ... 48 Com~11 28 Cl'ligoers •9 Oreeti Miner 27 Aide •bbr 50 ltreguter 28 COie et II 51 AC:tlOn tll1er 29 R101 J•m
52 Souc"'ono 30 Anoows u~ 01
Ct
PREVIOUS f'UZZU SOLVED
ROL
!I
T A C I T " T OP
E M I ERO 0 E p u PA
F I A 6 T NA ME s P A E P
ST ATEN • ;10 E SS E TNA
HT:m!J A L-Cl f.0 SI\ O •TAL E A S. H A l E 0 • AM B E R• 01 P , A p p L E P I E A L AM 00 E I S E •C ANT IS •HAVE Nt A EN T!Jj/ 0 T ~p & S Tl -H A Y FA E E S 4 MO S MAO • T A I( I N G
0 I R T E C OLOOICAL ANNE R E
M E1S S E S
32 Oun peoe>ll!
33 Surgery
3• T r•tfl(:ted
35 Health ctub•
37 Furry 1n1m•t
•O Specteclet
4 1 Mall .. tmown
42 HUtOfl 0< Ute
43 Hair Ptee4t
4~ Pronoun
48 Odd num~tfl<l
SI NI LO NE ,
T[..f S 0 NAN
• Pl91l
4T ~111acy
48 lrtlh POel
Tt1om11 -
4q Moote tl'(le
51 Starch
~J Comlo<t
54 F <u•t drtn~ • ~Ii Mete an1m•I
!17 Goto Sc.o
~ .. "''""·
Need lovlng hm female
Siamese Lost In Dsne Pt
area April i9th 492-8825
DIMES
A
LINE
WANT ADS
r IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
Sell your lttJma for $50 or ltJu In
our f•mou1 DIMCS~-LINES put>-
ll1hfld ••ch Saturday In the D•lfy
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ad1 mu1t tuJ
pr.-pald 10 m•ll or bring them Into
,,,. Dally Piiot Office. s. 1Uf'9 tp
lnclud• your phone numo.r or Ml-
dr.,. In your ed. have • prlt» on
each Item & no •bbrevt.atlona.
Sorry, no comrnMCJaJ Ml•. gar_,.
...-. prodc.K», plent• or .,,1m.i1 .,. 41CQ1pt•l:u..
DEADLINE :
12 NoonF~ ComMeu~
LARGE SELE.CTION OF
NEW & USEb BMW'SI
LllllUOI ...
VOLUME SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
3870 N Cherry AV9 LONG
BEACH
(No Cherry exl1'""°5)
(lH)Pf.IYH
Tr~lns We6come
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
UPWTlllllPUI
DELIVERY DEPARTMENT
·McLAREN'S BMW
M·F tlll 9, 8-S 1111 9
e2e s Euclid SI Fullerton..:~-~ 714-taoGJW
213-4J91-U01
=
. .
-
"WE Will NOT
BE UNDERSOLD"
m Ml.IC NOTICE
a,···-. a --~
21, YEARS-GRADE 8
7 AM-6 PM
Christian School
• H.i~h Audem1c St.andard11 • Full Day Kandergar~n
• 81 le ~ntered CunicuJum • Pre-Kindergarten li>rogram • Cre<!ent1aled Teachera • 9 Acre Facility
• Limited Clue Siu • Hot Lunch Program
• Ana It. Sport.a Prorram • Extended Day Care
MICHAEL BARNETT-ADMINISTRATOR
645-9755
2026 Garden Lane, Coata Mesa, CA. 92627
CHRIST LUTHERAN IC HOOL .
NOW ENROLLING
for
Kindergarten thru Grade 8
"A CARING SCHOOL WITH A
CHRIST-CENTERED EDUCA 1JON•·
Extended Day~ Available
M&-6866
... ----..
Orang. Cout DAILY PflOT/WedMlday, A~ 28, 1"5 rt
Pacific
Travel
School
2515 North Main,
Santa Ana, Ca. 92701 i?4
---~
ORANGE COL NTYl ONLY PIUV iTE
.KCltEDrrED TIAVEL .i GENCl' SCHOOL
~NING, AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES
Call (714) 543-9495 ..... ,.,__..., --------
JUST MOVE IN?
H19h School St14e•t?
Call your school now to register tor Fall
...... !J!: .... s.....
~ .. tst4 ....... ..., .... s.. .. 1
"'·1Jtt .., ........ s.....
"J-6$71
fH•ttl• Vela., lilt• S.....
.. 2.1101
E41 ... •it• S..MI
"'·11$4 o... v ........ u ...
0
790 Vk:torte Coeta ..... Ma 06S6
-~' Jairmont ltlf ool
ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST A
FINEST PRIVATE SCHOOL
Fall Term begins
September 11
Grade• K-1
Anaheim-Eat Campua
121 8. Citron
('71•) '7'74-10&2
..
Gracie• Pre·&elaool·8
.Yorba LJ.nda Ca.mpua ''&1 valley v1.,., ('71•) &U-8181
I
ENROLL l!PW
CHRIST CEITERED TEACHllC
Huntington Christian School
1207 Main St. (at Adams)
Huntington Beach IWllllTll·••• bt11•1•.., C.. 7• ...
Abek1 CYrtculum ............... Mualc Program
Computer Experience....... Cred. Teaehera .....
for ~ latoraado1 . =laf ll"'1lllaa pla ce••t. ta tM •
lMCncdaM. ~. can
SUE 141-4311 lxt. 3M
..
-----
-GRAND OPINING-
• NOW IN COSTA MESA•
OF FIRING CREATIVE IDUCA TION
IN A DELIGHTfUL ENVIRONMINT
Large Play Area • Convenient Locatlo
CALL
Thi1 Variety of Fine Schoo/1 Could
Introduce You To A #ew Tomorrow
l1'NI ... MDID "'9&.ICAlM* ,. .. .,.., o... ,,.,. PtC'nTIOUl eutMn
l•llr•••"l Mv••H: Mm ITATIMmlf ~,.,.._ .. Ml. The fOlowlnO ~ere
¥1Ull1MMI llkferHH: dolnQ bullneM .. PtlClftc ....,..,. lnterlora, ttO 1 N9wpon
""'°'"UT NOT1C9 Blvd , Co1t1 M111, CA
• YCM.llt "°""n te .. tae21 P<Mm~ KCAUM Peclftca AMI Property In·
YOU AM --II YCMM '*1IT*ltll Coowatlcn. A •AWa. IT llAY M Ctllfomta oorpontton, 1901
IOLO Wt,.HOUT AMY ~ ltvd • eo.11 M ...
C°""' AC'nOll, and CA 92627
~---Jbe lbla. ~ a. c:on-brlng yout account In OOOd 0uc19d by: • corpor1tton
1tandlog bY paying all of J8'MI D Strotte, Ell·
yfNtl-' due peymentt 1*11 eciullve Vici Pt..io.nt ~tted CC19tt and U • Tllll 1tatemenl Wit tl4«I
,.,.... WltNn ttvee monttll with the County C*1t of Ot·
from tile datAJ thla no4toe of l"'llt County on J4JAy 1 1,
cttftlUlt ... '900fdld. Thia 11115
lmOl.Allt It M ,311.21 • of '1IOll1 1~18. and .. ..... P\I~ Ot~ OoNt unt11 ~ aooount b9col'Me Delly Piiot .MoJ t5. 22. 2t.
curnnt. You IMY not l'teve to AUOUlt 8, tMS ~ tN entlr9 unpeld Pof· Amended Publlcatlon
1torf of YflA/T .acoun1, 41¥1t1 August 21, 19U
t"°'4llfl full peyt'Nftt WM c». M·5t1
rneniled, but you ll'M.let pay ---------the firnOUnt 1t1ted ~ rta.JC N011C[ ......-. you and '/OAlt ______________ ;;.__
Del~ cw rnortgaoea NOTlCI!
rrwf mu1UelY ~ "' ..,. llWTINO ..,. 1nO "10f to the tlm9 the ~ Notice II her9b'/ given that
tioe f1f Nie 11 potted (Which the loetd OI Tl\lft .. of the mil/ not be ..,.., than the Ooaat ~ Coltege
end of, the thr-montll Dtttnct of <>r.,. eo:!f·
pertod "etecl lb0¥9) to, ~ wlll rec.M otNt tlllnQ9, ( t) ed bldl up to but no i.ter
addltlonlll !lme In tJ*l 10-00 1 m., Friday, o our. the dtlflun by a.pt. e. 1"6 at the PurcMa-
of the P'C>PertY OI lnQ ~t of 111<1 ~ othefWlie; (2) eetlb!WI I lage dlatflct located II 1370
llChedule of peymenta In Ailam1 Avenue, Co1t1 °'!: 10 ~ '1f".K deteult, OI Mela, c.ifcmla at wtlk.:t\ t1ot < 1> and m 11me 111c:1 bldl ..., be ~
• tiw. month• trom 11cty opened and reed tor:
the date 'of recordatlon of PRINT a BIND ...
thlfdoalment(WNchdlteof SPRING CLASS 8CHE~ ~tlon 1PPN"1 her• ULE; ORANGE COAST Dts-
Buebal.I co.ell• needed
Ncwpon Harbor H1&)1 batcball coach Wayne
Heck IS look.lni for a couple or &<>Od men -'~J.fkally to hc.liu:oac.h on•~"® bwut-Ntwport Harbor
"I'm loolc.1~ urr cxpencnccd lradcrs that le.now baseball, says Heck
The vacanctct arc for coaches un the Junior varsity and ftnbmeo levels lntcrt"stcd 'P*f'\IC)
should cont.kl Heck at 642-5866
Soatl11re1t Sealon ~
The Pacific S.Out.hwest Sen.tor's Tournament, held annualy 111he Ncwpo" Beach Tennis Club.
11 scheduled Sept. 5·8 and t4-IS. The tournament ts one ofll\c most prcst1g1ous senior tennis toumamcnt1 in California
Pia>~ oomptte an aaed d1v1ltons JS, 40.
45-85 to mcn'a. v.omcn'sand m1xeddoubleund
stnal~tatc and national ra.nlc1ngs. Satclltto courts at the Balboa Bay Club RacQuet Club and 1ht Rqcqgct Club of Irvine
will be used the first v.cd:, with semifinal and
final rounds set for Lhc Newport Beach Tennis
Club.
YJICA teJJtJl• tournament
The Irvine Communtt) YMCA 1nvuu bu11-
neues 1n the community to pe1'11etpetc 1n 1 ~rpQrate Ltnn11 ~ paa .of tA. YMC'Ays fndian Summer Family f'un Fnllval
Sept. 22 at the Woodbndac South Lake Tennis Club.
Tht" tournament wall be held from 9 a.m to ' p.m wnh Ult" championshap macth slated for 2 p. m. l he Family Fun Ft"su val opens 10 lht"
public at 11 a m.
The en1ry fee is a m1n1mum SI SO dona1ion 10
the Irvine YMCA. For mort" informauon, phone SS9-1 I 7 S
L.A. Coaaty l"alr r•cbJI
The Los Ansclcs Coun1y Fair 11 Pomona opens Sept 12 for its 47th year of ho~ rac-1ng.
w11h horses and Jockeys competing on the new
5/8·mtle tr1ck. The runnina surface 1s now 70 feet wide on the
turns as well as the stra1gtnaways male.ma 11 pou1ble to stan up to a doLen horses an a race.
CH.Ppen eoalJrm dedule Tfic rmaJ pme of the Los Anadct Clappers'
ciaht ... mc P""K&IOn tchedulc Will be played OC:t. $ ~t the Oolden State Warriors in Cook GymnasTum on tlie camput or Santa Ana
Collqc. In addil.lon to tbepmc which lS llCheduled for
7.30 p.m .. t~Oippen wih<'onducllnaf\cmoon chn1c under the direction of Head Coach Don
Chancy. All Oippc.r pla~fJwtlJ be an aucnoance
for the clinic which will bo followed by a ptt-prno ta1I..ptc party hosted by the city of Santa
Ana For further 1nform1uon. phone (213)
7484000.
Boat raclnl Mt Sept. tJ.8 The lnternattonal Hot Boat Assoc1at1on (IHBA)
will hold the 1985 IHBA National Cham·
p1onship Boat Races SepL 6-8 at Puddanptont"
Lake near Pomona. Puddanastone lake, wbach covus 250 acres, is
part of the 2,0QO.acrt" Frank 0 . Boncllt Los
Anacles Count~ Rqional Parle, located in San D1mu near 1-IO and 210 freeway antcn:hanaes
Tickets arc av11lablc at T1ctctron outJeu. For more information, phone 592-361.S
on),' unlMe tN o«ilgatlon TRICT
b9'fto toredoeed upon or • All bide .,. .to be 1n ao-•-----------------------------------------------------------------11111!1--• ....... wntt.n IQI ..,.,...,,t cordetlCI with the Bid Docu-.,......, you and YolK cr9dl-ments-wtilch .,. now In me
IOI ~111 • longer period, 1nd may be eecured In the you; hlYI only lhe leg.i right offloa of the Director of to "4P the .... of YolK pr• PurchMlng o1 Mid CCJitege -tt by peylng the entire dlltrtct.
lm6unt dernlnOed bY '/OAlt Each bidder muet IUbmlt
Ct9dltor. with hie bid I cahier'I
To find out the amount check. oertlfted chedl, or
yqu mu9t pay, or to llt'rlnQe bidder'• bond made pey.,_ fof payment to •toe:> the f~ to the ordet of the eo.t
dotUre, Of If 'f04" property le Community College Dletnc:t In fpNdoeure tor any other &oerd of T ,,,..._ In .,..
reeton. contlet' amount not ..., than ftve
~ERICAN SAVINGS perClf)t (5~) of the aum bid ~A. N ASSOCIATION, ... ouaranl• thet lhe bid· t5 25 Eut Whittler der wlll enter Into ,,...
d, Whittler, Cal~ PfopoMCI Contract If the
ro<ala toe07. TeMpfione:laeme fl -<led to him. In
(714) 773-7134, Loen No. the -t of falture 10 anw It 1"208253-3-74 (E) Into 1\ICll contract. tll•
If you have any ~ion.. prooeed1 of the chedl wtll be
you thoUld contact a ~ fOfMlted. or In the QaM of a
or the oovemmen• agency bond. the full IUfl'I tf'lertlof wNctl may,....... lnawed 'f04" wtll be lorlelted to Mid ool-
loen Notwtthatandlng ..... lege c*trtct.
tact that your property .. In No bidder may wtthdflW
~·· you mey otter hla bid IOt a period tor forty-your property tor 11i.. five (45) d•Y9 .it« the date
pt<Mdecl the .... fl con-Mt fOt the apentng thereof. eluted prtor 10 the con-The Boerd of rn.t ... r• ck.Itkin of tha I~ .._theprtvllegeofr91eci· ~ti«. YOU MAY Ing any and Ill bld9 Of to
LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF waive any lrregulartt ... or I~
YOU DO NOT TAKE,tormalltfel In any btd Of In
PROMPT ACTION Ille bidding.
NOTICE IS HEREBY LH A.. lftYINa, Yloa
GIVEN: TMt SUNKIST SER--IChaMlellof, •u•I -Al-VICE COMPANY II now 6ut'f tetn, Coeet ComMuntty
appolnttld Truet .. under a Collete Dtetnot
Dead o f Trull dated Pul>llal'lecl Orenge Cout
10/27n7 executed by: VIN-,Dally Piiot AUfual 21, 28.
CENT L. KONTNY. ANO 1985
JOAN 0 KOHTNY, HUS· W-01"4
BAND ANO WIFE u Tru1t0f. --------
to MCUra obl~tlon1 In P\BJC MOTIC£ fe'IOf of: AMERICAN SAY· _ __;...;.;;;..;;;..;;_;.;.,;;..__;..;....__
INGS & LOAN ASSOCIA· K.·to018 .
TION, U e.netlclar; Nottoe of ....
Recorded on 11122111 u of~ "1openy
c:tocument no 28920 book ~ at
12486 Peoe 771 of Oflldal Pm• ..
Recordl In the offtcl of the No A t 21 308
Recorder of Or1n99 County, In the Superior Court of
c.JltOfnlL lncludlnQ 1 not• the Slit• of Ca11toml1. !Of
IOI' the eum of S 185,000.00 I the County of Or1nge.
lhlt the Deneftclll tnter•t In the Mitt• of Ille Eat•I•
under Mid Deed of Tru1t I of Utyen J Bocll, Oeceued
and the ot>llgltlone MCUted Notlca II hereby gty.,.. ttllt
thereby are pr9MOllY held the und«llgMd Witt 1111 11
by the beneficiary That • Privet• Nie, to lhe hlgl'leet
breectl of, and default In, the ind belt bidder 1Ubjec1 to
obllgatlon '°' whlctl llld connrmatlOn ot 1ald Su·
DMd of Tru11 ta MCUrtty llu perlor Court oo or attar lhe
occurtld In that the payment tOth d1y ot September.
11a1 not~ made of-1985 11 tne ot11ce of <Anrury
Failure to mue the 811185 2, OM.A. 229 AYenlda Del
payment of prlnelpal and/Of Mir. Sin Clamerite. CA
lntarMt Ind 111 1Ubeequent 9 2 6 7 2 ( T a 1 1 p h o n e
payment1, togttllet Wftll l1t1 714_.92-54 13), County of
cllargn. Impound•. Im-Orange State of Clllfomla.
pound depo1111, If any all the right.title and lntar•t
under the term• of Nkl nol• of Mid deoeaald at the time
Of Deed of Trull of death and all the right.
Joe Thelamann J ohn Elwa y Erle Dtckenon
Landry says Cowboys' backs to wall
National Football's East
raCetn gast ls up for grabs
NEW YORK (AP) -for the first ume an
10 years, the Dallas Cowboys fai led to make
the NationaJ Football League playoffs last
season If you listen to Tom Landry, the NFC'
East 1s so tough he's ready to make it two for
11. Whrle the San Francisco 49ers waltzM
through the West on 1he way to a Super Bowl
victory. and 1he Chicago Bears took the
Central b> default. the race 1n the East last
season went down to the final weekend with
four teams still m contention for playoff
spots.
The Washington Redskins finally 1ook the
title with a 29-27 victory over St Louis that
wasn't settled until Neal O'Donoghue's 50-
yard field goal attempt we nt wtde at the final
gun. As far as Landry 1s concerned. Washing-
ton's again the team to beat.
"After Washmgton, tt''i St.Louis. then New
York and Dallas. I pick us founh." Landry
said as training camp opened. "I like that
positi on I hke to come from behind."
"You don't win this diVls1on. you try to
survive" Washington's Joe Gibbs said.
One team m the NFC that will alm~t
surely survive is San Francisco, which won
18of19 games last season, includmg a 38-l 6
thrashing of Miami tn the Super Bowl. Only
the Rams seem capable of challengmg the
49ers in the West.
In the Central. at looks lake a two-team race
-defending champion Chicago and Green
Ba).
But then there's tht" East.
St. Louis, 9-7, had the best talent a year ago,
led by Neil Lomax. whose 4,6 14 yards
passmg was the fourth best single-season
performance in NFL history.
The Cards' most serious problem tills ~cac
ts the offensive line, where they lost guard
Terry Stieve-to retirement and tackJe Luis
Sharpe to the United States Football League.
Sharpe wants to come back; 1f he does, at
means larger holes for Ottis Anderson and
Stump Mnchell, morct1me for Lomax to find
Roy Green and probably a di11ision title.
The Giants, 9-7, have found one element
they lacked last season - a ruonmg game 1n
rookje George Adams and USA. refugee
Maurice Carthon. Tht"y complement Ph'tl
Simms, who passed for more than 4,000
yards Last year to a young receiving corps
headed by Bobby Johnson and Lionel
Manuel.
Injuries to center Kevin Belcher and tackJe
Wil ham Robens have forced New York to
reshape ns offensive ltne for the second year
in a row. But the defense, led by Lawren~
Taylor, re mains soltd, although a front-line
pass rusher would be a welcome addition.
The Redskins. who finished 11 -5, have a
new running back in George Rogers, ob-
tained from New Orleans. John Rigg.ms, 36,
1s also back, and Gibbs says he mish.L
abandon his one=back set ill times to get them
both into the game at the same time.
DaHas added 16 new players last season,
one reason they missed the playoffs. But the
Cowboys seem to ha ve solved a couple of
problems.
The quarterback controversy, for instance,
appears to have vanished. Landry says he'll
start wtth Danny White at quarterback over Garv Hogeboom although White will miss
the last two weeks of preseason with a rib
injury suffered last Saturday ni&ht. And the
offensive line, so banged-up last season that
Dallas finished the year with five guards 1n
the lineup, is baclc intact, and rookie
Crawford Ker looks like a future star.
The true strength m Dallas, however.
remains the defense, led by lineman Randy
White, hnebacker Eugene Lockhart and what
might be football's best secondary.
Philadelphia, 6-9-1, revived late last
season. But new owner Norman Braman's
austere financial policies have resulted' 1n
se~eral hold0111S. most imporwuly b)'-Wide
receiver Mike Quick, the team's one of-
fensive threat.
But whichever NFC East teams malce the
playoffs must contend with tbe-.49ers, whose
coach th.inks they've actually improved after
a ncarlv perfect season.
Fallure to pay real 11t111 11111 Ind lnter•t thlt the ....
taxn and/Of ...... ment1 1111 of .. Id dec»Ued nu
for tot11 r990rted delln· 1equlred by operation of law
QU9nt 1nd all IUbeeQvent Of Otl'lef'WIM other than or In
p1yment1 which became addition to th1t of Uld d+-
du• tller .. nar, lneludlng any c:.ued. 11 the time of oeath,
1111 ct11rg419 or oth« sum1 In and to all the certain real
P•'f11bll undef the larmt of property lltualed In City of •--------------------------------------------------------------------• .. Id Note or Deed of Trust Caplltrano Beactl, County
Thlt by rMton_ triereof ot Orenge. State of Call·
the pre11nt benellcluy tornll partlcufar; delct1bed
.Jndtlf eueh Deed of Tru1t 11 follows to wit
nu executed Ind dellverld UNDIVIDED ONE-HALF
lo Hid Trullet. 1 written c 112)1nt1r11t In Ind to untm-
Oeci1ratlon end Demand lor proved real property In the
S1,., 1nd hu dec><>lited wtlh State of Catlforn11. County
.. Id TrullM such Deed of of O•anoe. c:teecrlbed .. Lot
Tru11 end 111 the document• 44 1n Block 18 of Traci No
IV!denci"ij ,,,. Ol:>ligatlOOI 883 81 lhown 00 • Map r•
M(;Uled th«tby end hU corded In 9oolc 27. PllO" I
declared 1nd don hereby 10 10 1nc1u.ive, of Ml ..
declare alt 94.lm• llClJred ce111neous Maps. r8COfd1 of
thereby lmmedletely due Orange. County. Callforn11
and PIY•bll lfld hU elected Tu I 0 • t23-303-.44 112 -
Ind dOff h«tby alec1 10 S2S.000 00
cauee lhe trull property to Tetml o1 .. 11 cun In t1w·
t>e sold to .. 111fy the ol>ll· ru1 money of 1n1 Unlttld
g1tton1 MCUred lhert by Stllll on Nie, or part cull
DATE 7122/85 1nd bllenct evidenced by
Ainenc.n a.Ying• and note """'ed by Mongage
Loen •-&atlon, K.~. "-· or Tru1t OMd on tlle~roc:>
rle«i, A.Mt. Vice "'"6dent eny eo lokl Tan per cent of
Publllhed Orange Coaat emount bid to bl depollted
Delly Piiot Augu11 7. 14. 21, with bid
28 HISS Bid• or offen to bl In wrlt-
w.972 lflil llld wlll 1>1 received at
the afOfMlld office et any
luijiii:Oiftil• ~~1;: ~ld:::1 SORIN r A119ult, 1986 Sally Sorin passed IC10netll M. G1rcel0tt, ' 2I02 ,IClftc C-1 Hath· awa_y August 26. •n. Ton-..-, CA IOfOI.
1985 Survived by 21~1111, Attomef tor
Io v 1 n g husband IHcvtor
Ab h P ._.,~ f . lock, ••• ra am rivate lecvtotofthelet1t1of!Nld burW to be Thurs-Oecederlt.
day, August 29. 1985 Pu1:>119hed Orange Cout
Harbor Lawn-Mt IOa1ty P1io1 AUQU•t 27 28
Olive Cemetery Septembl<3 1986 rw.799 1
Harbor Lawn-Mt
Olive Mortuary -
dlncUng
HARBOR LAWN-0
MT. OLIVE c. 0 Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory Ql 3: 1825 Gttlef Ave -· Cotta MeMI -540-555.4 '< .,,
:;, r-
~ePOTHIAI -m MLLMOAOWAY ':T
MOftTUARY ct .-4 110 Broadway
Costa Meta 111 m 842-9150 .. -· fJACIP1C VtlW WE (I)
MEMORtAL fJAAK .. 1 c.m.tery • Mortuary
Chapel • CremltOl'y = ::i J500 Paci"' v...,, Ort\19 s . Newport S.e<:h (I)
6.44-:1700
•
·-·--··--·
Sub way, Freeway, Coast-to-Coast possibles
Fall Classic could well
be~~mething special
MI NNEAPOLIS (AP)-Fall 1s on the way
and so. too. 1s tht" Fall Classic. baseball's
World Senes For the first ttmt", world may be
an appropnate word.
There's been talk about a "Subway Senes"
between New York's Yankees and Mets, a
"Freeway Scnes" matching the Los Angeles
Dodge~ and Angels, or a "Coast-to-Coast
'ienes" fcatunng clubs from East and West
There 1s anothC'r possibahty to be con-
'ildered. according to Toronto Blue Jays
outfielder Jesse Barfield
"lsn'1 1t about tame for an tntemauonal
<ienes'1" he ~·d
This 1i. Rarfield's way of throwing a scare
into ABC which owns television nghts to the
1985 "'orld ~nes Networks are 1n the
business of making money, and the biggest
paydays come when teams from major media
markets make it to the World Senes In those
terms, 1982 was a bad year for TV, because
that "Suds Series" matched the Milwaulcee
Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals.
What could be worse, especially for TV,
than a Canadian team in Amenca's national
sportmg spectacle? Barfield has the answer.
"How about two?" Barfield says. "There's
always the possibility that Montreal could
come back and win the NL East."
Montreal 1s 91h games behmd St. Louis 1n
the East. so the Expos' chances for postseason
play arc shm.
But there is a very real chance that
Toronto. leaders in tht" Amencan League
East since May 13, could advance to the AL
playoffs and1 ultimately, to the World Series.
Barfield realizes that Blue Jays supporters are
the m1nonty.
"Sure. there as a preJud1c.e with us being tn
Bears doing it right
1
BERKELEY (AP) -AcknowledJJng
that all football coaches arc op11m1 suc 1n
August Joe Kapp told the h c·IO Sky·
wn tcr, fnday the University of Cah-
fom1a will be better this fall "because we
are doing things nght."
When asked if last year's 2-9 season was
1hc m.ult of doma things wrong. Kapp
smiled and explatned, {'We're do1na
1h1np more na.ht this year "
(al certainly will have to follow that
plan 1f 1t expects to sun ve a schedule that
be&in!t next Saturday aaainst San Jo~
State and, for the ~ond ma1a.ht year.
include, all nine conference foe .
In fact, there 1s concern that an order for
Kapp to ~urv1ve the Golden Bears must
improve Kapp owns a 14-18-1 record
cntenna his founh season But, 1f he''
womcd. he isn't lctt1n1 on
"So what's new? You 'vc .JOt to win," he
said. "You'rt not 1n this ify6u don't like
preuurc."
The Be.tn hope to win more often by
~ improv1n1 their runn1na pme and their
• dtfensc apmst the run.
\al h.a.s red-1h1rted ~I of 61 freshmen
the past t~o 'ICllOns and that should stan
• # -....
to pay d1V1dends. "Little by httle. not
overnight , but player by player. we're
buildma depth," Kapp said.
"Last year we had one quarterback." he
said, rcfemna to three.year starter Gale
Gilbert. now with the Seattle Scahawks.
"Now we have two quarterbacks . that's
progress."
The two are 1una or Kevin Brown and
sophomore Bnan Bedford, netther as
strona a passer u G ilbert, but both more
mobile. With that tn mmd, Cal will mesh
an optJon packasc wtth Its trad1t1onal
pass•na pme.
Kapp ms1sts there wtll not be a tw~
quarterback system, bul 1ndJcates he will
not announ~ a starter pnof to the
season-opener "They will lalow who the
staner as. San Jose State will not." he said.
Three-year stltkr Dwl&ht Gamer and
hard.ch.,.,!\& senior Ed Barbm>-ill 1tan
an the beck.field, althou&h hi&hly rcptded
f rcsbm1n rccnut Marc H'icks should
mili a{I 1 mpact.
"Ht's someth1n1 1pec1al. so wt're not
aoma to'thro.-him to the wolves" K.apJ)
111d. "But we're 101n1 to bnna him alona.
He'll play••
ANALYSIS
Canada," says Barfield. "No one in the States
wants a Canadian team in the World Series."
Toronto has a very real chance of making
that happen. After a 8--0 romp over Minne·
sota on Tuesday, the Blue Jays led the
Yankees by five games with an 11..game
homestand opening this weekend.
"People sllll think of Toronto as an
expansion franchise that finish~d in last place
all those years," says Al Oliver, acquired by
Toronto on July 9 from the Dod'ers for left·
handed punch at desipatcd hitter. "This
team d1dn't even act a taste ofwmning until
( 1983) and has been ignored by television."
Oliver has played on some big winners -
the 197 l World Champion Pittsbur&h
Pirates, for instance -and ltkes the look of
his new team.
I
"They're confident," he says. "The Pirate
teams had more outgoina people. We'd never
boast, because we didn't have to. But if
someone asked us what k.ind of team we had,
we'd be honest. So will this team here."
"This is the best team we've had since I've
been here," says pitcher Dave Stieb, the
club's lone star to its lean years. "We're sohd
eve~here."
St1eb, a five-time All-Star, is the best and
best-known player in Toronto history. He
says bis teammates are just now bcginruna to
share the limcli&ht.
"lfxou do welt, you'll get recognition," he
says. 'I've done pretty well and l've sotten recosnited ...
"Aw, rm tired of everyone uyina we're
anonymous," Jays Manqcr Bobby Cox say1
"Unul you get into a World Series, that's the
way it's goina to be."
After all who had heard of Kurt Be-vacqua
until San Dieao played in the 1984 Series?
Rebuilding at Stanford
ST ANFORO (AP) -Stanford Coach
Jack Elway doesn't want JO call this a
rcbuildina year, even thouan 1t is in three
mam areas. 1
"We have seven scn1otll on the team
but only two or three WJI) contribute,•1
Elway told the v111tinf Pacifi c-10 football
SkywritersSaturdaf. •We have SO players
with four years eha,ibility lef\. We're a
younateam."
"But I'm not soma to put any limits on
this football team. I wcttt home the other
nta,ht and my wife said, 'They're not
-younJ. you're just Jeltirta older.• No war,
am I &oma to say this 11 a rebuUd1na year. •
Elway welcomes back bis four lcadina
rushers from last year and aooomplished
quarterback John Paye from a team that
went S-6 in tu1 first season on the fann.
But onl)'. one lntenor offeoSJve lineman, taCklc John Batns,'"turns. Also
aone l1 the entire defensive front three and
two top mcrves, two of the four at.anina
Uneblcktn and three defensive bacb
who started the first pme lut season.
Fonunakly for the C~nal, most of
the more powerf'ul Plc-10 OP.P.Onenu
don't appear on the schedule unul the fifth .
game of tbe season when Stanford plays
host to UCLA. By that time. Stanford
mia.bt have a chance to jell.
For once, a runnina back is the teadina
man at a school that has featured top
quanerbacks goina back to Frankie Alben
4S years aao.
Fullback Brad Muster led Stanford last
season as a freshman in both rulhina and
receivina despite not playina much until
the fifth pme, when in.Juries to others
cleared his peth. Muster capped a Roe c!.enr
by ruabina for 204 yards aaain1t •
fomia in the final prqe oftbe aeuon. "If the pmc is over " Elway laid. "And
Muster hasn't Carried the bill 20 tlmet
and had it thrown to him 10 times I'm
aoina to bodoinaa lot of second~"
Elway said either Kevin Scott or
Thomas Henley. the 19~ 1CCOnd and
tbird a..dt• 5ianford nathen neoectS\ie-~y1 wUI line up at tailblck afoapide
M\ll1Cf. Both alto can catch. Muater MU
be becked up hY. powctful Brian Morrll and a promiJma M&rshall Dtllard.
HIViq lhae q~lity rwtMn for aup. c.i,;1!!.:!.'°" P&ye to do M>metbiq
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 28, 1985
'
.
~ ke-t-h e-J-a hor o-u of~
Simple, do-ahead recipes, method of-
barbecuing reduces preparation tlme
Tbe aroma of turkey barbccw l\f and colorful v~ble salads come
together for an alHime Labor Day p1cnicexperien~.
Barbecuing America's ~alive bird, the turkey, in a covered charcoal
&rill reduces outdoor cookiJ\g time because heat is reflected offtbe lid onto
the food. And deep.basted turkeys eliminate the neoessity for frcQuent
band basting. A broad-breasted, d~ba•ted turkey weighina up to 14
pounds fiu comfortably under the grill lid.
County Fare Barbecue Glaze bas a tangy flavor that's equally delicious
brushed on the bird for a wrap.aroul)d flavor, or simply spooned on each
succulent slice. This easy-to.make glaze can be prepared up to two weeks
ahead. Make plenty and keep it on hand for grilled hamburgers and ribs,
too.
For a very special flavor underneath the glaze, add mesquite barbecue
chunks to the charcoal. Soak the chunks three to four hours before adding
to hot coals.
Six to eight mesqq1teprc-soak.edchunks, three to four added to each
side of the hot charcoal, will be enough to add a distinctive and smoky taste
to the turkey.
A favorite homemade salad dressing comes to the table in a new role
as th~ creamy dressing for our Bountiful Potato Salad. The unique blend of
hearty spices in the dressing mix creates an especially delicious dish. Fix it
a day ahead: the flavor in this vegetable-laden potato salad improves as it
waits in the refrig~rator. 1
Olive-Nut Spread wilt appease those impatient appetites, whetted by
the delectable coo)tingaromas .. You can whip up a batch of th is crunchy
sp,.cad for a versatile sandwich filling, or use it as we show here-with
cruditcs (cut up vegetables) and a variety of crackers for dipping..
TO BARBECUE TURKEY:
•Wrapthe turkey wing tips and legends with foil.
•Place turkey on top grill above drip pan.
•Place cover on kettle.
•To maintain heat, add six to eight bnquets to each side every hour of
cooking. ·
•Add charcoal through openings by gnll handles.
•Check fordoneness after I 'I• hours fora 10-pound turkey; internal
temperature of thigh should be 180 to 185 degrees.
COUNTRVFAREBARBECUEGLAZE
"" cap Ugbt brown au gar, firmly packed
14 cap augar
! tableapooaa prepared mutaid
1 "" teaapoona chill powder
"" teaapooa aalt
"" teaspoon garlic powder
"" teaspoon onlon powder
I cup cataup '
14 cap cider vinegar
! tabletpoona Worceaterablre aaace
1 tablespoon UqaJd amoke flavoring
14 cap batter
! teaapoou coruatarch
Combine alt ingredients, except cornstarch. with 11? cup of water 1n a
one~uart saucepan. Mix well Heat to boiling, reduce heat and simmer 30
minutes. Combine 2 tablespoons water Wllh cornstarch and stir into
sauce.
Cook and stir over medium heat to thicken slightly. Set aside until
ready to use. Sauce may be refngerated, covered, for two weeks. Makes
about 21h cups.
BOUNTIFULPOTATOSALAD
~ medlam potatoes
S1Uce1bacon
SM cup chopped celery
~cup carrots, flnely chopped or coarsely grated
"" cap chopped onlon 14 cap chopped parsley
'
3 laanl-cooked ea•. cJtopped l"" ca ps (1-oancecu) pitted ripe olives, drained
3 tablespoon• plm.Jento
YI to 1 teaapooa aa.lt
'iii teaspoon pepper
i table1pooa1 rice vinegar or distilled wbJte vlneaar
111• caps prepared ranch drnala1
Cook potatoes until tender. Ora.an, cool. peel and cut into cubes. Cook
bacon until crisp; drain on paper towel. Crumble bacon and set aside 2
tablespoons for garnish. Reserve 2 tablespoons bacon fat. R eserve 12 npc
olives. Add crumbled bacon, vegetables, eggs, olives, 2 tablespoons
p1m1ento, salt and pepper to potatoes.
Add vinegar to reserved bacon fat, beat to boiling and pour over
salad. mix well. Add salad dressing and mix gently to coat potatoes. Chill
one to two hours. Garnish with reserved bacon, pimiento, chopped
parsley and reserved npe olives. Makes 6-8 servings.
MICROWAVE DIRECTIONS: Peel and cube potatoes. Arrange in
circle in 9-inch glass pie plate and cover with plastic. vented at one corner.
Microwave on high for8-10 minutes. Uncover and cool to room
temperature. Arrange bacon on microwave-safe bacon/meat rack. Cover
Wlth paper towel. Microwave on high for 5-6 minutes or until en spy
cooked. Proceed as above in combtmna ingredients.
RIPE OUVE-NUTSPREAD
3 cvps whole pl tiff ripe olives
1 cap wal.Dat pJecea, Uptly loalted
14 cap mayoualae
"" teaspoon or more mlnced lff'd dayme or tal'TagOll. or ,,. &eupooa
dried leaf ~yme or tarragon (optional)
Freallly groud black pepper
Fioelycbopolivcsand nuts by band with a knife or 10 a food
processor. Mix olive nut mixture with mayonnaise Season to taste with
thyme or tarragon, if desired, and pepper Can be made ahead and
refrigerated.
FRUITED COLESLAW
~ bead green cabbace, IJu'edded
I cap akredded red cabbage
I cap touted walData, coarsely chopped
i red apples, 1Uced
1 "" caps prepared ranch dtttalng
Combine prepared cabbage. walnuts and apples Add "31ad dressing
and toss.
Business moves
8.t a Snail's pace
at escargot firm
PETALUMA (AP)-To sa) busmcss 1sslow at Enfant Rtant Escargot
of Cahfomia 1s putting 1t mildly It trul)r mo ves at a snail's pace
Amenca's only commercial escargot compan) 1s on the move. and
owners Mike Beynes and Tracv Brash hope more palates will grov.
sophisticated enough to appreciate their product
Two million sruuls slither through two greenhouses in Petaluma eve!')
year en route to restaurants and gourmet food stores m i6 states The sna1l~
are'J>lcked tn water in 7112-ouncc cans retailing for S6-S7. 1ncludtng a m101-
cookbook.
While Bcynes and Brash arc senous about their ~-year-old busmess.
they're not above joking. Beyries ms1sts has little mollusks have great
mtelugencc and arc tramable
Holdmg one tn the palm of his hand. he orders it to "Stay' it' Pia-.
Dead!" The little cntter compiles.
"You have got to have a sense of humor to ~ m the snail business,"
Bcyncs said. Hts background as a professional stand-up comic on the club
circwt tn Los A"gelcs has definitely come m handy .
Bcynes, however. was teaching at Cal State San Francisco when Brash
sugcstcd startinganescargotcompan) Brash had bttn 11;angto do a stof)
on a Santa Rosa man r&Jsing snails commercially. but fo und he had movt-d
to Texas, leavillJ behind a book on nus1~ snails.
"It started JUSt as a lark," Bcyncs sa1d "TraC) 1s an epicurean and
gourmet who has traveled throughout Europe ··
Try a els11Hn1 platter of Chicken F~tu with Mole Sauce and ltwtll MOD become a popalar reqaeet. ~
Brash soon was raising snail\ at his Tiburon ho me Enter Be\nes hi\
boyhood chum.
"We sat down and starte-d to talk about 1t one n1&h t and ""ere ~till
tallung when the sun came up the next moman&," &)nes said Ole! Mexican ~ajitas f abu~ous Lots of research foll owed including a check o f governmental
regulauo ns.
"They coJldn't dcc1dt' 1f -wt" were a farm or 1 ranch," Bc)nes said
"Our insuran~ company ltsts U!> as a f ~ lot ·
Variations abound
for platters of
steamymeatstrtps ·
Mexican F~itas arc the latest
food fad sweeping the country. The
popular platters ·of pilled mea~
served up 1iulin4 and steamy at the
table make an impressive Labor
Day meal.
Aocordina to Anne Lindsay
~r. author of"Creatjve Mexican
Cook.ins." f_,itas are made with a
beef cut tmownu skjrtsteak. 0 8ecf,
however, .. adds Greer," is not the
only choice. The ovCTWhc:lm1na
p0pularitr of the stz:zhna platter
presentation has encouf"l.lcd many
variation , such as pork, shnmp or
chicken ...
For a light barbecue dash, Greer
suaaests O\icken Fajitas with Mole
Sauce. "The mole sauce is often
thought to be the forerunner of
barbecue sauce," says Greer. "Ac-
tually, mole can refer to any
blended sauce using a combination
of chilies.
"Traditional mole has chocolate
added, which impans a wine-like
flavor, makina it a perfect s-nner
for chicken. Its liahtly spiced taste
complements the avocado, peppen
and onions in the faiitas dish.••
Greer recommend rnakina the
mote sauce the day bcf orc ror a
labor-free Labor Day and roundina
out the meal with a calonc-con-
tervauve side dish-of Ct111i Beans
(only 387 per 15 ounce can) that
may be topped Wlth salsa and aratcd
cheese.
CHICKEN FAJITAS
WJTB\MOLE SAUCE
8 cltlckea breaata, spUt, boned
110-oaace cu uckllacla sauce
'.4 cap freala Ume jlllce
I tabln.,.a eacla IHltter ud on
1 yellow o.101I. peeled ud 1llced
.. 1tripl
t IJ'ffD tten peppen. 1llced ta
stripe
Salt u4I pepper
11 flow tortillas, perferabl)
ta.memade
I avocados. peele4. pttte4 ud
1llced
t recipe Mole S.•ce ( recl,e
follows)
V •I cab or suflower oil
In a gla dish marinate the
chtckcn in the enchilada sauce and
hmc juice for 30 mmutes. tum1na
once. Meanwhile, prepare a The company buys snails 0.) the ton from farmt-rs happy to unload th<"
charcoal anU, allowing the coals to pe ts attaclu~ thctr plants
d h. h h After delivery to Petaluma. the snails are I~ a mixture of SO) meal. bum own to 1 w ite ot as · bran flakesand trace rt11nerals. ~veral weeks later the) 've bttn fattened to Saute the onion and pepper stnps • fi h da 1 h d in hot butter and oil for about 5 to 6 catini size and arc tCd only .,.,...ater or t rtt \.S to c ean~ t c tae-stJvo
S)'Stem.
minute or until liahtly browned. While Bcynes and Brash normal!\ wor~ with only one other
Set aside and keep warm. · employee, they hire many as 30 part-ttmr workc~ for coo~ans v.-ttk o nce
Remove the chicken from the a month, during whu:h the snail,~ parboiled p1ckC'd out of their shell'
marinade and re erve the and cooked under ht&h prt'SSurc -
marinade for the Mole Sauce. While some 1mponed cscaraot come with Oavonng. &ync~ ~id mo~
Prepare accordtna to dirt'Ctlon che~ prefer the pure vtnion ~ the) don't have to work to ovt-rcomr
Laabtly salt and pc~r the chicken another navor.
and bru b with oil:"Grill OVtt hot .. The texture is perfect." he w<l nottn3 his c~raot are not ruhhcl"\
. and chewy hke thelr larser. imponed cousin~
coals about 3 to 4 .m1nut~ per de. Stan-up co lilWOl'Cll1a&O camecomptet~)< out of pocket for ttttwo
Remove aod cut mto std~ men.
Heat a well-seasoned anddle on "We think of oul'S(lve hkt-a small wtnery, v.c hkt> to keep control:·
hiah heat. Have tortillas wanned Bcyne said.
and both Mole Sauce and avocados In fact. he hkcn' the c~araot 1n<lu~try to the wine indu,try of tht
ready. Mound the ch1cken stnps I 94()s
and onions and pel>Ptts on the hot "At that t1mt. people thouaht onl)' foreigner\. w1n and c ·
t1'0rd•nanty n ch proplt> drank wine Now pcoplt think of escaraot a o nl>
Pl-... .. P'AJtTAS/C4) appet17en you ordtr 1n f'C"ttaurant \\-c hopt-that wtll chanRC. loo.",
-----~"" -
\
..
-
BEEF SALAD'S
PERFECT· FARE
RORA PICNIC
Everyone lovesa picnic, especially on a holiday. Wben the weather's
-ufiffir,iny J1relty spot wilfao-tolifialy ovenookina a sparkUnf
stream, a arassy meadow or a sandy beach.
Ute a pretty, inexpensive basket and bri&hllycolored plasucor paper
platesand cutlery. To keep food f~h for hours, fill an ice chest with ice
water forabout 30 minutes. Empty, and then carefully pack with ice and
=n~emembertotakealonaanextrapaperbaatoeasilydisposcof
Picnic fare should be simple and tasty. Most important is the lunch
itself. Lemon and Honey Beef Salad is a perfect take-along main course. It
is bri&ht and colorful and has a frab, li&ht flavor.
Since it's filled with beef, rice, peppers and green onions, It is a meal in
itself. The dressing is a tasty mixtureoflemonjuiceand honey spiced with
garlic and red pepper flakes.
LEMON AND BONEY
BEEFSAL,U> a INad beef Op roa1t or 1trlola ttp roa1t
~ C9p freU lemOD Jaiee
I &ablnpoou'lloney
'ca.ves 1ar1te, ffaely clopped • ·
'4 lalpooD salt
~ teupooa red pepper flakes
'4 np vecetable oil
.. C9f1 coMed rtce
l mMlmn red bell peppen, cat lDto tll1n 1trlps
1 np •Uced IJ'eell omo.
•
Place roast. fat side up, in open shallow roasting pan. Do not add
water. Do not cover. Insert meat thermometer so bulb is centered in the
thickest part of the roast Roast in 325 degree oven. The meat
thermometer will register 140 dqrees for rare; I 60 degrees for medium
and l 70dep'ees forwcll-done.
· Allow 26 to 32 minutes per pound for rare, 34 to 48 minutes for
medium,and'40to42minutesforwclldone.Roastsusuallycontinueto
cook after removal from the oven.
Remove roast when the thermometer rqisten S degrees below the
temperature of desired doncness. Allow roast to .. rest" in a warm place IS
¥ocktails tasty
and alcohol free
to20minutesbeforecarving. Summertime brings party time
Slice roast across the srain into thin slices; then cut each slice into I 'Ii and sometimes party time can
inch pieces. In bowl, mix next S inaredients. Toss ~f slices in lemon mean over-indulgence in alcoholic
mix tu~ until well coated; cover and refriacrate Vi hour. beverages. This year, give your
Stiroilintorice. Stir in beef and tcmaininaingredients; cover and guests a choice, and serve
Until now, club soda with a twist,
a Virgin Mary or a soft drink were
the only alternatives to cocktails
and high-caloried specialty drinks.
~fiiaerate at least 2 houn. no lonaer than 24 houn. Serves 12. mocktails, delicious nonalcoholic ======::=========;;.._------------------------------. beverage alternatives that la$te just
Mockt.ails now offer everything
from Chocolate Amaretto Creme to
Tropical Not-A-Colada -each
without alcohol and each with a
fraction of the calories.
. . .. . . . -. ,.
--------------------
..... -...... ~ ..
·fl'·-···-~!.,\.~-..... anoanneaaes es at
• 4penc1ls
for the Qrtce
o/3
•Makes wood
pencils
obsolete
• Never needs
sharpen mg
....
like their traditional counterparts.
Equal mocktails arc the perfect
choice for people who are cutting
down on alcohol for health and
fitness reasons, or who don't want
themselves or friends to drink and
drive. They ca'n be served anyume
-from a cocktail party to a late
night' treat.
Moclctails arc made with Equal
low-calorie sweetener, made with
aspartame not saccharin, so these
recipes have a clean sugar-like taste
with no bitter aftertaste.
Easy preparation instructions for
(Pleue eee DIWIKS/CS)
D'Rf:cao~s ·
BRANO
mozza re la ricotta
IRRESISTIBLE
BEST SELLER
Twelve months of unique and interesting recipes for
RICOTTA, MOZZARELLA, SHREDDED AND STRING
CHEESE. The Precious Kitchen Companion gives easy
and inexpensive deijghts for your menu planning. It 's free.
Simply mail the coupon below (enclose 50¢ for shipping and
handling, cash, check or money order) to : California Cheese Co.,
9816 Arlee Ave., Santa Fe Springs, CA 90670
... '
,
... ..
-. .. ~ .......
Fish lezi#hens lifeline
Eating seafood
can lower the risk
of heart diseasf
l "'"* peppen, red pd are-. •at lostructiona. drain and toss e11t lD Jllleue 1tript with two tablespoon1 olive oil.
I mMAtm 1Kdlal, ~J •Uced Saute oniona, peppcn aAd zucchini
• tarae tomatoes, e11t ta wedan in remainina oil unuJ cris~tender.
lL f .. ba 0 ) Add tomatoes, basil and red pe~ 711 cap res. 1 (or more ' per, if desired, and toss and heat
, daopped quickly.
Eatina fish at least once or twice a "" teaspooa red pepper flake• A.mnae bot linauini on heated
week may sianiftcantly reduce the (opdouJ) platter, top with veactables and
risk of coronary hcan di~ and ted Parmesu claeeae J_op--ood, broken-into bi.to-aizo Ghunb.
heart attack, tho lcadina cause of doul) Tou tose&her ancilserve immcdi-
death in the U.S. today. Do not thaw frozen fish. Brush ately with &rated Parmesan.
Two eep&rate studies> published fish liabtly with margarine or oil; •For fresh cod (often called
recicntly by the New En&}and bake at 450 dearees in non-stick or scrod) fillet.a. lay fillet Oat and
Journal of Medicine, provide the li&btly greased shallow pan io measure at thackat pan. Bake at
fint convincina evidence of a link center of oven for 20 minutes.• 450deareet for tO minutes per inch
be...-een eatina saltwater fish and a Cook linauini according to pack· of thickness. t
lower incidence of coronary heart _.::_.:..:.:..:::.::===-=:.::..=:..:..:=~:.:....:===-------4-t ---=======~~~~~~~~====~~~========~~~~~~!!:::::=::
disease.
One study, conducted by re-
searcben at the Uniyersity of
Leiden, in the Netherlands, fol-
lowed 850 middle-aged men for 20
yean. Those who ate an average 7
ounces of fish per week experienced
hal(lbe rate of heart disease as merr
who ate linle or no fish. Researchers
also found the more fish eaten, the
-less likely was heart disease.
The other, at the Univenity of
Oregon, presents evidence that fish
oil may be the component respon-
sible for lower heart disease, redu~
ina levels of certain fats,
triglycerides and cholesterols that
seem to increase the risk of heart
disease.
The good news comes at a time
when affordable, delicately
flavored cod (often marketed as
scrod), from the icy waters of the
Nonh Atlantic, is in excellent
supply -both fresh and frozen -
everywbeTC in the country. Cod,
like all fish, is an easily prepared
convenience food.
coos1CILIAN0
1 1-poand pacu1e fro1ea cod
fWet1
1 poand llDplDJ
4 tablH pooDI olive oil
1 lar&e 1weet oaloa, taibaly allced
DRINKS •••
l"romC2
29 luscious and creative dnnks a.re
included in the Equal Mocktails
recipe booklet All ingredients used
arc commonly available in grocery
stores.
To give your mock:tails flair and
eye appeal, serve in fancy glassware
with creative garnishes. tor exam-
ple:
•Serve mocktails m cold, frosted
glassware. Simply dip glass in water
and chill in frcczcr 1 S minutes or
until frosty.
•For a sweet touch, rub rim of
glass with lime iuice, invert glass
and dip into artlficial sweetener.
•Garnish drinks with fresh fruit
such as a pineapple ring sprinkled
with artificial sweetener, straw-
berry slices or orange or lime slices
or curls.
•For a umque look, use fresh
flowers as a garnish.
To obtain a copy of the Moclctails
recipe booklet, send S 1 (to cover
postage and handlinf.) to P.O. Box
5925, Libertyville, II . 60198.
Herc arc some recipes from the
booklet: ·
PEACH GINGER F ROTH
Ya cap 1klm milk
14 cap peeled, pitted and sliced
frettl peaclles
.,. teaspooa almond extract
.,. teatpooa pager powder
1 to ! packet• Equl
i to 3 Ice cllbe1
Combine all in~cnt.s in
blender. Blend on hi for 30
seconds or until light d frothy.
Pour into tall, thin glass and serve.
Makes 8-ounce serving. Serves l .
Serve in cold, frosted &lass: dip
&Jass in water and chill in rreezer ~ s
minutes or until frosty.
Calories per serving; I 03 Dia-
betic exchanac: 'h nonfat milk, 'h
fruit
GRAPEFRUIT APPLE ZINGER
14 cup 11111weeteaed arapefralt
Jalce
14 cap u1weeteaed apple Jalce
1 to i dasllet bitten
1 io I packet•~
14 cap clab 1oda
Stir together grapefruit juic.e,
apple juice, bitten and equal in a
tall &Jus. Add club soda and
enou&b ice to fill glus. Stir and
~e. Makes S-ounce serv\na.
freeze grapefruit or apple j~oe i_n
an ice cube tray and serve with this
drink. Serves I.
Freeze arapefruit or apple juice
in an ice cube tray and serve with
this drink.
Calories per serving; S l Diabetic
exchange: 1 fruit.
ICED CAPPUCCINO
1 tea1pooa1 la1taat espretto
ceff" c••er ~ Cllp, u1a1 water
lcluam••dck ~ cep atlm m.llk
1 to 1 ,PAck•t• ~
Comb10e first 3 inaredienta in
mua. Let atand S minutea. Remove
cinnamon flick.. Stir in mUk and
Equal. Add coouab ice to fill ~ua
and serve. Makel 8-ounce aemna.
Serves 1. ffi Look for instant espresso co ee
powder in the coffee aisle of your
~ store. Or. use reau1ar or
dcc:afftinated instant coffee and
double tbe coffee measures above.
Calories per aervina: Sl Diabetic
ucbanp: 'h nonfat milk.
t:'
Fresh
Fryer Breast . J41chelob
l.JghtBeer
OoalG
los.bag
Ralphs SJ»dal 99 Low Price •
BJ-C3Pack
FruJf Dr1nb
Fresh Salad
Tomatoes
Vln.IJJ*Md
You Pay
Only
ThU WM.t'I F9'GfW9
Dillllerplate Zacrt T~ ao-w/atbf
SaT• i:~l.29 p 5:2:49 .39r =='6~
ODI1 • 7r'.
Special Values
--~#0.00............. . ---~°' ..... --................... p $ -·-
Special Values Special Values
,.,....,,, .
Lemonade
""'41tNfJ001' Ille .ft
Omnge.1u1ce
·~ .49
-.: 129
Qi(;imbea ... .15 maw JleloZJS -: .39
iro'Mi O.D.f ons ~ .15
001wm1s .,,.139
Prtc•• effective Aueust 21 thru September 4. 1985
Special Values
lSSoned.Donuts ~ 159
"""~ 2 nu.tey Breast • • -r: . 99
lQ!edC£9dam-.!r. 159
SChaeieilBer ~ 2. 98
..... m ... V~
Almaden Wt.Des ... .: 2. 98
~'90alM 98 xnm1te Spumante 3.
)
QI Or-..C..CWlY PILOT~.Augult28, 1'85 ...
\
Campaign proves Zinfandel 's alive and welJ
ioce ~ oolu.m.n anno~ced me
formation of the "Zinfandtl Come-
back Comm1ttee" a few month
back. America's own~ wine anpe
bas been receivina some very
favorable publicity.
Modesty prevents our t.akma
complete credit for all the nioc thiOP. bapperuna to Zinfandel, but
we like to think that perhaps the fhO:S old ZCC iot some other folks Jrina "Zinfandcl.
You may recall that lhe ZCC was
formed in response to a story in a
New Yorlc newspaper SUifCStina that Zin wu dead, a suuest1on we
refused to concede.
Amona the good things happen-
JERRY
Mw
ita to Zintan®I Qflate was an cnure
issue of the Wine lnstitute's news·
letter, California Grapevine beina
devoted to the noble variety, for.
lowed by the production of "Zin
Fan" buttons to be worn by all who
love the grape and the wine It
makes
You too can have a button by
scndina S 1 to: Wine Button, 16~
Post St., San Franci~ 94123.
Further, an entire section of a
recent issue of The Wine Spec\ator
was also devoted to Zin, and a very
positive section it was.
The folks at Sutter Home Winery
report a virtual run on their always
~rutar .. Life is Hell Without
· ~ftndcl" I-shins ud .aprons,
which may be ordered for the
bargain price ofSlO each (includes
tax, post.age and handling) by
writina to: Sutter Home Offer, 277
St. Helena HiahwaY. South; St.
Helena 94S74. "Specify size when
ordering.
W.l.N.0 . IS oil offenni "Ztn
Lives" bumper stickers for $2 each,
by wntina to: Zm Lives, P.O. Box
7244, San Francisco 94120. Quanti-
ty discounts arc available for fleet
os,>erators or those with lots of Zm
fnends.
And the "Giant Mead On Wine
Zinfandel Giveaway" continues.
Already dispersed 1s a mixed case of
Zm from my private cellar, and
now I can start Jiving away Zms
"onated by a vanety of producers.
Once you've entered you're quali-
fied for the duration of the give-
away, which concludes on Jan. I ,
1986 with the awarding of an enttre
barrel of 1985 Bandiera Zinfandel.
Rules tor entry arc s1mfle. Buy
any bottle of red Z1nfande (whites
and roses don•t count), soak off the
label, write your name and addtt s
on the back and mail to me at:
Mead's Zin Lovers, P.O. Box
880281, San Francisco 94188.
ReaHzrng that some modem
aJues att nearly 1mpQssiblc to
unsttck and that some labels come
off in little bitty pieces; ifat all, you
may substitute a postcard bearing
the words "Red Zinfandel," so Ions
as you swear an oath that you
actually bought the wine. The curse
on cheaters is to have every bottle 1 n
your cellar tum into California
Cooler.
Marquez Burrito~ Minutemaid
• Red 8"f I Bean
• GrHn 8"f I Been
• 8"flBHn
•Been• I Ctt..M
• BMf I Potato
•Chill Dog
1toz..•
French Breed
Plzu
•ChMH
s.u .. ge
..
Weiglit Watcfiers
•Au Gratln
Flah Fllleta 9.2 OZ.
•Oven Fried
Fl•h 6. 75 oz.
• Sole In Lemon
Sauce 9.25 OZ.
EA.
19
eoz •gg
~
Sunny Delight
• Fruit Punch ·
• F1orlda
Citrus Punch
Orange Juice
•Regular
• Country Style 49
12 oz.
10 oz. 1.49
B.ig Sticks
59
12 PACK
8PACK 119
,,,, ..
Banquet Dinner~\
• 11 oz. CNctt.n •.11 oz. 1\tf'Uy
• l1 OZ. Webuty llelll • 1:1 OZ. hlllft • 12 oz. Medceft COIMo • 12 oz. .... lcaft ' • u oz. ..., lnctlllMa • n oz. w-.m
~.99
" •'·•···.~~-,...
To demon1trate that this is
serious ajveoway. 1•11 announcc the
two late t winnen. A cue o
Stevenot 1983 Amador Zinfindel
goes to Or. Jame Reavis of St
Helena, with a vertical tasting (two
bottles of each wine) of Olymus
Zinfandels from 19191 1980 and
1981 aoina to Mr. ano Mrs. Paul
Donovan of Santa Cruz.
"Fil& Donovan's entry ~0-on a-
l~bel from Joseph Swan 1974, while
Reavis qualified by drink.in& a 1981
Shown & Sons. Reavis addcd=no
about havin once met
Ginestet of 3ie famous Borciea
wme family who said that Zin-
fandel was his drink when visiuna
California.
Yet to be given away are Z\n-
fandels from Pedroncelli, Round
Hill, Rutherford Ranch, Fa.rview
Farm, HMR, Cranbrook, Land-
mark, Louis Martini, Mirassou and
more.
One of the great things about
having started this whole thing,
admittedly on a lark, is the love
leners I've been receiving. Alu!
They're all for Zinfandel, not for
me.
Eddie Nathan of Las Vegas
complains that "I would buy more,
but rarely find it on the retailers'
shelves." All retailers ta.kc note.
People want Zinfandel.
A cryptic postscript from Mi.Ice
Mathews in the Los Angeles area
accuses "yuppies" of "blockinJ the
ajsles at the wine shop and drivina
up white wine prices." Earlier he
voiced his appreciation of the
"reminder that 1 can get good Zin a1
a bargain price."
The mayor of Calistoga (Napa
Valley) sent along a picture of his
vanity license plate "ZNFNDEL."
and noted that the rumor that
Burgess Cellars will stop making
Zin 1s untrue. "Tom Burgess says
that he will always make Zin." says
Mayor John Conger.
Anthony F. (can't read the last
name) as nostalgic about Zinfandel,
recalling his father and uncle buy-
ingZinfandel by the truck load at SI
per box, some 50 years ago, for
home wmemaking.
Orville Magoon, propnetor of
Guenoc Winery in Lake County,
feels patnotic about the grape and
asks the question. "What can be
more American than baseball, hot
dogs, apple pie and Zmfandel."
Absolutely nothinJ. Orville.
Douglas Chadwick wrote that his
favorite Zin was homemade by
friend John Soracco. an Italian
gentleman who died recently.
Soracco and his family had been
making Zin since at least 1906.
John was 90 when he died. Would ll
help Zin to start a rumor that the
stuff contributes to longevity?
Perhaps my favorite Zin letter
came from an Alsatian wmema.ker
named Klee Francis. who entered
all the way from France, though I
almost hope he docsn 't win because
delivery could be a real problem.
Francis said, among other things,
"I find four Zinfandel promotion
genial. worked four months m
Napa VaJley and Z1nfandel is my
favonte red wine. Don't worry, I
make big promotion about this
wine here tn France." Who can
ar,gue with a Frenchman about
wme?
FAJITAS ...
From Cl
piddle. At the table, squeeze hme
JUICC over the gnddle, which
creates the sizzle. Advise your
guests to use the tortillas to roll up
tidbits of chicken, avocado, pep-
pers, onions and sauce.
MOLE SAUCE
1 clove 1arUc, minced
1 tablespoon batter
1 tablespoon veaetable oU
1 tabletpoon cocoa
t tableapoont toasted 1esame
1eed1
t tablespoon• seedlea1 wblte
rabln1
1 U"' oa.nce cu l&allu 1tyle~
tomatoe1, lDclad.lDa all jaJces
110 ouce cu uclao cllill aaace
Reaerved marinade from
chicken, ualaa enclallada saace
and lime juJce
.,_ teaapooa aroud cluamon
"' teupooa leaf orep.ao
1 14"' ouce cu clllckea brotb
1 tablespoon fruit mtaced cllaa·
tro
Freab aroand black pepper
Sautc the p.rlic in butter and oil
until softened, then add sesame
seeds, raisins and tomatoes. Cook
for S minutes, then transfer to a
t>lender and blend smoot,h.
Return the mixture to a lar&e
saucepan and add all the remain.in&
ingredlents except the cilantro .
Cook for l S minutes to blend
flavors, then add cilantro and black
pepper to taste.
1-4\ttel•
1000
\ \\• d• ....
1 ••*" ~an\' l ••'"I" .... 4 ......
~~. "" ... l No matter what
you re doing. your
hometown
new a paper
The Dally Piil ms 1n
Fresh apricots
add piquancy
tomanydJshBS
By TOM HOOE .-....... , .........
The season for one of my favorite
fruits, the golden-yellow apricot, is
coming to a close.
This nutrition-filled fru it was
reportedly first discovered in China
more than 4,000 years ago and still
grows wild in the mountains there.
The famed "golden apples" of
Greek mythology are believed to
have been apricots. Italy began
growing the fruit as far back as
about 100 B.C., but it did not reach
England until the latter part of the
16th century.
The Spaniards brought the
apricot to the New World, and
seedlings were planted in California
at the Spanish missions m the 18th
century.
Today, California is one of the
world's major produci ng areas. It
grows 97 pe rcent of U.S. apricots.
About 26 percent of this crop is used
for drying and it is estimated that
dned apricots will run about one-
third of total U.S. production in the
near future.
Apricots rank above other de-
ciduous fruits in basic nutrition,
with a good concentration of Vit-
amin A.
Apricots are available to the
consumer fresh, dried and canned.
The season fo r the fresh fruit is
fairly brief, but the other two forms
are available all year.
. The versatility of the apricot is
remark.able. Not only is it suitable
for a wide range of dishes, but it is
also widely used in specialty items,
such as apricot wine, brandy, baby
food and jam.
Apricots go well in beef stew, a.s in
the following recipe.
BEEF STEW WITH APRICOTS
! tabletpooDI uJad Oil
I poud1 1tew1D1 beef, cat ln
I '4 -btc~ c~ukt
! medJ1m onloa1, qaarterecl
1 tea1pooault
I wbole aJl-1plce bits
I bay leaf
'4 tea1pooa pepper
I beef boatlloa cabe
Water, u aeede4-
S carrott, cat ID jalleue 1trip1
I pond llCf..mt, 1Uced ~
I cap drted ~prlcott
'4 tea1pooa .... ,
I tabletpooa OOlr
In large saucepan, heat oil, add
beef and brown well all over. Add
onions, seasonings, bouillon cube
and 2111 cups water. Brina to a boil.
Reduce heat, cover and simmer I
hour, or until meat is tender. Add
carrots to beef a.nd cook S minutes.
Add zucchini, apricots and sugar.
Cook 10 more minutes or until
vegetables are tender. Remove bay
leaf and discard. Blend flour and 1/•
cup water until smooth. Stir slowly
into stew liquid. Cook, stirring·
constantly, until sauce thickens
and boils I minute. Add salt and
pepper to taste.
Tuna, chicken
layered in salad
TUNACHI~N
8 c~ckea Wpa (abo1t !
poud1)
~ cap clear fat.free ~ckea
bro di
'4 e91 mayoua.lse
1 tabletpooe lemoa jalce '
a~ .... ce cu tua, dralaecl
t-ouce cu Oat UICMvtet,
dralffd
Ca,en
Lettwce, cMrry tomatoes aad
1Uced Cle9mben
Steam thi&bs; skin and bone; cut
each into 3 tCngthwise pieces; cover
and chill. In an electric blender
whirl toaether until blended broth,
mayonnaise, lemon juice, tuna, 3
anchovies and I tablespoon capen.
(Makes about l 'h cups.)
AIT'lnp~ small pieces of thiah•
over bottom of a wide, &hallow
servina dish; cover with half the
tuna mixture; layer with remainina
cb.icken and rcmainina tuna mi1-
1urc; cover and cbJn.
At servina time prnisb odtel
with lettuce1 toma!ocl a!ld
cucumben ano center With remain·
lna anchovies and some capcra.
Makes • to 6 *Mop.
..
• { 5
Bean dips nuttitious, flavorful
........
Turkey
Armour Butter Basted. Frozen.
Greet For A Labor Day Picnic.
.. $169
On next week's trip lO the
supennarlrct, reach fon few cans of
red kidney beans or chick peas.
Watb them you can crea_te aome
tas•y dips that are as nutritious u
they are flavorful
Beans are h1g.b m protein as well
as phosphorous -for healthy
bones antftcc:th -and potassium.
Both of the dunks fea tured here can
be whipped up m a hurry for la t-
minute auests -using a food
processor, electric blender or old-
fashioocd potato masher.
The Dallas Dip is made by
pureei na a can of red kidney beans
with some of its liquid, sour cream.
Boileless
Ham-
Smok·A·Aoma Ham.
F~ Coof<ed. ~ Or Whcle.
59 ..
Pres•
Grou•cl •eef
Regular Grotm Fresh Deity F1Wnily
_SWt Ptf,g. 6-b Or l.Mgef.
~~99c ~
plus Southwestern aeuonina of
ch1h powder, pound cumin and
ptlic pe>wder. Serve· it with com
.chips or with cnsp vegetable n icks.
Chick peas (prbanzos). used
frequently an the Middle East and 1n
India, form the base for Dhat Dip
-blended with yocw1, leroon JUtt:e
ud a bit of cuny powder.
DALLAS DIP
I CAD (l t OU«1) red kidney
beau,drataed
'4 cap dalry sour cream
l tabfetpooa cklll powder
1 table1pooa seeded H d
cHpped Jarred Tucu peppers
........
Fryer Bre~sts
Grade A Fresh FfYVlQ Ctilc::tu!n
Greet Served Baked
.. $199
~ •1" Wllole Fryers ~~
b •• ,.. • •• , -.. ~~ArfShciuo.
~Spareribs 'Wew Yolk" Strip
Armour Defrosted Whole Sold "In The Bag· Set~
Beef BrlskM
.. ,~-ii• ~12•· Fresh Whole ·1o The Bag.
(1mvned b •1 49)
, 9atokecl Sausage:= b •2• Bua a ltos ...,..~ Froan
fresh Trout kWlo RwGow lb •1• Frosted Flakes=·
Salllton -st SMttil~~Collr lb 'I" Fruit Drlnbc.,,,s..i
Baked•••• B & M. Set'l9 With
Meet Loef. 28-oz. Can 99c
Chris' & PIH'•
Bw·B-0 Seuc6
1•-oz Bottle 79c
Ketcllup ecn..~
Ice c ..... u.c.N
•• .., lcl••~
~99c
~·•" ·~ .,..,
c
tea1p0oll ta.It
~teu,...pr ,....
~ -............. lo the container of a food
procnsor fitted with the tttl blade
or in the J&r of an electric blender,
place kidney beans and sour cream.
~rsmootli."""
Add chih pe>wder, Tuscan pep-
~.salt, prhc powder and cwrun;
mix until combined. Spoon tnto a
serving bowl. Cover and refriger-
ate. Serve wttb toniUa chips or raw
veaetables, If de trcd YieJd· 2 cups
DBALDJP
1 ca.a (11 onces) c~ck peaa1
(cecl) .
~ C1ll plala towfat ,...rt
l ta.blap I• lcaMa jak:e
11 tea" I 18 CV1"J ,..,..,.
~"'~ ...... Drain cbtck peas. Ml!r'Vina '4
cup Li4uid. Place cbick peu and V.
cup 1.iQuid in the con11j ncrol.a food --+"'°'~
proceuor fitted with the Mel blade
or an the j~ of ao dectric blender.
Proces at hiah speed unul smooth.
Add yoaun, lemon j uice and
curry: m1x well. Spoon into a bowt
Cover and refnpn te. Just bcfon
seTVlng ur m tomato. Serve with
toasted p1ta bread tria., or raw
vegetables, if des1red. Yield: 2'h
cups
.,.._0-.,. ........ '
,._. .. _...,._.,. _______ _ ....... -.... ...-.. -----·---" ..... '---------.. -· .. ----, ____ _,_ .. .._ __ ,__ .... __
.... -a... ... ,.....-----.. ..._.~ ~-----------=-... ---_-_-_-_--
Large
Musltroo111s
Flavor EnhMcer For
Steaks Or Selads
... $ ....
Fre•ll To••••••• WnlR:>ed In Celopt*'8.
Smll sae. Perlect For 5*a.
11 69c Greeft Olllon ~
11 ., .. Plillo ..... s.r!,-'...,
10~
I
-1~~j
Paper Towels Potalo Chips
Mango6d Auol1ed
59C Prepnced 7 5 Sq Ft Roi 59c
Lays Or FUllee
7rez. PllQ, 99c
RIGISTIR TO Wiii
Yflll -=3 0
ROUND TRIPS
I
POR TWO
1 .. ..,. ............. Alrl .... ....
.. IM C.alk:ealal U.S.
'1" H Allll ... I ...... ~ C.-'flt 2 •• ,,,, ........ ....
,,,, , .. MwW •w1ul1 er ••
-~-rlllMI ~~ .. 19 --OI • Wlrltlfll,..... ..... ........,,. -~ 0... At~
AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOOD SlOREI ~~ass~
J
• Al~
~~
r.c.a.-·-·~ Ollllna.,.,
lft AMII ore-~
..
Fire.up .the barbecue for a
delicious, thrif~y fish dinner
Almost oothilll m this world
wtes u aoodu fiub fish, pilled to
perfection over charcoal briqueta.
Whether youcatcb them younetfor
buy them at the local fish market, a
delidom fish dinner will excite
your fimily or friends and make the
~ue an event to remember.
. Mo~ than 200 1pecies of edible
fiab are' cau,bt in American waters.
Your fisb.ioa friends or seafood
retailers wiD-bdp you find a local
fish that is in -.son in your area.
They will be the freshest in both
flavor and tex'°"' and abouJd be the
moat economical.
flesh wtth a knife. It is done when
the flesh as opaque a nd doesn't clang
to the bones. Remove it from the
-heat-mnt1ediatety and sit down to
an immensely satisfyina meal.
Marinade are quick-to-fix and
deliver marvelous flavor vanety
HERB AND OIL MARINADE
~ c1ap lemon J•lce
~ np u.lad oU
1 teaspoon eacll thyme and
rosemary
before gnllma. Baste fish with
marinade as 1t cooks.
SPICY TOMATe-AND --
LEMON MARINADE
1 cop tomato JaJce
~ capllladoll
14 cap Worcaten~ aa~
~ teupoon red pepper aa.ce
t lemODs, sliced '
Combine all uid injl'edients.
Arrange fish in inale layer in a
)JS .£!
One place you should not economized in your choice of r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-========================================================================
Mix inaredtents and pour over
fish arranaed in a single la)'er in a
shallow bakina dish. Cover and
refrigerate for an hour or more
shallow bak.10g dish. Top with
lemon slioe . Pour marinade over
fish. Cover and refrigerate for half
an hour before arillina. Buie fish
with marinade while grillina.
cbarcoal. Choose only top quality
briqueta. ~eJt briqueu li&bt cuier, bum · y and aive con-
sistenly dependable cootuia.
Bu<Jaet tnnda often are difficult
to li&bt and bum unevenly or quit
early on the job. And for an extra
wte treat, why not try briqueu with
mesquite wood chips added. The
wild. sweet smoke of mesquite will
take you by the nose and make your
mouth water.
If you are servina whole fish,
allow one J?OUnd (aftef cleanina) per
serving, s1nce the head. tail and
bones account for nearly half of the
total weiabt. The bead may be
removed before cookina, but it's
best to keep the skin and bones
intact to retain flavor and for easier
handling.
For variety, let the prepared fish
nest for about an hour in a favorite
herb oil marinade or try a zippy new
tomato juice and lemon mixture.
Fish are eittremely fragile when
fully cooked. Use a hinged well-
oiled rack so they can be turned and
basted frequently with a minimum
of fuss.
If you don't have one of those
handy gadgets, your regular grill
rack will do ifit is well oiled and you
carefully sandwich each fish be-
tween two wide spatulas to tum.
Small fish should be cooked in foil.
Overcook.i~ is the most com-
mon fault io grilling filh. Fish cook
quickly.t depending on the thickness
of the nsb, over a moderately bot
fire. To gauge the temperature, bold
your band, palm down, 3 or 4 inches
over the grill. When the fire is
medium-bot, your band will be
uncomfortable in four to five
seconds.
Always test if the fish is dooe by
cutting mto the thickest pan.of the
Think twice
onwalkdown
(grocery) aisle
The American Hean Association
wants. you to think twice as you
walk down the a.isle ... the arocery
aisle that is.
Eating the right foods and paying
attention to one's diet are major
concerns to everybody today. As
"the association adv<1Cates lowerin&
cholesterol intake, it will present
A ~rican Heart's Food Festival in
O. nge County during the week of
Sevt. 8-14.
The festival is a nutrition event
that Wlll include displays of educa-
tional material on heart healthy
foods and shopping tips, and
cookbooks in Safeway and Alber-
tson's grocery stores in Orange
County.
"The AHA's gu1dehnes for WlSC
ea\ing patterns emphastZe wei&bt
control; a limited mtake of
cholesterol, saturated fats., refined
sugar and sodium; and the as-
surance that the diet mcludes a
variety of foods," wd Joy Ward,
R.D., chairman of American
Hean's Food Festival.
"An obvious place to bejin to
integrate these guidelines into a
person's lifestyle 1s at the grocery
store -the place wbeT'C Americans
make the majority of their decisions
o n food selection," Ward said.
"We feel the festival is a great way
to inform the public about proper
foods to buy, how to prepare heart
healthy meals and JUSt generally
improve their nutntion," said
Ward.
"While a consumer will probably
not make any major dietary
changes in just one week, we hope
that throulb this event people will
become aware of the role diet plays
in tbeu overall health."
American Heart's Food Festival
is the fint national health aware-
ness project held coopcrati vely by a
national voluntary health aiency
and supermarkets.
CUCUMBER AND
SBBDIP SALAD Me4J1m~ber
1 cabte1poe9 n1ar
I tabla,..., rtce wine vlneaar
'.4 to ~ .... ,.. ... ,
Hm..Uam*rlmp
Pare cucumber and score
lenathwise with a sbarr>-tined for~
tlice thin. Stir toscthct supr,
vinepr and ult; mb in cucumben
well; marinate for at least I hour in
the refriaerator. Cook., ~U and
deve1n shrimp; cut each in half
lcnsthwise. At servin1 timearranac
cucumben and shrimp on individ-
u.el plates Makel '4 servrnp
Beef round
BONELESS
RUMP
ROAST
12 m can • ~CD or P1U
SJtMIGS ALPHA BETA LIMONADE
10 t5 oa or 10 l oa • 10 11 ~
'IOI INOS . m7.,. """*'* mza.s c-r-....,....
• 25 oa nu.ta • ll m SUc:b
VAN DI KAllP'S .
UQHT • CRISPY nsH
10 5 OI paaog.
P"'SBURY
lllCROWAVI POPCORN
• 09 tu.b
llRDSnE
COOL WHIP
...
12' ... •••
LB.
-=-a: 119 ... &A. -asc '!!.. ...
J . ,. , .-;t I' -. .... • .-I _, 1'-.. • •' .... -· •,. .• •' ,.• .. -.• .• -.• ... ~_. ~ __.... ....
p
Loin or Shoulder
COUNTRY
STYLI PORK
SPA..DDJBS
50 OL baz
SUH IJGHT
AUTOMATIC
DISHWASHING
DITIRGEHT
SA.
-----------------------· PA> MANUPACi'UUl'S COUJON
· ltlDllMA.tLI A'I ALL IOVT'lfDN CAW'OINtA AU8A llTA MAIDTI OICLf
rf C:C-CMS = WITB.TBJS,coUPOC N Pll'll •u•
•mf ......... "= =:5~ on aa 09 an oliOil •&.MT Gm COGfOel MID Giii 6 MCI
macstDCWIOlal at01CAMI
Cl_..UllOINll •,AD&" w •• -•. 9'f.4-.... IOQ, -----------------------
•Beef loin
BONELESS
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAKS
WftW ~ .-1.50
2 JOI 1.48
6 IMIC2,
lf oa. CC1D1
u . 7·UP OR · Dt.c °' LID COLA lllqWar
..
r
·~
Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT IWedlWlllay, Augul128. 1185 C1
For nutritious snackirig, you
can't beat-fresh, crisp apples
When the urp ror between-meal popula.r snack.I bccautc they 11~ quick aft.er-Wenk or aftercbool
nibblina is ha.rd to deny, you can the urae for tomelbiq sweet and tn.atk..
make it a fruitful indulaence With chewy. for a slice of bread you can For more c1lorie-conaciou1
nutritious lnaredienu, snacklna really sink your teeth into, combine snackina. app es are appealina in
can be satisfyina to your palate moist. freshly ~tcd _apples. utada or combined with raw ves--~-.....
whtle p1o+iditl11ood foodforyour cbopped ouuand sp1cen~ith bread etables forcirunchina when the Ll!'IC
body. batter and bake up a loaf laden with to nibble 1trik.ct.
Fresh, cnsp and naturally sweet aood taste and nutrition. \ However you ~oy apples, their
apples arc an ellcellent snack food. Shredded apples. nuts, and spices snack-ability iJ enhanced by &ood Slowly savor a cool and crunchy b k nutnuon. A aoqd tource of fiber,
apple, bite by bite, for a refresh an• a e mto mouth-waterinJ cookies. apples are low in calories and very .. toO. Enjoy them warm with a aJ,ass I · • .-.... Tt.-'l.. •• enjoyable and spontaneous snack of milk for an old-fashioned snack. ow m llUU.lum. 'w;y contnuulc full of healthful extras. For plan-potassJum and other v1tanun1 and
ahead snackJ, prepare appetmna Ancasy breakfast treat that turns mineral to the diet;
apple recipes and take advantage of into an afternoon snack 1s made by Apples a.tt a 11tisfyins, good-for-
the peak season for: this versatile addina shredded applet to boxed you mack food full of uab flavor.
fruit. com muffin mix. Warm up leftover texture and recipe appeal. Take -~------------------==================~::'.=::=:==========================='.~~B~re~a~d~s.~m~uffi~1~n~s~a~n~d~c~oo~~~·~es~a~r!e_:m~u~ffi~1~ns!Jin~tb~e~ou~cr~o~w~a~v~e-fi~o~r~a~8dvantageoflh~manyappkvar-1eties avatlable in the produce
department dunna the fall and
wtnter months ahead for &ood
• 12 pact
12 os. cam
BUDWEISER
BEER
IA.
••••••••••••••••••••••• m . nfll COUPON ICDHMA.lll ON1.Y AT ~ IOtlT'HIRN CAl.lrOINIA Al.~ HTA MMKm
DOUBLI SAVINGS COUPON "8eftl ttu.~pe11.•lo119 ""'h enyoM ~WOCtllHO ce.iaocr C-potl
, G"'ll 0tC OOUILI nft IAYnfGI Wll .. fOU PllJCIMIM tbe II•• onat NOT TO OICt.UJ)I llTAJLll Ot nu COUf'OMI 01
COVJOMIOVftt l 00 urmn>MAT NOTUCllDVAU110P m w soancr 'to STOCK olf &AHO UCUJDll 1.1Q001,
TOaACCO AHO DAllT ftODVCT'I MO Ml'NDl1JY JIVICKAJI llQUlllJ) LIMIT ONI 1TDI na MAMUPACTUID"I COVPOM AND WOT TWO DOUmS COUPONS nl CVITOYll
CODOll DfiCilfi .,.........:::' I " IDNm Wlmll•IY, W14-l tu .......................
. .
4 roll·pack
LIMIT 3
·MARINA
BATH-
ROOM
TISSUE
3poc2
DOLi · c::n::. or WHOLI •
FRUIT COOLIR
.........................
., T1ftS COV'PON llDRMAILt ON\.f "'1 •1 • IO\mtCIN CIJ.lfOINlA Al.l'KA lnA ~ans
~~~!!'.!!£~m! I 4Jlld ... l)OUlf.S IAVIHU wMll 'l'O\I SNIC'-IM I'-•
orrn MOTTO lJICtlJl>• llTADI Ot"Ylll cou.otr1 01 I OOGfONI OYll Sl 00 IUVWD MAT MOT IXC:U:O VM.UI or l'l"llll IUaJICT TO tTOC:I OM llAlfD UC.UDO UQIJOI.
TOIACCO AllD DAllT lllODOCTI.
MO YDmtVY fVICllAll UQUl:UI) I wm Olll ITDI m MANUJAC!Vllrl comoN AJ1D
UMIT TWO DOUILI COVIOtll PD CVITOMH . cowcmu1ae11t1 u ..... busssa" IWlmW&& M ,WI Dt, l MI ...........................
•
OPEN .~OR DAY NDAT, IDT. 2 7 A.II. TO 10 i.11.
19 os. package
TOMATOES
DELI SPECIALS!
\6 oa tub a: MIGS ALPHA llTA
SOUR CRIAM
2 & 01 pack09't • ANort9d '"21'1•U.•
DA.NOLA :111D1 SLICED llllTS
79~.
39!
-::: I!!
llDIUTI Ml.ID LDIONADI un , ._. aa c:artoo • OU.U..S 89;
01 nu11 PUNCH * u
PRICIS CIOOD THURSDAY
THRU WSDNllDAY
AUG. 29 THROUGH SEPT. 4, l 9&5
AT ALL SOUTHERN CALD'ORNIA
ALPHA BETA UAllETS
ea~f"ect firm well-shaped apples of
aood color for tbe vanety. Skins
should be smooth and free from
bruises. Handle with care and store
them in a plastic bag in the
refngerator.
APPLE CORN MUFFJNS
lt OllDCff COl'll maffla mix
"' cd'p milk leg
t applet, pared ud allreddecl or
flaely cJaopped
t tableapoou browa npr
In bowl, combine muffin mix,
muk and cg; mu Just until dry
msredienu are moistened. Stir 10
apples. Spoon batter into 12
greasCd muffin cups; sprinkle With
brown sugar.
Bake in 425~~e oven 15 to 20
minutes or until golden grown.
Makes 12 muffins.
APPLE HERMITS
~ ~P batter or marprioe,
aoftdecl
1 cvp packed dart brown Hgar
1 e11
'4 cap milk l •
t C1lpt ualfted all-parpose floor
~ &ealpoon bakinl soda
~ teaspoon aalt ~ teupoon p-ow.Dd clluwnoa
'4 teUpoon groud cloves
Ya cap cbopped nata
t capt a.llredded pared applet t t
applet)
In large bowl cream butter and
sugar. Beat m cu and m1Uc fy11x
flour. baking soda. salt and spices;
blend mto creamed mixture. Sur in
nuts and apples. Drop b)' table·
spoonfuls OD p-eased bakfog sheet.
Bake in 3 7 5-degree oven l 0 to 12
minutes Cool. Makes 4 dozen I cookies. ·
APPLE--CARROT SALAD
S capt ctaoppecl pattd, cored
apples
1 ..., caps 1breclded pared carrot•
1 cup chopped wa.lnat1
·~ cap mayouaJae
..., cup soar cream
a.. teaspoon uJt
'i't teaspoon prepared mustard
1 tablespoon chopped freab
parsley
1 tablespoon cider vtnegar
In medium bowl combine all
ingredients Mix hghtl) but
tb.or.ou&hl>. Makes 8 5Cr\'Jll&S-
Fruit butter
easy to make
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
""-~--
'
For several years I made fruit
buncnHhat old-lime preserve) but
I finally gave up prepanng them
The) took hours of slow cooking
and. to keep them from scorching,
continuous st1mng toward the end
of the coolung
Then a fnend introduced me to
the oven method of maJang f ru1t
buners that need sllmna only a few
times. This oven method 1s fine as
long as the day is cool.
ThlS )ear a Cahfom1a cook came
up wtth a method -new to me -
of maluna peach butter quickly and
cas1h In lr)tnl her recipe we sltced
the peaches an a food processor.
boiled the slices for 5 minutes and I then pureed them tn the processor
(Even though the peaches wert' I unpeeled, the puree was bcauuf ull\.
smooth.) After that romparat1veh
bnef coolung did the JOb
If you try this recipe we suggr-st
}OU use full)' npe large peaches that
arc rosy-hued, this wa> your peach I butter wiU have a pretty color w · SMAU. BATCH
PEACH Bl.m'ER
4 to S tar1• freslt peacMI
t.; cap water
!~ etapt ••1•r
Hahe and pit peaches. do not
peel lJSIQI the medium shc1ngd1sc
an a food processor. slice the I peaches -thcrt $hould be 4 to 6
cups (Volume of fruit \ anes ac-
cord1na to npenc l
In a broad he,avy uut'tpan hnna
· pcache~ and water to a boil ( O\Cr
and ummer until tender -about ~
minutes Proce~c; in a food rm-
ccuor Wlth the metal bladt unt1l a
mooth putt't ~uh
Return putte to clean dry
uu~pan, add 'upr and bnna to a
boil, Slltrint lO di lvc U r 8o1l
sentl) unttl m1xtutt darken 1n
color and bcaln• to thicken on the
bottom -about IS minutes, tl will
be th1dccr when 1t 1s cold
tort 1n the rcfngttator Males
1bou1 3 to •cups
I I
' j
MARINADE THE SECRET
PRODUCE
FRUIT ROLLS ~ P..,i..q. 12.,_. lN
SEA FOOD
FRESH B<JlTERFISH
f'•iel' PK.toe
FRESH OOVER SOLE SllHWW<I G f,.mm<"<I PIO< ,_
HALIBUT FILLETS
lli.eMt\. ,._ C>t !Jt.1-
U! 198
L.8 198
L8 398
~~c§~~t~ SHRIM~ 898
....... ~lllDJllUl .... ~-
N01113
Sauces with hickory seasontngg e ----a gourmet touch to barbecue salmon
To add a aourmct touch to food
prcpaftd on a barbecue, use sauces
or marinades.
SMOKEDSAJiMON
STEAJtS SUPREME
I talm ... &eak• Pit lDda tJtid-)
l Y. capt waler In the recipes that foll ow, hickory
seasonina is used with a variety of
other in~ients to create aauocs
and mannades for everything from
salmon steaks to kabobs.
Y. cup lillckory 1ea1oaJq (llquld
1moke) ~
Y. cap mayoa,1al1e
Place fish in a shallow dish.
Salmon steaks marinated just 20
minutes take on an elegant flavor,
while marinated steak kabobs de-
h ver a hearty taste.
Combine water and hickory
seasoning. Pour over fish; marinate
20 minutes. Dram fish . Brush both
sides with mayonnaise. Broil or
FRESH
,.9ROOND BEEF
,_al . ' .
PEPSI, NO·a2l560 o
DIET e ~
• PEPSI WUT O• IOl MC&
"'psi Light. ~I Frtt, Diet M1°C>ew, I ~uler or Diet SU<ll!. 6 P..:k. 12 Ounoo C..n•
Wtth f>ut<t..ue o4 t~OO nt Mot• l -K•ud1t19 Purt h•-of
I l '<lllO'-l'luid 1'11lk end Pt1te ul Col.pon lltnH l')rw P,,t 1.,,,,1y
Effo<ollw ~ 29 Sclpt-1 • 199~ I
' WILSON MEAT
WIENERS
16-0 unce Package-Limit 2 Packages Per Customer
BONE~& RIB 298 £YE STEAKS l8 r.gi;K""I~
SIRLDIN TIP STEAKS BoMI~ T-K•"ll 9ttl 169
18
LEAPLGROUND 159 BEEF P~i 1 IES L8
BONELESS
TURKEY
ll•rnaur iold S... f'-
lB J69
~!~J.SS CUBE STEA~2 19
PORK
SPARERIBS
11\od..,m Su@ l'n>MI\ Of OdlOlll-.1
Hill.SHIRE FARMS SMJSMlL 209 <,~ BM 1'1:>4•411 Of ~ Pn11.n L8
WHOLE 79 CHICKEN LEGS 1 ~ e
V•IU" P~I< So.•llem
-
VAft CAMPS 69 PORK & BEANS•
31~ ~--
FRENCH'S MUSTARD .79
1 19
1110...-~,. Boltlo
8.8.Q. SAUCE C""* ~ P11u. llogulM 0t 11~"°"' l.l Ot Bot11t
Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS "--',........ ~ c..n
FOLGER'&
COFFEE
.75
239
DIAMOND PAPER PLATES t t9 I~ Caunl ""9 OW.Or Of C.O..,.,.n,.,..,.
~~y;o1~11E_~L 12s
CHEER DETERGENT 189
42 Ounce Baa (lnclucln 40 Olfl
POTATO
CHIPS
L•p °' l!ulf\f!t. 7 ~Oum ~
.89
COORS BEE
12 PACK . Aipqu'-Ot l•""1 ll 'l\~f , -~ ....,,,. 80 WHOLE: FRYING
~~r;t1 ~~r;"!!RY COOLER 2 89
~f!.lf> Ith ~q~! CHABLIS 3 99
aAR11.U £ J AYMU 249 ~~~OLER
CRYST~
~·~
GIASSWARE
I caz:.=~ SAU! I
~ ,,, t')Oll .. ,.,, ..... "' • 49 '"'"ha.,. I I<
CHICKEN
(JS DA Grode-A Southl'rn. L1m1t 2 Per Customer
You don't pay more.
You just get more.
~· ~;;;;;;-;;--~~~--=--
place on &rid and &rill over medium
hot coal 6 to 8 minutei per 1de. 6
aervinas.
Vartadoa: Add DJJOn·style mus-
tard and/or your favorite herbs to
mayonnaise before brushina on
fish.
SMOKY STEAK DllOBS
1 can ( I ouces) toma&o 1auct
1 Y, cap oru1e JaJce
'-" cap DlJOA·•tyle ma1tard
I table1pooa1 lllckory 1eaaolllll1
(llqald smoke) I table•poon1
brOWJ augar z poaodl 1&tak, cat into 11.4-lDcb
cu bet
l larae gretn pepper. cat lDto
cllla.nk• ' 'fl poa:ad m11broom1
Cberry &omatoet
In medium bowl, combine
tomato sauce, orange juice, mus-
tard, hickory seasoning and sugar.
Stir to dissolve sugar. Add steak
cubes; marinate 45 minutes; re-
serve marinade for basting.
Using skewers, thread meat
alternating with pepper, mush-
rooms and tomatoes. Broil or grill 6
minutes. Tum once and baste
frequently. 6 servings.
Cheddar
cheese used
in tasty
casserole
By TOM HOGE
4' Wine Md,..., Wrtt.f
When Andrew Jackson was in-
augurated as president, a group of
admirers presented him with a
I ,400-pound Ch~ar cheese,
which he displayed in the White
House vestibule for nearly two
years while it ripened.
Then the president held open
house and the cheese disappeared
in two hours.
Cheddar cheese has long been
one of America's favorites, eaten in
sandwiches and with apple pie, plus
being used as a key ingredient in
souffies, soups and omelets, to
name a few dishes.
Cheddar cheese has been made in
England for centuries and for many
years American farmers made their
own, according to the English
formula.
The first American factory for
ma.king Cheddar went into pro-
duction m 1851 in ttie state of New
York.
All cheese 1s made from milk. be
it from cows. sheep, buffalo or
reindeer. But practically all Ameri-
can cheese 1s made from cow's milk,
which must be pasteunzed.
Today, nearly half of the cheese
consumed in this country is pro-
cessed. The result is a bland mixture
of natural cheeses of different ages .
ground fine and blended by heating
and stirring. The finished product.
in the opinion of some consumers,
tends to beinsipid.
Thts doubttw eiplains the pub-
lic's enthusiasm for natural cheeses
such as Cheddar.
As a matter off act, some Cheddar
is also mild, but those who prefer it
with a bite can get excellent Ched·
dar, produced mainly in New York.
Vermont, Wisconsin and Oregon.
A good luncheon dish featuring
Cheddar is this recipe for a
casserole.
CHEDDAR CHEESE
CASSEROLE
Z tablespoons batter or mar1ar·
lne •1, cup flaely cbopped onloa
% caps water
YI ltalpooD 1.lll
Y. cap qulcfl crU1
'fl te11poon Worcestersblre
sauce
Da1b Tab11co
Black pepper to taste
1 ~ caps crated 1barp Cbeddar
cbeese a tablespoon• •oft butter
% eu wbltea
In small skillet melt 2 table-
spoons butter over moderate heat.
When foam subsides, add the
onion and cook 4 or 5 minutes until
translucent b\lt not brown. Brina 2
cups water 10 boil in I -<1uart pan.
Add ult and slowly pour in grits,
without allowina water to atop
boilina. Boil I minute, stirrina
constantly.
Reduce heat to medium and
oook 2 minutes. Add the onions,
Worcestershire and Tabasco, a
little black pepper and l 'h cups
arated Cheddar combined 1with 3
tablespoons soft butter.
Preheat oven to 400 deattes.
Grease l-<1uart casscrole. With •
wire whisk or rotary beater, beat ea whites until they form stiff
peaks on beater when it is lifted
from bowl. With rubber spatula,
thorou~ly fold ea whita into
arit mdture. Pour into casserole
and sprinkle the top with rema.in-
..inaaratedchcesc. Bake in middle or
oven about half an hour, until
miuure hu puffed and browned
Serve 4 to 6.
Call 142• H71.
Put • ftJlf word• to work for ou
Modern prodllcts Put clean laundry in otwater
By DOllOTBY WENCK
Mw811F I I ucc ...............
If you·~ atr averaae conaumer,
about 2S percent of your pun: hues
in a supermarket arc for nonfood1.
Clothina can prbducts -de-
letaeftU, IO~ -Nm ltbJOVtn,
bleach --. a.re a major caieaory
amona these pu.n:twel.
How much you spend on laundry
products depcnda on the aiu of
your family how often you waah
clothes, and on whether you buy
JUSt the basics, such u detersents
and bleach, or whether you buy the
numerous extras that arc touted to make your clothes cleaner, whiter,
softer, and may add a lot to tho cost
of laundering.
Accordin& to a study by a major
wasbina machine manufacturer, I
consumers are complainin& that
their clothes aren't 1ettin' as clean
as they used to; stains aren t comina
out u easily; whites tum aray; and
1ettina rid of the ring around the
collar has become more difficult
This manufacturer identified
three major changes that have
impacted the laundry process and
contributed to the cleanability
problem. These include:
(I) The change from natural
fiben to synthetic fibers. which
bepn to arow in the 1960s with the
advent of permanent press and easy
care synthetics and blends.
(2) The declining use of hot water
for washiq. In 1970, 43 percent of
wash loads used a hot water wash .
By 1979 the use was down to 20
percent and the trend is continuing.
Reasons for this change include
the rising cost of energy and the
de~ire to save energy plus the
growth in popularity of easy care
clothing. especially synthetics, that
wrinkle less when washed in warm
rather than hot water.
(3) The reduction of phosphates
m detergents. While California has
not banned the sale of phosphate-
containing deteraents as some
states have, the deterJent manufac-
turen have voluntanly reduced the
amount of phosphates in some
producu and also increased the
availability and promotion of non-
and low-phomhate detergents.
Synthetic fibers -polyester,
nylon, -acrylic -arc derived from
petroleum products and therefore
have a natural affinity for oily stains
and soil and arc hydrophobic -
water-hating. Thus, they behave
differently fro m cotton and other
naturaJ fibers when laundered or
cleaned.
Oily stains and soil arc much
more difficult to remove from
syhthetics and may become per-
manent if not removed promptly.
When not pretreated before
laundering. oily stains may not
g:>me out' during washing and
become permanently set from dryer
heat. -.
Sometimes synthetics have a
"soil release" finish that reduces
their chemical affinity for oiJy soil.
lf they do, the label will tell you.
The simplest, least costly method
for pretreating is to sprinkle or
squirt a small amount of laundry
detergent on the dampened stains
and scrub with a soft brush. Some
greuy s~ts are removed more
easily with a arcasc solvent type
-spotl'emover.
Another pretreatment method 1s
Lemonade.base
Keep a homemade lemonade
base on band.Just add water and ice
to Lemonade Syt\Jp Base to instant-
ly make homemade lemonade.
To make syrup base, in medium
saucepan combine 2 cups supr and
112 cup water. Over low heat. cook
until sugar dissolves, stirring oc-
casionally; · add 2 cups bottled
lemon Juice from concentrate.
Cool. Store covered in refri&crator.
Makes about 3'11 cups syrup.
For 1 (8..auncc) servina of
lemonade: pour •;, cup lemonade syrup~ into glass; add '11 cup cold
water. Stir; add ice.
For I quart lemonade: in pitcher.
combine I 'I> cups lemonade syrup
and 2'1l cups cold water; stir. Add
ICC.
.... DIJ>1DPl9 GO?·
!Wnwmbcr. wh«n ~partnQ lsh ln0$1
wtlhhrtnktom lOto tS"endaboul
35" 6'om shd on 1ocoolwd end
claned shrtmp
llUOOD ftlCll.Ftcsh IUb>d
pltcc1arc m~h mort llOlatllc lhen
thoa of'&o111tn lsh b«cauM of' the
unpredktable nature of'ftshlnQ Y<N 'D
~ prtca b.wt 11 lsh sptducomc
lnllOt«alOnand btconw more plcn11fU
,...~rMmbc,when
catchlnQ your own damt check on lhcrt
calebillty They ate only ea puro1 the
wal~r they carM &om
Onlnft Cout 1 0nty Awvd WIMlnl
Sabld lto\9\ltanl
-~
(714) 175-2511
Loul«d on ttw 0( c n ""9n1
IOU ffom IN ~ A• h f!MI
prcsoak.ina -either with laundry
detcraent (the .. old" method) or
with an enzyme presoak product
(the .. new" method). Bo\h work
well if enouah time is allowed -
ovemi~t. or several hours -but
they W111 not remove all t)'J)CI of
stain rom all fabrics.
Presoakina. followed by a hot
water wash with fiub detersent is
effective in betpina to remove body
oils that otherwiae may build up
and cause yeUowina in underwear,
T 4birts, sheets. pillow cases, etc.
For heavily soiled clothes. a
prcsoak or two wuhinis with fresh
deteraent in each arc more effective
thao ooe eir.tra-looa wasb. When
clothes arc aaitated too lon.1 (over
l 0 to 12 minutes), the emulsion of
dcteraent and soil as broken and the
soil redeposited on the clothes.
Water temperature hu an im-
ponan effect on .oil ~
especially removal of oil. The old
rule ii still true: hot water sets
clothes cleaner and ltills more
bacteria. However, It also cauteS
more wrinklins, shrinkina, and
fadina.
So hot water .is still best for
aettina bcddina. towels, and under-
garments clean. You can save
ene'I)' by usina cold water nnscs
however. For oulef &anntnts-, ~
pecially those made from syn-
thetics. a warm-water wa h with a
cold-water nnse will remove moro
soil, yet cause little more wrink11na
than a cold·watcr wash.
.AJ. phDsphat.e aod
nonpbosphate deteraenu. research
on detersent pcrformanoe hows
that pbospbate·bu11t deterscnts
perform best 1n aJJ three ca\cgones
me11ured: removal of soils,
amount of ao1l redeposited on
clothes, and amount of calcium
carbonate buiJduo on clothes. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ABUD:
Q. Bow HCnl&J'1 11 It &o bleadl
$Ulelt ••••:,a ...... I e9eld -CU& A. Chlorine bJach, wbicb is a W..W ~ • u efteedff?
~ stain re!"o~er t.bit bdpe l;O • A; I don't know ofany aubttitute
whuen a~ bt:lth&ea c&olba. ~" that ha the same effect u •btlc
an effect.ave distnfecta.nt. But 1t alto toftcnen that habricatt fiben and
causes ~othea to wear out fu1e1 mate th4 fabric softer and reduce bcca~ n ~u c cu~ ' Us1n.1 ch!<>nnc bleach Mth every However, aoftenm bwld up, if
load of white and colorfast dot.bel utect ~tedlyt' and reduce lhc
is un~oceaary unless yoo need ·~ u moiltUR4momlna ability of the a disinfectant. The noo-cblonne fabric ud aho cause yeUowiJla. bl~cllcs often don't 1ee~ to have a So it's best not to use softenen
no1:1oeable eft'.ect on ma.kin& c;lotbes with every load every time you
whiter and bri&h~r IC> you miaht be wuh. And you miaht want to omit
JUSt as well otrW1thout t.be.m. Ulinatbcm compleidy or use them
Q J'abrk .. ;..:.;. '*'a fllC tr J anfrciqucntJy, wilh ~ that
... di.em wltll *"'er/ ...._ la IMn ahould be ablorbaat such u towek.
;:;:.;,* ·77· ***** Rib Eye ***** Top Sirloin
Steak. f97 ** Beef ... 59 Ground Beef
ANY SIZE Pt<G LB •
***** Pork
Spareribs
FROZEN.DEFROSTED
***** Whole Beef
Brisket
LB
f 19
BONELESS. LB
f 19
TEXAS STYLE. 7 TO 9 LBS
***** " Ground Beet 3s~ ~!!!~~OZEN 3 LB DOES NOT EXCEED 301ro FAT BAO
Elavorlul 39 Peaches ·
JUICY ANO SWEET LB •
Honeydew 19 Melons
LB .
P' Hl-C Fruit
6 Drinks
5 FLAVORS, 48 OZ. CAN .73
f-Harveat Day
~Buns
HOTOOQOA
HAM8UAGEI\ I CT PKO .39
re::
Strips
110Z. 8AQ f 09
Check your mailbox
for our
~
Mailer
~--~--.-........ -........ --~--er...__....,..,__,..._ •• ..._. ................ -'--............ -.
Steak
BONELESS BEEF SPENCER
*****
Fresh Whole 69 Fryer Legs
SOUTHERN. LB •
ftO 9 PIECES PEA TRAY
***** Cornish
Game Hens f 49
FROZEN 200Z EACH
***** Hlllshlre Farm 199
Sausage
SMOt<ED POLSl<A LB KIELBASA SUF OR BEEf POl.ISH
Sweet
Corn
t-Lady Lee
&Bar-B-Q
Sauce
REGULAR ~ HIC KORY
230Z BTL
.99
pt Minute
6Mald
'Drinks
4 VAAll!TIES. FROZEN
CONCENTRATE 120Z CAN
.57
P' Aunt Jemima
6 Waffles
IUTTE,..IUt 0-.
OAIOINAL FAOZ£N 1ooz. eox
~.69
BONELESS BEEF LOIN
***** Armour
Turkeys
FRESH OR FROZEN
BONElESS. 5 TO 7 LBS
*****
LB
LB
f6-7
Lii Butterball f 19 Turkeys
SWIFT FROZEN LB
S TO 10 LBS
***** Oscar Mayer 219 Bacon
I LB REGULAR EACH
OR 12 OZ THIN SLICED
pt Minute
6Mald
Lemonade
OR FRUIT PUNCH
CHILLED &t OZ C.TN
.79
f"Northern
&Napkins
250CT PKG f 17
pt Lady Lee
&Diapers
ELASTIC FITTED, MEDIUM
Je CT OA LARGE 2• CT
EACH PKG
499
P'E & J Gallo
6 Wines
J VARIETIES ISL T" I TL
239
Beck Ribs
FAOZEN.D£FAOSTED
***** Hoffy
Boneless Ham
WHOLE. LI
5 TO 7 LBS
*****
Alaskan 299 !!~•r Salmo!!
HALF ()A WHOLE
***** Swordfish
Steak
FRESH. CENTER CUT
.. 599
peLady.Lee
6Beverages
All VARIETIES 12 PACI<
12 OZ CANS f 99
MEA'T. UI OZ. Pl<G ·.97
pt Borden
6Slngles
I AMERICAN CHEESE FOOO 16 01 PttG f 99
P'Coors or
&Coors
Light Beer
12 !'AC~ 12 Ol CANS 429
' l
'·'''~0$2352 • f .,, ... JC !UUO UU cs 4
Technique is pl.um goo~ idea
Quick pasta has
color, excitement
and zesty flavor
As the summer season reaches its peak, an abundan<:c of tomatoes,
peppers, squash and other fresh vegetables adorn Amencan tables. With
such an abundance, the challenge becomes finding new ways to take
advantage of the harvest.
One simple way to create new interest is to eombme seasonal produce
with year 'round staples like fresh mushrooms. Whether you're selecting
vegetables from your garden or from the local grocery store. fresh
mushrooms area hghtanddehctousway to add excitement to summer
vegetable recipes.
If tomatoes and bell peppers are on your list offavontes, try this
1ummerumc pasta fcatunnga fresh mushroom-tomato sauce.
Just toss fresh mushrooms with npe tomatoes, bell pepper, onion and
other seasonings and serve over hot pasta for a light and n utn tious en tree.
The sauce doesn't requarecookmgsoyoucan beat the heat of the kitchen.
Remember to select mushrooms with smooth. firm caps. If purchased
in packages, store mushrooms an their original container in the -
refrigerator. If you've purchased them from bulk trays or you've opened
the onginal package, store mushrooms in a paper bag in the refrigerator.
Just before serving, w1pe the mushrooms with a damp cloth. If needed,
rinse quickl y 10 cool water and dry carefully, as the mushroom's porous
surface absorbs liquid quickly.
Mushrooms not only add taste and texture to a recipe, they're also
good for you. A %-cup serving of fresh mushrooms contains only 14
calorics. 1s 99 percent fat free, low in sodium and cholesterol, and provides
important nutrients like nboflavin, niacin and thiemin.
SPAGHE'M'I WITH FRESH
TOMATO AND MUSHROOM SAUCE
3 cups finely chopped rtpe tomatoes
111 cap chopped bell pepper
•;, cap chopped areen onions
1, cup chopped parsley
t cloves garlic, pre11ed
1 tablespoon red wlne vinegar
Salt and liquid bot pepper sauce, to taste
8 ounces masbroom1, 11lced
12 ounces 1pagbettl, cooked and drained
In mmng bowl combine tomatoes, bell pepper, onions. parsley,
garlic. vinegar, ~alt and hot pepper sauce. Add mushrooms, tossing to mix
we ll < ook spaghetti m boiling salted water until just tender; dram. Serve
~ucc at room tempcraturcovcrwann spaghetti. Makes 6servangs.
Note: ~auce and spaghetti may also be served chilled.
I
I
I
I
I
I!
Ill 3 IAM IATII OR RBIJW
Oii
2 IMS Of FMll. Y llZI
1).-r. Amlouf-Oi81 will ~ you
tor !he '-Yllli9 OI OOUC>On pi\11 ..
IWdlng Pf'll¥IOed you_, !tie~
,_~di"" -ofllltOllet c.t1 Y111i9 1/'100el OI 11 A1-<0tll.,
lfle., ._ mt, lllll Ctly, MC 11*.
AMIOUR4MM., INC
Fast-rising read
maximizes fruttfiiI
bounty of season
somemn-es summer seems T
contradiction of terms. The warm
weather inspires relaxation and
casual aet-toaetben. But even tbe
most informal gatherin& requires
food pr,eparation and that's work.
How does one remain true to the
sum"'er rule of taking it easy and
still tutn out aood food for guests?
One answer is to concentrate on
simple dishes featuring tbc fresh
foods in season. Rapid Rise Plum
Bread is a arcat example of thls
relaxed attitude toward summer
cooking.
The totaJ dough-risina time is
nly an hour and a nalf and the
s icy 10 en loaf is full of fresh
lifom · l plums and nuts. Week-
en kfast guests will love a
warm slice of plum bread with a
bNsh of bu cream cheese.
Fresh · om· plums will be in
the market ouah September.
California, p uccr of more than
90 percent of this country's plums,
harvests more than 140 varieties in
a rainbow of skins and fleshes.
Select fresh California plums full-
colored for their varietr and firm
except for a slightly soft Up end. The
liaht dusting, called "bloom," oc-
cun naturally and is perfectly safe.
If the fresh California plums in
your market are not quite soft
enou$h. ripen them at home in a
ripenma bowl or loosely closed
paper bag left at room temperature.
Watch the ripening fruit because
plums can go from firm to overri~
very quickly. Ripe fresh plums will
keep m the refrigerator for several
days.
RAPID RISE PLUM BREAD
% pac1ta1es (II& once eacll)
qaJck ri1ln1 active dry yea1t
11& cap warm water ( lH degrees
-115 dearee•>
'ii cap brown 11gar (packed)
'ii te11poon salt
Z tablHpooDI butter or margar-
ine
1 table1poon 1rated orange peel
•;, cap oran1e jalce
1 eu
3 medium frHh California
plums, chopped
Z Ya to 3 caps Ooar
I SAVE 40$ on MAX11HINS · I I --. PADS OR PANTY SHIELDS I
I irillll:::; I FJ; e !~i:E:i~~Lic~~~.;'ru"..::~:~w1:~= I offer ttatld ~ COupon VOid If toed, prOl'llC>tled
ountncttc:I by 11.v Clan value of ll20o11cen1 V1lld
on1y1n1ri.u SA Tl'n1couponnocaMtgnebl1ornen1·
I terrlOle M111 coupon to Temb<lndt Inc , Dept *5, I
El P110 Till .. ,_ Oft.tllml-.cl .. enec°"'°""'
Good on OM bo• of 26 or 30 count s>un:hlM
I OR two bo•n of 10 or 12 count MANUFACTURER COUPON I
EXPIRES F'EBAUAAY 28, 1988 73010 102!],9 "'Ull>ii"\ U •~ ,.,.4,.,d..,..~ .. 1 lr'1><•1>cltl"'
Ya teaspoon cinnamon
Ya cup walnut1, cbopped
Dissolve yeast in water. Mix in
sugar, salt, butter, orange peel,
orange Juice. egg and plums. Stir in
flour, cinnamon and walnuts to
form soft dough. Turn out onto
lightly floured board and knead 3 to
5 minutes until dough 1s elastic.
Oil top of dough. Cover with
plastic wrap and let rise in wartn
place, free from draft, until doubled
in bulk, about I hour. Stir batter
down.
Tum onto greased 81/2 x 41h x 2~
inch loaf pan. Oil top of dough. Let
rise again until doubled in bulk,
about 30 minutes. Bake in 375-
degrcc oven 35 minutes or until top
is aoldcn brown and loaf sounds
hollow when tapped with finger.
Cover loaf with foil after 15
minutes to prevent overbrowning.
Remove from pan and cool on
rack. Makes 1 loaf.
Packets'
contents
tempting
When it's barbecue time, every-
one seems to have their own
speciality. To establish your repu-
tation as an outdoor chef, prepare
Italian Grilled Chicken. Three
summer weather favorites -
chicken, pepperoni and ve,etablcs
-arc grilled together, using one
easy cookinTmethod.
Pepperoni adds the zing to Jive
chicken a boost of flavor and fresh
prdcn vcaetablcs add economy
and crunch. This mixture it
wrapped and cooked in a bundle of
heavy duty aluminum foil that
holds in all the flavorful juices.
Served on pilled zucchini and
topped with mozzarella and
Parmesan cheeses, this recipe adds
a new taste to chicken on the pill.
ITALIAN GRILLED CHICKEN
4 boaelets cllickea breast
baJve1, cat I.Jato 1 'iii lncll pleee1
1 'iii C11P1 cllerey tomato llalve1
1medlam1reen pepper, cat I.Jato
1-lncll plecH
'iii cap clloppe4 onion
11 1Uce1 pepperoa.I
'iii tea1poon eacll ore1ano, ba1ll
leaves and 1arUc ult
14 tea1pooa tlayme leaves
Z ice cabel
l tabletpooDI batter or mar1ar-
IH
'iii tealpooD leltoaed ult
~ tea1poon 1arUc powder
4 medJam 1wcdtal, ctat la laa1f
len&tawt1e
1 cap (4 oueea) sUedded
mo11arella neese -
'iii ctap .,a&M Parmesb tHe1e
Combine chicken, tomatoes,
green pepper, onion, pepperoni,
orcpno, basil, garlic salt and
thyme; divide mixture in half.
Placeeachbalfofmixtureand 1 ice
cubeincenterofa 14-inch square of
heavy duty aluminun foil.
SAVE40•
ON NEW IMPROVED
Brina 4 comen of foil square up
togetherin pyramid shape. Fold the
o~n edaes toaether loosely in
, locked folds allowina apace for heat
circulation and expansion. Orill in
covered siiJJ over medium-hot, 1 direct beat tor ~S to 30 minutes or ~ 1
until chicken isldone.
While bundles are cookina com-
bine butter, scuo~u.lt and prlic
MAXl1HINS·
Ul TRI\ THIN ruu PROTECTION PADS
• NIW LONQER LENQTH
• NIW QUILTED SOFTNESS
• NIW LEVEL OF CONFIDENCE
powder, brush zucchini. After
bundles have k:ed for t O
minutes, place zuccbjnJ on &rill cut
side down. Grill in teUOnec1 butter
throuahout &rillina ume.
I!:: 1 •h \vu •u "'I' I ~I C' '-"'llflNlt IM 1~J
.... .... .... .... ... ... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .. ............................................................ 111
Carefully open bundles; sprinkle
each with half the mouarella and
Parmesan chcctet. Reteal until
cheeae melts. To serve, top pilled
zucchini with chicken mixture.
Ma~cs 4 aervinP.
..
•
....
Orange Cout OAILV Pll, OT IW«JMMSay, AUgUlt 21, 1915
----------------------------------------------------~~iiiiiiiiiii;;;;,
As Amencans become more 1 cup red pepper cut to l·lncb
health conscious, they arc recogniL· 1quares
1Jll the outriuonal value of the 1 cup ,r n pepper cut lo l·lDch
versatility of vegetables. Vegetabl et. 1quar,1 are high m vitamins, minerals and 11. co,-wai.r
fiber, low tn calorics-and saturated 1 cup cherry tomatoe1• halved
fat and they have po cholesterol. All In a lar&e skillet heat safflower oil
valuable components of a bean unlll hot Add onion: saute for 2 healthy diet. To retain their good nutntion minutes. Add ch1h powder. orange
and natural flavors, vegetables peel tllld salt; mix well. Add
shopld not be overcooked. Jn Chili zucchini and red and green pep-
Vegetable Saute, a dish rich in pcrs. Saute ·untll onion is trans-
vitamins A and C, they arc quickJy parent and vegetables arc parttally
sauteed 1n 011 seasoned with spices cooked, about 3 minutes. Add
and orange peel. . water.
Rice or past.a goes arcat with this Simmer, covered. st1mng fre-
d1sh. But for a tangy contrast, serve quently and adding add1t1onal
it with a cnsp romaine and red water 1fneeded, unlll vegetables are
onion salad, tossed with a red wi ne almost tender, about 6 minutes.
vinaigrette dressing. Add cherry tomatoes. Simmer,
Baked Vegetable Ring ts a ver-covered, for I minute. Serve hot or
stable powerhouse of nutrition. at room temperature Yield: 4
Again fresh vcaetables arc sauteed • portions, about 3 cups
then baked m a nng mold wtth egg
whites and lowfat ncotta cheese.
This dish is complete wi th protein
carbohydrate and fat. If desired,
serve topped wtth tomato sauce and
shredded mozzarella cheese.
CHILI VEGETABLE SAUTE
3 tablespoon1 11ffiower oil
~ cup chopped onion
2 ~ teaspoon• cblll powder
If. teaapooo grated orange peel
~ teaspoon Hit
l cup zoccblol , cut in l·lnch
1Uces, balved
8.AKED VEGETABLE RING
1 pound fresh aplnacb or
pacu1e (10 oo.nces) frozen
chopped sploacb
lf.i cup aafflower oil
2 cup1 1acchlnJ
l cop chopped onions
~ cap chopped carrot
I clove garlic, crushed
3 whole e111 or C eu whttea,
llgbtly beaten
:tr, cup plain dry bread crumbs
3., cup lowfat ricotta chee1e
•, cup grtted Parmesan cheese
l tea1poon basil leaves, cru1hed
~' tea1poon ult
i,,. teaspoon grollDd black pepper
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Remo~c and discard stems from
fresh spinach; wash thoroug})1y.
With water clinging to the lea ves,
place spinach 1n a saucepan with a
t1ght·fitting cover, cover and cook
until willed, 2 to 3 mmutcs Drain
off hqu1d, cool.
Chop spi nach; squeeze out as
much liquid as possible, set aside.
Or, thaw frozen spinach and
squeeze out as much liquid a~
possible, set asujc.
In a medium saucepan heat
saffiower 011 unlll hot Add 1uc-
chin1, onions, carrot and garlic;
sautc unlll vegetables are tender,
about 10 minutes. set ; 1side
In a large bowl m11 eggs, bread
crumbs, ncotta checs •e. Parmesan
cheese, basil, salt, blac-k pepper and
reserved spinach; mi " well. Stir in
reserved vegetables. Spoon into a
greased 6-cup n na rno ld.
Place in a larger b.afC1ng pan, pour
m bo1hng water to t he depth of I
inch. Bake unul a &Olden crust
fonns on top, about l hour and IS
minutes. Run a sharp knife around
the sides of the mold.
" Tum Vegetable Ring out onto •
serving plate. Top, if desired, with
hot tomato sauce and s.breddcd
mozzarella cheese. Yield: 8 por-
tions. about 311 cups.
Feeling the crunch? Serve b1read sticks
· 2 tablespoon• 1bortenlng grease top. Cover, let nse in warm t teaspoons s• lt · minutes at medium ~ 8 Homemade bread sticks are l egg wlllte, 1llptly beaten place unul double, about 25 l teaapoon sua ar h s · Y
handy accompaniments to all your 1 tablespoon water mmutes I teaspoon d I d and'. padflually stir in enough
act V tics You Can serve . r e rosemary: remammg our to make a firm summer. 1 1 · 3 to 4 tabletpooDI poppy or Punch down dough. D1v1de tnto crushed d them with cocktails as a mid· · · '" h ough.
f\ k. • h t sesame seed• 4 parts. D1v1dc each 1ourt into 6 1 tableapooo gra ted Parmesan Knead on floured surfac:c 5 to 8 ab 1c1moon snac •as munc ttehs a a In large mixer bowl. combine I pieces. On lightly floured surface cheese minutes Place m --. .. ....t· bowl a game or picnic. even wt yo ur fl d 1 II h 8 h · &'~ ' favonte summer soup or salad for a cu p our, yeast, sugar an sat; mix ro cac piece lo an ·tnc rope ' teaspoon wbJte pepper turning to grease top Cover: let n sc
hght easy meal well. In saucepan, heat water and Place on_greascd cookie sheets 11, cups water in wann place unul double. about Try these plain or pepper bread shohenmg until very warm ~ombme egg white and water 3 tablespoor 1s oil 25 minutes
suck recipes to add a touch ol ( 120-130 degrees. shorten mg does brush tops of bread sticks. Spnnkle 1 egg white, slightly t.eaten Punch down dough. Dtvi~e mto
indi viduality to your summer not need to melt). wtth poppy or ~same seed. Cover; I tablespoorn water 4 parts. D1 v1dc each fourth mto 6
meals and l'nt cnaintng. Add to flour mixture. Blend at let nse in warm place about 10 3 to 4 table!ipoons sesame seed• pieces. Roll each piece 1010 a 12-
low speed unttl moistened: beat 3 minutes. Bake at 400 degrees for 15 In large mu er bowl. co mbine l 'h inch rope Place 1 inch apa.n on
minutes at medium speed By to 20 mmutes until deep golden cups flour. } • ·a<;l, salt sugar, rose-greased cookie sheets
hand. gradually sllr m enough brown. Remove fro(Tl cookie mary. Parm 1·san cheese and ~P-Combine egg white and ~tcr: z•, to z~, cups all-purpose remaining flour to make a soft shects,cool.24breadsucks per: mix wc:ll In saucepan, heat brusbtopsofbreadsttck.s.Sprink..le
flourl package quick rise yeast idough. water and 'Jll unul ver; warm with sesame seed._ ~ a~ 400 ·
l tablespoon sugar · Knead on Ooured surface until PEPPER BREAD STICKS ( 120-130 def•rees) degrees for 25~inutes unJ,tl
BREAD STICKS
t teaspoons Hit <;mooth and clasuc, 5 to 8 minutes. 3¥1 to4 cups all-parpo1e flour Add to f1 1;ur mi xture. Blend at deep_i oldcn brown. Remove from
_______________ l_c_u_p_w_a_te_r __________ Place in gr~sed bow~ turning to 1 package quick rl1e yea1t low speed 1 1nul moistened: beat 3 cookie sheets; 0001. 24~d11.lcks.
Oper1tlon Kld11fe offera you 1 fun w1y to teach
your kid• about 11fety and en opportunity to let
your coupon• help a n1tlonal cauae.
Th• Sef ety Phone Book tor Kida la dHlgned to
help p1rent1 t11ch their chlldren Hfety fact• like:
•UH of the phone, emergency numbera
• P1rent1' numbera 1t wortl
• Sefety tip•
• Medlc1I deta ..
Thia unique book provldH 1 pennanent record
tor the home plu1 1 detach1bl• aectlon for your
child to keep. The color·ln dr1wlng1 throuQhout
the book m1k1l11mlng1bout 11fety tunl Adhe·
alv• 1tr1p provided to keep book In 1 convenient
pl1ce.
-~ ...
-~---
... ...
8
SAFETY PHONE BOOK or~DER FORM
For ••ch bootc ordered, Include 25c •nd one "Mt w.tght'' t 1t1tement from the front label of any
alze FANTASTIK BATHROOM CLEANER, QLASS PLlJS. ~iPRAY'N STARCH, SPRAY'N WASH,
VIVID « YES. One pn><>f-of1>4.1rcNIH r.qunted IOf .. ch 1 :><>Ott ordered. ,---.
NAME L__j 1'<0 0~ B001< \".. ,,. '1.,
.:i AlJ[JR~ SS z 0
.J
"' Cl T'
:::> 0 ... Mall to· Texrze Salety Book P 0 Box 4015 Mont tP• MN ')5J6S 3 Oller good through De1.. 1 1985 This Cllll•l rcatl' mu• 1 a rrpan.,. , u .. qves• .mo
may not be reproduced Oller vorO wherP prohrt>•te • es' .... 100 or regu alPd GO<Xl
miv rn US A Plea!>e alluw f) 8 week5 tor Oeliw• f ,
~.~ . . . L-----------------------------------------·----------------------------_.....,."..,""·
McGtutl IM Cr!,,,. P,....enllon Dov
• !98( TM ""•ef'l•••"9 Council Inc
---------------EXPIRES I 31 16 MiwuFiciuiEicouiiON' fi~Rfsii:l1i8i
SAVI ON II OZ. FllfTAITIK0
UTlfROOM CLHNlR
MANuFA°c-tuAER ciiuP<>-N eiPIRff 131/e&
SAVI ON HY IW GUii ~IS· UYl 0.. ANl SIU SPRAY "I STAllCMT9
C*IJWHa Qim! .. , •• ""'• ~ .,,,,. • --~ _. ..,.:-~ ._ r r • . • ..,. ~ .. ' Iii IWll! •• • ...... ..... . ..,.... .. . .....,_.~ .................. .....,. .. ., .. """ ..... ~ ~··"" .. ,. .............. ,. ... ....... ~"' ... ~.-~ 1",..... • "•C..... ~ •• .__ •• ,. .... ~ ... '11\11
, I •1 .... «t••• J W>o
5..-· 107368
02
I 5
Tex&.~--• .,. -·C~• 546 16 -
MANU;i c1u"ERCOUPON-fifliRffii31/N 2oc
IMI ON UT Sill UUY •• WAW.
l*JWll(t ..... ..... .. -.. ·-• Piii"---.......... ., ....... . .. --~ •t ,. Ii ,. .. ._... ........ *·-·~--· .... -~·•,._..tt........., .... ,. .......... ..""""',... • ....... ...,, ...... ... .................. ~ ..... ~.,....
...... (1 ..... .,,,.
~ r-l.07392
0 2
5
546
COlttu••• · ,.,_. • • -..,.,,.. ... •. ..,,,.. -..u~r ......, "~--· .... ~ "IP'! ., .......... ,. ... ,...,. ...... ..... . ,........ ............ ..,.. .
:-; ......... ·~ ... IA~~ 1111• ..
107350
4015
107 41.6
s I
546
__ ..
---~ •n.a
02
I
li
\ ... . ,, ....... ;...-..-............ .
~ .... .-?" ltl• .... ;,. .. ~ ........... ,....,. ""' ............ .. .......... ..... ............ .....-........ ~ _............... ..... .... _.._. .,,...... ............. 'f'i1lt ......... c ... • '''" j. 107400
t A 5
Tealn -~ 546 9 1 r
Tul:ll ...
' 546
'
......... ; . a o a 35)£3 5 3 c a s
~ p. DAILY PILOT/Wtd~leeday, Auguat 28, 198S -------------------·!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.....;. ____________________________________________________________________ __
Pair fresh salmon,greens
for a perfect summer salad
rice or pasta or in the aourmct
section.
~-····· ~ ~.-.... ) No Gan10~) N
Delectable salmon steak,.
marinated in new lemon and hert»
navor salad dressing and served on
~-----.. _..;:•_..;::bed of aree~ s~nnkled with J 1enne strips orpntenvqetab~
and pmishcd with avocado slices
is a main dish aal.ad that may well
nmk u one of this summers best.
Broiled Salmon SaJad was
created by Chef Nancy Weiss. A
araduate of Culinary Institute of
America. she has been a chef at
Chic,qo'darnous Pump Room and
Phoenix's Steven restaurant. Now
rr.,
'T 1·'
she's developing recipe and me~u
ideas for Bia Four restaurants in
Phoenix. t
ThouJh she claims she doesn't
cook much at borne, eiss ts Utful
in combining intcrestina mare·
dients with grcaMaslln& results.
Her Couscous Salad makes an easy
yet unusual side salad.
Couscous 1s a tiny pasta often
used in Mtddle Eastern cooking.
Packaged couscous can be found in
most grocery stores.. either with th(
Meat Dept. Savings
Beef Back Ribs
Rump Roast ~1~::;
Chicken Thighs ::.;;~ .. $'~·~
Sirloin Tip Roast =o
Beef Wieners ~'~;~~11()$
l ! age
,. s1.19
.• age
I s1.69
UC.. age
French Fries ~~=~f
Pt • 7'"7~ TOllHOS 1.~~~""''°"
Hali but Steaks ;~~.. .• '2.99
Jumbo Shrimp ::-.:'Ag~ 1 •• s7_99
~
Lindsay Olives =~~ ...
Pickle Relish ~;;<>""
Heinz Ketchup
BBQ Sauce M\IHIS •11 HAIU"••
ll'lt01t0 l "C:.•0-• O• ~ ....... ,,.,\,
Steak Sauce , ..... -.. ,
Miracle Whip ~?i~: . Tuna '"IC., .. Of , .. l KA C-• .ec,.1 WOol. Ollw•TI•
l""\nn Food ~ .... ~ ~•wAGO"
rocery Specials
Alurr1inum Foil •fYHOlOS "'°" s1.39
H 1
t D' •LUNU ss.59 ug~)1es 1apers ;ff.a:::°:>'.':"'~.
Paper Plates ;!~1"0" ·-· ..
51 .49
Charc.~oal JUSTL'°"' •u1s s1 .99
Li,ghtEtr Fluid ~!:~:~ ,M, 51.09
Marsh,'llallows ;a,:o
95c Margarine ~:~~0
•OI B d s r. If• 1"0$ Gfte rea :~~~~,,··.vi••
's0'u.:J~ English Muffins roc:i:
1111 1.25 p t t ("'h • 1>YIOll .,,, s1 .19 o a o ·' 1ps ::~~' ..
•001 52.09 Stater al--. "~:~: •i:ii
•• 511 .29
1•01 ~
J 4
Mi Iler Lite Beer
Spanada OAIY~~
Wine Cooler w .. cou .. •••
Ronrico Rum :~00•0
Lord Calvert ~~c::"
Kahlua LICOllOfCArf
UnlOZCAHS S4.19
I ~ITUI 51.99
41)01 52.59
I T!>L1ffll
58.99
. ''"Tl" 89.79
fK> PROOF VODKA REGULAR OR LIGHT Crown
R11gge
Coot• ....
'?49" $4-I9 ·~~
1 75-UTER -CA S
Cheez Its .,....,,., C••(•f"' --··· ... ,.,. Oii
wt lllE.SUWl THE ~ TO LIMIT Of' AEFUSE
SAi.ES TO OOMMVllCIAl DEAl.£1111 OA WHOU.SAlEAS
I
Couscous is easily cooked ac.
cordjna to package directions.
.Remmi,cent of Middle East
flavon. this Couscous salad com·
bines new lemon and herbs salad
dressina with cooked and ~led
couscous, diced tomatoes, d1~
cucumber, chopped green ooaon
and mint.
BROILED SALMON SALAD ~ cup prepared lemoa ud
urb• ulad clres11D1
4 ouce fresll aa.lmon tseak ~ mecUam iaccllhll, cat lDto
1tr1p1 ~ medlam yellow aqaa1la, ca&
LDto 1trlp1
"' carrot, cat lDto 1trlp1
a4 red pepper, cat l.Dto 1trip1
Ii\ tomato, seeded ud cat l.Dto
1tr1p1
i teaspoon• cilutro, cbopped
(optional)
! cups ulad green•
a4avocado,1llced lD 1l1 wed1e1
Pour 2 tablespoons of the dress-
ing over salmon in a small bowl.
Combine zucchini, squash, carrot,
red pepper, tomato, cilantro and 2
tablespoons of the dressing. Toss
salad greens with 2 tablespoons of
the dressing.
Broil salmon, basting OC·
casionally, about 5 minutes on each
side or untJI done.
Arrange salad greens on serving
plates; place vegetables in center of
plate.
Top with salmon and fan
avocado around bed of vegetables.
Drizzle remaining dressin& over
avocado. Makes 2 servings.
COUSCOUS SALAD
1 envelope lemon ud laerb1
talad drn1ln1 mil
Vlne1ar1 water and 1alad oil
4 cups cooked, cooled coa1coa1
1 cup seeded, diced tomato
1 cap peeled, seeded, dJced
cucamber
a4 cup cllopped green onion
! tablespoon• ,cllopped f reafa
mlnt leaves• •or use l teaspoon dricd·mint.
Prepare salad dressing mix with
vinegar, water and oil as directed
on envelope. Pour over remaining
ingredients; toss gently. Chill.
Serve garnished with fresh mint
leaves and lemon wedges, if de-
sired. Makes S cups or l 0 servinp.
Rx medicine
can impair
assimilation
of nutrients
a
' . ,1
Orano-Coatt DAILY PILOT /W9drt#d#Jy, Augutt 28, 1185 C18 -~
, .
ANNOUNCING
. •
• Blue Ribbon
Waistshield
• FOrm-fitting.1.
Shape ,
. •· Refastenable
Tapes
• Thicker and ·
more absorbent -·
....
-
® • •
A Drie~ Baby _f.rom Top to Bottom!
' t
• . 1n your
·favorite
store·!
-, ..
t
,
, l
,
'
r
......
IASn•N YIAL
FOlt SCAlLOPINI OR 6 99 WIENERSOiNITZEl && •
FESTIVE PUNCH PEACHY
True Sparuah sanana •s a cold,
fruity mixture of red wine, ice, fruit
juices and supt. In the south·
wC1tem United States, a ··sanaaree"
is euentiaJJy the same drink.
However, a cheap aradc of red
wine 11 used, its quality osteni1bly
ma lccd by the frwt flavors.
Our Festive Peach San&ria uses
larae. flavorful fresh California
peaches-in a fr<>Hn melange of
strawbenies, oranges. limes and
lemonade. Red wine and soda are
Poured into the frozen punch before
servma and the fruity cube melts as
it is served. Peach Sanaria is a areat
pany punch because it stays f<>ld for
CALIFORNIA
WHOLE BODY
CHICKEN
LIMIT 4 .... •.•
ITALIANSAUSAOI
SWEET
OR HOT
Excellent lex 8.8.0
&& 1.99
FRYERS
5AU5AGI A
81SCUITS..,.1.19
L ..
a ton.a tune. _
The larae t California peach var-
ieties of the season are avaJlablc:
now.
Wben selectina fresh Califomia
peaches. look for a creamy or
aolden undercolor. That reddish
"blush" is pretty but indicates
vanety not ripeness. A void
wrinkled peaches and those with
lQCeS of-arcen.. To ripen fum !res.b
peaches, place them an a fruit
ripening bowl or loosely closed
paper baJ at room temperature.
Patience 1s the watchword -you
can't rush the process.
Once ripe, store f res~ peaches in
CLOD •OUT Oii
PAMILYsnAK
BONELESS I 69 BEEF CHUCK && •
the refrigerator and Dnna to room
temperature before tcrvi!'I-.
The peaches for tht sanp
should be pitted. Smee most ~
ieues currently av&tlablc at this
time of the season are f reettone.
pittina is easily accomplished.~
you're ready to pour tn the spmta.
let the occasion diciatc whether this
punch will be sangria or san'1f'CC.
If you cart to match the quality of
the California~ C;h~ ..._
vintaac bottle of a good haht red.
But even if you slum i!z. ~c full
flavor of a npe Auaust UJiforn~
peach will help~ mello~ the ac1dk
bite of even a wine special.
FDTIVE PEACH
SANGRIA
1 CU (I! OllDCff) frolell
lemoucle, tbwed
1 cu ( U oMcet) water .
i cap1 1trawberrie1, llaJled.
ltalved
4 larse freala California peaclae9.
pined, sliced (Z pouch; 1 qurt
sUcet)
1 oru1e, tll1Dly sliced
1 lime, t~y 1llced
1 boUle (750 ml) red wlM
1 boUle (10 onces) clab soda
C.Ombine lemonade and water in
3-qLUtrt freez.er container. Add ill
fruits; cover and freeze until ready
to use. To serve, remove frozen
punch base from freezer 2 hours
before serving.
Place in punch bowl and Pour in
red wine and sbda. Stir gently to
blend flavors. Remaining frozen
cube will slowly melt as punch is
served. 12 servings (6 ounces each).
Hedgerows
now yield
ingredients
for salad
Fresh
GROUND EASTERN VEAL LB I.ff AJ.AIK.A• llAUllUT sn.AQ && 2. 8 Fresh. Hot or Mild, I-lb. Cup
RIO OE ORO SALSA ............. EA. 1.19
Toss those old formulas for salad
out the window along with the
iceberg lettuce and JOin the salad
revolution.
.::: --·· ~ Sltl' 1 MAD ilJ ~1 ........ -~-~~~ 59 ~· ~ LIMfT2 •
...
for Stuff1nsi.
LARGE B'Ell PEPPERS 5 FOR 11
Walt 011n.y ............
Ua.AllY
M.rci Gelle 8 Ounce
MOUSSE SHAMPOO OR RINSE
Lo Sololre
NO. 2 SUNTAN LOTION
.
M& ..
Wll& I ...
KG. OI
HOf & sr1CV 2.59
:12-0unc.
l YNOEN MRMS 'fENCH ~IES
t6-0unc.e
WllOEJtNESS 8WE8ERRIES
, r
Tender Eon
HEINZ
KETCHUP
c
c....,....~....._.,.~.._....._.,..._~._.,,c...._.,,,....,....,, , . .., .. ,.....,...,.,.....~
1 ~..,............,...,._..,...,...~.-._....,.....( ...... I C>o•r ~~ ............ .,, ... .,..,..., ...... -.... ' ~ •• .,._..,......._..twr••<~· ,,,.....,..._, ~..,.. • .,...,.,,, ~·-~~...--.. -.. ......... ,, •• I ,. -.. NW •tof\o,.. ........ ,. .... ~ ,,.....,, ··~ ..... , .. ,..,.,"""' ... I~"..,.~ ~ ................. ..,., ~.........,_' ~·II) ....... .._·~·,,..., O" eotf'\ (~ 10 ()ft.or Good"""' ,. ttw-~ ..,. 4 ·~ ti ""'-... ~ ~ ,... ., ......... -·---_____ .. __
--ICEBERG
LETTUCE c
IA.
4 Inch Pot
KllAn
Ml•MLI WHllt
32-0Z. REG.
OR LIGHT
LIMtT 2 ·1.59
FRESH SWEET CORN 5 FOR '1 BLOOMING MUMS ... 2.••
VOL. 3
2.59
I.ff
'·"
~ llVf!!.~1} _.,,,,,,,, ·i' l{.111 ;.1:111··"-
3.17.0UNQ COOi 44. = ~ SClllLU ... 0&111.IC SALT•
• '# FREE RIG. 1.09 =
•• WfTH U .00 MINtMUM MIAT Dll'T. PUtlCHASI. ••
llMn OHi ..a COUllON OHi COUllON "• CUl10MD
• VALID THltu lll'T. 4, 1915 • ........................
16-0unce
l.S.Ounce Pockoge ....... .................
MSG ASAHI AJI.. . .. . ..
Dried Seaweed, 0.8-0z. Pkg.
URASHIMA YAKISUSHI NORI
12·PACK
COORS
.. ........... 89
.................. 1.11
.................... 1.19
~: 0=~ .,.
19
I
LIMIT
TWO
12~
ss· ....
.... 1 ...
--
COLOR PRINTS
•M&._.,.M.,_Of~ &_. ........... ..,,.... ...
~·--~NO ...,..c.. ............... . me,....., . ..,. ... _
..... , ..... "" ....... 0. ..... _ OMW • Olll ._ OI .... , ....... ...,_ .... ::·a.-...,. ...,9'.n, ....
c
• I
I·~· 1.19
2·~Conon
RISVOlD POTATO SALAD .................. ' ...... I A•
Aleoned, I-Os ... ftE:N & QUtll DIPS ..................................... .
Blow away the froth of fads and
crazes, says an article in Con-
noisseur, and you will find the
choice and treatment of salad '
greens is changing.
Some adventuresome folks have
givJn up lettuce entirely. but more
common is the switch from iceberg
10 more exotic varieues.
There is a literature of salad, .
going back in English to 1699 aod
John Evelyn'.s .. Acetaria, A Dis.-
course of Sallets" (available from
the Univenity Press of Virginia), in
which the author talks about the
frupl French and Italians who
. gather ingredients so that "every
hedge" can yield a salad.
"See what the Italians and French
do" and "look in the hedgerows ..
are also the mottos of today's salad
experimenters.
Evelyn lists 73 salad ingredients,
including new wave "discoveries ..
such as oak-leaf lettuce, purslane
and rocket.
To find out what was new one the
salad front, author Alan Davidlon
•isited 14 cities, using as his
standard of comparison a salad of
purslane and flowers such a.s
nasturtium, pot marigold and
borage flowers created by Joy
Larkcom, the English author of
"The Salad Garden," who vows
her own outside Cambridge.
Among the trend-setters wu
Donna Jean Zentner of Seattle's
Cafe Optimum, who uses flowen
such u pinks, violas, evening
primrose and candytuft to set off28
different kinds of ~ns.
In Berkeley, AJ1ce Waters of the
Chez Panisse restaurant, and her
grower, Andrea Crawford, favor a
curly endive called frisee de
Louvieres, red salad-bowl lettuce,
rocket and curled chevril. Small
seeded mache, a salad com, is
intersown with bronze-leafed
mignonette.
Their salads always include a bed
of mesclun, a Provencal mixture
that includes rocket, dandelion and
baby lettuce, into which Crawford
mixes rocket, red oak-leaf lettuce
and at leut four other ingredienu.
Mesclun bas Italian counterparts
such u the Roman misticanza.
made from at least seven wild
areens.
In an ideal world, &rcens should
be picked just before beina tOSled
into a salad, but most ina.redicnts
will keep if treated propcrfy.
Handle peens aa httle and u
aentl_y U PoSSible. Rinse them and
briefly shake or spin nearly dry.
Refriietate them while still dewy m
a well-packed bq. Keep atorqe
time to a minimum1 particularly for
the delicate new co1ored lettUc:et.
For salad dresaina. it is hard &o
improve on the claUic vinaiarette,,
three part.I olive oil to one pan
viocpr, with top quality exu.
vir1m olive oil ..,,u wonh the ~ce.
To add a Cheek touch, Con·
no1neur 1u11nt1 1ub1utuun1
lemon juice -for Yinepr. Oarlic
loven will want to rub the salad
bowl with prlic.
ln•ex•pen•1lve•
.,In Ill ep9n' IN) not '"Oh In prtce; reuoneble,
Cl&Mlfled ..., __.
~tlelng rW9I
Cluslfled Advtrtlslng 8'2-5&78
. . -....... -..
TOMOMOW:
. -WARM
S.rvlnf Newport Buch, Cotta Miu, Huntington lelch, lrvlne, Llguna Belch, Fountain V...., Md South °"'"91 ~
• ORA NGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA WE ONE SOA f AUCUS T 28 1<f8'> 2S CE NT S
ount awmen
Coaat
A city traffic report con-
cludes that the flow of
sun-worshippers flocking
to Balboa wlll soon be-
come too much for the
limited streets./ Al
Callfomla
A commuter plane has a
rough landing In Fresno
after a propeller becomes
lmbedded In the wing./ AS
Nation
Suspicious fires dis-
rupted Grand Central
Termlnal during rush
hour this morning./ A4
Actress Ruth Gordon
dies at her home In
Ma9sachusetts./ A4
World
Three terrorists are ar-
rested for the San
Salvador cafe attack that
killed six Americans./ AS
Mlnd6:Body
What's In a name? Ask
columnist Linda Algazl In
Help Yourself .I A9
Food
Do-ahead recipes help
taket~~laboroutofyour
holiday menu.C1
Business moves at a
snall' s pace at a Call-
fornlaescargot f~rm.C1
Sports
The Angels do unto Balti-
more as Orioles did to
them./81
A boxer who retired for
six days will step Into ring
agaln./82
The Raiders release two
veterans to whittle roster
down to 50./82
e
1
Peace Ina.de a hangar
Newport Beach Mayor Pblllp Maurer, left,
•ten• h.latorlc aettlement between the city
and Orange County over John Wayne
Airport u ::r:m~r Tom Riley and Gary Proctor, c of the Airport Com-
ml•lon, look on. Story on Paee AS.
OC Fair Board seeks an end
to amphitheater noise bill
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of Ille O.ity l'Wot llMf
The Orange County Fair Board
asked state Sen. John Seymour on
Tuesday 1 0 drop his PaG1fic
Amphitheatre noise bill and let the
state Attorney General's office work
on lowering the volume at the
outdoor arena.
In a letter sent to the Anaheim
Republican, fair officials pointed to
the board's recent demand that the
amphitheater comply with Costa
Mesa's noise limits or be found in
violation of its 40-year lease.
The 18,()()(kapacaty concert arena
1s privately owned by Ned-West Inc.
of Los Angeles, which rents the land
from the state-owned Orange County
Fairgrounds.
"It is the board's intention through
the Attorney GeneraPs office to
diligently pursue the enforcement of
the langua&e... of the lease with the
Pacific Amphitheatre," board presi-
dent Clinton Hoose sta ted in the
letter.
The letter also stated that board
members unanimously agreed Senate
Bill 1257, which would allow the city
of Costa Mesa to regulate
amphitheater noise. was "no longer
necessary or required ...
Fair spokeswoman Jill Lloyd said
the action was taken by a board
unwilling to shart its authonty with
the city, which has no junsdict1on
over the fatrgrounds.
Seymour's bill 1s strongly opposed
by officials from other state-owned
fairgrounds, who arsue It would set a
precedent for allowing local govern·
mcnt to ~ulate them._ _
In an apparent effort to s1de·step
the bill, board members notifcd Ned-
West this month that 1he company
had allegedly breached ntne
provisions in the March 1981 lease.
Most of the alleged v1olattons deal
with building complaints as well as
the reported sale of alcohol to minors
and the concert noise spilling into the
nearby Mesa del Mar and College
Park. neighborhoods.
The amphitheater has been gi ven
until Sept. 13 to correct the alleged
(Pleue 11ee FAIR/~)
Meanwhlle--:Inany
residents report
seeing elusive man
By STEVE MARBLE
~IMO., .........
Three days after the N1~t Stal~r
struck for the first time m Or!tnJ.C
County, fearcontmues to build while
authorities step up efforts to track
down the unpredictable killer
ln lrvmt, police have increased
patrols and have ass1Jllcd personnel
to handle the flood of telephone calls
from worried citizens and tho~
claiming to have spotted the lanky.
curly-baucd man responsible for 14
nighttime slay1ngs.
"Everyone is paranoid." Lt. Pat
Rodgers sa1d today. "l can't blame
them.''
Orange qounty Shenff's deputies
are stopping suspicious cars dunng
Sketch of killer
tht pre-dawn hours and have tn-
crcased their helicopter patrols over
(Pleue eee IUGBT I A2)
1,900 in limbo
after S t. York
cancel ation
Ford Aerospace watts
for Army Instructions
on what to do next --
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of the O.ity ..... SW!!
.\bout 1,900 workers at Ford
Aerospace & Commun1cauons Corp
an Newport Bcacn are uncertain of
their future employment today.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger on Wednesday canceled
the Army's S 1.8 btlhon contract w11h
Ford to produce the Sgt. York battle
gun -a major project an Orange
County.
Many of the employees first heard
the announcement on the radio as
they drove to woff lueS<lay~rTy
news reports told them that the
massive defen se project the} began
seven years ago at four locations 1n
Orange Count~ was being tenn1n·
ated.
Managers at the Newport Beach
plant on Ford Street. the Ford
Aerospace test site east of San Joan
Capistrano and two of the Ford
Aerospace (DIVIDl locat1om tn
I rv1ne held simultaneous meetings
'Tuesday afternoon with the em·
ployees who were working on the
project. Ford ~erospa~ rcgJOoal
spokesman Don Ramm said. He said
supervisors are· still awaiuna word
from the Anny on what to dd nellt.
.. S1oce 11 was ao Army prOJCCl,
we're walling for the Army to isst.te
formal instrucuons." Flamm said. He
said the employees were amviog for
work this morning and that they wiU
come to work a~ usual unul they~
either transf~-«-<iwn•ssed,
Ford .\erospace spokesman Tom
Momssey said the ,workers assigned
to the battle gun proiect .. are a b11 ma
J;ord Aerospace workera
still don't know what their
fate Is. Story A3.
state-ofili0Ck-1n lhe afpermat trot the
tederal announcement. ,
'This whole thing has not been
well-<:oordinated The people really
don't lrno~ an)'th1ng about what's
going to happen ..
.\lthough the d~1s1on to halt the
ant1-a1rcraft S)Stem orders 1s a signifi-
cant move that "Ill have certam
impact on the future of the large
aerospace firm . "1t 1) not a closc-the--
bus1nes~ type of dec1s1on " Morrissey
said
(Pleue eee SGT. YOR..lt/A2)
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Claaalfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
A14
A3
A 12-13
B4-7
A14
86 es
A11
BS
C1-14
Oil Qpponents tour platform
. Entertainment
Horoscope
Food
Ann Landers
Mind & Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
PoUce Log
Public Notices
Sport1
Televtaon
Weather
A 11
A9
A8
A9
A3
B8
B1-3, 8
A10
A2
Rep. Bob Badbam
Badham. coalition update perspective;
Irvine Co. joins off shore drilling foes
1By USA MAHONEY
6t Ille O.ity "'-' ltell
Proponents of offshore 011 dnlhng
on Tuesday took their political enem-
ies on a tour of Edith, Chevron's state-
of-thc-art oil platform.
Chevron officials and representa-
tives of the Western 0 11 and Gas
Association took U.S. Rep. Bob
Badham, R-Newpon Beach: Bob
Gentry and Evelyn Hart, two mem-
bers of a coastaJ coalition oppoS(.d to
ellpandcd drillina, and Chns Towns-
end of the Stein-Brief Group around
the huge 011 drilling platform which
..
stands off the coast of Hunttngton
Beach, Bill Schreiber. a Badham aide.
said today.
Meanwhile. the Irvine Co. broke tts
s1lence on the offshore 011· question
and opposed dnlling off the OrlJnge
Coast. A lttter has been sent to U.S
lntenor Secretary Donald P. Hodel
saying that the firm supports the
~cretary's effons to increase anlhng
operations off the California coast.
but company officials believe Orange
County should be kept clear offunher
011 ngs. The letter says increased
drilling could "threaten the environ-
S_gi1' sin ·uries a· living nightmare
. .. .
Mother wants driver who deliberately hit
blc cllst to know the dam e he has done
Lois Rufer awakes every momina
and rccalla once gain that it wasn't
just a t.d drea.m.
wns on bcr atain that her son
deliberately lcnockcd off his cy last month by a passin• car In
Irvine and that he is still 1n the
bospitaJ, leatnina how to walk and
bow to talk
She recalls little thinas~ like sec1na her son stretched out on h11 ho pat.al
bCd in an intcnaavccarc unit tryin• to
pn:mouncc the word ·~bye" and 1av1na
up the elfon in fNatrauon.
Will he be Ok ? he doesn't know. Has be suffered brain dama e? She sn•t sure.
wm tbepoliccevcrcatch thednver
wbo purposely swerved into the back
of het son's JO-speed bicycle? Pro~
ablv not. c(I don•t want venaea.ncc." he said
recently at her Fountain Valley home.
''I'm not an anael. I do thjnk horrible
thinas of them, but it's doJ\e. It's over.
"I do wish I could to Wk to them
and show them what they've done.
Take them to the h05pital. to the
intensive care ward and say. 'look
what you•ve done to my son.
..That's wut I rqrct mon. I
wonder if they will even know what
they did. Do th~ JUSt think, 'Hey.~
just knocked off a baker today?' Or do
STEVE
MARBLE
NEw s FoLLowuP
·they thtnk about u at aJlT'
The m-onuna of July 29 stances
routinely for Jame Rufer. a 3'·ycat-
old typcsctterwho had mo"fd back 1n
with h•s mother lhls year aft.er
chln11na JObs.
Ruf'tr, an ardent b1cychst. left
hamc early wath a fncnd and rod.t has
10-speed bicycle toward lmne a pan
of a rcaular workout On MacArthur
Boulevard. JUSt SOUlh o( tht frttway,
a metallic-blue car pulled behind
Ruf tr. '
Accordina to pohce, tht two men 1n
tht car beaan yelltna at either Rufer or
his female fnend Rufcr's mother
doc n 't doubt that her son 11"~ the
dnver and has passcnier "some lip."
The ar ped up, swerved into the
marked bake lane and chppcd Rufer,
witneues told poh~.
"from everyth1na I've heard. I
have no doubt that they 1ntentionallt, C>U"P.O ly rammed him with their
car. ' Irvine Oet«tivc Peter Linton
said .. It wasn't an 1«1dcnL"
Rufer was thrown from h1, bike,
nrikina his head on the 119vcmcnt
Two motonsts who saw what hap-
1 (Pleue ... CYCLIST/ A.2)
\
ment and qualtt~ of ltte which hdps
~upport this county's vibrant grow ·
1ng econom)'."
Badham got pcrm1ss1on to tour thl'
oil platform to get some perspectt\t'
on the question of expanding dnlhns
operations off the Orange l oa&t
Schretber said. ..
Although Badham remain<i op-
posed to alloWlng the 011 indu!>tl') 10
make further tnroads in Orange
County. Schreiber said the v1stt to the·
platform was useful because 11 gaH
the congressman and others on the
tour a fil'1t-tiand look at the tech·
nolog) u~ tn elltracttng 011 and ga'
from underwater tracts
.. , thank 1t Wlll help when flr'e'>·
enung our case on Saturda\ ·
'i<:hre1hcr ~1d
Badharn will jOin with a host of
l)thcr '>peaker'> b<lth for and against
opandcd o il l'xplorat1on at a mcctu~a
"'1th Interior ~retar. Hodel schtcf·
uled tor II a m ~turdav al Newport
Beach ( 11" Ha!I
Hodel 1<; tounng t I (ahfon:Ua
('1t1e'i to hold toY.n hall meeunas 9D
whether the federal government
should dip dccper into off~horc Otl
reM"nes which have httn protected
bv a four·\e1u dnlhng moratonum.
'" of the I 50 tracts tcntat1\1Cty
proposed for expanded c'plorat100
are ~ ... cral male-; off the Oranac
Coast
Bad ham w1ll met't 1N1th Hodel for
an hour or more pn<¥ to the Saturda1
hcannjl,. '>chre1ber said Badham will
(Pleue Me OIL/ A2)
u .s. officials
fearful about
pair's safety
By ROBERT BARKER
ot-O..,NiMetM!
>\ t ~ \lJlc Department ofrlC'1 I
said toda~ c;he 1!> "vcl') conecmcd" fo
the safet) of Leo and Doto~ LaJcu-
ncs'iC', who r'('ponedly wett releucd
last Saturday b) tht N ac&rqUl,I\
govt'mmcnt
Leo l..a.Jcunt'41'it, a former Ora
Coast C'ollqc 1Mtructor. and h11
were ~1hna their 6S.foot ketch
Wah1nt from F-1onda to the Oranat
Coast when N1carquan l Gua,rO
unit\ hoordC'd thcu boat A 7 &id
to"'1td u to a N1taraaua.n Pon
~lttr CllCMtV(' inqu1n fTocn
(P1eue ... C01'C&U/
, .
I
.
Onnge Cout OAILV Ptl.OT/Wlldneedty, August H. 1986
NIGHT STALKER PATROLS BEEFED UP •••
l'rOmAl
wuncoporatcd eommun1uc' like
Mission VieJo and El Toro.
Nearly l 00 people contacted the
ritrsdepartment late Tuesday and
early today to rcpo11 prowlen and
u picious-looklna persons, Lt. Dtck
Obotl said.
Police in Hunungton Bnch have
been besiCJed by c1ULens wantma to
form Nc&&bborbood Watch chapters
&l'ld seekina advice on secunna their
homes.
"l cenainly can't fAult anyone for
h.avina concerns about themseJves
and their families," 1t1d Huntina,ton
Beach Police Chief Earle Robitaille,
who said he 1CeS notbina wrona wtth
citizens lteepina firearms as Iona as
agt ~ trained to use them.
The N1aht Stalker manhunt has
resulted 1D more than 2,000 tips or
rtpona by citizens who claim to have
1een the ltiUer, S&Id a spokesl"{lan for
the Los Af\ICICS County Shenfl's
Department task force established to
ttac:k the mass killer.
Althouah police and deputies wd
tbey an treating all leads as top
prionty, most if not~ the caJls have been dead-ends:
police he rccea.,ed a telephone ca11
from a man claimina to be the Nilht
St Iker, telhna her she wouJd be nis
nut victim.
Durina a Tuesday aft.cmoon pre
conference, Sheriff Brad Oates asked
cttiuns to protect themselves by
lock.in& all doors a.nd windows at
n.iaht. feavina on porch and backyard ltahts and tnmmma shrubs and
bushes that could be uscd 11..1. hidina.
place y a prowler.
"We want to do evcrythma pos.sible
to decrcatc the chance of a aecond
incident," said O.tes, wbo aJso
announced that his department bu
been stoppina 1uspicious can durina
pre.dawn hours since the latest Nia.ht
Stalker attack.
"We don't know how or when he
m1aht strike next," said Oates, who
descnbcd the attacker as a cunnina
but unorthodo.l senal killer wbo may
thrive on the fear that has spread in
his wake.
The Niaht Stalker is blamed for 14
k.illinas and 21 assaults, iocludina the
k.idnappina of four younasters who
were molested. The strina of violence
bqan in February and now s~tches
from San FranclSCO to Orange Cuon-
ty.
Mcmbct'I of the Los Anactes rask
Force on Tuesda~ issued an updated
sketch of the N. t Stalker. The new
draw1naadd ab cit basebalJ cap but
other features like the man's pppcd,
stained teeth remain cons11tent wnh
an earlfer compofite.
Los Anaeles County sbenff s Lt.
Dick Walls said the killer may have
left a s1milar baseball cap behind ~ ~ a.belJev.ed io have luUed ht
first victim, Dayle Ok.az.ak.i OD M&Kh
17 in Rosemead.
A navy blue cap fo1,1nd at the
murder 1CCne had a silver patch
embroidered in red. wtth a liahtnina
boll and the lettcn "AC-DC.'' the
name of a e-?Pular heavy metal rock
band. he Slld.
Gates wd his offioe~ wdl dJS·
tribute JO Oranae County den lists the dental~baru believed to belona to the
Niaht Stalker.
Supervisors' pay
hike gets final OK
Thr On.nae County Boa.rd of
Supervisors, as expected, voted Tues•
day to Jive themselves a 22 pettent
pay raise bqjnn1ng in January.
•Police in Fountain Valley wen:
told that the Nia.ht Stalker was h1dina
LD a department store.
•Shenff's depu\jes were asked if 1t
was true \hat the Nipt Stalker had
fataJty shot someone m Costa Mesa.
•Numerous citizens contacted
newspapers thinking that a homiCJde
in Anaheim was the work of the
.... Stalker.
•San Oemente police received 19
rc~rted sightings of the Niaht Stalker w~e Irvine received 9.
The latest in the Niaht Stalker's
stnna of lcillinas and attacks was early
Sunday on a qu1e1JCs1deDtiaJ street
tn Mission Vie;o wnere Bill Cams was
shot twice unhe bead and his fiancee
bound and raped.
Cams. 29, remained in critical
condition today at Mission Com-
munity HospitaJ io Mission Viejo.
His 29-year-old jirlfriend, who has
not been identified. is being auarded
by deputies. Gates sajd.
With the same 4-I margin by which
the pay hike was approved tentauvely
one week ago, the board a~ to
raite its five members' salaries from
$45,612 per year to SSS,000. The
matter was adoped without com-
ment.
Supervisor Hamett Wieder was
again the lone holdout. opposing the
increase because Lhe board failed to
establish an outside method or for-
mula for setting board salaries.
<
•A HuntingtOD Beach woman told
CONCERN VOICED OVER COUPLE •••
homAl
U.S. State Department and the
American Embassy in Manaaua,
representatives of the Sandanista
so~emmeDt said they released the
L41eunesses last Saturday. They al-
l~dly set sail for a port an Costa
Rica.
But the couple has not amved at
tbcar rcponed dcsonauon of Puerto
Lamon. a voyage estimated to take
about SS hours.
"We arc aetting very concerned ...
said the State Department's Norma
HArms. She said the Weunesses
should have reached port by S p.m.
Tuesday.
Nicaraguan officials refused to
disclose the radio frequency on the
boat, she said, and declined to gjvc
information on the status of the craft,
which had reported enaine trouble
pnor to being boarded by the
Nicaraguans.
They told us we should be content
that they (the LaJeunesses) had left."
she said today.
Harms aJso said she finds it
ludicrous' that the Nicaraauans de·
tamed the LaJeunesses in the fi.rst
place and then refused to permit U.S.
Embassy officials to visit the couple
to determine their well-being.
Dean Bukhett, a former counselor
at Oranae Coast and a close friend of
the LaJeunesses. said today he fears
that the safety of the couple is being
jeopardized by the refusal of
Nicaragua to acknowledge that the
LaJeunesses are still there. He said he
fears that Nicarquan officials may be
tempted to do something to the
couple so they won't have to explain
their status.
FAIR BOARD SEEKS END TO BILL ••.
From Al
v1olauons or face legal actton Fair
officials would not comment on
whether the state would attempt
eviction proceedings.
Seymour's proposal was m·
traduced 1n March on behalf of the
city of Costa Mesa. which has battled
urtsucceasfully over the past I 1h years
to harness the noise allegedly floodi na
nei&hborhoods adjacent 10 the S 12.S
million amphitheater.
City attempts to prosecute Ned-
West under Costa Mesa's noise
ordmance have been stymjed by the
-ercn.a's immunity from local Laws
Caty Manaacr Fred Sorsabal said •
thls momma that Seymour would not
withdraw SB 1251 Wlthout Costa
Mesa's consent. which will not likely
be given.
''We would not be supportive of
that until there 1s some action
accomplished by the notice of de·
fault." Sorsabal said. "We're con·
cemed Ned-West could take the state
and the Fair Board to court over the
lease and it could ao through another
(concert) season."
While Seymour's proposal
survived scrutiny by a Senate aaricul-
tural panel, the bill is having prob-
Tems gettmg throuah the Appropna·
taons Committee, described br, a
Seymour aide as the "stronghold ' of
the amphttheater's lobbylSt James
Ganbaldi.
Supporters are also figbtina a claim
that the arena may have to close if
forced to comply with Costa Mesa's
noise ordinance, costing the fair-
grounds $200,000 in annual revenue
from its share of parking fees and
other charaes.
Scheduled for an Aug. 21 heanng,
the bill was pulled by Seymour and
held over until next year because of
fean that tt would be defeated.
CYCLIST'S INJURIES A NIGHTMARE •••
J'romAl
pened tned to chase the metallic-blue
car. but lost 1t in traffic.
Linton said nobody thouaht to
wnte down a hccnsc plate number.
.. , came home at about 4 p.m and I
rememberthe first thinJ I noticed was
that Jim's bike wasn't m the garaae,"
"1rs Rufer said. "lt 50unded an
alarm I knew he should have been
back
"l opened the door. walked ms1de
and almost 1mmediateiy the tele-
ph one '!tarted ringinJ. It was the
hospital. They said Jim was 1n an
act1dent. I asked them. 'How bad·1s
he?' They said. 'Real bad '
"I packed up the phone and threw 11
across the room. It was msunct1~. I
8Ucss Therc·s no wa y 1 can even
descnbe the shock:·
Rufer was in a coma for nearly four
days. The skull fracture caused hi s
hrain to swell. pushing the two
hemispheres together and causing his
body to all but shut down.
"I remember the day he wiggled a
toe." his mother said. "You can't
believe how excited a family can ~et
over something like that. It was hke
watching a baby in slow mouon ..
The accident caused a charn reac·
t1on of eventS 1n the woman's life Her
aJhna 83-year-old mother. who was
hv1n1 in a Newpon Beach convales--
ccnt hospital. had to be moved into
Mrs. Rufer's condom1n1um.
"There just wasn't enough tame to
',,,,Jam two or three times a day and
then dnve down to Newpon Beach to
tee m)' mother She was being
Just Call 64~2-6086
Dally Piiot I •
Delivery
la Ou.rantHd
dcpnved of seem' her daughter, so I
moved her here Wlth me," Mrs. Rufer
said. "Now f have to care for her ...
Her youngest son was mamed m
Philadelphia in June and Mrs. Rufer
had planned a reception for her new
dauahter-10-law in August.
"We had to cancel it," she said ... ,
feel horrible. My new daughter-in-law
is.out here watching after my mother .
and trying to console the rest of us. Jt
wasn't supposed to be that way."
Mrs. Rufer, who was widowed
scvcraJ years ago, said the series of
upsets illustrates how .. one stupid,
brutal act of violence can demoralize
a close. loving family "
After showrng signs of improve-
ment, Rufer contracted a bacterial
mfect1on that appears to have stunted
his progress. His speech has im-
proved and he 1s able to waJ.k
haltingly. He still recalls nothing of
the accident.
"Therc',s a question of permanent
damage to the brain. The doctors say
he should get back 80 or 90 percent;
but 1magjne losing I 0 percent because
two hoodlums knock him off bjs
bicycle." Mrs Rufer said .. Why
should he have to lose I 0 percent?"
She sa1d her son will have to enter a
rehab1htat1on hospital when he
leaves Fountain Valley Communjty
Hospital
.. He doesn't know that yet, and I
hate to even tell him." she added.
Mrs. Rufer ~1d she doesn't care
particularly 1f police ever catch up
with the men who 1n1ured her son.
Loli Rufer
"But 1f they did, my recom men·
dat100 to a Judge would be for them to
serve ume at a place where people are
physically and mentally hand1·
capped. l'd hke them to see my son
trying to pronounce a word with four
nurses han&ing over him.
'Td like for them to feel the pam 1t
causes me to see my son walking
down the hall. dragjng one foot
behind him1 and then rcaJjze that
somebody did this on purpo~ ..
Wbu do you lib about the Dally Pilot? Wht don't you like., Call tht
number at left aad your me11a1e •Ill be rtcordf'd, tran1crlbed and delivered
• to lbe approprtaie editor.
Tbe same U ·boar anawerln1 service may be u1ed to record letters to the
editor oa any topic. Contrlbt1tor1 to our Letters column must lnclade tbelr
name and telepbont number for verification. No clrcalallon calla, pleHe.
Tell us what's on your mind.
Ka,.n Wlttm.r
General Mt1nage1
CltovlaUon 714/142-4m
Ca...tfted edvet1t .. ng 114(142·9171
AJI other depertmente M2..a21
MAIN OfF1CE
3lO Wll4 a.y S1 Coeie ~ CA M4'I *'Or ... 96• IMC) C.0.ta Me-. CA 9"19 """'°"' , •'4111 " f'I'• .,,, -"-•• '°"' °"""' hy & :>O p "' e•• ""''"'• ' o
llllO ~ C"PY ~-IW ,,.......,,
S..flJIMy ••IO W " "°" 10 f"lt)4: '~\....... .,,_,,.,, ,noy r.y 1 • "' u~ l><Ol(M•
•0 I m IM 1CJut ("''Y ,.." ...... .o
Franlc Zlnl
Et:Mo1
AOMmery Churchmen
Co1111otler
~ 1M.> o..,.-CcM! ""~ ~ Ho i-. iicw• -.i1111on• lldllcw"'4 m.11 .. cw *"""1-
...,11 .... ..,, ""Y be 'IP'~ •~"°'11 --4 fW
_,,, OI C()f)yJV!I -
Circulation
T•lephonee
C,0.,.,1,
• "
Aobert L C•ntrell
Produ-:l•or
M1n1g111
Howard Mullenary
Ad 111 ,, Q 0.rf!rfor
Ooneld L. WllH•m•
C11cu1a110n
Manager
Peggy Blevlne
Cla1141 ed Otrtclor
\
s.etono c• potl•ill' ~od a1 Col•• ~ c..-10r,.. IU~ IU toOI •••'fJiO•"' U•-$$ 2$ '"°"'Ny 11y .... ~a1no~
VOL. '11, NO. 2AO
-.. -.......,. .. -......
Little change in weather seen
Southern Cellforna wlll remtln hot Thurtday, with late night
and Mtty motnlng !OW ctoudt burning otrto hlgh1 In the 801 and
iOt.
Except '°'a allght cooling trend, little change In the WNI
pattem II expected ovw the next eev.al days, the Nation•
WMttier Servloe -.Id The mount tint wlll warm to hight In the 801 after Iowa In the
m1cl·.60a.and Uf>f* eoe. T~deiMrta wtttnnge rrom Iowa Tn th
UPI* 40t through IOW9f' 801 to hlQh• from the 90s to 114
From Point Conception to the l.4ulcan border· Inner wat
-llght, varlable wind• through Thurtday except tor aouthWMt
to w.t 8 to 18 knotJ In the ev41nlng houra. SouthMat swell 2 to '
3 feet. Low cloud• tonight and Thurtday morning t>ecomtng
moatly aunny Thurlday altemoon
'eo to "'Q" 100 T~mOt•tlVfU lOO
U.S. Tempa Ult Yegllll 101 IO
UUle llod< .. ..
L~ 12 IO l+tgll low tor 24 -..a 10 5 a m ~ .. .. .. L.. MIMll9MOI u 11 ~ 71 &I Mllw.u.• IO 13 ~ .. .. Mpla.81P .... ,. 15 .. 10 ....,,111119 15 ., Mcllot• .. 47 MewOf!Mll• 13 n " Alllll'lte I I 71 !WYorll ... .. ..llllOC> .,
AttenllO City 82 .. OlllilllOml City tl ..
Autlln "' n Calif. Temp• 8tylht 104! 14 1• ea 0mw 12 13 lelllm9r• 13 ... Otlendo '1 Ta
C.telln• Longe..cn .. ..
~ 13 17 Plllledelptlle ... ... lle!Mr<*. 79 M
HIQll low lot 24 ,,_, ending ., 6 Monrovia 101 ea . "' t9 07
8olee ... 58
p~ 1oe .. ,. &5 l•k.,ltletel ll6 117 Mont41<ey MIW~ •• 81 PIUt.:::11'1 lloelon 13 M Port ..... 13 59 llulfelO ., f1H91!• ·~ •2 N9wll0<1~ 79 ... ,_ 101 " 100 70 7& Ponlfind Ot ,. 67 0--13 55 Pr~ ts IM OllerMton.s c 13 78 =lly .. = c:MitW1on,W V . , 12 80 Clwlotle.N.C 13 .. Aeno .. 63 ~ 13 M l'lclwno"4 .. 17 0-..0 IO a SI LOUle II 13
OntltlO ... _,., 101 19 Ptlm 8p<lllQI 10~ 79 Lo.Allpee 01 70 PeMdefte " .. 0.111\d 71 51 Alvwllde . 101 .. Peeol'lob* 100 51 hnlernetdlM 100 17 Red llMI 94 56 IMOebriel .. ~ ~Cltj 7& ~ • .,..i-n
Clnolnnall 7t M S1Pec•TlmPI .. 71 oi-lwld 78 &I
IW'O 89 S3 811111 Ctw 73 $4 Sacf-10 92 5$ IO 43 ~~ 71 57 Sell Lelle City ,, .. SaillnM 74 " T-V•~ .. II SMAn!Oftlo .. .. Sen DMQo ,, 88 vo_...1. Vly ... 5e 8etl Juen,P R .. Dellee-n wonn 71 lel\FrenctllCO ,, ~1 Ill 71 a..1119 " 52 DIW!on ,. 57 =.~ 93 It °"'-.. IO 71 M O.MC!Mee 12 13 Spok-.. ~ Oetroll 77 IO S)'rllCUM 71 ... OVMll't 14 43 Toe>e111 82 St EIPMO " M Tue;_, 102 74 'llrbri• 51 40 TulM ti .. Fwgo 75 41 WMNnGlon 14 .,
l'legttatl 13 50 Wlol'llla to 117
81111• 8etlltt• II 57 Tl dee Sloolllon 90 83
Hlgl't, low '°' 24 nour1 enllk•ll et ~ P m llaretow 10~ 73 TOOAY
'l••l IOw 3 10 • m 01
Flrtlll~h 8 391m 4&
Secon 1e>w 2 40 om a I
Secona "'911 I 48pm 64
Orencl~ ,. 14 Wllk ... eem. 78 51
Surf Report THUllto,U
IWI IHAPI flrlf IOW 3 421 m .06 OfMIF 73 56
HwttOtCI 13 51
LOCATION
3-1 .... Ftrtt l\>Qt' 10 07 • m 4 7 ...... 13 a. Extended "°"°""" IO n
HunlJnglon 8eedl RMr .i.t1Y Hewpof1 • 8-10 9000 Seo;<w'd 1c1w 3 1tp m ..
40tW 81'MC NewpOt't 1-10 9000 h«>nOll'tll\ 8 25 0 "' e :s
Houe10ft .. 72 Uno Str-HftpOt1 1·10 9000 Sun Mii IOCl•y II 1 24 0 m .....
hldlir11jlt* 78 $4 't1rlhrOUCll'flfleWMl(ef1CleA09Pl lete
17 ee ... boeWec!Qe 12-1& 9000 T-.dey 11 8 24 a m anC1 Mii egll#I el
LIOUf\98eech 2 4 ,.., 7 23 0"' Jeollaon,.,._ n191'fl MCI ll'IOtnlng low ~ end 10Q
J1otu1on,... SM ClerMnte 2-4 Moon ,,_ IOCley II 8 5e P m -.It al to n ,_ 11'11-. Higlw rltlQlng l•Of'll 11'11 ,., ... .,lemp. $ 31 a m Tnut9Clty and ri-egtlHI II ~ IM 4t mid 70t e1 Ille bMdW toe warrNW ~City ., ... lnlenCI Yelieya I.owe moell)> In Ille IOt ....... OlnlC1IOll tOu1h 7 ~pm
OIL DRILLING FOES TOUR PLATFORM ••.
From Al
use the break.fast meeung with Hodel
to be sure "be clearly understands the
incompatability of the 011 dnlhng"
Wlth Orange Countr,'s ocean views
and tourist industry, • Schreibel' said.
"We feel confident that we can
convince Hodel this is an improper
placement of drilling ri~, .. he added.
The Irvine Co. with vast un-
developed landholdings along the
coast between Corona del Mar and
Laguna Beach, is the second develop.
ment firm to come out against new oil
uploration off the Oranae Coast.
The Stein-Brief Group of Laauna
Ntauel spoke against more dnlhnJ at
a Congressional subcomm1ltee hear-
ing in Washington D.C. last April.
After month!l of study, Irvine Co.
officials determined that more oil rigs
off Orange County's coast would be
undesirable, President Thomas H.
Nielsen said.
The company's stand -hke that of
the coastal coalition -supports
increased drilling but quest1ons the
wisdom of including Oranae County
1n the deal.
"While we do not questJon the
intent of this compromise, we do
question its equity in light of Orange
County's prime coastal resources,"
the Irvine Co.'s letter says.
"The current proposal nghtfully
recognizes that some coastal areas arc
such SiJllificant resource that no
drilliflilS appropriate at this lime. We
believe that the Orange County coa~t
is an equally significant resource and
1t should be treated equally m the
compromise plan," it said.
The compromise which resulted in
the 1 SO tracts which were chosen fo r
renewed explorauon, was hewn by
the Interior Dcoartment and mem-
bers of the California Congressional
deleption.
I
The compromise protects Big Sur,
Monterey Bay, the Farallon Islands,
San Francisco Bay and Point Reyes
from dnlhng.
Nielsen. hke coastal coalition
members. believes Orange County's
coastal resources arc equally precious
and should be included in an ex-
t'ended drilling moratorium.
Malfunction shuts down Diablo reactor
SAN LUIS O BISPO (AP) -
D1ablo Canyon' Unit I reactor
automaucally shut down after pumps..
sending water to the power plant's
steam generators malftinctioned, ut1l-
1ty officials said.
The shutdown occurred Tuesday
night wh1l~ Unit I was operating at
furt power. said Ron Weinberg. a
spokesman for Pacific Oas and Elec·
tnc Co.
The shutdown was cau~d by a
malfunction in one of the unit's two
main feedwater pumps, he said. The
large p mps supply water to the
plaot' t: steam generators. Age~ty workers inspected the reac-
tor after the shutdown, said Dennis
Kirsh, acting d1v1S1on director for the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission in
Walnut Creek near San Francisca:
"All the (shutdown). systems
worked just fine. EverytlUng worked
the way it was supposed to ... Kirsh
said. "fl was a normal. gardcn-vanety
ty~ of shutdown ..
Pnor to \ht 1hutdown. Unit 1 had
been in continuous opcralJon for
more than 99 days.
"At an appropriate time. the plant
will be restaned," Weinberg said.
Meanwhile. he said, Unit 2 was
opcrallnJ at approximately 3 percent
of capacity Operators were conduct-
ID$ a scheduled test of the turbine-
dnven auitihat) f~dwatcr pump,
which supplies water to the steam
generator!
Unit 2 was fi red up Aug. 20 for the
first ome as enaineers began a tesuna
program intended to lead to com·
mcrc1al operation by year's end.
Testing will continue as the reactor
1s gradually brou~ht to 100 percent of
its rated capacity of I.I million
k1fowatts. The reactor cannot
p~ucc electncity until it is operat-ing at about I S percent ofirs capacity,
Wean berg said
SGT. YORK CANCELLATION ...
From Al
Flamm said that Anny officials
held meetings on the matter late
Tuesday in Washington. D.C.
Officials at the Newport Beach
plant had not yet heard anything
about those m~tu\gs this morning,
he said.
About I. 900 of Ford Aerospace's
6,000 Orange County employees were
working on tbc gun that the Army
Gem
Talk
By J. C. HUMPHRIES
C~r11ned Gemo/Qfi1c, AGS
I AM A DIAMOND
. AND l·m very proud
My life began deep in the ,
"womb" of blue rocks hun-'
dred.s of feet down Ln an el<t"
Unct African volcano. Men
and machines blasted many
tons of rock pd tent lt to the
surface. wnere other ma-
chines cruahed the rock until
they found me inside
After my "blrth," there wq
little chance that I would
tomeday grace a lovely piece
of jewelry. For, you aee, 80
percent of all dJamondt are
conaidettd not good enough to
be geml10nes. My leaer "ttla·
Uvet" end up ln th •harp
tooll of industry . (We
cliamonds are tb• fwdclt of
1all natural sutietahces. you
know If I may brat a bit.)
ON» I made the pade u a
pmltOne, I wu cut, faceted
and pollahed until I was lovely
enouah to be pn!9ellted to '°"
dety u • brilliant reflector
and bender of God'• lJaht
raya. How proud I am now, to
h.aw bren found wonhy of
tho name DIAMOND4 I know
r ahall make IOl'N!One v ry
happy. Only then wW t hav
reallied rny d tiny!
Operation Test and Evaluation Agen-
cy concluded was inadequate for
growing military demands.
Flamm said 64 of the guns have
already been delivered. The govern-
ment originally ordered 146 of the
Sgt. Yorks, he said
The Sgt. York battle gun, named
after World War I hero SgL Alvin
York, is dc'igned to protect armored
columns from air attacks. The
weapon 1~ made up of two 40mm
chassis and linked to a computer and
a radar ,yc;tcm, Flamm said.
In the preliminary plans to order
the systems, the Army had hoped to
order 618 of the suns. but early
independent tests indicated there
v.erc some problems with the weapon
that resulted in a reduction of the
amount ordered 1n the contract.
llow gold neck wire
holding an 18K beA~ti-
f ully made unusually
haped diamond
with • 83 pt
dlamond and 36pta In
lamonda inlaid In the
j J. C. JJumphrie~ c}ew~fer~
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCtET'r ( ~)
1809 NEWPOnT BLVD COSTA MESA /~ ~
SINCE 1'1 .. 1 ~
0.nkAIN!fleatd Me11 , Chatg• PHONE. 6'1·3401
' ,
'