HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-19 - Orange Coast Pilot)
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1986
·Newport police get mixed reviews
Report says department above average,
ut citizen complaints on force noted
Although the review was aeneraUy
complimentary, the audit team cited
problems with excessiv~force com-
plaints by people who have been
By SUSAN HOWLE'M'
ud ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... hlp .........
An independent review of the
N~rt Beach Police Dcpanment
judaed the agency .. above average
over'all," but noted some problems,
includina the number of cxcessive-
force co~plaint.s..
Season's over
The UC lntne Ant·
eater'• baeketball
aeuon enda In Pro..-o at
the banda of BYU bl the
lfatlonal ln•ltatlon
Toarnament. B 1
Nation
Treasury Deparment an-
nounces first major
changes In currency In 50
years. /A~
Food
Renowned restaurant re-
vtewers get their share of
crltlclsm./C1
"Compared with other cities of its
srzc, Newport Beach is fortunate to
have what can only be described as a
good police department.." said the
700-page report released today by
City Manager Robert Wynn.
The department's weaknesses, the
report said, "related primarily to
internal operations."
Police fight City Hall
arrested. •
.. To the extent that allegations of
excessive use of force -whether
founded or unfounded -are the
result of unnCCC$58rily agressive
patrol tactics, these tactics should be
revi$ed," the repon said.
"The reduction of excessive-force
complaints and claims should be a
high priority objective for the depart-
P'oa.ntaln Valley police omcen -who U.e been wol'kin&
wlthoat a contract alnce No..-ember -picket City Ball prior
to Tae.day'a City Coa.ncU meettna In a bid for public
ment"
Police officials interviewed by the
audit team denied any use of ex-
cessive force by.officers, and said they
~ad taken steps to deter 1ucb behav-ior.
But the report noted that com-
plaints were filed apints 32 police
employees in a »-month period
ending last June and said the depart·
ment nevertheless .still .. bu .. repu-
tation for maintaina a strict enfon:e-
ment poliCY. and for beina at times
unnecessarily hcavy-handtA"
The aud.lt team re<:0mmeoded that
once a new police chief is selected, he
should review the dcpirtment•s en-
forcement policy.
Wynn said aty officials will not
comment on the validity of the audit
until a new chief bas been selected to
replace Charles Gross. who stepped
down in January. The field of can-
didates hat been narrowed to six
people with 1 final selection eJ1;pected
ID April. '
But Wynn, speak:il\J at a news
oonfm:nce this morrun&. said the
eapport. Darlni the meettni, the police &MOClaUon aireec1
to poll ita mem6en on the clty'a thu-far-rejected contract
propoeal. See atory Pa.Ce A2.
Irvine crime increased in '85
Royal beau
Sarah P'er~n. a com-
moner, la omcially en-
C&iecl to Prince Andrew
of tnctand. A5.
INDEX
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. DellJ,......,,
An increase an Irvine's population
last year was accompanied by a
similar jump in criminal activity.
according to an annual summary
released by the Irvine Police Depart·
ment.
The report indicates au to thefts and
arson incidents occurred more fre-
quently in 1985 than during the
previous year, but a drop wa s re-
corded in rape and burglary reports.
Irvine's i)opulatton climbed 5.4
percent from 76,0 I 0 in 1984 to 80, l 23
in 1985. The police repon indicates
that serious "Part I" crimes increased
6 percent over the same period.
Part I crimes include murder. rape,
robbery. assault, theft. buf'l)ary and
arson. During 1985. 215 ·offenses in
these areas were recorded in Irvine.
the repon said. But the 6 percent
increase was considered "a substan·
tial improvement" over the previous
year. when such cnmes increased
2 J.8 perceDL
Irvine's other "Part II" crimes such
as narcotics violations and check
forgeries totaled S, 745 in 1985, a 7. I
percent increase over the P.revious
year. Calls to police Irvine exceeded
132.000 dunng 1985. a 19. 7 percent
jump over calls in 1984.
Following arc totals for various
types of crime committed during
1985 m Irvine:
•Three murders were recorded last
year. An arrest has been made in one
of the cases, while the other two
remain under mvestigatioo.
•Thirteen rapes were reported.
This was a 40 percent drop from the
22 reported in 1984.
•Robberies totaled 35 in 1985 -
five more than 1984.
•The 55 assaults reported 1n 1985
topped the previous year by only two
incidents.
•A 12 perecnt increase in lar-
{Pleue eee CRDIE/A2)
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
A11
A3
A9-10
B4-7
A12
B7 ca
Skyscraper saga -to be continued?
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
C1-7
A7
88
A7
A3
87
81-3 ca
A2
They came bearing gifts.
Developer C.J. Scgerstrom & Sons
offered to build Costa Mesa a world·
class art museum, adding another
stroke to the c11y's growing panorama
of cultural and perfonmng arts.
The Scgerstroms also unveiled
plans for a non-profit. child-care
center. designed by the county's
foremost specialists in pre-school
education. It would ha ve space for
120 children from mfancy to 5 years
old.
And developers offered 15 acres of
verdant fields. shady groves, lush
picnic areas. eucalyptus-lined jogging
trails and orchards designed to recap-
ture a slice of Orange County"s
agncultural history.
All this. as well as St.5 malhon in
annual property and sales taxes,
would be bestowed upon the city. if
permission were granted to build a
controversial 32-story office building
-the tallest in Orange County.
The Segerstroms left Monday's
hearin$ before the Costa Mesa City
Council with their gifts still in hand,
spurned by residents who argued the
500-foot-high building would ruin the
city's suburban flavor.
Facing probable defeat. Malcolm
Ross, Segerstrom plannmg director,
was handed a loaded gun by Coun-
cilman Donn Hall and asked to put
the beleaguered plan out of its misery.
Hall, a skyscraper supporter. wd
later he was trying to save the
Scgerstroms' dignity.
Sheriff won't apologize for jail crush
Gates says he's done all he can, woulcl
break law with a 1,400-inmate limit
hold the jail's population to 1,400 a
day is to violate state law by refusing
to accept new inmates whenever
pnsoner ranks swell to the cap.
By LISA MAHONEY
Oflflehlp ........
A U.S. District Court judge. can
expect no apologies from Oran1e
County Sheriff Brad Oates when he
appears at •second contempt hcarina
onjail ovcrcrowdina Thursday.
Jn an interview Tuesday. Gates
said he has done all he can to follow
Jud1te William Gray's Jan. IS order to
At the same time, if the Jail
hmit the inmate population at the continues to exceed the court-ordered
Main Jail in Santa Ana to 1.500 limit, Gates and the county super.
without turning away felon y suspects visors could be fined or Jailed for
at the door. contempt of court.
And. rather than bcggi ng the Since county su_pervisors arproved
judge's pardon for exceeding the cap a tentative site for a new ,000 to
several t1mes in February, Gates said I ,SOO-bedjail Tuesday. Oates said he
he intends to ask Gray to waive an hopes Gray will ··ease up a little bit"
even tiahter 1,400-inmatc hmit set to • and leave the present inmate cap in
go into effect April I. place.
Gates said the only way he c-0uld Since last March. when Gray made
an in1t1al contempt hn<1ang against
Gates and the Board of Supervisors.
Orange County already has paid more
than $50.000 in fines and spent
millions on temporary jails. ad·
ditional guards and ot her personnel
to try to ease overcrowding at the
Main Jail. The American Civil Libert1es
Union successfully argued that coun-
ty officials had not taken steps to
reduce crowding at the Main J11I
smce Gray ordered them to tmprove
oonditfons in 1978.
At the time of the March 18
rPJeate eee 8HBIUFP / A2)
The developer agreed a quiet death
would be better than a messy execu-
tion at the hands of a council vote. It
would also deny the spoils of victory
to Mesa Action. a group of slow-
growth actlvists hungry to defeat the
city's largest and most prominent
developer.
Many council members and resi-
dents characterized the 677.000-
square--foot skyscraper as the most
controversial pro1cct to hit Costa
Mesa. It threatened to put poht1cal
8.berltf Brad 0.tee
Anaheim mayor: Jail Stripes, Angels' halos don't mix
By USA MAHONEY
Of .. hlr .......
If Oranae County supervisors arc
serious about buil<lin,a a maximum
se<:urity jail across from Anaheim
Stadium -the home of the Cali-
fornia Anaels and the Los Anaeles
Rams -they have a hard road ahead
of them Anaheim Mayor Don Roth
gid today.
Jails don't belona ·in a city that
hosts such tourist attractions as
Disneyland, Rams football and
Anaels baseball, Rc,th said. The
Board of Supervisors decided Tues.
day 10 conduct an environmental
review of a county-owned site at
K.atella A venue and Oouatass Road
an prcp1nt1on for construction of a
t.000 to 1.500.bed;ail.
Mixing Jail stnpes and Anacls"
halos would tum the "hub of happ1-
ness into the hub of despair." Roth
said. He said residenu of Anaheim
and Oraf!&C who would have the jaJI
for• nei&bbor are up in arms over the
board's aeci11on. "They're call1Jt1 me
the wardeni_" said Roth. who is
runniot for the Founb District 1eat of
Supervisor Ralph 8. Clark. who will
retire at the end of hi term
Roth said there i' not much the ci ty
can dQ ~l now to block the county
from bu1tdin1 a jail so close to
Anaheim Stadium. But he auora_ntces
that city officials will be scrut1nmng
environmental documents the eoun-
tv must prcpart Wllh an e'IC toward
legal challenaes.
l1tiption on env1ronrnen1al
JrOunds could del1y construction of a
Jail at least one'I> years, County
Counstl Adrian Kuyper said. Lepl
chalJcnaes over an environmental
review of expension at John Wayne
Airpon stymied planned v owth
there for years.
The board's aoal in choosina a sate
so quickly is to hasten construction of
a jail larse enouah to meet county
needs 1hrou.ah 1990.
Pm.sured bf a pcnd1n1 contempt
he1nna on Ja1 ovcremwdina. upcr-
v1sors voted 4-1 to bqJn nccnsary
environmental 1tud1e on the
Katclla-Douglau site. Onl y 'upcr-
v1sors· Chairman Ralph Oart. who
d1stnct includes the proposed J&•I.
dissented on the 1ct1on
O arlc offered thrtt sub$lltute mo-
tions which would have either de-
layed a dcci ion or dcsiJ1'ated
another tte in Santa Ana. All died for
lack of a 1eeond.
The preferred sate. 1 former tmh
transfer station. was one of four
recommended by county staff for
oonstrucuon of an urban Jail wtthin
thrtt ye.rs
Property on Harbour Boukvard
near 01 ncyland in Anaheim. a
strawberry field at Grand and
McFaddtn 1vcnuC1 in Santa Ana and
the Site of Phoenix House on Frui1
lrtet 1n Santa Ana also were con·
s1dettd b)' s pcrvttors
In addatton. ( lark tavorcd two
more sites -one behind the e1u ung
J••I m downtown Santa Ana. another
at the county·~ Youth Gu1dan~
Center located on a triangle of land
bet..wttn the Santa Ana and Garden
Oro~ frttway~ and the Santa Ana
Ri ver.
Tbc prospect of 1 J••I at any of the
propoxd locauons sparked oppo i·
lion not only from AnAheam but also
the city of ota Ana. the nta n
Un1f\Cd hoot Dmnct. °''ncyland.
the Ansel and the Ram
upcrv1sors chose the K.ateUa-
Dou1lus nt because n 1s 1n an
mdustrial aru away from ~tdcnual
neiahborhood5 and hool chal~n
(Pleue .ee A14AllBDl/ A2)
claims aUe&lna cxctUive u.1e ot force
by police offioen was a llP cA I.be
times amona local cities.
"I think tliil is the-aaie for people to
reecnt authority and brin( la..Wta. ..
he said. "lt is a cbarac.teristic cA IM
times, not an attribule o( the police
department for the mos•c" w~ said that in ~t~. city
officials would cootider it a problem
if they ;were sued more \ban once a
month. But it is ne>W common for
citics like Newport Beach to recx:ivc
(PleaM ... POUCS/A2)
HBgets
tough on
offshore
drilling
Mayor wants letter to
coastal panel to have
a much stronger tone
By ROBERT BARU:R
Of ... hlr .......
Huntington Beach Mayor Robert
Mandie b.a.s pulled beck a city letter to
the California Coast.al Commission.
claiminJ it is "too weak" in its
opposillon to oil drillina in fedenl
waters off Southern California.
Mandie said today he wants the
letter toughened to show state of-
ficials that the city-a Johnny-come-
lately offshore oil critic -really
means business.
Mandie said be is fearful that state
officials will lend more wci&ht to the
"adamant .. protests from Laauna
Beach and Newport Beach and ap-
prove new platforms off Huntinston
Beach, which hasn't put up as much
ofa fi.gbL
Laauna and Newport have escaped
esiablishmept of offshore pWfomu
over the years. while Jive sud>
facilities have been placed off the
Huntington Beach coast
Huntington Beach, dubbed .. Oil
City, USA" in some circles. has been a
strong backer of the oil industry over
the yea.rs. Local officials staunchlY.
supported offshore operations until
an about-face came 10 July 1985.
At that time. the Ci ty Council, with
the election of environmentalist Peter
Green, voted to join the other coas1al
cities in opposiq offshore drillin&.
(Pleue eee TOUOll</ A.2)
TONY
SAAVEDRA
PERSPE CTIVE
careen on the line. and was touted as
a test of strength between developers
and residents.
In the aftermath, it appeared that
after years of giving the inside track to
(Pleue 11ee 8KT8CRAPSR/ A2)
Booths
banned
on Main
Beach
By LAURA MERK
Of"'9hlr .........
Anyone who wants to set up booths
on Main Beach for art fcsuvals or
cultural events will be dn"tctcd to
Irvine Bowl under a law ld~tt'd by the Ci ty Council Tuc"1ay ni t
The Park Use Pohcy. w teh at-
tracted a threat of a lawsuit by a
rthg1ous sect last year. stlr?'N debate
and concern from some council
members who wanted the ordinance
to permit some aroups 10 conduct
e'ents on Mam Beach . ..
The Hare Knsbnas were banned
from usmg Main Beach for a Fesuval
of India last year hccau~ the pohcy
would not allow them to erect
structures, not even a card table
But when the city Ans Com-
mission asked penn1 ion to hold at
Ans-in-Motion festival on Main
Beach. the counc1l aarec<t. sayn\& tbe
event wu planned well in advance.
David Liberman. auomc"Y for the
Han" Knshna • filed 1 d11mna,nat.aon
u1t ap.inst the etty and &aier
Wllhdl"fw n whtn the cou.nc:1I allowed
thc Knshnas to uK" the beach fur lhe
fesuval
When the policy came btf ore lbc
council to be' adootcd u law, IOfDC
(Pleue -POLICY /Al)
'
u * Oreno-COMt DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday. March 19. 198e
Police will be polled in Qid
t o break contract dea.Cllock
BJ TOM WRIGHT
......... Ow $ • '
Rank and file polioe offioen will
voic on a contract proposal in an
attempt to break a deadJock between
the city of Fountain VaJlcy and the
polioe association.
The decision to poll the offioers ~c Tuesday niibt af\er a heated
council mecung exchanae between
Mayor Fred Voss and Steven Silver,
who repr:c:sents the Fountain VaUey
Police Officers Association.
The police offioers have been
workina .without a contract since
November. In recent weeks, the
association has tried to gather public
suppon and pressure the ctty by
pick.etinc in front of City Hall and
distributing fliers.
The city contends that its overall
contract package, including salary
and benefits, is the best that can be.
offered.
The pohcc association argues it is
only seeking salaries similar to those
paid toothf'r ll'wrnfM<'t"mtnt officers
throuahout the county.
City officials said that when au
u pcctsoftbc package are conaidered,
the Fountain Valley police officers
have a better-than-average salary and
benefit peck.qe.
That drew a cry from police that the
mortaaae can't be paid wiJh other
benefit$.
Voss told Silver he didn't believe
the membership of the association
was getting an accurate report of the
city's offer.
"If they really understood what we
arc offering," Voss said, .. They would
accept the contract."
Silver said be was perfectly willing
to let the mayor present the city's
offer and welcomed a membership
vote.
"But, whu if they say no to the
city's proposatr•
"Well, at least we'Jl be a little
further along then we arc now,'1 Voss
responded.
Voss and Silver sparred throughout
the council meeting after the mayor
Search for new chief narrows
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of tMO.-,NM ......
City officials have completed the second cut in the hiring ofa new police
chief. narrowing the in1t1aJ field of 50 to a half-dozen applicants.
According to Newpon Beach personnel spokesman Duane Munson. the
results of the written portion of the police chief test have been detennined.
leaving six candidates in the running for the city's top law enforcement
position.
Because of questions that surfaced over the fairness of the selection
process, Munson said city officials are being "very cautious" to ensure a fair
review of the rcmarning applicants. Munson said their identities are being
w1thcld until the final cut has been made.
The six remaining applicants will take the next phase of the test, an oral
interview. March 30. The results are expected to be made public April 7. he
said.
The position was vacated Jan. I by Charles "Pete" Gross. The position of
acting chief is currently being held by Arb Campbell, who 1s one of the
applicants for Gross' job. Gross, who announced bis retirement m October,
took an extended leave of absence. His resJgnation is effective iri July. Ne~rt Beach Ci ty Manager Robert Wynn said the oral evaluation at the
end of this month will further winnow the appljcants to three finalists. Their
names will probably be revealed then, he said.
A closed-door City Council sessjon was called earlier this month to
determine 1fthere were any irregularities mvolved in testing candidates for the
police chief JOb.
The meetins was called because two candidates were allowed to take a
crucial examination two days after the rest of the applicants took the same test,
which could have been an unfair advantage. according to city Civil Service
Board Chairman Dr. Norman Loats The City Counci l decided the selection
process had been conducted fairl y.
"We're bemg very cauuous to keep our selection process valid down to the
wire." Munson said
said the council wouldn't re pond to
Silver's q_uestionina.
When Silver turned to the audience:
and said Fountain Valley residents
wanted questions answered, Vo
lhrcatencd to have Silver removed
from the council chambers.
The threat was met with chants of
"let him speak." "we have the right to
answers," "unfair" and "we want to
hear him."
But there were also cries of" throw
him out."
When city officials presented their
contract proposal, Silver charged
there were aspects that bad never
been placed on the negotiating table.
"I think that proves you don't
understand our proposal," Voss told
Silver.
He then asked for the issue to be
presented to the membershiP. for a
secret ballot vote.
Voss al'mounced that negotiating
teams would meet on Thursday to
discuss polling the officers.
POLICE •••
From A l
up to 50 liabihty claims a month.
The audit of the police department
was requested last summer when
·problems with juvenile vandalism.
noise. litter and crowds plagued the
Balboa Peninsula and there were
questions about the deployment of
officers, Wynn said.
But the audit was prompted by
other factors as well, according to City
Council members who called the
study "a good managing tool" for the
city.
Every city department m Newport
Beach -except the Fire Department
-has been studied by an indepen-
dent audit team. The latest report,
which cost the city about $60,000,
was the first review of the police
department in city history and is the
most extensive study done of any city
agency.
The audit was conducted by the
National League of Cities Police
Consulting Scrv1ce,1. a Washington
D.C.·based pnvate 11rm.
The audit team talked with local
residents, observed police operations
and interview city and police of.
ficials.
The City Council will discuss the
study's findmgs at its 2 p.m. public
study session April 14.
CRIME REPORTS INCREASE IN IRVINE •..
From Al
ceny/thef\o; brought the I iJIS5 figure to
268.
•Auto thefts Jumped almost 60
percent from 159 incidents 1n 1984 to
217 last year
•A IOpercentdrop was recorded m
burglanes. Break-ins in 1985 totaled
l.047. compared to 1,116 the
previous year.
•Arson cases totaled 27, up from
2U in 1984
•A. significant nse was recorded in
narcotics v1olauons: 820 incidents m
1985. compared to 532 the previous
year.
Beyond these offenses. the report
focuses on traffic accidents that
occurred in Irvine.
According to the repon, 1,441
traffic accident during 1985, a I 0
percent increase over the previous
year Among these accidents, 318
mvolved inJunes. Eleven people died
in Irvine traffic accidents dunng
l 985, up from eight the previous year.
Alcohol was a factor in I 08 acc1·
dents. Irvine police made 914 drunk-
en dnvingarrests. a 6 percent increase
over 1984.
Irvine officers issued 29,889 Clla·
lions for moving traffic v1olauons. a
41 percent jump over 1984. Accord·
mg to the repon, the increase is hoked
to an increased number of officers
assigned to traffic enforcement dur·
ing 1985
SKYSCRAPER SAGA CONTINUES ...
Fr om Al
tommercial and business projects. < osta Mesa 1s indeed becoming more
taut1ous 1n cons1denng development
Yet the political fires fueled by the
growth debate continue to bum
toward the November city election
Segerstrom. Ross also warned against ··when we planned things a
reading too much into the skyscraper number of years ago, we had no
pro1ect's failure. mdicat1on of what other cities were
Clw, wwm wther. ~ ,..,._., U'9 etonne Mondey,
contl"'*' tOCSty, • a ~.,. pettcec:t cwtr' much of
the wtet brought a ftow of wttm dlMr1 etr towwd the oout,
according to the Natlonal w .. ttw e.Mce. Tem~atur .. wNI oontlnue to rtee. with hight ThUf'tday
ex.,.cted to reach the mld-70t and 801 on tM COMtal pleln, the
mld..O. to mld-501 In the mountain• and UPP" 80t to mld-IOe In
the ~t. l.owt tonlgh1 wlll be In the mld...40t Md 60s elot'tQ the
cout, the 20t to mld-309 In the mount.in. and the mid~ to
m1~50t In the <MMrta.
Along the Orange Coast It wlH be cleat tonight end tunny
Thurtd•y with local gutty wind• to 26 mph belOw the eanyona.
Warme< with hight In the mid 70t and 80t. l.O¥n tonight In the
mid •O• and 501. From Point Conoeptlon to the Mexican Border -OWr Inner
watera, local eutetly wtnd1 10 to 20 kno11 below the canyons.
U.S •• Temp e
acm ..._,. 1..a poOr 1-1 ,..
1..S ,..,
1..S ,. 3 ,..,
1·2 poOr
1·2 PCIOI'
TOOA'f 7.27 0 M ,,4
30
•• 00 u 2'
POLICY BANS BOOTHS ON BEACH ...
From Al
council members asked that it be
rewntten to allow for some festivals
on Mam Beach.
Tuesday night, council members
argued about how the city would
determine which events and what
type of structures could be allowed at
the beach without being accused of
discrimination. "If I own a Chevy
dealership in Brea, does that mean I
can come down to Main Beach and
exh1b1t my new Corvettes?" asked
Councilman Dan Kenner. "I am
womed about equal application of
the law."
Asked 1f the city could restrict the
space and number of days the park
could be used for such events. City
Attorney Philip Kohn said only 1f the
council could assure the requests
were dealt with on a first-come, first-
scrved basis.
"Where is the public going to see
an , drama and musicT' asked Leah
Vasquez, chairwoman of the Arts
Commission. who opposed the ordi-
nance.
City Manager Ken Frank said
although lrvine Bowl will be available
for festivals and art shows, he
doubted it would be used very often
because most of the business comes
from people who stop while driving
by Main Beach on Pacific Coast
Highway.
"I think the Park Use Policy has got
to include an area for expression of
First Amendment rights," said Coun-
cilman Robert Gentry. "It takes away tht" "'hnlt" O:»vnr nf rirmnt'r:l<'V"
Kenny noted that groups will still
be able Lo gather there, but they can't
erect any structures. Concerts will
still be held in Bluebird and Nita
Carmen Parks. he added.
In other business, the council:
•Agreed to send a council member
to the California Coastal Com-
mission meeting in Santa Cruz next
month. Tbe representative will solicit
the commission's commitment to
oppose offshore oil and gas explo--
ration.
•Sent a proposal to pl ant about 28
palm trees on Main Beach to the
Dcsi~n Review Board for public
heanngs and consideration. The trees
would be planted in five clusters
throughout the park.
SHERIFF TO FIGHT 1,400-INMA TE LIMIT •.•
From Al
contempt finding. the prisoner popu·
lation exceeded 2,000 inmate<>. some
of whom were forced to sleep on the
floor. The 1a11's state-rated capacity is
1.191. Earl y this month. Gray ordered
another contempt hcanng for Gates
after learning that the inmate popu-
lation at the Main Jail exceeded the
1,500 pnsoner cap on at least three
occasions in February.
According to coun-appo1nted Jail
monitor Lawrence Grossman, there
were 1.523 inmates 1n the jail on Feb.
ANAHEIM ...
From Al
18; l,537 on Feb. 23; and 1,520 on
Feb. 24. Grossman subsequently
reported that the department ex-
ceeded the cap again by one inmate
on Feb. 25 and by 13 inmates on
March 3.
In arguments filed in U.S. District
Coun Frida).'. county anomeys admit
the Main Jail exceeded the cap but say
Gates should not be held in contempt
of the judge's order because the
overages were not made willfully and
only lasted for brief periods until
transfers or other arrangements could
be completed.
Gates has made "every reasonable
effort to comply" with the court's
order, but he canoot do so without
endangering public safety, said Depu-
ty County Counsel Ed Duran.
Gates said the Sheriffs Depart-
ment is having difficulty coping with
the 1,5()0,prisoner restncuon despite
the transfer or release of all suspects
awaiting arraignment, trial or serving
time for misdemeanor offenses.
The department has also resorted
to paring sentences by three days and
issuing citations instead of booking c;omr mi~emt"11rinr <;uspccts
A final inmate reduction strategy,
which has kept the jail below the cap
since March 3, has been to release
some sentenced inmates five days
early.
Meanwhile, Ross and other
~gerstrom officials are burying their
sk}scraper proposal. which wa~ to be
the first phase of a 98-acre busmess
tenter on the company's Home
Ranch propert:; bordered by Fair·
"Things haven't changed. really," going to do.'' Hertzog said. She 1s
he said, explaining the project would supporting the creation of a com·
have probably been too progrernve mumty forum to trade ideas on Costa
for past councils. Mesa'sgrowth and "what we want the
Sult, Ross was disappointed by the city to look like in the year 2,000." Supervisor Roger Stanton. who rep-
tum in events. He wasn't alone. Counci lwoman Schafer had her resents Santa Ana, made the motion TOUGHER STANCE ...
'' 1ew Road Harbor Boulevard.
~unflo"'er Avenue and lhe San Diego r rccwa~
"We"re really going 10 ha ve to take
<1 fresh start" Ross said "You can't
s1mpl) whack awa:; at an existing
proJCCt and make II work ..
He ..aid the new proJCCt wnuld
probably not be as tall a'I the
abandoned tower plan. which would
have included the child-care center,
J 5,acres of landscaping. and the an
gallery R.o'is was unsure wht:n de-
signs for 1hc new pro1ect would be
complete or 1f the amcn111c' would
sull be included
In recent weeks the ">cgerstroms
were forced into an expensi ve
advert1S1 ng and publicity campaign
to counter anti-skyscraper letters sent
by Mesa Action to rnmmun11y res1·
dents.
Wh ile the extensive campaign fail·
cd to defuse the oppm1t1on. Ross
would not credit Mesa Action for the
demise of the pyramid-topped high·
nsc.
"The prOJCCt. being very Vls1onary,
perhaps concerned some people and
concerned the City Couocll." he \a1d.
adding that most rcsJdents he en·
countered were independent thmkers
unswayed by Mesa Action or ( J
~~~~e DlilJ Pilat
MAtN OFFtcE
)3() w ... Bey 51 Cofl• -.. I.Ao! •ddl-eo. 1st() Coo•• "'""' " l1~~
From A l Jim Aynes, spokesman for the own private forum of sorts dunng the to study the site. He was backed up by
aggressive Mesa Action, said he was past few weeks. Mesa Action labeled Bruce Nestande. Following a two.-
hoping for a clear win. He vowed the Schafer as the swing vote on the hour heanng. Harriett Wieder and
residents' group would continue put· Segerstrom building and urged resi· Thomas Riley added their votes. Laguna Beach City Councilman voiced against the poss1b1lity of oil
ting the screws to large,scale de· dents to send her postcards 10 The board has twice backed off Roben Gentry, a leading offshore oil spills and the harmful effects they
velopers in Costa Mesa. opposition. picking a remote location for a 5,000 critic, hailed Huntington Beach's would pose on wetland areas and
''Mesa Action 1s still gomg after the to 6,000-bed jail and is currently tough new stand today, asserting that tourism.
alliance of developers who are trying Although Schafer won't disclo~ restudyine possible sites but final the new-found unity would help the Mandie said the letter was too
to tum Costa Mesa rnto downtown how many cards she received, 11 selection 1s at least a year away and local cause. general and needed to deal more in
Lo'i Angeles." Aynes said. addin$ that would be safe to say she 1s a hkely actual construction cannot began for In the draft letter that Mand11: specifics. Ci ty Council members will
ihc group would be formulating a candidate for eyestrain. at least three years. asked be toughened, fears were cons1der a tougher version Monday.
growth in1uat1ve "of some son." "Mesa Action was using this issue ~=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==========================-.-He also warned that council incum· thinking the pressure would build up
bents Arlene Schafer and Mayor to a crescendo ofan election," Schafer
Norma Hertzog were still in a said. "That's sad. I feel the
precarious position if they planned to Segerstroms have tncd very hard to
retain their scats in November. work with us. They are a big pan of
"We're not going to let them off the this city."
hook,'" Aynes threatened. "They are Many would argue that without the
very vulnerable and we will be Scgerstroms, Costa Mesa would still
watching them closely. It may not be be a wide spot in the road. The
too late for Arlene to save herself. but developer donated the land on which
I have senous doubts about Nonna .. the Orange County Performing Arts
Ironically. Hertzog was ge3ring up Center 1s being constructed in Costa
to vote against the 20-acre skyscraper Mesa. It also owns South Coast Plaza, phase. the Town Center business area and
Even more ironic is that Henzog 1s large chunks of Harbor Boulevard,
now urging her council collcague'i to home to a celebrated stretch of car
be especially mindful of the impacts dealerships.
new developments may have on But, said former mayor and promi·
traffic and residential neighborhoods. nent oldtimer Al Pinkley, the
She said her awareness wu Segentroms may be challenged Just
heightened by the proliferation of fo~.~ing the Seaerstroms.
new developments 10 Irvine and I m not ~ure any plan the
other ne1ghbonng cities that arc Scgerstroms bnng back for the Home
dumping traffic onto Costa Mesa Ranch will meet the approval of Mesa
streets. . Action." an angry Pinkley said.
Detty Piiot
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VOL. 71, NO. 71
What do you like about the Daily Pllot? What
don't you hke? C.all the number above and your me~sacc will be recorded. transcribed and de·
livered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answerina service may be
used to record letters to the cdilor on any topic.
Contnbutors to our Lett.en column m~t include
thcir1'amc and telephone number for venlkauon
Tells us what's on your mind.
I
•114 "'°" copy w>ll M
~-.. '"° s.1"'"'' .,.., ~r 11
r'>U 00 -•llC .. "' 'fO'!I tOCIY 0., 1 • "' t~ DI'°'• •o • "' .,,., ,.,., coo, ..
Ii. 0."-90
I
Circulation
Te .. ~e Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717
HElllWOOD MAIUFACTOllf
19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627
'
32 Years Experience
M1nuf acturlng Quanty ~hutt.,..
......................................... _______________________ ~~~
Teena' problems
airing in Irvine
Teacbiaa p&Rnts how to cope with teen-qc
problems 1ucb as aubatanoe abuse and prepancy
wilJ be diacuued Tbunday from 7 lO 8 p.m. on
Irvine'• Community Cableviaion Channel 3.
The special live broadcast is the le<lOnd in a
four-pan series sponsored by the lrvine Unified
School Diatrict1 .People for an lrvine Community
Hospital and AMI/Irvine Medical Cent.er.
RetJree. plan job talk
Carolyn O'MaJJey, an emplo¥"'ent representa-
tive from the Area A,aency on A&Jn&. will seeak on
the employment opportunities for senior ciuzen1 in Oranae COunty at Thursday's meetins of Chapter
121 of the American Association of Retired Persons.
The potluck luncheon is planned for 11 :4S a.m.
at the Veterans Hall, S6S W. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
Binao will follow the regular p~m.
ScJence till~ at UCI
Nobel laureatej Sir Bernard Kitz wall discuss his
'research on the transmission of electrical imt>ulses
from nerves to muscles Thursday at 1 p.m. 10 the
Science Lecture Hall at UC Irvine.
The lecture is free and open to the public. Call
UCI's psychobiology department at 8S6-602S for
further information. •
Anmety control talk Ht
Psychologist Barbara Wright will explain the
relationship of anxiety to breathing probfems and
offer tips on its control at Thursday's meetmg of the
Better Breathers Oub.
The program, which is free and open to the
publlc, will be presented at 4:30 p.m. at South Coast
Medical Center, 31872 Coast Highway, South
Laguna. Call 499-13 11 for additional information.
Re.tlred officen to meet
Dr. Robert Cosgrove will speak on the bumorof
Mark Twain at Thursday's dinner mcetina of the
South Coast chapter of the Retired Officcn
Association. .
The program is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the
San Oemen~ Elks' Lodge, 1 SOS N. El Cam ino Real,
San aemente. Those wishing ~•lions should
call Dick Adams at (619) 728-6448.
Burglary talk planned .
A community buralary prevention qieeting will
be held Thursday at 7:l0 p.m. at Hope View School.
17622 Flintstone, Hunting1on Beach.
Detective Gary Meza oftbe Huntington Beach
Police Departme~t's burglary detail wdl discuss
current problems and answer questions. The film
"Crime an the Home" will~ shown and there will be
free burglary prevention literature available.
Female ezecs to meet
Rosemary Maellaro, human resources manager
for the Southland Co~ration, will discuss em-
ployee relations at the Thursday morning meeting of
the South Coast Association for FemaJe Executives.
The event will be held at 7 a.m. in the Cookbook
Restaurant, 17th and Yorba in Tustin. Call Leora
Baron at 8S7-9499 for additional information. ·
Wednesday, March 19
• 6 p.m., ln1.ae Commulty $ervlees Com-
ml11ioa., City Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree
Blvd.
• 1 p.m .. Coast Commulty Colle1e District
Board of Tnstees, District Board Room, 1370
Adams Ave., Costa Mesa.
• 7:30 p.m., lrviDe City CoucU, City Council
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Beaclt Park.las, Traffic aad
Ctrnlatto. Commlttff, City Hall Conference
Room, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Lap aa Buell Seismic Safe-
ty /Dlnster P reparedness Committee, Police De-
partment Library, 50S Forest Ave.
Thursday, March 20
• 4 p.m.. Lapa Buell Ramu Allain
Committee, Community Center, 384 Legion St.
• 6:30 p.m., Lapu Bead1 Board of AdjHt.
ment, Council Chambers. SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Beadl Cable Televlaloa
CommJttee, Community Center, 384 Legion St.
• 7:30 p.m., lrvlae Pluala1 Comml11loa, City
Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Pou cE Loe
. --~~ ---~--
Few swallows sited in Capistrano
By IMAIMdas.4 Preta
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Hun·
dreds of people pthmd at M111ion San
Juan Capt1ttano today to catch a allmpsc or swallows retumin1 from their winter
migration, but si&hti0&$ of thC"famed birds were few.
"There's one. theTe's one, ice him Oyina
around?" said Rose Michalee, pointiol
skyward above the ruins of an old adobe
church.
~irhl'll"(" fmm ~n r'le-mt"nf(' ~Aid ~hf'
Life on the Orange Coaat
hid vi1.ited t.be million often over the peat
2S yean add noted a lleady deeline in the
ownbet of uny di1f •wallows returnma
each aprina lO nest and raise their youn.a.
"You tee, there's so much bu1ldina," 1he
said, ''they even come and nest now under
the eaves of our house an San Clemente."
Nie.le and Lena Liberto said they drove
the 60 miles up from San Dieao to sec the
birds, but were disappointed.
Uberto recaJled sce1na flocks of
swallows returning to the mission in
newspaper photographs 40 yca11 ago.
"But now,e\lcryth1n1 is too modern. too
many people." he s.1-1d.
Scout swallows bad been seen at the
mission earlier, cbeclonJ out nestina sitts
in the miu1on's eaves 1n advance of the
main flock. said Dick undy, vistoroentcr
dif'C'Ctor for the miss1on.
He said he recently saw "" of the birds
flyina in the area of a newly constructed
church. a repbca of the Old Stone Church
that was destroyed in an 181 2 earthquake.
Acoordina 10 tradition. the clt-n·t•llf"(t
The llcenae plate on a llercedes puked on Via Lldo-eem• appropriate for Newport Beach.
Costa Mesa newspaper pioneer ·
Fred F. Allen succumbs at 72
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OfW.o.llJ .........
Fred F. Allen, formercditoroftheCosta
Mesa newspaper that became the Daily
Pilot. died of cancer Sunday at Long Beach
Veteran's Hospital. He was 72.
AJthough a Garden Grove resident.
Allen lived for many years in Costa Mesa
and worked as a joumahst aJong the
Orange Coast for 35 years.
Allen was editor of the Costa Mes.a
Globe-Herald. the forerunner-of the Daily
Pilot. He also served as the editor-
publisher of the Corona del Mar Ervign
during the newspaper's early years and
later founded the Orange County Daily
News in Garden Grove.
In the years just prior to his retirement.
Allen served as bead of communications
for the Garden Grove School District.
WaJter Burreughs. a longtime friend of
Allen's, hired him to run the Ensign in its
formative years and recalled his vigorous
rcJ)Ortinaofthe local area in his years at the
Ensign and the Globe-Herald.
.. He was a very good newsman."
Burroughs said. ..The one thing I re-
member particularly about Fred AJlen as a
newsman was that his stories really
showed you what was going on in the
area."
Allen served as president of the Orange
County Press Oub and was active in other
Journalism and civic groups.
The native of Chesaning, Mich .. gradu-
ated from the University of Michigan. He
served seven years in the U.S. Army before
and dunng World War II.
Allen 1s survived by his wife, BilJie; a
son, Marcus Allen, and daughter-in-law
Denise of Sun City; a son, Barton Allen
and daughter-in-law Mary of Huntington
Beach: a daughter, Jan Allen of Anaheim;
thrtt grand~hildreni his brother, David
Allen of Owasso. Mich.: and four sisters.
Mary Stales of Lansing, Mich.; Janet
Hershey of Wheeling. W. Va.; Beatrice
Crane of Southfield, Mich .. and Barbara
Rutt of Diamond City, Ark.
Private services arc pendmg. The family
suggests donations be made to Glenwood
House Inc., Alcoholic Recovery Home.
8SO I Acacia, Garden Grove. Calif. 92641.
Dean lawsuit in FV withdrawn
From staff ud wire reports
A lawsuit filed against former White
House adviser and Watergate figure John
Dean over a Fountain VaJley company's
stock sale will be withdrawn today. the
plaintiff's attorney said.
The suit alleged the Deans violated
federal securities law in the saJe of 800,000
shares of stock issued by Coelco Ltd. of
Fount.ain Valley. a holding company.
James H. Mitchell Jr .. who represents
Durango International Corp .. a Pan-
amanian company that bought $320.000
worth ofsecunties from Dean and his wife.
Maureen, said late Tuesday he would file a
motion for dismissal today. The suit was
filed Monday in U.S. Distnct Court in Los
Angeles. '
"The action was filed for a technical
reason," Mitchell said of the suit. "That
technical reason has been resolved."
He said he had agreed not to explain the
dispute further.
The decision followed discussions Tues-
day night with the Deans' attorney. Steven
Stanwyck. Mitchell said.
The lawsuit alleged: "At the time of the
sales. there was no rcg.astrat1on statemenl
in effect with respect to the stock and no
exemption applicable to the s:ud sale." No
other claims were stated.
The federal Secunt1cs and Exchange
Commission requires all stock sales to be
registered except those conducted under
certain exemptions.
Mitchell. a Los Angeles attorney.
previously said Durango had received no
income from the stock and was enutled to
recover the $320.000 plus interest.
He would not c;ay who will end up with
the shares
swallows amveat the mL...oa CllCb ,_,a.
March 19, St. Joeeciih'• Day, e1ldial I
6,00CMnlle 6iabt Crom their wlallr taom.
in Goya. Artentina.
Acoount& of the swallows' l'dW"D date to
the mission's found.ins an 1776 by F..._
Jurupero Serra. The berde' ~WM
popularlzed by compoeer Leon Ilene ia Wa
1939 hit tona. .. When the Swallows CAMM
Back to Clipistrano," and tiace tlMao
lOwUU have turned out in amtt nu.mben
to witnesa the phenomenon.
KOCEto
air Arts
Cen·ter ·
events
Station must raise
$2 .3 million a y ear
in production costs
By PAUL ARClllPLEY
Of .. DlllJ,... ...
National attention will focus on the Oranae County Perl'ormina Arts Center
nellt fall when KOCE-TV launches pro-
duction of center events for more than 300
Public Broadcasting Servi~ affiliates.
Huntinaton Beach-bated Cha.noel SO
and the center reached an "aareement in
principle" this week to broadcast two to
three productions annually on PBS af-
filiates, u well as a series of regional TV
proarams and outreach activities aimed at
developing community interest in the
perf ormjng an.s.
The success of the venture will rest on
KOCFs ability to raise $2.3 million
annually for production of the oat.Iona!
and f'CIJOnal propams, u well aa advcrtis.
ing. promotion. publicity a.od outreach.
Dale BeU, executive producer of the new
series, said they will focus on loc:al
corporate underwriten.
"WearclookingforaliQl)ecompaoy,or
a partnership of non-<e>m~DJ com-
panies-Sou them California neiflbors to
the center-who wish to become mvolved
1n their community and in the nation on a
najor scale," Bell said.
Bell declined to announc:ie what pro-
grams would be broadcast in the series, but
he said KOCE-TV would be broadcastina
from the center on openi~ nicbtSept. 29.
However, if I.be station as able lO attract
underwriters early. it wilt bqin prod&aet.ion
of spccia.I p~s in October (or national
broadcasung an the sprina of 1987, be said.
Spokesmen from both orpnir.ations
praised the alliance as highly beneficial to
them.
Cochrane Chase. president of the
KOC& TV Foundation Board, said, "We
know it will be a challenge to raise the
money needed for this project, but we
bclteve that among the areat companies
here 1n Southern Califronia, there will be
those who will want to speak to their
national peers through the great 'buy' of
PBS.
"Any company aligning itself with PBS
and the c:ienter will be able to reap
incalculable benefits."
Thomas Kendrick. executive director of
the center, &aid, "I know the benefits that
public television can bring to a performing
arts institution when it becomes involved
with quality prosrammiOf in the tndit1on
of 'Kennedy Center Tonight' and 'Great
Performances.·
"Literally overnight, the center, through
PBS, could achieve substantial national
recognition that would help us for years to
come."
Female robbery suspects
nabbed after heist foiled
worth $100. an electnc drill worth
$I SO and a battery charger on wheel!>
worth $50. • • • A salesman from the Pacific
Mutual complex at 17330 Brookhurc;t
St. reported Tuesday that since
March 1. someone had stolen a bank
card from a drawer in h1!> office and
used tt to withdraw $1 .200 from his
ac.count. He told police he had
paperchppcd his ident1ficat1on to the
card.
• • • Burglars stole fc ruhzer and
chemicals valued at S:!,500 and a
computer component valued at $50
fro m N urscryland, I 581 I Gothard St. • • • Officials at the Mervyn·s depart-
ment store. 9811 Adam!> Ave • n--
poned emloytts allegedly stole s 1.580
• • • Pohc:t' arrested Jan Catherine Win-
frey. 2S. of San Oemente on susp1-
c1on of dnVlnJ under the inOuencc of
alcohol. Winfrey was stopped at 11 :40
p.m. Monday on Ramona Avenue.
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... ~ .......
Two women who allegedly robbed
a Dana Point convenience market
Tuesday were arrested early today
after one of them tried to stab a male
service suuon attcndent in San
aemence with a kitchen k.nife,
authorities reported.
The auendent reportedly disanned
the women by p-abbiot her band and
smash in& it into a nearby cash drawer
until the tnife clattered to the around.
said Oranae County Sheriff Lt. Dick
Olson.
Lynn Anne Murine, 25. of San Juan
Pfewport Beach
A rcj)Orted $8,710 in jewelry WIS
taken from a home on Vasta Orande.
The owners told police the jewelry
a~ntly wu ta.ken from a blth·
room drawer, possibly dunna a peny
at the rnidcnoe. • • • A yeUow 1981 Honda Pasapon was
rcportechtolen from lbc Video Depot
0Atkin1 lot o n Balbol Boulevard
Monday.
• • • In a separate thef\ Monday. a blue
t 981 Dauun 280u was stolen from a
Newport Center plfkina lot. The
owner says he locked the car. and
when he returned to it hours later. at
wasaone.
Capistra,no and Patricia Lynn De-
menno, 32, of San Oemente were
arrested after the attendent provided
deputies with the license plate
number of the truck the women were
ridina in, said Olson.
The truck wu llOpl)cd on Pacific
Cout Hiahwty near Doheny State
Bach Where the women were ar-
rested on sUJpiclon of anned robbery.
Both are beina held at Orange County
Jail on SS0,000 bail.
The women allqedly held up a
Circle K convenience store io Dana
Point about 10:05 p.m. Tuesday and
C3Clpcd with SS6 in cash, 11id Olson.
• • • An auto buralatY Tuemy in the
1300 block ofQ"uaH Street resulted in
1 $4,-481 loss and a reported $826 in
damaae. Two car seata and a car
stereo were taken, and the center
console and dub board were damq-
ed in the inodenL • • • The owner of a truck parked an the
1100 block of Jamboree Road re-
ported the theft of construct.ion tools
Tuetday. More thin S2.SOO in equip-
ment wu &a.ken out of the tru~lc.. • • • About $200 1n Jewelry wu stolen
from a Dover Shores home Tuesday.
A Jewelry box cont.ain1n1 the item
was reportedly taien by burafars who
entere<J throuah an unlocked door
• (
Three hours later. the same duo
puUed into a Sao Oemente gas station
and asked the lone attendent for
change, Olson alleged.•
As the attendent started to open the
cash drawer. one of the women raised
a kitchen knife over her head as if to
stab him, aaid Olson.
He said the attendent l"lbbcd the
woman's hand and smashed it down
on the cash drawer.
Actina on the attendent's descnp-
t1on of the act.away car, a deputy
stopped and amsted the women
within minutes of a radio broadcast of
the robbery attempt. Olson said
Poaataln Valley
Fotch\I open a rear 1lid1na aJa
door. someone buralari:red and ran·
sacked a home Tuetday on tbe 11800
block. of Dotwood. The loss included
two 1¥nl valued at $490. • • • Two Santa Ana resJdenu wctt
arttSJC!d Tuetday on suspicion of
shop[iftina meat and c:iprettes from
the Von's supennarket at 16201
Harbor Boulevard. The sus~ M'R
identified u Demetri1.1s Rob Ceortt.
20. •nd Lesha La Shte. 22
• • • A rcs1dtnt of the 11 700 block of
Gloxmia reponed Monday tl\at
wmcone stole propniy from h" open
Pf'llC Tht loss included a router
• • • Someone entered an unlocked gar·
8Je on the I 0000 block of Lo
Otbatlo and stole sk.1 equipment
worth $232. a resident reported
Tucsday. • • • A Huntinaton Beach re 1den1. re-
ported Tuc1da_y that someone stoic
his brown 1978 Ford ('ouner pickup
truck. which had been parked 1n
Fountain VaJley on El C'ont7on at San
Mateo. The loss was estimated lit
$1 ,800. • • • A phys1Clan reported Tuesday that
someone burafamed h1 Toyota
upra whale It was perked in the
southwest lot at Fountain VaJley
Re&ional Ho1p1tal, 17100 Euclid t
The loss included stereo equipment
wonh$900. • • • ~tmna throuab a rear hd1na
window. someone buraJarucd a
home on the 17600 block of u Rosa
Lane, a res1dent reported Monday
The lo estimated at $866, included
two televnion sets and 11 video
t'eC<>tder.
B11.nttnctoo Beacb
Someone broke into upreme
Oonut1. 602 Pacafk CoHt H1.&hway.
throuah a side window and ,tole $90
1n C'lprtttts and S '5 Jn cofTC'C
• • • Someone stoic a $5.000 computer
a1 a ~s1dcnce tn the 3000 block of
Mont~o. • • • A 1975 hlack Porsche valued at
SI S,000 was 5tolcn from the parking
lot at McDonnell Douglu, 5301
Bolsa Ave.' • • • Thieve stoic n surlboard and
wetsuit valued at S4SO from the
Hunungton Surf Motel. 720 Pacific
Coast Ha&hwa) • • • Someone stoic a radio valued at
SI SO from an unlocked Jeep 1n a
parking lot m the 19000 block of
Brookhurst Strcct. • • • BuraJars tole a pur1t' containing
$25 from a bedroom of an apartment
in the 200 block of Marn llttt • • • Thieves broke into a Honda Ac-
cord parked in the 21000 block of
Warner Avenue and 1tole SHO 1n
tools
Lap.na Beach
Two men were cited early Tue~y
on·susp1cu>n of lewd conduct Stop-
ped at 1 a m at Bea lcr Parle wert
"'SOf'Y Harry le"cove. H . of
Lquna ~ach a.nd Michael Jo1Cph
McMahon. 41 . of Las Vep • • • l>amnge to a window on Part
A venue used atl estJmatcd SSOO
damaac. the v1ct1m told pohtt Tue
da ·
I
Intne
A man's bnefcase contam1n1 $500
cash was stolen from a home on the
100 block of Cheyenne Tu~y
eve1ng around 8 p.m • • • A fast food restuarant on the 1.5000
block ofC'ulver Dnve rcponed $175
massing from ttsca h drawcrTL&C:lday
at about 8 p.m. • • • Credit cards and a driver's licente
were reported massing from a home in
the 30 block Colonial Monday a~er
noon around 4 p.m
Coeta lleea
C'ash tota.h na S 110 was reported
stolen from the offic:t' of' Oco"F'~
Me,1can Rtstauranl, S97 W. 19th SL,
between 11 pm. Monday and 8:30
a m Tuesday. Entry wu made by
pryina a rear door • • • A $300 .. Will lO ~teated .. llJll WU
,tolen by vandals from Denny's
restaurant., 10s E 17th St., about
m1dntaht Tu~y • • • .t\ S 180 cd er wa reporttd stolen
from a trailer 1n front ofa home 1n the
lOOO block of Bibb tnict between 4
p m. fnday and 9 a.m Monday • • • Thrtt load of clothana vaJued 11
$734 were stolen from an unoccupied
laundry room m the apertment
comple11 a( 277S Meta v~ East
bctv.ttn 3 '\Op m and4p m. unday
/
---~~-----------------~----------------------------------------~~
Fo_es say Reagan's Contra aid plan doomed
WASHlNGTON (AP) -Hou~ dameniaJj-of th~ SlOO m1lhon 1ssue toV1etnam. "lseethis leadinato clox" aod that the adminas\tlhOn
Speaker T~omas P O',Ne11J said pack~&e· But he said chanaes were war .. .I sec a quaamire down there." wu listenina to oo mpromisc ideas toda¥ President Reapn s plan to possible that would delay delivery of he sa1d. from members of Conan:ss in hopes
provide S 100 million to anti--1ovetn· military and other aid for up to four The president decliqcd Tuesday of winnina their suppon
mcnt rebels l!l ~icarqua appears mont!ts !O permit time for d1plomat1c night to predict the outcome. telling "We have not made any aarce·
beaded for reJection .• and a White ncgot1auons. reponers at a state dinner for Can· menu" he said said He said some
House s~csman w~ a last-minute O'Neill , D-Mass .• anda vocaJcnuc adian Prime Minister Brian members of Congrcs; want the prcsi·
compromise was poss1ble. of the aid pack.age, said opponents Mulroney. "In all my year! as a dent to SJ&n an executive order callina
With a House vote set for Thurs· hold a 10 to 1 5-vo~argin. He said sportscaster. I never predicted the for negotiations while the aid is
day, White. House SP<?kesm~ Larry the~ has.been "no erosion" despite end ofa game:" delayed:·othcr congressmen arc seek·
Speakes said the adman1strauon was an antc:nuve personal lobbying cam-Speakes said that the battle. for 1ng such assurances from Reagan in 8
rulin. out compromise on the "fun-pai~ bv Reagan. O'Neill likened the approval of the aid was "very. very letter.
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NASA official hedges on
cause of shuttle tragedy
By tM Aaaocla&e4 Prell . .. . CAPt CANAVERA L -A top space agency official says the"' 1 room
for improvement" an the rocket booster JOln! suspected an ~c Cha.Uenser
explosion. but that in vestigators don't want to Jump to concl.usaons about the
cause of the tra~y. "We don't want to come up with one th1~.1 and overlook
somethina else.· J.R. Thompson Jr. told reporters Tue~l.· We want. to be
sure to come up with the ri&ht answer. We must be cauttous .. Th~mpson 11 vice
chairman of the Nauonaf Aeronautics and Space Admanmrauon ~.k force
aiding the presidential comm1ss1on's 1nvest1gauon of the Jan. 28 accident thitt
killed seven astronauts
Famed author Bernard Malamud dead
NEW YORK -Puhller Pme-wanning novelist Bernard Malamud, who
won acclaim for wnung about anu-Sem111sm 1n "The Fixer" and heroism in
"The Natural," has died. He was 7 I. Malamud. wh<? grew up an Brooklyn and
drew upon the Russ1an-i mmi$ranl experience of has parents for many of his
early works. died Tuesday at has Manhattan apartment of natural ca~ses, said
Sgt. Raymond O'Donnell. a pohce spokesman Malamu wo.~ th~ Pulitzer and
the National Book Award for fict ion 1n 196 7 for "The Fixer. which was made
1ntoa movie starring Alan Bates. Set 1n the wJnang days of c1anst Ru ssia. '"The
Fixer" reveals the courage of a Jewish handyman falsel). accused of ntual
murder because of anti-Sem111sm. Malamud also wo~ .a Natio.nal B<?Ok Award
in I 959 fpr "The Magic Barrel," a shon story collec11on pubhshcdan I 958.
U.S., Canada •agree' on acid rain policy
WASH INGTON -Wha1e-.er ll 1s the United States l'l going to do for
Canada about acid rain. 11 1s "substantial action." accordanJ to Canadian
Prime Minister Bnan Mulroney. Mulroney. other Canadian <?ffi c1als and their
U.S. counterparts were cagey all day Tuesday after a senior '-:J.S. official.
briefing reporters at the White House on condnion of anonr,m tty, said the
prime minister and President Rt'agan had reached "agreement · o n combaung
acid ram. In their own bncling.rnn the same condition of anonymity, Canadian
officials said there was no "agreement," and that the United Sui.tes had used the
word "amb111ously." c
States falling to care for mentally 111
WASHI NGTON -W11h a feweAceptaonssuch as W1sconsan. most states
have failed miserably in canng for the 5enously mentally 111 who wander
Amenca's streets. Ralph Nader's group Public Citizen said Tuesday. Thr
group released state-by-state evaluation!> of mental health care that rcponed
few standouts and much mcd1ocn1y. And 1t said the problem 1s not money. but
a lack ofcommnment and a lack ofcanng "It's not a money issue. Spending
more money docs not 11.t'I vo u belier sen ice," said Dr E. Fuller Torrev. a
former government psych1atns1 now working for the Pubhc Citizen Health
Research Group.
CURRENCY CHANGES
Polyester thread with m icro printing* on
$5, $10, $50 etc . denominations
Pa'yester thread with rrucro
printing• on $ 1 denominations
Micro -printing along scrollwork
of aJI denominations repeating
"United States of Amenca "
*USA plus the number ol denonunatJOn
-
Dollars change
to combat fakes
WA.SHINGTON (A P) -The greenback 1s staying green, but an
the first ma1or currency changes 1n more than 50 yea~. the Treasury
Dcpanmcnt announced T uc~a)' ll 1s adding a tany plastic thread and
m1croscop1c pnnttng 10 IJ .S mont'y in an effort to thwart
counterfeiter'>.
Treasury Secretary James A. Baker Il l ~1d the changes will be
made a year from now 10 protect American money from a v owing
threat from a new genera11on of o;oph1s11ca 1ed copying machanes.
The Treasury Oepanment has for !tt''eral yea r\ been studying
way-; to make lJ S. turrcncy more counterfc1t-proof including changan~ the color. •
In t e end. official-; decided 10 opt tor subtle changes that are not
hkely 10 be noticed unlcsc; the currency 1s studied carefully.
The main difference will be the add1t1on of a clear polyester
thread on the left side of the ponra11 The thread will be an visible until
the mont'} 1s held up to the light. Through light, the thread will appear along w11h pnnting.
The thread will to the left of the f ederal Reserve seal on all
denom1nat1ons except the SI bill On 1ha1 bill. at will be on the right
side of the seal between the seal and tht' portrait of George Washington.
On the SI ball. the pnnt1n~ will be "one USA one USA" along the
length of the thread "lJSA" will be pnnted on the thread<; woven into
alfl the bills, hut the dcnom1na1ion will change depending on the value o the bill.
The other ch~.nge will involvt' printing of the words "United
States of Amenca repeatedly around the ponraat. The words wall
only be v1s1ble when held under a magnifying glass.
Federaldrugtesiadvocate
won't pioneer the process
WASHIN(1TON (AP) -An of-
ficial of the President's Comm1ss1on
on Organtzed Cnme cned "cheap
shot" Tuesday when the chairman of
a House subcommittee asked him to
submit to a urine test before defend-
ing the comm1ss1on's recommcn·
dat1on for drug te<ittng of federal
employees.
"I thank you fo r very eloquently
proving the point that we have set out
to prove," Rep Gary L. Ackerman
D-N.Y .. told Rodney Sm11h af\cr he
declined to take the drug 1cs1
Ackerman caught Sm11h by "ur
pnsc at the Start Of the heanng when
he held up a small plastic J&r, declared
"I thank a specimen as wonh l ()()()
oaths" and asked the deputy direCtor
of the cnme commission to ao to the
men·s room wnh a committee staffer
and produce a sample.
Smith responded by facing a group
of telev1s1on cameras recordma the
exchange a nd de n o unci nA
Ackerman's request a. "cheap ahot
and .. a performance for the media ... ,
Smith went on to defend a com -
m1ss1on recommendation that "ap-
propnate" drug test ing be conducted
on all federal , state and local govern-
ment emf loyees as well as on em-
ployees o private companies that do
bu<,inc'ls wnh the federal govem mt'nl
Smith ..aid the comm1ss1on has not
~uggested that the cnt1~ federal work
force is suspected of using drup and
added that he believes employee\
found to be u<11na drup should be
rehab1lnated rather than fired
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Wedding
bells due
for prince
LONDON (AP) -Buckingham
Palace announced today that Prince
Andrew, the second son of Queen
Elizabeth II , will marry Sarah
Ferguson, a red-haired commoner
with close family ties to the
monarchy.
No date or place for the weddan&
was set, but Andrew said he hoped it
would be an the summer at West-
minster Abbey Both the prince and
his bnde-to-be are 26 years old.
The couple granted 1nterv1ews
today to Bntish correspondents at
Buckingham Palace. The pnnce said
he proposed to Ferguson "some
weeks ~o." but put off an an-
nouncement until his mother re-
turned from a tour of Nepal, New
Zealand and Australia.
"We asked the queen for per-
mission last weekend at Windsor
Castle when she returned," Andrew
said. Under Bntaan's Royal Mamage
Act of 1772, the monarch's consent is
required before those in the hne of
royal succession can be mamed.
Orange Coat DAil. Y PILOT /Wednesdey, Merch 19, 1988 * AS
Prince Andrew wltll fla.Dcee 8ara.b rerauon. . .
the pnnce's ~tudy, Andrew and Both Andrew, a Royal ·Navy
Ferguson kissed for photographers lieutenant and helicopter pilot wh o
and paled frequently. The bride-to-served an the 1982 Falklands War,
be d1spfayed a ruby engagement ring and Ferguson, a sales executive in a
encircledindiamondsonagoldband. London graphics and pnnting firm,
Asked bow he felt about becoming said they will continue working after
a married man, Andrew said he was their mamage.
"over the moon." Afteraquickalancc After their marriage, Ferguson will
from Ferguson, he added: "We arc be known officially as Her Royal
both over the moon, and will be even Highness. the Princess Andrew.
~ -----~--........ --~--
with Judy
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Restall'ant Review
with
Judy Chamberlain
Thursdays
6:00-6:15
Brought to you by
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Sweden to release Palme slaylng su•pect
By tbt Auoclattd Prt11
STOCKHOLM -Stockholm Pohce Commissioner Hans Holmer said
today that a 32-year-old Swede held as a suspect m the kilhng of Prime Minister
Olof Palme will be released later in the day.·• An important link in the chain of
c1rcumstant1al evidence has broken," Holmer said. "We have had a
confrontation with a witness today and that confrontation did not give what we
expected." He said there would be no coun hearing Thursday on a prosecutor's
request to keep the suspect in custody for further investigation. The suspect
was taken into custody March 12. The police commissioner told reporters a
second arrest was made two days ago m connection with the Palme case. The
second man. who had been suspected of illegal possesion of a weapon, also was
to be released shortly. Holmer said.
Paris mayor welghs premler's post
PARIS -Pans Mayo r Jacques Chirac said today he would tell President
Francois Mitterrand wathm 24 hours whether he will accept the tough job of
premier of a nght1st gove rnment under a Socialist president. His acceptance
would make C'hirac. a conservative, the first premier in the history of the Fifth
Republic to serve with an ideologicall y hostile president. Chirac. in brief
comments to journalists between meetings with rightist leaders and potential
ministers today. said he wo uld announce his decision "tonight or at latest,
tomorrow morning."
OPEC asks lndependents to joln cutbacks
GENEVA -OPEC' asked five andepcndento1l producers today to join the
cartel an cuttane 0 11 production an order to dnve up prices, delegation officials
said. They said no firm commitments were given. The meeting with
representatives of Mexico, Oman. Malaysia. Egypt and Angola followed three
da:,.s of 1nconclus1ve OPEC talks on ways to stabilize oil prices. Fernando
Pegado. a member of the Aneolan delegation, said OPEC did not request
specific production cuts. He said his country was wilbng to help the cartel try
to reverse the pnce shde.
Reagan calls maneuvers off Llbya 'routlne'
WASHINGTON -President Reagan says he'll send U.S. warships into
disputed waters off the coast of Libya again, but he denies the maneuver 1s
intended to provoke Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy. "These arc routine
exercises that the fleet 1s ready to do. The schedule is going on as usual," Reagan
told reporters at a state dinner T uesday night for Canadian Prime Minister
Bnan Mulroney. The exercises. announced by the Navy Tuesdal, could send
warplanes from as many as three U.S. aircraft carriers near the ibyan coast.
The Pentagon declined to give the exact location of any U.S. ships, but
Pentagon sources have said that the USS America is due to pass through the
Straits of Gilbraltar into the Mediterranean Thursday.
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88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA . CALIFORN IA
Thunlday thru Saturcbiy. I -XI p.m. • Sunday, Noon • 6 p.m.
MARCH 20, 21 , 22 & 23, 1986
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1n Or•nll"' C oun1y·, renowMd wml·•nnual showing of anliq118.
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State coalition
urges campaign
spending limits
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A coaliuoo of CaJifomta
busmess leaden and pubhc interest lobbyists has
launched an initiatJve drive to limit spen<ilO& and
contnbutJoos tn le&tsJauve races.
Al a oews conrerencc Tuesday, Walter ~rteo, head
of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. and chamnan of
the coabtJon. sa.id, "The rush to nli.st putcr and veater
amounts of money in larger and tar&cr demoruoauons is
eroding pub!Jc confidence m poli\Jcal instnuuons."
Another supporter, former Assembly Speaker Kobcn
Monapn, said lbc measure would "reduce tbc appear-Wrong di· agnoses an~ (that there are) quid pro quos" in the legislative
process -political favors in exchange for campailll d con~~=~ spending in all State races JUml)ed 3,100 be1· ng prompte ,
percent between l 9S8 and 1984. Spending on legislative
ratts totaled $44.8 mill.loo in 1984. more than double the f Al D s
spent by legislauvc candidates is contributed by spcc1al-
mtercst groups, the coalition u1d.
amount spent in 1978. More than two-lht-rds-oftb-e-mo-ne-y . by fiear 0
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
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NG EL ES (AP) _ One man was told he had AID~. but reall y LOS A . h muse le stram. A no th er man died of cancer
suffered nothing more rie"?u t an ths because doctors thought he had AIDS.
which went untreated or oumo~ tan AIDS clinic call "pseudo-AIDS" -
. Sucb ca~ reflect what 0 d11c;!~a cancer. tuberculosis and other illnCSSC1
paueots suffid~nng ~,?,!'1 heaonrrectl v a; deadly acquired immune deficiency that were 1agno!K"u inc ,
!-=========;;;;;;;;;;;...-;-,syndrome J I fM d' · rm A stud ubhshed an the March issue of the Western ouma o e 1cine
P• B th ~ ~ d th Y Pgh f 80 onsecuuve pauents sent to the clinic for treatment of 1erce ro er I ~r& Ora~ e1'esst ~verec condition known as pre-A IDS really $uff'ertd other
Sell Broadway Mortuary I
'c'o ~OilM~Y 642_9150 ailm~We were surprised to find that 10 percent of the patients ~eferr~.to us
.. ~ with d. oses of AIDS or related d1sea~s actually had other d1~~· said 1---------------1 Dr. H~ Hollander. author of the stud> and director of the clinic at the
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H llander..Pid, because San Francisco-area doctors unconsctOl.!,Sly over-e~phasii.c the possibiht} of Al OS when secang ill people who belong to groups
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"
These siblings are more than just brothers and sisters
By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVICH
The old Spanish-styled house in
Tustin -which serves as the main
headquarters for Big Brothers/Big
Sisters of Orange County (BB/BSOC)
-is surrounded by budding Oowers
and colorful fruit trees. Inside its
wooden papelcd walls. warmed by
forest green carpet, B•g and Little
Brothers and Sisters arc paired
together for a special friendship.
Elyse Garrett and Terri Birch
comfortably share a sofa in ooe of the
back offices. Overhead snatches of
t.)leir soft charier and frequent out-
bursts of laughter sugest a close
friendship. Garrett, 34-years-<>ld, and
15-year-old Birch have been Big
Sister/Little Sister for five months.
Both say that weekly visits and
continuous phone conversations
have nurtured a m utual trust and
appreciation of the relationship.
.. I remember bow much I wished I
had a big sister when I was Terri's
age," said Garrett, who is unmarried
and works as a coordinator for a rape
crisis hot line in Laguna Beach ... ,
rcaUy hated school as a teen-ager; I
tuned my parents out completely .. .!
could have used someone else with
whom to tallc.."
For Birch, who lives in south
Orange County with her si~e
mother, the course of her young hfe
has been far from carefree. At age 11 .
she began to experiment with drugs
and liquor. At first, the reason was
peer pressure, later it became an
addiction.
"I have been free from drugs and
alcohol for a year," said the pretty
teen-ager. "My relationship with
Elrse nu helped to keep me straight.
If a.m feeling bad, I can calJ her and
talk 1t out!' ·
The friendship, according to Gar-
rell. bas brou&tLt satisfaction to both
Big Sister and Little Sister. However,
it's the chaqc in Birch that has
brought self-satisfaction to Ga.rTctt.
"I bave witnessed such a change in
Terri since we first met," she said.
"Terri is happier, smiles more and
realizes that she has options for her
future. Terri is quite bright, especially
in the maths and sciences; now she
looks ahead and is even planning for
college."
The Bi1 Brothers orpnit.ation baa
speci.a) needs in this ala. officials say.
The OTJ&Dizatio11 tw more Bia Sisten
than Little Sisters to match them
with, and it also needs more volun-
teer Bil Brothen. Bi& Brothen bu also started a
"Couples for Kids" program, where-
by a child of either sex is matched
with a married couple. The intent of
that program is to expose children
from one-parent families to happily
married couples.
Joe Alexander, Executive director
.
for BB/BSOC, said that Bia Brothen
was started in 1904 by Earnest
Coulter, a Juvenile Coun reporter in
New York.
"Eameat Coulter realized that most
of the cbildren that appeued before the court system were ,producu of
broken homes. often bomCll witb ao
in Philadelphia. Bie Sistm mC'flC(l at
the national level with B.is Brot.ben in
1976, Prelently the"' art 460 qencies
in the United s-.t.cs; 30 formed in
Canada. aniLa number o( inter-natio~_~u1n. BB/BSOC is a non-profit. eelf
supportina .,ency that is totally
P .J. Van Beeteren and Al Beaadette.
father present. From. what be saw as
an important need, Coulter formed
an association with a Presbyterian
mens v.oup and started the first
agency,' wd Alexander.
ln 1945, BiJ Brothers became a
national orgaruzation headquartered
dependcni on donations and fund·
raisers for its economic survival. Tbe
emphasis of the organization is to
create a one-to-one friendship ~
veloped between a volunteer brother
or sister and a child.
ln 1985, BB/BSOC supervised over
SOO matches of volunteetsud yc>UOlt'
stets. However, accccdiu to Alel-
ander, there· ate over 180' boyt .-t
air'I• ~n the • of 6 aDd 16-
yean-<>ld waitina for their own voJu.
~t Bia Brother or Bia.Sisler.
''Sinale pueats bave an enormous
amount 'of problems." said A.ln.-
ander. "For women wbo ate radi.aa
kids alone, this is a place where they
can come and let support. We u~
perent lf'OUPI that ~ eacb moa1h and ate led by a licienlOd fAmiJy
COUJ11elor. Counselina for chUdnm or
parents ~ offered on a one-to-one
basis; all the serviCles pe free."
Stephanie Bannon uDdemaDdl
firsthand the P1"9blems that face a
sinale mother. Divorced for thn:e
years, tbe Huntinaton Beach mother
looked to BB/BSOC for help when
her 10.ycar-old son lqa.n to bave
problems at school.
.. Jason's self-esteem was not very
JOOd. :· she explained. "Altboulb bis father lives in clote proximity, 6e bu
remarried and_st.artecLa .new family.
Now, it teems, be doesn't have much
time for Jason."
Several months ago, while Bannon
waited for her son at a barber shop, a
m1pziM article about the BB/BSOC
call&ht her eye. .. I knew that Jason needed a male
fagure in bis life. I tried to be both
mother and father, but soon ruli.zed I
was unable to do that. It seemed to me
that a Big Brother could ajve Juon
what he needed," she said.
Observi.q Jason and his Big
Brother, Rick Corey, immersed in a
comical ball pmc that included the
family d<>&. it appears that the three
month match is suocessfu.l.
(Pleue-810 BROTDU/All
Impersonal care
not for patients JULIAN
WHITAKER
A mid-life crisis with style
I had followed Sarah Smith for
several years, and at 74, she was doing
quite well. Unfortunately, as some-
umes happens in her age group, she
had a smalJ stroke. At the time she
was visiting her sister in Denver who
calJed me because Sarah awoke with
slurred speech, unsteadiness, and
inability to use her right band.
As would any third year medical
student. I knew she had had a stroke
of the left side of her brain. so I
referred her to a major hospital in the
Denver area and called the emerg-
ency room doctor. We agreed that she
needed to be hospitalized for a few
days, given anticoagulants, and re-
ferred to a physical therapist for
rehabilitation.
Sbe arrived at the hospital at 7:40
a.m., saw the ER doctor very briefly,
bad a blood test and was immediately
sent for a chest xray, a CAT scan, a
doppler test. an EEG, and an EKG.
This odyssey through the hospital
laboratories took 9 hours, and cost
$1 , 700. During that time she recci ved
nothing to cat and saw only dis-
interested technicians to whom she
was "another stroke." She and her
sister were terrified by the ordeal.
The tests "confirmed" the
diagnosis, she was given an-
ticoagulants and, after a few days. but causes most physicians to bristle
referred to a physical therapist for defensively: ·~There is just no ~e to
rehabilitation. Jo the eyes of some, answer questions or bold~ patient's
she received "the best medical care in hand, there arc far more unportant
the world," but in reality, a major .~~ to deal with." To some extent
crisis in her life had been worsened -this 1s true, the demands on phys--
many fold! · icians to un~erstand and use ~y's
"Modem medicine'' has become technology is more than a full time
extremely technical and, as a result, job.
more impersooaJ. Doctors are trained Ho~ever, the marked ad van~
to practice "by the numbers" and are ~ent ~ t~hnol~ bu not translat~
guided more and more by test results into . sigruficant unprovements in
than examination of the patient. trcaung our most common problems.
Young physic.ians arc rarely criticiz.ed The death ra~e of among large
for performing unnecessary tests, but numbers of patients who have had a
are "raked over the coals" for over-heart at~ck., stroke, or most forms of
looking a potentially valuable one. cancer 1s about the same now as 1 S
There are several arguments de-years ago. .
fending the use of excessive testine, . The solution ~o the problems of
one of them being "defensive medi-1mpersonal care is not the a~don
cine." Simply put, physicians wilJ ment.oftcc~ol~ -far from 1.t. ~l
order many tests simply as protection thS:t 1s reqwred is a StD?ple shift. 10
against potential law suits that might an1tude toward the. panent making
result from a missed diagnosis. Also, the rounds of the tesung labs.
the need to lcnow is paramount in Jllliu Wlltater, M.D., is dlreetor
medicine and advanaced tochnolO&Y. of die Natloul Heart ud Dlabe&es
has made that drive stronger, even 1f Treatment ludhte la Badqtoa
"knowing" doesn't alter the course of Buell. Be wUJ uswer ~~deal U
treatment. cperiet are mailM to die Daily PUot,
To say that medicine has become Post Office Box lSft, Cotta Mesa,
impersonal understates the reality, 9HH.
John is a smart and lucky guy (it's
funny about bow often those two go
together.) ,By age SO, he had ac-
cumulated enough financial assets so
that changing his life-style became
thinkabJe.
John had achieved a fair amount of
succ:ess through his insurance agency.
For 2S years he toiled, sometimes
around the clock. to develop bis
business.
Some would call him brave -but
not John. He says be was just ready to
redefine his life. In fact, staying in
what he saw as a stagnating position
would have been far more ofan act of
bravery.
Now, finally, the weather on the
East Coast and the promise of
thelegendary West Coast "kick-back"
style lured him to consider the big
move. But bis family had some
doubts.
"It will be a fabulous adventure,"
said John.
"I'm not sure I'm ready to live with
a retired husband," replied bis wife.
"Retired? Wbo said anything about
being retired? Retirement is not in my
vocabulary," John insisted. "I'll find
something interesting to do."
Lots of men and women think
about dramatic change in mid-life.
No one knows whether the changes
are instigated by middle-aged
hormones demanding a fresh burst of
More than 590 say 'Ciao' for charity
By CAROL HUMPHREYS
.,..,,...c..11111ndent
Hosting an exciting and entertaining be~efit is a constant challenge for
most charity organizations. But the overflowmg crowd (more than 500) .
attending the benefit of the Carousel Chapter of the Newport Harbor Guild
wasn't disappointed, even at$ I SO per couple.
Secret formula step onc ... Carouscl's SS mem bers who support the Orange
County Performing Arts Center used a simple event name '.'Ciao" prin_ted o~
dynamite invitations. It announced a hosted bar(always rucc) and Cahfornsa
casual attire.
"I think wearingCaliforniacasual is great. It allows everyone to dress the
way they want to. People like the casuaJ ~~CB:· Everyone looks different but they
are wearing what malces them feel good, said Sberry Smith, guest and
neighbor of member U.da Stief el.
Formula step No.2 ... The food, lo~ of 8~ food provided by Cuisine-
Cuisine. The Italian menu offered aohpasto, PIZZI, cold pastas, lasagna,
scampi, pasta primavera, "?cat balls. sau5:8gc, and a ~e~se~ cart that would
boggle even Miss Piggy's mind. (The seating was a bit hm1ted.)
Formula step.No. 3. .. 1:hemed dccorations.1bey included fountains,
twinkle lights lattJoe and vme covered walls, I ta ban carts, flowers and red.
areen ancf whlte table decor with terracotta pots filled with Jcraniums. .
dining.
Step No 6 ... Location ... the Pacific Federal Plaza, the beautiful Mediter-
ranean building we've all admired at 19th and Newport Blvd.
Step No 7 ... Magical entertainment, in tbiscasc, the Righteous Brothers.
"They were the key," said co-chair J9dy Smida (attending with husband
Steve) "Our entertainment chairman, K.atla.ISmJtla, tried and tried to get their
agenttocommit. They arcsuJ>posed to be in Vegas toniptt(camingSIS,000
per eve), buttook the night off and have donated their llme."
The Heroine (every group needs o ne) ... Bart.ara Freudt.
"We had aUgone to the Hop and decided we bad to have the Righteous
Brothers (locals BW Medley and Bobby Hatfield) for our event. We wcrcn 't
getting anywhere with their agents, so my husband and I flew to Tahoe where
they were performing. We went to see their show and 1 passed them a note. 1
didn't want to take no for an answer until I heard it from their own mouths.
They agreed to talk with me and decided they would do it. They wanted to give
something back to their community and they believe in The Center," said
Barbara. (The chapter made S 35,000 from the event to bring its total for the
year for The Center to$ I S0,000.)
Enjoying the show (sli&htly over~amplified) were co-chair et.ly and Blair
Armstroq, Bela and c.rfs Mel~r, GeraNIH and Micbel Sdl.its, Carol
andW BaNlll.Sllellaand TlmC.Ulaa,S..Uand Jim~ Carol and Barry
Steele, SMrt and Belt Beat, Sa.My and Nenn Newell. Noey and Jim Claytoa,
growth or if "mid-life crisis .. is just a
culturalJy prescribed answer to the
fast pace of the modem world.
Was John a victim of the "Gaugin
syndrome"? Paul GaUfin was the
French impress ion isl art.1st who drop-
ped out of his so-called bourgeois
existence and went to Tahiti in 1891
in search of a purer life tilled with
innocent pleasures.
Oaugin has been idolized and
&)orified by generations of males.
Why? Because it sounds id yllic to
change jobs and/or wives and flee to a
warm-weather never-never land.
The truth is thal Oaugin blew it-
be was never the hero history has
made him out to be. ln fact, by the end
of bis life, be was embittered and
angry at being rebuffed by the society
he supposedly rejected.
John's decision was a far more
reasoned one than was Gaugin's and
so it was no surprise that be did much
better.
Somehow, John understood that
"crisis" at mid-life, or at any other
time meant a turning point for better
or worse -not j ust for worse. He
dared to change his life. made the trek
west and did indeed find a most
c~lcngins position at a cable tele-
VJs1on stauon.
"You've got to thinlc positively,"
says John, a man who charac-
teristically bas talcen charge of his
lJIDA
Aa.w1
own life. "Generati~ a new impetus
for change was exciting -and it
worked for me."
His wife says that the big move was
just what she needed to inspire her to
return to school, a dream she had
procrastinated about for all too long.
John was successful in bis cba.n,o-
challeo,ge because be took the oeceu-
ary time and energy to clarify and ~
evaluate what was really important to
him. He felt a pull to a different and
more creative lifc-style._.and he in-
volved bis family in bis decision
ma.king.
The risk of pain was worth iL
Dr. AlplJ Is a marrta1e ud family
dterapjat la Corou del Mar. SM
welcomesyev re1p1Met. Uyoe wtU
a reply, pleue adeae a ataa,-.
aeU~ •ftiepe. Wrtte to
Lada AJpd. ~ .. c/• Dally PUot,
P.O. Bos liM, Colta Mesa, IHH.
Fonnula step No. 4 ... additio. nal fundraising opportumtics (~l bcneflung
theOCPAC)ofTered in 74afTordableand donated silent auction item~ .
Formula slep No. 5 ... Continuous disco-music provided fordancangand
JoyceandNenn~andTlaaand n.P........ 4
P...,....la ... IM~yDallyPUetSCJle ... ..,VW.Deu. Bela llelcb.l.or aad Oen.ldlne &clalata Mlect a lood red_. ..
Patrick and Kallal 8mtthjola Barbara and Kent heuldt for
l&lad.
, J ,
~ ~
..........................
mu and 11arJ Wtla and Jo and Bl uce Corbett 10 for
antlputo.
Blalr and Cindy AnUtrOq wtdl Jady and 9teft Saltll.
·'"'
0renge eo.t OAJLY PILOT/ Wedneeday. Mareh 18, 198e
FACES IL_~ - -
DJck win• two week crul.e
Mary Dyck of 1.Aauna Beach wu the arand prize wanner of a two-week
Mediten"lnaJl Crw.e, via the Royal Od_yuey, in a draWl~ held at South CO&Jt
Medical ~ntc:r Silver and Gold uJa ''Celebrate America ' last month.
The Americana themed pfa wu held at the El Niauel Country Club
appropriately decorated with red.. white and blue flowers and balloons. Over
100 auesu enjoyed an elaborate buffet followed by music by Al Stark.
Door prizes were allo woo by Marpret Oauslin, South l..quna and Mary
Harriman. Grace Boyd, Lethe Boyd and Marjorie Dwyer a ll of lquna N1aucl
lrrine woman leavea for Medco
Carol Land oflrvine leaves Fridar, for Puerto Vallarta" where ~he will. be
auistant to the dartetor of "Hunter, ' 20th Century Fox s movie stamna
Arnold Schwartz.en.r. Land's husband, photographer Barry Sloban, and son
Noah will join her an Mellico before the crew completes the 15 weeks of
sh(,)Otina.
·Tyler l• All-American Girl flnallat
J aU Tyler, a 17-year.old candy-makangentrcpreoeur from Corona dcl Mar,
DO YOU HAVE
DIABETES M.ELLITUS?
We are investigating ,
the newest oral agent
In the treatment of
Type II, Non-Insulin
Dependent Diabetes.
Participation In this study Is .
FREE and includes M.D. :
Supervision, Lab Testing a,Dd
medication.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CA LL
640-7412
,:·
,
BIG BROTHERS •••
hujust been named one of five finalists tclectcd to compete for the one-of:a.
kind Litle or AJl·American Oit'l of the Year. Now in Ill eiahth yea~ the contest
11 JOlnlly sponaored by 'Teen Mqaiine and Noxzema Skin \..ream. This
uDJQue competition wu initated Lo focw the nation's auenuon on teenap
achievcn from 12 to 18 whose ouutandina talents arc worthy o( public
acclaim.
Jail uenioratCoronadel Mar Ha&h School, 11 tbedauahterofCarolyn and
Ted Tyier. President of the JilJ Tyler Candy Company since 198 I, Jill sells her
chocolate creations locally and across the country. She also donates her candy
to community orpnazations and senior catazen aroups to be used for binhdays,
ho1hdays and as door prizes.
When not diligently crafting her creative chocolate desiiOS. Jill, as
president of her ha&h school chapter of Students against Drunk Driving, is
active m pro moting alcohol-free teen events at her church and in her high
school. She received the P.T .A.'s Dcd1cat1on to Social Responsibility Award
and the Parents Who Care 1985 Corona dcl Mar Service Award for her
community cffons.
Skin Cancer
Is Almost Always Curable
... Whe11 It Is Detected In Time
Even malignant melanoma. th e most dangerous form
of skin cancer, has over a 99 percent c ure rate In Its
early stages. Unllke ma ny other cance rs, skin cancer
frequently produces early warning signs.
In cooperation wtth the American Cancer Society,
C osta Mesa Medical Center Hoapltal I• providing free
skin cancer s creening on:
Saturday, Marc h 22, 9:00 a.m. to 1 :00 p.m .
Ca ll 650-2400 to make an appointment
for this Important screening.
~
homA7
"Has it only been three mon~?"
Corey questioned. "It aeems I have
known Juon ajpt loqer."
Corey is 2-4-y,.rs-old, married and
a part time student and computer
technician.
"I, too. read an article about the
qeocy. 1t said that the proaram rally
needed Bia Brothers. That touched
me because I arew ui;> in a typical
'Brady Bunch' fam ily situation. I was
fortunate to have a father fiaure."
Bar:inon Said her son no lonJCr has
problems at school, and that both she
and Jason have benefited fro·m the
new friendship.
"Now Jason has someone he can
taJk to and do things that I am unable
to do with him. Rick has a lot to ofTer
ot the children arc so needy of
fnendsbip; most suffer from low self·
esteem. We have kids e~press, '1f my
father doesn't want me, why sho uld
anyone elser Jn three Lo four month,
after a k:id h.as been matched wath a
Bia Brother/Bia Sister. he will say 'it's
ao aood to have someone to talk
to ... or JUSt listen to me ... somcone
who thinks I um a wonhwhlle
person!'"
Alan Beaudette is 30 year~ old,
unmarried and a successful Newport
businessman. His house in Irvine,
richly decorated, reflects the financial
independence he enjoys. Over a year
ago Beaudette became Big Brother to
9-ycar.old P.J. Vanhestcren.
"I had been thinking of entering
Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital
301 Victoria Street Richard Corey and Juon Bannon.
Costa Mesa. CA Jason. We have even included Rick an
our family gatbcnngs," smiJcd Ban-
'------------------------------------------------1 non. "Yeah," enthused Jason, "every-
one loves ham. 1 thank it's great
having R1ck...cspccially since my
----1 mom and dad aren't together any-
more."
The qualifications to become a Big
anto the program for about two
years," Beaudette said. "I ~uess I had
put at off because 11 1s a big commit·
ment. It takes a lot out of your week,
and you can'tJUSt pack up and take off
for a weekend tnp without making
arrangements w1th the Lanie
Brother."
_ose!
Brother/Big Sister arc com-
prehensive. said Alexander. The vol-
unteers must be 20 years of age or
older, have li ved in Orange County a
minimum of sill months, have
worked a minim u m of three months
at their current employment, make a
one-year committmcnt to the pro-
gram, spend three to five hours per
week with the child and complete the
agency's scrcenmg process.
Today. Beaudette, who serves as a
BB/BSOC board member, says ht'>
involvement w11h the two-headed
youngster 1c; the greatest thing he hac;
ever done.
··1 had accomplt~hed many of m y
personal and bu\1ness goals. I knew 11
was time to gi ve somethmg back.'" he
said.
When yo u loc;e. even1onr wins' Your family. friends
and moc;t importantly yo u It's a medical fact
that people wh o are ove rweight are at greater
risk of deve loping ca rdiovasc ular disease.
diabetes hypertenc;ron. arthritis and cancer.
ac, well a c; cJ vcJricty o f psyc hologica l problems
ac;c;oci atcd w11h being overweight
We at Fountain Valley Regiona l Hospital and
Medical Center ore here to help you win your
battle of 1 he bulge We have four specially
designed weight loc,c; progra me; one o f which
ic, right for you
Recommended Diets
Individual Nutrition Counseling
lfor individuals 20 lbc; or more overweight)
A registered dietitian wi ll work with you on an
individual ba sic, to pu~ together a we ll•balanc~d
meal plan t~at wilt help you lose weight while
mai ntaining good nutritional status You'll lea rn
about your persona l1body requ irements and
how to successfull y lose those unwanted pounds
and keep them o ff
OptJfast
(for individualc, 10 lbc; or more ovcrwc1ght1
A medically supervised program rn which a
protein/ca rbo hyd rate food supplement pro·
motes more rapid weight loc;s You will receive a
body composition ana lyc;1c; nutritional counsel·
ing. behavior mod1f1ca tion stress management
and exercise prescriptions each developed
specifically for you by ou r team o f weight lose;
specialists After you reach your goa l wci~ht.
our one year weight maintenance program will
help you to maintain your weigh t loss
Gastric Bubble
lfor individuals 40 lbs. or more overweightl
Thie; painless non-surgical procedure involves
inserting a denated balloon into the stoma ch via
the mouth. Once innated. th e balloon ca uses a
full fee ling. as well as res tricting the amount of
food you can ea t. The balloon is removed o nce
the desired we ight loss is achieved. Nutritio nal
counseling. behavior modification. support
groups and exe rcise consultations are included
as part of this comprehensive program.
Gastric Reduction
ffor individuals 100 lbs. or more overweight)
If you have tried unsuccessfully to lose weight.
this surgica l procedure may be right for you.
Gastr ic reductio n involves partitioning a portion
qf the stomach so that only a small amount
of food willc.ca use a full feeling. as well as limit·
ing the amount of food the stomach can hold.
A team of doctors. dietitians. nu rses and physio·
therapists will work with you to ensu re maxi·
mum benefits from this procedure.
Fo r more information about any of these trea t·
ments. please ca ll o ur specia l Weight Loss
Hotline·
(714) 567-4764
Fountain Valley
Regional Hospital
and Medical Center
17100 Euclid at Warner. Fountain Valley. CA 92708
"The screening procedure includes
an interview with the volunteer by
two case workers (each match IS·
always supervised by a trained
caseworker). three psychological tests
and being fingcrpnnted.
It doesn't take long for the volun·
tecrs to realize that they arc getting
back more than they ha vc gjven tn the
relationshi ;·said Alexander. "Some
Vanhesteren, who lives w1th h1!>
grandmother. younger brother and
teen·age aunt. ~ys before he met
Beaudette has life wa<, ··ocmng. real
bonng"
"Now I have a good fri end.'' he
gnnned "When I grow up I am going
to be a Big Brother and treat my Little
Brother JUSt like Al does w11h
me .. spend time with him and take
ham fishmg.''
Is your pool. ~PrJ or ho1 11jh
thP. h1ghl1gh1 ul {O Jr lior11r·?
Ent Pr t ht.. br•st uv· r JI
NOtr-r" r r:ir~gory '" thf"· Datil
Pilot . l v1ng SrJor r•s" r rir1
test rou roulrl win 11p to
$200 1n pr11es
CONTEST RULES
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LIVING SPACES ENTRY FORM
ENTRANT'S NAMI:
ADD•tsS1
DAY 'HOHi NUMlll:
IVINING PHONI HUMID:
CAT1GO•Y1
SIND
INTlllS
TO
LIVING SPACE CONTEST
c/ o DAii. Y "LOT/
HUNTINGTON llACH INDEPENDfNT
330 W. IAY ST.
COSTA MISA, CA 92626
'
. ------
COMPLnE NYM COllPOSIR WACTION8, A10
Dollar's fall hurts consumers, helps companies
NEW YORK (AP) -Japannc
imports r:an1Jna from N1ssan cars to
Shal"P microwave ovens oost more
these dayi because of the do11ar's
weakness qain1t the yen, and U.S.
companies are acttin.a a chanoe lO
capture 10me lost busme .
Tbe dollar hit a postwar record low
ap.1nst the Japeoese yen for a second
consecutive day Tuesday, closing at
174.90 yen on the Tokyo Forel&JI
Exchanae Market, O.SS yen lower
lhan Monday's clote of l 7S.4S. tn
September, the dollar had traded at
about 242 yen.
&ooonusts say a lower dollar as
aood for the U.S. ecooom yin the Iona
run. but 1t also means American
consumers have to pay more for 10me
of their favorite tmportcd producu.
A 1987 model Niuan Seotra, for
eumplet will have a but nicker price
of'SS,999, a 6.S percent incru1e over
tbe 1986 model, the compe.ny an·
nounced la.at week. It laid new
features and lbe dolJat•a faJJ were both
factors in the increue.
S1*P Electronics Corp. ha io·
created prices 3 pcroent to 10 percent
in all product catqones. from ap-
pbances such u microwave ovens to
~nsumcr electroojci to office equjp-
mcnt. Sony Corporation of America
ratted some or its prices S pcroeot to
12 pcroeot oo Jan. I, and Jl)Oketm.a:n
Thomas Suaiyama said MondaJ another round of inc:n:ata t00n ss
"pretty much unavoidable."
When prices of Japanete imports ao up, American companies have two
cboaces: they can raite their own
prices, thus improvina their ~ofit
mlJlins: or they can hold prices
steady, takina beck cuat~n who
E nter the IRA Sweepstakes
at The IRA Store.
The IRA Store. The w1de..\l variety ot IRA mve,tmcnt
opt ion~. tno. For
e~ample. htrc\ a
one-year. high-rate
CD we've devel-
oped Just for IRA ..
Every IRA imaginable.
'thu'll hnd '1ra1ght tJlk. \Im· ,.
pk t.t ·t,, and EtOnd advice at ,,,J 1 ,,.
~--
.
YtXJ can Mart with a,, little a' $100 and. 1f
you wi,h, make additional dcp<N t' dur
1ng the )C ar The IRA tore " full.>
,hx:~cd with money market
.iu·ount' and certificate' ot
dcpm11. a' well a-. \C it·
Jtrcl·tcd IRA' that let )Ou
1n-..e't 1n 'h>d,,, hof'l(I,.
mu1wl fufl(J\. Ginnie Mac'
.md more • •
•\ tf'hl ""-'"'" 1, .. not Hr, lt\f' mne•.tl v-vtJ hrii1W11 t"' dW' t.U,,tftt .umtt•I rlltfci 11'-'Wtftln• It.a( J'ftn. tptl t~f •nttml rl"m..t.-ot~Jtf"l'\tf htif 1W ,,..,,, lfdt ''""' 1t"'1.-np1Wn.1ni mr1mhh •" • "'' '"' heu•
I h. • u11rnl '"'t ""'' '~r J'" l<ool\ •"'' " ""hft• I '". tunfC' "~"' l\'nt" •I I ~''' • ••hJ• ... •I nf '""'" "' •hi""' 1,.., llu!I \111 ;f' Ah '" ''1' """ ' 1i. '" • '""''•'II ul "" r'!r ' ,_.,.,., .. •••I I .,.,, .~ '"'
,1 IHI ,I WU• IC'krAI ~••hl•fl IWflllllo<'"fl'I •l'4••1'1'h
• •I,, ""'" ll•n•• ''""', ""'"" 1rol lllr1•1'll ( 1Af I 1n..n.1111 -' '""'' '"'' ~""" ••Uh••""'' •11 •!I«' °'''"''"'"I "'' "'"nv• ftAn~
went over to tbe Japanae.
Couwnen would be beuer off -
and intlatlon would ranain under
bener cxmU'OI -if U.S. companies
held the line OD J)nCa to rep.in
market tbare, Mid Irwin K.dJner, 1eruor vice president of Manuf'.111>
UU'tts Hanover Trust Co.
So far. Japeoae corqpuia have peued alont ooly a hction of tbe unpect of thedolla(a 6te ._the
yen. ~ have l1.l'Utlled to bold
down their own prices to keep from
losiQI eustomm io hotly contesled
markets.
'9 1tt ! :~ ~ Bi
I~ ~..:1 (ti ~;
4f .t ~ Y'i
pi ,.. ~~· .,.. p
p
s-p
AMBRJCAN AIRPORT
TRANSPORTATION
& LIMOUSINE
S E RV ICE, INC.
ew.t/Minibul/~
5*attot IWOQOf '11/Vom/ FN I
Ooof to Door~
Ptl'llCM cnotter'1 and Tour1
I ·800-524 -1 3 00
U.ntb1n9Art
leawlc••
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WPlllCI •EWPOllT
{714) 72(),.9191
... ..__. C-0. . ..__. ..... u -
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------~7----~----~------------..-..-..---------..... --------------------------------------...... -
0ranoe Cout OAJlY PILOT/ Wedneeday, Merd'I 10, 19&6
..
0t¥ l"e IMK LUI Clot
l
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Mar. 11
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S
GoLo QuoTES
METALS Quo1Es NASDAQ SUMMARY
To I b:Jtt ttll.S
from t.hcz. Rob:trL Tol~da~~
~uc:ho in ()")rTT¢l vol lily t.hci.
world !) flna.st. ho~ L\<Z.S
olw~~ thlz pir Or.ct, 9' !\.
end ol~ thz IOr~t.
~q.ct,ion
~ bcux:h q14 r&!Y1"1n ~\nrd, 7114/6'1-. 5070
\MZlll.'MXXl vt\~ 1001 ~ bl'\d, 21~D~7 ~
~M ~~aouthl0\140'4,818/»i 9~
man tlm .. fn lC'to9. -'Ot.urday IO t.o6l ~noon to~
..
r
HoRo scoP1
T~1...ay.~lt
ARIES (March 21 :April 19): Restricllons are removed you'll have more
"workin, room.'' FarruJy member hlta "lucky streak." Yo~'ll have reason to celeb~te. you'll add to wardrobe and receive invitation to travel.
TAUllUS (April 20.May 20): What seemed a lost cause will be revived
Family member ata~s by, proves l;oyal, could even help you obtain fundani
Be aware of small pnnt, check detaJls, be ready to rebuild on more solid bast.
GEMlNI (May 21-~unc 20): R~nt inquiries bring positive results.
You'll locate lost al'l.lcle, financial------------
picture improves, you'll be at ri&ht place
at crucial moment. Focus also on cllang~. travel, variety. improved rela-
11onsb1p. SYDNEY CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Moon
in your sip continues to hi.ahliplt o
personality, charisma, d.iplo,macy, tu:n-MARR
ing. greater dcaree of sccunty. Family•••••••••••• member talks about possible move.
seeks your counsel and approval. Taurus plays role.
LEO (July 2l-A~a. 22): Priv~cy is of ultra-imponanoe. Secret meeting
will be arranged, you II be count~ on. to be discrcc~. A "biJ deal" is in the
offing. Many answers are found in unique places. Pisces, Vlf&o natives will play roles.
VIRGO (~_ug. 23-Sept. 22): R~nt experiences help you confront current
challenge. U~ knowledge, don t pull your punches. This can be a powcr-
play day :--prest1ae.,,money and love arc emphasized. You are likely to win •·populanty contest.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What seemed out of reach is now available.
You JCt valuable "second chance" to prove your mettle. Professional
supenor is oonvinccd that you are capable. Aries, another Libra play roles.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No-v. 21): Focus on biJ!ler educ.ation, philosophy,
spiritual values and lo~e .. You'.ll make new stan 10 new direction, you'll get to
heart of matters, you 11 1mpnnt your own style. long-distance call brings
desired results. ,
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Mystery 1s solved, much to your
advantage. You can now dance to your own tune. Individual who is
attractive, dynamic, talented will become your ally. Express feelings in
original manner. Leo plays role.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What had been an obstacle now
becomes steppina stone toward goal. You'll gain more k:nowled$e concerning
legal rights. permissions. Short trip could involve brother or s1ster. Gcmim
native plays role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Accent moderation, refuse to be chided
into snap decisions. Stress details. examine source material, realize time is on
your side. Keep recent resolutions concerning diet. nutrition. Scorpio figures
prominently.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You'll receive communication which could
involve creative project or travel. Get thoughts on paper. Realize you gain via
wntten word. Discern motives, reject superficial responses. Virgo native
plays role.
IF MARCH H IS YOUR BIRTBDA Y you arc family oriented, mother
has had much influence on you, you are likely to have gourmet appetite
combined with digestive problem. You are loyal, dedicated and moody. You
have knack for dealing with public, especially women. C.anccr, C.apricom
play important. roles in your life. You ar~ capable of sensing ~hen ~mething
of importance 1s to occur. Many people ms1st you arc psychic. If smgJe, you
could marry this year. There might also be an addition to family. June will be
outstanding.
Woodrow Wilson was
another la te bl oomer
AJben Einstem wasn't the only
bnlljant fellow who d1dn't learn to
read untjl late in childhood. The only
U.S. president Wlth an earned doc-
torate, Woodrow Wilson, couldn't
read until be was 11 years old.
Costa Rica is almost totally white.
''Takes too long to get the soup,"
complained the queen. No, she
didn't. really. I made that up
preliminary to report it's a quarter of
a mile from the kitchen to the main
banquet room in Buckingham Palace.
All counes arc served on time
therein, nonetheless. They've got a lot
of fast-footed help.
Most of what the scientists know
about the nervous system they
learned while cutting up &iant squids.
"'Lukewarm" 1s a redundancy.
"Luke" means tepid. Or did.
Q. Did you ever get a letter from
Cat Mash, Ala.?"
L.M.
Bo YD
generally. Pets may. not merit credit.
Maybe the pet keepers were less
morbidly inclined, anyway. Also,
prison suicide statistics arc un-
reliable. Still, it's common knowledge
that people who take care of living
things, outside themselves. tend to be
mentally healthier than those who
care not.
Why go to college? "To make
money," say seven out of I 0 collegiate
scholars queried on the matter. Not
the only reason for going maybe, but
it's No. I .
If 1t isn't the remains of an
orgamsm at least I 0.000 years old, it's
not a fossil. A. No, sir, aot one from Scratch
Ank.Je, Ala., however. Still hoping for
one from Bu.mt Com . Ala. Patience. h
Q. Which outnumber which 1n t e
Is Switzerland an 10surance · foot-the bones. the hgaments or the
saleman's paradise? Must be. No muscle~?
other nationals spend more money A. Ligaments. 56. Muscles, 38.
per capita on insurance than do the Bones, 26.
Swiss.
Some prisons permit convicts to
take care of pets. Among these.
studies show, the suicide rate is much
lower than the suicide rate in prisons
Takes I 00 pounds of wood chips to
make SO pounds of paper.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1pdlc•IH
colamo11t.
Blushing d efines
hum a n c h a r acter
Reductionists who insist that man
is "just another animal," except for
the faculty of speech, overtook the
other distinctively human capacities
they cannot rcaJJy explain in a purely
physical ICOle.
The first of these 1s laUlhing, and
the eccond is blushina. ""No other
creature does either, except in a
figuntive way. We att unique io the
ability to lauah at ourselves and to
blush for ounelves.
As Mark Twain wtly put 1t long
aao: "Man is the ontx animal that
blushes-or needs to.• We blush for
a multiplfoity of reasons: out of
sha~. shyness, modesty, em~·
ment, breaches of etiquette, or mis.-
conduct.
Moreover, like laughter, 1t is uni-
versal and involuntary. Forced laugh-
ter is hollow, and even the most
accomplished actress cannot blush on
cue. As Or. Leon Kass, the biologist,
P,2ints out in his recent book,
'Toward a More Natural Science":
"Blushing ~uires an observer;
though we may feel shame ·before
ourselves, we do not blush except
under the p.ze of the other, and only if
the other ts someone whose opinion
of us matters."
Blushing requires mutual social
concern and social self-awareness,
which is why very young children,
indifferent to what others think of
them, do not blush, even when openly
caught in a lie.
It is social u much as personal. In
some cultures, for instance, a woman
will blush if her legs are accidentally
exposed, while her breasts may be
bare: in others, the reverse condition
induces a woman to blush. Habits,
customs and social norms determine
what is "embarrassing" in a given
S111EY
Hu11s
r~ Ir-
SOCtety.
We can account for speech as pen
of man's reasoni114 faculty, and even
laughter bas a cosn1tive or inteUectuaJ
component; but blushillj., which is
wholly out of our control, seems to
siJEify that man iJ qualitatively
different from the other species in a
deep moral and social sense that is not
wholly conventional.
When physiol<>sists attempt to
reduce us to a bq of chemicals and a
nervous system, respondin& and rcac-
tina to stimuli in much the same way
that other animals do, they att not
being "scientific," but rather arc
deliberately ignoring some of our
uniquely human behavior that can
neither be explained nor explained
away on naturalistic arounds.
lfblushina is evoked by a sense of
shame -however different the
conventions of shame may be in
different societies -this seems to
imply that shame is part of man's
moral serue, and thus man is .. nat-
urally" a moral beina as much as part
of the animaJ world.
All creatures have personalities.
We alone have c:b.atacten. Delvers
mto the mind would do better to
concentrate on character than to
diddle around with personality.
SJbey llurt1 u • 1yNJcalff
colfUllal1t.
Stepdaughter, 18,
needs her privacy
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I need
your clear-headedness. This is the
situation: My 18 year-old ste~
daughter, with her father's per-
mission, installed a Yale-type lock on
her bedroom door.
1 maintain that I have the right to go
into any room in the house, but no1
look in my stepdaughter's dresser
drawers or the desk where she keeps
her personal papers. (J admit I have
done this at llmes.)
This child and her older sibling
have lived with us for 14 years, since
her mother died. She doesn't smok'e
or use drugs but I think she drinks a
little. The girl has a part-time job and
gives her father 20 percent of her
paycheck for room and board. She
has a few thousand dollars from her
mother's estate and is responsible for
her own car.
I am well aware of the larger
problems this lener reveals -poor
communication and a lack of trust
and openness. Would you believe my
husband and I are both psy-
chotherapists?
I am angrier with my husband than
With the girl, because be gave her
permission to install the lock. Please
tell me how this situation looks
throU&h unbiased eyes. -SOME-
WHEltE IN INDIANA.
DEAR SOMEWHERE: Yov scep-
dupter wu jaadfled la JMltUq a
lock oa lier door, 1laee, by yoer owa
aclml11I011, yoe uoopecl la lier room.
U 1llle were 13 ud yo. aupected ••e
was 111-1 dn11, It woelcl be •
dlffereat matter, bat u 11-year-old
wlao pay1 room ucl board cleterve1
privacy. U It talet a lock to 1et It, so
be It.
I llUetl jolat couullag for yoa
ancl yoer 1cepdHPter. TUt'• w•ere
tbe tro1ble Uet. T\e coallkt between
yo1 two 11 polMalal/O•r marriage. • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am a
widow. 78 years old. In order to keep
my bills paid I ta.kc in COUCfC
students. I have had 21 young men 1n
my home in the last several years and
never had any trouble with any of
them, until I rented a room to .. George ...
His quarters looked like a pi31>Cn.
He broke the bed and left it with the
nails sticking out of the headboard.
He always left . the lights on, and
sometimes tbe water in his sink was
left running. He sneaked out with his
belongings in the dead of night
leaving a $62 telephone bill and
owing me S 135 in rent.
Recently I learned Georie has
rented a room from a woman who
lives on the other side of town. I am
not a vindictive person, but I hate
being cheated out of what is rightfully
mine.
George works pan-time as a secur-
ity guard so it is not as if be doesn't
have any money coming in.
My ministeT says everyone has a
spark of decency 1n him and that in
time Gcorie will make good tus debL
What do you say, Ann? -PER-
PLEXED IN ILLINOIS.
DEAR P.: I say U tMt apart t.ua't
lplted by tlae time JM read Gl1 la tk
papen, I •• YM will CMtact
Geor1e ud cell Mm tMt lJ oa ~ • .en
payday, IM doea't UM over IM ftnt
lD1tallmat .......... debt, , .. wm
take •tm to 1mall claim• cwrt. U •e
doeao't come ~ cloa't lletltace
to make 1ood Y•r tlarut.
Woody 's 'Rose ' voted tops in Britain
By ~ Associated Prell become stars.
------------... ----··-----·-_. -~...:-
Or-..ge COMt DAILY PILOT~. M8"Gh 18, 1 ...
TALK 18 NOi' Cll&\P1
North&u\h vulnerable. South
deals.
WJ'.8T •• <:/J87t
NORTB·
tJt4
<v'AQ48
0 Al4
." 14 EAST
•761 Q" 10 92
0 16 0 KJ1082
+J 105 ••••a 80lJTB •A l(Q 108 2
Q I
OQ97
+AQZ
The biddlng:
Soatll We.t Nort.b Eut
1• 3 0 •<> , ... 5 + .... . . , ...
P ... Pua
Opening lead: Jack of+
Some bridge hyper-modernists
believe you should do everything
in your power to obstruct the ene·
my. That sounds well and good.
However, juat bidding for the sake
of making your presence heard at
the table can prove costly. On this
deal from a team tournament in Eu-
rope, West's interference drew
South a blueprint of the road to
success.
Six spades is certainly the right
contract. At the other table, North-
South got to that spot without any
attempt by the opposition to get
into the bidding. Alter the lead of
the jack of clubs, declarer adopted
a reasonable line.
He won the club in hand, cashed
the ace of trumps, crossed to the
ace of hearts and ruffed a heart.
CHU LES
GllU
0111
S11111FF
South reentered cha.ma:\J wtu-the
nine of trumpe and ruffed a heart
hlgh, hoping to drop ~ klJC.
When the monarch faUed to obu,e,
declarer drew the last trump wtth
dummy's Jack and tried a diamond
to the queen. Wnt won the kiDI
and contlnued with tM Jack, and ln
due cour&e declarer had lo conctde
another diamond for down one.
Where We5t felt obliged to put in
his two cents worth, declarer wu
warned that he could not expect to
make his contract by leading to-
ward the queen of diamondt. He
won the ace of hearts, ruffed a
heart, crossed to the nine of spades
and ruffed another heart. The jack
of spades provided the entry to
ruff the last heart, and declattr
drew the last trump. Next he
cashed his three club tricks, ending
in his hand.
With the groundwork laid, de-
clarer led • diamond toward the
ace-nine. When West produced the
ten, declarer al.lowed him to hold
the trick. West was then forced to
lead away from his king of dia-
monds into declarer's combined
tenace, and the slam was home.
'!:!::' S<C \lc4llA-/&'f..~s· .... ....
-----MllM l>y CLAY I. rouM
0 leorro"Qe lenen ol tt.e
fovr "'°"'bled -els be--low to form lcwr timple _,ds
I R I T T C S t
I' 12 I I I
1
1--.,...W__,..A_Y_E ...,R...--1\
1
, I' I I t _ I
I H U R S E I • My young OOUlln wa di~
s I' I I I !:" Pointed whef'I Gramps gO( the . .:. longendoflhe~ ··0on·1
..--------....... ht,00 Mid <nmpe, '"my...,,_,
I N QB 0 LG , t,,at youwould--'·
I I I' I 1· 0 ~~I~:-.... ~~~~ '-· __.._ ... _ __. __ .__.......__ YO\I dew.lop frotn no No 3 below
• r::~:lSN~~~m I' r I' t r r I' I' I
• ~~~~M&lEFOll I I II I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Froi:en ram
6 Offspring
10 Austrian -
U Ane fat>nc
15 Half: pref
16 Promote
17 Of cl11es
18 Wahoos
19 Bull: Sp.
20 Varmints
22 Hides
24 Foltow
26 Long curls
27 Plotter
31 Devour
32 Oulckty
33 Italian river
35 Dance step
38 Bastes
39 "--Walk" ..a Of planes
41 Sitter
42 Afriean land
43 Belt
4'4' Conveyance
45 Flcicle
47 Scortld.
news beat
5 1 Asian garb
52 On the spot
2
5' Stupid 0ott
58 Author Paton
59 Alaskan
glacier
6 t Prize money
62 Routine
63 Four roods
&.-Roman Judge
65-
MacMurray
66 Compul11on
67 Stave off
DOWN
1 Ticket pert
2 Captivate
3 Italian Island
4 Rubber
bands
scamping
equipment
8 Pronoun
1 Flan
8 Ant
9 CircumtpKt
10 Certify
I 1 Plunders
12 Soup
t3 Feeing a
glecJer
21 WrongdOing
23 Bring up
2S Pretend
27 Hyphen"s kin
28 Olympte
Games event
29 Cut to sire
30 Cliques
3-4 Votumes
35 An wound
pref
36 MllC&WS
37 Ex-trolh
39 Worlung CS<>o
40 Body posture
42 Promont()()'
43 Streaked
4'4' ChMttld
46 Mr Fleming
47 Boa
48 Embellistl
49 Elocute
50 Card
53 11 .. bodlng
55 legal~
56 -of Wlgtlt
S7 Driver In golf
60 Carmine
11 12 13
LONOON-Woocly Alleasaid
he was flattered that ''The Purple
Rose of Cairo" was named Best
Film of l 98S at tho Briti h
Academy Awards ceremony.
.. I'm connected to everyone m
that audience. Basically, l know
everyone out tbere.t'..:,.he II.id.
The town of l ~wu turned out to honor acton rewen ......._
Maule, 8a"7 1'11"1 Due
WltknpoM and musitj_an .U.
Patter.-.
. 14
Spea.kina "ia satellite from
New York, Allen said "rm very
flattered over your response to
'Tbe Purple Rose of Cajro, • and I
hope films I do in tbe future will
be meaninaful to you as well."
Allen's film also won Best
OriJjnal Screenplay at the na-
tionally televised event. spon50r-
ed by the British Academy ofFilm
and Televlsfon Ans. fn other
awards1 directors .... s,Mlkr'I
was aiven the prestiaious Fellow-
ship of the Academy. WUllam
Bin wa.s named Best Actor for
his role in "Kiss of the pider
Woman" and Dame Pegy
Ader.fl won be 1 actrc honon
(or "A J>usaae to India. ..
Patty Duke w eda
ST A TEUNE. Nev. -Actress
Patey 09• mamed an Army driU
~t in a ceremony per·
formed o't'er the weekend at a
"'1eddl.na chapel.
r
Woody Alla
Her marriase to S&t. I st Oass
Mlc:Mel Pearce wa.s held at
Love's Chapel in the South L&ke
Tahoe area. Duke met Pearce
whale film1na a movie about life
in the military. accordu\& to her
publicist, Mackey Freeman.
In the CBS-TV movte, "A
Time to Triumph," she portrayed
a houteWik who became an Anny
pilot to auppon her famtly.
SJaJdey llacLaJ.ne
Pearce, JI, ul Wall.ace, 1<1ah<>.
se~ as 1 1ecbn1caJ advtser
dunna filmtn• of lbc movtc at
Fort Bcnnina. Oa .. Freeman wd.
Hometown beroea
NYDER. Teus -''General
Hosp1tal .. Jtt.r8rMM1U.say he
faced his tO\llbcst audience dur-i~ a homccomi"l for five nydcr
H1ah .,.aduatcs who went on to
Spaced oat?
NEW YORK -Slalrley
MacLabte, visitinf Peru to film a
television minisenes based on her
autobioeraphy. landed in hot
water when she augested the
country's pant desen drawtnp
were made by vwtors from outer
space.
The SI ·year-old actress wa.s on
loc:auon in the Andes for "Out on a umb" when she was reponed as
suuestina the drawinp were
done by extJ1H~tnals rather
than aoaent Peruvtans.
Later, Time rnapzlnc reports,
Maclaloo lnCd to make amends
by sayina. .. , profoundly believe
that Peni is the repo 1tory of a splcndi~rou culture. If lhtre were Utratcrrtstn.J be1np that
bad vwted tbe Earth, Pena would
be the place they ""O(lld chOOIC. ..
17
20
27 28
32
38
41
58
TD
FAllJLY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"That's Mars. It's named a fter a
candy bar."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"I lost him!"
PEANUTS
6RAMPA SA'fS THIS
15 TuE TIME OF YEAR
WHEN KID5 USEO TO
SHOOT MAA6LE 5
GARFIELD
HE SAVS YOU JUST
DON'T SEE KIOS DOING
THAT ANv'MORE
·'
BJG GltOROE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
<.
"You're just trying to scare me. The football
season hasn't started already ... has It?"
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
J )·~
• NAw. l NEVER HOU.ER AT MY '[l.\1).
1AAiS MY N'OM'S$J8."
by Charles M . Schulz
WI-IV WOULD
ANl(ONE WANT TO
SHOOT A MARBLE ?
by Jim Davis
T~E i V ADVER1 1C?>ER~
PIDN'i WASTE ANY TIM E
f'VE 8Ef.N ON A DIET ONE ~c,i •
AND TMEl./'RE ALREAPCI RONNIN(s MORE. l=OOD COMMERCIALS
TUMBLE WEEDS
DRABBLE
~ 1\1£. OCC.10€.0 TO ?IT
Ot-l OOR n~ooT RJQ.(.~
UNTIL 1 CROAK I
• J
ROSE IS ROSE
~uns Abra Lincoln had to r .,;~k Un mil~ to 6Chool , and read his txioks
by e&ndl&lf ,ht ... "
,
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
BLOOll COUl'fTY
Zz
I
MOON MULLINS
by Berke Breathed
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
MAKE$
~_,,,..,,,, you T~ INK
NoT YET. if
~h
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
eoT rr~;fAJE~ IF leo'S
ea:N 1N~ewrrn Ht5
~Roi ALL 1f1ESE.
R&-WHV DID t-1:. \"-......--,..._~ ..____ SE.. 1b
IE ?I
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
YoU GoT>OUR
MON~Y1S
WORTH.
by Lynn Johnston
rrssnLLNo A AfFAIR OF~-
by Jeff MacNally
by Harold Le Doux
l INANT 'l'OU TO KNO W THAT
l 'M SEEING A LAWYER, FIRST
THING IN THE 111\0R.NING I I
INTEND TO FILE FOR A DIVORCE I _,,_
by Tom Batluk
SN.) ... DID lXXJ ~EAR A
WHIRRING NOi$£ I MR. DINKlf ~
!I '6 PROBA8'J.' JUST" .!:COSA
$PINNING IN HI& GAAVE .'
' ...__."'T"..,__ ~~ !
DOONESBURY
A!ilA~
HUH•
I
I ·~
•I
by Gary Trudeau
tVf 8E£N '1DM81f/CP.
I'M H15
S'l.AVE
---
UCI finds Twilight Zone
BYU ends Anteater hopes
with 93-80 NIT triumph
Special to tlae Daily PUot
PROVO, Utah -UC Irvine's dreams of an
eventual appearance at Madison Square Garden in
the National Invitation Tournament went u~ In
smoke Tuesday night as Brigham Young took 1t to
the Anteaters early and never let up in recording a
93-80 victory before 11 ,436 basketball fans.
The verdict sends BYU ( 18-13) to the
quarterfinals Friday night at Ohio State, while the
Anteaters exit with a 17-13 record.
The only solace from Coach Bill Mulligan's
Anteaters was that it wasn't a tormenting last-
sccond loss. This one seemed to be on ice from
virtually the start as the Cougars jumped all over
UC Irvine with 16 straight points to tum a I 0-7
deficit into a 23-10 lead with 6-10 Tom Gnciting
and 6-6 Jeff Chatman consistently doing the
damage.
Defensively a saging matcbup zone simply
stifled UCl's hopes from start to finish.
BYU upped its lead to 37-20 before settling for
a 41-32 halftime lead, then barged to a 53-34 lead at
the start of the second half, cventuaUy balloonina
to 76-54.
UCl's two inside guns -Johnny Roacrs and
Tod Murphy -were limited to nine po1ots
between them at halftime as the Coup.rs took
complete control.
"That was as well a coached team that we have
played against," said a disappointed Mulligan.
. "We haven't seen a matchup z.onc like that
since our last New Mexico State game. We were
confused in the first halfand obviously turned the
ball over too much.
"I thought we were prepared for ll, but
obvio usly we weren't."
Mullipn called for a time out to try to settle
bis club down when it fell behind by an 18-10
count, but whatever be said fell on deaf.ears.
He tried to talk to them again when they
conunucd to falter at 35-20, but nothing seemed
able to pull the Antcaten together.
"Rogers got frustrated early," commented
Mulligan, "and he j ust wasn't very effective after
that."
Rogers finished with 18 points, and Murphy,
the Anteaters' all-time leading scorer wtth l, 778.
had 4ust 11 for the night.
•1 wanted to ~ct the tcmp0 going." continued
Mullipn, "but 1t was all pne-stdcd.
"Ladell (Andersen) completely outcoachcd
m~·and their players played harder than ours. Y/e
m1ssed free throws. we didn't block out, we turned
the ball over way too much.
"I hate to sec It end this way because these arc
a great bunch of guys "
UC Irvine was sull miraculously within reach
at halftime on the short end of a 41 -32 count, but
BYU wasted no time in dictating the final
outcome.
Chatman scored two baskets and Richie Webb
and Brent Stephenson each added two more as
BY.U opened the second half with a 12-2 spurt
which ran the score to 53-32 with l 6:J6 remaining
in the aame. •
BYU held lls biggest lead of22 pou\ts (76-54)
with 7:56 remaining an the game.
Ch~tman scored 10 of BYU's first 14 points
and finished with 20 to lead five BYU players in
double figures.
JoininJ Chatman in double figures were
Gociting with 19 points (and 13 rebounds), Webb
with 17, Bob Capener with 12 and Alan Pollard
with 10.
For UCI, Scott Brooks bad 17 points and Mike
Hess added 13.
__ _._,...._,._
Naess pitches
Laguna to win
o.tr ..... ,..... ~ Dftld .........
Left-hanaer--blanks
CdM; Ea les. Sailors
topple Sea View foes
By JOSEPH DUDEVOlR
Jerry Jelnick, Corona del Mar's
baseball coach. said be learned every-
thing be knows on the field from
Laguna Beach Coach Tom Trager, for
whom he served under as an assistant
coach in years past.
When asked if he can tell what
Trager 1s probably thinking dunng a
game,Jeln1ck said. "You never know
with those left-handers."
Tuesday at CdM's dtamond,
Jelnjck and his Sea K.ings were baffled
by a left-hander. but it wasn't Trager.
II was southpaw pitcher Coby Naess.
Nacss hurled a five-hit shutout and
picked up three h1tsat the plate to lead
the Artists to a 5-0 wm tn the Sea V 1ew
League opener for both teams.
''Coby did a great job," said Trager.
.. He has ~ven us some stabili1ty with
his pitching and now he's st.artlng to
really hH the baJI like l knew he
could."
After Naess chaJked up 11
stnkeouts in upping his record to 3--0.
Jelnick added. ''He had us baffled, no
doubt about 1t. That Naess is one
tough pitcher ..
So far, Naess hasn't surrendered a
run this year in h1s 18 innings of work.
In his last start, he went 6l/1 innings
before finall y giving up a hit against
Santa Ana Valley.
third inning and added three more in
the fifth to salt it away. And it ,..
Naess who knocked in the winni•
run with lllS first bit. a line sin&)e ti§
nght. .
"We haven't been bin.in& the bd
real hard," said Trager, .. but we~
been putting the ball in play and
movmJt ocoolc around the hues."
CdM (4-5), on the other haQd.
never aot much going. Naesa fAnned
the first four batters he faced and .U
of the first nine. •
"I started getting a little tired." ....
the 6-6 Nacss. "l didn't have cooilll
over my curve. so I had to 'o with li.J)'
fast ball most of the time.' -.
It didn't seem to matter, u N ...
was in big trouble onJy oooc, whCt.
CdM loaded the bases on ~
straight bits after one out in the fila
inning. But a fly out and strikcQQl
ended the threat. :
The only Sea King to have m~
success with Naess was Kart
Ehmann, wbo doubled and si.n&led&
three trips to the plate.
For Laguna. Gary Scott, Tom my
Trager and Danny Lane all bad tttO
hits apiece. . :
In other Sea View Lague action:
Eatucta 3, Costa Maa Z: Pinch-
runncr Javier Gomez came bOJllC
with the winning run in the bottom<iJ
the seventh inning on an error at
shortstop offlhe bat of Pat Norville.-
the Ea&Jes(J..3, 1--0) won a squcakerM
Te Wink.le Park.
Norville, who pitched the final 2~
mnings to pick up his first win of tbe
year, ran bis hitless relief streak to 5Yi
innings as Estancia won the Sea View
League opener. Norville fanned fi'9C
Laguna Beach•a Britt Yamamoto alldea into aecond ba8e with ateal u the throw &eta put Corona del Mar•• Kart Ehmann.
Laguna Beach (4-2 overall)
scratched out 11 hlls, all singles, in the
wm. The -\nists scored tWlCC ID the (Pleue eee PRSP/lli1
Pirates
enjoy
laugher
Occ romps, 33-7;
RiiStlers thumped
by Fullerton, 13-=4
The Orange Coast College baseball
team cnJoyed a laugher at Compton
to stay undefeated m the South Coast
Conference, but Golden West wasn't
as fortunate. dropping a decision to
Fullerton.
Herc's a look:
Oran1e Coast 33, Comptoa 7: The
Pirates scored at least twice in every
inning except the third as they
completely dominated to beat Com-
pton and move to 12-4 overall and 4-0
1n the sec.
Joey James. who got the ball rolling
in the first inning with a two-run
home run, tied an OCC record with
eight RBI while Rex Peters, who went
4-ror·9 with three RBI, tied a school
record with five runs scored.
Peters also broke an OCC mark
with his nine at bats and hit a three-
run homer in the eighth inning.
Third baseman Robbie Gibbs, who
homered an the fourth with a runner
aboard, went 3 for 3 with four RBI
and four runs scored and Ralph
Ramirez, who capped the Pirates'
five-run first innma with a tw0o-run
home run, went 2 for 1 Wlth two runs
scored.
hllerto• U, GoldeD Weit 4: The
Hornets c~ploded for four first-
innin& runs and coasted to the win at
Golden West.
The fil'1t four Hornets hit safely
with sophomore left fielder Anthony
Moreno gitung the big blow, a tw<>-
run triple off Rustler starter Adam
Sanchez.
Moreno added another triple and
finished with five RBI while team-
mate Phil Diplock pounded four bits
1nclud1n1 a two-run homer in the
Slllth.
Fullcnon collected 16 hits off a
Rustler staff which has now given up
48 runs in 25 inninll" spanmna the la•t
thrtt pmt\, all In''~"
Riggins says he's been released; Gibbs says no
WASHINGTON (AP) -John Riggins,
one of the National Football League's all-time
outstanding running backs, says he bas been
released by the Washington Redskins. tboupt
the team's coach and general manager deny 1t.
The 36-year-old Ri8'ins. slowed by physi-
cal problems last year, said Tuesday night that
Coach Joe Gibbs told him during a meeting
earlier in the day that "he'd reviewed the films
and I'd lost a step."
Riggins, who three years ago led the
Redskins to a Super Bowl victory and wes the
game's Most Valuable Player. said he told
Gibbs. "I think that's absurd. I want to play,
and play for the Redskins this year. But I
understand what you've got to do, and if you've
got to fire me, you've got to fire me."
Riggins, appcanng at a March of Dimes
banquet, said he decided to announce his
release himself rather than wait for the team.
"It's very unusual for a player to announce
that a player is being waived." he said. "Have
you ever heard of a player makmg the
announcement? I'm doing ll because I feel 1t 1s
important for the public to know how I feel.
That's important.
"So many teams sweep players under the
rug."
Gibbs and Redsk.ins General Manager
Bobby Bcathard both denied that Riggins had
been cut.
"John has not been released," G ibbs was
quoted by the Washington Post today as saying.
"He and I did talk today. I thought the
conversation was1ust between me and him."
Beathard said, "We absolutely have not
released Riggins." He refused to comment
when asked 1f the team planned to release
Riggins, saymg only, "We have a decision to
make. As of this date. we ha vc not released John
Riggins. Joe (Gibbs) and I will meet again
tomorrow."
Riggins hit his peak with the Rcdsluns
when he rushed for a then-record 166 yards
dunng Washington's Super Bowl XVII v1ctol)
over the M1am1 Dolphins. Rtggins, broke that
game open with a 43-yard touchdown run
which led the Redskins to the 27-17 win.
But after rushing for more than 1,200 yards
in both 1983 and 1984. Riggins began to be
plagued by chrome back and hip problems that
landed him m tracuon in the hospital on a
number of occasions.
The Redskins acquired runnina back
George Rogen. and the team's need for an aaina
$825,()()().a-ycar running back who rushed for
only 667 yards last season diminished.
Riggins admitted he wasn't too surpriled
by Gibbs' decision. "I'd have to have my bead
in the sand to be shocked." he said.
But the runmng back. who was drafted by
the New York Jets an the first round in J 971 , bas
left his mark 10 football. In 14 National
Football League sea.sons, he has rushed for
11 .352 yards. the fourth m ost in history and
104 touchdowns. second only to Jim Brown's
106.
Artists turn
back Eagles
in volleyball
Angels pound Giants, 8-2 SA'sCoombe
will coach
South stars
Laguna Beach High tuned up for its
b1J' match against Ncwpon Harbor
with a four-game victory over Estan·
cia, while Woodbridge swept past
Corona dcl Mar Tuesday night in Sea
View League volle)(ball action.
Herc's how it went:
Lapa Beadl I, E•tucla 1: Senior
middle blocker Sean Jordan had 13
kills and senior outside hitter Matt
Kessler chipped in with 10 as the
Anists turned back the visiting
Eaales, 15·12. 12-15, 15·3, 15-11.
Oespite the victory. Laauna Coach
Bill Ashen wasn't happy with the
effon of his team.
"I wasn't real pleased Wlth the way
we played with the b11 match at
Newport coming ue, (Thursday evc-
nina)," sajd Ashen. It wasa matter of
our team maklna the least amount of
errors tonifht."
The win improved Lquna to 3-1 in
leaaue play while dropitina Estancia
to 1-<4.
Woo4brtd1e a, Corou •el Mar t :
The Warriors broke open a close
match in the fourth pme to defeat the
Sea Kinas. 16-14, ll·IS, IS-12, 15-2.
atCdM.
The first three pmes were dttided
by three points or le • but the
Waniors took a 6-1 edge to start the
. (Pl ....... VOLL&YBALL/113)
)
Fors~Corbett turn In strong
efforts In btdSfOr spots on staff
From AP 411petd1et
SCOTTSDALE, Anz. -Rob Boone's two-run
double was among six straight h11s the Angels collected
Tuesday in a five-run, seventh-inning rally which gave
them ao 8-2 exhibition baseball victory over the San
Francisco Giants.
Chris Brown's home run off Angels' starter Ken
Forsch pve the Giants a 1--0 lead m the fourth The
Angels exploded in the seventh off nght-hander J 1m Gott.
who had retired the first seven batters he faced.
Ruppert Jones snapped Gott's streak with a one-out
walk m the seventh and went to third on Devon White's
tw<H>ut double. Boone followed wt th his double. sending
the A nae ts ahead to stay.
Ous Polidor then tnpled and scored on Rufino
Linares' si~e. Stnales by Gary Petti!>. who had three h1t'i,
and Rob W1tfooa ooncluded the rail}'
Rsaht-hander Roaer Mason of the Gumt~ made his
first official Cactus Lcquc appeuance after rccovcnna
from a blclc ailment and worktd four shutout 1nninp.
Catcher Bob Melvin bad lhrec of the Giants' 10 hits
Rook1e fint baseman Will Clark of the Giants had to
leave the pme with a hamstnna pull after runn1na out a
fly ball in the sixth.
Forsch and Ooua Corbet1. t>NO vettrans flahttn for a
btrth on the Angel • naff. hclP'd their bids with
Tuesday's efforts.
Forsch P.1tchcd four 1nn1nas. alJOWlf\I one run and
fivr h1t4I, whtle C orbc'tt fin1 htd" up p1tchm1 the ntnth.
The four-mmna •tart wa Fonch's lonae\t of the
spnna.
"I'm feehna better and mort confident every da>.''
said fo'1Ch. attempuna to comr b.lck aner m•~ 1nR th<'
la!>\ two seasons with arm problems. "M) goal 1s 10 make
the staff as the I 0th man -that's all there 1s now -and
then work mysclfanto a mort prominent role "
Corbett fac.ed only three batters m the ninth, fomng
Brad Wellman to h1t 1nto a game-ending double play after
a smaJe by Jose Un be, and has faced the minimum of 13
batters in 41/J 10nmg.s.
Boone left the pme with a bruised b1p after making
an awkward slide into second on his t~run double. ~e
11'\Jury isn't believed scnous, but Boone will be g1ven Jr
couple of days off. .
Meanwhile. th~ ngelsannounctd that 11 non-rostt'r
players. including ma1or league "eterans pitcher Alan
Fowlkes. and left ltg Whitehouse will be rt-assigned
when the club rtlocatcs 1n PaJm Cipnng\ on Fnday for the
balance of us ( ac1us League schedule.
Also left behind. thouah not }Ct bcm& re-assigned.
will be pitcher Ra)' C'hadw1cK, infielders Pat Kttdy, Mark.
Mclemore and 8111 Mcmfield .ind outfielder RcggJe
Montaome11 No dccn1on ha~ )Ct been made about
nahthanders Urbano Lugo and Fnml La orte. both
comma off arm suracncs.
The Angels, who -opcnt'd trd1nm' with 5' players.
thu~ wall break 1t, Mesa. Am camp with 35
IJod6en oat.1Q66ed by Tua.. J 2-9
POMP NO BEACH . na -Odd1bc McDowell and
Bobb Jones out lugacJ a quurtt't ot Dodger"', Mt. Oowt'll
l\1tt1na a grand-,lam and Jones a thrcc--run hornet 1n the
bottom of tht' fifth 1nn1na ai. the Rangers J)O\tcJ a I 2·Q
\\-ID
The two home~. M~Oowelr\ otYl o'i An cit'\ \tant't
Orel He"h1\Cr nnd Jon(~· oil JerT} Reu\\ ove~~mt' solo
home run\ b) Ken Landreau' and Bill Madl<Xk and two-
run shot\ b\ Reai1r W1lh~m' and Crrea Brock
W1lltam4I. ~halleng.ing l..andrt u' for the startana
ctn1e1 fielJ JOb, had four htt\ and dro"e 1n four run\
G reg Coombs, a 2~year-dd,
fifth-year basketball COICh 1t
Santa Ana Hiah School, bu beea
named to coach the South in tbe
Orange County AU-Star pme •
Orange Coast Collef' JUM 21.
The South leads in the, 12-.a. ••
the annual sho'NCUC sponlOi'ell
by the Costa Mesa Kiwanis~
A product of Sunny Hilla Hilb
and Cal tatc Fullerton,, Coombt
has awded the Saints to a 82-41 record over the past five yean.
including a 46-10 Century U..U.
mark the past four seasons.-lie
has won two ltafUC titles aad
finished srcond twJoc.
Santa o\na has been knowa 1bf
11 pressure man-te>-man defemc
and running pmc and has Cflab.
lished a strong defensive repu·
talion
\ alenc1a H1&h 's Ray Roclfi..
quc1 will ~h the orth, 10 Itel
~h1ch 1n ludt Mater Oe1.
Rodnquet ha a llS-96 ~
It alenc1a 1n 10 years and h11 ,,..
}tar carttT mark. meludJna four
~ta~ at L John 8olco. 11
.. 01-1.?S
Coachtn• the uth 1111s wdl be
Echson HIJ,h'• Dive Wlutt, whi
the North frl COid\ will be
K.atclla H\th s Mickey Mc:AUla •
• ,
J c
. ..
\ .. -
M * OrMge Coett DAILY PILOT/ WedMld•y. March 19, 1988 -• Lakers Win ninth in row
INOLEWOOO (AP) -Earvin ••Ma&Jc" John·
son scored 26 points and added 11 assi1u Tuesday niabt u the Lot Anleles Laken equaJed their season btJb by winnina thdr runth consecutive NBA pme.
·a rl&-122 victory over the Portland Trail Bl&ttn.
Los Anaeles, wh.tcb led 99.96 after three
quarters, ran off a 9'-2 spurt to Ol)Cn the final period.
That pve the t...anrs a 108-98 lead with 9:02
ttmaining and Portland could not iet withm e1&ht
points until the final minute.
James Worthy added 22 paints for the takers
and Kareem Abdul.Jabber bad 13 paints before
fouJina out with 2'h minutes left. Kenny Carr scored
27 J>Oints. K.ilu Vandeweabe 25 and Steve Colter 23
29-9 bunt 1ba1 tied the pmc 89--89 with 2:43
remainina in tM period.
The Portland run forced the Lakers to work
double-t1me Tuetday niaht . ..It was one of th05C pmes 1ba1 we had to wan
twice," Laker Coach Pat Riley said. "We went
throu&h a horrid sbootina slump·in the third period
where nothing would drop for seven or eiabt
m1nuttS.
..It wu imponant to stop their run ... if they
went up seven or eiJht points. it would have been
difficult to act back in the game " Worthy said the la.kers relaxed. and that let
Portland back into the game.
Cllppersfalter, 126-122
OAKLAND (AP)-Terry Tcape scored a scason·hiah 32 points and Larry Smith grabbed
14 rebounds Tuesday ni&ht, leadlnl the Golden
State Wanion to a come-from·behtnd 126-122
National Basketball Association victory over
the Los Anaeles Oippers.
Los An~les outscored the Wamors 42-32
in the operuna quaner and was ahead 60-44
midway in the second period before 1he
Warriors tumed things around.
9olden State pulled within 71-6 7 at
halftime and wentahead to stay late in the third
period on.a thrce~point shot by Teagle .
The Clippen· b•& men. Benoit Benjamin
and Kun Nimph1us, wert scorina almost at will
early in the game. But Smith and ocnter Joe
Barry Carroll, who finished with 24 points,
more than held their own under the backboards
the rest of tbe way.
The Clippers' leading scorer was Marques
Johnson w11h 30 points. Benjamin added 24.
Betljamin scollld only Sill points in the
second half. He, Johnson and Nimphius scored
12 points apiece in the openina period.
'for Portland, which bas lost aU five ofits games with
the Lakers.
Los Angeles had an 80-60 lead early in the 1h1rd
penod when Colter sparked the Trail Blucrs on a
.. We got a little luy tonight," Worthy said. "We
played the lead by trying to ii on it, which is a
mistake. We can't have letdowns. We have to play 48
minutes."
Portland'• Kenny
Carr ~be rebound In
front of Kurt Rambt..
· Pums Short scored 30 points. for the
Warriors, reacbinJ 30 for a third straight game.
Smith. the Wamors' other forward. had 16
points. mostly on tiP-ins.
"BenJamlD 1s 100 percent improved from
early in the season," Teagle said of the Los
Angcks rook-ie center. "He was a totally
dom1nan1 force for a while tonight."
The matchup drew only 5.458 fans. the
Wamors' smallest home crowd of the season.
SPORTS BREAK
Bird nets 43 in Celtics' romp Islander• outakate Rangen Ballesteros unaware of penalty
Upstart NIT tea01
shows worst side
in -films to foes
Larry Bird scored 43 pomts Tuesday m
night. including 34 io the first half, to pace
'Boston to a 126-96 National Basketball
Association victory over Cleveland. It was
Brent Satter'• two first-period goa•s ~
started the New York Islanders on their '
way to a 6-2 rout of the New York Rangers
Tuesday ni~t before the largest crowd in
NEW ORLEANS -Scve Ballesteros !I
said Tuesday he was unaware of the
consequences -a one·ycar loss of his
playing rights in the United States-when
1he fifth time this season and the 18th time in Bird's
career that he ,cored more than 40 points. It also was
the fifth consecutive triumph for the Celtics . . .
Elsewhere. James Balley scored a season-high 31
points. including eight in overtime, and New York
~napped an eight-game losing streak with a come-from-
Nassau Coliseum history. A crowd of·l6 265 saw the
NationaJ Hockey League game in whi~h Islanders
goalie Bllly Smlo recorded bis sixth straight victory
against the Rangers ... Elsewhere in the NHL Job.D
A.Ddenon had the third three-goal game of his career
and Stewart Gav ID scored twice ma span of 76 seconds
as Hanford beat Detroit, 6-4. The victory moved the
Whalers within two points of idle Buffalo in the chase
for the final playoff berth in the Adams Division ...
Wayne Gretlky hit lhe SO-goal plateau for the seventh
straight season and Jart Karri scored his 60th goal to
pace Edmonton to a 6-2 victory over Winnipeg.
he failed to play 1n the JCqu1r~ I S American
tournaments fast season.
From AP dlapatcbes m
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. -1 he surpris-
ing Southwest Missoun State Bears can
thank Cleveland State. which has been
pulling off some upsets of its own in the
behiod 107-103 victory over New
Jersey ... Claarlet Davia came off
the bench to score 11 points in the
second quarter as Milwaukee
built a 58-39 halftime le.ad and
went on to defeat Washington.
l I 6-87 ... Reserve forward Jay
VlDceDt scored ciJht points
within 21h minutes midway in the
fourth quaner to spark Dallas to a
120.113 victory over San An-
The Spanish star said that. up until Aug. 16, he
thought the penalty would be loss of his membership on
the American Tour and "we go back to the old rule. I
could still play some tournaments on sponsors
exemptions."
USC interviews Banick
NCAA Tournament. for their success in the Na11onal
lnv1tat1on Tournament.
The Bears knocked off Pittsburgh in the first round
of the NIT and upset Marquette. 83-69. Monday night
to advance to a quarterfinal match against Flonda
Thursda:, night in Ga1nesv1lle. Fla.
Big day for Soviets in skating
LOS ANGELES -Coach Jim Har-m
rick of Pepperdine has interviewed for the
head coaching position at USC.
Harrick reportedly met with USC
Athletic Director Mike McGee. who 1s searching for a
replacement for Stan Morrison, who resiJfled from the
position last week to take an administrative post at the
school.
However. 1he Southwest M1ssoun team that won
those two games was not the same one 1hat Pill and
Marquette had seen in a game film provided b}
Cleveland State Coach Kevin Macke}
Mackey had sent Pittsburgh a film of Cleveland
State thrash in$ the Bea~ -who finished runner-up to
the Vikings in the Assoc1atton of Mid-Continent
Un1vers111es Conference -94-67 in Cle"cland. He
cho~ not to send film from Southwcs1M1ssoun's 65-61
victor) over the Vikings earlier 1n the season at the
Hammons Student Center.
.____,.'-"'" tonio. which suffered its sixth
Blrd consecutive setback ... Allen
Leavell scored a season-high 23 paints, including a pair
of free throws with fo ur seconds left, as Houston
clinched a Western Conference playoff berth with a
112-109 victory over Phoenix ... Eddie Jollaton hit
four free throws io the last 1 :30 as Sacramento came
from behind to beat Denver, 117· I I 3 ... Rickey Green
scored 10 points io the final 71h minutes to rally Utah
from an I I-point deficit to a 107-104 victory over
Seattle.
• GEN EV A, Switzerland -Soviet
Sergei Grinkov spun tiny Ekaterina
Gordecva as finely as cotton candy in a
lively, well-synchronized long pr<>JrlD:I to
win the world pairs' skating championship on Tuesday.
"We're JUSt m the process of developing infor-
mation on the candidates," said McGee.
Their triumph compelled another satisfying day
for the Soviets at the 1986 World Figure Skating
Championships.
Earlier. Alexander Fadeev continued to zero in on
his second world title. winning high marks for a fast,
high -flying shon program, while compatriot Kira
Coach Gene Bartow of Alabama-Birmingham
reportedly met with McGee on Sunday, and Coach
Dave Bliss ofSMU is also reportedly a candidate for the
job, as is Navy Coach Paul Evans.
Jn seven seasons at Pepperdine. Hamck guided the
Waves to five West Coast Athletic Association titles
and into the NCAA post-season tournament four times. I van ova took an early edge in the women's compulsory '"
figures over American challenger Debi Thomas. "I had said the greatest thing that lould happen
would be 1f Cleveland State sent that film to our NIT
opponents." Bea~ \oach Charlie Spoon hour <.aid.
Quote of the day
Lakers sign 7 -2 center
INGLEWOOD Petur Gud·
Raiders• Alzado to retire
BEVERLY HILLS-Lyle Alzado, the
Los Angeles Raiders" ro ugh -and-tumble
defensive end. 1s expected to announce his
retirement today.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
Donald Davidson, d1minu11 ve as~1stant to
the president of the Houston Astros on ne"
Astros Coach Yogi Berra "Yogi calls me Short).
and I call him ugly. Yogi's "1fe gets mad when he
calls me Shorty. She doesn't get mad when I call
him ugly I know why we've got him down here
(al the K1ss1mmee. Fla. training base> -to scare
away alhgators:·
mundsson, a 7-2 center, has been signed to
a 10-da} contract by the Los Angeles
Lake rs.
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Clippers, Channel 9.
In order to make room for Gudmondsson. the
L.akers placed center Jerome Henderson on waivers.
Henderson had been signed to a 10-day contract by the
club on March 10.
Neither Alzado, who scheduled a press conference
in Beverly Hills this morning, nor the team would
comment officially Tuesday on the nature of hi s
announcement.
10 p.m. -BOXING: Great moments in
Olympic boxing. Channel 56.
RADIO
7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at
Clippers, KLAC (570), KMPC (710).
Gudmondsson. 27. had pla yed for the Kansas City
S1ulers and the Tampa Bay Dnllers of the Continental
Basketball League this season. In 47 games. he averaged
eight points and 5.5 rebounds.
But a high ranking Raider official who asked not to
be 1denflfied said Alzado had told head coach Tom
Flores and Raiders' owner Al Davis he was retiring after
15 years in the National Football League.
THURSDAY'S RADIO
10:30 a.m . -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
Dodgers. from Vero Beach, Fla .. KABC (790-).
Tennis results PREP BASEBALL .••
Wemen's toumam4"'1t
(at.,._ Ywtrl
ll'ir1f R9UNI SinlMI Clau<I•• l{Ofl<le·l(llSCll !West C.ermanv1 Off
'Nefldv Turnbuff (Auslreliil. 1 6. 6·4 Marlin& Navralllova (US I d-1 Tet"ry P,,.1os <U SJ 6 I 6·1 Hana Manoh•o•• (C1ecl'I0$10•e•1a1 ci.f
Z•n<ll C.arrlwn (US I 7-4, 6-1 6 1
Conwnunnv coe..e
SOUTH COAST CONFERENCE
Orel'et CMU 9, RalldlO S.ntla .. 0
~ Gen1 IOCCl Clef Pein 6·7 7-S Own OCC dff Roof, 6· 1 4· 1, Huslt<I OCC I <lei We11over •·6. 6·7, 1·S, BeOlev (OCCl def Baru. 6·7 6·3. )ludeb41ker (0CC) dtf Chol 6 4 1 s. LOllffltl 10CCJ def Re11. 6·3 6·4
Ooulllft Ganz·&e<llev IOC( def Root Wt\lo•er 6 1 6 l , 04sot1·Studeoa•er tOCCI def Pellz·Cno•
6-l, 6·1, Berrte·Lockwooo IOCC t def Bari1 ~t!Uf 6 3 6·2
S.ddlebad1 a, C.,.rni I
s~ 8e1ntlc11 rC1 def Rusk, 6·4. 6·3. 8oiemen IS :ief Devine, 6·2, 6 1 1·S. Hein <Si oef 8ewl•ste,
~·J 6·3, Aloe (SJ def Fi.e•. 6 2 6 1 801<• IS• '" Sanc11t1 6·0 6·0 ScnlOema"" IS oef 'fo<
i ·I 6 I
Doutrt9\
Ru\~·Morr1s 1s1 def 8e1n11cn·Oe••ne S 1
~·) 7·6 Albe·801ce def 8ew11ua Sanchez 6 l 8oieman·H t•n def F aet Voo 6 l 6 I
H 19'1 scflool
SUNSET LEAGUE
H""""""" e .. ct\ 11. WtttmlnUtt 0
S'"-" ,l.•meno !H81 def Oev~1..,,an t> _,,.,
Nh•••~er 6·0. def Ho. 6-0. I( e11v • H8 '"''" 6 O 6·0 6· I Slewerr IH8 , won 6·C 6 l 6 c
Dou*"' Ou•nn·Crenoell •H81 def Wr>1•m111 8M9f' 6 l dtf ()Qewa·Vu 6·0 Mt NOl>lf·Hem 6 I But" CllanQ IH81 W()tl 6 0 6 0 6 I HO WtOO H81 won 6·3 6·1, 6 2
Marine 10, Foumaln v ..... I
~~ Lowe 'M de• /4 LH 6 4 ,..,o~ 6 l J
Lff 6 0 Cnu /t/11 won 6 4 "'' ? b w <1• ~ 0 O•lle~c• M 1011 S 1 ) 6 ,.or 6 J
Oaubles 8 •en1 Ko1u•• IMJ I01I 10 Nguvtr Me I 6 O.f HeCfQewa· Yte 6· t Ho 1{1m 6 4 ll•Ci'I a•d\On Memot M 011 7 • c 6 won 4 c A11>9r•s Garrell M 1011 I 6 won 6 l 101• l 6
SEA Vll!W LEAGUE Hew_, Hartl« 14, Woodlw1Clee 4
~ Banks INHI def Patt. 1·S. def ...... 6·4 oef SIHnnolOI 6 1 lhl>b•ll INHI IOSI )·6, won 6·3
6·2 Miller (NH1 IOSI c-6, 0·6, won 6·2
Oaubtet M<lrh" M HerO•r INHI oet Al1wa1as·Cl'\8"11. 6· l dff Cllven11·811Ckmen. 6 l Oef 8IOCk End010. 6·), Grulev·J Hardin (NHI won, 6·2. 6 7, 6·0, 8aker·Wermln111on INHI won, 6-C, lost.
)·6 won 6-3
Cwona d9I Mar 11, La9UN Baadl 1
Slnllft f:lrie1111 IC<IMI Clef HU91'1el, 6·4, oet KOllen<la, 6 0 de4 T Haworlll, 6·0, S Ali.In ICdMl losf, 1·6 won 6 1. 7·S. NICMI ICdM) IOSI, 2·6, 1·6,
won 6·3
~ , Ceoi• Tor~1 ((dMI Off M&Qet'l·Em0<
'""'"''"' 6·3 def 8reno1-K1mbafl, 6·0. d(!l Condon Soe111 7·6. C.111>er1·Sar1d0vel (CdMI 1011. •·6 l 6, won, 6-3, II Alkln·Schuraln (CdM) IOSI. I 6 l 6 won. 6 I
E1tanda ll, Cotta NWY S
• Slntlft 0101111 IE I IO\I IO Nuecnterleln 6·1 def
Zillman 6·0 Dinh, 6· 1, Dix (El IO\I 6·7. won. 6 • 6 J, Semue11 IE) 1011, l ·6 won 6· l 6 •
~ "•nce·Hest nos •El def BIOQQ C.ellecilier 6 I "'ciuven lleoor 6 I Taneka·Vu 6 1 StudfOeiltr Me111e1 IEJ won. 6·1, 6 1 I 6. Ouirk·Mooov IEI IOsl. )·6. won 6 2 IO\I 1·6
communnv coe..e women
SOUTH COAST CONFERENCE
Oi'Attee Caasl t, Rat'ldla S.ntla .. 0
S"""1 B•O<lle IOCC> oel Scrtullt, 6 0 6·1. Harris tOCC> def 8aMelo1, 6·0 6 0 Ouarlerero
OCC • oet If aufman 6 1 6-0 C.oodboOy IQCC) dPf Y'am&d• 6·0 6·0 Be•more •occ1 Clef ._.,,,,..a •·0 6·1 Pen / lOCCI ~ Renrion. 6·0.
6 0
DoubMI PPrrv·Gdodoodv (0CCI def Schullt·Kauf·
ma~ 6 0 6· 1 Ham1·8r0<1•e tOCCl def
8a~·os Yamada 6· I. 6·1 Ouer1erero· More"o IOCCJ Oef Rennon·Ya Ima 6-1, 6-0
ll'Ulef1tln 6, Got.Mn Well 3 ~ 8•e<lltonu1 IF) def Jahn'°" 6 4 6· I Wlllon F oef F1tm1119 6·7 6·2. Lillard IC.WCI def Ml Ponce s 1 6·3. 6·7. So•nowt IGWC) Clef Ma Ponce 6·3 6·7. 6·3 T11a1cner IF> oef Pomrelln, 6-0, 6·2 Z.ol (F > Clef Scheffer 6· I. 6·0
OoutMs JOM,Ol'\·Solnosa IGWCI def 8rKnll>Ul·MI PO'lce 1-S 0-6 6·J. WllM>f\•Ma Ponce IF) dtl L· •erd Fleml119 6·4, 6·3. Zeol T11a1cner IF) de!
C.er~ Sc'>eirftr 6 4. 6·3
0., ........... .., .,..,... lllllnMb
Corona del Mar ahomtop Kurt Ehmann ranaee lnto hole to
backhand grounder darlng Sea View Lea&ue game Tuesday.
From B l
and walked twoafter comingon in the
fifth with two runners aboard and one
out.
Norville. a Junior left-hander,
struck out two to end Me~·s threat 1n
1he fifth and fanned the side in the
sixth. Mike Rosellm1 staned for the
Eagles.
Costa Mesa which scored on an
error 1n the second and again 1n the
fifth when John Carlson doubled
home Mike Crowe.
John Baker. who singled to open
the seventh before Gomez ran for
him. doubled home Dan Burke in the
fifth for Estancia. Eagle catcher Tom
Campeau doubled in Enc Mowrey 1n
the sixth.
Newport Harbor 8. Woodbridge 1:
Senior Jon Mahone)' held Wood-
bndge hitle5s until the sixth and'
struck out 12 en route to a thrce-h11
complete·game victory at Newport.
Senior catcher Wes Torell had a
two-run homer in the second to open
the scoring for the Sailors ( 3-7
overall).
Torell and teammate Tony Wren
each went 2 for 3 wnh two RBI
Saddlt baek f, University I: Senior
nght-hander Jeff Rowe struck out
eight and scattered eight hits and the
host Roadrunners benefitod from
seven passed balls.
Saddlcback {4-4). which scored 11s
first three runs via passed balls. used
Victor Rossano's solo homer in the
fifth to cap a two-run rally. Univers11y
(2-6) received a strong performance
rrom lcft·hander Todd Krueger, who
fanned four and did not walk a batter
in six innings. But costl y mistakes by
his teammates allowed Saddleback to
get the most out of its fi ve singles.
In the Sunset League:
Weatmi111ter S, HantlDgton Beacb
%: The Lions moved into sole pas-
Eagles' Dorn leaps 23-21.A to win long jump
f<;tanc1a's f nc Dorn neared his cwan1 _,Mir"· WMdllrldee l1 110t1-1 Fie•-Ill 1s 1,, 8rosnen 0 1. tFv1. 79 11 ~ J Ptleller tFv>. :it·S 110L1-+-1 c.r111on 1w>. 161; 1 DVOftil 1w>.
perc;onal best of 2 ).4 in the lonoJump 100-1 erOOlls 1w 1 "· ' wootwv tCdMI. is.1. 3 s.n1111 ILH >. IS9 s•• v1•w &.••GV• 17 7, l Benne11 <CdMI. 17.7.
3 "' 10 l J Warne< (C<IMI, 10. 300!1+-1. Bro\nan ti), Cl.O, 2. Peck. (I), 41 7. 3 llOLH-1 Kerr (CdM) 4' t· 2 Stroooe (W) w11h ~ l ·2'1• effort and also took the 21~1 BrOOl\s IW>, 23.l, 1. Wootse-v tCdMI, Fleweoer 111. 41.I ioo-~'G'...,, ~~' 1;• :·~~ 123 , 49'. 3 Sclltf1m (W), SI 4 ' ·
long JU mp and high hurdle~ to lead 13 6 3 War.,.,. ICOMI. 242 400 rt1n -1 lrYlne ... O W•kWI lEI r~~141 1• 1 · 1 · van' · • HJ-1 Sawin <CdMJ •MO 2 lltllffO (WI HO
h Eaal ~I F•woll ICdMI. 5, 1, '1 Hvttfon 1,.clp relay-I lrVIM,) 41 '· ' . 3 Werttn (CdM) 4·1 ' ' ' '
l e .,es J?aSt Newpon tfarbor 1n ii tCdMI SJ l , 3 Newman (WI, SJ 1 HJ-1 Fut* II.HI. H . 2 TWNH'a (I), 5-1 220--l Grenl IEl, 27 •• 2 Waldtn (El, 2t 4• l L>-1 Luc.i (COM! 16-1 '2.. Rllt09 (W)
'iea v ICW lea8ue trat'k meet Tuesda)' ll0-1 Gal\nlla (COM), t-OI 2. , Alva ti U-1 Wln.iow ILHI, 11· 10, 7 T•mvr• (I), g.,::.!~H~~ (NH) 1:01 t · , R bblll (NH) 13· I 1, 3 Sawin ((OM) 1J•6\.\.. •
H • I k h , k <CdMI 20'1'0, 3 Marrtn ICOMf~ ,-OS 7 lt ·f, 3 FIJM (LHI. 17·J • ' • a ' TJ-1 LUCIH ICdMI 31•1 ..... · 7 SI (WI ere Sa 00 ~t I ~·ma cup meCt\ MU-I Rooolns (C<IMl. •·311, 7 Galutlla T i-1. Tamwa (I), 40-3; t Cova 111. 39:5, 3 l:e.1. l. Mtrn (El. 1~7. 31-11 3 's.wln ICdMl ;o._4 ' roooe ' CoMJ c 41 3, 3 Holltnd CCdM), 4 41 9 Te<rv (LHI. 37·1 llC>-l RabOl~I (NH), »2J; t Ander\Ol'I !NHI. sP-1 Mnn (COM) 2'-S 1 o (W) 1 ,,.,,,_, 5"rvocll CCdMl, 10 142, t. Brown PV-1 >ennl119s (II. 10-0. no second or llllrO UH. l RHM-; (NH), 2:3H 7'·,l6 ) CllOn9 (CdM) i1 11111) . Zllll ' C<IM 10 110, 3 Mer!Yn IC<IMJ, 10-lH SP--1 Gef'erOI (I). 4'-4'-'t, 1 $1\a'* Ill. 4S·IO, s.Jf~'-;~,.~~Hlj 5:27. 1 RHMY (NH), OT:_\ C110n9 (CdMi. n •6; 1 c;r..., (CdM), IOYS
HA VIEW LEAGUE ••'9ftde "·...,,,..,, Har11w 41 100-1 Con11 IE), 1031 2 S~rrerd IE1
1 Esolnote CE>. 10,,
110HH-I McManl9•I ICOMI IS S, 2 MAJuv J Te<n <LH), 47· 10 ' ' n ' 14·6 "l J Mver1 tCdM) )? t 10 S fCdMI 16 3. l G•Olflt>ack (Wl. 166 OT-I Terrv (l.H), 1 .. ·10, 2 Shena.. 11), 144·0; 7·ml~~· Re1n1v (NHI. ~3·17, 2 Henton ' ' llOIH-1 Wllllams (W) ., • , R.nl (W) 4J s J Oden (I) l>O•I (NH). 13· 12· l . Kr.a.I INH), l3 11· SOUTH COAST '-••ou•
tt~I ~rard lEI 73 1 1 E101no1a f nt 3 Chiv INHI. 24 1
440-1 MaCOOMIO (£1 SJ 4 7 800# NH Sl.4. 3 Melwln IE>, S1 I
9'0-I &Ode (NH ) ?ot S. 2 Penw Er 7 11 7
l Storv tE>. 2:10 Mli.-1 Brown INH) 4,,t 1 GHrllng1 •NHI, 4 411. 3. 8uOe (El. 4 ll J 2·m(.-.1 Brown INHI. 10 0?1 , 8u!MI [ 10 rn. 3 Klotlar INH). 10 I I 6 l~H-l Dorn If I, 10 1 Mtll!Pt IEI IS l l McCarll'tv IE), IS 1 JlOIH-1 M<Carlllv <E>. 4.ll, 7 Oortt •E 1
<19, l TOdd {NH), « 0
....0 r"'v-1 E••ancla 46 4, 1 Newoo'1 Harl>O•
4 1 Mlle rall-v-1 ,...woor1 Heroot J SS 6 HJ-I ~(El,• S., Hlll\Ort INHI. S·lO, l
llli~ INH), S•I L.>-1 Ootn (El, 7l 1 4 J Mottl!<v (Nt•l
lt •t. ) SwtntOn IEI 19 • T J-1 Miier IE), 41·), 2 Norvllle IF). lf f "· 3 MC'CMlhY IE), Jt•O Pv-1 Mlller IEI. I) 9. 2 O'neal IEI. 12·0, 3
HllllO!I tNHl. 11·0 SP-I Corbo (NH) 44·0',. J 'l"etTllOt ( ) 4J-m", ) Sw.n.on IEI, '3-S..., OT-1 Wa~ (El. 1 .... s, 2 Corrl9all IEI ,,, •" l T•trdOwlll l CEI. 114 7
l Mullv tC<IMI '4 t ' ' ' ' ' ' llOlH-1. AllllWY (NH), 160. 2 Pele<s (NH). '"""8 tt, Ll9Ulll H .. J3
44') .... v-1 C.orllf\a de! Mar ... , o..-L$ lt 1, 3 Htrt IE). 17.0 ,--... Mlle rei.v-·1 CorOtl• de! Ma~ l~ 1 N<Ht·~•ou• UOl.l-+-1 All-.WY tNHI . ., s. t. Sunhran -· HevMs Ill. ll t. ' LM tu. Ill, • HJ-1 ... rl>O•« ICOMI ••• 1 EMls (WI. ~ v.., n. Mml!lfl.. (NH). SJ 1, l. Hert (El. SJ.2 w-::.:•1. l3 s 6 '· l Frver l(OM) • , ~1 Tnoma• (Ml 12 7, Tolton (FVI, 13 I, l 440 rtlav-1 Estenela. SJ 2 Hnnes Cl). 11.2, , LM Ill. 7t 4, , U-1 8Hrl>Ower <C.dMl, 10-S'IAt, 2 Cl'\ang SIHl.ev IF), 13.1 Mlle rt!er-1. New_.I Herl)O(, ,,.., It~ (LHI, 7'(t , WI 20 )'') 3 Won1> tWl 19·1 ~I 8oalte (FVI. 76 4, 1 A\10\lfn (M), ,,., Li-I Grenl !El, IS-t'h, 1 Evan\ (NH), .......-1 HOISi I), 10?. 2 ROOtn\ ILHl. 1104,
T .1-1 (l\t110 IW). 41 10, ' &eartlowe< 3 ... ,,«(Ml, lO I IS·,'h. l Hllf'lle< (NH I. IS·I l ~\LHlj l IU CoMI 41·3 J NO'Oul\I !Co.Ml )I 10 ..-1 ThOrNs (Ml. SfOS, 2 Fluaelen (Ml HJ-1 Faroullar !El. S-0 2 Henson (NH), no lftlrO Wf O"ltl), UH,, ColefMll (I), 7.)4 2,
Pv -1 Ja<:oo\ ICOMI. ll-0. 2 Painter ICdM I, 1113 .S, l CO'eot•" (IC'V), I~ ot 4· IO, l Mlle\ (El. c t , 1 400-1 T I~ 6 J Urou11ar1 (W), 11 6 --1 Wor'kn'lat'I !FVI. 2 0 , 2. Lyni.on (M), T J-1 1 Ftll IEI, l3·10h, 1 Hunter INHI, • orr11 ILH), S· ... O, 2 FrtllkOI (II, ' 30-10.., a Lt den tE) )0-11.") SM 4.' Grlmtlemlllf ILHI, 5'57 t
CJ ~~-; ~:~~~~;...f·::~· 1 Hann ICdM), 7 '~;I~~:~~~ (FV), 16 ,, 2 M«ll. 1Fv1. iP..:1 ·~!' ce'i. l\·9. 2 Art!Hev (l'OO, is.Ji2:°;:1111~nulltt <II. iu7 7, 2 Pelra m.
OT-I ea.n ICOMI 160-10. 7 Ro~' IWI 11•-•. u Ot.) WNtMan (FV). 11' ,, ...... , v .. (N~ ,... IOOl.l-+-1 Tl on-(I), lh. 2 Cletc (LHI.
l Ntutta<ll IW) l11 •10 300LH-I l udlenOn tFVI 4'.l, 7 Mock lll'V), OT-I YM (NH) 90·4, 2 Gooclman IEI I0-1. ISi,) ltlltll<I ILH>. 1' 2
SOUTH COAST 1.IAGUI
INIM 92, ~ Hlh ll 100--1 Perltlnt Cl) 11 4, 1 Cow1 (II, 11 }, )
M lt .. Cl> II S
>Ot>-1 Ptfktni Ill 1) 4, ? Mlele Ill 21 S ) Temure Ill, 14 7 .-00-1 Jennlncn Ill. s 1 s toe>-1 MCMiiien Cl), 200 10,' F'erw IL.Ml,
1-o? 4 ) MICl.i (LHI. t OU 1,600--1 OltOn (II '1•0 , HlcJu !LHI Ul 0,
3 llKk II), 4 .. 0 ),100-1 1111 .. 11an II>, f SOt, 2 klWeo.r (LHI, 10'07 t ) Lono ILHl, 10 It 0
SJ 01 Lvnt0n (Ml, S4 1J l SIOle Cf'l, '4 • 440 retav-l. F'OIMll•ln llelltv. ~ 300LH-1 (!tr( (LHI .•.•• 2 HOltl (I). .... l Mite , ... y-1. FOYnl•ln V111tv. Hf c-. Mtlr 7t. WllA,... S$ JC>llnton (I), 5021 Ml~l Unotrwooel (Ml. •-ot. 2 l(eltl't 1,VI 1--1 YrlllO<I (WI, 11.7, 2 Molt0 (COMI. I If 400 rei.y-1 lrvlne Sl 7. ~ Hlllt dCl'd
'
10. ,~ (,V),. 1• ) Lll<tt IC4Ml. 121 lAOOrtln-1 1rvtne•·2u. '-"""' HlttU·4' I
,,._. • > 120-1 Kwr ICdMI, 27 0. t Mo4M1ICCIM),1t 0. H ._1 ---111 • I " • .-. (' .. , • 4 2•mli.-I Mith (FV), It.JS, J Uno«WOOCS ! Of"lllofl (W' -I ,,-,....._, ' •• '• -·-· ..,... ' •• ' (Ml, 1l 01,J. CCNlleV (FVI. I) 64 , -) TOllNY (LH). •·• HJ-1, T~ (Ml. 5*0; 2 Wldmav« (f!VI , ..... ~I ~-r (GdMJ. ll02 6, , Wllll•m• CW). LJ-1. Tl °'1'" (I), IS-0; , Umber! (LHI. • 1(1-l"V), '•0 1~ t, ). knertr« (W), 1115.l Mc01: 14·1, I letltl'IO ILHI. 14·4 • '" • MO-I $mitt\ IWI, U:s.t. t• et .. ICdMI, T '-I TI ..._, (I) "I 11 • • • T>-1 luchenon Cf!Vl,l-4·114,7 Sfteke lFV>. .. #-.,. .............. "'"'1 (LHI, n·•. 1 Tllon'le• (Ml. JM , ,, 2. a Str-1w1. 'n' >0·•· 3 JoM'°" m . ._. U-1 51Mllt (l"V), IJ.S ...... , r ..... IMI Mhe-I Smltll CW), S:JtO,, C81tltoft ((dMl. SP-I OOftl (I),,,..,' Te 0r1 .. 111 21'4V., 14•7\~. J. TY'ef (M). lt-l~ UL>, l Hoa.no ICOMI, SAJ I , HUO.• CLHl, tl·J'h
.,._1 !( ..... ~ • .,_ (M), Jl 101'1,· 2 Ll'fetlVI'• ' t'fll I $mlltl (W), 11.)U, ). Castllofl or-1 Te. on ... (II, IOl·f , ' l(odtef' II), " , .... ..,.......... tCdMI. 12,. o. l Holltl\O (CdMI, n 43 1 1oe-1, J Hubl• (LHI. ·-·
' ,
session of the Sunset lead at Mile
Square Park
Westminster utilized speed (seven
stolen bases) and a balanced hitting
attack (seven players in the lmeup
had at least one hit) to aid its win. No
player had more thao one RBI.
Freshman startmg pitcher Ryan
KJesko worked 42/1 innings and allow-
ed four hits. He struck out three and
walked three. David Turner got the
save, pnchini the last 21/1 innings
without allowing a hit.
Foantalll Valley 5, Marin.a 3: Junior
nght·hander Rob Flmn flirted with a
no-hmer and the host Barons scored
all five of their runs in the firs1 three
innings.
Mark Williamson ripped a solo
home run in 1he middle of a third·
inning, three-run rally for Fountain
Valley while Flinn, who finished with
a two-hitter, didn't allow a hit untal
one out in the fifth. He fanned three
and walked three.
Jim Doyle came borne on Terry
Reichert's sconng fl y ball to left and
Phil Sakelios scored on an error with
Chm Nena at the plate to account for
the Barons' other two third-inning
runs.
In the South Coast League:
Irvine 5, Lagoa Hilla 0: Bnan
Snoddy, a 6-2. 160-pound senior
right-hander, needed only 61 pitches
to toss a one-hit shutout and beat
Laguna H1llsace Wayne Helm -one
of Orange County's top pitching
prospects-as the visiting Vaqueros
won the league opener.
Snoddy walked none. struck out
none and allowed only right fielder
Chris Sheff's third-inning ground
single to center. Bobby Hamelin
provided the big blow for Irvine
(~-1) with a three-run homer m the
Sill th.
Uni, Eagles,
Laguna win
Univ~rsity, Estancia and Laguna
Beach h1&h schools opened their Sea
v.1ew ~ague softball campaigns with
vt.etones Tuesday.
Herc's a look at what happened:
Ualverally I, Saddleback 5: The TroJan~ push~ 9ver a run in the top
of the eighth innmg on an RBI single
by Tina Cooper .lo nudge the Road-
runner! at S:lddlcback.
Winning pi1cher Jennifer Frei had
two hits and Lamour Ponce drove in a
pair of runs with a double in the third
inning to spark University's attack
E1tucta 11, Costa Mesa 0: Kim Braatt combined with Tammie IUnc
on a two-hjt shutout and provided tht
offense with ~Ill run (three runs
scored. three RBI) for the Eagles.
Laaua Beadl?, Cor-. ff.I Mar 3:
The Art.1sts tc0red five times m the
e1Jhth innin1 to win at CdM.
Junior naht·hander Kristen
Hu.&hes (1·2). who helped her own
cause with a two-run s1fll)e in the
ei&hth, struck ouc four and walked
three in 1oin1 the d1stance co record
her first victory of the 1eason.
•
Na A
"ISTltt .. CON~lttlJfCI ~"*OM.-w L ftct. .. .,.~ .... S2 16 JU Pwttend 34 ~7 ,,, 1'~ Ptloelll• 26 ., -2$~ S..111• 2S ., :Ml ,,
ai..-. 2S " 3'2 ,,.,,,
Golden Ste)e 2• " .343 29 Miofwett OM.-x·HOU$ton '3 2' ,62) 'Dell..., " ,. .59• 2 Oellat 37 31 5't St;J Utell 3S 3S JOO ·~ Sec:remenio 31 • .... 12 $en Antonio 31 )9 "3 11~
IAJTUN CONPl•INCI A tl9l!fk Ofwttiell IH~Otton SS 13 '°' ··~· " 25 ... 11\lt New JerMY >s 36 193 111;) Wasnl119ton n 31 "' 231'1 New YOf'IC 21 4t ,300 3S Cefttral DMUeft •·MllweukM a n .. , 11-<t.tlante 43 2' 623 • •·o.frolt ., 29 SIO 1 Cltv91eno 25 " .342 n lndlene 2S 45 .lS7 22\o'i Clllc.eoo 2• '5 ~ 23 x-<tlnc:ritd Plevoff beftll ~llnehe<I Olvltlon
berth tllle •llO Pl•voff
TUetdllY't kwet LA11en 12t, POf'11ano m
Golden Stele 126, °"""' 112
Boston 12', Clevelend 96
N-York 107, N-J-y 103 (Ot)
Dalles 110. Sen Antonio 113
Mllwe uk" 116, Weilll119ton '1 Houtton 112, ,.,_,. 109
Secra"'*lto 117. Denver 113
Uten 107, S.ettle ICM
T ......... 10-
l.Allena1ai.....
lndlene et Bolton
Chlceoo at PlllledelPfll•
Atlante •I Sen Antonio DetrOlt el Denver
Sec:ramento II Phoenix
Laken 121# IMaun 122
~TL.AND 112'2> -C•rr 1·13 11-11 27, venoewevn. •·" 13-u 2S. Thoml>ton 1-1
4·4 •. COiler 10-16 o-o 23, Dre111er t-11 0-0
"· PHIOll 5-• 0-0 10, K. Jonnton H 0-0 2, Pofllf' 1-2 0-0 2, JC>Ofl 2-3 1·4 S, KerMY
2·1 0-0 4. Totela: 45-91 29·33 122.
LAKlttS ( 111) -Rambb 4·7 0--0 I.
Worthv 10·16 22 72, Abdul·Jebbar 4·9 S--6
13. E. Jonnaon 9·191-11 26. Scotts-• 3·3 13, c-S·9 0-0 12, Green •·S 2·• 10, Lucaa S·7 l·4 13, ~ S·9 1·2 11. Totela. Sl-19
14·31 121
Sc-...., QMl1WI
Portland lO 21 • 2.-122
Lellert 34 «I 2S 29-121
Tllr .. ·oOlnt ooets~Olter l. c-2.
Fouled out-Drexler, Abdul· Jebbar. Ra·
boullOa-Portlancl '6 (C.rr 9), Lalltn SI
(Al>dut· Jebber, Johnson 6). As·
11111-Pottlancl lO (Orelller IOI. Lakers 34
(Johnaon Ill. Totet loul.-f>Of'lleno 29.
Lellert 23. Tec:Mlul-<err.
AtleMenc-17,SOS.
Warrlen 12', C111Pen 122
CU"•H (122) -Meawell S--7 t -1 II.
NlmOlllus I· 14 2·2 II, IMnlemln t-16 6·1 24.
Jotlnaon 12·27 6·1 lO, Nbcon S--16 0-0 12.
White 4·S 1·2 9, C•Dlt 2·3 0--0 4, GOf'don 2·S 0-0 4, Edwerd• 0· 1 0-0 0, Velentlne 1·5 O·O
2, Cron 0-1 1·2 I. Total•: 4'·100 24·30 122.
,GOLDIN STAT• (1i6) -Sllor-t 11·24
7·7 JO, Smltll 1·9 0-4 16, CerrOll 11·20 2·4
24, Flovd 4· 11 2·4 10, Tiffie 10-16 11-13 32.
a.nerd 1·2 O·O 2, Hinton 2·3 C>-1 4,
Wtlllefteed I·• 0-0 2, Connor 2·2 0-0 •• TlllbMux 1·2 0-0 2 Totets. 51•'3 22·33 12'.
kwe ..., OUertiln
CNPOen 42 29 II 33-172
Golden Stele 32 3.S 2t ll-126
TllrM·oolnt ooels-Nl11on 2. Short.
THOie. Fouled out-Smith. Re·
boulld•-<llPC>ert ,. (Benlemln 14>, Golden Stete S3 (Smlll'I 14) Aulstt>-<Qppen 29
(Nlaon 10). Golden Stele 21 (FIOyd 10)
Tot•I *"'-<noci.n 27, Golden Sl•I• 25. TICMlul~lamln
Alttnd.nca S,451.
COLLEGE BrttMm Yeune n, UC WW. IO
(NIT)
Rooen
Enoeltled MurPIW
Broollt
Bucnenen
Germon
Ht'H
Cle«Jo
Streuu Ooktorc1V11
C11dwell
Tot els
UC INIM (IO) .... ft·• pf tp
6·13 6·7 s " 2·6 0-2 1 •
4·1 3·1 4 11
6·11 S·6 4 17
•·• 1-1 s 9 3·7 0-0 1 6
S-S 3·S S 13
0-2 0-0 2 0
1·1 0·0 0 2 o-o 0-0 0 0
0·0 O·O 0 0
31-61 11·29 27 '° avu ltl> .... ft·• pf tp
Cnetmen t-II 2·2 4 20
Stel>llenson 4·7 0-0 3 I
Gneltlno 7-9 S-S S 19
Cepener 3·1 6-1 2 12
WlbC> S·9 7·1 3 17
WeOt l-1 1·3 0 3
Huml>hf'tvs O· 2 0-0 2 O
POiiard S· 7 0· I 3 10
Coc:llren 0-1 4· S 1 4
Totell 34·62 2S·32 23 93
H1lf1lme· ISrlorw.m Young, 41-32.
Rtl>Ound1· UC lr.,lne 37 (Murphy encl
ROMrS 1 tedl). BYU l6 (Gneltlno 13)
Anlsts uc lrvlne 12 CHns SI, 8YU 23
(C.-end Webb I Mdll Turnov~ UC
lrYIM n . ISYU 23.
Atteno.nce 11,tlt..
NIT
HCOND ROUND
TlletdlY's Sc-.
BYU 93, UC Irvine IO
QUAttTERFINALS
~ndeY'•Games
SW Mlnoorl St1te 124·7> 11 FIOf'~
(1'·12>
Loulalene Tedi ( 11· 131 •I .Providence (l7·13)
Clemson ( 19· 10 et wvomlno 172· 11 > .. ,....,..~
eYu c 11· tll et Olllo Sta te < 16· W
SIMl .. IMALS
MIMllV
Cat New v.-1
CHNW"tOMSH• w....-v,Mardl» (et NewY_.,)
NAIA
(et IC-• Oho, Ma.) TUISDAY'S CHAMl"tONSH• scotta
01vld LIPSComb, Tenn. 67, Ark.·Mon·
llca!IO S4
Kings toppl~
Capitals, 5 -2
,.,...
LANDOVER. Md. (AP) -Ma~I
Dionne tied Phil Eaposito for stcond
place on tho NHL"s aU-time 1COring
list Tuesday night with an assist and
John Paul Kelly scored two goals as
the Los Angeles Kings beat the
Washington C'.apitals, 5-2.
Dionne assisted on Dave Taylor's
soal S:28 into the game. moving him
into a tic with Esposito at I ,.S90
Points. He also took over the No. 2
spot ID ISSISlS at 927, snapping I lJC
with tan Mikita.
Kell y had only two aoals ID S2
p~v1ous pmes. But he doubled that
u the Kinas prevented the Capitals
from t.aki~ ~ver first pla~ in the
Patrick Div1s1on. The ~p1tals, who
had won nine of 10 previous pmci
and had a club-record, eiaht con·
secutivc V1ctories at home, rem11ncd
pnepoint behind thedivi lon-lead1na
Philadelphia Flyers.
Los Anactes.. 1-8-1 in 10 previous
pmes, took a J..O lead dunn.a.• fi~
minute span of the ftrst penod on
pis by Taylor. Kell\' and Bryan
Eric hon
NHL CNMta•LLCON,&RIMCa
-...~ W L T .-.a WeA
SI lS 6 lOI llM m
35 2' • 71 -274 no 6 S2UIXM
22 42 7 SI 2S1 U1
" )t 17 .. 235 2'.S '"""~ ll·Cnlcaoo
•·M1"""4)1t
11·s1.t..ouh
TOf'onto O.trolt
JS a I 71 316 111
» n ' 1s "' rn 33 30 • ,. 291 2'1
73 41 6 S2 * U)
IS SO 6 l6 237 )14
WALU ~"•ttlNCI ~."1dr OM.-
11 • PlllledelOllle .. 21 • " m 21' 11·We.n1no1on n 71 s tS m 237
NY 1"8nclen JS 26 lO IO 216 US
NY ·~·· 33 33 S 71 US 141 PlttMIUroh 31 31 I 70 279 261
New Jer"Y 22 4.$ 3 41 261 )U
A.,.,.~
•-Quebec 39 ,. s '3 2" 2'2
x·Montreet » 29 6 IO lOS 2S3
Bolton 33 29 I 1' 275 25'
euttato l3 31 6 n Hf 2'3
Hertford l4 3S 2 10 2" VS
a-dlncMcl Plavoff berth
v-<llnched dlvl'loa !Ille
TllllMltY'a SC... Ka.. S, Wesnlnoton 2 Hartford 6, Detroit 4
New YOf'k lalenclert 6, N-YOf'll Ranoers 2
Edmonton '· WlnnlMo 2 TaNIM'tO-
T Mon to et Ouetlec
PlllMiurOll 11 New JerM'V
Hartford e t SI Louis
MontrMI a t Winnipeg
Mlnnewte 11 Caleerv
ISutteto et Ve~ver
KINI 5, C.. ...... 2
~"",..... 3 2 o-i 0 1 1-2
.. Int ......
I Lot AllNlll, Tevtor lO (DloMI,
LedYerd), 5:21 (OP), 2. Los Anot4H, KdV 5
!Currie, Erldcton), 7:S1; l. Los AnMltl. Erldcton 20 (ICelv), 10:41 ,._,.
Jlfl,-Lanowev, Was <crou-dla<:lllnol. 4:20;
•~ms. W••· double """°' ldler9'no· rOU9hlnol. 14:4'; PMt~. Was. Mf'l9d bv
T1vtor llllell·stlclllnol, 14:44; Smith, Wes
(cron•c:hec:klno), 1':4'; Wtlh, LA (rouoh·
tn11>. 14:44; Tuer, LA <rouonlno) 14:4';
Peeters, Wes,. MrYlld bv Ginlefuon
1s1a.n1no1, 15:55.
~ .......
4. wesl'llnoton, Christian 36 <Stevena.
LeUlll'ltln), 1J:A7 (OP); S. LOS AllOl4H. Gelltv
9 (Nlc,•o•"· LUllowlcll), 1uo. 6. LOI An·
Hin. KlllV 6 <Erldlson, Redmond), 17:SS.
'"-ltlet-i..tdverd, LA (lnlert.rence).
1:31, Ke41'1. LA (char11lno), 12:46.
Tlllrd ~-7. Wesllln11ton, Leuglllln 24 (Stevens,
Gould). 16:41. Penettles-T~. LA (llOolt·
lno), 2:36; W•. LA, ml!IOt'·malor (hlOll·
stlclllno·llolltlnol. •:OS; St4tYens, WH,
mlnOt'·melor Cllloh·stldcln1H'9httno). •j)S;
T~. LA !rouohlno), 4:A2; Ceroeflter, WH
!llOoltlno>. 6:21
Siio" on ooe~' Aft9lleS 17·6·S-21
we.n1no1on 9· s-11-2s.
Power·Plev OPPOrlunltles-t.os Anoetll
t of •; watl'llnoton I of •.
Goatlfl-t.os •~. Mllenson (2S
allots·23 uvttl. WeW!lngton, P9efer•
C2t·2ll
~ . . . ..
~C-..Mftbltl
SOUTH COAST CON .. attlNCI
•anc:M ........ 1, OnNte C.11 0
Rencllo SantlaoO 000 000 J.-1 S 0
Orenoe Coast 000 000 ~ o I
Martin eno Je n1111; Herrere •ncl
5"'V111e.
~ West J, CY'lll"IU 1
C '(Pt'ISS 100 000 C>-1 3 1 Golden Weal 100 002 C>-l I 0
akemeru end Wllterson; Rowlett Ind
Rua ... !
Hltfl sc:Mel Mftbltl
s•A VIEW LEAGUE ~ 6, Sa fi l sdl S
Ul\lversllv 014 000 01-. 6 l
~· 200 020 lo-i • 4 Frei elld T a.ti, Pwet. COt'dove 151 end
Gonreler w-Frel, 2-2. L-<Of'dov•
2&--Frel (Ul, Ponce (U).
....... 11. Ceeta Meta 0
Coste ~ 000 000 C>-0 2 I
Estencl• 115 400 11-11 II o
Fields eno Bovell; T. Kane, BrHtl (5) encl K. Kane. W-T. Kene (4·4). L-f'llld'
2B-8rH ll (E)
LeeuM lleedl 7. c-.. """ 3 LaoUM ~ 010 000 IS-7 9 2
CorOM dll /Mr 000 001 11-3 • J Huonn end St9PMnl; Johns•-eno
8um1olen W-Huo llu ( 1·21
L-JOl'lnatont 3&-0atet (LB)
CYl"ttlSS TO\MNAMSNT
Matw Dal 2, L.s Aml9M I
Los Aml005 000 000 ~ 2 3
Mater 0.1 cm ooo .-2 3 o
NeOOll, Recoro (6) encl H-. Lomen
end Rice w-Lonwlll, 4-0. L-NeoOll
3&-:..omell (MO).
NOM·LIAGUE
..... ST GAMa
..... 1, ~ Gf'llft 0
Geroen Grove 000 000 ~ 1 •
Eolson 002 «11 x-7 l 1
Olttf'men encl 59ut1odt; Lvmen end
Baker. W-Lvmen, S·O. L-OStermen
SICOND GAME ldben a, Ger911 Gfftlt o
Geroen Grove 000 000 ~ 2 • Edison 101 303 •-t 1 I
FIOrea 1nd Sl>urlOCll; C.r1111111er eM
8aker ~nienter, 3-1. L-f'torea.
28-Golfo\ !El.
.,..., ........
DAV•Y'S LOCK•• (........, a.di)
-5' anoters. 31 cod, 201 c.ellCo ban. 26 ~ bets, 17 macktr'tl. t50 blue perd\, 12
~Mad. 5 twlPln.
Nlwt'OttT LANOMG -n •nolln. n
rode eod, 21 rock fllh, • 1111'9 Pltl'Ch, 1
mackerel.
~ . .
~ .. ...............
TU9IOAY'1 scoan
A.--~ Sell l'rlllel~ 2 Tt ... ri, .,._..9
TONfltO S. lo.'-2
Alltftl• '· $t IAul• , Mont,... 1. Kati .. • Cltv o Clnelnnetl S, Pitt'°"""" 4 I 11 lnMlf1) ClllcMo Wlllte S011 6, New YOf'k Y1n• .......
New Yortl Mal• 1, Detroit s 111 IMlno•> Mlnnnola 2, Houston I t 10 IMlll@t)
C......_, 6, tlllc.No CUM 4
Mllwaull" 6, Sen Oleeo S (12 ll\f11"9tl
o.kJand 6, Seattle 3
&altltMr• •• Phl\lldelpflla 1
~c-.. .........
SOUTH COAST CON,••INCI ,..,... lJ, GtNell West 4
F ullerfon 40> OCM 200-13 16 0
Golden Wnl 001 010 001-4 10 1 lltnMtt, Odin (I), TUl>Ot (9) and Ftvnn,
DtY-0, S.ncil'ler, Maritn (3), Kaub c.i. TMlklnle (I) Ind Keub, Klno (6).
W-8tl'nett, 3•2 L--S.ndle1 >-2
:Hl-Qlerdanll (Fl 2, Flynn (F). ltelh
IGWC). 36-Mor-!F) 2 Hlt-OIPlock (It).
Or-.. Ctest Jl, ~ 7
Or•nM Coast 560 S34 352-XI 2S 3 Compton ICM 011 OOC>-1 11 S
FOlr/, /MktmlOll (7), Weltll (I) encl
ERlaon, KruM (I). W111ter, Mo«t (2), J.
Barnett (21, Tucson (7), P. earMtt (9) i ncl
Thomas. w-F•v 13·0>. L-W•tllar.
2&-Peten (OCCI. Enlaon (OCC), Remlrll
((>CC), R1nmuuen <OCC), Parller (Cl. ChrhlV (C) 2, Lumllllln (C), RouncltrM !Cl
HR-Peter• IOCCI, Gltl05 (OCC). Jemn
COCC), Remlr11 <DCCI
Hltfl acMet .........
SUNSET LIAGUE ,_,...,. ".,,,,.., s. Mal"llla l
Metlfla 100 000 ~3 2 6
Founteln Vellev 203 000 x-S • I
GuedM encl Hetlebaugh; Fllnn end
ltlldltrt. w-Fllnn (2-0). L~u.dff (1-1).
28-0ovle (FV) HR-Wllllamson (FV),
Hal11bauoll (M)
W..trnlMtw S, H""""""9ft lleedl 2
Wfttmlnsler 102 011 ~ I O
Huntlnoton ea.ell 000 020 C>-2 4 3
KIHko, Turner (S) eno Vllleoe1,
Mcl.eoc:t, Hooen (4). Florea m encl
Mcelendon W-ICleallo, 2·1. L-Mc:Laod.
2&-Sklonabv (W), Eddv (WI
HA VllW LEAGUE
New.wt Ha"'-I, Wudti 1d9I 1 Woodbrldoe 000 000 1-1 l l
Newoort Hert>or 040 004 a-t I 1
Akn, Fenlo (II eno McNee, Mehonlv
end Toretl 28-H1tcfl (NH). Hlt-TOt'etl (NH)
LMuN ... dis. c-.. """0
Leouna a.acn 002 030 ~ 11 3
Corone del Mar 000 000 ~ S 3
Neets •nd Treoer; Heu, /McMiiian (SI
•~Luewbrlnk W-Neeas. 3-0. L·Htn,
l·1.y&-El'lm1nn (CdM).
, la'9nde l, C.sta Mau 2
Coste MIU 010 010 C>-2 4 I
Estancia 000 011 1-3 • 2 Snadtc.-and Crowe. ROWl!lnl, Nonllle
IS) end Cem-u w-Nonllle ( 1·01
L-Snedecaer 28-Mevna ICM). C.r1ton
(CM), Beker (E), Cemt)ffU (E ).
~dt 4, UIWwMtY 1
Unlversllv 010 000 C>-1 I 1
S.ddtebac:k 100 120 K-4 6 2 Krueger end Beker; ltowe end Sllve.
w-ttowe (2·1). L-Krueoer !1·31.
2&-Slltllrman (U). 8radsllaw (U)
3&-8redsilaw CUI HR-ftosuno (S)
SOUTH COAST LIAGUI
lr'WW S, ~ H .. 0
lrvlnt 000 003 2-S • 0 Leoun1 Hiiis 000 000 ~ l 3
Snoddv end Htbefmetll, Helm encl
Her<l'f W-Snoddv, 2·0. L-+lllm C2·2l.
HR-Ha melin rn.
Hltfl lc:IMlf ....
SUNHT L•AGUIE • ._ 220, w.-...., m
(8t SM CM CC, t Mies)
1. Elchler (El, 40; 2. Clifton (El. '1, 3. (Ila) Weten (E) •nd Rettv (W), '2, 5
Herdemen (W), 0 .
0-Vlew .,, ...... v....,.,
1 (tie) Duerte (OVI end PoNllto (FV).
3'; l. TakeMshl (FV), )t; 4. (lie) Wright
(0V) •nd Schreder (FV), 40; 6 Overturf
(0VI, 41.
SIA VIEW LEAGUE
UlllWnltY ... LA..-... di 240
(et Rlfldle San JM4llUill. 9 ...... )
1. Hen (U), 40; 2 JoMson (U). 41; 3. ctlel
Roc:l'le (U) end O'Here (LB), 42, S.
JKOblOn CU), U
H-~V ... w1*!
SIA VllW LEAGUE
Leoune 8aadl def. Estencla, 15-12,
12· lS, 15-l, lS· 11
Woodbrldot def Corone def Mar, 16· I•,
12· lS, lS· 12, IS•2.
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Dena Hiiis def. Irvine. IS--6, 17· IS. IS· 13.
NON-LI AGUE
Mire Coste def. L• Quint•. 15·12, 10·15,
IS-13. 17· 15. lS-II.
..
TYMdlY't tnMIMCtleM
"ooraiLL
NatllNI ....... LINN
DENVl!R BRONCO$-Slona<I evron
lfflton, Sten Short end Revrnond WOOOlrd
Jr .. offefltlve llnemen
COLL.GI
80WLING GREEN-Nemeo Jim Ler
ranau men•a belketball coacll
'
~ C4e9t DAILY PtLOTIW~. Mlrdl ti ... * •
Los Alamitos resul
~ .........
TIM-.Y'S a1M.n ''""" ...... ...._ ....... ) ,...., •AC& Onf mll9 IMCllt. LUVI ~ (.._.) ls.AO U0 U0
Mii& VWlovtr <T,..,,...vl 10,.0 UO
Walch Tiie llrdle (l..oneol f IO
Timi: 2~ 11~
U IXAC'TA lMI Mid M600.
NCOllO •ACa. 0111t milt irot Sea WW--(AulMll) t 00 U0 UO .,,,. ""' ..,_ (...,. ..... ) , "° uo T'lcMtROMl(~p~) IAO
Timi:~ 2/S. at IXAC'TA (4-fl Mid '100.20,
ntaD ttACI. ()lie mllie HCt. ~ lluel (ltulJ) uo s.• uo
Fro•tv L.eYlty (OrundY) 24.IO 19.00 Vlc10flous FIOwtf' (L.r;ln> IUO
Time: 2:01 J/S
U IXACTA t,_.41 Hid ~
SM uo
)20
VOLLEYBALL • • • From Bl
"'"" ttACI. One mite trot
final game and breezed to a I S·2 scorc
for the clincher.
weJustd1dn'Jaoaftetit~vely."
Dua H11l1 J, ln'IM t: The visit.in&
Dolph.ins won convinanlly, IU:
17-1 s, l S-13 to say unbeaten in tiC
.. !hi Double (Kuebler) 49.20
Hlell Grader (Adlerma")
Chlo Of Jacle lsreetfll ~~1/S P IXACTA (S.-7) Mid 1151.lO
uo uo uo ?.«I uo Woodbndge was led by 6-7
sophomore middle blocker Adam
Keefe. who dominated pla) at the net. South Ccasf l..eape. i· · llXTM •AC•. Onf mile ~ KlnO Of'llllylhm (Perlllfl ) 00
Mel!O\I 8Mdl <Tramblav>
WlMOrne ~ <Schanksl
Time: 1:51 l/S.
U IXACTA (1-61 paid Mt.20.
300 uo ''° uo 4 20
.. It's goin1 to be a Iona season
unless we decide to play aggressively
and commun1cafe on the court." said
Coron.a del Mar Coach Paul Kubas.
.. Those games were ours to win, but
Middle blocker& Martin W
and Keith Ha.milt6n pn>Ylded su~ngth around t.be net 1or lrv •
(2-3) while setter Rich ()niJbj die>
played well. :-•
GOOD VISION
WITHOUT GLASSES OA CONTACTS
AK SURGERY
Radial Keratotomy will fully or partially
reverse myopia and astigmatism perma-
nently! The surgery itself is safe and
painless and has been performed suc-
cessfully for over a decade.
TRUST EXPERIENCE
Dr. David Sacks was the first, and is
the most experienced AK surgeon in
Orange County. He is a recognized
leader and teacher of the technique
with a proven track record. Dr. Sacks
uses a conservative approach with
realistic goals.
EXCEllENT RESULTS
This five minute external microsurgical
procedure has enabled 95% of Or.
Sacks' patients to achieve 20/40 or bet·
ter vision without glasses-within legal
requirements tor <;iriving. Dr. Sacks, a
Board Certified Ophthalmologist, has
performed more than 3,500 AK proce-
dures since 1980. Don't entrust your
vision to a less qualified physician. For
more information, free literature or a
private consultation with Dr. Sacks, call
David B. Sacks, M.D .. (714) 542-3961.
Payment Plan Available
DAVID B. SACKS, M.D.
999 North Tustin Avenue. Suite 122, Santa Ana, CA 92705
Now you can indulge your taste for flavorful fish
and seafood without going overboard! Try our
Shrimp & Fish Dinner and enjoy 3 golden shrimp, a crispy
fish fillet, fryes, fresh cole slaw and 2 hushpuppies.
LONG]OHN
StLVEl{S
SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 Harbor Blvd.
Costa MMe
(Across trom Fedco)
\
l
·---~__,..---~~~~----~~--.............. 91!111111 ............................................... ------........
t
M Or-. COM DAil Y PILOT I Wedfaeedey, Mmrdt 19, 1Ne
CALL 642-5878 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANQI!
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANG!
I LOST MY OWllER IUT
FOm•MTERI
PLACED All AD II THE
CUSSflEDS.
You cen now e11ll the D•llr Piiot Cl•••lfled Dept. on Saturd•Y morning from 1.-00to11:30 a.m. to plmce your Sunday •nd Monday ad1 .
MN.UTAn -.,_.,. "', F•IAU ~ -c,,,.,. ins -.. _ ,,,,
MOU SH/CONDOS
_.__
l«IO
O.OOI C. ..._, ,,,,
0-... 100') O.OOI_,._ IUO --100. ._,..._,o.-,,,, ..... -1007 _,,_ U IO e---IOtl '-~ '"° c...-.. -1071 ··~ ,...,
c..-•02• If w .... ,.,,
102• --"' ... IO:rt RlllALI -"'~ ICIM .-.--'°"° MOUSIS/CONDOS ...__..,._ 100 -•OM a.-. rnn
'--lo.ii ..._.. ....... 7106
~-'°'° --)107 w.-.....-ion ~-, ... Loh-10$l c..-..... 11n ----1061 c.--,,,. _ ...... ·~ --lUt
-c-t07• flf-,,,, --c--•0'7' _ ....... )1)4 --IC* .-..--71.0 _ ............. 10&4 .-..--.. )Id
-'--• ... -Jl<M _._ '°" ..__ )IAI
r-IOIO .._ ... JISO .._ ......... ,.,,
MISC. I .I. ~-JIU _ .._ ,,., --1100 --JI .. ... _ II)) s...c-,.,. ........ c-__ t UO --'-1171
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5678
......... JllO MtlC. llNTAll Al•••••••nn• '--....... JIM """*""---''°' ...,.'-_ ,, .. 0..--7100 '-' ....... """"""-,,. -VO. ....._ ,_ J•tO --,, .. ...._ ....... ... _._ rm .....,,_
Al'AITMINTS _, ..... m • ( ..... ...,...w_ tn• o.wc.. 0.-. lt01 ~,.,-,.,.,, o--ic. --).0. ....... ,,., _....._. ).al --,., .. c.....,--, ...
c-.. -,.,, COM"ECAL ,_
c:--W• ,.,.,.__, .. •• --112• •.l.IAU/Bm' ...... .. , .. ,.,, a.tool/OHiu ~-... _, ,~ "-"''° T-.i/T-,......__ ,..., ---~t.-7711 w.. .-....-, .. , ~ -,., .. ~ ,,_ ~ c-w..--. :rm a...... ~-, ... ._-,~ ~f~ ,.,... ........,_._. _.., 1711 l_ ....... ,.,, _,,_ 11'0 lAlh ....... lW
-v .... 1 .. 7 ,.,.._ --· , ... .......... _,_ ,.,. ._ --'-->tr• ,,.,__ _..,.,,
'* , ... _,__
"°" -_ .... _ ...... °"'. -c--, ... ---~ ,... ,..., , _
DEADLINES
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday..... .. . Sat. 11:30 AM
Tuesday. ... . Mon. 5:30 PM
Wednesday ... Tuee. 5:30 PM
Thursday ...... Wed. 5:30 PM
-1'04 C--&f.--"°' '-' ,,. _,., ...
1911 .-.,JY-,..,.. ,.,. .....,._ ,. .. ......, ,. .. ()Meo,-.' l_.
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFACE HOURS
Telephone~
Mondey-frtdey
8:00 AM-5:30 PM
S.turdey 8:00 AM· 1 1 :30 AM
&u.i-Counter
Mondey•frldey
2ftlO
1"Jj .,
JOOo
>012
JOI•
>01• JOll
4'.111
1100
"°' MOO
'* SJIO s.no ~
U»
IOIO
.011
IOU
.01• .,,., .,, .. .,, .. .,,,, ..,,,
tO:JO
t06S
f/00
_, ....... ~· --.on .._.,,°'-tOtt ...... eoeo ....,.a-.. ~ "'_..._.. '°'° CIAllAGI IAUI
0.-.. 1107 _ _..
1106 ..... ,....... ••01 c..-.. _ Ill? c..-. .,. -..... "" '-"'...,, t lM .-... ...... 1140
~---t lO
Ir-. .....
'--•a• ·'--•''° .._ ....... .. ,, _.,... •111 ..,_._ .... --..., -........... ... ,,
-VIG
-CT•Y ...,.......,.......,,
.........
... Cl .. Y '°"".., ..... ~
RAll .... T ATIOll
IOATS
o--1 1011
101) -'°" ,..
.....,~ 10•• ....... 1'0tl .....,..,, ....... ,~ '°'° ,.._/Declu/--11m
MISC. ......... IO•O c._.,..,,,_ IOU _.,._.1s.-.,,.
AUTOMOTIVI
"'-'-" 9010 _,........,,_ 901t .._w.-90?0 ........ a.-·-tOJO ,.,..._, 90.))
v--..._,~. •oo -'°'° .._ ........ tlOO ,,._ .,..__ "°°
_,,._
H40
DIAECTOAIES
S.-Ohdort 0r.,..c-c. ()ulde, Aulo,_
"9.i &Nt9 T alllOlcl
Open"°"'* -"-
O.ity
..._.,,,~ ,,,...
~ ktur.W,&~ ......,
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM IOUTM OltANGE COUNTY
540-1220
•tlOO
Friday.......... Thura. 5:30 PM
Saturday... Fri 5:30 PM
Sunday....... Sat 11:30 AM
II 00 AM·S·OO PM
842-5871
CltECK YOUA AD THE FIRST DAY
The Deity Piiot atrtwe tot emaeocy and ecc:urecy.
H0'#911'9r. OCCMloneNy ettora do occor. PIMM
llaten whefl your ad le reed I>-* and cMci( your
ad dely. Report erron lmmedlatety to &42-5678.
The Deity Pttot accept• no 14abfflty for any eirror In
an edvettleenwtt fot wNcn 11 may be reepon91ble
9JCcept for the coe1 of the apeoe ectualty occupied
by the .-rot. Credit cain only be allowed lor the nrat
lnlerUon.
GtHral 11t2 la.a1 Estate F11 lal1 8taeral 1002 lalMI lntah C..ta... 2124 lf!J111 IHcla 2111 Arut•nta C..11 •na UM
______ __...-:..-:..-:.-:.-:.-:.-:..-:.-:.-;.--llfflllT LlllllATill Ptaiaaala lM'I .. I I PUB w.;r;Jff' 28R 26:. r9ffg 1111 pa_,.
leural lOl2 Mull SACRll=ICE thl• BREATHTAKING cetallna ...... /C.U• 2/bd 1/ba,condo S800 mo to mo. Cell Gtatral 2'12 2Bdrm 1B• EHtald•. *IDT 1Llff1 llY* weekl Prime • bdrm + aunMt1 trom OCMntront c:.Port. poo1,ape'., Sonya 552-2010 · ANAHEIM 38R 1'hba. all Quiet arH. No P9tl Lat~38'2'~BaEndUnh house w/180• v1ew ON 2 stOfy, BalbO• Pen. Pt 8tatral 2112 1725/mo,962-1700. •Venailleeon!MBMf* newpalnt,veryapac1car 631..et55
2 huge patloa, lllce new Beyllde DfMI w/46' b081 hOme, away from boetd· NEWPOAT BEACH PENlRIOGE COVE 1bf, walk to beeeh, ocean enold gar, coin laundry 1635/mo 28R 2BA lrplc
Int. V9fY lharpl High Bal· 1llp. PRICE SLASHED walk 4br •ba. office. 1 BLOCK TO BEACH V9fYuctueNe verylharp view, ga1ed community $696 984·1•42. after encl gar all bltnS_ ,_,;
ance uaum loan. Prloed S600K lrom 1ppralaal '::tat~:-~:;:+ ~-2BR lBA hOuM. fncd yd, 2 bright and Mght 28R 28A; $760/mo 850-2226 5pm 962-8868 ll'IOpplnQ center
Let Us lltlp Y•
Sell 1.., Prtptttrl
Ctll Cla1111W,
642-5678
nght=at 1229•500
1 :_•1 ~~u~ ~:1 ~~ 1~ lam/party r~. 211p, 2 w car ~· avaH lmmed. triMc. dbl ;er. w/d. No •&. tam rm, vtew. pool, laJMa lalu• ztM 810 Center
• F0< addreu & Info call gar.+drtveway. loog t«m /mo, Y'Nf1Y. peta. S 1100/mo. Call tennla, xtt IOc. $2100/mo. XfflUcfiVE SUNNY TSL ~ 142· 1111 ~ AITI'llll p AT RI c K TEN 0 A E landleaae le95,000. By ~1111 IUl.n Ann. 63 ~-~~•I • n d 7tl0-8782 O< 976-9889 Apt avail 3-15 'thN 6-16,
IAIUlll 631-1266 ~~cr,g_~~ ,....AIAlllBT I ~. ~~\: ? 68R, mtn & city tight• YU, yrly0<1Ummer873-3458. mealiBJIU •·~~ti ~.~ con · l14/11M111 •., ,\fill Ph ... lllHarborVuHm1. • l llar ~:"!~;!~=:tsMM ,... ••• ... 11 Fnod Ill lag bctl 2/bf hae n ~ S 1976/mo. Agt 640-w.4 HU • &PllTmlll
Luxury & Custom Hornet _'!!,;;;;;; _ • •• d' R-2 lot w/2br tlOUM. 2 appla, l/hkupa, klda/peta, • ' Appredete quallty, 3/b<, *~!:r11.,~ ~~~~ Immaculate large Garden ~t 854-2•60 blk1tobeh.cholce1t.~ $650hurry589..et91 yr1y. exec: toucMs. at u751~0 ·7220 Apll. Beeutlfully land-
CdM. toll of rm to build egt coat. mle81iBJIU value, db gar, 11100. IC8pecl ground•. pool & FIR Ill Rll1AT111 .lllT UITD $275K ownr 87S-317S NAPLES ISLAND near OOMrl doee, othera avail, 3BR 2BA w/flreplace. ape, patloldedc. Ho peta..
I Of YOUR propertlee. NO UI• YlfW ~ Seal 8eacti LO'lelty large Jl .. llll 53M191, egt t... aundecll. lndry, 2 car gar, tBdrm $826-$640
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
I obligation by TOP Beautltully decorated 3 l~PI-2BR Great arM Wat• ........ _ _. Dover Shra lovely 4Br ref r lg-, cpt1/drp1. 151E.211tSt. 5-48-240I
p R 0 DUCE R C a II I Bdrm end unit • V9"/ prl-DUPLEX-2Br 1ba each. act~ Frplc, yard, IUp« W _.. 2'h8a, lg tam rm, new I 1376tmo.87S-8599 ------.,. ....
PAT RICK TENORE vetewlthank:emountaln So-ot-PCH $2&4,900. gartige(213)8&9--0035 Frp6c,vaultedcefflnga.dbl kltch formdlnlng$2200 Chennlng 28' lBa 1rp1c 18drm ._.,
631-1288 view Formal dining 521 Carnation By owner gat, pool & epe. No pell. 122-6428 Of &46-0lOO eun rm aun deck •3 blki 131E.18th 846-6818
I ii~~\. room lamlly room end I 673--02•1 Of' 873-1541 •-n ...... 11•--.a Jlll 18drm $760 t bctli900 675-91 15 H•• ••• •-•· r ,: IOvely petk> ~ yard ,.__ l ..,,_ .... 88e W. 18th EIBLUFf BACK BAY. o mo -• _ _.,. b $263,000 '-fttl .... 2BR 28X. a:\. new carJ*, MS-2739 ~ 183 Full vtew, lmmac 2 sty 3br Clean p1MMn1 2BR 1 be 1Br & 28', trig. range, _!". • BYOWNER-3BR S127,500 paint, very elun PLUSH CONDOS wllalla 3ba lrg rec. rm, 2 trplc, wltn yard. No pet1. laundry,pool,carport.No --------1 (714) 67J..4400 Encl/upgraded comer lot $1600/mo/ 87S-2678 atreama. Gii w/opnr eundeck, new carpet• & $«>Olmo. 676-4886 pets. 1550 & $650/mo.
Enter Now
And Be Eligihle
to Win $ 20000
of Home Deeor1tl19
Supplies f ro11
CATEGORIES
Best use of water in house or garden-do
you have ceramic mermaids 1n your spa? Or
do you hove o ~01 pond 1n your garden or
I ountains 1n your foyer 2 Enter your display
t today.
Best children's play area-Has your child's
c;ondbo.x gone chic? Mom & Dad, this
r ategory is for you to show us how creative
1ou hove become to amuse your child.
Best use of a rt in decora ting -Art tokes many
forms , but we'll be the 1udge of that. Enter
your best use of art in decorating today.
Best overall kitchen-ls yo.ur kitchen country?
O r 1s 11 on "80's" gourmet type. Thi s
d \\ II f cotP.gory is w1 e open or space saving 1
that's your type.
CONTEST RULES
f~' UJ"'fK' ' ~'11W' I~ ,_. ..... '•'(li'"""'" hCll"" °"Y Qt.CWOCJl"lf rA I) hr~ tOIWlt'> fJl)t'Wt""1JlllM
--QI ~ ....... ,,. ..... f')'N >..-, ,_,..,, -... le. ...... , c~e "'9 -f ,.,,,. ard
o.bl'•• o ""°'°°"°""bl..., -t I ... -f -be 0<~ bye 0.Vropl-ol llw .,,.,y Ill. ~OQrQ(llt\ be<Ofl'll llt(4lerlf <.J Ibo Wiv ,J&i/Ht.tl<A"'9'Q1> '-«.I>~ Olod UIM(jl bt ,..,.,.,,.,.; f,,.,,., -be pr;ill"'°1t"" 1-t W~, AP<I ,, 198• ry'Olli•..,9d II) .... IM•l\I
P111:>1/H""1~8ooorh1~ </ol""'VW .. (Cl'llW 330W lovStr .... (00111M"tt1 r_,, •7616 by ~ 00 ""' llvldov ~~ l rtU w_, ... be ._.,.., .. ''(JP"" °"''
(IM'rlrqrx;,, • .... l·-O ~-· _,..,. 10 be~ Aot• 11 ltt. 0o.ty ,rlt:/l/HoiM"'OOOI> """'" ~~,,.oq .... , .... ...,_be 11.,...~,.,,,...,ood....,.., .. .,,.
" -Oo ', .... J ....... "'91'1' ~~ ,.__ ._ • ..,,_ °"'"° Do'v ''1:11'""""""'°" """"~ ,...,__., ""'""All~• ... .,...,...'ICJ'll .... ..._... -... lot ~Clf>Oft .. ""' '""'9
'""-'<.. '"''<"' , ,..,._, "'°' -· _,,. "-°"" tOl"OQ!' ~ ,,,.,., ~ ...... ,,.,,.
(U'tO"f• w•R M "'11..i."'1 r>-.. --""tOO"f ...... be t1'oMn
LIVING SPACES ENTRY FORM
I NTRANT'S
ADDll551
NAMlt
DA 'f PHONI NUMIUt
I VINING ,HONI NUMll l 1
CATIGO IYs
•
SINO
INTlllS
TO
LIVING SPACE CONTEST
. c/o DAl.Y PILOT/
HUNTINGTON llAOt INDEPB•oe n
330 W. IAY ST.
COST A MISA, CA 92626
Wiii Carry &4S-T782 w/d hkup, new deoOr. Av! = ~~Ce:~-LAG 2BR Iba, tome ooeen 931 W. t9th St. ~w.2
EJSIOE qui.t cul-de-uc, p-•---•-21_ now 2t>< 2ba 1950/mo, · 759--0649 · vu. Ldry, orw. dedc, trptc
Charming 2Br $134,900. ......... •• 1bf 1760 1'1 mo + S500 $1000/mo. 676-4980 ~11!11:1
By Owner ~~ OH ooeen front 2/t><, c:ntry MC. 54S.-2~7 HARBOR VIEW ,..-__ --=.,.-=---------:~r.
.... ..__ kit, aneloMd ;er. upper 2 + den or 3BR. corner ~•• '"" APllJmTI * -·-* s100·11ezn, 53&-6191. M~.!'~a =!:"~~~~~ l1Mlff L11cebrandnew1AnutNtt1M 2Br 28a Condo. 111 Tru'1 egt cost. styled 1/bf, .....J home. St 600/mo. Call Lola MOVE IN COST paid. Pool. gar, no peta.
--------~~. ~ .!1
87
::; ,.__ .. J •·-JlU 1555notfwt~. 873-7544 Lge Cotttige Type. 2BR 28drm tBa lee5 IUl __ Tl_E_Ul_E__ buyer cloalng coeta. _... -Nt .. 111 1BA, pv1 patio. w/d hkup. 301 AvocadO &42~9850
Located In South Cout STEAL et 1123,500. * .. Tllll* Great1191ue,$7003/bdm, HUGE dowNtalra OOMI' nopet1M75/mo ,. .....
Shore•. thll lovely 3 ~120/876-49l2 Bkr 3Br w/;ar + utlla Incl $850 2/ba, red frplc, updated ~p~c~rm' l2~1~~ TSL MGMl 642•1803 ALrvTILTIES PAID
bdrm 2 ltOfy l'IOme With lniat l 2Br 2Ba aqueeky ms kltctl, f/yd, dbl gar, at Avail now. 508 E. Ooean.-1 ~ FIU •m Compare before you rent.
lamlly room and wet bar 1Br 1Ba eute & cory '826 53H190 BMt Rlty, t•. front, Balboa Penlneula. 1525/mo 1BR 18A, all Newly d«X><ated custom
11 walking dlltanoe to 18R COHOO. matety OTHERS AVAILBLE· F-. touch of cl.... charm Call OenlM built Ina. lndry rm, nr de1lgn feature• pool.
South Co&l1 Plaza. S. ~~ ':itt::s-~ TIUlllT 111-t111 3/bdr, 2/ba, gourmet k.h, at 851 -1164 bMct'I & ~· bt>q, eovr'd garage, aut·
curtty gated community · · . •SPYGLASS HILL* trplc/garg, $815, 4-1 IJll/_...K 735-7•1 W 18th St. rounded with ptuah land-
11
:i;~1~1:~~~bhOUM ·~r1 .... ~ l 88' •'hBa, new pelnt & move, 53M191. ag1 , ... 3BR condon -frplc TSL MGMT &42-1803 1='?2':~.:.m..n.cs 21'F MOBILE HOME. crp1 S3000/mo 844-1481 lut. ...... I 1800/mo. '120-1960 · 1/Bdr, .._Ptex. Lower E.ut· 365 WEST WILSON
T d. . I Need to Miil 24x.O, ad4.IH 3BR 2b• cottage In Olde 3B 2L: f /refrlQ aide. no pet1, 1525/mo, 142•1111 ra ttJona parlt. Call Mike 546-1208 CdM. Tiie, hardwood rt dam rm"' SI09S' LJll llU 111 +MC. •94-5196, CM
Realty **IU NIL** floof1, dbl gar. 703 lr1a. ~18Pe1erpaekr~1-3191 · 31B~" 2
0B0A,. newly d,ec. 1Bdrm Apt w/balcony, Deluxa 2Br 2Ba w/;ar. Nu $1560/mo. 876-9797 ' " m 0 • Yr Y · pool. No peta "495/mo Paint & carpet. 44t Harn-63 l -7370 ., 11n.-•BR 2'~8A hM ....... At"420alm09t a boetl Bch 87Mt81 agent &46-3618 llton Ave $&75 87S-9797.
EXCELLENT VAlUE-. Lrg ClOm. ......... pad off PCH bltlne, crpta, Hewer Condo ,,.., Hoeg --------1•-------· muter bdrm, dining rm + tennl1. Vu,~ FR, $2200 ctlMd fine, call 53M191, H 2BR 2'hba i.t E~ 1Br w/lota of net Eatalde 1Br 18&. Old & • OE •u lrplc. Newport at an af-mo. Bkr/own 64()..4162 agt eoet. ru'f'6. MQ. PC:~a wood. Freah u a breeze charming 1625/mo. Call SACnlFI .... E lordeble prlcel Call COZV bctl cottage So of BEACH HOUSE-214 Avall 4/1, $1000/mo •• ~ "495 No pet1990-2970 Larry ai 5-48-5880 lot YI& LJll 1111 PATRICK TEN 0 RE Hwy 28r/tplc, hardwd flra Knoxville, 3/bd, 2fba hOt Spm c:8'I 876-7358 28drm 1Ba "Cottage", pvt EASTSIDE 28r, yard, gat·
LIDOISLE 631-1288 U75tmo83&-7082 tub , 3 car garg , yard, eprlng freah S650 age. Kida/Peta okl
7S'BAYFRONT LOT with ··~~~~\·fa JASMINE CRK .. 3BR, lge $1160/mo, owner In bedt ... .., '!Ill' HO PE1S 990-2970 le95/mo. 1787 WMI· Dock to accomodate up ~·' ,: t•-lly rm . ..__ ......... •·a, unit,~. Roealle. Spadoua 38' 2~8-. new 1 ......... 1 1 ..... minster, •A. 720-IM22 to 90'yactlt Build an _. _.. • .. -. '"" "' etpt w/d refrlg Im-"' ...,...r w garage. nvil =""'==-=-=-----late O< aubdlvlde. Seieled T ' top cond, loV9ly petlo BEAUT. turn. condo 1 ml m~e '$1360 i.... ~d. Ho pet1 "495/mo. EAST SIDE LuJt In a~
o fra accepted thru --------S2300/mo.780-16:M tobeectl.2bf2ba,refrlg .. VIHaRental9676-49l2 . 35 Victoria &464181 F0<eet,lge 1/br,d/w,trlg,
MARCH 21. '1986 Mini-........ JASMINE CRK 3BR 2'hba range, micro, dlapoaal, Avail April 111. iu/wtr pd, 2 patloe,
I Nwpt Ht1 big R·2 k>t. d/w MC 66 & OY9f Nwpt Hgtlll charming 2BR 580/mo, adultt, no peta, mum bid 1,850,000 l209K w/fr" 3Br 04d« Ute & bright. Sec gllte, • ...,5. / · ..... 17.,. • l8A. Jae petlo Iota of 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, yr !Mae 646-0SM ($22,000 ~front ft) fl tennle, pool $1900/mo. _... mo.~ ..,.. wood s12oo •94-1131 carport. Latge y81d. Ho ' .
CALL AGENTS ~/r:i·&4';~ ra. Lat .. ne 844-8907 f4 .. :......_ 2~. 2.,... peta 1875/Month 2825 E'SIDE 2BR lba. ag1 cw
Jenn11 ... snaw759-9064 -------L~ 3BR condo wlfem Ville ............ ..., fem-Elden, Apt #F. 84&..e519 gar. patio $760, 2052
Joann Akerman675-7898 ILlffl ., ... ,...._ ...... i..t Comm 28R28Aden,endunttgm llYrm,S1100VlllaRentala 2 ... 1 ... C'---28r 1 ... Garden LaM&4S-3081 OR 844-9080 rm . ,_.., _.., · befl condo, plantation 8'76-4912 OA 754-1792 .., .... -· .... =·==-~,.------!•-------• 3Br 2Ba. COMPARE! tennl1, pool, Jae. shutters fr doora s1260 garage, w/d hkupa $660 E SIDE 2BR lba, freahfy
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:::; ......... -. --COMPARE! S189J)OO I 1800/mo. Kathy mo., no Peta. J80-I092 Yll ... ftrJ VIiie Rerltala 876-t912 painted. No pete -f ... The Property Mar1. Granlert ag1 676-eOOO GATED VIUAGE COM-28' 288. lndry M85 $800/mo. Drive by 2ee-B
640-90t9 PrellttQ!oua SpyglaM Hiii **MlfALI** MUNl'TY. 28drm, 2 '~Ba. mo. 2120 Pomo::.' water E. tSth Pt Then cell . . Lift it tm 11111 •1681', lrg yd, canyon vu. CALL US REGARDING 1800 aq. ft. of PURE & gM paid. 843-0355 844-().$52
LIDO PenlMula 28R 1ba. $2800/mo. Aot 780-9&40 IRVINE RENTALS LUXURY. Gar999. SPA In 1-L:--:O::c:FT=-A,...,P=--=T=-.-=e=-A'""'C,_H_E_L_O_R
----mobile home. Fully TO'ally-"'--31bd rm lnlM ..... l11hn mutef ~!!~_.'!l~ng c!:'12:: :='=ry Frplc. patio, t>Mm cell fumllhad 2 car carport .....__... ' 111-llM room, -·-"' 1"• • • r-· 1575/mo lncludft r .. Pvt bMch 136 000 1 · 2/ba, frplc all eppte, 2 p1age, mlcrow..... O\'en, rm, lndry tac. le95/mo frlgerator' 84~
••7"/mo.· For' into°'c~ g8ftige, aundecic, 81375, Dix 2 rnatr bd 2'h b• 1800 private patio. ELEGANT 598 Joann St. 86()..3873 -~::=~·-----·-·· .... .,_, __ _,,..., O:.Ob.. at 57S.-7eoo .. muat .... 63M191, "· f/p, pool, NUna. ten-LIVING onty 15 mlnut• Of 549-0-433 mftll ..
...F-"-------..-.,.,-~~-agtcoet. n6a crt. S1326. Scott H. toSo.Co.Plaz.a,Jueteat 28RC>ptk GreatarM New S825/mo. E/1lde 28R COLDWeLL
BANl(C!RO C lw ,.__ 55&-161710 •92--0216/E of Nepwort BNd & ~tfl crpt~nt-drpe, gar, y0 1BA, patio, pool, lndry ~ ~ta... 1114 ~ oondo In untv of Sen ~ freeny. N7CMe86 659-&>01 room. Cloee to all a Xd)Olnlng Rm Vl9W 1m . itOYa, r;Mg, ;na Town Cemeir. 2BR 21MlA. ~•73 ORA EAVE 2 Br . 1•9 E. Bay
----· Cemetery Iota, MCtlon ;wage $-476 wet• & gM $1100/mo. Aot 875-eOOO 63I 5.439 By IPPt only. & :::-. ..... ':'1~~!~ TSL MGMT '42-1803
IPYIUll North Memoflal Garden pd. No pell 548-MIO RANCHO &AH JAOOUIN Plza $700, i:Ol 161 N9W 28R 2'ABA. 2 lty, frpl,
1111... '2600 all. 8464367 28' Ouptex, garage, w/d ElteoutNe Condoa, 2/bd, h•t~ CNlt ••trt •E'SIDE 18R wood i:io'+ bad(yd, ~··
.Juat lleted. ~-ltory tra.-t ty Nlupe. 21788 Piecentla. den, ...C·ber, fairway. 1111 bewna call: C/Op, refrg aec. 548-7 2
dltlonal tamlty home. • Preprty 1111 M3& No.,_. ~7"3 ., .... 2 cw ~·er· 2iM 28X. ™· 1788. Ill& Incl utll 831..aMe Piil UllM WIYllW
BA, genie room, femlty -*-.atm* l 1al0/mo, '30-n . Pool, Jee, rec room. e..idelg IBr lBe / 28dfm n.. ~ celoo =ic ~,,,::: L.u1 ~~~al ltv-1 + 1 + petto. Uttla Ind. 2 IPACiOUi 2lr 2k 2 '*' . &4&-7131 °'131-f111 R .. pon peraon "'o~y ~· ~ pdo~belcony.
taln vtewa . g0<geoual Ing Fallbfootc ~ 1. 14 Mlle to bead\ 9480. Fee ~l:F~ ""09 28A 28A, 1 C*' ~. H~O/mo. Credit ...-~&5-0e85 n•131_:1~•t•
......... ""'' ac etoee to town T.-r 1'11-1111 •pool 1 ·~ upper oondO. P\1 comm. req d. No pet• 831-22•2 °' J>m
water l etee qU4eC and 110ffl . 73S-l-... /mo, '800a.:. ""9. •MUA VERDE d'lux 28r F1R£PLACE·~·PATIO
1ec tudad , c a ll ...... ~ 2't.alM0tM7.olll 18a, garage, dahwahr X·4JlBrlle5&28tMM
llUllllllll MW••T 81e.12wo2e. a.::,;~ fnod )'fd. L!eaa..... = iO. eo.c eoncto 2br 2-seeo No P9tl M0-2.es E.Ulalde 567-n..1
.... -l...rt ~ --. 11MMI ~. c.pon, pool, Jae, MM. •FfllEE CABLE TV. 411er MDEC. 28R, gar, fer'°9 Aeduoed & r..ty to gol ~ ,_, Cfwmer, trpec, (2ta)MO-e51S & 28' Grdn AptL Pool ~!~1yd,nopeta,2peopte
Location plua In thta ~ llllr ... an • •SHAftP W....ide 28t dlatance lo bHCh, M2&-N2&. 710 W 18th fOOQ. 388 W. BAY ST.
1y executive home Im· Exel. INOIAN WELLS, 18e ~ Tiie ttoora, S1IOO/mo, 17f.a1. AdWlftldlldllaneMV EISIOE 28R 1\48e te71.
maculata & r .. dy to Ootado Vlllaa 3BR 3be orpta.. , w/d h61up, OELUX2 OOH008 2/bd, weyto ... ~merellen-2~l~u~~57 1 271 Cabfllo. 722-0812
mOYaln,3bdrma.Of2 & IUJC .. condo. OrMI lo-gatage. +eeo.Mult 2Wba. furn & unfwn.,dtaa,MCllU eMyon~ ~Msa~5aO-l01':° ShetJ>2BR, t'M>e,....,._
den. 2 fl<eptacae. Perlect cation. a.utlfulty Ul>· ltand cndlt .,.. . No pet&. '"*' lrMllMla VllM. WlleC too. ,,.,. df'Y9' hkup,~gar. no
for entenalnlnQ. ASl<INO graded w/poole, IP• & no-M2t. pettoa, S*ttlfta. 11200-peta Meo, '4t-ttl0
sa.to,000 fota of tennll. Unfllm. ,.. Choice location ieoo • 1•· WJ.AOE ,.,._ c.te ... •at C.. ... •M Sc>ec 28R 2be ft
7')Q-Q10()
FIND
through classified
Whll.....,. YoU're In the mat•
k.C to buy, eomeone'1 r>tOO-
a«ily In tl'\9 mlf1c_. to aan In
Cllaliflecl
dueed. Owrl8r en•IOwl 2/br ..,_....,., kh .,,d TAL ... 7-64M,Aot. acr0.. trom p..l·:.
$220,000. &l$/H8-0?7I 91'· . ._ opttonaj • LEA81 IPECTACULA" • VILLAGI olt.1700/mo. M4-2.oe7
MONTANA RESORT talll.534M191,aetOO.C. WhltweMIV.,wallto '"1lllll ::~~:~a:::·: choice 1ocation. uoo. d':8::e."r1 9~:: AllAUMlllTS uu1rno. HA HA
ICtPf eec:ret In r°'*lee. 2/bf, =. ~ ~ 71...........,.93-4. townhouM, encl g•r. C..at.gC7 l4l~2 f:a,MM1tt,aetooec. QUAINT ~ ~ lndry7;c;'.~~-8t '
..... I L0e Hr 2 .. 2 ttQfY vtew, oat. lftoO/mo. TSL MGMT "42-1803 DUPlh . Prln only. Condo. Yard, gar-oe, .....,.f2 °' MWl41 *UNtOW COMPUX•
c.s-trano lctl. LIO CMf\ I 1100 VIiia Aan111a • 1IOAM "''" db4 ~ M40 ctn. pttti onty. '"""'te 17Mttt t II I• 2M , .. .,tfrpto. g1r1n1
Local ~ wo.Act Ike to MUA WN>E. a Ila, OUteT. PMto. poo1. IC)e., buy3or 4 bdrmhomeln dbf ...... enolywd, d,..pt, Poot ~t gar ll••llM ..,, .. ., NOPET8 ~7
C.M . .,_, 646-1211 g1rdlNtS1tlO. la7·Ul2 1111/mo. M2-0lt1 Ma, may A 91 WAl'm mclL. WUT atoe lerga l lclrm
rrade your old ttuff for M.V hie. Ml. 4M hi. e,~order,Cl8MI-Ml IJ'" I 11 Dui>lex, prv t>eca yd, Utl
naw goodlu with • tam rrn1~ ... !*" ftad_.OGme~for ff 7M 1111 ...a.tH Pd. 1536/"'°· 711 JoMn Claeeifted ed "42-54171 tno •1«11U/mo ~IMO rou tt 150-3173, '*'M11
SAVE
"i' /11 $2000*
• ... u ..... leasn
S1W1ptol'5G
on 6 "'°""' ltHll.
• Month·to-month
also avtulable
• Furnished!
unfurnrshed
• Frtnass centers,
tennrs, sw1mmrng
Models open daily. 9 S
Srmy no pits
Newport Beach No
880 lrvtnt Avenue
lat 16th)
145-1104
Newpon Beech So
1700 16th Str1tt
ltt 00¥tll w sn1 ~
llAA t.l..,..,.O l"lop11t t
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SALES
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Crew Supervisors are
needed · to Wor1< In a
fessfonal management
it Ion.
now
pro-
pos-
We now have openings for
mature adults to supervise
newspaper sales crews.
Responslbllltles will include
hiring, training, and motivating
teens In obtaining new cos,.
tomers for one of the area's
leading newspapers.
For an exoeUent opportunity
and earnings of $500-700 per
wk.
Call TC
Ask for Ron
642-4333
-----------------~---
..... " .. WOl1l AX ... fftendly
nelgtlbortlooo etore,
IYl*'o required. Mon-Rt
f0..7.-144-2111 ........
F or Newport
Beeetl/FUtllon lelend
Oraptllc Arte Studio.
PWlty of leede 72().f 111 •
PAOf RET All SALES Pc. •
Itkin 9VClable In bwltlM ••
ftl9 In Atnum Court. F.1. AiiPr~ 25/tn .. pcMn-: •
u.i to grow Into flt. Met .·
Mgr ~ Cell 720-1223..
.... Estele .....
£lltebllhed ll'Nlll ~
mwdel ~ trrn In Cerone oaf ... wettl ...
c:eptlonel reputetlon
Meda .,, ~ioed
-" mott.>•t«S f/1 a..
lg9nt. c.-.........
AEAlOHOMtCS CORP
(7141875-e700
c •• ...,,, ~. daO
Glr'l • llind °"' ~ cen '9lldl )'OU t!Y!up!I c'• 1"'-S. t
j
--..---~ -_.. __ ------..---_..-....... .....,..--..,.... ____ ,,__ _________ ~-----------.. ------------.. ------...... -... ---------
M OrMge Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday. Match 19, 19M
a.r ....... ... ..... ... ,.,...... MH lut. ..... IHI ..... Tr...,.UdM &a ...... , &.tll la,.,.. ••• , ...... ,.,,.. ••• la•....... I!!
-----...-•-••-. llllllD Wll'l9 8!WING MACH~! PIATTAH PtNnCI Seil '300. Cliutlt IMI MIZ •73 OOllL 2nd VW '78 Aiabbtt, ..... lillK'Df
POQD 11W OPIAATOA:S Klno bed S200 . ._. Ofr. ••• t 1111'11 Cul~ 1114 ·ee ptymouth. 4 dr 81 own., tllv9'/blk Int. ttn/fm OM9. eunrOOf, ' AftUU\'1
l)'N .... CMr*'O..., llon. "'-IPPIY et"° Oommerdel eicp' ~ 541-7524 Of &4&-78'1 .... mT ,,. 8le U&SO/bet OJ; WllOOft. At le orig""'· Or1g, 1 of h..,... In dr,,.... uheuft, $1100. c•NI 'AC
So. C0.C Hwy, L8oune ~Ing. '31·"31. M REMODELED Need to MOf'9 UMd Handcrefted 1( ...... 111. me.n. 2117i Od tlnleldMn APPfx Ceifomlall 87~ OH HVer H mpg. NILL
OOCKTNt. HRV!R 8oh e.1o.m. M-f:, EO& TElEMAKTG TO IUS Selll 21 In Zentth TV, e" and ... ~ ~/ep13 6n..120I 71M mt, IMO. Ma..n1 Mil '71 4608EL. lltwr, 712'"2-3413 L.AAGUTIWCT10H _}.)If 9IP · EXPER CONSTRUCTIOH ~iced Per9ont couctl, ~ OOffw tbl, s t 18 "' Id 25' T ....-. ,...., __.. 821( -•. mint. Muet ..U VW '15 Jett• GU, alo, lntf. of 11119 modll, IOW mtltllgl _. HOeTlS8 733.....a3 au. lamp ptcture e.t oner • . un. ~o enw .. t r-._, -oon-... ~ Jtm o.-5IPd In Ot ~ WORKER Uk .for Mu,,rlte Cottege.Edlngerand lalned,bedroom..bllt.ti.. 11t,000otlof7&-aet0 _.,,..,em 41 .. •13*3• C.-.C. M08 c.tpentry & !xf) ~ WARE H 0 U IE HE LP • ' Oolden-.t 15 per _...,. room alt __.. utr-. ME-""...,8 •• ,, St ...... lo mlte9. Mint. ..,_.., COUintVI a..ue t~
URGUAAD Meik• 831·23"45. WANTED·Walker & 8'2•1359• ~only, WS.~ uceilent "condition. .._..~ ... a...,., .... 1100
I'll SWnm« COOK. NMcMc1 tor Hunt· == C«amtc Tiie ' t 81 714oM6-3185 l•FP"..... :.~.!:.3~.= 5 :i: 117H~ :~/'9cond, 2t00H:.WllW.
atanlno May 24 ~n Buch Pr•-~ble to=·· Mf:.c.:: 1xi POOL tXdt!. gooa Ml 111111 .. uu '58 Lalcewood ao ft tral ..... ~ 10SI CCM • 2hp '**• 1tereo, utru. 6'48-30H. C08TA MESA .-uT&H ·~not req'd. mu.t llft 50 lbt mtn, gci cond . uoo Above SAT3/22, tOto4pm Fol· 1bedfoom.81500. ,.;,~~~· Mu1u .. M0-82Hpp vw bUg 175, rUN grMt,1------~-
9'&-6000ext261 C.11 Patti 1788 benef, rwonable hra, oround pool 14x.28 all u· low the atgni to in. 64e-2N 1 or 842· 13&7 • _,tn ~ onMMy very ~debit, low WI Ill ILL ....
O&llbeitwelnt-4pm llllrD Plllll tnqul,.. 6.4&-3171. tr ... 1250 H2·1847 clubhouH at tHOO 8 ~ ehetl bl't()k ctr fttt IMMACU TE mlle9, owntr. MVW USEOCAAS& TRUCKS
Dry CIHnet1, COM. -•.,...t ..... 4x8 Slate Pool Tabla, Fl0rld1 St.""' 5 Point.. ah11 bad P.U, new ieeo. Price upon'"';, uut In accl ant 12.000. COMl!INORCALLFOA
FOOD SEAVER 3pm-7pm. 3 d~; Sat r 59•5 S300 t 4x28 Above Furniture. Iott of i.tnpe. Mfl for 1.430. Xlnt oond. 113·921·2838 A: for 891~. PID IFPUllll 2 Yt'1 Fine Dining exp 8·30-5pm. 875-3308 • Ground Pool, $250 mlec clothlng Ind houM-5&&-8441 Iv meg Mwtanne vw BUS ·ae wtth 'i2M ml OellLLO coc~~L.::RVE!R c~r,~~o ~ N~R~ !'u~IS!X'!f~2 "2•
1847 ~~~~1~:~e1a1c;;'fu'!:/i ... "" CHRYSLE~·ae. 4dr luxuty *•'II....... ~.;~~ ~;.7~~~· 182~VO
1trate etlt ch ery/ ~~11 . c~~;l?,s~rr~c~~~j ·~blgecraenTV. ........ .. •• ~~70~55"r1~· Sltwr/Btue IMth, beel.lt. vw RABBtT ·eo. 51K ml, HUNTINOTONBEACH·
HOSTESS needtecran no exp nee. -drawer•. S800 obo. Lawn MC>Wel'. 12' alum tAO Ronda 788 Uk• new cond. only 3K enrf, l·ownr.am/fm c.... Ml ... lt ... 1111
Deylhltt ,, .. training fl t pi t ull ••rck1ai111 Ledy'• Diamond wedding boat. 5hp. Ta~. chalrt, St 5H. Many ExtrH ml., Mf'Vkle recordt. Bel S3000 873·2125 C
LIFEGUARD 84M906 or 8..0....728. M1 S 1500 968-5 t25 pool table & aoceea, IOfa 840-8019 A8IM ........ flM of feet. w11r. Avallable for ' ' CHEVY '79 CAPRI I
FIT &I hd~8tl IOll . . & loveseat, mag racit, TV .--..... or purch .... Call VW SUPER BEETLE '73, CLASSIC V~I. 2-ton.
Stwtlng:':"y2<l COMPLETE Dbl bad $50 stand, band.aw, Edison 71 HARLEY Sport1ter, .,.,. for 1pac111 prlc•I lmmaculatecond.12850, grey,blklntanor.am/fm •fTER BAV RIAN China, Amw 16.5 Truck 11.r• $25 Baby phonograph & mite tr.ah thru/out,,,..,, l)elnt .... (121714) 96e..nae. air, good cond. 12.500 ft Cambridge gla .. w1ra, 08"ry cirri«. llke new Fri/Sat 9-? 9682 Surf· tool 12400 obQ. (3C8640) - ' MI& nelll ~ --964-2078 evM. 111.lU UT all SCHOO Cryatal ttamware, •II s to 8<l8...t853 pp 84M202 ~ __ ...
..-&-SOOOext251 l cir~ 1930. eea.5315 --· -crest. SIMPLY THE BEST ••n SOUTH COUNTY Chevy CIWtlOn 'IO ve
Cell bMweln 9'-4pm ENCYCLOPEDIA Brltan. lmat 144 '80 HONDA CM200T s .... -8erYtoa • lMaMa 100! Quall 81 N 8 VOLKSW ... G"N CIMn ale Jo mt ont
JOBS Beautiful handmade qullta nlc• 's.4 •I unopened motorcycle Pant ax .IVERY m..9300 · · n L owoe/ 1350C> ~5
HOSTESS FIT from m~ Pre 1900'• grMI book• $250. ancye~ Ontt Day onlY . i'hUriday Mlpel' program, motor E1~:g~~~~~E ~~. & • l
Mc»-Frl, daye, Apply In EARN to te.40 t . Some newr lopedla $63, 731_.560. 6AM 10 IPM drive A, 3~105 ..,... NEWPORT BEACH lSUZll CHRYSLER 5th Ave. IS ~ J..5pm, 212 E washed Xlnt cond, From (...t.-a... Sal I h Aloom '436 Ha.0098 brown eictlt.n Int, loedec , 17th St, Coet• Meet S t50 10 S<l50. ALSO FREEZER $275. WHEEL· ••91• 1 1 .. . ' AdJ.aant to FuNon laland CHICie 7000 ml, under wert
.. --MONEY Mahogany Duncan Phyfe CHAIR $250. HOSPITAL L End~~~~· A•t• LM1U, l Operl ~Week $12.500 flml, 751·2200 -dining table, beautlfully BEDS 175 <l96-4820 amri,ly & E~ rom WU.ON
•WAfTORIWAITRESS• refurbished w/3 IMvet & KROY 80 L1ttefing $425 1 En~ettalnlng vatle~ .I llPIUft llllfUI C~Rp~°!~ 1 19~!·n::ro~
•HOSTESS/COCKTAIL PRIZES 5 matching chalrt S5SO Panasonic 9" Mool10<. v.,., Reasonable&. v.,.., • DELIVERY DEPARTMENT POlltCHe "5.000 m"-••,ooo o. ParadlH Cata, 8000 tor all or told eepatlt..,., -·1 -1 AUDI .. --
Newport Cent• Or. NB TRIPS 759-t877 _, ::~.3fo~1 898-2848 or ~~'.!:b~~:~~nd McLAREN'S BMW H="8.!"!.!v bea1 offer. 836-058'.
P/T lllTEllEI WANTED· TOP CASH L•dya 10 a9o 'NOr'k1great t2 Elderbeffy, 3120 Only WE LUii ILL M-FtlU,S-St1118 SU.. a S.r¥k• C~RV~ ·~ =
10:3()..4pm. ThUr-Frt·Sun hlfttrllC ... PAID for uMd Oriental $25. Typa~rller/elec TURTLE ROCK . 828S. EuctldSt. c·a•,.'K •=~re tharp. Oaye
Call Mr. Lamb, Sat & Sun. IAJLY PILU Perelan & NavaJo Rug• S25 675,..007 aft 5pm ,-rtat't IAlll DI Fullerton, CA n•'-'· 5-47-7393 Eyea 84M$41 Any elie and any con· ' -----raaae 1 • -I I 714..eao 8300 ,.,.,.!ID.ft., 1<>am-12 noon ltnt.,.r. dltlon. Call collec t, MOVING SALE! Furn. L 21J..e91-870 .,..,_~,..
87W515 II you are loc>klng !or eX1ra Patrlcit. (213) 659-835-4 China, Mugs. Art, Nie II I· OOE 1
W A IT RESSE S ANO spending money, or llke Nac1. 6-45-3749. loata Gtatral 701 1
HOSTESSES · Late eve-~~~t:i~~n~~t~ = AullHCtl l NB TENNIS CLUB FULL 12· f!feEROLASS Seara $299,98 nl~ ar•veyard. Apply Farm. or win Prizes and I llY lPPLIUOEi FAMILY MEMBERSHIP Boat s s llttlnga 11 rlnder. t 400 Pa-Awards Call us nowl We LES 957-8t33 $750/0BO. 722-6-460 w/accessorles. No tralltlf'. Citic Cout Hwy, NB • $350 962-5932 have several openings In 23. SIS copper OE refrlg. A~OWOOO 2x6' decking, al 5530 C M . H B. or F V Exoel working cond s250 a ·20' long. Miii direct. 38• Richardson Flybrldge
ATTENDANT For Unocal 642-4333 650-9499, 982·<l21 4 49¢ ft p.p Jim 842-1403 sedan, twin V8 '1, equlpted !or fishing. Kint
1
Service Station Island IRIYER/FltWtr Sitt' 081 Dryer, Kenmore, Mountain Lakes RV club & llve aboard 960·5610
..,.. FT & PT. Apply Must know Newport atmoat new. Pd $390, camp coast/coast mem· ------1476 SE Brlatol at Beach area Mull Mii St50l 845•2895 berahlp 434 campgrds. COMMERCIAL fishing Radhlll, CM 54()..5676 Cost $4995 tell $3400 boat 44' long by 12· wide 1 6-45-7845 Relrlg; 25' tis exit cond p/p 7 l<l/962..0857 Fully equipped, ex cond B t EASY Assemble Workl $32~. t6• nr new $275 Has sleeping space !or 5, oa $600 per 100. Guer pay· Pon d/w $125. 548-t 172 SCHWINN 10 spd bike 67 t Detroit engine
Pet Mo.+ Tax
60 Laue Payment•
Cap Cott 532,280
Cap Red. $6,802
Retldual $18, t88
Total Payment• OI
$19,078.80
OAC CEL
18110E
$199.98 menl No Exp.lno aalea $55, chllda record player 638-5570
0 oet alls send self-ad-Waahr & Dryer S 145 ea. S 10, toy1S15. Antique Ice Pet Mo + Tu Perator dressed stamp ed Sto¥e $125 O/wahr box $225. rocker $110. JETSKt'85UO xllcond 60LeuePayment1
envelope ELAN VITAL S 100 6-46-5848 desk S t 35 963-3910 pm St 500/obo wltlleveet. 1 Cap Coat $23,680
• ·903.3<l18Enterpfiee Rd, ----WANTEOL ate Model new81'1g, 751·6160 I R;.~~u~·1r5~~80 ~.,trriOtJr12 ccrp•ny Ft P18fce, FL 33482. Fuaitut I014 Starcratt T81'1t Tri Sip 6 IPontoon Boat~. all Total Payments or °' y etu... FIHrTIREI MYEH I llY FllllTllE or 8 c an Bruce 963-7897 ~~~~U:~~~11 ,:;.r;,~!;' s 12.7t8.60 s:,cr~~== :~Experienced. Need Call!. LES 957-8133 ta •lt rl 6011 $6000/obo 751-2200 OAC CEL
perlence required Neat drlv8's lie 6-46--3665 -• u ..,. p IN 701 2 66 l •4040
LARGE SELECTION OF
NEW & USED BMW'S!
Ml!.C-1H9?
~ ....
671-•9••
LIHllAlllD VOLUME SALES PORSCHE '73 911 Targa,
SERVICE & LEASING blk /blk , xlt cond,
3e70 N. Cherry Ave. LONG S t0,000, 5-48-0382.
BEACH PORSCHE '79 91 lSC
(No. Cherry extt--405) Cpe, blk, 75K ml S 15,450. (714)111-llll 6-48-7853 Of 759--3074
Tr~lnt Welcome ===""'=-=, ,,-:=-.,,,,..,,.---OPEN SEVEN DAYS . PORSCHE 79 928 (nu pnt, ur ... blauJ)Lnkt). 5 epd, s
pkg MINT$ 19K ~9-8720
.......... 1
RABBIT '12 Conv, rad, low
ml, rad/blk Jnterior', fac-
tory air, etarao, loaded.
e.autltulcar. 962-9707
Renault Fuego '82 TurbO
1nroof11Mth lntr. Priced
under 13000. Excel
thape & c:llan. 720·1212
llPPMfanca euentlal S8 hr to start *2 ,.,.. 1-..u * 2110) twtr 11 . .. A.sit For Jim, Jr.
HOUSECLEANERS oums, ...... memory, 10 Mb hard 28' SEARAY, Must Hin --...
Knowledge or Cou t GOO<l Hours, Good Pay t0x13oflwtllteS75. disk Lau than tyearold Low Hours, Extras Aalt Strricn/
WEWIE
ILLIUIEI
l .. ILI
Guard regulation• end car required, 675..0579 10x12Sealoamgr.enS75 $2500/0BO 6-42·5526. $18,000 OBO 968-t409 Parll 9011 dOel ..... a ...
.. rety procedures re· -Call 733· t669 Iv mag. -------,...,.,..., quired LLOYD'S NURSERY frff tt f H 6022 CUSTOM Bulltsmall Yacht TIRES·<l Fulda V 2000 H!. ..... ~!__~ · I Designer needed 111, florlat AMERICAN Drew five for comfortable crulalng Perform 225/50 VR 18. putdlll• ,_,, _.
To apply, plea ..... : I exp, 650-2515, C. M. Pleee walnut dining room M $39.000 Invested Sacrl-No punctur", llttle weer.
eat llke new, has two cap-B U NN IE S w I cage flee ror $25,000. (213) Cost S800 $350 obo Daryl Landrum I MAIL TODAY-RETAIL taln and two regular cane 552..0058 0< 55t-5545 436--9500 &&J..9930 9411-6758 .
California Recreation 1Wrap/pack/shlp/coplea, back chairs Asking p I •-· I 11.11.11.9 ~-'"="-·-~_...,rr.<T Company cullomer service, al· $700. 992•8042 t I naaaa I •-DONATE boat & marine A•ltl Waat ..
......,....,.
13881 H11bor Blvd, G.O.
114-2100
~~
ISUZU
THANK YOU
F:2~
IN U.S.A.
AHO TRYING HARD£R
TOBf ;:-1
•SALES
•SERVICE
•PARTS
•LEASING
I ARC.l!.1 INVlNllJfh
o~ IH[ W[ SI °COASI
EVCRY MOOU ' COlOR
CALL TODAY
WIWAITYm
IWllmUIU SM Veno doe Sentoe
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JOt>IJ HAllbOA f•l 'Jfi
CO~TA Ml'A 1,.1; O Jill
JOHISOI I so•
Oruge Co1111ty·s oldut
l.J1tol1ilrrc1r} dulrr
5llip &lfU JOU QUlhtl
1 ulu. 1en1ct. I lrH1ng
2626 Harbor llltd
Costa In.a s•o S6l
MERC Capl'I '73. New
b<akM/tlf•. Needa WOftl
S175,Calt~290
OLDS '78 Cuttaaa 2 df hd-
top, IUper ctn, X·lhape,
grt tr&M 844-1090 aft 4pm
OLDS '77 Cutlua Sup Cpe
EXlt mech cond, new
paint. $1575. 780-0157
OLDS ·n Dena ae, 4 °'.
ale, p/a, p/b, ~g/W.
$2000 080 552
OLDS '81 Cuti... V8,
blue w/wht vtnyl, xlnt.
make offer 545-1508
1 t37 Ba~d• Drive tltuede neat appearance. 1 equipment. Unique tax
Corona dal Mir. CA Ford at San Mlguel Or, BABY Grand Plano, cu .. Puppies, lawn & sable opportunity (Corpor1te WANT to buy car, $2000 SCllAILOS
(7t4) 6-44-973-0 t 1-5pm, &••·MAIL or tom iota. wtng chair Cal 6-42•5365 eves/wtmds too) For consultation pr range. Wiii pay cuh. A8tM DtaHtic 1300
733·8828 Phtl Courtney. Mode din tbl, 5 chra. 760-7124 Mr Stewart Call Jerry 722·t848. ••••••••• ;;edlcR 171 Regal All UllRl/IAUS --antq. umbrella 11and, FRENCH LOP RABBITS 14 un.. l l>rl /J
FIT poattlon open tor hotel •AHIH TU.llH lremarc col tbl. 857-4646 f for EASTER. 4 wt<a otd Sail hall 7014 w•ff " ..,. Coupe Ltd. Equipment, HOROSOIPES gift lhop Mutt be re-And Counter Help. Ice $20 aa Call 645-4854 21 foot Aquarius uUboat to30 BMW 1984, 8,000 ml & YOtJ name It, lt't got ltll
9'>()nelble. and have neat Cream & Gifts Balboa BABY'S Changing Table Lhuo Apao AKC chem· with tr1111er. outboard. 3 1 IEW ... •EP ~~~~8:n!~2a1~8;.0: TOP SSS PAID ~~ ~~:~=~::: OE MW
1P9Mtanoe Experience 957·8320 Carolyn very sturdy. euetom bullt pion puppies beaut $200 sells. great on oceans, f1 6 (213) 831 3402 F P at 12875? N--tr II Mt,. Laa•m helpf\lt ~9569 3' Wide /1. 2' deep x 42" · 3-0 rivers & lakes $4 995 Call OllUIOIE • er · • °' Of ampered ~... ... . PtlT com 1L TEOI high Plu1 shelves '°' 73 t·S630 or~~ 536--2156. ALL NEW FROM JEEP (213) ~ 188 MercedM 8efu 642..0795 Eva 5-4S,.8823 • 111 UlllllS/l ,I . Lloyd Peat Control needt storage S.O 964-6758 IPiHH i 0JfHI II 14907 t BMW •74 Bav. Boe/bge, ti-llllMATI Ull CAD •53 Coupe de VIiie.
Servkleltatloneuhleft& route1echn1can,wetraln, Beaut. oak kng az water· 1059 27' SOLING 8 aalle, Hiii loyt, 8flrf, amltm t1erao TopMeroada9PrlCMPald Excelcond.557·H98att fll
attendentt. AM/PM ahlft must have good drMng bed must be Merl cost treller, cover 2 rlgt. Od HUNTINGTON BEACH tape. Xlnt cond. $3950 CALL PETER Of RAY 5pm Mon thru Fri UIES
Full or P/tlme. $4-$5 hr record, call Mr Taylor am S tooO Uk S600 848•5192 FOR tale Lowry organ & cond S5000. 5-45-3006 I AMC/JEEP RENAULT obo, 650-23&4, 645-4053 .U If ..all Call 844-5054 onty 979-6021 bench, pecan cablnttt 70 -6751 "'---h Blvd H B CAD '79 Sevma. 1 ownr,
-COFFEE TABLE 59x28, ke}'$ 'modal #TPL S300 I 12' SL• 1 .,.,... · · BMW ·at 3201, 1 ownr. .... ..... grNt cond, fully loaded PAIE ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~ ~d Table 28x2~ Oak 89t~524. FlnnNsh-made TARGA. 84 1~~ 3~~mf, lier, al~ tnrf~!2~13~or~7~t:4:~~7~-~~~~~w:/~~rl~~~~~~~:7:85:2~~~~~~~~~ MOTOR ROUTE Both $200 848-8223 Lowrey Organ L·22 Fiesta ;:ri~1a1f11~~rg~!~c~~~: IEW 'II 'llP $10,500 obo 720-035-4
DINETTE SET, butcher w/majlc Genie, voiceS, center cockpit, te1k CIEIKH DATSUN '81 280ZX GL
Available In Irvine area.
$300 to $600. No coJ lect-
lng. 3 -4 hours a day. Mon.
thru Friday afternoon. Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
642-4333, ask for Kirk.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
330 W. Bay St
Costa Mesa, CA
btocil top, 4 cheJra, $95 rhY1hme. 5yre. Must aetl cockpit bench• art It comes with bucket Mitt 51pd, t-top, loaded.
Hoover vacuum cleaner. $650 844·9646 cabin. Volvo di.Mt, no and radlal tlr ... order $6900. PP 7t4-522-6557
St5. 847-2968 lie In 060 electronlca, llmlted Ma your1 today. DATSUN '81 200 SX Fif5~A~~Ns1z":'~ire~:~~ <&Ls SCHWINN 2011 :l:"2~~1!7~~d~u~: ORA!~:~AST ~~~~51:'~11:.C:!.8:;
$25. 536-8564 Good~~~~;· $30. 722·9<l80 Wknds, Viv Jeep/Renault condition. PP 962-8842
HIDE.ABED & 7'aola, teak --CATALINA 27' 2524 Harbor Colla Mesa DATSUN '8 t 280ZX
col tbl, $35/ea, 2 end tbl• Sptrtiat '"41 6065 · 1976 Tradltlonal & greet 14l·I021 Turbo, exc. cond, auto.
S25/ea, 644-2472 3sALT Water Flehlng cond Only $14,000. Tracb 3S PS. air, cruise. am/rm ..,.---,----,---.,,f-2~.,...._ Rods & Reels !or sale by Call 951 -6t10 Must eeel ca.as. tkl racke, chains, 1 Apricot vel ao a, chrs, --188 C"'-1 ton tow t~·ck ow,.._ n tmkr 53• ""73 II bl & I bl Senior Citizen In very Santana 3-0130 "Sn1ru" ..... v '" '"" • · .....,.. cocilta t amp t • C Hotmee 500 on bacit llke new. $650. Poot tbl good condition. all tor Grand Prix, loaded·f\111 $4500 548•2881 · HONDA '75 CMc Hatctibk.
1" slate $300 963·7929 datalls 847-7802 _ race. Dye 752-9277 6-42•1357 or 5 epd, good cond. 57,000
G p c T ml. S t675 or offer. Runs MUST SELL New high OP ULTRA-YM A · op SliJl/0.dia/Sttr11t El Camino '88. t owner, very well. 893-7130 quallty Ratt8/l tided 2 °1 the llne, only used 250h 8 cy1 bit t weekd f1 4
piece eectlonal sole First once. $300, 960-l008 022 S 1~'. Call s:.920";,° °' aya 8 pm.
S600 takes It TM buy ol SHOT GUN. 12 gauge, llke Op to 22'. Shallow drafi. --. HONDA '77 ACCORD, ···=·=============-the year 53t·9814 new. Franchi 1250 $150/mo Call 673-27<l7 FORD 79 F250, orig ownr auto, 28mpg, S1000tlrm. • Oak dresaer w/5'"driwers, 536-3013 -or 675--0 t49 -~S:l'Fr!~~ J'~ 18~· _84_7_·5_5_3-0 ____ _
If '" ere .. , h111i11ttc ••• •Hf to •
••• , ... u1h,
WE WANT YOU!
.. .,.,., ......... .,.,,.We will
..... ,.. ._ ft tell •••crlpti .. 1 ................. ,.~, ....
... .,, tt ......... i1wtfft4.
c .. Tt41rl A•• ltt T.C.
(7 t4) 642-4JJJ
wood carV1ng on tap, I 45 dock, pvt entrance, HONDA '64 ACCORD LX
bevel mirror. pert cond C1r11t Salta Huntington Harbour Vaaa Xlnt cond, orig ownr, 30K
S325 Sola,brntonea.gd 2 $250/mo 2t3·592-At98 CHEW ·67 Van nu tfr .. localml,4Door,lltealfver
_cond !too 675-9883 C.1ta •111 61 4 41' ILIP IEEHI Irena, rad, 3s0 V8, runi blue $7777. 631-9208
10NE 6 drawer daak-,2BA 2BA. furn 2 car gar· Call 95t..OttO /1 f great $550 54S,.9890 K-GHIA '70. Newbalanoed
I mlddle opening, 3 draw· age, E/alde, encl bacic I w n °· DODGE •79 VAN-JeO HP UIOO eng, new tmte, 5
era each side $40 One 9 yard. $1000 6-4 t·9375 IOAT SLIPS AYlJL V8 townr pluah cut1 Int' Mlchellna, Pioneer t1er
drawer lo·boy master --. -/ f bd ' f d ' $3000, 964--0047 lv/m90 d $40 T k both You don I know whet you re I 0e Anu 8a~de VIiiage w to I • re . ,....,, Of call aft 7pm resser • 8 missing II you h•ven't read 300 E Coatl Hwy, N.9. cloMt, xii cond, MUt1
lor $60 total 963·6682 lctaaallledletety 573.1331 Mon.·Frl.9-4pm Seel $5200, 64S,.1882. MAZDA 828 '83, 4 dr.
I •••••••••••• • • • • • •• • • •• .... !On-Shore and Ott-Shore DO DOE '83 Van Con-a/auto, misty bl fmetalllc, --•--L 1 1 _ .. __. c, cc, pt, am/ m can, • : mooring In Newport ver_,.,, o m • o .... -.. excellent. 16950/obo. • DE LI VERY DRIVER Harbor (714)752·5t3<l w/extru. Mu1t HI. 84S,.6425.
• e SH 0 RE M 0 0 A I NG St2'900' 54()..9205 -M-AZ-OA-'8_1_RX1--red-,-.,-gd
I : Daily Pilot motor route : . WANTED On Bal.boa ., .. H , cond. ale am/fm 15800 • 'I bl · H t' t • laland Call Collect CllHICI 9049 957-2565 °' 751)..5484 • ava1 a e in un ing on • a1s-502-0220. __ t§B boa e ¥. Ton MAZDA RX7 ·eo. 5 IJ>d,
• Harbor area. 1-2 hours : SIDE TIE tor up to 40' Stakebed ~ruok. Info & eunrl, ale, t1erec>, lo ml,
: per afternoon. e $225/mo Balboa Covet. Pix avall at 6-4S,.7049 red $5000/obo 854-1844
• • Water/power 722-1292 Beat offer over '8.000 MBZ '7l 280SE CPE
e Call 642-4333. Monday -• SLIPS AVAIL 25.30,35'40' The featest draw 1n the Immaculate cones (02531) • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for : 3333 w COAST HWY.NB w .. 1 a Dally Piiot l13,995Earletkelmport• : Art • 642-4644 9-5 Mon-Frt c 1ualtled Ad 642-5878 (714)-e6()..9094
I ~ 0 ~:,?; ;.;:,~·· !, A PIECE OF CAKE
: 330 W. Bay Drive :
: Coata Meaa, CA :
-························· I
Openings Now Available
CAR ROUTES
Earn Extra C••h
For Delivery Of Thi• Paper
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. No
collecting. no soliciting .
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842-1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
IT'S A PIECE OF CAKE TO ADVERTISE IN
THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES
PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No C.nc.it&llOtl)
3 11~ 5 hme minimum
S 60 per llfW E••~ 3 hnn S d.lys 19 00
• r~ r•res on1y 11pp1y to,,.,,,, •dV9ftis.d for • prtet1of I1000 00 or lltSS
• Pr~ mus f "" lf'IC/Udttd lfl M1 • flal• do. not •f>PIY to Commetc4tt .CC()(ltltl or Roll ftt•t•
• NO CANCELLA tlONS OR CHANGES one. thf •d hat run Cutomt1t ts
FOR~~~';;TA;r~ llilJ Pilat
CALL 142 .. 5171 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~.~---------------=-·------------------~
---~~--.-.---... ...................................................................... -. .......... .-. ............... ..---.-..-----~~~~--~.-.:.~~...;.,_--~-~-----
A
AD!
\
• I ..
•
JOE'S LASAGNA
1 pound lean ground beef or veal
'I• cup minced onion
3 cups tomato sauce
1 teaspoon basil
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
'h teaspoon oregano v. teaspoon garlic powder or
1 clove garlic. minced
freshly ground black pepper
- ---=--~~~. & ~ --
W-$21
•
• F ..
t.
-.. . ... -.... --------~-..----
CM's plannjng
panel is failing
its community
Costa Me~ City Council did its civic duty Mond~y
at the vocal urging o f some angry and o rgamzed
constituents. It fo rced a bargain that stop ped the planned
construction of a 500-foot-tall office building near a
residential neighborhood .. In so doing, It cfTcct1vely
overruled a questio nable deci~io n by the city's Plan ning
Commission.
The planner~. armed wit h data predict ing that the
towering structure and its companion buildings would
create unresolvable traffic problems on Harbor and
Fairview boulevards, approved the project. Traffic
congestion, one commissioner d eclared. is inevitable.
Perhaps the planners were blinded by the prestige of
the developer, the C.J. Segerstrom and Sons Co. The
Segerstro ms have been synonym ous with Costa Mesa.
The company's projects. especially the South CoaM
Plaza Shopping Center, the South Coast Metro businc'!l':I
and office area a nd the soen -to-be-unveiled Performing
Arts Center, are the jewels in the city's crown Not to
mention the fou ndation of the city's tax ba~c
But the City Council saw the same information
from another perspective, a perspect1 ve that could not be
denied in the face of what must be the most ~1gn1ficant
public response to any politJcal question outside of a
forma l electi on
Reacting to the pressure of homeowner~; organ11a-
u ons insisung that the en v1rorimenta1 study be g1 vrn
credence, the City Council did what the Planning
Commission \hould have done. It said the project
cannot be approved.
The Plan ning Comm1ss10n's decision might be
considered an error 1f ll were viewed alone But, only
weeks earlier. the Planning Commission granted a
request to tum Town Center Dnvc over to the
Segerstrom company for incorporation into tht: ">uuth
· Coast Metro/Performing Arts Center complex. The
decision was contradicted by an environmental impact
report that concluded that closing T own ( enter Dn vc -
a s the developer planned -would exacerbate cx1~ting
traffic congesti o n in the area.
By abdicating their rcspons1b1l1t} -or by ma king
dumb dec1s1ons -the planning comm1ss1oner\ have
added fuel to the pohttcal fire~ that have been raging for
more than a year in Costa Mesa. r oo man~ re~1dcnt'>
have come to the condu~1on that the government exist'>
to serve the bus1nes~ interests at the expense of the
residential population. and the Planning Commission
bas given them reason to believe they arc right
City Councilm an Donn Hall. who rs gcncrall}
conceded to be a member of the pro-growth tamp.
declared Monday that approval of the Segerstrom office
tower wo uld "spilt the community." There is little doubt
that he was right. But that doesn't preclude the
possibility that the comm unity has already been split by
the contoversy that has swirled around development
issues and given nsc to politically vocal homeowne r'>'
organizatio ns like Mesa Action.
Altho ugh the City Council has the final say on <111
projects, the Planning ( omm1ss1on 1s spec1ficall y
charged wi th evaluating them and making rchahk
recommendations based on ment, not pohtK'>. In that.
they have failed.
Palntlng crosswalks not
city's only safety option
1 () th(.' l dlltir
Your rctent ed1tCir1.1I I S1·wp<1n
tne\ tr> \h<1w 11 tart·\ -and 1<t·1,
1appcd l>atly P1l<>I. f l'b 191 torrc·t 1
ly 1dcnt1ficd lhal a kc; rC<t\l1fl wt.)
cro'i\walk\ in < orona 1.kl Mar 11;1 •-i·
bas1Lall y heen leh a., 1h1·) <Hl' -
poorly marked and un\af1• "
becau'I<: any a11cmp1 h; '"'" < 11, 111 improve them may makt· tht < 1t\
re'lpon\1ble f11r defcnd1ny ar1, IJw
'IUtl\ that <1n..e fmm pn J1 \l11.in ·
related 1n1urw\
However th('t'Cl1t11r1.1l 1111plwd 1h.1t
the city I\ 1n d 1111 w111 ' \llu;it11m
And that l\n't 1·iut< tly true Wli1 1(
the city might find 11\t·ll more opc:n 111
lawsuit'• by maktnK 1mproH mrn1' 11n
existing tro't\walk\ \u1 ha\ repa1n11111t
them, marking them with \1gn' ,,,
setting up Oa\htng heacoM thr'4
ideas arc nnt thc <inh wa>' to 1mpn1 ,.
pedestrian \a fct v in < 11ri 1nJ drl \If .11
The c.lly doc., h<Jve r>lhcr v.11nh
while opt10n\ that w1,uld not '>1gnlli
cantly increase It\ hab1l1ty l\nd tht'\l'
Options need to be adequalC'ly '>tud1l·d
and considered
For uamplc. the nty v1uld 111
creue P<>hlt patroh to forte mo111r
1st~ to adhere more t lo.,.•lv ''' ltll'
speed hm1t An yone wh11 ll vc\ 1n
Corona del Mar will ttll ;11u th:1t
molon sts reaularly Clt{('<'d thr "'
mph speed limit, C\pt'tially <•t nip.ht
and often cannot rcatl tn 11nw t11 ''"P
for a pedcstnan 1i1bout 111 t ''''' lht·
street.
Second, the city tould l 1in\ld<'1
establ"h1n' ~de'ttnan-ac 11 v<1tcd
traffic s11na 'at kt'y pedC'llrtan r rr1\\
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
1ng' l hl'\t' \111n.1l\ v.1111lcl rrrn;.11n
grt'l'fl :ii .111 111111'\ t'Hept "'hl'n ,1
fM 1vin "'"lll'd 111 tr""' .11111 a1 tl\,tlnl
lh• ""'"' ti·, p11\l11n11 J huttr111 thu\
,1\r111h11y iln~ unn1"""•11 'r 1n tt•r
rupt1•m 111 tr.ifl11 ll11v. I Ill' u 1v'\
l1.1h1l11v 1111 thl\ t;f)t· 11f :1 llKhl v.oulrl
be 1111 1111111· lh.tn 1\\ llaht111•, ftH Jny
r11t11 r rr.1111< \1gnal l•>tall'<l 1111 ,, u ty
\lrl't'I and p111hahl; In'> th.in for :in
lllllll(lfkt•d U<1\\W,Jlk f 111 ( OflHli.I dl'I
\if,1r\ 1·ld1 rl ; v.h1111f1cn havt 111 wa11
111 m1nu lc\ or 1111111 lwf1111· thn tan
l r'''' \aft-I, ii \lyn.il of thl\ l'r fX' IA.tiuld
1~ .in ttn'>"""' 111 tlw11 pr,1;1·"
\,, I ht· rt Mt 111lwr t hcm 1·\ 1A.11nh
''"'1d1 nn11 \1111 11 v.11n'1 he. t:J\~
llnd1n11 a v1lu111111 111 th" nr11hlcm ,
p.trlllUl.trl\ hrl.IU\(' ( .1ltr(ll"J\ ha\
J 11 \<Ill t11m nvN 1h1· l11yhw;n ;ind
rnu .1 .1ppr11"'t' rno\t < h.in11<•\ 1n 11,1flii
\11/f 11/l' ,11uJ \1)-'.l"Jill\
llut ll1t· t1r1H· hclHl•ITil' for lhl' (II) Ill
taJ..1 1hc lead on tht• 1\\ue .rnd a
th<m1ugti \tudy to determine cx.tt tly
wh,u ncccl' to ht. done and what
11pt1on\ arc ;1 v._1 lahle would t>c a good
'>tan
It " unfonunatt that pcupl<' arc
in1un'<I .ind 1h:11 l11w\u1h re\ult Hut
thf' c 1\y IA.Ill alv.&v\ hl· vulnt•rahk 1<1
;in ovcr1calou\ attorn1·y look1nf( w
firi<I gmund\ for 1n111:i11n& a d111m r Ill' real que'itmn '' not how we pr t>lt•t t our..cl v<'\ from legal lrah1h1y
hut how we protc< t our c 1t11cn\ from
tw1nv hurt
DA YID Pi\INI
I Kl\f I WL~ I ON
< 1t11cn\ Im \ate< ro1swalk'
ICllf.., Wltl-
p,,r '""
,,.,. llftl
r-r.tt
IJA " 'IQ r ; I o.,..-,
''" '"'' . 1..,.e......,
• ._..,, E1't •
c, ... tMft
~•fdt!O'
"4iMf'llMJ C ~rctwnen "'""t-
AottenL C.,..tfe'f
~ .,,..,on ,.,_,.,.11"'
f ""11l ....
( ••'IJ'el U4fltlOll'
""'""~ M••~•l•rog 0wf'Glr,r
c::r.a~,.,,
• 'Csllfornla RepubllcantJ are In the most mellow mood they've been In
forthreedecades."
'
!?
O.K.WE'RE GOING
FOR A RECORD, NON .••
GOP scrambles to ward off
moderate winds of change
This time.11 th Commandment aiding
m oder a tes ra ther than CQjllservatives MARTY
SMITH ~A< RAMf:.NlO -flic 1o1.ind'> uf
<.:hangt' blow a1141n w1th111 the <ah-
forn1a Rcpuhhum Part) And onc.;e
again. tht· I I th < ommandmcnt,
although 1n an updated and watered·
doY..n H'r\11111 I\ t~:•nR invoked to
\helter agent\ 1,f that t hangc from
acc u,aucmc, of pany dl\loyalty and
e\Cn here\) r hi\ llOll' thl· 1;d1l I 1<, ha ving an
opp11c,11r cflt•<.:t lrom what 1t had when
formulated more than 20 yean ago
When then-stall part} c.ha1rman
c,a>lord Parktn\on formulated the
I I th ( ommandment -.. Thou \halt
not '>peak ill of an) other Republtt:an"
-the proh1b1t1on worked, either by
accident r,r dc<>1gn to benefit arch·
con~r-.at1ve\ who werc on their wa}
to tahng over the < alafom1a (JOP
..,.,,w 1 t c, pro" 1ding a degree of
protecuon for the party" moderate
and pragmaut clcments fr<Jm attack\
b> long-<lom1nan1 right-winger\
Th e pre..ent \talc chairman < lair
Burgener voiced hie; ver\1on of the
edict at the(,< >P'\ <.talc con vcnuon 1n
Santa ( Iara where he made a <,pet1al
point of urg1ns candidate\ c.ompcting
for party nom1nat1ons to refrain from
cn11u11ng each othe r
"II yo u don't like each other. we'd
JU\I rather not hear 1t." he declared
Ht· may have been drc,appornted hy
\ome of the 1mmed1ate re\ult'i of hr\
admon1tmn, hut no fJnc 'ihould ha ve
expected two of the t0mpct1tor\ for
the l J ~ Scnatt' nom1nat1on. state
\en l d Dav .. , Jnd < ongresswoman
Uobb1 f 1cdler to halt their bitter
\Crapp1n~
"''r <ihould Hurgcncr have thought
\latc \en II l R1<.:hardwn. now
oppo'>lng h1\ f11rmer ally. Mike ( urb.
for the (j()p nomination for heuten-
an1 governor would lay off rn any of
hi\ illt<t(k\
Aul wh1k the rnmmandment lacks
'>CJmC of 1t\ old force. rts late~t
1n vcK.Jt1on doe<. help the state OOP'<>
moderate wrng 1n It\ re\urgencc '"
poht1 c.al rcspcctab1l11y and, possibly.
1n power as well.
Assemblyman Robert Naylor, one
1n the crowded Jicld of candidates for
the GOP nomination for the U. S.
Senate. learned this at the convention
when he renewed his attack on a rival,
( ongrcs~man Ed Zschau, who clearly
1'1 the most moderate Republican in
th<' pnmary contest and the one most
independent of President Reagan.
5peaking before a packed audience of
delegates. Naylor charged that
Zschau'<, tclcv1~1on commercials
··should have a warning label -
h:uardous to the Reagan agenda."
The remark set off a chorus of boos
and hmes
Twenty years ago, the party's
moderates could complain that 1m·
po'>1t1on of the I I th Commandment
hampered their efforts to demon-
strate that the nght-wrn~ was promot·
1ng extreme stands on issues. It's the
conservatives today who fear a chill-
ing effect on pnmary campaign
debate
E:v1dencc of th1i. was seen when
Zschau distributed copies of a pledge
which he proposed that he and his
n vals for the Senate nomination sign.
It would have had each of them
prom1~ not to even refer to any of
their opponents dunng the primary
campaign
None of Zschau's competitors
agreed to go along with such self-
restraint Naylor, who has consistent-
ly attacked Zschau for not being more
faithful in hrs support of admin1s--
trat1on programs, suggested that the
pledge would amount to a gag rule.
The candidate who stands to the
nght. tclcv1s1on commentator Bruce
Hcrschensohn, simply tore up his
copy of the pledec and returned the
pieces to Zschau in an envelope
Conservatives fear such a yledge
would disarm them in their fight to
retain control of the party -JUSt as
the I I th Commandment effectively
disarmed Republican moderates and
pragmatists 20 year~ ago when the
right wing was on the move.
Now the status quo again appears
to be shifting. California Republicans
arc m the most mellow mood they've
been in for three decades. For the
most part - the angry old -timers,
those who had come to hate Re·
pu bhcan Earl Warren as much as they
bad detested Democrat Frank.hn
Roose velt -arc gone. enhcr dead or
past canng.
Young faces were a much more
frequent sight at the recent ~late
convention than they were in
previous yea~. So were blacks and
Asians.
This conclusion 1s not simply the
result of subjecti ve observations but
1s supported by the findings of New
York pollsters D ick Dresner and Dick
Sykes in the surveys thctvc con-
ducted for a vanety of California
Republicans, among them U.S. Sen
Pete Wilson. Long Beach Con-
gressman Dan Lungren and the state
Senate GOP caucus.
It's the judgment of the two
pollsters that California Republicans
arc chanfin& in their nature as well as
growing tn numbers. Jn essence, they
say that while today's state OOP is as
conservative as ever on economic
issues. it's more moderate on social
questions. It's aJso more pragmatic
and tolerant.
The toleration, however, 1s less
lilccly to extend to the intolerant,
those who seek to keep the state party
in the kind of ideologicaJ strajt-jacket
it's been in for much of the las1 two
decades when the test of one's
Republicanism was one's total loyaJ.
ty not only to Ronald Reagan but to
all rus works. That's the most hopeful
sign yet for the state GOP.
Col•mol1t M•rtbl Smllt 11 pollllc•l
t:dltor o/ Mca.tdy New• Servi~.
-1~1.fiiil:t;t.J:I t 1;,i;ijij.!ft.llW·i·---------------
President misses 'simple
ple_asures' of everyday life
~ ~HIN<1TON -"What do the
s1mplt' folk do ro help them escape
when 1he; 're hlue'l Oh what do
'ilmplc folk do (that) we do not?"
Ronald Reagan. the ea~yaoina
channer who gets along efTortlculy
with k1nas and commoners. barons
and blue tollar\, would he 1hc la~t
man imaginable 10 sing the
.. ( amelot" version of King Arthur
lJnllkc tht• l..uner-l.oC'we ruler, Re-
apn know\ what he'~ mining.
In a recent conve"'3t1on with Dalt
Van All .. 1n the Oval Office, Reagan
sounded almost wistful as he reflected
on the "~1mplc pleasures" that arc
dented him as president. "Ye,,'' he
said, "you m1u the simple thin.a of -
you ~tand u~tam thcrt' and you look
out the wmdow and sec the people
walkinf by and you ..ay, 'Hey, you
kn ow, can't do that anymore '
"I can't go down there and ~Y I'm
101n1 to walk clown to the dru.ptorc
and buy a map.11ne, or drop 1n som<'
place for a cup of cofftt. And you do
ml,, 11 "
The pl"CSldcnt added that there 1'
another i 1mple plca1urt he m1uc1 -
one that probabfy only \Omeone who
arcw up tn small-town or rural
Amenca would appr«1att "The only
dnv1na I att lO do 11 With the Jeep II
the ranch -wtthtn the t'>Of'(kn of the
ranch "
JACK
AIDEISOI
r~
and DALE VAN A TT A
This led Rea.a.an to an 1nterellin1
observation about the cocoonlikc
elustencc of a modem American
pressdent:
"I have to tell you. theTC ts
somethina that I'm very much aware
of I d1dn1t act to be so much aware of
11 until about the time we were lcavina
Sacramento, but now 1t is tn.te here in
Washinaton ·
"Now, I've been here •n Wuhina·
ton 1n yean past when we'd rent a car
and we'd ao wherever we wanted to
ao· out to dfoner and th.at sort of
th1na. You'd be 1urpnsed, s1tuna 1n
the *k seat with 10meone clJc
dnv1ns, how q_u1ckly you IOK any
sense of wbcrc thin,. arc. I found out
as the ycan went on m Sacramento
that by aony. tf they tum me loose m
the front seat of the car, I couldn't find
mr, way even beck aDd forth to work .
'And the11me is true here. Now we
So lo the placa where they take 01.,
hkc banquet• and t0 forth at the
hotels, and I remember back when I
used to drive to tho5e places on my
own. Now I have to say, you JCl me
outside these ptes, I couldn't find my
way any place."
At this point, White House Chief of
Staff Donald Rcpn chipped 1n: "I
doubt that the president ~1zcs
the front door or the entryway of any
major hotel.··
The president lauahed to ag.rcc.
menL For security reasons, he n
usually taken in and out the side 0 1
rear entrance to a hote l or
audJtorium.
"Wbat was 1t," the president 11jd,
"that Killy in 'Killy Foyle' -what wu the hnc that they used about what
I now tee 1n hotels? She was usina It to
delcribc comina into Chicaao on the
trai~ and the said it's Ukc 1etina
civiJmuon with ilS pan ta down."
Tbc prcs1dent'1 reference was to a
19-40 tear-,etkef. for which Oiqer
R<>sen won an Academy Award in
the lltlc role. (Ironically for 1 ton·
let'Vltive president. the tcreenplay-
and presumably the line Reapn
remembered -wu written by the
late· Dalton Ttumbo. one or the
Hollywood Ten. who went tO pnson
for rcfusina to answer COf\ll'CSSlOnal
qucitiont about their allqtrJdJy pro-
communiat sympeth' )
J•ct A*,... -De# v .... ,,.
• ,. lyNkatH ~ .....
11.A.RTIJlf 8111TB
col••n'-t
ANN
WELLS
Can this
couple
weather
woes?
The~re's too much
heat and cold in
their r elationship
Kay asked me to have lunch with
her because she wanted "to talk," she
said.
As soon as we ordered she rut me
with, "Do you know a good marriage
counselor'?"
'T m afraid not I don't know a soul
who's been to a mamagc counselor.
Why?"' ··r need one."
I was stunned. Kay and Dick (not
their real names) and my husband
and I a~ together frequently. We've
never sensed anythtng off<entcr with
them mamagc.
Sure. she docs a little back-seat
dnv1ngand fusses at Dick because be
cats too much Junk food. He criticizes
her bndge game and thinks she's
involved in too many community
prOJCCts -a typical. happy marriage.
··You and Dick need a marriage
coun'iClor1 For what'!"
"If we don't get things straightened
out. either I'm going to kill him or he's
going to lull me:· .
There were no third parties in-
volved, no gambling. no out-Of·
control drin king, nor any of the more
mundane but usual reasons why
mamagcs break up. ·
It'~ their thermostat.
ForJears Ka y has worn a sweater
aroun the house in the winter
because Dick 1s always too warm, and
he keeps the thermostat turned down
low. She quit complau1ing about 1t
long ago. Kay had no rcbuttlc lo his
argument th.at she could wear a
sweater and be wann, but there was
no way for him to cool down 1f the
furnace was turned up h1&h.
Recently, because of a tennis
tnJury, the doctor put Dick on some
med1cauon that change.d his personal
thermostat. He 1~ cold much of the
lime. Dick's theory 1s the medicine
thinned his blood.
Now he keeps the thermostat up
muc h higher. As sorry as Kay is about
his injury, she was glad to get out of
her sweater and hoped his blood
would stay thin even after he finished
the mcd1cat1on.
Sounded hkc a perfect solution,
and at was until Kay began havina hot
Oashes.
Kay says she is not havina hot
flashes - she's not old enough. Her
husband says she is. and shows her
every article he sees about the
menopause.
In the meantime. when Dick passes
the thcnnostat, he turns it up; when
Kay goes by, she turns it down. When
Dick turns it up 1'4in, she opens a
window. He turns It up even hiaber
and reminds her the gas bill is &0in1 to
be astronomical.
Kay tells ham to put on a sweater.
She reminds him she wore one for
years because he kept the house so
cold, and she did 1t willin&)y. Dick
refuses to wear a sweater and suucsts
she go see her doctor instead and act a
prescription for whatever it is they
give women who have hot flashes.
At this point Kay begins to scream
at him and cries and goes to the
kitchen and makes a tall, cool drink
-no matter what time of day. She
turns down the thermostat on her
way.
Dick says that proves his theory is
correct. All women have temper fill
and crymg spells when they ao
through the change. He shows her
another article on the s\lbjcct he
found m the Jut issue of Reader's
Diiest, and turns up the thermostat.
All I could offer was sym~tby, and
the hope that Dick would soon finish
h11 prescription and their body
thermostats would be synchronized.
Maybe they should go ICC a
maniqe counselor and 1 doctor.
There 11 no doubt th.ls is hard on their
mamqe .
And on their thermostat, too.
Col•1Ul1t A.u Wtll• Ut'n hi lA,_.NllH}.
TODAY IN HISTORY
BJ tM A111oclace4 Preti
Today is Wcdn~y. March I 9,
the 78tb day of 1986. There arc 287
days Id in the year. This iJ the date
the awlllows traditionally return to
the San Juan Capistruo M1slion in
C•hfomia.
Today's birthdays: Judae John
S1 nca i• 82. Author lrvina Wallace aa
70. Ac t o r-direc to r Patrick
McGooban LS SS. Author Philip Roth
is S3 Actrc &inaer Phyllis Newman
11 SJ. Actreu Ursula Andress is SO.
Tbouaht for today; "1iasline ~nd
superliclal1ty arc t~ J>!IYCb1c diaeue
of the 20th century.· -Alcundtr
SolLhenh!tyn, exiled Sovie\ author .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1-
Say 'cheese' for the health of it
Incorporate this high .
source of calcium
into your daily menus
Today's brunch or luncheon party
guests expect more than food that looks
good and tastes arcat. There's an ad-
ditional ingredient required by our
health-oriented society -food that is
good for you.
For women especially, one of the
many imPQ.rtant factors in healthful
·eating is calcium intake.
The best calcium sources are found in
dairy products including processed
cheese food slices that uc featured in
these recipes.
Calcium is essential for building
bones, muscle contraction, blood clot-
ting and nerve function. If the body does
not get enough, hormones will cause
calcium to be released from the skeleton
into the bloodstream to make it available
for nerves and muscles.
Long-term inadequate intakes of
calcium have been associated with the
development of osteoporosis -porous,
brittle, breakable bones. One out of every
four women over the age of 65 knows this
disease too well.
Although osteoporosis is most com-
monly observed in persons in their 60s,
the d1sordcr may actually begin in the
mid-305. The key to reducing potential
risk is to build maximum bone mass
befor~ age 35 with a balanced die!Jlnd
exercise.
To achieve an all around good diet that
provides plenty of calcium, learn the best
food sources of calcium and then
incorporate these foods into your daily
diet.
Milk and American cheese arc conve-
nient sources of calcium. Incorporating
these dairy products into the three meals
each day 1s an easy way to help you get
the recommended allowance for
calcium.
Other suggestions include: 1) adding
cheese in sandwiches and salads; 2)
snack.jog on cheese and crackers; and 3)
using milk and cheese in casseroles.
The recipes featured here provide
some new ideas for creating brunch or
luncheon items with American pro-
cessed Chte$C food -for an added dose
of calcium.
BAKED VEG ET ABLE
CROWANT
YI C11p Cllopped OllJOD
Y. cap cltopped tomato
Y. cap maauoom 11Jcn
14 cap cltopped veen pepper
I tablespoon marsarlne
14 teaapoon dried ba1ll leave1
4 crol1unt1, 1p1Jt
• 1Ucet Amertcu proeeH clleete
food, nt ta bU d1a1ouJJy. ·
Saute veaetables in marprine; stir in
basil. Fill croissants with veaeiable
mixture and process cheese food. Bake
at 350 degrees, 5 to I 0 minutes or until
process cheete food begin• to melt 4
sandwiches.
Saute vegetables in 1 tablespoon
margarine. Beat egp until foamy; stir in
two process cheese food slices, chopped.
Melt remainina margarine in I (}.inch
skillet over medium heat. Add cu
mixture. Cook, stirring occasionally,
until eggs are set.
Top with vegetable mixture and
remaining process cheese food slices, cut
in half diagonally. Continue cooking
until process cheese food begins to melt.
4 servings.
TASTY TURK.EV SANDWICH
1 ~ pacuse cream clteete,
IOfiaed
! tablespoon cltopped red or ITffll
pepper
1 tablnpoe• dlopped cMves
4 wltole-wlteat bred alien
Lett.ee
4 c:oHed tvkey 1Ucn
Tomato 11Jcn
! 1llcn American procn1 cltene
food
Combine cream cheese, peppers and
chives, mixing until well blended. For
each sandwich, top one bread slice with
cream cheese mixture. Top with lettuce,
meat, tomatoes, process cheese food
slice and second bread slice. 2 sand-
wiches.
HAM DANDY
1 81/•-ouce can cn11ted plaeapple,
drained
11& cap applnamce
1! ralala claumoa bread 11Jces
l! 1llces A.mericu proces1 d1eese
food
lZ boUed bm 1Ucn
Soft marprille
Combine pineapple and applesauce;
mix well. For each sandwich, cover one
bread slice with one process cheese food
slice, pineapple mixture, ham slices and
second process cheese food slice.
Top with second bread slice. Spread
sandwich with margarine. Grill until
lightly browned on both sides. 6 sand-
wiches.
Colorful stir-fry
nests in noodles
Quick, colorful and nutritious, this easy supper takes advantage of
leftover cooked chicken.
The chicken takes on sweet-sour Oriental flavors from a marinade of
peach JU1ce, cider v10egar, ginger, hooey and soy. Then it is quickly stir-
fried with vegetables and peaches to retain texture and nutrients. This
colorful array tastes especially good served on a crispy baked noodle nest.
NOODLE NEST STIR-FRY
1 can ( 11 onces) clla1 peacll 11lces la jaJce or eztra llpt 1ynp
I package (11 oance1) freslt Clalane 1tyle eu noodles•
•;, cap oll plH J tablespoon
J tablespoon corn1tarclt
Y. cap water
% tablespooDI IO)' IHCe
J tableapoon crated stnser root
J tablespoon elder vlne1ar
1 table1poon lloney
1 clove prllc, minced
% c.pt 11tredded cooked clllcken
% oaloa1, cat into wedge•
% capt broccoU nowerene1
% capt 11Jced celery
1 cmp clterry tomatoe1, blved
Drain peaches reserving all liquid. Cook noodles as package directs;
drain. Toss noodles with •/•cup oil. Divide noodles into 6 piles on 2 (IO x
5 x I-inch) bak.jng pans. Spread each noodle pile into a 5-mch circle. Bake
at 450 degrees until golden brown, about 25 minutes; tum halfway
through.
Combine reserved peach liquid with cornstarch, water, soy sluce,
singer, vinegar, hooey and garlic; mix well. Pour sauce over chicken;
marinate while preparina vegetables. ln wok or I (}.inch skilJct beat
remaining l tablespoon oil.
(Pleue ... n8T/C3)
Critics, diners don't always agree
By JOYCE A. VENEZIA
• I SS • ..._....,
HARTFORD, Conn. -Miss
Manners might be appalled, but
Jane Stem apoloaitts before she
reaches across the tabte to take a
forkful of a aucst's dinner.
"Don't mind me," she says. "We
have to do this."
l'he prob1n1 fork might 1eem odd
to lhose who are unprepared for a
dinner with Jane and Michael
Stem. But these restaurant critics
and syndicated food writen know
their busine s, even 1f their readers
might not alway• aa,rce.
To watch them at work requires
careful attention. They eat fast
("like it'sa taste test," says Michael)
and observe everythina. AJtbou&h
they make dinner reservations
under assumed names. they know
that many times they are re-
cognized by majtrc d's who have
seen photos of them in newspapers
or on TV.
But the couple knows that bad
food or service can't chanae dra-
mattcally in a few minutes.
"They're not 101na to run naht
out and hire a better chef because of
us," Michael 11)'1.
"You miaht act a bigcr cut of
meat or a prcttlcr plate," Jane says, But another review 1n pra1 1n1 a
"but even if your prime nb 1s milkshake hop in rural Man-
han11na to the floor. 1fthe person at chester went unprotcstcd.
the next table has a small cut. then The Stem are perhaps better
you know." known for their other prOJCCts.
She interrupts her explanatton to The1r .. Goodfood" re taurant 1u1de
make an obtervauon: ·•1·vc already on Amcncan rqJOnal food is popu·
nouccd that the people at the next lar amona travelers Their
table bave ordered tbetr dnnks cookbook, "Square Meals." m-
tWlCC and haven't &Otten them Y.tt." eludes recipes for uch exntte foods
TM pubt1c -at leu1 in Con-as Milky Way cake (made with the
nccttcut -doesn't always llJ'CC e11ndy bars of the same nJmc) and
Wlth what the terns have to say. A flam1n1 cabbage head wttn1e
review nppana a popular restaurant · Their syndicated newspaper
1n the amucnt northwest comer of column. "A Ta~tc of Amenca."
Connecucut drew a backlash of runi wttkly on food pagtt na·
cnttc1'm from in~ulted rqulars. (Pl--Me CRITICS/CS)
Food , wine course
at elite school a
week to remember
ln the tiny v11JageofChalet-a-Oobctjust outsjde Lausanne.
Switzerland, ts the world's best-known hotel training school.
Ovcrlook.jng the languid lake on one sjde and the majestic snow-clad
or flower-laden mountains on the other. depending on the season, is a
modem building. dormitones and an ancient farmhouse to accommodate
500 students at one time.
The school was founded in 1893 by thc Swiss Hotelkecpers
Association. The Swiss have long been
known for their meuculousattitudes 1n
this field; therefo re. the reason for the
prcsttgious reputation enjoyed by the
school for the last 90-ptus years. The
original school. falling victim to age,
was replaced in 1975 by modem
facilities.
Entrance requirements are
FIFI
CHAO
stringent and the sc hool is expensive. Apphcants must come highly
recommended. speak at least t~o languages, one of which must be French
as alJ lectures are dell vered in that language. White students may take only
selected segments of the total tram mg program. such as waiterservicc or
cook's training. this pracucc 1sd1scouraged. .
The emphasis 1s on hotel management with the service and food
training bemg sufficient to augment the management pros.ram, but not
full-fledged programs 1n and of themselves.
.. tudcnts enrolled m the four-year course take method and practical
courses for one segment forflve months. then work in an establishment to
get hands-on cxpcncncc 1n that pan1cularpan ofthcLrtra1runaforanother
fi ve months.
The school has never been open to the public. for mspcction or
otherwise. That is until one very clever youn1 lady from Denver, with a
company appropnately named "1 mpact," decided that all schools could
use more money. and that allowing a select group of people interested in
fine food preparation to attend a one-week SCS$iOn might be a possibility
worth pursuing.
Marcy Albm wa, already putting together onc-of-a-kmd travel
expencnccs for adventurous types. and she dearly loved Swltzerland. The
natural sque was to persuade the school that it should allow her an
exclus1 venght to bnnabut lO peoplc toattend an 1ntenstfiedcookina1nd
wine course for one week dunna thc ~ester break in m1d-wmt.er, and to
bnnaanother one-week iroupdunngsummcr vacauon.
lt seemed hkc an idea whosr time had come. and thus 18 "foodtes"
from New York. C'.t1fom1a. wiuerland. France and Belalum met 10
Lausanne forairandcootanacxtrav•nza Two rnembersofthepress
were 1nv1t~ to ao alonaaswell. the editor of a naoonal food mapzmeand
my~lf.
Thi wa 101na to be oncfunJaunt. right? It 'f/a a happy week. buta
tcmfically busy one, too The work week wast'Uddlcd bclwccn two lona
wcekendsdunng which dinners W1th localcbdi wcrctchcdulcd,
or.1ght5cetr\I was done, and some lama was squeezed tn.
On Monday, everyone was up at 6:30, tak.1naa ov1lizcd European
breakfa tat 7 and boarding the lu~ury bu for tM 20.minute nde to the
school At 8 t s. cooking demon trattons bcpn, conducted by t..be lthoot'1
~-rooD/CS)
__ ...__ ___ ------
j
. J
C2 * Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT I Wednesday, Mar~ 19, 198!_
Mousse a light finale for a me~l
No maner how filling the meal, there'salways room fora fresh. fruity
dessert. And if that demrt highlights the flavor of plum p.J u1cy arapcs, who
can rcsistahcanybelpingortwo7 .
With the scarcity of fruits during the winter and early spnng, most
tend towards heavier desserts featuring dried fruits and other rich fare. But
wouldn'ta light, velvety Grape and Citrus Mousse taste good right about
now?
You don't have to wait until summer to enjoy the good taste of grapes.
Thanks to the opposite seasons south of the Equator, grapes from the
Southern Hemisphere ar~ thrivin~ an~ at thei~ peak .at this ti'!'e. . .
With theexccJlent soil and chmat1c cond1ttons in the fruit producing
regions of Chile, imported winter~pcsarc of excellent size, color, aroma
and fla vor. Prices should beat their best, too.
Chilean Grape and Citrus Mousse is a cream y concoction with halved
grapes folded right into the gelatin mixture. It's easy to make and a good
dessert choice for busy cooks since it must be made in advance to chill and
set.
1 envelope oflavored 1elatla
1 te11poon 1rated oru1e peel
t lar1e eu•. separated
Ya t up 1raa11lated 11gar
.,_ teaspoon u lt
1 cup wblppln1 cream
1 cup balved and seeded 1reen or red Cbllean 1rape1
Grapes and cbocolate leaves for decoration (optional)
Spoon 2 tablespoon~ orange ju.ice into a small bowl orcus~r~ cup,
add lemon juice. and sprmkJ~ gelatin over to soft~n. Tutn remammg
orange juice and orange peel m~o topo d?~ble. boiler, and heat over hot
water. Beat egg yolks lightly. Stir the hotJ~1'7 mto yolks.
Return to double boiler, and cook. sumngcon~tantly; about 3 . .
minutes. Remove from heat, add the softened ~elat.m and if• c~p sugar, stir
until dissolved. Cool. stirring occasionall y, untrl mixture begins to
While this dessert isdeliciousservedjust the way it is, you can dress 1t
up further with an accompaniment oftbio chocolate sauce. Or toss I cup of
halved grapes with I tablespoon sugar and add 1M cup flavored brandy or an -----------------__,;..--------.., orange liqueur for spirited flavor. Chill the mixture and spoon over
thicken. . . . '/. Beat egg whites with salt to soft peaks. Gradual!Y beat m ren:ia.anmg •
cup sugar, beating to a stifT!Tieri.ngue. Beat crea~ staff. Fold menngue and
cream into thickened gelatin mixture, then fol~ m grapes. .
Tum into 31/1 to4-cupsouffie dish fitted with a l-1ncb fo.11 co!lar, and
chill until firm. Remove foi I collar carefully. and decorate wt th whole
grapes and chocolate leaves, if desir~d,just before serving. Makes 6 to 8
servings. Prison
are only a
Preventing
.child abuse is
a cure.
•
Abuse a.\ a (h1ltJ 1, a <.ommon
thread that rum through the llH·'
of most men and women in
pn-.on tocla}
private t.haritable organi1ation
that knm'' how to prevent child
abu-.e
And stat"tK' \hovi. th.tt the
v1oknt crime in Aml·n<..& ,., uftcn
comm11tcd b) adult' vi. h11 Y.erc:
abused a!> 'h1ldrcn
Not aJI abu<,ed <.hildrt·n wovi.
up to be <.nm ma I' If"' l' <.dn pre
vent child abu'it'. however we <.an
decrease Amcnla's c.nml· rate
And child .ihu'l' '"" he
prevented
The Natwn.d C ommiuee for
Prevention of< hilt.I Ahu\C: '' J
But we need 'our help to do ll
\t e nect.I mune~ \X t• need
\Olunteer.,
Take thl· fir't 'tep toward
prnentin~ ch1lt.I ahu'c wnd u!i
vour chnk tod.a\ Or wrt1t· for
our hookkt
Bl'<.au.,e if wt· dun t .all 'ltarr
..omc-wht·re, "c "on t ~l'l
anywhc·re
Z National Committee tor '1lr. Prevention of Child Abuse
Help us get to
the heart of the problem.
Write: PrC"Vcnt Child Abu<it-, Boll 2866. Chicago. llllnob 60690.
Does your kitchen have
the ''Good Housekeeping
seal of approval?''
If so, enter
the Daily Pilot's
"Living Spaces ..
Contest.
,
•'
; .
1~1· t·li~1hl1· 111 -...1n -.1r111
.,f hom1 decor.irmg
.,11pplwc,
CONTEST RULES
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~rt•fl•'''''"°' [A"lf,ff)Q''l(i""'' .,. ~t')9'00f' pt,. w~ ..,.,.,,., for publ.rot10f'I ",._,. l·w~
Sc'1,..•l ,..,. ',.~ v-1-.uo.-,11 "''lY .,..,. ~• thert °"" cotegory olt+'Ollgt' onlf r'fl "f''"' ,_...
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LIVING SPACES INTRY FORM
INTIANT'S NAMl 1
ADDHSS1
DAY 'HONI NUMIH1
I VININO 'HONI NUMlllt
CATIGOIY:
SIND
INTlllS
TO
LIVING SPACE CONTEST
c/ o DAILY '1LOT I
HVN TINGTON BEACH INDEPfNDENT
330 W. IAY ST.
COSTA MESA, CA 92626
individual servings of mousse. .
1 caporu1eJaJce
CHD..EAN GRAPE
AND CITRUS MOUSSE
1 tablespoon Jemonj lllce
Note: Top with chocolate sauce ora spirited grape sauce made by
combining I cup hal\led and seeded grapes with 'I• cup flavored brandy or
an orange-navored liqueur. Chill before serving.
-------~------~
MAKE YOUR EASTER DINNER EXTRA SPECIAL
WE HAVE TH E WINF.S
CKT Ltl.AQll '13 111.n ~~(SAUV IMCl"a. ~ ~iF11 n:: mn.s:.=~1' CKT llOl/TI* llOTHSOtl.D 13 IUI CKT ST DA.~ 'It
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llMTll,SP((W. SElECTDI 71 Lii STMTM ~ 1'
mwlAOI CM 10 ALWllO "l Y UI KIMl Mn Qa EX1M ORY eo Winn avellable on our Wine bar
~~
\\'I NE CI.Ufi
..... ....
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CM'Tnll ... .... I.II UI •••
SAVE
40• Souffle, cobbler
techniques mixed
For a very special dessert treat, mixes and matches the two prep-
yet o nr that's actually quite simple aration methods into an old-
- - - - - ----- - -to make. Soufficd Apple Cobbler fashioned fruit pie that's dramati-140$ I MANUFACTURER couPO'i I EXPUffS SEPTEMBER 30 1986 I 40C I - - - -• .. ~~~Js~~.~ped with a mile high souffie
I SAVE 4De 603822 I 1--CVS ----.1 so~~~Ydf!~~it~~u~~~ii~~~~~n~ l butter, and dairy-fresh California I TO DEALER: lever wlll reimourse I Cheddar cheese for a delicious and
you lor the lace vatue of coupon I Toctay•s d. · I I · d h
I ana lhe consumer have complied I navor. A fluffy, sweet souffie batter m Plus Bt handling provided vou Neighborhood Drugstore I tra ltlona app e pte an c eese
:~:~ethe1 ~~~hot ~~1s ~;fer 1~~~~ 5 1 I •Baby Products ~~~:~si~~~ a a:J~een~~~t~~~ and is
I Brother~ Company Dept #S9SQ I I •Beauty Aids I
E Paso Telfas 7<!966 11111 87040 G SOUFFLED APPLE COBBLER •Gandy & um I Lil'lll• -~r pwch•.. 1 tablespoon batter, softened 140 c ~;:;. ~ m .. oa.. (Z) 12 OL .. IC) "01 40 c I L •Health Aids • 4 tart grffD apples, peeled and
..,, oth« -co1,.u1111 .. lr9Ud - - - -• sliced
------------6 oance1 Cheddar cheese,
MAKE SURE
HONEYBAKED
BRAND HAM
IS THERE.
ORDER YOUR
EASTER HAM
TODAY!
Half or Whole HoneyBaked brand heme Cltdl-. '' ~~'°'no iess 111t11 ao-.. lftd """ *M IOI u•r Sftlll l
• Party Traya • Gift Certificate• • Fully Cooked S.rbecued Albe
• Frffh Oven Routed and Smoked Turkey• • Nationwide Shipping
Y1111 ftOrttt Ho11eylakd 1101• 11
AN AH UM
The Village Centtf
1222 So Btoollh41fsl
92804 (It a.u Rotd)
Phone (714) 635-2461
EL TOAO
24601 R1ymond Way
•2 (Bell Tower Plue
North 11 El Toro Roed) 92630
Pho11t (JH) 837·3822
OllANG£
1419 N Tuslll'I (II ~telll) 92567
Ptiont (714) 997-9960
• IWICHO MIWf
71 6:J4 H'fWY 111 91270
PhOl'lt (819) 3'° 3894
AIVEASIDE COROtlA Ill MAii MUNTl ... TOte HACH
190611 Beach Blvd 112648 HON E\'BAK ED TM 3700 E Coast Hwy 9262~
Piion• (714) 673·9000 (Next 10 Ralphs M•"•' at G1rl11kl)
Phone (714) 848-8575
5276 Arltngton AYf
(H•rdmtn Centei) 97504
Phone (714) 688 9681 l'IOlol YUtOO """"'•HOftt:•IM~IOIOft
••• ttacteff<oer•t et~• .. *"f J "~~·••f h•t
abredded
Ya cap aagar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Batter:
2 eggs, separated
I cup aagar
Ya cup water
I cap flour
4 teaspoons baiting powder
Butter a 2-quart baking·dish. Mix
together apples, cheese, sugar, and
cinnamon and place in baking dish.
Whisk together egg yolks, sugar
and water. Stir in flour and baking
powder. Whip egg whites until stiff;
fold gently into batter. Pour batter
over apples. Cover and bake at 350
degrees for 45 minutes. Uncover
and bake 20 minutes more. Makes
8 servings. Serve warm with ice
cream or cream.
GREEK PILAF
f &ablespeou ( ~ a lick) bitter
l cap loa1·t rabt rice
Ya teaapoon aalt
l cap broken up ( '4 ·Inch pieces)
vermicelli
t medlam-alied onions. minced
t '4 c1pa c~ckea broth
'4 cap dry wlllte wine
l tabln pooa tomato pnee
Salt aad I realaly groud black
pepper to taste
In a saucepan, over medium
heat, melt the butter. Stir in the
rice, coating it well with the butter.
Stir in the salt. vermicelli and
onions. Combine the broth, wine
and tomato puree. and add the
millture to the pan.
Stir, bring to a boil, cover, lower
the heat and simmer for 20
minutes. or until the rice is tender
and the liquid ha been absorbed.
Taste for seasonina before adding
salt and pepper. F1uf1' up with a
met.al fork before serving. Serves 4
to 6.
0 O O. e. 0 0 ¢$to a o o •• 0 ,., • 0 ° 0 0 0. 0 a •••••• d + d ••• a 0 • t + + •• • • d . .
OrMge COMt DAILY PILOTIWedn.._, ..._ 11, ,._ C9
!_OOD, WINE COURSE A CLASS TO REMEMBER ••• ... -c1
e:te;cutive chef, Pierre, and his easy enough to ~rcate an your The pumpkin should be peeled, ~ cap oru1e J1lce
assistant, Vladjmir. Thia ICISion own kitchen. Recipes serve 4 per-cleaned and cut into thin alices or '4 et1f ..,ar
"lasted from three to four hours. We aons generously. small cubes. Place pumpkin in i ~ .. ,.... ..naverH aeJada t~k notes, asked millions of ques-kettle with the broth, sautced i ea yolb llons, snapped picturet ••• .,. PUMP·~ SOlJP · · · b ttc ch'ckc ll/. .._ ... -....... dreamily out the window's ~ au" onions, remamma u r, 1 n .... cep _,, cre&m, w .. ...,..
falling snow, and thoroughly en· l •mall..._, Waly tllced broth, salt. pepper and curry pow-Miit the supr and aelatin with
Joyed the marvelous attitudes and i elovet prUe. m1affd dcr (the curry will not 0.avor the the orange juice in a small
personalities of the chefs. This pan 'tablelpMu IHIUer soup -it merely enhances the saucepan. Heat gently till gclatin
wu a picc:c of cake. 1 ~ ,..... of ,.mpkla fletti pumpkin 0.avor). and sugar dissolve. Add tbe wine
At_\cr the momina demon-• cape ~e'" brotll Simmer for two houn. Put the and set aside. Beat ca yolks until
strauon, we "students" ate the 6 to 8 Pt.d of et1rry p0wder soup into the food processor (V• of they are lemon-colored. fold into
dishes prepared in our presence. We Salt ... pepper the soup at a time) and puree it. gelatin mixture. Gently fold in the
sampled a little Swiss wine and l etip "'-vy cream Add the cream. Adjust seasoning. whipped cream and put into decor-
longed f!>r a nap. Foraet the snooze. Croetou Put a few croutons into each ative serving dishes. Chill for at
lt was umc for an afternoon wine Saute onions in butter until they bowl and ladJelhe soup over them. least 6 hours before serving.
lecture tlnd a tasting of. wines from become transparent. Add p.rlic Noie: Can be topped with
several countries. More spirited and saute for about IS seconds WINE MOUSSE raspberry puree or toasted
discussion, and would-be chefs more. l e1p rietU.1 wiae almonds.
becgin1foracupofstronacoffeeto .----------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------~ awaken our bodies in preparation
for our tum at the stoves.
Around 4 p.m. we were each
banded our own-set of professional
knives, an apron and asked to get
out the morning's recipes.
Vladimir, Pierre and a handful of
senior students were going to watch
us cook. If you want to cat dinner,
you have I<} cook it first.
We split into two groups. One
half made the appetizers, first
courses and cntrees; the others,
desserts. We ate dinner whenever
we finished cooking.
Though it would seem that we
might be starved by this time, that
was usually far from the truth. We
kept tasting, and the instructors
allowed us. to make even more
recipes than those that had been
taught, and they allowed us to peek
in cupboards, refrigerators and
freezers to sneak tastes of this and
that.
It was a format repeated over the
next four days, the only exception
being that on alternate days each
a.roup switched places between the
food preparation kitchen and the
pastry kitchen so that we all got a
well-rounded education.
After dinner, our chauffeur drove
tired minds and bodies back to the
exquisite Beau Rivage Palace,
which alone can bring the most
exhausted soul back to life.
This might t>C billed u one of the
most enjoyable work weeks ever.
When you arc learning so much,
surrounded by so many charming
people, ensconced in a grand pal-
ace, and re-evaluating life amid
such splendid scenery, it is bard to
imagine that a vacation could be
more perfect.
Everyone is back home with fine
knives to remind us of our pro-
fessional training. with recipes to
enjoy forever, Wlth the fondest of
memories. The following recipes
are ones that we prepared. They are
CRITICS •••
From Cl
tionwide.
"People think we ha ve our nose
in the air in Connecticut, but we arc
the •beloved Stems' in the rest oftbe
country "Jane says.
"At first. it was really weird to
have people bate your opinion that
strongly," Michael says. "People
listen to critics and believe them,
but if they think we are wrong,
they're not going to bow to us.
Reviewing is not some rarified art"
The Stems said they used to
flinch at the criticism, but now
they've toughened themselves to
become champions of the average
American diner. They have not so
easily accepted the reaction of wary
friends who "arc terrified to invite
us to dinner," Jane says.
"It's the stupidest thing because
they should see what we eat at
home," Michael says with a grin.
"Fast food, frozen dinners and
more."
There have been times when a
home~ked meal has turned
more into an adventure than a
culinary delight, however. An a~
quaintancc's specialty -steak
steamed in a washcloth -was
"interesting," Jane says politely.
"But the point is that meals
express personalities," Michael
says. "She and her boyfriend cared
enough to show us how to make
their favorite meal."
Working out of their West Red-
• ding home, the Stems have un-
conventional work habits. They are
up at 5:30 evcrr, momina. seven
days a week, 'because of two
incredibly demanding dog.s," Jane
says.
"Then I have a whole day of
sitcoms -•Bewitched,' 'Leave it to
Beaver' -one after the other," she
says un~basbe~ly. "Mich~el
isolates himself 1n a very quiet
comer. We hardly see each other
every day."
When it comes down to actually
writina an article, they take tums-
onc composes, the other edits.
"But there's a lot of tallcing
beforehand," Michael says. "By the
time we sit down at the trPCwriter,
we've evolved into a sinfe_voice."
Most of the Stems national
columns focus on true American
foods such as chess ~ie in Har-
rodsbura. Ky., or vanllla muffins
from the Peabody Hotel in
Memphis, Tenn.
NEST •••
From Cl
Stir-fty onions until tcoder~sp,
about 2 minutes. A~d broccoli af?d
celery· stir-fry 2 minutes. Pour an
sauce ' and cbi~ken; cook, tOf:Si':'&
until mixture is thickened. Sur an
peaches and tomatoes u.nul heated
throuah. To serve. s~n over
noodle nests. Makes 6 scrvanp.
-Or use dried cu noodle .
v
Hey Kids!
Join tn RalpN
Easter Coloring
contest
Detaill est •cllphs
Beef Rib Roast
r
Chuck Roast
USDA Inspected
G\olden
Pf..UIUD·
leefllOcleeut per lb.
Save .SO •
per lb.
L1mit2
Per Customer -. '
Cream of Mushroom Fresh Celery
Deleft CiirOW'D
each
USDA 169 Inspected
Lar~Meaty ~·~!~eak •
Philadelphia Cream
Cheese .89 ~~ 3bs1 Buy 3-S<ne .l1 R
cn.p GhellJclDd 2 9 ecrch
•
Fresh Valencia
Oranges 99 laJce 3 L
=·
Western Hearth
Bread 89 Krakus Canned Andre Champagne re 5. 99 ~.rk_J. 98 Allon.d van.u..
:MOLloaf
Scrt'e .30 • Scrt'e .80
.... bog
Plain or Peanut
M8tM's
Special Values Prices effective March 20 thru March 26, 1986
..... 4*ea,,.... .... ~, .......
7-Bone Roast "= 1. 09
~ ~OfRCIUlb lff) 2 59 Alaskan Salmon Sit. -: .
PWll>WT· .. trl~ 89 Crescent Rolls :..-: .
WbiPPingcream ~· 1.09
Ot990• 89 Pwple Plums .. e: . .
ia~On Bits ~ 1.15 Lower Prices.
J89
Higher Sta nda.rds
\
4
Eveready super
Heavy Duty 99 Batteries •
a.nb•f'9-1!9. Of
Pastel JUsSes •
Caclb\lry·• Creme Eggs•
':.: 2.29
~ .99
Spec1a! Values
Sbc94.ftoeea
Kem's Strawberries ~ .59
Cl.Ip-~
Fresh Carrots -.:: .25
Ralphs Crotwmts :: 139
Ho'ii8Y~:Ki Ham 2.29
OiabliS"v~ u: 2.98
lom.t 1N1 or lldlo Dry
Champagne ,.,~ 6.98 ............ ,....... ... "' ...... ..-...... _ .. _.,.. .--..-----·= --____ ..._. .. ... --·--.. --...... -.... -....... _ :='.:::-............... _..... ---
Consu~er complaints payoff
Dear Jue -Yes. it does pay to
write to the company when some-
thing about the product is not right.
Our store had Imperial margar·
inc on sale at 59 cents a Pound. and
I picked two packages out of the
dairy case. Both packages had a 20..
~nt Imperial couJ>On printed on
the back, so I knew l could look
forward to additional savings.
box, J found that it contained three
sticks of margarine instead of four.
I know there are a lot of people
who wouldn't do anything about a
problem like this, but I decided to
do ~o things.. . JANE
FULLER
When I unloaded the groceries in
the kitchei:t. h_Q_wever, I noticed that
one of the ~felt lighter than the
.._-------------------------' other. When I opened up the lighter
First, I told the store manager,
and although he seemed surprised
he refunded 17 cents for the missing
stick. I aJso thought that Lever
Brothers, makers of Jmperial,
should be alerted to the problem, so
l wrote to their customer-relations
department.
Today I was very pleasantly
surprised. I received a nice letter
from the company. II said: "Oc-
A Favorite for Easter!
***** 19
LB
Boneless
Ham
FULL'l'COOKED WATERADDED STO 'LBS
Fresh Fryer
Drumsticks ... 67 OR THIGHS
•• r-..1 •GPIECESPER 'll"'
Armour 159 !!E~!'o!!!~! Turkeras
BUTTERBASTEO
f,~~~~~:~895
r Imper/a/ 59 . '!'argarl~~ ~Kc •
rLady Lee
Beverages
OAANGE ROOT BHR
OR CAFFEINE FPEECOL.A
' •?PACK '' Ol f,ANS
269
-~ -!Pepsi . .,,. ~ \ i ~-~~ Diet Pepsi
\
j ~ ~ Pf P<;I FREE DIET PEP<;1 ·;,..-·'~ H•EE SLICE OR DIET SL f" t ~ -::;..·~ Q PACK 12 OZ CANS
,'.I:~·· 349
~··
rRC
Diet Rite
r,,.P H•fE RC 100 OR
••(RR., Rr, 'l TR 8Tl
.99
°"' ..... _ .. _~---.... " .... __ ·-.............. ,~ ...... , ....
r Key Buys mean
extra savings.
Key Buys are 1tom1 priced below their everyday
lower price IS a result of manufacturers
temporary promottonal allowances or
e11cept1ona1 purchases
j,
***** Large End
Rib Roast
FtVf STAR LB
QUALITY
***** Whole Top
Sirloin
BONEtESS LB IN THE BAJ
Ground Beef
Patties
MOR AN fA, lEN 3 LB BAG
DOES NC T E,CEED JOll.FAT
***** Fresh
Idaho Trout
PAN SIZE
,. f19
,. 139
fJ~~=t:2 79
C1-1/o8L 5 Ofl !. OTHER VARIETIES
Fresh
Broccoli
VERSA flLE LB •
ANO DELICIOUS
I
\
Golden Delkloua
Apples
CRISP LB .
FROM WASHINGTON STATE
D'An/ou
Pears
LUSCIOUS EATING
Brown
Onions
ADOS ZIP TO SANDWICHES
, .. 49
SMALL PITTED. 6 OZ CAN
• == OATMUL
.85
rQuaker
Oatmeal
/fl .K) INSTANT.$ VARIETIES. rPopov
Vodka
,,~~· 12 OZ PKG
.. .,. "'' ]99 \. f 89
r Mrs. Smith's
Apple Pie
NA TUR AL JUICE f ROZ EN
37 OZ PKG '269
r Stouffer's
En trees
ORIENTAL BEEF CHICKEN
A L.A ORANGE OR GLAZED
CHICKEN FROZEN eoz soir
247
r Harvest Day
English
Muffins
6CT PKG
.49
!Wesson
Oil
VEGETABLE 2~ OZ BTL f 23
rKraft
Salad
Dressing
8 VARIETIES 8 OZ BTL
.87
rLadyLee 55 MAN~~~nge~oz CAN .
~-+-;-~ ... M>
,_. '·;~ -......
STRAINED OR.WHOLf
BfRR'I' 16 OZ CAN
.55
rLady Lee
Sugar
POWDERED, LIGHT BROWN
OR DARK BROWN 1 LB PKG
.49
rMD
Bathroom
Tissue
rBuffet
Cat Food
FRISKIE!> 6 VARIETIES
60Z CAN
.33
c_....... ,_.., L••• --.. ...,... ·-L_..,..... _ ... c_._
Everyday
lower prices.
Instead of a few w kly 1poc1a11. costly games of
Chanco and double coupons we otter •cross-
the-board lower pricing to reduce your overall
food 1ot11 at the cheekstand
casionally machines do mal
errors, and spot-<:hecking may n•
always detect ~weight d.iscrepanc:
We regret any inconvenience, and
have passed along your commen
to our pack.aging division for the
review.''
Along with the letter, they i1
eluded a coupon for a free packaf
of Im penal. So it does pay to writ
-Mr1. Lee Sawyer , Moatap
Mlcb.
Dear Mrs. Sawyer -Sma
shoppers who have a produ1
problem don't ge~ mad" they ta~
out a pen and a piece 0 1 paper an
write to the manufacturer. Nin
ttmes out of 10, they receive
prompt ·response and some kind c
compensation. •
Writing to the companies is als
important because 1t lets ther
know that we will not accei
anything less than the full value~
have paid for. Good communic.
tion from consumers helps kee
companies on their toes. The
know that we're watching!
Here is this week's list of refun
offers. Start looking for the require
refund forms. which yo u can obtai
at the supermarket, in newspapc
and magazine advertisements an
from trading with friends.
Meanwhile. start collecting th
needed proofs of purchase as de
tailed below. Remember. som
offers are not available in all area
of the country.
Today's refund offers have
value ofS8.
These offers require refun,
forms:
ANACIN-3 SI Cash Refun•
Offer. Send the required refun•
form and an entire Anacin-3 cartor
along w11h the cash-regJster receii:
with the purchase pnce circlec
Expires April 30. 1986.
BUFFERI N UPto$2.50 Refun1
Offer. Receive the purchase pric
(up to a $2.50 refund). Send th
required refund form and the entir
carton (or a hand-drawn facsimil
of the capsules cannister and it
Universal Product Code numbe
on a piece of paper) from on·
package of Bufferin or fatr:
Strength Buffcnn tablets o
capsules (any size except trial size)
This offer has no expiration date.
LANACANE. $1 Refund Offer
Send the required refund form anc
a Universal Product Code bar cod·
from a 2-.ounce package o
Lanacane Creme Medication. alon1
with the dated cash-register receip
with the purchase price circled
Expires April 30. 1986.
LUDEN'S $1 .50 Refund Offer
Receive $1.50 in coupons (one 60
cent coupon good on any brand o
Orange Juice, one 50-<:ent coupor
and one 40..percent coupon good or
Luden's Cough Drops). Send the
required refund form and the
Universal Product Code symbol:
from any two bags or handy three·
packs of Luden's Cough Drops
Expires April 30, 1986.
NU PR IN $2 Refund Offer. Senc
the required refund form and the
entire Universal Product Code
symbol. from a Nupnn canon (an)
size except tnal size). along with the
cash-register receipt with the
purchase price circled. Expires
April 30. 1986.
Chilies add
some zest to
skillet spuds
By CECIL\' BROWNSTONE
If you are interested 1n serving
potatoes in a new way I strongly
recommend the followi ng recipe.
~though. over the years. I've tried
JUS~ about every vanety of potato
recipe, I had never before used
green ch1ltes with them.
Then a fnend suggested we try a
sk~ll.et version of potatoes with
ch1!1es and other good things. It is a
rec_1pc that can be made easily and
quickl y -an attribute that t
suspect appeals to other everyday
cooks as much as it does to me.
CHILI POT A TOES
11.4 cwps water
4 medl•m potatoea ( 1 ~ ecut
poud1), peeled u4 1Uced 'It·
tacll"'ct
Salt co ta•te
3 tablupoou ve1etable oU
4 acaJUoa1, *-Jy 1llced ( ~ cwp) •-once cu diced aree• H.Utn,
drataed
MedJtm clove sarllc, flllely
cltopped
4 oacet MHterey Jack clteeu,
wed•ed medJ•m-f lae a tablgpooe1 f laely cltopped
cUaatro (fralll cortuder) or
peraley
Jn a I 0-mcb k.illet brina water to
a boil. Add potatOC1 and salt; over
medium heat cook, covered, until
tender -l 0 to 12 minutes; drain.
Jn the clean d~ skillet heat oil;
add ~lh~n. chllies and prlic;
cook. sumna often for 2 minutes.
Stir in potatoes and toa until
1hcy bqin to brown -S to 10
minutes.
Sprinkle top W'lth cbcne and
over low beat C-Ontan uc cook.in&
until cheese mclta. Garnish With
cilantro . Makes 4 ICf"Vi°"'.
e
~t
'· t
:s
1r
l-
e
:!
• .. ,
:t
e
d
e a
1f
,-
r
1
~· l
Hot spices pepper gumbo
Tasty tips shared ..
by Southern chefs
for regional dishes
•4 cap all·pvpose flo.r ln a larac saucepan saute bacon
~CUI (U*I& ouce1 eacll) fall· until lijhtly browned, about 3
ea1t1t beef broU. minutes. Add onion and prlic.
tea1pooe Croud black pepper Saute until tender, about 2 I t "a1pooa crouct red pep-minutes. Blend in flour; cook and
per stir for I minute. Gradually stir in
Recoaniziog the tastes of dif-1 cap cllopped creea pepper beef brQth. 2 cups water and black
ferent kinds of pepper, many 1 cap clloppecl carrot and red pepper.
Southern chefs use both black and 1 c,p clloppecl celery Simmer, uncovered, until soup
red pepper to spice their regional Wash apd sort beans; place in a thickens slightly, about 3 minutes,
dishes. Some, such as Southern sauo.epan. Cover with water; soak stirring occasionally. Add reserved
fried chicken, have always been overnight. Or, simmer beans in beans. Simmer, covered. until
perked up with lots of black pepper water to cover for 2 minutes· cover beans are tender, about 1 hour. Add
other dishes use strictly the red. ' let stand I hour. Drain and discard green pepper, carrot and celery .
But since black pepper is tasted liquid. Combine 1/4. cup water, Simmer, covered, untiJ vegetables
primarily on the front of the tongue onion and garlic; let stand to soften, arc tender, S to 8 minutes. Yield: 4
and the red pepper on ·the back, a about IO minutes. portions (6 cups).
combination of the two can be most r.::~~==::.:....._-----==-==----=-=:-=::------~---_:_:===:::=======::::::::::::====~==~~~~~========~~ ~~~~~~it~1~i~: Von_s a. nlimited Dou.hie Coupons
For a New Orleans chicken and
sausage gumbo, three-quarters of a
teaspoon of black pepper is used
(some Southerners may wish to add
even more) as well as a "pinch" of
red pepper. .
we·ve used the more available
Polish Kielbasa, instead of the
traditional andouille sausage, along
with boneless chicken breasts,
celery, green pepper, tomatoes and
-of course -okra. The gumbo is
not difficult to prepare and takes
under a half-hour to cook ..
A real Southern bean soup is so
comforting on cool nights. The
same measure of black and red
pepper is used here, adding a nice
nip to the bacon, and minced garlic
and onion flavors.
CHICKEN AND SAUSAGE
GUMBO
8 oance1 andoallle or Pol11b
tlelba1a 1aa1age, in 14-incla
1Uce1
Water
3 tabletpooDI veaetable oil
14 cap all-p1rpose noar .
3 caps cllJcken brotll
1N tealpoon lfOud black pepper
Y.. tea1pooa aullc powder
1/1' teaspoon groud red pep-
per
8 ou ces boned and 1tln.Ded
cbJcken brea1t1 (catlet1), cat in
1trlp1
1 cap sliced celery
I cap chopped creen pepper
1 Y.. cap• chopped tomatoes
1 cap fresb or l packaae (10
ou ces) frozen okra, cat lD ~
incb pieces ( opttoaal)
Place sausage in small saucepan.
Cover with water. Simmer, un-
covered, for 15 minutes; drain and
set sausage aside. ln large saucepan
heat oil until hot. Blend in flour;
cook and stir for I minute. Grad-
ually stir in chicken broth. Add
black pepper, garlic powder and red
pepper.
Cook and stir over medium heat
until liquid thickens slightly, about
3 minutes. Add chicken, celery,
green pepper and reserved sausage.
Simmer, covered, until chicken
and vegetables are tender, about 5
minutes. Stir in tomatoes and okra.
Cook until hot. about I minute.
Yield: 4 portions (6 cups).
SOUTHERN NA VY BEAN SOUP
I cap (8 ou ces) navy beans
Water
2 tablespoons in1tant minced
oDion
l tea1poon in1tant minced aarllc
4 ouces (4 to I slices) bacon,
chopped
Beefing up
shopping
knowledge
• The ground beef label often
tells you the ratio of fat to lean beef.
This may be stated as ".~oes ~ot
exceed 22 percent· fat, which
means at least 78 percent of the
meat in the package is lean ground
beef and 22 percent is fat.
• Choose the vou nd beef a~cord
ing to the beef dash you are going to
prepare. The price of ground beef
increases as the percentage of lean
increases.
• Ground beef is good for
bambu"'crs, Sloppy Joe's, chili and
spaghetti sauce. .
• Extra lean ground beef is
excellent for tow-calorie diets, pat-
ties and combination dishes.
• Because there is no bone or
waste in ground beef. one pound. ( 16
ounces) wiU make four servings
(one serving is three ounces cooked
lean beef). • No matter what the fat to lean
ratio, one pQund of ground beef will
make four servings. During cook-
Ina, the higher fat ground beefloses fat, while the leaner ground loses
water.
NutritionaJly, the difference 1s
nine calories between the regular srind and an extna lean four ounce
patty.
• Look for ftabness when buy-
ina around beef. Pacbaed around
beef should be bri&ht reddish-pink.
• Look at the pacJcaae closely. Make sure the peckaac has not been
tom.
• Feel the temperature of 1 the
package. Select a package that feels
cold.
• Make around beef one of your
last purchases before leaving the
Store. Ta.kc it home quickly and
rcfriJcnate or fruze 1t 1mmcxhatcly.
Pepsi J49 or Coke
6Pack
12-0unc:e Cans
M V•nedes
limo 4/6-Packs Pl!r CU'ltomer
~~-. --· . . _,,. ... . :.. ~ . -._ .· '. -.
Minute Maid J59 2.~!!~t!1ice
fielf Gallon Cartoo
Jerseymaid Yogurts 3 b 9 9
~ F\o~-~<Anotl II e
fleischmann's Margarine 95
llegullf, 5po-i od.-...0 Hb Pl<Q 4 c.-e
Green 2B29 Onions ~
Oarderl F re.sh
lvJd Zest to Your Foods •
Green Beans
Golden Delicious
lb .69
3 ~99
Tomatoes-20 Oz. Tray 99
11-.J II~..-r """ P-.q e
Carrots 2 Lb. Bag
(tlop and (Nn(!>y
Red or Black Grapes
~'\ rh. ... en (.Jm .....
Large Papayas
-"""""' Fresh Mushrooms
&Ounte PIK'Mige
White Rose Potatoes
8"1wt. Ball °' Fry
""".49
Lb 129
lb .99
f"oo .79
lb .29
Areca Palms-6 Inch Pot 399
.,,...,.., SNI.,...... E.. UU> 8oA 1 W9 u .-
10 lb. Bag
us set
otatoes
-
Uura '1 Scudder's Chi ..
Po'8IO-f! Pack •
7-0uriceBlg
Umit.2 ~ eu.tomef
Chicken of 5 7 the Sea Tuna
Oiunk l.Jg\l In Weter •
or Oil. 6.~ c.n
Green Giant Green Beans 39
Reg. Cul"' F-SllC'ed tf>Ounc-t c.n e
Gala Paper Towels
12<><.aunt Roh
Vons Pineapple Juice
~c.n .
Vons Chocolate Chips
12<Mnlleo
Libby's Potted Meat
3-0lrce <Art
Spaghetti Sauce
Owf llo'f""*--"'-·~ c-
Vons White Vinegar
l2<Mn8ol9t
.65
.89
149
.36
.88
.4 9
Betty Crocker Cake Mixes 89 s.-""'91-""""""' ..,.,,._ 1&0o eo. •
Betty Crocker Frosting 139
R.TS I'll•-~ F\o-.-16.5-<i. CM>
Coffeemate Creamer 199
c.n--160l.wn JM
Unde Ben's Wild Rice Mix 139
6-0\ttoi ao.
Grapenuts Flakes Cereal 209
l'loel-l&Ourn eo..
~ry .79
Vons Hot Dog Cradles
8 ........
Kings Hawaiian Rolls
~Of ""'a.-. 12 ,.,,
Apple Turnovers
"'°""~ Crescent Crumb Donuts
Vora-121'Kk
.79
.99
109
.99
N011fmG TO a.JP
J<JSTBmNGYO<IRMAfl<IFACTORER'COOPONS
Just bring your manufac·
turers' coupons to Vons and
we'U automatically give double
value. All manufacturers' cou·
pons may be doubled subject to
contract of manufacturer and
expiration dates.
$}.()() may be doubled. If cou·
pons exceed an item's price,
Vons will credlt only the full
price of the item No additional
cash will be given back. Liquor
and fresh fluid milk products
and free coupons are excluded.
7 Bread
NVaN11es • I 5-Pound Loef
Limit 3 ~r CuslOITWI'
Jerseyma1c1z300 Ice Cream
Detwoe-Hlllf <Won Carton F 0 R
7 Selec1led Varieties
Dole~ Orange Juicet09
at "'-c>Pit G,_/Nlt 12-0t. C,.,
~~utri Grain Waffles .99
Weight Watchers Entrees 199
~ Selec-1--6 ~ .. 11 7~ ac.
Birds Eye Cut Com 85
"' ..__ 16-0unce !leg •
Van De Kamp Fillets 259 e..,. ScJio Cod. Of ,,. .... ,,.,,.., I 1<:A.ra llao
~~Creme .99
~rUte~500
10 to 12.~~ Bo•
Si~~,I~
Reg. Slzit lb. I. 94 (S.11e M Lb.) lb
Dubuque Boneless Ham 899
llo)lll 8uffet-~Pound c.n 1s. .. 2..)01
Oscar Mayer Beef Bologna 89 °'MM!~ Skf!d ~ Ploi •
Danola Sliced Cooked Ham99
Oblrwv PKMllR 40uncit •
Vons Thin Sliced Meats .4 9
e..i. Hom. Tutlwy. 4-0ura Pll(I
Vons Cream 69 ~ .•
Bayer Aspirin Table ts
I~ ......
Ban Roll-On Deodorant
2~ ....... ~ ... ,-
Crest T oothpeste
&~ ,.., "-""" "-
239
229
139
~ tn.dt .. n-..."'"' ..... .._ ... ·-c...-,.,~,. ................ .._..,...,.... ........ ~flt ..
_....,.._ • .._, I.('....,..._. l~-.,. .... W1w•• .,.
...... ,,. .. ""' ........... 0-..,, ....... v-...... 'f .... ~ '--· .. ~..., .......... .-••• •"°•"" , ....... .. _ ....... --
Fresh
Chicken
Gallo Chenin Blanc
F-~o...ct.e---1~ IM
Popov Vodka "-"=~ ....... I M18d -5*1H9 i--1a-1.a
2 69
749
~naw:229
Boneless Sirloin Tip
!!illll9o-S-.. US.DA 0-. ._ lb 189
Boneless Rump Roasts 169
or 8allorn lbnl i.-E.,..-Sart U.S.OA Ck. l!f.l.J>
Boneless Rib Eye Steaks 329
5-CI US.DA 0-:. 8"' lb
Boneless Shoulder Clod 159 ._,_5-1 ll.SJ)A ()-.. a..f lb
Pork Spare Ribs 129 ..-.....Silo.,._.,,~ lb
lb 249 Boneless Lamb Legs
,..._~
Swift's Sausage Rolls 149
M V...-12-0uiu "'-EA
Slim Price9 Sliced Bacon 139
16°"""'........ lb
Fresh Cherrystone Clams 99 ~,....,.,., r-I.I> •
~~-Bass Allets I.I> 399
J49
Tiie •are Stare.
'
•
• !
f
ce Or90ge Coal DAILY PILOT I Wedn.day, March 19, 1988
.\ C uh er C It) confecuoner has
enlisted the help of Rambo to fight
for c:onsumer anent1on at Sou them
( ali forn1a 'iupc.·rmarket candy sec-
tionc;
Natu1al Nc:t'tar Product!I Corp.
has mtrodu<·ed Rambo Peanut
Butter \lt1Un ( upsalong with two
na\-Of<, 1)! Nectar Nuggets: coconut
caram•·I with almond'i and crunchy
almonJ hutter '-"tth cmp nee. The
acuon l UP has been de'>Cnbed as a
"cro"ls tx-1"ctn Reese's Peanut
Butter< up and a Ne'itle·s ( runch. ·•
l he nn~ line 1s expected to reach
shcl\-t·'i b) the t"nd of March. Action
( up"I will Ix· offered 1n colorful 24
pa<.k'i and 288 fl oor pack shipper
J 1i;p'kt)s lulling "Ramoh11ed" with
tull-u1l1Jr a• CJOn shots (no machine
guns) I lccl we are truly the
tastle<tt part ut the whole Rambo
phenurncnom:· says the company
o\.\ner \n~hew l lngerle1der
f-01 1111 rrnat1on call 1213)
lr\8 x p .
Longer shelf life
Stir-fry fast with frozen veggies
ttr.fry food takes onl y minutes
to cook -once all the advance
cutting and slicinf is done. Easy
TeriyakJ Star.Fry ts a time-saver.
because it uses a frozen vegetable
combination of ready-cut broccoli,
carrot , water chestnuts and red
peppers, combined with thin strips
of beef.
The vegetables arc added to the
stir-fried, marinated meat without
having to be thawed, another time-
saver.
You complete this healthful, low
calonc main dash by simmenng the
vegetables and beef 1n a little
bouillon for three to five minutes,
JUSt long enough to crisp-cook the
vegetables.
This bas1c recipe could be made
another time with pork or chicken.
The frozen vegetable mixture also
can be used in other stir-fry dishes
to replace about 111? cups of
chopped vegetables.
EASY TERIY AKI STIR.FRY
1 poand 1lrlohl or Ouk steak,
c11t Into paper·tblD 1trtp1
YI tea1pooa la1tut beef boallloa
YI cap llot water -
1 tablespoon oU
lt-ouce peclla1e fro1e. broc·
coll, carrots, wealer ~esaat•
ud red pepper 'I• c•p water
' tea1pooa1 corastarcll
•;. teupoo• pacer
! tea1pooa1soy1Hce
Hot cooked rice, If dealrfld
Marinade
1 tablespooa H&ar
3 tablespooa1 soy uace •
i tablespoon• oil
i tabletpoo•• oerry
Combine marinade ingredients.
Pour over meat; let stand 20 to 30
minutes. Drain. Dissolve bou1llor1
an 'h cup hot water. In Large sk11lc1
or wok, heat t tablespoon 0 11 ove1
hilh heal.
Add meat; star-fry unttl beef as n<
longer red. Add frozen vegctablet
and dissolved bouillon; sur. Cover
reduce heat to low .. Simmer 3 to !
minutes or until vegetables a~
crisp-tender.
Combine 11. cup water, com ·
starch, gjnger and 2 teaspoons SO)
sauce: stir into mixture. Heat a~c
star unul sauce thickens Serve wilt
hot cooked rice. 5 scrvang.s.
J ofu. the ~wlkd 'ioy m1lk product
that ha'i h<·en hailed a'i the "miracle IL--=~:!!!!!~~=:.,---~~--------_J '----=~-----------------~ "----------------------
loud." no"' uime'i 1n a prescrv-
at1 ve~frc<'. awpt1cal package with a
hcl f-llt ·of 10 months
~,.fon -"'u ~ resh Tofu, unlike con-
' cnt1on tolu. rcquircc; no rcfngcr-
at111n ancl the: '-"aterdoesn't have to
he' <.hanecd datl} With rcfngcr-
at1on th1: 'ihelf-llk 1\ c~tcnded to 12
month'
I hi\ prod1l t t'> made llkt: no other
tofu . said a "lpokt:'>man fo r
~1onnaga Nutritional r ood'> Inc.,
Los \ngelcs .. Our tofu 1\ actually
made inside the hcrm1t1cally sealed
aseptic package and II remain'i
hactena free until the package is
opened r hie; ehminatcc; spoilage
prublerw-. · he said
Lov. rn ..aturated fats. 'iod1um
.and , al ines. tofu 1<, an excellent
meat 1r da1 r\' suhst1tutc and nutn·
t1onal \uppltrnrnt Rccau<;e of Its
bland ta<;lC, 1t can be easily 1n-
u1rp•m1t1·d into 'anou\ re<1pcs It
ah\orh~ tlr11;or<, and \t:a.,oning ol
\.hat< \t·1 11 1<, u1okt:d with
f Ill fllt I in t11rmatwn C.3111211)
'8 1 ; ''
New, Improved HOC«
f , r, •t•111t•\ tht:ilnthOlh1hpot
'1th 11' u111que flc1,or and '1brant
t •l•>r h1\ l'l·cn a pr11cd 1ngrcd1cn t 1n
,J'Jthl 1111 'v11'llllan CU l\lnC I '-.ed a'i
1 "' ,,,.,n1ng rn tamCJle'>. \Oup<, and
c.11·.~-.. •I\ v.•·11 a<; a ha\e for "1olc !1r
LB 6/12-0Z
PURE CANE
CUR
Sugar
5-LB.
9-VARIETIES
I
red< h1h <.<iuu.:'\ the anlhri Lhil 1 ha\ l'-----------------------18.5-0Z. !
y:11nul pqpulant) atrll'\\ the c.o un -
tr~ 111<,pr,1altv d11>ht:\
I nail 1 ltntl}' the preparation of
the \au1..l' lrn<. h<·en tedwu\ and the
purt h.1-.1.: •ti 1hc <.hil1 or po'-"der ha<;
lwen dilli ult 1f not 1mp<J\\1hlc 10
rnun~ r g•on<; of the <.ou nt r)
......... I 1\ Palma<, I hOd'i c1f 'vcn-
tura a I ading manufallurer of
Mc1u• ar \alsa\ ha'I c;ohcd the
prohlern .... 111i the 1ntroduct111n of a
prepared anth11 c.htl1 'iau<.e the fir'>t
1111t'i kind t., hit the market
1 he food firm ha'i alc;o an\wt:red
the need of man> co1Jk'> who have
been rrlL <rant to make Mc:<1<.an
foodc; ho· a11\t: qf tht: · heat.. in
prepan· I '>aute'i I nhkc the 1ra-
d1t10nal c.nd11la<la \CJU(C lhdl "
cooked '-"Ith meat cir hakt·<I into
cnch1 l;sda'>. th!\ 1ntr11dutt1on
r omat1> f nch1lada ~auc(' '" a
milder, th1cker-1n1 urcd '>au<.e 1ha1
Lan be ~pooned on meal (hie.ken .
egg~ and fi<>h
The 'iauu~ '' lUrrcntl~ availahle
th roughout th1· ~outhwc\t 1n 10-
oun<c rnnc; or 12-ounce~Jar'> For
more 1nforn1at1on c.Ill (HOS)
64'1 l 178 ..
Snack a ·peellng
I overc; of po1a10 c,ktn\ will he
interested m Kechlcr' new \nack
c.h1p that ha~ th<' ta'lte of a mouth·
watt'1ing ba ked potato \k1n cmp
and brown on the 0111c;1dc golden
on thl' 1nc.1clc anti lo.Hkcl w11h
113\'0t.
Tato <ikin\. made w11h real
potatoc~ and real P<H3to \kin\ arc
ofTcrt"d in three na\Or\ Baked
Potato. <;ou r< rtam 'n ( h1v('c; and < hcc~ n Baton. For mon· 1nfor
mataon. call n 12) 649-01 7 2
Tbat•a ttalla.n
( clcntano, a ltne of IUtllan frOJcn
en trees that ha~ Iona been a favonte
of New Yorkcn, has come to the
West Co.ut.
Thert are 12 e ntrces an the
current hne-up 1nclud1n1 the
f1mous round ravioh, the Celen-
tano creation of 30 yean aao that
ult1m1tely launched the hi&hl y suc-
cnsful famil y busine 10 New
(Pl M'" Pf'&W LIJU./C7)
•.
Meat Dept. Savings
Rump Roast .:···· "·· :,
Pork Butt Roast ....
Cube Steak ....
Stew Meat .'.:.
Pork Steak ,, , .
Sizzlean
Franks .,:.
Italian Sausage . M··'~
Compare these Low Prices
QUARTERS
Imperial
Margarine
STATER BROS
Frozen Food Favorites
•&Cl age
•EAR s1 .09
40l s1 .09
~01 ss.39
1101 sa.39
.. ~oz s1 .99
t-OZ 85C
•10Z ggc
Grocery Specials
Dish Liquid PA1 .. v• ,,
Facial Tissue 1zY.i'';1~~0-0 .. 'j
Bounty Towels M:~:~,
Zee Napkins .,, .,f
Almonds ~i~~·:::~r~'
t1ciflfl\ vN• •• ur
1101
91.39
Str.oz Semi .. Sweet Morsels .,,\,,,.,()/ s-t.89
s1 79 Sandwich Mate .,,~~·~ PP~tka1to Buds ·~·::... •N Sec Barbecue Sauce ........
ic es •1 .. ·"!' ... • .,S2.29 Dr Pepper ~ .. ~~:~,~ .. 01 ive Oi I .~ Chee ., .... Dennison's Chili ::;~,~! .,0, 75c r !.}.";~.~.
•1•>01 sa.49
utOI ss.39
Garden Fresh Produce 1
Lemons l EHT(" <A•ORltf
l>l'GE <•-.C•
Potatoes ~sTI~.m
G rapef ru it DESt!" 5Wf" AVftYS
EXTRA FANCY
TENDER GREEN
Asparagus ,,,LB
Mainstay Dog Food ~-..~".,,.. 54.99 ..---------,.,-c.u--uncnn---,-ftlLL--oA_r._• ___ A_DVERTISED _ ___._rTEM
Noodles ~mr.::t:!:.~.': •Ol 3ec ~ ........ ,._ ... ""-r.e ... ouARANTEE
W I SI\ 0 59 -· 20 u 22 Wt etlM IO Nw on Nnd tufllctwil MOCll Of Diamond a nuts ~·Jll•'· ~, ~..=-:.~~ .. 11l .. 4 •• -.£. :-:.::::--n:~~:i::::
Ch . Ce I $2__29 ..... ___ ~.. ~ ~ ~1AAIHO'IEO<•bli..tlNl>llng eenos rea ............. ll, ,,ttl ..-..----. ~'°~ .... 11em• .. ~pr1c1 .. Royal Gelatin ·~"""' ~ 29C ...._ __ -_-_·_-_-_,.._-___ -_· __ _..;;; .... ;.;;as:;.;;Wl..;......;T~;_OOMMUIOA~-THE-AIGtil_l_ow.LM..._1_0_uwr_OA_~_MFUSE __ RS ___ eoon __ ._"_i.mn. ___ ~ __ °'_ .... =~30-... _---l
~ ..... ;--.······ ~ ti ... ) 50 G(~(~.·r1 Y':;1r·, fq1 /qr1,·r1 1 .1r1 f rr1 1 Jit1r1r1 'lJ ( ,rJirJ1·r1 "(r·r1r', /\11 /".r111·11r.,tr1 l1.1dit1<ir1 { ....• )·\
--~-----------..-....-....................... a.i ............................................ .._. .......... _. ______________ ~~~~~-------·-----------------. -
I
---------
.
Or1ng9 COMI DAILY PILOT/Wedn••· r.wdt 1t. _. Cf
Use caution when taking calcium supplements
th~c~~ iir~~o~~l~ ~~~nl !,heories. All hthe lcientists say, may be harmful. Persons Wltb supplements help sttensthen the fruits 3 percent~ dry beans. peu. Not everyone Ii.ta milk; tome
· k · 1 n more retearc .'' n~." 1mpeired kjdoey function or with bones of older women ataU. nuts 3 percient; iupn {primarily complain W.t milk .. doele.t liU quic to use pre !minary research So the Quest.Ion 11: sbouJd con-certain Jypes of hypertension are So the prudent person may molasses} 3 percent· and mi• them·"' and 10me avoid it beri-~ns ~nthpossJble ~nerrts ~r 5umers follow the ad~ice of the particular!)' at riJk from aeuina too dec1dc to follow the advice of ceUaneout foods I ~t. of me fat and calories it COD~ ~~:n,~~ts foP~l~t!on ~van-promotcrsan~ take calcium supple-much calcium. nutritionists that foods are sllll the People who don't use milk or The lantt problem ii die_...
ou · 1 1 1 · cir~ uct1, ments "Just 10 e:ase? .. qt should And altbou&h calcium intakes up preferred source of calcium and milkproducudo bavecon11derable to IOlve: learn to like noafat mild
p&rtJcu ar Y ca ca um supp emcnts. they take the cautious, wait and sec to 2,500 ma (milligrams) per day concentrate on catins calcium-ncb problems acttina enousb ca.ldum Noruat milk. u its amne impliel.
Recent research auaacsts that approach? . . llJ>pear to be relatively safe to foods every day. because t&e other food groups bas .no fat and about Ulf dlle
calcium may play a role in the The firs~ .step 1s to cb~k Wlth normal healthy people, there is no In the United States, milk and supply calcium.in relatively small calories of whole milk. A com-
preve11tion of osteoporosis (the your1 physician before. takina ~n)'. evidenee that bone mass increases mHk prodt&ctsare the most import· amounts. You have to eat a latse promiteproduct. low&unilk. bu 2
bone softe~ing distase of old~r . ~P c!"lents. ~nd calcium, cve~Jf with intake1 beyond t ,500 mg. In ant food sources of calcium. Milk. quantity of areen leafy vcgetables. ~t fat, competed 10 3., pen:ieat
people}, high blood pressure, en in tbe 1.orm of an antaci • fact very bi&h intakes may inhibit cheese, yogurt. and other dairy dried beans and peas, nuts, whole an whole milk, IO you don't save
atherosclerosis (clogged arteries). shouldbc1considere?i a supplem~nt, the 'normal &one r~modeJ1ng cy~le products, excludina but~er, p~ov1de arain cereals, m~luses •. etc. in O~T nearly u ~Y calories when you
and colon cancer. not ahrep acebement. or the calcium in which old bone 1s replaced with 72 percent of the calClum tn our to meet your dally calClum require.-UJt lowfat mdk as you do~ you
The ~se is strongest for os-you s ould getting from food. new. diet. Meat, fish, poultry, and eggs ment of 800 mg for an adult male) u.tc nonfat milk. . . _
teoporos1s; but there 1s no "for Thereasonforcheckinafirstwith Another recent study sheds provide 7 percent; veaetables 7 l ,200ormoremgnowrecommend-Tbus.youeetthemocte&lc:iumm
sure" evidence yet for any of these your doctor is that excess calcium doubt on the idea that· calcium percent; flour and breads 4 percent: ed for an adult female. proportion to calories when you me
---------------------------------------------------------, nonfat milk. An &-ounce,._ of.
aOlllLISS
LONDON aROIL
Half Hen, Fresh
LOUIS RICH TURKEY BREAST
Single Roll
ZEE TOWELS
12-0unce Bottles
6-PACK
HllNIKIN •••• 1.5-liter. Red or White
ROBERT MONDAVI WINES
750-Ml
TORRE ASTI SPUMANTE
LB 2 .19
PILGRIMS PlllDI FalSH,.Ynnn•• -(u\O • (
) C,tAU f
A SOUTHERN 59
CHICKEN L&. •
•IUHllMSPlllDI ................
SOUTHERN
CHICKEN L&.59
11&11 M
SLICID UCOll
I LB
PKG IA. 1.59
nonfat milk (the type tbat bM
nonfat milk IOhds actaed) bM 361 ma calcium and 90 caJories -a
calcium to calorie ratio of3.S to I.
>Ji 8-ounce aJass of lowfat milk.
havina added nonfat nillk solids.
has 313 mg calcium and 12$
calories and gives you 2.S ma
calcium per calorie. Whole milk baa
291 mg calcium and 160 calories
and sives you 2.3 mg calcium per
cal one.
Using nonfat dry milk u '!'
additive to milk and other foods 11
another low-cost way to inaeue
the calcium in your d1eL One-third
cup of nonfat dry milk has 81
calories and 280 mg calcium and
the same caloric to calcium ratio u
liquid nonfat milk.
You can add nonfat dry milk to
liquid milk to make "double milk"
wtth double the calcium value. Orif
you make your own nonfat milk by
reconstituting dry milk you can UIC
twice as muctl mJlk as the label calls
for when you mix it with water.
(This may be too concentnued for
your taste, however, so try increu-
ing it in increments to the level you
can tolerate.)
Bake, Broil or Fry (C 3A9 ..... mASnllll SCllOD PILLl'IS .. . ...... . ............. L&
Nonfat dry milk can be added to
many foods to boost their calcium
value, for example, to gravy.
creamed soups, mashed potatoes
(add to cooking water instead of
draining it all off), puddings and
custard, coolci~ homemade yeast
and quick breads, cereals to be
Pork Shoulder Fresh I 79 cooked such as oatmeal (alona with
BUTI PORTION STEAK . . .. ...•.... .LB • water), mcatloaJ: meatballs, ham-
~.. ..... .•
5·LB. BAG
SUGAR
49
IN~~0 MUfflNS
KllAft
MAC&CHUA
REGULAR OR A9
' SOURDOUGH
7.25-0Z
DINNER
LIMIT .. .37
)
1·Lb. Pkg .. Quarter Sticks. Reg. or l0\111 Solt 59 ...... 1.29 MEADOW LEA MARGARINE.... . •
32-0unce
MAZOLA CORN Oil.. ................ 1.79
\ GOLDEN
EXTR~ ~~r,fES\
---/V1//\J t
Soro LH 10 75 to 13 75 Ot
POUND CAKES
•·Eor Pkg
BIRDSEYE COB CORN .
Ivy, Pothos. Vt0lets or Dieffenboch10 EA • 99 . . .. EA .79 4.INCH HOUSEPLANTS N••••w.12 n
10.oz .. Aji Minn
KIKKOMAN ® ... n 155 COOK ... SAKI •
6 25·01 Morutomo 0<
YAM.ASA KAMABOKO
W.1-Poc 7·0t Con
BROILED MACKEREL
...... 1.69
'·"
1.29
.75
AUllT .... A ........
IS.OZ
PKG .99
burger panics, and similar foods
made with poultry or fish such u
chicken croquettes or salmon loaf .
• • • QUESnONS WE ARE A.SUD:
Q. S.mewkf'e I r-eM daat cettqe
daeete, w~ I eat a lot .. • •J
weJpt co.trol tiet, Mesll't laan •
mlld cald•m u oU.U types el
Cffae. It ~I tne?
A. Unfonunately, for those wbo
arc trying to cut down on their fat
and caloric intake, this is true.
Cheese is an exccUent source of
calcium, but whole milk cheeses
such as cheddar and processed
cheese also arc high in fat and
calories.
Cottage cheese is made from
nonfat milk with just a small
amount of whole milk or cream
added back when it is "creamed."
However, cottage cheese with its
fewer calorics also bas much less
calcium than ripened cheese be-
cause the calcium is lost in the
whey.
l he cheese with the bi.fbest
proportion of calcium to calones is
parmesan. One tablespoon of
parmesan cheese has 69 D1J alcium
and just 23 calories and 11ve you 3
mg calcium per caloric -almost as
much as nonfat milk.
Processed cheese and cheddar
cheese have 174 and 204 ma
calcium and 106 and 114 calories
rcspcct1vcly per ounce. So you get
about 2.2 mg calcium per calonc.
Cottage cheese, in contra.st. has 75
mg calcium in a half-<:up servinf
and 100 caJones, giving you just 0.
mg calc1Um per calorie.
• • • Q. I doD 't seem to be able to drtak
mllk lD any quality at all kt •o
ja1t fbte eating yoprt. Bow does
yo(lrt compare lD caldwm valH to
milk?
A. Yogurt is a $ood source of
talc1um especially 1f it has added
nonfat milk solids (read the label!).
The ca lone content of yogun varies
wtth the type you choose. The
popular fruit-flavored yogurt tends
to be high m calories (even though
it's made from lowfat milk) because
of Its high sugar contenL
NEWLINE •••
1'romC8
Jerst>
The Ccknt.anos· attitude about
quality and dedication to authen-
t1c1ty arc some of the qualities that
make their products special, said a
company spokesman. Special
enough. for eJtamplc. for their
Cannelloni Florentme to have won
top honors 1n a companson with
360 other frozen foods in Wastnna-
ton. .
Of pcc1al interest U> ~t
consetous Cahforruans is that most
of tht entrees reflect the family
credo that lt~han food can be
deltc1ou without beina fattenm1.
For example an I I-ounce pvkav
of lasqna Pnmavcra contains
only 300 ailoncs per servina, a I~
ounet packasc of tuff'ed hell no calon per strVin&, and. ·~
ounet pad:• of MankottJ. •
per servms.
For more product 1nfonnauon,
c.aJ1 M 1 m1 Zwemer, martctina ad-
mi nistra tor of the lmP'ICt Oroup
Inc 1n Newpon Beach. (714)
640-S 111
•2.00 TUElllY I
WEDIEIDAY
AS INDICATED BELOW
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Comedy relgns
in· 'Washlngtoa'
at Westminster
By KATHLEEN CUMMINGS a..., .... c... ,._,
The Westminster Community
Theater's prt$ent production as
"Georae Washinaton Slept Herc."
wntten 1n 1940 by George S. Kauf-
man and Moss Hart. Next to Hart and
Kaufman, Neal S1moo's wisccraclung
prose nogs hke scns1tjve poetry.
Kaufman as considered to be the
master of the destructive Jett, and 11
credited for making the wisecrack a
part of our language. In Arinabclle
and Newton fuller (Marcia Bertholf
and Marc Le Blanc) we have a perfect
· marria$e for the medium: the ver-
baJ1y' v1c1ous and the hysterical.
Brothen show a lack of l0&1c and
sobriety. And to say that Newton's
naivete aod aencral out-of-itncss
dissolve the bou.n~ between inno-
cence and imbeciJjty as another
understatement. Tbe story has all the
subtlety and fi nesse of an early
episode of"f Love Lucy" (or a.ny one
of a dozen present 11tcoms, come to
thtnk of it). ff you can accept the
outragCOus premtae you can enJOY the play.
You can imagine Kaufman and
Hart laughing themselves silly over a
three double martini lunch, where
they must have daJhed out this play.
The 'itory 1s httle more than a
backdrop for w1sccraclcs. It was a huge
success m the JOy-starved early '40s,
but a contemporary audience may
have trouble accepting its premise.
You can't fault La Blanc for not
aiving all he has, and then some. He
launches each of his scenes with the
thrust of a booster rocket, you wiab
there were some room for subtlety,
but his character is IO goofy 1t 1s too
much to ell:pcct fine d1stinctjons.
Bertholf elaborately and ap-
propriately snide-steps her 'lffay
through the debris, casting her verbal
grenades at all the stupidities. We are
certainly on her side then:. Her tough-
manded, shoot-from-th~hjp delivery
as right up there with Alice K.ramden.
lla.rcla Bertholf. Ila.re Le Blanc •tar in .. OeorlJe WuhlDC-
ton Slept Here .. at the Weetmlllater CommUDlty Theater •.
about the country and their huv
bands. The way they talk you wonder
what keeps them from stranghng their
mates and leavi ng them on the side of
the road .
from foreclosure
Rhapsodically nature-loving New-
ton buys a run-down pre-Revolution
farmhouse in the back country of
Pennsylvania without consulting
nature-loathing wafe Annabelle -
though when we cxpenencc her rapier
tongue we can understand some
rct1ccnce. The amazing thing is that
be thought she would be pleased.
Lara Warburton as their daughter,
Madge, is sanely aJoof from the
goings-on of her parents, what with
shedding old boyfriend Steve (Nick
Sigman) and sfi ppin_J off with a
somewhat mamcd Clayton Evans
(Tony Grande).
Mr. J<jmber(Wil Thompson) is the
old caretaker of the farmhouse and
personifies a bom and bred city
slicker's worst nightmare of the
"country." (In Kimber country the
speed of entropy is slightly greater
than at would be in a country at
nuclear war.) The balls mount up.
Rich Uncle Stanley, played with
cffcc11ve economy by Jack. W1llen -
bachcr. as the only one to save them
A miscreant ncwphcw, Raymond
(Gabnel Hall). who 1s the obJCCt of a
custody battle (neither parent wantl
to have ham), is thrown 1n for laughs.
and gets some. Other supportintparu
are covered by Paul Anderson, ynne
Tavemett1, Ginger Francis and
Barbara Sorenson.
To u y that Annabelle is sardona cal-
ly detached 1s to say that the Marx
Sue Chaska, as Grande's somewhat
wife, glamorously glades in and dis-
covers a kindred spint an Annabelle.
Together they indulge an vain carping
Actors sought TV LISTINGS
Acton and actresses arc being
recruited to perform m industnaJ and
educational film and commerc1aJs by
a Costa Mesa talent agency.
EVEMHG
-8:00-eoe NEWS 8 MATT HOUSTON
• • •.; "FoolJoote ( 198-41 Ktv1n
BacOtl~ NEWS
~:THE LOST
EPISOOE8 An open aud1t1on for performers
over the age of 18 has been called for
Saturday at I p.m. in the offices of the
Producers-Actors Conson1um, 729
W I 6th S1., Suite 8 7
11100,000 PVRAMIO
THAEFS COMPOO -7:30-e Off'ASIT STAOK£S I 2 ON THE TOWN 9 BUSIES8 REPORT PAICE IS RIGHT
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GONG
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r 1982J Belle Davis Peony Full« ONE -e:30-S.D AT l.AAGE
0 NBC NEWS 9 PEOPlES COURT
Qt JEOPAPIJY ~,000 OOHCE Of A '1\) AACIHQ FROM SANT A AHl'T A
• TOO CLOSE FOR COMfOR'T rp J NEWS
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ID HEW UTEAACY: AH -8:00-
NTAODUCTION TO COMPVTtRS • EAS'T TIMES THE COMEDY
WITHOUT BRAKES.
(J) 9 NEWS I BOB HOflE SJIECIAL 8 BENSON U: RIOEAS Of THE GD I.AHO Of THE 8l8l.E WINO
G 80lD ONES 8 9 MACGYVER
(C) MOVIE (f) Wl<JIP IH ~TI
NOW PLAYING
• t '-1 The Shocluog Miu Pllg.nm • NEWS
119471 Belly Grable DIGk HtyrneS ., MOVIE
-7iJO-* *' * "Ma,« Dunoee I 19651 Chlr1·
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----~,._,..._.._ . . ~ ''-CARSON'S COMEDY ClA8SIC8 ~=THE LOfVl ( ) BAOTMERS
•••••• • •••••• • • * •AROAIN MATINEES MONOAY THAU FRIDAY 1 S T 3 Pf RHiRMANr f c, * * SA TUROA'f 1 '' ~ PE RF ORMANC F S *
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.------
Tom Titus. who as stanmgh1s third d~de in community theater, with 86
productions behind him, as the direc-
tor The show runs Fndays and
Saturdays through Apnl 12 al the
theater. 7272 Maple St., WcstmJnster,
with re~rvat1on\ taken at 995-4113.
-8:30-IJ (fJ TOUGH COOl<JES
i TRAPf'ER JOHN, M 0
PMMAGAZINE
SEAOEAHT Bil.KO
f PJ HONEYMOONERS
r $) THE INCREDl8l.E TIME
TRA V'ELS Of HEHAY 080000
-9:00-9 Cll MOVIE
"~" (PremiereJ Rober! C.011
rad, 1<1ten '-UShn
U a Bl.ACKE'S MAGIC 8 COUSTEAU OOYSSEY l ~NASTYO
• ••; Three The Hard Way 119HJ
Jtm Brown Fred Wlllam5on
9 T\JMNG POINTS ID SMfTKSOHIAH WORLD
El!) PAAJSE THE LORD m MCffALFS NAVY
fRJMOVIE
• • ·~ Oespera1e1y Seelong Susan
11985) Rosanna Arqueue Madonna
ILJMOVIE * * • The Collon Ctori 119841
Richard Gere (,regory Hines
P JSTAR TREK
Z,MOVIE * • l The ~le<man Wee~end
1983J RulQef Ho\18f JoM Hurt
-9'30-
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• • • .... Rot>tn And Mlfllll (19 7&1
Sein CMlnety AUOrey Hee>burn
'$!MOVIE * * * '' Zell\l 119831 Woody Allen Mia Farrow
-10:00-D 8 ST. ELSEWHERE 8Gtl)NEWS
19HOTEL
APARTHEJD'S PEOP\.E
Ci) AUSTIH cm UMfTS ID 89ilNO THE SCENES 6D GAEA T MOMENTS Of
Ot. YMPIC BOXING
CCJMOVIE
• • fast Forward ( 19851 JOM
Scolt CIOugh Don Frankton
f Pl COMEDY BAEAK
-10:15-
a!) REUOIOUS PROGRAMMING
-10:30-m DALE EVANS IJ) INDEPEHOENT HEWS
-11:00-
IJ 08tD9Q!NEWS e CARSON'S COMEDY CLASSICS
I LOVE CONNECTION
BAANEY MILLER
AMEAICAH INOIAN ARTISTS
I!> 8U8IHESS REPORT
Cl) THeSDAY GD JAa< HAYFORD e NIGHT GAU.ERY
H,MOVIE • * M1&s.ng 111 A'1t0!1 ~ The Begtn·
01119 119851 Chuck Norns Soon·
Tee~ Oil
P ST ART OF SOMETHING BIG
S MOVIE
• t ' Andtood 119821 Klaus l<msllt,
DonOPflef
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C,11r1~1te Gre1a Scaech1
-11:15-
LJMOVIE
• • Bo<dello" ( 1975)
-11:30-e <IJ T .J HOOKEA
D Q!TONIGHT 8 000 COUPLE 8 9 MC NEWS NIOKTUN£
0 BIZARRE m ovNASTY e LOVE. AMERtCAH STYLE
9 SOUNOSTAOE m FRUGAL OOl.HWET
a;) PRAISE THE LORD
~ HIGHT GAUE.RY
-11:50-
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-12:00-
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ENTERTAIHMEHT TONIGHT
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-12.20-
$,MOVIE
Tom
• • Tank 119831 Jamet Garner
G D Spradlin
-12:30-u Q! LATE NIGHT WlTH DAVID
L.ETTEAMAN 8 RATPATAOl
IJ MOVIE * * • I<~ On Any DoOf 119491
Humphrey Bog8'1 JoM Derek
INOEPEM>ENT HEWS e MERV GRIFAN
ti) MOVIE
• • Ge111ng Wasted' (1980) Brian
Kerwin. Stephen Furst <ml MOf\E AEAL PEOPLE EID PAAJSE THE LORD
Li MOVIE * * Allet The Fall Of New YQl'lc"
119841 MICllael Sopliiw Valentine
Monniei
-12-35-
Q TOM~OER
-12:40-
• MOVIE
'Vultures (193'1 S1uan Whitman
Mered1lh MacRae
HAPPY 81RTHDA Y
Best Wishes from.
Or W. Ronald Redmond• & Staff
Onhodontlca
r~ 1:u1 h4l • o Ml • •1 IMt QUICltlllVll tNt
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II IUMaT ~ MVllL y HILLI ,., + WWWUI_. ltlflU '"'°"I
Holly·lcclefleld
lrendoy Goof1by
Tony Pear1on
Mlchael Sokol
lobln loeuler
Katie Mee
Karl Wl9ht
Jocelyn Mee
Chrlttln Orltt
lobln Dovie•
Claude WIHlt
Geoffrey Dix
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(714) 4'2·2141
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25~ WARM
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1986
Gates: No apologies fOr j .ailj·a .m
Sheriff planning to askjud e to waive
new lower limit for inmate populatiorl
'By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. O.., ..........
A U.S. District Court Judge can
expect no a~logjcs from Oranie
County Shcnff Brad Gates when he
appears at a second contempt bcanna
on Jail overcrowding Thursday.
Nation
Jn an lntervicw Tuesday, Gates
said be has done all be can to follow
Ju<SJe William Gray's Jan. IS order to
Limit the inmate population at the
Main Jail in Santa Ana to l,500
without turning away felony suspects
at the door.
And, rather than beggina the
Office
Vt 18 t• 'I t• I ........ • ._,.....,,.._. T
•: U~ITt:O~"TATt:~Ot'A.-tt:N I romance ------~ .
. 'Fl 07 • • • •ratings
Treasury Deparment an-
nounces first major
changes In currency In 50
years./A4
Coast
Laguna Beach was un-
justified In bulldlng a park
that blocks access to a
proposed housing de-
velop. a judge rules./ A3
California
Los Angeles unveils a
four-point, anti-
apartheid policy for city
contracts./ A5
World
French President Mitter-
rand asks polltlcal rival
Jacques Chirac to be
premier./ Al
Food
Renowned restaurant re-
viewers get their share of
crltlclsm./C1
are up
Poll finds workplace
Is better spot to meet
than sin es bar, spa
NEW YORK (AP)-A walk to the
water cooler could lead to a wallc
down the aisle, accordjng to a study
which found romances that stan in an
office last four times longer than
those that begin in a singles bar or
health club.
Jn a survey this year of 1,800
prof cssiooal women between lhc ages
of 21 and 4S, S6 percent reported
having had an affair with a co-worker,
customer or client, according to
Srully Blotmck, a New Yorkrcsearch
psr,chologist.
'Women want a better idea of who
they're gctung involved Wlth," Slot-
nick said Tuesday. "They say that it
takes lonaer to get started with
someone they meet on the job, but
that the relationship lasts lonacr."
Last year SS percent of the women
surveyed said they had had an office
romance, compared to 17 percent in
1984 -lhc bigest incrcue since
Slotnick began the survey of career
wo men in the late 19SOs.
Despite the tradjtjonaJ taboo on
combinina romance and work, only
S 3 percent said they felt their
relationship had hurt their career.
OnJy I in 400 rcponcd losing her job.
(Pleue eee OPFJC&/ A2)
judge's pardon for cxceedana the cap
several times in February, Gates said
he intends to ask Gray to waive an
even titbtcr 1,400 inmate limit set to
10 into effect Apnl I.
Oates said the o nly way he could
hold the jail's population to 1,400 a
day ia to violate stale law by refusing
to accept new inma~ whenever
prisoner ranks swell to the cap.
At the same time, if tht Jad
continues to exceed the coun-ordered
limit, Gates and the county super-
Ducking the weather
visors could be fined or Jllled for
contempt of court.
Since county supervisors approved
a tentative site for a new l,000-to
I ,SOO.bcdjail Tuesday, Gates wd be
hopes Gray will .. ea9C up a little bit"
and leave the present inmate cap in
place.
Since last M~h. when Gray made an. injtiaJ contempt finding apinst
Gates and the Board of Supervisors,
Orange County has already paid more
than $50,000 in fines and spent
Tbeee foar waterfowl wen more forta.aate tbaD the owner
of th.la •mall ...UbMt aacllorecl off llaJboa Jaland. They
etayed afloat darln& tlae weekend storm wblle tbe era.ft
n.nk beoeatb tbe welCJlt of the ra1D water.
millions on temporary Jails, ad·
ditional auards and other personnel
to try to cue oveterowdi na at the
MainJ&il
The American Civil Labertict
Union succasfully a.rsued that coun-
ty officials had DO\ taken 1\Cpl to
reduce crowd.ins at the Main JaiJ
since Gray OrWnalJY ordered thepl Lo
improve conditions in 1978.
At the time of the March 18
contempt findina. the prisoner popu-
lation exceeded 2,000 lnmates, some
..
of whom were fon:ed to sleep on tbe.
Ooor. The jail'• ilate-rated c:.pecity ii
l,191.
£.atty th11 month., Gray ordend
another contempt beanna for Oates
after learnin1 that the inmate ~
lation at the Maio 1iail e1ceeded the
1.500 prisoner cap on at lieut dlrce
occasions in February.
Ac:cordioa to coww.ppoioled jail monitor Lawrence Oromman. tbae •
were 1,523 inmates in the jail oa Feb.
(Pleue _. OATU/AS)
Supervisors
pick Anaheim
as new jail site
BJ LISA MAHONEY °' ....... "" ....
Pressured by a pcodina contempt
hearina on jail ovcrcrowdinc, the
Oranac County Boa.rd of Supervisors
Tuesday voled 4-1 to bcain en-
vironmental studies necessary for
construction of a new 1,000-to J ,~
bed jail across from Anaheim
Stadium.
Only supervisors' Chairman Ralph
Oark, whose district includes the
proposed jail, diucnt.ed on the action. Clark offered three substitute mo-
tions which would have either de-
layed a decision or designated
~other sjte. All died for lack of a
second.
The prefcned site, a former traSh
transfer station at Katclla and Doualass streets, was one of four
recommended by county ataff for
construction of an urban Jail within
three ycan. Propeny on Hatbour
Boulevard near D isneyland in
Anaheim, a strawberry field at Grand
and McFadden in Santa Ana and tbt
site of Phoenix House on Fruit Street
in San~ Ana were also considered by
1uperv1son.
The prospect of a jail at any of the
proposed locations sparked sharp
opposition from the cities of
Anaheim and Santa An.a, the Santa
Ana Unified School District, DiJ..
ncyland, the c.aJifomia Anaels and
the Los Anaclcs Rams. The Aniels bastbalJ team and the Rams football
team play their games at Anaheim
Stadium.
Supervisors chose the Katella·
Douglass Site bccaux _1t 1s in an
Ralph Clark
industrial area away from rnidcntial
neighborhoods and school children.
By choosmg a site foT a mcdium-
maximum security jail to meet tbe
county's needs through l 990, super-
vison hope to dissuade a U.S.
District Court judae from slappiq
Sheriff Brad Oatc:s with anotbc:r
con tempt findlns.
Judie William Gray round Gates
and aJl five membcn of the board in
contempt a year llO for not actina fut
enough on bis 1978 order to reduce
crowding at the Main Jail an Santa
Ana.
Gates has ~ordered to appear in
(Pl-..e .. .JAD../ A2)
Sports
UC Irvine's basketball
season ends In Provo at
the hands of BYU In the
NIT, 93-80./81
Orange Coast College
Pirates' baseball team
scores 33 runs while beat-
ing Compton./81
PBS broadcasts
due for Center
John Dean
suit involves
Valley firm
Entertainment
There's comedy aplenty
In the local revival of
"George Washington
Slept Here.''/CI
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business ,
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Pollce Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Tet.vlalon
Weather
A11
A3
A9-10
~-7
A12
87
C8
C1 -7
A7
88
A7
A3
87
81-3
C8
A2
Hunt!ngton's KOCE
gets permission to air
opening and show~
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of"'90.-,"'-'lwt
National auent1on will focus on the
Orange County Performing Ans
Center next falJ when KOCE-TV
launches production of Center events
for more than 300 Public Broad-
casting Service affilfates.
Huntington Beach-based Channel
SO and the Center reached an "agree·
ment in pnnc1plc" this week 10
broadcast two to three productions
annually on PBS affiliates, as well as a
ieries of rcgionaJ TV proarams and
outreach activities aimed at devcloi>
1ng community interest m the per-
forming arts.
The success of the venture wlll rest
on KOCE's ability to raise $2.3
miltjon annually for production of
the national and regional programs,
as well as advertising. promotion.
publicity and outreach.
Dale Bell. executive producer of
the new senes, said they will focus on
local corporate undcrwnters. ,
"We are looking for a single
company, or a partnership of non-
competing companies -Southern
California neighbors to the Center -
who wish to become involved an their
community and an the nauon on a
maJor scale," Bell said.
Bell declined to announce wha1
programs would be broadcast 1n the
series, but he said KOCE-TV would
be broadcastin& from the C'cnler on
opening nightSept. 29.
However. 1f the station 1s able 10
attract underwnters early, 11 will
begin producuon ofspccial programs
an October for national broadcasting
1n the spring of 1987, he said
Spokesmen from both organiza-
tions praised the alliance as highly
beneficial to them.
Cochrane Chase, president of the
KOCE-TV foundation Board, said,
"We know it wtll be a challenge lo
raise the money needed for this
proJCCt. but we believe that among the
areat companies here an Southern
C'alifronia, there will be those who
will want to speak to their national
peers through lhe arcat 'buy' of PBS
.. Any company alia:n1ns itself with
PBS and the Center will be able to
reap 1ncalculablc benefits." (Pleue ... C&NT&R/A2)
Spectators scan
skies for swallows
By tbe Aa1oclated Preti
In a renewal of a legend that has become big busmcs for the'
sleepy coastal village ofSan Juan C.ap1strano. word Tuesday was !hat
1hc swallows would complete their fabled return to M1ss1on San Juan
Capistrano on schedule today
According to tradition, the 11ny clcf\-t.a1lcd birds amvC' at the
mission each year on March 19, St. Joseph's Day. ending a 6,000-mile
fllght from their winter home' an Goya. Argentina.
Shopkeepers and mission officials were busy Tuesday prepanng
for the arrival ofthousandsoftounsts, who faithfully return each year
to welcome the swallows back and snap up 50uverurs from Jlfi shops
"Econom1caJly, it means qui1e bit a revenue," said Chns Ake.
manaier of the San Ju.an Capistrano Chamber of Com me~ .. It'~
been go1na on for years and years."
Accounts of the swallows' return date back to the mission's
(Pt ..... 8WALLOW8/A2)
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A lawsuit
has been filed apmst John Dean, the
former Wlute House adviser who
played a prominent role in the
Watergate scandal, over the sale of
$320,000worth ofsccunues issued by
a Fountain Valley holding company.
The suit, filed Monday an U.S.
Distnct Court, alleges that Dean and
wife Maurttn violated fedcraJ securi-
tJCS Jaw an the sak of800,000 shares of
stock 1SSucd by CoElco Ltd. of
Fountain Valley
The su11 was filed by Durango
lntemauonal Corp., a Panamanian
corporation that purchased the stock
from the' Dean\
The lawsuit alleges. ''At the umc of
the' sales, thC'f't was no rcaistratJoa
stalcmenl 1n efTC'ct with respect to the
~tock and no cxC'mpt1on applicable to
the said !Mlle' " No other claims WC1'e
stated.
The fedC'ral Sc-cunt1e and Ex-
change C'omm1~1on rcqu1~ an
\tock salC''i to be l"CglStcrcd except
tho~ conduct('d under ocrta1n ex-
emption~
Jam~ H M11chell Jr . a Los
AnJelc'i lawyC'r representing the.
pla1nt10 , said Durango has rcoc1ved
no income from the ~tock and 11
entitled to ~vcr the $320,000 plus
1ntcrt-s1. .. [Pleue eee DSA.ft/A.2)
Skyscraper serial interrupted, but plot thickens
Can Segerstroms develop Home Ranch
to enhance city, satisfy Mesa Action?
They came bearina a1f\s
Developer C.J. Sq.er trom &. Sons
offered 10 build C'ost.a Mcu a world-
clan art museum, addina another
stroke to the c1ty'1 arowina panorama
of cul1ural and perfonnina ans.
The Scacntroms alM> unveiled
ptan5 for a non-profit chiJd-care
centtr, de,1ancd by the cOl:mty't
f0ttme»t speciah,ts 1n pre-school
education. with 'PM'C fo1 120 ctul-
drcn from infancy to S years old.
And developers offered IS acres of
verdant flelds, 'hady aroves. lush
picnic tl"t'I\, cualypcus.-hncdJoaint
trail• and orchards dt'it&ncd 10 recap-
;
ture a slice of Oranae County's
aa,ricultural history.
All this, 11 well as S 1.5 million 1n
annual property and aa1es wes.
would be bestowed upon the city. 1f
pmniJs1on WH lflnled to build I
controvC1'51al 32-story office buiJdina
-the talle tin Onnat County.
The &entToms let\ Monda_y'i
hurini before the C'osta M~ City
Council wtth their a>f\J suJI 1n hand.
spumed by residents who •rau«S the
SOO.foot·h11h bu1ldin1 would nun !he
c1ty' suburben flavor
Facina probeble defea1, Malcolm
Ron. ntrom plannma d1rtctor.
was fiaurat1veJy 11ven a loaded gun hy
C'oune1lman Donn HaJI and 1old do
the honorable thing with 1he
beleaauered plan.
The developer larced a qu1C't death
would be better than a messy exccu·
llOn at the hands Of a council VOIC' h
would allO deny lhe 1po1ls of victory
to a aroup of slow-srowth act1v1sts
hunlJY to defeat the City's largt'\I and
most prominent developer.
Many council members and "'"'.
dents chanctcn7Cd the 677,000-
~uare-foot •lcy~pcr a.s the m°'t
controve"1al proJ«t to hit lhe C'll)« It
threatened to put some pohuc~I
careen on the line, and wu louted as
a te t for mcasunna 1hc council'•
nanct on arowth
In 1he af\ermath. 1t ap~ared tha1
after ye.a" of fl\t-1rackan1 mm·
TONY
SAAVEDRA
mcrc1aJ and bus1nc:i prQJccts. Cosu
Met.:a 1s 1ndttd b«omin& mort
cautious 1 n ooni1denna developmcnl
' cl lhc poht1cal firt1 fueled by the
arowth debate continue 10 bum
toward the Novc-mbcr lily el«"llon Me"nwh1J~ Ros" and other
ntrom om 1als lTf buryina t~r
I ...
lcy1CT&per proposal, which was to hc
the first phatc of a 9kcre bu J~
center on the oomi;e,.:J's Home
1Unch property border by Fair
view Road. Harbor Boulevard.
unfloWtt Avenue and the San oteao
Frttway
"We're ruJly 101na to have to take
a frdh IW1 (on a new plan)," R
wd. "You can't simply whack a..-ay
at an ciusuna project and make 11
work."
Ht sa.1d the new proJtt't would
probebly not be as tall .. , the
abendoned IOWtT plan. which would
have included the child care center
I S..ecrcs of lanchaptn and tht an
plkry Ross ,,..., un,urc when cl
s1ans for the new proJ«t would he
compktc or 1f the amcn1ll~ would
tall ~ mcl udcd.
The tr1trom were forc<'d into
an Cltpen,1 ve ad'>tt'\I 1n1 and pu~
hc1t~ ~m paign 10 counter anti·
\lcyK'nSpcr lettcl"\ 'Cnt hy Mesa Ac·
uon to communtt) re\1dcnt
While 1he eucn'\IH" campatan &.al·
<'d to defu\C the' oppo11ho n, Ros.s
would no1 c-rcdn Mc~ Aetion for \be
dem1tc of the pvnm1d-topped hllb·
n\C
"The pmJCCI, hctn& very vi 1onary
pertlaps concerned tome people and
cona:m~ 1M c1ty cou0C1l." ht llCl,
addJns that most rh1Ckn11 ht
countcmS ..-ere 1n<kpcndcftt thin
un~•~ b)' Me ActJon or CJ.
1'1trom RO' mo~ 'PiDSt
rcadint too muc:b into the taiJcd
lc~per Pf0Jtt1
'Thi ha,,~·t cha
(Pieue .. unc:~~
d OrlingeCOMt DAflY PILOT/Wtclnteday. March 19, 19M
Two Lagunans arrested
in $1 million coke raid
171.AUUM&U ................
Two Lquna Beach residenu were arrested and more
lhan SI million wonb of coc:&ine was ICizcd in Man.ban.an
Beach Mood.ay, endina a month-Iona n.arcotica investip-
tion by state and local officials.
CoWlty Jail on SJ million bad late Tuesday. l&Jd Ed
SY'll.icl[y, soec:ia1a,ent1uperv110r for the atate Burau of
Narc:odC:a Enforcement.
Accordh11 to White, police acted on a up received
from an informant more than a month aao.
Larry Steven Badcwell, 2-4, and Ronald Earl Price, 27,
were arrested at a Maohanan 8each hotel on suspicion of
pouession of five kilos ( 11 pounds) of cocaine, said Lt.
Jim White of the Laauna Beach Police Department.
Ot6c:en from the Oranae. Laauna Beach and
Manhattan Police depertment1 assisted in the &n'CatS.
The undercover state officers met the 1hree men at
the hotel with $21 S,000 to buy the cocaine, said Syn icky.
The money, borrowed from a state 11ccount, was never m
the transactions, be said.
A third suspect. Michael Manuel Slndoval, from
Santa Crui:. wu also arrHted. All were booked on
suspacion of sale of coca.Joe, poueasion of cocaine for sale.
and conspiracy. They were beina held in the Onnge
Dealers often demand seeing the money before
selhn, the druas to pTote<:t themselves from being robbed,
said Syn.icky.
Officers also seized $20.000 an the operation.
Malamud, author
Of 'T.he FiXer,' dies
Bernard Melemad
NEW YORK (AP) -Pulitzer
Pme-winnina novelist Bernard
Malamud, who WTOte about mys-
ticism, Jewish tradition and the
nobility of the bumble man in books
like "The Fixer" and "The Natural,"
died Tuesday at the qe of71.
Timothy Seldcs, the president of
Russell and Volkenina. literary
agents, said Tuesday night that
Malamud had died. but refused to
gjvc any details. He said the author's
family would make a statement
Wednesday.
"The Fixer" won the Pulitzer and
the Nauonal Book Award for fiction
in 1967, and was made into a movie
starring Alan Bates. Set io the Soviet
Union, "The Fixer" reveals the
courage of a handyman falsely ac-
cused by the government of ritual
murder.
Malamud also won a National
Book Award in 1959 for "The Magic
SW ALLOWS DUE •••
From Al
foundinJ in 1776 by Father Jurupero Serra. The birds' Jo urney was
popularized by composer Leon Rene in has I 939 hit song. "When the
Swallows Come Back to Capistrano," and smce then, toumts have
turned out in great numbers to witness the phenomenon.
"Scout" swallows already have been seen at the m1ss1on ,
checking out nesting sites an the mission's eaves an advance of the
main flock. said Dlclc Landy, vis.itor center d irector for the m1ss1on
He sajd he recently saw six of the birds flying an the area of a
newly constructed church, a replica of the Old Stone Church that was
destroyed in an 1812 earthquake.
"h looks hkc they arc on schedule,'' Landy saad. ··1 had breakfast
wath a man who laves an Carlsbad and be was telhng me he saw a flock
of 40 or 50 swallows an his backyard. They were taking a rest at the
tame."
Landy esumated that San Juan Capistrano's population of
22,000 would swell by 4.000 people today as tounsts v1s1t the town to
witness the swallows celebrated amval.
"People still behevc the swallows will be back and they want to
sec them," he wd. "Ifs a matter of hope. When we think about the
fact that so much of our news 1s bad ... at least one thtng will go nght
today -the swallows will arrive on time and everythmg can't be
wrong in the world." ·
Landy said he was hopeful that more swallows would return to
the m1ss1on than an recent years, when tounsts vastly outnumbered
the birds.
As the city of San Juan Capistrano expenenced increased
development, some of the swallows' f~m$ grounds were wiped out
and the ansect-eatJng birds moved to oullyrng areas, where swam~
and fields generated plenty of bugs and mud for their nests.
Landy said that over the winter. fohagc was cleared from a
m1ss1on plat.a and the area was kept well watered so the swallows
would have access to mud ..
In addition, a dome o n the new church was painted red and lights
msade the dome turned on each rught.
"h's hke a beacon for them when they fly," he said. So far. no
swallows have taken up rt11dence in the eaves of the new church.
"It's going to take them a httle while for them to get acchmated
to the fact that there 1s some place new for them, .. he said.
Barrel," a short story collcc11on
pubhshed an 1958.
Because of has earlier novels such as
"The Fixer," which hke the 1957
book "The Assistant" arose from the
Russian-immigrant cxpenence of his
parents, Malamud was regarded as a
"Jewish writer," along with Saul
Bellow and Philip Roth.
Malamud's 1952 book, "The Natu-
ral," was made into a movie three
decades later, stamng Robert Red-
ford as an agmg baseball player ajded
by magic. However, the upbeat,
heroic cndmg of the movie was a far
cry from the book. in which the
protagonist. a star baseball player, 1s
disgraced.
Malamud was happy about the
1984 movie because at enabkd him
"to be recogruzcd once moti as an
American wnter -and that is a kind
of triumph," he told The New York
Times m an 1nterv1ew in February,
1985.
GATES •••
From Al
18; 1,537 on Feb. 23; and I ,520 on
Feb. 24. Grossman subsequently
rcponcd that the department ex-
ceeded the cap again by one mmate
on Feb. 25 and by 13 inmates on
Mart:h 3.
In arguments filed in U.S. Dmnct
Coun Frida).'. county attorney\ admit
the Mam Jail exceeded the cap but say
Gates should not be held an contempt
of the Judge's order because the
ovenges were not made willfully and
only lasted for brief periods until
transfen or other arrangements could
be completed
Gates has made "every reasonable
effon to comply" with the coun's
order, but he cannot do so without
endangering public safety, said Depu-
ty County Counsel Ed Duran.
Gates said the Shcnff's Dcpan-
mcnt 1s having difficulty copmg wath
the 1,500 pnsoncr restnction despite
the transfer o r release of aJI suspectc;
awaaung arraignment, trial o r serving
ume for misdemeanor offenscc;.
The depanment has also rcsoncd
to panng <Jentenccs by three days and
assuang c1tat1ons instead of booking
some misdemeanor suspect!>.
A final inmate reduction strategy,
which has kept the Jaji below the cap
since March 3, has been to release
some sentenced inmates five day\
early
But Gates said he's not comfon.ablc
With such solutio ns. "Why should we
have 10 tum felons back into the
community JUSt because we haven't a
plaoc to put them?" he asked.
JAIL SITE NEAR ANAHEIM STADIUM ...
From Al
coun again Thursday to explain wh y
the Shenffs Department ha'> not kept
the number ofmmates under a I 500·
person cap imposed by C,ray Jan 15
number of resident~ wathan a half.
male radius of the recommended site!>
but they failed to figure how many
people come to Angels and Ram'i
games at the stadium
year, so than 4 malhon w11h1n a half.
male radius of the area where you
want 10 put a Jail "
Though the Harbor Boulevard rne
clo<ac't to Disneyland was spared by
Stanton's mo tion, Disneyland
spokesman Jack Lindquist stated has
company's oppos1t1on to all four
locations
Sunshine to make a come back
•~·~·~· "'ONTS \Uf ';lfl ~ W•M -COIO._.
S-•1i. Rain F\l<•olll• ">11<1• <kciuo.o ..... $Ulonaiy .....
flMaiotW W..... ,,.. ... .,-;;;JA,. u.•., ~ ~ (tlr"""'911' •
.. M 11 ..
" 42 41 u Tl ...
11 21
4 1 o ... ••
... w waw w w
SKYSCRAPER SAGA CONTINUES •••
From Al
he said, explaining the project would
ha vc probably been too progrcssi vc
for past councils.
Sull, Ross was d1sappo1ntcd by the
tum an events. He wasn't alo ne.
Jim Aynes, spokesperson for the
aggre\save Mesa Action, said he was
hoping for a clear win. He vowed the
residents' group would continue put-
tmg the screws to large-scale de-
velopers in Costa Mesa.
"Mesa Action is still goi,rlg after the
alliance of developers who arc trying
to tum Costa Mesa mto downtown
Los Angeles," Aynes said, explaining
the group would be fonnulatang a
growth inatiatave "of some son."
He also warned that incumbent
council members Arlene Schafer and
Mayor Norma Heruog were stall ma
prttanous position afthey planned to
retam their scats an November.
"We're not going to let them off the
hook," Aynes threatened. "They arc
very vulneTable and we will be
watching them closely. It may not be
100 late for Arlene to save herself, but
1 have sc:nous doubts about Nonna."
lron1cally, Hertz<>Jt wa~ gcanng up
to vote against the 20..acrc skyscrapCT
phase.
Even more ironic is that Hcnzog is
now urging her council colleagues to
be especially mindful of the impacts
new developments may have on
traffic and other environmental con-
cerns.
She said her awareness has been
heightened because of the rash of
developments in ITVinc and other
neighboring cities dumping traffic
onto Costa Mesa streets.
"When we planned things a
number of years ago, we had no
indicauon of what other cities were
going to do," HC1Uog said. She as
supportmg the creation of a com-
munity forum to trade ideas on Costa
Mesa'sgrowth and "what we want the
city to look like m the year 2,000."'
Councilwoman Schafer had her
own private forum of sorts during the
last few wcck.s. Mesa Action labeled
Schafer as the swing vote on the
Segcrstrom building and urged resi-
dents to send her postcards in
oppos1llon.
Although Schafer won't dJSclose
how many cards she received, 1t
would be safe to say she is a likely
candidate for eyestrain.
"Meu Action was usma this issue
thinking the pressure would build up
to a c~ndo of an election,·· Schafer
said. "That's sad. I feel the
Sege1"1troms have tried very hard to
work with us. They are a btg part of
this city."
Many would argue that without the
Segerstroms, Costa Mesa would still
be a wide spot in the road. The
dcvelopeT is a majn contributor to the
Orange County Performing Arts
CcnteT being constructed in Costa
Mesa. It also owns South Coast Plaza
and larae chunks of Harbor
Boulevard, home to a celebrated
stretch of car dealerships.
But, said former mayor and promi-
nent oldtjmcT Al Pinkley, the
~erstroms may be opposed JUSt for
bemF the Segentroms.
"I m not sure any plan the
Segentroms brina back for the Home
Ranch will meet theapprovalDfMesa
Action," said an angry Pinkley.
OFFICE ROMANCES LASTING •••
From Al
"Sixty-one pcrcenl said (romance)
actually helped their JOb pcr-
fonnancc," Blotnick said. "Some said
they felt they had more energy and
were more involved ...
M ost of those who fa vored o n-the-
JOb relauonsh1ps cited one or more of
these reasons. he said:
-"J know how much he makes."
-"I know what his pros~s are "
-"(know how rcsponsablc he is."
-"I know what has ups and downs
arc Jake."
Slotnick recited what he said was a
lypical response: "I know too little
about the men 1 )USt date. We're both
on good behavior too much of the
tame. Rut at work ... sooner or latcT,
something will get to the guy you're
antere,ted an. Then you'U sec what
he's really hkc "
About 20 percent of on-the-Job
romances le.ad to mamagc, compared
to a quancr of I percent of those that
st.an m settings such as singles bars,
h~alth clubs and beaches, he said.
And the average office romanc.e lasts
51 days, compared to 12 for the
others, he sajd.
Asked why she didn't try to meet
men on evenings or on weekends, one
woman wd, ... Who bas evenings or
weekends?... Blotruck said. 'vrbcy
work so much that they have to spend
their spare time on shopping and
laundry."
In the I 960s, Blotmck said, 12
percent to 20 percent of women
reported office romances, but fro m
1970 throuah 1983 only 7 pcrocnt to 9
percent dicf so.
That, he suggested, was the result of
the women's movement. "Women
were saying. 'I'll JO it alone,"' he said.
"They were KCkinJ the brass ring first
and the wcddina nnJ second.••
Slotnick, who wntes a column for
Forbes map.zinc and 1s a manage-
ment consultant for several large
~orpo~ataons .. told of the suTVcy man
1ntcrv1ew with Success magazine.
The women he polled had a median
aac of 32 and an a veraac income of
$26,000. About a third had been
divorced.
CENTER •••
From Al
Thomas Kendrick. executive direc-
tor of the Center said, "I know the
benefit$ that public television can
bring to a perform in& arts institution
when it becomes involved with
quality programming in the tradition
of 'Kennedy Center Tonight' and
'Gr-cat Performances.•
"Laterally overnight, the CcntcT,
through PBS, could achieve substan·
tial national recognition that would
help us for ycan to come."
Gates and supervisors say they
hope that acting quickly to choose a
new Jail •sate will convince the Judge
that they are taking has orders
scnously and another contempt find-
ing as unnecessary
The county will continue lookrng
for a remote si te for a larger 5,000-to
6,0<»-bed Jail to accommodate in-
mates through the year 2000, super-
visors said.
"One important statistic that you
left out as the number oftounsts who
come to the area every year," Pat·
t.crson told the board .. We're
talking close to 4 million people every "It is a Band-Aid response to the ~==================--;;;;;;;;=================----. problem that's facini this county,"
But Anaheim and Santa Ana of-
ficuals were not sympathetic with the
county', prcdacamcnt. panacularly 1f
11 means putting a 1a1I in their city.
After a motion by Supervisor
Roaer Stanton to de'lignate the
Katella-Douglass 'late for futther
study, Anaheim Mayor Don Roth
cnticized the haste in which super-
visors were acting. Tounst oncntcd
Anaheim is not the place for a Jail he
'81d. and urged that thorough en-
viro nmental and economic studies be
conducted on all po$Siblc site~.
"I'm pleading with you to proceed
w1th cauuon on th1s·part1cular •11te,"
Roth said.
Arthur E. "Red" Patterson, spokes-
man for the C'ahfom1a Angels. said
the board may have considered the
~~~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
uo "'"' s.v It "'4•• .._.. . A .., ,__ "°' . seo C-..•• ~ • •>' ,,
C:-..0-.. t ·M7' ~ & _.,,,_.. ~I 431'
DEAN ••.
From Al
A telephone call Tuesday to l.)ean's
home seclcang comment went un-
answered
The phone company said CoElco's
number had been disconnected and
was no long.er 1n service.
Dean's testimony before a Con-
gressional Committee 1pyest1gaung a
1972 break-an at Oerf\ooratic party
offic.cs at the Wateraate complex in
WashJnaton impUcatcd President
Nixon's top aides an the scandal.
Prctadent Nixon resigned an
Auaust 1974 as a result of a arowina
public furor and intensifying Con-
arcts1onal anquines anto ha s involve-
ment an the Watergate ~vcr-up.
L1ndqu1st said. "This problem has
existed for awhile, and a Band-Aid
retp0nsc came about last week."
Meanwhile, Dan C. Wooldndge.
chief aadc to Supervisor Clark, said
the board's choice of sates could
change as the county proceeds
through the environmental review
process. "We ccru1nly hope there w1ll
be tome funher discussions between
now and NovcmbeT (when the study
is to be complete," he said.
Wooldridge also observed that
Gray may not be impressed by the
apparent speeding up of)ail construc-
t1on 1f the city of Anaheim cam es out
its threat to sue to prevent a Jail from
bc1n1 constructed there.
.. We're now ao1na to be facina
potential long-term lat1pt1on. That
doesn't sound to us a.s the kind of
quack fix tolutaon Ju~ G ray wanu
us to come up with,• W-00ldndie
saad.
O•llY Piiot
o.ttvery
11 Quer•nteed ... ~....,,.. ",,.,. ""-•'>-•'-"" ~~1>,,.<,e 11e1.,.•1C"'
CM:rr4" •09) Ot~ c-.i ~ ""'"""*'"• ~ -.ioo.. .-v.11e110M -Qt., .,...11.. ' .., • .,,"' ........ _..,, ..._y .,. 190fl)C);r.., ""'"""' -... Pl"
Justcall 642-6086
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mcssaae Wlll be recorded, trtnKribed and de-
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VOL 11. NO. 71
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