HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-28 - Orange Coast Pilotl\VARlM
FOMCA8T8 ON A2
**
W EDNESDAY, M AY 28, 1986
Alcala guilty for second time ·
Hearing starts June 9 to decide if he will
be sentenced to die for HB girl· s murder
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,., .........
Rodney James Alcala was found
auilty for the second time today for
the kid nap and murder of a Hunt-
ington Beach girl whose death in 1979
is considered one of the most
Joraenaen at 60
Oran.te Cout raldent
Cbrlallne Joraenaen, a
traneeesual p ioneer,
dt.cuaeee bow •m•ery, and notoriety, bu af-
fected her life. Bl
California
Senate approves a state
budget, but the abortion
Issue ties up passage In
the AssembfX./ AS
Sports
Fountain Valley High
reaches the CIF 4-A soft-
ball flnata./D1
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
B4
A3
A7-8
C4-5
BS
06
83
C1-8
81-2
86
81
A3
notonous crimes in county history.
"We did it. We did it." cried
Marianne Frazier, the mother of 12
)ear-old Robin Christine Samsoe.
A second hearina in the Superior
Court case in Santa Ana wiJI beJin
June 9 todetenmne if AcaJashould be
stntenced to die.
The former UCLA student was
convicted and sentenced to death six
yearsaao for the mutilation murder of
Samsoe, who wu abducted from her
Huntinaton Beach neia,h borhood in
June, 1979.
Samsoc's bodY. was found 10 days
later beside a tratl in the foothills near
Pasadena.
Alcala was on death row until 1934
when the state Supreme Court re-
versed his conviction on the grounds
that he did not receive a fair trial.
In the retrial. iuron deliberated less
Hungry hummingbirds
than three fuU days before reachma
the same verdict a Superior Court
j ury d id in 1980.
Durina the retrail, which opened in
Late April, several witnesses testified
they saw Alcala tak.ina photographs at
the beach the same day Samsoe
disappeared while bikina to a ballet
class.
But the chief witness. a former
forest ranaer who allqedly saw a man
resemblina Alcala pushing a youna
girl toward some bushes, stunned
counroom obtttvers during the
retrail when she claimed to be
suffering from amnesia
Dana Crappe did not testify, but
her ori11nal te'ltimony was read. to
Jurors.
A pairofsolden camngs found in a
Seattle noraae locker rented by Alcala
were identified in court as being
nearly identical to a patr Sarnsoe was
fond of wearing.
But Alcala's attorney said has client
occasionally wore an eamng.
A 1978 videotape of "The Dating
Game" television show 1n which
Alcala was a winnin& contes~u
proves that Alcala wore an eani~ at
the tame, wd anomey John Patnck
Dolan.
Dolan said the carrina seen in the
videotape 11 one o( the peir found m
the storage locker. The videotape was
made nearly nine months before
Samsoe was killed. be said.
Samsoc·s mother, who testified an
both tnals, described the Supreme
Coun's rulina to ovenum Alcala's
conviction as "cruel."
Year of waiting
an ordeal for HB
son of hostage
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of ... .,..,,......,
Eric Jacobsen has 365 reasons to be
depressed today.
h 's been one year since his father,
David, said the words "I'll go, ru '°"
in broken Arabic to six gun-toling
kidnappers, who pushed the 5S-ycar-
old American Universiry Hospital
admimstrator into a blue van and
sped down a West Beirut street
Day by ever-so-slow day the young-
er Jacobsen of Huntington Beach has
prayed for the release of his father,
one of five Americans held captive in
Lebanon.
On this. the anniversary of David
Jacobsen's abducuon. Enc 1s stJll
waning. He's sull praying. And he's
sull afraid that has dad won't be
coming home.
••A year ago, I was convinced it
would be over w1th1n a week or a
couple of days," said Eric Jacobsen.
29. "It's hard to believe that 1t has
gone on this long. I'm mott dis-
couraged and more depressed now,
because we have been beaung our
heads against the wall for a year."
Jacobsen. his brother Paul of
Erle Jacobeen
Upland and sister Diane of Lo
Beach have been u em.c:NJ
roller coaster that ~ taken them
~ ... B All/A2)
:Orug-relateddeaths
.up 50% in county
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot .. 0-., .........
A p0tent form of heroin and the
risky practice of combintn~ heroin
and cocaine may be responsible for a
dramatic increase in drug overdose
deaths in Orange County.
"It is an epidemic. It's out of
control." Chief Deputy Coroner Jim
Beisner said.
An annual report issued Tuesday
by the county Sheriff-Coroner's De-
partment showed nearly a 50 percent
increase in heroin deaths in 1985
compared with the previous year.
this year -could reach an aJl-time
county high m 1986, accord1na to the
document.
The repon shows 71 people d1ed u
a result of heroin overdoses last year,
compared with a county low of only
12m 1979.
In the first three months of 1986, 31
people died as a result of heroin
overdose, spokesman LL Dick Olson
said. Officials fear as many as 140
people will die of heroin overdoses
this year.
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
03,06
01-3
83
A2 A pair of bummln_.,lrd chlcb enjoy a take-
out order from the mother at their boalain-Tillea branch bomeetead on Linda Ieland ln
Newport Beach.
Heroin deaths have increased an-
nually smcc 1979 and -Judging by
figures from the first three months of
Heroin deaths reached record
levels m the mid-70s with 95 deaths in
1975 and 76 deaths the next year
Add1t1onall}'. the presence of co-
(Pleue MC BltROIN/A2)
Dr. Ruth'sadvice
about senior sex:
Early and often
TV therapist touts
physical stimulation
to AARP convention
By LAURA MERK
Of .. 0-.,,... ....
A group of Amenca's graying
senior citizens might seem an unlike-
ly audience for a sexually explicit
lecture by nationally syndicated talk
show host and columnist Dr. Ruth
Westheimer.
But when Westheimer took the
podium in one of the larJeSt halls at
the Anaheim Convention Center
Mooday. the room was packed with
hundttd1of silver-hajred seniors who
received her warmly and seemed to
appreciate her bluntness.
The occasion was the 13th biennial
convention oflhe American Associa-
tion of Retired Persons.
The popular sex therapist spoke
directly about continuina an active
sex life late in li fe. Althoua,h there
were applause and laughter, the
dimmed liahts provided a mcasutt of
cover for-some who may have been
embarrassed as Westbeimer ex-
plained how to enhance their .sex
hves. ~
Many were grandparents, many
were retired. They're the ones who get
the senior discount at Bob's Bia Boy.
But their presence there said they
wett the nation's active senior
citizens.
Dr. Ruth Weethelmer
And Wcsthcimcr made It clear that
sex should not end when the Social
Security checks sta rt rolling in.
Instead. she gave several suucs-
(Pleue Me S&IQOR8/ A2)
Upheaval in clerk'soffice
sparks interest in ele.ctidn
The county clerk's race ordinanly
receives a yawn from voters.. but
upheavals 1n the office, 1nclud1n1 a
acanna audit of the former clerk·
recorder's performance, hu focused
more than the usual amount of
attention on the post th1, election
Add.ins 111 the brouhaha 1s one
cand\d•te'\ nack for 1nrumn1 the
wrath of vanous officials and the
•DJCChon of panisa.n poltti into a
non·partisan race.
Appointed County Clerk Gary
Oranv1llc IS runnana on his c1aht·
month record. He is be"'' challeqcd
by 21-)ear department cmploytt
Manhall Noms.
Granv1'1c wa, appointC'd b the
Board of Superv son last September.
about six months afttr an a udit of the
clcrtc-rte0rder's office <kte:mu ned the
department was 1n d111rray.
Supervison dcddcd to teparate the
clerk and recorder'• duties into two
off IOCS. and Oerk·Recordef Lee
Branch reslaned. He "' tbea a~
pointed to the rtcOn:tcr's PQlt.
Newport-Mesa school board
prohibits spanking of students
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. O., ........
The Ncwpon-Mesa Unified School
District board unanimously ap-
proved a new policy Tuesday that
prohibits the use of corporal punish-
ment on students.
Disciplining students by paddling
was previously allowed 1n certain
cases with the permission of the
student's parents But dlstnct uper-
intendent John Nicoll said recent
changes m SU\te law persuaded school
officials to revise the policy.
"In hght of the laws on child abuse.
11 ~med incongruous to have poh-
c1es that allow administrators to
paddle children. even with the per-
mission of parents." Nicoll said.
"We also wanted to avoid any legal
problem that might ansc because of
ll ••
While policies allowing corporaJ
punishment have been in the New-
pon-Mesa schools for several years,
'l1coll said such d1sciphne was
seldom used.
According to the state educatJon
code. the governing bod) of each
school d1stnct 1~ allowed to decide
(Pleue MC 8PAJlfltINO/A2)
Their appeal rejected, firefighters picket
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. ~ ........
About 200 Orange County fire-
fighters and their supporters picketed
outside the county Hall of Adminis-
tration on Tuesday after su~rvisors
refused to hear their ap~al of a new
overtime pohcy they ~)' end:angcrs
Paul
AICHIPLEY
ELECTION '86
On Apnl 8. a report was presented
to supervisors dcta1hng what step
Granville had taken to correct the
problems 1denuficd 1n the earlier
audit The rtpon pra1~ Granv1lk''
IPl,..-eee CL&U 'S / Ai)
....
both fire pcr.,onnel and the public.
"What do ~c want hert 1n Orange
Count).,.. a protest kadtr a ked s1gn-
cart}ingmarchcrs "Career fire-
fighters." they chanted
It was the third tlmt in as many
weeks that fircfi,hters marched below
the supcr>.1sors fifth-floor offices 1n
nta l\na to protc<;t a me.asurc
1ntendt'd to reduce oven1me costs
that v.ould rc<1ult from elltendina
pro" 1s1ons of the Fair Labor tan-
dards .\ct to count) fin:figh1crs
Th1'i 11mc firtfi&hters wert angry becau~ Board of Supervisors Chair-
man Ralph Clark would not permit
Ftrt Ftghtel"\ Loe.al 101 4 President
IPleue eee APPEAL/ A2)
Busing fees to BB school
events said a last resort
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol lMO..,NM.._
Hun11naton Beach hool officials
ha"e put off unul the la t re on a
proposal to charae tuckn1' to nde
huscs to athletic events and other
e'1racumcular prOlf'lms.
"We' rt 101na to fu"e that (the bus chara~l alone until we ma' nttd to
do 1t. .. Bonnie Cutrc). prnldent of
the Huntington Beach lJn10n hool
°''tncl tru\ttt,. 'ltd toda\ ··And
I "
then thcre would be public heanna."
rrusttts put the proposal on the
a1end1 Tucsdav ford1scuss1on and to
find out what the public thinks about
the I~ UC
( harma)ne Bohman. a percnt 1n
Wntmin ter. cla1mcd that a S2S fet
per child Y>ould lead toehusm -that onl~ )'OUnptcn whose famihcs could
afford 11 would pa.ntc1pate 1n the
'
(Pl_.. ... BUSIJllG/ A2)
"" c
U * {)rang. Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, May 21, 1919
CLERK'S RACE STIRRING HOT DEBATE •.•
Prom Al
PfOtttSS..
Att<>rdmg to Chn K.tna of the
County Admm1strat1ve Office. who
PfCpartd the report. the post audit
revealed Granville had made "sign ifi-
cant proares " or had already
launched most of the rhtef adm1n1s·
tr11 ive office's recommendations
"In some areas. the count)' clerk
1mplemrnted !>upcnor methods
be)'ond the recommended course of
action to deal w11h depanment.al
probkms." Kina reponed.
The post audit found morale wa
up among the 274 employees in the
depanment. and eight of I 0 random I)'
selected attorne) s said service had
improved to good or excellent.
vran' 1Ue credits his ability to turn
around the department on expcnencc
he garncrrd in thc free cntcrpnsc
system.
He was a reponer and editor at
local newspapers for I J )'ears after ti more than a decade as a manager and
execuu vein the business comm unit)'
Granville. 57. has also lined up
numerous endorsements. including
count) Supervisors Thomas Rile>.
Ralph Clark and Bruce Nestandc.
state Sen. Marian Bergeson. Orange
Ma yor Jim Beam and several former
Judges.
Although the: po!t1t1on 1s non-
partisan. Norn!> thinks his long-
standing membership 1n thl' Re-
publican Part) will neutrali1c the
1nrumbenc) ofh1s oppom·nt. who is a
Democrat.
Granville said he was asked b)
rount) Republican Part} Chairman
Tom Furntes 10 Join the GOP. but
d1dn 't behe-..e 11 would be proper in an
rlccuon )Car.
··1 felt in good conscience I had w
sta) a Democrat." he said
Noms also argues the C'Ount) has
penalized itself b) conttnuuusly ap-
pointing clerks who are innpen-
enced
He points to his 21 ~cars in the
count) clerk's office. as v.t'll a!t 10
~ears as a count~ sheriffs dcput). as
ideal training for the post
"II takes about sc' en )ears to learn
what }'Ou'rl' doing," Norns said
"Last )Car's audit showed we're in
bad shape Lt·c Branch couldn't
handle ll Most don't knov. what
Gary Gran'rille
wr're doing
.. I feel w11h my background and
cxpenence. I could do a lot better than
anyone."
Gran"1lle said Nornf background
shows why hr should not be elected.
When Noms ran for the same post
1n 1978. he was cated b> the Fair
Poll11cal Practices C'omm1ss1on for
mak1ne false statements in his cam-
paign literature.
Norris also failed to pay more than
$7.000 he owed the county for
publication of his 200-word state-
ment of qualifications.
Following unsuccessful attempts to
collect. the county sued Norn~ 1n
1 ~82. But he tiled bankruptcy in 1983
alter a fire in Anaheim destro)'ed h1~
pouess1ons.
Nevertheless. he said he will pa}
!he count} back.
"He stiffed the county." Granville
said "Here's a guy coming back eight
'ears later and sa) ing. 'Trust me.·
··in 1978. 40 people u11hzed the
campaign statement. and one didn't
pa) ..
Norns. 60. found himself in hot
water again this year when he used a
photo of himself and supporter Gene
.\utl') on campaign literature. as well
as the courtroom phone number
Marab&ll Norrla
where he was work mg.
The picture was taken in Supcnor
Court Judge Frank Domen1ch10i's
courtroom under the state seal. At the
time. Norris was the clerk at a tnal
p1tung Autry's C'alifomia Angels
against the city of Anaheim.
Anaheim attorneys charged the
tnal had been tainted by politics. and
the Executive Committee of the
Orange County Superior Court or-
dered Norris removed from the
courtroom and from direct contact
with the pubhc while on duty.
Norris said the phone number was
pnnted without his knowledge. a
claim Granville questions.
"I have done nothing m my hfe I'm
ashamed or embarrassed about,"
Norris said. "As soon as the election
1s over. win or Jose, I'll be right back in
my courtroom doing the same thing
I've be~n doing for 21 years."
Although Granville's record in the
county clerk's office is much shoner,
he's not afraid to compare them.
"He brought politics into the
courtroom. He failed to pay his bill.
He put the courtroom phone number
on his invitation. He was taken before
the FPPC for lies.
"It's a disgraceful chronolog> of
events." Granville said.
HEROIN OVERDOSE ... SPANKING .•.
From Al
came found during autopsll'S rnn-
11nucs 11s stead) 1nncase Tral·es of
cocaine v.ere found dunng 110
autops1c'i la~t \ear -up from onh
eight 1n l~N
But the tnlrease 1n heroin deaths -
espec1all) alter m sharp decline
earlier this deladc -1<, onr of the
most womsoml' trends ot1inals said
l\arcot1c officers olkrcd st•,eral
t'llplanat1ons tor the upswing 1n
heroin death<> -including the prac-
ti ce of comb1n1ng hrro1n and coca int·
into something kn own on the stn.•ets
as a "speedball ..
Such a mixture reported I) led to the
death ot 1..omed1an John Belushi 1n
I lj8::!
l'iearh a third ol the 71 heroin
dC'aths '1n I ~85 mvolved .. speed-
balhng." a('cord1ng to the coroner's
report.
E'en 1n Ne w port Beach. where the
use of hero1 n is far overshadowed b)
cocaine use. police have detected an
tncrease 1n "speedbalhng." Sgt. Tim
Rile) said
"1arcot1cs officers also suggested
the increase in heroin deaths may be
attnburable to a popular and more
pure form of herotn known as "black
tar "
From Al
what Its policy Wlll be concerning
corporal punishment.
If 1t is allowed. however, such
punishment must only be adminis-
tered when It 1s deemed reasonable
and appropnate. says Lupe Green.
coordinator of student services for
the Orange County Department of
Education.
The Newport-Mesa school distnct
is not alone in prohib1tm3 the use of
corporal punishment. Along the Or-
ange Coast the Irvine Unified.
Saddleback Valley Unified. Hunt-
ington Beach City and Huntington
Beach Union Hi$h school districts
also ban the practice.
BUSING FEES TABLED BY TRUSTEES .•.
From Al
"II )OU con11nue to hat·k awa).
v. here do go next''" Bohman asked.
"Would \OU ('hargl' a fee for using a
microscope in J laboratol') '1" she
askrd.
John Mason h.rnll director at
Westminster High \J1d 1he lee~
would be unfair to mt•mhcr~ of the
band and dnll tea m\ who~ families.
he said. alread) pJ\ at>out S f25 for
band shoes. band Jadt't'> student
bod} cards. unilnrm dc~mng hill\
and insurance lO\l'I
Da'c \ran Honrhel..c athlClll d1-
rNtor at Huntington H 1~h claimed
that transporat1on fees may be un-
co nst1tut1onal "If they don't pay,
the> don't part1c1patc And part1c1-
pa11on fees aren't legal." he said.
The e"<tracumcular fees would
raise about $20.000 at carh of the s1'
d1s1nct high schools
"We .... anted to sunshine 11 and get
input." Trustee Bnan Lake said. "It
ma} be something down the road. but
we're not ready to take action ." Lake
added he would vote for the fees onl)'
1f the} could !>ave cnt1cal programs
tor all studt'nts trom the budget ax
In other action trustcss continued
to dole out lottery money to school
programs. They previously com-
mitted $850,000 to reducing class
sizes in English classes and put
$350.000 in a special reserve fund.
Tuesday night they spent another
SJ00.000 for updating the data pro-
cessing system, for computers to keep
better track of textbooks and for
moving portable classrooms to Ocean
View High School, the only over-
crowded school in the djstrict.
D1stnct officials said they expect to
get about $2 million in state lottery
funds for the current school year
SENIORS APPRECIATE SEX ADVICE ...
From Al
t1ons on ho"' tu "l'ru1n11. latl·-ll k
phH1cal l hangl·~ thJt mal..c Im l'·
making more d11lkult
When a spou\c or partner v.11h
"'hom someone v.a' '>l'"<ualh act1vl'
dies. the (rerman-horn therapist said
the sun l\Or should not lcel ashamed
or embarra'Ssed about ma'Sturbattng
In old age. she ..aid "thinking about
'>C\ doesn't v.orl.. "'C: nct·d ph\'\1cal
s11mulat1on
.. a"ng that ol der J)l'oplc l3n't
learn nrv. lmk~ l\n't true." 1he 57-
\Car-old <>aid "\\.l• JU \l m1gh1 haw to
feave certain po~1t111no; tu 1hc younger
gt'nerat1on ..
She 8'1' t• St'' t•ral \uggcst1ons to help
mal..c Sl'\ more enJO\.ablc for older
couples "\c\ual ac II\ It) ought to be
chc1ngt•d to lhl· morning Womrn
ha' t• hccn ra1\Cd to he lie' e that the
~tar'> ha' e to be 1v.1nklingand 1t has to
he dark \\ell. clml' the: curtains You
~hould get up 1n thc: morning. "'a'Sh
up brush 'our teeth ha'e a httk
breakfa\t and gci ha(~ to bed.'' shl'
\aid
The cro.,.,d rocHCd II'> c1ppro,al
he lieldl·d '>C' era I anonvmous
question' Imm the aud1cnct' 1°nclud·
1n1t onl' Imm .t 1 ~ \Car-old v.oman
MAIN OFFICE
l:ki .,.,, ·al, · • "'""' • ¥1 •0~1•\\ F • "~ ~·• ti,t:•u & ")<£:~
v. ho asl..ed v. hat to do about her
.. , ounger· 74-\car-old husband who
had "Sc\ on hie; mind most of the
time ..
"\\ell, 1f he ha~ SC'< on his mtnd
most of the time than }OU are a 'Cl)
tonunate v.oman," Westhe1mer said
More than once she 1old the older
set to ne'er stop touching and
carc'>s1ng each other
\\.csthe1mer said that on a re('ent
tnp 10 China she noticed a park filled
with older men doing their exercises
earl) 1n the morning. "I thought.
ma\be the men leave their wives
home to rest and ma ybe theent1rec1ty
1s going back to bed after exemses."
she said. "Ma>hc there should be a
<~1mllar) rcsolu11on b)' thr AARP."
The therapist did not apotogm: for
her ma1gh1-forward language. ln-
'itcad. ~hr explained to the crowd that
no.,., "'3'i thc lime to talk openly about
'i('\
.. -\II of us here comr from back-
grounds where V1ctonan. Puntan
mother\ (werr dominant). I sprak
C\phr1tl) because the time has come
10 5peak rxphc1tl>.'' ~he told 1he
a11ent1 \'C crowd
Her frankness with her radio and
telev1s1on audiences exposes her to
some strong cnt1c1sm. she admmed.
but she said when she receives a caller
who lambastes her. she tells them,
"Tm not a missionary. plca~e move
~our dial."
Shr told the crowd that abortion
must remain lrgal "Before July I,
1970. only women with money had
abortions. Others had to resort to coat
hangers ... We must never go back to
thi: dark ages we have JUSt emerged
from ," she said to thundenng ap-
plause
I ns1sting that she 1s "trad1t1onal,
old-fashioned and square." she said
although she 1s against teen-aJe~
engaging in sex. she knows It 1s a
reality and supports sex education 1n
high schools. "I wish we didn't havr
to gl\e 1t. However. I know we have
I 5 m1ll1on unw11nted pregnancies
each }Car." she sa19.
Reprt'scntat1 ves from AARP or-
gan1zat1ons acros'i the country camt'
to tht' four-day convention. which
features speakers and cxh1b11 booths
from rxpresso vendors to pharma-
ceu11cal ~lesmen
Dally Piiot
Dellwery
It GuarantMd
C IM•l90 Ill< ~•? ~ne ~,,.~-,\ • .,.,,,.I 84? '1~ • Justcall 642-6086
Mr>f'/Uy ! "1:!11 11 '°' 1"' '\Cl ,,.,. 11)o,11 i:>IM' Dy
~ lO o ,.. u • 1>1!0<• l o ...
1"0 tOVI CCCy " Ce
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.,..,,,,..,.,, T ... CW"'CCI OU'C"Y'"'fJPI " ,., HOWi'\' a.,,,.,.., • 0 11 • ''~0 ••• ""~ 1 •y• • 9i~>fl
VOL. 71, NO. 148
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~
Hot. tunny WMlhtr wlH contl~ through 1'.hurldsy In
Southetn Ctltfomla. except for night e.nd morning IOw clouds
and fog •long tht oout.
The hlgh-P,....,,r• ayst.m that haa bMfl kMP!ng atclel ci..
alto waa UP9Cted to M1 gusty wtndt btowtng ecrosa tM d...,-ta
In the 1ft9m00n1 end h9n ngs. eccordlng to th9 Natlontl
WMtl'Mlr s.rvie.. T..-nP«ttur .. wttt rMCh th9 IJPf)4W 60I to
mlcs-70. et th9 betehea Thunday end tht mld·80• to mld-901
Inland.
APPEAL OF OVERTIME POLICY .•.
From Al
Lary Simcoe to address the board at
Tuesday's mectinJ-Clark said it as
a$3inst county policy for the board to
discuss labor disagreements Wlth the
pan1es concerned.
Simcoe must air his gnpes with a
Personnel Department representa-
11 ve who will relay them to the board
pnvately. Clark said. "Your address
to the board is out of order," he said.
Personnel and union negotiators
have tried since September to agree
on a new overtime policy that
satisfies the Fair Labor Standards Act
and keeps county costs down.
A 1985 coun ruling extends the act
to public agencies as of April J 5 and
governs overtime pay.
Ovenime hours have h1Stoncally
been offered to full-time county
firefighters at straight-tame i;>ay. The
act makes that arrangement illegal.
During negotiauons. the county
proposed using part-time firefighters
to fill shifts that otherwise would
reqwrc overtime payments.
Union offietals are against the idea.
They say pan-timers wilJ be largely
untrained and could pose a danger 10 ·
firefighters and the public.
The county declared an impasse in
negotiations early this month and a
state mediator was called in May I 4 to
no avail.
0
e
e
Two days later. Fire Chief Larry
Holms circulated an open letter t
firefighters telling them the overtim
poliry would be implemented despit
thr protests of their union local.
Although they may wnte letters to
board members or speak to them
pnvately. union offic1als may not,
undrr any circumstances, speak to
supervisors in public session, Count
Counsel Adrian Kuyper said.
y
e .. Such a public appeal is "outside th
framework that has been established
for orderly labor negotiations •
Kuyper said.
YEAR OF WAITING AN ORDEAL FOR SON ..•
From Al
several tames to the White House -
including a mccung with Prcsjdent
Ronald Reagan. They've endured
'1oaxes and reports that the hostages
would soon be freed. reports the
Amencans had been shot dead.
They've been suests-of-honor at
reverent ceremonies. during which a
yellow flag was hoisted over Hunt-
ington Beach City Hall. and yellow
streamers were tied to newly planted
trees in a Westminster park. All
awaitin~ the return of the captives.
They ve suffered through the re-
cent slaying of American hostaJe
Peter Kilburn, shot by terrorists tn
apparent retaliation for the U.S.
bombing of Libya. They and other
families of the hostages have received
anonymous threats for their so-called
"unpatriotic" cnticism of the Amen-
can attack on the forces of Libya's
Mbammar Gadhafi.
"It just shows the Middle East
doesn't have a monopoly on ter-
ronsm." said the younger Jacobsen.
The ycar-loni ride for a time left
E.nc Jacobsen himself a prisoner. not
to Moslem kidnappers but to his own
o'\C11lattng emotions -the hope, fear.
JOY and d1sappo1ntment that raised
and then dashed his spirits.
Now he 1s numb. So numb, that
rumors Tuesday of the execution of
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moveable custom
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AT FACTORY
DIRECT PRICES! Call
(71 4) 548-9841
548-171"7
the American hostages. plus four
Frenchmen and one Bnton. lcf\
Jacobsen unfazed. Police in Beirut arc
characterizing the report, received by
an anonymous caller, as just another
hoax.
"The buffers have all worn away.
l'm tired. I'm emotionally raw and I
don't have the energy to go up and
down anymore," Jacobsen said. He
explained the last straw came during
the confusion in April over whether
the body of a slain hostage was that of
American Peter K.Jlbum or Bntish
wntcr Alec Collett. The corpse was
ultimately identified as K.Jlbum, an
American University of Beirut h·
brarian.
''They sajd 1t was Collett. They
confirmed it was Collett. The next
day I woke up and 11 was Peter
Kilburn. I expected them next to tell
me it was my father," Jacobsen said.
"That just shoved me off the roller
coaster track. I don't think I can do 1t
anymore."
That fatigut', he said, has lulled the
families ofall the Ammcans still held
capti ve by the Islamic Jihad, a
shadowy group of Shute Moslems
Wlth ties to Iran. The captors are
demanding the relrase of 17 terronsts
convicted of bombing U.S. and
French embassies in Kuwait.
0
e
t
• .
Jacobsen said he is hoping t
reboost the fam1hes' spirit Wlth th
scheduled release June 4 ofh1s record.
"When the Word Comes." In ye
another chmb on the roller coaster
the hostage ordeal afforded Jacobsen
an amatrur musician, a "break" into
the music world.
e
r
Jacobsen sings the SOOJ. which h
and his brother wrote. It is produced
by pop music veteran Michact Lloyd
and fu nded by recording company
executive Mike Curb. a forme
hrutcnant governor who is again
campaigning fo r the state office.
Jacobsen said that he does not plan
a musical career, but only wants to
keep the plight of his father and the
other hostages in the publk eye.
After that. Jacobsen is hesitant to
guess what be or relatives of the othe
captives will do to stir the sentiments
of a country that he says bas forgotten
r
its brethen.
t
t
He likens the situation to the
families fighting roughly two decades
to convince the government tha
somr soldiers captured or miss.ing in
action during the Vietnam War are
still alive and imprisoned in tha
. country.
"Are we families going to be in the
same boat 20 years down the line:
Jacobsen complained.
Designed • Finished • Installed
Established 1953
1977 Placentia
Costa Mesa .,.
. .
I
Signups set for
LB kids' classes
The Laauna Beach Recreation Department will
bt&in summer rqistration for a vanety or youn&
people's classes Monday. Oas~s include creative drama for luds. flne
arts for k1ds (new this summer for fees 4 and S) arcat
art c!'counters (or founh tbrou sixth graders. C~t1ve StOrylelhn&,fo~ IJ"ldCS kin erprten thtO\Jih
tb1rd.arades, ~by smma for kids 11 and older and
creative cerem1c1.
Pre·rcaistration is necessary for all the classes.
ContacttheRccreauon Dcpartmentat497-331 l ext.
201 for a brochure.
School meettna tonight
A meeting for Irvine parents whose children
will attend the new Northwood IV Elementary
School wilJ be held at 7 p.m. today at Nonhwood
Elementary School, 28 Carson St. The Nonhwood
IV principal will be introduced. architectural plans
for the school will be unveiled and the process of
naming the school will be discussed. Northwood IV
will be built at Westwood and Adams for openmg in
September 1987. Students and teachers for that
school will begm classes this September at Wood-
bridge Instant School, 31 West Yale Loop. CaU the
Irvine Unified School District at 651-0444 for
details.
PC users to meet at OCC
The Orange Coast IBM PC User Group will
meet Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon in Room 214 of
the Chemistry Building at Orange Coast College in
Co.sta Mesa. The featured topic will be a presen-
tation ofJBM's new computer and optical discs. Call
966-5250 or 850-0474 for details.
Home Sernces to move
The Adult Home Services Unit of the Orange
County Social Services Agency Wlll move from
Westminster to 1801 N. College Ave. in Santa Ana
Monday. A family maintenance and reunification
service will occupy the 14120 Beach Boulevard
address. Funhcr information on the rclocauons 1s
available from Ed Murphy at 834-6233.
Obeslty semlnar slated
Dr. Frank R. Toppo will speak on the medical
aspects of obesity at a seminar beginning at 7 p.m.
Thursday in the headquaners of the Comprehensive
Care Corp., 18551 Von Kam1an Ave .• Irvine. The
seminar IS being offered free of charge by c~reFast, a
supplemented fasting program for people with
severe weight problems.
Toughloveratneannounced
The Parents in Action Using Toughlove group
will hold a fund-raising raffle Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Westmont Elementary School, 8251 Heil Ave.,
Westmmster. Prizes include a videocassette re·
corder, a television set. a stereo and 25 lotterv
tickets. Call 963-3007 for further informauon. ·
Dyslma screel}lng set
The Newport Community School will offer
screening for dyslexia to elementary school students
between 9 and 12 a.m. June 7. The cost 1s $50 and
reservations should be made this week by calling the
school at 644-7890.
Yout.IJjob seminar slated
A seminar geared to helping young people find
after-school and summer employment will be held
Monday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the Hcntage Park
Youth Services Center, 460 I Yale Ave .. I rvme. The
program 1s open to both parents and teens and
information is available at 559-0464.
An Invitation:
Attention Ofganlzatlon prMldents and MC·
retarlee: W• went to help m9k• your upcoming eventa, m•llnge . ..,,,Inert end tundralMrl IUC·
oeeetul. s.nd brief ennouneementa tncludlng time,
piece, coet (If any) and • phone number '°' addltlOnal lnfonnetlOn to· Bulletin Bolird. Dally
Piiot. P.O. Bolt tseo. Coet• M.-a. 92821.
Report• of your ciub or 0tganlutlon'1 ectlvttlee
-Ilka community Mtvtca protect• or atac110n of omoer. -lhOuld be dtracted to the ~
N9w9 EdltOt et the aema addr ... Non.-f'etU<nat>ta
btectl end whtt• photogtepha .,.. wak:ome
Wednesday,May28
No meetlD11 scheduled
Two-term limit,
mayor selection
on-Irvine ballot
Heading for high ground
Matthew Glbeon, 5, run• for hlgb gl'01llld while hl• father, Terry,
pick• up hi• brother, Julian, to eacape the incoming aurf a t Corona
del Mar Beach recently.
By PHIL SNElDERMAN
Oltlle ..............
The race for two Ctty Council seats hH
drawn most of the ancnt1on in lrvine·s
June 3 election. but the city's voteN also
will decide two ballot qucsuons concern-
ing a hm1t on council terms and the direct
clccuon of an Irvine mayor.
• Measure A asks. ··shall the C'haner of
the cuy of Irvine be amended to hm1t the
term of council members to two con-
secutive terms?"
There 1s no hmll on the number offour·
year terms an Irvine council member can
serve now.
If Measure A 1s approved. a cou ncil
member wo!Ud be restncted to two
consecutive terms. After that. an incum-
bent would have to wait at least two )'cars
before running again.
If Measure A were to pass. current
council members would be considered to
have served one term and could run for
another four-year term.
The measure also addresses council
members elected or appointed to a pan1al
term. If such a person serves more than
two years. he or she would be considered to
have served one of the two consecutive
terms permitted.
The ballot a11umcnt 1n favor of the two-
tcnn limit was signed by the current
mayor, David Baker. and b)' two can-
didates, Thomas M. Jones and Hal
Maloney.
The three claim adoption of Measure A
will:
•Limit the power of incumbent poh-
ucans and thus prevent "machine politics
in Irvine."
•M1nim12e the threat that special
interests could gain control of the council.
•Provide wider local representation b)'
encouraging new candidates.
In her ballot argument against Measure
A, Irvine resident Carol Simon calls It
"foolish." She says 1t will not have any
effect until 1990 or 1992 at the earhe~t.
Simon said the measure 1s "poorly
drafted and will probably be held un-
Supervisoiial candidate Roth says
Beam taking undue credit on toxics
By LISA MAHONEY
Ofllle O...,l'llet l t.n
Fourth D1stnct superv1~onal candidate
Don Roth says one of his poht1cal
opponents 1s taking credit '-'here nu credit
1s due for his role in de' eloping Oranae
County's first tO"<IC d1sclo~ure ordinance.
Roth, who 1s mayor of Anaheim said he
has filed an unfair campaign practice!.
complaint a1U1mst Orange Ma)or Jim
Beam for a statement in a pohttcal mailer
that credits his clly with adopting the first
municipal toxic chemical disclosure ordi-
nance in the co unty
Labchng Orange Mayor Beam "desper-
ate" as the campaign for rctinng Super-
' 1sor Ralph Clark's scat moves toward a
primaf') vote, Roth told rcponcrs Tuesday
that Irvine actu~lly premiered an ordi-
nance requmng businesses 10 list hazard-
ous chemicals they keep on site in 1983.
A.nd he provided a copy of the Orange
ordinance bcanng an adoption date of
September 1985.
"It's unfonunate that Jim Beam no·w 1s
II") ing to pohllCIZC the toxics issue With
cheap campaign rhetonc:· Roth said.
Beam's mailer says that while under his
leadership Orange "adopted the first toxic
chemical disclosure ordinance for an) cit~
1n Orange County.
New Daily Pilot columnist takes
humorous look at being over 59
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of tlle Deilr ,... .....
.. Age 1s like a country. It's a nice place: to
v1s1t. but nobod)' wants to hve there."
So sa)s Nanq Mcintyre an the introduc-
tion to her week I> column on aging -"59
and Holding" -which makes 11s debut
Saturda) 1n the Daily Pilot
If age is indeed I 1 kc a count(). Mel ntyre
promises to be an irreverent 1our guide as
she points out the unique charactenst1cs
and mystenes of e'erything from autum-
nal daung and memory lapses to face hfts
and retirement
.-Mcintyre treats aging with a sense of
humor. ~h1ch she' believes 1s essential in
fighting the foibles and f ru~trat1on!i ol
growing older
"If you don't have a sense of humor at
this age. you're sunk," she says.
Mcintyre -who calls herself"thc only
woman in Amenca who admits to 59" -
knows from cxpenence the trauma of
waking up with a chin that wasn't there the
night before.
Her column. she says, proves the best
way to grow old 1s to fight back. "even 1f
your feet are lulling you."
Mcintyre has hved in Laguna Niguel for
26 )'ears. She as the author of sax cookbooks
and a humor book. ··wild Animals at
Home ... She regularly contnbutes an1cles
to magazines and newspapers and her·· 59
and Holding" column appears m nine
newspapers.
"[was think mg about wnunga book and
decided to wnte about something that I
know best." says · Mcintyre about the
column she staned 21/2 years ago.
"What I've learn~ is that turning old
doesn't change you. It docsn 't make you
different. It JUSt makes you more the way
you already arc," she says ... If you're
cranky. you'll be crankier. If you·rc an
opt1m1st, you'll hang in there:·
"Laughter 1s a very good exercise.
espec1ally 1f you don't jog.·· she said "I
think people need a little humor with 1hcir
bran flakes ··
Mclntyrc·s column will appear every
Saturday on Page A3 of the Dally Pilot
along with canoons contnbuted by 8111
Mcintyre. Nanc)'s husband. who was
formerl y the canoon editor of True and
Esquire magazines.
consutuuonal."
She also s.a1d 1t .. agnorn the tnC'd-a nd-
tested method for votcl'1 to deal with
incumbent C'11y· Council membtr: rt-cl«t
tho~ who ha vt-worked hard and t-amcd
rc-clcct1on and throw out th<>S( who havt'n·t ...
Mcasurt B asks ... Shall the ordinance
d1rcct1ng the adopuon of a pr0«dure for
the direct tlccuon of mayor bf adopted?"
In 1nc's ma)or\s choSt'n annuall) b) t~
Cit) Council from among its five mem-
bers. Meuure 8 would have \Olersch<>OK
their ma)Or directl) on or befort the
mun1c1pal elccllons 1n 1988.
The council would be required to adopt
the procedurt' as an ordinance or pla~ 1t
on the ballot fo r the' oters to consider. The
manner 1n -.h1ch the ma,or would be
selected 1s not specified. ·
The argument 1n favor of Measure 8 was
wntten b) Councilmen Ra~ Catalano and
Larr) Agran. ( "-gran t'i S('eking rt-t>lect1on
June 3,)
The argument~) s ... It t'i undemocratic
to prevent In ine ,·oters from dir«tl~
electing their ma yor .. The ma)or 1s our
spokesperson and our chief negotiator in
comple" dealing'> with neighboring c1t1es.
with 1he count) and even with our state
and national go,ernments
.. Plainl). the elec11on of lnine·s ma) or
1s too 1mponan1 10 be left to fi,e C'll)
Council membt'r'i to decide amid the
whcehng-and-deahng of backroom poll·
llCS ••
The ballot argumcnt agatn'it Measure 8
was wntten b' ( ounctl'-'Oman Sall) Anne
M 1ller he saH that under this proposal.
"A ma) or could be elected '-'Ith no council
experience and. more 1mportantl).
without the consensus and confidence of
the other four council members:·
Sht adds. "D1rtct election 1mphes
g1,1ng greater po..,er to the ma) Or. Toda).
Cit) dec1S1ons are based on the equal votes
of five people. It ..,ould be assumC'd a
directly elected ma)'or could act alone for
the cit) If as the proponents state. there
would be no difference in the mayor's
pawers or rcspons1b1ht1es. why chansc-r·
Gavin plans bid on
Spanish TV station•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -John Gavin.
depan1ng U.S. ambassador to Mexico.
said he has Joined an investor group that
plans to bid on KMEX-TV and other
major Spanish-language stauons in the
Unned States.
In a separate development Tuesday.
Ga\ 1n was named vice president of
A1lanuc Richfield Co.'s new unit on
federal and mt.cmataonal commun1ca-
llons He will repon directly to Arco
Chairman Lodwnck Cook. a longume
fnend. said company spokesman Al
Grccn'ill'in
Nancy Mcintyre
S. Lagunan fined $3,400
ill toxic dumping incident
. . .
Clothing\ alued at S ~ S ~ "',1, '1nlrn Imm
a communtt\ laund1' room 1n th1· l)(Ul Ptll\\\OOd . .
Th1t"'C~ pried oixn a 1Jnor 1n thl' \(MIO
blocl. or (kt-anus and \lnlc s I 110 '" l a1h
and SR~S in tools
\bout S 1 0110 "'onh nf d('\lgncr drc\\t"\ "'"re \tolcn in a lommerd.ll tiurglal' at
D "' \1acDonatd·\ on \ 1d l 1do • • • \' andals 1.lashcd the lire\ on at ar parl.e11
at \1on1cro .\'rnu(' and Ba' \1m:t The
""' ncr reJl(lnt"d SI~~ damage
CoetaMeu
.\\C'nuc anJ \an lirum• 'itrl"Ct One re\ldt"nt reJl(lnrd 1ha1 a hurglar broke a
"'tnd "''"@. II• entrr his bla\'k IQ84 \. .ill.s~.1gcn Ro1hti11 thC'n fled w11h s1rreo t•qu1pmcn1 and .i lron1 t'nd co,er. all
'alued at S~w "nother rrs1dcn1 rtponcd
1h.i1 J "'ind "'"'ll .... , tirolrn and stereo NU1pmcn1 "'"nh \.a~o ,.u stolen from his
red : "I<~ T t1\l•ta p1d,up true.. A. third
rt\1den1 YtJ burlgarHul .i holl' 1n lhr rear pla\1 1• "-lndov. or his l~KO .\lfa RomC'O tiut apriarent h llrJ brlorc rcmo' 1ng the
\lt'IC'11
By &k Ataodated Preti
One of two brothers charaed Wllh
dumping hazardous chemicals along
the Ortega Highway earlier this year
pleaded no contest Tuesday to illepl-
ly transponina the waste in an
unrcrtified vehicle.
Richard Leavitt, 37, of South
Laauna. was fined $3.400 and or-
dered to make restitution of SI 5,000
for the cleanup as he entered his pica
in South Oranae Municipal Coun.
Leavitt entered the plea to the
misdemeanor charae durina the first
' IA(una Beach
Police responded Tuesday momma to
ttpons of a vehicle sp1lhn1 chcm1c:als on
Stach Street The officer respond ma to the
tttnc. ho~ver, wu unable to toe.tcd an )'
spill . ~ . Alt-<\Ila LA&ul\a ooulcvard home *H buf'l)antcd 1 u~)' with a lou «II mated
at fJ0.000. 1he V1ct1m told pohcc. In a
sei:-rate 1nodcnt, a Rqatta Dnvc ~11dcnt
rrpontd a bur&Jary Tuesday Wlth a lou
estimated at $6,000 • • • About SSOOworth ofclcith•n& wa\ Stolen
from a car parked Tuc"1ay mom1na on
Clenneyre Strttt. the vici1m lOld poh~
lrri.De
The 1terco from 1 Volkswqrn GTI
i:-rted on the 000 block of Walnut was
stolen Tunday ••• A black Mumv btach<'nitvr wa\ 1tnlrn
day of bis preliminary hcanng. which
was called to determine 1f there was
enough evidence for tnal. said Dcpu·
ty District Attorney Diane Kadlcl2.
The SI 5,000 in rcslltution will be
divided among vanous agencies that
performed the cleanup, Kadletz said
Leavitt will remain on probation
until the fines are paid, she said
A hearing for Leavitt'~ brothrr
Philip Earle Leavitt, 39. of KeM·
ington in Nonhern Cahfom1a. wai.
continued until July 22.
Richard Leavitt was arrested in
from thr 14300 bloc~ of C ulvcr Dm r
Tuesday
A chrome BMX.b1~y~le "'a' ~tolrn frum
a home on tht 4600 blocl. or ~alnut
A venue T uc5da)' • • • A ea~h boit eont.a1n1n1 S 180 ""'" \tnlrn from a hu11ncu on thC' 2000 hln<>k of
8u\1nc~s Center Dnvt • • • 4 stereo was stolen rrom a I ~KO
Volkswq('n bua parked on the 200 bloc~
of8er\de)'
A 3 caliber rtv.ol~e; wa\ 'toltn from .l
t 98S BMW pa.lted on tht I 41100 bluc:k of
Jefftt)' Rotd • • • .\bout $4SO in CT\llnC' pon, ~erc \tolen
from 1 cranr periccd 11 the HOO 1:11." .. nl
fn me Center l'>rne
Hunttncton Beac b
Resident• found that thr fOl'q't dnor
failed tn noc-n whrn thn rrtum~l In theu
Januaf} afier authonues linked ham
to a rental truck seen near one of the
illegal dumps1tes on the rural h1gh-
wa) that links Orange and Riverside
counties
The brother wa" arrested 1n Febru-
ary aOer he was 1mphcated b)'
Richard Lcavm
A l 4-m1le stretch of the highway
was closed 1w1ce in January while
hazardous matenals teams removed
the chemicals. some of which were so
volatile they were destroyed wtth
cllplo51vcs at the scene
home 1n thC' 9000 blocl of \\ oodcrcst
When the\ enter«! the) d1"'0\ crcd 1ha1 ~meunr f111d ranSlldml 1hc1r home and
'h\lc .a $4 ~O ~ 1deo ca,&ellc l"t'\'.order and a S HO \ltrt'O :af\er ac111n11n 1hrouah a rear
\ltd1ng gla\\ dom • • • f1W1l men "-err arTttted after \ttahn~
lour hctttlc\ of "'1ne 11 Bcat"h Liquor IQ.,,I Bcalh Rhd • • • ~ rc\1den1 1n 1ht •OOO Mnck ot "'c> \ll1d
\OmtMt' \I nit four \quart 'ard\ ol bt11c
t:at'l)(11n1 'alutd at SI 0 ff nm ' p11 l up
'""' k '" • ~rk1nt IOI • • • rh1C'\C"\ \tole I Sl.Of~ wft bro"-n conven1hlc lop ~alued it S2 000 from a
11~'7\ Mtn-C'dC\ Renz wh1k paT\.cd on a
\lrttl II lht ~11 h
• • •
8Ufl)lt'\ \\Ok I $22~ rfiJ l)u1mond~ I.
h1~de and 1 SlOO hlad \ch\lo10n hike 10C'1
lort1n1 opt'n a prBJr tfom in the ~ooo
hlc"K k of Ha vcnrtl<'k
Newport Beach
"pa1rofflags \llut'd at S I Ill '"Crl \lolrn from a rc\1dcnu 1n the l~OO hh>e.k 111
O<can Roulr' ard . . .
.\ rctnac.-ratllr "-'1lh tuod 111 11 .. .i' ''ulrn
trom a la"' office loc.utd 1n the Noll bhx~ or Wrs1erh Pl act It wa~ "-llrlh St. \4 ...
A. tlllt' bag "-Ith bt"ach jt".tr v..s\ rl'ponC'd
\!Olen from tht 1100 hl<x k 111 \\ t\I Ocran Front Tht ov.nrr u1d the 11t•m, v.err
v.onh St42
Two men seized
on rape charges
'\N B RN •\RDI 0 (AP) -" ra~ '1ct1m run rcam1na from a
trud. -. herl' ~he h.id b«n held for I \
hours. promptina a "has.e throua.h
dov.nto"'n \trect\ that lead to the
arre\l of l"'O men puhu· 'iatd
One man v.os haulcd from h1d1n
bentalh I parkt'd C<H while the Other
wa lrrtstt'd afler the \ 1ct1m pointl'd
him out to officer\ offic1al'i \aid
Mtchafl nden. ~fl and Mich el
Bunon. 27. both from Ne-. JeN\'
were hcinf. held toda)' m connection
v.1th the ohduC'llon v. hu:h the I q
)car-old v.om n said hf<a,an at '\O
pm Monda' in Wc\t llolh..,ood
C.1lass rack\ 'alurd .lt S 700 "'ere unholtcd and \tolen from a tnid. .it
.\mencan Balboa vlus < o I l't ~I Plact"n
11a .\' c \'l(twttn Fnda\ and \1ond•n . . ' .\swned lood 1ttms 1nclud1ng llt
ncam. cookie~ and bumto~ \lot'rt rt ponrd s1oltn from 1ht tafttt"na at Da' 1s
SI: hoot I 050 A.rhngtvn. ~l"-etn f rtda\
and Tucsda' Thr los\ \I.I' ts11m11cd 11
SI 00 Ent!'\ "'a' made 1hrough an Op(n
"-lndO"-• . . >\n 111tmp1rd tiurglan "'a' rcponcd J
1ht Radio Shat k at t Sn\ -..ic .... pon Bl' d 11
4 30 am !\fonda' Pn marl.s "-m.· tound on lht front do<•r Jftc.'r tht tluralar alarm
..... \ ac11' atcd
Fountain Valley
Th rtt \Chicle btt'ak-10\ v.err repm1ed
earl> T ue~a\ 1n c1rpon' ;H the f);ar ..
Pac1fk aoanment com pit\ u Hat 1rnd.i
. . . " rr\IJen 1 of 1hc 111 11 M1 hloc ~ of "\l
"'<'"'.l < oun r('poned Tue~a' 1ha1 v.h1Tc \hr "'a' ou1 -.ail ing hrr dllg th1c'e' cntemJ hN nJ'IC'n prap.r and \IOlt a b1C)'cle
and a .amrr~ The In""'"' e~11ma1cd 11 ~4!6 . . .
\ l~ l.)u1111.r'H11h 'tudcnt "'ho h'c\ on th(' 1111•) hlill ~ nt rh,)l 1n1h ( ode reponed
T Ut'~J\ 1h11 r11ur burJlar' "'ere broking 1n10 her \rh1d(' v.hen \ht .ha\C'd 1hem
av.a' Thr hurala" llcd "-llh \lerco cqu1pmrn1 "'nnh \~4() • • • .\ rt\ldt"nt of tht' IM~ Wl Mo' k nl l .a\o;cn
r(poncd \.fond&\ 1ha1 "'hilt hr v.a\ awl)'
1111 \ 11\ illll"ln bU~U\ pntd upcn I \hd1na door .it ht\ holmr and stok a ,·nlor
•~le' 1'1on '<I min\ and mcn·Hl'lun' Th(
l'l(lnn11nJ' "'~re 'alut'd at '212 and 1he damaar In the door "-ilS t~11ma1ed 11 S SOO
Officer's hearing postponed
.\ ~cwport Beach police c3pta1n
a((uc,rd of shophf\1ng a pair of blue
jean~ WI' vantC'd I J)tl,lponement
1 ue\da' at a ncanna dunn~ \\ h1ch he
'-'aS to enter a plea to tht m1'4.k·
meanor charge
Capt Richard Hamilton 44 wac,
or dtttd to ret\lm Junr 'to \.1untl •P: I
( oun 1n Santa .\na for arraignment
Hamilton wa' arr"teJ March 211
atler he alle&C'dh tur.,t•\j ~ rolled-ur
pair of dcc,1ancr Jean' tn h" "ec,t and
"al.,cd nut of lh<" Pncc ( lub 1n 'ianta
.\na
Th<" 'ctt'rnn police captain ha
1nd1t<&tC'd he wa~ undef101n1 tremen·
dou!> o,tre 'l at 1he tame of the all~
tn\.1den1 and hkent>d 11 to ··walk1n&
around tn a foa,"
Hamilton at tint oOertd his m11·
nation hut Withdrew 1t afler V\'cral
J:hs of c-ons1dt'rat1on He hi\ not said
-.i.hethC'r he would return to dut) 1fl
~ m c:'aluat1on clca~ the wa)'
Shultz raps Africa policies
WASHINGTON(AP)-cretary
of tate George Shult1 says unw1~
poht'1es by .\fm·an go vernments and
We tern donor countncs are ron·
tributing 10 lhl' economic cn~1s 1ha1
affi1c1s mul'h of the rnntincnl
min1stt'rS meeting.
Arabs courting Soviet support
In a speech prepart'd for dt'll \l~r)
toda) 10 the U N Gcncral .\s~mbl>.
C\hult1 said the United tales and
other donor countries ha.,.e lt'arned
that wcll-1n1cn11oncd programs can
.. product' dcpcndcnq ralhcr than
~lf-suffic1cnC). l'Conom K stagnauon
rather than self-sustaining growth ..
At the ~mr 11mc. he \aid. <\fr1can
countnes must abandon policies that
ha'e "s110ed 1nno,a11on and led the
na11ons of the con11n~·n1 into their
prestnt d1fficuh11:s "
The 1c'1 of Shuhi'' remark:. was
rdcascd Tucsda) night h~ the ~tall'
Dcpanmc.:nt o\fa•r dcltvenng the
~pcclh Shult1 v.c11; Ill 11) to Hahfa\
"''"a \cut1a IC.tr a "'~TO foreign
fhe occasion for the speech was a
special General Assembly sen1on on
Afnca·s «onomu: cns1s. The sc s1on
is aimed at finding practical soluuon
rn tong-term development on the
lOnt1nent
Shuhi recommended that donnr
wuntnes design ass1stan~ program~
that increase sctf-reltance and d1~
courage dependency.
He also said trade and investment
opponun111es for African nations
must rt'main open and that bi lateral
aid mu<;t be supplemented by as-
sistance from 1nternat1onal ans111u-
11ons such as the World Bank and the
lntc:rnauonal Mont'tar) Fund
.\t Tucsda) 's opening session. Sen·
egale'>t' President Abdou D1our. rep-
rest-nt1ng the Organ1ta11on of African
Lln1l) asked andui;tnaltzed nat1onc;
for al least S80 h1lhon in aid and dcht
rclte-f for the conlln('nt
Gromy ko m eets Syria n, Li byan offic ials
--to coordina te criticis m of U.S .. Israel
MO COW (AP) -~' 1el Pres1-
dc:n1 .\ndre1 A. (,ro m}ko met wtth
the Synan vice president today in
what Western diplomats have specu-
lated is a Kre-mlm attempt to unite its
a111t1sm of lJ S and lsrat'h pollc1e~
~tth that ofm A.rah allle..,
The v1s11 10 MoStov. b> the SH1an
official. Abdel Hahm Khaddam.
co1nc1dcs wuh d1seuss1ons between
Soviet lt'aders and thc Libyan go' ern
mcnt's No. 2 man. Abdel Salam
Jalloud.
Jalloud wa!I reponed to ha.,.c rnet
!kfense Minister Marshal Sergei L
Sokolo"' toda). but the officiaJ So' 1et
nc:v.s agency Tass did not say whether
the two had agrt'ed on new Soviet
arms delivenes 10 Libya.
Tass gave no detai ls of Gromyko's
meeung wtth the Synan vice presi-
dent. and official media have not said
how long either he or the deputy to
Libyan leader Cot. Moammar
Khadafy will stay 1n Moscow.
Jalloud was received by Com-
munist Pany chief Mikhail S.
Gorbachev and Premier Nikolai I.
R)zhkov Tuesday.
Monda} Gorbachev warned that
an) U.S. or lsraeh attack on Syria or
the Palestine L1bera11on Orpn1za-
11on outside Israel would have "in-
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calculable consequences," according
to Denis Healey. foreign afTairc;
~pokesman for Bntain's oppO'.l11ton
Labor Party. Healey was ont' ot a group of Rn t 1sh
parl1amcntari11ns who mel
Gorbachev 1n the Kremlin.
In his mceung w11h Jalloud rues·
day, Gorbachev condemned the U.S
raids on Libya on Apnl 15. and I ass.
said v1g1lance and a high level ol
defense capacity were needed an ca-,c
of future Amcncan attacks.
The meetings Gorbache' and
Ryz hkov held wtth Jalloud were th~
first between lt'ader.. of the two
countries since the U.S. bombing
raids staged to punish Libya for ti'>
purported pro-terromm policy
Reports from Tass on the meeting\
and speeches at a dinner R)1hko'
gave for Jaltoud did not make dear
whether the Kn:mlin has aarced to
increase arms dcliverie5.
Rut la~., ~ud Ryzhlcov lauded
Libya 1n a dinner speech as .. the
country that has not wavered when
faced with an outnght 1mpenah1t
aggression of 1hc United talcs."
Tass quoted Jalloud as . sayina
Amcnra·~ "cnm1nal. terronst-style
aggression" agamsl Libya and West·
em reaction to the: April 26Chernobyl
nucleard1s.aster "have con finned that
the capttall<il We)l has no mo~ls."
I le was quoted as accu.s1n1 the
Uni1cd State!> of "provocatJons and
ruthles~ barbarous aggression''
against hiscountry since 1981.,
Tcn'>1on has nscn lately 1n the
M1ddlt." East following terrorist at·
tacks. the U.S. raid on Libya and
accusations by the United States that
S) na and Libya are aiding terromts
Soviets plan concert
to benefit v ictims of
Chernobyl disaster
MOSCOW (AP)-A h1gh -rank1n~
Soviet offi cial said today a (Jl:tallt."d
repon on the cause of the Chernob~ I
nuclear accident wtll be read) in lou1
to six weeks. and Soviet authon11e'
announced plans for a pop and rock
concen to benefit a Chernob)I nu
clear disaster fund.
Lev Tolkunov. chairman nf the
House of Unions. said the report on
the Chernobyl disaster would be
given to the lntc:rnallonal ~wm1l
Energy Agency m Vienna. l\u<;tna
"The exact knowledge of 1he cau<.t•
and results of the power plant d1..a\ll'r
are not only of 1nlt'rc:st to the So.,.1e1
Union. but to all countnes that art>
working on th~ peaceful u!.C ol
nuclear energy.'' Tolkunov said
Also today. off1c1ah 111
Roskontscn. 1he Russian Federation
Concen Organ1zat1on. said some ol
most popular Soviet pop and r<xk
music stars will perform at a concen
tn Moscow on Fnday 10 raise monc>
for a Chernobyl nuclear disaster fund
The concert 1s being called "i\l ·
count No. 904" after an account set
up for d1o;:lo;ter fu nd donauons. and 1c,
1h1: firn of 11!. kind in the Soviet
l n1nn. the Ro\kontsen officials said.
T ucsda) an Amcncan doctor said
more than I CXJ.000 people nsk de-
' eloping cancer because of exposure
w rad1a11on unleashed by the
( hcrnoh~ I d1<,aStl'r
Dr. Robcn P Gale:. a U.S. bone
marrow 'ipec1allst 1n Moscow to help
treat 'll'llm!> of the nuclear accident,
1nd1cate<l tn an in terview Tuesday
night that the full human cost of the
disaster ma) not be known for years
'ipeak1ng h.,.t' from Moscow in tht'
Bnt1sh Broadcasung Corp. program
">\fter Chernobyl.'' GaJe said 300
people had sus1a1ned immediate tn-
Junes from the reactor blast, and that
35 or them were 1n danger of dying.
But he said 11 was not unlikely that
a thousand or thouc;ands of people: in
1hc < 'hemob~I area who were exposed
to ~ubstant1al Jc-..ets of rad1at1on
would de\dop cancers in yean. to
lO me
He estimated the 1otal number of
people at mk of developing canc~r al
mort' than I 110.000
Syrian president denies
giving aid to terrorists
By lbt Assoclaltd Press
ATHENS -S\nan Prrndcnt Hafe1 Assad returned to Dama'Seus today
after telling his Greek hosts that ~vnan' arc no1 tnromt., But he ''owed never
to allo" ··1n1ust1ce to he imposed upon U'>" The ~ynan leader, who amved
Monda}' on ht'\ first official v1!>1I to th(' West in eight years. was seen ofT at
Athens Airpon b) Pre'i1dent Chm10' Sartzetak1s and Premier Andrtas
Papandreou Western diplomats said •\\sad's '1)11 appeared destgned to seek
Grt'ek help 1n mu~tl'nng f uropean 'uppon to counter charges that his
government back<. terromt<, No Jmnt '>Wtement was "sut'd after Assad's
depanure. and a (ired. '>p<>ke\man decllm·d 111 ~ummenl on the results of the
VISll.
South Afrlcan poll ce rout protest march
JOHANNESBt 1RG -Police uc;ed ruhber "A-hips today to break up a
group of black women marching to protei.t restncuons on not v1ct1m s·
funerals. police said The clash 1n Kempton Park. a white town JUSl east of
Johannesburg, occurred when the "omen refused orders to disperse as they
marcht'd to a court to see the chief magmratc. Elsewhere. police reponed four
more blacks slain 1n scattered unrest around the country. Two were burned to
death by other blacks, and two were shot dead by police when a crowd attacked
a foot patrol. police headquancrs 1n Pretona said At the Crossroads shan1yc1ty
near Cape Town. government crews resumed clcanng the rubble of shacks
destroyed last week 1n fierce battlec; between nval groups of squauers.
Thousands of homes v.nc ra1ed in the fighting. leaving between 25.000 and
50.000 black!> homek'\s
Evangelists cleared of converslon charge
A TH ENS -Thrct' evangelists who ga' ea C1reck vouth a copy of the Ne"'
Testament have been found innocent of charges that lhC) broke the law h)
seeking convens tn this officially Eastern .Onhodox nation A three-Judge
appeals panel Tuesda) ovenurncd a lower coun ruhng that sentenced the
missionanes -an American. a Greek and one: with JOtnt Bnt1sh and Ne"'
Zealand c1111ensh1p -to 31/i-year Jail tcnns 1n 1984 on charges they tried to
conven a 16-ycar-old hoy. The thrt.•(' had hcen charged under a 1939 ant•·
proselytizing law enacted by a Greek dictator. The boy, now an adult. told the
court dunng the seven-hour appeal heanng that 1he ltfe'ltyle of the e-..aneehsts
had appealed 10 him because he came from a broken home, but that he did not convert to Protestant C'hns11ant1}
France touches off nuclear device
WELLINGTON. New Zealand -France earned out its third
underground nuclear test of the year in the South Pacific today. cxplodine a
device wtth the explosive yield of 2.000 tons of TNT. sc1cnt1sts here said.
Warwick Smith, the director of the New Zealand Seismological Observatory .
..aid 1he test at Mururoa Atoll was monitore at the eanhquake recording
center in Rarotonga. the Cook Islands. There s no 1mmed1ate confirmation
of the blast from the French government. r 1mmc<11ate reaction from
increasingly vocal anti-nuclear nauons in the . uth Pacific region. Rarotonp
is the closest monitoring station lo the Frcn nuclear test 'ilte at M ururoa in
French Polynesia.
Guerrilla• dynamlte brldge ln Peru
LIMA. Peru -Lefi1st guemllas dynamited a bndgc in the Andes
Mountains. sending I 5 cars from a freight train tumbltna into the nver below
Five of the six crewmen were tnJured, none \Cnously. officials rcportrd
Tuesday. They said the bridge. 108 m1leseastofl1mund 1 l.250fectahove sea
le vel. was blown up late Monday. A secunty official for Enafer-Pcru, the
national railway company. said the hlast occurred when the train was pulhna
27 frt1aht cars loaded wt th copper ore ;ind vegetables acros~ the 2~foot spen.
The blast cut nul traffic. mclud1ns pa scngcr train • from Lima to Huancayo.
capital of Juntn province The railway 1s the world's h1ghe t. and a tounst
attraction. reach1na I 5.777 feet at one point
Two Armenian• •laln ln Watt BeJrut
BEIR T -As"S&ssins us1n1 s1lcnetr-cqu1ppt'd suns murdered two
Armenians in West Beirut today. pohcc said. and Shute Moslems and
Pale un11ns battled for 1 10th day on the city's southern Oank. The slam
Armenians were 1dcn11fied as Va he Kas')3f)1an. a dentist. and Knkor Ohannes,
a phot<>srapher known as "Koko." Their deaths brought the number of
Ltbancw Am>enaans kdtcd tn Beirut's Mo lem scttor within the pa~t two da)S
to four foltcc said funmen waJked into Kassa.J1an's chn1c near the Amenc~n
University Hosp11a • shot h1m dttd and wal;ccd down t\o\'O 01ah1s of stain to
escape m a waiuna car at 11 a.m An hour earlier, 1 lone assas 1n enttred
Ohannef studio Mar the offica of an·Nahar newspaper m We t Beirut'\
Hamra commcrctal thorouahfare and ._,lied him with one p1s1ol shot to the
htlld polt« \aid -. ....... ________________________________________________ ~~
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedn.d8)', Mmy 28, 1NI * Aa
• ,
Abortion debate stalls passage of $37 .6 billion budget
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Senate has
approved a $37.6 bil!ion sta~ budget but the .Assembly
got boged down tn a dispute over anu-abortaon
amendments.
Tuesday's Senate vote was 34-1
But the Assembly delayed unttl today a vote on its
S37.S billion version of the budget.
The Assembly spent its tame on a complicated series
of parliamentary maneuvers over ant1-abort1on amend-
ments added to the budge1 last Fnday.
The delay and the anu-abort1on dispute could lead to
a prolonged stalemate in the two-house conference
committee set up to reconcile differences between the two
spcndjna plans for the fiscal year that begms July I : Many
Mail-in drive
is launched
vs. Waldheim
DemocratS wouldn't vote for a bud1et conwnana the anti·
abortion lanauaac, and many Republicans wouldn't vote for one that didn't have them.
The Lqislatu~ 1s required by the c;pnstuution to
send a budJet bill to thegovcmor by June IS each year, but
that deadline isn't alwa ys met.
The Senate plowed throu&h a half-dozen sets of
amendments before its vote. Tfie single d1ssent1na vote
was cast by Sen . Diane Watson, a Los Angeles Democrat
who was on the losing side of the anti-abonion debate.
Senators approved four of the amendments and
fCJCCled two. includina proposals to increase funding for
anti-drug and alcohol programs, and to elimmate
additional funds for local family plannina programs.
THE LINKS AT LOS ANGELES (AP) -Offietals
for a study center named for Nazi
hunter Simon Wiescnthal launched a
mass-mail campaign, urging Presi-
dent Reagan to deny Austrian pres1-
dent1al candidate Kurt Waldheim
entry to the United States.
,~O /\RO I RC/\LJ I
The I malh on postcards the of-
ficials want sent to the White House
display a 1943 photo of Waldheim in
a German army uniform and a 1975
shot of him as United Nations
secretary general.
The postcards urge Waldheim be
denied entry unless he can prove he
took no part in Nazi war crimes.
Waldheim has denied allegallons he
was linked to World War II atrocities.
"The (postcard) campaign as being
directed at the White House because
ultimately we believe that the dc-
CISlon on whether or not to bar
Waldheim from the United States
will be made there." Rabbi Marvin
Haer. dean of the center.
Hispanic ministry
task force to start
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A pro-
gram to fight gan$S. aid immigrants
and help the 2 m1lhon Cathohcs in the
nation's largest Roman Catholic
Archdioc.cse who are of Hispanic
descent was announced by
Archbishop Roger M. Mahony.
The "Plan for Hispanic Ministry,"
announced to the media Tuesday,
reflects a move toward greater ac-
t1V1sm by the church within Hispanic
communiues. Mahony said.
"No other diocese 1n the nation has
a plan for Hispanics so definite. oo
concrete. so comprehensive, ..
Mahony said of the prOJCCt. which
wlll be launched Sunday evening at
Dodger Stadium.
Task forces will be set up to opposc
eviction of 11legal ah ens from federal
housing and to halt gang VIOience.
Muhammad Alijaba
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One of the ant1-abon1on amendments It approved
was by Sen. Jam Elhs. R-San Daqo, to deny family
plann1na money to any clinic or orpn121t&on that
"performs. promotes or advenises abortions."
The other, by Sen. H.L. Richardson. R-Glendora.
would rcqutre parent.al conacnt for a student to be e•cusc:d
from school to.obtain abortion counseling or abonion-
related medjcal services.
Lanauaac similar to the Elhs amendment was added
to the budaet last year but was struck down by an appeals
court.
Also added to the Senate budget bill were two other
amendments. One would increase funding for local
transit programs. The other would put into the final
D
G. WEST HOLLYWOOD (AP) -
Former boxer Muhammad Ali was
involved in an accident that left a
motorcyclist slightly inJured after
Ali's Rolls-Royce cut across traffic to
tum left. authonties said today.
Motorcyclist Gregory Gray. 26.
complained of bruises and paan in his
left leg. said Los Angeles County
sheriffs Sgt. Guy Earl. Hr was treated
at Cedars-S1na1 Medical Center and
released early today.
The accident occurred at 9:30 p.m
Tuesday on Santa Monie~ Boulevard.
a four-lane thoroughfare.
The former world heavyweight
champion, 44, dnvmg a Rolls-Royce
at S mph to IS mph, turned left from
the nght lane, Earl said. Gray,
overt.akin~ Ah an the left lane. hit the
rear of Ah scar. he said.
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"He (Ali) JUSt cut across the left-
hand lane," Earl alleged.
Serial killer in LA
claims 17th victim
LOS ANGELES (A P) - A slam
woman found by children an a
schoolyard is the 17th victim of a
killer who stalks black prostitutes.
police said.
The death of Verna Patncaa W1l-
hams, 36. whose body was found
Monday at the 68th Street Elemen-
tary School. as s1m1lar to that of most
of the other v1ct1ms. Lt John Zom
said Tuesday.
"She's a black woman. between the
ages of 20 and 40. worked 1n street
prostatuuon in South Central L.A ..
who was killed dunng the latr night.
early morning hours. And hrr body
was left 1n an isolated area."
"Y cs. she's the latest v1ct1m." 'Wltd
Zorn. who heads the South Side Scnal
Killer Task Force.
He said her body was sprawled an
an outdoor stairwell. Her clothes were
partially pulled off, and she appeared
to have been strnn&led. An autop y
was to be conducted today.
Ez-track atar guilty
of teacher'• murder
PASADENA (AP) -A fonner
collqc track \tar faces 27 years to hfe
1n pnson after admitting he killed a
Pa11dena hiah ~hool teacher and
another student because he feared has
father-son rtlat1onsh1p w1th the
teacher was endtnl
Robcn Grcu Butler, 22. onet a
nationally ranked track star at Azusa
Pactfic Un1vcnny. al)"Ced to a plea·
berpan TucMia) ancf plellded 1u11ty
to two count' of first-deartt murder
after prosccutor<J dropped spccaa.I
Clrcumstance allepuons which could
have led ham to tile aas chamber
Sen"ncina w1ll occur June 27.
full derails and stay tor the extra
interest. Offer good only ,1t our
Huntington Beach branch
'11' h• I.. 1 n11 •'
'
lCl!lA .
budfCt ntaot1a11on$ the 1 $UC of whether 10 ttplacc S 18
malhon an federal funds for the homeless.
The lona~t debate in the Stnatc took platt over tht
Elias amendment and a ~t o( anu .. fam1ly plannana
amendments by Sen. John Doolittle. R..C1tru$ Heiahts.
that dted on a 13· l 9 vote
Amona other thana~. Doolittle's propouls would
have restored fundina for the family Plannina Advisory
Board. which critic$ have ~ad is controlled by Dcu.-
kmcjian appointees opposed 10 birth control or abonion.
It would also have wiped out a SS.S million
auamcntataon for local family plannmg programs and
eliminated language promoting health chn1cs (or tecn-
aacn near haah schools
1/3 off. ..
on all "Btlle Fran ce"
skins and dresws,
through Tuesd.y, June 24ch
For ~sc wlrct1on.
shop urly
85 Fuhion lsund • N~n Buch
Phorw 17141 ~9433
Ad1ommg Bi.llocks Wrlshirr
\Vhenever
you need us,
we'll always
be there.
For a ccntur\' nm\. lolk~ ha\'c hrrn J
trusting Grea t \\'c-.,ccn1' Ct) keep thl'tr
money sale .md m.lkr H grl)\\ Thn..,u~
good time~ .md h.lLI tune::-tht'\
learned they lclll Lnunt on Lb
Todc.l}. \\'C\'C grn\\ n to .1 l.un1h l 'I
comparne ''1th c.'i,cr .~ 2=; h11l1l1n m
asscb .md L.tn meet '1rn1.1ll~ .tll 'nur
fmclnu .. 11 need" I itgh-mtcTc"t cht'L k-,
mg.mJ ,., in~" <. t1m1xt1t1\c ln.m
rrogr.im.., l.rv,l\ 1ng,rnd rc urcmcnt
plan~ lnsur,mtc \t.11nr crrd1t c,1rc.b
Real C'-t.ue '-l'r\ llC'-<. nmT'ntcnc
21-Hl)Ur h,mktng .\nd ITil'lrC
Rut hc~t l)l .111. '1 )U L.tn he ... urr l'I
1h 1.., We'll alway~ be there.
)
A8 * Orange CoHt OAILY PILOT/ Wednesday. May 28. 1988
,j1'/I 0 t[J Introducing our coo l. cmp Sea Salads~
B i'lt/t1. ff lll::J . Each one ·~a greaHa~ttng refre~her course
'f / f II hnmmtng with plump. tender \hnmp Choo~e our
• hnmp alj<l $4 39. Seafood Salad $3 19. Combo Salad $3.99
\H (kean Chef Salad $3.79 -with your choice of ~pec1al dre~~tng.
. all in tor nu r Ne"" SeJ Salach -the ta te will ~et you wh1~tlmg for more!
LONGJOHN
SILVEl{S,
3095 Harbor Blv d .
Costa Mesa
(Acr oss fro m Fed co)
NA T ION
Voters in Arkansas reject
F&ubus' bid for comeback
By the A11oclated Pre11
Arkansas voter ruined former
Gov. Orval Faubus' comeback hopes
as they set up a third confrontation
between Democratic Gov. 8111 Clin-
ton and former Republican Gov.
Frank White. Voters in Idaho re-
jected Connie Hansen's bid to follow
her arch-conservative husband,
George. 10 Congress.
In Kentucky. the 1h1rd stale with a
pnmary Tuesday, Republicans pick-
ed Louisville lawyer Jackson M.
Andrews as 1he1r underdog cand1da1e
to face Democratic Sen. Wendell
Ford, who had no pnmar) oppos111on
in has bid for a third term .
In the closest maJor race of the
night. nane-term Rep Ball Alexander
of Arkansas. the chief deputy Demo-
crat1c whip, had trouble beating stale
Sen. Jim Wood who had said his rival
was too liberal for the st•te's rural I st
District. Alexander had been targeted
by the National Republican Con·
gressional Commattee an an ad cam·
pa1gn that nd1culed his numerous
tnps abroad at taxpa yer expense.
Wi1h 786 of 792 precincts, or 99
percent, reponing an unofficial re-
sults. Alexander had 79,56 3 vote~ to
Wood's 7.3.3 I 8 votes.
The only Republican seeking the
seat 1s Rick Albin. who own~ pan of
two radio stations.
The 76-year-old Faubus. onn: a
S) mbol of defian1 segregation. said he:
had waged a popuhs1 campaign on
behalf of .. lhe rank and file" and
blamed lack of money for his loss He
v1 nuall) ruled ou1 another race,
say10g that by 1he next e!ect1on for
governor in 1990, "I think 11 would be
pas\ my lime."
Faubu~. who served )IX terms
ending in 1967, had hoped to follow
in the footsteps of other ex-ttovemors
who ha ve had better luck this pnmary
season. James Rhodes of Ohio and
Wilham Cle ments of Teus both won
Repubhcan pnmanes for their old JOb~. whale Terry Sanford won Nonh
Carolina'-; Democratic Sena1e pn-
mar) . Andrews' victor) 1n Kentucky
brough1 relief to GOP leaders who
teared embarrassment had an) of
1hree other candidate:<. won The pany
has httlc hope ul unsealing the
popular Ford
Reagan to U.S.hailsSovietdecision
disregard !y~.!~!.~p~? migrate to U.S.
1. •t f j WA HINGTON -The United State'>. which has been pressing the m 1 s 0 Sov1c1Union10 improve 11s human rights performance. says a Soviet decision
t to let I I 7 cit1zensjoin their families in Amcnca could help £ast-Wes1 rela11ons. arms pa c And a congressional leader on human nghts IS'iUC!> says the move shows the
Kremlin leadership 1s starting to heed world op1n1on The State Depanment
announced Tuesday ii had received word from the So' 1e1 Union that 36of126
div1ded-fam1ly cases on a last submitted b) lhl' Un11ed Stales had been
resolved. That means Soviet em1gra11on permit!. are e.>.pectcd to be granted to
11 7 people over the nex1 few weeks and they will be wekomc:d to Amenca
WA.SHI NGTON (AP) -Pre!>1 -
dent Reagan says he wall disregard
limits se1 b) a 1979 treaty on U.S. and
Soviet nuclear weapons unless he 1s
convinced b}' the end of 1he year 1ha1
alleged Soviet cheating has stopped
In a decision announced Tuesda)
the pres1den1 condemned 1he un-
rallfied SALT II accord as "funda-
mentall) flawed" and said he will
upda1e A.mencan malatary forces ac-
cording to U.S "strategic need"··
It was the fi rst time 1he U n1ted
States asserted a readiness to break
out of the trateg1c A.rms L1m1tat1on
Treaty signed by President Caner and
the late Soviet leader Leonid I.
Brezhnev at their Vienna summit.
but never ratified by the Senate.
The U.S. could surpass treat)
limits at the end of the yea r. when
enough B-52'i are eq uipped with air·
launched cruise missiles 10 c'ceed
one of 1he trea1y·., prannpal
provisions.
In the meanume, however. Reagan
ordered the destrucuon ol t"o
Poseidon nuclear suhmanncs 1ncr
1he summer to clear 1hc wa ) for 1hc
eighth Tnden1 submannc. which
steams ou1 ofGro1on. ( onn to JOln
1he fleet toda}' This 'Wiii keep the
number of missile'> w11h multiple
warheads w11han lhc 1.:wo limll
establtshed b) 1hc treal)
Senate Republican leader Rob I >ole
---4 of Kansas saad Reagan <,hould ha\\'
gone further and '>Crapped thl' trt.'al'
at once Modcra1es 1n ( onrc'is such as
Senate Democratic Leader Robert (
Byrd of West V1rgan1a chose to stress
the dismantling of the two Pose1dons
as a sign of continuing Ll .S. ob-
servance of the contro.,,erc,1al accord.
Actor's daughter pleads gullty to drug rap
NEWARK.NJ . -The 23-}'ear-otd daughter ofthl· late auor Peter Sellers
has pleaded guilty 10 knowing aboul an an1ema1111nal ccx:aa ne operation that
authonues charged used violence. a federal pro'i«utor dasdoscd today
V1ctona Sellers pleaded guil ty in a locked counroom here on Apnl 10 to a
charge that she was aware of the drug operation allegedl) run b) her
Holly"ood. Cahf .. housemate and talen1 agent Recd \\ allacc. !.aid .\smtant
U.S A11ornc) Judy Russell
Slaylngs of Palestlnlan couple probed
WYNCOTE. Pa -The killings of a ptommcnl Pales11n1an-born
professor and his wife do no1 appear 10 be the work of an ordinal') burglar.
authont1es said as they sca'rchcd for a poss1hlc political mo11ve an the stabbings
A pregnant daugh1er also was 1nJurcd an the attack 1n 1hc couplc"s home
Tuesda). while another daugh1er and a young grandson esca ped anJury by
hading in a closet. Killed with ·•a 15-inch surv1,al-l)'pc l.n1fr" "ere Ismail al
Faruqi. 65. a Temple Umvcr'lllY profcs5or 1n l ~lam1c '>tud11:~ .,1nl'l' 196~. and
has wife . Lois. 59. said LI. ~1ec:11 vc Robcn Krau.,er
Dealers report run on machlne guns
NASHVIL LE -Weapon., dealer<; h:\\c had 1roubk keeping enough
machine gun'i on hand to sa11sf) a nation.ii bu}'1ng spree !>parked b) a federal
ban on their manufac1ure for public sale .. People who were undecided about
bu) ing a gun and ""ere s111ing on 1he fence arc bu)'1ng no"" before 1he pnce gel!>
too hagh and there are no gun~ left," c;a1d Roger Small. pre<;adent of Au1oma11c
Weapon!') ofNash.,,ilk Prec;1den1 Reagan 'iagncd the gun la" Ma} 19. and as of
1hat date no machine gun-; could be manulilllurcd tor <iak to 1he puhl1~
Independent Deaver probe councll pralsed
~ASlllNGTON -Lobby1\I Michael K Dca.,C'r and \Oml· of his most
pers1sten1 C:apttol !fall cnt1<:\ praised the dcCt\lon hy a lhree-Judge panel to
appoint an independent counsel to 1nvcst1ga1e the former Wh11e House aide A.
special federal coun panel disclosed Tue!>day that the Justice Dcpanment had
five days earli er recommended that the cou n name an independent cou nsel 10
probe whether Deaver broke federal c:on01ct-of-anterl''il law'I Dea' er. who had
sought appointment of the counsel, "1s plea'IC'd that lhc: pnx:co;s toward a fair
hearing 1s on course." said Pam Bailey. a spoke\ woman
Buy any Sport or Super Sport ~wing~ and we'll give you
a seat cushion set (up to $440 value) a~utely free
'-it1\\ \OtJ «111 f<'<'I mcm· comfortahlt.· lhan <·wr ttl>out 0\\111111.t tlw ho.it 1h,1t
ht1 ... I 1t't omc• ,111 1\tm ·m ,m h·~c·nd Bu\. ctll\ Sport or Sup<•r Sport. I I to Ii h't·t
d11f111~ tlw month of \1J\ r111<I we· will ~IV(· vou the· i,<•c1t cu~l11011 ... c·t lrn 111<11111nd1 I
,d1,oh11< I\ In<· lh \\Ort h up to $440 And 11 \ om• H.$1'0# ....,,,., /
lll<il' rt'1Nlll \\h\ \OU "lh!Xlldn I \\rlll tin\ rcin~N WNA~lll _/
lx·fort·~l'lt1r1~1nl<1t18o"lton\\1MI ·r Sport or ~qualit)badctdby
)upn ~i)( 1rt a IChw' tnmdmble warnnty.
B 0 ATS
2900 Layf ayett• Street
Newport leach
(714) 673-2050
Orange COut DAIL V PILOT /W~-r. ~ 21, 1 ...
C OMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANIACTION8, Al
Budget projections: Almost always off the ark
With time, innocent errors
compounded into huge ogres
By JOHN CUNNIFF
made. Assumptions. on which forecasts must be bascdi.
become increasinfly less accurate with the passage 01
time. And, with time, innocent little errors compound
themselves into huge ogres.
,.,, ....._ ANfrtlt
NEW YORK -Budget projec11ons arc almost
always made to be broken, as can be attested to by events
1n your own household or, if you prefer, by the sorry
record offcderaJ budget estimates.
The big switch by the CBO occurred between August
l 98S, when it projected the annual federal budget deficit
would swell to nearly $300 billion by 1991. and February
1986, when it shrank that estjmate to just SI 04 billion.
Almost inevitably it will be changed again and again,
demonstrating anew the wisdom of the old maxim of
economists: if you forecast, forecast often.
One five-year projection, by the Congressional Budge~ <;>ftke. was revised six months later by almost
$200 btlhon, or about S8SO or so for every American man.
woman and child'. And that brings up the question: what happened?
When il made its earlier forecast, the CBO made
what, at the time, was a· rather common error, that of
underestimating the force of falling interest rates. But that
little error created a curious little scenario.
The answer tics with the assumptions that were Because inter~st rates fell . the level of federal
government overspending, quite obviously, also fell. That
-{111 llllJl:I IJ,J15:t~:-.,__ _______________ _
NEW vo'll~s <~~p -~~fonowfno 11s1 1l ~~~;g~td 3t716 951! 8: lH! •
,hOWI the Over • the -Coun er I AHA~Tv J:V.~ H4 (Jp fl) slocks and warrants lhal have oone up 1 Housl pf 11'1 UP I the mo,, rnd down the mosl l>eM<I ct t M h WI :v. Up . i>erc;:enl o cf\ano~or Tuesday. • Gen: lePd ~~ 31it UP · No MC:urllle$ fra Ing ti.low 12 or I 111 la " 'h Up . j 1hares are lnclu . I S P :~ !J.PP ••• ' Net and i>ercentaoe chano.1 are In. MedlcreGlsr • .. .., ..
difference ti.fw~ the prevlo1,1s clos no ~P1mlth 4 ~ UUpg J~·: 1•
Price end Tuesday ~:;1 or bid Price. ~ ~aJ~Jr 7 lj~ ~ ~P
1
,
1
..
1
l
Pur~~ LHt Cho Pct. ~oma~n ICP.4 11,4 Up . 1
j ~!if£.tp r II;; ~~ ~~l ~ ~~~m~:t'DOis ~ 8: : ii ~~mx,l~~GP f: ~ 8: : J lnft's:ru-Lai• _c~o''"" ic~ .o Y ~Yid-31/J ~ UP . wn.,.clnv 2 If• u l~.l • Coovtele 12 2V. Up 1.S ElectMIUI ~ -112 1J· • S
~PS AND DOWNS NEW YO K (AP) -The followl119 Rst
shOws lhe ew York Stock Exchange 1tocks end warrants lhat have oone up tne most and down 1he mo11 besed on percent of chanoe regardless of volume for Tuetdn. ~o ~rltles tradl119 below S2 are Incl--ed. Nel and PWctntaoe ctianoes are he dYi erence ti.twet.n lhe prevlo4.1.s closlno price and Tuudav's 2 P.m. o r I c e .
Pct Up }1.4 ~~ ~1:i
(Jp I ·1 UP 1 . UP . UP • UP .
M UTUAL FUND S
I/• 'h
l DOWNS Last Ch8 2'h -14 10 -1 ·~-~
Pel. §!! 9.1 9.1 7.9
~Jia Ir ltd
nx. lcl Yukon v
MKhn •" t II s e ch or I •.ilon Eqylt ~~I A c;;hrn ~1ei"'= ~heung H.emot~ ~T~ P:.eJl;,1 wt
Am~d ~lwreP1,1bl lnerNutr mMadAlrt
ll'e = 1~
~. = ~ ~ -~ 'h -lVt
r' = ~
1 -v. v. -22 -32 -s-tt 14 -v ..
·n =
J
'h -14 -.,., -.,.,
'h -2 l/e -'h -11/1 -3-16
15, the 1mpactoftbcerrorwaseompounded 1mmed1ately·
not only did rates fall, but the am.ount of the deficit fell
too.
One analysjs of the CBO's projection -by Natiorlal
Association of Realton economists -assigns 25 percent
of th~ biJ chanae betwee~ ~ugust and February to those
scemJnaJy small cbanaes in interest rates.
The biggest miscalculation of all was in defense
spending outlays, which accounted for 60 percent of the
reduction, with the remainder coming from reduced
outlays for non-defense discretionary programs.
The miscalculation will continue, of course. because
assumptions must continue to be used. There 1s no way
around such problems, a dilemma the CBO acknowledges
with 1he caveat that its fiau.res arc based on growth of 3
percent to 3.S percent a year, with no significant changes
1n economic policy.
fho~ assumptions arc alrt . a bit of!'th~ mark. and
little bits can arow into mon ously Ja,_ projection :
errors. Already. for eumple, inttteJt rates have fallen
below levels auumcd in t.he CBO projection.
In addition. there arc su1picion1 that the t00nomy is '
arowing more slowly than envisioned, which would add •
to the deficits. And the drop in cnClJ)' price. and lhc '
decline 1n the value of the dollar most hkcly have skewed
the numbers.
Perhaps more s1gnificant than the rl&Urcs themKlvcs
arc the potential econom.Jc and Political contCqucnttS.
As the Rcalto~ economists Pomt out. the earlier.
gloomier forecast by the CBO "no doubl eoonibuted to
lhe sense of uriency which led to passq.e of the Balanced
Budget and Emeriency Deficn Control Act of J 985 ...
It is conceivable that, based on the lakr fi1ures, the
bill might not have had the same impa<'.t on national
thinking and conaressionaJ voting.
The ~1u1h Ulll'I View
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Wirh hospiralizarion so rarely ~u1red, the cost of treatment ts dramatically
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" "
!~ ' ~t
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12 • f .n ia
u "0:\1i"' 8 r~I· ,
H =· t:U \,~o ~~ H~r~·tju H lw1 21
1~n·. ··=~
H 1iij t.~ ~ 8 E' :-.--~ ~-l=" " .,..._ v. -v. v. I
0"1• tu ~ t XI '"' ~ .. -'Ao Ut •I
Good news sparks market
NEW YORK(AP)-Thestockmarket forged
abead Wednesday. setting new record highs as the
rally of the past three sessions continued.
Analysts say the revival of the bull market in
recent days has been spurred by a spreading belief
that interest rates still have room to decline.
Henry Kaufman, economist at Salomon
Brothers. said Wednesday he exptttcd the Federal
Reserve to stick with an expansionary monetary
policy at least until late 1986.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Dm
NEW YORK (AP> MtV 21 T~~ 7:~ NEW YORK (AP) May 21
T~
' AMEX LEADERS
GoLo Quo n s
METAL S QuoTE S
' NYSE LEADERS
NEW YORK (AP) -S.lft ' p.m prlee end net change of \he ltttH n
rno't lcilve New Yor1t SIOCk Exdlenge I n uts, tred lno n1tlon1 1fy et more than $1 ~ Soerrv CP FlePr~reu AudD d' 1u1er rfv R'.nrN!t ~~Sy Am1xc>reu fit~~·
OudloVld' SSINI
NASDAQ SUMMARY
CC)LE ·HAAN
o ~thzrn cot 1fbm10
claeeic, eva1 loblcz.
fbr 'P-J \t'\ Li d1ffqtunt
color coml::nnotion:, 1 TVJVY /khol<t
nt:JVY/vom l ~
ll>njcnzmq
putty1\tom\le
She'll be80onFrl·
day, but the woman
who once made in-
ternational head-
llnaafter a hl•torlc
•uchangeoper-
atlon •Y••.IJe'sac-
talllJy much young-
er. ForChrl•ttne
Jorgensen, life
began anew in 1951
-when she became
a woman. SoonFrl-
day, Jorgensenls
either 60, or 35, de-
pending on your
polntolvlew.
floral blouse. Her blonde hair is
neatly coiffed and a collection of rings
adorn her slender hands.
Christine .Jorgensen keeps Quit( a
low profile these days.
Thiny-five years ago Jorgensen
made one of the biggest splashes -or
perhaps ttdal wave would be more
descnptive -that ever bit the news.
Jorgensen had traveled from New
York to Denmark as tall. thin
introverted George William Jor-
gensen, Jr., only to return to the states
two years later as a willowy blonde
beauty named Christine Jorgensen.
Although Jorgensen was not the
first person to undergo a sex oper-
ation in Europe, the publicity that
raged throughout the world when the
story leakea to the press earned her a
permanent spot in history. In the late
Spring, 1954, a trade magazine for the
publishing business said the Christine
Jorgensen story had recci ved the
largest worldwide coverage in the
hjstory of newspaper publishing that
Christine
Jorgensen
looks back
By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVJCH
DeltJ ..... C«fJ 111 MlcOI
1: doorbell chime at the secluded
hillside Laguna Niguel home brings a
torrent of barkin$ from two small
terriers lodged behind the closed front
entrance. A woman opens the door,
quiets the pets, and ushers the visitor
into her sun-filled home decorated
with an abundance of lush green
plants.
She 1s dressed conservatively in
black pants and a black and pink
year.
The male Jorgensen, a photogra-
pher. had traveled thousands of miles
from his New York home to be placed
in the capable hands of Dr. Christian
Hamburger, one of Europe's most
eminent endocrinologists whose
treatises on hormone studies had
been widely published in medical
journals throughout the world. The
process would involve hormone in-'
JCCtions and a total of three re-
constructive surgeries (the third sur-
gery was performed in the United
States). The process would take two
years.
Fish oil: good for you
lt's·bccn the year of the fish.
Fish oil. 1hat is.
The health bencfi ts of fish oil are so
dramatic that soon bottles of fish oil
capsules wiJJ be as common to the
American household as bottles of
aspirin. In the past 13 months. no less
than 4 separate articles on the benefits
of fish oil have appeared in the
prestigious New England Journal of
Medicine.
It all started several years when it
was noted that the Eskimos who
consume a high fat diet -which, in
other countries.. was known to cause
heart disease -had far less heart
disease than expected. The reason:
1he fat from marine mammals and
fish does no1 lead to hean attacks. at
prevents them, in two ways.
First. fish oil, even though it
contains some cholesterol, actually
reduces the blood cholesterol level, as
well as 1he blood fats known as
triglycerides. Heart attacks are much
more common in people with
elevated cholesterol and triglycerides
IO the blood.
Fish oil is more like a ve~et.able oil
than an animal fat because 1t contains
unsaturated bonds, but differs from
most vegetable oils by the location of
these bonds. The unique location of
the unsaturated bonds in fish oil
make it extremely powerful at lower-
ing blood fat levels. In one st"dy of 10
men with dangerously hi~ levels of
cholesterol and trigJycende, a diet
high in fish oil lowered the cholesterol
from 373 to 207 and the triglycerides
from 1,353 to 281 in only four weeks.
Secondly, fish oil acts as a safe
blood thinner by reducing the pro-
duction of a substance known as
thromboxane A2. This hormone,
increased by animal fats in the diet.
causes the blood cells to stick
together. forming dangerous clots
that cause heart attacks or strokes.
In a study of 13 men, I 0 capsules of
fish oil significantly reduced pro-
duction of thromboxane A2, and at
the same time, increased the pro-
duction of another substance.
prostaglandin 13. that is a natural
blood thinner.
For several years now patjents with
heart disease or tendencies toward
stroke have been advised to take a
single aspirin per day as a blood
thinner. Aspirin works like fish oil by
reducing thromboxan A2. but it also
The quiet and reserved 24-ycar-old
Jorgensen was also confident that the
operation would remain a private
decision. Onl y a select group of famiJy
and friends plus the medical team
knew of the surgery. It was, therefore,
a staggering shock when Jorgensen
received a copy of an international
wire service bulletin while she lay on a
hospital bed in Denmark recovering
from her scoond operation. The
message from New York, dated
December l, 1952, revealed the next
day's banner headHnes: "Bronx GI
becomes a woman -Dear Mom and
Dad, son wrote, l have now become
your daughter."
"I can recall my bitter resentment,"
Jorgensen said in a recent interview.
"Who. I wondered, could have ex-
posed such a tot.ally private episode to
the blinding glare of publicity and the
outside world?"
As a male, Jorgensen had secretly
guarded his gender confusion for
many years.
"When I was growing up, I de-
veloped into a frail, tow-headed
introverted child; I learned quickly
that society laid down some firm
~ound rules concerning my behav-
ior. A little boy wore trousers and had
his hair cut short. He bad to learn to
use his fist aggressively, participate in
athletics and most
importantly, little boys
didn't cry. It must have been
around this st.age that 1 became
aware of the differences between
my sister, Dolly, and me. Those
differences to me lay in the
order Of masculine and feminine
things. Dolly had long
blonde hair and wore dresses,
both of which I admired but
which were not allowed to
me; I was upset and
puzzled by this," she said.
The emotional
confusion continued for
the male Jorgensen; after
a stint in th~ Army,
he still secretly
questioned, "Why,
at 2~years-old.
am I this way?
Who am I?" I
JULIAN
WHITAKER
halts production of the beneficial
prostaglaodin 13.
Fish oil seems superior to aspirin as
a blood thi nner as 1t not only reduces
the "bad" elements that cause clots,
but also increases the "good" cle-
ments that prevent them.
The one-two punch of blood fat
control and blood thinnin4 propcrtjes
make fish oil a must 10 treating
patjents with heart disease.
Supplements of fish oil, called
MAX EPA, are available without a
prescription. However, if you have
any heart or blood vessel disorder,
you should see your doctor before
t.akin$ them. The optimum dose of
fish 011 depends on the initial levels of
cholesterol and triglyceride in the
blood as well as the health history.
Julian Wltltaker, M.D., ii director
of. tlte National Heart and Diabetes
Treatment lastltate In Hantlngton
Beacb. Please address any questions
or comments to bJm c/ o tbe Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa
9%6%6.
Easter Seal, Family Service
groups holdjazzy gatherings
By CAROL HUMPKREYS
Delly"°' c-upandent
The very first fund-raiser of a
newly formed support group can
be quite "Jazzy," which was the
event name selected by the new
Easter Seal League of Orange
County.
The evening at the Hotel Mer-
idien included all the jazz current-
ly being used for a successful
money raising affafr. .. a no-host
cocktail reception. silent auction,
a filet mignon dinner. a live
auction and dancing.
open until the end of the eve-
ning." said Margaret. one of the
fou nd ins "top ten ...
Extra Jazz featured entertaining
auctioneer Clark Smith of
Cheyenne. Wyoming and his twin
daughters Amy and Annie Smith
of f""o untain Valley. the dramatic
silhouette decorations chaired by
Joanne McQuerry (exquisite table
decor by Dana Cooper), cocktail
jazz by the Bob Frengel Quartet,
and dancing to the Sounds of
Music.
Guild members in the swing for
Easter Seals include Pamela
Blair, Jou Spencer, Shirley
Pepys, Margaret Jenkins, Retha
Enns, Diane Gibson, Vicki Hess,
Penny Hart, Barbara Brown,
Debbie Manlatl1, Carol Nick. and
Shirley Goward.
"We're committed to raising at
least $20,000 tonight. All the
funds will go directly to Easter
Seal programs within the coun-
ty," said guild pr:esiden t Bob~le
Lougbltn. (The group exceeded its
goal -made $25,000)
"Bobbie's husband. Dlck, is •••
president of Century 21 Inter-The Board of Directors of the
national, the largest corporate Famil y Service Assoc1at1on of
donor to Easter Seals. About a Orange County invited Its sup-
yca r ago 10 wives of Ce ntury 21 porters to celebrate 31 years of
employees decided to form a local dedication in offering counseling
Easter Seal guild. We've had a few programs to families facing oon-
small fund·raisers. but this is our flict, child abuse, child molesta-
first big one (200 attended)." tion, domestic violence. child
commented Teresa Penner. bereavement, uicide bereave-
Marga ret Helme chaired the mcnt. marital mediation and
event at)d received a silver en-parenting and stre s manage-
ifavt>d serving dish for her efTons. ment.
"We now have almost '°')5!:nly 00 people attcnd~i the
membcrnn the guild. We've been e n1 well-planned cvemna.m
working on this event for a year. I a ti ate salon of the Anaheim
was in charge of the auction ttems. Mamou.
We were supposed to close the . ··u~fortunatcly. there's a c<?n-
ilcnt auction at eight, but our flact with othercvent!tonight (i.c
nucttnnt-cr has told us 10 keep it a yacht club Catahna outing). Wt
had many more attending last
year's 30th anni versary event. We
want to make this an annual
affair. not only a fund-raiser. but a
thank-you." said event chair
Jessica Uniack.
"Jessica did all the work,"
commented FSA board chairman
Biiiie Bearman while chatting
with FSA president Ron Jobason
and United Way director Merritt
Johnson during the no-host
cock tail reception . United Way is
one of the supporters of Family
Service. {'
A prime rib dinner highlighted
with bananas foster flambe was
served on tables cen tered with
small hot air balloons.
.. Balloons are our theme this
year. Family Service America
(there are 280 agencies) is oel-
ebrating its 15th an niversary and
moving the a~ency from New
York to Mi lwaukee (more
middle-America). We plan to
celebrate with them and hold a
hot air balloon race and carnival
fund-raiser in the fall,.. said
Lortan Petry, who was re pcn-
sible for the evcnf s tasteful
invitation.
The volunteer directors of FSA
arc among others.. Morton Ba•m,
Joyce BroW11, James Farley,
Adrteue G~l1er, Mary Harvey,
Jolla l.lllefer, Robert Levertoa,
Laverne Wiicox, Beatrice
Tb o m a1 , Dr . Ml claa e a
Scbamaclaer and lite Rev. PHI
Estebo.
Papara1u ts edited by Dally
Piiot Style tdJtor Vida Du a.
ANN I.ANDERi 114
COlllC885
"Everyone assumed prior to
my surgery that I had the
understanding of a male - I
d idn't. I was playing my
biggest role. When I am
asked ifl was a good actress,
I say no .. .I was a better actor
Jorgensen's Pllabt to find a total
gender identny ultimately lanckd
him m Denmark for the sex reas11gn-
mcnt.
After the 101uaJ news story broke.
Jorgensen was immediately inun-
dated wnh faniastjc and extravapnt
offers. One offer came from Warner
Bros. to perform in pictures or
nightclubs; another from someone
who was willing to pay SSOO weekly if
Jorgensen JOincd 1 two-women stnp
~how. Although uowillio&Jy thrust
into 1he public eye, Jo11tnscn decided
to capitalize on her new fou.nd fame.
"When I amvcd at the then New
York lnternattonal Airpon on Febru-
arv I J. 1953. I was mel by a crowd of 300 shoving reporters. newsreels and
stJll photographcn. I later learned
that 11 was the largest as5Cmblagt of
press representatives in the history of
the airport to that pomt," she said.
.. I could never understand why I
was receivi ng so much attention.
Now. looking back. l realize n was the
beginning of the sexual revolution.
and J JU St happened to be one of the
trigger mechamsms. Jus,t previous to
my operation. the ·Ktn~y Report'
had been pubhshed. Although it was
as bonng as heck...just a bunch of
statistics ... 11 sold like hotcakes.
Everyone 1hought n was a sex novel.
although 11 was far from that."
The years that followed Jorgensen's
return from Denmark were filled with
n1ght club appearances. st.age per-
formances. wntingand lecturing. Her
notoriety t0ok her on a wave of
succes~ that slowly ebbed to a com-
fortable halt m the early 1970s.
"I don't know who faded first ... she
said laughmg. "'the nightclubs or me.
h just seems that all the big clubs just
sort of disappeared."
After so many years of entertain-
ing. Jorgensen who had earned
enough to hve comfort.ably, volun-
tanl) backed away from the public
eye
"I am not an 'old war horse.' hke
my fnend Malton Berle or other
pcrf ormers. ·• she sa1d. "I never
crawled up the ladder to reach the top.
then fought to stay there. J didn't need
it. When the busin~schan.gccl and the
(Pleaae .ee JOROENSEN/82)
Male hormones can cause
math superiority, study says
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
PHlLADELPHIA -Junior high school boys are
bener than girls al math and that is probably because of
male hormones rather than differences in upbringin~.
says a researcher who acknowledges the idea 1s
"unpopular and controversial."
Iowa State University psychologist Dr. Camilla P.
Benbow presented ber findings Monday at the annual
meeting of the American Association for the Advance-
ment of Science.
She said she made her conclusions based on studies of
more than 100.000 gifted students l)ationwide over J 5
years.
As 7th-graders, the youngsters were given the math
ponion of the Scholastic Aptitude Test. an exam usually
taken by high school juniors and seniors. The boys
consistently outperformed the girls, and the gap widened
at the very brightest level. Benbow said.
Scores ranged from 200 to 800. Among J 2 year olds
who scored over 500, there were two boys for every girl.
Over a 600 score, the ratio was 4 to I. And over 700, n was
13 to I.
Benbow exam aned whether upbnnging or some other
social fac1or could explain the boys' superionty. She
found no significant difference between boys and girls in
their attitudes toward math, in the encouragement they
go1 from their parents. in their math instruction or even
.
FSA fau Martha Killefer, Ron Johnaon, J
~,_.,.......,0....MI :pl ft
Kuter 8ea1 Leap.e founden Dana Cooper
and Te.re. Penoer. ...
the toys they played with m their early years.
But the differcnc~ in math ab1hty that was nollcable
in junjor high widened forther as the youngsters went
throu&.h high school, Benbow satd.
..l t is premature to conclude that at is only
socialization that causes sex difference in mathematical
reasonability,'' she said. ··1 bcheve that both environmen-
t.al and biological factors arc important."
Benbow said she realized that her studies reached a
co nclusion that was both "unpopular and co-ntrovers1aJ, H
but she said "our data arc onJy consistant with one
biological hypothesis, and that 1s the early hormonal
exposure hypothesis."
"Contrary to popular belief," she said, "there seems
to be no evidence to support the theory of male supcnority
at this age."
Another researcher, Dr. Elizabeth Stage of the
University of California at Berkeley. wd no one has
proven a hnk between hormones and math. She suggested
that boys might do better on the SA Ts because they arc
more willing to make educated guesses when they aren 't
sure of the correct answer.
Benbow said she also found that youngsters who were
espcc1ally good at math were significantly more hkely
than usual to be left-handed, to have allergies and to be
near-sighted. Some theoriu that all of these things may
somehow be related to exposure to high levels of the se~
hormone testosterone before birth
Ptaldent ~a. ~ ud Jaay
cb.aJnnao ~Heline. ...
~
'
.. * Or.noe Coat DAIL v PILOT I Wedneeday. May 28. 1988
Acupuncture & Her~
Cn11c
3 "NO" OFFER
NO matter what kind of pain or chronic illness
NO results from acupuncture or herb treatment
NO charge to you for treatment
Whoever believes In acupuncture. herbs, or P.E., shall
not be ill, but have everlasting health and life.
(714) 968-3325 30 years experience
15 years Instructor
You
You may be eligible for
a s pecial lnvestlgatlonal
drug program
In Orange County.
You must have had Rheumatoid
Arthritis (not Osteoarthritis)
for less than seven years
and be under age 70.
For Further Information Call
644•963lor645•7362
Let Us Help You Shed Those Unwanted Pounds
Wh en you lose, everyonP. wins~ Your fami ly, friends and
most importantJy you. It's a medical fact that people
who are overweight are at greater risk of developing
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension , arth ritis
and cance r, as well as a variety of psychological
problems as.sociated with being overweighc.
VVe at Fou ntain Valley Regi onal Hospital and Medical
Center are here to help you wi n your battle of the bulge.
VVe have fou r specially designed weight loss programs,
one of which is righ t for you.
Medically Supervised Weight Loss Programs
•Nutrition Counseling•
(for individuals 20 lbs. or more overweight/
In our Recommended Diets IR.0.1 Program, a registered diet1tJdn
will work with you on an individual basis to put togelher a well
balanced meal plan that will help you lose we1~h1 while
maintaining good nutritional status. You 'II learn about your
personal body requirements and how 10 succe~fully lose thost'
unwanied pounds and keep them off.
•Optifast •
(for individuals JO lbs. or more overweight I
A medically supervise d program in which a protein /
carbohydra te food supplement promotes more rapid weiKhl
los.s You will rec.eive a body composluon anal~~. nutri11onal
counsehnR. behavior modification, stress management and
exercise pres.c.ripuons; each developed specltlcally for you
by our team or weight lo~ specialists. Arter you reach your
goal welp)it, our one year weight maintenance prowam wlll
help you maanrain your weigh! las.\.
Fountain Valley
Regional Hospital
and Medical Center
17JOO Euclid at \Varner, Fountain Valley, CA Q2708
•Gastric Bubble•
{for Individuals 80 lbs. or more overweight/
Thi.s palnle~ non surgical procedure Involves inserting a deflated
balloon into the stomach via the moulh. Once lnfla1ed, lhe balloon
causes a full feeling, as well as restricting the amount or food you
can ea!. The balloon is re moved once the desired weight I~ Is
achieved. NuU'itional counseling, beh avior modification, suppon
groups and exercise consultarlons are included as part or this
comprehensive program.
•Gastric Reduction•
(for lnd1vlduals 100 lbs. or more overweight/
If you have tried unsucce~fully to lose weight, this surgical pro
cedure may be right for you. Gastric reduction Involves partJtlonlng
a portion or rhe stomach so that only a small amount of food wlll
cause a full reeling, as well as limiting the amount of food the
stomach can hold. A ream of doctors, dietitians, nurses and physlo
lherapists wlll work with you to ensure maxtmum benefits from
this procedure.
For more Information about any of these treatm ents,
please call our special ~lght ~ Hotline :
(714) 567-4764
c fountain ~llfy RfVJo~I Hospital ~nd Mtdial Ctnttr. 1080
CHRISTINE JORGENSEN •••
f'romBl
that the person mus1 spend 1 year or
two with a acnder clinic, and 1hlt be
or she mus1 assume the new sender
role in both his or her profeuional
and personal life for one or two years
before 1hc operation.
Alona with the new suraiCl.1
procedures developed for the oper•
ations. JotJcnsen believes the public
as bcner informed about tbe true
nature of transexualiJy.
"At one time or another, I have
bee n called a male homosexual1 a
female homosexual or a transvestite.
I don't fit into any of those
categoncs," she said. "A transcxual is
a person who truly believes lhemself
to be! of the opposite sex. Everyone
assumed prior to ID)' surgery that l
had the understanding of a male; I
really didn't. I was playing my biaest
role. When I am asked ifl wasa aood
actress, I say no .. .I was a better actor
than an actress."
Lookin~ back, a highpoint in
Jorgensen s life took place in 1978
when she was invited to speak at the
International College for Surgeons in
Mexico City.
"Here I was with respected sur-
geons from all over the world," she
recalled. "Eve ry day of the con-
ference. there were different sym-
posiums offered. and oun drew the
largest audie nce. My talk was trans..
lated into I S different la nauagcs. I felt
it finall y ga ve a tremendous legit-
imacy to the subject. I couldn't help
but reflect on the 1950s, when I was
banned from performing in Boston."
Accord mg to Jorgensen. she has no
past regrets.
"I have no regrets1 not even those
deep feelings I expenenccd when the story broke," she said. "All those old
regrets ha ve long been gone. Over the
years. I real ized that had it not been
for the press male.in~ me famous, I
would never have en1 oyed the type of
hfe I have lived. I would never have
met people lik.c Marilyn Monroe,
Betty Grable and Vivian Lei&h. I
would not have been a pan of all that.
Now, look.mg back in my 'twiliaht
years,' I can say, I have had one hell of
a Iife ... ll has been wonderfuJ."
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Best Wishes from :
Or. W. Ronald Redmond a & Staff
Orthodontics
Aurore Belarde•
Brenda Banab&ll
Sua Schueller
Mike Smith
Alllaon Horak Da•ld L7on
Brian Da•iM Stephanie Ledm,.ton
Shannon Reinhold Bruce Morlok
Laura Nua Joe Bak
Shann• Smith
30111 N1auel Road • Laauna Neauel
(714) 495-oeoo
181 AYentda Vaquero • San Clemtnle
(714) 412-2141
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For more information Call After 2 PM
640-7412
Sotvrdoy, June 21 , 1916
Information will be presented by members of
th e police deportment and members of the
Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospi tal staff:
• Avoiding sexual ossovlt/profile of o rapist ~
• Prevention & awareness f1. r.p--i"
• "Victor or Victim" (film) .O~. ~ y:r
• Post -ossovlt examination & core ~,.,_AP
• Victim svrvivol course ,~r
Two seminar sessions will be ovoiloble
8:30 o.m. to 12:30 p.m. or
1 :00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Wom en's Sofoty Semina r will be held in
the conf eronce center of Costa Mesa Medical
Center Hoipital Resorvotions or• required to
gvorontee your space Write to Administration
ot the Hosp1tol or coll 650·2400 cm COSTA MESA MEDICAL CENTER HOSPITAL ffiC JO 1 Victono St Coito Meio Cal1fomio 92627
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, May 28, 1988 BS
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These camps are open to the public and are designed co
improve the cenms game of j uniors.
John Wayne Tennis Club T-Sh1rts <md visors will be given
co all campers and rackets will be iJwifrded to camp
tournament w inners. Enrollmem is l1m1tuJ to six students
per Instructor
SESSION DATES
June 23-J!b 4 ' ~· 4--Aug. 's
;JW 7·.»/ 18 Aug. JS-Aug. 29
Jutv21·AUG~ I ~· 1-Sept. 12
i _ ..-: c-.'Wil not M Mtd My 4ch Ot Sfpt. f R,
~ IJOJ.50
CLASSn..S
MOn . ..frt. 8 ..,., , am
30 Hours • S225
I J 7 J JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
For rt>q1Jlfl1t1on 1nfo1 m.wtln
call 644-ft900
BAAOAIN MATIN••• M ONDAY THRU SATURDAY tST 2 PERFORMANCE~ J_ ('<CfC>T H0l1DAV5 & !5TAR1'E01*1'f'ATUA[S
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l'HTTY IN l'INK '"°''ll ljfi•·lf , .. u
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LAST llSOllT 111
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ORANGE
714 IM Oil t • ,..., I O'""'"
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551-0655
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UNIVERSITY
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CINEMAS 891 OSt.1
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday. May 28. 198& -----
HOROS COPE
Thursday, May U
ARIES (March 21-Apnl IQ)• Dialogue 1s leaturcd w11h one "ho
previously was secretive. Focus on motives. special ix·rl'l'l)t1on~. unckr
standing of individual who really neect) yourtrust. Gem1n1, Virgo .. ag111ar11"
people will play outstanding roles.
TAURUS (l\pnl 2() .. Ma) 101· Lunar pos111on h1ghlaghl\ 1x•rforman,1·
design. persuas1vene!>s. a11ract1\encss. ab1h1y 10 emerge \ 1ctonous You'll
win fnends. clement~ of 11m1ng and luck nde w11h }OU. Libra. ScorpH>.
another Taurus pla) roks.
GEMINI ( MJ\ 21-J uni: 201 1nd1'1dual 1n po!>1t1on of authont} e\pres!>c\
doubt. c;eeks 'our roun\CI Define
terms. daflf~ mcaningc;. anept
challenge of addrd rcspons1b1ht)
You'll pcrki.:t 1ethn1QUl''> P1scl's pla)s
role
CANCER (June 21-Jul\ 22) Th1'I
could be )Our po""er-pla\ dJ)'1 'ou'rr
capable ol perce1' ing future trl'nds ol
being romanm "hllc keeping feet on
ground Superior pra1<,c<:. ~ou
C apncorn natl\e pla)'S ke} rok
SYDNEY
0MARR
LEO (Jul~ 21-..\ug. 22): \ ou'll reJlh more people, populant\ 1ncrea't''
restrictions are rcmo' ed and green hght tlashes for progress, poss1bk m Ill''
Nt'"S concerns monc~ Anes figurt•<; prominent!}.
VIRGO ( .\ug. 23-Sept 22 ): Ne" start results from brt•.ik ""llh pa\t I unar.
numl·mal l0)'dl'' highlight pannrr,h1p. legal affair-.. \trong rt•latwn,h1p
man till status. \ ou'll gt·t to heart of mailer' and dann· to' our ov. n lUlll' l t•n
pla~c. rok
LIBRA (Sept :!]-Ou 221 Ht· spcnfic concerning Jc1a1I' -wl·l uul
those who sh:Hl' ~nur rnnLl'rno;, ideals. RcJCCt fal!>e pnde. strn e for prngrl'\\
F-ocus on ~tc;. emplo~mcn1. health ln1u1110n nngs true, 101111"' fir,1
1mpress1ons
SCORPIO l<kt 2 '-"-o' 21 I ()1,cr<,11\. loo!.. be\ond the 1mml·d1.itt•
mal..e long-d1stanc:r C<tll in Lt1nnl'l't1on v.1th P<>''>lhlc '>l.';1Journ1'\. l'opul.mt\
increases. social act1v1t1r\ atcl'leratt' You'll add 10 wardrotx· (1l'mtn1
ag11tanus people pla) roles
SAG ITT ARIU (No\ 22-Dct 21) \1rong emphas1' on quahl!G.1t111n'
research. secunt}. real ec.tatc dealing ... v.1th older ml·mhcr' ol lam11\
commun1t) You'll Ohl· m~sten anJ could reap iinani:1al n.•"ard \n1rp111
pla~s role
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-J.in 19) Emrh.i'" on ninn\lt) mnH'm1·n1
tra,cl. ab1ht) to d1)ccrn mull'l'!> and potl·n11al ( hl·tl.. rt•,raHh ht.· ro\111\t'
concernmg !)Ourre matcnal 'ou·11 gain through rommuntlat111n "n11ng
ag1ttanus figures pronunrnth
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-hh It() l\.eep recent resolution'> concerning J1t•t
recreation. general health Fam1h member tonlide<. 'lecret Be d1plom.1tll.
stfl\l' to be fair ""1thou1appearing10 be d1:.1ntere'ilCd
PISCES ( Ftb. 19-M:mh 201 Lunar numcncal c~c.lt•, h1ghl1ght
1cthn14Ul''>. <,tyle. design. ah1lt1' to loo!.. behind St'encs for pcn1m·n1 data
'our mmt de'i1rablc quaht1e' \urge to forefront Empha:." on gl.imm
d1scrc•1ton. t·landesttne agrel'ml'nts.
IF MAY U IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you no" Jrl' on more \Ol1d l'mo11on.d
tinannal grc1und 'l ou arc \C~lllc. a natural IC<tl'hl.'r. )OU al'>o art• capahk ot
··reading thJrartcr .. a<, Y.l'll a'> an\ professional po;;cholog1c;t or d<11n 0)~1111
You·, 1.· haJ an unu'\ual fam11\ Ilk ;ou arc far,cina1ed h;. the mantle art'> .ind
'>l'ICOlC:'> tOc.IUdtng 41'trolog} ( ancer. ( apnC'orn . .\qu3rJU\ pcopk pl.I\
1mponant role<, 1n Hrnr hfr. Romanlt' cmphas11ed rn Ju1w 'nu'll tr.i,rl 111
..\ugu~t \ou'll nc rewardl'lf toreffon-; in October
Public hanging for
murderous elephant
E\ccut1oncr'> nggcd a \ll'l'l lJbk
atLachcd 10 a raalrnad derm l aruund
the neck of a cm u'> ckphan1 named
~far. and I\ m hnJ hl·r in fn>nt ot
5.()()(1 r,pcctaior' \I ft'4IO fr\a\. 10
I Y 16. 1h1'> On ...i r.1mragl· \far) had
kilkd three ml'n \ rnmm1ttcc
1hough1 a puhlll hJnging '-'OUld tx· 1n
1>rdtr
f....1np. Hl·nr. \ 111 v.Prl tl'Olll\\hol''
In v.h1dl hin ofH>UI rdngl'ratordo
\l>U ll'l'P the lhCl'\C0
' Wh1thl'\l'r 11
\.\lU rut a l ubc ol <,ug.ir rn thl'fl' lhl'
hlc:u chee-.c v.on·1 turn grcl'n I'm
told ~ugar rl·tanJ<. molJ
Q Bdorr thl' dnrt· pr• 1hlc:m' t1.1J
an~ plaH~r l'H·r been thr11"' n 11u1 o1
"iational L ragur hd\t'hJll lnr h'l'fl'.,
.\ One Iron \I.to \hC rinn1t' In
I I.Ill I ht· Jchtx·r;ud' \h1mpu.I 1111 .111
umpire\ \hot''> thl·n '>P•t 111 1h,1t
ump1rt·' tau·
( 11n\ ll I\ in I tht'l \ ( 1\.tr!l\l0 flfl\<10
"'car kg 11 1n' <ii n1ghl 1 111111· 11111rn
rng guard\ un'>h;rt klc.-thnn and 111'lrn
thl' gJlt'\ T11 I urn lhl'lll lrn>\l' .111 d.1,
'lt1 lhl0\ l .1n ht·!! lnr l1111d 'nu Jicull' tt
might '"1rl.. ,11 'i1n11 \rn~·'
1) 1, thr 1 I pnll·nt dl111·ra1 t.rh"
'" th< { ntll'U \I.II\'\ d111 Ill 1mm1-
>'ftlOI\ lqtal or 111hrr'' 1\1 ··
\ Clnh 111 part <If 1h11\l' \\hll\l'
11.111q· t11nf11l'" I ngl"h thr dlltt•ral'
1.111 'till run' •I pnu·nt
' 11 .ill hll'10l''' gon h.1d 1n an
PEOPLE
L.M.
Bovo
et:onom ll drf)rC\SIOn I h Ing<, I h,11
cost tht• k:i'>t . 1ht·n. seem to <lo v.dl
l'nough l\.kl'Ol'\ hooml'd during thl·
14 '\lh. ')11 d 1J ( ul..1.·
rvtale dn't't'> at-romran1n1h\1lw1r
V.l\C'i ha\\:-kw1.·r dl'llJl'nt' thJn mt·n
v.ho Jn,1.· Jlont· In Bl•lg1um .11 an\
rate \o '>a' traffit '\tall\t1uan' ,,,rr
1herl' The~ c;uggeq nc" car' bl·
e4u1pped with t\\o <,pcrdoml'trr' thr
n1r.1 onl' 1n lrnnt ol lhl pa\\l'Ol,!.\'1
\tJI I Jon't bchnc thn haH· ii
( nmrkte g.ra'>p ot tht• \llU<llllln
' 11u l ;in ll'l'I \orn 1nr .1 q un·n ""'
l nough C)Ul'l'O \ ll tun.1 ' hdo\ nl
l'nnll' \lhat \\J\ Jc.id Jnd l.111· 1n
her lift \ht• "a'> hlJrJ to murmur
"Hm·h .ti the apprn.1l h 111 d1-.1th thl·
't•il '' r ;11wd and '>lit h purt• 'Pint' an
.ill11v.rd lo '>t'e a ghmp't 111 lhow dcJr
1111n v.<11t1ng for thl·rn ·
T cnnc•..,ee annuall' lo't'' mnrl'
1opc;oll and gain" more <,ongv.ntt'f\
1han an; oth<.>r ~talc 1n lht• tountn
11·, nnt a fair trade
LU. B oyd
rolumnist.
is B synd1catt•d
Sensitivity often
not two-way street
c H all thl' familiar patterns ol
hch:H wr I have observed over the
~ear... pcrhap~ nothing is morr
pcluhar than th1~. that 11 1s custom-
anl~ 1hc peopll' who iU"C the mos1
\l'0~11nc about their own feehngo;
''hu Me at the same time the lea!.t
scn<,111\e about the feelings of others
On~ "uuld think that the ab-
normal!) 1hin-sl..1nned about the
rc,ponse-, ofotheN would be the most
a\.\are ot the reacuons they pro"okc
-but 1n more rases than not. there
seem\ 10 tx· almost an 1mer~
rl'IJllOO'ih1p
That 1s thow "ho bargt• in laltlc...,-
1) and arc tht•n Quite proper!)
r1.•hulkd rarel) w1.·m to grasp this
<.1mplc p•l)cholog1cal la" of cause and
t.>11i.·n . ..ind are balllcd b} the treat-
nwnt thl'\ often rt·n·1"e
ThNe j, .1 '>trnnge kind ofhltndnt:!>S
10 operation hc:n· ~o many of the
1nJ1' 1duab who arl' c:asil> insulted.
,1tlmntnl and hurl hy tht• rc .. ponses of
nthc:r\ <,ccm totall) unable 10 pcrce1 vc
ho\\ thl·1r own l'Onduct rubs other
f)Cllple thl' ""rong W3\ and IOC\ llably
\t'I\ Uf) the \l'f) \lluauonc; the) brood
.1hout
I '\:11t 10 mention 1hoc;e of us ""ho
trl'JIC lht' \Cl"'. (Ond1t100\ \.\e com-
plJtn ol. like ttir mo1onc;1 "ho sman-
Jkll..'> a traOic wp and then cannot
undt'r'>tand '' h~ he &l'h a llll..Ct v. ht•n
he \hnuld haH' got oil v. 11h a mild
rqmmand I
\\ l· Jll lnuv. <.omc1llll' "'ho though
h,l\llJll\ ,1 nrlt JX0r\on 1~ pu'>h~ and
rro,l><.Jll\C Jnd then v.on<lcr<. "h'
hr ur ,tw mJ\..<'' 'ulh J negatl\~
Im f1rt'\\IOO 00 l .t'lu,1 I Jl'llU31 OICI OlC:S °'''' h 01.'11('lh' hrtll\l' l'd<.lh 10 \OC131
SIDNEY
HARRIS
s11uat1ons. but never seem 10 ~ra<.p
the plain fact that 11 is their o""n
assen1,c.>ness that 1n' 1te'i snub' and
\\()!'SC
11 I'> not hard to understand tho<.e
brash 1nd1"1<luah who "311 through
life uncrl~ unawan: of the 1mprl·so;1on
tht') gl\t\ and seem neither to kno"
nor care ""hat 01hcrs real1' think of
tlu:m. Nobod). apparently·. can hun
their feelings, for they have a hide like
an elephant
But the real punlcrs arc the supt·r-
sensn1ves about themsclve<>. who
display little or no recognition that
millions of people in the world share
the same 1cnderscnsib1li11co; but have
the sense to protect them by d10idcn1
behavior
Oddest of all. this has nothing 10 do
\\1th intelhgence. as 11 as general!>
measured. Some of the most in-
telligent characters I have known
suffered from this «oe1al ailment.
v.htlc some of the stup1dc'>t ha'c
possessed a seeming!) 1ns1mc11,e
sense of g1' e-and-takc It requ1re'1 J
lifetime for r,ome 10 learn ho" to sec
themseh es as other~ o;ce them. and
some neH·r lcam at all
Sidney Harris i s a syndira tt'd
columnist.
Mom frightened of
a dreadful delivery
l>I ..\R .\N~ L..\NUF R~ \.h hJ\t'
.l wonJatul I 4-month-nld daughter
\I\ hu<,hanJ an<l l both ""Jnt another
l hild But tne mcmurir'> of nn
n1ghtman-.h dl'll\ef) are "1111 fresh .. ,
l·nJcd up" 1th 200 stitches and lost a
great dc:al ol hlood Jftcr the bah~
fl'm,uned 1n lht· h1rth tanal tor more
th.in I 2 hmir' The problem v.a" a
'mall rt·h ll area
I l an tokratc nine mun th' ol
n:.iuw;i hut I 1.an'1 '>tand the th11ugh1
111 anothl't hornhk delt,er. \h
i.tUl''t1nn (.in J woman rcqUl'\I a
( l''>Jrt•an '>l'l..'l1<m !rum ht•r dlK'tor
pnllr do tx·roming prl'gnant'' I ha'l'
t11ld rm hu'>h.i.nd th1\ would ht· the
11nh "a' I "ould ha' ea c;econd chtld
PkJ'>e l~d me !..no"" -TR..\l 'M ·\-
f l/rD IN~..\( RA'\1ENTO.
OEAR SACRAMENTO: I consul-
ted with Dr. John Long, a dis-
11 n g u Is he d obs tetrician aod
gynecologist in Chicago. He said,·
''This patient should commuoicafe
her wishes to her doctor. The site of a
<'hild can oow be determined by
ultrasound . If she bad 200 st.itches
with her first delivery, another
delivery could possibly tear the old
'i<'ar tissue Patients have the right to
be involved in the decision-making
proress of tbei r care." • • • t>f .\K \'"I LA"-DERS· I am a
'l'hra<,l..J farmer'-; wile I know
\l''l'ral h~tnkt•r" and nc,cr thought
.In\ •II lht•m \\('fl' \Cf' \('\\ !That
"'1•m.1n 1r11m Omah;i mu-;1 hJ'l' a
r,rc:.11 111,Jg1nJt111n 1
I nr b H'ar<. m\ huc;band ha'>
"orl..ed I fi hour' a da\ in c;uh-n·ro '~c,1ther and under thc0 hro1llng o;un
I k h"' a tollcgc degree 1 n agmulturc
,ind !..no"'" "hat he 1-; doing It 1s not
Hll.i m1<.,managcmcn1 that 1-s dosing
1hc bank\, 11 1'-. a' President Reagan
.. ard la-.1 \.Car the hankers' wtlhngncso,
10 g:imble on 1nOat1on and loan
rnont'\ on a piece of paper that 'a~c,
11ur net \.\orth ha<t 1n<.r1.·a~ed
M" huc,hand m...ide cl lhcmc Hl'
l hnc.c ICI t arm It 1urnt•d out to ht.· Jn
ANN
UNDERS
unfonunate 1.hoH.r lur U'> hut I"'"" t
1olcra1t· c1 banker'<, w1k hltlming m\
husbamJ for HFR huo,hand\ v.orm·,
He dt.>\en ec; cvcrv om· ol tht•m \\ l.
ha"cenoughofouro"n -MR'°) "1
HOSKINS, NEB
DEAR MRS. M.: This bas 001 hel.'n a
great year for many of the nation's
farmers. It's a risky business, being
at the mercy of fl oods. droughts,
early frosts, tornadoes and cyclones.
Jt must be very painful to see all those
years of bard work go down the drain.
My sympathies are with ea<'h and
every one of you. • • • DF.\R .\NN I ..\NDERS I ha'e ,1
word for those men ""ho are '>1111
uncertain ahout the torrcc1 "'a' 10
o;hai..e a "oman·~ h.rnd Plca~c le.Ila'>.
g1'e U'\ a brcal.. \hake a woman·s
hand JU'it a~ )OU "ould a man'\
I am tired ot reaching out to c;hal..c a
man\ hand and getting a wimp'
<iquccLc of the finger\ 1n rt•turn ·\ t a
reccnl hu~1ncs'> lunrh I \.\lnn•d \\hen
a man I kn<>"' v.ent around thl· tahk
squce11ng v.omen·-. lln~l'r"
Please . .\nn pnnt th1'> lettl·r fht:rl'
arc a lot of men "hh nl't'll to Ix·
t•ducatc<l -rtRM CiRll' '"" OR-
LANDO
DEAR GRIP: Some women need
educating, too. When a man gives me
a dead fish, I free my hand at once and
give him a no-nonsense grip, as firm
as any be will ever receive from a
male. This never fall!! to produce a
strong handshake In return and I have
never felt that J bad sacrificed an iota
of my femininity
Tatum, McEnroe are proud parents
R\ tbf' .\"'or1att>d Prr'I'
\\--.r.\\f()'IC\ \,Ht\\
Tatum O'"..;tal h,1, ~1 l n h1r1h to .1
hJh\ hm h\ ll'Onl\ ,I.If J ohn
M r E n r u r .1 h , , ' p 1 1 ,1 I
\pl"lh''"' nnMn \Jld t11cl.I\
I ht >< pt •und I I ·111101 \' ho\ "<I' hC1rn I ml.n .ind h111h
m11thl'r Jnd hah\ ''t·n1 lt111111·
\fond<1' 1n ~11nd tw.1hh <..ml
< 11nnnt• Roger\ nur\ln)? 't1twr
'1\ctr .11 'It fohn' ll11,r11.1I \h1·
d1dn°t kno"' tht• h.1h\ 'n.inw <> "l'JI and hi nr111· "ho
hJ\l tra,ekd lr>[l.t'lhl'r on tht•
tt•nn1' 1 ''' u1t 31 1ir\t dv111nl
rumor<. th.11 th1.· ~2-\l'M nhl .1<.
Ire\\ "a' prc(lnan1 Rut in .1n
1ntC'f'\ IC\\ 10 r)(.·u·mhcr Mt I rlf•)l'
ackr\O\\ kdgt•d the prctfn,101 \ <.1nd
..aid tht cnuplf planned to marr:
Princess sings
\f \DRID -Munalo'\ l'rut•
~C\\ cepb•nlt 1~ maling her l1r'1
, 1\11 10 \J13in to c;1na on a ldfll'd
tl'IP 1~mn van<"t> \how lc4'111nny
humomt Ptdro Rall.
T ht' rnnn~ ~. who "a' to
fX rform 'iOng\ from her nt'"-
alhU ITI "Humcanc" un the ,hov.
amved '\fonday from Pam
Prlnceu Stephanie
ard a pn' a planl \he "'a' tt d Cl\ 11 gu,ud<, and
rollrc a1 araias a1rpon a\ rC'·
J'lorlcrs and photographc"
ht-\1c5ed her
Sexy Forch
"l[W O RLEAN -HHry
Henry Ford U
Ford II ha\ wmpla1nrd that .,
fortt}lom1na hook on hi~ fam1l~ 1s
\PIC<'d With 100 mul h \C'.\, !>a) ...
Robtrt l..at'f)', author of ··J.ord
Th(' "1cn and th<' MJchin<' •·
l..41ce) told a ncv.'i confcrcn1.c
th.H f Ord 'kl1d hC' V.3\ unh3PP>
with the manu\Cnpt. which co'-
er' I 00 )'Care; of life 1n the Dl'troll
Jutomotl\C famll)
But the former thaarman ol
• ord Motor < o . .-.aid he undcr-
\tood the hU\IO(''i'i MlC'ISlly of the
w\ angle, according 10 l accy "I
11.·t Mr Ford sec the manu~npt
and he wa'i upset." Lacey satd "I
a'>kcd him whether he was dlsap-
rointcd 1n 1t and he rcpltcd: 'No.
I'm not d1sappo1n1cd a1 all. It\
what I expected You h;n c 1n put
""' in hook'> 1 hC\l' da" 10 'l'll lh(,'01.
Brown directs
I O<-ii\NC,fl F~-JlmBrown,
the football l'fl'Olt turned tlctor.
make\ h1\ d1rtclinl' debut w11h
thC' Jct1on ln'l' '>Ion .. \lam
dun~:· ""hlth goc!> into pro
duct1on at the end ol Ma\
Rro"n ali;o v..111 \tar tn the
mo\le "llh Voncua MlOht•e
and Be' er!\ 1 odd
The mo .. 1e 1'i "'h"'' wt11n·
produt'cr Boo~er (rnfTin .,.,.., ''
one ol th<' blai.:k-th<'mC' me)\ 1co;
made po'i'iibk b> th<' \UtlC\'> ut
"The Color rurptc " He~ 1d that
film ha~ "rtl.indlcd an 1ntcrc-.t"
in black films.Just a\ "The C.oc,b)
Show .. haci hrought nc\\ hlal k·
themed hOW$ to lCICVl'lton
I ..
ROAl> MAP VIA VIENNA
'\1•1t lll'I' \'uhwrnhlt• i-:a~r dt•;i l'
NORTH
•A~ 10 ·1
K 7 :t
A 10 4
• Q !).&
EAST WF.ST
+95
8tH
+76:1:!
A ,j 10 :'i "!.
9 :') Q .J 7 ;J ii!
+ K 7 :J • JO fl
SOl T ll + K .1 H
Q9
K Hfi
+ \ ,J H;, :!
T111 l>idd1m•
East Soulh " .....
Pas., I + I
I I NT """" Pai;s Pai;s l'1t ....
( lp<·nmi.t lt•ad E1t-:h1 11t
\orth
Obi ..
:i \T
At ll\l' l>1<lcl1•r" ha\ 1· a r 1 """ 111
lwar l'lit·~ !'>111111'111111· .. rt•\t•al '"
murh ah11ut 1111' hand 1 li.11 1 lw\ 111
t·11rn1• pa.;-.1\ 1• dt•l••rHll'r ... a' dt•• l.11 •·r
makc•-. 11-.<• 11f 1111' 1111111111.111011 1 lic \
)o!I\ t• h11n C'on.,1<11•1 t 111, li;1111I 1r11111
ttu• n•t·rnt (;rand \.1t1c11t•tl l 1a11"
< ·1iampwn .. h1p
\11rth .. d1111l1l1· ttl 11111' 111.1111111111
\\a-. n<'~·''"' 1 " 1111 1 al\t•11111
11111 tor pc•ndlt 11·" ~11111Ii-.l11n\1•d 111 ..
halarwrd hand hy 1 hoo-.111.it orw n11
1 rump IC1r t11 .. 1..t11d -.1111 t' ht • t•\pt 1 1
r·<I ;1 lw;1r1 l.>111 .. h·r I ron1 hi-. p;11I111'1
<mtl \orl h r.u .... ·d 111 ~.inw
W1•-.t it'd thr• 111p of 111-. part1wr-.
-.111t 1111111111.\ pl.1y1·tl ltm and Ea"t
t m 11·1·1 I~ i11,1·rtt·d 1h1· It'll llt•da1
.. r Hll'llard O-.lil.1i.t 11f \f.,mpt11 ..
Tt•1111 , <hwk•·d' '"" E.1,1 m:ult t ht•
f11w pla~ of n•111rn11ilo( .1 lov. lwar I
l>t•darC'r 11\ 1·rlt•ok 111-. q11c•t•11 "11 h
I ht• laltlc··..., l..111).t .111d lt•cl lllC' 1;1-.1
lll'a r1
t·;a .. 1 had 111 1.1k1• 111 .. I"'"'" 111
llt'Vl'r Ji(<'I I lll'n1 Tlt,1 t 11·d111 •·d 1 lw
hand to tl11-. r111 ... 111nn
CHARLES
Go REN
OMAR
SHARIFF
WE~I
+!Hi
NORTH
•AQ104
95
• 106
SOlTH
+ K .J H
K H fl
+A .J
\.\tu It I .1-.1-.hlltt·d111 ,i <11am11nd.
d1·• l.1r1•r \\1111 111 rfumm~ with the
.111· .111rl \\ .1-. 11111 1Pmptf'd by rht>
1hrh111w-. .... -:illt•r .di \\'(•-.1 had rn
h.1\1• rltt 1\111).! 111 11111-. .111cl f1vr c11a
1111111r1 .. 1111 t11-. II\ \'I I .tit I It· I amt• to
h.111d ~ 1111 t h1· an• ol d11b!'>-a \ 1
1'1111.1 < 1111p ;11111 t h1•11 ran four
-.p;ult•-. cti-.1a1d1111-t1h1· 1;wk (Ire lub-;
1r 11111 har\ll
111 rl11111111y t l11•1t• rc·111a11lt'd 11 d1a
111111111 a11cl t ht• q11t•1•n ol 1'111hs. wh1h•
dt•t l.111'1 lll'lcll\ H111tl1amnnd" Wl•.;1
• rnllrl 11111 hole! h11(111 ht• kin~ofdub~
.111d '"" d1a111on<h .111d wa-. fH<•t•rl
"II h 1111 1 lto11 t· 11! ,.., h11 h II.ind 111·
pr t•-.i•11t1"t
l fll k
\\II h 1 IW lo(,11111• li(ttlnli(
......... c. Ill ~ ~•""\-i c •"',;;;..· .. ..
'"" .. ;::>.J:j l'"""..J ~ (,.:J """""' ~ ... . -----I• ·•'f •• (\A• • "OU•"' o ·· ~ .. ~ . .. ... .. ...
...
,... 1
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Preserved
6 Hall Sp
10 Arrived
t4 Having wings'
15 Concerts
16 Bltnd as -
17 Punitive
i8 Bath item
20 Dry
21 Crocl<
23 Way
24 External
26 Franchise
28 Groo11ed
30 West 1na1es
coun1ry
31 ldoltzed
32 Oppress
36 Humorist
George -
37 English poet
38 Negative
39 Cease
42 Smelly
44 Statues
45 Ethics
46 Mysteries
49 ltaltan C•tv
50 Regions
Si Melal
S2 M ove around
55
60
63
55 Tne geegees
58 a manger
60 Bone pref
61 Fastener
62 Moslem
COl!e<Je
63 Hardy girl
64 The dole
65 Cyc.le par1
DOWN
1 Trenches
2 To shelter
3 Pacific port
4 Greek letter
5 Expunged
6 Drain
7 Food
th•ckener
8 Spanish
artrcle
9 Residue
10 01 heat
1 1 Concerning
12 Slurry
13 Anesthetic
i9 Container
22 United
25 U1n1a
26 Meal hSI
27 S1b1lale
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
28 Dwelllng
29 Mineral
deposit
30 Excites
32 Resounds
33 Extricated
34 Work
35 Destroys
'3 7 Complication
40 Illusions
41 I e . 1n lull
42 Coll11pse:.
43 Time period
45 1/1000lnch
46 Hard shoe
47 Get rid ot
48 COlns
49 Miriam·s
brother
51 Morose
53 -maier
54 Do business
56 Asian
commander
57 Next to Wis
59 SIOul
t 1 12 13
--I
TllB ..
FAlllLY
CIRCUS
by BU Keane
"I'm too sleepy to go to bed."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
S-28 e -~-.:r==.... 1'1~
"Now do you see why I wanted a
full-size car?"
PE MW TS
GARFIELD
T~IS 15 FOR OUR SC~
PAPER Cl-lARLIE EUC:OWN ..
IT'S OUR ANNUAL
SWIMSUIT ISSUE ...
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Went me to wake you when you're
medium rare?"
DErmIS THE MENACE
_ , -co .~Y... Jiank Ketcham ... ~ ~~ '1f
!Jj ~·
UJ< ~~
W~dD WANT TO SEE
PICTURES OF 0A5EBALL
Pl.AVERS IN SWIMSUITS ?
~
by Charles M. Schulz
IT0LL BE A SELLOUT !
by Jim Davis
l'P LIKE TO Sf ABLE TO ~TOP
EACH Of ~E CAR!> AH&J A~~ THf PfOPLf WHERE THEY'RE
GOING. IF THEY PIPN''f HAVE
Of' COOR&,50Mf Of THEM
MAY NOT HAVE A HOME ••• MOW~"
A GOOP£~ l'P 9ENP
THEM HOME
TUMBLEWEEDS
ANtnflNri' 1t> ~~
\I LDOKOU"r!'
'~. \
DllABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
~-
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
..
Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT/W~. ~ 2'. 1... •
BLOOll COUKTY
U.8. ACRES
AREN'T YOU OOINO
TO FIN16M MATCH INC,?
au-r THEA('~ A &f6,
&f\IGHT, Bf.AUTIFOL
WORLP OUT MERE NOT REALLY.I PR£fER
10 ~TAI.ii IN MERE,
TMANK l.i'OU
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
JUDGE PARKER
THERE WERE n«EE CALLS
ll-4AT I THOUGKT I HAO
eeTTER TELL 't'OU AeOUT
RATHER~ JUST LEAVE
A MESSAGE. MRS. WARNER !
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
AAo tcJ A51HE CJ..AS6 OF
A&6 &.EAVES ~ERE 1bDA'.' ...
by Bert<e Breathed
by Jim Davts
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNaJly
\t'lDt<A AMO
MIU<(;$. Wit~.
J
I
IJ l ,,
by Harold Le Ooux
MEANWHILE WOULD I'M NOT VERY
YOU UKE ME 10 FIX ~.~NE ' MAKE YOUR DINNER, IT SOMETHING UGHT!
MR. WARNER? BY TME WAY, WHE~'S
MV ~~?l99HE HeAE?
by Tom Batluk
<t'E.~ , 1~ s PrrE OF EIJERC)-IHI~ WE'VE "TRIED ON 1Wrr
5f'RPl.J PAim" ON -rnE rn:».rr
Of "THE BUILDING .. , ______ ..,'
DOONESBURY
i
i
j ..
by Gary Trudeau
'IQJ ,w;,/W, /.{/(['
A >OOt£Y 7Wf 1HfJlt. CSi sa.ETHIN6., 'tW
60
..
.. ... Onange Cout OAJLY PILOT/ Wednesday. May 28, 1988 ----
Schools duck
the issue
with user fees
A ve teran of four decades in poll ucs, Ed Burns had
a special way of answering newspaper reponers who
tried to pin him down . If Burns wanted to confirm
something, but didn't want to be quoted as the source of
that confirmat1on, he would say: "If It walks like a duck
and it smells hke a duck and goes ·quack. quack, quack.'
n's a duck."
In Irvine and Laguna Beach. school boards recently
have imposed "fees" on families whose sons and
daughters pan1cipate in extra-cumcular acuv1ties that
require transponauon. Huntington Beach has proposed
the same thing. Those fees walk. not hke a duck, but like
a tax. They smell like a tax. And they cry: "Tax, tax , tax ."
They are taxes.
The problem "-Ith those taxes. which suppon
valuable educauonal func ti ons ltke football games and
band concens. 1s that the1 arc imposed only on the
parents of the students who represent the schools at
those extra-cumcular functi ons. The Hunungton Beach
~chool board calls th ose students "users."
Other taxpa yers. those with out children or those
whose children arc not involved in sanctioned extra-
curncular activ1t1e~ or those whose children's after-
school actt vtty does not require trave l, are exempt from
these taxc~
That's not what public education 1s all about.
The acuvit1es in question arc not sponsored only for
the enJO] mcnt and cultural benefit of the panicipants.
Rather. the\ are extensions of the school as a small
society . The) are ed ucational e\penences for many
students -those ""ho ma ke th e team and those who are
cut , those who pla} th e games as well as those who cheer
for the players. Spon, an. mu sic, drama all are pans of
the to tal learning environment th at ex ists in and around
a school The young people who function within this
atmmpherc learn more than how to throw a foo tball or
ho"' to pla) a tuba -they learn about competition,
about c;ucLess and ta1lurc. about their personal stre ngths
and weak nesses 81 functioning in this society -inside
the clas,room and out during school hours and after -
thn learn a lntlc about hov. to function 1n hfc.
· When we c;uppon our puhltc schools with our taxes.
v.t· cndor\c a total C\pencncc w11h the understanding
that that expcn encc wi ll be different for each child.
Taxpayers ex pect to pay their fair share of the
education bill because they expect thei r public schools to
produce citizens who will be members of the communit}
at large lf ta~payers thought hkc the sc hool boards ha ve
been thinking latcl), the childless would complain that
the} arc not user'> of the schools. so they should not pa y
Onl) the parents of enrolled students would be left to
caIT) the tax burden of public educati on.
W1th that kind of tax base to work with, our teacherc;
-would oc luck\ to hl' ahlc teach children what a duck ~ou nds II kc ·
Op1111oris P.•C.HPSsed in this ,pace are tho'e of the Daily Pilot Other 111ews
iuprened on this page arP those ot their authors and artists. Reader
~omment is 1nv&1ed fhe Daily Pilot PO Bo" t560 Cos1a Mesa 92626 Phone
6 42-6086
Street corner job 1narket
causing trouble in Mesa
r Ill• I i1i111r
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ORANG[ ( l')AST
Daily Pilat
l hr \'1fl!\' l\ rt' of prohkm Iha I I\ Oc1ng
<. n-.Hl·d 1n ()rangi: C ounl~ hy "1r1ut of
n1111ur.ig1ng tht:\t' ind1gcn1 labort:r\
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Herschensohn, underflnanced tho~b his campalgrl has been, has
moved up even more dramatically than Zschau, and now leads the
pack with 18 percent support.
Writing's a full-time job
if you have full-time wife
Careful isolation
from reali ty proves
his key to success
Paul 1s a successful wnter. He's a
good fnend, but sometimes J wish we
were JUSt nodding acquaintances.
He frequently quizzes me to see
how many hours a day I write, then
1ells me at as not enough.
''I'm at the keyboard at least sill
hours a day and sometimes eight
hours a day," he says. "That's the
only way you'll tum out any volume.
You should get on a schedule lake
that."
That'i. easy for htm to say -and
do
Paul wakes up. showers. dresses
and goe s out to eat the breakfast his
wife, Linda. prepares for him. He
doesn't have to make his bed after-
ward or do the dishes
He goes into the den and sits down
and wntes. The only 1nterrupt1on is
when has wife bnngs him a cup of
roffee at I 0 a.m. And that 1s hardly an
interrupllon; she gltdcs in silently,
puts 11 on the edge of his dco;k and
glides out.
Paul wntei. until Linda calls him to
1unch Then he goes back to the den,
agam wathout clcanng the table or
ANN
WELLS
doing the dishes, and gets back to
work. No 1n1erruptions.
He never has to stop and run the
vaccumn or dust. or clean the
bathroom He never answers the
doorbell. Landa does that.
He doesn't think about what to fix
for dinner or do the shopping. All he
has to think about is 1he story he as
working on
Paul wouldn'L have the remotest
.dea how to load and tum on the
washing machine or dryer. He doesn't
;:>ut out the trash, pay 1he balls, or have
the car serviced. Linda does that. Paul
focsn't even answer the phone.
When has wtfe goes to the market,
bank, car wash. or out to lunch walh
fncnds, she unplugs the telephone so
he won't be disturbed.
He stays 1n the den wntang until he
hears Linda getting the ice out. While
they have a dnnk or two before
dinner. he runs a few-ideas b) her. She
is also a good cnuc
When Paul fini shes has current
prOJCCI, Linda takes at down to have
:opies made and mails one of them to
1he editor. along with the letter she
has written to his mother.
None ofthas actually reglSters with
Paul. Only when something goes
askew-power goes off. rooflea.ks. or
Lhe plumb1ng s1ops up. does he come
out of his imaginary world. And then
he acts as though the disaster were a
personal vendetta.
I've tned to ellplain to ham the
differences in our schedules Once I
said, "Paul. you don't understand-r
don't have a wife."
He looked at me as thou&h 1 were
wired up wrong, shook his head and
said1 "You must have priorities, and
writing is your first priority.''
The only way I'll get through to him
1s to have Linda's cooperation. If she
would go v1s1t her mother an Toledo
for a ~eek or 10 days, he might step
into the real world.
I suggested thi s to Landa and she
was shocked. She wouldn't think of
going away and leaving him there
alone. "Ann, he wouldn't get any
wnung done at all." she said.
Paul, If you and Linda ever split, I
hope I'm the first to know. I'd marry
her in a minute.
Co/omol•t ..to.a Well• lives ill w1uo• Nlpel.
Herschensohn and Zschau
gaining in bid for Senate nod
Problems of other
candidates push
them into forefront
The stop-Zschau forces in thc
Republican senatonal pnmar) cam·
pa1 gn ha ve a new problem His name
'' Lo' Angeles broadca'it commen-
tator Bruce Herschensohn. th e new
fron t-runner for the nominauon
The problem some others 1n the
ral e now face create~ a nev. op-
ponun1t ) for 1he man who pre\-1ously
ha\ been regarded by insiders ai. 1he
~ and1datc to beat. Congressman Ed
/~hau. the one w11h maJOP finan cial
bac king from C'alafornta's busmess
<.ommunll)
Htrschcnsohn's surge of suppon
.imong Southern Caltfom 1a vote~. a!.
indica ted an Mervin Field's poll tht'>
wcrk . caught most uf ha~ opponent\
napping Now ( onare~swoman
Bubb1 r 1edler. Los. Angele~ ( oun l)'
'iul)l.'f"\ 1sor Mike Antonovich. >\\·
4>t'mbl)man Robcn Naylor. and
olhl'r'> must reahzt they have a 1wo·
front war on their h3nd s an their
1n<.rc::asingly uphill fight for the
1hance lo run aga1ns1 l.>l'mocra11c
l \ Sen Ian Cranston th1'> fall
Fiedler and Naylor have a11acked
7~hl\u as too much of a moderate.
especially accu'iing the Los Alto~
congressman of being 1n<0uffic1entl)
"uppon1ve of some Pre•aden1 Re-
agan's pr0antms
7schau devuue~ from Reagan
ch1eO> on social issue . but he's also
been a fiscal con5trvllt1ve who pushes
for cuts 1n military as well as
domest1c-spc_nd1ng proposals.. This.
too. somct1me5 puts him opposnt the
dm1n1strauon H1~ ovrrall per·
centage of support for Rcapn
proposab. however, 1s almost the
ume as Fiedler's. and sh&h1ly h1a)lcr
than 1hc averaae for all COP mem-
ben of Conv.c s
An1 onov1ch has h.ad 1 different
stop-Zschau strale&)' IJQ?rc him.
and he m1aht ao •~•> Th~ bas1) for •
MARTY
SMITH
Antonovach'!i hope wao; the low
statewide name-1dcn1ificat1on
z.,chau had at the bcgannang of the
race.
Both strategies have bccn knocked
into a cocked hat by Field's poll,
which shows Herschensohn and
Zschau both getung stronger. Zschau
now is tied wi th state Sen. F.d Da vis.
1he previous front-runner. Each has
15 percenl support.
So much for Antonov1ch's hope-;
that Z~hau simply would disappear
But Herschensohn. underfinanccd
though h" campaign has been, has
moved up e~n more dramatically
thnn 7~hau, and now leads the pack
w11h 18 pcrctnt support Fiedler and
.\ntonov1ch art tied Wtlh Naylor and
econom1i.1 Arthur Laffer. at only 8
percent each
All this means the others can't
afford to 11norc Hcrscht'nsohn's par·
ucular vulncrab1ht1cs the way they
have so rar Con11nu1n1 to do w whale
anackana Zschau would leave the
door wide open to further pins by the
1clev1s1on and radio commentator -
and probably at their elpensc
HerKhensohn stands well 10 the
ng.ht not only of all has n vols. but
ind~. on some forc1,n-pohcy 1 •
sues, to 1hc nght of President Reagan
u well As an eumplc of his stndent
conservatism, he accuses Congress.of
four "day of 1Af~" when 1t votC'd
1n favor of 1 freete on nuclear arms.
hm111 on MX m1ss1le production.
rcs1nct1ons on aid to N1c1raguan
Contru and economic ~nctaons on
South Afnca
That stand on South Afnca puts
htm an d1sas:reement even with the
Reqan adm1n1Stration. which by
Herschensohn'sst.a.ndards 1Jau1l1> of
ats own form on infamy on lhe •!1\ue.
.
Herschen'iohn. a ro rmcr
'ipecchwnter for Richard Nixon. was
one of the form er president's b111er-
cnd supponers during the Watergate
cram. He generally condemns Fie-
dler's voting record in Congress,
along with Zschau's.
Whale 1h1'i kind of ideological
f undamcntaltsm proved 10 be the
stun that won previous Republican
senatonal pnmanes when Cranston's
seat was up for election, 1hcrc's
an other side to it, which should gjve
pause to GOP voters. This lond of
elltremtsm also proved to be the way
10 lose Republican general election
campa1gm. Cranston has won rc-
elecuon to the U.S. Senate more
11mes than any other Democrat 1n
Cahfom1a's history, largely because
moderate voters of both part1e5 were
put off by hard-lane ng.ht·wana Re-
publican nominees an 1968, 1974,
and 1980 .
Herschcnsohn's backer$ may argue
that has broadcasting skills set him
apart from the earlier Republican n ominee~ wh o proved such
pu hove,., for Cranston. But Field's
poll. which measured hos11hty as well
as support for 1nd1v1dual candidates.
suaaests that substantial numbers of
GOP moderates already have been
turned off by Hcl"'IChenwhn'~ hard
line
The survey shows 42 pcrcenc of
Republicans d1sanchncd to support
him Only Fiedler and Davis. who
were involved 1n earlier acrimony
over a bnbcry accusation. had htJher
nept1ve'I showtnp in the p<?ll
If Fiedler and Antonovich chen h
any hopes for a politic:1I comeblck.
they muit stan remjnd1n1 GOP
volen th.at Hcrschensohn reprctcnls
1 road the itatc Rqubhcan Pany hu
uave red down before -to
Cranston's benefit They'll have to do
that even 1f 11 davcru them from
worrying about Z$Cti.u. and helps
build his case that f:tepubUe1n
should 1h1ok more about the elec·
tab1ht y of those seekina lhe nom t·
n111on l<nst Cranston.
Wart.J• Smlq 11 ,_atkal t4J,.r .i
ti M«:latcHy Nen JettH:.
MARTIN SMJTH
Political writer
J1c1
AllEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
Defense
waste
under
scrutiny
WASHINGTON -Rep. Jack
Brooks,[). Texas. 1he cigar-chomping
World War ll Marine veteran who
heads the House Government Oper-
ations Comm1ttec, rarely takes no for
an answer -especiall y when he's
dealing with the brass hats at 1he
Penta,on.
Whtie some colleagues go for the
easy headlines with horror stones of
overpriced coffee pots and toilet lids
-and then drop the crusade when
the press loses interei.t -Brooks
pursues the less glamorous eumples
of Pentagon waste. And with a unique
combination of stubbornness and
wry humor, he perseveres untal he
gets sat1sfac11on. ·
Brooks explains has outrage at the
Rca~n a~m101stration's spcnd.sng
pnontaes in one succinct sentence·
"They're wasting tax dollars while
they're cutting our school lunches."
Brooks' most recent target 1s a
little-publicized Penta~on satrapy
called the Defense Security As-
sistance Age1ky. Ty p1call y, ·Brooks
translates the highfalutin' tltle anto
"the world's biggest arms dealer." h 's
this agency 1hat arranges sales to
foreign countries of such military
hardware as Stinger missiles and
automatic rifles.
In an average year. the~ sales total
nearly S 13 billion Bui Brooks' com-
mattec mvest1p1ors have dug into the
agency's activities and concluded that
hundreds of millions of dollars arc
thrown away each year -perhaps as
much as $1.7 btlhon just since 1981.
They shared th t 1r findings with our
associate Donald Goldberg, Some
examples:
-Federal law requires buyers of
major weapons to pay at leas! a fair
share of their cos1. But congressional
and Pentagon audits showed that the
Pentagon gives the weapons away
more often than not. For instance.
research costs of $94 million on
Harpoon, Maven ck D and TOW 2
missiles were never charged 10 the
buyer'i.
-In a survey of $2.4 b1ll1on tn
mass1le sales. the Pentagon inspector
general found that the arms had first
been -undcrpnced by $4.6 m1llton -
and then underhillcd by an add1t1onal
SIO milli on.
-Undercharges tot.alins $90.3
mil hon for one kind of Jet cn$;1nC we rt
uncovered. and of $41 .3 m1llton for
another model.
-Besides sloppy book.keepmg and
inadequate control mec hanisms that
allow careless waste, Brooks dis-
covered that 1he Pentagon has fre·
quently granted waivers on costs for
selected foreign buyers. Between
1977 and 1984, more than $1 . 7 btllton
in weapons costs wert deliberately
wai ved for Egypt. South Korea and
five NATO coun1nes
Another recent target of Brook~·.,
bard dogs· ts the Pentagon's co5tly
habit of leuing defense contractors
keep government equipment
furnished to them for arms pro-
ducllon. For example, a New Hamp-
shire company was found to have
more than $47 milhon worth of
f.OVemment-owned elec1ronic gear an
its warehouse. some of it having been
there for IS years. The company wa,.
charging the Pentagon storage foes -
$79.000 an 1985
"Just how much government
money as wasted every year 1n the
Defense Depanmcnl's chronic: mis-
management ... may never be fully
known," Brooks said, explaining:
"Government aud11or5 can onlr re-
view small samples of the t9tal. •
One thing 1hat 1mta1e5 Brooks hke
an East Texas chigger 1~ Pcntaaon
officials' walhngncs'i to "rubber·
5tamp" the defense contractorf every
request
"There 1s no reason to sutx1dilC defen~ contractors 1n this fashion."
hesa1d. "A 198SNavystudyofproflts
at 22 ma1or contractors showed that
over the last few years they have made
more than twice a'i much profit on
defen~ work as on their comme~1al
endeavors."
GETTING OUT THF. VOTE: In a
sharp reversal of PftSl trends, five of
the biaaest non-profit aroups now
carry1n1 on voter-rqistration efforts
are conservative or ultra-
conscrvauve They art the Amencan
Coal111on for Trad1t1onal Value$,
Christian Voice. Amencan Ocfen~
Foundation, Amencans for Rcspon·
'1ble Government and the Ltbcny
Federation (formerly Moral Ma-
JOMty)
A study by the C enter for Re pon-
s1ve Poli tics say the five orpnll:t·
taons "focused their rcautrataon 1c-
t1v1ty on conservative church con-
arqat1ons. military personnel. bu,.-
ne persons and other\ who share
s1m1lar value~"
Unlike women's and cwtl nahts
poups, the COnl\Crvnt1ve\ run tlieir
voter-rqntrat1on dnvci with l111lc
money from pubhc founda11ons,
usnta instead con1nbu11ons from
their own memben. Jart MfttRq u4 Ju~ ~•r
an 1yo4.lca te4 C'dt•m•JJb. ·
----------- -------------
.·
l&A J'AU IALAD
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Drain .-di balva. ~ tiquid for
oda ~ cambiM bullennilk«yle
dre 11h11 with c.camber and clil; dailL
C.O..bine crab, celery, oniou and oliva.
To mve, line plates witb lettuce leavea.
Place two pmda balvea OD acb plate. Top
with crab mimare and drizzle with dfta.. ma. Maka ' leninp.
MAalNAftD ClllC&BN BR&AIT
UJ,AD
I ma (II -) c.lfel• ellllll ,_.
~ mly Pllt • WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1988
c:acgy BAM SALAD
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Drain peacbea, raervina liquid for other
Ulel. In lule lerVina bowl, combine peach
llic:a. romaine lettuce, watercress, ham,
Jack clleeie and red onion. Toss with
dreuina and sprinkle with Parmesan
cheese. Maka 2 quaru.
IcesUlted
toStea11
COLD WATD WAY: Fill a
quan jar or r· tdacr witb cold wa•. .W to 10 te-.
(.-.ove 1111). CG¥U and JIOl'e
an 1dr-raeor at leat 6 bowl or
ovcrnaaht. llcmove bap,
tq,ueezilll ... i .. side of CIOO-ia1ner. Makes l quan.
NTANI' WAY: A11oW 2
rouided t8blespooM of instant
tea powder fore.ch quan of cold water. Stir to dissolve. If usina a
ftavored ked tea mix. ute VJ aap
(or 2 envelope$) to a quan of
cokt water.
TRADITIONAL WAY: lrilll l
quart of cold waler &o a full boil
in a saucepan. Remove from
heat and immediately add as
teabep or VJ cup &oOle • leawa.
Sur, cover and let lllnd S
minutes. Stir ipin and IUaia
anto a patcher containine
another quan of cold water.
Makes 2 quans.
Wine: the missing ingredieilt
#la ;' 111
J.U. Clllld. the America.a anad dame of heDcb cookery.
419played her tecbniqae at Robert llonda.t Winery.
0 •
By JACK SCHREIBMAN .......... ,,,.. ......
OAKVlLLE -WhenJuliaChild talks,
people listen -especially if the tab to sit at the
feet of the French cooking expert is about $450
a day.
About a dozen students were spellbound
recently by the cooking celebrity whose
televised show made her name a household
word-at least in the kitchen.
As she cooked, a mirrorabove the range
reveaJcd the master's every knife-sl ice and
each bubble of the pot.
With aracaous nods, the puckish. 74-year-
old diva of whisk. bowl and saucepan drew
rounds of applause as she produced the
chubbiest pufT pastries and the creamaest
fraarant sauces.
Clearly Child, who in books and on
television convinced Americans that they
could cook in the French manner, is no fan of
nouvelle cuisine. That's the butter-shy, cream·
shon venion of French pstronomy meant to
appeal to caJorie-contcioua restaurant-.ocrs.
"It's been a terrible, trendy fad," said the
Pasadena teaend, wbocooksamona mounds of
butter and lakes of ettam ... I hope we will &o
back a few paces.••
The scene was the new stainless steel
kttt hcn at the Robert Mondav1 Wtnef'). and
the 10th an01 versaryofMondav1's "Great
Chefs' program. Each year. Monda"' bnngs
·renowned chefs to teach at the winery. a few
yards from his vines and manicultd lawn<,
What does cooking-ha ve to do with wine''
The U.S. wine industry only wishes that the 90
percent of Americans who arcn 't regular wmc
dnnkers would d1scovertheJoys of wine with
meals
"In France," she said. "one always plan\
meals with wrne and food tQRether "
Overglasses offlanty Fume Blanc, the
white wine for which Monda v i 1s be t known.
she explored the question ofhow to get
Amencans to consume more of the vaunted
"beverage of moderation ..
"We have to do someth1naabout the
pncc." said she. "They have to come down
We have these lovely wines at SI 0, S 12, SI 7.
but we wantaaoodeveryda)' wineat$2a
bottle."
The fault. he 1d, he with the industf)
She mentioned that the ate wine industry la'1
years~nt S l00.000 to feature her 1n a
tclev1SC(d promotion for wine. The oroduc11on , ,
wasn't considered a succes\. but TY. Childs
IOSIStcd. IS the kc~
"You have to show 11on1clev1S1on. with a
family having a meal w11h wine out of a carafe
oqug. You ha ve to start modifying the
.\mencan culture by showmg re~ular guys
dnnk1ng wane wtth their meals.'
But will macho Amencans s1pat wine
lrom delicate en stal.,
". ure." protested the lady "The b1a.
tough Frenchmen do 1t. they dnnk out of w1'*
glasc;es and the)' 're as tough as anybody
C altforn1an\ought to savvy up. lfthey want to
make some money. they ought to spend 1t
"It ought to be. ~a use it's a hcalthy. aood
thing to have a gJassofwrne And it doesn't
mean getting drunk It makes everybody
happ)' In Frenchcu1 inc. )OU rally think
about wine and food t ether, and how nice
this 1s th1sgocs with a nice white Buraundy, th11aoc~withagood Bordeaux You're
th1nkm11bout 1t."
rurthermorc. he added. Amencan chefs
must carry their sh.are of the load. -
"The~hcfi haveaot to thinl more about
ahout wine!" she ordered. •
Cl Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I Wednesday, May 28, 1Ytsts
Add zesty dash, cook in a flash
Take a ribbing
Although the definition of true .. barbecue" is hotly debated
among regional culinary ma vens. It's generally conceded that the
South 1s king of barbecue cuisine. But even among southerners,
arguments can spring up about what ingredients. condiments.
sauces and marinades constitute authentic barbecue.
One thing southern barbecue bu ffs do agree upon, though:
barbecue means pork. Picnic shoulder. butt, loin. or ribs -all
those pork cuts are fussed over and served up hot from the grill.
Plantation Barbecue features coun try style nbs. meaty and
succulent. This cut is popular with those folks who demand plenty
of meat with each serving, as opposed to those who prefer to gnaw
on well-grilled but leaner spare nbs.
Boneless count!) style ribs are also w1del~ available for the
fastidious who want all meat -no bone
These nbs are tang). 1n the 1rad111on of the best m southern
barbecue Offer a creamy colesla"'. warm cornbread and ice-cold
beer or tea to complete the meal. If weather or inclination does not
perm11 cooking outdoors. the ribs can be roasted in the oven.
PLANTATION BARBECUE
4 to 5 pounds country style pork ribs
11:1 cup lemon jaice
l tablespoon all-purpose flour
i.., cup sorghum or molasses
"'2 cup soy sauce
l,'J cup ground mustard seed
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
3 to 4 drops bot pepper sauce
Tnm fat from nbs as needed. Place ma single layer, ma gJass
or enamel baking dish. tir lemon juice into flour until smooth.
add remaining ingredients. Pourovernbs. tumang to coat. Cover
and let stand at room temperature for two hours. or m the
refngerator overnight.
Place a drip pan with 111 inch water under grill : bank charcoal
and prepare coals. Gnll over medium-hot coals for about I hour
or until done. OR bake 1n a 350-degree oven fo r 1111 hours. Cu t
into serving portions. Serve w11h addiuonal sauce. Serves 6.
Italian seasoning --
blend liven s chicken -
a nd stuffed squasE__
If you've st udied Italian
cookbooks you know that their
sautes are quite simple. Fresh
ingredients. quickly and simply
~kcd in a little oil -usually with
a judicious use of herbs and spices
-sometimes sauced, sometimes
not.
In this country we can buy a
blend of Italian herbs in one
container that can simplify the
seasoning even further. The blend
-Italian seasoning -usuaJly
contains basil, oregano, rosemary,
marjoram and sage. This product is
now packed under all brands in the
spice industry.
The chicken saute is a succulent
spnng celebration dish. whether it's
Sunday night for family or week-
nights with fnends.
After the chicken has been lightly
browned. instant minced garlic is
added to the pan, along with th~
Italian seasoning, black pepper,
lemon Juice and white wi ne.
When done, the simmeri ng sauce
is reduced and spooned over the
chicken. Garnish with slivers of
lemon peel, 1f you hke. Pasta shells
and spring peas com pliment the
dish.
Another use of the Italian season-
ing blend is in stuffed Lucchini,
which may be served hot or at room
temperature. The hollowed-out
zucchini boats are baked with a
Parmesan-bread crumb stuffing
seasoned with Italian seasoning.
garlic powder and black pepper.
HERBED CHJCKEN
WITH LEMON AND WINE
1 teaspoon lnstant mlnced garUc
1 teaspoon water
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 cblcken (3 pounds), cat ln
eigbtbs
l ~ teaspoons Italian seasonlng,
crushed
'i'J teaspoon salt
11, teaspoon groand black pepper
~ cap dry wbite wlne
Z tablespoons lemon jalce
2 tablespoons lemon peel cut in
matchsticks (optional)
Combine garlic and water. Let
stand until softened, about I 0
minutes. In a large skillet heat oil
until hot. Add chicken. Brown on
all sides, about 10 minutes. Drain
off all but I tablespoon of the
dnppings. Add garlic.
Saute until golden. about 3
minutes. Add Italian seasoning.
salt, black pepper. wine and lemon
'Promise. to be I leart Smarf
Heart Smart people exercise ord eat ngtit Becwse Heart Smart people know that a ciet low In choles-
terd ord saturated tot con t'elp redJce sen.m chalesterd levels wlich con help red.Jee ttl9k risk d
~dseose
Tl"ofs why Heart Smart fomlles sl"loUd make deliaous
rew Ptomse speod a port of their 00-
tory pion to help redJce
senJm chdesterd Great
tasting Ptomse mode wtth sunttower oM l"os no
cholesterd ord tS low rn
sofUtoted tat
No Chofesterof • Low In Saturated Fat
TRY NEW 'Prom lSe. and SAVE NOW!
'·
juice. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat
and simmer, covered, until chicken
is cooked through. about 30
minutes.
Remove chicken to a heated
platter. Simmer sauce, uncovered,
until reduced to 'h cup, about 3
minutes. Pour over chicken.
Spnnk.Je wtlh lemon peel, 1f de-
sired. Yield: 4 portions.
MILANESE STUFFED
ZUCCHINI
4 medJum-slzed zucchini ( 1 'i'J
pollDdS)
leg •1, cap grated Pannesu claeese
I tablespoon parsley Oakes
1 tea1poon Italian seasoning,
cruslted
"" teaspoon salt
11, tea1poo• sroud blad pepper
14 teupooa garlic powder
14 CllP plaln dry bread crumb•
% tablespoo111 oUve oil
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cut
a thin slice lengthwise from each
zucchini; scoop out pulp leaving a
1/Hnch shell. Set aside zucchini
shells. Finely chop pulp (makes
about 2 cups).
In a small bowl combine
chopped pulp, egg, Parmesan
cheese, parsley, Italian seasoning,
salt. black pepper and garlic pow-
der. mix well. Spoon into reserved
zucchini shells. Combine bread
crumbs and 011. Sprinkle over tops.
Place zucchini in a shallow
casserole. Pour hot water around
zucchini to depth of '/•-inch. Bake.
covered, until zucchini is almost
tender, about 30 minutes. Uncover
and bake until tender, about I 5
minutes longer. Yield: 4 portions.
Prepare for future shower
by fixing do-ahead spreads
Array of chilled appetizers ts easy for
co-hostess to transport to bridal party
1 ~ teaspoons paprika
16 sUces whole wheat, wbJte or
pampernlckel bread, cat to tea
sudwtcb slle
The key to hosting a successful
shower 1s preparation. How about
tasty appetizers that are served
chi lled ... you can prepare them
ahead of time and simply pop them
out of the refrigerator at the right
time!
Best of all, 1f you are shanng
hostess responsib1lit1es, these de-
licious treats travel easily. Putting
together your next shower will be
effortless.
Surprise yo ur fa vorite bnde-to-
be with this very special appetizer
buffet.
SNOW PEAS WITH
LEMON DIPPING SAUCE
2 eu yolks
3 tablespoons wine mustard
2 tablespoons ltmon jalce
% ancltovles
l sbaJlot
1 cop vegetable oil
I pound fresh snow peas
Put egg yolks , mustard. lemon
juice, anchovies and shallot in
blender container. Cover and pro-
cess at blend. Immediately remove
feeder cap and pour in oil. Remove
to storage container. Refrigerate
until ready to serve.
Serve in dipping bowl sur-
rounded with fresh snow peas.
Carrots and cauliflower pieces may
also be used. Yield: I 1h cups.
HAM 'N MUSTARD
STUFFED MUSHROOMS
8 ounces cooked bam, cubed
2 green onloDI, cat into pieces
Z tablespooDI soar cream
2 tablespooDI mayonnaise
1 tablespoon wiDe mutard
1 tableapoon ctietney, minced
Daab c1rry powder
U-%0 medlem fre1h musb-
room1, stemmed
Grind ham and onions with
coarse disc of food processor.
Combine all remaining ingredients
except rllushrooms. Mound ham
mixture into mushroom caps. Chill
until ready to serve. Yield: 1~20
appetizers.
CHEESE SPREAD
1 packa'e (8 oucea) cream
clteese, 1of teaed ·
Y. Cllp bitter. 1ofteaed
% tabletpoou drailted capen
Y. teaapooa nlo• powder
I tea.tpoH aactioyy pa1te
l aeupo.. •tJ mu&ard
Whole drained capers
Parsley sprigs
Place cream cheese, butter, 2
tablespoons capers and seasonings
in small bowl. Beat all ingredients
until smooth. Spread each tea
sandwich with I teaspoon mixture.
Garnish with a caper and a small
sprig of parsley. Yield: I cup.
SHRIMP SPREAD
1 package (8 ounces) cream
cheese, 1oftened to room
tempera hire
% cans ( 4 14 oances eacll) tlny or
broken shrimp pieces rlnsed and
well drained
'4 cup mayonnai1e
2 table1pooD1 lemon juice
1 tableapooa cbopped fresh
parsley
'i'a teaspoon dUI weed
Unsalted crackers
Combine all ingredients at me-
djum speed until well mixed.
Remove to serving dish, cover and
chill until ready to serve. Yield: 2
cups.
VEGETABLE DIP
FLORENTINE
14 cap milk
I cup mayonnaise
1 small onion, halved
~ cap f resb parsley sprigs
"" teaspooon dill weed
1 1N1Cka1e (10 ounces) frozen
1plucll def ro1ted, cooked and
well dralaed
Salt to taste
Put. ill ingredients into blender
container. Cover and process at
blend until smooth. Serve chilled
with your choice offrcsh vegetable
slices. Yield: I 'h cups.
Y. CQ oUve oil ARTICHOKE DIP
I tabletpoMI red wlae vlae1ar
I clove prllc, cruated
i tablet,...• ftaely cltoppe4 1weet red peppu
1 lar1e laa~ed eu. flHly cltopped
Salt aH pepper to ta1te
Wha k 111 inarcd1ents t<>1cthcr; covcrta&htly and t h1ll. F\t scrvma time
bnng to room temperature and wht k well. Scrv~ u a dip for four cooked
and chilled anichokes.
\ \
----------------------------..:--1:... .........._
Lobster
Pernod
catchy
By CECILY BROWNSTONE /#,......,
Sharon Oliver, a friend of
mine who ia still under 30, ~
bas switched careers. Bom,
bred and educated in Utah,
she became a successful
travel aaent in California.
But a year or so aao she came
to New York City to try
another field -cookery.
Now Sharon, just gradu·
ated from The New York
Restaurant School, has
beaun to free-lance. As a
starter, she has been develop-
ing recipes.
When I told her I was
looking for a dish that could
ri val Lobster Newburg -
famous since tum-of-the-
ocntury Delmonico days -
she took on the challenge.
Recently Sharon arrived
in my kitchen around noon-
time. In short order she
produced Lobster Pernod, a
most delightful dish.
Modeled on Lobster New-
burg, it has few ingredients
and is made quickl y. Served
with wide noodles, it makes a
grand and &)orious main
course for a "celebration
dinner" for two.
LOBSTER PERNOD
3 froua Soatb Af rtcaa
rock lobtter ta.111 (eacb
a boat ' oaace1)
1 tablespoon batter
Wbite part of 1 creen
oalon, f lDely cbopped
t tablespoon• Pen1od
1,4, cap clllcken brotb
~ cap beavy cream
Salt u d pepper to ta1te
Onion 1ree111, tblnly
sltced
Thaw lobster tails. With a
kitchen scissors cut along
each side of the soft under-
side membrane and remove
it. Pull the meat carefully
from the hard shell and cut it
crosswise along the natural
divisions.
In a I 0-i nch skillet melt
butter over high heat. quick-
ly add all the lobster pieces
and cook, tossing carefully
until firm -about 3
minut,s. Drain on paper
toweling.
With slollet off heat, toss
in the finely chopped onion
and the Pemod. Return to
moderate heat and sur m
chicken broth and cream;
reduce by boiling gently until
sauce coats the back of a
metal spoon - 8 to 10
minutes. If sauce is thicker
then desired, add more
broth; if thinner. add more
cream. Stir in lobster, salt
and pepper, and heat briefly.
Serve at once. Garnish with
thinly sliced onion greens.
Makes 2 large servings.
Flnetune
seasonings
forsprlng
After the heavy, hearty foods of
winter -soups. siews, casseroles
-spnng suggests lighter. fresh
foods: salads and bright vegetables:
green peas. asparagus. green beans.
spring lettuces.
Seasonings for vegetables tum
lighter too: dill weed, tarragon.
parsley. savory, thyme. chervil.
Many of the sprinJ vegetables need
only gentle steaming to cook. with
spnnkJings of herbs and salt and
pepper for variety.
Suggestions from the American
Spice Trade Association : For
asparagus. try dill weed and a bit of
onion powder; green peas arc
enhanced by instant minced onion
and a touch of tams.on: sprinkJe
new potatoes with dill or parsley
flakes.
Spnng green salads bloom wtth
an ensemble of herbs: chervil, dill ,
tarragon, a tiny pinch of thyme;
chicken stnps become delicious in a
lighter-than-mayonnaise dressing or yogurt, dill or tarragon and
parsley flakes.
To keep the fresh color o( such
green items as freeze-dried chives
and parsley flakes. store the con-
tainer on the door rack inside the
refrigerator
8AK~O CARROTS
4 1callloa1, thloly 1llced
3 tablespoons batter
10 small carrots, cat lo DI•
1bort 1trlp1
l tableapoon1 mlnctd partley
Salt ucl pepper to taste
•,. e11p ~all and ball
Cook the scallion, 1n butter until
wdtcd t1r m the carrots. panley.
-;alt and pepper Tum into a '-quan
cuscrok. pour cream over top;
cover ruid bake 10 ll preheated 350-
degrcc oven for 45 minute Makes
4 10 6 servings
Tamale pie takes Italian tUrn for buffet
By CECii, V BROWNSTONE .,,....-
The earliest recipe l ever found
for a "tamale pie" -that baked
dish of' beef and tomato sauce
topped with cooked cornmeal -
appeared in a 1916 San Francisco
cookbook. The beef mixture uM:d
had Mexican overtones. Since then
cooks have invented endless ver-
sions of th~ dish.
Now comes a new-to-me va n-
ation on the theme. This recipe,
sent to me by a Midwest cook. uses
Italian sausage and tomato sauce
with cooked hominy grits plus
mouarella and Parmesan for the
topping.
When tested at our house, 1t
made a &ood dish for an infonnal
companr supper. You can make
this ltahan-Amencan Buffet Dish
up to the point ofbakin" then cover
and refngerate ovemipt. When
you arc ready to bake and serve it,
add 5 to I 0 minutes 10 the bakina
time give n in the recipe.
ITALIAN-AMERICAN
BUFFET DISH
~ pound sweet Italian aauaage,
ca11Da1 removed
YI pouDd hot ltaUu 1au1aae.
........... ~n,ti-:,~
Do~~!!.E~!pon
ru, •'•' •t .. , .. ,...,."°'' I), ,,, _.,,,., .,, 1 1 • M'lr·\ilO':" uen • · n •V.' ..,, "o.,.
1 ... ,. ·r.e ""4'1t:?\ Wl •t y , J." t ') e fP.• ~••ft ,,o• r-''1" ·lf"?W•t lte• .!! ~:~y f_.~;~ .. ~~~:~;,:~.:J 1 ~~~~~~~·ti: ;!!,_,~f 'et ••1 't• V01we '>I
U mit One Item Per ManuJac:twe11 Coupon and Umll 2
N•wapaper Double Coupona Per Cuatomer Coupon
Etlectlv• May 29 thru June 4 1986
ca1Jap removed
i larae 1reea peppert, cat lato
ltrlpt
1 larse oa•oa, cut U.to tklD
wed1e1
1 clove sarUc, flaely claopped
1-ouce cu tomato paste
l teaspoon b81ll leave1, cr11laed
% cupa water
¥. cup q1Jck laom.lDy arus
11• teHpooa ult, If dfflred
4 oaacea mo11arella cbeese,
1bredded (aboat 1 cup)
i larse eu•
USDA lnlpected-Golden Premium
London
Broil
Ralphs Gallon
Bleach
Plain Wrap '"
Bacon
Sliced
I lb pllg
per lb 1.19
Ralphs
White or Wh•CJ1
a4 0 1 1001
Save .20
eacb
Save .38
/
I
>..stoned Vanettea
6 01 can
Save .09
·~ et1p anlH ParmHU ~
Crumble sausaae into Larae skil-
let. Brown well over medium-hip
heat; transfer to colander to drain;
reserve.
simmtt until thick. ttinina oft.en
- 2 to 4 mioUles.. Off heat add
mozuttl la and qp, and mix well.
Spread over s.ausqe mixture;
&prinlc.le wath Parmesan.
Bake Ln a preheated JS().dqree
oven until liaht aoldcn brown -
about 30 minutes. Ltt stand S to I 0
minutes before serving. Makes 6 to
8 scrvinis
Add arecn pepper, on1on and
garlic to skillet; sautc 3 to 4 minutes
-veietables should be tcnder-
crisp. Add tomato paste, basil and
reserved sausage; mix well. Trans-
fer to an 11 l/4 by 71/2 by I >! ... inch
bak.lng dish; pat down to form a
base. NOTE. To substitute reaular
hominy gnts. increase water to 21/4
Bnng· water to a botl; slowly ttr 'ups and simmer grits 12 to 14
1n grits and salt. Reduce heat: minutes.
Ralphs
All Natural
Ice Cream
~ ....
.50
Aaaol19d PICJYon OFF ....
•IJ q<llctn -tJmtt On• tt.m a:nd Oat Coupon Per cu.tom•r Coupon tttKtt•e May 29 OlN June 4 1916
Sweet Juicy
Seedless Grapes
Leo's
Sliced Meats
Auorttd 3 99 VartetteJ :w. 01 pttg F
Buy 3·_ ~. -
~9 -~ <Ji!l. l~ [JC
~!!: '~I . . . I ""--Jo
Estia Gourmet Stainless
Steel Flatware
Thia Wfflt's Feature
Soup
Spoons 3~!1 with each
S5 00 purchos.
4 ll:>. cello bag
Fresh Valencia
~~ges.9.8
Cumberland Cookware
lQuartOpen
Saucepan
ontr 1.99
Meat/Sea1ood Grocery Values Grocery /Frozen Produce /Floral
Shannon Po1n1 Cut lrukel 1.19 Corned Beef ,,.,
r
USDA I.Asp Golden Pr•mlwn Bfff Cllurl Steak 01 119 7-Bone Roast ':' .
USDA lllsp Golden r..111111111 ... f Lo-.ii(l.o111 T~ lt I "9) 4 99 Tenderloin Stk. 1~· •
osnA !;Ip Goldto "-"41 C\11 Sit• lltCll ~ I It\ 1 79 Fresh Beef Brisket ':' .
roc111c r11tet crresh 10 20 01 Trout lb 2 ~l 2 59 Fresh Red Snapper ~· .
Pr••1ously rroien (Fresh Sha1k r.11.-1 lb l ~9) 2 29 Alaskan Salmon Stk. ~ .
Dairy/Deli
Lo•·Fcrt or Non.r01
Lactaid Mille
Porme•<Jn / t omdno.QcntcS Sargento Che ese
Hebrew Ncn1onC11 Kosher Salami
Ya.lltmo Valley Chilled Apple Juice
Hormel rtanlu
Frank 'n Stu11
Ralpru 1t11c11•n h•1h Col• Slow 01 Potato Salad
.. ~ 1.19
:.; 2.49
:.~ 2.49
lu 49 .. , .
~·~ 1.69
·~ .69
.. , t "" .e.o-,••-"•0-.ct tC~e•, A._..., .......... .
•• ·~· .... '""' tf"I 1411 4111 I .. •'111u1 t• •t .. ,,_... I •• • • ... ~ •••• ' ~· ...... " •• ,,. ... ,..... ........... -. "'fll ••• • • ., .............. ft;.,,,. ,,. ~ ... ,,,.. ..
..... , ••• ,, ... , ..... ••• ••·• •t •• ... , n ....
Ge11ha 1.09 Hunts Albacore . "' Tomato Paste csn
Assorted Vanettes M:h• Hansen's Juices Uot 99 ixed Nuts "" Ml) .89 Weicht Bathroom Tissue 4 ,, J Grape Jelly P•O
s.w Cul GIHn hems 16 0 1 Cream Com 17 01 or 53 Glod 30 Gallon Whole Kernel Com~:. . Trash Bags
Contad1no .~ .59 Clt1\IJ HW troMn
Stewed Tomatoes ·· Orange Juice
Regu!CD or Mint 1.79 """'' lemlmo·l uttermm "o••n Oreo Cookies ,. "' Pancake Mix 1'00
Prices effective May 29 thru June 4, 1986
.67 !JOT ....
I~~ 2 .25
.. "; 1.99
10~ 2 .49
1.29 . ...
""
.99 'tot ,...
New Crop ltohon Red Onions
noYor Tree
Fruit Rolls
Tablf' Top t> Su• Bogton Fems
Bakery
.39
.35
3 .89
... ...
Rolpl\s Hon•-.:~ Butter Pota1o Squaw or 1 09 Hawaiian Rolls .,,, : .
talplllll~ Aptl<'C'!Oarw.t1 h>~~~JwtM•n~" 2 19 Darush Homs I~ ~ a
Appetite••
Liquor
&O hoot
Sandra Vodka ... 799 .. . It " )., . ~\~\l 1
Lower Prtcer.--S~°C~~1try Coolers l.89
.... ~ 2.19 Mon Alc-ho Sante Wine
• {\o .... .., •• -~ ..... "•'"• ' ......... """' ..... . ............. ,.,.. ... ,.._..... ... ,.... " .... . ':;;t(-,:,: .:·;-::.:.·;,~~::-7.: !·~.:..~;.:.: .::::.: ... _. ..... ' .. ~· ,.,.,.,,,,_,. ,.,., ""'"'''•~•••• ....... ...._ ..... ,, .. o...,.. ............. ,._,..,,
"'-• ... , ..... ,, •~• ll•••t .. ,, •• ................. ..,.__., r....-... ..-r•t
• • • •• ' .... r~• th ••• •""• .,.,.. .. , ••"'•"••• .. r_., •• , ,., .. ,.,""
Higher Standards
, ......... ,....4-"""-olf .... l ...
ttt ti •t •••• ,tt"·wflllt •t.U •••• • •t...,tfl wt•tHll~
•••, ••••"••"'••••'-•t"'lll•l"'t••••' fflf llllle, AC .. .._,,..,..., • ....... () ••• ,..., ••.• rl'ot ...... "' .... •-4 ,_ •••• ••lot!•
l
Cl 0'9"08 Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wednaday, May 28, 1986
Pennsylvlinia Shoofly Pie has·split personality
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) -
Pennsylvania doesn't have an of-
ficial state food. But if it acts one,
and if the decision comes to a vote.
shoofl y pie could be a shoo·in.
Its credentials are excellent.
Born m Pennsylvania some 300
years ago and baked there, almost
exclusively, ever since, shoofly pie
represents one of the oldest. most
clearly defined kinds of American
regional cooking, that of the Penn-
sylvania "Dutch."
Furthermore. in addition to its
historic and cultural significance: to
residents of the state. shoofl} pie
has national fame. People every-
where have heard about it. Tell
them you're a Pennsylvanian and
thc:y say, smiling, "Oh, yes. shoofly
pie, right'!" Then, often as not, ther,
ask. "What 1s shoofly pie, anyway? ·
Definition No. I : It's a cake
baked in a pie crust.
Definitio n No. 2: It's a pie with a
cake filling.
Either way. the crust is flaky. and
the cake, nchly flavored with
molasses, is covered with sweet,
nch. white crumbs. What gives
shoofly pie a special character,
however. is its split personality. It
can have a very moist bottom layer
(known to connoisseurs as a wet
bottom); it can be unlayered but
moist throughout, or it can be dry.
All three versions are made from
the same bask ingredients; only the
preparation methods change.
Traditionally served "chust so"
(unadorned) for breakfast. shoofly
pie can be a dessert, too. Sometimes
1t is garnished with whip~d cream
or warmed and topped wtth vanilla
ice cream. Not often, though.
No one knows for sure how
shoofly pie got its name, but there
are several theories.
Most people buy the story that
BEEF
3 VARIETIES
the t>te's sweetness. caused by· its
relatively high molasses or syrup
content. attracts flies that a watch·
ful cook or helpful child must shoo
away.
Others, noting molasses is a
common inaredient in Penn·
sylvania Dutch cookery and that
shoofly pie is but one of hundreds of
Pennsylvania Dutch sweets, arc
inclined to sec a connection be·
tween the words shoofly and
choufleur (French for cauliflower).
A reasonable contention, it ii;
based on the fact that the creators of
the famous pie were not Dutch but
German. They spoke the dialect of
Gatoracte
Drink
32-0Z
their homeland, the Palatinate or
Rheinpfalz area adjoining France,
had considerable knowledge of the
French language a nd may have
given the pie. heaped high with
lumpy white crumbs. the name of
the vegetable it resembled.
Then again, as Ann Hark and
Pre:non H. Barba, writers of''Penn·
sylvania German Cookery," point
out in scholarly fashion, shoofly
may also be a distortion of Schubli
or Schufli, words that meant a small
part of something larger, a reference
to the crumbs.
Whatever. no discussion of
shoofly pies is complete without
LB
KRAFT DINNER
Macaroni
~ ..... {I Cheese
All VARIETIES REGULAR. DIET,
CAFFEINE FREE, CLASSIC OR CHERRY
Coke, Tab
~~·· 'Or Sprite
:a«-
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Chuck Steak:::"~ H<
Round Bone Roast..,.
Pork Ste aks,;· .. :·,·
Link Sausage!:~": ·"·
Stew Meat;.~:· ·
Red Snapper~:~:·
Dover Sole ......... .
Lunch Meats:· .. ,~'~:~H.
,,51.69
,.s1.09
.s1.59
... ,.sge
"$1.69
52.49
~5 2. 79
.. 69e
Compare these Low Prices
Noodle
Roni
75°
BlllDSEYE 89 Vegetables~~:g:r:s •&-Ol c
Crispers~~;~~s iooz51.39
Mexican Classics;~:.~~~~·0151.69
Budget Gourmet ~v~Al~~~E~ •001
51 .29
Macaroni & CheeseMO•H;::),51.99
Bagels~::11s ,,oz79c
Pound Cake:::.~HBVTlf" ,~0252.29
Juice~~:::LE ·10151.29
Grocery Specials
Crackers=~~wr~ .
.~age
•R0u65'
uOf'.T75e
•eoz99e
·~o,41 C
Hansens Soda ... ,, ..
. Dressing .. :: ..
s1.69 Triscuit Crackers ... tl•V-:
'01
51.49
~,51.69
••01'1 .99 s1 .49 Cookies~~~;~.
• N"nt5CO .,s2.39 Cook1es·!~.~~~f Crl'sconJ, AM. Ht Ht
~ .. ,,,., ... ""'""
· Spaghetti :~;~,.~:~:~·~~ ... ~ .. l:'1.99 Schweppes MixerslV•R•(ll{• 'll'l"59e
· Cat Food ~:~·,.. •01 23c
Dog Food==· .... A
512.99
Spaghett.i Saucev:.=.:::·~5 1 .99
Macaroni :"v~:.('~·· .•.• o,59'
.... _ .... ____ ~ .. ____ .. .,.. ,.. .. __ _ raicu ... ....
Lt-I z
,. ·~ n.. ....
Nq
J 4
PotatoeS us "°, AEDROSf
LemonSn.uOf Jua
0 n ion s..,E ... CROP ITAL•AN SWEET RIO
ASSORTED UPfllGHT
ffOUSe
Plants ~~99
Ing lenook~~~.:s"E
Wine Coolers~;~s
1~"TtA52.99
6l~ML52.49
Chivas Regal~~: ~Ml515.95
Seagrams v. 0 e CAHA~AH '1HIT£As17.59
Strohs Beer eomFS ~•?-01 52.09
'I "1U.DAI'• ,._ ... ...
Zt JO JI
ADVEATlSED rTEM
GUARANTEE ---~
:::=.,-:-..:;:::: :..,,_ I ,
.~52.79 WE RESERVE THE f:UOHT TO 1.IMIT ~ Rt:FUSE
SALES TO COMMEACIAl DtAlEM OA WHOl.CSAl.ERS
Wt '1""" to 1'111¥1 on IWl(J IUfflelent ttoc:k of .,....,IMO INftNndlM-tt, <IUt lo oondlllona
b9yOnd OUt oontlOI, .... run out of *' .,_,...,
epecte~ e AA.IN CHECI< Wiii be Ila.cl~
~ to buy the Item • the ~-Pftce .. econ M II ~~ Of wtlNtl 30 cleyt
--- ------- -.······, h r--:-······ . . . ... , '} 50 GolcJun Years ... A n Ar r1f ~r1ca n Tr dd It 1< Hl clJ ()old< ~ri Y ( !(H ~J .•. An An1c~ri cd n l r dd 1 t l()fl ~ ...... ) ~ .... ~ ------------
mentton of the women who in-
vented them . Recognized as excel·
lent cooks, they produced 1hree
prodigio us meals a day, each made
up of the substantial foods their
families expected.
And 1he food that Pennsylvania
Dutch feinschmeckers (those who
know what go~ is) like,d best w.as
pie. Lots of pie. Any . km~ of P.1c.
Morning. noon, and nighttime pie.
Hausfraus baked two or three
dozen pies at a time, makfog them
from whatever was on hand: fresh
and dried fruit, eggs, cream and
cheese. pumpkin, even com , on-
ions. clams. chicken and beef.
Perishable pies were eaten first; the
others were placed on shelves in a
ventilated pie safe or cupboard.
Several culinarians think crumb-
topped cake in a pie crust was first
baked by a woman with more pastry
shells than filling; or a cup of cake
batter and no cupcake pans, or half
a cake that had been hidden from
the children and forgotten until it
was good for nothing but crumbs.
Whal seems more likely is that
when fruit was out of season and
even dried apples and raisins were
in short supply, Pennsylvania
Dutch housewives made pies from
whatever was on hand -staples,
like flour, molasses and brown
sugar. Baked to keep clamoring pie·
lovers quiet, the "wi nter" pies were
soon year-round favorites, and no
Pennsylvania Dutch meal was com·
plete without at least one shoofl y
pie.
Variations on the cake-in-a-pie
crust scheme became popular, too.
Among those still made today are:
Amish vanilla pie: Really .. wet,"
it is flavored with vanilla, not
spices.
Montgomery pie: Also gooey, it
contains lemo n Juice and lemon
peel. (Once scarce, lemons were
regarded as a rare treat.)
Funny cake: No crumbs on this
one; the surprise is a moist, choc-
olatey bottom layer.
U nion pie: Major ingredients are
molasses or dark cane syrup, sour
cream and buttermilk.
Sugar pie: Crumbs top a lemon-
juice flavored batter. No bottom
laye r.
McKinley cake pie: A cake tast-
ing of lemony molasses, it is moist
but not wet.
Quakertown pie: yery moist. it ss
similar to shoofly pie.
Gravel cake: The crumbs of this
molasses cake are made from
leftover cake or cookies.
Garden salad
crunchy with
flavorful nuts
This nutritious, meal-in-one
salad is unusual in that it offers
plenty of protein. thanks to gen-
erous portions of toasted almonds
and cheese.
The almonds are not only im·
portant as a low-cholesterol source
of protein, but they add a delightful
texture and wonderful flavor to the
combination of crisp, fresh veg·
etables.
You top it all with an intriguing,
easily-made parsley pesto dressing,
seasoned with garl ic and basil and
thickened with flavorful ground
almonds.
This satisfying salad is appealing
at any time of the year.
HEARTY GARDEN SALAD
1 ~ c ups whole blanched
almonds
Several outer leaves lettuce
3 cups torn spinach
3 cups torn lettuce
Pesto dressing
1 can (8-ounce) red kidney
beans, drained
~ poODd mushrooms, sliced
~ pound Monterey Jack cheese,
cut into julienne strips
J medium zucchini, cut into
matchsticks
l green pepper,'cut into l·locb
squares
t tomatoes, thinly sliced or 1 can
(l 4·ounces) sliced to ma toes,
drained
Spread almonds in shallow pan
and toast at 400 degrees stirring
once. for 8 minutes or until they
begin to turn golden.
Line 4 individual salad bowls
with lettucci leaves. Fill with . tom
spinach and lettuce. then sprinkle
with half the toasted almonds.
Drizzle each salad with 2 table-
spoo n Pesto Dressing.
Distribute kidney beans. mush-
rooms. c~ese strips, Lucch ini .
green pepper and 1om ato on top.
Garnish salads with re main ing
almonds. Pass Pesto Dressing.
Pesto Ore11tn1: In electric
blender or food processor. combine
1h cup almond or vegetable oil, 2
tablespoons vinegar. I small garlic
clove (halved), I 1/2 teaspoons basil
(crumbled). V1 teaspoon orepno
(crumbled), 'I• teaspoon sail and 11>
cup parsley sprigs (packed ). Pro-
cess until parsley is finely chopped.
Add 1/4 cup d iced Parmesan or
Romano c heese and 2 tablespo<>n~
whole blanched almonds. Process a
few seconds lonaer to get dressing
consistency. Chill. Makes v. to 1
cup dressing. Makes 4 servings .
Or.noe COMt DAILY PfLOT l'Wetll 11 dlit·. -•• tW C1f
Vietnamese adapt diet to U.S. foods,marketing
Older tmmtgrantgeneratton continues
to eat native foods they've always liked
By DOROTHY WENCK
UCCllJ .... ......._
like and have always eaten. The te_,.. aM set.? ••11 & dall........., tomatoes bavr more aree•,
arowth in the number of mark.cu A. Both tempeh and tofu are A. If the tomatoet have a areen aboulden than odlin;
sclHga these foods in Southern soybean curd products commonly shoulderandthisianotcutoffwhen Q ......... ~ • • ....._._
California is evidence of the de-used in Asian countries u protein they are canned, some areen Pi&· · ·~ P•• • • -1
mind for them. foods. Both are made from cooked menu, which are water soluble, will •f ~ ... w _,. ~
American lifestyle. This pressure QUESTIONS u ·A.BE A.SUD: soybeans (or other l~umes or show ur in the liquid. This ll not : ·= =~ ..... · v· cereaJs) that have been formed into harmfu . You could use these seemed to be greater 10 ietnames Q. Wllat ea .... d9e film tMt compact cakes or patties. canned tomatoes in some coolted A, Yes, )'OU can (~ wbOle The Vietnamese families in families with children i1l schools. float• oa sea Mmeaame.. dish where color would not make 1 apples. Freeze ~y vr:r1 cmp ODCll Southern California have had to These students often became the A. This film may be caused by Tempeb is fermented; tofu is not. difference. and seal them lft molltW'e>-rtl)O!'·
make man adjustments as they agents in brlngina about chanacs in hard water -that 111 chemicals in Thus, their ftavors are different. proof &ceur •· Stor11t ume 11
become assimilated into American traditional food habits as a result of the water. Or it may be caused by Both are sold u fresh products that You are unlikely to see this short _ just a cou9le mon~L
society. Unfamiliar food and a eatina in school cafeterias or shar-fate Jef\ in the cup that was not require refriaeration because they problem in commercially canned Frozen apPlet can only be \ded lD'
di fferent marketing systems are ing foods with friends at school. thorouaJy washed and rinsed. or fat are quite perishable. Te~peh also tomatoes because the canners are sauces, pies, or other cooked cbtba.
among their most immed1ate con-Nevertheless, the Vietnamese in the pan that was used to boil the may be dned to preserve at. very careful not to have any To ute, do not ww. RUil c:okS water
cerns. immigrants, particularly the older water. lt is not harmful. • • • tomatoes entering the packina line over them. peel, slice, lftd cook In Vietnam, food is purchased generations,continuedtocatnative • • • Q.'l'Mll4'1WlaaomeofmyMme-which have any sign of veen ammediately.
daily. Vendors sell meat, seafood ~foods~~bcca~~u~se~th~e~y:_:arc~~fi,:::Ood~s:_.:::th::c:!....y _ _:Q::_. WU.....::.':..:'.:.:' .:..:dle:..:..:dJff=•.:.:r_eaee.:..:.._be_tw_ea_-=ce=•= ... =-=' ... ::;:::.:tees=:.......:ta=ne4:.::..::--=ll'ff=:.,..:...::....• .... ·--=S:.:..:h.::.oWU\.:.:.=.. :.!a:.:o.::n..:th:.:.:c:.:.m:..:...:..:So:..:..:.:m.:..:e:..:..v....::a:..:..n....::· e..:..t•_ts:..:..o:..:..f ____________ _
and fish , fresh produce and other d Th• ... L I r~.i~~::::.~!dmuchhm• More Goo 1ngs 1or ess, pus ,
an food prcparauon. Meat and . '* SE~~i.£t~~~~ Vons Unlimited Double Coupons,. and charcoal broilina.
In the homeland, a Vietnamese ·.-( £:""' , .·' •See Stores F• ~ typically consumes three meals a _ ~ ~~-•. ~ day. Breakfast is usually a liaht meal , .
served with a soup calfed pho -. ·
(which contains rice noodles, thin · .. ""' ...
slices of beef or chicken, bean
sprouts and fresh herbs), or ~s
with French bread, or sticky nee
with mung beans (xoi).
Lunch and dinner are more
substantial, consisting of several
dishes served communal style. Rice
is eaten with small quantities of
fish, seafood or meat, soybean curd
(tofu) and fresh vegetables. Other
dishes include soup and fresh fruits.
A fish sauce, nuoc mam -used
as a condiment and seasoning in
addition to soy sauce and salt -is
prepared by fermenting layers of
fresh fi sh and salt in la11e barrels.
After several months, a hquid that
contains significant amounts of
protein and other water~oluble
nutrients is drained off.
Tea is typicaJly consumed at
every meal. The Vietnamese will
drink carbonated beverages, but
only occasionally. Fresh cow's milk
and other dairy products are nearly
unknown. In the cities, the well-to-
do have acquired a taste for canned,
sweetened condensed milk and
often use it in breakfast coffee.
What has happened to Viet-
namese dietary habits in the United
States? A lim.itcd survey ~ndu~ted
in 1979 provides some insights into
their food patterns and shows the
increase or decrease in consump-
tion of selected foods in the U.S.
compared with Vietnam.
The U.S. Vietnamese generally
changed their food-buyina prac-
tices -that is, they made purchases
less often and shopped for food in
Oriental food stores and in super-
markets. They changed their diets
in many ways as well.
Although rice continued to be
eaten abundantly at least once a clay
(at supper in the evening). it bad
been partially replaced or sup-
plemented by bread of instant
noodles at lunch and cereals at
breakfast.
The consumption of red meat
and poultry was higher in this
country , where costs are more
reasonable than in the homeland.
On the other hand. fish and seafood
were eaten much less because of the
lack of fresh and familiar kinds in
supermarkets.
Consumption of bananas de ·
creased and consumption of or·
anges and Juices increased. Rice.
vegetables. poultry, fruit and pork
and pork products were the fi ve
types of f~ most freq~entl.Y eaten
by the Vietnamese 1mm1grants.
Milk and milk products was the
least used of the basic food groups
(possibly because of problems t.he
Vietnamese people have .w1th
drinking milk that are assooated
with lactose toleran ce).
The Vietnamese surveyed ex-
pressed dislike for some American
foods su ch as hot dogs and ham-
burgers. Reasons frequently cited
were texture. fla vor and high fat
content.
Compared to the America~ die~.
the diets of the Vietnamese 1mm1-
grants had a much smaller amount
of meat and fat and dairy products.
They generally ate adquate
amounts of starch and fiber. The
average number of times people
had foods from the fats. sweets
(cookies. cakes and so ~orth) and
alcohol group was relatavely low.
However. the consumption of soft
drinks was high.
Thus. It was found l.hat the diet of
Vietnamese immigra~t~ is.basically
a healthy one. NutntJonists con-
cluded that the Vietnamese should
be encouraged to maintain their
good dietary habits and modify
poor food practi ces by ~ucing ~he
amount of salt and increasing
consumption of milk and dairy
products such as cheese and yogurt.
Not all Vietnamese families have
changed their eating habits after
they came to America. Those who
had changed cited various reasons.
For example, many women worked
outside the home; consequently,
they had less time to shop for and
prep:ire familiar foods, nor did they
ha ve the katchen help that many
pre \.1ou ly depended on.
There 1s always pressure to one
dqrec or another to adapt to the
ln •ex•pen•alve•
• (In "' ..,.n· tlv) not NQll In price . reuonable.
~l .... hed ..., .... Ad~lllng ,._
Classllled Advertising 642-5678
Whole 10 Watenneloh Lb
s-t.,., II~ ~F-"*(Umll21 •
Larae Mangoes ~~~-T""*""Tro.i
Salad Size Tomatoes
SoledF....,,ow
Italian Squash
EMR-"'C°"'ed
u.69
lb .49
LI> .49
Red Flame Seedless Grapes89
Sn.ct< F-f.b •
Large Bell Peppers 4 [,100 Sc~Sott II
Jumbo Size Brown Onions 15
r-.Crop lb •
Fresh Raspberries } 98
112 P.ni P.cMp Pl<Q
Fresh Blackberries ] 49
112 Pll'll PecMgit Pio~
Golden Bananas 2 9 ~~SQd...., LI>•
Danola Sliced J79 Cooked Ham
°""'"' ~ 8 °"'1«' P• U9f (S.W I 00!
Vons Monterey Jack Cheesel 89
Cal~ '•''"1¥ Pt<lo tS-8' lb.I Lb
Orval Kent Ham Salad 1 29
or 1.,,,. 1 O\A• '°'"'k"" or C•eb ~ Sol.J 1 •91
Foster Farms Chicken Franks 79 ()~~ 16~1'1o\1 •
Oscar Mtryer Varietv Mc!ats 189
"""' ... -~ 126'..;(;~
~~!~~~~!3<>1ogna 109
Bob's Bleu OleeSe Dressing 1 49 s-i~ 18~..W
Gallo Salame Chub 199
-'11\'t 10.--.• ...,
Hunt's Tomato Sauce 5 ~ 100
110......Can 11
Sunshine Hydrox Doubles ] 39
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Ocean Spray Cranberry c.ao1a11 c,.,,.,t,ppio "' u-~ Drink
IKlllClellonl
Kraft Miracle Whip
~ °' L.q>t-JJ 0Yra M(l..lrM 2)
229
} 39
~~~~~~rages2.f9
Vons Apple Sauce 149 ·~c::i...--
Vons Fruit Cocktail 99 JO <MY• c.-•
~ .. ~~~~es .75
~~~I Mixed Vegetables .53
~~!eeled Tomatoes .39
Hinode Long Grain Rice 199 ) 1'1-u>d e.g
Creamette Lasagna 89 16 0.,,..... eo. •
T ~ical Strawbeny Jelly 89 1110...0.Jor •
~ ~tergent 116
Zea Sath Bar 58 )c:Nn8ot •
Zee Facial Tissues .59 ''°'"""!loo ~~~-lj~~ Bread .99
Vons Danish Rolls 199 ll P-.•l"'"""'~~c
Vons Bran Muffins 109
tir«'"
Miller Ute
Suitcase 14Pwtl-11~C"'°'"* lldM I 0 Q9
VOl"C8 SELECT U.8.0 .A. OtOICE 8E£f STORY
Von, ~ 1 U SO I\ C'hotct Bttt '' • 't'ou might ~t ~US 0 I\ Cholcf'
yrodt' lbow-IN bttf mMt ~rmorM>ts Bttl to CO'lt ~ Not II Vons Wt w l
~ It, mott ~' mott ~y. rnott 11 1«t US 0 A Chcw4' Betl for IN>
n.t\'Orful VC'nslltlvs y(J SD I\ ~t ~mt pr1ct o~r l'Nlrkt>t• ~11 thf'u
Bttf, "Wtlic-h 11 'JX'CMllly wlKtf'd by our ung~ bftf
bu~r1 tnd iMu~ ut IN top ol IN VOtW don t p.iy mott 111 VOM TM1 ~ ~
gredt Thfy buy only gr in ltd bfotf wlttl of tht NUOnt ""' cal \I0111 ~ MorY-
~~vhctl~ f't.l"°'llf'd StOrY'
lf'ndf'~
.. --ft •
Van De Kamp Fish Fillets 299 ~c:Mn h
Totinos Pepperoni Pizzaci!!. 99
or c:...ci-11arvr-ic....--108' 0unc., •
Birds E~ Cool Whio 99 ~,,,f,.,.c....,., 12 ~TJ. e
Sara Lee Pound Cake 239 16c::i...-c-
Vons Mixed Veoetables 7 5 , ('.,.eon."'~ X>o.;;fi&,;9 •
~~affles .79
Minute Maid Lemonade .65 ·~~' ---.......... ~ ""' ~ .
Vons Beef Patties u.499 ) .,_,_,a.a
The
More
.Store .
--
Legitimate or not,
wrestling enjoying
popularity growth
FRESNO -The Iron hc1k , one of ·m the baddest of the bad auys, started hm1ng
below the belt even before his professional
wresthn• match began. ·
Sctttng down his Iranian flag for a moment, he
grabbed the microphone at Fresno's Selland Arena.
Snow Chief to aklp Preakneu
CHERRY HILL. N.J. -now Chief, E
who sufftrcd "a bump on his ri&ht front
ankle" durina or after the runnina of
Monday's SI million Jc~y Dcrb}'. will
skip the June 7 Belmont St~ke& tat Belmont Parle, his
conntct1ons said Tuesday.
Trainer Mel Stute said the anJury was not ~nou~
but that they didn't want to take any chances with th<'
Preakness winner. The colt wall be shipped back to
California for a rest, Stute said at Garden State Park.
"The Belmont is a classic race and we would have
liked to run an at," co-owner Carl Gnnstead said of the
final leg of the Tnplc Crown series for )-year-olds "Iran No. I The shah No. I. U A as a sack
country," the sheik said. dclivcnng the verbal
equivalent of has most dreaded wrestling hold. the 49era sign ex-Ram QB Kemp
camel clutch
The crowd fought back.
&
Warriors reach softball finals
Sandra Schoonover drove in the
10-ahead run with a bloop unaJe an
the si'Lth inning and senior left·
hander Pani Russell tossed a two-
hitter as Woodbridfe Hip ~ached
the CIF 3-A softbal title contest by
defeatin1 Valencia Tuesday, 2·1. in a
scmafina.1 pme at El Dorado H1S}l an
Placentia.
The Warriors (23-3). champions of
the Sea View l.ea(uc with a 14-0
record, wilt meet Crcsccnta Valley
(23-4) on Friday (8 p.m.) at Mayfair
Park in Lakewood for the cham-
pionship.
Schoonover. whose clutch sini!e to
rif.ht field brouaf\t hOme fre hman
Lisa Wehren from second base for the
game-winner, broke a l·I tie with
only the 1CCOnd WoodbridJe hit.
Wehren reached first on an error after a bunt attempt and moved to second
on a throw1nf error on the same play.
Russell ( 0-1 ). who outduelcd
Michelle Oranaer of Valencia (who
also threw a two-bitter). struck out
four and walked three. Granger
fanned 10 and walked none.
Susan Spring pve Woodbndge an
early ISO lead in the fourth innina
when she scored on a passed ball after
leading off the inning with a single. A
passed ball moved her to ICC)Ond and
Schoonover'• sacrifice bunt allowed
Sprina to advance to third before ahe
scored.
Two Woodbridae errors and 1
sin&le allowed Valencia to tie the
pme m the fifth inning..
"I feel like it's about time," said
Woodbridge Coach Sue Kall. "We·ve
made it to the semifinals three years
tn a row. and this is the first tjme we're
goina to the finals."
Woodbridge lost to Garden Grove
last year in the semifinals, 1-0. ~c
Warriors have never won a Clf tlllc
an any sport.
"U-S-A. U-S·A. U-S·A," at chanted. accompanied
by a number of universally understood gc!lture~
directed toward the sheik.
People paid up to S 13.50 last week to come to 1he
arena. to insult and be insulted. to dnnk beer and eat
popcorn and watch big guys the) hate -hke the she1~
-wrestle bag guys they love -hke grccn·tongu cd.
SAN FRANCISCO -The San Fran· 'ii!'
c1sco 49crs have signed a new quancrback ~ Sh~lk~~~:r~~~c~cl ~~~J~kcswoman All agree g.am e two
Quarterback Jeff Kemp, formerly of the Rams. was
signed along with rookie linebacker Charles Haley, a fNB~ • • t 1
BARONS •••
FromDl
Young was n&}lt on top of the ball and
gunned out Domsthorpc at second.
Taylor retired the next two hitters on
fly balls to end the inning. wnthang George .. The Animal'' Strele
founh-round draft pack. 0 s er1 es pl T TO a Haley was signed to a four-year plus option V 1
contract The 49ers declined 10 reveal details on · Fresno 1s one of the c1t1es along the tour of thC'
World Wrestling Federation. which as usang tclc\ 1'\1on
and wrestling's No. I draw -Hulk Hoga n -10 cn1oy
Kemp's contract. Kemp was acquired in a draft-day Celtics believe they ijoston. 109-102. before losing the
1radt· series in six games.
In the seventh, Young turned in the
fieldinggem of the day. Zcttman hit a
shot between third and shortstop,
Young dove to her left. snared the
ball. got up and threw out Zcttman by
three steps. Taylor got the final two
hitters and the Barons were on their
way to Lakewood.
1ts greatest populanty ever. Islanders. Arbour retires Pro wrestlers still live by the same good gu y-bad
gu) images that have always gone w11h the trade. There UN IONDALE, N. y -Al Arbour, Eil1
are new patnot1c O\ ertones. howe ver. championed by who guided the New York Islanders to four ,
the flag-wa\ '"$ Corporal Kirchner and assaulted b) Stan le) Cup championships and was the
villains N1k ola1 Volkoff(Sov1et Union) and the sheik. senior coach with the same club an the .
Never mind that pro wrestling falls somewhere Na11onal Hockey League. announced his reurcment
between sport and acung. real11 y and fantasy today,
"I thank they're prcll) tern fie athlc1c~ and actors.'' The 52-year-old Arbour coached the Islanders
said JeIT) Daniels of Fre~no since the 1973· 74 season, directing them to fou r
Oaniels. s1111ng at nngs1dc last "'eek "'1th his two consecuu ve tanle) Cup titles. from 1980-83.
sons. Chns and Scott. gets so angl) "'11h ""resthng's bad · This past season. the lsJandcrs were eliminated an
gu) s that Sclland guards threatened 10 to"s him out after the first round of the Cup playoffs . losing to the
a run-in with Co\.\bo)' Bob Onon at the arena la t Washington Capitals in thrtt straight games
month
Quote of the day Television, radio
TELEVISION
Jobo McNamara, manager of the Ho'>ton
Red So'. who pla}cd Detroit 1n spnng training
games that started al noon. l. 2 and 7 'O p m
after the Patnot's Da)' game with th e T1geri.
which had an l I a.m. stan. ··wc·w pla)cd 1hc
Tigers JUSl about evel') hour ol the morning.
afternoon and night."
4 ~O p.m -BASEBALL" Dodger'> al New
Yor~ ~1ctc; ( hannel 11
RADIO
4 10 p m -BASEBALL: Dodgers at New
York Mets. KABC (790).
7.30 pm. -BASEBALL: Detroit at Angeli.,.
KMPC(7l0).
Daily Pilot Salutes
LIONS CLUB
$1-MILLION
FISH FRY & CARNIVAL
Official Program Tabloid
Thursday • May 29
Local charities have received over $1-
million from this annual benefit hosted by
the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
Spend Summer On An Exotic,
Sun-Drenched Coast!
SPEND IT AT ORANGE COAST COLLEGE!
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ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
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}1111e 9 and }1111e 23
Jf'e'// Help You Gel There.
need win Thursday "We wouldhavewontheserieslast -year if we had won game two." Bird before heading West_ -said. "lfwe win on Thursday, we feel
like we'll be in complete control."
BOSTON (AP) -With three
straight games at the Houston Sum-
mit next week, the Boston Celtics
believe that Thursday's second game
in Boston Garden is the most am Port·
ant of the NBA final~.
"We have to wm this one, no
question about 1l," said Larry Bird.
who had 21 points. 13 assists and
eight rebounds Monday as Boston
won the best-of-seven scnes opener,
112-100. "If we win, we kn ow that the
worst thing that can happen is that
we'll get back to Boston for the last
two games."
Bird recalled that the Celtics won
last }ear's champ1onsh1p sencs open-
er. 148-114. over the Los Angeles
Laker~. then lost the second game an
Weiss selected
new Spurs coach
SAN ANTONIO (AP) -Bob
Weiss. an assistant coach with the
Dallas Mavenclcs since their 1nccp-
uon. was named head coach of the
San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday and
promised to bnng the NBA team an
exciung brand of basketball.
Weiss. 42. JUSt completed his sixth
season as assistant to Mavcncks'
head Coach Dick Motta. It will be
Weiss' first head coaching JOb 1n the
NBA. .
''We're going to open 1t up a little
more. I think the team has some
people on it that are better 1n a
runnmggame. I thank thafsone thmg
up front that we can say we're goang to
do," Weiss said at a news conference.
He declined to speculate on any
specific changes, saying ·T vc got a lot
of homework to do."
Boston Coach K.C. Jones, who has
complained about the 2-3-2 homc-
court format in the finals since last
year, agreed Wlth Bird about the
significance of Thursday's game.
"The second game 1s the most
important," Jones said. ··we have to
wan to keep the homecourt advan-
tage. The Rockets need a wm here to
have a chance to go home and wan
three."
The Celtics lost only one home
game all season, and a Boston victory
Thursday would give the Ce ltics 40
consecutive home victories. Stall,
they sa} they are not overconfident.
.. You feel invincible after you wm
at home. but before the next game
starts }OU remember a lot of times
when the games were close. that yo u
could have lost," Bird said. "You
realize that you should be happy to get
the win and not be cockv about 11."
"We do n·1 have a sense of 1n vin-
c1b1ht} at home." Jones said. "The
first game was a good and1c.at1on of
that We had to scratch 1t out. We had
10-pomt leads twice and they c.ame
back both times to win by one."
The Celtics led 24-14 in the first
quarter and 38-28 early in the second
period. but the Rockets rallied on
both occasions. They also led 65-64 an
the third pcnod before a 27-1 1 streak
put Boston an control.
"What bothers you the most 1s that
you know what they're gomg to do
and th ey're good enough to do it,"
said Houston Coach Bill Fitch, who
coached the Celtics to the NBA
champ1onsh1p 1n 1981 against Hous-
ton. "We couldn't always do that
when I was here."
The Rockets have to hope for a
much better game from 7-4 forward
Ralph Sampson. who was I for 13
from the field and scored two points.
··oad my third baseman make a
play or what?" asked Baker. "She is
outstanding. She was MVP of the
Sunset League her sophomore year as
a left fielder (she 1s now a senior). This
is her first_year at third base and she's
coming off an injury in basketball."
Baker explained that among the
rest of the Barons' outstanding de-
fensive corps, Young was not the only
player at a new position. Right fielder
Sindy Rice played left and center
previously, White, the left fielder had
been at third for two years. In
add1t1on, Dara Price is playing only
her seventh game at first base.
•· Pau11s one ot the main reasons we
are here. She keeps us in the games,"
said Baker. "We JUSt tell her to make
them hat the ball because we have the
defense. We have to make the plays. If
we don't, we don't win."
Andrews wins
racquetball title
HOUSTON -Huntington Beach
resident Ed Andrews captured his
founh U.S. national amateur sin&)es
racquetball championship in the last
seven years Sunday Wlth a I S-12. IS-7
victory over Andy Roberts of
Memphis.
Andrews, 29. had previously won
national titles in 1980, '81 and 'SS.
The No. I seed in the tournament,
Andrews drew a first round bye, then
defeated five other opponents before
turning back Roberts in the cham-
pionship match of the men's open
d1vis1on.
It's the beginning of a
beautiful relationship. You and
Holiday Spa Health Club.
Where you'll get more of the
most sophisticated equipment
and facilities. Rows of gleaming
equipment. With trained instruc~
tors to show you how to use it .
Swimming. Jogging. Lifecycling~
And more. Call or come by any
Holiday Spa Health Club today
for a free guest tour.
Join now for only $18 a month.
It's an offer your body
can't refuse.
$18 down payment,
23 payments of
$18 a month.
Annual
Percentage
Rate of 19.5%.
ot all facilities at all locations.
Available at participating dubs.
Some restrictions apply.
~:~
bMenmi\\blmn
~ n Collm~
·.
ANAHEIM 310~ Ma1tnoha. l blcx;kSo.of Lmcoln,(714)952-3101
CFRRITOS/LAKFWOOO I JAAl Dt'I Amo Blvd at Pion :fr,~ hlodcs Ebt of 6Cl~ Fm.•ww~ (213) 924-1514
COSTA ME A 2~l0 Harbor Blvd.(Beh1ru:I Thnlty Dru1tl. (714) S-49·3368
t .....
H UNTI GTON BEACH 17091 lkach Blvd. •t Wllf'Mf in t~Chartt'r Ctnu·t. (714) 848-1919
LO G BEACH 1IOI Atl;;an11t. Bl"d . C.Orntt of Canon,(213) 426-8874
ORANGE 622 a\t K.u tlb A,. We~t of Tu 11n AVf . (714) 639-2441
. . '
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MA.JOit LaAGU• STANDINGS
AmertcM u..u.
WIST DfVIMON
W L f"ct. Ga 23 11 sn n n 500 1 n 2• 467 2'')
10 2t OS a
11 2S •It 41/t
11 11 400 s•.-,
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IAST DIVISION )0 ,. ,. ,.
25 11
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21 20 n n 10 ,,
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20 s.ts 10 s.ts
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73 419 • 17 74 415 1
New York
MontrH t
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Ct11Clnnet1 S. C1'1lc1go •
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Mo;iston s. St Lo;il\ •
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12,,
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Cl'IClnnttl !Gui ICll.\Oll •·J) ., Clloeego (~IClll·
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Sen Dll90 IMovt l·ll 11 Montra11 (Youman'
•·31. " S.11 Frenclt co tGarr1t11 •·4) 11 Pllll1dltp111e
IRtwlev S·•>. II
Atlentt IP•~ 3·3) 11 Plt111>uro11
MCWIUlt ml 0-JI n
T'llllndm'I'• GtmH
o.d9lrl et New Yori< n
Sen Frenclteo et Pflll.a.ton•• n
NATIONAL LEAOUE
Meta I, Oodew1 I
LOS ANGELIS NIEW YOfllC
So2b
Lenora cf
Mtelldo. JO
Mtrtllel rt
SCIOICl1 c
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AP-p
CldenOoll
StullOI M
Ounc.n u
Wtleflp
Nltdnfvr P
Vtl\Cl8rg o
MtlUk ID
T"811
ebrllbl
4 0 0 0
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• 0 1 0
• 0 1 0
? 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
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J 0 1 0 , 0 0 0
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Dvttstrt ct ac.mn tt>
Mrnnor ID
C1rttr c
Httort
Fo1ltr tt
Kn'9hl lb
S.nl•ne u
Dtrllng P
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S I 1 0
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Lft .,,..... 100 000 ooo-' "-Ytrtr 000 106 IOll-1
Gt mt Winning R81 -8tCIU'l'ltll 11)
E-MtrtlleR, Ni.otnfuer OP-Lo\ Anotlt\ I
LO&-Lo. ·~ 6, N..,. 'l'CKk 6
28-8ec1tmen. M"o. ScloK1• HR-Ltnornux
()), Folltf ISl, Htrnendlr (3) SF-<:erttr
Ir M Ill ER 811 SO U.AneMt
Wtldl L.3·4 S 1 6 S 0 I
Nleotnfuer 0 2 I 1 0 0
Venoe ller11 t o o o o o
.t. ~ 2 1 1 1 I I
NtwY~
Otrllllll W.6·0 9 1 12
Wtlell ollchtd to 5 l>tlltr\ 1n !Pie 61n,
Nleo.nfutr ollchtd lo • bttter1 In 1ne 6111
M8P-Stn11n1 bv WtlCll. Knlghl bv Nledtn-
luer
Umolru -t4omt, Pv4h, Flr11, Wtll Stcono
B Wllllem1. Tlllro. Rl~v T-7 47 A-3S 6'3
Hitt\"'*"
Cl" SIMIP'INAU
T~Y'• k«'H ••• Es-11111 6, Simi V•tltv S Fonte11t 1, El Oore elo 0
).A
Wtttern 7 El Sloundo 1
Rio Mew 11. L.ornooc: I , ..
Artt•I• s. MJu ton Vltlo O
St119us •· Montclelr 3 I 10 lnn1no'1
l·A
Gleoitone 6, SI Anll'IOllV 2 (I 1nnl119sl
8el0wln Perk 11. St Bernaro 3
Smit SdlMtl
Provkltne• 2• Wlnd'#aro 6
Llnflelcl Cllrl11l111 13, PHteltnt Potv I
HHNIS
,Nndl °"" (•f ~•th)
TODA Y'I lllUUL n w_., s.c.-111._. ~
Steffi Grtt (Well c;.,rn.nv) Cltl Gretcl\ln "u"' (Us), 6· I. 6· I, Cllfll l!lltfl Uovo IU s I
Cltl Nttllallt Mtrrtmen (Frtnc.), 6·t , 6· 1, Hine
Mtnollkov1 (CHc110110v1klt ) Cltl Virginie Pe·
quet (Frtnct), •·O. 6· 1. Mtn\All MtlM YI
(llutoarlel def Cetl\lrlnt Suire IFrtnctl 6·0,
6·3. Ceruno '""" CC1 neoe1 Cllf Pucelt Etcllemtnd\t IFrtnct), l·6. 6'-•, 7·S
,,,_,,, ~ •tuftd ~
lven LtnCll (CrtellOsloveklt ) Cltl Jt ll.00
MltMk ISwil1.n.nd), 6·), 6·3, 6-l Jonen ICrltll
(Us I dlf Mlltn Srelber tcrtcllOllOYllll•I. 6·1.
6·), S·7. 6•3; Guillermo 111111 <Argentine) Off
Mtrlln Wo11en110tme IC•n•O•l. 7·S, 6·1, 6·2
TUISDAY'S •HULTS
Wemtfl'• .. W.f llttuftd ~
Cltudl• KOl\Of·l(lllcll tw_.1 Germtll'fl Otf
LO< MCNell IU S l. 6·•. 6·1, Leura Glio.mtllltf
(Ptrul dlt Allllt Wllole (US), 6·1. 6·3, Mtnut4•
Mtlttn Clef 1C111rlne Skronlll• 1c1ec110110·
••kit ), •·I, 6·1. ICt lllV Rln•IOI IU s I Off t4U Ne
(US ). 6· 1, 6·3, ICtltrlnt Mtlelv• llu19trle)
Olt Ttrrv Hoiltoev (US I. 6·7, 6·3, Mertine
Navr1tl10v1 IU S I oef Senora Cecc111n1 llt11vl,
6· l 6· J. Mtncllfkove di! Set>r Int Gole1
IYvQO,lt Ylt l 6·7. 6·3. 6 l. AndrH Temt\vtrl
(Hunoerv> Clef C11r1,111111 Jolln11111 <Sw·•rer
l•lld), l ·• 6·1, 6·•
Mell'' ""' • IU!ld SIM!ltl P•U4 McN•~ (Austrt ll•) di! Joell.Im
Nvtlrom (Swtoe11>. 1·6, 6·3, 6·2, 6·0, Dt mlr
ICtrtllc (West Oermenvl dtt M•n1 Gunt111ro1
(Swltrtrl•ndl. •·6. 6·3. •·6, 7·6, 1·6, Henri
Leconte (Frencel Olt D•vld Ot MJgutl 6·3 6·1
6·3, Guv Foroet (Frenctl Cllf Ptl>IO Arrey•
6·3 t ·4 3·6 1·6 Vennlck Noell (Frencel def
Teri• Benl'l•blltl (Frtncel 6·l, 6·•. 6·7. 6·7,
6·4, Tlllerrv Tut11ne 1Frenee1 Otf Frtnct\co
Ct notllotl llltM , 4·6. 6·•. S-7. 6·2. 6·•, Mtf\
Wllenoer (Swedl111 Olt Rlceroo ol'cunt (Cllllel,
6·0 4·6. 6·1, 6·1, Andr•1 Gomez IEcu•ODrl Olt
li1t11n Mtcllll>t lt (CtntOa l. 6·) 3·6. 7·S 6·3
Mtrtln Jelle (Aroenllnel Olt RonelO Aoenor
IMeltll 6·1, 3·6. 0-6, •·2, 6·•. Jlmmv Arl11
1u S I •111'16rew, wr•lntd enllle
LOt Alamltoi
TUISDAY'S llllSULTS
(Urd If S2·nltllf QUI~ ~)
l'llllST -.Actt. JSO verd'
Oulet Dintro tE Garett! l(ev Et1ltr (H GtH lt )
Tr.is Hour lCr .. oen
Time 11 15
JOO 300 760
l70 ?IO
• 00
ll IXACTA 11 7l Pt •O Sl•OO
SICOND llACI. lSO •trO~
Flrll Down Des" (CerOOH I
!.wffttsl ScK.lno' (Plttctnron)
IOt Rael lluftr !Trt11ure)
Time 17 7S
0 lllACTA (2·71 PI O UIO
THlllD •ACE. )SQ vero• Wlh 81 Eu,. (Treu urt)
Clllck• Badu1t10 tCrH11trl
Fol' Ovneslv (Car<10111
flme 17 63
U _IXACTA (3·•1 oe O IS ?O
FOUtllTH -.ACE 3SO vetd\
F•ttctom Fiver IDlor·c•""
Enlourege tCerOOreJ
v.c1orvfor111 IM•r•1
Time 17 11
l'll'TH •ACE. 150 ,rero'
Pie M•wkar tceroo11l
Selin Stffl !Maril
Me FIV\ EH V IWllilll
Time 17 IS n IXACTA IJ·S Pao"'°
SIXTH lllACI[. lSO varo1
Oesllln DH r 1Purce111
!>edit Cllerotr (11arll
TOH I To Toni (H Gercte l
Time 17 9l
l 40 2 10 7 10
7 10 7 10 2 10
• 00 1 10 7 10
110 , 10 , 10
1000 100 HO
15 00 670
• 00
l 70 HO t 10 390 , 4()
120
620 4 10 260
0 0 370 , 20
U •XACTA 14·31 PeHJ lA210
S•VllNTH •ACE. 3SO ntd\
Tiit Rel>tl 8tl\CI 19rooh l S 00
OH·Sl•lkt .t. Wt v Purce1 l
DH·Lovt tn Tiit F•\lttnt IP·l~tnton
Tlmt 17 73
U I XACTA () 41 oeio \S 00
S1 IXACTA !l ·}) 01ld SS 20
llGHTif ll ACll. lSO vera1
110 2 10
, 10 7 10
, 10 , 10
Knlgt.11 WMtltr tMvletl
Evlt'HI IHerO
ll•rt NIQlll Out IP1Hltnlonl
Ttme 17 U
640 JIO 340
)4() )00
l 00
U IXACTA (7·31 oe10 \29 10
NINTH RACE. lSO vard\
SotlO Polley (Pllktnlonl 9 80 6 70 S X>
Wtsl COHI Native ( DlotrlCkllnl 10 10 s 20
Sterlln Frt lll ITrtH Ufl l 18 60
Time 17 '7
s2 IXACTA ll·SI 011d '7•00
s2 fil'tCIC SIX IS·)• l 1 0<, II oe•o U ISSIO
IO ll'lrff wlMll>O llCl<I" Ill .. f'IO<\l\t $1p0 5,.
contOltlion t:>tl<I I 191 IO 10 6S w1nn1n11 toeotts
Clive rror\lsl
T•NTH RACE. )50 ve rd'
Decktm Too (LICltt VI
OeU Sol Right (01atr1Clt.stnl
Ell'ltrOIOOc: (Pt utlnel
Tome 11 10
uo 400 J60
1260 •OO HO
i2 llXACTA I 21 Ot •O l t0180
"'"•"o'"'' J m
F11'11MX Pint
(tll"tmtM)
TUESDAY'S •RSUL TS
( Mtfl ef tS ·l\ltfll "-,_" rMtt1ne l
FllllST •ACE. One milt oece
L•noen Jem" tlle tclll0<0I 10 .0 C•non Drive (8ernal)
CltU•C SO<rtl ILtclllv)
T1me206 •S
$1 IXACTA t i·?> Pelo SSIOO
SICOND ltACE. One milt lro1
•00 l60 ~ tO uo ao
S.11.1r<1e v Oen (V•1t1nc11no11tm1 S 60 3 40 J 10
Fennv\ Hunter IM(toeU1 s '° • 60
lliv8' ID•-rJ 2 IO
Tlrnt 2 01 • s
U DAILY 00U8LI l·l l oe o<I SA2 00
ll IXACTA U ·•I 111•0 17910
THNID lllAC•. Oflt m11t PKI feoul~O tV•llt 114inel\llml l .0 FnttnyQvt'ffltltO (Mtllf I
Mull•QtltWllY "eflllt)
UO HO
160 >60 ) 00
T>t'l\t 1 ff 1 S
ti •JU.CT A 16·>1 Pt'CI 12• )0
'DVll'TH •ACI. One mt11 trot
Anelftw' Stir (Wtdlt mJl 22 10 1l IO H1~11 (lllP 1v e1t1"4ln9111ml 4 10
Quick To•O ISllv•l
Time 2 Ol 41$
"'"H •AC• Ont' m11t PIU Miiier G;.tlftv llllOutn) u 00 11 IO
Vt n"ll•flt Act l lCUl«>ltr l •IO
Slo.•POet• he-(AnotrlOftl Tlmt !St 11S
lS IX ACTA l•-ll oelO Utl 00
SIXTH ••c•. Ont milt Pitt
• '° , '° 300
Karen Ev• IC (Steetl'IJ ~ 00
SomtlMlll Su v (\ltllt lldlr>Ollt mJ
Po\lllvtlv Rowov ITOOO Ill
U O 110 ''° >60 , 60
Time 1-00
'5 IXACTA ll·lJ oe10 '76 SO
SIVINTH •ACI . Ont m•lt Pett
Pt rkwt v AOlo' lMt•trl • 40 SmOl<ln WllO (Slfftlll
Lumotr Slllo (OlfrtnCOI
Time 101 41S
U IXACTA 11·11 ot·O ll1 SO
llGHTH •ACE. One mo1t Ot(e
llreOC>urv llrtt (Meler> • .o l .o Joo
NtllYt FOA (MIMI 73 00 S IO
Bt11 Of Arnie IAllCHr\onl ) .0
Time ISt 31S
U •XACTA (S·ll o"Q l403 SO
NINTH llACI. One milt o•et
Winning S.non IPlenot S 60 l 20 3 20
llrown 819911 (Lt ekl'l'I 4 60 >IO
Lev11v D G (Mtlkt< I l 60
Timt 200 4 S
U IXACTA 13 71 oe10 t?l 40
U ,.CK MX l 1·4·3·1 or S or l ·S·3l oeld s 1,2l3 IO to to;ir winning llC~t•• (llvt llO<'"' Cerrvover pool l 16.691 41
TINTH •ACI. One milt oett
Left Turn Only !Coltman) • 60 4 10 3 00
Son Of Ml Mtrro IT Odo 11 t 6 60 II 60
CAPlllrt no llt•cn tWJ•naro) ) 10 Time 20S
Sl •XACTA (J·'I ot ld OJ 90
.t. lllllOt nce 1,671
~ . . . "
50,TIALL Hlttl Khoof
CIP' 4-A ~LAYO,,'S
Ft11MtWI Vtlt\' 1, (M'rlttl 0
Ct rr ro, 000 000 ~ I 1
Fou""'" V•1 t Y 001 000 •-1 4 7
Ztllmt" eno Mer"enoer Tt vlOr enO Atverer
w-Tavlor 19·l L-Z.1tm1n 28-Youno
CIF l·A l'LAYOl''I
Woodbrlclee 1, V•ltnclt 1 WOl)(JDrldot 000 101 0-2 1 7
\111 t llC•t 000 010 0-1 1 I
Run•~ ano Ptvton Granger eno F•n"v
w-lluue IO·I L-Granotr 18-F1111tv IV>
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( S«TllflNI• I
4·A
Foun11ln llelttV 1 Cerrito' O
~I JOH Oll I Oownev 0 II •nn•n11S1
l ·A
Woodbrioge 2 v • """'' t
C•"cenre lie""' I Sonore 0 II ""'"0'
2·A Arrovo 1. Cllarttr Ott\
El Toro 1, Coron• 0
0.. ... ""'" NEWf'O•T LANDING - l l>O•I,, .. 1nglt r\
94 ce11co l>tn 10 1>1rr1cuo1 2• 1tl\CI oeu. I
'll '•Dul , ll'lltD\flttO 1 \CulO•n 1 rock tl\h 110
meclltrtl
DAVEY'S LOCKER (New.., ... di) -6
OOtll, 1S9 al\Oltrl 15' C>trrtCudt, .0 DOnllO 1
vtllOwllll, 1 natlC>ul 12' cellco C>tn, 27 H nd
oen 3•S mecktrtl, 1 C>lut ~rc11, S \culoln 2
C>on•IO 'lltrl<I 1 l>IUI \llark,, 6 \ti OHi
DANA WHA•P' - S Doell. 116 er>0ltr' 3
,. •CO l>IU 2 Dl"ICUOt , C>onllO 1 roe~ ,,,n
llS mec'"'' 41 "'''ct·leneou1 1 wlllte Ht
03\\
•
TuesdlV'• trenaadonl
IASlllALL
Amtrtun LMtut
CHIC.t.GO WHITE SOX-llec;etlecl Scoll
er 101tv ceicner from 8utt•lo of '"' All'ltr•ctn Auoc1ehon •s•acl we vtrs on Mere Hm c11c11
., f(K '"' ourpg\t of OMl>O ltlm ,,., uncond•·
llOt\tl rtlttH
NEW YORI( YANl(EES-S.01 Brien Fo\1'111'
Pllcner, to Colum1>u1 of 111t lnternelionel LHO~
Calleo uo Doug Drel>tk, ollcl'ler, from Col
uml>Y\ Moved llOCI Scurrv 011c11er from lt'lt IS
aev 10 '"' 71 dev Ol»bltO lhl N•fltnM LMtut
DODGE RS-Acllvtled Alttt ndro Pt ne
o•tcner from 1111 dlltl>ltd list OotlorntO 8etv1no
G•IYtr p!lclllr to .t.IC>trouerout •n tl'le Pec1fllc
Coell LH gut
PHIL.t.DELPMIA PMILLES.-Announcta rne
•t llrtmtnl ot Jot LeleDvrt o;ill11101r
SAN DIEGO PAOEllS-Pleced Blp llol>trh
.nt1el«Mr on 1111 IS·oev ol1el>lt0 11\1 rt1roectlve
•o Mtv 71 Ct lltd up Mer~ WH•noer ,nflefoer
from LH V1911 ol 1111 Ptc•hC Coe11 Lteg..e
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BOSTON CEL TICS--S1gneo Greg ICI!•
center 10 11 mulrl· vear contreCI
SE.t.TTLE !.UPEllSONIC!>-Namt<I 8oD
Whllltll l>t'"ldenl
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GREEN 8AV P.t.CKEllS-S1gne<1 Jim Zor11
ouer•trl>t<k 10 a one·vter contrec• W11vt0
Mlkt Oouoteu ..... IMICll.t•
Ml.JC NOTIC( rte.IC NOTICE Pla.IC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTICE NII.JC NOTICE
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT!Wednelday, M•Y 28, 19M * M
Indians in a fog, 2-0
Boston wins 6-inning ame over Cfevef and
to extend win streak
From AP cll1patclle1
C LE VC.LAN D -Mike Brown
pitched five scoreless innings and the
Boston Red Sox scored two fi~t·
1nnang runs to beat the Clt'veland
Indians. 2-0. Tuesday night an a game
called with two out an the bottom of
the sixth becau~ of heavy fog.
II was Bosion's third straight
tnumph and n>nth 1n its last 10
games The Indians lost their fourth
consccut1\e game
Ln other Amcncan League pmcs.
Brewen t, Royall l; In Kansas
City. Charlie Moore hn a basc!i·
loaded tnple. Rob Deer hit two home
runs and Milwaukee scored seven
unearned runs to beat the run-starved
Royals
Twln1 7, Bhae Jay1 I : In the
Mctrodomc. Tim Laudner~ base~
loaded sacrifice fl y 1n the 11th inning
ga ve Minnesota the v1C'tOr) o'er
Toronto.
* TWIM 7, IMue JIVI 6
TOil ONTO MINN•SOH
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BOSTON
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MILWAUKllE ICANSAS CITY
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Umooret-Home Ka '" ""'' COOl\tv ~· ono Poll '"'0 TlltrO B• """"•r. T-1 16 A-71969
R.u1ert I, ~Ile Sox 3: In "rl1na·
ton Tun Odd1tx-McDo~ell
doubled. homered and scored three
runs to back the four-h11 p1tching of
knuckleballer ( harhe Hough u,
Te\u tx-at (hu:uo
In the Nauonal uaaue·
Braves •. PlratH l : fem Harper
hit a JT'lnd ~lam With \WO Oua tn tht
l 2th inning. pov.enna '1~1una Atlan•
ta past Pattsburah
Attros S. Cardloal1 4: .\l Busch ~tad1um Kt'' 1n Bus scored from
'>t'<ond ba't' on shonstop Ot11c
5m11h 's 1lirov.1ng error 1n thc ninth
1nn1ng g1' 1ng Hous1on 1h 'tC'\0"
0' er <\t L o u1<i
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Mii-McDoweil 16t Hultll •21 Porltr ISi
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.t.TLANTA ~ITTHURGH
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MllC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE NM.IC M.lTICE
• •
t
nmtes t , Glutt I: At Phtlackl·
ph11. Mtkt' hmtdt's two-run bomtt
broke an c1ahth-1nn1na ue. Jtad1n1
Ste\t' Carl1on and the Phalhn put
an Franc1Ko
£•po• s. Padrft •: .\t 0 1) mptc
Stadium. Hubie Brooks· aroundou&
dro'e 1n Mitch Webster from tturd
ba\t' "'Ith the t1c·brcakin1 run in thr
><'' cnth innina. 1tf\1n1 Montreal o' cr
San D1e1to
Reds 5, Cub• •: Da' e Parker had
four singlcs. including one on the
n~t·field "'all that broke a ~-2 tie. as
( 1nc1nnau tx-at C'h1ca10 at Wriglc\
Field
* ~ '· Glafttl 2 UN ""ANCISCO ~HILADl..,HIA
litt OOtn ('I
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Orwige Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wednesday, May 28, 1986
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220
491-UOO
IT'S HARD TO llUEVE IR
WAS OllCE SO DRURY UllTl I
FOUllD MY DREAM a. MT
IV Loonll 11 TllE DAILY
PIOT'S CWSIFIEDS.
You can now cell the Delly Piiot Cl•••lfled Dept. on Saturday morning from 8:00to11:30 e.m. to place your Sunday end Monday ads.
nALISIAU _,._.., 111)
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GOI.,...,~ 1011 •rt..-... 1.00
c.--107• If W-.. ,, --107•
fl '°'• IOJ) ltlln'AU IQ.:14 •-Volloy ...._ ..... 1040 HOUSH/CONDOS ---'°"' ~ 1107 -'°"' ·--~ '°"* ---710. l--10)0 ---1101 _ _...
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l_ ....... '"' MISC. I .I . ·---21S) _..,. )1•1 --1100 ,...__ )I .. .. _ ,.,, s..c-,,,.
~,,_.....,. II)() S.."-''--1111
CLASSIFIED INDEX
642-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY
FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY
M0-1220 •Uao
MISC. llNTALS ••••o•a111111• .......... '"'-...... "'° ,...,,._ IOlt '-............. '"' c-11-1701 ......... Ell I '9'10
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DEADLINES
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday .. .. Sat 11:30 AM
Tueaday......... Mon 5:30 PM
WednMday. .. Tues. 5·30 PM
THE DAILY PILOT
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Monday-Friday
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lnMrtloo
DIRECTORIES
Thureday ......... Wed. 5:30 PM
Fr1day ............ Thurs. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............ Fri. 5:30 PM
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Saturday 8:00 AM· 1 1 30 AM
Bullneaa Counter Mond1y-Frldey
8.00 AM-5;00 PM
S42-54S78
,.,,,_ ow.ctorr
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AulO f'!lol
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Ital Ettatt Fer Salt , • ..,.,, leac• 1069 ICtrtH ••• ••r 2122 • ..,.,, ltac• 2Ht CHta .... 2124 C..ta .... 2124 LatHI Jtac• 2'41 lltt•• 2'ZH Ganru ler 1111 Ptneub 3112
Gtatral 1002 IEWPllT IUCI Exec home w/ooeen view •SEAWIND 4Br 2't4.Ba, fNSfXNT IA E...ide 2Br 1B•. frple, OCEAN VIEW '•m near So Co11t 2'140 JAPANESE axchnoa 1tu-••m1111J" 11 .. ir-• Pvt bell 5Br 4Ba. yrty lie lam rm, entry kltefl, din '51S/mo 1BR 1BA. all beam cell.gar 2 peraon1 Only 10 mlns lrom Lagune Plaza/405 twy, wash/dry. •1111•..1.a lar t dent• need Hoel famltlel .. _ n.~• $2900 mo Call INGA., rm Nr PQOl/lennls GrMt bullt Ins, lndry rm, nr No pets $690-$700 t Your own private ooun kllcNlnette PoOI Jeez • ..... ~ for 3 wt period thlt tum-
Finest .. Bayside Cove .. 2 unit• near channel Ra/Mu 559·9400 or Ille vu. grdnr Avl 711. beech & shops tut, MC $225 650-1798 view trom Dani Point'• $325 mo 556-1737 · Storega only Ea• tide mer. Greg Johnson
Townhome • 2Br Sullee. Greet stanerSpropeny 786-7698 $2300/mo ~288 735-741 W 18th St EASTSIOESHARP& .__A moll teeluded aoentc -C M 64&-5137 l0-7pm 982-8378 4·30-epm
End Unit II wller. edge Pr!Ced only at 180,000 ---TSL MGMT 642-1803 c...,. Blulf Like new 28' Clll LG SEPERATE RM W/BA E. SIDE C M Sale clean • • w/lull bey view . An 3bd. 2b1 up 1bd. 1b1 I HARBOR VIEW HILLS 18eaull1ul trl·levef Newport 2Br, 19a, etove, side 9e0-633l or 661-644 1 Male, prv ent, eeml-lvm, single (;011201 00 pr; Ptntaal HY ttl
elegent & distinctive down. frplea. bit-Ins & 4 'It ecra 4bd, 2ba, lacuz:zJ Knolls Condo 2Bdrm, 280-C Oe1 MIT 1BR. gar· yard, I ear gar. W/O hkup tv, w1tk to beh, $300, 1S1 elley iong term storage 3t14
adult home ss53 400 C4r perking. Priced at hse. aval 7-8, $2500, 2'1tBa, 111 amenities, etc. age. catpela ind stove. $750 No pets 54~9950 lnrrrt ltac• & last. aft Spm 494-2915. s951~0. 673 3800 •
ll1stl111 a c.. 3~~~5·~a upper uni! d-645-4311, e-631·2917 s 1100/mo 722-8477 ~:.;:r~-:~~=-8~~7 nowt FURN lbd, utll paid. S500 * 1 ...... .... NEWPORT SHORES RENT-S;NG~ GARAGE Anlng~ .. ~!albl~ • .:.',;,,;
640-556<fANYTIME w/lrplc bit-Ina & view of Ctlll ••11 2124 Ill OAIYll OllM mo. •250 see. 599 Hemll· Refrlg dllhwuher a stove $350l mo ltt, lut & dep, In $60/MO, 2'864 LA SALLE. loss. Jo4n ,,..,, U Pt<>-
b1y a Oeeanl Lower un11 I2 9A dbl gar~ yard 2BR 2YrBa. Oen on golf 2BR 2b• w/p()OI, newly Gtonor'dConMororMcalklle96& 1711 Incl NO PETS 545-4855 very nloe home, n-lmkr, CALL AFTER 5PM grem. Saddlebadt Com-2bd 2 f ...,. & I · • · course Nex1 to tennla painted and ept'd, no · 1v1ll now. 831-378e. 556-28« mun 1 t y Hoe p 1111 Ollll ' ba, r,.,.,. pvt I garden area $7 . MCUt-court S 1895 759-0079 pets. $895/mo + S800 1Br Veru.lliel PenthouM. 770-3952 •• m •• T. IUO. p1t10 Owner moving out lly Prefer couple no depotlt. 646-3818 •FREE CABLE TV. Lg 18' Quiet Sec bid garage NR BACK BAY furn rm, Ill I taJ ff .
of eree $295,000 pets h1ndy man a 'plus CLEAN 3bd. 2b1. Hatbol' 6 2Br. 2Ba Garden Apia PoOI Gd V\.I Nrgbcn 1695. PY1 ba, gar • PoOI. fOf F IC. ta I ..,..A-=-R-=-E__,..Y:-:::0:-U--H..,..A'"'V-IN...,G=---A
Charming 2 Bdrm upstairs Ocean lront, 4bd 2b• 548-2938 Hlland1I LM S 1200 mo •3Br 28• Townhouse Pool, rec room S52S-675-4912 vi111 Rentlls non amkr S375+ a too & ESTlBLISHMENT MotM· PROBLEM with AL·
unit in POQular Hunt-down 2bd 1be up. good _ gard/water pd NCJ PETSI Double garege Patio. $855 710 w 18111 SI refs Ulll Ind 646-6423 home 281t $450/wk COHOL Of COCAINE?
lngton Townsnlp Perty tocallon. w1nuwt summer •SHARP w .. 1t1de 2Br, 646-23890f548-1366 WIOhook~p Pool Spa 2Br 1Ba upper. AH,,..,,,. I l J•t l ·'Ill +10cent1ml Sleepe4-&. CallN.R.N 9e6-8179 llze 6ecll very l>flvate ren111s Priced 1 1 1Ba Op111 Tlta nra. ~ts, S990 No Peta 722-8011 USA IE Ml apple, klten. new crpt, I I I_ t I Rav/eummar 957-3071
Beautllully meln11lned SA29 000 drps, w/d hkup, ger S600 EXECUTIVE HOME •Clean 2Br 2Ba nr SC ALL UTIL TIES PAID M>me vu Stepa to bch •iraa ••1--l lc ... b
ground• and eommun11y • MC Muat stand ete<llt Yearly 3BR+den Compare before you rent $850 1807 w Balboa Blv ~ _,s; C.-trelal la t &.1--t•tz
pool Welklng distance to I "" No peta 770-54529 overlooking Iha back bey Ptau. 5 .A Carport, Newty decorated euatom Antonio 1175.-4520 10-5 Wkly rentals now avall. Ll I l /It I I ne'"'a _..
shopping & park A lllf· --I In Eastbluff ., .. Avail patio, pool. Chlld Ok. d I , t I 1 129.50 wk & up. 2214 I ·-• EXperteocea ... 1u;gu;a
rlflc velue at s1o4,950 3bd. 2ba. 2 cer garg, lg yd, I July 1 at s2500tmo Ger-$750 NO PETS 722-8011 b~.g~vr~: ~:~.·ge~':r~ ••Brend new 2Br 2Ba. Nwpt Blvd, CM 64~7«5 and swim teem coech
gerdner/w1ter pd, new dner Included Peta & •WTlllE* rounded with plush land· Choice area. Garage. SU I Ill LOllE laaiaftl/Ofllet ltat w/,.J witting to leech prv
(714 ) 673-4400 UNIQUE Opporty 10 own 1 I ~~~~~/m~2~~1 f~~s~., chlldran OK 675·9~-28r. 28a remodeled. Jee, seeping. No pet•. ~~~~·71~9!085~.~77~ets 2711 swim lelaona at your
specious 3bd. 3b1. 2300' dep, 8'1811 now. 969-3820 EXECUTIVE HOME d/w, garage $750 Fee 18edroom Fumlehed 3028 W. Peelflc Cout ~ BRIGHT NEWPORT OFC home. FOf mOfa Into call
hOme In the Bluffs ANO ----1Yearty3BR•den TEUllEIT 111 lllO 385WESTWILSON •IWTIEWAYEI* Nawport8Mch.Relr1g 643 sq fl w/ltlowef Neer 213-49 l-Oe53,~.
enjoy all the benefits ot A must for yovr l>Ydgetl overlooking the bid! bay • 1•2-1111 Studio ·~ 10 blk. panting. S 125+ wtugl. no d9poalt PCH, Post Ottlee 6 PARENTS: Screening fOf
owning 5 aparkllng ran-Under $700 3br 2b• ~ In Eutblutf are• Avail •MESAVEROED'lu1112Br, AH new drplletpts All l1at1h It l•art Marlner'aMlle 646-2947 Oy1texl1 (Olfflculty In
lats grosatng S60K 12 more 539-619! Agl lee July 1 at $2500/mo GIT· 2Be, new decOf, d/w, LIYIU llln ullls Incl Yrty $525. Fee 2724 Reeding, Spefllng, Hand·
encl g1rs, pool, elub/hM, E SIDE CM dner Included Pet• & locked garage, lndry GARDEN APARTMENTS TIWllT 111-1 .. 0 0411 IU nms writing, Organfut1on1t
patios, 1t1ndka $6951< Designer 2br, 2bl hme. chlldran OK 675-9111 $795 No pets 640-2495 Strums, gu BBO. thfV* The Ample ptcg, ullla plld Skma) Offered by Iha
l aase/$865K fee. upr-tavel, frple, all appll. E.111.panalve poc)lhm 31>8 •MESA VERDE O'luJI out Pool. apa, tuana, Enjoy Iha Luxury of the IH•• ... O..lfftle1 2855ECatHwy875-fiOO Non-Profit Newport
owner/bkr 953· 1220. quality through-out, grt 28drm. I Ba. new decor, ClubhH, encl prknB; beeutlNI aurroundinga of FOf the Compatlbte .. q n Communutly School to lmHT llAOI Stit• Ct1at loe. n-petl, S950/mo. j~u;~•111 1~1~ch d~~~~: dshwshr, 1oo1ced g11:f' Spacious 18' '595. 2 Ill GUYH WT Roommate •261-5n7* On NB Watertronl ·w/vtft, children completing K s~~-~~· ••tre lOH
1
751-3898 539-6191 Agt lee $675 No pets 640-249 i~~,~~~~~1~!: l~lr~~· ~go.,:: 2rmmtaneededl0f3--level grut apece, charming, ~!~" ~~"og°:'a~:; ll~n m:~ :..11 move yo!: LIRE NEW38o MESA VERDE 110111 Yf(W IHES •NICE 2BORM 2BA• 2000 Parsons. ~&672 with opener Sec guarded I o wn hou •• 3 bd . ciOMIO Ill Iha harbor ae-Parenti. Same day oon-
lnto 11111-'stunnlng VIiia 2'1) BA CONDO-Bonus rm Beaut 3br. 2ba, new decor 15 Br Sommer a e '[Lndry tac. d/w, Fncd patio. gatea. W/d hkupa. From ~:~.Y~:::.~·22:.·~~.•w. tlon, w~~~parklng aultillons. Low I• oU60
Balboa condo w/OC(Jan 11e. teeurlty 1ystem. sky: I cs~';7/;~~ ~~~~·387;f8"· S2000/mo 1 yr la.a Call ~~-~\'e ~~2~/:~kra lmY IElltllUI s 1395. Call 644-0509 CO'*' leatlng & con. vi-Complete MCUrlty Illes. patio a deett, fresh _ · ____ Agt 644-9060 Alie for Xtra lg 3bd. l'lr ba. carport BLOCK to l>Mcill New llWPllT IUOI lerencee. For RaHr·
w/guarded gate, pool & p1lnt, new carpet, 2 car Lovely 3Br 2Be Obi ger Rite or 675-6325 SA95 1 BR mobile home In w/stor:ri· pool, n..peti. IEWPllT llEIT house 3bd, 2ba, frplc, Full~ Bolldlng. vatlonlllnfMma1lon ce.ll
!WI Owner mull Miii g ar1ge, $118,000. 2097 Santa Ana $925 -quiet edit prk. No pate, S79 ·642-5210 Lrg 3BR 2'hBA w/viftw, 2 1/d1Ck, w /dry 1450 S«:te1arta1Servlcea (714!&'4--7890
SUBMIT $131,900 854-14331979-2078. Owner (213)54t-6196 or 1 HARB~: V~~ HOME I gas pd. 140 C1brlllo. POOL-PRIVATE PATIO car ger, pool, tennla, +tee 957-6468 Comefo1Wwtcllff6 lrvlne Traftl 14
SALLY SHIPLEY • ~·I I (714)951-7063 ~mac ·d 8 • PV1 ~ 759-5590, 873-7787 New d/w, frplc, gerage close to beh S1395/mo -E SIDE CM CONDO VIEW SUITE HOUSESiTfER· n-w.
JOYCE OABOLT •,;,· .. ~•H ll00 Ne'# 2 matr bdrma. 2''\ba ~·i~:~ nrs1~~ 1' S550 South Cou1 Plaza x~i-i:rJ585 ~8;7~l45t TSL MGMT 642•1803 F/want11ame to lhr. 35+ MM101 tlble care for you~.
759-9100
.-t .. •t •ii• '.1~·h"• •
COLDWeu
BANl(C!RO
2 car encl gar Twnhae --area !Bdrm. air, lanced NEWPORT MARINA APlS 2bd, l'~ba. trptc;, emkr NEWPORT BEACH planta. pell, refl. Celt UDO 18' agl Wide Steps 11yle No Pet $895 H V HMS lmmac:. Monaco pool, carport. No petl . •Bayfront 2Br, 2B1, Ok, 5 min to beh, 1337.50 1800 .,.. rt.13,..,. w•r• Barbafa{7l4) 83~1715 to bay. PoOI Reduced to 548-8251 or 472-9253 2br. den, comm PoOI. 546--8791 ........ B.AU Den Micro, lrptc;, encl + 12 utll, 6-01, 645-3379. ...., 'IV l8K Mika Offer Must watr/grdnr Incl. adult n-~ U gir Pvt beh 12595 houM w/450 aq h ofc, latl-nt sell Sp rent s550 700 New Eutllde 3Br 2Yr8e 2 smkr. n-peta. avell ~1 . $600-$650, 2bd, 1ba, *ALSO• F 20-28 lhr 3bd, 2'~b• S 1100/mo. on Pro-_._,-______ _
Lido Pan< Of11'4. 650_6873 11ory Townhome All $1400, 818-335-9710 Of completely renovated, on l(W &PAITllEITI 2Bdrm. 2Ba $1795. S0<ry, TwnhN. HB. Wilk lo bchl ductlon Pl.S E corner of CL1U Cut -tall
emenlllae S 1250/mo 619-340-2593 weal 17th f'\eAr Whittler Featuring beautiful land· no 760-0919 Btwn 6-5 S290 +$350 MC. Avl 8/1. Monrovla/Productlon.1~91"""" .. _____ .., __
ta ltr Salt 14 Vitia Rental• 875-4912 LIDO ISLE Vrly lease. 548-3829 lor more dale. tclpe, BBOa, pool/spa. NEWPORT PIER AREAi 720-1824 Jiii. 980-06e1, M-F. 8-5pm, 645-4800 Ali I'm m . Ml s; 2 mo
Laguna Beach flat lot. IPll .. llAYlll Charming 3BR 2ba. avall ILIFF APT W/Y1(W ~:~~~~~rryG~~~;!1:' Stepa to bch, 1ge 3bd, F n/smkr lhr 2Br TwnhM OCEAN BREEZE o4d IOOf'I, I'm l()()l(lng for
View Near beh, schools, NOW. no pets. $1800 mo Vaulted eelllnn1, prvl 2b en ""' I nr SC Plua $300/mo + For leaae al Iha' e metura, e,lCP, I /I
1 Best Afl 5 E-slde 2br 2b1 abode 99 ... "" / • 18drm $320 •. • .,..ng, nope• '"' utlla ,..._ 641-eeeo llllll SHIU babysitter, Im lle11 own arM. w/ger kid• Ok S600's 4 -->....,.,,own bkr balcony. redeeor1t1d 2Bdrm 1'148a $715 S14 mo 873..e&40. ...,. w/ldeu l sal 11 neg
·---..... -.. 1714!992•5724 1165·000 many olher1a111lleble ----$895 2151 Pacific AYe 2Bdrm2Be S795 X27 ll.Eve 432•7903 ProfMllOnal Btdo & ~ ptauecall875-9475 · PflflSIU ltatala *IJM110• Ytarly 2 a Jl4r•t 6 3 1 • 6 1 O 7 pm or 825 <Anter St 642-1424 vhJtlcf! .. llr5 h~ F to lhf 3bf CM home. CJeP1/Sec1y Inc:. 411-2797 LIVE IN WANTEOt Ocean viftw Otherl avall· 855--0665 No petl "'Y cute, -· • 1 S 175/mo + aaalstanoe , M21,000 BHHt/Ct .. tl Klds/enlmel tlne 3bf hae ebleqoaetobeach · SHARPANOCLEANGAR· Cell831-5775 tor Fem tHeher In OFFlCEFURN/UNFURN Care fOf 1~ yr N-ernl(.
Beech front. B•l boa big 101 S82511 539-6190 O&llHY HIT&l CLEAN & SHARP 2 BR. OEN APT 1BR. atove & whleh NI le 645-2357 S150/mo, Cotta M ... loc. m/drtve. IPk engl. aal. pd
charm. 7 BR hOma on the Gt1tral 2102 Beat Alty fee _ _ J I lllT llO. , epta & drpa. O/W, ger· refrlgeretor. no pets STUDIO. view. ooeen/bay, r am r n r 171hI P11cen11 •. vac, +muefl mOf'S. HB
oceantron1 Comer 10-•PENTRIOOE COVE• age, no pe11 $840/mo 1520/mo 548-1377 g11 Yeatly lease $495 Good llvlng, Npt Hgt1 d-642-2390, e-875-4$4-4. 714 883-4272
cation Newer roof and I l11~ltr~t/ltafttn 2Br 2Ba CondoS995 Over llll·U01trlll-11lJ 645·5577 MESAPINES2650Har11 ~3~29~~~:7~~13~.8 ~:;;,~~ioam~~~~nc! SmaJI ~
7
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plumbing Fast lrae tenant prv<tre fella & streams New Luxury for leaa S 1095 East Cotta M... newer 2BR 1B1 w/gar $750 amkr, 1525. 722_ 1222 rent. ..-I 1 th t ull Live In/out. Refs. '9quired. 1"-IOIO lnlo 539-6194 Belt Alty decor W/d hkup, 2 car 3bdrm 3ba pool home prvt 2Br 1Be, veulted oell· TOP AREA,·Oulat, No Peta aervloe. S350 & Up. Alk no t• Slttar. Unllmtted --------•I llttll I • l gar w/opnr 111 mo •1 fprle dahwshr a gar Inga In llvlng rm, dining **545-3115** hall All Btill~: Mature n/amkr ahr torBlll645-338e Agency.9SS lWamerAv • I.. $500 MC 545-3115 539-6191 Agt C091 rm & kitchen. Sngl ger· Furnl•h•d 2Br 2Ba I • Ste 2s0 Fountain v....Y
C11t1 .... 1 24 ••UmFIL .... ,. l'•aataia ----Nice Ill garden atyte Hltea age $750/mo. Avl 6/1. WI ••n a OWE FURN StOblo apt. Condo II Big Canyon Ht•• "'"~ 1w54io133
BY OWNER Eut aide Lg3BrpStepaSt300obdlF.Gar ValJty 2134 1 area2brg1r&m0<e $700 ;a~~~B 673-3117 ~~n~g;~~:'o~!rg!~~ 1600/mo.11t&lut.utll1 Eutl7&0 640-9139 rz SITTER NEEDED: for 10 smell 1 bd on lerge Fprlc ell 1 · ae kids 11 539-8191 Agt fee lnol Pool Fenced yerd. Mature prof'I pereon. n-U. 4-ft.11 Aellebte
so , 150 lot $1001< jttlEIEIT 111-lllO 5 BR 3b1. ferga mut8' ··~~·~;·· 1111!'0 from• amall11'f~0 Nency850-1050 amkr MIF to lhare exd •11 2 .. __.,oom, 1 Bath mo.glr1. n-emtcr, ,,.,, ""l7 ift • m SYlte • h~ bonue rm SPECTACULAR CONDO ~ r • -4 bdrm hOuM. 'UV'\' F " ...., refs. 5 day week. NB .,...,....... '"P ----' at, I I CM NB HB IV V1y lfM..850--02l3 °' Units Good condl11on 536-7344 ___ Mull rent Ille ctlermer saparlle II ng rm, dining 18drm 1ba • frplc, all rk ng n • · °' •l In al 9e2·2321 t>.r 1 lpm Alill"" 1247,000. llLY 1094 II IWO lncd pvt bungelow + area & femlly rm Sunny bltlna, l)OOI, rec room. -·---•• think of ua flrat for that IC. t I ... 1...--... --dn::----~rr.-..
New dupleJt nr Meae bUlc blltns $600'1 II k itchen w/breaklut Mu11 ... 1Only1595 F.. eholoa of Ideal llv1ng. M/F 10 lht 38' 29a N'#J>t
Verde $139.900 Firm 539-6 191 Agt ... nook, 3 car g11 $1495 TtlHEIT 111-IHO IM..aaliB.AU TSL MGMl 642-HI03 ..... l'ZOI Beh Al)t on blk to bch Traditional EXPEAiiNCED houM·
Prln only 759-5080 •• 1L.A. 11111as1 •cleaning Call ~ WllTUll YIWll Bai601 laland, rm161 $300/mo 54&-1934 X31 , keeper, women to IN9-ln, --Terry 6 4 6 . 7 11 1. VILLA BALBOA CONDO w/prv entrance. $425. Steve or 67~93 Realty prv rm/bath l aalaty, Baat. ltac• l 0 j Pt1ia11l1 2107 549-9823...,.. Prof decor. eomc>I furn &PUTllEm Bachelor 1525/mo 1111ta11. S200 aeeurlty. NB f\Jll 81 644-6819, Newpof1 lk:tl.
HHY, WH'T UST *IGUIFHIT• Baat. Jtac• 2140 ~=,;~:. L=/F!/D~ 8:~~1:"1 n:i'~b:,~1~0~~ 1 B~~~::.6n':~~ Yrly r*1tal. ~789 n~~.,;~F. ti~ S:l l ·7370 HOUSEKEEPE.A
Lllll 12bdrm. 2be, The Polnl g elocks to OCEAN oeean/bay/llghlt/ Laa Pool. Sp1. No pell 845-8122 833-8917 Cor~ def Mar woman mo +MCurlty. 850-1253. • .. ~·· w:~ ~ t:'e
Execullva ownrtf tren•· ar .. New decor, lrplc, Etegent ceder 6 glaaa S1800/mo Oy532·8.C92 2Bdrm l'/•Ba $75()..1780 laat. ltac• want• to lhar• dellgner Nwpl Beechl Mature, non· IH au elder1y BonNe .Cl3-0300 lerrad S15000 under gerage,onty S1300 Fae 2Bd m 2, ... B1 lemll ev/wtlnd771..0428 151E21a1St 543-2408 houte,w.t,wfth cou ........ ttnk,11w tobeech,3bd. ,._ • • ' r ,. Y 2BR 2ba, epte/d-r•""... 11500/mo~. '"73-2 .. 2 --..-2B 1Ba 2 market tor quick NII 11 TELHllT 111-1110 room 1'oen Phien erpte. IH ltantt lifi •EASTSIDE 2BDRM• ... -v vv 3ba. Moe1 amenltlae. Avl ' · cat gatage • P ........... /
$159 000 Po pular lrple aundeck Ot>l gar Garage Huge yard patio. gar•~•· dlth• 815. S280 mo. 831..028e mu. dapr•olatlon. M I latratfft IHI
LaCueat1 4Br 2B1 l1m1ty Ooeanfronkl I 5 '~-Condo lvlly maintained yard . Luxury 2Br 2Ba Condo. 1787 Wnlmlnater •C wuher • co n lndry ltwJllt ltac• 211f Prof 19male 21-35, lo Cl~ 1u'c4k00 orlncLol~··JoCnea1,1 •• a * rm RV peved arH ~ tctl gar.,.,., style • 2500 IQ rt, 2 frplct, IQ lam s6951mo 720-9422 S726tmo. 8"&-&451 " a
Mllure landacape on cul-lnc:d '(d $850 539--6191 HO-I.I 1 rm Beautllvl ocean l hUI · 1 ·-• lhare COM dupleJC, 3bd, 831-128e °' 84-5743
d .... e "731 Mellnd1 AQanllM side vtew1S1750 Peta Ok Eestllde un!um 18r 19a, lll!J8al IC 2ba, '580/mo + ,_. utll, ~~ S.. Ad undet " BY OWNER-TownhouM ,... .,... -i valt 7-1, 875-&en. Roz. I·~_ ~-"CL!RICAI." for Clrcta or call 968·5198 Ctrtll ••l •ar 21 2bd. 1'.ltba, ueume 8 75 Avt now 4.,4-......,8 or encl patio , c ar port *llZYflllll* .. , Prlnelp1t1onty .......... _.....,...,. ..... _....,.,. FHA toen. nr rec arM a 364-8053Wknda Todd $545/mo 329 Unlveralty wane to bdl, all utla Ind PROFF/lothr2bd,2,_.ba. • . T..-nporwyCenterUSA
lrriat 1044 Lg~:'fla'r'~~!. ~=~. :~~· P~:.~k~~ Aputatatl Or Call EVM 548..QMI prkng. Hurry1'525. F• ~:~;,d'~f'·~: luiwa I fblUdll H•f!.*t,~,...
UNIYERSI TY TOWNt I ll bltlna. 'v1111 Incl. MO: 161.500. 968-1068 ...... , .. ,..... Westfield nlllllt 11~1111 *H 12 ......... ". 6~14 or 751-5183. "CLEAICAL"tor
CENTER BY OWNER mo 0t yrty 1850/mo. F• Kid 1_ Cl 5 rm ZIO'l la" 1p tt HOO ROOM 10 rent, prMte •a.Mt ft Leu 1114 TemporaryCeri•USA.
Aerou from u c 1. tlngte TtUllEIT Ill-IMO oa~d;i' =~a:": yard , .. IU &PUmm H I •t1fft ftafft, beth, femei. nonemolt• 1""""!:::!.'!'!"'!l~-'!'!!'!'"'!'!!'!~-1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•lory condo 2br, IV.ba. --$850 hurry 539·8191 *"'"Tl Ull* Spending ctean laroa epta only. Chlld OK C&ll •"* ...... ~fir I•
lrpl, din rm 1#/akyllta. •llllT 11111• Agt cost Lg 1Br 1Ba. 11tr1 e ... n All ror tamltlae with 1 or 2 ·Month to month 8pm 5"t-7513 TO. S10K/!JC>, no oredtt,,.. .....
ale. 2 cer gar t>rloll P•tloj 1 room. 1ba. !vii kitchen bltlna. Hurry '5751 F• chlldren Neat pent Heat also available DeniaonAleoc. 873-7311 ...aHmMI S133 900 83~3690 Cable TV Incl vwy ... 1... ..... lf TIWEIT lll-IMI peJd No ~a a..ut oceenfront INdlo SECLUDED, troptcat, Weareatotalynew..-. ~ .' 1 S eluded $375 F• HED h I . 2Bdrm 1'/•Balh 1720 for tOI fMMOket. Hlt1or1C . Furnished/ beame, lrple, tennlt , ........... ... ~ ,,...,_,.,,
•H IH Ttlllm Ill-.... FU HIS om• ~r Nwpt Pen1n 38' 28&. oar. 28drm 2ea111 1740 Spanltl\ ""'-on J)ttYa1• unfurnished PoOI•. )ac:r $400 Friend ~,.-.... yp '°' .... P4olbl ... OWNER on NO 1o ,.. ~2~~2~~ lndry. rrp1c. Vrty I ,300 391 w wttaon 831·"'3 cow SNS/mo 414-M07 °' Bill w '45-11°"' Lett I ,.... 1111 ~~we heY9 a "**
EJ NIOuel cc. PQOI. ape 38drrn. 2Ba. lrplc, retrlg 6 11200,mo 841_8789: v1111 Ren1111 97µ912 ·Fitness centtrs, Shf G,..1 0oeian -Mw ..,_ ...... ..,_A.... reocwd 1n a ckar\ top
N un•. l l50K in up· ''T Hooll·upfOfwutt: 491-1832. 494-41C>e untum~X-1.Mge 38' C..ta •IN 1114 c.ta... •14 tennis. swimmmg home In C<IM ~ rvuo ... ......_ mettietaeoroaattte ooun-O'adee. "85-9064 evee ., dryer Cornet. va 2Ba I .. alblen/atnkr hOO +utile Poodle/Tern. Ml•, Fn try and need IOrM loCal
1 catll & rMdy a 1300/mo ....... I l H . • OCMrl • Models OPlll daily, 9 6 720-9729 or 780-ft43 8 a I b 0 . p. n In. u I a . Or ...... .... 1 28drm 2 Beth fully m I bay view a 1100/mo. WOODLAND VILLA GI Sorry no ptta 81$..()$16 proa to Jc*'l ue In .,. •• .,... I ~:~ ~OA~::r.. 1t01eoe Br 15 o:,-:,:. Slept 10 .. bch 875-62().4 ,. tall ... ,.. lott. REWARD '°' ;;~.,.
BY OWNER -AO~Nl JUM s 1800/mo 1tely, '876. 722·8729 ... APA•T ••• Nrwporl Bmll No 26Ci'" RI, RI. CM a.,.., Shiirs>ia M dog. 8ml °'*" ULD ......
uoar.o.d deoor8t« P8t '( j / 'I. icOtE 2B&m. 1L. QW· Come & eniot our 1arden itytt eptt Ovitt. comlortebllt Im 880 lr11'"" Avtnvr rnotMr, adult eon, 1750 t>m. lOlt at PX lhOt>'g _.,. ., .. feet Ing! M ~ 28r fil(ll111 m • . ,, fll ll!JI!! l age a trplc '850/mo elo~ 10 lrM•l11' So Coast~· llflile only minuln to lllf ttt 161hl mu, otiaen, •table, non cntr, Magnoll & AdWN ~
28&. den LO P4KiO 2.C hr .fu.J.i ,/(i .> *llZY llTTlll• 875-4112 VIiia Aentalt lltt(fl. Cart&"~'~ NO PUS Pl[AS( M5-t104 drtnk.,._itlNcrs, no pete, HB No chlldr.n·he'• We're ...,. aboU1 trle
..c ~.:;:::' 11 • • 7' Good arM, lrg Studio, all OCEAN FRONT-FURN ..... •Al . LA Nhtpor18ew1So nowt3l-83I0/&45-f5M. epedel&4t-1211 meg but1nW of ~,._
'338, ' 1,·;J-.ti(~'I~ l>ltln• utllt lnct OtMra Spectou1 1bd, den. Iba, .......... 1100 t~th Slrl'tl Writer Mlllsroom, """* LOST COM A,._ INfty ~an:,, ":",.::..:i
...... ---._.,.7 ( aV911 '475 fl• bft4n lelteh, Vlft Qato1'9, •-111 Do"''' to WCWk off el/part of Au9tr ~ Dog ,.., "*"· " ,,.., '*' , e:;;m 2 bent -+ den, _ _, C...l ltwJ ·CM nlllllT 111-.... oall 9 .e , a f300, t•••••• Ml·51ll rent, hee _,..,...lend--brown "Jalmu '' ~ uet. ~ ue
F,.,..at dOon & ~ -· T1lll 873-5595 ~ llCaC)eloenertiiconl'*"· 781Me77 Of t47-4044 ecwne tnfOnt*lon "*
etabor1te petlO/deiftt CdM hm w/frplc & D« s rm 1rPm.T ... C..ta • •• ..... '7 •117.. ~-:::'::.. ~t LMf • ,_ & Nft wll ton» '--10 eel l'°'I '°' 12tt.OOO 790-03$3 nr "" N$0 Ot .ieoant 48' 28a. 2 car gar, yard. • ... lmAf A"" WAfta -.:IL. l.O-OOIC WiiithViliiti ,. .,,.,.... ~ ,....
-3bt 2~ kldllpeca Sf200 Wiii condalder oat? W 1U Ml •&-.MDII Al W1'1r1~f\otM~ ._.,,., P9lt 10 ••al•• 10 .01222. -:,_o ~
Ci.ulfled 110fee1 P1aoato otherl a1 53M190 Beet S1000 Honyl ,_.. lg Pttlo end!I gareoe ...., ............. " n , ...... , 64,. tie ).1tlr'"~.'f I,, epaclalty A1t«1tton1? Ac-. Mtmal AMttanc» Ho ~~ t2.... ,.,,. .J~· Mfv9nleey011f~bUll· Any• nLlllJT 17Mlll '825No'petsl54-2m •----" .. Mll M-1;lll'l"t""'h11 oountlng?Autort11)81f'1 Fett71-P!U ~a ..._..-._. ,_. ----4--,_ AdYartlM In cllMI ,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!..
iUt POifM * f 4 lllRIM &,.Ill mtll• .. MOVtNGIALEtow-11"'· TOY A .. C.111'Sr ~MflO.•.~'*'.~. .~~~a-~":'..,':.1::= ~~·~:·~ Or.....,..._to,,.. MgMen1ti i '':raw. .,,_.,,..,.,....,oom --.~..-oofld. Yr~••••••
-• - T ---·-r. medt -· _ ,_,,_ tlPllt on UW ptione, a..ty P •" o" Io r b" t y ... "'*t. .,.-. """"' ""' roof. Int • mt ..-... 119 ..... -. IXCIL IPOf'TI erllPOf~C....USA. ::·xoe1~.me ~ h ..... 00/Jw,llO ..... no Chlroprector't om.,.. w/Mwl ..... i7a.t4al. lt3.AIOOGM.f..,.'°' ,,... .... '44-010I
P*>OOCTaMMOI? ,?~~~ ~" 8llllly '° c1o • !9*9-: =••in:".: :=ce .. ":"tZ9 ~~~ •11111111• Mii ... ~ ..... .,_ •IDYTIYITI .._ "°""-ia1~ onoa.fttywllNlflctJ:: °' ..... beoktt~. l ·IPl'I\ M·'· Sat QPfflWOl*'tlO.,..._ iiWKlie WIBBIAI Newport .. .__.,..,_ •&1 -.,.,~,~~
v..,. Mon.Wed .__ ~ c.ri tn.o ot. OonNrr ......_ am ..,,..1Pl'I\, _. Rhonda oattoN a ..,, oe... DAUi, ac. 5, ...., 7u-.oeoo -..
lrltht, •ntltut lH tlo lllft .~C-1T"!~MpMY/TY·,l.T =--::i· ~=: ::..~~-aM.411&"'' 8lao IS1-Ml4/111..U.hea ~*OM. t150 Ot... --·
-···r•~ .. "~ .........
melure pWIOft for -II Al ... .. ; .. " 110-1001 ...... -· iNiOiWiCI a... c.11 MCM2lt I P••• Chiropractor'• offloe. kw ... .-.~ :' fproc.~needed • AtHmbl•rt•lteohrt• Com'111net CM FIT°' PHtlCOMP-1nri110,hCA 1-1 ..__....-.......
Perm potllton. Vwted • ,....:=! -----or "' .. peoed eotnm'I ,OR coeTA Me8A Whee. LOn0/"*1 term PIT Mlery + comm Cllll blc/Wht 1t' TV SH peek> --
Ill ...... 0UU.. ie ....,..,. .. del Met. '!time. IU; btokerT. oo. In NI. M,O COMPANY tempof'wy Jobe, Muet ...... IU 0310. ' tbl 136 nice I' aoft toed llM"-Y Tte IUT ll•/111 ... openlOOOldengto =/Wed/,rl/ht. WMI Xln,11!l:a wty eklllt 8•1•~ + commlaek»n, fle¥I Phone end dllpen-IOfa/2 ~ Ot"'Oe._. ...._ ~ lAm6nD 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...i
oeittona a up. t7a.7t'~ "111M. Call ~d. 13$-ltOO. Nat' travel r~ulrect • .,_ tr-.c>. 162..e424. •Mt&&IM• form rodtett pao ... !U~ oEuvlJW" SO TH COUNTY
ts1..a1MorN,4Ullv • · :-..;.:. mll/1111 i!IMIT (~~oc.-"'°"·call TACT.,..orwylWll. ..~~~tor Llhape~~wttti 4 1~~.Jc':.°· VOLKSWAGEN ='e!a,. •=...;;:... ~"' H.I . lntryCA~~~l/Hr ~ ur....,.. locelkwia ~~= Temporwyc.MrUIA. drawett, bookcue. AdjeeenttoFMNonleland 6
=1:..0::-:-C.::: ==i..:r.:':'.'f::P1T lan/BIBlllMIT Top~drS:.~ =-..·~,;~~';';,~· lfEOOMI) =·~=r::: 0p9n~.~w.-JSUZU
aide & Ming out tn-OfftCe • LlaM \YPlncl, hdttne _.., oPPOf1lri-8~ lne, 2t t·l44t. ILDO DOCK & "*1ne 1200. 10 Key Md medl iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
aurenoe 'onne. FUll-ltme ~ phone ... to ei-ty lo _..of tn 0Mce 0.-lmmedlete e>penlng f0t rneintenenoe (not boett). We h9Ye two *""°'wy· 125. Student deleroom LARGE Hl.ECTION Of' beMftt•. ~ °'*': _, "' agency operation. rtctor a young & hit" ICtloOf orect. no up 3333. w COAST HWY NB S*t-tlma poettJona evell-cletk 125. Mt-1'45 NEW & UKO IMW'll
720-1412 or 71CJ.t211 ~ancet .., ,,,...,.., ~ ~ ~) MCHHty flt entry...... 642.....:...: t-5 Moft..irl able '°' 9'.HftftW, ,,~ N!WPORT Sl!ACH TEN-... ---..... no nee:. IU-t703 Co. (F1M .......--' -· poeltlorl requtrementa· deya S* ..-. ut. eev-NIS CL.U8 Family VOi.UM! SAW
MEDtCAL A88SSTAHT Oen Oft ~ ~ wtth a great 9'rno.phere good drMng record herd 111 lllftll Ing oerttftcate requited. bet h T an1f1 nwn-SERVICE & LIASING 1 C:::,: !.,. ~ ":t end 10 ti.i ;-.:·,_;;; :::..=: :ie :C:: worker. neat •PPear· M9ture reeoonlble driYwl C4il Peleo1wlef 91 (714) ae~.18e,. 7~;~•bl• 3170 N. ~Ave.
51j.1MO W'f. 811111 '5.50 hr. c.11 people In the world. :=o::-.:i:r !!!!l_ forNEWPORTTAOLLEY. ~~2~·~/tC::: fllt II f M LOHO BEACH for -.H>t. MS-4072 Cerot We're loc*lng f« eon-. catJon Al»tY 91 , ........-FIT or PIT. C4Ma 2 Uc. Mn (No. Cherry aft.4()15)
MllllllTllAlmY lllllllATI one wtth ~..,. 8t0t•21oe·Hwtiorre::l 85M320,1:30-10A.M. Tl.Ir..... Met......... (J14'mMlM
Wiii train. Gd llllery & ben--rettrlal I tele phone Cotta MeM. ' --/•mt Int. I~ Khtw, 8 wtlt, nMcS good 0Tipr~S""! WN8'.eoo.neD ... YS
• 647-0797 tkHll, good Client contect W--'-~ .. 5 .t---.... COtefANY home. c .. M2· 121 f "'" ''"'~ .. & wtio hu aome com-1111-•i _ .. ....,.... _, ......... =11/tNBat -1411 FuH Time end Part Time puter exp s14oo/mo -·-eo.t. ..... Auto WMtl J ... lry/hn/Lt -·n •IPIUI ~Ulf." Tempo~~ry Jobe In Vacetlon &:Medlcel c.ii ,_. MIS--1039.JayOtUftda Mn _._ ·-•r
so.ting enwoment nev!O. MIMlon VlefO llrvtne. Feith at (714~25 N!,•t._!C~t.lng appll-.... ,--~.. . DELIVERY DEPARTM!HT
typing, oomput•r. AECEPTIONISTS-Gr .. t 11NT ~;;'l~the ~Full time ;•:~ool M~n~EPC:~~K~H2~:::, MclAR£N'SBMW ~~~'1~=~~· c1ten11,llQhttyptng,buey Accutatetyplttwentedlft nw. We er. lnter•ted gredu1Wwlth00oddr1v· LIMll1•err1rtter Moon Phu• Wrlat M~Ftlu,• .. t11• .,,...... .... ~ .... ,,...,...,.. .. ___ • __ • phonee, M-7.50. -our clr~tlorl dept to In a'-key lndMduatt to Ing record. AIJfJfY Ill S*· Femele pref. GoOd drMnQ Watch, Gold Beno. -u
CLERICAL SECRETARIES E. I melnteln addr... Hau JOln our mM.,nent eon to Mr. Fu.ntet et record. F/ttme 541-3443 I 12,000/obo, 075-7239. t2e 8. Eudlel St.
-n1m111•1•111T 8111
l.U. H•IUTlll PennenentlTemporary Per901,.,.. Serw.
end Admlnlet ·ati:u.} ve end cerd f*. Al90 prep-ataff. Shoe Manage· Robert 8•1n, Wllllam ••-•--• Off!~ f--•a....... flllertOft, CA r · op ., tlon Of po9te1' oute ment/Shoe HIH ••· Frost l Aaaoc. 1401 _,._ ....--....... ,. 714-llOl300 •klll•·P•rform routine .,!.. wtll eln ~ pertenc. pr...,_, 1op au.ii St., Npt. 8ctl. Permenrnt PIT. Approx ......... .., IMT 213-etl .. 701
dutlet, 18.25-10.60. t 5 t , ~r ,· p rl aalary + beneflte' call **DRIVER** 25 tn/Wtl, Job lndudee ---m ... f!~lllRI_.:;...., ....
DATA ENTRY·Mlnlmum t ~: 1=~~~: 842·1057 ~rn nduon1e011e to ~~· ,.:::'? n:t HEAVY OVTY 1"!!1111!!!11!!!!11
mo. •)(per. type 40 wpm, Coete ...... *IALll* dl'M him •ound o.c I ftlftQ .,,ende. Cefl Imm 0 FT TO 12 FT
10-«ey touctl, M-7.25. """~ SM Ad under LA. Bed beck 7&9--1879 ... ,only 87&.2311 54t-3710
CLERKS-Flle, mall, oopy & ....... ;'CLERICAL" f0< DRIVERS . -11111Milmf Ptts I blalll litj ...
mlacc:letlc:eltM.00. EntrylewlpoettlonlftMll Temporaryc.rtterUSA. C~n~':, ~: Nud e d Wukendt klTfiRsQtiY(Happy 18flll
TAC Temporary Svea eatablltMd ftrm. Mutt Cl•/a.tauub MeciGregOr Yec:hta.1e3i "87-llOO Nltr. for Korkle reedy for kWlng hOme,
4500 c.,,,pua 1124 have 11rong typing ' ••• Placentla. CM. -,... S20/M. Ind kh-«•• pt!g, ......__ " --Newpott 152·9424 C"" tldllt. ~II tlme. guw1n1 ... &50-8&33. ,__r • ......_
In penon to Mr. tr • EASY ASSEMI L.Y WORl<f 1"*\.ndwomenneeded MUST SELL. TROPICAL. n'laaan of ,.. I
OFFICE HELP Fuent• •t Robert Belrt, no exp nee. StU<Mn1 ~· S714.00 '* 100. Gu•tn-to WOttc • order 1eleett. FISH KOi l GOLDFISH carefulty prepared
....... NO CL.ERIC~L. lkllll ,. ~:rnau:~ .. ~pt~· ::, ~J;~~.11 =l~l~t. ~a= ~. ::::;-... ne::, St-up. MM8C!3 pr--..ct .... M ..... , IUll quired, oppt y w/growtng ' m;T· _ ... _ Envelop•· EL.AN-903 '"""' be ,,..., ~ Piute i ~... atocll
W• c.M ,.._ .....,, In 1 tnn compeny, 540-5150. ....._. r-PIT ,BOOKKEEPER 3418 EnterprlH, Ft end able to etert lmmedl-••w a.... n d0e9 ..... • ... ,.._ ,_ -... -SSH W•!k•ndt only. u-Pierce, FL. 33482. et.iv • ..-y "20/mo If .... ,_ence ....... J~~ ...... Arnef1cwl ,.._.... peftelloe, calf Leurt f()I quallfted. tor appoint· REMINGTON Upright I -,. firm""" ___ ,,, Pet1tlmaewun0wt1ncta. allllftlll/ Int 08-8311, Can PUULmnDT menl ~ Mr. Cl"euten uoo OBO 1t4 SQctllll,... ..W.
. ..lllllll.. Good phone voice with ptnpl• Marla. Dane Pt P..on ,IT I PIT. Apply N2•5648 78e-5251 ~ «)r,,,,,. &L
butlneat lltlle 9PPM'· The Orange CoMt Delly pfT w, 1111. 1827 Weatdlff Dr H.w· ~ .... __.
•COMPUTER ance. Cell 751-8822 Piiot '9 lnt~ig f« • ..., por1 8Mct1 M5-7M5 ..... .... ...... ITIJIWIT... · • ~~~J~RS ... , •• , Journeyma~/Pre .. man M0~1~""4PM FIT Help ~woe adult ~~ 1 Trm to approx DIVORCE FOAC£8 SALE • (11a\ -.ani
SECRETARIES HMded for Bullder In With 3 to 4 year-a U· auto oerrtert lot the OC . .....,,...... uea 11am to 100 YR OL.D-Solld oe6t 211 W. ,.._ ..... ,...
eTRAVEL AO'Y CoetaMee&.Ooodtyplng petlenceOt14cotor Web ...... IHi R•Ol•t•r. 2am-11am approx. 7P"'· Wiii train. hend~w/matchlng CLT'ftD
IN U.S.A.
Arc> TRYl«i HMDCR
TO Bf :: 1
• I A&il
• llRVICE
• .-ARTI
• L£AU.O
lARClSI INVfNIORY
ON rHr WfSI ·coASl
EDY lllOOO. ' COUlll
CAUT•AY
I
I ~ ', • • • • i'
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/111 842 2000
PERSONNEL. tkllet, nice ..,,,..,etlCe. 0 ff •• t . M • ch a n . wtlel)'SlwMd•. '5/hr + :,~· 1eeo bench. Mu.t ... to ep-
•SALES PERSONS N/amkr. Salary com-lcal/Malnlenencle bad!· AFTER gee allow•a. oppty for preclate. flelc, 646-1217· 1"'D-A""T..,...SU-N-....,7-1-W-agor\--(-.l-10 .... ) VOLKSWAOOH '12
(lntlcMIOutalde) meneurate wt exp. Call ground ~ed. Excel-edv•ioement. •It ben.-au.llhd l*'90n with good ·~..... IRS With '**· ato. t i200. SUPEA IEETLE."*-'Y ~ •DEMONSTRATORS 645-SM07 or hnd ,. lent PIY end befteflta. scunnr efltt, need dependeble phonnolce. aome tvP1nC1 7&6-1132 bu1t eno. "*90, 11.000
•INTERPRETERS 1uma to: McDanie l Cell for appointment. J1UUL car, Int, Qd dtMng rec. & ~ MNla. Cotti , CLubt & 8118 c:ell Amy Ms-6411.
•BOOKKEEPERS Bullder'a, 3197-E Airway M2-4S21. &t. 394. JOBS call 71 .... 751""4155 6-fcn Mete.,..._ 1549-1157. S70~ffl~sJ:':.; PDUllllBll ... 'U h tll i i•iltil t•
•TYPtST8-Mln80WPM Aw,CM92021t. Litt Hli 11am .... ..,.. ~ontS75.Me-3008 Aed,mlntoond,1M<+ml =~~~HTS *ma* EARN GORDON MOVING 'WhotWl!eproduce Early S33K,8tS-192-22Sa JIMCLICK
PERSONNEL llllPTll•IT DYNAMIC ..... program. ~O~_!E·r:~-= AM totatem::~Salary lntral 11n .............. AUDI/RENAULT
•PLu*s ... ~~.::RE.*.. e::.~~e.-T•t•m,!r~·1~'!.~·2auM~td, fl)f(Y ~..:..!'2~!. .. ~ :,;;;y.eteenci~ 'S::!=.i.DJ~,7 o=:r.:J·!"'.:=~ JEEP ~ •• -Potent-v -"'' '""" ....,..1 n1VTI~ •· record req d. 557-1359 • t0x10epecefO<125 14K mllee. (022962) ~ o .,. A=t~oo. Ad~!...t. Sheri. 81S-3082 8111 PRIZES ~~u~: •"-5el3 °' n<M452 111,-~ r • 1~ FREE Opport. In m.tment AIYEITillH TRPS lrvlne. 7N-0643. Telemattcetlng Trwprtatiea M M z Ill
TO APPLICANT =~~· 1111•1 .... II .IHI p ... Ttt• ••ti IRVINE AUTO FOR AN APPOtNTMENT 1&1.11 ,,...__ ... ':Ii;....._ IWll ti • 100! Quell St., H.B. CENTER proceealng, numenc.I AWJ -Federal government Jobe ... , .. 01LI 11 ' I!! D~-___ ....... 933-l300 714-951-3144 CAU AOBYN aiptltude,1nter1ectng Expel1enced ~ IAl.f In your .,.. end owr-• -.. " ..-·-1 ,.,......,..,
or GRETCHEN w/c:llentl. Sendreeume Account Eucutlve ...... ., ..... Manylrnmed.open-Energetic people needed With 4 Matt & 35hp out· MASERATI 81 TURBO '84 800-428-7 485 714/47S-3e80 to The Vieth Compeny. needed t« fast growing If toe*""" • Inga without ..itlng Hat to conduct • Mattcetlng bowd mot0t on tl'eller 8-Yerel to ctiooM.
WeatTower-suite3000 4350vonl<.ann9n,Ste publlthlng company youare ".,,foreic1ra or l•t1. 118-Ml.OOO. Study tor the Orange with hltdl. Good cond. 8Mctl lmport1, 152-o800 ~======~
. ~ . . -. . -
BUICK
DEA LE R
~
ORANGE COUNTY
We Otter
•New Car Sales
•Used Car Sales
•Service
•Leasine
•Excellent Financ1na
·.~l · -· . -
2926 Helbor IMYd
CM. 979-2500
NABERS
CADl.l.AC
CADILLAC '72 8.CSan
deVllle, vyn'I roof, al ... od rvDber • ..,,. cond
S1ei5. M$.0302
CAOIUAC ''79 tevltt..
lolldeiO, ............
new pe1nt. '7900. o.a.o. M0-1HI ..,..._In.
5000 8lrdl St'9et 490, Newpor1 BMct1 a.Aery+ commlfelon and ~ mon::e ~:: Phone call refundalM Cout Publlehlng Co S1950. MM033. • .. 111 Ulll BUICK '64 Bec:tta StMton
N9wport BMctl. CA 92NO 1~'f!:?r:.2C:a benefltt. Send reNM to: Mount.in, Knott9 Berry (802) 93M885 elC1 3N. • ........ ,ah94 WESTERN 8UIL. T t2 ml.... new uphol, ::~:~· !~~ :!~~:i liiiiiiliiiiiiii;;;;;::;:;:;;;jjj;w:r;:iiiiiiiiim 100.~:...Aower, .. ...,.. St. =.... Fwm, or,.~ P1111M end ..... ..... PlWln1 phOna voice a c~ .. t\~ ~OOOTMk 13900 (209)37S-97N St750. 499-1520.
-· ...,., --·-Awwdl. ~ U9 nowt W• mutt no ·~ ,.... "'.,. ·VT-...... Loe MQ91ea. CA 90017 -·-· ~-... heve M'Vefel ~In Needed. Wiil 1,.in. Muet quired ldMl for home--lnveeted, •Ing ttUOO. MERCEDES BENZ 450 8l
••••-••au•
Or11i• C...m \ •~t\I
u1col1 • •~tlfl lfraltr
,~ •• crn s ,... eulf'tl
213/._.2989 ml... P.O.Box l'MO C.M., H.B. ori.v. haveowntrw.54&-0757 makeia. high achool xncond.~7~73toap-19M • a..utlful. Both
BUSINESS In Newport Coeta MeM. CA 92$M M2"'4333 Boeta and blkM ano Mnlor'I, c:ot1eg9 atU<Mnta pr.elate, -..-v . top1, chrome ~ •• SELL 24050 Medllon Street
Sult• 1008
T orrMCe. CA 90505
213/37~29'1
8Mdl varied dutlet Iota Attn: Tlm au-nan c:arrll*• and cotteo-• .it & rnoonffQht.,.I Hour.: LiJ ..... 711 t (003542). Priced to ..... of phonee, w/p end com-the thlngl tha1meke1Um-Monday-F""rtdey 5:30om v 8wtt lmporta, 152--0900
puter WOf'k In • tmall Nophonec:elapleW. merfune.nbefound ln to 9:00pm, Saturday SANTANA 30/30 Snafu, PEUGEOT EXECUTIVE through c~ssified
I.AIU. lt met I ffUlll
2626 M1r1lo1 l"-
Co1U ltu S'8 SUI frieftdtyofl'lce,831.......,. clPlffl«I. 9:ooam to 1:00pm. Start loeded. f\.11.nct 9 ..... CARS • 1995 GL i------....--......,.....,......,......,,....._.....___ at 14.00/hour plu1 dleMl,rdyloreumr...-MODELS • Low mlea.1--.---,,.-.,-----1 __ .,. -
bonuMa. Privet• cletk & or ltland. 09;y'l 752-92n. ...,.,., to dlooee from. --~---""-'-•ll'lo«. __ 1 _ __.~ .......... _-_,._ __ _
phone, cal4Jtl attire. WINDSURFER· STAN· Starting •t '9495. NOTICaTO lldattt.jol>.-.
Hom. WOf'kert -...come. DARDExcellentcond. In-(387381). 8Mctl lmporta, CONTUCTOM ltlNlbetnenll•cirwpon
For lnl«Vfew Clell Mr. ·~ eummer funlll 752--0900. CAUMO '°" _,. tNCONTAACTO•Uollhoft\ M I ck Mon . • Fr I . a I 1375 C .. "3-6237 School oe.trlet: INIM lJnl. tfle contract 11 _...., ..S t 4 2 • 4 3 3 3 b wt n fled U90t1 MY eubcOntractcw
11•m-3pm. Or erter IU,./Dacb/lltrlfl_ _ ll'lllFG Bid DeedllN' 10 o'Cloc* Ufldef "-=" CONTMCTOA. 5:30ptn at M2·5e78. TIU .._.... Lm. of Hie 5th d91 of~ to Pl}' not1-~ tN .-...,, ft86 tp9CllleCI ,.._NI II...._.
.... WllTD* WllT Pleceol81dAaolle>t5050 ~by"*"llltN•·
• ..__ n... Berr1t1ca, lfvlne, CA. 92714 eowtlon of tN oonerect. FOf new 4•> .-..-uvwt. POR!>UH Prof•ct ld•ntlflcetlon Ho tlldder n.., ...,.._ ,.....,......,.. Cellatler0pfn790-e011 -'LIOI N 1 m •: Co 11n1, enytMOtou,.nodof"*'Y-
CHOICE SLIP • Sallboatt t Hf'VROLL T Poft&Otle-UnNwllty High ftll'll (361 _. .,_ tN ~
NO SEL.llNGI 2 Ctertt• only. Up to •5' a li6e tie Hit"•" Qu••lly School-Electtlcal •tor ttie °'**"of~ =.,, lllltrllll ........... -needed to wnty ...... up lo 24' In Im friendly ';•In" .... M.. Plaoe Plana -on ... A ~ bOftd end •
ii======iiiii _ ..-. , ____ ...,...,._...., phone ord«t. Hourly. anchorage 83i""'480 lrvln9 Unlfted SChool Oleo-perfonM!ioe bOftd .. be ~OM CARPENTRY. ·----I a....u. A.A.A. PAINTING lnt/E.Xt Hour• 5:30pm·9:00pm. ' . lrHUlll 11101011 trlct, 5050 8arrano1 ~ P'tof to~
$2.40 per day
That'• AL.L you pey f«
3 ltnea, 30 day minimum
In lhe
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL. TOOAYll
lllP•Llll
Qu.ilty wood wortl. AMI. QueMty work free eat ,._.___ • f,.. t ttmml LOWEST poMlble price. Sat. 9:00.,,,.. 1:00pm. F0< END TIE, 28 ft max, S 170 flll1 Parbay, IMM, CA 92714 of the contract end 1tMM1 be
price Refl Me-82tt #425514 ' M8-74o1 -~ & H=ng 10 Step Service. N2-3235 lntarvl9W call Mr. Mick al mo. Av.ti 011/llt 114 NOTICE IS HEREBY In tN fotm ... fotWI In tN . • ,. ._ . 0 4 2 4 3 3 3 b w t 541-te79 40 l C 0 .. 1 H,.11 OIVEN that the ebo"'° oontnlCt OOGumer1ta. ~Moldmg..B«y RESID/COMM'UIND 28 Call Rigo. 541-BEAT ANY CONTRACTOR t·oo.~-3·00pm Aft•~ ""••p-O<I Buch named Sctl004 Dletric:t for ~to Section 4980
Wlndowa-Com91et• Patloe yra. Do my own work. Uc. You WW'lt the beet loolclng BID BY 50%. Fr• .... 5:30pm e.42-se1a .... , ...... II' 6 7. -09 00 0r.,. County. C9llfOmle. °' tM OcMI "''*" Code ot AddltlOM. Qu.itty Work. 12780'1. Al 646-112' Inn on the blk? Cef1 me. work guer. 722·7537 · · Good toc.tlorl 075-9435 ~ acting by and tflrougfl ltt tM St• of c.llfOmla. IM
•477..e Paul 54MMO NEW/REPAIR. Quallty. Ho lt't guerl Rlctl teO-Oe54 DAN SAL YER PAINTNG Telemetiletlng II' II.IP &YllUILI ~~.~d ... "!°:S: ~:o~ ~~t~
Ptut Smell A9fnodel end Jobe to emall, rMeOMble. T,_ITrtm/CINnup comp! Uc #425924 ....uni 3333 W COAST HWY NB *PEUGEOT 11' TRICT". Wiii N01M up to. 1ucceut11I bidde r to
AddltlOM. W .... Doore. FrM aet .• Mc'd, 831·23-46 gardening. Competitive Call Anytime "4-2017 842~; .._5 Mon>-frt •'*A~~:~:h'*+ butnoti.t•tMntN~ aibetttuw aecurttM For.,.,.,
142• 1JJl, I Ull, ID ---pricea. Cfludc M2·2873 EXTERIOR EXPERTS WO<k from home. Chooee '* SMB 11' BITT£R1t atated time. a.led bldl for moNy1 wtthhltd by tM a.a.. • DllflculVE.t Our Sped.tty own hou,.. No Mlllng. WU'Tll •T II.IP the awrd of• contract for TAICT to enaure per·
HOME REPAIR SERVICE wa• • • ,,.... •: ~ng UC#2M597. 831-92'5 For more Info c•ll For my 32' a.yttner In Npt ~BEA Ho · the aboW profeOt. ForlNtlOI under .... con-AJI Ptlue9. Repair. ,_.. .... Cement. bnck, IC)rtnkter., 042·54'79 After 5·30 pm & Balbo9 atM. 859-54510. 8ld9 1111111 be reoalved In tract model. AddltlOM. Guw'd Cu9'om Glw l Mirr« tod, free Mt, 951·9037. GLASGOW PAINTING only Uk f« Mw•/ . 1 . the plao. Identified ~ o. .. *• .._... ., 4.
WOf1c. By UC. Contractor. '#Of'k, wtlta, llldlng doon ISHIKAWA LANDSCAPE lnt/EJct. 30 yr1 exper., ' . . WANTED: Tempo rary 11' 752--0900 * :c'~,.: .:::-:. ~ ~c.i,,.,,.. Co.
Fr• eat. (714) 554-2813 9'c. A· 1 0 ..... 64t-1507 Sod. ci.n upa. Malnt. ref a. 642-5214 * TllYIL * mooring for 35' ~ at1ov•1t•t•d llm• and Dtilly .-.ot May 2', 2t. ,...
C.~P.,,.._L.oclfa-etc lnt/EJct calllnga reflneab "CL.ERICAL."for Co.Collect019/32M747 Blk,AC.loeded. TweWlllbeaNOdepoelt --------
~RepM-Alteratlont ~ Spr'lnklera,etc. 95CM147 PAINTER NEEDS WORKI e..Adunder bo9t. Short term. enge SMB TURBO '81 piece w ...
35 yra exp. J«Ty 642-054'7 ~ Muonry • ~~s!~nk~ (2e) yr9 exp., w«k guer. · Temporery c.rtter USA. Iliac. Trua,.,Udta (2BLK217) '64115 required '°'" w:h Mt of bid "8JC MJTIC( 1--------= ~~ .. ·JB~~ erM. Tony .M5-5124 D•vla Painting 964-3837 WllTD ,._ 1114 Beech ~mpor1a. 752--0900 :!:":'1n~ooi': ll ._ AnudllJ C.W... s...vtot Painting Int/Ext Pep«tng Men & WOtl*\ over 19 "9·~ SAAB llO, runa l loc*a within 35 ~ llf'l• 1M bid PM:lthOUI• ..... REal6Wtt6MPXINTtb repalre r•trete~. nNCES-GATES ,,.. trfm ~erdenlng. Full u tr.:. Prep. end ~. 25 wld•P•ndabl• oar ' 165il:ahw00d, 15' over gr .. t • .ir. eutb, eunroof. opening da1•. um ITA'S • "
Ai.o tnt/Ext Painting =~:...!'.0::~~~.91 ' Dump runa. C.M.IN.8. W::. ~e.'tv mag ywuxp., t7a..5294 proof of tnaurMCe for all. Nctnc brelt•, ci..n. ~~0=11 12950· Cell E.acti bid mutt oontorm ~ = =-=~
Uc#2115t7 931•9296 W.JlmWf'Y'•,M2'·l20e SOUTH CfTYS PAINTING home delMwy or The ~ cond, ae75 Or a..t :C::tr: =·to the MAN JAMESTOWN ltAKf· rn etmftJ/c.mti •OEN. HOME REPAIRS. = FMeld'I Rel*fttt Int/Ext. Reglater N•••P•P•'· ., 548-6538 WI LWE &di bidder en.-aubmlt NEAS.LTD.,•~--= ~ &t.ew.Y:. p;;Q, p:u;: PM'lt. Drywell. Cetoentry .... ~ FtM eat. H3-*M8 EarP/Tn $4()()...MOO•arl ... Mmoh f0<• Aatt *iltm Mli HL 11111 on tl'I torm fufnlaNd .....; lst.od p9"11 '*"'*, .. . 2008 t . I 1 etc No Job too emel 9'c. Gwy Ms-527'1 PTL • .,.,....'""'"• TOP QUALITY PAINTING Y " r · .. the oontraat cklcutnWlta • an po" • ""-·· ant• £. '0#.,.,., AN..Mlckey.536.o&l3 . **HANDYMAN** ~~~ =ir-lnt/Exl*t,fnleeat. ~155, 1·11em to ll&XEY • llllllLI 119'oftheprQC>OMOau~ "":t.~07~ CGr· ~ 8wtl loo. SU ST CL.AIR COftSTRUCT. LMge or 11'1\8'1. I do It altl 4114121 Nl-1111 IU 111111 ...., ....... =':, o;'y 1: t,°C,ing pcntlOfl, 200 I. S.ICll*•
HEUPOC 875""4449 ~• Conc:nte Work Pat 531-5578 or Ive meg. 8~~8:'*'J::: We Try to l!IMt t1fY Price *WAllMlll* I 11.. 1W1 Hwbor Bl'VO. G.G. and SuboOntrectlng ,air A~. a.me ~ CA Altni!;.w Re-. Rat•. ~1 YOU I UY •I INSTALL lrvlne Wt 87~111 *THOMPSON* S-Ad under DOMESTIC I '-OAEIGN 11•.2100 Praattoea Ac\. O<wernlMnt ·~.:1· • Oeillfofnle corpor. RiiO:' T J PELLE CONCRETE Lt etec L.t. Plumbing. · · *PAINTING* "CLERICAL." tor IUllY TIYITI • Code S.Ctlon 4100 et Mq. • Thl9 t>u .. nw 11 °°"
chart a In . ecc:: a 'c'.oNaTAUCTIONCO. o.r.'o,W-1.WL.~IM .......... , •FREEESTIMAT!S* TemporatyC....1erUSA. 19891 BEACHBLVO ~acn~r:;:,~ ducteObr •llmtead1*1r*:
terpntt • Hi..i...t quettty L.o prtcea Bride. 8'0Ck end ConcNte RMldenllal l Commerdal c::c-== W ... · . 1f110 110.00, 8ryen 4'2~1745. ~~-Irick la.U.. Work. FREE ESTIMATE. lnt/EJct/end L.t Malnt. -.-,---t U 11•/Ml-1111 ~~R~ ~~~ St•t-*' c.pn.i Cor-~t lk>ctt. UC & Bonded -nitWuNd . UOVINd 646-2130 Refl/Ouw. 1e2-oe15 SSH 4 WHtl lrlft/l In the form ... forth In the e~oon. St.,,., '· Qood. ~:x;;; tc;p;;; I Cell (714) "2·7093 Oerage l Verd Clnupt STUCCO MASONRY-TILE Pipd!t balufe EXEC iEcTY. tB; ':I;. contract cSocument• 111 an ~,,.::.:=,.,,t _ fll9d ~ • Rooftr'G 1 .__._ Jon 64&-6192 Ho Job to ama11 Alt 1ypee ~ exp'd, .. ~Of otb amount not IMt tnen 1~ of wttll tt1e County~ of Or we~• e31~1tt CJMalat __.... Hauling_. Movtng. c;.,. Free •t. Uc. · 931-234S ~ANGl=/~'f.::;.?,:f procedure. One• PIT •tt ..., .... D I 1N m&J(trnutn amount°' btO .,. County on -..., ,,.: ... ..... ~=J:: upa.~ ~.~:J-....... V\SA-MC e73-1512 tTa.."21 Tll n Lm9 :.: o:i'":n~.:M:n~': ~ ''" ,__
l'li--•'a .: H -W• Oalt lhd Mng t•her .... ~...... ,_,., propqe9CI oontr9C' If 1he Pu ,..__,, Co.t _..IOet~ Refl.call-1•-1""' COiegutudentw/la1Ndc ... 1.... Hang/ttrtp.A«MC9tolhe -It awerded lo ll.IClfl ~.....,21"'ir June
T• ~. vtmllfl, HOI....-.. 111'8 14 yrw up. low r.,., Pfomc>t. "Thank CLEAN & EXP£RT crazy. 930..0130 AnllHMI Ml l Iii IMl'91 TOP SSS Piii bidder In the.,_,,,. of~ ~ 1tee ay · ·
oompound, wu. 867·2"'9 relable rw . .,__. own you, Court. 7&9--1978 o.. 25~·ulll*1efioa -11111 For PampeNd to enter tnto Mid contract. · · W<IM hlillll..... trw.Ptn.e.411 11110... ............ Ltc.T-111,421 fa0.1313 tiaawll 1111........._. S-lall229,, ...,oedaa&eN ::C,MOJ(lt; -41! tie for · "8.JCNOTICE ~"'Z!'.U: ~=-..:. lJ.mean_. au::~~"r,~ J£S!!1~t= UI •t-1111 ~~~~~~io:E=~~~ Topl~~'J=eld .. :~u~o~a ~o~ ....
Tvoeerintni . GAAPHIC8 Kltby. Malnt.191·5212 K.C. "fMEHl'{VK;f L.0 RATES. 552.0.10 1e751 8Mct1 Btvd, H.8. CALL PETER or RAY purtUenl lo tne luein9ea f'M:TmOUe --
NtwPOA'f'.'720•9111 ............ T~~T:i~~· n..,....,.. =.=:'=.~!~ 841·3"' --••em ::~~he~ ~= ..
Word Pre [I NMQ, &perWa OOlrge ttv-MM2t3 °" SM ••• .,_,. ... .. M 1-0007 UC. 722-eote ..... ~· .... ..... Cl .... ftcatlOM Elctrtc91 • CIOlnQ ~ .. KACH
tnQ.AUIHJOA dent Refl,. ~1 • n--eo ~ ~~!I YOURS FOA 213or71037-2333 C-10 BAHS 0# on 8HOM. 0 SPECIAi. i TY. . · EXP DGAAOlN!A:_ 10rB ..,.._._ . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY The OIST~T raearW9 3321 8uMn ltNet. ......
GRAPHICS NEWPORT "~' ...._ N.I ., CdM ._ OU8l1Y Student~ T any Rieptlr Bid (Stkf 211'n(Ser• 5271) the right to ~ Wf"I Of 11 AM. CAn7CM 20-t t1 . ,.,.._.,...._ yan1Clef'9at,...,r•*· L.lc.T12.4-4M.641..e427 8y~30dtly1P9C1.MW ,, FIND btctl °'to •llM Wf"I Ir~ ~·-~Int.. 1 1 I h'~ AON'SGAAC>lHING NEWWwetlOUMStonoe root .... ouw. m-1537 ._ ,..,..,,. ... "'Wf"l'*"°'1n u21 w ~.lent•
TYPING, word pre r 11 lf1V, NlilftOCiii;li;t WWW: ..,_._ ........ I =~ == .i PIECE L.MNG ROOM ORAHOIOOAST 1t1e ~ AM. CA ta104. Celtotn6a ~ ~. M-.'. dry491 & ....... ~ Cil LAWN llfMCE ,.....-.. _,. ___ __,..__ ~~ SET. Uk.e '*'· H• 0.-252• H=~ MW h h I f d of =:"1~~= ~ Oln. 2212 I ::.::..';:;;; ;., .. n.'4,..-'""""~Mt~ MOW•IDG!TWUMO. ~;Jc;"'"'"~Mi A&i trim. Peld 1751 ..... 12ts ·--•a t roug c assi ie coo. of 1t1e ._.... °' c. Duf\tot 1.,..., flledondo
·-·--·----· ----l2042I. !Ma-5112 UJ Top Ouellty. Low Moe. Caah. 162~254 ----'°'*.11'4 04STNCT '*~ leeofl. CA I027f =trJ ;; l1•Rtk lenlHI fUL.llPV LANOiOAN ·~...... ,,.._.,Lio. 1.11-DU All Fr. Prcw. Form din 1lllNd from t"9 DINcW Of TIMe DwlMM le con. = 1n i= A ... rn&:;::com. Ho M 2 ila °' 2 1me1 eu1te. orta l3.500 MIC, iN Dec>ai,,.,.t~ °' ~, dUCtild by. • f8IW1ll .,.,. -·~ ---~-~out ,..__.'4t40729ft.....;,111d11t111Clre. t 1UO: cot tbl eet SS50; Re1 .. 1on1 "• gen•r• ner'INP AemaM"I •Al.,,,_. ....---· ._... Home for the Ederty dNAf &Alilt!Y&; occ c:11n at&o: IOf• kWa-,... ot .-_.,. oi.,.wotc•oii-. ""'· 81~ 9IOWkg&.11t/eql47-<55<tO 11111 tca-M0""4101 Dtltlnc:tl¥e.Albdlble ........ In ....... 705 • •"4 the ....,., .. a Cellfornl4I COFPOr9tlon.
WI DO. IT Alli UC'd11N/ ... , . l(lt<IMN, bathe. nt-1713 .... -· ~ t -PNV~ rat41 tor llolldeY t•neral partn•r. John P~Oonlt .... 3M4 TOCIPedh~ Clean-Oon.-llooJAlctaa for IM Tr11 .... twd ell """' oot and ~wortt ln1Mlc>-..,,,.,... "1alll1rt g;;;1 mm up.,.. ....... 111-M1• .,, .... .,. ~ f« ,.. eof9bcl 1310. °"""' Otlltytn .. vw.wcwti•tio THa •• " ......... ==:~L= ey~·~'=' c..i .usie•f•Tr 1N9derfy(7•4Jm-200t ll'TTH!SUN8HtHllN =~::.:~'so~: WE'RE HURTING. ==n:.'== .... =:"..:cri ~ 1•1 ..., ...._~ ' 8uNNne ~ deen4nG ..... ••11·.,., .... oota in ....,,. o.---. ,,_. r.l: LD OR Nl'A"' MIKI '50-3 t..td. Cell (714) ..,_MIO o.;.-bidrin taiO· country -~1., "" • ,,.,., ... , nt • ....... i '"" 1•· • .. ,... .,. °" 11a •,... Dl8-~
W..-........... , ......_........_, • ... ~ ... -......., •-_ _.. d.._ __. ... :.i.S,• __.,_, ·""''"'"' 1mm1m1"""I"""'"''"•'''""'"""".. ~~~~.._er.nee,,-~ ~ vvvr• ""'""""9 .... ~r .... -,, ..,....,_ ~ "' ... .u1 19Ut.,. ,, '~'"'. Ill •• , .• , t•. ••t•t ,,, .... ,,, ,.,, '•.,II ...... fti9 ~ ,,._,,. ........... , ~ -·, ... ~ C:,~.c:=..:O: TA'=. ::=.HQ ~::::: .. '::;."':.-:=. =.."~ ~,J150· American d Cros~ :=:::..'i':.:l:.;.,,~--.. _1_'·-'*-----·-~···
/ ...
oe Orange Coast OAJl V PtL011/ Wed~ly, May 28, 1988
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINQ8 ON PROPOSED .RATE CHANGES
AND AMENDMENT TO APPLICATION
The Calltornll PubUc Utllll!M Commlaelon (CPUC) will hOld public hearlngt on propoeed rale changM VOi.i ere Invited to
ettend
TheM he&rlngl wlll conatder MYerel INUile They are
• C~-bolh up and down-In the rat• tor vartoua ten/ION tt\11 you may rece!W trom Pacific a.II lnfonnallOn on
the varloua propoMd ctl&no-In rat• are on the following pageit
• The money P~tlc a.II~· to mocs.rntie tta plant, the '9V9t ot liM of Its plant, Ind the Company'• OY«lll lew! of
productivity
The public hearing• w111 be ti.Id In.
SAN FRANCISCO
VAN NUYS
LOS ANGELES
Mond1y. June 23. 1988
2 P.M. and 7 P M.
CommlaalOn CourthouM
State Bulldlng
350 McAIU11er Str .. 1
Wedneedly, Jul\e 25. 1986
7 PM
Aucmortum
Van Nuy• Reereatlon Cenlef
1'30 t V1nowt1t1 Street
Thurlday, June 26. 1986
2 P.M
Commission Courtroom
State Bulldlng
107 South Broadway
The tocattons are acoesalble to persons with dlllbllitles
The CPUC welcomes your commenta. It you cannot attend theee hearings, you may 1Ubm1t written commenlS lo.
C11lllorn1a Pubhc u111111es Commission. 350 McA1t111er Street. San Francisco. Calltorn11 9-4102
or
Ca1tlorn1a Publ•c Ulllltles Commission. 107 South Broectway, Loa Angelee. Caltfornt1 90012
Simply state that you are writing ab<>Yl Pacific Bell's Appllc11lon No 85-01--03-4
WHY RA TE8 ARE CHANGING
The issues to be discussed In the public hearings 1re part of PIClflC Bell's 1986 generll r11e caM which was 1nnoonoed
in September. 1984
Earlier this year the CPUC lsaued a decision In the llr1t phlM of the cue, which reduced the Company's revenues. Thet
dec1s1on lowered the temporary t>llllng surcharge paid by cu11omers to 2.48 percent.
Pacific has amended Its application to propose new rates for various servloea, Including those In the charts on the
1011ow1no pages Part ol this proposal 11 the elimination ol the 2.-48 percent surcharge. u well u changes to Centrex rates.
we belleve these new rates are necessary to t>rtng rates ctoeer to the cost• of providing aervl<:el, while at the same time
ensure everyone who want1 telephone service can have It
Pac1f1c Bell estimates that the rates 11 proposes-II adopted l>y the CPUC-would tncre&M the average realdenc.
customer's monthly l>tll by S 71
Pacific Bell ttas filed an 11tern1te proposal at lhe reQuesl ol the CPUC Thia could rNltlt In different rates, Including baalc
e.cchange and Service Area long distance rates. than thoee shown In the IOltowing cherts
The final rates approved t>y tne CPUC may differ from 1ny of theae proposals
Al>DmONAL HEARINGS
In addition to the public hearings on June 23. 25 and 26, eddlttonal hearings wlll be held. TheM will analyze the propoMd
new rates as well as the Issues of the Company's modernization program, and the extent to which It• plant hu end wlll be
used The hearings wltl also consider estimates of the Company's future productivity
Al these hearings the CPUC will receive testimony from Pacific Belt and other Interested parties, Including the CPUC
Put>tlc StaN The Public Staff conal111 of engineers, accountanla. economists and attorneys who Independently evaluate the
proposals ol aJI parties and present their analysis and recommend1t1on1 to the CPUC.
You can par11c1pate In these proceedings
II you need advlee on how to do so, write the Public Adv190f, Callforn11 Public Utlllttes Commlaalon, 360 McAlllater Street.
Sari Francisco Calllornl• 94102
The PUblic Advisor was established by the CPUC, spec1llcally to ualst ullllty ratepayers. who wllh to participate In the
e"'•dent1ary hearings. as well as lhe public hearings
~unher mlormatton as well as• copy of Pac1ftc Bell s appllcatlon end related exhibits. may be lnapecied at Ila local Public
Ott1ces and at its Headquarters at 140 New Montgomery Street. San Franclaco. Callfo<nla IM 105 or ft the CommlUlon
ott1ces listed ~low
1n add1t1on, any comments or Inquiries relative to the proposed changes. Including a reQueat to receive notice ol any
Mannq on 1h1s apol1ca1lon may be directed to one of the Callfomla Publlc Utilities Commission offtoea et·
350 McAllts1er Street. San Franclaco, Calllomla 94102
or
107 South Broadway. Loa Angetes, California 90012
SUMMARY OF P9'0POSED
1911 RATE CHA.HOES
rw 1011owing rates are included 1n the proposals ol Peclllc Bell The present rates shown ere tariff rates on flle with the
CPUC Tney do not include the federally-imposed access charge or the present surcharges that apply to many services
Ttie l P JC m ay grant different rates than tnose proposed by the Company and may change rates tor services not listed
below
SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE CUSTOMERS
PRESENT TARIFF PROPOSED
RESIDENCE (NON·LIFELINE) MONTHLY RA TE MONTHLY RATE
One-Pan I' Measur&d Local, Zone 1 $4 45 $5 00
• Measured Calling Plan
Montl'lly Rate Include'>
Calling ~llowance 01 300 2.00
1n111a1 M111 04 04
Each Addi Min 01 01
• Call Allowance Plan
Monthly Rate lor 130 NOT CURRENTLY
Local/Zone 1 Calls OFFERED 4 00
Each Addi Call Over 131 Calls 08 Per Call
One-Pany (Flat) Unllm1te<l
Local/Zone 1 8 25 15 00
Zone Usage Measure 1ZUMI
Zone 2 • lnttlal Min 08 09
Zone 2 Each Addi Min 03 03
Zone 3 -tmttal Min 10 09
Zone 3 Each Addi Mlfl 05 03
Foreign E11change Accesi.
One-Party Measured 8 50 ·9 05
OnP·Party (Flall
U"l1m red Local Zone 1 15 00 21 75
'"ell cnaric; ·~rerenc.t15 10 Zone 1 2 and 3 and to ZUM I Zone Usage Measurement) apply In San Francisco. Los Angeles
Orange :::;'lv c1m.-n10 and San Diego eJJtended areas
LIFELINE se.-v1CE'
In Ar•H Where Me1eured Service le Awallabi.·
L•tellne Basic Measurl!M1
Includes 60 Loca117onl'I 1 Call"
( i;tll' Over Allowancl!
1 .. i.,,.. Cli I Ailo"'a"ce Phir1
••C•udl!' 130 Local lonP I C -111&
,111s O""' Allowar r1i
u f11111ne Jnl1rT'1teo
Loc111 lone 1 Calle;
Call Allowanc.e
In ArHt Without ~•aured Servk':e:
On., Party tFlnll
• 1n11m1tP.d Loe.al UMQlll
PAE SENT TARIFF
MONTHl Y RA TE
$1 48
6 t-70 calls
S 10 per calf
71 • calls
S t5 per call
NOT CURAENTL Y
OFFERED
NOT CURRENTLY
OFFERED
$3 38
P9'0POIED
MONTHLY RATE
$1 75
61 • cans S 08 per call
$3 75
131 ... calls
$ 08 per call
$9 75
Unlimited
local cans
$6 75
''-1&1 .. ~ ~hown ... r.ec;t S 75 cr.,1111101 1t11ephone ~t 111ach month For Zone 2 and 3 calla, see Auldence (Non-Lifeline) chart.
SERVICES FOR •U81NE88 COMPUTERS
8USIHESS ACCESS LIMES
One P1trT·1 Measured
Ont< f>M! t Flitf
I• '' ~ l r•.. Meac;wrtHI
r runk 1 ne Fl1:1r'
511m1.PubllC Coin c .. stomer Own9c1 f -ty Te1ep'1onl'I 1<.<W 1J
Measured
F1a11Average1•
~ on••gn Exchsng9 Accen
On~ Party '-AeBsured
BUSINESS LOCAL JSAGE'
ln1t11tl Min
Each Adell Mm
SERVIC.E CONNECTION CHARC1t S
IMtetta11on Cti"''J'"
lnt1111I Lone
Tr\ink Line
Numbitr C..hange
RP" orin~t Charoe
P9'EHNT T ARlfF
MONTffl Y AA TE
s 8 25
17 15
8 25
25 65
20.00
17 00
3300
1950
04
01 -
70 00
70 00
30 00
4000
-'Only aYa11a1>I• ,,.. c.enein area includes un1tm1ted loeal/Zone 1 uaege
•Tri. rll~ '"own ror ores.n1 And propo94Mj rete5 are 1veragn Preeent ratN
range from S2 7 00 to S43 00 ProPQMd ratH range trom 132.00 to $.48 00
•For Zot:te 2 nd J U58Qe rates see Residence INon-Llfellntl chart
HAVICE CHAHGH
A•ttt for ~•In OthN NNIC'f!S may 8llO Chang• For ex•mplft
P9'0P08ED
MON'Tifl Y RA TE
$10.75
25.50
16.00
38 00
31 .00
22.00
44 37
22.00
045
01
100 00
175.00
3-4 00
•5.50
• Rate lncrellib r11ng1no ''Om t 1'1-to 77% ert propoted lor varlOUI private tine ~urrfng ratn Ind nonrecurring
c;h1r~
u ml.IQ1 .. ;,c i:--mtnU'• mot9 '119" me ~t tenn tMee.)
N9WURY1Caa
T,,_. may be new eervtcee on.t.d. F0t axampi.:
A new Hating MNloe It being on.r9d tor S.30 per month to attow you to omit your name end phOne number from Peolno Bel'•
Whitt Page.1 directory. but etlll hlYe It avellable to ~ who call thfouvh Dtrectory Alelst.noe 41 1 (11 the an.mat• pr~ (1 IPP(owd, the ,,... lllllng ~ ,. ... woutd ~ to a.60 per month.)
UICIAL NOft: CINT'MX CUtTOMIRI
Pacific Bell hu propoeed ~ ror c.t\t,..x Servloe rat•.
Under eitlattng c.ntr•• ret•. cuetomen Who 16QMd up tor WW:. after July J!:!:J • higti.r rett than thoee etiltomert
who purchaMd MNloe b9for. that time. TNI difference la due to the f9dettlly cuetom« llne charge. Und« Pecifle
a.11'1 propoted rite 1tNC1Uft both pr .. tnd poet.July 1983 ouatomtt• would pey the..,,,. emount. The prop<>Md rate
structure mlk• certain ftttur• atandatd-thtl"• would be no eddlttonal Chergt tor oerteln fMtUf'• that are now charged
tor aeparately. In lddltlon, the propoeed rate atructure lndudtt certain dlecounta b..ct on • ..,.,. ftttur .. per atatton Tine
or the numb« of featur• per tytttm. Under the propoaed Centrex ret• 1tructUf'e, IOfM rat• wffl lnct .... and some wlll
decrelM.
Basic Rates
Buainesa LIMI
Resldtnoe Lines
Semi-Public Unea &
Cu1tomer Owned Pay
Telephone (COPT)
Central Office Servioea
Olreet lnwatd Olal end Remote
Call Forwarding
Centrex
Foreign Exchange Service
Local Uaege (Zone 1)
Relldenc.e, Business and
Extended Arel SeNlot
0pefetOr Services
Verfleatlons
Prlva1e Line (e.g. Alarm
SeNlce)
Service Connection
Charges
Toll Usage
Service Aree long distance.
Call Bonus. 800. WATS,
Optional Gaiting Plana
Listing Services
Zone Usage Meaaurement (ZUM)
Other
Sub Total
Ellmatlon of 2.48.,,.
Bitting Surcharge
T otat Revenue Increase
EITIMA Tl.O MVINUI .. ACT•
•nwA'TIONn
MVINUll INCMAA
Ott DICMAll --.uoM8
8.0
6.3
2.5
.... 8 e
28-4.•
0.3
26.5
17 3
-307 1 •
7 ..
-318
23.3
$1201
-$120.1
0
44.0t~
11.8%
25.8%
t.9%
-55.0%
41 .0%
23.2%
22.3·~
12.5%
• SPECIAL NOTE: Under the alternate proposal Nied by Pacific Bell It the reQueat of the CPUC, the E•tlmated Net Revenue
Impact would change for oerteln let'Vk:e categories The toll UMQe d~ .... would be -$71.0M and -3.5% due to tncreuee
Jn certain proposed rates oV« some preterit rates. Add1tton1lly. Iner ..... In Liiting Services would be $14.0M and 80.8%
due to Increases In llstlng Mrvic.e retea.
Published Orange Coest Dally PllOt May 28, 1986
NllC l«>TICE P\B.IC NOTICE I P18JC l«>TICC NlJC f«>TlC( PtB.JC M>11CE ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~.1 ~~~~~~~~~1-~~~----;..;..;,..;._~ ~~~~~~~~-
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MOTICa Of'
NOTIC~ TO CONTRACTORS "*.IC ...-.0 s .. 1eo proposala from contractors lleen194r\n llCCOldance with Seclton A. 17, ProPQMd Requirements and DIYll~NT AQRIW·
CondlUoos of tri.e Special Provi11on1 wlll be received al the Office or lhe Clerk of the Board ol &ll)e(VllO(I, Room mWT
465 Hall ol Admlnlllratlon. County ol Or1nge. Sent• Ana, Calllornla, on or before Monday tt)e 16th day ot June. at fOR A tW UNIT
2 00 o'tlock. at which tlrM they will be publtcly ()99ned ano reao In the Board of &ll)e(Vlsora H .. rlng Room. Flr11 11'.NtOR Cf11Zmt
Floor. Hall of Administration 10 Ctv1c Cent• Plaza, Santa Ana. Callfomla. IOf the lollowlng protect lo be Al'AlrTWNT COWLme)
edm1n111erad by Orange Counry Envtronmental Manegement Agency NOTICE 18 HEAE9Y
TALBERT CHANNEL GIVEN ttlat the Huntington
FROM YORKTOWN AVE TO 0021205 CONFLUENCE BMct1 P1enn1ng Com+nlllaton
ICH£0UlE Of' W().Rt( IT£MI
Esttmlled ltetm NO Item Quantity t Moblllllllon 1 LS
'1 Oewa1ar1ng 'ls 3 Clear1ng and Grubbing t l S 4 Shoring 1LS 5 Remove Existing Footbridge tLS
6 Unclu11flad E.iccava11011 1.800 c v 7 Unclaaslllad Flll 9,500 c v
/J Structure E.Jlcavallon 40.200 c y
9 Srructure Backfill t.600 c y
10 A [);apotaJ ol Matetl•l-Al T A 20.000 c v
IO·B Tempor~ocicplte-AL T B 20000CV
1t P0t11ano anl Concrete 11.975 c y 1215) RetnlOfClng Steel t 1120.000LB
t3(SI Aelnlorc.lng SIMI Epoxy Coaled 411,e<>O LB
14 Pipe Inlet with Flapgata 3EAC
15 lnlel Type II 1 EA 16 18 CMP 205LF
17 Concrete Muonary un111 1,050 EA
18 4" Pipe Galle()' and Flt11ng1 3,"60 L F t9 6" Perforated PVC Plpe 3.020 L F
20 Gr11ve1B ... 13,450 c y
:11 Geotaxtlle F1brlc 25,000 s y
22 Guard Cable Fenoe 3.330 l F
23 Chain Llntc Fence and Gata 70 I.. F
2• Ad1ust Manhole to Grade I EA
25 Muonry Bloctl Retaining Wall 24,260 SF
26 A1pna11 Concrete 40 T0t1a
27 Protection ol 30' See-t9f Pipe 1L s (SI Spec;1a1ty ltam
Reduced construcuon plana special prov1a1ot11 and other contrac:t docum«1t1 are avallable fOf eaamtnatlon
without tharge Of may be MOUfec:I upon payment, Including elate NIM lb , of
S 7 80 11 plekad up 1n pe<aon
$10 00 11 requeeted by m11t
Plana and 91)9Clllcatlona ~uelled by mall are 181'1t v11 U P S , IO pleue Include 1"41 street address 10 wtllch
tneM documenlS may be delllfered
A complete Ml ol lvll slle con1trvctlon plane wlll be available lor aaamlnatlon without charge Of may t>e MCurld
upon payment, lncludlng Nies tax. ol tne amount lhown In en. Pf<>C*' COiumn In the llble fisted below
No of Sheets 1·5 &-10 11-15 16-20 21·25 28·30
Coll Per Set $3 10 $7 40 11 10 1• 80 18.50 22 20
No ol Sheets 31 ·35 36-40 "·45 48-50 51-55 56-~
Co11 Per Set S25 90 29 80 33 30 37 00 4-0 70 44 40
Add S2 00 to price snown If plans are req-1ed by mall
EMA Oe"'94opment standard plana wllh apecial prov111on1 (currant 1.-1 ar• also part ol thia contrac1 Copiet ol
the 11andard plant with apectal provlSIOnl ere alto avella1>141 11 the oHloe of EMA Oevetopment 10< an addltlOnal
cnarge mcludlng state aalee tax. ol
SS 75 II ptelted up In l*M>n
$7 25 II 1equested by mall
All theckt shaH t>e made payeble 10
Environmental Management Agency
Poll Office Bo11 4048 (malling addrese)
400 C1Vlc Center Drive Wett (atreet adoress)
Santa Ana, Callfotnls 92702·4048
Orde4'1 whlcn are not properly addrn5ftd 01 pay•ble are subj.cl to delay the EMA lhall not accept rnponalblllly
lor thal dally.
Th•• wlll be no 1alund lor return of plan• and special p1ov111on1, and return 11 not required
B1dd4lfl wlsnlng to obt11n 1 Utt ol plan hOld41f• shall notify EMA/Public Worka a1 the address shOWl'I above. by
mall and shall Include a Cheek payable to EMA/Publlc Works In the amount to cove1 coPVtng costa of the 1111 of pl~ f\Olde<t The COP)'lng costa may be de1erm1Md by contecttng th41 EMA by telephone at (714) 834-3460 Due to the
r.omplexlly ol EMA' a projee11 and the typleally large number ol btddera encoun1erad on MCtl Pf"Otect. the EMA Wiii make no attempt to read a lltt ol plan holder• to proepectlve blOd«I ~ the telepf!One. BtdCS.S requeetlng 11111
ol plan hOldera are adYIMd that the 1111 will be curran1 u of lhe dale of request and that the r~t lhould be tlmec:I at to allow tor nonne.I mall ~
The bidder'• ettantton It directed to the provtalons In SecUon A, "Proposal Aequlrem.,Y11 and Condition•," ol
theM Special ProVlslon• reQardlng the requlretnerlta and condltlonl wflle;fl he mutt OC>MrVe in the preparation OI the PfOPOMI form and the .ubmlllk>n of the btd
Purt1U1nt to 1he"provtal0ns of Sec11on 1773 ol the LebOf Code of the State of Clllfornla. the Board ol Supervlaora
hH obtllned the general prevalllng rare of pet diem weg" and the ganeraly prevelllnQ rate fOf holiday and oven1me
worlc In Hiii toe.Ill)' !or aac;n cra11, clualtlcatton or type of worllmWI needed 10 execute the contrac1 !tom tne
Olrector of the Depar11'n411\t of lnduatrlal Relattons TheM ratet are on Ille wltf'l lhe C'-'k of the 8oerd of Superv11or1.
ind caplH wlll be made llfAlleble to any lnttlt"ffted party on requett
Question• on 1ntarpre11t1on of the Plana and Spectal Provlalont prior to the date acn.ctuled lor bid opening 1111111
be addrtaMd to KathlMn Martin, Project Engineer. Of to Martin Price, Protect Engineer's Engineering Su~taor
who m1y be reeched at (714) 934·'3~ or 834-.1307
For bid 1uu111 contac:t J\lchard Cloteon. Conatructton OIVlslon. al (7141113-4-3410
au.111on1 concerning purchHe of Plana and Special Provtalont lhould be addr....cl 10 the Utf'll«. EMA (714) 834-3450
By order" 01 the Board of Supervisors of 1he County of Ot.,. Ot .. Covnty. C.Nfom1a DA TE May 13, 1086
LINOA 0. "~trra, Clen of tN herd of ..... ,!eon of O.Mf9 c-ty, C ......
Publlltled Otange Coa1t Dally Ptlot May 2'. June 4, 108tl
wlll hold • publlc Meting In
the Coundl Ctiembef II the Huntington le.ach Civic
Center, 2000 Main Str•.
Huntington Beech. Catt-
fornta. on the elate #\Cl et the
time Indicated be6ow to ,.
oelw and conaldet tM at•t• menta of al P9'tOftl wtlo
wletl to be hMrd relatlvw to
the ~ton deec:ffbed
!*OW DATE/TIME: Tueaday,
Jvne 3, 1t&e. 7:00 PM
APPLICATION NUMBER
~Ltd.
LOCATION· Weet l6de of
SpModlltl. 790 fMI eouth of
Edinger Awnue
At"OUEST: To execute a
"'del ... 1e1o91 .... wwm"'•""n·t agreement M-
t-...n the City anct the ..,.,..
cant for an appro\09d 114
unit aenlol" 8'*tmen1 eom-
plu
ON FILE; A 009Y of the
pr()pOM(I deWIOpment le on "le In the Oepattment of 0..
ve4opment Serv\oee, 2000
Main Slr"t. Huntington
Beadl, Calttornla ,2641, for fne9eCtlon by the putllc.
ALL 1"1'tRESTED PER-SONS ere Invited to anMd
Mid heet1ng and ~
oplnlone Of aubmlt ~ for or agatnet the lj)plleetlOn
.. outt{neCS abow " theft .,. any f\lrther ~klna
P1MM call Gayle 0'9'1en.
Aulallnt Pl anner at
536-5211 . ......... , ..... ... ,...,, ............ .....
~c.wtlllllDA
Publitllecl °'.,. CoMt Dally Pilot Mey 21, 1Me
W472
,-.CTTTIOUI ..,_ ..
umaTATWmNT ni. tollow4na penone .,.
d oing bualn••• aa:
SOUTHERN CALFO .. NIA
MAINTENANCE I ENGi·
NEERING, 215 Proepeo1,
NftpOt1 8-:f\, CA t*3 T'heoelora Wllllam Sen-
tOtd. 215 Pro.pect.. Newpor1
&Md\, CA t2te3
Thie txitlneea la C10ft·
ducted by: In tndMdual
Theodore W. Sanford
Thia ltatement ... Mid
wlttl the County Qeltl ~Of= County on Mey 21, ,.,.
Publlttled °'"'09 c...
D9lly Piiot Mey 21, .Jvtwl 4,
11. 11. 1Me W411
~ , __
TOMOMOW:-
25¢ FAIR
fOMCAaTI ON Al
-
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1986
Firefi hters picket board
Protest board 's refusal to allow union
to speak against hiring of part-timers
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. o.llr,.. IWI
About 200 Orange County fire-
fighters and their supporters picketed
Tuesday outside the county Hall of
Admimstration after supervisors re-
fused to hear their appeal of a new
Jorgen11en at 60
<>ranie Cout r•ldent
Chrlatlne Joraenaen, a
tran••ezaal pioneer,
dUc1a.un how •ar•ery, and notoriety, hU af-
fected her llf e . B 1
Coast
lrvlne officials are review-
ing a budget that calls for
'belt-tightening' over the
coming fl seal year .I A3
California
Senate approves a state
budget, but the abortion
Issue ties up passage In
the Assembly .I A5
Nation
Reagen orders two nu-
clear submarines de-
stroyed, but says he may
not abide by the SALT II
limits when making future
military decisions./ A4
Scientist say clues to
human aging may be
found In a study showing
that dieting extends the
life of rats./ A4
overtime policy they say endangers
both fire personnel and the public.
'.'What do we want here in Orange
County?" a protest leader asked s1gn-
carrying marchers. "Career fire-
fighters." they chanted repeatedly.
It was the third time 1n as many
weeks that firefighters marched below
the supervisors' fifth floor offices in
Santa Ana 10 protest a measure
intended to reduce overtime costs
that would result from extcndin&
provisions of the Fair Labor Stan-
dards Act to county firefighters.
This time firefighters were angry
because Board of Supervisors Chair-
man Ralph Oark would not permit
Fire Fiahters Local 1014 President
Lary Simcoe to address the board at
Tuesday's meetinJ. Clark said it is
apinst county pohcy for the board to
Sports Hungry hummingbird•
discuss labor disaareements wnh the
parties concerned.
Simcoe must air his anpcs With a
Personnel Dcpanmeot rcprcscnta-
uve who will relay them to the board
privately, Oartc said. "Your address
to the board is out of order," he said.
Personnel and union ncgottators
have tried since September to agree
on a new overtime policy that
satisfies the Fair Labor St.tndards Act
and keeps county costs down.
A 1985 court rulin& extends the act
to pubhc agencies as of Apnl I 5 and
governs overtime pa)'.
Ovemme hours have h1stoncally
been offered to full-time county
firefighters at stnught-t1me ~Y The
act makes that arrangement 1Ucpl.
During ncgouauons, the county
proposed usin' part-time firefighters
to fill shifts that otherwise would
require ovenime payments.
Union officials are against the idea
They say pan-timers will be largely
untrained and could p0sc a dan1er to
firefighters and the pubhc.
The county declared an impute in
ncao11a11ons early this month and a
state med1atorwasc.alled 10 May 14 to
no avail
Tv.o days later, Fire Chier Lany
Holms circulated an open letter to
fi refighters telling them the ove111mc
pohcy would be 1mplcmcoted despite
the prote ts of their union local.
Although they may wnte letters to
board mrmbcrs or speak to them
(Plea.e eee COU!ITT I A.2)
Year of waiting
an ordeal for
son of ·hostage
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OfllleDlllJ .........
Enc Jacobsen has 365 reasons to be
depressed today.
It's been exactly one yea r since h1'1
father, David. said the words 'TU go.
I'll go" in broken Arabic to six gun-
toting kidnappers, who pushed him
Ho1t99e acare. SM Al.
into a blue van and sped away down
the strttU of Moslem West Beirut.
Day by ever-so-slow day the young-
er Jacobsen of Huntington Beach has
prayed for the release of his 55-ycar-
old father, held with four other
Americans in Lebanon.
On this. the anmvcrsary of David
Jacobsen's abduction, Enc 1s sull
waiung. He's stiU praying. And he's
still afraid that his dad won·t be
coming home.
.. A year ago, I was con vmced n
would be over wnh10 a week or a
couple of days." sa1d Enc Jacobsen
29. "It's hard to believe that 11 has
gone on this Ion&. I'm more dis-
couraged and more depressed now.
Erle Jacobeen
because we have bttn bcauns our
heads aiamst the wall for a year."
Jacobsen. hts brother Paul of
Upland and s1sl.Cf Dtane of Lona
Beach have been on an cmo•ional
(Pleue .ee HAR/ A2)
County takes title
to greenbelt land
By LISA MARONEY
OftMo.llJ""'"""
La&una Beach will finall}' ha ve a
patk in Arch Beach Heights thanks to
Orange County Supervisors· drs1re to
accommodate ·another prOJcct in the
same section of the .\hso Greenbelt
A 91h-acrc shce of land called
Moulton Meadows Park wtll be
deeded to the Clly for a park at the hill-
top residential ne1ghborhood. 5th
D1stnct Supervisor Thomas Rtk)
said Tuesday
the Mission VtC)O Co. in 1979 in
return fo r pcm11ss1on to build the
20.000-unll Ahso Viejo planned com-
munity.
The acceptance was made chiefly to
allow the construction of a proposed
national fitness academy on a 190-
acre parcel of the greenbelt.
Laguna Beach, offic1als and Arch
Beach Heigh ts residents have been
wa111ng 1mpauently fo r Orange Coun-
ty to accept the grttnbelt dedication
so children in the communll}' won't
have to pla) in the street.
Fountain Valley High
reaches the CIF 4-A soft-
ball flnals./01
A pair of hummln.rhlrd chlcb enjoy a take-
out order from the mother at their bougain-
.Wea branch homatead on Linda bland in
Newport Beach.
The pending land transfer became
possible Tuesda) when supervisors
accepted a 760-acre portion of the
3.400-acrc itrccnbelt. first offrrcd b'
In March 1985. 29 ne1f)lborhood
children wrote to Riley asking that the
(Pleue Me ACADEMY/ A2)
Dodgers lose a fight-
marred 8-1 decision to
the New York Mets./01
Marina High begins the
task of finding a new
football coach./01
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
84
A3
A7-8
C4-5
85
06
83
C1-8
81-2
B6
8 1
A3
03,06
01-3
83
A2
Irvine voters face
2 ~allot measures
~ Battle lines dra wn on
direct vote fo r mayor.
limit on council term
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Otllheo.llJ .........
The race for two City CounC11 scats
has drawn most of the attenuon 1n
Irvine's June 3 election. but the c11y's
voters also will decide two ballot
questions concerning a hmit on
council terms and the direct election
of an Irvine mayor.
Measure A asks, "Shall the Charter
of the Clty of Irvine be amended to
limit the term of council members to
two consecutive terms?"
There 1s no hmll on the number of
four-year terms an Irvine council
member can serve now.
If Measure A is approved. a council
member would be rcstncted to two
consecutive terms. After that. an
incumbent would have to wait at least
two years before running again.
If Measure A were to pass. current
council members would be con-
sidered to have served one term and
could run for another four-year term.
The measure also addresses council
members elected or appointed to a
partial term . If such a person serves
more than two years. he or she would
be considered to have served one of
the two consecutive terms permitted.
The ballot argument in fa vor of the
two-term ltm1t was signed by the
(Pleaee eee IRVINE/ A2)
Upheavals in clerk's office
sparks interest in election
Appointed clerk cites improved service;
foe runs on experience. party afflliatton
By PA UL ARCHIPLEY
The Count) \lerk's race ord1nanl)
receive a yawn from voters, but
upheavals 1n the offi ct. 1nclud1na a
scanna audit of the former clerk-
recorder·~ performance, hH focused
more than the usual amount of
attention on the' post this eltct1on
Adding to the brouhaha " one
candidate's knack for 1ncumna the
wrath of vanous offtc181' and thr
•f\Jccllon of partisan polll1c, into a
non-panisan race
AppouHcd County C krk Gary
Granville 11 Nnnm& on ht, c1f,ht-
month rt<'Ord He 1 hcing challcn1cd
b) 21 -)ear depanmcnt emplo}'tc
M r5hall Nom
Gran ville wa appointed b) the
8oanf of uperv1sors last ptcmber,
about 1x month after an audit of the
clerk-rtt0rder' s office detenn 1 ned 1 he
department was 1.n d1~y.
uptrv1son decided to separate the
clerk and rttorder's, dutjcs lnto two
office • and Ocrtc-Rttordcr Ltt
Branch IT tancd. He was then ap-
po1 n tcd to the recorder's posl
On pnl 8. n audit was ~ntcd
to 'u~rv1sor dC'tiuhng what steps
High Court spares
phone customers
$50M rate increase
SAN FRANC! CO (AP) -Cahforn1a telephone ~-u,tomcr<> '"II
be spareda$50 million rate increase. or about S5 per customer in a year
by Tuesday's .S Supreme Court ruhng on dcprern111on. but the
potential effect was far greater. said state regulator\ offtn als
.. A tremendous amount of money was at ~talc" 1f the court had
reached the opposite conclusion and allowed the Fcdc-ral Commun1ca-
11ons Comm1ss1on to regulate ccnam in-state phone operations. said
Gretchen Duma~. the state Public Ut1ht1es ( omm1,,1on la"\cr who
rcorcscnted California in the caS<'. '
Jamee Kerr. the P Cs chief counsel. \311.1 th.it 11 the Fe <. had
&Otten its way on the deprcc1at1on issue. 11 thcn "-Ould ha'e probabl}
ordered states to foll ow accounting methods for phone companies that
would have put a much as 20 to 25 pel"C'cnt of the rate\ m <. altfom1a
under federal control (Pleaee eee PHONE/ A2)
Man pleads
no contest
to dumping
on Ortega
By tbe Associated Prell
Om· of two brothers charged with
dumping hazardous chem1c.ats along
the Onega H1ghwa) earhrr this year
pkadcd no contest Tuesday to 11lcpl-
" 1ransponing the v.aste 1n an
unc('n1fit'd \.Chicle
Richard Lea' 111. 37, of South
Llguna "a'> lined S3.400 and or-
dcrtd w make rcs111ut1on of SI 5.()()()
tor the l lean up as he entered hlS pica
1n \outh Orange \.1 un1c1pal Court.
L ca' 111 entered the pica to the
m1..0cm('anor charge dunng thr first
d;n ol hi\ prt'hm1nar) hcanng. which
"'••' ~.illcd to lktcrmine 1f there wa
l'nou11.h C\ 1dcn1:r tor tnal. said Dcpu-
(Pleaee eee TOXIC/A:l)
PAUL
AICIHPLEY
Roth says opponent
taking false credit
ELECTION '86
Gran ville had taken to corrttt tht'
problem 1dent1fied in the earlier
audit. The rtpon praised Cran' 1llt''!.
Proa:rtU
Mcord1n1 to °'"' Kina of the County Adm1n1strall\'C Office. who
pttpartd the rcpon. the po t aud11
revealed Cranv1lle had made "'l&n1fi-
cant Proart •• or bad olrtad)'
launched most of the chief dm1n1\-
tr1t1ve omtc·~ rttommend lions
(Plf&M ... CLERK'S/ All )
' •
By LI A MAHONEY o. .. o.11r ..........
Founh 01\tnC't supe~1~.mal l·an-
d1date Don Roth ~)'\ ont' ol hi'
poh11cal opponent'! ·~ t k1n1 ~red1t
where no crtd11 t'> dll<' for h1'i mlc in
devrlop1na Oran&t" ( ount\ ·.. li"t
tO'<IC d1 lo ure ordtnancc
Roth. "ho 1s ma\'or of A\nahc1 m.
~1d he hM filC'd an unfair campatgn pracu~ complaint aga1n~1 Onm l
MA)Of Jim &-am for a '+lltC'mcnt in a
pohucal mailer th1tt credit' h1'+ l m
with adopting the fiMt mun1ttpal
to'\1C C'hc-m1 al d1..clo~urr \lrd1n ""'('
1n thr niunl\
Lahchna Oran&t' Ma)or Beam
"dC'\ptf'lt('" a the campatJn ror
rtt1n ng UJX'f"'~' Ralph Oark's scat
mo"c' tov.ard a pnmary vote, Roth
mid rcponer\ Tue~) that Irvine
a~ wall\ prrm1emi an ordinance ~
Quinn& busint'S to hu huardou,
cht'm1cal' the' keep on \1te in 19 3.
•\nd he provided a cop of the Ora
ord1nanct' btanna an adopuon da
of Seotcmbt'r 1983
··11 ·~ unfortunatt' that Jim Beam
Oll" •'-tl'\.1n1 to poht1c11:c the tolia
(Pl eee ROT1$/ A.I) .. '
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Wednelday, May 28, 1988 •
CLERK'S RACE GENERA TING INTEREST .••
From Al
"In some lttb, the county clerk
implemented superior methods
beyond the recommended course of
action to deal wtth dcpanmental
problems," Kin~ reported.
The post audit found moraJe was
up amona the 274 employees in the
department. and eight of l 0 random I)
selected auorneys said service had
improved to good or e\ccllcnt.
Granville credits his abihty to tum
around the department on Cllpcnence
he pmercd in the free entcrpnsc
system.
He was a reporter and editor at
local newspapers for 13 years afler
more than a decade as a manager and
Cllecutive in the business community.
Granville, 57. has hoed up numer-
ous endorsements as well. 1nclud1ng
county supervisors fhomas Riley.
Ralph Clark and Bruce Nestande.
state en. Manan Bergeson. Orange
Mayor Jim Beam and sc,eral former
Judges.
Although Tht" pos111on 1s non-
parusan. Nom-. thinks ht'i long-
standing membership in the Rc-
pubhcan Part) count) Republican
Party Chairman Tom Fuentes to Join
the GOP. but didn't believe it wouh.l
be proper in an election )Car
"I felt in good conscience I had to
sta\ a Democrat.'' he said
Noms also argues the count) h:h
penalized nself by continuousl) .1p-
potnt1ng clerks who an· inexperi-
enced.
He points to his ~I 'ears in thl'
Count\ Clerk's office. a\ \.\Cll a., IO
}Cars as a count~ '>henlf<, dt:pUl) a-.
ideal training for lhe DO'il.
"It takes about Sl'"en \Cars to learn
what you're doing." 'lorns !>aid.
.. Last )ear's audit sho"cd "c'rc 1n
bad shape Lee Branch couldn't
handle 11. Most don'1 I.no" "hat
"e're doing. ,
.. I feel w11h m:-bad.ground and
e\penence. I could do a lot better than
30\0ne"
Gran' 1tle said '1..:orns·, background
shows\.\ h\ he should not he elected
\\ ht:n Noms ran for lhe !>amc posl
in 1 t.f,8. he "'as cited b' tht• fair
Pol1t1l.1I Pr:wt1tcs C omn11ss1on for
Gary Granville
maktn$ fabe statement!> in his cam-
paign literature.
Noms also failed to pay more lhan
$7.000 he owed the count) for
pubhcatton of his :!00-word state-
ment of quahficat1ons.
FollO'-"tng unsuccessful attempts to
l.Ollect. the counry sued Norris in
I '>82. But he filed bankruptcy in 1983
after a fire tn A.naheim de~troyed his
possessions
"'e' ertheless. he said he will pa)'
the counl} back.
"He stdTcd the counl} ... Granville
-.aid. ''Here's a gu) coming back eight
\Cars later and saying. 'Trust me.'
· .. In l97tl 40 people ut1hzed the
~ampa1gn statement. and one didn't
p:.1\ .. ~oms oO found himself in hot
"ater again 1h1s year when he used a
photo of himself and supporter Gene
.\utre~ on campaign literature. as well
as the l.OUrtroom phone number
"here he "a~ \.\Orktng
The p1ctun• "as taken 1n Supenor
Coun Judge Frank Domenichin1's
cnunmo m under the state seal where
"Jome. \\at; the clerk at a trial pilling
Marahall Norrt.
Autrey'sCahformaAngelsagainst the
city of Anaheim.
Anaheim attorney's charged the
tnal had been tajnted by politics, and
the Executive Commmee of the ·
Orange County Supenor Court or-
dered Norris removed from the
counroom and from direct contact
with the public while on duty.
Noms said the phone number was
pnnted without his knowledge. a
claim Granville questions.
.. I have done nothing in my life I'm
ashamed or embarrassed about."
Noms said ... As soon as the election
1s over. win or lose, I'll be right back in
my courtroom doing the same thing
I've been doing for 2 1 ye-ars."
Although Granville's record tn the
County Clerk's office is much shorter.
he's not afraid to compare them.
"He brought politics into the
courtroom. He failed to pay his bill.
He put the counroom phone number
on his invitauon. He was taken before
the FPPC for lies.
"It's a disgraceful chronology of
events." Granville said.
Afternoon to be paritally sunny
Partially aunny tk ... thl• anwnoon and Thu..-dty aner-
nnoon w1tt follow nloht and morning IOw cloud• ov9' th• Orange
Co.at. the Natlonef WMtMr ~ Mid. Sklel will be moatly
c!Mr Inland thll afternoon HIOh• a\ the betlchM wttt range from &e to 73, and Inland
from 78 to 8.4. Overnight IOWI wilt be 54 to 82. Sunny, warm daya are forecMt for tooal mountalna, with
high• In th• upper 70• to mid 809. and Iowa rrom 40 to the 50t.
Local gusty attClfnoon and evening aouthw.t wl~ to 25 mpfl wlll blow over nor1hern deeerta. Upper deMr1 high• wtt1 be In
the mid 901 to 102; In the IOW9t deeer11, 100 to 108.
Overnight Iowa wlll be In the mid 80I to mid 7Da. Over tocal wate<a weat to aouthwest wind• 8 to 18 knots wlll
blow this afternoon and evening, with a westerly awelt of 2 to 4
feet Low ctOYds wttl hover throughOYt the day With partlat
clearing this afternoon and evening.
U.S . Tem ps
H1Qlle. Iowa 111<0UQ1> 5 pm Tu.Gey
HI Lo
All>lny.N v es s1
Albuqulr-72 63
AINtillo ee .e
AnchorllQO .. 42
Alllnla 13 lie
Allontlc Cny M 58
Aualln 79 II
81Utmore 78 54 81rmlngllam 85 M
811merdc 83 50
Bol• 93 55 eo.1on eo 47
lkiflelo 78 51 8utlonQlon VI 84 36 ~ 71 3f Cl>arle91on,S C 71 H
e111r1on .. N c 75 ee
~... 59 «
Chi<:IQo 83 54 Clf>olnnltl 79 84
CW...end 71 82 eoun~.s c 85 ea
Columllu9.0No 78 83
C-d.NH 87 41
Oell .... Ft WOttll n 81
Oeylon 79 62 o.n-ts ... OetrOll ee 81 EIPuo n 81
F elft>lnk I 80 3 7 Fwgo M 51
Fllgatell 90 44
0<eno~ ee se
GrMIFllt 84 51 O<Mf\tC>Ofo.N C 73 82 Eztended HW110rd 8$ 52
·Helene 90 50
HonOlukJ 97 72 HC>Yt1on eo ee
lnclienepollt 78 83
JecUon,MIU. 78 87
""'-' 51 ..
71 S&
57 50
81 54
82 Ml le .,
81 57
71 12
71 51 eo 51
.. 70
Te 54 105 75
97 se 78 55
.. 44
10 eo
14 49 91 47
74 51
78 57 113 81
81 Ml es 14 .. 52 n ea
74 51 .. 51
12 62 to 72
74 56
101 ..
70 57 ee se
70 58
75 52
lllJIJA.. f"\. ~ ~. "'°"TS '49~~~ wwm-C4!0.,.
Snowets AWi Fut•• Sno. Occi..oeo ........ s1 .. 1.vn .. ,&y
,.._"°'* w....., ~ • NOA.4' u • °'-'' • • ,.,.,,.. ....
Calif. Tempe
8ln1a MOllice
Slodlton T lhOe v,,,,.,
Torr-
YOMmlte Vl)o
.. 59 99 .,
18 35 74 eo
92 53
4.7 -09 aa
2.9
49
-0 4
4.1
27
YEAR OF WAITING AN ORDEAL FOR SON .•.
From Al
IRVINE VOTERS FACE MEASURES .•. roller coa!>ter that has taken them
several times to the White House -
including a meeting with President
Ronald Reagan. They've endured
cruel hoalles that indicated the
hostages would soon be released, and
later that the Americans were shot to
death by firing squad.
an anonymous caller, as JUSt another
hoax.
"The buffers have all worn away.
scheduled release June 4 ofh1s record,
"When the Word Comes." In yet
another climb on the roller coaster,
the hostage ordeal afforded Jacobsen.
an amateur musician. a "break" into
the music world.
From Al
l'Urrt•nt ma, or DJ' 1d HJl.l·r and h'
t,,..o land1dates 1 homJ' \t Junt''i
and Hal \lalont•\
The thrl'l' claim Jd11ptu1n ol
Mea~url' \\\Ill
•L1 m11 the PLl\\l't ot 1mumht·n1
pol1ti(JO\ and thu' pin l'nt "m<ll.h 1nl'
polit1n in '" 1nl· ··
•~in1m11t' thl' 1hrt·.1t th.it 'l~ll.tl
1nt1.•rests l•)UIJ g.i1n 1,.11ntrol ot thl
Lou nu I
•Pro\.ldl' '-"Hkr 1111.11 rep1l·,en
tattoo b' cmouragmg nt·\\ 1.J11·
d1datc\
In her h;1l1111 .ut:um1..·nt .1gJ1n'1
Measurt· ~ '" tnl' rn1tknt ( arol
Simon calls 11 · looli\h \hl· '>a\\ 11
will not ha\e am d k u until llltl(I or
1992 at the carl1cl>t
Simon 'i8td the ml.'a!>urc '" ··1)<1orl\
drafte"d and ""'ll probabl\ he ht•ld
unconst1tut1onal ..
he also said 1t "ignore<, the tncd-
and·tC<,ted m ethod tor 'otcrs to deal
, .. ,th incumbent C11, C uunnl ml'm·
ber rl'-ekct lhO\t' \\.hn h3\l' ,,..orked
hard and earned rt··l'll'll111n .ind
thro" out thusc \.\.hO haven't'"
\ka'>ure H J<;(,..s. "5hall the ordi-
nance directing the adoption of a
pro('edure tor tht• direct clec11on of
m.i' or ht> adurted'.'"
ln1m"'> rna'vor I!> cho<,cn annuall'v
In the C. 11' ( i.iu nul fro m among its
ti' c mcmhcrs \kasure B '-"Ould ha'c
'111cr' \. hoo\C their ma' or d1rccth on
or hclore 1hc municipal elections in
l'l!\l\
Tht• council would he required to
adopt tht· procedure a!> an ordinance
or place 11 on the ballot for the' oters
t1H·ons1dl'r The manner 1n "htch the
m.l\or \\OUld ~ ~lectcc.I 1!> not
'ix·nfied
The arguml·nt 1n fa, o r of Measure
B \\as "ntten b) Councilmen Ray
C a1c1l.100 .ind LarT) Agran ( A.gran t!>
\CCI.mg rt>-dec 11on June 3 I
The argument ~}S. "It I'> un-
dcmllcrattc to prevent I rvint• 'oters
from dtrl.'ct l~ electing their mayor ...
Tht• ma'm I'> our spokesperson and
our th1d ne~ottator 1n comple\
dealings with neighboring c1t1cs. Mth
the county and even with our state
and national governments.
"Plaint)'. the election of Jnine's
mayor 1s too important to be left to
five Cit} Council members to decide
amid the wheehng-and-deaJtng of
backroom oohucs "
The ballot argument against
Measure B was \\ritten by Coun-
cilwoman Sally Anne Miller. She says
that under this proposal, "A mayor
could be elected with no council
expcnence and. more 1mponantly.
without the consensus and con-
fidence of the other fou r council
members."
She adds. "Direct election implies
gi ving greater power to the mayor.
Today. city declSlons are based on the
equal votesoffive people. It would be
assumed a directly elected mayor
could act alone for the city. If. as the
proponents state. there would be no
difference in the mayor's power~ or
responsibilities. why change? ..
They've been jtUests-of-honor at
reverent ceremonies. during which a
yellow flag was hoisted over Hunt-
ington 8e<i.ch City Hall, and yellow
streamers were tied to newly-planted
trees m a Westminster park. All
awaiting the return of the captives.
And they've suffered through the
~ent slaying of Americao hostafc
Peter Kilburn, shot by terrorists m
apparent retaliation for the U.S.
bombmg of Libya.
The year-Ions ride for a time left
Eric Jacobsen himself a prisoner. not
to Moslem kidnappers but to his own
osc11latingemotions-the hope. fear.
JOY and disappointment that raised
and then dashed his spirits.
Now he is numb. So numb, that
rumors Tuesday of the execution of
the American hostages. plus four
Frenchmen and one Briton left
Jacobsen unfazed. Police in Beirutarc
characterizing the report, received by
I'm tired, I'm emotionally raw and I
don't have the energy to go up and
down anymore." Jacobsen said, ex-
plaining the Last straw came during
the confusion in April over whether
the body of a slain hostage was f!lat of
American Peter Kilburn or British
writer AJcc Collett. The corpse was
finally identified as Kilburn, an
American University of Beirut Li-
brarian.
"They said it was Collett; they
confirmed it was Collett; the next day
I woke up and it was Peter Kilburn -
( expected them next to tell me it wu
my father," Jacobsen said ... That just
shoved me off the roller c.oastcr track.
1 don't think I can do it anymore."
That f atiguc, he said, has spread
throughout the families of the Ameri-
cans still held captive by the Islamic
Jihad. a shadowy group of Shiite
Moslems with ues to Iran. The
captors arc demanding the release of
17 Moslems convicted of bombing
U .S. and French embassies in
Kuwait.
Jacobsen said he is hoping to
rcspark the families' energy with the
The song. wntten by Jacobsen and
brother Paul. 1s sung by Jacobsen,
produced by pop veteran Michael
Lloyd and funded by heutenan1
governor candidate Mike Curb.
Jacobsen said that he does not plan
a musical career. but only wants to
keep the plight of his father and the
other hostages in tbe public's eye -
or in this case -ear.
After that, Jacobsen 1s hesitant to
guess what he or relatives of the other
hostages will do to stir the sentiments
of a country that he says has forgetteo
ns brethen.
He likens the situation to the
fam1hes fighting roughly two decades
to convince the government that
some soldiers captured or missing in
acuon dunng the Vietnam War are
sull ahve and 1mpnsoned 1n that
country.
.. Are we families going to be 1n the
same boat 20 years down the hne."
Jacobsen said.
PHONE CUSTOMERS SPARED RATE HIKE ... ROTH SAYS ... From Al
Instead 1he lUUrt 1 ukd '-2 thal
lederal la\.\ dlkn<. thl· \l,1ln not thl' re ( tO \Cl lhl' dt'fHCl IJl111n lormul,l\
tor phone l.ompam l'qu1pmt·nt U'-l'd
tor hoth rn-,tatr .\nd out·ol-st.itl·
sen ice Depn.•c1,11111n formula' ,k
term1ne hem lr1n~ th•· t•qu1 pnwn1 ''
npectcd tn la<,I and him qu1d .. t~ thl'
rcpla(cmcnt c 1i<,t' in Ix· l'M\\t•d a Inn~
IC> CU\loml'r\
f ht• re ( had Jll npml'd d d1·-
p!l'Cl.Jl11>n tormul.1 m11rl' ~t·nl'r1111\
NB officer
wins delay
on hearing
\ '\1'\'P"fl lk,1d1 pol1\l t.1p1a1n
• H l ll\l'tl 111 \hnphtt1ng. ,1 p.iir ot hhw
Jl·Jn' \\J\ grant\.·d .1 p11,1ponl'lllt'OI r Ul'\U,1 > .1t .1 he.inn~ duriny \\ htth ht
\\J\ Ill enter a pka In lht· n11,tk
mranur l h.irgc
< ,Jflt R1th;trd I l.11111l111n .i.i "·''
11rdrrcd 111rcturn.l11m· ~ t11 l\lun1unal
r t\u n in i..,an1a .\n.1 Im .11 r.11gnmt•n1
lf.1rn1l111 n "J'> .1m·,1cd l\.1arth ~;..,
aftt•r hl' .1llcgcdl~ t1u i..l·d ,1 rolled-up
J'l.llf Of dt•\lgncr l'•lll'-Ill hi\ \ l">t Jnd
v.all.rcl n111 uf tlw P111,.1· t luh 1n \an ta
.\n,1
Thr 't'H'r.tn p11liu t.1pta1n h.1,
1nd1tatcd he \.\a\ u11dl·rg111n!' 1n·mt·n-
dou~ \Ire•;<; at thi: t1m1 t1I the allt•gt•d
inetdent and li~em:d II 111 '""al~1ng
around in a fog ·
Hamilton at llr\I olll'H'd hi\ rt'\I~·
nation hut w1 thdrt'\\ 11 Jlll·r 'l''l'r.11
dins of c-on'>1dcrat1Pn I Ir h;1' nnl \aid
whether ht• would n·t11111 111 du1' ii a l It\ (.'\J(UJtwn dl':Jr' Ill( "·I'
MAIN OFFICE
lVa -N• R• u , .a
~. IC~' I• •
C 1t•'e1 •O• 15•:? 'P9 rue.~· \ • ., • '. ~·, ••
VOL. 79, NO. 141
I
lhiln thn-;c used b' ( altl0rn1a and man~ otht•r <;tates.' sa)tng It \.\Ould
cmouragc phone compantc\ to mod-
crn11c their equipment
··\.\1: don·t C\~Ct 11 to have much-
1mpact in California " sau.J Die~
f Ill morn'> ~poke~man for Paci fit
Hell. the largest in-slate phone com-
pa"' ~' 1' 1.i \1cgl'I of the con.,umcr group
I oward l 11ltt\ Rate NormaltL.at1on
lJlkd thl.' dt·u\lon "wonderful" and
said 11 would save customers "tons of
money" in the long run.
The federal comn11ss1on regulates
telephone rates only for interstate
caJts, lt"aving operations entirely
within a state to the state com-
m1ss1ons.
But the Reagan admin1stra11on and
26 phone companies. led b} Ameri-
can Telephone & Telegraph, argued
that the FCC formula should appl) to
all equipment in the industn
T OXIC DUMPING PLE A ...
ACADEMY SnE ...
Fr-:>mAl ~ From Al
land be turned over to the city so they ln1t1al costs arc estimated at issue with cheap campaign rhetonc."
could have a safe place to play. $27,500. Yearly maintenance and Roth said.
Riley wrote back saying that the security will cost St 0.000 a year. Beam ·s mailer says that while
city could not have Moulton Assistant City Manager Rob Clark under his leadership Orange
Meadows Park until comprehensive said Laguna Beach officials are just ·'adopted the first IOlllC chemical
planning of the adJacent Ahso-Wood glad to finally get the land. The disclosure ordinance for any cit) in
Canyon Regional Park was com-property transfer should take two to Orange County. This ordinance has
pleted three months, he said. been used as the model for similar
Planning for the regional park is Money has been set aside to build a ordinances county-wide."
sttll "in progress.. according to a JOggtng trail with exercise stations,
county repon but. since supervisors two tennis courts and a childrens' Irvine 1s generally recognized as
are planning to lease part of the park play lot. Clark said. having adopted the first toxics ordi-
to the National Fitness Foundation nance. In fact. county officals last
From Al
f \ f>1•.tr1ll \t10111l'\ Diane Kadlet7.
I hl' $1 \()()(I in re!>lllUt1on will be
di' 1dnJ among \Jnous agencies that
J')<.'rlnrmt·d thl' l'kanup Ms Kadlett
'aid
for an athletic training center this The city will seek bids as soon as month stoic away the city's hazard-
summer, they decided it was time to park plans are updated and cost ous materials administra\or Sylvan
\U a rrntal truck seen near one or the take over ownership of the land, said estimates modified, he said. Hersch to run a comprehensive
illegal dumps1tcs on the rural h1Vi -Ken Winter. manager of urban and The park could be completed in a disclosure program in which most, if
wa) that links Orange and Ri verside environmental planntn~. httle more than a year. not all, cities wtll participate.
l.O Unt1eS r;:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;;;:::;;:::;:;;:;:::=:=:::::::::::::::::::::;.
I l'3' 111 \\Ill remain on probation
un11l tht• fin1·, arr paid, -;he <,a1d .
·\ hean ng fo r Lea v1tt's brother.
Philip l .irlc l ca' Ill. 39, of Kens-
11Htt11n 1n '\nnhcrn \ahforn1a was
~onllnul·d until Jul\ :!2
R1lh.1rd I ea\ltt' wa\ arrested 1n
J,1nu.in .tlll'r authont1cs linked him
The brother was arrested 1n Febru-
af) after he was 1mphcatcd by
Ri chard Leavitt.
A 14-mile stretch of the highway
\.\.3S closed twice tn Januaf) while
ha1ardous matenals teams remO'\Cd
the chemicals, some of which werc so
'vO laule they were destroyed with
explosives at the scene.
COUNT Y FIREFIGHTERS ...
From Al
pm atd~ union otlk1als ma) not.
11111kr an~ llrcum<;tancc'>. speak to
'llfX n 1<;or., 1n f')ubhc 5C'iSton. Count)
I uun\1·1 .\dna n l\.u) per \aid
\ut ha puhhc appeal is "outside the
tramt'\\Or~ that ha~ been ec;tabl1shcd
tor orderly labor negotiations."
l\.u\ per said
~1mnw ~aid 11 wa<; important to
hnng h1' wnccrn<, d1rectl) to the
board and wa<, rnt1cal ot the policy
that wouldn't allow 11.
Aul Second District upcrv1!-0r
Hamett \\lieder accused S1mc<X of
grandstanding on the safet} issue
1mcoc denied W1eder's acrn..a-
t1on. saymg he just wanted to make
the board understand that the o"cr-
11mt" proposal 1c; "1rrespon\1ble and
11·-. dangerous ..
Delly Piiot
D•llv•ry
It Ouer1ntffd
Just call 642-6086 1,1._noey F >Oar '' ' " :lo.l
nQI ...... ,...,. °"""" Cy s JO~ .. 091 "'~ ' 0"'
•"<I '°"' Cl >!~ .. t>e ~·-...,
What do you hke about the Daily Pllot" What
don't you hke'> Call the number above and }Our
me\~ae Wlll be recorded. transcnbed and de-
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The same 24-hour a nswenna 5trv1ce may be
used to record letters to the editor on any topic.
Contnbutors to our Letters column mu~t include
their name and telephone number for vcnficat1on
I . Tells us ~hat's on your mind
, •• ~··,·~ .-.a s..... ., ,. '°" "'()t " • ..,.. '°"' °"' c-, Te"' • '>• •D t... •"«l ftv °"' • • t• ... _,
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