HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-01-15 - Orange Coast PilotCltANGE CO\ST
•
WEDNE_SDA Y, JANUARY IS, 1986
Inmate shuffle m ·eets deadline
Population of Main Jail ts 1,420 today;
80 below limit set by judge to ease jam
By LISA MAHONEY °' .. ..,,... ....
It took a weekend of shuftlina, but
Oranae County Sheriffs Department
officials succeeded in mectjna today's
court-imposed cap on the number of
NEW SLINf
"'' pl IL Actreee Donna Reed la
d•d at ace U. See A7.
Tbe plane Crull tbat
kllled rock 'n' roll .tar
ll1ck lfelaon m&J ba•e
,..Jted form a fire 11-
alted by free-butnc c.
calne. Bee A4.
inmates housed at the main men'sjail
in Santa Ana.
"As of midnight, our Main Jail
population was 1,420." Undenheriff
Raul Ramos aid this morning.
That's 80 betow a l,SOO.i nmate limit
Battles
I ' • remain,
says son
ofKlng
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY
Of .. ..,,... ....
Martin Luther King Ill, son of the
slain civil ri&hts leader, told a UC
Irvine audience Tuesday lhat Ameri-
ca stiU must find solutions for the
problems of equal ri&hts, poverty,
1anorance and racism.
Jn a wide-rangina address to about
350 people, King said the battles his
father fou&ht 20 years ago are un-
finished.
His speech was part of the second
annual Martin LuthCT King Jr. sym-
posium on the Irvine campus. The
country will be mark the first national
holiday honorina the Nobel Peace
Prize winner on Monday.
A march commemorating King's
Jan. IS birthday was held today in
Irvine. The march bepn in Mason
Regional Park and ended with a
memorial service on the UC Irvine
campus.
King Ill said the turbulence of the
1960s-including the assassinations
of President John Kennedy and his
brother Robert, as well as King's
father assassination in Memphis on
April 4, 1968 -caused a period of
adjustment in the 1970s.
'We needed time to adjust, to
internalize," he said.
(Pleue Me KDIG'8 /A2)
aet to 10 into effect today by a U.S. 3,112 persons 1n custody, Ramos
Dist.net Court Judge. said. To accommodate them and 11m
Sheriffs officials spent fnday, comply with the federal court order, it
Saturday and Sunday movma in-was necessary io fill 473 beds at the
mates from the Main Jail to branch Theo Lacy Branch Jail in Ora.nae. 349
facilities 1n Orange and El Toro, of the 409 beds available in newly
Ramos said. The transfers were made installed modular units at James A.
over the weekend so they would not Musick Honor Farm in El Toro and
be complicated by the Monday-to-241 beds remainina in a tent ~ity at
Thursday court schedule, he said. • the honor farm. The tents were
The Sheriffs Ocpanment has oria.inally intend~ for temporarv use
....,,... ...... .., ..............
..ID America we ha Ye to do 80llletlllJIC about b11J1Cer,"
llaJ'tln Lather KiDC m told a UCI 8Jlllpoalam Taeed.ay.
while the modular bu1ld1n15 were
readied, RamCK sajd.
K.eepina the Ma1n Jail population
under the court limn will be a day-by-
day talk, the undershenff wd. And
even thouah 180 more beds should be
available by April, the effon to relieve
overaowd101 will only be made more
difficuJt byanolhercap-th1s 11meof
1.400 inmates, he said.
U.S. Distnct Court J udge Wtlham
Gray ordered the county to take stept
to reduce overcrowdina at the maan
men's Jiii last March. At I.bat time,
more than 2,000 inmates were ~na
wedJed anto a facility dcsianed for
1.191 •
Efforts to lower J&H population
include the modular units. construc-
tion pro)tCU at Lacy and the Matn
Jail and stepped up use 'Of detention
release.
Teac~er fights
deduction for
mandatory fee
Claims Huntington
school board forcing
union membership
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ...............
Bill Waxman. a teacher of theater
arts and Enghsh at Ocean View High
School. Tuesday night claimed that
Huntington Beach Unio n H1S}l
School trustees arr forc10g h 1 m to JO in
a union and to pay unaon dues. •
"It is a fundamental 1DJus11ce and
an appalling infringement of my
ri~ts,· the 36-)ear-old Waxman
said.
He also charged that because he 1s
not a member of the Dist.net
Educators Assoc1a11on. he was not
allowed to vote on a new contract last
month that appro-..ed mandatory
agency ftt-s,-a long-coveted goal by
teacher union members.
He said that betng shut o ut of the
\Ollng booth amounts to auuon
without representation. Amencan co-
lonists staged the Boston Tea Pany in
1773 to protest the same pnnc1Pk .. he
said.
Waxman must agree by Jan. 17 to
d1stnct officLals deducung the union
dues fro m his payroll checks or to
have the union attach his wages, he
said.
"How wo uld you feel to have $400
arbitranl) removed from your pey
check each year>" he asked trustees.
Trustee Da' 1d Warfield. who was
backed bv the OlStnct Educators
Assoc1a11on in last November's elec·
uon. said toda) he's opposed to
Wuman's reQuest to rcsc1nd the
(Pleue eee UNION/ A2)
Lungren qults Senate race
LONG BEACH (AP) -Rep. Daniel E. Lungren announced Wednesda)
he is withdrawing from the race to unseat U.S. Se.n. Alan Cranston because he
failed to raise enou&h money to continue the campaign
During a year-long exploration campaasn. Lungren raised S:!.40.000. far
shon ofthc $500.000 he said he would need by February to go ahead wnh hts
campatgn.
LunJftn. 39, younaest of 11 prospecuve candtdatcs for the Repubhan
nomination. said he still thought Cranston. a Democrat. v.as beatable
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
.Bualneu
·Classified
Com lea
A12
A3
A8-9
BS-7
A 13
B8
A11
Ex-congressman Patterson
will seek supervisor's seat
Source
of toxic-··
waste
sought
Death Notices
Entertalnmen1
Food
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televlalon
Weather
C1-14
A12
A12
A14
A10
A3
87-8
81-4
A7
A2
By LISA MAHONEY °' .. ...., ........
Former U.S. ReP.. Jerry Patterson
said Tuesday he will run against two
othCT announced candidates for the
scat of retirina Orange County Super-
visor Ralph Clark.
Patterson, a Democrat who lost the
38th District cong.rcss1onal scat to
Bob Doman in 1984, said in October
that he would not challenge the
controvenial Republican to a re-
match this year.
Rather. the SI-year-old Anaheim
·Board refuses to review
ouster of school chief
By LAURA MER&
OfllleO..,NM ....
A Laguna Beach school district
trustees's request to revive dis-
cuuion1 on the board's decision not
to renew Superintendent Billy
Barnes' contract fell o n ·deaf cars
Tuesday ni&ht.
Board member ~ Harry Bithell
directed that the item be placed on the
Jan. 28 •nda even tho~ he
received no support from his col-
leques.
Bithell's request came after hearina
questions about the board's intearity
from community memben who filled
the meetina room.
A loosely orpnized Barnes IUPPOrt
group was formed afier the communi-
ty learned that the board. an late-night
discussions#t a December meeting..
let Barnes' contract expire bec.ausc of
"philosophical differences... The
issue was placed on the agenda as a
last-minute item at the request of
then-president Janet Vickers.
There was no pubhc notice before
the 3-2 vote, which came at 2 a.m.
durina school board member Susan
Mas' fmt meeting. She cast the swing
vote.
Warren Blossom expressed con·
ccms about the way the boa.rd
handfed the.vote.
"I think it's a traaedY that vou can
(Pleue ... ecaooL/ A2)
resident will campaign for the 4th
D1stnct Supervisor's seat aga1mt
Anaheim Mayor Don Roth and
Orange Mayor Jim Beam.
Clark has represented the 4th
District -which includes Anaheim.
Buena Park, La Palma and parts of
Orange -for IS years.
The senior ·board member an-
nounced in August that he would not
seek re-election because of his age.
health problems and publicity over
his links lo Anaheim fireworks
magnate W. Patrick Moriarty.
Moriarty pleaded auihy to mail
Saperlntendeat Billy Barna
Retirerp.en ts "signal break
·1nMesapolice 'dynasty'
--After years without promoUon opportunity.
department's top ranks will beopentn soon
Costa Mesa police Lt. Oeof'IC
Lonon waited l 7 yean for the chance to~acapcain.
He waited IO '°Ill IMt when a
VICUC)' anived dlit IDOA&ia. l.onoa
found tlim.telf wondcrina wtaether be
wu to0 old to apply. ·
''I ftpftd 1ny ttmt Md oome ud
sane around l 980. I'~ alt but li¥en
up. ... mid Lonon. who .. " ........ yean away from the mhlim_. rttft.o
IMfttll'·
in e 1969. Lt. Tom Durham. "'ho
held lus post for 22 ytan. has al
rtt1rcd -creat11'\1 the first openma
for 1 lieutenant 1n about s1• years.
And one xracant as ~.Pl""& 10
lnvc. IJ"'"I uniformed ofrscen t~1r
first crack at cam1n1 stnpn an t"'o
yean.
l n tht com1na months, Nttb said,
l.be *Partment c:oWd • u many as
\hne ICrPl\U.. two heutcoanu and
two capta1n1101 ~ rctiJ"mHt'*n
that""' into effect Jan. I. U ndet !ht new 1ystnn, ~ Vflmltll can
NUIV'f muimv1n btfttft11 at • SS. Neth, JI, MMt Mo.day he: alto
plaM to Mt~ 1n Novembtr afttt •
fraud and 1s under 1nvestag.at1on for
illegal influence pcddltng.
An associate of Monarty's has
char$ed that Clark. along with other
poh11c1ans. accepted fa, ors from
Monart}
Both ('lark and Monarty have
denied the allega11ons, which were
raised b} aide Richard R. Keath in
inter' aev.s wit h criminal 1n-
' estaga tors
Patterson. whom voter sent to
Congress afier a stint as mayor of
Santa Ana. said he doesn't consider
county government a step down after
Jerry Pattenon
10 years on Capitol Hill
"I am delilthted to be coming home
(Pleue .ee PATTER80N/A2)
SA Heights seen as
redevelopment area
County planners urge
buyouts of homes in
unincorp0rated site
By LISA MAHONEY
Of_Oelly .........
The Orange Count) Plann1na
C'omm1ss1on recommended Tuesda)
that mo~t of Santa Ana He1Jhts Ix
dc!l1gnatcd as a redevelopment area
The rteommc:ndauon. which must
Ix supported by the Board of u~r
v1sors acting a$ the Co11nty Develop-
ment '\gency. would allow planners
to proceed with a plan to h nan, l'
no1sc-reduct1on measures and horn<'
buyouts 1n the unmcorporatc."d a~a .it
the foot of John Wayne .\1 rport\
main runway
Soundproofini and the puf('ha~ 111
homes from residents who wan1 to
move away from the no1sc-1mpactC'<l
area arc part of a land-use plan
approved for Santa na HC'tghts la•a
year
The measures art' intended 10
mitiptc noise leveJs that <'U'tt"d <;llllt'
hm1ts and buffer the area from lutur<'
expansion planned 11 the airport
~ rcdevelopmen1 proJ«l ha'
been on bold because of a lawsu1L
(Pl ....... BIGHTS/ A:l)
Ortega dumping
called one of most
dangerous in OC
By STEVE MARBLE
Of -Oell'I .... 9WI
Orange C nunt'\ r n' 1r11nmental ol·
1i1.1als v.t•re tr. ini toda\ 10 1racc th<'
1ngan ofa potcn11alh deadh mnturt'
•f1.hC'mttal" found (ln a 'hnulder ol
lh<' Ont'ga High-....;, 1n v.ha1 "
"in.,1dt'rt'd th<' 1.ounl\ ·, rno\t danger
11u\ t JS(' of illegal dumping
.\ shenffs bomb <;quad dettinatC"d
the mli<,t unstable I. htm1cal' c-arl\
T ue~a' b plan n@ ahout two J)(lu nd-. ,,1 e'plOSl\C:S on top ot the tm..1,
m:llenal after 1t wa' 10 .... C'rt'd into ,,
thret"-1001-deep pit
The rc~1duc was . oof)(·d nut h' J
long Rt'a1. h ha1an111u~ V.J\h' d1,p<1'al
finn and v.1ll bt· hJull"d an .1 tO\I\
dump
The t'\plosmn 'ounded h~<' 11
-.hotgun report anti 1 ould bt' ht•ard lor
Jhout h'<' mile according Ill w11 -
ne!>!.<'S standm& a1 J roadblod. on thl"
rural h1ghwa\ CJ\! ol \an Juan
l ao1\trano. •
(Ple&M eee SOURCE/ #\3)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
Focus ON 1Hf N tv,~
Officer, not guard,
detained two blacks
at Fashion Island
BJ U ROWLEn _ ...............
Krvin1s1n« 196Suthcat)' tec0nd A NcwPon 9tach poh~ offi~r.
pohcc chief. not 1 pn-..att 9Ceun1A!cuan1, pulled 1 Th~ expected vacancies should sun on t Lona _~ h men "'ho
push ranktn& of!'aan up another r\U'I ba~e (~ 1 Sl0.000 d1Jmmmaoon
on the promotional ladder and .re-ctaim .,.uut the <'1t • an internal
Juvenate ckpanmcn' adm1n1 u1t1on polecc invest.ipuon has te\e.t.lcd
wllh MW blood, oft'ken IA.cl
"What w '" talkll'\labouu a lot of ln1u1Jly, • 1«unt)' otTt~r for
new ttunkaftl ap \heft," IJ..)'tl8r SIL Fub1on l.tand *IS su ptttcd of :r.m Holbrook uid. "Whee (die brandasluna the weapon at the two
admin1IU'lton) rant C&JDt Oft liw)' IMtl as they~ ia\1ftl I~ ~
Nd eood .-.; but after 1 .,b.ak they Pl~ ~ntct.
became 1 tin.It 1~nl •• ~ la1m fded lpU\ t the a t} of (Pl••• ... aaAJd) Ncwpon lt.ach by 1t\Ol'nt Tom
8&.rbam on bcba.11 of W1lha.m Powcn
and Carl Wtute was rout1nel) denied
hy the tty Council Monda).
8&.rham ha wd he intends to file a
federal la"-'1uat on beha.lf of the pair
v.-ho contend lht) wtrt dctaaned,
photosraphed and nan out of town
beau.se they were bl
Pov.en and Wlutt WttC lavu• ~tnum Cowt ov. 21 •"Mn thn'
wett tppro..hcct by two u"*etaftea
auards 1iwbo .aid \.be ma ~ ...... ckta1Mdas~111-.rcta.llrt1 1 &Uc:alt'id lfl ftOl dar Mio ~
lbc~ r ••-••roaT1Mt
•
0
I , • •
SCHOOL CHIEJl''SOUSTER PROTESTED •••
,.._Al
.. tM coocern here ud ltil.l 0call it I *'°'°Pbical diffttencc. If we nn
• coua~ like ~u are mma'na tbia ~I thank wed be in a lld atatc of d.air&.··
After hearina ~plainu &om
ve raidenta. boerd Plaideot
Schwan II.id. .. Thia la a '!!1'Y
matter. Not only will at c:raac animoaity, but hardship. It
does no one any aood to open old woullds.•'
Scbwan and Bithcll cut voca to
continue Barnes' contract anotba
)Uf'. 1 Blmes has been s1.aoerintendent of
the Laauna Beach CJnifaed School
District for 3'h of his l l years with the
dislrid.
former school trustee Norm
Browne told the board be had no
Cl'Wftls with its decision.
.. However, just as the super-
lDWDdt.nl la raponaible to I.be boeJd,
tbc boatd is rnpoaaible ud ICCOUD• lalM to the comrnwlity;• 8rowDe
aaid. To make auch a decision
without t.be-~ma>ullitv baviDJ a hint
oflmowledle about il.'' be Uid. .. it's
irrasiouibfc and DClbul uetbic:al." Du Daniell, ....._..baud mem·
bet wbo .... been repleced by ...
alto spoke.
... wuarnued. to~titmilclly, that
it wu bandied u a supplemental hem," Daniela a.id. He altoubd wby die boud put off
the matter untU bis 1emnapind and Mas wu on the boud. ... ~ bope
(Victen) wu ectina not in concert
with anyone elte, couideriq the
Brown Act," O.niela IAid. refenina to
a Stale law that includes proviaiona aaianll dec1ed offic:iall meetina pri.
vatcly to diJcu• public buaineu.
"Al a new board member bow
.
could (Mas) hive made an informed
decilion on the mat~. The decision
should have been made when an old
board memberwu on band,·' Daniels
said to a round of aoola111e.
Resident Richai'd R\&&h, called
Mas' deciaion "incontcionable.'' She "1ld ao experieooe to mm aucb a
decilioft, be laid ... lftbere WU a hurry
to come to a decis.ion it lhould have
been made with (an e•perienced
boatd member). This calls mto ques-
tion I.be ioacarity and mdibllity of the
board." MAJ araucd that ahe was informed
about Blrnes' oerfo.rmance. It wu revealed Tuesday that Mu
aat in on board meetinp and clOled
lttliona Ii nee the time it was clear she
would be Nnnina for the seat un·
coacested.. Schwan said he consulted
with a lepJ advilef before allowing
her in the meetinp.
NEWPORT OFFICER HELD TWO BLACKS •••
rromAl
• An invettiptiol'\ by the Irvine Co.. female dispetcber who was ridina
which provides securitr for fashion with hinral10 responded to the call to
· laland., found its secunty personnel assist the detective.
•re not involved in the incident at Oriainally, t><>lice said Powers and ~ sbo~na center, spokeswoman White were .. ammediatcly released"
S.lly Smith said. after the Newport Beach officers
•Powers and White were told later arrived and investipled the rcpon.
that they were suspects in a robbery But •fter the invest;iption follow-*' occurred two months ago. int the incident, police supported
Barham sa1d. Powen' and Wb.ite'l'cbatae that they
Newporr Beach police spokesman were detained for another 40
Trent Harris said an employee of Raff minutes.
Jewelry store in Fashion Island caJled Harris said the detective and of-
Ncwpon Beach police because "they ficers held Powers and White .. be-
bad been robbed byapnaofblacksat cause they were tryifta to determine
their store in Los Anaeles" a~ what they threw out of the car." The
µ,ought Powers and White were ~ suspects allepdjy tossed a rum bottle
same suspects. out of the car u they were stopped,
A plamclothes Newpon Beach Harris said. It was not known whether
detective, who was workinf under-the driver was cited for an open
cover, responded to the cal . Harris •
container vioJation, Harris said .
Barham claimed the detective told
Powen and White to "eet out of
N~ Beach and don't come
beck and subjected them to racist
remarb. He further alleaes that
Powen and Wbjte were folfowed in
their car io the city line by a marked
Newport Beach police vehicle.
Harris cou.ntered the ~. con-
tendins tbat after the offi<len left the-seen.e, they responded to a traffic
co~on at Bristol Street and Jam-~ Ro.d. .. They were rapondina to the
accident and they probably pessed them, .. Harri$ said. -
He denied the claim by Powers and
While that the officers or the de~
live made any racial remarks.
refused tQ identify the detective. --------------------------Powen and White allege that the
plainclothes ,man "pulled a gun on UNJON OPPOSED them" and detained them until after a • • •
TODAY tt:Olp.111
9'tlp.m. .,..._..,
1"64&.111. 7:MLf'll,
I.ta p.111. 7:)7 p.m.
...
0.1
4.4 u ~ .. u
marked Newport Beach police car l'l'OIDAl
arrived.
According to Harris, the in-house
police investigation dealt only with
the chain of events that occurred
when Powers and White were pulled
over by the detective, who was
driving a white, unmarked police car,
$laortly after they left Fashion Island.
agency shop provisions.
But Warfield said that Waxman
and otber .. conscientioua Oblecton"
arc not required to join a uruon and
that they can assian their union fees of
about $375 a year to a charity.
Waxman said today be believes his
constitutional riabu may be violated
by the new contract and that be plans
to tee an attorney.
MESA POLICE UPPER RANKS OPENING •••
Harris said the investiption re-
vealed that the suspects alleged-rf 'dumped somethinaout of the car"
when the detective was pulling them
over, and the detective '!' ulled bis
gun out and held it behin his leg in
?SC something happened." He later
put the handgun back into his holster,
Harris said,
Officer Danny Reynolds and a
Warfield said the contract wu
overwhelminaly ratified by the
teacben and that the qency shop
provision Wii approved 10 order to
get all teaOben to pey "their fair
share" for bcnefiu that the associa-
tion bas achieved.
Otben, however, claim that
tcachen may not select charities in
place of union fees unless they've had
a proven record of put contnbutions
to the charity.
He aaid be and other non-union
teacben were asked to perticipete in
job action.a taken by union teachers seekina contact appro,val but were
''left out in the cold' when it came to
vot.ina for the new contact.
Wuman said be also tried to
orpnize non-union teacben at
Oc5ean View to protest the man~tory
union dues but bis sians were alJeled·
ly tom down or defaced by union
memben. '"I don't want to be represented by
an orp.nization like this,•• he said.
KING'S OBJECTIVES UPDATED •••
f'romAl
But the time bas come to confront
again the nation's problems, he said.
to reject the Yuppie ''me-ism .. that be
called "a si.ck mentality."
"We are interdependent No one
can survive alone, .. J(jng said.
justice and equality, J(jng stressed the
1mponanceofbeingactive, individu-
flly and in poupa.
only' front section of a bus) many
Americans were able to stand up," be said. .
PromAI
Tbe cbanp could also ease the
frustration of promotion-minded of-
ficers stuck in what became dead-end
jobs.
"There hasn't been a· lot of
enthusiasm around the department
because there haven't been a lot of
positions open," Holbrook said.
Nearly half of the administrative
posts ~ expected to cbanfC, Neth
said, explainmg that promotions and
retirements would create the need for
as many as six-new seracants, five
lieutenants, three captains and a new
chief.
"'bile conceding that high-level
t. ..imotions have been rare, Neth
dislikes sugestions that veteran ad-
ministrators bad created a dynasty.
He said the 137-member depan-
ment, formed in 1953 when Costa
Mesa incorporated, was experiencing
the first cluster of retirements by
supervisors "who came in at the
ground floor." Neth added be ex·
pectcd a quicker tuMover u older
officers move into the top posts.
"Most of us who came in the early
years became ranking officers," Neth
explained. "Some people say it's not
good for an orpnizat1on (for people
to stay so long). It may not be. but it
means there's stability there."
The chief conceded that infrequent
promotions had become somewhat of
a morale buster.
"I wouldn't say it's been a serious
problem, but cenainly the fact they
have not been able to move up has
been there. h 's amazing those people
have been able to perform so well
with that frustration," he said.
Neth added he expects the new
opponunities to boost police spirit
and spark new enthusiasm among the
troops.
"When you've been in rank a long
ti me, you don't try to invent the wheel
every Monday morning. You don't
have the fight and fire like these
(newer) guys," be said. "More people
wiU now be tryins to prove they arc
worthy of promotion.•·
However. opponunity knocked
too late for auys like Lieutenant
Lonon. During the 1960s, he climbed
from patrolman to lieutenant in a
mere nine years before bumping his
head at the captain's level.
The new vacancies "won't rcaUy do
me any good," he said. ··certainly it
has been frustrating because every so
often this or that guy was 'oin_g to
leave and it never happened.'
Lt. John Regan, 49, sa!d he never
gave much thought to the idea that be
was being held back.
"When you worry about that stuff
you won't be in the business very
long," Repn said. "You always want
to make it. but when that become•
your No. I priority xou start haviq
some real problems. •
The bottleneck became especially
nerve-wracking for officers tak.iq
exams to become sergeants or lieuten-
ants, Sergeant Holbrook said.
"It's frustrating because you know
you're nottoi04 toget another chance
for a Iona ume. • he said.
He suuested Americans shouldn't
spend thjs national holiday with
barbecues and picnics. but rather with
fasting and prayer.
He said unified sroups were able to
achieve milestones in the 1960s like
the J 964 Civil lliabu Act, the l 961
freedom rides ana the 1965 march
from Selma to Montaomery, Ala.
o~r the right to vote.
"Twenty yean later, many of us
still don't vote. That bothers me,
because many died so we would have
that ri&ht. tt be said.
He also sugested racism continues
at the hiahcst levels in America,
where the aovemment calls for sanc-
tions apinst Libya when whites are
k.iUed by terrorisu in Vienna and
Rome, but ianorcs the lcillin• of
thousands of blacks in South Africa. SOURCE OF CHEMICALS SOUGHT .••
"In America, we ha ve to stand up
and try to do something about
hunger. Every minute I've stood up
here 28 persons have died of hunger,
18 of them age 5 and under," he said.
He described fasting as a way to
cleanse the mind "so hatred. malice
and violence don't come in."
Calling upon the students in the
audience to take up the fight for
But Kina also cited individuals
who, like bis father, took stands
apinst popular opinion becau1e they
believed in their cautes.
"Every time I ace Miu Rosa Parks,
I have to thank her because in 1955
when she sat down (in the 'whites
"Freedom and equality isn't yet a
reality, but itcan be. It wasn't popular
in the '60s for blacks and whites to
work toaether for civil rights, but it
was riabt. I
"Let's set the pendulum right,
whether it be feed.iq people, clothing
people, or getting people together in
love:· King said. "That's what we
should be doing on the 20th."
f'romAl
The chemicals appear to have
originated from a laboratory, perhaps
connected with the pharmaceutical or
aersospace industries, said Bob Mer-
ryman. director of the county's En-
vironmental Health Department.
"But the odd mixture doesn't point
to any one industry," Merryman said.
HEIGHTS URGED FOR REDEVELOPMENT ...
If located, the offending . pany
would face a maximum $50,000 fine
for each chemical dumped, or a total
of $650,000 for all 13 chemicals
found. From Al
brought against Orange County by
Newport Beach and two ciuu:ns
groups on behalf of residents who live
under the airport's flight path.
That suit was settled in mid-
Occcmber allowing both airport ex-
pansion and noise mitigation
measures to proceed.
By marking Santa Ana Heights for
~evelopment, the county can divert
wes from other taxing agencies like
school districts and water districts for
projects in the redevelopment area.
The d1vcrs1on 1s accomplished by
setting a base year valuation on
property in the prC?ject area. Taxes
coUected on foture increases 1n valu·
ation arc then put into a redevelop-
ment fund.
Planning staff also recommended
John Wayne Airport be included in
the redevelopment area. That way
lease income may be used for some
projects in Santa Ana Heights, said
Bob Fisher, director of p~ning.
Upper Newpon Bay Regional Parle
as also part ofthe redevelopment area ~r:nmended by the Planning Com-
m1ss1on.
Santa Ana Heights would be the
first redevelopment project for the
county since it established the De-
velopment Agency in l 982.
Although the rural, mostly residen-
tial Santa Ana Heigbu nei&hborhood
Merryman said the odds arc apinst
is far from run-down. it can qualify tracing the chemicals to a specific
for redevelopment because of its company unless officials are able to
"non-confonnina land uses, substan· find identification markifll on the
dard commercial and residential cannisten, drums and bottles that
structures, inadequate public im-held the various chemicals.
provements and peroels of imgular The ilJepl dumping incident is
form and shape and inadequate size probably the most dangerous one in
for proper usefulness and develop-• county history, be said.
ment," accordina to a planning "It's certainly the most serious in
document.
Supervisors will consider the Plan-
ning Commission's recommendation
Jan. 21. If they approve, a com-
plicated series of actions will take
place to set redevelopment in motion.
Final action is anticipated by late
summer. ..
.PATTERSON TO RUN FOR SU~ERVISOR •••
J'romAl
to Orange County. I look forward to
repretentin& western Orange County ~n/' be said in a press conference
J"uaday in Santa Ana.
.. The Board of Supervisors makes
m.;or decisions affectin1 people's
lives every day. ltcenainly isn't 1 step
down or even a step sideways;·
' Patten0n said. ~r. -TIM former conlfCssman said he is
•tired of commuting to Washington in
his role as •a lobbyist and wants to
~Ille down in Oranae County where
be has lived for 27 rears.
Pat1en0n's dceis1on entails a legal
separation from his second wtfe,
Sally. who will remain in Washing-
ton.
Patterson said he 'W!l1 campuan on
issues such as the need for more
affordable bousina. •better transpor·
talion solutions and answers to the
arowtna problem of toxic waste.
And he is bankina on his hiJh
profile with voters and his familianty
with the ins and outs of Washinau>n
politics to win out over other can-
didates.
"I'm counting on hiah name recos-
n1tion and favorable name recot-
nition," Patterson said.
"I know who to talk to, where to go
and what projects work (in the
Waahinaton ~na)," be said.
Pattcnon is also countin1 on
Sl00,000 in commitments be said
he's been offered by supporters. He
hopes to raise S2SO.OOO for the June
primary.
Pattenon promised that, if elected.
be would KrVe a full term. He said he
would not use the supervisory seat as
a jumpina off point for another political~.
~=:rid
Ju•t call 642-6086
~-y "ff14'00 "" ..... '"'"" ~ o, 130pl'l'I ~ci.loit 7Plll end 'tfNt cooy ...,. ii.
otol!Wtl4
What do you"-\ike about the Daily Piiot? Wba1
don't you like? eau the numbtt above and your
mess11t wUI be recorded, nnscribed and ck-
Uvettd to I.ht ~iaw editor.
TM 1&mch0Ur anrwtri~ scrvict may be
used to ~ord lettm to the editor on any topic.
Contributors to our Leners column must include
their name and tetq,hone numbtt for vcrificauon .
Ttlls ua what'J on your mand.
I
"'°'' -.....,., ~ .,au oo ftOI rec-rlNt COOy D\' 7 a 111 c.t Otilllt
•O 1 "' IM "°"' cqiy Wll °' ........ '°
Clteul1.._ Till,,_•
...... o.w..,.c-, A,_. ~
~..,.. ........ --
(
•
WHY INDEPENDENT
JEWELERS GROW
In apfte of multiple chain store
cntdlt oper1tlon1, direct mall
... ting and overMas buying, the
Independent jeweler II ateadlly
growtng both In number and
volume.
Why? Because an owner-op-
efated jewelry store, which we
are, 11 part of the community,
contributing to Its welfere and
offering P9f'10na1 MrVk:e to It•
customers.
we offer better Idea, bett•
eervtce and utu1Hy lower prtc..
The sparkle you ... In our new store le not the glitter of
expenelve ftxturee end dleptay
caMe. tt'• the beeuty and quell·
ty of gem1 end ,._..ry Mlected
penanmlly by ue.
Our ...,.,,. wttl help you d•
itgn that unique ptece of Jew.try
you've llWeyt wanted. The
peopte who Mrve you are
hOM9t Md ~rteou1. They wtll
ueuelty be here When you return
for MNtQe or help;
--~
•
terms of immediate threat to public
safety.'' Merryman said. ''We've
never had anything this dramatic."
Because of the lack of nearby
facilities licensea to dispose of ex-
plosive chemicals. it is believed the
dumping incident was motivated by
convenience and finance.
"It appean to be a deliberate act
with a complete disreprd to public
safety," Merryman said. "I would
think it was motivated by monetary
reasons."
The nearest dump that stiU receives
hazardous material in liquid form is
in Northern California. A toxi~ dump
site in Casmalia outside Santa
Barbara no longer accepts liquid
toxics and a hazardous waste dump in
West Covina was closed in 1984 for
health reasons.
"It's expensive and inconvenient
From the peQple
making crystal a legend.
SWAAOVSKI
to get nd of this stuff.'' said Dick
Pierce. a spokesman for the county
fire depanmcnt.
h 's possiole the drums and can-
nisters holding the chemicals were
dumped more than a week aao.
according to a witness.
Larry Lawrence of Rivenide told
firefighters he spotted the cannisters
one morning while commutina to
work and stopped, thinking he could
grab one of the drums and use it for a
trash can.
"At that location, it could easily sit
there a week without being noticed,"
Pierce said.
The Onep Highway links River-
side and Oranae counties, cuttin&
throuah the Oeveland National For-
est. rt is used as a shoncut by
commuters traveling between Lak.e
Elsinsore and Oranee County.
. -
The Gift of
Friendship.
The perfect gift for
your hott or hott ....
The Swarovakl
pineapple -long a
symbol of hoapltallty.
The Gift.of Joy.
The IUthentlc Swar~I
teddy bear. Select
from MYWal llz99 In
the SwarOYlk,. Sliver
Cryatal9 Collectlon.
8WAROV&K1·
32%
Full L .. d
Auttrlan
Sttwr
Cry1t1I
lCHWl'llRlkS JEWRlc/?8
an1c•11Nt1
1835 Newport Blvd., D-162 Co9ta M-
MEMllR AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
I . \
• '
Llbr~ friends
mark2lstyear
The Friends oftbe fountajn Valley Library will
celebrate their 2 lst birthday Friday il 7:30 p.m. at
the libra~, 1756.S Los Alamos. A sJide prcscnta.uo.o
1n\ ~alley s Comet will be offered by John Sanford.
pmtdci;tt of the Oran~c County Astronomers.
Children's libranan Marueen Aschoff will give
• t.alk on children's services at the library. Call
842-6874 for additional information.
Keyboard cla .. •lated
A class in keyboard 1mprovisat1on will bt g.iven
at .Orange Coast College m Costa Mesa. beginning
Fnday. All levels of advancement are welcome.
The class will concentrate on im provisjn& and
amnging po8 and jazz standards at the keyboard.
Call S44~911 for more information.
Animal meeting In FV
Animal rights advocates are invited 10 at1end a
. mcctin1.of the Animal Assistance League Saturday
at lhe Fullerton Savings and Loan Assoc1auon. at
Brookhurst Street and Talben Avenue 1n Fountain Valley.·
The session is scheduled from 10 a.m. to noon
and many volunteer )Obs arc open ,.Call 644-8851 for
additional information.
Watercolor lecture set
Watercolor anist Wayne Bender will give a
lecture and demonstration for the Costa Mesa Art
League Thursday at the Neighborhood Community
Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
The demonstration at the 7:30 p.m. program
will include an exhibit and comment on his award-
winning reproductions. The public is 1nv1ted.
Orcldd class ln Mesa
The Newport Harbor Orchid Society will hold
its monthly meeting Thursday in the meeting room
of the First Methodist Church on 19th Street at
Newport Boulevard. Costa Mesa.
Mexican botanist Alfred B. Lau will speak at 8
p.m., preceded by a culture class at 7:30. There ti. no
admission charge and visitors are welcome.
Accountants to meet
Dagmar Halamka will speak on legal issues at
Thursday's mecungof the Orange County chapter of
the American Society of Women Accountants.
scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Sheraton Newport.
4545 MacArthur Blvd .. Newport Beach. '
Guests are invited and the cost of the dinner
meeting is $20. Reservations may be obtained by
calling Ruth Urban at 553-0440.
French sesslon planned
The Alliance Francaise of Orange County will
preSt'nl Dr. Therese Ballet Lynn in a lecture in
French entitled .. Joan of Arc and Christine de
Pisan" Friday at 8 p.m . 1n the Bndge Hall of the
Congregational Church. 340 St. Ann's Dnve.
Laguna Beach.
The pubhc 1s invited. T here will be a charge of
$3 for guests and SI for studcnt'i under 25 yearo; of aae.
·An Invitation:
' Attention <><ganlzatlon presidents and sec-
retaries: We want to help make yOYr upcoming events. meetings, Mmlnars and fundralsers SUC·
~ful Send brief announcements including time.
pi.Ge, cost (If any) and a pnone number for
addltlonal Information to: Bulletin Board. Dally
Piiot. P o Box 1sro. Costa Mm. 92626
Reports of yOYr club or organization's act1v11tes
-Ilka community service pro1ects or electton of
officers -snould be directed to the Commun11y
New9 Editor at the ume address. Non-returnable
black and white photographs are welcome
Wednesday, Jan. 15
• 6 p.m .. La1uDa Beacla EDergy and Environ-
ment Committee. Community Center. 384 Legion
St.
• 7 p.m., Laguaa Beacla Plaulng Commission.
Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
• 7: 30 p. m .. La Jana Beacla ParllJn1, Trame and
ClrcelatloD. City Hall Conference Room. 505 Forest
Ave.
• • 7:30 p.m .• Lapu Beacla Seismic Safe-
ty/Dtsa11er Prep11reae11. Police Department Li-
brary, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Irvine CommuH. Services
Commluloa. City Council Chambers . 17200 Jam-
boree Blvd.
---~~ ~~--
Tactics vs. sea lions hit, praised J
t
Sportsfishtng businesses welcome new rUie
allowing noise born b to scare mammals away-
By LAURA MERK °' ..............
A federal ruhng allow1na sportsfi~hing
busJnesscs to harass sea hons with noise
bombs has sparked both criticism and
appliuse from local groups.
Ttie National Marine F1shenes Agency
pubfished the new ruling in the December
issue of the Federal Register. The ruling.
which went in10 effect Jan. 3. wa.s the result
of a ~titton from the Sportlishing As-
sociatton of Califom1a. It spec1ficc.ll>
allows the sponfishing groups w11h soon-
to-be issued permits to use noise bombs to
frighten sea lions awa) from fishing boats
The devices arc ~mall cxplos1 ves. about
the size ofa man's thumb. that blow up on
or below the surface of the ocean. The
bombs are supposed to ~art' the mammals
away from the boats. all owing fishermen·
who paid for the charter trip the c.:hance to
reel in their limit offish.
The bomb~ arc considered a non-lethal
method of harassment by the federal
agency and have been used by commercial
fishing operations ·
Bui Bill Ford of the Laguna Beach
Fnends of the Sea Lion contcnd.s that the
ruling weakens the Manne ~mma.I
Protection Act of 1972. wtuch has helped
increase the $Cll hon population from
20.000 to 80.000 over the pa.st IS years.
··Tests have s~own thJt repeated UK
could cause deafness and they won't know
until the animal dies and they run tests If
(the bombs) land on the animals and
explode. the debris could also dama&e the
eyes ... Ford said.
The Federal Register reponcd studies
done on the bombs .. indicate that the
devices tested are loud enough to be
painful. but probably do not result in
damage to the auditory system ... But later
the repon said. "an1rnals could ron-
ce1 vably become deaf to a narrow band of
frequencies after repeated exposure to
these devices ...
Ford also argued that there 1s no means
of con trolling the use of the bombs and that
sortle irresponsible sportfi shing operators
will abuse them. At the Fnends' rehab1h-
tation center 1n Laguna Beach. sea ltons
who have !ken gaffed or shot are often
brouJ.tit in for care. he noted. despite laws
prohibiting anyone from killtngor inJUnng
the animals.
"Not all party boat operators are doing
it. but they arc t~ ones ~~·re afraid ~ .. he
said. adding that some cre\I,\ might thr<)ll·
the bombs direct I) at the dntm.il~
Doug Farrell. pan uwner ul Ua' e\ \
Locker 1n Balboa and onl· sponfhhing
operator who plans to u)C lhC' noise
deterrents, said most of hi' chentelc an~
famt.hcs who enJOY waacbana, the tca hOft~ t f hem 1sultd the born~ and threw t.htm 1 '
the sea hon • be said, lw customcn wo
not return.
Sea lions. wba~h arc noted (or thric:.
antcll1atnce. k.now they can set• free meai;
near the 00..11. They follow t.bt bolts and
often tcare tbe acbool fl~ away or beoo~
hooked when uyina to s.na&Ch a fish from
fisherman's line. Farrell sa.id. F
"We t.1.ke people out for • eood ume.
The sea hoos arc sman. If we ICatt ODf.
awa), theycommunacatcandaJI aoaway ••
he said. "We're out there for only four
hours. Tbey have 24 hours to fish... ,
In other cfTons to aid fishermen, thq
NMFA this spnng wtll begin feedina
honi. dead fish 10Jcclcd with huuum
chlonde. The chemical 15 supposed to
make the sea hons nauseous and trai1>i
them through a ncpuvt cond1ttoom&.
process 10 Sta) awa) from boab. Over a
three-year period. the state Department
Fish and Game will be allowed to te$t t~
chem1cal:S effect on 300 Cahfom1a itl
hon~ and 150 harbor seals 1n the ocean. ;
Ford ·~ worried there will be no way to
follov. 1he sea lions to detect the t'ffects of .
the poisons. unless the animal d.lCS and'
""'ashe!I ashore. If a s1m1lu program ii
approH!d for commercial use. Ford sa1Cf:
au1hon11es will ha'e no wa> ofcontroU1ni
the li thi um chlomk dosagt' the lishermcl\'
u~
-q
County OKs pact for Fitness Academy
By LISA MAHONEY
Of ,,.. Oelly l"llot .....
The Orange Count) Board of uper-
v1sors entered into a lea')e-optlon agree-
me01 Tuesday w11h the National Fitness
Foundation. paving tht' wa y fo r construc-
tion of the proposed l 'n1tcd States Fitness
Academ) on count)'·O\I. ned land in the
Aliso Greenbelt
Supervisors voted 4-1 with Chairman
Ralph Clark d1sscnung 10 sign the agree-
ment and approve a conceptual plan and
project guideli nes for the academy
proposal put fo rward b) George Allen.
chairman of the President's Council on
Phvs1cal F11nes~ and Spons.
the superv1sor'i' ac11ons dear the way
for Allen's Nat1on;il Fitness Foundation 10
start a fund-raising campa1_gn 10 get the
academy butlt The foundation's board of
directors had he\ltated to begin raising
mone~ until the proJect''i location was
Se ttled.
The founda11on chose Orange County as
11s preferred site 1n February but womed
about the ume and difficulty required 10
mo ve its proposal through the count)
approval process.
The foundation ~ull must obtain ap-
provals from the state Coastal Com-
mission and the Board of Supervisors for
spec11ic site plans.
"This 1s a h1stonc decision because the
United States 1s the only (maJor) country
m the world that doesn't have a fitness
academy.'' Allen said.
The fonner Los Angeles Rams coach
said the academy W1ll offer programs that
will promote fitness among all segments of
soc1et). but w11h a panicular emphasis on
yo uth. ··we are 1n dire need of a youth fitne ss
program in the Un11ed States." he said.
citing a stud) that showed the average I().
'ear-old could not chin himself even once.
· Allen promised a model youth fitness
program would be in operation 1n Orange
County this summer to demonstrate what
the academ) can do. The program will be
based at UC Irvine. he said.
~
Romance cluthor
has the write stuff
for young readers
By ROBERT BARKER
.\s long 8!> 'hl· can rl•mcmbcr. Barhara
Conklin had al\l.a)<:> ""anted to Ix' an
author
"I read 'Gone W11h the \A. ind' "hen 11
li rst came out I "-IS I I Pcopk asked me
what I thought I was doing.'' !>he ..aid.
"I alwa)'s hked to wnie l've alw~·s been
interested in other people's problems and I
threw myself into the s1tua11on'i quite well.
I could be anybody I wanted 10 ..
Working at night whtle her s1 ' children
slept. Conklin broke into the "-nting
business 1n 1952 wnh "The Adventures of
Lulubelle.'' u column ahout a cat that was
published in the Lcvllto\l.n Times 1n
Penns)lvan1a.
"So many 'htldren dropped by to see
Lulu belle that we had to huIT) and get a cat
10 match her dcscnpt1o n." she said. She
also wrote a soc1et)' column for the
newspaper.
Conklin mo\.ed to Huntington Beach
""1th her husband. Robert. an executive
with the McDonnell Douglas Astronaut1ci.
(o.
For 16 )ears ~he worked as a supt'rvtsor
1n the records department at the Hunt-
In 1964. she enrolled in a creatl\e
\I. n t1ngcou rse taught b~ Dr. Patncia Kub1.,
at Orange Coast College Conk lin began 10
~nock out I 0.000-word true confess1on-
type amcles that were snapped up b~
popular magazines Then she turned to
wnung romance no' els for young adults.
Her first book. "P.S .. I Love You."
published 1n 1981 , has been pnnted 1n nine
languages and has sold three million
paperback copies. she said.
A sequel. "The ummer Jenn) Fell 1n
Love," followed m 1982. It also has been
succt'ssful as have ft, e subsequent }'Oung
adult stones.
he has also finished "Time Framl.', .. hl'r
lirst adult boo k. a saga about a famtl) that
hves through a depression and two world
wars from 1901 to the present
Conklin s1tll churns out true confession
stones on her Wa ng \!.<Ord processor at her
home in Laguna Hills. After she gets an
idea for a plot. Conklin said. she can wnte
the romance stones 1n about three davs.
"P .. I Lo"e You .. 1s about a girl who fell
in love W111l a bO\ who died ot cancer But
It has an upbeat ending
Supervisor Uark said he h ~ed the •lk<s
of a fitness academ). but did not thin~ the
county had built enough ~ffguanh 10111
the lcasc-opt10n agreement. v.-hllh ""ouh.l
provide up to 200 acres along -\h\o ( reek
to the foundation rent-free for at least 50
years.
"What tf this goes bdh -up -.oml·wherc
down the Line? What art the nind1t1ons for
another Ziggurat'>"' Clar~ as~ed rt'lemng
10 a half-empty federal building 1n l,..iguna
Niguel.
• Other superv1w rs are \Old un the idea of
Orange Count) 's hosting .i OJt111nal litness
academy that will "tea(h lladwr<." the in-.
and outs of fitness ""\
The proposed academ' \I.Ill bnng pre'>·
uge and rccogn1t1on to Orange ( ount)
Supervisor Thoma~ F. Rile~ \atd -'\ltso
Viejo 1s 1n Rtle) 's Fifth D1s1nc1
Rile}' and Su pen 1sors Bruu· '.'-cstande
Hamett Wieder and Roger ~tanton rcad1l~
voted for the lease-opt ion agree ment
which 1s ~ahd for 25 month\ \I.hilt' thr
founda11 on seeks li nal count~ .ind< oa\tal
Barbara Conklin
11. she said.
"I sent it to numerou .. publtshl'r'> l hn
said 11 was "e"' good ..-,,n11ng but thl' thenu·
was too hea,·~· for a teen-agcr to hJndk I
was real depressed ... But <.he ~on1.11.1t•J .in
agent 1n 'Jev. York who ,old thl· hl}t1~ tc1
Bantam and 11 \1.35 puhlt\ht'.d tn thl·
com pan~·., ·weet Dream<. c.l·ne' ,1w ,,ml
The re)t 1s a success )IOI"\
( omm1s~1on approvals and securt'i.
financing
The maJont\ of the board was samfied
that secunt}' d.c:posa s and other financ1-a1
guarantee'> would protect the count)·,
mtaest 1n the propen)
The~ \I.ere also w1llt ng to go along with
general assurances that members of tht•
public IAIOuld be able to use the fac1ht) on a
re&ular basis
The land to be leaM>d to the pnvate non-
protit ~at1onal Funes\ Foundauon \1.3~
ong.inall\ des1gna1ed for a reson hotel·
conference center
The center along \I.1th "ineyards and
perhaps a restaurant \!.<a~ 10 be a rt'venue-
ge neraung -proJect that would pa} for
public recreauonal usc ol the greenbelt
Reacung 1ocn11c1sm that the count) \.\a.\
giving a\l.a~ publi'C park land Rile) said
that ph~s1cal fi1ness 1s a goal the super·
\. ISOr<. \I.an t to promote and leasing land tu
the fou ndauon 1s one wa) to do that
Jhe board 1s ~till commttted to requinn
the greenbelt to pa' lor ttself he ~1d
Arts Center's
chief suffers
heart attack
By TONY SA.A \'EDRA
()f _O.-,. ..........
t
'
4 .
Orange ( ount~ Pt•rtorm1ng .\ns <. entl·r
f \t'lUll\t' D1rC('tor T om "l'ndnl k rt"·
rnaint·d ho<>p11alind h lda' alter \ufTC'nng .:1
mild hcJn attJl~ at h" homr 1n "-C\l.!)tln
Beal h la'>t \I, eekcnd. ~enter utfo. 1als ..aid
h.endn1.~ '12 \l.il' Jdmtltl·d 111 th.c
,ardtJ\. ~are unit Jt Hoag f111,p1t.il ·
'"'"~)n Bealh \undJ\ altt'r u1mpla10 1n1t
111 l hest pain HI' re lea St'. dt·pt·nJ" on
tunher testi ng '>Chedull-l1 tor IJ ll'r tht\
\l.Ce l c;a1d ·Dic k l\.1t1rn\I. <,po~t·\mJn Im
lhc Jnc. comple\ 1n C ll\tj \k ·\J
l\.1t1ro\I, <.trr,sed th.it "'e ndnd .. ·' , 110-
d 1 tion '' 1mrirn' tng dad' dnJ tht· prop·
no''' tor re'o' en ,., good_
i...l·nd nc~ and General \fan,.igl"r Jud,
\lurr ""en: h1n:d a\l.a\ 1r0m the 1-.c:nm·t.1'
(enter 1n \\ a'hington D ( la\t \l'Jr 1i
O' e~e the Orange ( nunt~ .. om pk\
I ht• hx.il .entn' 'llCNl-5(.'JI m.tt\1
1heJter 1., .,, hniuled tt1 upe'n '-<.•pt 2'1
l\.enJnl ~ ' ho\p1tJlt1a11on uime'> Jt •
11mt \I, hcn lt ntcr '-'t1i.1dl' are rn·"url·d to
'-'-m1 pktl' '>4-ht•dult!_l~ Im the pn.-m 1t•rc
\l't.l'•'n .1nJ ra1,c the SI J m1l11nn nl•eded to
PJ' 111l thl' s-1 ".rrrffl,.,n ni.11n tht•Jtl·r
i...111r.1\I. -..1 10 \ton \I. ill IJkt· "'er 1.t111'
ofll·r:i111111' \I. hilt' i...naJn, J.. "rt'l llfWratin1t
1 ............................ ingtl:>n Beach Pohce Depanmcnt and wrote stories in he r off t 1 me
.. We got thous.ind'> ot letters from all
o .. er the \l.Orld l\ome -.aid 11 hel ped them
10 face death .. c.hc: -..11.t
•\I fir'it ( 11nklin .,X h.id trouhk \cll1ng
Conklin will be the l°t'atured '>Jlt'j~cr jl
the Huntington Beach Fnend' lll lhl·
L1hral') program ThurSlla~ She "Ill talk
about teen·age~. their problem~ .inJ tht·1 r
books. ~he al'-<1 \I, 111 talk about ho" tt•
become J \l.ntrr The program \I.Ill ,1.in .11
7 pm in tht· l alhcn R0llm at the lthran
"1 111 T.il~·n .\,l. Thl' puhltl "'"' tttJ
\11111 "tll tx undtr 11\1 d11t·111 .. n n1
T '11Plh' '-ltradt•r .1.·rt1·1 t-.n.trd pr1.•,1Jl • l
.1n,\ 1·h1cl l'\t'l Utl\ l' 1tl1 .. 1 r l-..1·mln, J.. .1h1
't'\ Pt'lll d It ht I\ .t .11\ I ' 1,h '' l
PoucE Loe
Motorcyclist accidentally
shot himself on freeway
By PAUL AftCHIPLEY
Of ............
A Mission Viejo man rt'mained in
critical condition Tuesday night af\er
accidentally shootina himself while
ridina his motorcycle in Irvine that
momina. ·
Police had initially treated the
• incident as an attempted murder
case.
Raymond Charles Broulette, 27.
wu ridina his motorcycle alona the San DiCIO F..eeway near the Jeffrey
B-tlJaltOa Beacla
A Westminster resident reported
that her son's $700 bicycle was taken
from the I 6'SOO b10ck of Oolden W t'St
Street Tuclday. • • •
The T·tOpl and lhe c.r cover were
reponcd stolen off a dartr blue 198~
Chevrolet Carnaro Z-28 parked In the d.ri~y of a home an the 19100
Wock of Stif\PWY Tundly. The loss was estimalfd •t $820. • • • A thief rcponedly atole two video
Road exit when the acc1ocn1 oc·currcd
at about I a.m.
Broulette may have been carT) ing
the scmi·automatic handgun 1n h1!i
waistband, lrvtnt' ~Jt. Leo Jone" 'i31d
"Maybe it was falling out and he
vabbed it," Jones said. "He hnd the
&un in his hand. and he shot h1mscll ··
The bullet truck the motor<: cl1s1
1n the abdomen .
A passina moton st saw Broulettc
ao off the road and alcned C'ahfom1>a
H iahway Patrol officers.
They found Broultue lying neu to
A thief who entered throuah • rear ~ndow rcponcdly stoic S300 in
linaerieandaS3S ~ir of hoes from a
home in t~ U~ btock of Hunl·
1naton over the weekend. • • • Someone rcponedly stoic $700 1n ~ewelry and SI S 1n ca.sh from • home
'" the 17300 block of Qucc:ns Tue
day. • • • A resident in the 8100 block or l
Kiner reported that she saw man
shoot • cat u1 the front yard of a
nearby home. Sbe detcribed the
IUSptt't IJ. ~ tall Hnptnk mUr
1n his early 20's. he tVrth.crdctitnbed
him u bcm1 O\~labt. pohcr
rqx>r1S lltd, • • •
his chicle. c.omplaulln& 01 pain.
Jone~ said.
When they saw he had been 'iho1 10
the stomach. they ummoncd para-
medics and Irvine police.
Broulcttc was rushed to the Foun·
ta1n Vallt'y Regio nal Hospital trauma
center where he rtm1.1ncd tn cn11cal
condition an the intensive cart unit
T ue~a' mttht.
If'\ 1ne offi cers ~arch in& the frt'('-
wa ) crash site for evidence found tht•
handgun.
poned stolen I uesday from a home
1n the 20000 block of Harbor !sir
P'ou.ntaln Valley
Fishing equtpment ,aJucd at $474
wa~ rcponed toltn from t ht> gara&<' ot
a home 1n the 16.00 block of F1lbc-rt
Tuesda) • • • Pool~lnnana equipment "al~ at
S 139 •·u reported tolcn f rorn rtd
1985 Toyota pickup lruck parked 1n
front oh hOmc 1n the 10300 b40l'~ o(
La Dcspcnu venue unda)' na&ht.
• • • '200 car S1Cm> -..as rtpontd
nokn from a liaht bh.c t 98l Honda
'-"Ord p11'tttHn 1 lot •t IS. ''
lrvlne
.\ fl"'.itdl'n t along Fa1rlakc rt'poned
that 'hr ~\I, a man o n a ladda
l11uk1ng 1n a bedroom window 11p
ping up ht\ pants Tucsda ~. • • •
(,.1, ''a' ccponed ~1phoned trom
"eh1cle<t 1n a lot at 1711 McGaw A \C
Tuc'>d3) The '1c1tm told police 11
"'3' the third OCCUTT1lnrr m thr p:l'il
'il\dJ)'i. • • • \ S~OQ b1C)c:IC \l.3S reponcd 'ltOlcn
from a home 1n 1he 3600 hlod. ot
"lonh Mall Tuesda) • • • Po\l,er tool'i and a T ~l wel"C'
reportC'd 'itolcn from the garage of a
home along "'a> tarer Tuesda'
Newport Beach
\ S ~00 '1deo cu~tte recorder, a
SI ~O nnsv.mng ma hine and a S300
camera '4t"rt' rtponcd stolen from a
home 1n 1hr ~00 bl()(k of 20th StT'C'(t
some11mt bet-.cen last turda) and
Tucsda~ • • • .\ S400 car stereo wu reported
~1olen ftom a tan Toyota R·S pickup
truck parked tn front ofa home an the
1200 blqck of Manan Monday n\lht
' ...
S200 pair of eamnp,., ere amona
tht clotheund d1shci rcponed stolen
Mondi) from a home 1n the 400
block or Beionta. The IOlll I ..... \ ~t1m1tcd at SSOO
CMtall-
Official at \he toelated Destin
ud1os rcponcd that somctamc lat
wc.ckmd someone stole fuur S800
t)'pt-.ntcn from the ofTICCS at 184
"'""'>· • • •
cautite reoonten. a TV tet and •
walCb. valuedatSl,HOLft'om 1 hom.t
in dait 700 block of Jay 1 Ulldl)'. TM
inuudtr entered thrOulb an •nlocked
llictn'I Ila• door. Mllil! repon& aid, . ~..--Jefflty valued at S680 wu tt• l trkk} Monday n~l --=-......... ~-duffel bl& conta1mna dotb1nc
'
~ Jnd tool'>. 'alucd at ~~tl \l.,t,
re~irted \!Olen lrom .1 ru't"'11l.1n•,1
1'1"•1 tltlnda { l\tt parkt•d 1n .1 '-lt.11rr
Brotht'f' lot ,l\ 11 ~ B.1kr1 '-II l."r
I nda'
• • • •\thief reronedh 'tnk a NIU ,J,
'\tcn·o. J S50 pair l'll !11 n~xu l .mJ
Sl6 11'1 \'.'a'h trom a red rir o Hl\ulJ
pickup truck pMkcd in lrun1 ''' .1
home in the 200 hlod. l•I Hniud\I. J'
\1C1nda\-night
• • • kwelf'\ Jnd fircarm' ,,llunl ,11
S:?. I b ~ "<'Tl' re!)tH'tl'd ~10kn It 11r1 .1
home in 1hr 1 !\OP hllx k Pl 11•" '
Tue'>d3'
• • • .\ thtd u:rortt>dh \tllk • \110 111
cash from the l n11.1u<' f at("" H "t-i
Pullman \1ni1d11' n11tht
• • • i\ SI .200 t~pc\l.nter Y.,I\ '''l'lll!lCd
\tolcn Monda\ Imm th,• t•t'i,~·' ot
lkJ,h1111n1 P111111.i111111 ' ''·' \.h'ill
\ l'Hk {)n\C t-.1 ... 1 . . .
i{'Y.lln \Jlul"tl .11 "~'' "·•' "
l"'rtl d '' •IC'n lrt•n .1 h11ml r th1 'ni
"'"" I I lam1 ' \1 1 ,1.1'
South County
\ 11111 t rcponedl\ '"'ll' ~:' 111. ·"ti
lr1•n1 .1 I aituna '1~11cl h,111H JI• ni:
\\i J \ 'l.l '31u1t!J'
l r1l•11n~ 1hn1ul-\h .1 11'.11 unl1x led
1!,hl'n ""'"d''\I. J thtd rt'fll•rtt'l.1 \ 'tuk J <.~no \ hfrll l.\\( 111· tt•u•rdrr
.ind Ssu 1n ca\h trllm ,1 I .1ttum1 "•~Ul I
hl•ml' 1n the _:~.,Ile hind ol \ltuna
'Jturdl.1\ nt~ht
• • • .\ Ptll.'Slt"ll<) ldahl1 rt'>1dent re-~..,ncd that .1 S ~o , o"' of the 8 1h k
and a cht-d:ht.lOk ~~rt' 'tolen from~'
l ar parked 1n the ~ilt < rttl Bea~h t
1n Laguna Niguel ~u nd '
I
DMVamnesty reaps $400,000
.i\( R ... ~1FNTO ('\Pl -Thnla\e
hb collttted S . JO 1n 0' erdur
rqJStrauon ltt\ for 6.0<Xl 'chide'
throuah a '~°"~"~l.-old amnest~ pro&J"lm. the Pepartment of \.totor
Vch1ck$ sa)
notht'r SUQ. ha' bttn Lal.en
1n 1n cumntly d~ (et'\ o n tht-ume
vchtclt' D~V '"pc>knman l Nl.O
Cooper ad Tuoda).
The amD(sl} procr1m, the mult or
tepslataon i-~ a.-.. nJan
I It all,,~ vehicle ownen to
dehnquent ft'IJStnat1on tee
beforT March I. IQ S • .,.,thout
alt\
om .. , ~t1ma~ that rqistrat
hu lap;.ed o n I 2 million Of dw
motor ~chicles rcai. ttftd 1n
romt.a
The amacll .,.,.,.... cock
I . .\f\ct that. driven of unrqt
\c.b.ides mf..-ofS 'OS2'°
. '
86 federal deficit to top $220 billion;· trigger cuts
blllion. WASHINGTON (AP) -Con·
'onal and administration budact
mcials said today lbc federal defici t
or fitcal 1986 will exceed a staaerina
220 billion and tn,.cr the fint
und of aovemment-wade spendfoa
uts under the new Gramm-Rudman
The two aaencies, outlininJ pend-
ina cuts totatina S 11. 7 bi I hon that
would be rtquircd March I under
terms of the law, enumerated staff
and service cutbeck1 tut will be
needed in thousands of federal aacn-
des and Prosrams.
the I 98S deficit despite spendina cuts
approved last year by Conaress.
Under the law, automatic spending
cuts arc triifCred if the estimated
deficit, as projected by the two budget
offices.. exceeds the Ora mm-Rudman
deficit taraet for 198.S of S 172 billion
by at least S20 billion.
weiahtnl a oonstttutionaJ challenge to
the law by several member'! of
Conaress and a fedcraJ employees
union. The case is upccted to wind
up before the Supreme Court before
cislon by President Reagan to shield
all military personnel from any staff
cutbacks resulted in the sliahtly
hi&her pereentaae of cuts for the
remainder of Pentagon programs. March I. .,
dact~balancing law.
I ln separate projections required
under the new law, the White House
jOffioe of Man•mcnt and Budaet predicted a deficit of $220. I billion
•wrule the Convessional Budget Of. !fioe said that this year's red ink would
!amount to $220.9 billion.
ln all. across.-the.-board cuts of 4.3
percent will be needed in domestic
p~ms and 4.9 percent for the
military. the budaet aaencics said.
The extent ol the cuts had been
disclosed earlier by White House.
The projected deficit for the year,
which bepn Oct. l. will far surpus
In this case, the average of th e two
estimates•-S220.S billion -was
$48 . .S billion over the target, meaning
that the cuts will take place automati-
cally Mart:h I unless Congress moves
to block them or a federal court issues
a stay.
for this year alone. Congress
limited the overall impact of the
budget cuts to S20 billion for all of
fiscal 1986. That work's out to S 11 . 7
billion for the period of March I-Oct.
I, that' portion of the fiscal year
affected by the required cuts.
The law says the cuts must be
evenly divided between defense and
domestic programs. However. a de-
The first round of spendina cuts
under the Gramm-Rudman budget·
balancing law may force hiring freez-
es throughout the federal govern·
mcnt, require layoffs in some agen·
cics and result in thousands of
individual program cuts. U.S. of·
flcials say.
That will be the net effect of a S 11. 7
billion reductfon in government
spending. according to senior agency
..
Last fiscal ycar·s deficit was $21 2
Will interest rates continue
to faU?
Or will they soon ru.rn
arouOO and rise?
No one knows for sure.
That's why our ~month CD
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now. .
If rates continue to full (as
some experts predict). you will
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lf rates ll.lrn arou00 in the
spring (as odlers forecag), you
won't have long to wait before
you can shift your funds into an
investment that (Uys higher interest.
A short-term strategy.
Invest in our ~Month Great
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over aU the money you've earned with
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Invest more. Earn more.
Our ~Month Investor Account (UY~
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And. the interest in your ~Month
Investor Account is compooOOed daily. So
A three-judge federal panel as
you earn the highest pos.sible yield on your
interest rail!.
Current Current
6-Month CD Yield* Rate
$ I .CXX> to $ 2 .499 8.00% 7.70%
$ 2.50010 $ 9.999 8.27% 7.95%
$10.CXX> 10 $24.999 8.49% 8.15%
$25,(XX) to $49.999 8.S4% 8.20%
S50,CXX> and ovcc.. 8.(,()% 8.25%
Make the mbst of your interest.
The inte~1 you earn in your ~Month
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lf you choose to have it credited
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Groot American
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I . ,.
•
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....... (fl\\T\I lll(\\.C1I (111 '1' lluntlnaton 84-.. 11.~I\~ \11..1<·•· ,., \If\: ·~··'•"POf'l ........ ,,, .. l">f•f<l~.u•h-141!111\•llalllnllhi.tld.,ll M~ftnt A•f 117,\ll~
ft111t1o1-... Pton'l'llhl, 10 1 I U.1lt-.1,d\h,I t»\ l"fll •I ll'lfRI .lkll, 'HH l,.Nn \It .IOW 1\.&I • \'4JMnll 8a\, I \f•Wlilf\:h 811 li'lu1~l'l'"•C'lllN'1lflll lllUtll, unn.~m 1';1~ 1W "~·~•"II · .._nt ~t. t•ll' r1 C """'' A<.11Jll!11'1\ • ~n ( """""'" "'tftMI Pb.JC .. \·cn..l.t '""°' .~hi• l\L \\UOttA°'<, C.Ol ,, \ \MlllHnl II*'•,,,_,
'41'1.t <\11o1t""1 •tn MJ WO! fl1\l •°'1lftlf' 1\lo.thl 81 """'·~'''~"Ill l11.i111 \1c ~)• ._.... \~. lllll' \I.ti« A•t Ql\\~IU,. "oudbr~. 1\N&f',_'I Pb} \W 8*1'
I .. 11n1 lfilh. :J 1()1 p..,.,;1r \<llrn.w \~ 'nl• fl flit@ • .!.'M. (I fi'fd RJ M 10 1.!)I • M~ \ lty., '\l\~ (1"1dlJ ~'.'IU.~ •I .. 111111 \IJlll1. '\clll? C'n""" \alley Pb ~ l~\ 6?~l .__, __ ..,. '-"Juan t"1plolr11nn. 11~!1('~11111 .. •('~•lr•n.•1161 ~7
0..1-\MDcttS.-1 •I """°S..""'•"°"li~~--S... ........ ~ •F"'1~ .... 0fSrufl ........ ••1~~ .. ·it-o11~· -0-,~.
-c .. ._ •• w .......... ~_..,,......,...,..,,~....., ... c-.-....,... ....... ,."'.,..,._,...._.,....h_,.. •• ..,_._,. ••-· .. ~6"117'"''"'~ \!If-.. n., ... ""''*" ....,.., ............ _... ...... _ ..... " r..,.,..., ......... .,._ .......... (If ............ _...,... ................... __ ...., ........... IMJ ........ .,
•
'
officials who spoke Tuesday on
condition they not be named.
At that, the rcductio,ns will n~t
approach those that will oome u1
subsequent fiscal years. when the
Gramm-Rudman act takes fuJI effect.
.. Hinng freezes were expected to be
inslltuJed throuah~ut the aovem-
ment. with layoffs hk~ly at a number
of agencies. accordina to several
government offi~i~ls who also SP:Oke
only on the cond1t1on of anonymity.
Labor Departmer:it ~pokesma!'
David Dcmerest ~1.d,. We don t
have a lot of flex1b1hty from one
program to another."
Coke link
probed·in
Nelson's
·plane fire .
WA 'HI NGTQN (AP) -A fire
ignited by "free-basing" cocaine rnay...
have caused the New Year's Eve
plane crash that kallcd rock 'n' ro!I star
Rick Nelson and six others, published
reports said today. . .
Sources said prehm1nary reports
indicate Nelson's body contained a
measurable level of unmetabolized
cocaine, which means th_e drug had
not been absorbed •nto has system at
the time of death. The Washington
Po!it reported. But final laboratory
reports arc not available yet
Rudy Kapustin. National .T~s.
ponation Safety Board chief in-
vestigator. was quoted by the Dallas
Morning News as confirm ing that th.e
board was investigating the poss1-
b1lity of a drug-related fire.
However. fra Furman, a NTSB
spokesman. 53id: "The board has no
evidence now to support that kind of
speculation and no autopsy rcpon on
the passengers from .any so~r~."
Free-basing requires mixing co-
caine with flammable ether or am-
monia. After the chemicals
evaporate. the "free-base" cocaine is
usually smoked in a glass pipe held
over a steady name .
Are Americans paying
mobsters surct:iarge?
WASHINGTON (AP)-The ma·
nipulation of a few corrupt unions has
enabled organized crime to become
so entrenched an the marketplace that
millions of Amencans "unknowingly
pa y a surcharge" to mobsters for a
wide variety of goods and services, a
pres1den11al commission says.
Winding up the first com-
prehensive federal probe of labor and
management racketeering since the
McClellan hearings of th e 1950s. the
President's Commission on Or-
ganized Cnmc concluded Tuesday
that cnmc famahes and syndjcates arc
"increasingly using labor unions as a
tool to obtain monopoly power" in
ke)' sectors of the economy.
The 18-member comm1ss1on
charged that federal enforcement
effons are fragmented and inade·
quate to stem the tide. and it faulted
the administration for political tics to
the Teamsters because the rela·
t1onship simply does not look good.
Sinkhole revealing
a rcheologtcal bonus
MIAMI (AP) - A sinkhole JUSt
outside the city as revealing one of the
richest archaeological sites in North
America. providing evidence that
humans lived here 10.000yearsagoio
a cool climate they shared with lee
Age animals. scientists said.
Bones and other evidence show
that long before Ice Age glaciers
melled. creating the Everglades and
Biscayne Bay by raising the sea level,
earl) humans who possessed tools
such as scrapers and kni ves hved in
what as now southern Dade County.
Vibration not faulted
in fatal Galaxy crash
WASHINGTON (AP)-A federal
investigation has uncovered no
evidence that a severe vibration
caused a Galaxy Airlines chaner
plane to crash a year ago, and
co ncludes the pilot should have paid mo~ attention to keeping the plane
fl ying.
I he tour~ngane Lockheed Electra
with 71 people aboard crashed shortly
after taking off from the Reno, Nev ..
airport last Jan. 21 , killing 70 ~le.
The only survivor was thrown free as
the plane plowed throuah a rec-
reational vehicles lot and caught fire.
Penny Stocks
An Os>1>0rtunlty Of Tlae 80'•
Por Your FrH R•port
Call MIKE CABAN ·
1-I00-531-5314 ......
NA D tou•t•Hl ..... .,.
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\
~ ----
Top cotirt tackles religious questioris Shuttle astronauts cut
space voyage by a day WASHrNo:ro~ (AP) -The Su-
w·eme Court JUSt1ces had questions o~ l;he lawyers: What if a pcf'IOn's ~haious be~iefs demanded he wear a
b11 cross wath his miUtary uniform? o~.a beard, or. turban?
.What 1f your client wanted to sa~1~fy his reli4ious ri&hts in the
m1btary by w~annJ a derby?" Justjcc Byron R. White said. Wo~ld t~e aovernment be guilty of
violat!n& hu constitutional rights if it told ham "no"? ~hat 1f . someone's religion re-
quired cocaine for ceremonies? Must
the i~"'.crnment say OK on grounds of reha.ious freedom? ·
The point the justices were tryina to
malce as they heard arauments in two
'Baby Doe'
policy gets
court test
WASHING.TON (AP)-The Re-
agan administration clashed with the
nation's medical establishment today
an a Supreme Court showdown over
lhe federal government's asserted
role an investigating and regulating
medical treatment of babies with
severe binh defects.
Justice Department lawyer Charles
J. Cooper argued that a 1973 law
banning discri mination aaainst
handicapped people gives federal
regulators the ~wer to make sure no
hospital recei ving federal money
denies nourishment or treatment to a
child "solely because of its handi-ca ." ~ut lawyers for the American
Hospital Association and the Ameri-
can Medical Association said Con-
gress never intended the Rehabili-
tation Act of 1973 to g.i ve the
authority sought by the gove rnment
in such S<H::alfed Baby Doc cases.
"This is not an easy case," Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor, who domi-
nated questioning from the bench
during the hour-long argument
session. said at one point.
When Richard L. Epstein of Chi-
cago. representing the hospital as-
sociation. accused the administration
of "grasping" at the 1973 law in its
effort to intrude into hospital de-
cision-making. O'Connor said, "You
have to come to grips with the
possibility .. , the government's inter-
pretation of the law as correct.''
And when Ben. W. Heineman Jr. of
Wasb.ington. D.C .. representing the
AMA, referred to "highly intrusive"
investigations of "federal Baby D<k
squads arriving hours after birth,"
O'Connor countered by saying
"nothing m the ( 1973 law's) legislat-
ive history says Congress dad not
intend" that.
But O'Connor also peppered
Cooper about the wisdom of sui>-
planting ~te regulation with federal
anterventaon.
Justice Thurgood Marshall told
Cooper he was trying to.bolster "the
right of the federal government to
move into what forcentuncs has been
a state matter."
Reagan hails
sacrifices of
'gutsy' King
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan hailed Martin Luther
Kin~ Jr. today as a brave and
passionate "drum major for justice."
a gutsy civil nghts leader whose
sacrifices made Amenca "different,
and better."
The president was celebrating
K.mg's birthday with a visit to a grade
school named for the slaan minister in
a predominantly black neighborhood
of Washington.
In an address for students at the
Martin Luther King Elementary
School. Reagan emphasized King's
non-violent approach to winninK
civil rights for blacks.
"Martin Luther King was right to
insist that the civil rights movement
be non-violent. And he was bra ve,"
R~n said. "It takes a lot of guts not
to hll back when someone is hitting
you -and he had that kind of guts."
Rcapn called Kina the most force-
flll and effective leader of what was to
become a great American revolution.
and said he used the tactic of"saying
no in a peaceful way."
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reliaious-freedom cues Tunday was:
How far must the aovemment bend
its rules in order to allow Americans
their constitutlonallr auanntecd npt of .. free exercise' of reli&ion?
'Uawyers for two clients fiahtina
wet att and military-unifonn restric-
tions on rcliaious arounds didn't
pretend to have the answers.
But the "what if' questions froro
several of the nine justices -includ·
ina John Paul Stevens. William J.
Brennan and Cf-lief Justice Warren
Burger as well as Wl\ite -seemed to
show a coun thinkina hard about the
broader ramifications of the de-
cisions it will make this year on the
subject.
In lhe two specific cases araued
Young
Men's
Assorted
Tuetday:
-A federal appeals court here had
ruled last year the Afr For~ was
within its riahts in tellina Capt. S.
Simcha Goldman. an Onbodox Jew
and an ordained rabbi. he had to quit wearina his yannulke. or skuU cap,
when in uniform as a clinical psychol·
oaist at March Afr Force Base in
California. ·
-A federal district court in Penn-
sylvania had ruled health officials
had to resume welfare payments they
cut off to a S-year-old named Little
Bird of the Snow, whose parents
n:fused to let the government use her
Social Security number.
Computer use and dissemination
of the number -which lhe parents
say was unwattan&Jy applied for when
the a.itl wat an anlant -would under
the parents' Indian tnbal beliefs ~rob
her ability &o beoomc a holy person."
lawyer Gary Gildm wd.
In both cases. federal lawyen
araued that the principle of the
aovemment's riaht and ability to
make usabk rules -botb c1viJian
and ~i1itary -was at lcut as
imponant as che specific problems
that miaht be caused by makina
exceptions for Little Bird and Gold·
man.
In fact. attorneys for all concerned
agreed that allowing lhe Indian airl
and the Jewish psychologist to have
their way would not cause anyone
much harm.
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) -Columbaa's IAtonaoaa, 25
days late in aoina into s~. are com1na home a day car1y Thunday from a costly tnp NASA twice considered canoclaq.
Tbe National Aeronautics and Space Admina11ntioa ..W
Tuesday the shuttle will return bome after only four days ia .,..
instead offive, c:itioa the rush to prepare the craft for its nn1 mitlioe
and the possibility of bid landin& weather later 1n the week.
.. Don't shoot the beattr of this mes~ ... Million Control
communicator James Weatherbee bcued Columbia's seven-man CftW
as be told lhem the shuttle would lancfhere at 5:28 a.m. PST Thunday,
the first ship landioJ at the Florida spaccpon 1n nine months.
"We copy," said mission com mander Robert Gibson. a hint o(
regret in has voice. "You'n: ioana to brina us home early." :
It came as no surprise. The astronauts we~ told before they wen 1
launched Sunday that they might be brou&ht back early 'to avoid
jammina up NASA's amb1t1ous schedule of IS shutt&e nia1tu this yar. ~
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-
Second U .S. carrier nearing Libya Fighting in third day In
battle for S(>utll Yemen
WASHINGTON (AP)-A teicond
American a.itc:rat\ carrier WU ex-
pec1Cd to move into ~ Medhtt-
ruean Sea today, two days after
Libyan jets inte~P'ed a NaVY. surveillance plane in uHernation.al
aJ11J*iC and briefly shadowed iL
Altbouch the U!7.!n flabten -
two Soviet-made Mi0-2S1 -Qlide
no threatenina moves toward the
Navy plane, two U.S. F-A·l8 jet
fiabters were ICf&IDb&ed from the
carrier Coral Sea to intercede if
ncceuary.
Monday's incident. disclosed by
administration sources Tuesday, was
described as lbe first d1rec:t~otact
between U.S. and Lib~n for6!"to lbe wake of increased U.S.-Llbyan ten~
sions over the Dec. ~7 tenonst attack
on Rome and Vienna airports.
Tbe United States bas accused
Libya of supportina the teTTOrist
croup that conducted those attacks.
As a ttSult o( those tensions and
inc::reued activity by Soviet naval
ships, the aircraft c:ame:r Saratop and
an acwmpanyioa poup of smaller
wantups was ordered away from a
routine deployment in the Indian
Ocean last week and into the Mcditer·
ranean to join the carrier Coral Sea.
The Coral Sea. from wbicb the E-lA el«tronic swwillance plane
had been dispeicbed. wu reDOt1ed In
the Ionian Sea. aoutbeast oflt.iy and
due north of Libya, The s.q'Oll
arrived at the IOUihem eat.ranee of
the Suez Canal late Tuctday rtiabt en
route to the Meditmuean, IOCOf'd-
ina to Suez City 'shippina souf'QCS wbo
asked not tp be identified.
Defense SccrcW}' Cas~ W.
Weinberaer, altho\.ICb proVldin& no'
details. oonfirmed lbe incident in-
volvina the Libyan fight.en Tuesday
evenina. He wd he found nothing
remarkable about the affair because
Ubyan planes had patroUed in the aenera.I area before.
.. Libyan planes have been up in
that area. This is a little farther nonh
than they've been before, but I don't
think t.hue's anyt.hina unusual about
it." Wein be~ said.
The administration sources also
so~t to downplay the incident.
notana the Libyan MiGs had turned
t.ck toward home before the F-A-l 8s
arrived on the scene. One source a.arced. hpwever, the MiGs had
appeared pnexpectcdly and moved
unusually 1 close to the surveillance
plane -.. within 200 feet ...
Bya.Aaeeta ... Prell . . MANAMA, Bahrain -Diplomats and Penan. O'!lf ~un:a aaad today
that South Yemeni air force planes bombed the capa~I s a1rport ~ harbor,
and thaJ forctt lo'yal to the president made ~JI pans in. the, third day of
fiahtina for control of the impoverish~ ~vtet ally. ~ciaJUed~ ·~ .. ~ .. t'~nlv African country of AJetria said •!1 AJaena.n diplomat was..... an ~ ..,.tans.
They did not identify bim. or. 11ve lhe ca~umstancet of has death. Japanete
sources had said earber the diplomat was lulled by a slrly bullet.
Rea6an .ed• ol>en ald to Contra
Aquino backer
shot to death
MANILA, Pbili . (AP) -
Gunmen killed a ~tician who
had endorsed oppositJon candidate
Corazon Aquino today pQlicc and
opposition officials wd. lt Wis the
f~t lcilling reponedly lirtked to the
pteSidential election campaian.
Chileans stone Kennedy's car;
shout 'dea:th' to visiting senator
WASHlNGTON _Nicaraguan rebels would get It J~ast $2.S million in
open U.S. military aid under a plan that Prcsid~nt Rega!' as ex~ to aend
to Conaress soon, administration and conaress1011al offic~Js sa¥. ~.t would be
tantamount to rccognlzina (the rebels) as a 1overnment. 10 eule, one weU-
placed congressional source said Tucsda)'. If approved. lt w~uld ~ the f~t
open military aid the United State.s hu given the rebels fiahuna Na~ s
leftist Sandinista government. The ansurgcn~s-known as ContrU-receaved
an estimated $80 million in covert CIA assistance from 1981 to 1984.
' "" Sov1et. warn Japan <JD 'Star Wan
TOKYO -Tiie Soviet Union's foreign minister t~I~ h!s Ja~nese
counterpart today that Japan shoul~ be cautio~~ about part1c1paun1 WJth the
United~ in research o~ the Star ~ars space weapons~· a
Foreign Mirustry official said .. The . o~c1al, who spoke on condiuon. of
anonymity quoted Soviet Foreign Manastcr Eduard Shev~n~dze as saying
Japan sho~ld "consider its own national intcr:es~" ~heri dectding whether to
cooperate in research on a space-based anu-m1ss1le system.
An opposition leader identified the
victim as Jeremias de Jesus. Former conarcssman Jose Yap also said de
Jes us was killed a day after he told the
U.S. Embuay that armed men were
antimidatina opponcnu of President
Ferdinand E. Marcos in Tarlac. Mrs.
Aquino's home province.
Yap, who now works with Mrs.
Aquino, also said he was checking
reports that the driver of de Jesus'
vehicle was lcilled in the shooting.
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy had to be flown
out of the Santiago airport today by
helicopter after 200 supponers of
Chile's military aovernment blocked
roads from the airport. Later,
protesters stoned the senator's car
with rocks and egs.
Some demonstrators carried sips
that said "Death to Kennedy." The
Massachuuens Democrat bas de>-
nounced Chile's human rights record
and voiced opposition to fresident
Augusto Pinochet's government.
Kennedy arrived from neiahboring
Argentina. where 81 people were
arrested Tuesday d~ng a violent
protest aga1nst Amtncan banker
David Rockefeller.
Kennedy talked with U.S. Am-
bassador Harry Barnes and several
Chilean opposition leaders in the
airport's VIP lounge before being
flown to a nearby children's hospital
for a scheduled visit.
Kennedy was inside the airt>on for
more than an hour and a halt before
beina flown out.
As he left the hospital, a new group
of demonstraton threw eggs and
rocks at Kennedy's car. The motor-
cade did not stop on its way to a sociaJ
club in downtown Santiago, where
the senator was to hold a series of
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Slippers
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245 Forest Ave • Laguna Beach
Selected styles limited to stock on hand
Coping with Stress
meetings.
Police at the airport did not seem to
make great efforts to clear the airport
road of the protesters, who were
members of the Democratic lndepen·
dent Union, a right-~ng group
supporting the government.. which
took power in a J 973 coup.
The demonstrators forced the cars
leaving the airport to pass slowly so
they could see who was inside. When
they identified opposition figure~
they tbttw tomatoes and eggs at the
cars.
Gabriel Valdes. a leading opposi-
tion figure, was hit with several
tomatoes.
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Rebel leader •arrenden ln Le~on
SEIRUT -President Amin Gemaycl's main Chri~tin rival. Elie
Hobeika. surrendered today after his hcadquarte.rs near ~ttut harbor w~rc
barraged for eight hours by forces loyaJ to.the president, m1htary .sou.rces ~Jd.
But militia sources reported th.at fightmg between Gemayel s ~t-wang
Phalange Party, backed by rebel units of the Lebanese Forces mihua. and
irregulars supporting Hobcika. commander of the Lebanese Forces, was
continuing.
Mmco Clty gripped by cold •• ve
MEXtC-0..ClTY -The coldest weather in 30 years caused !Jew h~dsbips
for thousands Jell homdcss by last year's earthquakes, but officials said today
no new deaths were added to the nine victims already claimed by the cold ~ve.
The government newspaper El Nacional ~d today in a front-paae hcadhn.e:
"Yesterday the Mexican Rcpubhc Expcnenced the Coldest Day of Tb•s
C.Cntury." The National Weather Service said the overnight temperature hit 23
at the airport. on the eastern outskirts ofMellico City.
OPENING
SOON
548-3632
Hope rises
for French
hostages
PARIS (AP) -Foreign Ministn-
Roland Dumas said hopes of freeing
four Frenchmen kidnapped in Leba-
non have increased since new. un-~=======================~J specified initiatives were made toward contacts in Lebanon. Syria
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and Iran.
Dumas said Tuesday on radio RTL
that France has not directly contacted
the captors, who claim to be members
of a fundamentalist Shiite Moslem
aroup called Islamic Jihad. or Islamic
Holy War.
Islamic Jihad, which is believed to
l\ave close ties to Iran, also has
claimed it kidnapped six Americans
missing in Beirut.
Last Friday, the captors released a
message accusin$ France of
"procrastination" an negotiations
and said the health of one hostage had
become "life threatening."
It was the second time a French
hostage was said to be in ill health,
and the references arc thouaht to be
about Marcel Carton, a 62-year-old
piiiiiiiiiiiiiT~!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiii,!ijiiiiiiiiiiimiii~iiiiiiiiift~il diplomat with a heart condiuon. · Dumas said Tuesday, however,
that ''initiatives" toward Lebanon,
Syria and Iran had been made,
leading to a "period of hope because
discussions have intensified." A
Frenchdelcption visited Iran on Jan.
3-7, and Dumas said its report was
being studied.
r
Guatemala's
new leader
cites abuses
GUATEMALA ClTY (AP) -
President Vinicio Cerezo, in-
augurated as Guatemala's first civ-
ilian pres!dent in 16 years, blamed the
'!Cvere economic problems facina his
new government on a tradition of
corruption and abuse of power.
I I I
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• Relaxation T raining
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• Motivation/Goal etting
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Cl lping with Stre"~ i~ a 12-w ee k
cn ur~c a t FVRHM . A free
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j,,nuary 30 '1t 7:00 p.111 . To re e rve
,l ~,1t, Celli 966·8006.
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Regional Hospital
. and Medical Center
I~ lli •••I• I 11 1011\ tllo\ l \wJ 1i-
Cerezo said in his inauJural ad-
dress Tuesday that no sncomina
president had ever fond Guatemala
1n worse sllape. The Central Ameri-
can country's $2.4 billion fo~ian debt
is four times laraer than its annual
l,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitfmmiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifjiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 export eamin.,, and that there is no money to pay internal bills, he said. tlo~ Caio{e, cf?u~w
save
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If their income was divided equally
amona them, each Guatemalan
would have the equivalent otabout
SO ~9ts a day .to spend on food,
housana, education. transportation
and health, he said.
"The truth is cnaeler and harder "
he said. "We know tha& a fe~
Guatemalans have much more tban
this and ma.ny others have nothina."
The president disuft<lcd bis 90v-
cmment from the military rqjmes of
the pest, accusina them of a lack of
principles that cauled Guatemala's
troubles. •
"For absurd and lld forc:a of
history we are a people that hu been
thrown out of its bouM ud todey we
are comina back 10 it." he wet.
Ceruo, a ctwbmatk •J-year-old
Christian Democrat who bas
aurvived three UMMination at-
tempt.a. said Guatemala's 7. 7 miJUon
people had. recovered their rilbt to
free e.preaaon.
"We are a people wbo have Iona been denied upreuion aod many ~re penecuted for MyiQI tbe tnalh.
We have repined tbe wont." he told
the pecked National Tbeaw.
As he spoke, about 400 demoe·
Straton crowded aeaiatt \be ..... 10
the tbeatersroun4st ~to be
ltt in and ukina ror n.,....UO.. -
Othe di=· nce or • ••ildi or uate 1 o•cr \be ,_..
Some b.ama. .... .,...... •l ..,
lo 31,000 .... uve vaa'otlld "
been 1c•llecl ia me a.111 '' ~ • ~
'
'1
. --~-----
TV Lii ''"'(I ' I,) I , , • L)
I
Oscar-winning actress
Donna Reed dead at 64
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -AU-
American, picture-perfect television
mom Donna Reed, who reaped her
pat.est acti" honors as Af ma the
prottitute in From Here ,., Eterni-
ty.'' will be buried Friday.
The Academy Aw1rd-winn11.1 ac-
lretJ. two weeks shy of her 65th
birthday, died at her Beverly Hilla
home Tuesday of pancreatic cancet.
Her husband, retired Anny Col.
Grover Asmus, was at her side.
.. ,, was l>f'Obably just as well. We
expected it. Her death was imminent. Jt was kind of rouah." said Miss
Reed's brother, Bill MuJlenaer, 58, a
real estate qent in Denison, rowa.
"I sa.w her at Th,nksaivini. She wu about Jike ~y normaJ person
·-would be when they find our tbcy
·uve cancer -depreued. There was
not much hope of remission or that it
could be treated. There's always hope,
but the li&ht at the end of the tunnel
wun't very bright," Mullengersaid in
a telephone interview.
Funeral services were scheduled at
2 p.m. Fri~y at Beverly Hills
Presbyterian Church. Burial will fol-
low at Westwood Cemetery, said Pam
Flynn.I.. whose husband, Harry, was
Mass Keed's publicist.
Mjss Reed won an Oscar for best
supportina actress in 1953 after she
Portrayed a prostitute in "From Herc
to Eternity,' the tale of Army life on
the eve of Pearl Harbor.
"I can remember in the beginning,
when every auy who saw her on the
screen bad a crush on Tunna,
particularly myself." said singer·
actor Frank Sinatra, a co-star in
"From Herc to Eternity."
"Donna was a lov,ely lady, gentle
.
Deukmejian
'will find '
AIDS funds
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
George ·Dcukmcjian says he can
"easily" find whatever extra money is
needed for AIDS research, and that he
wiU "have to consider" a tax cut if
state revenues grow much more.
In a 55-minute Capitol news con-
ference Tuesday, the Republican
aovemor touched on a wide range of
political and policy issues -from
taxes and toxics to State Bar dues -
but he cautiously hedaed .most
answers and revealed no new policy
st.ands.
He said if state revenues in the
contina year exceed the estimates in
the $36. 7 biUion budget he submitted
to the Lqislaturc last Friday, they
could lriacr tax rebate.or c~ts _un~er
provisions of a spending l_1m1ts in-
itiative approved by voters in 1979.
"I have not considered a Wt rebate
up to this point," because he has given
a hiaher priority in the past three
years to "rcbuildmg·· state suppon of
schools. law enforcement and mentaJ
health prOll'&mS, Dcukmejian said.
• "However. we arc approaching the
limit imposed by Proposition 4 in
terms of the amount of growth the
people have authorized," he said. "If
WC &et close to that limit, and indeed
there are some unanticipated rev-enues, then we would have to con-
sider returning the revenues, because
that's what the law provides."
County one
of costliest
living areas
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Cali-
fornia upheld its reputation of having
the highest housing costs in the nation
last year with Orange County among
the top five most expensive areas in
the country, according to a study
released today.
Homes in the San Francisco metro-
politan arca. thc1nost expensive area,
sold last year for a median price of S 152.000, more than twice the na-
tional median price of $75.000, the
U.S. Leaauc of Savinp Institutions
reported. The median is the mid·
point, with half the homes 1ellin1 for
more and half for less.
After San Francisco, the most
e1tpen1ivc ~ for home purchases wu New York City with a median
11111 l)rice otSl29,700, fOllowed-,,Y
BoltO!'J.,. $ 126,000; Los Anlclcs.
Sll3,uuv: and Anaheim-Santa Ana-
Oarden OrovcJ with a median aaJcs
price last year ofS 122,000.
Bird prepared
t o vote for dea t h
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 20S.
~ ~fente related by aupporten of
Cldtf Juatb Rote Bird 11ys lbe is
.. ftally prep9t'Cd to vote for a death
ICllteDCe tbat ii properly obtained
under the law and Constitution."
Tbe remart .... made Tuelday in ...,. of the .. Prolecuton' Wbite
Piper, .. a document releued lut May
by tbe Calilonlia Disuict Att~
lMl dm'ln Bird with deli~~ ctillonial I.be ..... Supreme Coun •
record OG tbe deatb penalty and other , ....
Tiiie proMCUton' atudy ecculld the
co.ft. perdaalarty l6rd .... Juttic:el JOllPb Orodin aad Crva leynoeo, of UW.. ".,..cl a continuous attack
-,t~~ ...... 8'rd....,
Yoe.dto~Cvtry ... ___
...... 00111i•1.-..1 wl ........ ...
,. ...... all but daree -a tallY that aow...,.. 1t .52 out oU$.
DOnnaReecl
and kind," he said in a· statement
issued through bis publicist. "God
bless h~r."
Miss Reed's most memorable roles
came on television. For eight seasons.
beginning in 1958, she appeared in
"The Donna Reed Show" as house-
wife Donna Stone, married to a
pediatrician played by the late Carl
lktz and raising a pair of children
played by Paul Peterson and Shelley
Fabares, who was later replaced by
Patty Peterson.
For her last television role. she
returned to being a mom. this time to
+ N
J
the Ewina clan on the pnme-ume hit
soap opera "Dallas."
In 1984, Miss Reed assumed the
role pcrf ected by Barbara Bel Geddes
for s11t seasons. Miss Bel Geddes, who
left because offailina health, returned
a year later and Miss Reed was fired,
promptina her to-fiJc a $7.S million
suit in April against Lorimar Pro-
ductions and CBS.
ln August, she accepted a SI
million settlement .
Despite the bitterness of the dis-
missal, she was remcinbcred fondly
by "Dallas" colleagues.
"I am extremely saddened by her
i-ssini. My heart goes out to her
family," sauj Larry Hagman. who
played her son J.R. Ewing.
''She was just a lovely person. It
(her death) huns a lot." said Leonard
Katzman. producer of "Dallas''"from
its bcgjnning in 1978 until 1985. He is
now a creative consultant for the
series.
Losing the role after a season was
difficult for Miss Reed. Katzman
said.
"She was hurt and rightfully so, but
decisions are sometimes made in the
name of ratinfs. and I think that was
one of them.' When he talked with
her last summer, he said, "that hurt
was still there."
"Donna Reed was above all else a
lady and a consummate pro-
fessi onal," actress Victoria Principal
of "Dallas" said in a statement. "'Her
passing a war, so eal'ty-1-ft her life is a
real tragedy. ·
Actress Linda Gray of "Dallas"
commented, "I loved her as a human
being and en).oyed immensely woric'-
ina with her. '
90UTH CCM81'
80Uftt ••TOI. IT. AT WlOWUt acwe,.. IOUT'M COAST "-AU
... AU(
llOA &••MM ...,,_c..,.... ••c•••.._a..,...•11
Orange CoMt DAIL V PILOT /Wedi~, Jenuecy 11, ttll * AT
-'
·' -u.-•(I) MCME ** "I'm G«*ig To It ,__..,
(1M11 Ok* Slrflnt, ...._ ...
cfW.
I
OilESS FOil LESS . ~
For 1 Rois StOle neer you call toll tree 800-~5'-ROSS
STORE HOURS Mon Fr~ 10 AM·9 PM
Set 9 30 AM 6 30 PM. Sun 11 AM·S PM
. . ..
Import dlapute aettled
Jaeqaellne Rita checka an automated bra,s. lnC operation ued In m•Jrtnc ezpanalon
taDka for phambt.q and beatint •Y•tema at
Amtrol, IDc., ln ••t Wanrkk, R.I. Tile
manafactarer recently announced eettle-
meat of an lntenaatioD&l trademark dlapate
wttb P'lamco of Tbe Netherlanda. The Datch
company bu~ to cJaance the name and
pacU.e dee!CD of taDb lt uport. to tbe
United" State..
'•
Our Chicken Planks' just got better . Now,
they're made of natural whitemeat from
the very be .. ~.t pa1 o f the breast . So they're
plump. juicy. and tender. Chicken the
Long John's way wa s always special . But
now ... ifs sensa tional!
[ONG]OHN
.SILVEl{S
•• •
Good at all .
~•rtlclP-•tlng ehoppea .
,
\
Huttori reorganizing
Jo " NEW YORK (AP) - E.F. Hutton Group Inc. bas Co.1ublidiary. the company said. . ,.
announced a m~or reoraani.zation, includina 1everaJ top Rinerei.ser was hired in. Jun~ from ~emit Lynch &,
man-.ement chan.es. aimed at atreamliriina the com· ·Co. where be was an execuuve vice president. •
pany an to two divia.ons. 'The reorpnization waa baaed on a plan developed~: H~~ton said it ~II foc~s on tw~ "~t~tqjc. business Rit~creiser 11 th~ request .of Robert F0!11on. H uttorf~
aroups, one covenna services for ind1viduaJ investors chairman and cbaef executi ve, Nelson said. Nelson wd;
and the other coverina inatitutionaJ and capital markets. fomon had final say on the plan; :
Spokesman Steven Nelson said Tu~y that unlike Scott Picroe, formerly presadcnt of E.F. Hutton 4',.
some other brokerqe firms ~t ha ve upianded into such Co .. will become vi~haarman of the parent co~~~Y.:
fields. as real estate .and credit ~s. Hutton intended to where be will "ha.v~ o.vcraJI f11•~~~.ent.respons1b1huet,.
remaan focused on ats current Imes of business. and assume addltlonal rcsponsibthues. the oornpany . :·w~ arc not a financi-1 services coaaJomerate. Our said. .
m1ss1on 11 narrower," the compeny said. Hutton spokesman Robert M. Sharkey saad the ~·~· Hutton &. ~.. Hutton's atock brokeraae company would .shortly announce the appointment of a
subsidiary, pl~ p~ an May to 2,000 counts of mail new chief financial officer ~nd a new aeneral counsel. ...
and w1re fraud anvolvana a scheme to earn extra interest Hutton announced an September that 1eneraJ1
by deliberately ovcniraftina ill benk acco@u. Nelson counsel Thomas W. Rae was llkint an early retirement
said the company had intended to reorp.nize before that. and that Thomas Lynch was relinquishing bis duties as,.
Robert Ritte~i1er, who has been president and chief chief financial officer, vice cfaainnatt-and corporate. opcrati~officerofHuttoo since last summer, will take on secretary. Sharkey said today that Lynch. had bee"''
the additional position of president oftbc E.F. Hutton&. reassigned within the company.
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u~•_., .. , . ~· · Stock prices c~imb il11 iJ :{ ~ h ~ ~ NEW YORK (A P) -Stock pnccs showed 11 M~~\, ~ Ii ~ 'tt':Hi. 1 broad gain today. cont1nu1ng their recovery from u~ Ho J ';'-• , last week's sell off. Bn 11 0 1 , , ..t ~ The Dow Jones average of 30 tndustriaJs rose ~ ~ l t 1 , ' ; • 7.22 points 10 1.526.26 b> l p.m. on Wall Strttt. 8~ : ::Mfft t l:. . Gainers outnumbered losers by more than 2 to
u 1 p1 ~ ~ • I among New York Stock EK.change-hned 1ssun. 8~ l = .. 'i t~ : Pnces oflong-term government bonds, which ~ :: "llli 121~ r-:• • move IO the Opposite d1rcct1on from interest rates. u::i;1 ~ is ,1 ~ ·-;, •• climbed S5 to SI 0 for every S 1.000 1n face value in 8~,~ os. 13 J ,.~;.. . toda)'s activity.
u rd o1 '~ '' ·-• lntemauonal Business Machines rose Pf• to
u1nwn H~ s f ,.,. . 151 1n acuve trading. The company 1s expected to u DTV ' 10 S6 S1S .. ~ ' I • I
81t :1 • t · rt'pon higher founh.quarter profits later tlus week 8~~,: ~ 10 fJ1 1 : Champion Spark Plug chm bed 'h to I 0¥... The 8'.J';'r, 116 ~ ? ~"; • -company. noting what 11 descnbcd as unusual
u•dMM 1 1 ''" • : act1,·1t} in its stock. said 11 wasn't involved 1n an) 8~~ 11 ~ •~'J 1~ • j kind of merger talks. 8 m I B 1 tt:~ • .; Precious metals stocks wcr~ mostly h!Jher. ~ 1 ... ,. ,. 1 ~~ • " t wtth ASA Ltd. up I )/a at 39111: Homestake Min&ng u n p1 ~ •1 + i. up l/, at 26: Dome Mines up ~ at 11 1/t. and 8 e' s 1~ ~ : ! ~ Campbell Red Lake Mines urc I at 231/•. Some Un IGk 17 ..,_ •
Un Kn JI 13 ~ • • " tn \cs II) rs have been bu) tng go d and sold-min in• e~R' • ."' I 'P3'l J. ~· ~ '>locks latel) on the theol) that a strongeroconom)
uw• 1 ij' ff fi"' • will bnng with 1t some pickup tn the 1nflat1on rate 8::!~:9 1 1 ri; • ; The NY E's composite index of all ns listed Unl.,.FO I I •
u nL."' 1 f l~ f' common stocks gained 71 10 119.92. >\t the 8= 'ii ~ 1in 1 1 • • 1 • I .\mencan Stock Exchange the market value 1n~ u:k~~~ ,'JL1 ., ,r wa" up 1.09 at :!46.04 8:r{. L01 Jn 13 7'! H~ Volume on the Big Board came to 81 24
UIPL. 01 I>' 1S 't t • u1PL. o1 ;o 1• ~ • m1llton share~ "'llh tv.o hou~ to go
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WHAT AM£x Om
NEW YORK (AP) Jan 1' Pr•v
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AMEX LEADERS
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WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK (APl Jan l e Prt'lf T-~ l AOv~nc.cl Deel Md ¥~~ •1
Newl'I ' 67
N•w 19ws 7 7
NYSE LEADERS
NEW YORK lAPl -S.lff, c 11 m TUftdav price and net die~ of lhe IS mo,1 active N-York Stock E.ccl'lanpe 1uue1 tred1~ natfC>nally at more ll'lan l I Name v.une Lut CM.
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NEW YORI( I A P > -Most acl1vt! over ·11'19·counl9f \IO<'IO \uool1e<I bv NASO
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fortunetelling is heF cup ef tea
• rs the same old ritual lunch -
e time, same day, same purpose.
r old college sorority sisten, now
hin,1 30, meet once a week: to
m1serate about their mostly un-
sfactory relationsbi~.
•Heidi is in love with Tony and
"tony is in love with himself, she says. ~ristine, carolyn and Jill listen.
"Did he call you this week?" asks
Oiristine.
• "Call? Arc you lcidding -be sent a
ttle&ram to my office to apol~ for
clsippearing1"0rtwo weeu. And then
he left a love note on my carr''
"What's ,his problem?" Jill says
•th disgust. "f irst he's Don Juan.
~n he's Houdini."
"I can't help it. I continue to love
tiim." :· Hedi is stylishly attractive. bright •d lively -the oerl'cct tar&Ct for a ~ like Tony. Some wouJd label tBm a "womanizer." Others call him a .. miqynjst ..
A womanizer seeks to seduce and
<;enquer women for both physical and
paychological pleasure. .
A misogynist is a special kind of
.
womanizer. He takes great pleasure in
having excellent taste in the things he
acquires.
He sees elegant women as objects of
acquisition.
Tony. and other men like him are
terrific at hiding their true colors -at
least for a while. Until he's caught his
prey -he can be gallant and socially
seductive.
He's a man who likes himself -
and proudly parade,1 his education.
style and worldliness.
He wants-oh-so-much more than
sexual surrender. Tony wants Heidi
to fall for him -hook, line and
sinker.
But since he pursues onl y to
conquer, if she does fall. the game will
be over for them.
Misogynist-Tony is a woman-
abU9Cf'. Use bis fists? Never. Instead
be strikes out with words and criti-
cism.
He usually succccds in under-
mining the confidence of the women
who make the mistake of lovinJ him.
Just try and leave him, Heidi, and
Learte Oebbardt u d laer a ward.
prepant woman. I said it couldn•t be
me. I am an old beg (38 years old). In
fact," abelauahin&lyrecalled, "I said I
was aoina to aive this readin1 to my
younaer sister who wanted to have a
baby. And ... would you believe it.. two
months later, to my husband's and ~~~Ii
my total surprise, l learned I was
preanant with our third child. Janice
also predicted a blonde-haired dauah·
ter would be born to us. She was riaht
-Mckenzie is a darling tow-headed
little ladr,." "1 can t take any credit for anything
I say," Roper explained, "I am always
amazed when things happen. I just
deliver the message as I sec it. When I •
took into the tea cup, I am lookin.a at
the person's subconscious mind, and
he is pving me the readina; I am just
the interpreter."
J
Roper, who grew up in a small
Missoun t_own, was expose:d to the
psychic world with the simple words, 1 • ~~~~:r~£::1~~~~~·~·:~,"e~~~~a ~A psVchic reading
you're in for a new sure-fire round of
~uction.
"He'll never change," says Jill.
"Get rid of the good-loolcing
creep," Christine chimes in.
Carolyn, whose own lover is mar·
ried to someone else, agrees.
"At least my Tom follows through
when he 5'Ys he'll do something. As
soon as bis kids become teen-agers. I
know be'U marry me. You'll see."
Dr. AJpd la a awriqe 6 family
tMrapltt la C.NU def Mar. SM
welcomes yov respoues. U yoe wt ..
a reply, pleate eaclote a •tamped
aeU·addretaed nvelope. Wrtte to
lJMa AJcuJ, P,.D, c{o Dally PUot,
P.O. Box UM, Cotta Mesa I HH.
"In f 968," Roper explained, "l 'J. . ~i~C::.: ~.':tt~:~~~=c~~e~~~~~ .r.or .r.orm er skeptic read the leaves. I bad already tau&ht 1 C 1 C
myself to read an astrology chart. and
I was very interested in findin1 out By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVICH more about m yself and my family.
Anyway .. Oorotbydidthereadingand DelrPIWC,.• ' 1 1
predicted several things that wouUI onathan Thomas, a pseudonym for a busy Ora nae County tax attorney.
occur on a scheduled business trip I hardly seems the type to cross the threshold of an English tea house in search of
was tak:ina to Dallas. I went on the trip a psychic.
as planned, and everything Dorothy But that be did, scurrying from his office, dr'C$5Cd in traditional gray
said happened, including a severe ice pinstriped suit, white shirt and yellow paisley tic, to have Janice Roper conduct
storm, lost luggage and returning a reading for him. .
home with extra cash.•• "This is my first tea reading," Thomas confessed." But after my wife had
Roper was hooked. She began to met with Janice and she had confirmed certain events known only to the two of
seriously study the art, anxious to us ... mycuriosity was piqued. Then when llcarned that Janice's readings are
undentand why, as she practiced on always positive, I couldn't resist having my own."
family and friends, her readings were Thomas said he wanted Roper to give him some insights into his personal
always so accurate. life and the business world in which he operates. A major con~m to him was
"I have a wondctful ~ft," she said. a family relah"bnship that had been severed. ~~!~~t: ~u~e tf dcv~l~tp Im~~ "Surprisingly," Thomas said, .. I fclt·very comfortable inside the tea house.
.When I saw pictures in the very first Theambiencewaswarmandfriendlywith themuffied chatterofmenand
tea cups that I react. I was fascinated. 1 women enjoying a relaxing afternoon."
continued to study1 meditate ... and do Without an appointment, Thomas ~as forced to wait two hours for his
hundreds of readings. I wanted to reading. Tenaciously, however, he hung on, determined to have his chance.
make sure this gift was going to stay .. When Janice and l tinallygot together, she told me to sip the tt'I and think
with me. and it always has." of two questions that I wanted to ask her. Then, while I slowly enjoyed the tea,
Roper com bin cs Astrology with she looked up my birthdate in a large red asll ology book. She said thjs was to get
hertca reading. She uses the "Amcri-amorecompletepicturcofmeandthecventscurrentJyin my life.Janice
can Ephemeris for the 20th Century," doesn't really predict the future, but rather helps the person come inront.act
as her text. The book gives the with his subconscious thoughts and desires." he said.
position of the sun, moon and eight Thomas learned from Roperthat each reading 1s unique fort he person
planets for every day of the year frorQ drinking the tea. After each session, Roper clears the impressions from her
1900 to 2000. She also uses the book mind. Whensbe~nsanotberreading. her mind is free from any images.
whenever astrological symbols arc · ·r. fOc 2 986 found in the teacup to assist in timing "Janice gave measpec1 1c dateo tober 4, 1 ; on that day 1 will make
of events. an important decision that will involve a major expansion in my business. She
"Since the beginning of time. also said I would travel out of the state on behalf ofa client. The initials M. R
human beings have used the sky as a and W would affect my life in some way," he said.
giant clock. Timing is import.ant in Thomas was skeptical, because of the seventy of the family situation,
our lives. Life feels a lot lighter when when R.opeuaid that therelatiorubipcould be restored. However. be admitted
we are aware that there is a potential that his spirit was lifted at the prospect of a reconciliation.
better time for action. Astrology is "It was definitely a good experience to haveJanice help me get 1n touch
like a road map. It will show you the withsomeofmydrcamsandgoals."Tbomassa1d. "I think there area lot of
tum in the road, but you will have to thin$5 in m y subconscious that are still bottled up and need ventilation. I am
make the trip," she said. looking forward to meeting with her again for more uscf ul insights."
Realtors pay a tribute to their own
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
The night belonged to "Lady Jane" as
friends and fellow realtors gathered to pay
tribute to Jue Boyd at the 55th annual
awards banquet of the Newport Harbor-Costa
Mesa Board of Realtors.
merit from Orange County's Board of
Supervisors and program emcees Harry
Winters and Dwipt Dickey bestowed her
with the board's gift, Lalique bookends.
A rose toast by Jane's family and close
associates concluded the farewell and rallying
realtors stood in ap{>reciation of.Jane's years
of service in "organized" real estate.
The 1984 winner Paal F ruklla presented a
hu$e winner's trophy to Betty Rbea. An
acuve member of the board for many years.
Betty served in many capacities most
recently as vice president. '
"My husband has known about this
award since before Christmas," said Betty.
"He never told me. I was so surprised !" The dinner dance at the Balboa Bay Club
was Jane•s farewell as president of the board.
She has been involved in real estate in
Newport Beach for 41 years.
Addressing the 200 plus crowd, Mayor
Norma Hert101 said, .. I proclaim January 10,
J 986, to be Jane Boyd Day in the City of Costa
Mesa."
"Newport Beach also declares today Jane
Boyd Day," added R1dlelyn Plammer,
Newport's mayor pro tern.
Prior to presenting Jane with a state seal
charm, State Senator Mario Berseso• joked,
"If it were my way, rd have~ Jane Boyd state
holiday!"
Yes, it was Jane•s night. Supervisor Tom
Riley acknowledged her with a certificate of
And what did petite Jane say as she
moved aside for new board prez, Terry
McCardle? "I thank you all so much, but
you'll have to put up with me for a lot more
years yet!''
Following a dinner of roast beef, the real
estate professionals honored additional
superstars of 1985.
Mary Betb O'Deu presented Laurie
Gebhardt with the Affiliate of the Year
Award. Although Laurie, who works for
Mortgage Services, claimed she hadn •t done
anything special, her supporters disaarced.
"Personality and enthusiasm,•• sa.id fan
Carter Ford, "that's what she bas!"
The best kept secret of the evening was
the recipient of the Realtor of the Year award.
And don't you just love those real estate
stories? As one. reaJtor said, "I made my fint
real estate sale in 1959. I sold a house right on
the water in Newport Beach for $69,500. The
house recently resold for three million
dollars.''
Others seen swapping stories were Ed
Wolfe, WllJ and Beverly Woods, Steplaule
and ltea Mosley, Bob DIGraccio, Keiat Pleree
ltlrk IJrklud, Alu and Cud)' Flt~er, J...;
and Dlue Gius, George V91el, Miqe
Boada, Steve and SUroa Perry, Man and
Gall Preato., Bob and LU Barmer, Art and
Ellie Reese, Jlldy Welptmu, Kn Venaeqo
and Nlp el ud Betty Joe Bailey.
Papanui Is edited by Dally P ilot Style
editor Vida Deu .
-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/W~needl)'r JanulfY 161 1988
'Laguna' brlght musical Spoof
17 UTHU:t;~ CUMMING
o.llf .... C.. 0 *4:1
"Laauna,~ an impudent musical
written by Vic Bernell and Tom Mull~prt~ •. s fs the.corporate world and Its hi -tec::h, ha&h-finance hiJ)l
jinks. Pr. uced l~flY •. this surpns-
1naly lav11hp10duct.1on 1s showing at
the Forum Theater m Laguna Beach.
But what it has to do with Laguna is
anyone'sauess. (One suspects a shady
business practice here.)
Authors Bernell and Mulligan, who
once worked for the same large
financiaJ corporation, tell us that one
niaht, while shifting fund s around
"one joke led to another, and the idea
for'Laauna' was bom." We're given a
separate two-page handout to help us
follow t~e story (it doesn't help).
alona with the program which lets
drop that we'll "burst with pleasure"
at how funny the play 1s. (Remember
the two Czechs of "Saturday Night
Liver'"We'rejust twow1ld and crazy
guys.")
Thisguilessness, however, 1s part of
the infectious charm of"LaJuna."
One has the 1mpress1on that
Bernell and Mulligan stumbled onto a
huge chest full of great costumes and ·
JUst decided to wnte a musical
comedy a.round them. The costumes,
by Tara, arc inspired, the hajrdos
deli&htfully demented, the di&Joaue
ridiculous, tbe plot macaronic, and
the humor, with the exceptions of
some fearless puns. prosaic.
But somehow "Laa"na" works. It
works on that level reserved for
musical comedies: humorous light
entertainment.
OveraJJ, there is a pleasing visual
unity to the show, and one gets the
feeling that no one in the cast has a
shadow of a doubt that this is one
"wild and crazy" show. It tumbles
along like a Moliere farce. thanks to
the steady hand of direc-
tor/choreographer William F. Lett,
the energy runs hi$h. Tbe music, by
Hector Salazar. 1s attentive and
supportive. and competent. 1f not
exh1lerating. ·
Mellua Price, Roe er Enc elder in ••Laeuna .. muelcal.
Performances are Thursda)'s and
Fridays at 8 p.m .. Saturdays at 2 and
8. Sundays at 2 through Feb 2. For
information call 494-1145.
Thert art some numbers that stand
out a few cpts above th e rest. Kay SaraP Sarah s (Patricia Gross) "Mon-day Morning Blue,.. "Saga of the
Mahrou ns," sung by Gross. Roger
Langdon, and "The Mahrouns"
quartet: Diane Vargo, Jilla Her-
rington, Roxy Schmidt. and Mel lissa
Price; also "Song of the Foundry,"
sung by the ensemble was very good.
A clever ditty called "Stonewall It ...
fea tures the ''Mobsters" tno: Don
Keith, William F. Lett, and Royce R.
Reynolds. who play very well
together. getting laughs as much for the~r apRCarance as for their lanes and
anucs.
Bndget lkmell. who plays the
human personaficauon of the com-
puter. Big Bertha. manages the Olym-
pian task of upstaging her fantastic
costume by delivering a funny and assured performance. .----------------1
Hudson fest
raises funds
But the most inspired humor came
from a giddy blonde named Rubella
(Melissa Price) whom we take to be
the boss' favorite asset. She stumbles
around behind the big boss in her
peekaboo body tights, like a mermaid
wearing heels. Price is priceless.
15 GOIDEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
' ; : J.. ' • ' • , ' ~ : I• ,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A tele-
vision tribute to Rock Hudson. who l-:;ijiiiiiiiiiiiii~=l~U~x~u!11!vJr~Hf~A~r~1tEuC:5iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I died of complications of AIDS. u 1~ "' l M111. w .. •d•Y• *
brought pled&cs of more than S76.000 "~:'.T~. 0 "an~:·.·Ns:,~d ..
an contributfons to fight the disease, a • 4 114 nu 1•• Station Spokeswoman said. OllUGl/""1re .. 1111
The 12-hour special on K ITV
Channel 11 featured four movies
starring the popular leading man and
a one-hour documentary on acquired
im mune deficiency syndrome. 1 "Every dollar raised goes directly to
the University of Southern Cali-
fornia,". said Don Tillman. vice
president of programming for the
station. uses medical school has
established a fund for AIDS research.
Viewers of th e "Tribute to Rock
Hudson" responded to pleas for
donations with pledges of more than
$76,000, said station spokeswoman
Elizabeth Saunders.
Hudson died last Oct. 2 at the age of
59 of AIDS complications at hi s
Trousdale Estat~s mansion over-
looking Beverly Hills. His death
prompted numerous Hollywood
fund-raising efforts for AIDS re-
search.
S RUNAWAY TRAIN (R) SHO WS AT
1 00 .. 9 o ...
WHITE NfGHT5 fN.-U)
SHOWS AT 6;30 &. t 10
IN 70 MM I NO PASSES
lllU°"'"Y"S •OMAM:£ .. U) SHOWS AT
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&. t ·SS
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SPIES UKI[ US (PG)
SHOWS AT 1:20 l 30
S:40 7:SO &. 10:00
-N O PASSES-
DISHE.Y"S tet
DALMATIANS (G)
SHOWS AT
6 ·4o &. •·ls
YOUNCS..ERLOCI<
H OLMES (PC-I l) s11ows AT
6 .!!) & 9 00
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& S'"" An4 f wv
Redford • Streep
OUT Of' AFRK:A Cf'G)
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HOUllES cPG·t>J
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JO UVI a Oii IN L.A. !II
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IL TIU ~1·9SOO
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-634·2SSJ c~
Charles W. McQuarrie, O.D., L.L.D. I
I ' •• :-:-~ [·'Ir· .r :,
'-. . . ~--~ . .., ............... Jt ..... ,_
,,,,~. IV _,,,
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·Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital
Really Cares For You '
We want to help you avoid one of humankind's
oldest and most common ailments. Please join us
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Thursday, January 23. at
Coeta Meea Medical Center Hospital
to learn more about:
"Back lnjurle•: Prevention and Treatment."
presented by Alan Beyer. M.D., orthopedic specialist
and staff physician at Costa Mesa Medical Center
Hospital, and Robert Decker. R.P.T.
This Is the first of our Physician Lecture Series
designed to enhance the well-being of our community.
They are free of charge and we look forward to seeing
you there. PleaH call 642-2734 to HHrve your space.
,
l.C.ID.I rma
Costa Mesa Medical
Center Hospital
301 Victoria Street. Costa" Mesa
WINNER
-a.~-
MerylStteep
.... ~ .... 0..-
a.a-. •¥hv-,,.,.y.,.,...o..a.. ... ~ .... o...-
announces the opening o f th e
Hunting ton B_ea ch
Vision Development Center r
Doctor McQuarrie will continue to provide family
vision care with emphasis in:
•••••• • •••••• • * BARGAIN MATINEES MONO A Y THAU FRIDAY 1 ST l Pf Rf C>RMA!lj< f <, * * <;A TuROAv 1 '' 2 PERFORMANCES *
• • 1 f r • •4 (1 A •\ & I\ TI.RAF 0 • J f A l Ulltf '\ •
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World grievances
·need t hird party.,,,
If you are not personally or politi·
caJly involved in a conflict, you can
see quite clearly that there is f'iabt and
wrong on botb sides. In most such
disputes, we know that there is rarely
an "innocent party."
Whether it is the Protestants and
Catholics in Northern Ireland or the
lsraelis and PLO in the MiddJc East,
or the Iranians and the Iraqis, we on
the outside may not have as much
know/qeofthe ins and outs, but we
do have sounder judgment about
human conduct,
Distance may lend enchantment in
some cases, but ~ore of\cn it lends a
perspective that the participtnts arc
incapable of sbarina. They are so
involved in their parochial argument
that all judgment is warped by
passion, envy, hatred, revenge and .
moµmi ng.
'
If the world needs o ne thinj. it
needs a Court of Justice to which
warring factions can repair, as iodi·
viduals do when locked m intractable
opposition. This bas been the great
development of civiliution from
primiuvc times when disputants
made individual retribution.
But the great barrier to this rational
solution is the overriding theory of
.. sovereignty," by which each nation
asstttsanddcmandstheright to judge
-andjudge alonc-in its own case.
And since each country wants to
retain this riaht, for its own interests,
no one is willing to submit to outside
arbitration.
What seems perfectly plain to me is
that there is no way out of this terrible
box. and that as long as anarchy reigns
among the nations of the world. there
is no hope of anything ~mbling
genuine "peace" - only one-uneasy
truce after another, followed by
$1110
H1111s
incrcasin&ly devastating wars one
after another.
As mdividuals, we arc willing to do
this -indeed. we 1lrc compellecf by
law to do this -but there 1s no law
that encompasses the modern
Leviathan. Each nation 1s a law unto
itself. and of course always decides
each case in its own favor.
And this .. favor" is usual!}' in the
interest of the regime or the poli·
ticians leading the country. more than
it is the interest of the ordinary
citizen, who has to be emotionalJy
whipped into a war fever by painting
the ''enemy" as inhuman monsters
bent on devouring us.
'
"Patnotism" is love of one's coun-
try; "nationalism" is the delusion that
one's country is superior to aJI others.
and deserves better than others. It is a
collective egotism that no individual
would assert for himself. except under
the cloak of~ national symbol.
We are stm light years away from a
world government. which no do ubt
poses its own perils. But what rational
alternative do we really have. when
each decade it becomes more evident
that the unrestrained sovereign ego
points toward death while pretending
to defend life?
Sythley Harrl1 J1 • 1yodlcated
colmmJ1J1t.
Tla .... y.Janary 11
ARJES (March 21-April 19): Circumstances swinJ in your favor -
iuctament. intuition serve as reliable guides. Current cycle hiahlights major
domestic actjustmcnt that could include actual change of residence or mantaJ
tat us.
TAURUS (April ,20-May 26): Emphasis on secrets, intrigue., romance,
ability to see others in realisuc light. Secret wiU be revealed, and ttils works to
your advantqe. Interest in arcane subjects is stimulated. Pisces plays role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on friends, hopes. wishes: mo ney and •
love. You act almost everything, you
want -you'll be asked to assume
position of leadership . Accept
challenge, know that cards arc stacked
an your favor. SYD.NEY
0MARR .
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): What
had been delayed will now become
reality. Focus ,on goal, profession,
career, dealings with the law or persons
in positions of authority. Scenario •••••••••••• highlights ~romotion. ability to reach wider segment of public.
LEo-(Ju.Jy 23.Aug. 22): Accent on travel, education, publishina. new
starts, fresh concepts. Be direct in getting to heart of matters, especially where
romance is concerned. Focus on drama, money and love. Aquarius will play role. ---'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You're drawn in two directions -choose
familiar course. one that leads to fulfillment of family obligations. Reunion 1s
on tap, will prove satisfying, beneficial. One who taught you in past is again
available. '
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Diversify. communicate, m ake long-distance
ca.II to one who made you happy in past. Focus on ideas, concepts.
unorthodox methods. Business part.ncr or mate plays outstanding role.
Gemini figures prominently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Be willing to revise, review. to bring source
material up to date. Emphasis also on basic issues, nutrition. diet and general
health. Job offer could be highlighted. Don't neglect care of pets. ·
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be ready for change. travel and
variety of experiences. Imprint style in pursuing creative endeavor. Member
of opposite sex is attracted. will say.so~ and the baJI is in your court. Virgo
figures prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Focus continues o n loni-rangc
prospects. property values, lifestyle. where you live. possible acquisition of
luxury item or art object. You get almost everything you want if diplomatic.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): Forces tend to be scattered -you may be
tf)ing to accomplish too much at once. Slow pace, make inquiries. verify
instructions, directions. Relative talks about weight problem. Virge figures
proJllinently.
• PISCES(Feb. 19-March 20): You'll get more authority and money. Cycle
hiih. you'll be at right place, you could also locate article that had been lost.
m1sS\ng or stolen. lndividual close to you has decided to become ally.
IF JANUARY 11 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc moodx. sentimental.
ro mantic. and you know that being aJone docs not neccssanly equate wuh
bemg lonely. You are spiritual. psychic. sensitive. capable of analyzmg
character and of bringing out the best in others. Pisces, Virgo persons play
important roles in your hfc. If single. you could marry this year. ff married.
there could be an addition to famil y. You'll gain through writing, you'll enjoy
travel. you'll be more popular. March and December will be outstanding for
you in 1986.
Losing face J!1 Japan A mother speaks up ~~~~~,.~~!,~e !~~~~~!~~'" for her 'prof essiOn'
much more violent expression in flexed rus forcann. observers said it
Japan: ••t<ao a tsubursu." Smash. looked as though a small mouse were
crush, destroy face, physicalJy. We runnjn~ up and down his arm under
tbiok of loss of face as temporary the skin. Our word "muscle." in
embarrassment. Traditionally ov~r allusi.on, .comes from the Latin for
there. ifs utter devastation. "small mouse."
What the nuclear fission folk are
trying to do, it's said. is recreate the
sun. A pound of the sun would keep
your kuchen range hot for S<"veral
hundred years. Come 1n handy during
the playoffs.
Q. Don't all vertebrates have red
blood cells to carry oxygen?
A. All except the ice fish of
Antarctica. If it had such cells. its
blood would freeze.
Those who drive their motor
homes to Maine -their houses on
their backs. as it were -are labeled
by the locals as "turtle tourists ... ,.
Q. Kindly tell this Mainlander
what the name "Honolulu" means.
A. "Sheltered haven." Lagniappe:
"Oahu" means "the gathering place ...
Q. Where's the wortd·s biggest
national parlc'?
A. In Greenland. That park 1s
bigger than Texas and Oklahoma
combined.
Developers around M1am1 in the
1920s sold land the buyers knew
didn't exist. Ask your neighborhood
real estate agent to explain that one.
Contracts were signed and money
changed hands. Then the diggers
dredged Biscayne Bay and ~reated the
already-sold lots.
PEOP LE
I.,_ -
Said Alice Roosevelt Longworth:
.. I have a sample philosophy -fill
what's empty. empty what's full. and
scratch where 1t itches."
The Los Angeles Raiders once were
the Oakland Senors. The In-
dianapolis Colts once were the M iami
Scahawks.
Greece puts a :!~percent tax o n
luxury cars.
Dcbatr goc<; on O\'l'r wh) .\mcn-
can~ drt\C o n the right while the
Bnush dn n• on the left. One claim.
Wagon teamc;1erc; rode astride their
left ""heel horses. The) cho~ to pass
on the right -;o 1he~ could "'-atch the
\pace between tht•ir huh<..
<) H i.I\ r tht• \t•1t•n11sts t'\ er created
an animal unlike an) other animal''
-\. Om· onh -the a>.olotl. Born as
a tadpole. 1t ·remains a tadpole. but
grows e'er larger. never turning into a
frog. G" e 11 th) road hormo nt: and 11
de,·elops legs. ho""e' t•r
Q What"• the a'aagl' l O\t of
hurntng a I <Kl-"a tt light bulb''
-\. A cen1 and a hall an hour
Founeen states a t the stan of this
century proh1b1ted 1he ScSle of
tobacco.
L.M. Boyd Is
cola11111l1t. • syodl~•ted
-------
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I cannot
ignore the letter published an your
column recently by the woman who
made the statement that beang a
mother is "at best a low-status
occupation ...
Does the lady really believe that the
most imponant JOb a woman will
ever do-namel). bnnging upa child
to be well·adJUStcd. healthy and a
contnbuung member of society -1s
an insignificant accomplishment?
How dare she eqwtte the role of a
mother with something wonhless
and poorly paid? Who can begin to
estimate the value a nd importance ot
a mother and the vanety of tasks she
pcrfonns dunng her life?
The world out there should be told
that motherhood 1s the m ost noble
and satisfying of all careers. It 1s ttme
the media refrained from pnnttng
wo rthless opinions held by m1sgu1ded
fcmaJcs. Their major goal seems to be
to undennine the m ost successful
u nil ever devised for the protection of
the young and the old.
Mo thers are the nurturers and
caretakers of the world.
Here's a toast to those blessed
creatures. Rise and shine! You are
worth your weight in gold. And you
arc beauttful. -OKLAHOMA
READER.
DEAR 0 .: Wbat a lovely trtbate.
Yoa made a great muy women feel
better &-Oday ud tbey deserve to.
Motberbood 11 tbe most difficult
job ln tbe world, yet tbere ls no way to
prepare for It. We learn tbroagb trlal
and error and bope for tbe best.
Never was tbere a more dJfflealt
Ume to raise elalldren. T'Mre 11 no
guarantee ti.at If yoo do all Uae
"rt1bt" tblngs yoar cbUd wUI turn out
OK. All we can do Is set firm
A11
LANDERS
gaJdellnes, be consistent, lnslst OD
honesty, respect tbe child '• best
efforts, give ancoDdltional love, and
keep everytbillg ero11ed yoa bave two
of. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 hope
you can help me. I did something that
has made me feel terribly ashamed.
Last year I became involved with
the husband of a very good fri end. I
realize now 1t was a rotten thing to do
to ··Marie." I did 1t to hurt my
husband be<:ause I thought he was
cheating on me.
When she confronted me with the
question. was Io. r was I not having an
affair with her husband, I was sick of
the deceit and didn't want to play
games any longer. so I replied. "Yes.
but ifs all over." She looked stricken.
said nothing and walked away.
I've made no attempt to contact
"Mane" but she 1s on my mind
constantly. Should I go 10 her and ask
for forgi veness?
I'll take your advice. whatever It IS.
-WASHINGTON STATE.
DEAR W.S.: Yoa need to talk to
somebody aboat yoar sbame ud pUt
-but please, Dot Marte. It mlpt
make yoa feel better but It won't do
maeb for ber.
Special award voted to McCartney
By tk Atsodatflt Preu
LOS ANGELES -Fonner
Beatie Paal McCarhle.Y will be
honored with the pec1al Award
of Merit during the 13th annual pr~ntat1on of the Ameri can
Music Awards.
McCartney will accept the
award by a satellite connection
from London during the tcle·
vision broadcast of the show Jan.
27, said publicist Paul Shcfnn.
The Award of Ment winner is
selected by a bluc-nbbon panel.
unlike the other Amcncan Music
Award winners1 who arc selected
by ~Jjna mua.c buyers. Shcf nn said. The merit award rccognitcs
"outstandin,1 contnbutions over
a long ~od time to the musical
entenammcnt of the Amencan
public."
No Hope for land
SIMI VALLEY -Local of-
ficiala havcaivcn up efforts to buy
a tract of mountain land from
comedian W H• thar they had
-.aled for a perk.
Paal McCartney
,
For almo t two year$, park
planners had tncd co 1et hofd of
China flat, a 7()6..acre plateau Hope owns In the mountain• 40
miles north .. nt of Los Anlclet.
Hope'• au.orneys tee0miDend·
. .
cd turning down the county offer
btcaust they "didn't think It WU
the best deal possible," said Ward
Orant. spokesman for the 82· t:f::_ .. cntcnai~cr "That's
..
Jullan '• orl6lnal
NEW YORK -The former
wife of ex-Beatie Job Leuon
says she's horrified by suuestions
that their 22-ycar-old son Juhan 1s
like a reincamauon ofh1s famous
father.
··Many ti me 1 ntcrv1cwers have
said , 'Don't you think it's like a
reincarnation (of John)?'" cy.wa Leuoe said m an inter·
v1cw Wlth McC.aJl's map.zme.
Option• opealn1
NEW YORK -J ... c.au .. ,
who Sta~ m the seven-hour
tclev11ion mmiscncti "Sins." said
the expericnc:r taut.ht her "that
mavbc I have some power af\cr
all.''
Collins. wh>..,.lays the manjpu·
latina Alexis Morell Carrinaton
Colby Ociuer un Ao<...'s wcckty
series, "Dynasty," saKl she hopes
to continue her aecuuve career
by produci1't and stanina in a
senn when her asJ0C11don with
.. D)nwy" ends.-~-
THREE'S A CROWD
Both vulnera ble. North deals.
NORTH
• Q•3
<:? AK87
0 J 1076
•K9 WEST
+A k 108
<:;) '2
EAST
• 976
<:?653
0 5'2 0 KQS
•QJU • 10865
SOUTH
• J62
""QJ 109
O A98
•AH
The bidding:
North Ea1t
J 0 Pue
2 <::;> Pue
Pue Pa11
South
I <::;>
'<::;>
Opening lead: King of +.
Weat
Obie
Pa11
To guarantee that an elimination
play will succeed in a trump con·
tract, you need to draw all the op-
posing trumps and still have a
trump left in both your hand and
dummy. Sometimes you cannot
achieve the ideal position, and have
to rely on a partial elimination. Con·
sider this hand. -
Note North's raise to two hearts
after West's takeout double. The
best way to counter a takeout dou·
ble is to make the bid that you
would have. had there been no in-
terference, exeept that you have a
redouble available to show a good
hand. North-South soon reached
their spund four heart contract.
The defense started with thr ee
rounds of spades, deelar&r winning
the third. If East has one of the
missing diamond honors. declarer
I
\
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIFF
can land his co11traet by taking two
finesses. However. if West has both
high diamonds. a subtler technique
is called for.
Since deelar~r has to ruff a club
on the table to complete his elimina·
tion of the black suits, he cannot af·
Cor t to draw three rounds of
trumps -that would exhaust dum·
my's ruffers. So declarer must rely
on a partial elimination. He can
draw only two rounds of hearts and
he must hope t hat East has t he long
trump.
After rurting a club on the ~ble.
declarer should end up there once
he has drawn two rounds of trumps.
Now he leads the jack of diamonds.
As the cards lie. West wins but is
faced with a Hobson's choice. A dia·
mond would be into declarer's com-
bined tenace. and a black suit would
allow declarer to ruff on the board
while discarding a diamond Crom
hand. No matter what West elects
to do, l he contract is assured-if
declarer remembers t.o draw the
last trump after he gains the lead.
I C A W T H I .' '"So many people are out of
~ .... 1$--.,-~,,-,--J ..., work and here I am hv1n9 oft the
. _ _ • _ • 111 of ttte land s•ghe<l one ::,~!:===:::!:::::::!::::::!!.___ woman She Qutekly addect I m
I F E E N I 0 I an -teacher 1--,--, -,-, -, -,-,-'I Q (.,...ple•e ·~~ '~~lie QuO•.d
• • • _ • by f,ll1n9 '? fhe ""H•"'i) WOtd' .__...__.___._.__...._...J rC\1o1o ~•••loo fre;m ''•P "'o 3 hel<.i-..,
8 ~~'.':;,:~· -~B~Qf •Of I' ,, !1 ,. ,, 1· I' I' I
e A~; ~.~t0~·e,r , ~ I I I I I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACA098
1 Scotch garb
6 Aggravate
10 Meat cuts
14 Foolish one
15 York's river
16 Have --
peeve
17 Suspicious
18 Foals' parent
20 Drier
21 Hof HRH
22 Time of year
23 Surmounting
25 Mounted
sentinel
27 PMfed
30 Heat ag1ln
31 Encourage
32 Levies
33 Jug lug
36 Bo1t blades
37 Jimmy
38 Length unit
39 Uncle: Sp.
40 Punished
4 1 Prelude:
lnform11
42 Tiiied toll
44 Manages
45 Most sacred
47 Hue
48 Swedl•h Isle
4~ farm animal
50 Hardtops
54 Grape plant
main stem
57 Countrified
58 Eternally
59 Genus of Illy
plants
60 Comb1t area
6 t Not as much
62 Pledge
63 Like a fuel
DOWN
t Weight unit
2 Conoept
3 Inaccuracies
4 Hurts badly
5 Lo.,,.ace
6 Bird
7 Poaseulve
8 Equal: pref
9 Papal name
10 Dirty-clothes
bask•t
11 Domiciles
12 Excellence
13 Arrow shaft
19 Pops
21 Scuttle
24 P of rpm
25 Irritated
26 Vaae's kin
27 Lowlander
PREVIOUS f'UZZU: IOl.YID
28 Asian tongue
29 Jets
30 Acted madly
32 Ism
34 Land u1111
35 Greek As
37 Enaccme11ts
38 Wobbly
40 Stud9nts
4 1 Son of Apollo
43 Crul1e ships
44 Curtty
45 Sheck
46 Martini
ingredlwll
47 But fa,.
49 Towed Y8SMI
51 Oittrlct
52 Bombut
53 Put to dMlh
55 Spigot
56 Palm leaf:
var.
57 Reproof
TD
PAMll·Y
ClllCV8
by Bii Keane
"Read foster, Mommy. I can't stay awoke
much longer."
by Brad Anderson
"He's had a bad day ... he failed to chase ott
the meter reader. the police wouldn't drive
him home. and the dogcatcher got away."
PEANUTS
l'M TIRED OF BEING
W ISl·N-WAS~I/! i'M
60NNA WALK Rl 6~T
O\IER, AND TALK 10 THAT
UTILE RED-HAIRED GIRL ~
. : '(J c
, .
GARFIELD
l'M GOING TO GIVE GARflELP A LITTLE
TREA'T 'TOPAY
ITUllBLBWSEDS
(pf AN01H~ ~ ~M{
I ~AXJ.!ff~'t>~ ~~~~ME!
DRABBLE
ltX.~E. CL£Mi.lllllG \.40W 010 ~~ MOt~R
COT T~E.'!>00.,()\QI T~ ~OU lt'410 00\"4G
1"M '?
BIO osoaos by v1rg11 Partch (VIP)
~
'*"' .. c.retul, Oeorge. Don't get behind It."
DEIUOS THE MENACE
b
l HAVE 'TO WEAR A TIE TO KEEP THE FOOD OfF
M'Y GOOD ~I Ri. II
by Charles M. Schulz
ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!
I •
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
••. SINCE I 1DL.P Hert1HA"f
He~ 1.-1me Ft60f9? ~ u.. •E
wt1M~ON10POF~
~~E. !>MO 1 CCXJ~O
~~\IE. ~LL 1\-\E L..00!£ C"'M~E. l n t-lO\
W'EWI N6 CAf(J: !
by Kevin Fagan
I Orenge Coat OAILY PtLOTIW~. ~ 11, 1111 Al8
11001' llULLlltS by Ferd & Tom John90n •
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
MbM,I CAN,-FINO
t't-/ CASSEfrDLE8.
I FVflREM DONN '"'""-
HERE .
PEAR..
SHOE
l F£a.. I MUST~ 'OJ, ~.I UAVE N£VaZ LDST AT TIZIV~ FU<SuT.
DOOIUSBURY
6i£55 MJHATI
J I
JUDGEPARUR
AL . wt.'VE oor A ~M Wf"f).4 O~ ~ CAFEiERt A !
)
~RJNNY
I JlXNW
NAVY ROTC' I
INNOC.£1{T
MYF<XJT1
I
by Gary Trudeau
by Harold Le Doux
•
'
Youth Council·
treads where
city shouldn't
The Newport Beach City Council, bless its good
intentions, has,tripped into the ~ovemment always
seems mired in. The council -with a problem -
formed a committee to take over the job others should be
doinJ.
Jn this case, it's the newly formed Newport Teen
Commission taking over for parents and the private
sector.
At worst, t~ecommission isanintrusiveco~ut. At
best, it's a well·mtentioned waste of time. ·
It all started in the summer, when Balboa Peninsula
residents and mere nts complained to the city about
tecn .. agcrs wrecking the neiahborhood. ,
Late-night loitcrina disturbed residents interested
in quiet evenings and a good night's sleep. Worse, the
teens were bad for business. Some patrons avoided the
teens and the businesses they congregate around. Rowdy
teen-agers had taken over, they said.
There were also some reports of drinking. drug use
and vandalism.
For their part, the teen-agers said they were guilty
only of hanging-out at a popular location.
Most of this ajlcged antisocial activity took place
around the Newf)Ort and the Batboa piers, where teen-
agers like to socializ.e: Boys bang out. Girls walk by. Boy
mcct.s girl. You get the picture.. · ·
· The council heeded Its taxpaying, ballot-punching
constituents and imposed an 11 p.m . curfew on its
younger constituents1.even though laws were already on
the books to allow police to deal with the problem. later,
the council let itself get buffaloed into scrappi.DJ that
time and imposing an even stricter 10 p.m. deadline to
be off the streets.
Newport police were given a free hand to .. detain ..
anyone younger than 18 found hanging out after 10 p.m.
The chief of the Newport Beach Police Department,
urging a get-tough policy, said his department was
looking for a green light to crack down on teens.
"I don't understand the logic that says you should
wait for kids to do something wrong before you do
something about it," then-Chief Charles Gross said.
Outraged, some of the teens promised a.confronta-
tion.
But cooler heads prevailed. Councilwoman Jackie
Heather entered the fray and eased teosions.
The councilwoman held meetings brinpng some
teens together with the chief and repre.JCntat1vcs of the
affected Balboa nei&hborboods. She defused a volatile
situation, a notable achievement for which the entire
community should be grateful.
Heather walked the peninsula, talked with the teen-
agers and, most importantly, listened to the teens. A lot
of what she heard $OCS something like this:
.. There's nothmg to do."
"Everything's for adults, kids have nothing."
.. What's wrone with meeting people?"
.. We like hangmg out here, picking up girls.••
Heather says comments like those reinforced a long·
time dream to form a teen commission that would guide
kid$1loward positive activities.
The committee, she said, might stage an occasional
concen or a dance but it doesn't want to do anything that
teens might enjoy too much because that would draw
even more kids to Newport Beach and worsen the
problem.
The teen commission, to be made up of JO students,
a council member, a school board member and a
represenati ve of the Parks, Beaches & Recreation
Department, is in a no-win situation.
It can't provide the types of activities that kids really
want and the positive activities they want kids to take up
aren't what the teen-agers wa.nt.
Positive activities like ping-pong and chaperoned
field trips are likely to meet with a collective yawn from
youth.
And teen centers are successful only at collecting
dust. -
Likewise, ad hoc committees are doomed to failure,
especially when their· mission is to steer kids away from
the son of things they have been doing since boys first
chased girls.
Teen-agers will alway hang out, whet her city
councils, residents. merchants, teen commissions or
police like it or not.
Ifie.ids need to be steered to enjoy positive activities,
their parents should do the steering, not a city
committee. The family, not government, should
determine what is positive and influence its own in that
direction.
It's only when teen-a$ers run afoul tha~~?vemment
should step in. Juveniles drinkina, ·na ~
vandalizing businesses or intimidatina resjdents should
be coumetcO--by me lJnifonne<tofficen of the Police
Department.
The teens have a nght to enjoy the pien, whether bl
strollina. fishang or hanging out. provided they don t
infrin&c upon the surrounding residents and businesses.
lreat teen-agers like responsible citizens Uld most
will ·react responsibly. The rest should be tauaht
rese>onsi bi Ii ty.
The council should get out of the teen commission
business and the curfew business and instruct the police
force to do its job -responsibly and fairly. It shouJd let
the troublemakers know that the city means busioeu
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat
1
,, .. Zlllf
E<JtOI , ... , ..
'-'11'1191'1G EOl!or .. ,....,
C.1y E~or
r ... c...
MewtfOllOt ==
n 11ce a c;on.,.,
..._.LC-..
,,~...,., .._..L_
Qr~IOl'l lMNOI'
..._..a s ,
......_,,..~
"When I'm dreiltdngtolf!out In thenen1ng.1 dori 't thtnlr-what w1U
I wear? I thJM ... now, who would el#JoY Matfte'• party?''
CoMMfNT AR1
lt Grass is
gr~ener
outside
county
Slie 's attached to clothes
as tried, true old friends
'In many ways are
more kind t han
my peop~e-fdends ·
Most of my relatives and friends
are tired of my clothes. I'm not; I'm
attached to them. When you arc
around somethin& long enough. you
form an attachmenJ and some of my
clothes have been with me longer
than my husband.
I call my clothes "classic." My
daughter calls them "really dumb.··
Many of my beautifully dressed
mends go through the agony and the,
ecstasy of shopping every few
months. By the time they find the
pencil-slim pants that arc a must an
August, the December fashion state-
ment is out saying flares are now a
must.
I don·t have this problem; when
you're short and-weigh enough to
never wear flares, )'OU stick with the
slim pa•nts. slim skJrts and everything
else that makes you look non-obese.
I don•t think of my clothes as my
wardrobe. I think of them as fnends
-old friends. In many ways they arc
more kind and gentle than my peoplc-
friends.
When I put on a few pounds, they
let me know an subtle ways; a
reluctant zipper. a button that refuses
AIHI
WEIJ.s
his head and said, "That old jacket
has sure held up well ... and those
lapels are back in style again ...
When I'm dressina to ao out in the
cvcnina. I don't think -what will I
cat2 l_ think. ---DOW. who would
enjoy M~'s party? The red chiffon
usuaJly qwven on beT hanger; she
loves parties, but she's been to
· M&tJC'S parties so many times I'm
afraid she's worn out her welcome.
to be buttonholed, a cowardly scam · When it's.ti!"e to pa~ with any.of
that would rather split than hang my clothes, It is traumat1c. Often I m
around to Stt what develops. not a~are the time has come. When
This is more civilized than a my ne1&hbor looks me over carefuUy
husband who eyes you and says, "My at a pt&erin& and say~. "Don_'t foraet
God, you·rc not pregnant, arc you?'· us down at th~ hospital thnft shop
Or a friend who comes face to face when xou dcc::uic t~ clean out your
with you on the sttceund asks. "Ny_ cl9SC!t.. I know the ,tl!f'C has cpmc.
dear, arc you on cortisoner' · ~en they ~litely decline my
I do try to keep my hem line within offcnnasat the thrif'.tshopand SUl&fst
an inch or two of the current trend I contact Goodwdl, I know I've
but my dressmaker bas specifi~ w.ait.ed . too Iona. I don't feel r:m
instructions to never c11t off any discardi~ clothe;s -I feel I m
material. She turns the hems up, she abandoruna old fricnck. .
leu them down, she turns them up... .1 wasn't e.i;n~ when.a friend
Recently when benalines bcpn to sa~d to ~e. I vc: al~ys adrJ?ited that
go down, I dragcd in my oldest and suit you re weanna. ~ wasn t emblr-
dcarest friend a black crec cocktail rased when another friend stopped by
dress (Now ifs caJlod an ··after five'" to pick me up for lunch and sai~, 'Tm
but when I bought'lt, it was called a early -you have plenty of lime to
cocktail dress) to have the hem let chanae." I wasn't embarrassed when
down apin. She greeted us both someone asked m.e where I bought the
warmly and said ... I've been expect· dress I was wcann&, and th~ shop I
Ulg you.·· named had been out of business for
The dry cleaner, who has cleaned ciaht years.
my clothes for the last 17 ¥ears, has a 1 was embarrassed wt:fc:n .voaue
good memory too. When I went in refused to ~new my subscription.
last wed to pick up a jacket. he shook Au Wells llvet hi Lapa& Nlpel.
-llWiiii Mi·l~IMM·H.!ilii ·'------------
Khadaf y 's planning to buy
plastic guns from Austria
Working out a deal for some 100 pistols
d ifficult for airport security to detect Jac1
AIDEISOI
r ..
WASHINGTON -Libyan dic-
tator Moammar Khadafy 1s 1n tht
process of buying more than 100
plastic handguns that would be dif-
ficult for airport security forces to
detect.
Incredibly, the pistols arc made in
Austria -where Khadafy-supportcd
tcrronsu shot up the Vienna afrPort
durin& Christmas week.
"This is crazy," one top official told
us. "To let a madman ·like K.hadafy
have access to such a pisto l! Once it is
in his hands. he'll &ivc it to terronsts
throuchout the MiddJe East."
T.hc hand&un lD question is the
Glock 17, a 9mm ptstol invented and
manufactured by Gaston Glock 1n the
vill• of Deutsch·Wapam, Just
ouwdc Vienna. It isaccurate. reliable
--and made al~ eetirely of
hatdmcd plaJtic. Only the beml.
\lidc and one s~na are metal.
OismHt.&cd. it 15 ff'iahten1oaJy easy to
smuak past airpon teeurity.
In fact, one Pen\qOO security
open dcdded to demonstrate just
how easy it would be to sneak a Glock
17 aboard an airUner. He stripped the
po dowo and d.isptted the mctaJ
pans in his cany-on luaacc. For
eumple, be wrapped the spnna
around a pair or eyealaftff.
TM Peniaaoo man tested bis
sysltftf twice at Wuhlftllon Nauonal
Airport. and succeuf\alfy tot pest the
ICCUrity ct.eeks bot.b times.
The hGlllOft oftidalau.blequenlly
alened airpor1 ICICUrity penonncl,
' TODAY h~ His TORY
-~-~~~-= •1-. A.sum ... Prw
Todly Wednadly, Ju. 22. &he
2lad _,.or 1916. Tbift arr 341 da)'1 lfftlallle~. Toda)'0J lhlblilf\t ID biltOry:
and taught them how to spot the
clements of the pistol. Security
measures ha ve been tightened as a
result.
I ntclhgtncc sources tell us K.hadafy
has nearly completed a deal to buy
more than 100 Glock l 7s, possibly as
and DALE VAN A TT A
many as 300. They explain that
Austrian arms merchants hopina to The Austrians were rewarded for
sell K.hadafy big-ticket items -such their supine semutlichkeit toward
as tanks-Ir<'! using the Glock J 7s as Arab extremists in 1981 when Palesti·
"swcetnen" for fututt transactions. rtian tem>rilts auauinalcd Heinz
A market in& official for Glock in NittelJ. ~prominent Austrian Jew an~
Austria assured us that the compeny close rricnd oflhen-chal')ceUor Bruno
has not sold Libya any of the auns -Kteisky.
at least not yet. He offe~ no When K.reisky complained to
mfonnanon on current ncaotiations. PiJestUie Utieti on Orpnization
An Austnan Embassy officl&l made chairman Yutir Arafat, the latter
this dascourqma observation: "If ~inted the fineer at his rival, Abu
there bad been a deal with pistols to Nidal, and even offered to send a pefr
Libya, we would not have a record." of"a.nti·tery'OriJt~iaJjslJ''Jo V1en-
Hnlplalned that Austnnton-ha'Vn -u-te Ul1tt Auttr:"n Pc>ftCC. ~ut
law rcqumna a sovemment license to MOMad, tbe lsnieh ICCl'et Kf'Vlc:e,
export war matenel, but satd P,istols lcarMd that the two PaJestinaans had
"arc not covered by this law. • And actuaJly been tent to auus1nate
even if the government dad learn of f.awtian Praidcnt An.ar Sadat in
such a saJc. he said, .. we could not Vienna, and to kill Kreisky. too. ifhe
comment on the private (business tot in the .ay.
tranuction)." Austrian autbontics arrested the
Austria's past deahnas with lWO Palestinians at the Vienna air-
Khadyfy suuest that even the ob-port. and found sharpsbootcr.-
viouJ dan~ of such a sale would not weapons and poenadn in their lua·
be enousn to bnna aovcmmcnt ..,e. FoUow-up tcarches of PLO 11fe
intet'Vcnt1on. It was ~ fint Euro-housct in Austria turned up maps and
peen country 1n ntoeyean to mta· plans for\hcSedaU•Mination. The
&ain Qaddafi on an oflidaJ state vuat. rwo pnmen ~ pecked off to
In 1982. He uted the platfonn Beirut. Once ipia. Abu NidaJ YIU
provided by the Aunri1111 1.n Vienna blamed.
to denounce ~' Reapn as 1 Jed jW• .. Mii Dale V• Ana
.. tenonsf' and "dfttnartav~ pcnon. .. .,...w ut n 1fff&.
On Jan 22. 1973. in a nalu11 that
continua to ,merat.e controvmy1 the U.S. Su~me Coun qahJJeCJ
aboniooa nauoaWMSe.
On tJU1dl1C
In I 7U, 1M E.nchth romantic pott
' •
Loni Byron WU bom.
In 1111 . u uaat f&yptaan ot>-
elllk ... _.... 111 1'lCW Yoft'1
OllltraJ Plft. It l.t known II Ckopetra'1 N.ue. .
Orange can't lay
claim to highest
median incomes
By STEh FREEMAN
Of the 20 areas in lh1s nation with
the hiahest median household in-
comes a mere two lie in CaHfomia.
And neither -bark ye this, ye
Oranac Countians -is within our
county.
The two: Beverly Hills is number
three and Rancho Santa Fe ninth. So
says the Wall Street Journal. Dec. 24,
1985.
My friend Henry Hockcnspiel is of
the opinion this miaht induce a
ctiange of venue amona some local
ladies and fCOtlcmen. Why? Because
certain ladies and ,entlemcn, being
sbmewhat of a fortune-hunlin& bent.
'have looked upon our fair county as a
Valhalla of sons. Upon disntina the
WaJI Street Journal revelations, they
may indeed elect to seek out those
obviously arcencr pastures.
Henry Hockenspiel opines ~
there arc more such tclf-teeken about
-Wn our sood 9--S ptryare'8ware of.
How does one spot them?
Conversationally, Henry advises.
To illustrate, he cites initial contacts
which develop in more or less the
followin& manner:
.. My name is Fritzi," the lady might
say, introducing herself.
A bit of idle chatter ensues -the
weather, this club/party/charity
whoop-de-doo.
..Do you live here, Henry?" she
asks. ..Yet."
'0 Whercr'
.. In Corona del Mar."
"Which side of the hiahway?"
"South side, .. he ans wen, knowing
it may punJe her.
More chit-<:hat. then, ··11 .... , I.he
ocean sider
''Yes."
Henry, familiar with such ap-
proaches. has a ploy which, under
some circumstances. he may use.
Meanwhile he will play 1t straight.
.. Do you have a boat~ .. she may ask.
.. No," Henry will answer.
Had he answered otherwise he
would have beg.at an instant licge-
lady. And bad he mentioned a boat of
aood size, perhaps one requirina a
second hand, with that second hand a
close friend and now aboard, Fritzi
probably would have been able to
summon a lady friend forthwith. both
ready to take off immediately. even if
Henry's ann'?unced dettination were.
say, T¥mania.
He will t>c Q\'estioned yet further.
On children -docs be have any -
ages? How lon1 divorced?
The Iona divorced are pJI and
wormwood to the Fritzis of the world.
Playboys and/or ··not the marryin'
kind:'
Ultimately will come the question-
ina Henry has been anticipetin~ hi s
business. If he is not retired it will be
probed rather deviously, pec:cadillos
from various flanks. It comes.
At about this juncture Henry. a
practiced campaianer and dedicated
leg-puller, will break with the ICT'ipt.
"I'm a part-tirrie doawalker:· he
pops at her ... t"vc a fra.nchiK covering
the north side of Lido Isle.··
11 Fritz.i looks at him as thouch he
may be a trifle deranged. Her faet'
hardens.
"And I miaht add I'm one of the
premier d<>r.'8:1ken of the west," he
continues. 'I can walk -and you
may not believe this -eipt dop at a
time, four wi1h each hand, tbe leashes
between my finacrs."
Fritzi mar, feel she has to say
somcthina. ·w on't the dop fiaht
somctimesr' she may ask.
'-'()b, sure."
"What do you do?"
"Kick the helJ out of them."
She is now wholly off bal·
ance ... should she stay or aiet the hell
1llI[ lit Jietc1
"Althouah many are unaware of
it," Henry aJibly continues, "thcrc'sa
areat deal of mJI involnd. My
forebears came out here in Coaestop
waaon1 pulled by a number of bones
or mules. They develooed skill in
handlina multiple reins bt.iwem t.be
fln,m. TbJs is my aepq ...
At this juncture the Fritzit wiU
often nc11tc themselves. To .. &ahen
up" or "make a phone call." Tbeir
retum as questionable. ,
But trus is DOl U aniface Al Wbid\
o,nlY. desiP,ina ladies *Y: ~ or
ttmalar ttnpe use similar~
on J)rOIP!'Ctive ladies.
Coft.11dcr then how f'onuulC we ..e
not -to be &l'nOftl ..... 20 .....
incomul'QI. Wby &be Fnahud ihe
male counterperu m• be ,....er
as but.web up thae. MayW....,..
• common -or llaOuld it. be
twenryfokS?
My eic»Odnaa, a penoa livt111amid
luch IWT'CMlndlait could become
&eary olhis ~=.z: ud kiel 1""
U1 COtltlt °"' ..... ,,...... ,. ,..~ .... -
••
. . . . ..
............... ..,0.... ........
ltdleon '• Pam Lewin ja.mpe aboTe the crowd for a ebot.
Lake rs
pound
Phoenix
Magic , Ive-others
in double figu res
in 143 -122win
INGLEWOOD ~AP) -The Los
Anaeles Lakersdon t like to lose once,
much less twice in a row.
"I'm not really amazed that we
haven't lost back-to-back games 1n a
year," said Laker guard Earvin
"Magic"' Johnson. "T his team
doesn't like to lose. We respond with
a strona performance the next time
out"
The Lakers clobbered the Phoenix
Suns 143-1 22 Tuesday ni&)lt in a
National Basketball Association
game at the Forum. The Suns should
have seen it com ing. Los Anaeles
dropped a IOS..99 decision Saturday
nif!!t to the Seattle SuperSonics.
'It's the sustainina of good play
and not letting your game sltp too far
that pr~vcnts losin~ streaks," said
J..,aker Coach Pat Ri ley. "We had a
&ood talk about our execution pn the
break before toni&)lt's game and we
had one of our most producu ve
pmcs in the fast-break department."
Johnson had 21 points, 19 assists
MaClc John9on
and nine rebounds to pace the LaJcers.
Six other Lakers scored in double
figures as Los Angeles pounded the
Suns for the third consecuti ve ttme
this season.
James Worthy scored 23 point~.
while Byron Scott added 20 and
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar had 19 points.
Reserves Maunce Lucas and Mike
McGee each scored I 5 points and
M 1chacl Cooper had 13 for the
Lake rs.
Lucas pulled down seven rebounds
for Los Angeles and Mitch Kupchak
had six in 20 minutes of play.
The Lakers received strong per-
formances from Johnson and Abdul-
Jabbar even though they were a1hng
going into the game.
"Kareem had a strep throat and
Magic had the nu. but both still
played very well." Laker Coach Pat
Riley said
The Suns' Larry Nance led all
scorers with 30 points. Center James
Edwards threw in 20 points.
Edison next to challenge
OV's Sun~et supremacy
Ocean View Hi&)l'sScahawk.sareoo an 11-pmc winnmastrcak 1n Sunset~ competition over the past two seasons (albeit 10 fo rfeit
toues)aod 1fanyonc is 'oina to tct ittelfup asa bona fide contender for
the l~uc championship it'll be over lhc bodies of the Sea.hawks.
That's what Edison Hit.h's Charicn arc hopcfuf of tonl~t as they
challenae Ocean View in the Scahawlct' aym 'n the premacr Sunaet
confrontation of the niaht.
It's the ,encral consensus that Edison's chances lie within a
pressina and runnina format with ho_pcs that a quick lead can take
Ocean View out of it• stinina zone dcfente.
f..djeon's firepower comes from Ken Ammann ( 17.8), Chns Cole
(13.0) and the combination of Rich Smith (8.6). Mike PriJacc (5. 7),
Mike Henderson (6.6) and Dave. Maraulics ~$.I). •
Faced with the interior of Ocean Views Ricky ButJer and Ott1
Hucly is 6-S Dou& Katona.
Tipoff it et 7:30. as ere two other k~ Sun.set Lcaaue matches and
four Sea View t..eacuc duels, l\iahliahtcd by Newport Harbor'• visit to
E1mnci1:
Fountain Valley (0-t) and host Marina (1--0) are locked up in a
critical match with the latter rcquiri"I a vlc1ory to maintain s-e witb
the Edieon-Ocean View winner. Fountain Valley would faJI two pma
otf tbl cbam~p pece with a &ou.
Huntinston leech is at Westminsltr wath both teams faced with
the same dilemma of Fountain Vall~ -win or fall to ().2.
Corona del Mar rilb the Sea View's only unbnteft record after
three st.ant witb a matchup at up.and-com I Of Un1vm1ty (2· I), white
Nrwpon Ha"*' Ida ita Pl mark 10 Ettanaa (I ·2) where the &ties
have tbc-1r becu '° the wall. Othtt Sea View~ COiia Mew (().3) at Woodbridec (I ·2) and
Lapna 8Ncl9 (l· 1) at Slcldlebect ( t ·2). .
Irvine (Pl) bOltl Clplaiano Valley (J.0) in the Soulia Cout =and Mater °".Cits 4,_..mc winnina 1uak °" 1M ltee viJhilll...., ~ID Anellut Llllpe play.
* 1111111111 ~ONESOAY, JANUA/ff 15. 1911
Charier Joy Blefeld (top, riCJat) racee Oc-.n View player for
ball, while Pam Lewin (below) deftecta a S-h•wk pue.
Chargers hit
campaign trall
f Or poll vOtes
Girls soccer team
believes it should
be ranked No. 1
By SHARON FRUTO °' ...............
Colleen Silva and h1:r E:d1~n High
airls soa:ier team v.ondered v.hat lhcy
had to do in order lo bt: dec11:d ~o I
in the CIF 4-A poll.
The Charaers arc the onl)' unbeaten
team in the d1 v151on. The)' havc won
14 matches and 11ed one This
season's trophies include an Ocean
View Tournament champ1onsh1p
and a South Torrame Tournament
consola•ion tttlc.
But in the most rcccnl poll. Edison
as only ranked founh The ( hargers
have a better record than all three
teams ahead of them -Torrance
(two losses. two taes). El Toro (seycn
losses). and Claremont lone los!.. two
riest _-and have alread' defeated No
2 El Toro.
But Edison doesn't ha"e 10 wolT)
The exit polls would probabl\ shov.
Edison n&)lt at the top. if anyone took'
the time to vote.
According to CI F media relauons
director Scott Cathcan. no one has
bothered to v1s1t the polls
.. It's been the same poll all season:·
Cathcart said. "The rankings have
been the same since the preseason
Ourdcadhne (10 vote) 1s on Monda:r.
They're (4-A coaches1 supposed to
call in with the poll. ..
So with one measure of concern ofT
the ballot. 1lva and her team can get
on with their campaign - one
they've had much success w11h 1h1s
year.
"T his 1s the best team I've had:·
Silva said\
This year 1lva believes her incum-
bent players, along with the strong
assonmcnt of first-term vars11y pla)·
ers. are read y fo r a C'I F cham·
p1onsh1p
"When we started this program. we
had very strong ~1SC1phne." 1lva said
9Un Blefeld
of her fi ve-rear pro1cct. "We're
polished now We hardly have to do
anything (disc1phne}. ThC1e ilrf1
made a personal commitment. For
every practice they don't complete.
they sit QUt a game. They run five to
seven m iles a day and have 21h-hour
dnlls." ·
T he Chargers have s1x scmor
players. all of whom have been in
Sil va's camp for fo ur years. The
maJonty leader in sconng as se nior
forward Joy 81efeld. a four-year
varsity player who has been named
all-CIF th~ years.
81efcld plays on a rt.IJOnal select
team. a band-picked aJl-siir squad,
and was named a ht&h school All-
Amencan. Her efforts earned her a
spot on the under-19 national team as
well
According to 1lva. Baefeld is one of
the premier playCTS 1n Southern
Cahfomta, and 1s also one of the most
sou~t-after prep players in the West.
81cfeld has scored 22 goals and also
has 13 assists 1h1s SCa.MllL
Joining B1efeld on the sconng
bandwagoo as senior forward Pam
Lewin. wbo has seven goals and seven
assists so far
Match Nadon. better known for her
cross country achievements, bas
booted five goals and dtsbed off ctabl
assists. As a n&ht halfback, 6cr
achievements arc hard-earned
"I know she'll always be there,"
Silva said. "She's the lund of player
you don't worry about. because she
always &et~ the JOb done._"
Assistant coach Renee adon be-
(Pleue eee EDl801' /BS)
Robinson ignoring obvious problem
QB n ot included
among changes
in Rams· t>ff ense
Nobody came in on the noon
balloon from Saskatoon and ask('d
me.but ..
•Rams Coach John Robinson !Ml\'>
he willJau up h1sofTense for 1986 hut
says that docs not include any
changes at quan crback ... that could
be the firs t mistake of 1986.
•The Bears won '1 have the cold and
• craz ) atmosphere of Chicago against
New England in the Su per Bowl
which probably means they won't win
by 24 points.
•The last time teams from< h1tago
and Boston mel for a world cham-
p1onsh1p was 1918 when the Cubll
met the Red Sox in the World Senc\
•New York Giants punter Sean
Lande ta has been cleared of a tit kct
scalpin&charge but he will ncvttr he
cleared ofmissin• the punt 1n the
playoff game apmst the Bears
•Look ahkes: New England < oar h
Raymond Berry and J ackJe <...oopcr
. Add loo le ah Ices: Chicago Coach
Malec D1tlca a nd Wallace Beery
•The Rams' tcmblc m1srcacl1ng ul
the clock just before halfiam e would
not have changed the outcome of1hc
Jame but it very well m1gh1 ha' e
influenced the point spread.
•Guess who at waswhosa1d M1am1
Coach Don Shula was overrated.
•Will one of the spectacles at upcr
Bowl XX be Patriots General Man-
aaer Pat Sullivan on the sidelines
scrcamin3 insultsat the Bears'>
•The LA Chppersarc sull using lht'
Gooden male
athlete of year
NEW YO RK (AP) -Dwight
Gooden of the New York Mets, the
younacst player ever to win batcball'o;
Cy Youns Award, today wu named
The Associated Press Mak Athlete of
the Y car for I 98S. ~ptunna the S 5-
ycar-old award by a substantial
marain over Chicqo Bean runnina
back Walter Payton.
Gooden, a 2 f ·)ear-old nabt-hand·
er who led the m~or lequn an
V1ctonn. strikeouts-and ~med run
avcrap last season. received 53 votes
in baUotlna by tPOnS writcn and
broldcatkrs nationwide. A total of
22 1 vota ~cut
Payton was ICICOnd wtlb 39 vo~
followed by stock car dnver 8111
ElliotJ1 wuh 25L. C1nc1nnat1 Reds playet~manqer l"ttc Rote W'lth 23
and Los Anecln lakt'TI center
K.arttm Abdul.Jabber with 20.
Lut year'• •1nntt or the award.
first prc1entcd an 1931 10 bucblll
l)lner Ptpptr Manin was arl ~ ... who won four aokt mcda.l an
tl"ICk and ftdd It tbt 1914 U>t Anera Ot~paa. Lewis also TfOn
the a\IW'd in & 913.
ad vemsing sloga n. "Soanng 10 n('v.
he1gh ts-don'1 lct us take ofT w11hout
you... . Sadly. they JUSI took on
v.11hout me
•The ( ·0~ telecast had ~uch a
Chicago na vo r. you had to li~ten
closely 10 find that the oppo~ing team
v.as the Rams.
•John Robinson said he rcgrclled
taking the ball 1ns1ead of the wind
afier"inning the coin to\'> in Chicago
Sunda' The Ram'> would still ha-.<'
blo"'n 11
•The Dodgers ha ve opened work-
outs and their plod toward the \\orld
~nt's. hut lhc "or\t fear in o' cr-
lapp1ng sea!>ons 1s that tht ~ B.\ will
oneda\ o'erlap 1ISC"l f
• Rlue<. Brothers ha as will be the
Hear.,· \uper Bowl\) mhol tht' \/t'w
England t'mtumer<> ha'-e not yet been
heard from
•John Robinson""~' the Pat not~
Buo
TUCIEI
wall ha ve to pass to ocat th<' Bears
This means he 1s picking the Bear~
•l 'Cl,.A basketball coach \\ alt
Haaard constantly bemoan' the fact
he has a team ofshon pla)ers Tht"
ob' 1ousansv.er Lo this stale ol afTau -c;
1s 10 recnnt taller pla) er'
•\\ell. the Rams got tunherdov. n
the road than the defendin g <iuper
Bowl champions from San Franci'\Co
•The \pom book at the '1(1M
Grand in La~ Vegas took m first
Su per Bowl bet two m1nutC'ufter lht
finish of the Pa1n o1s-Dolph1ns game
and the acuon has bttn heav' ever
~•nee: • pcak1ng ofspon,book!.
uthem Cahfom1a 'ipom mrn arc.-
d1scovcnng Laughlin. ~e' . and such
places as the Ed~cv. ater Hotel and
( asino l ike 1ht old da ~ \In \ cgas
the' accept 'our bet and smile ,rnd
!.3\ thanks ··Walter Pa\lo n 1'i final!-. [lmng to
get lO lht uper Bo wl and so I\ "Acri in
Olsen and that funn ) hlllt· l u' '4 ho
snaps the ball on tht• "'""' l:.ngla nd
Patnots' helmtl\
•Do the Ph1ladelph1a E.aglcssull
want Da' 1d \hula a\ head coach''
•It 1s the longest and roughest road.
".nd vou l'3 1T' a tl·mhh h<'a n
load.
But 11 has a realh magic goal
..\ '1s1110 the Super &v. l
Drug~estingOK'd by NCAA
Delegates say n o
to ba n on boosters
a s meeting ends
"-l:\\ ORL E..\\l~(API-"-l \\
.,l hool'I c;a1d )C~ to dru~·tesung and
nn 10 a ban on lt111ng booqcr\
rt"t·ru111ng on campu'I Tuesda) 3\ the
a'>.,<x:ta11on ·s 80th annual con\.enuon
end<'d one.-da~ earl)
T ut'~a' 's action. v. ht le •.omcllm<'\
confuscd .. ncH'r v.a!. a' 'ola11lc a' on
Monday when 0 1vl\1on I 1m.11tu:1t1n\
'olcd 10 retain standardized 1es1
scores in a far-reach1n1 new academic
rcqu1rcmen1 fo r freshmen. me
black rducalors. mainu1ning the te ts
arr rao all) d1scn minatof)., ,_.1d
T ut~a' the-. would "consider our Opl1 0n\ ..
··wc.-v.111 discuss lepl acuon and
v..t ""ill discuss gemna out of the
:"IC .\ .\ .. said Jo5tph Johnson. prcs1·
dent ot C.1rambhn1 and the sharpest
cntac of the nandardized tens
The measure on drua-tcst1n1 was
vartuall) unopposed by the nearly
1,800 delegates. i\thlctcs who test
pos111-.e on a Iona last of "s1rcc1
drup. ·· a ""ell u performan~
en hancina substances. Wlll losc their
d111h4hty for 1 m1n1mum of90-day
The tests will be done at foo1ball bowl
pmes and AA ch1mpion hips
and could involve penalues for
coachn who bavt li:nowlcJac of dnaa
use but do not "'l'Of'\ 1t
The 1nt1-<lru1 hJl ancludts aU(h
street df\&&S as mAt'IJuln&. coca.inc
1 and heroin and include anabolic
steroids and cafTe1nc
Vince Dooley. the be.td footbiJI
coach and alhlctec duu 1or at tbe-
"'"crsaty of ~ Mtd he WU
"\Ct)' pkatcd and Q'llle turpnlCd
that It Pined with web an O\'ct•
*Mlm1f\I m~ori.t)', t.tcd on IOfM Of
the convenauofts ·I've bad -.th
"ptapk wbo have u pttS.ttd concern
11\ er II ~aU$t' of u>n\l1tut111nd
ngh t\ tnd1' 1dual nght!I ·
"lt".mulh neededand tldn\th1n~
11·\ a 't'ar la1e:"
Last \Car'~ co n"en11on rl'll'\ 1nl J
drug·tt"s11ng proposal hC'l au\t' 1t J1d
not include stree t drug\
The scandal-wradt'd \outhv.t'''
( onference failed to pu<.h through J
motion that would ban boo<.trl'"\ trom
recrutan& on campus. Stiml' opfl\1-
nenls had suggested 1ha1 l°'l><l"-lt'r'
m1&)\1 enroll an a ont"·hour night
course to get around tht' ruk
"That's foolishness:· ..aid H1'u'1t•n
facult) representative \111..t· l11hn,1•n
John!on. 1lfitt hcanng h" nlnt~un·
attacked from all sides. ~u1t,gr\ll',1 th.lt
II be withdrawt1
'"We Wlll be bad ne\i \l'Jr .ind II
will be re-v.o rded Out '4l' 'ti' t'l·ht•\ t
11asa 1ood idea."~ ~•d
Two years aao. w11 h rt'lall' t'h n\'
debate, the C'A.\ uln\l'nl111n
banned off<a mpus hoo'ttr rt\ ru11
ina.
Also W'lthdrav.rn and crna1n "'
reappear at next year' (On'-rnuun
was a proposoal to ai ve athletes five
years of eli11bhty 1M1ead of the
trad1 ttonal four
It v. a<. <,pun .. urt"d t-i' th<' A1s \I,'
\ 1mll'rt'ncc.-and t't4l l..rf' 11f thr
f'lr<lflO\al said II \4 0Uld l'n\llllrdgt•
h1t1-hl.'r graduation ratt'\ .. ,,., shod .1ng 1nnl1' atl \l' dnd
ti•xxl .. said Te\a\ o.\t hlct1l Dirt'\ tor
()\.-Loss Dodd~ "II .. also rC.-\OI UIHIO·
.ti' and 1n need offunht'r \lud\ hct nre
"r Jct on ti ··
n nc of the biggest aumarou nd' nf
1h1· con•enuon cam(' nn J mmh·
dc.-hated propc.1s.al to rt'ducc lrom t•1 gh1
111 '>I\ the numhcr •<'fl\'"' .1 ~hc>Cll
mu'I \fl\ln\t'f fur ~1th men Jnd
v.omc.-n It• l.lu ahf) lnr D" '""n 1--\.
1ht· tnp loothJll leatt ur
'-arro...,_I~ Jt'feate<l ~ond;n 11 ~as
lir<lught up lor rc,on"J c:r.1tion Tuc'·
Ja, .ind dl'lc.-ated h' .me \nit' ''-~4
Rut then 11 "as again rt'lOn\ldt"n'd
'4ht>n "-< .\-\ Prr'l1dcn1 lat I.. ()u, 1
d 1~v('f'('d that dclqtzlM in nn<'
\t'l llOn ~I th<' room had not b«n
,ounted Crl\Cn anothe1 ,hJnle 11
f)a\~d 6.'· I
"I knov. -.ou r<' 11re<l u f heanna
about ho" pnvat <' hool~ ar<' hav1n1
money troubln," said l\Ml i\thltuc
Director Bob Hitch. spcak1na 1n
~uppon of reducina tht> rt'qu1rcmemt
lO \I\
L opez takes time off. to miss Uniden
E•p«ttna her second child 1n May,
anq Lopez will not be on hand for
the Uoacko LPGA lnv1tat1onal 1n
Costa Mna. Feb. 27-Matth 2
U>pez. 29. has won 3' tournament
victonct an nine Kasont. as 1 pro-
fcwona1 but she will be absent from
tht l.POA tour tbas }CU until at least
July
,.J'~ d«Jdcd I'm l<>lfll to Sta~
home and not play until the U
()pm,., said lopt't. "Th as as not
t0meth1na my donor ordered. but
I'm alrudy at a si.tt whcrc 1 couldn't
pla~ my t>m:·
Lu1 u r. Looct rn fh e •our·
naments and sci LPG.\ rttord~ for
cam1np. $416.4 2, and ~troke a vcr· a,e. 0 3 be v.on the Va~ Trophy,
11 vcn for the lo.,est stroke a "Cf'alt,
and was named Pla)'cr ofthc Year
~pe:und her bu band Ra y knaaht
a.rT spcndtna the win'er 10 Albany.
Ga. Knt&ht. an '"fiddtt W'tth the New
York Meu. -.n ~pon to lP"lftl
train1rc Fd> 20 1n Ronda.
he and Kn11tH have a daup\rr. , •
Jey, l , and K.qibt hat a eoa_ ••
8roob. 6, by I J"VM>UI mam.. Jr I
The LPOA .-. iit tN10a Jan. ll
~th the Maida C1ueic "' lcQ ~'00. Fla
Town's minister
has no synipathy
·for Blue DeVlls
• VlLLA GROVE, Ill. -The local hi&b tcbool bas cheered its Blue Devils tOr
almost 50 yeari and won't stop now,
despite objections fro!J' a local !Moister
concerned about satanism.
The school board voted unanimoUlly Monday
niaht to maintain tbe Blue Devils tradition.
The Rev. JeffWeUs' campeian antered some tow:n
residents -someone left a severed antmal head on b1s
church steps Sunday -and he says be'U let someone
elte carry it on .. .. I think my voice has been voiced," said Wells.
Most of the 2S people attendtna the board meeting
in thiumall cast.central lllinois community supported
the half-.century-old nickname. .
"This h6met's nest stirred up by Reverend Wells is
ridiculous," said Harriet Clarlc. "A name is just bow
you interpret it"
Rocketa' bome •treak mapped
IUeU1 o .... hit a buketand two frtt m throws in the final nit'e KCOnds and Karl
Ma1eM tcoted 29 Pointa u Utab SAapped
HOUSlon'1 2().ume borne winnina streak
with a 1OS.I02Natioul Buketbad Alloc:ialioo victory
over the Rockets Tuelday niaht.·Tbc Juz wen victim•
ofMouston's streak in two eaitierpm~ l 34-1 OS
and 106-99 ... In otber NIA acu~ ._...,,
Mame. CltHb and ...... ,..,.... scored 19 Points
each and led a third-quar1ef twte that carried
Pbiladel~ to a 121-10$ victory over New Jersey for
the 76en fifth ttrai&bt triumph ... ~~-came
off the bench to score 12 fourth-quarter Points and help
Atlanta bold off Sacramento for a l l S-104 victory ...
&al v ..... .,.. ~ 28 Points and Jen•• Seney
scored 10 of 6i1 14 Points dQrina a 3:20 span of the
second quarter u Portland built a 17-point lead on the
way to a 120-108 victoryoverQeveland ... .....-.. Bel, Wa~ton's 7-6 rookie center, tndcd punches with
Chicago s Ja•Ull ONMm in the doaina ·~ of the BuUcts' 11 7-1 13 victory over the BWla. Ouc::110 was
ahead 98·87 in the fourthquanerwben former Cal State
Fullerton standout LMll w ... came off the Wubina-
ton bench to score all oflu1 team's next~6 ·n~ and
teammate Jeft MaleM connected for e· t •tra.iabt
points as the Bullets cauaht up and S'U away from
the Bulls in the final two minutes. Wells, 32. argued devil worshlp ~nd satanism are
increufog among you.of. people and satd use of the Blue bal•-~ b
Devil nickname could 'enhance that. even if it's done Quebec's streak -.cu y Jet.
innocently." . .
He began publicly criticizmg the nickname of bis Dale Bawer~'* scored two con-Iii
own alma mater last month, after city officials secutive third-period goals to break a tie ,
repainted the watenowcr in the blue-and-gold school and send Winnipef to a S-4 National
colors and added the words "Blue Devils." Hockey League victory over Quebec
Wells said Monday night be should ha v~ntacted Tuesday night, snappina-tbe-)lordiques! seven-pme
school board members directly. winning streak. Laute Boldmu scored what proved
But he said his feelings about the nickname have to be the wioninagoaJ when be took a pass from 'homu
not changed. S&eell in front of the net and beatgoabe Cl•t Malardld
"I th1nlc the community would be better served at 12:52 ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Steve &Ga!97cl and
with a different nab:te," Wells told the board. "I think l Du Qa1u scored thud-period goals to give catgary a
have done my duty as a minister and a civic leader in 4-3 victory over WashingtOn and a sweep of the~
this community. I think it's a valid issue." game season series between the two teams. The Aames
One other person spoke against the nickname at had lost nine .st.raigbt road ~es and 11 of ~2 ove~
the meeting. before their vtsn to the Capital Centre ... Philadelphia "l would like to see a town vote on changing the came from behind in the third period on Tim Kerr'•
school name," said Steve Burnett. who atte!lds ~aith 200th career .aoal and a Power-play score by Pelle
Christian Assembly Church. where Wells 1s pastor. Eklucl to defeat~ew Jersey, 3-2 ... Brlu BeU.W.-
'Tm IUnd of opposed to it bei.ng on t!'c wa.ter ~ower." scored a fluke goal with 3:54 left in regulation as
Wells said· after he reused his obJccllons, be Minnesota rallied for a 3-3 tic with Chicaao ...
received several threats and then on Sunday found a Defenscmao Mike McEwaa'• second goaJ of the game
goat's head near the front door of his church. at 14:21 of the third period lifted the New York Rangers
Police Chief Gene Patterson said it actually was a to a 2-1 victory over Vancouver.
deer's head with the antlers removed. .
Wells said "a lot ofth~havc been blown OU~ of Gomez win• in aubetitate role pr1>portion" and that he never meant to suggest V1Ua
Grove was a center for satanism. NEW YORK -Ecuador's Andres ~
Gomez, a last-minute substitute for Jimmy
Connors, upset Henri Uc<>nte of France,
7-6, 6-1 , Tuesday ni&ht in the opening
round of the Mastcn tennis championships. Quote of the day
Mike Ty .... the rising young heavyweight.
~ving a baseball analogy to his first-round
knockout of Mark Young, which lifted Tyson's
professional record to 15-0 with 11 fint-round
knockouts: "h felt like bitting a home run. It was
oh, so smooth."
Finke hired as GM by Saints
NEW ORLEANS -Jim Finks, EE
former general manager of the C.bicago c II• Bears, Tuesday was named president and
general managC1' of the New Orleans '
Saints.
Tom Benson, who bought the National Football
League team last season. announced Finks' hiring and
said Finks would become part owner.
"We have been working to wm and now we bring
you a winner," Benson said.
Finks said'hc already has begun the search for a
coach.
"There are many people we'll be tallUng to." he
said, "but at this point we're a long way from naming a
new coach."
The Saints never have had a winning season m
their 19-ycar history.
"I have strong feelings that this club isa better team
than the record would indicate." Finks said. "But in the
final anaJ ysis, they pay off on the record.
"I've seen clubs with less material become a team
and win, and J think that's the No. I objective here."
Finks, SS, replaces Bum Phillips, who resigned as
head coach and general manager before the end of the
1985 season, when the Saints bad a S-11 record.
Gomez joins Sweden's Mats Wilander, West
Germany's Boris Becker and American Johan Krick in
the quarterfinals of this season-ending tournament
being held at Madison SQua.rc Garden.
WiJander began the Arst day with a 6-3, 6-4 victory
over American Scott Davi.s; Krick upset fifth-seeded
Stefan Edberg of Sweden, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2; and Becker
blasted bis way past American Paul Annacone, 3-6, 6-3,
6-2.
Gomez was inserted into the 16-player field when
Connors was forced to withdraw because of influenza.
Ironically, the left-hander qualified for last year's
Masters. but had to withdraw because of an injury.
No. 1 Tar Heel• survive scare
COLLEGE PARK. Md. -Warren m Manin and Steve HaJe scored four Points
apiece during an 8-0 Nonh Carolina streak
late in the game, lifting the top-ranked Tar
Heels to a 71-67 victory over Ml\')'land Tµesda y night,
extending their unbeaten strcalc to 17.
Maryland, I 0-S after losing close contests to three
of the top five teams in the last 11 days. led SS-49 with
11 minutes remaining.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
10 p.m. -BOXING: Great moments in
Olympic boxing. Channel S6.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -PRO ROCKEY: New York
Rangers at Kings, Kl.AC (570).
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASK.£'rBAIJ..: Seattle at
Oippers, K.MPC (710).
Alaska Golden Glove champ on Irvine card
lfaYratlJqYa at 'OltUll
Oabritla Sabetinl, a I ~year-old tennis player,
11 echeduled io play Mt111na Navratilova on
Wecloctday, Jan. 12 at 6 p.m. at the Forum In
IQ&lewood.
Navntilova iuaokcd No. I in the world while
the I 2th-ranked Sabatini bc'oke onto the 1ntCT'-
natiooal acene iD l 9U at Wimbledon. Later in
the same ycer, abc won her f\rst titk, the Japan
~n in Tokyo. FoUowina this match No. I-ranked Ivan
Lcndl will t.tlce on seventh-rt~ Yannick Noah
in the fifth rouod oft~ Forum c;'bamp~onship
Tennis Challcnp Series. Followma this there will be an eiabt-pme pro-set doubles match.
Tickets are available at the FoNm Box Office
and all Ticketmaatcr locations. for more information phone (213) 4 I 9·32S7.
TelllWI Clu.lc. toamey ,
The eiaht players have been chosen for the
Tennis Clusics townament 10 be held Jan. 29-•
Feb. 2 at the Palm Valley Country Oub in Palm Dcsen.
The five-day tournament features pro-
fessional men and women players1 30 and over
who have cam~ SI million in pnzc money or
won a major titk durin& their careen.
The-l)layen chosen were Billie Jean King, Bob
Lutz., 'Rosie Casa.ls, Many Riessen. Kerry
Melville Reid. Cliff Richey. Nancy Richey and
John Alexander.
AU proceeds from the Pro-am tournament will
ao toward the Shirley Copeland Home and the
Wide Horizens Home for sexually. physically
and emotional!~ abused children.
General admission tickets an41 box scats are
available by phonina the tournament office or
the Palm Valley Country Club Tennis Shop at
(619) 34S-274j,
For more infonnation. phone Brent Rose,
Di~or of Public Rilations for Sponswoman Inc. II (619) 321-0662.
Loa BeacJa Gn.ad PrU duets
Ticfcts for the Toyota Grand Pru of Long
Beach are now on sale.
The event iuet for April 11-13.
Ticket prices remain the same as l 98S.
ran,ina from S12-S7S.
Tickets can be purcb.ased at the Grand Prix
ticket office at 130 N. Pinc, at all Southern
California Ticketmaster outlets or by phorlina'
the Grand Prix ticket hotline at (213) 436-99S3.
lf~££*8a,_
Rqaauation for llewpon Nauona1 Uttk
Leeaue will be held Sanuday from 9 a.m.•noon
at cn1ip School, 2000 Q iff Drive, in Newport
Beech. •
The I-sue is open to all C:' 6-Jj years of qe who retide ln Newpon .
All new pla~n are asked to brina a b1nh
certificate.
M•do•lark appean I.a 7'V
The Fountain Valrty Jaycees att hosting
Meadowlark Lemon's new besketball team, The
Shooting Stan, in an exhibition game with the
Jaycees.
The game ia achedul~ for Saturday niaht a1 6
at Ocean View Hiah in Huntiniton 8cad1. ·
For ticket sales or further 1nfonnauon. phone
Karen Holsclaw at 968-SS97, Terri Krinsky at
530-0194 or Blase de Roco at 9S7-0783 or
839-3696.
FV Llttle Jh.. .altball allJiaIM
The Fountain VaJley· Little Miss Softball
L.e11ue will hold siptupsSaturday from 9 a.m.-2
p.m. at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center at
16400 Brookhurst St.
The program is bpen to prls aaes five through
I 6. Proof of aae and registration fee must be
submilled with application.
For more information, phone 839-9460.
Cllppen atadeat duet iu.coaat liie Los An&cles Oi~ have instituted a
special student ticket pn~ ofS3 f~r all S.10 seats
at Oippers games.. The d1tc0unl IS avatlable to
students at any level of ~ucation, provided
valid student identification is presented upon
purchase of the tickets.
The tickeu can only be purchased a1 the
Qippers Spons Arena box office which is open
Monday throUf)I Saturday from 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
For funher information phone the Oippcn
ticket offic.e at (213) 748-8000.
Blazers send SPORTS MAILBAG
\
•
Valentine
to Clippers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles Oippers acquired point
guard. Darnell Valentine from the
Portland Trail Blazers Tuesday in
exchange for a first-round selection in
the 1986 National Basketball As-
sociation draft.
seahawks' conduct
in Arkansas lauded
Also as pan of the deal, the clubs
traded second-round picks in the
1988 NBA draft. said Clippers'
spokesman Scott Carmichael.
Valentine, 26, had played sP.8ringly
for the Trail Blazers tn recent games,
after it became known about a month
ago that they wanted to trade hjm.
Appearing in 28 of Ponland's 41
games this sea.son, the 6-1 , 183-
pounder averaged 9.1 points, fi ve
assists, and I. 7 S steals per game.
The former Universitr of Kansas
star was the Trail Blazers first pick in
the 1981 dTaft. He was the 16th player
selected overall.
Ocean View squad
receives praises
of honorary coach
Dear Sports Edi tor:
I would like to take this opponuni-
ty to thank the team members and the
coachlngstaffoftheOcean View
High School basketball team, the
Seahawks, for their participation in
the King Cotton Oassic basketball
tournament held in Pinc Bluff, Ark.
on Jan. 2-4.
As an honorary coach I was
fortunate to spend three days with
these fine athletes. They quickly
became a crowd pleaser and 1 had
many people persona Uy tell me that
they were impressed by their fine
ability and by the way they conducted
themselvcsataJJ times, both on and
off the court.
Sincerely,
James" Jltten" Morpa
Job Gore
Te4Ranlla
GeneGra""
Proud parent.
Dear Spons Editor:
It is a somewhat rare experience to
be in the proud parents of a desig-
nated honoree, but to be parents or
two such selectees is too much for me
to let pass without comment.
Our sons. Scott and Mark Craig, are
two of the many fine Newpon Harbor
Hi1h School student athletes. Both
young men two weeks ago were
selected to the Daily Pilot and
Coaches All-Sea View League foot-
ball teams. To have two honors
within one famil y nearly overwhelms•
us.
Today we have even greater pride!
. . .. .
Valentine said he was happy that
he'd been traded to the Oippers and
that he no longer was in hmbo like
he'd been for the past month. Alaskan middleweight Lee Sen-Sentinella is a five-time Alaska Vallejo. Mario and Marc, will also be "I'm excited to be a part of the
tmella will make his Southland ring Golden Gloves champion. He's been featured on Monday's card. Mario Clippers' organization now and look
debut Monday night at the Irvine training with Noe Cruz at the West-will box J* Valdez. while Marc fo rward to getting down to Los
The manager of the motel where
they stayed made a special point to
inform me that he considered this
team to be one of the best behaved
young groups to stay at bis faciltics.
Scott and Mark were selected to the
All-CIF Central Conference football
teams by the All-Southern California
Board of Athletics.
We arc no more proud than other
parents, but we arc certainly proud
equally, twice! Marriott Hotel. minster Gym. goes against Alfredo Gonzalez. Angeles and having the op~rtunity
Sentinella, 24. is paired with Henry Nick Delong. the battling bar-Tickets will be available Monday at to play," he said. "The (Trail Blazers)
Jonson of Los Angeles. tender from Long Beach. will box l.V. 10 a.m. in the hotel's lobby. orpmzation has been great to me.
George Garcia and Oscar Muniz NaJ1s of Los Angeles in a six-round However, it was unfonunate the way
are matched on the same card. and heavywc1pit match. The program will stan at 8 p.m. things unwound. ft wasn't handled as
will be fighting for the suite utle. The Lesperance brothers from Seven bouts are scheduled. good as I would have liked.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j ·· ... l'mhappyto be out.ltwaslike I was a marked guy. I'm finally happy
ifs done and r can go on with my
career."
l would like to thank Coach Jim
.Harris. hisstaffand family. We hope
we madctbcirstay in our city
enjoyable.
Again, on behalf of the honorary
coaches of the Seahawk~ we &)adly
welcome them back to Pine IJlufT,
Ark. should they ever have a reason to
return to our area.
There are many hard-worlUng and
skilled athletes in our high schools
throughout the Orange Coast area,
and we only wish each one of these
yo yng men and women could share
our joy.
Happy New Year!
RonaJcl V. ud Rosemary CraJ1
Cotta Mesa Garys ~
Januaryj-
SaJ.e Running, Fitness Expo se1;
... ...
.. Latest equipment,
Ood, c lothing to be
featured at event
For those w1th1.runt.crest in
ex.crcise and staying in sha(>C. the first
Southern California RunninJand
Fitness Expo will feature a wide array
of the latest in athletic gcu and
aOCCJSOries.
The event, sponsored b).' the 1986
Lona Beach Marathon. wlll be held at
the Hyatt Rcacncy in Lona Beach on
Friday.Jan. 31 from J..7 p.m.,and
Saturday, Feb. I from IOa.m.-S p.m.
M!ior manufacturers orrunn1n1
and fitness equipment, clothinaand
nutritional foods will present their
products in 40 booth• alont the
Promenade at the hotel.
The event is f~ 10 the public.
A J Ok.run will precede the Expo on
Saturday, Jan. 31 ,at 8a.m., wh1Je the
Lona Beach Marathon will be held
Feb. 2~nninaat 7·30a.m.
Forfunherinformation on the
Expo. lOknao,ormarathon, phone
(213) 49.i.2664.
* * *
The Redondo Beach Super Bowl
Sunday 1 Ok will take place on Super
Sunday,Jan. 26. •
Enlr)' formu.re 1v11lable now at
RUNNIN G
runnma stores. health clubs and the
offices of the Redondo Beach
Ch.am6crofCommcrce.
I ncreasina participation by youna·
er runners bas resulted in two new age "°i: wbose winners will receive tro iet: llandundcr,and 14-17.
beheld Sunday at 9a.m .. bqinningat
the LosAngelesAthleticOubat 7th
and Olive in downtown LA .
The event will finish on the
Olym pic running track of the Col-
iseum. Trophies will be presented to
the toJ> three fin ishors,i n all divisions
andllwaras will als0-ao to Cheniab
school and uni vcrsi ty aroup wi tb the
most panicipantsand the fastest
time.
The entry fee is S 12 and late
reaistration will be accepted next to -
the LA AthleticClubthedayofthe
r.ace from 7-8:30 t .m. .
For more information, phone (8 l Sr
98S-5700. :
., * • • . . 1t year's entry fee is S 12. which
includeu T·shin. theproaram. l'Unnina ournbcr and cli~bilitY. fo
nfnf prizes: Most of the fcewtll ao to •--.•di•••• the host Ch.amber for its community SATUROAY
and philanthropic activities. PlllW ... •..,•-9"1Mh m.etlM
T '"' C!Vlc Center Mltt!Y !let C1urM wtttl ter111 Liit year's overall winner was om lllh. F•" "-*"' T•"*11M •S..,..,.Wlfl'lt l Wysocki in 28:H. with MonicaJo~ce 1ete...,•rt111e•1v.w.~...,. ... . the • . )) 9 ~ 111 tNe•Y.-Uftdl .,.., tltr""" Wlnn1nc women scrowntn : . MW1'1'911oft,...,.. .. v\Nldl .. ,,..,.,.,
Topwinnenttuayear,andone "*DAY,JA•1'
rqastered runner chote from the ................ •-....._ • e.m.•t
field, will receive two round-trip ~~~~:::;;=::,. ticlletl to London via Britilh Ca.ledo-......,.. T·"*' ,.,. ,., ..., ..., ...,.,_.
nian Airways. __.,.,.....,.._,.a... ..
Morethan8,000nannenhave C"9W'Wct llOrrnw•IMol"*""'• ..... l",, m-nn alradysianedupforthoev~ ...,..._, .... _.._.111h.M.taJ * • • .-e:ae .. "' , .. , .. , ....... ......,.. • " itedl.(1\11111 ..... ~ ~ .... ,,_.T...,_ -"'U ..., .. ....., .... ,, .... ...,....,. • The unkistCobteum IOlc nan wt """"'•""'-_._Dlal'9 ....... ,,...._ -:.
'
•
GIRL s B ASK[ l BAl t
Woodbrid e,
CdMrema n
undefeated
They meet Thursday _
fo r Sea View lead; -
OV, Barons also win
Woodbridge and Corona del Mar
highs kept their Sea View League gjrls
basketball unbeaten marks intact
Tuesday, scttina up a showdown
Thursday at Woodbridge.
Estancia also won in Sea View play
Fountain Valley and Ocean VieV.:
triumphed in Sunset League acuon
and Mater Dc1 stayed undefeated in
the Angelus League.
Here's how the action went:
Wooclbrld1e 0 , Costa Mesa U :
Gilly Powell putonascoring clinic in
the second half and Jill Daniels set a
Woodbndge rebound record as the
Warriors (I 0-5) made 1t 4-0 in the Sea
View at Costa Mesa.
Powell poured in 18 of her 22
points in the second half. 10 coming
in the fourth quarter when Wood-
bridge came from behind to erase a
three-point deficit after three quar-
ters. and Daniels grabbed 23 re-
bounds to break the old maFk-(22) set
last season by Sharon Lyon. Daniels
also added 10 points.
Suzanne Cowley had a big night in a
losing cause for Costa Mesa with 12
points and nine rebounds. The Mus-
tangs, who outrebounded 64-37. held
a 38-35 lead entcnng the final quarter.
but Powell's effort was too much as
Cost.a Mesa evened its league record
at 2-2 (7-7 overall).
Diana Zilko had 16 rebounds for
Woodbridge and Stephanie Swanson
had 10 rebounds and nine points for
Costa Mesa.
Corona del Mar 5%, University 35:
Michelle Willard kept the Sea Kings
( 4-0) atop the Sea View League with
Woodbndge. sconng 23 points and
pulling down 21 rebounds as CdM
handed the Trojans (0-4) another
loss.
Kathy Smirl (seven boards) and K.
. C. Jones added 12 and 11 points for
Corona del Mar and teammate
Natalie Basmaciyan had six assists
and six rebounds.
The Sea Kings. who ha\ e woo five
of their last six_ broke the game open
m the second quarter when they
outscored the Trojans. 18-5. to take a
30-13 halftime lead.
Estucia 52, Newport Harbor 46:
hawna Newbern and Brenda Jaeger
scored 12 points apiece to pace the
Eagles to the win at Harbor.
Estancia earned a 43-29 lead into
the final penod. but Chantel Deford
scored eight of her 15 points 1n 1hat
quarter to bnng Newport wtthin
47-42. before the Eagles stopped the
threat.
J~eger, a 5-9 senior forward return-
ing from a layoff due to a stomach
ailment. dropped in all 12 points in
the second quarter and htt 4 of 4 from
the free throw hnc and 4 of 6 from the
field.
Leslie Self added 10 rebounds and
seven pomts for the Eagles. who
improved to 4-8 overall and 2-2 in
league.
Harbof1s 1-3 in Sea View play.
FouatalD Valley 71, Martaa H:
Mehssa HandJey spar~ed an 18-7
Baron run in the final 51/i minutes of
the game to ~ve Fountain Valley its
second straight lcaauc win.
Manna had surprised the Barons
with a 55-53 lead before HandJey
went to work. She scored 12 of her
game-high 27 points in the final
period to thwart the Vikings' upset
btd.
Fountain Valley also had a spun
JUSt before halftime after the host
Vikings had narrowed the deficit to
two points, stretching the lead to 13 in
the final three m inutes of the suond
quarter.
Jackie Cook-added 17 points and
Dawn Lawler chipped in Wllh I 0 for
Fountain Valley.
Manna. now 0-2 in league play.
received strong efforts from Heather
Kirkup (22 points, 8 for 8 from the
free throw line) and 6-1 sophomore
Dawn Charroin (20 points. 11 re-
bounds).
The Vi kings have another stiff test
Thursday. hosting Ocean View. while
Fountain Valley meets Westminster.
Oceu View 57, Edison 49: Tnna
Vlachos and Dana Douty carried the
Seahawks 1n a strong second half to
outlast the vistting Chargers ( 13-3
overall. 1-1 in the Sunset League).
Vlachos had 19 points and 14
rebounds. 11 1n the second half, and
Douty added 11 points and was 4-
for-4 from the hne io the fourth
quarter as Ocean View (I 0-6. 1-1)
stretched a close game after three
quarters into an eight-point victory.
Dalene Lawson (five as<i1sts) was
also l)t'rfect m four attempts at the
hne in the fourth quarter for tile
Seahawks. who travel to Marina
Thursday.
Shelley Straight (six points) also
grabbed 17 rebounds for Ocean View.
Denise Ogburn had 16 points for
Edison while Michelle Hennesse)
and Knsten Wilson each added 10.
Mater Del IO, Blabop Moa&1omery
47: The Monarchs used a full-court
press 1n the fourth quarter and took
advantage of six Knight turnovers to
win their third straight Angelus
League game.
Mater Oct convened all six Mo nt-
gomery turnovers into points and the
Knights were unable to hll a field goal
1n the last ixnod • -
Noelle Manfre contnbut<.'d 17
poin1s and Gen Gainey put up 14 to
lead the Monarchs ( 13-6. 3-0). Gainey
tossed off nine assists and collected
nine r~bounds. while Manfre
K-'lthcred four assists and five re-
bounds.
fn college action:
SoCal College 71, La Venae U : Lisa
Terry had 18 points as the Vanguards
pulled away from a 32-27 halftime
lead for the victory on the loser's
court. sec moved to 8-7 wtth 1hc win and
will travel to C'al tate San
Bernardino Friday at 7
EDISON CAMPAIGNS ...
From Bl
lieves the team's mental framework is
also a factor m tts success.
"They are m otivated, intense
gjrls," she said. "They know what's
worked. They know 1t s a ~ood thing.
The older players d1sc1plinc the
younger ones. It's peer pressure.
they're positive about 11 "
Silva likens her team's attnude to
an armed services slopn. "They want
to be all they can be.' she said
In the Cha'}ers' 15 games. the}" 've
recorded a solid 12 shutouts.
Edison has even fared well against
South Bay teams. perennial top-I 0
vote getters. The Chargers topped
North Torrance (penalty k~s).
4owncd Redondo (4-0). stopped
PaJos Verdes. and rolled by West
iorrance three times {4-0. 4-0, 4-1 ).
In the Ocean View Tournament.
Edison got by hi.lthly-reaarded
Mission Viejo on pcnafty kicks.
"We don't JUSt play nobody
teams,'' Silva said. 'Tm not saying
we're absolutely awesome. but for
God's sake coaches. go around and
take a look:..... --~
So while the Chargers have thus far
proven themselves on the field. they
may have to start an absentee ballot to
cam the recognition they're loolung
for.
Lewln .. , ...
* * * Edison topples
Seahawks, 2;{1J
Mitch Nadon and Suclene Chen
scored a J081 apiece Tuesday as
Edison Htgh's girls soccer team
remained undefeated with a 2-0 win
over Ocean View at Edbon.
The wtn improvn the Charaers
record 10 !A.0-l ovc~ll and i-0 n'I
Sunset league play.
Edison had two players minding
the net .,ainst the Scahawks. Jenna
Truman stopped one shot. while Jill
Worden had an uneventful term at
goahe.
.
Mets' Foster reported~y
highest-paid ballRl•Jer
ARLINGTON. Va. (AP) -
Otorat Foster, the New York Mets'
veteran outfielder, wtll be the hi&hest-
paid player in the m-.jor leagues this
year, camin& $2 million. it wa
reported Tuesday.
The report wd that Philadelptu.a
infielder Mike chmidt , I t
S2,130,300. was the hiahett-pe1d
player last yca.r,. but would rehm1sh
the honor to rotter, the only ycr
who will receive $2 million in 986.
The ft&UttS were COfttalned in an
85·PlfC aocumcnt on 11~ com·
piled by the Pla~r Rdatiou Com·
m1nec. A CQPY of tht rtpon.. whd
was dastnbutcd to aencral manaacrs
and eucutivc oft"icers of each of the
26 mt,Jor lt'que clubs, was obtained
Ly USA Today.
The report also showed that the
tlanta Braves had tbt l&rtnt 1915
payroll. S 14,06,382, but the New
York Yankees hid the biahnt aver-aac 11lary. SS46.l64 to 16 pt,aym.
The Braves' avenec talary WU
$540,988. to 17 playera.
ln addmon. lbc repon lhowed that
4l players e:umd at lee.st SI milhon
an [98'. 4~ pl.ayen are .-raneecd to receivi SI milhon thts year and lht
•¥tt11C•lary lasi.yearwasSJ68.991.
-
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using inlet water temperatures as low as 120° F Power
3-level wash action with Mult1-0rb1t'• wash arm Delay
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Model TFX2,FG
Built-In compartment ooor tor instant
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All locations
COSTA MESA
DAVIS BROWN
COMPANY
411 E. 17th Street
HUNTINGTON BEACH
HOME SERVICE
COMPANY
17242 Beach
Boulevard
LA HABRA
HOWARD'S
901 E. Imperial Way
LAGUNA BEACH
J & H Appt1ance, tnc .
888 Glenneyre
LAGUNA HILLS
SADDLE BACK
APPLIANCES
22692 Granite Way
·,
'
LAKEWOOD
DON & TOM'S
4234 Woodruff
SAN CLEMENTE
DEWEY TV & HOME
APPLIANCE
218 Delmar
SANTA ANA
JESSEE APPLIANCE
1013 S. Main Street
STANTON
BILL & DAVE'S
APPLIANCE
10687 Beach
Boulevard
. '
.. e>r.,..Co.M OAILV PtLOT/~. J~ 15, 1Me
.. .. ..,.. ... cowa1MC8
~~ W L fl'ct, .. • • .m
" ll .571 ' IS 23 .>fS 16 u n .-14 II • J l1 lf\lt
12 t7 .. lf\lt .....,DMMM ~IOll 2S I) .611 o.nwr 23 I• .622 IYt
Sen Antonio 2r 11 ..m •'It
Oellel 11 " .»f • Uleh It 21 A7S 7 SK.remMllo ,, 2' ~ 12\lt
•&STa .. e CONf'D•MC•
MllW9'111M
Alttnle
Oelrott
Cleveland
Chlc.aeo tndlene
Alle.ek OM.-
27 1 .m
25 13 .651 )\It
u 16 ·"° • lf 20 -'117 IO 1) 2• .>SI IS
CM!rel DMlllllt
" 14 ·''° 20 " •. 556 ~ 14 ii .m ,.,..
" 22 ,.,, ' 15 14 .llS 10\lt
10 n ~10 14Yt
TV9Me~' kswl
Lehn 143, ~II 122
Pflll Mllll\lt 12l, New ..IWMV 105
Atlenle 115, s.ctemMllO lCM
f'ortlencl 120, ~ IOI
WeJllinelOft 117, ClllcNo 111
Ulell 10S. Houston 102
T ........ IGM* Sftllle ,, ~
Denver et lotton
New WMV et Plllle<Mtc>hle
Clllceeo 11 Detroit
Porltet'ld et l~ne
New YClftl el Oetl91
.._,on 11 SM Antonio
Ulell ti Golden Slele
Lallwt 143, s..... 122
~RNIX (1t2) Adel'ns t-12 2·2 11,
Nence 10-20 10-11 JO. Edwwdl 10-14 0-0 20, Humcwles 3·1 0-0 6, Thomoton S· 12 H 10, Devi• 7· 15 H IS. Plllmen 2·• 1-2 S,
Rooev 2-• o-o 4, S.lldlr• •-4 o-o 1.
Plncknev 1·3 1-1 J. Otouc:Ntov 1·2 H 3
Tottl1; 53· 100 16· 11 122.
L&KRU (10 ) -llemtll1 M 0-0 2,
Worthy 1·13 7·7 t.3, Atldul·Jebber 1·14 3·S
19, JonMOn t -13 3--4 21, Soott 9· lS 2·2. 20.
COOP« S·9 2·2 13, LUC.I 5·1 5--6 IS,
KuPCllek 3-5 3•4 9, Grten J-5 0-0 6, McG"
6·t 3·3 lS. Tot1t1: 51·94 2'·33 1.:1
SceN 1W Querier\
Phoenix 21 2' 21 37-112
L.Aker• 34 36 32 41-143
TllrM-Polnt 00911-C-FOUlecl
out-None. lllboullcb~• •1 (AO.ms I), Lektn 50 (JonnlOll t ) Aul11t~x
37 (Tl!OnV>ton I I. I.Aken 37 (Joflmon ltl.
Totel loull_,,,_b 24, Lekers 21 Tecllnl·
Q~UC.I.
Allendanc»-1•.415
c:-.. ICerft
WHT
W11rmon1 ... MUM Peclflc 73
Ct t h ollst •• Fr""° Pedflc 73
C•I S1e11 LA 103, Grend Ce nvon 71
Point, LOll'll 61, UC Sen Dleeo S2
Chico St. 64, UC Dt vll S2
Sen Frtnelsco St. n , ~ St. SI
HIYWllf'd SI. ll. StenlU.\11 SI. n
Peclflc: Lultlltf'en 57, S..llle SS
Cent. WaSlllntton 74, Puoet Sound S9
SOUTHW•ST Oklahoma City 17, Penhandle SI 6S
MK>WSJT
Cllla9o St. 115, U.S. lnttf'natlonal 100
Ml-I SS. oeiWloma St. 51
SOUTH
North carOllna 71, Ma,..,...nd 67
Vlf elnle II, Penn Sl
•&ST Pltlll>u<9'1 71, Prov~ 70
CommuNty mlele
SOUTHLAND f'OLL
..... SCllMI ..........
1 Cerri!<>' 11· 1 100
2. ltlver11de 17·2 •
l. El Cemlno 12·3 to
4 Gron mon1 15-S 6'
S. Ml Sen Anlonlo 14-l 51
6 Tit! 11·5 51 1 LA Southw11t 12· 3 42
I Cv11<eu 11·5 37 9 l>1Yden.t 13·5 ?t
10 L0119 8Mch 14·7 11
OtMrl realvlnv votn. Mt. Sen J.clnto
( 11-51. I; Cgmoron (11-Sl. 7
Hltfl KhMI ra-..
S·&
.... k:tlMI, ~ ·-d '"" 1. Me• Dll • .,..,, 1'·0 70
2. ~view, 5-Mf 11·4 S7
3. Vtrbum Del, Ce mtno 11111 10·4 S3
• Serre, Cemlno ll111 t·• St 5 LI PolY, Moo<t 1·6 42 " ...... ,.... 11-• 2t 7 Crnol, Oe4 lltv 10-4 24
I SI N\ofllee, Cimino RM I 1·4 11 9. (lle)SI. Anthony, C1m.R1al 7-S 16
SI. e.rnaro. cam.RMI 6·5 16
0t11er1: Lovo&e. Del ltev, t-7. ,......._ .,,..,, s-.t, •. ,.
t -A
1 CeN V....,, Soult! Coe1t 15•2 '6
2. Sent• Monlct, ltv 11·3 M
l. Muir, P.clflc 1S·2 76
4. J.W Norlh, Ivy 13-1 n
S. Simi Vettev. Marrnonte 15-1 63 6. Culver CllY, Ocffn 1•·7 47
7, 0om1noue1. Sen G•t>rlll 111v 11·4 " L C... dll MM, SM VW IJ·2 n
9. tll!lllWOOd. OcMn t·S 11
10 S.n Goroonto, Cttr1n ... , ll-2 6
Olllltf'l S.nte Ana, Ctnturv, 11·•;
Min ion Vlelo. South Coest, 12-4, Senft
S.rt1er1, Clllnne4, 1·3, El~. Citrus
1111, 10·6, J:oothll, Centurv. 11 -3
l ·A
I MM Wll'Oll, Sltrn l?-2 IO
1 G~, HeclenOe 11-1 n
3 Et Ooredo, Emolre 12-2 63
• Demien, a.s.11ne 12-3 41
5 1(111111, Emolrt I t·l 41
6 Mornlnvsloe, Pioneer 1-7 47
1 lr11-0tln~. Or11191 14·4 77
I. l urrouolll (It), Gotoen 11·3 26
9. Ct1remon1, BeMlllnt 10·4 2J 10 Pomon1, B11tlln1 8-l I
Olh9rs· L.ol Alemllol, Emolre, 10-J,
Sc1>urr, FootlllM, 13·2. BurtNnll., Foolt\MI,
ll·t, Nooetes. Slltf'r1. 12·4
COLL8H WOMllN s.c.e c-.. 71, .... v .. 62
( ... llRf WWW)
SeCll c-.. (71> u v.. (62) ....... .. .....
.,..... 2 t t • .... 5 ' • 1l
Terry > 12 > II Yalel 2 2 • • Nldev 3 0 4 6 It-lo • 1 5 f
Touaat 3 1 o 7 ~ 2 2 4 6
Smith •2•10w-.r 11 4 3
8rown 3 6 I It C:... I 2 • •
SUll!Yan 2 0 I • Loftin 7 I • IS
... tty 2 2 S 6 Wr..... I 6 3 I
Oita 0212
Harwell O O 2 O
Toltls 21 n 2S 71 TOIM 23 16 32 62
He"1tme: ;k1Ca1 ColtM, l2·27.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRU
, ....... Yllly 71, MertM ,2
( ..... U..-> ""· v.., (71) _,.. (62) .. ..... .. ,, ...
Halldlev 12 3 2 11 lrew•ler 3 0 1 6
Walin 2 2 I 6 Cllarroln t 2 • 20
Cooll I 1 3 17 Kue.fer 3 1 I I
Clower t 0 1 I ICIBUP 7 I 0 22
LAWier 5 0 ' 11 St~ 2 2 3 6 Jonnson 1 1 I J lttli.t'U 0 0 0 0
GlrWllll 0 0 I 0 Sllew 0 0 ,0 0
Htw ke 0 0 2 0 K~ O O 1 O
Totels 32 7 IS 71 Tot• 24 14 10 67
kera,W~
Fountain Vallev JO 20 1 Jr71
Marina I• 1) 11 11--62
OcMft View S1, .... .,
CS-...U...>
...... C4') 0-View (57) .. ..... .. .....
4 2 • 10 oourv 1 7 2 11 I 0 416 Vladlol J I 21'
2 O 3 • Strelltll 3 0 • 6 5 0 3 10 lanelll , 1 • 5
1002HclYnMll00 1 0
0 0 1 0 D.LWMMI l 4 3 10
2 3 4 1 C.LwMMI 2 0 0 4
Huri911tf' 0 0 0 0
IOCll 0 212
Totals 22 s It ., Tol•I• 11 IS 17 57
sc..w o.ar...
13 ,. 10 12-49
' 14 II 16-i7
Metw Diii ... ...._ Ma•ua•• w 47 (~U...> .
,_.... :-~':J .. a. 1Ueo•-:;-;tr J41~
Wtonar 2 1 2 S M-.r • 3 :t 11
Bacldon 1022 ~ ••322
MMrfr• 1 3 l 17 Fttzorrac 3 O 1 6
lttnllno 0 I 1 I Wntll I O 3 2
Galnev 4 6 4 14 Mlndet 2 2 2 6 O'Brien I 0 2 2 Thomas 0 0 2 0
Elllrrnen • S 2 1l Formnc1t 1 0 l 2
Anortl 2 0 2 4
Totels 21 16 20 60 Tolll\ 11 11 13 •7
sc..w~ Maler Del 11 11 11 t~
Bl•llOO Monloe>rnery 6 13 21 S--.7
T K?lnlcal· Maler Del COllCll Ce mooelt
E1tMcla SJ, New11*1 .._,_. 4'
Clea View UMM)
a11911da U2) ........., 1 .. l .. ..... " ...... FOlev 2 3 4 1 Ardith 1 1 2 3
llKlo I 0 2 2 Oe4ord 5 5 4 IS
Eooertv o o o o Anclr\ts • o • •
Nesby 2 3 3 1 AN*'IU 4 0 5 I
Kent 0 0 0 0 G0001 0 0 2 0
Maslin9S 2 0 , ' Stucker I 10 5 17
5'11 ) I S 7 S.ncNJ 0 0 0 0
MMn 0 0 • O Wntrbl>n O O O O
HewWn ' • 2 12 Fortman 0 l l l
Grant O O O O
J-4 • , 12
Nthmles 0 0 I 0
Tottls " ,, 21 S2 TOl•ls 1S 16 20 ..
Sc«• !rt 0Uer19n
E"encle 14 21 I J-S2 Newoort Herbor t 14 6 .,__..
Tacl'lnlcel•· Folev IE I. lteclo IE l, lffw·
oorl H•rbor Dtnch
w11 •r1d9e ct, C..• Mew 4S
(SM View LMWI> ........ ,.,,
" ft .. "' s 0 ' 10 I 4 l 6 Dt nlel' Zllko
Mllltl Powell
Hensen
Mal>Onv
3 0 2 ' ' ' 'n I l I l
I 0 0 1
<M• Mna (4S)
" ft .... Palmer 4 0 I I
Sw1Mon 4 I 4 t
MJW'lt ll I t 5 )
Cowtev S 1 ? 12
Benedlcl ? 0 l 4
Bovell ' I ' 9 Oernell O O I O
Tole!• 20 9 ll 49 Tot11\ 20 S 19 O
Scere bY OU1rtwi
WC>Odi>'loo. 13 10 17 J4-o49
Coste MtM 10 17 '' 7-S TICMlc:91 WoodOf'~ COKI> Banvi.
SKI REPORTS
11 :30 ·aam. and 5:30 p.m.
Brought To You ly lob McLaren IMW
On Orange County's
easy
listening
music station
KDCM
Newport Beach
C....•MerSl.~U
, ... ""-U...) u..u ..... ,., c.... .. ,,., (IJl ....... .. .....
2 o J • Wllllro 10 l t 23 .,,,-'-' 51 3 11
)OO•Slnlf1 •OOlf
) 1 ) 1 lattt!CYO 1 0 ) 2
4 l ttS~t111002 ~' 0 2 2 blllkl 0 0 • 0
TotM 16 J 10 JS TOIM 24 4 10 S2
..... iw °'*"" I 5 10 12-)$ 12 11 , ....... $?
.... tc.Mll .... ,. ..... •·& ......... we.-•acien
I. iw.JMo, he:tnc: I S-0
2. luMa. CMIW!tl 12·0 a. ,._ VllW, ....._. 14.J
•. ClfNtOft, Moere 11·• S. I. YflWOOd. San Galltttl V eAav 1 M "~.San Galwlel v.-.v 11-3
1 ~. '°*'"' 1>-5 .. ....,.,.,., Ocean 12·•
'· Mlllkall, Maore 12·1 'It. OCIMA Vtlw, '-et t -S OINt't recelvlM vot": Mtltt o.i. A,.._, 12·•; 11191eWood, ~. 1)-S,
....... .._., 1>·21 Don L\190, leMllne,
ll-21 cue-Cltv. oee.n. IM.
J•A 1. ar.•Ollnda, Or•nee 12-? 2. Footflll, <'.tnturv , 12· I
l. LoulnMle, 5an Fernando 10-• ._ E-ta, E!Nllre 11·3
S. Mlltlon Vlt!O, Soutll C.O.t I 14· 2 4. ,...,,,,..., ~ ·' IM
f Font-. Citrus ... , 12·2
1. It tv.rslde Polv. Clttus lelt t-3
t. Norco. '"" f.2 10 Sell Gabrial, Footlllll 10-•
• Olller• rtcalvlne vot11: El Toro, SOutn
Coe\I, 10-5; HH Wllloll, Slerni, 11·•;
We!nut, Slerrt, 1•·2, Moreno Va._..,, IVY, l02, <>ranee. c witurv, 10-s.
2·A
I. C1>1no. Haclencle 12-1
2. L.ome»oe, Norlllltf'n 12· I
3. L..e Quinta, Garden Gro111 11 ·4
... LA Habr•, Fr-av 1·3
S. Mont-..o, WNtmont 10-2 6. llldlo, Oetltf'l·Vatlen I·• 1. I.A Mir ... Suburtlen ,.,
I 0n1erlo, HKi.tlda t-•
t Le Slerre, Sen Andi' .. , 9-S
10 Allt'll Valley, Sen Andrffl 9·4
Otller1 receMnv votas: l rewlev. Offer!·
Vellev, t·l, Fullerton, Fraewev. 1·3
l ·A
I Velln Clvt1t1-ft, Otvmolc 17·2
2. Santa ci.e, Frontier 11·•
). lrllhrtn, Olvmok I· 2
4 Aletcadltf'o, L.ol Padr11 10-0 S. Moleve, OelerHnvo LAroe 12·0
6. Charter o.tt. MonMaw 11-3 7 Whittler Cllrt1tlan, Otvrnolc 6• 2
I. S.nle Ynez, Trt·Vallev 1·3
t . 811hoti, Oetarl·tnvo L.Aroe 10-0
10. COllMllV, SufvlM 11-0
Other raceMno votn : INKro Bn. Los
Padf'11, 6-1. Etslnore, SYnklsJ, 1-2; lan-
nlft9, Sunllllt, 9·2; Sen Dimes. I·•.
lfNI kMm
I Ftlntrldle S.C.Hear1. HorlJon 6·1
2 Tt-, Onarf·lf\YO Small 7·1
l. Yu«a ValleY, 0e Anll t-2
4. SLO Mlulon. Tri C.ountv 7·4
S. MerkloN, Tri COUlltv 7·4
6. ltMMTW>nd, 0.Mr'Hf\YO Smell 4·•
1. Ramona C0t>111111, Hortion 6·l a. Twen1vnl111 Perms, De Anie 7·• t . CrGlll'Oac11, Oelonlc 11· 1
10. W..trldle, Preo 7·7 Otllera: ... umont, De Ania. 1-S; Stiver
v.u.v. O...Hnvo Small, 1•3.
Lei ........
TURSOAY'S lllSULTS
lf'IMI et ff·NIM ..-rtwMrw fMlftllel
f'•ST llACI. 350 verd~.
Cllacll Del!Ce' (ltutz> •,to 3.00 uo
Tha Gleu thuilon CS.rel! 9.20 5 60
Confirmed (Hermon> 3.10
Time: 11.09.
Atto ran EIOKlll EffK1', c 1 .. e1v1
Goldie LAU. lted Lady Altllev. Owoe Rib F'okv. Hll A Gollb ltocJ(et. Benil Roll
luctctv. G•Y1 ~ No w eteftn
12 RX.ACT& (9·Sl oelo 111 40
S8COMD •ACE. 1'70 n rels
a.v Marrldoc:(lrOOksl 1500 U O J OO
Get Tiii Grton !Pe ulinel l 80 ? 80
Polley Unllml!ICI IH. Garcle l ? 60
Tlmt • 1.
Also t tn. Cl>eroer Victory, Woodvs Bo.
LUl~IO
No r.c:re tel'l11.
12 RXACTA (4-S) oald MO.to
TN•D lt&CI. 350 varelL
Lenet Exorns (L.Ack1y) l,to 4 40 l 80
A lure HOH (H G1rcle l 4.00 l to
Vet LOY (S.vtliel 1.10
Time: 11.00.
Alto ran: Sllere KMn, AelmlftllltelOf.
llo l(aftuna, P9rloec:I Tredltlon, Gotta Pol·
lcv. Gotte OCI ... H . APOiios Ma91c. Scrt tdlld: SMett.,. Tl"OUOle. Str1w Jettln,
PlundW• Setnt.
U •XACT& (1•21 otlcl s.Jt.00
l'OUllTM ltACR • ..0 vercts.
AIMUll Force (MaJtfletdl 9.to •UO l.00
DePHr Ma<c IDlderlcksen) 3 to U O
ltlclls 8ttd l ov IS.rd) 3 60
Time: 22.15.
Also re n: Orenoblossom1?Klal, Sov
Fiver, Ghetlo 81a1ter. Novuh Novlorv.
Outll'I. Malor lmoK't.
Screteflad: Ou1unll.
"""'" RAC•. 170 verell. Tiit Admlral• Jal (H.Grc) UO 2.20 2. 10
ltOdlln Currt IPaullnel 2.60 1.20 Honon CEdwardl) 2.to Time' ... 16
Also rtn' 1Cni9r11 Time Minic, Mester Fun Far, ltUMlno lla_,t, Ftv Bevou
No ICrtldle\
12 •XACTA 11-ll PllO 11 40
SIXTH llAC•. 170 verels
FINI Mickey (Orekln) 4 to l 40 2.10
Hll In Flfoht (TrHIUl'I ) 6.60 00
Gone JOMM>n (Ht rl) 7 60
Time 45.6?
Also ren: Bugs Miio, ~sleur L• Rue,
Luckv Pollcv, Produ<er. Cooler Maclllne
Scrtlclled TlmtlO Getgone, Catt Tiit
ltetM, MIU l ud LIOhl, llusMI ltoueMKO
U •X&CTA <•·5) MIO $37.IO.
1•v1NTH ltACa. Ho v1rcts.
Dell.Vi ltut ~ (Htrt) UO 320 U O
Mtrcu. l•oreu CTrMwr•) 4.00 U O
0.• " (('.rMtltf') , ... Time. 17.IO.
Alto ran: fOIJefl 011vt, c .. It Cllarlsme,
Klotalllo, AIMIMo. ,etcllen TM C.111,
ltollll I.II Douet!, IN OM.
SCtttcMlt: ltMll Lu Jon.
12 aXACTA Cs-ti Mid 5'UO,
•MNfTM •AC&. 400 YanliL V~ ~ (Ofctltlll 17.JO UI UO
FlnalV Tl#ltd IMt.llflelcil ... S.40 Mount HWll ... CHwl) tM ~au~ .
Alto ran: HtmHl'll Jtt. Oame Ooll. $In v• lt.o.t, SI Wiit.
No Krt lChtt u •XACTA ()·2) H id US.60.
NINTH ••c•. 110 vara c .. CallO IHwt) UO 1AO 3 . .0
TOUCll Of Good CC,....,) 14JO 6.20
Jetllller Joe CDi.lcttan) 6.20 Tir-. UJO,
AllO felt ll'tNlanl Polley. Anwtc.11
NallW, ._,..AM. Go On Holme, Doell
Fllefll,
No Kretdlel.
U ptCIC MX (2-1-•+S-S) Nici 13.906..40
lo It WIMlftt tldlth hlx llOt'lftl. U i-tcti
si. contOlttlOll oelcl 1n.eo to •7• wlMlnt tldlata (five l!Or'Mll .
II '9CK ...... 19+1·t·l+5•J-S) Hid M.S71.IO lo ftve wlMl!ld' tlettatt (ellt\I
llOrlftl. $1 Pl<k Nine cOMOlallOn Hld 163 . .0
10 120 Wlnnllll ticket• (~ l'IOrMS),
TINTH ltACR. 3i0 vardL
GOO<I n Famoua lMexftdl 4.20 UO UO
Tlla Ooctoreta IMltcllatll > 3.20 MOO
lat>v tm ~•tt lH•rtl l .00
Time: 11.15
Alto ran: ltlch a.doulll, TOlal Tan. tm A U..,_ Ona, APOiios Crte4 krelCJ!ad~ None
U DAILY DOUM-9 <s-7> Paid 111.00
U IX.ACTA 17•Jl P'M11 Uta
A•lllltl-6,.J12
NHL
C~RLI. CC>Nf'lltlNC•
Eelrnonllln
CelOllrv
Wlnnloee
Klnla V1ocou11ar
Chlceoo
St. Louts
Mlnnt1ot1
Toronto
Detroit
Sm"tllle DNttlell
W L T '"" Gf' GA JI f 4 6' 2U 171
19 20 3 .. 171 1'5
U 26 S l3 16S 210
13 23 s 31 144 103
13 26 s ll 1S3 112
Hwm OM1*1
20 17 s fS 1'3 ''° 11 16 6 42 1S2 162
16 11 I '° 111 162 12 24 5 ?t 1'7 1'5 ' ,., s ,, 141 m
WALH CON,a•INCR
Plllr.Clllelfllt
Waitllnoton
NY l.ianderl
NY ltanetr•
Pllllbul'lltl
NtwJenev
Quebec
""'°"'"'' lo1ton
Hert10f'd
Buftelo
~"1dl DMu.i
l3 11 0 " 201 12'
25 13 • Sf "' l)t 11 IS t 4S 170 153 It 21 , 41 IS2 , ..
11 10 s .. 1"3 162
1• 26 ' 29 lSJ ,,. Mems Dt¥tMell
2S 16 ? S2 llO 141
23 IS 4 50 195 1S5
19 17 1 •S 167 15'
21 It I 43 16' 1S9 " " s 43 15' 14' Tu.MIV'1SC....
Wlnnloee S, Quebec • PllllaOll~ 3, New ,ltrMV 2
Calelrv 4, We'111ft9tdtt 3
Ch!QeO 3, Mlnnllole l
IMw York lttnven 2, Venc;ouver I
T ........ •0-Ntw YOf'k llMlltrl et K-
E'elmonton 11 Hertford
Wlnnloee et Monrr1at
N-YClftl l~nderl II Plltsbuf'9'1
fffw WMV el .o.troll
TOf'onro 11 St Loul•
BuffelO et Chlctoo
MISl.
WESTa•N~
$In 0 "'9o
Wk hi le
SI Louis
Ke n.a•Clly
L&Laun
Tacoma
W L ~ct. Ga
13 6 ... 12 I 600 ,,,,
10 17 •SS 4"1
' 12 4?t 5 I 12 .400 Sl't
' .. .Jtl 6
IASTil9'N DlvtSION Belllmort 11 I .S7'
Ml"nesote 12 t .S11
c 1ev11eno 11 9 .S50 Vt
Pllltboroh 10 9 .52' I
DeMu 11 IJ .'51 ,...,
Chluoo 1 11 .lit l 'h
T""*V's seer..
Wicl>fle 6, KtnY• Cllv S
Tlflllllf'sS-Cieveltnd el MlnMSOlt
Belllmort •I TKome
GIN MCcer
HIGH SCHOOL
SUftMt L4"UI
...... Q. oc-"" 0 Edison "°rlnv· Neelon 1. Chan I
Me ...... ........,. ..
(et New Yertl) ,.,,. llaulld ........
Mai. Wll~ ISwlde<ll def. koll Devis
(I.IS >. 6·3, 6'·4; Boris ll«ker (Wnt Oer-
menvl Clef. Peut Annacont IU.S.). l-6, 6·3,
6·21 Johan Krltk (U.S.) Off. Slefen Edbero
(Sweden>. 6•2. 4·6, 6-2; Alldr" Gomez
<Ewadorl Clef. Henri Laconte (France>.
, ... , 6·1
WU 119 I
...... ICMOOC.. ... vw~ W11 • _. 11, ...... II lot--oeul IW) 11111 NaYl*I, 5.lO.
101-Tort C•) ._ Morten, 11•._
11~ (I)-. •ldlW. ,.s. "1-4ladlltt (WI die. Stldl, , • ._
lit-~ IW) dtc. Cllevea, N .
l:at-alDO\llllO U!) dtc. larMmlan. 6•0
1-Tellaka CW) dee Mk, .. 7.
141-Jonet IWl dlK. COieman 12•4. 15' ,.....,, IWI oln Potwl, S:lO.
W-4llml IE) dee. Tran, 12·7. m-a-CW) oln Prior, ~
l~Wallea (I) oln C•. ,..57,
Hwt.-YllHl'lllnel IE) dee. Coftefl, 6-1
H._tc.Mll,.._
CW 4•A 1. L-., 2. Canvon, AnaflelmJ a. • .....,
•· Catulco; S. El Dorado, 6. L'f!lllWOO<I, 7. t..omooc: a. S.n Gor9onlo; t . CYDteu; le. ........ .., ....
CIP l·A 1. Victor Vellev1 2. WHt Torrence; l.
lt_,,..ell 4. trfM11 1 Keooeli ' 6.
Caolstr-Va""; 7. OM Pull>tot; I. C•lon;
t . Venture, 10. San c 11men11.
Of' 2·A
1. 5allta Fe; 2. Torranee, l. llowt.llCI; ._
Valellcla; S. Svftny H~; 6. Cl>lno; 7
Wntern; t. HH WllM>n; t Wnt Covl1>1; 10 H-'. Clf' l•A
I AIHCaderO, 2. Gerden Grove; ).
Slerre Vl•l•i 4. Bl"-Amil, S. llenchO
AlemllOI. 6. 1..1 Qulnte, 7, 6 1 SeounOo, I.
GllOllont, t. Cetwllto, 10, ACIUlna'-
o... ............
NIWPOltT LANDING -16 anelltf'l. l4
ICUIP!n, l Yncl Dan, 1 eallc.o bau~ 11
mackertl, 150 rOdl c:ocl, 9 cow c:ocl. DAV.Y'S LOCKla (......, a.di>
-23 "'9lerL 1 bOftlto, 10 roac COCI. 19
a.llco beH, 3 Miid Das.. 23 .culPln, 1 Miit,
l Wlllte fllll, 2 ~. •white Ml bin
(r .... Md), fO blue Oltf'Ch, I OHi eve, 3
bo\col,
0-&NA WH&Jtf' -16 a111lln. 1 bin, n
rock cod, S ~.
fl'llld Mdrev
HtOH ICHOOL .__.a.a...
...._.H...-rJ,.lllMll'1
Newoorl H•rbor K«lllO: Cerr 1, llovte
l, Even• I
Eolson·scor11111: Ole'°" I, Wiiiems 1
TueMIY"t trwact111.-
1&S•1&LL
Amerlcall LlfflM
.ST. LOUIS CAllDINAt..S-SleneO Jett
L.Ahlt, Kwi Dntev. Pltcllers, end Andv Ve n SlvM, oulfleldtr.
TOltOHTO I LUE JA YS-Nemeel Crovo
lloYltf' manaoer of St. Cllllarlftll of Illa
New York·Ptnn LNeut. ........ L.-.w
SAN DIEGO PADllES.-Announc.ICI 1111
re-hlrlno Onie Vlrolt. thlrd·O.M coacl>,
Jeca Krol, llnH>I M coech, Dffcon Jones,
hlltlnv lnsrructor. Gelen Cl•co. Pltel>lno
coach.
a&St<RTe&LL
......... Ill ..... &uadetlefl
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Preceo
Mark West, center, on Illa tnlured ttsl .
PHILADELPHIA 76EllS-Stoneo Bob
McAdoo, for'werd, to •n oftllf' lllMI.
PORTLAND TltAIL ILAZEltS.-Tradeel
Darnell Valelltlnt, ouard, to tllt LOI Aft·
911et CllOMrs IOI' tllt ltM fl"l-1'ound ctref1
Olck ll<IVlouMY OWnlCI bV lloslOll.
f'OOT9ALL ....... ., ..... u.w.
NEW OltLEANS SAINTS<-Nemeo Jim
Finks or..idef\t and..,,.,.. .. --·
HOaCn
....... Hedi" a.a... BUFFALO SAHES.-Safll JacOUli
Ctoutler, OM!tendlf' lo ltoctlltler. CelllCI Deren Puppt, ooatttnder, lrom ltoet1111er
DETllOIT ltED WtNGs-<alltd up Jim
LHvlm , def9ftMmtn, and hall McllN,
Gltn Mer'lt.0111v, left wl"9tf'• from Olenl
Falls, N.Y .. elso Shewn 8u,.r, c.nt11-. lrom
Klleflantr.
HAltTFOltD WHALE ltS-ltacellld
Mike Hoff!T\an, forwerd, from llntiamton,
N y '""' American Hockey Laaeue •f· 11111•• cou..••• COLUMllA-Hamed 0oue JadlMMI of·
1wn11,,. coordinator and offenllve beellflelel
coec11. 1te11tnec1 si.v. ...... dlflntlw
coordlllator and dlfentlve tlackfltlcl coacn, and Lou Ferrari. defentlvt tint coach.
MISSISSIPPI STATE-+lemed Tom
Goode encl Lii Koennlf\9, •• enl11•nt1 10011111 c:oaclln.
MONTANA-ffemed Tommy LM of·
f~tlvt coordlnelor, BIH Smll11 dtf~•tn
coorellnetor, llOl>ln Pfutorttd wide rtea1119r
coactt, and wome Soueo def9f\1tvt beck. TEXA~ l~t MtcllMI ltnabacker
Coadl and 8 hl Hlcll• defeMlve IKkln
coacft.
Jlm Crowley, last of
Four Horsemen, dies
SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) -Jim
Crowley, the last survivina member
of Notre Dame's Four Honemen of
collqe football fame, died today at
Holy Family Rcsidenoc. the nursina
home director said. He wu 83.
Crowley. the lef\ hatn.clt in the
backfield immon.aJizcd by the late
lportl writer Grantl1nd Rtoe 1f\et a
1924 victory over Army, died about 3
a.m .. said Sister Patricia, director of
the home.
"He's been ill for quite a while," she
said, but would not elaborate.
In I 9i.. the Four Honemen, led
the f"a&btina Irish to their fint
national championJh.ip and a victory
over StanfOtd 1n the R0te Bowl. ihat
was Not~ Dame's onJy bowl appear.
11nce until the tchool administration
pemuttcd postteat0n tripe ..Un in
1970.
Besides Crowley, the blckfleld
included Elmer Layden at f\allblck.
Don MillcT at riabt haltbeck and
Hany Stubldrebcr at quanetbeck.. ;·we used to tei toeether quite
of\cn." Crowley iaid in 1910. ''The
last time I Mw Don Milltrwuat Yale
when we wnt honored in tbie winttt
o( 1979." Miller dted later I.bat ,_,, c~ alloaitcl Ihle ~me• Of«bc Four HCMteaaa tel\ bUn walb
... ycry loanomc ..... ~ . C~tey uid Ric'e01 ·~ ot tlie Notre 'Dame bee~ u the Four
Horsemen didn't really rqister with
him at first. '
.. , thouabt. to be truthful, it was a
nice anicfe. I didn't think it would
become a lqend, .. be &a.id.
Rioc wroie: "Outlined apinst a
blue lrlY October sky the Four
Horsemen rode apin. in dramatic
lore, they are known u famine,
pestilencie, destruction and death. But
tbete are onl~ allatct. Their raJ
names are Stuhldrcber, Miller,
Crowley and Layden."
Durina his plar_!na daY!7 Crowley wu known 11 ' Sleepy Jam:· One
account ll)'t ~ sot the nickname
because of a habit of alecpiftl until
jusr before pmc time. Another.
ecc:ount •YI ero-1ey once fumbled on an opponent's pl line when be
wun't peyina attention to tuck.in& &he bell away.
After leavln~ Nottt .Dame,
Crowley MIU anto coachiDI-He
became an uaiMant at the Univtnity of~. then WU blred u Mich· illan Scaee'a heed~ ia 1929. After four ycen at Midlilan State, CrowleY left to become t..a coach at
FOfdUID Ualwnny.
Crowley mnelned It fonlbam for
8'M...,.. belwe IU.lnt 1 leavt of
lbee9'll iD I Ml to ~ I MvaJ
commWIOI. He •• mrib la tbt
so.Ila Pad& • 1tMedc direcw of
the U.S. Navy•a fttnna Pf'Ol'I"'·
Motopros
ride into
A.naheim
The top motocross pros in t~e
nation are 1eheduled to compete tn
the openina round of the AMA
Supercrosa Serles at Anaheim
Stadium Saturday niaht.
Amona the t'ntrants for the 1986
Supercross Series arc Bob "Hur·
ricane" Hannah witb Team Suiuk.ii
Johnny O'Mara. David Bailey ano
Rick Johnson of Team Honda; Team
Kawasaki's Jeff Ward ano Ron
Lcchien; and Team Yamaha's Broe
Glover and Jim Holley.
Cballenaes a.re already brcwina
between the top riders.
"JefTWard won at the LA Coliseum
last November by sandbauina."
claimed Johnson, Team Honda's
newest member. '
"I go out racing because I want to
win -and I follow the system even if
I mi~t not agree with it because I
consider myself a profeuional. I
think it was kinda chicken of them
(Ward. O'Mara and Lechien) to sit
and sandbag a race." Johnson added.
"I'm out for Ward."
Current Supcrcross Champion
Ward had a different point of view.
"The strategy is to win the race; and
(I'll do just about whatever it takes to
win. John (O'Mara) did it (pulled
over). so there was no way I could
start on the back row and wan."
Neither the controversial double-
row start nor the two-moto final arc
included in the 1986 racing fonnat.
Riders have indicated their
preference for single-row starts with a
one-moto final.
Jn the 250cc class, 60 riders will
comP.:_ete in four qualifying beats, two
semifinals. one last chance consola-
tion heat and the main event. The
I 25cc class will feature 40 riders in
two qualifying heats of20 riders each
and one finaJ event
The Su~rcross is the first race on
thetourWlth the new race format. and
is also the first stadium raoc under the
new rules -which require all
motocross racers to ride production
bakes only (work bikes are not
allowed).
Prior to the ruling. factory sponsor-
ed riders held an edge by nding hand-
made bikes.
Sixers
• mays1gn
McAdoo
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The
Philadelphia 76ers will sign free agent
Bob McAdoo. a 13-year veteran
center-forward , if he passes a
st.nngcnt physi cal examination and
strength test. team owner Harold
Katz said Tuesday.
"If everything works out, we'll
probably have a de.al," said Katz. who
confirmed that the 34-year-old
McAdoo was examined Tuesday by
physicians for the National Basket·
ball Association team and flexibility
and strength coach Pat Croce.
The 6-9 McAdoo has not played
professionally sinc.e last season in the
playoffs Wlth the Los Angeles Lakers,
who beat the Boston Celtics for the
NBA title.
.. I know that Bob McAdoo keeps an
shape, but I want to be sure he's ready
to plat I'm especially interested en
Croce s strength test." Katz said.
Katz said that if the Sixers decide to
sign McAdoo. a five·time NBA All-
star and a three-time scoring cham-
pion. they probably would announce
II today.
Regle's father
robDed of watch
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Reagie
Jackson's fath er was robbed of a
raccoon jacket and a watch com·
memoratang his son's 400th home
run when two kn1fe-Wlelding men
entered the 71-ycar-old man's fur
store. police said.
Maninez Jackson said be was alone
in bis north Philadelphia store
Many's Furs, Tuesday aftcmoo~
when two men entered. sayioa they
wanted to buy a raccoon coat they had seen earlier.
"When he returned from the vault
with the coat, he felt a knife in bit
side," Capt. Roger Ca mpbell said.
"They strulf ed and he was knocked
to the floor.
!ackson was not inj ured, Ca mpbell Slid.
The men fled when a customer
entered the store, ac:cordina to polioc.
Martina Jackson said the Sl,700
watch was a &if\ from his IOn, who
received it from the New York
Yankees to commemmorate his
400th m-.jor league home run. Reale
Jackson play for the AG&el•.
Rustlers, Bucs
try for flrst wins
Somelhina has to 1Jve th.is cvenina
when Ooldtn West CoUqe visits Ora~ Coast in a South Coat
Conference blsketblU contest at 7· JO Each has limped thro\.llb the arty
states of conference play with Ora•
Coast losina three close decisions Ud
Oolden West takillJ an 0-4 nwt IDd
a 2~e SCC los1n11tteak Into tbc contest.
Each •re comiaa off tetblcb, tbe Pinta to~ (64-6l) Md the
Ruttirn to Cari&oe (9S. 71). •
In woma•a ~ it wtll allo bl 0raftte C.a.lt VL Ooidla Wea. but it Yrill bt on die llUatJen• ftoot. OMM time i17·)0,
-
CALL 842-5878
•
• CAI I ING PllOM NORTH ORANQI
IP-CAWNG PllOll 80UTH OllANGI
You cen now cell the Delly Piiot Claultled Dept. on l etur•J morning from 1:00to11:30 a.m. to place rour Sunday end Monday ede.
•ALDTAn ...... ,._., 117' .... AU c-yi..c,,,... llH ._, ........... l»t
HOUSIS/CONOOS i... ..... ·-°"' oe c. .._., .. ,, 0-ol 1007 o..oe .... :: IMO .......... 100. ~'-' 117S ..... -...... 1007 ..... ,,_ '* c.---1011 n.....-. '"° c..-.. _ Iott . ,~ , .. c--IOU .... I till o...-102• tl f ... 10)) WIAU ,_.,..., 10)4 .-.--1040 HOUlll/CONDOI ....,_..__ 10., -10.. °""'"""' JICD
~-IQ.II ......... t lO. ..__ IOj() ----JI°' .._ ....... .. '°'' ~ ..... tlll i-.,_ IOSS c-.. .-11n _,, .. 1°'7 c--. Jlt• .............. ~ IOtf o....-.. ,,,.
'-'C-... 101• l1T-11»
~-,--101' ,_,,..., JIM ,_ ...... II*> ~-,,.,
'-""" ......... 1094 ,........_ ,.., -c..-10-. -JI ..
'9wlll l-'°" ~ ...... 2141 ,_ 1090 ..__ 1110 .._ ....... 11'2
MllC. I.I. ........ JISS -"""'" flt7 --1100 ............ ,, .. ... _ llU a-a--Jl7t ....... ,c-...... 111111 ....... c..,_ .... ,.,.
.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5878
---"'° MtlC. llN'fALI a1111•••••n• _,_ ... ., •....• .__.....,.. , ... 119 ,... ---*-' IF?ll'lllY .....c..-JI .. VOil ._,,_ *' "-'°"--..... '-,.. m» ...... -..,.. .... s....,_........, ,_ JltO '711 ......,_..,_ ... ....,...o... -1m .......,,_ •It "' ....... ....._ ..
APAITMIN1'1 m• ·-• •• Im OlllC-JOI• .......... a...ol '"°' tJ.O ........ ... ..... ~ ttOe 174 °""'""" ••02 0.-.. ............. H07 ,, .. ............ 610. -c:..--->tit ...... -......... ••07 "" c-.. _ ,.,, ....... ... c:... .. _ ••n == c--,.,. ,........,.,, .... 1100 c--.. ,. 11-."-~ -"°' II-.-611• ..._,._,~ .. ,_ ,.,,, a..t.IJOllloo .... ._.,., .,,. ... ,o..lool...._ ,_.,..., ,.,. ~ •-JT-... ................. •IC> .............. ,..., ::~ ... UIO ........... -.. ., MtlC. .......... -,.., ~ HIO -.1 .. -,... ~........., 0-0.. UJO '--.... -'-...... ,.. o..--1~ ....,.__ Wt '--••to '-tfW ll-'--~ --'-....... .. ,, _,...,.._ '-...... ,.,, _.._., • smu•• ........... ... , .... ,_ 1.Sl ~ ..... .... AUTOMOTIVI -Ylolo ,.., •••••••• ....... 6010 .__ .. ., ............. -~ tOll ... ............ ... , -'-... a.-,.,. .. u1aM -.on
__ ,_ --c.i--U7'I ...._.. IOI•
_ ... _
'---J.-0 .............. -tOIS ·---... _.....,. , ... ..... Ou • C-&._ eott ,_,
'--C:--,... .__ c__. .... -VICI .,,_
-ie..i..-, .. -0w: 1 .-. ,_, . ., ... .., ._,c-. ,_ ,., --,,,,,_.,, ..... , ..... -· ICT•CTl•Y -....,, ...... ...,._ -_..,..._ ....,.._. ......... ... .._o..-
---.1.0;. a-.,_,,...,._ fMI ............. -.. --
PUBLICATION OEAOllNE
Monday ........... Sat. 11 :30 AM
TUMday ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wedneeday ..... Tuee. 6:30 PM
Thur9day .......... Wed. 5:30 PM
Cl.AS8tFIEO OFFICE HOURS
T lllPtlCM• 8ervtce MO!-Ffidey 9:00 AM-6:30 PM
S.turdey 8:00 AM-1 \;_30 AM .._Count.
C .. CK YOUR AD THE NIT DAY
The Cely ~ 9ltt1Me for ~ICY and accurecy
Ho• .... ooc•onaily err0t1a do OOCIUf ,..._.
~ ..., 'f04ll ed .. r.-d b-* and CheC:a ~
ed dlly. ""*1 err«a lmmedietety to 6'2-5178.
The Cely Hoe ~ no lletMllty fof eny en0t In en id¥a1 ... •••t for Whk:tt" may ber~
FROM NORTH ORANGa COUNTY
AtOM IOUTH ORANQIE COUNTY
.... ,.
-1111
Frlday ............. Thura. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............. F.n . 5:30 PM
Sunday ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
MOllde) frldey
1:00 AM-5~00 PM
ta..-n pcept for ... ooet of the epece ac1Umfy occupied
by the error. Credit cen onfy be allowed tor tne tint
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ltaJ lat1t1 Fer Salt C..t1 .... tflM ..wit lwl 1111 C..t1 .... 1124 c.ta ... 1114 IHprt llMk l lH lalllM C..t1 ... MM _c.._1!"!1_ .... _~~~
MESA DEL MAR-3-4 New3BR2BaGoldenweet, 38r2Ba,dblgerage,gdN Ren1/S..Oelwte2bt'2be ••"EHTALS•• lalaM ... •Lro1&28dnn,newly Lg 281','" 4 P9u. New lnan/C.Un Bdrm. toe lot. s 149,500. ap. rent s 130. peta. 8luff9 Incl S950. 908 w. Wlfeon. Eelde dplx w/2 QI ett.ctl 11000 to l3000 '*''"'°· aaiiiii W iii redee .. quiet, coot S53()..up paint. C9rpeta, dfapee.
lneraJ 1112 .ir:t':a~i s.&-0074for w/oceenbt'Mn&45-645e NopetaMS-7983 ow.18't5/moeecMOl3 AGf,Martla.42-1183 Newdecortn&out, 1800 18&.4Monrovll S"4~ ~er.-OIC>22~~-~ WITllT1
. AnMlt I I IS 38R 2ba. trptc,,,.. crpt, 2 W/IM» tam twn. Oceer\ & •OCEAN VlEW 48', 1 M, alt S 11100 Bkr &42-3850 •NEWPORT HEIGHTS• U\11._. you tiew ***"UITll** l aat. IMck I cwge1,1Qecov.pat1o,no eat..ina vu. 38" 1w. 2k3cargw.lg~yd. Bac:tlelor $475 utMa Ind 1t, 1~ng1~---:, •Spec1acw1er1Pta
Bat Blutf1a Pnc.d Opptyl l lll •t• UIH I ..... lene Pr11HtJ peta S9151mo. 644-9079 fMI. rm lf'CI w/d + tng Avt lrnmed. l.8e req'd. l1l ~t1 PtalHall AV911 """*' 720-~2 Pl't $5 tO Agi 550-1015 •1 & 2Br. 1 & 29e .,.._
Lrgr 38r 2 ~Ba End Unit 2 On T~ of The 1-flll 2 ...,... Lrg yd. Outet c:uH»-MC. S2000/mo. 840-2064 111'1 •STUNNING LG 1BR Ger-•Speaoul t~
huge patloe, like new Int Illa.. 5\.\ ~--For lnformetlon 4 Rm, be w/ .. _, ger. New crpl/palnt1bllnd1. den 1 Pool & rec nn LOFT APT Baell. wlff'ptc. •At~
Very aharpl HfOl'I belenoe Greet Corel l8ia-locetlon call Merle 213·92&-9143 ~~;~ty !11~ blgp f~ rd· '"5 w/gdnr t MC + S20 ~!_2~~~ll, =::· •-.t TmllJ• $555Af10 W 18th pvt petlO/pool. 1575/mo * Prtvete balcon... or 1.-um~ loan & Pfkled with boat allp. Large 5 .n 3PM egt. · • r ed ck. 1039 llncMn. r-. ,_, P · Studio ept Ind utll *395 tnclda refrlg &4~ Garden petio9
rlOht et $229.5001 ree bdrm, 3 beth executf~ 1 _...._ 547·27117 875-3315 Of 211--01oe =~I~•·~ ~ rn'~· 18r 1Ba oceentront $500 ™5/mo, trg bMU1 1 BR, Lrg 1 BR w/pool & '"°'Y llattlllct I 0., home on the sand. c.tf .,.._ &nm• •na r tUm S1:Jt51 .yr I C~ . 38< + 2 QI OW 11000 1111 bftlna, lrp6c: Must... Stove & Ing !\Im '550 WIT llTt
840-5560 ANYTIME! ror viewing appt Crutt IUS Why collect rent r•· ... Debbie ~~me wtlnds & 1ILllllT Ill-.... 7.;a.oo S300 dep 642-1401 • •3 UoM-' .... court.
..
•DYMIOlllWI• 2 ~ery !Ota 81 pedfiC oelpta??U"9lny04Xown f all!t IJH att 8 wtlcty9 Of Mllte 11 38R 2be Ouc>tex. oceen ~Ml2 or~ MESA VERDE 2BR l be. :~~
2 atory 3 bdrm 2 b•tl'I air Traditional View Memorial Perk. two ~room Moblle ou;a;yr:; .... 5 rm Inda 752-&474 wttcty9 view & trptc, ups1111n, qu'e1 cut-de-aec IMO, *5ofrt no PMa
conditioned ·condo · nr Realty S9SO each ~2& Home for teu tl'len 2b• dbl OW • kid• pet <>ti 3BA tum ~ 122'1' aue>er cteen, MW crpta. 1&20 E/IM» lg 2br t ba. tat/lut & MC 4IMl-19341 •F~ ev.ii
... ,
S.C. Plaza. Pool, apa, Cemetery lot at Weet-1580/mo Cell now s7oo 53M 19t "9ent ,_ 25th St, 112 blk to bch. drpe, pelnt S1300 mo PoOI. 2 Plf'IOnl m&ll. no ---------
frplc + cupart. Only 831-7370 "'fTllnater Memol'tal Pn. 534-3845 • 530-0805 aat llMk $725/mo 213/&97·1505 0.0.-ge. 870.1788 pet's, 84-5137 .. •.. ~HV...OT CAU
$02.900. A B1rgelnl CfJI 1250 obo. 881-1432 ··-111m ~ Lge 18r t cenal S&25 mo 28R. 18A. patio. 111-11• Petrick 831-1288 I ...... lid mam .... 1BR Condo, poof, JK .. 5BR 38A Sorn.Mt. s.. gr•tw ~:.co, ioe •e•ta•JIU pool. llUndry room. e,.., •
WM~R •... ~ •• ..:' / ........ 11 ~26~(2~~1~~1;;; ~~~~540v:' PltlO, frl)lc, mlcr~.. MM~ .. 9~~yo ell Ill-ft LIM , __ , W tu BACK BAY vu TIHt 3/2'~ D/W, poeelble boet allp. .,..,_,.. TSL MGMi &42 1903 15656 Humtngton v._. . . .. 4BR 2'Abl. 2 atory. patio. blcny, pool, lriMc. 38R 2BA. new pelnt & Baytront 21>< 2be. I>"'~ $800 759--9491 lmmec:Ulate ._ Gerden • Lane from s... '*80
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii $385,000. Creettw Ways l .. Ml/c..MI W/D • 2 car oe>nr. no pet crpt, Dahwetlr $1200 ~tumw/t>Mutturn& Lrg 28A l&e duc*Jt 1300 Apta. Beeutl~ land· NICE 1erge 3 8drm 2ba. F,..;,., nottt\ of a.di
&46-0520 493-044e 850-4013,S1200lopt1 Pete 751-3191 SELECT petlofum.H• ...... we1• af. furn AVllll ttW SIM 9CliC*t Qfounde. pool/ end gar, no pets ..._. to McF9od.n . ._.on
. t--1-I ...... 1111 BLUFF er•. 38r 2'~ba. 2 PROPERTIES & etectronlca " deelred $Tr5 II l&-968--0352 ape. petlo/deck. No pet.a del M1t $750/mo Avlil Mcf.oden . ......
PU Immaculate 1 Bdrm
Condo In full MWrtly
building. Track llgl'lta,
mlni-bHnda. mirrors. llOl'lt
col<><•. even an oc.en view! Fantu tlc communi-
ty paol end recr .. tloo
c.nter. S 123,9SO. low
down.
(714) 673 4400
1m11I aty, trptc, catl'I. oelta, ~ S15001mo, yrty 873-;Jm tBdrm $595-$e15 imtn9d 384-8056 "' meg i---------
1 ~rn: ~: ct.UC. I 1000 S.,._..164 New-:' ='R ~J b • Baytronl 38R 2BA, 2 cat 3B ~:;~1!~ F~l'I 2Bdrm 1'1•8a S705 POOL PellO. frP'C. X-lge Im.. 1M4
i39-&t91AgenttM Charmf~lllbungatow~at Townhome on prlv. ~:.·,=1,:>8j~~ti S~51mo 11111.'!t ~ eec' ~~~:~ard ~!!~ 1:cs~l!'c,!6:;.~ oRlNdftR£EC&iSO
2BR 28A condo nr S C $425 w appla too $ 00 lagoon. 2 car gar, 1/2 ml 111058 W Ba Aw Agt 635-3090 ------1BOA ... I.OFT .Tennill.
Pfau. Poot. 1p1. ,; ~~~rryl S3M 19 1 to bel'I. POOIJtennls Sec . y 28drm 1'•B• $725 1 l llflll ftlW &PTI ape poof no pell
cerpon Kida/pets OK. gen S1300/mo 850-8342 Bayrldge ~ C, gmd ftr. C • 151 E 2111 5'l3-240& tBdrm w/tott. 2Ba 28drm 1625/mo 854-'T<>et
1&95/mo Heel Is tr•. CIRCLE THESE Off tn<1ilnapoll1l8955 rm g•ted comm New. pool, 1 •lltUal I t Uk ----I 2B• vaulted e.tfl~a
3BR 2BA S795/mo. Agt Chedl this E·Mde hM ren· l'IM upgrlded kit tndry Ille. 2BR 2BA S1500/mo 1111 prvt ~. l*'U1.. b4t!N W..U..... 1141
LINJBarber•831-12ee tefw/frptcbttlnl&ydfOf l'lk upa 9r1u y yr d 87~91·bet to.5PM 2& 2L UPllrl m ~ S895 Nopet1855-0865 '2&2L ™ ™ ~ PllfllT NWPT CONDO -Sl9'11 to klda 1565 now S3M 191 A.gt ooet leeutltul Big Canyon 2Br S&50 ~ utMa Incl OWIOI Pvt 1 Br friMc PoOI patlO FriMc. pet lo Nr bell Nice
Peclftce In Turtle Rock bey&ooeen.Secays. ,In-*IH-:'111• · Wllkto8Mct12Brw/g1t. Oen, /irut toe. &e1-3&S3 Att8PM . Fa..Ylllllm ll g11t No peta·309 w ~ $9254t4-19M/4t4-31M
Hlgl'lten da Ge~den teroom, 3 cMctca. 2BR Look. you II Ilk• thla lnqutetar-.1825 + oec> St400/mo. 51"7802 ,.____ ... -u Spending cieetl lerge apta St 1615 65()...e35' Almoe1 Ocnfrnt tum or
Hornes. 3 Bdrm. 2 ~ be. 2BA. Yrty. S1llOO/mo. elegant 3br 2be wlfrP'C chrg 5-47-2787 BIG CANYON Condo. Golf .,..... ... -ror IM1llie9 witl'I 1 or 2 unlum s Lag. cozy 2br
Tastefully decorated. OCEANf!RONT condo ~ kit 2 gar $895 at • rrntge 2BR 2be pvt OW 11250/mo neiwer me children Neer~ Heel llllT l.1111* 1'"°9 I>"' bCh get utt1 pd
Beeutllut private yard 3BR 2'ABA. 12200/mo 539--8191 Agt coet l u L lurMu l4a poo11tenn1a S1500/mo' 38r 2ea. min•"'-'* ot ocn. p.id No peta · S750i mo 2BR 1'.\BA s1100 no pets •ei-2104
wttl'I Inviting s~~ Excel-MllH IULn Eutllde •BR. flm rm. llE'.XOT. #Urn !Gr 2i>a 75$-5597, 497-S..71 M Ni.leen. Rltr 875-7070 28drm 2Ba S720 Townl'lou.. Greenb9tt. -
lent locetlOn ..,.., com· o r P'C Uo huge d condo grt lltftr atreem -398 w Wll.on 831·5583 ttMJn<lty rm All bftln1 StudlO 8111 to bell, ocn YV munfty pool $289,000. ,_ •C.MMll ~eta'~ i l200, 1': & 11250imo 848-8 123 ' Bio CY" 2Br 2'A8a, den. 1BR Apt w/belcony, w.itt 20711 Tl'IYrln Utlls pd. Moee cow. No
fntH 0.Mf ......... 114/llM 111 IMt. LM ~t. Avlll Fe«> t . mtny upgrda, paol, ten. In c:toMt. lmm.c: s750i mo •Wllll• fl.Ull • TSL MGMT &42· 1903 P9t• $e75Jmo. 491-2990
111124Culv9rDr Irv 548-1291 t4 nl1,J1tS1500.&40-'4509 e31-5092or &&o.20M 28r 1•r.Ba.bltna new cpta Studio &qu6et Oceer\
111-1111° . ...... 2£ 1L lUxury conao In BLUFFS 3Br 2Ba, MW 2BR 1be lge spec ~ & df'l>I, D/W, bittne S&25 R:~~;oRA~;D ;...-:i.llde2 ,,.._.=pet-. ~r ::---....---:L~""T'lnrx P..UUala 1117 ~~blcteen 3:R 1~: Princeton Townhom11 crpt, drpa, p.int, D/W 1000./1 415 Poppy &900 +SllOO No P9'•540-4434 peoo1e'. f: petagS700 · pd $550 +MC. 497~17 l nrpr! • BAYFRONT cute 26f 26: S;:S/mo. ifs~ pe · for ...... S9SO/mo un-11200 No pet• 75Q.-0Me mo to mo Owlw 875--0160 IUll& .. &PTS 271 Cab<lllo -.,.2-048 1 ~--..... • un• 11•1 beech,.. .. , winter rentel, E ... A .... 3 ... 2 .. -fSu1r~h,•d ......... ~· Cllor, DECORATOR PERFECT 28r 1Ba unfurn. gar S820 1Br trig. ,.,. leundry $HARP-2BR cpta & drpi. ~ Abto11Jt1 t>atgalnl p,_. tum. evl lmmed S1100. cono-.,._.., "" ... nr """' mo"''"--2BR 2'"Ba + den unit 1Br 1Ba turn $575 No poo1 cwpon No Pl'• · no }Ba 1700 Frte.
tlglous 3 bdrm 2'h beth 873-3297 Of 831-3123 Nwpt dahwahf lncld see5 854-7564 L•V9 U.eage "9XI to pool AJr & hlgnly peta, no SIMrs 873-e246 ' $550/mo dlatl•= ~279 d9hW9tlr. lt0"'9 ~
!!!Ill a-.r exec twnhme.
0
POOI, ape celm W LI flU S3Mtil Agent C09t * *mfll.I* * uP11reded Avf lmmed 1825 28' petlo. So of 93 1 w 1911'1 St W-0492 !_911 mo. NO PETS S4MM5
-··· .....-1-1«1nla Try 10% oown E·IM» CfWT\ of the crop. S 1195/mo Cell 840-5324 PC • ' & I SpeiclOul 3t>r 2be trptc, * 1-... Sl,111,111 Cell P~trfck Tenor~ ieR 11X a:IUxe Send-Sue* pll'9fl 18r only CALL US REGARDING -H, "' bCtl ~ -UllW new carpet. pelnt a
Tired or the Mme Old 780-8702 or 831-12ee CMtt9 Condo w/aml yd, $450. • 09C> chrg. Call IRVINE AENTALS Eaatbluff 48r lBa Condo, Freetl cp1/pelnt &73-3852 2br 1be w/Wdbumtng frpl. dreoes S&951mo Ch._ fWMg. dlltl•..,_ & ~
took? Savor the t>eeuty &. "J)lc. wet bet, mtrrored nowl 5-47-27117 lnlllt ..... l1•n fr!~~i :"~!c0~·17~~ 38' 28a Apt, trptc, ctectt. 2 d/w, gar. pvt patio I dren weicome 964-2087 Incl NO PETS~
"'Iner deelgn of thl• 6 wardrobM, mlcrowew, , 111-1• ' v car gar cio.e to PIO! 381 E tlltl'I St. •2 .,..,. 28' 1se .eeno poo1 ow :Rhome located In New· traah compactor, etc. Elllde twnhM 3BR.2~BA, Avell lmmedl 933·3544 S 1250 Avl now 875-7113 S745/mo &4&-97~ UNtOUE BacnelOf ....., w11er1Q. pci S72S/mo:
• fl lty Avell now. 1900/mo. yerd. dbl get. 1 1100/mo, 3Br28a. 2carger. NoPl'I EASTBLUFF 88R 4be T/H ---I 'BDRM wlgerege $640 1110t·B 15th St 850-8213 pert I nett oommun 963-1191bet9·5pm lat, ... , & .... 831-8.283 11100 l.8e (818) 888-5510 w/f.p Ctoee churcl'I. achl, BEAUTIFUL 5,..,. MW, lg 111111wn llft. OUIE'T patio, pool,..,...,.
.......... HARBOR VIEW HOMES L 2BR /fed d (S 18)346-04-40 (L /4. •l bctl S 1950 Al 456-2108 3br + fMI rm. 2 trptc, tub 28R tBA, c:ottlQI type.1 NO PETS S.._2 7 2BR on 1M wet9f, newty
Monaco 3Br. lge fem-nn, 3BR 2BA. welt to beech, '19 ' w 'If • ~· -ape, allytft-. t>eern ~ Pf1V•te patlO gar wt d "ILU lll&aR9& decor•t•d $150/mo LAlll, LJll1 xtra lge yrd &«-8785 anded!. dtw.,,.. 8'>911., trptc Muat54~7W · + DtSCOUNT RENT lg 2Br. Furn oetux1 OCMnvtew tnga 509 N1rc111u1 l'lllup Norte S&75tmo w ~-. Bo11 slfp a1t1 llabte
&II
'
.vlftll -..-y --CArl)et111 ..... ·a~ Ol,!17~2 • .,. oec> c:hrg • ,.,,, rm. 28e-Nf pert! Co-condo 2Br 2BA, ell S2000/mo 9e&-8263 TSL MGM &42· 1803 212• EhlH ....a 1 873-27'7 or 87S--0149 11911' -"~' --• '7\1 .. , ,..,_ .. -..,, aperetew/Bkr• StoO mo 1men1t1ea S 1475/mo. ---_ I ' .. , 4 bdrma. 2'A batha, ramify Cetalln• view. Heer the LllllY ..... ( 7 1 4 )6 6 1 -5 1 9 3 or Re ts r e q · d Day a ~ 2Br 2B•.AXfJ~· Ul11m •TA •U 142-1111 2BR ~Plt•lrs. l be. fTl>IC,
room In Herbor l/lew aurf. Plan 4. 3BR 3ba. Brand new 3br 2'Abe tip, (818)883-0ae5 &42-01180, evel 831-4897 S 10951~g·/~9422 Baoti. cerport, trig. mtcro-2B, 28• 1emuys welcome r.•r edutti-no Pl'• 1 Yr
Hiiia. In mint condition! Highly UP11raded. Muat 1795/MO C<lM 2 Inc yd. dbl gar, pet <>ti. pl! Prkled below the rHI $775 -------wav.. lnet utM $400/mo D w drapes encl g1r. " S780 mo On Club
Nothing hae beerl left un· be aeen to be ap· RMr dupMJC In old . colof' S1095. 642·oee6 detalll 2br 2be 539--8 191 , _ ... • STUPENDOUS 180 deg. SMALL 1BR. get, 500/mo laundry rec . utM petd, Houee A\19. Avlll Jiil
done to tnt1Yre comfort & precleted. 1192,000, Bdrm. South of PCH. ,_.smelt,_ ~ .-.. "'-'* 0¥9F1o0ilfng bey & CAii Sheryl, SY3-3t l7 li rge p1ey ., ... ho Pl't•. 2• 494-8303
euy ffvl~ Motivated $64K exlatlng 111, OWnef Large IMng rm MIN Vero. 38r W•Be ..,,,.... Beautifully turnlal'led 3 oc.n BMut r.cMc 2br 5700 mo S800 dePC*I ------
ullere ere aak fng will oondlkSercarry~ S14t5/MO ~ ~~·.~5 UHIV.PAAK.SPACIOUS3 8drm 1"10me onl/l1Na 1ba. edulta pref S1500. ••LIDO ISLE•*
S3T79B.500BLEFIELD 735-0878 3 Bdrm 2 beth home with 9ran1 T·-.......... 47• ,....... BR, 2-ger, pool & i.e. Av .... ble from now to mo. 875-3814 tot llPC)l WI"'° a -Lu•. newty d8c 3BR 2BA
TRUOYS U OPENHSESal/Sun1-4 targe9nc:to..dyard.2car ~H-=~, .. -:;-nopeta.1~050.133-2548 Juty 15 etS1650 J*'mo. uu: .... 2B 1 .. _ wint al4Meetton o4 gt..i ept l.g aouth patio TOOOY SMITH 10 KAMALII COURT a.-.1-... Sou-.... ~. .. ... ._.,... ..., Cell Rod •t 073-4400 Of un.vrn r ... ? w can o.,_ --. $1500/mo yny 875-M 11
owof 'aglH. tn'"old___..Cd.M ......'..'..'. .. __ Vero. 38r 28e tmt I~= I HI eve• Cl ff 873-11112 1 tat, , .. , • MC N· EASTSIDE DUPLEX APT IMf'O e -.,-...... ..... l Iii PC~ · .._ -tmllr no pet a, no ger 28R tba, ow · new cpl tl'llf'O from 1 ""111 apt to * • -9ILI trf • pelnt, c:atpet and cerwnlc dplx 1850. 3117-A Corll ••pane v• oceen HARBOR REALTY -159-0240 or 967·1565 I ,tftj. . a 4 bdlm l'IOUM II f<>Otl· .... ... Ulm all Ute. Agf/Owrw 659-6221 vl•w, frplc , Jae, lge LciW.et r ent 8ect*<>r pees yard, 725 mo, 832·50M Ing In CM NB or HB 2Br 1Ba 102 Antlbee Don
e..ut. ·11 :zoxeo· l(evw-t MIN vero. 48r 11100 No ~. lndty. 11100 well! to _...,.. 1395 ut.. E11ta6de tux. In 1 p1n9 tor-111in. of us first tor tflat 87S.124' eva. 022..e715
.. ... Hm wit.ti NQht Int.,. 28" 1 Call M.McGulr• et pet-. 2921 CMMnut Ave. unfum. Furnl9h9d &/0t pd 539--8191 Agt ,_ !fid iL cpta. d~ OW eet, ,. 18A. O/W, tng ctl06C8 of ldUI IMng Nwp1 Penn 3 & 4 Br 28e..
Spacloua 48drm. 3BA 2Ba, 1ge Mv/dln & 11~ HARBOR MALTY 0o not dtetUft> 411-412l pet~ 4t7-2nl -No pets' Adltl pref S?OO Gae Wtr p9'd P1tl0, TSI. MGMT &42-tll03 yrty rntta $1050-$1350
home on 2 l9Y'ell. COOk'a ere&. All app4lencee lndd. 17)-.4400 . 38R 28A. coaetlle• view G=tlC 3Br 28e wig« l.8e Avt 111 5'&-723' $570/mo. yr lee.. Adutta WllnMI ft.UM 11*9 Ren1.ia 175-7015
llftc:Mn wtth ceremtc: I.Ned Sm pet & young ad!'-ME.SA VERDE ~ lnOIUdea NiMCt Ind w/d elk 10 bctl & LldO ... ~. • No .,.._ ~ $4 '5 CanMrt Vig 1ua-1BR.
ttoore a 1bundant wetc:ome. Comer lot, 5• AOcuetom to luxury 3tw 48A 3be ~ 1Peo ltHO/mo.161~7 St300/mo Y"Y 964 ___ •29R DUPLEX 9"99 E-ek» lux In 1 p1n9 toreet. BecMkW 9 veuned oell. 1 cer ger
counter tot» Ind CUP-pettl.129,500. 2ba l'trft tp90I age k" dbf 0er11:,~ ~~· Atctt ....... ..__ ~ Luxury H1rbor Aldge ow1199.1at91 ~~1 lo 18r '570 LQ 28R. 2Ba ~ ;:'i-:i;:t: ~ ei.y vu $750, Incl utlll
boerOL L.tg )'ltd w/'A .... IPP• g er 11300 delalla · _. • .., .... ._.......,. Condo4Br 3i,,81. NYlng gooctwset sel5. OIW. tng, Gae a .'Pool end epe-no peta Av.itF«i 1 873-3n7
baelletbell court. AH f« Beeut. h~ uporadecl 534M111Aftcoet MeMVerO.Executtw38' !:.n2~· .;:r's~.J: rm.dlntng&t1mrm 3car 2BR 1'MIA. I>"' tnctry rm W1t.,pd.Carport,Aldt1 &45-8122 833-89 t7 jiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ontyl1M,IOO. 751-3191 20x40 Buddy hin. Lg NAUTlfUl.l~t* lg 2Bahome.Frptc,dlrWl'm, •M-Ml7 or 4'4-3172 glltt. SpedoUI •f..~ In. unit, petlo, ow. No.-..Yrlee646--0M4 W•t_, ........ , .... 2 •• ...,.
•
SElECT tlvldln .,.. w/pulmen 3tw+ r.m. rm,'"'*-Mt g11tt 113!!0 Deb 722-1641 vtew & ctty '?ht' 1:· n1e9. No~ tl60/mo EeettM» lrMlll 1 bf per1 n.at:U-c.,,;,,, ~ "il''1• .11u, "nilfi ''"' -Ar111::s kltch. 2BA 1be. Very nice ..,. ~ ~ oe11-..._. 11.,.09 WlllfllnOton • oo.y oontmt. 1• ed comm vt F«> Call Jeen ts1-1211 tor 11g1 *""' "4*' deel\ ...-b r...u b•·di .. om ,1p1, ~ ~ encl patlOt .. unttbied. lngi Sot Narcl11u1. Ave. 3BR 28A. tem rm, bd, lrg pvt petto, pvt bch. S2MO/mo 711C)..M3S '475 No pM. 980-2M2. .,. .. ln4fy "" ~1 to
CtnM ... Li lfti AQ!N 540-M37 '2000/mo. Mt-l2t3 .... =·= r.· ~ ::o.e,:-~/:°' ~ HEIGHTS )t>,4'~ ll~ 29R 2)+9A ~ ~~·s~~~
&JPl&S 11; ... S0: NEW Obi,.~ 2 ~ OPU<· l18t Mel1acltd. 3 IA =~-.,q:-,J . UOUNA iiACH Not1h mo.1!'.:ret> T:o-...s.. new crplldrpa, trptc. WISIDE 2br 2ba. newl of-PCH. 1275,000. 5~1 .~ -..,._ _.,..,.... Sba , 140~. mo. bllywd. be6c.. ir,ory '*"P·
Carn1tlon. ly own•r Low down or lrad•. l40-0IOO Of 720-9211 · Monttoetto TI HM: SIA end. 4'IA. SM. vt!W Pl'ectlcalty on the ._.._. 28A 1"'9A Towmowe. no ger IMO/mo '40-1617 ,!9'S:a.18lO• eee
11M241ortn.1a.1 181-2004 LG•• Ye+ eep. fwn. tba.lcer~..,... Av::ocJ'mo -~-1':& ... Yrty :3bt 2be twn w/ger ~noa-., ~t11~ EJlide IPec: 28A n•M 646-t 5't 0t1~2 • rm frplc.. louttl of PCH •· itooVrec. IMO/mo, • MOO 1 S3t-t 111 AO' fW ton• IM8tlft0. -• -..
Sel. v-,,.,.,,,.
Cll Cl11.W,
Mt-1671
for Information
~& aurp,rllingty
low cost. .
..
~. oooup. l2000 Devtctor.._ .. .-1t11 ...... hofM on the a_.10 *'-"· 3CW 2be.. tBr ,.,.._ TwnflM End !~.:.-=.~~ lut.
mo . ...,.~ Move Nowt s+ ,eM-nl'\, _.., ..._ ....,, **-nuctPVpelntopn...,... UNt. get 1t12 w.._. tee. poot. eec. 1741/mo l .. '111111.,__ t»-2141.~~ ... ~din. '-ti Ot< ...... .,.,.... *-· f/pliOlj.Af'1.,_ •1 1111Weleca •104 No'*9C4.lr1M'31·12tl ~ .. ~-:::.. ~ iif t .. COiilP' 9171/dlp cfq 647·2717 .:..~.,:: :r-~ YUA 8AL90A 2 Mnn. 2 M41/mo 17M211 $pectol• 28drm. 2k '"*-..... 8111/N. Nkle i'+ '*-"" •'-· ,_, """*-"" -.alCN .. ,.,. a-• ..,._. 2 IN' ,T w/QAMO& detlwahr. f'1)60. '~ A-4 21 t9t 1f4~ .... Ml~ hfo. good....... ewwtt. '*itrel ootofl. NO~ r 8 C P I I U c.rpl&, drp~ LOtt Of
New .._,. ID iU 2M, lot. 14Tt.+ dip. dq. Gate 9u1rdH CAl.l. Wtmo Cell M-t\t1 ~ ~ llnO-
fl"pto ger. w7d. 4 ...._to 647-27'1 111 lllllt ,... ., Ila l,,.lyn 140°4111 or IC*Ped llO-a31 ~tfH021St4.13-30ll -fftllf•I-TIM!Ma~IM.""° tTMOM 2:.:.~bulllN..=
oon.ge: 1-. ""' 11A l'louee. "" ::_. e:o,r=: = ..... ~ p ., .. oprv frl*. t car ... w• to = crl*-ywd ·~· ..._. .. u.. .,,,._ 1100 ~ ~1
bd\, •111,,.. IU· 10ll 7IO/MO. Aft D1· 70 •1..-Cell 1e4 -· & ~..., ~ u,tt ., °"'1 to111eitat!6f 2IA llSA. ... tndry ..._
UiiQUi T~ ...., -tor.-.. ..._ I ''°" t;i h,._an i S-CNu ,.,tta ~ ~ -...1e, to t!lt 4 -. ~ ...._ 1 ,.., • a........, ~UIH C6"06i <>w. ,..2w10 .._ llr•" •.ail• '"s PlCASl .... to ...... ,..,.. mklto, W/O, ...... ..,..... I ...... Gar ;;.;:' a NMr.:: IMO CllJ99\U1·1-
ll'" ltlCIO .-.:1111 w/Of/llW, MlotO, wld fltkup. "'•· .c:.e.,;r-:,,ye. hJP J!M ~t ·~..:._:.•1J:; 4IM1n._..,..,. 1!1111!1!!!!...-~-.,..,..... =r.-, IMO A.,. NW Ml-1447
oer flf, IJIOIMO, unM'fl .,_ ... '""-
UMftl erl?W117 llW or u .--....; ..... .. hli oo;;a: 1 .... .. lf1lille, -=·. -.....-. AftM 111/M. --.... I 1 'Rjii;""iiiiiiiil;lt;-'.-;iii; ...,..,,,,..... ....c.1 q l:::::::::::::::::::::=::::::;:::J...!~~~~!!!!!!--1!1!! ...... ~~~~
WM~·
UP TO
$"100 Of'J I ' •
• '" !st yur's rent
ruRNtSHfD or
UNrURNISHCO
CALL TOOAYU
lllPMLlll
Your
s.vice Oltectory
Aept-•tltlw
1a-a21 .... Ml
CALL 842-1444 .
A1k for JoAnne C1eney
/
.. I . --•
Energetic people needed with a
pleaaant telephone voice to con-
duct marketing atudy for Jeadlng
.local newapaper. "NO SELL·
ING." Houre: Mon .·Frl. 5:30 PM
AFTER
SCHOOL
JOBS
EARN
MONEY
PRIZES
TRIPS
1111
NMCMcS tor fut orowtno
""•P•P9f 1dvert111no
d1p1rtment .
Aetc>ontlbltlt• wlll In· dud.'**"' end~ Of ldl, t~ ~
mall. ""°°"*• .... org1nlzed lndMdu111
with good drMno reoorcs
t nel/IOltiOf'iel '*"" eppty In perton to: The Orenoe
COMC ~ "llot· 330W.~8t,..., Cott• ,,... l:A t2t29
to 9:30 PM, Sat. 9:00 AM to 1:00 A.-lot~_
PM . S84 a week to atart, 1hare In =' R~w
partn•t•hJp p_r_oflt1 after lat· Coe1C Hwy~ w w~
week PleaNnt working con· ., • .,., . .. ...... dltlona, private deelc & phone.' lblttodttw~.DMV
Ca1ual attire. A real fun Jobi o-=:. '1en~"'~::
M A N A G ~ M E N T 0 P • '1Y1il54C)..»iiiiii:i~! WOii<
PORTUNmES. For Interview llOO.oo '* 100. °'*"""
.it.aft .aaaf.l teed ".,,.,.. No r... call David Grant at v.A·~ ,... ... ..,.. .._ o..
between 9:00 AM· 3:00 PM M·F. ===-= 1 1
641-4111 ,., ... :-"';',=. 't ~.,L .
..
IUlllNI TUml EnglnMflng Co. Santa
Ana No exp. nee
545-10<>e aft. 2pm EOE
m'ILIOIDIMI
ATTllUIJ
The Sporting HOUM, Npt
Beh. 6em to 2Pm lhltt
avail. Call Rich. 752-0565
PLANT SCAPE
tnt./Ext. Plant exp. req
Own tr•MP· 75 '-227 I
NIL lllYlll Plllll
Chemlcal1 only. Wiit train
& tupply truck. 645-e<MM
•
~ _ .... Mt.......,1C ..... •.......,11&1......,_'"_.;.;:,.:;;;;;;;;;;c_,•-.•-=--_ .......... • ... ec .... m .... TICE ......... ___ ..c __ .,_11CE __ , ___ ,. ____ 1e __ .., ___ na ___ --1·-.;.;:P!!JC~-"°;:.TIC(:.::.. ___ MYC-.a;; .... !!OR ............. _
1
____ ,. ____ 1e_111_m __
IH!aJI •H ~ ~ CDlll T"'9 1111 A -llM JotWIH,"""'* W.... .... Cott*• Mw.CAtH27 TAtN., "lf'Alll, DHl'IN be r900tcled In.,_~ twee•-lllJIRI .. all F o.l't "'°'.WW, 1. 1.11. WlltltN~a.tlOfOf· TIW •11l1M11t ._tied eetonoeATM ...... Oo. ....., Devld Law, t780' Mt<> ON.MTW AHV 1UCH wt*9 ... -~ 11 .......... 11SND1UCK10N n. ,.,_,..,. 22.1... ... COUflly Ofl D111mMI' •eountyCllftofOr• TIW '4al1TN11tw lllect IWnler, lanla Ana, C~ WILi.i O" MINll, ioo.tld. Al,..,.,__ ..... CH•RLS8 ff•N ~ ......_ a ~ W·6H tt. 1MI W109 ~ on Decembet Witt\ IN County CWk Of Or· taJOI WITHOUT, HOWIVl.R. THI DMe: Deolmbet U. 1118 .......... ,_ ,_ ... n. a •
"' ........... Hett>or ._ "· ttlll. :Te County on°'°""'* TNI l>UelneM .. con NOMT TO DNLL., MINI. .., .. IAL co•,O•· ........ ;lllRll ....... ORJCKSON M.D. ~~ .......... ~=~ NlJCll)TIC( ~a:':.T ... ~ ~ °'f.T.PI= •MS.. ,_ ~tw:.~~ ITOM.EC""OMAHOM• ATIOll CM' til mDA. • ... .,_.._....,_.,_ 06ed Swlday, J.nu--.... _ • .... .--... O....,.... l"ATI. THROUGH tHI _.. ...._, •.O. .. 111. ....... _. .. ...,,._ _,, l <t ·-ot .... ~-
........ Coeta ....._ ~ '·'·'"·' o.MyNot0.02S,teS.Jan ~~c... T.-~IWMtlec:8UN'AClO .. THfUPPIA ....... CA.1t&C911t.... _J ... ~ ·-· CA.., ~ Ptennoul• .... W·Ha 1,1.15. 1tM ~Not 0.0.. ff, , .... wlthltleCountya.ttOfOr 500 ,UT 0, TH! ....... .,, .......... ,. ....... ,.. attack "' Newport
.=elodl IHn. 202t NAllllTAW W·280 Jan. 1,1. 11, 1111 Mge C°""'Y on o.oembei IUl8UA,ACI OF THI ...... .,...... .... Of.,_,, I ..... ,_ ... BMch. JU WM 68. CA-~· Coeta ...... ~ == ::--.,. NlJC MOTIC( W-nt 11, '"' ,_ ~:~-~~":~.Ve'..v':o ~ Ofange CO.I ::.:-..::-.::' ..=: Born in Amhent, N•
,..... IMllllMM 11 COfl• DECISION MAKING IN-"8JC 11)11C( --ti' .,-Publlltled On1nge COM IY 01!!0 AECOfU>lO IN DallY l'llot J&ftlMY l . 15. 22 • ..., .., ... ..... bruka. Dr. Hen· ...... ~t ~ Ind ,OlllMATION, llOO f , 4th fltCTmOUe .,_.. ,.,,._. ,_ DellY Piiot Oeclem'*' 25 BOOK 12811 PAGE 1511, 1... fwtMr ......... '""' "'9 dJ1cbon received h1a ~ IHn Slr.-t. 81• 215, lanla Ana. TN followint 1*90M.,. 11Mm 9TAW PC1'T10Ue •Ml•• 1tl8, JtnUetY 1, I , 15, tMf OFFICIAL MCOAOS. W•H2 ...... mecUca1 ~ from
Cellf. 927M dolnQ bullflele •: THOG. The ........ ,.,_,..,. _.. .,.._.,._" W-2'« PAACEL 2: n.e .. ...., .... • Unlveraltbm:f Ne T"9 lll11Not W ...., Oedfne RMMrCfl. A Cell--171 ~Aw, ,,.... dOlf'CI ~ ae: TM to11ow1ng S*'IO"I ltt HOK.oct.Ull\IE "'8£. ... , Htl. Y• .., .... •
Wiit\ h County CWk Of Or· tornla Corpofallon, 1st3 port leedl. CA 12113 Alf Alnerlc:an luelMM dOiflCI ~ -ME.HTS OVER THAT l'AM· ftaJC ll)TIC( ..... lit ......, cflllt bruka, M . A ~ County on Oeoelnblr ~ Aoed, Meleen \/Ir· w~ T. ~ Jf .. tn Cclneepla, llO l'&ulaflno ......, Tec:tr~· PWUC llOTICE EATY ANO FOR THE ...cnnoue ....... ..., .• ,... .. ... ........ twenty llx year ,._
.... tte1. ..i..t122to1 ~A~ Newpof1 •P104.eo.ta.....,CA ... w----f ,. .. , -----u PU,.POIES AS SUCH ....... -.. ~ • ........,.,....., .... den•o4~ .. -"'-··-. ,_., ""rhlt bulln ... 11 con-9Mol\, CA t2M3 Jotln 0 . lofloe, 10211 ~ P.(). k• 1a'. N.a ""'NAii.nA~ EASEMENTS AAE RE· -., .. ,._,.., ........................... • • ,~ ..,._...., '""""1
~:.T.J°r' dYc:ted by: I corporltlon Thi• bullMll It con-Auoff Av.. wtlltti.t, CA. 92"2) t2714 TN tollowtng pertofW .,. SERVED FO .. THE BENEFIT ~ ..:::o..~ la ............. (lllM In ty, he e9tabllahed h1a -~ · · an Edwatd H PeterMn. Seo-ducted by: An lndMOuel tOe04 Norman H...on OWf9t1 OOinO ~ ee: A) flllch. Of OR GRANTED TO OWN-COUNT"'( f'LOWERS IM ,.._ Mel). medk:a1 pcac.X. In
t, I, t5, 1MI retlr( WM!ey T. Moore. Jr. Thie bualneea 11 con• 65 WoodlMI, tl'Ylne, ~ 1td'a Cendle'I I) Ndlatd't TE~!'! ~.~~~IOHETNI• 190tl luch Boule'lard'. ==.._.. ...:-J::. ~ Internal Medicine,
w-252 Thlt 1ta1ernen1 -hied Thie eca1ement ... ...., duCted by en lndllltduel 92714 Almond TO-., 1~ ~ ,.'NO•,,,_.. DUT"':!ns;a. ""'ur"tLITI ... HunllflOton BMcll, Calif. ............... .._ -=~ apedalh1n1 ln Im---------wtth ,,,. County c.-°' Of· wttll the County ci.ni of Or· JoM Sottoe Thi• t>utlMM 11 con· INf• Clrde. Newpof1 IMdl " ~ -'*' -. ,..,.,_, ln lt1.111" H
--ti' Mftftl'C ange County on oec.mbet anoe County on Oeolmber Thia ltet«nenl ... ...., due1ed '-': ., lndMduel. OA ---AHO CAIM.I TEL!\llSION", .. d K u " •• CMAa c~ m..._.._..., .vv. e
---.""""' ..... --..-""-..-1ftA.-..--30 1945 11 1"5 with IN Countw Olet1t of Or· u-::!.:..... u---,.__ .. _ "UllLITlll" "SIOEYAAO n ra •Y ..,iug an, ,ara~reH11ter •11• la aurvlved by h1a • • , ......,..._, ,._,.,, ,,._.,_. Alclwd £dwwd Powet •••r"'"E T ',, "I 7H2 Timber Clrcle It, ·-..... e _.. fltC'nnOUe .,..... ,_ ,..17 anee County on Oeceni• T"'-ttatement ... Nee 1331 HemptW9 Clrole New-..,.. "' N S • UPPORT Huntington e .. ch Callt '111• wife Marilyn; h11 MAim ITATUmNT Publllhed Orange Coeat Publlehed Orange COMt 13, 1N5 wttt1 Ille Count;y 01ertC Of Or· pot1 9eect1 CA ....0 ANO SETTLEMENT", "EH-82641 ' ..... M........... da hte ff the f
The fo1ow1ng paraona are O.lly Pllo1 Januaty I, 8, 15, Dally Pllol Oec25, 1"5. Jan ,_,_ llr\09 County on Decembel TNI t>utlneaa la con-~ROACHMENT", ANO Thlt t>uelneM 11 oon-UM .... • -...... \.II. l'I! ea ro ~ buelr'9le M ; Studio 22, 1985 '· 8. 15, 18"-Pubtllhed Orange Coeat '~· 1115 duct9d by An lndMdull • COMMUNIT'f. FACILITIES ducted by. an lndMdual ...... ... .. .. ......... s.n Frandll'o; Holly
104 1HO Log.911 ~Cotta W-527 W-25' o.lly Piiot Dec. 25, tNa, ,_. NoMrd IEdwwd l'OMr IEAS.EM!NT 0, THE tench i<ey M*'lll\etl ,.1t111l1n; M lllJ dlltl of t..o. AneeJea. and
....... CA 82121. • .... 1, •• 15, 1tee P\IOllehed Or-. COM Tilll S\ltel'Mn1 .... ftlecl AATICl~ EHTITLEO "EASE· Thie 1t-.ment .,.. Ned ............ -... h.ia IOl"I Charles of
Nw\11 Koetler. 87 Sall-•-ti' Mftftl'r W-242 Deity Piiot OeolmW 26 wtth !tie County Cler\ of Or· MENTS Of THE OECl.A,._ with tN County C... of Or· H•ptlr CH Ill fer• n...--
.,ort Or, Huntington BMch, rtaJC..,. ~ ""'~ INS. January 1,l , 15, 1tee ange Cdunty on Oeoeml* ATION 0' CONV!NAT8, ange County on Dsciembet 111allclaclu le1 ale a Newpon ~h. Hia
CA t214e nnou• ...... '1CTmOUe ...... ·-IC Mft'l"tl't w.24( ,. 1H5 CONDITIONS ANO RE· 11 1N5 ••11111 du ............. mother Anna of e ThomlOn t 174 FtC AMI ITATl..wf MAim ITA,....,. ..--ltUlftA • ,... ST,.ICTIONS RECORDED ' ~ ... .. .... ....... • Phoenix, ha •lit.er
G lea Terrece.' COiie T~ following pel'90l'I• are TM folloWfng pdOnl .,. Ftc'TmOU• ...... "9JC NOTICE PublllMd 0r.,. COlll4 m~N:A~IE:~~NT~ Publllhed Orange COMI -:· ........ ,,...,... .. Helen Anderaon and
Mela. 92127 doing bu11nt11 11: Mr. doing ~ u : Group MAim HATIMINT o.lly Pllol Dec 25, 1H5. Jen IHCLUatVIE Of OFFICIAL o.il't Piiot .Jenuery 15, U. lllJUll .. a ........ ,_. n e p h e W J oh n Tlllt bu1ln... 11 con· Lindtcape. 24 tOl Cindy Travel SHrch, 705 E. The tollowlng penona -fltCn'nOUe .,_.. 1, 8.15, 1tee. RECOA08 0, SAID COUN-29, f:tbnlary 5, 1Ne ,.., el~ r le,_... Andenon of Phoenix.
ductedby·Co-Partnen Lane. Like Fore1t, CA Salboa Blvd. a.lboa. CA doing ~ u: Ao'f;tll U..9TAIT rT W·257 TY (''THE DECLARATION") W-277 ....................... A nl•ce H•len
Neena Koeller 92630 82111 Tallorlno and Men 9 The followll'9 S*'IO"I.,. ANO SUPPLEMENTARY J etree ... ff cle 1¥ "' "' Thll ljaternent wu filed Chan-Tak Chung. 24101 Rk111r<1 09"\rllh, 115 Clothing. fOOIS Adams Ave, 1'0lng bualMA •: Ml.IC ll)TICE .DECL.AMTION OF COHVf. rtalC NOTICE 1 h cl•cl • ..... .._ Anderacio of t..o. A:ra -
wlth tn. County C=:~ ClndyL-.LakeFor ... ,CA IEdgewaler, Balboa, CA Huntington Beach. CA St,_, 2nl Mele Verde JiANTS,CONOITIONsAND =·.::c,.,.. ....... ~elea.Servi.ceswillbe
... County on 92830 928&, 92141 Eut M • 112. Coat• Mesa I( ll7'D A Es TR I c TI 0 N s A E. rtennoua ....... I ........ 0
... • 11. 1945. ,_.1 Thia buatneu 11 con-. Thl1 bu1lne11 11 con· RaJal 0 Kurd, 2907 CA 8212& ~ COUltT CORDED NOVEMBER 19 MAim aTATllmltf ........ ,_.. ... _.... at 11 A.M. January
........ 1~ Or C 1 ducted by An lndtvlduat ducted by. An Individual C.-SI, Newport 8Mctl. o.vld &town end Pin Of Tt9 9TATI 1971 IN BOOK 11917 PAGE The foloWtng peraon le ....,. ._., • •........ 16. ~ It Pacific
.-v ... .,_, •nQr 081 Chan-Tu Chung • Alchard o.mtath CA t2MO Tope, 2n5 Mele Vwde Eaa Oii ~ 1 1925 OF OFFICIAL RE· doing ~ ea: IR••• 1 • .. • •.,.,. View Memorial Park. ~~~~25• 1985 Jan Thia 11a1ement w• 1n~ w1! .. h!-..... 'taeoun1ernenty b.,W:-1~ d·~~ !."~~~n-M-112. Coat• u.a. CJ '°"-Tl!!.~
1
coRDS Of SAID COUNTY. UlillVEASAL MACHINE ... • • l c *• .... In lieu of fJoweracon-• · · w 255 wiln the COunty Cletfl O ..,.. u• .,.. o • ..... ,_, v1 82121. vr-=-Tiie ltreet ~ end SHOP, 155e1 Producer L.n ..... a............... 'butl •'--Sain • 1nge COunty on oec.mt>er ange County on Oeoember Raj.el 0 . Kurd Thi• t>u11n ... ta eon In re Ille matt• of the ottw common dellCJMtlon. #M, Huntington Belch, ....... • lllllclll • • tri one to u1e t
--------16, 1985. ti, 1985. . Thll atat~I WU...., dueled by: A General Pwt ~opllon petition of GENE!" IJnY, of the,.... propett) Callf. 92Mt -.................. Joaeph Ho1pital, P\B.IC NOTICE ,__ P1IAIO wllhtheCountyCWllotOr-nenhlp FRANCIES KIHOLM, Adopt· ducrlbed above 11 0.Yld A. Point. 85'2 Ab-~-el ., .. ,..... teJe· Ca.rd.lac Care Fund
Publlahed Orange Coeat Publllhed Orange Co&al ange County on Oeoelnber David Brown Ing P11en1. I purported to be! 11 NIGht· botl Dt .. Hunllnglon Beec:h. ). 100 S Ori · rteTITIOUt 9U8INIH Diiiy Piiot Dec 25, 1945. Jan Delly PllOI Dec 26, 1946. Jen 11, 1915. TNI llalerMnl wu Ill« NO. AD attn heWlc , !Nine, Calif. t271l. Calif. 92&47 C....... •• 1 t.ewart ve,
NAMI ITATIMINT I, 8 15. t988 1, •• t5, ttee. With the County Clet1t of°' CITATION TO The undenlgned Truew Thi• bu1lnea1 II eon-The name and~ of Orange, CA. 92668,
The lollowlng per*>ftl are W-253 W-25-4 Publlshed Orange Cout enge County on Oeoll'nbe· AllPIM dlllcMlma 1ny lidlty for any ducted by: .,, lndtYldU 1M COUt1 ts: (El ~ y are preferred. Pacific
doing bll"-u : I Dally PllOI Dec 25. 1N5 Jan 18. 1986 TH! PEOPLE OF THE lnc«rectnesa of tha atreet Oevld 1>.: Point dlrecclon de la corts •): View Mort•lArv, Di-
Tftt:NTRONICS. 583 Ham· 11o1m1ic MnflC( rtalC NOTICE 1, 8. 15. 1Ne , ,_,... STATE Of CALIFORNIA to edd,... end other common nw etetement w• filed SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY -J
llton. No B, Coat• M.... ...~ "" W-25el Publllhed Ofange Coel WILLIAM L: BALES: dellgnetlon, " any, lhown with 1M County Clerk of Of· JUDICIAL DISTRICT, 30H3 rectors. 64-4-2700
Callfornl1 92827 ICTmOUa ....... '1Cmt0Ua _,..... Dally Pltot Dec 25, 1985, J11 You -heftbY olted end herein. ange County on December CROWN VALI.EY PKWY ..
Rene Boa, 583 Hamilton. F NAmlTATlllllNT NAMl9TATl•NT P\8.IC NOTICE 1,8, 15. 1981. requlredlO~lnltleSu-Bllld.-wlllt>el'MCM blll 11 1MS LAGUNA NIGUEL, CA
no. B. Coat• Meta. Call-Harbour Packaging. The followlng pel'90l'll are W-25: perlOf COUf'I of the State of without ~• °' ;_.,. ' ,_1 tHn.
lornla 92127 16502 Loe Vwdel Lane. dolrtQ ~ a; Ot>nl<fyn FtCTITIOUa 9UMtlH Callfomla for tlle County of ramy, elCPfMI or lmplled, ,.. Pvbllahed Orange eoeat The name, addf .... Ind
Thi• bu11naaa II con-Huntington Beeeh, CA Reewdl lnetttute, fe835 NAm ITATIMENT rtaJC ll)TIC[ OAANGE, In~"*'' 11 gerdlng tlt1e. 'P11II111ton, Of Deity Pllol Janulrf 15, 22. t~ number ol p1a1n. due"!~ t.an tnd1vldual 92649 .. • Algonguln StrMI, Hunl· TM lollowlng P«IOnl ar• on Mardi 3, 19H, 11 9:30 encvmbrMoaa. lo pey thl 29. f:tbnlary 6, 19&1 llff1 attorMY. or P'alntlff
Th ...... at--t WU , • ._. Jotln F P111on, 16502 Loa tnQlon a.en. CA 92&49 doing bll.in.ta u : '1CTTnOU8 ....... A.M . then and Iller• lo llM7# remaining prlnclpal IUm ol W·278 without an attorney, la: (El .. •• -·~· ,_, v d L H ntl""'on John H. Rlcherdl. 4120 THE EWING COMPANY NAMI 8TATIMENT cauM, It any you hive. wtly IN notee MCUred by Mid nombfa, •• dlrecclon y .. nu-wllh the Coun"' Cterk of Of· .. !'_.!'. c .. '!!;." u • .,,. s the petition of GE~FRAN-.............. of T--........ lnt-•t mero de 1elefono del '' _., ,. u-• Dalplll Circle. Huntington t72t Whittler Ave.. ult• The following petlOl'll ar1 ._, ,..., '""' -anoe County on D«lembet Thia bu1lne11 11 con· BMctt. CA t2M9 B. Co111 M .... CA .1j2$27 doing butlneea u. CtS Kl HOLM for ad theNon, u provided In Mid "8.JC NOTIC[ at>ogado del dernandanle, 0
30, t985 ducted by· An Individual Tiii• busln... 11 con· This bu1lne11 11 con· L..w L .... ng Co , 186t lion °1 ELISE ANN GOM "' not•, edvancee. ti any, del den'l111danta que no
f2llUI John F Patton dueled by An Individual ducted by 1 Corpor1tlon SuperlOI' Avenue Co111 (Bales). your minor c:t\lld, undertMtwmaoftald OetCI WONa Ilene• abog1do, u )
--1111--ic---llt\_TIC_E__ D1m11c NOTICE 1111m11c unrlCE Mt.IC NOTICE P\&JC NOTICE ™ ground• on wNc:t1 °'*"91of111e TNlt• ll'ICI NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: PAA.DES & BANKS. A PAO-I
' lhould not be granted Of lruel, teee, ctiergee Md (CfTACIOlt AICMCIAl) HI GK IE Y. NEU LAN 0 ,
,~ "" l'"UIK. l'"UIX. "" Petitioner ctlima IM right 10 of !tie lrusl Cfeeted by Mid ~vteo a Ac:uclado) CRAIG FESSIONAL CORPOR·
--------adopt the minor child Deed of Tr1111 .. fOI' IM McCLURE, an lndlvkluel: ATION, Central SaYlnQa & NCfl'ICE 1".) PUBLIC without your conasnl II "I amounl rMtonably •ti· KEN MILLEA, an lndtvldual: l.oen 11d9., 24031 Et 'roro follows. You have lalled lo meted to be 1100,700.00. ROSEY'S PLACE. a per'lnet· Road, Suite 250. Lagun1
provide 1uppon tor the The beneftclary under Mid ~;and DOES t 10 25 1'41111, CA 92153 (7 14)
minor child, or llt411Tlpted DMd of True! lletetofof'e ••· YOU AAE BEING SUED 7 ... 7200.
eny communleatlon with her tcuted Ind dellvered to the BY PLAJNTlff:(A Uc1 leeata OAT~ (~J MAY 29
llnoeblrth."WllhOutlegaljut-undef9lgned 1 Wflt1en Dec-demandando) GOLD· 1"5
CF NO SIQHFICAITT EF'FtX:f 00 THE ENVIrotHNI'
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMONAL ,ARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Paclllc Vtew Drive
Newport Beach
6't'6-2700
HAMOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave.
Costa Mesa
540-5554
AND tUI'ICE 'ro PUBLIC tlfleetlon therefOf latatlon ol Oef*"1 end 0.-ENWEST PUBLISHING, ........ ...,,.., c--.
You have• r19ht to appeer mend for Sala. Ind e written INC .. A Cel"ornla QOfPOf· ~ K........., OeflutY --------
In '*''°" Ind tor t>y counaet. Notice of OefCIUlt and EleC-allon Publllhed Orange Cou1 Bu~ meetl Miier-with an
II you wllh to be '9P<eaented tlon to Sall. The • Ye.. M.e • CALIMDAR Delly Pltol Janu~ 15. 22. effeQtlve cla11lfled ad.
Oite: January 15, 1906
City of FCUltain Valley
10200 Slater Avenue
CF RmUEST FOR RELEASE OF FUIDS
Foll\ tain valley, CA 92 708
'ro Al..L INI'ERES'I'ID A.CDCIES, GIO.JPS AND ~:
en or aboot Jaruary 29, 1986, the City o f Fountain Valley will request the U.S.
De~t of tblsifY3 and Urban Developnent to release Federal ft.nds \alder Title l
of the fbusirg and O::Jmulity Develq::ment Act of 1974 (PL 93-383) fur the fl.rlt.ington
Valley Adult Dly Care Center Kitchen Rarodeling Project. ""'Ifii.s project is located
in Census Tract 997. 31, Wildt is txlunded to the north by Ellis Avenue( to the
south by Garfield Avenue, to the \!Est by Newland Street, and to the east by
Magnolia Street.
I t has been deteonine:i that su::h r81uest fur release of f l.rids wi ll not constitute
an act.ioo significantly affecting the quality o f the hLman envirorment and
acoordingly the al">o.te-naned City of Fountain Valley has decided not to prepare an
environnental .i.npct. statenent under the National Envirormental Policy Act of
1969 (PL 91-190). The reaa::ms for su::h decision not to i;repare su:h statenent
are as follCMS: The project is located in a medillll density residential area ..t\ere
the effects on the natural and physical environnent will be minimal.
An Envirorrnental Review Record respect.i1"Y3 the within project has been made by
the City W\ich · dcx:uroonts the envi ronnental review of the project and
rrore fully sets forth the reasoos -Jny such staterrent is not requiroo. '!his
Environnent.al Pevie..< Record is on file at the above address and is available for
pd::>lic examination and <:q:>ying up:n request at the Planning Department. between
the h::>urs of 8:00 a .m . and 5 :00 p.m.
No further environnental review of su:h project is prcposed to be condu::ted prior
to the request for release o f federal funds.
All interested agenc ies, g roops and per90ns d.isagreel.fY3 wi. th this decision are
invited to subni.t written caments for consideration by the City of Folrltain
Valley to the Planni.n;J Department. Such written CCl'mlents sl"o.lld be received at
10200 Slater Avenue on o r before January 24, 1986. All carrnents so received
will be considered am the City will rot request the release o f federal funds or
take any admi.nistrat.l.ve action on the within projects prio r to the rlate specified
in the frecedin:J sentence.
The City o f fountain Valley wil 1 undertake the rroject described above with Block
Grant funds Eran the u. s. Depart:Jrent o f Housin:J and Urban Developrent (HUD) un:ler
Title l of the lb.Jsi03 and Cl::Jrm..nity Develq:ment Ac t o f 1974. The City of Famtain
Valley is certifying to HUD that the City and Judy L. Kelsey, in her official
c apacity a s City Mrnager, consent to accept the j urisdiction of the federal cn.rrts
if an act.ion is brought to enforce resp:>nsibilities i n relati-on to envirorrnental
reviEMB, decisioo-makin;J and action: am that these resi::onsibilities have been
satisfied. The legal e ffect of the c ertification is that upon its approval the
City o f , Foun trl in Val ley may use the Block Grant flrlds and HUD will have satisfied"-
its resµ::nsih1 lities under the Na tional Enviromeital ~licy Act o f 1969. HUD
will accept an objection to its appra-.ral of the release o f fl.rids and acceptance
o.f the certi fication only if i t i s on ooe o f the follOlling bases:
(a) That the certification was not in fact executed by the certifying o f ficer o r
other officer of applicant appro ved by lfUD; o r (b) that the applicant's envirorrnental
review record for the project. ioo.1.c ates anission of a required decision firrling
or step applicable to the project in the enviroment.al revie.ii pr:1X.'98&. Cl:>jections
nust be i;repared am slt:rni tted in accordance wi. th the required procedure ( 24 CFR
Alrt 58) am nay be addressed to tfJD at Department. o f fb.laing and Urt>an Developnent,
Area Office, 2500 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90057.
Ct>jectioos to the release o f funds on basis other than· these stated above will
not be considered by HUD. fib obje ction receiver] after February 13, 1986, will he
ccnaidered ,by HUD.
• .,.. ___... ..--.
l\.rly -L. Ke f sey. c lty Manager
PUBLISH: Qi Time ()lly
Orarqe O:>ut 11 y P1 l
Jan~~ 1986 __ _ ·--------
by an altorney and IM court cauMd Uld Notice of 0.-DAYI ...., WI ............. 29, f:et>ruaty 5, 1081 642.5&7&
determines you cannot ••· taulf 1nd Elecilon 10 Salt I le _,_ °" ,... le .. 1 W-278 lord an lllOtMY. one wll1 be ________ ...:_ ____ .;...... ___ 1-.. _______ __.. _______ _
appointed for you wlthOUt
ef\afge
11 you flit 10 appeer ti the,
time Ind pllCCI Sllled above, I
the court may termln1t•1 your rlQhll to the control
and cullody of the minor
ehlld and go torwwd with the 1
adoption of the minor ctllld
Dale DEC 31 tN5
QA .. Y L. Q .. ANYH.U,
CLIM 8Y J. CUaoN,
DIPUTYCLIM
Pul>lllhed Orange Cout] Del~~ 15, 22,
29, 5, w.2741
HZ.-
NOTICE CW
TAUlftE'I IALI
T.I . No. F·21n1
lltllftOMANT NOTICE
TO PR~RTY OWNIA:
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT
UNDER A DEED OF TRUST,
DATED 12115/n , UNLESS
YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROP·
ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT
A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU
NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOU, YOU SHOULD CON·
TACT A LAWYER
On February 12. 1981, 111
10.00 A M , IMPERIAL COR·
PORA TION OF AMERICA a1
duly appointed Tru1tea
under and pursuant 10 DMd
or Trull recorded January 4,
1978. H lnat. No 1459, In
t>ook 12518. page 1593, or
Ottlclll Recorda In lhe office
or the County Racorder1 ol
Or1nge County, State ol
Callfornla, executed by
HARVEY LUCAS, A MAR·
RIED MAN. OR. ABELARDO
LOPEZ. A MARRIED MAN
Will SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO HIGHEST BID-
DER FOR CASH (payable ll
ume ol aate In ltwfu1 money
or the United StatM) II the
North front entrance to tM
County CourthouM. 700
Civic Ctntff Drive WHI, Santa An1 C1lilornl1 all
right. 11t1e ano 1ntere11 con-I
veyed 10 and now held by It I
under utd Deed or Trull In
the prc>perty 1llu1ted In uld
County and Stale deeer1bedl
In the Exhibit "A" attaehed1
here1o end maoe a part
l\waot
,IXHftlfT A
ALL THAT CERTAIN!
LANO StTUA TEO IN THE
STAT! OF CALIFORNIA.
COUNTY OF ORANGE. CITY I
OF IRVINE, DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS·
PARCEL 1
LOT 11 OF TRACT NO
9329, AS SHOWN ON A
MAP RECORDED IN BOOK
3H. PA~ES 14 TO 17. IN·
CLUSIVE, OF MIS -
CELLANEOUS MAPS. RE·
CORDS OF ORANGE
COUNTY. CALIFORNIA
EXCEPT THEREFROM
AU OIL, OIL RIGHTS, MIN·
I ERALS, MINERAL RIGHTS,
NATURAi. OAS RIGHTS
ANO OTHER
HYOROCAA80NS BY
WHATSOEVER NAME
KNOWN THAT MAY BE
WITHIN OA UNDER THE
PARCEL 0, LANO HEREIN·j
ABOVE DESCRIBED,
t.OGETH!A WlT~ THE PER-
PETUAL RIGHT OF DRILL·
ING, MINING, EXPLORING
ANO OPEMTING THERE·
FOR A.HO STORINO IN ANO
AlMO\llNO THE 8AME
FAOM SAID LANO OR ANY
OTHl" I.AHO. INCLUOtNO l~l .. IOHT TO WHll'•
STOCK OR OIMCllOML·
LY ONLL ANO MIM '"°"' LANDS OTHIA THAN
tH081 HtilWNASOVl DI·
SCAlllO, OIL OA OAS
WELLS, TUNNlL4 AND
SHAFTS INTO, TH .. OUOH
OR A C .. 088 THI
suaau,.,ACE o, THI
LAND HfAllNAIO~ DI·
IC"IMD ANO TO 1onOM 8~ WHIPSTOCtefO OA
OIAICTIONALLY OAILUO
WILLS.I. TUNNILI ANO
IHAFT11 UN~ AND H ·
NMTH OR llYOHD Tl41
EXTE. .. IOA LIMlTI THIM· M ANO 'TO ~LL. M ·
TUNNEL EOUIP, MAIN·
WORLD OF
AD-VENTURE!
Daily Pilot Cl111ifi1d1
842-5818
r
I I
Fro
Amc:rica'~ famou:-, ~aport:-, yidd cu isi nt·~ a~ \'arit·d and u111qul· a~ lht· t'i l k~ lht·m:-,dn·~
And w t:at carcht:~ from tht· ~·a p lay an important rok in t·ad 1 o f t ht·~· rn·ipt:~.
Tht: ho unry fro m tht· S(.'a ha:-, ht:t:n :-.<> grt·a t chat tlw ta~tt.· po~~ihilitin arc limit n t only h~
the: imagination. Sl'asonin~s. :-,:Hin::-. a nd addnl ingrn lit-nt:-, c an gin· :-,c afood a ho~t of
pt:"rso nalit it·~.
Put some c ulinary t:xcitt·mt·nt into Sl'afoou at your ho mt· with tht:St' grt:at rt·ci~·~. rd kl'I·
Birthday
celebration
takescake ·
Show business legend George
Bums, who celebrates his 90th
birthday this month, seems to have
the magjc formula for staying young
-.. Never retire, or if you retire,
keep your mind and body active."
·Adds Bums, ''Eating a few prunes
in the morning can help too. 1
especially love prunes because
they've got more wrinkles than 1
have."
ftCCordina to Burns. some people
"start rebeanina to be old" the
minute they tum 6S. "Not me.
When I wu 6S, I won a Charleston
contest," he said proudly.
At 90, this veteran comedian,
actor. rccordina artist and author is
still aoina strong. Throuahout the
year, he appears reauJarty in ni&ht-
clubs and concert halls, u well as on
television and in film .
Laat year, he wrote his sixth book
since be tu med 80 "Dear Oeorte."
andbLwill soon aw in yet ~nother
television special.
Entitled .. Kraft Se.lutes Oeorte
Bums' 90th Birthday ... A Very
Special Special.·· the propam ii
ICheduled for broedcut Friday at 8
p.m. on Qannel 2. Diahann Car-
roll, Billy Crystal, John Denver,
John Forsythe, Amr-Marpret,
Walter Matthau and many other
top celebrities in the emerwnmeat
industry will join 0-. for the
&deviled tribute.
This will be followed by I ...
celetntion -complete witli a
... , birthday QM, It tbe polb
Owen'• rcscaurant In Beverty
Hilll.
Willa 90 binMaJ CIDdlll to blow out on his cab tllit year, Oeor.e
may ftnd hirwlf in 1 lit.tlon fie
once detcribed in 1 joke ... you can
tell you're tettina old when every-
body ps to your binhday party
and stand• around t~cake to tel warm," lie qutpped. -
Since Oeorte bu eaten birthday
cakn for nine decedes. be considers
himself an open whe11 it coma to
... tins. "Wbltever the recipe, it
should have cbocollte!" Oeo111 lum1' favorite binhday
cake reel" features pnanee In a
lalllptuCIUI Cl'mft cblne ftlllna,
The two c:IH>callte cib tayen are
lptit in hllf to Nb an elepnt looii111.bar-layer~
I• lididon IO •lilll ~
>
-
WEDNESOAV, JAHUAIW 16, 1811
• 1can
inµ thl· unique. l'lhllll ht·n t.tgt'' ut 'omt· of :\nwnt..1·-. 1110-.1 tamou' 'l·.1porh
Add ,·arn:~ to ~our t.l\ontc mctb \\llh mort· µn·.t1 tJtch n ·L·arx·, tt·.uurinJ.! ud1t.11n1'
hrt·:itk d and hau cr·dtp p t·d fi,h li ll t·i-. .1mJ -.11 d,, \\'rill' t(1r ~our frtT top' h\ 'l'llthnµ \o ur
name. :ttklrc-.:-, .111J 1.ip cotk to (1rcat < .• 11dw-.. P<) Bo\. c; t02. lkpl x.:; I \tinnt·apnl1-.. \t:\
.:;c; ~(lO Offl'r good '' hik -.uppl~ l.1'"
Please see recipes for Great Catclles 011 C4.
,
' -
Restaurant trend
returns to basics
CAMDEN. N.J. -Just when \.OU think you're upon thelatest food
trend (a special cheese made onl) Junng the full moon on a small farm in
the Dakota Badlands. fo r exampk). c;uddenlyeveryone 1s talking about a
newer. even more csotenc food
Where do these food trends tan'> That's what Diane H 1llyard.
marlcetina research manager at (·am pbcll Soup Co .. rcocntl)' set out 10
discovCT. She interviewed 11 Ct"lebratcd chefs and owners of the trend1~t
restaurants in New York. Lo Angdes. San Francisco, and Philadelphia.
and a fo rmer ~sAn~lcs restaurant re' 1ewer o\11 are members oft he
prestigious American Institute of Wine and Food. which arranged the
intCfVlCWS. •
The good news is that e"ot1cism inf ood preparation 1s out. and
restaurant dining is t.akina a more relaxed. more healthful tum
The undercurrents of change in the food world bepn about 10 'car!.
~the rcstaunntrn1tc-The firsa1gns were:
-an increased interest 1n health
-eatina "l~ter'' ·
-lcssjntim1dalion about eating out, as re tau rants relaxed their
fo rmal environments.
As with all revolutions, there was extremism in the earl} stages -a
movement now known as "nouvelle cutsi nc." It was developed b
rcstauratcun to satisfy patrons who wanted to cxpenmcnt and who wert
clamorina for h&htcr frCsh foods and exotic items from far romcrs of the
world _ _
-Then. the Far East influence moved1n. espec1ally that of Japan.
creating an interest in arranged food prC9CntatJon. ttsopen preparation in
restaurants where the ki tchen 1s v1sible, liahtncss. and minimal rooki na
time. The "revolut1onarics" had help alona the way: cxooc. fTcsh
i~icnts became easier to obtain. and the electric food processor
s1mplified preparation of sauces. purees. and fancy pm1shcs.
Cumntly. accord1na to the food profess1onals. restaurants are
mtilcovmna buia but with a new 1ntcrprc1.1non . They arc. for example.
suddenly realizina that American food can be hipquahty. And Amc:ncan
cuisine fitsour"tasie memory;" fcw ofussrcw upon nouvcUccuisine. but
t-lotof1S11emen1beraoodchickcn · . Some~ of the revolution are beina retaaned. Frcsboeu
continues to be important. and many restaurants have aonc beyond fresh
tosrowiattheirown Prcteniationand v1walappc:aJahoconun\le
became. u one rcstautallteure~platm. appearancecompeaata for mall ponionsand liOt eaW.,
t.eMenuhzndin.nenprovecttbatcom'*' .. FJ.:taaren'• necaury and that food looks more appealina on,.., • Eatiftl lijht
is 1uch a c:oncern that two oftbe mlt\arafttew'I hl.e nutri.....,...
CIOftlultantl toldvite oa menu cboeces low in~ loidimn ad
choklta'Ol Bat10meforusha.e~ O..of't.Mm•c 1
• ••••RIM:-•~--:;.;
cuisine b.ih aroad WMt'uvui.Me hM in local at tllk ~--• '. fft 111-CTJ l/C8)
.., .
ake meals in minutes with _pantry supplies
Bwa ii you're nannina late, dinner can be on time. Geared to today's
IChedules, .. pantry cuisine .. putu uper ~hort-ordersuppers on the
...... la 30 minutes or less without shortchan1ma taste, nutnuon or
eca.omy. _._ 'th Pantry cuisine works bycombinin1canned and peckaaed sta~ .. ~ IM>dafrom thcrefriaeratorand freeur. T•ther, lhey.sbou~.cookqu1ddy
llldPICIDelittleinthewayoftime.-consum1na chopp1na,shcmaand
dicina. Condiments and 1easoninp such u vincpr. soy sauce, dehydrated
Settinaupforpucryaaii6Mile.ierthan you mipt think. In fact, you mincedonion,prlicpowdcranddried hcrbnip-upspecdymeals. Keep
probably bave muy 1111•dllillrtdlen&1 already on hand. Canned quick pearled barley, pre-cooked rice, instant potatoes and dried puta on toma&oe1.10ma&0---.~ ...... pork and beans.chicken broth, thesh~fforfast side dishes. Or, use them to stretch meat, poultry and fish pi:=.&DdtuDl ........ fttrYminuteoounL into~nomicaJcasserolesand skilletdishes.
_.__ :!,~:~~froanvceetables,cbicken andfish Tokeepcannedandpackaaedfoodsattopquality,slOreinacool,dry
__, •-Po-Jill cabinetorpantry.Savecabinetsnearthcranae,oven,dishwasberand _....;.. ________ ......., reffiterator for non-food storqe. A first-in-first-out inventory system
insures use oftbc oldest items first. ·
-------~
Frozen fish sticks, pre-cooked rice and canned New Orleans •!>'le~
kidney bean• team-up fast in Fish Sticks Creole. The sa voo/ sauce m which
tbebeansuepecbdeliminatestheneed foradded.seasonu~as. The~ns
ue one of today's nutritional superstars. Packed with protein and low 1n
fat. beam also provide dietary fiber which we now know is important to
IOOd health. . ... Fish Sticks Creole taket leu than l 0 mmutes to assemble and Just 20
minutes t.o bake.1t•s easy on the budaet, too. The saucy base ofbeans and
rice flavored with bits of onion,areen pepper and celery stretch one
peckqe offish sticlcs to satisfy ff ve hearty appetites. Round out the meal
with a quick totsed salad and fresh fruit dessert.
Pork and beans, anothercupboud staple, ~ve a l 5-minute ~k..illet
dinner a nutritiouund delicious beadatart. Pineapple chunks, vmegar, soy
sauoe and brown supr also make f .. t work of the sweet and sour sauoe,
while fresh arcen pepperchunband briaht tomato wedges add eye appeal.
For a crunchy accompaniment, serve Oriental Franks and Beans over
canned chowmein noodles. ·
50911 rn rn :r I··--• --·· ~~~?J~JACE i
WAYS 10 SIN
CLEAH!
WITH THE
~------°'=---------------·--~
MODY TREE REFUND
Here'• How It Works:
Each br•• of PO'iT' LC'rul ha• onC' ltf the' Mont'v Tr.-r pr<w•f·of.
putth-lrrtC'l'I P, O. 'i. T. on the' ~ panC'I C>( t~ "''" { ollu1
onC' MonC'y TrC'C' prn<>( from u ch ••oup 1hown on th.-ma1l·1n
c:ertifkatC' and you'vr •pC'lkd "POST." SpC'll PO'>T lhru hmr•
and ,,_ can .. ~ .. ur 10 S6.00 on cMh and coupon• sond "" an\
bnftd al POST { rttah.
FISH STICKS CREOLE
Ila e11p clloppe4 celery
14 C11p cllopp ... sreea pepper
14 ce,c:Hpp111-....
3 tablespooa1 veptable oU
1 'ft capt pacu 1e4I emiclaed pre-cooked rice, cooked
115-ouce cu New Orleaas-style reel kidney beau
1 8-oance cu tomato u1ce
1 7 Y.-oance pacb1e frozea fls .. sticks
Heat oven to400degrees. Sautecelery,grecn pepper and onion in oil
until tender. Add rice, beans and tomato sauce; mix well. Spoon in to 8-
inch square baking dish. Top with fish sticks. Bake 20 minutes or until
heated through. 5 servings; approximate cost per serving: 60 cents .
• ORIENT AL F RANltS
AND BEANS
1 med.11m 1reen pepper, cit la to 1-IDcb pieces
1 med.11m ODJon, qurterecl
t tablespoou ve,etable oil
4 to5frukfarten,c1tlato1-lacllpleces
l' 11-ouce cu perk u d beus, dralDed
1 1-ouce caa plaeapple cllaats la lleavy syrap, aadral.Decl
t tableapoo111 vlae1ar
1 tablespooa firmly packed brown sapr
1 tabletpooll IOY UICe
1 mecl.lam temato, cet la to wecl1es
In larae skillet, saute arccn pepper and onion in oil until tender. Add
remainin1 insredientsexoept tomato. Bring to a boil; simmer 5 minutes,
stirrina occasionally. Stir in tomato. Cook I to 2 minutes or just until
heated th'rouati. Serve over chow mein noodles, if desi red. 4 servings;
approximate cost perservina: 73cents.
Innovative potato
salad a healthful
meal in one dish
Salads like this one arc wonderful imaainative mixtures of fruit and
v*table combinations. With the addition of cheese and eas for protein.
they become healtbf\al vqetarian meals-in-one, th at even confirmed meat
-eaten enjoy for• ch;an]e.
The combination of fresh pears, with potatoes, cheese and cu may
sound unusual, but the flavor combination is exceptionally pleasina.
T~ with cucumbers, peppers and zucchini in a low calorie Remoulade,
it s a perfect candidate for a soup and salad fall supper.
1 Mad lceber1 leu.ee
WHOLEMEAL
POO' A TO SALAD
1 ~ , .............. ,.tatoes n. ........ o,... ....
-~ .. .... -la,J•U..•ad ..... .
1 e8J J.U-1-at 1w111-...
1 ,,.... ,..,.. eered ........ .
~ "'*1a1J 1Uc!M Em•• 1a eec:ember
14 "' ............... ,.,,.,
! ......... ,.,,... ..... ( ........ )
Core, rinse and thorouahly drain lettuce; refriaerate in cloted plastic
bq or plaatic crisper. Cook potatoes in water to cover until tender, about
20 minutes. Drain and Cool.
PreJMte Remoulade Oretl1na. Peet Potati>es: cut in half lena\hwite
and slice. Slice CIP. raervina a few for prniah. Add ea to potatoa, with
zucchlnt, cheae, par, cucumber and chopped red pepper.
Gently tOM with dreuina and chill. Shonly before terVi"I. line
terVina bowl with• few iettuc:e lelvn. Cut remainina lettuce into bise..ize
chunks to measure I c · Touwith potato milltureand tum intosvina
bowl. Oarnieb with el emit and red pepper rinp. Serve at once. Maka
' to 6 serviap (2 quarU).
--••• Drcl r' 1: Combine VJ cup low caJ mayonuiae. W. cup
chopped dil plelele, I 11 .. lllOOD IKb prepared mUllard. C1pen, ~
.,_ ooioft, pmnley and &ameoa ftevor white wine viftellt, I •lpOOD
•It and ~teaspoon ""'IOft, crumbled. Mix well. Makes ! np drnliftl. •
. . ,...,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wed~,~ 15, 1111 C8
Hot soups cb&sewinter•s· chill
It's no coincidence that January
as National Soup Month. There's
nothing quite like a bowl of steam-'
ing broth to chase the winter chill
away and warm both body and soul.
Soup is one of the most healthfu1
foods you can eat. In fact, mothers
are eternally grateful for soup's abili~y to "hide" J~ose good-for-you
nutnents that their chi ldren would
not eat otherwise. J
The best way to celebrate Na-
tional Soup Month and extol soup's
~any vanues is to create and enjoy
at! . Here are three outstnading
recipes that not only taste delicious,
they are easy to prepare.
GOLDEN GLOW POTAGE
3 '12 cups thinly sliced carrots (1
pound) 'I• cup chopped onion
2 '12 cups water
2 tablespoons butter or margar-
ine ·
2 cant f-1034 ounces eacb) con-
densed cream of cblcken soup
l/i cup plain yogurt
Vi teaspoon grated lemon rind
•;, teaspoon groun~ nutmeg-
Jn 3-quart cover~d saucepan
over !ow heat, cook carrots, onion,
'h cup water a nd butter 15 minutes
or until carrots are tender. stirring
often. Stir in soup and remaining
wate r.
Jn covered blender container or
food processor at low speed, blend
soup mix ture in two bathches until
smooth. Return to saucepan. Stir in
~ogurt, lemon rind and nutmeg.
Heat thoroughly, stirring oc-
casionall y. Makes 61h cups or 5
servings.
CHINESE CABBAGE SOUP
1 tablespoon butter or margar-
TRENDS •••
From Cl
acceptance of new areas of exoti-
cism -regional Italian. "other"
Oriental. and North African
cu1s1ncs. There is increased
ev idence of grazing as people eat
smaller and more numerous meals.
The chemistry of eating also is
gaining atten tion as we learn how
food nutrients interact, and the
order in which foods should be
eaten for greatest benefits.
The most dramatic change is in
the way foodsarc·prepared-some
served raw. others barely cooked,
and most with shoner cooki ng
times. Heavy, nch sauces have
given way to natural juices. Un-
usual species of mushrooms and
expensi ve. imported truffies are
becoming more familiar. Campbell
Soup Co. has helped popularize
spcnal mushrooms by marketing
SUl'h "exotic" varieties as oyster
and sh1itakc mu-;hrooms in supe r-
markets.
Based on interviews with 1he
food professionals. 1t seems likely
that fi ve trends will conttnue:
-fresh ingredients
- visual presentation
- eaung light
-eatm~ seasonal foods
-exot1c1sm. but to a lesser
extent than in the early '80s.
J.\nd. finally :here are trends that
the researchers and food pro-
tes-;1onals see emergjng:
-increased evidence of grazing
behavior
-changing methods of food
preparation
-increased awareness of nutri-
tton
increased popularity of
American cuisine
-increased use ofcross-cultural
vehicles to build on, such as rice
and pasta
-a consolidation of gourmet
foods ... Dijon mustard wi ll become
an everyda y item
-the desire for fla vorful foods.
CAKE ...
F rom Cl
light and fluffy. Blend in sour
cream . eggs. chocolate and vanilla.
Add combined dry ingredients
alternately with milk. mixing well
:iftcr each addition. Pour into two
greased and fl oured 9-inch layer
pan-s-;
Bake at 350 degrees, 30 to 35
minutes or until wooden pick
inserted in center comes out clean.
Cool JO minutes~ remove from
pans. Cool: split each layer into two
layers.
\omhine cream cheese and
marshmallow creme, mixing at
medium speed on electric mixer
until well blended. Reserve-!~up
cream cheese mixture: add prunes
and brand y to remaining cream
chcesc--nrixture. Mix well.
Spread three cake layers with
prune mixture: stack. Top w~th
remaining layer. prcad top with
reserved cream chce~ mixture. 10
to t 2 ~rvinp.
V.ulallo.aJ: Omit brandy.
Substitute dates or apricots for
prune . -
To cook dried fruit. combine 11/\
cups fruu and 11/1 cups water in
saucepan. Bring to boil; reduce
heat. 1mmcr 10 to IS minutes or
unlll fruit is softened.
ln•ex•pen•alve•
'(11'1 111 "*'' •M no• nigh
1n price, ret1on1ble,
ctM91tl9d ..., ... adVWtltlng
Cl111lfled Advert111ng '-,.~,, ,.A"'n
iDe
1 np 1Ucecl fresei m .. eiroom1
1 ~ caps firm &of• nt tato ~
lace. c•HI (I onces)
% table1poou dry 1~rry
i table1poo111 soy 1Hce
~ tea1pooa 1esame oU
•;. teHpooa v~tecl fresll pger
% CUI (lt~ OUCet eacll) COD·
deaHd ceitcllea brodl
% i oup cu1 water
% cups ~ese cabbage cu Ha •;, • "'
tncei 1Uce1 'I• cup tlaiDJy 1Ucecl radl1llea
In 3-quart saucepan over me-
dium heat, in hot butter, cook
WIN s1000°0
WtN -$500°0
WIN s100°0
mushrooms. stirring constantly.
until lj&htly browned. Add tofu.
In smaJI bowl, combine sherry,
soy sauce, sesame oil and gjnger.
Toss lightly with mushroom mix-
ture. Add soup and water; heat to
boiling. Stir in cabbage; simmer
about 3 minutes. Add radishes.
Makes 7 cups or 5 servings.
SALMON AND BROCCOLI
CHOWDER
t tablespoons butter or margar-
ine
t cups tblnly sliced carrots
•;. cap chopped onion
2 cans (10~ ounces eacb) con-
denied cream)' broccoli lffP
t 1Hp CUI mllll
1 cu (7 ~ Maeet) aalmM,
dralae41u4flded
1 tablea,ooa lem• J•ice
I te11pooa (raWlemOD rtM
GeaerH1 da•ei llot pepper MllCe
Jn J-quan covered sauoepan
over very low heat, in hot butter.
cook carrot and onion IS minutes
untif just tender, stirring often.
. Stir in soup and milk; add
salmon, lemon juice. lemon rind
and ilot pepper sauce. Heat
thoroughly, gently stir oc-
casionally. Makes 6 cups or 6
servings.
3 WAYS To WINI Receive One FREE Cash lDttefY Gcwne Tic~t Each Day
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•2,000,000 IN PRIZES AYAILAlilLEI Wiii UPTO'l,OOOlllSTAllnY
Top
Slrloln Steak
Salmon
....
Shrimp
Raw, Peeled Frozen.
Ocean Garden. ,,,, .. ~69!.
•• c_.
Boneless. ...... .,
... ,lty .... Loin
89
Ground Chuck
Fresh Lean Beef. Does
Not Exceed 26% Fat.
.... s 129
Boneless Chuck "Cross Rib"
...... y ... llty .....
.... $198
I
__ ,...,...:::;;;; _____ .., ---' ·.L
Sliced Bacon
Farmer John.
Serve With Lucerne Eggs.
:..··$1_39
12·01. 7'~c Pkg. -Y
•r• .. ...... " .. _ ..
•Mushroom•Regular
48·0% !2" STU
PorkCllops
Assorted Fresh Center
Ana Enacut LoTn.-
.... $ I 59
CIPUe The Grell So4.nda Of <net ~
l'UmC & WMllA1 IS
Femay Lbsy of Great Music I 5 I Ab.Jn 1 • AIM'na 2·24
Onty....... 49 '-" I .. 'r\--I
"
•
Coca-Cola
Diet Coke •Cherry Coke •Classic Cok
12 .... c. .. s1 .69 .....
Tomato Sapce
Hunt's, Ri ch Thick Flavor ..... c ••
6 for $1
Albacore
Solid White Tuna Star·KISt
.~ .... c..
ClleclclarC•••••
est Buy Mild Or Monterey Jack
Ramtum Weights.
Ht •
s199
•
-c ........ . Cllkll-••••• Soup
{lli(leell 3 $ I "0041• 101 • Ol ll:-8 ?!'"·• Cans
••••
4 ...... ...
Del1c1ous Tangy Flavor
Grea t On Hamburgers.
3~:.59
·' '
Tangelos
Minneola. Great For
Snacks Or Desserts
2 !: ' I '•• ~~-~~-
----· ..........6.... roo111 Tl11
Truly Fine •White •Yellow .... .,. •. -99c
SAFEWAY
DOUBLE
COUPON .., .... ' I ,......,.. "'__..·.,...., ~ -
..__.._.. --" ooi..-"'°gill dov-1 lilt ....... ...., W'D" ~ .. --
1 Hal to .................. IJIOl*'l IM'Clf-.
OOl.eOl'9 .... llWI -dais Of ---.. , ..... ~ .. ._ ..................
I
....
Navel
Oranges .
Sweet And Juicy. Easy To
Peel. A Good Source
Of Vitamin C.
c
Del1c1ous Steamed And
Topped With Cheese Sauce .. _ .. 59c
Grapefruit
Ruby Red Or White
Large Size California Grown
Kai Kan
Cat Food ..... , ..
4 Per$ I
SAFEWAY
DOUBLE
COUPON
•
fl Ola .. COMt OAJLY PILOT/~. Jenuery 11, 1MI
.
Greatcatchesfrom U.S. seaportsreeledin
~---lbc c:routOldl of the .. __.. -.. a cuiline that is
' I d, Nflectina tastes of the
Oiilat and tbe influences of early
...... .-lann. 0o Hawaiian It
Mme witla tlaia euy recipe featurina
IJb phas traditional island inp cleata.
HAWAIIAN rmamcu
1 fl±sll (II wet) c"'9clly ..... .... ( ..... )
' "'h ''I W •eptabie otJ I••••• C!81'n&a, nt dialoul·
~ 1..U, ...,aut, Ctlt .... "·
mdletlbet
14 ~ ..... (19-owe .... ) ,,.... .ua. Ctlt .... ~.
... Uffl~ ........... .
'4 ... ~ UW MIU leaves
.......... ,.,,er
4 ....,. re4 ,.,,er Mllee
I tabl"poou •lpped pera&eJ
1 medl•m tomato, ~• las.
elp~• ud elpt1 c•t brto
uJves
l peca1e (I omees) crispy
batter 41ppe4 fllll filJeu
Heat oil in 10-inrh skillet. Cook
and stir onion and prlic over
medium heat until tender. Add
remainina inaredients except
persley. tomato and fillets; cook
and atir 2 minutes. Reduce heat;
cover and cook 20 minutes, stirrina
occasionally. Stir in panley and
tomato; cover and cook I 0
minutes.
About 20 minutes . before
ratatoume is done, heat oven to 42S
dqrees. Bake fillets as directed on
packqe. Serve over ratatouille. 4
servinp.
Among the best known of Ameri-
ca's 1re11 1eaports 1s New York
City, who~ fOOds have lot11 on·
joyed a rich and colorful lwian
influence. These unique minl-
pi.z.us add an Italian influence to
your table.
NEW YORK STYLE
INDIVIDUAL PIZZAS
! pacu1e1 (l! oace1 eacll)
llpt recipe 11111 flllet1
1 CU (I Oucet) pllU IHte (1
c:•p)
14 arated parmesu clteese
~ np cllopped sree• pepper
l eu (t MIM:ft) 1llc!M mHll· ,............. .
1 ce, .-.... mo1u,.11a
chete
-Heat oven to 400 dqrees. Line
shallow baklna pan with alllminum
foil. Place fillets in pen, Bake 17
minutes. Mix pizza sauce and
·Parmesan cheese; spread over
fillets.
Top with areen pepper, mush-
rooms and mozzarella cheese: bake
until cheese is melted, about 10
minutes longer. Amnac fillets in
circle on serving platter. 8 servings.
~ .... ~·lmallleel ,--~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-==:..._~~~~~~~~
I e .... prllc, enaW
I a1•a ....... nt lllto .,.. ...
I • • •-11ee11 pepper, nt lllto
. l·IMlafllecet
l cm (1'4 emces) plaeapple
c• h 18 1yrmp, dralaed (re-
Mne 1ynp)
....... ~··· u desired Heat oven to 400 degrees. Balce
ftsb sticks as directed on package.
Prepare Sauce; reserve. Heat oil in
IO.inch skillet over medium-high
beat until hot. Add carrots and
prlic; cook and stir 3 minutes. Stir
in onions, areen pepper and
pineapple: cook and stir 3 minutes
loqer. Stir in Sauce.
Heat to boiling. stirring constant-
ly. Boil and stir until thickened,
about 2 minutes. Arrange fish
sticks on serving plate. Immedi-
ately pour pineapple millture over
top; sprinkle with coconut. 6 ser-
vings.
· Saace: Add enough water to
reserved pineapple syrup to
measure 'h cup.Mix in I/• cup
packed brown supr, '/• cup cider 1
vinegar, I tablespoon cornstarch, 2
tablelspoons catsup and I table-
spoon soy sauce.
Each yeM, millions of tourists are
lured to the port cities in California
and Texas to enjoy the historic
sights, the ocean and local dishes.
From four of these great seaports
come these tasty sandwiches. Enjoy
all four distinctively different tastes
of American cooking.
SEAPORT
FISH SANDWICHES
Heat oven to 400 degrees. Bake I
package ( 12 ounces) potato crisp
fish fillets as directed. Assemble
fish sandwiches, using the rolls and
toppings specified from your
favorite seaport below. 7 sand-
wiches.
Su Dleao Toppiq: 7 hard rolls.
split, I carton (6 ounces) frozen
guacamole, thawed, 2 medium
tomatoes, sliced, I cup shredded
Cheddar cheese (4 ounces). 1h cup
sour cream. sliced ripe olives if
desired.
Saa Francisco Toppins: 7
so urdough rolls, split, lettuce
leaves, 2 medium tomatoes. sliced,
I small onion, sliced, 1h cup tanar
sauce.
Corpt11 Ort1tl Topplas; 7 hard
rolls, split, I cup barbecue sauce.
heated, 1112 cups coleslaw.
GaJnttoD Topptq: 7 baklng
powder biscuits, split, I can (I 5
ounces) chili with beans, heated, I
cup shredded Cheddar cheese ( 4
ounces).
Capture the Fren ch fla vor of
New Orleans, our second larges t
port, with this recipe for fish fillets
and ratatouille. Famous in the
south of France, this ratatouille
sports a zesty, added touch of red
pepper sauce ... New Orleans style. .
RATATOUILLE FILLETS,
NEW ORLEANS STYLE
1 tabl"pooa olive or vegetable
oil
1 me4J1m Ollloa, diced
1 ele•e prHc, fl.Hly cllopped
1 ........ 1llCCllJ.a1, C11t Into 11•·
l8elitUeet '
1 m..._ sreen pepper, c•t lato
stripe
Toast salad
that douliles
for a dessert
A perfect buffet salad, Grape
Cha.mpqne Mold would aJso
proudly stand on its own as a li&ht.
~catcd dessert. And because
it 11 made in advance, the cook can aUc>Y the day. too.
GRAPE CHAMPAGNE MOLD
1 _. • ..,. allavered 1elatta
letlf ..... Jake ................
l e., •• ,.... er stqer aJe
I "'8 l'M ............ ud ............ ....,
1.,...e,ntbl .. aep1eatt
~e-. ..... ••aJnh
Len..
Soften aelatin in apple juice in
saucepen. Heat to diseotve aelatin.
Add supt a.nd diuolve. Add cham-
peane; chill until 1UptJy thickened
(foamins will subside). Stir in
papes, or•• ....,..11 •nd
wa.lnuts. Pourinto4-cuprift1mold;
ctull until farm. Un.mold onto
lettuc::e•Jined plate. Maka 4 to 6
lef'Yinp .
.,. ~fl . ~0· offers ·one cho-ice of beef
"We sell our Select USO.A.
Choice Beef for the same price
other supermarkets sell their
ungraded beef."
INTRODUCING VONS SELECT
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF··A grade above
the beef most other supermarkets sell. "Vons Select US.DA-.
Choice" on the label means you get a cut specially selected by
Vons to give you more for your meat-buying dollar. It's more
tender. More flavorful. And more likely to satisfy the appetites
of even the most demanding beef lovers. For beef of this h1gtl
quality, you might expect to pay more. Not at Vons. We.sell Vons
Select US.DA. Choice for the
0 same price other
markets sell their
ungraded beef. You
get more, but you
don't pay more.
That's why we call
Vons the More
Store.
,-------------------------~ I.-.-Wiii WOii WOii WOii WOii WOii WOlll ...... ._,
•I I• :1 On any Cl.S.D.A. tOO 11
• Choice Beef I II steak or roast OFF I,
11 I' :1 With This Coupon Effective Jan 16·22. 1986 1:
1 L1m1t One Coupon Per Family I
L ~ !.!'! l°"..! !'!! ~ !'!'-~-~ ~ V?'!. ~.."!' ~
London
Broil
59
Lb.
Steaks
Boneless
Top Round
U.S.D.A.
Choice Beef
-Rump
Roast
Lb.
.
69 Boneless
or Bottom
Round Less
Eye. U.S.D.A.
Choice Beef
1
Top Sirloin·~~
Steaks ~·;
79 .
Boneless
U.S.D.A.
Cfioice Beef
Sirloin Tip Rib Eye Chicken Boneless 19 8 Boneless 329 Fresh
!~~!~I Lb !~~ Bttf Lh !~l«~ ·Lb.
eOneless 498 Rib 219 Bill Tenderloin Roasts Baileys
Steaks ·. Larae End Sausage · ·
USDA Chott"'" ~I Lb us.oA. ~ 8ftf Lb. • Frnh Unlu Lb.
Boneless
Trl-TJp
Routs
USDA Cho'°' SHI
,.189
Hormel
Cure 81
Ham full Of FllM>t
Check Out Our Dor'le
Hoffy
Sliced
Bacon
160z P~
169
J69
159
Round
Steak
~_59
Lb.
Boneless,
Full Cut
U.S.D.A.
Choice
Beef
. .. ···-..
'
,.
I
Rolling out the barrel for Zlnlaadel w:lnnez
Bill Rainwater of Las Vcp1 tw a
problem ... & SS pllon one. Rain·
water is tbe winner of the annd
prize in the "Mead On Wine Oiant
Zinfandel Giveaway," an entire
barrel oft9U Bandicra Zinfandcl.
The winnioa entry was drawn on
New Year's Day as promised and
ends the I 98S contest, wtterein
dozens of wine·loven won bottles
and cases of Zinfandcl throu&hout
the year. I've bad so muc6 fun
playin• vinous "Santa Claus" that
l'm 101na to do it apin in l 986,
only this time with Pinot Noir.
More about that later in the
column.
JEBY
llUi
alto have to become a consuluna that "Z1nfandel is dead," to whach I too few cho1c:es of tastes and styln.. Oreloo), but for IOIM of IM mott
oenoloaist. Bandiera wi ncmaker took areat exception, and second So 1986 will be the year of Pino1 expensive red wiaa i• tbc world.
John Merritt qreed not only to because rm bored with the ttend Noir for "Me.d On Wioc," which the Bu.rpadies of France. ·
provide the arand prize, but to age toward drinkina only two varieties doesn't mean other wine types will ~ o( Amerimn Piaot•
the wine to the winner's .specifi-an this country. Cabernet and be ianored, only th-at Ptnot will be Noir auant that it is DOt oa a par
cations, and then either provide Chardonnay. empbasized, and that with a httle with lhe peat wines of'lutpaady. I
bottlina or the barrel. My response was to .. bribe" helr from some winery fncnds u say bcJswub!
What will be really intcrcsttna is pc01>lc into tryina a bottle of wit be the wine l'U J>Ve away Bu~y cu be pell. but little
to wte the difference between Zinfandel in the hopes of winrrina a throu&hout the year. of it is. The bnt Butpady comet
Rainwater's barrel, however it as lot of bottles of Zinfandel. Like Zinfandel. Pi not Noir does from a few hillside esusa o( very
There was one catch in winnina finished per his instructions. I'm still concerned that the not receive the attention it de-sman· acrcqe, and the averaae
the bi& prize. While delivery was aJonpide Bandica's regular release popularity of Cabernet and serves. more because of bad publjc Bursundy is nothin& spectacular
provided for all the other prizes, of 1985 Zin. Chardonnay wilJ eventually be to relations than any problems with non1 it even as SoOd as it used to be.
this winner it responsible for col-In case you weren't around When the consumer's detriment. Too the often wonderful wines. The French have taken abor1cuts in
lectina his own. this whole thing started, it was many wineries are producing only Pinot Noar as responsible not only recent decadel, ~tina clones of
Further, because the-wine was inspired by two things. First, the those two varieties (and maybe for malona some superb wines in Pinot Noirthat yield bieferberriet.
just made a few months aao. he will New York Times ran a piece sayina Sauvignon Blanc), which means America (mostly in California and which means leu akin to j uice ratio
--------------------------------------------------------------. and therefore wines of less charac-
Vons Select U.S.D.A. Choice. ter.
The French have consciously
attempted to make wines that can
be consumed at a younaer aae and
the results arc Jess than exciting.
That· is not to say there are no dull,
1ns1p1d Pinot Noi.nmadc in Ameri-
ca, but at least they don't cost halfa
week's salary to drink.
BAKERY
~~SJ_;~;,_~~.~~~ &ud • 99
Crescent Cnmb Donuts .99
.99
.79
~ 12 "8<-
Cinnamon Rolls
Of 0....111 ,.,... "°4k 8-Ptdl
Vons Plain Pbund Cake
100unc.
Ua<JOR
Popov 799 Vodka 1.7~ l:.li.r 8011 ..
5""ot 1.30
Taylor Callfomia Chablis .
449 ""-.... ) l -8onlo •
Carta Blanca Beer 1" w..i. ll~C....
Jim Beam Bourbon 599 750 i'WI01te< 8oui.
Masson White ZJnfandel 299 UUWt ISottle
PRODUCE
large
Artichokes
f ruh Ea.
f 1r11 Of The SH-.
Mandarin Tangerines
iq.i """""• ~ """ .>..a Routed Peanuts
Of s-PIMnut1 , carrots. Loose
Tapo Oii
Lb .49
l..b .89
Lb .19
Fresh Basil or Oregano 69
"4d u'tl lo 'tuu• foud S.,,, e
~~Cabbage lb .19
~-Cucumbers u .29
Fresh Mushrooms 79 a.o.-r '8cUp E.o •
~~.1~ Potatoes lb .39
Large Anjou Pears 59
!owHt -Juq Lb •
..
\
OCERY
Rourlta
Beans ~~~or Sc>o<-;
Fisher Peanuts "°""' .__ 12-0unat c...
Progruso Soup
~ 19.o.-. CM\
.49
169
.79
Treesweet Grapefruit Juicel 12
White or Plr.a 46 °"1v•
Potato Buds 89 8euy Ctocllet, I)"° Ounce 8o1' e
Palmolive
Fab Detergent
42.0... a.. Clrr<IYCIH ~Off!
Diamond Paper Plates
L.-tl 51.._ .o.c-r. ~
~ Storage Bags
Olllof\ Sitt. 20 C-W l'ocl.q
129
179
189
139
Solllmate Paper Towels 6-5 tO'f Covnl Noll •
~=~~-."> ·~\ r --.;;._ ~ ~ .. 'l\
r. I
Nice & Soft 89 ~e • 4-111>11~
•
.35
129
198
.rile
•
When you count the total pl-
lonage of truly exceptional Orqon
and California Pinot Noir, you
r.robably end up with a peater
quad mca.surc than that of Bursuo-
d y.
The one serious problem with the
Pinot Not.r grape. from m y per·
spcctive, is that the wines made
from it need more time to develop
properly than docs Cabernet. yet
the wine docs not generally hve for
quite so Jong.
Some Cabcrnets can be
prccOCJously attractive at two to
three years old. while most Plnots
don't rcaly begin to show their stuff
u n ta 1 about fi ve years of age. I like
them best Let ween five and I 0 years
. of age.
Shasta
~~!~~~ges• With Coupon
As much as I love a good
Cabernet or Zanfandcl, a properly
developed Pinot No1r offers tastes
and complexities unique in the
world of red wme. and they are
qualities worth seeking o ut.
I thank it's appropriate to anvttc
you to become honorary members
of the "P1oot Noar Appreciation
Guild" (P·NAG). because I'm
going to be naggmg you to try a
bottle.
SERVICE DELI
B.BQ. Pork Ribs 349
Hoe....i.....,.,.IO EM LI>
~~~~~399
Sour Cream & Potato 199 s.tad lb
f.!!"!.u.~~~t lb 299
DAIRY
Citrus Hill Select
0r .... ~ Ju. .. ,,.. (Jun,, ( .... ,,__,.
Continental Yogurts
Mon hi. "''"°"'° F 1-.r\. 8 Ou,,.... l ••I<><
Parkay Margarine !Pound.,....._..,. •r~
Sunny Delight
c~-.......,., 118 (,...,... r""'4<•
Vons Butter
l l'Dund Po<"-••.A><'>
DELI
149
.53
.63
199
179
Vons 139 ~g~a!iam
~Pec~t~!>OI
Vons Cheddar Cheese
~~...._r_.,I\ P .. , S-8"'L.b
Asher SaQdwichmate
SI.._ 11<>ura l'al.....,.. c~ .01
Carl Buddig Meats
T1'lfl :Wlttd q 11., ... -2 ~ °""'"' ""'"-
Oscar Mayer Meats """°'' ~ ... llH4 "' -12 OuN• r..-..,.
Bell Part< Franks
9-f or ~-16 Out.... Peci....q..
lb 189
.99
.39
1"
1 59
SEAFOOD
Fresh Rainbow Trout
Dressed Catfish
r...,. .. ...,.. '•·" ...... 1
Fresh Sea Bass
f~· ,..~ ..
Fresh Sliver Salmon ...,...,... ,,. 11.• ·~-· 18 ~wi1
fl 149
•b 159
.. 398
.. 498
FROZEN FOOD
.: -I ..
------
Classic
Lite "''"°"' D•n,....,~ Ver1rtw,. t ti •' I Jf t f~ •
Seneca Apple Juice
J Ou,-•r A
<?';~~~!~s Cake
~~,~~~~w~:~~!~ ;r~ts
Roman Meal Waffles
1/( ........... Ro.
Celeste Pizza
~Or·~ ·-.. 1101 lf'f
Morton Macaroni.Cheese
10~ Bit-... 18Qvfw ... ~ •qt
Heath Ice Cream Bars
1>1nP .. ._
C & W Petite Peas
lf>O...-~
Oh Boy Ganie Bread
11-0urn ea.
.69
199
115
.65
289
115
119
,129
.89
To become honorary members.
bu) any bottle of red Pmot Noir
(whites. "blushes," and roses don't
count). soak ofT the label, write
name and address on the back and
mail to: Panot No1r Lovers. P.O .
Box 880281, San Franetsco 941 88.
A hnle household ammonia (){
balong soda in the soak,~ould help
break the glue. but af the label
disintegrates you may sull enter b}
wnung the words "Panot Noar .. on a
postcard. but only af you swear an
oath that you actually bought the
wane. .
What can )OU win" Well. the
pnzc last wall grow. but there as
I already a maxed case from m~
personal cellar. plus a vel' special
I case from m ) favonte Pmot
producer. Santa Cruz Mountain
Vineyard.
Italian fare
much more
than pasta
By TOM HOGE
AP Wille ud Food Wrt~r
lf)ou mentio n Italian food. most
1 Amencans thank of anupasto. min-
estrone and pasta. But these arc
onl) a small part of the vaned fare
of that countr.
Ital) as a great nataen for soups.
incl uding such delicious ones as
\ eneuan fish soup and a th1d..
potage of macaroni with beans
Both can sen.c a!-meals 1n them-
\ehcs. U~C\l For the main course. Italian tam·
"I() ;. ranges through man) six-c1alt1es
Shasta ~t. 4 g !I trom 'cal chop rolled an grat<."d
11: Beverages ~f>O II Panne-;an chCt'~ io pork chunh
E 6-Pack · • i! stc"'ed wtth celcl). I ~~u·~ • D••• '• "'"'r ,_,,, Li .. it o... ;I ltaltan dairy d1she 'ar.. but one
· · ~ · " ·. ; ... · •.·:-:t fa' on te 1s eggs poacht"d in l hopped -· '·-.. .--mt tomat~s that ha'c ht"cn \aut~ 11\lifi\Jl\iliiQD v.1th spice'
• 1'll1 ~ There a.re man olher am-
el · 4 9 jl I agrnata"l" dishes. such as pancakes
0 ~t. • stuffed "'1th sau~gc meat and • ranges ~~ .. spinach ·
•
4 ·Lh. Bag • M While Italians put a great accent
.:.-.,,., ~--· L1"'11 <>-~I OJ\ pasta. thC) also mJOY many n~ .... "• ·= .~ ... · · : . . · ~ dashes. mcludang one cooked wtth
·· ~ '• · '"" --· ':' ..... Ii white 'ilrlOC and bouillon. ftft ~ When the' do cat pasta. mot
ltahans do not hm1t them selves to
vanauon of to mato sauce. as we
often do. They a rc also fond of
sauce rmade fro m clams. anchovies
and a-~p1cy grttn drcssana with
black ohves. c.apcn and chili pep-
pers Herc as a rcc1pc for th1s arttn
~uce. which a~s well on fish
da~he~
I r ' •
• • • • . • ' • ,
i
~
***** Cross
Rib Roast
BONELESS l B
BEEF CHUCK
***** Large End
Rib Roast
FIVE ST AR LB QUALITY
***** Whole Beef 127 Brisket
IN THE BAG LB
***** 1-BOl],8
Chuck Roast 119
FIVE STAR QUALITY LB
!"Harvest Day 229 cL Wines
~VARIETIES 'L TR BTL
rLady Lee
Beverages
AU. VARIETIES 2 LTA BTL
.69 . ~
:--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• ---~~~~~~~~~~~~----' . .
(
!Orange
Juice
LAOf LEE FROZEN
r,rn"CENTRATE t20Z C.AN
.69
rLady Lee
, Ramen
BE'EF CHI( l(f.N OR PORK
3 OZ PKG .19
Ovf ,,,_ ......... ...,. ._..., ~9"'t.-....... " ..-.c•• •• .. •n•rtlo • _.. _..., ....... t ...... , , ...... , 11 -
pe Key Buys nJean
6 extra savings.
K•y Buvt •re 1ttm1 prietd t*OW their everyd1y
tow.r price 11 • rH ull or m1nut.cturtrt
tempor9fy promotional •How•nc. or
••cepc1on.t1 purcn1 ...
***** Boneleas
nutrients from fewer
&tirors Nore: Thi1 i1 the final
arum ill•~ explorl,,, die~
fiber -one of the ma.r imporunt
nutrition /ssun of the 'IOt -and
its eff«r upon your health and well-beipa. .
One out of every I 0 Americans is
6S or older. By the year 20 I 0, the
number is expected to increase to .
one out of every five. While many
older Americans experience
healthy and productjve ·fOlden
yean, others do not SurpnsinaJy
enouah, their health and pro-
ductivity may be limited more by
diet than by aac.
Food consumption studies from
the U.S. Dcpenmcnt of Agriculture
(USDA) confirm that senior
citjzens diets often are below
standard in quantity and quality.
The reasons vary:
-Older people who arc lonely or
depressed often lose interest in
eatina. · -Loose teeth or poorly fitted
... . dentures can make chewina a
problem.
-Seniors who li ve alone fre-
quently find arocery shopping and
cook.in& too much or a bother.
-A fixed income may limit food
choices, and medical conditions
may ~eprive older adults or those
f ~1 they .er\joy most.
Because we become less active as
we srow older, adults over 6S
require considerably fewer calories
than they did at 4S. The need for
most other nutrients, however,
re mains about the same. Thr dif-
ficulty lies in obtainina the same
amount of nutrients from fewer and
fewer calories.
f"Lady Lee 6 Vegetables
11o;icAN .
Navel
Oranges
LARGE SWEET LB • S VARIETIES
Fresh
Whol8Ham
rAppJe · Ju/Ce Mushroomlr
·"f**** Moran Ground 3~~: Beef Pattie•
OUARTER POUNDERS.
FROZEN
***** Corned Beef 149 Brisket
POINT CUT LB
f.~~~: f29
FOOD AMERICAN OR SWISS
r Crescent 89 Rolls ·
LADY LEE 8 OZ CAN •
f"Lady Lee
cL Vegetables
COAN PEAS OR MIXED
VEGETABLES FROZEN
~:079
pe Troplcana
cL Orange
Juice
CHILLED. 32 OZ CTN
.89
f"Lady Lee
6 Cake Mixes
•VARIETIES. 18 26 OZ PKO
• 65
LADY LEE, 64 OZ BTL
FILTERED OA UNFtL TEAED
rLadyLee 69 Fr.ults
CHUNKY FRUIT Ml)( 17 OZ CAN •
OR FRUIT COCKTAIL IN SYRUP OA JUICE rl.adylee
Cookies 169
SANDWICH CREME, 32,0Z Pl<G
ASSORTED. PLUS' INDIVIDUAL VARIETIES
!"Lady Lee
6 Tomatoes
280~ CAN
.63
~: P' Lady Lee ~ cLTomato ~i:j;~~e . -s .. 33
f"Lady Lee
6 Catsup
NEW' PLASTIC SQUEEZE
BOTTLE. 2t OZ BTL f 09
P'HIClass ct Cat Food
TUNAll.IVER OR
TUNA/CHICl<EN. 8 OZ CAN .2a
f"Lady Lee
& Preserves
8 OZ Pi<O
GOURMETS DELIGHT
Large
Tomatoes
AED RIPE
Iceberg
Lettuce
SOLID FIRM
LB .69
~.39
·peLady Lee
ct Tomato
Soup
10 7501 CAN
.25
rLadyLee
\ LON~e!~~ett/
• I• l:HN • ......
lOWELS .... --....
't.89
f"Paper
6 Towels
LADY LEE 1 Pl Y WHITE
YELLOW OR EARTHTONE
78 S F ROLL
• 55
,....,.. , .... , \.wt•• • ..,.. Mc .,. ....... .-... , ...
"' ..... """ •• .! .. .,"" ~ , ........ .,< ..... ....
NowGqlng
Onl
Watch for our
ma lier.
Nutritionists ~mmend that
older adulu skimp on fat, keep
protein constant, and increase
di~tary fiber intake.
Bcain by swilchina to low-flt or
skimmed dajry prOdUC1!· Skim
milk, for example, prov1det the
calcium needed for strona bones
but contains juat 0.2 percent fat.
Whole milk contains about 3 per-
cent fat. Use nonfat dry milk in
cookina and bakina for extra
calcium and protein. It's both
inexpensive and easy to keep on
hand. Buy veactable oil m~oe
rather than butter, but use 1panna-
ly. Skinless chicken and fish provide
the greatest am ount of protein for
the least amount of fat. Lean meats
that are trimmed of all visible fat
are also good protein choices. And
don't overlook oon-meat protein
foods such as dried and canned
beahs. Beans are inexpensive, low
in fat.andaood sou~ofvitamins,
iron and calcium. They're also .an
excellent source of dietary fiber.
A high-fiber, low-fat diet has
several health benefits for senior
citizens. The water soluble fiber
prevalent in dried beans, oats and
barfey may help reduce bTooa
cholesterol le vels and rcaulate the
body's use of sugar.
The water insoluble fiber in
wheat bran, other whole pins,
fruits and vegetables aids di~ti~n.
and helps to prevent constJpatJon
that frequently bothen older adults.
For those who have difficulty
chewing fiber-rich foods, ground
oat flour can be used to thicken
soups, stews and puddinp.
Cheesy Com Chowder provides a
hefty six grams of dietary fiber
along with the great flavor com-
bination of com and cheddar
cheese. Serve this hearty soup one
day for lunch, and refrigerate extras
tightly covered to enjoy a night or
two later when you may not feel like
cooking.
Nearly everyone loves ending a
meal with so mething sweet. But for
older adults, desserts need to supply
more than just calories. Puddmas.
custard, yogurt, ice cream and fruit
desserts provide important vit-
amins and minerals. And you can
ftber-fon ify them with a special
topping.
Cinnamon Crunch Topping is a
not-too-sweet mixture of whole
grain oats, brown sugar and cin-
namon. It's easy to prepare and can
be stored tightly covered in the
refrigerator for several weeks.
Enjoy thi s tasty topping sprinkled
over frui t. la yered wLtb pudding or
yogurt, spooned on top of ice cream
or custard, and as a breakfast cereal
with skimmed milk and fruit.
CHEESY CORN CHOWDER
~ cwp f lDely claopPed oaloa
~ c1p f lDely claopped celery
3 table1pooa1 Uq1ld ve1etable
oil mar1arbte
'h cap 1roud oat noar•
i cap1 1kJm milk
1 1%-ouce cu wllole llentel
corn or oat I 0-ouce packa1e
fro1ea corn
1 tabletpooa Dijon mHtanl
1 Clp (4 OUCH) l~e4de4
Cbtddar clleese
FrnllJy 1roud black pepper
In large saucepan, saute onion
and celery in margarine S to 7
minutes or until soft. Add ground
oat fl our, cook l minute, stirring
constantly. GradualJy add milk,
stirring constantly. Add com and
mustard; heat through.
Add cheese, stirring until cheese
is melted and soup is thickened.
Add pepper to taste. Additio nal
milk or water may be added if soup
becomes too thick upon standing.
F'our I cup servings.
•GROUND OAT FLOUR
Place 1h cup oats (quick or old
fashioned, uncooked ) in blender or
food processor. Cover; blend about
I minute, stopping occasionally to
stir oats. 1/J cup.
CINNAMON CRUNCH
TOPPING
1 ~ cwpa oats (q1Jck or oW
fasllJomtd, aeooktd)
116 cwp llq1ld n1etable oU
marprhle
14 cwp ffrmly ,.eked bl'OWll . ... , .
14 tea•peo• cluam•
Irr-mechum skillet, com1Jine""l11
insredients. Cook over medi""'1
beat 6 to 8 minutes or until topi>ina
is light &olden brown, surring
constantly. Spread on cookie ahcet
to cool. Store tightly covered in
refrigerator up to 3 months .
Serve over fruit, yoaurt, ice
cream or puddina or serve as a
aranola cereal with milk and fruit.
About 2 cups.
MEATLOAF .,.... ....... ....
~,.... ...... ,erk
I mMl•m •lea, ftMIJ d1,.11I
I clHt 1arllc, ftMl1 dl1"d
~ ........... .
~ .... , .. ,.,,.,
i4 .,... en••• ,.....
"'·· 1 Ny leaf, flMly en.W ... "', .... ,,.,...en.-. i1a,...., .
ThorouJhly mix toeeiher all
in1ttdient1. Rinte a 7~ by 311.a by
lV.-incb 1oa1.-with cold-.
pack meat into the loaf pa. Tsn
6ut on a unaD lhaUoW blll:illl "e; -
bake in 1 prelaeatect · .)J,.._
oven for about I YJ ttour..
Safety record outstanding for mail-order foods
&y DOROTRV WENCi. ...... , I ucc ,, .............
Did you re<:eive some mail-order
food for a Christmas &ift? Or have
you orde~ aome or tliouaht about
doina ao and wondered if perishable
food would be safe by the time it
reached you?
The mail-order food business is
boomina. according to the Food
and Drua Administration (FDA).
SaJes are estimated at $I billion a
year, with 7S percent tak.ina place
between Thanksaiving and
Christmas. Gourmet food sales are
growina the fastest -total dollar
sales jumped I 0 percent in 1984.
In spate of concerns people mi&ht
have about the safety of perishable
foods that have been shipped and
stored, the record has been
outstanding, the FDA reports.
The reason is obvious: if these
shippers didn•t have the food sarcty
aspect down to a science, th ey soon
would be out of business.
The trade orpnization for the
mail-order business, the Direct
Markctin' Association (OMO),
runs a wmc-in action line to track
consumer complaints. In 1983,
OMO received 12,000 complaints
for all types of mail-order merchan-
dise, and only a small percent of the
problems were food related.
The food-related complaints gen-
erally concerned late delivery. in-
correct or spoiled merchandise.
According to the association, most
firms have toll-free numbers and
arc willing to make adjustments.
Most mail-order firms use quack
delivery services -either pnvate
couners or the U.S. mail -for
highly perishable foods. However,
slow-downs and misdeliveries do
occur, and our office receives a
number of consumer questions
about the safety of mail-order food
that may have gone astray.
In one case, the delivery person
left a ham in a backyard when no
one was home. The ham was
discovered there three days later. Its
safety was questionable.
If you receive mail-order food ,
you should know enough abou.t its
perish.ability and have a good idea
about how both food and packaging
should look when they arrive. This
is especially true for meat, poultry,
and fish that must be carefully
handled to avoid spoilage and food
poisoning.
Smoked. cured, cooked turkey is
dned or acidified enou&h to make
them safe at room ~mperature.
These sbouJd arrive cold and be
refriaerated promptly.
Steaks, choPt and roasts of beef,
pork. or lamb should be shipped
frozen or "hard cold" and should
still be either frozen or at least cold
to the touch and still frozen in the
center. Freeze them until you're
ready to cook them. Don't use them
if they're soft and warm or have an
off-odor.
Lobster. fresh aod smoked
salmon, caviar, and crab are the
most common mail-order seafood
items. Because seafood 1s hi&hl y
perishable. most of tt 1s shipped
fro%en. However. a few companies
ship fish fresh or even live via
speedy delivery services. Upon
arrival they should still be frozen OL
very cold lhhipped unfrozen.
Remember. If you're in doubt
about the safety of any mail-order
food. don't taste it. Spoiled food can
make you sick. Refrigerate it, then
notify the company you bou&ht it
from . If the company faffs to
provide satisfaction, write the Mail
Order Action Line. Direct Market-
ing Association, 6 E. 43rd St., New
York. NY I 0017 and explain your
problem. giving details on dates,
I•&21•&r•a.;;j..,,... .....
T-BOne or
Porterhouse
Stealc
Save
.16
.M oa.
ptg.
costs etc. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED:
Q. I reeelY .. I MX of nrto.1 tJJet., dtMM dlat wa11Ht &e me
tnm WllCMlla. TM cM4dar
dteeM loMI like U'1 weepla1. Is It
stWsafe&eearT
A. Occasionally cheddar cheese
that hat been overheated appears to
weep, with the butterfat separating
and runnina. But this is not a health
threat and the cheese will still be
rd~t.H.'' Mt .. ••Ill waa t ceW al aU ..... ,, ..
''"" ........ M41 Mme ...... ..w ,,._.. • lt. 11 It ufe .. nt 111
A. When the label says "keq>
rcfn,aerate<S," then sausaac should
be cold on am val. or it may not be
safe. While some sausaaes have a
characterisuc hannlcn white molet
on the casing. green. gray or black
mold could be hazardous. ·so
sausage wnh these colored molds
should not be eaten. aood to cat. • • • Save. tbe sausage an th~ refngcr-
Q. We ordered 1ome 11mmer ator and noti fy ttle company from
aa•u1e from a mail-order lu>t11e which you bought 1t about the ban Eut. ne label 1ald "keep problem You should receive a
a perennial favorite. h's usually '-.. ------------.... •-vacuum-packa&ed and shipped
.39
readx to eat eitncr frozen or "hard-
cold • (nearly frozen ). When the
turkey arrives, it should still be
frozen or cold to the touch. If it's
still frozen, 1t can be held an the
freezer for about 6 months without
qualuy loss. Otherwise it should be
refriferated and used within 7 days.
Don t eat any turkey with an ofT-
o<ior.
Game birds Jenerally arc ,frozen
and shipped with ice or dry ice for
ovemi&ht delivery. They should
still be frozen when you get them
and can be frozen or refrigerated
and used with in a day or two.
Potential hazards are the same as
those for turkey.
Ham is another favorite. Some
hams need to be kept cold (they wilt
be labeled "keep refrigerated"), and
if they don't arrive cold, don't eat
them. Country hams are dried-a.nd-
cured and can be safely mailed
unrefrigerated in paper or cloth
wrap. Their saltiness and dryness
make it safe to keep them for
months without refrigeration. Re-
frigerate them after slicing, how-
ever.
If the bam 1s canned, check the
label to sec if it requires refriger-
ation. Some do not require ref riger-
ation and can be stored un-
rcfriaerated safely until you open
them. Examine the can to make
sure it's not swollen or dented.
Swellina signifies trouble -poss-
ibl y botulism -so don't open a
swolJen can.
Dry, fermented sausaacs like
pepperoni and hard salami don't
require ~aeration and are lona-
lutina at room temperature be-
-C&Ute they are so dry and because
1he fmncn1ation produces proiec.
tive acid. After a few months.
however, the fat can become tan(id
and the sauuaes could develop
harmful btact or p-een mold1.
Semi-dry sau..-. an contrast,
like summer sau..,e, require rc-
frilCfltion bealu1e ~hey arcn 't
JUDY'S APPLIC8
' Mdatot91 1ppln ( .... t ! ...... )
PNIMJ P'8_. .. , ...
~ ee, ftnll1 ,_... •n
~,.... .... , .,.,.,......., ........... .. ................
Vullla lee a... '
Wllb 1nd dry applet; do not
peel~ an each into I wedeea·
Amnet wedeet in circular fatbion
in 1 IC)·inch pie plate. Sprinkle with
nutmea. supr and walnuts. Drizzle
whb butwr.
We uncovered iA I pnbealed
HOlls•CMe..al ~ ...... ~udboaddlilr ...... ~ about 20 miauta ~ "°' .,.,..... """ ........ W.-<4 to6
mvinp
Sav• up to
.50lb.
~I lb.
Va:IU. '°ct
.79
Special Values
........ e~=---"• FwmerJohn
FresbPorlc
Spareribs
Coke or
Diet Colee
ot ac.ac Cob . CMIJT Co.te, ~ 01
Ofet Catt 1'lee Cob « Tab« hg 0t a..t _,.,.u oa c:aa1
Tiop1cana
Orange Juice
,; ---~ Ralphs Frosen--!
Peas or Com
.--' .--.lo..
. _.' l\
eacb .39
IO l'root
IU.aar Lu"
H.aztbsid•
Cwnberla:nd Ston11,,are
Dtnll•r Plate. CUp. Saucer,
Salad Plate or C•~ Bowl
Zl.59 5%".69 l6o• bag 7;;7.99 ~.69 _
~------·-
________ _,,.,
Special Values
·-99 ,. . .....,,..
Taco Sauce
... 45 .-. iebied Beans
Gi>T15craeis ·.: .89
......... .,..,. OI 0.-0D 1 49 Honey Grahams ·.: .
1:0itmaStrrPs ~ 139
tlct... 57 Sco_tTowels ~or .
Special Values
••.ncsam V•n-Green Peas
GWldc>"--
... -
Golden Patt1es a::
.53
.53
1.19
............ O«Mllt•Ooc,,._ 129 Em•n Desserts ~
Fiesb .llusb.rooms := .89
'l'i'.Sli Sp1nach -.39
Special Values
~......_ "5 OaJOll 7l OI
Wheat Buns ~ .. 69
OidrciluO'n~~nuiS: 99
Low. l»cb-"5 2 89 Turkey Breast · · ...r: •
Jr: 1.49
"°: 9.29 seagrurnsseven 5. 98
twin ,.,.mtwn ••
Olive Loat
'1'iB Scotch
Ralphs Invites You to ... Prices effectlv• January 16 thru January 22, 1988
,,...,,..., .. Cllldlwi~
llcat(lfDllRwpbld-
'IUO"*a..
•
Lower Pr1ces.
-Higher Sfondarc:IS~~
..
• ~
.
Or• .. COMt DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey, J--.-y 15, 1tee
• Mild
BRE>WN
ONIONS
CHIQUITA
BANANAS ~
. "" 1 i '.25 os. Chicun Burgundy
11 OI. Chic-YD Mana.la
Of 'l'\J.it.r ParmffaD . 10.5 OI. lay ShJ'imp
ARMOUR
CLASSIC
LITE IA.
, U.S. No. 1
• 10 lb. bag
RUSSU
POTATOES
· ... · ....
64 OS. .
legulm or Unftltel9d
TREE TOP
APPLE
JUICE
8 OI.
Allort.ci fla'YOD
DANN ON
YOGURT
GROCERY SPECIALS!
, .. ,·
·.· ·.·
• •I
l2. OS. jar
~ PRICIO
SPACllll I I I SAUCI
•
SALi PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, JANUARY 16
ALPHA RETA
l,, camm--· ....... ,, ...... JI,,,.. , ____________________ _ COIN9--· .... -·· ......... ... --·-··················-~
1'
' I
IOHILESS
BEEF ROUND
·STEAK
Sbr pact,
12 0.. cam
RCOR DllTRI ~ .. T ... i
. 50 lb. bag
.ID PRO
DOG
FOOD
~ . ~ . . .
o I o ' . . -·--...............
. ·1011>.;; &tFfKiT
IA.
. ,_
BONELESS
BEEF CHUCK
ROAST
22 OI. botti.
lnclud• 35C oa label ,.,....w;
PAl.MOLIVE
DISHWASIDNG
SOAP
.. .... ·
14 os. can
Auorted TCJrteu ..
·SKIPPY
PREMIUM
DOG
FOOD
THROUCIH WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1986
OI flOlllOftOIW, ,_.•Ml.a 1U cauac"TID Oii Al.I. .W mM1 • .. ~TIU__,. TO &MT 90AlfllTlll
3-PC:-·
PLACEIEml&
°"'' 9 I ...... . .... ..ili-
· --Nn · • · -··~
.,.. -ca'IWIC:Aft ~ • .... .. 1,1,) •. mo. ...... _, -,, ..... ·--·-·-.. -..... ---·-----..... -..._ C9"111~-,.... =--..:.~--=-9!.:=:::i: a;.• ___ ,,, . ..., ....... ------->~-·= ......... ~--__ ..., __ M OIW .... r==--=-== ,._.,,.. .. ,. __ _
........... :"I:. c::..c.==--.............
·~·.·
Orenge Coeet OAILV P1LOT/Wedneedey, ~ 11, 1-Cle
· 42 OS. baz
IDdudel ~ oa label
FAB WITH .
FABRIC
SOn'INIR
48 OI. container SHIDD'S SPR ...... IAD
COUNTRY
CROCK
IA .
EA.
' •
Convenient soup updates
traditional Spanish paella~
····= ,. .• KK•U.CO•
l·l8. PKG. I A9 REG. Off THIQ( IA.
U.S.D.A. Choice, Boneless
BEEF STEW MEAT.. ...................... LB. I.ff
IVORY
LIQUID
uo~g~ISH 99
INCL 35' OfF •
Many time-con1umln1 foreian
dishes can be made quickly if you
know this trick: U1e a canned
rady-to-aerve soup for the base.
Thia cuts the time usually reserved
for choppina and cookina vea·
eiablea, Kiakina beans, possibly
rcfriaeratina the dish ovemiaht to brina out flavors, and so on.
Choose a hiah quality soup fo r
this purpose because you want
inaredients such as you would use
and distinctive seuonina.
Nutritious 20.Minute Paella. an
-FRESH AMIRICAN
LIG OF LAMB
WHOLE
OR RUMP
.,__,. HALF
..... SLICID ... uva
87
LB. I
easy version of the ttaditional
Spanish d ish UICI minestrone soup
as a ba.e, with a can of tomato sauce
and some extra thyme and prtic.
Chicken breast strips, uusqe apd
shrimp are cooked quickly; the
addition of qulck-cookina rice com·
pletea the dish.
A Oerman dish, Pork Chops with
Lentils, i1 easy to hurry up by uaina
thin-style pork chops and a can of
ready-to-serve lentil soup.
When the chops are browned,
sliced cabbage with typical season-
•o•?••• PAMILY snAK
SKINNED 89 _ ........................
C~~~K i& 1.89 I DEVEINED I.& •
Pon Reody U.S.D.A. Choice ,. .... 1DA110 11.a•••ow nOUT ................................ Le. 1.69 LAMB sHouLDER ROAST ........... La IA9
···~ ·-~.··
CARlONS
AVAILAB&.E LIMIT 2-DOZIN IA.
e eALA
IOWIU
SINGLE 69 ROLL •
~
pr<......... _ llAlllSCO r ~-··· NWIW
I • t~ 1-l& BOX ~ REG.Off 89 UNSALTED •
jnp of caraway and onion A!f-
added to the pan with the lenln
eoup. The dish aimmen for onJ~
about 7 minutes ud is then terVg?
over noodles. · 1
II'•
£.UY INIJNUTE PASJJ.4 •Ir ....................... ~.
14.19da .....
teua(ll...-... )NM't· ..... " ................. ---·-l<
1 eu (I oaea) tomato ullffJ
t tea1p11u ~yme lean91, mllMd I.
~ aee.,....prllcpowde~. /:
.............. AIDeG
eWekea breu11, la ~-mil'
l&rlpt • •H f
8 OUffl ...... ... dev~
•mall·to-me4lam Mrtmp '1•
114 e.,t q1iJd CMtt•1 rt~
( ..... M)
Jn a larJ,C saucepu i sausqe on both sides, about 1
minutes. Add minestrone so ,
tomato saµce, thyme and
po~r. Bring to a boil. Red
heat aoo simmer; cove~ '~·
minutes. '1•1
Add chicken and shrimp. Sii mer, covered, until shrimp are pi
and chicken is cooked throu •
about 3 minutes. Stir in ri .
Remove from beat. 'i
Let stand until almost all of tpe
liquid is absorbed, about • 5
minutes. Serve in bowls. Yield: 4
ponions, 6 cups.
l
PORlt CHOP WITH LENTILS,
GERMAN STYLE
i &abln,.... vqe&able oil
1 ¥. , ..... eea&er or Iola pert
cMpl nt 1/%-bldl &Met, well
trtllllDff
S npe 1Uce4 eabbqe
1 ¥. teu,.._. caraway lffd,
cl'UW
1 teupooa Oldw powder
1/11 &eaapoea· lf09M b~t
pepper
1 cu ( lt oucn) ready-to-aerye leaau tot1p
In a large skillet beat oil until h~
Add pork chops; brown on bdlH
sides, about S minutes. Remoltilc
chops from skillet; drain off fir.
Add cabbage, caraway, onion pow-
der, black pepper and lentil soup.
Bring to a boil.
Reduce heat and simmer, C<W•
ered, for 5 minutes. Add porit
chops. Simmer, covered, until pork,
chops arc no longer pink in cencor
and tender, about 7 minutes. Ser,v,e
over cooked noodles, if desired.
Yield: 4 ponions. 1
Try Chinese
cuisine in
"
~ a microwave'\
12-0L Con' 15-0z. Con, Reg. or Hot Keebler, 19-0z. Pecan Sondi.s or IS.Oz. Carnation. 12-Count. 70 Calorie By CECILY BROWNSTONE
6-PACK RC, OR DIET RITE....... .1.79 DENNISON'S CHILI WITH BEANS ........ 77 CHIPS DELUXE COOKIES...... . .... 1.69 HOT COCOA MIX ......................... IA9 Al',_...._
GOLD•N
RA NANAS
For Stuffing
LARGE BELL PEPPERS
"-.JI _,
• LIMIT 6 -LIS.
LB. A• Solid Head
FRESH CABBAGE ....................... LB .• 19
PLAT .... SAYm
22.0Z. HG l ,. At
~~· ~ ~~: .:,: .... ::: ;::/ ) -· ~· ................ ' ~
40.0Z. 11tO 1 • M
60-0L-tEG ,.. ... WHU ~y lASTll
Off SUNDAES .99 17 -OZ W.RIETlfS
Hughes - -
SLICED MUENSTER . . . La 2.as
$hofor 12·0t Pk9.
FRANKS OR KNOCKS EA 1.89
O.hc1ou• 2.M GARDENIA STRING CHEESE LI
16 Or Hot Or Mild 1.19 ROJOS FRESH SALSA EA
• ___ ....
c
LB.
Fresh Fr"h
BEAN SPROUTS ........................... LB .• 29 SUGAR PEAS. ......................... LI. 1.29
C ·g(ljJ --13 II ) ........
IWIYAKI •O•I
5 IAS I '
.. ..
KIM Clla
... 1.79
I 9·0 1. Bottle SeolOf'l•ng Ch ino Seo, I-Oz. Con
MISHIMA NORI KOUMI.... . .. .... I.II WATER CHESTNUTS ........................ AS
Shimoyo Doshi No Moto, 1.75-0 2 Chino Seo. 6-0z. Bottle
SOUP BASE ... -·-----~~ ........ A9 pY_STER SAUCL ........... a.._ .... ,. •• , .......... .89
RHINE Ott
PINI( CHAM.IS
.. The Hong Sisters Microwave to
the Orient" by Lucy Hona Mow ahd
the late Mary Hong Saunders is4 a
1>f"ivattly-pul>lllhed spiral-bound
Jcookbook that first appeared 1in
1976. It has been so successful that
it is now in its 4th printina. '"
When I talked to Lily Hona Mow
over the phone recently I •
covered that she is a 1ehool 1of
nursinaeducator. Cook.ina i1 oneof
her imporiant side interests. Be·
cause she has cooked for ha'
husband and their three children
(now grown) she has had plenty-d
practice. ,
Her cookbook is the outcome1of
her interest in adaptina Chinme
recipes -many of them learned
from her mo ther -to microwave
cooking .
SHRIMP WITH BLAClt
BEAN SAUCE 1,....,..... ....... ,
1 .........._dried Mack ......
<•"e.e),riiia
¥. &abln,... mtaeM ,,_ sta·
1er
¥. &abletpooa mlaced prk
1 &altl ........... f"IUCe -...............
llM1et,11u.U
~ ........... ,.n
1 .......... ~tuft mbed .... l ••••111•• waaer ,r
.......... ...., ..... r 01
~ npwaaer 0<
1 ..... u .. ..,...... fl a~,,.....-. ........ ..._ .......
•
,.
r
• ow:-salt soups pepped up
lat-tasting fare
nltvened with
needed. Yield: 8 cups. Per cup
ponion: 80 ma sodium: 228
calories.
I/& n, lutaat mbleff oaJoo
1 ~ ._.,..., caraway Heel
'4 &ea1pooa ll'ffM black pepper
i tab...,.... vtae1ar
I --
· Oil menus planned for low-
ium diets don't contain many
soup recipes. That's because soups
usually taste flat without salt. There
is..llowever. some hope.
tor many. the nip of ground
b~k pepper -the world's most
poJ>ular spice -seems to help fill
tht. void. (Many dining tables now
~ <?nly the pep~r shaker for
seasonina to taste without adding t~tra sodium.)
b'fhiJ low-sodium pea soup with
~~ti an~ celery can be !'lade by
sp1c1na with mmced onion, dill
~ thyme. prlic powder and the
brack pepper. It's' a marvelously saJ.isfy1na yet low-cost winter dish.
·A Meat Borscht U.$ing only a half-
PQ"nd of lean beef mikes another
fi)hna, low-cost winter soup. Jn
tion to beets, it's made w.ith
toes. fresh carrots and cabbage.
traditional spices are minced
onaon-ancLcaraway· .seed, plus the
bfack pepper.
or those who aren't cutting out
entirely, a quaner-teaspoon of
added dunng. preparation to
er recipe is enough to give it a
well seasoned taste.
1~EARTY SPLIT PEA SOUP
:. 11 nps water
1 paeu.1e (11 oanco) spilt
sreea pea1, sorted ud waabed
.I/& np luwat ml.need onion
l bay leaves
1 tablespooa dill weed
Ill tablespooa tlayme leaves,
11'tn1ffd
1 ~ tea1pooas 11rllc powder
~ &ea1poea sroaad black pepper t>t etipt 1Uced carrots
! nps 1Uced celery
1, 1 np coarsely cllopped celery
'eaves
• % tablespooas lemon jalce
fn a large saucepan combine
~er, split peas. onion. bay leaves, 4W weed, thyme, garlic powder and
bla,ck pepper. Bring to a boil.
R,tducc heat and simmer, covered,
fQf 45 minutes, stirring oc-
c~ionally.
Add carrots. celery and celery
leaves. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat
attd simmer, covered, until veg-
etables are tender. about 15
m:Mtutcs, adding more water, if
needed.
JStir in lemon juice. Remove bay
leaves. For a smoother texture,
puree halfofthe soup(4cups) in a11
eiilctric blender or food processor.
If reheated add more water. if
Quick bread
flavored by
dried fruits
I l\f CECILY BROWNSTONE
»_t--.... -
11Quick breads made entirely from
dark flour are particularly good. I
6nd, when they include dried fruit
and honey. For example, here is a
raipt for an Apricot Whole Wheat
Bttad in which the tang of apricots
and the sweetness of honey off set
achother.
>fit's a loaf that's fine to serve with
t.a, coffee, hot chocolate or milk for
sucks. At a company dinner it may
be ofJered after the main c-0urse
with chevre or another bland white
cheete. lt'sa versatile loaf to have in
&be house.
.. Jt
'11 APRICOT WHOLE
WHEAT BREAD
S npt 1drred wllole wbeat flour
(1,...udlnel)
I teaapooa1 baklDI powder
~ teupoeau.lt
1.ta 1 •...-srou4 ctuamoa
'4 &eupooa lf"Dd awtme1
nl• l lar1e ea
114 "" milk 1a,-.1
......... =•talff..tl 1 e., aprk9t1, claopped ........ , ...
1 e., walaall, dtoppe4 medtun·
_{ ...
'>''In a medium bowl, stir together
flour, bak.ina powder, salt, cin·
namon and nutmea. In a small
bowl beat cg until yolk and white
arc blended· add milk, honey and -bit· beat to blend. Pour over flour mi~ture and stir just enoulh to
moisten. Fold in apricou and
~nuts. \ll;Tum into a paled 9 by S by J.
1nch loef pan. Bake in a preheated
~oven until a cake tester
~ in center comes ouJ clean
60 to 70 minutes. Let stand ~t l O minuws; I001Cn edeet and
I out on a wire Nell; tum riaht
llP· c.ooi completely. Wrap
r tly to toften crust before alici na.
,,,
,1 Up dolh1r ·suv1nA coupons
MEAT BORSCHT In a1'~e saucepan bea1 oil until
2 tableapooa.-ve1etable oU hot. Add beef. Cook until browned,
8 ouce1 boaele11 leaa beef about S minutes. Add water,
(sllo1lder or roaad) cut lato ~-potatoes, carrots, cabbage, beets,
IDcS. c1bet · tomato paste, onion, caraw~y seed
I caps water and black pepper. Bring to a boil.
1 cap diced uapeeeled powcae1 Reduce heat and simmer, cov-
1 cap cl.Iced carrots • ere.d, IS to 20 minutes, stirring
1 cup 1laredded oabba1e occasionally. Stir in vinegar. Sim·
1 can (11 ouces) sliced beets, mer, covered, for I minute. Yield: 6
drained cups. Per cup portion: 20 1 mg
2 tablespoons tomato pa1te sodium; 152 calories.
12/1-0Z.
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites
Smoked Ham ;;;;~:
Rib Steaks ~~EE .. O
Ham Slices w:f(~
Chuck Roast :J~~lt~S
Pacific Whiting l~~~~
Dover Sole Fi I lets F~Es ..
Shark Fi I lets 'RESH
Orange Roughy FlllET5
Potaf o Crispers OAt ·o·
Lite Potatoes =~h~:~~E~ I • 'l<Jl s1 .59
.Pepperoni Pizza ~~i~~.~~r~~".,01 s1 .79
l 8 s1. 79 Buttered Popcorn !'~(":~~.. ,., ''>' 52.39
l •C .. s1.79 Chicken Fillets ;;-~f·:::.i~~·=~ ..... •I 52.59
l B ggc
l B s1.89
l B S2.99
L8 S2.89 Gorton's Fishsticks JHtl
53.49
M49 Dessert Cakes Wl•(H<I W.AICti(AS s1 45 lll ~~ -•llAA•fT•ES HO ~Ot •
La
53.59 Apple Juice ..... v•E .. ••O 11oz age
Compare these Low Prices
CAMPBELL'S
PorkU
·Beans
H:L
Fruit Stand Drinks ~Y~RfllHS ..ot ggc
Mashed Potatoes .~~?i:rJ· · .. Ol 890
Wishbone Dressing m Ri.llP •Ol 890
Macaroni & Cheddar o~r~ 35c
Jergen's Bar Soap MkO •«>l D
Sta=Puf &1." -~or '1.59
Bath Tissue 1J.~mr. ·~l 7So
Zee Print Towels ·~·o ·-L me
Sure & Natural e :1 JIM:' '3.08
Grocery Specials
Nestle Morsels ~Rl?Ir:::: •?OZ
51 .89
Five Alive l~;~:.~~p .. M
51 .69
Orange Juice ~.P~~~·l M OZ
51.29
Imperial Margarine !:c~J:.l 51 .09
English Muffins ~~ , .. C-•l<ll ggc
Keebler Crackers ;:~~~\ts"'~ ,Ol 75c
Keebler Cookies ~x:1:~:7:~ 91.19
••IOI
91.79
... -.,... ... ,..._ ... ..
-( ..... 16 1'7 18
19 -u n
SH EDD'S SPREAD
Country Crock ....... ~-·ne
Garden Fresh Produce
Large Tangelos ;,!~~ ........ , .. ~
Self peppers ;~::~::~;~
Potatoes , A!rH ·t
rf~~~~--4-'-'-w:np Jf'ff'Jflrilf\A u• Yll• t •\J '\.! Mt ,..,,
Ka111daatka
Vodka
~ER
'W; ..,.f fC' (qA ... ._,,.41\;"Mt f*t A .a.,. M'
...-........ -. . w.,=--,.. __ ·-·,_ .... ·-... ----~ ·~ fMtf ~ ................. _ ...... ....... _,..,.. .. -··--..,...._ ....... ,. .. ,,
o •a''•, •,
I . \, ' ; l't • ' J • I ~I • • .. • • • • • I • • •. • \) 1,111 ,1,11. ,, . ' ,,,,' '"" . '' • . • .. " .. .
.. .. . •
•
Baker's magic discovered by ancient Egyptians
altboufh eourdouah had been a by 1900, joumah were carryi~,
111ple an California aold campt .so advertieements for yeast. all cwmn
..
for some time before bekina. This
technique wu h.it-or-mi11. how·
ever. becauee some da)'1 the air bore
no 1uitable yeast.
Laitr, a beker ditc0vered that a
little douab rahed in this manner
could be used u a starter for the
next bitch of bread. The ponion of
bread kept to start the next betch
wu called' leaven; it was the ·
forerunner of today's sourdou&h
bread.
The Romans sometimes used a
leaven made or lfllpe juice and
millet to hasten the fermentation of
their breads. The juice contained
yeut from the skins of the arapea.
Barm. the foam that forms on beer
durina fermentation, was used u
leaven by-the Celts in Britain.
By tbe time the coloniau made
their way to the New Wortd, the
yeut orpniam had been identified
and the brewina ind"'U')' bad
beaun. A by-product of'beer makina
wu brewer'• ~·t. which could be
used u a IW1Cf for bread. The yeast
noatect to the top of the beer and
wu skimmed oft"IDd put into atone
bottles. Baken could buy their yeast
from a local brewery or make a
.. brew" at home.
Brewer'• yeast bad one draw·
blck; it frequently bad a bitter wte
that wu impaned to the bread.
Betides brewet'a yeast, hoUJeo
wives In the 19th century uted
specially brewed fermenu to make
yeast. The beli1 for most of thete
fcrmenu was a mash of arain, nour
or boiled 90tatoes. Hops were oft.en
inclu<ka to prevent sourness.
Clementines give ordinary
fare an extraordinary flair
What's the easiest party en tree to
serve? A roast is a aood choice. It
lits in the oven unattended while
you IO ·about your party prep-
arations-settina the table, arrana-
ina the flowers; cooking the re5t of
the meal. •
But while a roast may be ideal
when time is at a premium, it does
) lack a cenain ori&Lnality and style
when compared to the chic party
entrees served in, today's fashion-
orienled food world. This lack is
euily remedied when you serve
your rout with an unusual relish
made with exotic clementines,
thoee refrabina. consistently sweet
IDd juicy taftlerines from Morocco.
Moroccan Clementine and Red
Radish Salad combines the plump
aod · aromatic clementine with
arated radish. The frqrancc of
oranae flower water, available in
aounnet stores and Middle Eastern
aroccries, intensifies the fruity
clementine taste.
The resultins salad is a heady
blend of sweetness, tartness and
zesty flavor that will enhance your
roast and aive it that epicurian
touch.
As a relish for a roast or as a
separate salad course, easy-to-make
Moroccan Oementine and Red
Radish Salad is bound to elicit
admiring comments from your
auests, who will be curi ous to know
about your Slaf ingredient.
Oementint?, called the "candy
fruit" because of their sweet taste.
are grown in the fertile fields
around Casablanca and further
south aJong the Atlantic Coast near
Agadir. Lona a favorite of Euro-
peans. clementines have been ex-
ported in limited quantities to the
U.S. for several years. However.
only recently have they been ship-
ped in volume to this country.
They have a "zipper.. slon,
making them easy to peel and arc
vinually seedless. They're the ideal
sweet for children's lunch boxes and
make an excellent dessert when
served with cheese, European style.
CLEMENTINE AND
RED RADWI SALAD
%budtetl'MrMtun
i tabletpoo• .,...aaae.1 npr
Salt
• clemeatlltet
JaJce of 1 lemH
1 tablnpoH oraqe Dower
water•
Groa4 ctuam•
Wash and trim radishes. "Grate"
in a food proceuor. Wrap in
cheesecloth and preu out excess
moisture. Mix with supr and a
pinch of salt. Set aside.
Peel and slice clementines.
Sprinkle with lemon juice and
oranae nower watet to taste. J Ult
before serving,, mix clemcntines
with arated radishes. Dust ljptJy
with cinnamon and serve at once.
Serves 4.
•orange flower water is used
extensivel).' in Moroccan cookin1.
It is ava1lable in gounnet food
shops or Oriental groceries.
Sali.riaina bread wu made from
a 1tancr of milk, cornmeal and,
sometlmn, potatoes. The tenn
"lllt·rili.na" refemd to the practice
of neatina the bowl of 1&aner in a
bed ofhclaced lllt to keep it wann
overnipt. A little lalt also was
added to the ataner to delay the
arowth of~rii that mlaht aour
the milk.
For frontier fammes, sotudouah
WU the mcSlt impoflant POllClliOO
after the Bible. Not only was it usccl
to make bread, flapjacks and
biscuits, but it could be uted to fill
cracks In the lot cabin. treat
wounds. brew hooch and feed the
"Tt;e word .. aourdouah" became a
part of American lanauqe durina
the 1897 to 1898 Yukon aold strike,
years before. The word could mean • in, the purest quality. ____ J
the man or rua dou,b. Prolpccton n 1863, an immipant ~
carried their awur buried in the CbatJet Aeiachmann went bide .191 tops-of bql of flour or in pots Austria to search for a aood.qualaty,
strapped to their bKka. beker'a yeut and rettamed ti>
Ourioa the 19th century, Aut-~merica with the yeast cells lo a 1 trian chemists devtlopcd a system tube in hit vest pocket. Jn 1868, •
formau-producin1yea1t. They~t bepn ~Iii~• ~mprelied Y._ was sown In vata conuunana wraooed an tan foal.
fennentina 'brew. When it rote to Wfth the oneet of World War If,
the ~op1 the yeaat was removed and the U.S. aovemment souaht fl,
wunea, and some of the watet was dehydrated yeut that~uld be~
removed by preuure. It wu then to make bread on the bettlefield. I~
formed into ready-to-uee cakes. 1943, Aeischmann'1 compeny
Baken were wary of this new produced the fint active dry yea\,
product, called dried yeast or Ger· After the war, dry. yeast was ig·
man yeast, becauee it didn't keep troduced to the retail market and 'if1 well and it wu often bulked out now the form of yeast most CO"h1 withatarch.chalkand pipe clay. But monly used for home bakina. >
Morocco's seedless citrus
fruit a treat in any language
,•
,•
"'
By TOM HOGE annoyina see$.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-w~~~~ ~rsome~son,theclementinedidnotca~hon
Use the coupons below to sOYe S l .55 now. Then get o S3.00 CASH REFUND by follow ing these steps.
l. Obto1n o refund cer1if1c;ote of your tovorrte store or 1 Send in 6 proofs of purchase (mo111mum 2 per
from the ods of par11c1pat1ng retailers (If you con· • brand) ond unscramble the key word 1n the state·
not find one, write to S3 00 Savings Cer11ficote, PO menh you will find on the refund cer1if1cote.)
Box 2339, l1bertyv1lle, IL 60198 by FebNory 23,
1916.) Offer expires Morch 30, 1986.
The tangerine has always been one of my favotite in A!f1e~ca until ~bout t~o rears a10. The fruit is now
fruiu, except for all those annoying little seeds. comi~ in and will be d1stnbuted from December on
So I was intri1ucd to learn that a seedless form of throu ~arch. . . .
the fruit has begun arrivin& in this country from its ere s a tasty recipe for Clementine Pie.
birthplace in Morocco, aprden spot of many fruitsand CLEMENTINE PIE
vcsetables. u clemeaUHt
It seems that this new variety of citrus fruit wa s 1 t-hld abaked pie alaell
discovered some yean aa<> by Father Pierre Clement. t Wlllole-esa1
He operated an orphanqe in Morocco and spent his ¥1 cap IJ'Ullla&ed aqar
spare time samplina the fruiu of the mandarin trees 1 tablet,._ HIUC bru4y
which srew wild all over North Africa. t tUletpOOD• b1t&er, mel&ed
After munching his way lhrough several grove1, Preheat oven to 4SO degrees. Peel clementjncs
Father Oement happened on a clump of mandarins with knife, removing all membrane. Slice crosswise
whose flavor he four.d superior to that of their cousins. and arrange in pie shell in an e.vcn layer. Beat eggs witb
~n an:iate~r horticulturist. the priest began experimen~-4 tablespoons of supr, plus the cognac, and pour over
ing with his find and developed a sweet-fla vored fruit fruit. ·
that bore no seeds. Bake on upper shelf of oven for about 20 minute\.
Named clementine after the priest, it was smaller or until crust has browned and clementines arc aim~
than the other citrus fruits of this type, had a delightful cooked through. Remove from oven and brush fru it
sweet-sour flavo~ and the akin w~s eaay to peel. . with mixture of remaining suaar and the butter. ' T~e clem.ent~n~ cau&ht ~n qu1ckJy 1n France, which Cover ~stry border with foil to prevent burning
began 1mportin11t 1n quantity. It attracted the fancy of and return pie to oven for another 10 minutes to
'French children because ofits small size and absence of alaze. Serve at room temperature. 1
Sauces cut the mustard
In Europe's Middle Aacs. mus-
tard was the condiment of the
masses. Today, the spicy substance
comes in countless varieties and is
often associated with aounnct
cook.ins.
No wonder. Mustard, especially
Dijon mustard, provides an elepnt
flavor to an assonmcnt of food&.
Its flavor is popular with cooks
because it can be used in IO many
ways and delivers either a strong
taste that carries the dish, or a more
subtle one that compliments other
flavors.
For example, in the recipes that
follow, mustard spices up a hollan-
daise sauce that can be used with
meats, fish and vqetablea where a
hint of mustard i1 a flavor
enhancer. The sauce i1 simple to
prepare in a blender.
For 10methin1 different. Dijon
mustard bripten1 up a bread
appetizer. Dijon cheese breads are
allO elepnt and simple to prepare.
finally, try a fresh combination
of inaredient1 that includes DUon
mustard to the traditional 1tuft'ed
mushrooms and create a new
favorite appetizer.
QUIC&DUON
HOLLAND AUE
•eu1.a. ' ....... ,, ....... J8'ee
. ' ......... Dlj99 .. ..... ...............
Dauea1ew,.,.1r
~e., ..............
Combine ea yolks, lemon juice,
mustard, water aod pepper in
blender container. Cover IDd blend
on hi&h 3 tee0nd1. Heat bun.er until
bubbly, but not brown.
PaniaJly uncover blender, srad·
uaJly add butter in 1 thJn stream,
continuina to blend until 11uce la
smooth. Serve immediately. About
1 cup.
New. Keep sauce warm by
imma'lil\I 11uce container in
wum water until tady to ute . .
•
• .............. Uced
1 ,, eacet) p,.... ....... ...... ...... ~ ........ " .... ......
~rt,. .ae." c.,.a .. o
Combine mayonl)<e, cbeete,
m"'tard and onion. Spread ap-
prollmately 2 ta1pOOn1 mhnurc
on each bread llice. PIKe cbeae
aide up on blkina sheet. Broil until
cheese Is melted and liptly 90lden.
Oarnilh with rir olives ju11
before brolf na. l cJnired. 40
appetizcn.
I
'I•
Coiltrov.e~sy growing over mushroom picking
EUOENE, Ore. (AP)-Tbere•1 a
ftlw dear-a.inina controverwy aim-~.. in the woods. But it•s
cqnaiderabl}' clOICf to around level
ttiln the lofty tops of the fir and
1Jkuce treet an whose shadow it's
rdina. b. . <The au ~eel 11 mushrooms,
ifically Oreaon's popular ICftJJe rnuahroom. The aolden
I . y from the noor of the North-
i •a A>restl h11 been discovered ~ rortd and now hundredf of
-yes, tons -of the tasty
urecomina out of the woods
a badins to mafket each fall.
'The commercial explosion in the
pickina of chanterelles and, to a
letaer extent. other native mush-
.rdoms hu sent battalions of pickers
irfio the Cascades and the Coast
Ran1t. On some days, certain
cQitstal beck roads are packed
bumper-to-bumper wit.ti pickers'
can.
The boom , berely five year1 old,
has created a new economic o.lcbe
for mushroom buyers,.who operate
throuahout We.tern Oreson, alr-
freiJ}ltina their wara to metro-
politan markets around the United
State. or ahippina them off' to
W11biqton to be canned for export
to Europe.
By the time it hilt a retail buyer in
New York or Munich, the lowly
cha.ntcrclle sells for upward ofS l S a
pound.
But action besets reaction.
Suddenly, the weekend pick~n
who' vc stalked the cbanterelle wath
blissful success for deadet are
anacrcd to find their favorite spots
gleaned clean. And, from the most
dilettantish hobbyut to the most
businesslijcc buyer. there's talk of
CEREMONIAL TEA ' . . GIVES DESSERT
r-
NI QUE FLAVOR
, The powdered green tea of the Japanese tea ceremony is often used to
kea perfectly delicious arecn tea ice cream. Tilis recipe refines that idea
t uce a soft, custard-like cream from green tea, cream, eggs, milk. and
" hofrum for emphasis. It is made by-COO.kinagelatin, egg yolk, and milk to which the
powdered arcen tea and rum arc added. The mixture is then folded into
stiffly beaten cu whites and cooled in molds in the rcfriacrator.
The Japanese produce green tea rather than the more familiar black
tea oflndia, China, and the Wc$t. Actually, there is little difference in the
I.Ca plants. The Japanese steam the tea leaves immediately aftcrbarvest1ng
to prevent the growth of an enzyme in the leaf which would ferment and
blacien it. ~ ·
There ~re numerous vant1esof green tea, but the two major forms arc
leaf and powdered. The leaf teas come in a variety of grades from the lowest
(bancha), which is the most widely consumed, to the best (gyokuro ), which
is quite special and receives the full benefit of Japanese TLC in growinaand
preparation.
It i.s from gyokuro that powdered green tea (matcha) is made. The
ceremonial bevcra&e that is gracefully wtuslted into ajade frothiness at the
serene Japanese tea ceremony is matcha, which is used forth is recipe.
GREEN TEA CREAM
1 nvelope celatla
',',' 1 '4 c.pt plet l tabletpooDI mllll
, 5 &eatpooat powdered IJ'H• tea
• tabletpoolll .. ,.r
'4 &eatpoo•aalt a lar1e ea•. 1eparated
1 cabletp009 nm
l eepllavycream, •~lpped
I tlmple molds for forml•I cream
Sprink.Jegclafin over 1/• cup milk and set aside to soften. Ad~ 2
tablespoons milk.a littleata time, topowderedgre~n tea an~ mix toa
smooth paste. Mix in sugar, salt. and softened gelatin. Set aside.
Heat I cup milk very hot (but not boili~g). ~tcgg yolks sl!gh~ly. Sttr
apttlehot milk into egg. Return the yolk/milk mixt ure to the milk 1n
~cepan and set over low heat. Stir with wooden spoon until mixture
thjckensenou&h to coat spoon lightly.
Remove (rom heat. Stir in gelatin/green tea mixture and rum . Beat
~whites to stiff. shiny peaks. Strain 1n hot custard and gently fold .
~friacratc for about 40 mmut~s. . . Fold with spatula several times while mixture 1scoohng to prevent
separation. Do not over cool or mixture will be lumpy when combined
'tith whipping cream. Fold in whipping crea!1"1. . . .
Wet inside of molds with water. Pour mixture 1n, cover with plastic
wrap, and chill for several hours or overnight. To serve, remove pl~~t1c
wrap, and chill for several hours overn ight. To serve, remove plastic. dip
mold into hot water fora second. and unmold onto serving dish. Makes 8
servinas.
StudentScanlearn
.rn1crowa ve cOokirig
Everyday aourmet.1 can pare
fir kitchen houri to minutes by
.. M&crowave, .. an informa..
Cilakina cla11 to be praented ~
t Califbrnia Cater at 7 p.m. _. l p.m. Ju. lJ.
lMl-KW Will be Vicki Vuce -.oa, bomc economltt. Fee for
1111 a~coune la SI 2 and
I red booklet. . enw loca ... at Awnt
26 Md .. ,....,. .... Loi -=·Ar~rw9dom.caJ1(2l3) .... . .. lr~....----1, ... ...... ... ••4lllhelt c.H ..... heh proMu =i;··....,, -Will .. I lJCtA laNI 'cl
t
culinary coune 1Wtina Tuaday.
Complete menus from appetizcra
to dntenl will be demonttnled,
with an emphui1 on lnuipaina new
combinadoot of ftavon and a rich
variety oftnturn.
Diane WonJdllllOft. author of .. CalifOf'ftia Culsine. .. will abare her
recipes wiU. ttudentl on the ftrwt
two mectinp. The remalnderoftbe courw wiU be laUlbt by Mitchell
friedlr, ~ L'Enai• Hocel. Hi1 ,....urant credits alto lndude
LaToque ud L'Oranlaie in Lot ~udTnunpe111Dd MiDdy'a
I• Rlw Yort Ctty •
For detaill oa meeu,. and
......... calll!.a ..... ,,21J)
~·· '
overpickina and concern about the
f\atwe of the cban&erclle.
''The dtmand has just become
tremendoua,•· uyaChuek Harldns,
who'• commonly identified as the
E.,.e area'• bi11e1t and most
experienced buyer. "The conc:cm
about overpickina started comina
up about a year 110. The problem iJ
that nobody reelly knows. Some
people think if you pick' a spot too
much or if you P.ick it in the wrona
way, then you II hurt the future
arowth. Other peo_plc think ll
doesn't make any difference."
The cone.cm ripples throuJtt all
levels of the mushroom business.
At the Greenaroccr vegetable stand
in Euaene, owner Tina Farley says
concern over the chantcrelle's fu-
ture has caused her to limit her
buyina to one picker. "I don't want
to be responsible for ~ding a
doLcn people out there to ru1n the
crop, .. she saya.
Harkins says fear of overpick.Jna
1s so areat that, in some quant'f'I,,
there's talk of the need for reJU·
lation -pickina permits. ~ bll
lim1t1, buyer RtiatntlOn and feet.
Freeman Rowe is akeDtica1 about
th.e da~ of over'Dickina. Rowe,
.Lane Community CoUeee biotoo
profeHOr who spends m&aeh of hT1
time atudyina, cuhivatina and
punuin1 mushrooms, says drastic
rqulatory measures arc beina
promoted in the state of WaJhina·
ton. There. amateur mycol<>&ists -
mushroom fancien and pichrs -
have announced plans to push for
state 1qislation that would ban au
commercial pickinaof mushrooms.
The proposal may c.ncount.cr
touah sleddina because Wash1n1-
ton has two majo~ canocries that
proce11 ~s of thousands Of ~· ol native mushrooms des-uaed for Europe.
Diane Burr of Sprin&flcad i1 1 buy~r for one of th OK cannencs,
operated by the Alber Co. of
TllCOma. In a aood year, he buys up
to .o1ooo pounds of mushrooms
from ocal p1cke".
Bul'f is among those who main-
tain that chantcrell~ should be
knife-tut at around tevcl~1 not up.
rooted. Thost who subscri~ to that
view u y that puUJng up the plant
mh1b1t.s rcarowth
Some pickeM and buyers al~ say
that entuc stands should not be
picked. They say so me mushrooms
should be left.
.. There's JUSt so rfi\lch that's not
known," says Harkin~. ··we know
that mushrooms have been picked
for ce nturies for Europe and now
Hearty Sandwiches satisfying
Hot and hcany sandwiches can
be a satisfyina supper on a busy day.
Nutritious Ham 'n Com Sand -
wiches make a tasty choice. beca use
this recipe caJls fo r ingredients the
whole famil y enjoys.
You st.an with a loaf of crusty
French bread. topped with cream
cheese and ham. A navo rful mix-
ture of frozen ::om 1n butter sauce
and cheese, accented with green
onion and mustard, tops the sand-
wiches. Wrapped in foil. the \and-
wichcs heat in the oven in 20
minutes.
Because of the generous buttery
topping. you t!'a~nt to cat this
hot sandwich With a knife and fork .
To round out the nutnt1ous meal.
si mply accompany Ham 'n Corn
Sandwiches wtth mil k and carrot
sticks.
HAM 'N CORN -SANDWICHES
10-oance pacbp lroiea wlaole
kernel con la b•Uer aa•ce
I loaf Freaell bread
3·oance package cream cbeeae,
well softened
% fl·oance) pacllagH tbinly
allced bolled Isam
% table1poon1 sliced green on·
IODI
l tablespoons mayoaaaiae
1 &eaapooa prepared maatard
4 ouce1 ( 1 cup) allredded
Cheddar cllttae
I green onions
Heat oven to 375 degree<;. In
bowl of hot water, thaw unopened
com pouch for 10 to IS minutes.•
Slice bread 1n hair lcngth~1\C ••
Spread cut surface of bread hal ve~
with cream cheese. La yer ham
slices over cream cheese
In small bowl. combine content<;
of thawed com pouch. grt•t·n on·
io ns. mayonnaise. mu\tartl and
chcc~: sttr to combine. Spn:ad
corn mixture over ham down
center of each half French bread.
Wrap each halflooscl y wtth heavy-
dut)' foil.
Bake at 375 degrees for 20
minutes or until cheese is melted
and sandwiches are thorouJhl)
heated. Garnish each serving with
green onion. 8 servings.
•Com pouch can be thawed in a
microwave oven . Microwave on
High as directed on the pack.age for
11'1 to 31 i m1nutl'S.
••To prevent rounded top halfof
bread from tipping. cut off thin
sher of cru\t
Old South inspires new d-ishes
Susina Plantation Inn ·s me nu features
fresh foods with a home-cooke d flavor
Be 1t a seaside manor, V 1ctonan mansion orsouthcrn plantatton.
Americans everywhere are discoven ng the ro mance and fa scination of
country inns. They like the am b1ence. co m fonablc \urrou nd 1 nas and
individual. friendl y attention unique to these inn'>.
For a taste of true southern hosp1tahty. thc 'iu<,1na Plantation In n
receives high marks. Nestled 1n Southern Gc-orgiaJUSt acro'>s the state ltne
from Florida, it offers all the elegance and charm uf the old South.
Thegraciousantebellum plantation stands on 11 S acr~soqawn and
woodland in the heart of plantatton co uniry. an 1dylltc ~tting Wlth an
abundance of mqnifi cent oaks and magnol 1as
But even more than the ambience. guests kt·e p returning fo r the home·
cooked foods prepared by thcSusina'sowncr. An ne-Marie Walker_. Each
day's menus arc planned around fresh, seasonal foods andeveryth1_ng is
homemade, including the breads and des'iCm (iuestseOJOY meals in the
dinina room served around a gleaming 12-foot tablc under a massi ve
chandelier.
The presentation and the rtghl navorrnmb1na 11onsarc 1mponant in
the food served at the Susina Plantation D1 shc' range from elegant to
simple. but the emphasis is alwa ys on na vor.
A well-seasoned and colorful dish of Rice f·lorcnt1ne1s a perfect
accompaniment fora simple en tree such as Su\tna Plantation Inn Veal
Cutlets. The veal, prepared with a trad1ttonal hrcad crumb coating. sautced
and sprinkled with Gruye~checsc. makes a dcl1c1ou., navorduow1th the
rice accompaniment. .
The ambience and flavor of country inn d1ning1seas1lycapturcd tn
meals at.home.
SUSINA PLANTATION INN
STUFFED BASS
I OUffl ''"' •••laroomt, 1Uced ................. ,..,..n.e
I...._ ......... d:1,,14,teeded U desired
I ia•1e1,11• dla"d panleJ
1~ ......... .,. ... .....
~ ... .,....._JeJce ....... ,..,....
1,. ,11sf1 '69, .... er.aJMr tlmllar ft1ll (prepared for 1haffl•1; ebowt 1, ................. , ..........
•4 Clf frwlJ ....... ,. ....... dteete
~ni,,,... ...... ent ... .......
I elf wlatte wa..
lttlf'Wat« 1-.. ............ , ..... rprtae
1,.msp(l ..-..)llkt,,..._ltM ,....,
T ...........
Cookmutllroomsi.n medium slttllet 1n )table poonsbuttcrover
medium heatjutt until~.about 3 to 4 minutes. fttn ~ma1ninal
tablespoons butter. tir in cooled drained mushroom • tomaton, panic).
onion and lemon ju tee. Salt and pepper to wte.
FiU ftth wiltt musa-room 111i111ture. ure wuh ptC.b. Place filh •n
abaUowov....,roofdilh. Bl"Ulh ftah W1~h bcatenea. Combencchc!acand
cnambt; sprinkle over fttb. Dot W1th buner •• dau'ed. PourW1ne Jrouod
filh. 8Ueat400dllleetlor25-3'm•nutaorunul fl h f\akneualywnb
(Olk..
M•nwhUe,comb6M....,,the l tabkupoottbuneraM"°""""°'
rice ud teaODtftl peCbtl bi medium uuccpan. Inna to a boll. over &Jllady Ud ammer 20to2511iinu111oruntil111 water 6blorbed. Sttve
... ....... Rica~ o.r.w. Widl,.,.., aad -----·if • •
• • I ~ . . .
\ .. .
,• .·
VEAL CUTLETS
.CVS PENCILS
10 Pack. #2 Lead
•CVS WRmNG TABLET
100 Sheets. 6 Inch x 9 Inch
Plain or Ruled
.CVS SECURm' ENVE~~
Legal Size. 40'S or Letter Size. 80 S
c~i~~E2 1'2,Q FOR 89'·99'
CONT AC CAPSULES
•Decongestant
•Severe Cold Formula
~~~!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 20 count. CHOIC E
.,,..... 4.SM.73
.... ,,.b 2.99
..... Celd...... =:.:.. -1.00 "nnA1a1 ----·-...,. . ===
.... • ~-COIT 19!
SCOTT
BABY FRESH
WIPES
Scented or Unscented
80 count
219
Our Regular 3.19
SUM-FAST
50¢
OFF
WITH THIS COUPON
ANY HOUSEHOLD
PRODUCT
With A Regular Retail Of 75' Or More
Not GOOd On Sate Items
Sates tax where ipphcable.
charged on sale price
EXPIRES 1/18186
111tiit1' .... , ' ' •• f
pf ,, I I' • ... • ~~
PAPER-MATE WRIIE BROS.
PENS
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
MINI DESK
CALCULATOR
Blue or Black Ink
10 Peck 99¢
Our Regular 1.65
TYLENOL
CAPLETS
Extra-Strength
Twin Pack
50 count each
'l88
A 7.58 Value
DENTAGARD
TOOTHPASTE
With Fluoride
•Tube. 6.4 ounce
•Pump, 4.5 ounce
YOUR CHOICE
121
VICKS NYQUIL
NIGHTIIME
COLDS
MEDICINE
10 ounce
399
Our Regular 5 4.11
VICKS
V~UB
DECONGESTANT
OINTMENT
3 ounce
VICKS
FORMULA 440
DECONGESTANT
COUGH MIXTURE
8 ounce
VICKSSta
LONG-ACTING
DECONGESTANT
NASAL SPRAY
0 5 ounce
Light Po-..red
Modef 1795
699
Our Regular 9.99
259
Our Regular 3.59
3s~_
Our Regular 5.89
199
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Loehmenn't 5 Polntl P9aza
Main St. At Beech Blvd.
F0tmeriy Al*1't Pharmacy
&47-3525 ~~
• 5~ raeboci< n.,•h • • ..._.
~, .. _ ...
~ .....
·-~--... -
MEAD 5 SUBJECT
NOTEBOOK
•College Ruled
8-112 In. x 11 In
•Wide Ruled
8 In. x 10-1/2 In.
ms--12~Reg
CHOICE ts I 2.25-2. 75
•Golden Solitaires
3.2 ounce
•Golden Almond Bar
3 2 ounce
•Marabou Roll. 2.65 oz.
IVORY ·-.. ~
tll OI
I
MEAD
GLARE CARE
NOTEBOOK
3 Subject
150 Sheets. 8-112 In. x 11 In
169
Our Regular 2.99
YOUR CHOICE 69¢
Our Regular 1.<»ea.
VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE
LOTION
All Types
io ounce
149
Our Regular 2.39
LIQUID
IVORY
SOAP
Pump Dispenser
9 ounce 77¢
Our Regular 1 09
KOOAI<
•MEAD SPIRAL NOTEBOOK
70 Sheets. 8 Inch x 10·1/2 fneh -
Wrde Ruled, Our Regular 95' ea.
•CARTER'S FLUORESCENT HI-LITER
Broad Tip, Assor1ed Colors
Our Regulaf 69' ea
YOUR 3 100 CHOICE FOR .
II
OFF
GUI fWIYMY L1W '9Cll
COLOR PRINT
•lhll ... ,.,..
12. 15. ~4 ar 31 ALM • EXPOSURES •CL 110-24 •CL 128-24 COLOR •CP13&-24, 100 ISO
~!CE PRINT FILM
Oooe1 on 110. 12e. disc.
Our Aegulaf 2. tt..3 ... 3~mm Kod1co1or. Fuji &
•Olec.15E~ other C-4' PnJCftt flfmt
Our "'9ullt 2 • ...... t/f
LAGUNA HILLS MllllON VllJO
321 M"'60n Vlefo Mall Laguna Hltlt Mall
EJ Toro ROid
I
25~
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1986
..
Patterson off and running
Ex-congressman enters supervlsora
race against Anaheim, Orange ma¥ors
match this year.
Rather, the SI-year-old Anaheim
resident will campaian for the 4th
D1strict supervisory scat qainst
Anaheim Mayor Don Rotti and
Oranie Mayor Jim Beam. ly LISA MA.HONEY _ .. ..., .........
Former U.S. Rep. Jerry Patterson
said Tuetday he will run apinst two
other announced candidates for the
seat of retirina Oraqe County Super-
NEW SLIN f
M'1 ;I I
Actr1111 Donna aeed ta
dead at ace 84. See A7.
Cout·
Newport Beach City
Cou.ncll agrees to eetab-
llah a teen commlaalon
aJmed at ateerlng the
city' a youth toward
positive activities./ AJ
Jl'ood
Great recipes from
famous American sea-
ports can put aome cul-
inary excitement Into
horMfareJC1
visor Ralph Clark. ·
Patterson, a Democrat who loit the
J8th District conp-essional scat to
. Bob Doman in 1984, said in October
that be would not challcn&e the
conrrovenial Republican to a re:-
Oark has represented the . 4th
DisJrict -which includes Anaheim,
Buena Park, la Palma and parts of
Oranae -for IS years. ·
The senior board member an-
nounced in August that he would not
XJp Klnntnc• of tbe cUatrict attorney'• office and Mary
DeOaelle. a crime acene lnyeettaator for the aherlff'•
seek re-election because of h11 qe,
health problems and ~ublicity over
.bis links to Anaheim fireworks
ma,nate W. Patrick Monarty.
Moriarty pleaded au11ty to mail
fraud and is under mvesuption for
illepl influence peddling.
An usociate of Monany's has
c~ that Oarlc, alonJ with other
polit;tcians, accepted favors from
Monarty.
Both Ouk and Moriarty have
.
'1EC0VERY • DAUM
denied the allcpuons, which were
railed by aide Richard R. Kenh 1n
interviews with criminal an·
vcstiptors. ·
Pattenon whom voters sent to
Conaress after a sunt as mayor of
Santa Ana, saaohc docs.n't c6nsider
·county aovemment a step down af\er
10 l.ears on Capitol Hill
• I am delighted to be comma home
to Oranie COunry:i-look fonvard to
("-ee ... PA TTERSOR/ A2) ·:;;;;:;::;.-.:::==-;........;..__ _ _,
Report
warns
of mob
power
Mob entrenchedJ.0---
bustness, unions.
crime task force says
WASHINGTON (AP) -A blue.
ribbon federal commission told
President Reapn on Tuetday that
orpruzed cnme as entrenched in
Amenca's marketplace and as "in-
creas104ly usma labor unions u a tool
to obwn monopoly power'" m key
sectors.
The President's Commission on
OrpnLZ.Cd Crime. wrndm• up the first
comprehensive mvestiptJon of labor
and manq.ement rac:lcctccn~
the McCJeUan heannp three
aao. said consumers "unk.nowin&ly
pay a surcharse to organized cnme for
a Wlde ranac of goods and serv1cea_ ..
and that federal enforcement efforts
arc fragmented and inadequate to
stem the trde.
Sporta
Magic Johnson teed•
Lakers to 143-122 vtctory
over Phoenlx./81
Chemicals detonated on roadside
Just twodaysearhcr, Rc.pn, man
arucle for The New York Tames
Map.zinc. wrote that "for the first
lime m. our history_. we finally have
the mob on the run and boasted that
orpn1zed cnmt' convictions bad
quadrupled since he took office an
198 I.
INDEX
Bridge
Bult.tin Board
Bu8'neaa
Clualfled
Comk:a
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Horoecope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sport a
Tetevlalon
Weather
A12
A3
A8-9
85-7
A13
88
A11
C1-1'4
A12
A12
A1'4
A10
A3
87-8
81-4
A7
A2
Drug role
in Nelson
crash seen
WASHlNOTON (AP) -
Federal investiaton suspect a
fin ianitcd by -.rfree.baJina. .. a
form of cocame u1e, mal have
caused the New Year 1 Eve
plane crash that killed rock 'n'
roll llAr Rick Nelton and six
others. a publiahed repon said.
Sourcel said preliminary re-
porta indk:ate Nelton'• body contained a measurable level
of unmetabolized cocaine,
which means the drua had not
,...._._JllSUOR/Aa)
Authorities search for trucker who left
explosive chemicals on side of highway
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ... 0.., ..........
Ortega Hrghwny was reopened JUst
before noon Tuesday after a shcntrs
bomb squad detonated a volatile mix
of hazardous chemicals that had been
dumped by the side of the road.
The sheriffs department has
launched an in vestigation to find
who's responsible for the illegal
dumping.
The chemicals were discovered by
a passing motonst Monday evening,
promP.tmg county officials to close a
10-male stretch of the rural highway
between Orange and R1vers1de co un-
ties.
County fire officials agreed to
Struggle
goes on,
says son
of King
By PAUL ARCHJPLEY °' .. ..., .........
Martin Luther King Ill. son of the
slain civil rights leader, at UC Irvine
Tuetday called on America 10 find
solutions for the problems of equal
riahts, poverty, iJnoran<'t and racism
that still ~ue society.
detonate the toxic chcmacals after
deciding they were too dangerous to
move. Early Tuesday. a bomb squad
co mpleted the operafion , spokesman
Pat Antrim said.
Strewn over the side of the highway
JUSt inside the Orange County hnr
east of San Juan Capistrano. the
chemicals included benzene. diethyl
sulphate and acid-soaked hydrazine
pellets. which are used for propulsion
1n rocket fucJ,
Packaged in a vancty of containers
ranging from large drums to small
bottles. as many as 20 d1ffert·n1
chemicals were dumped. Antrim
said.
A salvage crew removed those
chemicals thouaht to be stable
cnouJh for transportauon before
blowang up the most volatile
substances. shentrs Lt. L>1ck Olson
said.
"Some of the stuff was far too
hazardous to move,"' Antnm said. ··11
would have been real nsky."
The 8: 12 a.m. explosion <><;curred .
af\er about an hour's delay because of
media helicopters c1rchng overhead.
fire officials said.
Officials believe a truck dnvt'r
probably dumped the chemicals
rather than take the tame and ellpen~
of hauling them to a proper toxic
waste fac1ht y.
The ncarc'lt such facahty fordlspos-
ang of Cllplosavc chemicals 1s in
Northern Cahfom1a. county fire
Capt. Lou Furst said
"Unfonunately, the dumps keep
getting moved farther away and that
probably as a cons1dcrat1on to these
people."' Antnm said ··They can't
In a w1de-ranJina address to about
HO listencn. Kina said tht' battles his
(Pleue Ne ITJtUOOLlt/ A2)
............. ., ............
llartla Latlaer JUac mat UC lmne aympoata.m.
Old guard steQp~ng a~id~
in Mesa ?olice Department
ettrements at top open long-awaJte
op-portuntttes oro lcerstomoveup
11nce 1969. Lt. Tom Durham. who
htkt his post for 22 ~. has also
retired -cratina w ftr1l openJl\I for a !~tenant In about sb yean.
nd one llCflNnt 1 prepenna to
leave. IJViftl unifonned ollken thetr
fi"t crack at amint stripes tn two yean.
In the comina months., Neth 111d.
the clcpenmnt could •as maay u
three ~II. two lteutcMDts and
two capwm IO a MW rctinment plae
that Wfttt 1nto ~Ju. I. Under t.M
new IY*"'. Police ~ cu recel.e muimutD benlfla 11111 $5.
Netlt.; st. met M_.y hi alto
,._. to -.. ift N0¥tmW
llMQl•DCt 196Su\kaey'uecond
r
J
..
TONY
SAAVEDRA
poJa~cbaef.
The upectcd vaanan lhGU&d
pu h ranlont off1Ctn up another nana on the promouonal 1.&kr and re·
Juvcnatc depertmtn1 ldm1n1stra\Jon
•1th ne-blood. omcen aid
"Whit we're 1alkJf\I about iu '°'or
MW tbtftkillC lilP ~. •• l Jo.year SI\.
Tim Holbrook aatd ··When (me
ed11un1tU"lton) first came on they
Md llM>d ....._ but aft~r aw"jle ~
t.alM 1 hnle atapant. ••
Thi ~ COU.ld 100 am tbt
(Pl1•1 .. 0LD/AI)
. '
afford to haul 1t, so they dump 11
"It's become JUSI abou1 a weekly
occurrence in Orange ( ount) ·· he
..aid
This pan1cular dumping was in a
rural area. and no one "a" 1n1urcd.
"Unless someone dump-. some
more chem1cal1o we should he all
nght." Antnm u1d
But the shcntrs dcpanmcnt and
d1stnct attomc} 's office wall he trying
to identify the suspc-ct or suspects for
posSlble prosccuuon .
"We'll have to determine what was
there. and put a package wgethcr 10
take to the d1stnct attome}." Lt
Olson said ··eut we need a \U'ipc-ct If
we don't come up Wlth a suspect
we've got no place to go··
The illegal dumping wa\ a health
and saft'ty codt' v1ola11on. Olson "'81d,
a misdemeanor Wlth fine'i of SS.OCXl
to SS0.000 and up to one \'ear an
county 1a1I for first offender\
But Comm1ss1on Chatnnan Irving
R. Kaufman. who pt"CKnted the
panel's rcpon to Reagan at the White
House. said. "There has never been a
coherent fedCTal strategy to attack
orga nized cnmc's corrupuon of our
busmess msutut1oos and labor or·
ganizataons. ··
In a summary released to rcponen.
the comm1ss1on cnt1c1zed pros·
ccutors who merely ··count bodies"
-conv1ct1ons -as a measure of
success, and said. ··instead, a nt'w
strategy must be develo~ to
bankrupt 1nd1v1dual mobsters and to
discourage union offic:crs. empfoycn.
and public officials from accomm~
da11ng organized cnme "
The panel. appointed by Reagan in
1983. faulted h1~ adman1strat1on for
cen.a1n pohllcal alhan~ saying. for
example that "lonll dclavs an rcach-
(Pleue eee REPORT I A2)
N oise-bom1b use ,
on sea lions.OK'd
Rule pleases fishing
industry. angers sea
lion protection group
By LAURA MERI.
Ot ... O.., .........
A federal ruhng allowing \port~
fishma businesses to haras'i sta lton"
with noist bomb" hac; \fl.'HkC'd both
cnuct m and applau'IC from local
aroups.
The Nauonal Mann<' hshcnc<1
Aacncy published tht' nt'v. ruhng 1n
the DcQCmbcr is uc of tht' FC"dcral
R~1'lttr The ruhng. ~h1ch wrnl into
ctT('(.·t Jan 3. WL'I th<' rc"iult of 1
pc11uon from the portfohan& Ai.-
soc1a11on ofC"ahfomaa. It spc-cifically
l\llOW\ the SportfiShlfli groups w1th
'IOOn-to-bt-l'l.SUed permits to USC tht
no15(" homhs to d1scouragt' sea hons
from dcplc11na their catch
Th<' de' 1cn an \mall e'plosaves..
about the silt' of a man·, thumb. that
blow up on or below the '1Ur1ace of the
oct'an. em1 tt1n1 htht and no11e.
Stvcral t\i>es are available. ancluda na
the seal bomb or cracker shell
The bombs arc suppo~ to aare
the mammals away from the bolt1.,
11lo~ng 1ishcrmen who ~1d for the (PleueeMU8&/AI)
Of fleer, _nQt ggr_d,
held-gun on 6lacks
at Fashion Island
1J SUSAN llOWLETI' ...............
Nc~l>On Beach pohtt ofl"i«r.
not a Pf'l"ltf aiccunt~ard. pulkd 1 pn on t•o Lona . a h m~n who
have flkd a U0,000 d11mminat1on
claim q&um \be Cit)'. an 1nitrnal
polJCt U\ uon ha revC"alcd
lanaaJl y, 1 aecunt officer for
F'lllaioe I nd was •u ~ of
tnadi.1luna \be -.cap0n at the two
mcft 11 the wtrt av1n1 tM h~
PUW ceft\tr. ·'nit da1m ftted ....,, the aty of
~ 8ncb by 1ttomc Tom
Al ...... TWARNSOll11108POWBR •••
. !119 • ........ .-ot a &.>epanment 01
-,.. ~doDc:oeemias lnaer-
JC: n:a:c:l:!r°'8~~-::
·•• ..,.. wbetber Presler'• auppc>n
ollM "'-iailtratioe iD tbe 1980 ud
ltM ••'-cam~ in8uenced .. .,.,.... oltbe lD~tion .•• .. A!dlMiiuP tbe commiSSJoo did not
coeduct aa in~tion for any nidlwofwroudolnain tbe Pw iav•ieadoaa ... 1t ii oonvineed that
tlae ..... ol luda COD&aeti can lead
••---olpublic(Ollftdeoceand ~·= deSite to end 111Cketeer-
~ On. Edwin Meese baa ~ MJ •voritism hu been
---Pr I Ir or the Teamtters. Tbe eome• 'Oii aid tbat .. even when u.er. .. ..,ldUalattemptatotamper
'trilll Ille. ~torial ~ by WM Polilk:al Power. cen&io ... welf-Gnxil polilic:al contributions can
liwt.e u appearance of Improprie-
ty ."
l• Tbe pud1 without oamina names,
Mid that ''tO(!DU enfon:emeot of-
6cials of the Deputmmt of Labor
lave noted that the opening of
il\vestiptions into funds related to
eenain powerful unions. or a signifi-
cant local-of those unions, often
asulted in prompt intervention from
the office Qf tbe scaewy of labor ...
( "One of the key obstacles to more
li"110rou1 oversjght of labor-manage-
ment rackeUerina by the Department
tif Labor is the department's un-,
= ~~= :::J!r:t~cartina.and :!"'uacy it ii auppolld '° ~ h died four uniom -with histories
OfBciab at tbe 2-•iUi.a• ••ber o1 camro1 or influence by Ol'pllized Teem..,.·beedqi..,....liaWlllQe-crl•e:" Tbe Jaternational
toe did aoa immedilllly,... a ~orr~Thelater·
reportdsc:da. Luc a 1 ~. "'-M1iw1 I c:T'1bllftlDl2'1 AllCJCia. was subpoenaed to teldft at the vial .., c.te H Employees ud R_n-
of five ~ted ~r•ern crime ...... , Emp&o~ International ......__ bu · '-~i-.~ .... _ Uaioo, and the Laboren Inter-~., t attorney.-'"' uml M1loaal Union ofNonJa •--i-he would refute to......,~ ""KOii-.
under bia fifth Ameadm • npaa. . Tbe twnmary did DOC 10 i.ato deWJ
The ;uctee then po«po8ld u.e .. ~ ... me a1lleed ncDteerina ac-poe~ otber three u~ unlike c.te =· ~aa.le.=1::c1eCP·
Teamtten, belona to tbe AFLCIO. rellllc of the twl document ~~"ft
"We have not teen the report ad WI ~clear when the~ is made
have no comment until we do." Mid av8ill~, .. 11•=ina that it contains Re~~. a spokesmaa fbr the iafonaauon re ant to pendina in-
labor federation. Lut year, AfL.CIO ~--Nu.
President Lane Kirtland blamed
aovemment for alJowina c:omaptio-n ~ '::~ ::°or"::.S~·
within tbe labor movement. uytae "I =imd C:rbne "diitorts the cost ot don't have the tools ormetllodl ... any butiDesa," and thus increases
way of provina auilt or innocence. Drices 10 consumers and results in
Crooks burt u1 ... we're entitled to lower w.-to WOC"tm, the repon
protection f{Om them ftom our law laid.
-"ort:ement authorities." ~ruThe commission. wboee memben ... ~ized . crime," it ~d. ''is
include Sen. Strom lbunnond. R-tncreMinal ~"DI labor uruons as a
S.C., and Rep. Peter W. llodiao, [). 1ool ~ olicain monopoly power in
N.J., chairman of the Senate and ceft:aUl markets ucl to live mob-run
Houae judiciary commJueea, uid baioetlel an fldee ...
that thro&cb dominatioD of certai.a TIM repon didn't venture a ~se
labor unions in m.;or-cilia, or-ftpft, •t laid tbe cosu of labor
pruzed crime coatrola IDd repletes niebMa iqa .. are" • nna. They are
a-numberof mareu ~~ aoc,Jult borDe byuaion memben, but
tion, wholesale and mail meat ~ by IDdety u a whole.
STRUGGLE GOES ON, SAYS KING'S SON ••• Prom Al .
Alber fought 20 years ago are un-
6nished.
ri His address was part of th~ second
annual Martin Luther King Jr. sym-~ on the Irvine campus. The
fOUDtry will be marking the first
national holiday of the Nobel Peace
Prize 'Winner's Jan. 15 birthday next
)tonday. ·
Martin JD said the turbulence of he ~ including the assassinations
9f President John Kennedy and bis »rather Robert, as well as bis father, SiaUled a period of adjustment in the
"'70l. "We needed time to adjust, to
internalize," be said.
But the time bas come to confront
apin the nation's problems, he said, to reject the yuppie "me-ism" that he
~"a siclc mentality."
: "We are interdependent. No one can survive alone,'' King said.
He sugestcd Americans shouldn't
spend this nationaJ holiday with
barbecues and picnics, but ratherwjth
ttiastina and prayer.
.. In America, we have to stand up
and try to do sometbina about
hunaer. Every minute rve ltOOd up
here 28 persons have died ofbU,DFr,
18 of them qe S and Wider," be liid.
He said futina wu a way to cleusc
the mind .. IO hat.red. malice and
violence don't come in."
Callins upon the students in the
audience to take UJ?. tbe fight for
justice and equality, Kina•trelled the
tmporunce ofbeina acti~. individu-
ally and united.
He said unified lf'OUPI 1fiert able to
achieve milestones in tbe 60a like the
1964 Civil Ri&bta Act, the 1961
freedom rides and tM 1965 march
from·ScJma to Montaomcry over the
riaht to vote.
"Twenty years later, many of us
still don't vote. That botben me,
because many died so we would have
that riaht." be said.
But Kin& also cited individuals
who, like his father, took s&a.Dds
llPIDI' popular opinion because Jhcy ~ed iD their causes. "Every time I tee Miu Rosa Parks I
bavt to thank her, because in I 9SS
wben lbe sat down (in the 'whites
only' front teetioa ot a bus) many Amcrbm ~able to stand up," be
said. He also sugested l'9Cilm continues
at tbe hiabest levels in America,
where the J<>Vcmment calls for sanc-
tioas apanst Libya when white
PCODle IR killed by terrorists in
Vieima and Rome, but isnores the killi-a of thousands ofblacks in South
A&b.
"Fn:eclom and equality isn't yet a
reality, but it can be. It wasn't populat
in tbe 60I for blades and whites to
wort together for civil riabts, but ii
WUriabL
"Let's set the pendulum righL
whether it be feed.ina people, cJothiftl
people, or aettina people totether in
love," Kina said. "°That's what wt
sbould be doing oa tbe 20th."
USE OF NOISE BOMBS APPROVED ••• Prom Al
~rter tnp the chance to reel in their
hmit.
' The bombs arc considered a non-
lethal method of harassment by the
federal qency and have been used in
the JMIS\ by commerciaJ fishing oper-
ations.
" But Bill Ford of the Laguna Beach
'friends of the Sea Lion contends that
.che rulina further weakens the Marine
Mammal Protection Act of 1972,
which bas helped increase the sea li on
~pulation from 20,000 to 80.000
over the past I 5 years.
, .. Tests have shown that repeated
\lse could cause deafness and they
~n't know until the animaJ dies and lbeY run tests. If (the bombs) Land on
lhe animals and explode, the debris
'Could also damage the eyes.·· Ford !Wd.
The FederaJ Register reponed that
ctudics done on the bombs "indicate
!hat the devices tested are loud
enough to be painful, but probably do
flot result in damage to the auditory
system." But later the repon said,
"animals could conceivably become
~fto a narrow band of frequencies
\lfter repeated exposure to these
acvices."
at the a.n.unaJs.
Doug Farrell, part owner of
Davey's Locker in Balboa aod one
sportfilhina Operll« .wbo plans to
use the noi1e dtterruu, laid most of
his clienteJe are families who enjoy ·
watching the sea lions. If be misuted
the bombs and threw them at the sea
lions, he said, his customen would
not return.
"Can you imagine doing something
like that in front of a 6-year-old prt'r'
he asked.
Sea lions, who arc noted for their
intelligence, know th~ can set a free
meal near the boau. Tiley (oUow the
boats and often scare the tcbool fish
away or become hooked when tryint
to sna~h a fish from a fisherman's
line, Farrell said. They have become a
nuisance and a financial hardship.
"We take people out ior a &Ood
time. The 1ea lions are smart. ff we
scare one away, they communicate
and all go away," be said, "We're ou1
there for onJy four houn. They have
24 hours to fish.
"If they can be trained not to
associate a free lunch wifb the sounds
of our engines, we'll be rcaJ happy, ..
said the 43-year-old fisherman.
"Even if we move a couple of miles
out they follow you lite puppies, ..
Farrell said.
made many fish migrate north, ford
said. And tn years past, commercial fiaiaa ~ have decreaJcd the 6tll supply by overfitb.ing. .. We are
lloMy depletlftl our fish supply and
tbe tpOrUfiabermen are complaining
it is the sea lion," Ford said.
"Other countries that have ovcr-
fisbed have started aqua culture
~s. We also wiJI have to Stan
raisin& fish," Ford predicted.
Boat operators will have to com-
plete a training prosram before
oenificatcs will be issued for the scaJ
bombs and cracker shells, according
10 the ruling. Every time they use the
scare tactics, they must submit a
report detailing the time and date
tbey used the devic.cs, the •yr of
bombl used, an estimate o the
aumber of sea lions affected and
detcri~tion of behavior changes in
tbe animals. In other cff ons to aid fishermen,
the National Marine Fisheries•A&en-9 thi1 spring win begin feeding sea
lions dead fish injected with lithium
chloride. The chemical is supposed to
make the sea lions nauseous and train
them through a ncptivc conditioning erocess to stay away from the boats. ~ a three-year period, the slate
Department offish and Game will be
allowed to test the chemical's effect
OD JOO California sea lions and I 50
harbor .teals in the ocean.
~ain expected to dampen coast
~.,._~by oocaeloNll llaht
ehow'• thle morning w11 g1w wwy to pertly cloudy lki. tfllt
.,... noon In the Orenge Coelt. the NetlOnel WMtt* 8ervloe .... Cooler ..,.,,.,_etur .. wlff Pfev9M todey, renglng from the IOw
to~eo.. low oloudt tonight wltf become moetly IUMY and wanner on Thufl.dey,
(°owa tonight Wiii renge from the 408 to mid SO.. OrMQe Coeet boetert Wit be grMted by light eouth wind•
beooft*ig IOUlftwMt to weet 8 to 11 knota tNe an.noon end
~ ..... the Inner COMt8' ......
....... Wtl llnd the WMtetty ...it will renge from• toe feet
·Witt! 0009lklotllil bfeek• Mt• to I feet on wt tedng 6MchM.
The ..... end eur1 Wiii deer .... tonight.
A tmlill cnft ectvteofy I• In 9ftect from Point Conception to
Sen Clemente l.e.nd In the outer coatel w•tere.
Rougtt combtned .... -411 renge from I to 14 feet, with aouth wtrMM 10 to 20 knot• veenng to wt to nortttwe.t thla efternoon Mde¥enlng.
-....~~-~ fM>NlS ~ ~ 'iJ.jl "fJtfl wwm-COIO~
SttOwtra Raw\ Fur•a Soow Occ:luO•O..,...... S'"''°""'' a.
N9..,,,. WM ..... ~ • N(")AA ti ~ [)e(,. .a (. ~ •
•.3 u •.a 0.1
4,4 u u u
OLD GUARD STEPPING ASIDE •••
From Al
frustration.of promotion-minded of-
ficers stuck in what became dead-end
jobs.
"There hasn't been a lot of
enthusiasm around the department
because there hasn't been a lot of
positions open," Holbrook said.
Nearly half of the administrative
posts arc ex~ to cban4e. Neth
said, explaining that promotions and
retirements would create the need for
as many as six new sergeants, five
Lieutenants. three captains and a new
chief.
While conceding that high-level
promotions have been far between.
Neth dislikes sugcstions that veteran
administrators had created a dynasty.
He said the 137-mcmber depart-
ment. formed in 1953 when Costa
Mesa incorporated, was experiencing
the first cluster of retirements by
supervisors "who came in at the
ground floor." Neth added he ex·
peeled a quicker turnover as older
officers move into the top posts.
"Most of us who came in the early
years became rankina officers," Neth
explained. "Some people say it's not
good for an orgamz.at1on (for people
to stay so long}. It may not be, but it
means there's st.ability there."
The chief conceded that infrequent
promotions bad become somewhat of
a morale buster.
"I wouldn't say it's been a serious
problem, but cenainly the fact they
have not been able to move up bas
been there. It's amazing those people
have been able to perform so well
with that frustration," he said.
Neth added he expects the new
opponunities to boost police spirit
and spark new enthusiasm among the
troops.
"When you've been in rank a long
time, you don't try to invent the wheel
every Monday morning. You don't
have the fight and fire like these
(newer) guys," he said. "More people
will now be tryin4 to prove they are
worthy of promotion."
Lt John Regan. 49, said he never
gave much thought to the idea that he
was being held back.
"When you worry about that stuff
you won't be in the business very
long," Repn said. "You always want
to make 1l, but when that becomes
your No. I priority r,ou start havina
some real problems. '
The bottleneck became especially
nerve-wracking for officers takina
exams to become sergeants or lieuten-
ants. Sst. liolbroolc said.
OFFICER DETAINED PAIR AT GUNPOINT .••
FromJH
An investigation by the Irvine Co ..
which provides security for fashion
Island, found i1s security personnel
were not involved in the incident at
the shopping center, spokeswoman
Sally Smith said.
Powers and White were told later
that they were suspects in a robbery
that occurred two months ago.
~rham said.
Newport Beach police spokesman
Trent Harris said an employee of Raff
Jewelry store in Fashion Island called
Ncwpon Beach police because "they
had been robbed by a gang of blacks at
their store in Los Anples" and
thought Powers and Wh1te were the
same sus~s.
A plainclothes Newport Beach
dctccttve working undercover re-
sponded to the call. Harris refused to
identify the detective.
Powers and White allege that the
plainclothes man "pulled a gun on
them" and detained them until after a
matkcd Newpon Beach police car
arrived.
Accon!ina to Harris. the in·housc
police investigation deah only with
the chain of events that occurred
when Powers and White were puHed
over by the detective, who was
dnvinga white, unmarked police car,
shortJy after they left Fashion Island.
Harris said the investigation re-
vealed that the suspects allcged-
ly"durnped something out of the car"
when the detective was pulling them
over. and the detective "pulled his
gun ou1 and held it behind his leg in
case something happened." He later
put the handgun back into his holster.
Harris said. .
Officer Danny Reynolds and a
femaJe dispatcher who was riding
with him also responded to.the call to
assist the detective.
Originally, {><>lice said Powers and
White were "unmediately released"
after the Newpon Beach officers
arrived and inves1igated the report.
But after the investi.,ation follow-
ing the incident, pohcc supponed
Powers' and White's charge that they
were detained for another 40
minutes.
Hams said the detective and of-
ficers held Powers and White "be-
cause they were trying to determine
what they threw out of the car.·· The
suspects allegedly tossed a rum bottle
out of the car as they were stopped,
Harris said. It was not known whether
the driver was cited for an open
container violation, Harris said.
Barham claimed the detective told
Powers and White to "get out of
Newpon Beach and don't come
back" and subjected them to racist
remarks. He further alleges that
Powers and White were followed in
their car to the city line by a marked
Newport Beach Police vehicle.
Harris countered the charge, con-
tending that after the officers left the
scene, they responded to a traffic
collision at Bristol Street and Jam-
boree Road.
"They were respond ing to the
accident and they probably passed
them," Harris said.
He denied the clajm by Powers and
White that the officers or the dctec-
ti vc made any racial remarks.
.: Ford also argued that there is no
means of controlling the use of the
bombs and that some irresrnsibte
'lponfishing operators wil abuse
them. At the Friends' rehabilitation
'center in Laguna Beach, sea lions who
-have been gaffed or shot arc often
brought in fOr care. he noted. despite
laws prohibiting anyone from killing
But Ford maintained the mammals
arc not responsible for the fisher-
men's problem. Environmental fac.-
tors, pollution and overfilhina by
commercial fishermen are what 1s
depicting the sponfishin& catch, he
said.
Ford is worried there will be no way r;;:::;::;::::;:;:;::;::;::;::;::;::===~;::=~=====================;;; to follow the sea lions to detect the
• C)r inJuring the animals. ·
"Not all pany boat operators are
doing it. but they arc the ones we're
··afraid of," he said. adding that some
crews might throw the bombs directly .....
The 1983 El Nino effect, which
warmed the coastaJ waters and forced
nutrients to the ocean floor, have
er.cu of the poisons, llnless the
animal dies and washes uborc. If a
similar program is approved for
commercial u se, Ford said,
audlorities will have no way of
controlling the lithium chloride 4IOllF the fishermen use .
~~~PATTERSON OFF AND RUNNING •••
From Al
represeoun1 western Orange County
apJn," he said in a press conference
Tuesday in Santa Ana.
"1 fie Board of Supcrvison malices ~or de<:isions affecting people's
lives every day. It cel'UUnly isn't asteP.
down or even a step sideways,·
,.lattenon said.
"' The former congressman said he is ~red of commutma to Washington in
·:'bis role u a lobbyist and wants to
tcttJc down in Orange County where
.tthc bas Jjvcd for 27 years.
,,. Pattenan's decision entails a legal
ORANGE ........
COAST --· r..a-
... Of'PICS
separation from his 5e()()nd wife,
SaJly, who will remain in Washina·
ton.
PattersQn sajd he will campaign on
issues such as the need for more
affordable bousina. better transpor-
tation solutions and answen to the
growina problem ofto1ic wuie.
And he is banJc.iaa on hil hiO
profile with voters and his &miliarfiy
with the ins and 011ts of Wm.inpon
Politics to wm out over oCMr can-
didates.
"I'm counting on biah name recot·
nition and favorable name ~·
llition, .. Patterson said.
••1 know who to ta1Jc to, where to go
ad what projects ..-ork (in the Wabincton arena)," be said.
Pauenon is also counting on Sl00.000 in commitments he said
M'1 been offered by supporters. He boftt to raise $250,000 for the June primary.
Plmerson promised that. if elected,
he would 1erve a full term. He said he
"CN)d not use the supervisory seat as
a jampina off point for another political nice. ---
°::.':':'
........... d nC> W. ley I! eo.lt ..._ C:A ........ lo• IMO eo.. .._ CA t~ c..-.-...a..tert.....,... a __.., "'2-42'• Just call 642-8086
MonOty ,._,. " yo.. 00 'IOI ,_ ,_ PM* Dy
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~of~O--. . What do you like about lite DUiy Noc? What
don't you like? Call the nwnber a~ and your
mcssqe wilJ be recon:kd, transcribed and ck·
hvertd to the •PDrC>llrialc editor.
The same l ..... lftlWtrilll .riice may be
used to ttcord ~ .19 * --.. -topic. Conuibutora to as..,..• l•t .. lnclUdr
the1r name and .......... n....,lot~
Tells us what's oa JOS m.191l ~
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"°91' by 1 e "' CMI CW!Ort
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WHY INDEPENDENT
JEWELERS GROW ..
In apite of mutttpte chatn store
credit operation•, direct mall
Mttfng end C>Wf'HM buytng, the
Independent jeweler 11 1teadlly
growtng both tn number and
votume.
Why? BecauM an owner-op.
erated jewelry store, Whieh we
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contributing to It• W91fare and
offering perifOMI Mf'VIOe to lt1
cu1tomera.
We offw better idea, better
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The apark .. you ... In our
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CMM. h'a the bNuty and quelt-
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.. •