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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-02-05 - Orange Coast Pilot• .• ... -- .:,. --.......~ ... ·---.-..,....-------- FOMCAITION A2 * .. --------· WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1986 ~Car-pool .laftes to be ·~Odified Rou te 55 Advisory Committee a llotting $50 .000; Caltrans t ries to curb mis use The subcommmec, made up of Caltrans, Orange County Transpor- tation District. OranJe County Transportation Commission and California H1ibway Patrol staff, all aareed to begin the improvements. The Route SSAdvisoryCommmec won't make a recommendation on conunutng the experimental lanes until Feb. 25. A final decision on the matter rests w1rh the Orange County Transportation Comm1ss1on which meets March I 0. By LISA MAHONEY Ofllle l>ellffltlol8Uft The state Department ofTranspor- tauon will begin making changes to expenmental car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway in two weeks - about the time the expenment was onginally slated to~nd. Nominated Whoopl Goldber& won one of 11 Oecar nomi- nation• for '"The Color Purple.·· Pace A2 Coas t Costa Mesa rejects a separate mobile home zoning designation./ A3 Natio n Reagan's proposed budget hikes military spending, cuts social spending./ Ats Papara zzi Floss Schumacher gets Golden Baton award./81 Food Celebrate the year of the tiger with g-r-e-a-t Chi- nese dlshes./C1,2 Sports Estancia soccer coach Janu Juarez has his de- fending CIF champion team winning agaln./01 INDEX Bulletln Board A3 Business B7 -8 Classified 04-6 With the conclusion of a 90-day trial period for the lanes approaching. a subcommittee of the Route 55 Advisory Committee voted Tuesday to allow Cahrans to make about $50,000 worth of changes to the controversial pro)eCt to see if the improvements might curb misuse of the lanes. Reagan ca.llsfor financial freedom ~emocrats dispute strategies after -----nationa l address By CLIFF HAAS A 11 a• lted ""'--•. ,.._ WASHINGTON -President Re. agan 1s calling for a "real and lasting emancipation" from a welfare web trapping families into dependency, but Democrats say his policies con- tradict that rhetonc. In his fifth State of the Union address to a joint session of the House OC polltlcl•n• r•t• Re- ag•n'a apeec:h. Page Al But new member Joe C. Catron, a citizen who heads a v oup opposed to the car-pool lanes, voted apinst the action. Catron said he thought the subcommittee was getting ahead of itself by approving expenditures for a project that hadn't officially been approved. and Senate, Reagan denounced "horse-and-buggy programs tbat / waste tax dollars and squl)nqer human potential." ·I-: "I felt they were voting 21 days too early on ·the issue," Catron said. ''That pretty much told me they have already made up their mtnds to extend it." lndted, the agencies behind the two 12-milc long car-pool lanes have been He also echoed his "Amenca··is back" 1984 re-election cami>aign Tuesday night by hailing the "great American comeback" and urging Congress to help him keep ll going. The seven Challenger astronauts Vice Preatde n t Georae Buh and Hou.e Speaker Tip O'Neill (Pleue eee ST ATE/ A6) Jr. applaud Prealdent Reagan before he gt Yea addreu. CdM-FreewaY finished , but it doesn't reach names ake The Last stretch of the infamous Corona del Mar Freeway 1s scheduled 10 open next week. And just as the Newport Freeway never made 1t to Newport Beach. the Corona del Mar Freeway drops motorists a far hike from its billed dest1na11on. The last one-mile leg of the Corona del Mar Freeway slated for the Monday unvci ltng e nds on MacArthur Boulevard near the New- port-Irvine border. The ceremony to open the SI 0 mt I hon extension will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday near the new Jamboree Road overpass to the Corona del Mar Freeway. That's in Newport Beach. But what's in a name, anyway? Plenty, 1fthe flap over the Newport Freeway 1s recalled. When Newport Beach and ( osta Mesa went to war 10 May 1976, their battle was waged ovtr the simple pnnted name on a fret"way sign The battling ctt1es even took the matter before the sta te Assembly Way'> and Means Comm111ee Freeways 10 the state are normally named after the ctty 1n which the) terminate -a sore spot for Costa enthusiastic about the prOJCCt despite mixed reviews ftom commuters. While acknowledsini some oper- at1onaJ problems, Sharon Greene. transportallon comm1ss1on prO)CCt director, has repeatedly told cnllcs that while mod1ficat10• may be made, the aicncy 1s not g.!Vtng up on the car-pool lane project. The Oran~c County Transpor- tallon Comm1ss1on opened the car- pool lanes Nov. 18 to dnvers wuh one or more passengc'5. The 90-day tnal period officially ends Feb I 0 The lane1, which run north aod south from the R1vmide to the San Dtcso freeways, were carved from lhe inside median and by SQUCC'Zllll \he rcmam1na six lanes doW?l to 11.(cet in wtdth. Double yeUow hoes separate the commutet lane from geoeraJ traffic. Three to four exit and entranoe points arc designated by broken while lines on each ude. Up to half of the car-pool lane ueen ignore rules for usmg the ~ne. Pleue Me CAJl-POOL/ A2) Hodel to\unveil plans on opening coast to drilling Action should not h inde r talks over- . picking drilling.sites By ROBERT HYNDMAN Olh0.-.,"94 ..... U.S. lntenor Secretary Donald Hodel will announce plans Thursday to open vast areas off Cahfomia·s coastl1hc for 011 and gas explorauon amid reports that the much-coveted parcels off the Orange Coast might be protected. Hodel's announcement 1s the first step LO offenng specific leases to 011 companies for dnlhng. lntcnor of- fiClals say. Hodel will bnef members of Con- gress on Thursday about the stepS that will take place over the next two years leading up to awarding dnlhng leases to otl companies A formal "call for information," tnV1llng 011 comparucs to tell the federal government where they would like to drill. 1s expected to be issued early next week. according to William • Schreiber. aide to Rep. Robert Badham. R-Newport Bcacb. During the same penod, the public 1s in vited to submit proposaJs on which areas should be off hm1ts to dnlling. Hodel met wtth an 18-member team of congressional negotiators SUSAN HOWLE TT Focus ON THE NEws Mesa Cll) offi cials who found the end of the Newport Freeway a1 their doorstep Costa Mesa C ll) Councilman Rob- ert Wilson argued at the time that the (Pleue eee CORONA/ A2) Tuesday and reassured them that this ,.cek's action should not hinder discussions over which areas wtll ultimately be opened.!Q.c.drilling. • "The wont from Hodel's staff is· that this 1s a very preliminary first step and shouldn't mterferc Wlth the current negollattons," Schreiber said. "The um1ng 1s unfortunate because It does look la.kc a slap m the W:c of the negouators, but 1t really isn't. He wants talks to conunue." With the cxp1rauon of a federal moratonum that protected much of Cal1fom1a's offsho~ areas, Hodel 11 required by law to submit a five-year plan for oil and gas exploratJon. The plan will govern the lntenor Dcpanment's offshore leasing policy from 1987 to 1992. It includes not only California waten. but offshore areas near Alaska. Washington. Or- egon and the East Coast. and m the Gulf of Mexico. After seelung comment from the pubhc and the oi.J LOdustry, the lntenor Department will compile a mapped r roposal on which offsho~ tracts wit be offered for lease. Hodel's leasing plans arc then subject to public comment and full cong.rcss1onal review. "'This 1s by no means a ume for pa.n1c "Schrc.iber s~ud. ··There Y.111 be ample opportumt1cs for public input and negot1at1ons. ·· Richard Charter. a lobby1s1 rtp- (Pleue eee OFP'SBOJUt/ A2) English teachers petition for help By G. JEANEITE A VENT Of -0.-., ..... 8WI Comics BS Death Notices 07 Entertainment B3-6 Food C1-8 Convicted protesters banned from hotel Mo~ than 30 high school English teachers showed up at the Irvine school board mttung Tuesda" ~k­ ing rehef from 68-hour worl weeks and large classts T cacher-, asked lhe board to pro' 1dc eal'h of In toe's lhr« high '>lhools ,.11h a suhsmute tCalhcr two to three da\' J '-"eek )(J the\ '-"Ould hc1,e more lime 10 che-c·k their \ludcnl\' "'nting progrc\~. Fun & Games 04 Horoscope , 04 Ann Landers 04 Mind & Body B 1-2 Opinion AB Paparazzi B 1 Police Log A3 Public Notices 07 Sports 01~ Television B6 Weather A2 Judge Carter challenging Rep.Dornan By LISA MARONEY Of .... Dellf ...... .., Orange County Supcnor < ourt Ju'dge David 0 . Carter left the bench Tuesday to begin campa1gn1ng against ll .. s Rep. Robcn Doman, R· , Garden Grove. Prom1s1ng a retum to old-style campaigning. Carter said he plan 10 win Doman's scat throuah mott on not money The 41 -ycar-old Demo- crat said he w1ll godoor-to-door m the 18th Con~rc 1onaJ D1stnct la ten1n1 to people\ conetrn'l and sohc111ni \Ole."\ "I'll he walking four to five hours a dny You're going to see very httlc mctttna 1n hack rooms," ,.1d Caner 1n announ 1n1 h1o;cand1dM:y T ~sday 1n nta An. In fact . the cnmmal tn I JUd&c accomph~hcd what fow non-1ncum· bent'I have been abk to do He quahfied for the ballot by gathenn1 (PleaM eee C ARTER/ A:l) By STEVE MARBLE Of IN 0....., Net 8teilt Ten anu-nuclear protesters con- victed Tuesday for blocking the dnveway ofa Costa Mesa hotel where delegates to a defense conference were staying were ordered to stay out of the hotel when delegates return this month for the annual conferenc:e. Some of the act1 v1sts. though, said they intend to return to the Weslln South Coast Plaza Hotel for a Feb. 28 candlelight vigil protesung the 1986 Winter (onlCrencc of Aerospace and Electronics Systems. The grou p of protesters was lOn· v1cted late Tuesday by a Harbor Mun1c1pal Court JUr)' which de· liberated less than two hours before reaching a dcc1s1on. Each protester was charged with a single count of obstructing a dnve- way, a misdemeanor that cames a maximum sentence of six months 1n jail and $500 in fines. Judge C hristophe r Strople sentenced nine of the activists to one )ear of 1nformaJ probation. 40 hours of communlly st"rv11:e work and ordered all to stay ou t of the hotl·l tor a year The I 0th defendcnt. Manon Pa ck. 39. of Yorba Linda. asked that her scntenctng be postponed until Fnday so she could argue against the order to stay out of the hotel In all. 44 people we~ arrested last Februar} during an organi zed blockade of a bus carrying delegate from the hotel to the arms conference at Manne Corps Air 1auon El Toro ..., ..... ,.... .. '--,.... Police dt•erted traftlc from nooded MGtb· U aurf, borne by blab tldea, waabed OYer'T· bound lane of Pacific Cout RJ.thway today foot berm• at Bolu ~hlca State Beacb. Most ol the act1\.1~" pleaded guilt' to obstructmg a dnvewa~ and ,.erl' fined But 1 I.of t he protc\tcn dcndcd 10 go 10 tnal to figh t the charges on .i ~efensc built around the theof) that the blockade was aimed at C'Om- mumcaung world peace and no1 at mterfcnng ,.11h dclcptes The group dubbed tt~lf the "l"J- CON 11 . but one of the defcnden" faikd 10 sho"' up for the tnal "'hllh openedJate la t v.cek Ot-putv Dmnct .\ttome) t..cll\ (Pleue eee-PROT ESTERS / A2) "-ann Ma ... cr. chairwoman of l n1 \Cr'itl\ High x ·hool\ English depart men1 ..aid Englt~h teachers are faced "'1th tremendous rcspons1b1ht1e\ Rill Honig. \late supenntendent of publtr 1nstruc11on I'> asking that students "'nte e'en da\ she said · · "-l' "' an 1 1 o fu If 111 our rt''>pons1h1ht1e\ hut ,.e ha'e a prob- lem .. \.1a\cr c;.a1d Student-to-teachcr (Pleaae eee gNQLISH/ A2) Wa ves stop traffic; PCH closed near Bolsa Chica beach By ROBERT BARKER 'UJ'\'f\ ,,.,, .11 Bol'-1 < hH a \tat,· Be1\\·h °'-°""',.....,. " ...i1d 1. rt'"''"' 111 tx· "'orlin~ thr,1ugh~1ut lhe Jin ,,, rt''itore a n<'"' Ho-4-to.-.i Th<' Pacific Ocean ,.a,h('(1 1"<'1 h<'rm ta h.tmcr ~t"'('t'n thl' hca h man-made sand b:amc"' 11 Rol-.;1 ~nJ ro.ld 1 \h1ca tafe Rt ch earl\ 1<~.t' .1n,1 .\ h 11.h tidr ,11 l'I l<'.:t ,, lori~ "" ~I \pla~hed onto all lour lane' ol p,,, 11i, r-4., a -n T huN1:t\ · "-r arr M'fl"\1 · C~ \ H11h"''' 1n lo"'·h1n' \t"< lt1'n' "t? n<'"' rrnhlrm' l llumr' \:ltd .. of Hunt1naton fka h -...131r , """'' al\<1 ~•II tl(' ~nrl11n 10 Thc "'atrr P''"'Cn"d h' '1 'Mou' , ll•Jr \Ol mi an,1 ~•tt'f off tht htl yelc \Urt and high t1dc\ hc'~.m t" 'rn" tr. 11\ ,\I tht· he: 'h p. 1 l o'er m thr "Ont' · arr a ,,t 1hr '" H l hu11w' '1:11'1 ~~' h l"l'O\tOn fmm nonh ot C1olden~t'\I \\rnue ,h,1nh th" m11rn111tt\ 11Jnl .tl't1on didn't txtort ti a m .1p!)('.u 111 ht· \t'nnu' Ru1 he id that The water and "MlnJ 11 , "'""''t ""11h the<~ c.rn hA' httn r1t1na a,.a) at the 1t 'ilo~ momma tn101, < >nt' 'h1in 0<-lll h Im 1hc1111 a "<' t and a h•lf It'' 'itl't'tCh of the Cl\I ~1und 1,tne\ IA>,l\ \,IU"4"d a hU (' hok of IOOUI Ont p1m:hed oil a\ a hulllfo1r1 pu,hc.t quant't mite nl•at Rntroom 2' north \Ond ,,11 thr \lrfft 1 "''' ro1hu·rnen l)f t<l\.la\ •, 'p1llo"rr J11"('\ trd dn' rf°' •tr11un11 1h , k.rn ur Otht'r l•tll, al\ \ltd ~ach r on arta Jl""t' ha' hc'rn 1l('('umn1 1mmrd11tJ I ( hu\ l l hurn1·' 1n.11ntroand' (Ple&N .-e HJOllWA1' /A.2) , AJ .. Orange Coat DAil. Y PILOT I Wednesday, Februa~ 6, 19$0 ~Coloi-Purple,' 'Africa' each earn 11 Oscar nominations BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -"rhe Color Purple." a drama about a battered woman's journey from sub- mt 1on to tndepc:ndcnc.c tn the rural South, and "Out of Afnca," a roman- tic moment '11 the life of a Danish novelist, each earned 11 nominations today for the ~8th Academy Awards. "Pnzz1's Honor," the bitter com- edy o( a lovesick Mafia hatman, and "Witness," a Police chase against a backdrop of Ami~h farm country. foUowcd with eight nominal.ions apiece. All four top nomanets were con· tenders for best picture, along with '"Kiss of the Spader Woman," the story of a homosexual pnsoncr living out his fantasies by telling his cell mate .the plots· of old B-mov1es. Nominees for best actor of 1985 were Harrison Ford of "Witness:• Jack Nicholson of "Priz.zi's Honor," James Gamer of ··Murphy's Ro- mance." Wilham Hurt of"K1ss of the Spider Woman." and Jon Voight of "Runaway Train." Whoop1 Goldberg. the ~tandup comic making her film debut, was nominated for best actress an "The Color Purple .. Al~o nominated were previous Oscar winners Anne Ban· croft for "Agnes of God," Jessica Lange for "Sweet Dreams.'' Meryl Streep for "Out of Afnca" and Geraldine Page for "The Tnp to Bounttful. .. Page, 61 . has been nomi- nated eight times and has never won. Don Ameche whose film career began in 1936. finally made the Oscar race as support a ng actor an "( ocoon" at the age of7Q Also nominated were Klaus Mat1a Brandauer for "Out ot Mnca," William Hickey for "Pm.n's Honor." Roben louja for "Jasacd Edge," and Eric Ro'&rts for "Run- away Train." Margaret A very and Oprah Win- frey. both of "The Color Purple," appeared among the nominees for supporting actreu along with An- jelica Huston. who was directed by her father, John Huston. 1n "PriLLt's Honor." Also 10 the race were AmY. Madigan for ··Tw1ee an a L1fet1me · and Meg Tally for "Agnes of God." All fi ve are first-tame no~1nces. In the race for best d1rect1on were two classic filmmakers· Huston. 79, for "Priui's Honor," and Akara Kurosawa for "Ran." The academ) voters also nominated Argentan1an Hector Babenco for "Kiss of the Spider Woman." Australian Peter Weu for "Witness." and American Sydney Pollack for "Out of Afnca " The best d1rectton category offered a surpnsc: Steven Spielberg, the all· time money-makang director was not named for his most amb1t1ous drama, "The Color Purple." Spielberg was out of town and no t 1mmed1ately avaalablC' for comment. said a spokeswoman an his office The nom10ees for best forc1in language film were .. The Official Story" from Argentana: "Angry Harvest," West Germany: "Colonel Redl." Hungary; "3 Men and a Cradlt." France; and ··When Father Was Away on Busmess.". Yugoslavia. Although Kurosa"'a was nomi- nated as best director. ··Ran" wa\ 1nehg1ble 1n the forcigr1-language category because 1t was not nomt· nilled by Japan. Pop st.ar uonel Richie captured a nomination for best song with his "Say You, Say Mc," from "White Nights." Richie was also named for co-wntinf lyrics to "Miss Cclu:'s Blues (Sister)" from "The Color Purple." Other songs nommatod: "Power of Love" from "Back to the Future;" "Separate Lives" from "White Nights" and "Surprise; Surpri~" from "A Chorus Lane." Other nominations included: Original screenplay-"Back to the Future," Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale; "Brazil," Terry Gilliam, Tom Stoppard, Charles McKeown; "The Official Story," Luis Puenzo. Aida Bortntk; "The Purple Rose of Cairo," Woody Allen; "Witness," Earl W. Wallace and William Kelley (screenplay) and KclJcy. Wallace and Pamela Wallace (story). Screenplay adaptation -"The Color Purple," Menno Meyjes; "Kiss of the Spider Woman." Leonard Schrader; "Out of Afnca.'' Kun Luedtke, "Priui's Honor," Richard Condon. Janet Roach; "The Tnp to Bountiful," Horton Foote. The nominees an 22 categories were announced at the Academy of Mo- tion Picture Arts and Sciences head- quarters here. Marc h 18 as the deadline for voting. The Oscars will be announced from the stage of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the Los Angeles Music Center March 24, wnh ABC again telev1s1 ng. CORONA DEL MAR FREEWAY FINISHED ... From Al signs should not sa} "Newport Free- way" when the road ac:tuall} leads to Costa Mesa. "Sance Newport Beach dcc1<1cd It did not want a freewa), it's only proper that 11 be named for Costa Mesa," Wilson said. "If we have to suffer with that homble thing that ends ln our ctt>, the least we can do as have 11 named after Costa Mcc;a " However, Costa•Mesa won out 1n that Cll)·t0-C1ly quarrel. now proudl) d1spla}1ng its name an bold green and whtte signs that cost ta~pa)ers $150.000. The Corona del Mar frecwa) s1gni. ma y suffer the s.ame fa te a>the spiked Newport Free"'a' markings Plans an 'le"'port Beach include the construction of the San Joaquin Halls Freewa\. a 'trctch of roadw:l\ dest~ed to ease traffic conge'illOn b\ linking the end ot the ( orona del \1ar Freev.a)' to the San Diego Freewa) at Crown Valle) Park'>'a) 1n Laguna Niguel, according 10 Newport Beach Cit) Engineer Oon Webb Ina 11all). the ( orona Cfcl Mar Freewa) was to t:nc.i 1n the c:1t~ o f Corona del \far. hut that 1\ no longer 1n the plan. Not uni)' docs tht."( orona del Mar Freewa .. end at the ""cwport Beach-In 1ne border but with the extentton of the \an Joaquin Hill' Comdor. 11 "'111 h\ pas'> < orona dl'I Mar altogether ··1would1mag1nc 11 would ncntu ally be called thl' ~an Joaquin Hilh Freewa) " Newport Bcalh pubhl works spokesman Don Webb said Officials from the state Depart- ment ofTransportallon and Newport Beach acknowledge that ihe name as 1t stands is not filling for a free way that does not amvc at its said destmat1on But no dec1c;1on has been made to change the tlllc ··1 haven't heard ufa name lhange discussed," said Newport Beach Pub- lic Works Director Ben Nolan Nolan said the San Joaquin Hills Freev.a\ ma) be a more proper name Don Durensk). a~s1stant transpor· tauon engineer for Caltran'>. said he had "no idea""' h" the frecwa\ he and his crew ha' c almost completed bears the name of ( orona del Mar "I ~uess the name wa<. adopted "'hen 1t "'a' lirst planncu to go there · Durcnsky said. The contract bid for the last stretch of the freeway began on Dec. 15, 1983, Durensky said. It is the extension just west of Campus Drive to MacArthur Boulevard. Perhaps there 1s just an obsession wt th naming things in the Southland, suggested ctty spokesman Duane Munson. "There's a name ident.ificat1on rn Southern California," Munson said. The San Diego Freeway, the Santa Ana Freeway, the Garden Grove Freeway -most call them by name. "Typically. Southern C~lifomians label thtngs with names," Munson s.aad." "Everywhere else. it's easy. They 1ust use the numbers." HIGHWAY FLOODED •.. From A l north of the-H untingtnn Hcach pac-r and in the \un'>l't Bealh .trC'a Toda)·~ tidal act!\ 1t1e<. rc\ol\l' mcmorie\ of hea') <.torm• and high "'ater that 1nundaied Pacific < oa\t H 1gh"' a~ in 1 •1M l do\ang the -1-m ale \lrCh.h het''t'l'n <iukkn Vv c•11 .\\.l'llUl' and V.arncr \\t•nuc for Jhuut tivl' V. l'eks <)urg1n11-"'~1cr pmpclll'U h\ high tides and bnsk wmds buried the road under thousands of tons of sand an late January three years ago. It wa., reopened for o nly about a mo.nth when bag waves rolled across Bolsa ( h1ca State Beach and the road again on March I A policeman who was direcung traffic at the scene toda> descnbcd the h1ghwa) a~ the "Sahara Desert " OFFSHORE OIL ANNOUNCEMENT ... From Al resenung Orange C ount) \ rna ... tal cn1cs 1n the offshore oil debate ..aid this week that water\ otT the local coastline arc e'pected to dra"' ··a high degree of mdustr) interest " "The 011 1ndustf) know\ prett~ accurate!) where the~ e"<pect tu find oil and. unfonunatel). 1r, on a colhc;1on cour\e with Orangt· < oun- t) \a1c.i ( haner -...ho alc;(1 1c; paid to represent SC\.eral other rnmmun111e'> along the Cahforn1a coas1l1nc ~chre1ber \atu reports <.ould not he confirmed thl\ morning that ~outhcrn C ahfornaa tral tc; would hi.· e\d uded from the pl;rn tn he un,,.ctlcd Thursda} Published rcpons th1'> morning said Hodel would consider leasing onl) an federal waters off Nonhern California. An lntenor Department offi cial said Hodel had "refined" the onganal plan and now "will defer the call for outhem Cahfom1a lease sale 95 for a fe w months.'' a newspaper account said. CAR-POOL LANE TEST EXTENDED ... From Al according to < altrJn\ .\' maO\ a\ -111 percen t of commutl'r-lane tln,er~ exit or enter the-lane improperf)' either by entering at an C\11 p.11n1 or vice versa or h\ lross1ng tht' \Cllow line ,1t "'Ill .\nd up 10 11 J>l'r\ent of drl\ er' in the lane are m'll•lTl\t\ without J pa\'>l'nger 1n their rar according to< altran' survq' To tn tn Iowa the\ 1ola11on ratl' on the lane'> < altranc, has dfndt."d to permndn,cr\ tt1l'rttl'f and exit at an' broken "'hate ltnl' -as the) arc no"' do1n~ an .. "'a' I he XfMl·l<>nt entranles and C'-11!> 1>.ill bl· ntrndcd b} another 500 feet n<.ept. near thl· \antJ .l\na Frccwa> ""here the wh11c line 1.1.ilf stretch for I k()<1 fel·t -.:11d r om I onunc puhltl affair\ offilcr li>r lhl tran.-,pona1mn u>mm1'>'>1on ( altran\ al"• propo\t'' an C\J)t'rl mcnt within an experiment in an eflort 10 kcl'P dn,cr~ on their uwn 'Ide ol thl' \cllo" line. he ..aid For a malc-and-a~halt ht:twefn \anta C Iara .ind ( hapman a'cnuc\. h1.ghwa) crew\ wall paint a blue line to separate the carpool lanes from general purpose lanes. On the northbound side. short. flexible pylons will be installed alon$ the blue lane whale southbound will sport reflectors The idea is to get dnveP.;' attention and ti) to keep rhem from zi pping ID and out of the car-pool lanes. Fonune said. lncrea~cd police patrols are also planned to ensure compliance. Car- pool lane v1olauons come w1th a $52 citation STERS BANNED FROM HOTEL ... From Al .\.1acEachern '>.!Id 1uror\ told her thr' were 'i}mpathctH 111 the protc\ICr\ but bchc,cd tht•\ "'l're Jl,Ulh' Macf.achern \,tut 11ie acti' l\l\ prt· mary gnal for K01n~ tn lnctl was pubht;tl\ "fhc\ cam,· 111 gl't puhltt 1t\ Jnd cxl)Osurr and I \Uppmc thn got 1t MacEachern ';11d adding one iuror told her the defendcnt'i 'iccmcd to he "~ad1ng from a '(rlPt'° '-'ht·n the' MAIN OFFICE l "-,.,.. n,. ' ......... took thl· 1.1. 1tnl''>'> \land The proset utor said thl' c;cntencr ""as lighter than -.he hoped. fhr actl \.l'it\ 'ihould have tx·cn ordered to .-.ta) oil all hotel propen> in<:ludang th<' dnv~wa} 1n~tcad of JU'>t being harrt'd from t·n1cnng the hotel. \he \did "The hotel and its gue,tc; \houldn't ha\c to pul up "'nh thl\ .. car after 'ear .. she '\aid Defendants in cluded Pack. Ken- neth .o\ndrew Bailor. 27, Garden Grove; Linda Jean Banez. 45, Bellflower; Timothy Brooks Cooper. 33. Anaheim: Elizabeth Mary Crawford, 2J. Santa Ana; Thomas DobRefOccke, 32, Costa Me$a, Vt· v1an Mane Jojola, 24, Santa Ana; MarCreta Joflenscn, 441 Garden Grove. Cathennc Ann Ridder, 25. Pasadena and John Walker hon. 4J. Orange. Dally Piiot O.llvery It Quaranteed Justcall 642-6086 ~ -O•r F•-oe; II 1CN 00 ro()1 ~avt y0<>1 P.1111' by ~ IQp,._ t •' 09'(1(t 70M 1~0 t""1 COPY 0t ,,.. ·•.O V. hat do )OU ltke about 1he Daily Pilot? What cl"n t .ou like" (all the numher above and your mt\\agc will be recorded · tran~nbcd and de· II\ ercd to the appropnate ednor '>elll'Oly -,g..,-a.y I '°" .,., ~o• .,...,.. ,,,.,. c«iy 1>r 1 • m 1· a• b'Otore l I) I "' l"Q yOU• cOOy ,.111 l>4' .,. .... .-i ,... • ... """ ,. .. , , .. , ~ ,. ,,. • I ,_......,., ..... ,, .,........, ... ,, ... ,,'JI• ;A ' ~Y ,,.., .. ~,br', .,. t f;'t'rflll "" •r ' if;: fhr \.lme 24-hour ansv.enna service may be u\Cd 10 rec.:ord lette" to the editor on any topic ( ontnhutors to o ur ~ttcr~ column must include their name aad telephone numbet for vtnficatton Clrculatlon T1l1~t ''"CM.J It.~ ~,, .... e-fJtf.(J ',.,,f; V• --, .... I I~ "'"°'Y' f "f 1)1 °<<1 l><oC..V J L I ' "' <r• ... .. 8•y !' ~ .. n ~ U ,#; C<'i•t• U,.<Wi T _. •• ~ '-. Tells us v.hat'~ on \.our mind VOL 71, NO. 38 • ' - New storm to bring cool winds An OCMn ttorm bearing down on the Peclllc Northwest today ahould aldeawlpe Southern Callfornla with cool, bluatery wind•. but tklM w.re expected to remain moaUy clear. Atter..ettect1 of two earller storm• continued to be felt as bO•ters moved larger ..,....., out of Santa Batbar1 Harbor to avoid grounding on aand pli.d up by heavy turf. Along the Orange Coa1t II wtll be fair tonight 1nd Thursday wttt) lnc:reaalng gusty west to northwest wind• 15 to 30 mph developlng by Thursday. Lowa tonight In the ~Oa and lower 50s Cool« Thurtd1y. HIQha 67 to 67. U.S. Temps aa s9 eo " aa 34 13 eo 75 71 ro ,. 36 15 A n 12 33 35 n 18 49 7:) 49 39 38 78 M « 35 42 33 73 55 28 23 45 34 31 19 79 83 33 21 25 ..OS 45 25 74 57 57 52 73 44 so 21 3• 32 48 47 37 34 77 •2 •3 40 32 ,()4 17 S8 42 40 53 25 35 33 31 30 27 28 ea 41 eo se 27 Ot 21 26 47 24 30 29 43 29 40 2t •• 28 88 70 73 69 45 11 73 82 79 49 37 23 48 38 15 .. Ullle l'lodt Louie .. lubl>Oelt ~pllle Mlern19Nch Midtno-0-. Mllweul< .. M~SI PllUI NMIMl!e -°"*"'· -YOo'k NOt!Qll&,Ve Olllalloma Ctty Oma/>e Ori.noo PNleOelc>hl• Plloenl• Pltt•butgll POfllend,Me POfllend.0< Pr- 33 32 )I 29 74 st 75 63 43 36 M 44 89 50 38 33 IO ~ « 33 71 S3 40 37 1 ••~~ "'ONTS WtTm -ColO~ <;t>o ... e•s Aa.r> Fvroes S"o"' Occluded.,,... St11>on11v a..p ... -w .. ,,... ~e "°"" s (\t(>• ·c~c. 34 6 Calif. Temps Senta I.I•"• 83 35 S&nta Mon!CI " 53 '° 41 S3 44 40 n 63 43 35 2t 48 32 S3 38 90 S7 eo &a 48 33 72 'IO 113 70 28 24 S3 44 75 81 32 29 37 33 l'4 25 49 39 aa 48 63 59 48 37 82 « 37 31 lilgll 10W 10< 24 !'<>"'I tnOlflg I I 5 Stoc'11on ht.oe \I tl'-Y 'r'OMtlllta \lty 31 19 d 29 ::::rClty Reno ~ St Louie St Pe1•Tam11• s.11 Lake Clly Sen Antonio S.,. Juell,P A St Ste Merle SMttle Shi'~ Sioux f"ell• Spohne SyrllCUM Topell1 Tuaon TulM WMlltngton WIC:htla w111t .... eerr• Extended FAii FrlOey VWllble ctouc.,,.._ 511- U«lll)' -Sunaay Hight 82 to 83 Lowe35 lo4S pm Ape>leVelley S8 Baawalleia !>J Bartlow es a-.mon1 53 81g 8MI 39 81111\op 62 Blytl'wt 71 c.1e11na ee Eu•ell• 55 Fr.no se Lancalllf 58 LOfl9 BNcll 99 Loe A~-76 Maryl lie 01 Monro"'• 73 Monte«*IO n Mont~ S8 Ml Wit-. "' _ ... 87 ~a..c:n ... Oaktana e1 Ontario 68 P ... a ..... 12 PMOAoelel ~1 R!Verelde 87 R.a Blun 59 R.owooaC11y 82 R.ru> •7 Sac••"*'10 eo Sell nu 59 S&n 8ern1101no 97 San Gab<\el 1l 9.,, Olego 64 Sen F rancteoo 63 39 4e 40 Surf Report 37. 27 33 LOCllTIOM em '""" 52 11unllngton llMc.11 2-4 ,.,, 55 River Jell(.~ , .... , ... 45 40tt> Street ~ 2-4 ,.,.. 48 22naStr•I~ 2-4 ,.,, 4 t &ait>oa w.oge 3-4 ,.., 48 LaQUtll 8Mcl\ 2-4 ,.., 52 SanC-1• S.5 good l9 wat., 1emp S9 •2 Swell dtreellon WMI •5 43 .)() Tides •8 •7 47 TOOA'I' •• S.Cond lllflh I 12 pm 37 44 TltU'llOAY 35 F1rll IOW I 301 m 23 40 Fifi! NQll 8 48e m 86 37 S«Xllld '°"' 2 llp m ·1 5 45 secona "lfl" 1 •7pm 4 0 32 42 Sun Mt• loday et 5 27 p"' .•• at 8 •8 39 1 m and Mtt again n1u.-.day a1 6 28 47 pm 43 Moon Mii IOCley 11t t 52 Pm .... !>J Tllu<lday el 5 17 a m atlO Mtl again at 48 25apm CARTER SEEKS TO UNSEAT DORNAN.~. From Al more than 4,000 signatures -more than enough to waive the $749 filing fee. Because of his judicial position. Caner could not raise campaign funds as part ofhis.cxploratory efforts in deciding whether to challenge Doman. But, Caner, a Vietnam veteran and former prosecutor, has been promised financial support from the national Democratic Party as well as the county Dcmocratte Foundation. Doman. who kn ocked Democrat Jerry Patterson out of the 38th Congresstoanl District seat in 1984, is a n;iaJor target of the Democrats this year. But before Carter can take on Doman. he will an all probability have to survive a primary race against Assemblyman Richard Robinson. D· Santa Ana. Robinson announced plans to challenge Dornan tn December. He as expected to make a formal an· nouncement on whether ht! wall run for the ~at toda)'. Carter shied awa) from talk mg about his possible Democratic challenger Tuesday. Saying he hoped to avoid a pnmary fight, Carter also noted that "I've never entered an) contest be at a race or an)th1ng else wnhout the expectation of winning." As for Doman, Carter questioned has credibility and quality as a leader Referring to Doman's claims to m1htary service and his well-publi- cized tie-pulhngepisode with another congressman, Carter maintained the incumbent 1s riot worthy of his position. In walkrng the dJstnct. Caner said he was impressed "wtth the gro'>'tng unease" people felt about Doman. That unease and Carter's con- servative attitudes should bnng many Republicans over to his su.k. &aid John Whitehurst, execut1've di· rector of the Democratic Foundation of Orange County. "l thtnk Carter 1s exactly the type of Democrat who will attract a lot of Republican support, he said. But. although he ma) ~~c.DD­ servat1ve on some issues lake cnmc. Caner ma1nta1ned he also has liberal views v.hen It comes to thangs lake fu ndtng for education "I ma}" he liberal 1n .-,omc area~. conservative 1n others vlt deix-nd\ on what "'c talk Judge David Carter about." Carter said The J!!th D1stnc1 mcludcs C1arden Grewe. Buena Park. Stanton. parts of Wc.,tmmster Santa >\na and Midway Cth and most of ( emtos an Los .\n~cle\ Count} Caner. a Llgun::i Beach resident. as an the prOCC\S of mo ... 1ng 10 Garden Gro'c ENGLISH TEACHERS ASKING RELIEF .•. From Al ratios far exceed the 20..to-I rec- ommended b} the National Council of Teachers. Dons Blake. spokeswoman for Woodbridge High School's English teachers. said, "It as not unusual to face 38 to 39 students at the begmning of the semester." After schedules arc juggled. "1he number doesn't come down much farther." Blake said all essays that students wnte are read and returned. She sa1d 1t may take six to eight weeks before the essays arc returned. however. "We have an obligation to be prepared for each class each day. We have time to teach it, but we do not have time to correct 11." "Your students are rece1vang feed· back," she said. "This is a labor o f love. a free donation of our ume, but we've reached the breaJong point. We have fam1h es and ohltgat ion., to meet. too" Tamma Montgomery, -;peaking for English teachers at Irvine High School. said a permam·nt subs11tutc teacher would allow the time to grade papers. Esttmatmg that 11 would cost the d1stnct between $20,000 to $30.000 10 provide a substitute two times a week at each of the schools. Mont- gomery said the add1t1onal help "would have a real impact onreduc- mg our stress levels and"helping our students." Montgomery said the Fullerton school dastnct has approved SI malhon over 10 )'cars toward reduc- ing class sizes and the Newpon-Mc\a Unified School Distnct has allotted S350.000 to hire teachers at the JUn1or high and high school le vel Don Chadd. president of the IP inc Teachers' Assoc1a11on. said there 1~ '>)'mpathy among all teachers for English teachers. "Ma.ah and science teachers can oiler obJeCtn·e tests" which can be scored castl) but English teachers cannot. he said Chadd said hanng subs is a quirk· ti~ solution "That de>e"sn't mean it's not good. but 1t could be better" Dean Waldfogel. the Irvine school d1str1ct's assistant superintendent of·· instruction and cumculum, said the district 1s watching a bill proposed by state Sens Gary Hart. D-Santa Barbara, and Manan Bcntcson. R- Newpon Beach The bill would appropriate $60 million t0ward rc- ducmg da'i'> '>llCS beginning an 1987-88 ..__SH UTTERS SPECIALLY • Capture the outdoors and create comfort with these cu stom moveable shutters in the colors, sizes and styles you want! Ii • • • Boys, Girls Club sets HB auction The Boys and Oirls Club or H untinston Valley wtll .h~ld i~s 11th . annual auction Fnday at 1l$ adm1!l1Strauve tud1encc, 19699 Education Lane, Hunt1nit~n Beach, wbcrt donations of merchan- dise, services, tnps. etc., are beina received. The fund-~isina event. pnced at S25 per person. Will bqin at 6:30 p.m. with cocktaJls and hors d'~uvrcs. Dinner is scheduled for 8 p.m. with ~he aucuon ~nning at 9. Those wishing to donate items or services should call Marianne DuBois or Thor Dykstra at 964-8508. Metal• aemmar In NB _, The Newpon lkacb Parks. Beaches and Recrtation Depanment wiJl offer a gold and silver seminar for three consecutive Thursday evenings beginning this Thursday, in Room I of the Oasi~ Center. Partici pants will learn the basic fundamen1als of gold and silver investment at the sessions. scheduled from 7 10 I 0 p.m. College instruc1or Rick O'f'.allon will conduct the seminar. which 1s priced at $27. Call 644-3151 for rcgJstrauon 1nfonna11on. Chlroprac tlc care dlscuued Chiropractor Linda Wilkinson will speak on holistic health through chiropractic care Thursday at 7: 15 a.m. al Coco's Restaurant. 18380 Brookhurst • t., Fountain Valley. The talk 1s pan of the regular program of the Hunungfon Beach South chapter of the Women's Business Ne1work. Guests are welcome and further informauon 1s available at 968-7843 or 496-6627 Parllamentar1ans to meet The Theta Untt of1he California Assoc1auoo of Parliamentanans will hear a talk on .. D1mens1ons"' by Mana Batcheller a1 its regular meeting Thursday at the Town and Countf) Bank. 12535 Seal Beach Blvd., Seal Beach. The program 1s scheduled for I 0 a.m. and as open to all those interested an the study of parliamentary procedure. Martlal arts eiplalned The film .. Masters of the Mania! Arts" will be shows Fnday from 1 10 9 p.m. in Science-Math Room 313 ofSaddleback College in Mm1on VieJO. Wayne Toursta. an author of a1k1do books and fourth-de~ec black belt a1k1do instructor at the college, wll l conduct the program, assisted by police officer David Dye. The fee 1s S3 or $2 for groups of IO or more Call 582-4646 for details Pregnancy workshop slated Pregnancy in the '80s will be 1he topic of a free workshop Fnday from 7 10 I 0 p.m. an Aud1tonum A at Saddleback Community Hops1tal in Laguna Hills. The program will include seminars. exh1b11s and 1nd1v1dual consultations for couples expec11ng a baby or planning a family. Call 1he Women's Health Center at 770-3700 for funher 1nforma11on An Invitation: Attention organization preslden111 and sec- retaries· We want to help make your upcoming events. meetings, seminars and fundr11aers suc- cessful Send brief announcements including time place. cost (ti any) and a phone number tor addlllonal 1nlormauon to Bulletin Board Oa11y Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Repons ol your club or organizallon·s activities -like community service projects or election ol officers -should be directed to the Communtly News Editor at the same address Non-returnable black and while photographs are we~ome CALENDAR \Vednesday,Feb.5 • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Redevelopment Ageacy. City Council Chambers. 11 Fair Dnvc. • 1 p.m .. Coast Comma.nJty College District Board of Trustees. D1stnct Board Room. 1370 Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa. • 7· 30 p m.. lrvlne Commaalty Services Commission. C11y Council Chambers, 17200 Jam- boree Blvd T hu rsday, F eb. 6 • 7.30 p.m , lrvlne Plulllog Comml11ioa, Ctl} Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Bl vd. • 3.30 p.m. Laguna Beacb Opea Space Sabcommlttee, City hall conference room, 505 Forest Ave. 1 PoucE Loe ' -· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT tW Mldey, February 5, 1Ne * Aa County OKs 27 new jail employees ] -. Additional personnel will run 180-bed unit arybo~1na attMJamesA. Musick Honor b&tl mooeyandcomml W)' ~taCUOlta. Farm 10 El Toro. Suvlca t«bruaan1 will do uunaie lau. to be Constr Ct -d' d t 1 -t L J il Becaux pre.ln&I dewnees have the dry and other cleanup taW. u e J or e a nees a acy a fllht to post bail at aoy time, Theo Lacy When the new unit II compleie. Tbeo ---employees must now be able to proceu Lacy wtll house 740 pnsonen. County inmates 24 boun a day, Oates said in his officia11coosidcrlhecxtra l80bccbcndl "'""""'" '" <uf'f'1"";•"""' to mceuna an inmate limi1of1 • .00 • .mcb Cumntly, inmates~ released only at wtll be 1m~ at the main mm'• Jail By USA MAHONEY Ofh!Wly ......... Orange \oun1y )upervi.sors have a~ proved the htnng of 27 new employees to man a 180-bcdJail unu under construction at Theo Lacy Branch Jilli in Orange. Shenff·C.Or:oner Brad -Vates asked for S398,605 to hire fi ve lieutenants, 10 deputies, ~ght ca hiers and four '5Crv1~ 1echnic1ans to supervue and service the Worker injured new unit, which 1s scheduled for comple· lion next month . Theo Lacy Branch Jail bas tradat1onally housed 11)1nimum secunt) anmates. Bui. with the county under orders to reduce the prisoner population at its main Jail 1n Santa Ana. the brancn jail will now be used to shelter pre-tnal detainees. Sentenced muumum secunty inmates who no lonaer need to be near the couru in Santa Ana are being transferred to 1empor- County flre~htera u11 ... ·•: ap injured con•truction worker Juan Hernandez, 20", of Loe AngelM, alter he••• l owered by for klift from & grain elevator on Sau" Canyc-~ R"".u~ ln Im.ne that la be~ r averted into a hotel. E"•manoer wa... tuen to Weetern Medical Cent ... where he wu llated L · ai. iJle '"jndition Tueeday night . scheduled umes, a practice not permitted st.al'111\J 10 Apnl . wath pre-tnal detainees, he s&Jd. A U.S. Distnct Coun J~ ha1 been Th fi I watchina over countyj il opcrations..si.D e 1ve 1eut~nts to be hired_ will~ last Marth Wlleo he found supervilOf'a in rcsponstb!e. f~r e~ployce ~heclul1!"8 and contempt of a 1978 order to relieve other adn:umstranve duties, while the overcrowdina at the main jail an Suta depUtJCS will OVer1e( Operations ID the new Ana. unn. The Jail. rated for I 191 inmates. was Cash1en hlred will be spin between housins more than 2,000 pnsooen al the Theo Lacy and Musick fac1llUes handl111g ume of the contempt beanna. Mesa rejects plan to create new zone for mobile homes Split vote by council follows futile appeals from enantsofparks By TONY SAA VE ORA Of ... ewty ......... Costa Mesa has dropped a plan 1ha1 would have made 1t more difficult for mobile home park owners 10 convert their property to other uses. Despite the pleadings of park tenants. the City Council refused this week to establish a mobile home zone that would give the cny greater control over the 21 parks and trailer camps here The fac1h11cs, some established more than lhrtt dC?OldCS aJO, arc on land zoned lDdustnal. commeretal or mult1ple-fam1l) rcsiden11al. Jn nearly all cases. the parkc ri not match the density or other standard!> of the exiSJ1ng zoning. Owners seeking to COn\en •f.~ rropert~ now need a city cond1t1onal use permit which would !:>..! hard to deny 1f the proposed project meets the zonms, require- ments. cit) planner Perry VaJantine said Howe' er. city dec1s1on makers \l.Ould have more leewa)' in declining the con- versions 1f the parks were in a zone spec1ticall~ designed for mobile homes and trailer; \\ 1t~. <''>'3 Mesa land becoming more ' .ind mur. valuable. Cit) officials are • ... mcemed the lure of higher profits could n•omp1 owners to close some of the parks Ye• council members decided by a 3-2 vote Monda) that state and federal regulations arc enough 10 protect the 1.209 mobile homes and trailers 1n the city. >\ new state law requires owners to prepare a repon on the 1mpacu to rcsadents before a park can be closed. Furthermore, the lqislation allows local governments to requ1rt that ownen re- locate or reimburse the dtsplaccd rua· dents. Federal law calls for the tenants. who own their homes but rent their spaces from the parks. to be gjven adequate notice ofa conversion. Councilman Donn Hall said after Mon- da> 's la1c-01ght meeting that be voted against cstabfisb1ng a spcc1al zone because he was nervous about stanma on a road tha1 could lead to rent control. ..It's JUSt more erosion of the property nghts of the md1 vidual. Owners fear rent control wouJd be next and they'll start tu.king their fees,:· Hall said. Counetl members Dave Wheeler and Mary Hornbuckle supponed the mcasutt. i\t least elghl of the parks m Cost.a Mesa arc used b~ tratlers. more hke rccreauonaJ vehicles than the house-like mobile homes Brandon Rosenberg. owner of Tropic Trailer Ports on Ba> Street. conceded that some of the older trailer parks were established ··~me 20. 30 40 vcars ago .. as holding tanks until the propeny could be developed ·.• .. other l4.\CS Some council members were fearful that stne1er eon'e~1on rules would m- advcrtentl) ue Costa Mesa 10 some declininJI, trailer parks. Still, the disappointment this week was cv1den1 among mobile home and trailer residents who peuttoned the council. Most of them arc elderly people from the embattled Trader Town park. wbert residents are ftptmg over rule$ and rent increases cstabhshed by the new owners. "I wish I could say something eatthshak- ina, but I'm so tired and disgusted," Don Hunter, a spokesman for t.he residents. said Tuesday. ..I'm concerned about ' what's gomg to happen to these people. but I can't get through to the council io do anytlung about 1t" ........ .... ........................................................................................ ... Laguna council rejects claims over Coast High way accidents Uy LAURA MERK Of I~ Oolty Not Ii.It Laguna Beach's C ''' Counul has re- JCCled 1wo claims seeking i 6 m1lhon from the Cit\ .\ S) million and a -I million da1m. both alleging that the ul~ "'a" re~pons1h1le for traffic acc1denl'> on Paulic ( OJ'.>t Highway. were denied Tucsdav n1gh1 11n the basis that the h1gh"'a' 1, l·ontrolled b> the ~tate .. It would he nice 1f the torne)'> lnim Lo~ .\ngeles would find nut "iere (amen Shores 1s." said Councilman Dan l\.ennc\ 1n response 10 one of the claims for an accident that occurred JUSt south ot Corona del Mar. The $5 m1lhon chum was filed on behalf of Carolyn Edwards ol ~an Diego. Ed· wards received head and leg inJune\ ""hen the motorcycle on wh1l h ~he was a passenger was hit head·'" b\ a car on Pacific Coast Highway in count' temtof) The claim alleged that 1l' Cll) 1s responsible for the mamtenance signing and operation of the h1ghwa) a·nd sur- rounding propen} Edwards has also filed claims against Newport Beach. Corona del Mar. Seal Beach. Laguna Hills. Orange County and the state of Cahfomia in connection with the accident The amounl of those claims "'as not available early toda) The$ I million chu m was filed b" John \t1ehael Zinn of ,Laguna Beach' 1hree mon1hsafler he ran into a parked car on his b1c\cle. Zinn claimed he was forced ofTthe road by a car leaving a garage at Brook ~treet and Pacific Coast Highway on Oct. ~ No police repon was filed 1mmcd1ately aner the accident Zinn discovered he had a broken elbow a tier ~ 1s1ting a hospital later 1n the day Zinn tikd an accident report on Jan 9 His claim filed Jan. 10 said 1he locauon and design of the garage caused the acc1dcn1 In other actions the council • .\mended 1ts smokrng ordinance which affects onl )' restaurants. to require rcstauran1 owners to post a sign 1nd1caung· that a no smoking section is a' a1lablc. • Asked C1l} Manager Ken Frank to de' clop an ordinance 1ha1 would prohibit businesses from pu111ng signs on tall poles and 8J'e owners fi\C >ears 10 com pl) \I.1th the new regulations The ne1.1. ordinance will be sent to the Planning Commission for a pubhc hcanng. • .\dopted a resolution d~lanng .\pnl as the ell\·., .. .\ns Monlh ·· Ride cancels lecture at UCI -\ sold-out L'C In me lecture b) asironaut Sall\ Ride 1he first -\mencan woman in si:>ace has been canceled, campus officials saJd. UCI spokeswoman Elaine Beno said the Nauonal -'\cronauuc and Space 4.dmin1s-- 1rat1on has canceled all public appcaranc~ b~ astronauts 1h1s month because of the recent space shuttle traged~ In add1t1on. Ride \I.ho became the first A.mencan woman in space dunng a 1983 shuttle flight. has been named by President Reagan 10 a I :!-member comm1ss1on that will oversee an invcs11gauon oflast week 's e:\plos1on of the shuttle Challenger 1n \I, hach st'' en astronaut~ died Beno 'i81d tho:-.e \I, ho purchased ticket~ c.an obtain a refund b't' ma1lmg their tickets. names and addresses to Susan Anderson at the l C ll"\otne OffiCt' of Ans and LN"tures. 14~ A.dmin1stra11on Bu1ld- 1ng ln1ne (-\ ~~,I, Refund checks \houlJ ~ 1s~ut'd 1n ahout '"'O wc~d.~ -- Loan shark gets lOyearsin card club gambling sche~e By tbe Associated Prus LOS ANGELES -: .oan shark V1to Dominic Sp11lone was sentenced 10 I 0 years m federal pnson and fined $200.000 in connection with a scheme to make h1gh-1oterest loans to local card club gamblcri. "I have little doubt there was a consp1raq to extort loans at rate'> of hag.h interest." ll .S. District Judge Matt Byrne Jr said before sentencing Sp11lonc. 48. of Upland. who was convicted on s1m1lar charges 1n Chicago in 1971 ~p11lone ser•ed ti vc years of a I 2- vear ~ntence before being parol~ to I m A.ngcles. prosecutors said Bunttncton Bea~h Byrne also se ntenced Frank Serrao. 56, of Huntington Beach. John ClyJe i\bel. 41 , of Chicago. and Frank ( 11r11 .39. of Las Vegas. A federal JUf) con v1cted the fou r 111 October of loanshark a.~d rad.l·tl·c·r 1ngact1v1t) at the C'ahfom1a Bell< JrJ ( lub in 8<.'ll 1n the earl~ 1980s Borrowers who \.\Cl't' lace 1n n•pa' ing loans wer(' threatened \I.Ith broken bones and other hann. Jl cording to witness tcc.11mon~ anJ tape-recording\ from go' ernmenl au1honzed wiretap~ "Sp1llooe and perhaps other\ w(·r,· at the upper echelon of 1hc schcnw' and "the threat of 'wknc-<' "';i, poles and surfboards. valued at S:!. 738. from 1he Lineup Surfboard ~hop. 7272 .. tum 1 uesday An undetermined amount of JCW- elry was rcl)Qrted ~tc~len from a home an the 16600 hlod of Rhonr Tue~. y • .. • • • • n employee of a Jad. m the Boil Ski equipment valued at S ")()and •ti:staurant a1 the wrner ofSpnnadale S400 m motorcycle part~ were rt'-trcet and Edingt'r A' C'nuc told pol1("c ported ~tolen from th~ unlocked. lhat he w1tne ~d a burglar) at 11 prnge ol a home in lhc ~60 bloct.. ol ncarb)' Radio hack earl} 1oday EnaJnnd Sunda) Repons ,..,d he ~w 1wo white male• • • • • t! > 1 h1eve~ brukl' 1n1u an E:dingcr 'ma\h the front window. grab three or A v('nuc apartment T utS<ia) and re-four v1deocu~ttc rttorder<1 and fltt poncdly ,tole a $480 rv ~•and S400 '"a Dat un pickup truck Poli~e ~1d 1n ca\h five VC'R~ valued at $2.250 \lol'ft • • • taken A thief reported I~ \tok. n S800 t'llt sttrco from a white T oyou1 Cclica parked at lhl" Mcr>onntll OoulJ)as pl n1 T uc~t1n • • • RuraJa" rcpurh:dl' \toll' fi\h1 na • • • fh1eve~ who u1Cd a llas~ lUllcr 10 gain entry rcponedh ~tole a SI 00 portahlt rod10 from .i home 1n tlw 7~00 hlO< k t)I 'tut.. I ue \tla\ cenainl) an integral pan ot this consp1raq.'' Byrne $3td Blair \l.o atson. a special attorne) tor the l Justice CXpanment's Or· gan11ed Cnmc 1nke Force. said C\p1llone \I.as earning ahout S 16.000 a mon1h from h1\ \outh Fl Monte \\ h11lc\Jk grocen bu sine~~ when hC' ,1,1rk•d lending mone' .it c\lon1ona1l' rail'' tn gambkr. lh rne ~ntenccd "l'rrao to one ,ear 1n pmon and the 'car;' probation .\bet to ti' e \Car\ in pn'>on and ( nro hl l"'ll 'e:ir. in pn,nn and tiH \earc;' probatllln .\bcl "l urrrntl) ~f' 1ng J ~ 'i.\ eJr federal prt\nn t('rm tor h:rnl rohhc.'n P'ountaJln Valley < 1jt.ire11c" and l and' 'alut"d .. lt SI 'I) and S50 in <.t~h "'l"n'. repont'd 'wkn trom .1 l llm men: 1al 'eh1dt• • pJrkc<d 1n the IOh()(I hl0< t.. l>I f k'1e \unda\ n1,h1 • • • Thr11e btr\{ le~ 1.1.c:rc rc pNlcd ~tokn Monda' afternoon One \lo lh "'J' \tOIC'n from the "111,uda xh1)t'I 11415 1 m J.ardtne'> \,\ e'>t the nthl'r IWO W('ft \toltn from 10 frnnt ,,, .l home" 1n the I04tl0 hk" l 111 \alina' lrrine \ ndal~ turned nvtr r1ih1 'eh1clc:•' i\firked 1n thl' Iona Rot·hclle \' enue toda\ • • • '\omrone repont'dl) ~rnl( 4 T \ '<'t and " '1de1.Xa'i~ttr ""'-"()"1Cr Imm .a home 1n the 5000 block of Dutlhcr ..\\enue Tuesda)' fhe v1C11m said he suspects a cleanan2 crew • l • Guns and Jewell). valued at s~.075. were reported stolen from a home 1n the 5000 blOl k o£ Bordeau\ ..\' enue Tuesda., ••• .\ computer wa'> reponed ~tolen lrom an apartment 1n the noo bloct.. of Parkv1ew Lane T ue\da\ Newport Beach -\ resldent 1n the I ~IJU bll'x i.. or Park Newport reported Tuesda' that c;ht lo'it her SI OO pur;e containing a $1 \ "'al kt, 'll S 7 5 pair ot \unglac;c;("\ \I ~O 1n makeup and a SI ,4tX} "-3tch • • • . T"o S400 TV '><'h. a StiOtl \IJcocas~tte redorJcr and a s~ l><X.l 11.\' 1gat1on radio 1.1.cre re ported \!Olen HS h osp ital fire quelleg T 1retigh1cr\ C\ 11niiu"hl·1! .1 ,m,111 ti re Tue~:t\ un the thfr~1 tl1.)(lf ot Humana Ho\p1tal 1n Hun1101t1un Beach at\er .a 'en11l.won fan ,i,er· heated and 11na1ed • " co"'J>ll'llC:'I rc\~mded to the ,alt 1u'>I .iner 10 p m tll'Cl'rd1n~ h1 f nuntain \. alle' AJllalwn ( hu~t ld \ .. silc l he fire "'•" controlled 11"1 .1hout I\ minute\ "'io one: 1.1.a\ t'\ l\Uat('d and dama ,. was hm1ted to 1he fan and J ul t \ ,, t \lid F1rtlighttr<. Wl"rt" l 1)n<"e1 nnl h<' cau~ tht hu1IJ1nai wa\n·t equip~ v.11h A \pnnklt>t \\\tem · It "I\ built he-fore \lo (' got thl" \tncttr lt1dc' \ t1'\1k \31d .. Ru1 11 hu" H'n 100J mon11onn1t \\'1l"m · T ue~a\ 011 a ~~-lllot boat mo11f'('\l dlong Harbor Island Dme • • • Fire 1n.,cs11ga10~ ha \e determinc<l 1ha1 arson 1.1.as the cause of a bla.Le "'h1ch brot..c out at the Gutenh<'rg Pnn11ng shop 2003 Quail. Monda' afternoon Coeta M e.a .\ burgla1 whli t..1ct..cd opt'n tht• tro nt door reported I\ stole SI I 1'11 1n camera cqu1pmen1 irom a home 1n tht' ~00 bk>l k of \\OC3dll \unda' • • • \. andal'> reported!\ c.mashl"d tht' S~OO front v.1ndo1.1. nf -Y1.1.tx1rt Ek'd ding. 1534 'e"pon "4h d Jrnntt S 100 damagt" tci a bra"" hcd FndJ\ night ••• 1 h1e,es brol e IO IO a hl.lml" 1n lht• llX1 block of t\dm1ral1' I .me \und.H \tole S '\ \00 1n 1l"v.dn .i nd Jnn c 011 m thl" rc\1den1 'v.h1te \1erl cde .. • • • Tool~ 'alued at \I 'ltl V.l'I\. t(' por1td \tnk n trom J l remt'-<.nhir\·d I ~ 4 h.,~ou p1d.up tnic lo. p.\tked 1n the :.ioo bkll l nt Harhor &iuln .irJ 1 ut•M.1J\ • • • Th1e\Cs reponedh 'tole a T \ ~•.a m"ro"'a't" tl\Cn and ,1 ph('nC' trnm a ho me 1n the: 1\11 hie)( k ol f~aulil last \\C'el C'nJ Laguna Beach The er" ner ol J l'ar flJTked l uec,da, .in "iuth ( oa\t H1ghv.a' n·ponC'd d 1he1t ,1t S '4 '111n ,c1 .. h Imm thr \ ,•h1l Ir . . . \ \.\JllC't dlOIJ1n1ng S:lkl \o\3\ 'lnkn l\O 'tinh ( 11.1c;1 H1gJi"a' lh(' '1l11m '41J I UC'\Ja' In a <.C"p.1ratr lnltdC:nt J V..t llet Clln1Jtn1ng $~(1 V.8\ rc~incd 'lcikn I ue\llJ\ mnrn1 ntt at l.l~una R<'.llh lhttl"t '-h1'\\1I nn Part.. \' rn 1r . . . p,, ll l .. 1rrr,tc-d R,,n,11\1 \,1nc:ne \1.itk' J'I 1111 'u'fl" 111n 1)1 11 r" inp. l1nJn th1· r 1lunh 1' l'I ,lll oh11I "1arl' "·" .1rrn1t«1 .11 I ~ J m T ur\J.t, on l ard1n.1I I )11q' .111\I '1•111h ( "'''' I tltth"'n' Pair held in shooting 1 '"' '"" I uan l .tJ'1'1ran1' rr,H.1<'n1' "'c:rt ~>ulcd Im .memptC'J mur1ln Tut'o(b't fullt'""'' a 'h•ll't1n~ 1h,1t 1n1un-d t"l' men -\lnl' , nt11.1lh in ll ll'l\.41 hu \h<'I l 1\n1.•111, ~ nl '*'" luJn < <lfll\lt1'nl' ""' ,h,,f 1n th<' nl"l ~ .rnll \1.in1n ( 1un11k ' '\ "'a' 'h1ll 1n tht• , ht\\ t the f .ul-0 T he-\10t3ll,1\lo "·u 1in (.amino ( ·1p1s1 anl' an,un,I m11I· night. \aid 'henff, I 1 l~m 1'.h11nr \ 1on1alr' ,\ddrf'"" un knL'"'" \lw1 i1r, Jl pullt'' ll 'l"''nd1n~ to the , II "'ll"•' t •On1ale't 1\Ut<.1de thr bar 111L11 ,,n<'fll' 1n\1d1. 1-kllh wt"re t"n' p1.•r1t"t1 "'''""on l 11mmun1t' H p11. I v. hnr \ 1,n('rtl\ ~•' li<ottd 1n , nt11 -'' .. )n.111111n and ( ron1alet .. n \('nOu' nm111ttt1n in thl" 1nt~n 1~ , art unit th" morning lX-pu11r' .1m,1rd \ndre" Juhan t rr , -'" ,and Pamf"la Bur-n \4 both 't \an J11an 1 ap1,1rann 1 "n v.("rr hl,.,l..rd tor attt'mpted muTLlr1 at 1 'ri1n1r < nunt\ Jail Marcos says opponents 'sow hatred' MANILA. Pluhpp1ncs tAPI -Prcs1den1 1-cnilnand E Marcos toda) lc:cuscd ha opponents of\O~H\~··hatre<t. anger and rcvoluuon," a5 both be and oppc:wuon candidate Corazon .\qu1no ap~ before suppone'"' to clo~ the tumultuous clccuon campugn Marcos spolr.c at an outdoor rall) an Manila before a crov.d csumated b} o~en at I S0,000 Ada) e.arller an csumated ~.000 peopk gathered at the same ba)SJde park to cheer oppos1uon candidate Coruon Aqwno .\qu1no toda} told a crowd of I 0 000 supporters outside her home 6(J m1IC'$ north of Manila. "Put )Our monc) in )OUr pocket but }Our \Ole'S to Cor;. and Do)," she wd. us1 ng her nickname and that ofhcr running mate, former Seo Salvador H Laurcl .\sited b' a reporter 1( she had a finaJ message before the elCCtJon Fnda) s e sa.id ··1 want to tell Mr Marcos that J believe in Chnsttan forgncness 50 long as we ha\C frtt and fau elCC'l1ons .. CotnC1d1ng v.1lh I.he \farcos raU) houn before the official deadltnc for c.ampa1g.n1ng. his part} issued a surve" forteasung a 13 perce nt margin of\1ctor;. .-56 pcrttnt to 43 per~nt The part) said such a margin v.ould be a clear mandate for Marcos. v. ho has ruled this nation for 20 )can Earlier \ifam» h1m~lfhad predicted he ""ould get as much as 80 percent of the \Ote Bnan .\tv.ood. an organ uer of a team OWf"\ 10g the elCC'l1on. said toda} that an am pon.ant v.atcrmark machine was rruss1ng for eight da)s LO S ovember and could have been u~ to pnnt counterfeit ballots and vote- Phillpplne Preeldent Ferdinand llarcoe fluhee victory •ten to rally crowd In Manlla. counting shecu Use of watermarked paper is intended to pre' ent fraudu lent ballots and tally sheets. The final day of campa1grung was marnd b) an 10c1dcnt tn\ olnngsold1ers and Aqu10o'u1stcr-10-lav. at a m1bW) highway checkpoint north of Manila. Lupita Kashiwahara. sister of Aqu10o's late husband. slam oppos1t1on l~dcr Bcna~o S A.qu100 Jr., said she. her daughter and two others in a car were .. mauled and ..,threatened at gunpoint" b) soldae~ after she tned to photograph them. Intercept: Israel has no apology fEl ~VI\ lsrul (AP)-Foreign M1n1stcr Ymhalc Shamir defended Israel's dec1s1on to 1ote~pt a Lib) an plane suspe<:ted of Oymg Palcsllntan gucmJla tcaden to Syna. s.ayma the Jewish state has the right to protect itself agamst "murdt'r and terror " Arab governments condemned I.be acuon b} Israeli 1etfighters over the Mediterranean Sea on Tuesda~ a.s an act of"~r ptraC)" that could lead to I.he ht)aCk.mg of Israeli and Amenc~n planes hrach fighters diverted the smaJI Libyan Arab Airlines JC't near the MedttcrTILnean island of C) prus on Tuesda)' and forced 11 to land an thC' Ramat Dav ad ur ~ near Nazareth in northern Israel. Israel's Yed1ot Ahronot newspaper quoted unidcnufied .sccunt) officials toda)' as warning that Israel should brace for a poss1blC' lib) an or ~> nan retal1auon S)na·s offi cial oev.s agcnq quoted Gen Hckmat Chahab1. chief of staff of the armed fo~. as s&Hng Tues· da' that Svna would teach the lsraehs .. a· lesson· the~ will not forget" at a umc and place ofSyna·s choosing. The t.:.N. Sttunty Council held an emergency mcettng on the matter Tu~} at S~na·s request. but took no action · Heavy security guards pope's visit to Madras .. 8)' ~ Ataoctated Preu k v.rh.omed Pope John Paul II to ~~ORA • India -\ hull-m alhon pco~ul f>Oh<.:c deployed thousand$ of this tropical rny 1n southern lidia 'c:t~~l ttmdu~ opposed to Christian officers to prc,ent pro~~t' 'i m , d..,. hate and yellow papal Ila.gs along m1ss1ona.r) ~orlt Throng~ of people ""a 1~0u~nd~ more headed for a beach on the route of Jolin Paul's motorcade, a~d elebrate Mass Roman Catholics from the Ba~ ofBcngal where the pope was 0Madra s on Tuesday, and thousands of SWTOUndJng a.rcu began poUOllJ tnlO o0a seat for the Mus. them slept on the beach O\em1ght to ensure 3 i 16 arrested en route to Peace Group be f \1u~ow'\ unofficial Peace Group were MOSCO\\ -<;ax teen mem rs 0 d at least one woman was badly arrested after the) med to hold 3 me~ttn~. an Yun Medvedkov said members beaten by police. a group mcmberh~1apt~n~t'nt where the}' planned to dncuss v.erc arrested T ue-sda) en route to . d tht!> month to the 27th Cong.re~s at a \loetldy meeting a letter the) v.ant to ..en of the Communist Pam Duvaller orders merchants to .wor.k PORT-Al'-PRINC E Ha ili _ The go,crnrpent ordered thousand\ of h d 1ncC' l.iun da}' to end what 1t said was an merchants ""ho have clo!>td 1 cir f 00~ ~ . d po•siblc seizure of their shops 11 ....... 1 k d n toda\ or ace am~~t an ~ 1 "Iii'" stn e an reope . 1 on at midn•""'t Tuesda" w·>< Th d I d d , er ~tate-run le e\ 1\1 &01 , ~ c pr~• cnua or er rca 0 , J ( 1. de Duvalier to ccturn this another bid b}' Pres1dent·for-L11c e.in· au .k f h ampovcnshed Canbbean countr. to normal lol1<1w1ng two wee \ u unrc\t l at has claimed an estimated sr h\C~ Italy eipels a Soviet dlplomat ROME _ Jtal) has ordered the c>.puls1on ol J W'_ICt diplomat and the Rome stauon manager ol th e Soviet airline ~erotlot tor alleged c~1onage activiucs the AG I ncv.s agenn rcponed 'Wednesda~ .\GI said one o the tv.o Soviet officials ts behe,ed w have left th~ countr} alrt>ad:r r~e A.GI dispatch idcnuficd the two as Victor Kop)tine a f1r\t \Ctrctan of the wv1et Em bass~ and Andrei C hclouk.hine the Rome chief ot .\erol1ol --....-.----------------------------- • • .... ~~. MANY OTHER STYLES BRASS & IRON BEDS ON DISPLAY AHO IN STOCK Notice of Public Meeting Concerning Telephone Services Pacific Bell, General Telephone and Continental Telephone have formed a committee with representatives of the Hispanic and Asian communities and scheduled. meetings to discuss the telecommwlications needs of their non-English speaking customers in Caliiomia. These meetings are part of a statewide effort ordered by the Caliiornia Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to determine whether the Caliiomia telephone companies should provide new or additional services to non-English speaking customers. The Committee will report the results 01 these meetings to the CPUC by March 31 , 1986. The public is invited to attend these meetings. ti Garden Grove Community Center 11300 Stan1ordAVeliue Cott Euclid, near Garden Grove Blvd) Garden Grove Thursday; February 6 lO:OOAM. PACIFIC EIBELL - •• -. Sonar may have located booster from Challenger C.\PE (.\\;.\\ER.\L f-la 1.\f>1- ~ASA ships put r<•b<Jt \uhmanncs overboard tod.a\ to '>Cc 11 .tn under· v.ater obJect sp(ittrd b~ \unar 1~ 1he_ much-sought nghl rod .. et h<.>oster ol the space shuttle ( hallcnger ··1 ~ould ~" thal th1<o 1s unc: ul the most \ital pieces of e' 1denu:-that wc'\e found a~ far a<, dehm •~ concerned said Jim \.111dl a '-a· uonal A.crunauucsand Spale .\dmtn· 1strat1on spol>..esman and engineer Sonc1r 1dcntfied the ObJel t as one of the tv.o OOP'>ll'.f'> ~.\SA ..aid. bu1 a closer 1nspe 11 n v.a~ nc1..~s-;ar: to tell hov. mu1 t ht' rcx:ket l.tsingo,1o as there and 1 , -'ti' from the suspect \larh ,. h• .. \I. 'h1 ... '·" 1!(••1ng on 1n the ~ t J \p.tt 1· < t•nter area the ' 1•a'>l (, Jrd .\1 r f·oru: and '-a\\ ,tended thur \l·arlh for '>Urale 1iebn'> nor'h to< dfW Fear '< Eight < • 1\t < 1Udtd -\tr Fort( Jnd '-a" ,m •Jtt .ind li\e tUtttr'> .ire tuncentrallr.g •HI d I~ nil() \l.jUclTe m1k art•d r; m ...,, < Jthennt'"' 1'land ( Jcl to ( ,1p-f-.sr ·· Tht• 1J t· , 1' ma\ he so mt 111 this debns ha• t.• : 110 the gulf\tream and has bct"n \.1rr1"J that far nonh ·~id Chief V. .trr.tnl < ifliter Paul ~11tt1 uf the (oa<ot (1uard Searcher" hoped tht• hoo~tcr if that \ v. hat 11 is. came trom tlTt-nght side ol the shuttle -\ \pun of name dircc ted from that nght rocket tov.ard the shuttle fuel tank. 1s the chief '>USp<:Ct IO the bla'lt ~11ell said 1f n turns out lo be tht' \larboard booster. salvage ships v.ould be summoned to raise the v.reckage. v.h1ch might take t""o weeks "It "'ould be a tremendous find hccau<,e .. '!ti,j;_)'Ould have some actual ph} s1cal data th a.( we could rctncvc ... he said ··1r v.e find out that some- thing was ""rong w1th that particular hooster then ce n.ainl) 1t would god long .... a~'> 1n getting us back on Lrack and gelling read) for launch again" Hoping to be read~ when word is gt\ en 10 rt>Sumc 01ghts. processing team\ arc asking perml\ston to re .. ume "'ork on the shuttles Columbia and .\tlanM .\II future 01ghts v.-crt' '>u~pcnded after the Challenger acc1· dent .. f ht re I\ no C\ tdCOlC ~he Orbtler ..... a., JI fault 1n this accident." said \fw:ll po1nung 11ut that 21 da~<o ol v.ork 1n the shuttle processing fac1lit~ t:an be accomplished ""hale a pres1 dent1dl comm1ss1on 1s 1n\est1at1ng There v.as no offi cial confirmation of a ( BS Ncv.•s report that "at least a portion" of the <ohuule's main crcv. t:om partment was located and that '>omc.-of the personal effects of Lhe dSlrOnaub f1oated to the surface Crude oll prices begin to stablllze By tbe Assoclate-d P rus :-..E\\ YORI-. -Pnt:n or c.ornl' crude 011 \ appeared t<l\tabtl11c toda\ after heading tuv. art.I $1 5 a barrel the lo"'c~t since the late I 97Qs in the market v.ar Detv.een OPEC countnes and non-OPEC produccr'i. <rude oil pncc'l haH' dropped b; more than a third since th(." year began. but some anahsts sa) the' doubt l . S gasoline con<,umc.-r; v.111 sec a s1m1lardecl1ne at the pump The shdr intensified aftCT a mccttng of the Organ11auon of Petroleum Expon1ng Countnes broke up v.1thout dev1s1ng a strateg) to defend the caners shate of the O\ ersupphcd market T radcrs also reacted to reports that Saudi Arabia Kuv.a1t and the l 'n1tcd Arab Emirates. among the nchest OPEC member; v.ould inundate the world \I.Ith cheap oil to for<.:l' non-memhcrs Bnta1n \;of'4a} and l\ifeulo In curtail production 'Cop can go to church at lunch ' (OM O RD. ~ -A state hoard upheld an unfair labor pracuce' 1..ompla1 nt b> a Na'ihua pol11..e o fficer who was repnmanded for going to church on his lunch brt>alo.s clcanng the way for him lo attend ~rv1ces The Pubhl Emplo)ees Emplo;ees Lallor Relataonc; Board in a 2· I dec1s1on Tuesday ruled that Officer Fred Wi l ham~. 25, of Hudson. had been unfaarl) rcpnmanded and h~d l.X'cn s10glcd out because of his una tin acu v1t1cc; The department had told W 1lhams he was " •ola11ng rules on lo1u;nngand lunch breaks afkr al learned hc attended churt·h on his lunch breaks about four limes last year Willtams said he was "excited, but rcht\Cd 1t'<; over .. Cit) A.ttomc' Steven Rolton said n\1 dec1S1on has been made whether to appeal the dec1s1oh Accused spy sought to heal rlft .\LEX.\NDRJ<\, \'a -Former CIA translator Larry Wu-ta1 \h1n passed classified 10format10n. to a moderate ract1.on Jn the C'h1neM" leadership tn an attempt to heal the nO between the United States and China. his dcfenS(' attomc) sa)'> At the opening Tuesda)' of Chin's tnal on espionage charges. defense counstl Jacob Stein portrayed h1~ 63-year-old client as a man seckin.g 10 recQJmlc the go\'crnment of has native China with that of his adopted countf). the 1J~tcd States The prosecution deSC'nbed Chin as a spy who sold l ' S secrets for money that ht" invested in a llong Kong banlt and used to bu) JI real estate properties tn Virginia, Maryland and Las Vegas. But Stetn said that (hin gave 1nfo~a11on to A facuon led b; Chine~ Premier C'hou En-la1. a mod.crate 1n China s communist govcrnmcn1. who ht"lped open the door to President Nuon's tnp to China in 1972 tUl>R£DS TO THOOSOOS Of DOt.lARS fRe8 REP<ltT THE REPORT. for the sertout new cer or truck buyer THE RE PORT cootalns exclusi'le 1nt0tmat1on and rt"ve&l<i voluoble secrets T~ Report tells you how to use these lacts ~lore buying your new car or truck If you're planning to buy a now v&hlcle. th1tn yoo can use the repor1 You've never seen anything printed like this bet0te UM n and save Use the easy to rud report anytime or anywhere T~ are no rettrlctlontf THE REPORT IS a consumer lnformnt1on ~Mee publi cation Send for your FREE COPY todny' Write: THE REPORT I 2973 H1ubo• Blvd Ooc>t CS-101 Costa M.,_ CA Qi>626 Please send ono dollar for shipping & h•ndllng rn GuarantM dell¥9ty ·-. ~ --~ -. ---. ._. --• ..... * ~-~---~ ~-· mmK•..,, • -·· ·~· .. _, .. -•.• -~· .. ---- * -- - --- STARTS AT 10:00 A.M. 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Savt 25%: On Lei. s st'tarp straight leg co non corduro-. eans I or sizes 8 to 20 Bov s Cloth1rg 2n Reg 11 99 to 15 99 10.49 to 13.99 Save 25%: On Chero~ee ·1rtemporarv canon skirts anc pa"t5 tu girls ... : • 4 Denill' n0• nc ud ed ) Girts' Separates 44 Reg 20 00 to 26 00 15.00 to 19.50 S.ve 25%: On newborns and r.tants co tton creepers n charming pr rts r. <)(JI j pa5tt?IS D 42 137 428 Reg 5 00 to 7 XI 3.75 to S.25 Save 25%: On our er" tire st ot anklets knee ht s t qhts and !iPOrtsocks tor 0111 4 \ • 4 D 56 Ong 1.99 to 11 00 1.49 to 8.99 Save 25%: On our br1qht \.Ott on ~nit screen print dresses for nf ants toddlers ano girls 4 to SX D 90 96 137 Reg 9 00 to 13 6.75 to 9JS S.ve 25%: On spring tleece act vewear for kids Find styles for newborns 3 to 9 months. nfants 12 to 24 months toddlers 2T to 4 and gins 4 to 6X D 83 90 137 234 428 Ong 12 00 to l100 Save n; On spnl'lg 11oral coord111ates from Lin le Ladv girls 7 to 4 D 44 Reg 12 00 'll 00 9.00 to 22.50 9.00 to 11.50 SELECTION WILL VARY BY STORE QUANTITIES LI MITED NO MAIL PHO E OR SPE CI Al ORDERS r Ae * Orange CoaJ( DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, F•bruary 5, 1988 oc-politicos echo party lines RepublTcanSTalid Reagan's agenda ~ Democratscharge him with deceit By PAUL ARCHIPLEY 01 IN DeitJ Nv1 ,._., Oran1ie County Democrauc and Republican leaders agreed on one point after heanng President Re- agan's tate of the Union addre'~ Tues<ta r He gives a great speech. But they found little else in com- mon, with Republicans laudan& Re- agan's agenda proposals and Demo- crats charging he's deceiving the Amencan people. "ll was another an a senes of excellent 'lpeeches by Ronald Re- agan." <;a1d Congressman Rohen Badham. R-Newport Beach. .. ll ~a~ another excellent JOb," agreed Howard Adler past chairman of theDemocrauc Part} of Orange Count) ... He's clearly an excellent communicator." But whereas Republicans took Reagan al his word when he again rtJected 1mpos1ng a ta'< increase 10 reduce the deficit, Democrats refused to believe him "This speech y.as prepanng u~ 10 face some reah11es. and a 1ax ancrea~e 1s clearly nol a cons1daat1on," said state Sen \1anan Be~eson. R-N<'"" · port Beach · II remains 10 be SCl'n ""here those reducuons v. 1 ll be felt .. .. Once again Ronald Reagan 1' lying 10 1he public" said Michael Ra\. chairman or the Democrat it r ounda tton of Orange ( ounl) ""We're looking 1n the face of a 'alue-added ta\ v.h1ch 1<; bas1call> a federal sales tax. And I 1h1nk we'll see an enc rg> 1ax A\ long a~ oil pnce\ continue to drop. the adm1n1stratwn will figurt: 11 c.an add a ta:\ that won't hurt." Ra~ <u11d "I JU\t don t bel1t.''l' him .. -\dler said. "His adm1n1stra11on ~as the archl(eCt Of the largest ta~ increase IO h1Stor} ... Reagan·~ call for ( ongn.·<;s to g1\c him "ltne Item \Cto .. power was supported b~ part~ members Badham and Bergeson but no one t'xpects Congress to gn·e 1t to him. ··1 support the hne item 'eto. 43 states ha\e 11." said Badham from his Washington DC office "The pov.er ha, ne,,er been abused an California. and the Legislature has been CO\ ered b~ 11s \.Cto power. "But 1herc\ '1rtuall> no chance C onv.css will ev<'r give 11 to any president." "The~·~ no chance of Reagan getting hnc item ve to power." o\dler said "It too thoroughly lips th<' ba lanc<' of power " Reagan again called for a balanced budget amendment. a proposal Democrats thought "hypocnucal" an light of his admm1strauon's record budget ddicits "It has been balanced in m> lifetime." Adler said. adding "b> Democrats.·· "But 1f he chooses to follow the present course of heavy spending and letllng the next generatton pa~ for 11. then it's not goins to happen "There's a hrn1t on how long you can postpone a debt. Eventually. !>omeone else w1ll 1nherit 1t and th<'y'll ha ve to explain wh y the system doesn't work." Republicans backed Reagan's argument that the ke) to baljn,ing the budget 1s through crnnom1c programs thal include inln·a~ing producti' 1ty. reducing trade ddint~ and addressing v.orld current' llu~ · 1uat1ons Bergeson. speaf...ing from her ~alra­ mento office, said. "If we can keep the \tate and the nation on an ups'-' ing through increased product1v1t>, then_ 11 Wlll certainly bring about a better resolutton to the balanced budget problem than a stagnant econom~ ·· Badham. commenting on Reagan s su pport of the CJr.imm-Rudman defi- cit-reduction law. said. "Evcr}body's nervous Congress ts incapable of "' ing wuh the problem 1t creatl·d - d<'fic1t spending. "If Congress acts qu1ckl> and proper!; there won't be any need for Gramm-Rudman. If Congress fails to do what 11 should be doing all along. then the meat axe 1s going to fall on the budget process" Democrats fear that meat a>.e will continue to fall on social programs. Reagan 's call for an overha ul of the welfare system meant "he's calling for ~O million people to go hung!) on 1he streets." Ra~ said Whether supporting or oppoc,ing Reagan. listeners Tuesday agreed his address was the president at his best There will never be a better time to begin ... or a better way to learn. MUSIC New Claases •tarting February 1 • Music. Mommy & Me fo r 3·year-olds • Yamaha's famous Primary Course for 4-6 yr. old s • Introduction to Keyboard for 7-9 yr. olds • Contemporary Electone ... Age 10 a nd up • O rgan class for adults "'"' Pri.1ttf' fnsrruc rl<m 111 fluff!. r:l1trlne1. ~1u11phonr. vl(llln '""fJ gu/ta1 drum4 piano. organ vo/cf' 559-5440 Jeffrey Rd . at Ir vine Ctr Or (Irvine Village Center) ST ATE OF THE UNION ••• P'romAl W('rt ilVCn Spc<'lal menltOn, and Reaaan 10troduced four young American heroes seated on the dais with him. But the 31-m1ou1e )peech was short on specific ways to carry out h1 ''1s1on. The only init1at1 ves were d1rec11ves: -To the White House Domestic Policy Council to report on welfare r<'vis1ons b} Dec I offering "a strategy for immediate action to meet the financial.~ducauonal. social and safety concerns of po<rr families." -To Health and Human Service~ Secretary Otis Bowen "to report to me by year end with recommen- dations on how the pnvate sector and government can work together to address th<' problems of affordable insurance for those whose life savings would otherwise be threatened when catastrophic illness stnkes." -To Treasury Secretary James A. Baker Ill to consider calhog a world monetaf) conference to d1scusc; whether to alter the free-market S}stem of setting currency values. Republican allies praised the pre~1- dent for offering what Rep. Guy Vander Jagt. R-Mich.. called .. a balance of compassion and practtcali- ty." but Democrats scoffed at Re- agan's talk of a fu ture filled wrth strong, self-sufficient families. freed from welfare dependency. "l didn't hear anything that leads me to behe"<' we are go1n~ to find the future that he descnbed. • said Rep Richard .\. Gephardt, [)..Mo. en Paul Simon. D-111.. said, "The funcuon ofa real leader is not simply to tell us what we want to hear." The president will elaborate in a detailed ~message of his leg1slame agenda for the year Thursday. But what he offered Tuesday night to Congress and a national broadcast audience were his signature themes. a hopeful v1s1on of Amenca, a pitch for reduci ng th t' scope of government and oppos111on to tax increases. "Let us speak o( our respons1b1l11y \0 redefine fOvernmcnt' role.'' Re- agan said. ' NoJ to control, not to command, not to contain us; but to help 1n times of need." He cited the breakdown of the family structure among welfare re- c1p1ents and said, "I am talking about real .and lasting emancipation be· cause the success of welfare should be JUdgcd by how many of its recrpients become independent of welfare." Yet. while the government has pourtd bi I hons of dollars into welfare programs, "the plifht of the poor grows more painfu , " Reagan said; the time has come to "escape the spider's web of dependency ... But he said, "We must revise or replace provams enacted 1n the name of compassion that degrade the moral worth of work, encourage famil y breakups and drive communities into a bleak and heartless dependency.·· The president's budget. released this morning, proposed a 15 percent cut 1n spending on federal JOb- traimng programs. The budget for the fiscal year ~ginning Oct. I calls for elimination of the 19-year-old Work Incentive. or WIN, program. It also cuts the Summer Youth Employment Program by one-third and the Job Corps by one-half. In a prerecorded Democratic response broadc.ast after the presi- dent's address. Sen. George Mitchell. D-Ma1ne. said. "The best social service agency 1s a fa mily that's together. The best social program is a good Job. "But the policies of this admm1s· trat1on are having the opposite ef- fect." Mllchell said. "They"re dnving more families into hard times and apart. and they're causing American JObs to move overseas ... But Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, 0-N. Y .. welcomed Reagan's call for a study of the welfare system. "It 1s plain we are not doing our jobs; the children are now the poorest age group in the na tion." Reagan salutes four young national heroes W i\SH I ~GTON I .\Pl -For three childr<'n . the tragi c fate of the shuttle Challenger meant keeping a fabu lous secret for another week. For Ri chard Cavoli. 11 meant a shattered dream that still won him a share of pres1den- 11al glo~ Cavoh, 21. of Marlboro. N Y Tyrone D. Ford. 12. of the D1stnct ol Columbia; Shelby Butler. 12. of St Joseph. Mo.: and Trevor Ferrell, 13, of Gradwyne. Pa .. were the surpn'IC guests saluted b)' President Reagan as .\mencan heroe~ Tuesda)' night ac; the chief e'<ecut1 ve delivered his Stale of the t nion address ;\S 1n years past. the Wh1k House had guarded 1hc1r 1dcnt1tll''> as 11ght l~ as an} national -;ecrc1 until he introduced them 10 the ( ongres'> and a nat1onw1de broadcast audience Reagan had intended to present the quanet to Congress a week earlier Then came the homble news of the Challenger e>.plos1on and a week 's po-.tponcment of his address Destro,ed 1n that disaster was a cr}stal eltpcnment that Cavoh had worked on for )'carc.. starting in high school Now a student at Union College. he hoped that the results of the project's nde on the Challenger "ould enable him to develop a more sens1t1ve rype ol \-ra> film that would require luv.cr radiation ex. posures and thuc, reduce nslcc; to pauen1s -, That ~me spint and perseverance, said th e president, was demonstrated by the "towenng talent" of young Ford, an orphan being raised here by an adoptive grandmother. Mrs. Burter Carelock. .. A child prodigy of gospel music, he has surmounted personal adversi- ty to become an accomplished pianist and singer." ~1d Reagan. who noted the youth already directs three church choirs and has performed at the Kenned)' Center. The president then saluted Butler, 13. of St. Joseph. Mo who was on dut}' with 1he Pershing Elementar} School safety patrol on Nov 19. 1984. ""hen a school bus went out of control headinJ!. for a crosswalk. Scven-year- old Felicia Gu) froze in the path of the bus Butler lunged an front of the bus and pulled the younger child to safety. Last. the president antroducecl Fer- rell . 13. who hvcs 1n the affluent Ph1ladeph1a suburb of Gradwyne. Dunng the 1983 Chnstmas season. after seeing a telev1S1on news 11em about Ph1ladelph1a's homeless. Trevor 1ns1sted that his parents take him to v1s1t the needy on the city streets Since then. he has launched 'Trevor's C~rnpa1gn for the Home- le1is" with 2~ volunteers who help cook and del1v~ hot meals 10 about 200 people a night. ------------ OUR FIRST ANNUAL CLEARANCE Sale UP TO aoo/o OFF begins Monday Feb. 3rd 10 a m. GUESS • No • New Man SUEDE • SWEATERS 1686 TUSTIN 631 -1922 COSTA MESA I corner 17th & T uilln) lht· 1· 1· 1>1 ·.~ '•-BUDGET Where It Comes From -------s~ "*"enc.-Rec.-pa t•'> ________ ...,__ ~vlduel incolN Ta.a• <I*> ------------CcwpotM!on ~ T.._. t9tf 1....t11,.._ ___ _,._ Bonowing ,,.., \...,..,.. __ _.. __ Elle.. r .... ,.,, ...,..__,~-Othet ,.,. Where It Goes Fecal Yf* 1~ eatimate C&eMd on one doa.I •Nationet ~ (19')------~ Owect Benefit Paymen1s '°' &ndNtduaaa(4f ')-------.----~ Giants to Staee. and L~lttlH (f~> --------. Net ln1.,es1 (f S<) ------.i Other Fedet al OpetatlOl\S lf<I -----"'---""'----.;..-~ • Includes Pentagon spenomg and Energy D•panmttnt r1ur1enr ..,t'n/• .. 1•\ Reagan sends Congress 'hard choices' budget WASHING TON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan today .sent Congress a "hard choices" $994-bilhon .budget for fiscal I 987 that would meet targets of the nation's new budget-balancing law through deep cuts an domestic programs and auctioning an arra} of federal assets. While few domes\lc programs were pared the budget knife, the president asked Congress for an increase in defense outlays in 198 7 of S 15 9 b1lhon. up 6.2 percent from last year. and proposed a 37 .8 percent increase O\.er 1he next five years The budget would leave all major weapons sys- tems in tact whale proposing a 75 percent increase in the president's "Star Wars" program of defense against nuclear m1ss1les. The bud~et would slash, freeze 1n place or ehmanate scores of c1v1lian programs -w.Qjle granting a small, S94-m11l1on increase in funding to the natton's space program. It would knock a million college students off aid rolls. cut Medic.are and Medicaid health programs for the poor and elderly and recycle many of the program chminauons 'iOught unsuccessfully by the president last year. The budget would raise fees for using the national parks, impose a SI 0-per-angler licensing fee for fish- ing 1n the ocean . trim benefits under the Gt bill cut federal support for the Interstate H1ghwa> system and re - qutre able-bodied welfare recp1ents to <'ngage m some "work-related ac11v1- ty" to continue receiving federal help. In all. the budget calls for domestic spending cuts ofS25.6 bil lion. Many of the proposals, including the gov- ernment-wide spending tot.al, had been leaked in advance . It was the first pres1dent1al budget to be submitted under the new Gramm-Rudman budget law, which would force an end to government defici t spending by 1991. Automatic cuts of around $40 billion will Ix triggered next October under th<' law 1fthere 1s a budget deadlock between Reagan and Congress. The first round of Gramm-Rud- man cuts. totalling$ I I. 7 billion. have -already been tnggcred "The~ will take effect on March I Figures 1n the president's new budget reflect the lower spending levels already m placr because of these m1t1al cuts In his budget message. Reagan told Congress that his plan would "set th<' deficit on a downward path to a balanced budget by 1991 ." Reagan said the proposals he wanted would present Congress with .. hard choices .. but we must find the ~ill to face up to our respons1b1ht1es." But few 1n Congress held out much hkehhood tha1 the president's budget would survive maJOr mod1ficat1on 1n the coming months of struggle over spending and taxes "l don't think there are 25 \Otes 111 the United States Senate for the budget." said Sen Bill Brad le>. 0- N.J. And Re p. Les Aspan D-W1s . chairman of the HouSl' Armed Ser· vices Committee. called 11 "DBA - dead before amval " Many senior members of both parties an Congress have e"<pressed doubts thaL the federal budget can be balanced with spending cuts alone as Reagan prefers Senate Republicans have recently urged Reagan lo con· sider a compromise including some new la"<es -poss1bl) an ml import fee ~1gn1ng 1he budget propo<.al 1n tht: fh al Oilier toda). Reagan hl'ld open the poss1b1ht) of appro' ang an otl import fee to offset an~ re,enue 10~1 b' change~ 1n a tax o'erhaul bill pending 1n the Senate "I've said that I'm willing to look at that. on tnat basis." Reagan said. Sen . .Pete V Domen1c1. R-N.M .. chairman of the Senate Budget Com- mittee. proposed toda) that Reagan call a budget summit "lo sec 1f we can put a package togcthcr .. The president's budget projected total receipts of $850 4 billion, for a deficit ofS 143.6 billion for the fiscal year begmning on 0<-1 I l 'nder the budget proposal wh ich also includes prOJCCtlOn'i for 1he next five )Cars. the government would actually end up with a $1 3 billion surplus 1 n 1991 ~-~-----~ CANADA by RAFT in Newport Beach Thurs. February 6 At 7:30 P.M. •t Newport Sheraton 4545 McArthur Blvd. (ou are CQfdl!Jlly 1nv11et.1 to a Sltde i\Nl l1tm presentd'"''' II~ I .ANAOIAN AIVF R .. XPfDITl()N< )I V ftntouver <N&ll known tor IOf"IQ 01'Shlnc"P fly •ft ei-~1hnr<. r)ow t 1Jritn.,,.,.,,..,., r vl'rc, 1()1'0 ·' '''" m0<1nta1ns ol B••ttsh Coiumboa "'" Vu~nn .1n(l At11s~~ CHILCOTIN ANO HlASER RIVERS EXPE01110N '1 cl.It\ S1<1:;,(; c;omt;.n·n~ C.04\!~ , ,,,.., •u '" qlacoer fhQht!.H·nq a•pone laltt 'ampng .. '" 240 lh• n nq "' IOf>'""~' r vP• ..,., ~ fATSHENSHINt Al$EI( EXPEDITION 1; <lav\ S•1>:>'t I)"'"~ vrbfH'v3t,~ '!.(•" fll, q.im11 q1ec.1ers and 1>e1ut1tol '1151 rive• F•om Vvl<OI' ll'trovq~ ~ tO'"!'' ot 6 C tl'CI <it>ep ,,.111•v\ "OM~t1"Q two 01 Al.J~kil ~ ho<)hll,I mountain r.ir,q~!' nol to 11'1" nr>f>n Parih• HEAOWA TEAS OF fH[ MIGHTY Sl(Ef NA 10 d<IY' S 12'>0 180 ""111< •' P•r•hnQ •.iPICl~ 9'""" mo..ntarn •alley ~ry PLUS tobutous SIMlhead s111mon ano •a•nt>ow 1 ''"''9 '" 111,. "'"'"' "s~ oeeo canyon POOis 01 1"'s NOt1Cl·•amoo." ""'" """ • ~ "'""'"''"~ FOf oeta11s p•us~ pr.one ua11y 966 6~• O' cont.ic1 J f1 Mikes c.-1 ,..,. '" s:. .... , l •P'WJ•lo<lf'1 64!> Cholco Strfft Vancouver 8 C C •nad1 Tl' OC>Mnll I~ 1 ,38 4-U'l G RAND 0 PE N I N /G ;\ .. 1 ... 1111 1· I ;II\ .rnd L ,11 h\ I), tl!'l{rt ..,t.1rtt·cl t ht•11 1 ultn;tq I ,111 t'r" ill ~rttn( 1• }ltt\t !ht>\' 0( I II "" 1 1 11t <I \-. 1 ht Lind nMn:l)l!u r1! •hp n 1•\\ fl"·;liH1r.rn1 f>:l..,lt''" r,r ,1ntl H;n 1h1·\ lt111k tr1f\\,lt'll I ,.,111111~· \llh\1111o1t111I \1111qut l••llt 1 t111l1•ii1 ul11tcH\ t rettltun;; fr11m lahlrnn1i1 and thl' ri·-.l ot I h<• \\ 111 l<I \ii11'l l dt•ll)lht 111 f n· ... h p <htd" It k1 • ft ll olor ~u-.;il "" w ll h Pro-. , 1111 ro :\Ju ... hroorn., \lnrt Blanr h1·cl fr ttfo \i111 II t,1ll In 111\t• \~Ith ( 1rtlladt·s ltke Pt11ll;trd of lh1l kt•n wtth l lt•rh Rutte r and Cabcrrll'I '°\duct· Pflc;tel q h,lq pizza too hakt•d man authPntic Italian wuorl -hurn1nl( oven! And tht•n·".., no\\ illpnwc•r l)n Erut h that• an rt '"'"' (,m "f;:unow .. cl<'''<'th ...,11 l nmt· to our ( ir,rnd 0 pl'l1 111)(' h •hllJM\. J h ·hrua1' lh P;i rt.ik•· ,,f tht· tun. nwt r 11m 111 and an 1111t·rnat1onal nwnu that '" un1qu1·h P;i-.rt'l\t Our hi.r opt•n-. ,11 .> pm d m111·1 '' ·"' .11 h IHll Rt'"I f\,ll llHI .. ttll rt I tHlHllt'JHJ.•d (•till end R1r I 'II "· ,, ' ''•"' I l1~·h11t I ,,." ,. " II· "11 t '"'' '"'I,, •11, I • I I t I• H1 • Orange Coast OAILY PIL.OT/Wedne.day, Feb""8f'Y 5, 1984S * A7 Manson espouses revolution, denied parole once more Governor ·to pursue unitary tax cut Mayor says hands tied on nuclear shipments 8y 1•e AtHClatd P~I LONG BEACH -Mayor Erme Kell coocedes there isn't much be or the city can do to block' the federal aovemment'• plans to ship spent nuclear fuel throu&h the Pon of Long Beach. 8\n be said he believet the U.S. [)epettmel)t of Energy wtll ll)' to relieve residents' fcan about ROSS•ble baz•rdt. of ~ shi_pmen.11.. The E.ncflY Department inlCnds to brina spent fuel rods from a reactor in an Ass.an country ~o the West Coast by ship. SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Mass murderer C'har~cs Manson, denied parole after telhng a state board he wouJd pursue his dream of a violent world revolution if freed, can look- fo~ to at least another three years 1n pnson. Tuesday the parole board fou nd the 51 :year-old form.er cult leader un- suitable for parole from his life sentence for the 1969 massacre of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others. · Manson, who wears a bl1.1e swastika on hss foreh~ad and told th~ board he spends his lime making dolls of scorpion~ wi th the i;><>wer to torment. must wast the maximum three years before hss next parole hean ng, the panel ruled. Jn a surpnsc appearance, Manson scruffy-looking with long, graying hair and beard, delivered a rambling, often incoherent 20.minute speech he wrote the night before, He had told prison officials he wouldo!t a~ at the bearing, but changed hss mind Tuesday morning. Manson said he didti't think the hearing would be fair to him, and blamed the media for describing him disparagingly. "l have children write me and telJ Cba.rlee Maneon me st's aJready 1n the history books that I'm a '?ad guy,'' he said, rubbing devtls wtth the power of scorpions to his long-nailed thumbs together over torment." and over as he slouched in a chair. His If paroled, Manson said, he'd wrists were tattooed and he bad "probably join the revolution down inked-in the swastika 'he carved into south somewhere and try to save my his forehead years ago. life on the planet Earth. I might go to He said the scorpions give "the• Libya. I might fo see the ayatollah power of the revolution to the (leader oflran). might go to France, people," and that "from the world of catch somebody in !!ranee I'm upset government, I did loose demons and with." SAervuvfENTO (AP) Gov. Geo.rgc Deukmejian says the Gramm-Rudman am~dment may delay action on California's unitary tu, but he still wants to cut it at least $250 milJion a year. At a oews conference Tuesday, Deukmejian also said be has reached "generaJ agreement" with the LegiS- laturc to place CaJ. Vet, jail, water and library bonds on the June ballot. But the Republican aovemor said he would veto the Democrat-iQ- troduced plan to reorganize the state agencies that deal with toxic wastes. Questioned about criticism by the federal Environmental Protection Agency of his administration's man- agement of federally funded toxic cleanup programs, Deukmejian said the EPA bas had its problems, too. and added: Prl•oneT fr eed, mu•t tell of AIDS VISTA -A homoscx~I man exposed LO the AIDS VllUS was releucd from county )atl under the condioon he ten future sexual panners he as a potential cam er of the deadly disease. The 21-year-old Escondido man, wh0te identity was not released, objected to the condition im_P.Osed on him Tuetday but agreed to abide by it, his attorney, George Hunt. said. The man's ex~re to the AIDS virus was discovered while be was servi~ time in countv 1ail for bss conviction on two counts of using stolen credit cards. Soviet ..Uor may be forced home SAN DIEGO -A Soviet sailor who underwent surgery in San DiCJO wants to return to her ship, but red tape may forc.c her to Oy back to the Sovtet U nson and lose six months of waaes. officiaJs sajd. Svetlana Prokudina. 26, wu reported in good condition Tuesday at Scripps Memorial Hospit.aJ by hospital spokeswoman Diane Yohe. Prokudina was airlifted to San Oiqo by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter Monday after complaining of scvett abdominal pains while on board the Soviet trawler Gnevynn. The woman is a food wotker on the shsp, which was about 200 miles off San Diego's coast when a helicopter came to pick her up. Blood tests confirin Nelson used cocaine "If they want to take over the whole program, I'd be happy to give it to them," Electronlc sarvelllance pro1ram to begin SAN DIEGO -Inmates in the county's work furlough center will be allowed to serve time at home under an electronic surveillance program that proba.tion o~cials say is ~be first of its kind. so the state. The year-Iona expenment, atmed at reduc10g the backJog of pnsoners wait1ng for admission t~ the ~ork furlough center is set to begin JuJy I and wouJd be open to non- violent inmates convicted of en mes such as petty theft or traffic violations. WASHI NGTON (AP) -Blood tests have con- firmed substantial cocaine use by singer Rick Nelson but authorities say no evidence links drug USC to the New Year's Eve asr crash that killed Nelson and six companions News reports had said government 1nvest1gators were exam1n1ng whether Nelson and members of his band might have t?cen takrng cocaine by "free-basing" - a method that involves an open name - shortly before a tire erupted in the cabin of the OC-3 that was carrying them to a Dallas concert. Toxicology reports. released by the National Trans- ORANGE COAST December job .hunts p~idoff By USA MAHONEY Of ""9~No41WI r:>ec&nbc r was a good month for Job-seekers in Orange County as temporary holiday hmng pushed the unemployment rate down to 3.5 percent for the first ts me last year. AJthough Marin County recorded a 3 3 percent unemployment rate for the month, Orange Count} was one of three California counties that could boast plenty of jobs for those see king work during the yule season. Besiqes Marin, San Mateo County matched Orange County's 3.5 percent rate. Los Angeles Count)' reported a rate of 5.4 percent while nat1onaJly, unemplo}ment stood at 6.9 percent. Retail payrolls in Orange County ballooned by 8,000 pos1t1ons dunng December The totaJ retail JOb count of 202.300 was 4.8 percent higher than December l 984's 3.5 percent. Holiday hsnng at Orange County tourist attracuons also helped lower the rate of Joblessness by adding 600 positions to the sci:vsce industry total. Transportation and utshtses firms hired 200 more workers dunng De- cember as dsd constructson contrac- tors. Msnsng also showed modest gains while seasonal farm work plunged by 1,000 pos1t1ons. · Scattered gams in finance. in- surance and real estate accounted for 500 new Jobs. Government employ- ment and manufacturing payrolls slipped during the month. Wholesale employment continued to show the effects of the meat cutters and Teamsters labor dispute Ava ila bilit y of housing low By USA MAHONE Y Of -o.-, ...... llMI A 1985 housing vacancy survey confirms what house-hunters have known all along -finding a place to roost here isn't easy. portation Safety Board Tuesday, showed that substantial .amounts of cocaine were in Nelson's body when be died. But sources close to the investigation said the findings provide no link between the drug use and the accident. The reports also showed traces of marijuana and alcohol in Nelson aod several of the other passcngef'S. but no evidence of drugs in either the pilot or co-pilot. The tests showed that Nelson had .082 milligrams of cocaine per liter in his blood and .131 milligrams of metabolized cocaine per liter in his urine at the time of the accident. A separate examination of a blood sample showed another .25 micrograms of metabolized cocaine per milliliter. Deukmejian aJso accused the Legislature's non-panisan budget anaJyst, William Hamm, of "ir- responsible statements" in a report last month saying Deukrnejian bas raised state taxes by $2.4 bilhon over the past three years. He did not dispute specific figures in Hamm's report, which contradicts Deuk:mejian's claims that he has not raised taxes. But he said Hamm's description of those changes as tax increa.scs "is entirely incorrect ... Anlmal• kllled, mutllated 1n LA County MARINA DEL REY -Nme baby chicks, a rooster, a hen and a rabbit were killed and mutilated at a ansmaJ sanctuary maintained by Los An~lcs County near Marina Park.. Another rabbit had an eye cut out, but it survived.. park volunteers said. Deputies from the Marina del Rey station were searchina for a juvenile in connection with the attack oo the arumals. I nenl' Hll ludm~ m.iru.11 Jrh <..lunun .... rr Jt1u1~ Vacancy rates in Orange County communities averaged 2.1 percent in May 1985, according to a Labor Market Bulletin from the state Em- ployment Development Department. Single-famil y homes had the lowest va~ancy rate with only about ·6.200 units or l .4 percent unoccupied at the time they were surveyed. Mobs le homes were next Wlth a I . 9 percent vacancy rate: only 553 tra1len were available dunng the survey. 2 Years For The Price Of One. uou.' -.t'par;He R\ m and 'PJ factlitic' ti.lr ml'n .tnd \\ nmen Pith .1 ~IL'.tm mg u )-t·d 'upt·r Ctr<. u11 "Tr.11nan~.1n:.1 Lu'\unou' t''<.'111\ l1n: mt·ter l.111 f"'ll 101 \\ ll h .I hot hnl n I m.1 ....... 1~<.· \\ h1rlpl11 ,I. .1 hu~c ..... 1tan.1 .md .1 "l Jndm.1' 1.111 <. nol d sp I)(\{ 11 \\ t · \<. l.!1 ,1,111 \th .tntnl l 1.11111n~ \1<.".I 1.1 .... hsnn .... 11, m' .1<.T1 ihtl ,l.1111. <. .1 d r.11 queth..tll·e" h1hll11 H1' Tht I Ii 1lld.1' "I'·' I' .th· ... t k hr.1ttn)l. h' d1 >tl.lt1n~ .t 1'1111111 111 \it .ti Ill'" mt 1'1lx -. 'l'IJ' t<.·e, 11 1 t hc L11' \n~<:k-' l ll.1ptu 111 I ht \ l.1 \..1.· \ \\ ''" h,und.1111 111 .I P '111'11>1 l••111hl.1t. • 1111 1111111.111\ 1ll 1. l1tldr<.'n Single-family townhouses, apart- ment units and condominiums had a 3 percent vacancy rate. Some 2, 700 surveyed townhouses and 7.100 apartments and condos were vacant U S. postal carriers who conducted the survey found that Laguna Beach. Huntington Beach, Santa Ana:Gar- den Grove and Anaheim had the most unoccupied units Orange Coast vacancy percentage rates include Laguna Beach, 3 6, Huntanaton Beach. 1.8, Corona del Mar. 2.8; Newpon Beach, 2.4; Costa Mesa. 1.5, and Seal Beach. 3. 9. The overall 2.1 percent vacanC} rate r:s htgher than Los ngelc!I Count) 's. but well below tho5e fou nd 1n the R1vrn1dt-San Bcmftrdsno area. Turn1ns to new home con'ltn.act1on. the bulletin repom that over hftlf of s1ngJe-fam1ly home~ being bush are go1na up sn Newpon Bcach. Santa Ana and c;an Juan Cap1m1no while 60 percent of apanment rtntal units and h1gh-nsc condominiums arc under comtruc11on 1n I luntsnaton Bcach I aguna &-ach and ~nt:i A.na \\ e r1.· ,11 w 1111~, 1u 1 ... 1 tal I 1 n I lum 111~1 on I k .It h ,\nd \lltt'n: 1m 11nl It' tilt' gr.ind 01x·nan~of 11ur . Ile\\ fl.1R'h1p 'lltX'r Cluh . \ • 1,1)1 )( JJ )()() ll ll I\ lT'<." o f tnt.11 f11 nt'" ( )\ l'f ~ ~.\11111 :--qu.1 rt.· tn ·t 1 ll l 111.· m1 l\I .HI 'Jnt cJ t'\.t·r l l'l' t'tjlll\)llll'llt h.mm n tn nun nr 11 ns,cl<.: l\\ 1 1 llnur' nl ... p.1 11,r,t·r111ti-..11l1ktl'' \nd It If.., l'lll IR' \II 111 .I __ _, ~httcnn~ Ill" t·n 'm lllmt·nt nf tnt.tl I at ll<.''' \nd 11 1 l <.'lt:hr.111. "<. n h.1'1 11>-!, 1 m.111 •r h,1,h \\ 1111 f.11111 ith '111 Ill' l1~u11.·, l1 h.1. '\nl.111 ( nHll\\t'll o l tlw I \ K.1111, .ind 'In(." k.1~<.'f It )f mn I \ l )11d~l I \\II h 1. cl<.:hrn 1t:' It kc \I.Ir\ I l.111 t n 1m I rn 1. 11.11 n mern lontp.ht kn1kc 11.ll rt'11n 111 •Ill l >.111.1, ( ,Jori.1 I nnn~ trom · ()J\ '1 l l l h11 I 1\t'' .111d R.1d1d \kl 1,h \h ()I\ mp1.1 Jl~~ 'IX·\ 1.tl \lldtlth.ll,ll11lt'l1111i\.!ltt. llU ~, •l it.I p .111 \ \\t.ll'lltlt"llll~.1 l.11)1.{ ... (h 0 1.k .il l\\1 \1,",11' 11 11 !ht pn1. t •I 11w 11 .11, ~ 1 Ill• • 111' 111 ".1rm LIP' \\I •1 l..1 •lit' .11hl \I,, 1l ,J \\ 11' I• I l 11t' prt1.l 111 1~ I l1•l't 1•11111 '''IX\ LI\ ul.11 I H .tit ll 1 hil" "• 1111 I nn l .llJ !i ll 111.t h.1' I\ t l 'l l 11 l I lll It ii 1( I I II II lll \\ I (11l1d.I\ '°'ll..1 lll I h1111111µ 11111 Ix .11. I It 11 l I rn ~llt''l (I llJI ll >\J,I\ \\ h<. n. lll\I' \ ll·, tht tlH \1 ... 1 inti 1x·r -... .... ~~ili.l&.J tn 11nn' t ht d1n·t t111n $.Holiday Spa Health Club ~~i'~~llll'll HU T l G TO"i Bf AC JI 1~091 1'l•e1. h AhJ at \\ arner in rht' magn1f1cent n~~ Chattt'r C t'ntrt'.,t -141 M~·l'>l11 ANAllflM 'IOSo. Ma1tnoha, I blo...~ ~' 111 I in~ •In ... I 1 .,,~ q, I lO'(J BEAC H ll<H Atlanu, Alvd (Mnl'f ,1 l .11' 'I• ,_:,, ~---• CFRRITOS LAKEWOOD llMI Del Amo Ahd 11 1'11101·1·1 \tl\\10' \If JO .'.'l lOI Aliu.a Pk .. , .i1 \,.n Dita• I rt'"',.' ·1ll ...... 11 1ix.~.' \block\ E,.c;i of (l()' Frt't'Way (.21')9.24 1,11 tlR \,(,f ,,:: f .1,1 k.1tt'll,. Aw WC"\t 111 fu,11n A" -1 l <1 N .?tll COSTA ME A l\O<l t larho; Bh·J . (8t•h1nd 'llmlt' Dru i.i '"'1 • '•11 '~'' \\ l "I \tl'I..\ ll R ,, ... , .. WC',tmin.,t<'r "" 11<•<1IJ<11 \\ht "M1 ~1> l ?;,..,-,.._._ . • _______________________ ..... ________________________ ...I --- 1 A8 * Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT I Wedna<11y. F•bruary !, 198e ··-. ~ OC politicos echo party lines 1hl· 1· 1· 1>1·.~ '•·BUDGET Republicans laud Reagan ·s agenda ~ Democ rats ~h arge him.with deceit By PAUL A.RCHlPLEY Of ... o_,,....., OntnJe County Democruuc and Republican leaders agreccl on one point after hearing President Re- apn's late of the Union addrcs'> Tuesday· He gives a great speech But they fo und little else in com- mon, with Republicans laudin& Re- agan's agenda proposals and Demo- crats charging he's deceiving the Amt'ncan people. "It wa& another 1n a scnes of e"<cellent speeches by Ronald Re· agan " ..aid Congressman Ro~rt Badh.am. R-Ncwpon Beach "It wa!> another excellent Joh," agreed Howard Adler. past chairman of thcDemocrauc Party of Orange Count) "He's clearl~ an excellent communicator " But whereas Republican!f. took Reagan at his ""ord when he again re1ected 1mpos1ng c1 tax increase to reduce the defici t Democrats refu~d to behe-.e him "This speeth "'as prepa nng us to face some realities. and a ta' incrca-,r is dearly n<it a l'Ons1dcrat1on," !.aid state Sen Mt.lf1an Berseson. R-NC\\· port Beach 'll remai ns to ti<.· ..ecn where those reductwns .... 111 he k it " ··nnce again Ronald Reagan " lying to the pubht .. said Michael Ra' c.hairman ol the Dt'mocra11t J 11u nda11on ofOr.inge C ounh \A.e'rc looki ng 1n the face of a \aluc-added ta\ ""h1ch 1\ ha\1call} a fede ral '>ales l<:t\ •\nd I thin~ we'll sec an energ) tax .\' long a\ oll pnce'> t.onunuc tu drop. the adm1ni\tra11on will fi gure 11 tdn t.1dd a La' 1 hat won '1 hurt · Ra \ .,aid "I JU\l ·don't hcl1t''C him.'" ..\dlcr said '"H1., admin1s1rauon .... as the arch1te<t of the large'>1 ta ~ intreasc in h1SI OI) " Reagan\ call tor < ongn·\\ IO gJ\·e him "line item 11etn" p<1wt·r was supported . b) pin ~ memhcrs Badham and Bergeson hut no one expects ( ongres~ 10 gi"c 11 to htm .. I suppon the hne 11em vew 43 states have 11," \;.11d Badham fr om h1'> Washington D < offi ce ··The po.,.,cr has nc"er hecn abu">Cd in California and the Lcg.1\laturl· ha <; been C.O\ered b~ lt'i veto power · But there s "1rtuall) no chance ( oniµ-css wall ever gave 11 to an) president." "There's no chanct• of Rengan gett;ng line item veto puwet ." •\dler ~·d "It 100 thoroughl) 11p tht balance of power " Reagan again called for a balanced budget amendment, a proposul Democrats thought "h)'pocr111cal" 10 hght of his adm1n1s1rat1on's record budget deficits ··1t has been balanc.cd in m) hfet1me," Adler said, adding "bv Democrat\" ··e u1 if he chooses to follow the present cou~ ofhea' y spending and le111ng the next generation pa\ for 11 then it's not goin~ to happen "There's a limit on how long yo u can postpone a debt Eventuall) \Omeone else w11l 1nhent ll aqd the) ·11 ha"e to explain why the system docsn 't work " Republican~ bat ked Rl·aga n·, argument that the key to halanu ng the budget I\ through econum1l programs that 1ndude lnl rt'a\1ng producll' It), reduung trade dt'fiutc, and addre'>s•ng \.\>orld current' llul · 1ua11on'> Berge'>on, speak1nll from her ~.11..ra mentooflice. said ... 11 ""e can keep thl' 'ltatc and the nation on an up!> .... 1ng through increased pn1duc11v11; thl·n II w1ll Ct'rta1nl)' bnng about a ht:t1l·r resolulion to the halanced budgl·t problem than a stagnant t•conom) Bad ham. commenting on Reagan ' • ~uppon of the Ciramm-Rudman ddi· l1 t-reduc11on law <>aid,"£ \ef)bod~ \ nCf\ ous ( ongre~!> l'i incapable of h\.1n$ with the problem 11 u catl·d - deficit .,pending. "II C ongrec,\ act'> quickl y and properl ) there won't b<· an) need for Gramm-Rudman II c_ ongre.,s fail' to do what 11 should he doing all along. then the meat a'c 1s going to fall on the budget proces'> ... Democ ratc; fea r 1ha1 meat ax.e will w ntinue to fall on !>OC 1al programs Reagan'\ call for an overhaul of the "'el fare S} .. tem meant "he''> calling for ~O m1l11on people to g<i hungr) on th t• \tree ts," Ra) said Whether \upport1ng or oppo<,1ng Reagan listeners Tuewa) agreed h1\ address was the president at his b<.·'>t There will never be a better time to begin ... or a better wav to l~arn . , MUSIC New Classes starting Febraary 1 • Music. M ommy & M e for 3-year-olds • Yamaha's famous Primary Course for 4-6 yr. olds • Introd uction to K eyboard for 7-9 yr. olds • Contemporar y Electone ... Age 10 and up • O rgan class for adults •\"/•u Pri. II'' fru rru1 111.n In flutlf c/t1rln•I •II Htph""' vlu/ln r rlfo gult'1t 11rum• pldrtO. organ •Ole• 559-5440 Jeffn•y Rrl at Irvine Ctr Or lln11n1> Village (enter) ST ATE OF THE UNION ••• From Al were aiven special mention, and Reagan introduced four young American heroes seated on the dai1 With him. But the 31-mtnute speech was 'lhon on ~pccific ways to carry out his \ 1~1on. The only in1t1at1ve~ were direCllVe'I: -To the White I louse Domestic f>ohcy Council to report on welfare tev1s1ons b> Dec I ofTenng "a strategy for 1mmed1ate action to meet the financial . educational, social and safe-ty concerns of poor fam1l1es." -To Health and Human Services Secretary Ot1s Bowen "to repon to me by year end w11h recommen- dations on how the pnvate sector and government can work together to address the problems of affordable insurance for those whose hfe savings would otherwise be threatened when catastrophic illness strikes:• -To.Treasury Secretary James A. Baker 111 to consider calling a world monetary conference to discuss whether to alter th( free-market system of ~ttmg curr~cy values Republican allies praised the prc\1- dcnt for olTenng what Rep. (1uy Vander Jagt, R-M1ch., called "a balance of compassion and prac11rnli- t) ... but Democrats scoffed at Re- agan\ talk of a future filled with strong, 'ielf-suffic1ent families, freed from "'el fare dependency. "I d1dn'1 hear anything that leads' me 111 behCH'. we are going to rind the future that he described," said Rep K1chard A. Gephardt, D-Mo . Sen P..aul Simon. D-111.. said,·• The funct10n ol a real leader 1s not s1mpl~ 10 lell U\ .... hat we want to hear " The pre\llknt w11l elaborate in a detailed message of his legJsla11 ve agenda for the vear Thursday But what he ofTered Tuesday night · to Congress and a national broadcast audience ""ere h1~ signature theme'> a hopeful v1c,1on of Amenca, a pitch for reducing the o,copc of government and oppo\1tiun lo tax 1ncrease5 ··ut u .. '>pea~ of our respons1b1hty to redefine fOvemment's role," Re· agan said. • Not to control, not to command. not to contain Ull: but to help 1n t1mes of need." He cited the breakdowit of the tam1ly structure among welfare re· c1p1ents and said. "I am tallung about real and lasting emancipation be· cause the success of we rt should be Judged by how man of its recipients become independ t of welfare." Yet. while the ovemment has poured billions of dollars into welfare programs. "the plight of the poor grows more painful," Reagan sa1d; the time has come to "escape the spider's web of dependency•· But he said, "We must revise or replace provams enacted in the name of compassion that degrade the moral wonh of work. encourage family breakups and drive communities into a bleak and heartless dependency." The president's budget, released this morning, proposed a 15 percent cut 1n spending on federal JOb- tra1n1fli programs. The budget for the fiscal year beginning Oct. I calls for cl1m1nation of the 19-year-old Work Incentive, or WIN, program h also cuts the Summer Youth Employment Program by one-third and the Job Corps by one-half. In a prerecorded Democratic response broadcast after the presi- dent's address. Sen. George Mitchell, D-Ma1nt.", said, "The best social !>Cr" ice agency 1s a family that's together. The best social program is a good JOb. "But the policies of this adm1n1s- tra11on are having the 01>pos1te ef. feet," Mitchell said. "They·re driving more families into hard limes and apan, and they're causing American Jobs to move overseas." But Sen. Daniel Patnck Moynihan, D-N.Y , welcomed Reagan's call fora study of the welfare system. "It is plain we are not doing our JObs: t~ children are now the poorest age group 1n the na11on." Reagan salutes four young national heroes WA\Hl""(,T()N (·\P)-f or three l"h1ldren the tragic fate of the <ihuttle C hallcnger meant keeping a fabulou'i 5ecret fo r another week For R ll hard Ca' uh 11 meant a '>ha tiered dream that s1111 .... on him a \hare of pres1den- 11al glon Ca voi1 . l.l... of Marlboro NY . Tyrone () Ford, 12 of the 01\tnct of (olumb1a. lihclb~ Ru1ler, 12 of ~t Joseph, Mo. and Trc.,.or Ferrell, 13. of C..radwyne. Pa . were the '>urpnse guest~ saluted by President Reagan a".i .\mencan he roe, I uesda~ n1gh1 a~ the chief necut1' c dell .,.cred h is \tate of the l n1nn addrcS\ .\\in '.Year\ pa'>t lhl· V. h1tc I fllU'>C had guarded 1hc1r Hkn t 1 t1c~ ac. t1 gh1h a\ an~ na1111nal \l'tn·t unul he 1ntrod uted them to thl' C ungrl\\ .ind c1 11dll onw1de hro.11.kJ\t dUd lCOll' Reaga n hJd 1n1cndt<.J to prt•\cnl the quartt'I 10 < ongre.-.!. a week earlier Then came the homhlr new' of the ( hallengt•r c\plos1on and a wcc i.. \ postponl'Olent 1,f h1'> add re\\ Dec.trml'll tn that dl\:l\ter Y.«I\ a tr~\l.ll nri..:n menl that ( :i vol1 had worked on Im 11ear'i. \tarting in high \Chool "'o" J \ludent at l n1on < ollcgc hl· hoped that the resuhc, of thl· f)fllfl'l I ' ndl' on the < hallengcr would enable him 111 develop a more \en\111\1' 1ypc 111 X-ray film thaL \\nuld rt·4u1re lo1A.a rad1a11on e\· posure., and thu' reduce n".il.'> to patient\ "Thal ~me spmt and persev~nce, said the president, was demonstrated by the "towenng talent" of yqung Ford. an orphan being raised here by an adoptive grandmother, Mrs Buner Carelock "A child prodigy of gospel music, he has surmounted personal adversi- ty lo become an accomplished p1an1s1 and \inger.'' !k11d Reagan, who noted the )OUth already directs three church choir'i and has performed at the Kenned) Center The president then 5aluted Rutlcr I 3 of \t Joseph Mo who wa' on dut" with the Pershing Uementar) ~l hool safct} patrol on Nov 19. 1984. when a school bu\ went out of control he.1d1n~ for a <:rcmwalk. ~~en-)ear· old f-cliua (,u, fro1e in the path oft he bu~ Butler lunged in front of the bu\ and pulled the youngerchlld 10 safely Last. the prec;1dcnt introdul'Cd Fer- rell 13 . .,., ho hvc~ in the affiuent Ph iladcph1a suburb of (1radwyne Ounng the 1981 Chnstmas o;ea'l<>n . after 1.eeing a telev1s1on new\ item ahout Philadelphia'!> homele\!>, Tre\t1r 1ns1s1ed that h15 parent'\ take him to '1s11 the need~ on th e uty <,I ftCI <, \ince then, he ha'> launched 'r revor's < ampa1gn for the Home· le'>'> .. w11h .250 volunteer<> who help cook and deh' er hot meals to about 200 people a night OUR FIRST ANNUAL CLEARANCE Sale UP ro 80°/o OFF begins Monday Feb 3rd 10 am GUESS · No · New Man SUEDE • SWEATERS 1686 TUSTIN 631 -1922 COST A MESA cornor 17th & hJ\ltnl Where It Comes From --........ --~ "*-MC.e 9'ec:eepca t•' > -----------+-lndiv~ ancome r .... t•> r--7-----..,.....-C0tpo1Mlon ~ Taa .. ,.., /-lllh----+--BOl•owlng ,,.., ,..,......, __ ..,..._~ r .... ,._, -----OCNr ,.._ , Where It Goes Fi9cal ve-1918) •tHnate (BaMd on OM ~I •Nat~~ ,,,., ______ __, Owect a.en.fit Peym..,ts fOf lndivtduata,41 ~, ______ .....,..._ ____ _ G111nu to S tates and l.OeektJH ,,~, ------..---..... Net lnt.,est 'U'> --------..L 0 1tw11 Fecse1a1 Opeta11ons {~J ------------;--.......,.- • Includes Pentagon sp1mc11n9 d"t.1 fne19y 01JpiMff1"11L!ltl l•UC l~iJI ""'"•*/" '"' Reagan sends Congress 'hard choices' budget WASHI NGTON (AP) -Pm,1 · dent Reagan tqday sent Congrei.!> a "hard choices" S994-b1ll1on budget for fiscal 1987 that would meet targets of the na11on's new budget-balancing law through deep cuts in domes11t programs and auc11on1ng an arra> of federal assets. Whtie few domestic program!> wen· spared the budget knife. the prcs1dcn1 asked Congre!>s for an increase in defense outlays 1n t 98 7 of S 15 9 billion. up 6 2 percent from last year. · and proposed a 37.8 percent increa\t over the next five year'i The hudgt l would lc(!ve all maJOr wcapom '>Y'>- tcms intact while proposing a 75 percent increase in the president\ "Star Wars" program of defense against nuclear m1ss1les The bud~et would sla'ih. frce1c 1n place or eliminate scores of c1v1han programs -while granting a small. S94-milhon increase 1n funding to the nauon's space program It would knock a million college 'itudents ofT aid rolls, cut Medicare and Med1ca1d health programs for the poor and elderly and re9cle many of the program ehm1na11ons sought unsuccessfully by the president last year The budget would raise fees for using the national park!\. impose a S 10-per-angler licensing fee for fish· ing 1n the ocean tnm benefits under the GI bill, cu1 federal \uppurt for the Interstate H1ghwa) sy'i lem and re- quire able-bodied welfare recp1ents to engage in some "work-related act1v1- 1y" 10 continue rece1v1ng federal help In all. the budget calls for domestic spending cuts ofS25.6 billion. Man y of the proposals. including the gov- ernment-wide spending total. had been leaked 1n advance It was the first prcs1den11al budget 10 be submitted under the new Gramm-Rudman budgct law, which would force an end to government defic11 spending by 1991 Automat1<: cuts of around $40 billion will be tnggered next October under the law 1fthere is a budget deadlock between Reagan and ( ongress The first round of C..ramm-Rud· mancuts,totalhngSI I 7b1lhon.have already been tnggered. I he} w11l takl' efTect on March I Figure'> 1n tht· president's new budget ret1cct the lower spending levels already in place because of these 1n111al cuts In his budget mes~ge, Reagan told ( ongrcss that his plan would "set lhl' dcfic11 on a downward path to a balanced budget by 1991 " Reagan c;a1d the proposals he wanted would prec;cn1 C ongress with "hard l ho1ces . but we must find the w11l 111 face up to our rcc;pom;1b1ht1e!; .. But lew in ( ongress held out much likelihood that the president's hudget would ~uf\'1ve ma1or mod1fica11on 1n the coming months of \trugglc ovC'r 5pending and taxc\ "I don't think there are 25 \11te'i in the l 'n1ted ~tale\ ')cnate tor tht• budget.'' said ~n 8111 Bradley. O- N J And Rep Les Aspin. D-W1s .. chairman of th e House Armed Ser- vices Comm111ee. called 1t "DH>\ - dead before am\al " Many senior member> nl both parties 1n Congress have l''I prl'ssed doubts that the federal budget can be balanced with 'ipcnding cuts alone a'i Reagan prefer; \enate Repuhhcans have recently urged Reagan to con- sider a comprom1'ie including •\'Oml' ne .... ta"<e\ -pmsibl> an oil 1mpon fee ~1gn1 ng th e hudget profl<1\,1I 111 tht· <h al ()flicc t1K.la). Keag;in hl'ld oPt"n tht poc;s1bil1t) of appro" 1ng an ml import fee 10 ofl\el an ~ rt."venuc IO'it b} chan$C" 1n a ta' <>' erhaul bill pending In the wnate "'I've '>Sid that I'm willing 10 loo!.. at that. on that basis, .. Reagan said Sen Pete V l)omcn1l1. R-N.M . chairman of the \<."nate Rudget Com- mittee, propoM:d 1oda) that Reagan call a budget summ1t "'1<1o;ce 1fwe can put a packa$e together." The president's budget projected total receipt!> uf \MS()~ billio n for a deficit ofSl43 6 h1tlwn for the lic;cal year beginning on ()(.1 I Under the budget proposal which also includes pr0Jcc11ons for the next five )Cars. the go\.eroment would actually end up w11h a SI l .b1lhon surplus 1n 1991. CANADA by ~AFT in Newport Beach Thurs. February 6 At _J:JO P.M . et Newport Sheraton 4545 McArthur Blvd. _ (""•re VJ«l1911y 1nv1ted lu d 'I"-'" .,nd 111m prn~·rn1~t11w 11·1 < ANAfJ<AN r11vr n f I Pf Ill TH IN 11 V,ifW-tH1V~t "'"'" .. 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'>P"" P 1c••~ HEAOWAH A'> QI' THE MIC.HTV Sl<EfNA 10 ll~y' \1/'.t 18(/ "'""' ,• M•<•l•nq t.ipt<l\ 'l'..,.. mounl&•n ••"ey v:enefY Pl US lebtJo<>u• ''~"'""&<I w lmol' MICl r1<1no<1W "''""'' "'"'' ""•"' t VIM! l1&ep canyon poo4, OI ll'lt\ NOftd '""'°''' ...... 1'M I\ lr.l'lltloll '" 'oi detn•I• P'llH4' o"'°"* Ill< Ally Qf>6 l:iS<I• 111 e<int.1irr I H M.-11\ r.~"·"I"" ,.,_.,, I •P."1•hon' B•S ('Mt.fl <;11MI V ln(("'""' AC (.11n~d~ II' 091'11)1>11 (,(M 111\ •U'I ----~---------------------- (_, RAN D OPENING \, I II• I ( / J rinrl .ti lh I'' 111 lo(r c 1.1r ll'd lh1•11t11l111M\ I Ill If' Ill for,\1\1 C' Jt,J\I f}ll \ bt•t•ll '• • ' 111 rl \ .. 1 h1 I .111d 111.cn,l){• r 111 I• 111 ' t• I .ell! .tnl J';1stl'I'" • .r 111d H.11 tl11·\ (,,,,i.: '"' \\11 1<1 1. .11 11~· • 1111 '''" 11r11h 11p1111w • 11ll1t111111111 111li11Ar, 1 rt ,1111m..., I r•1m L.illlrn n1 a a nd tht• ,, . ...,1 111 tht' \\1Jrld \i111'll d1·lwh1 ''' f r1·c;h JM st,, Ilk• Tn111l11r ~u .. i!Ji,. "1~h Pro .. • 1111111. \fi1,hr110111 ... ind Hl;i111 ht rl I 1,11111 \~111'll 1;1 ll 1n lrn1 \\1t h t rrill.t<.Jt , l1kt· !';11llarcl tJf L h ie k1·11 \\ ith I krb Dutter and Cabernt·t ....,dun· Ptt'it<·l 's h;i.; p1ua f()u l>Jkt•cl m ;m auth1•nt" ltaliari \\1 11°11! h111n1n.c nvl'n' And tht·n .'s 1111 w1llp<1\\t't on birth th.11 1 .111 n•::-f"'I ( rU\' 0 'i la~1..., rl<""'('I t ~it c 111111 tu our (;r.111d C )p1•11 m.c' f-c·hru;n \ J h ·hru;tr \ lh l';ir1.1kc• nf the• 11111. m<'tl 1m1 111 .ind .m m tnn;il1oniil 1nc•nu t h,11 1 11111q1wl\· J>;1"1t I''' O\lt har uµ<'n" .11 ;-, pm d11rnc 1 ... 1.irt .11 h pm ~' >c·11 .1111 1n ... 111 r1·1 111111111•11<11-d ( •tlll end Rar I 'II \.\ t!1111111 lo<1\ ''""I" 11 !11 "It I 11th 11111 I 11 h I 111 1-'" ' Oran~ Cout DAILY PILOT /WedMldly, February 5, 1988 '* A7 • Manson espouses r~volution, denied parole once more Governor to pursue -unitary tax cut M~yorsayshandstted on nucle~r shipments By th AllOda&e4 Presa LOl"G BEACH -Mayor Ernie Kell ooncedH there uo'l much be or the cny can do to bfocl( the federal aovemment'1 plans to ab1p lj)Cllt nuclear fuel throuah the Port of Lona Beach. But be said be believes tbe U.S. Oepartq'leftt of Eoersy WIU try to reljeve residents' fears about poutble hazards or the shipments.. T-he EnersY Dcpanment intends to briQ& apent fuel rod• from 1 reactor in an Asian country to the West Coast by sb.Jp. ~AN QUENTIN (AP) -Mass murderer Charles Manson. denied parole ancr telhng a state board he would pursue his dream of a violent world revolution 1f freed , can look forward to at least another three years 1n pnson. Tuesday the parole board found the 51-year-old former cult leader un- suitable for parole from his hfe sentence for the 1969 massacre of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others · Manson, who wears a bloc swastika on his forehead and told the board he spends his ume making dolls of ~orpions with the t><>wer to torment, must wait the maximum three year<, before his next parole heanng.. th e panel ruled. In a surpnse appearance, Man son. scruffy-looking with long, graying hair and beard, delivered a rambhna, often incoherent 20-minute speech he w~otc the n;iaht before. He had told prison officials he wouldn't appear at the hearing, but changed his mind Ttresday momma. Manson said he didn't think lhe hcanng would be fair to him, a~d blamed the media for describing ht'm disparagingly. "I have children write me and tell me 11's already 1n the history books that I'm a bad guy," he said, rubbing h1~ long-nailed thumbs together over and over as he slouched in a chair. His wnsts were tattooed, aod he had 1nked-1n the swastika he carved into his forehead years ago. He said the scorpions gi ve "the power of the revolution to the people,'" and that "from the world of government, I did loose demons and Claarlee llan80ll devils Wlth the power of scorpions to torment." If paroled, Manson said, he'd "probably join the revolution down south somewhere and t7 to save my life on the planet Earth. might go to Libya. I might fo see the ayatollah (leader of lran). mi&ht go to France, catch somebody 1n F'rancc I'm upset with." SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Oeor&e Deukmej1an says lhe Gramm-Rudman amendment may delay act.ion on California's unitary tu, but be stilt wants to cut it at least S2SO miUion a year. At a news conference Tuesday, Dculonejian also said he has reached "general aarecment" with the Lqis.- lature to place CaJ-Vet, jail, water and library bonds on the June ballot. But the Republican 1._ovemor said he would veto the Dcmocrat-in- troduccd plan to rcorpnize the state agencies that deal with toxic wastes. Questioned about criticism by the federal Environmental Prot.cction Agency of his ad.miniS1.ration's man- agement of federally funded toxic cleanup programs, Dcukmejian said the EPA has had its problems, too, and added: · Prl.aner freed, mu•t tell of AIDS VISTA -A homosexual man exposed to the AIDS virus was releued from county JaU under the ooodiuon be tell future sexual partners be 11 a ~tential camer of the deadly ducase. The 21-year-old Eacondido man, whoee identity was not released, objected to the cond1t1on 1m~ on him Tuetday but agreed to abide by it, his attorney, Georae Hunt, wd. The man'sex~ure to the AIDS virus was discovered while he was tcrViOj time in countv 1aiJ for his conviction on two counts of u.sing stolen credit cards Sov1et ullor may be forced IJome SAN DIEGO -A Soviet sailor who underwent surgery in San DiCJO wants to return to her ship, but red tape may force her to Oy back to the Soviet U n1on and lose six months of wa&cs. officials said. Svetlana Prolwdina. 26, wu reported in aood condition Tuesday at Scnpps Memorial Hospital by botpitaJ spokeswoman Dtaoe Yohe. Prokudtna was airlifted to San Dicao by a U.S. Coast Guard belioopter Monday af\er COl'(lplalrun& of seV'ere abdominal pains wh ile on board the Soviet trawlerGnevynn. The woman isa food worker on the ship, which was about 200 miles off San Diego's coast when a helicopter came to pick her up. . Blood tests confirm Nelson used cocaine "If they want to take over the whole program, rd be happy to give it to them." Electronic ~elllance program to /Jegm SAN DIB~ -Inmates in the county's work furlou&h center will be aJtow~ to serv~ ume at _home under an electronic surveillance program that proba.tion off!c1aJs say 1s t.he first of iu k.lod in the state. The year-Jona eitpenment, aimed at reducing the backlog of pnsoncn waiun& for admission to the ~ork furlough center, is set to begin July I and would be open to non- violent tnmates COnVlcted of en mes such as petty theft or traffic violations. WASHINGTON (AP) -Blood tests have con- firmed.substantial cocaine use by singer Rick Nelson, but authonues say no evidence links drug u~ 10 the New Year's Eve air crash that killed Nelson and six portation Safety Board Tuesday, showed that substantial amounts of cocaine were in Nelson's body when he died. But sources close to the investigation said the findings provide no hnlc between the drug use and the accident. DcukmeJiao also accused the Legislature's non-partisan budget analyst, William Hamm, of "ir- responsible statements" in a report last month saying Dcukmejian has raised state taxes by S2.4 bilhon over the past three years. companions The reports also showed traces of marijuana and News reports had 'ia1d government investigators alcohol in Nelson and several of the other passengers, but were examining whether Nelson and members of his band no evidence of drugs 1n either the pilot or co-pilot. might have been talung cocaine by "free-basing" _ a The tests showed that Nelson had .082 milligrams of method that involves ~n open flam e _ shortly before a cocaine per liter in his blood and .131 milligrams of fire erupted tn the cabin of the rx:·. 3 that was carrying metabolized cocaine per hter in his urine atthe time of the them to a Dallas concert accident. A separate examination of a blood sample He did not dispute specific figures in Hamm's report, which contradicts DcukmcJ1an's claims that he has not raised taAes. But be said Hamm's ~escnpuon of t~ose chap.&cs as tax increases "1s enurcty incorrect." Animal• killed, mutlJated In LA County showed another .25 micrograms of metabolized cocaine MARINA DEL REY -Nine batty chicks, a rooster. a hen and a rabbit were Jcilled and mutilated at a animal sanctuary maintained by Los AnJeles County near Mano.a Parle. Another rabbit had an eye cut out, but it surv1ved, park volunteers said. Dcpuues from the Manna del Rey station were ~bu1g for a juvenile in coonccnon with tbe attack on tbe arurnaJs. Toxicology reports, released.by the Nat10nal Trans-per milliliter. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiE;::::n--~:::;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::====::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:= ORANGE COAST December job hunts paid off By LISA MAHONEY °' .... Oellp ..... lutf December was a good month ror Job-seekers in Orange Cou nt) as temP<>rary holiday hinng pushed the unemployment rate down 10 3.5 percent for the first time last year Although Mann C.ounty recorded a J J percent unemployment rate for the month, Orange County was one of three California countlcs that could boast plenty of Jobs for"1osc seeking work dunng the yule season. Besides Mann. San Mateo County matched Orange County's 3.5 percent rate Los Angeles County reported a rate of S 4 percent while nationally, unemployment stood at 6 9 percent. Retail payroll~. in Orange County balloo'hcd by 8,000 pos1t1ons dunng December The total retail JOb count of 202.300 was 4 8 percent higher than Dec.e mber 1984's 3.5 percent Holiday hinng at Orange County tourist attract1pns also helped lower the rate of JOblessnes'i by adding 600 pos1uons to the service industry total. Transportation and ut1ht1es finns hired 200 more workers dunng De- cember as did construction contrac- tors. M1n1ng also showed modest gains while seasonal farm work plunged by 1,000 positions. Scattered gains in finance. in- su rance and real estate acrounted for 500 new JObs. Government employ- ment and manufactunng payrolls \lipped dunng the month Wholesale employment continued to show the effects of the meat cuuer'l and Teamsters labor dispute Availability of housing low By LISA MAHONEY °' the D..., ,.... Ii.fl A 1985 housing vacancy survey confinns what house-hunters ha ve known all along -finding a place to roost here isn't easy. Vacancy rates in Orange County communities averaaed 2.1 percent tn May 1985, according to a Labor Market Bulleun from the st.ate Em- ployment Development Department. SmgJe-family homes had the lowest va~ancy rate with only about 6,200 units or 1.4 percent unoccupied at the time they were surveyed. Mobile homes were next with a I 9 percent vacancy rate: only 553 traJlcrs were available dunng the survey. Single-famil y townhouses. apart- ment units and condominiums had a 3 percent vacancy rate. ~ome 2. 700 surveyed townhouses and 7. I 00 apartments and condos were vacant U S postal carriers who conducted the survey founQ-.1.bat Laguna Beach. Huntinaton Beach, anta Ana. Gar- den Grove and Anaheim had the most unoccupied unns Oranae Coast vacancy percentage rate, tnclude Laguna Beach. l 6, Hunt1n1ton Beach, I 8. Corona del Mar, 2 .• Newport Beach. 2.4; Cost3 Mesa. I. S. and Seat Beach. l C)..1 The overall 2.1 percent vacancy rate 1s higher than Los An&ele~ Count) 's. but well below those found in the R1vers1de-. n lkmardino area. • Turn1n~ to new home con'ltnJCtion, the bullwn reports that over half of s1naJe-f1m1ly home' hc1n built arc 101na up 1n cwpon Beach. Santa ~and n Juan ( ap1strano wh1k 60 percent of apartment rtntal unit\ and h11h-nsc condominium$ art under con,truct1on -1n lfuntington Beach I .aauna Jkiu h anti ~nta .\ na 2 Years For The Price Of One. \\n( ,111111111~11111 ... 111111n I lt 11111n~11111 lk.1t h .-\lld \ l>ll l"t' Ill\ lt~·d l1-.11J1.· ~1.ttld I >tK'llll1g 111 < llll 11t·" ll.tK'l11p "urx:t < lull \ S II II)( ll K 10 lllll\ l"l '4. o f 101.tl llllH." ( h1.·1 1 ~.lllHI -.qu.m: ll'l't 1 >I 1 ht· mn-.1 .1d \Jnn·d t."\t 1 1. 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I 1-.h \h <)I\ mp1.1 ll>8_2 "1X 1. 1.d t''c:m-. 1n1. lutl111~ m.1rt1.il .1ri.. cl< mo11-.1r.111on~ 1.1,h1nn-.htl\'' .llll>hll ,l.111lt'.11 ,1 r.1\ 1u1.1h.1U1.·\ luh11111n-. I ht• I h 1l1d.I\ "I'·' I'·'''' 't k "',II 111K h\ d 1 H1,ltln~ .t t)( 11 tu >1l 11I .II 11t." 1111 •nix 1-.llq't tn·-. 111 l llt• I 1 " \11)-tdt.·, ( lupt l 1 • 11 I lw \I 1 kc \ \\ ''" I 11und.111111 l .111• 1n p1111t: 1.1111hl.11 • 1111 1 1111111.111\ 111, h1ldu:11 \11d1t11l.11-.1111ltlltl\l~lll1llll.ll\ 11.111..111).tll\ \\1.'l\.1>lltrtll).t.1 l.tlll.l'll1 d1.·.d "" \1.",lr' h •t lh1. pt II,.' •I' lllt 11.11-._:I11h I 11i ... ' >I" .trill u1 ~, 11 h.1 •lit .... ind\," 11 d• ", , ... lo •1 1 Ill' prk'11·•I I~ In• •l l'C 11111. 1 11,t 'P<.11.1111 l.1r !ll .1ltll 1 l\,h, "' 111tlwm ( d1(11I \1,1 h,1' I \I I 'I I 11 ( • •ll ll 111 I • 1\11 I \I \\ I h 1ltd.1\ "l ,I 11 l I h 11ll11 l).I. 11111 lk.11 I It'' .1 lrtt )otlll."'' 111111 It !\I.I\ \\hen mu-. tit ' I ht th lll't.tnd pc..·r In l II Ill' I ht d trt'd II )11 ii Holiday Spa Health Club ~:~<l'~·;;;lll'll . H T ING TO 81· ( ~r091 H\·al h RlvJ a1 \\Jrn~r in the magn1facent nev. Charter Lent re. 1 ·1.\ I lS l1Jll.J i\NAHf-IM \lO ~ M.tjlnOhil, I hh k \(1 ,,11\n .. In .. , 1 " ' ~11 I I 0 ,(, Rf-AC H \IOI Atl.intll Bl~d ( nrnrr ·1 l .u ,, 1 ~I" 1.!11 ~"-• ( t-RRITO~/l AKFWOOD I IAAl Dt'I Amo Rh d II P11111n 1 \ti\\)(}'\ II-JO l.\ mt .'\hua Plew\.' .ti \1n l>tf'.1(1 f-m U\ -, , ...... fl'<:: \Moc k\ F.m ol <•0' Fren.iay. (.21\)9.2-1 1~11 \ >H \'\{,I h!! I"" )\1ue-ll• Avr Wr\t 111 l11\t1n AH ..,, , 1 N l \ l I _ tO 1'. Ml ~A l ~O<Hl.irhor Bh1J . (8t•h1nd f h11t1d>ru11 -1, 1 '"" \\ t 'd \\('\\ 11 R ,, ... ., ... \.\'~1m1n,1cr .-\H 1d .11IJt • v.:, ,, ·11\ >(<}) •\,. ...... -... ..... .:...----------------------~---..:-..-........... ----..... .-..--.-.~~----~~~~---. - -I I Real lott~ry winners are state schools ahforn1a schools have struck gold -lottery gold. Based on the figures for the first three months of the California Lottery, the real winners aren't the gamblers. the dreamers or the occasional players. The big winners are the state's school children. most of whom aren't entitled to play. Community coll eges, universities, elementary and high schools stand to benefit to the tune of$272 million for just the fi rst 90 days of $'lme playing. Tha t's a tidy $50.68 for every student in the state, according to Supenntendent of Public Instruction Bill Honig. In Orimse County, schools will receive $21.4 million as their share of the lottery. County school districts will get $17.4 million and local community college districts will receive $4 million. UC Irvine and Cal State Fullerton also stand to benefit. All told. 34 percent of the $800 million worth of those h ttle lottery tickets sold in October. November and December 1985 will $0 to improve the ~tatc's educational system. Projected over 12 months. that would put more than $1 billion into California schools. The added mo ney doesn't guarantee that all of the ills that plague the educational system will go awa ~. It . doesn't assure PhDs for slow learners or computers on every desk. But it wiUhelp -provided lawmakers don't start playing games of their own. Taxpayers must be forever vigilant that legislators in Sacramento don't shirk their basic commitment to education. The education budget must not be shot full of holes under the premise that lottery money will plug the gaps. The lottery can be a supplemental boon to education, a wrndfall if you will. B1i1t it would be reckless and self-defeating to rob the state education budget by the amount raised in the lottery. Californians should know better than to gamble with their children's future. LETTERS ------ Like Jack London, sp~ce crew lived life to fullest To lhe Editor One of Cahfom1a0'i mo'' tamou\ early author' was Jack London He lived a \Cl\. full life but died at age 40. · To him. quali t\ 1n Ilk wa, inlin11c h more important than ~ui.lnt1t\ Certain)\ the ht:ro1l ( hallenger as1ronaut~ lelt the !>amt: way . .\nd sure I) Mr London wa~ writing about them a!> wt'll as h1m\clf when he penned .. , would rather be a~hc\ than dust' I would rJthcr that m\. spark 'ihould burn out in a bnlltant blatc than 11 should be st1fled by dryrot I would rather be a superh mt•tt•or. eve11 atom uf me in magnificent gJo" than a <;lcep) and permanent planet The proper function of man I\ to live not to C'.l(ISt I 'ihall not wa\t~ my days 1n tl)1ng to prolong th!m I By tb~ Associated Pres'i shall use m} t1mt: · Hopelulh. a pos1t1"c rc\ult lrom this spacecralt traged~ "'ill he ii greater publ11 appreuallon ot lhl' dangers 1nH>hed 1n being on the l utting edge of <,pace e\plor Jt111n Perhaps some of our u1mpl,1t 1:nt ~ "'ill be wiped awa~ 10 be n:plJll'd b\. a greater admiration for th ow hr<I\ e souls. For those not onl) willing. but cager. to head into the "'ild blur strapped into man's mO\t lomple' machine, astride an enrnmuu\ \ ol- Jt1le. thrusting force Pray that we ha"c n(lt l(Olll·n "' \Oph1st1cated th11t we ~an no longer marvel at that, hut also at \Oml•thing \0 <;mall as the "'onder and hcaut\ ol t11~hl ll<ielf . I.\( I\. FVFR'>MI '\I R "Je" pon lk.H h I oda} 1!. Wedne,da\ J-h ) thr 'hlh d,1\ ol I 1IXl1 1 ht·it .trt· 1~·1 diJ" kit 1n tht• >ear rcxJa) 0 \ highlight Ill hl\tllf'\ I >n Feb 5 111-1 \1>01111 I 4 a\tronaut' \I.in U \hl·p.11d Ir .inJ J ill(.11 I> \.l 11lht.•ll landed on tht· muon <ln 1h1\ date· In 1611 theman~how11ul<ltoundRh11drf,l;1nd 1{11~1·1 V'.tlllan, .111dl11•. IA.lfC arn\rd tr Ro.,ton lrnm rnghsnd In Inn. '°lwcden n:rngn11ed the 1ndcix-ndc1111· 1i11lw I 111tt•d \tall:' In IMXI Ph1)(.'n1'.I( .\n1 . was inC'orp<>ratt•d In 1917 ( ongrc'>'> pa!>scd. O\Cr Prr\1dent V. oodn 11.1. \\. 11\1111 , , l'to ,111 1mm1grat1on Jtl \nercl) curtailing lht' rnllu~ of ·\\1,1n., .\150 in I 1117 Meluco'<; ttin\t1tu11on wa\ adnptnf In 141"' l'rc"dent franklin f) R1111\t'\<'lt (rt".ilnJ .r ''11rm of 111nlfl•\l'r'\ w11h h1' prnpoc,al to appoint up 10 "' .1ddt1111nJI \upr1 nh· ! n11r1 IU\llu'' ,.S.nt1l\ ch,1rged he wa, trving 111 fl<K k lh1· 11,11111n·, h1ghl'\I \t1Ur1 In I 9'1X < 1amal .\hdcl '-·1"1·r wa, 111rrn.1lf\ n11m1na11:d 111he<111111• thl 111.,, pre.-.1dent 01111( nt:"' l n1 ted \r,1h RC'f 1 hl11 Correction l>ut' Ill a l\pe<oC111np Nror •~·• linl'\ "'1'r1· 011111tt•d J.111 'Imm what wa<; intended IO ht· 11 \'t'thJt1m lf,111\tr1pt 11t 11 dt.,l u•"ton he-Id by the Fountain Valh:\ C 11' < 11un1 fl Thl· allvt(l' IO cnunl 11 h\ C II} \11111nt'\ \l.111 Burn\ 'ihould h:l\t' read ·• The apprn' al ol 1h1· tr all map .tl1t•1 thl tt·nt.1t1\ C' map ha'> been approved '" m ore or ll''i\ J n11nl\tt'nJI ,1, 111rn b' thl' < ounul and )'l)u're almost required to grant thl' final m:ip apprn .. JI Thl' dc,clopmen1 agreement and am wa1 q·r th.11 m1gh1 ht· lonta1n('<1 1n 1hat would ht· required to undt>r&o t"'o p11hht hearing\ and thl· <1dopt1on nf an ordinance with a ll r'll rt'.tding '>nnnd reading and then th<' m dn-. referendum pcnod · The Dail)' Pilot regret\ .1n., t'mbarra\!>mcnt thl\ error m.h ha.,t' caused Mr Burn~ ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot l'U()llV"'°~...,.,, ,.,. ftf\t ,.,..., ., \1 l't a., ~· Cc•t• .,._ • ,._ ...,,,,...,..., • 1 n , • ~r 11 """"" Tom Tell M~~ry,,,.., Oon llenley I 1, I fj ' ~ "°"" L. CMtrell ,._~,, '' !•r,r Mnr -o•• TerfJIC .... " ~-··()< ~""69f'' How•d~ M11rlittt•1Q CJ'"' IOI '9ecrY....ine o ... ~r.1ic °''"'' '"' --• ..... We should either flnd a sound rationale for manned spaceflight or we should a voJd Jt. · • By the Associated Press The virtues of manned space flight -debated for years in the sc1ent1lic communll> -:::-became a national issue last "4-eek as space shutrlc Challenger etploded. bare/> a minute offlhe launch pad. Wh ile rhe manned space program Hiced 11s worst setback, the un- manned Voyager probe was trans- mitting unprecedented pictures from the planet Uranus, d<"ep in our solar sys tem The Au1x·w11•d Prr: .... ~ tbkcd rwo eJCperts on .\pace flight, one D sup- porter of the s1Jut1/e program and the other an opponent. w put tht• case in 1he1r o"n "or<ls. Shuttle crew represented fulfillment of our dreams Should continue to should continue to collectively send out representatives to explore space send agents who will explore for us on our behalf. We should continue to do that 1h a public and v1s1ble way so that indeed all of us may pan1cipa1e vicanously. We should continue to fl y the space £01 TOR'S NO TE IJruce M urraL shuttle fo r that purpose as soon as the Ph [) " 3 professor of planetary pan1cular d1fficult1es associated with .,ucncc Dt the: California /nsritutc of-the explosion have been 1dent1ficd Technolug> tn Pasadena. Murray. 54, and fixed also I) 1 ice presidcn/ and co-founder There 1s a second tragedy unfold- (w1th ( ar/ Sagan) oft· the I 00.000-ing, not nearly so v1s1ble to the member Planetary Soetel). a pnvarc. Amencan people but Just as profound nonprofit group based lfT -Pasadena 1n llS 1mpltcat1ons in the long run. that 1!> dedicated to space exp!6nf1CHt>. 1:'1t~ shuttle had ,tJe.~_11 ... ~k.~~ ~~t From ICJ76 to 1981. Murra\ wa~ -onl}'-for-t~-purpose of carryrng dm?ctor of the N .\SA/Caltech kt human'> to and from Earth orbit, but Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Jt also incorporated a n~w and which operates 4 menca 's unmanned unproven concept in space flight. plancrarv etploratiun program The shuttle was intended to carry • · all funds of automated payloads By BRUCE MURRAY Tht 1raged~ ol last I uc.,day ha-; lout hed the o\mcncan -;oul mort dl·eph than an~thing \Ince: the Ken- nt'd' assa<;\ina11on Wh~" Wh> 'hould there be such a tremende>U\ gnef and outpounng over the death of sevt•n of us when death ,., \uch <1 l:ommon occurrence 1n all "'.ilk~ ol hfc'1 1 he reason 1s th<lt we have all 1den111icd so deeply with those a1- tral11ve and ad .. enturesome 1nd1v1d- ual~ who are our surrogates in space. The\ represe nted all of us reaching out 10 push the lrnnt1ers of adven1ure and citplorat1on f-or th.11 rt'<t'>on their deaths will not and \houkl not be in vain -we 1n1ended for dist.ant orbits 10 perform the services of the m 1 h tary . 10 Pl'rform the servlt'C'> of commercial commun1cat1on satellites and 10 cal"I) out the diverse act1v111cs of 'iClentlStS .\s a consequence, NASA has eliminated all expendable launch vehicles which have trad1t1onally been the means of launching auto- mated (and usually expendable) pay- loads. Now that the shuttle fleet 1s grounded. ALL U.S. space act1 v111es ltkewtsc are grounded The implications arc temfy1ng. Not only 1s the orderly continu· at1on of military surveillance and other functions disrupted Not only 1!. our ab1hty to ferry commercial wm- municaoons satellites suspended But our dwindling planetary explo-__, ration eOort has been dealt a stupen- dous blo"' with a year or more further delay of our pnncipal new planetary mission -the Galileo orb11er and probe for the planet Jupiter Galileo originally was su pposed to be launched b)' the shuttle m January of 1982 Instead. It and all other planetary missions ha ve been delayed or canc.;eled. A further tragedy yel to happen looms when the budgetary 1mphca- tions of these delays and reprogram- ming efforts for both the manned and unmanned programs go to Congress for approval. The time couldn't be worse. The Gramm-Rudman (deficit control) bill represents an abdication by both the president and Con~ess to make 1ud1c1o us adjustments in the various fede-ral program!> such as arc now needed becau!.<: ot the ChaJlenger traged y. Somehow we mustcolleC't1 vely find the political w1-;dom and capability to restructure and to respond to the Challenger setback. We must provide umely. efficient and flexible means to orb11 for tht full range of automated activities which are so essential to both our present and future And we must look beyo nd the shuttle and even the space 'itations to where the manned endeavor of explo- ration truly leads. The pres1den1 can and should let us see our wa y clear to Americans reaching the surface of Mars some- time after the tum of the century as the culmination of our step~ rn space and as the final tnbute to 1he seven (hallt'nger crew members Costs, risks far outweigh benefits of manned flight Unmanned craft. like the Voyage r 2,. a re doing the most exciting pioneering the Rus~1ans - or the Euroix-ans or the Japant'se. or the Chinese or some 01her once or future adver..ary -1s doing 11. Surely our mothers taught us that just because the other boys behave foolishly 1s no reason for us to do hk:ew1se. [/)/I (IF<'\ NOTf Alex Roland IS an aHoci.11c 1>rofcssor of history at OtJkt: l. ni vas1t}. where he ruches m1/11af} h1s1ory and the history of f('fhn<>log~ H e worked as a histonan fnr N .\SA from 1971-1981. dunns 1111.: dt·~ C'/opmcnt nl the ~huttlc .~pace. craft By ALEX ROLAND '°' tlM A-ieled "'-Manned fl1gh1 cost~ more than unmanned. In aJd111on to the people them~l ve\, the launch vehicle must lift their food and drink. their clothing and equipment, their life '>upport systems. the extra equipment and feature needed to ensure thc;r ..afety. and finall y a vehicle to return them to Earth 1\ t SI . .500 a pound. the current C'O\t of 1n~rtmg a payload into nrtm aboard the \huule. people become an expensive propm1t1on indeed Added to that is the human co!>t that will tnc .. 1wbl>· by paid from ti me to lime. 3~ ti was 13\l week W e \hould send people into ~P3<·e onh wht'n there l'i a compcf11na rea\on for them to be there The reason\ mo!>t often utcd arc CAPIO· rat1nn :ind vc ru11l1ty We must continue the p1oneenna explonit1on that made Amenca great, and no machine can do this for u<1. Addition 311 )' peopk can adapt to unexpected c\cnt\ and tht'y can adJU'it, ma1nta1n and rtPlllr space machines. Both arauments have a gram of tnuh Both have scnous hm1tat1on~ f he space shuttle was des1aned 10 make 'lpacefl1&t\t routine rf II 15 routine, 1t can hardly be p1on~nng CAplorat1on. ln fact. one 1s hard pre~'cd to find much flionecrtna or C'~plor11t1on 1n thr shuttlt' fl1~hts of , recent years. It 1s the unmanned craft, like the Voyager that JUSt flew by Uranus, that are doing the most exciting exploration and pioneen')g. As for the ability of people to adApt to the unexpected, this too has limited applicability We are, after all, the country that carried off the Viking m1ss1on to Mars. In the 1970s a team of sc1cnt1sts and engineers defined the parameters of hfe on Mars, designed and built a S{>acecraft to test for It, flew the expenmcnts to Mars. orbited the planet. sent probe~ to the surface, surveyed the v1cm1ty of the landing, sampled the soil, tested the sample'i, sent the data back to Earth, and responded to d1rect1ons from Mission Control here It 1s hard to 1mag1n~ how people on board might ha ve done more or better They would have added weight. co,t and danger, but not much else. An y country that can con um- male a m1ss1on like that can perform v1rtuall~ any task that it wants in 'lpacc Wlth machines -which arc, 1n the end. extensions of ourselves. When rational af1ument for man· ned spaceflight fails. its advocate a sen that we must puih on bccautt We should either find a sound rationale for manned spaceflight or we should avoid 11. Russian Cos- monauts wasting pointlessly tn orbit for months on end 1s more akin to flagpole-s11t1ng than p1oneenng or exploration Their versal1llty has not been much in evidence. One final argument for manned spaceflight 1s that we mu:.t conduct experiments on the behavior of people 1n !.pace. Th1'1, howe ver. 1s too much hkc saying that we must send people into space to learn 1f th<'y can ~urvwc should we ever find some- thing for them to do there. The urgency of this mission is hardl y compelling. NASA'scomm1tment to •he shuttle -to manned spaceflight as an end 1n itself -fo rces us to send the •nmplcst. most routine missions aloft on the most complcit and most expensive launch vehicle 1n the world. NASA should revive its expendable launch vehicles and reserve th<' ~huttle for thoSl' fligh ts whcrt the prtscnct of people in space truly JUSt11ie!> the cost and the risk . Co1D1Dents welcolDe The Dally Pilot welcomes your opinions on matters of • public Interest. Letters and tong., articles of commentary must be ''M~~· They should be typed or clearly written and sent to: L IRI to the I DfTOR, Detty Pttot, Box 15'0, Coeta ...... CA12129. Pleaee Include your address and telephone number so we may verify authorship. ALEX ROLAND Duke Unl•enlty profeuor ANN WELLS Madam, do you want a modem? Jusf make sure you'vegotyour checkbook handy ft started innocently enough. A friendly editor asked if I were interested in using a modem with my computer. With a modem I could wnte my articles, dial thc phone number of the paper and send my column wh1zz1ng into its computer system. No more addressing envelopes and trotting to the post offi c-e -or worse. dnving 20 miles to deliver them at dead I me . No, thank yo u. I said as nicely as I could. It wasn't necessary. Later, when a combination of houscguests and the holiday rush put a strain on my schedule, I began to ask questions about modems -like, "how much?" and "how complicated are they?" The friend ly ed11or assured inc they were a bargain dunng the Janual) sales. "You can probably come in under SI 00," he told me. I spend that much on postage, envelopes, ribbons for my printer and gas every few months. I called a computer store and was told the modems were on sale for onl} S.59 9.5 dunng the month ofJanual). I drove over to buy the modem and took my computer with me. I wanted the salesman to hook 1t up and tell me how to operate it. He told me instructions weren't necessary; all I have to do 1s read the manual He looked at my computer and called the other salesmen "Look. a Model Ill." he said. They gathered around and eyed my 5-year-.old maC'htne as though 11 were a museum piece. I Jumped to the defense of my old fnend Laying a hand on h1<. kt"y- board, I said. "Ht> perform~ per· fcctly." The salesman turned the computer upside down and ex amined the bottom. "It doesn't have an R 232 scnal 1n1erface," he said I had no idea what that was. but Wlth my customary cool I feigned shock and said. "ft docsn'1?" "No, I'll have to insert one " "W11l 1t hurt''" "79.95 plus tax, and you'll need a cable connector for 11 -that's SIQ.9.5." It hurt. $59.95 plus $79.9.5 plus SI 9. 9.5 plus tax -I'm over my ··under S 100" flgurc, but by now I'm sold on a modem. I take out m)' checkbook. "There's also a S 15 mstallat1on charge." Of course I should ha ve guessed. When isn't there an mstallatton charge? I wrote a check and was told I could pick up my computer 1n 1wo days. Just as I was going out the door the salesman said in an oflhand manner, "You have the proper modem software for this. I suppose." Modem software'! He tilled me 1n on that item. including the coc;t - $49 95 Well. when you have a reservation on the Titanic. why not go first cla<.<;'1 I took out my checkbook again. Dunng the two days I was waiting for my computer. I studied the manuals for the software and the modem. That's how I learned I would need a telephone 1ack 1mtallcd closer to my desk to connect the modem. I called the phont' company and asked how much that would Ix'. The representative was happy 10 help me. "$3.5 ... " What a relief -I was 'lure 11 would be more. " for the fir'it IS minutes and S 12 for each 15-minute segment after that." The water 1s already over the bow The day after the ser-Y1ce man installed the telephone Jack, I began to connect the parts -modem into the telephone Jack, telephone into the modem. m~em 1rito the computer, computer into the pnntcr. And I began to itch. Not because of my $300 plus investment -I often break out In 8 rash when r try to operate anything that plup into the ,_,.11 The fnendly editor tncd £ rcas~u~ me. "I'll wnte the procedure down for you-; one. two, three You'll 'lee, 11\ very simple ... So am 1. I have the one-two-thr« tn'itf\1l- 11ons (actually tperc are 27 instead of three). and everything 1s ~t up I haven't had the coura,ae to push the "on" button and 1ntroduct tht modem to my computer For five y~an I've had a warm and ~tisfyma relas1onsh1p with my com· puttr. I don't !Cow how he will rtan to a menage a tro1i '- ADD WtU1 llvt1 ID lA(HI Nt,..1 ... ) ,. • Dally Piiat WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY s. 1986 r:t . L:J,,: l It's an uphill treadmill for an out-of-shape reporter -__( . By BILL HARVEY ....,,...C-11111 ''"' The South Coast..f~e of Ath· l~l.JC Medicine is located 10 ~ wood-and-glass structure, just off Crown Valley Parkway in South Laguna. I had been assigned, along with photographer Richard Kochler, to go there and see what it would take to get me in shape. I decided I would pretend that J was an athlete. Pretend is the right word. I'm 48, overweight, and have two bad knees. I had absolutely no fearthat I was going to brcalc any of their machinery. with the possible exception of the scale. I was ushered in, and introduced to Man Berenda, tho Exercise Physiol- ogist. Matt showed me to a room where I could change anto my gym clothes. As I was an the process of doing so. I happened to glance down and ncnice that there was a sizeable hole an my left sock. Oh well, what the heck. AH I was going to do was walk on a tread(Tlill. Who'd kno w about the hole except me? J walked back to the treadmill room, and Man said "Take off your shoes." I was placed on a lying. stinking scale that was obviously out of kilter. and weighed and measured. Weight: Mmppph. Heigh t: About two feet short for the weight rijj!kredl>Y tJiaT lyma, stinkina scale . Man then told me that we were going to place elcctroderoti my body, and that the top layer of skin was dead, and so a bad conductor of electricity. He was going to remove that layer of sJun at the point1 where the electrodes were to be attached. He measured off some spots and started to scrub with the fervor of a love-sick sailor trying to erase the tattoo of his exgirlfriend's name. I asked him what he was scraping me with, and he said that he was using plain old gauze and alcohol. I'd have bet that he was using industnal strength sandpaper, and ahemaung wt th a wtre brush. At about the third spot, I asked him how many he had to do. He said ten At about the fifih spot, I asked Dick Koehler if he wouldn't like to con- tinue with this noble experiment, and let me take the pictures. He JUSt looked at me and smiled. Next, Matt applied the el~trode$ They were son of like banda1ds, m that he pee led a baclong off of them and stuck them to m y skin. There were also four little suction cup devices that were attached to my wrists and ankles. Wires were at- tached to m) electrodes. and I wa, Reassure children after Challenger The continuing saga of C~rolyn. Jill, He1d1 and Christine 1!> on hold for this week. We interrupt ttus sc:nes because ofa nauonal disaster. It's the worst tragedy in the history of the space program. Millions of our natio n's chJldren watchtd on TV as the space shuttle Challenger ex- ploded, shonly after take-off. killing all of its crew. Our children are not likely to forget what they saw, how they felt , and how the adults in the1 r Ii ves reacted and grieved. Do you also remember where you were wht'n President Kennedy was shot? I was a graduate student an a classr09m and was surrounded by paint and paper. The announcement was delivered that the president had been an1ured by a bullet. Our social work teacher res.ponded by asking us to maintain a silence and to paint our emotions. Before we could finish, a second announcement came. The president was dead ... Paint another picture." instructed the teacher ... Express your- self an the best way you can ... then you may go home.·· We painted and cried. Most of our children have never even experienced any real tragedy an their lives. Pnme lime TV depictions of crime and accidents have become ho-hum for most of them. 'Tragedy" has come to mean nothing more than unreal stones of fantasy whose purpose: 1s JUSt to amuse. This tragedy, however, is for real - n<>OKed'"Uplo a madn~ t~at-looked to be straight out of Star Wars. Next. I wa fined for a than& that looked son of lake a catcher's mask, and told that it was to hold the breathing apparatus in my mouth. Thank God. he didn't hook any wires to that. The purpose: of the breathing apparatus wa$ to see how much oxygen I took in, how much carbon dioxide I threw out, and how manr. breaths J took while on the trcadmil . The moment of truth was upon us. J was told 10 stra4dle the beh and use: my right foot to sort of test the speed of the thing. We had a practice session. and l managed to keep from being slung backwards off of the thing. so we went for tt. I had JUSt settled into a leisurely pac,c, thinking that I must look like a walkan& Edison sub-station, when Matt dad something that lost him all of my respect. He speeded the thing up. Not only that. he tilted it! 1 hun& in there unul it felt as ifl was proceeding up the side of Mount EYerest at a full gallop, _then cned uncle. They let me sit down for a little while, and Matt removed all of my wiring. Then he ripped off all 10 of (Ple .. e ~ TREADIOLL/B2) LINDA Atw1 and many of our children may respond with equally real fears. As adult~. we have an obligation to remain alert to any post-trauma problems. Children often defend agamst their powerlessness by assuming a "nothing bad can happen to me" attitude -surrounding themselves with a magic aura of protection. It c~n be scary whe'h the magic doesn't seem to work. Christa McAuliffe was only one of the seven brave and passion filled souls on that ill-fated voyage -but she·s the one most children are likely to 1dent1fy with. (Pleue aee CHALLENGER/82) BUI RarTey fitted with electrodea prio r to teating. '11...-.ey on treadmill Sonie muscle types may give a competitive sports edge By G. JEANETIE A VENT Muscle type may give a person a competitive edge in certain sports. UC Irvine researchers ~y. According toa UCI study. published an the Amencan Journal of Sports Medicine in January. people wtth a certain muscle type seem to perform well in long-01stance o r endurance events, whale athletes with a d1fferen1 muscle composition favor short-01stance events that demand quick bursts of power. The findings are based o n a study of 30 swimmers from the Mission Viejo Nadadorc~ a nationally sanctioned swtm club that took 13 medils m 10d1v1dual competition in the 1984 Olympics and has won 44 national team titles. The swimmers were studied at ucrs Huinan Performance Laboratory for muscle fiber type. muscle strength and cardiopulmonary function. Swimmers who typically competed 1n ~meter ev~nts were shown to have a greater number of what researchers called slow-twitch muscle fibers, wllale sbon- d1stancc swimmers who excelled 10 2~meter events had more fast-twitch muscle fibers. Middle-distance swim- mers, competing in 2~to ~meter events, had almost equal proportions of slow-and fast-twitch fibers. Though the study isn't designed to improve athleuc performance, researchers say 1t does show how swtmmers seem to naturally choose events appropnate to lhe1r muscle type. Prtv1ous studies an the field indicate that the research also applies to runners. Marathon runners have a higher proportion of slow-twitch fibers. whale sprinters tend to have more fast-twitch fibers: According to Dr. Dennis Davidson. UCI associate professor o f cardiology. "tt's probably not ad V1sable to do this muscle typing on everybody." DaVldson said although he .. believes athletes fall anto a parucular event because of their physiological makeup. the natural selection process is the bcsL This y oung entrepreneur serves a subpoena with a smile By JOLYN SOBEL o.., ..... c-1111 ,.,, If you've ever had the misfortune of being on the rece1v1ng end of a subpoena or lawsuit. you may have met Dan Wayne. The youngest owner and operator of a proces~ serving agency an Orange Count}'. 22-ycar-old Wayne doesn't fit the stereotype image of the elusive, v1lla1 no us collector at all According to Wayne. his Southwest Attorney Service has served o'er I 0.000 documents from dog-bite cases 10 Federal Court subpoenas since m conception 1n 1982 when Wayne was only 19-years-old. It all started when Wayne was Etill a1unior at Newport Harbor High School. He wc.rked part-lime after school as a "gopher .. for a Newport Beach real estate law firm where was mostly in charge of gassing-up and washing the firm's fleet of Mercedes. · After graduation and a five-week trip 10 the Maddie East. Wayne entered UCI and the law firm established its own in-house anomcy service which the> PAPARAZZI PLUS -------=----- Golden Baton for Floss Schumacher By VIDA DEAN Whe re IS the beach? "When I first came from Arcadia to live in Orange County, I was planning to rest in the sun o n the beach." said F lo11 Schumac her Saturday evening at the Irvin e Hilto n . But then. she said when she realized there was not e nough cultural and musical programs available for her children. she Joined Alta Bahia Committee of the Orange County Ph1lharmon1c society in 1966. That began a 20-ycarcarcerof volunteer support fora rt and c ulture developm entofthccounty, including Opera Pacific. the Metropolitan Opera auditions in this area. Pacific Sympho ny and the OC Performing Ans Center. And for hercontnbuuo ns. th1 aturday night so1re was her special salute; the presentation of the Orange County Philharmonic Society's third Golden Baton Award. "I am n O'-"BJOiner, I JUSt belo ng to a few things I love, -b.ut t io1so in volved ... forget the beach ... I don'teven know where the beach is." she said following an award'scercmo ny. • Henry Segeratrom, recipie nt of the first Golden Baton. made the presentation. (Donald Bren was the second.) Donald Chrtsjlansen, first place winner of the 0 district of the Metropolitan Opcn(;\uditto ns. serenaded herand the 450guestsasa "Surprise for Floss". Not a surpnsc. but a delight for the guests was the performance o f pianist Johnny G reen ( 14 times an Oscar nominee and fi ve ttmel! winner). Three standing ovatio ns were accorded the performer who not only played the piano. but sang and entenained wtth humorous dialog. Erich Vollmer, OCPS exec directo r. introduced Green. "'Isn't Jt thnlhng to have him here. His next performance 1sat Carnegie Hall" said Bunny P ero, chairman o f the OCPS maJ~r . fundra1ser that resulted m $40.000. ··Last night at the Center( tub. Jen and I had Johnny and his Wlfe Bonnie and Ench and Patricia Vollrner there for dinner. He was asked to play and received a standing ovation for '·Body and oul." • Also. getting applause at the gala was a whole comm unit) - Huntington Harbour. For 23 year~. the residents have decorated their homes for thc holiday presentation oft he C ruise of lights and mort .Lhao l.00 ... 0QO have toured ~eijun1 the f1H Com1J11ttee raise more than S 100,000 for6 PS. Eva Scbnelder, pre 1dcnt ofOCPS. presented the community award to Robert Mandie Jr., mayor ofHuntmgton Beach and Yvonne Ke lley,committcecha1rmao. Also. recogni7<~d during the salute to H unttngto n Harbour wcl'C' Jane and By Ood (who Marted the cruise)and Supervisor Harriett and Irv Wiede r. The" ho le event wuan even ingot praise and applause .for thC' o utstanding dinner, the plann1ngcomm1ttce. the mu~1c Qfthc performc" and Keltll Wtltt,wn1' I 8·p1cce big band and the spectDt"ular welcome ~C'nc 60 tapdan~t the cntrance. ''l'vc nc"<"r .. cen anyt~1rig like th ts," ~1d Robert E. Lee, making ht~ way past the Brenda Kalattes danccM. Hc(a nephew) wasamving with w1feCandlr~ 101010 o ther mcmhcr5 ofF1os~· family. hu band Ed, daughter Ann. 'ion Mark and ht'i hndc Cartn (from Holland)and 1 ter Carol Lff. wanted ~aynlto manage. W1thm a short ume, Waynt' wasdnvinga com pan)' car and working out of a bayv1ew office. But after o ne year. It was appart'nt that the.firm was not interested in cxpandinJ the attorney service's o peration and Wayne saw no future advancement for himself. That's when he decided to start his own agency. Southwest Attorney Service. The beginnings were rough. Wayne recounts To keep his overhead costs lo". he worked out of the back room 1n his uncle's warehouse located on the- west side of Costa Mesa 1n a bamo ··1 had to do everything m)self an the beginning," Wayne explained. His o ne-man operation included sohc1t1ng b usiness from attorneys. filing documents 1n court. serving papers at nigh t. billing and doing other paperwork at nighr or on the weekend. Some11mc~ working t 6-18 ho urs a day, Wayne recalls he missed a lot of parties during those days. but that the importance of building the business precluded has social life. With borrowed money. he bough I a used car which he dro'e an a'eragl' ul Preeentor Henry &ecent:rom wltla Renee (atandJJl&J and Georata rrontlere. l .O<Xl miles per week. Now, three )'tars later, Wayne occupies a plush office on Quail Street near the airport and has traded in his used car for a brand new one .. I've got help now. too," boasts Wayne of his small but adequate staff which 1nclu1.1t's a secretary and marketing representative. His clientele has expanded to include law firms spreading from Hawa11 to Georgia who want to subpoena local witnesses. The business of serving documents can get a httlt" rough as \\ ayne descnbed some adventurous expencn~ On Ont' occasion he served C\ 1ct1on papers on a man an Los Angeles who reacted v1olentl}' b} pursuing him with a 11rt' iron. Fortunately, Wayne escaped unscathed but admits. "It took at least 20 minutes before my foot stopped shakmg on the gas pedal." Another c~ involved a Superior Court lawsuit 1n Riverside where Wayne remembers kn0<.·kang on the door for several minutes when mystenousl} sax v1c1ous (Pleue .ee 8UBP0£1'A/B2) Harriett Wieder (left), Rober1 Mandie Jr. and T•O'IUM KelleJ. . ~ .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Wedn .. day. FebAlary 5, 1986 j .. I P APAR~lll ------ Wieder's all a-glitter at reception in her honor By VIDA DEAN "Ain't she sweet ... ain't she nice." Harrieu Wieder was bas~ing in the spotlight as 18 good-looking red, white and black attired Mannt'rs from Marina High serenaded her It was her night! She was at the Mend1cn to receive the national C1v1c Achievement Award from the Amencan Jewish Committee. Amving from her HuntllljtOn Harbour home with husband Irv, Hamett was weanng a white fur and what sh<.' referred to as basic black. "But, my hose are very glittery," she said. "In gave me six pair at Chnstmas. Some of the others are even fancier," she added, showing the spark.ling legwearas she mingled ~llh the group of2 I 0 dunng the recept1oi:i. Th<.' c1v1c achievement award 1s presented by AJC chapters "in rec~­ n11ion of outstanding leadership in civic affajrs and efforts in enhancin~ the well-being of the community.' HLDda Beral, director of the Orange County AJC. said. " Other chapters have honored recipients, but this is the first time for us." "I'm honored to be recognized b) my co-rehgwn1sts and I'm thnlled to be 1n the company of other rec1p1cnts .. Gov. George Babbitt of Anzona. Secretary of lntenor Donald Hodel and Wilham French ~m11h. Thank \OU for coming out to one more ihing," Harriett saaJ after receiving her plaque from Richard Weiss, na11onal AJ C VP The honoree 1s the onh fcmak to serve on the OC BoarJ of Supervisors and her 22 year~ of public service "ere highlighted. ho"'ever. Weiss Michael Lapin and Richard Welaa. painted another s1de of the honoree's ltfe. "She 1s a wife. mother. grand- mother, a sister and a sincere fnend. She has warmth, s1ncent) and vulner- ;ih1litv" Leona rd Shane (of Mercury Sav- ings. who was co-chair wtth Maurice McAll1&er of Downey Savings) said, "I have deep affection and respect for Harriett. The Wieders and the Shanes have been fnends for 36 years. People who have violently disagreed with her are here tonight to honor her. It is, continues to be and will always be an ·honor to support you in your work." Wledera: Lee, Diane, Irv and Harriett with Dr. Sanford Ullman. Honorary chairman for the affair was Gov. Deakmejlan, who was in town the day before. "I saw him at the shenffs convention and he con- gratulated me," said Hamett. Among those present to con- gratulate her were Michael Lapi.o (OCAJC president) and wife Judi, the Wieders' son Lelud and wife Diane, brother-in-law Dr. Sanford Ullmu, Pam and Sapervl1or Brace Nettude, AJC board member Lee Ban&el.D and husband Kl.Dg, Elalne Redfield, Dr. Robert Peterson, county super- intendent, Department ofEducatton. Lou and Judge Don Smallwood and Judge Jamet Jackman. Others there were Cecilla and Richard Goodmu, Gloria Zlper, Jerry Patterson and Naac y and Mlcbacl Meyer of the chapter's board (he gave her a bouquet o.f red.roses that went so well with basic black.) Diane Abrams greets Cathy Jasper. laagb with Lou Smallwood. Co-chair Leonard Shane. .... ~~-~ ~~~~~~~---~--~ ... I Best Catch Under the Bun ~ ~ Introducing the ft-..h sandwich only Long John's could ( reate It s made with twq Kit chen Breaded ... fi sh fillets on a natural grain hun WP use only LONG JOHN SILVEl{S. natural. hand-cut fillets-never pro- cessed-cooked up light. crunchy and delicious The new double fillet Fish/Fish Sandwich Only from Long John Silver's 3095 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa (Across from Fedco) [ill Pie rce Brothers Bell Broadwa y Mortuary 110 Br04dway (~!~Me" 642-9150 RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. Where Yu Dolw Covers Marti 1922 HARBOit BlVO., COSTA IE.A-541·11S6 T AKE HEART Cardiovascula r disease Is one of the lead ing causes of death among today's population. Feb- ruary Is National Hea rt Month-a good time to make sure you are doing everything possible lo ensure a healthy heart. Take the fo llowing quiz to see how you you· re doing: • Do you have your cholestrol level a nd blood pressure check- ed regu larly? • Do you participate In a regular exnclse pro- gram? Do you lake lime out of your day to re lax? • Do you eat a healthful. well -balanced diet? • Do you listen to your body's signals (e.g .. ches t pain. difference In heart rhythm. etc.) and co nsult your phys- ic ian with any con- cerns? • Do rou maintain an Idea weight? If you answer yes to all the above ques tions. you a re doing everything rec- ommencfed by the Amen· can Medical Association fo r keeptng your heart healthy. For more hints on how to Improve yqur diet or Incorporate an exercise regimen. call your local Diet Center at 960· 7606. The Diet Center Program Is also a safe and effec- tive way to lose those ex- cess pounds that can place additional strain upon your heart CALL US TODAY (71•> M0·780e Buttactoa -..e• roe.atale van., lHSl Beee• BITCS. {S. W corner Yorktown) (7 H ) 1'7S-O 11 l Corona cle1 llu 2888 &. Cout Hwy. •lite 201 SUBPOENA SERVER ... From B l looking dogs appeared from around the side oft he no use." I decided to JO& quickl y back to my car and head for my next stop,'' Wayne said Wayne can also encounter a dif- ferent lund of excitement in his work. For instance, Wayne was mstrumen · tal 1n serving basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as a w11ness 1n a big personal tnJury case. Abd ul-Jabbar's reluctance to cooperate sent Wayne out on assignment to Palm Springs where the Lakers were engaged in an exh1b1 t1on game. "I was the only spectator there weanng a lie and carrying a bnefcase." laughed Wayne. However, Wayne states that pre- canous expenences are not routine. Most of the time he is able to avert angry confrontations with the people he 1s scrvin~ Wlth his polite de- meanor. Ph1losoph1cally. his ap- proach to process serving 1s based on his good faith in his fellow man. "I hkc to treat everyone Wltb the kind of respect I would expect 1fl were on the receiving end," says Wayne. Dan Wayne CHALLENGER TRAGEDY ••• From Bl She was a teacher -l suspect not much different than their own. She was also a mom -and I I children lost a parent on that Tuesday. What can you do to help your child deal with their gnef and their own fears about potential loss? Emphasize the courage and the p1on~nng spirit of those who died. Use this opportunity to talk with them about bravery and about loss. Assure them that these children who lost a parent in the accident will continue to be well cared for. Assure them that 1f something happened to either or both of their own parents. you have indeed made good arrangements for them. Tell them who specifically would take care of them in the event of your death. Encourage your kids to talk about the accident and to write sympathy letters to the families of the crew members. Perhaps your child's class. brownie troop, or (ndian Guide tribe could plan a fund raiser and make • a contribution in honor of these na- tional heroes and heroines. Dr. Al1a11 is a•arrlafe & family ll1erapl1& la (j)ro~ de Mar. Site welcome. you re1 Diet. U yoa wt1lil a reply, pleate ea loae a 1t11mped, 1eU-addre11ed envelope. Write to Llnda AJ1a1l, Plil.D, c/o Dally Pllo&, P.O. 8 01 lHO, Cotti Men tHH. UPHILL TREADMILL ... From Bl those little band-aid t'lectrodes. one b)' one We weren't done yet. The next move was to measure my "percentage of body fat." This was done with a httle cahper·hke device that had a meter on It. Matt got a fold of skin on the back of my arm and sort of pinched 1t · between the 1aws of the caliper, and read the meter He did this three ts mes. He said that he was allowed a five percent variation for all three tne~. and the results were averaaed out He did the same thmg to m y back ' There's very httle fat on my arms and back, and I was ju't bejJnntng to think that maybe Matt wasn't c;uch a bad au~ aner all. when he arabbcd the spare 11re around my waist "This 1s the one that never hes'" he lOU1 llCO, dllU ~JCCIUll)' ICCIU UI'-lllllC meter To his credtt, he didn't giggle. By now. I was fully recovered, so we wandered around and looked the place over. They have a fully equipped physical therapy room. watched over by Stacy Chnstie, a physical therapist and her assistant, Babs Mclatchey. All of the equi~ ment there 1s statcof-the-an. anct some of 11 even talh to you Tht$ is the place where they help pcopk to recover from tnJuncs. and I must say that I was impressed Matt 11 now m the process of laying oul an e~erct~ routine for me, and I can't wa11 to ~e tt, It'll probably start out with "l1f\ a •mall bag of marshmallow5 from the table, and try to act them to \houlder height .. f wonder v. hn I c n get to help mr act the mar,hm.1 llow' home from the' no re'> 1 • A' I 11 I pllel4o Olivia de Harilland ln "North and South. Book n. •• Victor Mature maturing gracefully; still flt at 70 RANCHO SANTA FE (AP) 7 Retired actor Victor Mature, who once flexed his muscles in such movies as "Samson and Delilah'" and "The Robe," turned 70 last week. stepping from his home overlooking a golf course for his usual mof'tl.lilg game. Mature, who felt uncomfo11able during his career with the "Beauuful Hunk of Man," tag he received from a hne about his character 1n a Broad- way play. "ihe Lad) In The Dark.'" left full-ume mov1emakmg in 1960. "I went to New York to get nd of ·one Million B.( ... Mature said. "It was '8 grunt picture -we didn't say anything. just urgh. urgh. urgh ... and then I'm in the play and Life Magazine did a spread on me using thehne'A Beautiful Hunk of Man.'·· Mature no~ hves 1n 1h1s recreation commun1t} in San Diego Count). indulging his passion for golf. H1'I home overlook!. the ninth hole of his favorite course. He lives in his home set on 3 8 acres with his founh wife. Lorey. a former Chicago opera singer. and their 10- year-old daughter V1ctona. His wife said their daughter had several small presents for her father. and fnends Joined them for dinner Mature said he wa tches an oc- casional movie on videotape, but h1'i favonte stars remain Jimmy Cagney. Clark Gable. Henry Fonda and J1mm} Stewan "I honestly don't know anyone toda} who compares with them ... Mature said. "And I'm not hvmg in the past, I'm looking back at 1t like anyone else " Mature was in about 72 mo' 1es, and in the past said he made about S 18 million. He made shrewd invcst- men~ real estate and appliance stores following his rc11rment at age 44. Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital One unit of blood can save lour lives ... . . . And It only costs you a few minutes of your time. Please make your donation o n February 18. between 1 :30 and 6:30 p.m., during the Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital blood drive, held in cooperation with the American Red Cross. Contact Bonnie Burche tt at 650-2400 to schedule your donation. or for more information. • 1 Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital 30 l Victoria Street Costa Mesa. CA 642-2734 SEND A l To a lo~d one, your favorite reacher, best friend oc to. ' IOIDeone special this Valenrines Dal. Por only* a lint · ~ yow heartfelt message can be teM in • Daily Pilot Valenrine~s ad. ~cause this is a SpedaJ Offer, all ads mu.st be pre-paid . All ads will appear: Fri .• Feb. t•th • t r------~~~~~~2 ~:~~~~----------, ~ COUPON Send To Daily Pilot Valentine's 1 ; 330 West Bay. Costa Mesa. CA .g (>626 l ' Nam• Phone ~ AdreH ~ City _ _ _ __ Stat• ~ Amount lnclu••d $ _ Zip 111 J /,, J • I L------------CO ON -------------- ., v 'Melanie' a Yankee for new TV drama By JERRY BUCK .,,.........,..,., BEVERLY HILLS -Look who's playin1 a Yankee m ABC's "Nonh a nd South, Book II." Olivia de Hav1lland, wbo played Melanie Wilkes tn "Gone With the Wind," has crossed the Mason-Dixon Linc for the 12-hour sequel to the miniseries broadcast last November. The new production will be shown in Mar. ·• was at my home m Pans when someone called and asked ifrd be in a fiJm about the Civil War," said De Havilland. "I said, ·v o u mean the War Between the States?' "He said the role was that of Mrs. NcaJ, a hospital administrator. I said, 'Southern?' He said, 'No. Northern.· I said, 'You mean you want me to play a Yankee?' He said, ·w eu. there arc Confederate patients in the hospital • I said, 'In that case, I'll play the role I know I would never be forgiven 1f I played a Yankee and she was 1nd1f- ferent to Southern suffering."' De Havilland is the last surviving major star from "Gone With the Wind," which also starred Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh and Lcshe How- ard ... That's strange because Melanie is the only one who dies in the movie, .. she said. From the 1939 epic, she went on to win Oscars as best actress for "To Each His Own" in 1946 and "The Heiress·· in 1949; she was nominated for best actress 1n "The Snake Pit" 1n 1947. In 1953. she moved to Pans. "Melan1eandMrs Nealaresim1lar 1n that they have compassion," she said. "and their strength 1s similar. Of course. Mrs. Neal 1s older." She laughed and added, "Quite a bit older. "I was very careful to see that their hairstyles were different. I didn't want anything to suggest Melanie. The co~tumes are of the penod. but different. In the Nonh they didn't have much devastation so matenal was much easier to obtain." She worked principally in the miniseries wtth Kirstie Alley. "She reminded me so much of Vivian Le1&h," she said . De Havilland has returned to this country for only ocxasionaJ rotes. She played Henry Fonda's w1fe in "Roots: The Next Generations." She aJs'o was in the TV m<1V1e "Murder Is Easy." "I left because the movie business as I had known 11 wasdying,"shcsaid. "Television had JUSt come 1n. You .could feel that the whole world I had been pan of was dying. It was very depressing." ~ H11"Vtlland led a qum-tifc 1n France until recently, when French telev151on ran "Gone With the Wind," first in English and then dubbed 1n French. She said she is now recognized on the street. "Nonh and South," based on the best-selling book by John Jakes., told of two famLhes whose lives became intenwincd despite their regional differences. It ended with the onset of the Civil War. De Hav1lland and her sister. Joan Fontaine. an Oscar winner for "Suspicion." were born in Tokyo to English parents Their father was a patent attomc)' She made her film debut in 1935 in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" for Warner Bros tud1os. Next, she teamed up with a new actor named Errol Flynn in "Captain B.lood." In all, they made eieht or nine pictures together, includinf. "The AdventuresofRobin Hood," 'Dodge City.'" .. Santa Fe Trail" and "They Died W1th Their Boot.} On." "I would speak of Errol with a lot of feeling.'' she said "He was unique. No one has ever been able to play that kind of dashing, romantic pan since then. He was terribly underrated. It was not eas> to play those roles and pull it off. .. ~ Hav1lland said she never was pan of the fierce competition for the role ofScarlett O'Hara. which went to V1v1en Leigh. "I always wanted to play Melanie She represents the qualiues that are 1mponant," she said ..._.. C. MORRISON n'a~DAIVE ~ CJTY. STATE 1~ ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, F~ 5, 1Ne 9S 'That'• my mamma • Actrw 11.uJ lla.rtin and her eon Larry JlaCman. better known u J .R. It~ on "Dallu, .. celebrate after the o~ of .. Leaenda at the Lo9 Anielee Mualc Center. Martin and Carcil Channln& play reanfied llCl'eeD rtY&la. . New Fellini movie cheered ROME (AP) -Federico Felli ni's new film, "Gm$er and Fred," a b111ng saure on television. ha.s opened to rave reviews here and in Paris. Fcllfoj•s 16th film recounts a TV appearan~ of two Italian music hall dancers (G1uhetta Masma and Marcello Mastroianni) who were popular in the 1940s for their 1m1ta- tt0n of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. II $ An audience of 2.000. mcludlng such Italian movie favorites as Monica V1tu anc;t Ursula Andress, p ve the mov1e a I 0-mmutc stand.JO& ovation at its premiere. French cnucs called 1t one of Fellini's best films in years and said its poetic vein was rcmm1sccnt of "Amarcord," which won Fellini his fou'nh l'.cadcmy A ward for best foreign language movie 101 11-811210 ·-----""' Likewise. .. Now you can write all the checks yo u want to for as littl e as $2.50 a month. You can use our automated teller machine as often a you like for no charge at al l. And there's n<, minimum balance required -only $100 to open the account. 1() rnake this ideal checking account yo ur checking account, come to Crocker and ask for our newest service : the High Value Checking Account." If you have trouble re1ne1nbering the name,jµ,st ask for one of th(>se new checking accounts where you don't have to pay an ann and a leg for \\liting check~ and u ing the ATrvt . High Valu e Checking can 1nake y< >ur banking life a sin1ple as you\ c .tl \\";}~ s \vanted it to be . <iJ Crocker-~ \lrn h• 1 I l•h • ~. '~It ' '"'"~ Ill I THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "PJ's talkin' scribbles again." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "It's too cold .tor you to play outside. but let Veronica walk by .. PEANUTS -.., ~ 5 \\~ R!::~'-- ON ~.,!: CO~lERT uJE uJE~--0 "'c5-cK~A" GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Lately he's been running out of juice on our nightly walks." DENNIS THE MENACE ' I j j g by Hank Ketcham ,...--- '0~N~IS' NEW FRIEND HAS 1URNEO OUT iO & QUITE A VOCASUL.Al<'1' 6UILUER I" by Charles M. Schulz ACTUALLY THE BEST PART uou'RE WEl"D, 510 '· WAS WHEN MARCI~ WENT T I\ I\ FOR A OR1 i< AND Tl-If WATER ~ROM THE FOUNTAIN f - l-llT HER IN Ti-1E FACE• by Jim Davis IT'.5 THE WAITIN(; ROOM THAT DE.PRE55£S ME. by Tom K. Ryan PlXE: MOOSE, 'IOU MAY 'TAKE: or 1"HE:: COL.L.ecflON. by Kevin Fagan •'l ~\\.Jk T ~ou 60 NOU.. "IOU V€. 61V€.N NO i~T 1 .... \\u~• .\t-L?wE.k: ro ME \ ro i~t. c.~~(J{C£S NO iW)U~T 10 T"-£ ~ACT 1\.-l"T CACTUS Jl\CK ~M NC 1 \.lOUGU T TO °"OuR ~N ?AJ"ET'-l ROSE IS ROSE P\JT \.ll-? L.MT 12 0WotJe~T'1 IN I~ ~04P1TA.L I by Pat Brady BLOOM COUNTY MOON MULLINS by Berke Breathed nKrlPC " (~~~./) \ by Ferd & Tom Johnson NoN SENS£: · · 1' LL. H.AV~ ANOTf-/EfC! --·--·~· ·-........ --- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE by Lynn Johnston IWANlED · I -ro lbME \_ IAJIF'yOJ! by Jeff MacNally --~ JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN BUI IF I SEE. A MOiHE.R. Al IHE F~~rr OCX>R. WAVI NG Al ME ... DOONESBURY Ht /Alll.l AFT!R. HE'S FWTH!~S p,tSJC I fT O/IJ1Hl5 THE ff/£ 1AKU. /WC> fPIRITOF~/.OM· • '~).Sit' (( by Harold Le Ooux ~ANWHILE AT SPENCER FARMS l 'U. CALL l KNOW YOV GENTLEMEN YOU [N THE MORN· HAve THINGS TO 01scuss 1Nc;, ABeev • SO 1 LL S AY C:.OOONIGHT AND BE OFF TO 8ED ' 1 ALI>JPt..>S WAVE BACK AS 1 DRJVE et; ~ by Tom Batiuk Tf'5 1ME.. NICE. ~IN& 10 DO! by Gary Trudeau ~{;() >t)/ l<JIOIAI AU THIS 511Ff, 5/R' - rM~INOONt T>el~ ReAi. EASY 'fD 'fA.J.J< 10 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wednelday, Fet>Nary 5, 1988 ~~~~~~~--~~~~-I N/ADVICE/G 'Democracy' still indefinable term The death earlier this year Of my old fnend and tutor. Richard McKeon, who was one of the great Greek and phtlosophy scholan of our tame. reminded me of one of hill few academic projects that came to naught. As a U.S. delegate to UNESCO in 1949, he was among $1x mtellcctuals servmg on a cpmmmec that was assigned to compose an ~cceptable definition of "democracy." After nearly a week of close study, proposals and debate, the committee was forced to disband. with · the acknowledgement that an agreement could not be reached. With the best of 1 ntcnuons and good will m the world. these six fine minds could not amve at a common consensus about this word we fltng about every day. There should be a lesson for us 1n this -for "democracy" 1s a com- pound word, not a simple one. There ts polittcal democracy. there is econ- omic democracy. there 1s social democracy, and belatedly we arc learning there 1s somethmg called sexual democracy. What does. or should, that one word 1mply1 Is political democracy effective without tis economic counterpart? Is economic democraq meanmgful without Its polittcal twm? Is sexual democracy feasible. given the traditional roles of males and females 1 n the world? Almost everybody uses the word affirmatively -the Russians as well as we -but when we disagree on how tl is to be applied. we cannot even agree on the concept we are d1sagree- tnl! about. becuase we mean different SIDNEY Hu11s things by the same word. There arc even Amencans who ms1st th~t the United States was not meant to be a deil)ocracy. but a republic. There arc others who assen that 11 is mcompatablc with capi- talism. And still others who equate 1t w11h the kind of tnd1v1duahsm 1n which the devil takes the hindmost. Some people think we have too much democracy: others that we have too httle. The anarchists and hbertanans look upon government as a mechanism that mterfcres wnh democracy; the liberals and radicals believe that government fosters a greater measure of"full" democrac> Perhaps it 1s a word we ought to stop using so frequently and so casually -and so thoughtlessly It is a banner everyone lilces to walk under. hkc "freedom" and ··Justtce," which are equally incapable of agree· ment in a un1 vocal defin1t1on. A week was not long enough. even forthegreat minds. but we don't even give the term a moment's thou~t We "clanfy'' butter to ~et the 1m· punues out, but we don t think it's wonh the trouble to clan fy our thinkmg about a S}Stem we hve under. and are willing to die for. Gifts to bell ringers up when they stop it Researchers monitored several sidewalk Santa Clauses to note a pattern -Chn stmas donations tn· creased considerably when those bell nngers stopped nngmg their bells. lfsc1ent1sts figure out how to groy. hair on scaJps gone bald, they'll soon thereafter prolong the human life- span. To grow new hair. they'd have to regenerate follicle cells. If the) can do that, they can regenerate other cells to replace the cells that die. makmg us grow old. So theonzes a student of the matter. Say> our dog barks every time )'Our phone rings. Why? Does the ringmg hun those canme ears? Researchers checked this out to learn that 1t onl} happened -tn their group sampling. at least -"-here somebod) Jumped up and ran to answer It wasn't the nnging but the running. Q. Aren't almost all the bathtub electrocutions caused by hair dryers falling in the tubs? A . Three out of fi ve arc Q The names of" hat flowers once meant "Eye of the Day" and ··Tooth of the Lion"? A. Daisy and dandehon There are four times as many household fires in the Un1t1d Statel> -that's by hou~hold percentage - as in West Germany The anal)Stl> credit far better fire 53fety laws over there. Ecuador's best known poet was Jose Almedo. Devotees wanted a statue of him. Cost of commissioning his likeness was too much. They put up a second-hand statue of , Lord Byron and dedicated 11 to Almedo Who knew the difference? Who cared? Nobod}. nobody Q. What's the difference between an animal "trainer" and an animal "'tamer"? A. The tratner trams. The tamer puts on Che show. Some. hke Gunther Gebel-Williams. do both. Sleepwalkers tend to do their walking dunng the first third of the PEOPLE L.M. BOYD night. That's the so-called deep-sleep ume It's when most bedwetters do their wemng. too Q Where'd Y.e get the Y.Ord "hello"? A. From the Anglo-Saxon phrase "be Y.hole" meaning "stay health~" or something s1m1lar. In the 11 }ears after Ireland ran out ofpotatoe~ 1n I 45 more people left that countf) than had left 11 during the previous 250} ears Somethmg else not }Ct clear is why the alligator normal!) hves about 50 years while the crocodile typ1call) hves about 100 years Q. You said Wilham Cod> was mcknamcd "Buffalo Bill'' b) the dime novelist Ned Bunthne. Wasn't Bunthne eventually I> nched? A. Not eventually. He'd been hanged earlier for reasons unclear - tn 1846 h) a mob 1n Nashville, Tenn -then cut loose and revt'~ed It was later he became famous for his penn} dreadful stones ~ What used to be a farm phrase - "furrow-long·· -got tightened up to a racetrack phrase -··furlong ... Tudor kings set the standard length of a furrow at 220 yards. an eighth of a mile. Pio" bo~s don't care an) more Jockc:)s do Q Thomas ~ Edison said h1<, 10vent1on he hked bec;t was the phonograph. but did he ever say why" A. He told a~soc1atcs 11 wa<. absolute!) ongtnal. Nobody had ever before thought of anything hke 1t. Both lemon peel and 11nfoil are l'Ommonl) used as ba11 b) the fishermen of the: ~egean Sea. and the' do Y.ell Tb..,..day, Pebru.ry 5 ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) You'll get credit long overdue . ach1evement'i art recoan1zcd and you could receive financial reward as result Accent also on domestic adJustment. famil) reunion. &Jfi representing token of alTecuon. · TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Emptuws on travel, commun~uon, spi ritual values. ability to define terms and negotiate for a finn commitment. Many answers are found behind sc~ncs. Clandestine arrangement may be possible: with Pisces. '\ • GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): You receive news concerntng financial arrangement that could include invest·--------------ment or 1nhentance. Special r1:la- llonsh1p intensifies. cycle h.1Jl.hhghts money and love. You'll be deahni with older individuals. including C'apncom SYDNEY 0MARR CANCER (June 21-July 22): Rela- tionship could reach criSIS point. Focus on contract, possible Joint effon. public; relattons, mantal status. Scenano h1gh- hghts completion of project, ab1ht) to ••••••••••••• reach beyond previous hm1tat1ons. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): New or different approach featured 1n connection wnh employment. work procedures. Suck to basic issues. reject schemes that border on sensat1onahsm. I ndiv1dual you helped tn past is now ready to return favor. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focu~ on emo11onal responses. physical attractton, sweeping changes. travel plans Scenano h1ghhghts adventure. discovery. reunion with loved one Follow through 011 fil"\t 1mpress1ons. ( an,er nauve plays role. · LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Ke) is to d1vers1f). 10 d1spla) humor, to make 1nquines. to realtzc populanty 1s on the nse. You'll ha"e more "worlong room."' Lorf8-d1stance communicatton venfiei. views. could lead to exciting prOJeCt. SCORPIO (Oct. 13-Nov. 21 ): Be w1lhng to rev1!.t and remodel. You are on firmer ground financ1all) and where emouons are conctrned. Scenario accents tnps, v1stts. relauvcs. spontaneous d1spla)s of afTcct1on. Gemini pla)s role. SAGITTARIUS (No ... 22-Dcc 21 ): Give full rein tomtellectualcunos1t)' 'ou are going to learn plenty about money. hoy. to obtain more of tt. Focus Jbo on special l'Ollecuons crcauve hobbies. romance Virgo, another Sag1narian pla) roles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19): You'll take greater charge of your own de~ttn) -money comes from surpnsc sources. Scenano features domestic adJU'itment. remodeltng. gifts. displays of afTecuon Take 101t1atl\e, trusl • \Our own Judgment AQUARIUS(Jan 20..Feb. 18): Secret meeting could lend <;p1ce Do plcnt) of med1tat10g. reJect 1nd1' 1dual who constantly takes w11hou1 g1v1nganyth10g 1n return. Protect pnvac} and propeny. PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): You get almost everything )'Ou want, your ··performanC(" will be outstanding. Scenario highltghts intensified love rela11onsh1p, financial reward. achievement. unique honor. Cancer. Capncorn persons play roles. IF FEB. 6 lS YOUR BIRTHDAY 1h1s will be }Our year forchan,e. travel. \anet), the end of )tatus quo. If s1n~c. you could mafT) If mamed. there might be an add1t1on to famil). Mamed or single.> ou gain through creattve endeavors, pro1ects associated w11h wnttng, entenammg. d1ssem1oa11on of mforma11on. You ha\e unusual voice possess an abundance of charm. yo u lOUld also have a ··sweet tooth." Taurus. Libra. ~orp10 people pla) important roles in \Our ltfe. March and December will be outstanding for you 1n 1986. · If you ' re baring all, be careful who sees DEAR .\NN' LANDERS: In a recent column \OU told a woman who had a \Cr) Strong tncltnation tO d1<;pla) her beautiful body to the deh,ef) bo). thr postman. and 1n fact. an) mall' "ho showed up at the door. that she was out of the reach of thr law. su long as she d1dn·t seduce a minor I Y.Ould ltke \OU tO kno" that she "ould be tn big trouble 1fshe lned 1n Flonda. I am enclosing e' 1dence tbased on a case that was handled b) our firmJ The dcc1s1on was that the defendant. a male who answered the door weanng nothing but a smile and encountered a 7-\'ear-old girl selhng Citrl Scout cookies. comm med a lewd and lasc1' 1ous act C\ en though nothing out of the wa> was said or done .\!though each case is Judged on 1ts own ments. 1t 1scleanhat 1fMs. Bod) Beauttful exposes ~crself to the de· ltH·ry bo) and he 1s a minor. she also e"tposes herself to cnmmal pros· ecuuon I re pectfull) suggei._t that 1f Mi. B B ts unable 10 O\ ercome her compulsion to d1spla) her naked bod) she consider '1s1ung a nudist colon). -R.P.G .. CHIEF ASSIS- T .\NT. PUBLID DEFENDER. HIGHLAND COL!NTY. FLA. DEAR R.P.G.: You were rigbt on tbe money wbea you said, "Eacb cau Is judged on Its own merits." It Is also a fact tbat laws on Indecent behavior vary according to localUy. Tbanks for nposlnK lbe facts, If you will pardon the u pressloa. ••• DEA R ~NN rh1'i1SlorthC\\oOman 1n <. ahforn1a Y.hocnded an a1Ta1rw11h J mamed man and af\er 10 'ears )1111 thin~" about the ··"hat ifs:. and ··1f onh'i ·· Sh<' asked 1f \OU knc" of a mag1l \Y.ttth that couid turn otT that l''Cr·pfl'!lt'nt longing. Perhaps m' 'ilOI"\ Y. Ill hdp hl.'.r. ANI UIDERS I met the IO\ e of m) hfe when I was 22. He was 42 and mamed. Toda) I am M . He 1s 84. His poor. sick wife 1s i.t1ll Y.tth him. As recently as last night he repeated that fam1ltarline: '"Please wait for me. darling. we will have a life together one of these days. Just ~ patient ·· Just ho" much longer does he think he wi II In e') The man ts full ol anhnus and has a dcvtl of a time getting out of a chair He repeats himself constant!) and can ne,er remember what he did with hts e}eglasses. I must ha'e been nuts to aJlo" him to keep me on the stnng this long !>omehow. the )Cars JUSt flew b) and before I knew 1t he was an old man and I was no spnng chicken. e' eral months ago when I told him \.\hat a fool I had been. he said. ··1f)ou want to meet someone else go ahead. but \OU will never find an,one "'ho lo' es· 'ou more than I ·do ·· Please tell me. Ann. Y.hO am I going to meet at age M after gn tng this man -42 \ears of m, hie" I Y.Ouldn't kno" hOY. to act around anC'lther man I'd g" e an) thing 1f I could turn thl' dock back to when I was 22. I Y.nuld ha\e told him to call me up whl·n h" divorce wa s final 1gn me -20.20 HINDSIG HT 1:--.. CORPL CHRISTI DEAR CORPllS: Hudreda of womn '1¥rote from the same old leaky can~. but yu said lJ..-~ll. Tbuks for writing. / Celebrities boost aliti-drug efforts 5CN \ 4'L LEY. Idaho When sexolog1~t Dr Rutb West· belmer olTcred an hour of ther· ap). the bidding at a hcncfit aucuon grew Sf\lnted. Y.tth model Brooke Sbleld1' mother coming up with the top ofTcr c..1f S 12.000. Teri Sbleld1' c1onn11on 10 the Scott Newman Found:it1on prompted <1aughtcr B.rookc to iokc. "Mom btt)~ 1hat and 1,ct to auction ofT A. top_ 10 Disnc} World " The :iuc11on ;ind a S 100-a-platc dinner, attended h) morC' than 600 people. wcrl" thr final event\ 1n un Vallev'\ 50th Ann1ve~r. ( ('lebnt\ ~k-1 ln\ltjt1onal Y.CC'k· end Pr0aed'i from the dtnnl"r .and c1uc11on so to the foundation which pro .. 1dc~ fund" for dru&, rehatuhtation effon'i t Dylan tours .\lJ(. KL NU. 1°'1c" Zeal.lnd -Rod. ltgend Bob Dylu. ~ur Brooke SbJeld a rounded h\ a wall ol \Ct uni\ men ha-. arrived tor the 'It.in ·of h1., do"'n undrr tour The une\~t~I u·r" al ol . tnle Nkb, ot FlrC'tY.OO<l M.;i1 tame addt(I to thC' l hao\ 'lhc t>luded the prt\\ h1ddtn ~nl·ath I hlod. h t Kod .. t'r Tom Pttll Jt"Com· pan1ed D' Ian "ho~ tY.0<0nct'rt tour of 'l"" Zealctnd heg1n<, ttlda' 1n \\ elhnp.ton L), IJn and Tom Pt'tt' Jnd the Heanhrta~C'rs hetun their .\u~trdhan tour Frh 1 n MADD h on or \\llMl'-f1TO'J Ocl -lhe founder of \.fothen \gain-.t llrunk Oft\ 1ni. Ca_ady LI1btur. h:i' been hontH·td Y.tth the (om· mon \\ealth \Y.llrd tor Puhhl \tr' 1ee for ma~lnf thr li&ht • aain t drunken dn\ mg a na· t1onal 1:ru'-l!dc Th<' JY..trd '" among \l"\ era I ll't'atN b' a tru'it e\tabhshed b\ Ralp• Ha H . a C l'x a.\ ola C o C'\t'<'Utt'c "h" J1cd 1n 1<r.,., Lightner. " the fir\t P"~on to recct\C a < omnlnn \\ ealth .\Y.ard tor Puhlit ~1 \ h.e. t\l<\h· lt'ihcd M ~DD nfttr th(' death Ill IQ n ~1f one ofhtr t"1n d.au.ghtcf\ in an an1Jtnt 1n .. ohmaa drunk en Jn, er A TlMELY HlPT Uoth vulnerablt South dt>als NORTH +AKQ K 8 IS A 615 4 • QJ 10 WEST +1097• Q 7 32 Q 10 •A 63 EA.ST •8632 AJ94 J9H •82 SOUTH +J6 10 6 K 7 3 2 +K 9754 Tht' bidding Sout h WHt Pas8 ·Pau 1 NT Pase Pan Pau North 1 3 NT Opening lead Tt>n of + Eut PU!i Pa1111 Rubber brtdl(e 1-. almn-,t un known in Scand1mn 1a Bndl{t' players are weaned on the tourna ment game and, whrn f ht>y l(t•t to gether ·for social brtdRe th<'y 1n variably play a team mat eh Om· such game 1s the -.oun·f' of toda~ ., hand We would prefer a rai-.e to t "11 diamonds with the South hand over one no trump !\orth felt that even opposite a m101mum respnnw of 6 points, his hand should offt>r play for game. so he went stra1Rht to three no trumP, West made his normal lead of the ten or spades. won m dummy StnrP he needed club tnl'ks to make h1 contract, decl arer called for tht• queen of clubs at trick two. East started an echo with the eight. to s how an even number of cards tn CHARLES Go REN OMAR SHARIFF the !>1.!lt. and completed t ht> s1gnaJ by playing thf' two after h.-. part ner had held up the ace of r lub-. Smee a funtwr holduµ l'Ould nut gain West Yo on the 5CC'ond dub Declan•r almo-.t certainly held e1 ther tht> ""f> o f h+>"rl" '"" ki_r.~ .,( .J1 amonds for his no trump re ponse If 11 wen• the former. the ~efenst· c;tood no r hanre. 1f the lauer thl' Jack of hearts was going to be cru· c1al In add1t1on, West had to hol)4> that his partner had four hearts We t found tht> killing defenSt>- he h1fted to the queen of hearts C~rlarer h<id no t ounter· wht>t her or not he t'overed. the defenders would bt' abh) to lake four heart tricks becau"t' of tht> fart that hie; ten wou Id come down on 1 ht• t't und round of the <iu1t Actually declarn was JU'l a pot away from makmg h11> con· tract agamst any defense Switch the eight and nine of heart . and declarer ran guarantee h1~ gamt> by CO\"ertng the q11t>t'11 r::~~:;· s~Ro\llA -/lt.~s· .. u ..... -----f-.... QAY I '°'4M 0 ..... n>ftOe _,, ol .... .lour 1<rombl.cl wo-dt t>.- \ow '° for~ '°"' ""'°--ordt I CEODY I ............,l',..--,-1 --..--I ..,....-;I 1 .-------..I I S 0 I M T I ...... · 1 wu DuY"19 rwo boou trom i--.... 1-1....-... 1'---.l--t the local ~· One wu on ...._ .... ~-....._~. __.,_.__... 1~ me OChet on tr~•l'Q ..---------. 009' The ci.ttc c:omme<>tec wry I l E V A T S I 1Y The aog ,. PIQ IO l>ll -1--,-s _,l,...._,.1--..1',.....,-J ~ 0 ::-~ ..,. ...__ .. -..i ... __. __ .... _ __. __ .._ _ __._.__. ...., :~:c,.,,;, ::co......,,.:.! & •t·;~1FS~~~~~slfl'ffS IN I' I' I' I' r r I 6 ':~·u~ei; .. ~~~'f f•rr•s I I I I l I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Symt:lol 5 Enoures 10 Area rneasur" 1.i Pointless 'c; W ine vt>Sl;f'I •6 Fence part 1 ~ Amoogu•l •t>S .:o Wahoo 21 0111 nert:l :'2 vex 2J tn the sac~ .'4 E>.amont> 25 Caos 28 FoO••C ,~ C1ear -i~ \ "\ Cru•St»• l J Bt-etit> l.., Tnrvn9.; .36 Orainp1pt>s .37 L111ed .38 Cnrtstmas (')1 NeY¥ 'rear s .39 Part1c1e 40 po1rodge J 1 Proclaims 4.3 Immoral 4 4 Ball'I s rtver 45 01sco1.e•~ 46 HOCke) players Qt>d• 49 Make oette• 50 Article s:i 111 'i6 Grounos 57 Metr•C .::apac1h "'"' :>8 01 planes :)Q .JK count 1 60 At:11as1ve 6 t ~ 1nctures DOWN ' Lilh~ral ~ Etlog'f J Mood\ .i Beai. u:>ealt>~ t-Corne•er. • qt>la11ve .. Resooes .:i l f'llennQ oev1ces 10 Glow ing ' 1 Paslet:loar,, I, Canaooan •et>el L,111 <. '' 1ns1eaa 18 1oen1t" 1riQ S'ICker 1Q Comes cl<"''lt> ~J I~ StClt. 24 Ore"' baci. 25 Humble« PREVIOUS PUZZlf SOLVED 26 o~erneal1 ;>~ Saohna .,n.p ;>8 l\uCl•Oh:. :'9 Goa '\O Eu•OClt>d' langu.~oe 11 lmmatv11' 1 Po11ct> .11 acct>ss, ,, 10 Sona 1"' ., .. , 1· Meta1 ,.,., 1.:i t:>ac1<. a· l 4soan l " m.t 4: M o<.! •i>c .. 1 4J O•nam1>••' 4t-lt!SS 46 Be uf'lhdf'P\ 4. BOd., iOtnl 48 ~t'd Seat'<''' 49 Assign b\ measur "0 Pronoun • Prest>nt ~: Cuo•n .,~ ~no1 c••-11 5 'r l~un() in 1(\ 1 • 12 .. 16 ; s2.oo TUESDAY I WEDNESDAY ., AS INDICATED BELOW edwarda TOWN CENTER 751-4114 lllllTOl • ANTON AClllOaa JtttU• I COAST l'l.AIA flff , ..... UUlf- ... , "flWUDl MIVIH" -...... -,.,- "DOWll & OUT Ill 8£Vlll Y HILLS" (R) 6 I~ 8 JO 10 JO -~. ~ltf Lmt' t 1~ ,(, 1 J TWICE Ill A llffTI ME" 6 0\) I - • IUCAll rtllCf e dw.,d 9 l 100 673 83!')0 N( •Pu"' eL W(l A' ••A , 1[1 ltf! WPO"t 81 &' M llO DllCOUIT t lClUSIVl CN&AGCIHI "'HAZll" (I) 7 I~ '45 edwards FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1139· 1SOO •AOOllHUllllT &T !OIN<;(ll f OUMflllN VALli T •FTJn . "SPIES LIU US" (PC) • J~ "WHITE lllCHTS" (PC:· 13) 600 101\ IZ.!,l.USfu~liii "THE BEST OF TIM£$" (PC·ll) 1 lS 9 l~ edwarda CINEMA WEST 891-3935 WflT-ITlll AT OOlDEll WIST Wfl~IT(ll "TH£ TRIP TO IZ,OA TIES I WU IOUllTIFUL .. (PC) ROB 1owr . io 1 10 "YOUllCBLOOD" (R) -.. IAUAll PllCf -1 1 s HO 10 .,._ 6 IUCk DOI.BY SIERIO , __ l_Z_Q_Q_T_U_E....;l _l _W_EQ-- "OUT Of AFRICA'' 11ca NOt IE I 00 lO 00 '"' "DOWll & OUT Ill edw•rd• SOUTH COAST PLAZA 548-2711 lllllfOl AT IUWL0-11 fRff PAIOIC "' CAllACf- UY "'fOWWI llOVIU" MO HAS.Ill PRICE "THE COLOR PURPLE " (PC-Ill 100 HO llO HKAlll PlllCE ION VOIGlll "RUNAWAY TRAiii" (R) 6001 151010 H IAllH1• ,lllC( tlC"AtO r.raE "POWER" (R) ' JO '·~ w•rd• BRISTOL 54().7444 lllllTOl AT MACAllTMU91 IAWTA AllA IZ.OQ JUH I WED t08IN Wl llA~ "THE BEST Of fl MCS" (PC 13) boo a Jr w J sf.oo JUEi • WED "ELIMIUTORS"' (Pi:1 I •5 "HAMBURGER (RJ 00 I J, -$2.00 TUES I WED "lllCHTMARE HM ST 1 I 10 1R "MY CHAUHEUR" (R) 6 JO 1000 SZ.00 TUES a WED ,Oil 10111'1 "YOUllCBLOOD' (R) J~ '•& edwerd• CINEMA ~3102 MAll90fl IUO. I ADAMI con••M $2 .00 TUES I WED SAU f rt( l[1 IAWS CARPIO "MURPHY'S ROMANCE" li 00 I I~ I 0 I~ p,, 11 edwerd• CINEMA CENTER 97M1•1 MAll90tl avo a AD ... .... ._...,. cmrrEI cona••• 110 HllHlll PlllCE "CRY FROM TH£ MOUIHAlll'' (PC) QO I 1)1 12.00 IUES I WED NIC~ l«ll If "DO Wll & OUT Ill BEVULY HILLS' (R) 615 115 10 15 12.00 IUES & WED •OBl!I IM' "THE BEST Of TIMES" (PC JJ1 60~ A O~ SZ.00 TUES & WfD 'THE JEWEL or THE Nil£ . IPC) 11. .. t edwerd• HARBOR TWIN 831-3501 HAltlO'I I ... IOll co aTA••• IZ.00 TUES I WED • roe~ OOtBl mmi "'IROll EACLf' (PC) I' 9 IO 12.0Q TUES I WEQ RIC11A•D C.UI "POWER" (RI 00 9 l' edwerda MESA Ma-sens NfWl'OltT II.YO AT ltTH I T COITA .. IA au son H 1'1 "Sms u11£ us· 1Pc1 I lO ''YOUllC SHUlOCll' 610 JOJO '611 0 0 W•rda VIEJO TWIN 130-8990 t D JWT TO LA l'U a r HlllllANTA ···~ Vll!JO IZ.M Tiil I lfll tUU GlllH SAll T 1(10 "I UIPM Y'S IOMAllCf I JO H \ 'ft IJ 12.00 TUES I WED tt("t'') ,U( "'OWEI' (I) I' ' ..:> BEVERLY HILLS" (R) 6 I~ &JO 10 JO S2.DO TUES I WED "lllCHTMARE HM ST 2 . ·~ .. ··MY CHAU FHUR" (R) '!>O 10 1~ 12.DO TUES I WEI "ELIMIU TORS" (PC) A I~ "HAMBURCU '' (It) ~ ln 1n ~ IMG01Sm IR "IROll UCLE" (PC) 600 l lS IOJO 'U 00 JUEl WED R081N WM I IAlllS "THE BEST Of TIMES" (PC 13) 600 1 1510}\ S2 DO IUU & WED• YOIGHI RU NAWAY TRAiii' lR) I H~ $2 OD IUES l WED P· "AR ;I 'I 'POW£R' (R) I • 1n SZ.00 IUU l WED ~flk tUIW! 'TOUllCBLOOD" (R) 61S I J010)~ edw•rda UNIVERSITY 154-U11 CAWUI 1111 ACllOll ,llOM UCI • llY!lle sz 00 run, WED lNUIS "JEWEL Of TH£ MILE" (PC) \C\ aoo n Oil I~ q 10 fl'G I J, 12.00 TUES. WED. THUii lllCHTMHE ELM ST 2" A cs , HIMlllATORS" (PC) 6 ~ 1010 .ll..O.Q JUEi. WED. THURS MY CHAUffEUR" (R) 6 H 10 I~ 'HAMBURGER"' (R) A JO IZ.00 IUU WEO TNUU "SPIES LlllE US" (PC) bO~ JOJO 'WHITE lllCHTS" 80\lrtll 12.00 JUEi. WED. TltUll I lh '• 00181 rnRIO "DOWll & OUT 111 BEVUL Y ~ILLS" (R) 6 00!tS 015 edwerd• EL TORO 511-9500 IL TOllO llD AT TWIN NUI l'LAZA 12,00 YUH I WEI 4 'R•C~ OOl8Y srrMO WHITE lllCHTS" I 100 10 JO f'CIJ) .i.o BAllUlllll PlllCE 1 or.~ or.i1s1 SllRIO TH( COLO R PU.,tr" 10 10 1~ I" Ill SZ Q.0._TUU I WED \•1 r '•10 . .,.. \ r.••Nr• ¥URPHY'S ROMANCE" • ' o JO t'<I I J \2.QQ TUES I WED A lllCHTMH£ 011 HM sum PT r· &JI 10 IH•l edwarda SoCal LAGUNA HILLS MALL 7U-et11 I D ,.,. &T IL TOllO 1110 .. MAU •IT TD HAllll too • "'~ OOl 11 \U.(0 JEWH Of rH£ llllf (PC) tc•, uo • ~I oi!lll 111111&115 ·rMr acsr or TIMES" (PC l l ) • )0 JtO S 'iO I O' MT cuumut · 1•1 IQ I 10 H> • IO edwards CHART£ CE NTRE 841 OllO ••Rtrd • A' al At" •1 .,p HUN'IN1•'''"-•t A u n-~~: 4 IUCll OWl SftMO "llOM UCL£" l"·ll) 5·45 HO. 10.15 ....... PllCf • IUCK OOlll mMO "TIU COlOI PU.,U" 7 JO 10 t5 l"·IJ) iO llliAlll Pii& • IUCK D<llT STCJfO "DOW• & OUT'" IEVEILY Milts" (I) 600 1 t5101~ MO HHAll NICE IAll(S CMIO SAllY m o "MU.,HY'S IOMAllCE" 100 9 I~ (l'G Ill NO HRCAll PRICE 4 IUC• DOlBY SllUO "THE JEWH Of THE lllLE"' (PC) ~I\ A lO 1010 edwarda HUNTINGTON 141-0388 HACH AT llAlll a H lll HutlHIOTOll H ACH II IOUll NICE • t•ACK DOlBY srmo •OB£tl RfDf OltO "OUT Of UllCA'' 11~ 1000 Si,00 TUES l W£D ~(JI! 101111 "YOUllCBLOOD" (It) 600 1 1\10.'0 edwarda VILLAGE CINEMAS U1--0517 llACM l&.VO-J 11.CKI llOllTH OF OAllOlll OllOYI FWY ITAllTOll 12.00 TUH a WfO 10 ... 6 THCK OOiBY rnRtO "ROCKY IV" (PC) 6 00 • 00 10 00 110 HHAll PlllCE "CRY fHM THE MOUllUlll" (PC) 00 9~ -$2.00 TUES a WED 4 JUC• DOlBT SI('! "11011 EACLE" (PC·l3) 600 1 1~1010 4 IUCK OOlllT SllREO "'OUT Of AFRICA" 1 I~ JOOO l"I 12.00 JUEi I WED RICHlRO COi "POWER" (R) '.~ no 10 J~ 12.00 YUH & WED "lllCHTMU[ ELM ST 2" 10 1Rl "MY CHAUffEUR" (R) HO 101~ edwerda WESTBROOK 530-4401 WHT-lfllll! 0, lllOOIUIUlllT • OAllOlll OllOY 11.00 WfD & TUI "BACK TO THE FUTURE" 600101~1'(1 "YOUllC SHERLOCK" & I~ PG 1 J I 1.00 WED & THURS "ELI MIUTORS" (PC) al\ "HAMBURGER" (R) 6 •$ 10 70 edwerda SADDLEBACK 581-5880 EL TOllO ltO AT llOCKFIELO I L TOllO IZ.00 TUii I WfP llC• IQ II "DOWll & OUT 111 BEVERLY HILLS" (It) 6 I\ 410 JO JO IZ.CMI Iutl I IUD R08 IOWI "YOUllCBLOOD" (R) 7 JO H O '2.00 TUH I WED "'HAMI UICER" (II) 'w 1015 'ElMlllATORS" (PC) 14\ 2.DO TllES IC•M' r,ow 11 "' "IRON EACLE" (PC 13) \4\ AOO 10 I\ l21UO TUES A WEI •1(HARO cm "POWER" (R) ~oo a 15 ,075 NO IHUIN PlllCE "CRY flOM THE MOUllUlll" ("l 100 too edwardlil MISSION VIEJO MALL 495-8220 I 0 'WY TO ClllOWll VALl!Y IZ.00 IllU I WU "TME ICST Of TIMES" (PC 13) 1140 ,.~ • 00 1 IS 9 JO H.DO IIH A Ill ''DOWll & OUT Ill ICVEILY HILLS" (I) 1•HOO 61~ I lO 10 10 SI.DO TUH I WED "JOrH OF THE ~IU" (PC:) ll)l'IO~•~ 100 10 to edwarda s ouTH COAST LAGUNA 497 171, 1 coat• ...... •' ••o•o••• 11.WJWIABI t~GOSSln • "llOtl UCU" (PC) 6 00. I 15. I 0 15 II IUUll PIUOf SUWll SPUl(I' S "TIE COlot PUIPU" (PC 13) GIFT C~TIFICA TES AVAIL ABLE A T ALL LOC ATIONS .• 10 °' _____ ... __ 88 Oran~ Cout DAILY PILOT/ WedMjdey, Fabruery 5, 1986 • TV L IS TINGS M.NtNO -8:00- 1 !l=OH POUCE STOAY THAEE'S COMPANY OIFFRENT STAOf(fS IUUOS RE.POAT OCEAHU8 ~~=o a NBC NEWS G HOT SEAT I HOTLINE (C)MOVIE ~ • • • Counlry I 19841 JesslGi Lange. Sam Shepard (fl)MOVIE • • ,., "Oreamscape 11984) Oeflms Oulld Mall Von Sydow -8:30- D HBCNEWS Cf) 000 COUPlE e TOO ClOSE FOA COMFORT eJEOPAAOY e MACNEIL / W4RER HEWSHOU1' GD NEW LITERACY· AN INTROOUCTION TO COMPUTERS (J)(IJ NEWS (It BENSON , ai) LAND OF THE BIBLE Cl BAAETTA (S) THE VALENTINE'S DAY THAT ALMOST WASN'T -7:00- G CBSNEWS 0 ®)ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 9 TAXJ I ABCHEWSO LOVE CONNECTION Cf) HEWS m THREE'S COMPANY ., Qt WHEEL OF FORTUNE Cl!) BUSINESS REPORT Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE 81) PRAISE THE LORD MOVIE * * t "Out 01 The Past (1947) Ktrk Douglas, Jane GrlM!f (P) tNDEPEHOENT NEWS (S) HONEYMOONERS: THE LOST EPISODES l l MOVlE * * • Tiie Baltle Ot AlgtefS. I 1967) Yacel Sa.id• Jean Martin -7:30- 11 2 ON THE TOWN U PRICE IS RIGHT " WH.ti,rs HAPPEHINOll D EYE OH L.A. t> S 1.000.000 CHANCE Of A LIFETIME mM'A'S'H m> NEWLYWED GAME SI PROALES Of NATURE Cli) JOHN MClAUGHLIN: ONE ON ONE Cl) S.D AT LARGE @) PEOPLE'S COURT ~JEOPARDY * Momtnta 01 Love 11982) NICOie Black. Ron Jeremy ST ART OF SOMETHING BIO MOVIE • • "Tomboy 1 t98-il Belly Russeil Jetry Olnome l%)MOV1E * t * Long Ago T OlnCftO'# ( 19711 N1n111e Newman Mal,olm MeOowtll -11;30- 1 (I) T .J. HOOKER (llTONIGH'T OOOCOUPLE 0 ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE PfTFALL DYNASTY I HAWAU FIVE..O FflOOAL OOUAMET PRAISE THE LORD NIGHT GALLERY -12:00- 1 Cf) COMEDY BREAK EYE ON HOLL YWOOO Anthony Quinn (left) and Gregory Peck areJ a MOVIE out to de.troy Hitler'• aecr~t weapon i.n "The • • •'1 My Sweet Charlie 1 t9101 Guna of Navarone" tonight at 8 on KTLA PauyOuke.AIFreemanJr Ch l rr:r. ' @)ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT anne u . m 700 CLUB ( 1961) Gregory Peck. Dav10 Niven D (ID) MACGYVER 0 JOl<ER'S WILD Cf) WKRP IN CINCINNATI m HEWS «!>MOVIE • * • The lrain Rob~•S 1~121 John Wayne Ann·Mar91t1 &l) SURVIVAL Cli) PLANET EARTH al) PRAISE THE LORD m PETER GUNN (C1MOVIE • * "The Mean Season f 198St Kurl Russell Mariel Hemingway l~J MOVIE • • ', "Mrs Sollel 11Cl841 Diane Keaton, Met Gibson (P 1CARSON'S COMEDY CLASSICS 1$ BROTHERS -8.30- 11 LI' FOLEY SQUARE 0 TIC TAC DOUGH TRAPPER JOHN, M D CD P.M MAGAZINE m DRAGNET (p ) HONEYMOONERS fS-l BIZARRE 0 -9·00- • CJ) CRAZY LIKE A FOX 0 8 PETER THE GREAT D ®;DYNASTY O NEWS CD MOVIE • • 1 Gl'llOO f 19731 Gttar~s Bron-son V1ncen1 Van Pauen fJl) WAUC THROUGH THE 20TH C£NTURY WITH BILL MOYERS m SURVIVAL EI!) PRAISE THE LORD * • • Tile Marn Event ( 1979) Bar- bra Str91sand Ryan 0 Neal Z'MOVIE • * Turk 182' ( 19851 lcmothy Hut- lon Rober! Uriel\ -930- (' MOYIE • • • Cool Hand Luke 11967) Paul fllewman Geo•ge Kenneoy -1000- 11 l.JJ EQUALIZER 0(1) NEWS fJ®) HOTEL 0 THE SAINT SI WALK THROUGH THE 20TH CENTURY WITH BILL MOYERS m AUSTIN CITY LIMITS aD BEHIND THE SCENES m GREAT MOMENTS OF OLYMPIC BOXING ~ CINEMAX COMEDY EXPERIMENT H MOVIE * * 1 ht' Fury '19"81 1111k OoU9- .tas Jonn Cassaveles P COMEDY BREAK -10.15-m RELIGIOUS PROGRAMMING -10:30- Eii) DALE EVANS C MOVIE * * Tile Man Who Sa111 Tomorrow 1198 lt Narraled by Orson Welles P INDEPENDENT NEWS -11-00- llDOCD ~~NEWS 0 CARSON'S COMEDY CLASSICS 0 BIZARRE (!) BARNEY MILLER (C)MOVIE • • • "The Falcon Ano The Snow· man" ( 198-i) Timothy Hutlon Sean Penn PJEMEROEHCY -12:05- H JOE PISCOPO SPECIAL -12:30-a ~LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN D RAT PATROL D TOMSNYDER «!) INDEPENDENT NEWS Q) MERV GRIFftN SI HEW LITERACY: AN INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTERS ®l MORE REAL PEOPLE al) PRAISE THE LORD L1MOVIE • * Reckless I 1984) A10an Oumn Daryl Hannah -12 -iO-t> lJ MOVIE • * Tiie Rip-OU ( 19791 Eawaro Al- bert Karen Black S MOVIE * * Bells f 19801 R1ct1ard Chamberlain. Jotin·Houseman -1:00- 0 HEEHAW1/ MOVIE V • •' 1 Tea For Two 119501 Doris Oay Gordon MacRae (!)MOVIE * * 'The Damned Don I Cry 119501 Joan Crawford David Brian ~NEWS m PAULRYAN • 'Down and Out' top draw at box office HOl l YWOOD (A P) -It paid t be .. Down nnd Out in Beverly Halls' ovt'r the weekend. Director Paul Mazursky's zan look at how hfc changes for a Severi ll1lls'couplc -Richard Dreyfuss a.n Rctle M1dlcr -when a bum J01n their household wa\ No. I en the bo ollice scramhlc us first weekend 1 the theaters The T ouch'itone film. featunn Nick Nohe as the bum.grossed SS. million at 1ht' 806 theaters whert 1 was showing. Tht• nc"t three films on the list ha '1rtuall) the same hox office receipt for the wcl'kend. about $4.2 million. "Thi.' Color Purple ... from Warne Arn~ wa\ <,cen at 561 theaters an tirought ti'> '>t.''i.'n-week tot.al to $39.2 m1ll1on "Murph)·., Romance," stamn Jaml'~ < 1arner and ally Field. wa unranki:d l.a~t week. but bounded cnt~ the top lour 1h1~ past weekend while ~10g sho,~n at 1.046 theaters. The C olumb1a lilm, in a limited number • of1hea1t•r<, l'arllrr in its run, increased II\ \C\Cl)-\\.CCk gro!>S to $5.2 million. r he .art ion-packed hockey film "\ oungblood." stamng Rob Lowe, "'a'i thl' third lilm with a gross of al:lou1 S4 2 m1l hon. It was seen on 1.354 'il'rl'en\ 1n us first week of rdcac.c '"Ou1 of .\fnca" from Universal fin1'ihrd fifth ."-Ith a gross of SJ.l m1ll1on , Tn-Star's .. Iron Eaglt' plan·d \!>.th w11h $2.8 million. and l ln1n·r-.al\ .. Bl'St of T imes" climbed into the lop sc,rn with a debut that earncd11 $2 4 m1ll1on ( omp1cuously absent from th1t v.1.·l'k\ list was "M ) Chauffeur." th4' < 11mn lnterna110nal release which l.1<1t "cc"-topped the box-office hs! "'11h a rl'ponl·d weekend gross of$4 ~ mtlh11n m RACtNQrnoM SANTAANITA l> NEWS -8:00- 11 MARY . 0 ~HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN OMOVIE m ESPECIALLY FOR YOU WITH TOM JONES ,L MOVIE • • Crimes Of Passion '19841 Kalhleen Turner Anlhonv Per~rns P STAR TREK fJl) ALFRED I DUPONT-COLUMBIA AWARDS IN BROADCAST JOURNALISM m BUSINESS REPORT EI!) JACK HAYFORD ID NIGHT GALLERY P KUNG FU l MOYIE • • A NM}htma1t! On Elm Street I t9841 Jolln sa~on Rol'lee Btakelv -1:05- H MOVIE * • * Reuben Reuben Tom Conti Kelly McG1llcs Thl' figure wa'i 1mmed1atelx (halkngcd l:l~ C\ernt1vc~ at othel ,, 'tud1m. and < rown lnterna11ona' otlic1al~ sa id they were rechecking 1h1.·1r ligurcs las1 week. I 119831 • • * . The Guns 01 Navarone S MOVIE L MOVIE s LUXURY THUTRfS SZ 7\ l tl l Moh W U kGt y1 * WALK· INS * Ill M11 Only S11 Sun &. HOllG•w• Unl•u Nol•G (if,)1i;;@l1(j¥J.Uj; 4 w:.~slh..!~.' ..... J CRY FROM THE MOUNTAIN (G) 6 :4S &. I 4S N o'Panu YOUNGau>OO (It) SHOWS AT 7 10 &91S RUNAWAY TRAIN (RJ SHOWS AT 7 00 " 9,05 N o Baroa1n Mallnee NIGKTllllARIE OH E LM STRE.IET PART II CR) SHOWS AT 6 ·30 ... 30 CEnTUAY CtnEDOmE m 6)4 lSSJ Cn1p~••• Iii S•nl' An~ I "V OOMe AND OUT IN KVl!RL Y HtU...S (It) S H OWS AT 1:103 2S S 35 7 ·SO &. I 0 00 THIE KST Of' THllE.S (PG-U) S HO WS AT I 2S J JO S H 7:4 S &. 9 SS llURr..Y'S ROMANCE IPG-U) SHOWS /I\ T 1:00 3:U S:2S 7·40 &. 9 ·SS . OUT OF AFRK:A (P'G) SHOWS AT 12 45 3 SS 1 00 & I 0 I 0 IN 70MM IRON £AGLE ~I>) SHO WS AT I 00 l 20 S·408 00 & 10 20 COLOR PURf'\.E CR) S H OWS AT 1'.0S •·OS ?·OS " 10.os •ou •v~ C)J~1Urt1~[) I •. AM•· ~~s~~1~~~ \J rw r lllr9 ltOOM OOW.. ANO OUT IN BEVERLY HILU (It) Plus! S PLASH fP0) £UMtNATORS (PG) Plus! TRANCERS (PG 13) HAMBURGElllS TM.._..(R) Plus' MALIBU EXPRESS (R) NiGH-nlARC Oft IELM STRUT II CR) N19ntm~re on E lm SI I (R ) ROCKY IV (P'G) Ptusl WHITE NIGHTS (PG · I J ) flM:J( TO n« F\ITIJAE. (PG) Plu1I 101 DAL MATIONS (G) C n11<1 Pric:u C n.,ge<I * ORIYl 111$ 0••• I 30 W•••v•ll 00 W•u4t1Udtt 12 f 1u U•11n lle11• ****** ******* * * • BARGAIN MATINEES MONDAY THAU FRIDAY l ST 3 PERFOAM ANCfS * * SATURDAY Isl iPEAFOAMANCES * * fJC£PlHOllOAYS &SlARAfD•e •rfATUR!S • "A very funny, stand up and cheer movie." -Ron~ Barrett IPG-131. l'J~l.1' ~ A UNl'IE~SAl ~tt.,. CJ!; -• ·-·. - NOW PLAYING ...... .,..,,... ..._,.< AllAll.- t'ttllO COil•_... f ..... ,. .. ,,\~ ... G0t'AtilltSA fft•ll ....... r.-•"t"9U• '°""''•Wll v•1 • t "' I •••'""'' "' "'' ••iv)- ... 1111 ..... ... •O "'-•"""' ..... ,,. ~ ilio'J ... .. v ......... """' .. ...... ' .... 1••0-. .,. " 4-1>•·'., ··-·-· .... " 1111t I"°"" 'f' LIO ..... , .. ,.. ..... '"'" )~•-Of ..-~" .., ..... "'"" ,.. ,_....*-.JI . .... *' .. ,, .. -\ ... ,[,. ~~· ...... . .,, ..... But no rc"1scd grosses for '"Ml4 ChJufTeur" "'ere issued by CrOWTl lntl·rna11onal. and no new figures fos thl'> past '-'Ce kend·s gross had beef\ reportl'd h) the independent d1sL tnhutor a\ of late Monda) )tud1u~ and d1s1nbutors releaSt' I their own figures on grosses. The} l:tnnot be tndcpendently venfied . Herc arc the top seven films at the ho\ office. with d1stnbutor. weekend gro~<o. number of screens, totaJ gross. nuintx•r of weeks in release and l''t1mated produc11on costs. Figures not a'ailablc are 1nd1cated by n-a I ·o u"' n and Out in lkverl) I lillc, ·· T oulh'>tonc. S5 7 million. 806 \trl't'n\ S'i ~ mllhun. one ""eek. n-a 2 · f hl' ( olor Purple," Warner Bro'>. S4 2 mllhon. 56 I screens. S39 2 m1lllon. '>l'' en weeks. n-a. I "Mu rph)·!> Romance," Col- umbia. S4 1 n11l hon. 1,046 screens. $5 2 mtllton. "<.''en weeks. n-a. 4 "\ oungblood." MGM-UA. $4.2 m1ll1on. 1.354 1;creens. $4.2 m1lhon one wed. n-a. 5 "Out of .\fnca." Unwersal, $3.3 mtllton 997 screens. $50.8 m1lh on . <.e\i.'n \.\Cl'kS. $30 million 6 '"Iron Eagle." Tri-Star. $2.8 mil hon. 1 129screens.S15.6 million thrct.• "'<.'cks, S 11 mtlhon. 7 ··&!>!of Times." Universal, S2.4 m1ll1on. 872 screens, $2.4 million. ··.::..:.:.:-1 one week~ n-a. llO lJ.1111 f.,v S 11 Vtllry v .... f> ~~~==========~~------------- 1118 i~e 1he 119'11 l 0 0 0 LA MIRADA GATEWAY OOllT metlO MOC NOt T1/ICTT1 MIOUI DOWN AND OUT IN llVHL Y HILLS 1111 121»1'U ••• ••4McU -1 I ... NIOMTMAll ON llM mm 'MT 2: fUDOY'i l~ 1•1 121)0.t.,...,1..._,_IO!OO a 6iOilUS uii rii M6W ,...,1 n,JG lll'AAATI AOMIUIOH ---~)4 tJll/rt<•lly II Ott Amt WAI. T DtlHIT't 101 DALMATIANS 101 111• Jilt .... MHMft~ •UNAWAT TlAIN 1•1 ...... 1 .... l lCMAaOOH.l lllOWH tll 1b»bss.,,,..,,,._10t10 IAUT •llUI MUll'H'l''S IOMAHCt 1-.1i1 111•).J1to.J1u.-1•10.:io 1TlV1N tl'llLIUIO'I THI COLO• PU•PLI 1,.111 IN DOllT ltOCM11S-7110-IO!U NICI( NOU11H1'TI MIOUa DOWN AND OUT IN llVlaL Y HILLS t•I 11100UY 12a)0.1tlJ..4,_4M1IS-11 rOt LOUii oourn 1a. l•ON IAGU 1-.u1 1o1w,-...-...,._,.,., IOllH~MMU THI llSf Of TIMIS ,,._Ill l1sw.u+OM.l).I ... •OI LOWI YOUNGILOOO 111 114).J14S-S1so.t·••0tos OOLIY SfHIO RIOfO•DISTHIP OUT Of AfalCA 1..01 ,., ON\T 41JS 7140 IOtO DAii Y 11)0 4 1lS 1c40 10!4S ILIMINAfOH \N I 1.~ ... ,,1 .. ,.-. .... 10.40 JIWll or fHI NIU ,,.,, ,_..,U_.,lMt•IOtto Boa Oltlct O!Mnl Sil Sun 6 00 PM Mo11 Fn 6 30 PM Sltow SW1s 11 7 00 PM Cllllclrtn Unoer 12 Alwayt flee SU,lll SW&f Mil f ( • .,, S.l••ffy All4 S..•411 Ire"' 1Alil 11 )l'lll , .. 1.1 ......... Wll •IU IUt nu ANAHEIM Ut•J•rt !IH/Ltmap "·""'' 'm t. .... WIUWllMCUl'f ..... ~ ,, MmTOfr.1 .. 1J> I nncH '"' ::{' IGe LOWt YOUNCMLOOO 111 YIM Of THI DIM>ON Ill * llON IMM.I 1'1-111 * MT CHAU,,IUI flll ORANGE BUENA PARK c IU illl CO/O l••ctl• W ti '"'" ,..._ NOi. ""'"' MlllU;'l- DOWN AND OUT IN llVllL Y HIL•.l 111 HIAVINl Y KID 1,.111 e:1~i•11 1!1tlltl JtU 1 .. n!l G '-. >:: >:C llOt LOW. YOUNGeLOOO Ill YIAa Of THI OltAOONtlO HAM8UIOll... ll<*fl W'llllAMll'KUtrT 1\1111\\ M M0n0N '9CTU•I Ill THI UST Of TIMll ""111 MA&.llU IXNIH 111 fLnCH , .... ILIMINATO.I !NI DIATHITAUCH 111 loHABRA .. ~~. imn .. IGe lOWI TOUHOalOOO (11 YIM Of THI DIM><>Nt lltOf'f IA0\1 ( .. Ill MY CHAUPPlUI Ill >:c ""'°"'~' °" ILM 111tln •MT 21 PUDOY'I llVINOI TIXAI CHAINUW MMIACU lilt? i"~e t>e~\ G 8 . 10 tie \ u " ~ . ,, t 0 @,.""· ,, , .. -NOW PLAYING - Pxrf\c '>An.01fl'1,. 1 .. ~ 1179 96<;(} 8MA M.annStt.tJ.-1.H.f S29 SH" ~ £.aw.wo-'>oO<Jl(O< •• 581 5880 HUNTIN(;TOt; 8UrlH r """'W·l~. u ~ ll'' .. 848 OJ8tl IRVINC f Ow¥tl\ W "'Ill •I}' S51 0655 AMC r~•'hfltlf "iic1+, tr• ll'll 06lJ ... IA HABRA I, M If\\' (,,.tt.,.,.,"' '••t ,,,, '• f'Th• ' \A',,' ~ ' ... ...,., 'Rt I ...., 4A4 WESTMIMSTl:R f 1tw4fd\t.1r'lt"tft1• Wflo\t l!<il J9l5 1,, if t'i1 'If IV )9 II \.f nijql J6tjt GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD WINN ER 111 .., I \ l I Ill .., .., 111< \ '1 \ ' . "Mon then a ....,.,.. Ar• """""..nal tufV" 11110 • Mumol> <II hi nd1"') ""91'tr1•,. h •tlr-uld ~ ~U•O! the> l8<e ,,, • r ''"' 11 , r ,,i, , p, •rvl<-• • .. ~ Am IDW SHOWlllil lllllA Piii IM..,_, I H2·4ttl ..-ramw £.DWMOSSOUTM eolST PUZA Sotl-%111 ·~ EDWMIDS n TO.O ,. ... ..... ._.,, .. "' ... 0 . -· ... Ml••·--£.DWMIDS CHMTO COOi( 141 ·0770 UllUUAll £DWAM SOUTH COAST LACIN 4'7·1711 u ..... 'ACllC LA •ADA ,.... .. , -Cllio. mau .. , real cruwd 1111-1 Tiie ... SCllllS .. same _, 1111 llllhlat "" lliilld." --c..n. Pmt1 •IMlN lllU .... " .. •MILHAM •u ... •COil•• .. I'• ''•"II t,. ,.l N COfU "llA l&Ait·~ '4 ~IWM fl l1)jlQ -'•••1' lt:.""3'";t .. ~ ... , ,~, l>GUll• tt,aClo .. , •• • u allllAOA PM~ l''-11.14• ~ .. ¥1> ·~ ,.,.,,, ..-t..r\ ... ~ .,,,, Mr ~W ~I '4MlfW '" "«" ..... .,..,. °""' ..... ~ ~n• ....... ' ""'"' Jt°'""''" ... JMl EIOLlllYI EIUllllm 1111. TUii llllf ITDll 6:15, 8:15, 10:15 edwards NEWPORT -·-· •· ... •• •••• '-1111 01c.o •• • • -'1 • .... U'+'-t n • .... II I I - ' •I '•• I ------------------------~--·-·-------------------'---- Presentatlons, promotlons told Costa Mesa marketing consultant Marta Piscopo recently attended Photo '85 m New York City, an annuaJ international conference of professional photographers, where she presented a program on marketing photography services. Piscopo serves on the board of directors of the Graplllc Artists G•lld, Ba1laeu Developmeat A11oclatlon and Women lD Ma.u1emt)\t. • • • M!cllael Cole has joined Stiller Advertl11.D1, be. as an account executive and Marte L. Tltolo has been appointed assistant account executive with StUler Public Relatloa1, be. ofCosl3 Mesa, a subsidiary ofStiller Advertising. Titolo, of Huntington Beach, previously held an administrative position with Diane Sllenroocl utertors of Santa Ana. Cole, also of Huntington Beach, is a former free-lancer with agencies in the automotive aftcrmarket. • • • William A. Pope has Joined lrvllle RetaJI Properties Co. as senior director of retail development. The firm is a di vision ofTlae lrvlae Co., responsible for planning. developing and operating the company's shopping centers in lrvl.De, Newport Beacll, 1'111tlD ud Oru1e. The Irvine resident had been senior vice president for Jlm WUtoa & A11oclate1 of Montgomery, Ala. • • • Wa)'lle F. MaJler has been named president of the National Society to Prevent Bllnclne11' Southern California chapter. Muller is executive vice president of Irvine-based Superior Optical Co. • • • Tllomas Crooks is the new national sales director ofMullfactarta1 and CoD1altlD& Services Inc. oflrvine. Crooks, a doctor of engineering. 1s relocating from Westchester to Irvine. He was national saJes director for V.G. Sy1tem1, a graphic systems firm in Woodland Hills. • • • Jo Pedrojettl has been appointed senior v1c.c president of Liberty National Bank of Huntington Beach. She manages the bank's real estate loan department and has been Wllh the firm since 1984. • • • Jeffrey SlavlD, vice president of residential marketing for Bramalea California, be. of Costa Mesa, has been elected president of the Soatllena California Salcs ud MarketlD& Coucll of the Ba.lldlD1 ladaatry A11oclatloa of Soutllem California. He lives in Irvine. Other officers include: Judy Foster of Homes for Sale magazine. secretary; Boule Beaton of J .M. Peters Co., treasurer; and Marty Rel.Dfried of B.J . Stewart AdvertJalD1 & Public Relations and Ll.Dda Scarberry of Carma Saadlla1 Homes, members at large. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedr'41edey, Febtuaty 5, 1Ne * In . .. .. . ========================================================~============================::::::: ' .. MONEY SENSE .. • : • . . Don't let assets gather moss _ -5.rnaller businesses can'tleave their cash reserve standing idle More smaller businesSC'S fail in the first five ycan because of poor management than for any other reason. says the Small Business - MARY RUDIE Administration. . And never have there been more purposes, are credit risk-free. failures than in the past decade. Bankers' acceptances and Inflation, recession, high interest certificates of deposit have even rates and the lack of financial so phis-shorter maturi tics, from 30 days to tication forced even some well-around nine months. A banker's established smaJler businesses to acceptance is essentially a draft on a close. bank, which has promised to honor Only recently have owners of the draft at matunty. smaller businesses recognized what A ccntficate o f deposit is simply an major corporations have known for obhgation ofa bank to repay a cena1n years: They cannot leave excess cash amount of money to the certificate reserves idle; this cash must be h~lder at a specified time. Both carry working to cam additional income at hi~~r yield than T-b1lls do, but every possible moment. mm.1mum tnvestm~nts v~ry. S<?me Banks, brokerage firms, insurance certificates of depo.s1ts require as little companies and other financial in-as S~OO. Bankers acceptances can stitutions now offer a wjde variety of reiuu~ a minimum of$ l~.000. programs to heir small businesses • ustnesses Wlth more hm1ted cash tmprove ftnanc1a management. pro-can take ad vantage of money m~kct fessionalize cash-Oow planning, and • mutual funds. which offer hqu1d11 ) keep dollars from "growing moss." and require small minimum mvest- Herc's a look at some: men ls. HJP-Yleld uveitments -In high-Government agency secunues. 1s- y1eld investments, there is a virtual sued by agencies of the Federal parking lot to choose from _ every-government, may or may not carr) thing from Treasury bills. or T-bills, the "full faith and cred1_t" guarantee. and Ginnie Maes. to commercial Most offer attractive yields, but are not as ligu1d as T-b1Us. FlauclaJ Mua1emut -Most small businesses have no one wuh either the lime or skill to watch over theu assets. So many turn lO the corporate ~b management pro- vams offered by banks, brokerage firms and other financial 1ns1ituuons. In these programs, professional money managers ovenee company assets, plan cash flow and make sure company funds arc cammg income. Typically, corporate cash manage- ment programs transfer funds be- tween bank and brokerage accounts. compute net asset vaJues d.atly and tnvest funds i\l a choice of money market funds made up of any com- bination of' T-b1lls, cemficates of deposlt, government 1Jency secun- ues and money market instruments. A business can tap such assets quickly, either by writing a rheck or by calling an 800 number to transfer funds to the bank account. In ad- dttion, the funds arc managed to reduce yield volatility, so compames can better predict dividends and plan for their use Qr investment. Brokerage firms also offer a corpor - ate vers10n of the cash manaJement· type account popular among ind1v1d- uals, which combtnes money market funds with cbeckmg and debit card pnvilegcs. These accounts arc pantcularly suitable for professional corporations and smaUer businesses that do no1 need elltens1 ve financial piannlftibuC wish lO keep usets invested at b.iab yields and have easy ICCeU to them. Rate Pr.a.cu--Small busi- nesses can alao minunize the iJns-ct of mtemt raies on cash flow flucn.- tions and chanles in the value ol forei&n currency. If a company, for eumpk, is expectina a larae cash reserve in .U months, but is conoemed that rates on investmenu wiU ~ loWtt than they arc today. 1t can lock in the current rate with 1 financial futures contract on the 1nvestmeot it desires. say T-b1Us. Then, if rates drop, the company stlll buy T -biU1 at ~ guaranteed ra tc, or seU the contract an an active futures secondary martet for a gain -in either case approx- 1matcly ofr'setting the interest rate decline. Companies can similarly avoid risk when buying or selling goods over- seas. For example, if a company agrees to pay I 00,000 francs to a French manufacturer in six months, and the value of the franc increues 20 pcl"CCnt. the company could suffer a substantial I~ To protect ii.el( the company could purehuc a .. forward" contract lock.in& in the current ex- change rate for the franc. Mary J. RHie lt viee ~t AM ma.uier of couamtt eeca.r mane~ la& services fw MerrW L~ Pierce, Feuer • Sall" be. paper issued by corporations ano certificates of deposit issued by major banks. Which to select depends on the compan y's financial limitations, such as how much it has to invest, and on its needs, such as liquidity, safety and yield. -1~m;llHIMl!llHll------=------------- Generally, hqu1dity is extremely important. A company does not want to tie up funds for a lonj period. T- biUs arc very liquid. Their maturities arc relatively short, from three to 12 months. and they can be easil y sold before maturity tn an active second- ary market. They are issued in minimum denominations of SI 0,000. and arc backed by the full faith and credit of Lhe Federal government, and. for all practtcal When you' re four years old, you've got more important th.ings to do than vvorry about living to be five. -(1} llll!!Elfl~------------=--- You've got pictures to draw. Balls to catch Castles to build And, if you're like Peggy. you've got time for It all Even if you were born w ith a de- tective heart valve Even 1f you d id spend the first tvvo years of your llfe In a hospital bed Even if no one thought you'd make 1t to kindergarten Why? Because Peggy had a few million people on her side Scientists and physi· ctans all over tha country who've dedica- ted their lives to fighting heart disease- the nation's number one killer-and who hava c ontinued through the years to find the solutions we need to beat it . Without research. thousands o f lives · vvould have ended too soon And 4 year-olds ltke Pegqy vvould be ploy tng like there's no tomorrow WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOJ~ LIFE American Heart &ta Association V NEW YORK CAP> -The followclno "" ,101 I."!!':"b"H'11'-.!' 16J,. ~~ shows the Over • rhe • ounter " ..... " stocks and warrants that nave gone uP B ~nrovCnvOev 26~ '" the most and down ll'le most based on l~ Lrrn•~~axv un 1it? 21~: oerunl of change tor Tuesday "' No securities trading below s2 or 1000 ~CA or11 4 13-16 9· 16 shares are Included. nConv 116wt •~ 1h Net and oercentage changes are the FlghlOvnam 3~ ~ difference between lne prevlou5 closing JS Wl'IOl'l!leClub 11'"2 .:; Pf'lci• :;~~·~~"" '" ~~:«~.o ri ~~C, ,j ';~ ~ tmleJC 534 !Cm UP ·~ tr1H~1 S1h h 3 hellrComP ' '1 1111 UP . ..ss p 4\ot ~ 4 1ra<1vlb 3~ ~ UP olAm ksh 19''• + 1~ I ~rnAnx WI 2.... ., UP t DOWNS rownAulo 4 lio Up I Na~ L,~I C~ Qml Intl 2'"9 ~ Up 4 1 FslOtaMgl 0' • -3 '• FdSvMonl s 1334 2'. \Jp 19 6 2 Amer Adv 2 -,,., C COR Elec 7 1 UP 16 7 3 BercOf' ?l... -l''l ~·bs A~~S: un gnr~vCa~v s Enro P nomtxw Cardloc>l,rn un ~~~~s LMdWO.v A"~l wl Nth stTI s ~Fs ee~:l'CP . lsvl !p-lvon art un In oolc A. om Fs ec: WI Oo cSC>KI National University Announces a new locatio n in Mission Viejo You can now achieve your college degree at a more convenient location in Mission. Viejo. Continuous courses ?re available in undergraduate and graduate programs at National University. Our one-course-per-month evening format enables adults to complete a degree while pursuing their career Financial aid is available in the form of loans, scholarships, grants, tuition assistance, and veteran 's benefits. New classes 5tart monthl~ Call our Adm1ss1on A.dv1sor toda at (714) 582-7 222 lu 14. I~· i . I . 1 . 1 f· Id 11.1 1 u Ji Avoid capital gains tax . Support the American Heart Association . rail) r u,he\ n l m ,, .i ... h1 By supporting the Americ an Heart Asso c 1at1on you may • avoid c apital getins tax on apprec rat d se curities o r o the r pro p e rty • reduce c urrent nn<1 future incom e taxes It may pay you to 1nqu1re about the Amenc an Heart Asso- c 1at1on's Planned G1v- mg Program by con- tac ting the American Heart Ass o c 1at1on. 7320 Greerw1lle Avenue. Dallas . Texas 75231 .. - ... _ • pro vide a ltf t1n1p In corn~ tor you rc; II or benef1c 1an • avoid pro b nd publicity Some t imes. •t can be batter to q1ve than to rec eive American Heart "Association ,. ·~\. .. a. fL = l' , $l::. ,, . ~·;. 'J ~ .. ~ ... ;t . I i~,. •Q ~J ... o ~,,. , I~ s 1 ) ·. 6 • l'e 79 • ]~ , I 1t • J7 ... , . . ·~ ~ Ao • ) I • ' J& • 16 • ) ':') .. J~ •• ti Jl ... 74\ ~ l . .. • t.11 I 1 ~ t 7) o I 11 .. 6 • 'O • tei •• 10 ..- • ti"' ,,,_ •0 •• II • I • ,l.: 1 .. I • • IJ • I • l • , ~ ... )/ .. 1)'• q ... • .. ,.. . NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS WEDNESDAY!.$ 11 A.M . (PST) PRICES 01• PIE ~.i•• L•\I (n• OfV "" SMt uul C"9 I ~,~;: 11" ~·l r, :~I. n:~; ~ :r~' I"'!. : I Pt>lml!I , 10 u~ • t•• 11 I "-PolEI pf 4 ' u4i + t '• ·~ no ,, Prtmll\ 12 4 J •.-" ••Intl ~1 I i +1 I P11m~ 1 I t ij' '• Tutrl I • PrimeC l' 1 I 4 .. 1 • f••()(;1 f 11 I i. Pr•mM \ n ) I ij..,,_ "' TxPec 14 '6 01 •--. 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PS 01740 1100 .,Jo ~1 Trt cr' H11 I '•+ PS ot9 62 1240 '7 framl n l • I • Public~ S29 7'• TWA HJ 1•>, • • ~rl:,., It 11 ~~ Ir: TWA 01 ,,~ fll U'e I • Pu11••P I 76 t 191 11 ·--• r;:~~~ 1 d I/ ti ~ ': : PulPt n Ole 191060 • • Trn(aa n1'h 6 I of .,,_ • PulltHm 11 19 911 IS 1 t ftantco l !r SS 119 • I • Purolat 641 60 11 , 1 rn" ol I ~ 6 -" Pvro I 119 S•d • 1 ranE r • I~ • 't ~alo.01 I CO IS 'I04 SO'o I i.. Trantcn 10 I I • al.SO tOa 11 I• l•'t TrC.P ptl~ JI 9 • t • ;~~ 11' I~ 16~ 2' ~ ' } ;~!,.<?; •9 ' IJ1~ 19 •: 1 Rt•I 71& 17 fl )I • + Twla wlA I 10.. • -A-A -rrovler 116 12 7007 •8"111 '• Rf Ind Doi lO 6 1 t • Tr av pt c 16 SJ~ ff'• I , R A IO• 2• seH •? • • .. Tr Con J ~ ' .. A A pl ) ~ ti ·1 -• Tr•(n ol 2 I , t I R A Pl • 1 i. •I I • T•1etn' I t•I D .1 ~L~A pt J ~A 11 'ti • • TnlnO pl I~ ~ • .. 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U• ••• , l 11t I I I 19 • l R.<'.•P \ XI It 91 9 t I Un N'-I J~ 11 18 111 , • I ReoNV I ~ ll ~ ss .. -uc ..... r ~ 2) 17Jl H • Rro8• ~ o 11)) <117 • ' • Un(a•D • \0 S1~ 93 , t '• Reo8• "'111 JSI o}•'• "' Un•c.•·C I 9 R•nCol l2 •S ?S • • Un( e< I 14 I 13 17" t ~=~~~e 80 • j l t~ r! ; . ~I ~~~ g:...: s: ti I H • Rewhm 10 11 " 7• • • • U"( pl 2 ti 14 ?I'• t Rt•nro •• 11 •H .... -• unE pl ] 1) ... 21 • I Rhnln 11 '8 S 1671 ll'• •1 unf ol I•• 1100 )c • Rrvln "'" 06 791 ll• uE olH 9 t100 72>,-I • RtYMll I 60 )9"' "' UnE rP nl Olt .,I 016 , , ~.··.MM ~'11• ~ ,1 SJoo·. I unPa• 180 II JSll .... • "' ~ 9 UnPc pt I 1S 6t IOS , I • I R11eA10 11 8 .a l& t u,.,,. .. o• a zl90 12 • • R .rOe• S6 96 l..,, • u•o10r 1~ 1 Rob'""' 110 9 IS }8 U•'8t•O o~ ,, 23., ROD''" I 20 19 ?• • v 8 •o o• I ,, ... "' v1Robm\ S 1 9 I)'• .·J U(blll\ 10 ~ 9 H' lloc"C. 110 1 1 6 1l'• Ul1turri 131 S 11• , Roc"f 1 S6 10 18 Jt • Ul"u ot }97 ~ • • llc•C•• ' I+ 1U 19 • u1 u o< 1 70 t O • o Qoc'w 1 11 9 tS6 )6 "'-u11 u of • ~ , • •• llo,.mH '10 U lt I?'• • Ulllu pl 190 I) I • 1 Rohr ' 10 191 1a ... -•I llnHlnd 60b 10 19 1 • • llotn(n-•1 10 1? 16 J • • Un1llM 1) 60 19 4) , Ro,,rE ' Oii l l l)t O .,.2c-.. + 1 • u lt •B , I 16 11 ] ~ Rou0n\ •6 11 )0 I) -U•OMM 9 • ROC>f"r 6' II II • i UP,Mn • Rorer ti II 19~ ll'•! U\ottrC. 11 I 11 )6•, llow•• 11 'IS ltt +"o+ •!' uSHom ~ S'• llllv'D ) l'lt 8 J 60' • + US\..ta\ 80 I I 38'• Rovln• \ 1t S 16 I USS"~ 91 14 I u / 11 vDma ' '8 2l 1 I l5 , uSS•~e• J 10 IJ 60 6 11 , II J\\8• 6 JJI ,. .. • u~s· of5 S•t 10 s I'·-.. 11,., T~.i 16 2 II ?J-.-'o 11-.\U lO IS ISO 11'o NE\Y YORK (AP) -fhe stock mdrket headed lower today, backmg away from record highs reached early an the week. The Dow Jones average of 30 industnals. dropped 7.11 to 1.586.12 by 2 p.m. on Wall Street. Losers outnumbered gainers by about 8 to 7 among New York Stock Exchange-listed tssues Analysts said investors found no great surpnses in President Reagan's State of the Union message Tuesday night or the budget proposal he sent 10 Congress. They noted that budget prospects will remain uncertain unt1J court rulings are made on the const11ut1onahty of the G ramm-Rudman-Hol 11 ngs law, which sets a umetable for narrowing the federal deficit to zero by 199 I. Traders were also watching the 011 markets to see rf pnces there might stabilize. After takan$ a sharp drop Monday :ind Tuesday, they steadied early today. Energy issues. which sold o ff 1n Tuesday's trading, were mixed today. Chevron rose 1/4 to 34'/•, and Atlantic Richfield gained I/a to 511/1, but Occidental Petroleum lost 1~ to 261/i. and Amoco was down 1/• at 5)¥.. lhanH I 10 9 Ill 19'• + llvoe• \ 60 IS Ill lO II v ""~ &a 17 790 l I • -"' ll•rn•• \ )1 IS • • WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om q,,,...-,., ..,. , 10 " -s-s -'>(Ill' 1 lo •6 lJ , SL lt1n /ID 11 10 I•'. ~~~.~:' ~H .l~ l~'-, Sat>t'llv 1 l9t 161a17 •--. S•Q<J8> JO II I) 19 '•-• Sl11dS< 11 U I 11 •- St90S w• 90 l • S&flkt ' J1 19 Ill ~9 , t "' S•ltv.-I 10 9 1090" I'•• -. S..11& S1 '' 11 • ...-• s• 10 " 11 e 11 n . , .. .. s. b • I ~7 tO ' • \a•• tM ?• IS 1 I~ 31 • \a >Ill' o• J I le HO St • so p(,\ 11• 9 ~ 19 • \J• a•8 91'-9 t J ... ~~fl q ' l'-tt- NEW YORK CAP) Feb 4 Advanced Declined ¥ncnenoed oral issues New hlons New lows TOdaY 247 ~ AMEX LEADERS Prev dav ~ lS NEW YORK CAP) Feb. 4 Advanced Oectlneo ¥ncnenoed otal louts New nlohs New lows Tod'~ rt 2~ 62 NYSE LEADERS Prev day_ ~ .;t:":Q f.' :~ ~~~ ~~ ~ NEW Y0Rt<. (AP) -Sales, 4 P.m sret P 6'1• 10--. • Tuesday orlce and net cnanoe of lhe 10 NEW YORK CAP) T"" Sates. 4 p,m . Tuesday orlce and net chenge of !he lS most active New York Stock Exchange ~F tSoP I I• 110• )6'~ '• m 0 s ' ~·• .. L e~ 160 " 61l >2'-• -. acrlve American Stock Exchanoe issues, s:~~ :. ·~ 9 ~i n:~~ tr adi ng nat iona lly a l more ~• , 'IJ 1"' • t h a n s I ••" pt 70 • .,._ ... ~·~ Vofu~ Last Cho. CANA 1 H 102211 19.. OomePlrl 1,118.91~7900,~ 111·!~,. -3-f6 ScnrP•o 190 11 ~81 6J • " Wickes .. •.8 ,.3,. S<:nlmo 120 9 S'9• JI 1 • 8AT lnd 450,I 4 J ·16 S< A1· 11 16 791 II 1 • xouP 74 11 )9S SS.,., HelmlRot>I 412,7 '~ t ''°II xou., s1 13 '" is • Homelns of 373 'h •1. Sta~nl 0 I 111 1' '• Lionel m• 6~ 11. Su '01 1 •6 11 11• t • WangLab8 ' 18~ • S•a o10110 11 IO'ot • HomeGo n : 26~ + 'h ~::L ';;0 ~ 1 1~1 ~.;' "' Ecno8aY o • 13~ ~ S.et " 10 l )1 MIChlE no .SOO 11112 ~ ~aC 18 l Seaorrr 80 1~ 1040 •S"-' Se&pu• 10 1• a tc i.. "' 5o 1Atr U 19 l()ol ~ 1-t:!." , ,. :Y )I~~ r: '• SU•\ o•90lt liO I • S.<Pat 1 JC 1 643 '• t ~·cCP \ 31 71 Jn JI Sna>itt n 11 9)) 11 , Snawln 60 10 IJ ff • ~ne r 7 S2r I sos . t S•t-C. 90 9 19J u •'• • S~t•C. pl 40 10"' l ' t I s"''"" •1 1s 46 •I•+ SllQ4'1wn 17 I ,.,,_ • Sl\owo• 60 17 IJ ti • S e•Pe< 1 66 11 1~ 20 , + S·"llt' •O 10 9 41 • 1 S •gr 11• I SO H '• S•• .n• '8 11 10 ti • " i""'""" 17 21S •-o m•B J 11 114 Ii mo.t \ 60 46 4 '• + • neoO• I 16 U •67 • .... • lo ny~f 1 n .o? ,., • Son•• 1 704 '119 ,-"' GoLD Quor£s METALS QuorEs SonrcP 1~ 1J 1111t 19 ,_ "' ~.~~ ~I r>g ~J ll'~-.. NEW YORK (AP) -Spol non,.,,_ me481 prlCee SrcCo o• • IS l• , weoneecsey sere: of 50 ' H". ~. 51 95 cent• per "°""" HY Come><""" !toJert,.. 141 0 '• • T !.<luaw• ID 17 1~ J '. month~ ue ~18• 1 70 I I •• )6 '·I : c..,., ~71 cenll •pound us ci.1ine1IOOI •PS 7 1)1 JI 7 6 • c_., 83 40 oen11 per pound, NY Comiu tO<>t al[d 1 16 9 10•9 ~"t rnontll.c:IOMd Tue uorCo10ol1 8]20 7• , ......... ,.,,. t _ ..... nC.1 1t 9g 10 190u , 1 ,,,_ • ,.. .oen •• ....... -e t ,. ZMo • 3S centt • p(JUl>O .,.., _ _, UnCo ~ h 11 •H ft';_: Tiii • IHl•-l>le (Met ... W .... c;nme>e*1• P'IOI per utlnd I 17 10 1 • • • lb I 01.1110 111 • S ..,,_ "' ...,_ • 15 8951*' ounce Hendy a Hwme11 w"';;;• 7~ tt om ~~~-I ...... aa14i per 1royounoe,NYeon-tOO(montn w•For 11 Ii • cloMd TU9 wtC.e\ 129 a 1]4 11•.-....,_.,.$2$5 ()().1215 00per161b ~.~YOt1l Issues, rrad lno na tl onally a t mor e tn a n s l ~~n ~·mv· 4'f.,.:' ~ Amer T& T , , fg~ f$!Ynldlnd s • , + ~ p;;n~~t •re i: :' u~ = 1 :~ ~SStffl I,~· n~ -~ M 1.7 • 13v. -1h obll 1,li • 1h -~ \,lt>Svc Ind I, 7 • liJ + 1.\ AICanAlum I· 1 1h -~ E.i astnAlrL ,447, ~ -14 w•varnsr 1.ID 34ih l1 CSX Cp 1. 34! '"° Motorola 1. , 41 1:\61 Pen Am I , , I -"9 Dow JoNES AvERAGES NEW YORK (AP) -FlnJI Dow Jone• ~v a r f oes for Tu es d a~ T~K 1S9ri..,,6 l6r1~1st-~: mflrtt-hl Trn 75'. 76 ·H 744.H 7~~~1.07 Ull 17,. 17 . 174 1 ·~ ~ Stk 64 646. 631 4 . 1. l!ldu• ~ 2 ,llO, Tran 7fJ7, ~l1!~k J!.~.= NASDAQ SUMMARY W~f I 6 t JU IS'• ........._ • 1311 ()().$319 00 ~11C rnerchertt ,,.,., w nr '? 6 S99 alle "'ounce .. Y w 1 ~ 7 2 11 139 a • '"'------------Parlor 1 lat cl I 1 ot<•P •• . .-I oerrv 91 n ... , • ... (lp: .• r,v1 I ~1 14 m •t·e~ ~ 0 I • 14 I '3 '•-o OuiDD 11~10 11_1 .. talev IO I• 14't~ • t8 Pnl S6 11 Ile 19 '•-, IMO" )} II H IJ , • ·m" 1eo HJOt1 tt . tonC!e• 57 1~ ~ IS ··~ ...... I°"' 'o •I tt"' ::~t •, 3 ' ) 0 : t :I !>:o~~~P :O. 1~ ·~ h.:.: t"8<o 80 11 Jl .,1 , 1 '•' ::m. t 11 2 Ji:;, . 1rr10o 110 16 "t 4 • 1 ,~.,,,J ,,o "r J , li~i~:·:i ri'~ i1~ ~I .'.~~or~ " I ltt I ! ~ltalMI ~ I l' I '• ~rdi~· .. :t 1,: a un 1 SJ 't • • ~"" r • ,,, u· •11 "' .. ~~ 0o• 11l tO j i;: ~~ ..• \!... '° I• Ir 5-4"· !;~~~~:' ,' i II 'j: i f ~ • ljO\/e i \ ti 6 _,. • oM•' 4 I\ t •• ~::.·~ I J! l 1 ° •t>c'" .. n•1 • • • •"'•(I> If I • .. ''°' • • I 10 19 I • .. I , •\( .. " .... -T--i~co I~ 10 JI ~1 • r~11 11 •1 j • I~~ 1 'l ~2 ~ u.:-· tttw ,.7 1 ff , •r:t~.~~ I~ II ~I,: a1 .. .,. 1) I I . eltfv 01 '•I r:~o;o I c :t \I • • .: f~· t• 5 I .. '::c~ ,• ,H .. h•ov" 1 1 l l -. • 1 • l~~tt •Ou j '• 1.: ....... 17 .. m ,. fMC:O 104 I)) I • ""°' II II t T•rw. 111 140 l~• '"'1 !.,O.,,. 1S ' • ~:!r,0111 ~ l <I Ta 1 Lott LlllS fromUlQ Rol.121L1n ll:r.u.c!Q 1~n ~lud lu Ill I trllll Vt')llqy t,\\Q world~ !'111"•\t. horid."3<lWr 1 l.tll5 "llway.! Utt<:p;ttQ~t. 1!t 0111.i cll~.s tho 1dtG</~ <l<JIQ1 LLl"{1 nrz.wp:in. bcux.h ... 111eet"11on l'~lo1ed, 11'tt6't~ ':£J70 ~<'ll.~J V1lklr~ I l ~blvd ,2l.YXlUt75 P"~'"' ~r 'K"'l•th toka t!l'R ,Al8/ 42 9~~ ffll)li tl\f'U fh !Oto?. '<ti urday 10 I.ob C. !YYndery n< • r 1 lo !J hine!>e Nl'w Yedr is lrdditionally the time to qdther family and fnends around the table and share spec1dl foods, Wdrm Wishes, clnd tokens o( luck and prosperity for the coming ye.u. "Htlppy money" 1s distributed in red ,rnd gold envelopes dnd eel eb1 ,rnl5 '-''l hanqt-snMU gifts. sue ha::. "chops" n1.1rble r1ecc,.., ('ngr,1ved with the rec1p1ent's ncrnw c1nd thl' red -:,t,11np pdds the.II go with th1.•rn Chops hcwe been used -:,1nce annenl trrn<.:'S to t•mbo..,~ t1nd ..,rgn vM1ou~ mt>ss,19es or .utwork fhe holiddy food is alw,lys prepared with 9rl'c1t CM<' to reflect hc1rmony and balance 1n color. texture. tlnd n .. wor. As the new YeM of the Ttyl·r arproacht'">. whv not get into the spmt .ind pldn .1 Chuwse New Yeclr fed.:;t to celehrtlte 1lw O<..C.i .... 1011 on Fehruary 9) 0\ ('f the tent urn!>:>. Ch1nE'se <. ookmy ::.tyle:, 11,1\'l' de1.;PlopNI b1, reqiun. l!clCh with ,, d1st1nc 11ve char.1ct1.>1, u~ing nat1vl:' 111gred1ent::. The d1:,fws th.11 tollov.. ore all 1n the "<.lassie ... or M<1ndM111 '>I yle d blt'nd of the ve ry best rt> qH>tlcll 1119red1en1s c.llld dishes Ec\l h fl:'atun.'!> food products thclt ctrt> dvdilohle 1n ever~ Amer 11. ..in m<lrket. int lud1ng naturc1lly brewed K1kko mt111 Srn,. St1un' tboth l11e ,rnd all purpose) and 11.., l l'riy .. 1k1 MMin,,de & Sauce, Cal1forn1c.1 e1lmond.., .• 111d C.1hforn1d caniwd cling peache~ Tn lwq1n tht' lec1sl , roasted. seasoned" Mon ~ol1c1n" ,1lmond hor~ cf oeuvre::. m.,ke dPhc1ous pr l' d1mw r rnbbhng ,Ju st ~pity enough IO whet tht:' c1ppet1IL'. rlwy c .. 111 be m,1dl' ohet1d .rnd .... tored loo::.el> 111 •' plcl-.tiL <.On tairwr or hag Crunch~ ,1nd tc1nlt1h1111g. thev'r1c1 seci::.oned with bottled tl:'riv.,k1 m,mn,1dt' ,incl -:,.1ut e t1 perfel I blend of na1 ur ,1111, hr l'\Vl'd ">OV '>c1Ul <'. wme. sug.1 r. and <.,l'll't 1 h1•1 Ii., dnd '>Pl< L'S .111 rec1cly In ll'>e A 1e,i-.porn1 of brov .. n suq.ir dnd t1 fl'W drop::. of hot rc'f)(Wl ...,dlll P 1ntl:'n~1fv lh<.' tldvOr II) this recipe. Almond~ Ml' sarcl to ht1\e ong1nclt(:'d 111 c1m wnl China ""cl hJve long been prominent in mcinv M.indann d1 .... hl!s Owr on1:1 half of the 1A11rld·:, .1lmond .... upplre.., nm" come from C.1hfor 111.i The..,,, 1. runl h1,; v1.•rsatilE:' nutc; Me avr'lilablc> 111 .i \.~:tdE:' \clrll'I\. of L ut:, dnd St/l'"> ,1..., well d..., \'.iholl' lw bo1 h L ookmy and sn,ll king ' Cmp1.. [ 11e SparPnb ... tlbo make ta::.tY <lPPl.' l11c·r ..... or tntl)' lw "'l'r\. ed ch pdrl of I he mt1in nw.11 RtfL' ">111· ptl'L 1'"' of pork .... p .. Hl''r1h .... .Ill' ..,,1t 1 ul1·111 .ind 1 l'11cll'r \1,. IH·n ...,, 1•.iml'd. 1 hl'n mt1r1th1lt-d in cl hlt.>nd of low :,odium hu• '>OY sc1uu.>. drt,. ... hvtr» .rnd garlrl Soy '>iluu• 1~ dn 111dispenc.;1bl"' mqred1en1 111 many Oriental dishe~ It udds th..it unnw.,1c1k.ibly nLh fl.wor. so typ1c,1l of Chml''>l' food Loi.\. ..,odium lrte is thl· ... ame qu,d11v. 11c11 ur,1llv hrr•wed .... o> sc1ut e I h .. 11 ht1~ ...,t.,1..,onvci d1...,ht•..., .iround th"' world for ccnlune~. hu1 1.A.·11 h 10 1,,.,,.., c;,c1lt lb deep. reddhh brown (Olor cind d1~t1m 11ve tldvor enh.inc rng quc\lit1e .... rl'nl<ltn h1•1 t1ll">l' th<.' ..... ,It 1s l''lr.it IE"d aftl'r th<> hn•w111q pt oc..,.., .... After the nhs marinate, they're hroiled 10 the right degree of crispness Serve them ho1 wi1h Mandann Pent h Slwce . ..-i tang1, ::.weet pur<'1' of plump, IUK\ C.ihfor ntil l hng P<'•ll he.., 111 lllll l' rn e'1r<1 light ::.~rur f hl:' puree I!> w<1!>1J1wd with more teny,ik1 .... .iut l' .ind a dti.:;h of ll'nnel. pl'ppl'1 , tlm.e::.. tlnd gcirht lhl' Sdllt e 1::. p<.>rfE't ltun for d1ppmg velw1y smooth cind thick Be sure to prepare two b,11che.., of th1::. unique t ond1men1 becduse 11\ ,1bo es::.ent1al to M<Jt k Mu Shu Po rk. a clas~1c favorite. Serve our ver s1on of this egg and meat dish w11h a gerwrou:, ::.precld of Mandann Peach Sauu~ on a wdrmed tortrlla. roll 11 up ,md eniov out of hand To tool the palc11e. rn, MandMtn Ch1ckl'n S,·d,1d topped with tlw 11rh. nutty fl,wur of to,1sted lailJ Plllt WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1988 , [!I Hot muffin• not Juet for brNkfeat anrmore.C3 Eetancla'e wine rea..-a bargeln at anr price.Cl , -;h\·ered almonds Cn<;p. fresh be,rn sprouts and .... lueddl·d 1. Mrol are ,1dd •d to h.>nder l n1ckt:'n bre,1~t .ind drl' .... sed w11h ,1 1t1.;;r.., tmghng m"1ur1> 11f \ rn1.'•1.ir ~rn ....... wu' ,ind .... ug,;r K1kk1111i..111 S111,. '°l.illu'. I r.id1111J1i.dl1, hrewt'cl fr nm \1,. hi:',\! <1nd "'"Vht'<111">, hd.., a deliL c1ll' ll'-1\ or balcrnL e and .11omc.1t11. qu,1h11,.. 1101 found m non bn.'wl'd \t>r :,1011~. With lrt1gran1 l ilanlru in th1.., sc1lc1d. thPt P h d h.nmot11C1US fltlVOI hll'nd light cllld lrt>">h lcl~llng Cordi crnd Jddt> $t1r Fri,, I'>,, ... 1.olurful a~ lh ndme .,uggesh d l l,bSIL shnrnp ,111d \ 1•qe1.ibll1 ~I tr fry w11 h C.ihf orn1,\ ( anned chnq pe<1e h .:;ht~·-. Hl•c1t111g tlCILr.1lly enh.1111.1'"' the L h .. H,lt te11 .... 111.. f'll'i'Ch 11,1\,0I ,ind dHH)M \.1,.hile thl' plump. lllll I, .... hu~s t l't.1111 ll·w1r ...,h,1pe .111d t olor d"> I he1,," rt ' ... 11r fned Pdt kt?d the fight IA.dy 1n 1u11 .. ·e or e '<tra hqht wrup. they add a fn?!>h, S\H't:'t fruit touch to rhi.... edS>' dish C.ihfurnra t .1nrwd t lin·~ P\'dl I, •. .., ,1rl' L':.pec 1al · k nored tor 1 h""1r flnl..'. l IO~l' I ext ured tle::.h. round o.,hape ,md u1n"enrent lorm th~1y re always read> to :.erve from the Cc1n But in the :,pmt of celebra Iron lhl' r1:.1c 1pe lor t.>leg,rnt Mdndann GltlsS Pl'dt h1..·:. trdn:.form:. 1 h\>m in10 .. 1 cry:,talhne. L ,rnd" L oclted dec;~ert filled with crunchy. l hoppt'd dlmonds .md cn,stalhzed ginger Bl' .... ur\> l!l 1ell vnu1 guesh tlMt the pedch ., mt.'lull11:'.., onge\. 11\. in Chinese ore .. Hid entoy tlw hc1pp1, ending of your tedst and J luL k1,. begin mnq ot 1he 'r°lM nl the T1qer 1Reclpe11C!l @@@@@@@@@@@@ @@~@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@~@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Culinary couple create cookbook By CHRIS CRAWFORD Ocollyf'tlot~I ( halk up one more !>uccess for Piret and George Munger. a couple who ha ve the Midas Touch in the gourmet food industry. "It all started when I couldn't find a deep tan pan for a recipe I wan ted to try," says George. So he and Piret opened T"ie Perfect Pan, which. in 1975. bccamt' San Diego's first f ult-scale cookware store. Soon George began offering a few cooking lessons at the start' and the Perfect Pan School of Cooking was born. Th fee more pan shops and cook- ing chools followed, including the one an South Coast Plaza in 1983. They were expanded to include Prret's, a co mb in atio n charcutene/pat1ssen efboulangene, whi ch offers both sit-down scrv1ct' and carry-out. Today there are five Piret's in San Diego. one in South Coast Plaza. adJacent to the Perfect Pan, and one soon to open in Los Angeles. Now the culinary couple art' on tour with their fil"lt book: ''Piret's: The Geor~c and P1ret Munger Cookbook' {Houghton-M1ffiin - Sl8.95. hardback. $12.95. paper- back). The book·s ncarl) 300 recipes reflect f rench country cook inf as the base. but man) other cuisines are representt'd as ~II lncludt'd arc rec1pe'i from family . fnends and cclcbQJ)' guest teachers such as Jacql}@'s Pepin. Paula Wolfert. Diana Kenned)'. Mauncc MotSrc- Bctty. and Madeleine Kam man. "George and I are practlcal peoplr as well as a two-are~r couple," ~>~ Pirr t "With few exct'pt1on' (which w.t· rnuld not resist because they arc wonh the effort). the recipes in this book are practtcal in the context of a normal lifestyle with its time and financial constraints. "Many of the dishes can be made ahead, and even taste better when they arc. We want to demystify the idea that good cooking is only possible for the eh le few. Our aim ts to prove that good. fresh home cooking can fit comfonably into the new American lifestyle," she said. Another goal, sa ys George, "is to teach people to ta1te as they cook. That's what cooking is all about." "Yes," adds Piret, "our recipes rart'ly give an amount for salt or pepper. Instead. they wi ll say ·salt to taste.'" Another example of this. she says. involves one of her favorite desscns. Orange Cream with Chopped Nuts (recipe follows). "Whatever orang~ vanety you usc, taste its juice for sweetness. and vary the amount of sugar accord1 ng- ly." - In 369 pages (including inde'\). • the book's offerings are corv· '-------------- prt'ht'nsivc. ranaioa from "Begi"· Chnstmas. we made the Southt'm nings" -appetizers. first course. Cahfom1a best-seller hst. v.e are soups -to dt'sscns of all kinds. A into our ~ond pnnung in hard- chapter on "Charcutcne" in cludes cover. our third pnnt1ng tn soO- sausage , pates, temncs. quicht's, covt'r .. and gourmet pizzas a la Ahct Will there be a St"quel'> {)(>finite!:.. Watersand Wolfgang Puck. yes. say the Mungers "I alwa \c; The secuon of "En tree for wanmho wnte a look." adds P1ret . Entenainina" consists of 26 "and I'm tooling fo rward to recipes. with somt' dcsianated a anotht'r." perfect for small. sit-down dinners. Following art' recipe~ from the while others arc suagested for book. buffets or larae group'\. incc November. the Mungers have toured I 9 cities with their book, and "the l't"sponse has bttn very aood... say~ Pirct .. By OJUNGE CREAM WITH CHOPPED NUTS 3 lar1t orance• "rep111ar l c•p water -.#,. Pl.Deb of sail "'a c•p anultfli plstacblo nuts ! cup1 beavy cream \\ cep blaacliled almonds, finely cboppfli Wash and dn the oranges and cu t tht'm in half aoss"'1sc Squttie the orang<' JUIC't' Ulto a ~ucepan '~rape out and d1sc3rd th<' pulp and resent thr h<'ll ur the ~U{lJr into the 1u1ct', bnna 1t to a boil. and coo~ until the orange .,, 1 up th1ckeM t 11 a-.ide to cool In another ~ut'tpan bnng the ~tC'r and \all tn a boil l>r<'r 1n thr (Pleue Me CULINART /C2 ) ------------- Students in vent February fondue From 196 7 to 1984. I taught hundreds of cooking classes. Some were at college kvel. some were pnvate. and some were puhh~ classes One scne·s ran 18 wt"Cks. and though 1t was tilled "lntemat1onal Cuisine" and the onginal purpose was to cook th<' nattonal dishes ol St'vtral countnes. I found myself surrounded v.et"kl~ b) St"veral in- ventive cuhnary amsts. It was dunng the third or fourth class that someone said. "Lef, nickname the class ·1nvent1' c Cuisine' and t'ach w.~k create something nt'v. as well as cool thr food on your agenda " Fort y-two alrt'ady enlhusias11c 1udt'nts sud- denly 11pped into high gear and took an e'en greatt'r intere'it in fine food. food h1ston and learning about food affin1tirs It all began one Februan Iona ago. and one e'enrng w.e were e\penmt'nting w1th chtt'it" dic;hes Out of that class came our mipe tor Ft'bruan Fondue v. h1ch I v.(,uld hk(' to share with \ou alon~ v.ith a little background on the hi,ttm of chtt\C.' and tondue Chre\(' ma)' well !:'IC tht' onf\ l\)l)J in the world that span\ t'' rn suhtlt' d1st1nct1on of .tromn ap(X'arnn1.t· tc\lure and ta'it<' 1n lt'ntunc1i P.''' chct')(' has ~t'pt ~a~nt\ health\ arm1ro; ah'<' and ro,alt' amu~<l and no v.onder ~au~ 1t 1'i f)3c l('J with phoc;phoru .. l·al~ \Um protein and '1tam1n1, It h.i' g1,cn nev. d1men 10M to lOOk1n11 dining '1ml FIFI CHAO w,ne ta ting t-rom a11uqutt) to the modem worl d. chees~ has nt',er fallen from grace Food h1c;1onan<1 are not surr w-here or w hC'n \ heese-making actu· all\ be%an Then· are howe,rr. some entertaining theones. one 01 which holds that it all l:'ICgan quite b) accident when a nomad put ome milk into a leatht'r pouch so that he could dnnk it as he 1oumcved w tthout ha' 1ng to c;top 10 milk the ca mel It" c;unml;('(j the nomad fa hion ed h1~uch from a camel\ \tomal h0'ft>mach lrmng con 1a1ne<l 1"61 rennin cn1 mt"\ that cau\Cd the: milk to form curd'i a' tht" bumr' 1oumc' continued and the milk wa' ~losht'J around in the pourh ThC' nomad liked the tastr ol the l urdo; and thi ma' haH ~n the h1rth of lOtta e ch{'{'\C.' \\ hrthcr or not that 'itOf\ '" true hert re ~'me fa t' about chct\C.' that arC' rerorJC'd in hi\tol') "" earl\ , s the th1n.1 m1llemum R C lood rchc1i trom an E vptian tomh indudcd l h«c;e When barbanan' o'ernn Eurt'f'C in thr ~1h rentur\ .\ n chtr\C Jnd milk we~ Ire d' Pleue eee P'ONDU&/CS) • I C2 Orenge eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, F•bruary 5. 1988 MONGOLIAN ALMONDS _ 1 cup wlloleliahir almonds % table1poon1 bottled ter lyakl marlllade &c sauce 1 tablespoon water 1 tea~poon brown sugar ~ to 1_. teaspoon Tabasco pepper aaace ¥. teaspoon vegetable oU Toast almonds on ungreased baking sheet an preheated 350- degree oven 10 minutes without st1mng. shalong or turning. Re- move pan and cool on wire rack. Reduce oven temperature to 250 degrees. Combine tenyaki sauce. water. brown sugar and pepper sauce in narrow I ..quart saucepan. Bnog to boil over medium-low heat. Sur in al monds and boil for 5 minutes. stirring frequentJy or until sauce is absorbed by almonds. AdcLoil and toss-il1mond5 until coated; tum out onto baking sheet, separating almonds. Bake 5 minutes; shake and tum almonds and bake 5 minutes longer. Re- move almonds from pan and cool in sin$1e layer. Store in loose fittirig contamer or plasttc bag. Makes I cup. CRISPY LiTE SPARE RIBS 4 pounds pork spareribs, sawed In thirds across bones 11, cap low sodium lite soy sauce % tablespoons dry sherry · 1 clove garlic, pre11ed Ma.ndarln Pea ch Sauce• Cut ribs into I-rib pieces. Place in steamer basket or on steamer rack. Set basket over boa ling water; cover and steam 30 minutes. Mean whale combine lite soy sauce, sherry and garlic an large bowl; add aka. now makes it twice as nice! s -We 've added frui t & spice to the hearty, who lesome goo dness of Quaker R Oatmeal. Try the new taste that's twice as nice. I> ·-----------1 ft re off 1r-.,-.-Uf-lC-T11-RC_a_COIJ_P_O_• ...,,.--U-P-llf_S_AP_R_ll _JO_l_IM __ I ~ New Quaker Oats I Apple, Raisin & Spice ·or Raisin and Cinnamon • • .. ,.~,. ·~ . .. , , ~ I I I I I I I I I I . "·~'' ~f1 ·~~· ,tf}r~, j 1.JIJ.\KI .~. I ,,\J..:I I: f>\1 \ 4" . -\l )lfl ,~' r; I .. , .. " I •' I 11•1• '""'' , .. ''""tllll 5 ,,.. ' t .jllol'. ~ ·~ ' I• • ....._ !lit •• • ll"tH 4"11 it 1"6 30000 00025 I I ·------------------· ribs and stir to coat each rib well. Marinate I hour, stirring frequent- ly. Remove ribs from marinade and place, f)'leaty side up, on rack of broiler pan. Bake in 425-deg:rec oven 15 minutes, or until crispy. Serve with warm Ma ndarin Peach Sauce. Makes 6 servings. •Mandarin Peach Sauce 1 can (IS ounces) CaWornla cU.ag peacb 1Uces In juJce or extra Ugbt syrup 3 tablespoons bottled tertyakl marinade 6 u ace 1 tablespoon corutarcb 1 tablespoon H gar 14 teaa,oea feanel, cnashed 14 teaspoon black pepper .,. teaspooa aroud cloves '1il teaspoon garlic powder Drain peaches and reserve liquid for later use. Place peaches in blender container. Whirl on high speed until smooth; pour into small saucepan. Combine tcriyaki sauce and cornstarch: stir into peaches with sugar, fennel, pepper and cloves. stems ud plecet Vegetable oU 'eus,beaten Bring mixture to boil over me- dium heat. Sammer until sauce thickens. about 2 minutes. stirring constantly. Remove from heat and stir in garlic powder. Makes about I cup sauce. • Warm S-tnch flour tor tillas MudarlD Peach Sauce• (See Crispy Lite Spareribs for recipe) MOCK MU SHU PORK "l pound bonele11 pork Cut pork into thin slivers. Com- bine cornstarch, soy sauce and ginger; stir in pork. Let stand 20 minutes. Meanwhile, cul green onions in halflengthw1se, then inH1 11/J-inch lengths; set aside. Resen-- ing 1 tablespoQn hquad. drain and chop mushrooms. Heat I teaspoon oil 10 wo1c or large skillet over medium heat Add eggs; cook until firm on bottom. Gently lift cooked poruon to allow the uncooked egg to run underneath. ~lu)'' Rcmo'e and break into largl' p1l'lCS. Heat I tablespoon 011 111 )aml' "'ok o ... er high heat. Add pl1rk anJ 'illr-fr) ::! minutes. 1 tablespoon cornstarch t table1pOOns naturally brewed soy uace ! teaspoons miaced fresb gtn1er root 4 rreen ooJoos and tops 1 can (4 ounces) maabroom Continue procedure until com- pletely cooked but still mo1s1 and .\dd green onions and reserved mu,hnwm l1qu1d: stir-fry 2 minute) longer .\dd mushrooms and ~llol-.ed eggs. s11r-fr) onl y unlll (Plea•e •ee CHINESE/C6) Welcome the year of the t iger withg-r-.e-a-tChinese dishes The Chinese New Year is a fascinatingholiday- dramatic. colorful and filled wi th traditional fl ourishes Li Ling Ai, noted author and lecturer, offers gu id eh nes for a New Year celebr:\tion. Miss L1 teachescook.ingclasscs at the Chinese Cultural Center in New York City where she imbues her ' students wit~ the Chinese veneration for food as well as the techniques for making superb dishes. She says foods are used as symbols by the Chinese and are thought to impart certain qualities to the diner. Oranges traditionally symbolize sweetness and happi- ness. Once so rare in China that they were restricted to members of the court. to this day they are offered to all guests at New Year to ensure a sweet and happy year. Orange Chicken. therefore, is one of Miss Li's en trees at the New Year banquet. Zest of orange and herbs are combined with orange juice. vi negar and fermented black beans which impart a smoky, earth:y tlavorto the sauce. Sweet soups are traditionally served to provide vanety toa Chinese feast, and on New Year's. her choice will be a.n Orange Sweet Potato Soup. ORANGE CHICKEN 2 ~ pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs and breasts 11, cup cornstarch •;,cup fermented black beans• % tablespoons dark soy sauce % tablespoons essence of roses or gin 1 tablespoon sesame oil 1 tablespoon sugar l clove garlic, finely chopped 1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh ginger l orange 2 tablespoons cider vinegar Cut chicken mto 11 ~-int h p1l'le' place m hea1- proof cas erok or pnrrel.11n ho" I ')pnnkle cornstarch over chi cken p1cre' Combine ocam. \0 \ ,,lUi.'C. l'''l'Oll' of roses. sesame 011. sugar. garlic ~nd ginger. puuro\ er chicken Remove zest from orange v.11h J 'l'gctablc peeler; cut into decoratn e stnps. n.·scr" c Squeeze orange() ou shuulJ h<t' c about 1 'cup JU ire). Combine orange JUll.L' anJ 'Jnegar, pour over chicken. Place dish on tm ct 1n "111>. or large kettle with cover. Add 2 int hes of v. atcr (_ tn a Bnng water to boiling: rcdUt l' heat. ~1mmer 35 to 40 minutes or un11l ch1 r kL'n "tenJer (1arnish with celer) lea' cs Y 1eltl. 4 -;en mg' •Note: Ferml'nlc<l blad.. bean\ may be purchased at an> Ch1nesdouJ 'hop The~ .trnold di). In a package. and ha\e a d1,11nr1 I' c smoky fla \or ORANGE SWEET POTATO DESSERT SOUP 1 piece fresh ginger. about the lze of a walnut, peeled 1 cinnamon stick, about 3 inches ~cup fi rmly'Packed light brown sugar 4 cups water I sweet potato (about t., pound ), pared 2 oranges. peeled and sectioned In ml'd1um c;aucepantomb1m·g1ngL·r:{'10namon. sugar and water. bring 10 boiling. ( ut swec1 potato in10 tw o lengthwtSl' p1t•rc'i. cut ral.'.h p1l·re an half Cut pieces into ~-inch thick ~hces; add to saucepan. boil I 5m1nutes. Just bl' fore St'r' ing add orange Sl't'tion~ 'r 1cld 4 Sl'f' mg'> I CULINARY COUPLE COMPILE GOURMET COOKBOOK ... From C l p1stach10 nuts. blanch them for I 10 2 minutes, and dram them thorough!>-When the nuts are cool enough to handle. rub them be- tween towels to remove the skins. and finely chop the nu ls. L's1ng chilled bowl and beaters. whip the cream until 1t forms stiff I peaks. Gently fold the orange syrup in10 the whipped cream, along with the almonds. Spoon the mi xture into the reserved orange shells. and spnnkJe the chopped p1stach1 0 nuts ' on top. Refngerate unttl serving Yow1 fttlrttl MoR1yl 1kU 1tor1 It 11mc Sen es 6. SALM ON STEAKS WITH CAPE R BEURRE BLANC To make the Beurre Blanc 4 tablespoons dry white wine 4 tablespoon white wine vinega r l "1 tablespoons minced shallots 3, pound unsalted butter, a t room temperature, cut into chunks If.I cup capers, drained '' teaspoon kosher-style salt •, teaspoon freshly ground white pepper ORANGE ( ombmc the wine. wh1tl' "IOl' '1negar and ,hallo1' an a small. nonalum1num saucepan. Brang thl' m1\ture 10 a boil, lower thl' hl'at. and cook the mixture until 11 1s reduced to about 3 1ablcspoon' Qu1ckl~ raise the heat to mcd1urn - h1~h and bnng 1he reduction 10 a boil Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the butter one piece at a ttme. allowing each piece lO emulsify before whisking in th!.! nex t. You may ha ve 10 move 1hc ANAHEIM The Village Ctnler 1222 So 81ookhurs1 92804 (II 8•11 Road) Ptione (714) 635 2461 U TORO 24001 Reymond Way •2 (Bell Towt1 Plaze 1419 N lu slln (at Kalella) 9?b6 7 Phone (114) 997 9960 COllOHA OfL MAii 3700 E Coast Hwy 9262~ Ptione (714) 673 9000 North el Cl Toro Road) 91630 Phone (714) 837 3821 HUNTIN8TOM HACH 19069 Buch Blvd 92648 (Next to Ralphs Martel 11 Gar11tld) Ptlont (714) 8•8·8!175 RANCHO MlllASE 11·634 Hwy Ill 92270 Phone (619) 3•6·39~ RIVlR SIDI 5216 Arhngton Avt (H•rdman Center) 97504 Ptione (714) 688 9681 TM " .... ' pan oil and on 1hc hl'at to 1-.cep lht• sautc hLH enough to cmul!>1fy the bu tter but not so hot that the buttl'r rnl'lts and becomes oil). When all the butler has been added. "' h1sl-. 1he sauce until 11 1s thick and creamy. t1r1n 1hecapers. and season wi th the kosher-styk salt and .,.. h1te pepper Keep the 'i:lUlC warm in a double boiler or 1hcrmo~ bottle To Prepare the Salmon 6 salmon steaks Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste l tablespoon unsalted butter •, cup heavy cream (approx- imately) l red onion. thinly sliced 6 cloves garlic, minced 6 bay leaves Plnch of dried thyme Prehea t oven to 400 degree-;. L1ghtl:r salt and pepper the salmon l sc the I tablespoon butter 10 thorough I) grease an oven proof baking dish large enough to hold I the fish 1n a single layer without I touching Pour enough of the cream into the dish to barely cover the fi sh. and lop each steak w 1th a few onion slices, some garlic. a bay leaf. and a pinch of th} me Bak e the fish for 5 to 10 minutes. or until the fi sh is opaque a~d tests done when pierced with a fork or skewer (You may also cook the fish under the broil er fo r I 0 to 12 I minulcs. to give the cream topping a golden-brown color.) To serve. spoon some of the bcurre blanc onto each warmed dinner plate and center a ~lmon steak on 1he "auce. Top, 1f desired. with a little more sauce, and serve 1mmed1ately Serves 6. A Dutch treat DUTCH SPINACH 10 -ounce p ackage fr o1tn chopped spinach l tablespoon butter l tablespoon n our t,; r up milk a lt I tablespoon fi nely cbop~d onion I ..., teaspoons cider vluegar Cook spinach according to pack- age d1rect10n'i. drain well Melt butter over low heat, star an flour. add milk: cook. st1mna coMtantly. until sauce thicken and bubble\ Add spinach . ..alt to taste onaon and "incgar. reheat mn 1 ng often Make~ 4 \trvang\ ......................... lliiii ................ ,~ ......... _. ........ ----------~~~· .• a es S# Orange Cou1 OAJL Y PILOT /Wedneeday, Febn.t9ty 5, 1988 Chocolate-flavored muffins more than~ breakfast food Beat the Wlntcr blahs with hot-fro~·thc oven muffins made spec1al wnh cocoa and chocolate -chips. Traditionally, muffins have been a breakfast food. However, by adding fruits, nuts or chocolate, muffins become pan of a lunch, brunch or afier school snack. Muffins are also ap~aling be- cause they contain less fat· than donuts or danish and arc made more healthful wuh sur-1ns such. as bran, oats, wheat germ or peanut butter. Another bonus. muffins arc easy and inexpensive to make. Most begin with basic ingredients - flour, sugar, eggs and milk, gently blended and spooned into tins for balung. MINI CHIP OATMEAL MUFFINS 'r4 cap 1mslfted all-purpose flour ~ cup quick-cooking rolled oats % tablespoons toasted wbeat germ l teaspoon baking powder 14 teaspoon bakJng soda "9 teaspoon salt ~ cup packed brown s ugar '4 cup creamy peanut butter Legg '1'I cup milk ~ cup semi-sweet chocolate mini chips Toasted wheat germ Stir together the flour, quick· cooking rolled oats. 2 tablesPoons wheat germ. baking Powder, baking soda. and salt in a mixing bowl. Beat brown sugar and peanut butter in small mixer bowl on medium speed till fluff}. Add egg; beat well. Add the flour mixture and malk alternately to the beaten mixture. beating on low speed JUSt till blended. Stir m chaps. Grease muffin cups: spnnkle lightly with wheat germ to coat cups. (Or. hne muffin cups with paper bake cups.) SPoon batter into muffin cups, filling '• full. Spnnkle with ad- d1t1onal wheat germ. Bake in a 400- degree oven for 15 to 20 minutes or J until golden. Remove frpm pans. Serve warm 8 muffins. COCOA-SPICE MUFFINS I •14 cup batter or margarine, melted 'I• cup unsweetened cocoa FONDUE ••• From Cl ensconced as pan of the diet. In the I 8th century, cheese was so highly regarded that one English village was required to supply royalty with a vearlv supply. I Charlemagne. tn the ~me cen- tur). discovered a cheese so nch and creamy that he ordered two I can loads of It each year ~cap applesHce l T cops uslfted an.puflM)H flour l cup aagar '4 teaspoo• bakJng soda '1'I teaspoon chmamon '4 teaspoon nutmeg 1/4 teaapooa ult 1 eu. allptly beaten YI cap claopped nuts or raisin• Glaze (below. optional) Thoroughly combine melted butter and cocoa; add applesauce. Combine flour. sugar. baking soda, spices and salt in a m1xina bowl. Blend m cocoa mixture ttd -qg until dry ingredients arc moistened. Stir in nuts. Fill 12 lfCAsed or paper-lined muffin cups (21h inches in diameter) l/1 full with batter. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes or until cake tester msened in center comes out clean. Drizzle Glaze on muffins. if desired. 12 muffins. Glaze: Blend I cup confcc- noners' sugar and t 112 tablespoons milk until sm ooth. Do'!~!!.E~.~pon Do~!!_E~!Pon =~ ',t;:! =e= = ~ =:c=. W:~:!: :-~.:-. c~';U'!,.in~~ ,:~~ ~F=~~gitl\-:~~:.:u_;,Of •«..Ottw ~w• ~ Llmit One Item Per ManuJacturen· Coupon and Umit 2 New~r Double Coupons Per CUl1omer Coupon Etfec:tt•e februa:ry 6 thN rebrua:ry u. 1986 • • ,..,,, ''"' l)"P' r nJ #1lf . lr " r 1t Mf.Jnua"lt"..u•n •1\1 ?tt .rJ'ln <JDl1 J•t 1 ' • • • 1"" r J _, ·•f y_ f I "'-0""' th• •'•IT"1 H -I , ...,...,. ; •' JUe• U•• per lb t: ,:•v 1 • ..1 r. ~~ r ~' _, ... '-..... '/~~·;.·~u; ,.':., "o11"!.; •• ..,, u • w<Jh•• • l1m1t Or:e Item f'er ManuJactwers· Coupon and Llnul 2 Newspaper Double Coupons Per Custome1 Coupon £Uectwe rebn.la:ry 6 lhru rebrua:ry 12 1986 Top Sirloin · Steak 1.19 Save .20 61'S 011 can CZlllM l.Jgbf.ln Oil or Water .59 USDA lrup Golden 1'111m1um Beet Loin 1'01k 01 ... t area.tJcrst Stnps per lb. Sare 49 Ralphs 6.pack Solt Drinks Assorted VaTietJes l2 oz can w:db coupon l.JJDJI On• lt•m and One Coupon '8r C\ulom•r Coupon l:lt~~· F•t>ruar) 6 thru F•l>nla:rf J1 19'6 ~-1 -I RalphS6pk. Solt Drinks We kno~ that seeds. spices. I flavorings and herbs were added to cheese as far back as the Roman era. I Once discovered. the quest to make I Sa e different cheeses seemed 10 8~ l 59 tloun~. p~b8e. 1( lb. • Modem technology .notw1th· 12 oz each .89 ~not~ .99 .59 kinds of cheese today than there ._ __________ .. landing. there are actually fewer I were 1n those earlier historical times. The reason 1s in ancient I times each commune had us own recipes for making several types of cheese. Standardization set tn as I communication. technolog). and ease of travel began to dwarf our sphere. and the regional nuances began to disappear. However, quality today 1s much I higher. and hundreds of cheeses are available that are as soft or hard. pie~ or bland. pungent or mild. I smoo th or crumbly as our needs l\lat11ml Grmn 0 1 Wh1mtt>11rry with coupon below I ~I ~J ~ 'Kamchatka Vodka 60 l'root per lb c 0 1 o 1 Poe: Jr or 11 Voll •m-ll per lb Duratlame Fire logs and tastes demand. Swiss fondue may be the oldest rheese dish 1nvenied. that stof) I being that a housewife left a piece of hard cheese near the edge of the stove and It melted. In order to save the softened cheese. she grabbed a piece o f bread and scooped up the ltqu1d cheese. We do know that the word "fondue" comes from the French word fondre. which means s~~e .89 24 oz loaf Save l 19 ~;~ . Save 100 l 75 ltr btl 7. 99 :::: 1.50 ~~e 1.89 Meat/Seafood Z«t rrarmscaw G:o"11Tam11rmt 1r;/IJII' t4fl 139 Fresh Fryer Drums ·:~· . ··t.o_.melt." Hormel CUr•mastet 01 CUre81Ham ,. 3.19 FEBRUARY FONDUE I clove flaely mlnced garlic Pac:1t1c tf'lesh r1ou1 lb I"°' 2 29 Fresh Red Snapper ·~ . Dairy/Deli '-' pound shredded Swiss cheese •14 pound shredded Jack cbeese 11, pound crumbled bleu cbeese 3 tablespoons flour 1 tablespoon butter t cups Champagne Honn•l·Wtangi.r Smoked Ftont-1 or 99 I Fran.le 'N Stull :.~ 1. li~t;i;;,av.y;;iiurt · .~ . 4 9 1 • cup brandy I teaspoon lemon juice ''• teaspoon ground nutmeg '• teaspoon carry powder Dash groand wlalte pepper Plncb muatard powder 1 4 wbole 1pr111 cUantro t loaves cubed llallan or French Bread Put garlic in fondue pot and rub 1t around the 1n 1dc with the back of a wooden ~poon. To!ls flour with cheese Put butter champagne, brand>. and kmon Juice in the pot and bring to a boil Gradually stir 1n cheese and cook gently ull all checSt 1s melted and fondue 1s mooth. Add $p1~ and c1len1ro spngs Cook vrry gently for live minutes Rrmuvc c1len1ro spngs a,rid d1~ard pear hread cube~ rmd 'w1rl 1n fo ndue 'korvt"<i 8 to 10 a~ an rnlrN'. W to 'O ao; an hor5 d'()(U\ re 'A'Pi>i8'7c;;brf ritink . 79 LOOI $trl• Med 0 1 Mont•tf'Y IO< It J 99 Tillamook Cheese •J • pc,;a;~SCiicia N • .. : .s9 $/rc:ed rood AUOl'led Borden Lite-Line ·: 1.39 Grocery Values Grocery I Frozen ~~ or UllSC'•nted lnclud•s 15 Ott Lal»/ 1 19 Tide Detergent 0i!'. • ..U.t 6 JXJCb·O.I Alon,.Snad111g 1 59 Dried Fruit ';.': . MJ/d Formula 1 09 Dove Dish Liquid 11g,: • l'lnapl Orangs l'lllaJ>l llandann Del Mont•129 Pineapple Grapefruit ··~~ . 0.0dOtCJJll Soap 3 Litebouy Bath Bar · ·;:, . 7 l'ur-!ta.ban Sfrl• or C'nulled Progresso Tomatoes ·'":. .89 Aliife°iergent H:.~ 3.29 •aJptu Kidney Beans ·::. .39 .99 lnclud-. 20 olt-Sllugol• Fabric Softener ";, llow ' s.v .'.ktll f ltOl!aa Ot:M ~ :6 w b»,.... Benihana Entrees .:; 1.89 hf!U 16 en. I JQ 01 l •1g•ru 1 29 Liqwd Hand Soap .... :. . Palplu Old rasJuon~ Ice Cream ~ 1.79 Prices effective February 6 thru February 12. 1986 .. ---------- Produce F?flh hd Ol Black Plums ~-99 "' . 'Yelio'w Peaches r;. 1.29 T'r•sb '719 Honeydew Melons ': . , · Bakery llaJp/U ~"n llmpt.rrr ' ,,,:-. " • ~~ l 29 Swirl Cottee Cakes , : . Hcillywood flcnt Cot l..i,Jh• Diet Bread ..... -.99 Appetite Shoppe· e Sw1rr "911uum llutr.rt-a. •• Turkey Breast •"olumbw l1al1an Cotto Salami · · Liquor 11 N earu 01 Jon ~i.n '" •.i" Michelob Beer (un•1 H(',.,,# .,_.., m l' White Zintandel AUN'fe..J \ <)Ofth•t Gallo Wines ~ 2.99 l.79 . 2.59 2.49 3.69 .. ,... .............................. ., ... , ............... ,. ,.... "-··-.. ,,"... ... ..... .... ...--···· .. . . ..... ...... ...... ._ .......... , .... , .... ,,.. ... . • ••4 ·-.. " ... ... .,, •1••1 •Hptf•• • •• • ... ......,.,.._. ~· ·-..... . ...... ~ ........... ... l f!!i•-t .......................... . ... • JI . C4 Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey, Febf\Mfy 5, 19ee Teens' poor eating habits put health at risk • t'. h ? smphcauons may be formed. By OOROTKY WENC& ......... .. UCC11911r--~ Teens. worluna pan-ume arc restaurants now have orange JUICC bcdume snack is another posM- more likely to skip the evening meal as well as milk as a beverage bility . when they re aw_ay 1rom ome · Th s st is important to help teen. We used to think that children of u 's csall y those who are than those noncmployed. As a selection. Milk would be the best ome eitamplcs of good-for-you. Teen-agers are a Y1Jlnerable result, the study found, employed choice for providing calcium, quick snacks arc yogurt. cheese, ice voup when tt comes to nutntson. teens bad lower intakes of calcium. nboflavin. and vitamin A. cream. pudd1ng made with milk. They have high nutrient needs, yet riboflavin. vitamins A and C than However, orange juice which is gelatin dessert made wit h fruit. preschool and elementary school ~~rio)~rand often m1ss1ng the aae should learn good eating h bits P 1 f the day to learn to t~at they can follow the rc~t of their maskn· me~ fboo choi~s for thcm-lsves. But recent ~tud1e~ hav e ma c wis they may have poor e.ating habits noncmployed teens. pou~ over ice in a sofi drink carrot sticks. orange sections. dried and consequently may not be One way to help working teen container and sipped through a fruit. show~ that adolc~ence is an even scl~e!.. h ·r reason for concern 1s more important Umt' for establish-. 0?1 t: rowin ra sdl _the getting enouJh of some of the 'ct rnore of these nutrients is to straw may be more "socially accep-A parent's role is to try to provide essential nutnents. • mclude.extra frui ts, vegetables. and table." Orange juice is high 1n the nutritious foods at "access Especially vulnerable, are teens milk products in their morning and vnamins C and A. points" when the teen-ager i 1ng eating patterns that carry ovtr that teensareg g P . Y · d I hood growth ra te in adolescence 1s second sn~:sc~r~hers ·found that maJOr onl) to the prcnatal3bnd infancy holding part-lime jobs. Accorchng noon meals. Another idea is to help As teens zip off to work. the} hungry and has time to eat. By not to a recent study, they arc less likely teens learn to select restaurant might be enticed into tucking an stocking "empty calorie" snacks to cat their evening meal at home. foods and snacks with an eye for orange or apple in a pocket or purse such as soft drinks, candy, potato These young adults usually have a high-nutrient foods, espe<:1ally sf so it's handy when hunger strikes. chips and cookies, teens may be sandwich-type meal, which does they cat fast foods or snacks 1n pla'ce And they might cat a quick snack coerced in to choosing the more not include a vegetable other than of their evening meal. before they leave if it's available nutritious snacks. But who will it potat~s. For example, many fast food and ready to eat. A nutritious teach them to make good choices ---------------------------------------------------~ ~hanges in food choices that peri~"t ~;~0/~:~~~~o;~ls wtrfr~~~~~ into adulthood may occur dur g 1 hile their own growth 1s teen years. Dunng this ume, when. pregnan ww the ~r group 1s the adolescent's still under ay model, and when parents and other At the peak of their growth spurt, adults have much less influence. bo) s have the highest need for adult dietary habits with lifelong nutnenb of any age group with the -, except son of pregnant and lactating women. • FOSRRFAll.MSF81Sll PRYl8 a81AST WITH RIBS A9 CALIFORNIA I CHICKEN L& I 3-4 LBS. AVG. WT. FRISH P08K SHOULDER 80AST PIC NIC l•QPllON l ... 89 Cohfor<ltO Grown LIMIT 2 ROASTS FAll.Ml8 STYLI SPA8181aS 1 J'~" LOIN !r: .. ,,.aR\ FRESH PORK \Jo,.,. RIB END L& ·1.59 Former John Fresh Small Size Hormel Block 1 lb Pkg SLICED BACON EA 1.59 FRESH FRYING RABBITS lB 1.99 PORK SPARERIBS LB 1.59 ..... ·---~-I• B·Oz Vo11e11e\ MEADOW LIA MA8GARINI 601 PKG 69 O UAF!TEF! STICK~ • • -- 7.25-0Z. BOX LIMIT 6 KRAFT DINNER .$ 0 R ~_, __ K_~_~_~_:u_'•P _ ___,11 I B _P_·~~~::L1 320Z I 09 'IPRINGFIElD 79 SQUEEZABLE • •6 OZ CAN • CINT18 CUT , P08K LOIN ROAST f fj.sr,,.•111 FRESH I 99 ~ottH PORK LL • Former John Bull Porhon PORK SHOULDER ROAST Ls IA9 1.-SALTINI lillSE CllACKIRS l SPRINGFIELD 6 5 l l8 PKG • ' L ____ _ Dunng the rapid growth phase, bones grow rapidly and the ~ne­ form1ng nutrients -calcium, phosphorus. vitamin D. and pro- tein -arc vita II> needed. Boys who grow tall very. rapidly are most at risk of not getting enough calcium With prcgnanry 1n the offing for many teem girls., it's especially important that they get enough calcium to build solid bone struc- ture at an t•arly age. Yet many shun milk -the bt'st -;ource of calcium -becau-;c they think it's high 1n calones. or because they'd rather drink soft dnnks. The> ma} not feel the bad effects of 1h1s choice until 30 or more years I later when the) develop fra.gile. breakable bones -osteoporosis - .ind \I, hen it's too late to do anything about 11 Besides milk and foods made from mill... teens generally need to cat larger amounts of fruits and vegctabk'i to suppl y nutrients that ma\ be in shon supply such as v1tam1m ..\ and C. potassium, and fohc acid. Thus the importance of emphaswng snacking on 1hese kinds of foods ••• QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: Q. I noltced beta carotene listed as an ingredient on a margarine label. What Is tbl1 and wby It Is used? I A. Beta carotene 1s a precursor of I vitamin A and 1s the substance that pro' ides the ) ellow coloring of fru11s and vegetables such as I peaches and squash. In the body. carotene 1s convened into vitamin A It 1s added to marganne to give margannc the same amount of 'itam1n A value as butter. Vitamin ..\is a natural constituent of butter • • • Q. Wbal ts tbe secr et of maldng smooth gravy? A. Lumps form sn gravy because the flour has not &een evenly dispersed in the liquid so little cl umps of flour get cooked on the 1 outside but not 1ns1de and then don·t disperse. When this happen!> \ ou can strain them out, but this 1c; a messy JOb. The secret 1s to mix the flour with ROSARITA SALSA .79 Carnohan 10 6 Oi Svgor Free HOT COCOA MIX 2.89 Donly Moore olO 01 Con BEEF STEW 2.59 Z1ploc 15 C1 Pint 1:7 (I Ouort MICROWAVE BAGS 1.59 I cold water. for example. shake flour and water together in a Jar with a tight fitting lid. Then add small amounts of the hot hqu1d to the 17 01 Bosket CHERRY TOMATOES EA At Fresh And Crunchy SLICING CUCUMBERS LARGE ARTICHOKES c IA'e 6 Pock 4 Fo• 11 THOMAS ENGLISH MUFFINS 6 Oz Pkg • 99 MARIANI APRICOTS EA 1.98 UQUOll DU'I' 9"CIAU )--••••••nm •••n )------( •• ,.. sna.a•• )---- 12·PACK MllSTIRallAU allR 120UNCE 2 98 CHINESE CAB8ACF F81SH NAPA L ... 19 Q 32GALLON I aLACK TRASH CAN \__ j STURDY 5. 99 750 M Ro\tt o• Boonco MATEUS WINE London Dry CANS • 1 75 LITER GORDON'S GIN 12 7 Oz 8o11le 50-Count q' , Sue 2.79 10.99 MARUKAN GOURMET VINEGAR Oynosty 8·01 Con 1.09 A9 MEAD ENVELOPES 6-0vn<• lrV9 SLICED WATER CHESTNUTS ...... ROUOHY ~POZEN 3 DEFROSTED 5 7 FILLETS LL • CHERRYSTONE CLAMS l8 .99 LB 1.19 For Chowder or C1op1nr10 LIVE EASTERN MUSSELS ~PACIP::=PHll / / TASTY 2 27 ./ fill[~ L& • CLAIROL MOUSSE (YA.UmlNl ....... U.CIAU)-~ ' COL08fUL 6·1NCH MUMS w:~:~w 4.97 fr,.1 W•nPPf"I r l<l">"' 6 INCH FREESfAS f~ol Wroppe<i 6 INCH HYDRANGEAS At! 4-INCll 4.97 6 .97 ~~ VIOLITI · ' ~ w:;>:~rn IA. I A J .99 .. 1.69 "'en "'KflVI • A M .. THUft ,. ... tHll\I WIO. ..... 12 I .... UMll •IOHTI IUHVID NO MLIS '° of Aun a.a WHOUU""-NO CAU DIKOUNlS °" ADYllTISID lHCIAlS. AO NOt r,,rCT•VI ., OUI ,U"ltMO N . S10ft ( •s-..1 II CTLft l~-LAND 0' .. OST ~ ii CHIPPID M~Al'S HOl 3 0$1 ASSORTED I I lb Plcg C~e Food BORDEN'S AMER ICAN SINGLES 16 Or Jar .... &OB'S 8LEU C~EESE DRESSING I.ff 1.59 ,J WI ACCIPT DOU•LI. TalPLI and PaODUCT COUPONS F•OM ALL OTHER SUPIRMAalCITS LOWa Y ... 'IOrAL ...... LI.I -----.--.... _ .. _......,..__. __ _ I (Ovpt'H" CC"Hnbtnf')U0fl' 111¥'h1th .,<.-.d rh• ~Jive of fhe ,,.,,, C>\Jtt'~O•.d nft' rtrr•pt~ 1 f •P••erl rovpo"' Df'• rw>• l"W4 ·~~ l C onttn'-'''Y OfOmotiO"t ond 9'"'' •'• pu• ku,• '""P6"' ""1 o<totpt..:I • 0--ly ,...,..,.,.,.,.,.. .. • .,_.DO", I SI 00 ,. en •.,.. b. do..t> "" S \vb•t1t"'~' of ._,,,,on "'~ul0t•u•••' 40UOfW' Pf'•~• •t> •-.d bf 10-.... 6 \11'11~ o' •••••\ ""•e<oii..' <OVP<>" def .. ,,.,~ b>f -•NH PftC• 1 If -do not •to<~ 11\e ,...,. '""' ohed on f-10•'••' covpQn wie wtfl 1ub,tttu•• '>" Jt•f'PI of eQ'11¥alent wQl41e 8 \ •qvOf '°bnft() fJnd dot,., ptodU(ft ••tiud..t 0 \11.,...I IO''""" omo<•n-..f 0" .. J(~ IOU-IQ ()fie• Vood F.b • ltv11 ,. '' I-II U,,f,mtoed Ooub'e ( o..per> olt~ ·00' 0<<"91.d --·-•..-n"•__....,..._...,..,....,.. •• a .... HUOHll CAN NO IDNOfll nonM OFHI• Wll'ffMAMm' cou~J '°" "'" &.0rn•r nocm DOWllYR.AKI ,f~ ~·~~f/· WAPR.IS ·~ (l:i!~ 1101 l<OMIMAOI .69 -OR aunUMIU< 17 7~ 0 1 Cr•psy C1unt ny MRS PAUL'S FISH STICKS 2A 0 1 Ollrt.,., ..,, 7 lb Ht1\h Browm "'" ORE IDA POTATOES .. I.ff 1.2•~ flour water mixture. stirring thoroughly. until the flour-water mixture 1s warm Finally, gradually pour th1s·mtx- ture into the hot liquid, stirring constantly, and cook over medium heat while conttnuHlg to Stir until the gravy thickens. • • • Q. Recently I 1wltcbed from a brand of milk packaged In cardboard carton• to one told la plaatlc bottles becaaae It'• easier to 1ee bow macb milk 11 ln tbe plastic bottle. Tbe flavor of tbe mllk la plastic bottles doeaa't seem to be•• aood. Coald the plastic be glvlag It an off-flavor? A. The plastic may be the cau~ of the off-flavor in this milk . but not because it gives the milk a flavor. Rather. it's the fluorescent light in the dairy case. which can pass through the plastic bottle but not the paperboard carton. that is giving the milk a bad taste. The hght also causes a loss of the B vitamin riboflavin in the milk tn plastic bottles . A recent study showed that in plastic bottles"' there was a 10 to 15 percent ribo11avin loss and off. flavors developed after 6 to 12 hours exposure to fluorescent light. Milk packaged in paperboard canons was found to have the best flavor and nutncnt retenuon. Grapes add flavor CHICKEN GRAPE ALAO 3 cup1 mixed salad green• 8 ounces sliced cooked c blckea or turkey breast 11 .. c up coarsely shredded carrot l c up blue or black 1rape1, halved and neded •1. cup plttacbloa, cbopped me- dlum·flne Orenlng, see recipe On snd1v1dual plates arrnngc salad green,, chicken carrot and grapes pnnklc with p1-;tach1os. dn"lc with Dressing. Makes 4 ~erv1ng<11 Ore11ln1: Whisk toiether ' table-<11poons 'egctable oil. .2 tahlc-'J>00"' hme Juice, I tnblc,p<>on hone'. 1 teaspoun df) mustard. ''· tea,.poon grated lime nod and \Ult to ta\tt.' Orange eo..t DAILY PILOT/Wed~, Februety 5, 1NI Cl 1 Olives add an innovative touch I "h~~~l:':~1~, .:;;:~.~!!f~' Thal'• trasuna color. l<Xlur< and shape. l '4 pooad1 mild or llo1 ,,..,. parsley, or 1<ombludoo I ; ; 1 ornia npc Italian saaaaae or a comblu-ohve!. Read} 1n a can whenever When coolung with olives you Uon • Cut sausage into 1-mch pie~~. H)U need them. ripe ol ives and a ma ) not need to use the entire can. Brown sausage m a large skillet little 1maganat1on sdd 1ntt.·rcsting Once t~ey're opened, keep lef\ov~r I medium onloa, tlllaly tllced until cooked throu&h. Remove flavor. appealing telltu rc, and a rich olives in the can covered by their and separated lato rlD&• from pan; set aside. Pour all but ~ ontra~u ng color 10 many d1she~. bnne. Cover the can with plastic I lar1e or i small red bell about l table poon fat from pan. ~ausage, Pepper and Olne Saute 1'> an. en tree that anf ull ) blend~ u1lorful fresh ingrcd1en1s. and 1~ quick 10 fix. Use a comb1na11on ol mild and hot fresh haha n sausage 10 l reate a balanced sp1 q-hot flavor. 1 he subtle. nutty fla vor of (ah- fom1a npe olive'> dra mat1call} ofT- '>cts the robust seasoning~ of the 'au<>age. and ol I\ es pro\lde con- CHINESE ... FromC2 heated through. To eat. spread thin layer of \ landann Peach a uce over ton1lla and spoon about 2 tablespoonfuls pork mixture down tenter of tor- 11lla. Wrap to enclose filling and eat out of hand. Makes 6 servi ngs. CORAL AND JADE STIR-FRY \'a poaod medium-size shrimp, peeled and develned 2 tablespo ons corns tarch, di vided 3 tablespoons soy sauce, divided \'a teaspoon sugar 1 clove garlic, minced 1 can (16 ounces) California cling peach slices in juice or extra light syrup I teaspoon dlslllled white vinegar 4 ounces fresh snow peas• 2 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided 1 onion, chunked 1 tablespoon slivered fresh gin- ger root wrap a~d refngerate. Olives may ht peppers, cored, 1eeded and cat Add onions to pan and cook over held ttus way up to 10 days. lato tltln 1trtp1 med1um-hiah heat I to 2 minutes. If the onginal bnne 1s accidental- ly discarded. rcphlce 1t with a solutton of 1 teaspoon of salt to every pint of water. If you store olives 1n plam water the flavors will leach out and be los t. SAUSAGE, PEPPER AND OLIVE SAUTE 11. cup wbole pitted California ripe olives, cut ln llalf Z garl~ cloves, minced 14 cup medham-1weet Madeira or dry vermoutb Z tablespoons finely cllopped fresh llerbt aucb as basU or Add peppers, oh ves and garhC'; cook a minute or two longer. Return sausage to pan. Add Madeira. Cook over high heat to reduce liquid by about half. Re- move pan from heat; sur 10 herbs. Serve immediately. Makes 4 ser- vings. Rinse shnmp and pat di) w1th paper towels. Combine I table- spoon each co rnstarch and soy sa uce with sugar and garl ic; stir in shrimp. Let stand 15 minutes. Meanwhile. dram peaches. re- serving 11. cup JU1ce Add enough waterto reservedJuice to measure 1 cup; stir in remaining cornstarch. soy sauce and vinegar and set aside. Porterhouse orT-Bone Steaks Select Russe Potatoes 10-Lb. Bag ' Bake. BoUorFry • Cut peaches crosswise in half. Remove tips an{! stnngs from snow peas. Heat I tablespoon 011 in wok or large skillet over high heat. Add shnmp and stir-fl) 4 minutes. Sur in shrimp and SO} sauce mixture; I cook and sur unul sauce boils and thickens. Stir in peaches and heat through. Serve immediately. Makes 4 to 6 se_rviogs. •Substitute I package (6 ounces) frozen pea pods. thawed and drained. Stir-fry onion and ginger 31 minutes. Add pea pods to wok with soy sauce mixture. MANDARIN CHI CKEN SALAD I whole chicken breast, split 4 tablespoons soy sauce, divided Bolling water s., pound fresh bean sprouts I carrot, pared and shredded .,.. cup slivered green onions ud tops 2 tablespoons minced cilantro or parsley 11, cup distilled white vinegar 2 te11poon1 sugar \'a cup blanched slivered almonds; toasted Simmer chicken in mixture of I tablespoon soy sauce and 2 cups water in covered saucepan 15 minutes, or until chicken 1s tender. Meanwhile. pour boiling water over bean sprouts Drain; rinse under cold water to cool and drain I thoroughly. Remove chicken and cool. (Refngerate stoc k for another use. 1f desired.) Slun and bone chicken; shred meat with fingers into large milling bowl. Add bean sprouts. carrot. green onions and cilantro Blend vinegar. sugar and remaining O) sauce. stt mng until sugar d1ssohes. Pour over chicken and vege tables; toss to coat all ingredien ts. Cover and refngerate I hour. Just before serving. add almonds and toss to combine Makes 6 servtngs. MANDARIN GLASS PEACHES I can (%9 ounces) CallfornJa cling peach halves ln syrup I/, cup chopped almonds, toasted 1 tablespoon finely chopped cry1taJU1ed gln1er 1 cup Upt cora syrup 1 tablespoon almond oil Drain pc;aches. reserving liquid for another use. Pat peaches dry with paper towels. Place peaches. cut side up. on oiled I 0 ll 15 x I -inch pan. Combine com s}'rup and 011 in small. heavy, narrow. 1-quan saucepan. Cook over mcd1um-h1gh heat until mixture reaches 250 degrees on a candy thermometer or reaches the hard ball tage. Place peaches close to srnve and immedi- ately pour syrup over peaches. Let peaches stand to cool. 1 • Serve 1mmed1at cl>, li fting I peaches and syrup with a thin spatula and place on servmg pl:ttc Serve with knife and fork Make~ 5 to 6 servings. Daily Pilat CIASSlf 1cd Ads 642-5678 U.S.DA Choice Beef Lb. ~~nt J79 Q~ Boa(~ ~()11"1 Gatorade Drinks 79 LAmanUmt fNI ~ 01w'9"-l20.. 6oodt e Van Camps Pork & Beans 69 )l~C.. • Sacramento Tomato Juice 59 46-0unct Cln • Hunts Tomato Ketchup 99 )20..... 6oa» ' • Campbell's Pork & Beans 39 l~C... • Campbell's V.8 Juiee 1 t 5 ~-l6-0unc. PklllQt Sunshine Hi Ho Crackers 1 t 9 12 o..nc-. 8oo ~.,,~%~.wSauce 169 Orville Redenbacher 199 ~-l~Jor Peter Pan Peanut Butter 149 .~ ... Wesson Com Oil 239 46-0unc'<' 8olUt Schilling Bacon Bits 89 )~lloodt • ~~!1 Bar Soap .33 Paper Towels 79 OW..Yonf~-90<"""'11°" • Hefty Trash Bags 259 JO-Oolon-20<°""' ~ Vons Donuts 125 ........,..,~.,,~ ... 2Pkll Vons Fruit Pies 3 ~ 100 ~ 0...... &.<t., U<'l'Cln Of 0-X • '.>OI. - Homebake Bread 2 ~ .89 __ ,..,._~(,~ King's Hawaiian Bread 1 29 11'n.Ni....i Stouffers 2 3 g Lean Cuisine ChlcMn • °""9t 8-0I. ci-ci ~ Of ane.u ~ 8 ~lb Vons Blend Vegetables Uollomta -.. Orwll& ....,,..._~ 8-.i Welch's Grape Juice ll~C..... Marquez Taquito I I~&. Kraft La Creme Topping 10......llo"'4 .89 .85 125 109 Oh Boy Pizza~=~~w,259 ,_"' """""'" .!M."""" ea. Klondike Ice Cream Bar 199 M1P1 o-oi.tw t>,..,... Pillsbury Struedels 125 I~ Owl ~ S.-It )()o. 8oo lllltc. ~ n-..""" ..... ,... ... 2. ... Att ia 'Jlt l.OOtiww.---.i , .... ,_....,..,_ ...... ,..._ .... .. -·-1"1111• ..... _ ~,, ..... ""' ....... .,,. .. ... __ ,,.._.,..._""' ...... -·-~-.. --.................... ., .... "' , ........ __ .......... - Blooming Tulips 6fttl PllC ~-u 699 f.-399 Quarter Pork Loin ~ NcJr.i~ '"119 Boneless Top Sirloin si...a-.__, U SOA ~ &..ol Boneless Rib Eye Steak ~USO ~Bo.,f Beef Rib Roasts l.MQe frd-s.t USDA Farmer John Hams ~ ()f l!ull Pbftiotw Boneless Pork Loin o.cc--......... lhaoo.....,, Fresh Frying Chicken n,q."' ~-V-P9t'.k So.AIWm Table Kina Bacon Slc....i-~()f~-t~Plog Fresh Red Snapper ,,..._Pklflc Fresh Rainbow Trout lb 189 lb 299 U> 179 U> 129 Lb 298 lb .89 lb 149 lb 249 lb 179 Meister Brau Beer I 2·Pk. 199 l Ol'--2.'lll ... _ J ..v --- Gallo Chablis Blanc ~1t..i11aw~~t ~uw ~ Barton Vodka I 7' I.Mr 8oollt Cooks Brut Champagne at fAro °'Y ~ 7'0 ,.-.,, llolllo Clan Mac Gregor Scotch 1 7'uw ~ 239 799 289 999 "" . Limit 2 Bogs Per Customer Fresh 33 BroccoU 0-.~0-lb . F.rm fNlfl Large Navel Oranges ...,.....r~XJ> e-.i 129 Thompson Grapes S..-0.0fR.O~ Larae Pineapple T~T- l..arge Nectarines ~f'ram O. Large Mushrooms ().-.. a. Walnuts in the Shell <>-lar s.-Of ~ Large Eggplant 0.:-~ c.. 139 U> .89 Lii 1 69 U> .79 EA .39 ~ .59 Vons Beef Bologna Of-~ Sk..o-120t Plog Pillsbury Crescent Rolls ~"-"- Philly Soft Cream Cheese ~ a.-o-s.. Ao.on-Kil c...wwo Gallo Shaved Salame .. ~-1~~ Oscar Maver Variety Pack e..Of --12~~ Louis Rich Turkey Breast s..-Of Ootclwl a.--6<A 1'1-o Blue Bonnet Maraarine """"'~-()f~e- 109 .89 109 299 189 149 .59 ~·· 111 10 10.75-0z. Can. c-~~.,,QliC-..~ ~· ------~~~~~--------------------------..... --------.-------~----..._ ............. ---C8 Orange Coe.at DAILY PILOT/ WednMdly, February 5, 1986 Splce up fla vprs with proper seasonings J Paying attention to directions will yield big taste benefits ---- To get the best and hottest flavor from herbs. spices and peppers. prepare and cook ttfem nght. Follow recipe d1rect1ons closely when adding seasonings. Remember. withe~tra cooking, somegt:t stronger, others decrease in 1ntens1ty A little extra attention to detail )ields big taste benefits when you serve hot and spicy foods. according to Better Homes and Gardens Low ('alone Recipes. Peel fresh gingerroot.1f desired. Then use a fine grater to make ver) Wtall particles. Store whok fresh gmgerroot bv frc·l'Lln'~ll. wrapped in moisture-and vapor-proof\., rap You need not thaw 1t before grating Though ground ginger cannot match the fla vor of fresh gingerroot. in a pinch you can substitute about one-founh of the amount of ground ginger for grated gingerroot Measure dned herbs and spices before crush1 ng bv h!Ulth filhn~ tht.' proper measunng spoon to the top. There's no need to level with a spatula. To release their flavor. crush dned herbs and aromatic seeds into very fine particles with a mortar and pestle. Anothe r way to crush herbs is to place them in the palm ofone hand and crush them with the thumb of your other hand. Fresh herbs are usually snipped into very fine pieces before measuring. Place the uncut herb in a measuring cup and snip it repeatedly with Jotchen shears Check to make sure you have the proper measure for the particular recipe. To interchange fresh and dned herbs. use this rule of thumb: Three measures of fresh herb equal ope measure of dned herb. Best known of all hot seasonings 1sch11t powdc~ a blend of spices that varies somewhat by manufac- turer G1veyour hot and spic} dishes distinctive flavor by ma long your own blend. Weanng rubber or plastic gloves, remove the stems and seeds from four dried pequm, cayenne or whole red chili peppers and three dned ancho peppers. Us1 ngsc1ssorsor harp knife.cut thedned peppers 1nlo small pieces. In a blender container combine the cut-up Grllled sandwich dlpe and hot soup are perfect for snacks or aupper. Provide guilt-free snacking with nutritious, fun foods Hunger ha., J "'"' ol \tnkmg al odd hours. So be prepared" 1th c;omc nutnt1ou" idea!. and vou won't feel 2 eggs lr.i cup milk • one b1tgu1h> 2 cups crushed potato chips Hl'H .uc .,ome '>Ugge'>ttons that aH' tilkd with loud 'dlue and IOI\ of tun It.JO l tablespoons butter or margarine Dip'um Sauces The fim 1dea 1c; < runlh~ Ha m and C hel''>l' Logs a lkltghtful n1hhk to cnJO} v.hik ~ou'rc pla} mg '><:rabble or hndge ""a11:h1ng a 'ill --tom or after a la'>t-paced "'orkout The loge, t'Ould \l·ne ac; a m1n1 \upper too ''hen scrvl'd with .,oup and a hcvcragc: Prepare four c,and"' 1chcc; with hread. cheec;e and ham. Beat eggs and m Ilk together in c,hallov. h<'"'' or pie pan Quickly dip c,and"'1ches into egg mixture. 1hen into cru.,hed ch1 pc; to coat ou t~1dcc,. Cinll on both c;1des 1n melted butter mer lo"' heat unttl <,and"'ic:hcs arc golden brown and c hecst.· ,., melted V. hJt <;tan' out 10 bed deliuou'> hut lOn' l'Oltcmal >!r lkd \Jndv.1 h 1urn'> into a cnsp} treat v.hen \OU dir 1h1: '>dnd"'ilh 1n Jn egg m1\1urc 1hen Lru\hl·d potato \. hqh '""' 1111 the· tun tOUlh -1.ut the ..andv.ilhcc; into 4uana' <1nd wr'c.. "'•th"'' ar11:1~ of 1ntcre'it1ng dipping '>JULC'> u<,1ng a ne"' line o f f n:nth·., D1p"um ~auces. Cut in to quarters. Serve with Drp·um ~auce~ - espccrall~ good "'Ith Sweet 'n Sour llot Mustard and ( rt.'am\ \il ustard ~ '\ervings QUICK POPPY-ONION ()u1d. Popp~ <>n1<1n \rr~t11cr'> '" a Sl·rnnd fun idea 1 hl'\ loo l.. Ith ~1.in1 r11utonc; hut the' re rcall\ lUOc'i ol f rt.>nch or lt J'1.1n hrcad that ha\e bcrn rna1ed "'Ith m1nled union .1nJ pnrr~ .,cede,, then toasted ~en l' v.1th <,du',., 1111 1 \fltl\ lo.. thJt'\ 4u1cl.. l'et'i\ and dl'l ll ll!IJ' APPETIZERS •, cup butter or margarine 11'3 loaf Italian or French bread, cut into I -inch cubes (6 cups) I tablespoon instant minced onion I tablespoon poppy seeds Oip'um Sauces < HI :\( lfY HAM, ('If l':f:~f-, ~A'\ r>WICH LOGS 8 sliee'i ~bile bread Melt butter in IS\ llJ-11h.h pan. \dd hread Lube\. turn 1ocoat with butter. Spnnl..lc with 0111on and poppy seed'\. stir Broil 6 to -1nchec, from heat. turning frequent!) until golden hrown and hot Serve with D1p'um Sauces. 60 to 60 appct1Ier'>. 4 ounce" o;hced ..-;w1ss cbel''ir 4 ounceo; slil"ed boiled barn Hawaii's not the only state I - with pineapple plantations ;> LAl\.f Pl \I II> f IJ 1 \1'1 - With onl\ fi w .1 r ., nf 111p 1h1\ \Car. HJrold f,n,,l" I mrninger won't com re tr "llh I Lt\\t1J1 Bu t hr ma) 'well h1: the· 1~1m.irnk l..tnF 111 Florida "I don't f... no"' "h • \oml'l >nc..· l'I \C hasn't top1t.'d th" 11mml·r t' f m- m1r1gc:_r. 1n h1'\ \111,111 road\lt!I '>hop on u s ~., whcrl' tra \l'kr .. \top for cold pineapple JUttl' "I ti· ink lhl\ 1' the onh pineapple p!.101a11n11 in the state no""' Emm1n1ter f)ll ncq•r th11ul(ht about ral'>rng thl hr11ml'11Jd Ir 111t (pmeappk "not utru,1 ,1, .1 \•Hing man in Phtladelph1,1 But 1n World War II he '>t'n ed ;i, a na v1g.ator on B-~6<. and l°x'tdme enamored with flonda ""'htlr 'ta- t1oned at MacD1ll Air Force liac;e near Tampa Emm1nger cam1· hnc 1n 1952 and nought 35 acre\ Jhout four miles c;outh of Lake Plat id "I didn't kno"' what I wac; goinit t<• do."' hi.• \Jtd 'I thought .ih<111t rlMmg bullfrog' or asparaguc; Then I tasted a pineapple and r dcc1drd . ~c al<to attrihute~ ht\ dcc1c;1on to the late D ~. Radebaugh. who at that time had hccn raising pineap- ples 1n tht.' Jrea for 40 \Care, .. , sent a""'a' tor booko; and l<adchaugh taught me.· Fmm1nger l'\plam'> In I q5., a free1e reduced his plant'> h)' ha lt To c,ave 1he fruit. he t>cgan making preserves. which lontmue to be one of the tng sellers JI his Plantauon Paradise In a 12- "' 12 kitchen to the <.1de of the \ll'lall retail shop, f mmtnger U'ie'i lour ga" burners and some open kettle-; to make nine comh1nat1on'\ ol prcsencs u'irng pineapple as the ha<.e f"'O types Of '\.\.IOC made tor htm in Tampa are also on the c;hehe1, along with candies and other 1tcmc, all from pineapples Although Emm1nger has cul - t1 \.ated as much at IS acrc'i of pmcapple'i over the years. he\ cut down the acreage as ht' admmedl~ cntcrc. \Cm1ret1remcnt He ~ys growina pineapple'I of- ten fewer problems than ' 11rus. but '>av' thcv arc more 11usccpt1hlc 10 cold temperature'>. Each pineapple plant produce' one fruit per y<."ar With 60.000 to 80 000 plants. Emmmger harvest'i "J.000-40.000 pineapples between June and August each )ear When those arc gone. Emmmger 1mpon'i more from Melt1co "ft''i gctt1 ng 'iO 1t'SJU'it as cheap to 1 mport them ac; to raise them .. he c;a1d The mature pineapple plant'i a"erage aboul 1 feet in height and the fruit weighs 4-8 pounds Pineapples have been grown 1n Flonda since I 60. about 40 years before Hawa11 staned growing them, and producti on reached over a million boxe~ a )ear by 191 0. \/lost of the frull was grown 1n lncf1an Rt \.Cr. <-it Lucie. Martin, ( harlotte and Lee count1 ec;. as we-II as 1n some of the Florida Ke)'s Emminger has found that few v1mors know a lot ahout pmeap- plc'i " omc people th ink the) grow under the ground hke rad1 she'> or carrot\," he ~1d "Other-. think the) grow on palm trees." peppers with four teaspoons cumin seed, one teaspoon garlic powder, one teaspoon ground coriander, one teaspoon dried oi:egano, and one-half teaspoon whole cloves. Cover arid blend toa fine powder. Store in an airtight container in a cool. dry place. Makes about one-third cup. Though chilies do not belong to the pepper family, people started calling them chili peppers 1n the days ofC'hnstopherColumbus and the name has stuck. Becausech1li peppers contain volatile oils that can bum skin and eyes. avoid direct contact with the peppers as much as possible. It's best to wear plastic or rubber gloves when cleaning peppers. If gloves are not available. work under cold running water. (f your bare hands touch the chili peppers, wash your hands and nails well with soap and water. lt'sa common fallacy that the seeds are the hottest part of the pepper, when in reality, it's the nbs and membrane to which the seeds are attached. You can adjust the hotness of your recipe by leaving or removing this portion of the pepper. Store fresh chili peppers in paper bags in the refrigera\or for up to one week. To freeze, broil peppersnsd1rected l>elow. I hen cool and place in a plastic b g. Seal, label and freeLe. The skin~ "''II ped off easily as the peppers thaw. It i often best to peel the firm skin from fre~h peppers before using. To loosen the skin for ea 1er pcelina, place peppers on a broiler pan 4 inches from heat. Bro1l, tumingofien till charred on all side-; Place broiled peppers in a paper or plastic bag. Close bag tightly. Let stand I 0 minutes This steams the peppers so the skin easily peels away from the flesh. Cut the stems from the tops of the pepper\. To remove the seeds, membrane and ribs. silt the peppt·rs open. Place them. seed side up. on a flat surface fhen use a sharp knife to scrape the 'eeds and nb~ from the flesh. Slice or chop the pepper'i as directed in H'l'1pe. Dned chill peppers are convenient becau~~ the) have a long shelfhfc. They can be stored ma cool. di) place for up 1oa year For longer storage. free1t.' them 1n an a1rt1ght container. Before usmgdricd chill peppers, nnse them m cold water. Cut them o pen and discard the 'ltt.'m" and seeds. Cul the peppers into small pieces\\ 1th \ll'isorc; or knife. To soften pepper<; for use in a sauce. \Oil!. them in boiling water tor45 to 60 minutes ort1ll pliable; drain well before adding to sauce SOUPER SATISFYING Busy homemakers will love simple -----beer cheese soup Beer Cheese Soup 1s hearty enough to please the hungri06t of prospectors but 1s simple enough for today's busy cooks. Potato Soup. the starter for this recipe. 1s enhanced with the unique fla vors of onion and beer. while Cheddar cheese delivers the taste for which the soup 1s named. Toasted sourdough croutons add an Alaskan touch to the warming, noun sh mg soup. The most popule1ir halibut dish 1n Alaska is mayonnaise and sour cream. combined and spread over halibut before 1t 1s broiled or baked. This variation. Alaska Halibut. 'takes the favonte just a step closer to gourmet cooking, stan1ng with a marinade of white wrne. The sauce that tops the fish before broiling stars ca uliflower soup. enriched with sour cream and seasoned with garhc and onion. BEER CHEESE SOUP l tablespoon butter or margar- ine ~ cup chopped onion l can ( l 0 3!t ounces) condensed creamy natural potato soup I cup water "'2 cup beer 1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese Toasted sourdough bread cubes In 11 ~ quan saucepan over mediu m heat in hot butter. cook un ion until tender. sttrnng con- \tantl) Reduce heat to low. stir 1n \trnp. <iraduall:y stir in water. beer .md cheese. Heat 10 minutes or until soup 1s hot and cheese 1s melted. st1rn ng occasionally. Serve with toasted bread cubes. Makes 21h cups or 3 ~en 1ng<t ALASKA HALIBUT 2 pounds halibut steaks or fillets La cup dry white wine 1 tablespoon butter or margar- ine ,, cup chopped onion I medium clove garlic, minced I can ( I 0 31, ounces) condensed creamy natural cauliflower soup '>\ cup sour cream Beer chee.e aoup, bread a hearty meal. In 2111-quan shallov.-baking dl\h arrange fish 1n single la yer. Pour wmc O\er fish. Cover; mannate in refrigerator 30 minutec;. Meanwhile. to make sauce: In 11 1-quart saucepan over medium heat. in hot butter. cook o ni on and garlic until tender. Stir in soup and sour cream. Reduce heat to ·lo". simmer 5 minutes. st1rnng cx- cas1onally. In covered blender con- tamer or f<Jo<l processor. on me- dium <,peed. blend sauLC ml\ture until c;mooth. Preheat broiler 1f manufacturer d1 rectc; Drain fic;h. discard mannade In 'ame baking d1c;h with fi'lh in '>Ingle la yer. spoon 'lauce mixture over fish Broi l 10 minutes or until fish tlakcs easih when te'ited v.1th a fork Makes 8 servings. Not t h eir year . Bettina Huynk, 3, loob o•es 1laqbte:red ho&• that will be ueed by a Monterey Park Chlneee reetaarant (or the traditional f eaat to celebrate the Chlneee Year of the Ttier (not the pta). The fint day of Chlne.e New Year ta Sunday. V1s1t Our Newest Store CVS/ pharmecw COSTA MESA The Courtyards Harbor Boulevard 722·1750 Today's · Ne ighborhood Drugstore *VALENTINE CARDS By Cleo 38 count With Envelopes •Garfield •Looney fones 169 •Sesame Street •Kirby Koala •Superpowers CHOICE .. *CHUCKLES *PALMER •Douole Crisp Hearts 7 oz Bag •Solid Mill( Chocolate Fort Hearts 8 oz Bag YOUR CHOICE 149 COMTREX Multi-Symptom •Capsules. 16 count •Tablets 24 ·count Ou< RtQlll" h Slit ,,ia h ""M1nu1 Mfrs M1•0.R- 3.19 2.49 -2.00 •Ju Ju Hearts •Jelly Hearts •Cherry Vanilla Hearts 15 ounce -16 ounce Bag YOUR CHOICE 9_9¢ YOUR FlllAl COST .49 ... MAALOX LIQUID ANTACID ~=======:::i... CHLORASEPTIC Reg Cherry or Children s Grape 18 count ______ ___, 129 Our Regular 1 99 COLGATE INSTANT SHAVE CREAM All Types 11 ounce 88¢ Our Regular 1 29 ,-----------------... . . . 50¢ OFF WITH THIS COUPON ANY CVS BRAND ITEM With A Regular Retail Of 75' Or More Not Good On Sate ltPms • Sales tax where apphcaott charged on sale price EXPIRES 218186 ,_ ------------~ I LIMIT ONE COUPON I PER CUSTOMER 12 ounce 209 Our Regular 2 59 IVORY SOAP PERSONAL SIZE 3 5 ounce Bars 4 Pack 79¢ Our Regular 1 09 NEW FREEDOM THIN MAXI PADS Twin Pack •Regular 60 count Total Unsc or Deodorant •Super 52 count Total Deodorant C;irry & Toss Baqs Included 3 ~~E 8.38 Value *HERSHEY'S GIANT KISS 8 ounce 249 - Our Regular 3 29 ......... t2 Fl Ol USTERINE ~SIP11C REACH or REACH PLUS TOOTHBRUSH 99 YOUR CHOICE Soll Medium or • ¢ Firm Bristles Our Reg 1 69 ea ~ILLS GERMS 8Y MILLIOfllS ON CON TP.Cf CLOSE-UP or AIM TOOTHPASTE 1 8 YOUR C HOICE 5 Twin Pack 6 4 oz e;i Asc;orlC'd Types 3.38 Value LISTERINE MOUTHWA SH /4 011nc" 0111 rl••q l qq 229 Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /W9dneedey, F•bfuary 5, 1999 C7 *BORDEN PARASOL HEART Assorted Chocolates 7 ouncf: 249 M&M'S CANDIES Plain or Peanut 9 2 ounce Bag *CADBURY'S MILK TRAY Assorted Chocolates 1 Pound Box 99 Our Regular 5 99 Our Regular 1 39 DURACELL ALKALINE BATTERIES • 1 Pack 9 Volt •2 Pack AA AAA C or D Cell YOUR CHOICE 149 . Our Reg 1 99-2 49 PERMA SOFT SHAMPOO or CONDITIONER 16 ounce All Types Our ....,i" 3.49-3.59 • Salt P'tlClt h 1. 99 .. "" 1 1111 ""' 40 ~~~-... C..-°"""' -. PA~i~LY 1 s~a. •Hair Spray • '1iricr --"""'•if"'':. •s• o, Mousse. "S ounl t> 011r R~g .' 49-2 99 1.59 • CVS le<lle~ saline solution .. FOREVER KRYSTLE EAU DE TOILETTE 91s SPRAY 1 ounce GUCCI ~~u~~e~~~ &fnRAY 699 15.00 Value *VALENTINE GIFT WRAP By CPS 2 Sheets 8 Square Feet Total 59¢ Ava1taote Al M >SI Stores MITCHUM Ant1-Persp1ran1 ~::;;::::::;,. •Spray 4 ounce •Sot1d or Cream 2 oz •Roll-On 1 5 ounce a-"' h 2.59-3.49 Sett l'ua It 2.00 ---· .......... -2.00 YOUll 00 FIU l COST • WITH THIS COUPON ANY TOOTHPASTE ITEM ALCON ENZYMATIC CLEANER 24 S Fnr ';.. •• L>''I"-• ... Our Reo 11,p 6 90 VISINE EYE DROPS " ' l "l t l'.'1v .. t1( R 11 • R1•,1 >t \\ 11 f"r , f't l' r n, . "'I )~ CVS SALINE SOLUTION 'Ill V<t ~ Bausch & l omb S1hnt Sotu1111n I] ounct 11 3 • 499 144 121 Ii .. J • C8 Orange Cout DAILY Pll.OT/ Wedneeday, February 6, 1988 new line of wines should be priced al least twact as high to be co nsistent with the compet1t1on of s1mllar qualat)'. These wines ap· peared under a different label at considerably higher pric~s. and won more than a few _ic>ld medals Included in the rnllectaon a1e the three most popular varietal wanes in America today . Chardonna), Cabernet auvagnon and Sauvagnon Blanc. All will sell at $6 at the very highest, which means yo u may find them selling for as little as S4.50 in some markets. Unhk~e many value wines that are inexpensive because short-cuts arc taken an production. th as trio as aged JERRY MEAD an expens1 ve French oak barrels. th~: Chardonnay 1s partially barr~l­ fermeoted. and the wanes are aged in the winery's cellar until ready for release. The Cabernet 1s more than fi ve years old. a rant} for rl·d wane at this price. Here are the wines and tht'1r ne"' labrl. Estancia 1984 Sauvtpoo Blue (S6 or le5'))' Ttus I 00 percent vanctal as produced entirely from the winery's Alcxandet Valley vineyard estate. The wine: has seen ome ume in French oak. though oak 1s not a maJor statement. Fruit as the major statement in this thoroughly enjoyable white d inner wane that finished pleasantly fru1t- tart. . The grapefruit frui tiness in the aroma makes you want to taste it, and there 1s'so much fruit in first taste that you almost imagine some sweetness, though the wine is totally dry . A wine to match wi th any number of fOOd types, but my 1maJina11on cries out for a <lolcn Belons oyster$. E1tucla ltU Chardonnay ($6 or less): Another 100 percent varietal from the Alexander Valley appella· uon. This wine has as much style, complexity and finesse as Chardon· nays sell in$ at $12 to $IS.· The preceding vantage( under a different la~l) was. a multiple gold medal winner, and I think this bottling is even better. Partially barrel-ferm ented. the wine is nicely oaked throughout without being woody. There is pleasant va ni lla with a hint of toast in the aroma, and the wine is full flavored without being overly tn· ten se. This as a dclacately balanced Chardonnay that as hght 10 the mouth without being li~t in na.vor. a fact that is emphasized by the lmgenng and complex aftertaste. Estancia 1980 Cabe rnet Sauvlgnoa ($6 or less): If the other wines are bargatn'l, this wine is a steal. Five year old Cabernet. aged in French oak. from the Alexander Valley home of such famous Cabemets as Jordan. Sal ver Oak, and Lyeth, selling for less than half their prices. Typical of the region, the wine has round-edged tannins, making it EACH Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce A S l(NO(JI spa rag u ;:.'"&~(f .. Tangelos ~~~~\ .... ,v Ml"'INftJ\.4', Potatoes ~~~ Clam Chowder -~~· .. ·:· ~-•• 51 .29 Vegetables ~ifft ~ ....... f lr>'.,,sgc Seafood Bisque ...... l'.Q••· .. s1.29 Vegetables ~~~~::~i,"" •ftnr 95c I ' I Chili Con Carne ...... .51.29 Ve~etables B~":(;~F~--· · ~ ,, 51.37 Rib Roast . 51.69 Chicken Nuggets B•N, ,. •• f), s1.29 Shell On Shrimp 58.99 J enos Pizza ;!'.' • I s1.73 Spencer Steak · H 52.97 Frozen Dessert :. ~ o;., ,. "•I 52.19 D~n~eness Crab " 54.99 Totinos Pizza • .·or 53.49 .. ..... . ., R 51.88 Pot Pies -1.· .. ~N M,, .. ,,~ t~Ol 51 .15 Rib teak .. ~ · M•~• '""'"·''"" f_jll P11µM.fV Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials r ... ,. l"EI>< o~ r1-1r-SEA t, IL Q R ,/,/lffR Chunk light Tuna s~ ... Pineappl e Juice Cup o Noodles Peanut Butter Spam :~~~. Gatorade :: .. ~. · Dr Pepper ·: :~/ .. Chunk Chicken Froot Loops ·,· .. Syrup ~·~.· .. ,~." .. Margarine ~:::.· Reese Cups ~.~1::.:· ... Corn Flakes ·.·~·:: ·· Raisins 1:~~: ,,,t 65C '"''' 52.39 ,.,,, 51.25 .. , ... ,. 510.99 ,, ,,.,,, ..... $2.99 •'1 f 52.39 .,,,~ 57.99 M & M Candies .~: .. ·· .. Coronet Towels ""' .. , .. 7~ l0, 52.29 Scotch ~~~~"E"O" Meister Brau ll(tH Colony Wine ,~ ... f,.S Suntory Vodka Gilbeys Gin ' .. 55.99 '"'m,59.99 Myers Rum ...... .. RED LABEL ,-~MmlAA:;;M~W:A~l".':':KE:-A---7~ Bath Tissue ~; ... · ·· 47c Dog Food ~/:·:; ... · s1 49 Cat Chow ~ ·~:. s1:31 Dove Dish Liqui9 age 51.09 51.09 $2.19 ~ 52.79 Smirnoff Ten~ Vodka llourbOn SI0.99 tcJ.~J l'Ql age 1 75-LITEA PIUC&f U'RC1'1VE 7 nJLL DAYS ..... ,_..,. Tu. ... nuar l'rt .. , .... 6 7 8 9 jlO II 12 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ~tMrr 0A REFUSE SALES TO COMMERCIAL ~lfRS OP WHOLESALE~ ,. .... tf tJw ,.,..-, ,_ ffw WW dof, fllil• ,,,._..." thit ,,, .. r • ~._, tfitf'• ,,...,, Alf..-..... ,\,. ~ ,_.. IM itrM • li'twwt t h,..Ct .................. ,......... ...... ., > I '--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~ fl'.:) 50 Golden Years ... An Am-erican Tradition. 50 G o l<!~n Y~iirs ... An Am eri ca n Trac!i!ion . f.::::11 .-----..................... -.----------------------~· Cooking with class Cajun eooking to international cuisine will be covered an fi\e different classes at Piret'!i Perfect Pan School of Cooking an South Coast Plan. . Roy Pango wall demonstrate C::tJun cooking tonight, in ter- nattooal cntrees Friday and des· serts Feb. 12. A II classes bcgr n at 6 p.m. Eas) Elegant Entertaining is the topic of the first of three classes to be taught by Pa m Wischkacmper at 6p.m. Monday.and Pa1tyG11lfillan will demonstrate do-ahead d1shc"> for a Valentine·., Da)' dinner at 10:30 a.m. Tue.,da) For reservations and infor- mation on regJstra11on fee\, call the school at(619) 576-3805. • • • Queen of Hearts valcn11ne pastnes will be taught b) Jean- Pierre Dubray at 9:30 a.m. Tuesda) at C'est Gourmet. 14 Monarch Bay Plaza. Laguna Niguel. Fee '" $25. and reservations can be made b} calling 49l-2888. • • • "Cooking for the Working World." a demonstra11on-danang cooking class, wall be held at Lawry's California Center nc'<t Wednesday at 6 30 p.m and on Feb. 13 at 11 a.m and 6:30 p.m. For rcserva\lons. call (2 13) 224-6840 You '11 relish this HOME CORN RELJSH t O·oaue jar sweet pickled 1berlll11 8•.4-ou1tee can wbole kernel corn, drained '" cap flatly chopped olllon ''• cap flaely chopped •~ed cucumber i ubleapooa• finely cbopped 1reeD pepper t t•ble1poon1 fi nely cbopped t Wfft red pepper Drain gherkins. re~rvang 11. cup hquad, and coarsely chop Stu together gherkins, corn. onion. cucumber, green pepper and rC'd pepper. Refnacratc. ttghtly cov· ercd, for at least I hour to blend flavors Makes .it-out 2111 cu~ * ..., .... WEDNESDAY, FEBRU'l>.RY 5, 1986 [!J Trottier'• goel In OT give• Wei•• NHL All·Stera win. D2. No.1 North Cerollne outleata No. 2 Georgie Tech. D3. More of same for UCI? Always-rugged - Fresno pays visit Thursday night -------- By JOSEPH OUOEVOIR 0..., ...... ~· With the sour taste of Sunday's televised embarrassment sull linger- ing in UC Irvine basketball coach Bill Mulligan's mouth, things don't look to get any sweeter when the Anteaters host Fresno State. a team which has feasted on UCI over the years. "About the only good thing that came out of 11." said Mulligan of Sunday's debacle, "was that it will probably help our recruiung. The way we looked, every (high school) player around must think we need help and could start for us." Coming off a 71-55 loss to San Jose State (which wasn't as close as the final score), Mulligan was asked 1f 1t had a lin~ering effect on his team . "I don t know about the team," he said. "But it bothered the hell out of the coaching staff I would hope it bothered the players. too." And there's no relief coming JUSt yet as the v1s1ting Fresno Bulldogs come into town for a Thursday night 111t with the Anteaters. "We're at their mere)... said Mulligan of the Bulldogs, who have mastered UCI to the tune of a 19-2 margin over the yea rs. including a 53-48 win in Fresno earlier this season. "They will dictate the tempo of the game and there .won't be a thing we can do about 11 because we don't ha ve the quickness.'' he said. ··rd hkc to say 1t will be our kind of game -a lot of runrung and sconng -but I know 1t won't be. Fresno Wlll keep 1t low scon ng as usual." uc Irvine •hortatoe_ Chrb Galleao goea hl&h to avoid the •llcllnll Greg Mengel after ~ .... ,........,~" ....... throwtn.c to flnt bue to complete a double play Monday. UCI won, 6-3. UC Irvine opens with triumph And the man who runs (or walks) the Bulldog show 1s Fresno Coach Boyd Grant. who has a 285-75 career mark (.792 percent). This year Grant's Bulldogs arc 12-10 on the season. 5-6 in PCAA Kent goes distance in£-3victoryover Cal State LA nine play after a 67-58 loss at Cal State The UC Irvine baseball team Fullerton Monday night to drop opened us 1986 campaign on a Fresno into a tie with the Titans for winrung note Tuesday afternoon. fifth place. holding off Cal State Los Angeles, 6-3. Meanwhile, t.he Anteaters conunue · at An teater Field. to hang on to third with their 6-4 mark UCI built a 6-0 advantage after (I 0-9 overall). seven innings. and behind the arm of The only thing that might c~eer up Bo Kent, held off a Qolden Eagle rally Mulligan and the Anteaters a b1t 1s the which cut the final ma!Jin in half. fact that the University of Pacific will Kent. a conve ned reliever, worked roll into Crawford Hall this Saturday ·- night after the Bulldogs arc long gone. Mulligan , in his six yea rs at UC'I. 1s 11-0 vs. the T1gers.1nclud1ngan 83-75 win this season. "Even though we ha\e had success aga1mt them.'' Mulligan said ofl 'OP, "They play very hard. They have to pla} Vega'> Thursday. so hopeful!")' that will take a little out of them (Pleue see UCl /02) Monster movie for Dallas Return of Magic is one showMavs didn't want to see INGLEWOOO (A PI-The return of Earvin "Magic" Johnson It sounds like some son of monster movie. Dallas Ma vcncks ( oach Dick Motta will tell you II was a complete game-in strilang out 10 and walking just two . He allowed ei~ht hits, but his forkball continually baffied the Cal State LA hitters. "I had the pitch last year. but couldn't control it." said Kent. who was converted to a starter from a reliever dunng the summer and winter. "I worked all summer on the pitch and 11 has come around for me ... As a reliever, Kent notched 15 saves over the last three years, but was making his 15th stan of his career at UCI and posted his fifth complete game. The Anteaters supported him with a pair of ru ns in the first and single 'lallies It. t~ tounh, fifth . sixth and seventh. UCI was aided in lls cause by 10 walks against four Golden Eagle pitchers. At the plate. Ed Clark had two of Irvine's hits and Tom Bame and Chns Gallego collected a pair of RBI apiece. The Anteaters also showed that they may be a threat on the basepaths. Junior transfer Mark Webster, who stole 33 of 34 attempts at Saddleback last year. had two steals as did Clark. UCI will be back in action toda) against St. Mary's and will open a home--and-home scnes apinst USC Fnday at Anteater Field UC Irvine'• Mike Fry dl•es back to .econd Mfely dUl'inC Tuesday'• game at UCI. Eagle soccer: It's done his . way·, or else Juarez has turned Estancia intOCIF power because of it By ROGER CARLSON OflM~Net .... His 'Estancia High team 1s the defending CIF champion and 1s ranked No. I in the CIF 2-A d1v1s1on this year. despite the loss of nine seniors to graduation and two stand- out returners due to disciplinary action. The assignment was simple: Put Janu Juarez and his Eagles in today's edition, in print and photo. The first was easy, Juarez shoots from the hips and pulls no punches Tbe second, not quite so easy .. Give us that nice winning smile." said the Daily Pilot photographer Juarez remained stoic and somewhat gnm-faced. "I am sm1lins," he said "Come on coach. smile," insisted the photographer. ·Tm scnous. I am smiling." persisted Juarez. In a nutshell, that's Janu Juare1 (pronounced Ha-new). a well-trav- elled 36-ycar-old who appears to have found a home at Estancia with back- to-back juggernauts. His 1985 club surpnsed evef')one with a CIF 2-A crown. going 20-2-4 in the process. Presently his team 1s 7-1-1 in league play, 16-3-4 overall. a half-game ahead of Saddleback in the race for the crown aod they're do1og it w11h a squad stocked with e1ghtjun1ors. four sophomores and three seniors. But his Eagles arc well aware tlley have yet to really impress-the~. "We've become a lmlc bit over- confident," insists Juarez. "Even the weakest team will get up for us. For example, Costa Mesa scored a goal on us. And St. Anthony. they scored a goal on us, too That concxrns me ... St. Anthony fell , U.J. and Costa Mesa, in two combined games. lost by Janu Juarez a I 0-1 margin. "We should g>ve up less." insists Juarez. "We've given up seven goals in nine league games and that's not good. "The kids say 'Hey coach, we're winning.' but I tell them I don't lllte the way they're winning. They show me results. but I'm interested m the form. I want them to be an attractive team to watch, to be smooth." That's the Juarez formula. and it appears to work within a framework and sport that has had its share of d1sc1plinary problems in every direc- tion. · ~~evtt •.. wt..lLhave oo...puL•-- of problemt It's either solved very quickly or it's removed. "J still h.ave seven of the nme sophomores from last year's cham- pionship squad." says Juartt. It seems two of them felt their status gamed as sophomores entitled them (Pleue mee ltAGLU/DS) Sea View big battle now for third place Laguna Beach has slight edge in race (or final CIF berth By ROGER CARLSON Of .,.. .,..,, .......... The picture 1s beginning to clear in Sea V1ev. League basketball with tht' Corona del Mar High Sea Kings and the Woodbridge Wamors :.akmg the 1ns1de road to the CIF 4-A playoffs. 1n add1t1on to their toe-to-toe struggle for the league championship, as ad ven1sed. It was noted that the scramble for third place would be crowded. but with four games remaining the list of fi ve contenders has dv.1ndled -b) one Newport Harbor's loss to Un1ver- !>ll) dropped the Sailors under the 500 level. allowrng Laguna Beach (6-4) a one-game lead in the race for third place. fo llow<'d b) Estancia addleback and t.;n1vers1t)' at 5-5 The Sea Kings and Woodbndge appear to ha'e a lock on pla~ofl berths with Fnda' 's duel at \l.ood- bndge determining whether the ~ar­ nors can make a rac<' of 11 for the title or not Tonight'~ ke' game 1n the Sea Vil'"' 1sat Laguna Beach v.here Cob' "Jal'<.'- &. Co tangle w11h Bryant "-alton t\ Co. Walton. billed for collcg1atl' stardom at the l 'n1,ersll) of Cali fom1a, has been on a sconn(l hinge going for 29. 24. 35 and 38 points ln his last four st.ans In that span tht' Roadrunners lost io Corona del Mar (45-43) and Woodbndge (57-55 in double oven1me). nipped Un1vcrs1t) (60-59) and routed Costa Mesa. Naess' produclJon has tailed off m the last four games. averaging 19.2 points a game, but with the emcrg-• entt of6-4 Junior Scott Herdman and 5-11 senior Bill Elfsten with doublc- figure sconng each ume 0111. the Artists have won three of their last four games to Sta) in the hunt. Laguna Beach stunned Saddleback at the Roadrunners' gym in the first round. 73-69. to g<'t· a 3-1 start in league play wnh Naess outsconng his 0\81. 29-16 Meanwhile in the Sunset League. the stru~e goes on with four con- tenders 11ed at 3-4 behind runaway champion Ocean View (7-0). which 1s ineligible for the CIF 5-A playoffs Edison's game at Fountain Valley appears to have crucial overtone 'A1th Edison holding an ed$e over their nvals for the No I berth into the pla~offs because of the fact two of Edison's los~ ha\C been to Ocean \'i('v. which means thl' Charge~ don't have anotht>rdate with the h1gh- fh ing ~aha-.-.k'i \fater Dc1 meanv.hilc will bt' tr.mg to up llS two-year unbeaten st real to ~ l "11h a home encounter v.1th Bishop .\mat in .\ngelus Lcagut' pla\ lr.1ne test' Q.O C ap1strano \ alle\ in luth t oa.-.1 League action .\II games arc hilled to begin at 7 'II Tonight'~ schedule. · Johnson returned to the Los An· geles Lakers lineup Tuesday night after sitting out six games with a knee inJury and helped rally the defending NBA champs from an 18-point, sccond-pcnod deficit to a 110-102 victory over the Dallas Mavencks "I expected to see Magic back tonight and he was the guy who sparked the Lakers ton1ght. So. what else 1s new?" Dallas Coach Dick Motta said "That's why he's in the All-Star game ... UCI to induct trio into Hall Theismann blasts McMahon \N V\ew L .. 9" WOOC!C><•CI~ 1 J• a l Co\la ~Ml lO-lO E\tanc•• 1S S •' NtwDCYt Har~ U·•l !>e~<' \ S •' 1.a111Jna &ffC" 6 • v•·•t<5•'• ~ S at (Mona a.I Ma• I : s-.tL- The Lakers. who controlled the boards for an overwhelming 53-25 edge 1n rebounding. ou tscored the Mavcncks 21-3 from late in the second quarter to even the game at 60-60 on, a breakaway layup by McGee early in the third quarter Los Angeles led 93-90 and settled matters midway through the final quaner by sconng nine of the game's next IOpoints Despite his successful return. John- son w1U need a week before he's back to full -strength ·•1t will take at least a week before Magic 1s fully back." Laker Coach Pat Riley said "I wanted to bnng Magic into the game at the five-minute mark of the first quaner and the third But with (James) Worthy in foul troubk, we had to u'C him a hit more than we wanted to I think he pla)ed verx well tonight except for his fint pass ' When asked ti he wcrr a little ru'ity, Johnson laught'd and ~uJ , "I wa-1 a lot rusty "Rut 3s I 1101 into the gamr 1t got beucr." he addrd "M> knee wa, a httk tender at fir'>t and I was a little ~01rd Right now there 1' no 'iwtlling and e'crvthtn(l 1' fr('l1ntt ll.ood " • Three former UC Irvine ath- lellc achievers will be inducted into the UCI Hall of Fame at halftime of Saturday ni&ttt's basketball game against Pac1hc at Crawford Hall Randy Howatt. Mark Nelson and the late Dr Wa yne Crawford are the 1986 honorees. J0101ng 12 previous inductees into the Hall of Fame. which began 1n 1983 Crawford was the first athk11c director and chairman of physical education at UCI. J01nmg the unive rsity in July. 1964 He was rcsponS1blc for planning all phys i- cal education. rttrcat1on and athletic buildings and fields. pluco staff recrunmcnt and depanmen- t.al programs Crawford died in 1968 Howatt competed in water polo dunn& the 1965 and '66 ~Mons. and also "as a swim team member 1n 1965-66 and 1966-6 7 Nel\On played on the fint two basketball teams at UCI. f-f e led the 1965-66 team with 100 re bounds and 47 assists en route to team MVP honor; He al~ avera&ed 110 points ~r aamt' that ~ason He says Chicago quarterback h as 'lack of respect' HA\.11LTO"l. Ontano (AP) Quarterback Joe The1smann of the Washington Redskin' hac; cnticllcd J 1m McMahon for showing a "lack of re.-.pect for the rule.-. of hfe as a profcss1onal athletr" .ind said the Chicago Bear quancroock should "remember where he I\ .. ··If 1t weren't for football. he'd be some ~o-yo out tht'rc dnnlo ng beer," Theismann '31d dt a B'nai B'nth <;ports dinner Thc1smann wa" upset that \frMahon had v.orn headbands ""h commercial advcn1~1ng an<l then. aftt'r being fined b-. the league. wore a band b<'ann the name of Na11onal Football League ( omm1sc;1oner Petr Rou llr "We ha'c rule' and rtgulatwm W\"01T c'\pectcd to follow and one I\ that v.e don't do commercrnl adver11\Cm<'n1' (on 1he field) He did 1t. 101 fintd for 1t '' ht' 'hould. and thrn literally come' out and "'"' 'C\11ck 11 (1nl \Our t'ar · .. Tht'1'mann \aid v.h1lt h<" had nn Tbelamann Mc Mabon quarrel v.llh ~cMahon hc1ng J lrt't' spint. "\\eanng 'ungla~\C\ and runt.. haircuts. that ma\ he h1" v.a' of e'\p1tss1ng his ind1' 1dual"m ttut there 1 a 1tspons1h1ht' to tht· \1rnth What he d{)esn't rcah11· " J..1,J\ loot.. up to him "ta\ heh<' d1)t'\n'1 l.trl' ··1 \Ur<" v.ouldn't v.,mt "'' li.111' &rov.1ng up likr him '·'HI iheismann McMahon wn' 1n fiurhanli. I uc' da~ for a guc~I apix-arumc 11n · I h,· Ton1&hl hov. .. .\U.cJ to rc\ponJ tu The"mann's commt'nt\. \ih \1ahon declined to~omc: to the t<'lcph11n1' hut ~8( paae Jim McRae quottd him :\' uyin&. "I don·1 listen It' rt"m ""' made by grntlt'men v.ho lan t punt more than one )lrd Th.it v.111 .. m\ onl\ commrnt on the m.attrr McMahon was referring tti The1smann·, ki cking pc<formance 1n the Bea~· 45-10 '1CtOI'\ O\er tht• Red'ilon'i on \cpt .:!Q jc(f Ha\ec. "a'ihington ' riunter suOercd an tnJU~ on a ~~ 'ard i..1cli.off return h' l h1cago's ~ 1ll1l' C1ault The1smann v.ac. pre'i"C'd into c.(.'r 'ice and his lone punt v.c-nt nnC' \a rd Thc1.,m.inn a ont'·llm<' quar tnbal l tor tht" f Ort1011l .\rgonuul\ tll tht' { 11nd1an Fuothall l eagut• "ithhelu 1udgml'nt nn Ml ~t ah0n·, ,1hihlt\ "I ct him pla\ a full '1('3~in ilnd then v.c'll \t'l' " \Olld Tht'i'imJnn "Prr 'onalh I don 1 th1nl he·., ph\'"alh lc1 pal'lll' 1lf f\la\lng a lull I ti-gamr \("3'>0n .. Thrl\mann (la'<' \.1cM.ih1'n httl<' l rt'ti11 1111 tht" lkaf' 4h-IO r1,mp <l\ t'r the 'Ir~ I: n(lland Pntnot\ 1n tbr \uptr R.•w I t>-i·trn<;(' v.on them 1h1 \uf'('r B\1\\I r,;11d Thr1<.mann · \\ alt('r Pa t 'n 1 nuld ha' t" httn th1· ll'•.1r- 11 h.11 l and the.' \IM'\ wnuld ha'(' '"-·t'n thr \llmc " Tht"1'imann ~ho tN<'nth 'iign~ a 1-.-.0-H'ar con1r t t "1th thr RNhktn\, I\ f'l'<'tH cnna fmm J hrolcn IC'j \ul'fC"rt"d 1n .J \1 nnda\ niitht jlOmr v.1th tht" 'r" \ nr li. ( 11ant\ E01\0" J • •' l'ovnl••" V11i.v <J •• Wett,...,•n\lt • 1 S• 11 Mari1'1a 3 • Hufll "ll'OI' 8t'aC" ) 4 a• OcN n Vlt"' 1 0 Seotfll CN\I LM- l•vl.,_ 16 '' v\ CaP•\trano Valtev It 0 "' "8«! .. !>9r• C"'l4'0t y. ,,.<V" v , ('I 1 •' \. •oun.e H ,. ' J E • YO ' • A' 1:1.~ ... I ' 0 • ~.,.. ( ~l'T'\·t\tp DVf' GWCalumni game Saturday C "'Iden \\ C\t ( olll."(lC N~hall n'\3lh f-r<'d l11'1(\\('I I' \C't'ltn(l phl\Cf"i 1ntrrt'!>tt'J in rnmpct1ng in \aturda' ~ Jnnual \lumni pmc Thr '''ntc't dµtn<.t thi'i 'rear' wuad I\ "<"I l\l hcg.1n at nt)On :\I ( 1oldt•n "l''\ A.mong th<' "'f' alumna plll\C'f\ "4.hcdulcJ tlh ompctt" art pit~ ht'f' Jt"O HcathltX Ii. (I lou<.h)n .\stro\ I R1\ i...raY.1.\1!.. tPittsburgh P1rillc\I and Run "°'1<"rt-d1th 1< hi- C'.a~o < uh' l .\l'i<) <''p<'Ct<'d tl' attend art 1op pro'ip('<t 1't"\ in fl'>t<'r and T\ \pomr 'tt"r Bol'l l ldcr "'Channel 'fl Tho~ mt'mhcl"\ ot the C 1oldt'n w(' .. t alumni intrrc'ittd in plavma 'ihould phone Q\ 1n'' ' . Da * Orange Coat DAIL. Y PILOT I WecfMtday, Fet>ruary 6, 198G UCI ••. FromDl before we play them." The last tr me the 'Tigers (I 1-10 overall. 4-6 in Pf AA play) were able 10 beat the '\nteater'> ""!.fan 17, t 980 by a 59-46 count But Mulligan 1~n·t thinkmg abdut Pacific JU'it yet You get the im- pression hC' would like to stan trying 10 c~cn the score a little wtth Fre~nt> "We got confusrd the la'it t1nu: we played them." he said ··we've tx.-en going o'er film to see what we can do agarn!.t their prcc;c;ure defense Pres\- ure has hun us all war long .. <\Iler this t\\O-ganw hmne':ttand. L Cl he.ids out on the road for lour gaml''i. t"o of "h1ch intlude lto11t- runn1ng L'NL.\' I IU-lll .ind '><-'rn11ll- plau· '\ic\\ '11n1rn '.:>tall' ll\-1 I ThJt's another kind vf pressure Mulligan and the <\nteater'i "'Ill ha'c Ill t.1rc ··1 hat docs add a httk pre'i\Ufl' for U\ to do well 1n the\<.> two ganu·..:· "1ulhgan 1;a1d "It would \Ure hl'lp to "'1n these t\\O ht-fort' g111ng out llll the road .. When tht' ..\ntelter~ return tht' will ha \t~ but t\\O home i!.JnlC' rcma1n1ng tll:lm~· the Pl A...\ I our nament \\.hen a~l..ed h1>" the .\nt- eatt"rs "uuld fare 11 thl.' tourn.1ment "ere to \t,1rt wmorro\\ "1 ull1gan sighed anu \iltd ";\01 lotl \\l'll .. Hut tonunJtt'I' that' '1111 11\l'f .1 month .1 ..... 1) 'o l < I t .rn 'llll ngh1 1t~t'lt. )tartin~ f hur\dJ\ C1oing tor lhl.' Hulldt'gs ,qll tx· forward\ Jen" l ult' (6-6J and '"" K uiper~ 16-81 .\1 centt'r will ht.· HnJn alone 10.t-.1. "'11h 1h1: gu;m1 '1111t\ filled b' lurmc:r :-..t.-ua Dl."1 '>t.1nd11111 M1t...c \t1khcll 16-(1) and~ \fan 111 <. ana 111 -l> In action tonight t rc t ,qll go "11h II'> llnl'11r 11111.[11 Johnn' Roger\ Jnl.I t-. f1 In" < ,1rm11n up front "'11h h·" I od \forph' 10 lhl.' middle fhc: ha1 kniurt "'111 hi.' 6-~ Mike Hl'!>S Jnd' Ill "(<111 Brook' Estancia'• Annie Foley (left) and Coeta Meaa 's Stephanie Swaneon return to play in girl• buketball action tonight. Estancia boeta Newport Harbor and Meea vtalta Wood- bridge. In another game, Corona del Mar la at Unlveralty. All begin at 7 . SPORTS BREAK At least tourney in Pebble Beach not total washout From AP dispatebrs PEBBL. ~f-\( .tL~ £~1 ~o~n \i;ent a .... a~ "l't .ind grumhhn~ "'11h $640.UOO in pn1r n111ne\ !rum thl· lir\t AT&T Pcbhlc Hl,1~h '\ation.11 f>ro •• \m The rain-drenchn! tournJml·n1 al"' prudut~·d an esll mated $600.()( II J or mun· Im l hJr1t 1n "F1nane1all' 1hl· tnurnamt·nt ha .. n t tx:l·n great .. 1C>urnamen1 dirt· 1111 I nu Ru\\o <.:111.J I k added .. Thank <.1od lor 1 mporJti: .. pon,11r\h1p <>thl'r"' 1 e we'd be in the hok "W e "Ill "'ind up making J $1.11() ()OO 10 $1(1() IJOO contnbut1on to ~hant' l a .. t \l'ar I hclll'\l' our contnbu11ons totaled ahOu t S25(J.IJ00 .\mencan Telephone & Tele@.raph rut ur $.,'ill ()(J(J as first-lime sponsor or thl' tournaml·nt "'hll h tormc:rl\ was the Bing Crosh~ Prn-.\m Tmal attL·nd.JOl't.' wa\ only 84.000. including 'omt: I 1100 JI lhl' P<·hhlc Hea~h course on Monda' "hl'n rain hrough1thing'111 J halt compared to a fl'l t>rd 1 1~ ()(/I• t11r th1· \Un -hk, .. t•d I 41<~ Crostl\ t'\Cnt Onl~ three l11m pk tl round' "l'I\.' pla ,ed .11 lhl AT.i T hut the lull rur<.l' "'"' Ul\tfl hutl·d \\llh r II//\ Zoelkr p1clu ng up a ti r-.t rlau· l hl'l k 111 $I fin tJ(l4 !fur his ind" 1dual \ 1c1un ;,inu .in C\lra ~11 1111( !or "1nn1ng the pro-am \\llh panncr \111..l· ! \Jn' .\t m1cl-Ja\ "tonda\ t11urn,1ml·n1 11111~ 1al' JI tir~t announced tha·t the rainl'U 0111 tnurth round v.a<> re- scheduled lor Tue\da' fhat <ll'll'-Hln produced something llo\c 10 J goll'a.,· re' 1111 "T his 1<; 1hc h1ggl''it 111k1· l"\l· n cr lward nt · Hal Sutton \81d · fh1s I'> not fun for an\ hod\ Jnhn \1ahat1e\ '>aid "It's not going to dn nut I I 11t·,J.t\ I F nough " enough .. Peter Jauih'>l'n dt'dart·d fht' lOUrnarnl'Ot Lo mmtltC\' g111 lht OH'\\,tgL' anu changed m mind and spomordcu dnJ 111 ,1...,an.l 1hc lull pur\c Quote of the day Norm Stewart, \11"oun hJ,kr1h.1ll 11Jd1 ue<,cnh1ng the ;1nl..k tnj uf\ to thl' T 1grr'i I krmk ( hie' OU\ · 11 ''om \\herl.' tx't .l<'l'n .1\['Ir110 anti death .. Vanguards' Bardsley honored l\.rr H 1r hie\ ,f l.,outh1 rn I .1 rtlur Id m ( olkgl 'h,l\l.c·1h,ill team h.1, ht·t n n<1111t·1I a<.'-. \I\ lll\lnl! Ill Plt1 \l'r •I the \.\.l•d UJrd \1 •\ .1 turm<'r < "'I 1 \,fr,,1 H 111h \!Jnd11ul 1J lllt•d 7f1 p1 11n ' n thfl'L' g.mn' l.1,1 "c:ek n11ll h1ng J 1Jrrer-h1gh ,. r •1tn1' aga1n 't \.\.c<.1 r oa\t ( hr1\l1an In thL' three gamt·<. ll.1 J,ll'\ "'as~'' 111 ~I from thl' lint• m1c;s1ng his first fr1·1• th rn"' 1111he )car alter mal..ing his llrs1 31 attempts Hl' .1ddi:d 14 rebound<; Spurs edge Sonics in overtime {enter Artis Gilmore had a game-high m 30 points. incl uding live in ovenime. to pace San Antonio 10 a 124-I 19 National Basketball Assoc1aton victory over Seattle Tuesday night. The Spurs, who played wtthout starters Johnny Moore and Steve Johnson, had a chance to win in regulauon time but a late j umper by Mike Mltcbell wa-s ofT the mark after Seattle's Ricky Sobers 11ed the score 111-111 on a lay-up w1J.h 17 scc-0nds left ... 1:.l~ewrR'l'l"1Tnlft-NB.\. Ph0t'n1x center James Edwards scored 28 porns and forward Larry Na.nee added 24. 17 1n the second half. to hf\ th e Suns to a I 2 7-1 18 victory over Golden State Bill Hanzlik grabbed an offens1 ve rebound and then con- "ened two l/J!J throws w}th one second to play to give Denver a I 19-1 18 victory over Portland C1uard Isiah Tbomas, held to JUSI six points in the opening half. made three key free throws in the Gilmore final I .22 to hft Detroit 10 a I 17-115 victory O\.crCh1cago, which lost its 10th in Its last 12 contests Center Robert Parish scored 12 of his 20 points 1n the third quarter, keying a 20-7 Boston run that opened the second half and sparked the Cclllcs toa 11 2-93 v1ctoryo,cr Milwaukee Bucks fo rtheir 12th consecul1't:' tnumph longec;1 in the NB'\ 1h1s season. Herb Williams scored 21 ofh1s game-high 25 points 1n the st"cond half and Steve Stlpuovicb rnntnbuted 21 points as Indiana recorded its first four-game winning meal.. s1nu.• March I 984 by defeating New Jcrse). I 17-101 Randy Wittman tipped in a mJssed shot with one -;econd to pla) 10 give Atlanta Hawks a I O'i-104 \ 1ctor) o"er Cleveland. Dailey a no-show for game C-Hl\'\GO -Chicago Bulls guard m Quinlin Daile'. often 1n trouble over m1s!>ed pracllces and other personal prob- lem\ -failed to show up for Tuesday night's game against Detroit. Bulls ,General Manager fern Krause !.aid. • . .\ my\tCf) women called our trainer Mark Pfeil at ..i: 15 pm Tuesday. sa ying that Quintin was out somewhere on the toll road with a flat ure and that two state tow trucks passed him by," said Krause. "But he is going to have to prove to me he actuall} had that flat." \aid Krause. who vowed he would make ".i complete and thorough investigation" of Da1ley's absence. Daile~ the NB.\'c; No 2 leadin$ scorer coming off the hench with I 6 3 points a game this season. has twice undergone drug rehabilitation. m1s\Cd several practices and tailed to tatch team planes for out-of-town games "l nder NBA rules. the Bulls ha1.e no choice but to conduct a t0rnple~ 1n1.e~llgat1on because this kind of 1nc1dt>nt has repeated 11o;elf again and again:· Krause told reponers. Daile), a 1982 first-round draft pick who cams a reported Sn5.000 a }Car. missed 13 games at lhe beg.inning ofth1s season when he admitted himself into a Cahfom1a drug trealment center He returned 10 action on No' 19. - Watson tops Torrey Pines golf field GIRLS BASK [ T BALL From AP clhpet~1 Edison prevails on dramatic shot TORREY PI NES Tom Watson's luggage was li&}lter by a pair of golf sh~ when he came here for the Andy W1lhams Open. Noffsinger ero Barons broke away from a 20-13 halftJme lead by doublinf the y1k· ings' second-half output o 18 points to pull away and move to 7.0 in the Sunset. "You always take an extra pair of golfshoes to Pebble Beach. And when you leave, you throw them away. They're ruined.'' Watson said. In win over OV; Barons, HB win In sconng a season-high 21 points, Sue Walin had 13 in the second half to spark the outburst. going 10 for I 6 from the field overall. Dawn Lawler, who was next highest in the scoring column forthe Barons with t .S points, led the team in rebounds with 11 . While the rain, hail, mud and severe winds at last week's Pebble Beach National Pro-Am may have taken their toll on his footwear, the t9umament formerly known as "ihe Crosby" also provided the basis for a little optimism by Watson. Edison High took over second place in the Sunset League girls basketball race in dramatic fashion with a one-point win over Ocean View Tuesday night. Meanwhile, Fountain Valley con- tinued its unbeaten ways in the Sunset with an easy win over Marina, while Huntington Beach moved into a tie for third with Ocean View by downing Westminster. Herc's aJook: The Barons can clinch the league tttle with a victory at Westminster Thursday. The five-lime Bntish Open cham· pion finished a strong third last week -and made a move at the lead in the washed-out and uncompleted fourth round. It was the best finish in eight months for Watson, who's trying to dig his way out of a lengthy slump. "I hit some bad shots. too many of them, last week but I hit a lot of~ood shots1 too, and that's encouraging," he said. Ed11oa 51, Oceu View 55:.Jo a wild game at Edison, Martha Noffsinger emerged the hero, making her only field goal of the game at the buzzer to give the Chargers the victory. In the seesaw battle, the Seahawks (3·4, 12-9) appeared to be in com- mand on a number of oc.cas1ons. leading 33-19 at halftime and 47-33 entering the final quarter. HllDttnston Beacb 4', Westmlnater U : The big story in this gam~ was the fourth quarter whert: the 01lers.-held the visiting Lions to JUSt one point. Allyson Hartman enjoyed h~r top sconng night <?f the. se~son with 21 points. including s1.x in the final quarter when the Oilers (3-4) over- came a five-poi nt deficit. Hart.man mso pulled down 10 rebounds, as did Tami Chick for Huntington Beach. Watson, a six-time Playe r of the Year. did not win a tournament last season. "l just didn't work hard enough last year, and that's the result. You usually get out ofsomethin~ what you put into it, and I'm working harder this year," he said before a prac11ce round at the Torrey Pines Golf Club, where the Andy Williams tour- namen1 begins Thursday. But Edison came out in the founh period and outscored Ocean View 18-2 to take a 51 -49 lead and actuaily were up by three before the Seahawks scored fo ur straight points to take a 55-54 edge with iour seconds Jef\. Westminster's Jeannine Battaglia scored 25 points to lead the Lions (2-5). In an Angelus League contest: Mater Del I!, Bl1bop Mont1omery ti: The Monarchs (8-0 in league. I 8-7 overall ) took advantage of 32 tum· overs to post the victory ~t home. Watson. a two-time winner of this event, leads a field of 156 players who will be chasing an $81 .000 first pme. They'll play ont round on both the North and South courses at the public faci lity with the last two rounds played over the South course. With the ball under their own basket. the Chargers made a pair of long passes to Noffsinger. whose 20- footer hit nothing but net. Edison. 4-3 1n league, owns a one-game lead over the Seahawks and Huntington Beach in the Sunset. Debbie Wagner scored 15 points to l¢ad the balanced Mater Dci attack which featured three other players in double figures -Jan Rensing and K.Jm Ellerman with I I apiece and Noelle Manfre with I 0. Mater De1 can wrap up the league crown at St. Joseph's Thursday. FoUDtaln Vallry 56, Martna 31: The Anderson signs with Dodgers LOS ANGELES -Infielder Dave m Anderson has agreed to terms ofa one-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers. the National League Western D1v1sion cham- pions announced Tuesday. Terms were not announced. Anderson. 25. was on the disabled hst twice last season due to back inJunes and lost his starting shonstop JOb to rookie ~arvno Duncan. Anderson. played 1n 17g.MmSforthc ~Th,~S f.hlttlng 199 wuh fou r home runs and 18 runs-batted-in. The Dodgers now have signed or agreed to terms with 29 of the 40 playe rs on their blJ·league roster. Four pla)ers -pitchers Orel Hersh1ser and Fernando Valenzuela. catcher Mike Sc1osc1a. and first baseman Greg Brock -ha ve filed for arb1trat1on and have heanngs scheduled later this month. - Anderson also had filed for arbttrat1on. His heanng had been scheduled for Feb. 20. but that won't be necessary now. The Dodgers had offered S 180.opo while Anderson had asked for $235.000. Warriors on verge of change? OA KLA ND -The Golden Stale m Wamors might ha\C a coachin$ change soon. and John Bach descnbes himself as "hanging 1n the wind hke a pennant" going into thc Na11onal Basketball .\ssoc1at1 on's .\11-<itar break "A.11 1 want 1s to be told straight up about whatever actrons they're taking." Bach said before his team went to Phoenix fora Tuesday night game. the Wamors' last before the schedule break. General Manager Al A Illes said he will rccom mend to Franklin Mieuh. the team owner, that a dcc1s1on on Bach's status be made before the Wamors resume pla~ next week. But Attles added that the last time he called M1euh "he was not around .. Magic may miss All-Star game m .... INGLEWOOD (AP) -Earvin "Magic" Johnson. who returned to the Los .\ngeles Lakers' lineup Tuesday night after missing six games, said afterwards that he might pull out of Sunday's NBA All-Star gam~. "I'm thinking about not playi ng in the All-Star game." Johnson sa id after the Lakers' I I 0-102 victory Tuesday night over the Dallas Mave ricks. "lfl'm not playing well. rJI pull out Wednesday or Thursday," he added. Johnson, who has been plagued by a badly bruised and swollen right knee, was playing for the first time m almost two weeks. He injured the knee on Jan. 14 when he bumped into Larry Nance of lhe Phoenix Su ns. Television, radio TELEVISION 10 p.m. -BOXING: Great moments from Olympic history RADIO No events scheduled. Trottier, Bossy show up in ·OT They combine for winner in ockey·s All;Star sho~ =--.. HARTFORD (AP) -Br)'an Trottier and Mike Bossy failed to appear for a pre-game National Hockey League All-Star news lonference. but they were much m evidence on the ice Tuesday night in the Wales Conference's 4-3 overtime victory over the Campbell. The New York Islander duo connected on the wtnning goal at 3:05 of overtime as the Wales beat tht" Campbell for the ninth lime in the I I meetings since the current format was established 10 1975 . "They're JUSt electnfyrng," said Wales Conference Coach Mike Keenan of the Ph1ladelph1a Flyers. who sa1d he bad seen Trottier and Bossy "too many limes" for hi own comfort dunng the season. "They are a beautiful sight. hke (Wayne) Gretzky and (Jan) Kum (of Edmonton).'' Actually. Gret7lcy had scored earherin a furio us tlurd penod before the Trottier-Boss} combo won 11 for the Wales in overtime. It was Gretzky's eighth All-Star goal. Ironically. both Islanders had missed Monda} 's news conference which was auended by mos1 of the All- Stars at the 1Jn1vers1ty of Connecticut Keenan had shrugged his shoulders at the absence of the AWOL Islanders. saying only that It was obvious he would use them on the same line for the All-Star Game. The winning score came on a classic Bossy-to- Trottier feed ?.I the goal mouth, someting they had done dozens of times before. Trottier said the puck hopped over hi s suck and he knocked it in with his skates. "Normally I try to put it in with my stick. bu1 I whiffed and it went in off my skate." Trotller said. The puck beat Edmonton goaltender Andy Moog. "I challenged Bossy and couldn't get back to stop Trottier." Moog said. "You have to challenge a shooter like Bossy. He featered a pass through two or three skatc-s. No one could do anything about that." Bardsley's hot hand sparks sec, 86-78 RIVERSIDE -Sharpshooter Ken Bardsley, who was recently named NAIA Distnct 111 Player of the Weck. took up where he left off last week by sconng 24 points and leading Southern Cahfomia College to an 86-78 basketball win over Cal Baptist Tuesday night. Bardsley. who 1s among the NA IA leaders 1n field- goal percentage, neued 9or16 shots from the fl oor against the Lancers as SCC evened ltS conference mark at 4-4 and moved to 14-8 overall. Cal Baptist continues to lead the Central Division with a 5-3 mark. - The Vanguards also received a solid effon from Paul Hohmann off the bench as he scored 1 I points, pulled down five rebounds and did a fine job defens1vetx. Jon Haar had seven rebounds and Robert A vtles. the NAlA District III leader in assists, dished off I 0 more. And. SCC welcomed the return of Randy McAJhster, who had I 5 points. McAllister had recently been sidelined with a back sprain. UNL V football player arrested Dooley comes to Georgia defense 'sec led 43.37 at halftime. and although the Lancers did manage lo tnQl the deficit to four in the second half, the Vanguards were in control and led by as many as 16 (70-54) in the late stages of the game. SCC meets Biota on the road Thursday before playing its next home game on Saturday against Pomona- P1tzer. L.\) \IH1.\~(.\P1 -\I nl\Cf\ll\ of Ne' ada-1...a<, Vega., f1 11lht1ll pl.1'>1'r arrested after allegedl\ a\\a11 l11n11 .i h1ghwa \ patrolman and h" .>. 11• h.1, been <,u<,pendcd lrom ih t• 'tJM Jnd will be kll ked out of \t h11"' f f11und guilt) un1vcr<,1t1. Prr.,11k nt Rohl·n • Ma~c;on <,a1d fuc\<la Ma:t son said unncr\11 \ nfl111a1' decided to ~u,J)('nd ~:in \h < 11\ 111 following a repon c1n tht· 1nl 1den1 which occurred ~Jtuntn n•Kht H·· said l\.fr(m'' \(h11lnr,h1p \\111 hi· revoked 1f he-1' lnund pu;lt• ot 1h" charges "AsanathletC'ilttend1np.I '-1 Vht· represents the un1,cr"1' Jnd "<' i1mpl) '-"111 not <>' crl11<1k 1h1'1 inc I· dtnt. .. ~aid Ma ~'on \h( m 1.\-3'1 hooked tnr 1r11.('\l1g3 t1on of hatter) on d polia qfl1l er anti hatter') following an altt·ru111un w11h Nev da H1gh'-"a) Patrol trooper \rfel Pecson and ht'> w1fr Bernadette Pohce ~1d the three tollo""ed Pec'iOn. nd hi'> wife fro m a \h<>pptng tnp to tht> parkinit 101 ol their apanment i.:omplr-.. where the .t1t.1ck allcgt>df\ 10ok ril;l1 c ,,. 8ulldogs· coach denies wrongdoing In recruiting \ 11 \" f ..\ ( o\PJ -(1l'Org1a football ~0:1d1 Vince r>ook~ denied T uesda)' lhat <.onw c1thletr\ w11h poor acadelWlc had.· gro~inll' arc rec.:rur tcd onl> becaur,c 1hn · n cl'I 1n '>pon\ that make monc} for the r n1\t'r"t' o l C1coqua ··tt' ca\\ to ':ta) 1ha1 alter lht'-.e 1ndl\ 1d- uc11\ r11nw .ind don't do well academ1calh that 1he~ "'t're recru11ed 11nh to produce rc1.enuc T>ooley told reporters at a new' LOnference tollo"ing ht'> test1mon\ tn a kderal mun .. , 11u ne"er kn ow ho" 'tomr of them will d 11 •• ht• added "';ome ot them might o'er( 11mt' the odch " lfr ,;ud there have been lime'>. though. that he Jcc1dcd against ofTcnng scholnrsh1p'> 10 ~lhkte~ bccau~ the) ~howed little prom!'lt" of \ucccedtnit acadcm1call)' IJMlc~ 1es1tfied 1n the tnal of a IAw~u11 by lormcr I n1ver<111y of Georgia 1nstr'\1Ctor Jin Kem fl "ho contends ~he wa~ d1~m1sscd ~\;.1i1.,~ \he ob1ectcd to preferential treat· mrnt of athletes 1n (1eura1a'1, remedial 'itml11 ., projtfam - < I he defendants in the suit arc V1rgin1a f rotter. the un1vers1ty'~ VICe present for academic affairs. and Leroy Ervin. the assistant \.ICC president for academic affairs "ho d1recu the remedial program Evidence 10 the trial includes portions of transcnpt of ~ mt"et1ng Ervin held w11h rcmedtal studies instructors in 198 3 to d1\('uss 1hc poor performance of\1x athletes. .\lcord1ng to the transcnpt. Ervin 1<1h.l 1he 1n~trut·tor'i "I know for a fact that thei.e kids "'ould not he here 1f tt were not for thei r ullht) to the 10sntut1on There 1s no real sound academic reason for their being here other than to be ut1h1ed 10 produce income .. Doolc). asked by reporters 10 rc1pond to Ervtn 's charactenLation. replied. "That' ~cond-guess1ng nObod) can ..ay at>ctolutel} how anyone 1'> going to do academ1callv ·· Dooley al~ defended using players in the 1982 Sugar"Bowl and I 984 Cotton Bowl wh o had failed their remed1al courses for the last ume and were to be dnm1s9Cd from the • un1vers1tv once classes re'iumed they were .,llll ehgtble under National < ollcgiate <\thleuc A11oc1at1on rul" to pan1c1patc 1n the bowl game\, Dooley \aid, and the players !>till had avenues of appeal. .. Not allowing them 10 play (in the bowl games) would have hcen d1scnm1natory," he ..aid. adding that he would "alwa ys go the c~tra mile" to help athletes complete their degree .requirements Dooley also said that some of the football players who were allowed to play tn the two howl games arc ''still in school, still working 10 make 1t." He declined to say how many and how close to gradua11on they art. In a prepared statement released at the news conference, Dooley said 11 "might be unfortunate" that the Kemp suit came to tnal But "1t 1<1 good that the general public has become aware of 11 problem that we have t111 ~ aware of for several years ... He \aid Un1vcr~1ty of Georgia President f red Dav1~on hac; been "the leader 1n trym~ 10 restore reasonable academic 511\l'ldtUds to college athletics. "I'm also proud 10 say that on the athletic side. I have led thdight to restore reason3ble standards for athletic eh1Jb1hty," he said He u1d Gcora>a h8' faced lhe problem 1n a "noble and reasonable way .. to provide a wund a1hlet1c program on the one hand. and al'iO do everythm& po s1ble 10 help the \tudent-athkte to help himself" In a college women·~ game· Cal BapUll n . SoCal Colle1e 71 : The Vanguard women didn't fare as well as the men, dropping the NA IA Dt'itnct Ill contest to the Lady Lancers. Kim N1dey had a fine effon in defeat, <;eonng a season-high 32 points, SCC dropped to 3-7 In d1s1nct play and 12-1 I overall while \al Baptist is S-4 and I 2-9 OCC welcomes Cypress The Orpnae Coa.sJ College besketball lcam opens tts second round of South Coast Conference activity tonight. entenaimng co-leader Cypross in a 7 30 contest It Wlll be the stan ofa ruged weelt for the Bun. who play at Fullerton aturday Meanwhile, Golden West will once again attempt to ~nap 1~s ('losing streak, which has grown to 25 aames followtng last Saturday's tough los to Rancho Santia.ao. The R us tiers will vi!lit Compton tonight and host Mt. San Antonio Saturday OCC bnngs a 9· 12 season record into ton,&}lt's action. The Sues fell to both Cypress and Fullenon 1n overt.tmc during the openma round of confcrt"n~f play Golden We t 1s 4-1 fi overall entenn..i 1\\ conic" aga1Mt Compton Na A WISTl•H COHl'llllNCI l'•Cltlc DMNell LAhn w L ""· IH )6 ll '" Pwti.l\cl 2t n 551 tY, PllOe<ll• 19 2t * 11 c:a.-r.. II JI 347 It S..ttle 11 n 347 ?O GO!Oen Stete IS J1 ,.. 131., HOUSIOll MiqWt\I Olvllltn " IS 6M Denver ?9 21 SIO s Sen Antonio ,, 24 s,, 1'1'> Delles 24 n m I Uten 2• 'l1 471 101'1 Sacre men to 19 )0 ... 14 ... IAJTl•N CONl'UtENCI Iott on A .. ntk DMNell 37 I m PfllltdtfDlll• 30 II 62S I~ N-JtrHy 2t n S60 I l'"J W9'nlnot0tt n 24 4'9 IS New York II 31 361 21 MllWtUkff CtMr •I Olvhi.ti 32 II 640 Allentt 21 ?O m )'I'> Detroit 25 24 SIO 6'h Clevtlend II lO 31S ll Cnlc•llO 11 33 .l40 IS lndl•n• 16 n lll IS Tllffda'1'1 S<- UkWJ I 10, DeHH 10? Atlente IOS, Clevtlt nd 104 lndltne 111, New Jtrlt Y IOI Detroit 117, c111ceoo 11s 801ton I 12. MllW8Ukff 9J Sen Antonio 124, S .. tlle 119 (Otl De1wer l1 t. Poroeno 111 P"'<*'lla 121, G010tn Slete 111 TMlttlt'1 G-wn11lno1on e1 Boston New Jeney et Pnlleo.te>nla l'llUndlV'• Gemes Uken •• Housion CllHtrl t 1 P~b Allente e r lnolene Dttroll •I Wtshlnoton Plllledetl>llta 11 Ctevetarro CllletllO et Mllweukff Denver 11 Sen Antonio Ntw York el Uren S..ttle 11 S.cremento Den.1 et Portreno L•lrtn 110, Mavericlrs IOl DALLAS 11011 -Aoulrrt 4·11 )·4 11 Perkin• 6-11 S·6 11, Donaldson 3·S •·6 10 81eckmen I· 19 2·2 18, HerPer 7· 11 2-2 16 Vincent 6· 12 3·4 IS, Ellis 1·2 2·7 S, Davis 1-3 0-0 2, Wennlnoron l·l O·O 6 Tot11s l'l-71 21-26 10? LAKEU 1110) -Rembls 1·3 O·O 2, Worthy 9· 13 0-0 11, At>Oul· J11>1>er 9· 16 l ·• 21, c-6·13 l·I 13 McGff 9·17 2·3 21 Je>nnlO" 4·9 •·7 14 LUCH 3·7 1·2 1 Scott 4·9 0-0 9 KuPCller. 1-2 2·2 4, GrMn 0-1 0-0 o. S~looi. 1·2 o-o 2 Tore11 47·9'2 IS·l9 110 Scere IJv O\ler'9n DtllH 23 JS II 26-10? Lekeri 19 31 30 »-I 10 ThrH·POlnt QOeli.-Aoulrrt, Ptrlr.lns, Ettls, McGH Fouled our-None Rt bounds-Delles 36 (0one ld'°'1 I I, l ektrs 57 (LUCH 10) AulSlt.-De llH 29 (Herper I ). Ltken 32 (.At>Out·Jtl>Oer Jonnson II Toltl fouls-Delles 19 Lektrs 2S Technl eel-Odes illeotl oelense Allenotnc-1','l7S COLLEGE ~I C ..... U , C.I &apttst 11 ( NAIA Olltr'lct lit! -SOCAI C ..... c .. T Cal-Bti•llsl 1111 .. ftllflP f9ftpf!P HHr 2 l I 7 SIOOI> 7 3 .. } 8eros1«v 9 6 l 7• Revnoios • 3 • 11 Lucas • S I 13 K1n~v O 1 I 2 McAlli.rr l 9 2 IS Fov 0 0 .S 0 Ofelt 0 3 I l Grffn 10 l 4 ?3 Aviles 0 0 l 0 Kevs 0 O 3 0 L10111f1 1 2 l • wors1111> ) o 4 • Mvits 4 0 1 I Wllllemi. S 4 S 14 Sllvtri. 0 0 l 0 Davis S S 7 IS Reddick 1 O 0 1 Hollmann S I I 11 Torell 29 ?9 19 " Totals 29 70 37 11 Helffl~ SoCei Con-. 4J·31 COLLEGE WOMEN c.t &aottst 12. SoCal Cele9e 71 INAIA Dhlrkt Ill) s.cal C ..... (11) Cel hpll\I 1111 Sulllven araztlt Nldev Terry Herwell Wu"'cll TOUHI BHllY Smit II 8rown .. ftpftp foftollP 0 0 l 0 Halt I 0 2 2 I S 7 1 R U\11 1 1 ) 1 I 14 • 3 32 Hillme n 11 l 7 25 • 3 S 11 Lewis S O 3 10 I 0 1 7 Llllle 1 4 7 I 0 2 7 7 SetOv I 0 I 7 l 0 I 7 H11mos 0 0 I 0 l I l 1 Mecl<.le" 0 l I I 2 I 7 S Htr "211 2 0 l 4 o l S S Car08,a o o I 0 Dt<2rtCk S l 1 13 PalltrSo<I 2 7 l 6 Totals 26 19 29 11 Totels l l 70 24 12 Halfhme Cei 811>11\t 43·77 Technlceti. SCC bench 2 HYM .... di.,, Wntmtn1w 41 (~ L .. 9"1 W"ln'l!Ntow (41) HUflt. ... di (4t) .. ft.... .. ...... winer Ou1d\ef Lt ,.Of.., AIYlfel 8llt11• Akita I 0 I 2 Clllek S 1 J 11 0 0 1 0 Krcelk 0 > ) l 0 0 2 0 Atmw1111 3 • 4 10 OOIO~otr 11 ll o O ) 0 Herimen 7 1 2 21 10 S 3 2S a ... , Toteli. 4 I S 9 ' 3 2 s 1• • 19 41 k ... "" Que,,., Wt\lmlni.ter 14 It 10 'f.-4 I H""tlnvlon IMdl 11 I 1 12 1 ........ ·TKM!al Aklte IWJ Matw Ott '2, a11No Mont. 21 ( AlleMu• .... _, 811Mtt MeM. (21) Metw o.I (62) .. ftpftp .. ""'"' Molier "'°''" w ...... • 0 l 12 Weoner 1 I , IS I 0 3 2 8eeljl0r\ 1 0 I 1 0 0 4 O Menfrt S O l 10 Mendel t:llu11rc11 Troomes 2 O 2 4 Renslno S I O I I 1 o o 2 o•eri.n o o 1 o 0 I 0 I Ellermen S I 4 11 Formllll 2 2 0 6 Lwr~e l I S 1 Tot•'' 10 I 10 21 Toret• 1' 6 14 6'l k ... "" 0u.,.,., 8ls/\o1> Mori IQOmtr v 6 S 4 .,_:. 71 Meltr Del 11 11 14 1.-.2 GIRL$' STANDINGS SUl\Mt L..aeu. LM-W l. Founteln Vt llev 1 O Edl1on 4 l Octen v iew ) 4 Huntlnotoo 8HCll 3 4 Merine 2 S WHtmln\ltr 2 S Tu..a.V's Sewn Fountein Vt lltV 56, Merine 31 Edison 56, OcH n View S5 0......11 w l. ?O 4 17 • 11 9 II 11 12 9 10 ' Hunllnoton e .. ch 49, Wtstmtni.rt r 41 Tllun.cllV's Games Merine II Octen View Huntlnoton 8HCll el Edison Founteln Vellev ti Weslmlntter SM Yaew I.Ml" . L- Coron• O•I M•r WoodlJrldoe Co.it Mese S.d<lltbeck l •oun• 8HCPI E1tenci1 NewPOtl HerDOt Unlversltv WL 10 0 9 I 1 3 6 4 ) 7 3 1 2 • 0 10 T Mitfll' 1 Gamet Ntwl>Of't HtrtJor II E1t1ncl• Coste Mase er WoodlJrldQe S.Odle08ct. t i L•oUN Beac11 Corone def Mer et University l'rldlv'• Games E\tancla el Leoune &Men Woodl'lrldOe el Corona oe1 Mer Clnlt Ma11 el Unlver1ltv S.ddleOtck et Ntwl>Of'I Htrt>or Slrlc~s USM!\ fl'erti: No rtl>Of'I OVwll WL 13 ' 15 6 12 • 10 9 s 10 s 13 2 l'l 2 IS 8oreal: Ten lnc"'1 new MlOW on S-7 fool Dest, oroomecs elld PKkld oowa.r, S cr.elrs eno 2 e111rrs al nloht 0-Mii llendl: No new on 4·1 foot 08\t; oowOtr e no HCked POwoer, l cht lrs Sode 5:~~ ~o rtl>Of'f TallM . Sh< inc!IM -MO• on l ·6 1001 one, oroomed, packed POwOtr end POwder, 2 Oout>le chelrs •nd 1 1urlece lift HW111 Ster: Two Inches new snow on 3-7'"> fool "'"'· oroome<1 eno 1>ecl<ed POwaer oondol•. 1 cllelrs, JS kll<>mtltr of set rreck SU91r lewt: E1g111 ro 10 lncllts new MIOw on 7· 10 fool Dai.a, POwOt!' end oroomed POWOt!', s OOUOle cneln end K CHl oon Oole Al'*'9 MNdtwi: 4\"J lnche• new i.now on 6· 11 1001 IJei.e. oroomeo, 1>1Clled POwaer a"d POWOer. 9 OouOle c1111lrs ano 2 trlPMI chelrs Hemeweoct: Two ro • lncllfl new ""°"' on a 2·4 , toot IJHe, oroome<1, HCkta oowaer 1no POwOtr, 2 cllalrs and l surlac:t llfls SQuew ..,....., 11,200 lwt): Two 1ncnes new i.now on 11 711·foot 08s.e pecked oowoer, oroomt<I 1na POwde< 11 cllelrs end a oonde>I• etl>le cer Squ1w Valev (6,200 '"1): Two Inches tltw snow on a 21 1·foo1 !Jest, 1>1tkt<1 POWder. oroomt d end POwder, 4 cnalrs and 2 surlece 11111 TellM Ski Bowl: No reoorr HN'IMV v ... v: an. lo two Inches "ew i.now <.n 4·1001 Ot\t oroorntd oowdt'r ano POwder lram 6 Ir 1>le cneirs 1 oouote cllalfl, end S surlect lilts Slrt lndlne: N9 MW i.now ()<I e 2· 3 fool Oe\t, oroomtd, 1>t cktc. POwaer end POW oer, somt 00\tactes. S ooul>le cllelrs Oranee CMlf bHtretb.tl YMr·bV VMr YNr, CMdl 194'·49, Mllft Eeton 1"49'-SO, Mlle• Elton 19$0-51, Mliet EtlOtl lfSl·S2, Miies EelOll 1952-Sl, Mliet Elton 1953·S4, Mllel Elton 19S4·SS, Miies Etton 1955-W. Siu lnmen 19S6·57, Siu Wl\en 1957· SI, Alen S.wver 1'Sl·S9, Alen Sawyer 19S9•60, Alen S.wver 1960-61. Alen S.wver 19' l ·62. Alen S.wver 19'2·6:1, Alen S.wver 1963·'4, Alan S.wvtr 1"4·65, Alen s.wver lMS-U , Alen S.wyer 19'6·61, 8oO Wellt4 1967·61, 8oC> Wtll'4 19'1·6', 8oC> Wt11'4 Ifft· 70, Hero Llvsev 1970· 71. Hero Llnev 1'71·n. Hero Llnev 19'12·73, Hero LIYltV 1973·74, HtrO l lVHY 1974·75, Herb UvHY 1975·16, Herb Unev 1976-n , Tenov Gllll• 1977·1', T endv Ghil• 1971·79, Ttnov Ghll• 197'·80, Ttndv Giiiis 1980-11. Ttnov Glffls 19'1·12, Tendv Glllls 1912·13. Tendv Glllls 1"3·14, Tendv Giiiis 1"4·15, TlndV Glllli. •Confer.nee co·cnamplon1 • Comerenc:e c11e mPlo<1s • • Sti re clleml>lons * •Kert 14·15 •·17 9·" 13· 14 14·13 10-II Ht 11·9 • 24·4 • 20-1 ,. 1 19·1 IS· 12 11· II IS· 14 14·11 9·16 6·21 • 24·1 • 23·12 11-11 10-11 3·24 9-17 12· 11 22-I 1-21 10-17 9·17 17· 14 • • 21·S 12-14 17-12 13· IS 9·17 13·16 11·13 Gttdlft Wn1 bHiretMI YHr-bv VNr YNr, CNdl 1,....,,, Dick •srrkklln 1967·61, Dlcll Strlcklln 19'1·69. Dick Srrlcklln 19'9· 70, Dick Strlckllo 1910-71, Dick Strlcklln 1971·72. Dick Strlcklln 1m-n. Dick Stricklin 1973-74, Diet. Srrlcklln 1974· 75, Dick Strkklln 1975-76. Dick Strl«lln 1976-n, Dlcll Strkklln 1977· 71, Dick Strk;klln 1911·19. Jim Greenfield 1979-IO, Jim GrMnfleld 1990-11, Jim Greenfield 1991·12, Jim GrltMleld 19'2-ll, Jim Gr..mi.ld 1"3·14, Jim GrMnfltld 19M·l5, Jim GrMnfleld • Conference ctiemllloni. Wr.s.,,_ HIGH SCHOOL S.. View L .. _ ·-d 4·?2 MS 11-12 s-n • 26·6 14·IS 13-11 10·" 17-10 II· II 10-17 12-1• • 9-20 19· U 22·9 20-11 1'· IS 1-11 '""' WMClllttdet l7, U111Venttv 2S 101-&uchenen (U) dK Larson, 9·4 10&-Grul>er lUl 1> Beu.I, S:42 llS-Cheno !U) dee Richter, 12·3 1'.n-Rodller\ (W) p Berrios. S·IO 129-Jacot>wn IWI p Cnano. 4 SO 13S-8erM1mle n IWI OK C1~1. 14· 13 141-Tenekt (WI OK Brown, 9-0 1"8--<;ercla (UI OK YurlloYlcn. 1·3 1 S1-8 ures I u I 1> Jones. S:20 1...-..McNeuollton (U) OK Tran 12· tl llt-Becon (W) P Frenk, 3·22 194-<:ooo (WI 11 Pevne. 3:40. Hwr -<011tn (WI 11 Gerken!, I 40 Fletd McJl*V HIGH SCHOOL Cl I' T "'"'"'*" I Ouarter11ntl\ I IEdlsen I, Sen Dimas o HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS Fount.In V ... v 56, Mar1M 31 (Svftwl LN-) Ml. Rne: Four lncl'lt\ new snow on S·1 foot DeH, oroomeo, PeCl<ed POwder end POwoer, 3 rrl!>le chairs a"o I oouo1, cl'lalr IEdlo SUmmlt: Thrff lnclle• ntw snow on 4 -.-foot IJeH. oroomeo oowder ano firm 1>eckt<2, 2 Ooul>lt cnelrs end I surlece till SWrll Sttl ltencJI: Tnree •ncllfl new E dlson scorlno l..eSll I Merine ()1) l'tn. ...... ., (5') ltftllf!P ftftpftp 8rewi.ter S 0 I 10 Handlev • 0 ) I Cnt rroln l I 7 1 Welln 10 t 0 71 Kutsrer O O i O Cook 2 O I ' ICtrkUD S 0 0 10 Ctower 4 0 0 I Stu1>1>Y I 0 I 2 Lawler 1 I 2 IS ls~lerlr.1 I 0 0 2 Girwski 0 0 t 0 H1Sak11 0 0 I 0 L Youn9 0 0 t 0 Toll !\ lS I 6 )t Tole l\ ,, 2 Q S6 S<0re IJY Out,.,.., Merine 6 1 10 t-Jt Founre1n Vetltv u 6 19 11-S6 i.now on 4 '>·foot 08\t, groome<I POweler S oout>lfl ano I lrl1>19 cnalr 1Clt1rweoct: Sia ro tlollt 1ncr.e1 ntw snow o<1 6·1 foot IJese, oroomeo, oow0tr eno Packed oowder, 7 OOut>lfl, 2 trl1>le Cl'lelrs and 1 surface tilt, 60 kllOmerers of set Ir 11ck Ml. ltlbe: Four Inches new snow on 1' 1· fool oase, POwOer end pacl<ed POwOer. 2 tr11>le and S OOIJt>I• ChJll" OOd9t Rld9t: Four 1nc11e1o new tnow on 2·6 fool Oest POwder ena l>llCklO POWde< 7 theirs a nd 2 surlece lifts !Edit.Of' lie\ e rtc04'0 of IS·l-21 G"'s soce« HIGH SCHOOL SUnMI LNtut IEdlMn 6, O<ea11 Vllltf 0 EdlMn 56, Oc .. n View SS (Suns.I LN-) &•deer fl'eu: Tr.rte lntllfl new snow on II )·fool °'"· POWOtf end Pecked POWdtr 4 c11e1r1o end 1 surtece lilts 31 kilometers set track Mllmm.itl: fllree lncnet new snow o<1 I· foot best, oecktd POwoer and oowoer, 1 oonooles. ?O chairs •nd • 'urlece lifts Slerre Summit: Four Inches ntw 1now on 3·4', foot t>ew, POwder end Packed POw oer. 3 Cheirs 1no 3 surlece lifts Edl'on i.corlno 81efeld 3, Fo<11es 1, Hemlllon I, Wnl"'8n0 l 0c .. n View ISSI EOls811 06) ftltllflP foflpffil Oourv VlaCllO\ Strt lollt Z.nelli Hounstll Lawson S I 0 I I Htnnuv I 7 I • l • • 10 Coburn 1 2 3 16 3 3 3 9 Herman 0 2 I 1 0 I I W ISo<I I 2 l II o 2 7 Ruoo o o I o l S IS Noffsnor I l • S JUN Meunteln: Sia lnclles new snow on 4-11001 08\t 11roome<1 1>11c1o.eo POwdtr ena POWdtr, 3 Cllllfl Johnson • l l 11 Toteis 27 11 IS S~ Totals 21 14 16 S6 TthM Mercik£ Two ·nclles new snow on l ·S toor t:>IMI groomed ena 1>11ckeo oowoer SO ~ 110mtten of se• rr ec~ DMP SN fls.l\IM k«e IJV 0var19n Oco n View 70 13 I• &-SS Edison 1 12 14 ?3-S6 8Nr Velev· Two .nc11es new snow on • >·foot 08H, Pecked C>Owder 1S k110· mereri ser rrac.~ NEWfl'OftT LANDING -14 e nottrs Jt send 011s I neilbul DANA WHAlll" -16 anolers 14 OH\ North Carolina wins in OT From AP dl1palcbes Brad Daughert} sent tht' game into oven.me with a I 0-footer from the baseline ·and then gavo top-ranked North Carolina the lead 11 nt'ver rchn~1shed as the Tar Heels overcame a 13-potnt ~cond·hal efirn and edged No. 2 Georgia Tc<.h, 78-77. tn an tlant1c Coast Conference ba~ketball gHme ID Atlanta r csday night Joe Wolfh1t four free throw" tn the final 46 seconds of overtime. 1Dclud1ng two that iced the game with 11 seconds left 1n tht' first meet1ng th1r, c;ca<ton between teams rank~ first and <;econd in fhe As'ioc1ated Press poll Georgia Tech appeared to have the game under control when Mark Price sank two free throw'! with 11 56 remaining to g1\'e the Yd low Jackets a 59·46 lead. Wolf ~tarted a q.Q run by the Tar Heels. who cvcntuall} cu1 the lead w 1wo potnts on a 2<>-footcr by freshman JefTl..cbo with 4.55 to play l..cbo Inter dnllcd two frtt throw~ with I 19 remam1Dg to cut the lead to 69-68 Antoine r ord h11 one of two free thro"-$ for Creora1a Tech five ~conds later and Dau_ghert> clo~d out th<' rtgulRt1on s<:onn~ at 7().. 70 with 55 second~ left Pncc m1s~cd n 15-footer for Georgia Tech with eight seconds lt'ft 1n l'(·~ulat1on and Steve Hale grahhcd the rebound for Nonh ( arohna After two umeout'i North Carolina got oil 1wo \hots 1n the cloci1na ~rnnd\. Kennv Smith m1s'i1ng an I footer from tht left \1dc and l~ho fa11tna on a l<l-footer from the ngh1 1dc a the buuer sounded. After Dauihtt'rl't· hrt a J 5.foot JUm~r from 1hc frtt· throw hnc. m11h m.tdt' n ln)'·UP to 11\.C North Carolina a 74A 70 lend ID the ti' c minute extra period Duane Ferrell nnd Dru(<' Dalrymple eal h ha1t rebound baukct' lot C 1Mrg1a I e(h hcforc the oHmmc wcnl tntD 1ls final m1nu1C' Udu~1crty had 22 po1Dt!i and Hale It< for the Tar Heels. 23-1 Dvernll and 7-1 1n the .\('( ln another game· Texas-El Paso 64, Oregon State O : In ( orvalhs. center Dave Fe1tl scored 24 point!. a~ I 7th·rankcd Texas El-Paso came from behind tn the -.ccond half to defeat Oregon State in a non-conference gaml'. .. The 6-1 I 'ien1or sank 12 of 15 -.hots. most uf them from the I0-10 I ~·foot range. as the Miners boosted their <;('ason record to 19·' l ' TEP ~nk 14 ut I., field goal attempts in lhe !.«Ond half and scored W of the gaml'0 \ final ~5 po1nl) Oregon State. 9-9, led m-26 a1 halftime. and "'a~ on lop 40-35 after Jo!>C Ort11 ~ored an 1nco1dc ba ket "'1th 1153 to pla}. UTEP. using ll'i s11e and q111~·knc~\ ad,antage. out~orcd thC' BcaveM 19·5 o'er !he.' ne" 8 I 3 of th~ contest to take control for good o~~on tatt'•s last lead was 42-40 with 11 32 10 go The -.con.· ~a' tu:d .11 4ol-44 with 10:09 rcma1n1ng Tht' Miners outscortd the fku, c~ :?c>-'i thc rc.,t ,ll the game and the final score was the game\ IJr[l('~t margm College basketball score s WUT SOC•' conev. .. c 11 hP1t11 ,. Chte>men ti. us 1111«na11-1 .. lt'llet-Et F'Ho t4 OftOOn s• •• llo•nt LOf'ne N11erene '1. l lOI• 64 ltOCICIH C'11Wedl0 \1 u.. S Coioreoo \\ MIOWIST OePtu• 73 f v•Mv111e 4 t w .. ,,,,..., .. Mo<eneed '' .. JOVTH l 'U tJ Aubu'" al ~·" Ct <O""• 11 c.-. •• Ttc" I 11 ton un 1 0110,. u ~· Mt•ne SJ 'orOh•"' •l Mel'llellef f Harvt ro 6' OertMOVlll .... HOI.,. Cro-u 1' IOnl 0 l a hfM 67 \I Peter I ~ Ne.., 111mo\I•••• U Vt•......,.,., » ~ tl'l~ll~~ ., Mt~ IA ,._.,.,, •' P• nct •Of' O VI -·· '1 lt&SOO'I C NHL ~•LLCOMl' .. l.CI EdmofttOll C.IOarv I( ... Val'ICOU• WlnnlP89 . ClllcallO SI Louis Mlnnewl• Toronto Oetrotl Sift~ OM.-w I. T ,.,_ •I' OA ,. 11 • '9 m 2U n n • S2 211 m 17 21 • 40 190 251 " 21 1 ,. 111 210 1! A!~ . s )9 1• li2 Nerm DMMelt is20 1 Pmm T1 20 7 SI 1.. 1'4 19 24 I 46 * 204 14 3' S 33 ltS 2SI II l4 S 21 In %16 WAI.SS COtl, .. ENC• PnlledelPl'lle Wetlllnoron NY l"--1 Pll"Ourof'i NY Rtnoer' New Jer .. v Montre•r = Htrtf04'd 81Jfft lo ... tricll DMtleft lS IS t 71 22) IS9 )I " 4 • " ~ 11' 2S 17 10 '° 711 117 23 24 6 S2 JOO I., 23 2S ' SO Ill t•I IS 34 2 32 117 2U Adllml OMilafl lO 17 S t5 230 17S 21 20 4 '° 213 180 ,. It 1 S9 205 114 26 24 I 53 211 lt3 24 23 S S3 IH IM f..,....V's kw't Welts Coroter enc• •. Cemooel1 Con· terenu 3 (011 T'""91t'I ~ Monlr .. I et QueoK New York 111enoer1o ti Chlceoo New York Renoen et Sr. Louil TIM.lndlSY's 0- ICIMI et Ct l9trv 8ufltl0 •I 8ouon Hertford er Oetroll Eomonton el New Jtr .. Y SI Louil el PnlleoetPlllt Toronto 11 Mlnllffote NHL ALL·STAR GAME W•les 4, C.rnlltMI J Scare"",..,... Cam1>0tll O I 0-3 wai.s o 1 1--4 ""'' "'"" None P-111e1-Suter, Cam lhOldlMl. 1·51, Ger1ner. Wei (trll>Ojno). 12·SS. SKlftd fl'eNd 1 CemOl'leU Tt ntl, 7·56, 2 Wetes. Prooo <8ouraue. Nulunol. 11 S6 Ptnallles_..one TNrcl "'"*' l Welel, P Stestny ITuroeon, Robinson). US, 4. CemOl'lell Gretlkv (Coffey, S.verOI, 17119, S. Weles. Propp (ltoblnsonl. 17 Je (PP), 6 Ce mOl'lell, Hewercllull (Severo, Coffevl. 19 17 (Pl>) Ptn11tle1-t.owe, CemP (hlon-i.llcklnol. 6 14, Turoeon, Wei (ho(M(· lnol. IS.22, Meuler, Cem !holcllnol, IUl, Gertner, Wer (hoottlnol. 11·4S OV"1tme 1 Wale\, Trolller 180\SYI 3-0S Ptnel-llH~- Snoti. on ooet-<eml>Ottr 6-11-10·?-29 Wtlft l ·IS·9·)-3S Goelln-<eml>Oell, Fullr (IS •llOh· IS .. .,,"'· Mooo ( 11 03 secono, 20-llol W•le•, Gouelln (IS· 14), Froese (11:03 second, 14· 12) NHL Al·Star G8me MV,.s 1962-Eddlt snec11.. Toronto 196)-Frenl< MallOvllch. Montrtel l~Jnn 8ellVNU. MorltrN t 1'6~dle Ho-. Detroit 1967-Henrl Rkhero. Montreet 19a-eruee Ge m1>11, TOfonto 194'-f'renk Mel'oOYlkll. MontrHI 197t>-8ob0v Hull, Chlceoo 1971-80tl0v Hull, ChlcellO 197~ocov Orr. Boston 19~reo Poll•. New York RellQen l97~•rrv Unoer, St. Louis 197S-Svl A1>1>s Jr., P11110uron 1976-Peler MellOvlkh, Monrr .. 1. 19n-Rk Merlin, 8uffel0 197'-811lv Sm1111, New York IMlnOtr\ 19'0-Reoote LtKll. Plltleele11>hl• 1911-Mll<t Llut, SI l.ouls 1992-Mll(e 8on v, New York '"'"°"' 1913-Wevne Grellkv, EOl"nOfllon 1....-0on Melonev, New Yorio: ltenoers 19'S-Merlo Lemieux, Pl11s1>uroh 19t6-(;rant Fuhr, Edmonton ,,,,.,.,.~ (at MenwMsl S.Cend •eund Slnlllet Mertv Devl1 (US ) oel Jimmy Arlts U S J 6·4, J-6, 7-S, Davia Pert lU S ) a.I Marko O\le!O !YUQOslavla), 6·2 6-l J1mmv Connors (U S I oel Rame'h ICrisnnen !lndlel 1·6 6· I 7·6 C .... women "IOl*'dlM 6, UC lrvtne l s...... S.ncnez CPI def l... Trenwlt11, 6· I, 6·4, Bertrano (Pl clef. sn1~11aw1, 6·2. 6·2. llde IP) def lteo, lo·O. 6·0; C11eve1 <Pl clef D Trenwllh, 7·6, 2·6, 6·0, lusty !Pl Otf Petton. 6· I 6-3 Rost !UCt) def Adamson, 6·2 6-2 '**-' S.nct>er·llOa <Pl Ott D Trenwltll· Sll1Qek1we. 6· I. 4·6 lo-2, L Trenwllll· Petton IUCll Otf Cllt vtz·Btrtrand OY Oelaull, Rost·Reo lUCIJ def Lui.Iv· Adamson, 6-3, l ·6 6·2 ~ ' I .. " c .... baMball UC lrvlne 6, cat Steltt LA l Cel Stitt LA 000 000 030-3 I 2 UC lrvlne 200 111 lOll-. 6 O Lerivlere, w 1nei. (S), Moore 11) RICO Ill end Neff Lyncn r.l. Kenl e nd Nlchol\Oll W-KMI 11 01 L -l..tr1Yllfe 0· I 2B-Penn CSL.ill ~ S<eres Cat Stele Fullerton II SI Merv s I Pe pe>erdlne I UCLA S use 3 uc 1t1versidt 7 Cn11>man 1 Aruse Pacllic ? Slenford 12 USF 6 0<1nge Cout OAJL Y PILOT /Wedn.dtty, ~ ~ 10M * DS ~-· . Let ........ TUU04\NI UM.TS (l .......... .._ ........ J l't*IT aACe. OM mllte ~ H~ OraWI (~) U O UO UO llWttlm Act (T.-0 Ill S.• UO ledealoill lK'*-'I •OO Time'~ Abo ,.fl. HowCIY Slw, Fire And ltaln, lllldl N Soicev, $toll.et, I Yt l ye Scottv, AndVI PolHtt Sctllefled' Merdl Ster, Awev From Homa. - 12 •XACTA CMI Mid t lt-.0. saCOMo llAC•. OM mile NCll LMll Cllrllllna (~I .UO lM ) 00 C1111taln C.errott (setve) UO 3.20 L..ltYllV 0 G (Pierce) 6.00 Time. l:S9 Alto r•"' Of~ 8r'991, ltlell ,. 8"t, Petw Ftttll. MallOu a..c11, HI Sound lthvttwn, Fu1t11vour ... 11Je11 No ICI' elenet . 12 IXACTA (6-4) Hid stoo , THtaO llACI. OM mlit 118Ca. "-OUletll (0...nlll) 100 UO 2.'° Flemecr"t (Va .. ndlf!Ol\am) 4.00 l.20 S."'-' s.lrll (Andtrwnl UO Tlmr. ~1 4JS. Also ran: Sll1-A Ktlleftt. CISI Out, AnOVs Jim, Primo, 09d S.m. Albewoo Scrllellect. L°'d l.tvltv, Pivot! Pete U IXACTA 14·ZI peld UUO. .. OUltTH llACC. OM ,,,lie pace Never The Sarne (Kblrl UO S.20 3 IO Clllooles Girt (CrQ9hen) 6.20 4 IO Ton UP (Vellendlnenaml S 00 Time: 1:5' 1/S. Al\O ran: HevUn Snow. Annie Rovet. Mlu v 8ullet, Countrv Clul>. Al In Fevour No acr•lc:nt'L l'll'TH llACI. One milt PK1 Two OcMns ('llfldlwTI) 380 340 UO Sallrlna Reward (Holl) I 60 4 60 Stlller l19111 IColen'lan) l 00 Time: I.SI 4/S. Also 11n: Slldl, Winsome Loi.et0me, Forester, Sbt Acrou. Scrl!Clled; Trllllle Nine. ll IXACTA 14·)1 M id SlCl.IO. SOC"TM llACI. One mile oece Sir Kennv (Dflanlls) 27 IO 1' 20 I 20 Alllt Sovertfen (Sliva) t 60 s.ao S.. Rover (Hymen) uo Ttme·~l. Also ren: Ftvlno It-. Advenc. Soerl.. HorllOll Ster, Weier WOfkl, ltKlno 81n- ner, Ye Welled No scretcl'lt,, U EXACTA 17·2) Hid s.440.AO SEVENTH llACI. One mlle oece Nuevo ZIP (Medland) 1' 00 1 .40 6 20 PerllOl.ls Peullne lt>Momlrl S.40 160 Pleere Sciueeu IGrunctvl 10 00 Time 2:00 3/ S. Al\O ren· Wl'"'9mere, Venl,nl~ 4ct Nevv C~. Traci Miu , L A Mlstreu No Kreldles U IXACTA (1·6) Hid 1161.40. llGHTH llACI. One milt trot, Como Ster (Pierce> 12.40 UO • 00 Su11erne1 (Levin) l'.20 6 ?O Martini Pride !Relchford) I 60 Time· 2':02 Also ra n: lllUde, Pl\lln1om Ootl. 8¥oou. Femes First, NOOle Arnene. No scratchH. u EXACTA (7-1) 1>81d ms.90 NINTH llACE. One mile e>ea. Mldnloh• Mine !Croonan> 1 40 4.00 1 oo FlastlY Frank (It~ S.00 2 80 Level Devil !Laekeyl 340 Time: 2:01 21 S. Also ren: Reoel Monrerev. Andvs lt•ll>n, Cel Anlltl, The Cornoen~ Gold, VOlc.ano Of Sl'llrwll, C>...n Son No .uetdlft. U IXACTA <•·91 Daiei f26..IO. U l"tC1C SlX (l-4·7·1·7-61 111tlcl Sl.62f 40 10 nine wlMlno tld<eti. (llvt '-'ftl Ct r· rvover POOi· S 14,USJt TENTH •ACI. One mile PKe Alllrnof't lCroonanl 4.IO 9 60 7.60 Wtllrlna (Oesomerl l.40 3 00 Alenlldor (J . Sllerrtn) 9 40 Time: 1:59 2/S. Abo ran· Snow Dence, Hll>OY Scott, """°""' aiue. Llflle a1e Hor11. arenc11ng 1r°" An tr on. No scratehn '2 EXACTA ('·SJ 111tl<I J ISS.40 A llendenc:e: 6, S90 .. Tuescl8Y's tnfuc1telis 8ASE8ALL Amerlcoefl U..U. MILWAUKEE 8REWEltS-Aoreeo lo terms wllll Dennv Derwin, 1>0cner. on a rwo·yter conrr1C1 TORONTO &LUE JA YS-Aorted lo terms with Jeue Be~. oulflelcler tlld Jim ACl<er. C>lltllef, ro _.veer contract ................. LOS ANGELES OOOGERS-Aoreeo lo terms wlltl D.,., Anderson lnflelder on • one-vear contrecr MONTREAL EXPOS-Slontcl lven 0.· Jesui., lnflel<ltr, to• mlnor·lteoue contrect PITTS8UltGH PIRATES-Sloned Jim Winn, 1>Hc11«. MerveH Wvnne, oulfle40er and Sid 8rt1m, flr't IJeHman BASt<ETBALL Ne,..., a.Sok.-. Auecletten CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-S1011ta Ron 8rewer o~rd to a contreCI for Ille remainder o! Ille '"'°" Announac! tl'le reslonetlon o! Morris McHone es'''""' coec11 PHOENIX SUNS-Actlverea Cllerles Jones, !orwerd Pteceo 0-ol GIOIJCll•ov forwera, on ,,,. tnkKea 11$1 Aorffd to terms wt111 Jonn Mecltod, l'lteO coach l'OOT9Al.L NetteNI ............... HOUSTON Oll.ERl-Nemed Dow SnivttY Miller McCtlmon eno Min Jett.SOI' l\Slt.llnl COtCl"tft SOCCIElt Malw IMMr S.Ccw ......,_ LOS ANGELES LAZERS-S!Qnecl Cheer AIOU<lueroue m1clflel0er 10 • 10-dev c0<>· rrecl TACOMA STARS-S1oneo Steve Zu~ut torwero. lo • multi-veer conrrecl EAGLES ••. homrDl 10 doina th1np their way, but Juara sautfcd that ou1 quickly, diamilliJ'I both from the team and suspead.IQI acveral others unlll be felt tlunp wt!n bcq done his way. "Tbere'1 no ICCt'CU to it.·· josisu Ju&re2. "We've aot a •ood youth Pf<>st'IJn in Costa Mca with a IOOdly amount of talent. I do a lot ol teachin-. oraanitlna and. &ank.ly, I kick their buns once in a while, IOO. "They do pus.hups ... they Nn •.• they do lhinp my way or they ao to the hlahway. For example, the two J kicked off the team wert both All· Oran~ County players. "h s a matter ofteachiOJ, orpntz· 1n,1 and bcina firm." The fact Juarez bu become an on· campus teacher has a lot to do Wttb has success in a 1pon dominated by walk-on coaches. "J sec them every day, 11 lunch· ttme, in class, I know lbei.r habits. When I was at Santa Ana Hiah. l learned a lesson that I didn't want to be a walk-on coach. That team could ~~ve been CJF 4-A champions, but .. Estancaa's suCCC1S bas come even with the loss of 1ts No. I scorer, Rogelio TorrC1 to a knee injury, a player Juarez considers lcquc MVP potential even as a junior. While some mi&ht find it cunous for a team decimated by araduation to return as a power the followina year, Juarez isn't surprised at -.11. Tbe reasons arc obvious -seven ofhts eightjunion are from hJS frosb- soph team of 1984 which went 19-3 with 14 shutouts. Among his juniors are goalkeeper Mark Tysscc, full~cks Gary Grimm and Rob Lauderdale. m1dfielders Alfredo Estrada. Erin Wright and Julian DosSantos and forward Enc Kirsch, tn addition to Virginia trans- fer Russell Gnffiths at center half. Senion include John Corrigan (fullback). goalkeeper Ernesto Salazar and AJ(ooso Espinou, with the balanti! made up of sophomores Eduardo Andrade (forward). DaVld Perez (midfield), Eric Enn~t (for- ward) and Carlos Garcta (midfield). Individually there arc a lot of stories at Estancia. but one of the real keys to the Eagles' success ts tn the net, where Tyssec resides. "He was there as a freshman when I arrived at the school." rccaJls Juarez.. "He was good then. I don't want to boast. but we work a lot of hours together. and he has great reflexes. All I've done 1s to help polish. I know this, i -worked bim fo -death as a · freshman and as a sophomore. and now, I don't have to work that much.·· Juarez's reputation 1s bccomma well-known at Estancia. where be bas become a on-campus coach as an English teacher. ··A lot of kids who played soccer for the old coach don't ~ant to play for me," he admits. "They didn't like me. But I'm not there to make friends. 'Tm there to succeed. l tell them ·1 don't care 1f you don't like me. You just do what I say and we wm.' If you follow the pnnciplcs you win That's the same thtng for hfe. pnnciplcs tn law, principles JO morality. If you folJow the pnnetplcs you comt' out ahead .. Edison girls in 6 -0 soccer win The Edison High girls soccer team bf'tt2ed to a 6-0 Sunset Ltague decision over host Ocean V1{'w Tues- day afternoon Jo} 81t'ft'ld had a hand tn aJI sill. scores. t.allytng three umcs and asstst· mg on lhc other th~ The Chargers mo,ed to IQ-0-2 ov<"rall and 6-0-I ID league play 10 expand their Sunset lead. The) ·11 be at Hunungton Beach Thursda' UCI's women's team falls. 6-3 MALIBl ' - L'C ln-ine·s women·s 1cnms team. sans !\lo I single5 star tephanie Rh orer because of flu and am1ds1 a wind) St"tt1ng. couldn ·1 soh't' 15th-rank~ Pepperdtnt' l ni' ersttv Tut"sda~ afternoon and droppe-d a f-. \ dC'l"l~ll1" Kath' Rl>\(;· wa!> lhC' onh l ( I ~1ngles ·pla,t>r to score as th·r .\n1- ratt'rs dropped 10 3-I ---- DINING ·OUT with Judy • Restaurant Review with Judy Chamberlain Thursdays 6:00-6: 15 First Thursday February 6th Brought to you by BAKER PARTY RENTALS KDCM1Dilt FM SIERED \ Dt Onlnge Coul OAJLY PILOT/ Wedneeday, Feb~ 5, 1838 CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE 540-1220 411-8IOO THE ART OF SELLING IS MADE EASY IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED. PAGES. You can now cell the Delly Piiot Clasalfled Dept. on Saturday morning from 8:00 to 11:30 e.m. to piece your Sunday end Monday eds. n ALll TATI MISC. l~NtALS Al•IOUllalllllTI ........... _..,~ ,.,, ~ ...... lllO _, ... _ .O.t FH I AU . c-, '"' Crypn ins --........ , ... C-/T-110'l ·--~ ~--~~ oOU ...CT .. Y _, ... _ 1)1) '°""' '--· l lM °"'""' .. 110.. ,...,,,_ m s -·o-.-oOlf HOUS~S/CONDOS LM Po. '-"t '"°° s..-'-,, .. -VO. ,_,_ >002 ~ ... oOtO S-.rdvy-' s..ndoy 0...00 Ce ~ ,,,, ·-1190 --171t --.. >OCM S.--.0... _,., _ .. 100) °"'°'_,,_.. 'UO v .............. 1721 ~'--)012 rv -,....,._, eoeo t •Alll ... TATIOll .,._,......, 1000 -~ ,.,.... c;r. .... .,,, A' Alt MINTS ·-,·->n• ,, .... )()I• --... '4 •Oll7 ._..,,,_,.. '* -w-111• °'"" , ... )Olt GA•AGl l AUI , ___ . 1011 '-~ '''° o..-.1 1t07 ~,..-1140 -· >Oii IOATS l-Of.,.. ., ....,._. 10'11 l l l ..-,. •eOO --1.0. --,,., 0.-wl t l07 1011 c .... ~-..o ~· l (W-161) ----lt07 -·-l7a.t IMMOYMlllT --"'-' tlOt a-<• , ___ , ... -1011 °""° ·-IO'lt ---0107 fOI • ff 'o"~ 1011 ntnALI ,.._ .. _ ,.,, COMMl•CIAL ,_, 06)0 c-.. _ •'n .. ~· 701• ·~Yo"-l I~ c--,.,. ,_ .. _ )IOI) c--. .,. '°'' ---10.00 HOUSH/CONDOS °'"""'-,.,. •.I. I AU/111111' -· SIOS --0110 _ ... 1010 --0.01 ,. ,.,. ,.,, C1on<wl100.C• ""°° •-voAot •ll• W-•11~~ 1011 1°"4 0.-wl 110) ,_v-,. ,.,. .. ,,.,_ "'° f~a'lfr ... t "°' ....--.--01.0 ....... ,0on.,~-..... ·--~ lo..t ....._ ....... >10o ,.__....._ loAO ..,_,._.,_ 11•1 -. >SIO ..._....i-,. 61•) \ ........... lh •O>O ----1101 .._....._. 1 ... 1 -/Olfb l-,, .. ,,,,,... __ UlO -..... MISC. ·-~ 10>'1 c---111• -,..... c_,,_., 1n• c-.i U >O l--.... Att(foft IOIO , ..... 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I .I . , .... , ..... 11U S..,,,,.l-1 ... ~0,:pa,.,............ 1909 ,_,..,. lo ,....,. 60?1 ·~ CtGtt•U 900 ~V' .. 1161 1.-lt90 _..,_ 1911 ............. ""' ... t(l7) ... CTH Y i.o--'°'° --llOI) --,, .. -,1.i-,. .. ......,._ eo:>o ... _ _..... 91()1) ··-11) s..c-117• -.,w-19•• __., ~ ....... ~ 9>00 ........ ,( __ "'° ·-'--111• __,.. 10·. ,. .. OH...,_.. &t-60'7 W.O.., ,.._.. $.oM.., -·-9).00 DEADLINES CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY DIRECTORIES CLASSIFIED INDEX PUBLICATION DEADLINE CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS s.r-Olreciorv o.·~ Monday Sat 11 30 AM Telephone SeMGe The Dally Piiot atrlves tor etflolency and accuracy Orw-o-CoM1 Howev.r, oocatlonally errors do occur Please C., Gu!Oe Monda, a flluf90•' Mond•y·Frld•y 642-5678 Tuesday Mon 5:30 PM 8 00 AM-5 30 PM llsten when yoor ad Is rM d bed( and checil your Aulo Ptlol FrlcW; Wednesday Tues 5.30 PM Saturday 8·00 AM-11 30 AM "9111 ~Mo T aOIOOO S.turo.y ad dally. Report err()(a lmmedletely to 1>42-5678 ()pall H-Salurd•y a Sur>Oey Business Count!W The Delly Piiot accepts no ll•blllty for anyerrOI' In 5...-y Thursday Wed 5.30 PM -H-Monctay·Ffldey an adV9rtltement for which It may be re.ponalble ,,,,,., -· no1 pale! wl1Nn 30 ~ ... tequlreel Friday Thurs 5:30 PM FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY 540-1220_ 8'00 AM-5.00 PM e•ce9t for the cost of the apace ac1ua1ty occopied ... DO eul>jael IO l>U1 no4 ~ 10 ~ Saturday Fri 5 30 PM 642-5878 Clllargea _...,.,,eel ., 1 ·~114. of .,,. ur'C)eld ~ by the «ror Credit can only be ellOwed for the first FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY 411 llOO-Sunday Sat 11.30 AM Insertion pat IN)fll!I, .. COllaCtlOn ~II -any ,_. aOta •"ONIO'f'• - IMPORTAllT llOTICE TO CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS Due to computer malfunctions on Tuesday. February 4-Any- one who placed, changed or canceled an ad please check your ad t oday or call classi fied to verify. 642 -5618 Real Estate For Sale Gtatral 10021Geatral 1002 Acre11e l l251C0tta Me11 2124 Nernrt hacla 2169 C1111 Mesa 2624 Ct1ta Mtsa 2624 Ttl 14000 IOW• CtrtH MtrH Pr.,trfy I lUXHY OHIO'S HWPllT CREST 1BR BALCONY carport Eas1s1oe deluite 2BR IBA Houes/Conclos * y *I ·-· ...... ----.. --' On Top of The Hiii !Brand new 3br 2'~ba t p, s,ac1111ll r2'tlla $485tmo 7141645-6440., 1 level nuge yard, cedar 1 2 slory 3 bOrm 2 balh. air! 5 r acres For 1nlorma1ton Inc yd Obi gar pet ok, pk ' or 2131439-6417 oeck frplc. walk-in Gene al 1002 condilloned condo nr call Maria 213-928-9843 color $1095 642-9666 ••• or,t, w/4, refrls. close1. dshwr. frig. w/d r SC Plaza Pool. spa,, att:PM agl NPT HGTS CHARMING l••ac•lateS1100 lBR 1BA qs GOSEEI 1ncluae a G ar a ge * AISOLUTEL T * ~~~~ooO ;a~~~;!1n1~~r,1 RIVERSIDE LAND M1n1 Jbr 2ba iacuw fence least. Ylll1 Rt1t1ls 1 1 7 11~ ~I ~~~~~7~r $850/mo Ask for Jean YOUR VERY BEST Sue 631•1266 __ ..,...,.,. .. -.:.. Warenouse site 6 75 yaro. children ok Sl200 171-4112 63 1-1266 I BLUFFS OPPORTUNITY acres i oneo Pull per· mo 646-7057 2Bd 1Ba c 1s Clrps gar I ~i4~-fi Gorgeous 3Bclrm 2 1Ba ~ ~ ;' · lllRIOll VIEW MILLS mus appro:. 2 wks Frwy Ocean mist enhances 5 rm No pets /c,lls pref $700 • • , spacious Ena Umt wll h . 1341 000 I IOC 1714)787-0362 PLUSH CONDOS w lalls decor baste kit free UtllS & Lse Avt 111 548·723.4 "'-·*'·~I.Ill!" t1ugl' prvt eniry court • ~ Well maintatn'ed home on C L-111reams Gar wiopnr 1ust 1795 539-&19 1 •-~·~-~-~-~-~~~ fard & complete wrap-_. _ large 101 on line street 3 ea etery Oii w ld hkup new decor Avl Agt tee Easts1ae 2Br 1Ba 1 child E-SIDE 2Br lBa. beam ~~t~~~ P~~~I' ~~1<e1r;:;. lew,ert leacll Ct141 BR 2BA vaulted ce11-Cruts 1225 ~~~ s~~ ~~a m!9~0~~tc, VERSAILLES 2BR 2ba ~b d~~3"6auE~~~~9::{5 ce11s. frplc gar 2 per OHe•eCl by a ~ery realistic I Large versa Ille plan 4 witn 1ngs covered patio 3 car 12 Cemetery Lots 1n Mason· sec 549. 244 7 suite $985 All emen11tes sons. no pe1s. $690-1700 & an~ious owner at truly a a dramatic hving room, garage Owner amoous 1c section Pecillc View Sandy 667-7252 2Br 1Ba Cle11n 2Br 1Ba 1st Isl sec 1225 S fireplace family room & 144 1010 Memorial Park Newport Rent1Sa1e Delu .. e 2br 2ba garage w/d hkups $700 650-1798 bargain price 01 229 500 den Gooo view One of • e each $6 50 ea c,, Es1Cle dpl• w12 car attacn Villa Balboa 2Br 2Ba lam· Villa Rentals 675-4912 inc ana H1g'1 t>alance tne 1argest units on Villa I 836_ 1262 gar s875,mo 660_9063 lly rm. s 1100 Villa Rentals I E-Slde 2Br 1Ba beam assumable 1oan Surely ! Balboa Assumable -675·4912 OR 754-1792 •Cozy 1 bdr utl pCl $500 ce1ls f/p gar 2 persons tne finest value now ol-1 fin anc ing O wner CorOlll •el Mar 1022 Four interment spaces OUALITYLIVING-College •Pets Oii. 2·2 only $625 no pets S690-$700 ·1st tered We are very prouo an•ious $ l82 ooo OIE ILOCI Harbor Lawn Costa P1k Untt 3Br 2Ba den Arartaeata * Lg 3 bdr • gar S800 last sec $225 650· 1798 o• this i.st1ng MARIA BERCOVITZ I Mesa One or all wllrplc LR. DR B~ park TELHUIT 175-1110 ll1$UR&I ' Co. LINDA TAGLIANETTI TO ocu• Re as 0 n a b I e I 7 1 4 J & snops Adlts prel d No lalbo• 640•5560 ANYTIME' A spacious remo.detecl 84 1-7135 pe'IS $1050 Dave lsliai 2606 3BR 3BA single story wnh R I Leighton Agt 546-5880 1l.a~-leld Tne 1as1est arsw in the two maste1 sunes on an tatl I Baytront upper IBA apt t •~._, w est • Da11v Piiot oversized lot in the 200 Take 8 look 2·story 2br lower ofc space Perfect F'llllY 'P'•TIE-S Lg 2Br 1Ba In quiet Trlp- leit Encl front yrd & encl gar Pets ok $675/mo Nr 19tn & Maple 5<&8-1 498 or 997-9309 Agt C11ss1fled Ad S.2-5678 block ol Poinsettta Ask· Houea/Coa•os ~nbcad dys~w$~50hk~~~111~ tor a writerl ,omeonewho S •kl •1 •n 1 "1 1 -----1ng $390 000 Call -aoesn t need toot traflk: par ing c ean arge •P s ~~-...:w.P ~~~~~~~~~~ccr~~ccrc::>~~c::>~ 14 .. _7211 539-6190 Ag1cost 51400,mo Barbara Cole for tam1hes w11n 1 or 2 ~tekt ,. Ceaeral 2102 01 Newport 675.55; 1 children Near park Heat SEND A M.111\ EtStDE CM 2BR 1BA hm Hant. leack 2140 paid No pets APUTIHTS l I Yr round lse Avail 318 I 2Barm 1 •Ba $700 Al 1 t ~ w yd No pe1s. gar $700 10 mo 010 Condo m1 Spacious upper wllge 2Bdrm 2Ba $720 Like brand newt I ut111tes 'l I HB 1 blk to bch 2BR iBA from bch winew wl d Ing sunaeck lreshly decor· 398 W Wiison 631-5583 paid Pool gar no pets • ~ apt wtsndeck & gar $675 drps 1Br loft $900 mo ated in neul clrs Encl 2Bdrm 1Ba $680-$690 "" RHUCH PRICE JACOIS RUln Lee or Mary Jo 213/work gar s1400 Agt 759_8389 •Mesa Verde d'lux 2Br 301 Avocado 642-9850 ~ DUPLEX-2Br 1ba each '"°' MlHCEllHT 518-5770 7141840-9608 2Ba new decor dlw, gar IOYE I• •OW I So·ot-PCH S264·900 7141675-6173 3BR 2BA hOuse nuge ya Balb oa Pnianl1 5750 N_o pets 640·2495 S595 2BR I BA t 521 Carna11on By owner 260 mo · pa 10 ~ 'II e 673-024 1 or 673-154 1 s btks 10 Pier S625 2br gardener new carpets 7 *PACIFICA TWIMIS pool 1a1;ndry room East· • ti IC M 1024 w ocean view 3 1 move paints s995 548-5766 2 18 Balboa Blvd 3Br 2Ba Nwpt Hgnts spacious 2BR side loc . close to 111 e n osta HI 539-6191 Agt lee RAREUH1 1R trplc. gar 1 blk to bch !',Ba garClen apt, pvt TSLP·.~d~~E Ba6,2-1803 6 1} e lH ATIRACTIYE 1 IR. l1lbo1 Just blkS to ocean + appls $1000/mo yrly 673-29<&3 ~~~f ~=~;~rt In~~~~~: Newport His left lg lncd ~ a 6 3ba house Close to p . I 21 07 & utllsprov1ded 539-6 191 2Bdrm 1Ba newly decor-exit cono No pets $725 ~ 9 I scnoots ana shoppmg eaaa111 I Agt cost ated Yearly Blk to Curt 11 63 1_1266 yaro 1684-A Tustin Ave t 'II Great value $159.500 2BA 1ba. dplx ydy 3 BR beach Carpets bllnda -S585· 759•3031 ~ ~ . I MARSHAL PLAN INC nse 2 ba yrly v Ip lrvi ae 2144 $750 No pets 675-6806 •FREE CABLE TV Lg 1Br PHI sm111 W/YlfW \) lniae · l 044 LIVlng alone? S400's & 11's Spec 4BR 2' ;ba lam & 4 17 E Bay Ave. ulll pd. 1 lngs, prvt patio/balcony, ~ ~iee II Bkrllnda 2131450•0•15 Properties 675•2232 WOODBRIDGE ftHse $4So BALBOA 1Br0uplell ~:;ge~l~p~~~~·5~e:,r;i 2Bdrm 2Ba vaulted cell- complete appla • utlls a1n1ng rms Frplc. patios adult no pets 547-1 155 $.475 l BR moblle hm 1ac. bltlns No pell ~ almost oceantronl pool lake &tenn1spriv11 ----OuletaClul1park No pets 855-0665or631-6107pm 539-6191 Agt cost $1400 per mo Home Lg 2Br 1Ba All new decor 673-7787or 759·5590 -• • ,,.~ "•O l327 1 7"0 6897 1 hse from ocean Vrly ---POOL Patio. frplc, X-lge r/ ""' · 0 c c • $900 • ullls 675-7907 $550 IBR air. fenced 1Br $580 2Br 1680. $500 ,. "" Coroaa ••I Mar 2122 _ pool carport So Cs1 sec Uni E-side 557-284 l 367 P01NSETfiA 3Bd 2Ba L11aH l11ck 2141 Unlurn 1BR, carport. no Plza area 966-1136 t> 2 F s -pets S5751mo. 111. IHI & Prvt 1Br. lrpic, pool. patio. \) pies. Jae. l Blk to ea Big clean. new dbl mobile 5200 dep 673_5198 $620 El slde lg 2br 1ba, gar No pets. 399 w Bay ~ S 1950tmo Call 786-6399 hm on Blutts Treas Isle. 1128 w Balboa Blva pool. 2 persons max no St $6 15 650-6357 ~ 3BRl2'l ba lg family hm lab wn11e water. sunael pets 646-51371540-0130 ~ PUI 3 Sep dining grdnr/wtr vu yr lse n·smkr $1495 C i t I k - - -DllET lOCATIOI • 1n Heritage Park 3 Bdrm paid $1600/mo 720-9205 499-2704 avl 411/86 ap I uao tlC l Br 1Ba, new crpt, gar, $73g/mo 28 R 1'"rBA To a I( e .J Ot t h b f ' J 2 I I 2 2611 frig, upstrs 1922 Wallace T wn.. G b It >V u 0 , \OUr avor1te teaC e r , t St rten O r{(.} '•bath amlyroom --OceanlrontSouthlaguna __ .. ,.._,. _____ , S510 SMC 550-1015 ° .. ouse rM n e • f) car garage Nlee patio e,E~~ED kce~ln~s. 3s~R 3br 2ba home w/large * 2BR 2ba Upstairs Dphc -------laundry rm All bltlns. \) I h v l D L" I I Quiet Inside location lg s. 01 tie deck. xtra rm, l/p, 2 Cpls/drps Full gar 1650. I AlllA llAll APTS 2078 Thurln ~ SOffitOn e SptCla { IS ,l t ntine<i ar .-<>r o n\')()( a m e Choice or lende rs 2ba So or Hwy Frplc, patios fully lurn ileps to 661-3653 att&pm 1Br & 2Br. frig. range. TSL MGMT 642-1803 :1 S 132 900 New appllanees 2 car beech yrly·S25001mo laundry. pool, carpon No Remodeled 2Br 28a, new ~\O ur hearrft-lt f11t'SS<lt!t' (.Jll ht cold tn J Dail v Pilo r INIHCHttRealton I ~;~~5~~~~~-~6~:ll Agt 385-1378or675-9696 CorH1delM1r 2622 pets$550 &1650/mo. crpts, drps Encl gar • 18124 Culver Dr. Irv OCEAN VU MOBILE HM 2Br 1aa unfurn. gar . patio 93 1 W 19th St 548-049~ T ranqulf Meu Verde Va lent1nt \ Jd HetaU\t' tl11 \ ,, <I '>r eut.1 1 O fkr .• 111 Jd\ ITIUli( 711·7500 ~~2~:~~~e~~l~rs~6~0, 2BR 2ba adlts no pets $820/mo Nr beach No CASAHOllO ;~e: ~le~~rb~; ... ~lvdA~ ~ NtWJOrl leac~ 1069 Or 111 bigger 5 'm $975 security Pvt oeaches pets No smkrs 673-6246 ALL UTILTIES PAID lmmed $725 No lest mo ~ he rrc-. ra It I I •N~POAT HEIGHTS• 539-6191 Agent fee S985 499-5297 !lv/wknd CdM Furn or unfurn cor'Y Compare before you rent NO SECURITY :; All ctd\ will .1rl)t'J.r rrt .. f·tb I u h BEST PRICE Cnarmlng JA SM INE CAI( 3BR Rarelllpadonsand2br 2 B R 2ba gar a ge Newlydecorated cuslom 1581Coriander631-4623 ~• f 3tld 1 •ba F IP & quality wlv1ew wood firs top tnCI den b1t1ns & Isa op· $850/mo 760-8181 design featuresm pool, SHARP 1 BR Garden Apt ' I 11onal $650 at 539-6191 bbq, covr'd garage. sur· Dead line Wed .. Fe h. 12t l1 bnckwork Bkr 648-2111 cond. iovely p a110 Agent lee Newer 2Br 2Ba. lrplc. rounded with plush land-Stove,refrtg,smlyard,no I 4BR 38A. tam rm wlfrptC, $2400/mo 760-1634 balcony, gar-$ 1050 So of s c 1 ~1 n 0 N 0 pe 15 pets $.480/mo. 548-137 7 fl r---------------------------------2400 sq lt 3blks tosand LG <&Br3Ba • sep lamrm lurrt luck 2169 hwy Avl 2/l l20-9422 Furnished !Bdrm and •AVAILABLE NOW• ~ COUPON S e n d To ·. Da ily Pilot Valent1·ne1S1 Comm pool & tennis Fee trp1c So o1 PCH lmmed 2BR:"den. 3eA condo Sec Olde CdMS7002B/R 1bac, a1va,113~5n1~1~s1'o~ed 20~~~-1911 UNIQUE Bacnelor S525 land Priced for quick occup S20001mo 509''r entry & gar Pool. tennis Mar 1 mo al at __ IBDRM w/carport 1620 • 330 West Bay. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 seie 20•1.betow ienders ACACIA Ask tor Jack & i a c No p e t a s exc:p1_s at 54_6-3736 OOTI'llnPE OR wtprvi sngi gar S650 ~ appraisal at $225 000 633-2141 Dys Only S .. • QUIET patio """""' sna • "'-·-~ 6~2 ~588 14.c5i mo 833·3349 On Narclssua • 2BR 2BA. Large 2br 1ba. gar . pvt • • """'' .. • v .. n... .. ..... NO PETS 549-244 7 Uy Y-IEW-lllfFS C11t1 MtH 2124 ttENTALS AVAIL NOW 2 car qar · pvt lndry with patio, WtD, hookup No II> Nome Phone S900 to $4000 per/mo wt d S 1050/mo, leHe pets $875/mo YILU IUIEU ~\.\ Trina Model 3Br 28 • L H l022-A VICTORIA (duplex) Ferguson/Hahn 642-1193 644-7211 egt _TSL MGMT 642-1603 2324 Eld A 1 I 5205K By Ownr 160: 1108 2BR. patio. new carpet. en. pt . Ad ress - --floor tne s100 mo S450 *lllPS Tl SAii* Ct1t1 Mesa 2124 OITI All Otn 2BA 2B!421~~1~~ay yard , 118 Cdlll llMf sec dap 962· 1°92 2 • 1 • wld. all utl pd, $825 1895/mo. upper unit. Chlldren welcome. Drps. Priced to sell Monaco •3Br 2·~Ba. lam rm. big TELEllHT 171 1110 dahwr, lndry i m, cirpon crpt, dshwr, encl gar, c s I MOdel 3Bt 2"1Ba. Shows yardl Crpts. drps $975 --meatiBllU Close 10 all Move In Im-lndry lac Utlll pd ity tote Zip llke a model Open 1·5 Call Pete, Bkr 751 -3191 4BR 2ba, appro11 2600 sq mediately $690/mo No pets ~e S8t1Sun S<t90 000 Agt It hm In HarbOr View lPAITI EITS 2035 Pomona Am ount Included $ Marie F 760-0347 3BR t ~BA triplex lrpl Hills Flreplace. Ocean Immaculate large Garden TSL MGMT 642-1803 I E•ecut1ve M me. prvt com-~i~e~~P~8~(,"~fi~48;~ view 3 car garage Large Apts Beautllully land-EASTSIDE 1BR, sto ve, , munlty 3Bdrm 3Ba • y1rd Lease required scaped grounds pool/ refrlg lrptc ulll paid • V;:ilMt1 ''' '1 P I '•• 1:-p· , r 1r,... r .1 /v r :e. t•r I • ",Q•: i.;••r I 1 P r rr: tl.i1<.! Den & formal aint~Pool Chlld 'pet on approval S !900 mo available spa. pat101deck No pet1 $550 646-0988 • now 640·?064 1Bdrm $595-$615 --. & tennis $440. Or equipt abode w/appls "' 2Bdrm 1, .ea s705 EASTSIDE 2BR, garage, e I Bell Ollt r 844 6590 gar upper $400'9 cell Baytront 3BR 2BA 2 car 2250 Vanguard 540-9626 good IOC $700 666·4000 Wt IFHll l OIOIOE Want a aelectlon of great ltvlng? We can ottet any· thing from a small apt to a 4 bdrm houM If look· Ing In CM, NB, or HB think Of UI flrll IOI' that choice of Ideal llvlng TSL MGMT 642-1803 ~ M ~'I H 539-6 191 Agt coll 9ar avall Feb IO·June _ dya. 64a.2426 evl wknd • 1 t ••ts EASTSIDERS I tO S 1200/mo 673-3777 I I For Salt 1100 Fnccl garden spot 2borm 1805B w Bay Ave 2Bdrm 1' ·B• S725 E-slde BACH for 1 person t 151 E 21st 548-2408 New crpt paint, etc All Wn1 CM Lrg 28"' 2BA. ~ I •SA"• MO•EY• cook s kit leisure patto BIO CYN CONDO 2BR n ' u; k1Cls line $600 s et I 2· •bl den 9001 tennlS 1 & 2BR Apt $535-$595 utlls pd Sml pv1 yrd $.475 newly d9C, gar avail No I GOIOllLE U •IH-1110* 18c S1500tmo 6<&0-4509. mo All bulft 1na,lndryrm Smallpe1 olt 760-8862 pete Avall2/1 $595/mo « I LAGUNA HILLS wan1 quallty & E-stde? HSTILIFF nr7b34!ac7h 4 ahop9s. 5 E/llde lrg 28R, bale, gar 760-3832 or 646-l 649 I Beaut 11 20•60' Ktiy..test Then grab this 3br 2ba u ~ "'w 1 th 1 120 E 20th St S6751mo ii'IUPtiat ft21 ~. I Hm With llght inter 2BR home w/gar $895 details Immaculate 3Br 2Ba home _r_s_L_ .. __ 11 __ 1_4_2_-_1_•_0_1 __ 6_4_6_-0_1oo_o_r_1_2_2_-6_4_2_8 .... Studio w/full Cite ... ba1' ~:1 I '2Ba 10• flvldln & kltch 539·6190 Best Riiy lee ~: ~:p-:x: Ir~~'· s ~;~ All utll pd" s'42s1ni~: . I ~r~a ~: ·~01~8:i~~· 1~:f, E'SIDE T IH 3BR 2•1ree 875 4912 v111e Rental• WOODLAND YILLAGI 661-3653 a'16'1m I W91GOme Cornet IOI S• FRPLC YARD PATIO W/D Exechom• prvtcommunl-F11111ia ~ p&rk $29 500 HKUP DBL GAR GDNR fy 3Br 3811 1 Den & for-APARTMlllTI I GREEN.LEAF PARK s I050/rno 631·8283 met dining pool ' tenn11 v.u~ 2134 \ I BHul highly upgraded EH191d• view of Beck S27001mo 644-6590 ". \ rn I 1• "'~-fl •ty. Jpl\ Vv•PI n"'tfltf 1C•• h1•0, Cai>e coct&>f\ao 2it 26 •. ~ I 20•40 Buddy hm Lg Bay 3BR 2• ~BA conoo ' • 1 "",.Ar l ~·1 .!.114'1 Pld/A who~ 11nl11111nulP\ 111 I~, fr pie, d/w, frig, w/d, ~ llv1d1n area with pulfrnan "' gar Pool & •P• lllllllll YlfW 11111 r>o-,;• n 11 '' M" m1IAbl-NU Pl IS 1'1 f A)I carPort S8'15 768-4689 • I 1e1tch ?BR 1ba l/ery ntoe S1200tmo ht & last Panor vv 3Br 28a FR t I enet patio all un1t1i td $400 d t P 534 3858 1v1 $1500 Ag! 720-7432 Ntll • SPH • L&Hllf HlllS IHt. ltac~ 2140 ~ I AGENT 540·5937 teave m"ug41 LARGE 38drm 28• wtgar HO•Lll 1'*'1111 28A 2.X. gtr. fndry Nice ~ I NttW i eR 28A •P~ ,..,,, E·SIDE 3Br 29• 0p1. lml Walk to bchl lldO VIiiage ~ ::::. ::::::;~: 4 pl9x Quiet sir.et. 1 S 130 pets ~n btMJ• yt rd gat H 95 • S&Oo S t 100 11'10 yrly ~-6922 mile to Mach No pet1 • I In Coal• Mau 645 a.&e oep No pets 831 1757 u s. •UT. MT wan• IHl. S650 Call Jeen &:l 1· 1H6 Or.M n c:loM claH 3br 2ba l.i I Have ~thing you ~•n1 E SIDE C M 3 l>dtrn 1 11ptc newer 1111 2 1J9r U I rAIUlllll ______________ I 10 Mii? ClaNlfled aoe do tnllh . lrplc 110 QarllQft no 111c"'pe1 S1000539-6111 t TSl l&IMl•IT 1'4·1111 11 welt 842 S678 pell 846-3171 Agt IH -------------·COUPON 1"2·tMI • • 0renge CON1 OAfLY PILOT/W~, Febfuary 5, 1Me laat. ..... Zl4t I t •acla 2Ht ltata1a Wutlll H M Liit I Ft... DIS Cltrit.w;Ottice 1411 . _____ __.1 .... 11-.t •/ltetauatallM ._.11 ... 1911... 1U1 *WALi "... Nf Ha.g nice Apt W/OOMfl Matwe "" writ.,, nn:n H aut houn miiiiiiillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil·-,_ _______ _ ' • 1. • g.,, IOw moYe In. vtew 2& 2Ba.. vwao-. MCure, n-amllr ... u un-2 / , v I c o 0 1 d • I lllAll SAl.LSPERSOH lo won H llLI M.l'iiHllll Ult ~ C,oeia Countty Ho only IMO :•tlw1hr, w/d, hllupa rurn quiet (11.191t t1•fep1 eflwetl/Gothard F lrl-Part-time ~tic>tl. TTPlllTlll/ f~,;.ay~ oomw:"t;:; FUii Of -PJ~I~ °"YI 6 needed fOt bet1• deeiOn •~P nee. Cllllf. Uo req'd TILllllT 1114111 eoo • 111 IAlt & dee>oeA1 ( 18R) LMM II 0.tred colored. betWMll 2 3 Y1-llCPlrlenc• preletted, PUTI .. AITIIT n•ve own cw pletc.d 8Y9e Vf/ly lie• lehed· 1Pof11 bou1lq~ !"•· 1~~,..:~~ $895 Nice 28R 21>&, opta No pets 6<48"'°390 CE.Jtoel toe.I ,..,. NB or 894-4399 2s0·25 11our1 I w .. 11 I di t I f •r• pr...., c... ThUl'I utlng Apply In Pereon. r:.*-e mutl. F~ & drape;s. DlahwHher ti lll IUOI _d_M_P<et 120•979 t Found Latge old-E-ngllsh w~~·~~~=es~~:: ~:'~ 1 t~~~~~Mu~~ 10-~ Fr 1<>-3 8H·t5N Orange · Jl.i11u1 111 I!. llano 75Mt7• "", ... :T'""o.y--PC»ffiOn-~-.-~-- C•ll 71"1H0·4814 11460/mo 3bf 2ba, all bit· New condo, mat/MlePQ04, ShMPOog COiia Mtu. 11,1me or make •PPll· tleve htve marll-up u1,~.... lelboa Blvd vUlllmMUfl :: ~~ ~ S725 Nie• 2BATba -cp-11 Int MUSt SEE lndry, uUI Inc Pvt 5 min 545.3904 cation 10· e.11per . PMte-up b41Qtc· In ........... _:,' w• .. _._ .. 1111/llllJD ~~~lty~~m ~d e.rn-up to 117 /tw, & dr8'>" Dlshwuher ~~~unrr:t '4'0 be.ti Futn 6<4&-4~ fOUNO Ro09ter, beautlf\11 ...... OUST ground~ Xlnt ben-N'.i'W..iii3 m .. _, pet'IOtl 'IT PIT ~"' ·-.------·· w/good My wege ."" Call714/IHIG-4814 · ~-1803 wlUftl ftr ltat mull~. So Laguna l&R.YPl.IT =~~~?.n.c.~cc!! pert.on Ooufmet , .. ,. M••• loc 11 t on ~8'Men'Ed'•fttn• HLIXI HI. 21& SPACIOUS 380RM 28A 2740 49$-2595 330W 8aySt genlel atmoaC)here ~ l&LD... Co 2eot Newport Btvd. 213-2&5-4151 ~ IOI' 17ttl I Tw.tln, CM Mlle to t>Mcil. enq_1 0.,. M ew Ne1Ct to IXh Gat· UO I r §1' l ,.. F 0 UN 5 S-m 1 b I k Coat• Meu, CA 92828 tact Altaaa, 8"42·432t ext 'Of·~~ Newpot1 8MCfl llC)Pt. age. lrplc, bll·ina. $100 aoe Yr~ 11300 Avetl c~.~1~ 111thSl CM Cookapoo, male 8ekh ATTN AccounllnoOec>t 291 firm IMM & TUllln. WAITllllU va111:rn••• •ITtuftLllllT Aller 5"30, 980--4614 ~~5~912 1~1754~~7n912111 garage •3 1573-7711T & Garfield HB ""-679' BOOKKEEPER. PJT Fun :m~l;,o~ E ..... &nlghla TheGrinder E.t1ebllaNd MCUrlty ftrm MS~ 1~ ~~ s;~, SEAWlll YILUIE -EASTSIOE ll0ta09 single LOST BIO ble<:k lhaogy Chlllenglng Job. hrl ltex NAiii OIAIT lnterMtecl c;all now ....... 1.urant 1.00 PCH N8 ntied9 ~di fOf Colt• axper es1.eo..o WIYllTf LMt where you have •Spectacular apts IPAOttll APT w1...C:--.nc1osecs .se5 male dog Vk: 43rd 11 NB Call Mery 840--4950 l&l.Y Pll.IT l0t J J 86<4·1552. IYllDY •Tl•I ~,;_;5•5-<)~~ 'c!.:.:Cf ~ ,.,.H.,..o_Ml..,._------ 1 mile to beech 842·2357 646-09811 NB Sunday Reward CLERICAL OFFICE 330 W Bay Str .. t betWMn 2..SPM WAITQI ~· ..... -. -831·1185 548·8373 Costa M•a. Ca 921127 ........ -·-VACANT no tM. 2 Bdrm, 1 EncloMcs slngle car gar· . _ _ Computer exp a mu1t JI TMinarketlng e. creative, 12 wo"*i By Dou~,.. Ba. 'k blk to bch. new aga 399 W Bay St CM LOST cit. S100 REWARD Rapid advanc S1250/mo 1•2·•121 W1f 11&11 noercover Plue COA· nMOeCI leech•/ demon· carpet & paint Yrly $9500 850·11357 Gray Manx/no tall •to start ~46-7415 ••--t aumertoevatuate~ atrate needl«:t ft Wiii Compri Hot• al Hutton S7751mo plus Meurlty -. -573-8035 Jaok, 548-52112 C ----SlO ~w• & Pfoduct oncie flWlfy 4 • Centre, a.,._ rnld--prlced Broker 835-3090 e'lld• CM/aale. clean IQI Joanne 2 13-830·5910 LERK • Part-time lor Sell America I • t lnvee1· WM!ca Mu1t llve wlttltn traJn Cell JOM 842·•975 IUxury hotel. 1• IOOlllnQ for --~ on prlv alley Long term Marilyn Kern wicdys V 1de 0 St 0 re Ca II ment Progrem Reio.cl lhe dell,__. 1161 ot our •••-aag1 • HOUSE KEE PrN G VERSAILLES on the BluN1 storaoe S95 673-3800 •76-0644 again & ....,aln Hi..ne.1 ·-' -11 -or tbr penthOUM. aec bldg ---LOSTmalal n Shel lie llmfllm -.. "' DOMINO'S PIZZA STORE Adult w/eaperlence for SUPERV'80R Thia FIT POOi & rec lee. qutet. II· Sttr•t• 27 4 2 1. 1 ·86. YICtnlty Warner OtllTllOTitl ,...__" m-commlNlon In lhe lndul-LOCA TEO AT busy lrvtne Drug St0t• l)OtihOl't will USll1 II\ Ille * 1 & 2Br. 1 & 2Ba suites * Spaclou• townnouaes •Fireplaces *Private balconies Garden patloa WIYHT1 •3 Lighted tennis courts * 2 Swimming pools *Streams & ponds •Sorry. no pets *Furnishings avall t rt d $725 5•• 5 -d e kh T Account!~ "--t A 1 _... ••u•~ try Freeway cloae 21172 8eectl Blvd • .,, ~" .. _IU.lk A...._ to COOfdlMtlon & comoi. ~acc Y ..... 953 llYSTOll•IE an roo urat rl ..,_. Sit· NM<led lor Automotive & 1714)547-172• .. untl""ton '"··-n _......, "' .. '"' ..,.... tlonofaJl""• ...... Of-• colo< name ·Laddie lint lor en Cont Loe In A 1 E Cl " .. ,. ....,.. '¥Of"k even1ng1 & .,.... ,....__.. ......,..., S.a Cltatatt 2&7' StorageSPl<l8IAvallable R-ard Call9611·5801 Nwpt Bch Full-time ea atate asallled To8ec:omeaMy9teryCua-ends PteeM call M.,,: Ing SupetVI ... 10·lS "oomy "'•nny vi---28r Pe Anza Ba""'lde v111~ -bkkpg, computer exp AdYefltllng Sates at 1 Cl.M/lHI t tome< end receive a ager 78&--01811 P41(>ple Av•llat>te Im ... ·-,~ Ptr•'"'a1l1 3002 o rapidly exp~ndtng tocal aaru J monthly re .. ·te. ......~~ medlat.... Cell l0t appt tBa upstrs. lndry, nar 300 E Coast Hwy N ... prel 1 -key, llOht typing, A essl 55-... ...._ --r $800 No nats 493-271"0 673-1331 Mon ·Frt 9 ........ S100 REWARD lor the lo llling congenial per· newspaper gor ve. -call tOll frM on Cleaning perton wanted. 9am-5pm, M~F """ ..... I S tell·dlsclpUned lndlvld· •a1u1 ••y llft Thurlday Feb 8th S7 • '" /home1 Suzt's (7 t4) 751·2400 S •• t. •-a -2610 Coaa1rci1l of per$01"1/veh1cte that hit sona tty alary com--va11 may earn axoelle!'t --. • -1(800)52t·3874 C1een1no Serv 9&._.346 EOE ,... ma on Jan 29, 5 45 pm mensurate w/exp Con-income (salary + com-DOMINO'S PIZZA INC Gas for Haatlno & Cooktng . Paid "°"'_,._...,. ___ ......... Newfy cptdtpafnted 3 9~ I .E. Salt/ltat appro• on Harbor north· tact Karl at 852·8202 m1s11on), Dlltneflts, and PURCHASING CLERK ----Ollml llU-OMI INT DESIGNERS ASSOC WHY NOT CALl. 2ba upstairs Condo bound at Fair 662.0744 IH OFFICE/P·T Ir 1-1 advancement opPoftunl· Full lime Mon thru Fri.~ IAllWIOl/Ollml AM'a Above minimum PIT FIT. WILL TRAIN 111-1111 S6SO mo lo mo No pets A1utatatl 2750 Sela Nb a Perm mature rehab le ly Sales and/or adverlls-~l~~~,j~~::Oor:1!:10 1~ peftonl fOf Balboa Fun Gelato Clullco7~ 1828 Alk for Beth 7S6-I 243 _ > 497-3097 546-5880 EASTBLUFF6 units 2500" la1tractita 3012 lady, n·smkr 754-0370 ing ;•perlenoe helplul key Heavy pnones Wilt Zone Cate. Oays/Eveava11 OMTll I......... .IAllTll SEAWlll YILUIE •be. l1atah owners unot 10xgross --end r9141me to traln Applle•tlon1 available al P/l & Fil .. _.., at T'"· PIT evening WOl'lt Im 1---..-..-------$725000 Bkr953-1220 •APPLEll-111 Private QPENSATIIDOAY p Blev1n.s 845-5000 Bayside Cele Mon·Frt ....,...., ,..., med hlt «731 II 15555 Hununoton Village 1es3on s t5hr Setup home, I UI\ tUlll MUT 800 e Bay Ave Balboa Tummy Stuffer 270 So late 8 • 1 ~~~ayt~o,:rt~a~t ~~~ Hottla/Mttth 2711 l11iat11/0ffict ltat bus1nesssys1em 55•·5540 Foryour lnterv1ewtng l&JLY PtLIT l&l.Ul l&Y ILll ~-. SSJO Bnstol C-Osta Meaa JlllTORS to McFadden west on UillA l1t•CI 2769 lapltf!ltal and Convenience PO Boa 1580 HOSTESS Full time PM _.era lllnl WORKING FOREMEN McFadden """ 2 Ottloes-CdM T09ather --C-Osta Mesa. CA 9262& shltt weadend1 AllMll llllTllCTlll tor 1 ton Cllevy van RESIDENTIAL CLEANING llTIRlll or 1ndependenily Clai14Care 3016 GREAT PAY Exponly 497-5484 LBch Merc11and1se picltup &$550-$6.50/HR Depend lr~ial 2644 Wkly rental• Low rates $3101$225 Some scl ry PLU• IEllEflTS ---iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9I HOS TESS/COCKTAILS AFTER dtSlttbuhOll LA & Or· Ing on up. Min 2 yrs up WoooeRiode CONDb S t3S & Up/Wkly Cotor •'4 av.ail· prlt'ng so of BABYSITIER NEEDED •0tj .o UYHTlllH Fun lime PM sh111. may anoe C-Ounu .. M-F AP-•• Supervlaor or own 20r 2ba. carpor t TV, maid service free PCH 673·4664.9-5pm Sat daysapprox 900arnl .,.,. •• ITUECITfYE tncludeweekends tyear prox 30-35 nrs per w1t bus Clean cut & bond· coltee. tleated pool & 10 5 30pm For t yr old CLElll ---. experience a mull SCHOOL Must nave clean C 0 L able fluent Engllah Aleo S925tmo 720·0876 s1eps 10 ocean 1<1rch's •PrtftHltHllhll* boy 1n your home Calll Needed tor Reta11 645·5000ext 521 Call Mgr 786.0166 PIT Eves NB642-6824 hi••• ltacla 2641 avail 985 N Coa11 Hwy. 2 room deluxe suite 846-6315 $5.50 Advertising Sates at a OBS I • le' apt, water ··tew Laguna Beach •94·5294 $275tmo w11 yr LeaM I rapidly expalldlng local V l&llUJI W&ITll J t•••• •••••••• •••••••• •••._ • Pvt ellt '& Rsvd pkg IAIYSITIH newspaper Aogres91ve Over 21 yrs Wiii tra.ln S750/mo 105 Cedar Way SUURl IOTEL Ample guest pkg Saturday Only 10.5 Local REOEPT1tllST sell-dlsclphned 1nd111ld· Ask lor Sandra 847-9330 £1DN 1: DELIVERY DRIVER : 494-8685 Wkly rentals now avall Ut11 & Lg 51in incl refs S51Hf'\ 751·8003 $6 00 uals may earn excellem ---M • • S129 50 wk & up 2274 1 ed p 2 93 7 income (salary · com-lasl91tr/lltt19 lel, Almost Ocnlrnt furn Nwp1 Blvd. CM 646-7445 mm oss 4 • • LOVEABLE Nanny wantedl • m1ss1on). benefits and Pl ume Mon thru Fri only MONEY •• Daily Pifot motor route : 2brl 1'"1bl grt loc PVI 3000 1368 545 & 520 Sq to babysit t t mon111 Oldl IEHFnl llCL advallCement opportunt· Call George t>ef 1 tam or ocn gar ulll pd S975 SEA I SUI LOICE Fl 1617 WESTCLIFF boy on llome In Hunt-I llE ty Salee and/or advertts-811 2pm M·F, 432-<Mi70 PRIZES : available in Huntington : So Lag 499-2704 avl now 3026 W Pacil'-Coast H'""' Nwp1 Sch 54 1 5032 Agl 1ngton Beach 1>e1weenl lf1'I H b 1 2 h "' .. , Bolsa & Edtnget Ho • I .IUJ ......... Pl tng se.cenpedrlenresuce-:,omust COAIT'L c•stLE •• ar or area. -ours •• Small cozy pr1va1e turn NewPofl Beach Refrig TV 525 sq It S4251mo ur • rt•ll tin• II ""' • • TRIPS 1 •BR, mobile Beacn $125 ·wk 501 . .no deposit Balboa Pentn Pvt enlry & 9am lo 2 3opm M·F S10j •Crt~Ht llltl Mellnda Thacilery Fast lood restaurant. nov. 1 • per afternoon. • ~ouage Treasure tsld Y t i I 1 bath Clean 760-9792 a day Call alter 3pm OUHE Aaa.y hiring lor Grand Opening. • C II 6 • $650. 499·2704 ICI •• ..,. I 893·2645 •Pal4Y1Htita --All Shtl1S MUii be 18 or hlhtrlalttt. • a 42-4333; Monday -• N•wptrt ltacla 2669 2122 :12trtlrt11r: 1 Lee. PIT IHYSITIH la• ltrtl !3'f~ :~~1_ older Housew111e1 & IAILY Pt IT : Friday 10-5 P .M. Ask for : ---"""!""""!" _______ KAUAI Condo vacation 4 Campus Dr Suite in lor inlant m my CdM apt TEIP0•••1ES 110 Costa Mesa. CA. 92627 seniors welcome Apply ltftf.,.r. • Art. • * 1 IEllltll SIOO• rental Ocean water1alls warm cheerful 2 story 720-1537 or 548· 1647 """ In person btwn 9•5. Mon 11 you are loo\lng for extra I• • Relrig dl• .. w••n~ & S1ove tennis notl · & more' hnanc1al ott1ce bu1td1ng _ (714)2I0-10l0 thru Sat Feb 3 thru Feb s......,dinn ....,..,_ or like • • incl No""PETS s~s..4855 840•9095• 552.1100 RELIABLE babys111er Et 1t 1 f SALES CLERK tor lingerie t3 11045 warner at 1;"~ pr~·uk'~ Mao1el • Orange Coast • needed tor 2 yeat Old • •" I ti snnn. ex,.,..,lence prel'd Euclid In Ftn Valley .. ., a.. e • ---BRIGHT NB ottice appr~ -.. ..-. ....ountatn .. non e ._.ry, • Dally Pl•ot 28DAM & 28A $700/mo LRG BIG BEAS CABIN Mon-Wed Pm s 2 30-7 Energetic young lady Cos11 Mesa 548-6444 COOK. Exp helpful. lle.11· Farm, or win Praes and• e I' e Relrlg dshwsnr stove Pool ll!lble cir TV. 2 643 SQ ft.snwr Nr p C H My nome prelerred tn needed Full-ttme 1n a 2 A c • 330 W 8 D I • oncl No Pe1s 545·4855 lrptcs stps 14 545-6916 I&_ Post olhce 646-2947 Fountain v a 11 e Y ~irl oHtce in Co•ta ...... Sales Mot --ver1tled ible schedule avail Apply wards. all us now! Wa1 • • ay r Ve • 962 5026 .. """""' Earn $2000-$8000 mo days at II F0tna10 Atrium nave MYeral opefunos 1n1 • C I a.a-.-.-. C .a • •SHARP 18r compl re-I t 1 s1. -CdM dlx Suites A c . ltP Ill Construction BUSI• FIT $400-1200 PIT Court Fashion Island c M . H B or F v 1 • OS ....... , ~ • "" "" 272..i 2855 c: C I H 675 6900 4 I c:.5 8110 ....,., ~.,..., ' ------. -~ -•• e ••• ee e e e •,•• •• •• e • e e e •• close 10 sand Most uttls -w "' s wy • woman to wa1ch 2 sm pm or appt .,.. - mOdet.,. "·vered prkng fl 1 1 to •lrt ample Pkg ullls & 1anotor WANTED ex pd loving I ness nelplul Call alter Call L~ a•• "'9,5 Ask lor Toni 642-4333 pd S6251mo 780-8862 2 BA NB nr bch. pfl<g, bck EIECITIVE IFFICH children tn my home 2·3 R I E tit Offi I -"!~·· -yd, quiet. n·sml<r, $400 "-an V1~ Evec office days weell wlllght ti 1 t 0• I'· ' 11 u u I 8 5 t -0 4 7 o space for •enl 2600 sq hsel<eep1no 548-0779 • 2Br tBa, patlo. poo1, gar, V\.., "" ~ 'Experienced L arne Water/gas pd $725/mo 67 57 , _ _ coasial 0 C oltice Reply 180 l·B 15111 SI 6S0-8213 5-96 Avau now tt Fully furnished wts&e Doat1tic1 3011 to Box 4355, Costa Mesa ---2BR nr SC Plza Quiet llv· sys & conference rm Al A • CA 92628 Confidential 2Br 2Ba. 2 CAR GARAGE. tng, carport $315/mo • $3SOOl mo 650·0920 p '" I 2 bale l/p steps ro beach • uttls Eves 549.0234 Newpo<t Beach lamtly w13IRECEPT·lr'18ffiot. S 1100 Bkr 642-3850 ' IEWPORT IUCM chtldr8'l Must ha11e 11alld,Chearlul/h1gh energy **LIDO ISLE• S42Simo tncl utll Avl Fun Service Bulldtng drivers lie start as soon En1oy working with • •mmed NB 2 blks 2 ocn Corner of Westclllt & Irvine as possible 760-3605 or people 0 C Airport area Luic newly dee 3BR 2BA pool Over 21 Whl lam 588 Sq Ft view suite 82 1-530 1 ask for Jan 6S0-0736 ap1 Lg south patio pref Al16 675-7797 l,.1·1101 S 14 75/mo yrly 675-84 I I .. COM -Fem rmmte resp n· 0 C Airport area Atrium •Cm' con* smkr $450tmo • uttls court Office 225 SQ II 2 1 all bullt1n1. S750 yrty Call 8am-8pm 673-4982 Janitorial uttltttes Lots TEUHIT 111 __ ._l_l_l_O FEM n-smkr shr spec Npt of parking 852·9366 •UH llU APT* Hgla 3 bdrrn Wt O, lrplc PllllE OFFICE SPACE llOHHHPH , 111cEm1111T Live 1n or llve out Good' lor prestig1ou1 Newport salary Nwpt Bch lamlly Cen1er ot11ca Typing w/3 children Musi have skills & pleasant attitude driver's lie 780-3605 or a rnust All employee 821 -5301 ask for Jan benelus provided Call Ron Jackson 644«1242 $2.40 per day Tnat s ALL you pay lor 3 Imes 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY Home & Office cieamng by JODI ~ call !or free esttma1e 842-8746 HOUSE BROOM WILL TRAVEL HouMC16an1ng exper 1n exec homes Senior dlac~ I lost weignt,. feel great! 100% Nat!Wal program Sat11lectton guaranteeo Leon 846-5915 Ctmsune lutia1 a C..liafs 2• 1tr Elf 111-1111 •Heating dOM rlgh~ ....... •stllY BrQ Block alld Concrete WoOI FREE ESTIMATE 846-2130 SPECIALIST Blodl Walla Cement-plant• .. rec>elr• etc (714)545--0729 24tlr STUCCO MASONRY-TILE No Job to smell All type1 Free est Uc 83 t-2345 968-~808 ---ltat ltrricH ·..-I-2Br I Ba 102 Anti bes Don 548•2404• 675"4 7SO E 17th St. CoSla Mesa 675· 1244 evs. 622·8795 Fem l prol 25 • non smkr, 1200 sq f1 s 1 10 per sq 11 NEWPORT MARINA APTS shr 2br dpl11. ocan vu Rel avall lmmed Call lor app1 Prol111itaal/ .Yai ai1tr1hn S l 00 CALL TOOAY'l HouMCleanlng 14 yrs exp.1~--...... ,.. ____ 111_ ...... REOEmOlllT reliable. reas. free est. own CARPET Lt N 0 LEU M --·-------· IWITO. I.A.. ASI FOii LOIS trans Pina 645-9866 Della TILES • Contracter Miis •A-1--* req. avl 1rnmed $375• 8 30 5 30 C LU•ury 2Br 2Ba Frplc lasl 646•3424 to see · ra1g micro Encl garage Prvt 631 -1266 S 1 •50/mo Sorry no Condo 28r 28a $.425 '• • • • ' Your and 1n1talls at discount CLEAN & EXPERT OPEUTtl servtoe Directory IN ... II OLUllH prtces Ltc•374980 Over 25 ....., .. xperjenoe Full-11me exper1enced Representahve Own trans Free estimates R C INTERIORS Lte T • 118,428 730-1353 lmmed•ale opening for lull typing 50wpm pteasan1 &•2-4321 tit, 301 Exll work Call 111 3pm 542·2353 7711-4669 t UC ..... MANAGER I IN HANGING/STRIPPING VISA-MC 573-1512 AHOYS WALLCOVERIHG 1n1tallet1on & Removal Int painting 548-4013 .... "ElllTl" DEPENDABLE QUALITY WOl'llmanstllp 842-6813 We gals 1hould hang together Hang/remove 83~730 an}'11me PS.Ster /Drywall Int/Ext petctl pluterlng c:ut1orn textunng. quality WOflt Prootema-No Prob- leml' •3211864 554. 783 1 oeech boat slip a11a1labte Fem shr Laguna Niguel I ~~~-II pets 760·0919 Btwn 8·5 ulllS 494.3 196 aft 5pm Jr!& n 12 SUIMHE Fem wanted to shr nouse ttme Distnct Manager phone manner Good 750·0324 I T QUICK & CAREFUL work.no condlllons In __________ ! Ctatr1cten actat H LO AA TES. T 138046 p1--1..1-- Mus1 en1oy wori..mg w•th San1a Ana Call Louanne FRANK bGSSELMAN •1•.•J110 2 ,==1.., O. JM. lllO 2Bdrm unlurnlShed w1o I nr OCC So CoaSI Plaza $900 Avallable 1s1. 1as1 $333 • viii 549·802 I Beaulllul 2 stry Olltce Condo 227• sq It part lurn West of OC Airport $30001mo Gros~ ise. can sublet Villa Rental Prop Mgmt 675-4912 OR •• II• 11111• ••• Your nome or my oNlce Sett StOf'.,.., e.x ....... 1 cn•ldren E~pet1ence al Candy Stripet's Candy Actastical CtiHa~I ....... , I I R ... , I • & - helpful l7t41432·~888 MODERN ACOUS JCS Comm/restd 631·2345 Sr Cit Alles 646-7828 ...,.. ....... ~oodj00sdoner1ghf• 18 18)288-6710 F 'rmmt to shr lrg 2br 2ba We offer an excellen1 Den· REOEPTIOllST NEW & OLD CEILINGS ~WILSON &SONS STAHi• •Uflf WEEKEND PLUMBING altl program. paid VI· Experience, accurate SPRAYED 527·2589 Am Add Remodel l<llC la1trHti11 ITIHm ...,. oe. No overttmet Call anytime Nwpt Penn 3-& 4 Br 2Ba. H B apt N-smkr $300 yrly rnlla s 1050-S 1350 841-593• Beach/Edinger ca11ons & hOhdays. Donus typing & use of calculator Exquisite AcouSl•cs Re-Bath Tiie •35 7487 Ins .WILL Tutor-Credentialed. Orange Co Or1g1n11 Water llaters Ill· Vtlla Rentals 675-7015 MtF prof 28 • Live on Deh program and dental 1n· reQuired 752-8080 sprayed or remove. Dry· 30 yrs exp 646-1740 exp'd teacher Grad•~ Student Mover• Insured stalled from SS2 645-8712 surance Salary plus wall Repairs 847-7901 ROLLS CONSTRUCTION K·8, all subjecta. & al· Lie T 124-436 841-8427 DRAINS CLEAR From $15 754·1792 3 Br 2 Ba. nu crpl. drapes, dshwsh. lrpl pvt pat, gar t blk to bch $13SOtmo lrlNwpl $475 'ruUls 1st, last 673 t552 or 49•·5559 $850 sec. mo'mo M 35.45 4BR. 2BA 11se. 955· 12 t98•1·29S7 C M Pool w•. n·sm•cr AIRY 3 BR 2ba sundeck, S325. uttf 550.93 11 garage. nr beech & ShOP· M/F, 1mmed 1 blk bGh on ping Yrly S t2001mo Pen1n S3SO 38R 28A 673-4496 or 873-7427 Nd untll May 1 673-4289 Balboa Penln 2Br 1•1ea. lndry prkng. patio S850tmo 673-4868 Commercial ''°'"'' 2771 d53 sq 11 STOAEFRONT Xlnl MESA VERDE 1oca11on 545·• 123 •Combtned Otttce1S11op 22• sq It w1s1nk C·2 Nice CM area 548· 7249 1,000 SO. FT. llflllL FREE ~TANOING mlleage relmDursement SECRfllRJ NEW w en SI E~p prof w/superlor sktlls RE BLOWN OR PAINTED New const tremodeltng gebra acctng com· ar OUM orage Faucets Disposal '"'Hie< Apphcan1 must apply tn lor a c M Shopping Ctr Also Intl Exl Pa1nttng B Lie. bond 1n1 552-0428 Puters Janel, 964-7 13S MORRIS MOVING 851 ·9604 M&M 722 90&6 person at Detty Ptlot 330 Developer Wordstar Lte•288597 63t-9295 C~-• --& STORAGE E ....,. "--· & o--· W t B St C t taltr.ctata ... -....... ,, •• , s .... 0 R T N 0 T I c E ............. v•ce ,.,.,.,..r es a)' OS • e'lp essentoel $ 1400· A Ii .. I .•• , --n 32 )'fS e•P Res.o Comm Mesa Ca Apply 9·11 $1800DOE 241.0400 ., l~CI • 81 8J 6 WtraClrt SPECIA LIST LIC t..•C .,409035 964•8919 ~ m ~ 2;: pm (C1rcula· SECRfllRY 1 .. """• .. r .. •P,•""!••pr_•""'!I'!'!"'!--RemOdet-Repalr-Aooflng-daraenlng Fuh Service Ip ~~R~~ 5.:.:: I MCI N A•ctn ....... #! ion P F 0 CUSTOM Furnl Watf Untts Masonary & Home Safes Mow-edge-clean upa·tree 89 .. 7 .. 87 • '"~ • Nt4 " l/Dt I 1 5105 or Law tt1ce Newport Formica, Furn Kitch Cabs 24 hr SeNloe 544-6605 work 966·2716/E Iv man .,. • Remodels water l'IMlers ICI D I Beach Good typing and Free Estimates 639·5952 ----..... • ..... , rep1oes dram tines IEITAL HlllTHT spelling required L90a1 RAYNER CONST CO --.lOP-TRIM-HAUc;-,,._ clear@d ci1sposa1s & or th 0 8110 •11 e nc e exp not nee Hours lie•· A1plaalt Remodel·Restd'l·Comm·1 REMOVE ANY TREE OR TllE UPPY •YllS leucets i.•c :294084 preferred Some lron1 Of· tble 64•-5040. 852-0444 ''PPa .. r.,kl_n_g"'A-ra_a_R.ep_a_lr-s"'&-Ins d lree ell 648-S049 SHRUB Reas prices Ex-INC 838·54 tO .II Ol.' •• R••T lice helpful 752·5040 SECRET•llJ Resurfacing 8 Roofing & RTC Commercial Orywttl pert work Jon" 557-5121 We make moving ee1y I II """• • I 83 99 Speciallztng tn Comm'I IS-Hl"'"WA LANOSC. •Pe Fast ettlc1ent Insured Pll Ell 2 Bdrm Townhome. 2 ba. 2 DENTAL ASSISTANT Growing eng1nertng llrm Watarproo Ing• t-4 t and Resld'I Free eSI Sod Clean·ups M~tnt CAL . T -1 2 0 0 4 3 Reple>e remooeo 011'"' Lrg Show Room & Offices Corner of WeslcllH & lrvtne Sign space avl on Weetclltt lrpl, 2 car gar. A/C, w/d NB1snr dlx 3Bd hm nr Dell. Par1-11me Friendly Costa see1<1ng e)l(p secrelary/ Asphall·repalr·prklng lots 548•8923 •383924 Sprin~'-·s etc 8so.• 147 1142-0708 water heate" <l•9POs•t• hookup. lull sec. $1495, wllem n-smkr 645-3700 la c o a 1 Pre' tr t 1 Mesa of1tce Front & 1 gen ott1ce to work. In fast apt comple11-11eavy roller '""" .. - - -4 faucets 141-1101 no pell For appt please 646·0793 2790 Bae!\ Exp d X r ay paced dept llex heavy Joe 645-4269 7am-9pm •ROOM ADDITIONS• C&B LAWN SERVICE -fattiH Occalital Longs Ptumb•"g toe call 644·0S09daysoniy Non-smoker M/F share _________ 1 llcense req d to101nour phones 1dn1 typ1S1 detail , , •REMODELING • Mow-eClge twtce mo $20· U M banners or a ll r •S12 .. , 89•-02r Clllthaven 2& '181~plc, Newport Creal condo .... NllT llPLU Dental leam 631 1420 onellted )(Int benetns & ........ S.mctl ST LIC 428477 969·219• S25 6.45-5737 5411-5722 OCCUtonS Great tor Val-Pttl A s11. I etc Ideal lor retired per· 5400 • t mo 645-5533 Ocean View 28R 2',ba ea Dental pleasant working con· Acu1Type Word Process-Dt1ttttic StmcH TREES efllones Oa) Call Snarl ••-""P.'"P'Ato-o'!!"'"---- sons No pets 54!f.5306 PROF clean, quiet non· unu Annual rent S 19 200 FROllT /IAC., OFC d•hons Send resume to Ing We do manuscr1pls 968.5•511 POOL RE AIR Asluno $210 000 Ask lor " Mr Fuen1es at Robert m111ong lilt etc 786-3330 HOUSE/PET SITIING •n Topped removed Clean-26 yrs e\C'er """'' Ooh LIDO DELUXE 2BR DR smoker share 4 t>dr 2'• George Davia Grubb s I Temp pos111on 2 months Bein Wolllam Frost Superior OHoce s:a..M~ NBICM area long snor1 uP new lawns 151 3476 liniat S.mct more motors ••1ter~ lrplc, brick Patio bath H B condo Block Eiits Aeally 493 88 12 11pprox Starling Marci\ I 1 Assoc 1401 Ouatl St ~ '"""" lerm xlnt-refs 645·3083 -etc L.IC o •etort10 c ci"t 11e $1250 1se 640-7006 from beach S360· viii 14 day week no weekends Newport Bch CA 92660 for all your typing needs Clean Ups•Tree Trtmm1ng Care tor eldefl\I "' 1tcense 10, 968.9225 l8f!last & sec 955-8874 l11iat11 a FinHcial F'or Gen Oen11s1 NB SECRETARY Recep · Marte •97·2871 Detn Yard Main! •Havllng I Ptlvllle l'lome '"!Ome cook NEAR HOAG HOSPITAL days 969·•20 I eves, 646-8491 call Mon Thur CiLa'attl So Coast boor & Sash ' MIKE 650-3263 I meals t<.athy 5•0 4 •v' I IMfiat 2 story 2br l ';ba din wknd Noreen llOnt!ll wanted. F~ T & p. T, • ll!•••~·P"P'Pl!-~-- room. lndry hkups S750 luiuu for Salt DEITll REOEP/OFF Wiii train Call blwn "'Rl!lltf"cl'l'A"e"'N"S_e_tc-CPIA""B"T""r-a-. ~~!1~; w~r:~3 ~~;;s Prtft11ie11l llf•Hr Paiatia1 8€;~ B~~P:N .. R~~c" :, 642·6629 alter Spm Prol /F shr lg 1¥X 2br 2ba 2900 MGR . Ins e•p 4'l days 11am·5pm 841· .. t33 surtactn"'compare) Hom• Wiii mow & ed~. fronl & FINE PAINTING 9~ Roch· I so•-722~753~ CM twnhse llp. w/d, ten-'" E 1 & F h ,..___ S2 • · NEAR LIDO MARINA 3 "'?-0,-9-11-8-0-r .. f"'r-ad_e_t .. 2 ... ooo-1 CoSta Mes!' 546-3000 SRORRfa•y remOdallng lie 642-1777 n ry renc vvvrS back lawn two limes ard Sinor 16 yu ot riappy DELUXE 3BR 2BATH nls. pool n·sml<r avl 11 -" " n By Norman The Doorman or $39 95 tour limes For custom8f5 LIC 280644 ROOFING •e<"C've• •• DECK s 1250 998•5868 S460 • '"ut 75 1•4878 It general store in North IEITALIHCf PT. Typing 60 wpm some Carptatry Oak & For 857-000R tree est call Sii 539--0108 'l'riank· Yout 953·4 ' •4 oa11s ..,01 tar '11e OI..• ProfMIF.atraloht.n·smk.r IClahowt3Br API cafe& Enthustasttc person Dkkpgrequired Fullllme --v.ood rreeest 7506'>qt Newport Peninsula 2Br shr elegant 29R 3 8A E I au n d r 'I ma I C 1 11 needed for dy,,amic N B Nr So Cst Plaza Call lor Expert Carpentry Servl<:e Electrical I h11f. llf4t .. H S.n. AA IN BO~ PAINTING t'•Ba Steps to beach CM twnhm PVI ba, gar (2081437-3977att6pm general denMt olf1ce •PPt 71• 957·1838 Repalr·RamOd l-Addtttons PllllSIEUOTllC !-22-3255 d213 Sf•-8451 Ouahl) sour poltC) lnCIELL'lltoflll garage, ~rty $ lOOOl mo pool Jae. $450 722-8674 la1i at11 Salaried I lime X Ray RECEPTIONIST· Clolhl"" Doora-etc 548-4980 650 6646 JEH Loe 8688 Res·dent111 Stet' I • VIiia Rentall 675-4912 I d a s• II back .. ,. Quality work. free etl LANOSCAPE·MASONRY -so· .. OJ:F. l'REE p •1N" ea11s Guaral'lee• '° ,_ Resp MtF wanted HICe "-pertaaa'ta'tl 2904 IC en s 9 no • Mfg needs ou1go1no per--"•25513 968·7401 All p11asea done Brick· ... Newport • Versallles !!-ground pret Call son for heevy phones & BUILD OR REPAIR o1oci..-stone-lreee1t Mike Res comm 'l.•stao• DC'n es11 25 yl'S 892 ~~~e bachelor . quiet ground ~~~,~~·~tMEil:~.2~98 Aetlre young with daUy 840-2970 mail M·F 11·5 Benelns Walls sta1rs doors. locks I RESIDICOMM UIND 2~ 1•99•4072 Atek 681.95114 Edwa•os p1,,..1 S59·•"•(1 lnCMfll 'I •NrtH lloor locatlon overlooktnn cesh S5000 1111r1s your p•aT TIIR PO•nltl• $4 75 Hr to star1 Karen ralUnga moldings & trim yrs Do my own work uc; fountain Charming untt Rmmetes needed 2 rms In own PUC approved pay • " • • 966· t51o u 76108 Don 964-5949 •278041 Al 648-8 126 1 Garden MalntenallOe A A A PAINTING 1n1 E ,1 S OP Anv le•k~ Gu1tAI" 600 E/blutt twnhee avt shr phones alt 6pm 645-SO 16 Avallable for RN's. CNA s, ----I Mow & edge raa90f'lablt!l LOWEST PQU•bte price llNIS Fi .. e~•~ 2 .. "'' wioek accen11 S imo ba S275 ea 759· t 180 j homemakers & 1tve-1n Ttclaalcal/Trdt1 CABINETS & CAAPEN· DON S ELECTRIC 11tn 548-6409 10 Step Service 88;J ln~ 892 "'28 leaae 644·721 1 egt IYtltaeat companions 11 interested 5505 TAY Small tobs repairs 498·3797 Service cells I I ---..-:===--.I Rmmt shr new 3br condo o,,.rtaaifw 2901 please call 556·2233 for 1 lree es11ma1es 645·2003 d~ outlets etc bonOed LANDSCAPE MASONRY OAN SAL VER PA.tNTN ' ltaMtliat Aj(itltH You pool, fez C M non smkr '1 appou\tmont lSHllLHI Doo d --a.11 pllaSM done Brtelt· L" .:•2'>~24 $400 ·~ uttl 722-7642 Ch•rter Yacht 100~1nn tori "M"RICAN HOMFC' "E rS·mOI tngt-bay win· NEW REPAIR Ouahl)' No Dlocll atone-free HI Mike Cet• An111ime 9f\4 ~C '" E ". ,.. .. I'\,, Apply 7 AM only dows complele patios IObstosmall 'll$01lablt! •99 407~RICk68 19511A G SGO p • Cl"-A •DOTONS l~T qF DES RV E Rmte shr 2BR HB twnhse SO"'• partner Prolttable E 0 E MacGreoor Yachts 1831 add!toons quallty work Free eSI It<: o 831·2345 L.A W A.IN Iv\• V \'DE, NG .,.00.1 %'"" own be 2 blkl bch Avi establtshed bvatness E'l p••CTICAL ll•Srr Placf'f't•il Cosio Mesa ~··us Paut 548-8860 ff • "'C TREE SERVICE in: E\I JC' •"' ""· ,., ""'\ ~1o.s T HE BE T! Feb 1 s3 so mo cellen1 ta~ adventagff n• n ii; ID J!ll r trim ,,.move Oualll't r@fs fl..i, "?'• ,,, ,. _ ,1 uc 969 0100 d•Y• Barbar• I Call Barry 675·848• 3 Hrs per day StO hr 8 PRHIRHI "TCHEN C'..ABtNET ••••-t•JIA~ \t!rv1ce Alie dlble i~T ElC:T 2l~ "EARS E.-.;r> -cr:t. t S"'' .~. · Fitness Centers Tennis Sw 1mm1ng • furn1shPd Unh11111<;h11d • Monltl 10 Month Mnd11ls 111lt'n 1la11v 9 6 Snnv nn 111•1\ Ntw(ln11 A•1itrh Nn 880 Irvin• AYlll'Uf' lclt 161111 MS-n04 Nf!V'Wpnrl Bl'.11 I Sn 1100 11\tlt S11r1tf 1i11 Oo1111r1 642 5"3 ~ ~ '· 10 111·' 1111111' 1111 h II. 1/ munlh 11• '"r' d8y wMk 875-2916 REFACING -• •-"" 0vs ev9$ 536 &696 1 t t mmedt811! opening 101 C 1110< tree esl 642.0881 HOMER S HOME REPAIR ,,.,,.,llQt' R ~m S.<'9 fi'lt llffllATE FlltHlj "88 llClata 1 I Cltrical/Oflict 5400 QUlllil•f!O pe<son Harns Carpenlr'f oa'"' Ille & lll'dsceP•"'O So"""'•r• E\I@• o• .Stv• ··o $1."W • --------- •Dally computer updates 1 Aaataactatat1 2920 lOCtllTI PlYHU 1600 1660 e'Cp.-r h~P· ~~~~~8't,~~.:!~~~~~c f~ing :r°! Clea~·::~~ v;~~~ll Mllll'f•ais 64 ... ou; ~~X:!~:ri:~1.'~~~:,r'~".,. • More IH dl latter ""' Must have con1trucuon tul E'<rellent comp ny 35 yr• t•P Jerry 642.056.Z. AMERICAN HA NOY MAN I PAI~ TFR NEEDS WC'IRI\ I .. '''"'"" r itll • ., • •r1p. •All cllen11 acreened I PSYOlllO/Plll OAlll AIP exper Excelltnl Or bentftls and workorig !Carpent!) lancing win. TIE lllll SOllf Int i::~I oefltngs ••fin at •20'1t off 10 ell who need rtader, 20 )"9 exp C•ll 1 angtt Co company Mary conditions Apply Cta1at/CtlCrtlt dows piumbong marll1e., Lawn-Tree-Shrub lnatllll I (281 va •1tD worll. ouar Wi .. tw ClHlilf (71 4)841 5611 650 2758 011ne 631 8964 Hickle Agencv 1101 ORAHE OIAST CONCA"E DRIVEWAYS tub ~c1 eic And vu fr" Trtm an0 Removal OilVI~ P1.11tnlono •lfi• 't\1 ~n HOL.IOA\-SPEl IAl R 0 0 MM A TE N 0" .I Lt1t • r.... 2t2S Dove Su11t 2 70 Newoor1 ... L, PILOT Patios block brici. 1nt11v Jekll 11 lord 836·8,44 L1wn Matn & Rotot1Htr1Q I OUAllh PAINTING COTTTt'! Wrnnm·~ ~I ~molter female 3 l>dr I Beach 476 8134 .,.. Tom Fr.gone ·~·129..i FENCES·GATES TrM trom St:mnkler l111t111 A~•11 ~""' wtt,tet """' r.,.. 111 1 ~'"\••• Cr.1.1,. ,11111r 5111 houu wg1rdane1 I $1000REWARD u1r•'IEIOFFICE 1~s~·~:as·c4:'' OrtvflWll)'1 Piii~ PllM 0um()runt C ... NB "r"'f-11m11 .... 488()115 C•1 JOh,,'2 "'r 1 .,,· .. ~u111 r.~~~·10• ~~~~d !'~d Pg.~,·~~ I For return Of en arm Small bul bu9y lrvme com or all 6A1 •321 etc NO j()b 100 'mall .... Jtm Whvtl a.-2-noe ..,, UWl lllMI s,. .. .,., Pttit11l•••I u,hlstt"' $34 7 ~o ultl F'lutl't t>r&eelet 1500 REWA~O Piny IHkS melure Reas MICkey ~36-0!~ •OEN HOME REPAIRS r'#tQfl tron1 r lf()fll bacl\ h i1tiq S,...l1Hm ____ ., ____ _ 536 08~3 or 6S0 ·3100 ie.oing to the relurn ot energ41t1c & r .. table Pflt ·. •BRICK & CONCRETE • P11ont Drywall C&1oentrr H O S2~ •an uP• 1nt@••c:w •~1•1n• ;iu••A Rr l'4 t) ~-FR•llH'i c n t> c 11 1 son 10 oro• w comp•nv J.r" "1 Gooo ratM 5 etc Gar, 64!1 S2 ~· PTL o-ima • :tt 2 • 4 • lf'f'd ,.,., • 1 .., ~"' ,.; , ,,.. •• '• ••l~ ROOMMATE wanted em 1 "r m8•5 2r4~. • rnan01y ottie• no •rnQ6(·. If '1t'S got . no c 4,. .. 7384 T,.._ I .. , ., ..... •· .,. , .. ., .i••J ployed 111 and 11111 S22SI '" '"" Ing ,61 ·8'fl8 ..... IOr (d '(f ~ I • V'" l&Ua1 ' ~ n~ .,.. .. mo A•f•rancea Call • handles ClaU• Cart t+ AAutiAO MOVINO "'!• .. •!'!"11_1_ry_~~-.-~ _,,, wt1tliendaonly893 0822 ··~~·,~~~~IPO. you'll grab on my G•r~& Y1rd Clnup1 •Btoc .. w•ll• brl(I. .. I' SHA 3 BOAM 1 Bllh FOUND •os Locel Const Co 848 2995 81> I IA Jun 84~ 8192 cancr•t• Comr P• .. Wett c M hOuH , non " I • a sale H B INPT CM LAGUNA 4rH I I~ v" ll•IM!I 646 4"~~ tmkr lg yard 831 0~3 ARE FREE tlor II 1lh l'1lul • faster in Hnollng cteenuo·p11nttng •llUGIWIRI * Snr 4Br N8 Condo POOi &• ~.I h· I Daily Pilot l'lr ltltll'\ m\)m ... I 11'\0vtllO 'll•v., ''4 '341 EST rr, 3, .. ~ R[f<;, tMnlt crta etc '350 •I C H 11 ' 11 "1 baby••I mv ~·>""a Ha\Jt.ng "4ov•no Clean ut1ltC1117'20N9Evft a : """'"\ '"'' • Classified 71 4 082·!1193 ups :011ya l ......,..l •a1 Shr N 8 ~llt>•v mine MJ-1111 ',\It. ,, • ads. ·ea11 HOUSCKEEPERIN~NH'I' Cell Bar" ;22 811 .. J raMn horH Pf<>P 381 •1~ 1 111\ 642_5678 •11a·• 1rnme<1 !\~n..n Haub~ M~v•no Cie.an hM w lrg POOi, $400 · $75 1 •II t, I • , \ 1 , • ..,._king k..,._tn Mon r,, up\ ; t'leyt L\>-'1 r 11!t ulll f IL &~2 9259 Iv m19 1148 Jn& nt '" \\f~ • f\arr~ •n 86 • J Clas itied i terrific if you like bargain -... De OranQ• Coa1t DAILY PILOT/ Wedneldey, Febtuary 5, 1988 ...... SIH S.JltJ11tat Waa... A Dt I 1300 IC """T CE ~C NOTIC£ -~-------H39 hraltaH ........ Uu.... .. .. c .. ,.... llU Aatn ••r••H tlOI .... • ... c Nil "" I .... PAIT TI•t '* Prof SPof1fl•t:;;m•n LAZY eov ~, S90 rv Seere TrMdmlll •xerc!Mf, FOR .... Tioga II motor· MBZ .,, &OOSEC us BukC h a dr Md. c;n. IC am u"~--.. DllQ ~;:~~~ ~~:A=I '°' .,.,,.,, bMch hot.i Co••t Guard tied Capt •l•nd 125 Both In ext "°·· Sdtwlnn 20 In girl• hom•. orig owner. Cat Bta,ck & grey lnrf. ~i· ~~r 0;.7: :~w~~ 1:-=1~m'T omo MY,.,;..., UN· TM loflOWllle per.one.,. No hP9f nee 848-7358 Exten tourne~nt e>eper, cond 982-4939 bike S30 842-7284. loaded. mini, low mllea ~~~~'·'3~~:&, alatm. •Int car brsown w 0 11h cream °' CAUflOftNIA llll YOU TAKI ACTION doing butlneu u J OttYld motel cJIStrH POlltlon Call MOVING SALE S ola , SLIDING gt111 door & 18,&001080 980 8173 Weatport 6'54·8212 roof 1200/ 80 011 f'Ofl THI COUNTY TO "'OTICT YOUft "'°'• EnterprlM, 712t Broedmoot Ult .••. QllPU early tlm/ ev 6'6·4741 matching ohatra, CONM tCfMn 8 fMI long. a.eel Spoiler ah•ll S300 241-15497 Iv m•ss Alter Of' OlllANGI lftTY, IT MAY 81 I OLD AT TraJI, Orange. CA 928e9 6 Reeuna Of'lented. like· Capt Crelg tebte. lampt, Simmon• cond s 100 Linda Oldet' ahell $50 M•rcedes Benz-For sale, 5, 960·3168 In re the m11tlt' ot the ~,:·~~ :~A:Al~ 8,~,;:,w~=~·O;:,:. Gtl#gt couple IO aaalst Merc~11•l1t hid••·'*'· china. boolc-842-9002 Carpet kit $50 tor LBSM port or all . 1985 BUICK 79 ~-al Limited 1FdR'!PNllC0Ensl>!'1~1oonLMO,' .. od~tE Of TH· NAT'I-Of' fHa CA92809 man t 72 CaM & mor•. 788-3818 -S-- -truci{ 840-7404 Mercedes Benz $1000 or ~ ,. "n ,. v,. ,. ,..,.,.. f con ............ ag., O unit re I·---------__ TEEi. ahelvtng. ,.uHd, make Olfet' call Giibert 6 cyl, ex~ltent eond. air, Ing Parent PftOCllDINO AOAINIT Thia bU1tneli ' ..... u.. motel. Office & A r 1011 Moving Sony VCR Beta m•ny ''"' Priced f()f Trailer !Of' Mle Heavy duty 952·2528 POWer ttMrlng windows. NO. AD • .,. YOU YOU IHOUlO COM-clvcted by "'lndlYldual "*nt exp r~d I yr AU JJ IHCtl $ 125 Obi '*1 $80 Lg c ... rance. wlUlng to trade dual axel with 4· • 8' x 5' U 1118 Must u e CITATION TO TACt A LAWYllll. J O~ W~ eG•P· Pf•l'd •11 Ctnd~ I llY APPLl.AIOES drHMf S75 M90navox for? 96'~758 HI •ood•n box Low ~ 897·04"3 A.~Aft T•u"°irtncl~t°'l"'l., wi~hh:~•t:6.::*01"~ arrlaon at 937.5300 LES 957•8133 S 150 40 gel Aquerlum • ProFlle $850 00 Perteet C . THE PEOPLE OF THE " ,. ,. anJe 8 S165 10 •Pd blk• S56 WANTED WINE RACK for for ATc·s or Lawn Bua•· BUI K REGAL 82 Dark STATE OF CALIFORNIA to T.t . NO . ...,. Ange County on J ry . Miii &lll/HHPR *SILEI SALEI* Etec: wOlt $t5 650-3623 restaurant PleeH cell ness. 4 blu• meichln~ tnter WILLIAM L BALES N011CE rs HEREBY 1988 Ll~ln For Hom. lor eldtf _ . 551·5485 ___ _ 13000/obo 1 9. 1304. You are hereby cited end OIVEN. 11111 on Wednetdey. 0 ,.,C ~ ly.FrMroom andboard Aetrlgerotors $129&Up SOFASf.CTIONALl750 VW 1979 WHtph1l11 8468731 requlredtoappeerlntheSu· February 12.1996,111100 Put>ll.tied renge ou &43·848 t Washers $99 & Up OaklglHt/braas Col Ibis WANT Kelvin B-day doll camper Must sett. best P9fl0f Court or the s11te ot o'clock 11 m ot Hid dey. In Oally Piiot Jenu~ 22· 29· Dryers oastelee $99 4 Up $450, din eet S375, ber No 4 trede Hardy Boya/ offer Call evenings •OAD '10 El Dtralll1* NABERS Celllorn11 '°'the County or the room"' aside for con· Fet>ru•ry 5 l2. 19 Part-time evenings Stoves $99 & Up stools $75 Sola/1011e11 Nancy Drew books Betty 982·9717 Blorrlli, Red/White leath . ORANGE. In Department 18 ducting Tru11ee'1 S1IH, w-217 WAllA IAIE ·complete Ltne ol ~ome $500 . .otabd $350 OAK. Crocker My ROHS S Sil· ----I yr warr . priced to sell' CADILLAC on M11ch 3. 1986. 11 9·30 within the otftc•• ol REAL1--------- IOllE •011EY? Furnishings , wall unit $350. bdrm $400. verw1re 842-6940 M1torcyrl11/ 1639511) A M . then and there to •how ESTATE SECURITIES SER· l'tlll.IC NOTICE " I ALL APPLIANCES din set S350 543-4705 WEDDING Gown alze 12, ScHltrl 1011 11,11& LARGEST SELECTION CIUM, II any you n1ve. why VICE. loceted et 1800 North1--;...;.;;;.;;..;.,.._ ___ _ A~:~~~~ht~~.~e~~1i:~~ fllllJ 8111r11tttlll Trade 1oveseet (hid••· 1 1ac:e & 11~53ra2•5s. 6~t2h6a117 &3 1981 HONDA CM-400C .111 IUMOH ollate model, low mileage l;~ ~1t~~~~t 1~~~h~ F.~:: ~r~ag,ws':~,!ul': •• 1~~~':, Fl~l:~:.~~::'.J' lludents & high school bClllHt CHlllltlt1 bed) for good recliner ong ve • • >e In I con d • S 8 5 0 IMPlltTI Cadillacs In Orange lion or ELISE ANN GOMEZ Ore~ Slit• ot Colllornle. Thi followlng per.one are aenlorai Telamarket1ng UNIQUE FURNITURE chr Gold floral design ••trll 854-2690 days or eve 1001 Quall St • NB I co6u4ntyO' s_ .. 9 uls01od01ay1 (BtlM). your minor child, L & B FINANCIAL CORPOR· dOing t>utlneN u · PllClflc firm is looking lor 1947 s Main St $125 obo or trad• r. I &Ol• .82 HONDA PASSPORT 833•9300 tll<>litd not t>e granted ~TION. • C111t0fnt1 corpor· EnterprlNI. 2781 Btuet>lrd ene<~etlc individuals 10 Santa Ana 536-2549 or 551-3716 ..,. l•llt v Thi ground• on which •lion at duly •ppolnte<I Clrc1e. Cott• Mell, CA & -78 actual mites S400 Meredu 84' station 2600 Harbor Blvd Petltlonef ct1tm1 thl rtght to Trustee under ind purtu1nt 92628 eon uct • marketing Btwn Edinger warner on Wetert>ed double Flot&-0 M I c am 1 r • w 11 h 545-2682 280TE COSTA MESA adopt 1111 minor child to the po-ot tale con· w M J Knowlton. 278 t IYrvey tor a 1oca1 new M11" St See the Bear• tton matt1p1dded Sides 35mmf35· 701-205 lens & wagon gas 5 ~1 .. out vour con•-1 It •• terrec:t In that ~111n 0..0 of Bt·-olrd Clrc ..... C~ta ...... S ••• •220 mo e Package deal $500 83 Honda Passport speed ice blue 29,000 WE •• , ALL MllES ... " I ...... ~ ... v• ... peper NO ELLING 111v ·111 $50. Catt 968· 1406 r lollow1 You h111e tal'• .. to Trutt uecuted oy ART c• 92626 0 I Or Ott., 962 590 1 ••otoreycle. '83 Suru~ • m ' I e s I> e c k a r ...., o JO •N ROB "' n Y requirement •S " Open 10-6 Sun 12-5 -• ..., " USED CARS & TRU~S provide tupport tor lhe ROBLES AN "' • Thi• ou1lne11 It con· I I .. M1'1"tll1ato11 ~ 15 Motorcycle Make ol1er stereo-extras-mint O o WIFE P easaot te ep .. one 1101ce -• v Co•pattrl 6011 ( OT857 960 828 COME tN OR CALL R minor child or ettempted LES, HUSBAN AN . ducted by an lndMdual •Houri Mon-Fri 5 30-9 00 Coto spot 2dr relr1g. I 5 MJcrowa11e Sis . 2 sml -Weekends evenings IM l . 9 PP FRH APPRAISAL eny communleetlon with her recorded Augutt 1. 1984, In w M J Knowtton . ss8'a' 9•m· 1 pmk $4 htr t ~~~;g70o~9~~g?96$250 TV /radio Answering ma· AdPl~kLEd2r+j ec,oMZP8UOTEcRa. d2 9~;3-462_3_ 181 '13 IT OaLILLO •,,',n1 o~.,blnrtht;, wttht out legal IUI· c'hoerdoettrlcoel o.f.·~· g~~~:y'I. R:; wltthhll~e·c'aout•'.!',eny Ctlewrk .. ot"o*'r-per wee to s ar chine $35. 548· 7301 " 11 • r HONDA 1979 CB400T. Gd cond. $2000 675-5501 c ... 0 .. ere or " •· Share 1n partnership Port 110 volt apt sz May· monitor. pnnter, accl very go pd condition CHEVROLET You have a right to 1ppe1r Recorder's ln1trumen1 No ange County on Oecerllbef profits after 1st wk Im· tag dryr $110 Philco 5 2 Bkahtves S20,6'watnul keyboard Io ts of $750 54 7 ·8353 MG Midget convertlble 182 11 BEACH BLVD In person and/or by counHI 84·3 t8 l03. by reason ol 1 31 1985 mediate openings tor the frzr •~II $150 645-9441 console stereo $50. end sotwere gemea. word 1979 4 cyl, AM/FM cass HUNTINGTON BEACH II you wish to be repreeented breach or derault In payment nttal rlgh1 people Casual at· lbl $35 slide projtscrn processor like new $950 A1lt Lt11i a1 9010 new water pump & etee IU·fOll; &Cl-3331 by an attorney end thecovr1 or performance of the obU· Published Orange Coa1t tire pleasant wor111ng STOVE white 2 dr· 1 $35 surf brd trlr/btke obo 962-9362 -ignition xlnt tires 6 Int, determlnet you cannot it-gatlona tecured thereby in-Dally Piiot January 22. 29, conditions mananement ~•orage 1 oven 4 burners $15 3 PC set lugga,,.. • LDDllll TD LEASE no d ants $ 180 0 CHEVY 73 Camaro:-&Uto lord an lllorl\ey. one will be cludlno thll breach or de· February 5 12. 1986 oppor1um11es Fo~ "'•' .,., Qr n n mot gas S 125 673-3700 ,,.. fiU""iOJe1 6022 847 5050 pi s p/b x1n1 meeh cond appointed for you without ~~d~t~loot!.~~h,;,~s W-290 view calf Oev•U Gr.irt at OC>C ~47 8507 2 E11tr1 long twin t>ed sets AE'GfSTERED Australia l OIU'Jlllf PRDIUCT? gd 11,es $995 54S-3297. ch~r::V laJI to appear at the as Recorder• lnttrument l---------- 642-4333 bwt" 9arr-Jpm WASHER & DRYER S 145 with frames Weekends SHEPHARD 2 yr neut IF Oall ltw fir WE BUY CLEAN, 11meand place stated abo11e, No 85-399844, WILL SELL POOUC NOTICE M·F or 642-56~8 !Iller eac11 Gas stove $125 evenings 963·4623 all vac 754-1397 IEIT PRICES CHICK LOW MllEAGE1 IM coort mey terminate AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO -------------6pm M F S ""' 6 58 1 1 I THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR FICTITIOUI aUllNEll -D•t1hwsh1 1vv 64 -48 TO GOOD HOME Adult HUNTINGTON BEACH DOMESTIC IMPOR• your r ghta to the corttro N Mf ITAT!MfNT Call today start romor•ow WASHER & DRYER -ec 2 stes ol crutches, one fem yellow Lab. spay-". CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH IVERIDON CAAS, TRUCKS & VANS and custody of the minor CASH, t1wlul money or the A · • ex aluminum the other ""' 842 0631 5 0 5 ,6 '7 m child and go lorw11dwllh the United StalH. Of I CHiiier's Tiie toUowlng persont are c.ond $200 tor set wood $ 10 eech 15 1011. all shots, would love older • 4 • 4 JlORStHE-adoption of the minor child check drawn on 1 state or doing butiness as: S1n11 PASTE-UP 720 9749 alt 6pm balls In good conditions 1 family w'blg yard1 (714) 4 W.HI DriH/ JH &I AU Or Oare· DEC 31 1985 na\lonal bank, 111111e or fed· Rosa Partners. 1985 Pon 314 Days a week 1nc1 Sat w•SHER & Elec Dryer each or $10 for all 891·6336. ext 158 9 30 t HEVROLr 1 , OARY L. GRANVILLE, eral credit union. or a state Nelson Place. Newport "" CLERK BY J c "'"ION or lederat Hvlnga and loan Beach, CA 92660 Art/Oraft1"0 background stackable apt size Like 6 drawer student desk, 9 Jtwtl /Fl 1/ A t lilghut Quality ' .. " ' association domlclled In this Eric F Curtis, 1985 Pon helpful App•y at the Pen· new 968 2587 drawer low boy dresser ry r r 6025 IEW 'II JEEP .:;.1 .. & S.rvto C:••t.t Mesa ~0-0330 OEfu~r:h;;e~~nge Coast state. ell payable at the time Nelson Place. Newport nysaver 1660 Placentia lung & double mattresses n I< I CNHDIEE CHICK DODGE Daytona -198• Delly Piiot January 15 22 OI sale, all right. !Ille and Beach. CA noeo Ave Costa Mesa Furniture 6014 & box springs s50 takes MIN coat tu I IGength 11 comes with buck el seats T b AM F :. 29 February 5 1986 in II rest held by 11 11 v1111an Ethel Cur11• 2392 ,ET •fTEIDlllT I IUY FUR.,ITURE a11 -963·6682 natural brown ood and rad I a I t Ires IVERSON ur o a11 I M w 274 Trustee In that real property v11 Marlpote West Laguna • n cond11ton $1500 Call (Ser" s.371(Stk,,24621 stereo cruise control s11ua1e 1n said County and Hiiis CA 92653 Healthy o wner tl us i LES 957-8133 6 wk old lop-ear bunnies 962-3106 •ltll U S F Co .. , Hwy automatic Excellent con-State detcflbed at follows This business II con· Laguna Beach Ke•" e $10 Drop leaf maple -• Nt,.,porc Beech d1t1on $6800/0BO Lot" 01 Tract 706t H ducted. by a general Plrl· Start SS Hr 494-0 t42 ALL F•encr. Provincial Din lable & 3 chaors $50 00 Office ruait1H ORANGE COAST 6 7 3 -0900 673· 1646 lea11e message PUBLIC NOTICE per mep recoroed '" Boo~ ners111p set or 9 S2800 sac $1400 892•1552 A r. · t 6A .. 7 Jeep/Renault 268 Peges 38 41 Mite 1 Eric F Curtis PETITION CIRCULATORS Col 101 ~Pt S550 elegant "'111.l•ID '" 2524 Harbor Costa Mesa Wf W&•T YOllt K 23150 Maps 1n the Office of the This statement was flied VOTER REGISTRA T •ON sofa ll}vhl $650 occas 80.000 BUT gas furnace 4 Desks. r Chairs type-1u9 1023 PORSCHE 1963 Su~r 90 CLE·• u•r1 CARI FICTITIOUI BUllNEIS County Recorder ol Sltd With the County Ci41fk of Or- WORKERS S5-$15 hr cnrs S 150 x1n11 543-4705 $ 125 2 5 ton central air writer. etc 673-8122 Dys, 111,. • Porscne rephca kitcar • ~ NAME STATEMENT county ange County on Oeoembet PIT FtT 534. 1400 BEAU r nu o~~ cust-made cond1t1on1ng A-coll. new 644-1697 Eves Tracks 9035 Excellent condition Red See Veno dos Santos do~hneg fobllowua11nngespesrsoanss arJe The street addreu or 27. 1985 " $150 TV antenn"' $ 15 · ot .. er common designation ,_ ... ,/T D"IVER " I•-61\ .. 9 wtblk 1nter1or 1600cc c E s o o '' -comp1.<(t'• t!nttirtainment Playboys. 6 yrs ot bacti Pell 1U1i•1h '" ONEV3/CTJ'H .S1300 motor 4 spd du·ai MEITHCAOLP ENYILL FCABI· 01111e real property herein· Published Orange Coatt !or !lower oehvery NB ,enter SSllO 673-5905 $55 c 11 N ti 5 8 4453 N MA 245 lsher above descrobed 1s Oatly Pilot Januan. 22. 29, ' s s u e s a Albino cockattel 4 months ew res • car b am / rm 1 tape c s Costa "eaa ca 92826 ·' 833 1883 I · · "' · purporled to be 499 I February 5, 12, t986 · ELECTRIC d•ye• $7~ 962-1708 old with cage $5000 CHEVY '~TP/Vl970 New Wont last-call now• CJt1yMlwch11ae1s.e<1391110A2113:~s Greencap Avenue Irvine w -298 TELEPHONE WORI<. Couct S 1T•atch1ng love 8x 12 rust rug $30 Also tor 846-3073 engine. good work truck 0 n I Y $ '7 0 0 0 u Y n ...... m. Calltorn1a SlltVEY DEPARTMHT se,;f S~O Overstutled fixer uppers misc items COCKATOO most beauu-$9951080 536-0237 D a Y 8 4 1 ·60 4 1 Ca 92802 The undersigned hereby CE Have immediate open•ngs $50 ~oou1ar Shet11es or " un er 1yp1ng lul you I see yrs o FORD Pickup 67 ~so FORD 67 M I 289 C uy We •39 " &hll SOfif ~ rt cltC" ng chair I $15 • d I 2 Id Note 964-6988 I Stle<•ll C Sedillo 2356 S d1sc1111ms all 11obil1ty for any MLIC NOTI 1n Orange Co office No chair b•ke frame etc 1 s 1995 B 1 " PORSC E 7 9 us ang u Y n m incorrectness 1n said stree1 I FICTITIOUI BUll ..... 11 s 1• La,.,cs S· Al• good 963•2022 ame rass copper motor 76 rebuilt 100 gal H 4 14. black ,ome body dam $1100 Ca 92802 address or other common ".c selhng no experience .ono c:i5,;.2:·.,. eve & 7 cust cage $1995 camper shell new tores gd cond 1 8 ltter $4200 obo as .s 496-2750 This business IS con-NAME ITAT!MINT nbPConeus58sasrywosr~1a5rY_9 Op'~.s ""eei.eri.:s ANTIQUE press back rock-54 1-442310 720 1875tH s l800 obO 722-0286 Call t 7 14)894-767 t ducted t>y husband end wlle ,oesigMUon The IOllOWing persona are " "" FORD 79 Pmto 48K mo. J Michael Sedillo Sherill Saia sale wtll be maoe doing buslneu u In Mon -Fn 9AM-1PM Sal FULL ~ot1 !.leaper S75 ~n0~1~~1~1~ $Sil-~~ 0~~~~g German Shepard Puppies VaU--9040 PORSCHE 86 944 Turbo p s auto looks 8 runs gd c Sedillo wothCXtt warranty ex~ress or novattve Merch1nd111ng Paid weekly For apptml Portab1e cc11 arner $50 AKC registered Champ 2300 m1 met burgandy $1300 obo 631 5087 This statement was tiled tmplleG reoardlng "b' 8 DOS· Concepts 16721 Milliken. call Carol 662-5843 Gui' (4 '11 spd bike tor all Art Deco goose lines. 10 wl<s All shots 2 DODGE Ma>el·Van 1971 extras $29.500 990·3067 with the County Clerk ol Or-sess100 or encum ranc;es Irvine, CA 92714 Underwater DiH Tech. Must 'be 'ICUb8 cert111eo will tr a•" 6 ~3 :>630 S ,5 Gic1s~ rcip coffee neck lamps 2 for $25 left $250 631-2678 )>kt seats. PS. PB. auto, FORD Exp 1982 El(CI ange CO\Jnty on January 30. to sauary lhe prlnc1p11 bal· Ron Brown. 3312 Tempe 963·3910 new WW radials 11m1tm PORSCHE 928 Pe11 o cond inside 11nd out Low 1986 ance of the Note or ot,.,er Drive. Huntington Beach. CA t.inle $50 Colonial BEAUTIFUL red "elvet M11ie1l lastnaaent1 Retell $4800 Mu9t sell blue chrome whee1s 5 mileage 4 speed F29MN Obllga11on secured by said 92647 "''P1P "1<l"' c.ttind $25 • 6055 s3500 840•2400 sp. saddle 1nter1or AM FM Deed ot Trust wnn interest srereo cassette Pubushed Orange Coast Dan Oona hue 1450 1 •6 ·ne love seat $75 1<.1tchen $24 995 obo 542. 1554 ano other sums as prov•Oed C · New tires & wheels A Oa11y PllC'I February 5. 12 Gu11m11 Irvine. A 92714 double stainless s1ni.. with DRUM set. 7 pc black. like FORD Econoline Van 66 supei deal JUSI $2 800 19 26 1q86 therein plus advances 11 This business 1, con· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••, 1aucetandplumb1ng$75 new Cases Zlld cymbls Rb1teng.newpa1nt must CORMIER 964 7851 w 300 any underttietermsttiereol ducted by 8 generel part- • • 962 2938 S 1500 963 5829 or sett $825/obo 645 7448 SUZUKI and 1n11.,es1 on such ad-nershlp •: P .•ftT Tl~E :. BROTHEREP 20Personal 841 -2240 1 -* FORD Tonno SW 1973 vances and plus fees RonBrown ~ •TI Aa ti••H 1 .. 1n1 cond ,n & out New charges and eApenses Of the This statement wu llled po rtab e 1 ypewflter Pianos & Orfllll • / tires & brakes S IOOO ·---------Trustee and 01 IM trustt with the Coonty Clerk ot O<· • TEL L..., pH 0 '-'. • .., • AC DC power ,fnt c:ond 6059 1 Cl1111C1 9045 ..;:.. 536-6052 PUBLIC NOTICE created by aa•d Deed ol ange County on January 15 • I".J ..... .J • $65 Roy 841 4496 FORD Falcon Sp1tnt 63 Trust The 10111 amoont of 1986 ' : S \I f," S .• lcAR cover navy blue Console piano beautiful 55M 260 v8 auto trans 770-7001 T 44811 said 0011gatton 1nctudmg F2t1271 $ wood will help deliver & 23663 Rocklleld NOTICE OF reasonably estimated tees Publls .. _,. Or•""• Cout • • • ' .J• • nylon 111<.e new lor 30 power steering brakes L k F c• T .. USTl!l!'S S"'LE """ -·• $ 1050 7141962 5193 a • orest " " .. charges and upenses Olthe Dall" Piiot Jenuaru 22 2,. • • 962-4138 • classic S250o10BO • ., • Top SSS PAID Tl No. 300048 Trustee, at the time of 1n1ue1 February 5 12 1995 · ' • .i r 11 \ .. ) 1111 I i •otr 11 : Car;ed Brunswtcll pooltbl UPRIGHT piano and I 639-8298 IMPORT ANT pu1>ilcat1on otthla Notice, 1s · w.285 •. •, e).ll cond wthnht & ac-bench Story and Clark., NASH Metr""'alian 1957 F P d NOTICE TO S20.088 00 • exc cond $750 or make v.-or ampere PROPERTY Dated January 20. t988 • cess$1500obo526-1000 I good cond 1t1on M d B • otte 968 3640 erce es enz OWNER: L a 8 FINANCIAL COA· MUC NOTICE • W H-.W P \1 \1011 f n • CENTURY Stroller $25 ~ -Whtlet yellow s 2 600 IMMEDIATE CASH YOU AAE IN DEFAULT POAATION. • Ct lllornle -------- • e 81'"ycle1 60601 674-7994 UNDER A DEED OF lRUST ,, T ., -'' ~II I Sii l'\I , ilttrrl.I\ Graeco Oelu•e High •_ Top MercedesPncesPa1d 1 corpora on. •• r111tM , ,. • ...,.,r .. • • e• Chair St , 50 893 1606 Boys 26' bike coaster OLllES IUT COODIES CALL PETER or RAY I MERCURY 1971 station OUANLTEEOSSOecYOemubeTr .1!E 19A8C4-SY: REAL ESTATE SE· FICTITIOUS aUllNHI "ousr OF IMP •T "" CURmES SERVICE,• Catt-NAME ITAT!MfNT e • CPM card 101 Apple Com-brake middleweight LEN MORGAN MOTORS i;; On S waqo,, P S PB air TION TO PROTECT YOUR lornle corporation, 11• TPle lollowing P4!fsons are • I \i 1·11 .. 111 '"11 ~111 !! 1 1111 • purer liO Commodore NEW condition Cost 565W 19th Costa Mesa dia l MEllCEDES nPw oc111ery new stee PROPERTv 1T MAY BE Agent,By:D.J.Morg•r.11• doing business 11 PK •• ,j If 11111,, ~.ti 11 J d II I 11111 • C'J"~Pl't> in11 $25 00 All 8S ~~6802: 1 ~ell S89 SCARCE 50 Dodge •,ton 2 13 or i 14 637 2333 radial ltrP~ uns great SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE PrHldenl, 1100 North Hamburger 1875 Pllce<llll • b•and new ano Tecnn1c s c panel nu paontilots 1ttras $<l00 1.rm 842·5627 1F YOU NEED AN EXPLA· Bro.csway, Suite 100, Senta Costa Mesa CA 92627 •• 1111 .. ,11111 L • C •~SPl'e deck metal B 0 , s 'ilC, nQ 0 k e etc $4750 OBO 968•9502 TOv 73 CELICA man~ MERCURI/ ARO IS 7 NAT ON OF THE NATURE Ano, CA 12708, Teleph-. Hoa Benson t2t32 Chep • vO o, $30 oo Tele no Ku waoara s2oo JT nPw pans Western rims M U J Of Tl-ff PROCEEDINGS (714) '53-et10 man Avlll\ue Apt 18A Gar • • •• I~. 41 848·0794 1ea111ers size 28 $50 BMX Autos Imported 9100 Gd ~ond $1700 962 8350 lull DWI C•u•SP stereo g.:I AG A IN s T ... 0 u y 0 u Puolishe<I Orange Coa'1 den Grove. c~ 92640 • •I Oew1111 8 1ncn radial arm helmet s5o Max elbow SEPARATE' EUROPHI TOY 0 TA C EL IC A 7 7 $895 Ot)O 548-6773 v ER February s 1986 d1.1cted by an tndlv1dual _ cond "' ti out runs go SHOULD CONTACT A LAW-1 Oa11y Pilot January 22 29 This buslneu ts con· • • saw !Ike new $100 pads $7 847 4756 DELIVERY DEPARTMENT lltbclo. am1rm1cass aul!1 OLDS 8 t Cutlass Cpe On February 19 1986. 81 W·280 Hoa Benson ••• :··1 714842 2909 Leave BoysSp1dermanblkew1th McLAREN'S BMW trans s2100.s11ver good B 0 ghm e his t000A "4 CAL WESTERN ' Thts statement WIS flied I c.ond 847-6401 r u Wtr w . RECONVEVA Nl.E COR-WllhtPleCountyClerkolOr• "' 111 IJ'l'"illlllio id •,di message training wheels Excellent slereo $3200/obo. ?ORATION A California MLIC NOTICE angeCoonty onJanuary 14 • • ESTATE SALE I cond1t1on $6 962-3674 M·F 11119. S·S 11116 VOLVO 144 1970 auto· 759 1305 646-6731 corporation as duly •P· 1988 • () I ~ -I ~ ~ ~ • Thurs & Fr! 10-3 TV, Stereo, Electronica 626 S Euclid St mauc New battery fires OL OS Cutlass 76 2 dr h· po•nted trustee under and PUBLIC NOTICE F2tl0n Published Orange Coatt Dally Piiot January 22. 2~ February 5 12. 1986 • • F II CA front upholstery rebuilt 1 1 "-~ 1 t t NOTICE roa 409 Onda Eastblull NB 6010 u erton carburetor AM FM rao10 lop beaut cond xlnt eng pursuan o ..,,,.,., o rus re· .. " • 1 .. t ,, , , 11 , 1111 1 I I 111 11 , 11 • 011 Del Sol to Vista 714-680 6300 $850 OBO 960.9284 $1995 644-1080 alt 4 corded Oecem~r 21 1984 LANDICAPE • • RCA TV console 25 inch 2 t 3·69 1-670 1 as •inst No 84 5211269 In ARCHITECTURAL • ... • A OrnadCahto Onda d perlect condition Asking OLDS Cutlass 83 cpe bOOk page ot Oll1c111 Re· SERVICES •. \ .k 1111 I~·" \\ 1111.1111~ •. n:b·~~etsoom'unce~etoc~:tve $175 or otter 968-4002 ---------VOLVO 81 DL grn tan int $3500 ObOCall 759-1305 cords'" tM oll1ce or Ille SCHOOL DISTRICT • LARGE SELECTION OF eic auto snrt cass l!vS 646 673 l County Rec0<de1s ol OR-NEWPORT MESA UNIFIED W-242 • •• • •••••••••••••• ••••••• FOR SALE Adr dress G1r1p Siles NEW & USED BMW s• good COnd pr11 party l\NGE County State ot Call· SCHOOL DISTRICT , _________ _ rorm luO wnorlpool. hre· LO•& IUCN IMW $6900 OBO 642-0563 OLDS Cutlass Ciera 1983 lornia e•ecuted by PETER PLACE OF RECEIPT J>t&.IC NOTICE If'" lrt HfhH lutle and w11tt to , Ht• HIM ctth, WE WANT YOU! lie tqeritK• n1c11urr . W1 wHI ttMh r•• hew te ••II 11h1ertptit11 t• • lt141•t lteal n1.t1p1p1r. Ne 4tllnrr er ullee tlo.1 l11-otw14. Call Te41rl A1k ,., T.C. (7 t4) 642-4333 4 door automa'l1c pi s. F MARTINEZ A SINGLE :<!985-A BEAR STREET place screen 894•4362 VOLUME SALES VW 188 SQUHEIACI cruise control AM/FM MAN WILL SELL AT PUBLIC COSTA MESA. CA 92626 K-23120 Coronl deJ Mir 6122 SERVICE & LEASING New mtertor New rubber Stereo a11 low miles Ex· AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIO· DEADLINE On 01 betore NOTICE Of For sale K1ng·s1zed cnest style freezer $50 00 & steel secretary desk $50 00 and steel sec- retary oesk $50 00 and t<OX· 175 dirt bike 1980 for $500 For sale Magnavox reel· 10 •eel 1ape recorder SJO Roye11 electric type- ""' I Pr $35 c a ll , 14 :,31 6262 """'!'----~----1 3670 N Cherry Ave LONG tlmflm c:c1ss Radials cellent cond111on $7 .400 DER FOR CASH (payable at March 1. 1986 OfATH OF Misc nousehold Items. Of· BEACH $1450l obo 642-2469 968.3207 11me 01 sale 1n 1aw1ul mo,.ey NOTICE 15 hereby given SARA EUl!N MOfli.18 lice furn toys Mon-Fri at (No Cherry e~it-4051 4 ot tlle United States) Al the that the above named ANO 01' PfT1T10tt 228 Orchid COM (71C)l31·&719 VW 75 t>ug conver11ble PONTIAC 76 Bonneville North front entrance 10 the Scrfoo1 o11trlet ol Orange TO ADMIMIT!ft Trade-Ins Welcome •In I con d $ 4 9 9 5 Broug11 4 dr 0119 ownr county courthouse 700 County c11u1orn1a 11 re· EITAT! NO. A 111111 Hunt. 8t1cla 6140 OPEN SEVEN DAYS 962 4449 S 1200 obo 760-1299 Civic Center Or•ve West. quetting receipt of "Ouillll· To all llelrt, benellclori.t ...-MOVING SALE v LIKE NEW' S11nta Ana California all cotton Package, .. to 1nc.1uoe creditors end contingent E ryth 1 s right title and interest con brochures. 11 client list and creditors and person1 wtlo ve mg must go un· VW Convert 79 like new '·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:.;.:.;.;.;.:.:.:·:·:·:·:·:-:· veyed to and now held by .~ past experience wh1Ch re-may be othe<WIM lnt41f .. ted d a Y Feb r u a r Y 91 n i~f=i•aiiiii§~ 36M ong m1 S4 900 Aft s l·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·1 unde• seid Deed ot Trust on iates to educ111onat °' In· in the will and I or eate1e of 9am-5pm 511 Cahlornta ~GQJBPJUl M F 643 1210 wknd ' ''' '• '' · • ·' • • · · •' '· • • '· • the proper1y situated 1n said stitullo"al pro1ec11 from SARA ELLEN MORRIS St =5 960-9579 ~ • I .. ..._... n•-' vw JETTA 85 10 000 mi County and State detc111>ec1 Lendscape Archltectural " 1>9111 on .... .,_, ...., GARAGE sale Boy Seoul $ as THE SOUTHEASTERLY firms by DOROTHY M HOYLE In ISM non correcting Selec Troop Furniture IOIS or Ill n ..... nrl p windows stereo PU8UC NOTICE RECTANGULAR so FEET The School Board of the Supet'lo< Court 01 Of. ,, 11 l(fnl cond Courier goodies Saturdc1y Feb IOcldt>d 6 yr ext warr OF LOT :> OF TRACT NO Trustt1es will be reviewing all ange County requesting that • element S200tOBO 61n corner F1tolelbury & I Ra.a.a 511 400 I 1021 873-3940 I 911312 269 IN THE CITY OF Ou111111cat1on PacKages" DOROTHY M HOYLE be •P A!l1>r Spm 846 5777 1 Talbert ..... -o.iSk for Mike Corrigan Jr 0 11 f'fBRUARY 18 1986 COST/\ MESA AS SHOWN for the purpose ol preparing pointed as personal rep· ----------. 111 I I 00 AM •n lron1 of thti ON A MAP R(COROEO IN · Requests for Propo&al" tor resentatlve to 1dm1n1ater the JENEL Tea dishes Larg'l I GARAGE sale Gentle· ... lWlyl a tremendous '-(){'Tl.1 ''()l','1'f" 0111c"i localed :11 600 S BOOK 18 PAGE 33, OF spec111c landscape archltec· es1111e ot tne decedent size 44 :,2 r.1oth1ng Other men s dresser col-~ of ri.w & 1 1 '-,, 1 Commonwealth Los An-MISCELLANEOUS MAPS. tural services rela11ng to the The petition requHll 11ems 847 8810 lee end table much c.•rtfullv :ir•pared \ OL KSWAGF.~ geles CBlllnrnoa THE COM-IN THE OFFICE OF THE 1mpro11ement ol the campus authority to •dmlnltt41f the 7 7 F ' MISSIONER OF CORPOR· COUNTY RECORDER OF environments 9'tale under the ln~- Lane lounge chair brown I m's c 1 1 1 r Pf'-.owned MW•s In & l\TIONS l\S LIOUIDATOR SAID COUNTY OOVERNINO IOARO, dent Administration of Et· l•k e new $ 1 SO 00 .:OtWarner Wed Fn •oc:k, ISllZt OF WESTERN COMMUNITY Thi street address tnd CuolJn a. Stoclter, tates Act "'I• 960? 170 641•3053 It does mel<e e dff· MONEYCENTER will sell or other common dM1gn1111on P11rchHlnt Dir.clot A heiring on thl ~ltlOn GARAGE sale Sat Jan 26 cause to be sold 10 tne high· 1t any 01 the real prope<1y Put>llShed OranQB Coast Wiii be held on FEBRUARY MAHOGANY coffee table 1 fwehce whefe ~ '"t bidder !or a51l (lawful d • s c,. b 1 d 1 b 0 v e 11 Daily Pilot Februaov 5 t2, 26. 1986 at 9 30 A M In 20.40 $25 W"lrlpoot I a~d Feb 2 9am 1111 NH'C:h ... -..... . r 1~ u led s I ) ., n-N .. 700 Cl " 5.,5 8830 r--· 1~ ....., money o "" n1 ta es puroo<ted 10 be 162 East 1986 ..,....1 o ., 11 VIC retng wt1ce maker $150 j · but without warranty ex-22rn:I Sttet'I Costa Mesa W·302 CAnler Oflve W•t. Sent• CurtlS Mathis radio re IOYllli SAU ~ ~ pres"9d or 1mplled. NOTE in Celtlornia An1. CA 92702. cord player console mto A<;sOrled collecta"les ~W~ tne ortg1nal amount of The undersigned Truatee oun11C NOTICE IF YOU OBJECT to the 842-1627 1950 5 sewing ma~hlne $82.064 80 secured by 11 dlsclaims any llablllty '°' eny rUU\. granting of the petition. you (t1t)lal-11J 1 Deed 01 Trust on property incorrectness ol the Street FICTITIOUI eUllNlll should either appeer •I lhl MOV,ING hdresser, /kf•t n$e8w5 SS1eoao'Y191w401~soreecdolrldkes 20IW, t•,lllnteMI IPocL!'cede ac' 090ST1 • T~~EASNf aodress and other common NAMf ITATEMENT • hea,r,tng •ndfl ... •t•t,•t'tyourb/:ob· labe w1c arr~. am m CU>8!D 8UNOAYI " .., m ...,, designation. II any. shown The followlngperaon111re ontor ..,Wf eno • radio & record player 75¢ ea Butcher Block CALIFORNIA Inspection ol herein doing bualnees 11 T g o a with Ille court be ore r onsole cock1a11 table I $20 969-1906 the Collateral may be made Said sale wlll be made. but Industries. 7420 Carte Lane, the hearing. Your appeat etc 848--71 Newport lt1cla 6169 Datsun 197• 2602 2•2 11 600 South Com· without con11enan1 or war-Stanton CA9oe&O 1n<:em1ybelnpertonorby _ Mini condition, new monwealth Avenue Suite ranty express or Implied re· Merk Wiiiiam B Fuller your 11torney NEW ne11er u!ed sec11onat I TWIN BEDS hlde·a·bed paint air $3300 or BIO t 203 Los Angeles Celi· girding title. PC>S9"910t1 or l6000 vHll 'Yort>e Lane'. IF YOU ARE A CREDIT~ sofa Quality plus Pa•d stereo morrors clothes Evenings 963•7065 rorm1 during regular oosr-encumbr1nc11 1nclud1ng Huntington Beach CA or 11 contingent creditor ot $ 1•00 on sate askmg ~sc hsetiold items Tu ness hOur'J fees charges and expenses 92646 lhl d-.Md. you mu1t Ille S800t0BO Must see "'Fr 9 5 1407 w Blly DAT SU~ 81 280ZX Pubhah*<I Ora~ Coast ot the Trustee and ol the Ray Benfield, 7420 Corie your ct1lm with tile court Of Al,o 14 sq :fdS earrh tone TURBO Aulo T ·top Daily Pilot Fimtuery 5 t2 trusts creeted by sold Deed Ln . Stanton CA 90680 present It to the pet'IOntl carpellng SSO 531-981' Tr1a1portatioa LOADED 19K m1 XLNT l986 of Trust to P•Y the rem11n-This ou11nns Is con-rlC>'eseotettve appointed t>y -co No • o w NE R W-303 inn pronc1p1t toms of the ducted by co-partner• the coun Wlthlfl lour montht Phase linear stereo! • w 6 0 5 20 H 6 0 8RQO ~;, .. MCured by uid Deed Mark wiHlam B Full~r from the date of nrat It· speakers excellent co" • 1 1 4 • ...... THANK YOU 01 Trull to wu $211 778 49 This statement Wit tiled suence of tellers as prO\llcled d11ton $95 Meple Plot 1801tl4 Gtatfll 7011 FIAT 79 SPYOER UK wlll1 1nw"1 thereon trom with the County Clerk of Or· tn Section 700 of the lorm rocker 010 $40 10 FB Boat l f"h m1 auto am/Im lug rk. f#~,, ~. 'l11185at 11 nv.per annum ange County on Jenuery 13, Probate Code ol Callfornle Mapete T v c:ab1 1ng1dtnghy) 5350 a1mn,1 I nu Mich tires. super MLIC NOTICE 11prov1011<11n1&ldnotep1ua 1988 Thellme l01flllngctalma w111 nett stQrage cab1ne1 135 new 71' 841-0290 cond $3200 854 7088 • co•ta and ony advances wnn F2tlOIO not expire prior to lour ( 7 141 548 5676 I "ICTITIOUI BUllNfll lntereat Pub!'•"--' Oran,.. Co••t month• from the d1t1 of thl Slip1/Doeks/St1r7'ce HONDA '80 CIVIC 1/t HAMI ITATfMIENT ' The ~net1t111ry under Hid Delly P'tt~7"Jen.ua,Y-22 29. 11e111ng notice above POOL Table 4"8 $350 1 022 gOod cond 3~ m1>9 very The follOWlng P«M>nl are1 Deed of Trull ~etot0<t e•-Fet>ruery 5 12 1988 YOU MAY EXAMINE the Swim Poot t4r28 $27~ dopend $2400 49"·0697 doing buS1neu H Bacll 8ay1 ecuttld end delivered 10 the W·284 me kept by Ille COU'1 It you See 1 o a p l>r e c 1 ate IDAT SLIPS AVAIL HONDA 8 1 CIVIC 2 dr Brokers 2232 S E liltiatol underllgned 1 written Dec· 1rt1 a '*"'°" lnter•1ed tn 962 18•7 U S A St Sit 104 Senti An•' 11rat100 of Default and De-the estate. you m-v Wiit De Anza Bayside Vtll11ga hatchback 5 SPd •!TVlm IN • • • Heights CA 92707 mand tor Sele end 1 wrllt9" P\lll.IC NOTICE upon the executor Of lldmln- PRIVA TE party w1nt• to 300 E Co11t Hwy N 8 cau 1 c $4 I SO NO J y HG HARDER W11ter w SleV9flt &el Notice or o.1eu1t end (fee. 111rator. OI upon the at t>uy Old stoc:a merit at 673· 1331 Mon F'r1 9 4pm I 9&0-8173 A R I Atllbr~. l1v1ne CA 92714 uon 10 Sell The unoet~Md I( n111 torney fOt 111e llleeutOI °' OOOk' and m•~ A0gerf . JO BC -I Ste~ Croe>oer 330 E 17th ciuMd 'ltd Not~ of De-NOTICI Of 8<4mlnlatrat0t. and Ille with 963 4063 evenings 11nd $hore Mooring up to l8 in JAG '74 XJ l2 Ford V8 • I a Lori St Costa M .. e CA 92627 I 11u11 1nd Election to Sett 10 A~ICATION TO the court wUh prOOf Of Mr weeker.ds Balboa Cov8' $60/mo Conversion New •no '" 110 Don £ymann 2231 S E , t>e recorded '" the county lllL ALCOHOLIC vlee. • wrltten requeet 1111· Yearly 650-5027 paint mlttr etc BEAUT! • 8£AVICE Btt"OI St Cost1 Mou CA1 where th'l reot prQ9erty ta HVIRAOll Ing th1t you deal,. 9"C1al Retired? Ltke 11avellng? FUL' S14.900. 673-4:no • pa•T& "'027 11oc11_.. t .JO.... notlee ot the 111~1 on tn· I 1 Side Ties Available "'" 1 "" "v Here' L1e11me mt1mbf!r· 2!>-35 Non-liva llboard, MBZ tll81 380 SEL.'1 • LEAIJNO hll ou•1n10 I• con 01ttd J1nua1y 14 1989 foWhOmll MoyConc4'1n vtnl0f}'•nd'P9f tol •hip NACO WMI reG-Sallbo•IS only 673-6&08 32 000 ml, Sliver exc;el oucted oy fl 09Mfll part I C AL•WIBTIRN .... 8ATES Merllyn 0 & "''''""''Of Of lhe ~' •11a11on11 vehicle r.amps Inn! In & out. $26 500 Al/Cf Sl IN'#! NIOfh ""'•hip s ' CONVIY ANCI coi.,ott-MICl'leel J .,. applying to 11001 or IQCC>Unlt mentioned tor ure $3200 H&rrttlt Mi T t ti ON IH( W{$1 rJ;A 1 WW teven• ATION, M.H C11mlno Ott t"9 O.Oertment ol AlcohOltc In Stctlon t200end1200 5 Of I . ''*I S'.'16-2379 IC. r1a1por I H 964 1379 avn CVCIU MOO(l & COUii Thia tt1temen1 w .. llltlC! I "lo aov1t1, lvffe no. l4lft Beveraoe ~trot for "• 1" tl'le C.alllomta Probete CoM "OC"tNG ch11r1 ~AM·~ c 1014 MBZ 78 •50SL l'Cll cond With th• County Clel'k of Or 01190, CA t210I. (111) On S•"' a.' Wl"l tPub .................. At· "' " ~vvv,....• ~ I 70 000 Ca•• TODAY ang• Cn•1nty on Jenuory 14 ~I. ·~ MMtttr•l A. E•t Pl) 10 Mil llCOl'IOllC 'r'Tv tw '•lttteee, IOO dfl'k' cuttom 11111ve1 l~I 1 ownr · mi new W 1986 N 11• 1 1 -fl I S20 "'"" bO Afc'"'teta. ru.'"'• .... bevef1Q91 II 193$ 0 N-.• 110 • II •• tit, coo1ch m1tn • l"O""' '~'• 7' frW1)0rltif 20 RF & •o op """' 0 '*111 omur port a 1&3 Cotta MeH AMfWtM, CA..., 111no watef'*' ttl4MI• A cab 11r lo.Geo 4 IK mo 759 89'6 •N 4Pm Publlt."-d 0•111\0f eo.11 Put>1iat1ed Or1no-c;o.11 9'627 Publllhlcl Orenoe Coest comtO•t•" new '•'OJ $8500 9&3 8658 MBZ 83 380SH mint 01•tr Pilot January 21 29 Oe•ly p,101 Jenoary ;Q r11o Put>h•hed Ofonge CO.II Delly Piiot FebnlltY 4 &. 1 t p1llow11 c;h tldrf" 1 -I motorOlept,o~. '29K ml f'e~u111S 12 1986 1111ryo, 12 1988 Da11yP1101febru1ryS t980 1H6 CIOlhlt Cell 80• 9?69 Cloutfled Ad• &-42-5678 Mutt Miii 550-5121 w 286 w '~ W-301 TW-02? . ....._____, -' ~--~~~~ ' Ml.JC NOTICE MllC NOTICE MllC NOTICE K·a. 1411•0Mf 'tCTmOUI IUIMll (CITACION JUoecW. ftem'IOUI IUMtlH NA• aTAT'DlaNT NOTICE TO OEFENDA~T· ...,_ eTAT1•NT Th• lollOWlno Ptreont If• (Allleo a A. . Tiie followlng pweona .,. doing t>ualneet .. ~ Scott & Mc:CLURE c:fld~)dl~IO doing MlneN .. : + Pe'lll• A•toci•tM , 1073 A North KEN MILLER. an l~d~'. = SOO ~ c.nter 8at1vla. Of111ge, CA 92987 ROSEY'S PLACE, 1 Plrtner~ 92ee0 Nftport Geeeh. CA. 0. SColt & AMOClat... lhlp; and DOES 1 10 2$ Inc .. 1073 A North 8atavt1, YOU ARE BEING SUED C~ CFooda,t:·~ Orange. CA 92987 BY Pl.A,INTIFF· (A Ud le Mia Of 1 Off)Ofl • Thi• bualnfft It con· demandando) GOLD· ~~Ct., P'2~ New- ducted by: a COf'l)Ofltlon ENWEST PUB "'"' · A" """' Oougla• Ft Scott INC A c Ill LIS~INO, Thi• bualn•H It con- Thi• 1111emen1 was filed atlon 1 ornia corpor. ducted by· a COfl)Ofetlon wltll lhe County Clerk ol Or· You he¥e JO Stu•rt B. "*'-'''** ange County on January 22 DAVI .,._ ~A&.aNDM Thi• etat~t wu Nied 1986 ' le ..vect • 9UfftmoM wltll Jlle County Clerk ol Or· '2tlla 1 ttt on '°" t• l'lle • •noe County on OeQ,erl'lbel' PubllShed Ortnge Colet ~t-:W. 911 '"'°"" it 30, 198e Dally Piiot January 29, Feb· A i.tt.,·or ptiOn. call w• Pllbil•h«I Oran;~ ruary 5. l2, l9, 1966 W 2,.. "4>t1 protect Jou: JOUt ""'° Dally Piiot January 29 Feb· • ""' wr tt..i '"'°"" miaet be ru1ry 5, 12, 19, 1966 ' In "°'* letal totm " rou W-296 wont the COllft to llMt rovr Ml.IC NOTICE · K-22114 ftCTmOUl llUltNHI NAMI ITATEMENT Thi following persons ere doing b111ineu 11: Cllllornl• Laboratory ol Forenste Sci· ence, 17842 Irvine Blvd., Suite 224, Tustin, CA 92660 Carol Hunler Rhodff. 1 Alba East, Irvine. CA 92720 Stephan A. Schllebe. 6A51 Schubert Circle. Buene Park, CA 90621 This business Is con· oucted by: a general part- nership Carol H Rhodes This statement wu llled with Ille County Clerk ol Or· ange County on January 17, 1986 F2tUll Published Orange Coast Dally Pilot January 29. Feb· ruary 5, 12. 19, 1986 W-297 P\IJLIC NOTICE K 22174 FICTrTIOUI IUllNH8 NAME STATEMENT The following persons are doing butlness as: Aalntree Lane. 2466 Santa Ana Ave .• Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Jolln L Uhl, 1019 Marian Lane. Newport Beach, CA 92660 This b11slness is con- OuC1ed by· an tndMdu111 John L. Uhl This Slatement was Ille<! wl!h the County Clerk ol Or· ange County on January 14, 1986 F28e0et Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot January 22, 29. Feoruary 5. 12. 1966 W-283 NJLIC NOTICE FICTTTIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T.he following pe1sons are doing business as Orange County Records and Tapes. Winner's Circle. 1278 Glen· neyre SI . Laguna Bflach CA 92651 Rober! Keallng. 1278 Gtenneyre SI , Laguna Beacll CA 92651 This business is con· ducted bf an 1nd1111dllal Robert Keaung Tiiis statement was flied wlth Ille County Clerk ol Or· ange Counly on December 27. 1985 F298315 Pubttshe<I Orange Coast Dally P1101 January 22, 29. s;ebruary 5 12 I 986 W·269 P\IJLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The following persons are Oo•ng business as ODM Sales. Mus1ard"s Home Re· pair, 256 Esther St . Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Darren David Mustard. 258 Esther S1 . Cos1a Mesa. CA 92627 Thts business Is con· fueled by an lndlv1du11 Darren 0 Musllrd This statement was flled wllh the County Clerk of Or· ange County on January 17, 1986 F219Mt Published Orange Coasl Dally Pilot January 22. 29, February 5 12. 1986 . W·288 Pta.IC NOTICl' ceee. H YOU dD not file J- 'MPOflff on time, JOU mer lo.. Ille cete, Ind JOUf •eoee. moneJ Md prop- trty may be tekon wttttout turtller ·-•no from the court. Then 1re otllef let•I re- quirement•. You may wa11t to cell on attorner right •••Y· It JOU do not known In ettorney, you m1y cell en •ttorner ,. .. ,, .. Nnlc. or • letll lld office (lleted In Ille phOM book). Deepuee de que le en- treguen "'• cltaclon Ju· dlclal ueted Ilene un plaio de 30 DIAi CALENDAAIOS para preeentar une reepueeta HCrlta a me- qufna en ••I• cone. Una carte o uni ll1meda t...,onlc1 no le ofr-• protecclon; eu '"~t• eecrlt1 • m1qulne tlene que cumpllr con ••• for· malldedea l egelee llpl'opledH el Utled qutere que la cort• eecuclle eu ceeo. II u•ted no Pf'IMfll• eu rffP"Ml• • tlempo, ~ perder 11 CMG, y le pueden qult1r au eotarlo, eu dlnero 'I otrH coue de eu propleded 1ln avleo edl· clorull por part• de la cone. E•l•ten otroe requleltoe letelM. Puede que ueted qulera Hamer • un •booedo lnmedlatamonte. SI no con- oc:e • un 1bogedo, ~ ll1mer • un Mntlclo de rel· erencla de lboglldoe o • une oflcl.ne de eyuda .... I (ve1 el dlrectorlo tel•· fonlco). CeMNo.3"10 The name and address ol the court Is (El n.ombre y dlrecc1on de la cone es)· SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY JUDICIAL, DISTRICT. 30143 CROWN VALLEY PKWY .. LAGUNA NIGUEL. CA 92677 The name. address. and telephone number of plain· tttt"s auorney, or plalntltt wttllout an atlorney Is (El nombre, la dlreccion y et nu- mer~ 4• 1eJelono del abogado del demandante. o del demanaante Que no tlence ab9gado. es) HICKEY NEULANO, PAROES & BANKS. A PAO· FESSIONAL CORPOR· A TION. Cen1ral Savings & Loan 8109 24031 El Toro Road. Suite 250. Laguna Hills. CA 92653 (714) 768-7200 DATE (Fecha) MAY 29 1985 Jam•• 8. Herrle, Ctent, by K. 9arM•, Oep\lty Published Orange Cout Dally Piiot Janullry 15. 22, 29, February 5. 1986 W-218 MllC NOTICE SUMMONS (CITACION JtJDICIAl) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT (Avlso a Acusaao) TEARY MABILE. TEARY MABILE OBA MABILE & AS· SOCIATES AND DOES ONE THROUGH TWENTY, INCLUSIVE YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF (A Ud le esla demandandol PETER P MOSESIAN You have 30 CALENDAR DA YI etter lhl1 1ummon1 I• Ml"Ved on you to ni. • tJr.•rltten rffponH 1t th a court. A lettel' or phone c:.it wlll not protact JOU; your ty~ wr1tten rffponM muet be In proper ..... form If JOU went the court to heltr your caN. H you do not nte JOU' rHponM on time, JOU may loM the c.M, and your w-oee. money end prop- erty m1y be t1hn without FICTITIOUS 8UllNH8 furtllef wernlng from the NAME STATEMENT c~:!re .,. other let•I ,.. The following person Is qulremente. You may went 'doing t>oslness as: A...... .._ UNIVERSAL MACHINE to ..... "' attomey ,.,,flt SHOP. 15561 Producer Ln. -•J· If JOU do not known "M, Huntington Beacll. on attorney, you may ceft •n Calif 92649 •ttomey ,......, .. Nnlce Of David A. Point, 6562 Ab-~ ~.::::; (ll•ted In bott Or . Huntington Beach. ..._ __ de q.ue le en· Calll.92647 ~ Thia b slnesa It con· treguen Hta cltaclon Ju· u d dtclal ueted tleM un pluo ducted by an lndM uat de ao DIAS CALENDAAIOS David A Point Tiii• statement was filed P•'• p r eeenter una wtth the County Clerk of Or· '"~t• eec:rtt1 • ma- ange County on December qulna on "1• cone. l6 1985 Una cart• o una Hamada . f2tm1 ~·~ui.r.:=.: Published Orange Coast eecr1t• 1 m.ln• ttene que Daily Pilot January 15. 22.lcump~lr on I•• for- 29. February 5. 1986 w . 7 im •II • 1 I• 9 •I •, 2 6 · apropl " el uated quter• que I COft• eecuclle IU ~----------ceto. Pt&.IC NOTICE 11 ueted no pNMnt• eu ---------Nepueeta • llempo, puede FICTITIOUS BUSINEU perder el cao, y le pueden NAM! STATEMENT qul1ar eu eolafto, Ml dfnero Thi followlng peraon ts J otrta coua de tu d()jng busineu at· proplehd 1ln 1vteo ldl· COUNTRY FLOWERS. clonalporpertedelacorte. 19091 Beach Bouleverd. E•leten otroe requftltoe Huntlng1on Beech. Call! legelee. 'Puede que iaeted Jl2648 quiet• llemaf • un lbotado S1ndra Kay Maughan, lntn41dtatamonte. II no con· 7892 Timber Circle • 1. oce • un abogldo, ~ Huntington Beech. Calll llM\1r • un NAtc6o de ref· 92846 -I• de lbot9doe 0 • Thi• bu1lneu 11 con· une oftclna de epda Jee.i 'ducted by· en indlvldual (wee el dlrectorlo '1ele· S111dra Kay Mauoh•n tonlco). Tiii• etetement WH filed e-No: , ... ., ,with 1he County Ci...k of Or· Th• name and addreu ol ,ange County on December the court Is: (El nombre y 16, 1965 dlr.oolon de 11 corte ")'SU· F21M71 PERIOA COURT OF CALI· ,, Published Ortnge Coast FORNIA. COUNTY OF Delly Piiot January 16, 22. KEAN. 1415 Truxtun Av· .29. l'ebruary 6. 1986 enu•. 8aker911etd Celllornt• w .211 93301 ' ihe neme. addrei1. and ·-::::::;:;=:;;::==::=~1 teteptiqne numb« ol Plain· / ' tllf'• •t1omer. or Pl•lntllf ) Wlthollt an attorney. 11 (El nombre, I• direoclOn yet nu-'ACIFIC VIEW mero de telelono del mMOfllAL 'AM abogado <let dem1ndan111 :> Cemetery • Mortuary del demendente au• no Cl'lepel . Crematory tlence •boO•do. ff) WALL 3600 Ptc:lflc VleW Ot'lve ANO WALL, A ProleHlonel Newpot1 e..ch Law CorPoratlon. P 0 Bo~ 844-2700 2601. Beket11teld, CallfOf'nl• 9330t (805} 327-6491 OATt (Ftcha) 4-3-85 G• I . l nellld, Clwtl, ay O.J.lf"'thton.~ PubHllled Orange Coaet Dally Piiot January 29 Fat>-J """' ' " " "" w ... ..:"'::::::::::::=====- c L A s s I F I E D & 4 2 - 5 & l 8 c L A s s I F I E D & 4 2 - 5 & ., 8 --"--- Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT .IWedneeday, Febnwy 5, 1Ne * D'7 ... ( I I l c 1 If you've got a clutter of critters like Uncle Harvey's moosehead and some other family gems from the past, why not clear up the clutter and gain some new-found space and ~ONEY too! Call the Clas·sifieds and let us help you write a For Sale ad to bring in buyers for your menagerie of miscellany. Remember: One man's clutter could. be an- other's collectible! CALL CLASSIFIEDS 642--5678 ..... ,,....,.._ ------- DI o..-. Cout DAIL 'Y PILOT I Wedneedey, February 5, 1986 fbr e Silver s save so much it-'s not even lfyou'rp fiO or older, it's tin1e you had yo ur Silver Saven;' Passport card from South- western BeU Media. Your freg_ tick t to all the senior citiz· ns discount~ and offers listed in The Silver Pages. A senior citizens discount directory that saves you rnon<\Y on everything from restaurant'> and retail stores to rental cars aRd trav(\I. So sign up for your free Silver Savers' Passport. Then with your Silver Pages Senior Citizens f)iscount Directory, discover a whole world ofvalu(\s you'd otherwise be missing. So many, in fact, it's not even funny., ~--s--·~ To sign up f<>r your Sil\'('t' Savers' Pa~spor1 , fill in th<' f(>nn hplow and bring it , with proof ofag(', to otH\ of tlH' f(lllo\\'ing loC'ations. <>r rnail to:.S.ilver .Pages, 9420 Aeros pace Drive, St. Louis, M() 6:ll :J4. PIPas( • spnd a C'opy of sonH ' prO<>f of ag<\. For morP infonnat ion , call 1 -S00-~;}2 -fl()()(). 7:-l:l a.Ill. to .L:~() p.nt. ({'ST ) Monday through ~'riday. Fl l>ELITY FEl>Ell.-\1. H1111 • .I.I\ ~l.L~I \111111 H:I\ l ~11:id 1~111·11:1 l 1.11i.. -.. 1111 11.:1 J'al111 .1 .\\•' l • 1n 111:1 I 11 •I \l;1r 1\,1\ .... 1t11 · 111 Hm ... ,.i, · I lm 1 • ( 111\1•1 l '11\ lt.u11t11 ·1 • Pl.v .. 1 1111~ l .Jdl1·1...,1111 I ~I\ d htllt•11u11 'Ill \ 11;1111111 Hhd ln1111 · I I":.! l\.1rr~111< a I'""' l..ag1111a H1•ad1 Hll < .11·11111•\ n · :--1 l..ai..1 · Fon . ..,, ~-, nl Trali11111 l\d \,.,,p1111 H1·:u l1 1.-i1 .-, \.\1 • ... 1d11l I 11 1 \lfk1\f'I ) l't-tl 111 I k '"1 ·11 l:s 11111 El P:i .... 11 Plan·1111:i .!I JI E 'a 11rl1:i l..111d:1 HI\ d .....,anw .\11a 2/()0 \c •11 II \la111 :-.111 ·1 ·I s ... 11 l~·at h t :SH~ll S.·al H1·:wlt HI\ d "1;111l1 Ill l~OOll l ~·ad1 Bl\d Fl 1.LERTON SA\'I!'J<;s Fu 11 t'l1 on ~ 1 a111 ~00 W. l'11m11111n\o\,'<tllh )11rlm L1111l;i l'l.ic •·1111a 1:!11 IE 'ai1rl1:1 l.111cl;i Hhtl \11al11 •1111 ~.1111 ~. l.11 11 "111 \\1·1111' \l'\\j1Hl1 Ht •:tdt 1 l·:a ... 1 Hl111l ( '1•1111 ·1 > ~--,~:1 l·:;1 .... thll 1ff I >1w1 · I IJ~ll l\.!l' l ~;11 Id ll'l 1; 11 i.. :-.q 11.i n ·) ~I ~ I fo: ( 'lt:q 1111 :111 i:. 111111.1111 \.tlh·\ 1"'111:..!ll I '.1n11i..1t 1.11'-I ~I 11 •1 •I H111•11;1 l 1a1i.. \\, . ..,, \11.tlw1111 U l:...!I) \\. l..11w11l11 . \\I' 1.artl1·11<1111\1 · l..!~1111 E111 lld ~111·1·1 "\a111.1 \11:1 I ..!II I I·: lit Ii ~In ·l'f 1-:a~I F11 ll1·rt1111 ...! 11 H l E < ·11.1p111a11 \\1 · ... 1 F 1tllt·11011 h11:-, \\ I >ra11gl ·1 lt11q w '\1111 It F111l1 ·111111 ...! I 1.-, \ llarhor HI\ ti AT&T PllO:'\E CENTER STORES \nahrrm Pl:v.:1 -,110 \ 1':111 ltd \\ (. H11"1 ~1 11 \1 :-, :-.1.111• ( 11111•1.!1· Hi I• ·11.1 P:t d, °"II ;.-1 I ( )JI I I II' \ 1:t 11 lki...1111 sin.~~ tk1..,111I ~1 ( ""'·' \1, ..... , f:; L-.1 , \ llill It'll II :!:.!: ~1, E l.1111 11111 \',. In 1111 · I l '°'o.-, .Jl'lln-.' Hd \1 i...-.11111 \ 11 ·111 ...! 11100 1\)111:1 l'I-.\\ \ R'.•B llOPE: r •11J (J't1 _,vc 'Ii I\\ II c~ ( 'rn 111 If\ Ill S \1;1111 St . I h~111g1• CITICORP SAVINGS I\, ( 1 < '11 ~ Hh d Ea .... 1 ( l1~111g1. I l !I \ ( 1•11l1~d .\u· < ;11·11dal1· MER< TRY SA\'INGS \11:1h1 ·1111 -,,,77 I·: La l1:tl111:1 .\\1· Ht ll'll:t l'ari.. X! 1.-,.-, \':tilt'.\ \'i1 •\\ S I La I lahra llHll I·: l11q>l'11:tl I l w~. I .. al,,1 · F1 ,,.. . ..,, 2:~112 1 l..ai..1 · < ·, ·1111 ·1 I )J J-:1 'Ji,,..' S l11·m1an < >ak.., J m:n V1•11 111n· Blvd ·n1sti11 JOH.-, lt\.1111· Blvd. ElderMEO AFFILIATEO HOSPITALS I ,a Palma lntt•n·omm1111i1 }' I lo:-.pllal · /!IOI Walk1·r SI rf'<'I La !'alma W<·~tc·nt M<-<li('al < '1·111<·1 ,\11ah<·1m 10~.-, ~0111 h Armht•1 111 Hl\cl. Analu•1111 :r-..,...._ r---A;---------------------------------~~9 I ;~ -SILVER SAVERS' PASSPORT. Application t I SIGNATURE OF .,,LICANT SIONATUIU OF WITNESS DATE I 1 Hf RE A1 <fRT1r1 1 HAI r ~•r 11R11v1 1NJ uM~AI •fJN •'. rn111 ANIJ vf r.1r 11 o WI! Nf ')C,t o ev I n RRf (I "' lt!f 8( .. I ()f l.Af l'NI Mil I (J(,f ~ Sou""we~n fJiejl M9dla ·~86 L----------------------------------------~ .. .. ' 25~ FAIR '0MCA8TIONAa WEDNESDAY, FEBR UA RY S, 1986 Booster believed located .... ' S on ar reading prompts salvage effort; could prove key to shuttle's explos ion CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.(AP)- Searchers apparently located one of Challenger's two rocket boosters Tuesday and NASA said that could prove "a very valuable piece of evidence" 10 the invcst1ga11on of the space shuttle's explosion "Sonar soundings 1nd1cate a sohd rocket booster may have been Coast Huntington Beach of- flclals approve a $25,000 repair blll for damaged pler./A3 California Legal snag keeps Soviet woman from returning to ship./ AS World Israel Intercepts plane, mistakenly thinking a ter- rorist was aboard./ AS Food Celebrate the year of the tiger with g-r-e-a-t Chi- nese dlshes./C1,2 Sports Estancia soccer coach Janu Juarez has his de- fending CIF champion team winning agaln./D1. Entertainment Ollvla de Havllland Is back In the Civil War - but on the other slde./83 located," a NASA statement said There was no 1nforma11on on the precise location. There also was no 1nd1cat1on whether ·It was Challenger\ nght booster -the chief suspect 1n the liftoff explosion that destroyed 1he shuttle and killed Its seven astronauts Jan. 28. Challenger had two such Council . ' blocks super street Hu_!ltington offi cials reject overpass a t Beach a nd Wa rne r By ROBERT BARKER OllMO.-,l'MellWlf A plan b)-Or.ange t ounty traffic experts to turn Beach Boulevard into an eight-lane ··~upcr street," where dnvers would encounter mostly ~een traffic s1~als. has hit a Hunt· 1ngton Beach City< ·ouncal roadblock. Council members. wath only Jack Kelly d1sscn11ng. voted Monday night to kill a proposed overpass at Beach Boulevard and Warner A venue. County officials predict the antcr- sec11on will develop into a maJOr traffic bottleneck for motonsts on the rest of the 19 5-milc highway from Pac1fk Coast Highway to lmpenal Highway in La Habra. ·•At first eight fl yovers (overpasses) were propo~d along the route," Councilman Don MacAllister said. "Then then· were three. and then one (at Beach Boulevard and Warner ) boos1ers 10 help propel 11 into space. "It would be a miracle if we could find the nght IUlnd segment we sa\A41n 1he pictures and everybody has a hypothesis abou1," said Jim Mazell. a space agency spokesman. "There arc many things you could tell enginecr- mg-wi~ sf you recovered that data." CBS, meanwhile, reported that "at least a portion" of the shuttle's main crew compartment has been localed and that some of the personal effects of the astronauts fl oated to the ocean surface. NBC said some oftbe human remams brought to shore 1n rccen1 days have been identified as belong- ing to the stven astronauts. NASA spoktswoman Sarati Kecpn denied "c-ategoncally" that the cabm has been fou nd and said she would not comment about anything pertaining to the astronauts out of respect to their next ofksn. The Cout Guard, too, said at knew nothing about cabtn debns. If the booster is lhe from the nght side "we have a very valuable piece of evidence for the (accident) review ...... , .... board," Mazell said. When the shuttle blew up. the two boostcn separated and bcpn flyma crazily 1n rhe sky When one of them appeared ro be headed toward the Florida cout1 a range safety officer sent a radio s•&nal that detonated an ex.plosive charge and blew the top off both boosten. That bad the effect of shooting flame out both ends, stoppana the forward motion and tumbhng the rock.ct mto the sea. Under such circumstances, the casing could have suf'\11ved almost mtact. NASA wu expected to summon a salv.,e lhip with heavy.IJf\ capecity. if the IOD.ar indications were correct. Recovery of the booster mtabt show whether a leak m the t.tuck metal casing caused a tonaue of flame to heat the hl.ljtextemal tank.1ettir11ofT the blast. This flame was seen in film, ahhouJh its ori&in was not clear. En .. necn could p10 muc:b k.nowl- cdgc JUSt study1n1 the bum patterns or the joints on the side of the thick (Pleue ... aBUTTL&/A2) Reagan seeks to redefine role of government Calls fur changes in wettare, bu dgclary - proces s , med lcare WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan, in his fifth St.ate of the Union address, said Tuesday night the breakdown of the fami ly structure among welfare rcc1p1ents has reached cnsis proportions and promised to devtSC a strategy to break "the spider's web of dependency " While proclai ming ··a Great American Comeback" from years of economic woes. Reagan spoke of "our rcspons1b1hty to redefine gov- ernment's role: not to control. not to command. not to cont.am us: but to help in times of need." He said the government must work with pnvate insurers to develop affordable insurance against the costs of catastrophic illness. Reagan referred at the outset to the one-week postponement of has speech, telling a JOint session of Congress: "We paused together to mourn and honor the valor of our seven Challenger heroes. And now I hope we are read)' to do what they would want us to do -go forward." Democrat• laaue 1 rffponM .... M. young heroes who watched the speech with the first lady The president sugcsled few in- 1t1atives m hisaddrcss, boostingapin his tax reform proposal and eihortin& Congress to cut tbe federal dcfiClt by reducing spendinJ. Hts remarks in- cluded an emphau c thumbs-down oo tax 1 ncrcascs. Reagan al so sugcsted that "' bis proposed budfet fo r fiscal 1987. wbich he wit send to Conpns WednC1day, scveraJ programs and agencies wdl be pcged for sharp fundmg cuts. Saytng heavy federal ckficns cloud the future, Rcapo said, .. We cannot win that race held beck by honc-and- bugy programs that waste tu dollars and squander human potential." Wednesday be was to unveil a bud&et plan that included the elimination of ~veral f edcraJ proarams. INDEX "We don't want to be the guinea pigs on 1h1s I'm not read y to put our businesses out of busine\~." Cit) offi cials did go along with other recommendations advanced by the Oranse Count) Transponataon (omm1ss1on They endorsed coord1- na11ng traffic signals. banning parking along Beach Boulevard and restn p1ng that would add one lane 1n each Vice Pre.ldent George Buah and Houe Speaker Tip o •Nelll J r. applaud President Re.can before he gl•ee a•dreu. He then dchvercd, as expected. a generall)' upbeat report on a nation he said 1s "growing stronger every da) " He concl uded With a salute to four In layma out his tiopes to reform welfare programs, Reapn said: "In the welfare culture, the breakdown of the family, the moSt bas1c suppon system, has reached cns1s propor- tions -in female and child poverty, child abandonment, horrible crim~ and detcnora11ng schools,·· Reapn said (Pleue eee UAGA.Pf/A2) Bulletin Board A3 Business B7 -8 Classified 0 4-6 Comics 8 5 Death Notices 07 OCpolitlcans agree: He gives a great speech Entertainment B3-6 Food C1-8 Fun & Games B4 Horoscope 04 Ann Landers 84 Mind & Body B 1-2 Opinion A8 Paparazzi B 1 Police Log A3 Public Notices 07 Sports 01-3 Televlslon 06 Weather A2 1rt'ct1on to the six-lane comdor < ounc1I officials also supported the widening of the Warner-Beach anter- scc11on to add traffic lane\ instead of the overpass But Stan Oftelae. the Oran$C Coun- t) Transportation Comm1ss1on's ex- elut1.,e director, said that traffic increases would clog the 1ntcr.-.ect1on again in about fi ve year1 and would slow the entire Beach Bouk.,.ard route. Donald P. Jone!., wh o owns Paul Jones Realt y at 1793 1 Beach Blvd . wa!. one of several businessman who (Pleue aee OVltRPA.88/A.2) By PA UL ARt~~LEY Ol lMl)eltJl'hel OranJe Co bemocrat1c and Republican leadcr~eed on one point after heann es1dent Re- agan's St.ate of the address Tuesday: He gives a greal~h. But they found httle else m Ll!m· mon, with Repubhe41ns lauding e- agan's agenda proposals and De o~ crats charging he'~ decei ving the <\mencan people "It was another an a scnes o f excellent spccche'I b)' Ronald Re- District asks court to delay reinstatement in AIDS case Saddlebac k officials a rgu e time n eeded to e valua te if boy poses ri s k to othe rs By tbe A11oclated Pre11 The addleback Unified School District is asking a Judge at least to delay a rulmg on an Amencan Civil liberties Union lawsuit seeking to relnst.atc a hemoph1l1ac student barred from class because of AIDS .,... Chan non Phipps, 11 . hu the blood ,. disease hemophaha, rcquirang trans- fusions of blood products to flln coagulants his blood lacks Acquu-ed immune deficiency 'Yndrome anti· bodies apparently were tram.matted to him through \uch blood product\, although no evidence of the AIDS virus was found fhe d1stnc1. headquartered 1n M1ss1on VicJO. wants OranKe County Superior Court Judge Harmo n Scoville to defer a dec1~1on on a prehminal) 1nJunc11on at lea~t until aOer a Feb 25 ~hool board mect1ns A hearing on the inJunl lllln ·~ scheduled toda) "As to Channon Ph1pJ')0 \ al tual cond111on. there " a lii\11n1 t pos'>I· b1hty that he does have the virus • because of the positive test for the an11bod1e s." !>Ctlool officials argued in court papers. "The d1stnct beheves that it has the ngh1 and rcspons1b1hty to est.abhsnthat the student's attend· ance would not pose any nsk to other 'tudents becoming infected with this deadly disease .. The process (of evaluation) is under way but has not )Ct been completed " AIDS ant1bod1es were found 1n the bo) ·~blood dunns a medical test late Int 'ummer Has aunt and legal guardian, Dehorha Ph1pp,ofEI Toro. •rned the dsstnct in November, con· tending the boy's home educauon 1~ inadequate l)hc and the ACLU wan1 the m un to order the d1stnct to allow (PleHe Me AIDS/ A.2) Murder conviction sought in crash that killed 2 teens Prosecutor a rgues reckless be h a vi or in poli ce c hase ma ke driver r s pons lble By STEVE MARBLE Ot hO..,,.. ...... A pro~'"' 1r called on iurol'\ to convict 1 ~.1nt.t .\na man of murder becaute ha' allcaed rt"Ckku behavior dunn.a 1 p11hct l ha" cau~d a car accident that k1llc,t tv.o ( o\ta Mesa t~n-ager1 Ruben Ml )O~• \ ,lllr. l 1 WI\ 1ry1na to outrun 1 uhu' .u \peed\ reaching 70 mph when the \tolen van he was dnvma rammed two c.an at the 1nter1ttt1on of 19th Strttl and Pl1ctnt1a Avenue 1n \01ta Meu. Oe{>uty D1•tnc1 Attornc) Rick Kana ma1n1ained a\ Valle' tnal opened on Monday Ro) Wilham o n and Billy Ounng v.ere dnv1n1 to a h>1.:al douihnut •hop wtien their Vol~\wt en Bus was hit • broadside about 9 10 a m on~ I i. 1984 'Dcannf wa' killed 1mmcd1· atel"t and Walhamson died wathan the hou·r at Fountain Valley RC1Jonal Hospital Both were 17 and 'ltudenti al Estancia H1&h School The murder tnal 1s the lint tame 10 Oranlc Count" that a dmer hu bttn tned for ~ond-()tartt murder 1n a fa al car accident that did not 1n voh <' the use of alfohol Two Hunt1n1ton Bea h tttf\\ wrre ,haratd wnh murder an a fatal -(If &C\ id('nt an which the) '*ttt alleudl} CPt ....... ORJV&a}A3} I agan. ·· said Congressman Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach. "It was another excellent JOb," agreed Howard Adler, past chair of theDcmocratic Party of Orange County "He's clearly an excellent communicator." But whereas Republicans took Reagan at his word when he again rejected imposing a tax increase to reduce the deficit, Democrats refused to believe him "This speech was prepanng us to face some reals ties. and a tax increase 1s clearly not a cons1dera11on," said st.ate Sen Manan Bc~eson. R-New· port Beach "It remains to be Sttn where those reductions will be felt ." "Once again Ronald Reagan 1s lying to the public." said Michael Ra ), chair of the Democratic Foun- dation of0ran$e County "We're looking 10 the fa'e of a value added tax, which 1s basscall) a federal sales tax. And I think we'll sec an energy tax . .\s long as 011 pnc-cs continue to drop, the adm1nistra11on wtll figure 11 can add a t.aJt that won't hurt." Ra, said "I JUSt ·don't behe' e him ·· ~dler Wom an talked t hrough childbirt h ove r phone By PA UL ARCHIPLEY Of _Oeltt,... ..... A Westminster woman save birth 10 a health> ho)" at home Monday with the help of a HuntangtOl'l Beach Fire Otpartment d1 patcher. who talked her through the delivery by telephone Ella Youn&blood. l8, and her new son were resting comfortabl\' at FHP Hospital 10 Fountain Valle) following the S 24 pm deliver. at home, said Fare Otpartment dispatcher Nanc\ Fuhrmann Youngblood was dnvang on the frtewa\ near home ~hen \he apparently realized the baby might h on As wa~ he rushed h11me and called Hunungton Beach fire paramedics. but the bah) ~med in no mood to wait teve Rot hen, 41 . an I K-year veteran d1~patcher. talk<'d Youngblood through the delivery of her second Lh1ld while p.1ramed11 \ rushed to her home .\ taped ~ord1ng of the e\L ha nae Drt--.<f"ed the dram.tt1l <'' t'nt "The paramed1n are on the1r'wa~ .. Rothen ~1d "\\ ht•n tht' contrat'\aons stop. JU\t rcla:\ "When the rnntrac11on:. \Ian. \Oll JU'>I stjn \our panting breathing You have to conl'entrate " he '"""' (Pleue eee BlRTB/A.2 } said ··Has adm1n1stra11on was the archnect of the laraest tax increase m h1storv " Reagan's call for Congress to pve him "lane item veto" power was supported by party members Badham and Bergeson. but no one expects Congress to gJve 1t to him. "I support the lane item veto, 43 states have 1t" said Badham from his Washington. D C'.. office. "The power has never been abused an Cahfom1a. and the legislature has been covered b): ats veto oowcr (Plea.e eee AGUED/A2) Pair booked in shooting at local bar T"'11 \an Juan C ap1'trano residents were hi.')()ked for attempted murder Tuesda' follo~mg a shooting that 1nJurC'd two men -one cnt1call) - in a local bar ~hcl (1'1nero\ I~ of San Juan t dPl'>trano v.as \hot in the neck and \t.inm {,onzal~ :! \ was shot an the ~he't .it the rail-0 -ThC'·Swallov. bar on C amino < ap1strano around m1d- n1tiht \aid hen O''I l t Larr) Khunc ( 111nn1le., addre\\ 1\ unli.nown 'hrntr~ depulle'> rc'pondinf. to the (all round <.1on1ale., out'>adC' the bar and ( 1\nC"rO\ 1n\1de t\\ith were tr.in'I· ponrd 10 ~,1\\16n < ommun1t \ H1)~- 1'1t.ll "'hC"rC" l "nt"W'I wa 1i.,1t•J in , m1c .11 , ond1tmn .ind < 1on1ak' 1n \rr1ou' 1ond111nn Tue-.cta\. n11h1 (Pleueeee A.Rll&STS/A.2) County hires 27 new employees for Theo Lacy jail in Orange Raben M . Valle 8 LISA MAHO'IE\ OtlMWr ........ Onangt < <'UMY ~tiJlt'nl'IM\ Tue,. di\ apprO\ t'd the hinn& of ~"' nt'V. employtt\ to man a I xn.bcJ 1<111 unit undc-r coMtn.t\ uon at Thto I .al' Branch Ja1l 1n Oranar hrntT < oroner 8rad < •lltC'\ 11,k('\j for SN .bM 10 hart fi, c heutrnanh. 10 deput1t\ e19)H 1.uh1rr"i and four ~rHle tahn1l1an\ to \u(lt'r\I~ and \ff\ l~ the nc"' unit ... h11. h '' .ched· ulC'd lor complruon nt\I month I r heCI LA1.' Branl h Jail ha!> tra· d1t1onalh housed minimum \('( unt\ inmatei But Wlth thf' count under orden to rt'dut t tht pm.oner popu- la11on at it' main 111l 1n Sanua i\na tht hran1.h1a1l ...,1ll no"' he u~ to \heltC1' pre tnal detainee\ ~ntenet'd minimum ~unt 1n· mt tt\ who no Ion rr nttd to b( near thr N Ur'\\ 1n nta na art bt1nt tran\f('T"t'"fd to tempof'ln' hou11na at lhC' Jamn" Mus1ck Honor Farm 1n (P\ ...... .JIUL/A2) ... A2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Wednesday February 5 1986 REAGAN CALLS FOR REFORMS ... From Al In a prepared rcspon~. 1he l.km11 cratic Party said Reagan'~' 1e"" ol the cond1t1on of America 1s too Hf'I\, lhat under Reagan's leader!>hlfl, the natmn has been faced with devasta11ng budget ddic1ts. a noundt·nng tar111 cconom}' and a staggering tr.11k deficit At the end of ht!> '>Pl'l'i.'h Keaga1' saluted four ''heroe!I ol our heart' who wen~ 1n hi'> aud1emT an th1.· chamber of 1he I louse of Ri:prl'\enta uves. The)' were. R1<:hard ( avoh. whose high school expen..mcnt _to make X-ra)'s lco;s harmful "a!> de· strayed aboard 1he C halknger Tyrone Ford. a gospi:I mu<,1c singl'r and p1an1st. Shelby Butler. who ml>..ed her hfe to pull a }oung,11.·r out ol thl path of a ')(·hoolbus an<l T re' or Ferrell, who ~w ho mek'is people 11n telev1s1on and left his home to dell\ t'r r "'•• ~",_. hlankcts 10 them 1n what ha' tx-come a Ph1la<ll'lfh1a <:u'>tom 1n volving hundreds o volunteers On welfare. Reagan -;aid ".\ltl·r hundreds of h1ll1ons of dollar~ 111 poverty program\. the plight of th1.· poor i rows more painful But thl' waste in dollar\ and cents paleo; betim· the most trag11.· loss the \tnful "a'>tl' ul human spirit and potential · Sa) mg "we can ignore 1h1c, tcmhk truth no longer." Reagan ordered h1'> Domestic Pollq Council to n.'por1 h\ Dec I with ··a \trateg\ for 1mml'd1Jtl' acuon to met•t the r.·nannal edul.I ttonal. social and !>afet\ l.Onccrn' •I poor fam1ltec," "I am talking about rcJI an<l IJ\l1nti emanc1pauon .. he '>aid ··tx-rnu~ thl' success of welfare should tx· 1udgt"d h' how man) of 11<o rec1p1t'nt" ht·t•imt· independent of "dfare · Reag;.tn 'l't no 'l>l.'l tlil fUllkllnl'' Im rdorm othl r lh.rn w al l>..1111" kdgl' g1nt•111mc:nt', 11 'l"""1hllt1\ to "pn" Hk \ht ltc:-1.ind 1111liri,hnwn1 tor 1ho\1· "h11 ,,1nn111 pro\ 11k lur thl'lll· \l'h e\ Hut lw \aid · \\l• mu,1 ll'' "e 11r rcplJtl' prn~r.1111,cri.H tl'd 111 th1·11J111c ot n1mpJ\\111n th,1t J1.·itra<ll· tlw moral \\11rlh 111 "url>.. 1•nn1ura~l' l.tnlll\ hreai. up' 1n<l Jn',. uim mu 111t1l'' 111111 a hk.tl.. anti 1tl artk" 1kpcndt•n1' .. ... \ longt11t1t· uppllnt"nl 111 tom· pretrcn'\1' t' n..1ltt111;il h~;tl th 111 \111.inu~. Rcag;1n url1-e<l t ll'at111n ot .1 nt'" program ICI prntl'l t pc.•oplc "'l1t1 arl' 'ulnerahil t11 ht·111t' '' 1ix•d out finannalh In thl· , 1''" of 'r11111j' lllnc,., · .\llc:r \l'l'tn~ hn" d1·\ ~,1.1t1ng Ill nc.>sH Jn dt'\tr. 1\ lltl' ti nanua I \l'l IHI t' ofa lam11\ .. hl· ,,111! ·1 ;u11 <l1r1•d1ng tht: \t'trt't.tr\ 111 hralth ,ind human \ef\ 1tT\. Dr <>u' Ho"1'n 111 n·p11r1 to m1.• t)\ "1r-ent.l \\llh rl'lClnlml·n- Jattun' H' h"" thl' pn' alt' 'il'<. tur ;ind gn"emml nt 1.111 1M11lo. , logc:tht•r to addrt'!>' tht' pr11hll·m' of ,11lordahle 1n .. urann· li1r th1l\l' \\hu\e ltk '·" 1ng' ''11uld oth1 "' l\l' tw thrl«ttt·nnl '"hen t Jt3<,trnph 11 tllnr " ;.111lo.n In a 1ti11 .t n111.111H· ~l·a~.in dtrt'l ll'd ( r• .1~ur\ \n ll"l tr. larnt'\ \ Hakl'f 111 111 ,,ir\,Hkr1Jll1ng d "orld monetan l. 'ntr it:rtl l' lt• d1\l.U\'> "hetht:r t11 ilt1.·r 1hi: lrl't: mJrl>..t•l .,, \!em ol \( :ttO I! l llrll'Ol' \ JIUl'\ V. 1thou1 prqud~ln)it thl' l\<oUl' Ke- al?Jn \did .. r h1•. llffl'nl ('\ nan\111n 111 our e1.11n11m \ .q1d \Pt•rl\ rl·4u1rl'' .i 'oun<l ancl 'lJnlt tlollJr 11 home and n·lt;i.hlr 1'\1 I Jr ~l· r.111·, arnund lhl ''"rid \.\l• ·: 1,1 n1H·r .ig..11n permit ''lid 1 urr1·11 ' ·""t:' 111 l nppk our tarmt'r~ and otht•r ell.porter~ Kcagan sa1tl he wanted tu "rl'delinc go,ernmt'rll''> rule not to control. not tu lllmmand not to contain u'> hut to hl·lfl 1n 11me\ n l ~ed. abo'e all, to lrcatt· .i laddl·r ul opportunity to full t'mpl<>) ment so nil .\mencans can d1 rnb to,,ard t:\:onom1r power and Ju\tll't." on thetr own ·• Rcpl> ing to rt'pealed call'> b~ somr in < ongn:\'> to ra1~e taxe~ 10 reduce thl' lederal dl'f1ut. Reagan ~rd, .. I'm \orn the} 're a'iktng the wron$ people to tigh1cn their belts It's time we reduced the federal budget and left the famtl} budget alone" While Reagan's remark\ appeared to rulr out tax increase'>. as he repeatedly ha!> 1n the pa<.t. a senior adm1n1s1ra11on otlii.1al said he has n(lt dosed the door on 1mpo'ittt0n of a ne"" 011 import fee . Rl'agan. the onic1al sa id, has told la" makers. "I'd have to take a look at 11'' 1f c,uch a plan were included in the ta'< bill to make up for re' enue lost to rate cuts contained in the leg1slat1on. Rcpo111ng the !.late of the union "stronger than a year ago and growing '>tonger ealh da} " Reagan rem1ded the ( ongre'>'> and a national telc· '•<>ton aud1t·nce, ··1t wasn't long ago that ""e lool>..cd out on a d1flen·nt land -lucked fat: tof) gates and long µ!.oltne line~. 1ntolerabll' pnt·es and interest rates turning the grcate\I country on Earth into a land of brol>..en· dream'> .. .. rht -\menran people brought U') back... Reagan ~1d. "with quiet courage ant.I common scn'\e \\tth und}'1 ng fatth that 1n lhl\ na1111n under Gud the futurr v.111 be ouri.. tor thr future belongs to 1he frrc .. Man charged in Orange County with selling fake lottery tickets \A( R.\M f I' l <> f \1'1 I qttt'I\ ag~nts ha\I: mJ<lc thl ir t '\ rre<.1 •I someone allegcdh tr. in~ 111 wll ,1.1t lotter) ttckel\ altl'ft:d 111 11'\t'111hil' r11~· cash winner'\. " tur I 1•1l·1 •111 ii said Tue-.da' The suspt·tt \l.:J'> hrn11>;t1I \l1111d. into Orange< 11unt\ la1l 11111 lt.lh!l'" Jttempted grJntl tl'>l It ·ll ,,,J r.~· the official "l"u1 a\l..uJ ll••i l tx. named I otter. 'opnl..nmn1 dl l •Ill <l lumment on thl' l a\l' \' t ti I " , '"' :s11p.Jt1on I he Ill h·t .t111·r1ri. .i' • r C1ame"o ~ tn"'h1,ltit1· ir1\l1r 1 pn1c<, thJt , un ht. l .11 m ··I 1r11 a lolltf) t1tket. a Iler pleadinggutll) tu a for~er) charge 1n Lo~ Angeles \upenor Court He mailed the ticket to the lottery's \)'lmar office on Oct. 7 and was arrested b) lottery agents on Nov. 8 fatrada 1s set for sentencing on Feb 111 \lfeanv.hlle. Flo)'d Marsh . .50. of ~an f-ranc1sco. has become the first to \tand tnal 10 California on charges of altenng a ttcket to resemhle J S.5 000 "inner \ mun1c1pal coun JUf) v.111 try w 1h:l. Ilk "hcther Marsh found the t1d l•1 J' he d..i1mc, or tampered w1th 11 ·" lhl' \l.:lll' la1m'> JAIL EMPLOYE E S HIRED ... From A l El Toro Becau'>c prl··tn.1 Ill t.1 "l'' the nght to p11'>t bail .ii .11 . 11111t Lan empl<1\C'<'\ mu,1 n11" h0• 1h proces'> 1nm,11l'\ ~.l 1l11tH' a d.1. ~1d 10 his H"qUl''-1 10 -.urx·n "' r ( urrcnth 1nmall'' onh ar '>l hnJuled 11m ., .1 p r,11 • pcrm11tt·d \\1th prt· ti. 1 k t.i i., <,aid fhl· Ii' c 11L ut he H'\p• •n\thll l I ultn11 and •!ht•r ARRESTS ... From A l Deput1l'' trr('\lc:d \n Ir frr() 4' .rnd l'Jml'ia H 1rr 11 ~an J Uolf''I < ap1,1 ·.1 • , fhe\ "' r1· h1 u1~e,J I murde-r a l I 1r.1J11iL' 1 •111r AIDS ... From Al th<.' ho~ II t ~ Ill .I\< Hut ' h 11 11 1'l 1 .1 JO\ ru lir-11 t ' prrmaturr ,111d The J"1ri. l>a "d I ·'" 1r '1\1' ,n l'ilpi·r~ f l~d "' I' \( I I BIRTH ... From Al Whtie Rnthcn ltH' 111 children "a' l•1,1' 1nv. through th1.• d\'11\1 r cned. "Hl ' ' u1 I 11 He '\ tr"\ 1n~ "T hat ' il'" •cl "Wrap him up"• I and put him in '"Jr para med1,c, arrrH '" I l t ' g,irl., .. "It's a on' · 1n1rn~h1 • ,11 11.I "(ongratul.1111 •r.. MAIN OFFICE ..... VOL. 79, NO 38 \\ . at thl main men s 1atl \tar11ng in \pr1I ·\ I ~ 1>1 .. 1mt ( ourt Judge has ht.·l·n ""·ttd11ng cl\n count\ ad oper a11on'i -;ince la<,t 'vfart h "'hen ht• tnun<l <.uper' l\orc, in ton tempt nl ,1 1 •1 "'>1 qrlkr ll> reltl·\ e "' crt rc1\\dtng JI Ilk 111.1111 1.11l 1n "i.1ntc1 -\n,1 J ft' .111 rJll'd tcir I 1111 inmate' "'·'' 1111 1\lllg m11r1 thJn 2 !JO() pn-; Ht r' 1\ :h\ llrTll' 111 thl· t nntt:mpt lw.11 n~ DRIVER ON TRIAL ... From Al ' ·r r d 'll ti I lrt.1 • , r, '"''hnl 1 .1n.! f un i' dl I '.11r I h,I\ 1[\1 lll'd Ill 1 \ 11.1 tw111r1· I •'1llnUl'U n 0111\ l\ing to ld 1ur11r'\ he ~•II prmc that \.ilk'' l'fr<itll tin' 1ng drarl\ \hn""t:d 1mpl11·d maltn· J 'ilatt· 111 mind IH'tl'\\Jn to t'<,tahlt-;h murdn lklen\l.' attornl'\ "1 11>..r lf11ran rr 'i.'f\ld h1<. 11pcn1ng <>tatt•mt•n1 .. 111 111n•r' l11r IJtt:r in thr tn.il I h1 \\.1tl1arn,11n tam1h :iled ,, ..-11rngl11l-<lc:Jth \Ult In .\ugu'>t again<.t \.ilk the 't·wpnn-Mt•\a l 'n1fin l \l ho11J l>l\lnll the c1ttl'' 111 ( O\ta \I 'd .ind Hun11niz1on fkalh and tht· I k.tr ng. tam1h J he \Ult 1n partlt:Ular target'> thC .111mn' 11f < 11\W Mc-;a polite offi cer\ 10 \ 11IH·<l 1n the pur<,u11 It \late\ that pn lt 1 ~ggra,atcd lhc '11uat1on h\ hJ\1ng \ alk OVERPASS REJECTED ... f rom .1\ I tll• I 1., ~" .1' 11111t h I I' l.1 t !111 .ti r ~·lih n111g .Jlfo '\ll\.rl\1 .1 !ht \Ullt r 1111 r 111 1 1t1 I I'> lh· \,till 1pfl\ 111·d I '\ ~1111-d plJn' • I\ 111· '·"" 1 II ti hll\I I ll lhl,\lt k 1111 1t '"'''' hl ,,ti.I !· .111 e'rx:n.,, ... ,1.1 prr t.1hr 11 .1tf.t rr ·•" 11\t'r \\ .ir 111 r \\~flul· '''Hllll 11>1 I 11 . ..'.fl'' ·d.., 1 11mpk1t· hut ,, , Hl\t J 1l• u " mtllt11n \ t 1.1d1111111.1l 11\ lTPJ\\ wnult.l tr" I about 1 1 ~' 11 1111llwn hut would be under c11n\lrul.l111n for up to IX month\, l•tl1, 1al' \a1J Ir other dlt1on thl· C 11\ ( ounc1l I • \pprll\ t·d lirst r<.'ad1ng of an I w<lrn.tntl' requ1nng no-\mok1 ng .treJ\ 1n puhltt place\ ant.I in the "llr~plJle • \'\l>..ed to rr1t'•'l' the prcl1m1nary lindrng~ <>I H1st11ncal 5oc1et)' <>urvc) tc:am' tr) mg to preserve old down· 1 to" n hu1ldings 1nclud\ng the recent I}' t ln..ed C mlden Bear night club • T itthtrned 1. m campaign ~pend· iny rl·~ulat1on\ making both the duT1or and thr l nnd1datc annuntablc lot 1·ku111n \ 10lat100<; I nd1' 1dual donor\ m.i\ l onunue tu t'C>nlnbute S '<)(> to l.and1da1e~ and pohtrcal action cnmm1tee\ may cont1nut' to 1 contnhutc: SI, soo to cand idate~. Prcv1o u<oh only donor\ wert'" he ld rc~pon\1bie for abu'\Cs .,, D•lly Piiot Oellvery It Ou•r•ntMd Justcall 642-6086 \' c1' d •• 11. l1J..r: t}t~1ut the 1>.111\ Pilot '~ hat k 'r .111 'he numhot r Jhn'e .1ncJ 'rllUt Ii< rt'l t1rdt•d tran'>lnbnl dnd de 'llt' 1ppr11pr1JI C' ed1111r • Mc :J hnur an\"l'rtn~ -.enllt' m.i ' ht' r1 rd ~lk r\ ·n thr t•d1tor on ,1n \ tOf)ll 11 r' ti> 111r l<•hr,l olumn mu,11ndudt· n.1m1 1r11.l 1r lcphonl' n11mh<·t Im 'tnl1ult111n I II~ ,, h ll '.. • I jf llltr c1 \ Clrcul•tlon TelephonH " •.. ,. ........ WEATHER Weather will be clear, cooler Weather along tht Orange Coast wlll be clear and cooler today, with. local north winds to 25 mph below the northern canyons and passes Skies wlll become partly cloudy late In the day, with Increasing gusty west to northwest winds In most areas and a cnance ol showers at times tonight and thursday Highs today wlll range lrom 58, to 65 and lrom 55 to 62 on Thursday Lows wlll be In the 40s and lower SOs Mountain areas wlll be windy today Northerly winds wlll gusl lrom 15 to 30 mph this morning, Increasing this afternoon and becoming strong through Tr1ursday Skies will be clear early today, becoming partly cloudy Jater on through Thursday. with a chance ol showers at times Snow level will reach about 4 ,000 teet Temperatures will be cooler, with highs today 38 to 45 and 32 to 40 on Thursday Lows tonight wlll be In the 20s and lower 30s U.S. Temps K91'1HtClly 48 le es •e e~ ~9 so 55 73 90 75 71 10 j8 33 J2 31 19 ,. 59 ··<@~=:~ l .. veg .. llll .. Roell lOUltVllle Mempllla ~ "-' ~ ~ <>oct.oecs,.... StabONtY-.. H~h. •ow •01 2• ~°"" M<llng a1 5 p m - -S-C. HOM VS '*>' 01 C:.O..-co "lb&ny "llCllOl'llQ• All.,, le "ll•nllc C11y Ht l o 35 •5 is n 1J 49 ·19 36 76 58 "'411m1 a.ecn Mlolnd·~ Mi"""'"" MIJ'S S• Peu• ''11"""'"-New O<i.ant • Calif. Temps SanJoM Sanla Bar-• Sanui Cruz Sance Maria Sl'\11 M0<1lce 80 42 ee 49 &O 41 63 JS 68 63 &O 41 38 •• 48 "'"'In 8aJ11m0<e 44 35 New Yori! NOrlOI• Vt Oltlahorn• C11v Oma111 75 83 43 JS S8 44 09 50 38 33 90 ~ 44 33 11 SJ 40 J7 S3 u 40 '2 63 43 35 20 40 32 $3 l8 &O 57 90 S8 45 33 83 70 ~ 44 IS e1 J;> 19 37 lJ 14 25 49 19 88 •& 63 ~9 46 lT H•O" '°"' ''" 2• nou1• ..nalng •I 5 Birmingham Bltml•Ck eoi .. lloslll<' Bull••" Burttnglon 111 Cup« CnarltMlton SC C1>ar1011• N c C~ne cnic.vo C-•nd Columl><t SC Col"m"'-'t Oii ConcOl'a NH 0111a1-F1 Wonfl Ceylon o...- 0..""0<"94 0.110<\ EIPuo Fa;ft>anti:e Fe•go Fltogllalf Grano Flaptaa Greai Fallt Gr-.el>O<oNC Hartl0<0 H_,• Hono411lu HO<lt lon ln0lenapoel1 JK Uon Mt Ju<-. 73 55 211 n 4S 34 l8 19 31 28 2!> ·08 4~ 25 74 57 TJ 0 'IO 2e ;i.. 32 37 3• 77 42 43 40 37 -04 61 ~6 42 40 5J lS JS 33 II )0 1)6 .. ?7 11 18 25 ., 2• 30 19 '1 29 60 41 40 21 •• 26 &6 70 73 S9 45 ti 73 82 37 23 Ofl•nOo Pl\1llClelP!l•I Ph<>ef'I•• P•ll11N1g11 PonCend O• Prov1otmt& R11 .. g11 Reptd C11y 11...,0 l\Jcnmor-o SI loult S< P••• Tempt Sen l eke City San Juan PP S.•11 .. Sn•••9'l'>'• S•ou• ~.111 Spo11ane Sy•IC""' lopek• lu<;l')n fulu Wa.11unofnr Extended F'el• F•1dey varoeo1,, c•ood•n•&a• S11 J•oay ana Sunoay H'ljllt 62 lo 68 l o"'11 JS10 45 pm "119'-Vll'-Y BtU<tlltllO BtfllOW llMumonl BIO lk•• • Blol\op a1y1ne CataHn• Eur ell• ,,eMO Lancatler Long B.acn lot~ Maty•Vll .. Monro"'• Mont•bello• Monier ti)' Ml WlllO<l ,....., ... Newparl 8'Nlt1' Oaloano Ontar'° Puaa•n• PH O Flo1>1e1 Riv.,. .. o. Red 81.,n Reawooo C 1, Reno SK.r1men1r Salinas Sen Betn1•91nn San Oabrltll San oi.go San Fran<:»v.o 58 311 s·~-10<1 ~ •e Tal\o.Valltiy es 40 Yoeeml1• v1y 63 37 31 27 52 l3 72 52 86 SS Tides 55 45 ~ 49 $8 41 e11 4e TOOAY S63 a m I 2'pm I 12pm TltUlllOAY 12 30 a m 6 48 1 m 2 II pm 8 47 0 m 8 I 11 3 7 23 86 15 •o 78 S2 61 311 1J •2 12 •s ~!I •3 m 'IO 67 48 t.4 47 61 ., 86 44 17 44 ~' 35 67 40 \9 37 62 45 47 l2 C!O •l 59 39 67 ., Sun 11-IOOay al 6 47 • m ...a Mlt egaln •• 5 27 om 14 43 64 S3 63 48 Moon rlMt 1ooay ai 4 18 • m and Hit again 11 1 52 p m Surf report LOC"TIOH Zuma a.- San11 Monlel N-POl"I Beacll San oi.v<> Coun1y Weier 1ernp 511 ICZI 3.5 S-7 3-5 S.7 Diii. w w w w SHUTTLE'S BOOSTER LOCATED ... From Al rocket casing. M1Lell said "We don't have to find the whok' booster lo have valuable ev1dt•nc1.·:· M1ozell said "We JUSl have 1n lind the nght m<>tors." He t:\pla1ned thilt each oft ht' rocket\ four <.egmenl't ".1 motor The Nev. York T1mec; reported 1n 1l<, Wcdne'>da) editions th:11 till' hoosterc, ""ere not de'>1gncd for U\l' "hen lhl' temperature of th1.•1r propellanl drops hclo"" 40 degret'' ( hallengl'rsat on 1he pad through t\l.o frce11ng nights before the launch hut other shuttle<, ht ' e taken oil in old "cather and there v.a\ no e' tdl'Oll" the temperature of the propellant ha<l an)th1ng to do with tht· fatal C\· plO\lOn .\. spoi...e .. man lor Mon on-Thmkol (,tlbert 'vf uore. noted that the air temperaturl' could var> a great deal wtth.out ~1gn1ticantl) .changing thl· temperature o f the prof)ellant. the Times <,aid Rock\ Raah a \.lorton-Thiokol 'Poki:sm.rn told I ht \<;<,011ate<l f'rt''"' IJtl T ue'>da' th.11 ht· <ltd n11t kno"' "'h.11 ,q;uld happrn II tcmpcrJture\ ""ert• not m.11n1a1nrd "11h1n the ">peufit-d rangl' lk al'>o <,at<l hl' d1<l not kno" v.hl·thn the tio11 ... kr"\ IUl'I tt:mpcratun· m1gh1 ha' l' ht.'l'n 11ut\lck the opaa11ng range .. T h.11 son ol 1nformat111n. "a' impounded b\ NA."iA." <oa1d R.1ah Tht· announcement of tht· pc>'>"hk tllSl.O\ Cl') of a booster l anll' hour'> lltl'r ".\\.\ SC\erel) CUI hack a '\earth ot the <.urfacc. which has '1eldc<l on!\. one-ten1h of (hallcnger\ 1Arelkagc and '>h lfted emphas1\ to the "rl'la· ll'cl\ slo" and arduous '>Carlh ol thl' ocean hottom " C'h1d ObJeds ot the sea rt h ht,·,1dcc, the right booster arc the crew mm· partm('nt, "11h II"> t:oc.:kp1t '011.e rrcort.lcr and electronin that monitor and reund !>pacecralt sy'ilem\ Two \lattonal .\cronaut1cc, and "ipal'e .\dm1n1'\trat1on <,h1pc, wnh sonar and robot "uhmannt:'> 1hat can \l'C' 'hundred'> 1)f1tml''> Oclll'r than tht' human e~e·· l0nt1nul'd <>tanning thl· hot111m of tht· \tlJnllt Ocean ~11 m1k' 11thl111rt• in "'atrr I II.Ill fret dl'cp \\.1th Jn\ \urfale dchn' \l<ltll'rtd l''l'f "Ider O) strong ocean currents. the Na') pulkd out its ships. leaving nnh four Coast G\lard vessels. fou r li,ed wing planes and two helicop- ter'> There had been I 0 aircraft and I) '>h1p-. on ~onda) "I wouldn't be surprised 1f tomor- ro\I. nobod)'"' there," said Lt. Cmdr James Simpson of the Coast G uard T hl' hc:l1copters were patrolling the l.C>.1\1 12 miles offshore, from New \m\ rna Beal h Fla .. to Cha rleston. " ( . 'i \.'°I.\ on r uesda) crossed on ,,., l'n of I, .. targets" -Objects seen m \onar soundings -after a closer 10111>.. b\ robot submanncs showed the) were not pans from the shuttle. The agenq also admitted It was in error Mo nda) when 11 said two 1n1cres11ng \oundings were old wrcck- Jge of a helicopter and an airplane. I here were no sonar soundings at all. 'vf <; l\.ecgan. t he NAS A 'pol>..eswuman. '\3td Tuesda). · fhe) "ere c' 1dentl) surveillance lraft 1h1ng through the area:· Ms l\.c·egt1 n ,,11<l "\lu the) were 1n the air not unt.ll'r IA:\ll'r ·• AGREED: HE GIVES A GREAT SPEECH ... From Al Hut therl·", '1r1ualh n11 th:.tnn• ( 11ngre\\ "'" e'rr gtH' 11 to an\ pn· ... Jent.' "There\ no chan1.c of Keagan getting line 11em 't.'to po\.\l'r ·· \t.l lt'r \aid "It too thoroughh t1p\ the halance o f po"cr" Reagan again talk'd tor J. halanred hudget amendment a prop11\al Democrat" thought "h\pocnt1t:al" in light o t ht'I admtn1'itra1111n\ reuml hudgct ddint<i .. It h<l' hcen hal.tnlt'd an m\ lifetime." A,dler 'a1t.l add~hg "h;. Dcmocrt1t\ .. "But ti hl' thOOSC\ lO lollo\I. thl' present cour.-.c ofhea') 'pending and le111ng the ne~t generation pa} for 11 then 11'<, not going to happen "There'<, a limn 11n how long \OU can postpone a ckht F ventuall~ <,omeon1.· 1.·l\l' "'1111nht·rt1 11 Jnd thn II ha'l~ lo explain "'h' the \\\lt·m c!Oi.''\n't IAOrk .. Rl·puhl1tan'> hal k.L'd Rl·agan·, argumc:nt that thl' kl'~ tu halanl ing lhe hudg1·1 " through euinnm it program~ that rndude 1ntrra"ng productt' ti) redunng tnit.lt lklit 11 .. and addressing \l.nrld currcnl\ flul- tuatmn' Bcrgcc,on. 'IJX'akang from her \arra- mcnto onice. ""d "If ~l· can kl•rp thl" '>tall' and 1hc nation on an up\v.1n2 through 1ncrea'>l.'t.l pr<xlul 11 \It\ then 11 "111 rertatnl) bring ahout ,1 hcttcr re'iolutton to thc balanced hudg1.·1 problem than a stagnan1 nonom) ·· Radham, commenting on Keagan·, c,uppon oft he Gramm-Rudman defi- c1t-redult1on law <.a1<l .. Evenho<h ·., n1.•r, UU'> C ongr<.'<o<, '" 1ncapahlc ol "' ang \\tlh the prohlem 11 treatl't.l - detic11 spending "If <ongrrc,<, .ill<, qu11. I.. I\ and properl~ there "on t tx-an ~ nt:cd tor < rramm Rudman It< ongrr" ta il'\ to do ''hat 1t '>hould ht· doing all along thl'n the· meat a\C: I" going 111 tall un 1 he hudgct pr<ll.e\\ !>t·m111.:ra1' fear that meat axe will l0nt1nut· 10 tall on social programs where tht: Rl'agan adm1n1stra11on ha'\ alrca<l) made deep cuts. Reagan·., call for an overhaul of the v.elfarc '\}Strm meant "he's calling for ~II m1ll1on people to go hungry on the <,trret~ ·• Ra) \a1d. ··1 don"t think Ronald Reagan 1'\ n d hut the effects of his budget cul\ 11n "ellart' " l'\.ll The fact that he'\ 1gnonng ti and pur~uing a huge arms huddup 1c, a test of his moral character " Rcrgeson and Radham lauded Re- agan's propo!.31 "In some areas. C altfomta has led the way." Bergeson said. "He men- tioned ovrrhaullng welfare. and Cah- lorn1a has <,ho"' n that workfare is a promising alternative .. V.. hether 'iuppc>n1ng or opposing Rc·agan. ll'>teners fll{'\day agreed ht'\ .iddrc'>' wa<, the president at ht'\ be\! SHU.TTER S SPECIALLY 1 PRICED Capture the outdoors and create comfort with these custom moveable shutters in the colors, sizes and styles you want ! FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICESI Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717 abllahed 1953 1977 Placentia Costa Mesa .........__ ........... ______________________________ ~~