HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-09 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE COUNTY.
Terror ends
asplrates
surrender
PORT SAID. Egypt (AP) -
The Egyptian government and
the PLO announced today that
hijackers of an Italian cruise
1h1p with up to 511 people
aboard surrendered af\er two
days of terror on the Med1 ter·
rancan Sea.
The Egyptian Foreign Minis-
try said none of the passengers.
who included an estimated
dozen Americans. had been
harmed. Previous reports tn·
d1cated that two Amencan pass·
engers were lolled
The Italian Foreign Ministry
10 Rome also confirmed the
Palesunian htJackers had sur·
rendered.
The ministry, c1t10g a radio
message from the ship's captain,
said the hijackers had left the
ship and were on their way to the
Port Said Naval Base. The
captatn said aJI the pa.ssengers
(Pleue Me CRU18&/A5l
Coast
An Inquiry Into allega-
tlons that county
pathologists have
botched autopsies per-
formed for the coroner
has been closed./ A3
California
The task force lnvestlglng
sexual abuse at child care
centers Is being dis-
banded./ A 10
Nation
The Senate has agreed to a short-term increase In
the government's bor-
rowing llmlt./ A8
World
Kidnappings, releases
continue In Lebanon, but
Sovf ts still hel<t! A8
Sports
Round one of the Ameri-
can League baseball
playoffs go to Toronto,
6-1./01
Entertainment
''Harold'' brlngscomlcal
doses of nostalgia and
shtick to the lrvlne Com-
munity Theater./83
Business
Newport Produce stages
a grand reopenlng./M
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Serving Newport Beach, Coeta Meu, Huntington Beech, lrvlnt, Laguna Beech, Fountain V1lley ind South Orlft09County
C ALIFORNtA NEDNEC\OAV OCTOBER 4 1qsr; 25 CENT S
Worshipers seek school space
Edison High student fellowship urgtng
HB trustees to change a ccess policy
student relJ11ous groups arc betn&
denied equal access. like classroom
space. public ad~sannouncements
and bulletm board posters, made
available to other school organiza-
uons. By ROBERT BARKER
Ofltleo.llJ ........
A student Chn shan fellowship
organization Tuesday night urged
Huntingto n Beach school o fficials to
reverse school policies and make
A nasty
day for
blazes
inHB
Woman, 76, hurt
in second fire,
one of five victims
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... 0-'y,... .....
A 76-year-old woman suffered
smoke mhalation and first-degree
bums in the second of two Hunt·
tnjton Beach rcsidenual fires that
tnJured five people Tuesday.
Helen Balcer suffered what was
believed to be mmor mjuries when
fire broke out tn her apanment at
17676 Cameron St. shonly after 2
p.m.
The elderly woman was standtng in
the hving room watching the drapes
bum when she was guided out of the
ho me by her roommate, V1ck1 Lame.
77, and by a housekeeper, Ellen Cole.
The two women had been standtng
10 the front yard of the apanment
when they heard the smoke detector
alarm and rushed in to rescue the
elderly woman. accordmg to fire
department spokeswoman B1rgj1
Davis.,
Baker was transported to Humana
Hospital 10 Huntington Beach for
treatment. Davis said.
Earlier Tuesday, another fire tn·
Jurcd four more pct1ople. includmg a
woman and her 2·year-old grand·
daughter who were rescued by a
Golden West College student.
Dennis Atencio ran mto their ho me
(Pleae .ee P'IR.lt8/ A2)
classrooms and other school fac1hues
available for scnpture readmg and
other religious acuvities.
Edison Hiih School junior Joe
Mendoza tofd Huntington Beach
Union High School trustees tha1
School board officials. concerned
about the issue of separation of
church and state. said they'll be
look.mg into the policy that bans
religious activities at school factl1t1es.
But School Board President Linda
~ 0.-, .... .,._...., ......_. ........
Huntinfton Beach firemen battle aecond of two fire. which
injured five people TueM&y.
Mo ulton ·said toda> that ofliClals
hlcel y will dela)' their dec1s1on unul
the U.S. Supreme Coun rules o n the
consutuhonal1ty of an equal aLcess
law
"My concern IS that 1f rou allow
one group the use of schoo fac1ht1es.
you have to allow all -and that
includes fringe groups," she said.
.. But 1f a small religious group wants
to meet and ust our benches we are
no~o1na.put and break them up or an 1ng.
endoz.a said he'll be baclc before
trustees in two weeks. pT'CSSU\g for the
new pohcy H 1s &fOUp, he 1&1d, 1s
enhsung suppon of parents and other
high school students and will seek
help from Republican Congressmen
Robcn Doman and Jack Kemp.
Mendoza. who said similar re·
hg1ous organ1za11ons have formed at
(Pleue .ee ULIGIOft/A2)
Congressmen
conferring on
helicopter flap
Dornan withdraws
support for shift
after Badham note
By SUSAN HOWLETI
Of ... 0-'y ..... lt.fl
Followmg a rnr u' er J propo'><ll
concerning mahtar) helicopter no1St:
three Orange ( ount~ congr~smen
are trying to get together w resolve the
issue that has caused "a tc:m pe'>l an a
teapot among fnends "
It all staned w1th Rep Roben i....
Doman's signature on a pro posal b)
Rep. Wilham Dannemeyer that
would bnng the nbase of ..\mn
choppers to In ine 1f adopted
The proposal b> Danneme~er R·
Fullenon. to w l ve the helicopter
noise problem 0' er the cit) ot O range
sparked strong oppoc,;111on from 'ev.·
pon Beach Rep Roben Badham.
whose d1stnct would 1nhen1 the
whirling of copter blad~ 1f the plan 1~
appro.,.ed
Dannemeyer drafted a letter 10
members of the congressional del-
egation m Orange ( ounty three weeks
ago. asking for suppon of the
proposals Doman. R·Garden vrO\ e
was the lone repre\Cntall'<"' hacking
the plan
.. Bad ham 1\ q:hementh 1>prx1~d
to the proposah and " 111 oppose them
to the h1il\esl fe, el~ ol 1he m lllla~ ··
said BadFiam a1dt' "'II ham ">chre1ber
The problem concerns l0mplain1~
fro m Orange rt''i1den1~ O\ er noise
generated from m1 htal) hehu)plcrs
fly in~ 10 and from training m1,s1uns
1n the ~n1.a ..\na mounuuns o.,.c r the
populated Ka1ella .\' enue comdoran
the central pan of O range County
The copte~ fl~ from the Los Alamitos
A.rmed Forces Reserve Center
Bu t Doman ..aid tha t he has since
rcte1' ed a k'uer from Bad ham that
has (On'inle<l him lo rtcon~1der the:
proposah He:' "'tlhdrev. h is suppon
lasl "-fonda'
"I though I Danncme)er had talked
lo Bob f Badham I and I was wrong "
Doman ..aid ··1 d1dn·t realize I would
be '>tepp1ng on Bob Badha m's toes··
In the letter Danneme)er sug·
gested the u~ of ~n Clemente Island
1n the tra1n1ng missions. rerouung the
helicopters t\J train at s.ea o r along the
coast. past John \\a~ ne ..\1rpon and
then O\er lr,1nc
Bad ham 1'> oppo..ed to 11 because he
~1d 11 v..ould lau..e "a ma1or change"
in the m1'1wrn •Jf Lo~ ".lamitos
<ichre1ber said He 'Mild Badham ha'>
alread~ gonr to .\rm~ officials wtth
the problem and said that the pilots
\.urrenth IO\Oht·d in the training
m1s<,1ons are not tr.tined for fl1ghti.
ll' er the ti\. can .md are again-;t
Dannemc:\er's idea
Badhani Yid Danneme\er's first
proposal would also cau\e c;afet)
hazard'> hcc-c.au<,c: the wpte~ v.o uld
mt into the flight pattern of Juhn
w a.,.ne Airport·
Tht· \el. ind pr1111\•'>J I , alls r0r the
rerouting 111 the .\rm' helar11pter.
\Oulh ahrng lhe tnaq and inland 1n10
If' int' l>' n the 'Ian Joaquin hills
~hre1hcc-r ..aid Badham 1'> against
that propor..il helJU'i(' the copter\
would tho\ l'r the pnpulatt"d u·nll'r ol
lr.1ne
(Please .ee COPTERS/ A2)
$300 million Sarita Ana River dam endorsed
By J EFF ADLER
Of ... 0-'y .........
Orange County Supervisors Tues·
day endorsed construction of a S300
million dam in the Upper Santa Ana
River Canyon as an alternative to the
SSOO milhon Mentone Dam. long
considered a key clement of the
b11Jion-dollar Santa Ana River flood
Control Project.
Construction of the 550.foot high
dam about one mile from the mouth
of the Upper Santa Ana River
Canyon 1n San Bernardino loun1y
would save the county about $60
m1lhon tn construction costs, Super·
visor Roger Stanton told the board
"This dam would provide 160.000
acre feet of storm water storage.
enough to provide Orange County
with standard project flood levels o f
protection for many years:· Stanton
said.
The board's suppon for the con·
struct1on of the cheaper altematl\ e
came after a lJ S Arm" Corps o f
Laguna schools vote
outside pay controls
for athletic coaches
By LISA MAHONEY
Ot .. 0-'y ........
The Laguna Beach school board
has passed a policy prohibiting
coaches from accepting any o utside
compensation without prior ap-
proval from the school distnct.
effon to improve the hinng and
traimng of coaches.
Following new state gu1dehnes, the
school d1stnct will implement a six·
session tra1010g program for coaches
stanmg ne:xt week. 01stnct adminis-
trators have also developed an evalu·
ation form to rate the performance of
high school coaches.
Engmeers bneling on the so-called
..\ll·R1\er ProJeCt, intended 10 cont rol
what expens ha\e deemed the wo rsi
flood threat west of the M1ss1ss1pp1
Estimates are that a flood along the
heavily populated course of the Santa
Ana Ri ver through central Orange
County could cause SI:! b1lhon wo nh
of personal and propen> damage.
The prOJCCt. as onginally pro posed
by the corps. called for am pro' 1ng
Prado Dam tn R1vers1de Count\ and
bu1ld10g the new dam at Mentone
The compensation rule. enacted to
eliminate a repeat of a controversy
earlier this year. was part of a broader (Pleue Ne LAGU1'tA/ A2) Rep. Robert Bad.ham
"-htle widening tlood lt1n1r11I lhdn·
nel<> 1n Orange \Jn lkrnardin.1 JnJ
R1,er;1de coun11c<,
The final pnre tag Im lhl' proicct
could reach SI ~bill ton ..arum.li ng to
go \emment e~t1ma tl'' .it v.h1eh nr-
ange Count'\ share v.ould tx· a~1ut
30 percent "
The .\mn ( orp<. .it f ng1nl"er'
began cons1denng allemJtt' es w thl'
Mentone Dam lomp;1nent of the
prOJCCt v.hen 11ppo<,ll111n 1.11hc dam'
con st ruction su rl.H nJ n '-Jn
Bernardt'l• t 'UOt\
Thl· t rrt" 'oJ nta .\n.1 R1,r1 <a-
n,11n Dam ••n lht• <ll ht·r hand "
'upponrd 1'' Jll pani<''> to the prOJl'l t
....,tanton <,a1J
l('gl\IJt111n autht1nllng c.onl\tnJl·
tllrn DI tht· 'lanta .\na R1,er F-looo
< ontr(ll Pro1crt current!' I\ \tailed
hcton· < 11n 11.rr~<. ·
In J ll'll<"'r 111 tht· \rm' < orp., l>I
Engineer' "'h1lh '>UPl·paso"
JuthonLl'J ha1rman Thoma!> Rak \
( Ple .. e ace FLOOD I Al)
Court won't ban
autopsy on boy
Parent s of drowned
c hild claim violation
ofreltgtous beliefs
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... 0-'y -......
".n In anr tam1h tailed tt-.JJ, to get
a coun order pre,enting tht' lllunt'
coroner from performing an au top\'
in 'lll'H ,i-,ear .... ild <.on "'ho "'a~
round un\on~1t1u' lv1ng at the
l:x'trnm ol d bathtub full of v.alC"t
Fnda' The\ h1ld died \und3)
~uf'l<.'nOr ( oun Jud$e Richard
tkatom drntrd thr fam1h ·, motion
lo bltX ~ thr au top<,~ marking the first
ume ant lrange (nun I\ 1udge issued a
rula ng ''" "hrther a pe~n ha\ tht'
l'On'>t11ut11mal n1th1 to pf"t"vent an
au tori~' ~au~ uf rehgiou~ behel~
(PleaK eee COURT/A2)
Campus drug busts an education
University High administrator says some
students lied their way back onto campus
Rumors throu~hout the school
dastnct had led him to believe that
many cases had bttn dismissed.
Ba1ley wd. Wh1les1tt1ngasa member
of the dJStncfs Cllpuls1on commmcc.
"I saw a lot of kids With their papen
from the oouns shoW'ln& ch~ were
d11m1sscd or reduced." he said.
BaJley said
The group will also decide whether
to rcV1ew the cases of any students
who may have hed their way beck on
c.ampus dunDf the June expulsion
heanna.s. he wd.
LISA
MAHONEY
Fingerprint
network to
help police
8y USA MAHONEY °' .. ~ ..........
FolloWl n& the worktop of the
cnmmal JUSttcc sy,tem proved to be
an eye opener and an educ.ation for It
lcaat one Irvine school administrator.
"We're a little bit blown away,"
uid Kenneth J. Bailey, University HiJh School assistant principal, after
lcamina what became of 1 b peol)fe
police annted o n drua charae• after
an undtrcover pf'011'&11l in the city's
t.hret h1&h schools last February.
"We may have been neophytes
Soma 1n, but we certainly aot
educated "
Convicted drua dca.lcrs d1dn't act
anywhere near the klnd of sentences
he ellpected, Bailey wd. And, after
leamina the outcomes of the l S court
dec11ion1 to date, the assistant princi·
p&I said be fean tome accused
students ma1 have taken advaffU&e
of school officials' lanorance or the
justice system to lie therr way out of bei~ expelled.
Balley met Mo nday with lrvme ~officials for a brieiina on the 13
JUvtnllef a.nd three adults anattd
lal1 FebNary followina 1 four·mooth
uoderQover dN& 1nvesupuon in etty
biah IChools.
"
Thost' papen spa.riced some dJt-
satJsfacu on With the lrvme Police
Department. But, after rev1ewiOJ
final d11po11t1ons With pohce of-
ficiaJa, Bailey said he was satitfied.
"They did a arcat Job. That's how we feel naht now,' he said after
shanna the 10format1on with some
other 1ehool adm1n1stntot1
Adm1m1tnton from the three hiah
schools. U n1vcn1ty, Irvine and
Woodbndae. wdl meet later th11 v.ult
to talk more about tM d1spos1t1ona.
Nc1ther Genld Rayl, d1rtttor o f
tee0ndary and adult eduait1on. nor
his supervuor Dean W1&df<>sel. assn-
tant superintendent o f cumculum
and instruction, oould be !UCh«! for
comment on the outcome of the
police provam or the upcom1ni
mcetu\J.
Ba1l~y. who said he was also
spealetna o n behalf of U 01 vera1ty
Pnnapel• Bob Bnice. sud he was
p4ealled that police were abk to art
oonvtetaons tn moat cues. but was
c11aappoialtld at the h&bt scntencn
most tteci~.
Focus ON THE NEws
Some student drug pu\htrc. ~re
JI Ven prohat1on whalt 8 fe ... Other\
were a~\t&n<'d ume 1n Ju\tn1le Hall or
a wecktnd communat" work pro-
aram Tht Stiffest JUVtn1lt 1tntenCe
went 10 an 10d1v1dual found au lit\ of
telhna cocaine In that ca~. the let'n· aaer was ordcrt'd 10 SC'1'\lt QO da~ 1n
Juvenile Hall roncurrtnth With ume
he was serv1na for a ~pe1'1c buralaf)
chatJt. pohet ~Id
"TI>ett JU~t 1~n't much JU\t1~ for
people who art' v1ct1ms of IU\t'nalc
(Pl ....... RIOH/ A9)
e)• Sl SA!\ HOWLE'n
°'-~-·-1 eg1\lat1on rect"ntl\ 'lgned b\' t10'
('t('orge Dt·u~me)11n 'Wl ll allow la,.
enfof'("('mt'nt agt"no c to plug into tht
state\ nt'" I\ auto mated 1dcnt1fi.
'a11on \\\tern e-\tabhsh1n& a network
bttwe-C'n c1t1e\ in tht' hettk ap1ns1
cnme
C)(onat(' Silt I QO 1ntroduoed by State
~naton Marian Berlnon. R·Ncw· eon 8e,a(h, and John '"Fonan, D-Oal)'
Cit . Wlll ai\r local pohcc forces in
~ ( ountr and thf'OU&hout c.i1-
fom1a the ablht)' to pl~ into the
state· s fin~nHdcntifvina S)1le'm
Orukme11an staned the bill Se1K.
IP1-..e ... FmG&a.Plllft'T I dJ
,
I
&
A9 * ~Coat DAJl .. Y PILOT/Wedneeday, October 8, 198S
Ramirez granted new attorney
LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -Richard
Ramirez. charted with l 4 "Ni&bt Sta!Ut" llayinp. was allowed to rqace his public defender with a
enva~ anomcy today af\er a con
fidefttiaJ meelina wilh lbc JU<iae to
diJc:uu bia money W'OCI.
Municipal Cour1 Judat Elva Soper
relieved l:>eputy Pubflc Defender
Allen Adasbek of the case and
aj)pointed 01nard attorney Joseph
Oalleaos, who immediately asked for
a postJ>Onemcnt of the plea 10 the
caac.
Ramirez, 25, appeared in court
drc$sed in a blue Jumpsuit, shack.led
at the wrists and ankles. When Soper
asked rum if he wanted Galtcaos and
had no objections lo the delay,
Ramll'C2 answenMI "yes" both times.
bis onJy words m the five-minute
bearina.
The defendant 1s now scheduJed to
enter his plea Oct. 22. He will Still be
held without bail, the judge said.
"He wanted someone who would
take a personal interest in lhts case,"
GaUCJOS wd. "He feels that there
definitely is a defense. He is in good
spirits. He radiated confidence."
The Oxnard lawyer said he will
probably plead bis client innocent to
Lagunan held in LSD sale
A Laguna Beach man was arrested
Tuesday on suspicion of selling LSD
to undercover drug aacnts who claim
the man also led them to San
Francisco on the 8rctensc of arrang-
ina the sale of 2 .000 doses of the
hallucinogenic drug.
Roman Ojeda, 28, was picked up
on a $25,000 arrest warrant and is
being held at Orange County Jail.
OJ~. a familiar figure JO the city's
downtown area , aJlegodJy sold a small
amount of LSD to undercover police
officers and federal agents.
Pohce said Ojeda also introduced
them to a woman in San Francisco
who he said was willing to seU 20,000
doses of LSD. Police, who made the
trip north, said the sale fell through.
RELIGION ON CAMPUS? •••
From Al
Fountain Valley and Huntinston
Beach high schools, said the Echson
group of about 30-60 members meets
each Wednesday at noon on open
land ou tside the school. They discuss
the scri pturcs.Jle said. and somet1 mes
have guest spCakers.
"This school 1s kind of a pan}
scene." he said 1n an 1nterv1ew
Tuesday. "I believe students should
have another option -another view.
1t would give them another way to go
and bnng up morals."
Mendoza. a member of the school's
Model United Nations program,
claims that the U.S. Constitution
does not call for the separation of
church and state.
the 68 felony counts against him. The
attorney aJso said he was still un-
decided whether to ask for a change of
venue due to extensive publicity.
Earlier this week Ramirez· sister
complamed he was bean& denied
aooeu to County Jail telephone$
because of a court order requested by
Adashek
The Judge issued the restm:tcd
telephone access order Oct. I , but it
was not disclosed until Monday,
when Ramirez' sister. Rosa Flores.
complained about it.
Capt. Barry King, the JIJI'& com-
manding offi~r. con finned Ram1reL'
telephone privileges were suspended.
"His phone pnvlleges have been
taken away from him by his at-
torney," Flores said JO a telephone
mtervie w from her home 1n El Paso,
Texas.
She contended Adashek sought the
order as part of a continuing cffon to
kttp Ramirez from expressing his
displeasure with the way he IS being
represented. She earlier had con·
tended that Ramirc7 wanted to tell
the coun he desired another attorney,
Bui when he submits requests for
use of school facilities for his group.
the requests arc denied by the
principal, he said.
His said the religious group may
sponsor candidates sympathetic with
its cause in next month's school board
election.
COURT WON'T HALT BOY'S AUTOPSY •••
From Al
The parents. identified as Or-
thodox Jews. said an autopsy would
amount to the "mut1Lauon" of their
son's body, accordmg to an attorney
representing the county
Mark Strauss was found early
Friday evening, face-up under the
water in the bathtub, according to
Irvine Sgt. Dick Bowman. The child
died two days later at Children's
Hospital in Orange, police said.
Because the cause of death is
uncertain, Bowman said police arc
waJting on the results of the autopsy
before closing the case.
"But it doesn't look lake foul pla),"
Bowman said ... It seems clean 1n that
respect."
Assistant County Counsel Arthur
Wahlstedt. who rcpresentt'd the
county coroner, said state laws per-
mits a coroner to dissect a body to
determine the cause of death.
"In this case. it's necessary bc<.'ausc
we just don't know the cause of
death," Wahlstedt said.
The boy's parents, Bruce and
Rawlene Strauss, obtained a tempor-
ary restraming order Sunday prevent-
ing the autopsy from being con-
ducted
Supcnor Court Judge Leonard
Goldstem postponed the autopsy
unul today's hcanng.
Wahlstcdt said to his knowledge an
Orange County judge has never had
to rule on a s1m1lar case.
Accordmg to police. Mark Strauss
appeared to be running a sli~t fever
and his mother placed him in a
bathtub filled with cool water to
.. soak" in hopes of easing his high
tt'mperature
The mother returned several
minutes later and discovered her son
under the water, Bowman said. The
detective said he doesn't know what
caused the boy to submerge
While Orange County paramedics
responded to the Strauss residence 1n
the Turtle Rock community, another
paramedic gave the boy's mother
instructions by telephone on how to
perfonn card10-pulmooary resusci-
tation. police said
Paramedics took over CPR when
they amvcd. Lt Al Muir said police
reports do not indicate whether
paramedics were able to detect any
signs of hfe. ·
The boy was taken first to Tustin
Community Hospital and later
moved to Children's Hospital where
he died.
In 1981 , a family filed a lawsuit
agamst the.' county asJcjng a Judge to
prevent the pos.sibility of an autopsy
ever being performed on their son. a
resident of Fairview State Hospital in
Costa Mesa. The family. apparently
Moslem. said an autopsy would run
countt'r to their relig10us beliefs.
But the Judge declined to rule
because the family's son was still ahve
and the issue premature. Wahlstedt
said.
LAGUNA COACHES' COMPENSATION ••.
From Al
School officials came under fire
early this year after 1t was learned that
some coaches had ht-en g1vt'n S200
gifts the previous season by the
Laguna Beach High School Boosters
Oub, a parent organization that
supports athletic programs at the high
school.
Such tpfts are forbidden by the
Califomta I nterscholast1c Feder-
ation. an organization that sets rules
govemin~ school spons Adm1n1~
trators failed to catch the gaff. That
came back to haunt them when the
athletic program came under scrutiny
during public meeungs w11h an ad-
visory task force bent on improving
the athletic program
The task force. made up of coaches,
parents. school board members and
other high school personnel. pin·
pomted areas of weakness in the
school sports program includmg low
fundint poor management of the
sports udget and inadequate train-
mg of coaches -most of whom are
not school d1stnct employees
To respond to the task force report
and the requirements of Senate.' 8111
813. t'he school reform bill passed two
years ago, former high school pnnc1-
pal Robert Hughes was assigned to
develop a training program for the
coaches, Superintendent Billy Barnes
said.
Rather than learning rules and
procedures p1eccmcal. coaches will
get 18 hours of instruction on Clf and
Sea View League rules. adminis-
trative procedures. first aid. cardio-
pulmonary resuscitation and adoles-
cent psychology.
Anthony Ort~ and Jim Toomey.
the h1Jh school's new pnnc1pal and
athletic director. developed an evalu-
ation form to assess how well coaches
perform their duties. Evaluators will
complete a form on each coach once a
year prior to the end of their sport's
season.
Toomey. also act1v1ues director at
the.' high school. accepted the ad-
ditional responsib1ht1es of athletic
director after Walt Hamera resigned.
Hamera. who still teaches at the
high school. complained he was not
given enough ume to work on the
athletic program.
The high school suffered the loss of
many coaches last year 1nclud1ng
most of thC"Temaining ones who also
taught classes there. Some were angry
with financial and time constraints
placed on their extra<urricular JOb.
Others just said they were ured of
coachmg or dispirited by repeated
losses.
The.' vast maJOnty of this year's
coaches arc walk-ons -ind1v1duals
from the.' community who want to
coach luds, Barnes said.
Because Laguna Beach schools arc
declining in enrollment and the
d1stnct rarely hires new teachers.
there 1s no fresh blood among the
teaching staff to tap for the coaching
pos1t1ons. he said.
Barnes said SB 813 guidelines on
coach trainin' were designed for
school d1stnct s like Laguna Beach
who need to teach non-teachers the
ropes of coaching.
COPTERS CREATING CONTROVERSY .•.
From Al
The third proposed '>olu11on 1s .. the
least acceptable of all." Schreiber
said. That plan I\ 10 relocate.' all of the
Arm-y hehcopte~ from Lo'> Alam11os
to the El Toro Manne Corps Air
Station JO Tusun There arc more
than I 00 copter\ currcntl"Y stationed
at the Los Alamitos ba-;c, Schreiber
said.
The Manne air '>tat1on a1 Tustin is
Qlready at maximum capac11 y, ..
Schreiber said adding that lht·
proposal would be a maJorc.l1~rupt1on
for both air stations
Schreiber said Bad ham ha\ <,pok1•n
with Dannemcyer about the three
proposals. staling his o ppo<,t1on to
each of them
"But he (Badham) would be happy
to help Dannemeycr with the prob-
lem." Schreiber said "It remain~ to
be seen 1f there are any acceptable
options.
Doman said ht' signed the leller
realmni that tht're needs to be
somethini done about the noise
problem in the Orange area. but did
not examine.' each of the options
closely
··1 have to take another look at
Dannemeyer's proposals after having
the education of Badham's letter,"
Doman s~ud , "We all need to sit down
and talk about 1t "
Doman aide Jerry Gideon said that
the three representatives were c ur-
rently sctung up a meeting to d1..cuss
th(' matter
"Th(' congressman (Doman) rt'-
ah1cs that this 1s a very important
1<,\uc. and he believes at lookin~ at all
of the.' altemat1 ves." G ideon said.
FINGERPRINT NETWORK .•.
homAl
29. appropnaung S7 million for the
purchase of equipment, serv1C~ and
cllpenln needed to estabh,h the
nctwOrk. Berieson ,.1d
"The money 1~ well 'lpcnt Ill-
b matdy, the program should rc-sult in
a decrease in law e nforcemC'nl l<'gl~·
lative Cllpenses," Bc:rgc'°n \81d.
"Morc importantly. the proaram ..,
crime ~ent.all vt' -the sooner
crinunab are ~stcd. the fe~cr
crimes they Will Ix 1ble to commn "
8c1~n 1a1d that becau5C of the public safety factor m the capture of
erimanab. the F.OIJ'&m ~hould be put
tnto action qwckly
.. , think we Will he ~mil 11
'
1111v1u11~11u.u •c1 )' >UV11 t>Ceausc of
rhe urgenc) involved.'' Bergeson
said. The senator pointed to the
widely pubhc1zed "N1Jht-St.alkcr"
case, 1n which fingcrpnnt 1dcnt1fi·
cation wa~ the.' key factor in a1TCst1ng
suspect Richard Ram1re1.
The bill require$ the state Justice
~yc;tem to keep fingerprints as part of
"c;ummary cnm1nal history infor-
mation" on arrested persons.
Local law enforcement agenc1es
will be ahle to hook up to the system at
their option and their own ellpensc
Bergeson said
It will be a tremendous help wt
need all of the help we c~n get.''
Bergeson said
,
"The three members have not sat
down and discussed it yet. they arc all
very busy congrcssmen .. .lfthere was
a v iable alternative. we would be the
first to Jump on it," Gideon said.
FLOOD ..•
From Al
to sign. representatives from Orange,
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties urge the corps to recommend
LOn~truct1on of the lower-cost
alternative dam as "a crucial step
toward authorization" of the project
FIRES ••.
From Al
at 83Q I Am!>terdam Dnve and pulled
the two from the flames.
Ima Hendley. 56, who was hosp1-
tahzed at the UC Irvine Medical
Center tn Orange with second and
third-degree bums over SS percent of
her body. was reported in cntical
cond1t1on today.
Two other v1ct1ms, 2-year-old
Crystal Hendle) and Ondy Hendley,
an aunt. were treated for smoke
inhalation at Humana Hospital in
Huntington Beach and later released.
Fire Capt. Ocnnis Cato suffered •
minor back 111Jury in fightina the
blve to become the fourth injury
~'ict1m in the fire that caused about
S8 S. 000 losses.
No cause has bttn dctemuncd in
either fire
Fire department spokeswoman
Davis said Tuesday was the worst day
1n reant memory foT fire inJuncs
•
Look for clearing by Thursday
The remnant• of 1n AIUkan 110<m l')'ltem llngetlng °'*
SoutMfn Calttornte oould drop ~ rain Mtly Thurlday but
forecuter1 My etMtlng lklM ahoold bring IU"-hl"9 end wer"*'
ttms>«aturM.
The ttorm, u9hered In by gu1ty wtnd1 In the moont1ln1 and
deeertl, drlft.S Into the WM lat• Tu.day. TM NatlOnal WMthtll' s.vtce Mid the eoutal region woold have a ehanoe of lhowe<9
and thundenhowen tonight. Pa111y cloudy lklM weir• anttct-
pat.S Thurlday With hlghl ranging from ee to 75 degr ... aftet'
IOW9 In the 90s.
U.S. Tempe
Extended
74 62
11 81 76 61 eo 11
IM 7t M 60 6e J2
71 " 12 •7 70 M
74 66
76 67
.. 37 17 ..
72 4t
82 65
14 60
62 61 M )0
87 50
15 62 ~ 24 .. " 14 60
77 83 17 71
.. 41
" 73 to 11
66 37
14 eo
42 21
10 eo
70 ...
78 11
76 81
72 53
117 47 67 52
•&\.~~,M>NTI: 'a~ -W•m-Cot0-
Sh0wet1 R.-i Furr111 Snow Oe~....,.St1tiontrya...
~ W...... ~·NOAA US 01oC °' c-i.ree
Calif. Tempe Surf Report em..._,,.
1-3 ,.
2-3 -24 -1·2 poor
2 .. -1~ POOF
1·2 poor
2.7
5.2
00
4.7
20
65
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Ed1101
Roeem•ry Churchman
Controller
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Pr0duc11on
Manager
Ooneld L. Wllllame
Circulation
Manager
Howerd Mullenery
Marl\eMg Director
Peggy Blevlna
C1ass1t1ed 011ec1or
Gem
Talk
People today art' more than ever
adding color to their bas1c jewelry
wardrobe with a number of well
known and beautifully colored
stones such as ruby, sapphire and
emerald.
Clrculatlon 714/942--1333 c1 .. a1tled 8dvertlalng 714/942-5871
All other dep.rtment1 942-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 Wes! 6'1y SI Cosio M8M CA
Mail 3001~• 8o• I~ Cosla Mesa CA 9:>6:>6
CC1Pyr'91'1 1983 Orange COMI Pu-.ng eon-ny N()
,_. tluroH 1llull1a1'°"" "°'"' ... man .. or --men,. ~9"' IT18y De 191)1Ciduce0 WllhOul ~I P.,
·~ OI Ln()yt'(jl>I --
S..:O'oel ·~~' l>O''A\je r a..i ~· Co.1a Mesa C.•!ol,,..
1UPS '•• &001 Su!XC•·~ I<><' I • ,,. .. ..,. S!l l!> "'°"'""'
Oy m•·• 'I C)l '"""'"'UN~
By J. C. H UMPHRIES
Certified Gemo/Ofl1at. Ar.S
And these people are more than
ever lookmg at colored gems such as
aquamarines. topaz and a methyst.
Aquamarines, when a pale pink., a rc
known as morgamtes; when yeUow
they are called golden beryls. The
depth ofthc1r color determines their
worth. Small but rich blue
aquamanncs are the most costly.
Topaz 1s most often colorless, but
can be blue, brown or pink. The
browns arc known as "preciou~
topaz." and are fairly rare and
costly. Amethyst in Its rarest and
m ost cxpensi ve fonn has a rcd-
purphsh cast, but beautiful violet
amethyst 1s available at very reason-
able prices.
THE WONDERFUL
WORLD OF COLOR
Whatever your budget, you can
buy wonderful, colored gems which
will give you variety and lastina
pleasure.
'
OUR 1st SALE
IN 40YEARS!
SAVE
25% to 35%
on aJJ pendants
1809 Ncwporr Blvd., Costa Mesa 92667
' •
-
Bloodmobiles set
stops along Coast
American Red Cro11 Bloodmobiles arc ICbed-
uled to atop at a number of Oranae O>unty location•
durina the month of October.
Amona the local stops will be the Newport
Beach f~ Departmenti Oct. 2S; Orace Lutheran
Church ·~ Huntinaton Beach, Oct. 26; St. Mark's Preabytenan Church in Newpon Beach, Oct. 27;
Connell Cb~vrolet in Coat.a Meaa Oct. 29; Racquel-
b&U World 10 Fountain Valley Oct. 30 and Christ
Collepin lrvi!le, Oct. 31. Call SH-S38 l:ext. 31S, to
make an appointment.
Skien get fit a t YMCA
Skien can aet ready for the upcomina seuon at
a ski fitness class beina offered by the South Cpast YMCA.
The class teaches specializes cxcrc1scs for
conditioninina muscles, tendons and joints used in
skiina from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays
for the next seven weeks. Call the Y at 831-9622 or
49S-04S3 for reaistration information.
School n l.ght atBdl•on
Parents are invited to Edison Hi&h School's
back-to-school niaht this evenina at 7 p.m. at the
Huntinaton Beach campus, 21400 Maanolia Ave.
Parents will attend l O.minute versions of their
children's classes where teachers will outline the
proaram for the comina year.
Paralegal• meet tonJ6ht
The Paraleaal Section of the Oranae County Bar
Association will hold a dinner mectina toniJht at 6
o'clock at the Saddleblck Inn, 1660 E. F1nt St.,
Sant.a Ana, where Robert Seltzer, founder of
Graphic Evidence, will show bow video is being
used to deliver complex evidence at trials.
Dinenr will be served at a cost of S 13.SO for
members and an additional $2 for non-members.
Reservations may be made by . callina proaram
chairman Peri Tooker at 992-6300.
SchUopluenla talk .et
The Oranae County Psychiatric Society will
present a talk on schizophrenia toniaht in the
auditorium of Newport Harbor Hi.ah School in
conjunction with Mental lllnesa Awareneis Week.
On. Sanford Weimer, Stephen Wyman and
Lawrence Sporty will conduct the session, scheduled
from 7 to 9 p. m. A talk on disorden of childhood and
adolesocnce will be siven Friday at the same time
and place. Both lectures are free and open to the
public.
Ritual• a'Jred ln Irvine
In connection with the current exhibition.
"Traces of Ritual," the Irvine Fine Ans Center will
offer a panel discussion tonight on cross-curltural
rituals assocated with birth, puberty, marriage and
death.
The program is scheduled from 7:30 to 9:30
p.m. at the center, 4601 Walnut Ave. in Irvine.
Admission is $2 and further infonnat1on may be
obtained by callina SS2-I 078.
Sltten• coune•tarta
A three-scs11on course on baby situng. designed
to teach sitters what to do in case of emervncy,
becins toni&ht at Humana Hospital, Hununaton
Beach.
The classes will be presented tonight. Oct. 16
and Oct. 23 from 6 to 8:30 p.m. in the business and
education of the hospital. The fee is $2 and
retervations may be obtained by calling 842-I 473.
Vet., au.rlllary meetlng
The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3536 will
hold a business meetinJ Thurday at 7:30 p.m ..
preceded by a lad1esauxihary meeunaat I :30p.m. ID
the Veterans Memorial Hall. S6S W. 18th St.. Costa
Mesa.
Plans will be advanced for the post's rummaie
sale Friday and Saturday from 9th 5 p.m., which will
raise funds for the organization's t.mericanis'm and
cancer research projects. Call 646-6302 or 548-0497
for further information.
Fergu•on to •peak
Asscmblyan Gil Ferguson, R-Newport Beach.
will speak to the Laauna Hills Leisure world
Republic Oub Thursday evenina on bis impressions
of his tint tenn in the state Assembly.
The proaram is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at
Clubhouse I in the retirement community. Call club
proaram dt.rCCtor George Peterson at 768-7979 for
further information.
Blood dr1ve a t college
The Auociated Student Government of
Saddleblck Colleae will sponsor a blood dnve
Thursday in the fint floor foyer of the college library
in Mi11ion Viejo.
Blood may be donated from 8:30 a.m. to l p.m.
and 1tudenta and community memben can make an
appointment to donate blood by callina the
American Red Cross at 83S-S38 l. ext. 29 l.
Memory coune at owe
Memory improvement expert Dan Mikela will
provide tipa on improvina the brain'• recall
function• at a Golden West Collete workshop
Thursday. The aeminar is scheduled from l to 2: 30 p.m. in
Room 136 of the Administration buildina and will
be open to the public. Call the community service
oftlce at 89 l-3991 for addillonal information.
CIUneH IU•tory detalled
The hi1tory of the Chinetc in Oran,e County
will be the topic of diecuaaion at the Oranp County
Menu 1~01"1 forum Tbunday at 7 p.m. at the eran.e Main Ubrary, 101 N. Cent.er St., Oranae. Phil Brip.ndi. a 1tudent at Cal State Fullerton
and arcbivtat for the Oranp County Hi1toriCal
Society, will be the suest 1oeaker. Call Oarclene
Boord at 639·3791 for more fnformation.
ScottlldJ IMJJd at VCI
Tho &ay g~~L~ ~rulh bind named for an
1 Ith century annmnt club in Bdinbwlh will preeent a muacal Pf'OltllD TbWlday at IJ>.m. \n the
Univmity Caw Hlri• Room at UC Irvine.
TickeU for the Dldoi'm&nc:e are SI for ,eneral ectmtuion, S6 fOr tJa atudenta aod S7 for other
lt\Mtellta. senior ddzeu ud UCI J1aft', faculty and
Alwnni AllOCfadoa members. Tbcy may be
rwsved by calllna the bas of&e at ISM616.
Flylnlhilh
The lntne ltzchaqe Club went to ireat betcbta
Tueeday to preeent a plaque to omclala from the
Tranapaclftc De•elopment Co. for nytna 15
American flaC• atop their new 18-etory etnacta.re
-the talleet bail~ ID lntne, located at
llichelaon and Teller. Jack Berameier (left) and
Jlm Gorman of the ltac b•nce Cl ub flank Trana-
paclftc'• Bob Rueell and J oan Kent.
f
Jury gets murder trial of three
accused of slaying Coast man
By JEFF ADLER °'Ille.,.., ..........
An Oranae County Superior Court jury
bepn deliberations Tuesday to de-
termine whether a Santa Ana woman and
two Westminster men should be con-
victed of first-degree murder in the
February stabbing death of a 30.year-old
Huntinaton Beach man.
Clement Brown and Tutuila Tuvalu,
both 23-year-olds from Westminster, and
21-year-old Lisa Mondragon of Sant.a
Ana afC.Fharged with lint-degree murder,
robbery and burglary in the death of
Wilham Frank Cody.
Each member of the tno faces a
maximum 25-ycar-to-hfe pnson tenn if
convicted, Deputy District Attorney
Rick Toohey said.
The three arc accused 01 invading a
Huntington Beach apartment at 8081
Holland St. Feb. 6 in search of cocaine
and marijuana they believed was kept
there, Toohey said.
When they burst into the apartment.
armed with a sawed-off shotgun. about
8: 15 p.m .. they ordered the five people
they found watching a movie to lte on the
floor, tbe prosecution alleged dunng the
two-week trial.
During the course of the robbery. one
of the apartment's residents attempted to
grab the.shot.gun. triggenng a fight.
That's when Toohey alleges Brown
grabbed a butcher knife and stabbed
Cody twice. once ID the head and chest.
Cody died mmutes later from a chest
wound, eV1den~ presented dunng the
tnal indicated.
Brown. Tuvalu and Mondragon were
arrested by Huntington Beach police two
days later. A search of Brown's residence
turned up a sawed-off shotgun, which had
missing parts that matched those found
near Cody's body, Toohey said.
All three defendants face a murder
charge because the slaying occurred
during the comm1ss1on of related
felonies, the robbery and burglar).
Toohey exphuned
The prosecutor said attorne)s rep-
resenting Brown and Tuvalu presented
no witnesses in their clients' defense
dunng the tnal.
However. Mondragon. testifying m her
own defense, told the se ven-man. five-
woman JUry that she went to the
apa.runent that niaht mtend1ng to
purchase drugs. She said she knew of no
robbery plot.
Sunset Beach improvements approved
Bcachgocrs who frequent Sunset Beach
soon may notice it's bein& spruced up.
Oranie County supervisors Tuesday
told county planners to begin work on a
series of beach improvements for the
strand.
The Board nf Supervisors voted 5..() to
spend $40,000 to develop plans for
drinking fountams, bicycle racks. benches,
li ght ing, signs and land -
scapingimprovements along the popular
stretch of unincorporated beach front, JUSt
south of Seal Beach.
The board's action came on a mouon b)
Supervisor Hamett Wieder. ~ho rep-
r\!sents the area.
Funding for the 1mpro' ements would be
taken from local park trust funds and a
coastal access grant.
Lake Forest man faces
137 sex, drug charges
buttocks to ner 1A.h1le she IA.a'> dn\lng
home. eastbound on La Roca on \fonda'
afternoon • • • A resident tn the 18500 bloclc of Los
Geones reported that he was struck in the
face by a man in an Orange Volks~agen
Bua after the pair got into an argument at a
A wealthy Lake Forest man who alleaed-
ly enticed teen-aae &iris to have sex with
him in exchanae for cocaine pleaded
innocent Tuesday to 37 new counts of
havin.a unlawful sex with a minor.
Felu Florencio Maron, S4, now faces a
total of 137 counts of unlawful sex and
a:ivina drup to minon, accordin& to
Deputy District Attorney Jill Roberts. •
Maron. arrested Aua. 16 at his Lake
Forest home, is being held w11hout bail A stopb&ht at the comer of Bushard Stret"I
preltm1nary hearing 1s set for Oct 22 1n and Ellts Avenue Monda~ e' emng.
South Orange County Municipal Court.
The charaes stem from allegauons that Hantincton Beach
Maron lured six different girls. ages 14 to Someone reported!) stole S50 in cash an
16. to his home for sexual fa vors b)' offenna a $3,000 camera from a home in the 200
them cocaine. Roberts said. block of Utica A venue Tuesda\. A.ccord1Dg
Maron owns businesses 1n Orange and to police reports. the intruder entered
Los Anaeles coun11es. He 1s bein& rep-throuah an open bedroom window
resented by Wilham Charvet. th' f ed•l • ·1 s4oo I A IC report y sto e In JC We I') ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fromahomeinthel7~hlock of P~lard
IJ'Tlne
Tawachai Rat.anuanophol, ~. waa ar-
rested and boolced at Oranae County Jail
Tuelday after he reportedfy stabbed the
family dot in front of bi1 home alona Rald&b. Police wd a veterinarian waa
called" to tile the dot to a nearby animal
hoapital wbett be was reported to be still
alive. • •• Someone reportedly stole $7.10 10 pa
ftom a Chevron service 1t.ation, 1 7561
Mac.Anhur Blvd., Tuetday evenina. • • • John 8. Taylor. 31 , w11 arrested Tuesday
on a manalauahter warrant iaaued by San
Francl1CO Superior Court at the comer of
Deere and Red Hiil avenues. He wa1 taken
to Ora.Die County Jail and booked. He i1
beina held wt.bout b&il.
ea.ta ....
Uquor valued at S l l ,,42 wu reportcd
1toleo Tuaday &om a home in the .00
block of Princeton Avenue.
Someone ~y ~tole a S 1,8' I JOld
watch ftom a botM in th• 700 b1oc.k of
Center Street Sunday ftiabt • • • An armed man Mid u_p a T&r111 pa
1t.ation, 1740 Newport Blvd:.t Monday even.Lna and aot away with S 14'0 in cub.
police reporu Mid. Accordi.na to reporU,
the 1uapect walked up to the counter,
point:od • sun at the attilDdanl and. ln ~ab. dlmaDdld money. K• fted oo
tic>\. Ke ii deaibed U I U to 26-1W'"Oid
lfllPln"' ...._ about ' t.et. 5 iactii1a tall. • • • A rtddat la tbl JOO block ol Aower
South County
A S7S pair of stereo speakers was
reported stolen Wednesday n1&bt from a
l 98S Niuan pickup parked the dnveway of
a Dana Point home in the 24 700 block of
La Crest.a. • • • An El Toro rctHient 1n the 23000 block. of
Vi~ reported that hts S l 7S black
ScbWU1D bicycle WU Stolen from the aan&e
ofbi1 home Wednesdav afternoon. ••• Someone reponedly stole S80 1n caah
and a $20 1uitcaee from a Mipion Vie.JO
home lo the 2S700 block of Ma.raumtc
Parkway Wednetday ruaht.
Newport ... cb
A S500 1tereo amplifier wu rcv<>rtcd
stolen &om the ~ of a home in the
1900 block of Weit <Xun Front Tuaday. ••• FilhiDI equipment valued at S,20, 90
was reponed stolen Saturday &om a boat
moored in Newport Harbor at 16th Street. • • • A Phoenix woman reporUd Tuaday
that her jewelry valued at JJ ,203 wu stolen
&om her room at a Travd Lodle. 6208
West Cout ffiabway, Friday. • • • Someone reponedly ltole S2,SOO in cub
aod S l '° iD credit cud r.ceipu &om \be aafe of the Dove Su. blt.lura.nt. 1660 ~ St., Monday nilbt. , ....... y....,
A Nlidalt la tbie ll400 block of S&nta
lAODCll'l a~dW IOIMODI bfok9 lDIO
Tuesday Police reports s&id the burglar
smaahcd a rear Wlndov. 10 p in entl') • • • A resident in the 300 block of Coral Reef repo~ Monda) that a thtefbroke into her
home thrtt .. -eeks aao and stole tb.rtt aold
nnp layina by the Jl CUlll The loss was
estimated at S 1.040 • • • A vtdeo ~tte l't'Corder and camera
cqwpment, wonh SI 9.,0, and Je~lr) and
silver, worth S 1,400 wcrt reported stolen
from a home in the 8500 block ofDoremerc
Monday. • • • Jewelry valued at SI 0,600 wu reported
1tolen Monday from a home in the 9300
block ofOrand someume tut WMk. • • • Jewelry valued at $300 wu stolen from a
borne in the 8200 block of Blaylock
Tuaday. the victim told police. Police
rqx>ru aaid the thief entered throuah an
unlocked bedroom wiodow, • • • A thief 1tole a SUt·petk of bttr and two
TV aeu valued at $800 ftom homt 1n the
17900 block of Bell Tuetday. • • • A rnident in the 16900 block of
AJs<>n.qui.n reportod Tu.eeday that her
checkbook wu ltOltn from her car Fnday
niabt. She told police that &be didn't know
it &ad been stolen until t.n em{>loyee at her
bank called aayina aomeooe tried to cub a
SllOcbeck. .....
A S SOO cu 1tereo wu reponed 1tolen
from a red 1914 v~ Rabbu oon~~ed ln tbe 19f00 block of Lum y. ••• A FowttaiD v allry residrllt in tbe 9100
Street rwpocud T\allday mat IOlMWM la
the put month 101MOM 1tole btt jewelry
Ne ...u.p tld•W valued at 15,000. S1M t.okS polb tlw the
................ .--..... thief' may be IOt'neOM wbo hid ac:rce11 to
~~ ftPON ~~~::1.r ~rd 50 ft1A1t to I ,_, window. • • • A ~t In the 9100 bled ofl.a Roca
block orw.-wu~ ~ that teen-
.. boy 1t1bbed bu in~ poin ara wtuk
tbt wu joaj.QI oa M11Dotia t:rftt
Tuetday
• the lock bol ouwde ber home. reported \hat a local ICboolboy expoeed hia • • •
Coron or
inquiry
by state
closed
Botched autopsies
alleged. but problems
'have been corrected•
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., ..........
A cnm1nal 1nqu1ry LOto alJepuolll tb.al
Oranae County patholOllstS have botched
autopsies performed for the county cor·
oner bas been closed even thou&h an
1nvestiptor qreed there were problem•
and 1nqulantes.
Chief ASS11t.ant Attorney Genera.I Steve
White 1nfonned Shenff-Coroncr Brad
Gates by lener last week that the inquiry
was betna closed because It appears county
officials have improved the sltUAtion.
"Based on information we have re-
ceived from you and others, 1t does appear
that problems ha ve been experienced,"
White wrote. "It aJso appears that local
efforts to solve them have improved the
s1tuat1on."
lindershenfTRaul Ramos, spealcma for
Gates, u 1d the inquiry was unneccuary
because of"coroner's department 1s one of
the best 1n the nate and probably one of the
best 1n the nauon "
Wh1 te noted that the issue of mistakes in
pathology work in Orange County has not
been fully resolved
He said th at fonner Costa Mesa dentist
Dr Ton) Protopappas. convtcted of
seeond-dearee murder m the deaths of
three patients 1s expected to appeal his
case based part1all) on the work of
patholog.ists
White s1nJ1ed out two other bom1c1de
cases 1n whi ch the workmanship of the
pathologlsts has been chaJlenged.
Ramos said he 1s "disturbed" b) White's
letter and the reference to the cnmmal
cases 4-ttorneys for Protopappas arc
look.ma for anything possible on wtuch to
appeaJ their client's case, Ramos wd.
The Attorne)' General's inquiry was
aimed at the work of three patholoaisu
who performed autopsies for the coroner's
office One of the patholog.ists was Dr
Walter Fischer. who died Jul)' 11 after
reportedly shooung hims.elf twice in the
heart The others are Dn Robert Richards
and Richard Fukumoto.
The allegauons that sparked the inqu1n
included charges that Fuher and the other')
misplaced or mishandled e' 1dence and
changed their medical op1n1ons on ca~s
dunn2 tnals
Furiher 11 was alleged that Fischer and
his partne~ held a contract wnh the count)
for which other doctor.. could not bid The
contract was put out for bid this year by the
Board of Supen·1sor.. and v.as awarded to
Ri chards and FukomOlo tne onh dOC'lo~
to enter a bid
\\n11e complemented count~ offi...ia h
for open ing the hid He also noted that the
count\ had talen steps to alle' rate another
possible conflict of rntert'st b~ ha>. ing the
D1stnc1 ..\norne~ 's office 1n,est1ga1e di!
deaths at Orange Count' Jail
The co ntl1ct issue arose from the tal·t tht·
count) Jail rs run h' Shen ff Gates "'h1
doubles as the lOunt' , oruner
··v..c are pkased local efforts art· 1m
pro' mg tht• lUroner'<; otlilt' and acu1rd
ingl~ '-"C .Ht' closing the tn'e-;11gat1lln ··
\\ lllle conduJcd in the le lier
.\ resident in the "., ( bllxk ot \.\ arner
ref>l?rted that her t'\·b~nfned slashed \\l.O
of the ttrt's on her black I 'i~~ Dodge 'an
parked ID lront of her home Tue~'
morning
La.Cuna Beach
Thre-e suspects an~ bt'ing c.ought 1n
connection v.1th an alleged attemp1rd
robben Tuesda' night near ~ontC'rt''
On\l' and A.ster Street The '1rtim de-
scnbed one suspect as a blond-haired man
in his 20s. 6 feet tall. 1.,5 pounds. dres'ied 1n
a whtte T·sh1rt and Jeans ~o detail~ were
pro' 1ded on the other suspect~ • • • Polrce officen were asked to patrol an
area along Laauna Can)On Road follov. ing
complaints Tuesda) of someone throwing
eaas at people wa1t1Dg at a bus stop
• • • A, Canyon Acres On\l' woman told
poltct she wu an.ackcd b~ a doa Tuesda}
mornina. The doa was wen to an animal
shelter to be qua.ranuned
Niguel man, 91,
hit by car, dies
" Lajuna ~1auel man died Tuelda)'
fro m uuunes he suffered two days earlier
when he wu struck b) a car while crouina
the road. the Cahfom1a H1&hwa) Patrol
~ported
Whewell Dcrm)'er Lehman, 91, died at
M1111on Commun1t) Hospu.al 1n M1111on
Viejo, where he was t.alcen followt na the
11 ·SS am aetident shortl} be(o~ noon
Sunda) on Crown Valley Parkwa)'. wd
CHP Officer h1doro LoecL
Lehman wa1 cro111na Crown Valley, cut
of V11 Valle. when a westbound car
travehna bc~n 40 and 45 mph hit htm Lopez 111d Lehman..,,., not 1n a crouwall
or antenecuon
Tot's body found tn truck
WEST COVlNA tAP) -A tNCk
impounded b) a towtna company . co.n-
talned the bod:y of a 14-mon\h-old bo)'
wboll mothct twU &JT9l1iod I ,...0 .utia
after a cbue by police.
Tbe blanbt·wrapped ~ ol MadMw MlichelJ 5man wu · by polb
Tuetday while 1nvcaauuaa a ml.mnl
pcnon report filed by \he child'• •t1:1a
11id Lot Anpkl County lhmfr1 Deput)'
Siephen Lee
I
_j
Crash victim's kin seeks $2 million Fire stations open
for tours Saturday
87 'IONY LU VEDBA 4' .............
The father of a woman hospitalized since late
Auaust after beina hit by a car in a Costa Mesa crouwalk
bu filed a $2 million claim apinat the city.
However, Huntinaton Beach attorney Tim Ryan,
repraentina Dr. TbUODJ Vo and his 20-year-0ld
dauabt.er. Anh Thu Vo, 1&1d be wasn't sure ifthe city is
liab[e for the Aua. 22 accident.
Ryan said be is still investiptina the case and filed
the claim Oct. 3 merely to meet the 100-day statute of
limitations.
"We're just coverina the bases," be said.
The woman suffered a fractured skull and other
head injuries when she and a friend were struck down by
a 1982 Ford Granada while crossing Fair Drive at
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Robinson's Fashion Fine Jewelry. ·141
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~v
Vanauard Way. The traffic liJht hadappucntlychanpd
while Vo and Dmeb Connor were still in the crosswalk
at 7:4S p.m.
The women were reportedly coUectina donations
for the Hare Krishna sect.
Connor sustained a fractured pelvis, a broken left tea and possible abdominal injuries. She was released
Sept. 8 from Fountain Valley RqionaJ Hospital.
Vo, of Laauna Beach, who went into a coma after
the accident, has since repined conciousneas. On
Tuesday she was reported an stable condition at the
hospital. Hospital spokeswoman Sheila Lohstroh said
Vo was responding well to commands and was now able
to talk.
The driver, Marsha Amburgey, 32, of Capistrano
Beach was citf;d for allegedly failing to yield to
pedestrians in a crosswalk, although she reportedly
entered the intersection on the areen Li&ht.
Accordina to the claim filed by Ryan, Costa Meta
could be liable for the "nealiaent desian of the roadway ..
11 well u for an alle&edl)' faulty traffic sianaJ.
The family is seek.inJ S l million in damaaes for
pain, aufferina and disfiaurement, and another $1
million for past and future medical expenses.
So far Vo's hospital bills have probably surpassed
$200.000. Ryan said.
With such Jarae expenses, suing the motorist
probably wouldn't be worthwhile, leaving the city as the
main taraet ofliability, Ryan said.
"There aren't too many (individual) policies that
cover this type of injury and the driver probably
wouldn't have a mill ion dollan in assets anyway." Ryan
explained.
Cotta Meu'1 four fire station• will be open to tbe
public Satulday from 10 Lm. to 3 p.m. u put of
natioDll Firt Prevention Weck.
Each station will provide bandoutJ and conduct
full toun throu,hout the day. .
Smoke deiecton arc beina displayed ~11 week. at
Costa Mesa stores in observance of national Fire
Prevention Week. Costa Meta fire officials say the most prcv~ent
blues oocur at home in the wee boun of the mom101.
National 1tudie1 indicate that in most cases dealh la
caused not by bumina. but by inhalina amoke, toxic
psesand other byproducts of the fire. . . . A smoke alarm could prevent dealh or 1~une
and lessen the build.in& damqea. Stores fcaturina the displays are: L ~ P Home
Centen ABC Lumber, K-Mart, Kerm Rima Hard-
ware and Marvac Electronics.
noNLY:THU
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A99.99
IAYI 60% o"I OUR ITAINLlll ITllL
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Reg S300 Prom Coffee Imports, the
professional-quality c appuccino/espresso
maker With a sprtng-plston mechanism
tor a troth of steam. a measuring gauge
for water and steam pressure and a
12-cup capacity tank Robinson's
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Palm Springs
A275
DY OUR CAMIL HAIR IPORTCOAT
~AND GIT THI DRiii ILACKI PRiii
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you ·11 re ceive a pair of
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R. S. L Trousers,
30-42 Robinson's
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Clothing. 951139
*3.15-A!l...35
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best fashion colors Sandal1oot Silk
Re flections. AB-CD-EF. Reg $4 25. •2.1a
Control Top SUk Reflections, AB-CD-EF
Reg $4.50 t3.3a Robinson's
Leg Fashions. 8.
SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 10-9, SATURDAY 10-6, SUNDAY 11-6.
$22.99
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OXPORD CLOTH DRiii IHlltTI
Reg $29 50 Prom our
own JWR Private Label.
finely tailored button -
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pink or blue cotton.
141/2-17. 32-35 sleeve
lengths Robinson's Men's
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except Palm Springs
A9.99 ou11N o• KING
MYI ·~·604M. ON 110· AND
200·TH•IAD IHllTI
Come choose from our w1de assortment ot
no-iron. cotton/polyester percale sheets by
famous makers. Patterns will vary by store.
so d o hurry Aat or titted
Queen. Reg S32 -S48
••• ff. King Reg $40-$55
••·". Standard cases. palr. Reg S20-S33 e9.M
King cases. pair.
Reg. S22,S37 .••• M .
Robinson's Bed Linens. 30.
all stores except Palm
Springs
Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October I, 1MI * Al
CRUISE SHIP DRAMA ENDS AS PIRATES SURRENDER ••• Pirates after Maureen Reagan? hom A l
a.od crew memben were well and
there wu no violence durina the
ordeal.
~tian Fore~ Minister Eamat Abcfel~Meauid said, "The bijacken,
who number four, will leave EaYpt.
The ahip will JO to Port Said baibOr.
There were no demands."
Althouah Abdel-M~uid pla~ the
number at four, earlier reports in-
dicated there were as many u a dozen
bijacken and the Palesune Libera-
tion Oraanization said there were six.
The 61ue-and-wbite Achille Lauro wu anchored off Port Sa.id, ~l.
The cruilCf' was seized Monday ni&ht
after it left AJexandria, Emt. The
bijacken bad demanded that Israel
releue SO Palestinian prisoners.
A PLO official in Tunis, wbo said
he wu authorued to speak for the
orp.niz.ation but who declined to be
identified. did not say which or-
pnization the biiacken belonpd to
but said the PLO had "no connection
whatsoever" with the piracy.
The PLO news qency W AF A, in a
telex monitored in London, said a
deleption of PLO officials had
boarded the Achille Lauro and started
talks with the bijacken.
The Italian Foreian Ministry said
today there could be u many u SI 1
people on the liner, 180 paasenacrs
and 33 l crew memben. On Tuesday,
the shippina company said 413
people were aboard.
The PLO bu condemned the ~acking. An f.ayptian official today
wd his country wu certain PLO
Chairman Vasser Arafat bad nothina
to do wtth the b~ackina.
Earlier, the bijacken denied killina
any bostqcs and demanded to Wk to
Western ambusadora, pon aouroea
said.
An unconfirmed report re.china
the Israeli aovernmcnt aaid an elderly
Jewiab couple from the United Siatea
wu killed aboard the abip, a aovcm-
1 American eald kllled
ROME (AP) -Premier Bettino
Crui said today that an American
hostaac had been killed ·~r.rentty"
by the ~acken of the I n crwsc
liner Ach11le Lauro. Craxi told a news
conference that the captain of the ship
told him the Palestinians had thrown
an American named Leon Klinahof-
fer into the sea and that Klingboffer
wudead.
ment ofticia.I aaid today.
The offtcial, speak.ina on a 1uaran-
tee of anooymjty, Kid the names of
the couple were made available to
lsnel, but be declined to release
them. He said there wu no confirma-
tion of the report from a second
source.
The number of Amcncans on
board wu uncertain, but wu esti-
mated by the White House to be
about a dozen.
Hundreds of pu1enacn were off
the vessel for a one-da~tour of Cairo
~~yramida when the bijackina
larael said one of the prisoners
whose relcuc was demanded by the
hijackers was Samir al-Kountar, who
wu captured after a l 979 raid on the
Israeli coast .
WASHINGTON (AP)-President Reapn'a daulhw. MauteCD lh•"·
wu aboard a RoyaJ Vwna auste &hip 10 the Medi~ about the time u
Jtalaan liner wu eeued by Palctuntan tmoril~ but her IPC)kawomaD Mid
today the cnlitc it over and she ia safe lD an und11Cloeed location.
Althouah a report published by an Israeli newipeper ·~I.be may
have been the intended taraet of PaJestlnWl hijacken who lei.zed an ltaliao
CTUtle ship in the cutcm Mediterranean. the spok.cswoman said I.be bad no
information lo substantiate that.
"She ia safe, and there ia no problem," uid Susanne Ricb1 Rapn '•aide at
the Rq>ublican National C.Omrnittee1 where the president• cider dautbtcr
specializes in women's issues. But Ricn refuted to d.i.lclote the whereabouts of
the 44-ycar-old Rcapn, sayina only that ''ahe i1 on a private trip.••
Rcapn and her husband, Denni• Revell, were tnvelina in Europe lut
week, and she wu the featured lecturer aboard a Royal Vlkina cnme for
passcnacn interated in hearinJ her speak about women'• mu.ea and her recent
role as headoflhe U.S. delepuon to the U.N. womcn'aconferenc:e in Nairobi,
Kenya.
The Jerusalem Poat said today that the Palestinian aucrrillas wbo ·~
the Italian liner may have intended to commandeer the NorwCIJID ahip
carryina Reapn's daudlter.
•
lY THROUGH MON
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famous maker. the shor1·
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with enduring style
Choose trom a selection
of stripes \n many colors
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stores except Palm
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-·-~
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IAVI 44.,,. ONOu• ALL·LIATHI•
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hardwood frame and no-sag construction 1
we're famous tor and now comes m your "
choice o f creme. gray or black lea1her
Robinson's Occastonal Seatlng. 194. all
stores except Horton Plaza. Mission Viejo.
Palm Springs and Sherman Oaks •
*16.99-~29.99
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styles and colors. Inside Robinson's Red
Bag. 150. all stores except Palm Springs
!249.99
¥1 384Mt ON OU• IXCLUllVI
NAM UATHI• LUGOAOI llT
Reg S400 Our own JWR Private
Label set includes a 46 · · three-
sutter garment bag
with 3 · · gusset and a
large carry-on with
brass hardware and
retnJorced comers Both
have sel1-heallng
zippers. Black or brown
leather. Robinson's
Luggage. 19. all stores
except Palm Sprtngs
$59.99
IAVI 21.,,. ON ou•
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skirt tor tall ts 32 · ·
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rugs trort'I West Germany ln solld shades ot
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Reg 5400 tM9 8'3" x 11 6
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90. all stores except Mission Viejo Palm
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..
.. -·
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Thick and thirsty m seven decorator
shades porcelain blue. white. parchment
ro1mosa light coral forest green and blue
velvet Bath 25 x 50 Reg S 12 ta.99
Hand. 16 " x 28 " Reg S9 t2.99
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Robinson's Towels 31 all stores except
Palm Spnngs
Sale ends Monday October 14 Selection
vanes by store and quanhhes are !muted
to stock on hand lntermed.late
markdowns may have been taken on
some llems
·No payment untll Mmch 1986 on all
area rug carpeting rurruture and
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SHOP THUUDAY AND .. IDAY. 10-9, SA1\aDAY 10-6,~DAY 11-6. ...
--
•
I
Vote OK' don bal~nced budget Approved farm bUJ called JJoldlnl pattern
W ASHINOTON (AP)-The Houte puted a l 98S farm bill that even ill
backen concede i1 at best "a bold.i.na pet tern" to auppon flnn income while the
aaricultural economy 6.nda ha way out of a aerioua llump. Lawmakcn voted
282-1 41 late Tuelday in favor of the r>W, which reauthoriua farm and food proaram• into 1990 at a projocted co1t ofS 14 l billion. But they aarced it fa..ils
to addteu many of flnnina•• cu.mot problems. "Our commitment wu that we
send a messap that we cared, that we not ~uce drutically their incomeJ" said
Houae Apiculture Committee Chairman Kika de la Oarza, 0-Teua ... , think
we did that."
W ASHINOTON (AP) -The Sen-
tie. meetina into the early momina
boun today llJeod to end a parlia-
mentary 1tliemate and allow action
on a lbon-term increue in the
aovmunent'1 bonowi.na limiL
39¢
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. CREST CA.B.INETS , · Free ........... Buy Factory Direct
Orang• County. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 714/131-2323
San Fernando Valley .............. 111/957-3413
W.L.A. INch Otles, a.v. Hilla ........ 213/329-015'4
Valenclo-Newholl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 /255-3249
Rudman-Hollinp proposal tbi1 after-
ooon f0Uowi111 a vote on the Demo-
cratic plan. That would be quickly
followed by a •hon-term increue in
the aovemment'• CRdit ceilina, to
alleviate the financial crunch while
Conpeu completes action on the
Reapn administration's request for a
new debt limit of$2.078 trillion.
"Hopefully, we could dispose of
that by voice vote," Senate M~ority
Leader Roben Dole said.
The qrcement wu reached after a
testy evenina on the Senate floor, with
Dole, R-JUn .. sarcastically sayina to
Democrats at one point, "Maybe you
want to create hardship for widows
and orphans."
$5 billion auction goes on
WASHING TON (AP} -The
Treaaury Depanment announced
today it will •o ahead with an
emeraency auction to borrow $5
billion in new money to keep the
aovemment afloat while Congress
wraniie• over raisina the debt limit.
The new money will keep the
aovemment from beina forced to
start bouncina hundreds of thousands
off edCT'll checks.
Government coffers had run dry on
Tuesday after the Treasury Dcpan-
ment bad lost authority to borrow
new money because of an impasse in
Conaress over passing a new debt
ceiling.
In the hopes that the impasse
would soon be broken, the depart-
ment went ahead and scheduled an
emeraency sale of SS billion in
Treasury bills today to provide the
government with that much new
money to keep operating.
P&1JeJ OK• 1Jl6ller •taadard deduction•
W ASHINOTON (AP) -The Howe Wayt and Means Committee,
parti.na company with President Reapn on some m~or elements of tax
overhaul, bat aiven tentative approval to hiaber standard deductions while
reject.in& the $21000.per-penon exemptions recommended by the preaident.
Al with all the aeciaiona the committee is makina behind cloled doors in the
search for a new w 1yatem, the votes taken Tuelday are aubject to chanae later .
But for the moment, the panel'• plan would raise the standard deductions,
which are used to reduce the taxable income of people who do not itemize1 sianificantly hiaher than the preaident recommended and raise the person&J
exemption, now S l ,080 for 1986. to S l,500.
Youthful defector ••om bJ •• U.S. clt1•en
WASHINGTON (AP) -Soviet-born tecn-qer Walter Potovchak., who
chose life in the United States over li fe with bis parenu in the Soviet Union,
took his American citiunsbip oath Tuesday niaht in a Capitol Hill ceremony.
More than five yean aao, Polovcbak, then aae l 2, ran away from home rather
than return with his parents to the Soviet Ukraine.
FBI admit. fella• ageZJt. fired fatal &IJot.
PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -The FBI confirmed Tuesday that other aaents
fired the shots that killed a female aaent durina the arrest ofa robbery suspect.
Special Agent Herb Hawkif!S, who beads the Phocnill ~ffice, ~d .in a statement
he could give no other detatls "except to confirm that invesuptton conducted
to date indicates that Special A&ent Robin Ahrrn~· wounds were the result of
shots fired by other a'er:its at the arrest scenr ... "
2 British women, 7 Lebanese freed
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Two
British women abducted two weeks
qo in west Beirut were released
unharmed., and seven Lebanese, in-
cludini five journalists, were kid-
napped today and released four houii
later.
Meanwhile, the Shiite Moslem
fundamentalist HczboUah, or Pany
of God, called today for the prompt
release of three Soviet diplomata who
were kidnapped in Beirut on Sept. 30.
A fourth Soviet diplomat was found
fatally shot last week.
Hazel Moss, 45, of Derby, Enaland,
and Amanda McGrath, 28, of
Portsmouth, Enaland, walked into
the Commodore fiotel near midni&bt
to call their families in Enaland. They
were kidnapped by aunmen who took
them from their west Beirut apan-
ment Sept. 26.
Mou, a former restaurant man-
aJer, said: "It was a nightmare of
slammina doors, dark rooms and
diny blankeu over our heads. It was
temfyi114-"
She said the aunmen who stormed
into her apanmentjammed a pistol m
her face and pbbcd Miss McGrath
when she returned to the apanment
soon after.
The women, visibly nervous, said
they weren't hurt, but wouldn't say
who had captured them or why. or
wh y they were freed.
548-1123
1 Mineral Baih t · 'atments
~ . sauna
ShiatsU
25°/o OFF
ALL SERVICES
Transportation available
McGrath is a former En.Jlish
teacher at the American Uni vemty of
Beirut.
Still missma arc 12 Westerners
kidnapped in Beirut since March
1984 and the three Soviets. The
Westerners include a British journal-
ist, six Americans, incJudina former
Huntinaton Beach resident David
Jacobsen, head of the American
University of Beirut Hospital; four
Frenchmen and one Italian.
Police said aunmen in west Beirut
released five Christian Lebanese
journalists, the wife of one and their
Moslem driver after intervention by
Justice Minister Nabih Berri. leader
of the Shiite Amal militia.
Pure Collagen Mask &
Facial Reg. '65 Only '48
789 W. 19th Costa Mesa -Corner 19th & Placentia
The LcbanCK were abducted after
they crossed the dividinJ Green Line
from Christian east BeltUt while en
route to the independent French
languaae L'Orient-le Jour daily,
where the journalists worked.
The spokesman for the Hezbollah
faction released a statement today
callina for the release of three Soviet
bos~es.
Sheikh Mohammed el-Amin in a
uatement published by several Beirut
newspapers, accused what be called
"suspicious oraans" of kidnapp1na
the Sovie~ and of tryina to pin
responsibility for their abduction on
Islamic factions.
Bomb threats
stop worship
JOHANNESBURG, South Afnca
(AP) -Telephoned bomb threats
forced black Bishop Desmond Tutu
and about I 00 worshippers to evacu-
ate the Anglican cathedral th is morn-
ing at the stan of a nationwide day of
prayer, police said.
Police and bomb-sniffing d~
helped staff check the St. Mary s
Cathedral. but no explosives were
found and services resumed. police
and worshippers said.
Transportation company records
indicated about half the black
workers stayed off the job in the
Indian Ocean port city of Durban and
in Johannesbu~ where most of the
work force resides in Soweto1 the
black township of about 2 million
residents southwest of the city.
Soviets threaten
Islamic guerrillas
DESIGN EXCELLENCE: GERMANY
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -
Thousands of Soviet troops backed
by armored columns, jets, and heli-
copter aunsbips are battlina to!ush
back Islamic guerrillas aroun the
Afghan capital of Kabul, sources said
Tuesday.
Western diplomatic Jurccs and
auerrilla officials said SoViet units were conductina major operations in
the Paahman area nonhwest of IUbul
and in Lopr and Wardak provinces,
to the south and west of the capital.
Put us on your calendar for Saturday, October 12!
Newport Center Fashion fsfand and Harper's
Bazaar have created a des1sn extravaganza 1ust
for you.
SfECML fYfNTS;
· F•lhloa Sbow-2:00 p.m. at Stage Court
featurln& fathlon apparel from Germany.
• IMWDl!rplty-See the latest models.alyoUJ
choice located near Robinson's.
· Yilltroyl lodt Chin• DllDHr-Vis1t their
newly opened boutique in Robinson's China
Department. See their beautiful table set-
ting designs.
· Ruhttr To Win fcbu/ou• fc/m
· Round-trip ticket for two via Pan Am to
wrmany
· One year lease on a BMW automobile
·A starter set of Vi//eroy & Boch china
· .-\ <Arman deslsner wardrobe
.-\//entrants must be 18 or older. Dr1wing
w/11 immediately folfow the fashion show. No
purchase necessary.
· <itoNo Mwk-l1sten to loot-tapplns,
hand<lappins muste throushout the
Center.
For 1ddltional Information and contest entry
forms visit the Newport Center Fashion
/1/ar'ld Information Center.
Nelman·Marcus, Robinson's., Bullocks
Wilshire, The Broadway, Bulfums and Irvine
Ranch Firmets Market. Over 80 fine •tores
In all.
Warni11g delivered to
Greenpeace captain
ABOARD THE B~NY, Off
~ururoa (AP) -The French navy
11Sued a wntten warnina to the
captain of the anti-nuclear protest
ship Greenpeace u it paued about 20
miles from the French nuclear tcttina
site at Mururoa Atoll.
An officer from the Frtncb fripte
Enseiane de Vaisseau Henry boarded
a •mall boat Monday and croued the
open 1e& to the Greenpeace, several
hundred yards away, to present Capt.
Jonathon Cattle with the brief'wam-
ina: ··we remind you that puaqe
throuah the territorial le& within r2
nautical miles of the 1urroundiDJ
reef• of Mururoa and Fanptaufa
Atolls i1 temporarily prohibited."
The Ominpeace environmental
orpnhttion la in the area to protest
the planned underp'ound teatina of'
French nuc:lear weapon1 on Mul'\ll'OL
Flood relief promised
to aid Puerto Ricans
. •. -
-'£WPORT CENrn~ N FASHION ISLAND
Jus t off Pacific Coast Highway between
Jamboree and M1e.-\rthur Blvds. In
Newport Beach.
PONCE. Putno 1lic:b (AP) -The
aovemor declared three d&y1 of
mourn.in& and announced a multi-
million4ollat •mertncy a.id plan for
victims of 0~ and m»dtlidee
that be called the wont trqedy the illud't bil10r'Y.
Oov. bWHeruada Colon alto
IAid IAte TueldaJ _bl hid talbd to
White Houae otncla1I about obtain· lna &echnJcal help and Werat aid in
the aftermath of' a tropical de I Ute that
triaered tho flooda and muchlldes,
killfnt at least 66. The number of
miuina rutted from 7 $ to hundreds.
' .
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT !Wedne.day, October 9, 1985 A 7
.DA
THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY SHOP OUR STOREWIDE SAVINGS.
PLAZA SPORTSWEAR
Save 33%: On soft career blouses in two
styles and many fashion colors. Plaza
Blouses, 661297 Orig. 30.00 19.99
Save 33%: Levi's Bendover and pull on pants
1n misses sizes and regular and short lengths
Plaza Sportswear. 135
Reg. 19.99 13.39
Save 25%: On Personal Haberdashery
polyester basics. 1ackets, skirts. and pan ts
Plaza Sportswear. 133
Reg. 32.00 to 74.00 24.00 to 55.50
Special purchase: Pant Her flannel pants
and skirts in polyester wool
Plaza , 133 39.99 each
SPORTSWEAR BO'S
Save 25%: Counterparts career separates.
Belted straight skirt. Acrylic cowl-neck
sweater. D. 443.
Orig. 38.00 and 40.00 27.99 and 29.99
COATS AND SUITS
Save 30%: Misses short coats in classic and
updated styles. Coats. 25. Orig. 130.00 89.99
Special purchase: Misses two-piece suits for
fall in classic and contemporary styles.
Suits, 226 . . 99.99
DRESSES
Special purchase: Diane Von Furstenberg
drop waist dress with pleated skirt and pad
ded shoulders. Polyester 1acquard. m1ss~s
sizes 6 to 14 Dresses, 22 89.99
Save 30%: On misses career dresses from
your favorite woman designer. Dresses, 22
Orig. 102.00 to 122.00 69.99 to 79.99
Save 25%: On dovesk1n knit dresses from a
famous dress maker Easy-care polyester
Sizes 6 to 16. Dresses, 49 Ong. 80.00 59.99
Special purchase: Feminine dressing by
Secrets in a collection of soft polyester
prints. Misses sizes. Dresses. 21 49.99
Special purchase: Print crepe dresses for
the office and after work. From Taurus II 1n
petite sizes 4 to 14. Dresses. 27 59.99
JUNIORS
Save 25%: On our entire stock of soltd color
knit dresses. Markdown taken at register
Junior Dresses. 64.
Reg. 28.00 to 39.99 21 .00 to 29.99
Save 30%: On novelty sweaters by Alberov
and Sweater Teas. S,M , L Juniors, 97
Orig. 30.00 to 46.00 19.99 to 29.99
INTIMATE APPAREL
Save 20%: On our entire stock of famous
maker tricot sleepwear. From Lily of France.
Olga, California Dynasty, and more
Sleepwear, 2412881232131)
Reg. 12.00 to 40.00 9.80 to 32.00
Save 20% to 25%: Warner'~ nylon briefs and
Underlites panties. Pants, 260.
Reg. 4.00 to 4.50 ... 3 for 9.60 to 3 fCH 10.80
Save 25%: Myonne Captiva' lace trim brief,
hipster, and bikini. Pants. 260
Reg. 3.50 each . . . . . . 3 fCH 7.80
Save 20% to 25%: On Maidenform "Wise
Buys" brief and hipster 1n Captiva • nylon.
Pants, 260. Reg. 3.25 to 3.50 ea ch 3 for 7.80
Save 20%: All Maidenform and Vassarette
daywear. Half-slips, full-slips, camisoles. ted
dies, and tap pants. Daywear, 63.
Reg. 9.00 to 31 .00 . . . 7.20 to 24.80
Speclal purchase: Broadway's own classic
flannel sleepshirt. Sleepwear. 24 19.99
Save 37%: Selected Bali and T rendsetters
bras. Bras. 19. Orig. 7.99 . . 4.99
S.ve 20%: Selected Classic Lily bras from
Lily of France. Bras, 19.
Reg. 11 .00 ...... l.IO MCh
FASHION ACCESSORIES
S.ve 20%: On our entire stock of
pierced and clip earrings from Monet,"
Encore, Mona So. Trifari, t Lawrence Bon.
mc1re. Fashion Jewelry, 141 /20/439/111 /427.
Reg. 4.00 to 35.00 . . ......... 3.20 to 21.00
S.ve 20%: On all textured hosiery.
Hosiery, 3. Reg. 4.75 to 16.00 .3.IO to 12.80
S.ve 20%: On our entire collection of ladies
belts. Leather. fabric. stretch. evening.
Belts, 86/449.
Reg. 5.00 to 40.00 4.00 to 32.00 a.we JOIM.: On our entire stock of vinyl hand·
bags and clutches. Handbags. 37.
Reg. 12.00 to 60.00 t .IO to 41.00
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Save 20%: On our enttre stock of 1un1or
handbags. Junior Accessories. 106.
Orig 10 00 to 20 00 8.00 to 18.00
Special purchase: A&L Seamon calculator
clutches 1n ltzard. eel and crocodile-grained
leather Small Leather Goods. 142 19.99
Special purchase: Leather handbags and
clutches for fall
Handbags, 422 15.99 and 29.99
Special purchase: Wool wide brim felt hat 1n
fall colors Hats. 263 17.99
WOMEN'S SHOES
Special purchase: Mistee's draped leather
boot, "Sandra". m four colors.
Junior Shoes. 75 89.99
Special purchase: Red Cross cuffed fashion
boot. "Spitty II " in three colors Women's
Shoes, 87 89.99
Save 33%: Contemporary "Shell" flat by
Mia, 1n four colors. Junior Shoes. 181
Reg . 35.00 23.34
Special purchase: Axiom fashion sling m
three fall colors Women's Shoes. 35 29.99
Save 20%: On our entire stock of Nina
shoes Women's Shoes. 249
Ong. 59.00 to 92 00 47.20 to 73.IO
Save 33%: On 9~West's woven pump
"M aris" Junior Shoes 75
Reg. 42.00 21.00
MEN'S SPORTSWEAR
Save 25%: On updated woven sportshirts 1n
long sleeved solids and patterns .by Sasson
Brigade, Cadaz and more Men's Sports
wear. 41 7 Reg . 20 00 to 28 50 15.00 to 21 .37
Save 31% to 35%: On pleated or plain front
twill slacks from Arrow Brigade and Cadaz
Men· s Sportswear, 245
Reg. 32 .00 to 34.00 21.99
MEN'S FURNISHINGS
Save 25%: On French designer tone-on tone
long sleeved dress shtrts Men's Dress Shirts,
147 Reg. 30 00 22.50
Save 30%: On our entire stock of pure
lambswool ties From Neil Martin and a
French designer Ties. 122 225
Reg. 11.00 to 16.00 7.70 to 11.20
Save 25%: On French designer long sleeve.
long leg broadcloth paiamas Sleepwear 164
Reg 20 00 15.00
Save 25%: On French designer pure cotton
terry velour robes Robes 164
Reg. 60.00 45.00
Save 25%: On French and American
designer small leather accessories
Furnishings. 404.
Reg. 10.00 to 28.50 7.50 to 21.38
Save 25%: On our enttre stock of men's um
brellas. Furnishings, 105
Reg. 12.00 to 35.00 9.00 to 26.25.
YOUNG MEN'S
Save 25%: On Levi's corduory jeans 1n fall
colors. Young Men's, 123. Reg. 20.00 14.99
Save 25%: On Modz paisley sweaters and
foulard panerned sweater vests. Young
Men's, 5. Reg. 26.00 to 32.00 19.50 to 24.00
S.ve 25%: On ~rdache classic five-pocket
jeans in indigo cotton denim. Young Men's,
94. Orig. 38.00 21.50
Save 25%: On Modz polar fleece act1vewear
Includes 1ackets, vests and pull-on pants
Young Men's, 185.
Orig. 25.00 to 30.00 11.75 to 22.50
Save 25%:. On fall sportcoats by Four Forty
Jaguar. Young Men's 187 Reg 75.00 51.25
Save 21%: On all young men's packaged
IOflg sleeve dress shirts. Bv Sasson, Modaz
Chauvin and more. Young Men's 183
Reg. 15.99 to.22.00 . . 11.19 to 11.60
SpecW puwchMe· J .J. Mc Ways fall dress
slacks. Young Men's, 187 21.00
BOYS 4 TO 20
Save 21'Mi: On Levi's corduroy jeans in fall
shades. Boys Sportswear, 2n. Sizes 8 to 14.
reg. 13.99 10.41
Sizes 16 to 20. reg. 15.99 11.•
S.ve 30%; On s1riped logo knit shirts from a
very famous maker for boys 4 to 7. Boys
Sportswear, 74. Orig 17 50 12..-
Also for boys 8 to 20 . Boys Spomwear. 26.
Orig. 20.00 12..-
..
WEST COAST KIDS
Save 30%: On regular priced Health Tel(
playwear for newborns. infants toddlers and
girls 4 to 14 Sizes 3 to 9 months 12 10 24
months. 2T to 4T and 4 to 14 We5t Coast
Kids. 44 137 418 419 428
Reg. 5.99 to 20 00 4.19 to 14.00
Save 30%: On all our ou1er1N ... ar lot kids
Newborns 3 to 9 months infants sm~s 12 10
24 months. toddlers 2T 10 4T gHIS 4 1) 14
and boys 8 to 20
W est Coast Kids. 47 90 96 137 234 446
Reg 18.00 to 70.00 12.60 to 49.00
Save 25% to 30%: On sele1.,1ed fall swea ter s
and pleated plaid skirts for girls 2T to 14
West Coast Kids 44 83 90
Reg. 11 00 to 20 00 7.99 to 14.99
-Special purchase: Huggable pl ush bears
from our collection m girls accessories Plush
Accessories. 102 5.99 to 29.99
HOME ENTERTAINING
38% to 50% off: 5-pc place settings 1n
Bergen Green. &:ottish Thistle or Gen1 rv
Gray patterns. Dept 11
Orig . 27 50 to 44 95 16.99
40% to 50% off: Johnson Brothers 5 pc.
place settings in Heritage or Regency pat
terns. Dept. 11 Ong. 17 50 to 22 50 9.99
25% off: Mikasa crystal tableware with
frosted satin f1n1sh Dept 412
Reg. 12.95-19.95 9.71-14.96
40% off: Full lead handcut cry~tal dec anters
from Gorham 3 styles Dept 36
Reg. 50 00 each 29.99
50% off: 3-pc nested rray Depl 70
Orig 15 00 5.99
42% off: Our own 42 pc s1lverplate service
for 8 Dept 59 Open sto~
value 520.00 299.00
ELECTRONICS
Special savings: Pioneer 100 watt compact
disc audio system Dept 88 999.00
20.00 off: Panasonic slimline AM FM
cassette recorder Dept 447
Reg 139 00 119.00
5.00 off: Expresstine 1r1ml ne tel,..pnnrw Dept
426 Reg 29 99 24.99
Special savings: PhonernatP dnSwPr nq
machine. Dept. 426 99.99
CHILL CHASER SHOP
18% to 28% off: Our exclusive collection of
pure cotton flannel sheet~ from Marte'll Jr
our European Collection imported from Por
tugal twins to l(ings Dept 2
Orig 14 00 to 33 00 9.99 to 26.99
24% to 29% off: Our e11clus1ve Cadeau'I
prime European white qoose rfown (.Om
forter twin. full queeo l..1ng Dept 266
Orig 225 00 to 400 00 189.99 to 299.99
30% to 35% off: Our e~clus1ve prime Euro
pean M erino wool fleece ma ttress pacJ twin
to king. Dept. 264.
Orig. 100.00 to 200 00 69.99 to 129.99
30% to 42% oft: Our exclusive F1eldc.rest
automatic blanket. twin to king Dept 55
Orig. 75.00 to 190.00 49.99 to 109.99
FURNITURE
Specilil Nvi~ Our Eurostyled leather sofa
Dept. 38. 999.00. Matching loveseat 949.00.
Matching charr 199.00
201.00 off: Leather chair and ottoman Dept
165. Ong. 400 00 199.00
LUGGAGE
20% off: Our exclusive 420 denier nylon
luggage collection. Dept. 33
Reg. 29.99 to 69.99 23.99 to 56.99
STATIONERY
~w puzchM1: Burnes of Boston wood
frame collection. Dept. 15 1.99 to 15.99
SoecW pusclwH: Gold and sltv~r toned
albums from Melannco. Dept. 15 11.99
SLEEP SHOP
_...to~ off: Every Simmons and King
Koil mattress including Beautyrest and Pos
ture Bond. Free bedreme with selected
BeautyreSt and Posturepedic purchase Dept
69. Twin and full. orig. 129.95 to
399.95 11.00 to 11&.00 -· pc. Oueen and king, orig 599 95 ro
.).199 95 215..00 to 135.00 •t
•
..
M 0..,.. CoMt OAJL Y PILOT IWeclneeday, October 9, 1985
Aid reci pien,ts
aren't owed any
gambling funds
It is not, nor should it ever be, the responsibility of
the taxpayers to give gambling money to those wbo
receive welfare or other forms of public assistance.
That, correctly, is the policy of the administrators of
the Supplemental Security Income and Aid to Families
with Dependent Children programs. The first provides
money, through the Social Security Administration, to
peoplcwhose capacity to earn a living have been limited
by disability. The latter is what is commonly referred to
as welfare. Both programs exist because our society
recognizes its obligation to ensure that its members are
supplied with the essentials of life during periods of
misfortune-even if those periods are infinite.
With the advent of the California state lottery and
its lure of riches, some people who rely upon public
money for their survival have expressed anger that they
might have to repay their taxpaying neighbors if they win
a lottery cash prize. They feel that they are somehow
being discriminated against, frozen out of the games and
the chance to strike it rich by rules that favor the rich.
Certainly, the rules regarding gambling winnings by
public assistance recipients discourage participation in
the state lottery. That's not only good policy, it's good
advice. The odds are strongly against the lottery player,
so a needy person who spends the food and rent money
on a longshot ticket is acting irresponsibly. But the
government's not really in the business of giving out
homely advice, so the rules do not prohibit any person
from panicipation in legal gambling.
Rather, they point out, gambling winnings must be
declared as income,justas if the winner had obtained the
money from an employer or from an investment. Its
presence changes the conditions under which the
government agreed to part with the money it sends every
month. It reduces the recipients' need and, therefore,
should reduce the society's responsibility to help, as well
as its concomitant financial burden.
As members of a large and diverse social
community, we willingly sacrifice to promote the
common good and to maintain the dignity of our
neighbors. But it is no more a social responsibility to
provide people with gambling money than it is to give
them mink coats and limousines.
Opinions expressed In thta space are thoee of the Dally Piiot. Othef views
expresaed ~ this page are those of their euthon and artists. Reed«'
comment la Invited. The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626. Phone 642-6086.
Sllence golden following
clty's Swan. Street closure
To the Editor:
I am writing in response to the Ptlot
article concerning the closing of Swan
Street at Placentia The an1cle was
titled "Residents trade safety for
convenience."
M y question as -whose safety and
whose convenaence'l
The plan to close the street was
cleared with the police and fire
departmen1 well ahead of ume by a
well-organized group of residents. So
much for emergenc1e!>.
What about our safety., Without
cars and motorcycles dnvmg 1n
excess of 40 mph, I feel much safer
Whose convenieoce., Only the
commuterc; who used our street as a
shortcut should be anconvenaenccd
As a Swan Street resident I may have
to go 30 seconds out of my way to
enter at Albatross. It takes me no
longer to leave for work an the
morning since I'm not competing
with the commuters. and 11 1s now
possible to get out of the dnveway.
The benefits of this closure are
more than I ever dreamed. For the
first umc since we have li ved on'Swan
Street, the street as quiet. There are no
vehicles travehngat excessive speeds.
and no motorcycles racing up and
down at 3 a.m. -a satuauon which
occurred often. l am sleeping better
The Mesa Verde resident inter-
viewed by the paper could not have
lived on either Swan or Albatross -
the paper should have balanced the
anicle by 1ntcrv1ew10g a resident
from either Albatross or Swan. I
assure you, their responses would
have been far different. We always
kn~w we had a problem with traffic.
but we didn't realize to what extent
until the strttt was closed.
The silence 1s deafening! Thank
you. City Council. for approving our
plan.
SUSAN KINKADE
Costa Mesa
Sobran doesn't merit reading
To the Ednor·
Joseph Sobran's columns really
don't belong on an op-ed page
Whereas most editonahsts suppor1
their points with evidence from
personal experience or expen testi-
mony, Sobran rehes on barroom
banter toclaam that "Conscrva11sm as
realism. hberahsm play<; pretend"
(Daily Pilot. Sept. 25)
Instead of the op-ed page, a special
section for rants, raves and rational-
lZ.lltaons should be reserved especially
for Sobran Or perhaps the very back
page would be appropnate for has
backward thanlung. Better yet would
have been the editor's refuse file.
Sobran encounters a slightly tipsy
British profeHor m a har and
swallows his drunken hokum hook.
line and sinker. This professor ,urcly
was pulhna poor ol' Joc·'i leg and,
unfortunately. ol' Joe isn't able to
distinguish ··realism " fro m
··pretend."
You sec, Joe 1s a throwback from
the '50s. He readily admits 1ha1 his
V1CW$ were " .matters of consensus
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
dunng the Eisenhower years ... " The
reason 1hat many of us consider
Sobran " ... some sort of e~ot1c .. as that
we've grown up a bat since then.
O f course (Tlen and women af'C
different, Joe. Thiat goes without
saying. And to update you on the
social history of the past 20 years.
equal means s1m1lar opportunities as
men in all areas of life, including
career;, $3lancs and lifestyles.
"nd no. Joe. men arc not aU aJike;
~me of us thank before we act. or
wnte. for 1hat matter.
Tht last of Joe's inanities. which be
very co nveniently can attribute to
someone else. is endless. Joe and the
profes:'ior manage to offend not only
11.<omen. but also Latms. Chinese and
homosexuals Read the piece and
you'll Stt what I mean.
On second 1hought, don't read the
piece. You can hear the same
hogwash from any drunken $CXill
braggart at n l1x-at har
RENE P G ARONER
Costa Mesa
Fr IN\ll Zlftl
£dl•o-
Tom TllH
... ......,.(dltOr o.,....,
Olly Mier
~(~
·'Gardeners should know that bet ween the time they stop nurturtng
their tulips In late afternoon and come out aga1n Jn the morning, the
whole bed could be annihilated.·•
HAVE YOU TRJED
SELLING ANY TO DONALD~~?
ADWELL&
colnmntat
ANN
WELLS
Garden
truths
aren't
pretty
An editor from a syndicate called
me the other day and asked if I were
qualified to write a weekly column on
-one of these topics: food. auto
mechanics or gardening.
Faster than a s~ing bullet l told
her I could not wnte a column o n food
-one that could be published. All I
know about a car is how to put miles
on it. 1 told her I would think about
the gardening column and get back to
her.
Church giving up ideals
to keep abreast of times
I feel qualified to write about
gardening. I went mto it with a frenzy
some years ago, and since then have
made friends with experts an the field.
Libraries have a supply of books
wnrten by gardeners with degrees,
newsstands groan under their load of
gardening magazines, nurserymen
are knowledgeable and eager to share
their wisdom. so research would not
be a problem. Today's bishops a ppear embarrassed
by chur ch's traditional moral positions
NEW YORK -The nahon's
Catholic bishops have now released
the second draft of their statement on
the economy. The first draft last year.
in the words of Time magazine.
"called for a bold new effon to aid the
poor"
Zzznznnzzz.
This year's version is a modified
call for a bold new effort to aid the
poor whose chief merit 1s probably
that it's 10,000 words shoner than its
predecessor.
The bishops say that the nation's
unemployment rate, officially 7.1
percent, is "morally unacceptable." Is
this a J,a&. or what? How do you
determine a "morally acceptable"
statistic?
An archbishop on the Eastern
seaboard recently disciplined a w4ng
priest, accusin~ him of"undermimng
my authority. · The priest's sin was
that he taught traditional Catholic
doctrine. while the archbishop is of
the liberal persuasion.
What that prelate doesn't seem to
realize is that he and his fellow
bishops have been undermining their
own authority with self-trivializing
pronouncements on subjects that arc
at once beneath their dignity and
beyond their competence. Mean-
while, they dodge the moral issues
that stare the contemporary Ameri-
can in the face every day: porno-
graphy, contraception, homose~uah
ty.
Dinesh D'Souza, the bnlhant
young editor of Policy Review, has
pulled a dirty trick on the bishops: He
went around asking them some
sample questions about public policy
questions on which they have vented
their views, and he published the
answers.
"Interviews with these bishops,"
he wmes, "suggest that they know
link or nothing about the ideas and
proposals to which they are putting
their signature and lending their
religious authority. The bishops are
unfamiliar with existing defense and
economic programs," an assertion
Mr. D 'Souza backs up with embar-
rassing direct quotations from ind1·
vidual bishops.
A personal note: I am a convert to
Catholicism. and I entered the church
at a tame. nearly a quaner century
ago, when it was distinguished by
unwavcnng moral majesty. It wasn't
trying to keep up with the times: It
was willing to tell the times that they
were out of Joint. San was sin. no
matter how many people committed
at. no matter how glibly Hugh Hefner
Justified it.
But today one gets the feeling,
especially in the Amencan church,
that the bishops arc embarrassed by
the moral positions their trad1t1on
has so inconveniently imposed on
them. The more they pretend to be
boldly "prophetic" on political is·
sues, the more they seem to have
quietly acceded to contemporary
trends on moral issues.
Consider artjfi cial b1nh control.
Mo~t Catholics now use 1t, ignonng
Catholic teaching. This makes it all
the more urgent that 1ha1 teaching be
reiterated, developed. explained.
There is a serious case to be made
agajnst contraception and in favor of
chasuty. but how many bishops talk
about 11 individually, let alone collec-
tively? If the bishops want to attack
capitalism, they can attack it for
turning the most sacred functions of
the human person into consumer
goods.
Or consider devotion to the Virgin
Mary. This used to be the hallmark of
Catholicism, the very thing its enem-
JOSEPH
SOBRAN
1es were hkehest to single out for
denunciation and ridicule. She was
not only the obJect of devotion but the
inspiration of some of the greatest an
in the Western world. The exaJtation
of virginity, once part oft.he fabric of
Catholic life. answers to some deep
need in the human soul. even the
soiled soul of the reprobate. It rebukes
and corrects our natural crassness,
selfishness. impatience. Today you
would think the American church
had left devotion to Mary behind.
The only public mention ofber lately
was that of New York's Cardinal
O'Connor. in protest against a
blasphemous film about her by Jean-
Luc Godard.
A generation ago, conversion to the
Catholic faith wasn't JUSt a matter of
being persuaded by evidence. It was
an expenence more Like falling in
love. Cathohcasm had a beauty and
sense of mystery about at. The
mystery wasn't a blank enigma, but a
thing to be gradually, though never
totally, penetrated, offenng the satis-
faction of discovery at every step.
Whether teaming the liturgy or study-
ing Aquinas. your mind and heart
were rewarded together. And there
was always endlessly more to learn.
That as still largely true, but
sometimes it doesn't seem to be true.
The church an America seems to be
trying to fit right into the landscape,
among the fast-food joints and soft-
core movies, instead oftowenng over
them. And the bisho~s want their
voices to sound like editorials an The
New York Tames.
But I'm going to tell her I can't do it
It's a matter of antegnty. I can gjve the
begjnning gardeners the information
they want -but my conscience
would force me to reveal the whole
story.
When I tell them which plants have
the biggest and bnghtcst blossoms,
and which ones bloom the lon~est, I
would also tell them about p1ck.ing off
dead blossoms, what and when to
feed them. and the watering schedule.
When I tell them what an effective
border the Blue Mink ageratum
makes, I would feel obhgated to tell
them what effect the planting of it has
on backs and knees and necks.
I have to level with them and tell
them that 98 percent of gardening
cannot be done standing up. Gar-
deners must kneel. stoop. squat -in
the hot sun, in the cold. damp wind or
on one of those perfect days when
they'd rather be sailing.
Along with the detailed descnptaon
of how to transplant pansies from a
pot into the ground, or how to pinch
back the impatiens, I would feel
compelled to gj ve them a detailed
description of what happens to their
fingernails dunng this procedure.
When I write about the Joys of
planting. propagation and pruning, I
will have to last the necessary tools.
Gardeners need sharp. sturdy knaves,
shears, shovels. hoes, rakes, trowels,
cultivators, spadmg forks ....
Beginning gardeners may be aware
of garden eests, but I would feel guilty
af I didn t tell them they have to
handpick pests such as caterpillars,
snails and homworms. Do you realize
what that would do to the rooloe
gardener?
While they arc admiring the lush
green leaves o n the gerber daisies or
the ficus, I would remind them to tum
the leaves over and look on the
underside -that's where the scale
and the wbiteflies hang out.
Then rd have to get into aphids.
Jo1~pb Sobru JJ • 1y11dlc•ted thnps, leaf miners, mealybu~. mites
col11mal1t. and p-asshoppers. It isn't JUSt the
cheWJng and sucking insects they
have to be prepared to battle -how
about mildew. rust. Texas root rot,
fungi. and viruses?
India far ahead of Pakistan
in ability to build H-bomb
There are insccticides on the mar-
ket for almost all of these, but the
prdeners must wear clothes that can
be easily laundered (separately) or
thrown away after spraying.
G ardeners should know that be-
tween the ume they stop nurturing
their tulips in late afternoon and
come out again in the morning. the
whole bed could be annihilated. Could set one off
within two months
of decision to do so
WASHINGTON -lndja, which
exploded a nuclear bomb 11 yean
ago. can set off a 1CC0nd one within
two months of a decision to do so, and
is already storina enough material to
build an entire nuclear arsenal.
In addition, the Indians appear to
be masterina the more soph1atacated
technique of building a hydrogen
bomb.
This 1s the lateat infonnation we've
aathered from ClA tOUrt:eS and a
~nt trip to India. It adds fresh cause
for concern to our m:cnt repon that
Pakistan could allo produoc a nuclear
bomb Wltbin a maner of wce~a. Our
sources say there's no question that
India ia far ahead of its neiabbor and
potential advC'f'S&ry
India's I 97• device, wlucb had
.about the power of the bomb dropped
on Hiroshima. was essentially a
plutonium-fiuion device. Since then.
the CTA has reClCived repons -still
hiahJy classified -that India waa
about to detonate another bomb In
early 1976. for eumplc, Prnident
Ford was al~ to a repon by a
.. rtliable clandatJne t0urce" that
Jndla would complde ill eecond
nuclear bomb within three or four
weeks.. and would tett al under-
pouod But the test was never made
Althou&h htS late mother, lndara.
Jac1
AIDEISOI
and DAU VAN A TT A
pushed the nuclear prOJ1'8m wben she
governed India, Prime Minister
Raiiv Gandhi was thought unlikely to
follow her lead in this area. But he
ehaqed his mind earlier this year
w~ he became alarmed at the
propns Pakistan was making an
nuclear weapons development. On
May 4. he stated publicly that
Paki1tan'1 "persistent efforts" to join
the nuclear club had compelled India
to review its nuclear policy.
So far, however, the CIA has had
difficulty learning many details of the
Indian nuclear provam. "Indian
security is extremely tiaht on any
upect of ats pr<>&nm relatjna to
nuclear explos1vcs," lamented one
top.secret CIA report we've seen. To
make matters WOf'IC, &ood SlteU1te
photoaraphy of India's possible A -
tnt areas has been hampered by poor
weather. the rcpon adds.
"September and October of c:acb
year are 1ood montha climatically for
LCIU 1 n the western de:lcrt rqJOnt of
India," the QA report at1tl:d, ack111lJ
"Weather aa not a cootrolbn, f.lctor ln
ICbedulina a lClt. but lbe fo.dW11
have indicated that thty reprd 11 11
important "
Altbouah the CIA ~hevcs that
"worry about potential reactions of
other nations" has caused India to
hold off on a second test, the top.
secret report notes that ··m fact, the
world response to the first test was
less . severe than India expected,
particularly from Western aid donors."
According to CIA SOUl"Ce$, India as
simultaneously going ahead with
work on a hydrogen bomb. Unlike the
crude atomic bomb it detonated in
1974. a hydrogen bomb is a fusion
device trigered by ao A-bomb, and
thus far more complex to develop.
The H-bomb is beina built at the
Bhabha nuclear research center near
Bombay. About three dozen scien·
tists there arc tryina to refine a process
caUed "inertial confinement fusion."
The ClA acknowled&es that this
process can be used for peaceful
purposes, but the expense and con-
centration of scientists on this project
sugdt that if it is not already a
weapons Provtm it could easily and
quickly be converted into one.
Meanwhile. at a reprocessina plant
lcu than a mile from iu U.S.-buih
Tarapur atomic power plant, India
since t 983 has been atockpilina
separated plutonium that ia ideal for
weapons. At ruu capacity, the plant
can l'CPfOOCU lOO tons ofapent fuel a year, wparanna out u much u I SO
kilosrama of wcapooa-arade
plu&onjum. Sta to 8 kilos a.re c:noqb
for a nucar bomb.
Jtld All*,.._ a-' Dale Vu Atr. •n ~'*' ~llltr..
There arc not only creatures that fly
and creep and crawl, there are also
creatures that burrow and hop and
leap such as rabbits, deer, moles and
voles -and gophers. All of these
consider gardens the ideal stopover
for fast food. either late at night or at
dawn.
Don't misunderstand me -I
appreciate a beautiful garden. But an
honest, tell-it-like-it-1s gardening
column would not encourage novic.e
prdeners.
The rtault could be blocks ofbarrcn
land and a dearth of color and
fna:rance. Snails and rodents would
be starviqa. nurseries would be hurt-
ing, and prden clubs would dwindle
away. I don't want it on my cons.-
ciencc.
And I haven't even mentioned
weeds.
C.l•maJ1t AaD We.Ile U•n la Lllpu Nlpel.
L.M. Bo vo
Say, fella -
do you own
that coconut?
lh•cry coconut palm on the lndia.n ac.n·s Scychclla ialanda bC'lonp to
eomcbody. So every coconut don.
too. Police c.bete may weU atop a
f'cJlow carryint a coconut and query
him about 111 o'llrDCnl\ip.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Oc1ober 9, 1985 U.S.
Most drug arrests resulted in conviction DoctorS1udySays
-
1New.Hi·Tech' Pills By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. Dllllr .......
Most of the 16 people arrested 1n a
sweep of Irvine high schools last
February were found 1u1lty of
pusbin& pills, LSD, cocaine and
marijuana, Irvine Police Sgt. Leo
Jones said.
Jones.. who tracked the 13 juveniles
and three adults through Orange
County's Judicial system, said l I
people were convicted on felony
charges of selling drugs to an under-
cover police officer during a four-
month foray into the city's three high
schools.
Those co n v1cted rece1 ved
sentences ran11ns from probation to
several months 10 Juvenile Hall or
weekend work programs. A man
convicted of selling LSD is serving a
one-year sentence in state prison,
Jones said.
Two of the adults arrested made
deals with the Distnct Attorney's
office, one juvenile's case was dis--
missed, another was convicted of
scllinJ a look-alike drug and the
rcmauling one 1s scheduled for tnal
Thursday, he said.
Jones declared the undercover
operation -the first In 10 years at
Irvine 1ebools - a success.
"I tbmk it was very successful.
We arrested some of the people who
were very visible and very involved
in drua sales," Jones said.
A long-time narcotics investigator,
Jones believes the arrests and
sentences "posted notice to Juven-
iles" that the community will not
tolerate drug use and sales on cam-
pus.
And that's a message sorely
"needed occasionally to bring kids
around to reality," he said.
Pohce used a. youthful-looking
reserve officer to get the goods on
people scllina drugs to Irvine youths.
The 21-year-old woman, whom
police declined to identify, spent four
months in the schools masquerading
as a high school junior while develop-
ing drug buying connections.
During the operation. which had
the school d1stnct's blessing, the
officer infiltrated drug networks at
two schools and purchased small
amounts of drugs from the alleged
dealers.
The woman collected baggies of
marijuana, one-quarter gram bindle-;
of cocaine, pills and doses of LSD. an
hallucmogen, before the loose
network of dealcn began to suspect
her. Jones said.
lnformauon gathered led police to
a Santa Ana house where students
purchased cocaine and to a Hunt-
ington Beach communuy college
student who was trafficking LSD.
Jones said
Of the 16 ptople arrested 1n the
undercover optrauon, all but three
had been arrested for prior drug
offenses. accordms to information
provided by the Irvine Pohce Depart-
ment.
Gerald Johnston. the deputy d1s--
lnC\ attorney who handled most of
the juvenile cases, descnbed the
undercover program as "a very well
run, well documented operation."
The one case dismissed involved a
female student who allegedly con-
spired wtth another gJrl to pass off
harmless palls as amphetamines. The
case was not pursued because the girl
had no pnor history of arrests, Jones
said
Of the three adults arrested, one -
Larry D. Tucker. 21. of Huntington
Beach -was sentenced to a year m
pnson, Jones wd. Paul E. Hoban. 19.
of Irvine was ajven three years
informal probation and ordered to
pay a S60S fine David P. W1lk.inon,
18, of Irvine. pleaded 1u1lty to a
reduced charge of disturbing the
peace.
Parental concern about drug use
amona hlJh schoolers prompted the
undercover opcrauon. The hinng of a
reserve officer youthful-lookma
enou&h to pass for a teen-aaer set the
actual investigation in mouon last
fall.
High school administrators had
both praise and cnt1c1Sm for the
undercover operation and its results.
While agrtting the arrests under-
scored the community's attitude that
drugs don't belong on campus. most
doubted the arrests had much effect
on student drug users 10 search of a
high.
Gary Norton, Irvine High Sc hool
principal, said he's not sure whether
the undercover officer really reached
his school's hardcore dealers. "We
know there's a problem. How ex-
tensive we don't know," he said.
But Norton backed the message
HIGH SCHOOL CAMPUS DRUG BUSTS AN EDUCATION •..
From Al
cnme. The Juvenile Justice system is
so much baloney," Bailey said.
Even schools -because of their
power to suspend or exptll students
-can come down harder on juven-
iles than the courts seem to, he said.
"We can be our own judge and
1ury," Bailey said. "We probably have
a tougher sentence than most kids will
have gotten." Once expelled, students
can nave difficulty getting accepted at
another school, he said.
But, because of some possible
trickery which led to distrust of the
police department, only one of the six
students who appeared before an
expulsion c<>fllrnittec in June was
thrown out of s<lhool, said Bailey.
lo a representative case, a female
student presented committee mem-
bers with a court document showing
charges were dismissed. But Monday
Bailey learned the girl was convicted
of selling drugs. Charges had been
dismissed, but refiled the following
week to rectify a noticing error.
something which the girl was full y
aware of. police said.
Others apparently presented court
papers showing a charge had been
dismissed but failed to inform the
committee that other. more se nous
charges, were still ptnd1ng, Monda> ·s
discussion revealed.
Polt ce agreed to work more closely
with school officials foll owtng any
future undercover operations to help
them decode the acti ons of the courts
and make appropnate dec1S1ons
about whether students should be
expelled.
.. A lot of these (cases) hadn't even
occurred an June." when expulsion
hearings took pla.cc, Sgt. Leo Jones
observed. "What you people need.
1s somebody from the police depart-
ment ... to stt there and explam what
reality 1s in these cases. That wa)
there won't be any discrepancies and
m1sunderstand1ngs ...
Bailey agreed. "The interest from
all panics in volved here ts that we
want the kJds out. We don't want kids
selling on our campuses I mean. our
goaJs are the same."
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Pollce Sat. Leo Jon_ee _____ _, than 1he gn>up te~ted using thc famou)
behind the optration .. The v.ord will grnpdruit pill diet
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Ken J. Baile). assistant pnncipal at 1ch,mgtng your n0m\a.I eating or e\erc1!1
Uni\ ers1t) High School. LO mpla1ned ing h.tb1l\ and ,1111 lo!>e weight easier and
that police d1dn 't get a1 the senous f~t.er r.han~er before. starting unmcd1att
pushers and he eitpressed disappoint-I\·· Remarlabl). ALL people in the ncv.
men 1 at some of the sentence"> handed ·tu-~ h ptl1' d uucaJ tcst group lost wc1gh1 d~':"n ~Y the1uvenile JUSllLe S)~tem . t.tna,n age ot •1 Jb per d3) up tot lb per ~e ve got some hea\ 1e!.. v.ho I d , 1 11 al\o help~ eliminate bloat and don t think were touched. We onh J_,.
catch the rookies. bas1call\ .. · pultine" ..
Greg Cops. pn ncipal ·at V. ood-··PUls Do AJJ thf "1>rk
bndge High School. thought the .An.ording to the d mical stud) "the pills
operatton was fru ttful in that polite .tlone dn .t.11 the 'M)fk whue )OU quick.I) lose
were able to get a line on drug v.e1gh1 v.1lh NO ~tarv.1t1on "diet menu!." to
networks within the schools But he , fullt"M. :-.o calone counting. NO special eA·
doubted poltce could do much about eru-< Jnd ~O hunger pang~ .. You ~unpl)
student drug u~ in J ~1x.1t"t~ that l.U-t"thept1h .,..1tha~oe waierbc:foremeals
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AlO Oreng. Co.at DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, October 9, 1985
Over 60 customers
have already won
' ea.
Tell·A·Frlend
Child abuse task force-disbands
By tbt Auoclattd Pre11
LOS ANGELES -The sheriffs task force created a
year ago to invesllpte allcptions of widespread sexual
abuse at child care centers in Manhattan Beach is bem&
disbanded wllhout its members ma)cjnaa single arrest. The
Sexual Exploitation of Children Task Force was created in
October, 1984, to investigate the delu'e of allegations that
surfaced after charges were filed against McMartin Pre--
School founder Virginia McMartin and six teachers.
Municipal Judge Aviva K. Bobb has dismissed two-thirds
of the more than 300 original charges against the seven
McMartin defendants for lack of evidence after only 14 of
the 41 child witnesses took the stand during a preliminary
hearing now in its 14th month.
Atlantl•' Florida DlglJt •et
LOS ANGELES -The SI. I billion shuttle Atlantis,
which returned from its maiden space voyage wtth only
minor nicks and scratches, will be airlifted to Aorida
Friday. NASA officials said. The trip to the Kennedy Space
Center aboard a Boeina 747 jetliner will take one or two
days, depending on the weather.
Frult Dy quarandne gro,,.
LOS ANGELES -The latest Oriental fruit fly
infestation, which has already led to insecticide spraying in
suburban Glendale, may force agriculture officials to
quarantine an 81-square--mile area staning this week. The
proposed quarantine, which would restrict transportation Monroe death coverup probed offruit. would include Glendale, portions of Burbank and
LOS ANGELES -The county Board ofSuperviso~ northeast Los Angeles communities including. El~sian
has asked for a grand Jury investigation into an author's Park. Eagle Rock. Montrose and La Canada-fl1ntndge.
a11ega11ons <:>fa coverup in the drug overdose d~atb of Lltle RlclJard recoverlnt:1 actress Manlyn Monroe. Robert Statzer, who chums he a
was secretly married to the film star, wrote a letter to LOS ANGELES -Little Richard the rock ·n· roll
Supervisor Mike Antonovic;_h on Sept. 23, contending pioneer who gave the world "Tutti F~tti" and "Good
certain facts about Miss Monfoc's death in 1962 were kept Golly Miss Molly," was in fair condition after an accident
secret by mvesugators. Slatzer, who wrote a book titled in which he crashed a sports car into a telephone pole. Ron
"The Life and Curious Death of Marilyn Monroe," also Wise, spokesman for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center said
claims the cause of death listed on the death certificate was the 52-ycar-old singer whose full name is Richard Wayne
changed from "suicide" to "possible suicide" to "probable Penniman was conscious and receiving visits from
suicide." relatives Tuesday.
MONEY SAVINO COUPON
Thf><;unt1ow f'rCroup 1~11A1 Wf'\!110thLt-nP l.l KSf>f,]1'l •'ll~·ll't.' ](1~1 Jurors view
FBI agent's
tryst scene
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Richard
W. Miller returned to the scene of
trysts with his Soviet lover, but this
time the former FBI agent was under
guard and accompanied by jurors in
his spy trial.
The field trip to the West Los
An&eles park provided Jurors with
their final look at evidence shortly
after testimony ended Tuesday in the
two-month-long trial of the first FBI
agent ever charged with espionage.
U.S. District Judge Dav1d Kenyon
scheduled a hearing today to discuss
jury instructions with attorneys. He
said final arguments would begin
Thursday.
Miller. 48, is charged with passing
classified documents to admitted
Soviet spy Svetlana Ogorodnikov in
exchange for a promised $65,000 in cash~ndgold. He faces life in prison if
convicted.
Mrs. Ogorodnilcov and her hus-
band. Nikolay, have pleaded guilty to
espionage and are serving prison
terms.
Jurors and six alternates. who
traveled by bus to the park, stood
beside a LJttle League ball field and
stared across a parking lot at a car.
trying to discern what Mi!ler might
have seen on the afternodh of Sept.
26, 1984.
FBI agent Paul De Flores has
testified that he saw Miller in the
parking lot that day. He said Miller
spotted him seated in a car about 44
feet away, raised his eyebrows in
recognition and appeared shocked.
Defense attorneys wanted jurors to
visit the scene because the)'. say it
would have been impossible for
Miller to recognize De flores through
the car Windshield on a bright sunny
day. They also contend Oe Flores
could not have seen Miller's eye-
brows.
Things You Mig'ht Not Have
Considered
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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.
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Costa Mesa, California 92626
(714) 540-5554
HELP YOUR SELF
Finding the perfect mate
the second time around
"My next husband is aoing to hate
football," says recently divorced
Katy, who hated her ex-husband's
habit of planting himself for what
seemed like endless hours in front of
the television set.
"Do you like to watch football on
TVt' she asks Bob on their fi rst date.
She smiles sweetly."( hate TV and
football," he says.t. and his answer gets
him instantly to urst base.
"H ow do you feel about breakfast
in bcdr' she continues. "Not fun," he
says .. "I'd much prefer setting up,
brushing my teeth. and going out to a
restaurant for croissants a nd cafe au
lait."
She wonders where this man has
been all her life. So far, Bob sounds
like a perfect husband candidate for
her. And so the inquest continues.
"Tell me abou t your mo ther," she
says. "I always like to hear about a
man's family."
Katy has a not-so-secret agenda.
Never again, she says, will she be
married to a man who watches
football, gets crumbs in bed or who
has an unreasonable mother.
She's learned her lesson and her
next relationship will surely be dif-
ferent. She'll make sure of that, she
says.
Bob's got a checklist too. He hated
that his airlfriend ate sushi every
niaht -and insisted that he join her.
Her "aerobics habit" drove him crazy
-especially when it became a~
parent that her exercise class took
clear precedence over their rela-
tionship. Bob, childless and pushing
35, was beginning to think it would be
fun to have a couple of kids. H is
sushi-loving girlfriend didn't lake
children much. and he can't even
believe that he spent two years with
her.
"No sen~ an wasting any more
time," is his new philosophy. So now
he's typed out a list and canies It an
his wallcL He says he's still flexible,
though.
On a first date, a woman has only to
get hiJh marks in eight of his I 0 typed
critena in order to qualify for a
second date. Katy scored W1 and
Bob's thinking about makmg an
exception. ~
Oh-so-vulnerable Katy -not long
enough removed from the pain of her
disastrous first mamagc -makes the
decision that Bob is a perfect husband
candidate after talking to him for just
20 minutes. How could she know that
he hates skiiingand that his temper 1s
abominable?
LINDA
ALW I
Her fi rst husband, as crummy as he
was, sh_arcd her passion for skung and
was qune even-tempered. She'd come
to take his good qualities for granted.
Judge your new man for bis own
assets. I told Katy, and be careful It's
too easy to get canied away by his
contrast to xour ex-husband.
Katy's "life would be perfect 1fonly
l could find someone who hates
football'' attitude can get her right
back into another troubled rela-
tionship.
Dr. Alga.z11s a mamage and family
therapist in Corona del Mar. She
welcomes your respon~s. If you wish
a reply, pleJJ~ enclose a stamped, self-
addresSttl envelope. Write to Lind.3
Alazi, Ph.D., c/o Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box I 560. CosCJJ Mesa. 92626.
D1ilyPUat WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 9. 1985 m:
°"" ......... ., ___ ~
Dr. Gerald Weln•teln treata peorlula patient.
ANN LANDERS, 82
COMICS,85
Relief
in offing
for skin
disease
By EVE LASH °"" .... C.1 ' ....
For those suffering from psonas1s.
a potcnllally deb1litat10g skin dlscase.
some relief may come 10 the form of a
new drug that 1s expected to Ix
approved by the Food and Drug
Adman1strat1on later this month
According to Dr. Gerald Wems-
tetn, dermatologist and dean of U(
Irvine College of Med1CUle, although
there 1s no absolute c ure for psoriasis.
the drug etret1nate 1s considered
effective 1n severe cases.
Etreunate, a synthetic version ot
vnamrn A. has only been available b}
prescnpt1on in Europe and Canada
However, 11 has been chn1caJly tested
JD many 1nst1tut1ons throughout the
country, according to Weinstein
Scientists theorize aboutgeD.etic programs
Gail Zimmerman, executive direc-
tor of the Nauonal Psonas1s Foun-
datio n. said the inhented dlsca~
affects appro ximately 3 m1ll1on
A.mencans It 1s charactenzed by red
blotchy patcht>s on the sun that art'
covered b) sliver) or gray1sh-wh1te
fla ke) scale~. Symptoms include 1n-
ten~ itching. skin pain. swelling and
df). crack.mg skin. It stnkes both men
and women at an) age but m ost often
between the ages of 15 and 35.
'Weinstein wd there are two other
v.a) s of trcallnJ the disease. One of
the treatments includes two different
forms ofhJbt therapy and the other 1s
w11h an internal anti-cancer drug
called methotrexte
By STEVE WU.STEIN
• 0 a ,,.....,...,
SAN FRANC ISCO -Scientists
peering into the microscopic world of
genes and cells lined up Monday on
two sides of a hotly debated issue in
biology, armed with arguments about
what triggers changes in living or-
ganisms.
It is an issue with far-reaching
implicauons for treating many her-
editary diseases and for breeding
animals. It aJso is an issue that
borders on philosophy: Does each cell
have its own genetic dcstmy and can
that destiny be altered by moving
around a few molecules?
On one side of the debate involving
about 500 leading microbiologists
from a.round the country were those
who believe that behind aJ I dcvelo~
mcnt there are genetic programs
created by an interaction of
molecules.
This view holds that the changes
from a fertilized cu into a n embryo.
then a fetus, an infant and an adult arc
cootrolJed by specific molecules that
comprise the genes.
In the opposing camp were scien-
tists who believe cell development is
not so simple, that it is important to
understand the behavior of cells as
they interact with each other.
According to the cell biologists,
molecules interact at many different
levels until they finally get to a point
PAPARAZZI
where they create some lund o f tissue
or o rgan. Therefore. these scientists
say, cell development can't be
thoroughly understood simply by
looking at the molecular makeup of
genes.
"It's certainly not a blood feud,"
said William McGinnis, assistant
professor of microbiology at Yale
University. and one of the propo-
nents of the molecular theory. "It's a
difference of perspective. But it's a
debate that's going to be resolved, I'd
say certainly within the next two or
three years."
McGinnis spoke at the opening day
of the three-day conference about his
research into "homcobox genes" in
flies and mice. Those genes are
believed to trigger the growth of
certain tissues or organs in animals.
By altering the genes, scientists have
been able to alter the development of
an organism -for example, making
legs instead of antennae arow on a
fruitfly's head.
"That's an example of a homeot1c
transformation," McGinnis said.
"You're transforming one Oy body
structure into another. A homeobox
seems to be present in many of these
homeotic genes that arc involved 1n
controlling the development of the
body pattern."
If the molecular biologists are
correct, then each cell would have its
(Pleue eee THEORY/ 82)
Pr ob es d elve into renegade genes
By DANIEL Q. HANEY ,.,....._ ......
BOSTON -Doctors have found
they can accurately pinpoint the
origin and type of cancerous blood
cells. 1mprov1ng d1agnos1s and treat-
ment. by u~ang microscopic probes
that delve into the genes of renegade
cells.
The work m1$flt lead to a lreatment
that could zero an on cancerous blood
cells and not harm healthy ones.
The technique 1s a practical out-
growth of significant advances over
the last two years in understanoing
the basic biology of a key variety of
disease-fighting white blood cells
known as T lymphocytes.
By analrzang the genes that guide
these cells response to disease. doc-
tors can now determine whether these
cells are the culpnts ID blood cancers
known as leukemia and lymphoma.
The newly developed test looks for
tell-tale rearrangements in the nucleic
acids or DNA that make up the blood
cells' genes. If many blood cells
contain the same genetic reshuffiing.
then doctors assume they are
cancerous and all descendants of the
same cell.
.. What you can now do is analyze a
tumor cell down to the very level of1ts
nucleic acid. and you can look for
differences that are unique to the
tumor cell. .. said Dr. llan Kirsch of
the National Cancer lnslltute-Nav)
Medical Oncolog~ Branch at the
Naval Hospital ID Bethesda, Md
Three repons on the use of the nev.
tool were published 1n Thursday's
issue of the New England Journa l of
Medicine.
Cancers of the white blood cells, or
lymphocytes. begin wnh a single cell
that escapes the ordinary cycle ofhfe
and death and d1v1des again and
again. eventual!~ producing man)
copies of itself.
In health' people. these cells are an
essenual tine of defense against
disease One \ anet}. called 8 cells.
produce ant1bod1es that neutralize
bactena and other germs. .\no ther
type, the T cells. helps n-gulate
ant1bod~ production and attac~s
cancers and invaders directh
The ncv. test allows doctors 10
d1sungu1sh whether the canLerous
blood cells are T cells or B cells a\ v.cll
as learn how mature the runawa) cells
are
.. It's no longer enough to sa) a
patient has leukemia because
leukemia 1s a diverse group of
diseases." said Kirsch "It's 1mpon-
ant to subclass11) these things because
pauents do better or worse. depend-
ing on what kind of l)mphocyte 1s
involved as well as what stage of
development that l)mphOC)1e was m
when the event that transformed 11
into a cancer took place "
The breakthrough that led to the
latest work was the d iscovery of the
genes of the T -<:ell receptor, a
chemical structure that allows the cell
to recognize foreiJners The genes
that cont.am the building instrucuons
for these ~ptors can be rea!'Tllnsed
1n an almost infin11e vanet}. letting
the rettptors recovuze the plethora
of challengers that tn\ade the bod~
Ordinanl). fe-w of these re-ceptors
are alike. But when a T cell turns
cancerous. 11 produces man~ copies.
or clones. all with 1dent1cal rect'ptors
and genes.
The new test uses scraps ol DN ..\
(Pleaee eee PR08Uf0/82)
A 53->ear-old Orange Count:,-
woman has suffered from a severe
ca~ of psonai.1s for 18 years that
covers more than I 5 percent of her
body. She S3)S because 1t 1s not hfe-
thrcaten1ng 1t has often been 1reated
light!}
Since she has rece1' ed treatment b\
Weinstem with Pu\ a light therap~ ,·t
has cleared up the problem tremen-
dous!) "I feel good and look good
It"s wonderful And. its nicer to Ix
able to dress the -wa) I h ke to dress and
not in long slee-.es and long pants."
the patient wd
She said the new drug w1 ll be a
blessing. .. Anyl.hing that helps 1s
wonderful I know many people
\Oung and uld that \uffer from th ts··
.\ s~ mpos1um on p\onas1~ v.111 La~t
place Oct 11 from I to 5 Ju p.m JI
the Long Beach \frmonal \.fed1cal
Center V.e1ns1e1n and Dr "l1ctrolas
Lov.e. professor ot dermarolog) at
L ·cL .\. v.111 spea~ about nev. ad-
\ ances and method~ nf controlling
the d1sea!>t' .\l~o <.<: ht.>dukd 10 speak 1<.
Marcia V. e1n\tt'ID. ~he dcx-tor"s v.1k
and an nix-n in dealing v.1th th~
disease's enrnuonal soual anJ
ps~cholug1rnl d.\pel ts For 1nfur-
mat1on M retmtrJtH\n , Jll l't 't'I·'' I'
B ea ch nigh t for Planned Parenthood
SCOOP group enjoys elega nt seaside soiree
on sands of Abalone Beach along Irvine Cove
By BETTY PORTER
~ .... C.I IJ _. ..
wve it to Pat Cox to abandon the
costly black-tic galas in cavernous
ballrooms with fussy decorations
and hautc cuisine. Cox favors the
practical, rclaxed'(evcn "laid back")
and therefore more enjoyable fun-
draiscrs for her favorite charities -
SOrQe of which she founded.
Often. fund-raising parties arc
held on the $prawling. tree-shaded
lawns of Pat and husband Al Co1:'1
Upper Newport Bay farm.
But on Sunday afternoon, founder
Cox and her "No. 1 Charity"
SCOOP (South Coast Organization
of Pla nned Parenthood) invited 100
members and friends for what she
dubbed "A Beach Party." Of course.
1t wasn't just an y old beach, but the
exclusive and t>reath-takingly
beautiful Abalone Beach and cabana
clubhouse in the Irvine Cove.
"Isn't this perfectly elegant? You
have to do an awful lot of work to
make a party seem effortless." one
guest commented.
"We wanted to keep things simple
and have a lot of fun," said Cox, who
gave party co-chairwomen Janet
Treat and J•dy Wtblter, president
Patti von HeDkle and other commit-
tee members all the credit.
"Fun" was. . . seeing gracious
Fred C.1lck again, hosting an open
,
bar ... choosing from gourmet hors
d'ocuvrcs made by members ..
watching Dr. Robert Treat (Hoag
Hospital) kick off his shoes and
dancing a "mean" C harleston with
his pretty daughter. Jalle. They and
other guests danced "under the
stars" to the music of Dr. J oseph
Hart'• Over-Sextet Dixieland Jazz
Band.
Tiki lights and luminerios (can-
dles supported by sand in brown
paper bags) lined the cabana patio
and the few steps down to the sand.
On the beac h. red, white and blue
balloons (tied to c hairs) swayed in
the ocean's breeze at tables covered
with blue cloths. centered with
battery-operated lamps.
The party dinner consisted of
barbecued chicken. com-on-the--
cob, baked potatoes by HenclaaJ.
cole slaw and dessert -chocolate
and lemon squares -b> Eddie
Median. Before dinner. von Henkle
reported that S 14.000 had been
raised b> a Jul) 4th No-Benefit
Benefit (where guests pay not to
attend a benefit part~ l
At evening's end. guests set tree
hundreds of balloons -one at a
time -and stood. watching them
disappear into the sk). as far as the
eye could sec.
Listening to the Hart band and the
songs of lnsh singer Mike McCaf-
frey of Laguna Beach. guests walOO-
ed the ocean's 11de inch closer and
closer to their chairs Then. spon-
taneously, some of the guests took
off their shoes and went running into
the white water surf.
o.9J ..... ,..._.., Tem C-
SCOOP 1s a support group of
Planned Parenthood of Orange
County, a non-profit pro~m offer-
ing affordable, confident1al medical
services. counseling and educat1on
concerning human sexuality.
Judy Webeter. Janet Treat and Patti Von Henkle.
Among guests were SCOOP co--
founder Barbara (Gotbrd) and
Dick MUt1, past president Evelf8
Vou1, Mariaue Toweney, Pat
and Jeu Hucock, Dr. Rlcunl and
hdly H•rwitl, Henry and Patty
Blk.laal.I, Bob and Pa tty .Udenoa,
Rlcunl and May Robla1oa, I.ea and
Jue Mapm, Coleee E1plDou,
Lelud and Rtllff Wnt, Nyla lftite,
Belly Bredearld1e (who lectures
for Planned Parenthood's Peer
Education Program). l.la11ley
Bretaaa. Slmoae 0.Ckue (an o\us-
trahan student hv1ng With the
Websters). Al Ra1ma110, Marty
Stnmber1, Pete Vu Ondtot. Seat-
• Blueo, Paal l\ftd, Gay Bryut,
Ray and Pegy Cwll y, Beverly
Mo.,.y, A.Mrey Mcb*' Amy
GaltM, Ja~ and Jackie Pn11y,
Jella and i.e. Enril and other board
memben. Qrtity Sdleeer, Lecy
R.M, Je,m Mlnme. Leh Sb.IM and
GtuJS..O .....
Paparazn 1s t'd1tt'd b Dail) Pilot Pat eaz wttla Dtck &ad Barban Ill.lee" Sryk Ediror VHil Dean.
i
I
I
81 • ~ Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 9, 1986
Dying child requires all
of a parent's atte_ntion
Dear Ann Landers: This letter 1s fo r
"Feelina Low in Arizona." the lad
wbo felt ncaJccted because has parents
&re focusina all their attention on his
brother who bas canoer.
I have lost two children to cancer. I
also spent every walcina hour with the
sick ones. I had no time for the others
except a quick bu& and a kiss. I knew
they feh ncaJccted but there was not
ONE TREATMENT IS EQUIVALENT TO
1500 SITUPS-1500 PUS HUPS /
1500 LEGLIFfS J
COMPUTERIZED HEAL TH CENTER
72 -1727
enough time or energy to 10 around.
Do l rcarc1 1t? No. I rearct that I
could not be two people at once. I
needed to be with the child who was
dying. The others should have under-
stood. Until you have a tcrminalJy 11J
younpter 1t 1s impossible to know
how dnumng 1t can be. You go to the
bathroom and cry your eyes out.
Before you go back to your child. all
traces of tears must be washed away
and replaced wuh a sm1Je
If you were the sick one you would
want and need all the love and
emotional support you could get. -
Been Through It Twice
Dear BeeD Tbroagta: Tllank yoa for
a letter tllat mast llave recalled some
pai.Dfttl memories. I'm aare yoa
lielped tbe broUsera lD Arlitona and
ma.ay otbera aa weU.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband 1s
53 and l love him very much. This is
the second marriage for us both and I
am detennined to make ll work.
"Joe" is awfully good at his Job and
wilJ always make a nice living. The
problem 1s the way he murders the English~ language. Since we moved
back to his home town it has gotten
worse.
l will wnte down some of the words
and the way he pronounces them. For
heard he says heerd. Electncity comes
out lect-ter-clly. Instead of hair he
A11
luDEIS
says harr. Iron 1s om . Hire sounds like
harr. Fire is farr. Tire is tar. Milk is
malk. The one that buas me the most
is cx-<:ape instead of escape. What do
you suggest, Ann? -Joe's Wife In
Arkansas
Dear Wife: I aageat yoa keep yoar
lip lipped. lf Joe ls U, maklDI a alee
llvln1 and yoa are determlae4 &o
make &Jae marrla1e work, doa't 1weat
&lac 1mall 1tllff. He aeecla a lovt.q wife
more lbu lac Deed• an Ea1U111t
teaclter.
Dear Ann Landers: You repeatedly
advise people who comtemplate
suicide to get professional help.
You don't seem to understand that
some of us are so overwhelmed and
depressed we would think twice about
spendinj the money for gas to get
counseling, let alone pay the fee if
there is one.
My physician is more concerned
about m y blood pressure (which is
no t danierously high) than about the
depression that may cause me to put a
bullet m my head or try for a mcc,
fatal automobile accident.
What advice do you have for me?
-Sad In Scelconk. Mass.
Dear Sad: AppareDtly yoar playa-
lclan WU DOt trahaed to lpot de-
preHIOD. Sllow lllm tll.l1 letter and leU
blm lt'a yoan. Ask t.lm to laelp yoa get
into tberapy at ODCe.
Mr. and Mn. M. K. McGraw Mr. and Mn. Dan Macdonell
McGRAW-JUBINVILLE
Matthew Kevin McGraw of Newport Beach claimed Nancy Ann
Jubinville as his bride in a Sept. 7 ceremony in St. Ambrose Catholic Churc h
in Salt Lake City, Utah. Father John R . LeVeclce, cousin of the bridegroom,
officiated at the nuptials. The newlyweds greeted I 00 guests at a reception
at Log Haven in Millcreek Canyon.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Henry Jubinville of Sandy, Utah. are the parents
of the bride and the bridegroom is the son of Judge and M rs. Phillip Richard
McGraw of Newport Beach.
PROBING GENES .••
The bride wore a gown of white alcncon lace and satin .with a scalloped
lact neclcJine and long sleeves o flace The full slc1n swept into a cathedral
train.
Anne Quirk was maid of honor. Norma Jean Manin and Peggy Mac
Jackson, sisters of the bride, were bndesmaids along with the bnde's niece,
Jennifer Jubinville, Sheri Call and Karen Cook. Leland McGraw. niece of
the'bridegroom was flower gjrl and his nephew. Ryan McGraw was ring
bearer. TANbijNG
• PRIVATE ROOMS
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H EALTH Pl.ANS
From Bl
called gene probes. When mixed with
a blood sample, they will reveal the
presence of cancerous T cells wllh
identical combinations of scnes.
Similar tests already exist to p1clc
out multiple copies of B cells.
Researchers are work1 ng on ways to
treat 8-ccll cancers by developing
antibodies that zero 1n on the unique
receptors of the cancerous blood cells
but leave healthy ones untouched.
A similar approach might work
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I 1111 \l"" "\ 11 ,, I h1h "11nll 11 rr11ni11r·' fr11m \Jn ( h•mt·nh
against T -cell cancers, Dr. Jane F.
Desforges of New England Medical
Center wrote m an accompanying
editorial in the Journal.
Besides the team from the Naval
Hospital. other researchers reporting
on their work with the new technique
were from Massachusetts General
Hospital and Stanford.University.
THEORY ...
From Bl
fate built into ti when it is formed by
the pan1cular arrangement of its
molecules.
"It's an interesting debate,"
McGinnis said. "I think it's going to
be resolved in favor of the genes, that
we all have genetic programs direct-
ing cells to have a cenain fate. But
that's the belief I have to have in order
to lceep doing the experiments l do."
Leading cell biologists in the oppos-
ing view at the fifth international
conference o n molecular biology
sponsored by Nature magazine was
Gunther S. Stent, chairman of the
molecular biology department at UC
Berkeley.
Best man was Tho mas A. McGraw, brother of the bndegroom and
three other brothers, Phillip, Joseph and Peter McGraw were ushers with
Jim Root and Rick Jubinville.
The couple are residents of Alameda after a honeymoon tnp to Kauai,
Hawaii. She is employed by Cardio logy Associates of Berkeley and he ts
with Castle and Cook Foods. San Francisco.
MACDONELL-RUTHERFORD
The Marina del Rey Hotel gaLebo was the setting for the Sept. 7
mamage of Michelle Lori Rutherford of Van Nuys and Dan Macdonell of
Corona del Mar. A reception with dinner and dancing followed at the
Marina del Rey Hotel. Jimmy Rutherford at guitar. David Rodnguez,
keyboard and Lydia Prono as vocalist provided the music.
Sheila and Jim Rutherford of Van Nuys are the parents of the bnde and
the bndegroom 's is the son ofEdla Macdonell of Corona del Mar. Attending
as the bridegroom's father was Connie Macie Kostka, his Big Brother.
The bride wore a contemporary fitted gown with an overlay of draped
lace ending in an uneven hemline. Her shoulder-length veil fell from a
circlet of seed pearls.
Kathy Hopson was maid of honor and bndesma1ds were Melissa
Chudler, Kim Coston, Melanie Florance, Laura Herlt and Stacey
Rutherford. Nicole Jensen was flower girl and ring bearer was David
Rutherford.
The bridegroom was attended by six of his Corona del Mar High School
friends: Jim Koberstem as best man and Dennis Brady, Dan Brower, Matt
Clabaugh, and Dave and Rob Funston as ushers.
The couple are residents of Los Angeles after a wedding trip to Jamaica.
She is employed by Rutherford. Inc. a nd he is with Merrill Lynch
stockbrokers.
DOLAN-NIEMEYER
Elizabeth Niemeyer of Newpon
Beach became the wife of Jeep Dolan
of Arcadia in a Sept. 28 ceremony in
St. Philip the Apostl e Church in
Pasadena. The couple greeted 350
guests at a reception at the Arcadia
home of the bridegroom's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. James Dolan.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
"WHERE NONE HAS GONE BEFO RE"
Wilham Niemeyer and the late Mr.
Niemeyer. She wore a gown of white
satin in a straight fitted style,
tnmmed wt th rosettes a nd bows.
When you go exploring. you never quite know where your next step
will lead. lnto an underwater cave. where a nameless animal lives.
'fo the edge of the um verse, looking back in time throujlh a telescopt-.
Into the cock pit of a plane that can circle the earth on nne tank of J{a~.
Come exploring with us on the next Smithsonian World
'thur host 1s author and historian David McCulloujlh.
9:30 pm Tonight
KOCE-TV Channel 50 Huntington Beach
NICDONNEL.L DOUGLAS
Mary Lynn Turner was maid of
honor and bndesmaids were Laura
Shadden. Julie Marie, Marie
Jacobson, Juli Ann Niemeyer, Ton
Amieva and Lisa Peters.
The bndegroom chose his brother.
Jeff Dolan as best man and two other
brothers. John and Joey Dolan, Lang
Cottrell, J.D. Fox, Stuart Forden and
Kevin Kirk were ushers.
After a wedding trip to Cancun,
Mexico. the couple are residents of
Pasadena. The bnde has a sales
rc.prcscntauve company, Parallel
Lines, and her husband is marketing
director for Driftwood Dairies in El
Monte.
BALDWIN-PA TTltRSON
A Sept. 13 cere mony in Christ
Church by the Sea in Newport Beach
united Catherine Patterson and
Russell Baldwin. Their reception at
the Costa Mesa home of the bnde's
mother. Mary Bruno. was attended
by 70 guests.
The bridegroom is the SQn of Peter
and Nancy Baldwin of Costa Mesa
and the bride is also the daughter of
Mel Patterson of Huntington Beach.
The bnde wore an ivory gown with
a pcarl-tnmmed lace bodice with off-
the-shoulder styling and a sweep
train.
Honor a ttendants were Miyuk.i
Sakurai and Jeff Macl..ean.
After a wed<;fing trip to Big Bear, the
couple~ residents of Orange Coun-
ty. She 1s with Master Blueprint and
Supply Co. and he is employed by
Williamson Windings.
8AUNDltR8~KARR
Fonner Costa Mesan Coll~ P.
Karr exchanaed weddina vows with
Gregg 8 . Saunders in a Sept. 7
ceremony in the seaside home of his
mother, Pauline Saunders o f Ven-
tura, where a reception followed for
the 130 auests.
The bride 1s the dauahter of Mr.
and Mrs. Earl H. Karr of Garden
Grove. Roslyn Hunt and Jennifer
Grandi were her honor attendants
and ~vid Williams was best man.
She 1s a diaanostic medical sopo-
lflpber at Santa Barban Medical
Foundataon Oink and be is em-
ployed. by the City of Ojai The couple
· are res1dent1 of Ventura.
K eep an eye on Local
government in the
Daily Pilat
•
Ofange Coa1 OAILV PlLOT/WedfWedlty, Oct~ 9, 1M5 .. a
'Harold' stlrs up
comic nostalgia
in Irvine reprise
'Summer' keeps NBC hot
in second week of ratings
ByFR£D R01'HENBERG .,,......,,......,
NEW YORK -"The Long Hot
Summer," starring Don Johnson and
Cybill Shepherd, sacked a pnmc-llme
football game and CBS norma_lly
dominant Sunday lineup to help NBC
to another ratings victory ID the
second week of the 1985-86 television
season.
were Spaelbcra's "Amazma Stones"
on NBC, in 23rd, NBC s "227" 27 th
and NBC's "Alfred Hitchcock Pres-
ents" 30th.
for research pro,ects, S&ld NBC
purpotelr, scheduled "The Loaa Hot
Summer ' ap.1n1t ABCs Sunday
football aame between Dallas and the
New York Giants. The pme bad a
17. S ratma and ranked 32nd. By KATHLEEN CUMMINGS
IW!rNetC:.ri ... ,,
1:'hcre's a comedy in town. The lrv~ne Coml"!lunity Theater is {lfCS-
cntmg a repnse of"Harold," wnttcn
by H~rman Raucher, a play which ma~e its ~range County premiere (to
audiences delight) when ICT
produced it in 1974.
It's the story of a chronically shy
young ma~ who 1s taken under the man~ wtogs of his middle-aged
bowtms chums and coached in the an
of l"!latmg ntuals as they sec them,
havmg never been in love them-
selves. The play was originally
produced <?n Broadway 1n 1962 with T~ny_Perkms and Don Adams in the
pnnc1pal roles.
"Harold" 1s one of those "happy"
plays t~e mid-century was so fond of
produ_cmg. h's an audience-pleasing
combination of nostalgia cliche and
kitsch, designed for those who don't
want their mind straying beyond ats
~rdcr:s. who only want a little
diversion from our daily bread of
chasc-andc.tobber capers, paint-by-
number sitcoms and the unruly
se!lual habits of the soaps -enter-
~mmeot that requries a head-check gJrl at the door.
Nick Sigman plays the virginal
Harold with ungamly exuberance and
an. ~Y of face twitches and body twtd~hngs that wo~ld give even Tony
Perkins pause. Sigman is such a
bundle of nervous energy and inep-
titude he almost crosses the border
from pathological to pathetic. A little
more subtlety and vanety of reaction
would make Harold's character more
intc~stmg.. ~ut then, nearly everyone
an this story 1s a cancaturc.
Marc Le Blanc pla ys Obcc, the life's
blood and circulatory system of the
gang. ~ Blanc inJects enough energy
into his character to power a smaJl
town. It threatens at tames to run off
without him. And Le Blanc looks too
fastidious for a rough, Bronx accent;
it's as ifa skinny person were trying to
play fat. This 1s especially apparent
next to Fano (Francis Donnelly).
Donnelly is a natural before he
opens his mouth. And when he
speaks, we can almost feel the rows of
brownstone closing in. He's the
perfect lethargic counterweight the
the promiscuous energies of Le
Blanc's character.
Chris Magee Steel is Lew, one of
your more middle-of-the-road neu-
rotics. Steel docs it well and seems to
have a natural stage presence.
Four experts arc hired to 1mpan
I.heir dubious wisdoms to Harold.
Miss Prose (Carol Michael) 1s funny
as the lit coach who succumbs to the
charm in the task before her.
There arc a COUJ>IC of cultural, and
one sexual, stereotypes. Gottlieb
(Tracy Godfrey) is the Jewish (oy
vay!) tailor who fits Harold out for the
baJI. He's a 60-year-old bachelor who
has made up a dead wife and two sons
for himself to make him feel more
acceptable. (Sometimes he throws in
a daughter, depending on the tum of
the conversation). Godfrey's is a
sturdy shtick.
Mr. Wong (Lee Clark) hails from
the "ahh so" school and runs the
Chinese restaurant. He's hired to
teach Harold the mystique of wine.
Clarie performs with inscrutable
charm (but if this were a Peston
Sturges story, the Jew would have run
the Chinese restaurant and the C'ha-
nese would have been the tailor).
Frecker (Lee Prickett) 1s hired to
teach Harold to dance. Pnckcttt
hadn't settled comfortably into his
character opening night. His fey hand
gcstu~es secl_Tl tentative and what they
need 1s a flaJr. There's a stereotype an
Johnson had a hand m NBC
performing well on two nights. ac-
cording to figures released iuesday
by the A.C. Nielsen Co. His "M1am1
Vice" ranked 16th and beat an
original episode of CBS' "Falcon
Crest" for the first time. The first part
of the four-hour "Long Hot Summer"
ranked seventh with a 22 6 rating.
lf Johnson 1s hot, Bill Cosby and
No other new scnes craclted the
Top 40. The debut ofNBC's "Misfits
of Scien~" ranked 44th out of 69
~hows.
Because of "The Long Hot Sum-
mer" and respectable performances
from "Amazing Stories" and
"Hitchcock," NBC fimshed a strong
second to CBS on the pi votal Sunday
ntght. CBS dominated the first two
hours with "60 Minutes" and
"Murder. She Wrote:' and then lost to
"LonJ Hot Summer" w1th the
premieres of "Crazy Like a Fox" and
"Trapper John. M.D "
Gerald Jaffe. NBC's vice president
Last week's five lowest-rated shows
were ABC's "Hollywood Beat" \nd
ABC's "Ripley's Bebeve It or Not,"
ued for 64th: ABC's "Spenser. For
Hare," 66th, NBC's "Punk1.
Brewster," 67th; ABC's "Fall Guy,·
68th, and CBS' "Hometown," which
has been canceled, 69th.
In the evening ntw1 competJllon,
the "CBS E vcnanJ News" ranked first
wtth a 12.1 raung. ABC's "World
News Tonight" was second with a
10.8, od&ina the "NBC Nightly
News." wlucb had a I 0. 7
Michael J. Fox are sizzling. NBCs nr.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill•~~ "The Cosby Show" and Fox's vehicle,
"Family Tics," agam ranked first and
second. rcspccta vely, but their margin
over No. 3 "Dallas" was stnlung.
"The Cosby Show" had a 30 8
rating (percent of the nation's 85 9
million TV homes) and a 48 share
Nick Sl&man tempta Kelly (percent of sets in use). while "Family
Miller l.ri .. Harold.' Tics" scored a 28.9 raung, 44 share.
CBS' "Dallas" had a 23.8 rating.
Prickett struggling to be freed, you "I haven't seen those kinds of
can feel it., numbers 1n a weekl y series since 'All
Before Harold goes for the big game in the Family' an the 1970s," said
(thegirlofh1sdreams)hc'sgivenadry Mike Eisenberg, CBS' research direc-
run (that's not so dry) with Ins (Kelly tor.
Miller), the girl next door. Miller has a Wath fi ve shows an the Top IO,
natural beauty and, combined with NBC finished with an 18. I rating to
herquietly fonhrightdclivery,isvery CBS' 16.7 andABCs 13 9.
convincing. When Harold, after all NBC"s "Cheers·· tied ABC~
this coaching, finall y gets the op-"I:rynasty" fo r fifth and NBC's
ponunity to perform his biza rre "Highway to Heave n" tied CBS'
counsh1p display, you can imagine ··Kate & Allie" fo r eighth. The other
the outcome. CBS shows ID the Top 10 were
Joyce Lawrence manages the "Murder. She Wrote," which has met
backstage with the help of Barbara the Steven Spielberg challenge, 1n
Sorenson on properties. Mike Jack-founh. and "60 M1nu1es." 1n I 0th.
son handles lights and music (rock Among new shows. the onl}' <;enes
and roll fan s will enjoy the musical in the Top 20 last week were
interludes). comedies. NBC's "Golden Girls" was
'1nllf teet WhT idOctor. ~ \ loe and Arch
1i tment of sun\ons. Hee.:.~k}ne. \nfant rea -~<. s~ JVfC'.A • rtes (>ain. Nal\ PT~·.-· t Oeform\t\es. \n\U
d Ch\\dren s fOO an d foot.
of the Ankle an 0 \AT R 't' G R 0 up
ARBOR P O
NtW PO Rl H McCARTE.R o .r.M. GAR~\ west C\\ff Or\ve
Suite #3
Newport e,eac.h
(714) 631-~
This is the second tame Tom Titus 12th and ABC's "Growing Pains"
has directed "Harold" for ICT. He was 18th New shows in the Top 30 al~ sta~d the Oran~ County ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ premiere 1n 1974. where it was the ; I
Joshua Logari to talk
at UC Irvine Friday
mosl popular play of the season. The
audience cenainly had a good tim e
with It the night I attended. in spite of
the opening night gli1chcs, so it looks
ltkc Titus might have another hit. I
Performances of ''Harold" con-
tinue Fndays and Saturdays at 8 p.m.
through Oct. 26 with a matinee Oct.
20 at 2 p.m. at Tunic' Rock Com-
munity Park, on Sunnyhill Road off
Turtle Rock Dnve in Irvine. For
• Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright
Joshua Logan takes a sentimental tnp
down Broadway's memory lane Fn-
tron outlets.
Joshua Logan's appearance is
sponsored by the UCI Office of Arts information, call 957-5496. day at UC Irvine.
The show begins at 8 p. m an the Gjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Fane Arts Village Theater. rl
and Lectures.
Show tunes and anecdotes about
Hollywood make up the 90-minute
program called "Joshua Logan's Mu-
sical Moments." It features Lopn;
his actreu-wife Nedda Hamgan
Logan: and Broadway performers.
Logan 1s co-author of "South
Pacific," "Mister Roberts." "Fanny''
and "Wish You Were Herc." He
directed bits includinj "Annie Get
Your Guo" and "Picnic."
His other productions include
"This Is the Army," "Knickerbocker
Holiday" and "By Jupiter," the last
Rodgers and Hart collaboration.
Among the many stars Logan
directed arc Mary Manin, Helen
Hayes, Clint Eastwood and the late
Henry Fonda and Marilyn Monroe.
Most recently he wrote the libretto
and lyrics for the new musical "Huck
and Jim on the Mississippi" and the
translation of the opera "Carmen" for
the Shrevepon Symphony.
Nedda Harrigan is president of the
Actors' Fund of America. The USO
named her "Woman of the Year" in
1984. She met Logan when she acted
in his production of "Charley's
AunL" She also appeared an the film
"Charlie Chan at the Opera." She
retired from the stage after marrying
~Pcaring with the couple will be
composer Bruce Pomahac. He or-
chestrated "Fly With Me" and "l
Remember Mama," the first and last
musicals composed by Richard
RodJers. He wrote the l)'.rics and
music for the show "Punfication."
He has arranged music for performet'!
Doc Scvcrinson, Mike Doualas, Ten-
nessee Ernie Ford and Ben Vereen.
Tickets for the performance arc $8
general admission. SS for UCI stu-
dents and $7 for other students,
senior citizens, and UCI staff, faC'ulty
and Alumni Association members.
They are available at UCI box offices
856-6616, and Ticketro!l and Tele-
*
Crystal Gayle
expecting again
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer
CrxstaJ Gayle is cxpcctina her second
child in the early sprin' and plans to
take ti me off from tounna to pn:~
for the baby's birth, her publiclSt said.
Gayle, 34;. and her husband, at-
torney Bill uawmos, 33, have a 2-
ycar-old da\lfbtc_r. ______ ....
Doctor,
Explain -T It-To T
Me
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offer
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I I
I
M Or.nge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, October 9, 1985
MAKE A RFsERVATION
To· HAVE A FEW LAUGHS
Wonder
sued over
song theft OVER DINNER.
Savor three delicious slice-of-life comedies, each
set in a restaurant booth. Starring James Coro,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two
songwriters have filed a SI 0 million
lawsuit against Stevie Wonder, claim-ma Wonder stole from them the
Oscar-winning song ··1 Just Called to
Say I Love You." Teri Garr, Dame Judith THE BCXJTH Anderson, Mary Kay Place
and Mildred Natwick. B Lee Garrett and Lloyd Ch1ate allege
they wrote the song m 1978 while
staying with Wonder in a Hollywood
hotel. attorney Jack Whitley said at a
news conference Monday. Wonder
heard rehearsals of the song and was
~ven a taped demonstration copy of
It, he said.
9>TV Worth Watching
TONIGHT
8 P.M.
KOCE 50
ORANGE COUNTY PUBLIC TELEVISION
lwJ rM<lt-l"'-''bl~ 1n pan I>\ • 11r•nl '"'"'
tt.. l •"f•"•"'"' '"' 1'u1>1i. a ..... d.-.... ,,..
Garrett and Ch1ate's song, "I Just
Called To Say," was registered with
Broadcast Music Inc. in 1979, said
Whitley, who represents Garrett.
New York-based BMI confirmed the
registration.
The song attributed to Wonder was
released in 1984 as the theme for the
film "The Woman in Red," starring
Gene Wilder, and won an Academy
Award.
Attorneys ~id Wonder C?uld l~se
his Oscar 1f a Jury finds agamst him.
In his application for the award,
Wonder had to stipulate that the song
was written for the film. which the
attorneys maintain is untrue.
Wonder would not comment on
the allegations, said spokesman
Charhe Collins.
Codefendants in the suit include
Motown Records. Onon Pictures and
GTE Sprint Communicati ons, which
used the song in television com·
merciaJs.
Wonder and Garrett, both blind
from birth, have been friends since
1964, Whitley 'Said. Between 1971
and 1978 they co-wrote three songs:
"Signed, Scaled, Delivered," "It's a
Shame," and "Lefs Get Serious,"
which was recorded by Jermaine
Jackson, he said. •
82.00 MIDWEEK DISCOUNT
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edwards EL TORO 581 ·9500
[I ft1J111~·~· fi.l ,_.,"•Pl A•~r /': .. /A £\ T 1 )f~U
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-------edwarda CINEMAS /So Cal CINEMAS
l~GUN• Hill S MAU 768~611
so r wv <.o ON f l TOA<., IN '"' M&ll 1Hf l T TOSEARS1
'Cl I" ... ........... ..... ,..,.,.. ,..., ....
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.._ __ ... .. .. "" _,_.,.. ....... ,., ........ •tt.•tt -.n...,..,1t111
._ TV LI STING S
~
-t;OO-•NEWS MATT HOUSTON
HART TO HART nRE't ()()WAH'(
tiff l'IENf lno<ES .... ""°"' M>JICT UNMME
CllNEWB
~~
MOYIE H • "The Of_." ( 1983) Albert
Flnnty, Tom CourWnly
-t:a0-
1 TOO Ol.08E FOfl COMFORT
Jl.OPAJllll(
MACNEIL / LEHAER
NtW8HOUfl ID PttOTOOfWHIC VISION
(1)9HEWS ID .. THE lAHD OF THE 8l8lE !~HOTSEAT
H~ "Breakln' " (19&4) Lucind•
Oi<*ey, Adolfo Oulnonea.
-7:00-
(C)MOYI!
***"Al Of Me" (1*1 StM Mw-
lln, Lll'f T omlln.
-ttm-~lfTQ4COCK
I EYE ON HOLLYWOOD
DAW DEL DOTTO
NJEllfJC)9fT NEWS
MC>AE AfAl P£OP\.E
TOOCWI
-12:30-
• Cl! LATE flOKT WITH DAVID
lETTEMIAH
I MTPATAOI. THf&THAEEO
MOYE ··~''Way, Way Out" (1966) Jerry
Ltwla, Connie Stf\llN.
I MERV QflFRN
ll&ENDEHT HEWS
OCfANlJS
l C88NEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
AICNEWS Q
GPALW (!)NEWS m THAEFS COMPANY e WHEEL OF FORT1JNE ID 8USIESS AEPOAT
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
Edward WC>Odward (left) cluha with the
man who hold.a the key to a houae of enforced
proedtation (rock •t.ncer Adam Ant) on .. The
Eqaallaer .. tonight at 10 on CBS, Channel 2.
I emRTAIMHT TONIGHT
PM'8E ntE LOAD VIDEO JUKEBOX
(D)MOVIE
H \.t ··Uni~ September" (198-4)
Ktt81'1 Allen, Thleny Lhermltte.
(S)MOVIE
CC) MOVIE SD 8E>ffNO THE saHES **~"The Frisco Kid'. (1979) Gene m HOWTOOWNYOUAOWN
Wiider, Harrls'.on FOfd. BU$1HESS
*** "The Yw Of LMng Oen-
gerously" (1983) Mel Git.on, Sigour-
rMJy Wuv«.
@) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
al) PMl8E THE LOAD m~THOT\.JE
(8) MOVIE CC) MOVIE **~ "The Buddy System" (1984) * • • "Country" (1984) Jessa ~=· &isin Sarandon. ~:Shepard
-12:40-
fJ (I) MOVIE
t t •,; "GrandVlew, U.S.A." ( 1984)
Jamie Lee CYrtts. C. Thomas Howell. -8:30-t * * "Once Upon A Time In Ainerl-
l TlC TAC DOUGH ca·· (1984) Robert De Nlfo. James
t * "The Hoax" ( 1972) BIM Ewing,
Frank Bonner
-1:00-
"HEEHAW ~:TMELOST
EPISOOES LOVE BOAT Woods (IJ MOVIE -T:30-P.M.MAGAZJNE -10:15-
1 MlSC ffSTIVAL WASHIHOTOON Ell) RELIGIOUS PROGRAMMING
WHArs HAPf'BtHGH -t:OO--10-.30-8 A081N HOOO 8 Cl) CHARLIE & COMPANY U NEWS
• • • ~ "The Night Of The Hunter~ ( 19551 Robert Mitchum, Shelley
Wint en
I M'A'S'H 1uoYNASTY fDIS08El.BISHOP:PORTRAITOf NEWLYWED GAME f'tl!Cno THE ARTIST
WILD. WllD WORLD Of THE BOOTH ~ MURRAY AWJ ARlfNE
ANNALS Cit MOYE Ell) 0000 NEWS
Cl)MOVIE
••• "OlamondJ F0< Brelktur·
( 1968) Marcello MIS1roiannl, Rita
~·
~~RYAN ~ MAAKET1NG *** "The Omen" (1976) Gregory al) DRAG RACING
Cl) SAN DEOO AT LAAGE Peclt, Lee Remk:lt. -11:00-
0 PEOPl.E's COURT m PRAISE THE LORD I u Cl) 9 a NEWS
al) RACING AOI OAK TREE (Q) MOYE CARSON'S COMEDY CLASSICS (%)MOVIE ·~ .. A Night In Heaven" (1983) m Wt<APIHaNaNNATl
• t "Cross Country" (19831 Rk:Nrd 8e'fmer, Michael Ironside.
(?)MOVIE u * "Flying Down To Rio" (1933) 'Christopher Atkins, Lesley Anne m BAANEY MIU£R
Ginger Rogefs. Fred Astalfe Wwr~ SI Ck y WHEN I LAUGH * * "Finders Keec>eR" ( 1984) M~
cilael o·Keefe, 84Mrty O' Angelo
-S:OO-**'~ "Police Academy'· (1984) ~ BUSIESS REPORT fJ CJ) STIR CRAZY al) CAUJNG OR. WHIT AKER U A TOWN LIKE ALICE &eve~81'1berg, Klm Cattrall m 80WlJNG
-1:30-DNEWS
~ ~tomy Of A Seduction·' ***"All Of Me·· (19841 Steve Mar· ~·=In Heal" (1983) Annette
(1979) Susan Flannery, Rita MOfeno. tin. Lily Tomlin Haven, Herschel Savage
fJ AT THE MOVE! m CQMEDY TONOKT Cl! AL.I. IN THE FAMI. Y
al) PRAISE THE LOAD m ABOUT m.EVISIOH • ~s WM n -IT\ ,.,~r??:;...., "'""'•EDY (.S) MOVIE G ~ "_, -uu ~ ovnrw"""' • ··rhe lnitlallOfl'. ( 19831 Veta Miies.
(!)COMEDY BREAK WITH MACK ~MOVIE ~ = -1:35-
~ ~ • * "Rooster Cogburn" ( 1975) Jolm • "Camille 2000" (1969) Daniele m MOVIE Wayne, K•thaflne Hepburn Gaubert. Nino CastelOUOYO
(~MOVIE * H "Cal" (1984) John Lynett~
en Mlrren • * * "My Name Is Nobody'. ( 1974) ~ $UfTHSOH&AH WORLD -11:30--2.'00-
fJ (J) C8S NEWS NIGHTWATCH
8MOVIE ;~en:~to a w ~-B ~Je's~~
G) ntE BOOTH ENTERTAIHMEHT TONIGHT g COMEDY 8AEAK WITH MAQ<
a!) PRAISE THE LOAD D m ti) NEWS AWJ JAMIE
*** "Atry Wedneedty" (1966)
Jane Fonda. Jason Robards.
fJ QINEWS m MOVIE I o HOTEL u 9 ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE • * * "Commandos Strike Al • MOV1E (IJ 8'lAAAE Q) MISSION: IMPOSSIBlE mo.c. TODAY Dawn" 11943) Paul Munl, Annt Lee. • * "The Reluctant Hetoes·· ( 1971) m VEGAS
LUXURY fHfATRIS
NS $2 7!> h i two M1h WtekOiy>, WALK· I * 1•1 Mil O nly S1turd1y• •. Sun 00'• &. Holtd~y• Unleu ,..ol~d
MARIE IPG-1 ))
t:U .
CREATOR (R) 1 00
AlllERICAN FLYER
crG-U) SHOWS AT 6 :45 .. t :IO
JAGGED IEOCE CA)
1 05 l 25 !> •S
810&.IOH
A F TER HOURS CAI
1 •o l •Os •o
1 •O & 9 <10
BAC K TO THIE
F UTURE ~I
1:10, 3:JO, S:SO, •:OO, IO:JO
SILVIERAOO (PG·IJ) a !>S Pee w~e·, B KJ
AO•enlu•r 1P C) 6 SS
BCVIERL Y HILLS COP fR) 9 :0$ Plus Co·Hlt
W1tneu CR) 6 !>O
KlSS OF T HIE SP'IOIEA
WOMAN CA)
I 00 ) 20 S 40
I0!>&.1020
l'GNIES OF GOO CPG U)
I 20 l 2!> S )S
74S&9SS
THIE GOOS MUST BIE CRAZY (PG) I O~
l 20 !> H 1:>O10 O!>
DRIVE ·INS ::";;~
• il;!•]tt;,,w61
ta J' a 110 • ,,, .. ,., -.,..t ', •ft ,
COMMANDO (R)
Plu• Co·Hol
Porky•• Re .. n9e (RI
DAY OF n41E 0€AO Hou•e Dy T,,e
Cemettrll (RI
..:c W£C "S BIG AOVIENTURIE (PG)
Plu• Teen Woll (PC)
RAMBO FIRST B LOOD
PART ti CR) Plu•
M.td M~· B~yond
l huodf'tdutnt> IPC 'lt
lllVTU .. A TOA CRI P fu\ (. v ...,.,,
<.•u~~ l\l•nO (RI
W£1AO SCllE N CIE (PG· I J) P lu\
F .. 9n1 Noqnc f RI
s
'Commando'
commands
top honors
HOLL YWOOO (AP)-The battle
for the box office turned to guerilla
warfare over the weekend as Arnold
Schwarzenneger's "Commando" in-
filtrated the No. I position, forcing
Chuck Norris' "Invasion U.S.A" to
retreat three notches.
"Co mmando ," s tarring
Schwarz.enneger as a former soldier
trying to save his daughter from
terrorist k.jdnappcrs. grossed $7. 7
million on 1,495 screens.
A week earher. the guns 'n' guts
trend put "Invasion U.S.A." into the
top spot, but this pa.st weekend it fell
to founh place on a gross of $3.5
million -a decli ne of almost 50
.... ~;:--:o:M~·~vl~l;N~~ ;l "~''"':·:·"~'~'""~·~· 1~1~1 :k L~L~L~"~'"~' ~~·~···~"~11~o·~n~1 ~11~1 .,.~,~···~·~· 1§1~10;"';~ ';";u';;;::---1 percent. Columbia filled in the gap with the
L 1-..1na..-..• *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* second-place debut of"Jagged Edge,"
BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Performances Mondly stamng Glenn Close as an attorney Thru S.tar•v (bctpt Holidlys g ~-E-flmtntl) representing a murder defendant
LAKEWOOD
....-·...-played by .Jeff Bridges .
.. Agnes of God." also distributed
by Columbia, took in $3.6 million as
it slipped one notch to No. 3.
Center .Pm11u1 ISH/h aoliy S. t.Mltw'•
OOUY 11U10
INe POHDA
AGNES Of GOD 1i.u1
11'» 1'» 41U "" l1U 10140
OOUY ITIUO
CHUC• NOllall
INVASION USA Ill
I iGO >•• ''"° 1.00 ,.,,.
DOUY lllJllO
ST1VIH PtllUllO "'-NHTI
&ACK TO THI fUTVll (NI
IJiJt 1JIO J110 7141 'MJ
GU-ClOM
MAXll <NI , ... ,, .. , ... 7.00 .... 11 ...
LAKEWO D
Center South
121 Jltlt llll(!!Cl!lr( Uhl A-
DAY Of THI DIAD
(NO CINI U.. Ir~
121» Ml .... , ... "" 11111 MDll!Nt
' TllUI '109'I' .......
THI IMlltALD fOUST Ill
h ll .... llttl
DOUT ITUIO
AMHICAN fl YIU 1,..111
ll14S, >tlO, 1.U , MIO, 10.U
LA MIRADA
COCOON~u1
11>41 S.-01 S1U 7:0 IO!OS
AMADIUS (NI h)O ••• ,,. 10,JO
CNUClt~ll
INVASION USA Ill 1.00 l:U J1M l :IS IOt40
.,,.. QOM
MAXll c,.l
IJiJI JtU ••U .... MJ 10,M
DOUY 11010 .IAHI PONOA
AGNU Of GOD 1i.111 Iii• JiU •.U ..U 1140 IMJ
COMMAHOO (11
1IOO lftttM1.00 .... ll.00
GATEWAY
JAGGID I DGI Ill
1.00 >11S S1JO 714S 10:00
"' Wll'S llO ADYINT\111 Cl'Ol
12:>0, 4·40 ... so
U . IXTlA nHESTllAl (NI
212S .. ,, 10:0
MAall (PO)
A TIUI ITOIY ••••••• MASK 1~u1
h ll ... S 1"4S
OOllT m.o
ITIVIN JNU.. NUIHl'I
IACK TO THI fUNll INI
'"''""
llNIH Of M l.MNG DWI 111
11iU 41U list
FRIGHT NIGHT Ill
214S .. u l .. U
*PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES•
* CINE·FI SOUNOI At U... symi.oh ~·t sound direct to your AM C8r * radio. If n• radio with tcem0ry potatien, wi"I yovr own AM port1M1.
N ':r.:' se..rt Dutlc ChiWrenUnde. 12 ALWAYS FREE
ANAHEIM
1m 1m .,_ ,,,,. ,., ~ CIMll ,_ * JAOGID IDOi 1111 MAXll !NI
INVASION UIA Cl> CllMU Of 'ASSION 1111 AMllKAN Pl YHI ~111
t 0 TO MIDNIGHT 111
1. THI OOONIU CNt
.2. OltlMllNS !NI a. OMOSnUtnu ""'
1. ,AU •IDI• 111
2. A VllW TO A IOll CNt a. AMllUCAH NINaA 1111
COMMANDO (II
THI TlllMINATOl 1111
MeJ;ey@• ~T:;.-r~ _ ... m..,.-.m.__-.t1 ...... r:,...._nl.t=-'=:.._.1 mN wou '"' ......... _.....,,.
MCk TO THI PUTUll 1N1
llVB1 Y HfW Cott!!
MOOID IDOl t111
ClllMU °' ,AlllON Ill)
a.fll •• , llf(T (..., ,,. "' ... ....., ,,_ ,.,, le ,,.,,.,
....._ c.-111.iu.
lo HABRA ,., .., ·:.u-.i 17,~ •
lllWN ....... ,_...
I.ACK TO THI PVTUB 1N1
OHOlnUITIU"'
DAY Of THI DIAD
(NO °"' -11 MMf"'9I NOUtt IT M WMT8Y
(NUClt HOlltllt
INVAllOH UIA flll
10 TO MIDMOHY 119
.. Wirt l'9 AOWNn* !NI
Wll•D ICllNCI "°'"
Behind "Invasion" were three
summer holdovers: "Back to the
Future," with $3.4 million; "Pec-
Wee's Big Adventure," wtth $1.2
million; and "Teen Wolf," wt th SI . I
million.
Here are the top seven films at the
box office this past weekend, With
distributor, weekend gross, number
of screens, total gross, and number of
weeks in release.
I. "Commando," 20th Century
Fox, $7. 7 million. 1,495 screens. $7. 7
million. one week.
2. "Jagged Edge," Columbia, $4.1
million, 1.125 screens, $4. I million .
one week.
3. "A~ess of God," Columb1a,
$3.6 million, 623 screens, S l 0.2
million, four weeks.
4. "In vasion U.S.A.," Cannon,
$3.5 million, I, 735 screens., S 12.6
million, two weeks.
5. "Back to the Future," Universal
$3.4 million. l ,350 screens, $1 S9.6
million, 14 weeks.
6. "Pec-Wec's Big Adventure,"
Warner Bros .• $1.2 million, 842
screensi.,$36.3 million, 11 weeks.
7. '"1ecn Wolf," Atlantic, SI.I
million, 940 screens., $28.8 million,
seven weeks .
"HIGHLY
ENJOYABLE I"
~ ... -~ ..... " :"9''--• ---
mflm&7'1-41M _..._cona
•l11l A1 ..,. ... CDn9
-134.1553
~ .,_,unn
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"Will you do it, Mommy? I can't
get it right."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
~
"No, I will not put your precious bone
in my safe!"
DRABBLE
\' l.l, ~f. ~OU
fON\6WT AT
1f\lf.N, CRl!>TI I
GARFIELD
&OY, AM I BOREP.f'~ 50 BOP.EP
(HAVE NOTHINC, B ETTER ro
PO THAN LIE HE.RE FLAT A5
A PANCAt\E
JUDGE PARKER
Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT /Wedneedey. OctOl>er 8, 1816 -
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
--..:-:-.----====--_-:-=--~ =-------=---5>: "' .;.
"Cosgrfff, you're• dre•mer."
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham , •' ..... ~ ; -l ? ~
' . r l.
..l
' l THINK 'TAPIOCA PUOUING STAA'TEO OUT 10 Bf
SOMETHING I ~EN G,l.VE UP .•
'10lJ\Jt. ONL.~ ~£.N IN
~U6 ~ 5CMOOl-R>R TWO
DA~~. At-.10 ~ou·vt.
1\1..~I).~ 60T
-t~~f ~
01\it. ?l ---·r--ri
by Kevin Fagan
by Jim Davis
0
0 0
by Harold Le Doux
HE'S A LIAR ' IN THE
FIRST F'l.ACe, eEN'S 100
5IMRT TO STAFU A
RGHT WITH THRE~ OOONS1.-._..,....
by Jeff MacNally
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
~~~~~~~~
BLOOM COUNTY
j{X~_rHArj
Iii.I. !'£ Mtf) 111$ l4mP
IMVE. IDT 5/X. ~
1D ll'IE" A t.ffTWI€
MP 50 '1fl.Qf
{.£Pf 1l) (l'() I
ONE Ti-llN6 ABOUT
LIVING IN T14E DESERT.
T~ERE'S ALWAYS 50METHIN6
EXCITING TO DO.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JMACt' I
~r:' ~c.t ~
~!('~
.MfAc.<"
A ROUSING GAME OF
1' HAT ON THE CACTUS II~
-:?-
------~· -.. -·· ------~--~"""''<..
by Berke Breathed
~CAN 1lfKt" Mt
IOI, CO!tl€r f!MY. .. MYCQf~ = ~~I HAP 1DO
J .:,,
1EMt
' (J)CKrlflj.
I
\1E DID? HE. DIDNT !
HE IS? TrlAT'S
RIDICULOUS I/!
He WHRT? I CON\
BE.Lie VE IT Ill
uVSI A MINLJfE.
CONN IE-I Hem
by Lynn Johnston
OK-Wt\Cf$ l..15\e.NI
IN ON \KE
EXIENSION?lll I UI-\ ~VY 6REAIH1f'4G
~~
TUMBLEWEEDS
HeM 1}fe N!!~ 'S,' WES'5? 'THE:'( Pl{~Cr
A ~ev'eR!lii WA'TE~ ~HOR'iAGf:.
ROSE IS ROSE
BRIDGE
. -
:-!either vulnerable. South deals
NORTH
WEST
+ KJ S
'7 Q975
¢ K 765
• 97
• 987642
:'Void
0 QJ843 + K4
EA 'T
+A Q 103
8
~Void
• QJ 1086~32
OUTH
+ Vo6cl
1:7 A KJ106432
O A 1092
+A
The bidding: ti'
ouU. W Ht N orOI Eut
2 + Pa.. 2 ¢ S +
S ;i Pua Pu1 Obk
Pu1 P.... PH1
Opt>ning ltad: F'1vr of ~
Tht're 1s a bu1c rule of bridge lf
you have made a preempuve bid.
any further move 1s up to your part
nf'r. you detcri~ your hand with
your preemptive at't1on. Thus. 1f the
prffmplor does act again. 1t should
b4! to ronvey a 1pec1fic mt>"8ge
South'• openin1 bid was art1fic1al
and forcing and North madf' a nega
t ive response East. Leshe Wt"~t of
Houston, decided to mah hfr 1n
teresllng for all concerned h) leap
in~ to five clubs before the op
pont>nts had even started to mt>n
t1on tht>1r suits. When "'outh c, f1\ e
heart bid came ba~k LO him. ht>
elected to double
Ob\ IOU<ily. East t"ould not ha' t'
OMAR
SHARIFF
I he high-card values to double rive
hurts . Therefore. his doublt> had to
bt> lead d1r<>cl1ng-or lead tnh1b1t
1ng. to be precise S ince only ont>
.;u11 had been bid natural!~ by tht>
d.-darinjl 1de, East could not ht>
a<ik1nR for a specific ~u•t Ht> wa"'
simply telling West that he did not
want a dub lead -the ~u1t he had
bid
ln .;urh r1rcum!'tan~' \OU would
normall) lt'ad your lontt 'u1t Hf're.
West. J Pa ul lvuka of La., \iegu ,
did not have a suit of any gnat
length to lead. Still. hf' deC'1ded that
hf' would htt<I his partntr ~ 1nstruc-
t1on11 and selected t he lon1t<'r of h1l'
two unbid su10 diamon<I~
~ ·-----
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
He t11t thE' Jackpot' East ruffed
the diamond lead "Ith h1i; only
trump and tried to cash the ace of
.;pade-. Declarer ruffed. but he had
no wa~ Lo a 'l>1d losing a trump trick
and a tr1c-k to the king of d1amondc;
do" n one
CHARLES
GOREN
At the other table. too. North·
Soul h were forced to five hearts
Here. however. East did not double
and. after a club lead . declarer ea5
1ly romped homt> v. ith 11 tricks. los
ing only one heart and one diamond.
Rue 1•• bffa naaalas late "-'
W. u.eWe7 Let CMriMG--Wp
1" RIMI J"r way~ t.M ....
9'00UIL£St.,...._ ... ._
takHal. Fer a copy el kla
"OOU8LES ............. __.. H..15 •
-c .... ou•1-.· can el tWe ....
,.,..., P.O. lea Ill, P.a..,.... N.J. oeoa. Miike ~ ...,..... te
Ne~L
J.
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88
Bus1NEss No1ls Newport Produce plans
grand reopening this week Crown locates
By TOM WRIGHT produce o n the Orange Coast for over i C M
Who runs the White House?
Regan the manager crowds
style of Reagan the leader _
leaders when he isn't teach1na it M1c~1pn State
U niversity or writing books or lectunng on the
subject °' ... ...,,......., 22 years. Every day. except Sunday, D osta esa · · he travels to the Los Angeles produce Newport ~uce will celebnnc its market at 2 a.m .• to buy fresh produce
The situation isn't an uncomm on one, be said.
c~plainiog that a manager is o ften used to rein in t~e
natural leadership propensities of a leader In. th!s
instance the bare is President Reagan, the tortoise 1s
&rand reopening al a new head· and flowers for his wholesale and
Quarters on Newport Boulevard rel.\lil customers. Th~~ f The CamJ) family's produce mar-··we provide produce: for most o
ket has moved three ti mes in 22 years the maJOr rcstaura!'lts ·~.the area ~d
and in their new home ~1e fam1.ly many of the hospitals. Camp said.
flora.I and produce business will In addition to the wholesale oper-
sprawl over 7,000 square f~t on two ations Newport Produce is a produce floors. Flowers by Debra wtll be on ret.ailc~
th.c upper level. The produce market Ncw(>ort Produce. at 2825 New-
will be on the ground floor. port Blvd .. is open daily from 7 a.m.
Ernest Camp has b«n selling to 6 p.m.
Ovf R r H£ CouNT ER
O&Mr 4S·l6 4 ll·31 o.t.lbA 7911.t 7tY, 0...IMd 6 ,.,..
o.ic.11 13 131.t. Oewev 2111o 2\6 OleCry l01n 30"" OlrGnl II .. 19'i't OovtOB 191/) 20
Orleten 11~ 11"' OunkO ' n 1n 22'16 Ourtron 11).'16 IOl'll
Ovnacn 514 S'n
EetVen 32 33
Ecc>nLt> 33\'t 33~ Ec!Cmi> I~ 114 EIPes 13-" 13"" EklerB 211.11) 11"'1 Ei.<Blo 1-IM 9
EteNucl IS•n 15'-EmoAlr 14 141'• EnoCnv 11•1o 1711'>
Enlwl1tl 11 20 EQIOU 7 7\'o
FrmG ~SI~ FedGo I m ... IN
Filler ' 11h 21\'t FEmo St~ 60V.
FtWFn ~ ~'-' FteNFI v. "" Flu<ocb 1i't 4'.t.
Foner h n~ ~h FM Am 'IJ
ore1t0 "" 4\'t ~mkln 11< 14V. ~~=~ ,.,., .u~
Fremnt ~ g" FUll'HB im ,.,., ell .,,. lit
nO.vo ~ '-11RIE'1 I ~ ~ 6"'4~ ~~~ l~~ 1 .,,. .-./ii 1{$ 1 v~odv S ,g~
a~d 2" J-14 e It~ I h
er 1 ' ; Uiz H yn 2'14 HcnoB • 1''h Ht11rdF 34 ~n 1''• ~1~r. , ,s ....
t!Yl>rllc ~llo ~ 1rs I u'h ~ l~~K IS•t> ~'I• n· treln ~ 71r. 1111~ n •n 22"4 dn-trcE11 r '"" '"' Int I l:\li ln~•h l 2'11t ••r. lweSoU '4>tlt 45 :!:.~~ i"~ ~11~ Jerleo 1
JOlllCl>I JOM>l\111 Vt Jo\lyn 29 Y,
elver l ~ ~rv1'81. u~ i
Orange County's
easy
listening
radio station
KDCM
1D!l.t
FM SIERED
9-Piece
Shrimp Dinner
Special $4.99
Limited Time Onty
Its heaven for shrtmp lovers Nine of our large.
iu•cy. batter f ned shnmp With cocktail sauce
tor dipping. Served with our freshly-made cole
5ldW and our new. larger fryes Enjoy it today!
=-
'LONG]OHN,
SILVEl(S.
3095 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
(Across from Fedco)
Crown Hardware, with stores in
Newport Beach. Corona del Mar,
Anaheim Hills and Long Beach. has
moved into new corporate head-
quarters at 760 W. I 6th St.. Costa
Mesa.
By JORN CUNNIFF .,..._......,... Donald Regan. . . .
In 30 years of ~bservi~g and adVls1ng, sa1_d Jennin~, one of two thtnJS 1s hkel)' to rcsull from this
combination: The speedier hare simply goes around
the tonoise or else becomes encumbered and
frustrated behind it.
• • •
IUog Adver&illDI a.ad Pabllc Rela·
tlona of Newport Beach has ~n
called upon to provide all a~vertismg
graphics and collateral desgms for the
Sales and Marketing Council's 12th
annual Major Achievement 1n
Merchandising Excellence awards. • • •
LeAnce-Herbert-Bowen Publlc
Reladona ud Advertt11D1 of New·
port Beach has added G~~aco Com·
pater Corp. to its ad~ert1smg roster.
Genisco works with computer
graphics, government command and'
control im2'ging, display station mar-
kets and other areas. ••• Doell Networks !Jlc. of Irvine
reported that shipments of its data
communications products passed
$.500,000 in July, compared to
$31.5,000 shipped in Jun~. July book-
ings totalled nearlv $3 m1lhon. • • • Advertising and public rclauons
responsibilities for thrtt new ho me
developments of Deane Homes will
now be handled by Norma Hayes,
who specializes in real est.ate develop-
ment. • • • Avco Flna.nclaJ Servlcea Inc .. a
subsidiary ofTcxtron Inc., has agreed
to purchase Metro Finance Co. Inc ..
the Puerto Rico-based consumer
finance company of Heller Overseas
Corp. Metro Finance Co. is the
second-largest consumer finance
company in Puerto Rico. • • • Certain assets and liabilittcs of
Tallmuh Avlatioa at John Wayne
Airport were acquired last May by
Oru1e Avlatioa. The firm now
operates as Orange Aviation OBA
Tallmantz Aviation. • • • Tbe Le1acy Compo.lea and Daon
Corp. have announced the formation
of a joint-venture partnership for the
dcvcloj>ment of a 2.50,000.square-
foot office compleA consisting of a .5-
story and an 8-story tower in Irvine.
The project, to be known as Dupont
Center, is at the com er of Von
Kannan and Dupont avenues. • • •
Tbe Mega Groap Inc. of Irvine has
published a kit that teaches first-time
uscn -even those unfamiliar with
mainframe computers. keyboards
and spreadsheet concepts -to build
electronic spreadsheets within 90
m inutes. • • • The Newport Beach-based Paclllc
Mataal We luaruce Co. announced
that fee-based financial planning
services wiJJ be offered through a
wholly-owned subsidiary registered
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission as a registered invest·
ment advisor. • • •
R.L. Coach Pabllc RelatloDa bas
been selected u U.e pabllc relaUon1
a1ency of record for Anllelm-baaed
ALS Government Prodact1.
ALS Government Products manu-
factures high-level transistorized
power conversion equipment for
government and military appli-
cations. • • •
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
For The Rest of Your Lile
1922 HARBOUL'ltf., COSTA MESA-~8-1156
NEW YORK (AP) -Eugene Jennings, wh<? ~a~
spent his adull life studyin$ leadership aod advtS1ng
leaders on its effccti ve practice, is bothered by what he
observes today in the White Houi;e.
"I\ is akin to the tortoise loolc..ing after the hare,"
said Jennings, who advises corporate and govcmment
MUTUAL FUNDS
(Pleue Ne UAOAft/87).
... VAULTS-LOCKERS-SAFES!
llW LO-COST ON-SITE RENTALS ~TRAVEL GUARD AGAINST FIRE/THEFT
WE ALL NEED PRIVACY & SAFETY
~BUSINESS & TRAVEL HUB
Aviation firm plans
$2 million expansion
f~~,~~~ 2156 NEWPORT BLVD CM 860-1500
The new owners of Tallmanl2
A viatioo arc planning a 12-monlh,_$2
million expansion program, which
they say wi ll make the company~
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ORANGE COUNTY
""' ••<l•lftrt hv Wfttt411m AUOl'•1'lt00 nt Sl'honla MHl I Oll"llfl'
f1111n• 11141 851 4300•0rq• 17141 851 4)52 •El Toro 014185 1 11/B
le>t Al•mtto• f71 41 861 4356 01 1~131 594 4 114
"
1
leader in providing jct maintenance
and tic-down services at John Wayne
Airport_
Tallmantz Aviation, a foundcT o(
Orange County aviation, will nearly
double its hangar space with the
34.000-5<1uare-feet construction pro-
ject. scheduled for completion early
next year.
The additional hanpr space will
make it the largest fixed~based oper-
ator at the airport, accordi114 to Marty
Cooper ofTallmantz AviatJon.
Cooper and Chuck Seven, presi-
dent of the company, headed the
Ori.nae County business aroup,
which purchased the firm from the
Frank Tallman family.
The company plans funher ex-
pansion. including additional lie-
down and hanpr space as well aa a
two-story, 14,"000-5<1uare·foot COT·
porate jet center.
Tallman A viationJ. besides provid-
ina tie-down apace tor SO corporate
and private jets and I$ transient
aircraft. proV1dea ator:qe, fuel and
maintenance scrvi0C1 for 11e~I Or-
anae County law enforcement •n-cies aircraft.
The company, the !a!Jnt paru
d11tributor for Huahea Hehoopten in
the Umtcd States, iJ involved in
neaoti•tions with m~or independent
aircraft manufacturen to RI up
ICT'Vice and maintenance facilities.
~ calls the new oompuy'1
plana a step into a new en.
Cooper aaid many of tbt com-
pany's facilities will be tom down and
renovated to brina it into Une with
John Wayne Airport'• increuina role
u an ''intematJonaJ center fot com.
mercial, printe a.net corporate aar
travel." /
~_,.
iL----------------------------------------------------~~~~~-~---
•
Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 9. 1886
Lorimar plans merger
CULVER CITY (AP)-Lonmar
the entertainment and communica:
uoos conalomerate that has been ~sivefy eitpanding for two years,
said it has •arced in principle lo be
meraed into Telep1ctures Corp.,
another enteruunmenl concern.
REGAN CRAMPS REAGAN •••
From pace 86
In the While House, he said, "Reagan the leader
doesn't understand manqcrsh1p any more than
Rea.an the manager understands Reagan's typc of
leadership "
It wasn't immediately clear which
company would emerge as the domi-
nant concern in the stock-swap deal,
valued at about $306 million.
"It appears Lorimar will be folded
into Telepictures, although most
people would have eitpected it lo go
the other way," said industry analyst
Harold V?f.el with Merrill Lynch in
New York. 'It's not all lhal clear what
1s happening."
Ashland
announces
a~quisition
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
Ashland 011 Co. said 11 had s1gne
an agreement to acquire the J.l
Balcer Chemical Co. from Rict
ardson-Vicks Inc. as pan of a strateg
of eitpanding its operations 1n th·
specialty chemicals field.
Terms of the sale were not dis
closed and Ashland said completior
of the transaction is subject tc
approval from government regu.
la tors.
Baker's worldwide operations gen-
erated annual sales of more than $80
million for Richardson-Vicks, a
produ~r of consumer health prod-
ucts.
Ashland and Richardson had
suspended d1scuss1ons about a poss-
ible deal last year but renewed the
talks in July at Ashland's reQuest
Ashland, based 1n Ashland, Ky .. 1s
a leading refiner of petroleum prod-
ucts and has mterests in chemicals.
coal, cngin~nng services and high-
way construction.
John Hall. tts chairman, said the
purchase would broaden Ashland's
hne ofhigh-punty chemical products
for the electronics. semiconductor,
laboratory and other specialized mar-
kets.
The acqu1s111on includes Baker's
headquarters and manufacturing
plant in Phillipsburg, N.J.; plants.in
Jackson, Tenn.; Hayward, Calif.;
Deventer, the Netherlands; and Mex-
ico City; and sales offices in Singapore
and Gross Gerau. West Germany.
(~ lllJH:I •l1ihJ
Pct. 8: ~ Up UP Up Up Up UP Up
~~ u: Up UP ~~
on 1Ssues and people Spokesman for lhe companies de-
clined to elaborate on their bnef
announcement and said no ad-
ditional details would be available
until after the companies' boards
meet.
Peter Temple of Telep1ctures said
Monday's release was made only
because of speculation that touched
off heavy trading in the stocks begjnnin~ Friday.
Lonmar. based in the Los Angeles
suburb of Culver Ctty, 1s creator of
such h11 TV scnes •s "Dallas,"
"Falcon Crest" and "Knot's Land-
ing ..
For the nine months ended Apnl
27. Lonmar earned $!7.4 m1lhon on
sales of $302.2 million. a substanual
increase over previous penods. For
all offiscal 1984. the company earned
S 11 .6 million on revenues of $263.2
million.
But Donald Rea.an. former Treasury \CCret.ar)
and chairman of Memll Lynch. 1s a proven leader,
frnnrngs was reminded Yes. he agreed. but added
that there 1s a b1a d1fferen~. which he would eitplain
later.
urc, be sa1d, the advisers often dJucRicd but
that ~lowed 1~uC'S to be at.red and perm1n;d the
president to step m and maJce the decta1oos, thus
re1nforc1na the public imqc ofa man 111 control .
The system permitted a looseness and lO-
novauveness that actually extended lhe power of the
president, Jenn1np continued. The president, be said.
could lead throu&h bis advisers.
By midday Monday, Lonmar''i
stock, traded on the American eit-
change, rose about $2 per share above
its Friday close of $31 .621/i. Tele-
pictures. traded over the counter,
dropped about $2 from its Fnday
close of$ J 8. I 21h.
Under the merger plan, holders of
Lonmar's 7.67 m1lhon shares wall
rece1 ve 2. 2 shares of Telepictures for
each Lonmar common share they
own
What's important, he stressed, 1s that Regan the
manager is limiting the effectiveness of Reagan the
leader. He is overcontrolhng a man whose first-term powereit~eded that of any president bat k to Franklin
Roosevelt, he said.
In that first term, said Jennrngs, Reagan's
leadership was allowed to comm un1cau.· free!}. A tnad
of advisers resulted in overlapprng strengths that
offset weaknesses and offered a mult1·pronged attack
It was a sys~m. he sa1~ that allowcc;f for
creattvny It was informal enouah to allow art1cula-
t1on and discussion.True, mistakes and pffs result.ed,
but JO Jennings' oprn1on they did hnle to diminish
prcs1den11al power.
Over at the Treasury, however, Rcpn the
manager viewed such a system as one filled with boles
that required plugging. To him, Jennings speculates, n
wa~ a slopp) opcrat1on. one he knew how lo clean up
...
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WEllElllY'I OLOllll PllGll
Market advances slightly
NEW YORK (AP) -1 he st~k market
advanced slightly today 1n a swirl of takeover
speculation. Ana1ystssa1d many traders were busy trying to
search out the next "deal" stock, whose price might
Jump on news of a merger, acquisitio~ or buyout
Otherwtsc. they said, a cautious mood
continued 10 prevail about prospects for the
economy, corporate earnings and the stock
market. • Once the battle an Congress over the federal
budget and debt ceiling 1s resolved, Wall Strcci
expects the Treasury to come into the credit
markets wath a heavy schedule of new debt
secunues.
If that go vernment borrowing puts upward
pressure on interest rates, brokers say, 11 could aJso
ha\e an adverse effect on stock pnccs.
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK CAPl Oct. 9 Prev. ··~
AMEX LEADERS .. .. . . . .
Wednetdav price and net chel'loe' of lhl 10 m 0 I f •CllVt AmtrlCll\ SlocX ExcNno. Issues, tradlno nallonah t i more lh1n l l. ~~Hldo lveeumr2~'~ AT Ind 3:\lo 1nol1b8 , 16~ + 'I• Wick.. , 4 ~,bf~~, : n~ 12~ I 11rt1I , 6:V. ,,_ '°"' Hold 41iJ.OO n~ 3'11 ~~:,, 'i.Soo I 1S-Jt_ -1-16
CoLD QuorEs
METALS QuorEs
NEW YOAK (APj -SOOI _,,.,._ ,,...., ptlOle
WeelneecMy ......,_ • U .M '*11• per po.;nd, NY C-. 9C)OI
NEW YORK (APl Oct. 9 T~\ ~,
NYSE LEADERS
w::/;~e~0S:1"c. ~~1neli;t1~,::· of4t~-1'~ most active New York Stadt Exi:Nnge ~·~s. lrtdlno natloneltv 11 more then 11. e::-~10 s. ' v~,~~t ITT orp l, , flt AMI nc 1, , VJ 11 ... Gouldlnc 1, 7, ~ _,,,_
81nkAm1r 1, + 1.4 HtwletlPk ~ ~-~~IKrft s ~ + 1~
HC'Ahern Co lili ±. ¥:
Revlon I, l\ + YJ Norlnd PS ~ -We
Humana ~~11/.o • -1 ~~ Gen Motors Vt
Anhlu1r t_ AmerT&T
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
NEW YORK !AP) -FIMI oow-JOMS
ft
vur/ for Wlilv. Jl:!:. 9
lfid 1324. , . ~+ . ~~J m~1 mflJ.tl ~~~~k .Vl11
NASDAQ SUMMARY
"'°"'" dOMd Tu. NEW YORK (AP) -Most •ctlv• ovtr-~ • M'IMt '*'"•pound us 0111111a11ona -lhe·counltr 1loc:k.1 suPOlled bv NASO. e-. e 1 &$ 1*11• per pound. NY C-x 9!>01 LA'1'tr
rnon1h ~Tue. ,!!~ V Allred CM. LllM -19oen1Upound Ase'.,. l• , ~ ~ ~ ~~,;o'3~~-=-~t1pr10ep.. lb l Pntollf\ a ' !Vt = !'! .._·at a&& Pl' -Hendy & Htn!WI NlwkS s v. -2,,_ .._. M 2n I* lroot -·NY eom.• llPOI month ~ti 1,-. _ Y'J
aloeed Tu.. Joa
--, • 1320 004330 oo Pl' re •b 11e111. ~ YOt'I cvMo j -IJt ,...,_ • l30e 00-13, 2 oo ~IC rnerehln' ••oy •t'ldem 1r _ VJ
-.NY Lln&rd 7' , +2'.4 _ ____ Qvotrn 6 • -_ -,,_
f amou~ 1a b<ll.S -. _ ~
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mon t!1nJ fh 10t.o9. ~tuidl'ly 10t.o6 t. ~r'doy noot) to~
l1ilyPllat WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1986
Country mualc atara ahare potato NIH recipe. C4.
Flah fllleta fancied with a fllllp of artlatry. Cl
Make Mine Convenient
But Make It With Style
Look outside! ls the day bright and sunny with a lazy warm breeze that cries out for a picnic?
Or, is tonight's dinner a bit more formal and better served inside?
With today's convenience foods, choices such as when, where and how a meal is to be served are
easily made and just as easily changed to suit the mood of the moment.
Casual or elegant, at home on the terrace or outdoors on a picnic blanket, it's style that counts.
The following menus make the most of simple foods delightfully and deliciously served.
You'll find foods such as Alaska ca nned salmon and canned Bartlett pears invaluable for
spur-of-the-moment meals. T hey remain ready on the shelf and the quality and flavor of both
foods belie their simple canned origin. ·
Alaska canned salmon offers the j uicy rich flavor of salmon preserved within just a few hours of
harvest. Highly versatile canned salmon is an ideal "fast food" to turn into salads such as the
Salmon Picnic Salad shown here or as an entree in the second menu.
Canned Bartlett pears bring the classic flavor and texture of poached pears to desserts and
salads with none of the difficulties of ripening or cooking.
Outdoor Picnic
Salmon Picnic Salad
••••••••Quick and Elegant Pear Dessert ••••••••
Our outdoor picnic is a warm-weather feast designed for travel. The main course salad is a
delightful assortment, assembled at the site, of Alaska canned salmon, artichoke hearts, avocado
and tomatoes with a tangy vinaigrette dressing. Simply bring a chilled can of salmon (don't forge!
the can opener!), the jar of artichoke hearts and all the o ther prepared ingredients -no
refrigeration is needed for summer food safety.
The dessert is an elegant Bartlett pear compote laced with orange liqueur and served in pastry
shells baked earlier. Just remember to carefully pack the shells to prevent breaking. Make the
compote ahead, chill and carry it to the picnic in a leak-proof container, then fill the shells with the
mellow sweet pear mixture just before serving. The results? A picnic with convenience and great
style.
Salmon Picnic Salad
can (1 5-1/2 ounces) salmon*
j ar (6 ounces) martnaled
artichoke hearts
J/3 cup white wine vinegar
I medium avocado
2 tablespoons each minced
parsley and green onion
1/4 teaspoon each basil a nd
o regano, crushed 12 cherry tomatoes
Lettuce leaves 1/8 teaspoon pepper
At Home Preparatio ns: Thoroughly chill salmon, artichoke hearts, avocado, tomatoes and
lettuce. In small jar, combine vinegar, parsley, green onion and seasonings; chill.
At the Picnic: Open salmon; drain and break into chunks with a fork. Drain artichoke hearts
and add marinade to vinegar mixture in jar. Peel and slice avocado. Let each person arrange
salmon, artichokes, avocado and tomatoes on lettuce leaves. Shake contents of jar thoroughly;
drizzle over salad. Makes 4 servi ngs.
Utensils to Include In picnic basket: Can opener, small knife and small cutting board.
* Two cans (7-112 or 7 -3/ 4 ounces each) salmon can be substituted.
Tip: Sliced cucumber and pitted ripe olives can be included in Salmon Picnic Salad.
I
1/2
1
Quick and Elegant Pear Dessert
package (10 ounces) frozen
patly shells*
can (29 ounces) BarlleU pnrs
cup fresh strawberries, quartered
o range, peeled and cut
into chunks
1/2
1/2
2
2
cup grttn grapes
cup Heh pear liquid
and orange juice
teaspoons cornstarch
tablespoo ns orange liqueur
Bake pally shells according to package directions. Cool. Drain pears; reserve I 12 cup liquid. Slice
pears if necessary. Combine all fruits. Combine pear liquid, orange juice and cornstarch: mix well.
Cook and stir until mixture boils and thickens; cook I minute longer. Add liqueur; cool at room
temperature. Add to fruit and mix to coat fruit. Spoon fruit mixture into cooled pally c;hells just
before serving. Makes 4 servings.
* Leftover baked patty shells can be stored in air-tight container or frozen in freezer-proof
conl$liner.
Dinner at Home
Crisp Pear Salad
Salmon and Creamy Pasta
French Bread
Ice Cream and Cookies
When time is important but you still need a dinner with n a1r. remember th1' q~ l1c;h menu Begin
with Crisp Pear Salad-mellow canned Bartlett pears ac .. ented "'ith 'P"·' rad1,he' and green
pepper and a pear vinaigrette-to tempt the nagging appetite\ of 'ummer
Follow with the Salmon and Creamy Pasta. The pasta '>auce '" a deli .. ate but rich hlend that
perfectly sets off the wine-marinated Alaska canned <,almon. herb' and Parmec.an ...:hee'e .\nd th1'
menu, using today's convenience products c;uch a' Alac;ka canned '>almo11 and canned Bartlett
pears, can be o n the table in Iese; than 45 minute\.
Cri sp Pear Salad
can (16 ouncec;I Bartlett pear hahe'i
cup tach thinl~ julie nned radhhe' and
green pepper
l~ttuce
Pear \"inai~relle
Drain pear<;; re'len e 2 1ahle<ipOl'n' 1tqu1J . ~hu: ~ 1de end\ L11 pear
halve~ verucall ) into ~ 'egmcnt\, do nl't ,1i1..·e thniutzh narro"' end-;
of pears. T O'i' radt,he' and green pep~r'. pla...:e on lettuce-lined
plaiter "l-an" pear haf\e, on rad1,h green peppl'r hed Dnnlc
Pear V1na1gre11eo,er pear' \1akc'~ 'en mg'
P~ar VinaigrttU: ( omhine 2 tahlc,r1)t'n' ~ach 'inl.C'gar. lemon
juice, oil and pear liqu1J and I 2 tea,roon tach 'alt anJ du,hed
thyme. ~ake' about I 2 dip
Salmon and C reamy Pasta
I C'1l n ( 15-1 2 ounch) 'almon. drained"'
1/2 cup d'1 white "ine
l /8 teaspoon pepper
J tablespoons butter or ma~arine. di"ided
2 tabltspoons nour
I /2 teaspoon salt
J /4 cup half-and-hair
1/3 cup milk**
2 tablespoons dn sher11
2 tablespoons chopped grttn onion
8 ounces dn spinach pasta. cooked and drained
2 tablespoons each mineflt parslt) and
grattod Parinesan cbttSe
Mannate <ialmon in "h11e wine and rerrer 5 minutec;. Melt 2
tablespoons butter: add nour and <.alt and cook until buhbly Add
half-and-half and mill.. "While s11mng O\.er ~ heat, cook and 'it1r,
until mixture com~ 10 boil Sur m shern: r~mO\.e from heal aute
green onion m I table.,.roon butter Remo\.e ..almon from marinade
with slotted spoon, add to onion mixture and heat Top cooked
pasta with cream sauce: 1op wllh <.almon mixture. prmkle parsley
and Parme-;an chee\e O\cr <,almon Make\ ahout 4 ervings.
• Two cam ( -1 2 or 7 3 4 ounce<, r«h) salmon can be sub-;t1tuted
•• Additional milk can he added to make a thinner aucc.
............................... ----------------------------------------------~~~---
•
;
C2 0renge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Ociobet 9, 1985
Southwest dishes keep getting
hotter in popularity and taste
USDA lDsp.-Golden Premium-~J Top Round
Save
. 80
per lb.
~r
lb.
1"'""11--.~i;....-....-:-:::;.... .......... :-:
Boneless Beel
Rump Roast
USDA IJ:up ·Gold•D h•mJum .... f Save RoWld
.JO l 49 per lb
i:;r •
-~
,. Ralpl).s
; White Bread
01 Wh901 SplJI Top 01 SandWICh
Save .59 16
24 o•
I oat
or h •ncb ColotnbaTd Cb•a.Ja l/cmc
Save up to 2.69 1.20
1.5 ltr
btl
In the Southwest, there arc many
varied cultural backgrounds and
lifestyles but in the region's
cookery, two ethnic flavors
predominate -Cajun and Mex-
ican.
And chicken is an important part
of each tradition.
The National Broiler Council
found that residents of the Soulh-
westjoined the rest of the nation in
their prcforence for fried and
barbecued chicken. But even these
Cal1JomJa
or CoW!IJ'y Styl•·R•tng•rat~
Buy8
Save s~s1 l.16
7!h o•
pkg.
9-Lives
Cat Food
Aslon.d 1'aYon
Save .29 .08
60 ..
can
two aJl-Amencan favorites arc
most often served hot and spicy,
frequently seasoned with red pep-
per or hot pepper sauce. Chicken
casseroles also reflect this regional
trait.
Chicken Jambalaya is a favorite
in Louisiana, the Mardi Gras state.
It is an early Cajun-Creole deriva-
tive of Spanish settlers' paella.
Below is a mild-flavored version
but those whose palate tolerates
even hotter foods may easily in-
crease the cayenne pepper and chili
powder.
Tex-Mex Chicken Casserole is a
variation of the popular Kina
Ranch Casserole. served throuah-
out the Southwest. This dish, too,
can become more pungent by usina
a hot picante sauce and a larger
amount of chili powder.
With more and more areas dis-
covering the pleasures of Southwest
cookery, Cajun and Tex-Mex
chicken dishes are being prepared
or Rl*g. or Diet Pepsi Fre• or Pepsi Ught or
Reg or Diet s.ztce or Mtn. D•w·12 0£ cans
per
lb
6
pack
Fresh Salad
Tomatoes
rum llif>9
.29
or lloo,.,.r Jac.t or Loagbom ai-
Tll.39
with coupon
Fresh Crisp
Cucumbers
each .19
CUmberland Hearth.side
stoneware
1'21.11 WH.t'1 F.afur•
Cup ~~-· 69 15.00 purcba,.
only •
Meat/Seafood Grocery Values Grocery/ Frozen Special Values
AJa&.tan·l'r•.iowJr Fto,.a
Halibut Steak
AJa&.tan.S11 .. •t·WbOI• 01 Hall Fresh Salmon
1'rNb Local
Swordfish Steak
':1 3.59
'7.:2.79
':' 3. 99
Dairy/Deli
~l'knon 3151 Ralphs Yogurt ,.,.
c:wp
f'Ub•ll.slJCM 1.19 Sandwich-Mate '~;
Rcwm.I '1.io'bl • Wcm" 1.29 SlJced Turkey .... _.,,
ltalpll6-C~ llOCGTOZJ.1 01 .89 Potato Salad ,. "" ,,.,
Hama.>l:Doall"\llff °' 1.99 Beel Frants """ _.,,
llalpll6~.,., 1'rNb .89 Buttenntzt ,,,.. -~ .... ..,.__..,, __ ............ _ •• ,.....,.. .... ·~ ......... ., ,. ............ ,.......,C-...................... . -e-----·-.. -··---o.ee C-0.,...... . . ·-.. """"" _ .... ._ .. ,....,. °" °""
S<>Ud WJJJ,. T'UDcr ta Wat•t 01 OU
Bumble Bee
SJDgl• Jlol/.lafhroom Tluu•
ScotTissue
'".:. 1.09
1000.: .52
'~ 23 t.:om Muff1n Mix ·~ .
Chij,p;a;~-;;"'~~ l.39
S.a.ca
Grape Juice
V•ro
Facial Tissue
.. :: l.29
UOct 63 ......
Prices Effective October 10 thru October 16, 1985
·-·-.. -·----··-f?i·---· 11 10• '-·-.. ---~-·-" .... It .... " , ............................. -c.1c ........ fJMf._...... .. ........................ . ....... ~ ......... .,..
~ "'6t:"·trwb kk0(1Wd Co# flaw 01 39 adMJ.% ::: .
llar»'I ~·U Oii.jar
Salad Dressmg -· l.59
ColottuM"a.
Garden Mums -. 99
OiiiiiPiCMeaiir~d . 95
.......... CJuamcm OI Powdered Donuts '!/, . 99
o.c-ar ~· ,..., 6alf1'1• 1Uf ,,_ Tasty Ltght Ham -r: 2.59
011ff'ioat .. -r: 1.29
IOrroot Pla:tn WrapGtn'•,,,: 6.98
SChO::l8iiHr ..: 2. 98
............. _...._ .. ..._. ....... --..... ·--............... ___ ,,_.... .... .. _...._ ... _ ........ _ ..... __ ..... _ -.. -
---.. .... -~-.....-..... --··-........... ...._
•
more frequently in kitchens across
the land.
CHICKEN JAMBALAYA
4 broiler-fryer c~ldea tMp1
4 broller-f ryer clllckea
d.ram1dckt
I 1llcea bacon
'>' cup pla1 i &abletpooa1 fi•r
1 '>' teaspoons ckl.U powder,
dlvlded t,'a tea1pooa cayeue
pepper
1 '>' teaapoon1 1alt, divided
"'-teaspoon black pepper
1 cup finely chpped Ollloa
1 cup finely claopped celery
1 cup cbopped IJ'ffD pepper
i cloves garlic, minced
1 can (%8 oance1) tomatoes
i cups clllcken broth
1 cup water
1 cap ancooked rice
1 &ableapoon Worceaterablre
sauce
'>' bay leaf
In large Dutch oven, cook bacon
over medjum low beat until crisp,
about 10 minutes. Remove bacon
from pan and set aside. Mix
together flour, 112 teaspoon of the
chili powder and cayenne pepper.
Sprinkle chicken with 112 teaspoon
of the salt and black pepper; dredge
in flour mixture to coat. (Reserve
remaining flour mixture.)
Place chicken in Dutch oven
over medium temperature and
cook, turning, about 15 minutes or
until brown on all sides; remove
from pan and keep warm. Reduce
temperature to low, drain off all but
4 tablespoons of dripp\ngs; add 4
tablespoons of reserved flour mix-
ture, stirring until dark brown to
make a roux. about 8 minutes.
Add onion, celery, green pepper
and garlic. continuing to stir for
about 5 minutes (vegetables will
remain slightly crisp). Measure
liquid from tomatoes and add
enough water to make 1 cup. Chop
tomatoes and add to mixture in
Dutch oven. Slowly stir in chicken
broth, tomato liquid, 1 cup of water
and rice.
Return chicken to pan and add
Worcestershire sauce and bay leaf .
Bring to a boil, reduce heat to
lowest setting. cover and simmer
about 45 minutes o r until rice is
done. Sprinkle with crumbled
bacon when ready to serve. Makes
4 servings.
TEX -MEX C HI CKEN
CASSEROLE
1 broiler-fryer clllckea, cooked,
1kl.Dned, boned and cat In cabe1
~ tea1pooa ult
1 tea1poon cblli powder
% tablespoons cooking oil
1 cup cbopped onion
a;, ~up chopped IJ'ttn pepper
'>' teaapoon camln
1 teaspoon parsley
J can (15 OUCH) Spanl1b·1tyle
tomato sauce
1 package ( 1 •;, oonce1) &aco
1eaaonln1 ml.I
1 can (11 011.11ce1) refried beu1
•;, cup plcute aauce
i cup1 1bredded Monterey Jack
cbeeae, divided
'>' cup 1oar cream
1 package ( 10 COGDt) &aco 1bell1,
cru1bed, divided
l avocado, 1Uced data
Sprinkle freshly cooked, warm
chicken cubes with salt and chili
powder. In frypan, place oil and
heat over medium temperature.
A~d. onion . and green pepper,
shmng until done,• about 5
minutes. Add cumin and panJey,
then tomato sauce. Stir in taco
seasoning mix and cook about 3
minutes.
In smalJ bowl, mix together
refried beans and picante sauce. In
another small bowl, mix toaether I
cup of shredded cheese and sour
cream. In 37~egree oven, heat
crushed taco shells; top with half of
chicken cubes. Spoon half of
tomato sauce mixture over
chicken. Cover chicken with all of
refried bean mixture and spread
sour crcam<heesc mixture over
beans. Arrange avocado slices over
ch~sc mixture, add remainina
chicken and top with remaining
tomato sauce mixture.
Place in 375-dearee oven for
about 25 minutes; remove from
oven and sprinkle with remainina
crushed taco shells and cheese.
Return to oven for 10 minutauntiJ
cheese melts and casserole is bubbl·
ing. Makes 6 servings.
'Veally' quick
Sl.ILLET VEAL CHOPS
1 rtb veal ... (aMwt '4 ,.._
total)
l &abletpooa alJ.-,.,,... .....,
Salt ud ,.,,er s. eute
1 ea yelk lteaae. wtdl 1 tale-
1peoa wattr
I tUletpeeu fbte •ry fined
enmbt
t taMetpooa INtter
Use cbopt without .. taill." Coat
chops with a mixture of Oour, aa.lt
and pepper. Dip in ea·Yolk m~
ture, then in bread crumbs. In 1 I 0-
inch Wllet over moderate beat. in
the hot butter brown choPI -
about I 0 m inutes o n each aide.
{'over and cook aenlly until tender
-20 to 30 minutes. Serve at once .
Orer.gie Cou1 DAILY PILOTIWesJMlday, Octow e. 1986 ca
Cut back on that culprit excessive caffeine
By PAT REMMELL, MS beverqes depends upon the types of cotree bean, tea leaf con1umptJon within the upper level• of tb11 ran,e some Ounce for ounce, the caffeine content of sof\ dri.nka 11
••• ••....... or cocoa bean and the method and lentth ofbrewina. all of people report unplcuant l)'tnptoma: headache, irritab1li-leu than enher coffee or \ti, a 12--ounce eervina of 10CDe
, In a t)'l>ical year half the world's coffee ia sold 10 the which makes it difficult to be prcci1e about the catfeine ty. aleep ditturt>.ncet and stomach upset. providJna an amount roU&hly equivalent to a kunce cup
Un1te;ct States, provtdina the sreatett source of caffeine in content of an "averqe" cup orbeveraae you consume. While cb.Udreo and youna adults drink leu coffee and of weak tea or cocoa. or 'I ounon of chocolate candy.
our diet. The remainder of caffeine we consume 11 food Nonetheles!J a11ume your caffeine intake from coffee tea. they consume a lot of soft drlnkt and other foods with Mcdicauons need to be conaidercd, too. Many over·
come1 from tea, soft drlnka, cocoa and chocolate. to be anywhere ttom 7 S milli&ram1 for a 6-ounce cup of caffeine. the-<Ount.er and pretCnptlon dnap conllin lizable
About 30 percent of ou.r population drin.kJ each day in1tant brew to rouahly twice tbe amount for other brews. On a body-weiaht ba1i1, caffeine from soft drinb 11 amounts of caffeine, and include popular products aucb u at lea11 s c f .__ Althou&h dry tea contain• more caft'eine by weiaht hi&best amona one to S-year-oldl. Since the effect of weiabt control aids, 1iay-awake iableu1 diuretics and ups 0 COugig or tea, or both. Aa many 11 one in than dry coffee, uaually you will conaume let• caffeine in calfeine it dependent in put on body wei&ht. a 12-ounce pain, headache, cold and alleraY medicauon1. Check the :g rg~~;~? ~us:; =y~OuDt of ~ffeine equivalent a cup of tea tioce a amaller amount Of product ii uaed. A cola drink may have the llrne effect on I youna child 11 4 non-prescription drut label or aak your pharmacist.
On the whole women tend to take in more caffeine weak tea brow may contain around b&lf the caffeine of a cupa of coffee on an adult. No definite health riau have been identified for than . men, and people tend to increuo their intake of cup of inatant coffee; medium tea, about the ume u Any aoft drink wbicb baa the word "cola" or healthy people of all aaes wbo conaume caffeine in
caffeine until about aae 60 when tea more often instant coffee. "~;per" in lu name con taint a small proportion of moderate amounts. For aau1t1 this mean1 limitina intake aubttitutea for coffee 11 the main bot boverqe If your coffee or tea habit 11 around five cups a day, caffe1ne naturally prosent in kola nu ta u well at added to a daily maximum of 200 to 400 milliarams of Caffeine
The caffeine content of coffee. tea and cocoa your intake of caffeine from thete sources likely ~ caffeine. Caffeine u an i~ent in any soda beverqe from all source1. Hiah level1 ofintak.e-more th.an two or
Hunt for
venison
recipe
solved
When the hunters in your family
return home upon sucx:e11fully
bauina their trophy deer, the chef
ahould be ready to beain preparina
delectable veniaon di1he1.
You will find veniaon 1urpri1-
in&ly scrumptioua if prepared prop-
erfy -the Romertopf clay pot
method ai vea aood reaults. Its
popularity i1 ever increaaina l»
cauae food prepared in clay it
naturally low an caloriea and hiah in
nutritional value.
While the hunters decide how to
mount their trophy (don't foraet to
enarave the date on your plaque!),
the deer should be proce11ed im-
mediately to prevent spoilaac.
Veniaon ateala, roasts, chops and
sround meat should be wrapped
and frozen in portions suited to
your particular needs. Once the
meat it proceased and packqed, it
is time to brina out the Romertopf
pot and prepare a savory dish.
The secret to a flavorful
Romertopf meal lies in the qe-old
concept of clay cook.in& which dates
back to Roman times.
Alwaya soak your clay pot, both
top and bottom, for 10-lS minutes
immediately before use . The food.
filled pot it then placed in a cold
oven. As the temperature in the
oven rites and the food starts
cook.in&, the moisture retained in
the clay ia diffused all throu&hout
the pot.
The water molecules penetrate
the meat with several wonderful
benefiu. Finl, they act to break
down fibers and aasure tenderness.
Second they provide important
moistne11, which makes your meat
more succulent. Finally, the water
molecule• pick up the flavorinas
and seasorunp you have added and
cause them to penetrate the food.
unlike other cookina methods,
where the seasoninaa remain on the
outer surface of the meat.
Try the followina veniaon clay
pot dish, served with potatoes (or
dumplinp for a chanae), Brussels
sprouts and cranberry sauce, and
your Romertopf-prepared meal is
sure to become a family favorite!
ROMERTOPF VENISON
! poud1 veDJaon
~ plDt vlDeaar
1 oa.loa, dlopped
Marjoram, tl111me, uae
l bay leaf
Julper berrlea
i poa.nd1 veDJ1oa
1 oDJon
i tablnpoon1 batter
1. tablnpoon red carrot jelly
1 tablnpoon ma1tard
1 tablnpoon 1rated lemon rtnd
1 plDt 1oar cream
Cboppecl panley
Salt ud pepper
Remove all fat and bones from
the veniaon to lose the "game"
taste.
Prepare a marinade by boiling
the vinepr briefly with the
chopped onion and seasoninp.
Place the meat in the marinade
for about three days. Then remove
the meat, dry and lard.
Soak a 31/• quart Romertopf clay
pot, both top and bottom, for 10-1 S
minutes.
Place the marinated meat in the
soaked pot. Add the butter in small
pieces, the onion and the marinade.
Place the pot in a cold oven. Set
the temperature at 475 dqrees and
cook for two hours.
Remove the cover and carefully
drain off the liquid. Return the
meat to the oven, without the lid,
and allow to brown.
Strain the liquid throuah a sieve
and then mix with the currant jelly,
mustant, arated. lemon, 10ur crum
and plenty of chopped paniey.
Heat aentJr. to an even coo111tency.
Seuon with talt and pepper to wte. Serves 6 to 8.
There are teVml variations to
tbit venatile recipe:
•Marinate the meat in red wine
or buttermilk.
• lnaiead of la.rdina. lay thin
sltoea oft.con over the meal
•Add ~pound mUJbroomJ and
a little tomato puree.
•Peel and COft a few small apples
and put them to stew whole in the
liquid with the meat.
from about 200 to 7SO millip!m1. With caffeine mu1t be 1tated on the label. three cups of 1tron1 coffCf a day -1hould be cut back. ,l~~~~~==--===:.;......:::=-~-=-:::=E::=-;.:..:.:-=::::::-=.:;:.::.:..:~~=-=~~~~~~~~--==-::~-~~~=-=-=.L=-::=:::~::.:_::==-
CalH >mlo Gin 6-0z. Jar
JUMBO
WALNUTS c
LB.
SWMf
RED YAMS ..................................... LI. elf MA•INATmt AllTICHOKI HIAllTS '19 A.uor19d On loril
...... EA. e 6-INCH PHILODENDRON
•--"'"'· 'y ... • • ---1 ...IL -. • . -~ I ........
•UOIAllLI llAZ ...
GILLETTE
10 COUNT
REG. OA PIVOT I. 99
Walt Dlaney Vol. 9
FUN TO LEARN LIBRARY ......... 2.11
.......
PAMILY snAK
BEEF I 67 CHUCK L& •
1.99 4.oz.
ASSOln'ED
8-01. Auoned
ORV LOOK HAIR SPRAY., ........ 2.61
•llP llACK ••••
FROZEN 79 DEFROSTED L& •
( ••••• .. • a ) ... ....
•ICI Yllll8A•
MAltUKAN
12.7·0Z 95 BOTTLE e
W.1-Poc Mutubl Nori 10 Shfftt
DRIED SEAWEE0 ..... , .................. 71
........
c
LB.
LIMIT
4
ITALIAN MUWI
HOT OR I 99 MILD L& •
~ ~ 1• 2 oz
PKG
.....
EA .59
K1kkomon 8 5 ·0 1 6ottle
MILDER SOY SAUCE.. ............. 1.61
HOii.MiL
SLICID UCON
BLACK LABEL I A9 OR WRANGLER
I L8 PKC IA.
U.S.D.A. Choice hef loin Whole or Half
TRIMMeo TRI-TIP ROAST ............ la. 2.11 ,. ... ltMn sou•• s1Lv1• SALMON L& 2.89 lov•• Roch Freth
TU RKE Y WINGS OR DRUMS LB .69
"'
.... ....
LIMIT
2
-., 4-PACK
NOllTlllRN
LOOSE 9 GRADE A
CARTONS AVAtlABlE U. • Iii CUPO ........ ..
2.5-0Z. A9 ASSORTED
ASSTl) ' WHITE I 09 -..._ BATHROOM TISSUE •
I.St
ltll&S•U•Y
... llCH LOAP
12·0 Z. 99 CRUSTY •
lake-To-lok• 9-0 z 1 ••• EXTRA SHARP CHEDDAR
Alchs 12-0z '·" fURKEV VARIETY PACK
O.liclous i.21 HUGHES SWISS CHEESE LB
M4K>• or Bfff. 5-01 Pkg .59 FARMER JOHN BOLOGNA
l l b Pkg
CREAMETTES SPAGHETTI ·''
AUllT JIMIMA
IS.OZ. WAIPfLIS
O R 9-0Z
FRENCH
TOAST .99
A.in! Je'l'H"O 16 Oz Oro9 Or Bu,•erm1lk
PANCAKE SATTER .19
Or990" Forms 17 5 01
CARROT CAKE 2.19 ·m llOT ..CKl1S .
10.o z I 99 ASSOIUED e
q 01 .t.ssort.d
PROGRE SSO SOUPS
... 1
IS Nm
...... ml!.
AUl•IL,_ .... •...... ,
ltGHT
Wl ACC[PT DOUDll . TRIPU and PRODUCT
COUPON-, f ROM All OTHCR SUPlAMAAK lT~ HIADQUARTIRS
12-~CAHS 2.98 ~3A9
79C).MI. •M N() AlCOHOl ST. ltEGtS WINE .................... .. = lAIEl CHAMIW)NE ......................... 1.et
L FOii
LOI llllY
ftCKllS
,
·''
C4 0'1lnge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedne9day. Octobet a. 1985
Whistle favorite country music
While fixing Judd family recipe
Singing duo says, 'For extra nutrition
leave potato skins in grandma's salad'
voice is lower, rd naturally go into
harmony. Wejustkeptdoint.itand
getti~ better and better,' says
Naomi.
The Judds admit they sull have to
pinch themselves to believe what
has happened to them. They've just
recently cut a new record album
which 1s "so hot off the turntable,
that it doesn't have a title yet."
The Judds' story sounds like a
COUDU)' music song. This beautiful,
red-haired mother-daughter team
onoc turned to sinaina for amuse-
ment on the back porch of their
Kentucky home that bad no phone,
no TV and a wringer washer.
Then they took a wild chance and
plunged into the Nashville music
scene, only to emerge as the
country's hottest duo.
"Everyone figured we were a little
crazy back in 1983 when I d.raucd
my daughter Wynonna and her
acoustic guitar into a Nashville
record.in& studio for a live audi-
tion," said Naomi. Wynonna
added, "I was only 18, and what did
I know? I remember leaning over
and whispering, 'ls this a micro-
phone, Mama?" Within an hour,
the two had a recording contract
and within a year, they had won the
Country Mwsic Association's pres-
tigious Horizon Award.
"We bad never been to an awards
show before," said Naomi. "When
they were about to announce the
Horizon A ward, I was looking over
at another nominee to see his
reaction when he won. Then when
they called 'The Judds,' I whipped
around so fast, I about snapped my
neck offi"
"Alabama was sitting in front of
us, and they said their ears were
ringing from all the screaming."
said Wynonna.
This year The Judds arc nomi-
nated for three awards and are
scheduled to perform on "The 19th
Annual CMA Awards," sponsored
by Kraft and broadcast live from
Nashville at 9 p.m. Monday on
Channel 2.
The Judds credit their success
with a mixture of luck. bard work
and a special closeness they share.
"When we're singing together. l can
raise my eyebrows when I look at
Wynonna, and she knows to go up,"
explains Naomi, "We're almost
telepathic in that regard."
Their likes and dislikes reach
beyond the music world to encom-
pass almost everything that's a
matter o f taste. The two love to
cook. And, being traditional, down-
home women, they value family
recipes that have been passed from
generation to generation.
"My mama was a cook on a
n verboat in Tennessee," says
Naomi. "lf anyone knows her way
around a kitchen, she does. She's
my favonte cook in the whole
world."
"Cenain foods have cenain
memories," says Wynonna, "and
when I think of Grandma's potato
salad, it reminds me of church
functions and family gathenngs."
The Judds' Family Potato Salad
makes a tasty and festive-look.mg
dish for all occasions. The secret is
in the sauce that combines French
dressing, mayonnaise and mustard.
The cooked cubed potatoes are left
unskinned ?or additional nutrients.
Ashley (now a fashion model), and
returned to the South.
The move to Morrill, Ky. ("a
town of about SO, and most of them
cousins," says Naomi). left Wynon-
na without a TV or telephone. One
day she picked up he~ mother's
guitar a.nd turned to music to amuse
herself.
"As the years went by, I'd teach
her the words to songs. Because my
...-------::::::::::=--==:::::: -------------~ ---= ----------
THE JU DDS' FAMILY
POTATO SALAD
.,; cap French clret1lD1
t table1poon1 mayomaaJae
1 tableapooa prepared ma1tard
BUY YOUR
CALIFORNIA
LOrl'ERY
TICKETS AT
ALPHA BETA
24 oa bottle
MA.ZOLA
CORN
OU.
e oa tar
Dec:aa.l.Dated
llAXWELL
HOUSI
DIST.AMT corm EA.
32 oa bottle
HIJNZ
ICIG 0'
DTCHUP
6oa~ AalolWd~ ..
Iii if
CJIOCDR STUFFING
MIX
MEAT SPECIALS!
"Everytime I go to mama's, I
know I can find her potato salad 1n ~
the green bowl on the second shelf
of the refrigerator," says Naom1.
Having had an upbringing that ------------------
provided a strong base, Naomi is
devoted to simple, country living.
In the I 970s, she was a divorced
Kentucky country girl, adrift in Los
Angeles and worlcing as a model
and secretary while trying to sup-
pon her two dau~ters. She didn't
like what city livmg was doing to
Wynonna and younger sister
.,; tea1pooa ult
t CGpt C9bed cooked potatoea
.,; c•p celery 1Uces
"' c1p cHpped 1weet pickle•
i banl-eeokect eu•. chpped
Lettllce
Combine dressing, mayonnaise,
mustard and salt; mix well. Add
potatoes, celery, pickles and eggs;
mix Liahtly. Chill. Serve in lettuce·
lined bowl. 8 servings.
Varlatioaa: Add 6 crisply cooked
bacon slices, crumbled. Substitute
green peppers for celery and red
onions for pickles.
27
IA.
L.
? oa No Salt Com
6 oa No Sa1t or SCllted
HI.I.
NATURAL
STYLI
CHIPS
PRODUCE SPECIALS!
'
Give v;.'letable
Orlen slant
iTrni' iiiiSAGi.................................... 19!. ~ Jt<>'l'A'l'C>i!I .......................... 99~.
SESAME BROCCOLI
l ~ poud1 broccoli (I bucb of t
to S 1talk1)
I tablespoon 1esame oil
MILK Fm VL\L ICA' 14PIHI ............ 5 '!.
rRilH PACIFIC SHARK ftllll ....... 34! nm RA:iilow TROUT........... .......... I'!
CCoi:OiWCIUoalllRIJO.......... ......... . .. 3 '!
Rm YAMl ........................................ 39~.
iiuiiii0o111 ............. \•···················· 79!.
RID GllAPll .................. ~ .......... 69~.
Quart llae • AD Dcnoll J29 11.J....NIDI NATURAL JVICD.............. IA.
·-
• •
89 18 OS. paQage
Aaaorted ...:a1etiM
MOTHIR'S
COOIDll IA.
~ -~~ I i-5!!!!'~,., .... -:::'!:" 69
m • •11001t CllDll .............................. 2 u .
..,... "''teoc'W cam ...................................... 2.19u.
M ~ • IAVI UP 10 l .00
... ..... CMclHr Of Noo-.r Jack 3" LAD 'IO un Clllill....................... IA.
I <Na. • IAVI 4't 9fto AJ.N llOORtKD IJJCID IWlll.... 71A.
12 otmot • IAVI 4'f l" IOllDDI Clllill FOOD IDIGUI... ...
U o.e» • IAVI,.. 2 '' PlllCIOVI mconA C11•m............. ... l tabletpooDI letame leffl
1 tabletpooD IO)' IAIC'e • IAYIHW 111.ATl lO PUV!OUI ALP'KA HTA rmcJ OI W1 DA1I PllOI TO OOTlAL ma HDOCTION rxa.usrn or A.OVU'nAD OI PIOMOTfONAI. "1CU
Strip leaves from broccoli. Cut
stalks an inch below the flowercts
and separate them. With a swivcl-
blade vcactable peeler, peel stalks;
on the d.iaaonal slice thinly. Boil or
steam flowercts and slicct until
tcnder-<risp.
Heat aesame oil in a skillet or
wok over hiah heat for 1' seconds.
Add sesame 9Cedt and broccoli.
Stir-fry until heated throuah. Re-
move to a aervina ditb and spnnk.lc
with soy sauce. Makes 4 serv1np.
Orengeeo.t OAJLY PILOTIW~. OctoOlrt, 1-C9
Cream crowiled
The world's richest double cream
of Devon, EnaJand, is superbly
blended wtth the warmth of Scotch
whiskey and J' ust a aoupcon of French bran y in Devonshire
Royal Cream Liqueur.
Devonshire Royal Cream
Ligueur is deliabtr~ straiabt or as.a
refrelbmcnt over aoe. fi also 11
excitina for mixina. Served in
coff'eel over ioe cream or frozen in choco ate cordial cups.. the quality
uniqueness is not diminished.
Restaurant-style ribs are
talk of happy hour crowd
Iu resultina depth of flavor
uti1ftea ~ the ~sons _you enjoy
cream liqueur. n cb full-bodied
creaminess laced with a gentle
spirited taste.
Charles Jacquin et Cie, an inter·
national wine and spirit company,
made an exhaustive worldwide
search and finally selected Devon,
Enaland u the premier source in
the world for cream.
Most cream contains 35 percent
butterfat while the Devon cream
comprises 48 percent. The reason
for this superb quality is the unique
lushness of the Devon countryside.
DEVONSJURE ROY AL
CREAM CUSTARDS
In electric blender, combine 1 cup°\,~~ or wbippiJla cream or half and ., if preferred), ~ cup
Devonshire Royal Cream Liqueur
and 3 eggs. Blend on hiah speed lO
seconds. Pour into four 6-ounoe
custard cups, divi~DJ . equally.
Place cups in shallow baki.na dish.
8yCltCILY8ftOWNSTONE "' .......
DEAR CECILY: A cocktail bar
my fi;ienda and I sometimes go to
serves delicious Oriental.style ribs.
Do you have a recipe for ribs of this
kind?-PARTYOIVER.
DEAR PARTY GIVER: I loud
u eacellellt recipe for Oriea&al·
1tyle freU pert eparertbl ta "Rlbl"
bJ S.IU R. Frtedlud (Harm•y).
bve wlHly c'°9ea ud well·wrt~
tea redpet for aide dJ11tet, ulaft1 bred• ud ltbewitl, COIMl!mat1
ud d"ter11 -C.B.
SWEET-AND-SOUR
APPETIZER RIBS
4 tableepoou soy aaace
I tableepooa dry IMIT)'
I 'i'<I poud1 fred port 1parertb1,
Ctlt .. l·lac• pieeet
'i'<I c•p cora1wcb
Scape (abHt) con oU
Sweet-ud-SOV Sa•ce Mixture,
aee recipe
1 tablespoon con oU
Pour boiling water into dish to
reach halfway up custard cups.
Bake at 325 deareea 20 to 25
minutes, untiljustset Serve chilled
garnished with whipped cream. ~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~-
1'MI recipe takee a UnJe dolq
IHlt dae renltl are wol'G It ... RJbl"
11 aa attracUve papert.ack daa&
lacladet It Amertcaa and later·
aadou.I reetpee for rtbl u4 "fix·
ta11!' fte 1ecUoa1 oa "flxill11" t,', cap Waly tllced scallion ..
• 3 lb. bag
• Washington State
• Extra fancy
GOLDIN DELICIOUS
APPLES
o ounce Mloned ftlMtSel
JOHNSTON'S
PRDIJUll
10CIVRT
l 9 m . paclaq•
TOllATOIS
IA.
J os package
• a: 7
DANO LA
SIJCED
HAM
BUY ONE,
GET ONE FREE
79
IA.
FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS! ITALIAN SPECIALS! ----~ ~....._---~
16 OI. P«t'ioe • taobe A.l • SAVI l4t 69.0 DWHll 11 oa ILIOW llACAllOlll IA.
U cm. • ~ 9IClllMMI • SAVI 40t J19
PRICIO IPMIHll ii IAUCI.................. IA.
11 ca. cca • UHded ........ • IAVI 12t afto CllO ~a JlAVIOU............. Y&A.
U•;;;m •~•U.Vll.. 3fi0 LAW ~·ii IADCI lllZ... IA. "-~~·a=· .. VI,.,. 2 29 lllCllAKL A + .0'1 lhiUD....... IA.
r. J
. --C-I ·w i ..... ·--. .. _ ,,. \ r-.. ,
•
100 1aba.tl •• 9141 14!. llATUU MADI VITAMIN C. -
llTllf. lattef* Uld\ldlld 629 DOU.I.All P'LASllLIClllT... . IA.
Quart • lOW.O oc JOWIO l°' c.unot crrx 11oroa on................. IA.
IOOOOWlt•~ aao ICONO eona FILTDI........ u.A.
10 lb. " •cat bas lllN«beat 3" &II &IT CAT Ui ID........................ IA.
l'lllCll CIOOD IWUllDAY
TllllU WIDllllDAJ'
OCT.10 tillOUQB OCT.16, 198S
AT ALL SOOTHEIN CALIFORNlA
ALP1JA llTA UAIDTS
In a l.arse bowl, stir totether to)'
sauce and 1berry. Add ribs: tou lO
coat well. Marinate at least 30
minutes. Place coroatarch in a
plutic food baa. Drain ribs; reserve
marinade to U.tC in Sweet-and Sour
Sauce Mixture.
Add ribs to com1tarch; shake
vi&orously. Remove and shake
each rib to remove excess corn-
starch -ribs should be liahtly
coated. Pour 3 cups oil in&o a l ()..
inch skillet -oil should be about
112-inch deep.
Heat over mcdium·h.iah beat to
3 SO degrees. Fry a few ribs at a time,
turning occasionally, for 3 or 4
minutes. Drain in a sin&le layer on
paper towels. Prepare Sweet and
Sour Sauce Mixture. Just before
serving, reheat oil over medium·
high heat to 350 degreel.
Re-fry ribs a few at a time, for 1 or
2 minutes or until golden brown.
Drain on paper towels. Pour off oil
and wipe out skillet with paper
towels. In the skillet heat I table·
spoon oil over mcdium-hiah heat;
add scallion. Stirring often, cook I
minute.
Restir Sweet-and Sour Sauce
Mixture; add to skillet. Stirring
constantly, bring to a boil and boil l
minute. Add ribs; toss to coat well.
Stirring often, cook until heated
through. Serve immediately with
cocktail picks and lots of paper
napkins. Makes 6 servings.
Sweet-ud Sou Saace Mlstve:
ln a small bowl stir together 3
tablespoons sugar and 2 teaspoons
cornstarch. Gradually stir in re-
served Marinade. 3 tablespoons
cider vinegar, 3 tablespoons water
and I tablespoon sesame oil until
smooth; set aside.
Lactose
problem
doesn't
nix milk
Lactose intolerance docs not
translate into milk mtolerancc and
for people who confuse the two, it
can mean the difference between
healthy and broken bones. acoord·
mg to the Amencan Society for
Bone and Mineral Research
(ASBMR).
"Lactose intolerance 1s the in-
ability to normall y digest a sugar
found m milk called lactose," said
Fred Smger, M.D .. a bone and
mmeral re~rcher and member of
ASBMR.
"ff you've been diagnosed as
lactose mtolerant and consume a I large amount of milk at one sitting.
excess stomach gas, diarrhea or
cramps can result.··
However. according to Singer,
fermented milk group foods such as
yogurt and cheese ha ve very little
lactose and are comfortably
digested by those diagnosed as
lactose intolerant. Y ogun and
cheese also provide calcium, the
maJor nutrient found 10 milk.
Mil k group foods account for
about 75 percent of the calcmm 1n
the American diet. Calcium 1s
necessary for developing and mam-
taming healthy bones and teeth.
"As a matter of fact. even small
amounts of milk -six to eight
ounces at a ume -can be safely and
comfortabl y digested by individ·
uals diagnosed as lactose in-
tolerant." Singer said.
Daily calcium intake 1s espcctally
".It.al for women. who ~ suscep-
tible to osteoporosis. a painful
bone-lhinmng d.tscase that de-
velops over a long period of lime
wi thout symptoms until a fracture
occurs. h affecu one of four older
women in the United States and is
responsible for more than one
million broken bones each year.
If you arc diagnosed as lactose
intolerant and subsequently cut
dairy products out of your die~ then
your major source of calcium 1s
aone and rou may be set up for
osteoporosis later in hfe.
"There arc sources of calcium
other than dairy products to keep
bones strona." said Sinaer. 'These
include salmon with bones.
sardine&, tofu, bok choy, collards
and spinach. But these arc not likely
to be consumed every day, whereas
milk, cheese or yogurt are easily
consumed daily." '
The Recommended Dietary Al·
lowance (RDA) for calcium for
women aaes 19 throuah SO, is 1.000
milliar'am&. or about three milk
aroup ICT'vinp • day. One cup of
YOIUI'\. 1 Vi ounces of cbeete or one
cup of milk equals one milk IJ"OUP
aervina.
The caJcium RDAJ for teen~
females and po1tmcnopauaal
women art l ~ and 1,SOO milli· sram• rapective.ty. • Other previeatative meuura
u~ ~ indlldc daily wdabt uerda sucb u waWna or nannina no unoti'Wo
avolda.Dce of m111dolel o1 Vl\.o
&mini A and D in edditioo to d&ih
con1umption of calcium-rich
fooda..
•
f
R1ce salads ready after busy,day
Liabt main dilh aa1ad combinationa, which can be prepared in
advance in 30 minutes or leas. are a real boon for the busy cook. They're
limple, too, wbeo you beain with Iona pin and wild rice mixes.
Putcbue amobd turkey breaat and Swiu cbeete ftom the deli for
Wild Salad OD-The-Run. Diatioc:tively aeuoned rice• toued with a liJh t
vioaiareue make a perfect bue for the turkey a.iid cheese salad.
WILD AND CRUNCHY CHICI.EN SALAD
I~ e.pe waier
1 pacap (t oueet) loq IJ'abl ucl wild rtce
1 wp ..,... ... cooked claickn
I medlun carrotl, Uredded
1 np .,... 1Mu1 (cat lato l·lacll lenstll1), cooked crl1p-teader
(U..t•oacea> s tabl .. poou v.1etable on
I talll .. pooaa lemoD Jlice
'4 tMlpooa ftaely miDced f reala &1a1er
Y. teupooa 1..ame oU (opUou.l)
Combine water and contents of nee and seasonina packets in
medium aaucepan. Brina to a boil. Cover tiahtly and simmer until all
water i1 abtorbed, about 25 minutes. Transfer to lalJe bowl.
Stir in chicken, carrots, and arten beans. Combine oil, lemon juice
and ainaer; mix well. Stir into rice mixture. Chill. Stir in se11me oil if
desired. Serves 6.
WILD SALAD ON·THE·RUN
l t,t caps waier
1 packqe ( t ooce1 > loa1 araiD and wUd rtce ~ pqua 1moked tarkey breaat or bm, cat lllto lx'.4x'4·1Dcll 1trlp1
'4 poud 8wt11 cMele, cat lDto lx'4xV.-lDcll 1trtp1
~ cap o.lery 1Uced cUa10Dally, 14-lllcll thick
I tablffpoGDI claopS*I peea ODIOD
1.4 cap veaetablt oU
I tablffpooa1 wlaite wlae vtae1ar
1 tea1pooa Hl•r
Combine water and contents of rice and scasonina packets in
medium 11ucepan. Brina to a boil. Cover tiJhtly and limmer until all
water is abtorbed, about 25 minutes. Transfer to tarae bowl. Cool to
room temperature.
Stir in turkey, cheese, celery and ~n onion. Combine oil, vinepr
and supr; mix well. Stir into rice. Chill thorouahly. Serves 6.
~~~~~~~~~~~~-
ALL 12PACK
BIER
II
JUST IN TIME FOR
THE WORLD SERIES,
WE HAVE REDUCED EVERY
12 PACK OF BEER
TO OUR COST!
STOCK UPON
YOUR FAVORITES NOW!
16oa.
42 OI. • Auorted '9GrteUH
CHUNKJNCI FOSTER FAJlllS
CHICDN FRANKS .. CHOW llllH . . . . . . .. . IA.
60I.
CONTADINA
TOMATO PASTE
~==~Cl .. !100
12 pk.
Reaulm or Milk Chocolate
CARNATION
HOT COCOA MIX ...
• 5 OI. nm
COD liVffDI MIX
' .tl ~,.,
I'! u.
a1c
DU.na.IClllT
IS!
)4 oa. unow
OUVIOD.
10 QOW)\ a1c amonn
16 09
PDIATA TORTU.LA
ITIUPI OR ClllPI
uu,.. mans OCIAlf 11111
DRTCATJOOD
16 oa. • Qlobe A-1
LOMGDAGHlm
ORIL80WMACAROMI
SALi PRICES EFFECTIVE TBUU., OCT. 10 TRIOUQll WED., OCT. 16, 1985
AT ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ALPHA IBTA MARDTS
601. .,~ ~==~ ... I' a
•.:: .. 79~
lOoa. as~ ~~~ ... ····· .... IA.
12 oa.
aAUICll • LOID IAUJll IOLmON
ll oou.at
COIDAT
ltOACll COW I IOL
Give
fruits
proper
TLC
Ripening routine
frequently needs
specialized storage
Fresh fruit, a delicious and natu·
ral food Americans are enjoyioa in
ever-increalina quantities, can be
confU1ioa to the averqe shopper.
Consider: Bananas properly
ripen only after beina picked while
freah pineapple does not ripen at all
after barvestina.
And thi1: Peaches lhould be
refriaerated until a couple days
before you plan to eat them while
that aame refriaeration miaht well
halt the ripenina of fresh papaya.
"Each fruit is different and needs
specialized care by the consumer,"
says Donna Higins, director of
consumer services for Del Monte
Corp. "To Jet full eajoyment and
value, it'• unporunt for the con·
~umer to learn the differences
between each of the major fruita."
There a.re many sourcet for this
information, Higins says.'8ut the
most acx:essible is your local aroccry, panicularly the produce
manaaer. Most knowledaeable em·
ployees in the 1upermarket's
produce depanment a.re well train·
ed in the care of fre1h fruit and
aladly will counsel shoppers on how
to select, store and serve fresh
items.
They may also direct you to
special fliers and brochures that
sometimes a.re available in the store
I or throuah commodity orpniza·
I lions. Higins offen these tips on the
care of aom~ fruits:
•Bananas are the easiest fruit to
catt for because the color of the skin
is an accurate aauae of ripeneas -
the more yellow, the riper the fruit.
Bananas should be kept at room
temperature until the desired ripe·
ness, and can be refriaerated if they
stan to overripen. The skin will
darken but the fruit will be fine for 3
to 6 days.
•Pineapples don't ripen at au
after harvestina, and should be
eaten as soon as possible. Store
pineapples in a cool place or
refriaerate until ready to use.
The shell/ unfortunately, is not an
indicator o npeness as ripe pinea~
pie can ranae from mostly aolden to
mostly areen . Look for plump, firm
pineapples with nice areen crowns
without obvious bruises.
•Peaches and nectarines arc
fra&ile fruits that arc aenerally pic"ked almost fully ripe. Store in the
refriaerator, removina a day or two
before eatina to complete the ripen·
in& .Process. Too Ion• out of the refri&erator and the fni1t will quick-
ly deteriorate.
Look for briaht, fresh peaches
without any areen. bruises or dam-
aae. Nectarines should have a rich
color and be plump.
•Papaya i1 picked partially ripe.
Do not refriaerate until ripe as the
cool temperature will stop ripenina.
To brina to full ripeness-, store at
room temperature until the fruit
yeilds to the touch and begins to
tumaolden.
•Pean arc harvested unripe and
ripen best at 60 to 70 dcarees. Too
much beat, however, will damaae
flavor and ap~arance. Pean can 6c
stored semi-npe in the refriaerator
~ntil you're ready to finish ripen-
lfll.
•Oranaes, like pineapple, are
barve•ted at the peak of ripeness
and should be eaten u aoon 11
pouible after buyina. They can be
kept in the refriaerator but quality
and flavor will start to diminish
with extended storqe.
Read all todays news
,everyday
in the
llllJPllld
-,_
OrengeCout OAJLY PILOTIW~. Ootobert. 1995 C7
3 brothers adding label to L~kespring family
La~e1prin1 Winery in Napa Val-acclaim forChenin Hlanc and t'ehte -f1u•• to be a """di to such gol·nac Icy ts a personal favorite, with Si rah. •... ..... ~ • ~-from his Iona usoc11uoo with San
nearly every wine in the line Then came a tongue-in-cheek on. I will, in fact. ·spel one rumor Martin as well as scvmal other
bll-we· re ta.Urina 78.000 tquare
feet of winery speee, plus a Vlll&«
facility of neatly 6,0001quare. fc?et.
Storage capacity will be one million
gallo ns, wb.ich equates to a ~
duct1on capacity of 200.000 cases a
vear
rcceivina a positive review h're at take-off called "F ·s Leap," be-J already cin::ulatina. The wine wtll w10eries. Bruni will crush eno~
0 l. th Tb roa EftY be .,..ca. .... --t iri standard 75 liter cmlftl'C m· the n•w .u.nery to m c ne 1me or ano er. e win~ cause it was established on the site ...-~ ... -..-~ "' ...
maker is Randy Mason, of 10 abandoned commerdal frog bottles, not in r>l1c~es. about 35,000 cases in 1985. with
Winery owners arc Frank, Ralnh farm. As frivolo us as the name may lraa NEW WINERY PROFILE -first releases coming early in 1986. and H Ba hi b tar d F uw The first two releases will probably any ttat w c exp ms soun • rog's Leap makes some Brothers PhiJ and Frank Arc1ero att be a White Zinfandel and a White the name of the winery's second really superb Sauv1gnon Blanc. It, putting their name on what will be
label: "Trois Freres ... Why ob why too, ts in Napa Valley. by far the largest winery in northern Cabernet.
do we have this thin& about French Now jumping into the market, all Fume Blanc 1985. And don't let the San Luis Obispo County. An::iero The reason I'm tclhng you about
names? But you do nave to admit the way from Australia, is "Roo's vintage date throw you. Re-Winery is located near Paso Robles, this new winery long before any
that "Trois Freres" sounds a lot Leap," and what could be more member, Australia has its vint.&Je home to such well known producers wines are for sale is because o f its
classier than "Three Brothers." appropriate. The handsome label six months ahead of ours due to its as HMR, Estrella River. Eberle and awesome potential. ArCJero is going
Why do wineries have second will feature the likeness of a golden position south of the equator. several others. to be one very important winery on
Bruni hastened to point out th.at
there 1s no intention to make
anythina like that much wine any
time soon.
I can't help but observe that
people don't build wineries with
this kind of capacity unless they
plan to use it. Watch out for ~bets? Reasons vary. Some wine-kangaroo in flight, and the first I'm sure the wine will be the The winemaker is Greg Brum, the Central Coast.
nes create them to sell large release under the new label will be a subject of myriad bad puns, but I whose name you may recognize When I say 1t 1s big. I mean reall y quantities of cheap bulk wine ,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. Arc1ero.
pu.rehased from other wineries.
Some use them as a way to sell
through two different wholesalers
in the same market, and there arc
yet other reasons.
At l..akespring, The Trois Frercs
label is used to sell wines that were
intended for the .Lakcspring label,
but that for one reason or another
don't meet the high standards the
winery sets for its primary label.
That is not to say there is
anything wrong with Trois Freres
wines. A Chardonnay released
under the label a little over a year
aao received rave reviews and
actually became a medal winner.
That wine was intended to be the
Lakespring I 982 Chardonnay. The
winemaker didn't think it was quite
good enough so Lakespring had no
Chardonnay at all that year, and
consumers were able to buy it as
Trois Frercs for something like 40
percent less.
Trol1 Freres Merlot ($6.75): No
vintage date appears on the bottle
because it isa blend of two vintages,
butisover90percentfrom 1983. Its
youth is its major drawback but the
wine is enjoyable now with certain
foods, and even six months in the
bottle will sec dramatic changes.
Two or three years will work
wonders. The wine bas good fruit
and an attractive aroma, and most
wineries would be proud to offer it.
But it does not fit the l..akespring
image which is for a darker, more
intense style.
Trol1 Freret 1984 "Napa"
Claardonnay ($7.50): Also released a
little younger than a l..akespring
Chardonnay would be, but I don't
think intensity is the reason this one
didn't quite make the grade. The
bouquet is gorgeous, with hints of
apples and vanilla from good
French oak. The flavors are good
and true and long-lasting.. My only
problem with the wine is a slight
awareness of alcohol in the finish.
whkh isn't a problem when the
wine is accompanied by food. It is a
good value.
• • • NEW RELEASES -I rarely
comment on wines before I taste
them but occasionally I do mention
new releases when I thfok there is
some special interest to consumers.
I usually follow up with a review
later.
Weibel has just announced three
new table wines, a white, a rose, and
a red. So what makes them
noteworthy without a taste?
All three wines will sell for $3 or
less the bottle, and all bear vintage
dates. The white is a blend of
French Colombard and Sauvignon
Blanc, and both grapes do very well
in Mendocino County where the
wine ori~nates.
More importantly, the red wine
bears a 1979 vinta~e date and 1s
mostly Pinot Noir wtlhjust a touch
of Cabernet. Weibel is legendary for
its stock of old red wines, and
espe<:ially old Pinots. It's almost
mmd-bogglin~ What this amounts
to is a premium varietal wine, 6
years old, selling as a generic for $3
a bottle. If you taste it before I do. let
me know how it is. ••• NEW LEAP -While writing
about wines I haven't tasted, I want
to be the first to tell you about a
brand new "Leap" label scheduled
to hit retailer's shelves by Novem-
ber.
First there was Stag's Leap Wine
Cellars, one of the most famous
producers of Cabernet Sauvignon
wines in the world. The Napa
Valley winery really established
itself by beaung some of the best
chateaux off ranee in a competition
that received worldwide media
attention.
Then came Stags' Leap Winery
(note the different position of the
apostrophe), a neighbor, which won
Shred bounty
from garden
Here's a tasty accompaniment
for a hearty fall entrec.
GEORGIA SQUASH
I atratpt·Mdl yellow ......
(eacla al»Mt 'I llldtet loq), I
ICUI .....
l 1mall (I oaeet) ea.I• ,......,, .. ._ner
Sa.It ... ,.,,... a. wee
Trim and wub 1quuh but do not
,.re. In a food processor with the
medium ahredd.ina disc., shred
1quub, then onion~ or coanely
ahfed OD I band p'&tef.
In a t 0-inch skillet melt butter,
add 1qwash and onion. Stir con-
stantly over hi&h beat for a few
minutes or undl there it a little
liquid in the pe. Simmer, covered.
untiJ cooked throuab -S minutes
or IO. Stir in ult and pepper. Serve
very bot. Makel 3 ICtVinp.
COUNTRY VONS FRESH VONS
HEARl1I COOKED ICEBERG CHUNK
BREAD HAM LE'l IOCE TONA All V.r\ei ies Stkl9d. &-Ounot ~ G•r<lffl F r~th l•ghl 1,.. W•t~r ()• fJol 15 Pound I.Del 112-0unot ~I ) C.hlom1• Grown 6 Ovou C.n
1RTllOCJT COUPON . 99 aaY CHU /a .H , GET OtU wrntoar COCIPO" .49
.59 J39 FREE .29 ""1t COCIPO"
~<5!,~~!:t~~tJ>~ES t A .59
~~E~r!<J~~ ... <}IT 4 ~ 100
~~~W'~ULIFLDWER La .59
BOLK PEANUTS ~ffn 79 C.-Fo< -~ Tel« l'lo 1., Th,. &II C..... La e
~;~~9~!!!~ IN SH~~~89
~2~._2NIONS 3 1:1~ .59
fL~ec~ ~~So~~~MS P>IG • 69
~~~ .. ~-Cl-\ ORANGES 4 i:l;129
~~!.~M~~~ t t ••I 199
FRESH
SWORDFISH l 8
f"oll<U. "-<tnc s,......, r,....
~~,9~f!~ CRABS 18 298
~ .. ~tf RED SNAPPER Ui 259
BAKERY
~~ S~Po!~. Pe«•
VONS CAKE DONUTS ~ "'Pl*' Spcr "' ... ....,,..., 12 ,,,..~
VONS DANISH ROLLS
i.-""'"" or "lmond 8 ,,,..,
VONS PECAN lWIRLS
8 Poc1I (Of ,,,,,_,.. Twt<11. "-•emo I
149
139
215
.99
CARLO ROSSI 299 CHABUS Rhl.... v .. be l lit~• 8ottw
£i<22.~, .. BRUT CHAMPAGNE 289
~,,~~~ 8oc~ICE VODKA 699
~!Jl!..,C29~.! COOLER 289
~'c.!£?.S~L't BLANC 259
"'111 COCIPOfll
79FREE
1986 FORD THUNDERBIRDS ,....,,. --~---'1
-~-'!'-
~ STOUFFER'S
LEAN CWSINE
8H1 .,. Pot~ 9~ 0..x C..OC~ tO 7 Ot eo. !Ot.r..i Cll•• 8,)-01. Chia Ala O..iv II 01 2 :>91
~·~ Stt'1~~rp,-~~~ 2 ~199
MORNING STAR ~1~ 10 9 0..-149 e..-.i.1 ... Ltnii S.n~ Onlwn 1Sc:.-" 12 Ot 991
~~~1,~~.S22~ .. ~HIP 119
MINUTE MAID 2 ~129 0<.,. Juitt 6 Outtc-. C... 11
CELESTE PIZZA 2 6 559 ~. ~· ~ t9102l0t &o. R
WISHBONE DRESSING "'°'""" S..lad 0.-ng. ~lar 8 °"""' 8oow
VONS APPLE CIDER
M O..,,..,. lloctl•
PORK & BEANS
Sl•m p,,..... 15~~ Car
MOITS APPLESAUCE r.......e 2•0..-.i...
CHERRY PIE FILLING
Slim """'° 2 I Qu...., c.n
LIBBY'S CORNED BEEF
H<i.,.., t~~Y"
STOVE TOP STUFFING
Ch"'i..n. 12 Oul>cT Boo
HEINZ 57 SAUCE
I 0 ()u...., 8oc1 w
BEST FOODS SPREAD
S..-tel\ I ~C>un<T .Mr
.69
109
. 39
.99
129
119
186
219
119
COKE J59 DIET COKE
~=~~
WITH COCIPO"
~~~~t~~~ .49
E!~~B£~ BREAD snc~99
~!P~S~~~~StfUB 199
.79 VONS CREAM CHEESE
8Qunc.r P.oc'-
~~7 ... 1!?.o ~!.<U~~~ 139
~£0~ICOITA CHEESE.99
KRAFT SINGLE SLICES 159 w.._.i. A-.._ C'-w food 120v..... ~
DAIRY
IMPERIAL MARGARINE ~p.,..._.c.-.
CONTINENTAL YOGURT
"""''• ,._,,.., r-i..on, 8~ C.'1<><
COITAGE CHEESE
k -V-ld Far-• S.~w Or loo f91. J2 0 1 '-•""'
.69
.53
159
~-t' ..... 179
BONELESS
TOP SIRIOIN
STEAKS
T~ King
8Hf
You don't pay more.
• "> rNN. r c...n UIUT OM
FOSTER FARMS79 BEST·O·FRYER l.6 e ~ .. ';. "& ~ °"""'
~~.!~STEAKS LB 169
~E~~t:~UMP R~ 159
~~f!°r~·~~ ~ASTS " 189
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
Tab•~ K ,""1
fl,-!
~~~~~!~EYE STEAKS .. 329
2.I~Vf.!.~.~ BEEF 11 169
!;' .. ~2r ~ORNED BEEF t< 129
~~~,..1}2,1 ~ ~OASTS .11 298
"309 PORK LOIN CHOPS ~·~·"' ~tJlll'~~ ..
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
SECRET ROLL-ON (.~nt ~i.1 "'W tn••ntrd } ~~ "'l\J"" .....
ROBITUSSIN CO<JGH
r:~l.e • 1 °'"J"'• f\."'!fOt
SCOPE MOUTHWASH 81~~·~
YOUR CALIFORNIA
LOllERY
COIUU!C110N You just get more. :.!!!!!!· ~;;;;:;;;:;::-----
ca Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedneedav. Octobef 9, 1985
Remember, alittlesweetnessgo.esalongway
BJ DO&oTllY ~
:=-:c:,,:,:,.:,~ • ........,.
Supr. It's IWetL It makes many
foods wte &ood. We Americans cat
a lot of it. Yet it bas a bed image.
When queried about changes in
their dietary habits, people arc
likely to say they're trying to eat less
supr. Yet statistics oo actual sugar
consumption show Americans are
eating more today than ever. Ac-
cordina to one estimate it's I 58
pounds per person per year or 632
calories daily.
That's 632 calories that arc pure
eneJ"IY with no other nutrients such
as v1tamins and minerals. You may
shonchange yourself nutritionally
if supr calorics take the place of
foods that do carry other nutrients.
Tooth dc<:ay is another hau.rd for
those who overeat sugary foods.
Scientific evidence shows that
sugar is responsible for tooth decay, es~ially when it's eaten in its
stickier fonns and stays on tooth
surfaces for a period of tjmc. The
more frequently sugary foods arc
consumed, the greater the risk of
causing tooth decay.
But what about all the other
claims that arc made about the
dangers of eating sugar? Docs it
cause children to be hyperactive? ls
it responsible for acne, obesity,
(' .
~T·Bone or 'I '•/ orterhou••
SI Ice cl
Liver
Fresh. Great Cooked
With Onions.
llt.
.... leas Pra•kascotch Buy
Steak. Safeway
Quality Beef Loin
Famlty Pack. 9 9
(20.. .....
.......
Lamb Chops
USDA Choice.
Blade Shoulder
.... s1•9
1 lb
Pkg
diabetes, heart disease and cancer?
Is supra poison?
The answer is "no" to all these
questions, according to the oot
scientific evidence available today.
Supr. in whatever fonn it's eaten
-refined white, brown. raw,
honey, com syrup etc. -is
wholesome and safe to eat In
moderation.
Moderauon m consumption is
the kC}' tO lood health for just about
everything we eat. And the amount
of sugar that is "moderate" for you
depends on your aac. activity level,
total caloric needs and aeneral
health.
A person who has diabetes often
llt.
Gra•A
f reah
Pryer
Whole Body
Frying Chicken
.. ... Reno'• =r Pizza
Fresh Pepperoni And
Cheese. Delicious!
is told to hmit supr consumption.
This as because supr is rapidly
absorbed and may result in a rapid
rise in blood sugar. Elevated blood
supr (hypc:raJycem1a) is a sym~
tom of diabetes. Because of this,
many people still believe in the
outdated notion that supr causes
diabetes.
However. the actual causes of
diabetes relate to the 1nab1lity of the
pancreas to secrete sufficient in-
sulin to properly control blood
supr levels or other conditions
which cause the insulin to be
inefficient in regulating blood sugar
levels.
Another situation where sugar
I O·llt. • •• .......
Mushrooms
Large Size. Great In
Salad Or For Dipping. .... $149
has been impli c ated is
hyPo&lycemia. Hypo_glycemia is
not a disease, but 11 a clinical
measurement of low blood s~.
Most commonly it is a complica-
tion of diabetes and results from an
imbalance of insulin or oral druas
and food intake.
In rare instances, a person may
actually have a true case of food-
reactive hyPO&lycemia not related
to diabetes.-Cfenerally a reduction
in sutar. includina natural sugar-
conuuning foods such as fruit -
especially dried fruit -is rec-
ommended for this condition.In
coronary heart disease. statistical
studies of PoPUlations show a
Russet
Potatoes
Serve Baked Topped With
Sour Cream And Chives
Fresh
Cauliflower
Serve Raw With A
Dip Or Steam And Serve
llt.
lb 'I" I Serve Refried P nto Beans w ith Cheese 3 lbs '100
• .. •
Boneless Beef ... ~eak FullCenterCut lb t 1 •• ..... ---· 1·1b •1•• --w ...... Safeway Pkg. I k Grapefruit Trop cana Ju • Glass Bottle
Potk Roast Beef Brisket Ground Chuck
llt.
Fresh. "Boston Butt"
wtde Blade Shoulder
Fresh. Whole. Safeway
0uaJrty Beef. "In The Bag" 99c .... 99c
Fresh, Beef. Does Not
Exceed 26% Fat
... ~1 39
GroUlld Turkey Lean Detrostea lb 99c Hunt'• TO..ato Sauce
hcl ... pper ~. Pacific lb '159 hedtla h Mild Lake c r C~··· To Lake
ryerLega Fresh Caltfornia G<own
lb '1" gllo II Lake Loll rB C 89H To Lake Fosre< or Zacky Farms
Thomas'
English Muffins. For A 0Jiki9'
~
olger'1 Coffee
Mountain Grown Ground
$699
Hanaen'•
Filtered Apple Juice '1639
Sweet and Juicy Crispy Fresh. For A
3 ~:Si ... :319 c
s 8·02 •100 Cans C I Low In r •PY Carrots Calories
9·02 $139 Pkg
2 9 ·0Z Pk gs •3~
/
Slclarl Pasta
Assorted Pasta
(Except Lasagna) 16·oz Pkg
2 .. ~1
•••• Spaghetti Sauce A$rti 24i
Grape lelly Or .Jam WPlc.h s 18oz 99c Jar ........... ............ Buy 1Get1
1000/o Whole Wheal 24-oz. FRll
Mrs Wright's Loaf Skippy Dog f ootl Premium
...... eon.011
4 14-oz •100 Cans
IL-Sweet & $our ......... IRfree Chicken Frozen 11oz t 1 •• Pkg
~tatoes Frozen
Lynden Farms 20-oz 39c Pkg
Kellogg'• Frosted Flakes 2~i:•2 3• C .. Co Birds Eye 0 rft Bio Ear. Frozen 4 Ear 99c Pkg
...... n.. lxcitllte SARWAY-slDA•l-YWA·Aff• •••••
ITALIAN VACATION SWllPSTAKIS
And Have A Chance To Win One 1 I ..
Of These Fabulous Prozes ~ , j
*Limited Edition Alfa ..., •
Romeo "Graduate" Convertible
•Round Trip Air Fare For Two
Via TWA To Rome , Italy
(Includes 10 Days In First Class ~ •••• :r,,,r._;-;;..-o--Hotel and '1 .000 Cash) ..:::,.
No Purchase Necessary Must Be Over 18 Years or Older To Register
Complete Details Al Safeway
..... UUAT ...... AY
•IA LOnlRY TICKllS
More People Wttl Win In The New
State Lottery At Safeway Than />.J?y
Other Food Store In Caifomia
l111perlal
Margarine. Dellclous
On Toast. 1-lb. Cubes
·Up,Dlet 7 ·Up
•Like Cola. A Refreshing
Drink. 2-Llter Bottle 59c s12•
ERICA'S fAVORIIl FOOD STORE
. . .
48-oz. '2" Bo ttle
4 10·0Z. •500 Pkgs.
: :;-_:::;. :i.-:..-:.::. ~ ,...= ... ______ -" __ : ______ ,.....,,_,.. __
: :':'-tuotr ... -=:-:=-c:::s:.: .
: IC> .. -....... -.. .. ~~ • : -.. .. : •···················•••··•·············
PrlcH Eff.ctlv. October
10.16, 1985 At Safeway
Store• In SoutMrn Callfor-
nla (Exe.pt C.talln• And
Bell). SalH In ,...all Quan·
tltlH Only
correlation between the amount of
supr consumed and death from
coronary heart disease. A cause·
and-effect relationship between
supr itself and heart di5ease hu yet
to be proven, however.
From the evidence currently
available it isn't possible to separate
the effects of sugar int.alee from the
effects of increased energy intake
and obesity as causes of coronary
heart disease. But people at risk
may be well advised to moderate
tbetr supr consumption.
Supr bas been suspected as a
cause of behavior problems includ-
ing hyperactivity and feelings of
anacr or hostility that cause delin-
quency or criminal behavior. But
sound scientific evidence proving
the sugar<rime Hole is lacking. In
spite of the lack of evidence, a
number of correctional facilities
have changed inmates' diets, reduc-
ing sugar<ontaining foods.
After reviewinf the evidence, the
American Medical Association,
The International life Sciences
Institute, and the Nutrition Foun-
dation Expert Panel of the resource
conference on diet and behavior
concluded that there is no casual
relationshit> between sugar intake
and behavioral disturbances. Nor
did they find sufficient evidence to
Justify changes in public policy.
including sugar intake of inmates in
correctional facilities.
In studies of hyperactivity. it has
been found that hyperactivity may
cause increased sugar intake, rather
than the reverse. A well<onductcd
study showed that instead of
sucrose contributing 1"' hyper-
activity it actually appeared to have
a calming effect in children. Sugar
s ubstitutes saccharin and
aspartame did not have this calm-
ing effect.
QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED:
Q. Why do 10 muy foods contaln
earn aynap -It 1eem1 yoa 1ee It on
ja1t about every label tbese days?
A. Com syrup is now used in
foods such as bakery goods, ice
creams, canned fruits. dairy prod-
ucts, soft drinks and other
beverages, cereals. condiments. and
snack foods. One reason is that it 1s
cheaper than refined sugar. Also,
com syrup imparts desirable tex-
tural qualities because it is mostly
glucose which keeps certain prod-
ucts containing it more moist and
less grainy . ••• Bee.He I bave a 1f el11tt problem,
I hve eUmtaated food1 1weeteaed
wltb Hgar aad 1D1tead •H
artlflcially 1weetened food• wbea-
ever I cu. So wby don't I lo1e
welpt?
A. Yours is a common question.
The Caloric Control Council (an
international organization rep-
resenting 60 manufacturers and
suppliers of dietetic foods and
beverages) reported in 1984 that
they knew of no scientific studies
that showed the use of artificial
sweeteners leads to weight reduc-
tion. To lose wei~t. you need to eat
less arfd use artificially sweetened
foods instead of, rather than in
addition to, other foods. • • • Q. WUt 11 tbe difference between
toha ud tempeb?
A. Tofu and tempeh are both
made from soybeans. They are both
protein foods, bland and low in
sodium (exceP.t for seasoned var-
ieties). But while tofu is ready to eat,
tcmpeh needs further cooking (de-
scribed on the label). Tempeh has
about twice as much protein as tofu
-so it takes about 1/2 pound of
tofu to provide an average serving
of protein, but only 4 ounces of
tempeh.
Improve
choices of
rice, bread
You may have to eat up to fi ve
times the amount ofa refined bread
or cereal product to get the fiber of ~ts whOle grain ~ountcrpart, accord-
ing to the California Dietetic As-
sociation (CDA).
"Whole grain products offer fiber
-the bulk-producin,g substance in
food that has been hnked to good
health." said Cheryl Loggins, R. D .
president of C DA. '
"The average American needs a
daily intake of fiber for healthy
diaestion and elimination, but only
consumes about half the amount
recommended by most dietitian•."
Whole grain products arc avail-
able in everything from bread,
crackers, rice and flour for baking to
put.a, hamburaer and hot dog rolls
and bagels.
"Those arc all memben of the
breads and cereals aroup, one of the
four 1'.'Utrient-~ food JTOUps
essenuat to optimum nutntaon."
taid Loains, addina the easiest way
to aet -the fiber you need is lo
consume the four recommended
servings from both the
breads/cereals and ve1 -
etables/fTuit1 aroups. Two daily
servinp arc recommended from
both the milk and meat sroups .
Becau1e it produces bulk. fiber
alto contributes to a feelina of
11tiety. belpina dieten foci fuller
lo.r.
"K.eep in mind that one slice of
whole wheat bread hu 11 much as
two to three times the fiber of a
picee of white bread and brown rice
has nearly three timea the fiber of
white." said Loain1.
Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT /Wedneedey, October 8, 1986 C9
----------------------------------------------~-----Feature fillets with filliv·of artistry
llo~ ~t ~caJ ... ?1f1 . .'~1sbtic sat.isfac-Wb? can resillst'! od 4 medium raw 1~rtmp (frozen minutes or until fish 1s JUSt firm •,, cup meUH butter . ~ ·-~ y us1na a lt11anexce entwaytointr ucc be IHUf bdl I · r. le dinner plate to substitute for white new foods to the family. No need to may • res r mp are Wha.le 1llb coo s. drop shnmp 11, tcatpooD aotmes
canvas and arrangjna foods to eat a whole belpina of somethina Dot avaJlable ) into s1mmennJ water for 2 to 3
create a litt.le i:nini-masterpiecc. new. Have seconds available for the Cbina peas, mD1broom1, baby minutes unul 1t turns pink. Cool
The unlimited vanety of food heartier eaters. summer squ1~ ud 1callloD1 or under runnina water. remove hdl.
shapes and colors makes it easy to After such a light main course. cblvct (or yoor cbolce of ve1· deve10, lcavma ~on.
present a~ enticing meal to tempt treat yourself to a superb desscn etables) Remove fillets with a spatula to
the most Jaded appetite. made with luscious, nutritious Call· LemoD or lime ~lie~• for 1~nl1b scrvma plate. Arrange vegetables
Consider these colors ... a creamy fomia dates. Mannate dates in hme JUiee for around the fillet, top with shnmp
white fillet of oranae rou~y from an hour or so. Mash dates down in and serve. Serves 4.
New Zealand, stutTod with a pi-.. DATIC STUFFED Juice and sti r once. Add minced
quant dat~ and Ii.me filling, topped FILLETS CONTINENTAL JICama or celery. S~read on ~sh
by a bnght pink shrimp and 4 New Zealud oruie roagby or fi llets and roll, secunng rolls wtth su~oundod by .mushroom slices, otlaer w~te flill fllleta toothpicks. Place m a shallow
bnaht green China peas, a slice of 1 cap cllopped Callfontia dates buttered casserole with 'I• cup fish
oranae, a green baby summer JaJce of i limn stock or dry white wrne. Cover and
squash and a spray of scallion tops. ~cup minced Jlcama or celery bake at 375 degrees for 20 to 25
DATE CHEESECAKE
CRUMB CRUST:
1 ~ C8pl sralaam cracker
crumbs
•;, cap browu sugar, flrmly
packed
FILLING:
1 cup cbopped dates •1, cap fresb lemon or lime Jule~
3 eu1
Dasb of u lt
11• cup sugar
8-ouce package cream cbeese
4 ounces small curd cottage
cheese
''' cap dairy sour cream
1 teaspoon grated lemon or lime
peel
Date 11lven and grated peel
Serve
sauce . just for
halibut
Alaska's fishermen
eriJoy unusually good
season for whitefish
--,
***** !;r~~on,. 429
Chef David Nicholls
Walton's
Restaurant
of Walton Street
London
Enjoy 11111 l•mout recipe
lrom W•lton • Re1t•u••nt
• am1ll 1nt1m1te rnllu••nt
on the l'leen ol Lonoon a
lut11on1t>l• Cne1 .. 1
Dlltriet PICk UP"'(Our
FREE recipe on 11'141 me11
deper1ment
Cook Book
Binder
9onut ' ~ ... ••• ~ OH
CoullOl'I •ti!\.,.....,., pUfCl'\aM
Ute your tc>vPO'I• 199
II 11'\a C'-klll ncl .•
***** Cross Rib
Roast
BONELESS BEEF CHUC!(
***** Pacific
Red Snapper
FRESH. FILLET
,. 167
,. 199
P'De/ Monte
6 Pears
HALVES OA Sl•CES. 1eoz CAN
.71
..,._ _ _,.,...__,,_ ... _ _____ ._.___ ...... , .. ~
};;,~; 55 Chicken
WHOLE BODY. LB
SOUTHERN, GRADE A •
***** Rib Eye
Steak
BONELESS
BEEF SPENCER
***** Ground Beef 359 Patties
FROZEN 3 LB BA(,
!Del Monte
Green Beans
CUT OR FRENCH STYLE
!60Z CAN
.47
!"Hawaiian
d>Punch
!"Harvest Day
6 Raisin
Bread
1e oz LOAF f 09
In-Shell 59 Almonds
PEERLESS LB •
LARGE
Granoy Smith 69 ~~~!~s LB .
EXTRA FANCY
Bose
Pears
EXTRA LARGE , .. 49
Ruby Seedless 69 Grapes
SWEET AND LB •
DELICIOUS
i(",d·
~JJ
!Lady Lee
Orange
Juice
GAL BTL 299
r Yoplalt
Yogurt
URIC,INAL I} ~lAVQR')
60Z CUP
• 49
~ !"Stouffer's ~Cuisine. 1 d> Lean Cuisine r li... . ~'CHICKEN CHOW MEIN
.... .~:: OR SPAGHETTI FROZEN ·-~"'f49
fit Mealtime
d>Dog Food
CRUNCHY BITES 5MALL
OR LAROE 15 LB BAu
915
P-Cheer
&Laundry
Detergent
72 OZ BOX
349
I By TOM HOGE ... -...,.---~,.,.-------., ..... ~ ............
r cheerios 185 Cereal
t5 OZ BCu
r Christian 249 CHA~~others I~!~~
NAPA ROSE OR RHINE
!Joy
Detergent
f"Downy
A> Fabric
Softener
•••tr .... f~"'A~
: ,1• •
179
!Lite
Beer
ti \• l n • ~;; •
,1449
C J: 2
( ................................ -.c: ............ .... ........................ ..-c ... ...-. .. .....
Alaska 1s famous for its salmon
and huge long crab. Less known but
equally imponant 10 the food world
1s the halibut. One of the most
highly rated of the world's wtutefi&b.
It 1s 1n abundant supply tlus year
The influx of this fish onto the
mainland began an May and con-
ti nues. Alaska's catch for 1985 1s
expected to reach 56 million
pounds. an increase of 12 million
pounds over last year.
Halibut has always bttn highly
rated among the wtutefish. It 1s
naturally lean and has a tender flesh
with a mild, delicate flavor. Halibut
has a number of advantages: It is low
in sodium and relatively free of
bones
.\laska halibut 1s tasty in many
fo nns. including baked, steamed.
sauteed. broiled and barbecued.
Propcrl> packaged. Alaska halt·
but ma) be stored in the home
freezer for up to six months at zero
degrees or lower. Fresh or thawed.
halibut ma)' ht stored 10 the refnger-
ator for one to three days
Fresh or frozen , hahbut 1s market-
ed the year round as steaks. which
usual!) range from 4 to I 0 ounces. It
1s also sold as roasts and fillets .
This fish should never be over·
cooked It 1sread)' to cat as soon as 1t
flakes readily when tested wtth a
fork
Coolong time usually runs about
I 0 minutes for each inch of thick·
ness measured at its thickest pan
One of my favonte dishes 1s
halibut with orange sauce, as an the
following recipe.
HALIB UT WITH ORANGE SAUCE
1 "a pounds oflaallbat steak.a
"a cap oranae Juice
? green onJoDI, dla1oaally sliced
1 tablctpooD Ume or lemon jGice
3 tablctpooDI OU, divided
1 • teaspoon a:roud &lnler
i._ teaspoon u.lt
Fl oar
Oruge slices ( optioeal)
Place steaks. f~sh or thawed II
tro1en. in shallo~ baking dish
( omb1ne orange Juice. gr~n on·
1om hme or lemon Juice. I table-
spoon 011. ginger and salt Pour
mixture 0' er halt hut and mannate
for JU minutes
Dip halibut 1n flour Sau1e in
remaining 2 tablespoons of oil,
allowing I 0 minutes lime for each
inch of thickness measured at
1h1ckcs1 pan of the fish. or until fish
fla kes eas1h when tes ted with a fork
Tum steak·s halfwa) through coolr.-
1ng 11me
Rt'mOH' halibut to a platter and
lr.eep ~arm ~dd mannade 10 the
">lr.tllt't and reduce to half the
'olume 1ahout 1 ' cup I Pour o'er
halibut
(1arn1'>h -l Ill 0 sen mgs 1.1Wllh
nrange slice'>
Missing
'cheese'
corrected
\l.h.:it Ir.ind nt "lhl"e\C" wa!.
ffil'nt11\nt'd at the end nt the pn1e-
~1nn1ng past.a recipe in last week·.,
Cul1nan ( u1S1ne section"
If \OU 1mpro' 1sed ~1th ''freshh
grated Parmesan · 'ou guessed cor-
reuh
Here for the rC(·ord. " the
l lanfied 'ers1on of Pasta Supreme
ala G1n1 ~hich earned runner-up
honors for G1ni Maten of N("wpon
&ach 1n the Quid. and Ea-.,
lategor. nf th<' Oa1I' Pilot's rt>c1pc
l"ClnlC''t
PASTA SUPREME ALA GINl
1, cap fret~ baall, ctiopped
'" cwp ollJoD, c~opped
"a pond frHb mH~rooma,
cbopped
'•pond pro1clwtto, C'°PPed
1,, ct1p 1u-4rled tomatoes..
cllaoppedl aarlk clove, mt.eed
~ teaapoo• cTHtted re4 pepper
I tableapooa oUve oU
I plat ulf aH Ulf
"' pou4 roteUe pu&a, ~ed
u4 dra.taed '°' c.p tredly tntM Pannesu
c~
Saute basil. onion mushrooms.
prnsc1u tto. sun~ed tomatoes.
garlic and crush~ nx1 pepper 1n
ohve 011 for 20 minut.es.. Add half
and half and '1mmer for 10
minutes
I C'ombme ho' pug with sauce.
Add chene and loss well Ga.nusb
wtth f rftb butJ leaves and wmato
weda.c\ ~rvts four
•
I
. r
ClO Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, October 9, 1985
Make Yuppie's morning sweet
Humbly named Pear Coffee Cake is made with creatively twisted bi~uit douah spread with a mixture of fresh Banlett pears. dates and
1p1ces. This bmlkfast contender for New American. Cahfomia or
nouvelle cuisine serves 12 upscale coffee achievers.
PEAR COFFEE CAKE
1 pactaae (11'4 oucea) .. ot roU m.h
'Ill cep warm water
lea
~ cap melted batter
1 tabletpooa ......
1 teupooa 1rated lemon or oraa1e peel
Pear Fllllq, recipe follows
Dissolve yeast from roll mix in wann water. Stir in egg, butter. sugar
and lemon peel. Add flour mixture from roll mix; blend well. Cover; set
in warm place about 4S minutes to double in size.
Knead lightly to a smooth dough. Roll on floured surface to 16 x I I -
SEE WHY
UNIVERSITY
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IS THE
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• Reasonably Priced
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PISSAN S£NTRA
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s1172c..;
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•4a mos 0 •60 mos + ta1. 0 AC
inch rectangle. Spread with Pear Filling along one long side of rectangle,
sprcadina to cover half the dough lengthwise. Roll up, starting from long
side (same side that filling is on). Filling moves somewhat as you roll.
Place on lightly greased baking sheet. Shape as you wish into ring,
crescent or strip. Cut shallow (decorative) slits across top of dough about
11/J inches apart. Let rise about 20 minutes.
Bake in 375-degrcc oven 30 minutes or until crust 1s golden brown.
Drizzle with powdered supr glaze, 1f desired. Serve warm or cold. Makes
I coffeecake (about 12 servings).
Pear Filling: Pare, halve, core and cube 3 fresh California Bartlett
pears ( 1112 pounds) to measure 3 cups. Combine in saucepan with 112 cup
dates. chopped, '!. cup sugar, 2 tablespoons cornstarch, 112 teaspoon
allspice, I teaspoon grated lemon or orange peel and 2 tablespoons
butter: mix well.
Cook. sttning constantly until mixture boils. Cook unttl mixture is
thick and fairly dry, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat. Cool.
r----COUPON-----.
ALL
VIDEO
RENTALS
1144 ... wpclft Blvd., Coetli .....
21211 Mergl*'tte, Mlulon Ylefo
153IO -..Ch Btwd., WMtmlnetet
10812 Katefla, Oerden °'°"
1303 N. Euclld Ave., Anahekn
Sunday, Oct. 13th Games
0 Rams* 0 at Tampa Bay
0 New Orleans 0 at Raiders*
0 Buffalo 0 at New England•
0 Cleveland* D at Houston
0 Denver* D at Indianapolis
0 Detroit 0 at Washington*
0 Minnesota* 0 at Green Bay
0 New York Giants• D at Cincinnati
0 Philadelphia 0 at St. Louis*
0 Pittsburgh D at Dallas*
0 Kansas City* D at San Diego
0 Chicago* D at San Francisco
0 Atlanta D at Seattle*
Monday Night's Game Oct. 14
0 Miami* 0 at New York Jet1
*Craig's Picks of the Week
(Craig's Record Last Week: 10-4)
(Record for Season: 49-14)
R1l11 of the 01111 20522 lagund Canyon Rd
Laguna Bea ch Games list will be published each Wednesday. Make your picks on your entry blank, cut
out, mall or deliver to The Dally Piiot, 330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626.
Entries must be postmarked no later than 5 P.M. Friday, preceding the Sunday
game, and Monday game. Late entries wlll not be counted. If more than one
winner, a tie.breaker wtll be determined by the score of Monday night's
....--.... football game. Winner• wlll be publlahed the following Wednes-
day. Winner• may pick up prizes at The Dally
Piiot office on Friday before 5 P.M..:.. . ..--r6!J..
following announcement
publlahed In the pape._:.'·;....ii-w
IN ORANGE ~ COSTA MESA
COUNTY , ••• SllOP
.. ..., .................. _ .
.............. -.e&T, -·-
FAST SERVICE
~•r JACK KALWN
Cun Sotclll1st "1lh O•et 2~ yrs eipeuence
COSTA MESA, GUN SHOP
3115 Hetbor Btvd.
CoetliMeea
182-1313
'86 JEEP
COMANCHE
Fully factory equipped
#010961
$6624
Your Chance to
WIN
$50, $25,
·or $10
EACH WEEK.
FOLLOW THE
WINNERS'
CIRCLE
(On Your Envelope)
ATTENTION:
Winner's Circle
1 ENTRY PER PER80N.
Must be 18 or over to enter .
LAST WEEK'S WINNIR8
Joseph Gamez
(13-0)
S. Herrera
R. Chavez
Daily Piiat WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1985
Orange Coaat wlna, 20-14, but It waan't footbell. D2.
Newport Harbor, Woodbridge glrl1 net vlctorlea. 03.
Jays'
quick
cure
Timing poor,
says Herzog
Blue Jays don't
look apprehensive
in 6-1 win over KC
TORONTO (AP) -The Toronto
Blue Jays found a quick cure for any
apprehensions they might have had
about playing in their fint postseason
game.
They went out and beat up the
eJtperience-laden Kansas City Royals
6-1 Tuesday night 1n the first game of
the American League playoffs.
"People have said we might be
tight, but we can't be since we played
some touf!l games with the Yankees
last week, 'said Lloyd Moseby. one of
only two Toronto starters who did not
take part in an I I-hit attack.
The AL East-champion Blue Jays
played aggressive and errorless
baseball, getting timely hits and
max.ins key plays. They raced to a 6-0
lead after four innings as Kansas City
came unglued.
The only consolation for the
Royals. 1n postscason play for the
s1Jtth time, came from knowing that
this season's league playoffs are bcst-
of-scven instead ofbesH>f-five.
"If this was a five-game scnes. it
would ha ve been different," Toronto
Manager Bobby Coll said. "The first
game didn't mean that much."
The eJt panded playoffs may give
the Royals more time to rebound, but
1t doesn't change what they have to
do.
"It's not as bad as three out of fi ve.
(Pleue eee JA Y8/D2)
Doctcer Manacer Tommy Luorda and
Fernando Valenzuela, tont.cht'• etarting
~~·
pitcher, po9e for photographen daring
pracdce eeealon Tuesday.
DodgerS:-St. Louis
open NL playoffs
before the sun sets
LOS ANGELES (APJ -When the
twihght descends this e.,ening. the St.
Louis Cardinals and Los Angeles
Dodgers will be playing bascbaJI. and
that makes Whitey Herzog unhapp)'
"It seems a shame to me that )OU
have to come out to pla) at 5 Jo:·
Herzog said Tuesday at Dodger
Stadium, as the Cardinals prepared
for the first game of 1he Nauonal
League Champ1onsh1p Senes
"J know why It's that wa y. becau\e
of TV ... he said of the 5· 30 p m start
··But this is not a good baUpark to play
in at that time.
"You work your tail otT 10 get here.
then you have to play at that time. I
don't think 1t's fair:· the-St Louis
manager said
Dodgers Manager Tom m >
Lasorda. scoffed at Herzog's com-
plaint that hmers are at <t disadvan-
tage in the twilight. remarking. "'I'd
feel bad 1f the) were playing at IS and
we were playing at 5
.. But 1rs the same lime for both
teams 1he same mound. the ..ame
plate
'"I've seen games here at 5 v.hen
p11cher<; got v.racked up prett~ good ··
Lasorda said
A. pair of left-handers -one vtbo·,
red-hot and the other who's not -
will be the starting pitchers tonight
John Tudor will stan for the
Cardinals against Fernando
Valenzuela of the Dodger~.
Tudor 31 compiled a 21 -8 record
Playoll 11elJedale
Ton11111t -St Loul• (TUOOt 11 t > et
~ (Velen11. .. 1e 17·101. S:lS
Tllur'4e1' -SI Loul& (Anduler 11·11 > et ~ IHer"'IMI' tt·l ). S:lS 11 m
Se1uroav -~ 1weiu. l>-•I •' St
L..OUll ICO• lt·91 IO:OS e.m
Sunon -~ er St Loul• S 15 11 m
Monoev -~ el St Loula, 12-0S
pm If neGn••r¥
Weo"ftOev Oc• 16 -St Loul1 et o...n, 11-0S 11 m If nec.uarv
Tr1uooav Oct 17 -51 L..OUI\ •'
~. SlS 11m. If -&arv TU.aVlMOM
All N IM\ on Cllallnel •
RADtO
All Garnet Oii KA8C (7'01 KNX 11070
and a 1.93 earned run average for the
Cardinals alons with a maJOr league-
lead1ng total of 10 shutouts. the most
since the C'~rds' Bob Gibson com-
piled 13 in 1968
More 1mfress1vel}. Tudor won 20
of his last _, dec1s1ons after starting
the season \. 7 That one loss was to
Valenzuela and the Dodgers 3-0 on
Jul~ 20. Tudor had a 1-2 record and a
2 57 ERA in 21 innings against Los
Angeles this season.
Tudor'\ ERA was second among
staners in the ma1ors -the Mets'
Dwight Gooden v.a~ 2~4 wllh a I 53
ERA
The ~4-,ear--0ld Valezueta ~as
17-1 0 "'1th a ~45 ERA. but he
managed onl) one -..1ctof) after <\ug
~6 Valen1uela was 1-0 w1th a I 59
ER.\ 1n I' 1nn1ngs against the ( ard"'
this season
Man~ ol the Dodgers have been
s.a:-mg tha1 to beat 1he Cardinals 1n
the best-of-se-.. en league cham-
p1onsh1ps. the' have to keep speedy
\' 1nce ( oleman and ~ 1lhe McGee off
the basepaths
clabbar's future plans still big news ~~~sne.r
Willheorwon'fheretirenextseason? •tf1herc 1snothin1p<?thccocasnc FJ •Hocke>pred1c1 1on TheLm tOlllng lll • char~ which keep hitting the Dallas ~ngeles Krngs v.111 once again m1~\
Issuebelngbouncedaroundbywriters Cow ys.whydotheypers1st 1n ~ theStanle}Cupsenes obscur1·ty comsngup'> •Coachmgchangesat 'iotrc Dame
-•If yo u thin k 1t 1s bad 1hat low hfes are always histonc and n c111ng
N bod h n... . ..:,..,t Goodenand Bre t Sabcrhag .. n are peddhngdope to athletes. how •Sponsgambhngcolumn1st Ernie
0 ycame1n ont e noon LJWla-• '" aboutairplanepilots? Kaufmansa)'s footballcardsarefor Rams· nose tackle ballpon from Sasklltoon and asked of the Royals. have a combined total •Pro sports people role models for suckers .. I wonder 1fhe has heard
me.but... of4 1binhdays. ourk1ds? ... EdWh1tsonandhis aboutthelmdbeflhcase has }earned tO live
•Dept. of wretched exc.css ... Now •Show me a guy who listens lo an manager Billy Martin fought each •Steve Gal' e-v 1s the onl) :-.la11onal
the basketballwritersarcinafrcnzy LAOippcrsdelayedrad1obroadcast th 11 h h I d • -· i h t th l •• .L. h K bd I J bba ofane"h1"b1"t1'ongameandl'llshow 0 era overt e Ole an out into u;aguepla)ertoha ... estartedeven w t OU e gory overwuet er areemA U · a r " theparkinglot. •There1stheSubwa>World<ienes game th1sseason ht1ll1htnkhe·
will return to the Lakers for the you a guy with time on his hands. •When GeofTEdwards replaces and the Frec~a) World \cncs and ""ould ha' c looked good stan1ng
1986-87 season. •San Francisco Giants owner Bob Tommy Hawkins on radio. some· no" 1ha1 Toronto is in thl' Sled them for 1he Dodgers
•As Dave Adolph takes over, he Lune is taJkingabout moving to lhc body's pnonuesareout ofbalancc. Dog World 5cnes •If Bobb' C Ol goes trom Tnnin11•
has the same minor handicap that Oakland Coliseum on a temporary •Now that San Francisco 49er •Said an Diego Manager Di ck 10 A.1lanta, 1·1"111betx-c.:ause11"
Tom Bass had as the San Diego basis··. lfhe tries to leave, will he be quarterback Joe Montana is ti nail} a W1ll1ams dunng the closing senes greener there
Chargers' defensive coordinator... hit by eminent domain? father. perhaps he will settle down ""11h the Dodgers. ··we aren '1 ly1ng •The :"'B ~is hert· onlt.' morl'
There is nothing to coordinate. •Noteveryone appeanng in lhe and win some games. down for anyone" . l here arc 1hosc.• Months ofswea1ing I'> 1n s1orl
•Cy Young pitched until he was44 LA Coliseum this football season had •How would you hke 10 have a car ""ho suspect tht• Padre~ laid down But 11 rcalh "on·1 he: cl hummc.-r
years old ... This year's likely Cy a commitment to eJtcellence . Bruce with wheels like 8111 Wal1on and ~omcwhen:ahout the m1ddk ol ""e'll ha' c the final~ bdnrl' ne\l
Young Award winners. the Mets' Spnn1meenjustd1d music ( ednc Maxwell" '>um mer. summer
El Toro vs. Sunset teams better not look ahead
VaqS: Study Fl -1 't • 1oss10Loara'16-14> Hcre'salookat . na uneups what's happening 1h1s v.eck. This week's prep football 1n contrasts ·rorleagueplay
They're both 1-0 in South Coast
League football action, but definitely
com in~ from different dm:ct1ons.
Capistrano Valley-~11ler El Toro,
which had waded through a very
tough non-league schedule, meets
unbeaten Irvine Fnday night in a
game which contrasts in virtually
every d1rcc11on .
El Toro 1s a trad1taonal power-
onented I team. with the USC theory
of"stop me, 1f you can."
Irvine runs a Delaware winged-T
with deception and misdirection.
"It docs create problems," says El
Toro Coach Bob Johnson. "It's a
headache one week out of every year
and tt's very effective. That's one of
the reasons. you only see it once a
year."
Johnson's Chargers won the Irvine
League championship in 1981 , but
could manage just a 27-26 decision
over 4-5-1 Irvine.
El Toro's CIF Central Conference
champions dealt Irvine a 37-13
setback tn 1982. but despite Wlns over
Newport Harbor and Saddleback in
'83. lost a 24-1 7 dec1s1on to Irvine.
A year ago the Chargers breezed.
39-1 4.
Almost as b1a a concern for John-
son is the chemistry of this one -
Irvine was tunina up last week (33· 7
over LaJuna Hills) while El Toro was
in a cnticaJ matchup with favored
Capistrano Valley.
set this week
By ROGER CARLSON
Sunset League football 1eam~ take
one last tuneup lhts week before 11
really gets serious -but ~ou won't
find many talung this week'-; oppo-
nents lightly.
Among the bamers:
•Fountain Valley will be trying to
snap a two-game skid against one of
the best defensive teams in Southern
California. unbeaten Long Beach
Poly.
•Manna High's Vikings. after a
week's rest, are faced with a Millikan
squad which is averaging over 400
yards of offense per start.
•Edison tries to maintain its
winning ways against a Notre Dame
team which came within a touch-
down (21-14) of snapping Canyo n
(Canyon Country) Hi&h's 28-game
winrung streak last week.
•Huntington Beach. also looking
for a victory after two straight lossc<;.
1s up apinst Angelus League power
Mater Dci, a team good enough to
defeat previously-unbeaten We'it-
minster.
•Ocean View gets a "breather", of
sorts, after losses lo Fontana. Gar-
dena and St. Paul, but Western.
Friday niltht's foe, 1s 2-1-1. its only
Notre Dame (I ·3 l vs. Edison ( 3· I l ·
The Knights from Sherman Oak~
boast 6-6 tight end John Perak as one
of quanerback John Benz·5 favonte
targets. and ha ve 6-3. :! IS-pound
linebacker Ron Altbaum spearhead-
• ng 1he defense
"Their secondary looks prett)'
good.'' sars Edison Coach Btll Work·
man "Offensively lhc}' ha"e a lot of
good athletes, part1cularl) the tight
end. And. the quarterback can 1hrow
the bdtl, too. But, we don't know thal
much about them."
The Knights run split bach and arc
coming off their best performance of
1he year in the loss to Canyon. The
Sherman Oaks-based Knights are 1hc
last team to defeat Canyon ( 1983).
Notre Dame lost a 33-7 decision 10
Edison a year ago, but it may be-
Edison quarterback M1lce Angelov1c
who has the score to settle Angelov1c
lost his bid for the starter's role to
Keith Jarrett in the Notre Dame game
a year ago.
Angel ov1c doesn't fi~ure to ha "e
many more problems hke that. He's
completed 41 of 68 passes fo r 745
yards and 9 touchdowns in four
starts. a completion ratio of 60 2
percent.
Sophomore tailback Kaleaph
Caner. meanwhile. has rushed for
303 yards on 64 cames dunng the
winnma span after a slow ( 11 for 231
start against El Modena.
&hson goes 1n at less than full
The game
THl1RSDAY
Estancia "' ""oodbndge at In inc L,ta n1. 1.1 h-.. r
\.1Jtcr I >t·1 h' \ Hun1ing1on Reach"~ Mater Dc1 at anta .\na Bo"I
FRIDAY
addlebal k at '-<e" pon Harbor
Corona def Mar "'i < O'ita Mesa at Oranl(l' < 11,,,,
Un1vers1t~ at Laguna Beach
')addkhJ1. lo. h-.. \
(J\1tn .i
l.Agu na Real h h' ~
I 'l·n
l H P11h h' X r J1,on h-.. fl
~ r\ll'm h' ~
\1 ilhlo.an h' \
El Toro at ln1ne
Foun1a1n Valle' ,., LB Poh at \<e1erJ n' \tad1u m
Notre Dame '~· f d1son al Huntington Bcalh
Ocean V ic~ al ~cstern
M1ll1kan "s Manna at ""est minster
strength with dcten"ve II neman ( iar.
Gama douhtlul w11h a knee in1ur-.. In
add1t1on. fullback Mike "m,·ser 1~ out
for the second \lra1gh1 week
Fountain Valley fZ·Zl vs. Long
Beach Poly (3·01: The Jalkrabbm
have always been known for their
speed and otTens1 \t~ explosr' eness,
but it's the defrn~ v.h1ch ha<; realh
earned them 1n w1m o.,er C1ardena
(7-]). Wh 1tt1er (~8-0l and Banning
I 19·10)
Frecsafety Marlo.(amcrl6-~ 1751.
an A.11-C'IF and Moore League de-
fensive player of lhe vear as a 1un1or
sparks the ~ondar;
Defens1H end StaC) Elliot {b-3.
245) and linebackers Bnan Tuliau
(6-3. 2251 and Mark Odom (b-0. 2001
have also been big 1n a defcnK which
has allowed 31 0 vards total this
season
Offcns1H·I' thl' Jad,ra~htl' k Jdn
1s Junior running ha1 lo. I 1·nnard
Russell (b-2, ~I ll)
Fountain Valle\. mean11. hill· m u~t
go it "'thout c,tandnut rcn'l'l'r Den
n1s .\rq . "ho " 111\t l11r '-.i "l·elo.\
""ha dislocated 'ihouldcr \r<'' ha'
caught 23 pac;'iC\ for -'II~ 'ard' Jnd '
TDs. v. hKh is ab<1u1 1 ' Pt'rcent 111 thl'
Barons· punch
"'The\ probabh ha' l' a Jo1cn 11r w
gu~s that v.111 he going tn lour-,ear
schools on \Cholar<ih.1ps.'· \.3\\ F-"\
Coach Mike Milner 'Tm going l\I
e\erv '-11 in F-ounta1n \ alle' 1h1c,
v.eek to bu\ lotter; tickets -I m1&ht
be gone ··
.\!though Fountain Vallr~ entrr'> J\
an underdog. Milner \AH ··\\e ha•e
an opoon unm a \('('ond chanet'. tor
(Pleue ~ SUJlf8ET /02)
By J OSEPH Dl'DEVOIR
Tud1ng in tht' grime anon~m11~
and .ill the grandeur n l a salt mine.
Rc1m\ no"K' tad.le (1rt·g \fc1sner J U~t
\hrugs and ..a~~ "fi"s not the rleane\I
1ob 1n the "orld ) nu might rl'late 11111
a garhage man
··But 11' thl' tought•q po<,111nn in
11101ball and I l1 r...e thl' "hallengl'
n cn11me I line up··
\!el\ner ha' teamed 111 ll\e "•thou\
the al·colades that !!:II 111 the glon
po\1t1on<i nl the 'pon
fh I\ \Um mer in la, t hl' had c:1 'en
'oht-nng t'\penenLc 1n "h1L h hl' mu'\t
ha'e felt hlo.e thL· In' 1\1blr ~an
~lel\m·r\ Lnn traL t had run nut and
he ""anted a llln<>1derahk raise Imm
h1<, pre\ n>u<i pall
But no ont'. ""a" hq ening t ' en one
""a' d1<,traL1cd h' a cenain .\II·
l nl\tr\e running haclo. "'ho v.a'\ al<.O
dt•m.inding a ..alan increase
~1th EnL D1cker\on <iteahng the
hl'Jdllnt•\ \.1c1sner v. a., rl·lcgatcd to
an altenhnu~ht
·11 \A,J\n I ,j gcllld \(.'J r Ill d1.1 II "'llh
l:.n" out at the \ame ll mt· nn I !\FL
lor fe,erage and the o"ne~ 11ghten-
1ng do" n ·· Me1\ner said "It I had to
di' 11 .ill <"er again I prohahl\
"OUld"\C d1lnC <,1\ffiC thing<, ddkn·nt-
" "I J1d n'1 111>.l' thl· "'-d' 11 .... as
handled. out no" ,, ... '" thC' pa~• and
I" m OaCI>. pfa \Ing fOOthJll tL) the heSl Of
m• at11l1t1e' ··
He ended up taking SJO ()()(l klis
than the Ram.,· 1n1t1al olTe-r and hl<.t
SI .1 50of'>31an forthe N oµme\he
m1~St"d dunng h1\ contract dispute
.. .\nd I not nnh ki<ot the mone' hut
m~ \tarting JOb too ·· h<' "31d
But af\C'r C\unda:-'s game-. 11 appt>a~
\1c1sncr 1c; making a bid to f'C'Captuf"e'
his '>pot as slaner. which could bnng
him '\Orne-add111onal re' e-nul'
H1~ ne"' contnu ... 1 ha' incc-nu'r
dau~s that could fill' him a S"'i.1XlO
honu\ 1f he pla\\ tiO fX'n"('nl nl the
Ram'\ defensnt dov.M
The last down he plaved ~unda-..
m1~ht tx-wonh its wetghl JO gold
(Pleue eee KEISmtR/D3)
"We're very concerned about a
letdown." says Johnson. "They're
coming off a win wh~ they didn't
have to come up with an emotional
effort."
Surprising Oilers keep share of Sunset volleyball lead
Irvine Coach Terry Henipn.
meanwhile. sees his club with a
reasonable chance apinst tht usually
bigcr and stronaer Charscn.
""Hopefully, physically, we'll be
able to match up with them," says
Henipn. "The last two yean they've
completely dominated us at the line
of scrimmqe.
•·And. they've aot an elccllent
quarterbeck. He's only a sophomo~.
but he's quick and he makes their
offen1e."
That w~ld be J hnson'110n, B~t.
What T doan't t..ve it
tatlbeck octlet. who auffmd
a fractured shin bone on the fl.rst play
of the Westm1n1ter pme two ~It•
(Pl_.. ... laVINS/D2)
Huntinaton Beach, the early sur-
prise in the Sunset Leaaue g,irls
volleyball race, maintained its un-
beaten status and kept a share of the
l~e lead with a 3-0 sweep over
Edison Tuesday niaht.
Fountain Valley also stands at 3-0
in the Sunset followina 1u sweep of
Westm1n1ter1 while Newport Harbor
and Woodbridae 1till rank 1-2 m the
Sea View.
Here's wt..t took place:
Hadqtoa S..dl I, Mt.o. t : By
keepina tht share of the lequc lead.
the Oilen handed the ClwJcn their fint defeat in Sunle1 play, IS-I I,
1 S-9, I S-6 at HuntJnat0n Beach.
Sharon IU•tc.r and Ana>e Crabb
each had eight kills and Angela
Martin contn'buted seven for Hunt-
tngton Beach. Mara,arel Hillhouse
and K.tthy Hays stood out defensive-
ly for the Oilers
For Edison. sophomore Pam Lance
had 10 kills
Fouca.111 Valley S. Wettmla•wr t :
The Barons retained their share of the
le•d. swccpina p&Sl tht Lions. 15-2.
15-7, IS..t,at Fountain Valley
The Barons (6-1 overall) were led
by senior middle blocker Jill Myera.
who had 1even blocks and four loll\.
Jack.le Cook ( 14 ~ills and four scrv1n1
aces) and teller Stephanie Snyder,
who had 32 assists.
Sabrina Dennis and ChrtSly
SvaJstad al so played well tor Foun·
tain Valley. the top-rankrd team 1n
CIF 4-A.
tacie Humphrey was stead)' 1n the
back row for Wcstm1n'iter (0. \)
Martaa l, Ottaa Vl•w t. l>awn
Cbarroin and Chnsty Lanen com-
bined for 17 kills u the Vikings won
their first lcque match of the season.
I S·9. I S-13, I S-12 over the Scahawlcs
at Manna.
Ch&rro1n. a \Ophomorc middle
blocker, ~orded a team·h!Jh nine
luUs wlule Lanen. a Junior w:tter. had
eliht Manna .,.,at down 7-01 n S«ond
pme and 9-l 1n the third pmc before
rcbound1na,.
Junior ICtter Temrc Kuester did a
good JOb on defense for the V1l1n1s
Tnna Valcho<; was a 'tandout for
Ocean V1ev., which remained w1 nf('c;c;
in league compeuuon
Woodbrtdae l . Costa Mna 0: The
Wamon made 11 a quid. e.,en1n&.
11lov.1ng JUSt ~-..en Muc,tang po1nis
tht entire match. to rai\t their o' erall
mark to 8· I and Sea \ 1ev. f'C"Cord to
b-1 in leaaue action on \\ nodhndgt'\
coun
Mindec .\dam" a 1un1or m1ddlt
blOC'ker dnllcd n1nt lollc; lor "'ood·
bndac while teammate-Ttrn l •1lht'n
a sophomore lef\-~1de h111rr <Added
five to lead tht Wamo" to 1hr I~ ).
15· I. I S-3 verdict Jill Daniel' had \11
tcrvina 14-C\ for WoodbndJC' v..h1k
\Ctter U>rtn Ne"' man led the dcfenS<
NHrport Harbor S, E1t.ucla t:
Tran 'Kruq er 10 1 the hall rothna
when she drilled four <i,tratght kills JO
the first p me as the Sa1lof1 went on to
~in, 15-9. I ~-4, 15-3 at fat.anc1a.
Setter Lara Asper 11erved 12 con-
S«utJ ve points tn thc third aame to
'park the deets1ve V'lctOf) for New.
port Harbor. the Sea View leaden at
.,-0 The EqlC1 a~ 1-5
Kel lie Kane and Karen Scblcu-
1nacr played well for Estanaa
c.,.... •el Mar l, tJalYa'ldty t:
\hnwe Yon. an ou~dt b1lt.C'.f, and
Nicole Hatch su•ded the Sea Kines •o
(Pl ....... OtaU/D2)
I )
UaJnuwltT ~ ffl Sanday. Tbc Univen1ly H gym wall be open
Sunday ni&hts from -9 p.m. for pick-up
besketball pmes, for players 18 and older.
Tbe fee 1s $1 and all games Wlll be played
UJ?de~ a challenge format in which the
w10n1na team plays until defeated by a
challenaina team.
The aym will be open every Sunday nijht
except holiday weekends. For information phone 660-38S I.
Wbeelcllalr Team Tennl•
Teams fTom Japan, Canada. France.
Australia, Holland, Israel as well as the
United States will compete 10 the Inter-
national Wheelchair Team Tennis com-
pcuuon at the Racquet Club of Irvine,
Fnday through Sunday.
The event. which is a prelimina.ry to the
198S U.S. Wheelchair Championships
beginning Monday and running through
Oct. 20, will be played Davis Cup styfe.
with each team playing two singles matches
and one doubles match.
Matches begin Friday at 10 a.m .. with
competition continumg Saturday. Semi-
finals will be played at 9 a.m. and the finals
at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Admission is free at the Racquet Club.
Culver Drive and Sandberg Way, Irvine.
SPORTS BREAK
Oakland expected
to deny Giants
1nove to stadiu111
From AP dl1patcbes
SAN FRANCISCO -The San Fran-
cisco Giants indicated Tuesday they expect
to be turned down in their bid to share the
Oakland Coliseum with the A's for a few years un11I a
new stadium is built in San Francisco.
"It was clear to me that the A's may not support
this proposal at all," Giants owner Bob Lurie said after
a lengthy meeting between the two teams.
A's President Roy Eisenhardt said he would make
his decision by Friday about
whether he is willing to waive the
A 'sexclusive n~t to the coliseum
to allow the Giants to play there
next season.
However. Lune said he came
away d1sappomted by the talks.
which also included A ·s co-
owners Walter Haas Jr and
Walter Haas Ill. San Francisco
Mayor Dianne FelDstem and
Assembl}' Speaker Willie Brown.
"I believed the A's support
for the proposed temporary relocation was essential to
1ts success and I part1cularly believed that we needed
that support before the meeung of the coliseum board
scheduled for tomorrow ... Lurie said in a statement
after the meeting.
"We all understood that our request to share the
coliseum with the A ·s will be discussed and perhaps
decided at that meeting," he said. "I believed based on
prior meeungs with A's officials that such approval
would be given. I was mistaken.
"After a lengthy meeting today, Mr. Haas Jr. was
unwilling to express support for the Giants temporary
relocation to Oakland. In fact. II was clear to me that the
A's ma) not support this proposal at all."
Lune said he was "disappointed that we could not
obtain the A"s consent at this time to our request to
share the coliseum with them on an mtenm basis. It is
my hope that when we do hear from them.1t will not be
too late to see th is project succeed ...
Quote of the day
Petr Kllma, the Cze<:hoslovak1an hocke>
star who defected and signed with the Detroit
Red Wings. owned b} pizza baron Mike l111ch. on
his new life ··1 hke fun. I like "'Rambo.·· I hke
music I like cars -\nd I hke pizza ...
Soccer star Coeck killed
ANTWERP Belgium -Belgian m-21
temat1onal ~occer \tar Ludo Cocck died
toda) of JnJUrH~'> '>U\tamed m a car
accident. offi c1alo; at .\ntwerp'<. Un1vers1ty
Hospnal said He wa<, 30
Coeck '>offered .. e ... erc lnJUTles late Monday when
his car sk1ddt>d on a ram-slicked highway ID suburban
Antwerp and hit a truck before crashmg mto the 'ilde
railing~ He wa., hospttaliLed m cnt1 cal cond1t1on.
The 1n'ipirat1ona l m1dfield<'r. known for his fierc<'
shoo11ng. won two national leagut> titles and thr<'e
European (ups with nderlecht of Brussels
( oct k began his league career at age 16 and wa\ on
the pla\cr h\t of lntt'r "1'1lan when he died.
C oclk \\ho was not mamed. played 46 times for
the nauonal team He wore Belgian colors at the 1982
World Cup 1n Spain and the European Champ1onsh1p
m France last year
"He meant a great deal for the nauonal squad. He
wa<; a cla'is pla:,.-er and had an exemplary mental
cond111on. He was an in sp1rat1on for the other players,"
national coach (1uy Th)s ~1d
.\fter a long \pell with J\ ndcrlecht, Cocck moved to
Inter Milan in I 91rl where he played for one season
until a recumntt ankle inJun sidelined him
1V•tena lHJO at IU'f'el'Wldet
The I 98S Winston Cup NASCAR racma
senes will end with the S32S,OOO Western SOO at Riverside International Rac-eway
Sunday, Nov. 17 at 11 a.m.
Two-time Wmston Cup champion Dar·
ryl Waltnpcomesinto thedecidinaand lut
of the series' 28 Grand National races with
a 20-point lead over NASCAR's win-
ninaest driver in I 98S, Bill Elliot. This
year's series championship is worth over
$2SO,OOO.
Harry Qant's Sept. 29 victory at the
Holly Farms 400 puts him in third place,
still 10 striking distance of the leaden.
Elliot has also fared well at Riverside,
winmna his first Grand National at the
1983 Western SOO. Last year Elliot was
fourth.
This year's race will be held in conjunc-
uon with the Pep Boys 300 for NASCAR
Grand American Challenge Series stock
cars on Saturday, Nev. 16 at 1 p.m. Both
races follow two days of practice and
qualifying on Thursday and Friday Nov.
14-1 S. to narrow the fields to 3S cars.
Tickets will be $7 for both Thursday and
Friday, $9 on Saturday. Wlth $15 general
admission and $22, $24. $28 and $30
grandstand seats for Sunday. They are now
on sale at all Ticketmaster outlets and at
the raceway ticket office.
For information phone 653-116 l.
The Riverside International Raceway 1s
54 miles east of Los Angeles at the Highway
60-1-215 junction.
Celts nip Lakers In exhibition
HARTFORD, Conn. -KevlD m
Mc Hale scored 18 points and Bill Walton
had 15 pomts Tuesday mght to lead the
Boston Celtics to a 110-109 victory over
the Los Angeles Lakers in a preseason National
Basketball Assoc1atjon game.
Ea.rvm "Mag.ic" Johnson had 33 points to pace the
lake rs.
McHale stole the ball from Byron Scott with five
seconds let\ in the game to preserve the victory for the
Celtics.
Wtth the victory. Boston improved its exhibition
record to 2-1. The loss dropped the Lakers record to 2-1.
Both teams used their starting players sparingly.
Larry Bird played only a portion of the first quarter for
the Celtics while Kareem Abdul-Jabbar played only
parts of the first and third quarters.
Nett~es, 41, signs ($800,000) -SAN DI EGO -Graig Nettles, the 41-a
year-old third baseman for the San Diego
Padres, signed a new contract with the club
and will return for an 18th major league
season, team officials said Tuesday.
The one-year deal reportedly was wonh about
S800.000.
Nettles. obtamed by San Diego in a March 1984
trade with the New York Yankees, has a lifetime batting
average of .25 I with 363 career home runs and 1,212
RBI
A former Gold Glove winner. Nettles 1s best
known for the sparkling defensive plays he made
agamst the Dodgers m helpmg the Yankees defeat Los
Angeles 1n the 1978 World Senes.
Padres increase ticket prices
SAN DIEGO -The San Diego m Padres on Tuesday announced an increase
1n ticket pnces for I 986, the second year in
a row the club has raised the admission for
1ts games at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium.
Increased player salaries were the main reason for
ra1sing ticket prices, said Ellen Schiller. the Padres
semor vice president ofbusmess operations.
Seats 1n the field. plaza, and press level will cost
SS.SO, up from $7.50 in 1985. Loge level seats also will
go up by SI . to $7.50. while general adm1ss1on seats will
still cost SJ SO each.
Redus to Padres deal denied
SAN DIEGO -Padres General a Manager Jack McKean on Tuesday denied
reports that he would send San Diego Jeft.
handcd pitcher Mark Thurmond to the
C1nc1Dnat1 Reds for disgruntled Reds speedster Gary
Redus.
"That 1s very much mcorrect." McKeon said of the
report m The C1Dcinnat1 Enquirer, which suggested a
deal was ID the works involvmg Thurmond and Redus.
"I never talked to Cinc1Dnati about trading Mark
Thurmond for Gary Red us."
An outfielder with base-stealing speed, Redus 1s a
pnme candidate for a trade because of his discontent
with Reds player-manager Pete Rose.
The Padres general mana$cr said he met with
Cmcmnat1 General Manager Blll Bergesch when the
Reds were ID San Diego last week.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
Noon -BASEBALL: Kansas City at
Toronto 1n game two of Amencan League
pla)offs, Channel 4.
S:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: St. Louis at
Dodgers m game one of Nauonal League
playoffs. Channel 4.
RADIO
Noon -BASEBALL. Kansas City al
Toronto, KNX ( 1070).
S:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: St. Louis at
Dodgers. KA BC ( 790).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL. Clippers
vs. Sacramento at Marysville, KMPC (7 10).
Open womea '• baaetball Open women's basketball will be offered
at the lrvme Hiah school gym on Monday
nights throuah Oct. 28 from 6:30-8 p.m.,
and Friday Oct. 18 at the University Hiah
School 1Ym from 7-9 p.m.
roram bor1"6 card
The City of_lrv10~ Community Services
Department as trying to reach women
10tere1ted in playina in a Jeaaue scheduled
to beajn in February.
The cost i1 $I and is open to players 18
and older. For information phone
660-3851.
The Stroh's featherwe1&ht tournament
final bout between Lupe Suarez, 18-0, of
Corpus Cbristi1 and Refugio ROJU, 38·9, of
Los Anaeles will highlight the ne~t Forum
boxina card Tuesday at 7 p.m.
The ti&ht was postponed for two
monthes &ecause Suarez n~ed t1m~ to
recover from numerous facial lacerattons
received in his semifinal decision over
Rocky Garcia. Suarez, ranked No. 8 by the WBC, has IS
knockouts and 1s managed by An&elo
Dundee. former manager of Muhammed
~-30 Rojas, ranketl I Sth by the WB~. has
knockouts and has fought such big name
fighters as Hector "Macho" Camacho and
Rocky Lockridge.
WatmbJ•ter 6olf tournament
The inaugural Westminster Chamber of
Commcrc-e golf tournament wilJ be Tues-
day, Nov. 5 at Meadowlark Golf Course,
16782 Graham St., Huntington Beach,
beginning at 8:30 a.rn.
Also on the card will be a Stroh's
welterweight semifinal fight between
Stroh's and Cahfom1a champion Dcmck
"Humcane" Kelly, 14-0-1. and D1omcdcs
Colome, 20-12, ranked No. 14 by the
NABF. Both fighters arc from ~s Angeles.
Entry fee is$7S, whick includeSJOlf, cart,
post-tounament prime rib dmncr at
Marmac's and prizes. Dinner only 1s $IS.
Trophies for the tournament, to be held
annually, will be awarded for low gross
handicap, calloway, ladies low net and club
team challenge.
Rounding out the card will be _an
elimination tournament bout feat.unng
Stroh's middleweight champion L1Ddell
Holmes, ranked No. 14 by the WBC vs. an
opponent to be named.
Tickets are now on sale at the Forum box
office and at all Ticketmaster locations.
For information phone (213) 673-1300. Local merchants arc also invited to be a
tee sponsor for $40.
For reservatfons phone 898-9648. Dead-
line is Thursday Oct. 31.
-~~· Kanaa• City'• George Brett look• back ln di•bellef at the
plate umplre after being called out on •trlkea Tueaday.
JAYS ...
FromDl
Four out of seven 1s better to bounce
back from," said George Brett of the
Royals. "If we lose tomorrow. we
have a long road ahead of us."
Losing pitcher Charlie Lcibrandt
said the way that Kansas City lost
may have left the Royals in better
shape than 1fthey had dropped a one-
run affair.
"The fact that we were never in the
game will make it easy to forget , .. he
said. "The fact that we play tomorrow
afternoon makes it even easier."
The way the game went ~lso helped
each manager firm up his p1tchmg
plans.
Cox was going to use either ace
Dave Stieb or Jim Clancy for game
four on Saturday. Stieb settled that by
~huttmg out Kansas City on three hits
over eight mnings.
"He'd thrown 101 pitches. which 1s
not a lot." Cox said. "But we want
him rested because he'll come back on
three days' rest ...
"Cox told me that I had had
enousfl. and he's paid to make those
dec1s1ons." Stieb said ... As for m)
elbow, it feels fine and caused me no
trouble."
Kansas City Manager Dick Howser
had planned on starting Danny
Jackson ID the fourth game and using
Lc1brandt in Game 5. But Lcibrandt's
bnef outing may allow him to pitch
even sooner, especially since Howser
brought 1n Jackson to pitch the final
inn mg Tuesday night.
"There's a good chance we'll bnng
him back a day earlier," Howser said.
"I thought Leibrandt's stuff wasn't
that bad.
SUNSET TEAMS FACE FINAL 'TUNEUPS' ...
FromDl
the second week in a row to prove to
our fans that we can be a produc11ve
football team.··
Millikan (1 -t) v1. Marlna (l-t-l ):
Considered second only to Long
Beach Poly 1n the Long Beach area.
Millikan's Rams aren't among the
unbeaten ranks thanks largely to six
lost fumbles in a 17-10 loss to Los
Alamitos and a defense which col-
lapsed against Schurr in a 43-33 loss.
Quarterback Cliff Mosley has com-
pleted 36 of 68 for 704 yards and 4
TDs, with Ed Robmson his chief
target. Robinson has caught 20 passes
for 437 yards (21 .8 yards per catch).
Up front the top lineman 1s tackle
Dan Hampton (6-2, 220).
Schurr racked up over 600 yards
against M1lhk.an. which could be
welcome news for Marina. which has
not been able to really put together a
concerted offensive thrust.
"We haven't scored in seven quar-
ters," u ys Marina Coach Dave
Thompson. "We just have to play
better than we have been."
Defensive back Ke ith Laszlo 1s lost
for the game because ofa broken hand
and may not be ready for Marina's
Sunset League opener next week
against Hunt10gton Beach.
Huntington Beacb (!-!) v1. Mater
Del (%-%): The Oilers of Coach George
Pascoe have lost two straight and go
into the Mater Dci game without
halfback Tony Hernandez, who is lost
for the season with a knee injury.
"We hope to control the ball
offens1vlcy and to mix up our
defense, enough to keep them guess-
ing," says Pascoe.
The Oilers face Mater Dei
sophomore quarterback Todd
Marinov1ch for the second time. It
was Mannov1ch who engineered a
14-13 victory a year ago. Mannov1ch
has averaeed 32 pass attempts per
game, hnung 17 of 25 for 18S yard'>
and 2 TDs a year ago.
"Pascoe thinks he has one of the
better defenses in Orange County:·
says Mater Dc1 Coach Chuck Gallo
"And we think he's nght. They run an
intelligent offense. too. But we don't
want to play with a great deal of
emotion m preseason. We did a~inst
Westminster because we felt 11 im-
portant to oursclve!> to beat a quaht)
team after being embarrassed by
Santa Ana.
"We 're not pointing to Huntington
Beach. we're po1n11ng to St. Paul."
That comes a week later m the
4-ngelus League opener
Ocean View (1-3) v1. Weatel'1l
(!-1-1): The Seahawks have run the
three-game gauntlet and Coach Karl
Gaytan 1s hopeful that now that
they've seen what the best can do.
Ocean V1ewcan return tothewmnmg
ways they found in their opener.
"Western runs a few plays well out
ofa lot of different sets,' says Gaytan.
"I look for us to have a superb
defensive game. This 1s one I've said
all along we had to win.
GIRLS' VOLLEYBALL ..•
FromDl
a IS-3, 15-7, 15-J victory on the
Trojans' floor.
The victory gives CdM a 4-3 mark
at the end of the first round m the Sea
View. while dropping University to
3-4. ThC' TroJans were paced by
outside hitter Shannon Laudermilk
and middle blocker Amy G1ddmgs.
lrvlne 3, Ml11lon Viejo i : Tht:'
Vaqueros pulled out a squeaker, I 5-8.
12-15, 17-19. 15-12. 15-4. to even
their South Coast League mark at J. ~
1n a match at Mission Viejo
Freshman middle blocker Bev
Oden was the biggest force for Irvine
on both blocking and hilling. Setter
Shanna Arnold also played well,
defensively and setting, for the Va-
queros.
Mater Del 3, St. Jo1epb 0: Both
teams entered the match undefeated.
but the Monarchs (8-0) made it look
easy in their I 5-7. 15-2. I ~-10 Angelus
League victory at Mater Dc1 over St.
Joseph. which was ranked No. 5 in the
CIF 5-A.
The ninth-ranked Monarchs, 4--0 in
league, were led by seniors Cyndy
Kuhter ( 12 ~ills), Karyn Rice (I 0
kills. three blocks) and Laura Fort
(five kills, four serving aces). Fon and
Heather Mead also set well for the
winners.
In college action:
Athletes I• Action 3, Cltrtat Cotlefe
Irvine 0: The independent Athletes n
Action won easily, I S-2. 15-7, I S-1. in
a non-conference battle at Irvine.
Apnl Johnson and Michelle Neely
played well for AIA ( 14-2), while
Christ College Irvine ( 1-2) received a
fine performance from Lisa McCann.
IRVINE ...
FromDl
Mirande 's eight goals lead Pirates to water polo win ago, a season-ending in1ury.
"There's no big key in stoppin&
lrvme," says Johnson. "Everyone
Just has to do his assianment. Their
quarterback (Jimmy Raye), he's
pretty fast, a big play auy, and he can
hurt you With some aood wheels.
They're very sound up front."
Oranae Coast ( olleg<' opened 1t'i PaC1fic
Coast Conference ~late with a wild 20-14 win
over host Palomar Tucsda) as Rob M1randc
scored eight goal~. h1ghligh11 ngarea water po lo
play.
Meanwhile. ( ornna del Mar po~tcd a non
leque wm over Villa Park. while Mater 1)(1 wa\
dumped by Loyola 1n a Del Re\ I c111tuc t('St
tbe details·
Oraaie Coast H , Palomar 14: The Pirates
were sparked by M1randt'~ eight i 031\ and four
more from Mike I 1rt Nine." d1fT<'rcnt playt'l"'i
notched JO&ls for ('oa I wh1t h 1mpto\.ed to 8 ~
0' erall
The Pirates led at half\1me. 10.S. then
stretched 11 to 17-10 after three quancr\ and
'-'"ere never ID danaer oflos1na the lead
The goal-tendana chores were ~hared hy
"11ke H1Dze ID the first half and Ian McKay 1n
the ~cond.
()( <. v1s1ts San D1eao Mesa Fnday
In h1dl school action
Coroudcl Mar 11, VIila Part 8: Junior 8111
Harmon ~orcd five goals. 1ncludmg two
11nponant ones 1n the Sea Kmu· dcc1s1ve
fourth quarter as CdM won the non-league
encounter 10 the Spartans' p<>ol
Jason L1kms added four as Corona del
Mar. No. S tn the CIF 4-A. used four founh-
Quaner aoals to beat No. 8 Villa Park.
Harmon scored on~ as the gun sounded in
the first halffrom beyond m1d-~I and Likins.
the team's lc.ad1na scorer. tallied three tn the
second quarter to help CdM overcome a early
Villa Park lead.
The Sea Kmas talhcd five 11mes an th~
second q_..ner to take a 6-4 ed&r at halftime.
Erik Vinje and Brad Thompson added one
for1he~aK1nasC6·4.1 ·11nlca1ueplay).while
CraiJ Aclcley was the b1& ,hooter for V ilia Park.
sconna three times.
Loyola t , Mater Del S: The Monarchs. shut
out the enurc fint half, were down 9-2 hcforC'
they scored tht'C( times 1n the founh qu3ner to
make 1t respectable.
Mater De1 suffered its third Ocl Rey
Lcaaue defeat in as many tncs while Loyola
moved to l-0.
Hansi Assipl tallied three &oals for Mat<'r
Dei (3-8 overall). two m the fourth quarter, and
Nick Blankl and Bnan Green scortd on<'
Says Henigan: ''They're 2·2 (over-
all), but it's dcceivina. Look at who
they've played -Fountain Valley
and Westminster. We haven't
chanJed anythina. but we have to
ehm1nate some m1stah1 and
hopefully we won't J.Jve away the btt
plays. It's ao1na to be two 1ood
football teams playina that n1aht and
it's JOing to l'Ome down to who'1 1he
llc,t team on that night."'
•
FoR THE RECORD
w ......
CC>MlwluNtT'r COLL•O•
On,... C..u •· ,....._ 14 Orano. Co.tt S S 7 ~20
Pelornar l • S ._14 L Orentt Co.at Korlno Mlrenoe a u,.. 4 Mlh«men 2, te.9fltf '· JC>ftet I, O''Rovk~ I f>«ea I, Chrt1lle11aon 1, s1..,.8r1 1
HIGH SCHOOL
C C.... dll Mltr 11, V9ll ,..,. a
orone d9f Mar 1 s lllNe Park 1 ._ 11
l I l I-I
Cor0<18 Oet Mer t<1orl1111 Hermon s Llklna 4, Vlnle I. Thomt>M>ll I •
L..,.._ '· Me .... D.i J Meter O.t 0 0 2 ~
LovOle 3 3 3 o-t
G Malt< 0.1 \COl'lno. A.ule•t 3 atenkt 1 r .. n I . '
Min's f9umement
let •nt ·~ IU.I "'"'·--~ Ivan Lendt (Caec;lloslovekle) oaf Jlmmv
Connor1 IU S I. 6· I. 6·l. Jo/In McEnroe
(US I oaf A.nclrea Gomez !Ecueoorl. 6· l, •·2
r:.wetten Cup
(et T9'1' ... , JePM)
TedaY'a fllrlt It--..
U.S.. J, CMN 0
SIMiies
l<etrw Jorden IU S.) oaf Znono NI, 6· l,
6·0; Zina Gerrlaon IU S.l oaf. LI Xlnvl, o-9,
M .
~
Jorden-Sheron Wat111 IU S.J de! LI· Zhono, 6·2, 6·2
US. edvencea lo ouerlertlnelt ThurMSev
Glm flennt1
HIGH SCHOOL
W"""1dee i7, Cetta Mew 1 s.... Wiiiette IW) def Cllern1. 6·0, Clef. Herrls,
6·0. Clef e.teclc, 6·0; Sleomund (W) won.
6·0, 6·0, 6·0, lvev IWI won, 6·0, 6·0. 6·0
~
8rown·Solvev (WJ def Tuckt<·So/\rt,
6·4. Clef Pt lmer·T8't'lor, 6·1, oaf
Nue<ltf'teln·Oev. 6•0, Ven H•·Adcocl!
(W) won, 6·4, 6·0. 6· I, Perenlcl!e·Weng
(W) tost, S·7, •on, 6·2, 6·1
....._, Hartiow II, •1fallda 1 ,_...
0.Chfffte INHI Clef Bowen, 6·0, def
GIRLS TENNIS
0.UllCll, H , def. Pel41rMlll. 6-0, Croo«
INHI won, H , ...... i. Newcombe tNHl
won. 7·5, !Ott, •·7, -· 6·1
0.-.
ltyen·9unnell INH) '°'' IO FarQUflel Hendrlcka, 4·6, oef. Strew· 91ref\, 6•0, def
Kotna·Sdleal, 6-0; E..-· .... d (NH) Iott.
4•6, 4·6, 4•6, htledlci·8UM911 (NH) !Ott
1·6, •·6, won, 6·2
C.-dlf~1'.~2
llllllK Plle«>ua u;oM1 O.C L.,,.Wn, 6•0, oaf
Gr-. 6-0, o.t Cartaon. 6-t Scott "dM)
won, .. 1, 6·0, 6·0; a.in ICdMI won, 6·1,
6·0. 6·4.
o.ulllel
Rowbolham·C-•11 (CdMJ 0.1 llltero·
Wrteht, 7·6, dlf. ICr•~Ewer'I. •·2. ""' Mlller·Kl119, 6·3; MellOt·Smltll ICdMl Iott. ~-6. won, 7·S, 6·2; COlllv·Fre.dmen ICdMI
Iott. 3·6, won, 7·6, 6-l .
Mal1M IS, 0-View J ,....
Crlaell IM) def. Hur111er. 6·0, oaf. 0.
Vtf'a, 6•0, def. Roblnton, 6·0, Po IM) IOst,
6·7, •on, 6·1, 6·0, Jecooton (M ) IOll, 0-6,
1·6, WOii, ,-0,
'**" Llene·liloOetltott (Ml d41f. Cullison·
Hetvonet1, 6-0, def ltoelnson·9elft. 6· 1,
def Kocll·N•k•mur•. 6·0; MeG,,.u.
au11or1 IMI won, 6·2, 6·3, 6·0. Fenton·
Cllurell IMI won, 6·0, 6·1, 6·0
edMll 11, H ............... di 1 ~
Golcl1>9'118< IE) def ScNnlO, 6· I, def
Henten, 6-1, def Thornlon, 6·0, Ammann
IE!'°''· 4·6, won. 7·S, won. 6·3, ~'(E l
IOat, 1·6. 3-6, WOii, 7·6
~
OleM>n· Jetttrs (E~ lost 10 C
Subhtf'weht·S SUbl'ltf'we h4, I ·6. Clef
L-rO-TllOmt>aon, 6·2. def L Carev-J
Carev. 6·1. Brown·Goedeck• tE I totl. 3·6.
won. 6·3, 6·0; Weslly·Mahllr IE) tot•. 1·6.
1·6, won, 6·3.
,,.,,,, MCar
COMMUNfTY COLLEGE G-...n Wett J, fl'*"-' 2
GC>l<len West Korlng: P9nner 2. Cal .. IU
Wwnen'a MC.cer
COMMUNfTY COLLEGE
CO.... Wft1 2. ....... hedl Cltv 1 G~ West sc:orlne: CMvet I, Schultz
On1n9e CMlt 6, ..-...mer 1
OranM C04111 KOrl"ll Welker 2. HOPl>lle
l , Wrl9ftt 1, Owen 1
Sai)ors, Warriors,
CdM net victories
Marina, Edison
remain in front
in Sunset Leaglle
Newport Harbor, Woodbridge and
Corona del Mar continued their
winning ways in Sea View Lca$lJe
girls tennis Tuesday. while Manna
and Edison did the same to stay
unbeaten in the Sunset.
Here's what happened.
Newpon Harbor 11, E1tancla '7:
The Sailors received excellent per-
fonnanccs from singles players
Simone DcChcsne and Corey Crook,
who combined to lose j ust two games
in their six matches to help the host
Sailors improve to 10-1, 5-1 in league
play.
Leslie Ryan and Vanessa Bunnell
sparked the doubles teams for New-
port, winning two of their three
matches, 6-0.
Woodbridge 1'7, Costa Mesa 1: The
Warriors' tno of Julie Willette,
Kristen Siegmund and Liz Ivey did
not lose a game in singles as the
Warriors dominated on the Mus-
tangs' courts.
Mesa's only point came in doubles
when Mane Tucker and Carrie Sohrt
managed a 7-5 win over Wood-
bridge"s No. 3 team.
In doubles, the Woodbridge
tandems of Laune Brown and Kara
Spivey. and Tonya Van Hee and
Jennie Adcock each won all three of
their match ups.
Corona del Mar 11, Unlvenlty %:
Freshmen Kristi Phebus and Robin
Bajn and sophom ore Danielle Scott
recorded easy singles victories to give
the Sea Kings the Wln over the
Trojans at CdM.
Corona del Mar. ranked No. 4 in
the CIF 4-A. is I 0-1 ovcarll and 6-0 in
league.
Gloria Rowbotham and Nicole
Caprcu won their three doubles sets
as the Sea Kings prcpared for tt1eir
showdown against second-place
Woodbric!fe Thursday.
University was led by the doubles
team of Gloria Vilaro and Juhe
Wright, who recorded th~ team's or;ily
victones and barely missed a third
when they lost a tie-breaker, 7-6, to
Rowbotham-Caprcu.
Marlu U, Otto View J: The
Vikings, the seventh-ranked team in
the CIF 4-A and I 0-1 on the season.
made it three straight in the Sunset
League with the easy win.
Carrie Criscll, who didn't lose a
game during her three-game sweep 1n
singles, led the way for Marina.
Jennifer Liang and Kim Robertson
swept their doubles match, scttinJ the
tone for the rest of the V1kmgs·
doubles teams.
Shannon Magness and K.nsten
Bashore teammcd for three victones
and Tiffany Fenton and Heather
Church rolled off three more as the
Vikings won easily at Marina.
Edl1oa 11, Hutlngton Beacb '7:
Debbie Goldberger was perfect 1 n
singles as the Chargers edged the
Oilers a t Huntington Beach.
The Oilers received fi ve of their
seven points from No. I singles player
Susan Schmid, who won two of three.
and the top doubles team of sisters
Cbanderika and Sunetta Subherwahl.
MEISNER ...
FromDl
With one second left to play and the
Vikings on the Ram I-yard line,
Meisner, the designated disrupter. got
good penetration and placed his
helmet on running back Darren
Nelson's Leg.
After that. linebacker Jim Colhns
came over and finished Nel~n off.
On the surface 1t appeared Collins
made the play himself. But you
usually have to scratch the surface to
find Meisner's contnbut1ons. He can
be found di~ng away 1n the trenches.
doing the dirty work. and allowing his
teammates to reap the stats.
But after that play it was hard to
deny Meisner his due.
"Greg had the most affect on that
play," said Rams Coach John Rob-
inson. "He had excellent pen-
etration."
There, some recognition at last.
But. Meisner says, "As long as my
teammates know J"m doing the JOb,
that's what's important. I always give
110 perc.cnt for my teammates. I have
to go out there and think I'm gom~ to
make the play every down. even 1f I
don't make any:·
Last Sunday he made a brilliant
one that mi&ht finally st.art throwing
some hmefight on the five-year
veteran.
Orange County's
easy
listening
radio station
KDCM
IDB.I
FMSIBIEO
o~ Coul DAILY PILOTIWedneecs._y. October e. 1986 DS
LAI ~
TUUOAY'J •HULTS (1'1'1 ............ t-Mu ,,.......,
fl•IT ••c•. One mMt -LlnclMVI ltMuly IAlldon) UO UO HO
Siii-• Ser_. (SIMlll) suo 10 '° Cethn Bluel (Oetoml<') • 10
Tlt'M' J;Cn )/ S.
IJ IXACTA 13·71 paid Slcl.20.
HCOND •ACI. One mite trot
Ho! Chip (And41rt0fll 20.10 13.60 I 00
Sally (Meter) • 60 3.00
aenoo T-.1 IL.enonl 11.00
Time. 2:03. P IXACTA 12·3) r.eld 171.30.
THllltD ••c•. One mite PeCI. Bro.d Mlrided 1\llndhm) lt.IO UO 7 60
CHI Ou! (Grunclvl 6.00 4.00
er Pac.o IC•l'TIOCletll 13 . .0
Time( 1;01.
P •XACTA (2·4) paid 1107 10
flOUllTH •.+.c•. One mite P8c.
AA>a-I Oftom..-1 1 IO • 00 l 00 Frts11 T119nt IS.Ill) c 00 2.60
Brown a.111111 IV1Nendlnelllml 2 60
Time 2'03
l'lll'TH ••c•. an. mite P1ce Winter WOOd (Perll.,l 14.00 • 20 j IO Su-Tr~ (M4trrlem) 1 CO 2 10
Giia Monattf' IL.ersO<ll l 60
Time 2:01 1/S.
U UlACTA (9 1) i>eld '6000
SIXTH •ACE. One milt t>ece
Smart Rue (Sliva) i.IO l 80 1 IO
Tlmelv Prlnc.e (WIHlem1J 11 40 S 20
f>MMy Clle111141r (O.wntll) 3 60
Time 1 St 3/S.
U llXACTA I H l P81d SIOS.30
SEV•NTH •ACE. OM mile Peet
Fatnvraeetbetl (Meter) 5.00 3.40 HO
Sklt>~n Solrll (Anderton) 14.20 I• 60
SolO Flloht (PlenoJ 5 20
Time; 2'00 C/S U IEXACTA (2·•1 Paid S97.80
•IGHTH ltACIE. One ml .. pace
Dut>llce le IAn<Mnon) 4 20 l.CO 2.60
CHe Olamlu.cl IBahouthl 160 c 00
Savll .. Lord (St>rlVOI) 140
Time; I-SI 1/S.
U •XACTA <2·61 peld. \29 10
NINTH •ACE. One mile i>ece
A.ndv't Ne.die (F!Mlhl 7.IO S 00 3.20
Hv San Skle>c>er I Kuebler) 7 80 3.00
Jeckleu Jet ICroellan> 3 00
Time l:OO 3/S.
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Houston
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600 121 104
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·New England 10 over BuffelO
St Lout' S''2 ovt< •Pflll•Ollt>rue
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New York Gian!' I over •c1nc1nne111
C......,., Va o..-•Ho<n10f1 ·Gr..., a.., • over Mlnrteto1e te1
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6 Arkentet ll OV41r 'Texet Tech 1 •Ftotlde 9 OV« Tennn ..
I •Ptftn Stele 2 under Alabame
9 N.tlt'ttll• 511'1 ov• •Qlli.nome St1t1
10 Ateoeme 2 ov• •f>eM Sle t•
11 •eYu 11 ov., s.n D'-lio S••••
12 • Aul!Ufn 4 o.,.,-FIOl'IO. Slete
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16 ·SMu 6 ov., a.v1or
17 "Teiea 1 under Ollletlome la! D•ll•U •
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19 aevk>t • unoer •SMu
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PCAA
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Pecttl< 1 O O
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C•I SI••• Fullt<'ton I 0 0
L°"'1 e..ch Stile I I 0
Uteh Stele 2 2 0
Nevade·L.e' VeQel I 2 0
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New Meil<O St••• 0 1 0
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conler~•I
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CetllOUn. CSF
JO"fl, UNL \I
Gwvnn. USU
Lewlt . UNLV
TC8 Ycb. TD 10 410 • so 289 0 61 341 )
74 309 )
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SS &
PASSING
Plllver PA PC 111'1 TD lil'd. Y lb.
Gevnor. LBS 204 141 6 10 691 1313
Miiier NMSU 161 91 7 ) S71 976
Stallwortn. UNL \I ISi 80 2 S 530 968
Carlson SJS 124 61 I l 49' 86?
SwMMv FSU 9? ~ 4 S 447 161
llEC£1VING .......
t..ockett LBS
hmt>teron. LBS
McOontld, NMSU
Ltwlt UNLV
Wello.er SJS
SC~ING
l"C Ycb. TO
)6 CJI s
11 202 I
23 )?I 0
19 ?10 0
11 1)9 0
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0 IS I l9
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w.ller. NMSIJ 0 1 • )1
Locbtl, LIS S 0 I • WI~, FSU 4 0 0 M
Welker, SJ$ 4 0 0 M
~c=r "'-lc:Mll ~~
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I $en Olello M9M >-1 JI t Col!llM o1 OeMft W lO
10 Gronmont 1'-1 11 Oltwn recelvtno VOie:. ~ <>-11.
1', Rl..nlOe (2·2). 12, W•I LA t>-11. 11,
LA Valley 0 ·11. 10, S.n ~natd$n0 lie/MN
ll II, •. Ml s.n Anlonlo (1'-2), ,, ••ncho
s.1111 .. 0 11·21. ,
• ~'-· w.....-. ........
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HuntlllCllOll 911ch l 0
Edlaon 2 1
Mtrlna I l
OcMn vi.w 0 3
wntmlnst.,. 0 l
T....-Y'a Sc9rM Huntington 9Mc:rl ,,.. Edlt.O(I. IS·"
IS·t IS·6
Merine o.t OoMn VI-IS-t 1S•13
IS· 12 Founte1n V11tev o.t Weatmln11., IS-1
15 1 IS·•
TlM'MIV'• GwtWI Huntington a..ct> et OcMn lllew
Merine et Wettmlmt.,
Foun!eln Vettev et EdlM>n
s•A vt•w LIEAGUE
Ntwl>Ofl Herbor 1 0
WOOObrlC!Ge 6 1
L111un• keen s 1
Corona a.I Mar • 3
Unlv.,sllV 3 •
E1tencla ? S
Cotre Mew 1 6
SaddleC>eck o 1
T.,...V'I k9f'ft
oNoodl>fldlle Clef Coste ~w lS· 3. I S-1
I S·3
Coron• oel Mar Clef Unlveotrv 1 S· l
I S·7 IS-3
Newt>ort Hen>or oet E stancl• 1 S·9,
rs-•. 1s-1
' TlMlndeV's ~ Corona Ciel Mer et WoodbrtOQe
Nawl>Of1 Herbor et ~
ueune 8Mcll 11 E11enclAI
Unlversltv et Coste ~
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Irvine dt'f Mlulon V1elo IS-I 17· IS
17· 19 IS· 12. IS-6
GRAND OPENING SALE
CELEBRATING AT ALL STORES
I FREE With This Coupon
: 3King Alfred DAFFODIL BULBS
Finest of the
Kl
I .AJ.lllllirong GARDEN CENTERS
'Periwinkle·
PAOUDL Y ANNOUNCE THE
OPENING OF OUR NEW
STORE IN I yellow trumpets
l Limit one coupon per
I family or customer
VINCA -~1 ~:
Lavender. pmk und w/11/e flowers ~ '
Excellent for portrul sltade or Juli
'101 sunny pfu(e~ I gal size
THOUSAND OAKS
(formerly Treeland) 1 Expires I 0/22/
Rpgular $2 99 NOW 1.49 ~~~~~
Large 2 cu fl bog ~1
Regular $4N46W 3 • 79 1r:!J
3 for 10.99
BEDDING PLANTS
BUY 2 GET J FREE Buy two pony
or pot packs of bedding
~ Th! best hybnd vonet1es
. /~ 1/ Lorge selection now
1 ' 1 in bud and bloom
5 gal size
Regular $14 99
Now 8.99
Large, spectoculor ice pink
plants at regular ~~~ll'f lll011 y 111ore /lowers summer and fall
ar110/ shade loving vrn
5 gal SIZE' Mixed RANUNCULUS
12 Lurye (7rn1) bulbs
$2 99 Value NOW1 .89 Regular $21 99
NOW
'Weeping Banyon Tree'
King Alfred
DAFFODILS I.? Lur1w bulb
$2 99 Vulw NO~li 1.79
13.99
FICUS
BENJAMINA
Mixed
DUTCH IRIS
Decorator's del1gl111 F111Ply
li:..I~-~~ te>.tured. dark gree11 leaves
rl1tiMP 3 . ft toll s· pot sue
Regular $1899NOW 11.99
A 1/11rs1 Que11l /11113 1dt•o
grou, ~>Our OLL•ll lt>111n11udt>
tree Du.lJr/ trt'e to 7 u:1th /11/1
SILt' f rlll/ 5 gu/ l>ll't' 8 99 Canadian Rt><Jttlar $16 99 NOW •
Plu111 11ow Jor blooms 1l11s PEAT MOSS
w111ter and spnny
Clioose from our vt>ry
large select1011
of both sun or
shade vane111~s
rrw..._..., l gal. size
Regular $4 99
·~-J NOW 2 .99
WINTER RYE
~~GRASS SEED
Now is I he time to overseed
your lawn IOll bag covers
IOOO sq. ft NOW 3.29
25# bog covers 2500 sq /l 7 99 NUW •
,.--;i.. 50# bog covers 5lW Nb~ 14 .99
KELLOGG TOPPER
Seed cover 2 cu ft . bog
Regular S3 99 2 99 NOW •
N. HOLLYWOOD ARTESIA
12920 MAGNOLIA BL VD. 11540 E. ARTESIA BL VO
(111) 711·1522 (213) ~1•
GL•NDALE GLENDORA
5816 SAN FERNANDO 1447 E. ALOSTA
(111)~ (111)~
COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
2640 HARBOR Bl.VO. 1829 TUSTlN ~VE.
114 Mt-6525 14 '42~145
dl!llf:W'11Zl~ Super for porch. patio or garden
6-pot size Regular $6 99
Now 3.99
'Paludosum'
DWARF DAISY
MEXICAN POTTERY
SALE
High quality hand crofled red clav pots
16-Jarden1ere Reg $1399 1 99 NOW • If .Ar.-,,.trong I Z-&II pot $.'i 99 Volut•
Now 2.99 GARDEN CENTERS 1r 3 Legged pot $5 99 Value
SERVICE and QUALITY Now 2.99
SINCE 1889 1s· 1 OUJ bowl SS gg Value
Now 2.99
OPEN DAILY 9·00 • 5 l>
LA CANADA
1515 FOOTHILL Bl VD
IRVINE THOUSAND OAKS
15285 CULVER DR 75 E THOUSAND OAKS BLVD
(111) 190.2555 (714) as1-e21a (805) 4~1•
W. COVINA FULLERTON
1426 S. AZUSA AVE. 2m E IMPERIAL
(111) 111·11'M (714) ll0·112S
ONTARIO MONROVIA
1140 H MOUNTAIN 480 W HUNTINGTON
114 -~114 111 351..S11
•
IM Of'ange CC81Jt OAJLY PllOTIWednellday, Ootot>et 9, 1985
f oR THE REc oR o
~ f I
MURJCAN LaAGU• ~LAYOPPS
T ... 4 llCMM~ Cltv I
UT'T*O WMM•• Y KA~SCIT'Y
L$m1tll
WlllOll
arett
Oft• SMl'IO.n
Wllll•
a.~1
~ llalKAll!na
Conoeodon
Oloro T.,_..
... r 111aaw1111 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
4110000
4 0 ) l 0 0 0
400000 0 , 0 0 0 0 0 1
4 0 0 0 0 0 0
, 0 0 0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
l 0 l I 0 0 0
n1s,001 TOltOHTO
a11 r 11 a Jb 11r rtM J 0 2 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 S D 0 0 0 0 0
Sl11000
4 I I t 0 0 0
,110000
l 2 I 0 0 0 0
1 100000
1010001
JOI0007 ) 0 , 0 0 0 7
Garcia
Lae
Moiebv
GBe41
CJOl'lnaon hrflalcl
UoJNIW Glorg
Mulllnlks
Wlllll
Fer11anou
T"9h M'11200 i
~TCHING SUMMARY
Lell>randl
Fa rr
GuDlcze
OJaci<ton T..-
KANSAS CITY
t IP II 1 7 1
I 1 7
1 3 0
I 1 2
I a 11
TOflONTO
r., 1111 .. s 5 1 0
1 I 1 0
0 0 I 2
0 0 0 0
• • 3 J
tip llrwblue
1 8 3000 1
11 71100 ot s 1 1oa
SC:OflE llY INNINGS
Kenwit Cllv 000 000 001-1
Toronlo 023 100 OOC>-6
L~enwis Cltv s, Toronlo a SF-
Toronto·Fernenoez HBP -Uo•l'l•w by
Lelbrendl.
A-39,11•
FllELOING SUMMARY
KANSAS CITY
pe • e
LSmlll'I 0 I 0 Wiison 7 0 0
Brett 3 0 0 Sheridan 6 0 0 Wllltt 0 1 0
Ball>Olll • 1 1 Sundberg 3 0 0 Ble ncalane I 1 0 C onc:eoclon 0 0 0
Lt lbrandl 0 0 0 Farr 0 0 0
GuDlc:ie 0 0 0
OJackson I 0 0 T"8b M 10 I
TOftONTO
pe ••
Gercl1 0 2 0
Mosaov ' o o L.ff 0 0 0
GBetl 3 0 0
8arfleld I 0 0
Uo•l'low t I O Gtorg I I O
Mutllnl~l 1 O O
Wlllll I 0 O
Fen u1nde1 I O O
Stieb 0 I 0
Henke 0 0 0
T8'81s V S 0
NL PLAYOFF COMPARISON
How Dede9r'I .. "9d
1l9111Mt CerdlMb
Slellstlc.\ tor tne Oodllen In their 12
u mes 111alnst SI. Louis tllls season Tl'le
Oocklers won seven of ll'le g•mes
Wllltfleld
Guerrero
.Su
Cabell
Broc:I<
AndertOn
Matuszek
Mli"llell L.enore~x
Madiotk
Scloscle
Yaeger
Ouncen
Maldonado
8111«
JOl'lnsrone
Torets
Diez
Howell
Welcll
\/alentuele
Nlec:tenfuer
Honevcull
He"l'llMtr
Reuu
CesHllo
Torets
""""' Ae R H HR RBI Pct.
t• 3 8 2 3 .S71
29 1 I• 1 3 "83
34 6 14 0 I 412
16 3 6 I ' .31S
JS 3 12 0 J 3.a
23 J 6 0 7 261-s 0 I 0 1 200
31 0 6 0 ' 194
37 ' 6 1 6 , ..
48 1 9 I 1 181
21 7 s 0 2 11S
17 0 3 0 3 176
36 ~ s 0 0 139
16 I 2 0 0 125
6 0 0 0 0000
I 0 0 0 0000
.o7 39 106 S 36 2M
~
,,. W·L SO Bl ERA
• 7 1 0-0 I I 0.00
9 0 1 ·2 9 3 1.00
18 0 2·0 9 2 1.00
17 0 1-0 IS S I S9
9 I 1· 1 8 J 1.93
12.0 I ·O 9 S 3.00
701 1·1 14 6 l .10
19 I 0-I I 1 3.26
01 0-0 I 0 S400
110,0 1·5 7S 34 2.37
How Cerclnllls ,."9d
••Inst Ood9en
Stellsrlcs for St. Louis In 17 g.,T,., •geln•t
rne Dodgers 11'11• seeson
Cedeno
Herr
Nlllo
McGff .. JH US
Joroensen
Porier
Coleman
Smith
Var> SIVkt
Clark
P1ndte1on
Landru,,..
Braun
Here>er
LI Wien
TOllll\
Oevlev
Lahll
Andu10•
Tuoor
Horr on
Co• Forsc~.
Carno~11
Worre11
Tot alt
Hltttrtt
A8 R H HR Riii Pct.
9 1 3 0 0333
47 l IS 0 1 319
23 l 7 0 •. 304
SI 8 14 0 3 27S
• 0 I 0 0 2SO
4 I I 0 I 750
16 0 • 0 0 2SO .:i S 10 0 I .233 .a s 10 0 3 .233
19 0 4 0 I 211
40 '. 1 S200 &6 190 3196
I• I 1 0 0 t.a
I 2 I 1 2 12S
I 0 0 0 0 .000
1 0 0 0 0000
40S JS 93 l 32 230
Pltcrllng
IP W·L so ea ERA
3 2 O·O 6 0 000
1 0 1·0 I 0 0 00
23 2 1 0 12 6 I S2
7 I 0 1 1 1• 3 7 S7
9700 . 1219
18 0 0 2 11 3 • 00
4 1 O·O 4 1 • 15
H 0 I I 0 •SO
0000 0 o -109 0 s 1 ... 33 781
PLAYOFF SCHEDULES
Lt1eue Ch•mpionlhlp ~
AMERICAN LEAG+UE
TuesOav -Toronto 6. Kensas Cllv
rtoronto leads \eriH. I 01 rooev -Kansas C11v 1e1eck 10-ISJ e t
To•onro !Kev 1'·6) 11·0S om
Frl()ay -Toronto (Aleunoer 11 10) et
Ktll\8\ Cllv rSaoernagen Xl·6t, SIS om
Selurde• -Toronro ot t<ensu Cllv S 1 S
om
Sundev -t<anses Cttv et Toroll!o. I JS
Pm 11 necenary)
Tu1noav -l<.an'as C1tv er Toronro ~IS o rn (II necenervl
Wtdnesoev Ocr 16 -Kansn Cilv at
To•onro, S IS om (•I nacenervl
NATIONAL LIEAGUIE
Tonlol'lr -SI Louis tTu<10< 71 91 er
DtdMrJ (\/etenzutle l7·10J S30
Tnursdev -~I Louis t•nc1<J1er 11 111 at
~ IH11rsnl"r 19·31 Sl5 om
S.lurdev -Dtd9tf'S JWe1c11 13·•1 at ~' L.out' I Cox 18·9) 10 OS em
Sundav -Ooctterl 11 St LOUI\. S IS om
P\BJC *>TIC£
,
Monclav - -.,._,.at St L°"''· lt'i>5 OJn. (1f nectis.rv) w..,....,, Oct 16 -$1 Loul• er
~ 1>05 o,m (If ~rvl
Tllundev. Oct 11 -SI Loul\ If ~ Ui P.m (If NICftMN)
NOTE. AN Plavofl Hmei lele11INIO on
Cllannal 4.
Wertd Settel ,.,. •• av, Oct. 1t
al Amer'IQn Lee9ue, S:l6 p.m S4May, OCt ••
at Ame<ICA1n LMll\Ot, 4 p,m . tt T oronro.
S.lO D.m., If l(anM\ Cttv
T-..v. Oct. n
er N1llC>flet LNoue, S;.U o.m.
w.-..11,0d.D
al Nallotlal L-. S:ts pm. ~ •• OCt.14
., Netlonal LMoue, S:2S o.m Iii ne<leU
arvl
$jltwd9y, OCt. 11
11 Ame<!Qn Lfftlue, S.2S o.m. (If
~~aarvl
~ •• on.v
11 Ame<lcan L"9119, • o.m , II T Ol"OlllO,
5:30 om .. If l<anwis City Ill nt c:.narvl NOTE. AM World Wit\ oa,.,..... ,, .... ,,eel
on Cl'lanMI 1
D.-r•YWallltl
l'INAL "•GUL..ut SIASON
Guerrero, of
Sclotc:la.c Mar~ll,of
Su,2b
Madlock. 31>
Cabell, 3D
LndrMu•,f
Whlfleld, of
&rock, lb
8allor.lt
Oun<:•n, n Mldc>Ndo,t
Matuuek,of v .. oer.c
And9nn, lb
Jonnstnt. of
Tor at\
Henl'llier
Wek:n
Valenzuela
Diaz
Nled9nf\M
Reuu
Honevcull
Howell
Cu llllo
Tot•ll
" ..... A• " H H" RBI •A
.. , " 156 33 t7 .m • ,. •7 127 1 53 .296
s11 n 1Sl 2t 9S .m
... 62 136 I •2 .27'
su " 141 12 S6 .ns 33S tO 91 7 36 2n
..., 70 12' 12 50 .761
104 • 11 3 16 .760
QI 6-l 110 21 6' 7S1
111 • 2' 0 7 ,,..
S'2 U 137 4 3' .2U
213 20 4 s " .ns '3 10 14 :1 13 .m
12 I 4 25 0 9 .207
nl 74 " • 11 1" IS 0 2 0 7 .133
S502 '11 I.,. 119 632 .761
Pttdllrll
IP W·L SO H ERA 239.2 19-3 IS7 61 7.03
167. l 14-• 96 JS 7.31
2n.1 11-10 20e 101 us
79.l 6·3 73• 11 2.61
106. l ,., 102 24 2.11
212.7 14· 10 ... SI 2.92
142 o •· n ,, ., J.47 u o •·1 61 " 3.n 6t.O 2·2 S7 •1 HJ
146S.O 95·67 979 462 2 96
St. Louis awreges
FINAL REGULAR SIEASO.. """"' Al " H HR •at IA McGH ,of
Herr, 2b
Cedeno. lb
Clark. lb
L.en«um, of
Smllll.u
Colemen, of
\/en Stvke, f
Harotr. of
Pencnetn. lb
Braun, of
Nieto. c
O.Jesus, u
P0<ter, c
Lewleu. 2b
Joroenin lb
Tot els
612 114 216 10 ., 3S3
596 91 180 I 110 .JO?
296 l8 86 9 " .291 U7 71 174 n 11 .?81
1'1 21 4S • 21 .280 S37 70 ,.. 6 S4 .21•
636 107 110 I 40 .261
424 61 110 13 .SS .259
Sl S 13 0 I .2SO
SS9 S6 134 S 69 .240
61 1 16 I 6 .239 2S3 1s S1 o 34 .ns n 11 16 o 1 .m
240 )0 SJ 10 36 .111
SI 8 17 0 8 207
112 14 22 0 II 196
5461 ,., 1•46 81 617 ,264
""""' IP W·L SO II ERA Lellll
Tudor
Oevr.v Co~
Worrell
Horr on
Alldular
Campbell
Foncn
Tota ts
6' I 5-2 •I 26 1 ....
21S 0 21-8 169 49 1.93
65 I •·• 62 18 2.16 2•1 o 11·9 131 "' u e 21.2 3·0 17 1 2.91
t9.2 3·7 S9 34 2.91
269 2 71-12 112 12 3 40
6-l.I S-3 •I 21 3.SO
13'.0 9·6 .. 47 3 90
I~ 101·61 798 •S3 3 10
J00•'91n41 Winnen
I Cv Vouno
2 Waller Jot>nson
3. Cllrlstv MatnewM>n
Clle ) Grover Ale.ender
S. Warren 5'Mtnn
6 Jemes Galvin
1 Cl'larlfl Nlctlols a. Ttmo111v Keefe
9. John Clarkson
10. Eoole Plank
11 IL· Steve Ca rllon
(tie) Gevtord Perrv.
13 MICl'leet Welch ,_
1'. Cl'larlei Radbourn
IS 1C·Tom S.ever
16. L.aflv Gro11•
Ille) Eertv Wvnn
(lie ) x·Pllll Nlel\ro
a·ecllve
Actrw-~ln
Sii
•16
373
373
343
361
364 w
328
371
314
314
311
)()II
301 300
JOO
JOO
OonSullon 193
'NBA EXHIBITION
cemct 110, &.allws IOt
LAKE•s < 109) -RamtHs 0-2 1-2 1,
Wortnv 4·6 2·2 10, Al>dul·Jtt>t>ar O·S 2·2 2,
Bvron O·l 242 2, JonnJOll ,.17 lS-16 33.
KUPChllk 7· 12 8· 10 ?'2, Luau 1·6 •·• 6.
COOPe!' 0-3 2·7 2, Ltsler O·S 0·0 0, Sorloos
1·3 7·2 4, Nevlll 4·6 1·7 9, JC>llfl 0·3 1·7 I, M~ 4·10 1·1 9, Gr~ 4·10 l·I 9 Tolels
J'1·11 '5-51 109
IOST'Otl ( 110) -Mc Hele S· 16 1· 10 11.
Bird 7·4 0-0 4, Parisi\ 4·8 3·3 11, JOl'lnson
S·l3 l·l 11, Alnoe 6·1' 7·2 ••. Wetron •·7
7-9 IS. T!'llrdklll 2·S 2·3 6. lllnctnr 2-3 3·• 1,
Wt<lmen 1·1 0-0 2. Stcntlno 1·2 O·O 2.
Wiiiiams 4·S 2·• 10. Kite 1·2 1·3 3. Cerllste
3·• 1·1 1, Mitchell 0-1 0-0 0. Torel• 40·92
30-.0 110 ~by Qua,,.-.
Le kers 28 31 26 2J-109
Boston 2S 31 ll 21-110
Fouled our-Aln99. Rtl>ounds-Lakeu
S3 (Kuocllak II). 8oston '8 (M<:Helt 11)
An ltt\-L.eklf\ 21 !L.nrer 61. Soston t1
!Alnoe. Welton, Wllltems 3) Total
touts-Lekers ll. Bosron 31 Tacl'lnl·
cats-8ot1on, l(C JOflfl 1. elecrtd 3rd
Lekers, llleoal Oefenw, 3rd Attend·
enc-IS.13'
NHL °"'*"....,,.. THUltSOAY
Vencouvtr 11 I(._
T0<onto el Boslon
Heriford t i Buffalo
Montrtet er Plnsouroh
Cntcaooer ~
Wulllnoton 11 New YOfll Ran1>1n
New Jtnev 11 Plllledell>hl•
Minnesota at Ottron
Wlnnll>tO al EdmOlllOll
fllllOAY
WlnnlS>tO et Cato-I')'
SATUllOAY
New York lalelldefs el Klnln
Wuhlnoton al New Jenav Plll~le •I Plllsl>urgll
Sotton a1 Otfroll
New Vork "•noer-s al H1rlfo<d Chboo ., MolllrHI
Quell« • t Tor onto
8uff110 11 Mlnne10t1
St. Loult at v aneouv ..
Prep football log
SUNHT LIAGU•
•DIM* U ·ll
01~1 LO Wiiton
Olt-Ed11411 SAOOL•IACK (4·0) Olf-1..agutia Hitt• (et MVl 02~111 Hiii• (e t MVI
NI-I Warren 02S-.I Hunlln111on BHch
N1-Foun1eln V111tv
N~rlne
1 "8nta Ana Vatre11 O
0 El Modtna 1• 20 WI• Alie 12 Mt-Minion Vlelo (et MV)
Nlr-5an Clemente lat MVJ lS COiton 1 • )4 La H•1 0
27 lennlno II NlS-OC..n View 211 Un1¥iWMIV 0
2t SI. Jonn lloKO JI
Oil-Noire D•me (•I H8)
Ott-et Wnlmlntr ..
02s-<>c:Hn View ter Wml
Nl-+iln. INch tel OCCl
Nt-Ftn Valle¥ Ill Big Al
S• A Vl•W L• AGUI!
COltOHA O•L MAJl I 1-J)
1 Huntington et.<:11 n
011-1 Newoort Htrbol'
011-Eatencle (al SA llowl)
02..-WoodbrldN (et lrvlnt)
N2-<dM (I I NH)
lllVINI 14·01
1' Unlvtr111Y I
34 NewDCYl HerbOf 16
13 Tuslln 10
'' S.n Ciem.n1e 12 0 Ces>l•trano \/al....,, 1'1
Nf-<<>il• Mt-ta (at SA Bowl)
Nl.t-llOUN 8NCll (al NH) 33 L.aoune Hll11 1
011-EI Toro Nl .... Marlne (I I Hiii 0 Wooelbrldoe 13
011-Cosle Mew (e r OCC1
Olt-Unl11er1llv (11 lrvlnt)
Ots-E1t1nclt (II NH )
Nt-S.ddltt>ecl< (11 NH)
UNIV•UITY ( M) Olf-tt San Clement•
02s-<eolttr1no Vella•
031-0ane Hllrt f'OUHTAIN VALLEY <J•ll I trvlnt ?9
10 Mater Ot4 10 J Minion Viti<> 41 N7-t Gellr 1' Et Toro 1 ?9 Leouna ... ltt• 17 N l+-1 Minion VlelO IS Min ion Vlelo 11 N ...... 1 LegUN 8tKfl 0 $ed<lltl>tdc 2t
1 Servll• ,,
011-t.8 Pof't (al Vtlt Sltd,I
Olt-OcMn View lat OCCl
OU-Marine Il l OCCI
NI-• Wetlmln•'"'
Nl-EdlM>ll (11 1110 A)
Nls-NPI Harbor l•I OCCI
COSTA MaSA (l ·ll
10 8olM1 Grande •
6 S.nllaoo " 1~ Lo• A1emllo1 ~
011-1 uoune llHCl'I
Olt-CdM (al lrvlntl 02~ost• MeWI (11 NH)
031-1 N-POl'I Harbor Nt-E&11ncle (t i lrvlnt)
Nl~~ldN l•I lrvlntl
LAGUNA HILU 10·4)
0 WOo<lbr ldge I
3 E•tencle 20
11 Untverallv 29 1 lr11lnt 33
010-Los Amloos (el MV)
Olt-EI Toro (•I MVI NIS-.t Huntlnoron Beech
WOOOUIDOI! tl• ll 1 Legune leacn 24 015--•I Minion Vial<> HUNTINGT°" 91EACH C2·Jl 0 1..-CdM tit OCC) 1 Leoun• Hlll1 O NI-San Cremenrt lat MV>
Nt-et Caol1rreno Vellev 73 Corona de1 Mar I 01 ...... 1 NtWPOl'I Harbor
02~n1¥iWslty (II NH)
Nl-Wooelbrldge (II lrvlne)
N.-S.ddleOecl• (er $A Bowl)
N1S-Eslencle tat NH)
O Tu•tn 14
21 Oamltn 14 I San Marccn 1
I• Newport Harbor 19 IJ Corona dtl Mar 0 NIS-.1 O•ne Hiiis
I LB WllM>ll 23 Olo-£•tencle (al lrvlnt) MISSK>H VllJO tt •Ol Olo-Mater Ott tar SA Bowl)
Oii-Marine ter .,.Bl
025-Wtstmlnsltr tat HB>
NI-Edison <•t OCC>
ESTANCIA 12·2)
01 ...... 1 Legune lleacn
02~ (al lr11lne)
NI-Cotti MAH lat lrvlntl
1S San Olevo Mone 11
42 Unlversllv 3
11 Fount•ln Valley IS
Nt--OcHn View (al H8)
NIS-Founreln Vellev (•I HB)
3 Et Toro 71
20 LIOUl\I Hlll1 J
2• LO\ Amloo• •
N ...... 1 N•WPOl'I Harbor
NIS-Unlver1lty (11 lrvtne) 27 San Clemenrt 12
011-0ana Hiii•
SOUTH COAST LE AGUE 27 Newoorr Herbor t1 011-00wnev
02S---Laouna Hiiis MAIUNA (1·2·11
9 SI Louis <Hewell) 9
010-Woodbrldoe 111 Irvine)
Olt--sa4dltl>ack <•I SA Bowu
025-<dM (at NHI
CA.-0 VAL~ (J·ll
26 Footlllll 1 NI-I C.pl1treno V1lle'f
NI-El Toro (•I MV)
N1-.rv1ne 71 Esoerenie 1 N 1-L.aoune Baacll 1•1 NH)
Nt-Unlver\llY (el lrvlnt)
Nls-<011e Mite (at NH)
31 C1n11on 12 14 SeNllt 74 71 Corone de! Mar O O Foorl'llll U u El Toro 11 SAN CLEMENTE ( 1·1-1 J Ol )-Mllllken tar Wm)
Olt-er Hunllnoton Beecn
015-f'ountaln \/artev tet OCCJ
Nl-OCHn Vltw tar HEii
Nt-el Wettmlnster
Nl.-Edlson l•I HBl
LAGUNA BEACH U·I)
33 Buena Park 24
11 Elsinore 14
20 Dane Hiii• 46
74 Coile Ma.. 1
011-1 San Clemantt
01..-...1 Dene Hiits
02S-.t Irvine
NI-Minion Vlelo
Nt-L1oune Hiiis
NIS-EI Camino Reel
,. S.1111111• 0
12 Corone del Mlir l6
77 Escondido 77
12 Mlulon Vlelo 17
011-C•Plstreno lletlav
OlH rvlnt
OCIUN VIEW ( 1 ·ll
23 Ktnnedv I•
Ol l-Unlver111v
Olt-WOOdl>tldga OAHA HILU tM ) on-1>v•
Nl-Lagune Hiiis let MVl
N"-1 Dene Hiiis OU-Newport Harbor
Nl-Eslancla (at NH)
Nt-Corone de1 Mar
N14-S.ddlel>eck (11 NH)
1 Sonon " o Fonlane l8 26 Tor rev Pines 2• Nls-EI Toro <•• MV) 73 Gerdene 2•
0 SI. Peul 22 46 L•11une 8Hcll 70
3 Brea·Otlnd• u ANGELUS LEAGUE 011-1 We11ern
Olt-founraln vatlav (at OCC)
OU-Edison (er Wm)
NI-Marine (I t HBl
Nt-+itn EIHcn lat HBl
NIS-.1 Wntmlnsrer
NEWP'OttT HA"eotl U · ll n Santi Ana 17 26 Irvine 36
19 Hunllnoton Beecn 14
47 Ettencle • 71
011-.11 Mlu lon Vlei<>
Olt-<aolstreno \/ellev
02rEI Toro (at M\/l
NI-at lr¥1nt
Nt-San Clemente
NIS-Lagune Hiik
MATIER DEi (2-2)
10 Founteln Vetlev 20
41 Santa An• Vellev 20
14 Sanre Ane 20
1• Wtstmlnster 11
WHTMINSTE• U ·I)
1 Valenela 6
O I l-Se<ld1tl>ec1<
Olt-COll• Mffe • El TOltO (1-J)
01<>-Hln. Baacl'I IS.A Bowl)
01.-.1 St. Paul
02.t-Blll'IOP Amer (SA Bowl)
NI-I BllllOD Montoornerv
N1-Plus X lei SA Bowl)
10 Pacifica l
26 El Toro 7
025-at Lailune Beech
031-UnlversllY
21 Estancia 3
1 Fountain V1lley 14
1 W.atmlnsltr 26 11 Maler Del 14 Nt-Wooelbrldoe
Nls-<dM (II OCC) N l.t-S.rvlte 1•1 SA Bowl) 11 Ceolllrano 11111ev ••
NFL lldw1 ..... ltllftl1ta
NA TIOMAL c.ONfl •"IE NC E
~s
MciMl'lon, Clll.
Bartkowski, All
Mont111e , s.F
Dickey, G.B
Simm•, Gla111s
ltA P'C Yds
123 ,, 1194
Ill 69 738 in 106 1273 111 60 ,,,
.., 11 1731
TO ll'lt
10 s
S I
10 s
' 3 10 s
llllaNn
TCe Yds AV11 LG TD
Wlloer. T.B.
Oori.trr, Dall
Riggs, AU
Rooeo, Wun
Tvter. S,F
120 S26 • ' 2• 2 94 ... 0 )1 I
IOS l'H 3.8 lJ ?
11 lei U 31 I
73 367 s.o 26 2
Recalven
PC Ye Ave LG TO
Crel11, S.F 33 401 12.7 <16 4
WllO.r, TB 31 io. 6 6 11 0
Hiii, 0 111 11 407 I• S •9 3
J.Bel1, T B 29 319 l1 • 23 1
Co1ble, Dell. 26 331 12.7 32 I
AMERICAN CONFl!RIEH'E Qva~ctrs
PA PC YO\ TD IM
r:ouh, S.O
EslalOll, Cln.
l'tunhtt, Raiden
Krieg, See
O'Brien. Jet1
113 75 10a.t 10 • '°' ... 762 103 11 IO)
1 3
l 3 166 96 1219 11 6
1:ia as 962 s 3
R11"'9n
Tea Ye Ave LG TO
McNlll, Jets
Werner, See
~··ldtn Medl,Clev.
evner,Clev.
106 '12
101 •17
" 40t 61 3S6
12 350
Rec.fVtr'I
ll'C Yd>
11 Ut Ctlnlrllrl. Raiden
Sl1llwor111, Pitt
8ett, Buff
Leroenr. Sae
Jemts, S.O
29 361
29 20S
2t 429
2t 349
ltAMS LOG
<S·O)
4 s 69 2
4.1 71 S
'-l 20 1
S.3 61 3 4.3 36 J
AYO LG TO
lo.6 l3 ,
121 27 3 1 I 21 I
IS 3 40 1
12.S 60 1
20 Denver 16
11 PlllledelDhla 6
3S S.t llle 7•
17 Allente 6
13 Minnesott 10
Ocr 13 -er Tamoe Sev. 10 a m
Oct 20 -e t Kansas Cltv. 10 a.IT!
Oct 27 -San Fr•nclsco. I o.m
Nov 3 -New Orlee M, 1 o.m
Nov. 10 -•I NY Giants, 10 a m
Nov 11 -el Atlanle, 10 e m
Nov 2• -Green Bev. I om DK I -al New Orlean\, 10 a.m
Ot< 9 -at San Francisco, 6 p,m
OK. IS -Sr. Loult , I p.m.
OK 23 -LO• Ano•les Rel<lt". 6 p"' All rlmn Peclflc:.
AAIDEAS LOG
(3·2)
)I NV Jel\ 0
70 KenHs Cltv 36
10 San Frencls<.o 34
3S New England 20
19 Ken .. , Cltv )0
Oct. 13 -New Orleens. 1 pm
Oct Xl -el Cltveland, 10 e m
Oct 2t -Slln Olwo. 6 Pm
Nov 3 -•I S.ettre, 1 P m
Nov 10 -e t San Olltllo, I p m
Nov 11 -Ctncln111111, l Pm
Nov 24 -Otnver. 1 pm
OK. I -el Atlenra, I D m
OK I -el Denver. 1 om
Dec. IS -S.111111. I Pm
Ot< 23 -at Rams. 6 om
All times Pacific
Cele9t fMtMI lcMdUM
l'•tDAY
GremDltno State 11 Ttnntu.ff s1ere, n
SATURDAY
Wnt
UCLA ., Stenford
Walhlnoton et C•llfornl•
Weslllngton State •I Ort11<>n Start
S.n Joie Stele al Frnno Stare. n
Pacific et Ntvada·Las Vt0as. n
St. Marv's et Ctt Lutl\efan Sonoma SI. •I Cat Sti tt NonllrldQe, n
AZUWI Pac:lflc ., Rtdland•, n
Ciaremon1·Mudc:I •I Wlllttler, n
u . San Oltoo al Occidental, n
La Verne •I POMOna•PltJtr
"~ C.I Slt lt Fullerton •I Ulell Stale
San Oltoo State al BYU
Utah •I Arltona "''''· II
011-1 Irvine
Mlnourl el COiorado
ldeho Slate at Monl•ne
Ellttt'n Wa1lllnolon el Neveda·Re!>O
COiorado Slelt et New Mexico, n
Mof!••ne Stele el NOflllarn Arizona, n
ldal>O 11 Wel>ef Slate, n
Hewell •I Wvomlno ... ,
Botton Cotltoe el Armv. n
Air Force el Nevv
Alabama al Penn Stalt
North Carotlne State el Pin
New Hemolhlre el BUCJtntll
Oeieware Slate et Connectlcur
Herv1rd at COl'nell
Cotoere al Oertmoull'I
Boston Unlversllv el Delewere
James Madison 11 La favtllt
Rl'IO<M Island a l L.efllgll
Rlcnmond 11 Maine
Mauecnulells er Norlneu rl!fn
Brown er Per111
Cotumble al Princeton
Rutoers 11 Temple
Hotv Cro" er Ye te
Selltll
Ftorlde St111 at Auburrr
Vlrolnle 111 Ctem1on
Wtk• Fortsl 11 Norll'I Cerotln•
Oukt 11 Soutl'I Carotlne
TtnntHff el Florlde
Western Carotlne et Geofgla Teen
LSU et Vanderbilt, n
Mlu ln lDDI State 11 Ktnluckv, n
Soutllefn Mlu lu lOPl et Loulsvlllt, n
Tulane •t Meml>hl• Siert, 11
Clnclnnall 11 Mleml, Fie., n
Georgie v1. Mlulss1P91 er Jackson. n
AuUln Peev al Moren.ad Stele
4-m Housron Sl•I• 11 SE L.oul•lane, n ~rlhall et Furman
Eastern Kenruckv 11 Middle Tenn.1iee
Stele
Nlcnolls Stare e r Soutntrn U
Wasiern 1<.entuckv er Cenrral FIOl'~d•. 11
Oevtd10n e r Tne Clt10et, n
Mlctwett
lowe er Wisconsin
llldtane et Ohio Stare
Mlclll11an 11 Mtcnlgen St•t•
Mlnnnole et Nortnwestern
llllnols e t Purctue
l<ensas al Iowa Slale
Tuu·Et Paso •I Kenl State
Indiana Stale el N0<tl'ltf'n low•
Ball Stire el Olllo U.
Miami, 0 11 Toledo, n
N0<tnern Mlcl'll119n at w111ern IMlnols
Ct nlrel Mlcllloan at Weslern Mlchlg1n
Tu11·Arllnoto11 et Or•k•
1111not1 Sl•tt er E••tem tlllnots
Bowtlno Graen at Eestern Mlclllgen. n s.utti_,
Long llHCl'I Stele al Tulwi, n
Nebr11ka a t Oklahoma Slata, n
Oklatioma vs. Tans al 0•11•• HOUllOll ., Tun A&M
Arktnus et Te•aa Tacl'I, n
TCU 11 Rice
Bevtor 11 SMU, n
Wichita Siii• 11 Wtsl Tues Stalt
North Texas Siert er Arkanwi• Stett n
NE LOUl•l•n• •I Lamar. n
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOOI Oranee CM&f
(0°J0 I)
7 Goi<Utn We•I )
9 Futler"lon ~
1 s Saddlal>ack 71
Oct 17 -Rlvertlde', 1:.)0 o.m
Oct 19 -et San Oltvo Mau•, 7:30 P.m
Ocr 26 -Soutllwtttern•, 1:30 o.m
Nov 2 -al San Olwo Cltv". l:JO o.m.
Nov 9 -Palomar', 1:JO o.m
Nov 16 -11 Cllru••, 1-:xl P.m.
Nov ?3 -R1ncl'IO S.nlleoo•. 1:JO pm ·-~tes Min ion Conftrtl'Ce oame.
Gekllln Wnt
(1·2·1)
1 Orenoe Coas1 1
1 Rencno Sanll•l>O 9 10 Tiii ll
42 Pasadena 7S
Ocr It -er Mr. San Antonio•, 7-:xl p,m
0c1 26 -Lono 8aKtl City•. 1:JO o.m.
Nov. 2 -•I Cerritos•, 1:JO P.m.
Nov. a -Fullef'ton•, 7:JO o.m.
Nov 16 -el El Ctmlno'. 1:30 P.rn
Nov 12 -lall..-.fltfd•, 1-:xl o.m.
'·denote1 Pac·t Confertnc:1 111~.
~dr
C•·O)
4t El Cemlno 14
42 San Bernerdlno 10
21 Orange Coast IS
l3 Rlvtrllde It
Oct. 12 -San Oleo<> Mele", 7:30 o.m
Oct 19 -11 Soutllwntern•, 1:30 o.m .
Ocr 26 -San Oltoo CllV', 7:30 P.m .
Nov 2 -ti Palomar", 1:30 p.m.
Nov t -Cltrut•, 7:30 Pm.
Nov 14 -el RellC'ho S.n11aoo•, 7:30 p,m
'·denolH MIH lon Conftrenct game,
SCGA Mld·ArnllWvr toumev
(If .......... ,
Bernerd LeBeau 17· 1?-14-4
Kenr Rtcllardson 16·6~ 1'S
L.arrv Ca rr 11·1:t--145
Ari llutler 1!.-71>-1'S
Lee Devis 73·7S-1"8
Jon Buchma n 13·16-149
Jerrv Mlcl\al' 12·11-1•9
Nole Crl\ Brown and OeYld Snett of
rrvlnt, along wlll'I Daniel Gimbel of
Bekersfltld ll\ot lSO. Bucllmen 1$ also from tr vine
~ . ' ,, "
Sertler ......
HUNTINGTON ••ACH HHIORS • Wl'lllller IS. Huntlnoton Beacl'I 1
Co,re Maw 10, Santa Ane 1
Founteln V•lltv 6, Lo1 Alamllo' S c
Hunllnoron Beacn S, Seel Beec" •
El Monie II, Gerdtn Grove 8
Tu,lln 19. Fullerton S
lrvlne 21, NIWPOl't Beacn I
Weslmlnster 24, Co••• MeMi 6
TueldllV'a tranucftons
aASIHALL
Amtncen t..Meut
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Re·,111ned
Earl WHver, menaoer. lor one veer
SEATTLE MARINERS-Namecl Dick
Bel<lenon. vice ornldenr In cll1roe of
b•Ml>•tl aperellOn\
Ha"-! LfftU'I
NEW YORK METS-Namecl Roland
Jol'lnaon acoullno dlrt<IOI'
SAN DIEGO PAORES-Slgn.d Greig
Nt lllt\. rnlrd basemen ro a new contr acr
BASKETBALL
Hatlenlll aewetblll Anoclaften
SEATTLE SUPERSONICs-Pt•ct<I Tim
McCormick, torwerd·cenltr, on rne lnlured
r•ierv• "'' FOOTBALL
NaftaMIFttlblllL-
ATLANTA FALCONS-Slgn.d David
CroudlP, cornerbadl. Releuec:t Rt1111le
Pteatenl, COfntrbeck
CINCINNA Tl 8ENGALS-Welvecl Sean
T11oma1. cornerbllck.
GREEN !IAY PACKERS-RllHMld
Tonv Oeor•I•, deftn1lve linemen Signed
~rk Sllumete, deftmlv• llnemen.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Walvecl Odlt
McKlnn.v. deftnalve Cleek.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS--Placed
Lucious Smltll, cornerl>eck, on tne lnlurad
reHNe llst. SIOned Jim Rocklord, cOl'-
ntrblCk, H • numtt'letl rtf>l•ct,,,._,I
HOCICllY
Na!MNI Hedi.., L-
8 0STON 8RUINS-Senr Doug
l<O\lvnt kl, forward •nd Cleon 011tl<elaklt ,
ooetlt ro Moncion of 111e American Hoc:ktY
LNOue.
DETROIT RED WINGS--Anlontd Lene
Lambert, rlolll wino, Cleude Lot..+le,
etnttr end Boll Probert, lefl wlllQ 10
AdlrOl'dacll farm dub In 1119 American
Hoc:ll1¥ LMoue.
NEW JERSEY OEVILs-Auto1141<1 IC•rl
Frlewn, ooallt, L.uc Dufour. left wlov •nd
Par Conacller, cent.,-10 rl'le Malnt
Mllrlntrt of '"' Amt!1c9n Hockev Leewe. AHllHMCI Sll•wn MacKen1le, ooallt and
David Anderson, left wino lo FOfl Wa\lnt of
the lnltrn•llonel Hocktv LHoue.
NEW Y()ttK RANGERS-*! Gltll
Hanton. ooerle, 10 Adlronda<:a of the .Amerl·
can Hocktv LNgue, s.n1 Nick Follu and
Mike "°Oers, forwarm, •nd Roi> Wlll•llt
•nd Sltve Rldlmond, dtfenMmen, to N-
.... .,,tn Oi '"' ~rntric.n Hoclttv i.....ue s.n1 Pierre 1...arouc:11t. center, to Hertnev of
Ille Amerlc:an Hoctl•v L-. Stnl Twrv
terkner, dtifenMtman, to ~terl>oroooll of
ltle 0n11rlo Junior Hoekev Lwoue.
Wrestling
criticized
by judge
·u gives children
impression that
dirty tricks legal·
NEW YORK (AP)-Professional
wrestling gjves children the im.
pression '"that every dirty trick is
legal," a family court judge has told a
state Senate task force.
"We know professional wrestling 1s
exhibitionism, but the public d~sn't
know that; children don't know that,"
J udge Daniel 0 . Leddy Jr. of Staten
Island said Tuesday .
He testified as the task force began
hearings in Manhattan to investigate
alleged illegal practiees. treatment of
wrestlers and the effect of violence on
children.
State Sen. Abra.ham Bernstein, [)..
Bron;r., has proposed le$lslation
prohibiting pro wrestling 10 New
York state.
"I want to prohibit professional
wrestling as ll is portrayed today
because of its depiction of violence
and p~ysica1 {>unishment," said
Bernstein. who singled out wrestling
"because it has reached tremendous
proportions.·•
Bernstein said later that rather than
an outnltht ban against pro wrestling
he would support allowing it to
continue under collegiate or Olympic
rules.
"Children are watching so much
violence, they're w~tching very li ttle
else," testified Peggy Charren, presi-
dent of Action for Children's Tele-
vision. ''Research shows there's an
1m1tat1ve effect."
Yet, Mrs. Charren said, "I believe
government should have no role m
censorship. A wrestling program 1s
not going to destroy a child, but there
1s too much of it.'"
She suggested that parents become
mediators between the television and
their children, "and push the 'oil'
button more often."
Former professional wrestler Eddy
Mansfield of Georgia, who said he
was blackballed in 1983, testified
about fixed fights and exploitation of
wrestlers.
''Wrestl ing is not a sport, it is a vef)
high-powered business," he said. "I
was told before every fight what the
results would be .... If you refuse to go
along, they can put a Ioele right on
you. It's called a blackball, and It
happened to me."
However, he does not want to see
wrestling banned. "lt needs to be
straightened out," he said. 'Td hke to
see a union."
Outside of the hearing room in the
World Trade Center, Sen. Nancy
Larraine Hoffmann, D-Ononda$3
County, said, "I have no interest 1n
banning professional wrestling.. This
ts not an appropriate issue for the
state Legislature to get involved.
"The outcome may be some action
by the state's Athletic Commission to
investigate some of the suggested
irregularities, but where they go from
here ts out of state hands."
After its investigation the task force
will make recommendations to the
Legislature.
Penner's goals
pace Rustlers
Pat Penner scored both the tying
and game-winning goals as the Rus·
tiers stayed unbeaten m South Coast
Conference soccer action after two
matches with a 3·2 victory over
Fullerton.
Javier Callejas gave the Rustlers an
early 1 ·0 lead, but Fullerton c-0unter· ~d with goals from Marc Smith, one
1n each half, to take the lead in the
second half before Penner found the
net twice.
Scan Si.pos had 13 goalie saves and
Shawn Kirby and Hagop Balikcioglu
were instrumental in setting up the
goals for Golden West (4-5-3 overall).
Marcelo Franzetti, Abael Estrada and
Andrew Austwick sparked the stingy
defense.
In women's matches:
Orange Coa1t I, Palomar%: Kjcrsti
Walker iJnited a four-goal second-
half sconng outburst for the Pirates
~nd Lori Hoppke t?rokc a 2-2 tie early
m the half as the Pirates won easily at occ
Jennie Wright and Kim Owen also
scored for Orange Coast.
Golden Wnt %, Loa1 Beacll City 1:
Eva Schultz scored in the fint half
and Christy Cheves scored and won it
in the second half to give the Rustlers
(1 -1 in. conference, 1-4 overall) their
first victory of the season in South
Coast Conference action on the
Rustlers' field.
Deify Piiot October 2, 3, 9,
108&
WTh--090
-=~ ---·~~·~~
Oflnge Coeat OAIL Y PILOT /Wed~. October 8, 1te5 D9
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220
411 llOO
IT'S MMD TO 1BEV1 lR
WAS OlleE SO DBMY lllTI I
FO•• IY DIU.1-JllT
IY looml 11 Tiii DAIY
PIOT'S CWSIFDS.
BELOW ARE THE NEW CLASSIFICATIOKS BEING USED IN TODAY'S DAR. Y PILOT
•IAL ISTATI
FHSAU
NOUSIS/CONDOS
&eoch ''09'9'°" Ceme .. ,, lo•t \•JP"'
~CN\h lo .. Mo..,.d
•O•tf:O•~
Ow• Ot Co '"oo-""'
0..-0< S-•·-.... 10ft<"'9'1 ,.,._, G'O••'
I I)
1]1)
I )1)
141Xl
I)/\
Somo 4"'0
Somo A"'O tt-•1~h
~(~~10
S.......1-r_.,tw'I
lllO
)IU , ...
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MISC. HNTAU Al•IOUllCIMlllTS ·--1 .... & ,_
.... -,.,~~~ .. \
c--.1
lolboo ltkwMS ao.oo ,~,..,to , ................ .
'°'°"° ., M.M•
Co•to """-~ 0-,_
ti foto
l-CNn•D41' Vol .. .,.
'1wftft"Q40f'li .. 0(1'1
HyM~fOt't '°4Qfbow1 ,._
' OQvftO "'°' .. l~ ...... , ,_ ... _
\ah ,o,.-d
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Sovtt\ L oqv,..,
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MISC. R.E. --
lfr.KJ}
I ljO
IOU/
•011
1071
•O>•
1076
Oll •oJ•
l(l'O
1041
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1060
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f ~• ShOh""O
• f '""-• f W°"'•d
RINTALS
HOUSES/CONDOS
~·o•
lolboo \.IOf\d
lalboo •• ,.... ••••
(opt\hGnO ... ,. "
Co•°"° o.. ¥0•
(ot•o~
~'°"'' fl 'o•o 'O\loft'°'"" 10; .. ,
"'"'"•tf'l9tOl'leoc:ti Hw(lt~·tOf' '10'bow•
\OiQ'llf'tO ... " l.09V""'0 ,.,u, ·--~Oil• fo,Ht
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.
APART MINTS
~··~ lolboo ,e-Nn"Mr.tlo
opt\hO"IQ a.oi ..
( 01 ono ckl Mo•
(o\IO ""-\0
°'°"° '°'".
•ovntowi wo .. •, ... .,~~ .. .,.. ..
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~( .. ~·· \Of'I il.lt)n ( 09',flf\N!
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~ IOQv''> .. ,.,
lo;JI
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1001 >o•• >on
101• ,.,.
11>1?
lt>h
10-
10-. lo-•
10-•
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1601
160~
10111
11>1a
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11>11
709<.
"'Ot .. , M,olitil\
,,.,.~·~' • ..,.,.... to \frwv•
•~w~ C.0.-opt JO# • ..,,,.
~-'°""'"" l~ot•
COMMl•GAL
R.I . IAU/•INT
4po-
1..;..,.,..,,~\oM
""~" Ot•"'-• '4'M ~·c.al•,-ope.....,.
0v...-... ~
.u ......
FlllANGAL
a n.JWulO' !lo;. .......... ~
e...i,..,..."w~
27)()
1101
1109
1111
1716
lltl
1100
Set.ooh .. Wt, .. ~
IMMOYMlllT ,._,,...,
•1ote\~ ·~\Hgt•,..
Mod-col
C••ocol OHo<•
r-...._ot ''"°'" ~
(liwtbt '"'°""'°""' C,.....10~
t•ploy~lltf ..... d
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A.1>91.onfe; ·-· hJ•fll.lfv•• .....
c~·°'''~' ,_,
.... 10 ,~
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'-"""'9_ ..... _.._..,
0t1 ... ,.~. l fq......,._..,..
GA•AGISAUI
'-'"' ........... .-
lo'boo ·~la ( °' ono d.I Mm
000 ll!IW.O
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f,~V·>•••y ...... ~~·
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......... 4 ....
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DlmlCTOllY
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taAllSllOllTATIOll
IOATS
:.0.
~· ">o·ltM~·h
~ ...... t.N'"~'"' ._..,..... ...
"-t.i•!Jltlro ., ••• ·~
MISC. .. . , .. _, .. , ,,
~ 1. ,.. !of! .,,. ;,q ••
AUTOMOTIVE
-op,.'"" ..... . "( ~, ....... ·~~
6 .1 NOl"f'r-fj
. ',,....... ..., ..
.. ..,,....,..,,,..,1
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r
II ' . .
CLAS.SIFIED INDEX
842-5878
DUDU•a
PU8UCATION DEAouNE
Mondly ... -.. ·-............ Fri. 4;30 p.m.
Tueedlly .................. Mon. 4:30 p.m.
Wedt.-dey ............. TUM. 4:30 p.m.
THIDALY ... OT
a.ASllFllO OPFICI HOURS
T ..... •lerwtoe Moil., .....
l100 A.fll.4'30,, .M.
lul lltatt
ftr Salt
1002 lniat
_________________ ,
Gntral
.... 1220
1• llDO
Thurrlday ................. Wed. 4:1G p.m.
Fr1dly .................... Thf'UL 4:30 p.m .
S.turday .................... Fri. 3:00 p.m.
Sundey ...... -.. -........... Ftl. 3:00 p.m.
.......Colds. ...., .......
1.-00A..W • .-:OOfl.M.
ea-1171
1044 Ctatral 2lt2 Cetta •na 2124 !.!tau ltac~ 2141 Cetta •na 2624 C..ta •na 2'24 Cetta Ina 2'24 Dau Ptiat 2121
3BR, den, 2 story twnhm, 2 19R 1ba w/renge 1 frig .. $550/mo 2BR 1BA apt CAU 11111 Xttrec: .. bWTI oelllnga. 2bf IUlll RINI UOLISIYE lllTW car gar, comm pool, no Ill OAIYlll lndry rm, w1tw pd '460 upper unit. laundry, Im-ALL UTILITIES PAID unturn near Marini
8 /C. • Upgraded Dynuty mOdei COM Townhouae. VIEW. 2 pets. no smkni S 1100fmo Prestigious. elegant exec mo+ S375 d4IP &42-6502 mediate occupancy Compare befOfe you rent 49fr.~2 noon-5:30pm _,,•.,•.Mt....,....,, .. •.-.M.___ Condo with aerene Ca-Bed, llreplace $1550/mo Lee opt 1vall. W/rm . ~~;.,.,~~:~~Int Lg rm3 1BR, bachelOf $-425/mo. 2278 MAPLE Newly decorated cu11om Ml.II NW "-eral 1002 nyon VIEWS from 2 OCEANFRONT home: , Diana Cappel 831-1286 lplc, """'·'""a + TE~NtS'. util pd. 599 H1mltton, call TSl •IT 142· llOI deelon features. pool ... ...-... __ .. ,. __ "-·· V..,.., large "'"nef 5 .,._.. • """" ...., ,.,.,,,,1711 ... I L -bbq covr'd gar.,...., *"r· Only 10 mlnut" trom. ====iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; ;;r~s ~o~;d'~~ "";~: Dl¥~(ng. 3 ;;; 0.,: ~ ··~~~]~:\ · S1695/mo + $1895 aec .. ~ •-°' au.~ $750/m o 2Bd 11..,B1 roun<led with pl.;:; 1;"d-u.guna on Dane Point a ·-oo .... ..__ .. _ changes. Good 11_ l\Jrn s2a50tmo trftnt Crd ck req, pet oft Call 2BR 1'i'tBA, w/d hkup. 9ar Townhoute Gar. lndry I sc apl ng No pets I m~ secluded acenlc
PENINSULA PT· 2 t>ed -!!=--• 780-8702. egent. No pets Av111 now room. nlOe E/11de IOC Furnished 1Bdrm and bluffs SpaclOUI 28drm
::,rable lo.n and °"''7; UYI .. TIP home. vu $1200/mo -=========:.. BLUFFS CONDO, Linda $645/mo Call Craig 2629 ORANGE AVE FurnlStled 8achek>f w/Qen, pN1 ~tk>I, end COLDWeu
BANl(eRO Aak~iJ~~~~2nsT IFTllWllLll OCEANFRONT LOWER 3 OnOotlCourae4Br,2atry, Plan.Upgraded3Br28a 631-1266 Tll•IT 142-llOI 365 Wllson 642·1971 gar 960-&33t or
Fen tut le view ol night Bed. S 1200/mo lrplc. 2car¥.,$1450/mo unlrn S 1600 mo. 722-8522 I ·~i~~-~ I 861-6441
----,_ \41\HHIHO'lo/l llghtl end suneeta from -+MC Agt 51-3191 ~·· West:f:_._. EASTSIDEC M.2Br 18a . lot IMc~ llllMl..,t \4ArtHIHll'lol ~lllSll FOflee.aeLldolale,1valt ~ den unt $650/mo --..·~.....,~~....,;;......,-.
• M . this beautll\JI 5 Bdrm. 3 llllMI..., Inc. n•• I now. 38R 2BA. No pets. r · ~ Ag~t 645-3683 2 ILmS Tl-.U •Ill •l IAI REAL ESTAfE bath Turtle Rocle Terrace AE.t.L EST.t.TE We1tslde 2Br 1B1, p1tlo s 1700/mo. Bkr 499-J.400 2B 1.,.. 1 571 J-a-&P&IT11Em \ "'-'"'htful --h#-UYFlllT lffl,000 831-1400 home. Frencil doors to yard, carport $650/mo r ... un · .,...n. E-slde 2Br 18a. belm ..,.,'V ....,_, ..., __ Cuatom 5 BR, 4,h BA. Two!•-------• wood d«:k patio wtth fire 831-1400 862_1700 Harbor vu Hm• $1800/mo H>r 1 or 2. S510 No pets. Beautllul Garden Aptt I cetll, frplC, gar 5700• tS1. Specious 28drm. 2Ba·
mu tet eult• with M91r-i---------pit and BBQ. $495,000 4BR, 1 leYel, super r• Sierra Mgmt 550-1015 Pltlol/dectla. spa. Heat lut MC s225 2 persona, wtthgarege All iwwcq>ta
ate ftreplacel. 50' water lfU YD• Miii tnlH halt leeltf 2~A~~: =t:: model. Agt 640-5&64 2Br 1Ba completely r• 2~m ~~~· $7201-no-pet• 650• 1798 \ ~tul;,ot~~== ,:.°r'3· 3 t>oet tllpa. 111,IOO 18124Cu1Yer0f, Irv. lalMa blad ZlM new drapes cerpett JASMINE CREEK. 24 hr flnlahed 2052 Garden 398 w w"aon 631-5563 LARGE 18drm .t.pt with 960-6331
Lovely upgraded 2 bdrm lM-llOO 3 Bdrm 2 beth, comp1etJ; $600+ cjep. crd c:Mctl. aeour1ty. 2 BR 2ba, den°' Lane S800 mo 845-3081 pool No pe1a '°'75tmo 14'-IMO condo In excellent area. refurbished S1150/mo No pets. 770-5629 pool rm wl tlble, tennis & 2Br unf apt up1t1irs gar· 646-3618 A"er 3 30 * *Lo0
28#s2
7Ba50 NWllk to
Attached one car garage.·~ ac• I 120A t 412 8959 pool• Leue $1850 cell 2 's525 ~Eld I lx:h II 0 pet•
community pool. wm go Aay;&IMnVuOnlqueHm. gu. • Baal. ltac• 14 colteCt(619)244-1eeO ~& :::i~~·~~260 l 2&ci~ ~~~~H~~~~75 I 857-17760f 760-1713
FHIOLlllll V.A. or F H,A, Outstand-Lg llv. area w/2 mttr SYltea u•• ••1V1 llflllll. 6 bi0&1 to ocean. Elegant SEAWIND 5br 2¥.ba 2 ~Tl ta drps ll&IT91m No pets 645-5073 I llSTAIT •
Bank owned 2 bdrm. 2'i't BllngL "..aJ
00
uelNN"' WEBSTER M59K. Agt 963-9216 aft 4. --• -oedar & glass 3Bdrm, lrplcs. night lite vtew. Prl-r, enc 0 '· c;:-P N' Like brand newl All ullllla , S550Jmo 1BA 1eA. lndry
bath condo with ltreplece ILL"' " Ill ••-H • ir••iri BALBOA ISL RENTALS 3Ba Deco<ator's dream, vate poolltpa+comm ~ W W~';g_742j pets paid Pool. gar. no pell Large 2BR 1 'tba. patio I room, doee 10 beectl
and garage Bank wlll -• ~ Wlntw 2 Bed. $950/mo p lush crpts. lprlc, tennis. S2400/mo mo 1Bdrm 1565-$565 Dishwasher Garage 4932 Chan.oe Cir
nnence at 10 75"1. llxed Prestigious. elegant exec Winter 3 Bed. S 1000/mo wellpapers throughout 760-6266, 760-8978 •Lro 1 .\ 2 bdrm. newly 28drm 1Ba 5690 s7ooi mo Call s-45-3229 TSL MGMT 642-1603 GE 759.9100 Interest. Full price Mod4trn Condo Lg 3 SHORT TERM Obi gar Fully malnt yrd redec quiet pool $494 up 301 AVOCADO 642-9850 NICE 1 BA. IOW9I' enc g_, ---s 129,000 bdrm, 2 1h ba wt dlnlng Bayfront 3, l\Jlly turnlahed 960-1331 SEA WIND 5br 2V•ba 2 1834 Monrovia 548--0336 --elC ra""'". rerr....,... no sraWlll YILUIE
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
FORECLOSURES S5K On CH1 either: Equity w/ 12%
flKed ()( 10% flXed 15 Yfl
or 3/2/1 buy down·t1art
81;.%, ho neg. cuh flow.
All under SOOK S.F.H
Rlvwsl!M. San
Bernardino Co.
Bkr. 714/924-0272
WITllTT
m I le pool spa + $2000/mo lrplca, night llt• view. Prl----------· ··¥ ""V"' ~ ~ENN~S ' S1&95Jmo' + Yearly Lease BAYFRONT SKIP TO OCEAN. beach & v1te poollapa+comm •MESA VERDE 2Br 1Ba mealiBJIU pets. "480 642-5964 C.naa•tl•ar 1022 51695sec.crdckreq,pet 4 'Bed. boat slip, vu park. 3+3, dining, lrptc, te nnis. $2400/mo uni upper Dahwshr.011 POOLPatto,trplc,X-toe
Build yoor own dream oft. Clll 760-8702 agt. $2500/mo gar $1200. 963-5191 760-8266. 760-8978 $650 No pets 640-2495 ll&ITIEITS 191 S580 2Br $680. ~
hOme In CdM. 301 & 3031 Yearly BAYFRONT Upper (mat 144 •STUNNING Lg 3Br 2Ba lmmeculate lerge Garden • sec Uni E-llde 557-284 1 Live .mete you have
Narcissus. Agt 759-9070 WTILIFF 4 Bed S 1600/mo TUC BllffS Garden Apt Pool. rec rm °'PIS Beautifully land-Pvt t Br uni frplc pool I* Spec18acular aptt
I **IEOILS** llll. $725710W18th s e epe d grourid s patio gar nopets .399W •1&2 r 1 &2Baault• OlllU Ill IU Outstanding lemlly home -"\I I HI H• ''I CALL US REGARDING ---poot/sp1 patio/deck No B St $595 650-6357 •Sp&Clous townhOu ... •• •••ut AT l on large tot with 180° 111 1'11 .., In< 3BR 2BA. 1 story End Unit. •WESTSIDE 28drm 28a., pets •Y * F1repl1011 ._.... vlew.4bdrmt.2'nbaths. RE •l ESl.t.I( IRVINELEASES "Linda Plan· Totally lndry lac $550/mo No 1Bdrm $605Quiet1Bdrm in Nwot Hgta •Pr1v1t1 oalconlaa or WUll PllOll lam. room. security sys-17U900 lmat 0.ast l•lltJ lresh $1700/mo Vacant pets 646-4382 28drm 1• .Ba $705 area $525/mo Cell Evee Garden patio.
2700aqlt5BR3ba.totally tem 1nd more. Near lll-llOO ............ 3BR2'i'tBl,luxuryTwnhM 2250VANGUAAD WAY 631-2916 -.,,
updated In 1978 on an schooll. 1hopplng and ta.1114 &IYTI•fl apt uni frplc gar No 540·9626 or 631-0960 ww1 overslzedlotonly4doors tennis club. Fee land So Bayfront exec type. Furnished ciuslcally 4Br pet~ 5775 679 w '181h -----lllnLIC&Tlll 1•3Ughtedtennlacourta
to the entrance to Big $389,000. upper ol duplex. 2BR 3Ba+ den. $1850 mo. Westclltf 3BR 2BA hM St. 631_8213 attw 3pm 1Bdrm $61 5 S750/mo 28A 1'~BA j•2 Swimming pools
Corona Beach. Super! UMllALTY 3BA • otfloe. ele'11tor & 788-s.482alt9pm0featly w/pool. S1300/mo. gdnr 2Bdrm 2Ba $750 twnhM . grlll'lbelt. lndry •Str11ms& pond•
jetty view lrom front lll-llOO pier Avall now $2250/mo In the ITI04'nlng. Incl 844-7440 9V9I 3Br Weataldl Coate Mesa 151 E 21st 548-2408 room 111 t>ulltlna l*SOfry, no pet•
decll. Off 1tr•t parking Lora Vance Realtors GREENTREE:3BR 2b•. No Yll ---rT 1'1t8a, p1tl0. bltlna. d/w -----2078 Thurm •Furnlahlngl 8Vl ll
tor RV or up to 7 cars. 873-4062 nats Lee $l200/mo 818 o •TED -VIL-..LAG•E" COM· $725/mo Kids oil No Cute & cozy Bachelor Unit TSL MGMT 642-1 803 Sluhed t $389 000 "'",, " 40 888 55 O "' pets Av all Im med S385t mo Ullls incl -WHY NOT CALL O ' Fabulous 5BR 4BA, bay & 111* 34"""4 I -1 MUNITY 28drm 2'n8a. 645-M-48 Lv M90 786-96 14 Quiet spacious 2BR Ql-1111
14t-l211 Illes vu. Huge lot. Ataum Ptaia1ala 2107 New to 3br 3ba condo, 1600 aq. tt. ol PURE I t '•BA 1wnhme new I tin owe S625K 831-4&96 gar . w/d. •vi Nov 9. nr LUXURY Garage SPA In «50 Furnl1had Mobile UT&Lll& YIEW paint crpta drapes, etc 1r•W111 YIWIE
Cute fl.Arn. cottage. 2BR UCI, lee S1200. 854-"248 1 It DI 1 home. no pets. M1ture Pvt patio Carport ~ ' ' · llWPllT OlllT patio, gar, lndry. blk to " ma• er su aa. n no adults Quiet. secure 2Br 2B• uni 1000 SCI tt, $725/mo Vac, no pets 15555 Huntington VIiiage t;; OC"'"'N VIEW CONDO R h S J I 2B room, woodburnlng ttr• 1991 N~Po ... .,,,., "'"73 I gar.11c Redecouted No I L fr Sa ni--~ ocean, Yrly $750+ dep. enc o an 01qun r place. microwave oven, ,._ .. ,,,_...~ pets 58951mo 855--0665 Curt II Agl 631·1286 ane. om n .,....,,,o
DUPLEX-2Br 1ba ea. Spacious. private End Avtll 10128, 548-3727 .. dens'~~·· Jop8~ts:· private patio ELEGANT $495/mo 1BR. retro. no AM 831~ 107 PM SHAAP-C-LEA-N l B_R_. -NO f~ee::1.:. .. ~h. ~~
• IUt', So-of-PCH. S275,000 u2.~2'· BNewlthdooorS17258d.oormo • • • l IP• 1 v LIVING only t5 mlnut11 ....... adlta pref 724 St ------PETS $450/mo ............ .._ Abo\19 u-...vvt Harbor. 521 Carnation. By owner ,. real t U 4 to So. Co. Plaza. tua1111t Jemea St•C 873-7787 OITI&ll TTPf Cell 5'6-9950 McFedden lncredl~-: 4 bdrm•. 873--0241 or 673-154 1 °""* 873-2803 FOR LEASE. Charming lro w1•U ltac~ Nepwon BIVd & 90Ulh ol --2Br 2Ba w/gar Pvt PlllO 3br 2ba, den+ dining rm. 36 28X. No pets. Chit San Oleo<> freeway 2473 3Br 2Be Unlur 1027 1 wtwuh rm Quiet No Sharp Meaa Vero. 2Br ml lbOl'S FmlT ~~t~ii:°'~~c!::!. Huge newer Duplex $31K ftOTlltAI ITYlE 3 lrplca, patio. gerage. dren OK. Avail now Orange Ave. 831-~9 By Vatencla No pet1 $725 pets Wiier pd U901mo I 2Ba. encl Oil No pets QUIET RESORT LIVING
Income. $329.000 nrm. 3Br 28e. femlly room. pool s 1350/mo. Open Oallv~. S 1200/mo. Bkr 499-J.400 eppt only. mo Call att 3, 831·6155 TSL MGMT 642· 1603 S750 979-38-48 Att 8pm •S .... ntll"" '--·ted ...,.,..
$345, · Prins only. Bkr 720-9422 & tennl1. 2 block• to 620'L M"'RIGOLD "'V I ... ... ·-"""" • be1ch. s 170K, S35K ,. j 60 8 "' · Architect d•lgn 2Br 1•;,ea ltantt 171 SP&OlllS •Court )'11rd vtew dining l JllllllC)JJf tl()M(S IYIOUl•llllll down. S1500/mo. No ::~~7~:;1n. 7 -1 870< Duplex. Specteculer ocn WOODLAND YILLAGI S875 t mo 3BR 2BA •VlgnetteBBQarMS
•
-RMlt--0'9-,9•7•6-•6000--• $4391< Agt 759•9070 qulllfylng. 760-8509 vu. Beaut landscape & 111 3BR. :;;;, gar. 11650/mo. twnhM EncloMd gar. •TwllQht dine In court yrd
Irvine Terreoe 3BR. lam mOd conven Incl lndry 23& Avenue Montery Ofc APARTMlllTI I laundry rm yard ganoos iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Cnta .... lOM Lth •r It 14 rm. pvt y1td $1800/mo. S1350/mo. Dy 49.-ao38. 497~ hm 498-6890 7113 w' t9th St •SpeclOua Apartments
4la ...a.. _. __ ....... Lit No pet1. Joen Brac:ey Eve497-35« a...._,.._ ((lm,&•ni y ,•~••dt'"'l••JPI 0 ,, 0.,.1 "•~r ,., TSL MGMT 642-1603 •Your ownpvtpatto A 006 bOWIJ ....... _ ~ u lq H 675-&000 -~ .. " •Gourmet kit~
2Br
,..._;..,.0 1,L.,.. ~a· Flat -OVERLOOKING n ue omea Charming 2Br hM CloM ''°~'' 1''''"''Y' A ~. ·•'>'I' Jtl .,, • ., "
VVIN . n ... , -· o•N"' PT H"'RBOR .t..... t • 21 twn/bch. Frplc. gar •alL.aa DI'••' r..11~~" .. All 4tl• Ill< f'I ' rtt A'il I -....:.~•nu ·~00....tlf\Cf"PI lot. Spa. Small Comp ex. " " " · -Y-• tH s 1200 mo Eves 494-2027 ...-~GU...'9 •Lro waltl-ln clONt•
Trldlttonal 28drm nome S15.000 under lppt'liMt p rox 10 .ooo •Cl 11 · 2BR 18X dup, unfr, lrg Yd. •---L l lllad .. 'UM P'llll • UlS • UHllY , ... , •Oiied COV9f'ed pntng
with beem oelllngt. uaed at S 9 o. o o o . B y _4_9_7_-7_00_5_____ no pet•. S850 + MOUrlty. ~rt-• tBdrm unftmllhed yrty UCllLll IHl-llH tatOfage
brtGk and wood panellng. Ow ner I Agt ' Betty ....... 1952 Meyer S..9-3484 11MR6use ON cXRXL No pet•. garage()( lndry0
, ...... llM-$110 ..... ,., .... ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED
Hugelotg!Yely<>UllTiple 645-9181or644-2270 •NEWPLUSHl3Br2'h8a with BOAT DOCK. '675/mo.873-8293 21111t111S SIH-1111 FrplC.veultedceltlngs.dbl '
room to edd on. Reduoed "'"'STSIDE 2Br 1Ba. F/P l ..... /C.U. 2 T ·"' S 1000/mo IN 831--0560 ,........ • No _, 1 & 2 Bedroom to.,_ '339.000. ~ + ~ h• s 1•"'K -stry wnhme. g11. ATI N I 1BR t l&S. IUT I llT wam llCl . g11 """" .. ape. ,......, ,..... ..., now S1200 untrn ear Y new •P 18drm $720 2 Bedroom TOWNHOME
. ~ 7 91•• ..... "559 ltural 2112 1111 I. UITI Ill·-2BR 2BA condo. goll $675/mo .. utll• No mo Ml Plk.U91 28drm 2·~Ba 1930 Furnlahed & Unfurntlhed (714) 673 4400 P.P. uv,.........., .-.--OOUrM vu. Sep gar $1400 or ger Agt 875'-3331 686 W 18th Viall our model Deity 9-e ULIHLUll llMl12HlM-1ll2 Ben644-0141•87e-5739 I l~ p i I nt.IUl&IRll'T lM-Mlt 142"1111 645-2739 964-4183 ~.no'*9
DELUXE DUPLEX: 2BR l4BR 3ba Condo up· I II ta ata I ........... lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ 2ba M unit. 890-9083 Lg 2Br 18a, gar. w/d hkup greded. MlrrortitHk, 2'lt • Trll)lexl Unf 2Br 1'~8a LA QUINTA HERMOSA
$e25 No peta. unf, 21780 comm pool S1800/mo 2BR 1&aUOO mo lnC1 utU: GRAND OPENING Townhome type 1815 18211 P1rtcalde Ln. H8
The faateat draw In the
Weit. a Dilly Piiot
CIMelfted Ad. Call Today
PllOlf'llla 5-46-7983 Sp a r 11 n g R • 1 It y ltlM. yar. PINN cell mo No pets S46-5eOS Nl ..... 1
............... 1_642~·-6&_7_•~~~~-
M.aa Ver!M towty lg 4br 759-0882. 833--3544 owner 52·5710 Utllt pd Enol gar Smell ~U.... =
.. a yd lo rt IOc mleatiBJIU f\irnlahed Studio 1 lcllt i::_~ .. iiiiiiiiiilPiR-pf-iiliii 2.,., . pat . g . no BAYCREST 2BR 18A, untum. trptc. Pf9fd No peta "450 mo '"' i §EE THE w
pets 10-1S1150751-3898 Spec 3br. Fm/rm, lrml gat&Qe. Stepa to beedl 538-530I Of 54&-8251 from ttleee CIMn. ~
------'------..... dining tmrM<I oc:cup YMrly. 873-1955 APARTMENTS OCEANFRONT 29r 1841 i::~=' SCC\\c4llA-/J, ctr~~
------4 l>r CUT I P()UAN
• ,_..._ ....... ol ....
,.,.,, ........ bl.cl -d· II<> ""* ro '°"""' few• .. ~ .. wordt I POT CR l I' 11 I I I
M<Mher ot tteneged cnildlen
'The ICIUgt*l ll'l•nQ llboul ..... nQ "'°' ,. convinc•no ,.,.... I'"'•' .,ov
rrrrrrrr1
let U1 llelp Y•
Sell Y .. P,.,.nrl
Cal CluatfW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
Wett loc:at9d. Reduoed to BAVFRONT FURN WI lffll &-unite In mid Leguna
SHOO/mo 2BR S1000 ... II pd,..,. .. E Went I M11ctlOh of_, Beach Compl•t•ll 944-7211 AQ1 "' ~ 825 CENTER STREET ,,._ Ed09Weter 871-21M COST A MES~ IMng? We cen o"9r eny• tumlehed N.-capt l&JPlln VACANT· 38r 2ba. S995 ttl~lrom a amell apt to dr1pH, garage, lge
lm"*"81• pcn1111lon 2 + mo uearly. 1328 w. a 4 hM If tootling In patlol. Weekly "60 -den 0\'9ft00tllng Mein BllbOe 'C', e3&-30tO Come Mrty to get your pick of theM CM.NB.or HB tl'llnk ot Ill Monthly '675 to S1200
Channel. Exit cond beeutlful brand new 79 Apartmenta. Going ""'1 fOf thet oholCe of WINTE,_ ONLY 417-5125
S 1450/mo. 844-9513 ... .. r..tl lmm.ctlate occupency ~ ~~ 642•1803 STUOtO ooelll'I *-~
a..nttul 3BR 2ba. 1 ml 2iR \I);'.~ 8ACHILOM FM>11... WEST8AY ELDEN APTS = 1
1
.:::: ~ =~
from bell. S 1100/mo. Call '650 Ind "'1&. • 1 ~· ~ 1111 2311 ELDEN AVE. eec $575_ 497 ~&7
8'&-0498 21)-5M-45e1 -~ 2 KOROOlll" aATM '** W Speaoue 18' EMt9lde • aa--LUlll 28R 1ba. nu opt, paint, t •DtltOOllla 1 aATM FROM -
1
,,..., ~ _.,..,. 1 STUDIO w/kltch•n•tt• .... ,_ dlw /d m:C: t •·-Poot Oii 1 Incle 11t11. Furnl•hM Pteattgtoue tMQlnt allec ·• • • • car =:: · wet• •.1ruo.1m Selnw 497-1144 modlm concto. Lrg 38A OI' SMC> 17 lfl' Encl gar No C*I _...,
2'A8A. w/dtn rm. ft'plc, 29t 2ba. lfp. gar, WIO. F .. tunng pool. 91>9. prlvat• petk» and Wll1Ull51mo 145-6a1JM780 =~~= • ~• IPI + f!NHIS ~auo. Poot/rec arM. d9ciel. garage()( carport Bellutlf\JI abun-'"-fil~-..,-ll::~-::if:-i-i:i:
• -... dent lend~. II eH/mo • 1.,,.. _. 1500/rno. 4"-14'34 28" t'At t>a. IMS ~ ptltlt ~ ~ ""~ ~· 7~= 2M ~ oc.i.-llent IOe. omctl CNN DALY l:JO All TO 7 N Pool!~ no=-AmenNe1.. W-1144
Aeent ' ~':"le:.":°~ Loc.t.i at the conw of Cenwr St,...t 6'H122 17 OECOAATOM bW1C1M
""'CLUSI""" ... ,.., ... v 10115. .. 10 t n-&333 end ~ A~ w.tatoe "' 1ba une. """· Condo on .. -'"" '"'' _..,.. ... MIO mo MSO. d9'> Oii S11'Mlmo ..,.._.
Sbr 2~ untum. "->-blitONt~·i turnlal'IM 142-1424 a W11* C*CI. ~ UOO l.UX
r H tton fac. nail. T~ ,.rpee & poot SOtTy. no~· Sfll Idle Item• •ltl'I a 18' 2 Ill...,.,°"' ..ati. =~or~ onty I 1116/mo. 17'3-0IM Ollty No( ~ NJ a 1IOCJ mo. l40-1QOI
,
\
•
Or"Mge ~ DAIL V PILOT IWtdnMday, October 9. 1986
Enter Now
And Win
$200.00
of Home
Decorating
Supplies
from
..
II
.. .,.
. ,. '~,
·--··· J ! ·"'
" CATEGORIES
ROOM WITH A THEME-ls your kite.hen country? Has your den
gone nautical? Enter your favor!~ room designed around a particular
theme.
HOllY DISPLAY-Attention Collectors and Hobbyists! If you hove
displayed your collection or hobby as a part of the decor in your home.
this category is for you.
CllA TIVI FLOOR & WALLCOVIRING-Non-troditionol use of
carpet, tile, wall and floor coverings qualify you for on entry in this
category.
BUSINESS OR OFFICE-Design and style ore now a necessary
function of business. The category is open to offices designed either
privately or professionally.
CONTESTS RULES
Thi• conmt il d.,;gned 10 receive rMpon-f101n ony occupont of o home, condo, opartln«lt, mobile ho'™'
or llveoboord yacht. ComtMraol entr..-. are only occeptobt. for !tie &usineu or Office caf890ry and will
be r~ in ony of the other ltirM c<Jl'a90rie1. To tfl!wr, c0tnplete th entry form and submjf o phorogropll
of t+ie entry. The tnlry must be occotnponted by o ct.Krlption of the entry. Ptiol'Ograph• bK~ property
of the Daily Pilot and cannot be re!vl"ftld. EMrie1 Mutl be po1tmorlted by Wedneldoy, Om>ber 161+1, 19U
or deli-..rad IO the Doily Pilot, c/o INTERIORS, 330 W Boy, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 by .5100 p.m. Octob.r
171ti, 198.5. Wmnen will be feo!ured in stories and plw>togropht in !tie "Int.non" Mtd>att published an
October 31", 198.5. Doily Pilot employee• ore not eligible. Entrants must be 18 ,..an old or a11er and must
l'etOcle in !tie Dolly Pilot circulation or.a. Dotty Pilot pllotograph•'l will pt\olOgraph the winning entiret far
pubUc:ation in !tie llfhtrion t«t>on. Com.slants may enter moire ltion one ca199ory although only one entry
per cafe9o<y will be coosidared. One wionar per <CJl'a90ry will be chowon
INTRANT'S
ADDRISS:
INTERIORS
ENTRY FORM
NAME:
DAY PHONI NUMlllh
IVINING PHONI NUMllR:
CATEGORY:
S•nd entrl•• c/o The Dolly Pilot lnterlore ContHt
330 W. lay St. Costa Meta, CA 92626
Lrg A Iba. flrpfc.1 Couctl a IN~ unr. 1288 IQ H w/tr&d OIO IQ '• • • • I " II• 1111 ti....,... .-_!!]_ l
balcOny. 1242 Rutland UQ9I oond Off wNt.. ,..., d~ dOor. No ERTISING ~-for N.8. Lft ""-· .._ Rd.'800/mo.831-0211 LOOM~l400/0f macNne Of euto ~ADV o~oln~r~ OU.-toouraoy HHntl•I.
Ill lllBll n ofr 840-0311 CdM '66C>lmo. eat TermNil iorn:· ~ AllO to in. ~ ~ =
GATED VII.LAG! COM· ROOM w/kltch9n ptM• ' :._: ~~ 640-'362. IDTIST ~ .. ~.~,~= ~ NQ'd, 1144 8040
MUNrTY 28dnn 2~8a. '--9dutt1 onty. Nw N\ '""'' ---v ,. ' /T ... 1800 .,; rt of PURE ~j,,. enop.. M2-5780 950 Sq. Ft. w/offtol & •xp«. only. Mon.·F1 '!,· T11blfaJ 1 ..... • ' wareflOUM, top tocatJon. Growing dally iii IP8"' tw5. •1300/mo. Meu .. HM LUXURY. Gweo-. SPA In Room w/pvt bath. eo.ta Fwy cloae. 875.8251 on tM Or~ Coaet Sona. Karw'I, "6-1510 ,,_. mutet ault••· Dining M... Kit prlv '30()/mo needa ll'nllglnetlw pro-&I-II =· =:."!"' 0::-722· 1·301 or 543-7542 "f,:0~= ~ ":!:" ductlw, layout artiit who lllUllPll Full tlf'M poettlon avail. twtv•t• patio. ELEGANT lettla/Lttla Hil For Into. can t1;t7o.nW ~=~..:g ~=~i 1~=; ~':r ~!':r.:: ":t'
LIVING ~ 16 mlnvt• L.11111 llAll ~7000 or 873-2222 for' a van.ty of citenta. pref. SM-38781$40.0110 Weatmlnater, 647•1556 ' ~Blvd~·~,:::: .... IUiallalnautial ~~~:'~":d IMllllP/Ullfl PUlllT
San Dl900 fr..w~4T3 Wkly rentale. Low rtt• atyte. Local geMl'al building PIT w/flaxlbl• houre.
Orange AY9. 83 l-9 By $ 136 & Up/Wkly. Color ........ otfloe. Part tlrM. M&-m6 Xavlet'• of NB. 846-7646 11PPt only. TV, maid NfVlce, tr.. ... lllf Nawap•p•r production con... hMted poo1 & knowtedQe helpM. Ablll-llllUl .,,.. IHf ...._,./ ...
i i •t• to OOMn. Kltctl'• w.liiil••• ty to wen un<Mr dMd-Typing flllng and other exp,. oonatNCtlon a blue ou• "ngll' Ont' avaJI. 985 N. Cout Hwy, • ...-W •WI llnee • muat. Prior ntn-ci.ric8i dull•. Own car• prtntt. Reta. Excat oomm.
o bl'dt oom ttph L-ciun• e..cn. 494-5294 ..._, Pac>« aper. an advan· mu• t . Ca 11 Jud Y. Me-5900, 495-6"7
--• Htoh Proftte. Loo.I .A,... t1ig9. P~ltlon I• part 142-4321, ext. 318 tor iiiiiii~===~iiiiiii IUUll-·~ Wiii Train. Part Time time. good lnquk'IM and appt •l·• Wkly ,.,.tale now 1111111. No~No r HumH to: S teve il••lllUT nrtiiiid/ ~ 1l J :I $129.&0 wk & up. 2274 ~. NoSelllng. Hough, Art Olr•otor, aauy.u... P&llllPUTllT
Nwpt Blvd, CM 646-7445 OrMt Tu a.n.tlta Dally Piiot, P.O. Box -,. ... ,
•• E Mr. Wotfer (714)831-6G20 1580, eo.ta ~. Ca. 330 W. Bay St. lm!Mdlata opening tor * 1n 1st year's rent IU I Ill L Sun 12-5. M·F aam.5t>m 92928 Coet• M .... Ca. ...,., typeeett.,, Mu.t
•URNISHlD or
30=~~.~ •l!fl~, f.D. Bii WllUT ~~r~~·ry.~ ~:;! .. h:;: .. :;:'~ UNFURNISHED S130+Wk agl,;,;~t. wkf?W4'U money for IAILYPILIT • groundhelpful.Xlntben-v ti I t l TD•· 110,000/up, no 330 W Bay St BMoh, Nlary. ~ti. eflta Including !Mdlcal & FITMSS HI ta ta a I l:'edll V/no penalty. Call Coeta ~ Ca 92828 depend• ugon bl~:-denial lnaurMCe, con· nu Denlton A.MOO 1173-7311 . • perlenc• an • y. genial.,~. Con-CUTEIS, TEHIS, OOi •.llWILIY UUI* 720-90 t9 utt f0< Cerolyn tllCt All.U. 842-4321 ••t.
SWlllll,, ,t11s Lft>!~c= ~~~nf,;lca, laatuttantl Full Tlme for well groomed Exciting oppty w/Nal'I 291 llllC~ llOrff Sorry. •leep• 14. 714/64M916 • r __ ... -u P«'IOn for Coeta ~ Coneultlng firm fOJ -·-· -·-ltO pets . lodtl' Lest 1... .. Jewelry Store. 648-3403 postttw 0<ganlzed lndlv _ -·
open d1llJ 9 to 6. In ta la tt hart Lost amall ::tllte SC011' MANAGER 10 aaa111 Office Mgr. Xtnt 1&1.Y Pl.IT
d 2714 dog chlldrena pet need• typlng/tel•phone. die· 330 W. Bay Streat
'Ni TOP AREA MESA PINES •peclal diet, Ille. ~Cot· ~ pr~·t~~~ J:,°; Costa MeN. Ca. 921121
VV 1Bdrm, llke new, cozy rs: ~~3 s;~1;.e:."aRD. Immediate opening for full Xlnt "g.neflti. 9~ 11am la-Gil
A partmenh trple. encl patio. Carport, • time Dlatl10t Manager. 769-1358 0.bble
, pool, spa, Quiet. No pet• Found 2 tan Code« Span, M It enjoy wort<lng wtth 110
Nvwport Beach So $595 Up 549-2447 .. Dal~ & Red, Nwpt Hgt• cuhlldran. Experience mnnn llOIOUY laln I
l 71111 l h th .., fl , .• I Chrlatlan/F hU tum condo ar... 52-5699 83 l-71MS helpful. Ina ... a ....... Fri UftlTW Ill.II
1.11 p,,,,.,, to Stir 1425. Pool/Jae. H. W• off« an excellent ben· Ila. I Jlln ..,er. Interior dHlgn and
641 5 11 ~ Hrbr nr •hope 840-8866 fOlJNO ADS eflt program, paid va-Wtd fer I ....... , furniture publlcatlon
... rt B .. N Costa M .... Muter bdrm ti & h-'ldatya bon·... ....._~ II II-a.A needa local Nlea !*>Pt. ,,t>wpo l'd<r• 0 &ba, kllch prlv. furn. ::.=,, ;;d d~tal 17,: llH.-nm __ ,..., to contac1,,... ecoounta. ~ow lr\1111· A''"'" $260/mo. S49..S677 ARE FREE aurance. Salary plua hHll. WI fer.,,., Enthualum and drtw a 61~~~~;~4 E'alde sharp 2BR, garsge, mlleaQe relmbutMMent. 111-1148 ~1':Jon. ~:·~ =;
11T1all lfd. S700tmo. No Cal: Applicant muat apply In IDEUL lff10I plan. Call 213-652-3698
Su Cl 41•71 peta. 8-&950 II I per90n at Dally Pilot. 330 Phones, t~lng 50 wpm. Advertlalng Salee position
t•tatt -Fem 20-30 ahare 2BR 2ba 142· 1 West Bay St., Coate good w,lth number• & cat-avallable for loCal com-
Furn 1BR U50/mo. ger. In CdM w.aame. Avall Oct M .... Ce. Apply 9-11 cutator. Varied clerlcaJ put« maoaztne. Salary +
236 Avenue Monlert. Ofc 15. $.450/mo. Pool & ten-a.m. or 2-4 p.m. (Clrcula-dutlee. Good benefit•. commlHTon. Exp d•
•97.-«65 hm 498-8690 nla 720-0690 Chrl1tln1 FOUND Dutch Lop Ear tlon Dept). Wiii trat~ 731-3551 8:00 •Ired. Car a mull.
Stwtla Ct11t ••tH FEM 22-32 to lhf spac NB tam• Rabbit vcty •.UcaleDntal SIH to 4:30. uelln. (213)487-7878
4aH Weatclltt home w/pool & Pewlnkle Prt< 764-<4481 yl Orth RDA Grubb & Biia Realdentlal 1111_. p••m ..,.. Jaz $.400+ utll 54&-0100 DENT.. • o, Brokerage DM•lon In -• -f'IN""ear-P"'iua.-"'2•e•R .. 2""&i_pooj...,. • · · Found gray and white male req, Ort ho exp pref, 4 day Newport Center need• opp or tun 1 t y to u 11
sauna. lncludea gu & Fem, 2BR l'hBA ~I apt. cat Corona del Mar area. Mon-Th. NB 642-2828. axceptlonal ..Cretary. Speclallty Food• and
condo reea, Dllhwuher. $300 + dep & ~ 111111· 8«-389& lllTIL nu-· Accurate typing •klll• Gifts. Flex. hou.... wlll A/C $850 875-9008 642-4525 Iva mag Found: Ring 11-w/at leaat 80 wpm com-train. W•tclltt Pica.
· • M/25-35 prof. only, clean, Call 831-2385 llMnUY /UllPT. puter & real estate icnowt-Alk ror Debbi 142-0072 •lac. lntalt n-emkr lhr 2bf 2'~ba twn· betweeen 5 & e PM ONLY For busy Orthodontic of-ed09 helpful. Salary com-•--net y w--c M n50 831~91 fte&-lrvtne, dental exp. m«1eurate w/exper, con· s.• Hf ..... hM · · -· Found: Slameee, young helpful, mutt type & xlnt taot Admlntrellve Aut, at the L~ Angetee Tlmeia
ltta1 2711 Male prof non--amkr 30-38 cat w/flea collar. M... communication akllla. Mra Netland 8-44-8200 Telemartu11lng otfloe In
F/M prof only. 2 rma, own ahr Nwpt Hghta home. Verde erea. 979-3341 Xlnl houra. 840-4292 Cotta M .... With our
ba, no kit 1310/M rm. $.400. 642-~2 Dian• evea PUT nm new commlaalon ac•le
lnel utll. CM MS-0403 Male to atrr Nwpt Ben Found 11T1all Turtle vcty lllTll. IPFlll Wiil lou can earn mor. than
F /... ""M HB ho m • w Ith Po o I. Newpo. rt Meta 8oy·a Oral Surgery Surgical The Dally Piiot Clrculallon 200 In oommltelontlyand urn rm w .,.. on ~ Aaa't experlenoed. New-wagea by Mlllng on 20 NB border. $300, lat & '375trno. 844•2807 Club 631..e988 port 'Beach. 720-9019 Office Meda 1 reliable, eubacrlptlone per WMk.
la11, Shr ut111 642· 1198 M/F, 2BR hM In COM. pan Found Surl Board. eo.ta aak tor Carolyn mature and reaponllbfe lt'a poulble 10 eem m<>f•
rum Noo-amkr S350 + Meaa arM. Call & ID. [)y9 peraon to vertfy new or· that S1000 weekly. Houre F~anrm, c.·M'.PMvt ... bvt~~~ ullla: 759-3-461 irt 8PM 835-7817, Eves M5-11e2 llllUL..... derl . NO SELLING. are "••Ible. High 8Chool
..........._, .... """ 1 yeara axperience In GYN Appllcant mull have • graduates, college ltu· hme $350 mo, th< utlla. M/F, 3BR CM apt w/fplc nr Found Yorky T«rler. male. required. Excellent pay & good phone personality. denta and Mrlof atlzana
Pror per90n 5-45-9231 SC PIU S250 + utll & dee> vcty Springdale & benefit•. 120-1941 Training wlll be provided. are encouraged to apply
Lag bch, s295mo M pref, Non-smkr pref. S4S-8602 Talbert, HB 840-9595 Learn valuable office For an Interview call
pool. Proflbua. n-llTlkr M/F, reap, non•.mkr, 3BR, LOST 9/30 long haired blk lllllAL PlllT IFO akllla, work with nice 540--0301 eta 494-0461 le c ..,,..,, Kl Rd Full-tkM. Newpott'BMch. people and earn 14.25 1 _______ _ 40+ • r . yrty rental, nr beach. ma at •v•1 ng• • 1 -awn r~'d. Xlnt ,_..y & per hour to atartl M. onday ... • -p•y L'"" Bch rm, pvt ba, pry1gs S250/mo 650-3253 Nwpt Ben. 714/642-8594 ,. ........ ...... 30 8 30 S r•-•-• :'!oo. 1/2 utll. Mature or 213/421·2850 benefit• 7 1941 • Friday, 4: to : . at. PUT Tm ...
... M/F 3b I H B 6:00 to 10:30 AM. 0 t ltl II bl emplyd lady 494-7346 atlr r tlM n · · nr1LOST Blk semi-long hair ....... AWet/Alhltfh Please call Eiieen to ppor un ea "'8 a •
bch S275l mo. + utll, fem Cat vcty Sunnower & Cert aldM pref Hlgheat achedule an appoint-wtlh L~ Angelea Tlmea LO Bdrm, pvt bth. no kit. 1at11aat dep. 960--0888 Main SA 644-0998 • ..;.... In arM ·+ bonua ment. 642.~21. Clrculatlon Dept. In our Fem only. S275 Utlla pd. · · .....--EOE door to door rwwpepaper Avall 11/1.543-9231 M/Ftolhrlge4 bdrmhM. Lott Dog, amall whlla every2wka.Exclbeneflt• Mi.a program. Guaran-~--,-----:-:,.--Balboa Pen. Pt. $380/mo. Lhua ans to Crlctte1 & med. ln11. 494-3075 llOIPTlllllT PIT teed hourly wtige plua ~rm, ba, gar, pool,•f~ 673-5385/D 875-1419/E '..,. Bch 4~8322 . PART TIME .. you -Joy ........... & commlulon. Houra 4PM M/F namk nr bk t>ey ...,50 ..._. ,, .... .,..,....
+ SlOO & 1'9fs. 846-6423 Nwpt Bch turn Of unf metr -LO..,....,...ST.........,G'""ld_n_Ret=---r ....,,A'""'n.,...· ~2 -yr For baCk and front omo.. would Ilk• the morning• to 9PM. Training 11 ~----------------~--------.~------~ ~-~~&~2 ~ nr J~ob~ & eo.t•~~319 -~·11 ~~~1 ~~~. H~~~ ~ bike to OOMn l500/mo. BrlatOI 10/5 Sat eve. No RADIOLOGY BILLING OF-Good telephone etiquette graduat• and college P" 19~ ~ C•ll Answer Ad #222, tagt or collar. Reward FICE hu an Immediate a accurate typing lklll1 • etudent1 encouraged to
I ( ' • 1 • • I 642-4300, 24 Hrs. $300 478-18381720-8100 opening f<>f •full time fll• must. Cati 557-7470, ext =· Potenllaf t~ earn •... ~ ............. l;;~L''~i ...llm•l·L.:~ Prof.IF over 25 to anr nice Lo•t: K .. 1hund/Hu111.y clerk. Contac1 Mra. Ctiow 261 for a.ppt. Int~ cat~r-r38~
• • Balboa laland 2br. Call Blk/gry 8 mo rem. T.. (714) 831~22 Receptlonltl/Secretary ext. 1204 Afttrti · IA tar,.atry lltctricaJ LadscaJfa1 P1iatia1 Jane 720-221& btwn 9-' wtnkle Prk CM Reward RADIOLOGY bllllng offtoe Part time or full Ume.1--------l&al tn - -I Lane&H -Prof M/F atlr Lido Isle 645-2374/M 1·1067ev hu an lmmed. opening 18/hr. 833-2050 SALES-HOUSE PLANT
$2.17 per day
That's ALL you pay for
3 llnea. 30 day minimum
In the
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
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Your Dally Piiot
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Repreaentatlve
IU-•121 tit. IOI
R•I Tl Flllll RESIO/COMM.UIND 26 Wallie~ lnterlOf'I waterfront Apt. pll1 bch Loat Terrier Mix wht for a mature raaponllble UllPT/Hm P/tlme. Hou,. llexlbl•
Paul 557-4758 art. 5. fYZ2~";~ ~1 Sf~s ~a ~~~ ... ~~~P~~=~ T~:t9~~~~~rla1nt1ng. S500 Incl utll• 675:: 1497 •fa1brwn apoti.t 9Nhlokkk.,.I' ~~-:=.:.~ :, ~ PART. TIME Good front of-Wknda. 64&-0210 ••• -... _l·R• ....... w 181 B • clnup .... t. Carl 722-1171 Rel fem ovr 21 Stir E'llde c.. n answerH•lgho .,_.. __ ,· of lnaoranc. blfllrvi Con-flQe appMranoe. T~lng SALES LADY Need lmmed
._ -•
111
aa ;:u P11;ri•1 CM apt. S342.50'..1utl. VIC Edlaon ~"""· M Ch .... (714) 85wpm & phonee. Con-2 mature or oleler lad!M Kite cab., elec. plumb Clean Upa•Tree Trimming Cyndi 648-7223 8118 REWARD. 645-6364 ~~1 ....
2
rs2. ow tact Tina 78()..1313. fOf exCIUalVe 0r ... Shop-lmmed est. (818) 965-7632 XbfTAN HANOVMAN Yard Mtlnt.•Haullng F THI G INTERIORS "" ._ pe. N/11T1kr. Flex. houra
I Carpentry, fencing, wtn-MIKE 650-3263 HANGING/STFUPPING .,.,_ ....... 2744 PtrnHI ltnicn RADIOLOGY BILLING of-111111&1.u•nuy Day time. 831-2177 Door .... Repalr-Alteratlona dows plumbing, marllte VISA-MC 873-1512 W"TERFRONT BLDG 3I04 floe hu an lmmed. ,.,_.._ Tl 11I08 m-AemOdel·Panel-Locka-etc tub .~cl hauling etc . TIEEI " . -....... . -'• UUIPlllll
Cablneta-Wlndow-Fenoes I And Yea jaua It lord • ANDYS WALLCOVERING Exec. Suite. 1350 atr avall TIMI If Olm Ing for a matt.n, reac>on· Major nnanoe oo. needa Gift Sh F
35 yrs exp. Jerry 642-0567 (llC#~06) 636-8244 Topped/removed. Cleen lnstallatlon & Removal 4th floor with view. ESCORTS llble lndlv. w/at leaat 1 yr MC)(e1ary for dlver91fled Hallmetk op. ul
up, nf!1W lawna. 751-3476 Int. painting. 543-4013 642--46•4Mon thru Fri 6-5 898_2355 expr. In data entry. Con-dutlea. 60 wpm typing, time. Exprd In otnce
Clail• Cart •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. Complete Cleen·Up, gen'I Expert Wallcoverlng In c.-trclal tact Mra. ChoW 831-4422 1-2 yrs office exper 8 ·~r-1~;~0 ~~nt~~~ark
CHllDCAAE A f ANVTIME Pain I. Drywall Carpentry malnt. tree trimming, free atallallon. Reu. Contult· lclattll I 1.U mutt. Nr Newport & •
6 Mo's up to 3 Years. TLC. etc. Gary 645-5277 PTL eats. Mauro, 831-'997 ant Aaalgnmnt 561-8590 LI. s.lt/lt1t la1tnctita 3112 _ __,...,..for butN ""'"ho of-Santa Ana Fwy. Send re-SALES Poaltlon Avellble
,,_,.,., -, ""• aume to· ITT Commercial Pan-time In a flower Christ::'~' 9:·,8h5:r9 w111 H:m~~tMtNDr7~e A·~~ ~~:\/f~~~;:•e:i=~j !~!~t~M~~J-~: Af!rtmnt1 2750 Pg~s!o!~r~5 ~~~0FuT1x":i.;~ :,,-:::·~:·~~ ::1~~8!; atrop. 833-1887
bab""lt ~-Fri. CM/SA 531-5579 Pat or Ive mag. Mr. Estrada 645-3381 839-0730 ANYTIME Fii ULI If 1111.B yra axp. B.A. 559-5-481 time. 496--0800 550-9655 EOE SALES
,_ THE HOTTEST PRODUCT area. 841-9314 HAUL-A·WAY Handyman ShrubilTree Trim. Compt,Plw•ltiat 8 Unite In Sunn)'IT*ld. ill I tat 11/LYI •ll•nAIY* ON THE MARKETI
•AROUND THE CLOC~ All type carpentry, tree gardening Competitive -Under conatructlon now. f 1J! Dey atlltt char119. Every PR & Mri<tg firm a..klng s 111 000
7 Days-Laro-Yard I trimming. Y!'d clean·up, pMoea. Chucil 642-0322 H ltr D • 111-1118 CALL S46-7001 f la •HO other Wknd off. Excel. aharp l*800 f0< WKY ••
Safe-Healthy-Free Envrm. •tel Call Jeff 5-46-
7830
•Good loba done rlgh~ luiatu/Oflict IAat tlC IR benefit•. Med. Iner. Call buey office. HMvy typing No competition! R99911 ~~~~~~~~ Respite Carel 548-1545• HOME REPAIR. Carpentry .llllJt DRAINS CLEAR From S 16 2711 TUllllS-1Hft4 380-8098 on memory ayatem. Light orcter.I No tra\1911 Com
Aatlaalt/C.acrtlt Cl • •-• fences& gates, lree trim, BRtCK~RK Small )061 Fauceta Olapoaal HMter Forexclllngwortcwtthchtl-accounting a pro· pleta traJnlngl Aealdual•
Hiii. nmet dump rune. C.M. & N.B. Newport Coeta Mesa. 851-9804M&M122-9088' 1100 1q A. N.B. 4 amall dren. 6 mo' .. 6 yr•. In a Cltrical.Offfn MOI faaalonal gen«al office (702)731-0718 PR~•lrl~!.nreefi •RRepooalrrin'g'& ROBINS CLEANING area Jim WhY1e 642-7206 rrvtne. Ri.f·e. 875-3175 offlcet. 3 connected. 1 positive, caring environ-l•I /II--lklllt. Call fO< lnt«Vlew In STITlllEIY -
....... '""' SERVICE· a throoughly I' Expert Service & Repair private + outllde reoept ment New facllltlH ~-_, 1 So. lrvlne .,. .. 768-2943 Waterproo Ing• 631-4199 clean hou~ 845-974 l Raw ••I . •m•t 32 '.'1'1 exp. Aeald'l/Comm. area. s 11150/mo. R .. r dynamic ateff. lrvlne: F/C FIT fO< amall Conal. Store In CdM need• Salee
Driveways, patios, paths. Cf HAULING · MOVING + UO-•Ylllt Lie 1409035 964-89l9 unit of Waterfront Hornes 552-1987 Co. Acc:tng & ~co.Ung llllnUY /llllPT Peraon, FIT. 5 Daye. Xlnt etc. No job too small Houeecleanlng, carpets & Garage & Yard Clnupa NEW/REPAIR Quality No 2436 W. Coa1t Hwy. exp. helpful S8 hr to •tart, FU1 paced N.8-P.R offtoe working eonda. Eapecially
Reae. Mlekey 536-0553 uptiolstery, windows. etc Jon 645-8192 QUICK & CAREFUL Jobi to amall, ~ .. aonable. 631-1400 non amkr 546-5271 nd• exper'd raaponllble rlne cilenteie. 875-1010 ~~!~~l:ttn~~~!!,2, 1\'CLEENCO• LO ~:=~~:80-46
Free 811., llc'd. 631-2345 $225/mo -18x20' apace. lc~ttll I
2
lc°lttll 1 ~ae~g~· -:'i':,d TIUIWll.ITIM Aaph<-fepalr-prklng Iota
apt. comple•·heavy roller
Joe 645-4269 7am-9pm CLEANING MY WAY Fr.::..1eaes~-~:n& ~~~o Self Storage Expert• P1JClaiC1 :~a~.'!. a;'~ Bl, laatractita lOl la1truU.. lOlZ 720-0941 Artlcul•t• s.cmartee. No
....._ • typing to fft apptl THROUGH SCHOOL! *'·1 •-* European Psychic Tarot • • ... n••y111--s Ir. Remove asphalt drive-Reis 548..SS57 Hauling. Cteanup1, paint· • .._ Card a Palm Reed«. Paet. *mllTIYI llml p f -_,.I •l•ry + BonUMI. "
ways, replace w/concrete Ing. welding, odd job1, CLEAN & EXPERT Praaent & Future. 1 fr .. ? 1 MONTH FREE RENT ac J Jc For 1 man Newport e..ctl Houra a day att«noona brlck/blocil wrk 539--0345 EUROPEAN CLEANERS. movlnn, 7 days 673-3503 Over25yearae~perlence 850-27"'.,..... '""l 8.-~ 88l Dover Dr Suite 14 tew office. Good typing Call Mr. S()ri(ln 642-3490
Housecleaning/Gardening • Uc. T-11&,428 13()..1363 "° U1ane "" -....._ Newport Beach 831•3961 1
. aldlla. wtll train. 676-5«9 for lntervtew .
... , S.nicu free est. Refs
495
•
2478
Btallla, .... ., ITAIYlll llLLlll lttfiat T rave SECRETARY/Sale Aallat TELEPHONE SOLICITOR
COAST DIVING SERVICE Home Cleaning by the filan1 l1'llllTS •Ylll II UUFllll& ~·~~~;6~4w!~~11:. •1uo 111t mu. for lnetltutlonal Stock • Eaay wort<. 14-$7/hr
Underwater Hull Cleaning Dynamic Duo Comm'I, Stress Management, stop • llPEIHf OI. N.B. 5-41·5032 Agt S h I ~,-Bkr. NPB. Related exp Call 8&0-1316 & Malnt. 675. 7392 resld'l,xll refs 650-6278 smoking, weight conlrol. Orange Co. Orlolnal C 00 -. req'd 850-1904 CJ-L-/ ... u d 645-aa26 for appl Student Mover1. Tneured (7l•) ..... 2111 CdM'• beat offlcea. S595-· ... turuh COMPLETESERVICE HotM50fllcecleantngby oy ' Llc.T124-436.641..a427 -S11001nclutll,A/C,pllg, 2~15NortbMain, llm/ ..... Tll . Hit
Outdrlvea & Outboards JODI Please call ror free HANED.A MASSAGING NEWWtrehouMStorage ROOFING recover. re· janitor,, 2855 E Cout Santa Ana, Ca. 92701 Relponalb .. fOf amall high tiffiiiitiiiiii:mr;;F
Freeway Marine 650-4444 estimate 8'42·6746 *11&11 IPlllll• paltt hol tar, Ille, rock, Hwy 67M900 Anytime aotllllly office. Oood Ulm/mt111
•• II •• ". •·m'c•• Housecleaning 14 yrs •)(P (714)1175-8178 lwnia~ S.nice wood, tr• •t. 150~6U I Aa---... p-.&. O~ANGE COUNTY'S ONLY P«IVAn typing. Xlnt I~. Exper'd cutli.t/hoe1 ...
ft reUable, reas. free est, own Open 7 day week a..1..11 nlH _,,... •• C Cy SCHOOL 8MIC bookk.-c>lng. Wiii for French Blatro. APC>fy liiA•cu•119f•ype-W!'!'l""o•rd-Pr_oceas-__ 1rsna Pina, 6"6-9666 405 30th St. Npt Beech Lie. BO RO & CARE In my a..Ntliat/-.tltal 3000 IQ rt avall. DM!gn ACCREDrTED TRAVEL A BN train reat. 667..j200 between 4:3()..6:00 PM,
Ing. we do manuscr1p11, -TLC home. Home cootled own tpace to tenant• 1787 NeWport Blvd, CM.
malllng llst elc. 786-3330 HOUSECLEANING. Prof Btatial, I Cttlkfta mull. 540-41,01 Kathy I /EJ( tOtl Pl ,;;i apecltlcallon Gen ,.. AmerlcM .A.lr1lne Sabt• Computer Tr.intng Seu with EASEi •
Art Resea.rch Service ~~ 8;~~3~~~ ?~:~g· C.A.S CYIRelf' 4 hj et' Palatial " ;~at~·t:.ur1ng~ua1::· ~:~~,;~lt~o::ma c~~;:: ::.e:::.5878 Cle~: :;.r~~~78
Before tnves1lng call tor A~~n~' AiC .;.%' 469263 FINE pjfNfiNd BY Aidt. ~k,. ~r3°2~ .. 5~~7P~~~ other a,;,menltlea. A111ll MOANING, AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES
blgaavlnga Mr Hoflend llYALll.llllEIYIOI, ardSlnor.19yraofhappy ..,,,, .. .,.,_.,.... °" 2·1·88, or poulbly I .1·1 p•1at
988-1136/213-374-75-4•. Satl.sfact~guar'd. HllrEl•711-11H cuatomera. Lie. 280644. *NEED TO REMODEL? to0ner. Call Barbara. ft.41ft .• •••••••• J I
BEASec'yServ Typing. Comm llresldl.891·5HI •Heatlngd<>Mrlght\f Thank-Youl 963-4114 FrM•tlmat•. 2~8Uor9M-8024 C811 (714} 543 • ..,.5 .
Oletallon WOfd Proc. YOLANDA HOUSECLEAN I s........1-RAINBOW PAINTING 100% FlnanctnQ PRESTIGIOUS Nft e e
In H.B. Linda. 6•0-1570 SERV Rea1., reliable, ••• nwn Ou•llty 11 our policy * QUALITY WOAI< Offloea For Rent. From A.a"'.....,..,_, ... •,.._......, -•. PART TIME • Com Tl _.. 1 exper . refs 642-0405 EXqutllte XcouatlCS R• 650-&648 JEFF Lie 8688 BMch Clt1418 ~Ing, I 1 15 IQ rt 2902 ReclhlH .._ e puter m_,,ar no or rem 0ry. PhoM 673-8122 · 934· ·
StataortheArt&CGountlno C.11trwctit1 !,":,~~81,. 84~·901 IO~lff llT/m Lie. 201~1 A~. •1420· .: OFFICE ..,ORK :
aottware moc:su1ea a I u•· ....... . ' ~-1-1 "iWI ~ n Darla 979--0551 • &al I tr dea 55~740 Fr .. •tlmat• RHldentlal/Commarclal ~v.. •
• RTC Commercial &YWah ~J !f A A A PAINTING int/Ext BIG Joe CANCELLED 7 : :
Franklln Acctg Tu~a. Spectallzlng 1n cornm·1 MUSIC LESSON8s. 1Col" • LOWEST poaatble prtoe Cheep pr1ce1. • 642-2078 1380 sq Ft r!<rmpor1-cf'lua a! ~ristian •. The Daily Pilo! Circulati'on rv
6
,..•. flnaneal llatement• ...... and Reald'I Fr.. aet lege profaaeor. P4'0 a ty 10 SI SeMoa 882-3235 I ~ VWde loc. VJ ""'
alsl with obtaining credit 5'4".8"23 11c;,., .. 3924 woman, kid• too. your ac> THE CONST. ,co. lie O.C; • nt ........ 1-. It 4:lc&. .. 01 / '5inbnoarfrn __ _i I' bl nnee & loan•. 5•8-03•5 " • ...., l'lome. Graoeva 749-3524
1
GLASGOW PAINTING Comm .. l"Mk1 I. new/rmd I _._ '-" f'rr-c"" 'I" r (" D :n~" a re 1a e, m8ture and reapon·:
Custom carpentry, horn9 Int/Elli 30 yre ••f*., Profaaalonal • 384-5121 •OMoafShop/Storege• •W fll9ftl I~ 1 :L( 'f d Low-coat bookkeaplng. repalra. door•. drywall, Plano Lwon• 142-8216 rari · 642•5214 •--...t 264 IQ"1 up,, .... C.M. ,....,.,,.,_ •'we person to ver1 y new or ers. NO•
accounting and data pro-electrical Mika 850-2814 S•lon de Mullque ... .ut'r . c 2 Quiet.,. 548-7249 .... SELLING •
c.aalng, State ot the Art. . Uaa A. Zeoohlnl. 9.A. J.Q. INT !EXT PAINTING bO;JitYWr;;fit Iron wo;:tC ~ · ' fll , .. 111111 left. ... : • e
too. Daria. 979-0551 Demnlic ltrrict1 , ~.. ..a... HOUMa & Apt. Aw. rat.._ fencea. Qel98. MOi.Wtty ..-y ftLU11 A i· h ood •
Superior Office Servlcea AoOsE'sifTINd dulet -Mir-. auamywo'1!. 895-5755 doora, ~. r.ctory °" 31at at. a7o aq1n Full Oay Kindergarten : PP icant must ave a g phone•
tor all your Word PrOCMa-f9fn•le ••ec will hou• • Lantan LADY PAINTER prfc)M, ,,.. eat.136-1623 w/ou.tom« partclng. An-Pre-Kindergarten Program :personality. Training will be provided.:. Ing nwn Marte 497-2871 tit. Kint , .... 492-3398 LXNOSCAPE-MXIONRV lnt./Ext 11 yr •K~ .Ll:= a ... _... tlque • gift • marine • Extended Oa~ Car•
-uc Prtv Home for Elderly Land~ng. all ph... Free •t. RMaonable. ._.. ... bOUtlque. For LAua by •Learn valuable office skillt, work with•
---·•• Waek/Month. Amb. or don. Brlcic, bloot<, •tone. 850-1924 or 957-5801 Are YOUI Window. Cteenl owner. 875--e909 Small Clau lze :nice people and earn 14.25 nllr hour lo: ~~ll-ryAd (;4WVl()9dttloni non-amb. S40-4101 Kathy tr• •t. Mika 499""°72 ----~be>a Wtndol# WMNna LIDO PENINSULA Art.a, Craftl. Mualc & Sportl Program 1 rv• t
,._ ,_....., Ric. 881·96&4 PAINTeR NEEDS WORKI eoo Balboe Bl. e73-31as Prime Comm. Ofe~ 200 Bible C«ltered Abeka Curriculum •1tart! Monday-frid1y , 4:30 to 8:30,• Docn-4{c. ~980 llectrlcal ISMAEL·s GARDENING Int/Ext, oalllnge, r.nn cab. w89hfng ~·1 to6e001.f. IVall. FromS1 p t Participation Program ~ •
BUILD OR REPAIR Pllltll ILQTlll Malnt Clea~upa. Tree ~29) Yfl •XJ>., WOttc GU•· r;;nm·1~ p/flf 873'-8004 873-3777 aren 411,S.1 6:00 to l 0:30 am . I
w-. ..... ,... r::t Oualltyworil, treaM1. s.v. Fr .. Eat. 55<>-e3t9
Oev1a Pa1nttno 964-383
7 '"*'1· tr .. eat 631-7800 HMCt •0 "'*' "'*'.,.. ~:·:.:r~~d School -: Pleue call Eileen to a.chedule an: doots.1•181~~o82~20'? U~5513 988-7401 C&e LAWN SER~t__ TIP '9Al.ITT Pilllm -,..:..ww t ~ ,.._ t•oboutat~•50bo1Qx•"· &~~ Onan Door Potlcy • . t
ELECTRICIAN Mow4*'119 IWlce mo._.,.. a.rvtng~Co.22~. ._._ 0 ~·· "" -.... -41ppotntmen1 . 642-4321. • = • patloa. eowr._ Uc.1233103 Small/Iara-125. 646-5737. 873-512' Prompt! ReMon•bM ..-.. ~-* !!! !~... no need fOt offloa ~. .a-.. .. = 1I , •illf • • ~ O.OU. Concr9t• wdt· joba & r99411.-. 545203 HAWAIIAN EXPERTISE R41Mteonoa& llc.#33-CleO ":tth"~' ~'A~r' -:::: J.0 r/et:/:C· _,_ liii -: EOE :
weya. 8loCk w.ii. Room --TrM trim, lop,~., * lll-11H * Call Now1 M2·6e11 •••••••••••••!•••••••••••• addN l 5yr ••P ~ Claaalfl4lcl Ad• '42·6678 oi.en upa Stu 649-18" I __ __ -~ _ _ _ _ _ -
•
t1uaat1 ltatral IHI . 1131 ...... HH •l1ttllaa.... Ml! a.nic~t s.-1,...'b. ............ tlM 11 ... ._,.,. .. --~.~ .. ~,~ • ...;.;:;,:,: OHlllLNI TNJCK ORIV!AS OWNER I llY,...,... •• -'I
FM MotNr'I MIOl.t & p 1 -~--OPl!AATOA8. Beklne L!S 9574133 2 270 ;n;Jnee. 2 L.AAOI! HLECTIOH Of
l(ltchen. Acoeottno ~._ .,, t m. earner oouneei-Agent, Orange Co NEW l Ul!O BMW'S! C4ttlOM tor 'rr l · Prr Of9 want«! Help boy9 HOUMhOld exp Cell Mtke JHtl'• med 2 pc; Diving 1 __ ._ ..
..i.t oo6d tine oootce end glrle eollclt new in tem. APACE MoYlng wet·eull t 100 ~ t&4e ~ -~ It 225 I! 17th at tubecrlpttonl on their l 8tcnga. ~ 10 NMt1y new Singer MWing
Coet• ..... ' ~ rout ... MUil en)oy ..... ·--rnad\IM. Model 834 wttfi
Tll 11111 •11 IDTAIUIT
worictno wtth t0.13 yr ....,, ' I I *275 Olde EJlrly eYentng nou,. ...... wa nut cab net • . c= days/ ftexttM n~ '""'*' Opentnoe Plld va-241.()1~ C:'::. ~ eatlOnt, Holid1i:· Cet l frM tt f ta 1022 ta aooeptlng r-..mea for ~t ~llllO'fl M1H
to· e 19 Sleee>Y Hollow
I.AM, LIQUnl leecn, CA
92851. No pllon. calla
p!MM.
&42-4321 ext ~ phone • muet e-2868 BI I c' ' 6 m 0 0 I a
VENDINO MACHIN! AT· COQtlapoo with p~t to
CHICK
IVEaBON HAlll llAIT TEN 0 A NT A I HI~ h I n!Qe tamlly 840-&<t 18
Sc II oo I. hp r • q d 1-:-..,----=-~---...,.,,-.....,. lllU PIUT (714)77 t-2311 Oolden ~river AKC, 9
mo'• tr• to good llOl'M.
PO"SCHf AUDI
CHtVJIOLlT
H191\ot Qv.llty
!i.1•1 A S.rvlc•
•--pt•.... WUTll/WUTIUI &4&-7795/E 648-4teat D -'' .._ Counter Help Dell 10.2 Full & p1rMl1M In f911den Fleh cutter want«!, full Mon·Frl. Airport arM. llal flelllty !xperlenoe SPRINGER SPANIEL
""'19830Afr.rn ~~. 1~,:"· M0-0312 or &41--0248 helpful &42·5"1 Cleudl• 955-7~Y;;·;::1::C CHICK
IVE880N lta111l 1131 DHml llLP 1a,1.,.nt llt To gd nome. 1 yr old fem. Mornlnga, Oelato Claul-1131 bllCk a.,m1n Shepl\ef'd. e. &111.m ,I'•••• co. Above minimum. "e 30 ~•ft Sid• '" C-t Hwy ••• ...,. CdM 720-1828 Liv. ln/COIT\p1nl0n, PIT. " 2--07 tOim...,..m. litand New._, S..C.. UNIV!RSITY
lmmedl•t• 099nlngt tor Ambulatory onry. Ref1 v.i1ow Lab Mh1Pupplel.8 873-0788 Cat~ prtpMH 67S-etet
A/P Ci.rtl with 1 lo 2 Yrt llLIVllJ Plllll BMcn lfM. 8-42-87&3 wka. MalHll•m Call ~eowned ..w'I In r;;:::;::;:;:;;:;~ OLDSMOBILE/HONDA PtaJC flJ11C(
~x~ 1~,~~n~~,1~.i Apply In perton. Allen __ .111 M6-8t971Mve mag Sllp Av.II -No llve Al>Oard stock = ---------
• Beck FlOl'111. 2809 New-•re ..u11 up to 32· 1330 • Po RscHE ·92 ROAD· N•BERS WI 11Y Ull 1e.-TIP .ua 111tem'IOUI .,, ... 111111'· App~ Nlagare Port Blvd NB 875-1353 Pttl I b laall 1041 Sid• tie 10 25' 1226 tt dOM ,,,_. a cit• STER 35&8, c1U11e blk & ft ~:,:~· 178 2 Cowin, Driver• Cr~ ~ntry. No btit•• HlO HJmfSlarMM kitten, m•'· o~~A9~~s ANCH~~l~I •enoe ---you tan Collector'• Item c•.DILL·c IMUDUll MAmatA~
2850 HARBOR BL VO Tn. followln9 !*'ION ...
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii exp n«:. Calif Lie req'd. LoVMMt, ViCtorJan d• 10 Wkl $75. 967-0e07 pufOhMe yout 8MW. Looka & run1 grHtl ft ft
MacGregor Yac:tltl 1&31 tlgn, fniltwood frrM. Xlt Sllpe Avllleble, 28' 30' 32' ~~ $ l3.600 54t-3727 LARGEST SELECTION
COSTA MESA doing~ a.:~ 540-9640 TREE OEU, 151 KalmUe ========;.!Drive, l11lte F-t. Coeta 11 lllYllU Plac.nt11 CM ' cond MOO. 87S-7800 aalea 1 ••• ,...... 35' 3333 w CoUI Hwy, ~~ Por.cne '85 36&C Mull of lat• mocMI, low mllMQe
Tn. Or1ng9 Cout Dally EASY AS~EMBLY WORKI OAK SIDEBOARD. Llooe 1059 NB. ~5 Mon-Fri S!-1k'41111111 '52•~1..,,!4, :~2~"80o811er CldlllacalnOr:
MeM.CA92e2t Chang H Patll, tu
Piiot It~ n.lp In teoo.OOP41f 100.0u1tan-hMda & fMt, ~ jpj;C;f1m1drum Mttik• WANTED Cute 215 ' .,... ......, ...... • CountytS..ull ayt ~blllttee w1N~ te«I P1ytMnt No Ex-mirror, reflnllMd. Muet new with complete hard-Cllrltcralt needs • nn . ""'~-~~ PORSCHE 9118 ·75 SIL· 140-1180
PaulatlnO A~. Coetl K·m19 Meee. CA t282t
l'1CT1TIOUI .,..... Ju Kyo Palk , 828
clud. plcl( up Ind d• ~/No Salee. 0.-Mll$700ol>O. S..5-0415 Wife & cymbal• Mutt slip (818)9l3-821l .,....,_,_.. VER ANNIV Mint eond 2600Hatl>OfBlvd
llv1ry of tdl, pulllng tall• Mt'ld Mll-lddrMMd A llaa Mii 557-8393. ttrlft 7 $13,500 Cati 673-888e COSTA MESA
...._ ITATUmNT Paulatino. eo.ta ~. CA
The lollowtnQ pefSOfl9 are 82820
t .. rahMll , proce11lng etamp«! envele>p9: ft '" ORUM ut, complet• -BMW 320! '81 White, Im-PORSC E 11 S 7 8 ad1, .,-.d • v1t'9"' of ELAN VITAL .903 I llY IPPUAllll Eight plecee, Lud'°""'/ C IOl.. maculate S pkg, ~o H I 1 • 4 lk CADILLAC '78 Coupe o.
dOIOQ t>ullneet u Freeno I Th.. t>ulll\Me II con-AMocl•t•. 3200 BmtOI St , dUC1ed Dy llYSbend arwt .....
Suite eeo. Coeta MeM CA CNng H Palk Other dutlee. Candfdate 3418 EnterprlM Rd. Ft. LES 957-8133 ZllcfJlan $1200 ;'V bMI ••rn , ... 11 Snrt, •le. cut. ~~:y ~:-~~~~ 13 ~~ VIiie. s "50 646-1998
mull ~ lxtrem91y or-Pierce, FL 33482 DMP Freeze seo Ou rlll offer 842-5797 3/4 lor'I Ford truok wtMU $9995, call Al 675-1809, rcpll $18,000 firm UllLUO 'll Elftrlff 92626 This sta1emen1 -Ned
Oonat\1.19 ScMber, 3200 wttll LM ~ c.1! Of Of· 8r11t01 St Suite 560. Coeta _,. ~ on s.ptemt>er
M... f:.A 92826 (A C•I· 26 11185 g111iz.ct, rMponllb .. and lllTIOILTllWJIT S50 &.41--0314 g Pl cont Teardrop CamP«. Mon tnru Fri, 8-5pm Cellular phone optional Low ml. load9d. eunroot
at>Mt to work well with · 1811 flll Ilk• new S5000, 673-8888 M 11 ... 10 •npr~111e s eoo 75"8073 Interior plant co. looltflg GE FROSTLESS RE -IOSI DASTUN 810 '74 WIQC>r'I u -... ..., 1 ~ =~MurM Attn· LIH for plant m1lnten1nc• FRIG ERA TOA S 150 ltttrcycl•/ Runa gd, look• great 492-2005, 493-8817 Cadlllac SeVllle 19,
S 1 tecn,nic11n. PIT, 1xper Chrle &45-2435 · BABV GRANO PIANO -lcMttn 1011 S1760 873..e269 Porecne 928 '79, blk Loaded. mnrt Aeking
forn1a corporation) 1'111111
Mehmet F Noyan 2135 E Put>llilheO Orange CoM1
Mento Ave Fr•no CA Dally PllOI Octobet 2, 8, 16.
m -1 OIUT ~~·:.~· atc:i5 Ma'jo or ~1j.19~~ 0~~!~54~50 '78 Suzuki RM125. new DATSUN '99 Wagon. eurt-~~~"'~.~~~1." g~;r.~~ $6950 obo 5151-448_1 _
IAILY PILIT pleton rings. clutch & er• deOght, n-Urea, whl1, S 17,500 947-7943 CHEV '72 MALIBU p/1 --056 OE lld•by-elde frig, f,otd
S 150. Holpolnt rig,
937 lO 23. 1985 Th11 buelneH 11 cori·
dUC'led by 1 09f*ll pen-nersn1p
W-081
HOUSECL l~rtl11 I IOIS brand new mo10 crou cltch, carb. AM/FM c.... or 54a-5480 p/b, am/Im caaa . good P.l.lt11llO Needed. Full & NOROICA NR 980 §RI helmet $350 firm. S675 Obo &.44-2327 transp car SACRAFICE EA NEAS brown $100. 780-1901
Oonlllue Sehrlbef. Joy1---------Oelta .... ,01.12121 548-06 BOOTS-COMP. New. 641-9658eves Datsun '76 280Z, red/blk, TOYOTA '74 Cellca, 5 ap, $1100 0 80 498-1759
--------•HOUSECLEAN never used S2 25 Like new Yamana '82 4 •PM<! air bra tinted n-paint, 7',000 ml, ex-
Moulion, Ch .. I Financial Of.
llGer
part-time. G.E Wuner ind Elec1rlc 21 Dryer/Gold. Gd cond
AFTER
SCHOOL
JOBS
EARN
MONEY
PRIZES
TRIPS
you Ilka to 543-8874 Fathers 250, sons 80, din window~. ;una · great ri~~t r~;~.1~~7~ondlt1on
St 80-$210/ Solomon sx91 EQulpe Ski bikes. $800 & $500 080. $4200 obo 548-52_39_ .
ING Would $250/bo1n. 548-8672
make btwn Kenmore refrlg, freezer.
IEWCIRULEI
USEI CAR SILES
WEllY
CLUIClRS
UITlllCIS
H'llt •tllement wu llled K·a.11
wtth tne County Clerk ol Or· ,teTrnoue IUH•U ange Counl't on September ...,_ I TATlllllWT
Kathy 842-99 Boote new never used 640-4196 DATSUN '80 10th An· Toyota Corolla 82 4
HOUSEKEEP $250 '543 8°874 a 1 _ • tOlO 280 .,.,. L door, E.>ccel cond lo ml
wkly. Call
22 2'8"x 5'6" Oold, gd cond s 175. 548-3276 26 t 985 The followlng pereone .,..
'211'7'MI dOlnQ t>ullnMS u UI• Put>llllhed Orange Cout Sound• 575 Anion 8'vd
Da11y Piiot October 9 16 23. Suite e. 3rd Floor. Coeta
ER LIVE IN · · nltt ... 1na1 nlversary <J\ 0 $5000 call 720-1950 Hard working 11. S I -mllH, all Ktru, Im· · Engllllh. NB · -ra1t I ti '11 llUAJI SEllTIA macu111e MUST SEEi TO_Y_O_T_A_C_O_A_O_NA ·74 30 1985 M-CA 92826
Refs. Some Reconditioned Appllances
631-6115 Aefrlga/WUhera/Dryers
.. UlllT
e J'5~16111 MllREEPI PIT. mull drlv
11111.IPI
$8 05 111rt
lllllrt
Ing rate
Several potlllon
with local co
18 plua, artlc
retldent, llu
No eKp. req
a 1vaJl1ble
rp Mu1t be
ulate. 3 yr
den II OK
Call HPM,
hffttrlq tltt H B 964-28 IAILY Pit.IT 541-8878 for
90 or S.A.
appt
IUll ..... .,.,. llll OLll IT
If you are iOOklng for e>Clra ATTENDANT
spending mOMy, or 111<1 avall. lrvln• C
to oo pleoea Ilk• Magic try Club. &44
Poaltlons
out Coun-
-9680
Moontaln, Knot11 Berry Ill P/T Farm. or win Prlzea and .IUrTH
Awarda, Call us now! We OFFICE/LAB.
hlWI 1everal openlnga In eKper. 20-25
Must have
hrs wMk
bondable. C.M., H B. or F V Muat be
Call 642~333 CM/SA area
Benrwitt 979· 6375
Mr.
BABYSITTER Lille -In 1--=---.,,.-MGMT wanted. Motherly lady fOI' KENNEL Ing akllls good home w/worklng Exp Only. Groom
Grandmothe< 6 4 yr old In required. 557 -eo20
acnoot full-time. Salary Llllll ITH
negot. Reta. 842--0350 P/TIME. ExP« IOLll
pref, but
banking not nee C 111 Liquor SU Ollllm 11 L Locker 49 8-9611 or
pletrano Bch
n e•ded
$50 to 1300 1630 Su-
pertor, CM 631-3197
Retrg $200. Wasner/dryer
$145 each, dlsllwlllhel'
S WO Port cir TV $125
All In xlnt cond &46-5648
Seara Kenmore E.lectrlc
Drye<. Good condition
Asking $75. 645-9877
Faraitare iD14
1•X Fl sofa, black
naugahyde w/lndlvldual
cushions $75. 3 pc corner
studio couch, makes 2
beds W/lbl $100 8M
couch. blue pattern S50
Or beat otters 646-3429
BEAUTIFUL GI r Is
bedroom MUI Matching
dresaer, desk chair and
princess table $250
H/644-2724 W/546-4186
BEAUTIFUL IOlld wood
dining table w/carved
pedeatal leg• $100. New-
port Beach. 722-7351
Couch & loveeeat, brown
plald, good condition
$65. 9e3-7M 1
CrMC«lt shaped couch
$100 obo 968-5457
$117 48 / $10,000. Serloue In-Station Wagon $1000 • 110 qulrles only PLEASE 642-7156 or &42-29040
Ctrt11 ••I ••r 6122
CdM GARAGE SALE
Misc Items Priced lrom
2SC·S25 Fr Antq
Armolre $350 705
Narcissus 780-8122
• th, 48 mos .• CEL. OAC 645--0251
SOUTHERN CALIF
AUTO BROKERS
22922 Center OrlYe
El Toro
111-1111
Honda CRX '88
S 199 down. cloaed end
Comme<claJ Leue
L11a11 ltacla 614 Aat• Semen/
GIANT M0VtNG SALE Partl 901 5
11.L·SAYEll LWl
lt•l4U-1Hl
1521 TAHITI ott Park fires oo rims 2-HRJ8x 15 Jaguar '18 XJ6L. 4dr. all
Ave Antiques. king u 2-GA70x14 $50 LA78K15 ~=· e~~~w~~~n, ~~~~
brass bed, l\Jrn, sports, H78Kl4 135 2-155Rx13 see PP $7600 760-0823 91"1'clu11c dingy, 3'"1 hp 135 631-3701
Seagull O/B, bikes. T L 903S MBZ '67 200, 1 owner.
plants (Inside/out) more raca1 very good cond 4 cyl,
--·7-4 DATSUN PICKUP stick $4295 492-793 1
Tr1a1rrt1tlt1 w/camper shell AunnlnQ MBZ .75 450 SL. Maple cir.
condition 1Aed paint OrlQ owne< l03M ml,
Power INtl 7012 S 1200 63 I-272. S 16.950/obo pvt ply
Y111 9040 Mon thru Fri 833-3150 1 ~~,!~~~;~~art+ner!~1~~~ 165 WJ Camper Van, looks MBZ '85 500SEL. blue blk,
new '84 28' pp Ole & runs well. new tires, metalllc. blk lthr Loadedl
633-4441, Hm 662-0689 $1600 obo. Wkd~ 9-5. S39,985 Eves 551 -2867
873-1070 TOP Ill Pill
"WE Will NOT
BE UNDERSOLD"
m
WI Ill ALL IUUS
USED CARS & TRUCl<S
COME IN OR CALL FOR
llEE lPPUJW.
DeLILLO
OllYlltl.fl
182 l 1 BEACH BL VO
HUNTINGTON BEACH
ac1-1011i l4t-aaa1
W-102 Aot>et1 E HUOf'lee. 380
---------Wleconlln Apt. ~2. Long Pta.IC NOTICE s-:n. CA 90814
Mary E HUQ1-. 3eo W..
1(-JOllO constn Apt 202. Long
flCTTTlOUI Ml..... 8eecl\ CA 90& 14
NAMe ITATl•NT Tht• t>ualnese 1• con·
The loOoWlng pettonl ate dUC1ed t>y hust>anO and wit.
doing l>ualnMt as The Leg.al Rot>et1 E Hugh99
Excnsnge 3200 Ptnl Center Thia 11stement -flied Orlve Suite 660 Coeta with the County Clef1C C/11 Of.
Meu CA 921126 snge County on October 3
Cnryaaha Put>1111>er1 inc 1985
IA Ca11forn11 corporation) ......
97,u Wlllhtr• Boulevard, PUOll9he<I Orenge COM! Suite 205 Beverty 111111 C•ll· Dalty PllOt Octot>er •• 1e. 23,
rorn1a 130 1985 I Thi• bu11n•H 11 con-w -110
dueled by • corpor111on I Chrytelll Publl.net•. Inc
, Wiiiiam Seaton PrMldel'lt
I Th11 etatement wu flied fl\8.lC NOTIC[
with 1119 County Clerk OI Or----------a09e County on September ic:-..n
Chevy Malibu Claulc 711., 30. 1985 f<tCTTTIOUI _.. ..
good cond. 3 apd $800 F217111 NAl9 IT A TIMmn' Ca.sh 873-5257 Publlahed Oranoe Cout Tne tollowing pertlOnS.,. Dally Piiot October 9 18 23. o o 1 n g bu• In••• a 1
Ct'lrysler LeBaron Conv 30. 1985 Montebello Julie. 3200 25'1980 WeUcratt Sports-
man. Twin Volvo 110 . bait
lank, fighting chr, trlr
Must sell lmmedl $ 1000
down, lake 011er pymt1
Full price S 15.000 Lv
mag 645-6646
CHEVY, FORD,
TOYOTA
1111-YAMS
'82, •Int cond, pi s p/b, I W· 100 Brlslol 51 . Suite MO, c-ta
For Pampered etc. Asking $7500 Mutt 1 Meu CA 92826
Mercedee Benz tell 642·2•89 Robin P\&.IC NOTICE Thoma L Sc:Mt>er 251 t
l •• E.uTI A••1 --------S.. View Corona del .,.., "' -WE WAIT YIH K-an CA 92828 Top Mercedea Pr10es Paid OLW ISEI CUI FlCTTTlOUI Ml ... H Pstr1c11 Joy Moul10t'I.
Call Pete< or Rey MA .. aTATl•NT 25642 Peros Roed, Laguna
$199 Down 48 Moe.. llHSE If IMPllTI S.. Tonv Ralal The 1ouOW1no '*'°"''ere HI"• CA 92M3
Hu an Immediate op«ilng 498..ff77 Ca
for • Saving• SuPef'litor M E c H A N I c
and Teller In 11'19 San w/own loot•
C'9menle ., ... For lnfor-trudll. Low pr
mallon con11c1 Kim A Ptu• Moving
tor med duty 9 It Fre<'lch Provlnc111 30' Owens Sedan-bought
nu l>Oat. mull Mii N-
electrlcal. pl\lmb. paint
S9000 obo &31-7086
Closed end comm'I IM . .ill lllOllH \CIOlnQ bullnMe as Min.al W11t1am J l(enney, Jr 1111
OAC 213or714637·2333 BILL YATES King AuoctltH 3200\Aldean Plaee, Newport eaaur• job.
Booth at 498-2020 N~ CM EOE •"•'""·
Co .. 2350
549-7359
Banking
nLLEllS
Part Tl••
llOllU IG
airing GOif
ng equip-
underetand
To lt&lll In rep
C<XJrM mow\
ment Mu1t
oral & written dlrecilon1. Excellent opportunity for 644-5
reaponalble lndlvlduale to 1.:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -404
work 20 houra per Weel< 11
Prevloue banking ex·
P«lence prefe<red. Com-
petitive 11l1ry. PleHe
call Personnel Dept
•• IOT ••• n
Avall•ble In
Beach E
preferred.
necessary M
pendable tren
and be ove<
Seven day d
no collectlng
Piiot 10AM
Newport 111411eo-eooo
Interviewing By
Appointment Only
~
.;: Bank ~l)t 11111' :\t ., ' I)( )rt
Equal Oppty Empl m/1111
lllNWTl/T
N9Wport Weatefn Corp la
lootc Ing tor I d9t all orlen·
led person for our A~
Dept. CAT exp. helpful
Aleo cuetomer 1erv
xperlenoe
but not
u1t nave de·
1port1tlon,
18 years otd.
etlvery With
. Call Dally
-4PM Mon-
day -Friday 642-4333
IPNITI •m Men or Wome<t with d&-
pendable car• wanted tor
Dally Piiot routes In Hunt-
lnQton. Harl>Or & Seal
Beach area. Some cotlec-
t1on1 lnvotved. Call Art
Broadatocil &42~333
phone contact Type --------• 40.45 wpm. Nor'l•lmkr
pref. Carol 851--0517 PUllllY GUii COSMETICS & OIFTS wm11& WlllH NB 640-7373
Matur• Implant Cafeteria .,, •t11M Plllll Work., M .50/hr I" ~n-r-efit•. Houri 8am-2:30pm Needed. Mooday. 1 p.m.
75g_2563 10 approx. 8 p.m. Tu.-
day, 11 a.m. 1pprOK. 7 MTIH'I HLPll p.m. Fri. & Set 9 1.m. to 6
Reaponllb'9 etudent OK p.m. Wiii train. Apply st:
Mon-Fri, ~r. 2-ft•K. nr PENNYSAVER. 1eeo occ. R9lllb .. tr'1l• .... , Plaoent11 Av. Cott• Meea.
b•lt• 1 mull Anne I .I.I
543-4 711 or 548-7591 Chall'lld• and minor tront
Oellven Any Leue YW-lonche 8'111<>4 Sune 560 CO.ta Beectl. CA 929&3
lLL.••yns • 1u•ir ....._ CA 92828 Err>eet Wiiiiam WeC>et -~ ,qeel-&1-Donahue Scf\tlt>er 3200 4790 Via eor-_ YOf'be UY UHCll 71•/ •U· 1117 , lowtsl pots.tilt I Briar~ Sun• 660 Costa Linda CA 92e&e
15 Brletol Piiot 1971 prlcu 1111whtf•' M ... CA 92626 Rlctlard A Zak, JS5 cw.
Seeta 6 Palme< gu In-Aati,aH, San Alan Cal'IKttano FORD ·10 MACH I MUST Mer>me1 F Noye11 ?135 E 1;;,o:3 Ave . Leno 8eecn. c.11
t>Oard, Dodger, full cover. Cl111ica 9045 ,..... 351 Clev ...,, (n-brks Msnlo Ave Fresno CA P S Don ,. 11 C t G d 137-4800 ~11 _ .. ,, ~2710 1trlcil atwe. • a oas uar equip-Rolls Royce '76 Mulllner time chain tires paint, l<•m A Ov1an 114 w Starsnire Irvine. CA 92715 :;'b~~\~~~b:..;~1f8;~aJI-Park Ward. 2 dr, Coupe, *'12 MEIGllEI JIO VOivo '78 $6500 ol>O Perl carb) 11350 846-7094 Mein Sune 2F V1N h• CA Oenrel w Donahue
45,000 ml. mint. all orig. SIL cond! 5Sk ml Must see 10 Ford 71 Maverick r\lns 9327~ 31 681 S.. Btuf'f L-Soutfl Sail INta --70H 645-2221 ext 212 eves IBllo,/Pal Llhr Int var" appreci11e 675-2565 &d $500 obo Con1ac1 Tn1• t>ua1neu '' con-Laghuna bCAl92877 • ' -------G "•2 505 auc111d oy e llmlte<l pi rtner· i f1 II us neH 11 con Dellll(e 27' Sailboat Pur Aatt1 l•rr1t4 9100 sharp. low ml . servtce vw ·11 am/Im Blaupunkt ob ~ ·1 thip aue111d t>y •general pan.
new '77 6'1" need room rec • 1 year warr lease or stereo, Mlct'lefl n tires. Little Musa Mutfet sat on a Oonanue Schrlt>•r Joy nertnip
lmmec head & shower SEPAUTE ElllPW buy, 8 SEL 5 lo Choose good cond S 1500 Tuflet alo ng came a Moulton Clltef F1nenc•1J Of. Joy Moulton. Pannw
Sturdy, roomy, fast, de-DELIVERY DEPARTMENT from 673-6874 spider and reaa 1n the t!Ge' Tl!ll •latement wu ftleel
pendable. !uni Xlnt value M LAREN'S BMW Mr - -Datly Piiot Clas9lfled Tnoa ttatem.nt .., .. Wed with t,,. County Clef'I! of Ot-494-5714 Make Otter C (024 624) VW ·71 Bus Camper Mci1on aD<>ul Miu Mur-Nttn tne County C~I< of Or •llQ• County on Seotemt>er
12.,111 Mlchelln llras am/Im let 5 Tutte1 and bounht ti enge Coun1y on Seotem~ 26 1985 END OF SUMMER SAIL I M·Ftlll 9,S-Stlll6 cauet1e $67 5 o bo .. 26 1985 ,...,... Nice 21' Gal1 Rig Katch 626 S Euclld St -Ill SUllll 650-3980 Glen for S9 95 Vou can sell ~ Puo111nec1 Orange Cou1
WOOd Was $3500 now Fullenon. CA llPOtlTS your luff et and iots ot ovo11s~ Oranoe Coal! Dail\ P1101 October 9 16 23
$1500 Tr1tde?63 1·5525 71 4-680 6300 l001 0 UAIL ST NB VWBaJIBUQ '60 Nd verve Ol her t 111nos ltHOugh Oa11,P11ot0ctot>et9 t6 23 30 1985 2l3-69 t-670l Job Gd t>O<ly, new carb Dally Pilot C1ass0t1ed 30 •985
I 833-9300 new tires $400 675-2004 Aas Call 611.1-5678 w-101
Hobey t4, turbo kit ex-;.=====----------------------, traa $1400 646-3130 '--------~----,..-----iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.immir(
Chintz Fabric Sota &
Matching Love Seat.
$200/0BO. 673~743
On. u l>Ox tprlnga/matt
S 100, Sgl l>Ox spr & matt
$50. diM119 Ml $50, all
near new &49-7058
Ultra mod•m bdrm Ht,
llM & expeollve black la·
quer, from Italy, almost
new.$985. 497-2562
•i11tlJUM1I IOU
oYnute1 frM etyle ikle
with Solomon -444 bind-
1ngs $50. 10-apd Sutekl s 100 760-6658
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Tropic · SynO<I
Ripen -Futlle
SENIORITY
W-104
Mothe< of 1eeneged cnn-ISLANDER 30' rbll eng TODAY IS Q I exhaull. auto !Iller
thlngaboutralllnQklds ls compl sa1llng equip CROSSWORD PUZZLE dren "The tou hest
convincing them lhll you $18 500 993-6259 I: I. I s
have SENIORITY " -'l]j{l~1,1JW --YONEY
UNIV ATHLETIC CLUB ~ave you read todays !:!!!!!! 111 11• ••• •••
memt>erShlp.$600 Seiter c111a111ed Ads? II not 0MARR to pay traneler lee Dick 1 you re ml111ng the best
or Earleen 557-5234 bargains 1n 1own1 -1-----
DIMES
Thursday, October 10
ARIES ( March ~ 1-Apnl 191 Empham on rc-;pons1b1ht\. prcs-;ure. 1
deadlines. employment, basic issues. ab1lm to reassure tho'\C "'hn reh
upon ~our judgment. Older 1nd1\ 1dual 1s on .,.our ~1de. "'Ill hdp 1n
connection w11h license. tax requirements
TAURUS (Apnl 2()..May 20) Empha'il!> un intens1lil'd rela-
11onsh1p, love. cart'er advancement. added rerngnlllllll You'll
complete project. you'll win plaudits. member ot o ppos1l1." <.c~ 1.1,1Jl
make clear that you are objeC't of affect1 on
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) New approach a1di. "cl'Unt\ (1Cl '"
heart of matters. ask questions concerning land. reside net . ~helter and
safet) Member of opposite sex does have your best interest\ fort'mo<\t
AC9'0U
, S9MCIY
11Pu1 .... y
tO CrOWd• 14 Foollsh
15 -eno nouno• HI Baeet>all farntly
name
17 Hides
18 Alimentary
cane! part
20 Aoor dl'1
22 Coo -0tt
23 w .. ,.," .,.,,., ta1nmen1
24 Quarry man
25 Sc>or1 28 Owlndle
29 Bay window
55 Antagonisms s., ""OSleO'T> oecr•
53 US Cll
~9 -canlool-
at 11i.1no
llO No e;rree1
61 '"41nl0<~
62 HMCI~ 63 Happy 100!>1
DOWN
1 Some lt<Jes
'l Air-"
3 Fenc.. part
' HOI P<lll di;ac:tor
5 PllltlQe -6 Sperl.le
1 0111"<» A
LINE
WANT ADS
Child Care HouMllMf* ottlee. Career opportunl-
ne«l«I Monday tllru Fir· ty tor mature perton u-
d1y 1pm-5pm. Mu1t nawi 111t1ng In • plH11nt ll'.:l~~f
car 6 apeak Engllah Cell .. 11b. & ex.pandlng den·
an 6pm 540-1M7 tal pract!Qe In So. Laguna
CANCER (June 21-Jul} 22): Fo llow throu&h on 1n111al 1m-
press1ons. Give full play to intelkctual rnn os1t> ~rnano highlight"
relauves. famtl). basic issues concerning secunt~ Reunion '-"1th lo\ r d t
one 1s indicated
LEO (Jul}' 23-.\ug 22): Ry aslong q uestions. ~ou lOuld locall' 1 article that had been lost. m1rnng or -;tolen. C')cle high. populant\
increases. you'll have chance to improve earning capanl\ Gemini.
Sagmanus na11,es figure m dynamic S«nano
30 MlllM Hctt.0
35 M~ll
cape
3e Stupio one
8 hble ICf II>•
9 L.1Hlp.itten
10 K.11\d of 1<l~ 30 1no1eatton 31 VM'del
Chlld Care -U~ln Mon-_4_99_· 1_8_1_1 _u1c_t_or_0on_n_•_
, Fri. Engllan •~king. llUlf .,11101
cooking, Ill• llMkPg For mini ttofllOlt att9 In Own pv1 18r Apt Utlla Huntlngtoo BMGtl. Santa
pd Food altowanc9 + Ana Colt• M9la. A911r9d
aalery. 1Wt. Avl 11115 cooP.. p<eferr9d. Of'lloe.
873-205& an 69m t>ootckeec>tng 6 s>f\004l ••-
C091Mtol<>Qlst/ A .. t
107 Main St. M~ Lie
req. Call 9754412
~190e• ll•lpful Wiii
train. Part-llm• work
C all 775-3700 or
751-1300 for IDOlleat
After School -
Student Jobs!
Do You Need $ Cash $ And
A Good Job To Start The New Year?
Wt are look Ing for Jr. High end High
School atudentt end othert who would
enjoy t1lklng with people and working
with other etudenta their own age. You
can earn S2&.00 to $50.00 "ch week ln
comm1111<>n1 and MUCH MOREi You can
work PART TIME In the afternoon• and
evenlnge and atlll ha¥9 J*nty of tree time.
You MUST BE FREE Anl:R SCHOOLI
We ott.r complete training and provtde
trenaportatton. Thia II NOT A PAPER
ROUTE ANO IS NOT SEVEN DAYS A
WEEKI COf'M out and help UI get new
cuatomert f« our newapeper and haw a
gf9et tlml d~ It. You haw nothing to
roee and a""* fOb to geln. call today
and mayt)e you can 1t111 tomorrow!
Call Mr. Earl
SH~70S8 or 2U•84S2
IMPORTANT NOTICE T O
PAIVA TE PAATIE S
S•fl yoor ltftml for $50 or less 1n
o.ir l•mo.i1 DIMl!S·A·LINES pub-
1/lh«J ~h S•turd•Y In the•Oally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ads must be
p,...p•ld 10 mall or bring them Into
tM Delly PJfot off~. Be sure to
Include yo.ir phon• number or ad-
d,... In your ad. have a price on
Mell ,,.,,, ' no •bbrovlatlons
Sorry, no comm.n:l•I ad1, g•r•
..-. produc.. pl•nt1 or anlm•lt .,.. ecoept•b,.
DEADLINE:
12 Noon Frldey
Coete Meu Offtce
no ••• .., •tree• Coeta ...... c.. 12121
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&pt. 22): What held ~n elUSI\ e Wiii n<'"' I
bcco mc a'a1lable You'll be at nghl place at crucial moment \-loon in
your sign h1~hghts personahty. chansma. ph) s1cal attraction Tauru ...
Scorpio natives figure prommentl)
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22). Prote\'l pn \ ac)' & discreet. maintain
aura of glamo ur Means don't tell all you know You do best now b)
workmg behind scenes. V1s1t 1nd1v1dual confined 10 honw. hospital.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ): Po~ulant~ mc~asc~. )Ou could win
a contcst. Focus on beauty. personaht). abil1t) 10 make wishes come
true Fam1l) member talks about po"<11ble purcha'I<' ot an ohJecl or 1
lu~ury item Taurus plays key role
SAGITTARIUS (No v. 2}-Dcc' ~I) ln-;tructtons "from the top"
may lack substance. Know at, have altcmat1ve methodsat hand lX-linf' I
terms. clarify meanings. ~ o thers m reahst1c hght Romance
flourishes. but aura of deception could be pre~nt.
37 Grsnad• 00'<!
34 Hunting dOQ 41 Pr,ol<>ed
43 HOUMf\old
.... _, .. elt ..
•SOteet .a Coun •tlair so &<tell lyi>e
51 H9'-ll
1 1 Salad item
12 0001
,3 L111oan11
19 Throw
2 1 P tVCM pa'11
2• P9t~""' 15 FrOQ 11.,n
16 lnllh ,,,,., r Be11 c11.11>
211 MeglC •llC~
travel, rommun1cat1on, education. pubhshma. d1sscmmat1on of •r-+--+-+--t--CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good luoar aspect co1nc1dcs ~nh I
tnforma11o n. Romance IS featured. relationship arows stronger 10
intensity. Anothcr Capnrom plays outstand1na role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You have "srand opportuntt)" to
bend of los1na propos1t1on Be scns1t1ve. owarc. akn and get nd of 1._r-+-+-
burden which was not your own to C&rT) 1n lint plaC'C ) ou could
rcoel\'e news of possible mhcntancc
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) tress independence. ~at1v1ty,
1Al11tniness to break from put 1>1ttcms lunar emphasis on
coopeBllve efforts. lepl documents. possible P1rtnenh1p. mamqe
Leo. Aquanus nat1vcs play oumandana roles
nrOCTOBltl\ II IS YOUI' BIRTHDAY )OU art C'Tt'att,e. dynamic.
independent. onsinal. SC'Tlsual and obrtmate 'ou ha\e cou~e of
co nvtct1ons. p1onccnnc spmt, and you eOJO) bcma rint m h~ Leo.
.\quanus persons play 1mponant roles m your hfe You art'. dBwn to
the arts. you art an tODO"-lOr an4 you 1pprcic1.atc music 'ou currrntJ)
have chance to strcambne ttthn1q_uca,. to act nd of emot1onaJ debns, to
&fl yoursclf bedc into clocllcnt phy.acal condition October could be
your most StlJltficant month of l 98S
32 C1teo<>')' 33 Wheedle
3• s.cond-<ste 38 Stiow up 30 Argument
60 St090-
' t I( noca ing off 42 Stren u An H oi HAH
4S Abftll\MI 8 wl ..
L-----------------~~---~-----._,_,_,.~ __ _,, __
..
'
...
Or Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wedneeday, October a. 1985
It .... ....... T ._ oo.t.. ...... and .0-flK:TmOUI .,_.. MOlJCI MAH Wll.l Sill AT PUellC MOnctlOI' 'llnOeaatthetlmeofttleln-1 NMmeTATW .,..m1NGlllDI SuperlOf Coun Of Otanoe 10:00 A ... OATEWAY =lllOl'I. II any, ehOWn knownu:KIM'8LUOGA0£ AUCTIOHTOHIOHl!ST810-(CfTAQQll~ *>l"ICeTO .
(A*e>a ~) DAV10 A.
MOelN; NOOY L H081N,
AKA PE.OOY H09lN
,,....,... &M.I tti.i publ60atlon Of 1111a ~j The~~ .,.. Tr•• County Sanitation ~ ~"':':O ;:a:,= ~~~o 1aP~P~rn~•~ 1~11: Seid .. will 1>41 rneo.. but ALuN!'.?~:~r-',.~o~~I~~~ OfR 'o" CASH (pa_. at T .e. Ma..., tJoe of a.-.· Mllrnated OOln9 ~ • ,., w.t Dlltric\I of Ol'MOI County. "' time of .... In i.WflJ monaiy On OCTOM" 11, 1t1a .. t~'• ,._ and ooett lnl Culture ,arma Co-Op ,. ,20 c.itto<• w111 ~ ...,_ M penonal r~"'9 u and l>'"Uant to Died wttnout ~t °' -· BAOS end KIM'S HANO-ol the United ltaMI) at THI
YOU o\M IM!IHG IU€0
8Y Pl.AINT'lff: (A Ucl. It .U
demandando) "Ol!LtTY Cl\EDITOA stAVICI. INC., a Callfomla oorporauon
1 o . o o A M tN amount o1 1 1,211.17, IWoh. ~ ech. CA ed btdauntllTUMCS8y,Ocio-to lldmltllet• tha Mtate of Of TN1t recorded Sapl-ran:=i~°'~·,.. IA08 AHO LUOOAOE, ,AONTl!NTAANCl'TOTHI
8Hl.A"SON/AMIRICAN p1ua........, on the~ t2te0 bef 16, 11115 at 1HIO AM lhedecedent bet 16, 1N2, u in.I Ho W..11a1111110.-.. or IOCaled at 8370 !. On The OLD OAAHOl COUNTY
EXPRESI UCfllOW ~ ~ ~ at the r•tel Hugh R ~ '120 8ldl mull 1>41 ~ It Iha Th• ~tltlOtl requ .. ta ~2 .. 27, of OfTlclal .. ancum rancea, lt1Gludlng M ... 8uana Pane, County ol COURTHOUSE. &.OCA no
PAM y '0RM &Rl y of 11.16~ per annum from 81rcti ~ ecti CA o..tr10ta• A.drnlnilirtlM of• autllarlly to admini.ter U. corda In lhe offlca of the ,_, ct\argee and aoenMI Onnge, callfomla and 137 OHSAHTA ANAILVO .. If·
SOUTH!"H CITIES S/t /18 to date of ... plut t2eeei • floea by the d•t• and lllM Mtat• undef the lndapan. CountyAacorder'lolOtange of IN Tru.i .. and ol IN Tiii Plau Paudan a, TWEEN SYCAMONI ST. &
UCROW COMPANY AS lell dlergaa, piu. any .O-Thie butltl ... 11 con· herltnaboYe ... fOrth, I t Oatll Admlnlatr1tlon of E .. County, Slate of Calllornla. INat1 cnated by Mid Dead P...o.ne, County of LOI BROADWAY, IANTA AHA,
T"USUI! or Succ..aor ftnoel the ~ may duottd bY' an lndMdi.lal wt11ot1 time they w!11 be pub-talM Act. exeouted by RICHAIU> J. of Trvtt .. to IMlY the remeln-Ang1IN, Calllornla, and CALIFORNIA all right, tttll
Y•hrla•CAUNDAR DAVI.,._._...,... .. Trultll or Subatltutect b9 tutr-ind or obligated Hugh A.' Murohllon l6Cty ~ and 111emlned A hMr1nG on thl pelltlOn OOOFflll!Y, an unrnarflld Ing J>(tncl~I tum• of the 2 IS2 Olandtl• Oall1rl1, end Int-I oon~ to
Tnietee ol that oet1aHI o.d to pey ptlor to... TN• 11itement .... flled at the omoa of the ~trlc11. wlH be hald on OCTOBER man. Will SELL AT PUBLIC not .. MCIUrld by Mid ~ Olendall, County of LOI An-and now hald by " undlf ........ ,... ..... .
=-~ ~ .. .. of Trvit uaouted by JoM YOU ARE IN DffAULT wtth tha County Cllttc 01 Of· t()l.4.t E.111a A--. Foun-30, IM& at fUO A.M. In AUCTIONTOHIOHl!ST910-Of Trutl to wit· 11.500.00 Qllla. Caltfornla ~iv.-Said Deed of Trval In the w KnoA end a... E Knox UHDl.111 A DEED Of' TRUIT County on Sec>t bar tlln Vt/Wt callfornla. fOI' the °""' Mo 3 II 100 CMo DER FOR CASH (payable It with lnterMt thereon from fy property lltualed In Niki
"'**'<! end wlfla M lc*li OATIDAPAIL 18, 1M1, UN· ~H& am followlng ' Cent• Or1YI W•t. 8anta tlml of aall In leWful ~ t.Aatcll 1, IMS at ti.~ per The bulk tranafw wlN bl County and Stat• delc:t1bed .................. ............ ,...,_~
t--.tl and l"900f'cled ~ Ll&S YOU TAKI! ACTION ' 1'111111 A•palr Grit Chamber Ana. CA t2702 Of the United Stat•) at the annum • provided In Mid con111rnma1ed on or tit• N . t tM 1 M 'in.trument no TO ,.ftOTECT YOUR PROP-Pul>lllhed Of eo.t Orlln Vallle at ~tlon IF YOU 08JECl to the North front antrlll'OI to thl notl(1) pl\lt fof~ ,__ the ~II day of Oc1obar. LOT 26 Of' TRACT NO
_..... Nllfl ......... . "',...... ............ ,_ ...... ..., ..... ,_ tOeH. In boo6c 1~1'. page ERTY. IT MAY 8E SOLO AT o.lly Pilot s.cn-=w 25 Plant No. ' • SPECIFI· granting Of lhe '*"Ion. you County CourthOUN , 700 and ooet1 l'TIVI II a MOOnd 1986, and dalm1 may bl •502. IN THE CITY OF
1038 Ol'flolal Aaoordl of Or· A PVILIC SALE IP: YOU Oc1obar 2 9 ti li85 • CATION NO. PW· 162 ahould etthat 8'IPM' I t the CMc Centtt 0\'"'9 W•t, truat died I ltlld It WELLS FAROO COSTA MESA, COUNTY OF
angeCounty Callfomla,end NEED AN EXPLANATION ' ' ' w-07e 8ldl mutt be .ubmltted "-'1no and llata your ot>-Santa Ana, California. al1 TNblnef\ClaryundlrNld BANK, N.A .. EaorowC>epart· ORAHOE. STATE OF CALlo-
pui11>ent fO that C*'taln No-OF THE NATURE OF THE on the form tuppllld by the jaGtlOnt or Iii. written Obilc> f'IOllt. lflll and lntarest oon-Deacl of Tni1t herelolOfa ex• ment, Re: !1orow No. FOANIA AS PER MAP RE tloa of o.tault end e.ctlon PROC£EDIN0 AGAINST Olllrlotl In aooordanoa wftll tlon1 with the court bll0'9 W)'ed to end now held by It eouted and dlllv«ed 10 thl 843·11019: e&O Newport CORDED IN BOOK 113 -" ,_ • Ml ... .,._., ,.., .... -....... ,_...,
.... the .... Md .,._.,
lo s .. 1 llWIUndaf reoorded YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· PlB.IC NOTtCE all pr0Yltle>n1 of the IPICftl-the heating. YOYr llC>PMI'· under Mid Dead of 'frutt In undtnlOOld I wrltteri Cleo-Centlt' Drlv•, 11170, ,._.. PAGES 1& AND 18 OF MIS.
June 8 1ee5 .. lnltnnnant TACT A LAWVER "tlQna atlOI may 1>41 In peraon or by the propwty tltuated In Mid laratlon ol Default and 0. port Blach, County of Of. CELLAHEOUS MAPS, IN ...... _..,Md,,,,...
.,., ...., -..... wftMul
no as-2osaa2 of Oft1o1.i.. DATED! 8£PTEMBER t3 f'K:TITIOUI ttUINll S6aoilkllitlonl bid blanq your1ttorMy County and 81111 delcrlbld rn.nd f°' Sall, and• Wflttan 1nge. Siila Of CallfOfnla THE OFFICE OF THE
c#dt of Nici County wlll tt15 ' NAMI eTATaMIWT and lurthlt lnfOl'°m.tlon may IF YOU AAE A CREOfiOR u . Legal dlaorlpUon Ml Nollet of Olfaull end £lee-926e0 COUNTY RECORDER OF
~ ....... ...... tM und« and ~ 10' Mid 1 .. A"ION/ AMllUCAN The followtng l)at'ION -1>41 obtained at the~ Id· °' I COtlllngertt Cfldltor of f0f1h 111 !Ahlblt "A. at111Ghed tlon to s.11 The undlrllgnld All claim• rnu1t be r• SAID COUNTY
Dead of Trvlt ... at public llXPMll T1'UIT DllD doing blJalneu u. A) Thi drw , talepnone ~29 tO the diet ncl. you mutt 1111 her9to and made a P.i1 c:aUMd Mid Notlca ol 0. celv.d at thfl ldd,.... by IN Thi 1tret1 ldd,_. and
eUC110n IOf caltl lawful 11 .. YICll, INC., Al Ylllow Bnck ROid, 8) Yel!Ow or "2·2411 your Claim with the court or hereof, compr111ng one fl\Jft and Ellcllon to s.11 to 28111 day of Octobet. 1980, other common dealgn•tlon,
.wt. ,,... ........... ,.. .,...,..-.v .. _,._. ........ ....,,.., ,....,
.. ., ... ,_ ..... kMWft "'enon.,t rou _,,,.,,,, oa11 ... att0f'N1 ,..,..,... MfYkle or
alepl.WoMoe(laNdlll
hptloMbool).
money of the Utlfted Stat• TRUITll, Qwan A. Brick Ro.d Showa, 23t Ma J. "°""· ....._,,, pt...,..t It to the penonll page 1>41 r.cordtd In Iha county un .... the bulk trtn•f• lllO II any of the,.., property
ol Amarlca, at THE NORTH c........., ............. Vkle Rocn.t•. COit• M .... CA._... of DlraotOtl, COWi-, • ...,..,.u .... aooolnled by EXHIBIT "A" whef• the ,.., pr()j)lrty II Include• the lranet9f Of d u c'tlb•d abov• 11
FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE ,. ...... m. 1J01 ............ 92827 ty lenlt.atton Dliltriota the oourt within four montl't• PARCEL 1: Unit No. 48 u loealed. llQuor llolnM, In ~leh ~. j)Urported to bl' 1118
COUNTY COURTHOUSE, t 1 n d A., en u e , I a 11 Rita Ann Orauar, 238 Publlthld Orange Cout trom the data of flnt I• lhOwn and dlaorfbld In the Dela: &ee>tlll'lber 23, 1986 Ill clalm1 mutt be r.oelVed CARSON, COSTA ME.SA.
700 CIVIC CENTER DRIVE ........ IO\. CA t.MM (714) Rochltt•. CO.ta M .... CA Dally Piiot Oc1ober 9, 19811 111anceoflltt•1uprovldld Condominium Plan re• GATWWAY LAND ..... prior to the dat• on Which CALIFORNIA.
WEST SANTA ANA CALI· ... 1111, .... 7111 .xt. l?t. 92827 W.ot7 In Section 700 ot thl oorded on o.c.mw 12. vtCI, tNC., • Mid tnia .... the ll<iuor llclnM le tr111• The undll'llgned Truat ..
~-.... en-
FORNiA 111 that rtoht '"" m ' Thi• bu1ln111 11 con· Proball ~ of California. 1980, 111 BOC* t3a71, PllQM lfllO lo. 9undy Of~ ••· terrld by the Oepertment of dl10lalmt any llabUtty tor any
and 1ntiwMI conveyed 10 Publlahld Ofanoe Cout ducted by· an Individual Ml.IC NOTICE Thi time lor flllng Clalml wlll 183& to 1889 lnctuelw. of Loa Anee!M. CA I0021 Aleoho41e Bevwage Control. lncorrec:u-of tha 11r .. t .,.._ ........... """ 'dlol9' ........... llft ~
and now held by 11 undw o.lly Pilot S.Otlll'lblt' 25. Rita Gr-not •llPlr• prior to four Otlk:fal Ricord• of .. Id (2111 ~ ly ,,.,... SO tar u known to IN addrtM and otlW common
Mid Deed of Tr'* in tti. Ocloblr 2. 9. 1885 Tiiie 1tatemenl WM fllld ~ COUtltT monthe from the data of the County t . lell•, 'lloe ,....._.,, 1ran1ferM1, all buefnea1 dlelgnatlOn, If any, ~
de IO DIAi CAUMDANOI
par•..r.r•••ntar 11na nip -"-•,....
... afl .... 00'11.
property llltuatad In laid W-073 l wltll 1111 County Clerk ot Ot· M THI ITATI l'IMMO notlca at>ove. PARCEL 2 An undtv\dld Pul>lllhad Otenga Cout nlllnM and add,_ uNd r.tln
Coullty and Stata dlac:rtbad enga County on S.Ot.mbet CW CM.9'o..MA YOU t.AAY EXAt.AINE the ona 11x1y.nlnth (I 189th) Otlly Piiot Oc1ob« 1. 9. 18. by T1ant,.,or(1) for llll tllr.. Sald Ml4I wilt 1>41 rnaci.. but
... I 11, IHO ,()fl THI COUNTY 1111 kept by the c;ourt. ti you Int• .. , u I tenant In com-1118& yeatl IUt pu1. If . dlltttent wltll<>Ut ~•nt Of Wat·
LOT 34 OF TRACT NO. PlB.IC NOTICE .....n °' OfllANQf are • peraon lnttrMted In mon In the,_ lnt•Mt In and w-C)tO trom the above, ara: KIM'S ranty, axprlll or Implied, re-
U..~·-....... ......... "° .. ~ 9 lO&, IN THE CITY OF ,tCTTTIOUllU ..... 10!.1yublpl1lhedlot ~.,.t_,__,_eo..2 .. t. •plNPTLHIEC~ATTTIOERNOFOTHFE: the ·~t•. you may_!""', lofthlT eom ... '"..<>:1"''"ollotl Pt8.ICNOTIC£ LUGGA.OE and HAJND· gardlnglltle,poaaaeaion,()( IRVINE AS PER MAP RE· I .. .....,, ...... ..,... " " " upon t ... exeoutOf or .... m n. o rlC1 '"""" u par map BAGS. 47 tilllcrMI. an11 ancumbrlllCle. 10 pay the
CORDED IN 8001( 388 NAMI ITATE•NT October 2. 9, 1e. 1985 c HR Is T 0 pH ER LE e l1tral0f, or upon the •I· lllld In BOC* 485, Pag11 •• l-Ml79 Mall, Thouund Oak•, LOI remaining prlnc~ll eum or 1"'0°UC'Dn: IU ,..1p1...-
-.fta a IMqUIM "--4"11 ou"'f "' con la• for· 1t1ol dad•• le9afe1
... pl .. 11 talM.,..,. .,e .. -W MCuofte au
PAGES 21 22 AND 23 t.AIS~ The follOwlng pet90nl .,. W-075 STOVAL. I minor, by and torMy for the IUCutor Of' and 47 of Mlaoallaneoue NOTICI °' Anot!M County, CallfOfnfa the nota(I ) MOUred by tald
CELLANEOUS MAPS IN e~. =::.-~~ ~~I~ through Illa Natural Mother, admlnlstralOf, and 1111 with t.Aap1, R1cord1 of . Hid IUl.K "' ... .,.... Oated October 4, 1N6 Deed of Trvet. with Int ...
THE OFFltE OF THE St. ~c. Santa An•. CA f't8.JC NOTIC[ DONNA SHARTLE. For '"' oourt with proof Of ... County, u IUCh l•m i. d• (a.oe. 11014101 I IHAltN ¥1NTU91111 . thereon, .. provided In lakl COUNTY RECORDER OF enga of NatM Yloe, • written 1'9quMI ttal· ftned In the Article entltied u c c , INC.. • C.atfomla OClflM"'• note(•) edVanoM If any --SAID COUNTY 92~:. MllClu, 3913 w !fK:TTTIOUl IUIMll CAH NO. A 1I01tl lf\O that you dlalr• apedal "Deflnltlonl" of the Oeclar· TO WHOM iT 'MAY CON· etlon, IJ: H.I. IHAllN. undlr the t1rm1of~ o-i
THIS DEED OF TRUST IS C S C N~ ITATl.wf OfllOIR TO IHOW CAUll ~lea of the ftHng of an In· atlOn of Covanant1, con. CERN Ll'Rla.>t!NT of Truet, 1 .... Char,,_ and ., llllted no .,,_u au
f'OllPUIMla • ttempo. ,....
,...., .. ceieo. ~ .. ,.....
q1.1tter au IOWto, au dlillef'o r otr•• co••• de au pr aplt d9d Ifft rttoo _.
ctoMI por,.,. ... oon..
SECOND AND SUBJECT TO ~tal Lane. ant• An•. A w H E A E A s . ventory and appralaement of dltlon• and Aaatrlc:tlonl ~ Notice I• r.eby given 10 Publllhld Orange Cout •XP41"-of '"' Tru:IM and
A FIRST TRUST DEED NOW 92F:.lco C. Vallt'a, 1017 d ;r: ~ol~~ ~::'' ::. HR IS T 0 PH ER LE E Mlate UMt1 °' o'l the pell· ICflbld In "Subject lo"' tha Cr1d1tora ol KIM'S Dally Piiot October 9. 1985 of tile lru111 created by Mid
OF RECORD. Shtmrock Sac: It s TOVA.LL, • minor. by and lion• Of' account• mentioned below (the "Oeciaratlon") THOUS~ND OAKS, INC .. I W-099 Deed of Trull.
Thi 1trMI addren or :2~nliSt., Santa Ana, CA 1em1, Inc .. 11,;' Jon,/.;,~ hrough his natural mother, In Section l200 and l200.5 of PARCEL 3: E...,,,.,,,, .. Callforn11 corportllon The total amount of the
other common dlelgnatlOn Thi• builnHI 11 con· Ave .. A· 11, CO.ta u .... CA na Shartle, hu flied hl1 the California Probltl ~-Mt forth In the Section• anti-whOM bulll'lMI addr ... 11 P\alC NOTICE unpaid bllatlOI of the obll·
of u ld property· 10 ducted by· • ,_,_., P.i1· 92127 tltlon with the clerk of 11111 RandJ lwanion, At· 1JICI "Certain E.-nentl for 5 t39 Ranchllo Avanu1 gallon MCUred by the prop-
b1eten oboe ,.... ...... ......... "'*'-... ....., .......... --.... ~ ... 11no-
PalamedH lrvlna CA nttlhlp ·-·-Jatn11 A. O'Donl'llll. a CA ourt for petmlulon to tonwy fof '9ttttot-• .eo Ownerl" and "Support, S.t· Shetman Oaks County oi IOm trty to bl told Ind reuon·
92714 · Fldlrlco c v11era corp . 49e E. t8tll St , CO.ta hang• hi• nam1 from MIM Vltdl °"" hat, tlemlnt and Encro.chmant" LOI AnolleS si1te of Call· NOTICI OI' abl• Mtlmatad C01t1. ax-
Nama and tddrlll of the Thtl ttlttmant WQ flled M .... CA 92827 H RI s T 0 p H E A LE E lutte ... Coeta ...... CA or the Artk:ll anlltied "E.... lornla. that •· bul'I tran1ter 11 T1'UITEl!'I IALI 1*1-and advatlClel .. 1111
bentlf'lclary II wllOM rtqVMt w1th the County Clerk ol Or· Thl1 bu1l~u 11 con-T 0 V A L L t o e2al menti" of the Oeciatatlon aboui to be made to T.I . No..._ ) time ol the Initial publlcatlon
ooe • "" oboee6o. ,.... '*--·""~.,... wano&a da aboeod• 0 • ~ oftcfno da ayude ......
(•H •I dlNCtorlo t.i.-fonlco).
1111 Mia II being eonducted ange County on Septeml>er ducted by: 1 corporation HRISTOPHER LEE SHAR· Publlthld Orange Cou1 PARCEL 4· e.--tti u SHA.SIN VENTURES, INC . a NOTICI ol the Notlot of Sall 11
Gibraltar Savino• and Loan 18 1980 JamH A. o ·oonnall, LE. now. thlt'llOfe, Dally Piiot October 9. tO, 18, IUCll euement1 are partlcu· ca1lfornl1 corporation. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT $31,553.41
A 11 o c I at Ion c Io ,__, Praek*tt. Stlamrodc Secur· IT IS HEREBY ORDERED t985 larfy Ml forth In the Midi Tran1ferl81. wllON bull· UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. The blnef'lclary under tafd SllHrlOn/Amarlc~n EX· Publl•heef Orenge Coul lty Sytteme. Inc. hat all per'IOn1 lnter11ted In WTll·109 entltlld •·Euamen11·· of the MU address 11 3801 Park DATED 8129184, UNLES oeeo of Truit hltetol°'• ax-
pre11 t.Aortg1g1 Corpor· Dally Piiot S.Otembef 25, Thi• 1tatement wu 1111<1 he man• afor.ald appear Oeclaratlon ol Covenant•, WHI View •28B, lrvl11•. YOU TAKE ACTION TO ec:utld and d .. IV'lfld 10 the
auon 1201 Eut Highland Oc1oblt 2. 9, 18, 1985 with the County cianc ol Or· n Oepartt!*lt 3 of the PlB.IC NOTICE condition• and RMtrlctlona County of Oranoe. State of PROTECT YOUR PROP· underllgnld a wrllteri o.c-
c-No.1n.s Aven;,. San Bernardino W-086 a.nge County 00 Septeml>er bov•·•ntltled Court, In "Subject to··· below (the C1Jlfornl1 EATY. IT t.AAY BE SOLO AT laratlon of Def1u11 and o.
Calllom°la 92~ . 11, 1985 lld at 700 Civic Ctnter T 4Sll1 "Muter Oeciaratlon")under The r.operty being trana-A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU mend for Sale, and 1 wnttan Tll9 name and addr .. of
the oourt 11 (El nomb<1 y
dlreccion Oe la COf1a •)" t.AUNICIPAL COURT, CEN·
TRAL ORANGE JUDICIAL
DISTRICT. COUNTY OF OR·
ANGE. STATE OF CALI·
FOANIA, 700 Civic: Center
Drive West, Santa Ana, Call·
lomla 92701
Otrectlonl to the above "*271 Cftw W•1. Santa Ana, Call-NOTICI CW the Section heedlngl In llJCh fe<red 1 located at· 8370 E NEED AN EXPLANATION NotlOe of Default Ind flec-
property may be obtained Publllhld Orange Cout fornla, on Nov1m1>1r 8, "'UITll'I IALI Artlde enlltlld u follOwl On the t.AaJI, Buena Pane, OF THE NATURE OF THE tlOn lo S.ll The un<Mrslgned
by requMtlng NIM In Wfft· Ptlll.IC fC)TIC[ Dally Piiot Septlll'lblr 25. 1935,at 9:15o'c:locic A.M of T.I . No. •1m "Ownlrl' Rlghll and Outlet Countyof0r8f\Ge, Callt()(nla PROCEEDING AGAINST cauled Mid Notlcl of 0.-
lng lrom tlll bloef'lciary Octol>er 2, 9, 18, 1985 Midday. and than and,,,.. IWOffTANT NOTICl Utlllll• and Cable Tel• ANO 137 The PIUI YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-lault and EllCtlon to Self to
wttllln 10 d•YI from the flrsi 'te:N!!!!<>"ITI ~NTll W-077 lhow cauM, 11 any they have, TO "'ONlllTY OWNllt: v1alon". "Support 111d Set· Pasadena, Pu.den•. Coun· TACT A LAWYER bl rllCOl'Old In the oounty
publlcaUon 0111111 nollcl. -A • ..._ why Mid application IOf YOU ARE IN DEFAULT t1emenr-. "Encroachment", ty ol Loe Angeles. Callfornla On Octobel' 15. t986, II wh8'e the ,.., property le
Said 1111 wfll ba mao. The following peraon1 are change of name lhould not UNDER A DEED OF TRUST. 1nd .. Community Flcillllel AND 2132 Glendtle Galllfll, 9:00 A.M., LENDERS TD. located.
without covenant or war-doing bullnea u : NEW· Ml.JC NOTICE be granted. DATED SEPT. 10, 1982, UN· EaMl'l'*1t" Glendlle, County of Loi An· SERVICE. INC.. A CALI· Otte: 9t l8/&5
renty upr111 or Implied u PORT LANDING .• 503 E. It 11 FURTHER ORDERED LESS YOU TAKE ACTION Thi llrMI addrna and gllel. Cafllornla. FORNIA CORPORATION, u l!NDlllll T.0. HR¥te:f
lo llt141 poaMMlon Of ~-Edcwat•r. Balboa. CA FICTTTIOUI IU..... that the Cleric of thll Court TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· otlllr common dellgnatlon. Slld property II deectlbld duly appolntad Tru11 .. INC., 25301 CaOot Road,
Tll9 name. addr.... and lele9llone numbef; of plaln..
tiff'' 111orney. or plalnttlf
wltllOUt an anorney. 11 (El
nomt>re, 11 dlrec:clon y flf nu-
mero de telelono del
•t>ooado det demandanta. o
del demandanta QUI no
tlencl at>Ogado, •): NOA·
MAN L SCHAFLER, At·
lorney II LAW, 8383 Wllahlre
Blvd , Ste 325, Loa Angelle,
CA 900<48. TellphOnl (213)
655-645e, Subltltutlon ol
Attorney9 • Betti Gertz, At·
torney at Law. P 0 Box
5918, Sherman 0 1kl. CA
9141•
cumbr&no.. 10 lltftfy the 92 I NAMI ITATIMINT mall notice of time and place ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD A.Tl II any, 01 the teal property In ~al .. A.II Stock In under and pureuant to Died luhe 2'17, ,..O. 9os 20S1,
unpaid bllanc» due on the Marte H Howard. 2424 The lollowlng pareona are of hMrlNI thll 1>911tlon to A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU d11crlbad 1 bove 11 Trade, Flxtur-. Furniture. of fruit rlOOfded 113118', ~'"'8 HMtl, CA~. not• MCUred by Mid Deed Sierra Vista, Newport doing bull,_ N ; Fldlllty Tommy Stovall. po. NEED AN EXPLANATIO~' purported to be 12 •• E I t u lnlt No 84-315241 of (7 ......... _
of Trull 10 wit $71.200.00 Bllch, CA 926e0 Property t.A1nagam1nt Bo111 318, one. ()l(le--OF THE NATURE OF THEI PrlmrOM, lrv1M , Callf()(nla L~:~~~?'imp~uv~;:,:i,: Official Record• In tho ottA e~14710• IJ ...-U.
p1u1 the followlng .. tlmated Cheryl A Howard, 2424 Company, 25505 La Mlrad1, home, not .... than 10 dl YI PROCEEDING AGAINST! The undenlgtlld Tru1t.. LeHehold lnteresll and of the County Recordlt' ol Publllhed Ora.nge Cout
cotll. expen-and td· Sierra Vl1ta, Newport L1gun1Hllll,CAG2853 prlOrtothlhlarlngdati . YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· dltclaJmaanyllabllltyforeny Goodwlll 01 thoM oertatnOr1nge County, St1t1 of Dllly Piiot September 25,
Yanctl II 1111 llme of the In· Beech. CA 92860 Howerd Duhan, 25505 LI It II FURTHER ORDERED TACT A LAWYER lncorrectn.u of the atrl8t Retell Sale ol Luggege and Callfornla. Executed by JAC October 2. 9. 1985 111111 publlcatlon of thlt No-Thll bualneu 11 con· Mirada, Lagun1 Hlll1, CA thlt a copy ol thll Ofdlr to On Octobel' 23. 1985. 11 1ddresa and other common Le&tller Goods bualn8IMI PAULEY, AN UNMARRIED W-07,
Ilea of Sale eatlmated ducted by: hu1band and wife 92853 lhow CIUM bl publllhed In '----------------------------------------trust .. '1 1 ... and ooat1 In Martt Howard Yvette Duhan. 25505 la The Diiiy Piiot, • ~ P\alC NOTIC£ l>tlJLIC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE PlllllC fC>TICE Ml.IC NOTICE ~~~m~$1~&28, ~~~l~~M~~L~M~~~~~al~~~~~~ i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
DA TE. (Faclla) MAR 1 1
1985
~ a. t<uhol, Clefit, bJ ltelhJ Anlolln, oo,Mlty
Publlshed Ora.nge Coast
Dally Piiot September 18,
25 October 2. 9. t985
W-066
DEATH NOTICE S
plu1 lnl•11t on Iha unpaid with lhe County Cllr1c ol Of. 92853 lllhld In Coat• M .... Callo-
pr1nclpal t>llanc;e at 1119 rate enga County on Septemblf Thl1 bu1ln911 11 con· f()(nla. for onoa • w'llll '°'
or 17 75% pw annum tr om 1 I, !985 ducted by hlnbaod and wlfa IONr conNCUtl.,.. week• prior
"1185 to data or 1111. plu1 ,,.._. Howatd Duhan to the dlte Mt fOf heating on late cl'largee. ptui any ad· Publllhld Oranoe COut T1111 1111emen1 wu nled the petition.
vanoes the t>aMllClary may Dally Piiot September 25. wlth the County Clerk of Of. Dated: OCT t. 1985
be authOrlzed Of obligated Octobef 2. 9, 18. 1985 enga County on Sept.mber ...,._ lcodle, ~
10 P•Y prior to NII W-079 11. 1985 of'"'·~ Court
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T fBa70 J. Cllrl1topller WOOdward,
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST PUbllehlO Oranoe Cout AttOfney tor Pelllloner. 1055
DATED MARCH 31, 1981. Ml.IC NOTIC£ Dally Piiot Septlll'lber 25,•i Mein Street, Suite 918.
UNLESS YOU TAKE AC· Oc1oblf 2, 9, 18, 1985 Santa Ana. CA. 92701
TION TO PROTECT YOUR Fte:TTTIOUI IU..... W-082 Publlshed Oranoe Cout
PROPERTY IT t.AA Y BE NAi. ITA TEMINT Dalty Piiot October 9. 18. 23.
SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. Thi foltowmo Plf"IOl'll.,. Ml.IC NOTICE 30, 1985 IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA-doing l>ullM.. u : Bald 1----------
NATION OF THE NATURE Eegll lnVMtmant1. 315 N. FICTTTIOUl IUSINCll --------
OF THE PROCEEDING AllOClatld .. eo1. & ... CA NAME ITATlllENT Ml.IC NOTICE
W-098
AGAIN s T y 0 u. y 0 u 92&2 t The followlng peraon1 .,. ----------STEPHENS SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· Stuan Theodore Newman, dOlng bu1lnen u : Netlonal K·207M
YER 781 t Bently Ave.. GarcMll Atllllated BrOlcars, 2700 E NOTICE CW PERRY G. STEP-DATED· SEPTEMBER 13, Grov.. CA 92S.1 c o .. 1 Highway. Sult• B, DfATH OF
HENS SR . age 54, 1985 Cl'larlel Frane11 Raudonl1, COfona d.i Mat, CA 92825 THOMAI CH.AIU.El
resident of Hunt-IHfA91110N/AMlRICAN 315 N Auociated •601 Wllll•m J. Kennedy, 710 C"OllON
mgton Beach . CA.I~~· ~~c=~~i~ Br~~92~~~ , 1817-B ~~~1~;.eoronaoei 'T':,.~
Passed away October SOUTHERN C I Tlll Park Gian Cir .'1ant1 ~na, Darrlll PUii, 1888 Port HTATf MO. A12tOIO 6. 1985 at Hoag Hos-EIClllOW COWANY Al CA 92706 Wheeler, Newport Beach. To all helre. benlflelarlea,
pital Mr Stephens T"UITll, Owe11 A. Thi• business la con· CA 92860 creditors end contingent
bo Octobe 22 Ci...tand, AllliltMrl Vici dUC1eo by: 1 general pan-Tlll1 bualne11 11 con· creditors, and peraon1 who was m r • Prleldenl, 1201 leat Hlgt.-nerahlp ducted by oo-partn«a mey be otherwtlMI Interested
1930 m PeU City, Ala-I~ n d A"• nu I , I an Samuel Chung w1111am J. Kennedy In the will and/or ntata of:
bama H e had been llamafdtno, CA a.. (714) Thi• 1t1tement was llied Thll llatement WU flied TH 0 M A s c H A R L E s
lh C l II f -.m1, -.nn, Ht. '1t. with the County Clerk of Of. with the County Cllrk ot Or· CROSSON e on ro er or ~ a.nge County on September •noe County on September A petition llu ~ flied
Celesco Corporatio n Publllhld Ort~ Coast 13, 1985 11 1985 by Bitty LOUIN CroMOn In for 15 years Beloved Oa.lly Pilot Sep1emblt' 25. F-...z ,,.__ the Super!Of Coun of Or·
husban.d of Bettv J October 2. 9 1985 Put>lllflld Orange Coaet Publllhed Oranoe Cout •noe County r~ue.llng th11 • W-069 Dally Piiot September 20, Dally F>ilOI September 25. Betty LOUIN CroSIOll be •P-S l~phens Beloved October 2. 9, 18, 1985 !October 2, 9, 16, 1985 pointed u PlflOnll rep. fath~r o r S h er ryl 111m•1c NOTICE W-084 W-081 reseritatlvetoedmlnlatertlle p ( L rUP\. 111a1e ot lhe d~ent art in o dgu na The petition raquHt1
H tlls, Perry G Step-, ..J~a:'°' Pta.JC NOTICE authority to admlnlller 1111
hens Jr. and Lee I ~UITH'l IAL.l Ml.IC NOTICE •Ill• und8' the lndepen· Anne Stephens, both T 1 ..... -FICTTTIOUI IU ... 11 dent Admlnl1tra11on of &-oC '._. -B5 K·JDIM NAMI ITATl•NT talM Act of B irmingham. Ala· On TOBER ll, l9 11 NOTICI TO Thi following penon1 er. A heaflnn on the .,...ltlon '----Bel ed f 1 0 0 0 A M "'-'--· .. ., ,....., Uc<Jlld ov son 0 SHEARSONIAMERICAN CMDfTC>ftl cw doing bull~ ... UWUUoah w111 bl held on OCTOBER
L1J11e_ Stephens o f EXPRESS TRUST DEED ~~:r:,~:-c: g::~~eor~!38., ~~.•1g: ~119~~ ·~ ~t307~ ~1!
Huntington Be ach SERVICES. INC AS U.C.C,) 92825 Cente< Drive Well. Sa.nte
Also surv1v1ng are I TRUSTEE or SucceHor Notloe 11 he<eby given to Deborah Lynn Wyll•. Ana, C!< 92702
three grandchildren ~ru;tee 1 ~~ 1 ~111110::: creditors ol the within 111'~ 25th St .. N-port Beh, IF Y\'.)U OBJECT 10 the
d b th ffU ru 18 0 1 1 n named tr1n1flt'or(1) th1t • CA G2683 granting ol the peUUoo, you ~ a ro er 1 I ot Trust aucut•d by bulk tran1ler 11 1boul to be Oebor1h De1 lll•d•. lhould elthlt appear II the
SU>phens nf f'ayel· THOMAS E RICCI AND JU-made on pereonal prc>perty 12035 Stoneg11a Lane. Gat· hearing and 1tate YOUf o~
tev11le North Caro-DITH ANN RICCI HUSBAND lllre4naf1er ~Ibid. dan Grove, CA 928'5 jlc11on1 Of m. written objlc·
Ima Sef'Vlres d ANO WIFE. and rac:Ofded The namee and bullneu Thl1 bu11neu 11 con· Ilona wtth the c~rt before an In· A.prll 22. l981 U lnttrument addr ..... Of the lntandld ducted by CO-P.i1ntrl the hearing Your appear.
l<'rml'nt Wert-pnvate no 2&205. In ~ 14028. traniletori are. JAMES H Debotlh L Wy111 bl 1 b
P1e r Cl• Bro thers· PIQtl t849 Olflclal Ricord• FRISBIE AND COMPANY.A Thi• •l•tament WU nied ~:.:.ney n peraonOf y
Smith M ortuary. {)i. of Orange County, Ctll· GENERAL PARTNERSHIP with tll9 County Clerk of Of. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR . , 6 . I01nl1. and pursu1n1 to tllat 7,, Mont-Ito Dr., "··one •"""'County on <>~tember ti 1 ..... 11~ of
rf'Ctors 53 ·6539 _ cenaln Notice ol Deleult and o':ii Mer. Celtf 92825~ 1'1~1985 """' f~ ad:r.y~r;;;'u;t' Ille
JUSTI CE Electlon to Seo thereunder The loc.tlon In Calllornl• ,._,. your claim with the court °' ROS MO I recorded JuM 7 1985 u In-of the cll1411 executive olflca Publlllled Orange Coul prM81"11 It to the peraonal A N D J US· Slrument "° 85-207424 01 Of prlnclpal bualneu oftloa Dally Piiot September 26, repr...,,tat"'9 aP9Qlnted by
TICE. passed Sep· Official Recorde 01 H id of the lnttndld trantlf•°' 11 Oc1obet 2. 9. 18, 1985 the court within tour mon1111
l(.•m'-· ·r 30 1985 She County wlll under ind ume u •bOV9 W-080 from the data ol ft1'9t II · ..,.,. • • purauanl to said Deed of is ~urv1vE'd bv her SIS· Trull ~I II pu1>11e auction All other bullnta1 ~ tuanc. of 1ettar1 u provided · and 1ddr-uNd by the .. _IC W\-.IC[ In Section 100 of 1111 IN<o. Jan e Burc h .l 'oreul'l lawf\.llmoneyoftlle1ntendld tranel•Of within ..-~ "''" ProbateCoda of Celllomla.
Irma Kant7., Louise ~~~edN~~~~ 0~~~1caE~~ tht .. yeare lut yean lut ftCTTTIOUl IU ... 11 The time for n11ng c111m1 wlll
Kephngt>r and M ona TRANCE TO THE COUNTY pur ao tar 11 known to tlwl NAMI ITATE•NT not a11plre prior to lour Poage Eight ne1ces I COURTHOUSE. 700 CIVIC Intended tr1n1terl8 are· The following perton• •r• montlla from 1111 data of the I none d bu·' Com hie.ring notic. ebo--.. and neph t>ws seven CENTER DRIVE WEST, Then .. ..-,, and bullneu j olng .. neu u : put· YOll t.AAY EXAt.AINE the ' SANTA ANA CALIFORNIA -·-. Ing and Softwtr• Ta<:h· J(rand n1eC'es and 111 11111 ilgllt, tltle anciladdr.., of tile intended nology. Ancient °' Ental n11 k~t by the court If you
nephew s M emorial 1n1erfft COl'~ed 10 and ~a"(;~~~:o• N'!~~7 Pawefl,~/292~11r;"~·· ~ :.,S:.~yoc',n'::''~
S<'f'Vlct?S wtll lx> hC'ld nO'# held by 11 under Uld!GRAY 1e.12 Holkl~ ~ Gttdln rove. A 1 upon the execut°' or tdmln-r....to""-l(l t 11 00 Deedo!Tru11 1n1neproperty ,.._, · SllOOll Chung, 1817-B
V\.. '""r ' a . s11u1ted tn H id County anc:I Santi Ana . ....,II 82 05 Pane Glen Cir . Santa Ana, l•lrat()(, or upon the •1• A M ut the F 1rst State ducrlbed 11 That tlwl prOl)lrty partl-CA 92709 tOfney fOf the axecutOf °'
Presby terian Church
1
LOT2 OF TR.ACT NO 9411, ""'' "*1
810 ltFdllett ... •bld ___ ,2~ Thi• bu11na11 11 con-admlni.trator. •nd fllt with ~• u u ~ """" d ed by 1 dlvld 1 the court with proof of ..,. o f the Covenant in IN THE CITY OF IRVINE, AS ,. a I d II ·~-1.-.. uct : an n "' ......... wntt-r ....... , 1tat· F>ER MAP RECORDED IN ur n • an ...,.... .., Samvll Chung .. ......, ..... --.v C/)sta Mesa H arbor BOOI< 398. PAGES 15 AND 11. 404 W s.v.n111 St • LOI Thi• i tatemant waa 111ac1 Ing that you dealr1 epeclll
Lawn Mortuar~. {)i. 18 M ISCELLANE OUS A~.Clllf 900t4 #lthlheCountyClerltofOI'· notic.ofthlftll~ln·
rector 540 5554 MAPS. IN THE OFFICE OF by ::lde.:~!:::n:t = Ange County on Stc>ttmblr =~:v ::::r of tl'll ~~
HARBOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
~-
PtEACE BROTHERS
SELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
1 tO Broadway
t:;o!t& M~sa
6•2-9150
PACIFIC VtEW
MEMOfUAL PA,_K
Cemetery • M onuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
6•4-2700
•
THE COUNTY RECORDER IOClllOn II t.AcDonald'. 13• 1985 ,..., llonl or ICCOUllll tMntloned
I OF SAID COUNT'Y Hamburger1 Publllhe<I OtllnQll eoa.t In Section 1200 and 1200 5 of ot~ c:~ ·:a-:,.: Tl'lal Mid bulk tranahlr II Dally Piiot Septambet 25, thlCalltO'"I• Problt•~.
ol llld Pfopert)I • BUNKER Intended IO be OOf'llUm· Oc1ober 2. 9, 18. 1985 '°"'" '· Noteft, lloll,
HILL. IAVINE, CALIFORNIA mated at the omc. of: w..oea ...... No&aft, Attorner9
9211• Grover EllCfow Corporation, ,.,, "9ttttener, Mall Cale
Name ind lddr ... of the 1 t 1 S llllnole St., Anaheim, .. _ .,. W\flC[ I DI la "9ta. lutta •· benellclary 11 wttC>M reqvaet CallfOfnla 92805 on Of ,.,., ~ "" L9lluM .., OA ..a
the 18141 11 being COnducted· Oc1ober 29, 1N5 Publllhed Otano-co.et
Blverty Hiii• St vinga ~ T1111 bulk 1ranet. le tut>-l"ICTTnOU9 IUIMaa I Delly P1to1 Oc10blt 2 3. 9.
oar1 Auoclatlon c/o jlct to Calltomla UnlfOfm NAm ITATlmWT tN~ hurtontA marlca~ E•· Commer81,,.. Cl•I ~ Sactton The following Pl"9on8 ar•I WTh-006 ...., doing bu'"-aa: The Knit· I pre11 Mo11g1g1 Corpor· The nll'nt and addr ... of ""'I Flam~~901..C Eaet 1----------aoon. 1201 Eaat Hlohland -... ....._. •• •-ir W\TlC[ Av1r1ue Suite 0 San fhl pareon with whom Coul H11r)'. one..,.....,.,, __ rVUU\l;..;;.;;.;;;....._nu_..._.. __ _
Btrnerdlnor Ci ll;ornl• clllm• may bl llJICI II Lindi CA 92H6 K..-7
92404 Monnlg. QrOV'lf &crow Cot· Evelyn June OUll'ln, 162 r N011Ca Off
Direction• 10 the above poratlon. 111 S llllnoll St.. Creaoent Of • OCBE.. Oran-NATI4 OI'
pt<>Qlrty miy bl obtainld An1hllm c.111 829011 and bury, TX 780'4 HAM'Y D0eeALD
by rlQutottlng uma In writ· ltlt i.at d1y IOI fHlnQ ~ Tlll1 1>u11n .. 1 11 COn·j NCHAM»eOM
lf\O trom 1111 beneflojatY by lllY creditor enalf be ()o. ducted by an lndMdual AND Off NI I I ICM
within 10 d•YI from the fni IObet 21, tNS, wfUCfl la IN !velyn J OUll'ln I TO AD•HTD
put>tlcatlon of thlt notlel blalneea day 1:19fori the Tl'Mt •tet.,_,t WM "'-'I llTATI ND. A·tltMT
Seid Nie wtn bl made con1U"'"'8tl0n dat• eoeQ.-with ti. Coul'ty a.-ot ~' To al ,..,.., .. ..--....
wtlflOvt c:ovenant or -'*' •boYe 8"09 Coull~ on~ Cfedltort Md contlno-nt '"'~ •~Pf-or lme>lted. .. D1t9d S..,tlml>lr I 7, t 1, 1N5 Cl'edltOfl. Md Plt90ftt Who
to tltll. potMaalon or an-1915 ,_,, may bl~ lnt•ested
oumbranc. to Mtllf)t the Ootdon 1· Gray,~ J, Pub4llhld Ol'enga Ooe9t In the 1141 r.d/°' Mtatl ot
unpaid balll'IOI due on the Gray,~.,-,...,..... Dally P1IOt September 26• HA""y DONALD "ICH· not• aeoureci by Nkl Deed Publlehld Ol'anoa eo.., Oc1ot>ar 2. 8, 18. 11115 AAOIOl'f
PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL COST
OF WASTEWATER COLLECTION, TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL SERVICE .
F<?R USERS WITHIN COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICTS N0.11 OF ORANGE COUNTY
In accordance with the provisions ol Section 20• (bl (5) ol the Clean Water Act of 1977 (Public Law 95-217), County Sanitation
District No. 11 of Orange County la required to nottty all users ol Its sewerage system ol the rate and portion ot tile ad valorem
laxes paid by Its users wtalch la attributable to wastewater treatment services. Thia District. the Jurlsdlcllonal boundarlea of
which are preaented on 1he accompanying map, receives a portion of the one-percent ( 1%) basic tax levy collected annually from
property owners by the Ornge County Tax Collector This notice Is being published In conJunC11on with the malllng of the Joint
Consolidated Tax Biii by lhe Tax Collector to enable users to determine the share ol their basic property tu levy which Is uMd
to pay for wastewater treatment sertlcea provided by this Olstrlet.
Thia Oletrlct annually receives approximately 3. 1•% ot the t'I. basic tax levy collected from the property ownere In the 011tr1C1.
In addition, mator Industrial and commercial users of the sewerage system pay their proportlonale share of the cost of
wastewater treatment services based upon the actual volume of wastewater they discharge and the amounls of biochemical
oxygen demand (BOD) and suspended sollds (SS) In their discharge The tollowlng schedule Identities the rates now In effect for
these large users In fiscal year 1985·86·
Flow
(S/mllllon gallons)
$178.03
BOD
($/ 1,000 pounds)
$95.47
88
($11,000 pounds)
$98.38
RevenuM collected trom these large users are used to pay for the ongoing operations, maintenance and replace-
mentlrehabllltatlon costs auoclated with collecting. treating and disposing ol wastewater generated within County Sanitation
District No. 11, as are the revenues received from the 1% basic tax levy
If y~ would Ilka additional Information on the charges you are paying for wastewater treatment services, please call the
Districts staH at (714) 540-2910, Extension 5. The District's admlnls1rattve ottlces are open from 7 30 a.m 10 5.30 p.m ., Monday
through Thursday, and 7:30 am to 4:30 p.m. on Fridays
Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot October 9, 1985
LOS i ALAMITOS
US NAVAL AMMUNllON
E NET 0£.PQT
Y ANrTA.TION DISTRICTS
Of
OOANOE COUNlY
LEGEND
OIS fRIC T NO. 1 1 BOUNOARY
r
"' ';1 z <t "
~l~TANroN
In~
AV
ST
W--087
GARDE
8ROV
AVE
w > Cl~
COSTA
MESA
CJlf Truat to wt1 $47.85' oe 10.lfy PllOt OctOC>er 9, tte& 1 W-071 A ,,..,...,., '* i.ri ,..., II
!*II the tollcMlng 110matad W I08 .. Jlnl S___, WNll In the u
-~ ~1!!!!!!!!!!111!!!!~~~--..... --~~!!!!!!~~~~------...
I ,
Serving Newport Betch, Cotta Meta, HuntJngton Beech, lrvlnt, Laguna leech, Founllin Y...., end ._.. Orlllfl C.-Y
J R ANGE COUN TV CALIFORNI A l'I EONEC\OAV OCTO BERS 1985 .'~· .:E ~T S
e ru1ses e
1 terror en
Cout
An Inquiry Into allega-
tions that county
pathologlsts have
botched autopsies per-
formed for the coroner
has been closed./ A3
The father of a woman hit
by a car In Costa Mesa
has flied a $2 mllllon claim
against the city./ M
California
The task force Invest lg Ing
eexual abuse at chlld care
centers Is being dis-
banded./ A 10
Nation
The Senate has agreed to
a short-term Increase In
the government's bor-
rowing llmlt./ Al
The House has passed a
farm blll Its backers con-
cede ls "aholdlng pat-
tern."/AI
World
Kidnappings, releases
continue In Lebanon, but
Sc>Vtets still hetd./ Al
Sports
Round one of the Ameri-
can League baseball
playoffs goto Toronto,
8-1./D1
The Dodgers begin their
quest for the World
Serles against St. Louis
this evenlng./D1
Entertainment
.. Harold" brings comlcal
doees of nostalgia and
lhtlck to the Irvine Com-
munity Theater ./83
Buaineu
Newport Ptoduce stages
a grand reopenlng./81
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bua!ness
Claulfled
Comics
Crouword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
HorOICOpe
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Pofloe Log
Public Notices
Sport a
Televlaon
WMther
85
A3
86-8
05-8
BS
07
08
83-4
C1-10
07
B2
A8
B1
A3
08
01-4
B4
A2
A nasty
day for
blazes
inHB
Woman, 76, hurt
in second fire,
one of five victims
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... 0..., .... hi«
A 76-ycar-old woman suffered
smoke inhalation and firsH:tegree
bums in the second of two Hunt·
inston Beach residential fires that
injured five people Tuesday.
Helen Baker suffered what was
believed to be minor injuries when
fire broke out in her apartment at
17676 Cameron St. shortly after 2
p.m.
The elderly woman was standing in
the living room watching the drapes
bum when she was guided out of the
home by her roommate, V1clci 1...atne.
77, and by a housekeeper, Ellen Cole.
The two women had been standing
if the front yard of the apanment
when they beard the smoke detector
alarm and rushed in to rescue the
elderly woman, according to fire
depanment spokeswoman Birgit
Davis.
Baker was transported to Humana
Hospital in Huntington Beach for
treatment, Davis said.
Earlier Tuesday, another fire in-
Jurcd four more people. including a
woman and her 2-year-old grand-
daughter who were rescued b y a
Golden West College student.
Dennis Atencio ran into their home
(Pleae eee FIR..ltS/A2)
erssurren
0..., .... ,._19f ...._.. .......
Huntington Beach firemen battle aecond of two flra which
injured fi•e people Tueeday.
All aboard, including 12 Americans,
unhurt; fate of four pirates unknown
PORT SAJD, Egypt !AP) -The
Egyptian government and the
Palestine Liberation Orgamzauon
announced today that Palesunian
lujaclcers of an Italian cnuse ship wnh
up to 511 people aboard have sur-
rendered after two days of terror on
the Mediterranean Sea.
The Egypuan Foreign Ministry
said none of the passengers, wbo
included an estimated dozen Ameri-
cans. had been harmed.
The .ltahan Foreign Ministry in
Rome also confirmed the bijacken
had surrendered.
(Plea.e Me CRUl8&/A!S)
Parents fighting
autopsy on young
drowning victim
OC judge to decide if
procedure interfer es
with religious beliefs
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot ... O..., .........
An lrvme family has asked a judge
to prevent the county coroner from
performing an autops) on their .i..
year-old son who was found lying at
the bonom of a bathtub full of water
Friday evening.
A hcanng scheduled toda} in
Superior Coun m Santa Ana will
mark the first time an Orange County
judge will decide whether a person
has the constituttonal nght to block
an autops' because of religious be-
liefs. ·
The parents. 1dent1fied as Or-
thodox Jews. said an autops) would
amount to the "mutila11on" of their
son's body. according to an anornc)
representing the count)
Marie Strauss was fo und earl'.
Fnday evening. face-up under the
water in the bathtub. according to
Irvine Police Sgt. Dick Bowman. The
child died two days later at Ouldrcn's
Hospital in Orange. police said.
Becau~ the cause of death ts
uncena1n. Bowman said police arc
walling on the ~ults of the autopsy I
before closmg the case.
"But 1t doesn't look Li.kc foul play,"
Bowman said. "It seems clean in that
respect."
Assistant County Counsel Arthur
Wahlstedt. who is reprcsenuog the
count) coroner. said state laws per·
mils a coroner to dtsscct a body tn
order to determine cause of death.
..In this case u's necessary because
we jUSt don't know the c.ausc of
death." said Wablstedt.
The boy's pa.rents, Bruce and
Rawlene Strauss.. obtained a tempor-
ary restrarning order Sunday prevent·
ing the autopsy from being con-
ducted Supenor Court Judge
Lronard Goldstein said the autopsy
should be postponed untJI a fuJJ
heanng. which was scheduled today
A.ccordang to polloe reports. Mark
Strauss appeared to be runn1111 a
slight fever and Wa.3 allowed bv hJS
mother to "soak" 1n a bathtub hllcd
~1th cool water
The mother returned ~veral
(Ple.ue eee AUTOPSY/A2)
$300 million Santa Ana River dam endorsed
By JEFF ADLER
Of ... 0.-, ........
O range County Supervisors Tues-
day endorsed construction of a $300
million dam in the Upper Santa Ana
River Canyon as an alternative to the
$500 millio n Mentone Dam, long
considered a key element of the
billion-dollar Santa Ana River Flood
Control Project.
Construction of the 550-foot high
dam about o ne mile from the mouth
of the Upper Santa Ana River
Canyon 1n San Bernardino Count)
would save the county about S60
million 10 construction costs. Super-
visor Roger Stanton told the board.
"This dam would provide 160.000
acre feet of stonn water storage.
enough to provide Orange County
with standard project flood levels of
protection for many years." Stanton
said.
The board's support for the con·
struct1on of the cheaper altcrnat1 ve
came after a US Ann" Corps of
Engineers bnefine on the so-called
"II-River Project. intended to control
what e\perts have deemed the worst
flood threat west of the M1ss1ss1pp1.
Estimates are that a flood along the
hea\ 1ly populated course of the Santa
Ana River through central Orange
County could cause $1 2 billion worth
of personal and propert) damage
The project. as ongjnally proposed
b) the corps. called for improving
Prado Dam in R1vers1dc Count\ and
bu1ld10R the new dam at Mciuonc
while -~1dcning flood control chan·
nels 1pi-Orangc. San Bernardino and
Riverside counties
The final pncc tag for thr project
could reach SI 2 b1lhon. according to
government estimates. of "h1ch Or-
ange County's share would be about
30 percent.
The Army Corps of Engineers
began cons1denng alternat1\ cs to the
Mentone Dam component o f the
project when oppos1l1on to the dam's
construction rnrfaced 1n San
Bernardino Count)
The L'ppcr Santa Ana RJ ver Ca-
n~on Dam. o n the o ther band. is
supponed b) all panies to the project..
Stanton said.
Legislauon authonz1ng construe·
t1on of the Santa Ana River Flood
Control Project currently 1s stalled
before Congress.
In a letter to the Army Corps of
Engineers. which supervisors
authorued Chairman Thomas Rik)
(Pleue eee FLOOD/ A2)
Coaches' gifts restricted in Laguna
By LISA MAHONEY
Of ... 0.-, .... hi«
The Laguna Beach school board
bas passed a pohcy prohibiting
coachesrrom accepting any outside
compensation without prior ap-
proval from the school district.
The compensation rule, enacted to
elimin~te a repeat of a controversy
earlier this year, was part of a broader
effort to improve the hiring and
training of coaches.
Followin-new state guidelines, the
school distnct will implement a six·
session training program for coaches
starting next weelc. District admin1~
trators have also developed an evalu·
at1on form lo rate the performance of
high school coa ches.
School officials came under fire
early this year after 1t was learned that
some coaches had been given $200
J>fts the prcv10us season by the
Laguna Beach High School Boosters
Oub. a parent organ1zat1on that
supports athleuc programs at the high
school.
Such gifts are forbidden by the
California Interscholastic Feder·
at1on, an organization that sets rules
goveman~ school sports. Adm1nas·
trators failed to catch the gaff That
came back to haunt them when the
athletic program came under scrulln~
dunng public meetings with an ad-
visor} task for~ bent on improving
the athleuc program.
The task force. made up of coaches.
parents. school board members and
other htgh school pe™>nnel. pin-
pointed areas of weakness tn the
school sports program including low
funding. poor management of the
sports budget and inadequate train-
ing of coaches -most of whom are
not school dtstnct employees
To respond to the task fo~ report
and the requirements of Senate 8111
81 3. the school reform bill passed two
years ago. former high school pnnc1-
pal Rohen Hughes was a~1gne-d to
develop a training program for the
coaches. Supenntendent Bilh Barnes
saJd.
Rather than learning rulc<1 and
procedures p1~meal. coaches wtll
get l8 hoursof1nstruct1onon C'lFand
Sea View League rules. adm1n1s-
trat1ve procedures. first aid. card10-
pulmonaf) rcsu~1tat1on and adoles-
cent psycholog)
Anthony Ortega and Jim Toome).
the high school'~ ne'>' pnoc1pal and
athleuc director. develo!J('d an C"> alu-
at1on form to a~ how well coaches
perform their dut1es. Evaluators will
complcic a form on each coach once a
~car pnor to the end of their spon's
season
Toome~. also actJV'IUes director at
the h1gh school. ac-ccpted the ad-
d1t1onal respons1b1httes of athlebc
director after Walt Hamera resigned.
Hamera. who still teaches at the
high school. complained he was not
given enough time to worlc on the
athletic program.
The high school suffe~ the loss of
man) coaches last year includJ.n&
(Pleue..,. COACBSll/ A.2)
Campus drug busts an education
LISA
MAHONEY
· Fingerprint
network to
help police University High administrator says some
students lied their way back onto campus
BJ LISA MARONEY ..............
FoUowina I.be workinp of the
crt.minal justioc system proved to be
ID eye opener and an education for at
leut one Irvine acbool adminiatrator.
.. We'R' a little bh blown away,"
aid IC.ennetb J. Bailey1 University Hieb School usiatant pnncipal, after a.mina what became of 16 people
poUoe arresied on drua charaes after
ID Wlldercover proeram in the city'a
daree bAlll ecboola lut Femwy.
.. We may have bcien neophytes
Paa ~ but we oertainJy tot educated..
•
Convicted drua dealen didn't iet
anywhere near the kind of scntenCC1
he expected. Bailey said. And. after
learnina t.be outcomes of the I 5 court
decisions to date, the assist.ant princi·
pal said be fears some acculeei
students may have caken advant.qc
of .chool officials' i&Jlorance of the
juatice syatem to lie their way out of
bei~ expelled. Bailey met Monday with Irvine
police officials for a briefina on the I 3
JUVCDiles and three adulu anattd
last February followina .a f~ur·~onth
undercover drua invesupuoo an oty h.iah tcbools.
Rumors thro~out the school
district had led him to believe that
many cases had been d1sm1sscd,
Bailey stJd. While sittangasa member
of the district's expulsion commmee.
.. I saw a lot of kJds with their papers
from the courts showing ChalJCS ~re
dismissed or reduced." he said.
Those papen sparked some dts·
satisfaction with the Irvine Police
Department. But. after rev1ewana
final dispos1uons with pohcc o f·
ticiaJ1, Bailey said he was satisfied
"They did a put lob. That'~ how
we feel r\abt now,' he 5atd after
sharina t.be information with some
other ICboot administrators.
Administrators from the thrtt hi.ah
tcbools. U n1vcnJty, lrvme and
Woodbndae. Wlll meet later this v.uk
to talk mott about t~ d1.si>os1t1ons..
Bailey said.
The gro up will al~ decide whether
to re' iew the ca~ of any 5tudent~
who may have hed their way bac k on
campus dunr\f the J unr expul~1on
heanngs. he said.
Neither Gerald Rayl, director of
Sttondary and adult cducat1on. nor
his supervisor De.an Waldfoecl. as.'115·
tant supenntendent of cumculum
and mstructlon. could ht' reached for
comment on the outcome of the
police pl"OIJ'm or the upcom1na mttt1na.
Ba.aley. who wd he was also
spcak.1111 on behalf of Un1ven1t)
PnnClpaJ 8ob Bruoe. said he wa'
ple.ucd that police WC1'C able to set
conYlctlons 1n most cues. but wa\
dtsappo1nted at the 1taht tcnttn<'t1
mos1 rocea ved.
l
Focus ON THE NEws By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of .. 0.-. ........
lq.lslauo n reantly sll»Cd by l.Jov
Gcorse DcukmeJtan wi11 allow law
Some student drua pusher\ ~re enforcement qc'llClCS to plus into the
aiven problbon while a few oth~ suate's n~ly automated identif>.
were tSSllfled ume 10 Juvenile Hall or cauon system. esuabl1atuna a network
a Wttltend commumt) work pro-bctwtcn ctlles 1n the battle ~
aram. Thr Sllffrst JUVenile 'iCnlcntt cnmc
went to an mdmdual found guilty of Senate 8111 190, mtroduocd by Staie
stlhna coc~mc. In that cax, the tttn· Senaton Marian Bopwn. R~Nc:w
aacr was ord~ to scrve 90 <bys in port Beech. and John Fon.A. D-Daily Ju~nile Hall concurrently Wlth time City, will 11ve loc:aJ potioe b'OCS in
he was KTVlftl for a ICP'ratr burilaf) Ora.nae Countr. and~ c.1 ..
chaf1C. police said fomll tbc ability to el_\IS into \be
"There just isn't much JUS\lce for suate's fiJllC'llJ"lnt·ideo~IJ*m.
people who ~ \11C11~ of tuveruk Dcukme]1an siped tllc biD -..
(Pl--... BJOB/ A9) 1 (Pl---rDIOaPltDIT /Aa)
,
• --
AS e>n.nge Cou1 DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, Oc1ow 9. 1985
Navy employee goes on trial
for showing satellite photos
BAL TlMORE (AP) -A ci v1han
Navy employee 8QC'WICd of cspio~gc
for let'ldin& U.S. spy satclhtc photo-
srapha to a British military mapzme
showed a copy of the magaz1 nc w1 th
the photos to his boss and a co-
worker, accordina to testimony in hu
trial.
The co-worker, Kenneth Letson,
said he reported the photos missing
from his office on July 30. 1984. and
that 10 days later defendant Samuel
Lorina Morison showed him the
wotos pubhshed In Jane's Defense
eekly.
Letson said his conversation wuh
Morison was brief, and that Monson
did not appear to be disturbed about
the photo publication. Sometime
during the office's search for th6
photos, he said, Morison had said he
did oot know where they were.
Letson and Morison both were
analysts with high security clearances
at the Naval lnteUigence Support
Center in Suitland. Letson said the
photos had been on another worker's
desk for several days befon-the)
dis.appeared.
Morison, 40. went on tnal iuesday
on three counts of espionage for
clippina the Navy's "secret" stamp
from th* U.S. spy photographs of
Soviet ship construction in July 1984
and mailing them to Jane's.
Letson was the second prosecution
witness. Tuesday Monson's depart-
ment hCJld, Capt. Thomas Fntz,
testified that Monson also showe'd
him the copy of Jane's l'ontain1ng the
photos.
Fritz said Morison told him the
public had a right to kn ow what the
Soviets were doi ng.
"Morison was making comments.
'This is great. Jane's scooped them
all,'" Fritz said. "I took exception 10
it. The photographs were secret and
could cause damage to the country ...
Monson. of Crofton. also 1s alleged
to have sent Jane's information about
an explosion at a Soviet ammunition
depot tn Sevcromorsk that came from
his aacncy's classified repons.
If conv1ctcd, he could be sentenced
to 40 years in jail and a $40,000 fine.
There 1s no allegation that Monson
sold Information to a foreign govern-
ment. but he is charged under an
espionage statute because publica.tion
o( the photos allegedly undermined
national security by allowin& the
Soviet Union to sec the qual11y of
U.S. spy photos
Monson's laW)crs and oflic1als of
the Amencan Civil L1bcn1es Union
have contended that such u~ of the
~p1onage law undemuncs F~rst
Amendment nghts -threatening
espionage prosecu11on against gov-
ernment officials who leak docu-
ments or news reporters who use
leaked information.
Defense attorney~ hin e said that if
Monson 1s rnnv1cted. any reporter
recc1vmg information the govern-
ment 1s 1ry1n3 to keep secret would be
guilty
Strawberry Fields in NY
open as Lennon memorial
NEW YORK (AP) -A piece of
Central Parle was dedicated today as a
memorial to slain musician John
Lennon, whose widow called the
sof\Jy rolhng garden now known as
Strawberry Fields "a result ofall of us
dreaming together."
"It's our way of ta.king a sad song
and ma.king it better," said Lennon's
wife. Yoko Ono, lifting a line from 1he
Beatles song "Hey Jude."
"John Lennon's Vlsion of universal
harmony has been translated faJthful-
ly into a garden of peace:· saad Mayor
Edward I. Koch.
Lennon's son, Scan, I 0, also was on
hand for the dedication, held before
several hundred Pivited guesis and
Pf'CSS. The ga.rEen will open 10 the
general pubhc Thursday.
A 31h-acrc tnangular parcel of land.
Strawberry Fields has been planted
with trees, shrubs and plants donated
bv countries worldwide in memory of
the former Beatie. Dogwoods came
from the late Princess Grace of
Monaco. n ver birches from the
Soviet Union, maples from Canada
and daffodil bulbs from the Nether-
lands.
Plants from countries that are
political foes coexist peacefull y. Jor-
dan's fothe~lla, for instance, grows
beside Israel s cedar.
However. the White House did not
respond to Miss O no's request for a
donauon to honor her late husband,
so the United States 1s not rep-
resented with a plant.
The centerpiece of the area is a 10-
foot black-and-white starburst
mosaic featuring the word "lmall.ine"
-the name of a Lennon song-a gif\
from the city of Naples. Ital y.
Lennon, who would have been 45
today, was murdered outside his
apartment building Dec. 8. 1980. a
block from the J&rden sllc.
Strawberry Fields was financed by
a $500,000 grant from Miss Ono, who
also contributed another S 500,000 for
upkeep of the land. said Gary Zarr, a
city Parks Department spokesman.
The garden's name is from a Beatles
song wntten by Lennon and Paul
McCanney.
The project was announced in
August 1981 . eight months after
Lennon was slain, and Koch prom-
ised 11 would be "an exceptional
living tribute to John Lennon, one
that all New Yorkers will treasure."
Ground was broken in March 1984.
Police, health officials clash
on AIDS information release
CHARLESTON. W. Va. (AP) -
Health officials said they owed 1t to a
suspected AIDS carrier to keep his
condition secret. Police said they
owed the public a warning that the
man was working as a male prosti-
tute.
"If someone found out later that we
had this informauon and didn't tell
the public, we'd be the first to get the
blame," said department spokesman
Cpl. Dallas Staples.
Dr. John Brough, the state's direc-
tor of preventive health services. said
Tuesday that release of the infor-
mation jeopardizes his department's
confidential program to test for the
disease, which destroys the body's
ability to resist disease.
"Its put us io a very bad position,"
Brough said. "We were very disap-
pointed."
Charleston police defend 1he1r re-
lease of the information as an attempt
to protect the public from the sexually
transmitted disease.
Health officials counter that AIDS
could spr.ead more quickly 1f such
breaches of confiden11al1ty dis-
courage potential v1c11m'i from laking
the blood tests
"Someone was scheduled tu come
in yesterday. but didn't." 'ilatc
ep1dem1ologist Loretta Haddy saad
Tuesday. "We felt confident about
the tests. They wcrl' 1uc;1 c;taning lo
\tart coming."
Police reponed )un~y 1ha1 the)
were seelting an 18-ycar-old AIDS
virus carrier on prostitution charges
Later that day, he was arrested by
officers wearing surg.acal gloves as a
"precaution." The teen-ager denied
he was a carrier and agreed to take a
blood test.
Staples said a Wheeling health
agency bad confirmed that 1he man
carried the AIDS virus. Nol aJI
earners contract AIDS, but they can
spread the disease through SCAual
COnl{lCt.
Staples. and Police Chief Kent
Carper subsequently acknowled$ed
that they had not seen the Wheeling
test results, bul said their information
came from "reliable sources" includ-
ing the young man's family.
The state has a respons1b1hty 10
protect the public health, but has
promised those who submit to AIDS
tests that all informa11o n will be kept
secret. said Cabell County Health
Director Dr Wilham Neal.
.. That person was arrested for
prostitution." Neal said. ..That's
probably the only thing that thc:y can
do to keep th•~ person fro m infecting
people.··
Although city police did not release
the man's name, Kanawha County
Jail officials identified him and said
he was being held in an isolation un11.
Since then. state health offi cials
have 1ned to assure the gay communa·
ty that all informauon collected at sax
reg.aonal tec;11ng center-; as confiden-
tial
.. They believe that we might have
given out the 1nformat1on," Brough
~aid. ··They are going 10 be somewhat
wary about coming for tests."
Magistrate Ward HarshbarRe r said
FINGERPRINT NETWORK ...
From Al
29, appropnating S7 m1l11on for the
purchase of equipment. c;crv1cec; .tnd
expenses needed to e\t.abhsh the
network, Bergeson said.
"The money is well spent Ul-
t1matcly, the program 5hould result 1n
a decrease in law enforce ment lcg1c;-
lat1 ve expenses." Bergeson said.
"Mo~ importantly. the program 1c;
crime preventative -th e sooner
cnmanals arc arrested. !he fewer
en mes they will be able 10 commit ..
Bergeson said that becauS<' of lhl'
pubhc safety factor 10 the capture of
cnminals. the program should be put
into action Qu1ck.ly.
"( think we will be 'ICCIOR II
.,,.
1mph:mcn1ed "l'r\ '>o<>n hecause of
the urgenq in volved" Bergeson
said The senator pointed 10 the
widely public11ed "Night-Stalker"
case. 1n which fingerprint 1dent1fi-
catton was the key factor 1n arresting
c;uspcct Richard Ram1re1.
The bill requires the state 1us11ce
sys1cm to keep fingerprints a'i pan of
"'iummary cnmmal history infor
mauon" on arrested person<;
Local law enforc<'mcnl agencies
will be able to hook up to the 'IY<item at
their option and their own expcn<.c.
Bergeson said
It WLll be a trcmcndou~ help w<·
need all of the help we can get,"
Bcrgewn said
FLOOD CONTROL ...
From Al
to s1an. rcprcscntat1 ve~ from Orange
R1vcrs1dc and San Bemard1no coun-
ties urac the corps to recommend
constructio n of 1ht' lo wer co<;I
alterna11 ve dam a5 "a cruc131 \tep
toward authonzauon" of tht' ptOJCCI
AUTOPSY PROTESTED .•.
P'romAl
minutes later and d1!>Covercd her wn
under the water. said 8own1an The
detective SIJd he doesn't kno~ whal
caused the bo} 10 ~ubmcrst.
Wahlstedt "81d to his knowled~c Jn
(>ran,e County Judie hu never had
to rule on a similar cue. In 1981, 1 family flied a la w•ui•
against the county aslc1n1 a Judl t' 10
J'll •1..111 1llc l/\IHll/tlll)' ol an autop'ly
e'er be1na performt'd on their son. a
re\1den1 ofFa1rv1ew State Ho,pttal 1n
Cost<ct Mcu The family apparently
Moslem. "81d an autOP1Y would run
<.ounter lo their rc:l1"ou$ beliefs
But lht' JUd~e declined to rule
because the fam11 y·, son w1' stall ahvc
and the 1~\ue premature. Wahlstedt
said
l
he had no choice but to handle the 18-
year-old's case as he would any other
involvi ng a prostitution charge. The
teen-ager was re leased Tuesday on
S500 personal recognizance bond and
a tnat date was not set 1mmed1ately
Carper said the new blood test
results won't be available for about a
week. In the meantime. city and state
offi cials are wondenng how to handle
s1m1lar situations an the future.
Neal saad the Health Department
can impose restnct1ons on an ind1 v1d-
ual deemed a menace to the public
health. but 1t had never before
confronted a case involving AIDS.
He saad the department theoreti-
cally can act an any in cident 1ha1
threatens the public health. ranging
from a typhoid ep1dem1c to a res-
taurant scr,. ing tainted food.
Officials ID Flonda and rcxas have
faced s1m1lar dilemmas.
A 20-year-o ld AIDS victim from
Delra y Beach, Fla .. was placed under
house arrest last month after being
charged w11h prostatut1on. In Hous-
ton. ( 11y Health Director James
Haughton last week ordered a male
tran~1en1 walh AIDS to refrain from
sell an order the VKt1m saad he would
ignore
COACHES ...
FroqiAl
most' of the remaining ones wh o also
taught classes there Some were angry
with financial and lime constraints
placed on 1he1r cxtra-cumrnlar job.
Other'I JUSt said they were tired of
coaching or d1spanted by repeated
losses
The \.3\l maJOnt) of 1h1\ year's
coachc~ arc walk-ons -1nd1viduals
lrom the communll~ who want to
coach k1d<i, Rames said
Becau!>C Laguna Reach schools are
declining in cnrollm<'nt and the
district rarely hires new teachers.
there 1s no frco;h hlood among the
1eac:hmg -;tall' to tap for the coaching
pm1t1ons, he o;a1d
Uames said SB 81 ' guidelines on
c:oach training were designed for
..chool district's hkc Laguna Reath
who need lo leach non-le.acheri. the
rope\ of coachmg
FIRES ...
From Al
at 8 391 Am~tcrdam l>mc and pulled
the two from 1hc flame\
Ima Hendky. ~6. who wa~ hmp1-
tal11ed al th<' t IC Irvine Medical
\enter 1n Orange with <1etond and
1h 1rd~egrtt' hurns Ov<'r S5 perccn1 of
her body. was reported 1n cnt1cal
cond1t1on loday
Two other v1ct1m tt. 2-year-old
Crystal Hendley and Cindy Hendley.
an aunt. were treated for smoke
1nhalot1<>n at Humana tlnspttAI in
Huntington fleach and later r<'lra~ r lft' ( 3jll Dt•nn1\ ( ato \Ullcred a
minor b,1,k 1n1ury 1n fi&htang th('
bllle to b«omt' the founh tnJUt )
v1Cllm 1n the fire that c.auscd about
$8S,t)()O h1~sc'
No cau'it' ha' hctn determined an
either fire
Fire department \pokeswoman
Dav i~ ~1d TueMtay was the wo"t day
1n r<"C<'nl memory for fire •nJuncs
Look for clearing by Thursday
The r9mnant1 of an Aluhn 1torm 1Y9tem llngenng OYer
South«n CallfOl'nl• could drop mot• rain Ntty T'hur.day bul
for-ecaaters NY c!Mrlng ~lel lhoukl br1ng eunlhine and Wtlfm4W tempwatUf ...
The ttorm. ulh«~ In by gutty wtnda In the mountain• Md
dea«11, drift~ Into the arM late Tueeday. The Nallonal WMthet
Service Mid the coutal region would ha~ a chanoe of lhow«1
and thunder'show9r1 tonight. Partty cloudy lklel were antlcl-pat~ Thuraday with hlghl ranging from e6 to 76 degreea after loWI In the eo..
U.S. Temps ,. 12
11 11
76 61 '° 11 ... 16
.. 60 6e :u
71 62 u .,
10 5t
T• M ,, ,, •• ~~ ~=:C0'1-..
Extended
.. 31 11 .. 12 .. ea ea
14 50 62 51 ee )()
111 60
76 62
33 2•
... 2t ,. 50
11 9$
I T 11
... 41 ee 73 to T7
$5 37 ... eo 41 21
TO 80
10 ... ,. 11
71 " 12 63 17 47
17 52
S1'0wet1 ~ ll'Mrle1 Snow ~.,.... StetiorWV a.,.
,...... w...... ~ lfOM ua o.i °' c-e.
Calif. Temp• Surf Report
... IMAN 1-3 ,.,
t4 poor
2-3 poor
HI poor
2-4 poor 14 poor
1-2 poor
2.1 &I
0.0
4 1
2.0 u
9un -IOdlly Ill Lt1 p.M.. ,,._
TNndlly • t ·l.l L ITI lrlCI ............ 1·26 pm
Moon -~ • 4:0I p.111 •• ,,... TNndlly Ill 2:41 Lin .• .,_, ............ 444 pm
Just Call
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•1111 yOU' tOl)y "''" , .. ,,,,. .• et..,
S••utOev an.l 5,,"0fl't' "
t'°" cJo not ,ac.,.... ,~
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Clrculetlon
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Publisher
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Ed1to1
A0Nm1,.Y Churchmen
Con1tolle1
Robert l. Centrell
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Manager
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C1rcula11on
Manager
Howerd Mullenery
Markellng Director
Peggy Blavlna
C1ass1f1ed Director
Gem
Talk
People today are more than ever
adding color to their basic Jewelry
wardrobe with a number of well
known and beautifully colored
stones such as ruby, sapphire and
emerald.
Clrculetlon 7141142-4333
Cleutfted edvertlelng 7141142-5171
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Dy ma• ST 00 rnon1Ny
By J . C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Gemo/Qffist. Ar.S
And these people arc more than
ever looking at colored gems such as
aquamarines, topaz and amethyst.
Aquamarines, when a paJe pink, arc
known as morganites; when yellow
they are called golden beryls. The
depth of their color determines their
worth. Small but rich blue
aquamannes are the most costly.
Topaz is most often colorless, but
can be blue, brown or pink. The
browns arc known as "precious
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