HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-06-04 - Orange Coast Pilot" .. . . •
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1986
eStimner
Newport Republican incumbent whips
rene a ec al engerinGOP'sprtmary
pubhcan challenser who attacked
Badham's attendance record and
frequent oveneas travel, pmered
almost 3S percent of the vote. ••t thJnk I did very well for an 11·
week effort," Rosenbera said early
today from bis Newport Badl home.
"We ~re at least able to offer voten a
choice-an repreaentation.
taiiyl'or Sumner's write-in campat
eads LaRouc tan in Democratic race
November. ComputciizCd counuos machines
used to tab~late the baltOu showed
16,342 wnle>'.in votts_-pra.umabl.J
for umner -oom~·'!ritb Roff .. I)
IJ STEVE MARBLE
Of ...............
Rep. Robert Badham rebuffed a
1erious and well-financed challense
within his own party Tuelday, out-
diJtancins manqement consultant
Nathan RosenberJ at the pQJls nearly
2-to-1. ..
Callfomla
Hoapltal aocueed of,...
fusing to give baby a new
heart becauae lta parents
are not married./ M
FoPd
Make your graduate feel
llke a hero wtth a apeclal
party featuring refreshing
beverages and satisfying
Sports
The Boston Celtlca take a
commanding 3-1 lead In
the NBA Championship
aerle8./C1
Eatancla High pole
vaulter Doug Miiier look-
ing for new honors at
state track meet this
weekend./C1
INDEX
A~vloe and Games
BuUet1n Board
Business
Classlfted
Comlcl
Death Notices
EntertaJnmen1
Food
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Polloe log
Pubflc Notices
Spottt
Tetevlalon
Weather
c ..
-A3
84-6
08-8
C6
C8
83
01-e
81-2
A8
81
A3
C8
C1-3, 8
83 • A2
Crash kills
air traffic
reporter
By LESLIE EARNEST
Of .. ..., ........
K.FI-AM radio traffic reponer
Bruce Wayne was killed this mornina
when his sing)e-eJlline airplane
crashed in flames after takina off.
Wayne's wife, Lois, calmly broadcast
details of her husband's death from
the crash site just northeast of
Fullerton Municipal Airport.
Wayne. S2, Kfl's well known "Exe
In tl:ie Sky." was just two weeks short
of ceJebrauna his 2Sth annivel1ary as
a radio traffic reporter.
"I am at the crash site oh (Cessna)
Cardinal... the '"Aslociated 'Press
~uot.ed Mn. Wayneuaayinadurin1a
hve radio broadcast. "There is no
paint or number on the aircraft. The
aircraft did have an explosion on
1tnpeet''
Mn. Wayne, who had rushed to the
airport after initial reportJ said
Wayne may have been involved in a
crash, later told a newsman, "I have
no doubts that it's him."
·After authorities placed the charred
body in a body baa and put it on a
stRtcher, Mn. Wayne touched the
bq, knelt beside it and ~ited the
Lord's Prayer.
Wayne had delivered two traffic
rel)Ortl frorrt the around befo~ takina
off' today.
"We never heard anythina else,"
said Kfl reporter Tracey Miller.
'•It was an unexpected chalJenae
and we res~nded deliberately and decisively; uid the Newport Beach
Republican conpessman, who cap-
tured a bit more than 6S percenf orthe
vote1 acx:Qrdina to final but "nofficiaf
resu1u.
Rosenbera, the youthful Re-
I
Teacher
fired in
death
of boy
asphyxiat'o~ after
being restrained
"We aot the conarenman back in hia-dittric::i for an extended period of
time and that'• ~uite an accomplish·
ment in itself', • said Rotenbofs.
(Pl ....... BADBAll/A2)
By 'l'ONY 8.U VEDRA
... PAUL A.aCBJPL£Y
Of ............
In a f'a<:Mlvina wit!, Oran~ Couo·
J)' Oemoctatic Patty Chairman Bruce
Sumner apparently tcored a difficult
'Write--in victory Tuesday over
LaRouche Democrat Art Hoffmann
for t~e ,,otb ConarnsionaJ District mann·s 14,883. Since the mac!Uoes
nomination. ~o not reco&Jilu IWlla writicnmi.
Accordina to final but unofficla.I election Ofncllit mutt still review the
eJectjon results, Sumner appeared to ballots to ddmninc whether the
come out the winner in a DOJ'1C-111Ce-!otel were ma.rtcd and for
with Hoff'mun -S2 percent 10 48 :sumntt. •
percent -eaminJ tbe riaht to face ~o~ner ~ ~ oft.ly an~uncod
Republican primary winner and an-wnte-10 candidate m 1 campa11n &bat
cumbcnt Rep. Robert E. Bldbam in C"--~wm'l'S-111/AI)
Zschau Wins
right to fight
Sen. Cranston
ELECT:ON '86
Gates easily outpolls both
opponents in sheriff's r•ce
Turnout
'gloo111y'
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' ... .,.., ........
By LISA MAHONEY °' .. 0.-......... Oranae . County Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates successf1,11ly avoided a
runoff election Tuesday by handily
pilina up 64 percent of the vote and
leavina only 36 percent to be spread
between his two cballenaers.
Although both predicted they
would force the three-term sheriff
into a November faceotT, neither
Municipal Co11rt JudJ!:Bobby-Oon
Younablood nor shenf'rs patrol Sat.
Landa Lee Callipn racked up more
than 20 percent of the vote. ·
According to final but unofficial
tallies. C.lli&an led Youn&blood with
18 percent of t>allots cast Young-
blood received 17 percent of the vote.
The two challengen would have to
have amassed a combined 50 pen:ent
or more of the vote to keep the
sheriff's contest alive.
The sheriff's race was the most
llel'imonlous of county contests this
year with both challengers subjttting
~ .
Winners Agl-an, Dornan claim
mandate to slow Iririne growth
BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. DlllJ NIM.._..
The two victon in the Irvine City
Council election say voten· handed
them a mandate TuClday .to .slow the
pace of development, ~rve more
areen areas and retcand the city's support for three new freeways.
Attorney Larry Aaran was returned
for a third four-year term, alona with
runoina mate Ed Doman. an Oranae
Coast Col~ EnaUah profCsaor &nd
Irvine planntna commissioner.
. ' In a crowded field of I 0, Aaran and
• Dornan outpaced their nearest
challenaen. pro-busineq candidates
Thomu M. Jones and Hal Maloney,
by nearly a 2-to-I ma'Jin.
5" final but unoffiaal results with au 102 lrvme prectocli eolffttM,
A&ran and Doman each pmercd 27
percent of the vote. Aaran's total w11
10 S62 votes and Doman'• 10,266.
loncs. an attorney who 11 president
of the Irvine Chamber of Commerce.
finished with S,3 17 votes or 14
percent. Maloney, an Irvine finan~
comm1ss1oner. collected 5,035. for 13
percent.
Trailina were· Jean Hoban -
2, 742 or 7 percent; Mary Aileen
Matheis -1,497 or 4 percent; Gary
Steven Bennett -6S7 or 2 percent;
Stun Weitman . 5-80 tJr" i percent;
Anthony .R. Korba -$41 or I
percent; and C1arenoc Becwar -336
or I perctnt;
An I Ith cand1date, Be~y Scheer.
wlthd~w from the race, but her name
•till appeared on the ballot She still
(Pl ....... AORAlf/A2)
Gates to unrelentina cnuc1sm of has
management of the Sheriffs Depart-
ment and his penonal conduct.
Y ounablood and Calligan attacked
Gates for beina too slow to solve the
crowd ma problems at Orange County
Jail. The jail is under supervision of a
U.S. District CounJud&e\bccause the
county has not compl1~ with the
court's 1978 ordeia to C&Kcrowd1
In addition. Youngblood, on leave
(Plea.M ~ OATU/A2)
Apathy smoth~ the pri-
mary elections Tuesday. with
Cahfomia porung its lowest
voter turnout in S8 years, while
Oranae County rqistered its
lowest sbowina•incc 1982.
A mere 3S.7 ~n:ent of the
county's I m1lhon rqistercd
voters went to the polls. despite
supervisonal and county aov-
emment Q!)S1tions 1b11 MTC up.-
(Pleue ._ TUUOUT/A2)
Prop.51,
lOother
initiatives
win easily
From rtaff ud Witt repertt
Voten easily approved Prop-
ositton SI. the "deep pockets" in·
1t1ative that local aovemmenu and
insurance finns said would curb
unfair liabihty j udarncnts and that
lawyen said would curtail damages
for victims in lawsu1ts.
-------------------------------------------------------------· Cah(omia votcrsalw approved 10 Riley, Wieder easily win re-election other ballot in1ltat1ve1 to rataC ntarly
• $1 6 bilhon an bonds (or county Jails,
home loans f'or veterans, ctnn water
and local parks.
Voters cast ballou to ra1~ money
. fnr bu11d1n1 and public wotlta ptO-itets. ~1anabna an apparent sw1q ·
from the mood that prompted ap.
proval of Proposition 13, the pr-Opnty
tax-hm1tation iniuauvQ 'lhlt CU\ -
behind her, Wieder will serve the
district. which includci Hunt1naton
Beach, f0r four more years.
Riley was fint al>l)01ntcd to the
board ofsui>d'Vlson 1n 1974 by then·
aovemor Kona.Jd RiYJii. The 1enfor board member now t t 4th District
upervilOt Ralph da hu deacled
10 retire. th (onner Manne COfJ'I
brlpdier aentral has always been
popular with voten. In prev1ou
cltctiona. be tteeived 64 and 70 ~rccnt of total vo
rand, Sl, cballt Raley on
d velopmcnt and U'I rution 1
· . He alJO tcd Riley tncffcc·
uvc an aolvU\t pro ems wtthtn h11
A
district.
Pratt, SS. ofS.nta Ana tlct.,,tJ. did
htllc active campaiaruna. h11 main
c:ompltin1 bein& that the Board of
SuperviJOrs au ff en /rom · "tenn1nal
incumbency." Rt~ vo~ to p1npc1nt a Slte for• second rounty airpon dun the
comina tmn, move ahead wtth
conatruetion of thrte planned tr'lnh
pcrtation corridors and prcu the
ciucs to won Wlth Board of
;~J)«V110n on a mu srotrth
effort. .
R11ey•a di tnC1 includes Ne111f)On
h, Cosu Mesa. ll'\l1ne. · una
c:h and m";Ch of uth Oranat
County. He' h\ICS 1n Newpon Beach.
Wieder. 6S. the board'' only
woman, 'had httle lO fear from
oppontnt M~lovich. W1tb no politi·
cal cx~nencc or backina. Mcilovich
did not even ea ca.mpalll\ battle.
• Wieder ~1d sbe will cootanuc to
work on Southern Cahforn&a's wateT
won IS wtll H fin&) raolutiori Of
1 ues ,urround1n1 the Bolla Chica
wetlands 1n Hunt1niton h. ·
A new aru of concern for her will
hectnldadv y, Wt r•Wt, tld
abute. pna activity and rel ,-tocial
problems netd t9 be tdd more
1n Onnac County. she ad. (Pl_..... Y/A21
\
Vl()Ct after IU 1978 .
After I 00 percent of e vo had
been tallied early Coday, votets had
approved Proposition $1 ~ 1 6l ~rcent tO ~· percent mJ!lin.·About 2.8 milhbn votm tavored it and 1.1
malhon voU:d aaaiMt it.
In Oran Cou.ruy, Propo1iliS>n 'I passed by a 67 percent matlin. eaki
2'47,889 VO\tl &t tht po.U A l01a) 0
124,627 VO )) percent, Y
"No .. oa the propositt
(Pl eee PaOP.11/AT)
BADHAMl!OFACESUMNER •••
J'rcnAl
oahaps ~llln 1n one lu1 u· ll the
nvc-&rmi incumbent.
Wham 1ppa~ntl) "'"II «· mn upmor Court Jud Bruce
umncr, 1 wnte-m candidate and
chairman of the °'*J)lt Couoty
Democratic ) w-bo &ppe&TI &o be his f)*ny'1 n 1111 for tho 40th Conares ionaJ Di1trict. Rosenbera sent a concculOD ttle-
aram to Badham early today. yina
he would wort hard to mead any rift
in the Republican Pany ettated in tbc
caustic campa1an.
"Allhouah we've had our dif~
ference , we're both Rcpubhcans and
I'll wor~ hard to unite the Republican
Pany for victory in November."
Rosenbera's telcaram said
The challcnaer, ho~vcr, stopped ~hort of sayina he'd work dam;tly to
support to Badham and the 1ncum·
bent .!ttmed slishtl y amused by
Roseobers'' concns1on
"f'd IJVe ham the same advice I
would to anv biih school or colleae
stud.en&, .. Badbam -~ today ... I'd wife, dothts for himxlhnd hi wtfe,
•UP.t I.hit enyonc 1nltfejted 1n aijvctWl.fe&nd otbct pcnonAI hem .
poi1lica Olk throuab lbe pany ... not .. J hope c HSttns co the 3S pc~nt
JtJSI come 10 from the outside ith a who didn't ~olt for him," Rosenbera
lot of money:• • said. OunQI the prim.a~ ba.ulc. Badh&m 8adham wd it i& up to those acc:UsedRotenberaofbtiD.la'"~c-Republic:a.ns who voicd apiost him blat't' 1ppe~ntty tent to Orlrwe' to mend fenoes within the pany. . 1
County by 1Mdowy outside fortlC$ .. lffence1 need to be mended then n
eeetina 10 enhance their political ~~ to othm to bqin that prooess."
1nflutnoe." ham said. '*There as a need for
The ~fettnce was to Werner some people 10 come beck into the
Etbard. Rotcnbtt&•• brother and the pany;
founder of eat-a telf-impl'ovcmcnt -Rosenbcrs aid he _pJans to remain
proaram that Badbam ~ off'u active in area politics and wiU
beina akin to brainwaSh1na. concentrate for the time on defeauna
Both Rotc.nbera and bit brother 't.ate Supreme Court Chief J usuce
djsmined the claim 11 absurd. Rose Bird and her collcques 1n
For hu part. Roseobefa slammed November.
Badh.am•s attendance rcconl in Con· "And l suppose I should ao back to cress and the incumbent'& uac of work and spend time wtth my
campaian funds to pay for a Cad.allac, family," he said from his Newport
more than $40,000 10 au tnvel for bis Beach home
TURNOUT GLOOMY •••
From Al ~ ..
RILEY for pbs. Statewide, C-11forn1a re·
• • • conled a 40 percent turnout.
1c,ually started to roll 11'1, blamed the
lack of interest on a ta.rae number of
undecided voters, and a paucity of
emotional ballot issues.
From A 1 The final unoffica.al Lally showed
662, 785 of the county's rqistered W1cdrr lives in Hunungton ach voters and 7 4 million of the 12 2
One final supen 1wnal race ndcd malhon statewide voters stayed
in a runoff Tuesday. home. Three of four nsnd1dules ~king
(lark'<; \eat ran a clo~ race wnh none Althouah Orange County 81ckcd
t"merging a clearleader up.another 1.9 percent, or 20, 14, m
The-two top voter getters. Anaheim absentee ballots, county elcct1on of-
Ma)or Don Roth and Oranee Mayor fic1als said the showma was aJoomy,
Jim Beam. will fi\CC off in November even for a characteristically low
The thmJ c.a nd1date, former U.S. primary. Election offictals had pre-
Rep frl1) Pattcr\on. 1s out of the dieted a voter turnout of al least 48
running. as 1\ Anaheim architect perc~nt.
"1anuel Mcnde1 .. There Just wasn't a whole lot of
~am led the talhes W1th . 3S interest in the candidates or the
percent. Roth rcce1 vcd 33 percent. issues," said Rosalyn Lever. chief of
Patten.on draggt"d with 26 percent elcctton operation~. The lowest tum-
and Mendt"t laued w11h 6 percent of out previously was 46 percent in a
rhc vote June 1982 gubernatonal pnmary
Supervisors Bruce Nestande and Aside from the apathy, Lever u1d
Rt>Jer Stanton are m the middle of the voting TuesGily went smoothly.
The all-time low turnout for a
California pnmary was m August
1928, when 36. 9 percent of tt:iose
registered voted.
In thote days, the presidential
pnma.ry was held separately, 10 May.
So that state primary contest didn't
benefit from the added draw of the
pnrnary that set up the battle in which
Republican Herbert Hoover defeated
Democrat Alfred E. Smith.
The nut worst turnout was the 43
percent showina m the ~resid.cntiaJ
pnmary of May 1940. which ~ulted
m the nom11at10M of Franklin D.
Roosevelt for,,, the Demo.crats and
Wendell W11lk1e for the GOP.
In 1942, &he C.ahfornia primary
turnout was 47.2 percent. 1he1r fo ur-year term\, havmg been re-"AJJ the way around It was unexcll·
._ ___ __i::.ia.·.4C4i.~.ul l9i4... Un~ ~t ... a ... Pd-t-+11B1ttiiu'-',.shn<01Hii&aMJ~d~-
"uccceds in ousung Se\.ret.ary of State Statewide, a gloomy Secretary of
March Fong Eu in November both St.ate March Fong Eu. predicting a 47
!ace rc-clcct1on in 1988 percent turnout before the votes
The highest turnout fur a Oih fom1.3
pnmary was 72.6 percent 1n 1976,
when the Democrats sent Jimmy
Carter apmst Gerald Ford.
•
AGRAN, DORNAN WIN IN IRVINE •..
From Al
garnered 521.J ..-01c or I percent
Agran 41 <,;ud tt><la> he had been
confident of winning hut was sur·
pnsed by the lar11,e margin.
.. 'This I'> grat1f)1ng hecau-.e 1l means
1t v.ao; more than a dt:c1s1ve win -It
v.as a real mandate,' he said "It's a
clear mandate lrom residents for
putting their in1erc\t\ fir\t ..
.\gran claimed tht: council in re<ent
Year'> ha' gi"en a higher pnonty to
de' duixr'i and spcoal inlt'rests ··
Jone'> and Malone.,. v.ho received
\lrung tinanc1al 'iuppon lrom area
husmess people, v.aged aggr"s1H
campa1gm calhng fo r controlled
growth and t:ununued support for
three proJ')<>~ south Orange County
freeways
But Agran \aid ... It became t"v1dent
10 \Oter.. that lhl" developer\ aqd
\pt'Ctal mtere\t grou~ were trymg to
buy the election. 4nd they absolute!)
refus.ed to perm1t lha1 to happc:n ··
Agran said he will pres'> quickly for
permanent prt"\ervauon of agncul·
tural area$ such a'i Quail Hill and
dismantling of tht: agem.1es that arr
planning thl· \an Joaqum Hills.
l-ac;tem and roothtll frt>ewa>S
Durnan, 46, 'ia1d, ht'> un'iucce'>sful
un for the Irvine council in 1982 wa.-.
a la\1-minulc "''ih•>C''>tnng" campaign
This )ear. he .-..i11.I. he '>penl ahout
S2li,IJOO and campaigned more 1n-
tensel) He appeared in man) ads and
ampa1gn material') ""1th Agran
"I d1dn·t nde 1n on Lam's coa1-
1ail'> Lam and I ran on the \ame
l\'iUC'> ... he ..aid 1h1' morning.
"'I ""3'> expecting a landshdt', hut
not quilt: 1hal large a land<>hde"
Dornan ..aid he hchevcs voter'
8"i"C him a mandate .. lu \low g.rowlh.
pre<,cnc open \pa(C\ and to let the
In inc co kno"" 11 can·t du.;tate 10 the
Cit\ of Ir" Int' hkc: 11·, a hanana
republic··
I he Irvin~ ( ·., " lht Cl()·, rmn1..1-
pal landowner and developer
Dornan ,aid he·ll alo,o pres'i lor
Irvine's withdrawal from the agcnc1e'>
planninit the freeway'
Irvine. voters limit terms,-
vote for election of mayor
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of_Ollllr .........
B> dec1s1 vc margins. Irvine \.Oter!i decided Tuesday to hmat Cit) Council
mt"mben to two consecutive terms and to allow voters-not the council -to
pick the city's mayor
Although the contest for two Irvine C11y CounCll seats drew most of the
auenuon. the city'$ voters also considered two ballot measures.
Measure A a!iked whether Irvine City Council members should be
prevented from serving more than two four·year terms in a row. The measure
would not prevent an e1sht-yearcounc1J member from taking a two-year break,
then scekfog re-clect1on
· In unofficiaJ results with all 102 Irvine precincts counted, 11,608 vott"rs,
62 percent. fa,orcd thl" two-term hm11 The measure received 7.065 opposing
votes. 38 percent of the total volM cast
Proponents of the mea~urc argued 1t would h m 11 the power of mcumbcnh.
prevent "machm.c politics" in Irvine and encourage wider partmpa11on in
lounc1l races.
In an interesting twist. the ballot booklet arguments 1n favor of Measure A
were co-signed by Thomas M. Jone\ and Hal Maloney, two council candidate<;
Although the measure was adopted. Jones and Maloney lost their bid for seats
on the council. •
Measure A supulales that all pre.~nt cou.nctl member~ woulcL . .bc
considered to have served one term. As a result. mcumbent Larry Agran. one
of T uesda) 's winners, will be restmtcd from runnmg again 1mmed1atel) after
his. ne"" term expires.
Opponents of the two-term hmtl claimed 1t was uncuO'it1Juttonal.and that
11 would not let voter<; decide whether a two-term incum~nt de<;cned 10
remain an office
An even larger ma1only voted for Irvine's Measure B. This meai.urt
directes the council 10 ~t up a _procedure on or before the 1988 munc1 pal
election that will allov. vole:!"\ to pick lhe city's ma>or Currently. 1hc-mayor 1<;
chosen each }car by the council from among tt.-. lhe members
Voting for Measure: 8 wert" 12,958 people 71 percent Opposing 1l were
5 418 29 percent •
Incumbent Agran and ( ounc1lman Ra) lat.alano co-'i1gned the ballot
argument favonng Measure B
The) s~ud the mayor 1s the city's spoke'iman and chief negotiator m dealing
v.1th other go"ernmcnt bodies They claimed the role was too important lo be
decided "amid the wheeling and dealing of backroom politics··
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller wrote the opposing araument. clallD.l..llg
the measure would give too much power to the mayor and would alter the
present sy'llem of making city decisions throu~ five equal council vote5.
Meai.ure B gives the council the rcspons1b1hty for devmng the mechanics
of electing an Irvine mayor directly, 1ncludmg the length of the mayor's term
The council can adopt this procedure itself or place 11 before voters for their
approval
TEACHER FIRED IN BOY'S DEATH.:.
From Al
c o.-.ta Me\a, said I ut"s<lav that Warn·
c1:kc y,as lired last Thur\d.J) folio .....
mg an 1nvcst1p11on by Jame'i
C hambers. fair' IC""·., ~nior special
1nvcst1gat<>r.
Sarrao said three rc'>tra1nsng tt"Ch·
n1que'> apparentl) ""ere u~d May I
°"'hen Barth Pico a resident of
fa1rV1cw and a pupil at C11ll f duca·
uun C enter in l lunllngton Beach.
m1s0eha ... ed on 1hc bu\ and at 'l<:hool
The teacher placed a glove over one
of P1co's hand'>. allcgedT) put a diaper
over his head and taped 11 to block out v1~ual -.11muh man cfTnn 10 calm h4m
down, and rolled the boy m a mat
with the diaper aftcgedl) 1'1ll 1n plact>
according to Sarrao
The Fa1rv1ev. olfic 1al ..aid 11 wa~
1llepl to tapt: the diaper over Barth''
MAIN OFFICE
).)() ... "1 s., S! C:O.!• ... _ c ..
..... ~ ... ft<l• ·~~ Co-ia ...... CA 11,.,,,
~NI 642 6171 ~ & ~ .. 14? 4J;>
face, and that the matttn& technique
had been d1~ont1nued at Fa1rv1ew
lor a year
Sarrao s~ud that none of the
techniques used on Barth had been
approved by assessment teams or by
Fairview Executive Director Huah
Kohler.
Wamcc-ke had been c-mploycd by
Fairview for about eight ycan. She
was tcachma a class of I 0 younas1crs
who had behavioral problem• or had
multiple handicaps
Jn other developments stemm1n.1
from 8arth'•de111h, theOra~Coun
ty Department of Education has
be1un "a Staff asscs~ment"' to study
method\ and tcchmque!' dcsianed to
en•ure the '3fety ofthe youngsters.
Al\o the State Developmental!~
Disabled Aeency 1s urging the state'•
Special Education Comm1ss1on to co-
sponsor IC1Jslat1on dealing With re-
straining procedures in schools. said
Execuuve Director Rh ys Burchell
The orpmzatto n wants the state
Department of Education to ~
allowed to authonzc rqulauons for
•uch restraining procedures.
Merle E. Tracy, chairman of the
Developmental Disab1ht1es Arca
Board for Oranae County. said he 11
not looktnJ for scvere punishment
even though he's been _pressina for the
d1stnct attorney to reconsider a
dcc1s1on not to file cbllJCs.
He "'d he wanted it recoa,nited,
however. that people can't use that
ktnd of"bad judiment and get away
with It ••
Detty Piiot
DellvefJ
h Ouerenteed
~; '"Ollr II y~ '10 llOI ,.... ,_ -Or
CoflvfV' IPU I>•• C:O.•• ~ ~""' '• -MO'-Altlle!l(Jnl f¢1Qr ... .,...,,r (J' • .,...., "'
,..,," ............. , 0-@(>'~"" ... 1•o;• \C>K ... , ...
Just call 642-6086
What do you like about the Daily PiJot? Wbaa
don't you bke? Call the numbfr above aod your
metsaat wiJJ bf recorded:-tran1rnbed and de-
hvemj to the appropriate editor.
S30C.ll'I U ~ .. 'P"'
al'd 'fOl/I COO!' ... Oii
~
¥'il!T a-'CI ,.,.,. y II '°" CIO "°' tc-.,.,._ ~°"''"""' .• '0 • "' .-0 '°"' 'CIOt ...
Of •'9°11 _ ..
VOL 71, NO. 151
Thr same 24-bour 1n~n1 tcrvtcc may be
used to record letttn &o the editor on any topic,
Concnbuton to our Ltutn column mull tncludc
their name•nd telephone number for venflcation.
Tellt us "'hat's on your mind.
I
0.-
C&tcul8Uon
T tl1pi'MtMI
Acooling-o
A W.U w.ther ttOUgh moWlg·aoro. the Co.st *'" Iner .... the onthof9 ftow or motat OOMn llr. bf'lngtng low doudt
and tog to Southern Cd omla v.a.y. tonight and Thureclay
motnlng
Thu~ wlll b9 COOier, the National W .. thet ~ Myt,
wttl'I only parllal ciMrlnQ t•P901ed along the coast
Along the Oteng. Cout It will b9 fair today. Coutal low
oloud1 tonight .. tending lhto the vtlleya Mrly Thunday
morning Fair Thurld•y afternoon. Only pertlal afternoon
cteamQ '*r thetMl>MCMe Hlghl Thurld•y 11 the~ In
the mkf to upper eo.. LOWI tcmlQht In the mkt SO. to low eot.
High• Thurlday In the valleyt tn tfie upper 70. to mid ao.. LO*t
tonight In the mid 501 to low eo1.
U.S. Temps =~ ........ v.
..... ~Qcy
11 60 O!NM ~ ~ ~ ....
.. •1 "'-* : :; ::::r.._
17 73 ~.o..
IO 71 .. .. .. " It .. .. " .. n
71 N IO<l a 72 A
.. •2 73 to .. .,
J
71 IO ~~ '° .... ::rcny :: ., "-: : Calif. Tempe =~ '° •1 ...... Mof*'9
n .. . .. tf IO nu
11 • 11 ..
7• 64 HWl. IOw kit 14 '*"-tndlr>t et 6 am T.,_ V..., 70 ta ~ ~ " ....... l••Qly •• lellMIOtllO
U 70 1e1i4 .i.. 11 11 T-17 to ...,.. 97 54 y--~
., 17 ,_ '° .. ----------n " a..t1ia n • .,.... ICIOI" a" ·--~
74 M~ .... d .. 71 • LOe ""8IMe n ., Tl · ea .. 12 0..lend .. • , 11 .. to ;;;;.; ~: 12 T~1 "'"°0
71 17 T°'*'•
II 61 '-~ M M TOOAY :: : ==City ~ : leoond IOW I 4a pm 11 u M 72 T-M 71 .__ .. 66 ~· 106P•
71 M TulM
14 ., w~.oc 12.. ..... "54 ~· 71 ~ ~. .ll .N. flr9t•· -·-~1&.Ull. u. ..,, ,,~ .. 67 ~ 111111 .. 40 a.m.. ·--,. a ea
71 ...
IO M 17 .. ., 11
17 .... n 51 ,.. ...
----------..... ..,._. 11 g, a-.cflOw t'.1tpm 2 I
IMIC*IOn a ff '-Id hlQlll 1·ao p m a 1 Surf Report Hlgll, lcliw hit 74 110u.-411\dlno 11 a p m
AIJplaV..., H M Sun •• today at I.Of p.111.,, rteee
LOCAT!091 em IHAN lertlO'# 10I 70 TIVedll)'., a 42 a.m Md ... ~. ~llMdl 1-3 tw ..__,, tO 511 IOlp.m.
73 47 75 ISO
71 u
.. 71
"'-~. Newpot1 2.a ''* BIO ._ " '3 ..._ -1oe19y • 1.., p.M., ,..... 400\ av..t, '"'*"'°" 2-4 fair liltlOP M 511 Thur9dey •I 4 11 a.Ill Md ..U l9llfl •
17 " 71 10
iw~ ... o:: Net11on 2 '* llyttMI HM ,. 1·.a pm 4 lllr eut..Clt)' ti IO ----------1.2 ,,., 1.one ._. 111 11 •a--1-2 poof =-:: :: :: Smod Report
eo n .. 11 eo •1 13 17
103 71 ,. .. ., 16
Waler *"I> 17 .... ~.~ IO • ., 9 ~-~South ------~ 1751
----------......_ !Ol U Newporl leedl .. • t Eztended On!-13 &I , ..... ll9'tttoe 107 ,, ,...oeN IO M
" n ... 71
Awenlllf 64 ff .., ..,,,.,...., 11 ea 17 ,, .... Olllnll 11 It .. .. .... 11111'-74 .. ..,.,..,.,,. n a
GATES WINS SHERIFF'S RAC~ EASILY •.•
Prom Al
from the bench to campa1en. went~
far as to hire pnvate mvest1gators to
look into Gates' real estate holdings
in an effort to learn how he amassed
his personal wealth.
Gates said his assets come from
sound m vestmenas and pointed to an
FBI invest1ga11on dunng his fiNt
term 1n office that found no wrong-
doing.
Youngblood said his m vest1ptors
turned up several 1mpropnelles. The
state Attorney General's Office 1s
looking anto his allepllons
Youngblood himself has been plaaucd by financial d1fficulucs dur-
101 the campa1an. A former treasurer
and a woman who granted him i
short-term loan have both lodged
non-payment complaints against
him
· 'CalJigan. a 38-year-old M1ss1on
V1eJO resident. lambasted Gates for
what she described as 'his hcavy-
handed management style. The
Sheriffs Depanment suffers from
low morale because of him. she s~11d.
Call1~n and Gates waged an
expenswe coun battle early in the
campajgn over ht>r nght to make
allegations in her offi cial candidate's
statement
Calligan wanted lo tl"ll voters that
Gates was costing them millions of
dollars for temporary solutions to J•• I
o'crcrowding and lacked integrity
bec~use of his alleged l.llcpl own-
ership of a bar and purponed 1nvolvc:-
ment 1n covenng up a deputy"s arrest
for drunken dnvsng.
An Orange County Supenor Coun
Jl.ldgc labeled the allegauons false and
misleading and ordered them
stnckl"n from the statement that was
sent to all re11stcrcd voters.
The Judge's order trigcred an
intense scnes of higher court actions
which have not been resolved. The
4th D1stnct Coun of AppcaJ in Santa
Ana will consider Calligan's case June 18. .
Should the court rule that her
constitutional nghts were violated by
the censuring of her statement.
Calhpn intends .to deman~ 1 new
elccllon.
Gate, was first elected sheriff 1n
1974 after serving 12 years in the
department.
He was forced tn to a runoff election
only once -in 1978 by sheriffs Sat.
Loren Rusk
The sheriff-coroner's JOb pays
$79,019 a year.
WRITE-IN CAMPAIGN SUCCEEDING .• ·.
From Al
relied heavily on pencil,, rcfngerator
magnet'I and other item'> e mblazoned
with his name
Rosalyn Lever. county chief of
el~uon operations, said she didn't
ex.peel lbc rcsulli 10 c.h.an&c ~C1ll.I~
wruc-1n ballots are tallied by hand at
1nd1v1dual polling places before ~mg
entered into the counting machines
"In every election we have a few
other names thrown m. but I don't
1h1nk there will ~ more than a
handful," \aid Lever adding the
results will not be made official for
another sevt"n to I 0 day\
Hoffmann keeping his fingers
cro'i.-.cd . refu~d to concede defeat
lh1'\ morning
"h's \1111 loo clo.-.c tu call," he <;a1d.
· It's not over."
lhe wait for confirmation placesan
addendum to the cau\l1c race that
Jenerated nattonal attention and
Ill.Spiced a telev1s1o n ~cbatc via
satellite between Sumner and poht1-
cal l"'.\tremm Lyndon LaRouche.
And campa1ining wa, peppered
wnh bizarre accusations linking
Sumner 10 organized crime, and
coun1erchan1es that Hoffmann's
LaRouchtan.behefs were "ludicrous"
and "evil ..
Hoffmann, a 30-year-old technical
wnter from Santa Aoa, espoused the
platforms of perennial pres1dent1al
..cao~1date Lyndon LaRouche, mclud-
mg advocating quarantines for Al OS
v1ct1ms. LaRouche al'\o clatmri the
Queen of EnJland nnd the Rock·
e1'ellcrs are mvolvcd 1n a drug
conspiracy
Hoffmann considers the clo~ ra~
-not to mention the recent victory
of two LaRouche supponers in the
Illinois pnmary -tnd1cat1 ve that
ma10stream Democrats arc slowly
turning to the LaRouch11n camp
"The excuse in Illinois was peo ple
didn't know they were LaRouchc
candidates. Theres no excuse in th1'
case. It was h1ahly pubhc1zed," he
satd. Hoffmann said he spent SSOOon
his campa1an, while Sumner reported a war cl16t otSSJ;OOO.
Sumner. 61, a Newport Beach
lawyer and former JUd&e. was forced
into a congrcu1ono.J wnte·m cam-
pa1in af\er bomted county Demo-
crats discovered that Hoffmann was
runnina uncontested to become the
party's standard bearer
Admmcdly chagrined over the
party's failure to put a candidate on
the primary ballot, Sumner was
relieved this momirit after pmblina
his stature and the Democratic lead·
ersh1p's reputatfon in a risky write-in
campa1en.
"We had 1l aJI out there on the
line." Sumner said. "I admit it was a
scary thing. T can just hear LaRouc:hc
1fwc would have lost."
Sumner added that he doesn't
beheve the hand tabulation wiU live
the victory to Hoffmann. Nor docs
Sumner belteve that people who
punched Hoffmann's name knew the
candidate was a LaRouchian.
"'I don't care what Hoffmann says,
the voters didn't know 1t I won't f!ve
him anything." Sumner S&Jd. · We
showed LJR.ouch11ns they arc JlO.l
welcome here."
Sumner attnbuted his appare-nt
victory to media attention on
LaRouchc. a dm:ct-maJI campa1in
and tbC' hetp-of 200 volunteen who
targeted prec1ncu 1n the d1stnct on
Election Day
----------
Gifts For Dads & Grads
from J.C.::. Humphries Jewelers
Up to 40o/o off
Se le cte d Loose Di a monds
0 4 0 '!o off S e l ec t e d
Om e r• Watchea
1•t< men'• Seamasttr Ouem. featl'ltr atr1p
Reg S1150, Nowt 00
I •K "*1'1 Deville Quartz. t •k band
Reg $3000, Now t 1800
1•K with diamonds. 1'K band. rMnull
Reg $3650, Now $2190
14K meo'1 watch. menu I wlf'ld. suede 1trap
Reg • 895. Now • 535
Gent• OOldtone Saama11er Devlle Quartz
R'9Q s 496, Now. 291
' Sta!Olee9 SIMI Ouarlt Reg S 295, Now a 117
Two-tone S•m~ Oullrtt
Reg $ 295, How. 111
JC
phone 543-340 l SINCE 1946
FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK
eta COior clartty Sti. Pfloe
~8 Sl-1 $11•.oo
60 K VS·I $910.00
83 J' VS·2 .. $1,238
100 . a . VS·2 $3,700
1, 19 L . SI 2 .. .. $2,200
I ?.1 H . St·2 $3,000
I 39 G 51·2 $4,000
BankAmerlcard • M stercard • American Expre s
Mon-Sat 9:30am-S:l0pm • 1835 Newport Blvd .• Costa Me
--------
...
B lH l I r 1 N B o AH o
8o1Jl:.•d nlgbt pro r onKOCE
Proaraau to encou.rge ..r.· and IOber ai-du.
ation niahU ln Oranae County will be dilcuucd F~yat 8:30~ on Jim Coooer1<>ra,. County airinJ ovtr K Channel SO. ' ~na Beac Police Chief Neil Pun:eU will
speak. an 1uppon of hit city'• pad niaht petty, orpn~ and g>0nton4 by parenu ln the h.iah
IChool dmrict. Otber 1uesu will ~nt Corona
del Mar and Newpon Harbor htah 1ebool1. The
1bow will be rebroadca1t Saturday at 10 a.m.
Stin care tal.k bJ Alea
Richard Steffan an authority on akin care, wtll ab.are retultt of hit 15 years of research on the 1ubjcct
at Monday'• mcetina of the Lu..COnctw de OrO, a ~ orpnmtion for &u.aincu and pto-
fesaional women. The event will be held from 11 :30
a.m. to 12:30p.m.attheCopade0rorestawant.633
Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. The colt iJ $20 per penon
and luncheon reservauon1 are available at 964-9090
lnve•ton' coane at OCC
A ~urut business course examinina prin-
ciples of investina will be prnented from Monday
throuah Aua. l at Oran.JC Coa1t Col!ese in Cotta M"8· Investment -4Vl~r David P-ilac:o .. is the .
m1tructor and further mfonnation 11 available at
432-5772.
NOW often peace talk
The Bayview chapter of the Nationa.1 Oraaniza-
tion for Women will present two auest 1pea1Cers on
the national orpniz.atiop "Beyond War" and an
update on the Oreat Peace March Monday at 7:30
p.m at the Newpon Balboa Savinp and Loan, 302 l
E. Cout HiJhway, Corona del Mar. There i1 no
admission ctwac and the public is invited. Call
545-2669 for further information.
Women la.yen to meet
Dean Vanleeuwen, parole aaent for the state of
Caltfom11. will speak to the Oranae couni.r Women
Lawyen on "pcaona.l safety awarcneu' at the~ -
Monday noon luncheon meeuna in the Ora.nae
County Medical Conference Center, 300 S. Flower
St. in Oranae. The cost is S 11.50 for members and
S 14 for non-members. Call 760-0313 for details.
Dependency talk .et
Jane Shoup from Newport Outpatients wtll
spca.k on chemical dependency at Tuetday's
meetma of the Oranae Coast charter chapter of the
Amencan Business Women's Association at Ver-
duao's Mu1can Restaurant, 3850 S. Plaza Drive,
Santa Ana. Contact Penny Dunseth at 9656-4332 or
75-4-6386 for reservation mfonnation.
·Lions'
Fish Fry
reels in
$136,000.
Net proceeds must stJ ll
be tallied: money from
raffl e sales keeps coming
By TONY SAA VEDR.A °' ..............
Grosa receipts from the 41st Annual
Filb Fil tn Cotta Mela wt weekend
totaled S 136,429 from the tbouandt of
revelen entertained by the Cotta Mesa·
Newport Harbor Uon1 Club.
The three-day carnival at Uooa Park bu
become one of Coeta Mesa'• oldest
traditions; inapirina 1*1'ds about the
festival'• oriain• and t6e ''eecretbetter"
uaed to coat the filh dinnen.
Lion• Vice President Paw I.ainu i&iif -
more money was 1till comina in from raffle
ticket lllet, and expenditum bad yet to be
· subtracted.
The net proceed• will bo uacd to support
the Lion1 charity p!Olt'lfDa. 1ucb u
donation• to the UCI Eye Bank and a bearina foundation. Neatly SI million bu
been pmered 1lnce restaunteur Heinz
IUiaer bettered hi• fint fish for the
inauaural ft1tiv1J in 1945.
Hiahli&bted by a parade Saturday down
Hatbor 'Boulevard. the Fish Fry also
featured an old-fuhioned baby contest.
Top honon went to Kristen Marie
Bqwell, 11 montlu of Cotta Mesa; and
Alexandria Key, 18 months. of Hunt-
1naton Beach. i
~tt took the 6-to 12-mon~
div111on, while K.ey topped the compeu-
uon in the 13-to 24-montb cateaory.
Besides babies, the fair also featured
bath1n1 beauties vying for the title of Miss
Costa Mesa-Miss Mermaid. Wendy John-
son, 19, captured the crown, with Jodi
Eddy, 211 winmna first runner-up; and
TyleT White, 17. named second runner-up.
Jody Davis of Costa Mesa lassoed the
top prize of the weekend, a 1986 Ford
Mustang.. durina the final raffle.
.
Self-defen•e demon•tratlon
Jan Tanner will speak on basic self-defense at
Tuescby's luncheon mcetina of the Costa Mesa
Kiwanis Club, scheduled for noon at the Costa Mesa
Community Center She and her partner. Chuck
Bellah. will put on a demonstration of man1al arts
techniques. Call Bob M11hken at 631-1266 for more
infonnauon.
Foes of jail near stadium .
Group takes
aim at faster
homes crisis
. . ---
to fight funds for pla~
Infant survival tal~ •lated By STEVE MARBLE
ud LAURA MER&
OflNDl!lr ........
Anaheim and the touristS who flock there
"Thu 1s JUSt a lousy way to find a
solulJon to the Jail problem:· said Bud
Smull. president of an oppossion aroup
called Jail Actlt>n Committee.
Doman's ..38th ConaressionaJ Dtstnct
Tuetday.
Guadalupe Homes. a Cahfomta duld-
help orpruz.allon, bas opened an of'ficc m Ont.oar County to help relieve tbecounty'~
foster borne crisis Dr Thomas G Keens, an assoctate prof~r of
pcd1atncs and neonataJ respiratory diseate$ at
Children's Hospital in Los Anaeles.. will talk on the
sudden infant death syndrome at Tuesday's meeting
oflhe Orange County Guild for Infant Survival. The
proaram 1s free and will be held at 7:30 p.m. Call
Lynne Trujillo at 551-1634 after I 0 p.m. for the
..address. d1rcct1ons and other infonnauon.
OpponentS of a proposed county 1111
near Anaheim Stadium will Oy to Sacra-
mento Thursday to fi~t the county
"poht1cal move for political move" by
tryma to cut off fundina for the project.
The JfOUp, which includes representa-
tives ofDisneyland and the Rams. plans to
lobby for a leaislative amendment that
would make It all but 1mposs1ble for the
county to build the new Jail.
Andy Camocho. an attorney and board
dtrector of the Rams. SJ1d a branch 1a1l
would hamper operations at Anaheim
Stadium and would be unappealma to
spectators.
"We're not oppo~d io Jails. but this as
hardly the place to put 1t," he said
Meanwhile. the county is prepared to do
its part to m.fluence !Jlwmalcen throuah 111
lobbyist. County Adnumstrator Larry
Panshwd.
"The Lesislaturc 1s havina enouah
problems findm& sates for state pnsons-1
don't know why 1t would want 10 suck 1U
nose into Oranie or any of the other S8
counties an the state," sa1d Pansh.
While Ora~ County's SOCJal service$
department was ask1~ for supervisors'
help 10 (>ubHCl.ZC a cnbcal Jack of foster
homes. Guadalupe Homes. a 20..year-old
orpn121uon founded in Redlands 10 J 966,
wu already expandtn& 1u operauon mto
Oranae County
County supervisors, under a court order
to relieve crowding at the main Jail m
Santa Ana, agreed earlier this year to
consider bu1fdma another Jail near
Anaheim Stadium.
"Trying to get the state involved an this
JUSt isn't quite cricket." he wd.
Pansb said he can understand the
opposition of Anaheim residents and
business ownen.
Wednesday,June4
"If the county wants to play hardball
politics on the j&1l 1ssue, then so be it," said
Anaheim Mayor Don Roth, who plans to
join the lobbyina m1ss1on to the state
capital The 1ail could be built b) 1990 and
would cost an estimated S 150 malhon
according to prOJCCtlons
"Dumps and1a1ls -everyone wants us
to pack it up but nobod} wanl' us to put 11
down," said Pansh ... They want us to pick
up the trash and they want us lo pick up the
cnm1nals, and they want us to put them an
someone else's backyard ••
The ne~ offict has been opened an
Garden Grove. with Steven C YounJ as
director. The organ1zat1on's 1mmeduatc
task IS to intensify its Homefinding Agency
role Lack of (oster homes m Orange
County h.as been a ma1or concern for the
county welfare and soaal ~rv1c~ depart·
ments and for Orangewood. the new
fac1h1y that provides c;hon-t shelter
and can: for abused, neaJected or 01herw1~
needy children
• 7:30 p.m .. Irvine Commalty Services
Comml11loe. City Counol Chambers. 17200 Jam-
boree BJvd. • 7 p.m Bottleattk Aaaly1i1 u d Toll Road
Shldf. TJJslln High School. 1171 Et Camano Real.
Tustin
Thursday. June 6
The amendment to a Jail construction
bill would P.roh1b1t the use of state funds to
build a jail near an amusement park or
ma1ot spons stadium The hcanna on the
amendment was onainally scheduled for
Monday
Roth was on a plane at John Wayne
Airport when he reoe1ved a page from a
Sacramento consultant who sa1d the
heanna was continued un11I Thursday.
The opposiuon ~oup 1s \upportm& the
amendment to a J&JI construn1on funding
bill. The amendment, wntten by Sen John
Seymour. R-Anabe1m. and Assemblyman
Richard Robinson. D-Garden Grove, 1s
scheduled for debate Thursday before the
Senate Pubhc Safety Comm1t1~.
Roth sa1d the Anaheim site selected for a
brach Jill 1s wonb at least S 10 malhon and
could be used for more lucrative purposes
than a1ad.
The mayor, who wtll face Orange Ma yor
Jam Beam ID a November runoff for the
4th Supervisonal Dis~ la~tcd
supervisors for dragmg 1he1r f~t on the
Jail issue and then qu1cldy picking a site
"within a touchdown's throw of ;\nahe1m
Stadium and D15neyland ..
The pnvatc. non-profit corponu1on
already conducts operations in R1ve"1de.
S8n Bernardino, Los ngelC\ 01nd Sacra-
mento counties
• 7· 30 p. m , JrviJae PlaJl.atq Commi11ton. City
Council Olambtrs. 17200 Jamooree~d. The proposed Jatl. which would noose
up to 1,581 inmates, has drawn the wrath
of residents and business owners who
believe It would have a cnpphng_ effect on
The oppos1uon group hopes to address
commtttee members "I thank we have a
~ chan~ of getting ti lhrou&ll ... said
Roth "Seymour and Robinson arr dedi-
cated to our cause " Robinson won the
Democratic nom1na11on m Rep Robert K
't oun1 said GuadalUJ>! Hom~ wall
opel':ltt under contract witli the ount y o
Oranae to find foster home<; 1n Orange
( ount} for deix-ndents and ""ard" nt the
coun from birth 10 agc I H
Pou cE Lo G
Marine coaxed from tower,
arrested in rape of girl, 14
By LAURA MERI(
ot .. o.9r,... ...
El Toro Manne Corps Cpl. Ptulhp
J. Wheeler was arrested Tuesday on
$USpac1on of rape after a ba~ chaplain
spent two hours coaiuna Wheeler
down from a water tower
Wheder. 28 was booktd a1 the
Oranac County 1ail in conncctson
w11h the rape of a 14-year-old Irvine
11rl at her Woodbridae home Sunday
niaht. Ht 1s bean& held 1n heu of
Newport Beach
A diamond nna wonh $25,000 WU ~poned 1tolen from a ru1dence on Point
Sur 1n Spyalau Htll.
Two eoolcn wontf$ wcrtll'ren from
1 earpon on the 400 ~lock of 8c*to Way • • • Two d1rtttor'1 cha1ra wor1h SU wete stolen fmm a ttt0nd-Ooor balcony on the m Mock of£dacw9tcr. . ··~-V1ndll1 cautcd S4<JU 1n dam.,e to a
toilet 1n a public mtroom located 11 tht' "
Strtet tnllt'llClpa) pe.rkjna 101 • • • someone •m•shf:d out tht rar window
of 1996 Old•mobik perked on the I '°1
block of Ocean Boulevard • • • A buraJar smashed h11 -.1y into a
rn1dcn« on ~ I I nd Dnn and tool
JC .. ~lry. a V1dco ('.8Utllt recordtt llfld u~cnl camnu Tbe I came to U.900.
lnlne
A black and p>ld btcyd~ w11h an
Amrnc11n I -.pru lttekc:r on th' t.ck wat
._.~, 1tolr.n from 1hc 4100 blocli. of
SI 50.000 bail~
Wheeler 1s suspected of cntenna
the home throu&h an unlocked door
The 1Jrl's parents wuc at home at the
time of the rape but apparently did
not hear her cnes for help. accord1na
to police.
s,t. Dtck Bowman said poltcc
foundacarparkedonCulvcrDnve in
their search of the area Sunday niaht
after the incident. A check on the car's
tqJstrat1on revealed 1t belonae<f to
Wlteeler. who was arrested a year aao
Homestead Streel Tuetday. • • • A video casw11t ~order, came,., tomr spor1t equipment and 1ewclry wu s1olrn
from an unlocltcd Oldsmobile parkcd on
Summmtone Tuetday. • • • Two nm' and ttlT~. valuC'd at about S300. ~rt stolen from • 197'& Oamaro puked on thc 17txXl block of Jordan
Avenue • • • A wtutA! 1967 Volk1wtatn but wn
Jtoten ftom Anatll Slm:I . ' . Tbc idc petio aoor nf 1 homt on
R.aaano wu pried optn and 1Nfllal11tok a video c1acue tte0rdcr valued at SSOO • • • T'ft'O m.q wbecb and tome tam. valut'd
at about Sl,000 . .....-ft &tolen from Auto
f'• tcr Dnvc • • • A bticfcur coniain1na • ehed.booll waa aiolu &om &A uni« ked Ctlc-m>IC'l Malibu parked on 1hr 14900 block of
W111nly Lant • • • Som~nr a111emp1td 10 teal t~o can
parked on K.nnllfkn futtday night by
'"'"'"-a ~dn"er 1n 1he 1an1t1on An
I
for attempted rape an a neighborhood
near Woodbndac. pohce said
The 1Jrl 1denufied Wh~ler from
photoaraphs. said Bowman
Carryina warrants for Wheelcr''l
arrest. two Irvine mvcshptors went
to the El Toro Manne base Tu~)
Befort they could arrest Wheeler he
climbed to the topofa 100-foot water
tower.
The base chaplain spent two hours
talkma to Wheeler before he crawled
down on h11 own. said Bowman
attempt waa made on 1 I Q~4 Honda
Accord and a 198S Honda (. 1111c • • • A black Huffy c:ru111cr b1(.")'elc wu itolcn
from 1hcprqcof1 home on thC' tOOblock or K11an trcet ••• Four m1crov.1ve1 WC"rr uolcn from aputmt'Otl undtt constructton on Hunl·
mtton Tuetday • • • ~ black Huffy tTUlln' b1kt .-.as stolen (rom lbe rttr y&rd or a homc on the I 00
block of PineVKW Tue9day
C.O.taMema
Two antJqU( titromeitn worth S7SO
~ ""P(>nod ~ floonl MreondtpU) Mttquet. 19S7 Newport Bl vd, bnwttn
May 14 and Monday. Tbt item& ~
rtp0ncd 1akctl &om 1 locked eabincnt, pcm1bly .-tth a Uv, -, ..
A woman Olmt home Tuad&y II "JS
p,m toftnd1-opr1 t&kipa1temsrromber
...,... 1n an apatUM1lt al 2620 Eldc11 A "c
The buraJan too a dWn saw cool bo• nd vacuam m.1d11nt M>tth i2h • • • JC'lrel.ry, 1 aunn-a and -cash ~
rC'portcd 'tolen from a homC' tn the l 100
block of Canyon Dnv(' Monday around 9
a m The loss was valuC'd 11 S623
H untincton Beach
her purse was stolen Monday from an
un111cndcd locker while she was 1ak1n1
par1 in an aerobics class at Richard Simmons' ,l\natqmy ..\sylum. 18030
Brookhun1 lit The los1 1ndudrd S400 in cash and ~me c~tt carr1'
••• ~ rc,1dC'nl of thc 95CXJ hlod. ol \l•lt'r
Av told pohct' Tuc'!d.a~ tt-111 1h1cvc~
~mas a window to burs,lan1c ht\ tirown 198~ Maida Thr l~s 1ncludl"d ,, mrn '' watch value<! at j ICXI Employres 11 Laundry Land. 6949
Wamcr Avc n:por1ed that somconr put
about SI 00 1n countrrfet1 money in the
onc~ollar bill chan_JCr It 11 ipeculated
that culpnt1 art puttlnf tht phon)' m~nl'V
in coin chan&e" at vinous laundromats • • • Bingham defense rests
A ..,om1n said ihe wu slttp1na in her
rHtden~ IO tbe 6000 block of Edtn&er
whtn 1 man in 1 black malk cntt'~ and
't•bbrd her in the ltt • .... T~o \\('rt() ,peakers and I clau nna w11h 1 1ot1l value of USO were ,1olcn from
11978 Volk,wqcn perked at Manna Hta.h
~hool • • • Thttve' stoic st1eken, emblem' and a
tlq ant'r c:n1enn• the ~vron Production Cenl«. 20031 Golden Wm t. throua,h a window • • • Bur&la.., stolt 1v.o perk bt'ncl'i~\ialucd
at $900 from lhr M11l C'enter, 16 78 l Reach
Blvd
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -The de-
fense an the tnal of Stephen B1n&}lam
rested Tuc9day after the former
radical la~r refutc'd to 1dentsfy
·people who helpeod ham dunna his I'\
years as a futillve
C1osma arsuments are expected to
bqsn Thunda)' when Binaham's tnal
on two oounts of murder and one
count of consparac) resumes ·
Binaham, 44, as accu~ of 1hpp1na
a pastol to Blick Panther leader and
mthtant inmate ~oric Jack50n dur-
1n11I97 I v1s1utSanQuenunpmon
ProS«Utor Terry Boren uys Jackson Fountain Valley used the pistol to ,pttrk an C'$C'ape
" r•mp1n 111k at lo' Am110' H111t attempt that rtsultcd in tttt death\ of
School. 16'\M N..-whope S1 . re~ lil J)COplc, includin1Jacbon h1m~lf
Tuctday 1h1t tomc:nne.poured a bqWd Bina.ham vanished the day of the
-A1th p&lfl"1'"Cmov1na propcrucs on the violf!'nct and remained a f~bve hood of bfr bh1t t qU Ponuac F1~bird uDJ.il he sutrendcrcd to autborit.Jca an
The damaae was caumatcd at UOO •.. J--· 19.4 • • • 0 • ,.
A rn1d..-nt of thc 1&600 block of Durina crot1-elaminat1on by M~n10 rtpuntd 1 urtday that th1e"" Bortn Tuetday. in repeatedly
cntetfd the rnr ,.ard ofl\(T home throqh refused to reveal the names of people
an unlfttkcd wM<kn pte and stoic her "-ho htlped ham flee the counu·y after dot. namod l'~naJ, The 1n11n.1I was · •--' .i. blood ide-nttfltd u 1 ~month-old "'°"· ..o be wu unplu:a~ 1n we )'
pound 2 fCott wl and' f«t lo Tlae ctct bn:a.kout attempt and an his aubae-
"' valuec:t at ino qucnt tra'els lhrouah Europe, Can-
ltrndnts of the• i IJOO and 11400 ad.a and the Uru\ed Stat
b "' ~r Stoocaaa "'lJOrtcd TUQdav "I ha11t.a lo):alty to the pcooplt who
n\auhe'ircanb.adbecn rind. helped me and I don t want them~
rqu rmtnt wonh S 1.so ..,.., 11olen ftom\ a suffer for the f.14"1 they hetpeod me,
... hltf' r111 CO\lpc kTT<l cq1.upmnt ~ 81oP•m said
St 200wauaken frmn1ttrown1ndbronu Boren quett1oncd 81n~ham 1n
19'9 L1n<'Oln lown Car • n•tnstaluna 1.ktA I about hts tf'l\Cl~ • • • ·-d ( ' rv.Pott Beach rcs1<k'n1 1old aohCIC' tach umt a\k1na the 1 ent1t1cs o
..
people he menuont'd, rcrt•att'Jl1t
askma Bm&}l.am about hC'' he 1 1IJ tll
protect hts 1dent1t}
Tht pro~utor tnt'd tCi 'how
81naJtam bccamt comfonahk with
tyma under oath as he u~ hi\ tal~
1dent1ty Robert Boans. to oh1a1n
official document' and lnt'wl"I Imm
one country to anothtr But 81n~am
~1d he lied only tx-cau~ ht ~licved
he would be ,Jain 11 authontt" CIUJhl
ham and that he bad not lied dunna
h1, tnal.
"~t lhc ume I hcd under u,\th. I did
\0 10 keep mv.elf from bc'tng killed.''
ht' ,.1d ''That'' JU\t the way I felt
atMlul 1t "
Bm&ham tt'1t1fied he and his nkl4!
1cal mends behtved Jackson WU
a ina~acSanQuenttnh pn
offiaal who wanted lo J('t ncf of I
inmate He 1&1d he hehe"ed the
fatt la) tn store for him 1f he
apprthended b~ 1n\IC$f ton. w
had ftlCkcd htm as a Q oat for t pnaon blood th •
Ht abo id he bdicvcd
C'ODIPlf'IC) me-ant pruon 0 •
othctl would lie.~ hi if
tned
.. T ~htv"1 people would he
didn't know what etfect that
ha'e on whether or not I
l('(!Ultted '" he 1!1
..
Lo .. sAD-·gelesblgh schOo-1.g.-~-.-d-s_•_o_n_'_tlJ_a_Vi_e_'a_p._~_•yi_e_r _B_a_b_y~"'-denieO Ileart
Dist11crs board voted ID a doted lion, or a staltmcnt oftbank'tglVIOI, Brodhead, an ctor. planned to sw1· tch; hosp1· tal LO ANGE.LES (AP) -Praye~
aad direct references to God will be
banntd It h1ah school aradwillons. ln
a victory for an atheist wbo went to
coun to keep religion out of hi~ son's
se io~Tuesday to order stud nt but won't be able to refer to God, drop b.is uperior Coun suit today.
leaden pJann1n1 their aractuauona to Ravera 1aid. · accordfoa to Carol A. Sobel, h1s
avoid reliaious statements, said Bill "We are very pleased," 1a1d Jame Amencan C1vtl L)bcrties Union at-
Rivera. an assistant to the 1uper. Brodhead, who sued to keep cer-tomey. • ht • der
intendent. emorues secular for bis son, Dan, who .. , thmk the dJStrict bu beco fairly m ig rec 0ns1
Stu<knt will be allowed an invoca-at~nds Van Nuya Hiab School. reasonable," Sobel S&Jd.
commencement ceremony
The Lo An&eles Unified School
20th ~ersary .Offer: 2 People or 2 Years For 1
211'1. ~r' in ht1'mc" '' J Ii 1nR t1mt' E~pt·t 1allv natton's leading cruun of health club~. An<.l alter 20
years in business, we rem better stupe ch;m ever. 1111 .1 Ile.11th duh "'
\\ r '1.· lk.'l'l1 .1r1.1unJ ,1111. t 19<i1 And 11 .., e-J..,\ 10
'l.l '"" \\t' ul kr ln11n.· 111 thl'. m11,c ad' ;m1.1.·u
1.qu1pnw111.ind m< 11.krn l.t1.1l111t'..,
2 people for 1 IS a non -rene-wable,
I year membership
'\l '' \\l' ll' u k hr.1t1n~ • iur 20th ~mnl\ er..,;i n
".11h .1 ... pn I.ii .111n1'cr..,.1r, ntkr J111n nu\\ JI
Ill\ I 111 .:111 tLlll<>ll'.llll1:!ti2 \c,.Jr..,or 2 p<..:upk-
1111 l I 1t p1 ll <. ti I \ .1 II tlf , 111111. h\ l rn.iJ~ for J
I rn: gllL'"l It 1t11
ll11lid.1\ "'p.1 I It .tl1l1 < luh \Xcrc part of tlH:
''AHEl\t \l0\11 \IJ1411 .. l1.1 I lll•"k '11111l I 1nll1ln (''UJ'X2·\IOI
URRIMfU.J<.£~000 llHHI I)(') Am<• Hhd JI l'111rKtr ~ hlod,, F J\t 111 hll'i ~rtCWJ\ {llj) 9.!-1 1'I •
I O_,H ~A .!'111\t llJrbot lllHI (lkh1ml 111111!\ l iru14I. 17HI S-.9 ~JM
If! 'TI\(, ro\ 8Bt H 1-11•11 lk II h Hh ll II \l.JffK r tn lh<'. l lw1c:r ( l:Olrt'. Cl-4) 8il4·191'>
\tl\,IO\ \ IEIO !~ 101 It• tJ l'I;\" JI 'Jn l >1q.t11 l rtT\\ J\ 1 ·1-11 -,i~lHll
r>R"C.~1 __ f-J,t l\JldlJ \~t \\n1 ;I IU~lill \\~ .CHJbJ) !111
SOLTSA& (~OMP~
Jraditional (glot6ing ·
OFFE~S· TO TME P<J6LJC AS A
~i [tii ;i ~~?I tJ(i M (•1~1)4tll a
On Entire Stock of Men' 1/Vlomen' 1 Crothing and F11rni1hln91!
R1s1ng operational costs failure to realize ant1c1pated income and lack of sentiment on the part of our
creditors , forces us into this pos1t1on sell ott the stock, convert the merchandise into cash and
let tomorrow decide the future Every ettort will be made to weather the storm
Therefore· ettect1ve 1mmed1ately. the entire stock has been placed on sale at a fraction of its true selling
pnce. every1hmg including the newest arrivals for spnng and summer. There are no exceptions .
no restnct1ons If it's in the store it's for sale at "NEVER AGAIN PRICES " This sale is for you
Don I MISS 1tt .c
Over One Million Dollars of current and 1ust arrived men's suits, sport coats, slacks, dress shirts,
ties and assorted sportswear, also ladies' suits, slacks, sport coats, dresses and assorted
sportswear at reductions of 30't to soi
IF WUCWLYREMEMBEI< ON£ J>At£ IN KJU~
WHO/..~ /./FERM( ... T/:llJ> Wl/.J.11£ THE ONE.I
THE SELLING OF THI S STOCK IS NOW AN URGE.NT NECESSITl'
MMu1Cerd. v-&.
Anwrican ~ ..cc.,...erd.
621 South. B Sti~d
Tustin~ CA 92680
PhoM1 71~/731-7151
*TUSTIN STORE ONLY STORE HOURS:
Mon • Sat 1 ().-6
Sun · 1 f -5
r"'t ,,.. at .. ,. '"" • llUlhtJ ttort
•114 "'" "'"''" • 111111tty ,,,,. ""''' tllt IHI tty Of Ill lf1tltl'IU ~I Hi.
p11cn on"""*'"'"''""'"''"" rot t1111 rw1.-to m• •rt"' "
1191 trtl'"'llf Ott If fer you
Don I flllP 1tt
LO ANGELES (AP) -A p~ltfe
activist and a priest say a baby w11h a
fatal bean defect was ~fused a chance
at a transplmt because hospital
officials believed the unmamcd
parents couldn't adequately care for
the child after surgery.
But the act1vist and the rnest say It
looks hlice the hosptta .may be
rcconsiderina its refusal.
After news coverage of the family's
situation, a hospital officw told the
parents to call today and set up a
meeting, said Susan Carpenter
McMillan, a spokeswoman for the
anti-abortion R1&ht To Life League .
. Sbc said the offiaal did not specify
that the mcetmg would concern a
transplant.
"I feel hopeful that Loma Linda
will reoonstder httle Jesse's chance.
being trust it is the mother's b1nhday
(today) and that would . be the be\t
present in the world," said the boy's
father in a statement released b~
McMillan.
"We're fighting the clock here," ~he
said. "Smee when does a hfe depend
on what family you were born into""
She also said the baby, known only
as Jesse, was to undergo hfe-prolon$·
ing surgery in Los Angeles this
BabyJeue
momm1t-Offic1als at the Loma Linda med•·
cal center60 miles cast of Los Anacles
would not comment ducctly on the
refusal accusation TueSday. Doctors
at the hospital transplanted a baboon
hean into an infant known as Baby
Fae in a futile 1984 attempt to save
her iife.
Doctor asks $500 to testify
in OC trial; arrest ordered
By the A11odatecl Prell
A drunkcn-dnving murder tnal wtll begin 10 Orange County even 1f a
doctor who wants SSOO to tesufy continues his refusal to appear in court,
despite an arrest warrant issued for him Supenor Coun Judge James L. Smnh
rescheduled for today the murder tnal of Michael Wesley Rcdins after Dr
Davjd Dantes faJled to appear for the second consecuuve day Smith said
openm$ argument~ would be heard whether or not Dantes appears today
Smith issued an arrest warrant Monday for Dantes for fa1hng to obey a
subpoena to testify and has ordered him held on $25,000 bond if apprehended.
Retling. 27, of Fuflenon. 1s charged with second-degree murder man October
1984 drunken-drivmg colhs1on that killed Pamela Trueblood, 36, of Fullenon
and her three children
Lawsults ffled after bus tragedy
LOS ANGELES -The first lawsuits stemming from the Mono County
bus accident that k1lled 19 people have been filed in Los Angeles Supenor
Court. Mary J Amswonh, 6 7. ofSani.a Monica. one of 22 passengers tnJi.lred in
the bus accident last Fnday 10 the ru8'ed Walker River canyon on U.S 395
north ofBndgeport. Caltf. filed a SI m1lhon lawsuit Tuesday blaming the bus
dnver and the tour company for her extensive IOJunes. Attorneys for another
in1ured passenaer. Henry Dandurand 68. also filed a $20 m1lhon suit agamst
Starhne Sightseeing Tours and bus dnver Ernest A Khmeck
LP album poster brings porn charges
LOS ANGELES -Five people. including the lead singer of the Dead
Kennedys. have been charged with pornograpb> for including a scllually
explicit poster wnh 1he1r album .. Frankcnchnst" "The poster depicts a close-
up montage of I 0 exphcn sex acts,'' (lly Attorney James Hahn said Tuesday.
"It's hard.Jo imagine a more ~xuall)' exphcn poster. and 11 1s the height of
1rresponS'i01hty for 11 10 be packaged with an album d1Stnbuted to minors "
Jello 81afra. leader and songwnter of tl,lc San Francisco-based group. said,
"Needless 10 say we deny the charge "We think this 1s the first of the tnckling·
down effect of efforts by the religious right to censor rock an1sts and other
artists." The poster 1s en111led "Pems Landscape," which 81atra said
reproduces a painting by European artist H R. Giger that has been shown at
galleries and exhib1t1ons.
Fraternlty ousted over rape sues school
SAN DIEGO - A San Diego State U01vers1ty fraternity thrown ·off
campus for its purported in volvement 1n the alleged rape of a soront)' pledge is
suing to overturn the acuon, saying the school overstepped its authonty and
demed the fraternity a fair tnal. The P1 Kappa Alpha fraternity was suspended
from campus for five ye.ars io February following a d1sc1plinaf) heanng b)' the
untvers1ty In add1t1on, 29 fratern1t> members were gi ven punishments
ranging from expulsion to repnmands
Sikh m.ilitants in bloody
tem.ple protest; 1 killed
By tbe Associated Pre11
AMRITSAR. lndJa -Sikh militants went on a rampage today in the
Golden Temple dunng an anti-:iovernment. rally on the second anniversary of
the bloody army assault on their holiest shnne. One man was killed and seven
people were injured. About 200 m1h\ants armed w11h swords, knives aod iron
bars began attackmg members of a volunteer force guarding the temple as the
rally drew to a close Polrcc and secunty fon:e, entered the temple complex to break up the melcc
Commander Zero granted asylum
SAN JOSE. Costa Rica -Eden Pastora, the former Nicaraguan rebel
leader known as Commander uro, was granted pol111cal asylum Tuesday in
Costa Rica. 18 days after 11vma up his fi&ht apmst the lefust Sandinista
government The Foretgn Mmistry said the dcc1s1on came after Pastora 49
had agreed to ab1de by the nauon 'slaws and bah any further hostihues .Pin st
the Sandin1stas while liv1na here. Costa Rica bas no stand1na anny and a Jona·
held pohcyofneotral1ty in Central Amencan afTaus. Foreign Minister Rodri&o Ma~~gal Nieto sa.ad Costa Rica has a Iona tradition of grantina asylum to
poht1cal refugees of all persuasions and said the government based its dec1s1on on humanitanan arounds
Soviet. warn summit lnjeopardy
MOSCOW -A Soviet deputy forctgn minister warned today that any U.S. violation of the Stratesic Arms Limatauon Treaty wt1Jjcopard12e chante$
for a superpower summit thlS year, but he declined to compfetely ruJe out a U .S.-Soviet meeting. Alexander Bessmertnykh was asked at a news conference
whether President Reapn'' plan to abandon the unt11tified 1979 aarecmcnt cons~ituted an insunnountable obstacle to a Washmaton summit th11 year. "A
meet1na of leaders of these two countncs cannot be isolated from
dcvetopments in the world, from developments m Soviet-Amencan relatJon'J
panicularly 10 the fleld of ~unty," Bessmcrtll.Ykh !I.Id Reapn said la.st
Wednesda)' he would not be bound by the SALT II uuty in future mihta.ry •
dec1Stons. But he sugested the United States miabt stay within the SALT
limits 1f the Soviets take "constructavc stt'P" •• to corrett alleicd arms nolations
and negotiate scnou,ly on a new arms trt'aty. .
Moslem Ylolence ~Jatea ln BeJrat
BEIRUT -Shute Moslem militiamen who Cl'\lShtd a Sunni faction in a
I S-hOur howdown on the •t.reets of we t Beirut tod.a~ ~nded rby
Palestinian refuset camps with mortar fire. Pale tinian suemllas rcta.tiated by
sprayin1 Shiite slum surroundina Sibra. ChatiUa and Boll!) el-Bara;nch
campt with roc:ket·pro~llcd arcnade and mactune aun lire, police vid. The)
said two 9C0plo were lcdlrd and 1evcn wounded on the 17th day offiahtina in
the ah.antytOWM, raitina to 83 dead a.nd 370 v.oundcd the lnown toll 1n t~
· cum-nt round of war for control of the ref ustt camP'. Police ~lso n:poned 13
more death• from the Stti1tt unnl confrontation Tu y. Th<") u.id 4$
people had been lolled m the militia bautc. and that 127 peoplt ~e~ ~ounded
and 21 ~ miss1na. Another 21 people were killed Tuesd.ly in fi&)l11n1
between tht' Shute~ and Pale-stinians at t~ rtfu Cln\J" "
! NATION 'I '~--=-~------~-------
Activist fas ts for
h omeless shelter
~
W ~HINGJ"<?N (AP) L The Sen-
ate, tn neaouauon behind cloxd
dool"I and a resolution on the Senate
floor, is uf)ina the Wlute House to
release SS million for repaJrt to a
crumblint shelter for the homeless
and end a hunger 4trike by activist
Mitch Snr,der.
Snyder• hunier stnke entered its
fourth day today as the leader of the
Commuruty for Creative Non-Viol-
ence refused to take food or water
unless the Rcapn administratJon allows shelter repairs to bcmn.
A d~or at ~tie Washinaton Un~erstty Hospital says Snyder,
matuna bts second fast an less than
three months, could face scnous
IDJU'Y by the weekend 1fhe contanu~
to reject water.
The White House says 1t W1ll not
release the funds until Congress
transfers the Capitol Hill shelter to
the city aovemment's control but the lqislati~n bas been tied ~P in 1 oonpess1onal mue.
The Senate, meanwhile, pve iu
stro~iest sus>p<>rt yet for Snyder, pass1~ by voice vote a non-bindint
resolution callina on the White House
to "immediately releue a portiort of
the SS million the administration has aaree<t to provide for the renovation
and construction" of the shelter.
"It is essential that construction
bqin immediately in order to be
completed by the cold weather
months." the ~lution said.
lntroducinf the resolution, Sen.
Lowell P. We1cker Jr., R-Conn., said,
"Whatever roleanyofusplay, House,
Senate or adm1rustratioo ... at least we
can say that for thote least fortunate
among us, that we•ve used our power
as it should be used-on behalf of the
powerl_ess."
Cancer-stricken brother
of hostage.in tape appeal
By tlle Altoclated Preas
BATAVIA, N. Y. -The brother of kidnapped journalist Terry Anderson
has. made ~ Vldeotape telhng of has failing fight W1th cancer, in hppes that it
"m1aht stnke a chord ofcompaSSlon" with Anderson•s Lebanese captors, their
sister says. Glenn Anderson made the tape in a New York hospital where he is
bcin& treated, PCUY Say said an a telephone antervi~w today. She said the tape
will be sent to Lebanon, where Anderson, ch1efMiddle East correspondent for
lhe AsSOClated Press, has been held hostqcsancc March 16, 1985. "lt was, like
'iO much we've done. a desperate hope that they might respond or that he miaht
\tnke come chord of compassion 10 them," Mrs. Say said from her home tn
Batavia '
R eactor's !allure to •hut down studled
GLEN ELLYN. Ill. -Jnspcct0rs from the Nuclear Regulatory
CommtSS1on are trj1ng to find out why the LaSalle nuclear po~r plant's Umt
2 reactor failed to shut down automatically after a pump malfunction. The
pla nt's owner, Com monwealth Edison Co., 1s conductina its own investipuon
of what the NRC called "a scnous mechanical failure" Sunday at the plant near
Marseilles. Utahty officials have 30 days to complete their report and forward
tt to the NRC for review. Both aaency and company officials stressed Tuesday,
when the malfunction was announced, that the publk was never endanacred.
Thei>roblem bcpn at 4:21 a.m. when one of two pum~ for the Unit 2 reactor
stopped workmg. NRC spokesman Russ Marabtto said Tuesday.
\ .
Postal Service Jnfluence pedd11ng probed
WASHINGTON -The postmaster general has warned colleaaucs that
there may be more bad pubhc1ty as the agency's investigators continue a probe
of influence pcddhng at the $30 btlhon-a-ycar U.S. Postal Service. In the wake
of the rcs1a,nat1on of postal board vice chairman Peter E. Yoss, the board was
movmg on several fronts Tuesday to~ 1fthere is more corruption 1n the way
the agency spends au b1lhons each year. Last fnday, Voss pleaded au1hy to
taking $2,500 as payment for "an official act .. performed by him m h1s
position" on the postal board A federal prosecutor said Yoss stood to make
S625,000 or more afhe could arrange a $250 million equipment contract to a
client ofa long-ume aquamtance.
I nterferon to get OK tor cancer treatment
WASHINGTON -The government wtll approve a type of mtcrfcron for
commemal use apinst a rare form of cancer. the first time the geneticaJly
produced drug W111 be avail.able by prcscnptJon, a drua company wd today
The Food and Drug Adm1nistrat1on W11~t licenses to Hoffmann-LaRoche
Inc. of Nutley, N.J . and Schenna-Plou Corp. of Madison, NJ., to market
alfa-mterferon for use aPJost ha1ry<ell eukemia, Hoffmann-LaRoche said tn
a statement. The rare form of blood cancer afflicts an estimated 1,000 to 3,000
Americans, most of them adult men. the FDA said. Until now. interferon drug.s
have only been used expenmentally agamst cancer.
Reagan won't bend to Canada protests
WASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary James A. Balcer Ill said today
President Reagan wtll not back. away from a tariff measure that has ina-eased
trade fnct1 on with Canada despite pressure from that nation. Baker told !l ~cws
conference, however, that tfie new tension would not torpedo n~ot1auons
ai med at estabhshm& a free-trade zone between the two countncs. tncludang
broad reductions oftanffs and quotas Reagan will hold fast an ~ts decmon last
May to am pose tanfTs of up to 35 percent on cedar sh1nJlcs imported from
Canada. Baker said "When he takes a position or takes aetJon, he doesn't bend
with the wtnd." he said. "So I don't think you h_ave to worry about th.at.
~9.~CI> ~o<' ~9. \.~~ -o~ .. ""~'~e \.'f.~~ °d' ~ c,O~e '\'2. '\~ ~ \OtJ' ~<'f\\ ejf'"(,!J1 \"I cc:; \do 0 o~~ ~
o'"''0''T.'rl!fo We·~ ~,,~9e <:iJ I cf'J
"'~~~ 0 . ·o/o-
iZOSS
DileSS FOiZ LcSS
School baa cruh l.Dju.ree 54
A 8Cllool bu Oiled with clalldren rwta in a
field near Jer•1•We. m .. after wJ••••n•
into a lac tnack Taeedayoa aatate 1a1Pwa1.
SAVE 44't SO'\,
COMPARE AT $18-$20
COOL KNITS AT
A HOT PRJCE ...
FROM YOUR
FAVORITE
FAMOUS MAKERS
l/'Je've got them all
Knits fa fun Knits for
sun Knits to keep him
cool and sporty 011
summer IOngLA ton-
tostlC selection at on
all-time IOw pr1c~
Solids a stripes wtth o
\/Ofl9ty of COiiars In
~cottonona
cotton blends
S-M-L-XL
• •
'·
Nuke plant
sabotaging
still mystery
• PHO!NIX (AP) -Tbrec weet1
after tomtooe .abolaJCd three of1hc
four hip VOl1as . lines IUODIYiM
bad.u9 power toitbe siant PtlO:'VU* nudear ~ J)laa\ eut.bOriues y tM..Y. bave no._ Wbo did it or why.
1 1uet1 we all kind of~ somebOdy to say _,,,Y they did ht
1a1d GftS Cook at the U.S. uclar
Resutatory Commission•• ~ off'"~. "'We don't 1ee much of this kind of'thina,... • •
.. We still ti.ave a lot o( people to talk
to aod a Jot o< a,enu workiu, oe n." •
l&)'t FBI pokcsm•n Jim Bollcil1*b.
1 nvcs\ipton aay the three 500,()()().
vdlt lines were &hort:.circui1cd at
. ts . &om 2S to 3$ miles ~ ~within a ts-ce ol 25
minutes tbe lliabt of May 14. Tbe
aaboteun am:iarntlY climbed me. towen and used ropes co drop OT
throw 1enatJu of cbaiD and wn aaoa •
the l)Ower lines.
Federal rules require a :uuloWD of
t.be plant•• react.on if all power lines
10 down, even t.boop sucb plaAtl
have backup banenes and dielel
sencrators to run etberpcy ClCJUiP-ment. The plant•s two OJ)CratJ<mal
reacton weren't ~ at the time
o( the ubotap; a third it ocarty
completed.
There have been several incidents
at Palo Verde of snipped wires or
switches flipped the wrona way.
~--Deukmejian; Bi'adley set for rematch
Curb wins nod for lieutenant govenor;
Dav1s. Campbell to clash for control er -
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Re-
publican Gov. Oeorae DeukmC,J1an
and hi1 Democratic opponent of
1982, Los AnseJea Mayor Tom Brad·
ley, are 1et for a rematch in November
after defcatina political unknowns by
Wlde marains in their parties'
primane1.
In other statewide primary races,
former Lt Gov. Mike Curb won the
Republican lieutenant aovemor's _ ra~ Auembly Democrat Gray
Davi d GOP state Sen W1llwn
Campbell captured their parties'
nominallons for controller
each other 11ncc January. tku-
lcmejian launched an early $700,000
television ad campaian to promote
his re-elccuon bid and followed up
last month with another S 1 million in
ads. ·
Bradley has lashed out at Deu-
kmeJ11n 's ~rd on toxics and in-
surance issues, 1mplyins that the
aovernor has been bouJht by oon·
tnbullons from both 1ndustncs. Deu·
kem.i11n bu demed the allcptlon1
Recent polls have aiven Deu-
luneJian the lead over Bradley.
Anaetes had SO percent to 38 percent
for at.ate Sen. John Garamendi o(
Walnut Grove. A.uemblyman Ah1ter
McAli1ter of Milpitas bad 12 perceor
••1 think people are respondina to
our ~ttive campaian. The voters
don't like nCP,live campaian• and
name callina. Davis said , rofemna
to Oaramendi a~s that tried to evoke
ncptive memones of Pavis' work in
tht Brown administration.
But O&r1mend.i attributed his loss
to enother factor: .. We were up
ap1n1t a well-financed candidate. It's a diaadvantqe not to have as much
money 11 your opponent."
The panics' nominees square off
Nov.4.
In the GOP race for attorney
aencral, Bruce Gleason, a Pasadena
attomcy. won with 42 pen:ent ov~
Duncan James of Ukiah, a former
Mendocino County di1tnct anomey
and past prc11dent of the ~ifomia
District Auomey1 Aasoc11t1on, who
had 33 percent Lawrence J. Straw Jr.,
o Lo• An1elc1 auomey, trailed wtth
2S pcrctnl
lneumbenl st.ate superintendent of
public in1trucl10.n Bill HomJ. facin&
no maJor opp<>amon, won a aeeond
term wt th 78 percent of the vote. He
needed onty'SO percent of the total
vote.
Hon1a said he would anlerpret a
landslide vote as a s11naJ of support
for hn four-year education reform
effort.
Curb and Richardt0n, the OOP
candidates for lieutenant aovemor
who used to be friends and political
allies.. campaiancd heavily •inst
each other from afar without a face-
to-face debate.
Curb once called hi1 four years in
office "a lol ofwuted time," but Later
blamed the thouaht on hi1 aomeume1
sronny rclation11!ip with former Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
Richardt0n is the founder of pohll·
cal acuofi oomminees that oppose
aun control, advocate the views of
fundamentahst reliJious aroups 00
social issues, promote hardhne anti-
cnme lc&istallon and back con·
scrvauve candidates LA lla)'O:r Tom Brad1e)'
Vouna was h1ht throuahout the
state. Elcctlon ofietaJs ta1cf the final
turnout was 40 percent, the lowest for
a statewtde elecuon m S8 yean.
In the Democratic aubematontl
race, BradJe) won 1,686. 70S votes, or
79 percent, while his closest com-
petitor, businessman fiuib Baa.le),
had 137,816 vote!., or 6 percent, wtth
100 percent of the vott counted.
With I 00 percent of the Pl"CCIOClS Ill
Tuosday's electJon report.in&, Curb
pthetcd 57 percent, wtth nvaJ state
Sen. H.L. Richardson of Glendora at
43 P.C_rc:ent.
• I would love to support and work
wtth (Gov.) Georsc DcukmeJ1an. It
was very dtftkult to work with
(former Gov.) Jerry Brown because
Jerry and I diiaareed on so many
truna.s," Curb said.
On the GOP aide, Campbell of
Hacienda Heiahts defeated A$·
s.emblyman Don Scbastian1 of
Sonoma, 48 percent 10 27 percent
Fonner Fair Political Practices Com·
mission Chaannan Dan Stanford of
San DiCJO had 17 percent.
"l think we ran a very positive
campaian. We're very well respected
in the state;" Campbell said.
Democratic incumbents in the
other statewide officei -T rcasurcr
Jesse M. Unruh, Secretary of State
March A>na Eu and Attorney Gen-
eral John Van de Kamp -won
nomination unopposed.
Complete election returns
DculcmcJ1an won 1,824,389 votes.
or 94 percent, while Saratoga elec·
tncal cnamcer Wilham Clark won
I 26,S90 votes, or 6 percent, with I 00
percent of the vote counted.
Bradley and DcukmeJian have
been campa1gn101 aggres1vely aaainst
Lt. Gov. Leo McCanhy won re·
nomination unopposed in the Demo-
cratic primary.
On the fiercely fouaht Democratic
side of the controller's race, the only
contest for statewide office in which
there was no incumbent, Davis of Los
Nestande to face
Secretary of State
Eu in November
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Ottt.Oelly,.._.tl41f!
Orange ( ounl\ '>uper\ 1'\ur Bruce
"'estande breezed to an ea•» '1ctol)
Tuesda} 1n 1he Republican pnmar.
for the chanC'c to run against incum-
bent Secret.<tl) of \tat<' 'v1arch Fong
Eu in NoHmbcr
With all prec1mts counted
Nestande garnered 76 2 percent oft he
Orange Count) \.Otc Statewide
Nestande recet\.ed IS J 'i S<iQ \.Otes -
50 percent of the ballob l3!1t
Nestande. 48. faced token oppos1·
tion 1n the 1hree-~a} Republican
race.
-Ralph Winkler. a retired .\ir Force
major from Lake'>1de. rece1"ed 16 2
percent of the' ote in Orange C ouot~.
while \.11chael C vrus. a market
anal)'Sl from Hctv.thome. had i 4
percent of the count) 'ote
Statewide. Winkler got 48!S, 76 7
\'Otes and Cyrus got 327.052
Ncstande said he spent about
SI 00.000 on the campaign. prcfcmna
to save money for the general election
race against Eu. He estimated he'll
spendS 1.5 million in his campaign
against the incumbent
The 3rd Dmnct super.1sor ran on
a platform that called for reform of
campaign contnbuuon laws, better
management of voter re~1strat1on
rollsand stateWlde reapportionment
The former assemblyman had con-
sidered entenng the race for heutcn·
ant governor. but backed down when
former Lt. Gov M1ke Curbs1gned up .
Nestande s~ud the pnmary race
v.ould be too costl) with Curb
runntn~ and a stnct Orange Count~
campaign contnbutaons ordinance
would hinder his ab1ht:y to run an
eJtpens1ve campaign
Eu was unopposed in the Demo-
Unruh and Eu both arc seelong
fo urth terms. The Last poHtician to
~ccurc a fourth statewide term was
Frank Jordan, secretary of state from
1943 to 1970. •
Bruce Ne.tande
trat1c pnmaf') She'll Sttk re-electLOn
an "Jo\.embcr to the four-year post
that pa)\ a sn.500 annual salal)
The secretar. of state serves as the
\late'\ elecuon officer maintains
h1stoncal document~ and ove~es lobb~1sts' reg1strat1on .. and monthl>
reports
Robinson Wins, will face Dornan
From staff aad wire reports
.\s\Cmbl)man Richard Robin!>on
of Garden Gro .. e survived a lasl·
minute campaign ambush to win 1he
Democratic nomination 1n the lt<th
Congressional 01~1nct T uesda)
Robinson 1.0.tll oppo~ Rep Robert
Doman. R-< iardcn (m1ve 1n No-
" ember for lht ngh1 t11 rcpn:\ent the
d1stnc.t that 1ndudt•\ pan' of Santa
~na Gardrn c rro' c \tan tun "-est-
minster and Buen;i Park
Robinson heat Supenur < oun
I udge Da' 1d C artt•r a former Laguna
Beal h rn1dl.'nl h a ~-to-I margin
despite a la\l·mmutr Carter mailer
that 1mplt<.>d Rohin">on had b...·en
accused ofa cnme m con nection 'Yllh
the Patrick Moriarty poh11cal payofl'
scandal
Robanc,on wa' hnkcd b) ncv.!I
stone'> to lormer fireworkc; king
Monart)'. who was ~ntC'nced t<t
se'en ~ears in J)n')on on federal mail
fraud charges involving political rnr-
rupt1on
A. M oriart'f a\\oc.·1atc told
authont1es that acting for Monan ..
he 'iupphed prostitute\ to Robin,nn
and two other lawmaker<; a da1m
Robinson called lud11.:rous No
charges have been filed aga1n~t tht
asscmbl)man
Robinson captured 17 Y5) ~Ott'\ or
about 6 7 percent to aner\ !S 790 ( 'l l
percent) On the GOP side of the
ballot. Dornan faced no opposlllon
Elsewhere 1n Or~ngc Count) con·
gress1onal d1stncts, Republican in·
tumbcnt\ ""ho ran unopposed an the
pr1mar) will la<:e No\.l·rnher
d1allenger"
Wilham Danncmcyer will fan·
Dt•mc1Cra1 Da\ 1d Vc\t 1n th1· .Nth
dl'itncl
Dan L ungn:n 1.0.hose d1stm:1 in·
dudes part of Huntmgton Bealh, wall
he challenged by Democrat Michael
Bladburn in tht' 42nd d1stmt and
Ron Packard v.111 square oil ag•unst
Dcml.l(rat Jo\Cph Ch1rra tn the 4lrd
district
THE OCCASION
) T hl·rP 1<. a Hnm·vBakt>d •
l'Jrl)' Trt1\ 1wr1t•1 t tor .my pJrty
Jnd """' \V1th our j)P( 1t1l lO%
nh Jm· •>I 1iur < .ourmet Ptlfty
Trd\., \ 1 iu 1 .111 t lit.it the pnce
U.S. Senate
Abbott
Banuelos
Cranston•
Greene
Lan12
Democrat
Republican
Antonovich
Cleaver
Da\1S
Fiedler
Herschensohn
Knowland
Laffer
Montgomef)
Na>lor
Spnng
Zschau _
121,743
75.8 16
1,769,987
162.143
63.830
I 7S.838
22.436
127,230
139.540
573,S21
35.160
46,029
15.974
59.249
4,468
718.317
U.S. Representative
SBtb. Dl•trict
Carter
Robinson
Oornan•
( onnell~
Democrat
Republican .
Libertarian
8.796
17.955
23.575
162
40tb Dl•trict
Democrat
Hoflmann
'>umner 1v.nte1nJ
Ro<ocnbcrg
Bad ham •
RepubllcaJJ
14,IS8J
16 342
27,310
51.827
Peace & Frttdom
b7
Governor
Andcr\on
Bagle)
Brad le\
Ptnt•da
Thomae,
Democrat
Republican
( larl<..
Dcul<..mt11ttn•
100 954
J 17 816
I 686. 705
161.262
50.510
126,590
I !!24.389
Lt. Governor
( urh
R ll hard\on
OemO<'ral
Republlran
I 988.129
1,124165
834 798
Secretary of State
Fong Eu •
( }rU\
NMtandt'
Winkler
Oemorrat
Republlcao
1,979.857
32 7 .052
815.559
488.16 7
Controller
Dav1r,
Garamend1
McAllr,1cr
f\epubllcao
( ampbcll
(1arc1a
. Sehastf'an1
Stanford
I 070.117
807.447
2fl \ 155
865.527
I 14.b87
491.090
ll 1. 750
Treasurer
Democrat
Attorney General
Stllte A .. embly
58tlJ Dlatrlct
Stags
Kincaid
Farrall
Brown•
Demoet'at
Republican
4,003
2,476
2.236
14,677
69th Dl•trict
Democrat
Baldv.1n 15,171
Repalleu
30,708 Fnzz.clle•
Inmocrat
16,048
Republlca.o
Ferguson• 4S,460
72nd Dl•trtct
Onset
Heane}
Longshore
Democrat
Republican
12,2111
2,334
9,969
Superior Court
Judste
otnceJVo. 6
Ban Ila
Beds worth
Galh"an
61.183
140,778
108,674
OfflceNo.16
Bnckncr
Rackauckas
I ft6JS5
145.073
otnceNo.17
McDonald•
W1lkosk1
239.716
62.574
Harbor Munlclpal
Court
OlflceNo. l
Thoma' Ill
Carte,..
14 lSQ2
29.931
County Supervisors
2nd Dl•trlct
W1ede,.-
\.ieslo\ 1ch
48 51!(>
14 747
4th Dl•trlct
Beam
Mendez
Patterson
Roth
20 2~7
U!!l
15.143
19.543
6tb Dl•trlct
Rll~y•
Brand
Pratt
ti3.078
22,947
5,67\
County Assessor
Jacobi.•
Holbert
22 UllS
11 2,448
County Auditor
268,731
County Clerk
Granville•
Norri'\
169,062
1 lS.148
County
DlstrlctAttorney Democrat
\an dc Kamp• I ,9'17.BR NOVl('k 80.398
( 1ll'a\1>n
James
)trav.
Rcpabllcan
593,822
469,485 us 940
State Supt. of Public
In•tructlon
Baird
Honaa•
Nusbaum
484.S49
\.247.094
431 ,267
State Board of
Equllutlon
~rry
Buckle~
3rd D1stncl
Ocmocral
l\qJotltku
Kelly
Drooenbura Jr •
W1l.on
Pee<e • f rttdom
29,990
68,547
6l,61S
88.838
26,327
189
-Hicks• 242,98S
County Public ·
.Ad.mlnl•trator
191,S?S
96,1 11
Coaaty
Sheri.fl-Coroner
Younfblood
Gales
Callipn
.S8,3 71
216,S2S
61,9SS
County Trea•arer-
TazCollector
Cttron• 294,434
CoWJty Recorder
Bnmch• IH.724 Bales 62,70A
Win1crbo11om 9).618
CoantySupt.
olScbool•
. 265,140
CoUJJty Board
of Edacadon
Hughes
Brandt
Ackley
7,662
l2,S40
23,478
Irvine City Councn
Aaran•
Becwar
Bennett
Doman
Hobart
Jones
Korba
Malone}'
Matheis
Scherr
Wellman
vote for two
IO,S62
336
6S7
10.26()
2.742
~.317
S41
5.035
1.497
S29
580
County Committee
69tlJ Auembly
Democrat area i
vote for one
Catlett•
Char
10,445
S.012
Repubttcu
vott for 1.tx
.\gc:~n·
A~nes
Barnhart•
Brown
Cubete•
fl)nn
Hopp)
Hosmer
Johnson
Klein
Neilsen•
Orr
Stanton
StoufTe,..
9,827
3,689
12,136
11,332
12,254
10,629
8,702
4,6()8
9,800
4,798
11.978
12,05S
11,074
11,466
70tbAaembly
Democrat AreiT~
vote for one
Farrell
O'Neill•
6.637
10.160
Republican
vote for six
Allen
C'onnollv•
Fuente\'
Himmel
Holmes
Hughes•
l mcoln
McGrath'
Turne,...
19.733
27,007
28.49S
9,SI I
7.S86
27,794
15.972
25.144
24.605
72ndAuembly
Democrat area a
vote for ont
fl she,... 6.634
Mered 1th 4.95S
Democrat area 4
vot~ for oae
TnU-7.885
Wasc 1634
State Proposltlon•
Ye' No
Yl·~
No
\e\
No
Yee,
No
Ye\
No
Yes
No
Ye~
No
y~
No
Yes
No
41 -Veteran Bonda
3,280.881
1,058,743
43 -Park Boads.
2.877.632
1,393.1 45
44 -Water Bonda ·
3,152.310
1,100,004
U -Pabllc Mooey
2.752.789
1.41 7,013
41 -Tu Limit
2,478.921
l,6H,066
47 -Govtrment fees
3,406,81 s
781 ,527
48 -Retirement
3,S72.104
6J9.6S3
0 -NonparUau
2,26.S,707
1,76S,882
50 -Property tu
2.868,118
1.194, I SS
S 1 -Deep P9Cbt1
2,819,68}
I. 724.9.SS
H -Jail 8 Ads
Ye\ 2,750,398
No l.339,93 I
y~
No
Yes
No
Irvine Mea•are11
Coucll tttm1
l 1,608
7,065
Ma7t.r decttcua
12.9S8
~ 418
• 1 ca tAI
\
County office incumtien s
~rn back all challengers
By ROBERT HYNDMAN aad ROBERT llARUR °' ...........
Voters elected all the incumbenll
1n Tuesday•1 t1Ce1 for Oranie County
officn.
Fonner newapapennan and colleac
journalism professor Gary Gran ville,
who wu appomted county clerk an
September had the closest race.
The incumbent received 169,062
votes and hit opponent, MarsbaU F.
Nt>rris. JQt IJS,148 votes. Granville, s 7. received H percent of the ballots
cast while Norm, 60, 1ot 44 pcrctnt
The county clerk as responsible for
compilina fties for cnminal and civil
cases heard in Superior Coun and
proceisina such documents u mar-naac hcenxs and fkt1l1ous business
name statements.
The job PIYI SS7,013 a year.
Incumbent assessor Bradley Jacobs
of Mission Viejo, who wu named to
the post in I 97S, aot 221,S 18 votes -
6 pen::cnt -toppina one of his
employ~ ~puty •~•~r David
Holben, who received 112,448 vOtes -34 pet'Cent
IicObs and Holbttt stasect ~ s~rited ba~e. Hol~n charp:d that
his boss denied him ume of!t tryina to
•botaae hb campaian while Jacobs
aocutea his subordinate of tryina to
buy the election by. ape~ more
than $200,000 of an inheritance.
The useuor. who earns $70,907 a
year, is responsible for determinina the value of all property in the county for lilt purposes.
Incumbent District Attorney Cecil
H 1cks, who bas served an that pos-
1tJon for nearly 20 years. easily held
off the ch&llense of A.C. "Nick"
Novtck of Irvine.
Hicks aot 15 pen::cnt of the votes,
242,98S, while Novack, who bas
worked for Hicks for most of the pct
18 years, JOt 25 percent or the votes
cast with 80,398.
The job pays $88,046 a year to
oversee the staff' of deputy diltlict
attorneys in prosecutirlacriminal and
Cl'Vll cases in 0ranae C0unty.
In a relatively calm rue. incum·
bent PUblic Administrator Walliam
Baker of Irvine was an usy winner
with l9J.j7Svottt-67percent.Hi1
opponent. Viaor Hobbt. a '2-year·
old EJ Toro mlckni got 33 pereeot of the vote with 96, l I votes. The public adminiltrator ls respon-
sible for handlina estates of people
who have died without wias and the
financial matters of thote who are
commined to mental institutiooa.
Incumbent Recorder Lee Bra~h
49, of Irvine got 153, 72A votes; 49
percent.
\ Orea Winterbottonl;. res;ional di; ~or of the 0ranae \;Ounty Easter
Seal Society, JOt 91,638 votes -30
. percent-while Lany Bales, a Tustin
tax auditor, ~l 20 ._percent of the
ballots cast with 62,7t)S.
Branch served u county cletk-
recorder until1be office was split last
year followina an audit and be was
named recorder - a job that pays
SS9,426 a year to J"CCQ.l'd such d.ocu-
menlJ u commercial an<J residential
property t.ransactaons, ma:ni.qcs,
divorces and binb and death
t:trti fica t.eS.
lncwnbent TrtasuTCr-Ta:x Collfll:>
tor Roben Catron and Auditor Sten0
Lewis onrvine ran unopposed for re-·
election.
GWC teacher Sta/!,J!s
winsDems'nodfDF
-58th Assembly seat .
B1 LAUR.A MERK °' .............. l
Huntinston Bea.ch Democrat
Peay Stags will Oppote Republica"
incumbent Assemblymao Dena
Brown '°'"the '8th DiArict Sta Aaembly seat in November.
Stqp ca~ tho Democratic
nomination 1n tho state euembly race
ap.inst Le~ Btac,b ~ublicans An-·
drew K.ioQJd ahd Micbld Ferrall
Brown was unoppoted in the R~
J)Ubliean ~· The district spans pa111 of both
Oran&e and Lot AnFICs counties. incluaina HWlfinat00 . BeachBc!:t Lona Beach and &11 ·of Seat •
Sip.I.I Hall. Sumet Beach. Surffi<ie, llossmoor and Catalina llland.. OranF County results !tom 163
precincts showed Stqp · witb 46
percent of the vote wbi.JO Kincaid add
Ferrall had 28 peteent and 26 pe~nt respectiv~ly.
be bad 4,003 •• oPOOICd to 2,4761or
Kincaid and 2.236 (ot FCrrall. Brown had 99 perttnl of U. Omaac County Repoblicu vota tor
I tout Of l4,677. 8towo WU fint
elected to the Califbrni.a ~me u, J 971 nd Jed the fllbt for tbe
pmaso of PTOpOsition I 31n the~
Beach a.ra that year. Ke is nmnina
(or his fourth tam ia the UICID~.
Peace and Freedosn Party ca. er
didate PauJ Hut received 19 voe.es or
9S J1C!<%Dt ofbi1 part_y's suppon. . ~lllP a1JO ht.alt Fenall ud Kio-caid an the Loi AnaicJcs county race.
At a tot.al of' l 1' precinc.u Stqp
secured s.577 of &he 'Ocmocratic
votes while Kincaid hid •JSO and
FeTTall'had. 4,074 voiea; lo the final
count, Stag.t bad 40 percent o! &he
votes while her c>pponcnu Kincaid
and FerTall hid 31 pm')C'Ot &Od 29
percent reapectivcly. 1
November runoffs to fill. 4 court seats
fn the final tally Staaas. an inst.rue>
tor at Golden West Colleae an
Hu.ntinston Beach. swept the Demo-
cratic race takin.s neatly twice the
number of vOleS u her cballenscn.
Brown emcracd with I 00 percent of
the Republican votes or I S,680 in his
dTort to keep his leA1 in the ltlte
asxmbly.
Haak also had I 00 percent Of the
Peace and Freedom party votes with
S2.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dllllr,.......,
Four Oranae County Judicial races
will be settled in November runoffs
because voten Tuesday were unable
to select any clear-cut winners while
two incumbent Judacs coasted to easy
v1ctones.
-In another judicial contest -the
closest 10 the county -Municipal
Court J~ DaVJd H. Brickner
narrowly dt~ted Deputy Ofstrtct
Attorney Anthony R.ack.auckas in a
fiaht for a vacant Superior Court seat.
Bnclmer, presently l.SSl&ned to
West Ora.nae County Municipal
Court ID Westminster. captured
about S3 percent of the vote while the
lonaume homicide prosecutor pr-
n.-l'N1 ~li~htly more than a 46 percent
vote.
Jn two other Superior Court races,
an incumbent judge thrashed his
81ble-<1uotin& cbalten1ennd-. pair of
attorneys were unable to pin the edae
1n a three-way contest. forcina a
nmoffin November.
Supenor Court Judie Willwn
McDonald had tittle difficulty bana-
ina onto his appointed seat as be
pined almost 79 percent of the vote
1n a landslide win over James f.dward
Wtlkosk.i.
Wilkoski, a Newport Beach at-
torney who'd plcd&ed to read the
Lord's Prayer before each court
session if elected. captured less than
21 percent of the vote.
The third Superior Court fiaht will
not be settled until the falf when
Oranse County Deputy District At-
torney William W. Bedsworth and
attorney Robert H. Gallivan face a
runoff' election.
Bedsworth ended with 4S percent
of the vote and Gallivan with about
3S percent or the vote. One would
have had to captured just one vote
over SO percent of the total vote to be
the clear-cut winner in the thnie-way
race.
Los Anaeles County Deputy Dis-
tnci Attorney Joseph L Barilla
pmered less than 20 percent of the
vote, and thus was ellminated.
Incumbent Harbor Municipal
Court Jud&e Brian Carter had no
difficulty shuttilll down a cballensc
from Deputy District Attorney Rob-
ert E. Thomas Ill. ·
Carter, a Corona del Mar residen~ , ·
appointed to the bench an 1982, SD I t d captured just over 66 pertenl Of the·.• mayor e ec e ·, vote: Thomas. the son of former • •
County Administrator Roben t ' t l b k' d ni~.ru~~:.r:~0~~be ren con ro ac e
tettlcd in November runoffs.
Deputy Distnct Attorney James
Broob and LonJ Beach caty prot-
ecutor Paul Robbins will battle in the
fall for a vacant Municipal Court seat
in Santa AnL -
In Fullerton,, incumbent Judie
8et1)' Elias will face a runoff' challense
from attorney James Bates. Rivenide
proteCUtor R<>fCJ'. Robbins will battJe
Traffic Comm111ioner Richard Behn
in November for the ICCIOnd Munici-
pal Court seat in Fullerton.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -After
winnina election u the fint woman
mayor of San Die,p>, Maunen
o·connor tol<J supponm Ille ,,ants
to heal the wounds of the nation's
ct&htb larp:st city.
percent of the vole wi\b 99.9 preciDCts
rcportina. wiU face Munapal Coan
Judge &mud K.au:&nan. •ho ~ oc1vCd 3S ptn:en~ 1n-1 n oft' ~
Noyembct:
Eight ~ther states conduct primaries
~omorrow, WC! start brinaina this
city back toeether," the former Oty
councilwoman told a raucous Vldory
pany Tueaday ni&bL She won the
riabt to finish the 211> yean ttnwnina
on the mayoral term of Roaer
Hed&ecock. who resianed last De-
cem6er at\er beina conv.ictcd of oonapiracy and perjU!)'.
In other ballotina TUac:fay, miter-
dominated Santa Monica decisively
rejected a landlord-backed pr0poUJ
to relax rent eo'nttols. while-San
Bernardino County citizens voted -
in a razor-thin defe,at for anima.1-n&bu activists -to pcnnit public
pounds to continue 1elli.na animals
for medical research.
In another Los AnaeJcs County
election, as paunt Of the voien
decided to k.ceo the mctt()(a post
elective inma4 of maki.na it appoin-
tive, and DepUty AJIC90f John
Lynch led a 12-can<lidatc field to fill '
the position beina vacated by Alea·
andcr Pope.. Pope left that job for an
un1uc:cessful bid Tuesday for a scat
on the state 8oatd of Bqualiutioo.
Lynch, who won 21 percent of \be
vote, facet a November ru°"°" witb
businessman Jim Keysor, •'ho n>-
ceivcd 16 percent of the vote, barely edsina out Gordon Hahn. the brother
of county Supe1'Visor Ktnnctb Hahn.
for tee0nd place.
By .-e Alaoclaled Pre11
Sen. James Abdnor survived a
pohucal shootout 1n the South Da-
kota Badlands as the votes were
taJhed from pnmanes m etaht other
states ~ides California Tuesday.
- The winnen also included Rep.
Peter Rodino, 0-NJ .. clwnnan of
the House Judiciary Committee, and
Reuben Anderson, the first black to
sit on the M1ssus1pp1 Supreme Court
Rodino defeated Newark Coun-
cilman Donald Payne, who &1JUCd 11
was.time the d1stnct. "Nh1ch 1s nearly
60 pe~~t black, had a black con-
gressman.
Anderson easily turned back a
cballenac from arch conservative
Richard Barrett.
The busiest primary day so far this
elect1on year set the field an two states
-Alabama and South Dakota -
where Democrats were most op-
um1st1c about unseatin1 Repubhcan
senators.
Other states choosma candidates
for 1ovemor were Alabama. Iowa.
New Mexico and South Dakota.
Abdnor rccc1ved SS percent of the
vote to fi&bt off a challenae from Gov.
William Jank.low, and now must face
Democratic Rep. Tom Dasch.Jc 1n the
1eneral election 10 a state htt bard by
the downturn m the farm economy
Jank.low bad araued that he was
challenging his former political ally
because he didn't believe Abdnor
could defeat Daschle.
In bis victory speech, the South
Dakota senator descnbcd the gov-
ernor as "a formidable oppOnent."
. "When the voters tell you it's time
to quit, it's time to quit," Jank.low
said, addina that be had offered to
help Abdnor in the general election.
In Alabama. Republican Sen.
Jeremiah Denton was renominated
over' token opposition. Rep. RicbJrd
Shelby captured S2 petcent of ~
vote apinst fotlt opponents to Wlll
the Democratic Senate nomination.
rn a subcmatorial primary
shadowed by the retirement of Gov.
Georie C. Wallace after n~y a guarter century as the dominant ~ure in Alabeim politic.,~ Gov.
Bill Baxley and Attorney General
Charles Graddick were forced into a
June 24 runoff to determine the
Democratic nominee. ·
Baxley fm:ived 36 percent of the
vote and Grad(iick 30 pcrocnt to
emerge from a five-andidate field .
PROP. 51, OTHER INITIATIVES WIN .•.
From Al
Propos1t1on SI became the hottest hes ... 1t was a defeat for \hose who
issue in Tuesday'selecuon, accordma underestimate the mtelligcn~ of
to a newspaper poll released today. Of Cahfom1a voters," Woodward said.
5,571 peopleinterv1ewed inex1tpolls, Jim Wheaton, ch11rman of
43 percent sa1d the measure drew Citizens Apinst Propos1uon 5 I. ah
them. By contrast, onl y 19 J>(rcent tnbuted its passaae to low voter
gave the GOP Senate pnmary as a turnout and a heavy conservative
rea50n for vouna. vote because of the Rcpubltcan
State Attorney General John Van Senate primary.
de Kamp, who fouaht the insurance Two measures were related to the
measure alonas1de consumer ad-long-range effects of Propos1t1on 13,
vocate Ralph Nader, said he was the property tax-slashmg m1uauve
dasappomted. passed in 1978.
"We knew It would be an uphill The measures. which directly af-
light. ''-M.wd.~ he believe~ the fccted local &OV'Crnments, were Prop-
mcasure will hurt cancer v1cums. osttion 46, wniCJI eases restncttonson
whose cash settlements 1n lawsuits local aovemments' aeneral obligation
come from pain and suffenna awards bond issues for constuct1on prOJfCtS,
that could be cut under the measure. and Propo&ition 47 requirina the state
Opponents ar&ued liability in-to aive vehicle license fees to local
surance rates have 1one up as mu ch as governments. The latter is in current
600 percent in states such as Kansas law; the m~~rc would out it in the
and Iowa despite their adoption of state constttuuon.
similar "deep potket" laws. There were four bond issues total-
Easy approval of, t~er ··measure ing S l.S9S billion: Propos1uon 42, the
showed the electorate s 1nteM11encc. $850 million bond issue for Cah-
sa1d Richard S Woodward, cam-fom1a veterans' home mortga&es;
paian director of Taxpayers for Fair Propos1t1on 43, which would pro.v1de
ResponSJbihty SI 00 million. to acquire and improve
"It not only was a defeat for the tnal local and. reaaonal paris; Propos1uon
lawyers who spent m1lhons and 44, to aive water qcncies some SI SO
m11hons of dollars buyina outnaht m1lhon for new sewer systems; and
Propos1t1on S2, whch would provide
S49S m1lhon to renovate county jails.
Propos1uon 42 passed by a 76-24
percent m&J'lln. Proposttion 43
passed by a 67-33 percent ma.rain.
Proposition 44 passed by a 74-26
percent marain and Proposition .S2
passed by a 67-33 percent margin.
Proposition 4S, which will allow
the state to deposit money in credit
unions, passed by a 66-34 percent
m&l'Jln State officlals say it will
mcrcasc California's mvestment flex-ibibty.
Voters apJ>roved ProfTI:ition 48
lim1tma pensions of leaistors and
JUdJCS by an overwhelmina SS-IS
percent margin .
Prop. 49, a measure critics said
would linut free speech, was ap-
proved by a 56-44 percent ma.rain.
The measure prohibits party endorse-
ments an non~n · e~ions.
Proponents said 1t would deter politi-
cal patronaac and uphold California•s
tradition of non·panisan politics in
many local races.
Prop. SO. the utitaauve allowina
disaster Vlcttms to rebuild without
property tax 10~ passed by a
71-29 percent margJn.
ZSCHAU WINS GOP NOMINATION •••
P'romAl
with the Reqan adm1nistrtti.on. call-
m& for lcu defente 1pendin1 and
more support for social proarams.
The chaottc OOP Senate campallJl
chm~id the HP,~ett voter
turnollt m S8 years, with six of every
10 Cahforn11 votel'I 1hunnm1 the
polls.
The vote split lar&ely alon1 rcai~nal
lines, with Zscbau, a Sa~ Francisco
Peninsula mldent, runnmJ 1tr0naly
an tho noM and also in San Dieao
County. HeracbenlOhD led in every
other sOuthem California county and
IWq)1 the met.ro~litan Lo .AnF.l~s aro, where on third of California s
vo\cnhve. . Hcncheneohn maint.llned he WI
bun by the low voter turnout.
··1 was di ~pointed iD the turn-out.,•~ asd. We did CVCfY\_htnl we
could to ,et up there CNOft!tem C..lifomi.a) u of\e u we could. z.ctwa. 46 who IDI h11 11.1.n an
pohtics lobbyana (or bu11ncss
antcreats In W11h1naton1 and
Hcnchcnsohn, '3 * conSetVauve Lot An let ' pcnonahty.
d &\It ~ outdi an~ the 10 other
.
'
active GOP candtdatcs. profcnor 8111 Allen, Mann Count.)'
Fiedler Davis and Lot Anaclcs p1ycbolopst William Pemberton,
County 'Supervisor Antonovich Lot An&elea businessman Georae
bunched totether m a tbird-plaoc Mont&Qmery and Santa Ana consult-'
pack. and the rest of the candidates · ant Jolin Sprina.
trailed badly. Spnna, Pemberton. Knowland.
The diverse GOP tield mcluded Allen and Montaomcry rteeived only
economtst Arthur Laffer, the minimal support. ebulhe~t, .~lfish 1u.ru .. of Presid~n~ Durina the campa11n. Alle.n Re.apn s 1upl)ly-s1de eco~omic<a, withdrew ft-om the race and threw bis
Ocaver,a poet. formerpnton inmate , support '° HCT1Chcnsohn Allen's
and 1nt~t1onal . fuaiuve who once name. however, remained on the enaued an a t.ild sh~tout with ballot. Oalctlnd pol.ice; AntonoVlch. who u . · ·
a state uxmblyman was onco one of Also li~tcd on the ba!lot as a
tbe most contcrV1tive m m ra of OcmocrauchoJ)Cful ~Brian Lan~
the c.llifomia ~ilature, Fiedler, an AlamodaCountybusi ~ult.
who built a polittcal career u an ant and a · follower of conspiracy
opponent to coun-ordcred school tbco.nst Lyndon LaRouchc. who
businJ in the San Fcmaodo Valley; ~wed about l ~t oftbe vote.
and Robcn Naylor, the fonncr Re-Other ~u facina ~ranstoa
publican leadcttn the state A mbly, mclu.dcd pobttcal aacnlllt J
who 10ll h11 lcaders.bip PC> when be Abbot of nta Clara: R~
decided to tcek bi&bcr office. Banuelos. a l..quna Hillt tcchn.ician,
Other GOP candidates 1ocJudtd and lcsOrecncof~ a
Joaq>h Knowland. the ronncr pub-member or the Senior Lqislature.
tisher of tht Oakland Tnbune and lbe 1..cftnt Brenner of Ber\ and
son of ·the late U.S. Sen Wilham Paul of n franctteo !"ft u
Knowland: H11f'\eV Mudd Coll Pt C'C Fczcc!om Y ~ m1
Guy Hunt easi!Y won the GOP
primary, but the Democratic nomi-
nee wtU be heavily favored in a state
which hasn't elected • Republican
aovemorin 112 years.
Wallace, confined to a wbcclclwr
since ho was shot while campa1p.ina
for president in 1972. 'Watched the
returns in the aovcrnors mansio~
I I
'l
Meanwhile. Munici.pal Court Judac Maxine F. Tboaw• buS for a
seat oo the Superior Coon beocb fell
short of the required 50 percent of the
votes. Thomas; who received 30
lo the San Oie&o -bell ·
o·eonnor recei~ed ~f perc:ea~
all the votes counted wbile ber tole
competitOr, Qty COuncilman BaU
Oeator, received •5 pm:cnL
'
-""-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ W9dneeday, Juno 4, 198e
Amphitheater
ruling ignores
people's rights
\ When the 4th District Court of Appeals ruled Fnda y
that the city of Costa Mesa cannot enforce it~ noi.se
ordinance at the state-owned Orange County Fau-
grounds. it did so on ~lid legal ground. Invoking the
principle of soven~ immunity, it reiterated what other
courts have established: that the state may stand above
local regulatory authority.
But, while the courts recognize soverign immunity
and the inviolable boundaries of the fairgrounds. noise
does not.
Residents of the Mesa del Mar and College Park
neighborhoods have ~en complaining to the city for
three years about the loud music emanating from the
fai rgrounds' Pacific Amphitheatre during rock concerts.
The city has tried several legal tactics -includrng
negotiation -wtth the operator of the 18,000-seat,
open-air theater, Ned-West Inc. of Los Angeles. Friday's
ruling closed one chapter of the saga that had taken a year
to write. Further appeal, to the state Supreme Coun.
remains an option as does the public nuisance aspect of
the lawsuit filed last September.
!here would seem to be too little flex1b1lity in
soverign immunlly when its application-is almost
universally unpopular. C.ertainly, in this case, neighbors
of the amphitheater do not feel they have been protected
by the law, city officials do not feel they have been
protected by the law and members of the Fair Board.
while standing foursquare behind the pnnc1ple, have not
been aided particularly by this application of the law.
The Fair Board has sued Ned-West -ns own
tenant -for lease violations m an effort to resolve the
noise and parking problems the amphitheater has
created.
The concept of sovengn immunity 1s important to
insulate legitimate statetiincuons from the whim and
capnce of local government, especially when it might
have a negative impact on a legitmate state function
But, in the case of the amphitheater, what appears to be
at stake is the state's right to allow a tenant to produce
rock shows. While that right is a freedom worth
protecting. it is also one that needs to be balanced against
the nghts of those whose peace and tranquility tn their
homes is regularly assaulted by the blanng music.
It would seem tha·t the coµrts could protect the
principle of sovengn immunity -thus statisfying the
state and the Fair Board -while workmg out guidelines
for its application that are less arbitrary.
Optn1ona e.xpreaed In thla apace are thOM or the O.lly Piiot Other view•
exprMMd on thl• page are th<>M of their authors and artists Aead9f
comment le Invited. The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone
842...aoM.
Allens ln park illustrate
fallacy of U.S. handouts
..
To the Editor
On May 21. you pubh'ihed a letter
b' Daniel Payne of Huntington
Reach in "'h1ch he e~prcs\Cs concern
lhat "Orange County l'i seen by many
asa narrow-minded, rac1stcommum-
l\ "
He referred to a Mav 7 letter which.
unfortunate!). I mis~ hul which
dealt wtth the group\ of men "con-
gregaung 1n a local park ··
<\mce Mr Payne halls from Hun1 -
1ngton Beach. I am sureo he 1s fam1har
""nh the problems 1n Huntington
Beach at Commodore Circle Nobod)
is quite tertain ~ hether the slum
cond1t1ons expenenced at Com-
modoreo Circle are the reosult of
narrow-mrnded racism in that tit} on
the part oflhe propen~ owner•., or on
the pan of thl' propcn~ occupiers
These men do not congreftatc in a
local park. They congregate on the
curbside in substanual numbers. and
while 1t 1s undisputed that they are
trying lo find da" work, 11 1'i perhapc;
not accurate to 'i8} that the'.' are not
brl'akmg the law
As independent contracturs. the)
arc not licen~ te do bu<.me!..\ m the
l •tv of Costa Mesa. and since the} arc
inevitably paid on a ca\h-and<arry
basis. I doubt scnousl} 1f thl'y are
roncemed wtth Worker'~ Compensa
11on insurance, unempl<1yment m-
'iurance. the Federal Insurance Con
1nbut1on Act st.a te income taxec.
federal income taxec. and all of the
other 1mp<mt1ons of c1\.1li1ed life
which are faced up to h:y the working
~ommun1t } here tn Orange C uunl>
fhc bottom hne over there 1n
Hunungton Beach 1s that, according
to one newspaper, "the c1tv handed
over $450.000 of the Federal money
with few stnnas attached" to help the
Commodore homeowners resohe
1heir problems to rehabthtate this
hlock of d1\3,ter area in Huntington
Beach
I resent fedt:ral monies '1t'in& used
to take care of probkm' of this
nature, and 11 that 1s what ~r Payne
calls beingoverTealou<. tht•n he ought
to gl'l "on thc hacks · of tht• people in
If untrngton Beach whu arr g1" 1ng this
federal money awa) and tell them to
he ll'SS overzealous and mana~e their
ommun1ty without penal111ng the
na11on a'i a whole
l> \ VJD ..\ \.\ YOUNG
Newpon Beach
Artlcle called mlsleadlng
To the Editor
We are wnting 1n rc'ipon'ic to lht·
recent anicle. "Valle} teacher'
targeL. " This front page article
appears factual to the general reader
yl't several statement!. were mislead·
ma.
•Stated. Eleven and 4/1 Oths per-
cent pay raise this year -Actual: 5. 7 7
percent for this year from April
throuJh ly
•Stated: A one-lime honu' from
S 1.200-1,400 -Actual: Thts 1s not a
bonu1, but rully 1s retroactt ve pay for
the pa.st year that the contract has not
been 1ettlcd.
•Stated· Six pen:ent pay raises for
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
l~H6-87 1987 88 -.\ctual 1986-87
I'> a 5 7 J)('tcent pay 1ncrt'a~ I 1>87-88
l'i a 6 percent pa) increa'I<'
•Stated 70 will rt«e1ve over
S46 000 for their IC'o;s than 190 days-
\llual: S46,000 or more will not be
ubtamed un ~ I 9~R-89. and then only
by 1ho~ leachers who ha vc tauiht 18
years or more and have received an
MA or BA pluc, 60 units
It ~ms to u'i 1f this article 1\ front
page new<; then It needs to cll'arly
prt~nt the flac~.
SHERRY fOULKE
C..ARRIE SLA YaAC'J<
founuin Vallty School District
'"'""ZMI Fd<ICll'
T..,.Tlft *"•NO'W'IO [dltOt 0..,...,
C«'(Edll0t
T .. c._.
Ntwtfdl!Ot
c,...-... "'°'1• [dllOf
"•••rMrYC~ Cotlttollll
IWl9rt L C.mr.11
Pr~hOl'I .... ~
TWYJ._..
OioullltlOn MIMQ!!'
......... u:. *I
loteib!IMCI 0.ector ......
Oesllfled °'19CtOr
' I
.. Many U.S. nuclear plants have the1rown unique-sets of hazards lf>at
couldJead tonres.subsequentrunawaycontrolroomsandulttmate
cats-strophe.·· ·
ll£ ··~·· JJURGUR 15 SllU.
AT i,ARSE IN
NEWPORr.
JACK ANDERSON
column.lat
JACK
AllDERSOll
. .
and DAL£ VAN ATTA
NR C
relaxes
.ruies for
fires
Panel acts despit e
warnings~romits _
safety inspectors_
Governm.ent struggling
to keep a lock on secrets
WASHlN(,f()"' -Sometimes It
lakes a 1ragcd, Ill riove a IX>lnl The
( hernob'I d1'&'tl·1, ~:.used by a fire
and an t>\ph.~1011 111 .1 nuclear reactor,
occurred JU\I 'i I days aftl'r we
reported federal <,;ilet y inspectors'
complaints th\\t S nucl ar power
plants wen.· 1nadt·qu protected
against fire
At the time the Nuclear Regu-
latory ( omrn1'>\1on'<, director of 1n-
spect1on and c:nforlcment. Richard
Volmer. assured u') that the nation's
nucl(ar plant'> are perfect!} safe He
t0ld our ass01.1a1e Cork) Johnson that
nuclear plan1s' fire protection 1s "far
above" that ufothcr mdustries. So, of
course. 1s the danger po~d by nuclear
power plants. j\ thl" Soviet tragedy
made appalhngl) dear
Not easy, with split
in administration
on ho:w far it can go
By W DALE NELSON
'W .\SHIN(, TON -".\II that re-
main" for me to add 1s. that )OU keep
the whole matter as secret as poss-
ible,' the general wrote 'For upon
secrecy. success depends 10 most
enterpnses of the kind "
.The general was (1eorgc Wa'ihtng-
lon and the enterpn~ he "'as t.alking
about was "procunng good 10
telh~ence" -or. 10 shon. spyrna
\.\hat he had to~> about 11 in 1777
1\ being repeated in his own word'>
and others in 1986 as official \.\ash-
angton and theJaumahsts who report
on 11 irappk with what President
Reapn calls .. this busine\s of
secrecy"
Keeping secrets ''docs not come
easily to u\ Americans." the president
said 1n a speech la'it week to t1~t·
lapped \.eterans of the Office of
StrategJC Sen ices. the granddadd) ol
the CIA.
It certainly doesn't, Judging from
the adm1n1strat1on's experience so far
Ill dcahng with what 1t sa)'i 1s an
alarm1n$ leakage of tntl'lhgence infor-
mation in the news media
The tnal this week 1n 8dlt1more
federal coun of Ronald Pelton, the
former National Secunt> Agency
communica11ons "-Orker accused of
~lhng ~crets to <io"1et agents he
talked with o"cr a pizza parlor
telephone has focused the issue most
sharply
But. as White House spokesman
Edward D1ere11an told reponers rn
da>. "there 1s a larger question" going
be\ond Pl'llon's ca\e.
"Every method we have of obtain-
ing in1elli~ence -our agents, our
relat1onsh1ps with other intelhgence
TODAY IN HISTORY
By lb~ A11oclated Preas
Toda) 1s Wednesday. June 4. the
l 55th da) of 1986. There are 210 days
~n1ccs. our photographic. our elec-agecml'ntsw1th1n thcadmm1i.tration,
iron 1c. our comm u n 1cat1ons but said he wouldn't get 1010 "who is
capab1hltes -have beeri dama,ed . advoc~ting what"
b) disclosures of sensitive 1nfor-l\s the government unfolded 1t!i
mauon " CIA Director Wilham J. case againsl Pellon in coun, Casey
Ca~> 1old The Assoc1&Ned Press an an and NSA Director Lt. Gen Wilham
intl'rvtew last week E. Odom issued a wamms.
The admin1strat1on 1s attacking the "Those reponmg on the trial
problem on two front~ and is not should be cautioned aga1ns1 specu-
tind1ng the going easy on either As 11 lat1on and reponing dew ls beyond
seeks to stop its own people from the information actually released at
making unauthonzed disclosures 11 tnal Such speculation and add1t1onal
enlOunters d1sagreeml'nl 10 its ranks facls are not authonzed disclosures
over how far to go And when 11 and may cause substantial harm to
cauuons news organ1.iat1ons about the national secunt:r "
publishing -;cns1tive 1ntclhgence 1n-Lawrence K Grossman, president
formation 11 1s accused of tr)tng to of NBC News. rl'spondcd "There arc
muzzle the press some countne<1 where 'spernlat1on or
"Meeungs have talo..en place at tht• analysis must be authonzed b} the
working level to look al how the aovemml'nt before 1t can be pubhsh-
govemment can have better dis-ed or broadcast. That does not
c1phne over unauthon1ed dis-happen in a democracy and our
closures ·· D1ere11an said const1tut1on will not allow 11 to
"When the senior group that would happen 1n the United Stall'""
have to make recommendal1ons on Sen Charles Mathias, R-Md .. a
1h1s mue meets. then you gel into the senior member of the Senate Ju-
area where rl'commendat1ons 10 the d1c1ary Committee said hl' believed
president will _ be d1scus~d in an Casey "1s genuinely conwn~ bv
authornauve way" thl'SC leaks, genuinely feels lhat there
He said he didn't know when this Wlll some damage be done but I thtnk
would happen that society .at large ha~ to balance
..\mg,q lhe issues being d1sctaSCd whatever thbt damage ma} be as
an; how extens1vel)' to administer against the much greater damage of
i>ol}graph, or he detector. lests lo muizling the press."
government employees Casey sup-The adm1n1stratton retrc.-ated u hll
ports polygraph use. but Secretary of on the issue of the verb "speculate ..
State (1eorge P Shulll has said he which Webster's New World D1c-
would rl's1gn 1f he werl' asked to t.akc tionary define\ as .. To think about the
one \anou~ a'>peel<.. of a given \uh1cct
Also JI l\SUC' IS a 19'\0 ld\lo aea1nst med1tale. ponder· especially lo .:on·
"puhli\h1ng any clas'i1fied mfor-Jecture "
ma11on concerning the commun1ca· "If J had 1t 10 do over again I might
uons 1ntelhgence act1v1t1es of the not use that word" said (a\•'\. "I
United States" m1~l u!>C 'extrapolation · ·
Case\ cited this law in refemn$. to_ "Extrapolate" 1s defined a!> .. to
the Ju'itJ{f' Department for possible amve at conclusions or re)ults b:,.
prosecution an NBC-TV report on hypothes121na from known facts or
the Pellon tnal. The law has never observations" or "'to speculate as In
been 1n \ oked agaln'it a news or-consequences on the baw, of kno'' n
gan11a11r1n and some admin1strat1on facts or o~rvat1ons"
oflic1ah arc \31d to believe 11 should DJereJian, 100. said that "a hcttl·r
not be word than speculation multi h;1\l"
DJere11an conceded there are dis-been found "
left in the ) <';tt
Today's h1nhdays Sen. Howard
Met1enbaum, D-Oh10. 1s 69. Opera
singer Rohen MCTTill rs-67. Actor
Gene Barry 1s 64 Actor f>t·nn1~
Weaver 1s 62 Actor Bruet~ Dern 1<; ~O.
Singer Frcddte Fender 1s 49 Tennir,
plaru-AodrcaJaegu 1$ 21.
You rm~t think ( hemob)I would
ha..e taken !>Oml' of the smugness out
of the comml\s1on and perhaps
cau\td 11 to pay closer attention to the
complaints uf II\ own safety inspec-
tur'i
Unfortunnlel}. this didn't happen
We have learned that, since the
hideous acc1dtnt in the Ukraine, the
Nuclear Regulator. ( omm11s1on
st.in called in tht• inspectors and
informed the m that new, more
lenient interprc:tauons of fire-safety
regulauon~ had b·en approved by the
cumrn1s\1oner-. uvt•r the tn'ipectors'
vehemcnl protcw.
l he $Overnment ha.s t1rclcwy m-
pealed its assurances to thl' American
publu; thal a Chernobyl-type disaster
can't happen hert" because of desipl
d1tkrenct:s. Tim 1\ true, but 11 ts also
beside lht· point
..\' \afcty 1nspcnors e~plained to
u' man:r l ~ nuclear plarrts have
their own unique '!eh of hazards thf{t
could lead 10 lirts. subsequent run-
:l\'a> control room~ and ultJmate
l3ta'itrophe I he facl !hat a nuclear
tragcd) '>'on'! be <l carbon copy of < h<"rnob>l will bl' small comfort to
1hc virt1m\
( )nl" l:Olllllll'l'!Hlll Source S&ld the
ne\\ guideline\ deli\. er an ominous
meo;<,age: ··Fire \aft·ty is JUSl a minor
l\\Ue" Even af1t•r the homble exam-
pit• of< hernoh' I. the rnmm1s'>1on has
1111w lunfirmed th1'> message
A tire last month at the Browns
ferry 4.la . nuclear complell raises
rl·nc\\f'd concern o"er fire safet> The
late'>t fire thdn t affect any safety
s~~tems hul one 1n l'i75 dtd, nearly
l3U'\tng a meltdown Inspectors told
u'> that the Brown\ Ferry operators -
the Tennessee Valle) Authonty -
art 'l1ll resisting the satet't standards
aJ 1pted after the 1975 tire
I hl" 11eM-d1sastcr in 1975 Wl~
0111 '11,11 1.ontrol room functions.
l l~\t'n \Car'> later. -;cvcral an!lpcctors
~.llll the new pu1dehncs penmt a
"mtlar mishap hv not full)' protl'Cttna
l\e' controls
incrrdtbl}. 1he ne.,.. gu1dehnes let
nudcar plant operators s1de1tep the
protl'Ct1on of rcdundanl control sys..
te1m h\ planning firt' ~fety for the
fir\t '>ct ot wntrols onlv.
Birds and bees do it but
T tk ~~~nc ... pcrnlil parual fire
bdmer'i lxtwO(n 1he first conltOI 'l}~tem and the batkup system, wb1ch
can be in the <,ame room. This meana
that n fire could short-circuit both
WSlern'i
some need an ~xplanation The redundant system 1s the key,
but ti rcdundall(') 1s compromised bY.
fire lhe nsk 1s (another) Chernobyl.·
an 1m.pector said 011e source est1•
mated that ~ 01 60 ot the nntion'1
la'it year a hummanab1rd built a
ne\l 1n the scheffiera plant in our
courtyard. Hummingbirds' eggs t.akl'
14-16 days to hatch and the chick~
'l.BY in thl' nest thrtt weeks.
We placed the 1elescopt 1n ~
stralC&JC pos11ton tn watch the:
proc.cedmas
Mother Hummer chucd all bird'>
out of lhe area, evl'n the one'i perched
on the autter She took over the feeder
for her sole u~ and red the nall'd 't7lttMes every fl'w mmutes afttr tht•y
hatched:" •
When they feathered oul flJ1p~
their hnl~ wmp and look off, ~e pul
lht tele~ope n•ay and ,t.arted catch·
1n1 up on the chores that had been
neglected dunna that fivc--weck
penod
This year another hummin&bi"1
amvcd and built a nest on a tiny ltgJ'l1
bulb, one of a ~tnn1 of liabt in a
comrirctcly cxpo~d am -not the s~ of an expenr.nccd nctt·builder.
Out came the lclescope.apin and
we ~ttled in for thl' countdown. We
warchcd her cum lhe ClfS cattfully
from time to tame. Oa:as1onaUy, he
*OUld Oy 1n with bits or hchen and
more p1der web to shore up the nest
-tt takes a bc:a1Jn1 bcina exposed to
the wand and :SUn.
ARcr 18 dfl)'I I climbed a laddct
and pecked in There arc two m1nu~
cute e ' -1t 11 not her 1ma11nat on.
ANN
WELLS
Yt"\tl'rday wa~ her 14th dny It "'
obv1ou\ this 1sa vu11n hummtnttbird
and thf' eaas arc not fertile.
In a couple oflittle chat\ wtth her, I
told her the correct procedure 1s to ·
find n male. mate, and then lay the
e.11s. It 1$ hard tQ explain the facts of
lift' to a remale humm1nab1rd. She
won't sit sttll (or 1t
I rtmmded herthat 1f he d1dn't &et
off that nest and find a boyfriend
befort the season 1s over, there will be
no way ahe c.an raist a family this
\·ear
She JUSt OufTcd up her feathtn,
~moothed the edacs of the l:Nlttert:d
littlt nett with her Iona beak. and
&Jared ac me. .
Yesterday I called tbe cunitor of
birds at the Los Anaelt1 7,oo and
asked him 1r h• wottld ht more apt to let~ the nm and mite 1f I rook thl'
out He "'d that was a d"t1nct
'
poss1bthty. He al~ s.aid 11 wa'i tllepl 100 nuclear powc1 plants use only
in ( ahfom1a to remove eggs from 8 partial fire harrtel'\ 'pnnklcn and
bird ne<1t at an) ttme. or to n:move detectors. nl'sts from their tocauons In a d1ssent10a. report protcstJna the
The dilemma: The neitt time she new au1dchncs. a aroup of inspectors
flies off to catc;h insects, shall J wrote: "If serious safety problems arc
remove the eggs and our· mutual d1scovc1e<l dunna on audit. an m-
frustrat1on. or do I let her sit there the \pect1on team will not be in a po'1l1on
rest of the summer'? 10 efficiently rt$Olve or cite lhe utJhty
Her contemporanes have already becau\C they (the plant operaton)
staned tn('ubaung their \Ccond have done whftt the new inter·
clutch pretatton<i require "
If f remove the egg!>, which my And the comm1ss1on'5 acnenl
mstincu tell ml' to do, r will be (.oun~I wrote m a memo that the
brcakma the law. 8ul 1inCt' takina the N ~ stall's interpretation of the
nests out oflhl' trtts 1s also 1llepl, :ind ~fcty rqulat1ons "would subl\&n·
l'vl' been do1na that for the put ually und('I much of what the oom-
\Cveral ycan to encourqe our winged rn1 "on wanted to accomphth." ()e..
tenants to renew their lca'iCS c:ich spttc thi • the commiss1onc111 rubber·
spnna, I'm alre1dy a lawbreaker. 'tamped the new interpretations.
What have I aot to lose? We want our MJNT-F.OITORIAL: Twoobterva-
wingcd tenants to renew their leaKs uons about the Reapn adminu.
each spnna. '°every fall all trees tn trauon's purported crackdown on
the counyard aet "de-nc tcd :' leaks 6f tate scacts· First. President
One mcmbtr of ouf hou~ol<i Re n him~lf broke the law·that
thinks t should lc.~l' the cw a.lonl". C'IA dirtelor Wilham Cucy wants to
He doesn't realtn how Iona a month ult on the p~ • when he revealed the
can be to a hummtn bird. I told him it evidence of L1~n tomplic1ty io the
waHqu1valent to• worn n carry1na• West Berlin dt thequc bombina.
baby 27 months 1n tcad of nine. , Second. thl' White House memo oca
Hr said "~t n.atu"" take 1t5 tht Cf'Kkdown 1n t kers
counc." promptly lea~oU co 11. terl ~
You can tell he ha• nC" r hccn Douom hne: Pl n I u is an
prqnant. 1n~1de JOb, and ou 1tart at the cop
C.lua.l1t Au •111 lltti I.. J•d Aoders D.a/e Vo Alta upu Nlpel .,.updlctlf'fl rolurw1i...
·Goodbye nuclear family-
., JO\'CE SCll.EBER BODLOVICB Beina a stepfamlly ii not better Of
.._,... .. , s s s worsethananyotherk.indoffamily,n
\be ltq)fa.mily the •new' tam ily of is only different.••
l980s? · Accordina to mllriaac, A type of unrealistic expectation, ana chi)d counselor Nancee aptly named the ·era.dy Bunch ayn-
wbo specializes in step-drome, • describes a situation where
IAnUJM:s. .. the a.nswer is yes. ~very~_i!i the newl~ ~en~ f&Q'lily
.. In l 980 there weR a~mately · II tx,,_....., .to have unmecliate love
25 mi.Dion ste{>Camiliet m the United for tach other. Stata." she aasd. .. his estimated that .. It would be urueal.istic for me to
l,500 new stept'amilies are created ~pect . my new husband. to have '9Ch day; 80 percent of divqroed 1mmed1ate love for my child, or for
people miwty within the fint three me to think I )ViU automatically love
years after tho divorce. 8Y the end of m¥ busbtn~'s cbjld. Or ... that our
this decade, less than SO percent of children wtU instantly love each
our OC>Pulation wiD be the tnditional other. What my husband and I can
llUdearfanilly. Thereis~ubUhat ex~ O"om each other, ~owcver._ is
stepfamilies are. a prominent part of ~t we treat the stepchildren with
the American family 1eene." .. f~mess, honesty and ~.that we
A aiepfamily, as defined by Noel, is wdl do whatevC!' 1s . J>C?,S$1ble to
one with a non biol<>sical child. The de~elop the relauonsh1p, she ex-
child can be arown and livina away pla1ncd. . .
from home or he or she can be young . Prcmamaae counsclu~g or attend-
and still raidina at home. •na. a workshop, according to Noel,
N . . assists the parents to better undcr-oel, . who is president of ~ stand the different ·obstacles which 0rante ~unty cbap~r ofSteP.fanuly they may face. It can help deter the
of America A~uon. teaches a resentment that builds through lack
claas on stepfamilies at Oranae C.oast of understandina and communica-Colleae and leads worksh~ps lion. thro.ou~ Oran~ County which .. That certainly doesn't mean that
provade. anformataqn ~o people once you become informed about the
alrqily m a stepfanµly Situation., or special problems stepfammes can linale ~ts who are contemplating experience, that your ne'k household
a ~mamace. will be problem tree. The conflicts can
.. In the classes we talk about the still ansc, but the difference is that
unrealistic expectations placed on you have anticipated the problems
stepfatnilics because that is where and you \\'ill not t.alce them as a
most of the problems oriainate," she personal failure,•• she said.
said. ..Those types of expectations One of the ·major difficulties that
lead to unfulfilled drearps; feelinas of loom over stepfamilies is the conflict
failure and despair. Steptamilies are between the new couple when trying
unique; the dynamics and issues are to ~I everyone into the new
different from the traditional family. relationship.
A l~t of compassion
can be ·restrictive.
Some would call Mary an old-
fasb.ioned girl -you know her kind.
She's always there for her family.
Her floors are shiny, her dog is fed,
her prden is ~rfect. Shirts rc-eppear
in cfoscts as 1f by mific. Meals seem
to pop on the table an an attractive
ma.oner at 6 p.m. each evenina.
Her husband's clothes are "laid
out" in a coordinated fashion each
momina. (He's come to expect that,
she Ilic[) Once last year, she bad to ,0 out o(town for a funera.11 and left 3
days of clo1hes preued ana ready for
him. John nevertban.ked her directly,
but never complained about her
leaviq and Mary wu arateful.
When he brinaa a client home for
dinner unexpectedly, be need not
worry. He can always count of Mary
to have t.hinp run smoothly. ·
She runs interference for him, with
their three lcids and even with his
parents.
· .. You know how busy John is," she
reminds his mom. "We'll be sure to
see YOU on Thanbgivina NEXT
rear.''
It's she who goes to back-to-school
' niahts. manages the family check-
book. plans the vacations and buys
the theater llckets.
She-manages their social calendar
and sees to it that she is available to
adjust to John's any whim. .
Mary has learned to not argue with
John. Their secret unspoken contract
centers around harmony at any cost.
Last year. she thou$bt about going
back to school pert time. When she
presented her thought. John didn't
sound too enthusiastic. What 1f her
school interfCf'Cd too much with his
life?
.. Homework takes time you
k:now ... and if this is the year I'm
REA.LL Y able to take a vacation,
you'd feel terribte if you had to drop
out of your classes."
Mary tabled the idea -at least as
far as f ohn was concerned. 'Mary --the perfect wi fc and
mother·-told her therapist this week
that she was thinking about running
away from home ... Maybe I'm just a
spolled brat for thinking that I have
any rights." Should she really have to
get divorcedand/oJ run away in order
to take a couple of classes? -
Jean Baer, (How to be an assertive
(not agressive) woman in life. in
love, and on the job, Signet 1976) calls
"The atepP,&~nt often (eels left
out, .. she 111d. • Tbe natural perent
and the child have a history of shared
experiences. But for tbe stepparent,
who is many times not really allowed
into the family, not neceJllrily bo-
Nancee Noel wt.th a patient.
new relationship with the child."
Another problem area faciDJ the
cau!e the biological family is trymg to
keep them out, but because they arc
just not part of the history. The
relationship or bonding between the
parent and child is strong because it
took years to build. The stepparent
needs time to nurture and develop the
IJ101
Aa.caz1
Mary's dilemma the "Compassion
trap.'~
She says that even in a close
relationship you do not have to
•Exist only to serve your husband.
•Be the one that bears all the
responsibiltty for bis sick relatives.
•Take sole responsibility for
"keeping the family together."
•Confme yourself to the l(jnder.
Kliche, Kircbe (children, lcitchen.
chun:h) role advocated by Hitler in
Nazi Gcnnanyl. and &till firmly rooted
in the minds or many women.
Sure -doing "your own thing"
may sound selfish, ~and may indeed
be selfish) -if that s all you do. But
having enough personal integrity and
self-esteem to claim discretionary
time l& ~e some selfish goals is
good mental health.
Surely John can learn to undc.r·
stand.
Dr. AJ1a11 11 a marrtafe & family
ttaeraplat lD Corona de Mar. ~e
welcomes yoor responses. U yoa wlall
a reply, please enclose a 1tamped,
self-addressed envelope. Write to
LlDda Alpd, P ... o ., C/O Dally Pllot,
P.O. Box lHf, Cotta Meaa tHH.
s ayile lo t o t1i e StepTamily
natural P.l:ftllt. because be or she teels
responsible for bri.nsioa the new f~ toaether, is alwaJS attemptina
to nee every area 1n the family.
Whenever a conflict arises between
the lteppastnt and cluld., he or lbi
poaible,." she said. Noel Wd she tnes to bdp people
Commurucatioo, accon:lin1 to undcntand .lhlt ~ they ~ Noel is t .. _ 1.-.. wo~ in sucx::eUfullv • somfOoe With cbildreo they are ,
t ~ -T ,IV I ~ & • k deaJ • bl~.f~:.o:~~~·uftiea. .. E~n ~~~oare not livina
tion isto buiJd a suon1 coup6e bOOd,.. at home. yo~ ~ stall oot marryina
she said. ·~ niucb in the f(ec6mity OM P.tf'IO~··· It lS I pect1~ dQl ~
depends.on the relatioowp betweeil the ~ wdl be around wtiethei •! •
the new couple. The stro~ t~ phy11cally or cmotJ~caHy. The clUJ·
bond, the lC$S lbreateiu.,. the prob-drcn, ~oat likdy, will be pen.oftbat Jems thet occudn the ftmtly.'" S>ef"5'?D s lite for always. Jt is very
Stepfamily conructs do no1 im· poSSible that ~mewbere dowp the
mediately surface, Noel 'd. · ~ti, ~e stepcbild.ren may dOcide to
••The fust 1tqe of m.atrWte is the live _w1tb you. Abo. ~member a
'Brady Bunch Syndrome:~ Then cert11rrpett.'of ttie moneyeamea ua
either one or both of the parents ao new ~uple will a<> towlr'!uuppon o!
throuan a year or two of pretending the kids. Some ~pie .think they cu
that everythina is all right. Tbey will accept that SttuatJoo nJbt at fi~ or
try to handle tlie problems but realize ·some people d.O 001 think I.be 1$$UC
that things are not comina ~. throuJ.h. Hbweve!f after )'?1' of
Usually around this time~ is an financial support •or the kids, they
eruption and problems become ob-become iaent~ul. BuL .. tha,1 is pal of·
vious. The family realize& they arc ~t you buy-m when children are
still sep91'ated bybiol~l lines; they involved. ~. ~fore JOU man)'
have not blended into one unit, .. she someone ~~ ~bildren ~ Jwatt Of
said. those ~bil1ues." ~~e md.
Noel said it is critical for the . Noel ~d ste,P.f~ ~ho take tbe
1tepfamily to create common aoats lime to P1D ski!Js and~~~ to hdp
within their own new family· they no strenstben tJ\etr families will have
longci need to masquerade as a long term rewards. .
traditional family. ·•Eve~ tho~ somet1~es there are
••Oae other area that needs to be rough bmes 1n a stq>fl.inily. you Ibo
undentood is whether or not emo-have the .oPPG!fWUty to de= !
tio.IW divorce from the first marriage close rclanooahip with olbc:r ,
bas been completed. What l mean by sbe ~d. "'You are able~ et:tend your
will end up being pulled in two 'that is whether or '90t beth new f~il)' and tb<IK family t .F{>r a
directions. husband and wife have reaJly let go of child. he bas the ~uru~ to
"Also a negat1 ve for the new couple their former partners. That would broaden an.d k:af!l how to love m<>!'
1s that Jhcy have never had an also apply to the children. Many people besades bu ~~ AJld, an
opponunhy for 'honeymoon time.• times the children will inadvertently return, he lea.ms that be ~ loved by
The children have been there from try to sabo~ the new rela\ionsbip so~eone other 'tha.o his ~ts.
the beginning of the marri., the because they still have a fantasy Oilldren ba"e o~rtu01ty to
parents would like to have tune to dream that their natural parents will ~me exposed to new ideas~ m2"' ;~v~~;~~~·~~\;;~an. b~:;:;;d
"' Sara was 62, bad been on insulin they ate caught an a thet:apeutic
injections for 13 ycan, was taking 74 dilemma: The more they weigh, the
units a day, and wci&he4 212 pounds bigller the blood supr. the more
on a 5 foot S-inch frame. insulin is used; the more insulin that
· It is this type of patienttbat usually is used the less likely they will lose
can follow a rigid diet plan and weight.
JULIAN
WHITAKER eliminate · insulin injections lo overcome both herfears and to
altogether. What is not understood by initiate rapid weight IOS$, both insulin
many ph¥sicians and patients is that and food were stopped. For four days
the ansubn injections do not work she had nothina but water -a.ix 3-
wbere there is marked obesity. The ounce alUKS of it-and no insulin.
obesity renden the insulin .. in-She was also l9ld to stay active and cholesterol. Jn 12 days. she Jost 14
sensitive," so that even ifthe injec-took2and3mile~eacbday_.He:r · pounds,berbloodsupnwcrcstilli~
tions arc continued, the blOod supr blood suprs were. lD ~ 250-300 the mid 200 raqe -me same that°"'
will remain high unless exoessive range while on the insulin and food, they bad been wb.ile usma insulin -
doses arc used -wbicb wu the cue but durina her fast. they fell 10the1ow but \hete wilt f.aJI with continuation of
here. 200s without insulin. her new diet and curcite propam. Al
The first hurdle to removina the If this lm'D.S like a radical al, she loses the ~t herdiabelel will
insulin injections wu Sara's f~ Qf proach,. it it not. Dr. John di1appea.r.
dire consequences if such wasrdonc. Davidson, Professor of Medicine and
She had taken the injections.for 13 · Head of the Diabetes Unit a1 ~ TbJS approacb worb ontyfor-thost-
years, and tbouah all of her orevious UniYenitf Medical School. i.ft ~iJao.. dilbrtics who~ .ov~1 aad !D
physicians had told her that sbe could · ta, Georgia, bas been dotna 11 (or whom the obesity as a .m~or factor an
probably stop the injections if she lost years! He ha$ fasted and eliminated the diabet~ ~o diabe.tic shout~
40 poun<,is, she was stroQ&ly coo~ tnsulin from tens of 1housands of attempt this ~o"!t bis doctor s
ditioned psychologically that the obetediabeucsovert.htycarsdd iw--tnowfedat and ditecnon:
injections were needed. found it so safe and effective, that be
However, the insulin was prevent-simply~sthepetientwhal'?doand
ing her from losing wei&ht! She now sends them home for a wee.IL
weighed 20 pounds more than she At the end of the four days. Sara
had weighed when it was started, and was put on small quantities of fruit
she bad failed to lose weight for 13 and vegetables and gradually started
years. In the obese diabetic, large on her permanent diet of high fiber,
doses of insulin make weight loss high carbohydrate food with "'5trio-
almost impossible. and for many, tions of fat, animal protei,ns, and
Jllllu W..tam, -M..D .. ls 4JncW
of die Nau.al lleatt ud Dtabeta
Treatmeat lmUtwte la B= Beadl. Please address U,
or eommeah r. Mai c/• Dlllly
PUot, P.O. Bu 1511, C..ta Mea
Htit.
Frankie
. ~ croons at cancer benefit
BJ VIDA DEAN auction and later were bidding tn a Jive auction conducted by Irvine Mayor
Of .. ..,,......,. ».ve Bater, who claims to be the biggest elected official lD OC (six-foot-nine
Sometimes an artist donates bis time and talent for a "good cause" by ancb320 pounds.)
makinaa .. token appearance" on stqewithaco-.pleofsongs, a little clever Vitti (Jan, that is) started the auction by bidding and getting a kiss from
fl b f h SupervisorTomRUe1for$275. monolosuc and a as 0 c arm. Tom R1Jev (another one) picked up a prize that will see hls home decorated NotsoPnakleAnloa. 1
Didbedoa number on the more than 3S0deligbtedguestsat the oc atChristmasby~lJndaay. The Fashion Island floral designer also did the
American Cancer Society benefit! For over an hour he wowed 'cm with song. tabledecrationsat the benefit-pails of tulips set in sand. "Inspired by my
lrli".l'Wlliftftr--.... rcu~~"11..tly,n"'· pul10Cape Cod," Chris said. dance, impenonationsand even a bi\.Of trwnpet~aying with aITTJ'ie eltefJr Before, after and between courses of the ti let mignon ofbeefdinncr, guests
reminiJcent oflUs teen-age beach romp movies. e as now the father of eight danced to the music of'Ray ADtlaoay (Avalon said Anthony was his trumpet
ransinafrom 12to22yeanoldand bis wife was ere to take a bow.) teacher.)
•• Auene PulteUo wan~ to come, bu~ she's home making peanut butter . • .
aandwic:bes." joked Avalon in reference to bas beach days. Other comma nee members who have met weekly at Jan s Harbor Ridge
Hiloerformance at the·· A Summer Place'' benefit an the Merida en home to plan the benefit, included lu Armstroa1, Doua BIH, Dtua
ballroom was precec:1Cd bytlie surprise a_Weai ance comedian .Jee~~ho.--Brom~Dot Clock, Slllrle)' Rarrb.MUJUQ B~. Mary toe Hornsby •.
did biJ nisbtclub stand-up routine of sonas and sometimes barbed jokes. Joaue llaiat, Lyne J ona, LywPeane,Ardil&e Reis, S.aaw Ru ...allae
.. ltwulike1LasYepssbow,"aareedcommitteemembenVlrpnla~n1 JeoR7u.Also,membcnoftheHuntingtonHarbourCancerlequeand
and CedUa Nott. .. South County league were on hand to assist with a\h'.tion details .
.. Neiiherone of them charged usa dime," said cbainnan J u Vitti. "We Proceeds will be used to fund research. educatiQn, service and _
should mateS70toS80tbouund fortheCancerSociety." ActorMlc .. ael rehabilitation. J acqHllae Boran.e~ecdircctor, saic:f. "Fony percent. of
DoS.(brothcrofJan's husband ToaJ) helped arranaed for the performers' contributions made to national are returned to Oran&c County. Also, At UCI
perti(ipation. · . . . . S 1 million is being spent f<?r research to fund eightspcct ~c proJeclsat UCI ...
The black tie crowd dresaed to the nines bepn the evening with a silent laser surgery., byperthcmua and breast cancer research.
..
. .
•
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'I do~ ••• for manJ, m&~J JelU'_S_•RAPPm•-JVPTR•
When these two couples said "I
do,'' they m~t it. T<>sether their """'"--mun..-•PH • «ntury nd a
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Today a.frank and Emma Hudson
of Costa Mesa ate marlcins their 6Sth
annjvcnary with a small ptherina of
family and friends.
Frannie and Bayard Ryder of
Newport Beach celebrated their .60th
anniversary Sunday at the Chez Cary
restaurant in Oranae.
On the eve of the Ryders' intimate
dinner, champagne and flowers plus a
silver tray arrived from the~ two
children, Joanfl Ryder Bacbeller and
husband Charles of Albuquerque
N.M. and son Bayard Tod Ryder and
wife Helen of La Mirada.
The tray'has an inset of a two and
half carat diamond, anniversary in-
teription, with the names of the
celebrants' children, six grand-
children and nine great-grnnd-
children.
Fran was born in Los Angeles and
was graduated from USC. She is one
of four children of Charles Baker, who
built a chain of 19 C. H. Baker shoe
stores.
Bayard moved with his parents.
Dr. and Mn. Bayard Edward Ryder
· from North Dakota when he was 6.
He also was graduated from USC and
after several years as a C. H. Baker
company executive, he formed his
own shoe companies, Bryson Shoes
and Ryder of California.
Since . the~ marriage was per-
formed in 1921 at Marietta. Okla., the
Hudsons have added 40 members to
their family.
Their sons Cecil and Robert reside
10 Costa Mesa; Gerald in Riverside;
Oaude in Calipatria and flarold lives
in .Mesa. Ariz.
• rnu&hten of the couple are Im-~ene R.. Cutter of Moore, Okla. and
Linda Ashton of Columbus, Ind.
They also have 22 grandchildren aod
11 great-vandchildren.
Hudson worked on a farm for
many years in Oklahoma before the
family moved to El Toro in 1942. He
worked for The Irvine Co., and later
moved to Laauna Beach and was
employed by the city. Costa Mesa has
been their home for the past 20 years.
Summer Sale
' 20% off
cott~s. tee shirts,
& sundresses
Something Special
· feminine fashions
We Specialize in Fashions for the Missy Figure Sizes 4-18
.
250 E. 17th Costa Mesa
Hilgren Square
lhe Souch Coast View
645-5711
Why Jo Rackemann is
feeling no pain.
PerslStam headaches. Backaches. Joint pain. Millions of Americans suffer chronic
pain problems. Yee conventional creacmenc frequently offers little relief. Just ask
Jo Rackemann, a food clerk from South Laguna.
Ten years ago Jo developed severe migraine headaches. The pain and treat-
ments that followed were nothing short of a nightmare.
Finally, Jo and her doctor took a whole new approach: The Pain Management
Program ac South C.oasc Medkal C.Cmer.
Here Jo found a concerned, multidisciplinary team. An acupuncrurist, a
physical therapist, a biofeedback technician, a psychologist, a dietician and a
pharmactsc. Combining cheir diverse skills, they went co work on both the
physical and psychological aspects of Jo's pain. They caught her how to stop it
before it began. And now she's well on her way to resuming her active lifestyle.
If you're plagued wich any chronic pain problem that doesn't respond co
conventismaJ treatment, ask your doccor abouc the Pain Management C.Cnter at
South Coasc. Or call us for more information today. After all, if Jo Rackemann is
feeling no pajn, why should ybu?
Petn Management c.ni.r
South \,oast 1~1e<lical R tltcr
31872 Coast Highway
South Laguna. CaOfornia 92677
1714) ·~ 1311
'
Suzanne Christine Juptner, dluab-
ttt of Mr. and Mn. William Juptner
of Lasuna Beach, exch~ wedd.ini v~s with ""Marf Sleven Frappier oT
Waterbury, Conn., on May 10 in St.
Mary's Episcopal Church, Laauna
Beach. The couple sreeted 120 auests
at their reception at the Hotel ~·
The bride wore a JOWD of ivory
satin with a bodice of Chantilly lace
and a cathedral train. Her finaertip
veil was held by a wreath of flowers.
Lorraine Stanco was maid of
honor, and bridesmaids were Annette
Juptner, the bride's sister, Gisele
Fenu and Paddy Sweeney.
The bridearoom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Frappier. His
brother, BiJJ Frappier, was best man,
and Dan Shiff man, Rieb Belprd and
Wayne Merctsky were ushers. ,
The cou~lo honeymooned '° the
South Pacific and now reside in
Washington, D.C. She is a financial
systems manaaer and he is a technical
representative.
Submit your
nuptial news
-The Daily. Pilot wants to share
your wedding or engagement an-
nouncement with the community.
We make it easy for you, too!
First, get copies of our engagment
and weddini forms. You can either
pick them up in our lobby at 330 W.
Bay St., Costa MeSll, Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
or mal7 your request with a stamped,
~If.addressed envelope to lhe Wed-
ding Department, Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box J 560, Costa Mesa 92626.
Weddmg and engasement news is
published on a space-available basis.
We can't guarantee you a specific
date for your news, but we try to
publish it as soon as possible.
Suunne Frapp er
HOOKER-POWERS
Garden Grove residents Gail
Robin Powers and Michael Dwayne
Hooker were married May 31 in the
First Congregational Church in
Buena Park.. They greeted 150 guests
at the Newland Barn after the cer-
emony.
The bride, a former resident of
Costa Mesa, is the daughter of
Richard J. Powers of Wcstminst~r.
She wore a full-length white gown
accented with Chantilly lace and
pearl beading, sweeping to a chapcl-
lcngtb train.
Maid of honor was Linda Farquer.-
and best man was William Brom-
mand. Bridesmaids were Tracey
Vyemura, Sherrie Hockett, Melissa
McMillin and Pamela Baker. Glenn,
GreJory and Garrett Powers,
Chnstopher Harvey and Charles
IJakerwerc ushers.
Lowen D. Hooker of Apple Valley
and Sandra J. Enos of Westminster
are the parents of the bridegroom.
The co'uple arc residents of Garden
Grove after a wedding trip to San
Diego. She is a teacher at the· Vantage
Foundation school for the de-
velopmentally disordered and he is a
field service ' presentative for the
South em eati ·a Oas Co.
If you have
R HEUMATOID
ARTHRITIS.
1
You may be eligible for
a special lnvestlgatlonal
drug program
In Orange County.
You must have had Rheumatoid
Arthritis (not Osteoarthritis)
for less than seven_ yeats
and be under age(70.
For Further lnform-9on Call
645-7862 o r 644-9631
SCBltLIK·llcKIBBllf
Family and clote friends attended 1
the marriaae ceremoDy of Constance
McK.ibbin and Kevin Dale Schelin on
April 26 in the Los Anaetcs Temple of.
the Church of La1tef-day Saints.
Elizabeth McK.ibbin the bride's
sister, and Jeff Cornwell were bOnor
attendants. Two hundred and fifty
guests attended an afternoon rccep--r-
tion at the Newpon Harbor Yacht '
Oub.
The bride is the dau&bter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Hufi McK.ibbin of
Newport Beach. She is a graduate of
Newport Harbor Hi&h School and
was graduated from IJrigham Youna
University.
Hef husband, son of Mr-. and Mn.
Dale Irving Schelin.of Costa Mesa. is
a graduate of Estancia Hiah School ~nd fulfiHea a two-year mission in
Italy for the church. He received a
degree in business from Cal State
Fullerton.
After a Mexican cout cruise on the
Fainky, the e»UOle UC' t"C$idcnts of
Newport ~}$le is a' financiaJ
service office rcw-8Bn,k~or; . erica in Ne~r\ £ontet"~ ' :1 an csti-maf¥f~~~b i" , in Santa
Ana .' • t.. -1a ·•1 • • . l 1-. .• ~
Finally, som.diing that
worlcs.
After 38 years of prov;ng
and ,,.rlecting, th.re is a
HATUIAt 'Techniqw for
btlst ca,. & d.veloprHnt.
Compl.t. program now ..
avollol:M °" viO.O ,.., to
b. v#twed in the privacy of
your hotM at a prb
EVERY WOMAN con
afford.
T re~s wcceu •x,,.n.nced
at the INTERNA TlONAL
BEAUTY SHOW '86 in N. Y. C.
March 1$-18.
5.nd in your ch.ck or
money order TODAY for 959.95*
Join us for the
LITHOTRIFI'ER PUBLIC OPEN HQUSE
Sunday, June 22, Noon to 3 p.m.
~all For More Information
Orange Coat OAILY PILOT/W~rtn(Jay, June 4, 19M
-TV L 1\ I INCS
I,_ ~ ---- --
Amae Archer and John Rit-
ter •tar ln the TV mnte 0 Bero at Larae" tontfht at 9
OD CBS. Chalinel 2.
.( Actor's career on Cruise control
Young actor learns
ropes of stardom
from Paul Newman
By BOB THOMAS • 111 ,,,_....,
LOS ANGELES -Tom Cruue
recently learned bow to deal with his
newfound stardom. His teacher. Paul
Newman
Cruise co-starred with Newman 10
Disney's "The Color of Money," a
sequel to "The Hustler.·•
"Naturally I was awed at working
with Paul Newman," said Cruise. "I
can't think of any actor who has
handled his career as well I pumped
him for advice."
And thts ts the gospel according to
Newman.
··Learn wh111s important and what
1s not important. You're gonna be
pullcd from every anale. and you JUSt
gotta learn what to deal with - on
every level.
.. Don't be afraid 10 take nsks. The
last few films I've done have been
nsk:s, and I've been settJn& academy
nommauons for them. Oh. I've had
my hifhs and m y lows, Cruise, and 1f
you stick around Iona cnouJh. so Wlll
you."
Newman·s dictum as p~ny much
the way Tom Cruise has already
conducted his movtc career. An
1mmed11te sensation as 1he Red Beret
fanatic Ul hu fint film, "Taj)S," be
~istcd beina ·typed as a teen-age
psxchouc
'After 'Taps' I was offered a lot of
msanc characters -hip, on-thc-cd~e
auys," be recalled in an mtervtew. 'I
chose to work with Francis Coppola
ID 'The Outsiders,' even tbou&h
people told me, 'It's not a b11 rofe,
there's no money· It didn't matter.
Herc was a chance to work with
FranCls Coppola, one of the ~u of
the film world."
Next came "Rim Busmcu." the
sex comedy that established rum wtth
the youna audience He played an
entcrpnsina hiah schooler who runs a
home for boo~ers while his parents
arc away
Aftu plar,na a h1Jh school football
player ID 'All the Rlaht Moves."
Crwtc took bis "bigest nsk." the
Ridley Scott fantasy. "liacnd." The
film opened last month to mued
reviews, and bis (ans may have been
perplexed at find.ma him in a world
filled with sprites and aobbos.
Cndae Newman
mother and 111ters. Cruise was sul>-spent weeks ban1>na out w11h Riers at
Ject to the learnina disability, dy~ the Miramar Naval Air Station near
lex1a. whtcb didn't help his adj ust-San OJeao. He took three fllabu 1.0
ment 1n schools. F14 fi&bten and one with the aero-
But when be played Nathan Detroit battc Slue Anaels
in bis New Jetsey tu&h scboors
productJon of .. Guys and Dolls," hts "I wanted to capture th1np that the
hfe was changed. sen~ wntcn couldn't convey," said
"I felt I wasn't ready for collCf; Cruue. "I spent houn with them at
cmouonally or financially," he said. their favorite baniout -a lot of
·•for most people, the enjoyment of been. a lot of stories. I saw.bow they
theu first year in college 15 in bemg dctcribcd flijhts with their baDds and
away from home. I didn't need that with body lanauqe ... I wanted the
After 'Guys and Dolls' I decide3 I ,.._.fi_lrn_to_be_a_s_rcaJ __ u_pos_s_ib_le_._ .. __ ___.
really wanted to be an actor. I had
found the creative outlet I had been
lookina for."
He spent some ume tn New York
act101 workshops and appeared in a
dinner theater production of "God-
spell " That was his only professional
ellpenencc when he was chosen for a
small role in "Taps." He proved so
1mpress1ve 1n rehcanaJs that two ''Top G un" returns Cruise to the role1 were combined to proVlde the
contemporary world. He plays a U.S pan that started bis career 00 a roll.
Navy Jet pilot who takes danJerous For his role in "Top Gun," Cruise
TOM~
•~=r11c.nnu=='::r w chances in the air and beds wtth his -===============:::::;~ instructor. ~lly McG1lhs. 1.
~ ...... Cruise was 10tervicwcd in an ~ ~ A PAIWIOUIT PIClUllE I --·-..__.... __
alcove of the empty d•runa room '" P-Olu caw¥ ISry w one of those rudcaway West Holly---....-. ~I M .,.,,..
wood hotels that visauna celebntics mDJ(!)\JllllfUiU!ll
seem to favor. It was the lun<:b hour,
but the other hotel ~ests were ••Ir 1$3 9 CIST•m.t ..., .. -spendma their ume beside the roof--3• l_._c.. ,_..._. ~
top pool --NOW PlAYINCi--,....5olt17" '-.....,.. .... .,
•mA • mm ..... •LA--With his flushed cheeks, Cruise at -----. .. ---· ............ "'"" "'-*•LI-• ............ · _.... --_...,. !.1t mt 9'MI ;_.-;= ~coutdstin_-pllytbe~ott,t?R>ulb .-... uatwww .~ .,..;;-he 11 determined not to. tle 1s a self-:::--n:-~ =:.;:.-·:=...,.. ·=WU
COnfident man who has maintained a_-.._ -=-·::;:;_.....,. m• .....,._,. *'w1•
.,_ ·~llAO *Im =·~· control ofa movie career in which his .:.-:allMI •E: ........,. • E-a-. •IT..,. • ._ .. salary has risen to SI million pJus 10 :::-=.--_ =:::=.: c.. .. , ono E .... ._.. mu•,.
fi ... •"*-lllU c-•1"* ·--1 vc ycan. ·=.:.--( ::=:-.= J(..!:n:;.-.wn•) E.....S.C.l_..._ .... ,..,, --~
"M . times I would feel 1u1hy 1 ~;::::==:=:=:=::=:=;::=:=:=~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~ because I was so youns and yet doina r::
so well," he wd. "I asked myself,
'How can I Justify success?' But then I
dcoded I would simply enjoy 1t. Once
1 dCCtded pn a project, 1 would pve
my hfc to at."
Thus he devoted a year each to
"Lqend" and "Top Gun," lcamins
all aspects of fiJm10a Wlth an eye
toward dcveJoptns ha s ocwl} formed
T C. ProduCtJons.
Born 1n Syracuse. NY. Tom
Cruise moved from city to city as his
eoaineer father shifted JObs. HtS
pa.rents divorced when he was 11 and
his m~er supported him and htS
three sutcrs as a teacher of d).'slex1c
and 1bypcrkincttc chtldren. Like hlS
aAlllQAINMA~ MONDAY TH .. U 9AT\J .. DAY 1eT 2 PIM'<>"MANCle
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COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 86
Job outlook best in ·so cities
---Pacific Savings
nam-ts new veeps
Los Angeles. Boston metro areas to lead most pc>puloua meU"O area by 2000,
surpassana New York.
That government atudy, released
last Oc«mb«. also picked Los An-
geles as the rcaion wuh the IJUltSt
poi.eotiaJ for job arowth. followed by
Houston and Boston.
ton and s1m1lar art.as, but wnh
dechnina oiJ pnccs. en~rsr.-dtpe!>·
dent areas ate "leu boomina lhan "'
the past. Strona s:ud. nation's hiring spree for next 14 years On the other hand, the lowered
enc'I)' prices arc a benefit to older
tndustnaJ areas which att rnorc
dependent on oil 1ndt>thcr encr&)
sources.
Costa Mesa-based Pac:lflc Savtap Bok bas added a senior vice
president and a vice president to its finance d1v1i1on. Irvine res1dent
Edward f'. GobebaJJJOI n the firm as scmor vice prnaden t/corponue
controller He oome~ from Sec:w.rtty Pactfic lDccrutloul Ftnaece,
lee. of · n Daeio. where he served as vtcc presadent/e<>ntroller Paal
Ta.a JOan~ Pacific as vice prcsidcnt{ch1ef plannans officer. He wn!I
vice president ofplannma for Flnt lakntaae Bank. Los Angek!> •••• Jeff Rllffolo of Irvine has been promoted to vice president ot
pubhc relations for Reseat A1r Cot'f· Ruffolo had bttn director of
public relauons for about a year He·~ also president of lrvme-ba)C(!
Rllffolo J>RblJc Relations. • • • Jo~ F. McLaaplta, a rcJlStcred g.coeraJ sccuntacs rc:pre~nta-
tJve and principal, hM joined the Ncwpon ~ach office of
Cbrl1topher WeU 6 Co., lDc. financial planning and s«untaes firm .
He had wor._cd for McComb• Secarltle1 Co. B!> vice pre!>adent and
rcgastt'red representative for 20 years. • • • David Kirk LeMoa1 has JOined Hopkha1 Dnelopmnit Co. a!>
director of convenience center development. responsible for site
an1u1S1t1on Prevaou\ly with Pioneer Talle-Oul, lnc., he has l>IX year!>
of prupert~ development expenence. • • • David Lakacko wa!t named Agent of the Month m Febn,iary for
the commercial m~urance d1v1s1on of Aetna Ufe It CatJalty an
Orange Lukacl..o 1~ employed b) Jay & Renfro ln1uruce A1ncy tn
'lewrort Beach • • • Lisa M. Stoffer has101ncd the Newport Beach office ofSdaDelder
Commercial Real E1tate as a broker speoalmng an offict sales and
kasmg The lr"tne resident had been a ~le~ agent wnh Bucb &
Flaatea 1n an "1anno
lJY RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
,_,, 111 I ,,._..._
WASHINGTON-C'ahfom1aa'nd
Massachu'letts comunstac-s wall lead
the nauon 1n new Jobs through the
tum ofthr next century. according w
a pnvatc study that pr~1cts that
nearl) half of all ncv. JOb!I 'A-111 be 1n
JUSt 30 metropahtan area~.
l he National Planning A.~!l-0( 1,won
Volt Research
opens clinics
for skin care
The first an a senes of dermatolog~
cltntcs has been formed by Volt
Research Inc of Irvine.
The chmcs, to be operated b) the
Evergreen Skin Care Cenlt'~ of
AmencB Medical Group Inc. will
spec1ahze tn a comprehonsa'c skin-
care treatment for the effect~ of ag.mi
and the prevention of precancerous
changes due to sun exposure
The first chnac v.111 open an mtd·
summc-r. Volt Research. which has
contracttd with the medical group to
operate the clinics. C:\pe<:ts to oixn a ---;R~U~f~f;;E~l;--;l-;'~S~--1;:;;:;;:=========~1 number of them, mit1ally 1n Calt-
ITTlpl·erce Brothers rorn1a. 1hen across the coun1ry ~ Im pnnc1pals. Marti~tftichard UPHOLSTERY INC. Bell Br<>idway Mortuary Holt. Dr Rollin Green and Dr Roger
Grttn. are all long-s.tandtng member!. 110 "O:::Y 642-915 of the Orange County bus1nes!. and
medical communities.
"'-• YN o.a_, COTtn MGftl
1922 HAalO IUD COSTA llUA 541115'
---COSfA MESA MEDICAL CENTER HOSPITAL---.
&
cm me
THE COSTA MESA POLIC E D~PARTMENT
PRES NT •
Saturday, June 21 , 1986
Information will be presented by members of
the poltee department and members of the
Cosio Mesa Medacol Center Hospital staff
• Avoiding sexuof ossouftlprof!Te·or o rapist ~'"
• Prevention & awareneS5 ~ <./> ~~._
• "Victor or V1Ct1m " {film) ~~. 0~
• Post assault exominot1on & core Y' ~<>~
• V1ct1m survival course ,~o(.
Two seminar sessions will be available
8 :30 o .m. to 12:30 p.m . or
1 :00 p.m. to 5 :00 p.m.
Women's Safety Seminar will be held in
the conlerence center of Cosio Mesa Medical
(i>nter Hospital Reservations ore required to
guoranlee your space Write to Admm1sfrol1on
or the Hospital or call 650-2400
COSTA MESA MEDICAL CENTER HOSPITAL
301 Vtelona St, Costa Mesa, C l1forn1a 92627
The company recentl) completed a
pnvate placement of I mallton share!.
of its common stock
Voll Research is dedicated to the
development of new coneepts tn the
pre' entton and treatment of the aging
process
NEW VORK (APl -The followlng list soows the Over -the • Counter stocks end werrenh thel heve gone uP the most end down lhe most bese<I on l*'cent of chenoe for Tuesdev No securltlft lredlno below S2 or 1000 snares ere Included Net end C*'centege chenoes ue lhe dlff8f'ence l>elw"n !he prevlo.,is cl0$1ng price end Tuesoev'Mft or bid e>rlce
t Mk~~~un Lr2'' Ic~ UPPc~,,
o.ti:Hlll 1~ l~ UP f: Olgltedl 73-l~ UP 6
' HenredFurn 57'"> 11 • UP •• S Potvm,\'s un I \1-16 + 1~ UP I
' ~~~c:o,:1 WI ~:~ S~ 16 8~ ll l
9 Aml(.tlr vn 11. 1 •'I UP l . I GreenwPtl p 7-\ UI> 1 9
10 Funllme Inc ~ v.. UP 1 . l~l AmL•lld wt '·• UP 1' MarihSupmk l 2~ UP 14 ~rodlQY 2 11• Up 1· l•s ~mo•i• 3 ~ UP •
16 term ''h-'h UP 1 1? WlkrTele wt 2'1• ''• UP 1 .
twe IGP 191"> 21/• Up 1, ..
111 ~11loll 1 S-l6 I/• Up I 9 lrdfndr un l 'n -~ Up l . io~51 azComEkP 7 l'4 lJp l • R:~~~!p11 ~ l~i,; 8g l :2 lnte~end l '{ v. UP lit 0C Ttch S-16 UP 11 Am stFdlMI ~ ~ UP 11.
Ne me l Ac.aJQe
2 ~NH Bnc s l ElundLtd ' u lcCP f K nelOes
I ~&'~;::h lli ~~Asioc s
f-
s .. xCp
wstAlr wt ox Tech 1' Protocom
DOWNS
L•j'., _c7t Pc16 ~
3 lj6 :i.~lt 1 ~7 i~ :=:l 111 21 - 3 I 11 -1., 1
)l.. l l f'" .~ 1l 2 •,. 11.1
IS WstnWldTv -=============================;;i j WstnWTv un
1
1
,:'· ~·~E:""
2 : : ll l ~ .. '• 11 s
LONG]OHN
SILVtl{S.
3095 Barbor Blvd .
. Co1ta Me••
(Acrou from Fedco)
rnsducer co med Cell wt
omp~tone lonrFdl s
' • ,,., 1 .s lh -l~ 1' i'
6'"1 ~ 41h ,..., l
~~ •1. . ~ ~ ' ''• >4 9.
fillillntm
NEW YORK (APl -The followlno llst shOws the New York Stock Exchenve ,rock' end werranh tl'let hevt IX>!le uP the most and down the mo't bas~ on ~rcent of cti.nve reQardleu of volume lor Tuesdav No ~urltlts tredlng belOw S2 are Incl· ~ Nel and oercent11oe chenoes are lhe difference betw"n the orevlou' clOsing price end Tuudev's 2 Pm P r I C e
said Tuesday that the Los Anaeles
metropc>lit.an area will have the most
"'ntw JObs between now and the-year
2000, (ollowed by the Boston metro
area.
• The trends we att seeing are for
conttnuina arowth m the South and
West . but we arc also staruna to see
a httle larger arowlh rn the north~
eastern. trad1tJOnal industrial area~"
said Carlton ~ Strong of<the Plan-
ning A~ oc1auon
There arc CXJXCled to be JUl>t over
16 mtllton new JObl> available for
Amencans b) 2000. with more than
12 m1llton of them occumng an JO
metropolttan areas,~~~ the study by
the Planning Assoc1auon. an mde-
pendent economic research 8fOUP
The ant1c1pated JOb growth an Los
\ngeks parallels the overall growth
ot that region A !ltudy by the
Commerce Depanment's Bureau of
Economic Analysis projects that Los
Angeles will become the nation's
The Planmna Associauon atudy
antiCJpatcs that l..os An1eles W1U add
just over a m1U1on MW JObs for a tot.al
of S 3 million an 2000.
But the auocataon satd Boston wall
add aearly 7SS,000 new JOb!> for the
second larJc'sl arowth. followed by
Anaheim, San Jose aod Phoent~.
Aru.
Houston 1s expected to gain nearly
~98,000 Jobs by 2000 lO rank seventh
1n growth
That 1s a substantial chanac from
the last Planning Assoc11t1on study
issued JUSt over a year aio. which
c.llcd for Houston to be the bige1t
aainerthrouaJl the end ofthascentury.
The new ~tudy ant1c1pates that
Houston wlll have 2, I 91,SOO JObt.
available m the year 2000, down from
the 2.949,000 predicted in the 198S
study
Job growth IS conunuana in Hous.-
Boston. a center for hash tech-
noloay development l!'.J r«cnt year\,
climbed from 10th 1n anuc1patcd
arow1h a )'CU ago to ~ond pla<le in
the new repc>n Some 3.056.800 jot.
att c.c pcctcd m the year 2000. an
mcreasc or 7S4. 700 from the 1985
pr0Jecl1on
The p~om cover metro-
Politan attas, not JUSt central c1lJ~.
For example, Las Angeles 1ncludc~
the Los An£tlei and Lona Beach
re;ion. and Boston tnclud~ Boston,
Lawrence, Salem, Lowrll and
Brockton. Mass.
The study also noted that con~1der·
able arowth 1s hkeJy an metropolitan
~nters near oldc-r centers, such u
Long bland and New Jcncy an the
New York reiion. and the Anuhe1m-
Santa Ana metro area
NlW Y<>'tl<. ().P ) la"ta ,., , 17'-OleCrv )4 lS • HrlfHt " , . Mar. t •tl•la ~HI o n. ~r ~ Tr' NASO AO ~lien\ l~F ., •• 41 • OlrGN "•"· l'-ti! MaRt HlfMy" u. 1'. Pouti ' s1•. n. y .., ~ "'-•Ille ............ kit lb JtJ,. llO • Oovioa 1>'-,. Heh08 t n .., 1' MaVPI 7 2 "16 Po ... ,, 1 '-J I I ~q) aNI .... ,, ~ l>Y ... 011\( 11'-II, °'...c" ,,._ " HenrdF n • n"' ~~ l~ • P.09ro 7., ,~ lr~ . ' . mariltt maho H ef • 8·''C"' . ' '" OunllOn )6 .. »• = 11 I 1'11 . ._ " 11'111>NC 1•'-,."' . ~" •m T~v """'" l ly.-QOI' '" .. °"'''°" "" 11\o 1 ... Md'_an 12~ 12 • Pu<1t8 ' n ,. l: .... 11--lo") .. ~ Wldll4t ..... l"•Tom I t '. O•nKn ' • t l H«lrlh ) . ) " ,,,,_;,. "° S'-OMS """ 1• ~~·H~ man.vtt man.•-w l"Hrl If • 1t'-E•tlln , 1l JI l IMS ' ,._ ,. " ~£1 ' °""'' ... , . .,., lecum = camm 101•11 ••• e ... "O~ s-. • EcOllL.b SJloo SJ'-1SC 1•' 1.-. 11) l11 IS·» Qua1<C11 " .... T d T~l'dn S•~• ~~fr• l • )l, l lP .. I• I ••• IMofhc )6 • ~ -il IJ.
11-... •"-J~' id 1'' A(L ·~ ... ldlf9 11 .. l~ ' lftfl"' 1, 11 11 ·'"~ l:Or. 1~1~ .,~ .. • ,TI? 1 • • ) TEC ' ~ 11 l teclSoe fuln ~ t\o Intel ,. f=~· 11111 ·~ Ar APrl 77 11 a M.;; ·i·p··~ 11 il . ",, .. ~· =:' ll~ D · ... ~ :~~a·:~ 7'•7•J1• •'""''' t: ~ l ~ ~~r ~~ ~ ~, H;. ~ lteutfl-I ....... ~= .. · ~:: h' ,,,, 7•. e!'rao ~ . '" "=· ·~ ~lb I .. r = _ .. 1·r ~ ~l~ _, I
•M'f'\ \ ft' "'~ tt~~ A ~H: AOalH ..,,,O< • F ro . AO,~ ..... •'u' t 7, F~ ~ ~ WICOt l°"l• ~ ~d .. .. UV•9 a AO••" ~'"n~ \ t 1'• F ':r, Jon~ "" •• 11 .... UllYHI .... ) ::;i;t,t• 1 FIW 11 ="' ~ !t\;o wt t• ! ~ ....... ~· :1i9,~· "'· ,, .. l '• j1~ Fl811lFI w .... ' A1 COl'I ~ "' r~· 11 1 114 FOU<ocl> ~" .. ,,., l"f ~: ~~ .,~ ,, ... ~ tt 118'Ntl .. 4m<•'' •• I] • t1U1/l ~ :J : ~:Tm" " n~ ~-,,. ~., I. .. -. "" ..,. ...... ~·.~ AF u'fl u "'-11u111 Iv$ A' • I ·1' i' V~ro AC,'"' f1 • P'· ~r~J ~a.. ~ F'orttlO , i.., ~~". . ~ l ff; Aml<• e·. ' O'• Tie i , 1, F•Mlft !J'-n'• 1' • l ~ ~:i.t " AM·O It .. C)t'l\8of • Frlll<Er :i., ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ._ . lMu~ ;~ ANllt'f' ~ .1'~ m~, 61 'l F"""'' ll:: • • .. 11-. ~ A,,•~•tf' ml 1&'t • FvlrHll ._ f'" f IJ Ir,, 16 • 4'4! 1 'l • ., ~ WmotC A~ll A •o·. 'r· n\ ell tt.:? •, =c: ICN... t .... " , ~ wt!''• AnoAC. \ \ 11 I• ... 0'01\ Kr.,_ I~ ,,._ ' ~ • .)4 j rr =.::... '-APP'K p·· n I'" ff'fi· 1~11s-1t ICutclle ''"' , . .-. ~· Ut n:; APIOM l ff 1 , · · r .... r r ~· ~~ ~~ l.. ~ ll ·lt_I~ "''ri: ~ '~" ,1" :~t: ·~ ~ p _., l.. WlaA~ All •l' 1 '· •• "I ~~:~ ., a, WtMr ~·· All t\ \ . '• um • rev/l s 1 1 n ' qi~ ' c ... WO'" < !'n tl Avnt•,_ . -... 6 J.37 r• !IA.PIO ?, ''> ~ ~" tl , I 'ti Wrf/ftlW 1800 \ ... •lb ~ 7 vroov ii-. 1••. e'·" ~ i X,clK ••'d( · .. ., Mo
1 > H~ t l '"°' ~~tro -E· , '° )Cicor •·· .. 8~~~,.,, 'i ! 'i~ Cen IJ1' IJ .. H• I I I I ... '"' J?.! J1: i1 1 YIO,.F ' ~~ ~ ! ... 4 • • t Har i U t Jt • MadG( )6.)6, PMGI >, lfol\UI
Let's make this simple.
Imagine bunnies left
to themselves day in and
day out for, say, six months.
Plus interest-bearing
checking.
Insured Money
Market accounts.
.
t
Imagine the output.
Now imagine those same
bunnies brought together
only once every thirty days.
Picture I. D. cards,
~,_.. ..... a 24-hour automatic
teller machine and more. --Naturally compounding
Or once every three
;months.
lDa
7Da s
14 Das
20,004.03 20,004.19
20,029.36 daily. all by itself. may not be
enough to seRd you rushing
for your car keys. Carrots and cages
aside. that's pretty
much how com-
pounded daily,
monthly or quar-
terly works.
I .Month
3 Months
6Months
9 Months
1 Year
.-
~0.058.76
20,121.18 20,126.14
20,365.73 20,380.80
20,738.15 20,768~85
21,164.29
21,589.87
We know that,
But added to all Lincoln
offers-including knowledge-
dble, professional people
who work as hard for your
money as you do-Which is why
Lincoln's Certifi-
Yield I Z6 2 6 °/o I Z94 9 o/o
Rates subject to change without notice. federal law requires substantlal penalty
for early withdrawal Balance amounts calculated. assuming both principal and
lnterest remain ln the account for the fuU term specified.
it should make
your savings deci-cates of Deposit are
compounded daily. _ tutions work that way. sio n a simple one.
So your dollars multiply f.aster.
Seven days to ten years .and
But then, few savings insti-
tutions work as hard as
Hop on down to
Lincoln.
any time in between. $500
to $99,999 and any
amount in between.
Lincoln.
Where you'll always
Quick. Like a
bunny.
Your dollars earn interest
find good, solid, ·
competitive rates
on all of our Cer-
tificates -of Deposit,
every single night-even
weekends-and then earn
· -more the next night.
Not all savings insti-
ALHAMBRA BUR.BANK
300 E. Main St 3800 W. Verdugo Ave.
(It Chapel Ave ) (at Hollywood Way)
Alhambra. CA 91601 Burbank. CA Ql50~
(818}"2'&9·6343 (618) 841·3703
AHAllEIM HILLS CAMAIULLO m1 Santa Ana 2300 Pondcros.:t Dr.
Canyon Rd. (at Amc1U)
(It Imperial Hwy.) Camanllo. CA 93010
AnahclmHllb. CA 92607 (80') 987 O<X>2
(714) cm 4410 DOWNEY'
ARCADIA 10033 Paramount Blvd.
200 E. Duane Rd. (It Florence Ave.)
(It Second Ave.) Downey. CA Q024Q
Arcadia. CA ·91000 (213) 927·2506
(818) 44,.7660
with your money 11 $3.5 BILLION IN ASSETS
insured to $100,000. We Make It Easy To Make Money.
GLENI>All HOLLYWOOD
lOO £. Glenoaks Blvd. 7050 Hollywood Blvd.
(at Brand Blvd.) (near La Brea Ave l
Glendale. CA Ql207 Hollywood. CA Q0026
(618) 247 6306 (213) 466 6211 .
GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON
17851 Chatsworth St. BEACH
(at lelzah Ave.) 7662 Edinger Ave
Granada Hiiis. CA Ql344 (at Sher Lane>
(618) 363·5041 1iunungton fk._1t h.
HjtMET CA· 92047
1111 S State St (ll4) 841'1738
(at Stetson) LAGUNA HILLS
fiemet. CA Q234J , 23001 Moulton Pkwy.
(714) 052·2761 (Mottlton Pa1kway
Shoppln Center)
Laguna H1n!i. CA 92M3
(714) '86·4050
LAKEWOOD ROWNG HILLS
'.>l4/ Hazelbrook Ave ESIATES
(Lakewood Shopping 29920 Hawthorne Blvd
Center near Wards) (at Crest)
Lakewood. CA QQ712 Rolling Hiiis Estate!>,
(213) ()30·1404 CA QQ274
·1.0s ANGELf.5 c213) 3n·"l577
030 W. Sixth St SANTA ANA
1at Hope) 1631 N. Bristol SL
Los Angc:lcc;, CA Q0017 (at 17th St.)
(213) 028·4131 Sima Ana. CA Q27(k1
PANORAMA CITY (n4) 547 on1
14520 Roscoe Blvd. SANTA MONICA
<near Van Nuys Blvd.) 1460 Fourth St
Panoram C.ty.CA91402 (at Broadway)
(61&) 894·9394 Santa Monica. CA QQ401
(~1.3) 451·QQ31
SHEllM.AN OAKS TUSTIN
13701 R1vers1de Dr 14ltil Red Hill Ave
(at Woodm;m Ave) (nc·•t to State• Bros)
Sherman0,1k:;.(AQ1403 Tustin. CA 02<>80
(618) 763-3130 1714) 730·0:.N">
SUN CITY WEST. LOS
26127 Bradley Rd ANGELES
Sun City. CA Q2381 112~ Nauonal ·Blvd
(714) 67'9·6801 (at S<lwtelle Blvd)
TORRANCE Los Angele . CA Q0064
1213) 4/8 0481 21140 H.a'+ltli<;>rnc Bllld
(at Torrar1tc Rlv<.1)
Torrance: CA Q0503
(213) 540·4222
·o~ en Saturdays
at all locauons
except Los Angel s ·
"
4
'
-
r NYSE CoMPOSITE TRANSACTION S
Stock market retr~ts
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
ret.reatod Wed.neaday, faced with a renewed rite in
interest rates.
Interest rates dropped brteOy at lbe opeoina
Wednesday. but then resumed lbeir recent
upswin' as oonjecture spread that the Federal
Reserve was reluctant to ease credit further.
Prices ofloq..t.am Jovernment bonds. which
move in the opposite direction from interest rates,
fell S 10 to $20foreveryS1,000 in face value.
Meanwhile, the oil market came under
pressure. The price of crude oil for July delivery
slumped 77 cents to $13.10 a barrel on the New
Y oft Men:antilc ExchanJe.
But analysts said traderl were slr.eptical that oU
pricn were return.in.a to the kind of sustained
decline that took place earlier this year.
The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustna.ls
dropped 7.14 to 1,863.29.
-Dechruog issues outnumbered advances by
almost 9 to Son the New York Stock Exchanae.
Bia Board volume totaled 116.96 million
shares, apinst 114. 71 million in the previous
session.
The NYSE's composite inde>L feU .84 to
140.20. At the American Stock Ellcbange, the
market value index was down .48 at 280.00.
I WHAT AMlX Ow WH AT NYSE Dio
AMf.X Lf AD E RS
GoLo Qu on s
Dow Jot-H s Avr HAr.ls
META LS QuoTE s
NASDAQ SUMMARY
. famou5 la~ls ..
,..
Leadlng the way
..
oone sSliot
lifts Aligels
Three-run homer
h e ps Sutton win
h is 2 98th, 4-2 -
BJ J EPH DUDBVOJR
Diii) ,._ C•:o 4 J nt
It's difficult to say who profited
more from this ooe, but lhc end result
was the same for Don Sutton, Bob
Boooe and the Anacls.
Boone's ftnt homer at ,\nahe1m
Stadium sin'ce July 14, 1984, a three-
run shot, carried the Aniels past the
Yankees for a 4-2 win before 33,309
fans Tuesday nt&ht.
Meanwhile, Sutton won hlS first
pme in three weeks, eoi.na a strona eiaht ioninp for caner win No. 298
and raisina bis tcason mark to 3-5.
.. If you look beck on this pme. 1t
would be hard to say who needed this
mo~" said Sutton. ... know Bob has
been battling, so this was p-cat for
bun. And I know I sure ~ed 1t."
Boone wu in a 1-for-23 slump
when be bit the pme-winncr. The l.asL
time he homered was Apnl 27 at
Minnesota.
It was also the Anicls' fourth
1nra1&ht win, a first since last Septem-
ber. Maybe it's a s1an the entire team
is ~ttina untracked,
m~!r~1:n"!:~:.7:e:o~~:u~s :::,
Ton'61Jt•• ,,,_ • .....
New Yorlc Yankees (J. Niekro
S-3),at Aueh (Roman~ 3-2).
Tune: 1:35.
TV: None.
Radio: KMPC (710).
Thursday's pme: None sched-
uled.
home run swina too much. u~ "I'm afraid if f talk about it I mipt
contuse mY$df apin. ljust spent tbe
last ooupfe of days tryina to set
u neon fused."
Sutton, who hasn•t &Ont tbe dis-
tanoe since last June, lasted only 111>
inninp in his last start in New Yorlc.
He pve up six runs before bis catly
exit . .. , thought I bad prcny &obd stuff'
ton1"'1t... he said. .. But f've· been
decietved by that before. I think lhc
key was that I didn't make too many
m1Stakes and had 10mc luck on my
side."
Teti)' FOMU.a.me.oofof Sut100 lO
pitch the ninth inning and pict up bis
second save.
The Anacls are alto ltartina to have
a tittle better luck q;ainst left-handed
pitchina. They have now won three in
a row apin.st southpaws after fteina
l-12 at one~ .
Samet Leape footNU coacbee Da.e White of Edl8on (left),
GuJ CarroUo of Ocean View (center) and Rantlnaton
Beach'• aeorae Pucoe put their teem• tbroUCb the~
durtni •PrlDC practice. For a .tew of 811.D.Mt team•, tee C2.
we'll have to keep anndina for . the
next pme. I think we mtght be pullina
out of this th1na now."
Boone didn't want to dllcuss his
.. That misbt be overrated." said
Boone. ••Wlicn we wen I . DI all
those lhox pmes to ld\-bandcn. we
were 11vins up 111 runsa·J;amC. Wc·re
(Ple&M -AllGm.8/Cll
Thi_s Eagle exploring new heights
ESfuQcia vaulter Miller
en tertain ing lofty goals
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
o.11r .... c. ... , .....
Doug Miller still hasn't come down Jet.
The Estancia Hl&h senior bas had bis hea ID
the clouds smce his lofty performance m the
pole vault m the CIF 3-A finals -and he
doesn't plan on returnin1 to earth quite yet.
••When you So over a hei&ht you've never
rcacbed before Lt feels like you're floatina
throu&h SP'CC," says Miller.
.. And if your head isn't too big. you
eventually come down."
At the CJF finals at Cerritos Coll~
recently, Miller soared to new heights 1n has
upset win.
He cleared 15-(> to set a school record and
gain some personal sausfactJon ID defeatina a
host of 16-0 vaulters, with Steve Williams of
Scrvite one of the notables.
"Doug didn't lcnow Williams had ever
gone that high," wd Estancia Coach Tom
Fisher. "When be beard thcTc was another 16-
footer to beat, be got kind of down. l told ham to
keep bis head up and that he could beat that
guy." .
Miller will try to keep the momentum
goina when be returns to Cerritos Friday at the
state meet trials with hopes of bean& one of the
nine finalisu a day later.
He quahfied for the tnals by going 14-4 at
Cerritos 1n the Masters Meet, one of five from
the Southern Section gaining the honor.
When you realize that Miller was only a
13-2 vaulter at the start of the season, you can
appreciate the leaps and bounds be has made of
late.
"Ever sinoe the Arcadia meet I've been
gettinf better and better." says Miller. "I went
from 4-2 to I >-0 in one meet."
Fisher attributes Millers success to two
thin15-hard work and tcehnology.
"Dou1 1s a very hard-workin1 kid, .. says
Fisher ... He's dedicated and is one of the top
three athletes in the school.
"And an_?thcr bi& factor bas been the Sky
Celtics within
one win of title
Wa lton gets save
as Boston h olds off
Houston , 106-1 03
HOUSTON (AP) -Last season
when Boston center Robert Parish got
tired, be often had to ianore his
fat1aue and continue playif\I.
extend at any more than necessary.
That would give us a chance to ao on
vacation."
Af\er a tight struUle tbrou&,hout
the founh quarter, Blrd took a feed
from Walton and sank a thrcc-po1Dt
.basket with 2:27 to play lhat broke 1-
10 1-10 l tic and pve the C.eltics the
lead for 1ood. With 1:40 to ao. Walton's l1p-m
made it I 06-103 Neither team scored
the rest of the way.
Pole factory. We've been able to almost hve
there getting the help that we n«d."
The biggest kind ofbelp lhat the company
offers 1s the worlon1 on a vaulter's flex pomt.
"They put the pole on a machine and
compute what the k:Jd's wei&ht 1s," says Fisher.
"That way you can find the stress points on the
pole.
"And 1t aJso lets you find out 1fyou need to
move your hands up on the pole, or 1f you need
a stiffer . pole altogether. We basically try to
move three-tenths ofa flex point at a time.
"h 's been invaluable to us. In fact, w1th all
the free poles they•ve given us.. it's hkc having
your own company."
Miller has also received help from former
EaaJe vaulter Orea Pearce, who was the former
Estancia record-bolder as well.
'"Greg bas done a good job since he's been
here." says Fisher. "Greg bas been able to spend
a lot of time w1tti Doug and that has helped
QUtte I b1t."
Pearce. when he was at Estancia. cleared
13-6.
"But lately it's been all Doug." says Fisher.
When you ask Miller what has made ham
the vaulter he has become, he is able to find one
va!'llble.
"Matunty," he says. "That teems to be at
for me. I went up to a camp at Stanford last
summer and that really helped. I worked on the
weights for football and that helped too "
Maller played runruoa back and linebacker
for the EaaJcs.
As tar as a vaultma career after his prep
days are done, Miller has plans on attendtna
college, probably in Santa Barbara.
But wi th the state meet bcnh, Mtllcr isn't
womed about college yet.
"I thank I can go 16 feet and I stJJJ have a
little time lef\ and rd love to do it, .. be says.
Fisher thinks bis senior can do it too
"0oUJ has &Ot bJpe>d like ICC, "·says fl sher.
"He goes n&ht out and sticks it. Nothina he has
done has surprised me.
"He loves a challenae and I thmk he'll be
up to 1t."
And Miller would hke nothmg better than
to get up -and stay there. DoqMiller
Commentary misses mark
One wonders what
goes through minds
of TV commentators
In a day and agem a soc1etywh1ch
tends to blame the mlilc boll for
everything from wars to tidal waves
to baby booms, Y.OU wonder how
much history will record of the
incidents transpiring in the In-
siianapolis 500 motor race of 1986
solemn oath as." KevlD, what is going
through your mmd?"
Perhaps Kevan thought he was
losmg hLS mmd. Perhaps he thous.ht
somebody at ABC had already blown
has. At any rate, Copndocsnot
answer the call
The quesuon 1s repeated but there
1s no answer unul another voice says.
"Kcvan, th1s1sSam. What 1sgoina
through your mind?"
Bui
Tucu1
SPORTS COLUMN IST
But this season Coach K.C. Jones
learned that relief is spelled B-1-L--L
W-A-L--T-0-N.
Having Walton to come on in relief
of Pariah was a key stratcjy move for
Jones in the closing minutes. and
Parish agreed with the dcc1s1on.
It was m th ts lustonc event that
telev1s1on was making its live debut.
The ABC networkJurv1ved one
weekend of ra11wuts by replacing
racrng cars with talking heads These
are people who arc called com men·
tators tn TV news releases
Sam 1s Sam Pose>-. A good fnend of
Kevin Cogan A man who 1saomg to
be a very good race commentator A
man who has been around the bncks
lon11. enoull.h to know better
TV has wt red manqcrs dunng the
'World Scnesand the latest such
expcnment was wt th umpires. It aocs
without sayi Atl.Mlefttw• .. • w•ft•
for porno movies and dad not get on
--.-
Par;ish hit I 0 of I 5 shots, scored 22
points and contained Ralph Sam.J>S<?n
an thtteeond half to put tbeCclt:tettn
position to win pme four Tuesday
m&ht m their NBA playoff apinst the
Houston Rockets.
But it took a relief performance by
Walton In the final three minutes and
a crucial three-point basket by Larry
Bard to preserve a I 06-1 03 Boston
v1ctory.
Walton's performance allowed the
Celtics to take a 3-1 lead in the best-of-
scven series. They can win their 16th
NBA title wtth a victory in The
Summit Thunday night.
But Parish isn't the only tired
Celtics player ready for vacation time
-and forward Kevin McHale likes
Boston's position.
"Threc-<>ne " a 1ood place to be,··
McHale said. "Everyone knows bow
close we are,-and we don't want to
Dedeau.r steps
down at USC
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rod
Dedeaux., tlie winninaest coach in
collqe baseball history. bu step-
ped down at USC.
Ocdcaux, who coached the
Trojans ror 45 years and had a
cam:r n:cord of 1 ,332-~7 1-1 I,
will be succec:dcd by Mike
Gillcspic, who suided Collcat o(
the Canyons of Valencia to the
state commumty collcsc title
recently.
·Gill pie, 46, played for the ~ro,ans a an 1nftcldeT-OUtficldcr
under the 7 l ·vtar-old Oedcau~
from 1960-62.
"I ran out of ps with two minutes
left, ever yonc routd sec-1tnrt. I dcm't
think I could have done It," Pansh
said. "It was time for me to surface. I
was almost invisible m game three."
Walton played ~rly at the start of
the game and said he was surpnsed
that he aot a second chance.
"I wu out of sync and Sampson
had a bot band m the first half."
Walton said. ··1 was surpnsed that
K.C. put me back in the game.
"But at that point, nothina that has
happened in your life to that pomt
mattcn. You JUSt have to go out and
ajvc it all you ve.aot."
Despite Walton's ~r early per·
formance, Jones said he had no
hesitation about returnina Walton to
the hneup.
.. He knoWl where the offensive
boards are and he did exactly what
Larry Bird aeta ft.e after
Boeton toppled Rouaton
Tuaday nlfbt.
was expected of him." Jones said.
"Robert had played a tough game and
I saw that he was drqgjng a little. h
was a matter of gettin1 a fresh body
into the prne."
The Rockets led ~3 at the half,
but trailed 86-85 go1na mto the founb
pcnod.
Dcnms Johnson. who scored 22
points. hit a pair of free throws with
3;07 to play to CBSC Houston's final
lead and set the stage for Bard's ao-
ahcad three-pointer
A dnver named Kevin Cogan as on
the threshold of the 1mmortahty of
winning this mechanized classic.
Thett a~ a couple oflaps to go and
Cogan as leading and somebody up in
fTont spans out and this inspires a
yellow fla&. which means all the cars
arc required to slow down
Of course, th1s also11vcs all the
1uys behmd the leader an opportun1t>
to creep up If you bet they wouldn't
crttp up. you would not be showing
1ood scnst
Anyway. while all this 1s tak1na
place, a strange thm& happens to
Kevin Copn on his way to the victory
circle. He aetsa call on his car radio
from ABC
The Question a voice asks. I take a
Thts time Kevan answers some·
thinahke, "Sam, let me get back to
you. I am rather busy at the mo-"
mcnt."
Whether the can erascdXevin·s
concentration 1s not known. largely
because Kevin has not made a federal
case of the issue. but another guy
throttled past Copn when the yellow
flag went down and won the race
Presumably, this will be the ma1or
recollection oftelev1S1on's first h"c
broadcast of the lnd1anapohs 500
Th ts is not to suggest anythina
rcscmbhnga first for TV. You ha1.c
~n the cvt I box m action man-.
tames
Formstancc, a man on thcs1dchnes
carrying a microphone and weanng
those bag car trumpets will approach a
player1.1.ho has Just broken his leg and
ask:
"Ho1.1. do you feel ., ..
1hca1r ·
Jockeys have been interviewed on
their wa~ to the post
Wtlhc hom1atero~toktme
there was a rcque5t to wire bu ha.rd
hat and turn the make on dunna the
race
"I don't know what the bell they
expected," Shoe said, "but all they
would ha-.c beard me say was. 'Move
\-OU'I 0 b.'"
The ~me Shoe was once mter-
' 1ewcd m the winner's circle and
asked how the tnp went
Shoe replied he lost a stirrup on the
backstretch. his whip on the tum and
was bumped badly IOOyardsfrom the
Wlf'('•
"Tell me Shoe." the commentator
a'iktd. "did you have any trouble?"
.\t least. Sam Po~) listened to
"'c1.1n C opn'sans~r
Dodgers tcike frustrations out on Philadelph ia, 11 -4
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Fernando
VaJcnzuela bad on.ly one complamt aOcr
pttchina the Los AJ\aclcs Oodicn to an r 1-4
vJCtory over the Philadelphia Plulhcs
• ··E~y hit the ball &ood tonia}lt
except me. ' said Valenzuela
That wasn't euctJ_y true, but the Ood&cn
did pound out IS bits Tuesday n~t. 1ncludina
two home runs and a double by Grq Brock. u
they ended a thrce-tatnt lo ma strcaJt and
noppcd the Phillies' 11tiooins streak at seven
pmcs.
Los Angel te0red four 1n the fint,
TonJ6bt'• t ame
o.d1et1 (Hcrsh1scr 5-.l) at Ph1ladelph11
(Gross 4-5).
Time; 4:35.
TV. Channel 11.
Radio: KABC (790)
Thursday's pmc: Hou ton at l>od D .
7:3S p.m.
"~ncr the first 1nn1na he p1tchrd outstand-
1na." \aid Dodier Manlgtr Tom Lasorda. "He
wa1 n:'allv httuna the comcr1 ..
"He cs hko Ill treat pttcht'I"\," \aid Von
Hayes "You have to ttt to them rarl~ and stay
on them and hope to break their conct'ntrataon
if you're 101na lO beat them.
Hayes doubaed ofTValcn1uela for a run 1n
the fiMt but htt tbina cl~ in thrtt mon:o at·
he ts.
the second on 1n RBI Mnglc by ~tcv(" Sa:.;. and
they 1ncrca~ their lead to 7-4 an the third on
Frankhn Stubb<I' tw<>-run homer.
Lo• Anatle1 made at,_. an the founh on an
R Bl ~n&le b) Ken l..andrcauw., and a IOlo homer
by Brodt an the fifth made it 9_.
"Brock·s a &ood h.itler," Utd lasorda "He
JU t ha n't ~n doina 1t. Maybe this -.;tlf t
him started."
t
) •
parked by Brod:L_lhM:run hom('f. but the
Phils came beck to tJe the sco~ 1n the bottom of lhc · kctt hilb tbc.ha.U-aood to lcll Geld.."
Ve cnz ul1. 3, allowed onl~ three hit'
"Once Fernando ~t It aoing. he .... ~ really
someth1na." Hayes 1d "He wu re.all h1ttin
bas spots so wttl He th rc11> me one 'ICtewball for
.icalled.lhird.ruikt lhAl as lhc..IK.ll pa h I've
The Wln ended a Iona da> ror tno1t of the C>odctn· Luorda had ordeftd a rare I p.m.
practice Tuesday afternoon u a molt of the
team's lack1u1tcu1l~ o(latc...---------
the innina. ·
''It seemed hkc Lhc ball bad e~ '' said
Val ntuela. "I was makina Sood sntch but
after the fl"t inn1n1 as he recorded 11 itnke·
out It -as the list ttmc 1n his e&l'l't'r that hl'
tiia l\N k out 10 or more in a pme
ever ~n" •
Vth1I Valen
Ch le, lht IJnl~ft'IP'll.
ph1a n:oht 'c
held the Pl'11lh~ 1n
dcd on tht' rtnladcl·
I ~nt ahead ~ en
..
"I just •'anted t.o work out and kind of
remm1\C't," said Luorda. fl\b
tirml) an check, "Tla.at's •hy we
today. It . u t like a family
r
r
r
--
a
Mezlcan fan• celebrate win
SanDiegopitcher raos~~!c.~o~Stadiu~~ds= '-'ill c 1 1-aan<fies 1·n Sunset
will Show ability !i.~~F~!b~~~·~lp:~~~~ 11 o · . . _
pn &fiver SCreeD nrttl:erore, crowd of 110.000 wbi~h rocked t~ Halfoftheleague•steamstoiltn t~it: ~:.n9:_~~1t(i~m'e)f°c!0~~~;ti~~
massive stadium eyery time the Muic:a dJd d h d I -' Beach (home); Oct. 2l-1 E.dason (OCC), Qct. Pl-om AP fhpetclla somethtnt po&iuve, Fc:mando Quirantt and national Ufi er neW COaC es UT 0 .Spa an 30--Founta.in Valley (home. OCC); N<?v· 7-at ~anna
. A
on San Diqo Padres pitcher Eric:'Show to held off' the Be!Jians, .-bo &Ol a aoaJ by Etwm 17 ROOER CAAi.SON beuh). 1 SAN DIEGO -Hollywood,, callina • soc:ccr lteto Huio Sanchez ICOmi &Oils. Moaco then (Westminster); Nov 14-lt Ocean View {Huntu11ton
play the ullc rolt 10 a movie about pitchlna Vandenberlh la,te m the first halrbu1 could not produ~ Ot .. OlllJ....,. ...
sreat Oiriaty Mathewson, who won more anythinamorc. Ano1dkidrelum totheblock1ndh&lfofthelca1ue'~ Edlaon Cbargen
than 300 pmes 1n a l 6-ycar career wnh the former New At Gua.c!M~ara, Northern l~land tied with teams arc under new rqimes as spnna rootball practice
York Gtants. Aliena. 1-1 . whife Portupl stunned Enaland, 1-0. at continues for the Sunset teque.
Mathewson flayed for the G1anu from 1900 to Monterrey. Westminster High's Lions, at this point, fiaure as the
1916 37 ber th A ft The Ponuaucsc iot the only &oal in the 7Slh 1..... th 1 d I ha , w1nnana pm~ 1ore 1om1fll e rmy a er minute when midfielder Carlos.Manuel _whose goal team to ~aus e eaaue un tf10C$ severe c nat>
the Unued States entered World War I. wd Gerry apinst West Germany qualified Port ..... 1 fortht1cvent The coachina cbanaes have taken place at E.duon. Gross. the Emmy-award Wlnnina A • ,., f h ,.....H Ocean View and Manna.
producer overseeing the m1k1na -was leu unauarded 10 aront 0 t e net. c took 1 pass Bill Workman no lo~r1u1dcs Echson, hav1n• len. to from Dtamantmo, who had raced down the.right side, •
Softo "T,he Chnsty Mathewson and put it m with his left foot. head the Oranac Cout olleae provam. Dave White,
ry The lrish took an early lead when Norman Workman's first qua.nerback at Edison, 1uocccds him.
The JO-year-old Show. who Whateside's free k:iclc went off a defender in the AJ,enan Dave Thompson no lon4Cr au ides Marina, m:eolly
has a S6-44 record over four years wall and into the net. But Ojamel Zldane tied it on a free res1arun1 and lcavina the V1kinp an a scramble tO find a
with the Padres. wav.icked to kick 1n the S8th minute when be beat divma aoalic Pat successor. play tbe part of athewson Jennina.s low 10 the left And Karl Gayt.an's two-year reian at Ocean Vtcw is because he has the natural 1b1hty over, with former Fountain vaney us1stant Guy
and talent to do the JOb, Malton N rrl 1... __.th n-----•-Carro21o replac1na him Kahn, 1 spokesman for Groi.s. 0 8 •-.na w & ~-ag&Ll.I Herc's a capsule look at each of the league's teams· .__ __ _. said Tuesday.
ow Gross said he informed Show
about his selecllon in a phone conversation Monday
Show 1s in New York. where the Padres are playing the
Mets 10 a three-game st'nes that ends tomgbt
"He was thnlled," Gross sa1d of Show "I think
he'd be: perfect lor the part. People kept telling me what a great kid he wa s And MathC'wwn 1s alway\ a story I
wanted to get into because ht wns one of the most
underrated great pitchers of all time."
One of Mathewson's best known accomphshmcnts
came 1n the 1905 World Senes, when he notched three
win~. all ~hutout!> against the Philadelphia Athletics
Quote of the day
Bobby Rabal. dnver. on has succession of
handi.hake'>. .tutographs and anterv1ew5 since
winning Saturday·, Indianapolis 500: "I've been
sm1hng w mut:h my mouth doesn't work
an)'more ·· '
Usher places blame on NFL
NEW YORK -USFLComm1ssioncr m
Harry L 'sher ~1d his league 1s dying and 411 t
latd the blame on the nval NFL Tuesday,
sa ying that the 4-)'car old league had been
''pushed and '>hoved" b)' its larger nval into its tenuous
situauon.
Usher's 1mpass1oned statement came as he was
being cross examined an the tnal of the USFL's ~I 5
b1lhon anutru!\t suit against the NFL
Frank Rothman, the NFL's lawyer. asked him wh)
the L()~ L had moved out of•maJOr markets and into
smaller t1t1es hkc Memphis, Jacksonville and Orlando
L \her outlined the scncs of financial failures that
led to ~me of lhe moves. then said It was all !he work of
the NFL which. he said. followed the plan laid oul for it
dunng a seminar b)' a Harvard Business School
profes\or in Februar). 1984.
Florida State downs Miami
OMAHA -R1ch1e UWIS struck out a
I 0 and Enc Mangham had three hits and
two runs batted in to lead Aonda State to a
7-2. victory over defending champion
Miami an the NCAA College World Scncs wmners
bracket semifinal Tuesday
The two teams had billed the game as the Aonda
state champ1onsh1p The teams split Silt games dunng
the fC&Ula r ~a<;On
SAN JOSE -ln tbc latest chapter on ••
former ace major leque gitcber Mike
Noms. the one-lime Oakan A's star as to
return to the Class-A minor San Jose Bees.
cellar-dwellers of the Northern Divisjon of the
Cahfomaa League
The 21-30 Btts announced they would SllJl Noms
again. He was released an • sprina uainina rhubarb by
the Cal Leaaue outfit Apnl 18. S11ned in March. Norris
failed to show up for a pme on the second day of the
season. He had never pitched 1 s1naJe pme for the Bees.
The 31-year-old former contender for 1he Cy
Young Award. who fell out of the m-;on over drug
problems. had been arrested on char&es of cocaine
possession and dnv1ng under the mflucncc.
Leconte gains semlflilals
PARIS-Henn Leconte. France's last K3 hope. advanced to the men's scrrufinals of
the French Open today Wlth a 6-3, 6-4, 6-3
victory over Andrei C'hesnokov of the
Soviet Union
The first Frenchman \1nce 1983 and only the sixth
1n the last 23 years t<*cach the ~mi finals of bu nauon's
tennis championship, Leconte plays next against the
winner of the Boris Becker-Mikael Pemfors match later;.
today.
Leconte. the No 8 ~ed used an attacking ~tyll" 10
keep Che,nokov off-balance
Park fired as Detroit coach
DETROIT -The Detroit Red Wings ~
fired Coach Brad Park Tuesday after a '
dismal 1985-86 campaign in which the
NauonaJ Hockey League duh \Ct a team
record for futihty
The Red Wings compiled a I 7-57-6 record last
season. scmng a club record for defeat s. and finished
last 1n the league
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4 30 pm. -BASEBALL-Dodgers at
Ph1ladelph1a. Channel 11
10 p.m -BOWLING Channel 56
RADIO
4·30 p.m -BASEBALL Dodgers at
Phliadelph1a, KABC <790).
7 30 p m. -BASEBALL· New York
Yankees at Angels. KMPC ( 710).
Los Alamitos racing results
LOS Alamltn
TV•SOt.Y'S •ISUL TS
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•11anaance l •S.
ANGELS.
From Cl
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playing better now and getting bcw:r
p11ch1ng."
Dennis Ra~mu~~cn (5-2) wa~ the
late~t lefty to be an A.ngel v1t:t1m
Boone's third homer ot the vea r
came wtth two out 1n the ~venth .tnd
broke up a 1-1 uc Dick Schofield and
Rick Burleson were on board
Fountain Valley Baron•
It's business as usual for the Barons as they uodcrao
spnna practice under Coach Mlke MU.U, althou&h there
have been some changes -1n tcnns of coac6es and
playina personnel. ''We're very areen and youna." said
Milner. wbo tw. among othe"!t back Wana Tayl•r (6-3,
23S-PQuod linebacker and om:ns1ve guard); Doti Vu
Lare (7·3, 230 ccnter-defcnsi,ve tackle), Rick Brud (6-2.
200 tJ&ht end-strona safMy), and Derrtct TeucMr, a
S-I 0, l 80.pounder who started four pm cs at tailback as a
sophomore). Tbe quarterback c&ndldates are S&evt
Stafford (6-3, 190). David Hwau (S-10, 16S) and Dot
Blalabee (S-l I, 160). Henaaan com-
pleted 70 of I 00 puses for 21 T~ on
tbe freshman lcveL __ The Barons lo
three coaches (Guy Carrouo and BOb
Bell to Ocean View) and Tony Ellu·
callee, but picked up four. New are
CraJa ColllD1 (tackles and t1aht ends),
Larry s•eldoD (defensive ends), LotJe
Vatqaez from Dndgepon, Ohio (tight
ends) and former~ quarterback GU
Compton who'll take the sophomores.
The balance of the staff 1s intact,
ancludang Mlke Hul'u (offensive llilne.r
hne): Brace Pickford (runnma backs); Huk Coc•rue
(receivers); Dave Penlaall (quanerbacb); Georse Bera
(linebackers) and Jim O'CoueU (defensive hne).
"We'll be a little different 01Tens1vely and defensively"
Milner said. alludint to some vanous pomts of attack
picked up from UC A and Anzona State pme plans.
Defensively the Barons Wlll be shelving some of the
multiple fronts shown the past four to five years ..
Another change: The Edison game will not be at Anaheim
Stadium The Barons tontanue spring practice until
June 13 when they have a ispnng game at Huntington
Beach H1gh. the sophomores goan.Jf t 5 and the va~1 ty at
7.
The 1986 schedule· Sept 12-Mater De1 (home,
OCC). Sept 19-at El Toro CM1ss1on Viejo); Sept 26-at
Mission VatJO, Oct. 2-Scrvite (home. Huntinaton
Beach); Oct I 0-at Long Beach Poly (Veterans Stadium);
Oct. 17-0cean View (home, Huntington Beach); Oct.
24-at Huntington Beach ; Oct JO-at Wcstmmster
(OCC}, Nov 7-Edison (home.()( C) No" 14-Manna
(home, Westminster)
Huntington Beach Oilers
The Oilers lost 27 seniors to graduation, but there are
at least 16 returning Juniors and a flock of sophomores
~h1ch helps to swell the ranks to 74 for spnng practice
In all there will be 27 seniors and 47 JUn1ore on the
vars1t} Coach George P11coe has an intact staff which
numbers 10 through all the levels. and all are on-eampu~
coact\es Pascoe said his team's Delaware wangtd-T
offense may sec some changes, bill it'll still be a Wlnged-
basc. No changes arc contemplated for the 50 defense
The Oilers' have a spnng game scheduled Saturday
The sophomore'! go at 10 and the varsity at I l with a
p1cn1c to follow ... Among the lop returnees: offen•uve
guard Todd Little (6-2. 260), ofTensrvc tackle S&eve Otrlco
(6-4, 260). wide receiver Mike Tbompsoa. fullback
Rlcbard Ortea• and wide rccc1ver-defens1vc bllck Deu
Caulapam ... Andy Tbomptoa, the younger brother ot
two-ume Sunset leaf.UC Back of the Year Dauy
Tbompton, will be at tailback with the sophomore team .
.. Absent from spring pracllc:c, but expected back in the
fall : Don Goodmu, a 6-7. 290-pound senior . Among
Pascoc's staff: Roy Bnmme1t, offensive backs . Mike
Dodd, inside hnebacken; Andy Verdone. defensive ltne;
Mike Brummett, offensive hne; Bob DreU111 quar-
terbacks. Pete MJtdeU, 5CCOndary, and Mike De NaccJo,
receivers
The 1986 schedule· Sept. 11-at Corona dcl Mar
(Newport Harbor); Sept. 19-at Bishop Montaomcry.
Sept. 25-at Newpon Harbor. Oct. 3-Long Beach
Wilson (home)· Oct. 10-Mater De1 (OCC): Oct 17-at
Westminster; OCt. 24-Fountain Valley (home). Oct
'0-at Manna (Westminster), Nov 7-0ccan View
Chome). Nov 13-at Edison (0C()
Westmlnater Lions
New etwsel'l coech Dave W)tte has Mlk• Ba-
d rt0• work.in& .in the No. I slot at quarterback as the
Characra contliiuc tbrouJh spnna .Pracll~. which
eventually winds Ciown on June 14 with spnna pm.cs
(SOpbpmorn at 11, vamty at 1) ... Henderson is I
converted receiver ( 19 receptions as a junior) and at 6-2.
180, ia considered a bluc."up athlete ... Other rctumina
fl&tleriemona the 30 lettermen and turnout of 65 for the
dcfel\dina OF Bia five champ1~n ea• carter, Brwee O.Bel1, Marc Hartmu.l e llac ... o, Dnld
SMt1IWa and DUDJ Hao-. l.~ , who'U be a junior,
scored 13 TDs and ran for 9S2 yards last season ... His
sprina praetJce schedule has been turned upside down
with his shot put endeavors on the way to the state finals
... Du.Boas returns at nose auard, Hartman and Collacbio
are at linebacker, Sherman 11 at 6-0, 200 in the fullbed:
slot, and Huahes is a wide receiver ..• White's st.a«
includes Barry SdmWt (offensive line Terry Lora&u11
(defensive line), l.ymu a.wer (de?ensive ends and
special teams). Scon Stroakln offensive line, Brtlll
Glotlaea (defensive coordinator) and TroJ ~.a former
Edison standout who'll walk on and aaisl White with the
9uartcrt>acb, u well u recciven and defensive bacU ...
·We hope to be able to hire someone, maybe in the fall,"
said Whjte ... The Charaen'have bad former UC Irvine
track coach ltevlD McNilr workinJ with them on their
speed ... A new face and one which could make a bia
impact, 1ccord1n1 to Whatc, is Mlke Prl.Dee, a 6-1, I 8S-
pounder workma at safety and uaht end. He wu •
basketball starter u a sophomon: ... White wd he's
happy with his team's overall size, calhna n ··a aood
blend." Passi QI lequc plans th as summer include a return
to the Santa Ana tournament (they.,.ve woo it four 1trai&J\t
ycan), the Mira Costa tournament, possibly a tour-
nament at Lona Beach State and home-and-home pmH
with Capistrano Valley (Todd MarinoVlch) and La
Quinta ... Edison's opener at St Anthony 1n Mau1 bas
been moved up to Scot. 4 (Tbunday niabt).
The 1986 scbeduic: Sept 4-at St. Anthony (Maui).
Sept. 19-at El Modena; Se~t. 2S-ScfVltt (home, OCC);
Oct. 2-.Jit Mater Dci (Santa Ana Stadium); Oct
10-Santa Monica (home, Huntington Beach); Oct.
16-at Marina (Westminster)~ Oct. 23-Wcstminster
(home, OCC); Oct. 31-at Ocean View (Huntinaton
Beach); Nov 7-at Fountain Valley (OCC): Nov
13-Huntmaton Beach (home, OCC)
Marina Vlklnga
Whale the search contmues for a pennanent head
coach for .the Valcin.gs, 1t) business as usual at spnna ·
practice wtth Athlellc Dttcctor Aocly Don~u handling
the inside linebackers and quarterbacks, assisted by Mart
1UbllD1, Roll Vucler Slllll, Larry DoJle, Crala Yab1 and
Tim Reed . The Vtkcs bcpn on May 26. tfie day Dave
Tbompson made it offictal that he was resianma his post
. . Present assignments find Rehhna hand.lull the
offensive hne, Vander Sluis the defensive line, Doyle the
outsu!e linebackers, secondary and runnina backs. Yuhas
the defensive end sand Recd the wtde receivers ... Marina
has 50 out for spring practice, ancludmg quarterback RJck
Vuderrlet (280 yards rushing. l,2SS ards, 12 TDs
pass1n1J. runnma back Seu Mapla
(1 .174 yards. 11 TDs rushing) and
recc1 ver Brtu Stener (26 receptions. 2
TDs) Other plus areas: L1nebtlcker
Todd De1lltte, who returns at 6-0. t 90
after missing three games with an
Achilles tendon injury; Oeorse SmJG..
( 6-0. 190 defens1 ve end); Scott
McGllDclaey, (6-3 linebacker). Mille
Jepsoa. 6-2, 240 offensive taclle, ltea
Barker, ( 210 guard-«nter). Tyler
Alden, a running back tn the 4.6-4.7
range: and Jeff Robbi.Di, a 6-2, 19(). Dooecaa
pounder who quarterbacked the sophomores. He figutts
m the secondary and tight end ... Deslatte was a
quarterback as a sophomore and hnebackcr as a junior.
The J986 schedule· Sept. l l-at Esperanza, Sept
19-Servite (home, Westminster); Sept. 26-at Foothill
(Tustan), Oct 3-La Quanta (home, Westminster); Oct
10-at M1lhk.an , Oct. 16-Edison (home, Westminster).
Oct 24-at Ocean View (WestminMer); Oct 30-Hunt·
an~ton Beach {home, Westmm,ter). Nov 7-We'il·
mmster (borne, Westminster); Nov. 14-at Fountam
Valley (Westman,ter)
Ocean View Seabawka
The Number One
Ranked Tennis Club
rn Calrfornra
Boone also shined behind the plate.
gunning down Rickey Hendcr'ion as
the !>peedy Yankee tncd to \WIJle
second base after s1nghng to lead off
the sixth
Guy Carrono hasn't wasted any time 1n putting
toiether a ncar-<:omplete staff at Ocean View -one
whtch 11> an effect a six-man on-am pus staff composed of
Bob Beu, Jeff ~llcott, &1rt Clemem, Howard laom, SkJp
Miller and Ou Jaeuon. Carrozzo brought Bell with him
from Fountain Valley as has quancrback coach and
Chilcott (running backs nnd comerbacks). Clemens
(defensive hne and llght ends). Isom (defensive backs)
and M1Uer (defensive backs) att holdoven f'Tom the
previous regime. Jackson was the hea4 d11lnct (reshman
coach at Fountam Valley and will handle receivers ... The Seahawk~ are 50 strong tn spnng practice WJth eiaht
rttumina starters, includins Kurt 81ab1 (running back·
ft didn't take a genius to get a line on the 1986 Sunset strong safety). Pkll Meyer, (a 6-1 . 190 auard-hnebacker),
League football season as We'itminster High punished Larry Stappy (6-3, 20S two-way tackle), Job Bea•ble.n,
A1111DMJ1U~
MYRON
McNAMARA'S
Summer Junior Tennis Camps
• Myron M cNamara has been a prommenc name m cenms
for morf' than 20 y ears and has worked with such greau as
Pancho Gonules, Rod Ldver and Jack Kramer, co name a
·few Myron bnngs co these camps not only the expenence
long rr cogn17ed by the world's top amateur and pro-
fess10nal cennts players, but also a very personal mvolyt'-
menr m reaching co y oungsters
These camps drf' optm to the public ,md are des1gnf'd co
1mprovf' the tf'nnts game of 1un1ors. '
John Wayne Tenms Club T Shires and visors w ill be 91vt-n
co all campt"r~ and rackeu will be awarded ro c;,mp
tournament w inners Enrollmenc Is limited to six studt"nts
per instructor
I 1 71 JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT SEACt:i
Fo1 r('~atr11t1ori mlortNtJOt\
c~ll 644-6900
"Bob probabl) gives Henderson
the mo'>l problems of any catcher in
the league " uid Sutton. "When hc
got Ri ckey that chanJed tht• whok
complciuon of the inning."
Boone' ha" now nailed Hcndcr'ion
16 out nl 2Q attemot'\
* ANO«L NOTES· The Mt<ltt 111\Alt IOft•Of'tl
mate"" ""' ltamMkir (l -11 V\ M ,._.,,_
IS-21 ,..,. At11*1 "'"' Thunoev ott llefor11
hllllno ''¥ roao IOt "" uam.. ICi.Yalend •nd ClllceOO) O"Pitt tl'lelr DU!IHf\, ..,hk ll hid
been rouulled UP 11 of left, lht "'"°"' art now 71·1 '" nmti lhev have ltd ell., lllt tlClfllh lnnll"fl a. ._ tltd M Dldrn !or 1evan111
on tf'tt •N·tlrne "'' IOr u•m.• cauohl wllh UI?
Didi ~ llawi't maoa •n '"°' In Ill• le C>atl'Wt 11 fftor 11100 ~ It the oNy ,,._.,., In IM """'°' ..._, with a 1 000 ~ "'~'-al tt\et ooilllon Tiit ~ annwnted their
hr1t•l'OUllCI dt•ft Ol<kl In lllt rffUI¥ PNM ol
Mondev'l df•fl Tllav ere Roo.r1o H«"enci.1, •
rlollt·"-'*d P41chtr oul of SOUth CarOlin. Al-ti\ C~ l7 1. 41? EltA, fl MPH l•att>etll, LAa SM-. an outll4tk!M In~ out OI L•vwran<•
H'9h Ill Kell ... , t 415 llelllno everac11I, tnd
T~-. C..rr 4lfl outfleld« out of llannett Hlttl
In M¥'vlencl ( 4)9 1Vlf'"8)
one foe after another on the way to the CIF Bia Fiv<._ (running back-,trons safety) and Matt Bertram, (center·
"K"m1final'i All that was required was to scan the roster'llr n~ auard) Spnns pracucc continues until June 1•
and note the juniors competing. Coach Jim O'Hara'• when 1t cl~ out with spnna aames (sophomorrs at
L~on~ arc the consensus team to beat as they un~rso +2: 30. varsity at 2~30) . C111 ozzo•s btgat mrpn~ ~pnng practice, which wraps up June 14 with a spnna "Our overoll team "peed " Two other on-campus
game at 1.30. Westminster's offensive line figures to go coaches on the lower levels include Al Brudeaber1
235-23.5-230-245·260 the 260 bolonas to 6-4% Gary (sophomores) and Cral1 Nlcolopulo1 (freshmen) .
Lewellyn. a pro,pect who figure~ 10 see community 0¢ean View's defense 1s a multiple 50 . . The ofTen'te
college duty next year, Mille A11tba, a free safety and lakes another tum with a mult1pltt pro (ala Fountain
stroni safety a" a Junior and ,omet1mes quarterback. as Valley) as opposed to the pa~t iwo yean. o(J ta&ht, stacked
the Lions· quarterback the ltneback1ng corp of Mart I with all of the emphasis on the run . Ocean View hu
Sml .. (6-2. 21 S), Ray Smit~ C6-l, 225) and Todd Weaver JUSI two Thursday games this fall, and one 11 the opener.
(6-1. 22 5) rttums. Mark Smith and Weaver wall both~ The Scahawks will be "taninJ wuh somcth1na new m
acuon at light end. too. Also prominent m the ofTen11vc theirancnal-&Junior clau which finai.hcd ~ond in the
hnc 1~ Jaa Seklaoo, at 6-3. 215 O'Hara says the I .ions will Sunset waue sophomore standanp . A"!IC sma apnna
opcnue a multiple offen!IC, 1ndudmg an I with doubk: v prmiee. Carroao said: "We're work1na hard and the kad!l
tight ends and a Oanker; a ~wer l; and a "V1kina." with arc enthusiastic."
douhle spht ends. an "ace' back with backs nanlctn, the The 1986 schedule: Sept. 11-at Kennedy (Western),
quanerback on both s1dcc; and directly behind the J.U&rds. Sept. 19-at Newport Harbor, ScpL 26-Santa Ana
He ~)', they'll u~ the 'iho1aun too O'Hara 1 staff Valley (home, Huntanaton Beac:h). Oct 2-St. Paul
include\ Stai C1art (ofTcnstve coordinator), Rob (home. Westminster). Oct. 10-S.nta Ana (home,
McA.lllster (spcc.tal teams C'oordmator): Jack Bowmaa Westminster); Oct. 11-at Fountain Valley (Huntanaton
(defensive coordinator); St~ve O.bonae (defentive end•); Beach), Oct. 24-Manna (home. We1tm1n1tcr);
a'nd Don Presby (~trcngth coordinator and defensive Octll-E.d1son (home. Hununaton Beach); Nov 7-at
tackles). Hunhnaton Beach. Nov 14-Westminster (home.
The 1986 ~hcdulc· Sept. 12-at V•lcnc1•; Scot. Hunt1naton Beach)
·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BRING THIS AO
&SAVE25•,
ENROLLMENT FEE
'51 Ykt••~ It.
COUA•U& ··" .. ···'-' IU-030t
f
PAGE SCH
AGE 2 THAU GRADE 6
SUMMER CAMP 11th Ye.AA
SUMMER & F All ENROlLMENT
• 1no1v1oua1 Att•nt!O"
ENROlLMENT •Sm.ii Clasaea
NOW IN PROGRESS • No Child ~locled
REASONABLE RATES • Hot l unCl'M"•
Open
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WILD GAME
Complete Dinners
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fin world and etaht Amencu rt'·
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victory over the Milwaukee Brewen.
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aJl-time a.rand 1lam list.
l\u1•n •, w.tte Sox 1: In Ch1caao.
Oary Ward doubled in two runs to
cap a four-run third innina and rookie
Edwin Cot1'U ICIUered four hits over
aeven lnntnp to lead first-place
Texu.
BIH Jay1 •• Twlu I: Gcorae Bell
snapped a tic with l run-scorina una.le
in the aevcnth innina and Lloyd
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with a three-run homer u Torontt>
defeated viaitina Minnesota
l\*9 Soi I, JJad.lue 1: At Fenway
Park, Rich Oedman keyed a two-run
third innina with an RBI double and
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the seventh, lead1n1 Boston to the
tnumph over Oeveland
on.i .... MulMn a: ID BaJttrnorc.
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SlcOf'd JOllntol\, Tlll•d McCov T-1 ll
A-14Mt
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NO matter what kind of pain or chronic Illness
NO results from acupuncture or herb treatment
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Whoever betlevea In acupuncture, h rba, or P.E .• shall
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(714) 968-3325 30 y re expert nee
15 yea.re Instructor
18121 M gnolla St. (at T lbert) Fountain Valt y
Mike Boddicktr alloYtcd f\V( hu1
over eevcn tnninas u the Orioles
defi &cd Seattle.
In NauonaJ Leaaue action:
Olut• 1, E1,.1 I: In Montreal,
Dan Gladden ainaltd twice, 1tole two
buts and ecored •run and Vida Blue
allowed two run1 over flve inninp.
help1na San Franosco beat the Expos.
Cudlnalt I, Allro1 1: In the
A1tr0domc, Orea M•thcw1. mak.ina
h11 m"or·lclJUe debut, pitched eiaht
1hutout 1nn1np before need.ma reftcf
help ti) the ninth and Jack Oarlt hit a
1wo-run homer 11 St. Louis extended
1t1 wino1na streak to four pmes.
PadrH I, M1t1 C: Al Shea Stadium,
Carmelo Martinez hit a two-run
homer and Steve Garvey had 1 solo
shot as San Dieao broke a (our-pmc
l0tm1 streak
Bravee I, .Plraln I: In Atlant.a,
p1nch·hmer Ted Simmon• hit a arand
slam that capped • ~ven-run ex-
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Atlant.a
Rtd1 I, Cabe I: At Riverfront
Stadium, Nick Esaslcy hll a two-run
homer that capped• three-run rally in
the e1ahth 1nn1na and hf\cd C1nc1n·
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ond, WMI, Tlllrd I WI term T-2:31 A-10 ...
TOMORROW1 S
RESULTS
TONIGHT
Orange County's only stoclc morkttt
dosing prices will be available in the
Doily Pilot at the fol/o~ng sel~
stortts and news rocks.
Why wait until tomorrow when yov con
lind ovt ton;ght on thtt strHt no later
than 6:00 pm.
Store owners who wont the late stoclc
IKiitions call ... Single Copy Sales
Director at 642~321
.. ,_,.
o.·...-.1111&w~ ~'~
81...0.. Me.ti ..
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je., •l•te-nl lo od O.ota & ... ,,
~ .... ~ .... ~1r.w,,. ....
llldry~.n
lai.o (!Meo A '1•11
Ml I ~v• WO<-l PcwolK oa<• '1...,
·~t&Wor
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lolw 0..Co l Wa.,.., .,....._
Oel• •••Oil Md~ U I ,_..Offk,
0741W-
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Irvine
.. .. .
...
> •
r
1'8RclaJ , Jaa~ $
ARIES(March 21-Apnl 19) Fuanctal tran)Acl1on cu be complr:tC'd and
.. looks good" for you Focu!> on success through ncl'ouauon, persuasio n
en thu11a!>m. You'll wm by d 1!>play1ng 101e de v1v1c Libra, uno ther Anrc;
fiaurc pro minently
TAUR US (Apnl 20-Ma) 20)· You h8"e unusual opponun1t~ to l'Orrr:ct
past mistakes to start uvcr. to 1mpnn1 \Our own St)'lc Acl·ent m tkpendenu:,
cn'.'at1 Vtt), p1onccnna \pint Judgment, intuataon wall hit m.trlr...
teathmg. learning, 1ntutllo11. GEMJNI (May 2 1-J une 20). Forns on
reunion with famah member R ise --------------
above pett) difference!>, pcrce1"e luture
prospects Secret v.111 ht• rc\eakd -to
your ad\antage Canct•r, .\qua nu\
natives pla} paramount rnk' SYDNEY
CANCER <Junt· 21-Jul) '.!2l l'opu 0
lanty ,urges upv.ard' -~ou could wan MARR
an l'lctuon or l·unll''>t I ong-1!1~tanu: ••••••••••••••
call relates to \Oc"IJI e"ent pms1hk
1ournc., \ ou'll 11.·H~IH' gift pm-,1hly add1t1un to your wardrobe;.
LEO (Jul\ 2.1-!\ug 22) \ ou gt·t ""hat )OU want following hurcaucrat1l
"tangk" E.mphas1<, on amb1uon lart"er, contract\ with peopll· }OU hold 1n
high regard Mone' "-Ill he dl\cu"cd, \ou could ht.· ldvorahh \U"Jl nsed
VIRGO l.\ug. 21 Sc."pl 1~1 Emphaw. un mo\tml'nl tra .. ...i v.nllng.
commun1cat1un anc.J pm~1hk "t11nauon "Do ~omc personal dell'tl1H~ wor~
d1.,Lern moll\l''>. rL'ICl't ..,upt.·rfinal rl'Spon\l'\ Yuu unra.,,el 'htd<.kn
meaning ~ag1ttan.in pla)" ruk
l.JBRA l~l·pt 2 '·<kt 22> f ran~ dl\t 1"1on '' katurt."d -re\Ol"t'~
around monl'\ m~1111 d11mcstu .. adJu,lmtnt H1.· ~.hplomat1t . hut refuse lll
ahanc.J11n n1JJ11r ~u:il I mpha~1s on t"mplmment. 1nrnml'. marital \tatu'
\nothl'r I 1h1.1 flg1Hl'' prominenth
SCORPIOt<~t 11"'-o' 21 I F.n,phtt'>l'>on lt'.f.ttlulfatr.,, \flt"tlUI right+, a nd
pum1"w"" ahdtt' 1 '1n:alo; ln:l' from onl \lh1• \On,tantl) talH''i w1thou1
SI' 1ng in return l 011!.; t-...:hind \Cent'\, ddine term' rl'lu'it' to be int1m1datcd
b\ rt' ·alc1trant 1111J1\ 11lu.JI
SAG ITTARJll~ t '-m 22 Dt."l' 21 ~Empha'>t\ on r1,()(ms1bil1t). pressurl
ol deadline 1111 ·11, fwd 1·m111111nal rclat1on,h1p Olc.kr ind I\ 1dual will lend
benefit ol c\pt.-m·ntL' l">l.'1hap-. aid tn nhta1ning lunJmg ( ani..cr (apncom
phi.\ rub..
...,CAPRICOR~ t I >n :':'-Jan I 111 hn1sh v.hat ~nu ~tan look hc-\ond thl·
1mmed1a1c. 1mprc~!I \our u"'n ~t\ll'. rt!aL..fc man~ arc fa\unatcd h) }Ou.r
\ll'W' ~potli1$hl 1111 th.1111w tr.1\CI, \ilrll't} \l"n'>t' of dra01,1 \nl'\, l 1bra
dorninat1· c'c1ting \lC 11.1110
AQUARlt:S tJan :'o I ch 11' I ) ou gt'I nirt \t'umJ c ham.e '\ ou
p<>'>'>thh u\crloul. 1kt.11I ''h1th lt1ulll pr<J\e 1..0\11\. \11gh1 IO\lllH· lea'>e ur
lice ml rt·qu1 rcmu11 II· •t H'r 'ou mal..1· amend'> .rnd a' rnd \l'lhad.. U.·o.
another \quannn li!(ur1· prom1m·ntl\
PISCES I fch 111 ~ ;:m h :11) \ 11u ma~ ha' c tu retrdll' ~ll'P' due tu
requf'<,I made b' relc111' l' He lcn1t·n1 unJcr\tanding hut lr.nov. "hen to call
halt \ tiu II n.·ce1H' l.i"1rahk ~e"' l<mccrnhn~ fl'C1·nt tnl.lu1r\ lntu1t11111
slr~ng 'nu'll P•tl.. v.1nrw·
W Jl1NE 5 IS VOl'R BIRTllOA Y q1u arl' lh namat. neall' l' rt"\lll'''
hd\.l' l..ntill. tor lan~uari-lnuld ht· C:~ldknt r~pont·r photograph1.·r ttacht•r
\ IU Could mam thl') \t'ar, and thl'H' COUid Ix• ,lO addll10n tO lam11\ \OU
LUuld aho go 1nio hu\IOt''>' !or ~our,cll )OU will mt·ct dcadltnt'\ Hiu'll hi.·
a\lo;"d to au:c p1 l halknge ofaddt.>d n·-,pon.,1h1hl'.-( 11:m1n1, Virgo Sag11tar1u\
people pl1n important role~ in )our Ilk \ ou get l'\l'ltlng as\1gnmt·nt 1n Jum·
~·pttmhcr "di al'>n ht.· memmablc for \Ou in I 1>X6
Rolls once rolled off
U.S. assembly lines
~ h,1\ \1111 l.111'1 rt"ml·mtx·r "hl·n
thl' K111l \ Ku'< I..' \\,I' madt lfl tlH
t n1tnl ~tall'\" l-or 11 'ear\ lh.it
C'll'l'rtll!d \ l'hll k "'-:!\ ,l\\t'l11hfl'd hl'fl
l 11 lht• I l/ ~ I<, ph" In l.\pn ngticlt1.
\l.:i'' tht· marl.1 t •.1\ not ma~\l\C \t
he uni.· .1hout It.di tht .\1111·11l .ir1
ar .. v.11rld\'o1dl' v.c11· \1ridl'I ''
l h,11 n11h1c.1l gr1111n L.alkd the
l omrn11<.l•1rc:' "'"\he~ g.111 tl11:1r rtJllH.:
h' t11pp1ris 1hr1JUgh a d1d11•nan ,ind
pultln~· .1 t1n11-er m1 .i \.\ord an' \\IHtl
that v.orJ
11·, "'rit th,11,,1kn1·,..., rH1111t·d I ll'nr
I) ( ng~v.cll gnl 11d1 d111111~ th
l .1litorn1J < 11)ld Ku'h II\ ,tlllllllm"
d.111ng tht• ~olJ m1nL'r'> "'ho l'h.:C ll'll
golJ-Lapflt·d tront tt·cth .1., their .. tah1'
\\rnhol
I ht'rl "'·"a llllh 111 lu·l.1nd "'hen .1
1..illlng '-'<1'>onl\ rcg.ir~kd a\ 111111J1·r it
d11m• at night
I) I >nt•\( lint I ,!\I'-' >01J ~ h.ir.1 t 1
I >tr\\ I l:trn h,1\ 1· .a 1,,.,, 11 11111 '
\ < allahan
I) I hrcl" 111111'\ ,J\ 111.111\ IK'.Oplt
\'"' tht· < 1rt·a1 Smok' "-at111nal l'arl
a' go 111 an~ o ther n:ll 11 H1al par I. I f{IY.
1;..on1t•1
'
L.M.
Bovo
\ 11·, rt. an 1ncrn1ght dn'i.' tor
halt 1hc n. tr in 'pnpulatum
<) Wit.JI hJppcn' lo llll' llllrtl' of
.in111lJI' th.at truh h1hcrn<1tt''
\ It'' rc;ih~orhnl 1 thL·•r '>" lt:m..,
Lui\ \11qr,tl1,1n\ 1mp11rtL·d \'1,111
V.dll:r hutli.1111 lo pull plov.' But tlu
m.1ln pr<l\CJ .ilmu\t .... mt·Jn J~ till'
\lnlJn l.tflt' hutlal11 I uo hard 111
h;inJlt "111 farm.-. folded fhe buffalo
\~Crit e' cu v. ildrr .tnd multiplied
\.11\• p<•<h 11! f'Jlm lrCI.'\ grow
1\ l'r I Ip<' .111d fcrml'nl f hL' huflalo cal
thl'm and g1't drunl. I hnc an: .. ome
l.1ng1·rqu, pla(c' dov. n there when
thl' \\ntJ<I' arc 11111 111 rampagrng
Jrunl..t·n hullalo
L M. lfovd " " y ndicated
columnHt ·
United in .war but
divided in peace
Even: nation I h.a vc known about.
however united in war, has been
d1vtded 1n peace. This div1S1on 1\
sometimes between north and south.
sometimes between city and country,
sometimes between capital and
hinterland
In En&)and, ~rtain counties arc
looked upon by Londoners as es-
pecially backward and foolish; the
town of Goba m was for Iona regarded
as the home of simpletons.
In France, the region far west of
Pans as dtsmtsscd by metropohtes as
"la France profonde" -the G allic
equivalent of "tn darkest Afnca."
Northern lt.ahans scorn the ha~ as
well as the habit.at of the sou'laern
ltaha ns, and Germany has us own
"td1ot provinces."
I he U nated St.ates 1s skewed an 'I.'' eral "'a)s .,. much as its Euro pean
wunterparts New Yorkers look
upon anything west of the Hudson a s
''htlk country," while c1t1zens
t•lr,ewhere arc quick to assure 1he
\1\1tor that "New York rcall) isn't a
pan ol .\ menca "
Modern communicatron. es-
peetall\ nt'tworlc telev1s1on e)(posure.
" \uppo'>cd to have brought the
urnntr) do\Cr together 1n ume and
\pa<;l', but it has not perccptabl>
Jltt.'red the '>t'Ct1onal n valry. susp1·
oon and d1shlr..e After all. why should
"-Che d11Tert'nl fro m an} other nation
in the "-Orld''
Tht> aldco;t recorded facuonaltsm in
h1stof) 1\ that between ctty dwellers
and ru~t1n The language and 1d1o m
of a coo nu v a"~ know, ts formed by
'iCholars arid intellectuals an the ctty
-and the~ beginning w11h early
Rome refl("("t the bias against coun-
trymen
SIDNEY
'H1111s
Such derogatory words as "pagani."
and "heathens" des1anatcd the people
who lived in rural areas, and were
thus the last to be civilized a nd
C'hnstiantzed by the Rom an Empire.
"Pagan" originally meant a v1llager or
a rustic, and "heathen" was someone
h v1 ng on a heath.
.\nd a "villain" onginall) was a
fa rm servant. who worked for a villa
It grad ually cam e to mean a w1cked
person only because of the scorn felt
by city inhabit.ants for their rural
neighbors. ·
Different modes of hie. different
accents, even different clothes. Sttm
to generate hostility and nd1culc
Peo ple speak differently 1n vanous
pans of the sa~e countcy, and their
accent alone gives them a n a ir of
strangeness
We feel comfortable onl) with th<.'
famrhar Nauonahsm as but a few
hundred years old in the history of the
wo rld; rcg1ona hsm goes much further
back and h.a~ m uch deeper roots. It
takes a war against a common enem )
lo ~ feeh n gs for1111me but
when the threat as again removed, the
ancient animos1t1cs quickly reasr,cn
themselves.
Roommate finds out
three's not company
OE.\R .\'\,"I \NDERS I rec:cntl)
mL1\cd into an apartment with a
girllnrm.L her. thing wa'> love!)
un11I t\•o \\el'k'> ago The problem ·~
her bo-. lncnd. He decided to move in
:il<,o ·
I lctt a rnrntonable home because I
1.1.antt"d pn.,acv - the chance 10 do
those 1h1ngo; one can't do wtth little
hrother<. and '>l'>tcrs hanging a round
No"" I am faced with the same
\ltuallon and 11 "'dnvang me around
the hcnd
\1 ~ g1rlfm•nd I\ the kind v.ho k ts
rx·oplc walk all over hl'r She 1s
wmpletel} dominated h} th1'> nerd
and doec;n't r~ahze he 1s using her I
Jm being u~d too
I 1.1.ork \Cl"\ hard so tha1 I can allord
thJ'> apartment The gu ) 1s getllng free
mom <rnd hoard and maid <;crv1ce.
not to menuon transportation (He
ha<, no car J l''l' never bet.>n vef) good
,11 \landing up for m} nghts I need 10
knov. hov. lo deal with this satuauon
"'nhout lo~mg ht'r fnend5htp C an
~ou help'' -l HREE'S A ( ROWD
11\J < ONN
DEAR CROWD: The frtend1blp is
already sbot, 10 let's go on from there
Tbe setup you describe 11 gro11ly
unfair and you oupt to bave your
brad uam lned lf you allow It to
contlnur. If you can't face he r, take
the coward'~ way out and wrhe a
letter. Make It abundaatly clear that
you WHl tbe moocher oat pronto -
for ber sake as well as yoar own. If
you don'l have backbone enongh to
wrUe the letter, resign yourself to a
llff'llme of helH used Hd abused . " .. DE.AR \NN LA "I D ER S· Soml'-
lhang ha\ heen bugging me for a long
time and I'm a"ihamcd to ask a n'tone
The> "'oulcl than k I wa' nut\ But I
\1mpl~ mu"it get 11 off my mind
hccau'ie I have been g1 .. 1ng It a lnl
more thought late!} than I <.hould
What happens to tho...: odd socko;
alter tht'\ gn rnto the v.a.-.htnF ma-
chine• \f\ hu\hand and ')()n!I are two-
legged crc;1turc\ The} v.car P1\ IR 'i of
ANN
UN DEIS
socks. not singles. yet almost e\Cf)
ume I take the socks out of the dr.cr
there as one black. one blue o r a white
ont" left O\ er I must have collected 60
sock'> wtth no mate\ in the laM thr~e
}'ear'
Do thc"iC auto mauc wa'ihcrs eat
"iOCks'' I use a rathe r strong detergent.
hut no SO('k could dissolve 1n ll Is 1t
po<,r;1ble tha t a sock could go down th<.'
drain? .\s vou can sec. A nn I have
been toying with several po<,s1hil111 es.
None seem s logical Please hdp me
reath a sensible conclusion I am -
DI NGY IN DUBUQUE
DEAR DUB: AatomaUc waabers
do not eat socks. Nor do Jbey dl11olve.
No draln that I have ever seen 11 large
enough for a sock to go tbrough
Whatever went into the machine
remaln1 there throughout Ute wash-
ing aad dryln1 cycles.
Hpw then doe1 one accou.nt for tbe
1lngletooa? It'• obvious. The ma te
was to11ed away, ettber uncon1clou1-
ly or con1clo11ly becaaae It bad a bole
l.n It. We all do thln11 of wlUch we are
wuiware. This doesn't mean we're
~~gy. tt m erely meaa1 we are
11uman. Otber po11lblllt!es: Socks
•ometlmes cJln1 to other clothes,
1Uck to the 1tdes of tbe wH her or get
trapped on Jed1ea l.n the dryer drum.
Of \ RANN LAN DERS; This ma\
not he up }Our allry. but do )OU ha' c
an) 1tkas o n how I can get the ugl~
mark' off m y shoes that appear from
nowhere when I dnve m y car'' -
I)( l'F-FED lN SCARSDALE.
DEAR SCARS: Tbose marks are
murder to se t off. Avoid them by
k~eplng a.a extra pair of beat-up
numbers In &be car.
John Derek rests after heart attack
8 ) thf' A 'lodattd l'rt'"
\.\:\if.\ B\l<H\K\ \d"r
John Derek "'a' r1·p11rtl'1I 1n lair
cond111on and• rl'\ting 111m·
fonahl\ ~fond.I\ alter '>ulkring a
mild heart at1a1.I. """-tit> .i(tn·c,' Bo Oerek, \<11tl 1hro11gh a puhlt-
Cl\I
I >crrl.. 'r1 ""a' 'tridrn \und,1\
night 1oa1d l.tnl'I (>'Neill. a
<,poke\\.1<11m,1n for !\anta H.uhar•1
( ottage Ho\p11,1I ""hen· he wa'
admitted Tht" r>erck" live on .i
l2-~Crt' ranch m•ar '\Jn ta rhara
\ hando;omt" l haracter al tor in
tht' 1440<;and IC/~o.,, Dnek'.,film
c red1I\ 1ndudt• "All 1he Kang·,
Men " and "I '1xJ11.,," hc'forc
turning to d1relling in lh<' 11,1t,(J,
He ~as pre\ 1ousl> mamcd to
Al trec;\C'<i Patti Behr~. I r<;ula An-
dre'' and I inda f:van'>
Ban lifted
.\Lttl Ql ERCJl f: N M
.\clor·pll)"nght am Sbrpard
s mo' c:d from Ntw Mciuco •rnd
lifted h1" ban on production ofh1'
pie 1n the 'tate, th~ttt ntli<'tftl<
sa)'.
The Ne" Mexico Repertory
T ht'.llCf ha' ft'L"CIVW P<"rm"'>lllll
to 1t<'1Jtt" ~itqnrct's "fool for
I mt'" 1n October, ~1d the
thratt"r·~ art1'it1c d1~1or ndrtw
'lht',I
\ SantA Ft rtttdent fbrst'~f
~car\, Sheperd prohibited the
producuon110 en!W"e hi pnvacy
..
whale lav ing LD New Mc:u co, sa1d
Jim l 1nnell, chairman of the
Una ver•nty of New Mexico's
theater department.
Donnahonon
DENISON. Iowa -Former
"Donna Recd Show" stars
Sbelley Fabarea, Paul Peterten
and Aan McRae w ill be a mo na
celebnt1es hononna the late ac-
tress when the Ac~dcm) Award
she won tn I 9S3 return\ to her
hometo wn this month.
Reed, who died tn January,
asked an her will that the Oscar
she won as best su pport1n1 actress
for her role 1n "From Hert To
Eternity" be 11vcn to the htston ·
c•I society an Denison Retd \
hu$band. Grover Asmu • wdl
make the pn:scntauon June 14 .,
part '1Sf a two-day Donna Rrc-d
frit1val
Other rv , .. ,, expected to
attend include Fabarci' husband •
Mike Farrell, who pl•>ed BJ .
Honcycuu on "M ·A-S-H ,"
~at,Jea Nolu, who plated Kate tn ·"lll~ Rut Mecoys... ind
Norma CoueU7, who plays Aunt
Ruby on '"'General Hoipital."
\
HIDE T HOSF. CAROS!
Bot h vu lrwrublt• S1111t h dt>al'
NORTH
• 8 7 :J
10 4
0 A IS
+AK D732
F.A.'iT
•K 9
~AK 86 :J 2
J 10
WEST
+J IOfft
,IJ J 5
¢9 H 7 !l2
• QI\ • 10 6 4
SOUTH
+AQ 62
/Q97
KQ 6
•• J H
Thc bidding
South Weeit
I 0 Pass
2 NT Pa ."
North
2 +
:J T
Pus Pa <t
Upenin~ l1•,1d .lal'k ol
Pa8"
Taki• a <'rt11.,1· 1>11w11 I ndl'r antl
you may gPt 111 pla~ a)(ain.,t l'a11I
\1 ar.,ton Au~traha ' t>ntry 111 ffo~al \ 1k1ng Ltnf' s l'lay1·r of tilt'
Year n1mp<•t1twn A 1 lwor1"" w ho • .,
a stallrKh bel1t•\ t•r 1n the nPw
Stron g Pas!i act1f1n.t1 'Y"'lE'ms ht.• as
al!oo a pla\t>r of ran• ahahl) llt>rt' 1o;
an 1 'amph of hi" skill from 1111'
rnHFi '\ 11,1 rahan 'al 11111;1! Opt•n
Tt'ams C ln11npwnsh1p
T he• h1ddang i.tiven 1s what n11~h1
ta kl' µIan• at a table wht.•n• normal
methr111" we re b<'tn~ 1•mpl11v1•cl
Sufft n 11 to say lhal \far.,11111
rt.>ac lwd t hf' .,amt· l'ont ract in ha.,
met hodo;, w hf' rt' t hc• only inform a
w in available to the d cf1,ndl'r'i wa"
that '>otllh held at lt>a"l I :J p<1111i...
and thar :'\urth held a minimum of
I I " 1 l h .1 .,,x t ard or lnniter t lub
... 1111 and no ""~!Non
0 If' l"Ofi'Qt' iie"e•t C' 11o p
I ' KtO..,-.bled ...-ord1 •
""' • •or"' tov' .... """t'1• NQ•clt I C l TG A N I I I' 11 I
\ r~ A F L K I I I I 1:
CHARLES
Go REN
OMAR
SHARIFF
S 1111·1· ttw tf'n of ht>arti. u.p)kar1•d
111 dummy Wt"'lt',. h•ad of the Jat:k
11ia1 kt•d I-;a. ... 1 ~ 11 h a '41'< c·ard suit
twadl'd h~ t lw a ce k1ni.t and proba·
hi) 1 h1• k 111~ of s pades W t '\t was
11rll1k1•ly tn ll•ad from a '>hort suit 1f
lw tl!'lcl a pos,.1ble C'ntry in the kinjt
111' "Plidt'" Tlwrl'fon• declarn
lll't'ded to 01•\elup L\\o 1•xt ra t n ck"
"1t hnut .. urn·ndenng t ht• lt•ad Ttw
only hop<• wa., an Pru1p lay
F:ast '\Jl(nitllf'd 011 t Ill' J8('k of
h1•arts and clt•t·lart•r wo n th1• queen
Ile t.'f"OS!>t'd to tilt' a.n ol diamond.,
and took ,, w uu11111.t 'pa dt· fanes'>t'
Wht•n lw t 1hht•d t he k1nl(-queen of
d1amund' ht• was 1ntt•re'lted to nott.•
that Eusl ,111 ffrd a heart Next
1'1Hnt' ~· pu·k of dub'!, which
ton I'd W1•st lo c·ovt•r and the ta
hl1··., king \\1111 A ">pa dr to the act>
-.1 ri pf*d F:a.st or his la.'n safe n u
t'.trd and Ill' wrui t h<'n prewnH-d
with tlw lt•rul 1n ht•ar ls
T lw ht•"r Eao;t n1u Id do wa'I to
t ak1• h1<1 fu11r hcar1 tr1< k~ Then tw
!tact ro lt•ad a \\ ay from h1-. tPn nf
1'111h" 111111 1111111111) 'A !I t1•nar e t11
~'' 1· rlt•1 larn 111., c11nt r<u l
o ····!~~11 ~ ·TI i' ( r I' I
i I I l -
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Staple food
5 Waste matter
10 S American
rodent
14 The East
15 Detached
16 Angle Iron
17 Arizona slghl
20 Allempt
21 Uproars
22 Occupations
23 OutmRlch
24 Nailer
25 Spatler
28 Irate
32 Charac1er-
1s11c
33 Small groups
34 Av1at0f
35 Relative
36 Leg area
37 Thtrsty
38 Fish
39 Sac
•O view
4 1 Rebuilds
43 Ob1ec1s
44 Queens
Plate or
Preakness
45 Deplored
4e 47 41
53
46 P1x1e
49 Boundary
50 Shade
53 Is unbiased
56 Russian
water body
5 7 Oecorou!'
58 Smelly
">9 Bulrush
60 Paradise~
61 Lawyer abbr
DOWN
I Absorbed
2 Czecn river
3 Community
4 Audience
5 Dull
6 Quartz
7 The Olher
Side
8 Besides
9 Punch
10 Corsair
11 Retired
I? Receptacle
13 Skills
18 Thal IS Lal
19 Some ewams
23 Provoke
24 Ta blew are
25 Riser and
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
I read
26 Prig
27 Fixed roul~s
28 S1up1d
29 Despoil
JO Cake parl
31 Transfers
33 Trey
36 End
37 Biting
39 w a1ercral!
40 Luster
42 Threefold
43 Radio sets
45 Mature
46 Card game
4 7 S American
counlry
48 Ex istent
49 Ear part
50 Otrk parl
51 Fool or volt
52 Whirlpool
54' Ooze
55 Extinct New
Zealand bird
, , 12 13
by Bii Keane
"You don't have to press down so hard."
"But I really MEAN what I'm writing!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
• "What are my shirts doing on the floor?"
PEANUTS
W~AT DO TMEV CALL
TMOSE TMIN6S ™AT
FALL OFF Of TREES?
GARFIELD
A"E YOO ~OING TO EAT THAT MAM80RGfR. POOfWl
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
ROSEISRO&B
••
BIO OltORGlt by VlrgU Partch (VIP)
...
.. So THAT'S how they get 1hlp1 Inside
bottl11."
DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketcham
~! ~ WAAT l fOUNl) tN lHE WIL~
~1T\C ! ISN'T \T NEAT~ /1
I
J
J
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
o' ~L ,_ _____ '"""
by Kevin Fagan
i.tE.'4, OOWN lt-i ~T, "2.'RE 'T°R'41MG ·10
--JERK ~l+.Gf.. ~. l.lAT~ INra.D PllAC:t\a.1.I
by Pat Brady
BLOOM COUNTY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE .....
JUDGE PARKER
DOONESBURY
~..y ~ JEY,!Ue,
HJMIS THE
J ~
4 .
OAILY P1LOTIW ~' Junt '11,
.,~,,
'
MEANWHILE CAN I
GET YOU ANYTHIN6
ELSE ef!FORE I TURN
IN FOR THE NIGHT, MR
WA"NER ?
by Berke Br•thed
by Jim~
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom BatJuk
A~1HAT6UJ
~e.~ 511"flN6 CAlliH
OOER lMC.RE Ml(,UT
WJJ#lT 10 MAVE ~ • °1MI~ iO 5/'IJ Ascxrr rr ...
by Gary Trudeau
~
1HIN6,
MNl,I
I
r . , .
• >
C8 Orangie Cout DAILY PILOT I Wedntllldey, June 4, 1888.
CALL 842-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF. CALLING FROM IOUTH ORANGE
54()..1220
411-llOO
TllE ART OF SEUIN8 IS
MAH EASY IN THE
DAILY PILOT'S
CLASSIFIED PAGES.
You et1n now call th• D•llY Piiot Cl•••lfled Dept. on 8•turd•J morning from 1:00to11:30 •.m. to pl•c• your 8und•J •nd Mond•y ada.
nu.u1an
••IAU HOUlll/CONDOI
0.-. 100)
..... -100. ............. 111111 ~...... 1011 c..-~-102' c:..-IOI•
"" ,,,. .,,,
1000 uu
IMO IS7S ,
'* '"° 1.00 .. ,,
MllC. llNTAl.I
not no.
"°" 1711
1121 m• 1111• 11.0
,,~
·"~
Al•••···---· ••• * .. tt20
1#6,..... '"' ......... *' "--"'---.. ......... _ )012 ,..... .,.
OllWC... ,.,,.
~ IOlt
lllMOYMllll
GAllAGI IAUI
°""""" ..... w.'4 ••02 ··-•101
.......
~y
~ ... .........,.
ftAll .... IAllOll
IOATI
o.-wi 7011 ,.._, 7011
O...tw. I* .. ,_ 10»
,_......, 10)4
............. -ICMO ._,............. 1042
Blll'ALI
HOUlll/CONDOI
, ....... :w.: ·~· .............
a.toal/<*ieo
..... -c:-.. -c.--
0...-_v...., "" 612• .,,. .. ,.
61.0
•1"7 .... ,, ..
... 1014 ...-,.. '°" ......... ,.I. ..._,......,_,...,... JIQIO
llWOMMI--1Wi
-10.W 1--1CMI ~-1ot0 i..,_....... 1~1 i.llio~ IQU
-'ilojw IOtl' .....,......... ·~ -o.-ltR• ... ,,_. c..--'°" --,.., .... _......,.. ,. ,......c:-_ ... ..-.'-, ... ,_ '°'°
MllC.1.1.
..... -1100 ~-l lU ....... c--.. 11111
........
.. AllCIM ..... ,.., .. ====----°""-..._w_., ....,,.'-_,,......,.
.......... ,0 ..
, .... /1 .... ..... °'*'"--o-..i .... ......,_w-..
... Cll ......
.......... .010 ,.__..._. .011 -.,,, ~ .01•
-.OU '-'........ .,,, c-.-. .,,. _,.,... .on
_.,1'-1"" .ms
...... -tOIO .........,.. ... .,..,
Oflw, ........... ' ...,_. *M7
"""""""" -~--...
'''° . .,, .. ., ....
t llO ... ,
MllC.
.......,. IOIO
'-t/ffll/T...,. IOU -...,...,......., IOll
AUTOMOTIVI "-..-.. '°'o _......_,....... '°'' •-w-.. '°'° • ..,,..... o.+..1-.. tOIO ,,... '°"
-tO.o • ....... ,0.-I04t
-9090 ..._........, tlOO .-.o..-c ..
Mia -"40
CLASSIFIED INDEX
842-5878
DEADLINE I
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday .......... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tueectay .......... Mon. 5:30 PM
Wedneilday .... Tu.a. &:30 PM
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
Telephone 8ervloe
MOfld•y-!'r:td•Y 8•00 AM-5:$0 PM
Saturdey 1:00 AM·11:30 AM
Bullneea Counter
Mond•y-Frld•y
CHICK YOUR AD THI FIRIT DAY
The Delly Piiot atrtwe tor efflclenc:y and aocurllC)'. H~. oocatkH\lllY trrora do QGCU!, ,,.....
llaten wMrl your Mt la read beci( and cMdt your
ad dally. Aeoort errot'I lm""81at91y to 042-&971.
The o.lty PUot toOePt• no Hablllty for any errot In
.,, tdWttte.Mnt for wNctl It may be r~uoept for the coet of the epaoe eotulltY occupied
Dy the err«. Credit can only be allowed torlhe ftrtt
lnMrtlon.
DIRICT0"111 ...... oer..., Olllr
°'91190... Cw~. liolOl*Y. ~ "°"'"""' .. .... .. ................ ..... ......... , ............. ..,,., °'*' ..._ .... . . .._..., ..... ............................................... Thureday ........ Wttd. 5:30 PM
Friday ..... , ...... Thura. 5:30 PM 11:00 AM·ll:OO PM
Saturday ........... Fri. 5:30 PM
SYnday .......... Sat. 11:30 AM 842-5171
,.,,, ......--~ w1111r1 ao..,. •,........ ......... IO,WI_.,....,.._ ................... ,~,, ..............
... """""· .. Olll9ltlllfl -..-~ ,....,.. ... f/lftflll't-.(• .....
1M1 lltatt Ftr lalt But. IMtlt IMO lal... , l•at. lttclt 1140 11111111 Ptalan 11 Calta •111 1114 C.11 •na MM laL ..... 1141 I~ IMO lllt ..... Wu... ftll ..... ,c.a.. av OWNER-1iwnhou.. Pnla1al1 2117 N!W LUXURY HOME ..., 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath. XJnt lo-Git Coeta M..a .,..., ddrm.1 Lth. trPIC. dlW. bfiFcAML-210 11A
.......................... __ 2bd, 1'"~.ueumel.75 XvaiimldJJ;i&26eY'tY Never oocupled, 2200 aq aoo;mnpald 1iOY;/"'1Q'. Ottlon, lrg ll~no rm, prvt28r18a,vautt.doell-new crpta l drpa, ~ d,... ~ neetooupta,needbed llurtl 1001 FHA loen, nr rec.,.. l updated kit dbl 11.,, ct«* tt. 3bd, 2'" ba. walk to Lrg 1aA duplex. 4fli patlo.1..!'!0'· gar~. no Inga In llvlng rm, dining balcony, encl garage n·patl, yrly IUH, bath In ~ hOft'8 nr -;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;1 pool, frptc, aparkllng •1300 53M111 Agt,.. beh. teua/ ..... oPtlon, H•rdtng. Balboa Pan. 1 pet9"°"·154-2717 rm I kltohen. Sngt gar· t710. 714/146-0H4 l800/mo, 17~7 OC F8" Qr~ during
• ~· ~ ~~t, etc, IC • I u:: llU 11!!00, te0-3521. adult no peta ~7-1155 2 BEDAOOM 1bath alngte age 8750/mo. Avl 811. ,_.__ ... u fair J4Jto1 t-21, laUndry -1.llOO, _.... ........ .,.naa • .... , ..... _ It•• ' . n . d ~ Call Sheryl a. 873-3117 UTia9 ..._ ....... prtv, 2 bade '""81 be Ua ~ 13:: *llZYlln&ll• mat Cenat ...... iift 1es~~~~~a.e-J1anaga . 0t831-12&e oRXNdffMH. Lro 1ij( 1MIL!TOBEACH otean,Pf1oeneg.1.~oc»---
COLDW<?LL
BANt(eRLl --. -Lg 2Bt home IWWIY ,... SBr 2L. new Tur;; ROCk * ... ID"'* 221o..c AUTOEA8 A.IC, retng, tannit/poot, 042·2357 1ect t18-e44-4fw. URE RLO. Point• Condo. Stape to no pall 117&/mo Ii
2baCondo.oent H/A, In. ~~oariJ!''(~~ pool. Av•ll July 1at 2Br, new deoor. oatPOft1 7 · 28R 2ba, flnlplaoe, 98'· 11Vllt/MC 780-l7et Clt!tate M!! 1111111 111 IHt
----·tide laundr'f, gar W/OfKlr, oon 050. · '"' N/amkra. IM·2348 refrlg/1tove. Hurry 1?70 age, 1000 tq rt. otean, ~ gal, fttl
110 deg vu, ocaan TIU•tow1.llfyrty •1
15011· F:: .. 60NOO 2 bdrm den Untv TIUlm 111-UIO bulltlne, cptald,.,., '860. eMTSIDE 2BO 28A Ll1n1-1Ntk ... aeh1mo, 1at & 1eat aoo eo:t: u;: a:r;g: re;; -=.-.wU. :r::~·~·oa24 ~rwn·:~· -..-Part1,prtmaloe,acs'**1t •CUTE28drm,1h ,gar· catt&498300 Hr Santa Ana12'111 St, ......... aac,alao1bdaptln0ana rant UO/mo. Call ilre. ,_. 156-1837 *'"" .... * topool,tennt1,wuti/dr'f. ~ & frplc la60fmo. 28A2batownhome,pan· ca. to Mn I Jr HS, Cute l ~11r. Qood pt,IM-474111-...~1. 14&-7810 ~,,:,. ~ :.,: I ..... 2 1111 1 room. 1ba, full kltctlen. refrtdg. 11000. 561-7510 e 5-4812 Vitia Rantall try rm, pvt patio, laund =·~ ~· patio, ar•. p&r1I • all ut.111 1111 rn c ;;::w + • oan !!J!rl Cable TV lnol ' Vwy ... 1 • c:::' lltl carpr1, ltOtaga ahed, 1m1 • Ooln>"()p lnol. Only 25 ~ • 4tmmanu . around uw1 bt'tdt n,... ...... YllW MU eluded 1375. ,.:.. ...1au -llUT UllU 1 11 g:: Ok 1806. a 10 Joenn taun, 1 ClhllO, 1 fno Ok. wtr av_... ,_ I.I. 1111/lnt =" ~r:=-h: wantedPor1ot1noforeaat1 T1UU1T 111-1111 1:lli,~~ .. 96.~·.,:,~:g =~~~~.~~ *9-043311111.1°'111118&0-3e
7*3 ~=.:t.no r..~· mnm~Mlll he• nM 1uta111/0UIM ._,
COlY loft w/ooeen vi... buyw. A9k for Kitty 8o of PCH 5 rm pad bulc OCM.n vu frplc no NEWPORT HEIGHTS l!!J!d .... ~ Mlt -nb NEWPORT ftU 144-MI 758--1501 effordabla d•cor pet• '11350 mo LMae llUTUll8111 Cuta Studio, utlla Incl Bach•lor Only 1475 -CHANNEL FRONT
GW dll'twet'lr poo1 h50 at SatlSun 714494:2049 or Sundtcf<, vtew, avall now 1475. l.Q 1Bt, gar.. Lndry rin 1eea lrvlne * 1 .. 111 .... BOAT SLIP P088tll.E IFCidRT NiWPORT 6'e
53M 191 Agt coat 811l2&4·52ell Wkdaya lt50/mo+de9. 040-4255 Hurry Sll&o. Rare find ar Ave #A 72o-t4i2 ~1.<!..letlw-'* l ltallt Wknct.21S-274-6083 943 tq fl w/tktOwflr Near FIB m 01&.UTlll . 28a, frplc tel5. F• I Incl. NU PITS &4MW wtcciv--714-f71-tll5 PCl't' l'oat Ottla. l
Of YOUR PfC>pertlM. NO Unlurntaha<I 1Bdrm. 1 CHARMINQ Wooda Cove S~:'cW:· =tr::'Y s':r TIUlllT lll-lllO E·alde 28f 1Ba, frplci, ..... ftli Marlnet'a Mlle.146-2tM7
obligation by TOP -.--... -Bath, ft~laoe. garage, 280. 1BA Dining, den, 21~81 111 t totally bMln_.l,gar.2peraona. 1fJ ..... 11M * liiiiiiiiiii ____ ...,,iiiiiioiim
PR 0 DUCE R Ca I I _, ,,..., .....,. '800/mo. e12 Jaamlne. laond, patio, oak fl, frplc, remod~eur? :fi50/mo •ClaM 2Br 28a nr 8C No pet•. From 1700 + ~. dletlw.har I etallt C.M. Fumteh room for ... ILi 1111'11
PATRICK TENoRE ""'-' Open 4-8 o.lly gdnr, 114~5. 411-1217. Call Anytime 722•7834 · Plua, 8 .A. Carport, lu1, MC 122518().1798 Incl NO PETS ~MW 1'9nt. Reaponelble mat\n ~ c*al •. ~U. pmd,
S31-1He 2 unite n .. r ollannal. ta Ill FABULOUS OCEAN 119t10, ~· Child Ok. 28r 1aa; OIW dedc non amoltet perten taOO. 2156 E Caf mry 87&-tlOO
Ill GrNt 1t.ner property. Canyon Vlew·1bd lb• Unfurnl1h•d Bachelor. 1750N PETS722-8011 LIWLYllllT an5Yr!y;311~3ethft' 942·11"8/DN2-.3MO/E .... "
I ·~1~~\. . Priced onty •t 1180,000. HR 1BA, lg etoraga lll'led, wd • CIOM to bMCt'I Prvt an-GARDEN APAln'MENT8 .. _ • . • ~~. · 3bd, 2ba up. 1bd, 1be nu cerpt/6rapea, no P41ta. duplex, gar, dci\, laun, trance. 1 Adult pr.rd. •FREE CABLE TV. Li~Bt Straema, gu BBO. thru-..._ Sunday 10-12·30 F*"8lt non Imler, laf1la On NB Watsfl'ont wMll#, _II'_=::: down, frplca, blt·lnt & 4 1950 "8" Me)W, ahow by l 705tmo, 481"1217· 1400 Inc utile 873-3.474 ~::·::~:::"mi::. out. PoS>L 'Pe. Nena, **Brwld MW 28t 28a. bdrm, ~i::,.. ~ grMt _apeoa, c:Nlnnlng,
o.r peticlng. Priced at appt. IMO+ 0-s> &49~ • ..,.,. ...... IHI ICa.. • ..... sea& 710 w 11th St ClubhN, .,,cl 1)rltng, Choice .,... Qarage. ~ Kathy 54M7,:tv· Cloaa to alt the l'larbor ao. .. 11111• 1286,000 2BR brlghtlar llVI rm 2"+'15eii 2 St twnh .,.... ... ..... . Spacloua 1Bt 1595. 28r Patio. 1900 No pet• . tlon, W/MCUfe parttlng &aTm•111 3bd, 2ba upper unit 'nft paint/$..~· Ocean . Znt cc::· •MESAVEROED'lux28f, 28a w/tri>fe, d/W 1725. 1eo-17130te&7-1na Fam. nHr ao CoHt 831-6480 IL"'" w/frplc, blt..Jn1 & vtew of IY50/mo no peta edult• Nwpt T~ir IHO/mo. West:fleld 2b. MW <*of, d/W, :::: ';,°"'·Sor~:· *IAYflllT-• Ptau/405 twy, WUtl/dry, DELUXE NA AIRPORT.
At N • w p 0 rt . La r g • ~ 1 :'t~ u;.:: pref. 97e.'..3221 ' 575-4912 VIiia FW!tmla ~~k5•~ :;::r:o._2~9~ry ar90fl'· Lg 2ar 2aa. beam oelllnga. =~~7 Jacr. Pvt bee ot11ot w/VW!w,
"Latour" model wtth two ttO Own« movt ,.. " llAITlllTI Near Nwpt Hot• Lg 2Br balcony trplc Oth«a mo. approx 200 1/ft, •II
bedroom aolt• and n,... ~ .,.e. S215 000 no out * ILY '* *IUTl •H* Beautiful, ctMn l&rQ4t Gar-Spartdlng dean 28drm, 28a w/patlo. Within~ ml av.,..,. 11200' F• ltttbJ-...l1 ftll ametllt-. ..vtoaa 9Valf. pi.ce. Quiet with llOfM Ocean ·tr 1 • 4bd 2b 38r 28a, geraga, fncd yrd, 1BjSl'm, 1 Bath, new d«X>r, den Apta. patio., d9Ckl, w.aa 1895. New oarpet1 to bCh l800 No pet1. Art TILDllT 11· Miii _ HM'IM, From 1780 per
"'"·pool epaandMCW on • • • patio, w/o pet1 Other't g•r•g•. pool, blllna. ape Sorry, no pet 6 drapea All utllltlM 8pm & Wttnd9 846-8061 Ull &a llTD. rno. cal daya. ~70
tty. -~Of Only .,40,llOO: =~~~~~:;~ TILDavallal>lemS1000,l. MF .... o Hurry 1875. F• 28dr~ w.Bath . 1720 paid. Retrtg. garage. 1 Piii Ull llTTlll 380, 2BA. FIREPLACE Wkly rent• now avail.
GOOd flnanc:lng. rant al~ Priced •t BUlllT 111-UIO 28drm 28ath 1740 cl'llld Ok. No peta. E'alde 18A tit pd New W/O HoOk-ilP, 1 car 'gar, S147.00 wk ~ up. 2274
ROOER BROWN 1429 000· •SHARP W..ulde 2Br -•.1-HT 318 W. Wiiton 831·6583 19e0 W•lll!Ce 942-4014 cpt/d / • u •• 2:. t 1836/mo, avalf now, Nwpt BIYd, CM M&-7445 WE STCLlfF BLDG
NE WP(JI~ I Bl AC.ti · · *-r" * Or After 8PM 5"8-et21 •a,.,. mor..., "app &42-4311 1 Ba Dt>t• Tiie nr., crpta, Ettte 28r garaoe new ontr 15C-3873 5-49--0433 IU I Ill Lllll 759-9100
---~ . ·. . ... '.
associated
llllU• r ll'. IH Ill fO"S
/II/' \Ill! M"ll" .~ h ' t I f.I. I
.. .. .. .. . ....
drpt, w/d hkup, gat teoo decor ml"ora all,bltlna ~ •MESA VERDE O'lux UITll"' 1M 302IW PactfloeoMt'HwY
:,..o.Muet1tandored1t yrty On1ys13o'o.F• . 28drm, 1Ba,n.wcs.cor. ~ .... any N .. r Shopping c.ntar Newc>oitleedl.AefrlgTV "'AJfCondtttonlno
.Nopeta770-5e20 TIUUIT 11• .. .,. llllTllllTI dahwahr, locked .gataga ~ u ,.. 1725Nopeta&40-13&4 112&+wkagt,nodepoelt . ..,..~a)anltortal
.. a• .. • __. .-..-Uk bfMd All U1111tlea le75 No J)9tt 840 2495 ..,..Muakl m110 llWPllT 1111m * -··-* 3BR 21h ba, Newport CrMt pats. Poo"r'garege. 1 •NICE 280RM 2BA• IPAITllm .UITlllff APT ....... ti ..... "'aw.tor Largt 48drm, 38a ax· Cozy Ranch-type 3Br •Br 2ba. 2 car gataga. Condo. Waltt to beech, ctlltdolc. Nopeti Lndryfac,d/W.Fnodpatlo. BMutlful largt Apta In 3Br2Ba.2cargw.Nopet1 2114 ..,..FullVW!wbaloonlel
-------
•cutlve hom•. Good Preview ror prlnclpata. Fncd yrd. Pet Ok, frf.lc, pool/tennla/2 car gat. 28drm 1aath 17,0 No pet• IMO Nr11n1tn quiet neighborhood. 1950. ~1010 a.a M-F vx.oxMM<le
Bactl Bay tocatlon. Wood Wed & Thur• 2-6. 2619 aundectt, etc •1
1
1
2M50· .:. $1325, 2131427-1138 301 AvOCfdo 942-9850 780-1418 or &42·7521 Poot. Spa. No peU. EMtblufl deluxe ...,1 2ar 80+ Reap Dal atv antq '-..,..leay..W.avaat. <**lno 1Md1 to a ape Hoity Ln s 11e 900 Agt TIUlllT .-28drm 1 v.aa 17~790 ""' · w/tama. Frndty wrv.lyda, .,AmpleilM1 aurrounded by luah land· · ' · CLEAN 3bd, 2~. HarbOf INSTANT IN 1550 South eo..t Plaza 151E21et St. . ~1-2408 21,\Sa, dbl encl gar wood fir, 2 catt, emk Ok. 11 acaplng. ~ kltehen ap. W•rfrHt tJll.111 380 1''48A MONTICELLO Hll•ndal LM 11200 mo. 1515/mo 1BR 18A. all arN 18drm, alt, fenced irfalee opnt. Rec pool l300'" 11111. 141 H03
pltancem & much mor•I 3 BR 2ba, Penlneuta ~oma. Condo, twnhM concep1, gard/Wllt« pd. NO PETSI bUllt Ina, lndry rm, nr pOOI, carport. No pet1. POOL-PRIVATE PATIO area. NewtY NnOVatad. Only 1229.000. E'ald• or BalbOa Blvd. frplc, w/d hie-up, bak:On'/, 846-2319 or Ml-13M. bMcl'I & anop. 5'46-1711 New d/W, frplc, oar.. No peta 18'>'5 Apot onty 30 + lhr 38' "-·~acre. c._=-=_..,.,===-:-=,,.--
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
dbl "at 1950 040-808 7"'"7 1 w 1'ath s X·LO 18r $6M. 28' M75. 87~ or 83o-32-Lo poot In udu equae-.-
1
Backyerd w/Ooci(. FN " ' ' . CONDO VILLA BALBOA _.. 4 · t. HOO·le50, 2bd, 11:>a, EASTSIDE 557·2'41 ~ trlan ataa of NB/Badt
Land By appt. only. CIRCL'E WESE . 1ba. poot. •P•. TSL MGMT 042· 1803 ClOmt)letaly rancweted, on • Enjoy the Luxury of the e.y 1475/mo. 152""250
OWMr 575-1173 hm, Here'• 1noth« 9395 pad patio, walk to ti.ach. 2bd 1~ !'aide IWWIY weet 17th near Whittler SHARP ANO CLEAN OAR-bMutlful atrroundlnge of
769--0592 boa. Pnn. only crptd deoot apple 100 1950 734-2te2. deC«'1.d trp1c' patio I 541-3&29 tor mor• data.· OEN APT. 1BR, stow & .. U1f11 UIT Brand new In IMM, nr UCI
Latlt CN1t ot~rUMl='; Fr.ti m gatdan epot 2br gar. S700.'Avallabtanowi ;~~~:!t~~:77peta. In• apactoue 28drm 0t ~~la~':.':'~ r--..---...r-:-,....-....,.~ ••trt t• lmpreulve 2 1try5 rm 2ba notfartooc:Mnl700gar 5"8·1709 afeS ... B.AU · 38drm Condo with~ 0/&44-00Y7E/838-aeel & ttyd 539-e191 Agt t• u Sharp large 2 Bedroom place, 2 ear garage wtttl 2~ ba. ,_ 2000 eq n' .... LllATlll LIKE NEW 380, 2~ BA f/yd & gar 18G5 kld1 em llW •••-•-downetalra. Abaof\.ltaly 01>9Mr. Sec QI.larded COSTA MESA M/F fltl ..,..17 • .j6ill00/mo •
BMut. agt etory, 2BR 2ba CONOO-Bonu1 room, pet 539-8100 LIDO ISLE. Yrty IHM. .,.. ... , ... ,. lmmacutate. Olaflw..,._, gatM. W/d l*upa. From 21:>drm 1ba t1ea w/yatd, 1 yr..._. T20-740l '
condo w/frplc. Many u~ I ale, MCUrlty 1yttem, lky· S..t Rtty fee Charming 3BR 2ba. avatl F .. turtng beeutlM land-enclOMd loekable OW• 11895. Catt 844-0509 Wlh/dry, gar, must lllce ·
gradea. Wall! to mtcta 4 flt•. petto/<*;l(, frHh Deluxe 38R 2ba W'mlde. NOW. no P41t1. 11900 mo ecape, 880., pool/epa. llQe. Pn..tlka grounda 111 muelc, 1375. 546-24~ ~~!rJ~.,.l"B~~
rHtauranta/WHtcllfl I P•lnt, new carJ)9t, 2 car FIPI. mini ocn vu 2 car 499-3400 own/bkr Patlo/deci(I. Qwagaa or 1880. Available June . 4"11T llllT COUPLE or I dlvtd at Ill
Plaza/LAROE patio/gate g • r • g •. S 119.0 0 0 , i•r 2218 E Pactnc Av NEWPORT HEIGHTS carporta ~. no pet1 19th/211t Ho ~ can lrg SBF\ 2\tBA w/Vtf/#, 2 n u · • IC! tooutlldel125.000Auth 86.._1-433/97g..201a. 1000· ... ___ ,1 ...... 722· Redec:2bd,2t>a,fr""c,w/d 18drm · 1820 ~71 · car git, pool, tannte, Vary lrg metr bdrm dMdllblton40,000eqrt .._........ ~ .,. 28drm 1'/•Ba S715 doaa to bd\. 11396/rno. w/frptc, bale, ~. lot, 5000 eq ft ale offloe,
Laurie Altr ~80 ••fllllt ltaff wlldya or aft 5. 751-1 10<4 hkup & gatage, n-SN1tt. 2Bdrm 2ea S785 111-11• T8L MGMT 842-1903 pvt bath w/dbt alnk, +kit, grNt~~· Jdnt loo .. avail Jun• 1 1975, • ..,,__ lndry, gw ~ Univ 45NN be AID C.reu •11 llu 1022 ftr lalt ll00 Eutalde 2br houM lelaure G/E/W paid. 759·9194 825 Center St 942-1424 2:,;1n:'r~ ~-/=· NEWP<>trr H!IOHTS Ptc. Moo mo 731-3471. 1111ee. M 714/840-7c:: * .. ""' .. '* FoR ReRt.fiEts oR ~~C~~e~:idkld•pet• NEWPORTSHORESl3bd. 1autL1UT111 &3&-4120c.i11-aPM · 2=~8:1::r· ~· Lnu••n-wANTED
eu.torn exec 1 story ''Sit P~..,:..,. I~ s,.596/mo e..t Alty t• 2b•, 1 blk to boh, pool, 1 7 5 o Imo 2 b r 1 ·~ b • ee1 VIC10tl• "C" .. M75 IYOO/mo ~j13 1 ml bctl f/p 4.,r Want ttr eompeny Meda llOQ..1000
.. T ....,., MC...,..., ounta.ln gar patio 11200 Yf1Y townhouN grMnbelt · • • ' fl ~. 38bray,,._&+ oe,am••1n Valley, 982-2112. WTll, .. 1111 +Mcurtty. e,.2_.917 lndry rm ari btf..tna ' MESA PINES 2950 Hatta NEWPORT'MAAINAAPTS M. S306/utUt7·1304. IC! • WtlrthOuN llPlliOe .......... 3be 2071 ' 28R 1Ba w/gar 1750 f0t apslfOll I mo, ~l apa. 8Nt .,... Nothing S LAGUNA Panaramlc That • rite mallow 2br •H flUll OllH Thurtn TOP AREA Quiet Ho Peta •Bayfront 28r, 28a, M/F 22-32 to ft quiet. ab ta rat u . upper
llke ttl Model home cond ocn vu. walk to atorM, bUica + yrd klda/cat ._ TSL MGMT. 042·1803 ••5-Ct-2447** Oen. Micro, frs>'o, encl apadoul N.8 . Waatollff NB/lower CM araa,
at &590 000 {lo!;I Land) adult pk, 1 bd, by ownr, m•ny oth.,1 •vallabl• Lg 3bd. 4ba, lam rm, a/c, BllChetOI Unit In South gar. Pvt bOh '2506 home with PoOI l apa. Je.lca, 873-0790 . ...ta... I h -$3-4,990 cati. •IHM!n&; 539~ 190 Beet Rtty r.. MC l)'ltam Secluded Costa Meaa Qreat for WI lffll 1-•ALSO• l400+ 11111. 648-0100 ~56eir'ANYTIME lnllll New 2 matr bdrm1, 2'Aba, =~ ':0\~~~~ old« ~ 14.H/rno Want a aac.ctlon of or-t 2Bdrm. ZBa l1Y06. Sorry, ~:,' g~· non emkr, qulM. lalata I ftuadlJ
C..t1 .... Int lnMl/C. .. " Ult 1641. II iwo 11 .. 111 21n
New duplu on larQ4t OOt· Stepa to ocean UOO PteX
ner lot. 1139,000 Arm. w/bltln1 & gar kid
Prln only. 751-5080 530-e191 Agt '•
A classified ad Is an easy way to sell your
merchandise, and It's easy on your
wallet, too.
ltf u. "'" y.
Sell v .. ,,.,.,.,1
Cel ClaallflN,
642-5671
for Information
& surprlslngly
low cost.
2 car encl gar Twntlea amenl1IH, call LH lncf utlle311·1021 IMng?Wacanoffirany: noP9'-feo.ol.1AM bl'O.M.twn,WIO, .......
atyte No Pet 1805 942·M05 IL"' •-w-tNna frorl't a email apt to I •-·-"' Mii kite prlv. S3&01mo. utll ~1111-....._. 5-41-1251 or 472·0253 _.., / ••• a• bdrm houea. "look· ..... ..... Incl. s.q..a25 aft 8pm. , ... ~
LI-.... "'~t··-38r 2 ....... 2 T~·t-~· ltyleR ~~ V•ult•d c•lllnga, prvt Ina In CM NB Of HI 8 BO .. w ·n .._... ~....,. ,..... ·-· .. llPpll Pfv• .... .., balcony, radacorat•d tl\fnk of ut' flrat tor that VILLA AL A:M/s;.r.f/C atory Townhome. All 1595 fncd pvt 53e-e19 1 le95. 2151 Pacific A¥t oholoe of Ideal IMng lhr tux OOndO, w/2 ,.-., Earn big ~ ttwougtlt
amanltlH. 11250/mo. Agent,.. e 3 1. e 1o7 pm or TSL MGMT 042-1803 avtlllnowl476, 1at&1Mt, lnt.-natlonal COneuttJng
VIiia Rental• S75-4G12 as~. No petl 541-f111/56:Mltea. 8•rvlot. Tremendou1
•PE.NTRIOGE cove• v:~~L:i ~,. 2: Clean ~ iidml. ger· Int. ..... 1141 NEWPORT HACH APT ~ ~ .... qukllt-
28r 2Ba Condo I095. OYer w/mlnl f.)ey vtaw a trp1o age 1 child Ok MOO/mo CU!AN 2BO ClOS! TO 'rr ) • = falla & 1tr .. m1 N.w 1080/mo Agt 8-44-7211 1300 aeourltt depoalt 28R 2ba, opta/dr:r,:, •1111........... BEACH, 1421/MO, "14 llS6-1
i:-iopnWl~h~~· ~ ci.: ':'l.? I .. ...__ Cell e&0-7427 P~t~~· gatat•· Id datl-Int .... 1111 '*'4817, DeN~. ... ..... , ..... tall
---CLEAN l IHAAP 2 BR, t7 er' ~ n ry. H I _.... ....... REIPONlllL£.t80, 2BA lo OfG C04M A fW MC ~t-2447 0oeen . Otherl avail-009-Add a pretty knit cpta 1 drpa, DIW, ger.. 25/mo, 1 ........ iua pootalde apt, In IC run. CAB All 17M100" Int. ...... 1141 able olOM to bMctl pcpover 10 your sweater age, no pet1. M40fmo. WILi Tl 11111 • Month·Co·montti --. *'26/rno +~ utll, l';!ii!!.!!!i:= 5116. SIX '60016 H UllllU UITIL • COflect1on Easy pattern 045-5877' 11r 1~ orpta, «pe. !ally lllO IVlillblt cMl1·17'30 •761-·33141. 1;
'l•ml tobMch,813151mo, '1~111. 111tch ribbed border~ v-•'"-'tk...__ ........ •t""'•',. ~~: .... .0:1! HOO. ·furnis ... td/ Amiewt9d.Wi/mo~ Anela11 U'1 ..
d•y• • 841·1424 11 ...... .,111-1111 Ute Jply spor1 Siles ........................ ·-"'·-·--·~ " 112111n OM~---liii ev./wtienda-142-6707 10 Hi included '"'~=na~·t rwt TIUllllT t'fl.llll unfurnithtd c ... Kefv0
btwn f..7 Mon---
'400·1 tult bllc-oon 1Dr leat• Ctllt lttll Send 13.25 plus 75e cl t!!y. • Fitn111 ctnttra, Fri. ~ °' wkndl M,,,~-::~
oompl kit fr• utlla '90¥9 1111 pottage handling tor Ctlt1 .... MM ttnnit, swimming AOOMMATI f/m to 1MN ....,._ ..,.... U..
now MM111 AOt,.. COxOMY 2113rm z la H eh P•"•"' houle, 1 blc ~ .,...,, o.y of bide .-be "'--
5 ILOCKS TO OCIAN Condo, St. Albant, tt15. 1n 1o w Models open dal~ M $260 +utll. Cell •"" 1~1 1•. lld9 .. .-
EltQant Oad•r 1 OI... hat a 8•11M 0.V.I \.Mt WM* Cllfttr. • Sorrv. no pata. 8:00pm, MCM111. ._ tt Ven Del & Af,.
2lfdrm 2~1a famlty l3t-0405 even 31•7Ua ,_..,... J ·cl Newport Beach No lhfmyl,OOOtqfthO!Mln aoolttHM 17101 rooml'esen.~~ El ..... t':';',:.~C..'=-. 880lrv1n1Avtnu. F•~=~ ~l1~14oo.ntna, ttPo llUndeok Pbl ger -.,, 1177 Mii ....... Com• • 111,01 Ollf pmn atyte IPb. QWt. COllllottJbil U¥1 •• ..,. tufty 'm.intatned Y9fd. • zi..' ... ·,._~ dost to,,.....,.. So. Cont Plw .. ollfy tllfflutll ID (It 18thl 4 pm A1"°'7'7 Lett I,.... ..
lll-011 bl... IHI bNcll. GaflPI evalltbta. NO Pm ruASE. ...... W1Jtt tern. prof '"'1e tor=====;;;;
AVAtCNOW 490 iTUbio Xri OAJONA NIW FOR OHL v 11 w . •Al • LA-Y •••u Newport Btach so .,.,.. -. 1n c.w. "'
llA-Hr Att.nta/Magnolta F11d9 ptOWMd, P8'k'ng, 81-p~ full-<:Olof Cat. a•reoe .a.a.-S.'lll 170018'h Str.1t end~ Del\. SMO/mo + F• IM • kite tam rm oombO, trple, 1.1tn pd, '860/mo yrty, '°9 of C,.fta -patter"-, ._.._. -..., (It OOONI utl. IS 1.-n flll, NhJ
dlw, ""* ~. pat~ avail now, 1&4-ff7't, booka .• aur:>P11 .. , crewtl, 1 •••OOM .. 11-••41 eo.w IDl' mrr
raunc1 dbl gar, ;rdnr pd crcta 1mr.l'l";°nnmtPClfnt. a Ml 1711......,..._ ~ llitlla W•til IUI Ml. r""-111&01mo +llOO ~: H an I '••ch Mok, qullttng.fand m.'/JOO'• ok;..ca" 1111 mo<• &U,~~~=:•~mL BL.. • Cal:
•• no . Nwpt Panln S8f 28&, ;•. L.Au•• WHHUI ~meres ~ Of -· Mn. . H .... .,. ~epecta1w11t.ator lndry, frple. Yrtt 11soo. "" ·-!~~-=~·~ .. =·~•;•;· ;;n~Y~•;•~•;•;;•~M=J.~•;•;•;111~-~Mlli:!:~-~~!:!:...J "'°' M. """*'Jl!_!.!001~~.,..~~~~~ routod!xlndWlflad. VIiie "-itala 17'"4912 c " • , ~ r I .. __ °"Udo . .,. m-.wu. ._
'
$2.40 per day
Thel'a ALL ~ pey fOr a .,,.., ao cs.y "*"mum
lntM
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
FU
SUCCESSFUL
CITIZEN
How mudl will your son or~ know about bu1lneta wh.n
applying for their fint full-time job? Pt.nty, if he 0t the has ewr
been a newspaper carrier. Throueh route experience he Of the
is already a lop oheod of lh.ir clossmotes. wtui.. ~II
mosf9r id.en, the boy Ot girl with O newspaper~ IS ".°
fh.m to practicol UM. !klttnMI? com.n t.am ft'9 basic :..n the bcnk pt iociples from the first day of dot1infil ".° deWer
newspopen. TMy buy at ~le • ..U at r9toil. make
cotlectioM "'-their own boob, and deal with people foee to
' • .._,.. · "'-..J ........... '' fit'' and ''lo&s'' ore foe9. Comen quickly nnu ovt .._, pro
more than tutboo6t twms
The benefits of manogino a newtpaper route ON an ~
for o future 1UCct9lful ~ 4 9mal num~ of ~·,
·nem mein and WOfMf\ stotted their public careen os ~ conien. And they all~ that a~ rC>UN
giws a boy or g rt o head start on the future.
Boys and ~iris I 0 yeort and older who may be 1m.-ested in r<Me
w0tlt shovld cOf'llOCI the Doily Pilot circulotion deportment ot
6·42 4333 .
Dally ?!!'TION om.
330 WEST IAY ST. ,.O . IOX 1560
COSTA ~ESA, CALIF. 92626 ,------,.,,-----------, I '¥.,my tton/~ would like t
informotion on o Oaity Not route. I
I HIS/HE9' NAME I I
I
~~~~~~~~-1
I
~~~~~~~~P~I
I
PHONE. AGE_ I
I
PAR&NT"S 1
I SIGNA TU9t j L-~~~--~~--~-~--~
penln1• Now Available
CAR ROUTES
E•rn Exlr• C•ah
For O.ll~•ry Of Thi• P.,_,_
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLE~
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a
1 ' I
}'
•
.. ...
'
tU1t11•• Ou•'"'
"•'•• & '""I<.
11111u111 •orou WllT
40 f tu .. t H"\
Nw..,po11 R .. ,h
673-0900
*PEUGEOT* * MASTEAATI '* *ALFA ROMEO*
•SMB•BITTER•
• 752-0800.
SAAB '80 Great grad glf1
P• perlormance lnt
need• TLC S2llOO, Cell
946-2929
WILWE
ILLIUIEI ••••ns ...........
13&e 1 Hertler Btvd, G.G
114-2'00
IAVINE AUTO
CENTER
714-951-3144
800-•28-7 485
CADILLAC'
immaculate condition.
Sllftialted corMt1. n*. loaded wttf\ .. X'tta .ca.ooo m1 Ol'tlO' Upt.
$14,500 Call At •--------1 Domenico, tl'·4174 ~~..m· WlllflLI. ...
YIUIWU.'11•
CLEAN & DEP!NDAeU!
$1395/08(),75~17 ... , ......
Run• Greatl i-1-00.
548--0789
VW 'Be RABBIT COHV
LOAOEOI OHL V 3000 ml.
Tnpi. whtte. !iEED TO
SEU FASTI S13,000 Obo
THANK YOO
F:2~
IN U.S.A.
ANO TRYING HARDER
f08(.:il
• IALE8
·SERVICE
•PARTS
• LEAl1NO
Afl Hl INVf,.1010
()fl Hit \lltS T t<».::
OUY MOOCl & C<lelt
CAU.IOD4Y
Sr >U TH UJUN IV
1 ~/1 I BF,\(. H HI V()
fH JN r 1NG T • . .lN Ht ,'\CH
(71.l ) 842-2000
BUICK
DEALER
IN
ORANGE COUNTY
I
952-<t136
VW Cem9« •74 Weet-VW SUPER BUG '79 Wttt
pflda-Pop top, 1111 eond, on wtt1 conv, SOK ml, ¥ef'f
mutt .... $3,200/obO. CIHn. tape ~ ... It., 2925 MWbaf 91¥11
SS&-837ana&-4439 suoo. ~7· CM 979·2500
VW R•bbll Conv. '82 AatnDtmndt -------
NABERS Blk/blk 1nt. e• c:nd. s IP. • 1 a '" ca Av et t e 1tldl, ale, extru 17200 red/gttptllte, Z51, .. c 751~ Of 880-7188 U"'*'81 X'lnt looltlngl
vw RABBIT GTI '84 Belt oner. 494-4490 CADILLAC
Am/Fm Cesa, 11nt1, xlt BUICK '78 L S b cond, Hklng seooo. • a r• 1 LARGEST SELECTION 5'4&-1083 Special. •Int oond, oflllemodef. lowml-.g. s 11~00 992-341& •ft e Cadff111e91n 0r-.
Boal• and bl!\ .. end
c:emper9 and eot~ -..
the fhlngl thet mek• tum· mer tun can be tound In
clUlllled
c..n Of '*' cheCtC onty County1 s.. us today1
BUICK '11 Pertc AV91lUe. I &40-1100 '::-See"" rr:11i mooo-2eoo Harbof Btvd ~tt;...y ~~ ~= COSTA MESA
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
NOTIC! TO COKT'RACTOA8
USED CARS & nwcKI
COME IN OR CA.LL~ nnlPPUIUI. DellL.LO
OllftltlT
1t2118U.Ct41L.VD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
••1-1111, ....... 111
OllYf'll ..... Conv 4M. 1 ~,,,.
ort• M3-673&
OOOGE-'U DayJOlla
Turbo,~ alee,~
w/atfl9, & epd, nu tit-. 1ou~teeM M3•10
WIWAITnm
GWlllDllll
S.. Veno doe $intoe
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
)060 ~tA•au" II v 0
COSTA M l\A 1'"11 001'1
OAD 'U Mwttrt0 COl'w,
tully ,.end, Nbll va.
11K ml, WMe/bfD Int $7900.875-3481
FKl'llflllTl Red, wt,.,._
12000. Cell ~ .. -~s..k>e-__ ,.,
FORD GRAN TORINO '74 wevon, rune grMt, good power, 170(). obo.
54&-2454 M mtg
M!ACUAY '78. Bobcat.
Good cond Aadlal•,
A/cond, new trana. AtU<-
ING S 1300, 850-4931
PONTIAC GRANO PRIX
'75 -HAS EV!AYTHINGI
LOW Ml. I 1,1100, 0000
COND, 87M181
S-led proposal• frpm conlr11C1or1 llGel\Md In &oCOtdenc. with 5ec11on 'A 11 Pr M<I Requ"ementa end
Condltlonl of theee Specie! Pro~ wtll be received •• the Off1ee of the Clerlt of the rd of $upenl1110B. Room
'85. Hell of Admlnl1trett0n. Coun1y of 0t'"99 Senta An• Ceiilorn••. on or b910<• MO'ldty the 16th dey ol "'-.et
2 00 o'ctoek, II wtl!Ctl tune they wtll be publldy opened end rMd in the Boerd 01 SUpetVISOl'I H .. 1ing Room. First
Floor Hell of Admintltratton, 10 CMe <Ant., Pleu. Santi An•. Clll1forn1a 101 ll>tl 1ooow1no Pfoi.ct 10 be
edmlnll1eted by OranQ. County Envtronmentel MenllO""*'t Agency
T AL BEAT CHANNet.
llem No
1
2
3 ..
5 e
7 e
0
10·A
10 B
11
12(SI
13(S)
14
15
18
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
2'
25
26
27 ISi SpecJelty Item
FROM YORKTOWN AVE TO 0021205 COPlffLUE~CE
ttem
Mob1t1ze11on
Oeweletlng
$CHEOUL£ OF WO.-IC ITlMI
Cleating end Grubbing
Shoring
Remove htstlng Foo1bndg.
Unde18tfled Elcc.vatlon
Uncteulfled A•
Struclura EJic.tvluion Siructure Bacti,t!Kr .
Olapoeel of MatlWlal-Al T A
Tempo<ai::~-All B POftlen<I t Conetete
Reinforcing St ...
Reinforcing St ... Epoxy Coated
Ptpe Inlet with ~tie
Inlet Type V
"' 18 CMP
Concrete MuonlfY Un111
4 Pt~ Ga11ety end F11t1nga
8 . P«forlled PVC Pl~
Greve! Bue
Geotextlle F ebrlc
Ouerd Cablt Fanoe
Ct1111n Link Fanoe end Get•
Ad)Ult Meinho6e to Grllde
Muonry 8locti Retain•no Wait
Atpt\tlt Concrete
Protection of 30" ~ler Plott
EJtlmeted
Ouamtty
1 LS.
1 ls
1 LS
H .S
llS t.IOOCY
t .llOO c y
40,200C Y tllOO c y
20.000 CY
20.000CY
UTSCY
I 826 .OOOl.8
'8,600 LB
3EAC
t EA
205 LF
l,050 EA
3,•eo l F
3,020 LF
13,450 C.Y
25.000 s y
1.330 l F
10 L F
1EA
l'.250 SF 40 T Ol'IS
1 LS
R4Kluoed con1trUC110n pten1 eoectal ptOlltalon• MCI ot"4K c:ootract noc "~'' era •~Gllabte ror ••tm•nauon ""'hou' cfl.,ge or mey be MC:Ured upon payment, lnc:tud1ng 11ate &alee.ti• of
S 7 80 If pld<ed up In penon S 10 00 If r9<1u.ted by mell
Plane end ~Ilona requnted by m•ll tre Mnl 11111 U P S so ()4i>t!MI tn<;Nde lhe street addreu to whldl
,,.,... document• mey be dellll9ted
A complete M1otfu"11ze c:ooauucuon plant wtll be a1111l1hl<t f0< 11•em1nell«! ""''hOM (l\atg41 0< may be aec:ured
upoo peyment lnclvd1ng .. ._ tex of the amount lt\own 1n Ille propf)f COiumn "' the t•ble 11s1eo ~
No of S~• 1.5 a. to 11 -1~ 1e..20 21 2s 2&-30
Cott Per s.l $3 70 $7 '° 1 I 10 1' 11-0 18 50 22 20
No of Sheell 3 1-35 36-40 4 I •Hi 48-~ 5 1 S5 !>6 !!><>
COS1 Par Set 125 90 29 80 33 30 J 7 00 40 70 u 40
Add $2 00 to prw.:• 'tl\own If plane are raqUMted by meil
EMA Oevelopmtnt ltenderd P'8nS With ac>ecl•I provllllOOt ltUrretll IU•~• Gt• •ISO part ()11111• contrecl ~of
tile 1tend11d ptlll1 with tpeeltl prov1..an1 are elso 1111111~ at the OlllU! cir E.MA o.,,oiopm.ot 101 •" edd1t10n•l
charge, lnck.tdlno 11a1e ... 1111. of
SS 75 II plck9d up In p«ton
17 25 If 1'9QUM19d by mall
All Chedl• 111811 be made pey•tH to
Envlronmenl•I M~t Agency
Poet Otll~ Box '°48 (malllng ltdar.11
400 Civic Cen1• Drive W"9t (llrMI a<ldr ... 1
Sent• Ant, Cellforn .. 02702-4048
Order• wtttch ere not Pf'°'*''Y lddrMMC:t or payable ere aub~:t to delay the EMA th all not ·~· r~bOlty for thet deley
Thef• wtll be no refund for return Of plent Ind lplCltA provtllooa end return II not requtred
Bidder• wtlfltng 10 obteln a lltt ol plen holdet1 lheh notify EMA/Putlhc W0tk1 II ttie eddrM. 11\awrt M>Ove. by
mill Ind lhall tnclude •check peytble to EMA/Public. Work• In the tmount to cover c;.ooy•ng cost• of the 1111 of plan
holder• Tile copying coet• mey be de*mlned by cont11e1lng the EMA by 1~• et (714) 934.3,90 Duet~ the
complexity of EMA • projecia end the ~Hy lerge numb9r ol bidder• tncountered on HCll Pf'Ojecl. the !MA wtll
mat!• no 111empt to read• Itel of l)4an h04cMr• to proepectkl• bidder• over the t~ Bidder• rtoQ1191tlfl9 n111
of P'afl hOlden 1ra •~net the 1111 will be curr.,t u of 11141 date of r~ and thal ~ r~-9hould be llfned
H to ellow fOf norm• m W"'°8
The bidder• enemlon 19 lrected to the prov1.ion11n Sec11on A "Pr09M111 R~utremttnl• Md Cooo1ttona," of
lheM Speciel ProYitiOnl rev-dlng !he requirement• and condrt10n1 wttleh h4t mu~t l)h-~ tn lhe prte)ltlhon of
the propoul form end ttle IUbn'llallOn of the bid.
Pureuent to the prOlllllOne of Sec11on 1773 of the l •bof Code of the Statt of C111torn11, tht1 Board of Su'*""*>r•
hu obtained the generel pt11Vlllllno rete of p« dle1 w90M Ind the genefaly prevallh·.g rate f0< holiday ltlld owrtlme
work In thl1 IOceltl)' IOt MCtl oraf;, delelhcallon Ot typfl ol workmen needed to e•aci.•te tile conlta(:I from the
Otrec10t of the Oep1111men1 of ln<lultrt• Rlletlone l'-,., .. tt• on f•le w!th the 0.-of •he Bowd al ~11CM1,
•n<i 009lea WIN be made avalteble 10 #fY m._•ted perty on ttllQUMI •
<>u.1ton1 on lnterprtl•tlon of the Plane end Special Provt11on1 prior 10 the dete ach9dultld tor bid opening .n.11
be lddr....O to Keth!Mrl Martin. Protect !nol~. or 10 Mlrtln Prtoe, Prnj«ICt E'IQll\Mt'• Engll'lel<lng Suparvteor,
wno m•y be '~ 11 (714) 83'-e300 or 83°4·830>
For bid reMJn1 contact Alchlld Cloaon. COnttructlon DlvtMon. at (7 t4) 13,,3, 10
au.11on1 conoemlng purch ... of Pt.ne end Special Pr0Ylalon1 thOVld be e<SdrOllMd to ll'le cathler, CMA (71')
134-3469
By order of the eo.rci of ~· of t"9 County ot Orange. Ortogil ~ly C hfOf~
DA TE Mey 13, 18M
LINDA D. lll041t1"1'a, Cleftl of.,.....,,. of ht*~ .. Orenee C~tJ. C.UIOfnla Publ~ Orenga CoMt Dally Plk>t Mey 21, June 4, 1N&
PAR1Y PINWHEEL
SANDWICHES
1 envelope Onion Recipe Soup Mix
l pint ( 16 oz.) sour cream
2 loaves unsliced white or pumpernickel
bread, sliced lengthwise (8 slices each)
FeatJve Fillings•
Blend onion soup mlx wtth sour cream; chill
Trim cmst from bread; flatten bread with mil in~
pin.
Spread one filling mL'Cture e\'enly on 8 sllccc., of
bread; roll, starting at narTOw end,jelly-roll style.
Wrap In wa..xed paper or plastic wrap and chill.
To serve, cut into 1/4-lnch slices. Makes a~mt
10 sandwiches.
•festJve Fllllngs-Choose ~Y Two:
Blue Chee&e Walnut FUUng-Combinc 1 <.'up
80Ur cream mixture, 2 oz. crumbled blue cheese
and 1/2 cu finely chopped walnuts.
Fruity C Fllling-C.Omblne 1 cup sour crcu m
mL'Cture, /..4 teaApoon curry powde r, 1/2 cup
raisins, cup finely chopped apple and 1 table-
spoon milk.
Ham and Oieese llling-tTse 1 cup ..our cream
mixture. Top each prepared slice wt th 1 thJn sltce
dell ham, then Swl or American cheese. Place
quartered dill pickle acroAA end of bread; roll up
starting at pick.le end.
Wine, Cheeae 'N Olive Fllltng-Comhtnc 1 cup
80ur cream mixture, S/4 cup hrcddcd cheddar
cheate and 2 tablcspoon8 red wine. Place 3 ripe
oUvea croM one end of each prepared ltcc; roll
up 8tartJng at olive end.
. FREEZING(fHAWING DIRECTIONS. Tightly
wrap pln 'heeh~ In waxed paper or pluUc wrop,
then he,l\'y-duty aluminum foU; freeze. To serve,
partJaUy thaw frozen roll ; unwrap and cut lnto
1/4-tnch ellce8. Continue thawtng at room tem-
perature for 1 hour. • • I
,
Food, drink• matdt mOod of hlg~c•l•br•tloft.D2
M•klng yovrown ~ch•••• notw~ ptlce, lllMJM.
Salute your graduate. the All-Amenean Hero. wtth
a party that•& ure to be a pleaaer. Whether it be a ;ram -
mar achool, hJgh dlool or collqie gruduauon, tnvtte a
crowd and plan W Krve the beat to make your Sraduate
feel Uke a hero for the day. Thia menu of eandwsehat and
. ~ rd'reahJng beverage.a ta bound to sau fy any peat from
the ntbbler w the gobbler!
The fun usually begins aft.er· the graduauon ccr-·
. emony. once the dtploma•tt tn hand. But ptq:;arlng the
food for thiA fcut can be fun too, capcctally lfyou have
a few extra hand8 to hdp In the kitchen! Party Pinwheel
Sandwtchef' add an elegant touch to the c>CCUton and
are AO 8lmple tn make. But of all, they can be madi
ahead of Umc and frozen until the big day. Thtn lcngth-
wtMe-cut Mltcctt of bread are ttpread with a fcMtlve Rlth:tg
mixture of Hour cream a~d onton MOUP mtx and rolled.
Be tture to try all four vartatJOM to plcaK your hungry
crowd!
Super 'n Swtft Sandwich, ovcrfioWtng with Cavortt.e
deU meat.H, IR the 'hero ff&lndwtch at lt.H best. Layena of
four dJR'tt11ctlve taKtltlgdry !MluMOg'es are comp mcntea--
by a untque dteHttlng bru11hed over cut Hides of the bread.
I lard Halaml, made of Helected cu tit oflxd' and-pork. haR
a tangy, Kmoky fla\'Or ,,1th hlnt of garlic. Genoa laml.
mack of all pork, contrtbuteff a tangy tattte similar to that
of aged cheese. Peperoni~ made of chopped bcef'and
pork, has a prom Inc.nee of red pepper from hence It gets
the name. Originally made only In summer 11IOJlttm but
now made year long, tmmmer Rausage has a tunoky flavor
·wtth selected spices for enjoyment all year 'round.
I lollowed-out round loevCR of bread hold a stupri~
In Merry-Go-Rounds. Onion 60Up mlx pro\•lde8 the
perfect blend of seasonings for a simple bread spread
made wtth sour cream and a hint of mu tard. Sliced
tomatoes, lettuce, dell ham, turkey dell brea. t, nMU t
beef, Swiss cheese, green pepper rtngs and shttdded
carrots are layered into the bread round for a colorful
striped sandwich wedge.
No celcbratlon .ts complete· u1thout a toast to the
graduate! Celebration Spritzer Is an attrnctJvc um-
mer punch combining lemon flal-'Orcd feed t.ea ml~ with
NutmSwee~ cranberry juice cocktaJl, pineapple juice
and bubbly club &;Oda or sperkHng whfk wine. float the
Fruity Mint Ice Mold In your punch bowl to keep your
beverage cold C\'cn ln the hottest ~\ioimer w~ther.
For a dtffercnt refreMher, serve fruited Tea Cooler,
a Sangria-like beverage, that blends lemon flavored
iced tea mix witli NutraSwce~ llm~julce, club soda and
lots of fresh fruit slices. The Iced team~ sweetened
wt th NutraSwcet Instead of sugar or saccharin, dell\'ers
that great tea taste that you've come to expect.
So bring on the graduates and throw them a party
they won't soon forget -a festive sandwich party that
takes little time to prepare so you can spend mQto;t of
your tlme praising your all-Amencan hero!
SUPER'NSWIFfSANDWICH CELEBRATION SPRITZER
1/4 pound hard salami
1/4 pound Genoa wami
1/4 pound summer sausage
1 /4 pound peperoni
2/3 cup olive oil
1/3 cup stuffed ~rcen olives,
chopped
l clove garlic, minced
2 tablespoons grated
parmesan cheese
1 tablespoon minced pal'81ey
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 loaf Italian bread
(about 15 in. long),
sliced lengthwise
Leaf lettuce, tomato and
onion slices
Combine oil, olives. garlic, cheese, parsley and le mon Julee In
gla.~~jar. Shake and let s tand several hours or overnight. Spoon
over cut sides of bread. Layer meats, lettuce, tomatoes and
onJons on bottom half of bread. Top \\ith remaining bread ha lf
Slice and serve. ~lakes about 8 se n·ing~; I cup dre~trt~
MERRY-GO-ROUNDS
1 envelope C>ruon Soup Mix
1 pint ( 16 oz.) sour cream
2 tablespoon& prepared
muetard
2 loavea unsliced round
bread (about 9-inch
diameter)
2 tomatoea., eliced
4 cupa shredded lettuce
1/2 pound Dell Ham
1 /2 pound Butterball
turkey dell breast
1 /2 pound aliced cooked
roa11tt Mef J 1 /)! pound sliced SwtA
chee e
2 green peppel"B, cut into
ring
4 canot.a. shredded
In medium bowl. combine onion soup mbt \\1th ~·r cream and
mustnn:I; chill.
Cut thJn lengthwise s lice off top of each bread; reserve tops.
I loll°',\' out center of each brc~ lcavhll( 1/2-tnch , hell. preAd
1/2 cup mixture Into bottom of each shell; top with tomato and
lettuce. Into ca ' ell, evenly layer ham, turkey, roost bed.
ch eae, en pepper and carrots• top wtth rcmaJntng l/2 cup
mixture. To ~ rep e re.Mrvcd loJ>I' and cut Into wcdg .
Makes about 18 rVI
3/4 cup Lemon Flavored Iced Tea
Mix with NutraSweet
4 cup water
3 cup& cranbetTy juice cocktail
3 cups unsweetened pineapple juice
3 cups club 8oda or 1 bottle ( 4/f; qt.)
sparldlng white wine
Fruity Mint Ice Mo td•
In punch bowl, combine all ln~rcdknt10. except
club soda; c hl'll .. Just before "-Cn·tng, add club
<;<xia and Fruity ~lint kc ~told ~lakcc, ubout
20 (5 oz.) t\Cn1ngs.
•fruity Mint Ice Mold.
In ring mold or bowl. add water to CO\'Crhot-
tom; partiall) free 1c .. \rrnn~c ~llccci orange,
lemon, lime. strawbcrrtci-. a nd mint lca\'c~;
freeze ln place. Flll wtt11 water und free /.e
FRIDTED TEA COOLER
3/4 ·cup Lemon Flavored Iced Tea
Mb wtth~utraSweet
1 • 1/2 quart.a water
1/4 cup lime juice
1-1/2 cupe aliced b fruit
l cap club eoda, chUltd
In laqle pitcher, combtne all lp.grcdicn~ ex-
l'Cpt soda. ,Ju~t before n1Jll(. add AOda. ~n·('
with tee. Make~ about 8 ~n1nr.
Note: Recipe ron he douhlcd.
~-··
..
)
' I)
tl ..
Make gr;.driationpartycardl11;1
dynamic duo of Cbcny c;ordial ud
Chocolate Decadence ... Just for
extravapoee ofit!
Impress the .,aduate and petll colorf'ul ice rina of cherry almond
with Cherry Cordial, a crlst> fruity tea, lemon and mint. in the punch
punch befittina. !be 1pccsal. ~ bowl to keep the punch rcfrcshin&IY
casion. Thia ttodiuon of a oo~l as c.hilkd without dilut.ini the flavor.
a smooth'ble'nd of cheny almond To help captutt the spirit of the CBERRY CORDIAL
tea, sinaer ale, f rozcn lemo~de celebration, tcrve Chocolate Dcca· J capt boUlal water
The word conhal acnerauy <le-concentrate and cranberry JWCC denoc, a f'uday double-decker crca-11 cnrrJ almod fomr·adecl tea
scribes a sweet and colorful liqueur, cocktail easily prel)IJ'UI ahead of (ion for those who plan to indulge. bap
a common inaredient for addina time Wlth little f'uu. The tea bap, This '"''CCt temptation is the ul-'.4 ewp HP'
elcpnce and flair to a special brewed m boilina water for five timate in chocolate desserts. des-i cup• c..W .. ppr ale
occasion. And what could be more minutes, provide 1 natural cherry-tined to brina rave review1. It too is 1 e1p c•Uled etubel'rJ Jlll~
sped.al than cclebratina a oollqe nut flavor base for the punch. easily prepared ahead of time. cocktall
graduation. Graduation festivities For a "spiked" sensation, So for the fun of drinkina some-1 cu (I oucH) fntH
are seneraUy hi&b· pirited and the subsmuto black currant liqueur for thins deliciously dlffuent and lemooacle coacctn&e
food and bcverqes should match the cranberry juice cocktail. creatina an unforaett1ble gradu-In teapo\, pour boilina water ~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~th~e:_m~ood~. -""T"-------~A~oa~t ~th~e:fru~it~ed:l~ce~T~ea~M~o~Jd~,~a-~a~ti~on~~ce~le~b~ra~t~io~o:_. ~se~r~v:_c ~th~c1 over cherry almond tea bqs; cover = and brew S minutes. Remove tea
Large
Ripe
BOY 1 AT .89 EA. GET -1
~ntaloupe
Medium Size
Minute
Maid
ADrM Juice
I 2 'Oz. Can. F roi.
Carrots
11.b. ~ Fresh (, Crisp
Greet for Dipping
Potato
Salad
Vons 14 Oz Catton
=~69 ~fj TenderLb I
Red Leaf, Green Leaf 39
or ~ Lettvc,. Ea •
Fresh Broccoli 59
Tig. Gm!n Cl.aten lb e
E~!~~ragus Lb .99
Large Bell Peppers4 6 100
orCuc:\mbers R
Honevdew Melons 59
Sunvner f°'IMlO!e lb •
Fruit Rolls 3 6100 Auortl!d. Greet fOf Soack.s R
Boston Fems 2 6600
6 lndl Pot R
BOT 2 ll .59 EA. GET 1
~=~FREE "'*1 OC' Soordougl
BOY 1 at 151 GET 1
Sausage FREE Links
SMl-~11~
8C.. iFrcmi1
• BOY Z It. 76 EA. GET 1
Globe A·l
~hPtti ~v
Pad<age
Geisha 98 White Tuna
Solid PCK:k 6.5 Ounce Con I
.99 Marina Tissue
Bethroom-4 Roll Pack
J'l\acaroni & Cheese 39
Knilt Bonus Pk 8 Oz. Bc:lll •
La Choy Dinners "M9 Chdi.~Pilld~.Q~ ' -
Sunlight Liauid 89 °'~ ~t!'rgef'll 2} Oz <fnc1 35 Off) • '
Heinz Tomato Ketchup 129
320unc'f!~
Vons Stewed Tomatoes 39 16~Can •
~gnc~~ked Beans .99
Kiwano Melons 299 American Beauty 39 New Zeeland Grown Lb Salad Roni. 12 Oz Pad<age • e
Ripe Avocados 49 Vons Cinnamon Rolls 99
Him Vllflf'fy Ea e 8 Pack e
VONS SELECT U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF STORY
Vons Select U.S.DA Choke Beef Is a grade
above the beef most supennari<et1 sell. It's
more tender. more Juicy. more f\avofful. Vons
buys onlyU.S.DA CflcMce Beef, which Is ~dally sdected by our truyers and Insure$ us the top Ot
the grade. They buy only grain-fed beef with
superior marbling which enhances flavor and
tenderness.
• You might CJq>ect Select" U.S.DA Choke Beef to cost more. Not at Vons. We sen our
.
"
Select O.S.DA Choltt Beef for the same price
other mari<eta sell thdr u~ beef.
You don't ~Y more at Vons. That's one of the
rusons Vo1C QU Vons, Thie ~ Store.
SILL C:V.Vll.A Pftf.SIOU'CT ~S (i~ f RY CO
Unlimited
Double .
COUR.Q.f!S
Vons
ff1araarine !Pound~
4 Cubes
IOY l ll .57 GIT l
Bat 2 It .39 PA GEi' l Colortex
Napkins
Pllpef
60Count Pkg
Aunt
Jemima
Walftes. I 0 Ol. b ~Fan
·Jeno's
Pizza
I 0.8 Oz. Frtml
Corri> or~
1\11
Bat 1 ll .99GET1
IOfllll"G!Tl
BonaaPIM:k
L'Oreal 319 ~!:
~~~ ~~k Roa~"'--'..-o#-f-1~~~ ute~ .
Ground Beef Chub Pack 79 .___'~_,..._._~_~w_~~------
3 lb OU>Ooesn t ~ JOl Fa Lb e
~~~CJ~AR~~t49
Alaskan HaJibut Roast "29 fresh Seelood ~ !StNlla Lb 3.99) U>.£-
Boneless Tri Tip Roast 219
Sdeci 'ISDA ~ ~ . lb
Beef Short Ribs 149
Sd«t US.DA ~ 6'C!f Lb
Boneless Stewina Beef 179 5etec1 US.DA ~ Bed' Lb.
Boneless Family Steak.5 J79
Vu P\t·Sdect USDA QiJice 6'C!f Lb
Boneless Chuck Steaks 159
Vu P\tSd«t USOA ~ ~ Lb
Boneless Cube Steaks 'Y29 v~ P\t·Se6rct ~ OlOlce BtJ U>_&-
New Yori< Steaks 439
Se6ec:t USOA ~ ~ Lb I
l.1'¥1 nf Lamb 149 f;;~ Froren ot o.tlODd Lb
Wilson's Sliced Bacon 149
Cd\ed-16 <Mn Pllcklge Lb •
Ice Cream1v~2 b ]OO~
Jenieymeid. 5qwire Half Oal. R
Engo Nutri-Grain 99 w.Mef RalSln {, Bnsl-I l Oz. Eb e
Swanson Fried Chicken 339
2 P<uld Bc:lll -
Minute Maid ~ Juicegg ../ l...c>hld-10 Oz.. UMilry ~ 10 Oz. •
Califiomia Mild Oleddar 189
or Maneen!y Jeck. Famtf PK'k Lb
Can Budrtin Sliced ~ts 59 1Nt\. 4 Ot. Ala ~i V8l1etles •
Jersevrnaid Orange ~1.. 129 ~-Hot ~P.;er Caton \r.I
(4 • .,_, _____ ,....,. ____ ......
-·-·••c--··--·,··-· w.. =-::::.:.-:;-:_~':~:::~...:-: _ ..... -..-
The
More
Sto~e
baas; stir in supr and cool.
-fo puoob bowl, oombine-aea witlt .,,,.
rcmainina inaredients. Serve with
ice or Fruited Iced Tea Mold.
Makes about 12 (S..Ounce) servinp.
Ont--third cup of cream of black
currant liqueur may be substituted
for the cranberry juice coclctall.
Fnl~ l~TealleW: In teapot,
pour 31/J cups boilina waier over 2
cheny almond four-sided tea bap;
ooverand brew S minu• Remove
tea bqs; cool. Fill 4-cUKeeru: mold
with l cup tea and until
partially ftozen. Arrange lemon
slices and mint on ice and freeze to
fix in place. Oeotly fill with
remainina tea and mae until
solid.
CHOCOLATE DECADENCJ
H...-nt (l....aaceea~) 1emt-
tweet cHcolaee
.. CQ batter or marsartae
P4 np c:oafectla.en npr
I tab_,... all-plll"POH noar
' ega, 1eperated
1 teu,_,...u.llla enraet ~ plat (l'oacea) ..... cream
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
In medium saucepan, melt choc-
olate and butler. Gradually blend
in supr and flour, stinina con-
stantly; remove from heat. With
wire whip or rotary beater, blend in
cu yolb, one at a time, beatina
well after each addition. Stir in
vanilla.
In medium bowl, beat egg whites
until stiff; fold into chocolate
mixture. Remove I cup mixture;
blend with sour cream. Pour re-
mainiq mixture into liabtly
IJ'CISC(i 8-incb baking ~lop with
sour cream mixture. Bake 2S
minutes (center will not appear
set). Cool completely; cover and
chill at least four bout1.
To serve, cut in i.inch squares.
Makes 16 servinp.
Note: Squares may be frozen for
future use. Wrap individually i.n
aluminum foil and fn:ic7.e. Before
serving, unwrap and thaw at room
temperature 30 minutes.
These rolls
taste like
Grandnia' s
BJ CECILY BROWNSTONE
Uft!IM ....
DEAR CECILY: I'm looking for
a recipe for cabbage rolls that have
old-fashioned sweet-and·sour
flavor -the kind my Hungarian
grandmother used to make. Do you
h,ave one you could pass alona? -
YOUNG COOK
DEAR YOUNG COOK: After
your request came, 1 tried a recipe
for Sweet and Soun Cabbage Rolls
that I aoquired yei'n aao. It was a
success the}> and now. Here it is. -
C.B.
• SWEET AND SOUR
CABBAGE ROLLS
i '4 to ! ~ pcnmd cabbl(e
1 pond 1road beef
1 cap cooked rtce
1 1mall oaJon, flaely cMpped
11ar1eeu
~ leatp008 salt
1.4 teupooa pepper
lt'i<.·oHce caa coadeD1ed
tomaso toap, udll•te4
lkuce cu 1&ewe4 somatoes
! &ablespooa1 lemon Jatce
l tableaJMD• cl.ark bnwa ••1ar
• Prepare cabbqc leaves and
shredded cabbage as directed in
Note. Mix together the beef, rice,
onion, cu. ult, ·pepper and 2
tablespoons of the soup. Divide the
mixture (about y, cup for each)
among the prcpered leaves, placina
a small roll oftbe meat in the center
of each; roll up leaves enveloJ)e
fashion; plaClC JCam-side down over
prepared shredded, cabbage.
Mb together the remaining
soup, stewed tomatoes, lemonjuice
and ·~ pour over rolls. Cover with foil and bake in a preheated
3S().dqree oven about IV> tioun;
uncover and bake abOut 30
minutes Jonaer. Makes aix aervinas,
two rolls per portion.
Note: To prcpa.re cabbqc, cut
out core 1bout I inch down; cover
cabbqe with boilina water. boil
about 10 minutes; drain. Remove
12 larp outtr leaves so lhq, are
whole~ cut out •ny heavy nb at
bottom of cb; spread out on flat
urfacc rQdy for flllirq,: Shred
remainina cab coancJy anf:S
pread over bottom. of a 12 by I by
2-incb bakini disti.
..
-
Baby's comfort target of 'smart manufaeturer'
bra°:' o1':,;-_.1b1t;<>~~~ •:~ Today's refund ofl'en have a Univmal Product Cod a~bols with a srocay • receipt with the Tree r_op Apple Juk.e. Japirw July
found .• pieoe of hard plaitic •tuck value ofS9 29. ~m~ lSO!-,~m.~til~ ~ rwr;~~.r Circled. Ea~ 30a::t Thl• offer._, ....
toth1ed1nhaaide!>f!>neofthediapen.lt r. These offen ~uire refund J Concentrate.Ext Ju1y31, 1986. TREE~lnc.O&r.b'cldvea ardudfoim.
wou ve 1mtated my blby '°I iorma: UIE REAL.EMO Sl Tuna llef\u\CI ~n for one or thclO NES1l.£ OWk Free Pr lball
decided to write to the man~ae> HI..CSl Ref\uidOft'er.Send,hc Offer.ReoeiveaSlcouponaoodon ucu:.~ « aatunl ~ Ofltr, P.O. llo1 IMI, ¥.,..._ t~o weeks later, 1 _
1
.ved
1
required refund form and 18 Uni· f UWI your next purcbue of your favorite ouriee, ~ lix~~milli-America MN ~'399. ~tb.,...i.." ·~
1 f • ....... vcrsal Product Code 1ymbol1 out brand · or Tuna. plus . a free Re. liw threO-~k or I l-oWM:c or If>. bueball liDpnoied WI ... vc um·
ettero ~poloayfrom the company, from the aide ~nel of any individ-JL.emon 5'a1ood recipe sampler. ounce frozen can Tree Top Apple vey'a~ture.SeadtwoUaiverMl
alona with two Jarae boxes of thetr ual it r Hi r i th Ori k Bo Send the r..nulred ret\lnd form and Juice. Send the llW'IUired reftm4 Product Code bat cOdel lrOm IDJ
• ..,. ll& , alonawith•'"ecuh no.ister-i'pu Inc. Offer. Receive 1our S-OCot we Dt label naoela from two 1orm 'aD M.l9 Uo1v....--. uct Neltle~-.... -uet. WIW di.pc-""' thi-"Jou should let vour un ° '""' n e n x, r. 2 ·'" fro ·~ " d ...... ·:"""!..-.... Prod t'\o.a .. ~ ~· 1
readen know at the companies w ···r. ,,._ coupon• eachJood on vour next bottles of aoy JU of Rcal.emon Codes from uy three R.eauJar or c:entl tor poctMt IDd · that produce .... atore branda are with the purcb.ue prices circled. ., ' Le J l A.... N rat IL~ ~ ~--'-.,.............. _. .. .a.a-... ... _ ...
uni Expirea July 1. 1986. purcb.ue of ew Ocean Spray mon u c:e UlJm Concentnte or •tu '""'uncc, ~ •'-'· ~-yow name. -.-often juat as tboufbtful aa the Uquid Conccntnte. Send. the re-the front label from rtftiaented Dick. 150-millilitat th.mo-pack or --ZIP cOde on & ).by.5 card. nil
companies producma national OCEAN SPRAY Cranberries, quired refund form and three Real..emon lOOPeroentPure,alona ll-Ounc:e or 16-ounce fi'Oien can otrerluvailablewhDeauppliellu brands. -Cuolyn Roe", Baeu ,_ __________ ...;__:_ ____________________ ...:.,___;:;...;,. ____________ ...:,_ __ ...;.... _______ _
Park.
Dear Carolya -Thank you for
makina an important point. .
Sman manufacturers, whether
they produce a store brand or a
national brand, are always con-
oemed with their reputatiom.
That's why smart shoppen let the
companies know when there is a problem.
Dear Jae -Most of the refund offcn I send for have a atandard
notice that 11y1 it ahould take aix to
elaht weeks to f rocess my request. I
keep track o those refunda by mar~ them on my calendar.
I can t tell you bow many times
the due date aoes by and I have not
received toy refund. I then write to
the same address and complain.
Often it takes two complaint letters.
Eventually I receive the refund, but
when it requires two additional
letten and 66 oenu wonb of postaae
to act a $1 refund, I am anarY-and
I think justifiably so.
Why are we beina subjected to
such an il\juatioe? It aeema to happen over and over apin. What
can be done about it? -Eba Mu.
Lakewo~, Fla.
Dear Elsa -I know the refund
forms aay .. Allow six to eiabt weeks
for delivery," but yean -.o moat
refund.en realized that the 1ncreu-
ina volume of refund request.a make
it impractical for many of the
fulfillment compuies to act refund
checks out on time. So to avoid
most of the diaappointment and
extra poatqc, try waitina 12 weeks
for lour refunds. I you wait the few eltlrl weeks, I
am ocnain you will receive mOlt of
the refunds you have 1ept for.
But when you have checked your
calendar and week number l 2 bu
palled and there is still no refund;
then it is the 'time to take action.
Don't write to the address on the
refund offer. Instead, write directly
to the company at the address on
the product packqe. Address your
c-0mplaint to the "Office of the
President" and aive the details. The
company president will certainly
want to know that valued cus.-
tomen are rcoei vina such poor
treatment.
Please let me know how this
advice works out. Write to me in
care of this paper.
Here's a refund form to write for:
Up to a $3 refund. GE Plant Li&ht
Offer. P.O. Box 888, Unionville,
CT 06087. This offer expires July
31 , 1986, but ~uests for the form
must be received before June 30,
1986. While waitina for the form,
save the entire cartons or sleeves,
including the order code plus the
words "General Electric Co. Nela
Park, Cleveland, Ohio 441 d" (on
fluorescent lamps save the entire
end of the carton that includes the
words "General Electric Co., Nela
Park, Qeveland, Ohio 441 l 2").
from Plant Light Kit (PLK-1) as
proofs of purchase for each $ l
refund. Two proofs of purchase
from Plant Llaht are required for
each $1 refund. Serial numben for
the cartons that can be used as proofs are: 7SR30/PL, F40PL,
F40PL/AQ. Here is this week's list of refund
offers. Start looking for the required
refund forms, which you can obtain
at the supermarket, in newspaper
and map.zme adveruscments and
from trading with friends.
Use processor
to make mayo
PROC~R MAYONNAISE
l lar1e eu
1 cap vqetable oU
t tablespooa1 wblte rice wine
vtne1ar
"'teupooD ult
"' tea1poo• dry mutard
1/6 lealpooD paprika
In a food processor, using metal
blad~. process toaether the cu. lfJ
cup of the oil, the vinepr, salt,
mustard and paprika until blended
-S or 6 seconds. At once, with
motor running. pour remainina 't'J
cup oil throuah food chute until
mixture is smooth and thick -l 0
to 12 seconds. Do not overprooess.
Makes one sencrous cupful. Store
1n a tiahtly covered jar an the
refriaera tor.
DD..L DRF.SSING
1 capuladoU
~ cq "'1te wlDe vtae11r
1 tealpooD ult
"' teupooD ..,,.,
FtaelJ cMpped '""' dill te taste
In a acre -top jar combine oil,
vinepr. aah and pepper. and dill;
cover tnd thake weU. Serve over
auorted tom aalad srccn1. Makes
about l 'h cupa.
/
re
lJ'SDA lnlp9cted.Qoldn Premium Chicken of the
Sea Tuna Top Sirloin
Steak.
Fresh
Fryer Breast
~~1"99
per lb.
Mowitain High
Yoghurt
:=:: varwa. 39
Scne .26 •
Fresh Ca nta16upes
VU:..Stlpened
' Fresh Honeydew
Melons
.39
t
Kraft Macaroni ·
&Cheese
3 ~81
Ralphs GaJJon
Bleach
' Kodacol or VR-G
Film Trial Pact
F.ltla Gounnet
Sfatnl .. StMl natwme
nmw..n~ OD1 ~r.3 ~s1 1tO&kMd
Scne .30 .39
Prtcea effective June 5 thru June 11, 1988
LowerPri .
Higher~sto ndards C..,... _ _, .................. M........... ...... ....... _..... ..... , r "':".J: ...... ,.. ......... __ ... .., ______ _......... ......._............... ......
-• --.. ............... _,_ ........ '!I:-' ..... .. .,._t=:' --...... --....... =:a' ....... -----............. _ ..... _ .... ..... l-. ................ a..-....... ...... . ......... ..._ ..... -....................... -...-. ....................... ... .•. ._____.... ---.-..c.-...................... ___ ,_...., __ _ ......... --.......... , ... ..,....,. ........ _._....,._,ft? WW .............
1
. .
,
r
f
l.
11
n ' ..
• » 00
\CS
lO
iai\ 'Hi l
~ ..
04 Otan Coat OAlLY PILOT/ Wednelday, June 4, 1988
Cottage cheese onlY.a bargain when ~rchased
couq1 cheese bu a curd that has Unfonunat.ely1 mu~h of the ~nhcatcd longenouah tobequate calcium in milk is lost in the whey ~rm. It bold• its shaped aod lends when cottaae cheese is made. ~ itself to salad mak.ina. while an 8-ounce &)au of milk
BJ DOROTllY WENCK thedfon. nnsed
What'• an a name? Ricotta, scbabz.i r, fromage de Ho~nde,
farmers cheese and hoop chCC$C -
all are names for our popular
conq,e chce1C althouah there a.re
tome differences be1ween them
dei)enclina ont e kind of milk used
and the manu acturina process.
You need a p llon (8 pounds) of
U:im milk to make about I pint ( l
pound) of cot~ cheese. Thia 1 because milk is 80 percent ..,ater
and most of this water is ~moved
in the form of wbey when cheese is
made.
lfftesh skim milk costs 87 cents a
half .ullon, and cottage cheese costs
S l.2'1 a pin" you can see it'sche per
by far to buy cottaae cheese than to
make it.
bacteria. The bactena srow an the
milk on the milk suaar (lactose) and
produce lactic acid.The acid causes
the milk protein to ''clobber" or
coagulate.
Ao alternative, or addiuonal
method of thickening the milk is to
add rennet, a digestive enzyme
derived from the stomach of
animals, Rennet is used when large
curd cottage cheese is made.
Finally, the curd 1s salt~ ~d
some cream 11 added to mo11ten at,
unless the product 1s to be sold as
uncreamed, or dry conaae cheese.
Creamed cottage cheese has
enouah cream added to Jl"e it a fat
content of about 4 percent. h has
about 120 e&Jones per half<up.
Uncrcamed cottaae cheese has less
than I percent fat and 8' calones
per half<up Partially creamed, or
low-fat cottage cheese has about 2
percent fat and 105 ealones per half
cup
Larae curd CX>tt.IJe chccse is supphes about a third of an adult's h~ted for a 1honer ome and is cut e&Jcium nctds, a half-cup cf cottaac
with laraer cutten. This re uJts in cheese supphes only about I I
large soft curds which mix easily percent of your day's n~d.
WJth olhcr foods. h's the best Since cottage cheese " low in fat,
cottage cheese for dips as the softer and also low 10 cholesterol coi:n·
curd beats up quickly into 1 very pattd to other types of whole milk
smooth product. cheese it often i'J recommended for Aod why " taae" cheese? Per-
b.aps because it was so easily made
1n the home (or cotta~e) btchen
back in the "olden days.'
You can make your own cottate
cheese, too -but it's hardly worth
Cottaae ch~ is a concentrated pepons on cholesterol-control
form of protean. AhaJf-cupcontain1 diets. • • • The process used in maltJn&
cottage cheese bqins wtth souri.na
the nonfat (or skimmed) milk with
a "staner" culture of lactJc acid
Af\er the protein 1s thickened. the
product contains <:Urds -the thick
pan-and whey-the watery pan.
The curds•~ cut with cutters, then
heated (which causes further truck·
enina) and stirred, then drained and
about a thud of your day's protein
reqwrements. Thus. it is one of the Q IONS WE ARE ASKED:
lower cost protein foods. Q. I llke to 1ae p-ated cbene •• a
toppLD1 oa varln 1 cunroles a1
---------------------· well a1 on eoclllladu . But often II
The size of the curd vanes in
different types of chee~ 5mall curd
. ,.
HUNTS REGULAR OR NO SALT
Tomato
~~Sauce
LB
AMERICAN OR AMERICAN LIGHT
Uqht
cro:':r m.91
Kraft
Singles
12-0Z
.LJlt~Da..:JaQJI Jll!l. bard._ What _
C1lUlft Wi? l1t
A. When cheese is cooked at too
h1&h a temperature or fort<><? Iona a
time. ll becomes tough, stnngy or
hard. To avoid tbu, add the cheese
to your casseroles near the end of
the cookina ttme, use a mdocratc
bakina tcmperature,(325 degrees F)
and bake only unuf the cheese 1s
melted. • • • Q. 1 Uve aloDt, Uke to ea& cottage
cffele once lD a wllUe, bat a1ually
cu't fla.lJla a small carton before I&
spoil•. Woald it be 1afe to freeze
part of It 10 tbat I can keep It
loqer?
A. Cottaae cheese does not freeze
well. Most people find that the
texture is unacceptable after it's
been froun However, frcezini will
keep cottage cheese from spo1hng.
and it will be safe to eat after It has
been frozen and defrosted • • • Q. I've beard rtcotta referred t9
at Italian cottaae cbeese. It 1eem
creamier Ou replar cotta1e
~eese, ud J am woiutertag II tile
two are really natrltloully com·
parable.
A. No, they are not. There are
significant diffe~nces in fat content
and calorics because ricotta gener-
ally is made from whole milk or a
mixture of whole milk and whey
while cottaae cheese is made from
nonfat milk Whole-milk ncotta
contains 16 grams.of fat and 21 S
calories per half <up. Pan-sklm
ricotta contains 10 grams offat and
170 calones per half.cup.
Since ~gular cott.8f.e cheese ts
made from nonfat m1Uc to which
JUSt a htlle cream is added. even the
creamed vanety conta.Jns less fat
and fewer calories than pan-sklm
ncotta. A half-cup serving of
partially creamed, or lowfat (2
percent) cottage cheese has just 2.2
grams of fat and I OS calones per
half<up.
Another difference between
ncotta and cottage cheese is
calaum content. While a half<up
of lowfat cottage ch~se has 77
m1lhgtams calcium, the same
amount of pan skim ricotta has 337
milligrams calcium and whole-milk
ncotta has 25 7.
French chef
star of event
An opportunity to meet and dine ~
with one of the great chefs of the
world 1s offered by the famed Ma
Cuisine cooking school and the
Hotel Meridien. Newport Beach.
Jacques Maximin, famous chef
of the Michelin two-star restaurant
1 Chantcclerc, Ncgresco Hotel. m
Nice. France. Wlll demonstrate the
'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--' --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ sbll that has earned him an
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites
Leg Of Lamb~~A~
Chuck Steak::: IS.~
Wiene rs "'~
New York Steak.ml~
Lamb Chops:::::~"·--
Rainbow Trout::
Butterfish~~~
,.s2.59
~$1.59
.s1.29
.e54.29
111$2.29
19
51 .99
.• s2.29
Corn=~
Lean Cuisine:rv=:
Entrees:~~
Croissants~~[
Waffles=--
IHAlflAAS $1.29
... ~s1.59
ll<)/$1.99
•2-0199e
a-01
51.69
.2-0,a9e
Orange Juice=:=~ •Hlls1.19
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
SKIPPY CREAMY 0A SUPER Ct!UNK , Dish. Liquid:.~LL .. O•H l>ll
Zest Soap:;.. "
Orange Ju ice=oMAJO
Shedds Spread .... CllOC>'
Bread=:=1
' 'c , ~Har11 ook1es~~OA ···w~~ Applesauce:=:::' .
Pi neappl ~~ a:ao
Barbecue Sauce:nOllY MJO<•
Ju ice~·
.. ~9¢ Ma Bells Chips~~()!!
~69-Mixers:: •1 79 p .aJC:t~""'"""
.a • etSI~°" .:or '2. 29 R c-1,.,.::.:: :::( ... ,_,
• • ~ l)IWl A!Tf Cat Fo9d:'::'~~· M)728'
Dog Food:= .. Oll 16\.
15.19
Macaroni & Che ese= .. =~ ,.or29'
Syrup.oe~ ,.°' '1.99
Detergen t::;.Tt~"'°' ~°' '1 .99
... ,..._ .. ___ _ _____ .. ,,,.
,.. .. --.... .....,, ___ _ ... _... __ ,,., ... •
n0199e
~39e
.. ,,,s1.99
,~79~
,.oz79'
1101$1.59
~,•1 .09
•unA&ge
1i~'3.49
··~'1.49
• 1• 11
Ga rden Fresh Produce
Broccoli~::::..
Mangos:.. ~V()fl
Onionsu. HO•SWf[lYIU.ow
FANCY RIPE HASS
l,arp
Avocadm
49°-
Seagrams~WMll<f" •1MMll •10.99
Kahlua~l .. '8.99
Bacardi Rum::()!! I»" *5.99
Michelob:IW9( ··~'2.49
Carlo Rossi :.:.M11111 klm''2.99
I
~= W>ftTE ~ OOc.D ~ .... .,.,, !9.99
'1H'~"
, ADVERTISED rTEM
QUNWfTEE
Wt lllM 10 i... on IWld -""'*"' llld of ~lllld 11*"9...._ "· M llD •dlb• ~our--MMcMofltl ..... .... • a-m< .. tll...,., ~
~ .. buy .. ..,,. .... DWUllld .....
IOOll • .............. Ol .illlrt JD~
excellent culinary reputation
worldWJde
The event Wlll take place Fnday-
Sunday at the hotel and the cooking
school in Atrium Court, Fashion
Island, Newport Beach
The agenda includes a welcome
buffet on Fnday, a pnvate lunch al
the Chantccla1r Restaurant. Irvine.
the demonstration at the cooking
school and dinner at the hotel
Saturday, with checkout on Sun-
day. For information, call Barbara
Eidson at the hotel, 476-2001.
Sprin-'s delicate
-v:egg-e souped up
ASPARAGUS SOUP
1 poand fre1b a1pan1111
t;. cap cbopped celery
% table1pooa1 chopped acalllon1
U'M·ouce ca.o clalckea brotll
~ teaspoon salt
l tablespoons batter
% tablespoons Ooar
1 cap milk
1 cap Wtand ltalf
Break off asparqus stalks as far
down as they snap eastly: wash
spears; cut mto I-inch pieces. In a
medium covered sauocpan simmer
asparagus, celery., ~lions. 11> cup
of the chicken broth and salt -until
just tender -about I 0 minule .
In an clcctnc blender or food
proceuor puree asparqus mixture·
until smooth. Milke a white sauce
usina the butter, flour and remam-
ina ch1cken broth. Sur an asparaau"
puree. milk and half and half.
Reheat. Make 6 cups
Slmple ba~becued chiclfea.
given an lntoxlCatlng taste
from cout to COUl you ~n ·~t BOURBON TEIUYAE-·..._ (onnmpes. . . rookla and vcterana ahb C"Nina '4 cep bettr' •·rt _ ..... __ -c Ian , __ .., • · 6 in 1 mOlt po~la.r summer 11Ytft _ -"' ,.., -ate • ut CUP t -··~·Wlle into or -· • alaze 8 wCdp. Place w~ in Jarae barbecuin&. h year, ll levelt of I tabl ....... bovboa wMlk•y bowl; cover witb water and let
outdoorcheflcan bo _. n uaJously 'It &ea.,._ blad,.,,... stand 30 minutes. Remove aD1l pat liabtina brlQueta. And, what they all ~ •-...:--_.. duam tirv 'th 1· 1--'tb have io common ii a detire to 1erve -....-.. -08 -: " wt paper towe ma; P~ wt
a diltioctivo and ·-t tastina m-I 1 m .. Jaa •su&ut ~~~~lc .. en on arill 6 inches from hot •--I po1UMlt frytq ~-pieces \iUAJ with I minimum orfU . Cook 30 to 35 minutes, or until
Chicken, a tried and truo Co b' •· · l..: ba •· de d .. 1 ..... ...1 • h' L--barbecuc favorite .. hill a home m me .... nyaiu ste °' ataze, ten ran ..-.-,., tumuia c lCMOn
run" in thla ioto;/c:atl"• _...._ flor w~ilkey,pepperandcinnamon~set and ef1Plant over occasionally. -·~·-uide. Remo\'e Item fri>m eqplant Brush frequently with bute &.alaze Bowbol Teriyaki Chicken. And, and partially pare lengthwise to mixture. Makes 4 to 6 aervinp.
tbecoo\inaiaeasy. 1--~~~~~~~~~~~-:--::-..;_--:-~_;.....--=-~~~-=:::;:::::;:::=:============:;================:::::=:::::=:=:::=:::==::::==::=:~~~==:;:: Plwnp cIUcken pieces aro simply
buted OD !he lrilJ with I dcliahttuJ blend t)f bottfed--tte--.ri'"''l~•ki"'-t--......if-,----------..-ataze. bourbon whilkey, pepper aBd
cimwnon. The mellow, mild C>U·
inal of the wbitkey comp&Cmenta
the delicate tweet flavor of the
teriyaki. while the pepper and
cinnamon add extta zjp.
We've chosen egplant for this
barbecue. menu because it add.I
variety and iJ euily cooked and
1CTVed riabt Ilona with the chicken.
For a diKerent ahape. we've Jliced il _
into wedaes and peeled .. It.ripes" in
the akin just for fun. The akin is
exoeptionaUr. flavorful. ao if it's
tender thm 1 no need 10 peel it at
all. To hem~eep the wedps moist durina~ · and alleviate some of
the aadity often perceived in
eaplant, the ~ are soaked in
water pnor to coohna.
To complete the menu. we rec-
ommend a leafy areen salad to
provide the perfect flavor coud'ter-
point
Get hooked
on baked
fresh trout
B1TOMBOOE "" ...............
America'• trout aeason bas gotten
under way onoe qain, to the delight
of countless fi1bennen, and lovers
of seafood in ,eneral. ·
Moist, but not fatty, these de-
licious fish are aenerally found in
freshwater streamJ. Tbe most popu-
lar typeS are the rainbow, brook and
brown trout.
If you catch them younelf, these
delectable sportina fish are easy to
draa. But if \bat's not your style,
your neiafiborbood fish dealer will
probably do it for you, for a small
cbaJ'te.
Trout are delicious broiled.
baked, poached or panfried. They
are usually cooked whole. If you
don't want to catch your own, fish
stores carry them.
The s~ of the trout determines
how i~ llloukl be cooked. Small
ones between 5 and 10 inches
should be cooked quickly, usually
broiled or baked.
Bia trout, weiahina more than 4
pounds, or about 20 inches long,
can be dressed with an elcpnt
stuffina and then baked.
Trout have very small scales, so it
is rarely necessary to skin them.
When boned, the entire skeleton
can usually be lifted out intact. A
few varieties, such u the sea trout,
live in tbeooean and fight their way
up riven to breed.
Best known .are the rainbow,
native to California, and the steel·
head and the cutthroat trout, both
of which frequent cold waten from
California to Alaska.
I like trout baked with thyme and
bay leaves, as in the following
recipe.
BilEDTROUT
1 clove prUc, enUed
l m"1Dl ollioa, eMpped
t te&lfOODI flHJy m!Deed fretll
.. J1D •.
14 teupooa black pepper
• .... trwt, abo•t ~ pond
ed.,.. dressed
f NJleiftl
'tablespoou nner. melted J.ac. .. 11emoa1
P.,rtb
Mix prlic, onion, thyme and
black pepper. Blend together and
spread atop trout with spatula.
lmert I whole bay leaf inside each
fish. Oil a hUiDf disb, larJe enouah
to bold fisb id 11nale layer.
Pour melted butter over fish and
bake 12 minutes in 400-dearee
oven. Remove bay leaf, and
sprinkle with lemon juice and
paprika before aervin.a. Serves 6.
Oood with a chllled white table
wine.
BAWAJJLAMB
1 AaU=•falqoflamb
(leUt' I), boH4
....... pepper
'4 a.,,.....,.. Jalce
t4ntlloMJ
.. Cllf ae... Jake •
1 ._., • •• n.e1, cUppe4 •rca ....... 1 ... .., , flHly.,,..
Sprinkle lainb with ult and
peppct, place on rack .10 lhallow
rOu\ina pa. Rout in a 32
o en 'for about l 'I> hou,. for
mcdiom rare or tQ, daired dono-
Mix toselher the remainina
inaredienu and occa tonally btu h
over lamb durina rou.ti a.
• \
c
an WU9MILON...~ ..... L& .12 ·L&
~ BEANS .............................. LI. .69 ~~l PEPPERS .................. fa. •t ~SQUAStt .......................... LI. M ~ MAfllGiOS .. : ................. ~ ...
Gat&on ll~~~ ........ IA9 • 7»MI. Vin .... lufpindy °'
CHARLES KRUG CHAil.JS ............................ l.M ~17~ TEA GlASS ............................... ..M ~=:wOtAMPAGNf .......................... 1.79 -.0... ~frock
ST. MS SHAMPOO & CONOmONet ......... 2.M
~ ITALIAN SAUSAGE ...................... LI. I. ff
........ CA,...
32.0Z.
IOnU
UMfT 2 .99
~~~~E ......................... .69
•••
\
FAMILY STEAK
~~-_, CHUCK-GOO Oii OtUCX WIT
............ ........
~MONEST L& 1.79
37
LB.
TREE TOP JUICE
APPLE, PEAR-APPLE OR PEAR-GRAPE
c
IA •
~~Uii I ........
IOl•n CAT ~ lftUY
!OC~ =' 4.99 ~ 2.59
left lrand '-In frock 6-frock 12.0Z.. c.... Auor'9d .
POl'A10 CHIPS ................................ I.ff._ DR PEPPER ott CRUSH .................... I.ff
12-0Z.
SUCES
FonMr John. 1-lb. ""°' SLICED COOKED HAM ...... EA. 2.89
Ff1go. 12-0z. ~ «
MOZZARELLA CHEESE ......... EA 2.19
~ Notutof
$WISS CHEESE ..................... LI. 1.1 9
'"abufv, 1s.or. IA• PIE CRUSTS ..................... EA. Y
•••••nvu · l'DAK•M••z••
~
I.DIN
Rl8£NO L& 1.69
,., . ~-~ 1-lb. P'lle-~ ,. • •
WILSON suao tw:ON ..... ~.:~ ... EA. 1.59
gfeu~FUN CEREAL.. .................... 2.99
.29
I
I
I
I
I
I • I
I
I
I
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I -1
Today's Neighborhood
Drugstore
Sylvania
Soft-White
Bulbs
40. 60. 75
or 100 Watt
2 Per Pack ... -...h 1.79
2 PACKS 2 00 UIM9 FOR •
::. ':.:. -1. 00
=PA~Ks/100 COST FOA
Revlon Flex
•Shampoo or
Cond1t1oner
20 ounce
•Styling Mousse
6 65 ounce ~
All Types CHOICE
Owilltul•h 2.49
'*'nah 1.69 ....... ,. t69 !Will ..... -
YOUR 00 AUlCOST •
I CVS Sheer ,
or Plastic
I ~!~,~~In x 3 In
30 count CHOICE
I 88¢
I
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COMPARE TO
Jotlnaon'a Plutlc or Sheer
Strtps 30'8 It 2 19 u
Scope I Mouthwash
I :~:~•e
I 233 I Our Regular 3 19
I
II
Barbasol
Shaving
Cream
All Types
I
177¢ I Our Regula• 1 19
I
I Dimetapp
•Elixir • ounce
I •Extentabs 12 count
•Tablets 24 count
YOUR CHOICE
239 I Our Reg 3 49 ea
J
Deep Woods om
Insect Repellent
•Pump Spray. 3.5 oz •Aerosol. 6 oi.
....... ............
3.69
1.99
-1.25
YOUll 74 AUl.COST . ..
Photo
Album
11 -114 Inch x 9-114 Inch
20 Pages
133
' ..
Planters
Peanuts
•Cocktail
Salted or Unsalted
•Honey Roasted
12 ounce Can
Our Regular 1 99-2 29
49
YOUR CHOICE
Goobers or
Ratslnets
.,, t
25~
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1986
Badha~ wins; Sumner ahead
-Incumbent GOP congressman stomps --~ renegade chall~nger from within party
By PAUL ARCIDPL£Y
Ol .. 0.-, ........
Conaressman Robert Badham
turned back a spintcd challensc by
manaaemenl consult.ant Nathan
Rosenbera /Tuesday, wtnrun1 the
Repubhcan 'nomination bandtly in
his bid to retum to Conaress for a
11xth term.
With baJf of the returns counted,
Badham was downina Rosenbera by
bet1Cr than 2·to-1.
· Rosenbera sent a concession tele-
gram to Badnam early today from has
campa1a.n headquarters in Corona del
Mar.
.. C onaratutationJ-.on-wi nnint--thiJ
harct.fouatit campal&fl;' be said.
"Althouati we've had our differences,
we're both Republi<:ads and ru wort
hard to umte the Republican Pany for
victory ID November."
SPelklna in front of 3.ooO Rc-
pub11can faithful at the Hotel Mer-
1d11n m Newport Beach. the S4-year-
old COJl&ttlSman said, .. The Re·
(Pleue ... BADBAll/A2)
By PAUL ARCllJ.PLEY °' .. ..., .......
Or&nae County Democrat~ Party Cb.airman Bruce Sumner was run-
nina neck ar.u ucck q,a1nst technical
w:"ter Art Ho~ann Tuesday with a
d1fficult wnte-in campa.isn in the
40th ConareuionaJ Distnct Deme>
crauc Prun.ary.
With about half of the mum cow:ned, Sumner led Hoffm nn SI
pm:cnt to 49 pm:icat. EarlieT counts
o( ablcnttc ballotJ had placed Hoft'-
mann more than 1.000 votea ahead.
"He beat me in 'lblentces," Sumner
said Tuesday cvenina at the Dcme>
cratic beadquancrs in
..We aperud lhlL . .
.. Ourphonesurveyindiaad mat
lot of the Pt5c>Pl• '"O~ able8tec dict-
oot k.Dow Holtm.irui was 1 Lallolac:b&
candidate. ·
.. As the prcaDCU" IW1cd com
in, we sW1cd P:Jftiftl,
.. I think WC re IQlJ\I to MD, but j
will bt ct~,: be said.
About JUU supponen WI
upoctantly throµsbout the eftni
(PIMee ... waJTS-JJf / .A.2)
Coaat
MuntlnQ.t.~ch City
Council votes to preserve
wetlands./ A2
Food
Make your graduate feel
like a hero with a apeclal
party featuring refreshing
beverages and satisfying
f8f'&./C1
Teacher
fired in
death
of boy
ZsChau leads
~ersche1Jf8ohn_
in Senate race
Sports
The Boston Celtics take a
commanding 3-1 lead In
the NBA Championship
serles./C1
Estancia High pole
vaulter Doug Miiier look-
Ing for new honors at
state track meet this
weekend./C1
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bultetln Board
Business
Claaslfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Mind and Body
Opinion
Paparazzi
Pollce Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
c~
A3
~-6
C6-8 cs ce
B3
01-6
81-2
A8
81
'A3 ·ca
C1-3, 8
83
A2
Atttistle-youth died
after bein restrained
at Fairview Hospital'
By ROBERT BARKER
OltlleO.-, ........
Teacher Jeanne Warnecke has been
fired for alleaedly usinJ unapproved
techniques in restraining a 14-year-
old autistic boy who stopped breath·
ang and died later of asphyxiation,
Fairview state hospital officials said
Tuesday.
It also wu learned that Orange
County District Attorney Cecal Hacks
has ordered his chief deputy. Jim
Ennpit. to review the pohce 1n-
vestJption and make a recommen-
dation on whether to file cnminaJ .
cha~ apmst the teacher.
Hicks reportedly has inionncd the
chairman of a stage qency oveneeina
services for the development.aJly dis-
abled younpten that he himself
would make a final dec1s1on on
whether to file cnm1naJ charaes.
Earlier, Deputy Dtstnct Attom~
Rick Toohey wd there was 1nsuffi-
c1ent evidence to support a hom1c1de
chafle and refused to prosecute
despite vigorous pleas by the Hunt·
inaton Beach Police Department.
Lou Sarrao, clinical director at
. Fairview Developmental Center in
Cost.a Mesa, smd Tuesday that Warn-
(Pleue Ne TEACHER/ A2)
Deukmejlan in Newport
Go•. Oeor&e Deakmejfan ireeta a Jabllant Cl'Owd of <>ranae
County trepabUcana In Newport Beach at the Hotel
Meridian. where party loyallata aatbered election llJCbt. The
ao•emor will face Loe Aqelee Mayor Tom Bradley lD the
race for IOYernor. See •tory OD A8. .
Victor of Republican -
primary to challenge
Cranston for senate
hem ltaft u4 Wire repona
High-tech mllhonaire Ed Zscb.au,
who mounted a slick $3 malbon
media blitz, led conservau.ve TV
commentator Bruce Hencbensohn ID
the Republican U.S. Senate primary
Tuesday as incumbent Demotrat
' Alan Cranston easily won renomina-
tion.
The chaotic GOP Senate race
neared its climax anud the laahtnt
voter turnout in S8 years, with six of
every 10 Cahforrua voten shunnina
the polJs. Hencbensobn, easily the
most conKrVative candidate in the
race, was worried by the scant
turnout
But the raoe remained close as the
fint ~or results from Southern
California bepn comina in. Zlcbau, a
San Francitco Peninsula resid.eol
Wltb his 11.rO~ support in northern
California, captuftd substantial votes
in San Die10 County, but
Herscbensobn led in every other
Southern Cahfomia county. •
Henchen90hn bad the GOP aolid.Jy
beliind hlm when the batlot countina
reached the midway point in Oranp
County. With 41 percent of Oranaie
County's vote talhed Herschensohn
lead Zschau by almost 27,000 votes.
Zschau maint.a1Ded a steady six·
point margin. AlthouJh the fWO nvaJs
traded leads dunna,.en:Jy absentee
Supervisors Wieder, Riley re-elected
Roth, Beam in horse race for open seat
in north county; Patter~n close behind
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OftlleO.-, ..... IWI
Incumbents Hamett Wieder and
Tom Riley were re-elected easily to
their seats on the Orange County
Board of Superv15or·,, accordin& to
early election returns
Wieder defeated challenger David
Meslovich. a 26-ycar-old ambulance
dispatcher, for her third consecutive
term on the board. The 2nd Dastnct
includes west Oranac County, mclud-
1 n1 a poruon of H untinaton Beach.
Tom Riley, who was fil"st ap-
pointed to the board in 1974 by then-
govemor Ronald Reapn. held wade
margins over challenters Jon Brand
and Kenneth Prau an has bad for
another four-year term
At the Republican party cel-
ebration Tuesday at the Hotel Mer-
Prop. 51 initiative
.. leads by 2-1 margin
From staff ud •Ire reports
Proposition SI , the "deep pockets"
1nittat1vc that pitted consumer 1d-
\l<>Cates and trial lawyen aaamst
ansunance companie and local aov-
ernmcnts ap~rcd headed for ap-
proval by California voters Tuesday.
anae County's voters
At the half-way point m the ballot
coununa Tuesday naJht 90.404 Or-
ange C.Oanty voten had aiven
Propotsllon 3 l a "Yes'.' vote and
4S ,484 had cast a "No" vote
"We have been cautiously OJ>-
umistic, but it 1s sull early," said J It
An&ius. a spokesman for the pro-
Prop. SI forcn headquartered in
Burlinpmc.
Witfi 6 percent of the ballots tallied.
1d1en 1n Newport Beach. Riley de-
clared himself a winner at about 11
p.m. and went home. with his rc-
elccuon assured.
Riley's Sth Supcrvasonal -01stnct
includes New.R<>rt Beach, Costa
Mesa, Irvine, Laguna Beach and
much of south Orange CountY The
7 3-year-old retired Marine Corps
acneral hves an Newport Beach.
Challenger Jon Brand, S2, of
Laauna Beach as a professor of
aeoeraphy at Orange Coast Collqc.
Kenneth Pratt, 58. of Santa Ana
Hea&}lts, is a business consultant an
computer software. ~
In early statewide returns. the
mea,urc led by more than a 2-1
marain with 69 pctccni in favor and
31 percent opposed.
The trend wH reinforced by Or-(Pleue ... PROP./ A7) Gary OranYllle
With 4th Dtstnct Supervisor Ralph
Clark rctanna from the board after IS
years, hi! north Orange County
dastnct was up for grabs.
Four candidates. 1nclud1n1
Anaheim Mayor Don Roth and
Orange Mayor Jam Beam. vied for the
JOb, which pays SSS,000 a year And
with about half the votes counted late
Tuesday. Roth and Beam appeand
very close in the balloting with Jerry
Patterson also mounting a strong
showing.
Patterson, 51 , 1s a former con-
aressman who was defeated 1n 1984
(Pleue eee 8UPERV1SOR8/ A2) Saperriaor Tom Riley
Granville holds slim
lead in clerk contest
9y ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. 0.-,,... .....
With more than half the votes
talhed late Tuesda)'. incumbent Gary
GranVllle held a sm ti le.ad over
challenaer Marshall Nom~ in has bid
to retain his county clerk post.
The vote totals for the county clerk
position wtre the closest of the non-
partisan county races Granville gar~
nercd 94. l l4 votes to Noms's 76.848
with nearly 60 ptrcent of the vote
cou nted.
The county clerk is rcspon'iable for
comp1hna fit~ for cnman1l 1nd c1 .. 1I
ca.cs heard ID Supcnor Court and
prO«SSana such documertt, u mar-
nqe hccnxs and fict1tiou" bu'\anM,
name it.atements.
The Job paysSS7,01 )a year and th<'
clerk 1s elected to a four-year term.
Granville was appointed to the JOb
in September to ~place former Clerk·
Recorder l.tt Branch afler a county
1ud1t recommended the offte<' he
(Pleue ... CLSIUl/ A2)
·Slow-growth calldidates win in Irvine
&d..Domao
'
Environmentalists now hold majority:
measure on election of mayor approved
would scrv<' Irvine and other oom·
mun1t1e
Doman, 4fl, '" 1 city plann1na
comm1naoner and Aaran '1 protcae of
'°"' Whale Al"'I\ and Ooman want to
slow the peed of doelopment.-
Mayor Dave Baker and Coun·
cilwoman Sally Anne Miller favor
de"elopmcnt and say new frttwt>S
arc needed to kttp(pac<' w1th that
construction.
C ounc1lwoman Rlrhera Wieder.
who supported de,clopmcnt I\ well.
did not S«k ~<l«Uon whik < oun·
<iltnan Ray 1...atalano as \Cfo " a swina·-vo on.the fivc·mtmhcr coun-..
cil.
Jones and Malone). who fin1 hed
behind the wannen. fl\Jot'd more
development.
Other candidates included Jean
Hobart, Scott Wellman. (rary lkn·
nett, Maf) Matheis, Clarcntt 8c:cwar
and Anthony Korb&
Betsy Scheer' name a~rtd on
the bellot. but ~he had dropped out or
the race Iona before clectann day.
Irvine -votcn alt0 wtre faced Wtth
two measures, ne1ther of which
prompted mu·h debete.
Voten chose to adopt an ordinance
that would allt\w them to dc<:t the
..... Javnl&/il)
.f
ELECTION '86
• oc ....... .1900be
glldlng to victory. M;
• .... tande winning
In atatewlde rece. M.
• More county, state
and natlonal election
resulta on A&-7.
return1t bchau held the edp f'or
mos1 of the even.ins.
And Zlchau suet~ in front as the 1n1tial Southern · ornia vote was
reported, 1ndicati.na Hencbemobn
may have been hurt more by tbe liaht
turnout.
"I feel srcat. .. HerscbCnsohn said.
.. but I hoped to be ahead at this point.
th<>UJh. l WU disappointed in the
cumout ... .we did e-vefyillias -we
could to set up there (northcra
Califomia) often we could.. ..
''Your '". · u SoOd u mine ton.iabt." Hcncbemoho said of tbe early returm. .. You~re never happy
with a low turnout. ..
Rep. Bobbi 'Fiedler, former Lot
Anaeles pobce cbief f.d Davis aod Lot
Anacles County SuperviJor Mi.le
Antonovich trailed, each with 8 to 9
percent.
(Pl_.. Me Z8CBAO/A2J
Sheriff
Gates
winning
handily ·
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ..., ........
Orange County Shenff-Coroncr
has cnllcs, Judae Bobby Youngbl .
and one of his employeu, patrol
straeant Linda Lee Calhgan, to win
has fourth four-year term, accordma
to early election returns.
Gales. a 47-)e~r-old native of Saa
Juan Capistrano, held a command1na
lead as votes were tallied in the non-
partisan race. •
Dunng the campaign, G1te1 fo~~l
off criticisms by both YounabloOd
and Calhpn over his handlina of the
county 1111's ov~rowd1na problem
Younablood, a municipal court
Judie oo lca\lc of absence, claimed
(iate WIS mOVlnJ much tO Slowly t0
~Ive the crowdan& situation at tht
Jiii
A. federal court order hm1ts ex>
cupanc) 10 no mor<' than 1,400
inmate~. except on weekends Gal
and other county officials dmded to ~nd non-violent an mates to other Jill
fac11tues to ease the crowdlDf whi'I
lona·ranae solut10M arc slll bei
(Pleue ... 8B&llD'P' / A2) . •
I
J
0r.ng. C0at DAJLY PtlOT/ W-.CS8Y. June 4, 1
• Rep. Robttt Badhem wblcla ap h1a
.tctory •peech a t the llertd.lan Hotel In
Newport Beach after bead.lnf oft a
..................... __..
cllallen&e by Katban toeen~ for .the
Repablfoan Party•• nomtnadon In 4'0tb
Con,re.lonal Dlnrtct.
BADHAM FENDS OFF CHALLENGER ••.
From A l
publican Party 1s now unified.
"The taste of v1ctorv 1s sweet, and
1he taste of Orange County's victor)'
l'i even sweeter ..
Ro~nbe'l. 34, h11 hard and often
oo Badham s record of absenteeism
in Congress, his frequent tnps out of
the countr)' and his use of campaign
fU.nds for personal expenses.
Badham countered WJth charges
that the fonncr president of the
Oranae County Young Republicans
wcs a "carpetbagger "
.. I'm leading now because people
"'-'>fl't be fooled about an outsider and
a oarpetbagger." he said
Badham alleged tbat Rosenberg
came to the d1stnct three years aao 10
further thc polttical aims of his
brothcr Wcrner Erhard's organiza-
uon which founded the mouvat1onal
programs est and The Forum.
Hc also focused on Rosenberg's
service m Washinaton for the Carter
1dm1rustration and Democrat Senate
leader Robert Byrd
As clccuon day approached, both
candidate$ increasingly ignored the
party's "I I th Com mandment"
apinst spcalung 111 of a fellow
Republican.
Rosenberg also incurred the wrath
of party lead~rs in the coun~y who
disliked a pnmary race apmst an
incumbent.
County Republican Ctwrman
Tom Fuentes urged Rosenberg not to
run against an incumbent, sa)'lnj
''challengers arc looked upon with
enormous displeasure. Thc party
leaden arc not pleased ..
Early returns indicated Badham's ,
Democratic opponent in thc Novem-
ber general elections could be Lyndon
LaRouche disciple Art Hoffmann,
althoU&b write-in candidate BNoe
Sumner was closini in on Hoff·
mann•a lead.
Badham ored1cted many Demo-
crats would 1wttch aJlqianoe m
November rather than vote for a
leader of the controversial National
Dc.moaatic Policy Committee that
was founded by the ultra-<X>n·
scrvattvc LaRouchc.
Rather than focus on Hoffman
however, Badham said be would
stand on his five-term record.
"What I try to do in every
campaign 1s to let people know what
my record is," he said, "and I'm
proud of my record
.. Any opponent I run apiost 1n the
fall can expect me to continue to run
on my record"
Reporter Satan How1elt allo COD·
trlbated lO thll story
WRITE-IN CANDIDATE IN SLIM LEAD ••.
From Al
as returns showed Sumner catching,
then leadma Hoffmann. "We're very
excited here," sa1d Sumner campa1an
mana1er David Payne.
Sumner attnbutcd his apparent
'v ictory to mcdla attention on
LaRouchc. a d1rcct-ma1I campaign
and the help of 200 volunteers who
tariCted precincts m the d1'itnct on
election day
Ciumncr focused his cntire c•m·
pa1&n on the LaRouchc threat while
1cach1n& vote rs how to wntc 10 his
name on thc ballot.
Sumner's campaign culminated
Monday when he debated LaRouche
via satellite linkup
The former state assemblyman
quoted extensively from LaRouche
articles and speeches to demonstrate
his charge that the perennial pres1-
dcnt1al candidate is "bizarre, danger-
ous and a threat to the United States."
Sumner echoed a theme bcmg
sounded across the country by Dcmo-
crat1c Party leaders who arc incensed
by the infiltratton of the party by
LaRoucbe and tus supporters.
The former assemblyman and Su-
penor Court Judae decided to launch
his wntc-in effort at\cr Hoffman
CLERK POS,T ...
From Al
~phi Rranch was named recordcr and
~as eac;1I) re-clcctt>d to that po'>t
Tue~a)'
Gran .. 1lle )6 of Irvine, 1s a former
newsman and bu'i1ness manager. He
had worked as an e~ccut1ve assist.ant
10 ~upen 1sur Ralph < lark before ~1ng namrd to the county clerk
pos1t1on
"lloms. a 60-ycar-old resident of
Orange, had served as a court clerk for
21 years unhl Supcnor Court Judges
removed him from the pos1t1on.
ruhng that his bid for office created
"'an appearance fo 1rnpmpnety" for
the courts
ZSCHAU LEADING ...
From Al
Lagging dec1'>1,·el) were A\·
semblyman Robert Naylor econom-
ist Anhur l iffer · former Black Pan-
ther Part) mcmber Eldndge (leaver
and former Oakland Tnbune pub-
lisher Joseph Knowland
Z...Chau, 46. a S1hcon Valley O'fl·
treprencur who mounted a lav1'1h
telev1s1on adven1sina effort to over-
come a lack of name rccoan1t1on, and
Hcrschensohn, 53, a former speech
wnter for Richard Nixon, were neck
and neck ID public opinion surveys as
the polls closed
became the only candidate to file m
the 40tb Dtstnct Dcmocrattc pn-
mary.
Pany leaders said two people had
indicated they would file, but both
backed out.
Hoffmann contributed to the pcr-
c:.cption that LaRoucbc and his sup-
portcn were radically different from
party rqulars.
C~mpa.1gmng a~tr Sumner.
Hoffmann charged the Newport
Beach resident was associated with
drug traffickers and the chosen can-..
d1datc of orpmzed cnme
Hoffnunn said early today he
wasn't prepared to concede defeat or
clatm VIClOr)'
Callin& the campaign
"acnmon1ous." Hoffmann said. "I
feel sorry for the voters. The issues
weren't discussed
"I did get my main issues stated in
newspaper articles, but Sumner had
only one issue -LaRouche."
Hoffmann said even 1f he lost,
"You haven't heard the last of me I
spent SSOO on the campaign, and I
heard Sumner planned to spend
SS0,000
"What 1f I had ~pent that much?
The outcome would have been much
different."
Sumner said he hadn't thoufht
about the aeneral election campaign
yet. because he thought Republican
challenger Nathan Rosenberg might
pull an upset against Congressman
Robert Badham
"Rosenberg ran a remarkable c~m
pa1gn when you consider on March 7
he was an unknown ... Sumner said
He said he planned to wage a
vigorous campaign against Badham
in the general elections.
SHERIFF GATES WINNING HANDILY •..
From A l
OU&ht
In add111on Younsblood went so
far as to hire pnvate 10vest1gators to
look into Gatcs's rcal-esU\te holdinas
1.11 an effort to learn h6w he had
artla!>scd h1a personal wealth
In response, Gatcs said his wealth
~omea from wund investments and
pomted 10 an inv~t1gat1on into his
Pttt«>nal finances the FBI conducted
dunna his fir~t term that found no
~Honadoin&
( alhgan, a 38-ycar-old Mm1on
V1cJO resident also had accused
Gates of movina too slowly on the
Jail-crowdma issue. She and Gates
held early campa1Jll fights when the
shenff-<:oroner filed suit against
Calligan for information she
provided 1n the official votcn'
pamphlet that was "blatantly false."
The court~ agreed with Gat~ and
the information was rt'moved
~
Gates was elected shenff in 1974
after scrv1 ng 12 ~can 1 n the depart-
ment
The Job pay~ S79 019 a year
IRVINE •••
From Al
AUPERVISORS .•. ~Al
mayor directly Althouah largely a
c.c~mon11l task, voters could reserve
the na.ht to select which council
member would serve the one-year
term of mayor
The second 1iSuc was whether
council members should be hm1ted to
no more than two con'ICCut1ve terms
Currently there 1s no hm1t by Rep Robert Dornan Manual
Mendez, a 63-ycar-old architect from
ahc1m. wu the fourth candidate
Superv1~rs Bruce Ne,tande and
R<>fer Stanton arc 1n 1he mtddlc of
their four-year terrm, hav1na been re-
elected 1n 1984 They face re-election
IO I Q88
But with about half the vot.e1
counted late fuesday, the outcome of
that measure wu too dote to predict.
MAIN Of'flCE
330 ~-.. ,St Cotta U.. C.t.
M '°"'-lllo• tsec> CoJte U-. C4 t~61t
0-.. ~ ~l ,.11 --... ""°'* ... ~ &l2t
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~ PGf1-0-~H at Cot•a ...... ~
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VO 71. NO. 188
Just call 642-6086
What do you hke about the Dally Pilot' What
don't you hkt? C.11 the oumbe'r above and your
meuqc will bt recorded, tran1mbcd and de-
hvered to the appropnate ed1tor. '
Tbe 11me 24-bour 1.DSwcriaa servic:e may be
UJed to record lcnm 10 the editor on any 1opic.
Cootnbuton to our ltttct1 column must toclude
their name and telephone number for venfication
Tens ut whaf 1 on )'Ou'I' mind.
0 .. ,, Pttot o.er..,,
11 Ouatenteed
loilonoey Pt>m1 ~ rGV dO -rwr.....,.,., peo.r "r ! 3()p"' ... !lei_' p"'
anO 'fq4lt CoPY ..lit Dt .....,.,
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Cltculetkln
T1f1phon•
liforl ·•c-tr .,... ......
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Low clouds to linger on Coast ,
Uk•• btoken ...cord, night and momtna low cloudl wtll ~t todlV and TNncS•y, the National W91th« s.vtot
Uld U.S. Tempe
T.mperttui:-hight at Orange Coett bHcMa Wiil rano-
ffom the mid to UPP9' eo.. -"' lni.nd from the mkt to upper
10.. Lowa wtll be In the 50t to lower IOt
...,.. .... .,,..,. ·~ ,_..... .. ~
~.NY, 17 M ~ ,. ., .. .., .,. n
n • n " 11 p Local mount.,nt wilt be fair except for 90fM ..,.1y
morning f09 and low ctoud• ~ the lower eoutal lloJ*
Highs Wiii b9 75 to 85, lowl 4& to N . °'""'win be mottty ctMt, wtth local 9'll1Y •ttemoon and 9YeNnG wtf'!dl to 25 mph In the northern Portiona.
~.......... .. 41
Atl9tl• n ., ,...,, .. acy ., ..
Awllln ., 71 ~ ,, . ., ......
11 IO .. ..
• II . .. . .. ., . ., .,.
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Hlaha In the UPS* c1eaer11 wlll be ts to 106, IOwt eo to
70 Hlgne In the lower ~· wlll b9 102 to 1oa. !owe ., to
11.
..... . ..
... Oii .... ..,... 70 ..
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14 ..
"4 70 ... SOuthwest to welt wtnda wtll btow 10 to 18 knoll
through local waler9 thll ah«ne>on CMW aaout.hwMt SW911 of
2to3feet
~.•e 11 11 ~c ,,.,.
~ a.a a,... Tl 40 a • n • u ., Furth9t out, a amall craft advttory II potted from Point
eont.ptlon to Senta Roal lltand for nontiw.tt wind• of 30
knoll Md &-foot .... through tofflQl'tt.
CNWlillll .,. 41
~ n ·u ~.IC rt 70 ~-°"'° 11 ..
• If
C:-..NH • la DeytO!I 71 .. o.n-.. la °"'"-., u OWOll Tl 40
71 Ill 111"-17 IO .. 52 ,lllrtl .. 111• 17 »
:; 51 'W90 t2 12 "'11 ,.._.,, 74 .. II OtMCI _..,. 7l N 11 Cl3 OrMI ,... 11 17
II 67 ~o.NC 74 IO
74 IO Hamon1 • U n ., ....._. II II
11 .. HOMUu .. ,,
12 Ill ._°" If 71 II IM 11.-111'1* 71 IO M IO ..-.Miii t10 17 ., 62 ~ .... tr 42 ~City 13 10
72 M LM'ilOlll 103 11
• , 51 "'"" ,_. 71 ..
Calif. Temps
L~ 11 53
Meftlpllll .. 10 ~~ 84 IO ~ 1211 ......... ., u .,.....,....,, .. u
~ 1412
..... YorllClty II .. OllWIOfftt City 11 ..
Tides
00 u It It
.cu u
21 ••
llln ,_.too.,. 9' I 0 a.m 11'4..,.. ..
11>1 pm liloefl ,... '°*'at, t7 ILlft, ....... Ml41pm.
HBcouncil votes 5-2 to preserve
wetlands near Santa Ana River
B:y ROBERT BARK.ER
Of .. O.., .........
City Council mcmben voted S-2
Monday nia.ht lo preserve 124 acres of
wetlands on the southern coast of
Huntinaton Beach after partisans
traded anlf)' salvos before an ovcr-
flowi na crowd -0f about 270 people.
Daisy Thorpe Piccirelli, 75, owner
of about 45 acres of the disputed
wetlands adjacent to Pacific Coast
H1&hway between Beach Boulevard
and the Santa Ana R.jver, opened the
fireworks by ripping City Council
members.
"If I'm not entitled to some nahts
(to sell for rcs1dcntial uses}, I'll &Cl out
of Huntington Beach and move to
Newport Beach.
"I've had to quit payma tl.llcs.
People have told me they have a
shoulder lock on me and that the only
thing 1s to go down there with a
tommy 1un and maybe their brains
will start to ~n"Sh't said.
William Cus:tis, who has gas and oil
leases for I J 2 acres and 1s an ally of
Ptcc1rclh, took a swipe at en-
vironmentalists.
"The wetland weepers have lost a
battle apinst Signal Landmark in the
Bolsa Chica and they want to take
the1 r revenge on a 7 5-ycar-0ld woman
who's been a taxpayer for 45 years,"
he said.
Piccirelli, Curtis and Robert Lon-
don Moore Jr. of the Mills Land &
Water Co. char;:aed city officllls with
tryma to confiscate their property at
unfair pnces to preserve the area for
wildlife P.abitat and open space.
But Bill Weisman, president of llu:
Friends of the Huntinaton Beach
Wetlands environmental organiza-
tion, urged officials not succumb to
the claims.
Weisman said P1cc1rclh once
owned about 800 acres ui the city and
was allowed to develop almost all of
1 t. He said Picc1rell1, now a resident of
Mesa, Ariz., bou&ht her land 1n the
coastal area for about S40,000. He
said records show that she sold~ of
1t m 1963 to the Southern California
Edison Co. for SS72,000, sold about
38 acres to the State Department of
Transportation in 196 7 for $2
million, sold another parcel to the city
in 1974 for SI 05 000 and stands to
make another S3l0,000 on purchase
options.
Wc1spian said the state will pay her
the appraised value of about
$650,000 of her holdings of about 45
acres.
Picc1rells stands to make about $4
million for what she paid $40.000 fpr,
he said.
"They (developers) want to
squeeze every dollar out they can,
even if it means pavina over the soul \
of the city."
Mona Miller. an attorney for Bitter
Lake Properties of CO$tl Mesa that
has an option to buy Picarelli's
property, warned officials of lepl
action.
She declared the area 1s not
wetlands and uraed them not to plaoe
"patsivc reliance" on st.Ste Fish &
Game officials who made that de-
termination.
But Bob Radovich, a fishenes
bioloaist for the Fish & Game, wd
the area met wetland cntena and
could be "restored.
Those favorin& development also
argued that restoratton plans would
increase floodma danaers by remov-
ina levees. But othen araued the
wetlands would actually capture
flood waters.
The new zonina, whjch permits
seven acres for hotel development at
Beach Boulevard and Pacific Cwt
Hia.hway and 83 acres for enel'J)' use
by the Southern California Edison
Co .. now heads to the state Coastal
Comm1ss1on for approval
Mayor Robert MandJc and City
Council members Ruth Finley, Ruth
Batley, Peter Green and John
Thomas voted m favor of the rnto-
r1t1on plan. Councilmen Don
MacAlhster and Jack Kelly, who
argued in favor of property owners'
riahts. voted apmst the plan.
TEACHER FIRED IN DEATH OF BOY ...
From Al
ecke was terminated last Thursday
following an investifition by James
Chambers, Fa1rv1cw s senior special
investigator.
Sarrao said three restraining tech-
niques apparently were used May I
when Barth Pico, a resident of
Fa1rv1ew and a pupil at Gill Educa-
uon Center in Huntington Beach,
misbehaved on the bus and at school
The teacher placed a &Jove over one
of P1co's hands, allegedly put a diaper
over his hcad and taped tt to block out
visual stimuli in an effort to calm h1m
down, and rolled the boy 1n a mat
with the diaper allegedly still in place,
according to Sarrao.
The Fa1rv1ew official said It was
illegal to tape the diaper over Barth's
face, and that the mamna technique
had been discontinued at Fairview
for a year.
Sarrao said that none of the
techniques used on Barth had been
approved by asacssmenl teams or by
Fairview Executive Director Hu&Jl
Kohler.
Warnecke wu employed by Fair-
view for about ci&ht yearL She was
teaching a class ono younpters who
had behavioral problems or had
multiple handicaps.
In other devclopmenll stemmlllg
from Barth's death, the Oran~ Coun-
ty Dc~nment of Education has
begun 'a staff assessment" to study
methods and tec:hniqun desianed to
ensure the safety of the: younaatcrs.
Also, the state DevelopmentaJly
Disabled A&ency IS UfllDJ the state's
Special Education Comrn.JSsion to co-
sponsor leaislation dcalina with re-
strainina procedures in schools, wd
Executive Director Rhys Burchell.
The orpmz.ation wants the state
Department of Education to be
allowed to authorize rqulat1ons for
such rcstrain1na procedures.
Merle E. Tracy, chairman of the
Dcvclopmenw Disabilities Area
Board for Oranic Col1nty, said he is
not loolunJ for severe punishment
even thou&h he's been pressLD& for the
distnct attorney to reconsider a
deci11on not to file cbaraes.
He said he wanted it rcco1nt2ed,
however, that people can't use that
kind of "bad judament and &et away
with 1t."
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from J.C. Humphries Jewelers
Up to 40o/o off
Selected Loose Diamonds
0 40'/o off Selected
Ome1a Watch••
14K men·• S.amaster Ouartz. IMthaf 1trap
Reg $1150, Now. 090
14K men'• Deville Ouartz, 14k bend
Atg. l3000, Now 11800
14K with diamondt, 14K band, mt"'*
R9g $3650, Now '2190
\UK men'• watch, manu•I wind. IUecM atrap
. Atg s 895. HO'# • 5$5
Gentt GOldtone Seama1ter Oevl8e Ouattz
Reg • 495. Now • 217
Stt•nlael Steel Ouartz Reg $ 205, Nowt 177
Two-tona Seamesttt Quartz
AtQ s 296. How s 1n
JC
phone 548-3401 SINCE 1946
FROM OUR REGULA~TOCK
C1t C04of ewtty SllePrloe
.48 . I . 61·1 $774.00
50 . K vs 1 $910.00
.83 J VS·2 .. $1 ,238
1 00 G VS·2 .$3,700
1.19 L 81·2 .... $2,200
1 21 H . s .. 2 ..... $3,000
139 . G . 81·2 14,000
1.92 ••
BankAmertcard • M t rcard •American Express
Mon·Sat 9:30am-5:10pm • 1835 N wport Blvd.,_Costa M Courtyards •
1
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