HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-23 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1986
Abducted baby safe in hospital
Injure HB tot be leve 1 napped y da
taken by great-grandmother in Colorado
BJ ltOIBAT BAUER
_.PAUL AAClllPLEY .............
An 8-montb-old Huntinat0n Beach
boy, who alJqedly faced death after
belOl •bducted Monday from the UC
Irvine Medical CenteT, tw been
taken to the University of Colorado
Hospital, police uid today.
The infant, who suffered bleedioa
between the brain and skull, 1
condition calJed occipital subdural
bematoma, wu reported in stable
condition today in Denver.
A UCI Medical Center spokesman
previoualy had warned that the boy
could die if hia condition worsened
and he wasn't treated.
Police aaid the baby, David Ken-
nedy It., was taken to the hospital in
Colorado by a areat-sranctmothcr
Bllaa on balcony
Prince Andrew and Ilia
bride Sarah ldwed at
Backlnabam Palace
after their wed41DC. A5.
Sporta
Dick Howter, who guided
the Kanaa City Royals to
the Wotfd Serles tttle last
fall, has a malignant brain
tumor./81
INDEX
Advice and Games A9
Bulletln Board A3
Business A7
Claaalfled 86-8
Comics A10
Death Notices 88
Entertainment 85
Food C1-8
Opinion A6
Paparazzi 84
Ponce Log A3
Public Notices 88
Sports 81-3
Televlafon 85
Weather A2
who refuted to ajve any other infor-
mation. The woman bad been coo-
tacted by relatives in On.nae County.
The baby bad been taken to UCJ
Medical Center by hiJ parents after 1
family physician rouod him aufTerina
from .. suspicious ir\juries," 1 Hunt·
i~on Beach police spokeswoman
said.
At UC1, doctors observed injuries
that could have been the result of
child abuse, aaid 1pokeswoman Jo
Anne Bonkowski. Injuries included a
broken left arm, broken left lea and
multiple bruises. aa well as the
hematoma.
The baby was placed in protective
custody by Huntmgton Beach ~lice.
However, bis parents, David and
Kimberlynn Kennedy, wen: per-
mitted to visit thetr son under
Storm
causes
power
outages.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. .,..,,... .....
A rare summer thunderstorm
swept through Orange County Tues-
day night and early today, causina
power outages, touchina off minor
fires and triggering burglar alarms.
National Weather Service fore-
casters said there was a 30 percent
chance of additional rain tonight.
The fTcakish weather set oft more
serious fires elsewhere in Southern
California and caused more extens1ve
damage in Nevada, authorities said.
In Ora.nae County, the stonn kept
power company repair crews working
through the night and forced police
officers to answer bura.Jar alarms
trigered by the thunder and ljght·
ning.
A Fountain Valley police officer
said his department answered 17 such
caJls dunng a 30-minute penod
beainning at about 12:30 a.m.
Jim Kennedy. area manager for
Southern C.alifomia Edison Co .. said
20,300 customers lost power in the
Orange Coa.st area that ranges from
Seal Beach and Huntington Beach
through Fountain VaJley, Newpon
Beach, Costa Mesa and south to
Irvine and Laguna Beach.
He said the the blackouts, lasuna
varymg periods, began early Tuesday
evening and were caused by lightning
that knocked out IS trans(ormers
mounted o n uulity poles. He said
Edlson crews had restored power to
aJI but about I 00 customers by early
today.
(Pleue eee 8TOIUl/A2)
CastJe .. fiKers
get eirtension
By G. JEANE'M'E AVENT
.,.., ,... C..: 0 *411
The Irvine City Council decided Tuesday a man's
castle -however incomplete a home it is -is bis.
Faced with complettna a controversial Irvine house
with city money or 11vina the owner more time, the Oty
Councif voted unanimously to aive a Kron Street
homeowner six more months to brina his castle-like
rcsjdence into compliance with city codes.
DaYl4 Kennedy
supcrvmon in the ICCOnd floor pedj.
atric:a wins or the holpttal in Oruee. said nunina supervi90r Sue Ahearn.
A custody bearlna bad been adwd-
uled today to de1erinloe whether the
boy would be returned to bis J*-Cllll' care. Bonkowski aaid. But Monday niaht, while O.vid
K.enaedy Sr. wu vilitina hie 1e>n, a
ourwe Id\ tbe room for 1 few minutea
around 9:30 p.m. to cace f'or another
s-tient.
.. She bad walked down the hall. and
the out1e1 were alert to the protective
custody," Ahearn said. Nunea said
they didn't observe any unusual-
bebavior in the older Kennedy.
But when abe and 1 ICCOnd nu.tte
returned, the pair were aone. Tbe
hospital declined to releaao the
m1ne's name.
Hospiw aecurity offioen adrchcd
the arounds before aJertina Hunt·
iqton Beach ~lice, who ICAn:bcd
the Kennedys home on the 8000
(Pl ...... ABDOCTSD/AI) De.td Jteanedy Jr. eafe lD boepltal after abdaetloa.
................. ~ ......
Newport Center
expansion foes
launch petitions
Election sought on
300 million plan
approved by city _
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. ...., .........
A Newport Beach group that calls
it.self Gridlock bas launched a signa-
ture drive to force a cit)'Wlde election
on a $300 million expansion project
at Newpon Center.
Members of the group contend
expansion will cause a traffic niJht·
mare in Corona del Mar and sur-
roundi na areas of the bc:acb a ty.
''The people should be ~itted to
look at this and decide if they want
srowth on t.hu scale and at th11 pec:e, ..
said Ron Covington, a Corona del
Mar resident who ts opposed to the
lrvme Co.'s project.
GndJock needs to gather about
4.350 signatures by Aug. 14 to put the
issue before voters in a special
election, Deputy City Oerk lm\e
Butlerwd.
Under cny law, signatures for a
referendum must be gathered within
30 days. The Aua. 14 deadline falla
exactly a month after city officials
approved the project.
CovingtOn said about 60 peopk
bepn circulauna petJtJoDJ Sunday,
walk1na net&hborhoods and canvass.-
101 shopp1na centers.
··we're disappointed." satd
Thomas Nielsen, president of the
Irvine Co.
Members of the pup apparently
do n't m::opuz.e the community beo.
efits of the proJCICl or the toed
~ ... R .WH>itT/A2)
4 Eastern stores
join Mesa's Plaza
By TONY SAAVEDRA
OltMo.llJNll .....
spa~ m the South Coast Plaza annex
scheduled to open Nov I.
Welcom1na the new tenants at a
press conference an Manhattan was
Henry Sqenlrom, mana&ioa partner
of mall-developer CJ Segcrstrom &
Sons of Costa Mesa.
A 1'-htnlna bolt 8trlkea area In downtown Ba.atmcton
Beacla Wedne.day mom.tna, looklnC weat from the Victoria
Street brht.ae. A freak nmmer atorm 8tnlck <>ranee County,
caualn& power oatacea and 80Dle traffic problem.a.
South Coast Plaza 11 will become
home to four elite, East Coast-based
stores that have chosen Costa Mesa
for their only Southern C.ahforn1a
branches, store and mall offietal~
announced today in New York
Alcott and Andrews clothmg. the
Coach store. Scnbncr books, and
Talbots women's wear will lease a
total of 23.650 square feet of retail
The I~ llJl!ICmeot marks the first
venture for the stores to Southern
C ahfom1a and 1s consadeTCd by mall
officials to be a coup 10 att.ractin& the
businesses away from such major
(Pleue .ee 8T0Rlt8/ A2)
..... ,... .... ,._...
LB tourist turnout large
Summer art festivals draw
more visitors than in past
By LAURA MERK °' .. °""',... .....
Two weeks into Laguna Beach's summer-long an
festivals. organizers say they are secmg more v1S1tors and
making morr sales than 1n any prev1ous year.
Though traffic 1n Laguna l!I always congested dunng
summer months. the an fesuvals' crowds compound the
problem. accordma to pohce
Fonunately. there have been no ma1or traffic
problems this summer. said Sat Linda Parker
But as usual. traffic 1s snarled 1n the earl} mom mg on
Laguna Canyon Road as commuters enter Laguna Beach.
and m the evenings as the Oow he.1ds back to the San
Dieao (405) Freeway
way up and we arc !Jee1ng more and more people. We arc
very opt1mist1c 11 will 'itay this way," she saad.
The Sawdust Fesuval. JUSt inland of the Festival of
Ans. has had the· same succrss. Organizen claim lasl
Sunday was the best day m festival history
Ron Rodecker, a spokesman for the festival, said 1t
was difficult to gcnerahzr on how each md1v1dual artJst
was dmng. "There art some artists who do extremely well
and others who feel 11 1s very slow. It rcalJy depends on
who has the merchand1~ in demand." said Rodecker.
"'ho said he is doinR doublr 1he business he did last year
..\different crowd 1s vi<;1tmg the Sawdust Festival this
)Car he s~ud. "Tht buying habits seem to be cban11ng.
People are buymg more now and making middle-and
uppcr~nd purchucs ... \aid Roded.er
And at the rt-A fair. sal~ and attendcncc are wu
up accorthna to Marie 81tr1t1 ·
Haym and Fem Oanish bepn remodeling their tract
home at 4822 Kron St. tn April 1981 1n what has
aJtemately been descnbed by neiahbors as Gothic,
medieval, baroque or 1 combination of styles. Despite
complaints about its turrets and rock-studded facade.
which contrast sharply with the earthtones and shake
roofs of other homes an The Ranch nei&hborbood, the
remodclina blueprints do not violate any city ordinances.
said Bob Ston::hheim. the city'• manaaer of inspection
services. Irrine City Co90cU hu iJ.en ownera of tbJ.a
(Pleue Me CA8TLlt/A2) ••caatle" more time to flidab balldlnC.
Altho11gh no attrndance figures were avaJlable from
any of the art festival org.an11crs. each claimed greater
attendance this year
Sally Reeves. spokrswoman for tht Festn.al of Ans.
said rveryday attendance 1s increasma "An1sts' sales art
Last year 75.000 people visited the fcstJval. and
spokesman Mark lke said they arc rxettdma their
e11pectat1ons this > r
"The only pro lem "° lar wa' the ram on the fint
wcckrnd wr opened It c•u~d o;ome dama,gc to some of
the artists' work:' he said
Buckle up; death never takes a holiday
O 32 people ki led inFourth accidents,
on y three were ustng t_!teir seat belts
Most of those who dtcd on C•h-
fomia roed1 over the Fourth of July
holiday were not wcanna seat belts,
an om1nou1 S14" that more deaths can
be expected tb11 summer as motorists
cont1nuc to -snore admonitions to
buckle up, h1Jhway safety authonues
II~. 'Normally ac:cadent rates are lti&h-
tt dunna the summer months &c.-
caute you have mOft people on the
road.'' aaid Susan Cowan-Scon. in-
formation offioer for the California
H1&hway Patrol. "Not only arc Cah·
fomtans travehna. but we have tour-
ists then too "
Califom11ns tend to hH the ro.d
more than residents of other ttate'
And over the Founh. many did not
take the eltra minute to tnap thr1r
seat bclu into place.
His,hwar Patrol {omm" 1oncr
James £. Smith said that of the U
people who died an c:c1dents on ruad
patrollrd by the \HP, onl~ three wcfl' Oranae Count)' on n<1n·frttw.v
Wt'anna ~•t ~Its roads f l"C(way u~ ratr ha" htt'n
"If all the July Fourth victims had talhcd at 70 percent and higher
tx-rn buckled. man)' of them would be "We csumate that. rou~I\ thr
alive today rathrr than hav1"f.I pla~ ~at heh level hl'I doubled · ( o wan-
amona thc-holiday !tat1st1cs. ' Smith Scott said
said But Barbara 01rraro. • \t111<it1c1an
"A uS<' rate oflcss than 1-in-10 1san with tht Na11on1I c;..rety Coun 11 an
appcalhng figure, iivcn the exlcn11vr Ch1c-ao· said, of 1he first fivr stat<"\
notonety which the manadatory scat (New York New Jerwy, Nrbraska.
b(lt law ha received smoc 1t tdok M1ch1pn and Uhno1 ) to Pl'' man·
efT('l.t Jan. I," Smith added datory scat ~It law!I only Nebra!lk.a
Overall 'tatlSllC1 on the use of snl report$ a 4'1cady ancrea~ 1n u~
heh\ art mort prom1sm1 Stud1e' Usually. < amro ~1d. the ·com· conduct~ carher th1 year sho"'ml phana 1\ temporary "Aller an 1n1t11I
buckle-up rate, ranaina from 29 1ncrt1~ in \Cat heh U\llJC usaar
pcl"C'cnt in Reddin to SQ pcl"CICn dt<"lincs." $he u1d
Whtn dnvers do strap themselvc"
1n the difTertncc can b( dramatic
accord1nl to Mike Lundquist. public
affairs offictt for the C HP 1n \anta
..\na
"l'vt <;«n vehicle<; out there totaled
and no 1n1uncs brcau~ pc-ople arr
11\C•nng their seat ~Its,·· he said
Lundqu1s1 added that 50.000
people d1r 1n traffic acc1<knl\ every
)e.ar while man) of them could have
ru1ly been saved
"~ m1n1mum of 25 pel'('('nt or mort
-up to 90 pcrttnt -"'Ould have
bttn 51ved simply by buckhna up I
would tend to tartt wtth the h1Jher
liaurr ... he 'lid
LE SUE
EAR IE ST
Focus ON THE N£ws
I ook1n1 toward Labor Day,
Cowan-Scott said the CHP Will be out
1n fol"C'e "Every 1va1tabk offictr,
CVtt) I v11 l1ble petrol car WI II be ()0
the road;· ahe wd
The CHP ill bit per\1Clptl•nt ID I
nationwtdc effort to promote bi&h-
way yfel)' caJled Operation CAR.£
(C" omb ned Accidenl ReductJon Ef·
(Pl_. ... DIUVSU/ A2)
,.
Aa * ~ COMt DAILY PILOT/
ABDUCTED TOTIN COLORADO HOSPITAL •••
Prom Al
block of Slater A venue.
Apol~oftioersaid itap~ the
couple had gathered some clothes and
quickly departed.
LL Dennis Powers, commander of
the UCI Medic.al Center Police Dc-
panment, Tuesday traced a &rand-
f&thcr of the boy's mother in West-
minster and told him the aravity of
the situation. Tho srand&ther, who wasn't ident~
ified, con1aeted other .,andparents of
the couple io the Denver area, Powers
said. who .omehow got poSJCS.Slon of
the bab~ and took him to the ho$oital.
Huntinaton Beach PoJi~Sat. Mike
Relic said they do not know the
whereabouts oftbc baby's ~nts or
whet.her local officials will try to
extndjte them on felony child en·
dangermcot charaes.
Dr. Christine Taft, who treated the
child at UCI Medical Center, said
tests showed the bleed1q under the
baby's tkulJ had worsened between
Friday and Sunday. They were keep-
1na a cloec waach on him to determine
whether suraiery was RQutrcd, she
said.
She said multiple bruises on his
body indicated ho may have been
abused more than oace.
.. When the bru.ilet are new, they
are red and purple, but older bruises
turn yellow and brown," Taft said.
Kennedy's body lhowed both bods
''As a pediatrician, when I eee
bruises on 1 child, child abuse as on
my mind," she said.
Gasoline leak inspected
Membera of the Newport Beach Fire Depart-
ment'• 11.asardou material• team ancl the
Soathern California ltd.laon Company ln-
•pect an electrical equipment •ault follow-m, a 1uotlne tank leak at the Mobil Station
at Bayalde Drive and Eaat Cout HJcbway on
Tae8day. A nearby reataura.nt and the
•tatlon were cloeed until the leak between a
pump and tank were located and repaired
juat after noon.
CASTLE BUILDING TIME EXTENDED ...
From Al
City ordinances arc concerned wtth height and lot
limitations and regulations pertaining to ~fet> and
zoning, Storchhe1m said.
deadline six more months.
"They don't have anything to do with the fact that 1t'c,
differen t "
The house was. however. brought to City Council'<>
attention for violating a 1985 city ordinance that require!>
all remodeling work to be completed within one year from
the date the bu1ld10g permit was issued Charges were abo
brought against the Gan1shes for living in an unfinished
dwelfing
In the agreement, which must be signed by Fnday,
the Ganishes have agreed to complete the work in phases.
The front cit tenor must be completed m 60 days, the rear
exterior in 120 days and the side eittenor and landscapmg
IO 180 days.
"We're doing the best that can be done under the
circumstances," Mayor Larry Agran said
Gary Vanderpol, a board member of The Ranch
Homeowners Association. told lhe council, "This
agreement is \be best solution to the project."
After the deadline for completing the remodeling
passed in March of this year. the city ordered the Gan1shcs
to complete specified extenor remodeling. such as paving
a driveway. cleamg up the lot and completing window
installations. within 60dars of the council's meeting. The
Ganishes aJsoagrecd Apnl 23 not to OCCUP> \be house
dunng construC11on
However, he warned the council that they should be
prepared to take action 1f the Gan1shes miss any of the
phase deadlines.
Vanderpol said, "First of all, one has to realize that
Mr. Gan1sh has not hved up to any signed agreement. any
court order or any city code and ordinance relating lo this
pro1ect in the past (Despite a previous agreement.) he has
not completed the prOJCCt and tus family continues to live
1 n the project."
According to a staff report. the Gan1shes had not
finished the work as of June 22 Rather than spend an
estimated $127.650 to bring the house into compliance.
council members authonzed an agreement to extend the
Ganish, who did not appear at Tuesday's meeting.
was unavailable for comment today.
STORM SWEEPS THROUGH COUNTY ..•
From Al
Kenned~ said th.ti cuun1yw1de. communities and leaving others dry
about 45.000 Edison t ustomcrs lost He said a gauge al John Wayne
power because of 1hr c;torm One . Airport showed only 04 inch of ram
hghlnmg bolt th re" .\ nahe1 m at 8 a.m. today, while another gauge at
Stadium into darkne\' tor ahou1 IS the nearby Oran~e ( ounty Fa1r-
minutes dunng an \ngel<.1 ha..cball grounds showed .... 3 inch. He said
game Tucsda} n1gh1 Huntington Beach recorded 16 mch
The freak1'>h weather 1s being of ram and a Corona del Mar gauge
caused h\ a lo"' pressure system measured 08 inch
smingJU'>lofTthe\outhem Callfom1a El\ewhere in the area. an Orange
coast. said "'auonal 'Weather ~rv1ce < ounty Fire Department spokesman
meteorolog1'>t ( hn<.1 landsea said lightning that struck power poles
The \yc;tem '' puc,hmg moist air 1n the C'ypress·la Palma area caused
over the '>outhland and creating some minor fire<;
scattered thunder<;howerc; .. It I'> very Hail was reported along Crown
unusual · landsea ..aid 'v alle> Park"a' 1n Laguna Niguel.
EmmettFranklln 11.ho <;upcn1<.1es ~ome traffi( acc idents were at-
rainfall records tor Orange County, tnbuted to rain-slicked roads. Police
confirmed tht' rarm ol the '>Ummer said the wet weather ma y have been a
storm He ..aid \antd .\na retard., lac tor in a one-car accident that killed
indicate rain in Jul\ ha'> h<:en re-~antos Banolo hteban 27 of Santa
corded onl) during· ninc pre' •OU'i .\na on Tue'><la> evening. Police said
years since J 90<> h1'> car was traveling al a high speed
Franklin <;a1ll lh1c, "'<.'Ck ., \torm was when 11 '>kidded. hit a curh and
highly locall1ed. droppmg a \1grnf1-!lipped
cant amn11n1 nt mn1~111re nn '"ffi<' \ccordinp. to the ~ssoc1ated Pres\
six men were injured when a bolt of
lightning struck a tomato field near
Carlsbad, 75 mil~ southeast of Los
Angeles
The men had no outward signs of
injury after the st nke at 5 p.m.
Tuesday, but complained of pain in
the extrcm1t1es and abdomens and ~1d the) felt a 11ngling sensation
Two of the men were in satisfactory
cond1t1on at Un1vcrs1ty ofCal1forn1a.
San Diego Medical Center burn unit.
and the others were treated for what
appeared to he minor inJune'I
elsewhere
Heavy rain~ 1n northwest Nevada
on Tucsda) were blamed for an
estimated S100.000 1n damage to the
Reno a1rpon, a break 1n the Dcrb:r
Grade Dam. widespread power
outages and 'itrcet flooding in Reno
and Sparks There were no reports of
inJune'>. Paul Areblpley also con-
tributed to tbl1 story
DRIVERS WARNED: BUCKLE AND LIVE ...
From Al
fort). The program. whi ch will in-
volve h1ghwa) patrol agcnc1e'i acru'ls
the country. will conccntralc on
snagging unsafe dnvcr'i on interc,tate
routes
"If you as a < c111forn1a re'i1dent
were to get on I ntcrc,tate 5 and go to
Oregon. you 11.ould Jind the <;amt"
kind of entonrmcn1 emphaw. in
Oregon ..is yuu "'"uld 1n < ahlorn1a
and that w1 II he iruc ol all of nur
nc1ghhonng c,t•1tc\ · Cowan·~·ot1
~Id
"Our cmph..t\I\ ,1, usual 11.111 ~on
rec kle!t'> dn \l~r' drink 1ng dn \.l'r\ and
\pecder\ · 'iht· '>aul ' I 1h1nk ixoplc
MAIN OFFICE
......... A
VOL. 71. NO. 204
can ex pect '>Obnety chetk points 1n
many locauons." she added
fhe CHP repons that appro'
1matel:r half of the traffic fa talities arc
akohol-rclated
Locally, L undqu1st said the CHP
"111 attempt to reduce traflic deaths
o"cr the upcoming holiday by issuing
publll sen ice announcements to
educa te dnvers about highway hat
ard!i, such as stopping on the freewa y
'ihoulder
"One 1n I 0 of our fatal acc1dent'i
1nHllve an a1.tlomobile thal stops on
the road's shoulder,'' he said ·
"tafct~ t1p'i include U'i1ng rest arcall.
pulling off the freeway to stop and
stretch or change drivers. and plan-
ning ahead to avoid emergencies
"We advise them to check their
vt"h1cles before they leave on those
long tnps," Lundquist said.
Even a Oat tire 1s not usually worth
the nsk of stopping on tht' shoulder.
according to Lundqu1'lt "If you ha ve
a flat tire. chances art' th<' tire 1'i
ruined. ~o exi t off the nearest offramp
to change the tire:· he said.
Dnven should be less womcd
about ruining their wheel nm and
more concemcd about avo1d1ng an
acc1den1. Lundqu1'it \aid.
D•llJ Piiot
Dell very
11 Quarentffd
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Circulation
Telephonff
Summer storms continue today
U.S. Tempe °"*'9 .. 12 OrtlMO .. " H'\lr. 90 100 l'tPIS11, .... .. 11 .. ... ..._.... .. 71 1, ... ,.~, •'···~ 100
Allleny,H y ... .. =t' ....... 14 ., bm;: 100 10 ~ a IO 71 14
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l lt ~ . "~ Watm -Ct•IO....-. Al.llllllO Olly It 72 .. 74
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a..tllllCI IO " Tl.l1IM M n ,-,_ lM .. TODAY ()olllmllUa.Ohlo .. 12 WMl!lnglon.O C " 11~ IO a 20 ~Wortll ., 71 Wldllla t1 .. Loe,,,... ., .. '-'CllOW Ill pm
~ .. ., ~,. 13 a o.lend 71 IO lecond !llgll 11;22pm ...
o.n-17 IO ~...,.,... n .. n4UMOAY o..~ .. .. "9dwooCI City 19 .,
flr'lllOW 12'a.m ot 0.rdl 13 .. Extended a--io 11 ..
Oulutll 13 .. ..... 10 ., tt-&7 pm •• ::'o:r'iow El~MO .. 82 lln Diego , • 86 I 14pm a.o
NlgM llllCI motnlflg low Cloudll mnd .!:!: hn ,,encieeo 70 .. '1'le 77 IMI eun MN := at 101 pm., ,... '*benk• 74 17 -IN QOltlll ~ llllr hnt...,,,.,. 71 57 ~•&· a_m ..... ~ .. contlnl;ecl WW'rll llMy d9ye Md lllld 810C*t0ft .. 11 ,.,to .. 71
=-'--.. 12 No114A Tempweture ,..,... at lie High.. low for 24 llOun .-.0 el um 1.00 pm.
13 to beedla l"lfla II IO 76. lrMfld 75 IO 16 Apple v.., M Mooll ,._ lodey 114 ICHM p m , ...
0-~ !ow.SI lo U Vllller ,.,... '4 llHllOW t1 M Tl'>lndey at UO a.rn Ind,._~ .. Honolukl ., r. ~ ... 10 M nlglll lowe 14 110 14 llO..., 74 60 10.SSp.m
lllhop 72 SS 17 .. lnd!M8'1Q119
Jedleon,MIM. .. 13 Smog report llytN VT 10 Surf report ..._, ... 12 ,, Celllr'9 70 IO .,.._ 83 54 L.ono llMdl 71 .,
~Chy 17 10 ~ .. eo llD'"""' LMVltQM 13 73 l'c*llenl 9llandlfel .,... J::-,> ().100 Mon~ 73 M Loc.\TIOM
Uttle flodl lM Ti OOoel. 1~200 """9elttllUI NNllM Newport 8Mc:tl 71 ., Hllntlngtoft leeoll 2-3 ..
l.OUlevlle .. 73 people: 200400 unhelllhfUI !or II; Onterto " 13 .._ .i.tty, Newport 2..1 ...,
MMlj)flil ... 74 300-500 Nwlreloul. Flf91 llgut9 le l'lllm 8pt1nga .. 71 40ltt a1.-. Newport 2..1 ..
MlelN llMdl 17 19 •Oelaf:.r.::~~-~ ....... M 11 =="-P~ a.a ,... ........ IO ... cwt'• .._, P9I .._... ., •1 w ... ............ 16 .. Sln ..... Cllno t2 .. 14 ,.., ......... ., 11 .... lied! 10 MllCAl1hut 9IVO 42-25 hn o.br191 .. 11 hnCle!MnW 14 .... .... ~ t2 ,. irw.. a.ocr1uct v1111er ~ a.n .x-.. .. w..r.,... ..
NewY0111Clly .. • UigYnl ~ 42 {toreclllC) a.nu,.,... ,. eo .... dlr90llon ~
()l(W-Cllly " fl LOe ,.,.... Alrpor\ .. •• ... 42'4S hnte CNa 70 N loutll
NEWPORT CENTER EXPANSION FOUGHT •••
From Al
improvements that wtll be under-
wntten by the Irvine Co .. Neilsen
said.
The Irvine Co. intends to embellish
the circular shopping and business
center with more than 1.5 million
square feel of office towers, res-
taurants and three separate residen-
tial tracts.
As a tradeofT. the development
company will bank.roll about $40
million m road improvements.
One of the listed improvements
will be the partial constructidn of
Pelican Hills Road. a thoroughfare
that would cut through the grassy hills
south of Corona dcl Mar and could be
used as a shortcut around that
community.
The project was approved July 15
b) the Newport Beach City Council
over the ObJCClJons of some residents
and two council members, Donald
Strauss and Evelyn Hart.
"I will be really disappolllted by
people who sign a petition without
real mng what they arc jeopardizing.··
said lnuncilwoman Jackie Heather.
an advocate of the expansion.
"There's a mentality 1n this town
that likes to shut everything down. I
think it's more productive to make
things work than shut thmgs down,"
Heather said.
Heather, a former mayor, said the
project will lead to needed road
improvements and bring overdue
features such as a teen nightclub and a
day-care center.
"I sec a lot offrcc ndes on this plan
like a day-care center. expanding the
library and a bigger museum. That's
$Teat but we'll pay for It d1~tly or
indirectly." Covington said
"ll'll come out of our hides when
we start absorbing the traffic," said
Covington. who believes the road
improvements will only lead to
additional growth.
"Pelican Hill may help for a while
but in the Iona run 1t won't make a
dam bit of difference," he said.
Neilsen said the project will trans-
form Newport Center into a "true
mixed-use center" with cultural over-
Car out of control,
injures two people
Two pedestrians were injured
Tue~ay when a dnvcr lost control of
her car 1n a south county discount
store parking lot and caromed olT
numerous parked vehicles before
coming to a stop
Pan'i) Venner of Laguna Niguel
was backing out of her parking space
at the Gemco store at Ahc1a Parkway
and the San Diego Freeway when she.
stepped on the accelerator instead of
the brake. said C'ahfom1a Highwa y
Patrol Officer Tom Sollie
Venner's 1982 Buick struck Pa-
tnc1a Rya n ofM1ss1on V1e1 0 who was
walking behind her car The Buick
continued into another parked car,
which created a chain reaction wtth
an undetermined number of cars
being struck.
Ven ner, 80. then tned to put her car
1n 'park,' but instead put 1t into 'dnve'
while her foot was still on the
accelerator. Solhc said.
She struck Ryan a second time,
then ran into a Volkswagon. The VW
hit a Chrysler Le Baron JUSl as El Toro
resident David Mathers was getting
out of 1t
Mathers. 79, was pinned against
the car parked next to his LcBaron,
Solhe said.
Mathers and Ryan were both taken
to Mission Community Hospital.
Mathers was in stable conditioo and
suffered nght hip, knee and elbow
uuuncs and bruises on his baclc, said a
hospital spokesman. Ryan, 34, was
treated and released wtth a broken
nght arm and multiple cuts.
tones, an added nl&hthfe and more
homes, including affordable units.
"We think it's a balanced plan. So
did the city Plannina Comm1ss1on,
the City Council, and many cnizens
who spoke in favor of the plan,"
Neilsen said. "We're sorry the peti-
tion circulators don't agree."
Alan Beek, a member of the activist
group and an announced City Coun-
cil candidate. predicted the signature
drive will be a success.
If enouJ.h signatures are collected,
the council members would have the
option of reSCtndinJ their vote or
calhni a special election. There 1s not
enough time to place the matter on
the ballot for the November gcncra1
election.
STORES ••.
From Al
c1t1es as Los Angeles or San Diego.
Add1uonally, Ralph Lauren ex-
ecutives announced today they will
open a second Polo store at South
Coast Plaza, \be new one to be localed
in the annex across Bear Street.
The announcements follow the
Scgerstroms' tradition of courting
prominent East Coast retailers lo
venture west to South Coast Plaza.
The two-year-old Alcott and An-
drews operation 1s described by South
Coast Plaza spokeswoman Maura
Eggan as one of the hottest merchants
in women's business wear. With six
East Coast stores. the company plans
to open branches 1n San Francisco,
Chicago and Atlanta. as well as a two-
level. 12,4 77-square-foot store in
Costa Mesa.
Based in New York. the Coach
store spcc1ahzcs in leather goods and
will open a 1,083-squarc-fool branch
at South Coast Plaza II.
Scnbner books has only two stores
in the United States. The 5,350-
square-foot Costa Mesa branch will
be the third store opened by the
company. which was recently sold to
Rizzoli International book stores.
Talbots women's wear Will add a
4, 740-squarc-foot branch at South
Coast Plaza to the 87-store chain.
based in Massachusetts.
Designed • Finished • Installed
Capture the beauty of summer-enjoy control of sunllght and heat with movable
louvers • Customize your window with shutters In an endless variety of colors
and sizes
For a persons/ free estimate call: (114) Nl-MU1or5'1·1111
(21J) 551-ostU or m-1111
Lon11 -..Ch (213) 01-TSU
Visit our showroom and msnufsctory st: 1171 Pfac.nll• A~•. Cnt• Me••
t I
Philip C. Habib. a U. ambt'M(lor ind apeciaJ
presidential envoy .... m deliver a ~or lecture on di~lomatic chaUcntet ift ~U"I) and Latin America
Fnday at the Ritz Ctrltoo Hotel at Monarch Beach lil t.a&u.na Naauc.J. The 1peoch, SJ)OnlOred bY the Monarch Bc:ach
ID.ltltutol will be liven from ~ to 7:30 p.m. in the hotel bal room, preceded by a cock.WI reception at 6 p.m. Media and auesu wUf have the ~unity to
que1tion Habib durin& a 4S.minute ion follow-!n& his .remarks. Call 49S.SOS2 for additional
snfonnauon.
SIJyneu RDJbJar at OCC
A linalca aeminar entitled .. How to Start
Overcomina Social Shyness .. will be SJR*nled Aus.
2 from 10 a.m . to 12:30 p.m. in Room 113 ohbe
Counselina and Adm1111on1 BuildJn& at Oranse
Coast Colleae in Cost.a Mesa.
Social 1eientist Jobn fetJUS is the workabop
lecturer and the fee is S 12. RC111ttation is under way
in the collcae's Community Services Office or by
callina 432-S880.
CardJac tat1ng •lated
Pacifica Community Hospital in Huntjnaton
Beach wiU host a canliac risk factor testina prosram
Aus. 2 in coo~tion with the National Institute of
Cardiovascular Techool~.
The p~. which ts open to the pubhc, is
desiped to identify individuaJs at risk of bean
diseast befon: symptoms become apparent. The test
fee is $98 and testina is scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to
S p .m . and funher information is available at (800)
421-4933.
Act1ng work•llop offered
A seminar on "Acuna for the Curious -for
Fun or for Profit" will be conducted by Coastline
Community College on two consecutive Saturdays,
Aug. 2 and 9, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . at the college's
Costa Mesa Center, 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East.
Veteran actOr Mark Mcintire wilJ conduct the
program, which will explore the baJjcs of acting and
eumine career opportunibcs. A $55 fee covers both
sessions, and further information 1s available at
241-6186.
Romance author to •peak
Rebecca Czuleger, a Los Angeles author who
writes for Harlequin Books as Rebecca Bond. will be
featured at the Aue. 2 mcctJna of the OranJe County
chapter of the Romanoc Writers of Amenca.
The luncheon program wilJ bc&in at l I :30 a.m.
at the Sizzler Restaurant, 1401 N. Harbor Blvd ..
Fullerton, followed by the meeting at I p.m . Visitors
arc welcome and the $3 non-member fee does not
include lunch Call (213) 927-425 5 for details.
SketclJlng clau at GWC
The architecture and landscaping of the Golden
West Colle&e campus wtll provide the selling for a
beginning indoor-outdoor sketching program on
Saturdays, Aug. 2 and 16, froOl 10 a.m. to 4 p.m .
Professional artist Mary Ellen C reelman will
present a basic mtroducuon to drawing and
sketchmg. The fee 1s $2S and pre-registration is
required. Call 891-3991 for additional information.
CPR workshop at college
A four-hour cardao-pulmonary rcscusitat1o n
workshop will be conducted Aug. 2 at Orange Coast
C ollege for people who wish to be prepared for
unCllpccted emergenC1es.
Rcaistercd nurse Elaine Dethlefsen will con-
duct the sessio n, and the cost as $20. For funher
information on tame and locatio n. call the college at
432-5880
Wednesday, July 23
• 7 00 p.m .. Lapna Beacla Plaa.nlng Com-
m111toa. Caty Council C'hambers, 505 Fo rest Ave.
Thursday, July 24
• 6.30 p.m .. La1ua Buell Board of Adjo1t-
meDt. C'at y C'ouncal Chambers, 505 Fo rest Ave.
• 6:30 p.m., Lapaa Beacll Houln1 Committee
. Community Center, 384 Legion St.
Po ucE Loe
Disputed new plaza signal back •
Mesa council also u~es study of pedestrian
bridge which would llnk two shopping area~
BJ TONY l.U Vbll.A ........ ,... ....
~t the advice of city ,caa.iOCCt"tna
offieials. CON MCll City Couocil mem·
ben ba~e aps>r0vod tbe Installation of a
ttaftic sipal on Bear Street to ecoommo-
date future ahopptta t.ravelifta to the South
Coat Plaza eJtpu ion.
However, \be couacil •bo moved Mon·
day to form a task force that would study
the feasibility or buildloa a pedestrian
bridte from lbe penni mall to tht IMt.x
acrota a.:r Street.
The reQueti for fl'lftk lilbU provided a.a open dOor for tlM city to llain-push for an
OVtrpMI liftkiQI t.be two thoppina &rell.
Votin& .S.0, Council mtmben ciat.ed a
committee to dl\tnnine bow the bridat
should be bW.lt. TbCaroue would conliat or
Councilwom.a.n ArlcDo Schafer, who io-
itialed the tut force, and six ara
merthariU. less 1u~ was tbe proposal ror a
Ready to give opinions about youth
A 10.member Yoath Ccnmcll bu been t1elected by
the City CoancU ba 1'ewport Beach to help
coordlnate tbe atart of a teen actl'ritlee center.
Tbe recently latrodacecl panel.lat. are from left, In
top row, Pete Bryan, Carla Baffman, Anne
Pb.llllppl. Jenny Jtarrt.on, Duua Jolmaton and
Jeff Glueck. ID the fl'Ollt row are Lia I'~ Erle
Antebl.. Amy llobert8 and Je11lca Jon•.
OC'sgeneralfundranlcsNo. 6
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... D.-r ........
Orange County's government 1s the
sixth nchesl in the nation when ranked by
general fund revenue, according to a
magazme survey published this month.
Orange C'ounty has a general fund
revenue of$7 I 9.3 m1ll1on, placing at third
an Cahfomaa behand Los Angeles County
(first 1n the Unated States with a revenue o f
$4.54 balhon) and San D1cao County
(second nationally with $897.5 malhon an
revenue). said tbe 1986 ed1t1on of Caty and
State magazine.
Other areas rankmg above Oranae
County in the survey were Nassau (N.Y.).
Suffolk (N Y.) and Fairfax (Va.) counties.
The Chicago-based mapzine surveyed
90 counties throughout the nation before
ranking them according to general fund
revenue estimates for the 1986 fiscal year.
With 1ts 2.1 million residents, Oranae
County 1s the second mo st populous 1n ~
st.ate and sax th largest in the United States.
It represents 17 percent of the state's total
economy and ranks 50th when compared
to the economies of the world. the
mapzine reponcd.
Accordana to the survey, Orantt County
ranked 28th an revenue per capita, 43rd in
pro perty tax revenue per capita and 32nd
1n expenditures per capita
Much of the county's revenue came
from other governments ($36 3.6 m1lhon),
propeny taxes (S 139.8 million) and
charges for services ($93.8 m1lhon)
Amons the county's $754 I m1lho n 1n
expenditures. $267.8 mtlhon was for
public protection and $206.3 m ilhon was
allocated for public assistance.
Odom jury selection starts
FOrmer major lea uer
faces charges of selling
cocaine In May of 1985
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY
OttlleOellrNM....,
Jury sclecuon was 'iCheduled to begin
today on charges that former maJOr league
baseball player John "Bl ue Moon" Odom
sold cocaine.
Dunng prctnal mouons T uesday, at-
torneys found them selves an a classic role
reversal. Defense anorne)' Stephen De·
Sates araued the court should a llow
statements into the record that Odom
made to police dunng and after his arrest
m May of 1985 Deputy D1stn ct Attorney
Greg Pnckett opposed the move.
"l say let it all in," DcSales said after the
heanng. "I want the JUry to son II out "
Supcnor Court Judge David Brickner
said he would reserve a ruling until later m
the tnal.
Odo m was arrtsted by lrvme police after
a co-work.er at Xerox an Irvine accused
h am of selling small a mounts of cocamc.
Odo m denies the charges.
Irvine pohce, according to DcSales, told
Odom they knew he was a "nickel-and-
d1me dealer," and they wou ld let ham walk
away 1f he helped them get the "bag gu~ ..
who was suppfyan$ ham
Po hcc found a last of names m Odom's
car aod claimed 11 was a last of his dope
customers, DcSales said
But Odom explamcd he was selli ng
Avon products and the last of names,
mostly fellow Xerox employees, was of
Avon customers.
"These arc middle-age, middle-clan
people," DcSales said , "one of whom as an
a wbcclchatr."
DcSaJes said police neither recorded nor
took notes of their conversations with
Odom
Odom . who 1s launching a pa1n11 ng
businesc;, said he was an~1ou<1 to get the
tnal started
'Tm out to clear m)' name. Odom said
"There's a lo t out there tn th as world for me
and I couldn't make at 1f what they said
about me was true."
Odom said his life has been on an
upswing smce he was arrested on assault
charges last Deocmber
Dunng that inciden t, Odom -de·
pressed about being o ut of work sance
Xerox dismissed hi m followang the co-
caine arre\t -held his wife at gunpoint
and then stood off pohce for several hours
from has Fountam Valley a partment
Following the mcadent. he sought coun-
seling. The assault charges wert' dropped
and fncnds and relauves have been
helping him start his new busmess
"I fttl lake that gu)' on the spom
program the one the) show dunng •the
agony of defeat ·
Odom also is sm·ngthcncd b) has work
with children
"I love ktd'i," he '>atd 'They bnng oul
the be\t in me
County,
Navy in
accord "' I
~ ----------------.._,,,-,,---Pact extending pub ll c s
useofmilitary landm •
Mile Square approved
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. r.lr ......
The U.S. Navy bu IPeed to exaend an ..
agniemcnl allowtna the COUAty fiec UIC o( I 1
137..cre area in Male Square Part wbcR :
the Navy onoc considered buildina mili-
tary bousmi.
The Orange County Boud of Super-
visors renewed the qieement Tuelday for
use of the Navy-owned land in the
FountaJn Valley reaional pu'k. and Navy
officials are atuious to trade the propetty •
to the county for a picoc of land Where ..
military housing could be builL
"There's a desperate 11ced for adcbtJooal
housina an that area." said Navy
spokeswoman Ellyn Gallaabcr. "There are
wailina bsts for housiaa-et bcnil the ~ &
Navy bases and the Marine C.Orpt ~(air
stationsUl El Toro and Tustin) that Decid to f
be taken care ot''
Fora time, the MileSquaresiteiudfwu
cons1dercd for a hou.s.ina project, but avy
offiaals qrccd -at the urpna of cowuy •
and Fountain Valley leaders -to loot ,
elsewhere. •
..The Navy's posmon 1s that they're
more than wtllina to come u~ wtth an •
alternauve And ntbt now, they re~
for possible sites," Gallq,her said.
The Navy's 137-ICJ'C tnanp1ar pared
occupies the middle of Ml!e_ square Patt '
and once served as a Manne Corps
helicopter landin& field. The PIR is
localed on Warner Avenue between
Brookhunt and Eud.k1 l\RICU.
The county, wbJcb owns the rat of I.be
park's acraie. el\JOY5 ute of the Navy's '
area free of rent, but mainwns the
premises and protects the Navy from
hab1hty resulting from ux of the put.. •
The Navy, in tum, relalns the n,bt to
revoke the license agreement at any time
without no tice. ••
But county officials, lake the Navy, are
anxious to make a trade for the property.
Scott Mo rpn, an a1de to Supcrvilor
Roger Stanton, S&Jd owncrslup of the Site
would enable l't'Cf'eaUOn officials to do
more wu h the enurc park.
The obstacle. Morgan said, as findma an
adequate sate to swap. The Navy 11
opposed to selhn& the pro perty to the
count) since the proceeds, accordana to
Morgan. would go to the federal aovern-
ment with no guaranttt that 11 would be
o;pcnt on addauonal property for Navy
housing
Se\.cral 'illes have been considered, bu&
weft" ehmmated for vanous reasons.
"They (Nary officials) rccognazc that at"s
not an es1>«1all) valuable property to
them. but 11 1s a val uable asset to the
count} for recreational purposes," Morpn
said "The)' 're vel) walling to work
something out"
Piracy doesn't pay in NB;
pair h~ld in boat theft try
'1olen from boat tra1len 11 ·J kneed '
boatyard at McGregor Ya\hu lb31
Placcn111 A.ve . bt'tw«n Sp m f nda~ and
7 am Monda"
• • •
A black pu~ wa~ rcponed ~•olrn trom a
car 10 a prage at m the 600 block ol Da""ll
Street bc1wcrn noon and I p m Sunda)
,he "'a' shupp1n1 in f11un~1n Valle) .u tht'
( remi:o storr I 7fl'IS Brnokhu"I C\1 \he
told police 'he left th' pur~ in a \hopping
lan and found ti F.Qn~ fi,e minute\ lau~r
Thr In''....,., c\11ma1cd at SI lfl
• • •
that \Omconc pulled a newer model black
< he\fole1 ptd.up truck behind the store,
loaded copper tubing onto 11 and fkd The
loss '"a' cs11ma1ed at $300
• • •
By STEVE MARBLE
oe ... Delr,... ....
A pair o f would·be boat rustlers aot
mto hot water Tuesday when they
tried -and fa iled miserably -to
take a 6().foot Newpon Harbor toor
boat on their own pnvate, pre-<lawn
tour. Newport Beach pohce reported.
Police said o ne of tie men was
s&and1na on the dock. the other was at
the boat's helm. trying without much
success to move the boat into the
harbor.
where he was arrested w11 ho ut fun her
mc1den1. said Eisenberg
The Showboat, one of several craft
that hauls sightseers past the John
Wayne mansion and other landmarks
m the harbor. is valued at SI 00,000.
said Eisenberg.. Esllmatcs of damage
to the Showboat were unavailable.
• • •
A stereo frame and lace plate were
rcponed s1olen from 11 van 1n front of a
busmess at 2051 Newpon Blvd bctwt-cn II
p.m Monday and 9 lO am Tuc"1ay
Ho....,ever. the \tereo 1tst"lf n:m11nrd mUll"I
\omconc rcmovt·d a \Ill.. that ""a'
\('lunng 11 pansall> open "'1ndo"' lit a
home on the I SCXX) hlcx k ut \.f 1 M Ill hrll.
then rntcrcd the hOfTle '\1onJa-. 11\emoon
The 1n1n.1drr was surpnSC'J ""hrn a
l't\ldtnl returned and he nw thrnuih a
rear yard dropping a backpack lamrra'
and bt'' era1u·, 'tolen fro m the hnu'><'
• • •
.\ rt\11.knl of the 10200 block ot Slater
.\ \Cnuc rtponcd Tuctday that someone
buf'll1n1eJ hts ... hilt 1980 Chevrolet
< amuo which wa\ parked 1n his 1pan-
men1 carport The lou included 1 ... 0 \mokcd·glas~ l ·IOlK wonh S 1.000
• • •
\ re\1drn1 ot 1he 11800 block of
\\ l\lrn .. repont"d Monday \bat some11me
\IOl'C .\pnl ~8 somw~ stoic 1 Smith and
\\~\On handgun from 1 secured cloecl tn
hi\ home The lou v.as e-.11m1tcd at Sl SO
Kirk Paul. 21 .. o f Whittier and Paul
Serven11. 20. of La Habra were in the
process of backang up the howboat
from its berth at the Balboa Pavahon
when they were spotted by a passing
patrolman, police said.
"They failed to unue one of the
secunna lines," sajd police spokes-
man Howard Easenbera. "As he tned
to back up it tore up the starboard side
of the boat and nppcd a cleating from
the dock."
The frustrated skipper Jumped o ff
the Showboat and leaped onto the
T1k1 , another harbor toun na vessel.
Pohcc said they are uncertain why
anyone would try to steal such a
d1s11nct1ve craft
"I don·1 kno.,,,." said E1scnbera
"Maybe they wanted to ao mto
business for themselves"
Newport Beach
A prowler \ttO lurking ht'hmd a hou""
was rcponej.1 on 1hr 20ll0 hloc._ ut
Miramar • • •
Je~lr; \'llueJ 11 SI, U ~ 'Al\ stolrn
from a rc\ldence on the 1800 bind.. nt
Bedford
i.a,una Beach
\ l"C'CC•"'"I d r .. at the Home l lub
I hllO I 8 rookhul'\I 'll rcponed Tuc')da'
Irvine blaze battled
by 85 OC firefighters
Bantlncton Beach
A man who asked for chanae It Artm1c
Hair. 7636 Edmp:r A~. V1bbcd about
$167 from lhe cash rq11tcr TuC'Sday
afkmoon Th~ man 11mula\Cd a weapon,
but none wat 9":t\ • • • WllMsact told pohcc that five <>( l.111
men wett ftlhll"l ""Ith lire irons 1n frnnt
of the valet parluna area 11 the Rrd Onion
restaurant, 16-400 hctficCoua H1&flway,
from a residence 1n the 10000 block ot
Tbcwus There ~~ no apparent s1&n\ of
forced entry • • • A SS punc contam1na S7 1n ca~h wa\
taken from 1 1hopp1na can 1ns1de Von '' ma~et; S922 Endinacr"-ve.
lntne
A $4,500 IBM conitNtcr was 11olen
from a bus1nc on lhc 17800 block of
MatcbcU Tuesday.
Park Boul~vard. • • • Tht stereo 1n a VAY Honda ~ccord
parked on IM I "10 hlcx k of Mc<iaw
.\venue ... a, stolen • • • "S2,000toolchC'St wau1olen from 1ca1
perked on Sky Parlt 8oult'V11rd • • • The ule' from a trailer puked 11 1
cc)n,1n.1ct1on \lie on Laauna Canyon RnaJ
and Ramnca Parkwa y ~ ttokn Thry
M"l'C valued II $2.000
A bron1r I 98.C Toyota van wu t"l'ported
itokn Tuc'lday aJona the I ~tl<l block ut
South (oa\I H'lfl,..•> Thr 'chicle was ~OV\'red lakr 1n \M di) on < hO ()n,e
No 1u pcct' havt' vet bt't'n 1rrr,1rd .-.. A Mynlc trttt m1dn\1 ~poned a
buf'll•n Tuetd.ty wtth $60 cash tJken
!.... •.• Poh~ •~led urtot ti t\ynla, H . ot C~IJI M~ on \u.$j)l(10n o(dnvtng undt"r
the 1nnut'ntt o( ak'ohol A\11• WH
\lopped 11 8 SO a.m Tuctday on Nonh Coe~• H1Jhw1y al Emerald Bay
OH·r 85 tircfia,hteN from ,talion~
around the cnun•v fouaht a 15..actt
brush fire 1n lrv1ne for nearly an h our
Tur~av ~fore tl wu. co nt.aJned
lus1 aOtr 4 30 pm fircfia,htel"
wctt callrd to the South Coast <run
( luh lnl' a• the end of Jeff~y Road at
Irvine Rouk\ud
Target\ 11 the aun club are ~t up
apinst embank tn \he o~n area.
said< p1 Joe Kerr of the County Fi~
Oepanmt'nt \pparerHI) a bullet
n("(k·hcted ofl the tarset mto the
parchtd brush aanatmg tht fin', K~
smd
The K~ firrfia,hte~ wertcalled from
stauon~ 1n Tu'ittn l~1ne, M1ss1on..
V 1e10 Fl foro San C lemerttc and San
Juan ( ap\strano lmn1cally. man) oC
thr engme-1 traveled through heavy
rain and 1n San Clrmcnte throuab
hail to get to the fire, tatd Ke,,. Men
from the El Toro Manne Ba~ Fan:'
OtpanmC'n• al helPtd fiaht the fi re •
••• A resident in ahe 15000 block of
No1t1naham Ried • fraud repor&, claim1na
1tltt tomeone hu used his tclq>hoM
comp&nycrf'd11 c:arcllocall Yu v11 on
te\'tta.I occa on• • • • BwJlan entered a rea1ck 1n the
21000 block of Surfwood lhrou&h an ~n Mndow ind ttolt camcrat. a
vidoo ca tc ""'°~'·audio equipment and pM, • • • nc two diamond n
valued al Sl 000, a kl chatft valued at S I~ and a 1 ·mm twmf'l'I walUt'd at 12~
it • • t_.ahtnlft• cautt<J a brief ~wer ou t i
tM Cfauth C'oa 1 Communtty and l 1btrty
Bapim C'hurth on Bonita C'u yt'n Roed
Tuetday evtn•na. • • • Someooe stole t T pa. 10me .. httl1
and a tool bo• ttom a car perked on Muutandt PartMv. ~ .. A lawnmowct was t•n from an open
ofa llonw on AltlN • • • About $67' of tool re olcn l'rom a buli l I 7900 11 of l )
' . . A 10..~pttd. red f11cyclt' wu stoic from
Pal mat um . '--~ f ht> t.11t>r; trom a I~ Dodac per\od on
I~ Dttre Avenue was \lolen.
C09taMeea
A s I o~ MU IQ.UC'" cry 1al vue "' ~pon~ m1 1na from an untocked di"
1)11)' Cllt 11 laV!Ck', J~krs lft South
Coa t Plaza The va v.as last 1ecn
Sunda)'. • • • t f our 11m wnnh S:'ll\ ~ ttpOnl'd
'
Fountaln Valley
4 u~1ear 11 Phoen11 lndu,tnal c raf\t>n , 17071 M t. Wa,J11naton.~ntd
TuMda) mom1t\& that ~mcane had l ul a
hole 1n 1 .c-ha1n .link fen« 10 rntrr th~
propcny lntruden Jl tk"I up 1wo 1nich
and 11nlt' e1Jht tt rcs anJ "'he'f'I\ The In" w., n11matl'd 11 S l .600 • • • ~n Anaheim 1't:\11k111 trfk>ntd T~ia\
aftt>mnnn that htr purv WI\ ilolen -hilt
f 1retighter !(on \.tnchez \tramNJ
hl\ naC'k dunng the 5<l·mtnult hettle
wh\lt < ;lf'I u~r. \terihcri 1nJUrt"d ha\
knte f\<11h rncn ~ 1rea1C"d and
relea~ trom ~e<1•ern ~~1cal
f C"nter m Santa "-na •
The Oran e Coun•y heriffs ~h;
('()ptC'r v.-at u~d to au1de the am\1\0 •
firefighten who Wt'~ unf1m1har wiltr
the atta and to monitor the d1rcct1
of 1hc lirt. said Km . '"Tht Yi1ttO
qutttt •lot ofhe1p,·· he •1d ~ .
Aircraft from the Southm\ C~LI '
tnmaa Depertmcnt of Forestry -.tte
rn mute to the firr but wen: callcc(i
~ ~hen tirt was controlled,
f.i.m
Terrorist gangs
'outstrip Mafia'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Violent
narcotics deaten, street and pnson
pnp. outlaw moiorcyd1su and
Asian crimmats are becoming better
orpnized and a bigercrime threat in
California than the Mafia, says state
Attorney General John Van de
Kamp.
trade by Jivina law enforcement
qencict 1JQtcr latitude in usina elect.ro1uc surveillance equipment
and stttnathcnina penalties against
money-launderina.
ln his annual rcpon to the ICJJr
lature, Van de Kamp also smgled out
the Jewish Defense League, the White
American Bastion and the American
Liberatton Front as being among the
most active terronst groups in the
state.
If the Lqislature does oot toughen
these laws, he said, "we could easily
join Probib1bon~ra CIUcqo and
M 1ami in the early 1980s as notorious
examples of communities over-
wbdmcd by orpnizcd crime.•·
Officials said the JDL description was based on asscruons b) the FBI
that the group "m1Jht be responsible
for the bombinJ." 10 Santa Ana last
October that killed Alu Odeh, rc-
&ional director of the American-Arab
Aoti-Discriminallon Committee.
·•Toda)''• b•• money is in smual-
1 na coc11ne ..•. today's most
murderous hit men execute their
contracta from California prisons,
not Chicaao spcakcasies. ... and the
new aodfathm a.re more likely to
come from Colombia than Calabna,"
Van de Kamp said.
The mfficJd~ of illeaal narcotics
remains the nauon's biggest crimnaJ
enterprise, with California "rapidly
overta.kioa Aorida as the nauonal
center of the drug trade," be said.
In a press conference Tuesday. Van
de Kamp endorsed several bills
designed to combat the state's drug John Van de Kamp
Storms lend firemen a h&nd
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Isolated 1hunderstorms
and overcast sltics slowed a 3, 900-acre tire to manqcablc
proportions Tuesday and fircfigh1ers predicted they
would have a hne contammg the fire finished by
Wednesday evenm~.
Two other major fires in Southern California were
being mopped up by skeleton crews, and tire camps were
beina disbanded. officials said.
Although firefighters were aided by ram that fell
Tuesday afternoon and evening, the storms knocked out
power to thousands of residents and threw An!lheim
Stadium into darkness for about 15 minutes dur10g an
Anaels baseball game.
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Lightning left 20,000 Southern California Edison
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Lightning that accompanied scattered showers
Monday touched off dozens of small, isolated fires
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Crews fighting the replaining imponant blaze in the
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S. Africa curbs assailed
., .. .u..a. ... ...-
WASHINGTON -Sccrcla!Y of S&aae Oeorae P.
Shultt called on South Africa.= to tet a timei.ibfe (or
eJiminatina apartheid, but p with ~l\lf'CU not io
bind the Retpn 9dminiwation in a .. aU'litjacket of "4id
lclialauon" limed ar pu~ tbe white tniftonty
government. Shult1 told the Senate foreian Relations
Committee that • bill puecd by the Houtc callina for
complete U.S. d.iainvestment from South Africa
unounta to ••a declatatton of economic Wit" that would
"end our capacity to have any positive inftueoce on the struale for JUStJCC and human riabU in 10uthem Africa.
.. Otfter leaislatJon althouah leu extreme, would aimi·
larly weaken o ur ability to have a po1i1ive effect on ~bat
happens in South Africa." Shultt said. The testimony by
the secretary of ltlte came a day after Preiident Reapn
delivcrcduPCCCboo U.S. policytowardSoutbAfnca. In
it, Reapo denouooed apartheid. the system of kpJ
sqreption b)'. which five million whites control the
nation·s 24 million blaclcs, but refused to seek sanctions
apinst South Africa. The 1pcech drew sharp criticism in
Congress, with even Republicans 11.>1n1 fe&ialatioo to cut most American economic tics with South Africa is
now likely to pass.
Manion nomination conlJrmed
W ASHTNOTON -The Senate voted S0-49 today to
confinn President Rcapn's oontroversial nominee
Daniel Manion for a federal appellate judgeship. Vice
President Georae Bush, as president of the Senate, cast the
ue-breakina vQte. "On this vote, the ayes arc 49, the nays
arc 49," Bush said in votina. "The Senate bein& equally
divided, the vice president votes nay and the motion to
reconsider is not agned to." But Bush did not need to vote
as the tic had the effect of sustaining the Senate's earlier
confinnation of Manion. On June 26, the Senate voted
41-46 to confum Manion to a seat on~ 7th U. · Circuit
Co\lrt of Aooms io Cblcaio. But Minonty Leadtr Roben Byrd. o.W:VL who ops)osed the nomtrfatton, moved
then to m;onsidcr the vote at a later date.
Ra.Jn ea.a heat, not dro"lllJt
Rain bas ealCd 2VJ weeks of heat tn the South. bl.It
brouaht no relief from the drou&ht that'• coat f.&nJlcn at
least S800 million. and a top U .5. qnculture official Ja)"I
be will recommend speedy federal USJSWlce. More help wu oomina today from the Midwest, where fannen have
been donatina hay since the weekend ~o bt:IP feed starvint livestock in the South. Iowa pnson inmates
helped National Guardsmen load 3,600 bal~ of haY, on
three military cargo planes ~und for So~tb Carolina,
officials said. About SO Georgia cattlemen lined up early
today at the Atlanta Fanners Market for a share of the 40
tons of hay flown in Tuesday from Rockford, lll. Oouds
and rain were upectcd to keep most of the Sou~ below
100 degrees today for the second consecuuve day.
Volcker wam• of economic •tral.a
WASHINGTON -Federal Reserve Chairman
Paul Volckcr warned today of arowina .. imbalancn and
strains" in the U.S. economy and urged America's major
trading panners to do their share to keep the worldwide
recovery alive. Volcker, in bis mid·year report to
Congress, issued his strongest plea yet for Japan and the
countries of Europe to push for stronser 1ntcmal powtb
to take some of the pressure off the United States, the
driving force behind the 31/2-y~-old reco~ery. Volcker•s
testimony to the Senate Banking Committee came at a
time when the central bank 1s under renewed pressure to
loosen its credit controls to spur tbe sluagisb American
economy.
Consumer prices up;
inflation controlled Pl==:. LI Seasonally AQllS'ed
HHS? •e ot ~ftltion by WASHINGTON (A P) -Con-
sumer prices, halfway through 1986..1
arc down at an annual rate of 0 . .L
percent, their best perfonnance in
more than three decades, the govern-
ment said today. The good news came
despite a 0.5 percent increase in June.
Last month's increase, the steepest
since November, foUowcd a 0.2
percent May gaJD.
Yet, due largely to three months of
falhnJ prices earlier in the year,
inflation at tt.e retail level for all of
1986 is now expected to be 2 percent
or less.
Both gasoline and food prices rose
last month. the Labor Department
said.
Gasoline pnces, on the heels of a
2.5 percent May gain. picked up even
further, rismg 3.1 percent in June.
Analysts note that, however, by the
end of the month, pump prices had
once more turned downward.
Food prices were up a tiny 0.1
percent after a 0.4 percent increase an
the preceding month.
The year-to-date rcadmg was the
best six-month showing since a 0.4
percent drop in 1955.
Despite the June gasoline pnce
increase, overall energy costs this year
have fallen at an annual rate of 40.2
percent.
Grocery storc8.nccs declined at an
annual rate of .5 percent through
June. while restaurant meals in-
creased 4.1 percent for the same
period.
Food pnces overall for the year
have risen I percent at an annual rate.
Meanwhile, the Commerce Dc-
panment reponed that orders to U.S.
factones for "big ucket" durable
goods rose 2.1 percent in June. the
first mcrcase an four months and the
bagest advance since December.
Pef cetWage ot Monthly
Change in Consumet Prices
Sou1ce U S LaOot Oee>anment
6 JASONOJFMAMJ
85 • 86
June 85 May 86 June 86
I+ 2 11 • 2 II· s I
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the day
LqNDON (AP) -Prince Andrew
mamed rcct.baited Enalish com-
moner Sarah Fcrauson today at Wes~minster Abbey to bua1e fantarcs,
peahna bells and a nation's cbeen in a
spectacle that mustered the pomp and
glory of Britain's 920-year.old
monarchy.
To Britons. it was an invitation to
put aside their troubles for a day and
celebrate the sturdier values of their
heritage, which is anchored by
Europe's most popular and enduring
monarchy. Prince Andrew and bl.a bride, Sarah, wa•e at crowda aftt:r their weddJ.o& today.
Ferguson. dressed in a beaded
1 vory silk satin iown, and Andrew, in cess Andrew, the Duke and Duchess don to Buckinabam Palace. nickname and new utle.
full Royal Navy uniform, took their of York. The queen conferred lhe More than an hour later, the
vows in firm, self..assurcd voices. She dukedom, the usual title for a sov· newlyweds stepped onto the palace Andrew's younger brother Prince
tumbled just once, on 6nc of An· ereian's younger SOD, on Andrew 90 baJcony and shared a tender kiss Edward was best man and Prince drew's four names. minutes before the weddina. before hundreds of thousands of Charles, his older brother and heir to
Andrew, the queen's second son The couple walked down the a.isle, cheering spectators. During their the throne, read the lesson from
and fourth in line to the throne, &ently bands clasped, pausing for Sarah to brief appearance they smiled and Ephesians 3 dunng the wedding
slipped on his bride's finger a nng of curtsy to Qoeen Elizabeth JI, while waved, flanked by the queen and ceremony, which was viewed by an
gold from the same Welsh mine that Andrew bowed to his mother. The other members of the royal family estimated 300 million people world-. ·1ed b oadl b d weddi wide on television. provided the wedding ring for hls new pnnoess snu r y to er an ng party.
grandmother in 1923. mother-in-law. Andrew and Sarah reportedly were Queen Elizabeth watched proudly
" ( pronounce that they be man and Church bells chimed as the new· to jct to Po.rtuaal's Azores islands in in a seat Just behind the couple. Kilted
wife together;• the Archbishop of lywed,s, both 26, approached the the Atlanuc fatcr today for their Scottish nobles, military men in red
Canterbury, the Most Rev. Robert door,andabugechecrwentupasthey honeymoon. tunics, lords and ladies in suits and
R uncie, told the kneclin_1_ couple at emerged from the abbey and waved to The London Standard, the only bl':'e dres~s? first lady Nancy Reagan,
I I .SO a.m. (3:50 a.m. PDT). the crowds. They mounted an open afternoon newspaper here, headlined Pnme M101ster Margaret Thatcher
Then, with only their close rela· carria&e -Andrew helped bis bride its story on the wedding with the and pop star Elton John were among
t1ves present, they signed the register aathcr up her 17'h·foot train -and banner: ··Enter Fcrgie, Duchess of some 2,000 invited guests in the
and legally became Prince and Prin-made a triumphal ride through ~D· York." a reference to bride's abbey. ,-----------:--=::-----------,----------------------------.....:.---------------------
Newsman
expelled
by China
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();Mge COMt OAILV PflOT ~ • .My 23, 1NI * Al
Plane alep t
to Libya bared
Five Californians,
2 Libyans named
in 50 million deal
ATLANTA (AP) -Five Cali-
fornians and two Libyans have been
indicted iD a SSO million IChcme '°
tell two Lockheed transport planes
and spare parts to Libya. a federal
pt'OlleQltor •id today.
The chief or Libyan armed rorces,
Gen. Abu Bala Younes Jaber, wa1
named 11 ao unindicted co-con-
q>irator io the indictment unsealed
today, said actin& U.S. Attorney Steve
Cowen. Jaber was not indicted be-
cause U.S. officials did 001 believe
they could brina him to tnaI. he said.
U.S. policy for1>ldt the delivery of
American aircraft to Libya.
Indicted were Edward J. Elkins.
David E. Baskett and Thomas J.
Burnham, all of Santa Maria; Frank-
lin D.R. Corcoran of Pismo Beach;
Carl D. Lilly of California. whose
hometown was not available~ and
Abdulraheem M. Badir and Abdur-
rahmcn M. Badi, both Libyan na-
tionals.
Cowen said Elk.ins., Baskett and
Burnham were expected to SUtTender
today to federal authonlles in Cah-
forrua. Corcoran was arrested Tues-
day in California and was released on
$1 million bond; Lilly was arrested
Tuesday in Hawaii and faced a
hearioa there today, be said.
The Libyans ate believed lO be in
Europe. Md U omcw. will let:lt '° extradite lbetA. Ille ..sded. 1'bey ..... , die ,.... from
Lockheed. ud they Mft flown from
Marietta lO Newfoundland to f l'aDCC
to Ben n and tbess 10 libya." C&#ell llid. •
CoWen llid earlkr t.bat the indict·
meot alJo names three Califontia..
baled compuia ud two Wea
German firms that cla.i med they were aoioa '° UIC the [,I 00 IU"Cnft for oil exploration in the West African
COUntl')' or Benin.
The four~ propjet ol&Des are
the civilian vmion CJf the · C 130
nuliW')' 2 plane and bave been built at lbeed...Qecqia's olant in
suburban Marlena since 19S3.
The indictment coo'tellds that
Libya bad planned to conven the
aircraft into KC 130 tanhrs, which
can refuel planet in the air.
Cowen said t.be indictment was
banded up in Atlanta becaute Loek·
beed-Georsia built the planes in the
area and tbe indictment a1kles aome
of the defendants dealt with Lock·
heed officials in or near AtlaJ>l&.
The government of Col. Moemmar
Gadbafi paid $42 million for eia:ht
C· 130 carao planes in 1972. but in the
eroding relationship between Libya
and the U ni1Cd States, lhe St.ate
Department denied an export liocnse.
The Cllbt planes ate &in.in& outside
the Lociheed oJarn .. in the JKX!f.
horrible shape they have been in for
I 0 years." Ma.rt.in said.
The planes were to be the second of
two squadrons aold to Libya. The first
squadron wudelivettd in 1971.
Fo.lding Bike
Perfect for
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folds to o <-.poet i O" • l I" 1121' 21 lbs. .
PEKJNG(AP)-NewYorkTimes .,.,,,,.,, "1-3239
reporter John Bums was expelled '1".95 SEAWITCH
from China today after being accused 2 Mo4eh ,. by thegovemmcntofphMog.raphi·h~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~N~T~E~R~N~A~T~IO~N~A~L~ class1fied objects 1n a restricted mili-
tary zone. He dismissed the accusa-
tions as nonsense.
Bums, 41 , was taken this morning
from the barred, padded cell where he
had been held for six days without
charge, and put aboard a CAAC state
airlines flight for Hong Kong, said
Times Executive Editor A.M. Rose-
nthal.
The allegations apmst Bums, a
Bnton. arose from a motorcycle i.
be made earlier this month throu
restricted rca:ions of central China. c
was accompanied by an American
attorney, who since has left China.
and a Chinese man whose where-
abouts arc unknown.
A statement issued in Pelcing by
Public Security Bureau officer Xu
Hut said Bums and his two compa-
nions "broke into a m1htarily restric-
ted zone of our country. and took
numerous photographs of classified
ob'ects." ~'Such demeanor obviously con-
'ititutes an act of spying and m-
tel hgence gathenng which wtll not be
tolerated by any sovereign state." the
\tatement said.
It did not specify what objects
Bums allegedly photographed. The
statement said Chinese authorities
acted with utmost restraint to avoid
harming U.S.-Ounese relations.
Upon arrival in Hong Kong, Bums
said the accusations were baseless
Hassan, Peres
conclude talks
RABAT, Morocco (AP) -Kmg
Hassan II and Prime MintSter
Shimon Peres held their second day
of talks today on breaking the
impasse in MiddJc East peace ncgo-
t1at1ons, and Western diplomats said
the talks would end today.
Peres.I-the first Israeli pnme mm1s-
ter to orncial~vtslt an Arab country
other than t, arranged to fl y
home late this a emoon. accord mg to
Western diplomats who spoke on
condition of anonymity.
The palace refused to comment on
the talks. but the official news agency.
\1aghreb Arabe Presse, said the king
would make a televised nationwide
address later today.
Peres and Hassan have not emerg-
t'd from the kli\g's retreat at lfrane.
125 miles east of Rabat, since the
lsraeh prime minister arrived Mon-
day night.
British official
in South Africa
JOHANNFSBURG (AP) -Brit-
ish Foreign ~tary Sir Geoffrey
Howe met today with President P. vi.
Botha in hopes of cnOOUf'lllf\4 black·
h1te talks on cndma aparthC1d. .
owcver, he was rebuffed by black
lea rs who accused tum of trying to
buy time for South Afnca's white
lea crs.
Howe said upon amval that h~
hoped to encourage neaouat1ons that
would "produce answers acocptable
to all South Afncans " ·
"The concern 1s apartheid. and the
n~ for it to ,;ve way rapidly.
without further V10lcnce. to • aenu-
mcly representative and non-racial
community, .. he told reporters at Jan
Smuts Airport. ·
The aovcmment Bureau for lnfor·
mation, meenwbile, 111d today that
''~ bl were ki11ed by other blacks
1n flahtina Tuttday
Samantha doesn't know it
yet , but she's depending ori yo u.
Actually, she's depending on all
of us to brighten her future by
providing a dependable source
·of reasonably priced electricity.
To meet the challenge. we
at Southern California Edi.son
want to remind our customers
about the importance of using
energy wisely.
Last year we helped more
than 160,000 cu.stomers find ways
to save ·on their electric bills .
This year wea like to help
you. For infonnation about our
•
free Home Energy Sun eys and
other energy and money saving
programs, call Edison 's Conser·
vation Action Line toll-free at
1-800-952 · 5062.
By using energy wisely.
we can n1ake things better for
'
Samantha and all the other
Samanthas to con1e
Thanks for your help
Together we can brighten
th e future .
.,.r'&"I
Southern Caltforrna· Edison
Orange Coat OAJLY PILOT/ Wldneeday. July 23. 1088
What Los Angeles ts today -a polyglot of races and ethnic culture
ts what Calif om ta w1ll almost certaJnly be tomorrow·
Kids absorb
the extra cost of
extracurriculars
You've got to be willing to pay the price to be a star
athlete or a tremendous tuba player or a champion
cheerleader.
The Irvine Unified School District last week voted
to charge members of the pep squad, drill team and
marching band $25 in bus fare to get to a season's worth
of events. If a kid is multi-talented, or multi-faceted or,
heaven forbid, just plain dedicated, the fee goes up $25
for each additional sport or activity.
The trustees already laid this tariff on student
athletes. Now, like their colleagues on school boards in
Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach, they have decided
it is more fair to be unfair to everyone.
In a perversely logical sort of a way, it makes sense.
The trustees, It seems, don't think it's enough that
these kids spend hour upon hour of their own time
learning the skills and maneuvers they wi ll demonstrate
as representatives of the district in interscholastic
competition.
Rather than applaud these yo ungsters for their
motivation, their ambition, their school spirit and their
energy, the trustees have decided to tax them for carrying
their school's name onto the playing fields and into the
gyms.
The activities in which these students participate
are not sponsored solely for their enjoyment. Rather,
the> are extensions of the school as a small society where
young people learn about life. They are an important
pan of the overall learning and socializing process we
call education. Sports, like an and music and drama and
trigonometry and student council, are all part of it.
The kids who participate and the kids who watch
gain a sense of themselves as members of a community.
A public education system should be structured so
each child is exposed to a broad spectrum of experiences.
lfhe or she chooses to acuvely participate in football , for
example, he shouldn't be charged a fee while other
students select activites that carry no pnce tag.
Jt is the responsibility of the trustees to provide an
environment of educational opportun1t1es. The school
should be approached as a set of equal opportunities for
all students. not hke a toll road.
Op1n1ons expressed 1n this space are those of the Daily Pilot Other views
expressed on ll'us page are those of their authors and artists Reader
comment is invited The Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626 Phone
642·6086
Quality police protection
calls for quality salaries
To the Editor
"" a resident and pm ate bu\1· ncs~man in C osla \frsa. I am 'er.
much concerned about the quallt) ol
our police protection I fel·I . w~ I'm
sure \.Ou must. that current!\ v.e ha\e
an o~tstanding police <kpanment
I undero;tand the pa\. and benefit,
the-;e fine men and women prc'>l·ntl~
\"Or~ for 1s not u1mpct1lt\e 1n the
< )rangi.' ( oun1-,, Jllh mar kct
Thi' hnng' 111 mind many que,.
t1on\ hrc,t \\h\ ha\ th!\ O{i.Urrcd"
Thi<. lit' I\ om· o l the mo\t prosper·
(1U\ c1t1c' in Orange Count\ 1 To
cnmp rn p;i' .rnd hcnl'lit' 111 our fire
,1nl.l poli1:<'" <1 d1<.c.cr\ llt' to thL ent1n·
commun1h M~ second question·~\\ hat are )OU
going lo do about 11·• Arc } ou going to
sa)' "The city cannot afford it'' .. I hope
not1 ) ou cannot afford to'
I think the pa} and henelil package
our police are asking for 1<, n·asonable
and ne<'ded
I kno"' I'm not tht· onl) re<;1dent
and/or hustnes\man of ( osta Mesa
that feels this wa>
) 11ur wpporl 1s JpprN 1a1ecJ h)' all
uf U\
"IC " & l I\\ FOOERA
Proprrttor\ "'"ks Italian
I )(·11 and Restaurant
< o<;ta "'1esa
(
~ / I
)
-~=-O•tl H-o A,....tca IJftCllCllot 1•
Nuclear explosion in space
could pu~l plug on network
Multi-billion dollar satellite systems
could be crippled by tests, accidents
WASHINGTON -Pentagon ot-
fic1als have yet another nightmare.
and n's no ptpe dream: A nuclear
ewlos1on in space could cripple the
multibilhon-dollar commercial satel·
lite network the military uses for 1ts
worldwide commun1cat1ons.
The nuclear explosion could be
1nten11onal -a test by some aspmng
member of the "nuclear club .. -or
accidental. as the malfunction of a
nuclear generator used to powrr a
reconnaissance satellite Or •l could
be a d<'hbcrate "accident" staged by
the Soviets. who agreed wnh the
United Citates in 1963 to stop above-
ground nuclear testing after a number
of satellites were damaged.
Oeta1l~ of the Pentagon'!> concern
are spelled out in an internal Defense
Communications Agency study com·
pleted three }'Cars ago. Our associate
Donald Goldberg obta1n<'d a cop)
"There ex 1sts toda} a 'Cf) real
concern that the current generation of
l0mmerc1al satellites with their e'<·
ten~1,e use of <>ohd ~late devices (1s)
s1gmficantly more -;uscepuble than
thr 'Early Bird ··· the report states
The reference was to satellites
launched in the late I Q50s and earl}
1960<> that used vacuum tubes l he
newer. solid '>late equi pment 1'i be·
heved to be much more vulnerabk to
the electromagnc11c pulse em11led h\-
a nuclear blast
·compoundi ng this 1ncrea~cd
suscep11b1hl} .. the report continues.
"1s an unstablt: s!obal en' 1ronment
wherein a prohferat1on of Third
World power'> ha.,,e. or are well on
their wa} to having, the capability to
test a nuclear device in space. The~
countnc\ :!re not constrained by the
currcnt nuclear test ban agreements."
The report then warns bluntly·
"Such a te~t. whether intended to do
so or not, could deliver a dec1s1ve
blow to our commerctal satellite
assets. severely or totally disrupting
our national telecommun1cat1ons
system."
Af!y adversary with the ncceo;sary
liftoff power could stage an apparent
nuclear accident. "This threat
pertains to any device tested in low
Earth orbit by a Third World country
or intentionally b) th e Soviet 1Jn1on
10 test the sun 1vab1lity and en-
durance of our com mercial o;atelhte
sef\ ices." the report stale!> "An
·accidental' nuclear <'vent might be
associated with the d1sintegra11on ot a
rad101sotopic thermoelectric: gener-
ator used as a pnme power source on
an operauonal reconnaissance: satel·
lite."
Another threat would be a high ·
altitude explo!>1on near the
"geosynchronous" orbits used h>
most commun1cat1ons o;atell1tc~.
Traveling at the same speed a'i the
Earth's rotauon the satellites appear
10 hover ov<'r one spot
"Such an event could conce1vahl}
be called accidental and a singular
event... the report states, adding
ominously: "Its consequences "'ould
b<.' devastating .... Such an event
would, could, possibly destro" the
entire fleet (of satellites) if the event
was positioned near the center of the
commercial satellite orbital an ..
A Pentagon task force considered
three approaches to the problem -
and discarded them a~ either too
cxpensl\e or meffecu'e
• Wa11 for the worst to happen and
replace the damaged satellites But
replacement could cost $5 billion and
would take five to I 0 years
•Store spare satelli tes 1n orbit.
read; to turn on But these. too.
would be vulnerable while waiting 1n
JACK
ANDERSON
and JOSEPH SPEAR
the bullpen
•Launch a fully protected military
satellite system of three $100 million
satellues But they would be "neither
affordable nor survivable.··
The stud\ 's final recomm<'ndat1on
was Ob\ 1ous. 1f vague "Harden ..
future commercial satellites wllh
bu1IHn protection against nuclear
effects. What this protection would
com1st of. and who would pa) for 11.
are ;cl to be determined.
PA YDA y Bl UES: No one JOIOS
the armed services expecting to get
nch. But a recent wngrernonal rcpon
shows JUSt how wretched military pay
1s compared to civilian )Obs. For
example. even factonng 1n all the
m1htaT) benefits (housing, meals.
health car<' etc ). a c1 v1han air traffic
controller sllll makes about SI 1.000 a
year more than a military technician
doing the same work A c1v1han
aircraft mechanic make~ about
$14.000 more
CONFIDENTIAL FILE: Bulgaria.
trad1t1onally the most loyal of the
Soviet sa tellite\, seems to be man·
aging m economy better than the
teacher . .\ccord1ng to State Depart-
ment sources. the stores are well
stcxked and the econom) 1s doing
n1ceh The Kremlin ·~ recent
crackdo"' n "'a<,n't out of Jealousy.
though. the \o .. 1ets are upset that
Bulgana e'ports infcnor goods to thc
Soviet Union, savmg its classiest
exports for the West. which pays with
hard currency.
Jack Aader1oa aad Jo1epb Spe•r art
syadlcated colomal11s
There's a lot to stomach
New freeways won't solve issue h b 11 h • g st t :;~~~.;d;:~:'""' '"'"Wellman ~~.:;' • .'~~:~,~·;~~ .~~dh~.~'::.ir·,~~-w. en e yac JD I :arc~
ll>ail) Pilot. Jul\ I IJ c,uggec;ts that veningm1ll1<>0\ofopen\paceacreagc C 11 it t bd b 11 b ' rrn 1ronmentalt\tHan't hlock gr0\1.-lh into housing plot\ Wellman doesn't a UffiffiY •a Omen Or e Y • Ut Space
tn <;lOpp1ng lreeV•iJ\~ c;eem (O ~arc fl.no'W Or understand between ribs and hips usually waisted space \top there <rnd he 'nght, in a v.a y that trall1c rnng1·,t1on 1<, cau~d b\ '
ANN
WEUS
"le .. ~·. Hut tr\1ng 10 prO\t' hi'> point h<' gro\\th
1gn11rt•\ the real trilllil villain<, l1mll1 ng lrcev.a~s can L ut do\\ n on
further he c;a\<. a growth ratt• nt SO traflk But not Jlone Pair 1t "'1th
f'l'TlCn t lan he e·qxcted I \J\ 100 growth rc\tm·t1on\ h)' lit\ offi11alc,
fK'rccn t He's right again 1n av.a\ and tounl) 'ur<·rv l\Or\ and ~ou ,e
~ In hi\ argument tor more lrteway<. got something E:xamplc Irvine
tw c,ecm<. rnnfused He sa" frt·ewa'.vs -.otcrs recent h o.,.erwhclm1ngl)
\\OU lcl ha\r ht•en t hcapcr 10 C10\ lhO\C slow groYith Other nttes too
llrown'o; time Al<1<1 l'H'r\lhing ef.,c It's a defin11t· trc•nd Even ~en.
I 1kc h1cyclcs madl' ol paf)Cr I ~anan) Bcrgc,on 1n her .\pril 21
'lo Mr W<:llm.1n " off on the anal}SI~ adm11' pcopk ma'f he
"rong trn ck T raffa '"' ltc d1rcc1h dl \low to catch on hut the\ ·re not
the Orange ( ount) ~upcrv1<;onal stupid
r11c;trum ~om \ie"' frecwa"' "'nn·t
nit 11 ) ou don t rub sah c: on a \ore
l()\lf .\l EX.\"DfR
Laguna Beach
Amburgey ls 'first' again
To the Editor
I noticed tn your Juh I ~ tht· lrun t
page story concerning our 11ixom1n1t
C O'ita Meu City ( ount II t•lct t1ono; a
~1r 0r\ Ille Amhur1tr>' "the: liro;t onr
111 file and he reu•1vc<1 h" r•~ ture 1n
the paixr
'-" h;tt "intereo;llng lo me" 1h.11 ht•
I\ not uni) th<' fi~t one to tilt'. hut \Ir
lf.!M 11..ir r < ll\$ T
Daily Pilat
"111uurgc) 1s al\o the 111 \l one to
"1olate our Costa Mesa elewon code·
h\' po\ttng his ~•ans up and down
\anta .\na !\venue and on the lawn~
of now-decea~d Will Jordan'o; hou<,('
\\here his wife \11ll h"e\·and al<;o on
the la"' n of forrn<'r c1t\ rnunc:1lmnn
la~ k H.1mmett m•c Kn '»tt 'w
( ()Ci Ul \If(' ..a
Karen Wittmer
ft•nlr llnl
E<lilO•
Tom Tell
'~M1i.o•no EcNc.r
Don Fenle'f
C. I~ (d•IO•
Tom Clanin
N-\ (d•IO•
Craig ahelf
"""''' [d•lt>t
AotMrt Cltf'llrtll
PrnducllOl' ()r-c ror
farrJ IC•ncfte
C••CulAllO•! MtnilQ r
Howatd Mvteftnwy
Ar.IVil<l•'ltnQ Ooreclor
.... 9, ... ri(t. C••n•l•flld O•r..C:10•
,
r umm). stomach. belly. abdomen
-v.hat }'OU call that area between
\our nh\ and }Our hips depend'> on
\Our age.~'· profession.
T umm) 1s a child's word. Babic-;
ha"e lumm1c~ -usuall}' full of milk
Children ha"e tummies; tummy
ache'>. tummtc'> that c;hck out, tum'.
m1e' '>0 full tht·} rnn't cat another bile
of their dinner -until dessert com cc;
around
Teenagers have outgrown tumm1c\
and do not ha"c 'ilomachs either
The> depos11 vast quantities or lood
\omev.hcre in lh<' seneral area. but 11
nc' er \how,. and 11 muc;t be replen-
1\hed lrcquently
) oung adults look down on ixople
who have \lo.machs. When they pa\s
\omcone with a nicely rounded
paunch. they 1ns11nct1vely suck them1
1n. their nostnls flare 'lh&htly and the
com en of their mouths turn down
That's becau~ the) can keep
$tomachs flat w11h hnl<' <'ffort. no
matter what the) eat
Models have no stomachs at all -
1u'lt a hollow pla<:e 1n the area betwec-n
d1aphram and 1)(1\1\
R1k1nis were designed for people
wnhout ~tomachs. Unfonunatcly,
word didn't g<'t around in time and u
num~r of people who do not Qualify
arr wearing th<'m
Stomach~ can be full. empty. and
hurtma. They can ~ pumped,
thumped, and ,.rayed Stomachs can
have b\ltterfhes. do flip-flops and
arowl -often 10 church or dunna the
bleu1na at mealtime.
Tummies can be lucked. tickled
t,nd patted Tummies fall into the
·cute" category A.dull women often
revcn 10 the word "tummy.. It
sound\ more genteel and 1mphe\ a
temporary cond1t1on
Belts do not necessarily define the
border of this area. Some stomachs
usually classified as bellies. bulge out
and hang over -way over -a belt
Others divide themselves equally
above and below the hclt. Th15 1s why
belt manufacturers put so many holes
in each belt reprdlcs\ of th<' s11e
stamped on the inside.
The man who has a beer belly
usually isn't concerned His w1f<' 1s
concerned. bul that's her problem A'i
long as she keeps the rtfnger.ttor
stocked With beer. he's not going to
give her any trouble
Prthe time people reach 40. th<')
are beginning to be con~1ou~ of this
pnrt of their anatomy Some ~1gn up
for fitnc'is classes. or exC'rc1sc at
home Most ~o on 3 diet. or talk about
going on a diet
Too man}' people, of both sc:<e~.
gnr up completel y lr)tng to maintain
a Oat front when thC'y reach the age of
60 and beyond Som<' wtll say, "wh)
hother''" They feel they ha ve earned
'~
I
'~
the nght to let go. Others will imply
th<'y have quite an investment tn that
front -gourmet cuisine is expensive.
Phys1c1ans refer to 1h1s area as
abdomens. When yo u go to the doctor
and complain of a stomachache, he
wtll wnte "abdominal pain .. on your
tccord. Your pain could be from your
stomach. appendix <:>r intestines. large
and small. "Abdominal pain" gives
him an out
Doctors come both With and
without '>tomach~ We are all familiar
with the doctor who peers over his
own bay window and tells us we must
lo~ weight.
Walking around behind a big
stomach 1~ noth1na to worry about or
be ashamed of -1f you are at lea\!
~'"en months pregnant
Col•m•/11 AD1' W~ll• I/vu Jo
LllPJI• Nlpt'I.
Pllot welcomes comments
The Dally Piiot welcomes your opinions on matters of
public Interest.
Letters and longer articles of commentary must be algned.
They should be typed or clearly written and tent to LETIERS to
the EDITOR, Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA
92826.
Pleaae Include your address and telephone number so
that we may verify authorship.
lflou prefer to mak'e a verbal statement, you may call our
WE'R LISTENING telephone number -642-6086 -and
leave a recorded message. Pleaae keep the:H meas.ages brief.
~
!..=...------------------------------------.-.. ...... ----~.....-..,,;;,... ......... ___ ~~~----------~~~~~~~~~~~--~--l
DA.llfWALTSU
Col••nlat
DAN
WALTERS·
LA:Miz
of race,
politics
Alatorre redistrlcttn
plan ma nifies pli ht
ofmfnor1ties in state
SACRAMENTO -As California
evolves into a more pronounced
multiracial society, its politics seem
destined to take on a more overtly
racial tone.
Inevitably, the soc10econom1ccon-
fl1cts oft he larger society are reflected
10 politics, and as they are, poUtics
wtll shed 1ts veneef' of colorblind
egalitanan1sm. Competing ethnic
groups will stnve for b1~er pieces of
the pie and will use poht1cs to achieve
their goals.
Clues to the essenttally rac1aJ
nature of statewide poliucs an 21st·
century California arc to be found
todar in the politics of local com-
mu nities, most notably Los Angeles.
What Los Angeles is today - a
polyglot of races and ethnic cuhurcs
-1s what California will almost
ceruunly ~tomorrow.
But, as with Ca!Jfom1a generally,
the ethnic diversity of Los Angeles'
populallon has not been reflected in
tts pohucal makeup.
Hispanics arc the city's largest
ethnic group, but until last year, there
was not a s1n~le Hispanic among the
15 ctty council members. There were
12 Anglos and three blacks on the
counc1f
Michael Woo, a Chinese-Amencan
and a former aide to state Senate
President Pro Tern David Robeni.
became the council's first Asian
member -thanks to the efforts of a
broad coalition of Asian groups on his
behalf -and a few months later, he
was Joined by the first H1span1c in a
generation, ex-Assemblyman R1ch-
ard Alatorre.
Almost 1mmed1ately, Alatorre was
given the job of redrawmg Cit)
Council district bouodanes because
the City was under fire from the U S
Department of Justice for 11s low
H1span1c representation.
Alatorre who redrew state legJslat·
•"e d1<;tnct~ as chairman of the
Assembly Elections and Reappor·
l1onment Committee. wanl<'d to
create an add111onal Hispanic ~al.
It soon be~me apparent 1hat
Woo's seat was most vulnerable
because h1'i political base \\as the
weake-;t
lncrea<;1ng the size of th<' council
was rejected, because it would havr
diluted the power of ind1v1dual
members.
Cutting into the Ang.lo power on
lhe council also was forbidden
\nglos. after all, still hold the real
economic and political power of the
city. even though they are numen-
cally in the minonty.
On a strictly numerical ham,
blacks were overrepresented on the
council, but eliminating a black scat
would have caused mort poht1cal and
legal prohlem~ than 1t would have
!>Olved
That left Woo. whose m1dc1ty
d1stnc1 doc<1n't contain a larJe bloc of
Asian voter. but 1s a mixture of
H1span1cs. Asians, gays. and others.
none of which 1s dominant.
Alatorre's rcd1Stnct1ng committee
went through the charade ofheanngs.
but Alatorre himself designed the
plan. and true to the onginal md1ca·
lions, II would create the new His-
panic seat out of Woo's temtory
while prescrvmg the power bases of
all other members
That ensures the Alatorre plan
enough votes to pass when 1t comes
before the City C'ounc1l th1s week.
But the story doesn't end there
Woo has called on bis old bon,
St'nate President Pro Tem Roberti,
for help, and a source close to Roberti
said "he hit the roof' when he learned
that protege Woo was to be sacnficed.
The area in quesuon also 1s Robcrt1's
turf
Roberti has been burning up the
phone wire~ w11h city councilmen
and othen 1n an efTon to derail the
Alatorre plan.
There were wme indication~ th.at
Alatorre, a onetime lieutenant to
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown
might call in his own muscle from the ~peakcl"s office to counteract Rob-
ert1's efTons, but so far that apparent-
ly has not been needed. Had tflc C1tl
Council red1stnctina adversely a •
fectcd one of the black councilmen
Brown's intervention would have
~n a v1nual ccnainty
The all-but~ram City \ounc1I
approval of Alatom's plan afT«ts
1t1ll another major poht1cal fiaurc,
los n,aeles Mayor Tom Bradley,
who IS running for &Overnor •ltlln.
Bradley 1s black. but has avoid~
overtly racial themes and i"ue tn his
campa1an' for both C'lty and statewide
offict' He 1s, neverthelm, bt'ma
drawn into thi' racial ~uabble be· cau~ any red1stnctm1 ordman~
would have to have h1' sipature 10
take cffttt.
It's n<>-wm situation for Bra.die),
althouah the path of least pohttcaJ resistan~ would eeem to be to tan
the Ala&orrc olan.
Ou Wallen IJ • 1f8dkatd
col1mol11.
Mission Viejo celebrating
devel9pment' s 20th year
8)' nM BAmCOCK
........ Cc;; 0 •a I
. ~iad~~msdon't happtn ovem11)lt. In lhccase of the
M1 s1on VteJO community. it took over 20 years. millions
of dollars and tht> foreaiaht and wisdom of a aenerat1on of planners.
dcvt'lopcrs have included 90 acres o~ commerdal
development to provide retail and ~rvice locations for
the arowin& population.
8)' 1967. Mmion Viejo Country Club's aotrcourse
ho tcd its first foursome and the area's first elementary
school was opened.
The Mission VieJo Co. WIS formed IS a land
development and home bu1ldint firm in 1963 with three
executive • one bookkccptr and a secretary. They staned
the procc s that will eventually be compktcd when lhe
10.0QO..acrc rommuni1y 1s fully developed in I 99S.
Currcntl)'. Mi ion Viejo contains 20.000 homes and
11s pop_ulallon e~cctds 60.000. The city will ulumately
have 30.00 homes and 90.000 residents.
The O'Neill family sold its Interests in Mission V1eJO
in Septembfr 1972 to Philip Moms Inc. which bad
acquired a maJor interest 1n the communi~ two years
earlier. Philip J. Rc1lly. the M1ss1on Viejo co:s current
prcs1dent. also serves as vice prC$1dcnt of Philip MorTis
Companies which also is developms Aliso Virjo in
California and Hi&hlands Ranch in Colorado.
Mission VieJO was developed on a portion of lhe SJ.OQO..acre Rancho MiH1on Viejo which was purchased
by. the O'Neill family 1n 1907. The area remains
unincorporated and falls under the junsd1ction of the
Oranie County Board of Supervisors.
To celcbnte the 20th anniversary of the develop-
ment. an extensive calendar of events is under way.
July 1ct1vilies bcpn with the Southern Cahfomia
Open Divin& Champjonships It Marauerite Recreation
Cen ter. Twenty-one additional special events endinJ with
a New Year's Eve Dance at Montanoso Recreation Center
will commemorate the development's history. Since the first home was finished 20 years ago.
9
NEW ~RK (AP) -The following list Over -1111 • Counter • e warr1nt1 that have oone UP l
most ·~=~ the most bHed on ! ~·iUtcrnG ~r~ °' 1000 1
end ~teoe c.ha=r• the ! ence betWMn thl prev cJoslng Ice and Tuetdlv'• last or bid pr
ulct . 11! UP . Up .
Up , lJ
UP H
l 4a111nnm--------.. s
NEW YORK (AP> -The follOwlne llsl 25 Harsco s ~'h + ll/• UUPP 5.2 lhOWt the Nfti Y~ Sl9Ck Exehanoe 26 Kvocerl 4 I/• + 21/• S.2 •locks Ind w1rranl1 tti1t haYI oone UP DO s DOWNS
the mos'J~ down lhe mo•I J-= on N~me L.ut c~ ~~ Lal~ _Ch\ Derelf\I noe reoardleu v ume J FIOlt t ~ -1 :il.4 J ~Hll.. I •1 ... _ 1
for Tundev. Valero n pf 11" -~1 "·!~.·:
1
. " un '"r• No Ti'"" Ir.dine below S:Z are I~ Tloer nt 4\.'J -~ .. rcuflSvst 69-16 -1 7-16
&...· ~w:r.~-.. '::~~ .. Ir-r = tt =· ·: ... = l
l'/Tl.. Int wt 114 ~ U. P 1 • , y, -'• !6:.l Y ~ 4"4 -3" ~R~ s 1 11/• UP .1 LH tt C'I pt 1 v. -~ j arrv ~~ = ~ ~I n~ ~~~ ~~ :t 1i Gen :dstr 2l~ = 1~ 6·t 4 ome'°:'co ~ iv. -1'1• ~m \ 11. l~ Up .1 nu~ ~ .J 1 ... -.... ~· • ~ld"'flfr"s 21'.-'J -3 1 U S ..., ,.. ..... :'::,.. ~ " , ... y~ V pfC '4 11/t p • ; ti e n f V. -l~ II~ .,. -n A SuPmk ~ 'h UP 6. AIOln 1.2.5of 'h -• kM dAmtc: 1 1h -2 ~ircultclll.Y ' lj'.4 I~ UP 6.9 Vero inc 'h -I ~~om" ... '>lftch5 24f,.. = 3~ TFI pf& :1 1 Up 6 s 1 Al~~"" 16~ -1 l ar~~~\.. 33,. -.. ~r~ pf u lt 8: t:2 I c~ra:" tl w~ ~ = :~ 11 ~onetGnl ••1. -.,., L ' pf8 't. ~ Up 4 A enlCP 41h -11• t~ 1,4 ~ :.i 2~'1• 1~ 8: .9, 4 ~~Trz~ /i'l = •': lch rlll ~~= :~: pfA \l'J 1~ UP . 5 FranceFd n 91_., -'h ~ l ~ MldAm 7 -li4
tr l 'h 1 UP __:_---------------------~""' Spk ~ ~ ~~ .6 ~Ir wlA 4:\6 1;. Up 6
Acme °'t:i.v nVt 3~ 8: t Coteco ,,_ 1h Up l
4 CotumSev pf Vt ,,. Ue> .2
fmPierce Brothers
Bell Broidway Mortuary
1t~oectwa' 642-915
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
.... , ...... C....ktl
1122 ... Ill•~ cma •sa-su.11se
21.4%
ANNUAL RETURN*
ltm1ted supply ot Rare, Premium Invest
ment Crlde. U S M:nt $20 St Gauden Gold
Coins (1907 1933) (Appro1 loz pure
Gold ) Available now for possession
-CALL-
CERTIFID RARE COIN
714/642-9089
714/645-3853
RESERVE Y<US NOW!
•Soii:ct ~ lrotller1 RtMMtll. Nlw Y.O
LOW FIXED RATES
9% 15 yrs Fixed
101/a 30 yrs Fixed
* We Specioliz:e in * Jumbo Loan•
Sierra Mortgage Co.
1114) 559-4828
Pct. l~& lh 17.4 lt:1 12:~
lu 11.1 11. ll··
111
Otenge COMt OMV PK.OT !We1*~. Mt 13, 1IM A'fa
:o;
'
'\/1•wport Ct•nter Fa~hion
/,/,1nd' ONE DAY ONLY \1rlP
~' ,,//, \ale wr// begin at 9 o clod
"i,irur<fa~ l11ly 2b Ftn<J 50%
10 -.,~ prrre rPduc t1ons on
wit•< tf:'d \i11•n ' A.pparel
WPmf'n' Apparel Jewelr'r.
\frn' Women., and Children'
~hrn•\ "iporttn~ Cood' To.,.,
(,1tt\ and f\.1uch \Auch Mor,.'
Conw t>;u/t, tor rh<> bf>,r
'*'lt•cr 111n
'l.1•111Mn \t,1•r:" l\n/11n"'"' Hw
R10.tr/\\JI Hullo<"'\\ 1/.h11t \m1•n
\'\~rd\ H11t111111' .11111 II\ tn• ll .1n• l'l
/,11111i>r• \l,ir~f'I (h1•1 If~ 1tn1• ''''"'
Ill,,,, \,111•1 1· .. ir~,,,~ .lf\rltl.tl1/.-. (lllhlrf•
Ar111H11 < n111I
/11'1 1111#'tc1111 I l<,1•f II llh\\,I\ 111'1\\l'•''
1.11nt" ,,., md ''·'' ~1rh11• 11 .. .,1 .. ,.irrl
in <\.1•1\ 1>< 111 /l,.,,, It
NEWPORT
CENTER
t SLA D
-
'
N ~' SE CoMP osir l TRAN ~;Ac TION ~~
Market posts small gain
NEW YORK {AP) -The stock marke1
posted a small gain Wednesday, struggling to
cxtc:nd Tuesday's rally.
Analysts said traders remained cautious about
the economic outlook. The aovemment reported
this morning that new orders for durable goods
ro~ 2 I pt>rccnt last month.
However, excluding the volatile category of
defense orders. the increase was a more modest I
pt>rcent.
Wall Streeters were also closely fottow101 the
tc\Umon} of Paul Volckcr. ctuunnan of the
Federal Reserve Board. before the Senate Banking
C'ommtttet'.
Volcker said the Fed would consider as
··acceptable" above-target growth this year an the
basic measure of the money supply known as MI .
R.ccent growth an MI . he said, has stemmed from
fon·es that do not reflect "excessive, and potentLal-
1~ .highly inflationary, money creation."
As expected, Volcker didn't commit himstlf
tither way about the chanoes for further cuts 1n the
discount ratt. which was recently reduced for the
third tJme this year. to 6 oercent.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Dio
NEW YORK fAP) Jul. 23 Prev NEW YORI( (APl Jul. 23 day Todi
ffl a:d'=' il~¥~= • New h1Vh1 N-loWI
AMEX LEADERS
CoLo QuorEs
METALS QUOTES
NEW V~K (API Spo1 nO<ll.,,Ol.lt "'8181 ptq,i
Wed-y Alumlllwtl ·SI 10 c;e<tte per pouncl NY C:O-o tl)01
month oloMcl Tue c.....,. 6'~06'\ -"•. pouncl us OeetlNlllOOt c...., . se oo _.,. per C>Oll<'CI NY Coone• ec><11
month dOMcl Tue
LMd . 21-2•-1•. pound
DM '1-4' rM>I• • pouncl ~.O no. S3 •3 ' •• ,,.. ... w ... oomroto•• ptU per lb t
...,., S5 010 C* ~ Hencty & Heffl\WI
...., ·SS oo.1 C*" lroy-. NYC"-'POI mon111
C'-"Tue ~ · 1290 00·12IO 00 per 78 ti> lleelo -•ort< ~ Sd7 so.s.ui oo <lomM!oc ....,c;twon1 ,,.,.,
-NY
I NYSE LEADERS
l:~ J~t l' I . .
I# : . .
1: .
1:
' NASDAQ SUMMARY
(
.,
Technology made
changes happen
h bas only been an the last few
decades that science has teamed
somethina fundamental that at didn•1
know before.
For a thousand years, it was
thouaht that the scientist was an
··objective" observer of natu~ stand-
ing quite apart from his measure-
ments and deductions.
Then, in a series of revolutionary
expcrimenu, it was found that the
scientist, by the very act of 1nvestigat-
1n1 something. changed the character
or process of the thin& he was
investi'8tina.
This 1s true in physics, in chemistry
-and of course in psychol~y most
of all, when: the act of probing mto
psycholoaical reactions tends to
change the reactions themselves.
Technology, no less than science,
has precisely the same effect. A South
African banker, durin& the troubles
there last year. said, "If there were no
1elevi1ion, there would be no cnsas ...
This is about as helpful as saying.
"If there were no automobiles, there
would be no car fatalities.'' or. "If
there were no airplanes. there would
be no vehicles falHng from the sky."
Technology changes everything by
ats very existence and function. The
auto cbangcd not onlr our traffic
pattern. but our socia and sexual
hves as well.
What the banker meant -or
should have meant -as 1ha1 without
television, the condition would have
festered much longer until it finally
exploded, to the surpnsc of the
outside world. The TY exposure
~implv ~pttded up the pr<><'f'c<; :inci
S111n
Ha11s
made It 1mmed1ately more visible,
the way a CAT scan will show a tumor
in the brain long before it can be
otherwise diugnoscd.
And. of courte, television, like all
other basic inventions, does change
the events it portrays.\ because many
of them arc staged 1or the sake of
gaming wide public attention in a
graphic manner that was not avail·
able before. What we baYe yet to
comprehend as that tt is not the willful
misuse of these devices that generates
a "crisis," but the nature of the device
itself, which expands our capacity to .
do both good and hann. Since there is
more harm in the world than there is
good, obviously each "advance" an
technology represents a greater poten-
ual threat than a benefit.
We are willing to change everything
except our modes of thinking. feeling
and acting; but until we do. every
"cnsas" an human affairs w1ll be
accentuated and mtensified and
speeded up by the tools we have not
learned to master, which arc master-
ing us.
Sldlley Harri• 11 • 1yadlcated
col1m11J1t.
Therapy can work
for nymphomania
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 liked
the way you answered. "A Nympho-
maniac." Your recommendation that
she get therap~ was exactly nght. I
should know. I ve been there.
I am a JO-year-old woman, and
there was a lime in my life when I
averaged a different man every 6.4
days. (I kept rccQrds an case of
venereal disease.) I had an over-
whelming urge 10 make love to ever)
man I met and saw nothing wrong
with it.
Finally I got sick of myself and went
into therapy. I learned that this
behavior was the result of low self.
esteem and incest that occurred in my
childhood.
I have been faithful to the same
man for the last seven months which
1s quite a record for me. I stall en1oy
sex a lot but I am free of th<' self·
defeating compulsion to hop into bed
with every man I meet.
My therapist sent me to a treatment
center for alcohol and drug abuse and
that helped me clean up my act. Life as
so much better now it's unbelievable.
Please keep advising people to try
therapy. I am thrilled to be free of all
compulsive and destructi ve behav-
ior. Sign me -RECONSTRUCTED
JN ILLINOIS.
DEAR RECON: Foor claeert for
yo• ud flve for yoar 1'erapl1t.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a
17-year-old high school girl an need of
advice. I hope1ou can help me. I've
read several o your columns about
J
teen-age sex and the last one got me 10
thinking.
I don't quite know how to say this.
so I'll JUSt come right out with at. I
can't seem to ~Y "no" when a $UY
asks me to go 10 bed with him.
Sometimes I'll even ask him to. afhe's
good-looking. Something must be
wrong with me to gel turned on by
every good-looking fellow who comes
along.
Some of m\ fnends have sex w11h
their steadies but I don't know of
anyone else who as as easy to make as
I am (l"m talking four or five
different guys a week.)
I need advice before I get into
senous trouble -BUSY AND
ASHAMED IN OKLAHOMA
DEAR 8. AND A.: Yoa arc already
la serious troable and tlae advice 11 la
tbe Jetter just above yoars.
I laope you (ud anybody else wlao
bas U1J1 problem) will pay attention.
It's aJmott lmpo11lble to cwt loose
from that k.lnd of behavior wltboat
understanding wily you 1ot Into lt.
Look lD tllle Yellow Pases ander
"mental lacaltb" or ask yoar family
doctor to recommend a 1ood tlllera-
pl1t.
Wt-tf> fYllAP I
3-Pc. Fish
Dinner s3.19
Tiwe plump, premium, hand cut cod fillets batter fried
to a golden, crispy. tasty crunch outside served up
tender and Aaky Inside. With all the fl.xln's thick C\Jt
fryes, fresh coleslaw and two hushpuppies Try 1t -
the great taste will bring you back for mon-1
~JI LONG JOHN
SILVEl{S_
:=====~::!!~ 8095 Barbor Blvd. f: ;t 0 1 Coat a M eaa l~~ (Acro••fl'omFedco)
..
.,.....,,, •• ,.. I
AlllE8 (March 21 ·Aenl 19): Reunion takes place with one wbo recently
bad been "unavailable ... Focus on family, home, 1«urity, future prospccu.
You could have special success in dealina with women. Favorable publicity
1nd1cated and sales soar.
TAURUS (April l~May 20}. Reach beyond previous expectations. make
Inquiries, accept social inv1tttton that could include holiday Journey You'U
be more aware ofappearance, wciaht. body unqc. Long~1stance call 11 p&t1
of exc1tana scenario.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): What seemed "settled" is qaan aljve and
kickin'-You'll be asked to remodel.-----------
revise, review and possiblr to rebuild on
a more suitable structure. Read between
lines. rcaliu someone wants to "tell you
something." SYDNEY
OIARR CANCER (June 21-July 22): IX
ready for change, travel, variety and
encounter with ex.citina member of
OpPOsite sex. Success indicated if you •••••••••••• wnte, communicate. make inquiries. Utilize Cl'Cative talents, satisfy
cunos1ty.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You receive reassurance in two areas -finance
and love. Major d omesuc change indicated. you'll benefit as result. Scenario
also haghliahts possible purchase of art object or luxury item.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Delay does not ncccssanly equate wnh defeat.
Realize time is on your side, reject tendency to brood. Contract or agreement
can be renegotiated. Focus on cooperative effons. clash of ideas. marital
status.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on deadlines. production.
organ1zat1on. work procedures. Love relationship grows stronger.
responsibilities increase. Accept challenge, realize you could hn for "big
money."
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on universal appeal. wider
audience. broader perspectives and love. You'll complete project. you could
be naning with fame and fonune. lndJvaduaJ you respect turns table and seeks
your 1u1dance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on fresh start. new
approach, ability to toss aside outmoded procedures. Love plays ma1or role,
you'll aet to hean of matters and learn exactly where you stand. Aquanus
native figures prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on collections. payments,
ability to put puzzle pieces in place. Sense of direction and purpo~ will be
restored. You'll also be reunited with individual who inspired an recent past.
Cancer native plays role
AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Don't artempt too much at once-means
avoid scattenng effon s. Element ofluck ndcs with you, populanty increases.
money comes from unusual or surprise source. Gemini. Sagittanus play key
roles.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on determination. convacuon.
strenath, ultimate success. Cycle as such that your own JUdgmen1 proves
reliable guide. Cantankerous ind1v1dual could be sincere but m1S1nform~.
IF JULY %4 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you're due to make new stan. love
will P,lay maJor role. vigor returns and health shows marked amprovcmenl.
You II be an vited to pan1c1patc in paonccnng pro1ect. You finally arc fi nashed
with obligauon that was not your own in first place Relat1onsh1p that began
as mere flirtation as senous. and you should be aware of at. Taurus. Libra.
Scorpio peo ple play important roles an your life. You possess sense of drama
and unusual voice September will be memorable for you in J 986
Good skeleton hard
to find and costly
When the government of India
banned expon of ,kelctons, their
pnce went up. Thaneen companies in
Calcutta annually had been supplying
med1rnl schools worldwide w11h
about I 5,000 skeletons and S0.000
skulls .<\good skeleton 1s not that easy
to come by anymore. And af you do
lind a good one, at wall cost you about
$800.
Al hand as 1h1s typcwnttcn note: "I
am a bland composer. That we arc
great mus1c1ans JUSt because we arc
bland as false. But something about us
is wonhy I believe what Christopher
Morley wrote: "It Is the wounded
oyster that mends lls shell with
pearl·"
Q What'<; the average weight gain
of people who get heavie r after they
qull o;mokang?
~ Nane poundor,
Q How come blonds get more
facial wnnkles sooner')
.<\. Less pigment to protect the skin
from the sun. less natural oil to keep
the skin supple
Q . ome hunters say Nonh Ameri-
ca ha\ only three great game anamalo;
What are they')
A. The Alaska brown bear. the
mountain sheep and the wild turkey
Possabl). possibl)'. That's widely
claimed but not all hunters agree
Q If I only need half the onion.
which half !>hould I ~ve?
.<\. The root half It lasts longer
In Ottawa as a man-made ice
skating nnk four and a quarter males
Iona. Some nnk. Thereby arc faS&
food booths. skate sharpening fac1 h-
t1es and rest huts. Sounds a little lake
an Antonio's renowned Raver Walk
but with ICC
More toothbru\hes arc o;old 1n
Seattle per capita than elsewhere
That's what I S31d "little wonder."
reports a former resident "When I
worked there in the electronic'\ indU\·
tf) I rouuncl) bought ca~s of
toothbruo;he'i to clean electron1l
pan-; Man~ mhe" th<"rc do so t()()"
L.M.
Bo YD
What old men most admire about
themselves is their abaht) to figure
things out What they most mass are
listeners 10 explain 11 all to
In thl' llml' 11 takes you to~} "1wo
more habac\" two more bab1c'i are
horn
< l;11m I\ people who hat,.tualh ta~l' tranqud11cr~ sunhurn more
\.IUI( kl\
That 1ntl•rna11onal criminal polilc
or~an1za11on called Interpol as a
private corporation w11h no 'lpec1fil
legal right t>ithcr 10 inve\llgatc or to
arrest
<.) fhrce-founhs ol all the cu1
tlower<, 'old in the l natcd Sta tel>. l'"e
read. art' grown ou1<o1dc the lJn1lC'd
State'> Vv hcrt''l
\ ~outh ~mcrica. mo'itl>
If 11 "J d1<.ca<,c a human hc1ng can
get from 'lumc other \Ort ol ;in1maL
1t '~ called 1oono<;1<;
Wn1eu retiree .. M } wile and I put
a quaner an a fruat 1ar an~ tame c1th<"r
of us st.ans to gnpc .<\ reminder We
want to break ourstl\.C\ ot the
oldster's habit of carping cn11c1sm
The 1ar tills up prctt} fast. The other
night I got onto Ronald Reapn·, lmc
affair with the mahtaf) andu\lnal
com pie' and at cost me S 12 50
Q. Why does water run off .1 duck· ..
back hkc water off a duck'<, back''
What !>Ort of coating 1s on tho'I<'
feathers anyv.a}.,
A. No coaung. Ju~t air pockt'ts too
'lmall to l~t the water an \ nu knov.
how \prayrd water form' 1nt11 drop-
lct'i'1 It'~ that prorxrt\ ul llw water
11~11 th:it \\-Blcrproof'I tht• dut l "farc;t, Clod made 1d1ot'i For prac-
ttt:t' Then he made Khool boards " I
d1dn'1 "that Mark Twain did The 1\\0" 1n\tnt('d h) l t"onard
da V1nc1 wcrtn't JU!ll scas'iOr\ to him
.\ "'ocados doo 't Stan to turn dark. -they dtmon•.trated le \ eragc
ev<"n af\er \OU pttl them. until vou
rtmove the pit
Ph1ladclph11n'i dnnk more &tn.
whaskr)' and ale than l "i i 1111en\
ehcwhcrc. The corollan fact 11, tht'y
takC' more spmn. too
I hat wtml 'pu,~\lootanp." nov.
rnmmon an the Y<'tn.lcular wa<.
.mncd h) none other thnn T cdd)
Roo'iC\C'h I 1lev.1~. "mcllhrnddl
IOI!. ..
• 1 roa BLOCKJNO
North·South vuln ta.bl~. North
dtala.
OaTB .. ,
Q &e
0 AQJ71
• K 10 e • WEST EAST
•Q 92 •AI07'3
QJ 1052 Q 88
O ta 0 1954
•Qt•2 •J7
SOlJTR • "J e '1 AQ97'
0 103
•A85
The blddlng.
North Eut
1 ¢ l•
8 • p ...
P&H Pua
South W~at
2 </ 2 •
3 NT PaH
Opening Ind Two of •
The second entry lo our lexicon
ot bridge plays con4'lllt!i of blocking
an enemy suit. This hand was dealt
ln a recent rubber bridge game, and
South was not aware of the
possibilities.
Light overcalls are the fashion
nowadays, and the preemptive
power or the spade suit 1s such that
we would not dream of censunng
East ror his action A reasonably
normal auction that ancluded a
weak raise of the overcall saw
South become declarer at three no
trump
West led the two of 'I pad es East
rose with the ace and returned the
suit, and declarer opted to finesse
West's queen won. and his spade
continuation removed declarer's
C111L£S
Gem
010
SHAllff
lut topper. When the heart ult -
tailed to break. South wu forced ~
to fall back on the diamond t1neMe
tor h1 contract. That failed --
down one.
The bidding and the o~nlng lead ...
provided valuable clues to maktng
three no trump. Had West raf.Md
with three low apad , he would•
probably have ltd h bighftt card•
an the suit And in the event that he ..
had made an unusual lead, ~ al·"
most surely would have held the:
king of diamond .
Therefore, declarer should have~
hopped up wlth the king of •padei
at track two As the cards Ue, the
defenders are helpless. West can-
not jettison his queen of ' apades
without yielding another 1to1>ptr,
and tnck. to declarer. After tesUng
the hf'arts, declarer loses the dla·
mond finesse to East. Th&t worthy
can revert to spades. but West's
queen blocks the suit. The defend·
er11 can ff<:ore only two spade tricks,
one heart and one diamond.
'::~~~, s~~~lA-at.~s· .... ... ..
Nff4 lry ClAY a '0UAN ------
• •eo•tO"ll• lette" a' .+.e four tcro,,.bled -d• be-
low IO lono-lour ""'l)le _.ds
I PRYSOO
I I 12 I' I I
I HARLE I 1~ 1 r 1 r
I INORY I ... ; I' I' I J : Woman to *IMP'f hutbMd at _ . . _ brealdut L8ble. "Bvf• yout wet·
l'9 wu tough an(S 0ty Y<N !\*
I mettle--'
.......... l,_H ..... E,_Z...,.1:__,11~,..-N..,,.1·--ll 0 C~··.. "'• cl111(~ • Q ..... .d
. -. --by l,flj"8 '" .... ''""'"9 "'°'d' ..._.......__,.,___......_ ___ you devefoo lrO"' Mee> No 3 IMlow
• PllNI Nl;M8rtf0 I'. lf I If t S •
I ; I I I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACAOll
1 RacecourM
6 Lotty
10 Slave
14 Fractured
15 Pisa's river
16 Outrigger
17 Salesman
18 Direction
20 Sp0tl
2 1 Jacket type
23 Ms Dinsmore
24 Lorelei
26 Rear
28 Put a value on
30 Code man
3 l Was furious
32 Pierce
36 Legendary
Cell
37 Hayworth
and Gam
38 Plunder
39 Early
•2 Right-hand
page
44 Garment pan
45 Female bird
48 Curled
49 Box
50 Income Fr
51 Implement
52 Kida' gam~
55 Divert
58 Rustic PQem
60 Caribou s km
61 CllmaJC
82 Color
63 Night birds
~ Gatherings
65 Tire surface
DOWN
1 Potat1on
2 Latvian port
3 Omission
•Humanity
5 Signed up
6 Wears
7 Pig -
8 Wiidebeest
9 Recenlly
stolen
1 o School book
11 Raze
12 Treat a v1011n
bow
13 Doomed
19 Theft
22 Spread hBy
25 Hocke'1
playing
surlace
26 Of pllch
27 War deity
PRIVIOU8 f'UZZl.E IOL YED
28 S1utty
29 Pro -
30 Lead or zinc
32 Mourned
33 Original
model
34 Burden
35 Black poe1
37 Ready tor
ha Nesting
40 Overcoats
41 Diminish
42 Prac\lcat one
•3 Nibble
•5 Paid player •e e.i1e1
47 Refresh
48 Satelltte
prefix
49 Pine fruit
51 Cadence
53 Inter -
5• Pleued
56 Cheek
5 7 T enn1s serve
59 The German
11 12 13
\ t\pacal oak tree hn1, ~Hn tame'
8\ mAn\ ltaH'\ ., • l\PIUll l\ppk lh'C
l..M B•yd /J • •y1tdlratrd 83
t'Ol•m1/11
• ' •
Qf8f9I CoMt DAILY PILOT/ wecs...oay, July 23, 1986
TD
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
.. Jeffy's being disgussm' again."
/ ,,,.
"Let a smile be your umbrella."
BLOOll COtmTY
~(4te,
10 !LE IHtU Jff( IT (J(lf/ lJU~ b(){)N.ID( ~ ~ MJf /llAf()~/
"'1"1Kr AMI J'tfl ~ID( B Hf.I( fO 1D MA«'t ~.
/M. ff)_F:l(. , MARRY I
~ .
U.S. ACRES
NOW PO WHAT I TU.L YOU NW
eAT THAT WO"•, SMe.&.PONJ
by Berke Breathed
by Jim Davis
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE CT1I':0'2
by Hank Ketcham
~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
"Quick. hide! Here comes Marmaduke .
and I think he has a nickel tn his mouth!"
PEANUTS
OKAY CAPTAIN TUTOR
JJl-lEli!E DO WE START 7
1
DON T CALL ME CAPTAIN
TUTOR Ml{ NAME
IS MA'(NARD
7 lJ
~1'M A LOUSY LISTEN~ &CAU$E '1'0U1Rf
A CRUMMY Pt.AYER .''
l
j
i
A
I
t
by Charles M. Schulz
vJ~ERE DO WE START.,
WHAT DO '(OU THINK
YOUR WORST SUBJECT IS 7
GARFIELD by Jim Davis
't'OO'RE RIGMT,GARl='IELP.EVERY l'M SORE IT'~ c.JU!>T A MlbPRINi.
PAY THl'3 WEEK IS MONPAIJ rT "°ESN''f MEAN ANl.r'T~ING
DRABBLE
uM IT
~rr£.AR'?
~.
OAO I
by Kevin Fagan
SHOE
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DE.AR BAN D AWMNI I
ii-106£ AUJMt<.l I WITH
C~llDREN Will 5l.>REL<r> BE
IITTE.REbiED IN 00R NEW
WESiVIE.W BAND ANNUIW n~o /
DOONESBURY
by Jeff MacNally
~.~WM< ~'f'JE I GAN
MOOK rT (){TO~~
by Harold Le Doux
BELIEVE ME, IT IS I
I ADMIRE WHAT
\'OU'VE OEEN ABLE
TO ACCOMPLISH
IN THE eus1NES9
1i'o A &REAi WPf...' m 5AV£
UP FOR iHA'f 1NEV11ABLE oo;> ...
WOR.LD '
,
1
j
1 ..
by Tom Batluk
by Garry Trudeau
lH ./)()
I~
)QI. ao ..
VtSCaJNr ST Al.ISTfJJ...
~M4'E)Q/9
Mlt OllJ56eb ()\45 Ar
18UY llHfr A l'fTY
MY l¥ffE IS VtTE I
\~~-
ROSE IS ROSE by Pat Brady
"()ifTE"?EX~ME
/JllT OIO I IJNOER.-
5!AJ.D 'IOU TO S4Y
, . , ,
•
I
'f()()~A "alfTE.,:r I
' .. .
--------------------------------------------------
1-5 since break ups leaq. to 2 1/2
Angels lose another, yet ...
they maintain hold on West
BJ CHRIS MONAHAN .,,...c.. .........
When it was pointed out to Anacl Manaier
Oene Mauch that recently his team wu not
executin& well in .. little ball," which is the style
identified with him, Mauch denied be bad a
style. But in the six pmcs since the All-Star
break the An&els have developed a style -
Catch-up ball -and it is difficuh one to be
playioa Wlth.
Tuesday niaht's game with Milwaukee was
u aood an example as is necessary. The Anaels were unable to score over the fint four inninas.
staked the Brewers to a 4-0 lead and they
parlayed that into a 6-2 win before 28,731 at
Anaheim Stadium.
But once apin.J the Ansel•, who have lost
three straiaht and uve of six, were dealt 10me Jood fortune a1 Texas lost for the sixth strajaht
time. That meant that the Anatl• maintained
their 21/J pme lead in the American Leque
West . The thin& that mqnifies the Aoacls'
struulea is the fact that they were comfoa home
off al-3 road trip before the All-Star break. "I used to hear about how the An(Cls
couldn't win at home. I've heard all the ahbis
and there aren't any," said Mauch ... We're not
pJayina our 'A' prne, we're playina catch-up.
"The bitten feel sorry for themselves when
they have to come from behfod. They should
act out on top. Catch-up is a touah way to play."
Tuesday's victim wu Don Sutton (8-7),
who at\er Wl.Dnina six strai&ht decisions before
the AU-Star break. has now lost hls last two. For
the second time in two starts be was victimJZcd
in the fifth innina.
Tbe Foartb Annual McKlnley Street Sbootout ln Coeta Maa wu
ln fall force recentlr -a two-on-two round robin tourney with an
.. A" player and u 9 • player OD each aide. A.bo'Ye, from rfaht, John
Siena (34) ahoota o•er Dana Joanoa, Ore& Flelda defencfa acatnat
ToaJ611t'• •ame
Milwaukee (Darwin S-S) at .U1ett
(McCaskill I~). .
Time: 7:3S.
TV: None.
Radio: KMPC(710). .,..,..._,,,Game
Anaets idle.
With Ute Anacll trailina t--0, Sutton's fint
pitch of the fifth was driven about six rows deep
m the left field bleachm by Rob Deer. He then
retired Jim Gantner (Jround oul) and Bill
Schroeder (fly out), bd'ore the real trouble
bepn.
Paul Molitor doubled to the nabt field
comer aod Earnest Riles walked. Ceetl Cooper
than slashed a line drive towards left-center.
Gary Pettis ran hard toward the ball, but 1t
WIJ shcin&IWI)' &om bim ud II)( by him lO the wall. By the wne be bid rwi it down, bolb
runners bad motored arowwl aod Cooper bad
cruiled into tee0nd. It wa now 4-0. When
alked if he thouaht thote two runs were a littk tain~1 Mauch rq>licd1 ••eau them what 1ou want. mey're the kind that make you lick.'
That meant that when the An,els tlnally
ICOred their only two runs in the bottom of the
innina (after leavina men on in acorina position
in the fint and tec0nd), they only halved the
deficit.
Even in acorina the An,els, wbo left 11
mem on in the pme, itranded what could have
been important runs.
A walk to Dick Schofield and a •male by
Bob Boone, followed by consecutive Oy beUi
(the second an ucrifioe Oy by Brian Downifta)
1ot the An,elt their tint run. Wally Joyner
walked and Dou1 DcCinces sinalcd home
(Pl ...... Al'fO&L8/B2)
Lasorda gets'
perfect diet
plan: A rally
Dodgers pull out a rare one-run .
triumph with three In the ninth
PIITSBURGH (AP) - A dramatic ninth-innina
rally by his Los An&eles Dod&en left Manqer Tommy Lasorda too excited to eat and PitubwJb Manaeer Jim
Leyland too mad to eat.
Regie Williams rut a two-run homer, only the
second of his major leque career. u the Dodacn rallied
with three n inth-mnina
runs off reliever Cecilio Toa1.61Jt'• 6aDJe
Guante to defeat the
Pirates 4-3 Tuesday DM&en (Henhiler S.-7) at
oi&)tt. PitubW"&b <lleuscbel S-1 l)
"What a pme! Time: 4JS p.m.
What a pme! What a TV: Channel 11.
peat vtctory," said Radio: KABC (790).
Lasorda. who bas been 'n•nday'1 Game
battJina a sour stomach Dodgers at PitUburgb. 4:3S.
that bas left rum unable -----------to eat much food. "This pme wu better than mcdjci.,.
for my stomach."
Leyland didn't stomach the loss very well, sbowerina
bis office with obscenities and a cup of milk that h4
splattered against a wall .
"This was one of our touf1est losses of the season;
We had it aU set up to win, said Leyland, who had
replaoed left-hander Larry McWilhams with the riah~
banded Guante at the stan of the runth.
"The only auys they had on the bench were nabt·
banded bitten and Guante 1s very touab against riab"'
banden," Leyland explained. "There's no way a ri&bt•
hander should act a hit offhtm on an 0-2 pitch, much less
hit a home run. He should have riaht-banded hi~
eatina out of bis band in that situation ...
Not onl¥ bad Williams homered on an 0-2 pitch thal
the rookie wd he thought "was supl)l)()Sed to move but it
didn't:• Mike Scioscia kept the rilJy aoing with an 0-2
sinale that set up Williams' pme-winning shot
"Maybe this will act us going." Lasorda said. "We've
won three out of four now and maybe this 1s what we
need."
Rick Rhoden and McWilhams had combLDed to
check the Dodgers on one run and s1A hits over the fint
eight innings until Guante came in to work the ninth.
Pinch-hitter Alex Trevino doubled and moved to
third on Scioscia's single before Mariano Duncan hit into
a force play, scoring Trevino and making it 3-2. WiJliams
then hit a Guante fastball into the left field scats.
Dcnnts Powell, 1-3, worked two scoreless 10nmgs for
the victory with Ken Howell p1tchmg the mnth for his
eighth save.
R.J. Reynolds hit a two-run homer for the Pirates.
Rhoden limited the Dodgers to one run and s1A bits
over 6.1/J inn mp. stnktng out three and walking one before
tinn~ McW1hams. who wtll return to the Pirates' st.art1na
rotauon later this week after two months m the bullpen,
worked 11/J hitless 1001015.
Sid Bream singled to center before Reynolds hit a 1-0
pitch from Dodaers' starter Ale1andro Pena over the ri&ht
field wall 1n the fourth. Re ynolds. a switch-tuner. has bit
all etaht of his homers batung left-handed.
Brock admits
his NFL days
are numbered
It's malignant, Royals in state of shock
From AP dl1patcbe1
Quarterback Dieter Brock of the
Rams hopes that the back problems
he has experienced won't hamper his
football career, but admits that his
days in the sport could be numbered.
"The back did bother me a lot last
year and esp_ec:1ally so dunng the ofT-
season." said Brock.
"Whtie rm definitely concerned
about 1t. I'm not ready to announce
my retirement JUSt yet.
"The injury isn't ao10g to go awax.
no matter what I do. but I think 111
still be able to perform as expected
this year.
"If the back gets to the po10t where
1t continually t1ahtens up, then I'll
dror. out. It's not at t)lat point yet.
Sul • anytime you talk about back
il\Jurics, you have to be careful. I'm
bopina the whole thina works out, bu&..
I don't have any auarantees."
Brock, 3S, completed 218 of his 365
passes for 2,6S8 yards and 16 touch-
downs last season, his first 10 the
National Football Leaaue after an
ouutandina I I-year career 1n the
Canadian Football Leaaue.
With Brock at the controls most of
the ume, the Rams had an 11 -S
reaular season record. won the NFC
West champ1onsh1p and advanoed to
the conference title pme, where they
were beaten 24-0 by the uper Bowl
champion Ch1cqo Bears
Despite the sucec5S of the Ram~
Brock 'cfTons were crit1c11ed and the
team Slll\ed veteran quanel"back
Steve Bankowski dunna the ofT-
tcuon
Brock, Bartkowt.lu and another
veteran, Steve Otis. att all expected to
have opportumt1C1 to win the Rams'
1tart1n1 quarterback Joh th9' 'um mer
Dick Howser undergoes
a three-hour operation
therapy. Dr. Robert Moranu, a Kansas City
neurologist, told The Kansas City Star last week
that pnmary tumors are the most deadly and
the most difficult to remove.
Howser, who guided the Royals to victory
over the St. Louis Cardinals 1n the 1985 World
Scnes. was admitted to St. Luke's Thursday
night. Just 48 hours earlier he had managed the
American League to a 3-2 '1ctory over the
National League 10 the All-Star Game at
Houston.
m d1sbehef. ·· said Mike Ferraro. the Kansas
City third base coach who was named intenm
manafer after Howser was bosp1tahzed.
" can't say anything. It's been enough
trymg to control myself for five days," Ferraro
said. •·1was10 shock for five or six days because
--
I was m that s1tuat1on." ·
KANSAS CITY, Mo (AP> -Doctors
removed parts of a malignant bra10 tumor
during a three-hour operation Tuesda}" on Dick
Howser. manager of the Kansas (it) Royals
Dr. Paul Meyer. the Royals· team phys-
1c1an. said the tumor was only part1all)
removed for fear of damag10g the bra10
"It was partially removed." Clough said
"A portion was sent to pathology for their
d1agnos1s. The frozen section analysis con-
firmed our clinic diagnosis, that it is a ghoma "
Clou&}l said a complete report would be
available 1n two or three days. "Our therap~ as
to where we go from here will depend on that
pathology report."
He had complained for two weeks of a st1IT.
sore neck and assoctates said he had begun
showing s1ins of mental confusion Dunng the
All-Star pme itself, said Mike Ferraro. one of
his coaches, Howser "was totally out of 11 not
Ferraro lost a kidney to cancer in 1983.
"I felt very close to Dick," said Lee May.
the Royals' batuna coach "Everything was
normal and then an the next da) or two there
was someth10g desperate!) wrong h's touah to
take and have to come out and tr) to funcuon
hke nolh10g has happened "
with It at all." Dr. Charles Clouah. the neuro'iurgeon "'ho
preformed the operation. said the tumor was
found 10 the left front.al lobe ofHowscr''l bra10
and that It "appeared to be a type of tumor
called a gl1oma."
A glioma tumor, alw 1..allcd a pnmar}
tumor. is commonl) treated with rctd1at1on
Clough said that Howscr's wife. Nancy.
was 1n the recovery room with the SO-year--old
manager. who was said to be awake and alert
and able 10 move has limbs.
"He was very alert and he knew Nancy."
Joe Burke. president of the Amencan Leaaue
club. said.
The tumor was discovered by a ( <\ T scan
on Fnday mornmg.
The Royals. 10 Baltimore for a scne'I with
the Onoles, heard the news dunng a meeting
w11h General Manager John Schuerholz
"A few of the heads hung down. probably
First baseman Steve Balbont, who became
a star when Howser rescued him from the
Yan~~ farm system. said, "No one sounded
too ~s1t1ve before but you always hope You
don t th10k the worst unt1l 1t happens ..
USFL-NFL numbers statitician 's nightmare
Gone With the Wind is just a
short novel. comparatively
NEW YORK (AP) -Put end to end, all the
documents an the US FL-NFL antitrust tnal would
cover more than half a football field Stacked on
top of c.ach other. they "'ould be h1&hcr than the
goal posts
S1fhng throuah this pile ol e' 1dence -
phys1cafl). mentally or both -1s the a~s1inment of
five women and one man who~ dehberat1oni. are
likely to decide the shape of profe'i'ilonal football
for the rest of the 1980\
By compan\On, 1t m~ht be easier for a
run01na hack to crash throu 1 aoal-hne defcnie
Thouah hardly unusua for an anutrust ca\C
the numbers produ~ tsy th1, tnal 1n l S 01'i1nc1
Coun arc ampo ina.
The USFt .• unable to ~uC'Cffd an 11pnna and
summer and hoP.1na to com~te 1n the fall. r1o
tttk1na $ l ,6Q b1lhon 10 darnaRe'I for what 11
'
contends were ant1tru'lt violations by the NFL
Even before Wednesday's clos10a argument\
the tnal transcript runs 6,55 1 pages. •11x t1me~ morl'
than the Hardcover ed1t1on of "Gone With the
Wand,'' better than five umes more than the Bible.
Over 43 dars· there has been testimony b) 4'
witnesses. 24 ca led by the USFL, 19 b} the NFt
That 10cludes depos1t1ons read mto the record, one
posthumously for former USFL club owner John
Bassett.
Other pretnal depos1t1ons. numbenna 10 the
thousands of pafes, are piled h1ah atop attorneys'
de.sics On each b1nd1na1s a name -Pete Ro1cllc or
Howard Cosell. for instance -followed bv a bold
Roman numeral. as 1f they were npts for a
"Rocky V" movie
That docs not count the uh1b1ts. 166 1n all
I 14put 1ntoev1denct by the NFL. 52 by the USFL
Vet all the paper handed from lawyerto lawyer
and JU~ to Juror still d~n't cover everyone or .
cvcryth1na. When New York Jet'l owner Leon HM\
1e,t1ficd. ht \\<M asked 1f ht tver took or kC'pt
'
memorandum<;
"Nope," Hcs!I answered ·•1t JUSt gets you 1010
trouble" .... _
That brought npples of lauJhter from
courtroom 'ipeCtators '
Each side. of course. had 1ts own economist
The t isn·snpen calculated damaaes 1n01cted by
the NFL amoun110a to S565 m1lh on. which 1s
trebled 1n antitrust cases The NFL expert wd 1t
dado 't owe a cent
The economists had \Orne b11 numben of
their own. each b1lhn1 more than S 100.000 for
their ~rv1ccs-S 210 an hour forthe NFL. S 160an
hour for the LISFL
On -and on the ca~ has 1one. \pannina 11
weeks 10cc JUr)' sel~-uon nancd May 12 the
dullncs, of documents broken by the courtroom
thtatncs of LJSFLattomey Harvey Mycnon and
by witntSsenall10acach other liars It has not suffered for attention. 11ncc the
verdict could well decide whether AmcnC. has one
pro foothall lcaRue or two
Angels send
Romanick off
Right-hander Ron Romanick.
who won 14 pmes for the Anaels
last sea!>On. hu been assianed to
Edmonton of the Pacific Coast
Leaauc.
To repla~ Romanick on their
ro'lter. the A~1cls ~led n&ht-
hander Ra) Chadwick from Ed·
monton
Romamck. 2S. 19 S-8 with a S.SO
earned run averaar this acason
while stan1na 18 pmet. He won
lhrtt ofh1s first fourdcc1 ions but
11 only 2-7 sin~ that time.
Roman1di:s hfet1me bia-leque
~rd is 31-29. He was 12-12 with
a 3. 76 ERA asa roolue 1n 198-4 and
14-9 wt th a 4 11 ERA last year.
ChadW'lck. 23, ma.dt 20 starts
for Edmonton th1' 1ea10n and i1
9.9 with a 4. 72 ERA.
r
\
--~-------
-OnlnOe COMt OAJL Y PILOT I Wednesday, Juty 23, 1Ne
News blackout as grand jury probes Bias case
UPPER. MARLBORO Md. (AP) -Unt·
\ersily of Maryland athletes and a woman
wbo wu with Len 81u the nll.hl he died were
umona thoae at a pand jwy Tnquiry into the
death of the basketball sw Tuesday.
Tbe paodjury also beard testimony from a
state police chemist and from a Pnnc.c
George's County paramedic. neither of whom
would discu has testimony when que uoned
by reporten as they left the county
courthouse.
the counhouse. Neither would say whether he
went before the arand Jury. although both were
subpoenaed and did a.o into a waitina room
outside the room where the arand jury session
was bc1n1 held.
Covington said the day after Bia d ied 1hat
he and other friends had talked wi th 81a'>
about his r;clect1on by the Boston Celt•~ as the
No. 2 choice an the NBA draft.
John T. Toban. an anaJyuca.1 chcmtst fort.he
state police. was one of the early witnCSKs as
the pnd Jury continued wh.at couJd be a full
week of mcehnas on what happened in the
hours before a&nd after Bias collapsed in his
dormitory room and was la.ken to a hospill.I.
.. , examined ev1dcnct 1n thts case and p ve
the results to the a.n&ndJury. Other than that I
have no comment," he said.
say whether they tesufied or would be called
back.
Two other players who were W1th Bias when
he died Terry Lona and Davtd have
been subpoenaed. but Arthur A. a all Jr ..
the prosecutor, has not s&Jd whether he will
call them before the JTlnd JUry
by the end of the Ywet or early next week. He
said they Ukely w1ll deal with ux, possession
or distribution of druQ.
Atler the grand JUry completes its invet!iP-
tion, it will have todecidewbethertoconttouc
with an inquiry mto allcptioos about drut UJe
by other athletes and po ib1e pmblina oo at
least one pme by an unidenufied member of
the basketball team.
One of the athletes was Keeta Covington, a
football player who was W1th Bias early in the
mornina of June 19, just hours before the All
American died of cocaine intoxication.
"At about 2 o'clock. he (81as) said he wa~
tired of all the questions and Just wanted to be
alone." Covington said at the time.
Other athletes who were seen in the
courthouse were basketball players Keith
Gatlin. Jeff Bnxter and Phtl Nevin.
Baxter and Gatlin shared a suite io the dorm
wi th Bias, but said earlier they were ulcep
when he collapsed
Anyone who testifief. under a subpoena 1n a
drua related 1nvenigauon is immune from
prosccutton, and Marshall said last week he
did not know if he wanted to pve immunty to
Lona and Ore~. Alan Goldstein, Lawyer for the two players,
said he eitpects them to be called and that they
will testify under a subpoena 1f called.
In addition, MarshaU said he may ult the
grand jury to mvesusate whether buketball
coach Lefty Driesell advised team members,
at a meeting after Bias died, to refuse to talk to
pohce or to destroy any evidence. Oriesell bas
said that players met at has ho use to pray and
to be consoled over the loss of their teammate. "I'm oot able to talk..•• Cov1naton said a~ he
and Ben Jefferson, anotherfootbaJI player. h:fi
Madelyne Woods, a fnend of Bias who saw
him the night he died, confirmed that she had
testified before the grand 1ury Tuesday but
would not discuss her test1 mon}
Ba.'(ter. Gathn and Nevin refused to answer
any questions when the} left and refu sed to
Manhall said last week that any andict-
mt'nts returned by the grand jury could come
Czechoslovakian
fans a little 1'_oofy
over Navratilova
From AP clJspatcbes
PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia -If the ~
trams ran a lmle late around Prague on ~
Tuesday, the station masters knew wh)
After 11 years, Martina Navrat1lo"a was playing
tennis an Czechoslovakia once again.
Several rail lines carrying passengers run along the
backside of Court No I at the Stvan1ce Tennis
Stadium. and It was there 1 uesda) that Navraulova
made her fi rst on-coun appearance an her homeland
since defecting an 1975
Whene' er a tram ~cnt b}' 11
slowed, the passenger'> and crew
hangmg out the wmdows to
watch.
Wha t the) saw wa~ more :.i
family reunion that a tl'nn1<.
match. a love fea~t on red clav
featunng Na' rat1IO\a's power
game at its peak as she crushed
Xinv1 L1 of Chana 6-1. 6-0. an the
lirst"roundofthe Federauon (up
Kawatilo.a Each point by NaHatllO\a
brought a cheer from the crowd. which packed tivt-
decp around the nm of the lSQO..sea1 coun Peopk
pressed so tightly 11 was hard to move and one tight
broke out between a man and a woman JOSI ling u' er a
good v1ew10g spot.
h all made Navratilova f~I "en much at hllmc
and she blew kisses to the crowd as she. wal~ed oil rnurt
"They were fantastic today:· <;ht' said ol lhe tans.
who last saw her live when she wa~ a pudg) leen-ager
already making a mark on 1enn1~ "I was nervous ~hen
I got ready to go out on coun I .,.,a., read) and H'n
psyched up"
NaHatilo,a·s match ~a~ thl' 'K'rnnd ot thl' d.i'
Teammate Zina Gamson opened Y.llh a stra1ght·..Ct
victory o'er China's N1 7hong. Jnd among the
spectato~ ~as Navrat1lo'a
It was hard to tell Y.h lCh "a" getting murl'
attentton. the match on coun or thl' pla}cr II\ wh11e
warmups and sunglasses 1n tht· \land'
Quote of the day
··v.11h thl'>. or '>'llh an~ other problem \ou
don"t take' 11 out there '>'Ith )OU There's llml· to
reflect on things like that belore or after the gaml·
-Kansas Cit) Royal\ pitcher Dennis Leonard
after learning of the co nd111on of his managl·r
Dick Ho.,.,scr
Rams sign Cox to contract
Tackle Robert (ox a <;nth-round
draft choice from l re L .\, <,1gnell a contract
T uesday with the Rams and ha\ reported to
the National f ootball l.eagUl' team·.,
tram mg camp
The Ram'> h;ne now signed nine of their top Ill
picks from thc:ir 1 '186 rnllegl' draft held last .\pnl Thl'
only holdout n·maining. ho~<.'h'r. 1s the club·, "'o I
draft choice 1adlc "1 1kc \<.had of Queens C olkgr in
Canada
··cox lnok' tine·· 'aid Rams Coach l11h11
Robinson · I'm \JllSfied with the ~3} things arl' g11111l(
.. v.e·, l' donl' c,ume good htt11ng the lac,t couph· 11!
days. Gu} c, arc hanged up a hllle ··
Rook1l· Ho'>'ard ~c.\dou a fir<ot 'car hnehal h·r
from \11ch1gan \tJlc -;ufTered thl' mmt \l'rl11u<. 1n1un
Mc.\doo ma) haH' c,uffered minor rartilagi: dam.1gl· 111
a knee. according to Robinson
Cubs' season getting spiced up
CHICAGO -Marla Collins, the Ea Chicago Cubs' ball girl whose curves are
better than many thrown by Cubs' pitchers.
wants to sp1Ct' up the team's dismal season
by appeanng -nude -as a Playboy magazane panup
girl.
Collins. the Cubs' ballgirl for the past five seasons.
shows her best curves to baseball fans nationwide in an
eight-page p1ctonal in Playboy's September issue.
She sho'>'s up an about a dozen Playboy pictures
In some, she's pan1ally clad in Jewelry and a !cattier
dress. In others. she"s nude, Playboy officials said. And
an some, they said, she's shown in action, chasing
baseballs dunng Cubs' games photographed dunng th e
1985 season
"I 1h1nk maybe ll will be a little spice in what so far
has been a dreary season for Cubs fans," said Gary Cole,
Playboy's photo editor.
Colhns. who has an agent and a shoe~ndorsemcnt
contract. hopes her appearance anspircs the team.
added Jeff Cohen. Playboy's managing photo editor
who produced the p1ctonal.
"We talked about how this might get the Cub)
some headlines about something other than their
playing:· Cohen said an a telephone 1nterv1cw Mondn~
night ·· he knows the players and hopes this gives them
some ne~ life and, 1fnothang else, g>ves sportswnter'> a
new angle in their stones about the Cubs.
"He} 1f 1Cs an} indication, they won (Monda}) ...
said Cohen a Cubs fan who had thought for several
years about fea tunng Collins an the magazine. She ha~
dust) blonde hair, green eyes and a 35-23-36 figure. he
said.
Collin'>· fora} into Playboy modehng come\
m1dwa} through what has been a disappointing year for
d1ehard Cubs" fans. The team. plagued b> poor
pitching. has tired one manager al read) and 1s 39. 50 -
22 games out of first.
"This wall gave fans one more incentive to go out to
the old ballfield -10 see Marla, assuming the team
keeps her on the field ." Cohen said.
Cubs spokesman Ned Colletti said Monda) night
that the team had "no comment'" on its ball girl's
Playbo) debut
Chicago Cuba ' ball girl Marla Colline.
Marathon runners
unable to convince
director, or camera
.\"I, FR.\""'' l\C 0 I .\Pl -I hl·
race dircctor ol the '°Ian h.irH t\I"
Marathon <;a1d ht d<ll."'in'1 hu' the
explanations of t~o lii<,qualilil·d l"lllr
run ner'> who 1n<o1\I lht'" d1dn"1 1 lwat
\unda\ bc1;.au\t' 'tilt' l3nwr a d11nn I
Ire"
Race dirntnr '°lu11C Thom,1\1111 "·''
rcfemng IO '" kotapang th.ti "·"
conducted .1t mile'> 11 .rnd ~11 ol tlw
26 2-mllC r,I(( J hl' caml'rJ\ rl'fl
resented .in at1t•mp1 to dctn t and
perhap<, dl\couragc 1hc ~ind ol
u>Ur\e·l"U lll ng that rr .. ulted 1n n(Z.h l
d1"41ualifa ,\111>0\ 1n I '~X4 ancl 11nr I,,..,
\(':H
Th" \(",tr tlll' eighth .ind IO<h·
plau: !inl\hl'r' "('rt' l'11min,11t·d "hl·n
thC\. failed ·Ill .1ppi:,lf 11n lhl' t,lpt:\
Thoma<;nn (,tlk1I lhl·1r .11.:1111n' "tlt•\·
p1cablc ·
Raider s· No. 1
s eeks speci alist
0)1.NARI> c \l'I -lkkmr'l' t•nd
Oob Bul 1kow\lo.1. thr I O\ t\ngck\
!{aider\ No I dra Ii l ho ire lao;t
\pnng. left the \;4t11111.1I I r>othall
J..cagut" tC'am'\ training C\lmJl furc.
da) to v1'i1I a hack '>fle.'l 1ah't
Aua'kow\k1, 15th Jlla\ C'r C'ho\('n
o\'t'rall 1n la'lt April ' collcgr l1rnlt.
had reported one da" latr tn lht
Raiden' training facaht-. Hr ;1rm cd
,ll c-amp late la\t l hur\da~ alter
i.1an1ng n four ';C'M i I I ·m1l11nn con
lrJ('t
In hi\ lil".\t prlCllCl" c;c<.\111n
Ruc1koy,c;k1 ~uOuC'd a 1.,.,1.,1u! h id
D1<.qu.1hhn.J ~t·re Thoma<, \U[!J t
ol R Ill~ 1,1J nd Ill "ho trll'>'ol.'d I ht·
lin1.,h lull 1n ,, time ol 2 huur., 21
m1nu1c' and X '><.'cone.Jc; and '°louth
·\lncan n;it1'e Rtdgl' lfr1~lit1. a l '"
\ngelc' n.:,1dt·n1 who fin1~hcd 1n -u
l"tedt1rw11I' '\ 45 Thomao;on-.afd
ht· l·, pt>t '' thl·m 111 ht· <.u<.pcndcd trom
\Jnl.l1mwd r11mpet1t111n tor at k a't a
\Cilr h\ The \1hlct1l\ ( on11.n·"
.\ugat r<"athC'd h' tdcph11m· ,11 h1'
home. .ll kno'>' kdgl·d 1h;1t ht•
m1swd · pJrt of clw ~our\c hut
drn1cd lhJt hl' chC'att•d
I l..noY. I J1dn'l lhl·Jt .11 ka'I not
l..;no\.\1ngh ·· hC' \.lid .. It "·" ddi-
nnc:I) not \Oml'lhang hl.11.tnl nr "'ml'·
thing plannC'd ··
The 'll ·H·.11 11IJ runner .-.aid hl·
\lllppt·J <.nn.11 llmt'' alnng lhl
.11urc;c \\1th lr:tmp' and lx'laml'
Jl\onenwd
ll1mn1 r r rt1\ I >urh:.1111 l•I H.t}-
"ard "'"nt'r 11! lhl' '>'hcdlh.ur
d1'1"on -.;.ud ht• "'I" \uga1da'h11111
Imm Ix-hind a 'an ;ind ha, k in1<1 tlw
ra~C' at m11C' 24
I homa\on \,lid .\ug.11 ' npla-
nJllnn ··,, about a, plau\1hll' ac, m\
running for pr1·1.1dt·n1 "Hr added I hat
ht• 1.ho11ld not h.1vc romt Jl ro~\ lhc
tin1\h lrnc hut onn: he did he \hould
h:t\.C told a r<h.l' ntlinal hl· h.tdn't run
1hr: lull cnur\C
lk1\ht1 2>!, "31d hC' wa~ 'ihockc-d 111
ht"&r of h1'i d1\quahfil at1on
·1\t.art<"d1hr rare and I fin1\hcd tht
r:tt<' ·• hr \.'ltd 'No1h1ng happened I
JU\I ran the r,1n· ··
He hlam<"d the actmn on h1'> txoing
\0111h ·\fncan C'111n:n'i of 1hat coun·
1r, .arc h•lrrl·cl Imm ,ompct1n& in
I \I 'dnrl 111nc"d nJH''
Don Sutton
ANGELS. • • From Bl
BoonC' ~1th lhl <.l'lOnd run
Rut Bohh-. Ctmh ~rounded 1nlu a
force pl.1) 111 rnd tht• 1n11tng ~llh thl·
l\ingrun\on h,1,c ~
* ANGIL NOTIS WI'\ ,. Rt11 llamaflKlr'\
0 I I> "0 "8' 0 •f ~o ,11> tt·f O.IC ....... 'I•,.. \f>lf "" II
De "°'"0 "°''" IO ,,... (llJ!> s lroo~ A '•'"'
•Ut'!' E<1~•011 ""' • malO< ,,.•out ll•lflW>r
•"d I 11• elwav\ ,,..., • ma.or ltaQue C>•ICIWr
H•d R<>m•n•t• I Nel'I lo be N r• "' lllt 04lnn11nl
,1,a1c" bu• '"'"• 11or1•1 w•nl m• II t'1ev ra n 011 \Om.oc:><lv ti•• lo dO ,,,. IOI>. hnt> ' Ma11•Qt• o-Mau<ll ,.,,, ltev CM~ ""ill llktlv 11•1
"" '''" SI•" TueMI,.., ,,, Oe~la"d w''" '"' U••' Tu<tt<lev Oeo\ ~ moved •nto toi.
C>O\M'\IOM of M"<'on<I Ola<• on the a• ,.,.,. 1-s1 w•tl'I 6•1 or. al\ffd "' 0.'lterd perry 'WllO<rl lra•I\
.,,. ... .,... (y ..._.. by 117 Olctr ~
COfll•nvt\ ro tH r JO '""' bn.eo•'"' H tl'le Anotl
\l\OflSIOO St()I• t"' Ill,, COftStcul v• o... " t~
•""-OO<I 1M•llO r~av Aflt<' IOdtV \ ff ....
wotll Mllwaul<H rtte A~t• tt•v• Tttursoav oft
0.. Friday, 11\e Ee\I i.edl"9 8oston ltad '>o•
rome .... tot '"'" O•"'-• Tttt iMtcn1,,. marcttvP\ •or tl'le •Hit\ ••• Jtfwl ~ ll I) .,
•-~ llC•JI Frtoav Miit• Witt (t ·7) ., ,,... ~ (). Sl \all.II' o.v end urw'4'< ><It<!
t PtoClabl• SullOll I •S anKt Hl'"I IS 4 l Sul\da...
S.h1"6h 1 .. rrw \ e• 11 IS o ~ at>G ... 11 0-
awt<J bv NI( TV
Maradona vies at Rose Bowl
PASADENA -Thirty.four of the
most talented soccer players an the world.
including Diego Maradona and four other
members of Argentina's World Cup cham-
pionship team, will star in the FIFAUNICEF World
All-Star Game 10 be played Sunday at the Rose Bowl 1n
Pasadena.
Although a few players arc yet to be confirmed, tht
likely hneup includes Argentrne players Jorge Bur-
rucbaga, Jose Luis Brown, Hector Mi$uel Zelada. and
Juli o Jorge Olarticoechca, who will join Maradona on
"The Americas .. squad. along with Julio esar Romero
of Parafuay, Paulo Roberto Falcao and Junior ofBrazil.
Manue Negrete of Mexico, and Paul Caligiuri of the
United States.
Michel Platini of France will lead "The Rest of the
World." which will include Soren Lerby and Prcbcn
Elkjaer-Larsen of Dcomat'k, Bruno Conti and Paolo
Rossi ofltaly, Fehx Magath and K.arl·Hem2 Forster of
West Germany, and Pat Jennings of Northern Ireland.
The two teams also will be coached by the same
men who squared off in the final match of the 1986
World Cup. Carlos Bilardo of Argentina and Franz
Beckenbauer of West Germany, each of whom fo und
coaching success in their first World Cup, will be
assisted by Bora Milutinovic of Mexico and Johan
Cruyff of Holland. respectively.
The inaugural All·Star Game 1n 1982. which saw
"Europe" defeat "The Rest of the World" J-2. was held
before a sellout crowd of 77,000 at Giants Stadium in
New Jersey and a worldwide telev1s1on audience of 600
mill ion. The 1986 game is slated to be te levised to 650
million people an 70 countries.
Proceeds from the match will benefit the Me:ucan
rehefefforts of UNICEF in the wake of the earthquake~
that devastated that country an September 1985
Tickets are $20, S 15. and S 12 (w11h senior c1t11en
and youth uckeLs available for $8) and ma) bl·
purchased at the Pasadena C1v1c Center box office and
at all T1cketron and Tcletron outlets
Corporate splkers vie at UCLA
LOS ANGELES -One of track and m
field·s most unique contests 1s coming to
Los Angele~ Saturday and Sunday at
UCLA's Drake Stadium.
Ifs the second annual United States Corporate
Track Association National Championship -for·
mcrly known as the Corporate Cup Rela)s
.. We're very excited about being able to hold the
champ1onsh1p in Los Angeles:· said Robert P Radnot1
chairman of the USCT A board of directors
Radnou. a senior engineer for Exxon Co . U .~ A.
1s typical of many of the 2.000 runners who will be
participating an the two-Oay event.
Most have either high school or college track and
field experience And many are regarded as nauonal-
class rummers. For example. this year's men's m1k
event will feature five sub-four minute milers
The maJonty of the runners are either direct!) or
ind1rectl} supported by their companies ... It's good
P.R. for the companies. but mostly everyone enjoys the
health benefit ," Radnoti said .
More and more compa nies are adopting programs
promoung employee fitness .. Some firms have built
complete fitnes<s centers." Radnot1 note<l
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4·30 pm. -BASEBALL Dodgers al
Pittsburgh. Channel 11.
I 0 p m -BOWLING: Channel 56.
RADIO
4.30 p.m. -BASEBALL Dodger; a1
P1ttsb.urgh, KABC (790)
7.30' p.m. -BASEBALL Milwaukee at
Angels. KM PC (7 10).
Boycott leaves
less than half
left to compete
Orily 28 countries remaining
fo r Common wealth Ga mes
EDINBURGH. Scotland (A P) -Four more nations
on Tuesday pulled out or this week's Co.mmonwca.lth
Games. brinama to 30 the !'um~r of coun~es boycotUnJ
the event in protest of Bntaan s refusal to impose tough
economic sanctions on South Afnca.
More than half the 58 ong>nal countries British
colonies and territories now bave withdrawn from the
sports festi val starting Thursday in the Scottish capital.
One nation, Lesotho. went the other way and came
back into the games after initially Joining the boycott.
In London. South African-born swimmer Annette
Cowley, who recently became a Bntish citizen, lost her
appeal an the high coun against a Commonwealth Games
ban.
The coun d1sm1s!>Cd her bid to overturn a decision by
the Commonwealth Games Federa11on which had ruled
the I 9·)ear--Old f~styler was mehgible to swim for
England because she had failed to spend the necessary
ume livmg an her adopted country.
Tuesday's boycotters were GTenada, Mauritius,
Brunei and The Virgin Islands. who JOtntly would have
sent 28 athletes to Edinburgh.
But Lesotho, which stressed 11 had withdrawn for
financial. not poh11cal purposes, said it now was ready to
compete. at least partially, after finding sufficient cash lo
send six of1ts ongi nal team of 17 sportsmen and women.
Cameron Cochrane. an official of the organizing
committee, said, ··we are dehghted This is certainly an
upturn for U!.."
Holmes loses appeal
NEW YORK (AP) -Larry Holmes' appeal to
ovenurn his split dec1S1on loss to Michael Spinks 10 their
lntema11onal Boxi ng Federation title re match was denied
b)' the IBF. 11 was ~vealed Tuesday .
Holmes lost the title to Spinks on a close. but
unanimous dec1s1on Sept. 21. 1985. He failed to repin the
lllle Apnl 20 at Las Vegas. when Judges Frank Brunette of
New Jersey and Jerry Roth of Nevada voted for Spinks.
Brunette scored 1t 144.141 and Roth 144.142. Judg.e
Joe Cortez of New York favoared Holmes 144.141.
Several nnb.11ders felt Holmes had won.
"The boxsn' experts and unofficial judges can very
eas1l) make dec1S1ons," James Stevenson of Bogalusa.
La.. president of the IBF's Gnevance and Appeals
Committee. wrote to Charles Spaziani. Holmes' attorney,
denyang the appeal.
"However, the one that counts 1s the one rendered by
the ·official' Judges ass1~ned to work the fight.
Retiring
Former Hehman
Trophy winner Billy
Slma, the moet auc-
ceuful running back
ln Detroit Lion• bi•-
tory, retirea today ac-
cordinC to team of-
flc lala.
Del Mar handicap
Def Mar
THU•SOA Y'S ENTRIES
(lncl ol U ·deV "*-tlNWed ~I
l"lnt Dftt: 1 p.m
FIRST RACE 6 lurionoi Pur\l' l II 000
TllrH vear 0•<1s en<! 1.11> Cle1m1no p,,,,. l 17 SOO
s 10 soo
I Dence On Down 18 artl II~ 2 Mone Code lSollsl t 1•
3 Hov•rlno Prt•*"<• IS1tven\ 110
• C.rtnob~ ISlbllltl • 116 S Sllaro ConlrOI CP~rotal 11~
6 Murm1.1r1110 aeau CTorol • ,,
TERRY
TURRELL
AVllltTED 12 ll &eek on ll'le dlrl from duli
lurf effort, •••ltsl lOOt to oatt ~••
CHA•o• 14· ll Raced orMn •nd wlda In rouoll
rrlo, ~•ker end w"1111riottam aiw .... s rouon GOLOllN SPttVCI (3·11 CIOM<I wttl In S«lnl
•nd ~n be e f.c:to.-a l !Ills dlSlanQI LONG·
SHOT &LACK STEEL
SEVENTH ltACI 6 furlo111H PurM •lt,000
Filllts •nd martl '"'" VHtS old •nd UP, bred In Cell!
1 Marll•ll DuSISIO.-ITI IStevtnsJ 114
2 Miu S•n Dltoo CEnrlQuell 114
• Sue>ef' AdlOs (0.lehOunavel 117 3 GH llC"$ 8ond (81eCkl •II•
• Treuma Tll'Tlt IOrteoel Ill 7 E•clus111e King IOouol~nl t 1e
I Oomlnanl Roni 1ereck1 •111
9 Be Tttankful IL•otlem II&
10 AnQltman IKHnetl 1 It.
EXCLUSIVE KING S·11 Cune 10 han<1 lo
win IS b8\t In IH I cen rtoea1 MC>ftSE COOE
t•· H Ue>sat winner wa\ muctt '""' best w"llt wide lf'trOuQllOul Ill 1~\I, HOVERING PAtiS·
tiNCI 16-11 Big cleu drop an<1 cen ma -• ,,..,.nds tor lest turll.ev LONGSMOT OOMI
NANT RONI
SECOND ltACE 6 luroong\ Purse lll.000
F•llln tttr .. \<Hr\ 01<1 Clalmlr>Q Price 132 000
s?l.000
I Le<lv Sh•man 18111~1 116
2 Coeled Ltllllf'S I Velenr~la I I It
l Le Prt<lo\a ISotol 116
• Wl'llrllng Too ISttoamakerl 118
\ Procuren IOtl•hOun•vel 116
6 Ab Or1Qlnal (Bleck I • 111
1 Loveland ISlevensl 111
I Cia vtlOle ISlbltt.I 111
OAYUOLI <• II 8ume>e<1 vpry ~"' a1 '"'" '" iast ,1111 clOM mav •Je>\tt lh1\ f•fl<I l(Njev
LOVllL.ANO IS·21 WOtl II ll'le 1181111\V lavorllt
Cle•~ O• Canant Srevtni tor o. todav LADY
SHAM.AH (6·" &r~ to bf QI.II(~ llu\thno Oll<'ll
IO Ouida lOHGSHOT A& OAIGINAl
THl .. D ltACI l l 16 mlltl PurM \ l• 000
fhr" vM r Olds Clalmlno Prlc• U1.000 '7t.OOO
I E110llC ArbltOf IH9tnanderl 116
1 rorwerd Command !Ptdror•l 116
J Nell"' j(Q<'t("t lMcC•rron> 11•
• JOllb lVeltnwtla l ''I S Red CtrdlNll 1$0lls 11•
4 l lOw T"" TrulftMt\ (0.t'9al 116
1 Vav• (St......,\I tit
JOAI ll·SI Jusl beat $1fTlller al 11\a Mllf wlllle
dlc1a1•no r11e Dt<• •O!Md dlt••nc• lhOuld no•
"ln<lff can r-t. IL.OW T'HI ~UlllV'ITS u II ll.l!'loed er the i tart rt<l"9 ooorly 11\t!'t
afltf c.en tnaflf •ITWl'ldt. NATIVI ,0.l(AST r• " ~v aO!>'Kl•I• •Oded distance LONG SMOT EXOTIC Alt81TO.
,~TH .. ACI 6 lurlonot P\l<w 110 000
MalOtfn hro .,..,. Old oreo 1n Calif CI 1mll'l9
Pr'« \$) 000-,,. .000
I Crtflv Cra" (Steven•) 11•
1 ftrarl r•am1tttl 117 l 41•r~11ve Y ..., lllt•ll•r""'I Ill
S First Shool11' IP~roie) 117
6 Solld GOid Sound ISlb•li.l I 11 111
7 Old Sourctouott rcu wtanon l I l7
I Celmo IF11'nanderl ll7
q Stffdv Siar (Ollvere'l 117
10 Make A PockeHut IG•rr1001 117
11 Tttat's 81arMv !Black I •I 17
17 Cnds Can OQ It (Orreo•l 117 .,... . ...,..
13 Canadian Punllfn ISlbl~I 121 111
U BOid 8arQeln l!tolol llS
SOLID OOLP SOUND 16·11 Mii~ of
So<l9 offlP< ong ttn "~' wort< pat19fn for deOut
mav be uoMlt t.c:tor Wf'ti• AOtOS I• 11 Droos
from strtl9f\I maiden ttaal. OelallOUnave riCMS
OLD SOU•OOUGH ()·1) Stffdv t'lfort 1111
oe">1te t>elno wide ll'lrOVQl'IOul LONGSHOT
CANADIAN PUNKIN
l"ll"TH ltACti 1 mile lurf PurH 110 000
T"r" vta• Old• AllOw•nc• l Klmrl°" Road l!>noemak11'1 116
1 Ra vtl"l 8otero l!toto) I 14
l 1r1s11 Star,., 10..al'IOulMYfl I"
• Charioe 8•n c Toro I "• S F•bulOui Sound IMcCa rrOtl 116
6 Patomo 18teckl c tlS
7 GorCIOtl ' corn..,.r>d (P1nc;av> II•
I H•rrlion·i Turn !Sleventl 116
• Crer's cnarm IP9clroral 116
ICIMAIDOI •OAO 12 I) Oroe>• Ir°") troubl9d
.ifOl't 10 ... ~. lPOI. C•" M•k• atMn<h,
ltAV•L.'S .OL.l•o 14 11 Soeed and f'ttld well
oof"9 dlttance M ground sirono toe, lllUS..
STO•UIS 110 I) $1rtt~ oul and \llOuld IOvct
""' t1Jff covrw LONGSHOT PALOMO
SIXTH •ACI . I I 16 rnllH Pur .. \11 000
Maldtn• ti." •M n old and U1I C1t1mlno ~le• ,,, . 000-12• 000
1 FIV•nt Oltl I Otl•~•\Mye) 116
7 Goiotn wuce 1 l1ec11 1 • 111
) Pr•nce Am~r ICHl•llOl'tl II•
4 81aek StMI (Toro> 116 \ .. '° ltl'tff IOI<! ( Oowle• l "4
• To la Sold lflwnandtrl 114
7 Su~ c11aroe ISfloernakw l 116 t A"'fftfO !Ml'Catronl 116
t Doctor T Are IHllf'Nllldtrl 116
10 Gan.n1 Tall Cl"tdroH ) 120
ll PI ' C~e IMcHatoo.1et 116
11 vioooon IOft-1 l"
S A-'• Secrete"' IOllvareo 119
I> PromlMI Me Luck IMcC•rronl Ill
7 Tammv Lu 10.l•l'IOuuanl llf
l1tAUMA TIMti 14·ll Nice drill ov« rtil,
lurtaca, ttllt ttard el tf'tll levtl T ANl#AY LU
ll · ll Aun• well at 1111, rrack, 'Horw I« Courw•.
MAltTlAN DUSTSTC>ttM 16· II Htrd to dtt!V
consldtrellon wltll Stevens rldlnQ LONGSHOT
PROMISE ME LUCK
llGHTH ltACti. l I 16 mile turt Purlt 0 7,000
Fiiiies and marn. lttrM """ old and uo AllOw•nc•
1 Roell " ROii L•.0.. IMcH•rouel "' 2 S.Cue!>Cla I PlllC..,. I 110
l Hlon IK-*l 116
4 R•klnotlno (Steven\ I 1 u
S Landlady (McCarronl 114
6A Ct ll Aoaln ITorol 114
1 A PrlncH • Ca rl<>lt (&Itek I • 113
A-(; D Herhtone Trelned Enrrv
StiCUINCIA 13 II Comtt out ot lllt '°'*'"'
l'lffl •nd ll'IOUld be mor• comoetlllvt todn,
ltOCK'N •oLL. <• I) ... utlf\Jllv lwed for "" oreu honed to lltffec:tlon bv .,.,.,, ~
conditioner. ~ALL AGAIN (6· I) WOii tt/vll ~let
Cltl,.,..... tn !ell IOUQfl t•U. 10 ,_, LONG·
SHOT REKINOLINQ
NINTH •ACI I 1116 mllet Purw &1',000
FllllH •lld m.,tt '"'" "'"'' Old and uo c1e1m1"9 "''"° au.soo i10.soo
' Hld<ltn Anolt IMcCatTon) '" ? fredlllon Of..._ IEnrklutrl 116
3 A)(lom (Cl\/*'°') 11 111
' Gr"" Aoalf'I ltlt<ll 1 IC II 1 s °"'911sl'I O.tn.r (Ortwval "' • SOltndldlV Luckv (~•> I I• 7 Suf Pf'IM Otft II<..-) 114 • Nwrn,.., Olr• 1st • ..._1 114
t ChOl"llta ~ IUllMml ll• oa .... AGAIN ($ 1) In llO!lt •nd Ille -lo Ito. ~ diet•'• 10 PK•. CHOtlUfA ou••N <• 11 llelltd H ••vorlte lest, un l"l\fkt ~
left, ntADITION 0111 ~· 110 I) Strttcll ,_ wortll Ille Pflee ln fllltlt LONGSHOT N•U·
MIES Gl•L
9EST 9 T m ("A\wd b ca l
PRICE 111'\.AY Tr_,.. Tim. (,....ltl rKt)
•-d9ftott1 •-ant1te IO<fl..,,
•
~
1 I I 1 ., .
lliUJOll LaAIMI• STANOtNGS ....... u... wan OMSION • w L ,.ct. oa " ._. .m ., " .500 , ....
0 61 .457 6'11 ., so ,451 , ....
43 Sl "1 7V'a ,. S5 .415 10\11
,. 57 406 11\'t
51 M All
5" 41 .5'1 4
50 41 Wt ' 50 43 .531 ,
Sl 4S .531 7V'a
• 45 .s1• '
44 " 4'7 12~ TutMIY'10-
MllwlUkM 6, Atllilh 2
o.kllt!IG 4, lolton 2
..._ Y0tll. t, Texe• I
o.troll l , MIMeSOla 0
Clevelend e, ClllUgo 4
hltlmore S, ICllM4!1 CUv 4
S<uttle •. T0ton10 7 ( 12 lnnlno•I
T•v'• G4tmM
MllwaullM (Derwin S-S) 11 Allllh (Mc;Calll.IU
10-6), "
Ttxet (Houotl 9·4) al Ntw Yori!. (J.NMl!lro
•·6)
Boston (NIP!* 4-6).at 0.11.lend (Stewarr 2·0)
Toronto (Clencv 10-Sl 11 S.11tle tMoo<e t -6)
MIMftole (HMIOll 3·91 11 0.lrolt (Mol"rl1
10-6), "
Clllcffo (9ennlslff S-61 at Clevei1nc1 !Schrom
10-2), " IC1n111 City (Le lbr111C1t 9-6) 11 9elllmore
(McGreeor 6-t), n
TllunaY'• Gef"9I 1Can111 Cltv 11 O.troll, n
Chlcaoo at 9etllmor1, n
Cll'vtllind at Tex11, n
Only Hmet ICMd\Jled
H-ton
Sen Francisco
Sen DlaOo
Clnclnnall
Al\enta
Dedeerl
N-Yorll
MontrNI
Ptll~l1
Chlcaoo
St.1.ouls
Pill~
Naftenlll LMtut
WHT DtVISIOH
W L
S2 42 so 44
46 " 43 47
43 50
43 50
EAST DIVISION
62 21
... 0
'5 46
40 so
40 S2
3' S2
~ct.
SS3
S3'2
419 .,.
.442
.462
..,
.S:J'I '9S
"" .43S
422
GB
2 • 1 ..... ......
13'h 17'1>
22
23
2•
TUHdeV'a Sceres
~ 4, Pltt1buro11 3
Chlcaoo 6, S.n OleGo 4 ~ York 6, Clncl11111t1 3 114 lnrilnosl
PllltadelPllle S, Atlaf'lte 4 111 ll'nlnosl
St. Louis 10, S.n Francisco 7
Houlton I, MontrHI o (10 lnnl119Sl
TtdlV's~
~ (Hffsllls.r •-n 11 Pl1t1buron (Re-
ulCMI S-11), n
Sen Oleoo tH1wklns 6·71 et Cnlc.11<> (Send· '"°" S•6) MolllrHI (B. ~Ith 7-S) II Houston (ICMPOe!'
11-7)
~Yori< (Oertlno 9-3) 11 Clndnnell (Brown·
lno •-71, n
PNladttPhl1 (Ruffin 7· ll 11 Atlente (Alea· andlf 1-1), n
San Frenclsco (L1Con 9·41 11 St Louh (Cox
3·9), n
TllundlV'• '*-Dedeerl et Pltt11>urot1. n
MonlrNI 11 Clnclnnetl, comPtellon ot
IUIPl!lded 01me, t-n
Montra11 II ClnclM•ll, "he<lulecl 111me. n
Houston 11 Pttlledetplll1, n
Ontv uames Kf*!ulecl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Brewen 6, Aft9llls 2
MILWAUk•E CALlf'OtU41A
Molltor 30
IU!etu
Coooer lb
GTnmt dll
Yount dh
Ooltvle If
Mlnnnocf
Braoosd
0-rf
Gentnr lb
Schroeclf c
M>rllDI llHllbl
S 2 1 O Oownlno If l o O l
• 1 1 o Jovner lb • o 2 o S 0 1 • O.Cnct lb S 0 I I
• O 2 1 Grich 2b S 0 2 O
1 0 O O Hendrck rt 3 O 1 O
• 0 1 0 RJonft rf I 0 0 0
O O O O 8 urleln dll 4 0 2 O •ooo Scnoflldu 2110
l I I 1 Jt(Hwt 011 1 0 0 0
4010 Boone c 2110
4100 RJdlsnl>ll 1000
Nerronc O O O O
Pellll cf 2 0 0 0
Ja 4 10 6 Tetala U 1 10 2
k-bV ""** Mlwtlulr.. 000 uo 002-• c....... 000 OlO 000-2 Geme Wlnnlno RBI -G TllOm11 (4)
E-$choflatd, Burleton. OP-Mllw1 ukM 2,
Caltfornll I L08-Mllw1ukM 7, C1llfornl1 1l
2~llet, Molitor, Coooer, Gentner HR-0..r
( 17). SF-OOwnlno.
Mlwallll ..
Nlevea W,9·4 Ctuttarbuek
Clear ~
I~ " R ER 9B SO
s
)
I
1
)
0
2 2
0 0 0 0
l
1 I
Sul!Clll L.e-7 7 I 4 4 I 4
Conell 1 1·3 2 2 0 0 2
Flnlev 2·3 I 0 0 0 1
Nlevft pltc'*I to 2 oettars In tne 6tn,
Clutterbudt plttned 10 I be rtar In the 9111
HIP-Oear (bv Sulton> WP-Sulton
BK-CIMr
Ume>lret-Home, McClelland, Flr\t, Youno,
5eciond, Rlllty, Third, Coble
T-2:59. A-2',nt.
A"911 •VW•eet
( 111reut111 TUHde '('I oame)
JOVMI'
Burleton
Oownlno
Jactuon
Grldl
Hendrick
Jon.a
WllfonO
Patil•
O.Clnc•s
khofllkl
Howell
Narron
Boone
T .... J
Runle
LUCIS
Witt
CencMtarl1
Flnltv
McCalklll
Forster
Corbell
Moor• Sutton
RomanlC'tt
T...U
9ATTING .. " " "" Jn s1 "' 20 170 25 S4 •
31• S7 86 10
2•7 31 '7 9
167 20 •S S 1n ?t 4S e
241 S2 61 11
19• " 49 1
317 " 80 2 296 35 73 10
2•1 39 se 1 ., ,. 19 1
4t • ll t
160 27 SS 3
1172 4'1 Ill " l"fTCHING
llBI .-ct. n .319
19 .318 so .27•
33 271
17 269
27 262
37 2S3
29 2S3
l1 2S2 ., 247
2t 135
11 232
• 224
20 212
4l' .1'U
I~ " 9B SO W·LERA ·~ 1 0 0 0-0 0.00 ~ l 0 3 O·O 1.93
16011) l<IO 47 130 9-1 3 03
17\'J 17 1 14 3·0 3,06
20'i'l 21 11 17 1~•3.lO
I~ 119 SI 119 10-6 l.26
31 36 13 23 H l.4'
5211'> .a 14 27 2-2 3 7t
21'1'> 23 11 20 l·3 • 13
116-\'J 113 ?4 1• e-7 UJ
10611> 124 .. 3' S· 7 S.SO
...... '14 2" 541 49.44 uo
S1111t ~· e. Corbell 8. Fon ter •
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dod9ln 4, Plr•tes J
LOS .A.NOil.iS ~ITTSBURGH
kx2b .
Lendr)I Cf
BRuuet rf
StuDbs If
Medick 3b
Howtll P
Matult lb
Trevino c
SClotcla c
JGontlt Cf
Ouncann
ltWtlmtrf • APena p •
Brodi pl\
C11Mllllfl
Powttl I)
H1mltn lb T.-.
111rnbl •brllbl
5020 BoncU cf 4 000
) O O 0 Onul•k rf 4 0 1 0
1 0 0 0 RIV 2b • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 BrNm lb 4 l I 0
4 0 1 0 Jllte'(lds If J 2 1 2
0 0 0 0 TPene c J 0 7 0
J O 0 0 Morrltn lb 3 0 0 0
I I 1 0 8eltlerd n l 0 0 0
3 1 2 0 UW1111n Oii 0 0 0 0 o o o O Rhodell P 2 O 0 0
4 I I J McWlmJ p 0 0 0 0
4 I 1 l C.uante P 0 0 0 0
2 O O O Muzftll Pl\ 1 O 1 O
0 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
U 4 '4 Teteh kenbYINllMil
Jl j 7 2
LM,.,,..... 000 010 003-4
~ 000 101 GOO->
Oamt Wlnnlno 11181 -A wnn1m1 (2)
E-S<:lotel1 OP-Los ~noele• 3 LO&-Los
"""'" •· Pltt11>uroh t. 2&-Sax, TPene, scio.c11, Trevino Hiii-iii lll•vnotdt (I), Ill
wllllem1 121 SB-Bonds ( 161 T Pent (4) ·~ " " '" .. iO LM,.,_..
A,._,. • , 2 4 3
PowellW,1 J 1 0 0 1 1
Howell S,t 1 0 0 1 2
~ •hOden • ' , ' 1 1 1 l McWMllem• 11·3 0 0 0 1 0
0\111\le L.4·2 I l 3 3 0 I Ull'l~rtt-Home. Grinder Ftr'1 B. WIMl1ms,
s.conci, Ponclno. Third, PviU
T-US A-IUU
LmLI L•AGU• ALL·STAJU
M9ler' DM1left
OIJTltlCT U TOUIU4AM•N'T ..... ,
(at fl ......... V*1f Sell1ll U .l CWIN _, .. """9VI
TlleMlll'f't ~
POU111alft Vtllev Nof'th 1•. *"'"""' l (CNm·
~·>
Or.-ige Coelt DAILY PfLOT~. J4/llt 23, 1MI * -
.Jr~~-~~~-Royals. can't get u NOie: It Fountain V....., Norlll wllta, •notlltf
Mme wll be Plav~ Ffldltv. ' s.ltr' DMllti\
SICTIONALTOURNAMINT <•t ,,..__ "· """' w .......... , ~W"•lcer9 Olltrlct 2' (FrOl!ti.t') t, Otttrk:t 3t CL.one IMcn) 2. ,.._..,O-s -Otatrlct '2 (Wntmlflatlfl vt. Olttrlct .0
Clltowi.nd Heltftftl .
IM MellM KINI MIN lcMdUle
Tllurt.110ct. 9 -St. L.oula, ht., Oct. 11 -Hew VoMI 11i.ndar1, kt, Oct. 1e -Botton;
Sunclav, Oct lf -Edmoftlofl. Thu,.., Nov. • -MonlfHI; Sat. Nov. t -
Hartford, Tutt .. Nov, 11 -W1MIH9. Thun.,
Nov. 13 -Wln11h>tv; s.1 .. NoY. l4 -eaioarv:
Wld., Nov, 26 -V1ncouv.,; Sat .. Nov. 2' -
N-JerMV,
TllH., Dec. 2 -Detroit; fhur&., O.C. 4 -
TOfonto; Set., DK. 6-Clllc:l9C>1 Sat., Otc. 13-
Ceto.rv; SUndav, Otc. 14 -Edmonton~ w.d., Dec. 11 -P1tt1but9tl; Sat.. DK. 'l1 -loalon;
Tuea .• Dae. 30 -PlllladelPhla. S.t., Jan. 3 -Edmonton; S.t., Jan. 10 -
Butl1to, Wtd., Jan. 14 -V1ncou•; Mon., Jan.
1' -New Von< Ranoen; Wed., Jan. 21 -
P11ttl>urllh; Fri., Jan. 23 -MlnntJOI•; Wed.,
Jen. 2' -N-JffllV. kl., Feb. 14 -HerttOrd; Mon .• Feb. 16 -
Toronto; Wed , Feb. 1', l:OS P.m -w11111neton;
Sat., Fib. 21 -Pttllide!Phla; Tutt .. Feb. 14 -
WlnnlMO; Thurs., F•b. U -WIM11>419.
Tue1., ,.,.._,Cit 3-Mlnnet0t1; SYndav, Merell
• -V.ancouvff, l;OS P.m.; Wed., Match 11 -
Buff1to; S.t., Mirth '4-Quebec; Sat., March
2' -C1Joarv; ,.,_, March 30 -Caloarv.
Wed., Al>l'll 1 -Vancouver; S.t., AD'll 4 -
Edmonton.
Uk.,.., Pff-•Heft "'*""8
Fri., 0t1. 10 -Chlcaoo (home); SUI\., Oct. 12
-New Yori\ (homt); Fri., Oct. 17 -11 Ctllcaoo,
4:30 o.m.; kt,, Oct. le -ChlcHo, al ChaPel Hll,
N.C., 4;30 1>.m .; Tues., Oct. 21 -11 New Vorll,
S:lO P.m.. Fri . Oct. 24 -f'tloenhl, 1t Albu-
Outir11U.. AM llmel Peciflc. AH qemes 7:30, unlell notacl.
Laken' summer pro ... ..,. "'*""8
(It L.n• Marvmeunt)
Fri., AUQ. 1 -Phoenhl; Sat., Auo. 2 -
MllwaukM; Mon., Auo. • -Chlceoo; Tues.,
Auo. S -Portland; Thuo., Auo. 7 -NBA Slara;
Fri., Auo. t -Phoenix, e:15 1> m.; Sun., Auo 10
-Chlc100. 3:4S Pm.; f'NXI , AUCJ, 11 -
Mllw1uk .. ; Wed .. Auo. 13 -NSA P,.oa; Thurs..
AUQ 14 -Porll1nd; Fri., Auo. 15 -Celllc1 Pka .
All v•ITlfl II 6 11.m., unless notaa.
Tl!NNIS
Fedlt'atlen Cup
(If ~awe, Cuc:11..wt11tlel
lhlttad S•tn J, Cl\IN 0
Mlrllne N1Yratll0111 (U.S.) def. Xlnvl LI, 6•1,
6--0; Zina G1rrlson (U.S.) def. NI Zhono, 6·3, 6·2,
N1Yretllovt·P1m Shriver (U SJ def Lll1n 01.11n·
Xluten Pu. 6·2. 6·0
West G«manv vs. 8elllUm
Steffi Grat (Wtlt G1rm1nvl def Ann Devries,
6-3. 6-1, C11udl1 Konae-IClllCfl (West Germanv)
091 Sendra W11..,-m1n, •-6, 6-1, 6· 1
....... vs. So\ltet Unltft
Mlnue11 M11ftva (Bul!lerl•l def. Larlu• s. ... cnenko, 6·1, 6-1, K11rln1 Melaevt (Bu!uarle )
clef N1tntl1 Zvertv1, 4·6. t·I, 6·2
ltMY vs. lffw INiand
Le ur• Garrone Ut1M dtf Julie Rlcl'ltrdson.
6· I, 6-1. ReffHlll RIOlll (1181\11 def Bellnd•
Corclwt ll, 6·3. 6·4 ""*"' toum11ment (II LIW!elton, N.J.)
~lrst Rwncl SlntM1
w111v Mosur IAustrallel ckrf 8rl1n T11cner
(U S I. 4·6, 7·S, 7·5, Mitt Anoff (US.I def K11tv
Jonet (US I, 6·3 6·4, Remesh KrlsM 1n tlnc!l1)
def Peter Ftemlno tu S 1 1·S, 6-1, Peul
Ann1cone (US I clef Mertv Da vis (U S.l. 6·3. 2·6, 1·5; Howard Herr 1Sou111 Africa) def. Vince
Van P11t1n (U S I. 6·4. 6·1. Eric Korlla (U SJ
def. llll1v Amr11ra1 llndlal. 7·6, 6·4, J1v Laolclus
(US.I dtf Garv Muller ISo1.1tn Afrlc•I. 7·6, 6·2,
Todo Nelton ru S) clef P11rlck McEnroe (US I,
0·6, 6·•. 6·4
I
• ,...
°"° ... ftstllne
DANA WHAlllf' -, bolts, 191 •nuler\ 619
Din. 3S oerrecucle, 10 bOnllo, 101 roclt flsn, 246
mecker11
NIWl'OltT LANDIN«# -4 boall, 100
1n111ers. 422 sand t:>en. 70 calico t:>en. 35 bOnllo,
26 berracucll I whit• s11 beu. 62 rockflsll, 117
mecll.ertt
DAVEY'S LOCKElll -6 bolts, 774 anolers.
106 oerrecuot. 91 bonito, 11 vttlowt11l, 1
rockflsn. 13S c•Hco bin. I. 194 Slnd ben 1
tculoln. 300 mackerel. IS blue sherkt, l m•ko
'"""'
VOLLEYBALL
T .. m Cup
(It '9rum, lftlleWMdJ
HoltvwOOd Siers clel ICROQ· JOQS. J 1·19
27·30; 30·27
Mluntv Sc>lker' dtt T11m Bodv Glove. 2t·30
30·2', 30-27
At1tndenc1· 1, IS3
Tllftd8V'I tr•Mtctlenl
Ul•ULl.
Amer!Qn LAetllll
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Optlonec! Joel
01vl1, pflcllff, to Buff1lo of tne American
Assocltllon. Purdllffd 1111 conlract of Ivan
C11dtron. ouifleldlr from Buffalo
OAICLANO & 'S-&u loned Erle Plunk, oltcll
er to Tacoma 01 '"' P1clllc Coett L1111ue
C11tea u1> Rutlv Tiiiman, outfletcler trom
T1comt
f'OOT9Al.L
NI"-!~....,.. LH9UI I
ATLANT.11 F ALCONS-<ut S.111 ThOmH,
Mlcl\eet $1001>• end Cnrls Svnc!Of, defen1lv1
backs
CINCINNA Tl 8EN4ALS-Slgntcl Gerv Hunt
end lluue11 H1lrl1on, dtflnsl•ll Dack\, •net
llloberl HI/dell Ale• Trooo and Sttvl l\lt>lldltr,
HnetMlck•" CLEVELAND 8ROWNS-W1l"'9d Otvld
MO(rtM, "°" te<llle Krl' AIOI, e>unltr, Mlcttaet
Curlln. teletv •nil Mentel Carter and Kufl
Norman, 11~11.10 Pllc'9CI Jon C1dt dt·
~llvt lflCI on 11'11 PhV\ICl llV unable to l>lf'lorm
iltt and Freel 911111' wlOt rtct lvtf, on trwt ~
tootblll lnlurv 11•1
OETlllOIT LIONS-Signed O.Car Smith Ind
0 111nv An<Jr-• ruMlnt Dackt W1lvtd •on Ztll
lrewer, running baell
MINNE SOT A VllCING-Slllf'lacl $tanlev
Adam•. llMtHICll~ 11na David Jacob•. kkker
NEW VORIC JEn-A9f'eed ro ltf"" wl!h Mike H•IOht, tve,.d, to 1 ........ Of one ..,..r
COfllrlCI, I ncl 8ob White, ottamlv• llCkle.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Slonect Pel SwlN
1no, llneoecker
PHILADELPHIA ~AGLlS-Sklntd Dan
McM~ ~ti.,.. Ind, 9l"IOll L .. , linebacker .
end .-..rwt kln4>lOl'I. runnlnt ~
SAN f'llANCISCO 4'tl'~W1l'l'H Joe Mein•
toJll. runnlnt beCll.
WAIHINO TON It OSKINS-W11Yfd lllknll
White. runnt11t bacll
I
Rt ken ·s solo homer
sends Baltimore past
a reeltn Kansas City
Prom AP .u,.tdff
BALTIMORE -CaJ Ripken Jr!s
aolo homer with two outs in the
eighth innina. Baltimore's fourth
hometof'the pme, pve the Orioles a
S-4 victory over the Kansas City
Royals Tuesday night.
Rookie Jim Tra6er drove in lhtee
runs with a pair of homers and Fred
Lynn added a solo shot as the Orioles
twice overcame two-run deficits to
forae a 4-4 tic after four inninJJ.
Ripken's 1 Sth homer of the season
came off' reliever Bud Black. 4-S, who
relieved staner Bret Saberhaaen at
the st.art of the sixth innina. The
winner was Don Aase, 4-3, the third
Baltimore pitcher. He put 'down a
bases.-loaded Kansas Chy threat iJ'I
the eighth with the help of Lynn, who
* 'Mnn.n 1, aau. .Nvs 7
TCMtOHTO SEATTl.E
Fer(lndt n
Garcia 21>
Mowovd
8all If 8arlleld rf
JPl\ntn dll
Up1h1w lb
IOf'O 3b
Mullnlll 3b
9Mertnzc
Sf\Phl'd I>(
Whlll c
abrllbl
4 1 .J 1 s J 0 0
• 0 1 0
6 1 2 1
4 I 1 3
S I 0 0
6 1 2 1
4 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
J I 2 1
0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
Mos.s cf
Phelp$ pl\
JRMc:IP
Remos Ph
PBradlv If
f>retlev 3b
Trt1bll rt
A01vl1 lb
OHeasn dn
Owenn
Yeeoerc SBra~vc
RNel&n Pf
1C11rnevc
R1vnlclt 2b
llbrllbl s 0 1 0
I 0 0 0
0000
0 0 0 0
6 0 I 1
S I 2 0
6 0 2 0
4 2 1 0 s 2 J 2 s 2. 3
2 I I 0
2 0 I 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
4 0 0 l
44 7 12 7 Tetlh Sc_bV....,.. 45 I 16 7
TeAnte 400 101 010 000-7
S..ttle 020 410 000 001-•
Two outs wllet'l wlronlno run ~cored.
G1me Wlnnlnu RBI -P Bradlev (4).
E-Blll. OP-Toronto 1. · Seattle I.
LOB-Toronto 9, Seattle 13. 2&-<>wan, 0 .
Hend«aon, Biii, PreS!eV, Ftrnendet.
3&-Fernandet. HR-81rlltld (14), D. Han· denon <13), 8. Merllne1 (2), UPtlllw (3).
58-Mo&M (19). s-Revnotds, PrHlev. t<Mrnev
2. SF-Pernander
t~ H R IR 99 SO T.,......
Kev
Eichhorn
Henke
CaUdlll L,2·7
Clark a
S.ttle •
4 e
3 s
l 0 1 1-3 2
1·3 I
6 s
I 1 0 0 l 1
0 0
0
1 l
0 1
Lanoston 6 1·3 7 6 6 s
Ladd 1 0000
MVC>Yno 21·3 S 1 l I
J. Ried W,3·0 2 0 0 0 I
4
1
0
9
1
2
l
ElcMorn pltelled lo I Deller In the 8111.
H8P-.A. Davit (t>v Ek:hhornl. P 8r1cllev
(bV Henke). P&-S. 8redlev.
Umpires-Home, Wtlkl , Finl. McCOY, Sic·
onc:t, Pttllll~; Third, VOltauolo
T--4:22. A-10,IS2.
1
1 NATIONAL LEAGUE I~ • --~
.
maM I diVtftJ Cllth or ptnch-b.iUU
Jorwe 0na·, 11nkio11intt to cmttt.
Elwwbere an the Al Tuesday:
.t•a•, ...... i: Jn OaJcJanCS. O.ve
K.iqman liricd • t~n $in&Jc in tbt
first inni°' and C.a.mcy f.anslord
followed wub an RBI double, a.od
three Oakland A's pitchers combined
to beat Tom Sc.aver and the Botton
Red Soll.
O&kland starter Joaquin Andujar,
6-l. yielded six ruts, includinJ Rkb
Oedman's two-run homer tn the
founh, in 711> innings. Tbe ri&ht-
hander. who walked two and struck
aut two, is 2...0 since comina off the
disabled lisl last week.
'Yu.keel t, Ruaen l : lo New
York. Dave Winticfd and Don Mat-
tingly led a New York power IUJ'IC
that boosted Dennis Rasmussen to
his seventh straight victory, besti111
the Texas Rangers, and helped pull
the Yankees within four gAmesofthe
American League East-leading Bos-
ton Red Sox.
Tl1en 3, Twla• 0: In Detroit. John
Grubb homered twice and drove in
three runs and Walt TetTCll pitched
one-hit ball for eight innings before
needing relief help as the Detroit
Tigers beat the Minnesola Twins .
Terrell, 9-8, held M~nnesota hitless
until the sixth innin'g, when Kent
Hrbek doubled with two outs. Terrell
left the gatne with two outs in the
ninth after singles by Hrbek and Tim
Launder and a walk loaded the bases,
BOSTON
Barrell 2b
Booot 30
Bucknr dh
B1vtor If
OwEvna rf
Gedmanc
StenhOJ lb
Qulnonsn
Terver cf Totela
* A's 4, R~ SH 2
OAKU .. D ~rllbl
4 0 I 0 Pl\11111>' lb
3 O 0 O MurPhv cf
4 O 1 O C1n1M1Co If
4 l I 0 Boehle lb
4 O l 0 Knomndh
4 1 1 2 L1nsfrd 3b
3 O O 0 M01vlsrf
3 0 0 0 Wllterd c
3 0 l 0 Griffin u n l 4 2 Tetln
Sc-by""*'91
alirlllll
4 0 0 0
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4 1 2 0
• l 1 2
4 0 1 1
3 I 1 0
2 0 1 0
1 0 0 I a 4' 4
.... 000 -000-2 OU&aftd JOO 000 lOX-4
Game Wlnnlno RBI -t<lnom111 (t).
E-Gec!men, Andular. OP-Oekllnd 1
L08-8oslon S. Ot ktenc:t S. 2&-euckner.
L•naford, Bocnte. HR-Gadmln (6).
Se-t{l1191Mn (2). s--<irllfln. SF-Griffin.
IP H R II" 98 SO ...,.,,
Seaver L.•·8 62-3 6 • • 3 1
BSt1nlev 11·3 0 0 0 O 1
Olltllnd
Anduler W,6·2 7 1·3 6 2 1 2 2
llonOhlen 1·3 O O 0 O 0
OnllverosS,10 11·3 0 0 0 0 l
WP-Seiver, Anduler
UmPlrn -Honne. Hlrlcilbe<:k; Flrtt, Tldll<ll;
Second, Bremloan; Third, Roe.
T-2:26. A-141410.
and WW~ Hernanda Sol I.he final out ror hi• t 9'h aave. ...._ I, WMl* In t: In
Ckvdancl. Ch.ria BaftdO's \wo-nlll
double capped a Jix..f'Uft first lllnu'I.
and 1=r. Bc:muatd had two of OeVe ·1 eipt bits ia the outbunt
u the Indians defai\ed the Chicago
White Sox.
MartMn ..... ,.,. 7: ln seantr,
* .............. s...
CMICAGO CLaVWl.AJID •rll., •r•• s l l 0 9emlrd21> 4 t 2 0
4 100 autler d 1720
4000 Gwterl"f 4111
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Game WlMlnt Rll -Jacoov ($)
E~ullilft. OP-<hlcaoo 1. LOl-<hlcaoo 7,
Cll'Velllld 4. 2&-Kltt19, 81110o, L VOM, Tlbler,
Skinner, Jac:obv 3&-luller 2 Hiit-Kitti. (161.
S&-+Mtll (3). SF-G Wa-.. 8ando, LVOM.
CNcae8 OottOllL,7·10
Mitton
MclCton
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~ndo.
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UmolrH Home. IC.1ls.r; Fin l,
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Scott, Sec·
* OrlllH 5, Revm 4
KANSAS CITY BAL TIMIMtE
LSmllhtf
Wllsond
IC!noerY rf
Brett 3t>
McltMdh
White lb
8albonl lb
Sundbtvc
ASalatru
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Blandnu
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3 0 1 0 Traber dll 3 1 2 3
1 0 0 0 sn..11 lb 2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Banklur lb 1 0 1 O
OMeHV 3b 3 0 0 0
OemDiVC 3 0 0 0
M 4 11 4 Teblls tt S 7 S
lceNbY""*'91
KMM• Cit¥ 022 -M -4 ......,.._. 021 llO Otx-1
Game Winning RBI -RIPlten 00).
E-9alb0nl OP-81lllmort I. LOI-Kan111
CllY e 9ellk'Mre 3. 28-A. S.luar, MA. Young
HR-Trlber 2 (3), McRM (4), Lynn (16), RIDl<an
(IS). S&-WlllOll (23).
II' H It ER 99 SO
l<ltMas CltY
SabertlaOll! s • 0 •
Siad! LA•5 3 1 0 0 .....,_..
Davit 41·3 • 4 4 S
&or-di 3 200 2
A1t1W,4·3 12·1 I 0 0 2
Umpires-Home, Cousln1, Firs! MumPl\rev;
Secotlcl, Merrill; Tl'llrcl. Mendrv
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Game WIMllw Ill -None. ==i E-<MTM. DP-Texas a, ...,, vn
Le>a-Teus s. New Yon '· 28-IM .· • Wlnfleld, Rllldolpft, C.
Hlt-M.111'"91Y (17), Wlnfltjd ('4), P9doNk.~ • . ....,.,'°" un. c WMN11t•011 <4>. ~ H~ (SS), W.rd (I), ~
Taua 11' M • • M -
Corr" l.,6-e I t-3 1 • • J I RutMI JM • 2 2 I
Mohorclc: M 1 t 0 0
Harrit 7 Jll' MNYtr'll
lltnmu.n w, 12·2 U •l a J
FlllW 2 1-3 2 I 0 t
UmD1,_...+4ome, Reed, Finl, ~ ~ Gert ie, Thl,.d, Ford. - ---~
T-2;.48. A-26,099.
* n....i.,.....
MINNE.SOTA 09ftCMT
•r11111
4 0 0 0
4000
4 0 2 0
4000
2000
)000
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Puekett Cf
B""1 If
Hrbek lb
lrnnlltv rf
GMtll lb
Smalvdh L.mbt~121>
L.9UCWPll
Salatc
H1tdlr Pll G.ene u T ..... II I J e T.-11 J 4
SC*'ll IW ...... Mii••... __ .......
o.w... ... -•-O Game Wlflnlng ll81 -GnJbb (2). •
e-Whlllker OP ~· 1. ~ M1Mnot1 t. Detroit l. 2&-H!'Mk. Htt~j
(SI. s-colllm · •
AMII-* IP M "U .. ,
Bl'l'leWn L,9-9 e 4 2 J J ~
Twretl W,t-1 e 2·l J 0 I 4 ' Hemande1 S,19 1·2 0 0 0 0
H8P-l.emon O>v &lvteVtn.).
Umc>lrts Home, Clert&.; Flr'lt, Slluloc:k; s.t;
onc:t. Morrison. Third, Md(Mn
T-'2:29. A-1'.'74
MetsoutslugRedsin 14, 6-~
!-
:Parkers· s crucial
error opens door
in marathon brawl
From AP dilpalcbes
CINCINNA Tl -Howard John·
son·s three-run homer in the top of
the 14th inning sent the New York
Mets to a marathon 6-3 victory
Tuesday night over the Cinc1nnat1
Reds in a g.ame that featured a bench
cleanng brawl, six ejections, two
protests and a cruciaJ two-run error
by Reds' right fielder Dave Parker.
Parker dropped a fly ball for the
potential final out an the ninth letting
in two runs to tie the game 3-3.
The Mets rallied in the 14th otTCarl
Willis, 1-1 , who gave up a double to
Ed Heam and a walk to pitcher Jesse
Orosco. in the g.ame as a nght fielder.
Johnson htt a 2-2 pitch off reliever
Ted Power. the sixth Reds' pitcher to
make a winner of Ro~er McDowell .
* CUbl 6, PadAI 4
SAN DIEGO CHICAGO
F11nnry 20
Gwv1>n rf
Krull lb
McRvlcl' If
N1tlle\ lb
Rovt1er 31>
ICt l'lll<IY C
Boctwc
Wvnne c1
Gervev lb
TmpHnu
McCliers o
BS1clclrd P
loro Pt!
LePolnt P
Mtrtlnr Ph
Torell
ab r II bl
• 1 l 0 s 1 1 1
4 0 I 0
l 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
I I l 1
l 0 I 0
I 0 l 1
2 0 I 0
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2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
1 l l 0
0 0 0 0
1 0 1 0
Muohrvcl
Snc1br111b
GMlllws lf
OMrtnr cf
Ournm lb
Morelncl rt
JOa vls c
Cev 3b
Soeler 3b
Ounstoo u
Lvnch P
OIPlno P
Trlllo Ph
LISmllll P
lS 4 '4 T•t.I•
k-bv tnntnes
1.b r II bl
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0 1 0 0
3 1 I I
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0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
32 ' • s
Sen OlffO 000 000 M0-4
Cllkl9' 100 020 JOx-4
G1me Winning RBI -Ga Mettnews (3).
E-Nellles OP-Sin Oleo<> 1 C11lceoo 1 LO!l~San Oleoo 1 Cttlceuo 9 1B-Oun,lon,
l\/lumpl'lrtv Durham, Moreland SB-Ourllem
(6)
IP H •ER BB SO
Sen Oteee
McCllert L,S·4
B SIOclcltrd
LePotnl
ClllC.a91
6 I 3 6
2 ·l 2 I 0
s
1 e
3 6
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• 0 I
Lvnch W,2·1 6 > 1 l
OIPlno 2 0 0 1
Lt Smllll S, 16 I I 0 0 I l
Lvncll PllClllcl IO ) oe111n In IM Ith
PB-Kennedv. J 01vl1
Umplr11-Hom1, Peltont Flr,1 E~ Sec·
Oflcl, Oertlno, Third, RIPotev
T-H2 &-27,044
* AltrOI I, EXPOS 0
MONTREAL HOUSTON
R1lnt• tt Web,ltr ct
Oaw1on rf
Wllltcn JI>
ICrnc:M lb
Fllzoerld c
Oont1ll u
Llw lb
Newmn2b
Youmn' o
Ttfllll
•II r II bl • 0 0 0
J 0 0 0
• 0 0 0
l 0 0 0 • 0 0 0
) 0 l 0
l 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0
Doren 2b
~411Cl\fftl
OSmllhD
WllllllO lb
G01"'I' lb
l 1nr1
C,.uJ If
Atl'lbv c
CRanldt n
Rv1n1>
Gelne\' ct
)I 0 1 t T.-.
Sc_bY...._.
111 r II bl
• 0 0 0
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l 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
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JI I l I
~ 000 ... 000 o-o
Ht111"" 000 M OOI I -1 No outs when wlnnlno run ~Otlcl
Game Wlnnlno RBI G01vls 110)
E-Newm•n A1llbv LOB Monlr11I 5.
Hout lOn , t8-1<11we••ld HR-C• Oevl1 C21)
$9-Wll>tlef <251 Melcher t24>
I~ H It ER a• SO
~
YGUml nl I. 10 • t 0 I
"91.flfilrl .. 1tv1n t l•l I o o I•
D\mllh w l • t ·J O O o O l Youmen• Piil"~ to I 1>111t1t In 11'11 10th
Umplrtt-Mome C Wllll1m1 Fll"\t
W~dellttcll, •Of\d Be111tn Tfllro Cr•w+orct
T-243 A-It 271
8-4. who aheranated with Orosco
over lbe final four innings.
The game was delayed for l S
minutes by a bench-dearing brawl
touched off when Mets' third
baseman Ray Knight punched Reds'
pinch-runner Eric Davis in the bot-
tom of the tenth inning.
Elsewhere in the NL Tuesday:
A1tro• 1 Expo• 0: In Houston.
Glenn Davis hit a I 0th-inning home
run after Houston's Nolan Ryan had
struck out 14 Montreal hitters and
held the Expos to one hit over 91/J
innings.
Davis' homer of Floyd Youmans.
10-6. was his 21 st of the season, tyi ng
him with Mike Schmidt for the
National League lead.
The 14 strikouts by Ryan, the all-
time maJor league strikeout leader,
was the highest total in the NL this
season. The only hit off Ryan was a
fifth-inning double by Mike
Fnzgerald
Dave Smllh, 3-6, was the winner
after com 1 ng on in relief of Ryan with
one out and runners on first and
second m the 10th. Ryan walked Tim
Wallach and Fitzgerald before Smith
came on to retire pinch hitter Van~
La\\ and Al Newman and give
Houston 1ts fifth straight v1ctory.
Cardlnal1 10, Giants?: In Sl Louis.
A.ndy Van Slyke tripled and homered
to start and finish an eight-run fifth
inning that powered the St. Louis
Cardinals to a victor} over the San
Francisco Giants in a contest marred
by a brawl in the seventh innin$.
Umpire John McSherry ejected
San Francisco Manager Roger Craig
and two Giants players following the
five-minute brawl. which erupted
when 'it. Louis outfielder Vince
Coleman wa~ struck by a Frank
* C8rcfinats 10, Giants 7
SAN l"lllANOSCO ST. LOUU
&rtnlv lD
FWlllmsD
Kuicner lb
lllTll1>1n 2b
Leonard II
CBrown :It>
JRobnt" o Woodrd Pt!
C01vls cf
Mldnclo rl
Mtlvlnc
Uribe n
Bartnur o
Ynobtcl lb
Blut o
MOevl\ O
Qulnon• u
Sollmn lb
Tetals
lb r II bl
4 1 1 2
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0 0 0 0
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COieman If
OSmltn u
McGHCf
Knlcetv lb
Herr 2b
Ooutnd 2t>
VenSlVk rl
Pndtln lb
Lvltrt c
TUdof P
Burrlt o
worrell o
l' 7 ll 7 Tlfah
k-bv IMlnet
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Game w1nn1n11 1181 -1>1nc1111on 131
E-< 0 1v1, 0 Smllll C Brown Oulnonea
Mt(,M OP-S.n FranCl\CO·l L08-Sln Fran
Cl"O I. SI LOUIS 1 l8-L11111ttert MtGtt C
8•ow11 Younoblood l&-Va1>Slvll.1 HR-Brenlv
!11 \/t nSIVllt 161 YounotM<>od 141 S&-0 ~\Ill
11t1 coi.men 2 ''°I s-e1ue, Tudor SF -Pendleton M1ld0ne0o ... " " ..... '° Sift ~ranene.
!llue L 7 ~
M01M1
ltrenouer
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St. LAlula
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Worrell S 17 l 2 3. t O
HBP-<Ollman Cbv F WIUl1m1J
U!N>l•H Homt, D•Yld.oll '1r1t ~ond. Hal•IO!I Third, Mlr\l'I
T-101 A-13.673
. )
J 0 I
0 I 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
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0 I 0
Umpire John McSherry atanda ln way of Olanta. Card1na1a.
Williams pitch. The melec at home
plate delayed the g.ame for 15
minute'\.
The Cards reported that second
baseman Tommy Herr suffered a cut
on the left side of his face that would
require at least one smch.
Also ejected following the seventh·
mnmg mel~ were Wilhams af\d
Grants third baseman Chns Brown
Tempers flared moments earlier
when Williams spun Coleman. who
prev10usly had stolen two bases. from
the batter's bQ\ with an inside
deli ver}'.
PllHlles 5, Braves 4: In Atlanta.
Tom Foley's p1nch-h11 single' w1th two
out in the 11th inning gave the
* Ptl•te• s, &raws •
l'Hll.ADEL~IA A TU NT A
Reau& If·
sione cf
•oen1ck C1
Semuet 2b
Scllmdl lb
H1ves lb
o w uaon rf
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i=oiev Pl\
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Ramlrr lb
Grlffev If
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Hul>brcl Ph
Ot><trlo. ti 1t1
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8ef1ecltCt C
Heri>erPl'I
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Semple on
Garber P
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42 S 10 S Tetlls
k-bV~
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28-Stont Chal'llbllH Hhe\, Mun>'lv
Hlll-H•ve• t6l Grltt.v ) <•l S8-S.m<Hli 11'1
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If' HRERaaSO
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Umoltt\-Homl Wtve< f:!frtt lttnnert \et
ond, /'NXlllO\lt Tlllrcl trO< ~tantt.r
T-)09 .ll-14 21t
Philadelphia Phillies a victory over
the .\tlanta Braves, who aot three
home runs from Ken Griffey.
Von Hayes. who hit a two-run
homer in the first. started the winn.ina
rally ofTCralg McMunry, t-6, with a
double into the riaht field comer.
Hayes went to third on John
Russell's infield grounder and scored
on Foley's sinf)e to ~nter that came
after pinch-hitter Grci Gross was
walked intentionally.
Caba 6, Padres 4: In Cllicqo, Ed
Lynch allowed just three hits while
blanking San Diego for the first seven
innings, and the Chicago Cubs went
on to band the Padres their fifth
!>tra1gh1 defeat
* Mm ,, lteds s
NEW YOlllK CINCINNATI
lbtll bl ., ....
Ovllllrt cl 7 I 1 1 Veflable Cf S 0 I 0
Bcllmn 2t> 3 0 0 0 8ell 3b • 1 3 1
Ttulet 2b l 1 1 0 Parllaf' r1 S 1 2 2
K Hrnc11 lb S 0 3 0 BOl11 t 4 0 0 0
Certer c • O O O Franco 1> 0 O 0 O
Strwbrv rt 1 0 0 0 Rote Dh I 0 1 0
Mitchell r1 , 0 0 0 EOaYll pr 0 0 0 0
HH r" c 2 1 1 o Brwnne Pf' O O t O
HffPlf JOJO Wlllll P 1 000
Sisk P 0 0 0 0 Po-P 0 0 0 0
Auuller 1>'1 o O O 0 EMtkv If 4 O O o
0rOKOI> 1100 Ml!Mfd 2000
t(nlo111 Jb S O 2 o lllowdQll " • O 1 O
McOwtt o ? 0 0 0 Pef'lz lb S 0 t 0
knl•M u 1 0 I 0 Ont., 2b 6 0 I 0
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New Ywtl M t1' .., M a -t
Clilelmatl lt1 tit Ill -._,
Game WIMlno 11181 H ~-(2).
E-Rowdon. Partier OP-New YoMI I, Clfl·
clnnall 4 \.08-,.._. Yorll 16, Clilc""'-11 11
2B-K H«nanoer t, Ttufill, ~
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JotmMlll i.1 s.-s1raW10etTY 1211. ftowdaft m.
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New Ywtl • M .... M to
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Delly P'llot ,._.... bf Dewtcl Cwl9<MI
No ca•ual •wnmer 80Clal bere ... a black tie dre88y event
with a well-turned out group in fancy finery. Beverly Coll
(top photo left) and Barry Cole were among the flnt to greet
•peclal guest Ann Landen. Other partytoerea (from top
clockwi.e) included desl4[ner Gilda• With Xavier who
•how• off bl• .elf-designed vest; Michael Perkin• ... i.•ting
Mary Ann Miller a• •be tries on furrry auction item;
committee member Ann Stern proves bacu out are 'ln':
Pam Gold•tein, wbo •pent 580 hours ma.king chocolate
plan08, r08e9 and truffles dl8play• one of her 15-pound
centerpiece•. and Bunny Pero. who gave the lrvtne Hilton a
look of .New York with decoration•. arrives with hu•band
Jeff.
ARTHRITIS ....
~ ·:.t~~r]~) rf.
f r i ·" 'f-j,. . ''i, J." 't ~ ~ ,/
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....._ THE 1986
Don't let it
stop you.
Learn how you can
live a fuller, more
comfortable and
independent
life.
ARTHRITIS INFORMATION
SERIES
When:
Time:
Second Meeting, Tuesday, July 29, 1986
7:00-9:00 P.M.
Where: HUMANA WESTMiNSTER HO SPIT AL
200 Hospltal Clrcle, Westminster, CA
(Baaement Cafeteria)
The Arthlrltls Information Serles Offers:
• Speclal Presentations By Board Certified
Orthopaedic Surgeons
• Information on New & Proven Arthritis Treatments
• Effects of Nutrition on Arthritis
• Question & Answer Dlacuaalona
• Free Information &"'Refreshments
Co-Sponsored by:
------mana Hospital
Anoclated Bone & Joint Orthopaedic
Surgical & Medical Group
Vlesbttinster
JOHN C WARBURTON, M D
AOeeAT Q . HERSCH. M.O.
A08ERT W HAMllAn. MD
JACK PAICHAU, JA., M.D
ST!Vl!H R. OAABOF,, M.D
Call for Reservations & Information
(714) 898-2554
.,I
,
~--------------
Women\ Diagnostic Center ,,
'Ht•morial Imaging Center of Huntin!{tOn Be11ch
( <1(1/t.,//\ II/ It/I'• I Ill/ (ti ,t •f'l/ltf/,I( tlfl
U 'omen 's Health Concerns
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''Medical Emergencies 1\ at Sea ... "
I Responding to a
shark approac h,
avoiding the bends.
surviving seasick-
ness. what to Include
In your shipboard
emergency kit and
much more.
• Mark Monroe. M.D ..
local phy1lclan.
certified scuba
diver and m ember
of the National
A11oclatlon of
Underwater
Instructors will
1hare lnfonnatlon
on how to de.I
with or avoid
common marine
emergencies.
Pleasto call 650-2400 to reserve your pace
lC1DJ rma
for thle f-.clnatlng forum.
Costa Mesa Medical Center Ho pltal
30 I Victoria Street. Cott• Mua. CA 92627
Search
party::
quite
aalght
The 'Night With
Gershwin' affair
was a big success
By VIDA DEAN
Of .. 0., NM aWI
If a fund-ra1S1 ng fashionable eve-
ning with great music, stylishly
dressed guests and a superb dinner
was what the Search Foundation
was looking for. the organization
found 1t Saturday with its "Rhap-
sody m Blue" benefit at the Irvine
Hilton
More than 400 guests entered an
arch ofblue and silver balloons to
begin partying on the hotel's
poolside patio that had been trans.
formed into a mini Central Park for
the New York-themed .. A Night
with Gershwin."
"We wanted a fun, summer
event. .. something different ... with
music." said chairman Beverly T.
Coil. "We all love music and next
year we will salute Cole Porter,"
added Coil, wearing a blue gown
and matchingjewclry by designer
Gilda•. He had beaded the bodi~ of
'Cotl'sdresswith the New York
skyline (as 1t was during Gershwin's
time).
"Things should be quiet around
the house in a few days and we will
have rei:upcrated," commented
husband Uo C0Uduringthecockta1l
hour. "The committee has been
working 14 to 16 hours a day for two
weeks." (Plans for the sell--0ut event
beun in March.)
Ann Landers, (who had arrived at
the hotel at 2:30 p.m. from Chicago)
Joined the sociahzers who were
minsllns. bidding on 60silent
auction items and listening to
Gershwin music provided on two
baby grand pianos by Barry Cole
piamsts. (''I'm proud of my
people," said Cole. who added that
Gershw1 n m us1c wasn ·1 the easiest
to play.)
Later in the chocolate-scented
ballroom. Landers. whowasco-
cha1rman. was presented the Na-
tional Drug A vo1dance award by
Beverly. ··Early education is the
only answer to the drug problem.
Our goal (the foundation) 1s to
provide a video presentation avail-
able to schools. Ann started the
fight back 1n 1955 with her warning .
counsehngoffamilies in pain and
ded1 cat1on to fighting the drug
problem."
"To receive this award is indeed a
great ho nor." said the petite
columnist. "but. J confess honors
make me uncomforta ble. The real
heroes arc those who never receive
honors or even a thanks ... dedi-
cated people that carry on the tight
against drug abuse with di~nity."
Guests were seated at m1rror-
covered tables centered with white
chocolate pianos filled with white
chocolate roses and surrounded by
dark chocolate truffles for the
ceremon~. dinner and entenain-
ment (C ole'sorchestra and the LA
Jau Choir).
Pianos creato r (and dona tor)
Pam Goldstein said "There 1s 1200
pounds of white chocolate in th15
room tomght in the 15-pound
p1a nos. 400 roses and 400 truffles."
(Persons having the birthday
nearest to Gershwin's Sept. 26
birthday took them home.)
Surrounding the ball room was
"New York" -a 20-foot high
skyline of the city: cumputerized
light curtains on either side of the
orchestra with neon signs depicting
NY landmarks. G uests had entered
the B1gApplescene(crea1ed by
decor chairman BUDDY Pero)from
the patio when 1,000 balloons were
rrlcascd to herald the dinner.
The evening concluded with a
live auction conducted by Roger
Luby and Dick Stevens and danc-
ing. (Auctions sales brought in
about $43,305-BoDllie Baker
cenainly did her part by paymg
$8.000 for the Pbylli1 Diiier make-
over by Dr. Michael Elam. Total
proceeds should go over the
$84.000 mark.)
O thercommmee members in-
cluded Ann Stern, Joan Stevens,
Barbara O'Neil, Linda Nanez, R•lb
Jensen, Betty Shamburg, Gloria
GaeScblck, Barbara Yuc:har,
Berl& Scbenlk, Mary Ann Miiler,
Sassy Luby, Katby Bryant, Diane
Slemon1, Kathryn Tbompson,
Beverly Minney, Lois Cannon, Lea
Petersen, Heddy Marosl, Sandy
Bryu, Jody Olsen, Charlene Prag-
er, Toni Armistead, Jady Hemley
and Sae Jarvie.
BIKINI LINE
WAXING $ 5 5klfl (en & (O'>/T'ttK s av
ott ~ With This Ad
Rq IS 00
By •PPI thru 7 ?7
Ptofln of Mtwport
170 I Westchtf Orrtt
642-6857
l •
Move over, 'Dallas';
here eomes 'Fresno'
By JO£ BIOHAM
ft ,,,,,_....,
FRESNO (AP) -Some ciULcns
aot excited, but most were hardly awed by the st.an of Cilmma of a
television miniseries ttllcd .. Fresno,"
in which teenn were btioa sbot alona
downtown streets.
About 100 people lounged on a
lawn at the Memorial Auditorium
across the street from the film's
location around the city's old water
tower. The stately concrete edifice
bad larae plastic letters procla1m101
FRESNO on the front for the film
crews to shoot.
But half a block away on side
streets, people were 101nJ about their
buuncss, 1anonng the ghttcr nearby.
That may have stemmed from a
lack of constan1 excitement which
resulted naturally from the fact that
films are made with short bursts of
filming interspersed by long penods
of nothma going on of interest to
onlookers.
"Fresno," a CBS,TV min1scnt'S
about moeuls of the raisin industry
I TV LISTINGS
that's supPoflCd to spoof "Dalt. •• and"Oynuty"~ was nouttp1100. But
thotcwho waited in the warmth of9().. deartc plus tcmperaturu to sec a
1eene were aJad they did.
"I think 1t'1 fantuUe," said Sylvia
Rom pa.I. "This 11 the first time I know
of that. anYlhina like th11 ever hap.
peoed m f'rcsno."
Rompal had watched one scene
btana shot and hoped to be able to
stay around for another btforc she
had to set back to work at the
counhouse cafeteria a couple of
blocks away.
"We'll stay here for a whale," saad
IUlhy Sanbongi of Vasaha.
She found it "exciting to see car
shots and people wallung 1n front of
the buildinJ."
Frc5no Street was closed near the
aovemmcnt center. and motonst~
weren't thrilled.
"I gotta get through there." one
dnver told a poltce officer at a
barricade.
"Can't help It " the patrolman
responded.
I -~
Early Bird Dinners
•7 .SO Featuring Prime Rib or Fresh fish
Complete d inner with choice of
Soup or Salad and Dessert
•to 6 PM
7 Days a Week
801 E. Balboa 673-7726
NOWPlAVING
COSTA .. A fOUHTAIN VALLEY
Eowercll CIMrnl C..... EowWW fount.Ion 't'•ll'f
LAOUNA HILLS OftANOf ORANGE SUOoum ()o-.. 'ft
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'Hill Street' may fend off ,_.,, .... ~---....
'"Hill treet Blues" is now in its ia the AUlttliiM °'"'*"· * 1111 1evcnth 1eason ofr.:;uctioo. The • • • primMimeaulUleriettowftllMdoe · · • ...,. .~ Jf NBC has any faltc 'tarts thu location 1n Autlntia. r"'J"M Tllon o-•-e""l9VUC o u... new season .,..,..~ n..... Zoo .. 81·....., ......... :._ ~ nlM¥ : .. A·---•-w';it Q;lt;" on Howard Huntet ( tcat0n, •• • IK" oiunJL • a corned~-• ...., wpac ~ --...-
JDM:t a. Ii'"••» wbo ls involved in drama, could become 1 rqularseria ia, waa ftlmed ~ • .' smi Vmlley.,
the off-duty bootina of a tecn.qe The show. hlcb stan MA_., also ....._ Pwt will be 1eami111 with
robber, and Joyce Davenpc:>n (Ver-ioeludes &a""1iM Rarr..w, who U.1 Grtllltll on tbt 'NBC ctranaa
Mka Hamel), who findt b.tnell in played Nola on ''The Oocton," and ''Mat~ .. whlchwillairooT~y
contempt of coun. k.tm DelauJ, whose last major TV niahu. Putt bepn her American TV
Althoua,h many NBC exec& bad role wH tbe btloved Jenny on .. All c:arttratthetrou_bkdaet,..erDemec
&atd this wu to bt the last Mason for My Children." oo 1'be Secttt Storm:· The blue-
"Hill Street, .. us ratinp pickup over • • • eyed.blOftdo.bairedPurl_altosea0n
the summer has them wonderina 1f CBS has Just completed filming .. H.a,ppy Days. .. p her :rv Mn ~n
there isn't an ei&hth season left m t.hc "The Last l=rontier,' • four-hour J~pan1 wllcre btt father was sta-
scries. miniseries st.arrina UMa Evaat and tlonco.
Rumor has 1t that 1f "Blues" does 1-.:;iiiiiiiiiiiiilfiiii~iiij~~jiji~~~~~---···iiiit go for an e1a,hth season, 1t wirt
probablJ do so wnhout tbe services of Dutel . Travut1, who plays C.pt.
Frank Furillo. • • • NBC has put the finishing music
,_ ' TllCll ICUf rrom •mm Carol Burnett plar ratain queen ln "Freano:
touches on tts mintsencs "The Two
Mrs. Grenv1lles.'' Marvta B.amllsd
is wnting the mustc for the serin
based on the Domjnick Dunne novel.
Au·M&rlJ'et. Claade«e Colber1, Lis
.U~ley and Peuy hller top-line the
producuon.
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• • • naao Pe1lgllll1. last seen on day-
umc as Tony on "OaysofOur Lives,"
is featured 1n the CBS drama special
"Power Play." The show is slated to
air Aug. 30 at 8 p.m. Also starring is
David Birney, known to many long·
time daytime soap viewers as Mark
Elhott in .. Love ls a Many-Splen·
dored Thing." There arc rumors that
"Power Play" 1s a pilot for a show
which m1~t step into the CBS
schedule 1f one of their regular
features fails early an the Nielsen
ratings. • • • Everybod} seems to be in on the
cont1nu1ng-themc act. C BS'
"Murder. She Wrote" opens its third
season wtth a tw()spart episode an
which MartlD Balsam, Floro« HeD-
denoe, Jackie Cooper and Alex Cord
Join "Murder" star Angela Lusbvy.
In the story, Jessica's search for her
long·bcheved-dcad brother,1n,law
takes her to a small traveling circus. • • • NBC'S "L.A. Law." which wtll
beg.in aanng Friday nights at I 0
o'clock in the fall. has added Saau
Dey to its cast. Susan was one of the
stars of"The Partridge Family." Also
in the cast is Corbin Bena1en as
attorney Amie Decker. Bernsen is the
real-hfe son of JeaDDt Cooper, who
plays Katherine Chancellor on "The
Young and the Restless." Bernsen has
''RUTHLESSLY FUNNY
FARCE.''
ORANG! COl1HTY llEGISTEJl.
Mr<"'-' Burlwtt
LA MIRADA GATEWAY
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Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Wed.nMd9y, Juty 23, 1Ne •• ------------4.
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220 ......,.,
SAIL INtO SAVINGS
4 lines, s7·&0 s5eo
7 days... with pre~ayment
Private Pany ONI. Y No Rea.I Estate, Commercial, OI H•P Wantlld
You c•n now call the Delly Piiot ca. .. lfled Dept. on S.turder morning from 1:00 to 11:30 •.m. to pt.ce your Sundey end Monder ede.
BA&UTAn ...... ,.,_., 111J -AM "'° MtlC. llNTALI ......... ...,. ..... _ .... . ........ .otJ ..... u :=:-l'-"-IDS
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eOeo MOUSll/CONOOI "'"'~ .... 1400 ...... i..,. 11• .... '* ,....,.... ~ ......... ,_,.., . ....,.
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c.-.. -107' ... :::::J9 1.00 ..... ~ MOI ....... "" a--•102 o-9 1011 c.--1a. .. .. ,, --2.o1 ---· T16'1 111111.0Yllmr --•IC» ...._ 1011 --ICIM ~-,. .. --•107 w 101• .,_ 1m ~ALI '-""'-2621 COIUllllCIAL ,_ ~ c..-.. -61'1 ~, ... POI• ,_......, IOIM c.--,.,. ,.,.._,.,,. __
SIOO '--•It• ....... 1011 .-..... ...... ICMO MOUHl/CONDOS --,.,,. •.1.IAU/mmf ,...,,_ SICIS --•1t• ..,_,( ......... , ....... '°"° ..........,._ IOd
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~-I cwt ........... 210. ................. '"° ..._~ '767 -· UIO .............. --...... .. ., MISC. '-... 10.0 ..... .._.. 7107 ,___ , .. , ....... , ,., .. ~ »10 -.I ..
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
842-5878
DEADLINES
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monday ........... Sat. 11:30 AM
Tu.day ........... Mon. 5:30 PM
WlldMeday._ .... Toe.. 5:30 PM
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
T~s.rvtoe
Monday-Friday
9 00 AM·5'.30 PM
S•turday 9 00 AM-11 ·30 AM
CHECK YOUA AD THE FIRST DAY
TM Detty Piiot 11rlves fOf efftc:~ and eccuracy.
He>weYet. oceak>nalty errora do occur ,,..._
118ten whet\ your ad 11 reed bectc and of** Y'O'I'
tld deity ~ errore lmmedletety to 842-5e78.
TM Delly Pict acioept1 no ltablllty fOl 11/'rf «rOI In an ad\'ettieem.nt fOt wNctt H may M r.-po111tble
except tor tM coat of the apece actualty oooup6ed
by the en0t. Crec:tl1 can only M allowed f0t:the ftrlt
tntertlon.
... u.
•Un
Thur9day .......... Wlld. 5:30 PM
Friday ............. Thur.. 5:30 PM
Saturday ............. Fri. 5:30 PM
&nday ............ Sat. 11:30 AM
eu--. Count•
Mondiry·Fridey a·oo AM-5~ PM
942.5171
J •
IM1 latate ftr lalt C..ta •eu 1024 l"l!rt leacli lllt. Cetta •111 1114 lut. ltac• 2140 lt!f!!! lta• · 2111 C..ta •eu 2114 C..ta •eu 2124 l!!f!I! ltuli Jiit leatah tt l•au .... al f Ri LIFT ITYU OUffUYll. YllW • iB&m. ffi)IC. r.,._ i:11 8 BLOCd TO BEACH ~ 1& '*· Snal E ... LI 2_. 3BO, 2BA. FlREPLACE 1714
F encl yard, pw1clng IPec9 4 B D + 2 BA, 2 155 2 per90n onty. Orange l uu---~ield Et1doMd one c;ar ....,.,_ •WllYlllTllUJ 2BR townhouH. Ire-Light. expenllve lllllng. lnrMr.Nope1a U1Mapd. Hanakal,St100/mo,fem-PatrMr.NopetaMSO.Lv WWC'.9Lll Latndryfec,d/w,gw;y:. wMtMw dry« "°'*.;I' COM -28R 28A ~.
• place. 2 car garage. 4BR, lam rm, 3BA, den, E. 19th St M50 lit + tty....,,.. bkr "3-8377 meg 1-42.2M() to... u•--"°'*'· 1750, 556-22 8. ~1 142-4387 • M/F, non4mkr 2&-35. W•llTll.lll patio. Bank Repo. pool. Lrg lot By OWMf MC 17141777-3325 -"'' • · -·•-•• llST•-• mo, '500/mo Ind utMI. Cell M4nt COlldttion 4 bdrm, 2\ot $104,000. Bkr 646--0222 1359,000. Me..'431M . VICTORIAN ninovated Walk to bd'I. Poota & ten-Uke brend new All lllHhlee -• WTIL"' JU IU Dennie 75S..94a0
bettl&tM'lllyroom hOme **lflYW** antique hlrnlthed 5bd, n .. •Bf 2~. on canal p.ic1 Pool, 11*'199 2BR 1'...\BA twntiee Elalde ---""'" . ..t Condo HumwOU1 ~edea end llUll I Mn Ulm lttw Yt a....11 hHr All arw pr1ce9 + m. 2-Aba, Jac:uulldeok 1 1895/mo. Avail now. 1 c:hlld <>II Sorry. no pet• loc POOi. gwage. lndry W/petto Hr~ cntr DELUXE ~4dge •
expan1lon1. Beautiful 41k 2Ba n11er. High on a 3BR Moneco • ,269,500 Monthly• 0< yrty. LAt ui 11500 mo. 841-7500 DOCKSIDE RE 722•9730 18drm S805 room 1745/mo. 1995 No P9tt 840-36' ~· lJ:."'°;oo.,"'*r ~-NW~ front & bluff. $43,000 Down. (213)89~ Hel ? F.. 28drm 1Bath 1710 2310 Santa Ana EASTBLUFF TownhouM seoo. 76• epa. ·
Ml* w/eu1o aprinkler9 & 1135.000. Call 142-e804 Ullll YllW lllU nlllllT Ill-UH Latu;' ltac~ 1141 f~ I U4rm 301 Avocado 842·9850 TSL MGMT 142-1903 38dfm 2-ABa. 2cat1:· gate. · 7~91 =~-:weftpncedat tnlat 1044 BHUI remodel Som-•tNSTANT-tNll* 3BR F/RA~ae:OOMl'I °::'ctoeeto~~·-21k 1'A8a TwnhM, trplc, tmAITll a::~r':5t;.~00:.· ~ORGr.t~ .= TWTU .... ... merMt 5bd. 3ba, 3 car New Luxury Concloe. 3Br Catatlna\IU. s 1e50. Marti, .. , IDTIL garage.Jard M 75tmo + $525/mo lBR lBA. all POOi/lat Thia one'• hotl
gar. S3ttK. 759-1 195. 2,ABa l/p IP• dbl gar Agt 142_1183 573-293e ··---dep. o peta 276 bltlnt. lndry rm, near llllAIY•UIT MOOtncltallM2-4809 ".... Open HM Sat/Sun 1·5 Pet~ 2~1tobdt l1195 . • • -· AllocadOSt548-7510 t>Mchandlh091 En)oytheluKuryofth ..... ______ ...,....._ Lewett"'"4..... 1706 Port Chanea. 64&-1W O< 842-Mee BLKS TO BEACH No Laa 111-4111 trl1M111 1t2 BDRM DUPLEX• 735 w 18th St clultlleguwdgated com-FEMALE ~T! ~ ..__•-~et LI.DO ISLE BLDRS HM Hom. (1 per90n) 2 bcf. I: &--'Ill New carpe1 & drapea g•r· TSL MGMT 842·1803 mun1ty In a~ 1, 2 SHARE 4bd, 2!Mle. 1350. -H ._ _. ,.__ BEAT THESE vttd celllnga. No pe11 Hltl _. a le & ,.,.,.... ' or 3 &drm Condo .Apia 912_..71
759·9100
. -----·
Tri-ieY91, 1740 aq ft 3 vvrner lot, Ac:rOM trom E·tlde Ill h9e 1575 chlld 1700 mo 497·1957 age, qu t _.... ar ... Large llharp 21k upetalra, AmenlUee Ind-........ wet =~"'="",..,...,..'"="...,.,..---Tmzll 1 STllY Bdrm 2'h S.th tamlty bch, 4bd. 4'hba, library, · -..nl TUI IDT1 M75 55S..5001 ablolu1ely lmmaouiate, 3 .. .,._, FEMALE/MALE Newpof1 Thie~ 2bd, 2be condo room' air cond.· 2 car blHard rm. 3400 aq h, :=,oil oar buk: kH r ... Clean 3 bdrm hOme otoM 2bd 2be twntwe, retg & ale baleOn)'I, enclOMCI look-::""'· Af.C2 mk:fo.. W/D 8Mdl 2 ltcwy, 3bd. 2be.
hat cuttom cabinet• gw.Q. MCtud.d petlo S895.000, Shapiro Co, to OCMn Some vtew. lnet $&5,500. Agent Pat -....11-anu able garage, park llke upe Cat g#agee frptc, gar. 9275 tteCiWtty
drwra, ehe!We, m.ntlea, flreplece, tued foyer: owne<l~t. 845-3120 *llM111* Nice patio. Frplc, dbl gar Cobb 87$-2013 ~ U 19 ground• S890 Available From c~'i.3~~ no (W:/Hoeg). MG-1271
and mlrron. All Ideal hm pool• view ol Irvine Of 873-6588. 5 room lay-out $875 2ba & all the goodlH I L C • now No petl ~279 pe11 MALE. ~ 8act< -..
for an OWf* who want• Ranc'h 3 yra old -R•••a--inr gourmet kltc:h kid• nne nr 12000/rno. Agt 873-5354 tit• Hit tllt HW llAITIEITS NEWPORT MARINA APTS condo ...-111 ...... 1~ .. t _. & .... ll"",.,;,.. ..... ,.2 .. ; -_,_........,. lh0pl53M191 Agt,.. 2JM FMtur1ngt>Nutlfulland· lllTSll *1111-....i-...1n-1ea 1100 • ~,_ nr m .. '· •• or... p .. "· ... ,..,.,. o....-w .... Modem !WO 3BR t ,. IOIAI YllW aw •• BBQ pool/ 2BR BA dllhwr bale ...... , ...... Uf • Lit• emkr o.k IS60 +MC ~~tr:tlP. 1125K ........ 11111 I c.r piing In .w. ~t.WNO OHPLl W/•U II Hot Tub, gwage. k~. 2Br 29. SC villa. #amliY ~~:deck1.1Garages99! view,
1111 bltln• se75tmo . ~· = :,U:g. m~~ Mlc*ey 145-6123
' ·~ deferred malnt. M00,000 2bd PLUS enc:IOMd yard. 497-4e02. C9~ MC:1. Downetalra. 24 hr eatporte Sorry no pet1 2201 Pac:ttlc bM(:f, ll-475 . Mat F/M 23--3& non amkt
UllM m.l YllW LIT T RE~f 3~~2,!~ a~~~ Need n.w ahelter. Print 548-3227 Off PCH )U9t ~25ftat e-t• = ::~1~t~S~ 1Bdrm , ' $e10 TSL MGMT 142· 1803 Sony. no pete 7~19 to* 31k nr bdl '215
Gated oommuntty key rno<MI home, Mc: only pleaae. 722-6808 EASTSIDE 2 Bedroom. 1 lrge roomy at>ode ttyllll'I . 28drm l:l•Ba S7lO NEWPORT VILLAGE mo 11t/laat+ •100 dep.
1325.000 790-1468 Haiti R.Mlty 842-1334 or t• II Bath with yard I garage decor o.11539-8191 futl1 lliO 28drm 2Ba 1795 APARTMENTS NEWPORT PIER AREA 850-3253 Doug 546-27•1
87H 1N • AH 1795/mo 842-.3850 Bkr A t '" 825 Center St 842-1 424 ,.__.. • .._& 3BR. 2BA .Apt. VMtty, no N8 MODEL...__ ·----·--ttn 1-. 11 Tnba .a. 3br tfl..Nn 2be ..,.,..,. -i>et9. ~-s1400 mo """'"uuv f..,.n Ii UITllll gar trptc kldl mom'1 kit *~· * PRESTIGE LOCATION evall nOwt 873-6640 To lhr wlf, prof dee. ger, 8 COLDWeu BANl(eRO ~ Woodie'!~ 0~~~~ Sec Attrecttve 21k 2ea, etove. Latua l't••l 2112 1775 539-8191 Agt t• BMutttul 1Br & 2Br $575 Sou~hB:;::, ~ ._ I a.. 1.... l>lk• to bdl. fUll eecurtty, mll'n.Y gated comm BMu1 lak• frig, DIW, oak e&blnet•. ~BR 11%BX conao prOf A~rta1at1 Up Gu, cook, l'leat, hot •CloM to oc Airport ..... ...... $550/mo, 5•• 0394· '"° •m vu. Ctioloe loo 28R 2BA, dbl garage w/Ofl(W No dee, w/d, ale, get. cOmm w•ter ger 2323 Elden •7 Mlnvt• to BMch ,,.. ..... M2·Hl1 PROFESSIONAL ferneloe, __ ..__ Exoept the price & It allbhln1 +frlg,w/d,crpt, peta$850FWl557·289t pool 11000/mo,IM.Avt Betty Wall S4S-7a5c •Nlght LlghtedSend VERSAILLE8 1BRPnthM n u t, non-emoker
LJll Qt• AAA couldn't be better. drapea, bllnd1. Hr SC Ealttl«M ~ 21k tBa now. Chr11 496-3700 11111• 2IOI •Mau Verda D' lull Volleyball & Tennie Crta Quiet locaUon. Avail now preferred, wanted to
B••utlful aop~•t•d 1199,000 Call for cMtall• Ptu. 1 120.000 838-9053 gar fned yrd Avt appro~ BXLB6X islXND car 2 28drrn, 1Ba New'*°'· •Pool, Jacuzzi. BBO 1775/mo, ...... Agent ll'lar• 3 bedroom, 2 bettl
bayfront penthOUH 759·1501 kW l 8.12'. S800 +' 9500 dep. 1ft!!r1 ..... 2llt bedroom A t . 1nr 1 dlhwahr, lochd garage •Covered Pl(t(lng 144-7211 condo In Huntington
Great vlew1 of bay. HUT WUTlll JI SUI 142-4M9 or 142-4887 1l"'ll'a'Viila Lib(); U7B bedroom Apf. c:loM to M75 No pete M0-2495 •C.ble TV Avallable VHI• 8alboe 18' ~ ~bitOO: ~7~·
OOWI, mountain•. New-IUL.Jltm 2~~~~~~~:~~1<. E'SIOEI Ltgl Newt 3bd. 2B 28-Eut Bluff 11100 wtter (818)195.Moo llUT LIOA~ •R:,;d~~!h Flr991aoa S945. VerNllit. ~tUdlo ~ttl +~. CaiM Ev!
port Center. Short walk GW Sc:ott·Land co. •9~228 3~ba, trplc, ~ yd 3B 2Ba Npt Shor.-$1250 STEPS TO BAY IH5/mo 2br 1 'Aba •Saunu IMO. 21k 1950 21k, bey at 142-4321 ext. 336 or
to Udo VIHage. or 4ff.1800 w/grdn,2cergaraval811 Marty Agt142-t183no,.. Charming 1 bd +bunk rm townhouH. grHnbell. 1 BR FURN/UNFURN OCMn ~ 11200 Aot 983--4987. 144-IOIO 1 1350 mo Perl9ct tor 280, 28A HOUSE on Uttle 11'9, l tOOO/mo lndry rm, all bit-Ina. JR 1 BR FURN 831-4te0 1---ROF------
________ , •VERSAILLES S87K11' MJt l•H rrnmatea. ~ &4S-OMS Flrep6ace, dbl!"• 3t17 lnct utll, yrty 873-55e1. 2078 Thurln Comer Hwi>t Fwy & Ba6cer II.lit l RJPOHS~~~~LY
New Jade Nlctlleut Golf !Br Condo Quiet loc. ftr l&Jt 1100 Exec oondo w/2 miter Clay St. N PETS, ial•ea Pnlanla TSL MGMT 842·1803 Sorry, No petel h f ._M One blk to bdl, l300, cell
Cou,....p\lf community, Pool •P• clubhouM , OCEAN VIEW with NiCe tuH•. FrJ>'C, wet bat. 2 $1050/mo. 541 eeeo. 211'1 Spar1cllng e6Mn 28drm. (714)657-4075 '... •• 10-3pm daly. eao.aan
cultom Iota a hom" Munu , gym & morel Breeze 2BR 28a, den, eat attectl gar. pool & * ....... * 1V. S.th 1895, all utllltlM •ir•••• I I -1[0Ck TO BEACH Straight n/ll'ntlr ptOf fern 953-8350 Ownr/Agt 722-7388 24x57 Senior Park. ape. No pete. S1 t00/mo ENO UNIT 31k FR 3Ba.. 1 BLKTO OCEAN-Unfum paid, refrlg .. garage , .ut.... • • 1 bd, Md get + wehrm, ••b awn. to fltld or ahf
'.
U -A •••J • ..._ Tll yu 1 --149,500 845-e45e Pam Moaa/bt!r 780-5000 DR 2000 If • G bn 2BR on 28th St, bale, ger 1 clllld Oil Soiry. no pete. E aide lrg. ~dee. 2 bdrm. $860 V..-ty +MCUrtty. 21k 28a apt In CM/!Ntne '" ... ----. ,..._. Lt or 759-1890 · St~ · Mm F nr Vrly. 1750/mo. All! Sept 1 1980 WALLACE 1 bath, patio. No P9tf. 5-4~59 Oya 752,...500 x5074 oi WI UYI Tll 111111 II• wn«e you are wtllle tlt'1 ta EXECUTIVE! 3bd 2ba c:r-a211 ·M4-~S78 ox C811 •h 8pm 4M-2NO 146·2739 842-4914 317 Cebrllto $e50/mo, + ..... Evee 553--0100 X826 viewing the grMnbett C~I lUS · • or S850 MC dep. 831-4038 Your deughter'e pr•yer1 trom the upper dedt of fr1c, d/w. Recently r• •Npt Crfft TWflllOUM 2 BLKS TO FUN ZONE & OID W•llll 1U T aH f 2 p;opi; Wot1<1ng College student
are entwered . Total r• thl• 1paolou1 family 10 lot• or Nie In Pacific decorated, wkly gar· 3B den pool ferryl 2bd, 1'hba, Md 1500/mo. Stove, Cl'pt1, TIE YIOTlllAI ~~~=11 w.:10 beect!' loOkl for rmmt to ahf
model. 2BR +ion. 3BA .3 home Only when you View Memorlal Park den Ing urvlc• Incl 1.,,':i, .teg~;m·decor' gar/patio, lnd1tao.1950 dri>• No pet• 84~382 2Br w/gar Crpt1, drpe, ~B 1 ~ fum other u~ 2bf t~ba C.M. apt '300
1tallt on '1' acre w/N.B walk out of the front door (Vleta del Mat), H.B. 1375 11200. 548-9950 l lsoo'+ dep. 548-t3M · Vrty. Avall 8/1 873-48M bttlni Fncd yrd w/petto. tun'.i 722-8355 +'Aout, 1111 6-l . Me-9n 5 addr... All thla at only to the 1treet do you r• ne1 Heh. (819) 729-t514 Fncd for kld/pe1 seoo $e50/1BR • 9650/Badl. llLID WIE ,... 83~ 120 Celt 1-5PM
1280,000 Agt 840-5580 aftze you're In the cttyl Inert ht homey apot E·lld• 11., BIG CANYON! GolfCourM Completely remodeled Hr new A\11 811 Shown by 887 Vlc1orla "C" M75 Btttb/Jlttt1I ffll Latah Wut.. IHI
Cerna ••I Jbr 1022 $2~.000 Call 75S..1501 ..... .'nw Aotttengt I avall S3M191 ~+.!:<\~~r!t. 1;:2~ ~l~t~ .. !ald No pe1• appt MOO/mo 873-3838 MESA PINES 2850 Hat1a llAUll 9ITIL CAN YOU HELP? 5 g;; llUT WISTlll -• 213 431•7893 1 ...,.y AV9. Apt 8 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath on Vier STUDIO 1550 wtcty fWltall now aV911 peen Qlnl loOklng for 38r HPlO If hltr IUl llTITI MUii fllU MAC ARTHUR VILLAGE NeW 3Br 2'-\S. Apt 2 ear torla Qui at n•lllh· 1BR 1Ba *650 1147 00 wtc & up 2274 hOme tn Hunt. Bc:tl/Colta
So of hlway Aul.Im 111 TO. G\1\1 DISSOLVING PARTNER-11k, ciean, quiet. end unit, B21oci!bdrmtoQt>Mch~houkldMe garage.'Avall Augu°it 1st bort'lood le50 No pe11 TOP AREA, Oulet, No P .. 1 Nwpt Blvd, CM M&-74-45 Meea .,.. >Ont refe prlnclplee onfyl $268.500 SHIP Mu11 NII lmmed. baleony, pool. IP•. ten· $1450/mo + SlOOO MC. 990-2970 ••549·2'471t * 7224738 or ~tt
875-5715-wknlevet 111111 PrfQed for fut eecrow. nla, voflyball. MOUrlty, ot'*• ev I at Ml9t 831-<t830 or 873-7895 Lrg 18r on VletC>fla, nr TOTALLY AWESOME ltall I It liart LOCAL Corona del Mer ta.... 1024 No •Ketl&ngee. M20. 490-5880 •11• Agt f• I Ila Nwpt Blvd. Sparkling newly remodeled •pt. 2714 family loOklng to ..... • --~~ .......... --ASSUME 8'h% Lo.n.new (~l~28drm.2b,•/0°taq MESA V«deCountryClub ....,,. rna • cteen,crp11,drp1.11ove. 2BR18afrom "'45.3BR 2BDHOME·E Bibi CIHn 48R Executive •IW YllH• 3bd 2'.-\ba. lrptc, 2 car ,;8;:;1umvu 0 · n rn Vltlu Condo 3bd. 2'...\ba, Condo 3bd, 2ba. pool 2BR 1BX unfUrn g.,age quiet $495. No peta H~B• 1725. Pool. coeta Meu ~/llngte Home In CdM. We ere
Profea11onlly Oecor•ted gar. 2 blk to bch, 1 to bey ('2) 2 Bdrm 2 ba 2100 prime •rN. quiet. pool, a1eoo. M-4-2807 apt, no pe11, 1 car ;ar. eo RMdy to go 990-2970 carport• wl etorage, coin parent, available now. bulldlng •new tlome. No
Contractor• homel 3Br. S290,000 875-M20 ft Prlvete lo1 • w/gr.: Jacuul, many extra•. BLUFFS 31k 2'ABa ol h1a w/lndry rm & Eutllde 28drm. 1 Bath laundry, 2214 College 1237.50, llttwe phone & pett. 87&-7440
,1:·B•, ~·t~~~~°{m ~~: IAYFHIT llPLD ar ... Prof decor & f\H'n. S1050/mo, 979·5738. famlly rm1n;nt & c1een: ~:::~eo:~ ~~aot upet~r•. Garage. 1 Adult Ave eall 842·5210 utll, aft 8pm &4M077 RMc>ontlble oouple wino
M8oEL Cullom o•k 2 Cullom 2 + Oen. t2x20 I 179M Meea Verde perfect M70 v. c. n I . N 0 p . t. pref d H50/mo Agt. a.... ..... -mi Roomrnet• Connection kid•. very dMn & (9.
lrple8 french d00<' new Mmdec:k , Panof'atnlc vt.w (#3) 3 Bdrm, 3 ba, 2300 aq 2bf lhedy ptlo ,,._.., kit 11750/mo. 644-0350 Lrg 2BR 2BA MWty dee 241-8282 111T•-. • tOO'e of Leade A\lall. ented wlhorne ,..,_. &
roof cuitom flllchen ot the main ctiannef + h EL DORADO MOTEL kid• o11 539-8191 Ag1 I• Patio, yd. lndry rm, gw, ----• •Open 7 Deya AW• landaceplng, wWI to oet
cabinet• ' Ille bill k 38drrn rental W/lneome Prof decor & furn ...... LR n... lrpt 2 blk• to bd'I. $1250 ··~ield 2BR tBA, ow. lndry rm, •Setvlng ... oc 84 t-4229 Into . houM, w/oPtton to n °• ol S30 ooo 1 w or l 195M Pvt party onty. IPllllll 3bd trplc lg patloa, pool 644-4993 or te0-84e3 •~1..1 • aundeck, t block to buy FW'• av.a 6'1...-10
' ~~ar~~m~~t 111~1·~t tr 1 d e o ~ r /A II t 830·35 t 1 AM/Wkday1 3BR tV.BA, frplc, patio, • $1&i6 720-1950 DESIGNER, FURNISHED f1••-ir.,.I l>Mch le75/mo BMYt deelgner'1 Nwpt 8.44-9513 831-2032 or 131-73-48 dahWf gar Prime Elltde _,.._, 1308 Walnut 8c:tl 8eyr-idOe hOme. A\11 lllftl tr tat mlM lhi9 C>nel '189·900 PM/Wkend• toc:atlon lmm•d oe-CLOSE TO BEACH! New-TOWNHOUSE Beautlhlf dMn ,.,~ Gar· TSL MGMT 142-1803 now. Fem MOO. tit, i..t, 1741 .. .,,., Dttll•• BELCOURT BEST BUY• eupaney. $950/mo Cell ~ Shor•I •bd. 2b• :m: ~':,~~ den Apie, pat.lot. d«llcl, 2BD 2BA NEAR 'A utll&. Aefl 79-3615 u;:;;o;; m 'CXM
111·2242 trl411002 2:~~·-:g~ ·: C:::0 • ... I M.,ltyn 83t-12M 1350 Agent l4&-36l3. IP• ~no peta Ta tberti Bueh Blvd 91.K TO BCHI of, , lndMdual gatage MOlnd
li!Mi'~. _ f~m, dener J pool lhope, beech. Xlnt oond. 398 W. Wiiton 831·5683 gar. '1"ea~~lld, 1 2 belconlea, ~· t125/mo, 780-"42. S389.000 Ownr 7~M94<> ~&1£1 ··~~~-3~ER~eet~: D~:tr~c~ot;,1~i.~n~!: ~=~~J~~thth U.!Z fenc:edyd,dl w,frplc,enoi n-emk.3bd,2ba,NBh89, (geted) community ,
2:~fe,1!!':!.~-Pniuala 11171 _g ' .. ~t,425+1•tanct lmmed. occ:up~ WTll•llLIU ~\Ok~~2 f;e. c~i 1333
moCall 81NGLE,jar:f.• tH
'"" ... aoe On baal.ltlful tree-2/381 wrn;; I Yrt; p;;:18queeky dWI 5 rm ,,.. dep. •73-17a. ... •1200'"'°· 57 2Br HU• 1paolou1 H3-l5001863-07$5 • ..,., ..... ... =· ~ :.1:
asunbow · ·· ... Rralt)'
lined 11reet In Newport tneula Rentala m . Calf 2ba 2 gar klde Oil equlpt Eaatbluf'f condo. bey~. mn fl IUll towntlome New crpte. 2Bdrm 1 h fr pie 973-n87 (UUYJ 118',IOO) Hetght1 1 1t7 ,500 VIiia Rentala 87M912 kttS85053M1t1 Agtt• 38A 2'h&A. Furn/unfUm 21k trp1c 88t$ No pets. drpe, paint Formal din-d~r. drpe,' b*Ony:
4 bdrm 2 bath home A.. 720· 1219 Of 752-7903 AttrectlY9 dWI 21k 1Ba.. •PENTRIOOE COVE• S 1700, 1et, IMt + MC Avall lmmed 720-9422 Ing, p111 patio, pool, Md garage $110/mo. No
model. lrg IOI, quiet lo-OLIFF llAYll nd deck t blk to 2er 2ea Condo W/O, 2 14&-7773 IY9 meg owporta S795/mo No ~· Call ~ SAVE
cation Chucu L12Jonet ..,. ~ryA~ 8/t SIOO/mol car ;arege wto~ner !A8TBLl.Jff84bd, 2'.iM Celta.... •it ~Edna 142-ote5 NEW 2 & 3 Bdrm, 2 ea. 831•12M or 94e-5743 3 0• •Bdrm• 5 bethl. lg + dep 5-46-3727 11050 Ovier etreeme & ale, nee hm, w , CNtm-1 or 2 BR Elalde Nloa IPA. batcoriy MC oat• I ;~i~~\· country kite lam room 1 falla. No peta 54t-24'47 lnQ yd, fonn din rm, den Eeatatde ea.ta Mele 31k 1585 & 1700 DIW, Frig. BBQ, 3 launctry ~201
up lo $1 JSO• IUIMU/ .. ,
n1t (' ? \ = r-::, ==• ~tT= 9::c: ~ wltrpto, evellable let• Cott1ge, ~. WI O Gu & wtr pd Adult• lfo Oeleware 89&-9562 _,'!..; ___ i 500 s1gna1 Rd 142-9282 othere evall 53M19t mfe81iB.AU ::1 ~~· = ~1~srmo ~~~~yard pe11 Yr IM 541--0391
... , ...... " .....
1an ''" saoo ............... 188 • aq l PG OiG
1n Wettcllft 1 uam. 1not utlll & jenltortet. Cell
14MIM or a 1-1111
let U1 lltl~ Y 11
Sell V.., p,,,.,.,1
c.o Cla11ifW,
642-5678
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
Ao1 tw 7eo.t3N or "42-0350 18drm, 1eatti Eutelde Eutllde 21k 18-. beamed cer ...... Jill llU TlftH•• .550/mo. A111161 811 Agt oelllng•. frplc, garag.. • Month·to-month ...... fw.... I!' BLUFF.AVAIL IMMlD Cell 93 t-2242 Pvt petloa a700 + tat. -elao IVllllblt
A4111111 ma* FrJ>'C, veulted oellfnOA, dbl ~ ~BA.r.:rtu= t8drm Apt w/baloOny 1 :tp: ~·t~~ ~pr~~ 1n~~0om~~ . Furnished/ 2 28.A, den w/hot tub, pr, pool, ape No ~ 1<11A.1..... In-pool No~S4t5/mo + lub, wld tt:g· C11 vec, Pf1 gee bbq, beM1 cale. •Y-18drm 1775 -· ~"' rm, Tl'le l>IOOeet meo~ 1n • •• " unfurn11h1d the Gu8'ded gate. Good 28drm 2'AB& + Oen St75 c I d e d o p e t I S800 eeourlty M&-3818 gar --• 1
loo s1eoo1rno M0-71CM eee w tlth St 84&-273t S2t&o1mo. UOOO MC, tOW'lle!!!!C!tncleleilled tan•·~•" ~ · F1tnt11 centers 790-93N or 142..o350 "~• .. •~& -• .. Ceca. J1t1a <M•S • New 38R 3'A Mth, frpiC, .,.. .. ---..... .... 1L: ti ttMll, 1W1mm1ng
..c bet, dbl pr, t09 6f Dua Ptlat 112' Entertain ,_. M>r 3M welk to ~ 2 Apert·
th• lln• appllancH SIM 2D amt vttW pool horn• gar kid• w DLAND YILLAGI ment1 •vtbble ., '825 l2000/mo AG187J.63&it ,.., ~ /tuto around 11000 c all Mdt 87&-soei SflOfdtfa~arMI eprtnkl«. w/d, ~•frig, 53M191 Aot • APARTMINTI
38', Mt.,. for OQUOte, frJ*. 11200. 240-9145 ltnmaoullltel Garden vtewe
nda '°"9 a cate. • 1d00, all 38drma, "'91-ln ctoeet Come I t11JOr our prdtn ltylt IJ)la Quttt comfortabl, 11¥1
lit, ..... dep. 7ff.t190 r ... tala In rNtr, 21a. f/p, 2 c.ar Clo_. to lt1t1'1n & So tout Pim whll• only m111ulM tot
'all •1 •• •"liQfl gar. kttdl w/nootc. botll C1r11t' oarltblt HO POS Pt f ASl
Modela open d11ly 9 e
Sorr~ no ptts
Newpo1t Buch No
880 lrv1n1 A1rtnu•
flt t6thl •noe
* OUK 8PACI 11' Garden oft "11 peUo '200 mo 2700 w. "eo.t Htwwy
Ste 290, N814.2-6002.
WESTCurF BLOG
'II il/N 1Jl l Al A• " . . . . SPACIOUS 280, 29A ;z • ft futblutt .,.. I 1400. Newport 811ch So
Duplex, 111*. d/Yt, MW m ltOry df SL'. Vllta ~ f7.._.tt2 ...... • UAa •LAW~..... •Diii Jll f'f•* 1700 t&lh StrHt
cwpet, ... ~,.. '* genoe, eoo alf r.tn11y rm, 2 • ....... LH 'S .. I 'SIS -~ •-a -111 o-rl "'-....... 711Jeemfne,11100. for frplc•. 2 oar j•'. l.Mge 28drm °"'*"' tie .,.__ .. • .-.-..... ..... 1W ........ v•• ... ~~
aopt 7eo-ta12, ev.11-1. •1600/mo C.-N2 710 wlpett(Jne&,.wd Na#tto I .... OOM '6JS.'6•1 tnc:I HO ml ~l5I Mt.Stu .,._,.
C..ta .... 1114 ut. wet• v=&*'"'° 2 •IHOOMI '760.770 *l81 Uffllll• ~ "'llt¥elcw ----------·1 UI# mAT a _., WA119 .a.. Hr 28a..12100 "'° fll ..-~*"'Mile c.• ·~ 2o=ldnn 2117~ 1M,..,,.. orptal ... IAVAOIOI 2M RA + ... ••••sere l11/2t2-1n3, f7M 'A""'n--" ::::..~ ......., ,ront I,_,~ Ut .. pd OEH COH00~2 c. · MllllON Of peooie took to ~ r, ogo ~ ....._ ..
Pteoentle /mo Ho lnalperwPNf Nopet1 ao-. pool I , fa llAllA.._., JH Hit U&.IM ~ ·K'e ltt.8~~ .... 111
I*• 541-7113 .UStmo &4-M47 I l 8M1mo, • ~1.ecs~~....,~·::.·...:.....:. __ _l~~~:!:=:=~==~!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
'
I I_,_ ... IY'Z!.a .,,,,,_ ' ... !! ..._,MIO a.= ~,,, ............. , .. -Mt ·--· oi'lllld .. .. ..... •.-..m ·~ :.. w.111'i.: = Jound·Mtiili HUH .,;::,=-,.._
V. ~"=:. -lw. ~:No&.~JA~til.t' Ce~p J ¢Mt .,,.,,,_,. ,. _..._ .. .....,0 . -,., ~ ..... .
Diii( "Hf iPlCi liC: • . MclllllNw rltllliJ, ....... -""iiiiiiiiiiir.;_ ,, •Id=• ,__ ......_ 'gru~: .. o't..,Kew'"'" =91.,~~ No Tl I 1mn :::0,.:0.:::., f-.'0:· =.lbllc·......r. = llrdl ....... :~i.... ·'='it..F"=
MNUO. CM. ' 1n11 =-== Q M1•t111 --...,.,,.iiiiiiiy;"iplif1W--'°'...,. ..
Re......_~IOiOOd tlOU4Mll COUNl"'ITOO*Mfli H iii I I t.:9-04loe........,"" .,q ft"°"' UI ...... w JOONb ,.,..... ,.,_.,Know o.o . .,.._ ._, M ....... Nwpt __.., ~ _...
....,......., ~ bul. blue 7111 :"":· meture, retp0ttalbl• c.nt« lew ntm .... ::.S~d~~· -·le.__...,, ·~ a ·~ ••89k MCM>140 ' lmmed oper*'O for ,.. __ req __ • ----
Cll '** 141·2217 Hunt lldl Mi--• -a.. ll.oll l*tOf\ w/fl'ont ofo y---•-·• ~
Wii•J.. 'OUNO Unlvete bike ca,... 'IT Job tDt ..,, "*"*Md OOod .. -" .,..,, -11 ~,_, PfOfll l111111f .. .._,um-.-
'lltl'f Pl!f .A""'1 .,.. 'ountMn Vflltv, C.il end 0... ~ht *llL ,ff, hrl-. !rm
ptme"'*' ~OM be 6 o.ortbe. ~ ._~ MMIA oomm w/-.p. Cell ...........
,...,.,... llWllY •I• New-flOUNO WRY iHV F ·-Mre. ·on 1111.1090 rff, entry 11via1 ~ rr-~ ..... ~ :. ar.p.d mix, med~ l(no~!?'..:=.o. 1111 121•n1mn =· ~~"'· •
be. 400 .ca ft,..,... :" .... '.~ ........ °':! bllllng, d, "'*"· '°eo· OC. ~ Mgmt 84"td rffurn• to Mr.
wlrMlow ~. bNM ,.. • '" ----.,.._.no pttonee fOt · HMVY pt1one1 6 "*"-It ~ 8e1n. orpee. *Pl & A/C. Cell Vero.. 540o-t713 Chlroprecuo olllct. typing. Gd pflofMt ... • Wllllem 'roat a A-.
..._, AEWAAOI L.oet Aultralln Salary commeoeure1• mult. P'°'*1Y Mgmt._, IOdatae. 1401 ~et..
-.-,.-.,,-... -,-,---M•7mo,gtty/t'"'-'rt WI~. ~ t191PM.1110Cl/mo+'*'" Newpcwtleedl,CA...,
• I no tlll l.oet f / 14 ytc f 7tfl betWMft ... f 2 & 2..f, elltt ..... 53t-ae(M Wtlynou•lfOYiN~ cM.S..2-4m • 931-1111.Newportlkfl. u1u1111nrn •••un••• .,,:::~ LOST l6edl C:OC..., mete, Nlllm... for young Atohtt't firm. Mutt ~ tNCk.
r..at b "MOVE.fN" Juty 17ttl, rw Ad..-ne & Neede lnM"anoe bft11nO bp ~ype Shpm, a IS1-MIO Providence , HS clerk, experience front ..,_enoe, WOMAN 6ffiiCi llUIU>tNO IM-2421 P'ef•red, bectc omc. ,.,,.., w/1().bfy a com-AHAL :y
Hunttnaton Bead! 11 000 Loet fmom.tlo 1*9Qn .... ttt6n Of eq>. puter. HtQtltr OfQlftled M9C °'900' .. OOtR eaf\.-.1.3M to ' • ..~ Benefttt & ~ Ull·tterter. M·f, 1831,..llta.CM' eq ..... _11• • oroee. -"'· 3 ...,._ r...un a . ._. 850-,,47. 64&-tOeO 8uNn
bkr. --• NB. leat wn &An • WYllY mms
OFFICE &PACEJ Mt eq ft 722•13'2. AEWAAOI ...,... BMceeoretettehtilMI. MACGAEOORYACHT8 •llLD"lll•• 11 11LD
e¥1111bte In Sen Juen Loet.f<ITTEH-7 WKS ~--. buey G.P. cal!CrelaorPeul 1131 Pl.AC£NT1A.CM.' To""· tfM\ and men.oe ~-.., pref'd ~eno llMdl saoo. ORA.HOE & WHITE Exp nee:, CM 646-MIO ,, .... ~-7702. Boy'e, <Mrt'• and Mufti 'ff ,,_, In. ""°". =. :.:.:oo m,: Of ... '=~~·NB u _.,UY ..... 1111 ~O::.'°'::t ::..: 1..0 eo.-.... C.M. .
NoTN.4t:M011 LllT•-& -11.11.llUll ~.~lndt-UftllWIDI t3S.-H5K. Mr. Menn llf .. WI N ~-:..A~ ~.Ht .Bee :
8Nlre 16no'f oft~ In r-PIT! with good 'YP'ng. '500/Wtt 8elety + oomm (213)4N.0093 Ctwtlleien Id*' 11131 .i;;;A....c..nt l250 OIO 720-1104 8ottnaer ..,.,... ~
pttme !JI~ Sult• In I.Ow coet ll)ey/IUIW ,. ~ expending hofM IP9lflng. grernmer WI 20%. Only queMfted need TELEPHONE .... wtlndel ~ ~ M2..a12 •v.Ncee M•ct1e111c AKC-, ehampton II~.
Newportc.nter.AVlllton ferrt6. P9' ID~. llQtf'°Y 19 ..-1ng communlcellon 1klt11, ~. ~ Or· Ptut OUTDOOR ..._ ' . •&~Specf= CU8TOMMAOEAATTN4 "-/YIM.,,_ & ......
llmlled bul1. Dye NoF•t7&-PETS PMNuneFITfor4-Wttv COITIPUW up e+, 2 'f'I ... County bue6w peoptet Exp~ On ••• -1•11 •~S.W.~ CNlrl(4)&meldllnOWI* l150r.dllS1-4441
720-1906. Eve t40-477t ~·· Mon-Ttiur i.. -~ minimum exp, P-.. cell INQGlne. 54'1-0585. ltelboa Pen 815--2822 M.f momhl hrl. ,,_,In Army,_.,,,. ~· 11400, MUST sell for ... _ I a:::::
PEA
'
--..t. ...,.. t-.1 lkllle e muet. wit few tor an appt ~ M . · · penon. 1000 N. · COMt ,.__._ .. ...___ • 8600. 867~7st. ..--....-=
8U &LOCATION -~ ...,.. appt Mon·Frl, t•llpm, .... ,... --•••-Hwy.t.Aiallct\484 4044 ..._.._54C).,02t Ol'b over1ootllng Hew-Qingm;;;oMngcorn.. Doctcn &. Nurw ~ ClallftedAdverUllng •~-. • Dene Po4nt~1I01 YTATEaALE
pon Herbor. Approx p•nlon, •Ingle 45.55 Hurting Servtoee. 3900 Ml-.. 1-121 We heve lmmed OC*'llnOI atm111 Huntlnaton lk:tl M2-tnt Bede, ~ ll--.
1100.,qftMS.-7100 Write to· Goff PO Bo~ Birch St Suite 112 NB SECTY/AECEP'TIONl8T TllDmmUl.D ~~tluelMtlcpeoC)leto pff"°"'torWOOdhmlnQ EJ f oro7N-6251 ~~1111 .... ,-:;:r:,..a l.9-
WUtlllJ Hli 3e35. ~ ac:h. 92863 It 1·2172, . i.oc.1 CPA Firm needt • The Ofqe eo.t Diiiy Ho .xp::9:,. $:: IUHontrectOf In CM. ~,.,: ~~ or °"1
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1
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1
MATURE '*'°" with • Piiot eurrentty he9 open-&Mw DOE Awt1 2860 Retired "Mllna contt'90-ARMY AEIEAVE. Expo v~. ledm 1
"" .. /..... lc1Mel1 I CildOl/OHlll Mil prOf 81tltude kw"°"' of. Inge for • f\111 end pert. ,..... Vente o;, iJ CM tor prel'd. 54~212 BE ALL YOU CAN.. wey .... him Jotln 8TDMAY ·zs L YODEL
3200 aqft, 1.55 per. laatnctlM Jll2 llct. DullH Include time 1~ M6M-"· 7-2525M.f, '1o.a'PM · -11LL11w-w..-~150 ot>o. Grend Allltoo9d, ~.
te&-4122 1111111• phonM, or..uno c:11tn•• 1 per90tl 1n °"' Cl••lfted w--• -·-c.11(714,__m "'*"· ir.1111 tt •• -!!=!!!.~~!!!!!!!.. la,~:.....~'¥ I uac, Entry l9V9I ~kw,.. IYl*'CI & computer lnput
0
A<Mttlelng .,.,,,,.. ... Cldl/Lliluutl F~1::'9poettionw/lnd•'°'ellCPd 'dt = ;; fen, 24", w/edjuetabte en...,.. , .. , ... ., n,,_, v.rr • ._ .... 15 port cler'k. Fff poetton, ctl(one850-1tl4. Mutttype45wpm.~ II• pen •n .wndto ... t45.1hteca I &l•lllO hdm• Hr. One-on-one MOftng. ~ know 1()..l(ey w1J1 pnor t9'ephone ..._ •· Bel* In ~ Beectl. GeeStO¥e chllrt pedded S2 eec:fl •--~:"-. ...... AnyprogfMIOflOft'#W•·· tt.in, thoM 1n..e..ed mn1 .... 111•n I peftenoe,llMS•plWei'lt. ..... AITBI for •ppt cell Arby Old Hemmond Cord . ~ . w .... ~.--iroc•11•1"'"t -===:;._ -._, 97~1. Gene may IC)C)fy: 2588 Newpor1 Exoelent ~ & derteal ct..M t9'ephone vo1c9. Aooeptlng epp· .. no exp 4t4-t471 °'Ven wl~. io.. o1 ocnd..SMDO.~ As;;;;;; Blvd.CM. 714-642-7702. lk .. reqd Kno-.dgeOf Excellent talery plu1 18 'ff~--Ceft•lder'• ••-111m• tt.cmualcl7!.&40-a ... Hl()E,.A.l(D, '60.. Queen ·== " .._ .... .._.............. -~t e6ecttonk: ..-., 'I comm-'-'-.... ,,....... 4200Scott0r NB --··-H6de e bed. new filbrte ___ _ w.·.;-;-~ -lll!llllJU dlcttipMne~'.Si.rt· ~won _.., _.... ' ~· Studk> Uon 19 BeAU11FUl CHM.SE 1125. U.137 50..... GYM
(714) 722-1479 · ts1w Ali Property MINigemn1 Co Ing .... ry S13t41mo. c.ii ~ o..on tor In-_..._,.... hevtno • IWllon& beeuty IAONZ! VAH lnO !Mdt. t 12s. 142-lt71 ~ hOfM _.,. 1 ~
XU p;; rm ;::angu:i looking tor ful time bocM(: (714)710-82H. 25411 I t•rvlew appointment Dey Of Negtwt lfllftl. f /P'T Pnoeo Promotion b. an ORAGOH ~N OHU ....... ·-old perfect ~· ...., t Lea ~--·-18 '* "v-" k--. 1:w-1eno9 In Cebot Rd, ti• 209, 642-4321 ext 302 ' AW'/ In penon 2131 upcoming Ptw>to EXhl-. S1200l 714 140 IHl -1 •-* '850 ... 7-7"42 lrfllin • -' .. _,.... , .. " -__....... -...-• --· H.. Deed · · W..tdlft Ha bit Ion Cell Lenny .... -. 'I. • a••• FAST I to wlfemlly tor 1 yw computertud eccount· -v--· llne · · · 97~ CdM E.xqutlttel ~ plM _,... n .... Di i -646-5685 Ing, property ITIMaQ9-Jutt 281h •I 5pm. EOE ••• IMIT ... WI mentel, ... w x e.:r· H. •llT Tratfl• I , -Nltln _, L.-~-•••• ment blldtground prer'd. Sec'y/Aec:ieotlonl1t: Top l&IU Pl.IT CHIU'S 3300 So 4lllTm HOO. O•lc 11•11 trM Hwe 4 .... on Aug. 20
REAL ESTATE LOANS --.eon .,.. Salery commenturete Mllllt, re11, tor buty 330W. &.ySt. ~ HIW • NB ~ WORKIHO FOREMAN w/~ & .,_..,.., mlr· Wiil nde for llfl/ ntaht 1r lth,.."'1talll
1at, 2nd• 3f'd T.o·1 Maturewomenoomrn ,~ ~· S::Mr ~ Hlltl Law offtQe Coet•Mw.CAaa2e tween 2~ .!!·Mgt. ~tlel ~ ~ '°'· e aA • 786ol301 ottw ttwi,::i. 11 tfir'u Uk• nw CClfldmolL aeo-~.~.Prot>eT.I ~ :;:-ri::-=~ 188 e. 17th, tt• 1·A, (714)83CMMO IH llllA1llPlllHI ~!"~·:!a:'~o~·= Fl~.O:S~: 23td.IMI Y'°·c."64 5e40
_, 24~AS •I In or OU1. S1504115 -*· Colt• Meta. CA. 12121 1•••••••••••••••••••••••1 '* Ew:utMCMf cut bondeble ttuent -a ssao. 9 c1r..., «-ry AtttetL.mf.... lull' .....
GARY (7t4)5!7~3203 ~~~14001y between l&T& lllll kDI •. C.·\REER OPPORTUNITY •. '* Mettred' alao P'IT evet 642-ee24 fr.-.ctl country Mngerte ~of .,:f' .!: -===:Lt... 1111 ,....~.,.... .. on · For buey CNtoprectlc of 11t Food&erver. Ll&l•l •IURID c:Met M60. Mghl oek Of~dele _.._ ... IULD1111LUll wented permanent Pff floe.Accounting & 10-k..; • • •Bwaoy. . hnctl retNctory dW*'O muet ... 7~P'ltPty UoOIAti. FufnlturJJ,
Low ratee ~el Ser· HOUMWOrk, lndry, yttd exp l*pful. Good off1c19 • MANAGER • * Hotteeeee ll•D tableS1450.e.tllfrendl · ~ it0fl1 ~. ¥Ice Tony Gulllen work, wUl'I catl. etc. 20 lklltt . Selary oS*'I ec· e • ln19Mew9~ Hu FIT~ tor drtll9r oountty CINilr9 w,.,.,_ NEWPORT BEACH ~ Iott mot9. ...
511·2864 hrtwk(n.xlble).'5-8/hf. cording to 9XP & ability • • i..5pm.Apptyln.-.on: ownera. lat• model~ Nth ..... t tMee. P1ne COUNTRY CLUB P"1 1C>-4.3240rdlld,lnii
WIOOW 11e9 MONEY tor ~292 Olene 831·5884 o; : Appliration8 are now b t ing a r · .• ~INtlll hlcl•. 25 YHrt +. & elm country llUtcll Prty .W. to purdlW IL:a.... I
T,,,_S10K/ ,noet .... 1' 551-3331!v.e df 325Bnilt,.St,N9 (213)74i..7222 ~~!_1~Smell~ rnembenlhlp720-3t12 .__ ..,. .., , e l'tplt or mana~tmrol po it io n,. e .._.._ -. -·-"'·no . Call 0. TllCUn ffM ENERGETIC ~ to e e llTlllllllll... MAINT£NAHC£MAN Alftel oountry dbl bed RAMS 4 SEASON ..........
n1eon AW>C 737311 TEACHER PRE1H<HOOl work 7-3. Buty CM e lndividu•I mus I bt ~ttr-e &-•-Heeded et lux~ Newpof1 *3t5 ,.,,_ ---Olllc TICKETS Club level Aeclnar, die.. ~. c:N*I,
u J CWlanMlnlltry.8E.C.E. ;;;;;.'t! C..... ~ ' ~ • o rganize • exi e 811 Muethevegt9exp Good attttude, to ~·;;;;..,,~-· 71~51-n201e73-0354 ._,. ~-=. ... ~. ~ ........_,. fc Billlna. lllinQ, e mo•1·v•l•d · d n 'bl d e I•-• Beach Apt C::e.,lex. ~ --;. ... ..,. W I p 8 r k I ng , Io b Qt _.,._ __._ti &
E HELPf still . unlll. Cott• MH•. evatt.ble su.i110 : ~oal oritnlt-d Appliran b must t'fljoy : flt aummeronty work lor demendlng r.16-M--onty •• ~., blO. mlee. S5-&50. SAT
lnglor a teeureper90tltO 642·9111 • working with l'OUlh., • PUINl&Tlll denc:•. wllllngMM to s.nc:i.m.m. 1 IUlllallflT oNLY.llm.'2MIMlbro ~=..e': Pnllldtul/ PIT~~~. : Rtl1ablt .v!"h1r lf'. "alid lir rm;r : e.m-=~~d =.:::~; FAAHKLINOAANOPleno ttNtitte~=•125· C.M.Nrawa...-st.
peylnttrMt. 122-ena or Mwlalatratfft SllO phonee. Hourt i..t ftex-: and m •uranrt a mui.t. : ,_..~toran then prevtou1 u-wtth Amp6co ~ mecho SE.AAS COU>SPOT ,... At~~ okl 1:
546--0819 U&l llllfl Ible! 641-1770 Coleen eppt t>Mw.n Mc>m. pertence. Cell M4-0&0t anlem under keybowd. lrlg411elor w/tcemaker dlle .... ~ "'°C>
fj Hll Tired Of F\.E. Become• GENERAL OFFICE PIT : U.'e oHeruct'llent rompan) b t n-: l&LllAl&Y... MEN~ WOMEN (eget _...,. "'*"· Lou6e 15, 135, Nof1e 11eevy duty V8C.bett.ctwaer,.,..
f • Loen Rep. F\.E. Uc ,.q'd. TrelnHI Afternoon• e tfiti. inrlud1og· Peid vacatio nr. and e M&-5000X521 17-35) .,. needed to ~ ~~ '6000. GI' ~ 135, klnG a tytene ..a.~ IMI W reun on IBM s.t-1'9 fOf you In tM PllonH, lite typing. e h I'd d' 1 d d J e terve wftl'I the Celfofnle " '"""' -tert>ed wftfl htt l30, 2583 Senta An9 A"-C.M TO.. Aleo~ on I buy fleld + Trelnlng. C.it tor 875-9212 e o I ay&, me er a an enla in-e RESORT HOTEL llM ~ "AIR" rutlonel au.d. ~HHY UNO CM, 3 An-Pleno '50. 931..e659 TJ'~.80~810~~~ an9'19tno.t0t7 Ct1Udc •-ai -••y e 11uranr t . bonu~ pro~ram. alart and • ~~~0 _!!.: No experlenoe ,.,.._ tiqu. ch.WS, ptetform Tourrnellne Embe M«* 'r.!'t:~~ .,_ . ...,.. ,._.,_,.., I ----·-• miltagt-allo"'anct. • Y-• .,........._., -..-· ery. ExoeMent opportunl-rOdler 1820'1. Ltbrery eo.t ful.....,_, ,,_.
Aaeoc. 873-7311 .. Mal/ ... tal llH For H.B. au.. & CMI ut e • ,._concept reetaurant ty town wNM you twn bend\. Aub)'-19 Pot Bely sa. ·8 .,-~·:r:· tlO ~
&a ..... •atl l•IPUmlllmT ~.,,~~"'eX: 5~ : Apply in ptr o n Tu,.1.. thru • =~ ::.l&~w!ne !....!',~· ~ rrcareerom If St!We. 7~ c.11 7~,2 · ,.. ...... ~ ... • ~ Front office............... ....... • Thun. 2:00-6 :00 p .m. •• I 8 30 , ,_.. ........... -· ....... .._.,._; ~ • "'11 ,.... 1111 .,...... ....... -exp. detnd, non amkr n per1on · •m· you qu.,lfy Mu.t be HS -·-Trede kw Ven or PU One ~ ....._
b• enlhUllHllC e nd ofe. xlnt ..... a benefit•. •• OUllE co••y PllLISHlll co .• • noon gred or ~ •• U.S. ~ full of Antlqueel ThomM Cetebt1ty orgen. boc*CHCI "-'· ''°
F-ADS
ARE FREE
$2.40 per day
Theft ALL you pey tor
3 llnee. 30 ~ minimum
In tM
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CA.Lt. TOOAYll
lllFHLlll
cheerful 4 work weft Send r~ to PO Box .. M·Th, N9wpor1er Aeeof1 Clttr.n end w1t11ng to et· AeMonablel 3'1·1428 glaiu I br ... cotfM LHlngton C M No wl~P••· Mutt have neo Npt Bctt, CA t29e0 .• 330 W. Bay St. .• 1101 Jambor• Na. tend AIR Force 9ee1c table 645-4832 check• rue..,,... M QOOd omc. lklHI. Some or caii 640-1880 Oelc rott-top, xlnt oond. · • A.turd-s ........ ,_ • Costa Mesa CA 92626 • ROniSCHILD'S Mllltary Trelnlng end a1000. Oeill fWt¥tl delk rwo . 8' llofel ~ ~ -.-tlT-11-...,,Tl...,IC-•---~di~· to ;.p 'a d p /T U•flllln e ' e RESTAURANT Vocatlonel School. Hew ot\8lr w/erma S 185. Muet yellow dlvw "+ 3 ;x4'" ....
llee. Diane 831·5864 or For t>uey CdM H.W 8-'on • EOE • Hu entry ltYel poeltlon QI 8111 torc:on.ge 18 ewll-.... 7~1 m•1chlna pelntlng. 1695. • ..........
551-33341 ewe CAU 8?5-5531 • e eve.Hable ~In 1*10n Ible. Excellent vocallonel 47~ 1 FrllNlcM *'-· IP'* a • e e ••••• ••• •••• e •••••••• e 2407 E Cout Hwy, COM. tr•lnlng progrem for ~...... M U other penem S1. Etdled gt'edue11ng .-itort ~ ~ Unlvertky Atlli.tlc Club mlrrort $3. IJphcfil.. f*tc: 111 IUll... COiiege l1udent1. For es>-I llf.......... Membet9111p,vel $850,... &Oc yd Lact a._.. s1
le 9009C>tlng apc>btlone polntmenll to twn more 1 _ II 1700. Ind .,..,.., fM SINW ~ S2 ow.,
tor ho1tHHt/ho1tt. about our pr~em. cell: _. 7-1111 851-80e2/E 1&2--05'0/D 1temwer., cryst.;, etc S1·
Mutt be •Yell tor dey & COSTA ESA-KENMORE WASHER WA8HEFU150 DryerS75 *3 Ptcm.ne. b001t1 S1
night lhlt\t. Starting pay (714) 97i..73fS3 Electric dry•r. wht. ~ eennon ' Lena 175' Old trunb 125. LOtl tum U-!tw AW'/ In .-.on: ONTAAI0-(714)983-2319 S200/pr or best otter N9wgairegedooropener' '5 Teble & ~ S125
819 &eepy Hollow Ln, RIVERSIDE· 875-3544 °' 982-7089 ' S4Wt5e . Dolle 1246. New Meull
L.agune 8eect1 No phoM (714) Ms.-4791 0 Pl~. lflOm.
eelitp!MM ima 11111 , .... ..,. MH WROUGHT IRON PATIO ~ s.s.,.. eeb
WAITRESS/WAITRESS dining Mt, glMe top, NC1 S25 Fr1. 1·7pm S.t
Aelldentlel board and I llY WI• tbl • 4 chalrt with t-3pm. 12'0 L.ov-n 1 bl! A~ In IMne ..... LO • ., .. 1 .. c:utfltont EJclnt quellty So °' a.er ~ ewe tor Sf Clt~ent. *Y 1300 to MOO No collect· -S 196 Extr• arm c:M1t a Hert,.,,1~
plHUnl tlmotph•r•. Ing. ~ hOurl • cSey , DBL BED w/lrame tide lbHM 75i..1t1t 383 Hoapltlll Rd, NB Mondey thN Fridey efter· MA<lboeld U0 2 iO UNIQUE MOVlNG SALE ......., Palatia1 al s noon SetUldly WI &in-wood delk S15 i s100 VALE FORKLIFT 3 .,. so COAST SHORES. ~weL. &Gwortc. GLASGOW PAINTING dey morning Call 733-9207 Iv mtg' meat.~ cap Like Welt9Nrn SI. Oat9 #3. Off
concnt• Comp petloe Int/Ext. 30 yrs e.xper.. I........ 642...-333, 91k lor Klrtl 642--0411 eft 8'Wn · new lor quid! Beu, bel•••n Mic
15 Y"t•llP«' 646 483-4 ref• 642-5214 To work In mark•tlng !ii half · .... 54o-52ee Mnut& ~ Ceatl ..._ ~ o4 Ptece IMnQ room lllt. U onty Aduttl ,.....
Hoo•c*9nlng 14 Y"I exp. •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. BRICKWORK Small jc>bl. PAINTER NEEDS WOAKI order ....,..I. no eitp nee. r _.. ~ 1.-d Mrttltonte
relleble, rw. he Mt. own Pelnl. Drywtil. CWDentry Newport, Coat• MeM, Int/Ext, oelllngt. r.nn c.et> ~~~'1.:°=:' ~. ':I 330 . a.y SI. eott S715.' ... 1285° ltalJ!!!t Mii ~:...... IHI
trana. Pine l4Mlll oen. etc. Gery64~5277 PTL IMIW. ~· 875-3175 (2')yra exp .. "°"' 9'*· neet, curt.out. and Ible Coe11Mw.CAt2e28 952-42.54 11 "· ....... iilll.D Cllllnrnfo. il11\lng/
We'll keep you tNp lh.tpel **HANOYMAH** BRICK-Concrete· Block Devit Pelntlng M4-3137 to ttett Imm 1920/mo, PART TIME/Per"**1t 4 8 ft !wry oolored tofe w/I 26 H.P. Jol!Mon. Ille l'tun\g/P.atlc 260 at'9ll
8)'f'lexpertence, rellab'e, L.Mge or tmell. I do It alll Cuttom Wonc. Low C09t. QUALITY PAINTING Mr Walleoe 882-5142 dey WHk. 9em-4pm cu1hlon1 150. Men't atert uptlol ... ._ OO\l9f loed.-wl.upp. emptyll,
own IUPPfM. F,.. eet Pat 53t-5579 or iv.t meg. lie/bonded. Bob 635-~ Spec:. In Old 11ou9ee a gref· a•••imll deity, no n1tM1•nd1. -'lit• MUQtl Lounge c:Mlt hOllt t>tt. assoc) oeo: nui11p t>ao. Old tNnti1.
JMn 146-2342 aft 4 _11_ ... Ulln lllllRJ flttl removal. Beet WT'f vvw S m• I I C o . or d • r S25. ~ May c.ny. 875--3912 wtr eenner. l'IClhld, ml9C .... ~ - -------bid guer wortc 97~ cteptlwrepplng CM l5hr rtem1. 455 WestmlnClt• ,.~ .. ..._ LT HT LINO ™VINO Brlclc, Block end Concret• . . C.it am ~t~ . a· Ivory mod couoh CANON 5t4XL-8. Super ,,...,. comer 8roed sn .
.,.. .. _..,.. "' • """ Wonc. FREE ESTIMATE SEE ME LAST Growing PMwpor1 8Mch w/metch love IHt. Imm Sound McM9 Cem-Fr1. 1,e, Set. 1o-e I.I. wit80N i iONS Garege & Vent 0nuot 648-2130 I wlll beet AHY Bid. Wonc Ad Agency need• lt\erp, PART TIME welnut OI ... cot tble, end ere. S200 733-4524 At6c 1-.0,_.....,....,..... ___ _
Rm. Add. Atmodel Kite. Jon &4M1t2 quar. 722·7537 d•t•ll minded bllllng Ible w/meten ~ com-tor eri.n M VINO SALE. 9 ~
Bath. Tiie. '357417 Int. HAULING • CLEAN-UPS. Stucco-Flntlh Ca~ry cl4lltl Mut1 be good with TELEPHOlll~ plete ••t StOO new dNuer S75, equ8t'luln 30't'l•P.648-1740 70eyt.Lowe.1rat•. No.Jobtotmetl A"typee PaJlriaL 11gu,..,tyP9 55wpm,UM • S1200. 975-3544 or 19 • '25.etec~er . .ic c.at a.ny, 722-M13 Free Mt Uc 131-2345 JXRTAIM jNf@AIOMS 1 O. k • y by touc h wure ..-1ng lndMcMlll 982-7098 MUST SELLI 7 uona; Old Auel m;;p 65()..2902 or 790--0764
Ctutrutln HAULING & MOVING SUPERIOR QUALITY a HAHGINO/STRIPPIHG Pr•vlou• igency H · with eggr .. tlv• ,., •• A pr Of HenredOn ~ no pepert, .a lhota, OOod TWO FAMILY'S
-------· A IUWbi College Student w/trudl REASONABLE PRICES VISA-MC 873-1512 ~ ~·* Ex· phone penonalltlee to ctn, COior SN1rnp l300 w/cHdren, he to OOod Antique beda. tOta frldg, are:R'l!r Thenlc L..-548-1452 llc:.t493700 oellent .,.. .... ta conteet cencelled cer-. pr. 3 c1rwr entlqu9 cNet hol'l'le 831.-00 eft 8cM"n do™"G, Ml &-2pm. aun iMltlMl C.W.... THE oouoLXS you. ....... Pluttr= SEND RESUME TO hOlder'I 1no ..._). we m . 645-4)2 AFGHAN ,.,,..... 2~ &-12. §101 ~. Mel
'111tm'8'f'm1Tfu 8~~ ....... ttiat ••l -• ~Gt T ~ Mrt Bld• :!, ~::,,In=~ BE.Al/TIF\JL SOllD oek old. bHutllul d::. Megnolla I Benning
Aleo Int/Ext Pelnttng 543-«M7 11418423) w.AldAtHOUf Plfi0l ... _,_ om .nurtna. Oueillty • p 0 BOX 1710 port"'1lty fOf -bedroom ault• king A aipeyed, 1191tde To ~ r~dM
Uc#2815t7 131~ tlk• lo¥lna m Of peta CLEAN & EXPERT Wont. Pr~No Prot>-N9wport e..ctl. CA 92658 dentl ~ ~ Pertitey bought S2500 home onti/ ~5234 •20YW'lln~Ouelty water.melf.etc.751.e3M °*25 YMIU~ terntll3298M 554-7931 AIOE TO MANAGER In ualltowork4"our1Mt1 ... s1i75ob07S9-3137' .... J=' al 7'11
t AEMOOEUNGIRUAJRS UcT·118.421 t•1"3 eMWer1ng MMQ9 PIT For mor lnlormetlon PUIUlllD ROW bost w/lhor'e moor x;; ma' All Typee. St~ Lultu"81 UA8C MOV1HQU Pl...... nu In t401 AVOC*ki ,,..... e.: JoM or,..., .i ll&ibil ·-Co6or'I orenge. 0.-00. tor• Ing. 341t\ Street c:NnMI
AeNfaclng •Rooflna& ~~~ ALnMut Ouk* & CereNI T138049 241wBf711·1• A~ Ste20o4Npt8cf\ 953-9235 eom.mpnrnewlnclw/d, t~lhell 152·1003 W•t N•we>or1 s•oo
Weterprooflng• 831 ... 1" -;:;:;:;;;;-:~iiti;;~· a;;;;M;;;-GI~ LO RATES. 552--0410 .AllplUmblngl~ ltv rm & bdrmt tum, kite FREE L-ve 4 p1eot Sec· &45-2117 or 881-9170 = Room AddltlOne-AlnlOdet __..ig. a.,ma1en. ANSWERING SEFMC£ ~ Oppty ~ .ic Mull Mii b't Jvty llonel LMng rm Mt ,.,_ -, ... t ~ Doort-Wlndowt·Petlo Sod~ 20)'f'lln nUYmllUlll OAAINSCLEAAFromS15 All Shlf11 Swttcht>oetd Pan time 29th,noper.onaicMdtl llll CALL&44-M42 flWt( t1 l ~rys;r:;tc;; Cov•rt·Deck1. Frenk, .,.. Tony 64~5124 ITMllll--M. Feucet•. OlepoMI, Heeter, Opu•t_ort wttr•ln Wiii tax• call• ltartlng ti1 '71 T-Ld Fo;:mui;
Aepelr-Aemod'i..Addlttona "6-7t07 Uc#48CMl17 K.C. TREE SERVICE OfqeCo.Oftglnal 641.ot07 Lie 722·toee 8 30em-3pm & Ora.... '""'... ...... July 22. 975-2310 lllllD 100hp bll'nlnl co... IO
eoor..tc. 54-4te0 Top Trim Remcwal Qu.t Student~ Hwured ywd 1401 AYOC!lldo A~ NO 8ELLINGI 2 c.na ~ Colec11on 5Pc I WEEKS OU>! Ttalned tn reduc9d to l5800 ~ISE aC='to! ~. Uc/1,,._ free eet. Uc. T 12~. 64 t-8427 P .. 1 11~ Ste 204 NewJ>or1 9-dl needed to Y'ltffY t.... Secllonel PtnHontc 540-8387 Xlt\t oond 875-0281
<\AMOE dOOf "*'8t,
ll'M •me le tne H9x· '"* Conlt 213 5t248S1
PM Q .._.,IOdel ~
AddlUoN. w ..... Doon.
9f1dc ~. piltloe . 9et-&213 or 538 •• NEW Wwehouee Stott09 cXLYHO!FAii EST uaam pfloM Of'derl Hourly tter.o. VldeO eam.a. J ... lry .,. 19 5 9aytlner 110 ,,,,,,,,
9144400Uc1451217 ISHIKAWA L.ANOSCAPI! M""'·IUI Rellable wklY ave,~. Growth oriented Hunt-Kou,. 1:30pm·l :OOpm. MM752 Mn exit cond ~ ruM ~ --------tSod. CIMIHlpe. Metnt. •t• 647-7753, ,4-Hrt. tnoton 8ctt Co 11M FIT Sat t ·oo.m.1:oopm FOf CUSTOM Sot• s 119 An-Nwpt DuMt ~ Ball hen Sprlntc .... eto. 860-4 t47 C~ lat / lieat pc>etlont tor Mght .. lnt9Nlew c:alt INf'9 att. tiqu. &.igh ~ d,,_, Ledlee Omege 12 '' .. ,ca; wnll, pump, depth fin«* r;;;y I m m DUSTY'S l..Mdac:epe/\nn By hf '"' plect, 646-3816 tembly a pk~. Appty In UOpm &Q~71 vanity a c:helf ' "'" ' .,,~ C1 dlemond Mml c a . Ice boit/alnk porll
By Hannan Tiie Ooonnen Mein S.V Witty/month/ Putlet/OeWJ.ai f:'~~"'= ~~ 14~55w~ ,.. ... more 633-0097 _ ~~00o, ~5 Po"lP ~,:5f° oeai a Fir 157-DOOA 1 lime. F,. eel. 24 ,_1640 R~ ara. f,. ... Lie 13~2~ No exp nee. ... tnH\, ,.. m&U"' H0-4152 (aft "
--------CH LAWN 8£AViee for klda 8-Deye!Pert... -UlllTllT ..-y. no .-no. hr• Liie• new ~ MO L.DIY ...... a.nn.aJ MOW•EOGETWICEMO Ae11abt1 ~f810 flit FOf MW rtiPklty orowlnO 5-tpm M.f', Sat ... tpm, &MvelctwS50 Cofftbll Ntlt1 proof Of Htgtl he 11'11Wt'll
'20-$25 ~722 ~ hetr Mlon F"" ttme ,.: eaeo ~ WOf1I evell, 'marble w1~· t40 & s.llno. *° Wtitt ~ OMC 100hp mertne r90IO ,_ B.111111 ' an.lat lerNt dPiRt btAXQIC TC; IC)Onllble w on.Med Wendy M.2-5143 'ppand' Sctndenevia11 Of Cd de te '* P¥t P,Y fl9l'I a tttl in prim. ...,.
().ieltywcn, ll'Meet SHAU9 I I.AWN CAAE;.:;;;:JCNJm t0r W:: Olatinetlve, Affordable pweon, ~ c:helt 41¥911. H t _ .. _ ...,_,,. *'O 642..oeot mutt ... 75t-t5e$ pon lllP. Pf'Of m-.i
1ua.e1S .... 7401 ~. oen cinup 1n car. a ... = tor l<Jt~ bett.a 722·1713 Ntary. op, le, cell Gaily _. --• '5000""" a.51-5040 ~ 17$-118' 4~ 1 Front end ..... Qteflc MOVING SA~ll lofalk1ve M9rl' ,.. ,.WO. OOid -- --=~~. R,!!IODo/C~~L~ Uc28 ,,..... 1"9f ~ (7 14 2009 191 -needed tor ouey Ptw· aeet. trpl d,..,, 2 ... A~ ~ wstdl 24' ~ et. '" •-:= .... -.."':~°"' ~-~.. ,. • ... , _... '""'" 1 ~ &llUI• II-Tl ~ 548-212'3 unlt9.. twn velWtC cMllrt & 2 men• CUlltom medct ceddy ~. IVN great P9h. 127I041 Al 14e-112t Topped/Nl'ftCMd Qeen.. JAYCff TREE SERVICE ~County Co ..._ 5 mtec: tternt 14f.74M dl.mond r1nQt , MOOG $4,IOO/Oftw .._. _.. =--~.::..:: fllCTNCtAN °'* WOl1I up,new....,.. 7114471 ardS!nof 18 .,..0f~ =-~~ pollt1onllorhrvtoelt• ':v:!.~ ~· · MOV1HOI OC>o foreft 7eo..t2 642-eeeeor .....
1
2&4
1a.n1a.11111.m
,,.. • l20 tv ~ ucie•T,.. TOl)C)6nQ eu11omera Uc 2ll0644 lion "°"' IS/Hf .. Cell aaG!Wtt 76. 8oltd we1r1ut octeoone1 Aobtr1 Jer"'9 I•' Lnl&I
T J. ll'lle COM(. 14'7"2 Oreg. t1t-4.271 ~ Thentc·YOUI "3-4114 Pwry eft 3pm M&-UIO Newpof1lleedl144-1181 ~ tbl •'" arm ctw'I ,_,,,. Dill Ona 1 .,... ~. n9W peW11 c:: ~-= Lift aanJiiit MITU: MO..s2ll A A A PAIHTIHG lntlbt L[T THI IN RH~~~~AJ~~ure 8 AVlCl 8TAT Affii>Nt 1g
1:0 ~ ~ ~~O':°'C~ll= l7W834
llOdl.u;;-'landed ~ .. 1re .... end TNelT~oomp LOWESTpo.tbleprtoe 8un1Nr1ewtnoow~ Y°'lf'IQ ~·._,,Mo* llrpw/Ntf Dlyltlm 14/tv f100 ,,,.._....._.., (111)2"2·51U Only M' '13 ~HI
Cel(1f4) tl2·l'ON "°"' . 54t~ ~ CompeUtlli4 10 tep a..Yloe M2-UU Ltd Cell (714) Ml eteo Auio ?*..-.. ....,1025 + ttme a•'*' UNon 71 • wtoue 1nqu1111e ~ ..,.. n 5fl9 ~~· ,..._ Prtc.~84.t"2111 ---"' ~11eec:t1144-7111~etm .... bed-. v · .. oe..~ ~'*"'-·lolllltolocM ""'"',_,-AIR_,, No EXTfAIOAtxP£R18 ComnlelctMl"-'Oentlal "9dlo.. ,....,~ iu .. model tteeter n yo1r~notinen:NnQ totN ..,._ .._1 _lfl09tr w Mtit 10 *•1 lomeone tob9 10 lfMI, r..on.-" . !oc*lng '*"°"" ""*'9 "11*1.itY t ory S30 • 2"'*'Y t40 · ~ · l'ldbrd & mm.: ' ~"""' ,.., ~.,. •• .. ,_ -"""'° In~. ,,.. ... le'd 131·21M5 r~ to,.cs Llc011517 U1·'21& Cellf WlndcMw ...... ,,.4 ....,,goe~eounot a.ncti~MIOlfh oofld pe,tnepnma t inMOI raMg ...,.. Cllf'9r • 1lllffl hel,..... a • tor you ~out Ol U. ctoldNms l300 120-0IM ~ "°"°"'3
OrMge Co91t DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, July 23, 191e
, .. ,,_ ,....,._
1111
AND TRYING HARDER
TO BC =I
•SALES
•SERVICE
•PARTS
•LEASING
AR(,f Sl iNVl NTQI<•
UN IHE W[ST CQA 1
EVEIY MOOll ' COt.Olt CALLIODAY
SOU Hi C ()tJN TY
18(1 1 llE A, H Hl VD
~~UtJ!INC,T 1 JN Bl ACH
7141 842-2000
IRVINE AUTO
CENTER
714-951-3144
800-428-7 485
BUICK
DEALER
CADILLAC ·a 1 Eldo 1
owner 80,000ml, wtttwtt.
lmmec $1200 o«>o. MU9t
... , 780-0580
PL VMOVTH 8"""' LjOf.
ro ·e1. 2e.ooo mt ~·· oond, mil. ,__ ttr.. $38,000 obo 122..-..
RECYCLE
through the
DAILY PILOT
Classltled Pages CADILLAC ·13 Eldor9do,
"""'--------lop cond All Htru,
BUCIK REAQL '11 OWMf. S12,500 Turn unwantfKI
Items Into
money today/ 2 dr, ve. auto, .ir. pb, pa, 9e2-4471
P'*. fl'TI CMS, tll1, OC, ldt cond, 13,050, c81 Mike. CADILLAC ELDORADO
8-5pm, 933-0070 '82·81k wig~ lthr lnl,
BUICK '78 ESTATE WON
loeded. 1700 or beet
offer. (Good Deel).
873-28&6 or 873-0225
BUICK '13 REGAL LTD
8Mul oond. 531<, orig
OWi*, muS1 NCrlflce,
$5875, call~ 7M-S455,
d•Y9--857 ·2"0.
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGE.ST SELECTION
of i.te model, low mt!Mge
CedlltlCil In 0r'1lQ9
County! S..14 todeyt
1•0-1100
2800 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
COUPE DE VILLE '70. xtnt
cond.lcMpendabll, one
own.r. 38.000 orlQ. ml.
$2500 OBO. 980-3081
C•ll 842·5871 wire wt'994 COWl"I, IUIJy
loaded, 51,000 ml.========
$9000/obo, "9-7851.
WI llT &LL 1&111
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FIU&PPUIW.
O.LILLO
OllYllUT
18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
14l .... ltr•••·lll1
CHEVY '81 CAMARO Xlnt
cond. llUIO, air, crulM
control, e cy1, S2950.
&«-7183
I( ... '1CTITIOUI ., ....
MAmlTAW
The ~ pel"IOnl ere
doing bu1lne11 H : (A)
FORTV CAAAOTS; (9) VlC-
TORIA 'S BAKE~. S33a
S. 9ristOI It, C.. M191.
c.Htotnll t"2t ~R.lc*lt.-..1
Wlndeot 8t'td , Loe ~
CA 90020
Thie butlMSI · le oon-
Oucted by: 11'1 lndMcUI
J~ A IOlker
CHEVV '82 CMYette 4 dr, Thie llatemen1 .,.. tied
4 tpd, xlnl cond, blue w1111 lhe County a.. "' Or·
$2,800 OBP. 5-46-38ee = County on June 21, ~. MUST SELL 19 ~
OOOOE '73 $150 Pub41ehed Orenge Coe9I
F0td '74 Colony 100 DallV ~ .My 2, I, lt, 23,
S 1000 good oondlllon 1988 ...... 1 988-5871 ... ....
P\llUC fl>TICE Nil.JC NOTICE Ml.IC t«>TICE P\8.IC t«>TICE P\8.IC NOTICE Mtt.IC NOTlCE P\8.JC t«>TICE Nl.IC NOTICE I Mt.IC t«>TlCE NlJC fl>TICE
W lllCI 120 Soutll Spnng Strwt, petlOr Court. on or en• tile oourtty cilenQe It on Ille In Ille 0.-Deed of Tru1t, for tlle quCtar eu eoWto. Ml""*° upon the executor or lldmln-•Ille of the decedent the Plennlng eomrne..on·1
D41PAlftWMT Of Room 1000. Loe AnQeM9, 28tll Clay of July, 1988 11 the P11oel G. Lotl A Md B of vetopment s.rvtc. ~ amount reuonebty H ll· 1 r ott.. coH• d• 1u tatretor, or upon the 11-1 Tiie petition roquHll denlll of • c:Nnge of mne ~·TION Cellfoml• 90012, untll 2 olflc• of LATHAM & TrllCt No 78", &I pet mac> ALL INTEAESTEO PEA-mated to be: $129,024.51 pnphllM ......... lom.y tor tile executor Of euthonty to 1dminl91• tile ffom (Q~ (~
NOTICa TO o'dodl pm on Augu91 7, WATKINS. 555 S o utll recorded In Book 31 1. SONS .,. Invited to lttetld Tiie benofleletyunder Mid ldoMI .,.,,.,,. ... _. ~'"'°'· ll'ld me with •Ill• uodlt the lndepen-Medium Aellden•
COWTWACTOftl 1988, •• ~Um• they wllt Flow Slroel, LOI Angelel, Pagel 47 end 48, Ml .. Nici llMr1ng ll'ld exp! ... Deed of Tnnt llerotofor• ··-• .,.._ ................ IN COllf1 with ptoof of..,. dent Admlflletretlon ol e.-. PlenMd D ... atopment) to 11-or. .. ...., De publldy opened Incl reed CA 90071, County of Loe OOl!aneout M~. In 11'11 Of· opinion• or IUbmlt OYldonce ecutoc:I Ind dell-od IO Ille ........ ~ ....... vice, • written requeet 1111· t•t• Act A2-4A (Medi""' 0.nally
SMioCI PfopoMll tor tl'll In Room 2 11 Mid lddrwll. Angolel. State o1 Collfomt1, flcle of the eoonty recorder of tor or ege1n11 tile eppfleetlon undet•IOned 1 written Doc· quiet• nemet 1 "" ....... Ing tl\lt you dellre ~ A hMrtnQ on Ille pellUon Aeelden~) end to
WOflt lllO'MI on'"° piww on-()enefal wort! ~tlon. Ill the rlgllt. title Ind lnlereet Nkl county u outlined •bOYI All 8'>911· l81'1Uon of Default Ind 0.-......._~II ftO OCMt-nottce of the fM1nQ "' 111 n-wllt be hetd' on AUGUST 13. llllOW M ..-~ oon-
Utfed. ST A TE O' CALI· T r1tflc llgn ... end lllghwsy of Mid decleNd II IN time Parcel H loll A end B of cation a, oxhlblte, Md CS.. INlnd for S•. ll'ld a written ooe o 11n 911 a tide, ..... wntory and ~llMmenl of 1 1988 et 9'30 A. M In ~ domlnlum unlU wtU\ ~
FOANIA, DEPARTMENT Of Nghttng 10 be modtfted of de9tll Md Ill the r1gllt. TrlC1 No. 9085, .. pet map ecnptlonl of 11111 Pfopoeal Nouoe Of Oefeult end Boo-...,_., • "" eer¥ldo...... •t•t• ...... or of the pet~ No. 3 II 700 OMc C..I• tor epec:lll permll.
TRANSPORTATION; PAO-Bldl lfO required fOI' tile title •nd lnlerelt ll'ltlt Ille ... recorded In Book 321. .,. on nte with Ille ~ ol tlon to Sell. Tiie underllgned _ .. .,. •• a 111lu 0 • Oone onccounte mentioned Drive Woet, Santa Ml, CA E N v I R 0 N M E N T A l
JECT PLANS FOR CON-onltroworlc deec:flbed !'lore-1111 of Mid deoMMd 11&1 PIQll 49 1nd 50, Mii · lhl City Clerk, 2000 Mein c:auled Mid Notice of 0.-une of'ICltNI de eY\lde ..... tnSec11ot11200endl200.5of 92702 STATUS: Neoe1M o.ollr·
STRUCTION ON STATE In .cqulredbyoper1t1onoll-celleneoua Mepe, In tile of-Slr"t Huntington BMch, llUll end Eleetlon to Sell to (fftl el dlnotMlo ..... theCllltotnilPrOblleCode. IF YOU 08JECT to ltlO ttlotl No M-2 .. alecl be
HIGHWAY IN ORANGE The ContrllCtor lhellpoo-orOll'llrwlMOlhlr tllen Ofln llceofthecountyrecotdorof Celllornl1.for ~lonby be r8C01'6oc:I In Ille coi.inty foMco) lerMnlA.l..eollte. ...... gt8'1tlngofthepetltlon,you oonel6eNd by Coun011 In
COUNTY IN COST A MESA -oltl'lot • CIUI A Ileen• eddltlon lo '"-' of NICI do-Nkl county tho public wtlot• the rMI l)foperty II e.. No. oc::vaem '"° c-.-°"'"' ..... lhOuld either eppeer ., the conjunction "'"" Mid llP-AT BAKER STREET or • CtNI C..10. Ileen• et ceued, at the time of dMth, mor1 commonly known HUNTINGTON 81ACH IOC.lod Tiie n1me Ind lddr ... of por1 ...... C::A ._ llMrtng Ind etalo your ob-peel
wtll be received II Ille O.. Ille time 11111 contrect 11 In Ind lo Ill 1111 corteln r1al u 3337-20 Punll Altl , CITY COUMC~. AKale Oete July 17. 1980 he court 11 (El nombf9 y Publlahed Orange Coelt jectk>nl or flle wrtnen objec. ON FILE. A copy of leoel
pertrnont of TrlNOOft•tlon. ewerd.o property llluetod In en unln-LeQune Hiiie, CA 92653 M. WentwGf11\, CM11 IWl,_.Al aANCC>Nt., • roc:clon 0.11 cor1e •t S U.. Deity Pllot Juty 1t. 17. 23, tlone with the c:our1 t>elor. ~ end cop6el of Tho ContrectOf ,,_UllO COfJ)Of1ed lrM of County ol fenn1 ol Nie c:uh In law-"--(11') Celttomla _,.. OI P RIOA COURT. SAN 1988 the hMrlng Your IC>C*I'· the Pfopoeed ~lonl
DEATH NOTICES be properly lleenMd 11 1t1e Orlngo, Stet• ot C111tornt1. tut money of the United Dated July 11, ttea I uld Trwtee, 9Y NAAOINO COUNT Y. WTh2e81 ence m1y be In penon Of by .,, on Ille In the~''
time tile bt<l 11 eubfnltted. pertlc:ulwlY d4*rtbod 11 lot-I SlllN on .... Of P.rl CUii Pubtllhoc:I Orenge Cout DeYlw, AMt V\oe l'rullloftt 1S40 N Mountlln Ave .. On-your 1ttorney of 0..1lap1M11t8etvlmlOt·
Thie contrect ts eubject to lowt. 10 wit Incl belenco l¥ldotlcld by Delly Piiot July 23, 1988 laO I. LA c::--.. lt¥d., tlt10, CA 91782, W"1 ValWy Nil.JC NOTICE IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR flcle
VAN HEEMSKEflCK 1 1111 contr1c t non· PARCEL t note OICUf'ed by Mor1gago W274 '"llewoed, CA HI01 Judldail Dlltrtct. Of• conttneenl cndltOf of AU IHTERUTa> l't'.,._ A N N E y AN dleer1m1n1tton end com-o..a1ng unit 20 1n BullCI· or Trust Deed on Ille Pfop-m-•c W'llTIC[ 21 /4f7~Ml2 Tiie name. ICldr-. and C:: 11D IN dlc:1111t1. you mu9I me SONS.,. Invited to 9ttilnd
HEEMS K E RC K p 111 nce r •qulromonll Ing No 3337 11 Mid unit I• ony IO IOld Ton I* OOlll of n111u nu TAC tlMI toloptlone number of pllln-MVl'R8elMI COUNTY your a.Im wltfl ttlo court Of Mid llMflng and ..,,,...
• a pur1u1nt to Government lhown on lh•I certain con-emount bid to be dopolltod NOTic::I Ofl Publlened Orengo CoNI llff'1 1l10tney, or plelntlff IUPIMOR COURT Pf....,t 11 to tho P9flONI optnionl or eubmlt ~
long tune resident of Code. 8ec:11on 12990 domlnlUm plen '"ectloc:I 10 Wltll bid Propeny IOld "u TMll'Tatl It.LS Di lly Piiot July 23, 30, wf11'10ul en 1ttomey .. (EJ 40IO MeM It. r....,tatM ~tod by for Of egelnll the epploldon
Cotta Mesa. palled Proferonc. wMI be gr111tod end mede • pet1 of11111 c:er-11 NO -..a1901 August 8, t98a nombf"•. le dlrecclon yet-. Mc:~.,..... Ille coun wt1tlln four monlhl .. oulllned etJo¥e. Al.,.,.._
J ) 22 l986 · 10 t>I06er1 property pro-111n 0ecter1t1on ol eov. 81C11oronert1o beln wrll· YOU ARE IN DEFAULT W278 moro de lelelono del ---' ffom 1111 d1t1 of",.' lo-eatlona, e.l(hlbttt. and o.
away u y • m q11llt~ &I. "Smell Bull-nen11. Condition• Ind Ro-Ing Ind wilt be reoel~ •• UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DID•Jc W'llTICE 1bogedo Oel dlmlnd&nt•. 0 P0111~. ROSA QAFICIA IUMC9oflet1 .. uprOYIOed latptlON of Ihle ~
S an ta Ana. C A . MA In eocordenoe with ltrlctlonl rec0<ded In Book t,,. 11or ... ld otftc:. II eny DA TEO FEBRUARY 17 .. _ "" det demendent• que no AHpOndont MARIO In Secllon 700 of Ill• ere on Ille wf111 the <>Moe"'
SUJ'Vlvors include h er Section 18M et eeq, Tiiie 2. 107811. P9Q9 101 offlclet r• time •"• the ftrlt pub#-l983 UNLESS YOU TAKE ~• tlonoe •booed<>. •) AN-GARCIA Probet• Code of Clllfomle. tM City CMrtt 2000 ~
daughter, Mrs M arie C1tllornle Admlnl1tr1Uve corda tn tile office ol t119 cation hereof I nd before ACTION TO PROTECT (C::fTAc::tON .IUOtClAL) DREWS & HUMMEL. Lew-CeM No D6llOO Tiie time for flllng clllme wll Street, Huntington 9eedl. p U ( H Code. AoPffeetlonl mult be county recofd9t of H id dlle of.... YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY NOTICE TO DEFENDANT yer1, 9330 BuellM Roed, IUWOMI not expire prior to four Cellfomle, for lnepectton by ow e 0 unungum IUbfnltted to the [)eplf1-county, end an undlvldoc:I Olloc:I 11111 14th d•y of BE SOLO AT A. PUBLIC (AvflO • ACUNdO) RICE s u 11 • 100. R. n c II 0 NOTICll .,.., ...... ...... rnonttlt from tM date of the the public.
Beach , son . Robert ment of Genefll SeNloel, 11130 lnt9teat In end to Lotl July, 1986 SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· M 0 A G A N I N T E R • Cucernonga. CA 91701(714) Med. T1-OMrhMJ ..,.._ l1eertnQ notloe etiow MUNTINQTC>te •IACH Van H~mskerck of Small ll'ldMlnofllyBuW-11nd2ofTrlC1No 90e5.u Amo I . ~. Al· P LANA TION O F THE NATIONAL, A CALIFORNIA tfi-1717 ....,.., ,_ ..._. ,_ YOUMAV EXAMINE tM cm COUNC~. Miii C.0.ta Mesa broth er Procurement A11l1t1nco I* map r.cordoc:I tn Boote tOtfteY et Lew, LATHAM a NA T U A E O F T HE CORPORATION GLENN DATE (F-eU!e) SEP 10 '*"' ~ ..... ,_ ,.._ Ille 119P' by lhe COUf1 tt you Ill. ............ Clilrt
M k <:>-( Ban ' OMllOn. 1808 14111 Stroet, 321. Pegee 411 I nd 50, Ml .. WATICINI, IH IOlllll PROCEEDING AGAINST RICE INDIVIDUALLY AND 1985 lpOIMI wttMn •den. Aeed 811 1 penon tnter•tod In l'tloM (TM) ar ;;x"fT8 0 • Svltl 100, Secremonto. CA c.lll'*IUI MIPI. In 1119 Of· "°9efltl'Ml,l.01AnfelM, YOU YOU SHOULD CON-OBA RICE MORGAN INTER· ..... ,,..r11 C::tl eua, .... ~..... ltll 11181•. you m4!y MIW O.tedJuly 17, 19M ning, 3 sisters, Mn 95" 14 not ._ ll'oan 5 deye In rtc. of the county r8COl'dlr of Cttltfomte I0071, Attome,1 TACT A LAWYER NATIONAL. JOSEPH A ~Ci.ti II you with lo_. lM .0. upon the executor Ot ldmln-Publlahod Orenge COlilC fiances Doughty and 1dv1nee of bid 099"lng Mk! county anown end do-fol AdmlftMIHtor wtttl Wiii On AUGUST 14th 198a OENNITTI OENESA OIL 6 Publlahod Orenge eo..1 vtce of .,, attorney In rh4I 1t1re1or. or Ul>Of\ tM •I· De.lty Piiot .My 23, 19M Mrs Joan Dou h t 011• fined 11 common., ... on AnMrod 11 1 30 p M IMPERIAL OAS co'APORATION A Delly PllOt July 2, t , 10. 23, minor. you lhould do '° tomey for tile eJrecutor or W273 g y Pt1n1, 9')edflc:atl0nl , end Ille l bove-rel•recl to con-Ndlttl Dltllow.a1. Ad· BANCORP. 1 C1tlfoml1 Cor-CORPORATION; RICHARD 198a promptly IO ttlet your writ· 6dmlnlltrelOI', Ind flle wf111 ---------
both of P hoerux, An· propout torm1 for bidding dornlnlum plen mtnMtretcw wltll W1U An-pori llon u duly eppolnted 0 DUNHAM DUNHAM & W247 ten reeponOl, If 11\y, m4IY be tM court wl1h Pfoof of..,. Mt.JC NOTICE
zona and Mrs Anita thle project c:en only be ob-EXCEPTING THERE-MHd of tM ...... -IMd Trust .. under and pur.uenl ASSOCIATES A CORPOA-Hied on time ~ •• W\11191\ ~l lltet---------.;...;..;..;..;;.. __
Omblets of Ridge -lelned II tho Oep1r1rnont of FROM 1ny POf110n of Lola A Deoodeftt to Deed o1 Truet reoorded ATION. JAMES B VERITCH, Mt.JC NOTICE AvtlOt Ul1ed"' lido do-Ing ""' you deelf• ~ CONmCTD
Treneportltlon, Plens ltld ll'ldBofNIOTrectNo 8085. Publllhoc:I Orenge Cout 1Meret'l 4 1983 utnstr No SEACLIFF FINANCIAL mllld.00 El trlbunlllpued41 nottoooflheflllngofMln· LaQALllOncl
wood, New Jer.iey Bid ~ti, Room 39. lldlolnlngMldLOll 11nd 2. D•~ Piiot July 16. 17 23, 83-095397 of. Offk:l•I ~CORPORATION ROBERT ".... d«:ldlr oonlrl Ud ""'8U• *''Of'Yend~l of OMMlilutel A.l&o survived by 4 T11n1port1tton Bulldlng. EXCEPT THEREFROM, Ill 198 WTh289 eo<da ... .CU1ed by. MARY W BALL, MACKEY l BALL. llOTic::I Ofl dlencJa I monoe que Ud ,. eetl1e "'811 or of the potJ. MO. m.
grandc hildre n Mrs 1120 N Str .. t P O Boll oll ou. mtner1l1 Ind Oll'ler HOOVER. AN UNMARRIED ROES 1 THROUGH 50 ANO DeATH O' eponde dentro de 30 dlel llonl or eccounll mentioned AN OROtHANa! Of THE Van H eenukerck has 1499· S icremento Cl ll· llydroceroont '*<>w' dep111 P\8.IC f«)JIC[ I MAN u trvllort. In lho of-DOES 1 THROUGH 100. IN· JOIO'H MAM.AN LH 1' lnformeclon que In Section l200 llld l200 5 of CITY OF HUNTINGTON t-ornl1 958 07 ( pllon1 of 500 !Mt. wllhOUtlhe right tic. ofll'll County Roc:ofder CLUSIVE MYAMT llQuo tlle c.tlfomla Probllll Code. BEACH AMENDING THI! ~ved tn Colt.a Mesa 9t&-«S-3325l. ind mi y b9 of 1Yr1aoe entry, u r~ NOTICI! Of' of Orenge County, St111 of YOU AAE BEING SUED AND Ofl Nfifk>H SI Ullod O.O.. IOUcl11t et LA Monte H. llMM, ,...._ HUNTINOTOH BEACH OA-
smce 1946 and w as a _,II Ille above Oepirt-ln ln11rvment1 ofr.cord l'UaUCHIA"INQ Callfornla. WILL SELL AT BYPLAINTIFF (AUd ...... TO ADMINllT'D' conMjo de un lbogedO en •tt-J...: ,.. ....... ,. OINANCE CODE IY ~-long time member of "*''of Trensportetlon of-PARCEL 2 ~TO PUBLIC AUCTION TO demend•n<tolOLEN LARRY HTATI NO. A114Mt M11uunto.deborilhleerto ,.. ,. ........... PEALING A~TICLE .. ,
the C..tholJc [)auah. ftoe and 11 the o"1CM of Ille Ne>n-ellC'uetve ...ornen11 I P't.AHMNQ COMflllHION HIGHEST BIDDER FOn MC MILLIN, BERNARD ANO To Ill "f'rl, boneftolllt'lel, lnmedlet91'Mf111· de Mll ~. Ra di _., ....._. C::A ANO ADDING THE~!TO
IY' Olllrlct Otroc:tori of Tr--lorlngr•lnd9Qr-.publle DINtALOPZOHI CASH (psy1bll 11 lime of ELEANOAT FfLTON; credltort end conllngent miner1. IU roipu .. 1' ~ NEW ARTICl.E 910 E.NTl-
ters m Costa Mesa A portlllon II Loe Angolea, utltllloe. -· Ind for Ill CHANQI NO. 14-11 .... In lawful money of Ille DONALD ANO CHRISTINE credllorl , Ind per90l\t whO eec:rlta ... ~ '91ne, pued4I Publtlhld °'7. Coelt TLED "AESIDIHTtAL AON-
Recita tion o f the ~:: ~r~~,,_~i;: ::--purp<>MI lnddln1et 1Mr.,O. • NeQATIYl United Slit•) II In the JONES ELDON 0 LAHR, m.y be olhenWIM "''--*' -;~~i;.~~~~NT = pit()( July 2 • 24· 30· CULTURE DISTAtCr' Roury will be held •led v-Including but not Hmtted lo O.Cl.AllATIOH NO lobby 10 Ille bulldlng loc:eted THEODORE GRANT PVT· 11'1 the wllt and/or eet11e "'· The peUlloner 1111 flied 1 19 WTl\217 SYNOPSIS
Th ___ _._ J ul 24 conltrvctlon ln11elletlon, re-14-ai 11 801 S Lowt1 St Orenge NAM MICHAEL AND JOSEPH HARLAN BRYANT Ordl"ance No. 2U4 W"1"Mly, y . 'at Tiie 1ucce11fut bidder pl~t. repair, metnton-NOTIC E IS HEREBY CA Ill rlgllt. m .. ltld lnter•t TRACEY AILEY. A08lAT A potlllon 1191 boef'I fli.d peUtlon conc.rnln~ Xiour 1 •mond1 the 1'4u=ton 7:30 P.M at Pie rce 111~11 "': • P•Y"*'~bond lnCO, e>perlllon end u11 of GIVEN th•t the Huntington con~ to end now held w SMITH; WILIAM H. ANO by CORNELIA GUMMER-merr1ege !!tr.:': do le C: Mt.JC NOTICE a..ctl Ordtnenoe to
Broe Bell Broadway i n Pu~euen~l~IOn 1773 Ill ~ or dellr1ble BMcti City Council wltl llold by II under Mid Deed of RENEE L SUIT ANO KEN-V£OI BRYANT In tM SU-~thal ltlle...,::,,,. ~ Mlilttng Antdl M 1
Mortuary. Costa of tllet..t>or Code trio.-.. roedw1ya, lld...,etlll end e pubtlc hMrtnglntheCoul!-Trull 1n the l)fopetty attu. NETH I. WILLIAMS ~lor Court of Orange taserYedonyouyourdefeult NOTic::IOfl llld6ddnewMtde t '°,.
M · .,...... · conduit• OY9f Ille fofl()wlng cit Chemt>e< et tlll Hunt-lled In Mid County Ind YCHa l\"9 ,. CALl'NDA.lt County requeaUng 111•1 · __ ... ....... l'\MLtC .. ~ I"""" lo the .......,,. ... Mesa A ass of or•I PfOYllllng ,.,. of weoee dloc:rtbod land tngton BMcll Civic Center Slit• deecrlboc:I ... DAYI ..... """ IUlftMOM CORNELIA OLIMMEAV£EN may be entered ..... u.. APP9A1. TO AOriCulflH'el Oletrlct. Slltd or·
Chriat.ian Bunal will In Ille county In wtllch lhl P'1c:el A Alt Ille lend do-2000 Mein Str .. t. Hunt'. PARCEL 1 An ~ .. oenec1 Oft JOU .. tie 1 IAYANT bl !lp9()fnled .. oour1 mey enter 1 ~ l'I Ul•lll CWllM>N dlnance ,_di ltld ,.._ be held Fnda ' Jul .wor1111 to be dOM hu bllrl ecrlboc:I In P1rcet 2 Of 111•1 lngton Beecll. Clllfomla, on 1/3&th lntor•t In and to Lot .,.,..t1tt.,.. "''UH et penonel ,._,1111¥1 to containing 1n1unct1ve or DIMIAL. Ofl ZONI or~ IN~ to Y Y Ootonnlned by the Director oertlln Olocl recorded In Ille d•t• end •• tile Omo In-1 ol Trec:t 10864 u per tMe ooun, edMlnltl• tM 11tate of the other 0tdera '°";:S CHANGI NO. ""2 be~' wlttl otf'9t • ~. 8.30 A M at St of the 0epet1rMnl of lndut-tBootc 10534, P1g9 345, Of· 1 dlcetoct below to rec.Ive Ind recorded In Book :;1, A lete.r Of pMM ..... decedent. clMtlon of property. /CONDfnOtlA&. Ull 111Ct '9gUllllOnl II l*t "'
Joec h 1m Cath o lic lrlel Re4etlonl Thole~IQ91flclllAeoord1.tn 111eotnoeol con110er Ille 1t11emont1 of Pagel 47 Ind 48 of M,._ notpretwclrw:,....,,.. Tiie petition requHlt IU090'1,clllt<lcu.1.:·~ NMSfND.•t the Oel\«el OIMfl UC> "'
Chun:h, Cotta Mesa ::ffr:~':.;;;"c!~ 11'11 county rec0<dor of laid all perte>nl wtlo wllh to be Olllaneout M~ .,.....,.. 111,1 _ _. .... euthOrtty 10 lldmlnllt• tho ::o'1~";:,.... .. CO:.:; ~......, OMelorlt Theortty~ (n~nt will follow llcetton onlltlod General coupnty B • .., T llMrd rolettve to Ille t09ll EXCEPTINO THERE lft pr..-r .......... II,_ ..iate unOer 1111 lndlpen-begrenledbytMCOUr1 The ......... I '"~ ,...t .. to lM
H l c-_ l h lrOll LOI ,. v• rect cation dolcrlbed b9IO'* FROM Untt1 I 10 38 IOclullY'O w•t 1M °""" te Mer,._ denl Admlnlltl'llton of fa.. .... ,,..._., INJtlmum height "' tlNO-at O y .:>epU C er Prevl lllng W1go R1t11, No 781t MI* mep r• 1 DATE Mondsy AUQUll 4 lhown Condominium t t•ACI ~I of w.gee. t-· NOTICI 18 Hl!REBYltu,.. The llllQht Ml tie.I Cemetery 11\ Orange. d•ted June, 19~ Future ef· corded In Boote 300, Peg11 198a . , ~1n rec:~ed In look ciw-· de Mt .. ,... •A heaf1na on the J19C"lon of money 0# l)foperty Of OIVEN tl'lel the Huntington reduoed "'°"' ~ (10) ._ Visit.AU will be held t.ctl .... wegt "'" wfWdl 411 end 50 MllCollianeout TIME 7 30 p M 13888 p t07 f Offlclal ,_ ..... wlll be lleld on AUGUST t 01 er court 1utllorlHd ~City Coundl wll hotd lo twenty.-f!W (21) ... on . lleve bMI\ Pf.O.lonntned MIP• In the omot ot Ille APPLICA TIOH NU MIER Roc:ofd1 • . 0 =a.: -:.... -,::: ;:: 11N al 1:30 AM tn ~·· prooeedlogl ma, mo,..._. • pubic'-'"" In tlle Coun-THI! ,Ull. flXT °" THf at W mortuary on Ind•• on ftle .-..11 the 0. county recorder of Mid Zone CNnoe No 14-15 I P~ACEL 2 Livi 1Jn11 32 IM No 3 11 YOO CMo C..ter MAR 17 1988 ell CMmber et tlle Hunt· OAOINANCI 18 ~V~LAal.I. W~y. between =-~I ,~":=~~ county Negative Ooct1r1tlon No. comp()eld of L u 12 and o :;-::.., ~-~ ~ w .. t. 8#111 Ant. CA :;...~,.c;::., lnglon lelctl CMo Center. IN THE CrTY CLEAA'I 04'·
Che houn of 5 P M printed In Mid publication P81o.! C Loi A of Trect M 33 • Af8:1 32 11 enown on lald ~ ~ ...... ,_.. IN t271n et U. 111 Aw I, ..... ~on =h.S~~ ~DOPTEO ~tlle City and 9 p M Pierce DI" Ail TMIN T o'INO ~~1, .. ~""tni: r• ,..lOCAPTI on Ille lnltnd dornlnlUm Ptert ....,,, ., YOU 08.J(CT to the ............. CA mn , ..... d•t• ......... -,._... ·-,._.........,.......... ... .... ~. Brae BeU Bro.d ~Anott, ~ cor ..... n ...,.,.. ..,.,., Igel ...,,... ot llCfftc Cout Hloll-The itr• ~ end n.re .. .._ ..... ,.. gr.,llng of lN petltton, you Pvblllhed Or CON! ,,. .,,. "' .,,. .. .,. ..... ..,.,..._"' .... "' nwn
. way ty otrecter 35 end 38, Mllootttnou• wey ~ M~I• Ind olhef common dellgnauon, ....,....... ., .. ..., ..,. 9hOuld otttlef IP"9lr at the Pilot .. ...., 8~ ZS 30 dlcatoctbelowlof90olll9and lnQton ~at en,..,..,
Mortuary. I>lnic-tora 1M•pe. In ,,,. omoe of .,,. Hewlllld Street• If 11\y of Ille real Pf°'*1Y ..... M ....,., ,._. hMrlnO and ltate Y04lf ob-= -7 • • • • conlldef the lt•t4'menll ofl"'"""" held~. June 64.2-91~ O.ted J:~ee county rec0tder of Mid PAOPOSAL Appeal to duc'rltlld ebove 11 ..., .• ,_•...ell:MWft teetton10tflewrftten~ 1 w151 -~wnowllh to be 18, fMt, by"-folow4nt
---Pv Or Coelt county tM Ptennlng CommlMIOn 1 purported to tw aao w • ....,_, ,.., __, ... _. UOn1 with trie oourt befor-. llWd r ... ,...._ to tlle IPPll-1 rel cal vow
I bllllhed lngl l'eroel 0 lot• A .• end c dental of Zone CftMOI No Wlleon ,.1cn CO.ta ...... ....,,., ~ ....... -tlle ri.nng Your --"8.JC NOnrc 1 ""''°" deac'l1bed below I AYH: COUNCILMIN. r 0.lly Piiot July 23 30, ;.,~~ of TrlC1 No 71N, .. per 14-15 end ~tllle Oocler-CA e2e21 · · 1 ..... .., ..._ CllllM llt lnOI may be tn per.on or by ·~ I OATI! Mondey, Augutt 4. j "nley. M1nd10. lalley,
,ACIPIC Vll'W meo rec0tded In Boote 3 10. 1tlon No M·l3, 11111 ".,. TM undlnllgned TNet• ._ ,._. ..... ). your enomey. K WQ tMI ~. Thomlil
........ D~ ,.__ Peg11 44 ll'ld 45, M ... hid Pf~ bott1 1'1111-dilClailN any 11abMy tor eny 0....-• '99 ... ~ tr YOU ARI A CMDfT~ NOnCa M TIMI 1 30 PM NOES COUNCILMIN. --"8JC *>TIC£ Qlller*IUI Mepe, In tile "'" QIMed by ltll Counotl on lnco«ectMel Of tho """' ...................... OI • oontlftgW!t ~OI"' NATM °' ' APPllCATl<»f HUMBl!R Kell)'. MecAlllter Cefftet-'Y • ~ flcle of trie COU11'Y recorder"' April 21. 1MO zone ChenOI eddr-. end OI'* oommon ..w ...., .._ 911 ..... 111e •• net you mue1 me ....,,. .. IMIUCH I Zone~ No •21eon.. AaaENT COUNCfi.MfH:
C,_,., • Crwtory IC.... lltd county 14-15 1111 roquett tootienoe deelon•tlotl tt any lhoWfl • • D1A9 CAUMD~ your c1e1m with lN oourt or AM°' Nifh061 dlllol\al U.. l'ermll No 86-2 None 3500 Peolfte V... Otfw ..... ef.... PWOll f . LOia A to F In-the IOfltnO on h · ect'O of ._. ' ' pert ''IUfttU •H ~ It 10 tN poraonel TO Mi•HTP • AOPetl CtTY °' ~ ~.._,. .,....,.""-""" clulNtoH rectHo 73M.• property from Umlled u. lekt .. wlllbenwdll but raepunta i ...... a ... ,..__111t111uooo•nMdby llTATINO.A1Jt'9 A~PLICANT l ff i nd 81AC}!t Alleta •·
644-2700 .. ,.,.. ... ._.-per l'lllP r.cordld 11'1 IOOlll Dlotnc1 ·eo.l•Zone(llJO. wt1t1ou1 ~or .., ......... _....,., IMoourt~toufmoMl'll To ellhelr-.~.,Yol1nd1 Colltn1/l e r9e ...... ...,~~
Mo. A 1JI ., 308 Peoea 11 to 14 11'1-CZ) 10 llmfted UM Olet~ . rmn!1~•!::!" .. °' lmpllod,,. u.. ..,.. • .. ._.. ttOl'll tlle .,... of Int • oredltort and °°"tl~t ZWelbel ~bfMltled 0...
In Ille Suorc: C0un of clu11ve . Ml1cellenoou1 CoMlal lone • combined P-;,.~Cllllllon, 0# .......... M Ill ........ "*"'9of .... ll~ ~.end penone -"O LOCATION I OUll! of Deity l'tlot .M'/2. "~ ~--:;: ~Slit• Of ~nta. for M~ lrt ~..._ of a~ .. c ztll,. olil) prodvCllOn (l~ encutn to pey IM ,, 11111' 4 -f 4 11° In Section 700 of ' • INIY be ot ........ lrt..,..,., I ~ DrM ..... of leectl .. :.o.!!ee,,..1ee1 l'ublloatlon .,. -.... ......-._ ooun., ,_.,... -...,, tor the ~ of ~ ~ """ "' ...,..,.,...... ..... Pt0bet9 cooe of Cellfomll 1n 111e .. end/ot _..."' ~ _, ~
Mortuwy • c.m.tery In the ttor of tlle Eal•t• county .... "'-"°"' eeoured try Mild HM'"' ••• I•• fer· Tt'9Ulnafew191\0 oi.lnw wlll 1£HJAMIN CH.-UCH I l'AOf>OIAL All to W211 er.n.tory of lertt\l l(epllin Oood"*'. p , Lott A IO In-l 1.-0 NM I NT A L Deed of TNM. wltfl "'*-' ••llfaf•• ••••••• not ~ CW1ot to lour A peC!tlOn Ml tie.I .... 1e2s~A.. DecMMd ofTrlC1No 7117. UI lteae11'4 Declat· "-eon.•Pf0¥ldedlnllld •• , ..... ....-... mon!NfrolftttleCSIWoftt. by PlOOY I. SIMMONS In v.· .&--"'---U-..-rf ~ ,..__ Notloe ll llerlby~that per map reoordld Ill .._ attonNo 14-S>-tlle not• ad\lencee.. If eny .. le~ ........ • .....,..,,.noeaatiow ti.""**~ of Or· ~t....,"-'Ull ~ ~SSS.-1 tlle lfndolllgnoct ""'"-' 11 l1C Pf1999 4' to 50 11'1-envtlon!Mfllel lmpect Of lftlertlleterme"'Milclo..i -. YOU MAY ~MINE tN lflOICounty~!MI Astodofk>n
)
~ ..... to the ~ Cl elve. M1ecoll1"eou1 llNd mone CMnoe at TNlt, ..... C1W9et 1nO It _... 111 jii 11 • ,_ Qp4 tly Ille court "JO::!. PfGOY L. l lMMONa lie.
\... .._ ~. eubtec1 . Ill tM offlOI of tM OH FILI!! Leo-I ~ .,;peneea"' the TN9tM Ind 1 p r'1: e ............. 1 '"''°" lntei•tea Ill POlntoct • per10N11 ,..,_ wrP£ FGfflN(, rOQ.-JIH~£ ._ _______ , oon ... ~··•tlon of ~ Su-county tllCOf'W ot u ld uon on the P'090Nd JOfte of tfle tf'\llta cr...i by .-, IM!"'I"' 11 cw. 1 • ~ IN _...., yoii m.y ....,_. NM'll•~ 10 ~· ttw """
J
almon steaks
ensational as
summer salad
Ask a cook to describe summer food, and
e answer probably will be quick and direct:
Ll&)\t, healtful, fresh-tastina, fast and easy to
repare with an emphasis on make-ahead
tems."
Summer diners agree. They want food
that delights the palate. Food that aoes where
the action is -on a terrace, boat or beach.
Equally welcome at a patio buffet, picnic
lunch or tial;lt dinner is the warm-weather
menu featuring poached Alaska salmon steaks
that arc marinated in piquant lemon vinaigret-
te and garnished with pepper strips and
tomatoes.
Accent the entree salad with California
Pistachio Garlic Toast. which transfonns pita
bread into crisp cracker triangles. Easily
prepared, these tasty treats can be made ahead
and frozen until ready to enjoy.
Hot summer days beg for cooling refresh-
ment, such as icy Pear Sorbet Ring. Made from
convenient canned Bartlett pears, the sorbet is
JU St sweet enough to satisfy the need for dessert
without tasting too sugary and heavy.
California Pistachio-style Shortbread, a
delicately flavored crunchy variation of the
buttery cookie, goes together in moments for
an easy homebaked treat. Serve with the Pear
Sorbet Ring or with ice cream.
W ith every part of the meal meant to be
prepared ahead. Lh1s menu leaves the cook
plenty of time for fun and relaxation.
MARINATED ALASKA SALMON SALAD
i (abowt 8 onces eacb) Poached Alaska
Salmon Steaks
1 small onion, very tblnly sliced
1 tomato, sliced 'I• cup eacll lemon juice and olive oil
i tablespoons minced parsley
1 teaapoon 'oregano, crushed 'I• to ~ teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
1 small green pepper, thinly sliced ver-
tically
I avocado, sliced vertically (optional)
Remove skin and bones from salmon
steaks: spht each into 2 pieces. Place salmon,
onion and tomato in shallow baking dish.
Combine lemon JUtce. 011. parsley. oregano.
salt and pepper: mix well.
Pour mixture over salmon and veg-
etables. Cover and refngerate at least I hour:
add green pepper durina last 20 minutes.
Arrange salmon, vegetables and avocado on
platter. Makes 4 servings.
PMclled Alaska Salmoa Stub: In skillet,
pour boiling water over 2 Alaska salmon
steaks to cover. Add 3 slices lemon, 3 slices
onion, 1 bay leaf and several whole pep-
percorns. Return to boil; cover and simmer l 0
minutes per inch of thickness of salmon ..
Drain and cool. Makes 4 servings.
CALIFORNU PISTACBlO GARLIC TOAST
14 cap b•tter or mar1artae, sqfteffil
% to 3 tablespoou cltopped slaelJed CaU-
f oraia plltaeklol
1 lablespooe mlllced panley
14 teaspoon pepper
Dub 1arUe powder
% pita bread roods
Combine butter, pistachios, parsley, pep-
per and garlic powder, mix well. Cut each pita
bread round into 6 pie·shapcd pieces,~
layers. Spread rough sides of pita pieces with
butter mixture.
Place on baking sheet; bake at 400 degrees
about 5 minutes or until browned and crispy.
Makes 25 pieces. Recipe can be doubled o r
tripled.
Preeztq Tip: Baked California Pistachio
Garlic Toast can be packaged in freezer-proof
plastic bags or containers and frozen. Reheat
to serve.
PEAR SORBET RING
I can (%9 ouncet) Bartlett pear halves
% tablespoons lemon jalce
1 Ya teaspoons grated lemon peel
Mint sprigs
Reserve I large pear half: slice. Puree
remaining pears (including liquid), lemon
juice and lemon peel in food processor or
blender. Pour into metal 9·inch square pan
and freeze at least I hour or until firm.
Remove to food processor or blender and
proce~s until smooth. Pour into 3-<:up mold:
freeze until firm. Dip bottom of mold 1n
lukewarm water: tum sorbet onto serving
platter. Garnish platter with reserved pear and
mint sprigs. Makes 6 servings.
Storage Tip: Leftover sorbet can be frozen
10 frecLer-proof container.
(Pleue eee PIST ACBIO/CS)
Pick apricots to flavor desserts
Cremny·rlcb Ice cream la low In calortea.
This 1s the time tosavorthe fruit-sweet taste of golden apricots. Unlike
many other f ru1ts, the apricot season ·is a very short one. They'll be
available in our marketsonJy through this month.
But while they're here it'seasy to enJOY them often in a variety of
delicious ways. Probably most popular simply eaten out of hand as a snack,
apricots arc surprisingly delicious whirled into blender fruit dnnks.
quickly warmed and served with meats or sliced into salads. This high fiber
fruit makes good nutrition irresist1 ble.
More of us are nutrition conscious today. especially about mcreasmg
fiber and cutting down on fats and cholesterol. And for those on a low
cholesterol diet, creamy ice cream is often more dream than reality.
But thanks to the California Apricot Advisory Board, here's a guilt
free. no cholesterol apricot ice cream. special enough for company.
No one would ever guess this nch tastmg. creamy-smooth confection
has only 90 calones per serving and no cholesterol. Contrast this with a
half-<:up serving of regular ice cream (I 0 percent butterfat) that has 140
calones and 30 mg cholesterol.
FRESH APRICOT
ICE CREAM
1 can (12 ounces) skimmed evaporated milk
1 envelope plain 1elatln
o/4 cup sugar
1 ~caps diced, ripe fresb apricots (about :ti. poa.nd)
lcan(l!oances)apricotneclar
~ plnt low-fat plalD yoprt
1 teaapoon vanilla or ~ teaspoon grated orange peel
7 poanda small Ice cabes
1 cup rock salt or table salt (according to Ice cream maker directions)
Combine skimmed milk and gelatin in large saucepan. Heat. sttmng
often. until gelatin dissolves. Add sugar and heat unt1l 1td1ssolves. Using
a wire whip, star in apricots, apncot nectar. yogurt and vamlJa.
Pour mixture into canister of ice cream maker and assemble the
machine. Make alternate layers of ice and saJt around the canister. Chum
20 to 30 minutes or until softly frozen. Pack into containers and freeze. For
best flavor, let ice cream soften slightly before serving. Makes about 2
quarts.
APRICOT DESSERT FCOAT
I ( 17 oucea) can apricot halves, a.ndralned
" cup apple juice
3 lablespoons dark rum, brandy or apricot brandy
1.4 teaspoon sroand cinnamon
•;, teaspoon vanilla
Pinch of nutmeg
Plncb of cloves
Apricot Float la an anuual 0 atppma•• deMert.
1 to l "' caps vanilla or apricot Ice cream
4 clnnamoa sticks
Puree the apncots with their syrup in an electric blender or food
processor. Pour apricots into medium <iaucepan. Add apple J u1ce n1m
cinnamon. vanilla. nutmeg and cloves Heat gently Pour in to four l up\ ur
mugs: float 1cecream on top. Garnish with cinnamon 'it1ck "1a!l.eo;4
servings.
At last, light cuisine that tastes gourmet
Jeanne Jonea
p
By LORI C NAKAYAMA
Delly .... C-..91 ..... '
l he problem with low-calone
cooking t'i that 1t tastes. well 111-.c
diet food. Take out the sugar. the
fats. the glonously flavorful 011'1 and
you're left with a fairly tao;telc'l'i
dish.
No wonder dieters stick to raw
carrots. If only healthful food\
could taste a rich and sa"or) a'I
aourmet cumne
Finally. someone has heard our
prayers and. thanks to renowned
cookbook author and nutnllonal
consultant Jcannr Jones, our w1'ih·
e~ are no lonaer JUSt wistful dttam'I
"I don't feel that healthy food
shoud be good for you and nothing
el~ ... Jones said dunng an inter-
view at the preview of her hght
cuisine menu at the Ne1man-
Marcus restaurant in Fashion
hland. Newport Beach. · ! never
bcheved in conaae chct' e and
carrot sticks ...
Instead. the former Nlwpon
Beach resident hails the v1nues of
health 1n fine d1n1na and claims to
be the first person to ever combine
nutnt1on with gastronomy. Her
concern arose from her earty strua-
ale with diabetes and from the lo
of her youna husband to coronary
disease
he bcpn a nutnuonal suppon
group. KiloKounters. in Mexico
and the popular, low-<:alone recipe
that resulted led to a h1ahly-
successful cookbook called. "The
Calculating Cook "
Her hst of med1cally..acclaimed
books now number 1-4, with the
latest -"Mocha Mix Cookbook"
-forthoscwtth milkallef'IJes. You
can hear her advice vta ca ~tte
tapes and read her syndicated
column, Cook It Liaht. in more
than 300 new papers.
Her approach to heathful cu1 inc
has pined such an apptte1at1ve
audience that hospttal" and hotel\
regular!) consult her on menu
design Chents include the npp'
~monal Hospitals. the four
Seasons Hotels and now Neiman
Marcus that features her "l 1aht
( u1sme'' menu
But low<alone cooking " not a
new concept. espec1ally with the
recent trend toward hghter eauna
What set Jeanne Jone · Liaht
Cwsine apan from the re t.,
"I use the epicurean approach to
aood eating. My food could fit 1n on
menus of the fine t re tauranu It's
bcauttfUI and bountiful," she 1d.
"Other health-consciou plaCC''i
\\ 111 cut out all the fattt'ning ingrc.'-
d1ent'i and pad d1she'i wtth
subs111uie\ hke art1fic1al in~·
d1cnts -without pa)'rng attention
to Oa\Or and balance"
While Joor\ agrees that fall\
\Ugar) stufT 'ihould be omitted the
OOltOm hnc I\ WtC '\nd Sht'
al"a~'i. alw1)'s usn onl} fresh.
quaht)' 1n1rcd1ent'i oth1n1
art1tic1al You'll ne~erdetccta tract
<.lf ""utraS-wctt in ber desscn .
How Jones redeems a de-fatted.
dc-'iupttd. de-<>iled dish couple
the 1ntu1t1on of a ma ter chef and
the prec1 ne of a food ch m1~1
(Pleue-LIOHT /C3)
Ortnge COu1 DAILY PILOT/ Wedneeday, July 23, 1988
TRYA LITTLE TENDERNESS
In a year when .. li&ht, '' .. whito" and .. fresh .. are the CORNISH RENS WITH PARMESAN SAUCE
nation's buzz words, there is no better time for • c..... 111ea1 (1,.... t oueet eedl), SU.Mia
reacquaintina ourselves with the Rock Cornish hen. rem•ft4
Weiahina from 18 to 26 ouocCs. the10 hem are• .,. ... pepper
cross between the Pl}:'.!l"IOUth Rock chicken and EnaJiah I •••lllf 11., vecetable oll
Comiahpme cock. 'Ibey a.re tender with broad bnmt. 1 .. ,..., 1 H btltter
Uttle &.t and muimum white meat. Nutritive qualities z.t., I ...._, e9t .... w.a •lriPI
a.re ciomparable to the white meat of chicken. "' _ cMebm w.•
The Rock Cornish ben bu Iona been a favorite "' ;; ._., cnam
entree for pecial oocqions because of ita impressive ~ ftp.,. ... PanDelu dMeM appearanee~deueof~t.ion,yetitleodsittclfto 1 ......... a.,.,. __ ._ or fret~ buJl more than ample rounna and basuna with butter. ,.... ~1
When 1moked ham and bot peppers a.re added to Seuon hen cavities with ult and pepper. Fold
tbe pot, the hen takes on the flavors of a Cajun stew. win& dpt under ~ns ~ tie lep tosether. ln a larJe,
When aim.mered with cream and fresh mussels it is heavy c:auerole with lid, beat oil and butter. Brown
reminiwnt of a special bistro meal in Paris. ~son all sides (may have to do in betches). Sprinkle
And, when casually arillcd on the backyard wnh salt and pepper; add lemon ust to pan. Reduce
barbecue, brushed ftom time to time with an herb beat.. cover and cook about 30 minutes. bu~ter, it will surely impress your guests. The benscook T~ hens to a P!&tter to ~eepwa.rm; unti~ legs.
qu1cker than chicken oo the grill and the teJttu.re of the Brina pan JWCCS to a boil over hiah beat; add chicken
meat takes to marinades, bastings and sauces. t>J:otb. Boil S to 6 minutes or until mixture reduces
The following recipe for Comish Hens With aliJbtly. Reduce beat, add cream and boil 3 to 4
Parmesan Sauce is a good example of how the elepnt mmutes until reduced. Add Parmesan cheese.
but easy Rock Cornish hens fits into our demand for Tute for seasoning. Pour sauce over hens and
.. light," "white" and "fresh." garnish with chopped panley or basil. 4 servings.
SAVE35CON
natural titat1F
At Checkout When You
Buy Any 2 Boxes of
@
g.ap&-ft!!IS~
or raisin o-..i.no.NltS· a-~ , .... or
grape..N11SJlalces
(Any Combination)
Yotrchid~
• \\\eS\OOOGreatTo.vG;,,e·a I!· I·· I ~\\\ from ~illd 'fO)'S .... US® ,,,,.,,, The shopping trip of a lifetime is in store for the
•.
100 lucky grand prize winners-$1000.00 for toys
at Toys "A" Us! 1st Prize-1000 Toys "A" Us $100.00
gift certificates. LOOk tor details on specially marked
boxes of Post* Children's cereals. Plus-Bonus $1 .00
Toys "A" Us coupon on back of each box.
Cover history
with fros~ing
Your cake might be
future prize-winner
in national contest
Fairs BookJct Offer, Box 540 I,
Dept. 818, Minnapolis, MN 55460.
To get a taste of the prize-winning
recipes, create this triple-layer
Coconut Cake with Coconut-
Cream Cheese Frosting.
COCONUT CAKE
S eggwbltes
! '4 caps cake Ooar
1 leupooD baking soda
! caps sagar
a,, cap margarlne or batter,
softened
a,, cap ve1etable oll s ea yolU, sllglatly beatea
1 cap battermllk
I teaspoon cocoaat ertract
a,, teaspoon vullla
I pack.age ( 7 oa.ocea) flaked
coconat (!~ caps)
Co<:onat.Cream Cbeese Frost-
lng (below)
! cups Oaked coconat
Beat egg whites in medium bowl
on high speed until stiff pealcs form.
Beat rcmainmg ingredients except
frosting and 2cupscoconut 1n large
bowl on low speed 30 seconds,
scraping bowl constantly. Beat on
high speed 3 minutes, scraping
bowl occasionally. Fold egg whites
into batter. Pour into 3 greased and
floured round pans, 8 x 11/i inches..
Bake in a preheated 325-degrec
oven until wooden pick inserted in
center comes out clean, about 40
minutes; cool 10 minutes. Remove
from pans; cool calce completely.
Fill layers and frost side and top
of cake Wlth Coconut-Cream
Cheese Frosting, sprinkling 1/J cup
coconut on frosting on each layer
and remaining coconut on side and
top. Store frosted cake in refriger-
ator.
/_/
I
I
I
J
.............................. --------------------------------~~~~-------( •
Cut meal-fixing time in halves
Lookil)I for & new sjde dish that's more. Arrange avocado halves over lase ,i.ce. Reduce beat and cook. covered.
abon on eff'on and Iona on &ood cabbagt on dinner plates. Spoon 'ft c.p (I oaeet) we«Wed 6 to 8 minutes or until pasta is
look.a and taste? Saucy Avocado sauce over avocados. Makes 6 M•terey Jan cMete tender and all liquid i absorbed. Halv~ do just that with the scrvina,t. t,\ C9p plala 7oprl Stir in cheese and Yotun. Cook t to rnamaae or flavon from the Far ~ poud eooted ud cleued 2 minutes longer or until cheese
East and West Coast medJUl Artmp melts a.nd mixture i thorouJhly
A 11uce made with fresh spinach SPICY SHRIMP AND l medlwm CalJforala avocados, heated.
leaves, o~ion, &attic, fresh &ingcr PASTA SUPPER 1eetled aad peeled Spoon small amount of pasta
and soy 1• spooned over &olden-t tablespooa1 ve1etaltle oil Heat oil in 12-inch frypan over mixture onto each or 4 plates. Add
sreen California avocado halves ~ c11p coarsely cllo,,.. olllon medium heat. Add onion, red shrimp to remaining puta mixture
nestJed in a bed of shredded •4 e11p •livered red pepper pepper, green pepper and red inf rypen. Return pan to heat. Cook
cabbage. This pretty sjde dish may '4 cup 11tvered 1reu pepper pepper Oakes. Cook, stirrina <» 3 to 4 minutes or untiJ shrimp is
be served as a hearty appetizer too. 'I• to ~ teatpoon red pepPer casionaUy, until vegetables are heated through. Nestle avocado
Avocado half shells arc the Oaket tender but not browned. Add halves over pasta on plates. Spoon
perfect complement for many en-l 'n cup1 clalckea brotlt • chicken broth. Bring mixture to a shrimp mixture over avocado .
ltCCs ~use they require little 1 YI caps raw spa1betal, brollea boil. Add spaghetti. Makes 4 servings. preparation and combine beauti-·-----------------_.;"--------------'"--------'====~~~=======~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~::::: fully with just about anything.
For Spicy Shrimp & Pasta Sup-
per, succulent shrimp and spaghetti
noodles are gently mixed with
peppered cheese sauce and spooned
over creamy California avocado
halves. This colorful entree is a
summenime must for family and
company ah kc.
SAUCY AVOCADO HALVES
% &ableapooa1 flnely cbopped
onion
t clove. 1arlic, cra1bed
t tea1poon1 crated fres~ 1tn1er
i &abletpoon1 ve1etable oil
I package (10 ounces) frozen
cbopped 1pluc~. thawed and
well drained
'4 cap clttckea broth
1 &ablespooa corn1tarcb
1 &ablespooa 1oy sauce
3 medium CaWornla avocado1,
halved and peeled
4 cups cooked and 1hredded
green cabba1e or boll cboy
Saute onion, garlic and ginger m
oil m small saucepan until tender
but not browned. Add spmach.
Combme chicken broth, corn-
starch and soy sauce. Sur m
spmach mixture.
Cook over medium heat. stimng
constantly. until mixture comes to
a boil and thickens. Cook I minute
LIGHT ...
From Cl
Taste. she said, 1s olfactory. Since
we actually ha ve only four taste
sensations -sweet. salt'. sour and
bitter -ever) thing cisc 1s per-
cet' ed b> smell
··You can east!) cut out fats and
oils without anyone not1c1ng 1f )OU
compensate by adding ex tra smell
wtth herbs and spices."
While people mistakenly think
that fats carry flavor. Jones ex plains
that oils tend to coat the tongue.
crippling its ability to really taste.
"If you lighten up the fats. you'll
finally get the true. unmasked
flavor of foods."
She substitutes other basic 1ngre-
d1ents like vinegars and lemon JU tee
to balance the absence of salt. non-
fat milk for heavy cream. fructose
for sugars, and all the while,
1ns1sting that in a s1de-by-s1dc taste
test. her cuisine would be 1dent1cal.
"You couldn't tell this food ts
low<hole-;terol and low-calorie un-
less someone told )Ou." she said
.\nd no one ca n disagree. Vis-
ually. her foods arc stunning.
Tastew1se, they prompt wagers on
~ hether they arc really low-cal Her
menu features Chicken Breasts in
Pe ppe rcor n aucc. Pasta
Primavera. almon Mousse and a
delectable Orange p1ce Muffin
that's unbcltevabl) sugar-free.
Calorie counts art> ltsted on the
menu, wtth the exception of her
desserts, which 1 nstead arc
mercifully offered in half-portions
at half-price
··Remember that taste 1s every-
thing and we won't cut ingredients
1f tt drast1call> affects taste." -;he
said. Hence. her food 1s low-sodium
but not sodium free . and
vinaigrettes wtll contain a tabk-
spoon or two of extra-virgin olive
oil or sesame 011. She'll readily add
them for taste and texture 1n scant
quantities. but never as a base .
Just before the preview began.
she qu1ckl> issued last-minute tn·
struct1ons to the ma1trc 'd, the
waiters. the chefs.
"Oh. rm still training some of the
cooks." she e'plained. Never mind
that Jeanne Jones 1s now an
mtemattonally respected figure tn
the cult nary arena. She still digs her
bejeweled fingers into the chopped
chicken and trams her chefs first-
hand
This way. she said. she can
establish a better rapport with her
~orkers and maintain cons1-;tcncy.
Ftnall>. good nutrition ron' crges
with fine dining. And from all the
health-conscious people out there.
A.men.
PISTACHIO ..
From Cl
PISTACHIO-STYLE SHORT·
BREAD
~.cap flour
1 • cup 1111ar
~ cup finely cbopped shelled
Callfonla •••&acblo1
a... cap butter or mar11rlne
Combine flour, 'IUgar and
p1stach1os. cut m butler unul dough
1 te,ture of coarse cornmeal (mix-
ture will be vef) i.oO) Pres mto 9-
mch ~uart baking pan Score
surface wllh fork. 1f dc'i1rtd
Bake at 125 deal'('Cs 20 to 25
minutes or unul lightly browned.
C ool ebout 15 minute\ and 1. ut into
I ' l-inch p1ecec, Make\ 27 ptCt'C''I
•Seafood Inspected for Quality by U.S. Dept. of Commerce•09er 200 Varieties of Finest Quallly Produce 11'1-
a s ower rices
6 pack-12 oz. cans
7-Up or
Diet7-Up
L79
tea i.ao. Coupon
in Ul1I tlewspaper • 60 or CIYCdlabl• at Ra1pba •
Lell lcdphl
Double Coupon ·.60
USDA Imp.-Gold•n Premium
RibEye
Steak
~, . ..,._..._...,,_ ......... ...._
l6ot locd
Save.30
.. _ .. ....,. .. -....... -.. .-..---..----~--------..... ........ C-'tl-·-·--''"°~•"411Wllt~-___ ......,. ......... o.-
.. ··--....... .._ .... ..._..,"""" -o-.
er -an s!
40, 60, 75or100 Watt
Ra2phl~ 200 Low PISce
i.e. Mfg. Coupon
mttmad ·.50
=.,..~ ·.50
Qalllom.r~ LOO
~utyn:';: ·LOO
W'Hhltebate Q You Pay •
Fresh Thompson
Seedless Grapes
12 oz. Frozen-
Donald Duck
Or~ge 79 Jwce
P'rOMD •
120&
Prices effective July 24 thru July 30, 1986
Lower Prices.
Higher Standards
39
Fresh Iceberg
Lettuce
~.39
s200 OFF
Knott's Berry Farm
Unlimited Use
Tickets •
Adult
Tldlets
..................
1495 1295
C't\Jldren'• 895 Tickets ·~ 1095
Double Coupon
Double Coupon __ .. ..., .......
--:."C'...._ -•...\..:"9 .., ____ ._,..,.,, r-oll ==:-=a: -... _--r"--..::::.:::.: ---.. ::.:.r--'-...... ..::c.:;-.---------"9'9CllM -,. r ; ••a...--u.. , __ Dlil!MeC.,... ... C-.,... __ ...,. .....
-·ei...---...Mtat-Jlllf JO -
...__ .. ,,..__ .. ....,.......,. ·----.. ----------..--...... __ ..,.. ____ ... _,.... _____ ....,.._ --..---.....-.----·-__ ....,.._ __
r
•
-~-___.....~---.-~~--~--,...~~-----------~--..... ----------------------~----..... --....... -------~ ...
These winning wines are at the top of the line
Jn &he ta t t~o wine columns.. we ha'-e conoentrattd on Ii tma the
most ine"pcn ive and moderately
priced wines that were top winnen
an the current Orange County Fair
Wine CompetJtion.
Toda)' we amve at the most
titpcnsive wines available in the
consumer marketplace, though this
hould by no means be construed as
meaning they arc uorb1tantJy
priced. Th~ wmes arc available in
wine shop beginning at S 10 per
bottle.
The wines, almost without excep-
tion, will reward you with fine
txpcrienccs m wme enjoyment.
These are wines to cellar. to savor.
to remember. These gold medal
winners were so judged because
they arc well-structured and well-
conoeived wines. Whether a heart)'
Cabernet Sauvignon or a light-
hcaned Riesling, they all have a
stature that sets them apart from
the crowd.
Again, remember the .. sl" nota-
tJon and a number from one to five
which follows the letters at the end
of each wine listed refer to the
residual sugar content remaining in
the bottled wane. One being lowest.
that means a wane is very dry. At the
opposite end of our scale. a wine
that as a five would be quite sweet
EnJ_o)''
Gold Medal wanner wines an the
SI 0 and above range-are:
Cabernet Francs: ( ongress
Springs, 198 l Santa Cruz Moun-
tains. sl I
Cabernet Sauvignons: Bonn y
Doon Vineyard. I 983 Anderson
Valle>. sl I: Callfta Cellars. 1982
Napa Valle). Foureem1nette
Vme}'ard. Resene. sl I Da vid
Bynum W1nl'I"), 1981 Sonoma
Cou nt~. Rc\ervc. sl I; Grgach Hills
Cellar,. 1981 Napa Valley. sl I .
Al'o lngknook-Napa Valley.
1481 '-apa \ alk). l1m1ted Cask
Rt•\rn l' ~c.:ll'c11on. Estate: Bottled. sl
I \1ontert'\ Peninsula Wmery.
I 111-.2 \tontrrn Doctor\ Reserve,
sl I ind Stl'rli ng \.inc) ards. 1985
N.tpd \ allr' (\~h1tl'I Estate Bottled
~I I
Chardonnays: Clo\ Du Boas
Wancn . 1984 Alexander Valley.
C alcaarc \ inc' ard. \I I Congress
&pnngs. 1485 ~anta <Iara Count).
11 I Perret V innards. 1984 Napa
Valley. (arnt'ro" sl I and St.
Andrew'> W1nc.:I"). 1984 Napa Val-
k'. Estate Boll led sl I
Cbenin Blancs: Callawa}'. 1982
( alifornaa, "'iwc.:ct Nan1.) ... sl Sa nd
f eller Vmevanh. 1985 Mendonno
( llUOl\ \I~
Ge"urztraminers: <hark'>
Lc:Frant Cellar<>. 1984 San Benito < ount}'. Selected Ha rvt·st. sl 4,
( hatcau St. Jean. J 984 Alexander
\alle). Belle Terre Vineyard.
&lected Late Han est. sl 4, ( hateau
"it Jean 1985 Russian River Val-
k). Frank Johnson Vineyards. sl I.
and Grand C ru Vineyards. 1985
.\lexander Valley, sl 2.
Merlots: Boeger Winery. 1983 El
I >urado. Estate Bottled. sl I and
?';cw ton V1m·yard. 1983 Napa Val-
k' \I I
Musuts: V.. tndsor \ tnC'rarr.h
• 1 JX S ~onoma < ount\ .\lex.andcr
:\. alln Late Harvest« ancllt I '>I 4
: Other Fortified Wines: Quach
J')R5 California. "'Es'><.:nua ·· sl 5
and ()ua<h I 4X'i ( Jllfnrn1a.
··l-1"1um · \I 'I
Pioot Blancs: < ongrc'' \pnng'>.
I 'IX4 5anw < n11 Mountain-.. sl I
Plool Nolrs: \antJ I uua V.. 1ncr:r.
I"< l ~an ta \1.lnJ \. alk' ...,1crra
~1.tdrc \.1ne,ard (\\ 1ld lior')C
l.1ht IJ .,1 I
Ports: <)uath I 'IX.:! Amador
< ount\ ,1 4 anJ \lwnandoah
\ 1nn.1rd<, I 11><4 \madnr C ount\.
'"\. intJgc. \I 4
Sa uvignon Blancs. ·\ ust 1 n
C dlar'> I lJX I ~.inta Barhara l oun-
h ~H.'rra Madrl V1ncvard -,1 5 Dn
Sherbet
easy task
'-"1th all 111 ahc tit'" Ill ucam
maker<, on lltt 111.11 h·t homemade
shcrlx't 1saH'.I'>\ .J'>a fn\. lrank.,on
thl' handle or till' n1p t>f ,I Wdlt"h
I h1" rn·.1nl\ hit.: rid "an attra< 1
'' <.' light grrl·n .dil·n made with
hcnndcw or f)ak 11p,tlt0\(t'nl or-
ange made "-Ith l.1n1.tl11upl
MELON SHERBET AMA'\fH~f;
I booeyde~ melon or 2 ~mall
very ripe ranlaloupe'
I envelope plain gelatin
I or 2 drops gretn rood rolor
I opliooal J
I r up wbipp1D1C r ream
11 C'Up SUf{ar
I r up wholt natural almond ...
<-oar~elv chopped. loa~lt'd
Kt mil\ c rind Jnd '<"<'th lrnm
melon < 110<· nH Ion to get .1h1111t I
Quan Turn into l'leltrH hknd<·r
ancl prml'" until \mnoth
'\-11\ I I l llp pUr('l'd f1ld1tn \\llh
gelatin 1n ,,1111 rp<1n \11r 11\.cr lo"'
hC'ill lllllJI g\'1,1(111 I\ tll\\Of\.l'd
Hknd 1qth r<'m,1111111)! 1>1m·t·d
mt•lnn 111 hkndcr \dd lond 111lor
ing ti 11,111g honndt'W ml'lnn
\\hip tfl'<Jm p.rnduall y 11t·.111nl(
in '11gar I old 1n ml'lon mixtun·
1'11111 11110 rl'111gt·ra1or l<>nt.11ncr
n.1r p.in •ir 11.c nt·am frt•t•1u
l llJ1t,11111·r F r1.·u1 111\I until 11
hq!ln' to l1rm fold in .t lmnntft.
F rt•o1• 1111111 lir m \ttkt'\ Jtlout I
q u.1 rt
' . 4-
Creek. Vineyard, 198S Sonoma tageCahfom11Dey, .. finest Hour." Weibel Vineyards., 1982 Men-Vanc¥aros.. 198S Sonoma County,
County, 11 ; Hal'lna Winery. 1985 sl l; and Papaani Vineyard. non-docino CountyBrut, 12 Russian River Valley, Late
Sonoma Coun~, sl I; Lolona~ vintage California Cream, .. Finest SJralt i : McDowell Valley Harvest, sl 4. w· 1983 d . c F Ho " 1 5 WblteTableWloe: Mis ion Virw 1ncry, en ocmo ounty, lfl ur. s · YineyarcSs. 1982 McDowell Valley, 19811. Paso Robles, "Serendipity.'' ii Lolorus Vineyard. Late Harvest, sl SparkllDJ Wlaet.: Corbett Ca-Estate Bottled, st 1. .i
4, Rohen Mondav1 Winery, 1981 C nyon, 1982 Sonoma County Brut, ftlte Rtalla11: Chateau St. 2·
Napa Valley, Botrytas, sl 4, and HAO (Shadow Crctk label). sl 2; Frcix-Jean, 198S Sonoma County, sl 2: Zlnfudelt: Haywood Winery,
Solari Estate Winery, 1984 Napa cnet Sonoma Caves, nonvintage Gabriele y Carohnc, 1982 1984 Sonoma Valley. Estate Bot-
YaUcy, Chino Flat Vineyards. sl I Sonoma County Brut Natural. Monterey, Late Harvest, sf 5; tied, 1 1; Hop Kiln Winery, t 9M
Sclteurebe: J oseph Ph el ps Spnng_). 1985 Santa Oara Counly, (Glona Ferrer label), sl 2; Scbas--Hidden Cellan, 1984 Mendocino Russian River Valley, Late
Vineyards, 1985 Napa Valley, Late sl I ttan1 Vineyards, nonvintage County, Lovin Vineyard, Late Harvest. sl 4: Rosenblum Cella.ri,
Harvest, sl I. Sberry1: Buena Vista Winery, Sonoma County Brut, sl l ; Yan de Harvest. sl 4; Santa Ynez Valley 1984 Napa Valley, sl I; and Tobias
SemUJon1: Boeger Winery. 1984 nonvintagc California, Cream, sl 4 Kamp Champagne Cellars, t 982 Winery, 1985 Santa Ynez Valley, Vineyards, 1984 Paso Robles, Dusi
El Dorado. sl I and Congr~es~s'........~an~d:'......!P~a~p~a~gn~1:........::V~i~ne~y~a~rd~s~,~no~n~v~i~n~·~So~n~o~m~a:........::V~a~ll~c~y_..::'.'.B~ru~t~,~s~l_::2;~a~n~d~~La~t~c_::H=a~rv~e~s~t,~s~l~S~:~a~n~d:._:W..:...:.:in~d=so=-r --R_a_n_ch_._s_l _I. ________________ _
More Reasons To Save, Plus
Thompson
Seedless Limit 6 Pounds
Per Customer Si!~f ~s~apes Lb .. 69 Lb
Black Exotic Grapes Lb .. 69 •
~~
Large,Plump89 Bluebenies
12 Ounce Baske1
l.Jm1t 1 Baskets e Red, Ripe-64 Tomatoes
20 Ounce PCK"
Regular Pnce ~ Ea. e
Valencia 19 ~~~!~an~ A
Regular Price.:» Lb. 9
Romaine 19 Lettuce
Salad f lJl!Ofite ..
Regular Price Ea )(' Ea. 9
Vons Rubbin64 Alcohol
32 Ounce Bottle
Regular Price ~ e
Coke
Regular
or Diet
2 Liter, 67.6 Oz. Bottle.
Limit 2 Per Customer
CitrusHill 69 Orange Juice
12 Ounce Can-f roz:en
Limit 4-Reg. Price):;i39 e
Aunt Jemima54 Waffles ~~
Qrigin11I or Buttermilk
frozen-Limit 4-Reg. ~ e
\• ~--
Land O'Fro:2 4 ~~~v~ a
2.5 Oz. P\(g.-Umit 4 9
More Ways To Save
Lb .39
Eu05
Bulk Banana Chios
Greet for Snacks-Regulof Price -
Fluffv Fems, 6" Pots Tropc~j ~nu. 4 .. Poc-2 fOf 2.00
Asian Pears
Slllftt and JuJCy
Persian Melons
I\ Summer Treet
Large
Artichokes
Full rJ Vrt.amJnt Ea.
Vons a ·mited
Do le Coupons
f
Chef Pierre Aoole Pie
or Dutch ~-27 Ounce (cf,eny ~ 2 79)
Kraft La Creme
8 Ounce Tub. Frozen
239
.99
~~~~~~~~~J;~ .89
~erse~aid Ice Cream 2~ 399
Od Fashioned, Haf-Oallon R
Klondike Ice Cream Bars 199
6 P9ct<, Ktt1py, Origlnel or CMcolete
Little Juan Burritos 219 &P9ct<. ~ Oi Each. Glftn. Red or Vantty
.
l
-
~TAPATIA Clout spelled with capital '
Giant f 6od retat ers are scram tng for
a portion of lucrative Hisparitc market
By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOvtCB
Dlllr .... CMr JI tl1t
Merchandi~ Expo at Anaheim
Convention Center.
All aisles in the circular exhibu area led to the center where large
crowds were serenaded by a
Spanish guitarist and sinacr ..
dO Favela, IFME executive ditec-
tor. ••Every town from Mexico to
the .t0uthem tip of South America
has this very 1pedal plaza."
Dlllr ......... ., ...... e....
lltcbael Jaare• tout.a freeh dally dell•ery of com or nour
tortlllu from La Tapatla o.en• to aupermarketa.
With the Hispanic consumer
market a 'major tarset of an inter-
national food expo, it was only
natural that 100,000 square feel of
exhibit space would be turned into
la pJacita, Hispanic meetinJ place.
And naturally Mexican food was
featured at a number of booths at
the second International Food and
In Hispaoic culture, "la placita is
known as the community's meeti~
place, a site of fiestas, open air
markets, cultural events and every-
day social activities," said Fernan-
The expo offered workshops.
displays and uhibiu to 1nfonn
trade memben oo bow to tap the
burseonina Hispanic marut. On it1
second day, consumers had the
opportunity to enjoy entenaj oment
and sample the a.may of new
products from food manufaciuren
tn the United States, Central
America and South America.
Attracting spectators' interest
was the displ!Y, featurina a wheel of fortune. by Coca-Cola of Los Ao·
~==-.M
Vons Liquid 3 9 Bleach
l Gallon BottJe a
Limit 2 Per Customer •
Chocolate
Oval tine
12 Ounce Can Umlt2-Reg.~
Glad
Trash Bags
30 Gallon-10 Cou{ll P\<Q; A
Limit 2-Reg. Price~ •
129
78
Spaghetti 2 6 sauce Mix
Schilllng-1.5 Oz. Urnit2-Reg.Price~ • •
Ann & Hammer:14 .g =~1
Vons Tortilla~4 ~~~~-80z.
Limit 2-Reg. Price .M" e
GlobeA-1 38 t~~~.
Hearth Baked69 French Rolls
8Pack
Limit 4 -Reg. Price~ e
Dakota Fannsg· 4 Cheese 9 0i. Package
Jack, Col , Oleddar
Limit 3-~eg. PrkeJ;erf e
Prtcu Eftf.dtve Thurs. Thn.a Wed. July 24-30, J 986
California Grown
Limit 4 Chickens per Customer
Swift's BeeforPort< 99 Sizzlean
Breakfast Strips, Limit 2Ea A -
12 OL Pkg.-Reg.~ • W
Donald Duck94 Orancff Juice
~ ~~eg. Price~ e
Nucoa 4· 4 Margarine
1 Lb. PIK'kage-4 Cubes
Umit2-Reg.Price.. e
~~i~~~~l~~?Poo~Loof .89
Old Fashioned Donuts 99
Reguler Of Devils Food , Vons-6 Plrl e
~~Q~~~~ke 149
Vons Cookies,.i .7 Oz. 89 Cloe.. ~. Coaru. OIOC. UllP· Grano111. P!erU buaer e ;;amon J29
• Al half prtce It.ems are ldentlfted with • hlllf price tag.
(ol(8181 J'°'8401~ loretlDft cl~ -you Nol al ~HMandpl<Wlllflieed~al/ora. 1020$ C~
llhod 1::IOCJP\(-o8"d 6~71 w eo.1151 l.a.~ Th4udnot~ln"'-'C*go F.-.o La..,.._~
endT .... Counl\I ~"'""•~lll~oNt Mc>M<',(-°""'8•m in IOpm 7~• ..... W.-IN·IO ...........
'
Regular ~
Price lb.~
Shoulder J14 Clod Roast
Boneless-Select U.S.DA Lb OlOice Beef-umt 2 Roests •
Boneless Rib Eye Steaks ]49
Sekoc:t U.S.DA ~ Beel Lb.
Veal Shoulder Blade Chops . t98
Mil< Fed (Round Bone 2..29 Lb ) Lb
Boneless Rib Steaks 229
lMge End. Select USDA~ ~ Lb
Farmer John Ham t39
Shenk or Butt Poftlons Lb
Farmer John Ham Slices 298
Cen11tt Cut Lb
Fresh Butterfish Fillets 239
Pktflc: Seefood T reet Lb
The
More
Store
~net ~-,r.. tpOMCJt..:.::
the wheel and~ on a winnia&
number, he would recae a brilb•
red T ~irt with the company lolo.
However, moll ended UJ> With ilae
consolation prize. a small~ of
a soccer pla~.
The ummous Chiquita Banana. with iu oolotful display booth,
brou&ht aJona its Jnare LICUcs. too.
Three lar)e Uiflalecl rubber barww
\ttre the objeci of the plastic rina
ton. A.pin, most carried away the
consoJl.tion prize: a very tmall
Frisbee.
Casa Hemra Inc .• a leadina
deliper and manufacturer of in·
store food processjna machinery (OT
tortillas and bakery aoo<ls. spared
no expense in d1splayina it6 watH.
The cost to set up the bakery 5Y1tem
was about $10,000, said ·Fra.nk
Herma. The mach1ncry, be said,
was worth S7S,000 to Sl00,000.
The baktty system, to the deliab•
of attendees, produced vast
amounts of the traditional Mexican
pastry that is sprinkled liahtly with
s"fbe profitable tren~ of upplyina
more food products to the H ispanic
community was the motivation 10
exhibit at the expo, said Herrera,
whose family-owned business,
based in Los Angeles, has been in
operation for 30 years.
for many years, accordjng to
Favela, smaller independent
grocery stores were the comcnt.one
for the Hispanic shopper. Stores,
ofen located in heavily populated
Hispanic neighborhoods, carried a
mix ofspccialty items and mainline
groceries.
''Times have changed," he said.
"Statistics indicate that Hispanics
soon will be the largest minority in
the nation, outdistancing blacks
and wielding an economic clout of
nearly $70 billion. Suddenly, the
giant chain food retailcn arc
scrambling for their share of this
lucrative market."
It would seem Favela's theory is
on target, considering the bia names
Jack Kahan wu buy ladl-
~ aamplea of Juanita'•
al6ond!C•• Map.
that filled display aisles. Ralphs had
one of the largest booths filled with
an assortment of Hispanic prod-
ucts: Albertson's. Vons and Lucky
stores also followed suit. Anheuser
Busch kept its kegs tlowmg. and
Faultless St.arch displayed its spray
cans with bilingual directions.
Zacky Foods and Foster Farms
spiced up chicken samples. and
Fnto-Lay. Granny Goose and
Laura Scudder also brought a
H1spa01c flavor to th~ food offer·
in gs
Ste.,c Helzer. sales representative
for M1ss1on Foods. another cxh1b1-
tor. boasted the company 1s the
largest supplier of fresh tortillas m
the country
"The company started m 1958 10
provide tortillas to a small chain of
Mexican restaurants," he said
"Now. 1t serves the entire country
through four facihues that produce
more than :!O m1lhon tortillas
weekly
In add1tton to a vane!\' of com
and flour tort1llas. Hcl7er' ~1d. the
product line mcludes such item~ as
taco and tostada shells. all found 1n
leading l '.S supermarkets.
Not to be outdone, La Tapatta
with a booth a t~w feet awa\
claimed that La Tapaua ,., the
authentic taste of the tortilla
"We've been 1n the tort1lla-
mak1ng busmess since 19"71." ~1d
\11chael J uarcz. "With our largc-
modem and automated plants w 1:
are able to deliver tasty stone-
ground com and flour tortilla'> from
our door to the store f rcsh even
da\ "
Jack Kahan. repre~nung Pico
Pica and Juamta's Meucan food
products based 1n Lo~ Anaeles. was
cspe<:1ally proud of Juanita's albon-
d1ps soup.
While Kahan ladled sizable por-
tions of the spicy ~team1na \Oup
into cups for umphng. he c'
plained the soup htt the marlm only
two ycaf"ll ago
"Recently.'' he \aid, "1t wa\
<U.'<'Cpted into the ~hoot • lunch
proarnm\ t>catusc of us healthful
mgred1cnu and 1t~ low-salt con·
tent "
\
I
I
Clipper 's curiosity rewarded with extra coupons
Dear June -I enjoyed using
Welch's ~trawberry Jam, but several
months ago I noticed that at was no
longer in the supermarket. Jts
disappearance arou~d my cunos1-
ty. Finally. l decided to wnte to the
company
A few weeks later, I received a
letter from Welch Foods explaining
that they were no lon~er manufac-
turing strawberry Jam in Jars.
The fact that they took the lime to
answer m) quesuon certainly
would have been sufficient. but the
last paragraph said. "To serve as
compensation, we arc cnC'losing
some 50-ccnts-off coupons. which
you may redeem toward your ne\l
purchases of any Welch's products
Thank you for wntang.
ll was signed by James Weidman ,
the corporate director of consumer
re lations. I thought you should
know that Welch's reall y cares
about its loyal customers -Mrs.
E. Benti, Boca Raton, Fla.
Dur Mrs. Bentz -In these
umes when manufacturer!. belie' e
JUNE
Fuw1
that brand loyalty as fading away, u
1s good 10 remind them that we do
care about quahty products. It 1s
aho nice to let them know that we
appreciate thei r thouahtful
responses to our correspondence.
Dear Jue -I recently went to
the U-Save food warehouse and
fou nd the triaJ-s1zc box of Life
cereal fo r 39 cents. I always keep
some coupons with me, and one of
them was for 25 cents off that cereal.
When l rot home with my
purchases. found a 20-cent
coupon on the back of the box, and
several more 20-cent Life coupons
an my tile box.
Instead of going back to U-ave. I
decided to see if the same Ufe cereal
pack.aacs were available at the
foodJand store because it was
offering double coupons.
Sure enoU&h, I found them, and
six more pac\ages cost me only 18
cents. Now, J have seven Life
Universal Product Code symbols
just waitina for a refund offer to
happen. -Jue& Me11mer, Waslli-
lngton, Pa.
Dur Juet -What would hfe be
without the pleasures of sman
shopping? It certainly wouldn't
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater's Low, Low Prices!
VINE RIPE
. -~
\
/
TROPICANA 100% PURE CHILLED
Orange
Juice
QUARTERS
Nucoa
64-0Z
FRESH ALASKAN
24-0Z
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Ground Beef
Chicken Wings
Rib Steak
Chicken Franks
Spencer Steaks
Catfish
Crab Fl akes
Salmon Steaks
u SJ .59
59c
$1.99
age
$3 .29
e52 .39
I
51.99
0
53.99
Co rn On The Co b ~:·~·· .,.,.s1.1 s
Tater Tots
Jenos Pizza ·
Taquitos ··:u ..
W eaver Chicken ·:· ·:
Pie Shells
Tree Top Juice ... Am
Gra efruit Juice IAf!SWll•
51.59
q ;99c
,,52 .79
"'52.39
~~ .• 51 .09
. :69¢
; 11
51.09
Cucumbers lfN(·f" ..... .,, ••
PI um s .. , ... ;(. \..,rrr a ••
Grapes ME• .. ,o, ·~5HM
FANCY TENDER
Sweet
Corn House
Plants
~NPOT
Compare these Low Prices
I90EA
~=~
·· ·K rispy Houy
Crackers s lllgar 79e ,. •I 5LB .39
Coff eemate Creamer 51 .89
Clorox 2 /. . ,,52.55
Sunlight Dish Liquid .. ,s1.99
Bath Tissue , · · . 99c
Inglenook ;:::f,
Almaden ~~~~~~~-...
Gilbeys G in
Schnapps . :":·:;
Michelob ~~. :::
~ ·~n52.99
ollAs4.59
Ms10.99
""' 55.59
,54.99
Barbecue Sauce
Corned Beef
Pac-Man
Dog Food
Dog Food ......
Mealtime
Cereal
Cookies
Tuna ~ ...
Spillmate Towels M 55c
Orange Juice .. .. ... 69¢
s1. 79 Light Spread · · .51 .25
s1 .29 Ritz Crackers 51 .69 as c Chips Ahoy ~ ,51.69
59e Doritos . . . . . .. 51.39 t 7~llUR
·· 3 9c ,..---------"'----------~ ~
WHITE OA GOLD Ronrico
Rum
SC).99
8 9 ADVERllSEO ITEM
• -·· GUARANTEE . 39 --..--. ~ We 1tnve to ,....... on hind IUfflcllnl lk>dt ol
• - -• • -- - -. • ~ '°""11Md tnercllendlM If, M IO concltllOnl
S 1 3 9 -..,.. ·-- -..... ~ ~our cxintrol -run out ol wi .,..,.,,..,
' • ,.. ... - --I ~-I • RAIN CHEO< wi• .. ....., INbhno ~ 4:9..:::::: :...-Yo11 10 buy tr. lt«n ti the ltMrtlMd pttoe u
99C WC RC.SFRVE TH( A1GHT TO LIMIT QA A£F\JSE 100t1 M II blcon'lll IYltlabll OI wttNn ~ dlyt n , .._ _________________________ ~_L_u __ ro_OOM __ M_E_ACW. ___ OtA __ Lt_~ __ OA_WHOl.E ____ ~_~_~ __________________________ ___J
,r -> \ -'
taste as good. Coupon Savtaa Tip: While stand-
1na in the supermarket checkout
hne, put your waiting time to I~
use. Arranae your coupons by their
values. Put all the I 0-cent coupons
together, and jt<>UP the 2S-cent
coupons, and SO-cent ~oupo".'S, and
so on. This makes 1t easier for
cashiers to nng up your co upon
credi ts. It also reduces the chances
of a coupon being rung up in error.
Herc's a refund form to write for:
A $2 refund, plus four 25-cent
coupons good toward your next
purchases of Oral-B Toothbrushes. ORAL~B SJ Offer, P. 0. Box 3346,
Young America, Minn. 5S394.
Send your name and address on a 3-
by-5 card. This offer expires Sept.
30. 1986.
Whil e waiting for the form, save
the entire back panel. including the
Uni versal Product Code symbol
from three packages of Oral-B
Adult or Child/Youth toothbrushes
(sizes 60. 40, 35. 32 or 20).
Herc is this week's list of refund
offers . Stan looking for the required
refund forms. which you can obtain
at the supermarket. in newspaper
and magazine ad vertisements and
from trading with friends.
Meanwhile, start collecting the
needed proofs of purchase as de-
1ajJed below. Remember, some
offers are not available in all areas
of the country.
Today's refund offers have a
value of$14.79.
These offers require refund
forms:
CYCLE Dog Bowl Offer. Receive
a Disney's Fluppy Dogs Bowl. Send
the required rcf1.1nd form and 1wo
Universal Produce Codes from any
1wo bags of Cycle Ory Dog Food,
along with a check or money order
for S2 for each bowl ordered.
Expires Aug. 31 , 1986.
G RAV Y TRAIN S 1.50 Refund
Offer. Send the required refu nd
form and two Universal Product
Code symbols from any size Gravy
Train. Expires Aug. 31. 1986.
HAPPY CAT Food Bowl Offer.
Rece ive a free Happy Cat Food
Bowl. Send the required refund
form and three weight circles from
any size or flavor of Happy Cat
Brand Cat Food. Expires Aug. 31 .
1986. or while supplies last.
PURINA Kitten Chow Offer
Receive a coupon good for one 3.5-
pound bag or two 18-ounce boxes of
Punna Katten Chow or one 4-
pound bag or two 22-ouncc boxes of
Origi nal Blend Cat Chow. Send the
required refund form and nine
points ( 18-ounce box. one point:
3.5-pound bag, three points) from
your Punna K1tten Chow Brand
Kitten Food purchases Expires
Aug. 31 , 1986.
PURINA 100 Cat Bowl Offer
Receive a Punna 100 free Per-
sonalized Cat Bowl. Send the
required refund form and 21 Purina
100 labels. along with 75 cents for
postage and handling for each bowl
ordered. Expires Aug. 31 , 1986.
PURINA Cat Chow Picture
Frame Offer. Receive a Punna Cat
Chow Brand Cal Food Special
Pi cture Frame (retail value S 11 .95)
Send the required refund form and
one Cat Chow weight circle, along
with a check or money order for
S4. 95 and SI for postage and
handling. Expires Aug. 31 . 1986
Stir-fry dish
made with
tuna, oranges
By NANCY BY AL
Star-fried main dishes are tops at
our house. I like them because star-
fryang is a fast way to cook when I
get home late; my son eats has
vegetables. and my husband enjoys
the Onental combination of 'iOY
sauce and ginger often used to
season star-fnes.
COLORFUL TUNA AND
ORANGE STIR-FRY
I teaspoon flnely shredded or-
ange peel
11• cup oruge juice
2 tablespoons soy sauce
% tablespoons water
•1. teaspoon ground ginger 'I• teaspoon ground cinnamon
I cup thinly sliced celery
2 tablespoons cooking oil
I cup fresh pea pods, halved
dla1onally
l.'a cap bean sprouts
• • cup sliced water cbeanuts
I 9 'I• ·ounce can tuna, drained
and broken Into cbunkt
I orange, peeled and sectioned
Hot cooked rice
For sauce. an a small m1,ang bowl
sur together orange peel. orange
JUt<'e. M>y sauce, water. ganger and
cinnamon. set aside
Star-fry celery 1n hot 011 for I
minute. Add pea pods; 'it1r-fry for I
to 2 minute'i or untal pea pods are
cnsp-tender 'itir in bean sprout'i
and water lhestnutc; Pu\h VC'it·
etahks from renter of \kallet
Stir~ute,add toccnterofskallet
( ook and c;tar until boahng. Sur
vegttahle'i into snucc until well
coated. Reduce heat. add tuna and
orange ~lion < over and cook
for I minute or until hntcd
through 'ierve 1mmed1atC'lv with
hot cooked m<'
Beneficial
food labels
can mislead
When choosing products at the
supermarket, beware of healthful
sounding labels that ma?'be mis-
lea~tng, ~~s. Susan Magrann,
registered dietttian and nutntionist
for Vons Grocery Co.
For instance, terms such as "all
natural,.. or .. fortified with I 00
percent of all essential vitamins."
or "no preservatives" can be mis-
leading. Names of products can also
be confusing to the nutrition-
conscious shopper.
Names such as wheat bread, bran
muffins or cracked wheat may
sound wholesome, but it's the list of
ingredients that tell the true story.
Sometimes these products actually
contain more refined white flour
than whole grain.
Maarann's advice 10 the shopper
1s simple: Read the hst of ingre-
dients and know what you arc
looking for. In the grain food group,
shoppers should look for key words
such as whole wheat, whole rye,
whole corn. oats. whole barley,
whole millet and bran of wheat. oats
or corn.
When reading product labels.
remember that ingredients are
listed m descending ord er. So, 1fyou
want to buy a whole gram product,
the first ingredient hsted should be
whole wheat, stone ground whole
wheat. whole cracked wheat or
sprouted wheat. This means that at
least 51 percent of the flour 1s whole
gram. And don't let the term wheat
flour confuse you! Wheat flour 1s
actually white refined flour.
Other areas of the supermarket
with product labels that arc some-
times misleading arc the vegetable
0 11 sections. Magrann suggests not
taking the words "no cholesterol"
and "hght" too senously.
Once again, she advises to check
the label for nutrition information.
"Light" refers to the color of the
product since the ca lone content for
all 011 1s about I 05 calones per
tablespoon. And. since cholesterol
1s found only in animal product'i
and never in vegetable oils. in this
instance the term .. no cholesterol''
1s meaningless.
When purchasing oil and margar-
ine. look for products that contain
twice as much polyunsaturated fat~
as saturated fats. The vegetable oils
\\.1th the highest le\-els of pol)--
unsaturated fats. m descending
order. arc safflower. sunflower.
corn, soybean and cottonseed.
When selecting margarine. a
general rule to follow 1s -the softer
the margarine. the less saturated fat
When checking marganne 1n~e
d1ent hstmgs, the first 1ngred1ent I
should be a liquid vegetable oil such
as safflower. corn or soybean 0tl
In the meat and deh depart-
me nts, Magrann warns: Beware of
terms like "lean." If a product
wants to truly boast about how lean
1l 1s, the manufacturer will provide
nutnllon information about fat and
calone content." Magrann s.aad I
Lean meat should have no more
than 3 Jfams of fat per ounce whak
a medium-fat meat has about 51 grams. Products with amounts
higher than these should be used
spanngly.Accordmg to Magrann.
good nutrition starts in the super-
market with knowledgeable prod-
uct selections.
For more information about how
to be a nutrillon-sman shopper.
pick up a copy of Magrann's Nutn·
Notes. a newsletter on nutntaon.
which 1s available free at all Vons
stores throughout <iouthem Cah-
fornaa
Leeks tantalize
Here's a refreshing. chilled \-Cg-
ctable to accompan)' summer meal-;
LEEKS VINAIGRE'M'E
I large leek•
% qaart1 bolling water
I tablespooDI ollve oil
i tablespoon• red wtoe vinegar
1 tea1pooa Dijon mustard
'.\ teaspoon Hit
'• teatpoon white peppu 1, cup finely chopped parsley
Cut tops from leek~. leaving 2 or
3 inches of the green pan: cut ofT
roots, cut in half lcnathw1sc Hold-
ma leaves apart. cuefully wac;h 1n
cold water to remove all din
ln a larac ~ucepot bnng the ltckc;
and water to a boil. reduce heat and
simmer JUSt until tender-15 to 20
minutes: drain Beat toacther the
ohvc oil. vincpr. mustard. \llt and
pepper Spoon drc,sing over leek\
spnnkle wtth pa"ley. Co" er t11htl y
and chill. Makes 6 scrvina.s
,
Orenge OOMt OAl&.:V PILOT/Wadi 11 dlr, .Mii n, ,..-C7
Fishing's fun; eating It'
Relax ins for a few pcauful hours
with Mother Natwe and a fi1hina
~le can be the best kind ofcscapc.
Start by placina a wUct of bacon
llicc1 over the fire. A1 the aroma of
smoked bacon spreads throu&h the
campsite, finilh cltanina the (ruhly
cauaht trout. Rinse the fi h in cold water and pat dry.
Saute onion, areen pepper and
thin sliett ofzucchini in the bacon
drippings. Combine with bacon
pieces, diced tomato, bread cubes
and shredded mozzarella cheese.
Then star in basil ~nd garlic powder
and fill each fish cavity with the
vqietable mixtu~. ~op atb kmon
1l1ca. ICC'Ure in fod and anll over
hot coals 10 to 15 min utes. If you don't have the stuffina
inart'(lients, simply wraf fillets with
bacon slices and ant until the
be.con i crisp end fish flakes cuily.
t f that "bi.a ooe" Sot away, don.,
wait until next year's vacation to tty
thcte temptina rec1pcs. V11it your
local fish marl<et a.nd head home to
heat up the backyard barbecue Jrill.
GRILLED TROUT WITH BACON
I VEG ET ABLE STUFFING
111l1cn bacon
.,., ...... c .......
~-ar::.:~'·~· ,....... . ..... ,~ l•••• ....... .... ~ ellf (t .-cet) .... ff
......... 9eele
l 1Mcoe w.M,..,.. ._small
plecet
~ se..,.._bull
1.4 1.ea.,... prUc powder
4 tr••t, .,""4
Lemoe11Jcet
Cut bacon into 'h·incb pie« •
Cook in skillet on medium-low
until crisp; dratn, remove baoon.
reserving 2 tablespoons dnppings.
FRESH
TENDER
EARS
better
Add onaon, peen ~ad
lucchana «> k1Ue1: coOlc :»mil
tender cnsp tir an bK.on, tomato,
chcete. brad. basal and prtic.
Rinse trout in cold water; .. , dry.
tufT caVity of each with veeeiablc
mixture: be with trina. Place oe
lifhtly~ foal. Topw1th lemon
hces. 1fdnittd. Brina Cdgct of foil together and
make a double fold . Secure foil
ends to make a packet. Grill 6
inches from hot coals I 0 to 15
minutes per ide or uoul fi b tla.kes
easily when tested Wlth a fork.
Makcs4'~in .
c
EA.
Fresh ~
LARGE ARTICHOKES EA A9 STRING BEANS. ..... . LB. A9 ~G OKRA
Nlll•'lm IDEF )
Fresh
l 8 A• cuT FLOWER Bouauers EA. a.H
( ua•I• 9DI UICIA... ) ( ... PDD•a SNCIAU )
~. Fronrlo I• •·07 Col1fom10 Bonus Pock (20°. More) 12-07.~
~,:.wain I~. -' ZlllfANDIL 249 ~ 'V 4-PACK COOLIH
llAllKA
eYOZAH 59 WOll1'011 SKINSe 399
750 Ml 80 Proof
PLAIN LABEL VODKA
6 Pock 1'2 Oz Bottle
HENRY WEINHARD BEER LIGHT
FAMILY PACK
FRYIR DRUMS
lr~Fmml CALIFORNIA 89
&JFARMS CHICKEN La. •
Former John 8 0 1 Pork
SAUSAGE LINKS EA•••
KAL KAii
DOG FOOD
IA oz
VARIE TIES .35
1.69
SUtlOlN TIP 299 8££F IURGUNDV
SEAFOOO NlWIUltG
ColcMn ~19Y I& 07
MICROWAVE PANCAKES 1.61
3.19 16-0z
MSG AJINOMOTO.
Myoio Chuk o ZOt1mo1
INSTANT NOODLES
FAMILY PACK
,.YIR THIGHS
I'~~ CALIFORNIA I 09 &Jnvvru CHICKENL& •
Swift \ Southern Grode A
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS l8 1.29
7 -Oun~• tube 1.31
.75
GLEEM TOOTHPASTE
10 Ounce Jar
1.79
2.12 NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM
LB.
HUGHES 1/4 INCH
VAWE TltlMMED ........
aOUND STIAK
HUGHES I • INCH 5 9 VAlUE TRIMMED I
8EEF L& •
little Juan 22 Oz
VALUE PAK BURRITO~ EA 2.59
80NILISS _......._...___.. cu•• snaKs
BEEF L.&2.19
Hormel R4tQ Me~u1te K1elbo•o or Hot
SMOKED SAUSAGE LB 1.89
SOLID WHITE TUNA
6.5-0Z. IN WATER
LIMIT
6
MlllUTI MAID
.. UIT PUllCH
GRAPl .. UIT
JUICI
eoz
PKG .39 6"0Z
CHILLED .89 OCEAN ~PRAY I 39 .t8 oz
. REG OR PINI\ •
Soft I lb Tub Or Two 8 07 Cup\
IMPERIAL MARGARINE 1.09 ................
ZACKYPARMS ~ICKlll PllAllKS
~ ~~~ .79
lost<o Sliced J 07
SMOKED SALMON
Hughes • 07 Pockoge
COOKED SLICED HAM
H11ghe1
MUENSTER CHEESE
Morie Callender ' Anorted 12 0 1
FRESH PASTA
2.79
.99
l8 2.73 t PockT. .59
...... .,..
C08CO ..
'2·lARS
NlllUll 21•
Soto L.-Frend\ 23 ~-Oz 1o ~07
CHEESE CAKE . I .It
I.ow Fot 8-07 Voriet1u
JOHNSTON'S YOGURT .39
•IHllll •1a••e -. '::'··=r-,_ .... ........ CANll
COOK800K ~r ENCYCLOPEDIA 10 98 ~ 12 "VAlUE •
Coo6led
LOUISI ANA BLUE CRABS La 2.H
Loulslono
COOKED CRAWFISH l8. 1.59 CAJUN
louro S<udder Howo•1nn 7 5 Or
POTATO CHIPS
"" ..........
BltEADED 3 89
L& •
~ appHes only to Food upetme""9C• In Loe •...-.. ~'",.. 6 Onnoe Countlie&.
1.39
1 c~ (~-~h -~ .......... ol .... ·-"""" ...... -........ , hpifwil .......... --wr....., , c.-o ...... iy ,,_ ..... .,... ~ ,,....,._. """'°"" .... _...,.... • Only ..................... _,...... .. ,, 00 .. '-' ..........
~ S. ~1tvtlent., , ___ ._,_, ,..,,... ,,,,..llttted "¥...., • "'11..-.i •-•on -let• _ _..,.,..,.,..,...
~ -~ jlfk• 7 If -de fttol tied. .... I""" ~1fled Ori_._,~ -wtll •'*"'II",."" •lwm al ..,,..i-..ive a ,,._ ~ .....t ~ ~ _ ........ t "•«t to"°""' '-•m.d °" ._h .._...,.. 10 Of!.,~ Mt l6 ~ J.il,
30 IW. II °"9f ..,.ii.. Orll\I le ................. ..........
-•-111•ee"9ll •---..,•~,..,..,. ·• ~.m ..... 11 11•--•1 ua
'
'
---~-=----------------~-=--~----
C8 Ortnge Cout DAILY PILOT I Wednesday, July 23. 1988
~ .
/'n rr'\ (,r,.,(/ lull !1.!'J /1J.'if1
\,, '"''''''' ''"''' • /.11111/ A'Jl!,hf, l<1
1
\t'/"l 1
1tl
f 'rt1 ,., /·//1 t I II t I/
(//"(l//.1t (11111111 '''ll'''""' f/J//)
Cneese &"=Den Farm Ffesn~ProOuce
~E\X ZEALAND CHEDDAR
EXTR \ ~II ·\RI'
Pt.i~ ol lilt' \('a.,on C.mp. l'l'ndtr
Famous , Irvine Ranch Grown
FARM FRESH
SWEET CORN
Picked and delivered fresh each morn-
ing to provide you with lhf' sweetest ,
freshest corn flavor!
Local Grown
-
I
Meat
L:soA Choice Beef Loin
T-BONE or
or
EGMO~T
-aho lrom \t•\\
Zt·aland \\ 11 h nJ \or
ROMAINE LARGE PEACHES LETTLTCE
I rN· npPn('d for
ma\lmum '"t't'lrH''-'-' 5 9 ta .39 EXTRA LARGE
BELL PEPPERS
Stuffing size. lb .• 59 PO RTERHO USE 499
STEAKS , lb .
.. 1mll:.1r 111 Jarhtu r~ 3 59
rt·~ I l)t) lh lh
POMODORO CITRIOLI
SALAD
\f 011an·lla \\ llh 111ma10
tUlU mlwr and ln·'h ha'll 4 in l1~h1 \tna1~n·t1t 99
n·~ ~ 99 lh lh.
GROCERY
TWININ<;s TEA
I ngli...h Brt'tthl.t'I
Ltrh < 1rt·\
2 =\ 1 I hJI.(' rq! 2 (1\)
Pl FFED K.\SI 11
1<1 .uh 111 I JI l t'rt al
-) 111 pkg r1·g I h1J
) 1111111.( ' \upn·m1·
ZESTY
fl~C ,hR PEPPERS
12111 htl ri·g 2 -9
BAKERY
JUMBO
IH ) O'\I·.
(,l:f ()\~
FRH'
.99
}99
BLl 1ERERRY MUFFINS
I r1·,IJ h.1lo.1·cl \\ 11h no pr1·wnat1\ ,., 1ir
.1dd1t1\1 ' lktlt r 1ha11 honwn1ad1·
tltt·\ rt· m.ul1· fr11111 our 3 99
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WINE & BEER
In trll ltrnt h l·arm1·r' \l.1rJ..1·1
~APA \ALLEY \X HITE
\11/I I''" l 1((1/o.;I
~ 1 1w111.1~1 ·r 1<11h1·n
f't•t Ill.I ' ht•\(
hl1·11rl \I I I 399 -"" 1111 n ~ ..., 111)
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lb .•
t l.\lr.1 l.Jr~t· \111 -11 lh)
TE;\D~.R \'ELVET
GREE\ Bt.\\S
~
lh .49
1"111 l'«arh of the TropH ..,
EXTRA LARGE
MA\ GOS 79 lh •
1111111 \ l>tpp<.·d
8 \\ANA CHIPS
I r1J111 our Hulk l>epl }29 lh or pk~
.\tree/. Red Ripe
WATERMELONS
Ar~ Arruwf!. Dat/}'1
<.hrn>'t' from
~edle ...... ) el low \1ea1 or Re~ular
iVow Available in Our Deli ... This Week's Special Features ...
CINGHAILE
ITALIAN SPECIAL TY MEATS
from
Boar's Head
Only the good goes in.
The quality of these Italian meats Is unsur-
passed . For a very imple reason , they are
made the ti me-honored Italian way ... never
hurried. Take the prosciutto for insttnce; it
takes Clnghiale almost one full year to cure
one prosciutto ! They cure It exactly the way U
was In Italy 900 years ago , using nothing less
than the finest cuts of meat . Again, Irvine
Ranch Farmer~ Market provides you with the
best quality and vaJue .
PROSCIUTTO
reg . 13.49 lb.
MORT ADELLA
reg. 4. 59 lb.
COPPA
Hot or Sweet.
reg. 10. 79 lb.
SOPRESSATA
reg. 10. 79 lb.
ABRUZZE
reg. 10.49 lb.
lb.1069
lb. 359
lb. 859
lb . 859
lb . 829.
BE EF FAJITAS
Tender pieces of USDA choice beef
with onions, bell pep-
pers. tomatoes and 399
our secrel seasoning~ lb .
BONELESS STUFFED
PORK CHOPS
W11h our o" n
cornhread 'ltuffin~ lh . 279
CHICKEN CORDON BLEU
Bonele"I~ brt>a!)I
Muffed w11h ham . thee~e 399
and mu~tard sauc<· lh .
FRESH HALIBUT 599
STEAK lb .
SWORDFISH 899 STEAK th
FRESH IDAHO 299
TROUT lb .
~~:i!,~~t~!.·~TEA~~. 599
Bv THE STEM
Flowers in the European TradJtion
ALSTROMERIAS
"Thl' Peruvian ui,'
l.mel> lonR \tern'
rt'K 1 )0 c·a ea. 1 OO
or 6 for S) 00
~1 111l11hlt• 111 I 111/l111n M1111tl f >ttli
ORANGf. Tl'STIN f OSTA \tf.\4
~h ~J ln11lf' \\• 11111
I -, I I (,~I t tO I
I tOOl \h lore! Wo<td
( 1,.) fHX lX"
MISSION VIFJO
l"""" tl \ l\l..l tit-I l <Aj(O
<'"I ~) t"'l 010~
Al!M> tore5 In ~vtrl y (,tnttr.
Northrid•t and Camarillo
~f.WPORT CENTER
!. t ~a,hion 1 .. 1ancl
(''I ~) .. 60 1 IOO
"') 10 f.ast Chapman
(7 1.f) fli<) 'P'H
H "l ~f'WJlOrl AH'
('"I •O H~H '))'"0
' .
~ J------------·--------~~~~------~------------
I
COMPLETE RACING COVERAGE
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1986
Father abducts ailing infant
Impeachment
The BOaH Tote. to lm-
5 federal judfe
Claiborne, eenCI-
& e t..ue to the Sen-
ate for a trial. A5.
Cout
Rock f ana get a piece of
the old Golden Bear
nlghtolub.J A3
Nation
Reagan tells nation the
West cannot dictate re-
form to South Africa and
should not Impose sanc-
tions./ AA
Capt. Midnight, the satel-
llte hacker who broke Into
a paytelevlslon program,
ls In custody./ AS
World
Peres, Hassan meet In
mountain palace under
tight security./ AS
Sports
Dodgers pull out a 4'-3
thriller at Plttsburgh./81
Dick Howser, who guided
the Kansas City Royals to
the World Serles tltle last
fall, has a malignant brain
tumor./81
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Food
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
A9
A3
A7
B6-8
A10
B8
85
C1-8
A6
84
A3
B8
B1-3
85
A2
Ba y p aced in hospital after suspecte
child abuse, may die without treatment
B1 PAUL ARCBIPLEY °' ... ~........ .
A Huntinaton Beach boy's life rnay
be in danser fo11owina his abduction t?Y his father from the UCI Medical
Center on Monday, police said.
The infant is bleedina between the
brain and skull. a c.ondition caJJed
occipital subdural bematoma, which
c.ould be fatal if it wo~nJ and ian't
treated.
David Kennedy Jr. was taken to the
hospital by his parents after a family
P.hysician found him suft'erin• from
'suspicious injuries," a Hununaton
Beach 1>91ice spokeswoman said.
At UCI, doctors observed multiple
injuries that c.ould have been the
result of child abuse, said
spokeswoman Jo Anne Bonkowski.
Injuries included a broken left arm,
Tourist
turnout
big in
Laguna
By LAURA MERK °' ... o.IJ N9t • ...,
Two weeks into Laguna Beach's
summer-long art festivals, organizen
say they are seeing more visitors and
making more sales than in any
previous year.
Though traffic in Laguna is always
congested during summer months,
the art festivals' crowds compound
the problem, according to police.
Fortunately, there have been no
major traffic problems this summer,
said Sgt. Linda Parker.
But as usual, traffic 1s snarled in the
early morning on Laguna Canyon
Road as commuten enter Laguna
Beach, and in the evenings as the now
heads back to the San Diego (405)
Freeway.
Althou~ no attendance figures
were available from any of the art
festival organizers, each claimed
greater attendanc.e this year.
Sally Reeves. spokeswoman for the
Festival of Arts, said everyday attend-
ance is increasing ... Artists' sales are
way up and we arc seeing more and
more people. We arc very optimistic
1t will stay this way," she said.
The Sawdust Festival, just inland
of the Festival of Arts, has had the
same success. Organizers claim last
Sunday was the best day in festi val
history.
Ron Rodecker, a spokesman for
the festival, sa id it was difficult to
generalize on how each individual
artist was doing. "There arc some
artists who do extremely well and
others who feel it is very slow. It really
depends on who has the merchandise
in demand," said Rodecker, who said
he is doing double the business he did
last year.
broken left lea and multiple bnu1e1, as well u the &ematoma.
. The 8-~onth-old child wu placed
1n protective custody by Huntinston
Beach poUce.
However, his parents, David and
K.imberlynn Kennedy, were per-
mitted to visit their son under
supervision in the eecond Ooor pcdj.
a tries wina of the hospital in Oraqe,
said nut1ina supervisor Sue Abearo.
A custody bearing bad been sched-
uled for Wednesday to determine
whether the boy would be returned to
his parents' care, Bonkowski said.
But Monday niaht, while David
Kennedy Sr. was visiting his son, a
nune left the room for a few minutes
around 9:30 p.m., Ahearn said.
"She had walked down the ha11, and
the nurses were alert to the protective
custody, .. Abeam said. NW'ICI said
they didn't oblerve any W\USUal
behavior in the older Kennedy.
But when she and a ICCOftd nune
returned, the pair were aone. The
hospital declined to releue the
nune's name.
Hospital security tcan:hed the
a.rounds before alertina Huntinaton
Beach PoUce, who searched the
K.enncdys' home on the 8000 block of
Slater A venue.
A police officer said it appeared the
couplebadpthercd someclolhesand
quickly departed.
Police have issued a bulletin to
other law enforcement qencies in
hopes the. boy can be quickly re·
c.overed and treated.
"rf the occipital subdural
hematoma c.ontinues to bleed, it
c.ould be fatal, .. Bonkowski said.
Dr. Christine Taft, who treated the
child, said tests showed the bleeding
under Kennedy's skuJJ had worsened
(Pleue eee PATDR/A2)
.,..,,... ..... ~ .................
Docton MJ' O.Yld Kennedy Jr .• I montlaa, needa care.
Drive launched
to stop Newport
Center project
Group called Gridlock
gathers signatures
for ballot measure
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.IJ .... ..,,
A Newport Beach activist aroup
that calls itself Gridlock bas launched
a signature drive in an effort to force a
citywide election on a $300 million
upansion project at Newport C.enter.
Members of the group c.ontend that
the upansion will result in a traffic
nightmare in Corona dcl Mar and
surrounding areas ofthe beach city.
"The people should be P._Crmitted to
look at this and decide 1( they want
growth on this scale and at this pace,"
said Ron Covington, a Corona dcl
Mar resident who is opposed to The
Irvine Co. project.
The JfOUP needs to ptbCT rouply
4,350 s11J1alures by Aug. 14 to put the
issue on the ba!Jot, said Deputy City
Oerlc Irene Butler.
Covinaton said approximately 60
people bepn circulattn& petJtions on
Sunday, walking neighborhoods and
canva55in1 shopping centers.
The Irvine Co. intends to embellish
the circular shoppina and business
center with more than 1.5 million
square feet of additional buildina,
includ1na office towen, restaurants
and three separate residential tracts.
As a tradeoff. the development
(Pleue 1ee NBWPORT I A2)
Unusual storm
brief but lively
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .... .,.., N9t ......
A brief but lively thunderstorm
rushed through the southland Tues-
day evening with a show that in·
eluded scattered showers throughout
the basin, hail in the south county,
lightning strikes in the north county
and a spectacuJar sunset for Orange
Coast residents.
The f realcish weather 1s be1 ng
caused by a low pressure system
s1ttingjust ofTthc Sou them California
coastline, said National Weather
Service meteorologist Chris Landsea
ram, as did Los Angeles C1v1c Center.
flash flood watches were posted for
the deserts and mountains. Street
flooding was reported in San
Bernardino and Indio. and the wash-
es were running in Palm Spnngs and
Indian Springs, Landsea said.
A.n Orange County Fire Depart-
ment spokesman said lightning
struck a number of power poles and
transformers in the Cypress-La
Palma area. causing bnef power
outages and minor fires.
Hail was reported along Crown
Valley Parkway 1n Laguna Niguel A different crowd 1s visiting the
Sawdust Festival this year, he said.
"The buyi ng habits seem to be
changing. People are buying more
now and making middle and upper
(Pleue eee LAGUNA/ A2)
Elaine Jone ofL&aana Beaohchecu out.the handmade wind
chbliea at Tom O'Hara'• booth at the 8awdaat Feedftl.
Artlaane and oraantsen .. ,. attendance and~--are up.
The system is pushing moist air
over the sou thland and creattng
scattered thundershowers. "It is very
unusual," Landsca said.
Santa Ana reported . IO ofan inc.ti of
While Orange Coast residents ran
for cover dunng a few bnef, scattered
showers. the moisture in the air
contnbuted to a blazing red sunset
(Pleaee eee UJ'W8UAL/ A:l)
Coastal panel says
no to CdM parking
By STEVE MARBLE
Oftlle.,.., .........
If 1t looks like a park, chances are
it's a park.
Such logic was used successfully by
Corona del Mar residents this month
to bury a city plan to pave over a
Fassy, tree-ringed vacant lot and tum
1t into a parking lot.
The proposal, approved by the
Newport Beach City Council la11t
month over the objection of resi-
dents, was scrubbed by the California
Coastal Commission, which ordered
the city to keep its hands and
bulldozers ofT the land.
"You hear of beautification, well ,
this would have been uglification,"
said Shirley Conger, one of a dozen
residents who attended the com-
m1sSton meeting in Los Ange les last
(Pleue eee COAST AL/ A:l)
_1
Theft of 60-foot
tour boat foiled by
tie line, police say
By STEVE MARBLE
OflMIWIJNee .....
A pair of would-be boat rustlers got into hot water Tuesday when
they tned -and failed miserably -to take a 60-foo.t Newport Harbor
tour boat on their own private. pre-dawn tour. Newport Beach Pohcc
reported.
Kirk Paul, 21. of Whittier and Paul Scrvcnt1, 20. of La Habra wert
in the process of backing up the Showboat from its berth at the Balboa
(Pleue eee BOAT/A2)
Navy extends
Mile Square
Park lease
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .... .,..,,... .....
The U.S. Navy has agreed to ex tend
an agreement allowing the county free
use of 137-acrc area 1n Mile Square
Parle where the Navy once cons1dert'd
bu1ldina military housing.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors renewed the aareemen1
Tuelday for use of the Navy-owned
(Pleue eee COUJlfTY I A:l)
Summer can be deadly time on state's roads
LESLIE
EoNEST Most killed on Fourth not wearing seat
belts,-but studies show use up tn county
Most o( those who died on Cali·
fomia roads over the Fourth of July
holiday were not weanna scat belts.
an ominous •••n that more df'aths t*n
be expected this 'um mer as moton1ts
continue' lo 1anor admomt1on1 to
buckle up, htahway 5aftty 1uthont1es
say
"Normally acx1dent ,.tcs are hiah·
er dunna the summer months be·
cause you have more ptople on the
road." s1ud uian Cowan-Scott. in·
fonnat1on officer for the \ahfom1a
Highway Patrol. "Not only are Cah-
forn1an'1 trav.elin'1 but we have
tounsts then too," the said.
Cahforn1an1 tend co hit the rood
more than residents of othct state$.
And over the Fourth, many did not
take the utra minute to snap 1hcir
seat belts into place.
HtahWI~ Patrol commias1oner
James E. Smith said that of the '2
people who died 1n aoodenu on
l
roadways patrolled by the C'HP. only
three were wearina seat belts.
"lf all the July Fourth v1ct1ms had
been buckled, many of them would be
alive today, nther than havmp place
amona the holiday 'tat1sucs. • Smith
said.
"A use rale of'I than one 1n 10 11
an appallina ftaurc, aiven the ex-
tensive notone'y which the man·
adatory 11eat belt law has l'C'()ClVed
since 1t took effect Jan. I," Smith
added.
Overall statistics on the use of seat
bells are more promitif\I. tudies
c.onducted carher thi1 year showed
buckle-up ,.,es nnaina from 29
percent 1n Redding 10 S9 percent 1n
Orange County on non-frttwny
roads Frttway use rnte ha~ been
tallied at 70 percent and h1&}1er
"We estimate that. rou~ly. the
seat belt level has doubled,' \owan·
Scon 111d.
But Barbara <.."arraro, a stat1st1c1an
with the National Safety \ouncal 1n
Ch1cqo, 11id, of the first five states
(New York. New Jcnicy. Nebraska
Michipn and Illinois) to pus man·
datory seat belt la"-'$. only Nebraska
reports a steady 1nettast 1n utc
U1ually, Carftro t11d, the com
plian« 11 temporary." After an in1t1al
increase 1n lleat belt usqc. usqe
dechn('i;," she said.
When dnvcl"\ do 'ltntp themselves
1n, the difference can be dramatic.
accorchna to Mike Lundquist. pubhc
affairs officer for the C'HP 10 Santa
Ana
"I've ~n vehicles out thcrt totaled
and no 1njunes bccauM" people art
wcanna their ~.at belt " he t11d.
Lundqu11t added that S0,000
people die in traffic a«1Clcnu every
yar whtle many of lhem could have
easily been saved.
"A minimum of2S percenl or more
-up to 90 percent -would have
bl'ltn saved simply by buckhnt up I
would tend to QJ'tt WJth the ht&h~
Focus ON THE NEws
figurt," he ta1d.
Lookina toward Labor Day,
Cowan-Scott u1d tbe CHP will be out
in force "Every 1v11l1ble officer.
every av11lablc patrol car Will be on
the road," she said
The CHP wtll be p&ntClpalina in a
nauon·widc effon to promote bi&h-
wa) ,.fety called Operation CARE
(Pl-... .. 8UIOISa/A2)
0ninge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ l"hund8y, Ju~ 24, 198e
Guollne leak inspected
llemben of the Newport Beach Ptre Depart-
ment•• bazardoaa material• team and the
8oathern California ltd18on Company ln-
epect an electrlcal equipment nalt follow-m, a &uollne tank leak at the Mobil Station
at Bayalde Drl•e and EutCoutJllCbway on
, ~1· A nearby rataarant and the
•tatlon were cloeed until the leak between a
pump and tank we.re located and repaired
)1aat after noon.
FATHER ABDUCTS AILING CHILD ..•
J'romAl
between Fnda) and Sunday. The)
wett keeping a clo~ watch on him to
determine whether surger) was re-
quired, she said
She said multiple bruises on his
body indicated he ma} ha "e been
abused more than once
"When the bru1~ are new. they
arc red and purple, but older bruises
tum yellow and brown," Taft said.
Kennedy's bod) ~howed both kinds
"As a ped1atnc1an, when I sec
bru1!.es on a child. child abuse 1s on
m}' mind," she said.
Hunungton Beach police issued
descnpuons of the parents to the
media to aid their search
Da"1d Kenned}'. 30, 1s white. 6 feet
I mch tall, weighs 175 pounds, has
brown hair and blue eyes. He 1s
employed by the Better Business
Bureau in Anaheim
K1mberlynn Kennedy, 24, is whne.
S feet 4 inches, I 00 pounds has
brown hair and brown eyes. She is
employed by a Nissan auto deal-
ership.
The c-0uple own two cars. One, a
1985, brown Nissan Maxima, has a
personalized plate that reads "KEN·
NEDI." The other 1s a 1984, red
Nissan Sentra, licensc plate 2AZJ567.
BOAT HEIST FOILED BY TIE LINE •••
From Al
Pavalion when the) were spotted by a
passing patrolman. pohce said
Pohce said one of the men wa~
standmg on the dock. the other was at
the boat's helm tl)ing w11hout much
success to move the boat into the
harbor
"The} failed 10 untie one of the
sccunng lines." said police spokes-
man Howard Eisenberg "A~ he tned
10 back up It tore up the starboard side
of the boat and ripped a cleating from
the dock."
The frustrated skipper Jumped off
the Showboat and leaped onto the
T1k1 another harbor tounng vessel,
"'here he was arrested wtthout further
1nc1den1. said Eisenberg.
The Showboat. one of several craft
that hauls 'i1ghtscers past the John
Wayne mansion and other landmarks
in the harbor, is valued at SI 00,000,
~1d Eisenberg. Estimates of damage
to the Showboat were unavailable.
Police said they are uncertain why
anyone would try to steal such a
distinctive craft.
"I don't know." said Eisenberg.
.. Maybe they wanted 10 go into
husiness for them~lves"
UNUSUAL STORM BRIEF BUT LIVELY ...
From Al
that was accented by lightning bolts 1n
the distance.
Orange Coast police reported no
traffic problems associated with the
showers
The ram aided firefighters who are
battling a J. 9CX>-acre bla1e in the
Angeles National Fore'il. which wa.-.
reported 70 percent contained Tues-
day afternoon.
The pressure system will hang off
the coast for a couple of more days,
with a d1mm1shing chance of more
rain. Landsea said
Forecasters expect night and morn-
ing. low clouds to yield to scattered
clouds dunng the afternoon today,
with continued high hum1d11y and
temperatures ranging from the low
70s at the beaches to the low 80s
inland.
COAST AL PANEL BLOCKS PARKING LOT ...
From Al
week
The proposed parking lot 1st~ pie.al
of "commerc1al-t)pe" intrusion 1n
old Corona del Mar. she said
The property. located near the
inter~ction of Bayside Dnve and
Jasmine Avenue 1s actual!} nothing
more than a section of city street nght
of way that has never been utilized
said Public V. ork<. Director &n
Nolan
The land 1s noi and never ha"i been
a dedicated Cll} park he ~1d
On one side of the property 1s a
small city park mg lot and on the other
1s a wide greenbelt that 'ltretches for
several blocks l\lolan said city of-
fic1als considered the parkmg lot
proposal 10 be "modest and reason-
able ..
"Parking 10 Corona del Mar. ol
course. has alway\ been a problem."
~1d Nolan.
Many business on nearby East
Coast Highway do not have parking
lots and customers often prowl res1-
dtnllal strttts in search of parking
spots. city officials s.a1d
But Conger said a clear ma1ont}' of
motonsts looking for parking spots
are customers of the areas restuarants
and nightspots. A parking lot to
accommodate "the happy hour
crowd" 1s unrea<>onable, she said
Over the years. the vacant lot on
Bay:ude has been man1curtd and
residents have come to use the
property as a park.
"What's the saying 'If 1t looks like a
duck and walkc; like a duck, it's
probably a duck.' .. ~1d Conger.
"Well, this look<, like a park and it's
used as a park "
Nolan said the wmm1ss1on action
prevents the Cit) from constructing
the park.mg lot but does not mean the
land will become designated as a
park.
Residents plan to celebrate their
victory with -what el'\e -a picnic
1n the "park ..
COUNTY, NA VY EXTEND PARK LEASE ...
From Al
land in the Fountain Valley re~1onal
park and Nav) officials are anxious
to trade the propert'.r to the county for
a piece ofland where military hou'iing
could be built
"There's a de'iperate need tor
add111onal hous1ng 1n that area," said
Navy spoke'lwoman Ellyn Gallagher
"There arc waiting list'I for housing at
both the nearby Navy bases and the
Manne Corp'i <air <.ta11on<, 1n El Toro
and Tustin) that need ICI be taken care
of"
For a time the Mile ~uare <,1te
itself was coM1dered for a housing
proJeCt, but Navy oflic1al'i agreed -
at the urging of county and Fountain
Valley leader'! -to look el-.cwhcre
"The Navy'<, p<1\lt1on 1" that
they're more than w1ll1ng to come up
wtth an altemat1 ' e .\nd nght now
they're looking for p<1\\1hle site\·
G allagher said
The Navy·., 117-<H.re tnangular
parcel occupies the middle of Mlle
Square Park and once ~rved as a
MAIN OFFICE
)'.)CJ fW•i' R•, c' ,,. M• -4 /4
l.llM •00'~"' r. • "i( !till •Afl "" A 4~ f". ,
0...·le(l •Ot &Al YI 7A ,,......._ 4 M.tnt••• M, •"
VOL 79, NO. 204
Manne Corps helicopter landing
field The park 1\ located on Warner
>\venue between Broolchurst and
Euclid streets
Since 1974 park v1c;11ors ha\e used
the site for land-sa1hng, model air-
plane nying and other recreational
purpo~s.
The county, which owns the rc<1t of
1he park's acreage. enjoys use of the
Na"y's area free of rent. but mam-
1a1ns the premises and prote-cts the
Nav) from hab1hty resulting from use
of the park
The Navy, in turn. retains the nght
to revoke the hccn~ agreement at any
11me without notice
But county offic1al'i, hke the Navy,
arc anx1ou<. to make a trade fot tht"
propcny
'icon Morgan. an aide to Super
\ l~or Roger 'itanton, s~ud owner'lh1p
of the s1Le would enable recreation
1Jffic1al"' to do more with tht entire
park.
"We'd like to do 'iome long-term
planning and decide 1f we're going to
leave 1t fairl}' much a'i 1t 1s or change
11 ·· Morgan ..aid .. Owning 1t would
gi ve the county that certainty for
planning. Right now it's bemg used
onl} under the good graces of the Navy ..
1 he obstacle. Morgan said, 1s
finding an adequate si te to swap. The
Nav) 1s opposed to selling the
property to the . county since the
proceeds. according to Morgan.
would go to the federal ~ovemmcnl
""Ith no guarantee that 1t would be
spent on additional property for
Navy housing.
Several sites have been cons1derl'd,
but were ehmmated for va~ou\
rea4'ons
"The}' (N:avy oflic1alsJ recogn11e
that It's not an C\pec1ally valuable
property to them, but 1t 1s a valu;sble
a'i~t to the county for recreauonal
purpo'lts," Morgan said. "They're
very w1lhng to work 'omething out "
Otlly Piiot
Dell very
It Qu1rantMd
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NEWPORT CENTER FIGHT LAUNCHED •• ~
From Al
firm will bankroll about $40 m1lhoo
1n road improvements.
One of the listed improvements
will be the partial construction of
Pelican Hills Road, a thoroughfare
that would cut throu&h the grassy hills
south of Corona del Mar and cou Id be
used as a shortcut around that
community.
Tht project was approved July IS
by the Newport Beach City Council
over the obJect1ons of some residents
and two council members, Donald
Strauss and Evelyn Hart.
"I will be reaUy disappointed by
people who sign a petition without
real1Z1ng what they are Jeopardizing."
said Councilwoman Jackie Heather.
an ad voe.ate of the expansion.
"There's a mentality 1n this town
that hkes to shut everything down. J
think it's more productive to make
things work than shut things down,"
said Heather.
Heather. a former mayor. said the
prOJCCt will lead to needed road
improvements and bring overdue
features such as a teen nightclub and a
day-a.re center to the center.
"I sec a lot of fret rides on this plan
hke a day-are center, expanding the
library and a bigger museum. That's
~eat but we'll pay for it directly or
1ndirtctly," said Covington.
"h'll come out of our hides when
we start absorbma the traffic." said
Covmgton, who believes the road
improvements wtll only lead to
additional growth.
"Pelican Hill may help for a while,
but m the long run it won't make a
dam bit of difference," he said.
"We're disappomted that the pet1·
uon cu'Culators apparently don't re-
cognize the many community ben-
efits provided by the Newport Center
Completion Plan," said Thomas
Nielsen, president of the Irvine Co.
"The road improvements, for ex-
ample, will be ample to serve more
than JUSt Newport Center's needs.
"Under the plan. Newport Center
wtll emerge u a true mixcd·UJe
center. with such amenities as a teen
club, a day-a.re center, an athletic
club, a ~ter variety or sboppioa
opportunities, more theaters, an ell·
panded library and art museum and a
broad base of residential bousina..
"We think it's a balanced plan. So
did the city Plannina Commission,
the City Council. and many citizens
who spoke in favor of the plan. We're
sorry the petition circulators don't
agree. As the community further
understands the plan, I hope they will
JOi n with us so the community can
move forward together."
The referendum drive brinas back
memoriC$ of 1982 when Covinawn
and others launched a successful
signature drive to tum back an earlier
proposaJ for expanding the center.
The Irvine Co. dumped its ex·
pansion plan rather than tC$t it in a
ettywide election.
SUMMER DEADLY TIME ON HIGHWAYS .•.
From Al
(Combined Accident Reduction Ef-
ron). The program, which will in-
volve CHP agencies across the coun-
try, wtll concentrate o n snaggrng
unsafe dnvers on interstate routes.
"If you as a California resident
were lo get on Interstate 5 and go to
Oregon. you would find the same
kmd of enforcement emphasis in
Oregon as you would in California,
and that will be true of all of our
ne1ghbonng states:· Cowan.Scott
said
"Our emphasis, as usual, wtll be on
reckless dnvers. dnnking drivers and
speeders." she said. "I think people
can expect sobriety check pomts in
many locations," she added.
The CH P reports that approx·
1mately half of the traffic fatalities arc
alcohol-related
Louil) Lundquist said the CHP
will attempt to reduce traffic deaths
over the upcommg holiday by issuing
public service announcements to
educate dnvers about highway haz-
ards. such as stopping on the freeway
shoulder.
"One in I 0 of our fatal accidents
involve an automobile that stops on
the shoulder." he said.
Safety tips include using rest areas,
pulling ofT the freeway to stop and
stretch or change dnvers, and plan-
ning ahead to avoid emergencies.
"We advise them to check their
vehicles before they leave on those
long trips," Lundquist said.
Even a flat tire 1s not usuaJJy worth
the risk of stopping on the shoulder.
according to Lundquist. .. If you have
a flat tire, chances arc tht ure 1s
ruined, so exit ofTthe nearest offramp
to change the tire," he said.
Drivers should be less worried
about ruining their wheel rim a nd
more concerned about avoiding an
accident, said Lundquist.
LAGUNA HAS BIG YEAR ••.
From Al
end purchases," said Rodecker.
And at the Art·A·Fa1r. sates and
attendencc arc way up, according to
Marge 81tctt1.
Last year 75,000 people v1S1ted the
festival. and spokesman Mark Blake
said they arc excecdmg their expecta-
tions this year.
"The only problem so far was the
ram on the first weekend we opened.
It caused some damage to some of the
artists' work." he said.
O n Tuesday afternoon Blake was
keeping careful watch on lht cloudy
skies and keeping his fingers crossed
that rain would detour Laguna Beach.
"I hear it's pouring two mites up the
road," he said.
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