HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-08-17 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1988 25CENTS
Baker faces felony forgery count
District Attorney's o flee files charge
relating to check written for campaign
By GREG KLERltX
Of ..............
One felon y count of forgery was
filed this morning against former
lrvine City Councilman and con-
gressional candidate David Baker,
who alle&edly wrote a check to
himself from the account of a non-
profit foundation to help cover cam-
paign debts.
Assistant District Allorney
Michael Capizzi said he filed th e
charge this morning an Orange Coun-
ty Municipal Court in Santa Ana. If
co"'' icted ec_an a"ome}. faces a
maximum tenn of three years in state Because the foundauon check re-
prison and could be disbarred. quired two signatures, Baker alle&ed-
Baker was scheduled to be ar-ly forged the signature of another
raigned at I :45 p.m. today in Central foundation board member. upenor
Municipal Coun, Capizzi said. Coun Judge Oa\1d Sills
Baker, who narrowly lost the Re-The check "'as" n11en as Baler "'as
publican nomination to Christopher "'alltnf for a campaign loan 10 come
Cox an the 40th Congressional Dis-through and "hale Baker's campaign
trict {>nmary, allegedly wrote a check needed mone~ for a mailer dunng the
to himself for S48,000 from the final "eek before the electaon. The
account of the Irvine Health Foun-$~8.000 check "as deposited 10
dauon. where he was executive dircc-Baker'!> personal account. but he
1or. The check was written only a few JSSued a stop pa) ment before the
-daytt,efo~the June+c·"lec-.irio"'n,..._-----,c'"'l"'il'.'.,..C'ln:1eared
Baker also allegedly attempted to
transfer S75,000 from a fou ndation
savings account to us checking ac-
count.
Cap1 n1 11>ould not sa) whether
other charges "ere cons1dercd against
Baker
"\\'e "ere cons1denng facts and
based on the fac ts this was our
Jec1s1on." Ca p1zz1 said.
'\;euher Baker nor his a11ome).
Paul ~le)er. was a'a1lable for com-
ment
""\\~IS dtsto< ere-d t~ alleged
transactions. he and 01her foundation
officials forced Baker to resign as a
member of the board for the $1 6
million foundation and he was fired
as at!> e>.ecutl\ e dartttor. .\ftc~r res1gn1ng, Baker checked into
Hoag ~emonal Hospatal under the
name John Doe for treatment of
depression and exhaustion.
Sall said 1h1~ morning be had no
comment on the charge against Ba~er
Dr Gerald 1n~lon. "ho 1salso on
{Pleue eee-BADRJ-ftj,6f----..
Northwood win• Laguna has its
own space race:
i' _ol Council
protests
Open, crowded attacks
on gays
Tommy Louie's pitching
helps Irvine's Northwood
All Stars move closer to
the Little League World
Series./81
Coast
Huntington Beach City
Council may be per-
suaded to save the Clark
Hotel, which played sig-
nificant in the city's his-
tory./ A3
California
A disabled woman· s fight
to keep her children is an
inspiration to others.I AS
Entertainment
"A Chorus Line" displays
high-kicking entertain-
ment at Orange Coast
College./C6
Index
Police want funds
for station repair,
not land purchase
By LANCE IGNON
OftM0811)r ..........
Environmentalists accused the
Laguna Beach city officials Tuesday
of playing games wuh some $2
million that some believe should be
used to buy raw. undeveloped land
but others feel should be spent
repairing the dilapidated police head-
quaners.
The mone' is pan of more than $7
million th e county has promised to
gi .. e the city by the end of October in
exchange for the right-of-way for the
proposed San Joaquin Hills toll road.
Ho" ever. while the city would love
to have all that mone). the council 1s
also opposed to the transportation
corridor and the sale. negotiated b> a
previous Cit) Council.
"On the one hand the cit) 1s
opposing the transport.auon cor-
ridor." Beth Leeds. an open space
commissioner. told the council Tues-
dav. "On the other hand the ci t\ 1s
allocating the money (from the sale)."
Cit) Manager Kenneth Frank said
there is little chance the county won't
come through with the payment
because failure to do so would
automaticall} ca ncel the deal. There-
fore. the county would have to find a
new route for the corridor.
till. the council decided to post-
pone plans for spending the money
unul the sale is final. The right-of-way
cuts through the city's Sycamore Hills
property located near the intersection
of El Toro Road and Laguna Canyon
Road.
But 1f the sak 1s consummated.
that's "'hen the fireworks begin.
The "a' Cit} officials figure it. there
will be about SI 6 million left over
after the sale for buying up additional
open space. But local environmen-
talists say the figure shouJd be upped
byanotherS2 m1lhon or so. which the
cal\ plans to return to ats general fund.
the council compromised by
agreeing to purchase S2 million worth
of open space -1f the sale goes
through -over an as.yet-un-
determ ined payment plan. Mean-
while. the $2 million from the sale
would go to immediate capital im-
provements. ·
But se'eral environmentalists are
"omed the cm "'111 never be able to come up "1th· the funds for future
open space bu'
But 1f 1he ~~ malhon as spent on
unde,eloped propen). Frank said the
City's plan to re no' ate C11~ Hall
"ould have to be put on hold. The
proicct I'> -;cheduled to begin at the
beginning of ne't ~ear
The makeo.,er would include what
J')Ohce sa} 1s a drasucall~ needed
refurb1i.hment of their headquarters.
.\recent letter from the Laguna Beach
Police Emplo\ ees .\ssocaation
outl ined problems caused b~
cramped and detenoraung quarters.
The follo"ing as a partial last of :W
complaints:
(Pleue see FUNDS/ A2)
............. ., .......
Police Department employee Janet Gfillam eqaeeaa be-
tween bozea of eridence ln Laguna Beach etation'•
overcrowded property room.
ByLANCE IGNON °' .. °-" ..........
"\\e v.1LI not tolerate violence
against anyone 1n the community,
1ncludang ga)'s and lesbians."
So proclaimed Laguna Beach
Counolman Roben Gentry as he
amended has own resoluuon meant to
thwart a recent spree of attacks
against ga)'s
Gentrv. Orange County's Qnly
openh py elected official, and a host
of oth"ers at Tuesday's council meet-
ing agreed a resolution condemina
violence should include all citizens regard!~ of sexual Qrientation, even
though gays have been targeted in the
recent attacks.
"The message is going to go-OUt that
if you do want to come to Laguna
Beach and beat up people ... you're
not going to get away with It," Gentry
said.
The resolution wa-,,pan of a list of
suggesuons formulated by gay leaden
and polict to ro'llbat lhe attacks.
On June IQ a ga) man. lost an eye
after being attacked b)' a gang of
assailants on Cress Street Bcacb. A
group of skinheads -\Ouths some-
times aJ1gned with the N~Naz:i
mo' ement -beat a ga~ man on the
head with a pipe m Hetskr Park on
Juh 14. II took more than 80 stillc;bes
to Close the ~ound ·
.\ transient was pushed to the
ground on Jul) 31 an He1sJcr Pai-le bya
gang of \oung men who had been
heckling a group of men believed to
he gay. One of the attackers fired
(Pleue .ee LAGUJlfA/ A2) Advice & Games
Bulletin Board
BusJness
Classified
Comics
Death notices
Food
C7
A3
A7-8
B6-8
CB
84 Crash kills Pakistan chief, U.S. envoy
Mind & Body
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
C1 -5
A6
85
A3
B4,8
By BRYAN WILDER
"II U 1111 f ,.,_ """"
ISLA MABAD. Pakistan -Presi-
dent Mohammed Zia ul-Haq and
U.S. Ambassador Arnold L. Raphel
were killed today when their Paki-
stani military plane exploded an the
Senior hou.sing:
Finding a hoine
a difficult task
(Editor's nore: This is rhe first of• two-part series on housing for
tenior citizens on the Orange Coast. The first part focuses on the
difficulty seniors h•ve finding affordable housi n,.)
BJ GREG llERU °' .. °"' ........
J>eay Stcmler's mother is 79 yean old. She will be 80 in December.
Welnnto her twilight years, Stemler•s mother now wants to move
from her Aorida home where she has lived for 25 years. She wants to be
near family. She wants to move near Stemler and her husband, Joe.
who live in Newport Beach.
Stemler's mother has enouah money to rent a moderately priced
apanment, but she also has rheumatoid arthritis; bad enouah to hinder
routine abilities like cookina and cleanift&, but not severe enouah to
warrant convalescent care. CoQIJ'Cllte care, which acnerally incfudes
such 9el'Yic:a. is the obvious answer.
But there is another problem. There is only one co .. tc care
facility ia Newport Beach -N~ Villa West -and it 1s primarily for aes..mbulatory seniors. And at is fUU to the brim.
Stemler doesn't want to lend her mother to another city, such as
Irvine or Costa Mesa. But with Newport Villa West full and a proposed
conpqate facility ~ntJy shot down by the City Council, she has little
choice.
"We want her to be as cl0te to us as possible,~ want her to be in
Newport Beach," Stemler said. "But tbere'sjust nothina heft. Nothinl
at all."
In Ncwpon Beach, scnion comprilc about l S ~t of the total
population, aa:orclina to county estimata. Aloaa Wida i.-na 8-c.h at approAimatclytbesame~uee. Newpan.-. ._lllehilllett per
capi&a ICAior pnpuh•ioo iJa OrUs COUl1 far -.,.a.-cWes. out~naSanta =nabeim ua Hun-..-8-ll. · OnljllpM witbme~a.-..Woltdcomfla.,hat
I hilhtt per c:apita ltll populatioa; ~ 49 paaM.. "'ht into numbm. more .,_ 10.~ .ol Newport a.di'• ..,.,..osimatcty to.000 Nliclentl lft..,, an-.
Yet of'lbe '*Y'• 9, 101 mW ••its ill NewpM ...... GlllJ 200 ..
(111111•-II lmt!MJ
eastern pan of the country. official
radio said. •
The Pakistani air force C-130
transpon plane with 37 people
aboard had JUSt taken off from
Bahawalpur. 330 males southwest of
Islamabad. when 1\ exploded about
4:30 p.m (~:30 a.m. PDT). the repon
said . .\ go,cmmC"nt statement read
O\'er the radio said no one aboard the
plane sur' I' ed
Be 1dei. Zia. "ho was also ann~
chief of staff. and Ra phel. the passen-
gers included sc'eral senior Pakistani
CountY delegates
in New Orleans
support Quayle
GOP vice presidential
selection expected to
cam ai n here soon
By NATHAN ROSENBEltG
~ .... Ceu $ •a I
aad PAUL ARCBIPLEY OllM..,,... .....
EW ORLEANS-Orange Coun·
t) Republicans joined other pan)
faithful Tuesday ma cram course on
Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle. then
almost unanimouslv approved his
nomination for the '~ct pru1dencv.
.. Fantastic!"' said state Sen. Marian
Bc!Jeson. R-Ncwpon Beach. "Who is
he?
Bergeson "as joking. but her re-
marks from the Supcrdome floor
where the Republican National Con-
vention is being held were typical of
the respon..e of Orange Count1ans
here and at home
"B' the end of the conventlon
e'en .one "111 know him and ltke
ham.'· Bergeson said. ..He 1s an
enthusaasuc cam p:ugner. I thUlk one
of the first places he visns will be
Orange Count~ ..
Gus {µen. president of the Lin-
coln Club. confirmed that program
chairman Kathi') n Thompson has
arranged to bnng Qua)'le to Orange
Count} at an as ~et unspecified date.
Thompson said Bush s selcct1on of
Qua) le .. sho" guts" and that .. Bush
1s thanking for himself."
Owen agreed the selection demon-
trated another e\amplc Qf Bush
stepping out of Pn.-1dent Reagan's
shado".
"It stiow how dcci 1,e and inde-
pendent the vic:t pre adent is.." Owen
said. ··He has chosen a rouna.
an1culate consa\'athe ·•
amn 2enerals. the radio said
l .·,. Embass' off1c1als an
Islamabad said other .\mencans "'ere
aboard the L".S.-bualt aircraft. but
the' l'Ould not pro' ade names One
diplomat. speaJcmg on condiuon of anon~ m1t). said Raphel's "1fe.
Indian• Sen. Du. Qaayle t.
called one of tbe rlal.aC etan
of the GOP b7 Vlee Preiddent
George Bush. Detaila OD A4
Qua' le's conscn'at1ve credentials
and ~ outh "ill double his appeal to
Orange Countrans. s:ud count) GOP
Chairman Tom Fuentes.
"There's a lot of enthusiasm for
tha~ selection b) Orana~ Count
Republicans because he (Quayle) 1
(Pleuc, eee C001'fT1' I A2)
Nancy. "as not aboard. .
Conflacung unoffictal repons said
the aircraft ma~ ha\ e been ilruck b)
an ant1..a1rcraft m1ss1le . .\nolhtt ver-
sion churned 1t collided wtth a
helicopter. Neither Palmtana nor
U .. diplomats could confirm 1t.
Slain Mesa
housewife
was raped
By JONATHAN VOLZK E
OI tM °'1ly Net hllt
The l1ller of a 22-ycar-old Cost.a
Mesa housewife stole her wedding
nngs, ~atch and a calculator and
raped the woman. police announced
toda\
Malinda Gibbons was found dead
Juh I an the Jiarbor Bo\lkvard
apanment v.hctt he and her bus.
band had hved for onl) a few day~
he was bound vmh SC\'eral of her
hu band's neckties and stabbed OJIC'C
through the chest. authonues said.
The v.oman. weanna a sweat SWL was discovered by her husbend. Keftl.
when he rct\lmcd home from "-Ork
The bod was d1 overcd about 6
p.m .• but authonUCll estunated w
died bcfott noon.
Police initially said there "'-"CTC no
ob\.lous SllJ\S of sexual mol~tat1on,
but Lt Ric\ Johnson SI.Id labont~
results m llmtd last wittk revealed
shewas ra~
lnvc npton also inmally said
(PleMe-9LAIR/ AIJ
Mily Co. fined for illegal advertising
81808 VAN llftDI--°' .. .._,_ ..
May Co.-califonia. owner or the
May Co. ~a1 seorts. has lll'ced to 1191 ~000 ill pmaloes
ud coun com ..mas from dm~M--CI IJFtfwdillcpl Id~ ......
TM ftnn. .-.. lllll~at South
•
•
Ola.eo...DAM.YPl.OT/Wedl..._,~ 17, 1•
ClJ II tidve, YOWi and hu an ~ record of committed ;r;r-republicanism," Fuentes
ne rank-and-f\le activists who are
to imponant to the local pany's
wccet1 will be olealed with Quayle's
CNdeatiall. wbile his th will
attnct )'OU"ltt voters J::'m both llUties ~were drawn to Reapn, Fueetn said. C'bril Cox. GOP candidate in the
40&b ~nal District -who embodies the same combination of
youtb and conservativlsm -said be '!81 ••thrilled'' by the Quayle selcc-
tJon.
.. We tot cvcf¥1hing we wanted - a
contervativc Vlce president and a
platform," Cox said.
Party activist Roger Schnapp of Newport Beach, an attorney special-~ in labor issues, worked with
Quayle when he was on the Senate
Labor Committee. .
... found him to be a responsive.
solid conservative," Schnapp said.
.. Thi• will send a mcssaae to con-
servative Democrats that George
Bush is not abandoning the policies of
the Reapn administration.
"Dan Quayle underscores the
mea11ec &baa Bush-will keep.faith with
the business wing of the party."
Bush's selection of Quayle was the
sole topic of afternoon conversation
in the Sheraton Hotel, hcadquaners
for the California delegation.
"Dan Quayle addresses the youth
vote that we are afraid of losinJ with
the loss of Ronald Rcapn.' said
political consultant Dave Ellis.
However, Bush's selection failed to
address Electoral College numbers,
since there is no one on the ticket
from the big ~pulation states of the
West. Ellis said.
Bush was cx~ed to win Indiana.
anyway. and didn't need help there.
"This choice speaks to demo-
graphics rather than regions,'' said
Countians·on GOP podium
Orange Countians wUJ be on the New Orttans Supetdome'a caner NF.
toni&ht. Rep. Robert Doman and 3rd District Supervisor Oadcti Vasquez wtll s~ at the cvcnina session of the Republican National Convention.
The fiery Garden Grove consressman will second the Pftlidential
nomination of Georae Bush soundina the theme of "faith, f:amily and
Freedom," wh.i1h he said arc the fundamentals Bush stands for. He will use the
phrase at the bC&innina and end of the two-minute speech.
Dornan. wlio docs not use prepared spc«hcs, is bein& Jiven the honor of
seconding the nomination because of 2'h yean of campeianina for Bush.
Prior to Doman's speech, Vasquez will speak on the values of the
Republican Pany and will state that those same values such as stroll& family,
arc shared by Latinos.
Underscoring Vasquez's relationship with Gov. Georae Deulcmejian and
California's imponancc to the Bush campajgn, the youna Mission Viejo
politician will close the convention with a spc«h Thursday evening.
U.S. Sen. Pete Wilson will also address the convention toni&ht. -
honorary delegate Roger Brown of
Irvi ne.
"Eighteen to 20.year-olds tend to vote Republican. Women like
Quayle's young, attractive family
which will help to bridge the gender gap.··
In addition. Quayle will help the
ticket in the Midwest. "rcprcsentin~
10-a .gieat degree. rµraL America •
Owen said.
Bob Schuman. campa1~ manager
for the Cox campaign, said Quayle's
selection will build for the pany's
future.
"In eight years he'll be 49 and a
-By Na,.._ Rosmber,
prime candidate for presidc~t to
continue the Reagan revolution,"
Schuman said.
At least one Orange Countian was
disappointed. Laguna Beach resident
Tom Kemp had waged an active
campaign during the convention for
another vice presidential nominee -
his brother..:. Rep. Ja~ Kc~ __
Natbu Ro1eo~r£ a Newport
Bead tt1ldeot ad former coa-
p-enloal caadU.te, 11 atlftNl.bll tte
GOP NatJOllll C.J'eotloa •• a ,_,,
of IM Oraa1e CoulJ; RepobUco
Pllrty.
FUNDS IN DISPUTE •••
From Al
• Upstairs toilets overflow, send-
ing their contents dripping into the
downstairs work area.
• An employee whose office is
adjacent to the Jail. "is forced to {>Ut
up with the very frequent nauseating
smell of drunks as well as their verbal
abuse. She is often in tears over the
frustration .... "
• StafTis forced to work in "closet"
sized offices and a 13-year-old carpet
is beyond repair.
LAGUNA HOPES TO STOP GAY BASHING ...
From Al
several shots into the air before
fleeing.
Finally. on Aug. 7. some suspects
fired several shots from a high-
powered rifle m the direction of a gay
bar on South Coast Highway.
As pan of the resolution. the
council will send a letter to the Orange
County District Attorney's office
askfog that people charged with "gay
bashing" be prosecuted to the full
extent of the law.
The resolution also recommends
the city coordinate meetings between
the ga y and lesbian community and
local schools. businesses, the
Chamber of Commerce and police.
··so we can continue to be a tolerant
community ... Gentry said.
"We haven't come together to talk
about th is issue in a long time."
Gentry said he's been over-
whelmed with the outpourinit of •
sympathy and support for · the
homosexual community in the wake
of the attacks.
Still. several residents said the city
should not ignore problems created
by gays. Several said gays should stop
using Heisler Park for sexual en-
counters, a P.ractice that some say
attracts assailants and discourages
others from using the park.
Alre.ady the police force has beefed
up its foot patrol in the park and the
numbers of py men congregating in
th~ park at night has decreased. police
said.
"'The park should be enjoyed by all
types of people ... unfonunatcly that
isn't the case." said Ian Smith, who
lives near the cliffiop park in North
Laguna.
Smith said that his brother-in-law
was recently pinched on the buttocks
"'by an overly aggressive gay cruiser"
in Heisler Park.
Others said the organized gay
community docs not condone sexual
conduct m the park. Indeed. police
records show a majority of men cited
for lewd conduct m the park are not
from Laguna.
"The leadership of the gay com-
munity is completely and totallX
against illegal activity in the park. •
resident Frank Newman said.
While police believe the wa ve of
violence 1s temporary, Gentry said
that according to the Washi ngton
D.C.-based National Gay and Les-
bian Task Force. attacks apinst
homosexuals rose b) 5.000 incidents
across the nation in the last 18
months. .
He said the trend 1s ca used by
people who blame the p y communi-
ty for the Al OS epidemic and a
general disregard for civil rights.
SENIOR· HOUSING SHORTAGE ON COAST .••
From Al
spccifkall) designated for seniors. Of
those, only I 00 arc considered af-
fordable under federal guidelines.
In Laguna Beach. there arc 110
senior housing units in the entire city.
not includins 15 currently under
construction m The Broadway Pro-
ject. That project should be com-
pleted by Jan uary, ci ty officials said,
and is designated for low-i ncome
seniors.
However. the wa1ttng list for the
project is already long. and is growing
daily. according to Donna McCullen.
the city's senior housing di rector.
"The ci ty is trying. but when you
lack space you 're up a cr.eek witbo~l a
paddle," McCullen said.
·Although the senior housing
crunch is perhaps most severe in
Ncwpon Beach and Laguna Beach. it
is an epidemic in many Orange Coast
cities.
Costa Mesa's estimated senior
population is 9.465. or about JO
percent of the city's 89.909 residents.
based on a population tally taJccn 1n
Jan. 1987. But there arc only 381
affordable senior units tn the city. and
270 of those arc in the crowded Bethel
Towers project.
Alice <\n_gus. associate planner.
said there 1s developer interest in
building more scmor housing in
Costa Mtsa. ·
··out of course in exchange for that
they want to go to hisJlerdensity." she
said. "And rhe units aren't al ways
afforda ble."
The story behind the lack of senior
housing is familiar: The cost ofland is
hi&h and senior housing is often a
riSky and less lucrative venture than
traditional ·commercial or industrial
developments.
Stephen Kohler. principal rc-
dcvclop91cnt specialist in Hunt-
inaton Beach, said there is a ycats-lona waiting list for affordable senior
housing in that city. The city even
owns one affordable senior project,
Emerald Cove, the only such city·
owned project in Orange County.
OAAHGE ....... COAST __ 1 .._,
llMtOFFICE
'31) ..... 8rf Sl Coa• -(;A
The bottom hnc with the senior
housing crunch, Kohler said. is
money -land 1s expensive. and
developers want to build more lucra-
ti ve propenies.
"Intuitively. we feel there's a lot of
demand out there. but we've done
about as much as we can.'' Kohler
said.
Seniors comprise about 8 percent
of Huntington Beach's 186,475 resi-
dents. according to the county. An
estimated 15,201 seni ors hve in
Hunttngton Beach.
Kohler said some developers have
been discussi ng senior proJCClS with
ci ty officials. but he declined to reveal
details. Still. ··w e're never going to
have enough to meet th e demand."
Kohler said. ·
Developer Bill Todd said senior
hou si ng projects arc often a less than
attractive nsk for ma ny developers.
He should know. As president of
Emerald Associates. Todd recently
labored to put together financing for a
120-unit senior housing proJect m
Corona del Mar. only to have the
prOJCCt shot down by dozens of
disgruntled neighbors and a planning
gli tch.
"Senior projects are different than
an) other tvpe of real estate. Lenders
are very, very caut ious about financ·
ing," Todd said.
Todd said it's difficult to get senio r
houstng financed based on escalating
rents. the normal selling point for
most residential projects.
"Food costs and such arc going to
eo up, but you can't go out and gouge
(seniors) and there's usually eo ntract
language to that effect." Todd said. It
generally takes between 5 and 7 years
to recover an investment on a senior
housing project. Todd said.
Even in master-planned Irvine.
officials say senior housinJ is in short
supply. There arc 643 remor housing
units to ~rve the city's approximate-
ly 3,800 senior resident~. who com-
prise about 4 percent of the city's
population. accordina 10 county
statistics. There arc only 125 af·
fordable units.
Officials at the Irvi ne Senior
Ceriter, which provides a variety of
services to seniors. said they receive
dozen~ of housing requests each week
and are often forced to refer seniors to
facilities in other counties.
One official, who as ked not to be
identified, said there are vinually no
affordable alternatives for se niors in
Irvine.
.. What they do claim (is) af-
fordable. while the ren t is decent and
1t sounds real good. when you go to
check on (the facil ities). you have to
make three times the monthly rent to
get in. If you're makin' that much,
you don't need the help. •
Juan (have£. who coordinates the
~hared housing program for the Area
Agency on Aging, said a lack of
affordable senior housing is only pan
of the problem.
··Basicall y. if )OU have money in
Orange Count) you can get mto
active senior housing. but even the
~nee) ones are going pretty fast,"
Chavez said "There really is not
much outtherc in the way of choices."
Chavez said the waiting list for all
affordable senior housi ng in Orange
County is 3 to 5 years.
"The demand is there. The housing
is not." Chavez said.
Next: Tbe alternative• for Or1111_e
Coast 1ealors wlto oeed care bot
caaaot li11d boo1l111.
Correction
An Aug. 15 anicle in the Daily Pilot
on the proposed buyout of Rogers
Cable Systems incorrectly stated that
a four-city consonium which in-
cl udes Huntington Beach and Foun-
tain Valley is con~idering purchasing
the local cable franchise. The con-
sonium is actually c-0nsiderinf selling
its nfbt to buy the frucbise in 1999
and ltS ri&ht to &Ct the franchise. for
free in 2004. The Daily Pilot rcvcts
lhc error.
D=-tecau..nt11d
-..,._ 8o• IMO Coll•~ CA ~
~ ~ &t1 ~18 --& edolOt ... &12 0 21 Ja.tcall 842-8086
~-II yoo. 00 "°' ..... ~ .,.,. 11)' ''°P"' UloetoN 7Pffl ~ yo.. COO? .... Ill .... .,
VOL It. NO.•
What do ~ like about lbc o.ily Pilot? What
don't you like? Cd die number above and your me-. wilt be •ecorded. transcribed and de-
livered 10 lbe ~le editor.
The 11tnc t 1D1Mrt1c lerVice may be
Mted to record lettert '° lbe editor on •nr topic. Conlributon 10 our Lenen column must include
&Mir-* and leleplloac nwnber for veriftcation.
Tell us what'• oa yow m1ad.
I
.,.., _, ~ .
'°"' 00 "°' -"°"' COPY !Ir 1 t 111 "' bl'Ort
10 ."' _, "°"" C4PY ... °'~ -
'
Sunny and continued warm
Wlndt frOrn tM IOUthMlt .. continue to btow dfy e6r woee~CellotftletOtlMMllt .__,, meenlftOwm,
.., ........ lt..ct esccept for a ....... night and .-ty
rnon*'O *'*and fog,'°' ...... Mid toay.
Molt of the low douda and tog .. gather O¥f/t the coatt.
although tome .. .:::.' a ........ Inland, the NaUonal
W•lher Servtce pt • Othef ..... '°'**' .. NY It wMI be mody clNr Ihle evening and eunny Thurtday.
Along the Orange Co.et t-. ... be .... night through mid·
morning low douda and tog mainly nMr the COMI. Othel wl• fair
through Thundey with eunny daye. 8eect'I 1owt t~t In the
mld·SO. to low eot. Hl.ght Thurtdey In the 70.. V11t9y lowt tonight In the low 50t to low eo.. Hight Thurtday In the mld··IOI
tomld-90t.
From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Ov.r Inn« wateta, light variable wlndt In the nights and mornings
through Thursday, becoming west to eoothwett 15 knott In the
afternoons and evening• with .... 10 2 feet West 9Wel1 3 teet.
U.S. Tempa =~
.. Le OkllllcllM City
Ill • M r. Calif. Tem1>9 711
74
73 ee
Extended
114 62 Omll>e
70 56 Ol'l1lndo ~ ts 13 Pllclenl•
t2 80 PlttaOUl'Qll
:: ~~ P«llMCJ.M.iM
118 83 Porti.nd,Ofe.
111 85 =ily M 71 Reno
83 78 AicMloncl
9'I 73 St LOUii
,: ~ $.it LM• City u -rr ~ ti 1111 S..tU• Spol.-102 ,. s>"'-
: ~ Tmmpe·SI P1rll>Q '°" 75 lOPfk• 118 77 Tuct0n
11 114 TulN ll7 67 WatNngton D C
114 72 Wlchlte
711 58
84 so
100
" 119
109
119 76 73
96 ts t1
113 102 as
-88 ee n
112
90 " 102
" ... 101
15 80 s 11 " mog Report
" 78 102 75
... 72 Ill 71 10 47
102 76
101 74
91 n
100 74
" 71 16 711
100 81
" 10
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71
113 M 71
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SS
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14 • 79 77 72
74
Tldea
TOOAY s.ootld IOw 7:03 P,ffl. 1.t
ftU.IOAY F°Wll high 12;41 Lii\. 1.7
flrll low 8:24 LI!\. 1.t ~Nofl I: IS pm. U 5-ICI low 1· 15 p.m. ,,,
Sun .... today • 7;)5 p.m., ....
~at811Llft.MCI .... ~· 7 3-4 p.1'11.
Moon -tOOty .. I0:02 p,11'1..,... Tlvtdey •t t 1 52Vft. 9'1d ... ~el 10-llpm
BAKER FACES FELONY FORGERY COUNT •••
From Al
the fo undation's board. said in his
eight years of worktng with Baker he
has never known him 10 be dishonest.
''I'm sad about 11. 1s m ) onl)
reaction. I'm sad for Da vid." Stnyktn
s:ud.
Sm) kin said he has yet to re-cei ve
results from an audit that was
launched b) the fou ndation to de·
tcrmine if Baker had tampered wi th
other funds. Although incomplete.
the accounting so far has not revealed
am other mconsistenc1es. invkin said. ·
John Nakaoka. Baker's con-
gressional campaign manager. said he
"as surprised at the decision to file
charges because of Baker s long
record of community service.
"Oa\ id 1s a phenomenally good
person who has contributed so much
to the community. He 1s alwa)s doing
things for others:· Nakaoka said.
"I'm vel) surprised b} the DA's
lihng."
Nakaoka said he spoke to Baker's
wife. Pally. last week. bu t has not
recently spoken with Da vid Baker.
"They were awa1ttng the outcome
of the investigation." Nakaoka said.
"This is not an easy thing to go
through."
Despite Cap1n1 ''i announcement.
Nakaoka said he and man) other
people rematn behtnd Baker.
··1 get a lot of phone calls from
people asking ho" Da' 1d 1s:· he said.
"'Th ere 1s an outpouring of people
who stand behind David I 00 percent.
They're all out there waiting for this
thing to pass."
Capizzi"s fili ng should also spartt
an announcement about Baker's fu-
tu re with the law firm of Paul,
Hastings. Janofsky and Walker. Rob-
en Lane, cxecu11ve director of the
firm said last week that the results of
an internal investigation into Baker's
conduct would be announced follow-
ing the conclusion of the District
Attome) 's investigation.
Baker has been on a _paid leave of
absence from the law firm sinct the
June election.
Stall writers Laoce lgJNa 8""
Joaatbaa Vo/ilre coatrlboted i. '*"
report.
SLAIN WOMAN WAS ALSO RAPED ...
From Al
nothing appeared to have been taken
from the apartment. which was
cl uttered with moving boxes. The
G1bbonses moved into Mediter-
ranean Village only days before the
slaying.
But Johnson said today that an
inventory of Gibbons' belongings
showed the woman's wedd ing set, her
watch and Ke nt Gibbons' scientific
calculator were missing.
Even wi th the information.
authorities are counting on a $25.000
reward to lead them to Gibbons'
killer. Johnson said. The source that
has offered the reward has asked to
remai n anonymous.
"This reall) doesn't give us any
dues," Johnson said. "The suspect
may have seen the opponunity and
taken the propeny. or It might have
been a burgla~ in the first place.
"This doesn t lead us anywhere but
the pawn shops:·
Johnson said detecti ves will
circulate fliers wi th pictures of the
jewelry and calculator to other police
agencies and pawn shops. When a
pawn broker bu ys an item. he must
fill out a slip and submit it to the
police dcpanment de cribing the
ttem.
The reward will be paid to anyone
who provides information leading to
the arrest and conviction of Gibbons'
killer. Johnson said. Anyone with any
information about the slayi ng 11
asked to call the Costa Mesa Police
Depanment at 754-5280.
In an earlier conversation. the
lieutenant said police are waiting for
the kmcr to slip up.
"A lot of people who do somethitta
like this can't keep it secret," he said.
"They go to a bar and have a couple of
beers an.d can't help braJ&ing about it,
or they tell their best fnend.''
Kent Gibbons returned to the
couple's nat ive Utah after his wife's
death and has not returned to Costa
Mesa.
MAY CO. FINED OVER ADVERTISING •..
From Al
Sandoval said Tuesday that the
investigation of MaJ Co. stores had
been going on since uly. 1987.
"'The way it began was that we h11d
an mvcstigatorwbo went in to make a
purchase, and got talking to a sales-
person who told him. "oh yes. we
mark them down as soon as we get
them.'" Sandoval said. "Also. we'd
been gctmg some complaints from
mall business people who said they
were unable to compete against these
practices ...
Similar in vestigations. with similar
results. have been conducted in Los
Angeles and Sacramento counties.
Sandoval said.
"It appeared to us that the problem
was escalating. .. she said. "Maybe it's
not earth-shattering. but all we're
trying to do is let the consumer be
fu ll) informed.'" ·
To comply with the coun order.
Ma} Co. stores must follow certain
gu1dehnes in comparing sale prices to
··original" or "r~:ir" prices.
A "regular' must be a price
which was offered · rat least 10 days
before the sale and I 0 days after the
sale.
So-called regular prices must be
rcaristic. market-determined prices.
Setting artificially high regular prices
to make sale prices look better 1s not
permitted.
If a w ice 1s advcnised as the
Through the centuries, fine wood shutters have
become synon ymou1 with luxury and good taste.
Today, Heirwood Shutters give an easy 9'eg8n<le
to any Interior from Colonial to Ultra Modern.
No other wtndow cowrlng performs Its function
with SUCh beauty and gr~. Shutters nner light
with an Infinite variety of ltytee. reduce glare,
block out heat and cold, maximize the view and
e>epand Interiors with Clean, ltmple lines. Unlike
other window treatments, thutter1 lncreue your
home'• vafue.
With Helrwooct Shutter I you may ChOOM
Louver widths of 11.4, 2tn. 3tn, and 4'~.
We Mlect the flneat WOOdt avattable and offer a •ee Mlectton of c:otors or stem• Md we wt11 hefp
yOU Mlect the belt dMlgn for your wtndowl Md
llkllng --door1 .
Serving California since 1953
"original" price. the merchandise
must have been offered at that price
for six months. If a sale price is beina
compared to a so-called oriainal
price. any intermediate pri~ lhal
ha ve been offered mu.st be disclosed.
The coun order also requires lhat
merchandise that is not on sale, but
which appears under a sale banner, be
clearly marked. so that customcn arc
not misled into thinking it is on sale.
• May Co.-Califomia's chairman, Ed
Mangiafico. was out of town on
Tuesday and could not be reached for
comment, a spokeswoman said
The company 1s a division of May
Co. Stores. of St. Louis.
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
Call the ottice nearest you ....... ..,..,_ •
•
• ............. g' ••• ,,
9'7'91111•a-.~.._CA_,
(714) HI •11 (114) ... '7'7
....... (11~ 711-11tt &,.. .....
• •
\
Home and Garden
Show will salute
all county cities
The 27 cities of Orange County will be saluted as
put of the county's lOOth birthday celebration in the
).4th annual Sou them California Home and Garden
Show, which opens Saturda¥ and runs through Aug.
28 at the Anaheim Convention Center.
Sunday will be Costa Mesa Day as three county
cities will be spotlighted each day of the ninc.<fay
event1 which will feature the onl)' West Coast
Sbowina of the Hartford House. This is a full-sea.Le
model home designed by Hartford Insurance with
101 ufety and convenience modifications.
Also on the program arc Antique Row, an arts
and crafts faire. a flower show and musical
entertainment. Hours arc Saturdays from 11 a.m. to
10 p.m .. Sundays from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
Monday throullh Friday from 2 to JO p.m. Call
999-8900 for a<fditional information.
ci.. reanlon •lated
The 1978 ~duating cl ass of Fountain Valley Kiah School will hold lls 10th reunion Saturday at
the Red Lion Inn in Costa Mesa. with a dinner and
dance starting at 6 p.m. ~ntcrtainm?nt '-''Ill bt provided by the tegends.
featuring Fountain Valley alumnus George Trull-
inaer. Alumni who have not been contacted should
call S39-3733 for ticket reservations.
Blood drive Jn Newport
Newport Beach residents can perform a
lifesaving act b} donaung blood this month at one of
two blood dri ves. The first wi ll be held Sunday from
81.m. to 12:45 p.m. in the parish Hall of Our Lady
Queen of Angels Church, 2046 Mar Vista. with
appointments taken at 644-9218.
Hoag Memorial Hospital will hold a blood
drive Aug. 29 from 7 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Appoint-
ments for donations may be obtained by calling
966-51 60.
CIWJeae art show set
The Ching Chi Artists Guild will present master
Chinese brush painter Wang Mo-Chen in a
demonstration Sunda} at Coastline Community
College's Costa Mesa Center. 2990 Mesa Verde
Drive East.
The program 1s scheduled from I to 4 p.m.
Admission 1s free and the event 1s open to the public.
AIDS benefit concert
The fi rst Orange Count~ AIDS benefit reggae
concert and dance jam will be held Sunday from
noon to 11 p.m. at the Iglesia Community Center.
2-4671 Via Iglesia. Laguna Hills.
Reggae stars StrangcJah Cole. Queen Rejoice
and Michael King will be the featured performers.
Call 458-64 7 I for ticket 1nformat1on.
Goodwill party set
The Goodwill Helmsmen. a volunteer support
sn>UP for Goodwill lndustnes of Orange Count).
will hose a membership party Sunda} at the Lido Isle
home of Marty and Amelia Lockney.
For information about the event. or about
membership in the Good"' ill Helmsmen. call
Goodwill at 547-630 1.
Jrlaorescent mineral show
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. Auguet 17. 1• A8
Historic Clark Hotel may be saved
By 808 VAN EYKEN
Ot ... 0.-,,._IWI
Huntington Beach city officials have
decided to take over the city's oldest
remaining brick hotel, but a study of the
building's histonc significance could save
1t from demolition.
C11¥ offi cials know little about the Clark
Hotel s early history. but Histoncal Re-
sources Board Chairwoman Barbara M1tk-
ovi~h said the agm_g hostelrr once played
an 1m~rtant role in Huntington Beach's
financial life.
"We know it was one of the ma.ior
financial centers 1n the mid-I 920s," said
.... ,,
M1lkovlch. "The bottom Ooor housed
ational Bu1ldaog and Loan and First
a11onal Bank. That congl omera te
pronded the capital for the growth that
was needed to accommodatr the 011 boom
1n the 1920s."
The old hotel. "'h1eh still has rooms for
rent bv the month, 1s located at 2~8 Mam
t .. on· a block that 1s slated for demohuon
to make y,ay for ne"' retail !>lores and a
parking structure
But the env1ronmen1al im pact repon tor
the redevelopment project also 1ndudes a
study of the hotel's place 1n Huntingt on
Beach history. and M1lko' 1ch s.a1d she
AUGUsr l s. is a
hufX''I the C It) Coune1l will be persuaded
to pre~n t' the bu1Jd1ng once its full
lmton I') l nown
\l1ll<n llh \aid shed1d not know exactlv
"'hen the hotrl "'.as built. ·
··e ut I'd ~a~ 1921. The building and loan
that "'a') located on the first fl oor.opened 10
19~1." \hC said
T"' o hotel') older than the Clark still
~un "e in the Cit). M1lko 1ch said. One.
thl· 1905 Evangeline Hotel. is now the
( olon1al Inn 'outh hostel. The 1903
\\orth\ rnmplex. on Walnut Avenue at
nth ~trl't'I had apartments for seasonal
guem
,Still in mourning _
Friends and reladTe. of M>me of the 166 people
killed ln the cruh of Flltfht 265 mark the 1-year
annivenary of the tragecfy ln Detroit on Tue.day.
Seven Orange County re.Jdents were killed ln the
c rash of the ~orthwest airliner bound for John
Wayne Airport.
.. The Worth) building LS on the nationaJ
ht tone regi tcr," be said. "The Clark
should be too. Those 01hcr two•~ made of
v.ood. Tht> Clark 1s the onl y one done in
bnck Ma)be after the rtpon is completed
v.e'll be able to gt>t 11 preserved."
M1lkov1ch said she had just received
'-'Ord that the hotel might be linked to the • Clar~ famil) of Los <\ngeles. which owned
a l ha1n of hotels in the early part of this
century.
Mond:t) '\ action b) the City Council
authonL~ the purchast of the hotel
through eminent domain. No dcmoljtfon
order 'has been issued for the building.
Me sans
in court
over gold
robbery
By JONATHAl'li VOUKE
Of -Oeil1 l"llot Ital!
.\ prchm1na~ hl'anng was scheduled to
be&in toda~ for l\\O Costa Mesa men
accused ot arming themselves and don-
ning camouflage clothing to rob a remote
San Bernardino mining camp and escap-
ing v.11h S~lWOO 1n gold nuggets.
Pohct> am~ted the alleged bandits. They
found a ~ache of"'rapons alJegedly used in
th e robber\ But the gold -raw chunks in
th ree gla's \ 1als -1s mil m1ssmg.
··'" e ha' c no leads on 11.-said San
Bernardino hm ffs Detective Steve
Mullens "'"r're kmd of at a standstill as
far as the gold goes."
Harold Euge ne Honeycutt. 30. and
Bnan Mauhe"' hu:anz. 21. alle&edly
1denutied themo;cf\ C'S as pohcc officers
engaged ma drug raid "' hen the) stormed a
t'-'o-man mining camp nestled between
Big Bear and Yucca Valley m June.
Mullens said. .\bou1 a dozen miners seek their fortune
1n the area. v.h1ch 1s about 65 miles
northeast of Orange County and accessible
onl" b' dirt road. The camps are without
elcctncal po""er or telephones. authorities
said.
Hone\cutt and hwaru were frequent '1s1to~ · 1n the area around the camp,
Mullens said One of their alleged victims
recognized the men and asked for idcntifi·
c:lllOn ~arching the camp. the bandits found
the je'-'ell)-Quaht~ gold. two shoiguns., t~o
ntlcs and three handguns. Mullens said.
Before fleeing. th~ tore. the engmc wires
from the ~icums· truck. but left the miners
unharmed . ·
The detec11 .. e said lhr '1cums proVl~
enough rnformat1on to lead authont1cs to . ·'
hwam· Wh1mer Strttt h~c. w~ :
•
The Capistrano Val le) Rock and Mineral Club
will present a lecture b} Greg .\nderson on
fluorcsccnt materials Sunda\ at Glendale Federal
Savinas. at Pico and Calle de Industries. San
Clemente. soy inolested by priest to get $54, 720 Honc,cuu "'as amsted Schwanz later · ..
surrendered to Costa MC$3 aulhontics. A ..
Regul ar meeungs arc held on the 1hird
Wednesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. Call
496-6886 or 364-6905 for further information.
Wednesday, Aag. 17
• 7 p.m. Lagana Beacb Open Space Com-ala-council chambers. 505 Forest Ave. e .30 p.m. Lagana Beacb Parkin1, Traffic and
'are.lation Committee, council chambers. 505
ForntAve.
By The Associated Press
The Roman Cath olic Chu rch ha s agreed
to pa~ $54.720 to an Anaheim bo~ who
said he was molested b} a priest during a
church-sponsorrd Boy Scout camping tnp
1n 1983.
If approvl.'d b) a judge nc"<t week. the
agreement ..-.ould end a lawsuit brought on
behalfofthe bo\. who said the Re'. Rohen
Foley molested' him and then warned him
10 remain silent Or "the devil '-"OUld get
him .. '0 cnm1nal lhargc~ '-'Crl' lilt'd ag.i1n\t
Fole\. "'hu ""as 'iCnt out of the countn b\
the ch urch aftrr the tx)\ ·.-, mother. loan Po~scmato. rnmpla1m·d ·to officials of "it
Ju~11n ~fart H (athohc Church 1n
.\nahc1m • ·
Fnlc~ "'a a parish priest Jt 1hc ..:hun: h
Jttcnded h) Possemato and her 'iOn. "ho
\\IS at the time. PmscmJto urged the
church to r<"ass1gn the priest I<' duttts
unrelated to ch ildren
\\ hl'n ,ht' karneJ that he had been
~w.1gnl'd t11 a church in England and no
111ha J\ 11on had been ta~en . she hired an
• .1t1nrnn "ho filed su11 on her son's behalf
< >n \lt,nda'. Poo;l>emato ..aid she ..-.as
d1 ... t1lu,1ont'd i:,, the church·~ reac11on and
nll'' \\ 1-.h,• '\hl:had li~st gone to the police
In ;ig.rceing. to the ~ttknrent. no wrong-
\t.11ng ..-..i, ..1Jm1tted h~ the church
Th,· IJ"sull name) Fok' and the
DwceSl' 01 Orange ( ount~ as defendants
.
\tu liens ~1d 1hc pair led authorities to a cal he of "'ea pons m Long Beath,· but -..... ,-
denied an' ~no" l('(fgt' of the .gold. · . "The~ tal~ed 10 us. Ult') just d1qn't ~Y
Jn\'lhmg about the gold ... Mullens S3Jd.
..\ \forongo VaUe). Muf!icipal Court
judge I~ c;chcdukd to dttermtne at tho end
of the prehm1na" heanng whe ther t~re is
sufficcnl "' Ldcncc for the pair to stand·
trial Each faces a single' rbbbcry c~.
Ge-orgc Kcntine. a lands and mineral otli~r for the 81i Bear Ranger District· in
the an Qtrnard100 Nauonal Forest.. said .
earlier that gold robberies aren't uncom-
mon among the area's miners. ·
• 7:30 p.m. Lagua B'eacb EJ1VlronmutaJ
lafety Committee, Police Department library, 505
Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m. Hutln1ton Beacla Tom·orrow,
Strasbaugh Enginecnng 1Ju1lding, 18460 Gothard St
'New heart club' assails animal aCtiVists'·raid. ·
_Thanday,Aug.18
LOM.\ LINDA (.\P) -Loma Linda
Un1,es1t) Medical Ct>nter officials.
fla nked b) cooing and Cl) mg babies "'ho
had recc1' cd heart transplants at their
hospital. blasted animal nght ac11" 1sts
who ra1dt"d a research lab.
·-r, e got a small fan duh .. Baile~ told
reporters as he '-'3' ed to the eight children
and their parents . ..-.ho ~upported him "' 1th
signs and applause
at the mrd1cal ccnter dunng "'h1ch 'Organ
tr Jn"lplant re<.car..:h papers '-'Crc stolen and
. 1, 11' 1~1' painted the '-'Ords '"torturers .. and
"murdt•rt•r, .. on ''allo; The group also
da1 mrd to ha\\.' o;tolen se' en dogs
Rancho Cucamonga:" ho recci"'cd a new
hoan in Ma\, wore sandWlcb board
placa'rds that ~ad. "l"m me because of Dr .
Baile) .. and "I lo"e 'ou. Dr. BaUe)."
• 4:30 p.m. Lapaa Buell H1maa Affairs
c-mtttee, community center, 384 legjon SL
• • 6:30 p.m. Lagoa Beacb Board of AdjHt-..a aM l>fllp Review, council chambers. 505
forest Ave.
C ni,crs1t) offi cials held a news con-
ference Tuesday wi th Dr. Leonard Balle} .
the surgeon whose infant organ transplant
program was the target of the animal nghts
raiders.
He said the ~oung ters. '-"ho each
rcccl\ ed human hean transplants at LomJ
Linda. "ould not tll· ah'e '-'lthout the
ad,·anC<.'s made throu gh research on
animal"
Th,· samt' group claimed 1t took ht>agle~
lrnm J rl''ieJrch lah at l'Cl.
\ 'onne lazar. f emanao·s mother.
orgaruz~ the parents~appearancc.
The -\nsmal L1bcrat1 0n Front claimed
re'irons1b1ht' for a rre-<la" n raid ~tonda'
\hout 2ll relall' e~ ,,f children s.a' e.d h'
B.11k' h,•an tran ... plants at Loma Lmda
turnt•d l\Ul tn "upp..•n oithe surgeon
\l\-\CJr-1,\d Fernando ~alaiar of
"I I lht'' cou1d onl) look into these ·
ch1ldrcn\.eo.es. I don't SC't' ~ov. they could
go 10 bt.'<1 peaceful!) ·· she said of t.l'ie
at. II\ 1<,tS .
Eigh~ face dl'ug charges
after raid on Mesa motel
BJ JONATllAN VOLllE °' ..............
Eipt people were arrested on drug
cbatln in a Newport Boulevard
motel after an Irvine officer stopped a
driverlllqpedly uoderthe influence of
coc:aiftc.
Cotta Mesa Lt. Alan Kent said the
driver tokt the officer about a party in
the Newport Boulevard motel, and
the offker notified Costa Mesa
authorities.
Thtt:e Costa Mesa officers were
sent to the motel where eiaht people
....., .. 1a81acla r
A l'llidcDt on Five Harbors Drive
1epartld 1 car parked in front of her ~ 11 2:4' a.m. S..acb ~mna is
bee •'Ill a continual prot>tcm, she llil nlofticer who checked out the a. llilld two peop1e inside pla)'l na
cm& • • • A ... was tlteplna btbind the
AllllW·11t lrookhunt Street and
Allllm A ¥eaue. • • • 9-ebodY bloU into an apan-
..,.. .. Oubu Street. but lhe .-...a ..w nodaina wu milliQI.
V..Ttt arrested. Kent said.
Five people were arrested leaving
the motel. while three others were
arrested inside the room. the lieuten-
ant said.
Arrested on suspicion of pos·
session of cocaine or susp1eton of
being under the influence wen": Thaer
Mustafa, 26. of Costa Mesa: William
Doddy, 32, ofSanta Ana; Christopher
Dahl. 25. of Anaheim: Brenda Foat.
20. of Huntington Beach; John Davis. 22. of Huntington Beach; Renee
Browning. 21. of Garden Grove:
Laura Hartley. 30, ofGa~n Gr<>ve
• • • Laughina. screaming and cryii\I
was heard from a home on Birchwood
Drive. Officers found a a-rty in
Pf'OIJ'CSS. ••• Two men were pert_ed in front ofa
home on 1 St.b Street The woman
who reponed them aid tbe wu ~ they weft .,. .. to bmlk
into her.-,.. but Police repMeid they were only .. loven. .. • • • A fcht WU~ Oil 19dl 5'reet
betMCD I '6-)ar-dd .... Iris &iflt'rieod and hit l~yar-old-. No
arm&a were rude.
and Tamm\ Reiber. 20. ol Garden
Gro' c. Keni said.
.\ll '-'ert• book('(! at Costa Mesa Cit'
Jail or Orange Count~ Jail. th~
lieutenant said.
'Tm not sure 1f the-. were all
friends. but there was s0me sort of
pan) 1n then•." Kent said.
Monda) morning's raid mar~t"d
th(' k'Cond drug rt1d at a Ne"' pcin
Boukvard motel in le-s:s than a "'~k
Thursda) narcotics officers raided
the Coast Motel. 1x pc-epic were
arrested and a quaner ounl'C of
cocaine valued at S I. 4i00 se1Lcd.
authonues said.
• • • Seven kids wcrt S('('o acting
su 1p1c1ousl)'On Ltw1s Lane. Fourte-en
rolrs of todet p1per ~re confiscated.
Newport Beacla
n unknown vandal used a glass
bouae to ~ tbt' t.ct window of a
pay 1987 Nll'MD ~ltar park~ on
Balbol BouJnard. the car owner told
pola Monday. The dall\< WU
etlimated •• SlOO. • ..! • A,_.., JV{.; teaoeo ~...tued at ~ ... 1eponed 11olell Monday
I mal C'Ute office°" East Coal
• • • The O'-' ner of.1 blac~ I Q8~ Lincoln
\'3rk \ II rt•poncd thr car stokn
\londa' from the parking lot of the
Lu,·k,\ mJrket on Ba lboa
Boulc\ard He told pohCT-that hi~
pa) ment~ had bttn cumnt and nci
llOt' elSt' had ~e~s to tnc C3r
Costa Mesa
.\ burglJr bn.,ke into a home on the
\00 block of \\ l'St \\ii son , trett anJ
ransacked 11 v.hllc the owner "'as on
'acat1on Thr intruder apparent I)
staved a\\h1le. helpmgh1mselfto food
and sh.a' mi. He then nOed drrsser dra"'e~ ~tore 'lteallng a T\'. \'( R.
c,tcreo and computer • • • Morr than SS.:OO 't'as tolcn trom
the Mobil Ga" '\tat 1on at J4"'0
Fain ie"' Rd Thl' ov. ncr placed the
mone in the ollicc safe for a Bnnl\
pickup. then disco' cred the folJoy, 1ng
d?) that the monc) v.a go nt' but no
pickup had occuf'T't'd There were no
tgns of fotttd cntl"\ and,a le) l C'pt in
the offict opened the S3le
LapnaBeacb
mountain b1C\clc 'alued al S100 was rcportc-d ~tofen T uC1day after·
noon from the bled. of hnle
tr«t. • • • mcone apparent!) stoic $260
wonb of dolht"f ft'om a sto~ at I.St 6
. COMt H\lhwa)'. The thd\ was ~pontd Tucsda) at tO:S4 L m.
r .. ea1av.u.,
.\ black I 916 Horida CR was
S1okD from its -"• ~ oo
Bndhunt Strftt "°"" Of Quail
Rl,Jt1 Jrt'und l >n am Tuesda' • • • l\11nwont' push<"d a bedroom wm-
do" t1Ul 1\i m framt" at an El Gorra
'trl't'l h<'mC' Tucsda~ morning and
\IOk -,C\l'rJI llC'm\ ofjt'\\t'll) • • • \ s1enugraph machine was 5tolcn
lrt'm tht• truql oia 1."'3.T panked 1n the
I ~ 1 'I! t Mod. of 'le'-' hope Road be-
t\l. ecn ~ I) p.m \fonda~ and Q 30
J m T uc..Ja,
Irvine
\man 1n his .'lk follo..-.cd an In int'
"'l'man to her Orange Blossom home
and beg:in ma~turbat1ng in fro nt of
her The womaQ ran 1oto her home
. . .
and the suspect fled
• • •
Computer equipment worth
s~. f stolen from a bus mess in the I b ock of McGaw AVCtlUt'
beJw , a IT\ and 4 p m Monday. • • • nc punched ·the tock on a
\'olksv..agcn Bug :ind stole the vc--
h1cte's tel"C'O while Lt was parked in
the I block of E ~planadc bctwun
10 fl m Monday and 6 am. Tuctday. • • • A. height gauge and calibrat10n
~u 1pmcnt v..ere stolen from a bus1-
nes 1n the t 780Q block of Slcy Park
Boulevard betv.C'Cn 4-~ p.m Tues-
day
Masked gunman h ·oids up
motorist in Costa Mesa
.\ < o<;ta Mt~ man was robbed at
gunpoint b) a man weannga skl mask
who ma' ha' e pulled the same crime
tv.o wet\.' earhcr pohcc id today l\nthon~ \\a)ne 'Huahcs. 30, wu
ltlll\I 10 hts car at the 1ntenection of
Harbor Boulevard and Meta Verdt wt at about 12·JO Lm. s.a.tdly
-.hen the suspect walked "I> to tht
passeaecr •indo• and daiwade4
money .
Hughn told Offioer P. T Donck10
that he dtclft' undcmaitd tM ...... ,
first command.
Tbc ~then pUlkd -I 1111111 stcd ~~ and Mid. ~ -'OW IDOGC')' ....
Huahcs had JUJt been paid SSOO
and had pe.nofthc monry1n hit,_.t
pants pocket. He &Nied o.t S160
from that pocket ud haded it to lk
SUspu'l.
The man then Oed oa fOol l8 • unknown darectioo. OoMetol&ida ..... ,..., _
1tportldJWJ29bfawa a.,.._ allins ia blr car a& a oame 1 ·1 I
.-t•MI&wlu'ftll..,.. udMaaV .. lim& •
Al IJIItf '=•lillr.W abmlt• ,_ la~'-"~ I IJ I W ,~. ... ..
dae·a~s
• ..
. .
OrMQI COllt DAILY PILOT/ Wednelday, Auguat 17, 1088
' .
Bush says Quayle
will help ticket
In every region
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Georae
Bush today called has new runnina
mate, 41 ·year-old Sen. Dan Quayle,
"one of the risina stirs in the
Republican Party" and said he would
be qualified to be "one heanbcat
away from the president."
Bush said the sccond·tenn Indiana
senator would help the GOP ticket in
every rq.ion of America. " We're
goina to tell the truth and it's going to
seem like they've (the Democrats)
enpged a couple o( pit bulls," Bush
said. ·
·•we agree on the fundamental
challenges that face this country,"
Bush said, standina alonpide his
conservative runnina mate at a news
conference just houn before the
Republican National~ention
gives Bush its 1988 presidential
nomination.
The first question to Bush at the
first Bush-Quayle tfleWS conference
was whether Quayle was qualified to
step in as president should anything
happen to Bush. The vice president
said, "I've listened to his peers ... who
speak eloquently of Dan Quayle's
standing to be one heanbcat away
from the prcsjdency."
Describing 1 his qualifications,
Quayle said he had spent a dozen
years in Congress, had experience in
Indiana state '-ovemment and "had
met a payroll ' at 'his family news.
paper in Indiana. Quayle has been in
Congress since he was 29.
Quayle was asked about whether he
had been involved with Paula
Parkinson. the key figure in a scx·and·
influence scandal in 1980. Quayle
and two other members of Congress
spent a weekend with Parkinson in
Aorida condominium.
"That has been covered and there's ·
nothing to it," Quayle said. Asked if
he had seen Parkinson on any other
occasion, he said. "No."
Quayle was asked repeatedly why
he went into the National Guard as a young man instead of joining forces
that might .put him in Vietnam. "I
have a deep affection for those men
and women who sacrificed their lives
in Vietnam and for anybody to imply
anything differently 1s just simply
wrong," he said.
He said it was not a handicap that
be had not served in Vietnam.
Bush was asked if it iwas smart
politics to choose a running mate so
much like himself. "He's different
from me," Bush said in response.
"I'm 64 and he is 41 ."
-Quayle, an cir. to-ffiC Pulliam •
newspaper publishing empire, was
asked about reports that his wealth
exceeded $200 million.
··Why do you thin~ I chose him?"
Bush interjected. jokingly.
Also attempting humor. Quayle
said. "That figure is not correct.
Believe me, you have caused me a lot
of problems at home because my wife
is asking about that. ... "
Bush, asked if the addition of
Quayle underscored the image of
Republicans as the party of the rich.
said, "I picked the best man ... It's not
a question of personal wealth."
Bush opened his news conference
by expressing "how horrible I feel"
about the deaths today of President
Mohammad Zia ul-Haq and U.S.
Ambassador Arnold L. Raphel. They
were killed today when their Paki-
stani lnilitary p1ane exploded in the
eastern part of that country.
Turning back to politics. Bush said
he and Quayle woutd be a formidable
challenge to the Democratic team of
u ..... ,,. •••
Vice Prealdent Geor&e Buh •bailee handa with Indiana Sen.
Dan Quayle daring a rally In New Orleana on Tueaday after
announclng that be had choeen hJm u hU rwinln& mate.
Michael Dukakis and Lloyd-Bentsen.
Describing Quayle as "one of the
rising stars in the Republican Party,"
Bush said he picked the Indiana
senator for several reasons. "Most
importantly. he's oualified,.. Bush
said. ·
Moroever, he said, "W e agree on
the fundamerital challenges that face
this country: how to keep America
strong and secure. how to create
opportunities for American fami lies.
While a Midwestener, I believe he
will help our cause in every pan of the
country."
The news conference provided
Bush with an opportunity to tweak
the Dukakis-Bentsen team about th e
difTernces on policy issues.
"We aren't going off in two dif-
ferent directions like the Demcoratic
ticket... We won't have to debate each
other." the vice president said.
Earlier in the day Bush practiced
his acceptance speech at the podium of the Louisiana Superdome conven-
tion hall where his nomination will be
secured late tonight.
"We'll do all right. I'll do OK," he
said of his acceptance speech, set for
Thursday night.
Description of Bush grandchildren criticized
NEW ORLEANS (A P) -George Bush's
description of his three Mexican-American grand-
children as .. the little brown ones·· drew a mixed
reaction among-some Hispanic Americans. One
Hispanic labor leader said the remark showed the
vice president is insensitive.
Bush greeted President Reagan on Tuesday at
Belle Chasse Naval Air Station, and the -vice
president to!d the president he want~d hi!" to meet his grandchildren who had flown wtth him on Air
Force Two from Washin~ton.
Republican National Convention from San An-
tonio. Texas, said Bush's comment was a "remark
of sincere affection" that shouldn't be take n out of
co ntext.
"All m} discussions wi th the Bushes has led
me to believe that George Bush cherishes the
uniqueness of his family. has an overwhelming
love and afTection for his grandchildren. Jeb's
child ren," said Barrera. who accompanied the
Bush famil} on their riverboat ride on Tuesday.
mark reflected insensitivity.
"Just sayins that means he knows they're
difTerent. He didn't say 'those are my grand-
children.' He didn't just r~fer to the kids by their
names:· Belmontez said in a telephone interview.
"Thal just shows that he's ... insensitive."
Belmontcz said it was unlikely the remark
would afTcct Bush's standing with members of his
own pan~.
Tr.casurv Secretary James A. Baker Ill, Bush's
campaign chairman, told reporters, "The vice
president is extremely proud of the fact that his
Health authority:
Lengthy heat wave
may kill thousand~
,.WASHINGTON (AP) -Rising
temperatures across America are
overwhelming vulnerable people and
could kill thousands, according to an
authority on health and the environ-
ment. "This will probably emerge as one of the largest natural disasters of this
century ... and it will have just
whispered its way by," said W.
Moulton A very, exccutt ve director of
the Center.for Environmental Physi-
ology in Washington.
By ones and twos, the poor and
elderly are succumbing to the heat,
'which overtaxes their bodies, lie said.
But most o( these trajedies will pass
with' little notice, bemg recorded in
government statistics as heart attacks
or strokes. rather than heat-related fatalitie_s._ _ .
· Jn the end, Avery warned Tuesday.
this summer's stiflinj temperatures
threaten to exact a higher death toll
than the 1980 heat wave that killed an
estimated 15.000 Americans,
"If I had in my hand right now the
number of people that have died this
summer(from heat) it would be front-
page news all over the country, but I
don't have that numbe r," said Avery.
whose non-profit center researches
the effects ofheat and cold on humans
for government qencies.
He has araued for a reportina
system to record heat deaths, but
statisticians musl depend on compar·
i~ deaths during heal wave years
wlJh "normal" years and calcula1ina
the excess fatalities. That was the
system used to ~etermine the I S,000
extra deaths in 1980.
"What we're tivina through now is ·
the same thing we were living through
in 1980," and is worse than many
other hot summers, he said.
Normal death rates nearly doubled
from Oklahoma east durina a 1966
heat wave -with deaths jumping to
fi ve times normal in St. Louis -
according to the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration.
The SCnate Special Commiuec on
Aging later reported that heat waves
in 1963 and 1966 claimed a total of
11 ,000 lives.
And a UC. Berkeley studr found
that hot spells in Los Angeles an 1939,
1955 and 1963 each produced more
excess deaths than any recorded
natural disaster in that state, includ-
ing the 1906 San Francisco earth-
quake.
Historic, monitored
nuke test applauded
PAHUTE MESA. Nev. (A P) -
The United States detonated a nu-
clear device under this remote desert
mesa today in an unprecedented test
involving Soviet scientists under an
agreement by both countries for
monitoring each other's nuClear
weapons tests. The nuclear device went off at 10
a.m., causing a ripple on the desert
surface at ground zero but was not felt
at the control center 30 miles away,
where it was observed on television
screens.
Diplomats who helped forge the
agreement in Geneva late last year
had gathered at the control point,
joining scientists and military of-
ficials who direct the nuclear weapons
programs for the two superpowers ..
Applause broke out after the test.
The nuclear weapon, with an
explosive punch nearly 12 times the
Hiroshima bomb, was buried 2,020
feet in the belly of a scenic mesa I 30
miles northwest of las Vegas on the
secret Nevada Test Site. The weapon
was encased in a steel canister,
painted red, white and blue by
workers who planted the device three
weeks ago.
Judge overrules kin of
Lib·erace in wi~l dispute "These are Jebby's kids from Florida, the little
brown ones." the vice president said.
The three youngsters -Jeb Jr., Noelle, and Geo~e P. -are the children of Bush's son. Jeb.
and h1 s Mexica n-born wife, Columba.
The former district judge said there is
"nothing at all vulgar or insidious or disrespectful
about being orown or being black. It is simply just
a description.·· grandchildren are 50 pertent Hispanic." By The Associated Press Bush has often bragged about the fa mily. In Los Angeles. Al Belmontez. vice president
of one of the local labor chapters of the Mexican-
American Political Association. said Bush's re-
wh ich lives in Tallahassee. Fla. LAS VEGAS-A judge rejected a bid to remove the executorofliberace's George P. Bush. 13. gave the pledge of multimillion dollar estate, overruling claims by his sister and four associates Roy Barrera Jr .. a Hispanic delegate to the allegiance at Tuesday's session of the convention. that the lawyer had looted the estate after orchestrating a deathbed wilt: i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Tu~a~ruliq~~do~c~p~ina~qoo~ba~~~t~~tc~~~ fortune. State District Judge Michael Wendell still must rule on who will pay
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the legal fees. Attorneys for the executor, Joel Strote of Beverly Hills, have
asked that the fees be paid by the plaintiffs, including Liberace's sister. Angie,
74, who was left $594.000. She had described herself as penniless.
F r anJcll n D. Roosevelt Jr. dle11 of cancer
POUGHKEEPSIE. N.Y. -Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr., a former
congressman and the third son of Franklin·and Eleanor Roosevelt died of
cancer tod~y. his 74th ~irthday, at the V?ssar Brothers Hospital. Rc'.>osevelt,
who li ved .m nearby M.11lbrook. ~as admitted to t~e hospital on July 21 . said
Charles.Gill. a spokesman. He died at 8 a.m. Chnstopher Roosevelt said his
father died oflung cancer. "It was a very late diagnosis and very fast moving."
Ez-alde JbJJcs Iran-Contra memo, Raglin
WASH INGTON .-A.former White House aide has told prosecutors he
saw a memo about d1vers1on of U.S.-lran arms-sale profits to Nicaraguan
-rebels attached to.a co"'.er letter to President Reagan, according to court papers.
James R. Radz1 msk1, a former National Security Council aide told
prosecutors he recalled seeing a memo by former NSC aide Oliver L. North
that referred to S 12 million in arms-sale proceeds going to the Contras
·.according to the coun filing in U.S. District Coun. '
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North Korea agrees
to meet face-to-face
over role in Olympics
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -
North Korea today said it would meet
with South Korean delegates Friday
to prepare for a joint parliamentary
session on a non-aggression pact and
the Nonh's demand to c~host the
Olympics. .
Sou\h Korea's National Assembly
said North Korea's Supreme People's
Assembly agreed in a telephone
message to send five delegates to the
truce village of Panmunjom on
Friday. It would be the first time in
nearly three years that the two Koreas
have met face-t~facc.
Both sides last met in December
1985 at Red Cross talks at Pan-
munjom. But the North shelved all
inter-Korea dialoeue in early 1986 to
protest regular Joint military ex-
ercises between So uth Korea and the
United States.
Tne latest peare overtures began
July 21 , when the North proposed
that a joint session of the parliaments
draft a non-aggression pact. It later
proposed that they discuss the Olym-
pics, which open Sept. 17 in Seoul.
North Korea has said it will boycott
the Olympics unless it is allowed to
co-host them. South Korea and
international Olympic officials have
rejected the demand because the
Games are awarded only to one city.
North Korea had proposed the
meeting for today, but the South
suggested moving it to Friday so it
wouldn't interfere with celebrations
marking 30 days before the Olympics
begin.
An assembly source, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said the
North's message today did not men-
tion its earlier demand for full-
fledged parliamentary talks. The two
sides have disagreed over the North's
demand to include representatives of
all walks oflife in the main legislative
conference.
The North also insists Frida) 's
meeting should discuss onl) log1sucal
am1ngements for main talks. '
Israelis accu-ed of beating
Palestinians during strike
CALIFORNIA
Disabled fight
for right to
keep children
SAN JOSE (AP) -Inspired by a
woman with cerebral palsy who
foul.ht unsuccessfully to keep her
chifdren, disabled parents across the
country arc likely to mount similar
custody challenges, her lawyer says.
Attorney Clay Bedford said Tiffany
Callo's case won support from many
other disabled parents and will have
an influence despite the decision to
end the custody battle.
"I think Tiffany has galvanized the
cause of disabled parents' rights
across the nation," he said ... There's
going to be other cases because there's
a lot of disabled parents out there."
After stones about CaJlo's case
appeared in newspapers throughout
the country last year and earlier th.is
)Car. she received dozens ofletters tn
support of her fight, Bedford said.
Callo. 21 . said she agreed to the
sculement that would allow her I g..
month-old and 8-month-old boys to
be raised toget~~r by foster parcn.ts
and let her v1s1t them every six
-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/W9dneeday, Augu9t 17. 1111 Al
Judge halts State Farm
support of no-fault drive
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A JUdfC has issued a
temporary rcstrafoina order prottlbitma State Farm
Mutual Automobile. Insurance Co. from contributing any
more money to a statewide referendum for n~fault auto insurance.
Superior Court Judge Barnet Cooperman issued the
order until Aug. 26, when he will hold a hearing to
consider if a preliminary in1unction should be granted.
The judge explained Tuesday that his order was
intended .. to maantam the status quo" until the hearing.
State Farm has given more than S l".4 million to
Proposition 104, a referendum to establtsh n~fault auto
insurance an Caltfom1a, a spokesman said. The industry
as a whole is expected to spend $43 million to support the
measure.
Wilham Shemoff. the attome) representing Ben-
jantin G. Barnes who filed the suit, said Lbe temporary
order does not affect the money already donated. but
blocks f urthcr tate Farm contributions and warns other
contnbutors.
"Other mutual insurers are in the same boat as State
Farm . so the y will be acting at 1he1r own peril,"'Shemoff
said.
nul the order was issued, State Fann had planned
to make another contnbution to the campaian. said Jim
Stahly. public relations director at State Farm head-
quarters an Bloomington. Ill. He did not k.now the amount
of the planned contnbutton.
State Farm had planned to give lhe campaign a totaJ
of SJ m ii hon. hemofT 53,1d.
·· tatc Farm w11l abide by the ruling," Stahly said.
Vendor barred from marketing
line of America's Cup souvenirs
months. S.\N DIEGO tA P) -A San Diego merchant has contract agreement under which San Diego Yacht Oub
··in this case. itJUSt boil@down to been temporanh barred from selling clothing and named Sail Amenca as the host and n'lanagcr ofthe Cup's
an 1nd1vidual mother's decision that. souvenirs beanng the trademark symbols of the Amen-defense also ga ve the foundation exclusive trademark
at this point 1n time. it was in her ca·s Cup. nghts.
children's best interest and her best U.S. District Judge Edward J. Schwartz issued a >\lso named as a pla1nt1ff an the trademark
interest to let the open adoption go temporar) rcstra1nmgorderTuesdayat the request of Cup 1nfnngement complaint was .\menca's Cup Properties
through." Bedford said Monday. defenders. who clai m the wares of Don Parisette and his Inc .. which conveyed the trademark rights to Sail America
Bedford claimed the parerttal ter-America's Cup Club arc a trademark infnngement. as the most recent winner of the Cup
mmat1on proceedings Callo faced The restraining order remains an effect until Aug. 29. Pansette. who claims to have spent S50,000 in
were unconstitutional. an "all or when another heanng will be held on a request for a de, elo ping >\m enc"8·s Cup Club T-shirts, cu ps and caps
nothing" g.amble that encourages preliminary 1njunct1on that would prevent Pansctte from and other items. said an court that he plans to continue his By Tlae Associated Pre11 parents ltke Callo to settle for limited selling any goods pending the outcome of a tnal. marketing effons.
JERUSALEM (AP) -More than 100 Palestinians were treated for '1s1tat1on. Sail ~menca attorney David Quinto said the .. You are courung danger." said the judae-~ti~ iaju~~~1n~Gaza~~h~i~~~bsai~~ri~a r=~~~===~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i Palestinian general stnke to protest Israeli rule of the occupied lands. The army
said it could not immcdiatel~ confirm any injury reports. Israel de~rtcd four
Palestinians from the occupied Gaza Strip to Lebanon today, said police an
Rachaiya, Lebanon. The move brought to 33 the number of deportees since an
Arab uprising against Israeli rule began eight months ago.
Student. atage protat rally 1n BarJDa
BANG KOK. Thailand -Student leaders made anti-government
speeches before up to 5.000 people in Burma's capital today. diplomats said. an
the largest protest in Rangoon.since bloody riots forced the president to resign.
Diplomats in Rangoon said protesters rallied in front of Rangoon General
Hospital. a gathering spot for demonstrators after security forces allegedly shot
doctors and nurses there during last week'~ rioting. Japan's Kyodo news
service. reporting from Rangoon, cited reports ofan orderly demonstration of
nearly 10,000 people in Mandalay. the country's second-largest city. The
report, which could not be independently confirmed. said protesters included
uniformed doctors and nurses.
Afghan• clalm 500 Soriet ttoop11 killed
ISLAMA~AD, P~kis~n -Afghan guerril!as claimed today _that they
killed 500 Soviets soldiers in an attack on a gamson and ammunition dump
near the Red Army's evacuation routt in nort.hern Afghanistan. Masood
Khalili. spokesman for the Jamiat-i-lslami Moslem Revolutionaries. said 200
other Soviets troops were wounded when guerrillas fired eight rockets into the
K.halag.ay base in Baghlan province at midday on Friday. Western diplomauc I
sources m Islamabad said they had conflicting reports of attacks on the
garrison by different groups on different days. Rival guerrilla groups had
reporte<tlast weekend that they started a fire at a fuel storage facility at the base. I
"I think _the figure sounds high." said one Western diplomat on cond1t1on of I
anonymity.
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Taking the.AIDS test
The results relieve anxiety
for most at county clinic, but
news is bad for 6 per week
By AMANDA WRAY
Deir,... C.1111 •n1
When Thomas decides to get serious again he will
probably ask his girlfriend -"over drinks or dinner .. -to
get an AIDS test.
First, however, he l\as to get his own test results back.
Although the 58-year-old divorced man said he is not
worried about his results being positive, he chose not to
liave his last name appear in the newspaper.
The Orange County Health Care Agency, 1725 W.
17th St. in Santa Ana, requires two weeks to process
results, but Thomas says he'll have no trouble waiting
because he is not in a high-risk group {gay or bisexual men,
intraveneous drug users, hemophiliacs or the sexual
partners of these groups).
He simply wants to put his mind at ease. "I've had a
couple of contacts in the last two years." he said. "One of
the girls is quite active in Club Med."
Elizabeth. 27, was tested because of a confession by
her husband. "I found out my husband was seeing
hookers." she said. Her results were negative.
She said the actual test was "pretty organized and
quick "but waiting for results was difficult. "I pretty much
tried ~ot to think about it until the last two days."
When she began receiving AIDS information book-
lets in the mail, hC{ mother and sister began to wonder. Her
husband tested negative six months ago. but Elizabeth
returned to be tested with him again just to be sure.
"I think anyone should do it. It doesn't cost
anythini," she said. "Why not? You never know who is out
there lying to you."
Peter Burrell. a senior counselor at the agency, stresses
common sense in deciding whether to get an HIV test.
For those whose only risk is heterosexual contact.
Burrtll said. the rate of posni ve results is 0.3 percent. From
March 1985 through June 1988, 17 of the 5,339 tests
administered by the agency to heterosexuals with no other
admitted nsk factors were positive.
The agency gives ~bout 200 HIV test~ per wee~ ~o all
risk groups. Burrell esumates that about six are ~s1t1v~.
His main concern is ~tting members of h1gh-nsk
groups tested, but Burrell said the fear of a positive result
often deters them from setting foot in the agency.
Before giving the test. counselor Brandon Page, 28.
determines 1f his patient is in a high-risk group with
questions like: "Arc you prer,arcd for a positive result? Do
you have a support system?' .
If Page believes .a patient would not be able to deal
with a positive result. he advises more lengthy counseling
before testing.• ·
Page said it's imponant to educate patients when they
come in for a test. Grabbing a handful of condoms from a
bowl on his desk. he said his hope is to provide people who
onlv have "bits and pieces" of information with the
"co.mplete' picture." ' • •
The information includes the proper use of condoms
(petroleum jelly can cause them to break down) as well as
anti-viral lubricants.
Page. Burrell and the othec counselon at the agency
also give out free literature with the latest information on
AIDS. According to a pamphlet titled "Sh<?uld I Take The
Test?" a test may be advisable "if you think that you or
your sex partner -or someone you have shared needle
drugs with -has taken part in any of the following un~fe
practices: I) During sex you have allowed semen or vaginal
fluids of your sex partnerto enter your body 2) You or your
partner have shared needle drugs with each other, or with
someone else 3) You or your partner have had vaginal or
anal sex with someone without using a condom."
On the other hand. the pamphlet advises against
getting tested in some situations._" If you thin~ ~hat.dealing
with the knowled$e th~t you might test pos1t1v~ 1s more
difficult than dealing with the worry of not kn<?wing at all,
you might consider not taking the test. In this case. you
should always use safe practices ... and do not put yourself
or others at risk!"
For those who do test positive. Page has information
geared for the homosexual or heterosexual: about support
groups, hotlines, AIDS antibody tests. physical exams and
medical referrals.
Elsa W.,eber. a 45-year-old health educator. said the
rate of positive tests "seems to be pretty steady." but she
never gets used to gjving positjve results.
"Every time you pull out a slip, ypur heart drops,"
Weber said. "I give them a lot of support ... you can't do
this work and be judgmental."
'
....,,...,...., ...... ., ..
EIN Weber and Brandon PaCe coanHl
people who come to the-Oran&e County
Health Care Aaency for an AIDS tat.
Thirty-four-year-old Art was very relieved to get his
negative results back. He was having night sweats, a
symptom of the disease. He also found a white spot in his
mouth, another possible sign of AIDS.
"This test directs t.he wa y you're going to run your life.
I don"t like taking risks," he said. "I have been dating the
same woman for two years. I say you're crazy if you fool
around.
"I might have given up on this relationship if not for
the specter of AIDS. Now I'll have restful nights."
Like Thomas, Art didn't want his last name used.
Elizabeth substituted her first name.
Burrell isn't surprised. "You have to be very careful
who you tell if you got the test, because they're not going to
understand it.'' he said.
Although Burrell says he has not advised anyone to
take the test. he compliments anyone who decides to go
ahead. When he counsels homosexual men. he makes sure
thev are aware that "20 to 23 percent of gays tested are
coming in positive."
Attempts are being made to reduce the turnaround
time to a week. Burrell says. "Even that's a long period of
time."
For information about the county AIDS testing
program. call 834-2198.
Men sometimes
solve problems
that don 't exist
Men are born problem solvers. Society also ins.ista
pretty much that they develop and refine those skills.
Sometimes, in marriage, they have to team the ~rd way
thaJ they can't provide all the answers and solutton1 that
seem to be called for. .
Lefs give them full credit for g~ and often IOVl"J
intentions, but on occasion a woman JUSt ~nts to do at
herself. . . . .L.-"One night, while we were watching telev1saon, UK1 sports came on," ~,
says Karen. "Tom _
Watson or some-1
body had just won
a tournament and
I remarked casu-
1lfl y. -that r
MIGHT want to
take up golf some-
day.
"That's all he
l.1101
ALian~
needed to hear. The next thing I knew he brought home a
full set of fancy golf clubs and a gift certifi~te for six
lessons and wanted to know when I was gomg to &et
started." .
Karen had all she could do to nicely thank him for the
expensive "gift." She was too angry underneath, and her
husband sensed it.
Joe was devastated. He says even Karen would ~
that HE was a serious golfer who did indeed have the skill
to select the best equipment for her.
"l checked out three different stores and even chose
the bag in her favorit.e color. And what did I get for it? l'U
never understand women."
"Thinking about taking up golf is my project, and I
didn't want him to make it his,' explained Karen. ••1 know
he meant well. I don't care how much he knows a~ut the
game. If I wanted golf clubs. I would have asked him for
some input. I wish he trusted me more to ask for help when
I need il.
"The truth is that I'm not even sure I ever realty
wanted to play the game. J was just thin.king out loud. ~ut
now. everytime l look at those expensive golf clubs. I m
going to feel guilty that I haven't become Arnold Palmer
quickly enough."
Questionirig companies 'handling of chemicals
Last week the men in Joe's regular foursome beard
the story of his generous gift and his wife's lack of
appreciation. They all agreed that a woman's follow-
through on a new project leaves something to be desired.
It's hard for most men to understand that their
women do not necessarily expect ... or even wa!lt them to
fix everything that is wrong or broken. Men are hkely to see
an~ dilemma as a challenge.
By SARAH HUMPHREYS
Fifty to eighty percent of the companies in the U.S. are
failing to comp!) with federal chemic.al safety standards.
says an official for a company which provides safety
training programs.
The high number of workers who could be affected
worsens the situation. "One out of every four workers in
our country's total wo~k force _is ex po~ed .to one .or !TIOre
chemical hazards on a daily baSIS m their wo~k
environment." Don Rhodes said during a week-long series
of seminars which ended last weekend at College Hospital
1n Costa Mesa.
Rhodes is vice president of Communications Con-
cepts Inc. in Lakewood. a company which provides work-
stte safety and health training programs.
"If there's anything that ~e as safety professionals
know b) now. it's that chemical exposure may cause or
contribute to many serious health effects," Rhodes said.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration
regulates and enforces compliance with standards of
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chemical use in the workplace.
Rhodes said there are four requirements for com·
pliance with these standards. They include: a material
safety data sheet for each Chemical: employee training in
the hazards of chemicals: a written safety program:
adequate labeling of all chemical containers.
Women, on the other hand, while they . usually
appreciate the efforts of their men. are likely to relish the
opponunit-y to talk. through some bright idea of the
moment with a loving and interested partner who hu
learned how to just listen and not jump in too fast with
some kind solution. "This law covers every workplace with any type of
chemicals. not just the manufacturers," Rhodes said. He
said 20 percent of the companies that are complying with
the standards are doing so only partially.
Ifs kind 'of like the Boy Scout helping the old lady
across a street she doesn't want to cross.
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Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOT/W~. AugUll 17, .. I/ti
· S1:1rvey finds ethics checks scarce despite scandals
Detpit.e the widespread Wall St~l
and ~vernmenl scandal$ invoJvina
ethics in the workplace, most eorpor.
atiou in a new survey say they do nor have a system for screcmna job candidateS oo the ethics issue. Jn
addition, be~ly half of the survey
mpondents say they require em-
ployees to ~ign a p!edat that they will
ooc QOmmat uoeth1cal acts.
Costa Mesa·based Personnel
Journal said its new national survey
of 100 CO"\)Onttions also found ~hat
disclwF 1s rarely an 1mmcd1atc
relPOflle to unethical behavior. Only
23 pereent said that only one instance
of unethical behavior will result in
,,
discbarie. The./remaindcr said di$-
cbarge depends on the severity of the unethical behavior.
Just SS petetnt of the companies
surveyed said they rcqui~ copies of
college transcripts to prove college
degrees and only 49 perunt demand proof of licensing. if the job requj~ a
license from some government body,
such as an attomcy, doctor, CPA, etc.
The survey revealed that 79 ptr·
9Cnt do not have a system for
screening potential new employees
~egarding ethics. Nearly the same
number, 77 percent, do not make
ethics checks on employees. Only 53
perotnt said they require employees
to sign statements that lhcy wtll not
commit unethical ~havior.
While most rC$ponden ts. 72 per· ~t. said they do have an employee
c of ethics most of thrsc cocks do
contain stroni measu~s or en· cement provision$, said Pcr'$0nnel Journal.
As an cxamele, SI pcrttnt of the
companies said they do not require
employees to refrain from SPfe!tding
unfounded rumors or adverse infor-
mation about the company. Also. SS
percent said they had no provision
~cquiring employees to avoid sprea~ing unfounded rumors or goss1p
about other employees.
Only 56 ~~nt said they proh1bn
employees from·talking about com-
pany businrss on or off the JOb and far
fewer, 40 percent, said they ask that there be. no disrusSton of company
business after the employee leaves the firm .
NYSE UPs & DowNs
A total or only 42 ptteent said they
prohibit employ~ from talking to st~uritics anaJysts or brokers unless
aulhoriLtd by man.menL
Even if an i.ndiv1dual leaves the•
company and stans disclosing com-
pany plans or secrets, near I y half or 44
OTC UPS & DOWNS
NEW YORK (AP) -The toflow 1no \Isl sriows the Over • the • COUt'lter stocks and warrants that h•ve gone uo the most al\4 down the most O.Md on percent of ™"" for TUHCSay. No securit~ trading below n or 1000 ~ares are included. Net and percentage chan!JtS •re t"' difference betwter1 the orev1ous dos no orice and TueSda'(;Ji.sl•st or bid e>rlce.
Namt Usl Ole rtl 1 Hof av RV v, 3"4 UP
2 Prl!trand un J, ii i ~ Up t1 3 A~ Wiscon 11~ 21"1 Up • I un ~ ~ UP . ~ lclrnTele + 34 P 1 . 6 reller s•. + lJ, ~p 11.t
7 Roboloot s 61ie + I UP )~. a CilizlnsAm 26lio t Jl.a Up 16. 9 fetenetlc 23:. + ~ UP IS.
10 PhoenixAm 3 I '.lot UP 14, 11 MedclActn ''" ''> Up 13. 12 AmistarCP ••. ,., UP 1 13 ~l'tecHech • • •;, UP 1
l;' ~~~5ataHld l~~ ·~ B: , 11·11 1 ICk lark 41"1 + ,., Up l .
1 lo vst 2' • t • UP l
19 CTC 4 'I 7·16 Uo ll 18 ~nQ. et un 4', , UP 12.
H
vstem~rr 2~ t • Uo 11.~ lnacom ot 71 li.< Uo 11 Cardinal di 10 1 Uo 1 l. Hosoosable 2'., + • Up 11. l EdilecmbCo 7~ + loio uo· 10.9 S SNL Fncl 3~ + ~ UP 10.7 DOWNS 1 Puli:~ 2 NuclSuprt 3 Entronio 4 AmCon$ull S RscPsn2 6 Micrwvelbs 7 Durate)(
8 ~mmunoTher 9 vslns 11 ountPwr 1 rexlerTc 1 amogen 1 Haber 14 PhOtoCtrt ,, SunE~1uilles 1 Aitov otr l Arie om '~~~t~Co ~l,:r~af" lotherap pf ar10ru9 k'otch astlline
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6'"J -~ 6''2 -~ ,..., -VJ 2'• -.... 311>-~ 1 -~
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•
. A.a. ONngeoa.tDAtLYptLOTIW~.~ 17.1111
,
WEDNE8DAY'8 CLOSING PRICES
Stock trading mixed
NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks finished mixed
today in a lazy session that reflected the absence of
big investors from the market and more uncertain-
ty about where prices are headed.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials
seesawed in a narrow range and closed up 4.45
points to 1.025.96.
Declining issues outnumbered advances by
about a 7-to-6 margin on the New York Stock
Exchange. with 745 down, 659 up and 513
unchanged. Big Board volume totaled 169.50 million
shares. against 162. 79 million shares in the
previous session. The NYSE's composite ind ex rose 0.15 to
147.64
Too tired to walk?
Too tired to drive?
Too tired to •ove?
Well If ., .. ·re •ot too th .. to r-4.
l'O• 'r• •ot too dr..t
toeltopcla .. lfle4.
. WH AT AM EX DID WH AT NYSE D1 D
NEW YORK (AP) Auo 17 ,.r.v.
Adv§nced Wm 1 Vec11neo nchanoed otal i~$ues 61 New h1ohs New lows 70 18
AM EX LEADER S
GoLD OuoTE S
M ET~Ls QuoTE s
NEW YORK (AP) Auo. 17 ,.,...,,
Advanced Wm ) vedi~ nch nged otat1Jsues l ~ew c1ohs ew ows ... ~
NYSE LEADER S
NEW YORK (AP> -S.IM, 4 p,l'JI Wednesdev e>rice •nd net ctlatKM ot tN l~ rnost active New Yori\ Slodi ExcNnoe lss~:s, trading nall~lllv et • ,'ri.Hl ..
Phila 'RT~c • , l , 1 ~h • NlaqM Pow , , 1 1 Ye 'It Navjjlar , -y. ~mExe>r , , •µ + ~
M , ,7 11~ -1'1•
ex l.Hil l·m· 21"' ge.w1ellPll , , 44'1• -1~ xxon j· , 46'11 + ~ rlmeCm , , 12'11 -i:\4 ac ,, v.+ bf:i,a,tq_ . '6J, H -li Am~r 't"& T 'fil' w.. -V. AmFamilv , , H'h + V. FordMotr s , 1 --" McGrawH , , ~ +3
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~~COLE· HAAN PalO,......,I•-
=-""»----=-·---.---Oja
•
'
Louie's
2-hitter
enough
ne own, t ree to
gotnNorthwood's
quest for LL Series
By UR& WOLCOTT ......... c.n •• , ......
· SAl-il BERNARDINO-On the
strenath ofTommy Louie's riltht arm
and an unforgiving defense, Irvine's
Nonhwood All Stars took the first of
four steps Tuesday on the way to a
-.l'Clumtcip to the Little Lea&ue World
Seri~.
"I talked to Tommy before the
game and asked h.im if he really
wanted to win,"
Northwood
Manager Mas
Hayashi said of
his 12-year-old
starting pitcher.
"When I saw he
had fire in his
eyes, I said
good-bye to
Washington."
So did Louie,
who held Ken-Loa.le
newick National of Washington state
to two hit.s as Northwood won, 6-0,
before a crowd of 6,200 at Al
Houghton Stadium.
Step No. 2 on the road to Wil-
liamsport, Pa., comes Thursday,
when Northwood (I 3-2) takes on
Nevada's Carson City in a 4:30 p.m.
ga.me. Carson City won its opening-
round game of the sin~lc-elimination
tournament, clobbenng Wyoming,
1 13-4, Tuesday afternoon.
Louie, one of three returnees from
the Northwood team which lost to
Chinese Tape1 in the finals of the 1987
World Series. went the distance
Tuesday, improving his record this
year to 6-0. "I was just trying to concentrate
toni&bt and throw stnkes." Louie
said. "It was OK if (Kennewick) hit
the ball, as long as we got them out."
Nonhwood did exactl} that. play-
ing an error-free game in the field. At
the ~late, the Irvine-based team gave
Louae all the runs he needed in the
second inning.
With one out. Nonhwood's Jeff
Zachan reached first with a bloop
sincle to shallow center field. He
advanc::td to second on a passed ball
and to third on a wild p11ch by
Kennewick staner-Zak Smith.
Smith struck out the next batter.
but walked the following two to load
the bases. Up stepped second
baseman Eric Sobek. who lined a 1-1
pitch past the Kennewick third
baseman to score Zachan from third
and Justin Lloyd from second.
(Pleue eee NORTHWOOD/82)
. -Piii WEDN ESDAY, AUGUST 17, 11188 I :J
M1lone lnk1 three-,e.r oontreot with Atlente Hawlal. •
Mete Miter Qllnta pitching tor nl,...run flret lnnlftl. M.
Ez-Newport Harbor Hlah standout Shane
Foley, a sophomore at Csc, la battling for
Oelly ..... pflolo
the No. 2 quarterback position behind
Helsman candidate senior Rodney Peete.
Foley focuses
oli No. 2 spot
Ex-Harbor passer
hopes to b~ck up
USC's Peete at QB
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .... O.ity l'llot .....
Ne"' pon Beach's Shane Fole) has
learned a 'aluable lesson at the
L'mvernt) of Southern California -
in a Y.Ord it's called pauence.
h 's been three years since Fole)' was
pas~1ng the oppos1t1on sill) when at
1'\e.,,,pon Harbor High where he
·established an all-time Orange Coun-
t) ~aret'r passing record of 5.361
~ ards. including 3.05 7 '.-ards and 31
touchdn" "" "h tie a senior But after red-shining 1n 1986. his
freshm.rn football sea!i-On netted no
snap'> from tht center. and presently
he 1~ l'mbrotled in a three-man battle
fur the '\o 2 spot behind All-
.\m~ncan and He1sman Troph~ can-
didate Rodne' Peete.
\.\ l'il. there's not a great deal
am one can do about Rodne' Peete.
and frank!~. nobod) at l. c wants to
do an~ thing about him
But as for the battle for !'Jo 2 ...
··11hink the' ·u determine 1t some-
time 1h1s "eek" s.a1d the 6-foot-2.
I 45-pound Folc~. "after some scrim-
mages and game-t) pe s11ua11ons:·
To the' ictor goes a 'el! big plum
-not in th~ role of a starter. but in
the role of the other quarterback
taking "reps" during practice.
~s the "other" qu arterback you
take almost as man) snaps dunng
pracuce as the starter, and you're
prepared to pla)
Whomever 1s No. 3 still travels
\\-llh the team. but for au practical
purpo11es. becomes a spectator.
There's no quesuon. Foley has his
Y.Ork cut out fo r him. and as if be was
well aware of the competition, he
spent the summer at USC lifting and
practicing his deep passes in antici-
pation
fht' compeutwn''
Pat O'Hara a 6-3. ) !);.pound red-
sh1n sophomore. 1~ considered the
.. most e\penenced" off his six snaps
as a frt'shman (he didn't pass even
once 1n the ">hort mnt against Orcton
State).
The other 1~ freshman Todd
Manno\ 1~·h a n-4. 210-J><>Under who. I
1f nothang l'ht' erased Foley's name
from tht Orange County record
book.~ \\llh a ,areer marl.. of 9,194
~ ard\ o\t·r four ~ears. establishing a
na11onal u1ret'r rl'l'ord
~S tor the f TOJBOS' dilemma in
making 11s choKt'. quanerback coach
( hul ~ 1oban sums 11 up this way:
.. Our l..e\ 1s 10 !ind out who 1s No. 2
and 11 Y.dl.tx' one-of tho~ three. The
quesuun "l"re IT) 1ng to answer is
thts Ho" are "e going to determine
'\o :!"ls 1t fur d pla), for a game or
!Y.O or lt•r the season'>"
Fuln. "'ho led Harbor in a two-
) t'Sr sconng and "'lOOJOg spree with
48 touchdo" n passes and a combined
nxord ot I Q.4-2 . has spent much of
his time the past six months working
on tht> deep outs
He Je\ eloped tendmms 1n his ri&ht
elb O" and 11 has kept him out of bis
(Plea.e eee FOLEY /82)
There's no mistaking some players' efforts
Let"sdo a tnbute to all the
fum blers. bumblers. offenders. and
an~thingelse that may have upset yo u
while watching an NFL game.
Here are the records that the record
holders beg somebody. anybody. to
break. These records will not put
players and teams in the Hall of
Fame. No. a dark closet with a dead
bolt willdOJUSt fine .
Nothing upsets a fan , coach, player.
owner or wino like a fumble. When a
pla )er fumbles the ball. he has
committed the ulumate sin. The all-
t1me leading fumbler in lhe history of
the NFL is Roman Gabriel. formerl y
· oft he Rams and the Philadelphia
Eagles.
From I 962 to 1977. Gabriel
fumbled the-ball 105 times. Next on
the hst 1s a Hall off a me quarterback
named Johnny U nitas w11h 95
fumble~. followed by Franco Harris
of the Steelers with 90 fumbles to his
credit.
~os1fumbles1n a season'> Dan
Pastonn1 while with the Houston
Oilcrsin 1973 fumbledtheball f7
times. Pastorini is now a drag racer
and }OU can bet that the steenng
"'heel 1s not shaped hke a football.
"Dandy Don" Mered1thof\he Cow-
bo' sis next w11h I 6fumbles10 his
credit
\1o~t fumbles 1n a game~ Another
Hall of Fa mer. Len Dawson of the
Kansas Citv Chiefs fumbled the ball
se' "n times against the San Diego
Chargers. Da\' son was scared to go to
the bat hroom the rest of the da\. Do
) ou thtnk the center might hav~
somethinf>lOdo\\ 1th the fact that the
guanerbacks lead the league 1n
fumble<." Supposed I) all quarteorbacks
fel'l the ~me 10 the center. ma~be not')
Fl'\\C'll opponents fumbles re-
CO\ ered 1n a season'? Three b) the
Rams in 19.., .t \\ h1le 1n Los .\ngeoles
Earthquake~. drought and <;mog v.ere
hsted a~ rt·a"un'> for such J meash
number ol fumbles m.O\ ned .\ctt1· all~ the pla~crs "antl'd tll get tn the
rernrd book somC\\-3\. someho" ~lost 1Uf0()\ ers 1n a season':' Theo
1978 San Fra1H.1sco -t9ers tu med O\Cr
the ball 6311rnl'S that sea~on fhe
following season most ot the .t9ers
became pla)ers tor other reams or
4u11 be1 ng pla,ers altugt•ther
\\'ho an: the" orst uffcndcr~ in the
1\auonal Football League'' ~bsolu1e
h nocontesl TheCh1cago Bcarshave
led the league 1n renah1t•\ I 6 t1me!i
Thl'\ d1dn'tlJll them \tons_ter)ofihe
\lu.f\\a\ form1th1ng ;\001hcrteam 1s
in double figure\. but thl' nc\ 11eam 1s
tht• Ra1da.,
\lost \;mh IX'nahzed 1n a seac;on"
In I 'Jf!O.'the then na~land Ra1dl·r<;
"erl' penalized 1.2..,4 )_anlc;.almost
enough) arJs to (Juahl ) for an a1rt1ne
BENNY
RICARDO
PRO FOOTBALL
lrequent n~erprogram. In 1984. the·
Raiders "ent O\ erthe I .200-)'ard
mark again" 1th 1,209 yards
\.\ orst bet e \er made'> The man that
ga\eh1sJnend the Red kinsand74
point<; in the\: FL Champ1onsh1p
gameagainsuhc Bears tn I ~40 Final
su>re: Bears 'l RedskinsO
The "0r"I perfect record'> The
Tampa Ba~ Buccaneers in 1~"6
1in1~hl'<l O· I ..i. Head coach John \ld~a~ talked to Tampa Ba) fans and
told them lhey needed ume to build a
"'inner. Right away a 90-ycar-old
man stood up and shouted, "Some of
u haven'tgotmuchttme."
The team that blew the biggest lead
in the history of the NFL?The New
Orleans Saints of 1981 were leading
the San Francisco49ers 35-0 at the
half. The 49ers came back in the
second halfand scored 35 points to
send lhe game into overtime. In the
O\ert1methe49ers' RayWersching
kic ked a field goal and won lhe game
3 -35.
Yours trul) kicked five extra poinB
in the fi rst half and then never se• foot
llO l rte field the rest of the ga~. r . .
._nl'" 11 was going 10 be a strange day
"hen I opene-d the game by Jocking ·. .
the ball so deep in the end zone th.at
the runnerdov.n<:'d the ball. I think I
hold the career record' ror the fewest
balls k1d.ed into the end zone on a
k1d.oO
Angels crush Yan.ks, 15-6 U.S. breezes
to Brita·nnia
semifinals
.. '\
Fraser allows five
home runs; Joyner
drives in five runs
NEW YORK (AP)-Willie Fraser
knows the drill -get a big lead early
and throw strikes.
He just hasn't perfected his execu-
tion.
Throwing what he described as
"nothing" fastballs and too many
pitches over the middle of the plate,
Fraser set a California Angels' record
by allowing fi ve home runs in 6 1-3
inninp Tuesday night. but the Angels
still routed the New York Yankees
IS-6.
Wally Joyner led a 19-hi t attack
with three hits -including his first
homer since July 31 -and drove in
five runs -hi s first R Bl since Aug. 5.
Brian Downing added two RBI with a
homer and a double.
The Yankees. who missed an
opponunity to move up in 'the AL
East standings as division-leading
Detroit and second-place Boston
both lost, sot a pair of homers from
Don Mattan&ly and one each from
Dave Winfield. Oaudcll Walhinaton
The schedule
AWAY
TOl'llont-New York, 4:30 o.m. •
Auo. 1&-New York . .t:30 om.•
Auo. 19-Baltlmore, S:OS o.m •
AU9. 2<>-Balllmore, S:OS o.m. •
Auo. 21-Balllmore, 10:3S a.m • Auo. 22-Boston, •:35 o.m.
Auo. 23-Boslon. 4:35 Pm. •
•on TV, Channel 5. ~Att games on t<MPC <710).
and Randy Velarde.
In losing for the I Ith time in 17
games. New York remained 311:
games out of first place.
"lma~ine hining all those homers
and losing." Yankees pitching coach
Clyde King said.
Fraser, 9-101 was coming off. the
best start of his career. a one-hitter
against Scanlc 1n Y.h1ch the Manners'
onh h11 "as a home run b\ ..\lvin Da\1c;. .
·-rll tx: mad all tonight and tom-
morciw" he said ."( should have bee n
able 10 close that game out with no
problem. I got a win out of It. but rm
not real ha pp). I kicked myself all
o'er the place when I got out. My
teammates JUSI laughed ai me. but I
"as angry."
He gave up e1gh1 oft he Yankees 10
hllS and all the runs. walking none
and stnking ou t two. Greg ~inton
pitched two and tY.o-th1rds innings of
scoreless relief
Stakeo to an 11-0 lead after three
innings. Fraser fell behind almost
ever) hiiter and was forced to throw
· fastball after fastball.
In the foun h. Washington and
Mattingl} reache-d him for back-to-
back homers. In the sixth. Mattingly
hit his I Jth homer and Winfield
followed Jack Clark's two-out single
with his 21st home run.
Rick Rhoden 7-9. lasted onh I 1h
innings -his shortest outing · as a
starter .since Sept. 21. 1985 -and
ga,·e up four runs. Lee Guetterman
then allowed six runs in 11/J innings of
work and Neil Allen yielded five hits
and three runs in 5VJ. Cec1lio Guante
allowed two in the ninth.
. .
,,,,~
Yankees Rickey Hendenon trlee In •ain to touch home
after being blocked by ,el• Bob Boone on lnJtlal ellde.
\.\ h1k the fa\l'rcd l n11ed Statt"s
team breezed to a 3-0 \ 1clor) over
Belgiu~ v. i thout losmg a s1 ngle game.
Fra nce m~' ed into the semifinals of
the Bntatfn1a Cu p tennis matches at
l tndborg Racquet Club Tuesday.
The lntemauonal Tennis Feder-
.rnon C\ ent for veterans 65-and-over ~
.rnd fe:it unng former 'W imbledon,,-
champion Tom Brown uf San Fran-
u .,ro "111 ha' e an off-da) toda)',
Ol'l~)re l on11nu1n g actton Thursda} 1n
thr "em1finals against 1h1rd-St"eded ...
\11,tralta. a 3-(f \1ctor O\er Ital\ r .11.·.;Ja\ .
rranre turnC'd 1n 1tc; sernnd straight
upi,t•t b~ do"ning :-.io. 2-seeded
'Ol>\J\ wtth a 3-0 win Tuesday
v. h1k (,reat Bntain JOIO~ the final
l<'ur \\Ith a J..Q.."1n O\er Sweden.
.\ndre Bib~au. France's No. I ''"~It''-pla)er. came from behind to
topple Ola Nordnk of Norway in the
<\l'COnd set of h1~ singles match ... -6 to
d1nch the ' 1ctorv.
.\ustria Cup ·(55-and--O\er) play
staned Tue-sda\ and will continue
"ith serond round matches today
Ital:-had the toughest victor)• with a
~-1 tnumph over Francr that went to
(Pleaee eee CUP /84)
Leary balks over call, but manages to get lt done
e allows Ive runs
in 6 2/3 innings, but
Dodgerswtn. 7-5
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los
Anacin' Tim Leary added another
complaint to a Iona list about the balk
after one of his allowed a run.
The Dodaen ca~ out on top 7-S
against the Phils TUHday night but it
was the siitth balk called .,a inst Leary
this season.
"I aum I'm just aoin& to have to
stan windinaup(insttlldofl(li"' into
the normal smtch position Wlth a
runner on bax)," lea!}' said. "h's a
sad state for baldlall if ttiey•re eanina
balks ln that situation.
"I've *n comina to a .ct like that
si llClC I was 13 years Old. I cu 't fO in10
Scptmibcr and potlibly tbe pla)'Offs
and balk like that. I may have to st.an
Guerrero 's pact s~a.ls. deal
T LOVIS (AP) -The run-starved St. Louis Cardinals acquired
slugger Pedro Guc~ro from 4>s ~ngeles on Tuesday tn a one-for-one
deal that sent pitching ace" John Tudor to the DodJers.
•'Basically. it's a premier pitcher for a premier hitter." CarJ1nals
manaJCr Whitey Herzog said after the trade was completed
Tudor, 34. is S0-24 1n 31~ seasons with the Cardinal~ and I 0 1-65 1n
his I 0 seasons in the maJ Or league's. In I 98S. he was 21-8 and led the
Cardinals to the National League pennant. This S("ason h(' 1s b-w11h a
league-leading 2.29 earned run avera~.
Herzog paid tribute to Tudor's competitive sp1l"lt
".\ 101 of days John went out there when he v.a~n·t rcall~ 100
percent." Hcnog said. "He always took the baseball. It rcall v.as a
(Pl--eeeGVERUR0/84)
·--~--""' wind1na up.., --
Leary. I~ won fcx the siuh time
in tiahl swu. He allowed five rum
and !'lint hits in 6~ inninp. Jay
Howell pve up one hit in two tnnines
for bis Uth ave.
Ptul Bradle) ttcd his c~rttr h\lh
wath five hit John helb leaped
above the ttnter-fidd fcntt to save a
potential piM-t)ina ho~ b Brad~
1t)' with twO outs h\ the ninth.
knocklna down the bell for a do\lbk
H 1\\\('ll thrn 'itrud. out Milt Thomp-
wn
··1t Jo1:._n·1 m:i ttrr 1f \OU don•t
\\tn •• Brndle' "31d "\\e're out lhere
for one 1.ominon goal. and that's to
v. in f l, a degrt>e. :-ou can sull be
"311,fted "1th ~ourown ptrsonal pin.
\ ou don't 1ump op and down. but
\.OU shouldn't he ashamed about
ha' mg a game hlce 1h1s ..
Bradle~ had ft,e hits against the
('le, eland lnd1nns on June , I 98S
"hile pla)in8 for the Seattle
"1ariners. He "as on the los1ngs1dc in
that one, too.
"l'\.c onl~ had one hit aga11'1s1 him
tlc-fore tonight... Bradley said of
le3ry. ~ho pvc UP. four of his hit
.. The deJrtt of d1~C\llty l'~,,i had
ap1n t him pu\s ham"' the &opT&ve Ul
m\ 1.-aret'r l don't look forward &o
facing hun. vcn on his bad "'ahts. be acu the "'°· That's wha1 klnd ol puchcr he is:·
Don Carman. 9-7, lost his tttOed
stra1~t
. I
~
.
.. •
. -. . . . .
. . . . . . .
~
. . . . . . ..
~ . . .
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?.
• t . .. • . : . .. . .. • "'t ..
. ;
. . ..
-. . . . . • . .
. . • • •
. ! • • :
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J
to Edmonton
be tough to take
for LA'• newest King
..._. Allecia ... Pnu
LOS ANGELES-Wayne Gretz.Icy is ri1
90t lootina forward to meetina his fonner '
llllmnWet wbile suited in the black and
pay of me Los Anteles Kinas.
"I don't want to go up there," Gretzky said ... It'll
probably be the hardest game I'll ever have to play."
Gretzky made his comments Monday night on
.. It's Your Call, .. a call-in spons talk show broadcast on
tbe Prime Ticket Network. which telecasts Kings
pm ea. 1 Gretzky wi I fint face the four-time Stanley Cup
champions Oct. l 9 at the Nonhlands Coliseum, with a mnaacb Oct. 2S at The Forum. The teams will meet a
total of eiaht tjmes during the season.
The ciaht-ti me Nauonal Hockey league most
valuable player also downplayed rcpons that Edmon-
ton Oiler playen would boycott training camp to
protest bis move to Los Angeles.
"Emotions run bi&h," Gretzky said. "Everything
will work itself out and they'll have a great team."
Gretzky, whose diswtc for flying has been well
documented, also called for the league to move Los Anaelcs out of the Smythe Division.
Becaure the divi11on's four other teams arc all in
Canada, the Kinas are believed 10 have to fly more
miles than any other team.
And apm on Monday he discounted persistent
claims that his actress wife Janet Jones influenced his
move.
"My father summed It up best when be said we
knew Janet was aolni to take some heat because 1 had
played 10 years in a city where I had become not only a
sports fjaure. but almost like the best fncnd with all the
fans," Gretzky said.
"We both loved Edmonton very much and would
have stayed there, but it just came to a crossroads with
the Oilers and it's to everyone's benefit that I move on."
Gretzky said a three-year deal that takes NHL
pmes offESPN, cable TV's largest network. was a bad
move.
Quote of the day
Juio( OrtiJ., the Pirates' backup catcher •
who suffered a broken collarbone when he djved
to catch a pop foul, asked ifhe would be out for sjx
weeks: "No. longer than that. Maybe a monfh.
and a half."
Nlcklaua pondera retirement
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. -·Jack n
Nicklaus. who has won a record 18
professional golf titles. said Tuesday be is
not sure whether he wants to keep on
playing. •
The 48-year-old Nicklaus has cut back his playing
schtdule in the last two years. but 5aid he is not satisfied
with the results.
· "I'm not playing.as well as J should, and I don't like
it. I don't like it at all," said Nicklaus, who has missed
the cut in four of eight starts thls year.
"I've been trying to cut back to five or IO
tournaments, and r just can't do it. I can't get there.
"Next year, because of commitments to friends
and promises I've made, I'm committed to I 5 or I 6
tournaments."
I ()m AVAIL.ABLE
!bl A LlMrrED J llMEONLr
fkmA\d tllld • ,,_.~-Ctt • ..JJIW it'tl ,
/ 111Joor I me N
Kimball electa to compete
INDIANAPOUS -Bruce Kimbel.I Iii said Tuesday be wiU compete. in the U.S.
Olympic d1vina lrials dapite ~
related manslaulbterclwlet IPiDll him.
"I cannot disappoint my family, f'rieDds aod
teammates by ~vina up on mytelf," 1 shaken Kimt.11
told a news conference.
"I've dedicated 21 years of my life to lbe sport of
divin.g. I've made incredible sacrifices to achieve the
level of excellence which I've pursued, and J bold a
stong bond of commitment towards I.be people who
have cncourqed me, supported me and ... Instilled 1
piece of themselves inside of me ...
Barb Mclaughlin, assistant executive director for
U.S. Diving Inc., declined comment on Kimball's
decision. She said earlier, however, that the sanctionina
body has no rule that would disqualify him because of
the charges and that ''the judicial system will have to
run its course."
Kimball was flanked by a aecurity pwd. bis two
attorneys, family, friends and teammates as be entered
the news conference on the Indiana University-Purdue
University at Indianapolis campus. Tbe divuta trials
will be held at the school Wednesday throuab Sunday.
Kimball's announcement came a day aft.er the
former University of Michigan SW was charted in
Tampa, Aa .. with two counts of drivina under the
influence-manslaughter and three counts of driving
under the influence with serious personal injuries.
The charges stem from an Aua. l traffic accident in
which Kimball's speeding car is alleaied to have crashed
into a crowd at a popular tcen.qe~t in Brandon,
Ra .. leaving two people dead and six injured.
Authonties said Kimball, who won the silver
medal in platform diving during the 1984 Olympic
Games in Los Angeles, could face up to 45 years in
prison if convicted on all five felony charges.
KimbaJl's attorneys, Frank Quesada and Lee
Fugate of Clearwater, Aa.. said they expected the
Olympics to be over long before Kimball's Cale reaches
the courtroom.
Fugate said he doubts the case will "go to trial
before December. at best" because of the large number
of wi tnesses involved.
Ram•' Miller end.a holdout
Defensive lineman Sbwa M.lJler Ell
ended a 26-day holdout Tuesday and t -t reported to the Rams' training camp in
ume for a hght evening practice. Terms of
the contract Miller signed after a 13-hour drive from
Ogden. Utah were not disclosed. "I'm happy with the
decision." Miller said. "I didn't think the Rams were
going to budge from their last offer and I didn't want to
lose that. It's water under the bridge now. I won't let it
bother me." The Rams also announced that they had
claimed rookie punter Scott Tabor'from the-Raiders.
Fourtb-year punter Dale Halder is still recovering
from knee surgery. One of the Rams' two remaining
holdouts. third•year guard Tom Ncwbeny, indicated a
trade may be in order to satisfy both panics. He has two
years left on his contract, said hisJ 1 S0,000 per-season
salary is not enough. "The whole ~i~g is now back t~
the point whe re they're not adding to my salary, Newbe~said in his first public comment ~ince his
holdout n July 21 ... A veteran punter for three
National ootball League teams, Jeff Gossett, was
obtained by the Los An.gcles Raiders, while the Raiders
released veteraR offensive lineman Brad B ... e. The
Raiders said they obtained Gossen from the Houston
Oilers in exchange for previous considerations.
Gossett. 31.joined the Oilers at midseason last year and
fin ished the season with an average punt of 40.4 yards
and a lonscst punt of 55 yards.
EQUIPMENT.
-.---RelltXmR smmas. steam
moms and whirlpools
----( ht'Sf l'rt!ss
(ompettflOIH{\U! lap pool
Rltepffncep
---Hip Abductor
r----1 t1l Extt•11.no11
50% CM ANNrnlRoo:wAL !Ms &N>~ b.
~a way to get it all: 50% off annual renewal combined with pool, trU. and rq.ietball. how can
dues, with Mthl~ due for 30 days. At partidpatl~ you go w~?
loc:adom, with some restrictioo& The facilities may w.ry, but our oommitment to
If you join now, you'U be~ the right~ r~ wont can or oome by any Holiday Spa n
Beause when a dubs got all the right eq.iipnent, a fret guest tour.
ltfu.Ioo ~Hw.rn Cum t~ ~--,-.-ca. .. -.-.,..
Ph 1'owrToN LocATION o f714) 8"9-<5611.
246 E. Or:angc1horpc 2t Lemon. I block
N. of91 Fwy & I block E. ofH:irhor Blvd
ANAH£1M 0 (''14) 9Sl·3IOI, 3IO M28Jl(>ll2, I block of Uncoln
ConA MF.\\ 0 (':14) ~ 2m Harbor 81Yd., (behind Thrifty Dr\11)
Hl'HTlNGTI>N BiM:H 0 r t4) 848·1919. J7091 Beach Blvd
2L \t';arner. in the Chancr Centre
Mls.~N V1FJ() 0 (714) ~-0822, 24401 Allcb Pkwy. 21 2n OIC80 Fwy
01ANGI! 0 r 1·0 639·244 l, 6l2 E2 I K21Clla A\1c., \Vest of Thsli.n A\'C
Grant Rakee claim to poettlon
l..OSANOELES-OaryOrantsiped Ill a multi-year contract with the Loa Anteln
Clippen Tunday and immediately sWted
his claim to the National 8-ketball
Auocialion tcam's swtinasuard poeilion. .. , can step riaht in and swt," Grant said at a news
conference. "fm comina out for blood."
Norm Nixon, who missed the last two reasons
because of knee and Achilles' tendon injuries, provides
Grant's competition for the startina spot.
Connon, SS, comee on .troq
MASON, Ohio -Jimmy Connors, E3 3S, seemed to get stronaer u his match
pr~ Tuesday in beatina 27-year-old
Dan Cassidy 6-4, 6-1 in the first round of -
the Association of Tennis Professionals Cham-
pionships at the Jack' Nicklaus Sports Center.
"He missed a few -a few too many," Connors
said after the victory. "I'm not suro. I got stronaer, I
think he just got tired."
Kin&• aaatnat lnvlU.., Laftear
INGLEWOOD -The Los Afttelcs ~ Kings, althouah flattered by the request, '
cannot invite reti.red hockey player Guy
Lafleur to join them at trainmg camp next
month, Kings general manager Rogie Vachon said
Tuesda}'.
"After some conversation both parties decided
that we would be unable to reach an qrccmcnt that
would be in Mr. Lafleur's best interests and we have
mutually agreed to close the matter," Vachon said.
Televf.alon,. r:adlo
TELEVISION
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees, Channel S.
4:30p.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Pit-
tsburgh, TBS.
4:30 e.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Cinci nnati, WGN.
5 p.m. -W!TER POLO: U.S. vs.
Yugoslavia, from Malibu (taped), Prime Ticket.
5:30 p.m. -POOL: Women's ()pen 9-Ball
competition, from Las Vegas {taped), ~PN. 1
6:30 p.m. -MEN'S BOWLING: The
Senior/T ouring Pro Doubles. from
Cheektowaga. N.Y., ESPN.
7:30 p.m. -BASKETBALL: The Summer
Pro Lea,guc final. from Los Angeles (taped),
Prime Ticket.
7:30 p. m. -BASEBALL: New York Mets at
San Francisco. WOR.
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
Dodgers. Z Channel.
RADIO
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees KM PC(710).
7 PJ!l . -BASEBALL: Montreal at San
Diego, KFMB (760).
7:30 p.m. -8ASEBALL: Philadelphia at
Dodgers. KABC (790).
THURSDAY'S TELEVISION
I p.m. -MEN'S GOLF: PGA The Inter·
national, from Castle Rock, Colo .. ESPN.
THURSDAY'S RADIO
I p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
.Dodgers, KABC (790).
..,
NORTHWOOD· •••.
Proa81
"(Smith) wat throwina me curves. .. -'cl Sobek,
another member of the 1987 Nonbwood team. "Wbeo be
threw me the third one in a row, I reecbed out and pulled
it down the line. , , "I was really just U')'in& to Ft a hit. I wuo t U')'ina to
pull, but it just worked out that way ...
Thinp continued to work out Northwood'• way tbc
rest of the game. The Irvine kids collected one run in the
third and three more in the fourth to teal the vic:tory.
Should Northwood win Thursday, it would facie the
winner o( the Hawaii-Utah game in the remifinals on
Friday. One more win would send the tc:am t.ck to
Williamsport, Aug. 22-27, for the World Series. The only
U S team to ever play in consecutive Wortd Series to~~aments was Schenectady, N.Y., in 19S3 and 1954.
Northwood, meanwhile, ·is the only. Southern
California team to reach the Western Rcaionals two
consecutive Y,eat'S· Th.c s~ccess this y~ is due to-steady
hittina, consistent pitching and taking advantaae of
opponent's mistakes.
Tuesday was no exception. Northw~ collected
seven hits. all singles. Sobek led the way, JOU\& 3-for-3,
scoring once and driving in two runs. Catcher Ryan
Morpn also drove in a pait of runs with a bases-loaded
single in the bottom of the fourth.
Northwood scored three runs on Kennewick passed
balls and stoic seven bases in the game. In the fourth
inniQS. Lloyd and Sobek executed a doub.le steal, with
Lloy<f scorin'k on the play and Sobek reaching second to
score on Morpn's single. "We train our base coaches from day one," Hayashi
said. "I may be the only manager out here who does this,
but we take every position seriouslr,. A base coach can
make the difference in a close pme. •
Northwood's win overshadowed a fine pitching
perfonnance by Smith. The hard-throwing right-hander,
who stands 6-feet tall, had I 0 strikeouts in the game. He
struck out two Northwood batters each inning.
Smith (6-1), who threw 124 pitches co~pa.red to.66
for Louie, came at the Northwood batters with a blazing
fastball and an assortment of changeups and curves. But
the defending Western Regional Champions never gave
in.
"He started throwing all curves because we were
hitting all his fast balls," Hayashi said. "It got to the point
where we determined a pattern and knew when be was
going to throw what pitch. We took advantage of it."
Malone signs
ATLANTA (AP)-The Atlanta Hawks, hoping to
piece together an NBA championship team, Tuesday
signed free agent Moses Malone to a three-year NBA
contract, convinced the veteran center is the missing link
to a title.
The contract reportedly is worth a minimum ofS4.67
million to the 33-year-old Malone, a 11-timc AJl-Star and
three-time NBA Most Valuable Player in bis 12 seasons in
the league. The Hawks declined 10 release details.
"Nobody hates losing more than me," said owner
Ted Turner during the news confcrcnc,e on the basketball
court of The Omni. where the Hawks play their home
games. "I know that one player guarantees nothing and
that to win a championship yhou need a loit of luck and
everything has to mesh.
"This was the piece of the puzzle we all felt we needed
to gi ve us our best chance at a championship," said
T4_mer. who bought the Hawks 12 years ago.
Atlanta has never won a championship since the
fran chise moved from St. Louis in 1968, last capturing the
NBA title in 1957-58 while in St. Louis.
The Hawks have won at least SO games the la.st three
seasons. but each year were eliminated in the second
round of the playoffs. •
"Thisjs a great sitwation for me," said Malone, who
played the last two seasons at Washington.
FOLEY F ~CES BATTLE FOR NO. 2 SPOT •••
From Bl
usual flow. but he's hopeful the work
he has done over the summer will
have made the issue moot.
One of the big problems for a young
quarterback at a major school is
simply beco ming part of the wood-
work.
"You lose touch with a lot of people
from high school." said Foley. "A lot
of people ask. 'How's it going? How's
it going?'''
The answer is basically "wood·
work ," and that's not an easy situ·
ation for someone used to throwing
multiple touchdown passes week-in
and week-out.
"ltJUSt takes a while when you're at
a university like this," continues
Foley. who would obviously still be
throwing those TD passes had he
chosen an easier path.
"I can't second-guess the decisfon
to come hert or shy away from the
competition. I've committed myself
and the important thing now 1s to
make the right mo ves while I'm here .
It's up to me to make the right
moves."
Peete saw action as a freshman (50-
for-85 fo r 566 yards) and has put
together a three-yark mark of 407 •
for-722 for 5,413 yards, but his
meteoric rise is way out of the flow .
Few freshman start. let alone stand
out.
"The transition is a big switch," he
Shane Foley
said. "You need to come in prepared,
in academics as well as on the field .
and stay focu5Cd on what needs. to be
done and what you need to do to get
there."
With Foley. it's been a need to
concen1ra te on his deep patterns and
to continue a productJOn similar to
his spring practice outing. which he
...
has done.
Some of USC's offense is develop-
ing into an option, which is basically
foreign to his playing'daysa(Newport
Harbor. but not one which is coming
at him as if Greek. ·
''It's just a portion of what they
expect you to run,'' he said. "I've been
concentrating really hard and feel
capable of running the option. But it
is a switch. We used it a couple of
times in biJh school, but it was
basically limited."
t='oley surpnsed many last year
when he volunteered to play on the
special teams, a practice not common
with those aspiring to be a quar·
terback in the Pac-10.
"It was already established that
Kevin Mclain was the No. 2 quar·
terback and I bad played defense at
Newport (safety) and have never been
afraid to get out Lhere and play
defense," Foley reasons.
That, however, has come to a halt
with his move to the forefront of the
battle for No. l .
Foley came into camp at a peak in
terms of physical shape, and in early
tests scored a maximum number of
points, so he's given himself his best
shot.
He needs it.
"The competition is here." he
admits. "It's a battle with a couple of
other guys who are capable. too."
\"F .• , T l \ •. < .ONJlOl \\' f .. D J) l "< .. • \ T S E \
OlD WORLD ROMANCE AFLOAT PROF~SSfONA&. PLANNWG
GourrMt baskets w /champ.-gne & roses Aboard luxury Yacht. Al services arr~d. •,
IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 61S-4104 IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 675-4704
-··
• r-... -~:'tO:i..T"MiaUi:'lr'--VA UABL OU ON---------------1~~ 'ifi~Ef ~_f~ .. ii!W* f~~
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MAJOtt &.IAGUI STANDINGS ~LM9Ue
WHT DfVtSIOtf w L .-ct. GI 0.klencl 7' ... .'33 MlnMM>ll '7 SI 561 • K11K11• Cltv " se .Sil WIJ Alllillt '° St .sew m'il Cl'tlcffo S3 66 .... s ,,.,.,
Tn•• S2 6S .444 1211'1 Sffttle .. 73 .317 ,,,,,
I AST DIVISION
Dltroll .. ., .ses Boston " S2 .~ 3 ,_w Yorll ... SI .SS7 3\IJ MJlw1'*" " '° .SIM 9\IJ Toronto '° '° .500 10 Clevlllnd S6 63 471 13i;, 81tlfmor1 39 78 333 19\IJ
TueNIV'• kWft Alllillt IS, New York 6
Mlnnaot1 4, o.trolt I
OlkJlncl 6. a1111mor1 3
Sllttle 7. 8CKlon 0
Ctewllnd 6, Mltw1ullM s 110 lnnlno1I
Cl'tlcffo s. Toron10 4
Ttxll S, 1Cen111 Clly •
TICllV'• G-
Mlnntwl• (Anderson 10-7) ., Ot lroll (Alell •
ender I 1-71. 10-.JS • rn Cllllornl1 (Clerk S· I) II New York (Ellene!
0-0). 00 PJl'I.
0.klencl (Youno 6·71 al Belllrno<t (Pe<•H
.S·S), 4:3S p.m
S.ettlt (Swlfl 6·9) el Bo\lon (Hur\! 13·•1.
4.JS pm.
Mllw1okN IBlrkblek l ·S) et ClevNncl (F1rrt11 12·7), 4:3S pm
Toronto 1c11ncy 6·1?1 •• cn1c100 IRtun •·n. S:lO Pm Texu (Gu1me n 10-91 at 1<a n1a1 Cllv (Ben·
nl1ler 9· 101. S 3S P.m
Naftonal LNtue
WEST DIVISION w L ~ct. GI
DMewl 67 SI
Houston ... SS
.s.n Franci1<0 62 S7
Cincinnati '° S7
S.n Olt90 S6 63
Atlante •1 ,.
EAST DIVIS!Of4
New Yott. 71 ..
Put~rgn 66 S4
Monlreet 63 SS
Ch1ClllO S7 St
St Loui1 S7 66
Pll~Phi• SI 61
TllMdlV'I Scerft DMewl 1 Pllii.oete>hll
Cincinnati 6, ChlclllO •
Plttlburllh •. Atllnlt 2
St Louis 3. Housion o
S.n Oleoo 6, Montrt1t 2
New York 13. S.n Fr1ncl1<0 6
T lllltillt'S Gamet
S6I
S3t 3\IJ
S21 sv,
Sil 6V,
471 11\'t
3'S 761/'J
S97 sso S'l'J ~ 1'->
•91 12"»
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431 19'1>
Plltl1de1Phi1 (M.M.ddu• 3·?1 11 DMewl
(TudOr 6·SJ. NS Pm
Cl'lkeoo (SulcliH1 9· 101 •• Clnctnne ll
(Arm1tronv 2·Sl. •;JS Pm
Atlante !Glevlnt •·Ill 11 Plttst>uroll IL•Polnt
O·Ol, U S P.m.
Houston ll<neootf' 12·41 at SI Loul1 (Ma·
orene 7·61, S.JS o.m.
Monlrt1I (Smith 1·61 a1 S.n Oleoo
IRumunen 11·71, 7:0S P.m
Ntw York <Cone 12·2) el S.n Frencl\Co
(RtulCl'tet IS·61. 7 JS Pm
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A,...n 15, Yriees 6
CALIF041tNIA NIW Y041tl(
OWllllt d
Rav 21:1
McLmr 71> Jo~lb
Ownnodt'I
C01vrs rl
Arm11H
Howetl.36 -c Miller c
SCl'tofllcl u T .....
ltlr tlbl
S 2 I 2
• 0 1 I 7 I 2 2
6 3 3 s s 7 2 2
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4 1 2 I c 2 7 2
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lS '10 6
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Ntw Ylf'tr 000 20l 100-6
Gernt Wlnnl1>11 RBI -Oownlno 11 ll
E-WHl'tlnoton OP-Cehtorn.. I
LOB-<elitornle 6, Ntw York 2
18-RHtnotnon, OWl'tllt, Downing, Rav,
McLtmore 1, Howtlt. HR-Downing ( 191.
Wu l'tlnglon (1), Mattlnolv 2 113), Wlnfle4C (211,
Vt lerdt <•>. Jovntr (9).
IP H R Elt H SO
CMlflmla
Fre...-W,9·10 61-J • 6 6 0
Minion 12·3 1 0 0 0
NtwYlf'tr
Rriodtn L.,M 11-3 6 • • 0 2
Gutermen I l·l 6 6 6 0 0
Alltn s 1-J s J J 0 • Gu1n11 I 2 1 7 I 0
H8 P-SChollelo (tlY RhOdenl
Umplr"__..ome, Sllutoctr., Fifi!, Ford, $«·
ones. JOhnson, T11ird, Rtiny
T-H3 A-30,214
NATIONAL LaAGUI ~7,,..._S
~~Ll'MtA LOS AMO•&.as .,.... ., ....
ltldleY" MfrwnPd
Sen!Ull1'1
Perrlthc
CJIW'Ml rl
Jorelln lb
Je!IJ H
G11111r1 lb
l(NM!lf Ph
CarlNll P
Hlfrl' P
GGronPh
Ttllulvt P
If.Yono Ph T_..
S1 S2 $edll •121
S 0 I 1 Grlfftll " ) 0 II •02 1 MHtdWrf 2000 4 000 MrO.mrl 2000
4 00 0 GleltonM C 221
• I 10 Stleltlvef •12 I
3 1 2 0 [)empty ( 2 1 I 2
3 O 0 0 WOodlll lb )1 II
I 0 0 0 Mclelnlb ) 0 2 0
1000 L .. ryp 1 000
0 0 0 0 APtnl P 0 0 0 0
1000 HMo Ph 1 0 0 0
0 0 O 0 JHowett P 0 0 O O
1 0 0 0
3' S 11 4 T ..... 2'711 7 Sc••..., ..... ,....,,.,tlll 1• tit •-s LM....... -•t --7 Geme Winning RBI -Woodtofl t•I.
E-Snetbv. Jorden. O~ 1, LOl Aneelft I L08-Pnll1~ 6, LCK A ...... 1
1a--er1e11ev 2. o.mosev. le-Shefbv.
HR-Gibson (231. S&-!>lmual 1271. Ancwton
(Cl s-<ermen, LH rv. SF-Oemt>Mv. • " ....... so .-..1J1I NI
Carman L,9·7
H1rrl1
TlkulVt LIS~
4 7·3 • 11-3 ,
7 1
s 1
0
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0
Lu ry W.13·1 62·3 9 S S
APeN 1-3 1 0 0
JHowtll S, IS 2 I 0 0
WP-Leery BK-Cerrnan. Lury
T-2'50 A-37."2
LITTLE LEAGUE
Westtrn R ......
I
0
0
I
0
0
Nar111wMd (ltVIN) 6, ~ o
(It Hwtllf9fl Stac!Mn, Siii llrlllr .. )
s I
1
6 I ,
Ktnnewkk 000 ~ 2 0
Nortnwood 011 lOil-; 7 0
Srnill't encl Oevenl\eue<; Louie encl Moroen
w-t.oule, 6·0. L-Smilh, 6·1
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Amerian LeHUe
(Thrwtfl TutMllV's C.-1
(8Htd tfl 353 If be")
G Al It H ~ct.
B090' Bsn 114 43S M I S6 JS9
Puckett Min llS •79 n 111 .357
Gr""well Bs" 115 426 62 143 336
Trammll Ot1 101 371 60 112 329
RHenelson NY 9S 369 SC 121 37t
Winfield NY 110 403 73 131 .37S
Melll"91V NY 91 447 73 132 31• Brtll KC 117 ..0 61 142 373
Frenco Cit II• •S9 70 ,.. 311
Molllor Mil 113 '47 II 142 311
PITCHING ( 11 0tci1io111)-Vlole, MIMHOll, 19·•. 816, 2 36, Hurst. Bo$10n, 13·•. 7'S, 4 2C,
GOav11, 0 111.tana, 12·• •. 750, 3 10, Bertn9ue<,
Mlnnesote. 9·3. 727, l.65, Wttcll, 0.klencl. IC·6,
100. ) 21
Na'*'-1 LNeue
(ThrlUltl Tllftdev'I G-)
(8H~ en 3Sl 11 blll)
G Al R H "ct.
GPtrrv A)I 102 396 .. 127 311
Gwynn SO 99 311 .. 12• 310
Oe..-i Cl'lt 11• '39 SI 137 317
Pelrntiro C111 116 4~ 57 131 >OS
Gelerr1oa Mon 116 '64 7S 1'1 3CM
GlbMll DMetn 11• 411 as 110 ...,
Bonell Pit 11• '3S 13 130 199
SIX DMew1 1 lt '74 SI 141 .2'7
LBW Chi 109 406 .. 120 2'H
VenSivkt Pil 118 •S6 .. 133 192
PITCHING I 11 dfCISIOllU-Con., Ntw York,
12·2, I S7 7 31, JROtl•"'°"· Plmburvn. 9·2, '"·
306, Scoff, Hou1ton. 13·3. I ll, 2 SI. Perrell,
Monrreal, 10·3, 769, 2 is. OJeckson, Cincinnati,
16·5. 761 263
NFL oddS
•R1m1 3 over Houston
Wa1n1nglof' I over •Reidln
Cle•t t1nd ' > over ·11t1w York Jt ll •Gr~n Bav 1 o.er 1Cen11\ Cllv
• M1am1 3 over Oenvtr
·~alllf S > over BultelO
·c.nc1nnah S 1 ovf" Otfrou
• Allanla l over T •'"'Pl Bev
'PtullOt'Pll•a J over Ntw Enolencl
'New Yor .. G•l "'l 6 O•e• PollSOUron
·1!'0·anaoo: "\ I ;>ver "''"" ~!tanl Sal\ Franc sco J 1 O•tr 'Se n O·PVO
·Pl'Ofn•• I ovt• ~i""e'°'" ·oa~as t : ove• Cl'l•<•oo
• ~•es "ome team
From Harra"'' Reno Ract & Sooct\ Bootr.
DffO SH flsNng
DAVEY'S LOCl(Elt (New-1 lllffdll -1
1>011,, 2tO anQfft's 11 vt llowt•il, 7'9 barrecucle,
1'3 t>o"l10. S rock fi111. 123 c1lico ban, 77 \encl
ban 20 mec~erel JO t>lue c>ercll •S l(\JIC>ln
' t>lut ll'tarlt. l. mell.o s"8rk. ,
NEWf'OlltT LANDING -' ooen, St
1no•tr1 6S cetico ban 136 t>errtcuO• I t>onllo,
123 wnes ban. IS vellOwteil, 11 meCktr., I
rock lill'I 6' 1culcr1n
~~ 198'8
ISUZU ISUZU
TROOPERS
60 mos.
4-Door +Tax, 1200 Drive Offs Tot81 Payments $15.240
IF YOU CAI BEAT
OUR PRICE • BUY IT!
llLL 842-2111 TAI lllllZ
South County
YILUW ... /ISIZI tpifl
11711 BllCh Blvd., lbltillton Beach
Mlll't ........,_
(It .... '*9, ''"' ..... ...... Jlrnmv Connon (U S ) dll. DWI Catslclv
IU.S l, 6·•. 6· I; Miii Wllendlr (Swedlllll Cltf.
Alldrtw C1llle (U.$1. 6·'-6-1; Jot'!' ltlW (U.S.)
def M1IOMIY M«lr (C11d101lov.itlli), .... 7-6;
C.rl Llml>tt'ter (AU1lrlllel def. GulllltmO ,._,11·ROldln (Ar"'1lln1>. )·6, 6-1, 7·6;
Mlcl'ta .. Chenot (U.S I def, Joftls s-.ton
(SwiMn), 6•2, 7·S; a racs Gllblrt (U,S.I def.
Pt1e S.mpr11 (U.S.I. 6-•. 6·2; An«el
Cn..nottov (Sovltr Union) dtf. Alex AlllCNlltlCll
(AuW la). 6·•, C•6, 6-2.
INTH MATIOMAL TIMMS 'IMltATION
l1tH ....... ...OI
UITANMA CUP (65 • .........,) sewwa..-
"""" """ l. ......,._ • S111.11tes-Oavt Martin (U.S.) def. Rudolf DI·
M11rtl 181, 6·0. 6•0; TOl'll lt"own (U.S.) def
HtnN Mlllnlltr 18>. .. 0, •...O. ~ltnn
HIPOtmtlet·Jol'tn McGr1t11 (U S.l dflf ~I·
ler·DIMMr .. 18 1, 6•0, 6-0
Aintnle J, ltllW I Slnolft-UO DucrCMJ IAI di!. Aueusto
Zwtfftl Ill, 7·S. 6·2. T~ ...._y (A) def.
Marlo 1,1c1or1 II), 6·2, 6-0. ~Hay·
Eric Smllll IAl def lsldMl·GNf1lllO LOflO Ill.
6·7, rtt
GrN I lt1tHI J, s..-I S1no11i~ Jim Malcolm <Gel 011. aer1
Andersson (S). 7-6. .,_ I, 6 ·•, Geoff Pllsll (GB)
dtl K•rt·Ertk EIMrll't IS>. re. 6·1 Ooutllll-'MllCotm· Erle 8ulmef' I Ga> otf
Andtf'n on·atnor waneorldl m ...... 6-1
Fr111C9 J, Nerway O.
S•no1"-Anelre ROiiend (Fl dlf. TI\o<Qnv
HH ntl (NI, 6·•. 6·1. Andre 81b0Mu (F) otf
Ole Norcsvlk IN), 6-1, 7·6. Ooul>lft-Mlurice
Emerv Htnrl Pefllna (F) Olf H1111H·NO'C1vlk.
6· I 6·)
Thundlv'i s.mtlllltl
US v' A111trell1, Gru t 6(111ln n . Fr111C'f
AUSTRIA cu~ (SS·lftd·-1
S.Cllld lttufld tt.iv 2. ,r_. 1
Slno1n-Giollenol M•l"rl (I) Clef~ J11n Pierre
OtLeu1tn1e (F). 6·3, 6·4, Llontl Mellon (F) otf
C•rlo Ooonau i (ll, •·6, 7·6, 6·•
Oout>l11-Mal5tro·Merct110 Mol*ll m Cle!
Mt11on·OeLeu1tnle (F), 6·•. 7·S.
Swtdln J, Grall ltftlNI I
S1n111ts-A1Ct Hult (S) def CJlvt Befnittln
!GBJ 6· I, 6·2, Sven 01vloson def. FreOOlt
Fitld !GBI. 6·0, 6·3 OouOIH--Hult·01vlcsson
IS) O CPlarlH H1111Y·Paul Drane. 6-•. 7·6.
FWllld l , .......... 0
S1nglfl-Arvo Hillt (Fl Olf. OIOICI Sy1n (II.
6·2. 6·0. GUY 0 1uMiO (Fl o.f. Svamsilwen (ll,
6·7 6·2 Ooublt1-HoHl-Oku>slo (F) Off Wulto·
Svam1~wan Ill. 6·0, 6-1
VALVOlN MOlOlt Oil •i-T2_.. -.a-
-:';I\· ........ 14• _,
15' ~ 15' ._. __ ·-
flAM
OIL ALTllS • 1"1IA fin....,., ,..,d .. , ... ,.a.. .r:~ 21
Auor-..n u•
IG-LO l.EHIGllAHT
HHNZOIL
MOTOIOIL • V"'to• ,,....,n
SAl JO
83 !. 93!.
"'"' J..,....... S~11totl hclutetll 18 1 def Neel
CMmodY Ill 6·2 6-1 ff•to O.OC•t0tt 181 def Nl1 ll o •R tord1n 111. •·I. 1 •
DoublH-ltdu"11l·Ot ocUC1ts 18 1 csef
C1rl'llOdy-o'Ri0r01n Ill 6-1 6·2 .... ,....... J, ......_.,,.,.. •
SlnQift-fteltr &ecrott IHl I oef It 81om·
mandMI (H ) 6-2 •·3 Jontl 8•rrt (NZ) Oii It
8ru.ntnoe IN) 6·0 6 I Oout>ltl-8 1rrv•
a.uo11 (NZI def 8IOt'll"'tnCI• w Slooo (H) •·1, 6·) 6-7
TICllV's MlkMI Cl~ vs tsr .... 11e1v •I Swleltl1 U S A vs F1nlen0, Sw1fftrtano v\ Arotnllne Wilt
Ge<menv vs So• n Norw .. v' Au"''-· 8ru ll
V5 Ntw Zlllencl Jao1n ..,, Aullr•I·•
UST A Ttmls LMtu•
(et WfltwNd)
Men'' Stctltnel Filllh SO-Fhnt Cenvon of La Caneela de1 Oowntv T tnnl1 Club of Oow,,.v ) O
.. S--Weslllkt Tt nnll eno Sw.m CIYtl o1
Wn ti.kt V1lleot Cit! S.n1 •OO ol Santa An•
S·O
I 0--JPL ol Pneot,_. off Ctrrllol Club ol
CtffllCK 3·2
ls-Lo' Ceo.t•tros SC>CYll V•' eoe of Foun·
le 1n I/all"' Off 111.eno E "'D·•t Wttl OI POMOne C· I
J o-F em TtM ' AHOC·•l.on o• LO\ Ano .... Cl Net Wit\ of NO<"lnr dllt S·O w_., SK1ltNI ,~
SO--S...rl ano T.,rt ol o .. Me• Off Nt'
ResUlll ol A1le0f'\e 2 I
• s--Eltctr>e 81~ of wnt,.•1 v 191 ~
North OrenQf Co..nlv CIYO ot "" trlon, 3· I
• 0--Tl'IO;;W"<l o.,, Recout • Cluo of
TllOusano Oa•1 of! C a remont Ciuo of Clere·
tnO<>I J 1
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0.i<s Clef S.n 0 pg~ •o 51.r>Qn.-l of s.~ o -
No.-ln Ce>v"'• S 0
3 0--Tnt llec~t"fl 01 C artmo<'I o ()4kr·OV.
lt•CO<AI c .. o o• ~m. ' I
NOTE Bauo 0" •ne ~a1o01141 T "'"'' Rehr>Q Proor•m ,..,,,, 1 o , a DeQ nne• a!'ICI 7 o ,,
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(San Juan Puerio ll>eo dtc Menutl OtL80rl
<Boston> " 1 Jnen1n"Ou\ 10 rouno 00...1
(Cerdona 11 11·0 w11n I? "nockou11 Delton "
16·2 w1ltl I• 'llOC' OVI\ JOllll Monlfl (Aneht.rnJ O« T m Burotn B•oOlllvn N Y l
lrt a unan•mo...5 IO·rouno oout Mon'" '' 31·• witn 33 kllOCll,OUI\ Bu•QtH ' 12·5·2 W •lll Ont
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DON'T M15S OUl • ANNIVfltSAll'Y ~Alf"
CllCUlAltl
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ITlMS • .AJ LOW LOW
ANNIVHSAll'Y SAVtitGS. I UT HUl lY...SAlE ENDS
AUGUST tott.t
•J.,,_..,...._
•A/NJ#o --• ::.:n-:.::
EN-a
PARTS DEPARTMENT COOLING
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LOS ANGELf.S -Wayne Gretzky 1s (ii
DOt lootina forward to mcetina his fonner "
••ma~ while 1uited in the black and
pay oftbe Los Aftleles Kinas. "I don't want to 10 up there." Gretzky said. "It'll
probebty be lhe hardest game I'll ever have to play."
Gnitz.ky made his comments Monday night on
.. It's Your Call," a call-in sports talk show broadcast on tbe Prime Ticket Network, which telecasts Kings
11mes. • Gretzky will first face the four-time Stanley Cup
champions Oct. l 9 at the Northlands Coliseum, with a
remaccb Oct. 25 at The Forum. The teams wiU meet a
IOtal of eiaht times during the season.
The eiaht-time National Hockey League most
valuable player also downplayed reports that Edmon-
ton Oiler players would boycott training camp to
protest his move to Los Angeles.
.. Emoti9ns run high," Gretzky said. "Everything
will work itself out ahd they'll have a great team."
Gretzky, whose distaste for flying has been Y'Cll
documented, also called for the league to move Los Anaelet out of the Smythe Division.
Because the diviSIQJl's four other teams arc all in
Canada, the K.in&s are believed to have to fly more
miles than any ot1'er team.
And apan on Monday he discounted persistent
claims that his actress wife Jan~t Jones influenced his
move.
"My father summed it up best when he said we
knew Janet was goinf to take some heat because I had
played 10 years in a cuy where I had become not only a
spons figure, but almost like the best friend with all the
fans," Gretzky said.
"We both loved Edmonton very much and would
have stayed there. but it just came to a crossroads with
the Oilers and it's to everyone's benefit that I move on."
Gretzky said a three-year deal that takes NHL
games off f.SPN, cable TV's largest network. was a bad
move.
Quote of the clay
Jaior Orth, the Pirates' backup catcher.
wh o suffered a broken collarbone when he dived
lo catch a pop foul, asked ifbe would be out for six weeks: "No. longer than that. Maybe a month
and a half."
Nlcklaaa pondera retirement
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. -Jack n Nicklaus. who has won a rcc-0rd 18
professional golf titles. said Tuesday he is
not sure whether he wants to keep on ,.
playing.
The 48-year-old Nicklaus has cut back his playing
schedule in the last two years, but said he is not satisfied
with the results. ··
"I'm not playing as well as I should, and I don't like
it. I don't like it at all," said Nicklaus. who has missed
the cut in four of eight starts this year.
"I've been trying to cut back to five or 10
tournaments, and r just can't do it. l can't get there.
"Next year, because of commitments tQ friends
and promises rve made. I'm committed to J 5 or 16
tournaments."
I <'J< < url
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Kimball electa to compete
INOlANAPOUS -BNCe Kimball 1:1 said Tuetday he will compe~ in the U.S.
Olympic d1vin1 trial1 delpi1e alcobol-
related manslau&bter ctwees apilW him.
... cannot disappoint my family, fnenda and
teammates by aivina up on mrtelf." a sbak.en Kimbell
told a news conference.
"I've dedicated 21 years of m~ life to the sport of
djving. I've made incredible ucriftces to achieve the
level of excellence which I've punuect. and J hold a
stooa bond of commitment towards the people who
have encouraged me, supported me and ... instilled a
piece of themselves inside of me."
Barb Mclaughlin, usistant executive diRCtor for
U.S. Diving Inc., declined comment on J(jmt>.U's
decision. She said earlier, however, that the sanctionina
body has no rule that would disqualify him because of
the charges and that ''the judicial system will have to
run its course."
Kimball was flanked by a security auard, bis two
attorneys, family, friends and teammates u be entered
the news conference on the Indiana Univenitf·Pwdue
Unjversity at Indianapolis campus. The diVlJll trials
will be held at the school Wednesday throuah Sunday.
Kimball's announcement came a day after the
former University of Michigan star wu char&ed in
Tampa. Fla., with two counu of drivina under the
influence-manslaughter and three counts of drivina
under the influence with serious personal injuries.
· The charges stem from an Aua. l traffic accident in
which Kimball's speedi~ car is allcted to have crathed
into a crowd at a popular tcen-aae haDJOut in Brandon,
Fla., leaving two people dead and six injured.
Authonties said Kimball, who won the silver
medal 1n platform diving durina the 1984 Olympic
Games in Los Angeles. could face up to 45 years in
prison if convicted on all five felony charges.
Kimball's attorneys. Frank Quesa<la and Lee
Fugate of Clearwater. Fla., said they expected the
Olympics to be over long before Kimball's case reaches
the courtroom.
Fugate said he doubts tho case will "go to trial
before December, at best" because of the large number
of wnnesses involved.
Rama• Miller enda holdout
Defensive lineman SMwa Miller EE ended a 26-day holdout Tuesday and e 9 t
reported to the Rams' trainina camp in
11me for a light evening practice. Terms of
the contract Miller signed after a 13-hour drive from
Ogden. Utah were not disclosed. "I'm happy with the
decision," Miller said. "I didn't thin.k the Rams were
going to budge from their last offer and I didn't want to
lose that. It's water under the bridge now. 1 w 't let it
bother me." The Rams also announced that th ad
claimed rookie punter Scott Tabor from the Ra1 .
Fourth-year punter Dale Hatdaer is still recovering
from knee surgery. One of the Rams' two remaining
holdouts. third-year guard Tom Newberry, indicated a
trade may be in order to satisfy both parties. He has two
years left on his contract, said his SI S0,000 per-season
salary is not enough. ''The whole thing is now back to
the point where they're not adding to my salary,"
Newberry said in his first public comment since his
holdout began July 21 ... A veteran punter for three
National Football League teams, Jeff Gossett, was
obtained by the Los Angeles Raiders, while the Rajders
released veteran offensive lineman Brad BMde. The
Raiders said they obtained Gossett from the Houston
Oilers in exchange for previous considerations.
Gossett. 31 .joined the Oilers at midseason last year and
finished the season with an average punt of 40.4 yards
and a longest punt of SS ya rlis.
EQUIPMENT
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• ORANGE 0 (..,14) 6.~J.1441, 6l2 Ea l KJ1clla A'"·· Wcs1 of Tu~On Avt
Grant •takee claim to pael.tlOn
l..OSANOELES-OatyOra.nt liped m a multi-~ar contract with the Los An,elel
Qippers Tuada~ and immediately •Wed
bis claim to the National Buketball
Association tam'11tanina pard polidon.
"I can Stej> riabt in and •wt." Orant said at 1 news
conference. "rm comina out for blood."
Norm Nixon, who milled the last two seasons
because of knee and Achilles' tendon injuries. provides
Grant's competition for the startina spot.
MASON, Ohio -Jimmy Connors. ~, 35, seemed to get stronaer 11 his match p~ Tuesday in bcatina 27-year~ld
Dan Cassidy 6-4, 6-1 in the fin t round of -
the Association of Tennis ProfeuionaJs Cham-
pionships at the Jack Nicklaus Sports Center.
''He miued a few - a few too many," Connors
said after the victory. "I'm not sure I got stronaer, I
think he just got ti.red." -
Kin&• .. aln•t IDTltlnC Lafleur
INGLEWOOD -The Los Anaeles Ei.i1 Kings, although flattered by the request, ,
cannot invite retired hockey player Guy
Lafleur to join them at training camp next
month, Kings general manager Rojic Vac on si.id
Tuesday.
"After some conversation both parties decided
that we would be unable to reach an agreement that
would be in Mr. Lafleur's best interests and we have
mutually agreed to close the matter," Vachon said.
Televtalon, radio
TELEVISION
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees, Channel 5.
4:30 _l>.m. -BASEBALL: Atlanta at Pit-
tsburih. TBS.
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, WGN. _
5 p.m. -WATER POLO: U.S. vs.
Yugoslavia, from Malibu (taped), Prime Ticket.
5:30 p.m. -POOL: Women's ()pen 9-Ball
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6:30 p.m. -MEN'S BOWLING: The
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7:30 p.m. -BASKETBALL: The Summer
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7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: New York Mets at
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7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at
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RADIO
4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at New
York Yankees KM PC {710).
7 P·l'l'l· -BASEBALL: Montreal at San Diego, KFMB (760).
7:30 p.m. -fSASEBALL: Philadelphia at
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TH URSDAY'S TELEVISION
I p.m. -MEN'S GOLF: PGA The Inter-
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THURSDAY'S RADIO
. I p.m. -BASEBALL: Philadelphia at ~Dodgers, KABC (790).
NORTHWOOD •••.
hom81
"(Smith) wu thtowiaa . me curves.~ Mid Sobek.
another member of the l 987 Notthwood team ... Wben he
threw me the third one in a row, I reached out ud pulled
it down lbc line. • • "I was really just tryina to 8rt •bit. I wun t ttyina to
pull, but itjutt worked out that way:•
Thinp continued to work out Northwood'• way the
mt of the pme. The Irvine kid• collcc1ed one nan in the
third and three more in the fourth to aea1 the victOry.
Should Northwood win Thursday, it would facie the
winner of the Hawaii-Utah pme in the semif\nals on
Friday. One more win would send the ~ t.ck to Williamsport, Aug. 224 27, for the World Series. The only
U S tc.am to ever play in consecutive Wor1d Series
toi.i,'.naments was Schenectady, N.Y., in 19S3 and l9S...
Northwood, meanwhile, is the only Southern
California team to reach the \\'.estem . Rcaionals two
consecutive years. The success this year u d ue to steady
hitting. consistent pitching and takina advantqe of
opponent's mistakes.
Tuesday was no exception. North~ collected
seven hits. all singles: ~be~ led the way, JO•na 3-for-3.
scoring once and dnving 1n two runs. Cttcher Ryan
Mo!Jlln also drove in a pair of runs with a bases.-loaded
single in the bottom of the fourth.
Northwood scored three runs on Kennewick passed
balls and stole seven bases in the prne. ln the fourth
inning. Lloyd and Sobek executed a dou~ steal, with
Lloyd scoring on the play and So~k_reach1na second to
score on Morgan's single.
"We train our base coaches from day one," Hayashi
said. "I may be the only manager out here who docs this,
but we take every position seriouslr,~ A base coach can
make the difference in a close game. '
Northwood's win ovcnhadowed a fine pitching
performance by Smith. The hard-throwing right-hander,
who stands 6-fect tall, had 10 strikeouts in the game. He
struck out two Northwood batters each inning..
Smith (6-1). who threw 124 pitches compared to 66
for Louie, came at the Northwood batters with a blazing
fastball and an assortment of chan.gcups and curves. But
the defending Western Regional Champions never gave
in.
''He started throwing all curves because we were
hitting all his fast balls," Hayashi said. "It got to the point
where we determined a pattern and knew when he was
going to throw what pitch. We took advantage ofit."
Malone signs
ATLANTA (AP) -The Atlanta Hawks. hoping to
piece together an NBA championship team, Tuesday
signed free agent Moses Malone to a thrcc·year NBA
contract. convi nced the veteran center is the missing link
to a title.
The contract reportedly is worth a minimum of$4.6 7
m1ll1on to the 33-year-old Malone, a I I-time All-Star and
three-time NBA Most Valuable Player in bis 12 seasons in
the league. The Hawks declined to release details.
"Nobody hates losing more than me," said owner
Ted Turner during the news conference on the basketball
court of Tht' Omni. where the Hawks play their home
games. "I know that one player guarantees nothing and
that to win a championship yhou need a loit of luck and
everything has to mesh.
"This was the piece of the puzzle we all felt we needed
to give us our best chance at a championship," said
Turner, who bought the Hawk.s 12 years ago. .
Atlanta has never won a championship since the
fran chise moved from St. Louis in 1968, last capturing the
NBA title in 1957-58 while in St. Louis.
The Hawks have won at least SO games the last three
seasons. but each year were eliminated in the second round of the playoffs.
"This is a great si tuation for me." said Malone. who
played the last two seasons at Washington.
FOLEY FACES BATTLE FOR NO. 2 SPOT .•.
From Bl
usual flow. but he's hopeful the work
he has done over the summer will
have made the issue moot.
One of the big problems for a you ng
quarterback at a major school is
simply becoming part of the wood-
work .
"You lose touch with a lot of people
from high school." said Foley. "A lot
of people ask, 'How's 1t going? How's
it going?'"
The answer 1s basically "wood-
work," and that's not an easy situ-
ation for someone used to throwi ng
mulllple touchdown passes week-in
and week-out.
"It just takes a while when you're at
a university like this." continues
Fpley, who would obviously still be
throwing those TD passes had he
chosen an easier path.
"I can't second-guess the decision
to come here or shy away from the
competition. I've committed myself
and the iml>Ortant th ing now 1s to
make the right moves while I'm here.
Ifs up to me to make the nght
moves."
Peete saw action as a freshman (50-
for-85 for 566 yards) and has put
together a three-yark mark of 407-
for-722 for 5,413 yards, but his
meteoric rise is way out of the flow .
Few freshman start, let alone stand
out .
"The transition is a big switch," he
Shane Foley
said. "You need to come 1n prepated.
in academics as well as on the field,
and stay focused on what needs to be
done and what you need to do to get
there."
With Foley. it's been a need to
concentrate on his deep patterns and
to continue a production similar lo
his spring practice "Outing, which he
\'E. 'FTI \ I.( 'J)f )I \S
has done.
Some of USCs offense is develop-
ing into an option. which is basically
foreign to his playi ng days at Newport
Harbor. but not one which is coming
at him as if Greek.
. "It's 4ust a portion of what they
expect you to run," he said. ''I've been
concentrating really hard and feel
capable of running the option. But it
is a switch. We used it a couple of
times 1n hiJh school. but it was
basically limited."
;oley surpnsed many last year
when he volunteered to play on the
special teams, a practice not common
with those aspuin& to be a quar-
terback in the Pac-I 0.
"It was already established that
Kevin Mclain was the No. 2 quar-
terback and I had played defense at
Newport (safety) and have never been
afraid to get out there and play
defense." Foley reasons.
That, however. has come to a bait
with his move to the forefront of the
battle for No. 2 .
Foley came into camp at a peak in
terms of physical shape, and in earl)'
tests scored a maximum number of
points. so he's given himself his best
shot.
He needs it. .
"The competition is here,.. he
admits. "It's a battle with a couple of
other guys who arc capable, too."
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US P.m.
MllW•ukff l81rkbtck •·SI •t c1evet1nd (F1trt11 12·7), US om
Toronlo tClencv 6·121 •• Cllluvo <Reuss 8·71, S:JO Pm
TexH lGurmen 10·9l al Ken'IS Cilv l81n·
"'''" 9· 101, SJS o.m
N1tlonll L .. tut
WEST DIVISION w L ,ct, GI o.-n 67 SI Hou1ton 64 SS
-Sin Frenclteo 61 S7
Clnclnnerl '° 57
Sin Oleoo S6 6J All1n11 41 71
EAST DIVISfO"
New York 71
Pittltluroh " Montrtel 63
Cll•ClllO 57
SI LOUIS S2
Pnllldelotlll SI
T_..Y'I Scw.s Oed9lr's 7. Pllllacsete>hl• S
Clnc111n111 '· Chlceoo 4
Plllll>urllll 4. Alllnl1 2
St Louis 3. Houston 0
San Oteoo 6. Montrul 2
.. s.
SS s• 66 67
N-Y0<k ll. Sin Fr1ncltco 6
T......-s~
561
.$38 l'h
521 S'h
.513 6"'1
471 ll'h
.l45 ,,...,
S97
S50 5'11
$34 7113
'91 121.;
4-CI II'">
431 19,.,
Ptlflecsetlllll• (M.Maoou• 3·1) ., °'""" {Tudor 6·S), 7 3S P.m
Cllic·•l>O (Sutcliffe 9· IOJ 11 ClnclnN ll
{Arm\lro<ro 2·Sl. 4.3S Pm
Atllnla (Gln lne 4· llJ 11 Pl!t,bUrOh <L1 Poln1
0·0). •:JS P m.
Hou"on (KMOPtl' 12·4) I I St, LOUii (Ma·
Orlnt 2·61, S•lS P.m.
Montreal (Srnltll 1·6) 11 San 0 1.vo
IResmusien 11 ·7), 7-0S Pm
New Vork (Cone 11·21 et San Frencllco
(ReuWlel 1S·61, 7 3S o rn
AMERICAN LEAGUE
~IS, Yanken 6
CALIFOtlNIA NIW YOtlK
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Rev?tl
Mc:Unr 2tl
Jovn«lD
Ownnoo11
COn~rf
Arm111f
Howell 3t> -c Mlllt< c
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c....... m oeo on-1s
Hew Yertr 000 203 100-6
Game W1nnlno RBI -Oownln9 1111
E-WHllfngton OP-<1lllornl• ,
LOB-CelffOl'nl1 6, N-Yo<k 1
28-AHtndenon, OWhlll, Oownln11, Rn.
Mc:LtmOl't 1, Howell Hlt-Oown11111 ( 191
W1111in11ton 171, Mattlnolv 2 113), Wlnflt«I (11J,
Velarde (4), Jovner (9) ... H "IE" II SO ~ Frtwr W,9· 10 61·3 8 6
Minion 21·3 2 0
NtW Yertr
Rhoden L,7·9 11 ·3 6 •
Guterman 1 1·3 6 6
Allen S 1-3 S l
Guante I 1 2
HBP-SctlOfltlO (DY RnooenJ
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6 0
0 0
4 0 .,
6 0 0
3 0 4 1 I 0
NATIONAL La..U•
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CJemftrf
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4 0 t 1 MHldlr rt t I 0 0
4000 MIO.vkrt 2000
4000 Gllleoftlf 4 221
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4 110 SNlbVcf 4 221 > 2 2 0 Der/IMye 2 1 I 2
Gutlefl 31>
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Ttkulvt P
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IP H•HUIO
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T-HO A-31,411
LITTLE LEAGU•
Westw11 R..._.
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0
0
I
0
0
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6
I
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NOf'lhwOOd 012 lOlc-6 7 0
Smith •nd Oevtnhlut<. Louie end MOf'o1n
W-LOIJit, 6·0 L-Smllll, 6•1
MAJOR LEAGUE LEAD•RS
Ameriun L-.ue
ITllrovtll Tuesdl'('s ~)
<••Md tft lSJ •• Nts)
G AB • H .. ct.
8ooo1 Bsn 11• 43S 16 15" lSt P1.1cket1 Min llS 479 n 171 357
Greenwell 8sn 11S 426 62 143 ll6
Tremmll Oer 101 371 60 112 329
RHendson NY 9S 369 8• 111 321
Winfltld NY I 10 403 73 Ill 32S
Melllngly NY 9' 407 7l 132 l24
Bren t<C 117 440 61 142 m
Franco Cit 1 U 4S9 70 146 311
Momor Mil 113 4.C7 II 14? )II
PITCHING l 11 Otci\ion1l-\llot1, MlnMlOte,
19·4, 126, 2.36. Hurst, Boston, 13·4, 7'S, 4 24,
GOev11. Oekleno. 12·4. 750. l 10, h<enouer.
MtnnHOtl, 8·3, 7't7, 3 6S. Wttcn. 0.kllnd, 14·6,
700, 311
N1ttonll L .. tue
(~ Tutlda'f's G-)
CS.Md "" JSl •t IMtll
G AB • H ,ct. , c;p,,,y All 101 3" .. 117 ->11
Gwv"n SO 99 lll 41 124 320
OawMlll Cll1 114 439 SI ll7 312
PaJtMiro Chi 116 4Sl S7 Ill .lOS
Gei.rr10a Mon 116 44' 7S 141 >CM
Glblell Oed9tf'I 116 •J 1 as 110 ..,
8on<ll Ptt I U 4JS 13 llO 1t9
SH o.-n 119 474 SI 141 .it7
L1w Chi 109 406 41 120 196
VanSlvkt Pit 118 •S6 M Ill 2'2
PITCHING 'i-11 dK1s•on11-<0M. Ntw VOl'I<
11·1 8S7 2 31, JRoolnion, Pit1s11u<o11, 9·1. tit, 306 Scon. Houston, 13·3, 813, 2 SI, Perrell,
Montreat, 10·3, 769 2 2S. OJ1ckton, ClnclM1ll.
16· s. 762, 2 63
NFL odds
·Rams 3 ove• tiou\lon Wasn1no10<' 1 over •1t11cMo
Cltvttano t > ovrr '"ltw Yori< Je•'
"Green Bav I on r K1nw• C••v • M1em1 3 over Otnve<
~1111t 5 ~ over e ... tt1to ·c nc1nna11 S , ortr Oetr0t1
• Allente l ovt<' T e mcte Bev
'f>nolaM Ol'UI ) O\'e<' Ntw Env11no
"Ntw Yo<!< G e~•\ 6 over P t11burof\
·1~oiana00' \ 1 ovrr tllew Or ''"' Sat' Franc·sco ~ , o•er •s an 0 1evo
•Pr~" I over M ,nne'\0'4
"Oe •as I > over Cn1caoo
• 0..,-.0Pf'\ "0rnf' t•em
~rom Harral! s RMO Rae• & Soor" 8-
Deep 5H flshlne
OA\IEY'S LOCKER INt~ llffdll -1
bolts, 290 1no1trs 11 venowt•il. 749 oerr1cuo1
2'3 bof\ito. S rock "'"· 123 Cltko 1>eu. 77 11no t>eu. 20 mackeret lO Dlue percn 4S teulpln
4 blue 1lu1r11., l maKo lharl< ,
NEWPORT LANDING -4 DOi ts, S9
an111tn 65 ca lico oeu. 136 oerr1cuoe e DOn1to,
123 llnd t>eu IS yf110wra11, 11 rnacaertl. t
roek "'" 64 KulPln
~~ 1988
ISUZU ISUZU
TROOPERS
10 .
60 mos.
•-Door + Tax, 1200 Drive Otta Total Payments S15,2'40
IF YOU CAii BEAT
OUR· PRICE • BUY IT!
Tll .r.1z 842-2111
South County
ftUIW ... /IUil ~111 --
11711 Beach Blvd., ...._.. BtlCh
MM'• ..........
( .. --. Giiie)
""'' ..... s...... Jlmtnv Connon (U $ l Oef. Dell Cetlldy cu S.l .... 4. 6-1, Melt W1leflCl9r tsw.-> def
Anorew Ce.tile (U.S.). 6-3, 6-1; Jvtov •tve (U.S l def Mll0$1ev M«Jr {C1ecflotlovellle), .... 7·6,
C1r1 Llml>er_. IAutlralle) dtf. Cullllrmo
Ptrei·Rokllltl (Aroentlnel. 3-6, .. 1. 7·6:
Mklll tl Cll•nve (U S.I def. .i-s ,.,.,._
(Sweden), 6·2. 7·S. 8rtd. Gilbert (U.$.) dlf
Pelt Slmpru CU S ), 6·4, 6·2; Mdrtl
CllnnokOV {Soviet Union) dtf. AIU Mlolllhdl
IAustrl•I. 6·4, 4·6, 6"·2.
INTl •NATIOHAL TIMMS "IDEtAnotf
(at H....... lleedl)
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Htftf'V ~lier (81, 6-0, 6-0. ~
HiPl*l\llel·JOhn McGre ltl CU.S.l dtf. Melent· lef·OeMN<-4 (8 ), 6·0, 6-0.
Allltnle J. ..... I Slnvtet~to Oucrou (Al def. A""410
Zwtlft4 (II, 7·S, 6·1, Teo ......... (Al dlf Merlo t110ofl (II. 6·2. 6-'0 Doutllft 900 .._v·
Erk Srnllll (A) def llldorl·G..._ LON (II.
6·2 ret
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Andtnton ISi. 1·4. 6·1, 6·4, Geoff PelVI !GBl
Clef K•rt·Erlk Elne<tll (S), 6-0, 6·2
Ooubles-Mllcolm·Eric 8urm« (G8 J Off
Anclefuon·&enot Wllllfstedt (S), 6-4. 6-1 ,.,_. J, ........
S1no111-And<t ROCend (F) def. Tll«vnY
Haanu (NI, 6·•, 6·2, Andre l itlOMU (Fl def
Ola NorOvii. (N), 6·2, 7·6. ~IG•
Emtrv Htnrl Pti11n• (Fl oef. HHMS·NorcMk.
6· I 6·3
ThurWIY'I S.11Mlnel1 US •S Au"rella, Greer 8rlt1ln .,,_ Frenct
AUST .. IA cu~ CSS·eM·-) ~ •eulld tr.IV 2. Frence 1
S1r>Olfl-G1ot1enol M11stri {I) Off. Jaan Pierre
OtL•ut1n1t (Fl. 6·3. 6·4, Lionel Ml llO<I (F l Clef
Cerio OoonfUI (ti, 4·6, 7·6, 6·4
001J~t1-Me1,lro·M1rce110 Monetti (ll Otl
Mlllon·OtL1utenl1 IF), 6-4, 7·5.
Sweden J, Gnet ltttaln t
S1no1u -A.c1 Hull {S) Clef. Clive k nlte\n
IGBI 6· I, 6·2, Sven OIVldson def. Freoctie
F•tlO IGBl 6·0, 6·3 OouDla--+4Ulf-OIYIOton
IS) O Cr>ar~ H11w K·P•ul Orene, 6·4, 7·6
FllUncl l, llWtllM4e 0
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6·2, 6 1 OouOIH-H1Mi·01uoslo (Fl Off W11110·
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SAf JO 10W JO. IOW-«I
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$6,..,..._..ihon IMcluKho 81 0.-~
CermodV UI. •·2 6-1 l rt•o O.OC•odft 111 °"'
Nl1 ll 0 ·•1oroe 11 Ill 6· 1. 1 •
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G.rmenv v~ Si>e1n Norw•• .,, Au1rr11 8rer11
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(11 W"lwttcSI
Meft'I ~ "Nlh S C>-FHnt C1nron of La Ca,,101 o.t Oow,,.. Tenn1\ CIUO ot Oowner, 3 O
4 S-WetU•~• T_.,n" end Sw1rn Club of
W"lllkt \11llloe oet 5•"'••l>O o' S.nlt Ant
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4 ()-JPL Of Ptwde<I• def Ctrr '°' Ctuo Of Ct rnto1 l 2
) S-LO\ C•Ot l .. •O\ Soor•1 "•·t~ 04 Foun·
111n 111• ev oet 1n •'10 Enno rt w"' O' PO/'l!Onl 4· 1
l l>-F 11m TtM \ A\~l&!IOI' 04 LO\ AnlHtleS o Ht! w .1, ol Nor1r>r ooe S-0
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S !>-Surf t "O T url o' 0.. ""'•' CM! 1111! ltnutt' of A·•-t 1 I
4 S-Ettct"C But\ C.I iNnt ut V •Ot Of!
tllortn Or•f!Ot Cou•ll• C>uo of Fu t <IO<I, 3· I
4 l>-T"OllW"O 0 1•\ RICQutl CIUO of
Tnouwno OI•' ot' c artmont c .. o of Cll<t · m()nl l,
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Proortm w~e•e I 0 ' o otO 'Iner 1 no 7 O '
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8e•ln9
(at IMMWMCS I
Tovrnament EllmiNl1*w ~UPE RLIGHTWEtGHTS-S.ntos C1roo111
!S1n J<;an P~t<''O R•CO C:K Mlf'utl OtLtOI'
(80\lonl r a Jlll MTIO"\ 10 fOIJllO 00\ol
<Cerdon1 '' 11 ·0 w.tn 11 •llOCl CX.ll OeLton '' 16·2 w Ill 16 l.llOC•CX.I\ JOl\n MontH
(A"•nt•rnl oec Tm Bu<Ofl\ !Brooittvf\ H Y 1
In a unan.rnoo' lO·ro.."Cl _,, Montn " 31·4 ·
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MOTOR OIL
DRESS -UP TRUCKS CLEANS
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. AUQU9t 17, 1181
HOaSW R.ACtNG
LM AMfNtM
T\IHDAY'S •HULTS
(hi ef »•fltltlM _.,_ W M IMellftel
F•ST ,.ACI.. 350 nrn
Sul Tun (Tr.uurtl 4 00 3 60 ? 6(
Merrih• We lto4Allon9 IA1111111r1 2UO IOI(
HH H1\lllll 0.11 (Lewi$) • X
Ttmt· 0-17 9S.
U IXACTA (10-11 N IO ll2UO
SECOND •ACE. 400 .,erd' Doctor Mvwev {Plktnlon)
All F Aomlret (TrNsure)
Ro« For ltoter (FIOueroel
T11ne 0:20-37
600 360 2.C
340 UC
UC:
U EXACTA 13·2) Plld Sl600
THIRD "ACE. lSO yerd'
L Otfl\I Co4n ITrtHurtl
Lithe TOlftt 1wn1tel
Oar( Denet (Cerooa 1
Time 0-1790
S2 EXACTA 110-11 pe14 s?OtOO
FOUttTH ltACE. 350 YlfOI
Nat,ve CaMO<I IPtrti) 37 IO 17 IO
S"' 11 Oe ntv Lact <Cerootal 610 LO•t To Trevt1 (O.rc11l
900 uo
0 0
T me 0 1100 S2 EXACTA i.-ll Ploe! '33S60
FIFTH llACE. .00 •••ct\ Cna~•11 •P l<enton
RaOI• APOiio Wn11e
Fo...r IN~y ,.,. n Gtrc_.I r , .... G-20 49
1 20 •00 400 uo 420
110
U EXACTA •3·81 Pli! s7S OO
11 DAILY Ta•LE 110-•·31 Plld '4 1117 00
SIXTH RACE. 350 nrO\
Cao-t Ooc•or P'l<entont "•P' ..,, ~De ILtW•l )
B•99t<' Bt"t<' Ou (Wn•ttl
Tme 01761
S4IO 3 40 240
440 300
310
S2 EXACTA f6·1 01 10 51940
SEVENTH RACE. 350 ¥1•0s ,n I r>O H1 p,11,tnlon 20 40 7 20 7 00
Httmf Ooc Carooza 1 7 IO e 00
M.t•&'•l1o •PaullneJ 100 Tome 01788
U EXACTA •9·101 1>110 174 IO
EIGHTH RACE. 170 vero1
Mo••" Brown Jug •LCl<tVl
8rt'lt\ Ci'\erQe<" tProc1or»
ICe H Gold IO•dtcr<~\t!I)
T me 0 •565
6 20 4 00 3.00
720 4 20
1.60
U EXACTA •2·41 Pl•O SJ7 60
NINTH RACE. 3SO vero1
Maooi er M. 1 C1roo11
BtOu '10\ MU (Lf••l l
l(t •C"I" ""'• Coov (8fOOltst
r .me O 17 66
uo soo 300
1040 SIO
500
n EXACT A <t ·•J Pl>CI lSA 40 n DAILY ,..~LE 9· 1·1 01.0 IAOS IO
TINTM U GI. f70 vwdl. tc• Murn Cllldl tL.tWhJ 12 • Mt 4M
IClt .. Thi One (Oidlrlc:k-) WA !fJO E"'-Pelcv (,..enton) 1.1t Timt o-.. n
SJ IXACTA CHI Moel tW~
Alleoo.nte J,• Muivel H9lldlt _,7 m
TunaY'a tr..wtiMI
IASl!IAU
N•tliMelL.etllll
ST LOUIS CAROtNAl.S-Traded Jofln
T..oor, PllChff lo the t..o' A~ Oooelr1 for
Peoro Gverrero ov!f..ioer-flnt oe-n. /A.n·
nounct0 rn.1 Guerrero n.o 10'Hd to lt<ml on
1 thrtt·vter contrect Ealenotd the contrKt of
01 Muv1u. -•' m11110tt 11\rOUOll 1'90 8A5'<ETBALL
Nltlenel .. Ill .... Al~ ATi..ANTA HAWt(S-Slllneo Mows Melone
Ct •lf' IO 8 llVff·VUf GO!llr'Kt
LOS ANGELES CLIPPElls-slonecl G•rv
Gri n• 111;1•0 to 1 rnu•hvff< GOnlflCI ~T A"4 JAZZ-<u1 Cter~t Mlrtlft, lorwero
FOOn ALL
N1MNIF .... LNe!M
A ........ ,..TA. FALCONS-W11v1<1 Carter
"" •• o.i ... , .• , Dee.. Joel w. ''"'' !191'11 end l !IO .... ,._ ... Anoe<-~lttv
BUFFALO 8 ILLS-W1 vtO CnrlS Ouliben.
llfOIC.t• B• an Mc<"''' 01;1n tr'Oeek, eJICI
T Cl"• S·""'"OI'' ci.'e<>l••t eno C N( • tllloiA T BE lllGAl..S-Reit1S40 IAOflal'O
8• "''" tNO•A lloAPOL1S COL Ts-E•tencle<I lht con-
t•1c• 01 O,a,,. 8 -c•e11 1rieoec1<er 111rouvo
1992
LOS AlllC.E 1..ES RA.tOERS~Slonecl Jefi
Gout •• Pi."'!!' Re1t1\t0 8rao Buooe. of·
ff"\ •f ,,.., •• ano Ra•P'I G11COfNlrre . PUnter
MIAM 001..PH1t11S-AMounceo 11\el OoUil
Ma<'O'le ~•1'0 Ill\ \IOl""llfilv left c:at"IP
iNe••t O Oe•t• "",...oerrv oeitnllvt end.
NEW ENC.L,.NO PATRtOTS-P!Kec:t Ar•
P•v"~'" ottt f'\•Vt ll Cl<lt. eo w t.i.nu
1tneoec•tr t "<I Matt Kniintr ot.11ntrl>eck. on
1n1ureo '"t'vt waovt0 Oe•t Nueent, "°" 11co le O•" 01enn.1111 ouartt(DeCI<, Olele< Hren
1no hrr. T umt• 1tnt06Ci<tr'S, l iM Klrtltr
olf'"' •e oriemen B•..cr RicllarOton, Mfetv
01 v•o $1" "' corneroeco.. Juon Stat.lt'OYMIY
• l<>e•t• C.er S•~n offt!fl\tVt vu.res, Pettr W•"''"' ~ff'\ •t end 1no Tom Yahn, runn!rio
DeCI< I
NEW ORLEANS SAl"ITS-Announad Ille!
Rtuotl' Me•H ·1·1bec1< nu Ifft c.amo
NEW \IORI( JE Ts-911ceo &ool>v ltlltv •·Ot •tct••tr 111C1 MIN """"'-l1nel)ecit,.,, Oft
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P•"'TSBURGH STEELE~t4MMO &<tan Cooo •.Of racf1ver i nd Jotln an-, _,.,
DON'T MISS OUI MANNIVBtSAIY SAU '"
~CULAI!
0 ,AGES Of SU'81 5'KIAl
mMS...AT lDW, LOW
ANNIVBSAIY SAV~S.
IUT HUH Y.-SAU ENDS
AUGUST 20tft!
PARTS DEPARTMENT COOLING
Me~ blas_t Giants quick
Clemeris ails,
to miss start
Nine-run first lifts New Yor
~uto recento(fensIVes ump
,,_ Tiie MH rte• Pntt
Mookk W1hon had two bns and ICORd tww::e 1n the ~ Yortc Mell' nine·run firn.·innina en route to a IJ..6
trounana of lbe hoo San Francite0 Gianu Tunday. ~•n McReynold1 and 0U"ryl Strawberry hu two-
rvn bomcn 1n the Mcu' I ~bit attack and Owia,ht Gooden. 14-6, won for the firlt t1me 1n four 1ians, allowi~ sut hits and 1tnlun1 out f1 ve 1n 1even 1nn1np.
The ninc.-run fint waa the tee0nd-bt""t inmna 1n
Mets' htstory, behind a J 0-run 1nn1na ••nil CinC1nnat1 on June 12. 1979.
Allee Kammak.cr, 6-S. pve up the fi"t 11a of the
Mets' etaht hits 1n the and WH charled wjth seven runt. ~ Oiant1 made three errors an the 1nn1ns. wath run1
tironna on two of them.
Jn t.be ataonaJ Lea&uc:
ae.at,Cllllla t; Enc Dav11hit1 two-run horner 1n the
1evenlb anoana off rehever Let Lancuter to hft hott CinanJ\at1
Frank W1lham1, ).I SQl one out for the vK:tory
before John Franco, the Reds' fourth pitcher, threw one
innina to \Ct a club ""°1'd with h" 103rd atl'CC1' aa ve1 surpauina (lay Carroll Franco leads the N1tiona Le~uc with 26 uv~.
Herm Winnan&ham led ofT the .eventh w11h a bunt
IJnak off Lancaster. 4-6. and wu forced at aecond b)'
Chns Sabo. One out later, Da v1\ lined a 1-0 puch for his
2Jst homer. UnCUter then Jcft With a itrain In the b&ck of hi1 na,ht shoulder
Plr11a t, Brant %: Barry Bond' hll a u~breakina
two-run sing.le in the fifth 1nnin& and Ooua Drabek won
hi\ si.uh w nsecuuve deca1on sin'-C June 21 for hatt
Pmsburih
R J Reynofds hit tt1s .aAth home run oflht aeason in
the \CCOnd and 11ng.led to sian P1mbuflh'' two-run fifth
to ~k Drabek'' e1&.ht·hll p1t.ch1n¥ over seven 1nninas.
The Pirate\ had IMl three 1n •row to the last-place Braves.
Drabek. 12-S. •truck oot llA and walked none. Jim Gott sat three outs for h112ht save
St. Lo.tit J, ff"•'-t: Vanc.c ( t)leman aot two
\Ingles. nol.e three bates and KOred two run• and St.
TWIM
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Lou11 ~t v11Jtin1 Kou1ton for 1u third shutout en ••A
pmei
Scott Tttry. 3-3, allowed five tn 6 2-3 innanp aa hll ~nd 1tart of Lhe tetiOn. ~ Dayley, the third
Carcltn.aJs• pitcher, threw two 1nnmp for bJJ foun.b eave.
St. Lou11 made the fir1t tn~ play of th( National
Lea&ue tcaion in the ea&hth when panch-hitt.cr Jam
Pankov1t1 lfOUnded LO tfim! off Dayley with ~
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uepped on third to foroc Youna. threw to aec:ond
baseman Jotie Oquendo, who forced Doran, and
Oquendo relayed to lint baJnnan Make Lap fortbe tbjrd
out
Pdrn I , Ell,..!: Tony Gwynn had three h1t1 and
drove 1n two run as host San Otqo handed Montrca.l 1t1
third C.()n'CCUtl VC l°'t,
• Keith Moreland IJ~ twLCC and drove 1n two ruM
and Carmelo Martinel hat a two-run 1anaJe 1n the Padret'
H.1-hn anack.
In the A mermtn Lea&ue:
Twlu •. Tlac" I: Ben Blyleveo pitched ,,. shutout
1nninp and Ken t Hrbek htt h11 22nd home run Tuesday
ma.ht a\ vas1un1 M1nn~\I beat Detroit fort.ht teventh
ume 1n e1&ht pmn thl\ .easoo. M1nneM>ta uas defeated Jack Mom1, 10-12, four
wa1&.ht times ao1ng back to Game 2 of the playom.
Blylevcn 8· 11 , who had lost.. hi1 five prcvaou.s
dec1>1ons1 wa\ makin&h1s first 1tart since July 29, when he
sprained ni' right thumb and was pu1 on the disabled hst
He allowed four hit\ and struck out four.
R.aqcrt •.Rusen•: C urtt1 W1lkenon and Scott
Fletcher fut two-out tri ple' dunoa a three.-run rall y in the
1oeventh 1nnina to lead v1\1un1 Te.a,,
( narhe Houih I(>. I 3, gave up six haa in 81/i 1nn1n''
He walked ~ven and 'truck out e1aht. Mat.ch Willi.ams g.ot
the finaJ out for hi\ I Sth ~ve.
Wbltc Soi i, BIN Jay• t : Carlton Pisk hit a two-run
homc:r and RBI •1ngk to lead host Chicaao. and cau&ht his I IS<>4th Amencan League game, one shon o( Rick
Ferrell's record Fi\k hit hn 11th home run, a.iv1n1 him
3 IS overall and 29S as a catcher, I 8 behind Yogi Berra'\
league mark
Bo9ton'• Todd BenzlnCer reacta after betnt
taaed out by Seattle'• Harold Reynold.a
wlille tryto.i to •teal aecond hue.
MariMn '1, ll.ff SH t : l)cott Bankhead scattered nanc
h1~ for his first major league shutout and Scott Bradley
went 4-for-4 a~ visiting Seattle handed Boston its aecond
'ltra1ght home lou. 7-0
lodlan1 I , Brewen $: Andy Allanson singled home
the w1nn1ng run in the 10th 1nnmgas host Cleveland won
for the foun h time in 16 gamci.
AWtllet t , Orioltt l: Storm Davis won his seventh
straight de<.1s100 and Marie McGwire aot three hits and
drove 1n two runs for vmung Oakl•nd.
Da vis, making his first career &tart ap1nst hi• former
team helped <rdkland win for the sialh lime 1n ~ven
game\ and I I <)f 13. Da va 1s 12-4 and Dennis Eckersley
got h1~ l4th sa ve. Jay T1bM. 4-10, took the Ion.
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~'TON CAP) -lote_1 ClemeM. IM Botton Red Sox· aillna pit.chu11 llC!t, iaJd Tuaday he will mitt a
tchedukd 1W1 ror the lint time in three yean..
Oemen111ad he and Or. Arthur PapPu cbdn't want
to nit 1 pottabk arm inJury by • ehaftee in ht1 patchina
rnechanacs beclu1eor1 mu.1clutt1in on the left side In h11
t.ck.
.. I've had th1np lik;e t~11 before, ~t I've bec,n able to
pit.ch my wa y throutfl 1t; Cltmn1 said. "'That 1 whit I
tned to do Sunday (qajn1t Detroit), but I couldn't do at."
O emenuaid he will .. \Ike 1 coupk of days otr and let
at heal, .. miuin1 h11 tc:heduled •tart •inst 0.ldand
fnday niaht in Fmway Prt "Dr. Pappa) is afra.id J miaht hun my arm by
chan1.sn1 my mechanics ttyina to compenute ror th.c
injury and J don't want to \Ike a chance on that ... be laid.
"Hopefully, I'll be able to pit.ch •in a week from
Wednesday."
With time runnina out on his bid for a third
consecuuve Cy Youna Aw.rd Clement confirmed he
hun h1sbackdo1nghouseh0Jdchores"about 15dayuao"
1n hi~ subul'ben Boston home. "Maybe J shouldn't have, but J hkt doina thanas
around the house," he said before the Red So•' pme
Tuesday n1&ht with Seattle. Sine~ tne in~ury, Clemens hu Iott three t\lrll in a
row for the lint ume in h" career, droppina h11 m:ord to
15-8.
nemens has not m11sed a start in the ro\ltion
because of injury sinct he came back an 1986 from
i.houlder surgery on Aua. 30, I 98S. Oemens confirmed a rcpon by The AsJOcialed Pm\
Monday that he would mm the start. A source told the AP
that Clemens probably would not pitch a.pin until ne•t
week. possibly Wednesday, Aug. 24, when the Red So•
wind 1Jp a homestand against the Angels.
GUERRERO •••
From Bl
rlcasurc to manage him. You hate to lose a auy hk.e that
always felt every ume John Tudor took the hall that we
had a chance to win and that's a heck oh thing."
Guerrero, 32, will join th~ Cardinals 1n lime for
Wednesda y n1a,ht's game apinst Houston at Busch
<itad1um, Hern>g s~ud.
C1uerrero has a .309 career batt1n1 averaic. He h~
m1\~d 59 pmh this sca~n because of a pinched nerve 1n
h1~ neck and u h1tung .298, but with only fi ve home runs
and 35 run~ batted in.
Guerrero, wh o a mak1n& SI . 72 million this season.
agreed to a Aew three-year cont ract for S6.2 million. He
will make SI 7million1n 1989, SJ.9Smallion in 1990and ~2 15 m1lhon in 1991. In add1t1on, he will reuive a
\4<.K'JJ.M)O bon us
"In Pedro (1uerrero, we feel that we have a proven
run producer, .. Muv11l said. "Guerrero has led the
Dodger\ to three d1vis1onal titles and has been a conmtent 300 hmer throu&hout his career. We think that
he'll be a big a\'ICI to our lineup for years to come."
( 1uerrcTo \Cly'i he's looking forward to playing with
the ( ard1nal\, but will miss h1i former team.
.. rm happy because I've got a good contract with St.
l..ou1\," C1uerrero said Tu~a.Y afternoon as he cleaned
out h1\ locke r at Dodger Stadium. "I wish I could have
\taycd hcre1 but 1t didn't happen, so I can't look back
an> more. I nave to look forward
"I don't think I have LO prove anythmg over thtre. I
JU\t ha ve to do my Job and do my share. It's Just hk.e here .
II°\ going to be 2S gu y'i and as long as we aJI do our share.
we're going to be all na,ht "
Los Angele\ General Managrr Fred O a1re wud he
wa' \Orry to M:c C1uerrcro lea ve the Dodgers.
.. All of U'i an the Dodgers organization wish Pete < 1uerrcro the very best w11h the Cardinals," O aire u1d .
"'Pete ha\ been a member of the Dodgers organ1:zat1on for
I .S year\ and he ha' enabh1hed h1mKlf as one of the
outstanding hitters in baseball."
WIN~HPHt Manitoba
(A fJ > -\ u &a r R" y
f.A:onard \ latest w meback fothl wi ll take place on Ni1v 7 at < ae\ar\ Palace 1n
I.a' Vcr;i" ~cv , hi\ oppo-
nent\ manaii:r <.onfirmed
J ton ar d \4 ii I f1 g ht
Donnv ulondr c,f c an:ada
thr World Ucmn& < <>un-
ol\ l1gh1 hea vy weight
(hamp1on 1n an attempt to
bc<0me the lir\t fi vc-11mc
champwn Al\<J up for
grab\ 1n the bout will be the
new WfJ( \upc1 m1ddle-
wc1&ht c.wwn
. .,.,,,,,.. . . ) . ,~ .... , , ... -~·._,.,, 'II t ~·-· 't 't 4 I 1 t •H4r 1' I 0 0 0
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.IC..-e•\V l r~ft 0 ' • 0 0 0 • '"'"' 0 II IS 11 f-:It •II • -· .. --The Dodgers did not need to nea.otiatc with Tudor.
He's under contract for 1989. at the same SI. I m1lhon he 1s bc1ngpa1d this season. -Cudor has ind1c.ated he wants to
retire after the 1989 sa~n .
"Well i.t lta\t wt" weren 't
the one\ who leaked ll,"
Lalonde'\ manag.cr. David
Wol f, !Mltd T ue-.day night
lkt11I\ of 1hr fi&.ht arc to
be announced fhurioday
mornina 1n New York
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MUC NOTICl
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Ml.JC NOTIC(
From Bl .,_,, ..,,,
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the doublcci final before a victory wu recorded. The final
!>el was won by the victors, 7-5
Dubler Cup (4S-and-over) play begins today. Finals
1n the Bmanrua (up are set for Fnday with the Austna
< up fi nal s on Saturday and the Dubler Cup on Sunday
•.ach match consists of two sin&Jcs and one doubles with
the first si na}cs compct1t1on start1n1 at 9 each day:
, "''
L.ttP•' 111• ,,~
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NOTICE OF ELECTIOH
ti H IJ I _H~UllT_I NG r_oN fff AC.II
NOTICE I~ HEREBY GIVEN that a General Munl clp1l El ection wlll be he ld In the
Cit/ of Hunt ington Beach on Tuesday, November 8, 1988, for the foll0111ln9
Off lcers and Measure·
Fo r Four (4 ) Memb~r\ of the City Council
For a City tlerk
ror a City Treasurer
(Full term of _4~ years)
(Full term of _4~ years)
(Fu l l t.enn of _4~ years)
"Citizens Sens ibl e Growth & Traffic Control Ini t iat ive·
(to appear on ballot as fol l0111s:)
Shall th• 1nltl1t1ve 111e1sure entitled
"C itizen•' Sen1tble Growth and Tr1fftc
Control Inttt1ttve• whi ch would requ1rt Yes
cert., In lev•l1 of road, park 1nd flood
cortrol f1 cl lttles and cert11n levels ot
pol tee, fire and p1rt11tdlc 1ervl,es In ,. order to pen11lt c•rtaln types of dev•l-
oPf!ltnt projects b• adopted? No
(A copy of the propo11d measu re In ltl entirety may be obt.llned •t th• Office
of th• City Clerk or cell (714 ) 536-5404) t nd • copy will be !Miiled to you 1t
no COH ).
tr no on or only one person ts n011ln1ted for an elective office, 1ppotnu-tnt
to th elective offtc e 111y be .. de es prescribed by Section 22843 or 2284•,
El ections Code of the St1te of taltfornt1.
The polls will bt open between the houl'1 of 7:00 •·•·and 8:00 p.M.
c~~ Ci ty Clerk
Off tee of tht Ct ty C 1 erk
2000 Mefn Street
Huntf1\9ton leach, CA 92648 (714)"631-5227
Consumer rip-off
_being touted as
consumer relief
One cr1t1c rcetntly compared the state Legislature to a
vendinJ machine: Special interests put their money in, and
legislation pops o ut. And who knows better how to shop for
barga1_n-priccd lawma'kers than the California Retailers
Assoc1auon.
Over the last three years the association and ats
andjv1dual members cou&hcd up more than Sl' m1lhon 1n
campaign contnbut1ons. That buys a lot of friends, and at
least one hi&h-pnonty bill -582592, hfting the 18 percent
cap on retail-credit rates. After sailing through the Assembly
and Senate, Jt\ landed on the governor's desk.
... The state's six largest department store1 claim they lo:n
nearly SI 00 million on credit ac€'.ounts in 1986.
h 's hard to believe they can't make a profit lending their
customers money at nearly double the current pnme rate -
especially when other credit-card finance charges. already
deregulated, have been dropping. But 1f kicking retail credit
rates a few points higher only allows stores to break even, how
high must rates go f>efore it's profitable to solicn new credit
business?
... consumer\ need to have accurate and understandable
1nformat1on to know what the)' are getting into, espcetally
before they sign their lives away on the department store
credit agreement's bollom line.
This btll, predictably, doesn't require such straight-
fo rward warnin~... As currently wnnen, 58 2592 is a
consumer rip-off touted as con\umer relief. The Duke should
do his duty and veto 1t
Loi A.Dgt/t$ Herald Euml11er
Toxics initiative
President Reagan's top advisers arc about to begrn a
detailed study of Propos111on 65. o ne of the most mischievous
measures ever enacted into law an California.
Jf the study suppons White House suspicions that
Propos1t1on 65 as hindenng interstate commerce and as in
conflict wi th the federal Food and Drug Act, action may be
taken to overturn portions of the law. Federal law already
provides many protections against tOXIC substances. and
Proposition 65 may undermine. those re$ulatao ns.
Federal intencntion aga1nC>t Propos1t1on 65 would come
none too soon Pu'lhed by the Tom Hayden-Lloyd Connelly
liberal clique in the state Legislature and sold to the voters by
As')Cmblytnan Ha yden's wife. Ja ne Fonda. and other movie
and telev1\1on \tars an a high profile. but misleading 1986
general election campaign. Propos1t1on 65 ~the classic case of
government overk1ll
Sacrameoto Uoloo
Grape boycott
If Dcm<x:ra11 c pn.·\1dent1al <:an d1date Michael Dukak1s
wants votes from farmer\ 1n the an Joaquin Valley. he needs
to tell them he o pposes the United Farm Workers' grape
boycott. At the very least, he should clanfy his position.
Dukak1s endorsed the bo)COtt 1n 1986, but it's unclear 1f
his pos111on has changed ... There was no mentio n of the
boycott in the De mocratic platform ...
The agriculturally dnvcn San Joaquin Vall ey. with its
large numbers of conscrvauve Democrats -many farmers
among them -1s kCn as a kc)' region in wanning the st-ate.
That's why Dukak1s fl ew to the vall ey the day following the
Democratic convention 1n J\tlanta.
The grape boycott (1s) an cmot1 onally charged issue for
many farmers who view 1t as an 1rrcspons1ble wa) to bnng
about change. A pres1dcnt1al candida&e lending his name to
such tactics doesn't sll well
Pesticides and · their effect on the environment and
workers who use them are \C nous issues which should be
addre\Sed through appropnate governmental action -not
consumer boycotts. We hope Dukak1s recognizes that and
makes h1~ position clear as soon a~ possible.
V/1alla Tlmei-De/ta
Campaign reform
It's debatable whether Assembly Speaker W11l1e Brown
wa~ M:nous 1n predicting h1ci own pohu cal demise when he
recently told a group of state Democratic Party leaders that he
has e xactl y six month\ to be effective under Proposition 73.
the campaign-reform 1n1t1at1 vc overwhelmingly approv~d by
voter\ an June.
.Proposition 73...as of Jan. I, 1989. limits the size of
poh11cal contributions. bans thr u~ of taxpayer dollars for
~If-promoting mailing. and most important, prohibits one
ca ndidate from gi vi ng campaign money to another. The
ability to ra1~ large \urns of mo ney from special interest
groups and d1Mnbu1c the funds to incumbent legislators has
been the 'ipcaker's key to the power.
.. No one yet knows for sure what ICJislauve 1m~ct Prop
73 will eventually have. The poht1cal mavencks who
sponM>rcd Prop. 73 and the millions of Californians who
voted for 11, no doubt, arc viewing Mr. Brown's troubled
tw1hght w11h equanimity.
Hemet Ne••
Your comments are welcome
The Daily Pilot welcomes your opinions on matttts or public interest.
Letters and lon,1cr art1cl<"s of comment.al'}' must be siancd. l"My should be
tyoed or clearly wntten and sent to LE1TERS to the EDITOR. Diiiy Pilot.
P.O. Rox I 560, Costa Mesa C' A 92626.
l>teatc include your address and telephone number so that we m1y verify
1uthonhlp. If you prefer to make a verti.I statement. you may call our WFRE LISTENING telephone numbcr -642-6086 -and leave a recorded mcuaee.
Plate kttp thcte m~ bncf.
ORANGE COAST .....
~~ .... , y pll._ ..... ,
JlO W S.1 $1 Got" .....__ CA
Aoar... COt•f'tC:ICJf~ t lo I •
IMO Ca... CA
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Ora• Cout DAILY PILOT/Weds~. AugYIC t7, t• •
"Blacks ... says (Clarence} Patterson. "have lt»t their polltlcaJ Jeva 'a,fe
because the Democrats have taken ua for granted.··
Bush needs an impres$ive
showing to ignite campaign
By WALTER MEARS
'\f-'.\ ORLEAN~ 11\P) -George
Au\h & ( <> are counung on this
v.-eck·, <;uperdome conv<"nt1on to
prO\ 1dc a bounce that will 'ault the
f<cpublicans w '1ctory 1n the fall .
Thaf\ not 1mpornblc -although 11
nc·\cr ha\ "ork<"d that wa> before
f he \"ICC pres1d<"OfS men are
v.agenng heavil-. on the pageant of
'\ev. Orlean'> lo help Bush O\Crcome
Democrallt: pr<"s1den11al nom1ner
"11chael Duk.ak1c,. who leads Bush 10
the earl) puhhl op1n1on polls
Bu\h control\ 1he conve ntt on
\how. ofcour<>e The delegates arc h1~.
rhe t hallcngc he faC<'S now IS tO show
h1m'>Clfa leader 10 h1.-,own nght. after
eight ~rar'> as the understud).
~ot since Harl) c; Truman has the
t"and1ddlC who 1ra1lc:d in polls pnor to
hi\ nomina11ng (onvcnuon rcv<'f\Cd
tht: number'> and won the <"lec11on
.\nd Truman \l,fJO ht'> u~t. 4() }ears
ago b ) o"ercom1ng 1hc: damaee from
a b1tterh d1.,.1dcd Democra11c con·
\COIJ On
l're\1den1 Rragan ..aid h1'> con' en-
1100 farev.ell \fonda' night w11h a
prnud re' 1cv. of an ;idm1n1strat1on
m ord ht.' ..aid fiu\h 'harn °'<>" Bu'lh mo'C'I "n •.ilage 10 speak
for h1mwll HI\ .. 1ra1eg1sl\ !Ml) that
'\(•v. Orlean\ 1\ the place and Thur.-
da\ n1gh1 thl· llme "hen (r<"Orge Bush
"'111 cmcrg.: a<:. ht'> OY..n man and as a
lOmmand1ng prc:\C'ncc 1n 1he race
aga1n't Dukak1'>
rhat \ h1gh-mk pollllC\. ..Ince
\ CJtl·ri. v.ho tune in fo r 1hc tran\·
forma11on ma\ tune out 1f1he\ don"t
'ICC one r he \a fc and standard
proccdur(· 1\ to pla> dov.n the C' enl
and keep C\pt'llation<t as lo"' as
p()\\lhll'
l>u~al1s did thal n .\tlant.a. put-
ung out v.ord 1ha1 hn conven11on
addrl..,., 1o1.a!> \ti dull hi\ "tfc: do1ed off
"htk rc:ad1ng 11 H1\ '>pt,"CCh v.a'> a
\tr<>ngr>ne h"deft,e~ \moo1handa1
11mc\ cH:n dramatic H n
chttrkad1:r\ prrimpt'' clai med a
ma\tc:rp1ne
Hardi\ '\ot a hne v.a\ memorable
enough ·w ha "e \Ur' '"ed tht\ long
But 11 "a'> a \olld performance
1m prc\'4·d J l!Jt of people and thu\ a
\UllC:\\
Kc:puhllcan l4llt1cian\ ar<' \Ct11ng a mon: d1ffilull target tor Hu.,h
"( 1corgc Bu\h ha' not ~ct been center
\tagl· 11, 1he .\mcnlan people." \aid
I cc .\t"ater hi\ campaign manager
'"Thi., \1.111 be the ti nt time ··
In h1<:. con,ent1on 'aled11to!) Rc-
..ig.an ~id h1., \ulCt"\\Or mufl be a man
fJf \trcngth and c\penence -Buc,h
··11 "'111 tale ~mrone v. ho has se<"n
th1'> olTttc: from the 1n!.1de v.ho SCn'in
the da nger point'> \I.Ill be cool under
fir<' and kno"'> the range of anw•erc, \I.hen the: lough que\ttom come ··
Rragan \aid ··fhat'\ th<' (1eorge Bush
r ,e \Ct.'n up do..c -\I.hen th<' staff
and < a hi net me mber., haH· do~d the
door and v. hl·n the 1 v.o of u~ are alone
""\omt.'onc "'ho'<. noi afraid 10
'lpcal ht'> mind .rnd "'ho can cut 10 the
lfJrt• 1Jf an t\\U<' ~meon<' v.ho ne"cr
run., a"a~ from a fidlt ne,er back\
a\l,a' from h1\ bcfief\ and ne\er
ITTJk l0\l"\lU\e\ ••
l hat°'> e\3llh 1he image Bu\h
v.anl\ to d1<tpla~ to qua\h 1hc '"Whi.-re
v.a., <1corge···· taunl ol Demonal\
and 1he m1\gn1n~ C\cn of some
Ri.-puhlican dctra1..tor't "'ho \till ra1\C
the \O-<'dllcd "\l.tm p fal'tor"
Bui Reagan pro' 1dcd not a \Ingle
c\ampk of Bu\h.\ do~d-<lc><>r per-
formance .wld \1Jtcr\rna' v.an t more
than l<'""-ag.an's word for 11
Th<' Republicans \3) that Dubk1s
edge 1n 1hc pubhc op1 n1on polls Wlll
1.:rr.ide and finall~ d1!>appcar as Bu\h
l'mer~ from his \uppon1ng role. and
a\ pt'<iple begin IO frxu\ ''" the issues
•hat d1" 1de the cand1da1,.es That 1\
\upp<1c,cd to un1old 0 ' er the four da' s
ol '""" Orledm Thal· as\umr\ ! conH:nuon 1m-
pnn1 more lasting than mo\t In I '160
John F Kenned~ 0
\ con\en11on per-
formance become a trademark c1f h1)
"nev. frontier"' campaign That ha\n't
happened 'ltncc ~' Bu\h ha\ '><'t h1m~lf a d11Ttcult
13\k
··r m n<Jt go1ngtr11n 1o bca Ronald
Reagan ·· the \ lt'e pre\ldtnl \31d
There I'> onh one I v.ant 10 he
Cieorgc Bu'>h ··
It " ironlC th41 1hc man with the
ru n-0n rcsume \1111 1\ ti) 1ng to
introduce himself Bush has afteJ. all
run for pre\1dcn 1 t~ ice and for vice
pre\1dent tv.1c-e L1sttng Bu\h's other
JOI>\ -congt~\man .Republic-an
l ha1rman I nited -..:auon\ am· has~dor rc:pre\.enta't1\C: to (luna < I ~ director -Prcs1dt'nt Reagan
\aid "I think the fcllov. 1111th that
rc,umc has 11 all ··
But the fello" ·., 0" n people sa~ 1ha1
hi\ image remains 1nd1\llnct
"'The .\mencan people r<"alh don"t
lo.nov. "'ho (1eurge Bu\h 1\ ·· \a;d Rep
lohn Paul Hammer')Chm1dt of .\r·
k:.tn\;I\ a long11me fnend
l hal normalh 111ouldn 1 ht: re·
µrdl·d a\ a \e~ lncndl~ thing to \a~
Jhnu1 a 'eteran f)Ol111c1an In th1\
l:J\C 1t\ pan ofa mk~ PQlll1cal game
plan
Walter Mrars, urcuH~ r ~/tor of
Tbr Asso<'iattod Pcrss. bas N>vuttl
aatiooal politics siJJ~ J HO.
Blacks may find expanded ·
role in Bush administration
NEW ORLEANS -In the aft<"r·
math of the C1v1l War. 1he Re-
publican Party-Abraham Lincoln's
pany -commanded the aJmost total
allegiance of newly enfranchised
blatk VOler'I
Th<' Democrats. after all. were the
party of th<' rural South . of sla'cry
and po\twar '\Cgrcgatton.
Alack 1dcnt1ticat1on w11h the Re-
puhlican'I ('Onllnucd unttl well mto
the 20th century. Legend has it 1hat
when I kmocrat Woodrow W1l\On
w;i\ forming h1'1 new adminmra11on
in I 91 l. hc wanted to appoint a black
attornt.') 10 a high Dcpanmc:nt of
Ju)t1ce fl'>St11on. but found that
everyone a' a1lahlc was a Republican
The chang<' 10 that pohllcal onen·
umon hcgan with Franklin Roosc-
"cll''I clect1on 1n 1932 Although h1<:.
political co:aht1on tncluded Southern
'R"grega11on1sts and he did h11lc to
confront c1v1l-nghts issues d1rer1I>
Roosevelt made at least symbolic
gesture-) toward 1nclud1ng blacks 1n
ht'> odm1n1itrat1on and its program ..
In the postwar era, 1he Dcmocra11c
Pan> came to identify wtth the c1v1I
nghts movement (ruptunng the
"solid South" and the old Roosc..,elt
coalitton) and in ~tum, blades be-
came as 1dcnttf'icd with the Demo-
crats in the late 20th century as the)
had been wi th the RcpublJcan.s in the
late 19th centu ry.
But there remamed a small cadre-of
blacks wtthin the Repubt1c1.n Pan).
stubbornly mist.ant to the 11ren calls or the Dtmocnts. pohtacaJ outcasts
amon11htireth1uc brethrcn.1ecm1n1
anomalies amona the over·
whclmintly ""h1te Repubhc:an
It's a contrast 1ha1·1 evacknt at this
wtek's Rcpubhcan 1t1onal Con,"tn-
taon as at all OOP pehennp -htre
and lhcf'c I flw biKI& """-nhM M
'Pflnklcd 1n a loaf of wlute brad.
The oniaal 1&1l1tt.cs arc tblt 11 S. or l.2 pattnt of tbt Repubhc:an ...n and alttmlln. are blltt.
OM ofthtm -OM Of 11 blacks,.
the 'ahfornaa ddetluon -ll
C'lattnci PanmoG, u OMiand rril
nta•t dfvdopcr. and wbat he •YI ii
"'hat one: 11n\l\tcntl\ hear<. from
hlacl f<l flUhlil JO\
"BIJd.' · "-1\\ l'atterwn. ··ha"e
Jt)\I thl'lf r-•l1t1lal In t.'ragc bc:-cauS<'
the lx·m11<ril' haH· taken u\ for
granlt.'d ·· r n hlJ( k Kl· puhli,an\, Jc\~ Jack-
\on '> ~urpmrngl) \trong run for the
l>cm111.1al1\ pa•\1dcn11al nommat1on
t'> ho1h J \11urll. of ethnic pnd<' (even
though Jal k,110·, 1dcolog) lilt\ too far
10 the: port tor mo\11 and proof that
the [kmcx rat\ for all their verbal
lOmrn1lml·nt. re'il'il blad. asp1ra11on\
10 rral rov.l'r
'\\ hJI "'l'0rc ~"ng is that J~~
mo lt' att.'d hlack i\mcricani."
another hl.ll k Repuhhcan ~mucl
\\ allae< ur 'i:ln Francisco. wt) s.
adding .. rh1't ... not Jc~ Jacoon \ i
< 1l'Ofit.' Bu\h Thi\ 1 M11:hael
f>ukait," Cieorgr Bu<ih •·
Bu\h. unlike mo\t R<"pUbl1can
leader' ha' a record of ~rwnaf
in\Ohcmrnt with bladt~ h<' e'en
depo<.1ted Rt'pubhcan Pan) fund., 1n
J blad-o"nC'd bank in Teus man)
'ean. a&o \nd he'~ made a pubhl
appeal to hla(k "Oler\ d~p1te \harp
cnt1c1.,m or the Rcapn admtnl\-
1ra11on from ma1n\trtam black e1v1f
nght!>gr<>up.,
"I'll makt ckar 1hat m) con-
..crva11 .. m h no1h1na 10 do v.11h
racism." Ru h told a v oup of bla ~
upponm la\t WCt"k "I w,11 mallc
clear m) cQnscrvall\m has 10 do with
hmJled ao'-cmment or trona op.
ponun11y"
That. black Repubh n bche..,e.
would lead 10 a mo~ '1~1btc role for
blach •n a Bu h adm1n1itrauon. t"en
thoup Bush has stopped ihon of
prom•Sll\I a black appointee to his
c.b1nct. a plrdtt he made to HI\~ pent Thn'e., bctn a Mn&ll \ •tt
prnidentaal boom~t for Cohn Po•-
clt. a black acne~I who 1'nn as
P'reMcknt Rc,apn'J national tttunty
advaJC'f
.. II )OU ha"e to do '' loot ae BUib's rt"Cord." SI) Pattcnon "Has
record " thnt ... One of the m0t.t v1 ibtc rob for a
bleck an lvsb'l camJ*lft ti bet111
pla cd h\ Btlta Mtttt. m"tnl1
DAN
WALTERS
namt•d < ahforn1a d1rcnor ~r field
n ix·ra t 1 on.,
\kt'\(' J long-time· <iOP artl' l'>t
,amc'I .i 111dl-l n11\I. n name 3') the '4tfc
11f C rMr~t" \k t.'\(' tht' bmtht'r of
lnrmcr l 'i .\ttomn ( 1eneral Edwin
\k c-... JnJ '' 1al1ng a lea'e as the
Jepul' .srix11ntmen1\ stcretal') of
C .ihh1m1J < •ll' C ieorge Dtum .. e11an
Rhl'l •nl aside. it's unli kel I.hat
Au'h"' 1, ra\ ._th<-90 perc.ent \Uppon
It•\ c that l)c-mocrat1c c-and1da1e..
hJ\C' l·n1ml·d among blac.,., ,,, re"\cn1
l'lnt11•n' It m1gJu eH•n bt higher 1h1\
\CJr dul 10 Jackson'\ h1ghf\ '1\tble
role J' a 'urroptt' camapa1gn<'r tor
()u .. .il..1'
.\' lonf .I\ the GOP rt'ma1n' a
'nn'4·n au\ e p;tn\ of the amuent.
1o1.h1,h If\ h lel~ to do, It w1Jf ltlfl~t
mun· bla ~ onl} as they also mo' r
up the ~occooom.a~ ladder
Dli• tf11lttrs II • qe4b~
rol•m•l1t
1 TO DAY 1~ H1sroR'
Today IS Wcdne1dl , AUi-l 7, Lbc
230t.h day of 19 . There~ l 36 days
kft in the yur Toda~·~ hlJhhght 1n history:
On ~ 17, l 7, Robcn fuhon'a ~onb R1\'"Cf team Boat (~y
lno•n as the C'knnoatl bltan eh~
llftt 1U WI~ up CW Y Oft-"J Hudlon
Rt\"tf' toW'lrd ~!buy. Tbt I '°'4ftlk
tnp toot Jl houn, ~ mutn Inf ano4hc:f JO, .. Fulton~I Folfy,'" atU Md
bce1' called. proved a tuCCle9t. •
Oa th11 datt·
In 1&63 Fcdt-~blumaand..W.
bombuded Fort S•mter in
C'hartcs,on harbor dunQI tbt CiV\I
DAR W AL•1••-•
Ctl I I
11
1 Lt i r f k
I ----=------
Affirmative
action plan
defended
To the EduCJr
Ja, Burchell in h1i le1tcr of Aua. I .
«1m plc11n\ about the affirmauve ac-
uon program-, beau~ \Ome opcn-
IOJ!> ooth 1n SO\cmmcnt ~nd lD
pn'ate enterpnst are rC1erYed for ~rncar·.\mtncans and othtt mm~
cmllt\ The rC\uh 1s that some wtutc
l8Jrchc11 1o1.ould rather call thcin
'SERB -'.mt'ncaru·· -Scand.iu-
\ 1an EuffJpean Ruu 1an BnttJh)
mal~ "llh h1Jh &fade\ nnnot auto-
mat1Gll\ !<'t into the choice uru"tt·
<:.111e\ and Jon po\lllOn\ an) more.
'c:111 Hurchett make~ an tnlercsuna
Jump 1n logic He claims that this
dtlirma11 ~ c acuon 1~ a form of
"gen0<.1dc Ho-.. can a few wbJle
mak\ not getting into 1he un1versit~
he gcncx1de''
Hr funhl·r ~ams us all 1h~1 .\fncan
.\mem·an' "'ho fight for the nghts
and bcnt.1m lor Lhetr constttuency,
\uch a\ Jes\1 t Jack\On are t.ak.ang part
10 that grnoude
H1'> ne\t claim '' really the \trangc<.I o! all
for '>ome \On of point. Burchett
po1n1' >ut that th<') ~naanly don't
8J'C much ofa damn about minont)
ngtm in Rus\ta H<" e"en has a quote
fr11m .s Ru\\1an guide v.ho declared
that he .1.a\ lrtt to do v.hal he v.-aotcd.
fc, that the ~t re~arch he can do"
\\ha• 1\ h1\ lcncr d01ng 1n your
paper
T hrn· ..irt' legmmat<' questions ~
g.ard1ng a1Ttrmat1\.e acuon. but
8urche11's nd1culous ans...,er and
h1a~\ gc1 1n the wa~
'l C\ hov. can v.e cu~ our 50Clety of
cc:ntune\ of d1scnm1n.auon against
L .\.\'\!\"Fl: people <Laun. Arab,
.\lncan. A':l1an Native Amencan.
f-emalc. E1c ) v.11hout an afftrmatave
ac-11on program of some kind? How
v.111 tt be possible to bu11d a new
wc1et' 10 which racism. suum, and
other 'forms of b1gott) do not exist"
.\nd v.111 ""<'be able to do that without
1tJ\.1ng up '>Omcth1ng"'
.\nd the mo-st 1mponant qUC'Sl.Jon
1\ hov. can we get people to stop ll') 1ng
to make lh<'St senous 1ssue. tnto st.11)
poliucal g.am~"
\\ ILLI .\ \1 G ILBERT
Costa Mt-Sa
CdM could use
beautification
T1• 1h1· ~d11or I rt'ad \I.Ith 1nterc"\t about the
l<>nlfO\l"l"'I' conccmins 1he ~1gn or \l[l.n\ he1ng good enough to represent
the bl:au1iful area known a~ Corona
dd \far
\\ ha1 rul/IC"\ me IS that lhe Great
If\ int.' o ha' neglected 10 do
an' thing about 1hc c~esore propeny
11n the nonhv.e<;I comCf of Coast
H1&h"'a ' and "1ac.\nhur
I fl<1HTO:"' LI DE~
'cwpon SQch
Beethoven· s no
match for pla nes
To The Editor
La!.t turda' e\ening I v..ent to
lr\lne \.ieado~:. to hear the be\l of
ttecthln en but thrre lime~
1kc1ho'<'n was drn" ned out b)
'>treeching.. low-O)tng JCt~ that com·
pktel~ ctrcled the amphitheater
he-Ion-landrng at El Toro
I pl<"ad w1lh the poli11c-1an~ v. ho
v.rr<.' there and other.. to uo;c lh<"1r
1n1lu~·ncc v.tth the m1litaf) to .:hangc-
thll\C 1et flt&)il\ at lea\t thO!>e llfi<'r
l'I ,,, Pm
\ nd please gc'I them to d~crea~ our
n1•1 \C pollution b) ending 1he budd~
\\\tcm of fl)'tn& wherT 1wo or morc
a1rt raft 0~ clo'iCI) together The
hudd' \\\tcm wu used 1n wan1me to
hl'l p ~ach other in ~of attack but
n\1\1. I\ is too no1s~. too dangcrou-,
.ind unnett\\al)
RIC'Hl\RD T 84-RRETI
South Laguna Be.ach
Help on the freeway
T n the Editor
It\ grnl to Stt thoS( call boxes
ix1pp1n1 up on lntmt.ate 40 Thrtt
t:h~rs for Su~ 1sor Hamett W1cckr aft9 the Oran ( ount~ Board of
~uJk'n ''°" for making them po.s-
.1hle'
War
M l\RK CELESTIN
Huntington Bcach
Tn 191 ~ a mob I nchcd Jnnlh
bu.,1ncs man Lto Frank rn Cobb
ounty. Ga . a.ft.a Fran.k'i dmt.b
IC'nttntt for the murdtr of a I l-Je9r-
old asrt was com.nnatcd to I~ lift·
pntonmen
ln 1942.. U .. bombmaueed_lhrir_~"'• fim ,...,_ .. ,raid oe,~
anani111 lto.n. Fnac:c.
11 I '43, Alied bas lliDed COll-U'Ol o( Sicily •
tn 1~4. H•mca• C-UUe
atamt'Md aato lk U.S. a.ti C...
claim1ns "'°" dmt 2'° II~
., •• !?' .... . .
. CALL 642-5678 ,
....._, r11111 ,........ ... llM .... ilM Cllll... •at ........ -llii ...-.... .. lt1t1J1 tt i •11t
[
CLASSlfl~D INDEX M1·5671 , , _.... ~ mi;;;;;t 1714 :....Nalml ...... co. ...,......asn t'ii& 3ar 21._,nd., ... , ........ IELlllTill • .. ~ ........ l2°!!2~ch .. 1'"· ... _ U2': e: !i!!!l!!!i ,:s:
PROll IOUTM ~··co. -1111 39 AC~ rlndl alt•. NW ~Wig«"'"' lmrneC 38R 28A, '""rm, •e•liBJIU ....... ....., --· -. .... Y9, L -...... .,,..,._..._ n ...... r Atllon&. Tr .... mountain ()fenge, S 1000. No pet•. pYt pool/epe Cllt'ndr. LM U Newly fUrnltfled llnglee, No peta. I 1025/mo yr · w*1« pd, I 50. "° l)eU. lht 2BR 2BA Apt, CM/SA
THE DAILY PILOT c .. CK YOUll AD ~. $13,&50 with euy 850-4390.146-9031/9119 $1905/mo. 8SS-150e • -• 18' complete with photW 844-1010, &-5 Mofl..Ftl l50-l213Of 1eo-1•t8 ., ... SS80/mo + ~ utlll.
CLAUINOOf'flCIHOVRa THE N8TDAY twnw.875-9408 NICE 3BR home, w/fam .... UfftlWI 1111"!']1 f ~~:;:,:'.::ts --~fnle ::T=28Rt~i &45-4748
'W:.~ ,.:·F '"" o. -..,;_ .. -.a tall room. S 1150 Nwpt Hot• cuttom hOtne. Theee ~.ct pta i:· OFF with thl• 8d tat week Cerport, pool. Adu!&:-No LMna 'a,,.a bd . M1tr bdrm w/be~h In 48R s.1~1 00...,...1130AM .... oc'"'"'' -..,..._ E;;t; TownhOme 3BR, Comm. 48R,apac:ioue.lnt.Short ture 'tpe, P' t• 2080Hftport81&42-2e11 pet• ll501Mo8S1..0211 ,L,toollcrm nwtr rm S.A. "-·Obi ger, w/d, ..._ eo.;,,,., .._,. .,,.,, .. 9«.,, ---pool 11100 1-m , .... ,., ..... 12300 mo. petlol Of dedtl '· getllg9 . I 100 r &42-3850 yard. Nr ~. $400 +
I 00 ,.,,..., oo PM ...,, .. • ,_ -• ..w _,, -~ ·=....... "" -· "" Of cetport n I bMutlfUlly SPACIOUS 18' ct.. to bch I Mb te..... OCEANFRONT 2~Br 1Ba utlls & dep. 540-7783 auot.•• ::,.;:~-~"':: " "-*• 84111•1• Randy &45-3334 ~1nd1caped H1tlng. $595 inefa .. refr1g. stove, 2Br, tBa. petlo, carport duplelC lower,__ c:..-Pett MSTR BR I 3Br/2Ba CM
l"\ikOCA•foto DUO<.IHl -.......... , ....... -, i sOUUtA rent81 ~ ..... -.... llLI Ofry~•1seo pool •• ~r:cl~~· 190011118/15e73-3&52 pelnt, g,w. YW1Y 11150 hm,5mln.nto bc:h.1Gyd.
1 !:,. ·~: ~ ';:;'.,..,., ,;rw:..• =: '=-=: alx-28R, gtrege perking. (/.............. 4BR 2~BA. FR/OR, lefge 2Bdrm 1'ti8a $770 peld p . FOR RENT -FOR RENT &42·2047•213f121-t057 I<*! fOf' right pet.on .. ,_. --..... .,,., c·-S750/wtt.Aug t3+ "'Avt 2Br HiBa, ger, petlo SIOO petlo. 45' lot. St to St. L.18 121-_.._ SpacloU• 1BR, pool, lfldry, LARGE SANDBOX WITH -•• --$450/'hotlll. 548--5543
.......... -,.. "'" 11ro1 Sept. 18 WINTER rent .. 2543 Or-. 642-2520 $2750 673-7787 Avt 9/1 -·-.,.._, c:etporl Stove & refrlg G NT POOLI Would""""' ___. r-• _, --St075/mo.CI09etofwry -...-COSTA MESA Ind. NO PETS. 15&5 f ~. 3 bedroom2 2Br 1Baupetrt,gr•tcond SEABRIOGEVlLLA toltit.
Microwave, oetl=. •WNlf W'fl LOVELY 28R 2BA, frplc, M2· 1U• S350 ctep. 642•1401 bath 'f,:1ment, 1 ~ 11200 t*r &42-3850 w/prof., n-tmkr. coneerv.
Gorgeouet P8tlol y Darling 2BR 1BA + new prime loc. walk to bMdl Call fem. HB Ill '"*' Cheri cieenl 7t•le73-4 /e, oeik kitc:hen. w/d hit~. & shops St t50/mo. FOf 2Bi. remodeted, tndry hi(. Sparkling clean 2Bdrm from he beach. Unf\lm 2BR 1BA. blt·lnl , 960-0e9c)12t3-493-2571
818/eee-5052/5059days qi ~· yard. 1895/mo. appt. c.at Oebr' Smtih up, tnc:d ywd. 1725 No W•Ba S740 All ullls pd. today Ind mow In s.p.. flrepleOe. g1rege, ltepe ·
335 CALL Cl.....,. 963-5568 Of 999-5-428 dogs. 23UI Santi Ana F~, ger. SMry. no pets. tember 1•t. 975-1977 to beech. \'rty 1875/mo. ~
Y••rly 2B R hou1e . --T· Ave. 21~1-3789 1 W1llece &42-4905 MUTLll&nll Avt 9/10. M1ture lldun u ···2·· ~i~. ,, •• .,..a 875-84 7M&31-12te 1r1wwy--~ 14.1.a .... .. • .. ..,,.... rrww .__,. •2BR tBA tlo pref'd. 14,....-4187 or _.,.....-."flllllW"'-r"~ tau 1 tac11ity Avt Sept Su,_. 3BR 2'ABA twnhme. • P• · g1t11ge, Sunny E1111ide 2BR 18A, 1• Wf (818 750 I••!•-•/ Lat
1 1 ~001 CALL ,.... dllh washer, laundry rm. lndry hkupa, private back I -(71~4'J67S~90A;'! ~-;r,·s~e'rs19~; No Petal. H 50/mo. yatd. nr shops & IChoofs o:,r,:2~~e~ WllBl'lllT..... ftlt
(213)924 3082 &45-ee&2 °' 950"2318 S7s0/mo. 646-4631 loc. Gartge. W/0 hk-4.ip, 38', 3Ba, petlo, gertge, ~---·---Liii hlllt llB •WNIT 1111111 * *lllA ... * * cable, track llghtlng, trple. Oocic poa. LM lalMI Cole 3BR 2BA hOme. Walk A amlll, quiet complex. tre m1ny extras. Cloee to S 1700/mo. e75-48ee Pniuall 2111 2 Bedroom, 2 bath FIOUM. to M1rlner'1 Mlle. Studio. 1Br, 2Br 2Ba. Ilk• DELUXE JBRlJBA, dbl t>each S87S/mo.
fireplace. garege, on 11550/mo. 2,41..oeoa new, w/b1lcony Of prv1 gar .• A/C, + xtras, avail 4101 Hllarta
PENIN. PT Stepatooeean quiet cul-de-sac. ICUIFlllT patio, trplc, pool, IP•. now $975/mo. Ernie TSL MGMT e42-1eo3 • 2111
& bey. Lrg 3Br 2Ba on St tOO/mo 640-4072 lndry. No peta. 1550 Up + 978-9t77 Of 962-4843 -.---~--1-111--~-n-dble lot. Huge yard, quiet VELMA 549 2447 Lg 2BR 2BA. d/w, frig, 2BR newly d«:or1tlld atu-~
loc. Avail now. s22001mo aat. IC JUILY lllTAU sec. -luL cla stove. comm pool, frplc. dlo. t~e.. cloMd gat-1617 WES CLIFF O IVE
e13.7777 or 673-1941 2eR 1eX. 2 biks to &:Cfij 1BR tBA $850. 2BR 1BA *lllMI '"* ILll•Tll _.. carport, $900/mo. age. Nr So. Coast Plaza& Nwpt Bch. Agt &4 1-5032
tH •• Jiu I v • r y c 1 e a n . n 0 St 2SO/mo. 3BR 2BA tBR, atove, small yird, no -WH • 9S5-6385 or e75-7792 freew1y $750. 786-7443 IALIM llUlll
peta/smkrs Yard St800.48R3BAS2000. peta.S540/mo.650-47S1 APAltllDTI LIMllU t Sm.offe.MarlneAve.upr
••EXTRAORDINARY 1875/mo. S36-B573 · llln Wllitt lffr *SPARKLING * IPAlllll 1 21111 5-8877
38R 3'h8A condo. dbl Ill •••• 28R/18A Includes amall Swimming poJ.s. Lighted 38drm. 2 b•1th1'' petlo, HA S300TIE m'mo ... e1,m 11111 gar..,,., lop of the line all 38R 28A hse, 2 car glf· -• I II b II & narw 500
the Q'ytS2000/mo. •· near beach, achools PENtN. PT. Steps to ocean U65~mo.06~3.4S:~ 0 r Y • ~~~~:i·b.ri~ ~~o:e 10 • ..... -. * *WllTDI* * Newpoft Ctr .. Felhlon Ill.
' ::,~1t/:~~e;:;~~· & b1y. Lrg 38r 2Ba on $400 tBR Duplex on w. beach, ac;hools, parks & A ,,.., & clNn middle The Efficient Ahernatlve
•2BR, 2BA. frplc. deck, dble lot., Huge yard, quiet 17th near Whittle< Ave. 1 shopping IQed ledy lo lhr my 2BR Full S4lfVk:e Of answering
w/d hkup, two blks to Lltau IC loc. Avail now. $2200/mo adult non-smOker only 6401 WEST WARNER 2BA, very, very pluSh apt servlc e/m111 o nly. ~~~L~~i~~~ 2A'ft71BX ONFOMisAtb 673-7777 "'673"1941 Rentilretreqd 548-3829 IU·OIH =::.,::,~~·,,!,~ 640•547o
RENTALS ALSO AVAIL! North end, dose to bc:h., PEllmlU PlllT 2BR 2BA Apt. 3 Blks to YR(Y Lux 26r tba. tfpjC, ~atonlc $450/mo tot~. trcial Prt(Mdy
673-5354 Agt lrpl, ._Y.~· ~9'}2700079/mo., 38r, 2Ba. frplc. ~ndeck ...,..~BJIU beach 4 tS 19th St. bar buih-lns patio pncg 72o2~1on0.,f ~7reqt 15d. 2771 -••llll yeer --"·.. ... $1700/mo -..;;;wu v S750/mo No pets. Cati N · M ' t actutt · .......,.. c _.,... -I •---L I .. 714-S97-7716 Bus or rocean. aure •· o 0.2111Wf11Tllft ~~~;~~~~J~;~~~~~~~ Large flving room, 2BR. ,..,.,. ~• 714·S98·2987 Home _ ~o pets S87S 57S-8040 FURNISH~ro $4~/~o COSTA MESA LOT, euffc,. t'iiBA. firepl8Qe, yard, mcrosNE dOXRB; APAITIEm Near Hoag. beaut lrg 3BR ~ds. Corooa Del Mar Ing & auto business In garage. St300Mo •GATED COMMUNITY• Sparkling clean. large * * tBR. crpts. drps. 2BA townhouse w/lrplc. 64._27n downtown., .. w/7 Mt-
... I Ill ma .... I 7 7 POinsettia 720-1866 ... ··-· Garden apts Beautifully gated complex. pool, dl w, lndry rm. encl ~ar-vice bays ANO 800 eq. ft. • OWEST PRICE 2 -• landacaped grounds spa, tndry lac $600/mo N 1 11000 .. 1 I' d 1 1 .. ~ .... L story Jumlne Creek 3BR, BEAUTIFUL 28R 2BA P I ,......... age o pe s mo ... a ure emp Y ma e. office. Just listed .,_,., GMllJ IM 3Br 2'~.~abooocn fU<nished s2150 w/~l l courae VIEW OOl&spa,paporttos.,_..s, Nopets Ca1tS4t-339t 548-0390or66t-2538 Chrlstltn morale, non-motlvatesseller.Offerlld •~"5K t t702 A I garage or car · BACHELO-R furnished on drlnk/amkr Golf eouree 1 S53S 000 mm w YU ~ • • g Waterfr ... ltltts .... St Also tBR avail at SOfry. no pets beach, pool, sauna. ex· · a • ·
3BR 2BA Up. 2BR Down. Ctsu .... 1124 IULTllS I 1 s t39s Fr~. wet bar. NIT nnm Bachelor S590 erclse weight room. lfWNIT lllllll 1'11. vu $29S/mo. 548-929~ .. ., ....
Bit-In•. frplcs. doubt• 1.1.PLWWA . • ;a~r!/~/a .~~~.2C: F:'i!~t~~.,:'[0~ ~~ J~~~~Ba = _£501mo.960-08.?!_ ;.:J!~,:; Btttll/l tttb 2111 111·HU
;ar11ge. S3A8.000 Incl In· 2 tral air Alf malnl. incl. aweeplng mountain and t6t E 18th St 642--0856 BACHELOR. skylight. "' ci-;..11., te• ~ • ._, ww llALJll llTB. ~ ~unhc>\\ terlorpelnt&new C#P9t Desirable hidden story, W/D, gar ....... Steps to Sorry.nopets.&44--0509 city lights VIEW. S2650 --------relrlg. stove. private eo· !,·~ •. ~.r"'.,c .. •1u111.~1~."'...~ Wk ly rent••• now avall. J•Mlll IUln · 4BR 21hBA. pool. lg .....-,,_,mo b hi N , , '"" .... ...... • .. _ dWnstrsmstr,$329,900. behStt50mo.858-1254 *lllFFSY-* .,.,. · 2Bdrm !\•Ba S8tS trance. near eae · o •• ,,...,,.,..,&.or~.0r..., St47.00 wtc & up. 2274 I &·alt~ •~• IUll• lULn 151E21st St 548-2408 pets. $475/mo 963-4954 • ...,...,,_ Nwpl Blvd CM 646-7445 Ila.tilt Mia 11•1 HUGE 3Br. 38a w/frplc all End Unit. 3BR 2'hBA. t900 l"aat-4• SORRY, NO PETS .,,,--...,--·-=---.-l llSf IEEU! anenitles, near park & sf,allnewty redecorated. lll·UOO " lll·H11 IClti ta tall ••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Exprt"l tl~ best.·
-IELMllT
1111,000
As lettured In 0 C Maga-ww. ttus 3 BR. 3~ BA 1s
surrounded by lush land·
ac:apl~. spa, fountain
EJCI used brdc & dra-
matic lighting! A treasure•
call lodly. 144-lllO
.... tlUOI
F•WITUI •1•.-m You will love thll 2 bdrm,
1¥. bath end unit In the
Verf.llllet Greet bulll·tn
,.1orage In bedroom
clo9eta, • sliding mir·
rored doors Neutral col-
Ofl throughout Last. but
oot lt'ast. there Is a peetc.
a-boo view of the bay!
St39,000
111·1100
. GEORCI: El .KJN~
·11': ( \.it.ti''"' ~ HEAi IOR"•
IUIMWIPAMIT1 We'A give you the down ln
exchg for • Share of own-
erlhlp Y04J make the
mthly pymts a we Iha.re
apprec You receive
100% tu benefits Must
hi ve clean credit Agt
957-eoo2 Oys. Ev. Wlcnds
.......... Iii
Unbelievable value in SC new center. Avl 9/1/88. like new home. Pool. STEPS TO SAND In West 39 d 28 J In 27""
Plaza area. 4BR 3BA. $1800/mo. 7S9-9194 Spectacular v•~1 V"'" ••~ield r eon ° a, gar, ac NEWPORT North COndo .. ...,... ...... Newport. 3BR H..,BA Wwt:9LI • bk yard, ale. StOOO/mo. ••,."""'••-•"""'.--"!'" pool, spa, AIC. $349,900. PlllE .::.1 L-*TIAAll $2300 mo. Bkr 720-7432 Duplex. Frple. patio. gar.. tst Security negot, ex -2Br 2Ba and loft, ale, end OCEANFRONT tBr apt.
Call MARGIE 979-8280 -_,,... WI O. St09S/mo yearly APUTIEITS tr as SSl-5763 home, unit. 2 car gar. pOOI, per· turn. prime week 11111
T .. Ew •ULTY 28R 2BA hse. Patio. yard, *HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1 c II Mlk lect location. unturn. one available. S9SO/week.
. " 2 car garage. S1950/mo. SBA 38A, tam. room2 F/'p2 renta . a e Large attractive Apts In a 800-S27-8073 days only yr old. $1400/Yr lease 650-t8S8 CHUCK CURRIER ..O·IELL 419 Bf'gonla. Dye story, lrml din rm, ' 644-8056/W 631-6133/H beautiful garden setting r. It L 41l!JI 7S9 6390
-&40-4924 Eves 6"0-6244 3 car gar . pool. ale s2eoo VIEW lllE Pool/spl. ~arage or -···· IC• 119'1 • ---....... •• laare HARBOR REAL TY E Side 48R 3 new BA. Nu G d /pool carport Sorry, no pets ;28R COTTAGE ocean Office e73-4400 kit, nu roof. nu FA heat.~-·-·=•..,•,,...•_•_•_•_•_•_-_•_•_•_!"_ mo ar :r1s26~-11•1114. 28drm i v.ea S785 v1ew,frplc,garage.decil. 38R 2'.ArBa on the bay 2724 Residence 644-S297
Nu skyl1$. Ille. oa.k firs. Lg SINGLE story home on VlC8 incl • · Spacious s j!fr, 2Ba 2 story 28drm 2Ba se 10 walk to bch. Avail now ~~[~~ d~at~~ ~; i eCOFFs JBR CONOO• ...... ..!-• _
lot. trees. PP 646-6473 corner lot in H~hlands *TIE lllFFI * Excellent condition, no 398 W. Wilson 631-SS83 st 17S Incl utl 497 -36"4 lease. S239S/mo 333 t story, lum, encl gar1ge.1_..__n_., ____ _
Li'"tHI litatl 1052 38r. 2Ba. db 11ar. 3BR 2',..BA. full bay view. .-ts! S2.500mo ----------9 via Udo Mgr 675-9289 M/F, n-smk. avail immed 1lAL I POMlll _ _ 1850/mo incl gardener S219S A.vi now 760-1108 ~· 1 Bedroom 5640 l~t ... cla · $750/Mo 720-9220 1n Jm usm 640-8290, 675-1651 --2Bdrm IBa $760 fiEDROOM sfubio offioe a Whrl'IM. f()( ....
R •Le ----38r/2Ba fully lumlshed, 301 Av~~o 642-9650 ,, .. Bath •• patio, cable -R•-•a.Tl.I 7500sf f tort Darling 28 2" A, den, Waterfront 4BR 2BA 2 •ty wl dbl gar. ·~ blk from ~ ., *-r-• . * , light man g. Ir pie Lovely yard home in China Cove bch NB. winte< rental •BACH SS9S Great East-ready, no pets $695/mo. ~ICIUSl~.ind F'em. shr 3Br/28a, mstr access doors. 16 ft cell·
S232,SOO Chateau-Spectacular view Yrly Sl400/mo 721..8 113 tide foci Gar, cable avl 548-2682 unt~\lucJIO tarcJ1 bdrm. Yfly. &4>2878 Ing, avail. immed.
PagenlRE Linda/Helde S3000mo675-4912Agt Clean&eozy 18RS610 28,, tBa. yeaily, lndry, IX'dloomapivtlllf'fll~~1 AVAIL NOWI nr Airport/ call M·F6"S-681t 493--0477 °' 497-4811 Cntl Jlt11 21 115-4912 Grnbll w/BBO. lndry rm garage, can be partially ar'(.J J l:.itdr'OOmr~ OCC. 3Br wlloft, 21AB•. laliam Fiuadti tlrt Sorry. No pets 631-8427 furn S 1250/mo +tee Witt'! '''tfoldtt"S ~-o trurn ldfl, pool. no gar $386+ u ·~rt ltacla lOH *3eR twnhouse Newport PENINSULA YEARLY 2111 BEAUTIFUL E'Sl de lo-650-805S SlSS/monclUdf'\C~t' S250dep. 63t-7939 ..... " • ~ANYON SBR §BX. Hg1s area, trs>ic. palio. I •3BR 2BA lower duplex. IMMAC. fBr Xie condo. cation. studio lor quiet N.!IA•to~litt'l('SS~ \w.m-M/F 2BR 2BA ,._ ... or--. A::::&:::tin 2tM Deane H very nice 322 Ogle•O 2 garage. frplc, patio, WOfking Fem, $450/mo, * 111111 Siii* mtrig l~«lttn<WHCUU """'"' ..,.... ~
1 largel story lk i ..... ~· S980tmo 6"7-7540 * lndry hkup, St250 mo. Adult, quiet, gated tract.$30 S200 cteanfnn, total Fng, dishwasher. stove ~ tlllJ ruge l»yYICW Bldg II Undrgrd prkg. ---lllTE Add' den+ wa -n """""'· _ __ ___ •Great 38R 2BA upper N. of Plaza. $650+ • S r{'(rt"ationcentt'f M!ltllll!-t Avail 9/1 French Park •~-pool, spa. Agts wetoome. duplex. garage. Nice to-most util. 77S-2580 move-in S650. Come In Incl. No pets 545-485 lV <incl rrort llN SA $400Mo -+MC Establlahed route (For
(714) 669-8955 me ..... B.1111 cation. St400 mo. person lor V1ew1n~ -*21111 ~100* . . Sale) Part-Time. No exp 2s27 Eld . . ~NEW 89t-7046d 667-098441 _...Catt t-•""323-t ~.~5 •4BR 2BA, 2 story home A=rtaeatl en ......... OVV'" .... IY IWIDI on Penin Pt w/lrplc. Avl -~ IUmFIL USTSllE Frig. dlshwas er, stove PARK NE\XIPORT N/smkr shr 2BR Wood-
Harbor View Homes. TDR•ES 10/1 Encl piltlo, lndry II incl. No pets s4S-4&55 f7141644-1900 bridge hm, pvt bath, w/d, BUY Somerset Mo.del, SBr, rm 2 ear gar $1700 I '· • u~ 2BR t'ABA Twnhse. Frplc. *s1-•1 AAR•• VIRW 11 •~"" C.•tlts Ftr ltlf PENINSULA PT WINTER 1 .. a ...,,. gar. yard/patio, lndry rm. nft ~nu' -•ucs.i~Hi!.\llold a usocamens . ....,.,mo ~:;;.'~!:.~s~46-e~~~ Flrer•ace. vaulted cellings. •Cute 2BR tBA furnished i vEXRLv $1160/mo• quiet loc S8501mo. 2 mstr Milles. Newtydecor. ~~ ~,;: ;~8-~~~38302 Lv throu h cl"'s·c.1'f1"-....t 6"~1413 ~~~ dbgar.~ry~-~ ~se~~v-~~~2 Bd~~age U17~M~ !S~t3~50~~~o~.~7~5~~~9~3~14~~5~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~¥~~~~~~i & spa. Sorry, no pets. age. lrplc, S900/mo. parking, steps to bay TSL MGMT 642-1603 I
CllTllPHAIJ CWS 28drm 2''48a St070 •Charmi~ 3BR t BA furn Refs reqd. 67S-3063 *LllE IEW* 2BR 28• d /d 666 W 18th SI 642-490S ,.. con o w en. hse W/ , garage. big BAYFRONT Come see the d1tlerance, Fam & din rm $279.714 2-BR tBA "·"It · f Id pal"" S105011mo ""' -ins, r ge, ""• · 1BR yearly, partclng, no completely remodeled
Tt)P Prudentaal <M
71' a111ty f71 4)76Q.Om
cus-r-C5U~r 2'.m&, 2. car
gar . t yr, full amenities
$349.000 3231 Clay St
Newport HIS. &42-a353
~:;~ ~:~· ~rdt9~~,~~ YILU IEITILS p e1's'1moo.r673szi .. ~oklng Beautllul 2BR apt•. Pool. S8 ....,.. rec room. laundry room
Meyer 1850 51P4464 UOI UY 1• s/f Ready fOf 1n111n1 move-21r mu I YAllU Remodeled hse 2Br tBt. 111~.. Puianll Int Only sa.o 10 $650/mo
S800 111 & last. 631-8812 lg tam rm. wet bar large 2'17 + S200 OFF MOVE-IN
•EASTSIDE 18R 18A. kltchen & tndry room. pvt 28R. garage, newt;™· IU llAU ans. yard w/spa, gardener tied steps 10 .,._,,beach 530 W. Wilaon iarage. W/D hkup t S 13SO/mo Avl 9115. 9 ;0 W 8.,b(; BIVd TSL MGMT ~:~ ~~~1$850/mo 756-07jM) or 756-9393 ,975/moYrly. e75-MSO 722-9012 or 642-1603
Sorry No Petal •BACK-BAY area Exec *28R/28A $925/mo yrty. --------
3Br 288 condo. b<and 2 blka from beach. New E'SllE 21r/111
new carpeting, 3-<:ar gar-carpel 1 cer •Itch 8., dwnatalra, no pet•
age S 1250/Mo. 498-0150 759-9Soe or 673.537 · $650/mo. 83 t-615S
OUR FAMOUS
HAS RETURNED!
Back by popular demand. 0 1mes·A-L111e w ill run Friday. Satur-
day and Sunday 1n 11s own cl<1ss1l1Cauon m tnt Cl<1ssif1ed Ads
•EASTBLUFP EJCecutlve *LI IUIT. Ill 2\.;U
48R. 2BA. DR. FR. Bay, Frpl fenced yd g1tdener
city & harbor view. CdM 2 gar w/st0tage E'llde .
schOOls No pets. S2950 $ t500/mo yr IM 548-1936 lllTM llUll -• '4500sec &42--0350 ----
Buutifut 3BR/2'ABA NEWPORT CONDO UCI UY 411 2U *TIE lllffS* BRITE. cteen upper 2BR E'SIDE 2Br tBa . upatalrs,
28r. Oen. 2Ba. frple. pool tBAw/gar.$850181SW. fresh pelnt, lndry fee. oo
and greenbelt. 2 patios BalbOa. Agl eS0-3890 pets. $690/mo. 27 t 'D' E.
Since this Is a special otftr. we have a ThUrsday noon dudl1nt
and ask prepayment ror all ads This is open to all private party
advertisers ror mercNndlse not ovtr s I 50 IP"" must be fisted
m adl and no abbrevlattom win be accepted. All ads w lff run
Friday. Saturday and Sunday. There Is a 5-llnt minimum at 20«
hOme, lg mstr suite w/ In great mld·penlnaula lo-POOi, 2 lrplcs. RV rm
trpl. jacuz bath. gourmet cation. Uke new apacious $2000/mo. Bkr 642-3850
kitchen w/loll of goodlel 2 bdrm, 2¥· bath with 2 *BEAUTIFUL park nlte
c.tl fOf appt $649,000. car garage. Top quality sunset & ocean v\J 3Br IUll Tm lULn with crown molding. tiled 21hBa.' w/d, pooliapa 111·1111 kitchen & beths. S128S/Mo 63 t-t t53
-----631-1400 .... S3AO.OOO
S t300/mo Newly decor-Owner 818-790-7159 16th Pt. 644-04S2
ated * &44-ts59 '* _ STUDIO. ye1rly. P1rldng. E'SIDE 2Br 2Ba twnhae
WEST Newport 3BR, Patio. 210 "'4th St. Fplc, yardJ. gar. llke new.
rooldeek. St27S Entrance off e11ey. S600 $920. 6o6-40t9/daya
WESTCLIFF 2BR, dbl gar-ulll lnol. 675-7640 6"0-2426/eves & wknda.
per ltne So your tow cost Dlmes·A-Une ad Is onfy ...
$3.00.
age, fireplace. $1350 ---c--lllllTll SPlllll BAYFRONT Condo 28R WINTER RENTAL BalbOa E/~IDE amall tBr ottage, C... •el lbr llU -\A.Ml Hf Hll't "Polynesian Atm09ptlefe" St650 Penn pt, 2BR/18A, 'h blk l/p, encl patio. No Pets!
1111M1' tM:. Spac condo 2Br t'.'tBa tri· NB Sh •eR f s 700 to ocean or bay no pets S580/mo 1 $680 sec dep. 38 1., B 2 I .. ~ rs '" · urn. 1 • ' t87 E 21at. 11H5.723~ r .,.., a, I ory '""''... AEAl EST.ATE fvl & 2Br 2Ba. den. Fp, OCEANFRONT 3BR, Ip, $950. ev 9/15. 723..()192 .,.. '"
Awox 150091. Oek cab!-w/d hkup~, Jac. gar + t L I $2400 .... GARDEN I 1BR ne1•, lg M/BR 2 fp, gar. REALTORS carport, 5 & S 1250 t pa io. ove y. C.rtu HI ... .. sen ng crnr
DEADLINE: Tnursday noon
PRICE: 5-ltnt mrn1mum • 3 days • 20C ptr line = S3 00
• All <1ds are prepa1e1 by coming 1nco tne Dally Pilot co
place your ad or us .. lht coupon btlow
• Priva1t party mercnand1st only ads No com·
mf!rClal ads, pets. livestock. product or planu aund«tl Remodeled & BA YFRONT Condo 2BR. w/gar & patio. beam cell · -•• -1-... sec. No pet• S4t -2447 den. dock ror 80' bOst 1 Ase from ~ Btvct.. & w1lk-lns Nr -.... occ. 2nd1toryllddedln t2/83 -n~w r--. B B ·-1· 1379,500. Ask f0t Steve EASTBLUFF_. °'SBA Ex· llTY LJllT 11111 Y11W Yearly $.4750 Big Corona. 1 ' 1 1 civic ctr, SC Plaz.a No
&46-7220 0t 650-3759 cellent flncancing. 2BR 2BA. loft, w/d Nlup. W•rfrtat .... let Duplex, lower, s950 Incl peta. S875. Mt-3078
Paredigm RMtty S4 19.000 1eo-11oa Bkr glfage s t300 8&4-1802 IULTm II 1 1•' utll/refrlg. e73-9013 LUU --------!---------•·---~----------·--•WALKING DISTANCE * 2• * •DELUXE• llTI IUll llTTAll TO CHINA cove. •18r. Bultt-ln•. Quiet area, 1850 : ; .
·~. Merrill Lynch Realty
11•11 YD •LI I lllJm
Slngte story, 3 bdrm and 1 large lot
wtth beautiful pool & apa. Near green-
beft, shopping, perks end beech. As6c· Ing S574:1so.
111·1100
let U1 Mel, Y•
S.11 y .. ,,...,.,,
Cal ClutlfW,
Mt-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
CUSTOM CONDO Winter ..... tBdrm yard, glrtge$785& •Bachelor mo. No petl &45-2435
frpl , Bear/MacArthur, tstlllttdep.eSO-t858 SSOO.e75-417.. Llfl•t••--
-tBR/tBA. 638.-0405 ~ =,..,..,.,-=--===--=,,..------------..._.. 0t 731-7S28 ...... DELUXE 3BR 3BA, "2 1111 llftl fll • Jog Of ride to 2151 Pldflc
Eaatslde iomtntlc l"IOuM, mtsler bdrm1". AIC. up-2BR t'MtA. Qoee 10 bettl Ave. 2BR 2BA. *925. No grade9 geto<e "Gated 900 s..LMMI144-2911 pet• &31-e107/855-0e&S
country & contemporwy Comm" S2295 540..02" MESA VERO£ 2BR tBA ~~'a3~~i,:A;,~ E'BlUFFS condo 3BR, ti ... yard, hkupa, tncl gartge:
halla open to court yd. t\tBA. lmmac: No peta. 18R FURN apt. fOf 1 adult, 1700 111, latt + dep Patio, hrdwd llra I morel Av a II now. Le•.. No 28e7 Hickory Piace
Vacant. $1450/mo. S1195/Mo760-1175 :;:-:~ ... t:J;:::';, 7St·9483 0f •98-t93t
Oonlld Pflff, &42-1717 •HARBOR VIEW HOMES depoelta. + % ut111. 11111.f •llUTll
38' 281 Higflly upgrlded. 0-540-0220/ E-557-7555 2BR wig.et. new carpetl.
Ut• a b<lte . .....,. gmblt, ••28R 1BA upper untt 15e7 Or1f19111 "A" ... Sl95
S21501Mo•700-50&4 lreeh paint, end gar.: 131--4120 C• 1-SPM • .v. H . SBR 3BA. new cerpet, sesormo. No .... , ..... .... ,. mr Meet llem. IChoot. No pets. 754-otee 2ar 1'h8a w/ger crpta E I h 3 petal LMM 9-10 mo'a IC • • :;;~·2 .,::•21oo 121somo. 120-13•8 • · pe~:~~.~~!'.J:.. "'A~rGc~.'s-~~ •q. ft., l137il mo. ~wtv\ltufMA to lhc)ppliig H 75/mo. 8e7Vlct0fle'E'. ... S720
SELECT BH&O 711-8000 ealtoefmlfled.. . 3eO VlctOfle &41-1623 2911 &ant• Ane 'C' ... S735
1
NAME
ADDRESS
Cf TY
AMOUNT ENCLOSED
UNU '.
2.
l .
4.
Each Item muJt ~priced in tn'e ad with no 11ems over
Sl50
M AIL TO: Dfmes·A·Une
0<11ly Pilot
330 West B<11y Streei. CoUCI Mr~a. CA 92626
Daily Pilot hours
Monday·t'riday 8 00 AM to 5 00 PM
PHONE
STATE ZIP
DATES TO RUN
53 00 MINIMUM
• WOAOS 1'£11 lll'll HOA.UIWVIATIOHS
S. UOOMill
~ u~
1. ...ao
~ ... ~
~ "~
U• add•llOOll papet If ~ llllJ.... 642-5678
·.
Orange COMt DAILY PILOT~.~ 17, ,_
l1tm • k1hr••t • .. .. U ~Iii .. !.!!J 1 1 IUI -1 IUI ,,.. ...... llTll ... 1 .. 1.-.\aii..... u,.:i: .... MMm LIM '~1~1T ewl for lllT Wool. .,_,atettiiii looldl1111'...,.... ~. No:r.:-'ane 11 r y • ...,,., .-p.,,.. .,,.,, ~ ...,_. 'ull .. ... wpm The 0...,. COiet Delly •t ' ==-: FIT,UlcMftt,fMtpWd, +1Mdic91.CdMl7i-11n = compul9' cicp, le, to~ Moft>.w.d·Frt. 12·5pm, m9nt.Goodpew.c.ll• lllcl&'t 8tJll1•t1 .. ..... 8ALll ~TOM Pilot NI WI lmmedl9le Ori! In INIMofbMedeouteo-· coeTA MESA ._,a. · Ofb eap. prtlfd. Cell '*" ..,_I01I Mii .... ._ _, ..
t 100,GGOto tllOOOO + .,.,.. time p09ttlon (llP-.,,. .... vJ:.*: ~ ROA .iu1 ·~· IM TC0. 722-1103 ino. own~. GAIL 145-4111.l:~.M-F ........ -* -~-· =~~= 2100 W.~ont.'NB IM1110t'~212 DlfAl(E GEHEAALOfFICE . *17
5-
3311* Pllfll.,.1'91. RESTAURANT Md~· ... Ma ';'i';;;;'~i36~ '*" ~t.= F!ll!Jfm"l!!to o.nt.1119f11111T CJRll':E~ i;: n;.~EHOTEL L==--~~ Nim-PRCR=-..w ·The sue wpm9ndbe!t':towotti. motf\fated lfldMdu9I tor FIT pleaMtlt .._ ...... Ull EITU Q SALE8e31...,250 wetr9in,muat~good 7·3PM.3yt1eappNll'd. ~· ••~ _. ~ .ubetMtl .. aq ~ ..it with tha publ.IC, IHt paced practice. eMch Offtee 4 d;i°:;t, F 1~&~ l ~ng rec. Ord. Call L91-.llM f l? .... ttom tMlr ..,.. ro:'cie Plew ca11 Judy o.ttino P-.. ca111s1.1ua. ..-. Mo.oe21 ~d lie e1a..eo21. e.o.e. 1.3PM. 5 Y'191CP pretd. • :m, .-.
(A9currlno Income r.: at &42-4321, ~tenelon Clerical ...... CLERtCALOFACE llUI .••• , ft.lllmtuml llLlll llY * .
9'dUllle}.
316
· 100%FREE • -~llPI ·--Wll'fl ll.lllTYPllT -No •XP· ..... we train ----•S30 Mllllon monthly lft'llllll F~~ epMll ~ Personnel Office ... 11 DLll y()U.U-$1hf.CAU CUI Need9db•ll _ _.
..... • llUJ... •••• V.Wdit ~. M1 l*IP6e oriented ~ NOW 520-4050 Ellen Day ua aw '"121 CO. EM c *"' -• •IJ:Mllllon ..... :r.roll ~.....-rs C..terSt $41-ssaS U.l~tm w/typino 50w m Xlnt ..... #121 f /T PIWMU --~ chw. Mon-Fri 2"-c.11 ~am1~:i::91u11~: ~ .. ,8f!nce!o0c~pr:: Aeceptlorlllt. Secretarlee . 1•1•11112'f11 pnon.la t:'a·l~l·l· 1. .For 11PPQ1mmer1t .,._..Office 'environment. no For appointment l>leue . A,..,,,AMPMl
7
1-0011
cornplM• lnauranoe. entt1u1la1t1c atttlude, and Word Prolcaalorl, lllTllCT ---•• -... cal~ t-4t>m 'Y1)inQ. 2 to 41 daya/WMI(. call b«weerl Mpm s.i.JM.,......
Join our IUCOMaful pro-greatpeoptecommunlca-uMyourlkllleto..-ntop IUIMllrM'I' AIM•I t1our1 vary rrom MW.SmiS .. '"'IM-
teuloNll aam1ng five & Uon & malnt lltllla. We dollar• wotti.lng tempor· 1511 I CLll 9em-8pm. WIU TRAIN. Restaurants lllLI JI I
she figure monthly In· offer: GREAT working wy. Long 9nd lhott t•m The """'"" Piiot It lootl'-•CLERKS ._.. aw #l•l -·-1111...... A1>91Y PennysaYer, 1660 EXPERIENCED Food Prep SALES coo..i.ATOM
ce>n*. conditions In new .... untt ueignrnent av9Yable fOt' "=:'~ """ •TYPIST --• Ins AoftttCy Prop c .. tol-Plaoenti. Ave .• C.M. & dWIWUherl needed $100 000 .. 000 +
•Entry level p01111on1 apt. complex In River. • you NOWll. Cell T.,.. !or m;;-"'"7:..,.~·1ers. •SECRETARIES tcitors. Lead•~. Must P/l-na-/MT& backstage during snow s~==-.-;. av911. side, Nlary p11.19 bc>nut. for appoint"*'1 o 'G9 ,..... c.r •RECEPTIONIST FOf appointment pleue be exp. In Pws Unee.. _, da~ af A.mph it heater. · --
Callfornla Clean Water 2Br apt lnclude9 utlll op-Management ~ •WORD PAOCE8SWG c.11 between 9-4c>m Send resume to·. Wllliem ENTRY /ERRANDS 546-4876 ate In .._ ...... 112-1• pO(tunlty tor Iona t.rrn SIWYU I helpful, but wNI train. •ACCOUNTING CLERKS Warmington l~surance N.8. se.75 hr. 7~1586 Restaurant up & oominO ......
bt .. 11 employment. Pli call = :.-1~J5~: •OATA EHTRY GET PAID for reading Brokers. 1641 'Langi~ OUALITV auto body shop IDYEIS :,.~.!:-.:
Debbie between 8:30 & ISSllllTES HRS: 11AM...,PM Mon~ OPERATORS boot(s! $100.00 per title. Ave, lr'Ane 927141 need• em~. Call FI T PIT. Flel()ble hours. nave su~ equity l!i!tz T1 leu 2tH Noon 550-9225 PEISlllEL Fri. .,.... Ill Write: PASE-259T, 161 (7141250-3338 for into. Located"" S.J.C Exp. prel'd Benefits. lfom their .._ foro9. Ull FUT Banking Call Pat Matley, 642-4321 ,=:-,aaa-S. Llncolnway, N, Aurore. .llllTll 240-1331 Apply within unit. Coco's (Recurtlng Income ,...
x205. 9'-11AM dally for --·-IL60542 IULDT&TI-"'· 2305 E. Coast Hwy, llduall). ~v.\~10:.~.: IPEUTllllmun (714)91M473 appointment. ·---~ GOVERNMENT JOBS j~m!cim:,.~ =~~ Sucowful R.E.--co:p1n <Monade1Mar673-905o *.!: Miiiion mOflthty
credit QI(. 720-1152 Our Ideal candidate wlll m ... nam ···LY PUT $18,037 to $69,405, Im-logion Beed'I a Costa plush office ., FuNon Restau·r~~R--•$15 Mii'"' .... ~ -.a••• -CALL TODAY mediate Hiring! Your Mesaar ...... 7-3118 lslandseek•OFFICEAD--·-•S36000EJCp9Me9*y, ..,.~OOSW HAS SSS have a minimum of 2 ,..., 111 W .., If 18-400 Von l<arm11t1 area. Call (Refundable) LANDSCAPE C MINISTRATOR to handle Jolly Roger. Day/Night famll'y college tuition•
for I 10,000/up No years working knowledge IBl•IDll • • Ste 130,lrvlne474-29741 1-518-459·3611 Ext. ..,_., -~pany 11181,aeuows,etc.MUST Shift. A.pp!y 1n person com..,....elnannce. '
cred."'/nopen. Call Den-of all areas of bank <>P«· oa-•-.. Oesta .._ ... U 100% FREE to APPiicant F2912H for Federal List -s •--"""' gar be llc'd + Experl NO 2-5pm. 400 South Coast ..,..... nitQn Assoc 673-7311 * atlons. lncludlng note _,... ....., E.O.E. 24 HRS. dener with truck tor ...Salar)'$1500/mo + Hwy. Laguna Beach Join our aoocniM~
funcllona. -Uoocf com-ltlllllllW ---/lllm1' -N.8Mcttaree548-1099-bonuMS, -setfd resume -fesslonals wning tt-Aauaacelltata municatlon and math· Appllcatlonl ••being ec-Boat handling up helpful. GOVERNMENT JOBS to: USA WILSON 18 ln&l. IUU silt flgcKe monthly ln-flllt I ,... Bil emalical skills required. cepted at the following FIT. must work week· me. ~llY ~1:iJ?:ie IOH~~~gj05y~~; ~akl~~ !~ c92~rorat!_,IP712az1~1·200' NB, F~~;:ng b~~r ,~ee~: ·~· level l)09itlona
locatlonbetween 9:30am ends. day shift & swing Mature, person•ble, area. Call (Refundable) Pertectpref'd.675.()200 ~ ._ andCdMstores Cash.er avail.
We offer compet1t1ve to 4;30pm: Huntlng1on shift. A1>91Y 1801 Bayside motivated MCfet.,-Y for 1-518··59-3611 Ext. . "'~·nt-........... etc. "TIFT. caJlfornla ~ W.., salaries & benefits. ror Beach MAIN POST OF· Or, CdM, Wednesday· busy real estate office. .. LIT PEISH ....... "' ~" .-consldefatlon oontact: FICE. 6771 Warn« AWi, ~unday 1<>am-4pm. Must nave good dictation F2912BB for Federal List flex., 15-6/tlr. 645--0«7 1---lU ...
Hunllngton Beach, CA & phone siillll. Apply at 24 HRS. v::,,~en:.Upm~~~ Riot\/ 673-2754 Scott or bf., 1 111111111 92647-9996. 1111 •EW TSL. 188 E. 17th St .it 1A, GOVERNMENT JOBS lcal ability beneflclel IUL DT&TI lllT Jacqui Iv. msg.
Im.IT.Tl OUll
'
•• I•-• Salli"" club FIT & PIT Costa Meaa. 642· 1603 S18.037 to $69,405. Im-""PIY 1954 Placentia IEf•H •aa -Pal• --• .,, ' · mediate Hlrlngl Your ~':...•Mesa 'ORG. CTY. 1'1 Top --t Flni· .. l -Cou _. -•-•••1 FIT or PIT. Flexible. S5hr. 675-7100 IUL aRI ..,.., area. Call (Refundable) """' . PrOdue« 9e9ks honest, ...,.., o ... no . nter Beach"'-Fine Art G9lo.
-Coronade1Mar675-1579 •LIWlll FL 9SMWUI 1·518-459-3611 EI lllllTllllmPEISll aggressMlexper us·o. Cl«l<P/T FIT.Bnghlresp lery looking for ttlat
Attn: Cynthia Thoreson ......,... TE• Kennel help near 0 C Perm. FIT. CONROY'S. F311 f F x . Agts to snow & sell RE. person to WOfl! in new 1 rir. special dynamic ..,.. 500 Newport Center Drive ... rw1U1 F·'· rounds Wiii tr.:.•n' Costa Mee&. 645-02<46 or ederal List PIT for • real estate oo. I T . P d All lab In C M 650-242• person. Hours 12"" o.IV. ~~~~~~~~I Newport Beach. CA 92880 Ent~level person to train .wg · ., • 24 HRS. 673-1900 ask for Steve w 0t ro ucer · • · CALL 675-2031 ;: (ll•)•••ilM ma ,.,.....penys toot1i.u. PfTSA.75/hr.549-9799 fUUL•llllD .... , .. 1.,.._ leads rnished.Extrem.-llTll.UUS FOUND black male cat. _. ........ 45. Ell ""' · wR ,.,.., llA9llUm 'Y hi Income potential. In South Cout Plaza. SALES PERSON NEEOEO Long-haired, beautllul. for. 52C)..4()45, len Day lllftl/1111111 FIT with expel'. A.Ill tor lmmed. 8yr sfylist moving. SIPllYISll SerlOUS only need apply. Need young. motivated, For ST AT I 0 N A Ry·
FOllt> ADS
ARE FREE
Cal:
142-Hll
Newport Peninsula. Equal Oppty Employer 11111 llLlll/ clean OMV. 25-30 tlrs/wtl, Dwight Hatano. 645-0093 No clients nee. 5411--~ Apartment maintenance For details, call Lisa beach lifestyle people for STORE. CdM. Flt, 5
673-0242 Ullll/UllllDm OIETA.RY AIDE. Must amonly645-0032Dwlgtlt F/TU•T••IT IWlmLlfrS experience necessary. 721•1200 the •1 Beach Store in days,Xlntwortdngconda.
FOUND prescriptions Booth rental $100/wk. read,speal<Engliah.tlave .IYll....,. Permanent position tor Progresslvesalon inCdM. MuS1 be organized per. California. Please call, Exceptionally fin•
glass on 8/15, vicinity Personal phones sup-co1w. Hoe. exp. Work $6.tlr. PT/FT. Contact Corona del ~ar Animal Seelllng commissions son with emphasis In 754-0221 tor application. c:fientele. Phone IOf llt)pt.
30th St. Newpor1 Beach plied. J.W. Airport area. flex. hrs, good pay. Cell Laura. 497-2282 Hospital. Wiiiing to work. stylists. Booth rental also supetVillon, paper work llTll. SALIS POSH 67~762
(on beaotl). &45-4330 852-8808 Jonelle M·F l0am·5om. Country no experience necessary. available. Addltional & oommunlcatlon. Salary LIQtltingfixtureshowroom. llAmTml
FOUND Younrt male C81, Club Conv. S4~1 111111/IALIS wm train. ~160 clientele provided Call oommensurate with ex.p. IUI. ma ft Mo ex.per. nee. 5.48-9341 PAY TOP m for --
blklwht. blk.tall wl wtlt lllPEl/llm lllTllDftlllP TUmlE GEN.ERAL OfC. Phones. Elizabettlat675-0S11 APPLYAT:TSL ~fMT l5 Retail perlence ...,,...,_for
Up. Vcty Magnolia & For small mfg oompany In Good pay/benefits. Good driving record. Neat, typing for Property Mgmt 188 E. 171tl St • ·A. Fm TIAlll• SallmMlar. 723-0279
Slater 647-6803 NB. Experience nee. In Call 898-4727 18 yrs. Oppty to advance. firm, co.ta Mesa. ()ppty HOUSECLEANING resdntt Costa Mesa 7141642-1603 Limited opportunlty to )Oin Sef JHf .... ,
A/P/.A/R,payroll& 859-2333 Of 556-0363 to learn property mgmt. ·homes PT/da~. reliable, *IOIELS* national real estate mar· I tltt ..&.w *_,.llY*
LOSTJ!asses w/berry-generaloftlce. Sl0-$12 EIPllllml Ill.I Freeway Stores. EOE N/1mkr. Call wkdy1 car a must. call Julie ketlng s~tem with un· I •••• Coldwell Banker l'tllllden-
Oolor case. Humana pertlour. 645-3881 Help. Femaie preferred. 642--4914 10--4pm. 631-1815or1v. msg. (all ages. MIF} limited earnings. For 10-~irfffle1, tlal Relll &t9te .W..
Hosp./Beactl 81 area. Balboa Mnet 67a..aa1o •11111 FILL Tm Prinl. Fashion, Promotion formation. call Jack seek8 an office ...iaa.nt
641-9671 lllllEEPEI/ For messenger service. ** 476-5525 Patty ** Ayers at SELECT Are you ready to make a tor tnw ~ a-d'I
LOST turtle from 1631-B &LUI llK fl.lllST Own car+ Ins. required. llllllf •&1 R• BETTER HOMES & dynam1e change for the offloe. Typing & months Irvine Av. CM. Possibly OFFIOE Mll&ID Delivery person PfT. 2809 Knowledge o.c. & LA. · ~ GARDENS o.ner? Consider the ex· office experience re-
picked-\IP by mistake. Newport Bl. NB 675-1353 counties. High P•Y for Seelllng energetic per90t1 REAL ESTATE 751-5000 clttng career challenges quired. Good com· ~am 1y 548-9 59 qualified people to grow with establllhed CVS Ptl municatlon 9kllla • must.
S
emi pet. 1 w~;~e .8,, ~~n!Yi.c:"~~ •LIYEIY PE... Please call 241-6996 CO.Min 1 yr retail exper, ~ltonwide ar,'~· :t~~; Pleull C8ll DwteM at tat Ing for a dynamic Mii· FI T. Seeking delivery --11ST1-• HEAL'THCARE Salar;S900-$1200.lnter· dlam.opening40-50new (7l4l)64+9080 3111 starter to take charge of stocker person. Call IOf .... _ -·-EQUICOR view by appointment ste><es eacn year. EOE
_...,..,._ ............ , our busy. small Hunt· appt 646-7«1 Train for career. PIT & only. 646-7«1 IUl.Jm · . allll\'llf +eRilbCXA@ wlNtebf !ngton Beach offloe. 11 ~&L a....-r•-FIT. 250-4064 ~ ... ....,llT Looking tor a professional Gµrrenlly. our Orange All wound AM69tant tor
mature, n-smkr. fem for 2 you nave experience 1n -•• ~·-• llltjllftlll .. I MANAGED CARE SERVICE CENTER wr"'5 ...,., 111 1 County 1ocat1ons nave t>usy PfociertY Mamt co children, nights. live GL. AR/AP and Payrol(, ROA preferred, bu1 wllllng EA N 2 i: 4'.!::11 LOCATED IN BREA, CA. HAS Boating firm seeks resp 0 ce environ.merit · P<>Sitlons available tor ill Newpc)rt s..dl. Mu9t In/out call 892·8358 as well as """"' math •"-to train. Plellunt group · .. r _, .ng Type/phone/boat Lynne Valentine go a I or 1 en t e d and Iced · titude 1~ b t~ ~ttce In Newport exotic Htrwallan plants & IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR: person. e 11 Properties Inc ts now In-nt ~ · Crew u.m-be eicper1e1 • reapon-111}:,wt sstl and t;,._ ablvli'ty tyo tvr.a, I h. 4 AAVweek, alter· fragrant potpcurl at the s~ows/etc ... 1.22' 90en5e5 ts. teMeWin9 C0ntact man-e tlu "~llC lible ' Mlf..mottveted. ~-'"' .,,,.. .... , A ahel H & G den ,..alary neg. • ALV>T Bob ·Schandel 1 t>ers .,..,, your career In Common ...._ ..-. AlftlTIW lllT then we're looking tor nate Saturdays 640-1122 s~ ~ug= ~8th. -.-·. a the right direction with a lent office & phonf skill
m-you. Hours are 8:30am-lllT&L ----Call 619_232_2600 or * TECHNIC •L IFFIOl ADI 111-1111 company that offers ex-req'd. ~ar exp a .,., .... H 5:00pm, Monday ttlfougtl r-• ..,.r_ A....., 1 T ft Newport Beach Law Arm cellent salafies and t>en-To star1 August 22nd
Protected lac.I tenltory. Friday Salary Is nego-Looking tor • rewarding .,.,.y nperson nursday •SSIST•N·T see~s FIT me clerk. 11•~ efrts. which lndude 20% S1750/mo.c.llS7S-.912 HB Market. Futstart-up, tlable.' For Immediate change? Good aala'Y & August 18th. at Noon at ft ft Duties met It typing. & 9U" ...... • employee discounts. --._ .... _.--g1,1~ran1ee + comm. consideration call Shelley benefits. Must be ex· the Anaheim Convention Work with Division Manager to front desk rellef WOfi<, Irvine Real Estate Invest~ prescilptions at cost. in almllY
$30K+ potential 1tt year. at(n4) 981-4095 EOE perienoewlttl Insurance& Center, Booth 32 In the support production staff and CALL 721-8101 men~ comapny has Im-depth training, a 45-tlour. For NeiWp011 CPA Firm.
<>eoree/Olreet Salea exp •••R ay II.IE · collectlons. Newport Arena. No up. nee. monitor work flow; mediate opening f~ r&-5-day worll week. and CALl 631~ • nee. 969-1280 -..-. •••-"' Center. ~1122 Enthusiasm a Plus. OFFICE HELP PIT ftex., oept1oniat, profesaaonal outstandi""' ..-.
,. t
SENIOR Cl &IMS tlrly • bor'luses, must be ....,... ·.,, ...,....... • ~ * I.A dependab}e and nave appearance. V"""' com-l{Oitlet tor edvanc:ement. munlcation slolls, typing · ANALYST car. It. typing. 536-t~ SOwpmreq'd~SomeW/P To apply tor full, part and LEUL
Adjudicate complex medical fllmlS lnPEI experience helpf\JI. day time positions. stop
claims referred by claims analyst. Custom residential. Neat Call Sue 955-0115 by the following lo· SECIOlllES cations: Al the mter-
appearance. ewn ear. llCIPTll•IT section of Baker and = .... • RECOVERY /COB
ANALYST Adjudieat~ medi-
cal claims mvolvlng COB or ottlef
3rd party liability.
* CLAIMS ANALYST ·
Adjudicate medical claims.
* ENCOUNTER
PROCESSOR
Input primary care encoiq1ter
data.
• FILE CLERK
Provide general clerical suppon
to division.
EXCELLENT SALARY & BENEFITS
EOE/AA
S6nd Resumes to:
EQUICOR
5000 Van Nuys Blvd .. Suite 200
Stlefman oaks. CA 9 1405
Attn: Celina HOOi<
818-907.()800
One yr exp er. Start Must be able to type. Must FaJrvie'# (next to Stat• F hl..il
$5/Hr 54&-0818 nave good oommuntea-ecos ) and a Newport ano PUT TIIEJI tlon ~ms. FV 964-Q68 19th) nelCt to C & A O'Melveny & Myers ti• of· llCIUTlll LUlll Clotniefs). fered a tredition of exoaf· ~ -,i PIT. M·F. 2-6pm. CYS/ ... ·--, lenoe~~~· and .uwnES Eoergetic person to work ,...___ a pr.;,__,,,., ..... at·
WEL .. J w/5-12 yr olds. Blllnqual tractive WO<it environ·
prefd (Spanish) 646-7181 Equal Oppty Empl ment for over 100 yM(S.
llUT Fii -mlEEU Res1auran1 WUUT Cl fl?lll I Our branch olllce In
Onl)'-Qne morning a wee!( URelfT 1111111 MAINTENANCE. PI T beautlM Newport Beed'I
for 5 hrs. Must nave car Includes off premiM cat9'-CALL 645-7100 is currently seeking ~
$5 per Hour PLUS gas ing. Must be orea11Ve & Sales-Football experlenoedretary. ,.,_,':f:' .. ~
allowance. C?"ganlzecl. 1r:ivo1ves nvy ••iftl-lf ..,....,......, ,,_ ~ -liftlng. Janeen. 643-2072 -•-ground a must. PC or · llllTmtll lllCI HI -w -•T word proee11lng ex-Restaorant _._ •-pertenoe helpful. . UlllPl9ftT Fiii SONES IUll lll U . lfWIHPO Excellent wages, tips & ~1t We otter a11 exoellenl 1•2· 1"44 ... fer benefits. Luncn & DlnMt. Call and NII IPQrts lntor-salary and superior bin-. ._._ Rocllo's 223 flillarlne Ave. rnatiOnl Make gree1 SSS efits ~age including ~ Balt>oa Island. Call for haying tun! Hrs 11;30 io Medical/Dental, Life Md
lu.&E CO.ST 1nt~631--0204 -~.30. 754-5711 LTOlnsuranoeand ~-
Plea.98 submit reaume
DAILY PILOT · Da~~l}~~~Full P~e~~·,,,-.!!e ~~ :1·~~'9& • . or Part Time. Gelato sales position. 5 Hra/Dy, Myers, 610 Newport
Part·tlme. Assistant Dt• Cluslco. CdM 720-1628 16/Hr 969-1280 , Center Or.. New~ort
V1ct Advisor needed Sat· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiimiiiiiiiliiii urday, Sundar and Hol~ Beaoh. CA 92660. OE.
idays 3AM to 1AM. Must Jl,/F/V/H
be 18 or OWK. valid driv-
er's 'Ileen•. ourrent in·
suranoe. good driving ,.
cord. $7.00 per hour. gas
DRIVER
' mlletlae. Call Pat Marley
Tuesday ttlru FrJday.
642-4321 Ext ~05.
l'ml.YEIY 1 IYlll
1ELEPllll IEP• rry' leYel. No exp. We
train. 520-40'5 Ellen Day
TelePhone Salel
• "llAll IY ..
EARN
. $400-$1000/M
;tt.\M-12 Noon
If you're 10 or older. a job as a newspaper
carrier might be just your size. Just send in
this coupon or call: 642-4333. Routes are
available now!
WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING
NEWSPAPERS. EAR~ UP TO
$600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE-
.LIABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE.
AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON-
DAY ·FRIDAY 2-5 P.M .. WEEK-
ENDS & . HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M.
NEWPORT /CORONA DEL M.~R
& LAGUNA BEACH AREAS.
CA~ Ma-4531' EXT. 205
ASK FOR8ETH
*"'° Nlghts/Wknd• •17/HA + ~/training
mtlm&MMl1t
mtl m& l22·1UI
mRIU.112·11• le H•eWJ. le I
D1ity Pilot carrier!
r~nSirn;;;;~~;:=:;:;,,
Ing a Daily Pilot carrier. ~~ . I I I Address I
I C•IY llP I
I = ~r&..": =G -~---J
t_ ___ c.su ~m.!.?----
:~ , ·-
. Motor Roiltes . .
available in
· W11hnin1ter c
Huntingion l11ch ~
Fou1t1i1 ,¥11111 .
NO COLLECTING·
NO SOLICITING
DeliVer One Day a Week -
Must h&Y\t dependabte car
and proof of insurance • ..
Ask for Joanne Craney
•
...
.·
' ,
...... 817N111/ .... ==~ .......... .. 1111 IMI RIAbMIDON • .,. I MiNf'"" c.... .... , .. .
If ...... ,.. ..... ... Grouolna. u ~ ........ °" ,,.. 100lllllii71fiii71iiii~ ........ UOUt ... we ... I vettety Of OPlfto -. . ~:;:,:: rm. the Aun "'9ion•ble lldl to ONLY ~
DllW-.._. °' WJfwe:;h0:.~~ .. ~~: -.MWIMO-llGO Ukt ***Ml1440***' lllLI. LOYING1~N:lll!mlr-ml'1
poot :....-· CM' Dul to~..__ TMADMIU ADULTll M1·11M °'11
10M1 _...,. .,..._ OCllMtolW ""'* be Med kinii= bami eet, llUl'ch With dl9tlal eltotronlo "14711 I• lttt
_,,,, UI. Oii. we °"9r: '*•' Alllll'Y todly, ll 1J~ ,,...,, 41" t::o monitor 1111. YOMll "°"· AkC, ;;;, 1MO Jm M>AD •"'ot•1lo1111 · atert tomonowt Thie II round t101t + 4 ewtlfl9I 22 Ill lhot9, Plf*.lll on Operl 1 1 ..-T,... not en egency Cell ch1lr1, country print pr 1m11 • e . IS o O. --------Extlftded Hour9 1..,.......,...,,........_,. ...... ...,.. ........
•LuorlM 976-1211 · 1700. Npt ldl 720-1704 C.J'... RH 21S.so.4124 frMlia tlll 7 Lm.·10 p.m. Mon-'''
CommllllO!' L-1ha.,. couch, dining t'NlllO WWW Nlfd en HUii i A...ua ··-------•I StNcUe Writers table, 8 chelrs l butt.c, IBM PC done, 84ci, dUll ... 1111 lVfD ~ utilll ~· ••
efltlellnt Work EARN OVER s 1000 for lemps. 54-2872 drive, gtllphice, ., .. IOft· good running ooncltkln, EtwlrOlwNnt, wf1t1-• poem, ahOft ••• ~'tr~ 2t\ 2411 M.UHarwn, u; n-... cuetom wheele, need• ·~~ Hourly •tocY~ personal wtlcte. ale ----... ~ ~ ·-__ .. rear window 91111
Wege For info. Mnd S.A.S.E. to D~Jw 2-=.:..., iAAiS. rJli ilf• Wll ::, .. ::~Oc,:,:; 11.000. Na 1408. e~:c,,(lght Wrlten, 13701 ~ die, ·~et•. 1nr, ~==' 141.-078".lpm . • .. :SPiii ~ Aw .. Coete Mell 733 mix, ftxecl, Ill .... : ft, ...... ,......... ftm•
....._ ouEEi lfZE MATTAESS 980-3240 .. ~~·=· -Piil a eox. au1LTED. J;:=c/hll/Li k ;el eon;o; i1fMO 0• ~-' -. !atiplL Ml! BRAHO ~=· 9WWU7 '~Chl~dele coflect.H
Call Mra. Collin et ~NY &op-.r;:J Call 118 •. Incl befteh. lee
642-453e #430.3:30•9:00 gate4eaaecl dining table TRIPL,e DR.ESSER, mirror. Marty Beil palnilnll. 950. 720-1704 Npt lcltt
P.-... • w/4 chalra. Tum-of•tt. 2 night 9ttndl. Roll top "Wakehurat Piece , NEW VIDEO
,.. ..._ century. $285. 538-3382 desk, PRICE TO BELLI $7000 or bfft ott.r. ERA, tripod 35M cem-1~ POOL teble, early \9009. ·432.7505 CALI. 673-9008 w, Iota ot'rn11c . .._ lllftY Wiii 8 'n x 4 ~. needs re· lilCtllueeu . llll IYj litldlJI fi Aefl'lg. Ct!Mpl 720-0181 'Pftlnft"r"ll...., E~ ~ ::::::~ :1:~·1i~50· 54
5-
4226 fas YDs. .. awx+ Fl.I. •n .,,. Liii AM/FM cw. *" conc1
1*1ence prefwred. S5-ftL Pif Ulll COMM~IVl£T, == If~ $e500, ~ CM> over l7S*hour.Caltforlnter-f Amer'---ci..-lion-belowwh•I . WllTEll ahell $660. ~748 view 557 ~2203 or -· • '7"" or days m-1 11 -& daug ~ el model trains. 893-1015 wtmdl'7'°"" ae (Up to ao yerds) ter who bought $7 brua Aalll ........ llM
.,_..,.. •HOM!l!r" (> • plant• at Gar'lg9 Sale. ..... •• ".. 1500 Auto Mall Dr Clua I local wortc. a flat !rrlincts 1111 •VIDEO TIO . ...., 103 Cypre19 Dr. on Sat =:--·
bed, OMV printout l t>en-mo warmer 'Bobby. 8MM/S ' 8113, m11t•en1V told-~ w/bf9cult Int. Santa Ana
eflts. 213/549-345~ Metlc' 5x3 -O®<l ~oo.d. IO..VCB TAPE. roommate hMrt·br<*~ $1 ,000obo873-2132 55 F~'._at Edinger
Wkdyl, 71'4 ~~ $250. Color TV 20". $2 FOR-50f1 REELS Ofllet hDkan •aentlment,el vatue • •flLB -IPll l llYI YETmf Mlcfowave. 962-0605 666-2104 I ....... 1117 belonged to Mother... Auto, ti cyt, pwr/dt, redlllt, Servloe Hrl. Mon-Frl.
Receptionist1, Animal At-HOT POINT Refrigerator llllUI l Ulll bE§k§FcredenzH, Tr~tiea crulae, P'#f/l/b, ceH. 7:00 am to 10 pm
tendent1 l Technician 15.5. with icemaker, 111Df !Nfalft191,2pfloneuY9-lei~IJ fill A/C,(7-330)$12095 '--------•I needed fOf buay large white, like new $250. Wtl lWp.ay CA HI tema, 3 typewriters. _ ........ ..... --...------
practtce. FIT, PIT lr;icl 760-8310/D640·8900/W ~koROLOI 145-4228,645-4121 ..... • ... ..,.... .. ... Ill =~~30.Exp pref d. KENMORE Refrigerator Barry 67~1 his I AaiNll Hit Electric 11ft. bey boal. ~ 8eaCtl Blvd Whne, lfilfeo cw. 531(
. · . white 5 yrs old excellent ™' $10,000 873-2132 142--0831 mllll. eidtl cteln, aun
fiilWYlmEl cond.'$175. 540-7585 1~;:0~~~= .tc:iRet,.!..~ .. tn11~tJ'll'lftl liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil, roof.(1LKA014)selt5
ASST. Good with animals i 1::a14 bed a. bu,.• qoo. ....., life eln't 90 hot DMv ~R-a people. Phone a c1eat,1-,.,. nrt .. Stereo nego. 84~ f•"'8d tier. 6.... ENO CNrter Stlt•Of-'ll llW
Ing 9kltll necesaary. 5 ~ 6 Blk dining chrs decor-• •.....: ,.._.ofmyownfrkeeps Arf3.4• Crealock Pkg
days, 71m-2pm In 1ted w/mellow velvet GE SIDE refrig 1 ~· Wltfl a ftmlly to care dell w/lkl tlT5-7100 INI ........ , L-oune BMc:ti· 41M-~ 988ts 2 coff tbls (llaflan Sl~•r Hw~ng mactl Mr kWe I wit! lhare pper • ve;r HQSf>.ITAa::' NEEDS.. Imports) 55 7 -9325 aft 6p =~5. ~ ::--..= , 146-6985 Lll .... 7014 4 cytlnder • automatic,
• El!$>:d '9e9Pt.1 ~ ~1. & <:ONTEMPORARY solid Sman.r refrrg ~te A LOVABLE BALL OF ext 20 wfdOCk sOp, 4 sunroof. Gold anadlzecl ., •• :·~ ~J!~~~~T oak ·dining table. six-• $)00, ?21-15411.' FUR. Himajayan kittens Siiia, gr .. t shape, mutt r,'"5~9 M~str::.a~~ 4 door ~Ol'el
HlfOOOR E
ROBINS
FORD I . .. .. . -. . I
( r J\ 1A M' , ' 111;
'll C1•i111c
FIHlwM4
llSTSEUI
s1• Need• little rear end body
work
'llF•l•MD
Pick-up, 4 cyt, 5 speed,
PIB. caasette, AIC,
camper shell, step bump. er. (7-340) $5495 ..............
~· ... "'f66~ff8 ~vd
142-0631
JOHNSON & SON
Lincoln M ercur y
~]'6 Ht11d) RI~!
Coile M111• '>4• -.» 11,
'llNlllll ...
982-7113 te.ve message '11 F•l lllT• It Whlte1 4 cyt, auto, *
after 5pm Black, 5 IJ)d. ale cruiae, cona, euatorn wheete . *** loaded.(207968)$11,995 (42432)$8995
·--.-"':' : uphtstdchrs +sotatable, LARG!wooesen..i • CFA teglatered. Shots. Hiii Aaklng $1950. 9c1t 111 $5'95(2EMWl31) . . ; .. , ..... _ ~. . . ~!I 7~489~·aft8f.'. 6Prn $500. Rote Carpet~ 70 Femetel $250.646-8131 67>5183 or 673-9042 a.ppr a e •
'.2-3.~ f0t-,etirecf' NEW Daybed ,White & 5Quare yards. 50 yards SMALL FEMALE C•llco 7 LIDO 14. NEW JIB. On 147·11f4er CADlllAC Seville '78 !JOHNSON & SON
Lintoln M er cur)
~~ .. nr~>C'' Blwd
THEODORE THEODORE
ROBINS · ROBINS
~le 'oh rMi_nten--~r.,.S. Wf'mattre.sse$' & ,cyctpneviiiyl.coatedfeno-weelts needs home. Call trailer. Good oondl~on. Ml •tl• Sedan. 191< ml .. eervlced ~ per..on. 'ADPIY '195'4 trun8"9 ewJiple.te .. S24S Ing & 3 gates Mek9 oner. 1 6 0 -2 6 I 4 -d a ya . Ready to salt, $710 firm. -. a 8188, $5300. 548-5105 Of ·-t1~1.P>-tM14eN.~ · ·.'. .. :•84~~33-f., -~ • •~5-3063.... 64&-8616eves • 650-1356 541.292tevealwtmds
FORD I FORD
'I' HAQ~~·*"' ... ' • ~ii\....: I• .. ~ "
(1)\lA. Mf\A '''• ' 11 1 (r1')'.l, Y' A '··· r Pt!ft M~• • ')4() S6}0
·.NI.JC ll>TIC£ ; . ~. . "8JC NOTICE ~,, • ·;;.Ml.JC .il)TICE · NlJC fl>TlC( rtaJC fl>TlC( Ml.IC ll)TIC( Ml.IC fl)TIC( PmUC fl>TICE NlJC ll>TICE NlJC llJTICE
-. . r H'_. •. anCt JON G. SCHEN06t PART" HER€ 0 F AS AND G. LEW1S BALDWIN, CORDS. ranty, eJ1pret1 or Implied, re-Ing of an Inventory end ap-IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR CALIFORNIA 92626 LIOUOR. 33'3 ""E. 'f 7TR NOTICE°" • . . andi~OSALIE SCHENDEL. THOUGH CONl~IN60 AN INDIVIDUAL, AS CO-EX-PARCEL 2: gatdlt\Q title, potMMion, or pralMnleot of eatate UMtll or a contingent Cifedltor of The nemw end ~ STREET, COSTA MESA,
• .TRU8TIE'I 1Al.£ r husband Bl'd wtf• as corn-'°HEREIN · .ECUTORS OF THE WILL Of A N 0 N ·EXCLUSIVE encumbrances. lo pay the or of any petition or eccounl the ·deceaMd. you mutt Ale sddr ..... of the TranilfetM CALIFORNIA 92826
' . .T.8. NQ:•1'127 "-m'umfy property·-.iq an uo--' .l?ARCEL 1:· . •.-· • }iOR.ACE J. STEVENS, OE-EASEMENT FOR INGRESS. r~lng principal tum of ,u provided In MCtlon 1250 your clalmwlth the court end are: MICHAEL F. STINGLE (d) The pi.ca, end dete on
YOU -~RE' IN D&FAu'l divided 5064 • encere!r'WILL '(01 111 OF Tff.a.GT NO. <£"SEO AND IN DEED EGRESS. USE ANO ENJOY-the note1 MCUred by said of the Cellforni. PrObate mall a copy to the P«IOnal AN 0 PATRIC I A ANN. or aher wNch the Bl*
UNDER A OEEO"Of TRUST. SEU: A'f PUBLIC AUCTIO.N 9355,• 'AS SHOWN Oft+ FR 0 M . H 0 RACE J . MENT OF THE COMMON Deed of Truat, with lntereat Code. A AeQuestfor $pedal reprnentatlve appointed by STINGLE. 18041 JENNER Transfer la to be COMUm-DATEO 8/11/86 ''UNLESS T.O Tl'iE HIGHEST"BIDD£R MAP RECORDED IN BOO STEVENS, JR.. BOTH AREA AS DEFINED IN THE thereon, as provided In said Nolic:eformiuvaJlable from the cour1 Within four month~ STREET, WESTMINSTER. mated we: THE ESCAOW
YOU. 'TAKE "~'CTION TO FOR CASH. (payable,tt tlrae 415r PAGES ]~TO 11.0,. OEE.D$' BEING RECOADED DECLARATION Of COVE-notes, adv1noes, II any, the cour1 clerk. · from the date of first 1.-CALIFORNIA 92883 FORUM. 23131 LAKE
PROTECT YOUR PROP· ofSa.l~finlawflJl ~ofihe MISCELLANEOUS llAPS, FlBR~' RY. t7: ,1971 IN NANTS. CONDITIONS ANO underthetermsoftheDeed Petitioners, Mary Ann suanceolletlettatprovlded All other bu9Aneu narn. CENTER DRIVE, SUITE L,
ERTY. IT MAY BE ~OLQ../.T Uniled States)-At AT THE RECORDS . OF, ORANGE BOOK 6.PAGE808ANO RESTRICTIONS RE· of Trust. fees, charges end Howell & Ems Joen Col-.tn MCtlOn 9100 of the Cell-and addr ..... uMd by the El TORO. CALIFORNIA
A PUBLIC SAl.f.'IF YOO NORT~.FRONTEN:mANCE COUNTY,CAlfE'ORNIA. .;~ N 8 tS.8 PASE 411, CORDED IN BOOK 13356, •xPlll'l-OflheTrustMlllld eman . lornla Probate Code. The Tranaterorwtthlnthree)'Mrt 928300NOAAFTERSEP-
NEED . AN ~HATION 0 . THE .c 0 l1 N T y EXCEPTING .",. UN-TH OF '¥F~IAL FfE-PAGE 1040 OF OFFICIAL of the trusts C:realed by said "-'MY a ....,.,.....,., time for flllng claims wlH not lasl past to far .. known to TEMBER 2, 1918.
OF THLNATURE OF THE COURTHGUSE 700 CtVIC OIVIDEO · ONE-H~l!.f' ·.OF 001!\PS. •• ~ F ,RECORDS OF SAIO COUN-Deed of Trust, to-wit· Attorney9 at L.9W, 11 ~ expire priof to four months the Transferee are: NONE (e) Claims may be flled
PROCf;EDINGS AG.\JNST OE&ITER .. OR1've WEST.·. 1208/25,8THS INlE!J At. SQ • EXC~ P.] I NG ty ANO ANY SUPPLE· $203, 164.43. .,, lfloN Drfft, htte a:, lrom the d1te olthe hearing (C) The loc:a.tlon and~ with the oltlce thown ebow • • .VOU. YOU SHQl,JLD CON-SAIHA ANA': Cf', all' rigl\t. 'OF All Oil. GAS.' fr.i-~~EFRQM All REMAIN-MENTS ANO AMEND· The beneliclsryundertald ~ e .. c:h, California noticed aboVe. eral delc:rle>Uon of the prop-(f) The 1a1t date for~ '{AC1~~EFr. •· , v title and interesl.cqnveye<I ERALS .A:NO Oil ER ING!'MIN™LS.,OIL. GAS, MEN~STHERETO. Oeed,olTrusthefetoforeex-YOU MAY EXAMINE the erty to be tranSferrect are: clalmsle Septernb«1,1MI:
..
..
On 9!.7188 if 10;00 A.Nt. lo an() now held by 11 under H" t>~R 0 C A"R...S'Q..N PEl1iQL,EOM ·~NO. OTtfER The' street addr ... and ecuted and delivered lo the Published Or1nge Coast Ille kept by the cour1. II you All FURNITURE. FIX-(g) This 8'* Tr.,._ te
CalllortllaGener1t "'1bngage said· o.ep ol 'Trusr jn the SUBSTANCES LXING'~ tf 'f 0 'A 0 CA A 8 O•N othef common ~tlon. undersigned a written Dec-Daily Pilot August f6. 17. 23. are a perton intereeted In TURES, EQUIPMENT, MA-subject 10 Section tl108 of
Service as . the dufv f.P-pr~ $1tuared lo . sakl AND . UNOl!R SAID '~Nb SYIST~ • UllNG ·.!H If In~ of the rMI property 1-r1tlon ol Default and De-1988 the estate, you may Ille with CHINERY. LEASEHOLD IM· the Commetclel Code. po1n'9d TlµStee u~·and Coonly .. caufqrnia descri«Y. BELOW A OEnt{ OF 500 AND ·(JJUA SAID LANO ducrlbed above Is mand for Sale, and written tW238 the cour1 a lormll Request PROVEMENTS. STOCK IN MICHAIL '· .,.._.,
"pyrsuant to Deed ol Trusl Ing the i;no itlerein: . FEET MEASUAEO VER-' BE~ A DflTH OF 500 IMQOrt9d to be: 10 RIN-Notice of Default and Elec-tor Spec:tal Notice of the Ill-TRADE. GOODWILL ANO fJATillCIA AMt ITINQL.a
Bec:orcte(t,on 8/ l&/86 Oocu· . ..LOT 1.11 OF T SACT NO: TtCAl l Y FROM THE lttJR-fttf ; GtAS\JAEO . VER! ~ IRV)HE. Ce 92720 tlon to Seit The undersigned Ing of an Inventory and ap-BUSINESS NAME OF THAT Publlshed Orange Coeat inen«JIO 86-3712'U Of Of. 93l15 1111 THE CITY .OF FACE or:. ~AID LAN.~'Bf}J ALLY tAOM-.1Mf JUR-The undelllgl• T,. .. ~Mid Notice or De-PtlllC NOTICE pralMment of estate uaets CERTAIN BUSINESS Daily Pilot August n . 1988
, l)c:lal ReCotds tn the olfloe of 1~1N~~ COUNTY OF OR· WITHOU1 lHE RIG'lf' Of 'Cf.Of SAID LAHrt!twT dllclalmSanyleblltytorany r..tt and EJection to Sell to NOTICE Of DEATH or of any petition or account KNOWN AS· BAY CREST W153 the Reicordef' ol Or'Rge ANGE ~$!ATE OF CALI-SURFACE liNJ'RY ·THEA!-WITHOl.fr''TI.dE RIGHT.:•QF lnCOrrectness of the street be recorded In the couniy as provided In MCtlon 1250
Couniy:Californlll" executed FORNIA. AS. MOAE. PAA· TO.'AS RESER\!ED 11\QEED 'SUIJFAOE E~TRY ~ Ttf.GRE-address and other common where the real property Is AT':.':...~ ol the California Probate
. by: BAADLEY G. WH~TIED; TICt:ILARL Y DE9CFi11:1E.Q IN FROM 'FlRST WfSt€RN TO. AS~ESEf.WED INrOeEQ. deSlgnatlon, If any, shown located. "'IT •Tf Of: Code. A Request for Special
1 INtfied m.,, .. bis sole EXHIPIT A CONStSTU'lG OF BANK "AND TBUST COM: RECORDED AlJGUST. 1!>, herein. DATE: 8110188 KATI..iu. ROH Notice form Is available from
end Mf>91'lte property .. to ONc·· f>'.(GE. A 'rT 4CHEb P.A~V . ·A • CAt.lf ORNIA l986 AS' INSTRUMENT NO .. Sald sale win be made. but CAUfORNlA GENERAL the COUrl clefk.
an yn-dtvrded .50% lnl ·.Ut HEf!E'TO ANO MADE A B~'NKING cqR.P<;:lRA11PN. f,~·3712~'1·_ Q.FFJC~~. fl~-without covenant or wer-MORTGAGE IUYICE, KA~·:-MUTH Petitioner. Lynn G. Muth -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~-~~•~. MAK~~ ~~m"d ~. ltatu, Netlonet City,. CA llGIO ESTATE NO Nona-. GutttMr, Kw
. ' ""' -.. . . "' . • -,. 1 •
.. : . " .
. 't1UNTINGTb,N
-..._ BEAGH
·' ·-" ....
""-: (111) 4'70-S171, IJ. ~ a .o.un • I Eliott!. .. I . ,..,_..
....., L w .. vet, Ant. S.C-T all .. ~1-:._....,_, ..._ lt.,'1atl'loof,Loe .......... Ntaty o ,...,,., ...,...,,...,.,..,., CA IOOFt-~
Published Orange Coast creditors, c:ontlngen( credi· Publlshed Or1nge Coast
Dilly Pllo1 Augus1 f7. 2.4. 31. tors. and ~ wno __,may Diiiy Pilot AUc!ust f7. 18, 2.4. 1988 be othefwfse tn.erest... In 1951)
W148 the will or esta1e. or beth. of WTh 15 t =--------KATHLEEN ROSE MUTH, Pml.IC NOTICE AKA KATHLEEN R. MUTH,--------
AKA K. R. MUTH Pl8.JC N()TIC(
No. 1CM014 A petition has been flied --------NOTICE Of DEATH J:>Y LYNN G. MU1H in the flC.T1T10Ua llUllNlll ANO Of PETITION Superior Court of Calilornla, ...._ STATE•NT
TO ADMtNISTER County 'Of Orange, request· The lolloWlng peraons are
ESTATE Of': ing that LYNN G. MUTH be doing~ as:
JOHN IEl.fORO appointed 19 personal rep-Kelly West Construction
l1ily Piiat
... ESTATE NO. resentatlve to ldminlatet the Comp1ny, 1152 Fenway
.~
,,
..
J
..
the·Da.ily Pi~(?t has a new way to turr:i
·your Hiqqen Treasures into CASH s 80
. -~ with
p~epay.ment
-1 Oays · ~Jo.·so . . ' . No charges In copy or cancfllatlon. Private parties only. No Co'llmercial.
Real Es~ate~. Automot1..e. B'.!)ating .or Employment Ads. There Is no.price ll~it towhat you can ~d~ertise. If you need to.s~ll your cou.ctJ. high ch~it
GF a~y unused merchand!se...-call the Dally Pilot Classified staff or"u~e th~
coypon below · , Mall to: · . · •
. .
NAME_· -"-
. ' . . •ilJ l'illlt
Dally Piiot, 310 w. Bay St .• f:t:osta Mesa, CA 92626
642-5678
-------ADDRESS crrv ____ STATE ___ ZIP ________ _
AD COPY: 4 fine minimum. approprfately 4 words per fine .
• . .
circle one: VISA or M.C. --------l~nofil OATf ---------
Afe you a subscriber to the Daffy Pffot7 dtde OM: YES / NO
•
A1'4175 estate of the decedent. # 31, Westmlntter. CA _L=-~~~-=;~;i~=-:-:::-1 To all heirs, beneficiaries, The petition requeata 92683
creditors, contingent credl· authority to administer the Vicki Ann Pflug, 7152
tors, and persons whO may eslate under the lndepen· Fenway #31 Westmlnttet
be otherwise Inter.Sled In dent Administration of Es-CA 92883 • •
the will or estate, or beth, ot lites Act. (Thi• authOfity al-Thia buslnets Is con-
JOHN $ELFORD lows the personal repr41Mfl· ducted by: an individual
A petition has been filed 111ive to take many ~Ion• The registrant com-by Mary Ann Howe41 & Erna wl1hout obt1lnlno court ep-menced to trensact ~
Joen Coleman In the Su-proval. BefOfe taking certain nest under the llctltlous
perlor Court of California. ac1ions. however, the !*'-butineM name or names
County of Orange, request· sonal repr_,lative Is re-listed above on n/1
ing that MlllY Ann Howell & quired to give notice to Vlc:kl f>11ug
Erna Joen Coleman be 8'>· interested persons unless This ttatement was Ried
pointed as personal ~ 1hey have waJved notice Of wtth the County Cl«k of Or-
r.-ntatlves to admkllster consettted to the proposed ange County on August 10.
the estate ol the decedent. action.> The independent 1988
The petition requests administration auth«lty wfll f.-n
authori1Y to administer the be granted unle11 an Published Orange Coat
estate under tile In~ intetested i>erson Ii ... an Dally Piiot Augu1t fl, 24, 31, dent Admlnl1tr1tlon of Es-objection to this petition and September 7. 1988 tales Act. (This authority el-shows good cauM why the W150
lows the personal repreten· court should not grant the --------tallve to take m1ny ~Ion• authority. PtlllC NOTICE
without obtaining 00Ur1 ap-A HEARING on Ille petl· --------
proval. Before taking oerlaln lion will be held on SEPTEM-IC 4tMI actions, however, the per-BER 7. 1988 at 1:415 P.M. In NOTICE TO
tonal repreeent1tlve 11 r• Dept. No. 3 loc:ated at 700 CMDJTORI
qUlred to give nouc. to CMc Center Drive West. (DMaloft t
Interested '*'°"' unlest Santa Ana. CA 92701. of the
they h.ave waived notice or IF YOU OBJECT lo the CofMMrcW Code)
consented to the proposed granting of the petition, you (a) A Bulk Trantfet Is
action.) The Independent should elthef 11P94N1r at tile about to be mede.
admlnlttratlon authorliy wtll hearing and st.ate Your ob-(b) The names and busl-
be granted unless an jectlon1 or n1e written objec· nees addretMI of the Tran.-
Interested !*Son mes an lions with the court befOfe laror are: KEITH O.
objection to this petition and the nearing. Your appear· KAMHOLZ ANO ANNA K .
shows good cauM why the anoe may be In person or by KAMHOLZ. 333 E. 17TH
cour1 should nol grant the your attorney. STREET. COSTA MESA, authority. r ---
A HEARING on the pell-
tlOn will be held on SEPTE~·
R9f'l'lefl'lbe, fhe magic of havil'l(J 0 REALI. y BIG sfuffed onimol . . . now yoo con malce Otl9 for
that sp«iol diild of any age..
7559: A froagy frieod jumps lo fvn as o 71 " lV
hassock 0< sOlt, snuggly toy. Use print or solid ~.to sew this eosy.to-molce pet. T mue po!tem,
direction$.
5013: Exciting MW toy will deligM oUI Sew-happy
stuffed hippoc lo make of plush or fur fabOc.
Tmue patterns for two siz~22 x Jr & l3 x 23"
& oll directions.
OFFERGOOOTHAUOEC 31, 1988
$3.25 P\.US 11.00 PIH FO.. EACH Mn'IM ORDEMD
Send to: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT,
Reader Mail, Dept. 0879, Box 4000. Niles
Ml., 49120--4000.
BER 7. 1988 11 1:45 P.M. In
Dept. No. 3 ~led at 700
Civle Center Drive West,
Santa AM. CA 92702.
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition, ~OU
stiould either appe1r at the
STARTING A NEW BUSINESS??
heettng end ttate your ob-
jectlont or !tie written ob)ec.
tions with tile court betora
the hearing, YCNr tlppMI'·
anee may be In perton or by
~ettorney. IF YOV ARE A CREDITOR « a contingent creditor of
the dec:•••d. you muet Ille your~ with the court and rnett • copy to the personer repreeentatlw appointed by
the court wtthfn four "'°""" from the ci.te of flftt It-~of letterl. prcMded
In aec;tlon 1100 of the c.11-
fomia Probete Code. 11'9
time tor~ ctalma will not
expire pno; to fOur rnonthl
from the dMe of the hMr'lng
ftOIOed lb0V9,
YOU MA'I' EXAMINE the
.. .,. by lie court. "·you .. e ,.,.. IMereated tn ........ '°"!Mr .... with .. .., • '°""" ~ ------Ofthetlf.
RECYCLE
The legal Department at the
Dally Pilot fs plealed to an-
nounce a new service now avail·
•ble to new bustneaea.
We wta now SEARCH the
name for you at no extra charge.
and save you the time and the
trip to the Court HouM In Sant•
Ana. Then. of eourM, a"er the
te1ret1 11 completed we wtll fl ..
your f1Ctltlou1 bulinell name
etatement wtth the County Clerk,
publllh C>nQ9 • wMk fOf four
week• es required by law and
th9n ftte your proof of publl·
cetlon wtth the County Clerk.
Pleate stop by to file )'OUr
fk:tltlou1 butineu atetement et
the Oaily Pilot legal Depart·
ment. 330 West Bay. Cost•
M .... Callfornla. If you can not
stop by. pleue call us
et (714) 642-4321, Extentlon
31 S or 316 end we will rn.ke
err1ngement1 for you to handle
thl1 procedure by mall.
If you lhOUld have any further
queet9on1, ptMM call us and we
wffl be more than gi.d to 1uist
yOU.
Good luck in your
new~nesslt
.,,.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1988
C7
Cl
Satisfying menu creative but quick
Quality ingredients key
to taste and eye appeal
Qu.ick, creative cooking is an art. Mastering it
requires plannina. resourcefulness and recipes that
otreratiafying ways to beat the clock.
Start with high quality, readily available
incmtientu uch as tangy California raisins,
premium Wisconsin cheeses and red-ripe Cali-
fornia st:rawberries thatare featured in this menu.
Tbe key is to combine these ingredients
simply yet imaginatively, and to be aware oft he
ims-ctofpresentatio n. Create a meaJ that has taste
and eye appeal.
Crisp and fresh , a salad is a fast-to-prepare
side dish to accompan y any quick and easy en tree.
Give your salad distinctive flavor with moist,
chewy and naturally sweet California raisins.
Marinated with orange juice and honey. raisins
brinaa fruity and slightly tangy suprise to Raisin
Ciuvs CUcunibers. Cheese is another ready-to-use convenience
food. Choose two from more than 200 varieties
madeinAmerica'sOairyland, Wisconsin. In our
en tree, Seashell Pasta with Two Cheeses. the
flavonand textures of smooth mozzarella cheese
and~asiqocheesecombine in an updated
twist on a classic: macaroni and cheese.
TotopofTthe meal, dazzle your fam ily and
guemwithStrawberryTona featuring fresh
California strawberries piled high on tender. flaky
puff pastry shells. Rich whipped cream adds
velvety, melt-in-yo ur-mouth flavor. Strawberries.
available almost all year 'round, put the Ii nishing
touch on this creation.
RAISIN CITRUS CUCUMBER
'Ila nip Calif orala rah lns
t ft1f1 ....iy sliced cacumber•
I eMr'rJ tomatoes, halved atns Mari.Dade, recipe follows
c.rtJ leaf lettace
In bowl combine al I ingredients except
lettuce. Marinate at room temperature 30
minutes. Spoon cucumber mix tu re into four
bowls. Garnish wi th lettuce. Makes 4 servings.
•English or European cucumbers have
thinner skins and don't need to be peeled.
tltn1 Marinade: In bowl whisk 11J cu polive
oil, 3 tablespoons white wine vinegar. I
tablespoon frozen orange ju ice concentrate
(thawed), I teaspoon honey and ''• teaspoon red
pepper flakes. Add salt to taste.
SEAlllELL PAST A WITH TWO CHEESES
• .-eel nell-1haped pasta
I~ mf1 ( 4 onces) freshly grated Wlscon-
1lauAaao, romano or paremesan cheese
FV woma~ fiµalty . ·
wins di;e~tri_pr:i~~;-:
Ice crea~ fo~~ye~r·:
By CllDYL WALKER
o.tr .... Cc:. s •• ii
A veteran winner of recipe com-
petitions complains that too marfy
contests &ive the same old prizes -
aprons and cookbooks.
''There are just so.many aprons
you can use and if you're aJ\y kind
of a cook you don't need a lot of
cookbooks. It's foolish." says Eliza-
beth Klein of Fountain Valley.
"They should gi ve people e>me-
thina they'd really like: a year's
supply of their product."
Klein found the contest victory of
her dreams recently when her recipe
was judacd fifth runner up in the ~·s Grand Light "Skinny
Dip ' Ice Cream Recipe Contest.
For her original Cream y Blueberry
Muffins recipe, she won a ycar:s
supply of Dreyer's Grand Light Ice
Cream - her fa vorite food.
The prize came as a booklet of 52
coupons, each wonh a half-gallon
of the product.
"I was thrilled, es{>Ctially since it
was ice cream. I'm in my mid-70s
and I've eaten at least a pint or more
ofice cream a day for as long as I can
remember, so no one could have
enjoyed the prize more.
'I don't care about calories
either. I've bee.en slim all ·my life,"
' she said. . · -
The rctired.me<lical secretary and
.·widow has entered .around 100 ·
conteStS. Her effons have paid off"··
as she ha_s WQn about halfo( them,
with major prizes being SI .OOQ (~'t.
first place in a Kraft Marshmallow··
Creme contest: the same prize ·for
first place in a Pace P ic._nte Sauce
contest: and $500 for second place
in a Lawry's Hambu~er contest.
Klein entered Jbis contest on' the'
advice of a friend, Clara Negoro of
Hawthorne ... Sile told me a~d\ it.
She knows I like to enter recipe·
contests and I Jove to c09k (e very-
one my age should ha\'e a hobby. It
keeps them active and keeps them
frot'n' gening old). so I just tried to
think of something aYJi ifTerent. I
didn't adaptanyoth ·pes; IJlJSt
made it up in my hea ·
The two friends subm itted.separ-
ate entries. Negoro soon received a
qua n of ice cream as a consolation
prize, and Klei n got the news that
one of her ttiree recipes had struck
the j udges' fa ncy. Cn teria included
tasle, appearanc:e. ea$e of prep-
aration. creativity. arid overall ap-
peal in the ori~nal be verage. snack.
or dessert recipe.
Her combination of va nilla ice
Elizabeth Klein at home ln the kitchen.
cream. bluebernes. ora!lge j.4ice
and crunch) granola chilled m a
freezer tray brough\ cri tical acclaim
and the coveted prize. But K.leir1 'is
discovenng the contest officials'
idea of 365 days of ice cream·heaven
isn't quite like her own.
"I u<;cd up a "e~k's cen aficate in
two da,s." 4\ald the Los Angeles
natl\ i.' "1th a gaggle.·· .\t this rate I'll
li nt h ~l\car·s "onh anthree orfour
month,:"
WheJ1 asl.l'Ci "hether her famil)
(Please aee WIJlfN'ER/C3)
I ¥a caps (louces) llaredded Wiscoasla
mouarella c~eese
1 teaspooe anted lemon peel
1 cu (7 ouces) artichoke lleart1, dra baecl
¥. cap f rozea peas
~• c•pmllk
Ii\ teaspoon cayenne pepper
Cook pasta as package directs; drain.
Combine cheeses and lemon peel. To assemble:
Layer half the pasta in buttered, 2-<1uan
casserole.Top with haJf the artichokes and
peas; sprinkle wath halfthecbccses. Repeat
Layers. Pour mallto\ercasscrole;dust with
ca)-enne. Bake. co' ered. in 350-degrttoven I 5
mrnutes: unco' er and bake 5 minutes longer.
Serve hot. Makes 4 servings.
STRAWBERRY TORT A
4 frozen pa.ff pas tr): shells, thawed
1 tablespoon butter. melted
% teasl>O!>ns gr:anulated sugar
2 pint baskets fresh California strawberries,
stemmed and halved
•, cup orange-flavored liqueur
1 cup wlllppbsg cream
1.a cup prepared chocolate sauce
On h~tly floured surface. roll pastry shells
1/A-i nch thick. Brush wnh butter. sprinkle with I
teaspoon oft he sugar: pnck with fo rk. Bake on
ungreascd baking sheet tn 400-degree oven
about 12 minutes until golden. Cool.
Toss stra"bernes "llh liqueur. Beat whip-
ping cream and remaining teaspoon sugar to
form soft peaks.
Toassemble: Ptace I pastry on serving
plate. spread wtth '•of the cream and ''• of the
stra"bemes. Top" 1th second pastry.1l. of the
cream and '• of the stra" bem es. Repeat for
second tona. Tosene. remove top la yers to
sen ang plates. making fo ur equal servi ngs:
dnzzle each" nh I tablespoon chcola te sauce.
Makes~ tonas. ~ ser' 1 ngs.
Tips Oii storage ud twadling :
- For maximum flavor, appearance and
nutnuon 'alue store raisins an a sealed. an-
t1gh t con ta1 ner or plastic bag and refrigerate to
pre' cnt them from dryingo~t. If stored
proper!}. they wall last up to 15 months.
-Once opened. cheese will stay fresh
se' era I weeks in the refrigerator: longer if
unopened. Rewrap m clean plastic wrap after
each use .
-Strawbem cs do not npen after being
packed. so choose bemes that~ plump with a
natural sh me. rich red color and bright green
caps.
Flavorful lite beef:
c ·it's no bum steer
By BEA ANDERSON
Olltle l)elly .... ....,
Imagine premium beef that has
less fat: cholesterol and sodium
than chicken. turkey. pork or lamb.
Although it may sound too good
to be true. Southern California
consumers can now add more of
this red meat to their diet without
worrying about exceeding suade-
lines recently recommended by the
U.S. Surgeon General . C. Everett
Koop.
Heritage Premium Quality Beef
is a new. extra lean type of cho1c~
grade that contains 15 to 50 percent
less fat than typical choice beef. The
.. lite" product also has lower fa t
content. lo"er calones and less
cholesterol than whole chicken.
according to Walter G. Maze.
Heritage pres1den1 and CEO.
Selected cuts of this product meet
the Amencan Ht'an Assoc1at1on's
stnngent dietar) guideltnes for
calones and fat.
old exclusaveh at Hughes Mar-
kets. tt 1s the onh iate bed available
in Orange. Los .\ngeles and River-
idc counues that has received
:--.:utntional La beling Verificauon
approval b) the L' .. Depanment of
l\gnculture. srud Mize. who top-
ped in Newpon Beach on a promo-
. uonal tour It as the onh chotn~ grade beef
that can be ad\ entsed to contain ~5
to 50 percent less fat than typical
choice beef. he said
outhern Cahforn1a consumers
arc more health-and fi tness-con•
sc1ous than ever. but industry
ob~ervers believe they are tired of
JU t fish and poultry in their
heahhful. low-calone diets. This
new product offers another option
- one with high quality taste and
low-fat contenL
·· .\t Hughes we care about our
cu tomers and we know they are
concerned about their beef con-
sum pt1on." said John Groover,
director of meat operations for
Hughes. "ho was also on the tour.
.. Now. even our most heallh-
consc1ous customers can enjoy one
of A.mcnca's fa"onte food tra·
d1t1ons without worrying about
their diet."
l\ thr~-ouncc cooked se n 1ng of
Hentage round steak. ~h1ch is 95
percent fat free. con~ms onl y 150
calones. compared to 1denucal
sen ings of roasted chi cken. pork
and lam b. all 198 calories: "nd
t) pacal choice beef. 191 calones.
according to Heritage brochures.
In term s of cholesterol. the lite
betf also compares well wtth other
trad1t1onal protein foods. The
brochure p<>ints out that a cooked
three-ounce portion of Heritage
beef ha~ less cholesterol than sirni-
(Pleue .ee LITE/CS)
Don't be chickeri; make grilled entree sizzle with salSa:.
Gracious entenaining is a breeze
when you plan the right menu, even
if it's too hot to cook. The first step
is to make a hasty retreat to the
shade and enjoy the ease of outdoor
grillina.
For the main dish, Pollo Con
Pico De GaJlo captures the saucy
ftavoroITex-Mex cooking. Created
by the home economists at the
Kik.koman Kitchens, this south-
western specialty features tender
boneless chicken breasts simply
marinated in a zesty combination
of tlJ'IY lime and bonled teriyaki
marinade A sauce.
To keep the breasts moist and
lender charina c:ookina. titm them
over ud brush often with reserved
lDlliD*. Tbey'U not only have a
aaper flavor, but a sforious crispy-
.. lled color, too.
Pico de O.UO. a fiesty chunky
..... ii --witb the cbick.m. This IP.irillll tomato and avocado
relilla ii Uballly teUOned ~th
jelepeeo pepper. ftlCI onion, bme,
• '
ci lantro and teriyaki sauce.
Althoujh not a typical Tex-Mex
seasoning. the teriyaki sauce - a
blend of naturally brewed soy
sauce. wine, brown sugar and select
spices - adds a delicate sweetness
that unites the strong indi vidual
fla vors into snappy harmony.
To serve, slice the breasts
crosswise, arrange on lettuce leaves
and pass the salsa. Tortillas wanned
on the grill and an icy pitcher of
margaritas or your favorite fiesta
beverage completes the menu.
POU.OCON
PICO DE GAIJ.O
Pke tie Galle, ndle t.alew1
•••elela~..._.tUlvn
~ c•p •••Ue• terl7ak l
awiu4le .....
~ ...,,,. patM Ume pee_I ............. ,..
l deft prlle, ........
Prcpue Pico de Gallo. Ri ntt
chicktn breast halves and pet dry
with .s-per towelina. Pblcc 10 laflt
plasuc bla-Combine tcriyaki sauce. lime peel and j uiot and
,
garhc: pour over chicken. Press air
out of bag: tie top securely.
Marinate I hour. turning bag over
occasionally. . ,
Reserving mannade .. remove
chicken and place <>n grill 5 to 7
inches from hot coals. Cook 15 to
18 minutes. or .until chic ken is
tender, turning over and basting
wi th reserved marinade oc-
casionally. (Or. place chicken
breast halves on rack mbroiler pan.
Broil 4 to 5 inches from heat 7
mi nute on each side. or until
tender. bastinJ wtth ~rved
marinade occas1onally.) Serve with
Pico de Gallo. Makes 6 scrvinJS.
Pico de G1U.: Dice I medium
tomato. I "1bolc jalapcno pepper.
and VJ avocado, peeled and sttdcd.
Combine with • cup minced ttd
onion. I tabtcspoan bottled
1en yaki marinack A sauce. 2 tea-
spoons lime juice and l 'h tea-
spoons mut«d &ab cilantro. Let
stand at room ttmpentu.re 2 hours
for ftavors to bltncl·
....
Fresh herbs work OavOrful m
Mellow.chili dressing
perfect on watermelon
Pink watermelon mixed with
mild onions, cool mint, and mellow
chili dressing goes well with grilled
lamb chops, beef ribs, or barbecued
hamburgers, according to Sunset
magazine.
WATERMELOM-MINT SALAD
1 wa&ermeloa, alilMt I ponds
IJ& c.p llinred mlN ftlte onion
~ c., mDced fl'ed mblt leaves
a.w dtts1lag (recipe follows )
Salt
Slice the watermelon into 1-inch-
thick rounds; cut rind from flesh
and discard. Cut flesh into I-inch
cubes and remove visible seeds.
Place cubes (you should have about
3 quarts) in a large bowl. Add onion
and mint If made ahead, cover and
chill up to 4 hours. · ·
Pour dressing over salad; mix
gently. Add salt to taste. Makes 8
servings.
Cbill Dressing: Whisk together 3
tablespoons cider vinegar. 1 tea-
spoon .chili powder, and 6 table-
spoons salad oiJ or olive oil. Use, or
cover and let stand up to 3,. days.
Makes 'h cup.
Fresh herbs ate tW'Riftl up on
American &ables with a frequency
and variety unheard of a teneration
110. Aro>rding lO the American
Spice Trade Association, the 1914
per capita consumption of bert.
and spices in the U.S. was 42
ounces, 10 ounces more than in
1974.
This herbal enthusium could
stem from the discovery that herbs
can be grown by almost anyone,
almost anywhere: small prdcn
plots, patios. roof tops. even win-
dowsills.
Fresh herbs can work mqic in
soups and stews, or turn a bead of
lettuce and a few tomatoes into a
sensual taste experience.
According to Polly Cannon, an
enthusiastic herbalist and president
of the HerbSocietyofWheelina, W.
Va., almost all herbs can be grown
as pot gardens. ·
Once you experience the thrill of
harvesting your own herbs and taste
the difference their fresh flavor can
make. you will never want to be
without them.
Rosemary Rice provides a new
variation for a traditional rice side
dish. Minced fresh rosemary leaves,
onion, mushrooms, pepper and
ready-to-serve beef broth tum stan-
dard rice into extraordinary fare.
For a delicious main dish, try
Thyme and Lemon Chicken, with a
sauce made from shallots, chicken
broth, lemon and thyme. Serve with
a tossed saJad. warm bread and
fresh autumn vegetables for a meal
"seasoned" to please family or
friends.
BASIL AND GARIJC
POTATOBilE
% tab~ dMppe4 frHll
basil leaves
3 tablespoeu olive oil
~ tea•J»Ma pepper
~~~ MONEY SAVING COUPONS :~~
America's
Best
Selli~ Steel
Truck
AClUAl DIMENSIONS
10¥.· )( 'Z' )( 3y,·
I m1~18• eleftl prllc, tltverell
1 eU ( u.,. emeet) elear ready
to serve cMckem ltreD
% ....... potatoes, lllce4
In large bowl combine basil, oil,
pepper and garlic. Add broth and
potatoes; toss to coat well. In 13-by
9-inch ba'ting dish, arrange potato
mixture. Bake at 325 dcvees for 1
hour I 5'1llinutes or until potatoes
are tender and liquid is absorbed.
Makes 6 servings.
ROSEMARY RICE
1 table.,._ eUve oil
"' C'9f replar rice, ucooked
14 c., 81ppe~ oaloa
~ cmp llieed m•orooms
1 eu (14~ ouces) clear ready
to serve beef brodl
~ ceupooa minced fresb rose-
mary leaves
"9 teaspoon pepper
In 2-<iuart saucepan over me-
dium heat, in hot oil, cook rice until
browned, stirring often. Add onion
and mushrooms. Cook 2 minutes,
stirring constantly.
Add remaining ingredients. Heat
to boiling. Reduce heat to low.
Cover; simmer 40 minutes or until
liquid isabsorbed. Makes about 21/i
cups or 6 servings.
THYME AND LEMON CHIC)(EN
Z tablespoons batter or margar-
lae
Z wbole cblckea brea111, .... .,
1klaaed ud bolle4 (1.,. ··-·· boaeless)
% teaspoon• miDce4 f~ ~
leaves
1/• cap cltopped slaallou
14 c•p all·IMlfPOH flev 1 cu ( 14 ~ ouees) clear re.ly
to serve c.ackea bndl
~cap milk
Z teaspoons lemOll jalee
In JO-inch skill~t over medium
heat, in hot butter, cook chicken
until browned on both sides. Re.-
move; set aside. In hot drippinp,
cook thyme with shallots until
shallots are tender. Stir in flour,
cook 2 minutes, stirring often.
Gradually stir in broth and milk,
stirring constantly.
Return chicken to skillet. Reduce
heat to low. Cover. simmer 20
minutes or until chicken is fork-
tcnder. Add lemon juice. Makes 4
servings.
Oat bran: How 1nuch is
enough as health aid?
McClatdty News Service
Oat bran is the latest craze in the world offiber. Docs that mean
wheat bran is passe? Will oat bran really lower cholesterol levels, u
recent studies have suggested, or is it just another fleetina fancy?
As is usually the case, oat bran is not a miracle cure, writes
Marian Burros in the New York Times, but neither is it somcthina
to be tossed aside. It is just one more fiber that is an important
component of a healthful diet.
Just how much oat bran would you have to eat to lower your
cholesterol level? There is no definitive answer. but some studies
report eating I to I .S cups of oat bran a day can reduce cholesterol
by 13 to 19 percent.
Eating enough oat bran to reduce the cholesterol level does not
mean eating one oat-bran muffin for breakfast: it means eatina a
serving of cooked oat-bran cereal each day plus five oat-bran
muffins. Every day.
And for these oat-bran muffins to do their job they must also be
low in fat and cholesterol, and it's not easy to achieve a tastymuffin
without eg yolks and fat. But oat bran is not the only solution; theft
are many foods high in soluble fiber that you can easily incorporate
into your diet. .
Susan Male Smith, a registered dieritian and a contributina
editor to Environmental Nutrition, a newsletter, says, ''The public
is probably not aware of this, because no one advertises dried peas
and beans." · ·
'
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• Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIW~. AUQUM 17, 1 ...
Beef, cltrus comblaatioa a wlaaer
Janet Hill of Sacramento will
1epraent California in the micro-
wave cateaory at the I Sth annual
National BeefCook-Ofl'Sept. 20 to
22 in Jackson. Miss.
Hill will prepare her winning
recipe. Breezy f1esta Beef Salad in
the microwave contest and is
eli&ible to win up lo $15,000 in cash.
the National Beef Cook-Off
includes three cateaories: indoor
conventional, barbecue and micro-
wave cooking. First place winners
in each category will receive SS,000
and compete for the SI 0,000 Best of
Beef award.
stafch.
Place beefstripsand mannade m
plas1ic bag or utiJity dish, stirring to
coat. Close bag se<:urely or cover
dish: marinate in refrigerator 20
minutes. stirring occasionall y.
Place oil and cumin in I I l/• x 71h-
inch microwave-safe baking dish.
Add beef with marinade. stirring to
coat.
Cover with waxed paper and
microwave at Medium or 50 per-
cent power (350 watts) 9 to I I
minutes or until beefis only slightly
pink. stirring 2 times. Pour off
drippings if necessary. Stir in garlic
salt and pepJ*Y.'
Arrange avocado slices and
grapefruit sections pinwheel
fashion on lettuce-lined individual
plates. Arrange beef mixture in
center of pinwheels. Sprinkle witt\
oli ves and chopped fresh cilantro.
Serve beef salad with Fiesta Ores~
ing, Serves 6.
Fltsta Dressing
'1'a cup EACH plcante saaee,
dairy sour cream and seeded
chopped tomato
2 tablespoons chopped green
onions
1 tablespooa claopped fresll
cllaatro
Hot pepper sauce. If dHlred
Combine p1cante sauce. ~ur
cream, tomato. gree n onions. calan·
tro and pepper sauce. 1f desired. in
small bowl: m1>. ""ell. Refngerate. covered. Yield: I 11~ cups
Note: Cooking times are based
upon a fu ll po"'eroutput of approx-
imately 700 wans. If yo ur micro-
wave oven ha s a lower power
wa ttage, cooking limes ma) ha ve to
be slightly increased Consult )Our
oven manufacturer's 1ns1ruct1on Hill says she's always thinking of
new ways to use the fruit from her ---------------------------------------------------------,-------citrus trees. She created her recipe
because she enjoys the South-
wesicrn flavors and says citrus is
often used in Mexican cooking.
booklet.
As a homemaker, Hill spends her
time looking after her children,
gardening and developing recipes
for cooking contests.
Cooking expertise runs in Hill's
family. Her husband Stephen, was
the second place barbecue winner in
the 1988 California Beef Cook-Off,
while her father-in-law. Norman
Hill, took third place in the
barbecue category.
BREEZY FIESTA
BEEF SALAD
1 .,, -poand bonele11 beef top
sirloin steak, cat 11/• Inches
tlalck
Fiesta Dre11lng (recipe fol-
lows)
'1'a cup plcante sauce
1 .,, teaspoons cor11starch
1 tablespoon ve1etable oil
1 teaspoon sroud c•min
'1'a teaspoon garlJc salt
14 teaspoon pepper
t to 3 ripe avocados, slJced and
brasbed wltll Ume jaice
t to 3 raby red grapef nalt,
sectioned
Red leaf lettuce
a,, cup sliced pitted ripe olives
(garnish)
Cllutro (gar11lsb)
Panially freeze boneless beef top
sirloin steak to firm. Prepare Fiesta
Dressing. Trim excess fat from
steak; slice into 11.-inch strips.
Combine picante sauce and corn-
LITE ...
From Cl
Jar servings of shri mp. lamb, tur-
key. pork and roasted chicke~.
The brochure also states 1s has
less sodium than shrimp, lamb.
turkey, pork and chicken, it does
not offer comparison figures .
The low-fat , low-<:holesterol beef
stans with genetics. Mize said.
Heritage. which is headquartered in
Cleburne, Texas. uses only full-
blooded Chianini cattle that has its
origins in Italy with the first
introduced in the United States in
1970. This breed. he explained.
produces lean carcasses as it
matures.
Other imponant factors are
quality control and selection after
slaughter, said Mize. "By the time
our beef reaches market shelves, it
has had proper aging."
Tenderness comes from youthful
animals. not from the marbeling or
fat that is generally percei ved by
.\mericans. Fat. he said. gives the
meat flavor.
But Heritage, which is trimmed
to 1/5-inch of fat, docs not lack for
flavor. In a blind taste test, where a
Heritage round steak and another
round steak from Hu&hes' regular
choice line were broiled with no
seasonings or sauces. the HeritaJe
beef was unanimously chosen for
flavor and tenderness.
And while the· lite beef costs a
little more than the other line, with
its dietary pluses it would seem it's
wonh it.
WINNER •••
From Cl
was impressed with her victory,
Klein said philosophically, "Well,
they like ice cream: they know I like
to cook; and if it keeps f8ndma
happy ... you understand?'
Here is her prize-wi nning recipe.
CREAMY BLUEBERRY
MUFFINS
' caps Grud Llpt vaallla lee
cream
3 ct1ps blweberrles, f resll or
f r'Olell
'.4 ct1p oraqe Jllke
1tablelpMiu1Nte4oru1e1est • .,, ctlJliruela
In a lal)C oowl, stir bluebef"!les,
orange juice and oranae zest anto
the softened ice cream. Fill 12 or
more paper-lined muft\n cups ¥•
full with ice cream mixture.
Sprinkle tops with granola. Freeze
until ready to serve.
Safely Ont
Consider safety fint when you
tote deviled eas or any · other
perishable foods to a sum~
outina. Keep cold foods cold With
ice or coolant in your picnic buket.
insulated bq or cooler. Use
thermal containen to keep hot
foods hot
THE BEST COUPON
OFFER IN TOWN!
HUGH rs
SH()ppf RS
WIN!
DU AILS IN STORf ...
WE A~CEPT COUPONS FROM O :_rHER SUPERMARKETS PLllS U~LIMITED DOUBLES
I ·t8. SLICED BACON
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ll 1.49
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llAIN•OW 1'llOUT
PAN READY I 89 IOAHO La. •
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All VEAL STEAKS EA 1.99
LUY'S DILUXI
DIAN8S
J2 CT LARGE 9 49 <18-CT MEDIUM
66-CT SMALL • Lil___
Herdes 7-0z Red Homestyle
CASE RA SAUCE ............... . .• 49
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CHOICE FAMILY SnAKS
I 4 INCH VALUE I 69 fRIMMED BEEF CHlJCI( La. •
Smoked Beef Or Polish
WILSON SAUSAGE . LB 2.19
SUNLIGHT
LIQUID DISH
2'1 oz
DETERGENT
M1lono Or Brussels
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1.49
FARMSTEAD BRAND
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c
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LIMIT
2
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SA~l(GE I 99
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Louis Rich I 2 Her· D•~"'' ') ,., ~gs to rq
TURKEY BREAST l B 2.29
I
7 Oz
IA.
LIMIT
2
INSTANT
FOLGlllS
8 oz
COFFEE 3.49
RODS TOPPING ' . 1.09
LB.
LLOYD'S
BllQ 811F 81•S
MICROV•A\A&lE 2 •9 .......
G ort0<1 \ Ii 01 Crunchy
FISH STICKS
.
EA 2.39
~ ._.ACK
~--.~ .......... r841 .liOZ • I 19· ~·~NS ' •
Dvncon H1n•s Loyer Vone11@s
CAKES MIXE.S
Ripe New Zeolond
ITALIAN TOMA TOES . lB .39 KIWI FRUIT
Foney Zucch1n1 3 FOR $1 ITALIAN SQUA SH LB .29 ~ Pot ~01)\t\~
COLORFUL MUMS ( u•• .u.r. snaa1• ) ( AMAll ~o•• u1aaLa .. :· .' ...........
12·PACK
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Former John I l b Pkg
SLICED COOKED HAM
Fn90 I lb
MOZZARELLA BALLS
2.H
1.H
LAKl-TCM.AKI
.. AMalCAll SINeLIS =-I 1 12 OZ P~G ' ,, I 59 / CHEESE fOOO • •
r
. HlllOICHI
TOAi
~~ ...
1 ~ 19 '
10 S Oz. Polll.s
BANQUET CHICKEN NUGGETS
• Chicago Bros 1 3 To U ·Or
PIZZA SHOP'PE PIZZAS •
•• A' llWCllAl• Ill
u u -. , ... 81VLON fUX . ~ . SllAMP.0-C . ~-~· -l _. I .... .'$ QZ
VARIET IES 1.37
RCP1<lon fl•• IS Or
CONDITIONER
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1.37
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Fruit, lamb a sure-fire combo
Al the weather turns sultry, fire·up
the coals and enjoy the ease of
outdoor pillina. And, don't just
aravitate to tried and true buraers or
steaks, add a little summer sizzle lo
your menu with today's lean and
savory lamb.
Often overlooked as barbecue fare,
lender lamb has long been noted for
its versatility. In Glazed Lamb and
Nectarines En Brochette the home
economists at the Kikkoman
Kitchens have complemented the
distinctive taste of lamb with the
pleasingly tart sweetness of juicy
nectarines.
For best results choose either a
boneless lamb loin or leg and be sure
to cut it into aood·sized pieces IO the
meat will stay juicy and tender when
cooked. If you prefer, lean bed may
be substituted for the lamb.
To enhance the flavor of the lamb
and add a piquancy to the fruit, the
brochettes arc &lazed with a deliahtful
sauce of bottfed terriyaki baste cl alazc, garlic and orepno durina
pilling.
Serve these tasty brochettes with
crisp greens and crusty bread. then,
just sit back and enjoy the freedom of
the "great outdoors.'
GLAZED LAMB AND
NECl'ARIND EN BROCHETl'E
~ np bottled teriyaki baste •
r::v" prllc, preued ~...,,, • .,......,enmbled
~ ....... ~ l ~ .......... &ellller
.... ., Mel, l ..... ck
• te I mHlam..tle ri,e 11ee-
tart.et
t uewen, ead alMHlt 1! llldtes ....
Combine teriyaki baste & glaze,
garlic, oregano and pepper; set
aside. Cut lamb into l 1h·inch
pieces. Cut nectarines in half
lengthwise, then carefully remove
pits. Cut enough halves to make 24
wedges.
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater Bros. Low, Low Prices
... SWEET CRISP
Seedlea
LB
FRESH BEEF BONELESS I FRESH I
,Chuck
·Coca·
Cola
30-0Z
BEEF LARGE END
Thread lamb alternately with
nectarines on skewen. leavina
space between pieces. Brush
thorouahly with bate & &1aze
mixture. Place brochenes on &rill S
to 7 inches from hot coals .
Cook about S minutes on each
side (for rare), or to desired dearee
of doneness, brulhina occasionally
with baste &. &laze mixture. (Or,
broil brochettes 4 to S inches from
heat 3 to S minutes on each aide, for rare, turning and brushing with
baste & glaze mixture OC·
casionally.) Makes 4 to 6 servings.
Producing
leaner meat
encouraged
Government grading reaulations
should be revised to provide
producers more . incentive for
producing leaner meat products.
This is one of 18 policy recommen·
dations from a National Research
Council repon. The report, called .. Designing
Foods: Animal Product Options in
the Marketplace," concludes that
Americans have adopted more
healthful dietsand that industry has
been "remarkably responsive" in
devising products to fulfill con-
sumer preferences.
"The reP<?n goes a Iona way
toward the idea that meat fits easi!Y
into a healthful diet," says Janet C.
Williams, associate director of re-
search, National Meat and Live
Stock Board in Successful.Farming
magazine.
The study was funded by the
USDA, the Department of Health
and Human Services, the Kellogg
Foundation and several industry
groups.
The "real solution" to excess
dietary fat is to produce leaner
animals. according to the repon. To
provide an incentive, the re~rt
recommends uncoupling y1eld-
and-quality grading so the outer
carcass fat could be removed im-
mediately after slaughter .
This removal process, called bot-
fat trimming. would allow price to
be based on the pounds of carcass
left after trimming. Under current
rules, USDA inspectors grade beef
for yield and quality prfor to
removal of outer fat.
The re port cites growth
hormones as another means of
reducing fat.
Although fat consumption has
shifted from animal to vegetable
fat, the repon states that most
Americans consume more fat,
cholesterol and saturated fatty
acids than recommended.
The report stressed that con-
sumers need to know some veg-
etable fats and oils (coconut and
palm) arc sources of saturated fatty
acids.
"Consumers think they're lower-
ing fat by cutting down C?n meat b~t
the report shows an increase 1n
sources of hidden fat, such as salad
dressings. fried food and processed
baked items," Williams points our.
The report advocated more
point--0f-sale material about lowcr-
fat animal products and cholesterol
content.
Meat Dept. Savings
6/12-0Z
CANS
Frozen Food Favorites
72=0Z
Garden Fresh Produce
Sample taste
.. of Ca r ibbean
Smoked Ham :
Comish Game Hens ~
Sliced Bacon ~
Chicken Franks=e:
Turkey Wings :=:,IO<S
Sa1:.1sage. Links :=!~~~!ES
6 atfish Nuggets :PN>E
UI s 1 19
,_,..aS119
,.ozS1 49
•M)lgge
l.49'
.az99'
UI •189
Compare these Low Prices
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Vegetables ::=,~~ FlOAiHTIH£0A~~M)Z •1 19
Banquet Din ners 7YAAIETIU .~,,~gge
Scramblers MOAHINGSTNHNMJ •I-OZ •1 39
Orange Juicec:::;!.~~c..iw .,~ •1 •9
Heaven Sundaes = ·~'259
Klondike Bars ~~YANl.U ~f23•
Sun Tops =:"-lfTBNIS .,.oz12°9
Grocery Specials
California Coolers :~. 4-?
Burgie Beer
DeKuyper Schnapps •VNWTU -'559
Lord Calvert ~ ~ .JMITUl'911 ,=.. -·7~
• . . . -,.. -"" ' ' ' ~....... '
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,
Better Ho~• and Gardea•
As refreshingasacool breeze, this
salad samples the tastes of the
Caribbean islands.
Hearn of palm, the bud of palm
tree. are a staple ingredient there.
Look for them in the canned-
vegetable section of your grocery
store. Shaped like smooth. fat
sticks. beans of palm have firm
texture and delicate flavor. Slice
them into coin·shaped rounds for
this salad.
CARIBBEAN FRUIT SALAD
1 u .. uce cu lleartl of palm,
drailted ucl sliced
Ila to l medJam bliaaaa, qur-
tered
I mediam papaya, seeded,
peeled ud sliced
1 lar1e oru1e, peeled and
1ecttoaed
% uiblespooDI lemoa jalce
% UlblespoHs lime jldce
I Ulblelpeoa CMkial oll
% tealpow 8-ey
.. cea":..:••dwmoaor ~ .... ..,nu ·
Leu.ce lean•
Lime 1Ueel or we4ps .
In a medium mixing bowl com-
bine hearts of palm, banana.
papaya and oranse ICCtions.
For dressins, in a screw·top jar
combine lemon jW<:e, lime juice.
oil, honey, cinnamon and t-prika.
Cover and shake well to mix. Pour
dr'ftSina over fruiJ miX"ture~ toss
aently to coat. Arranee fruit on a
lettuce-lined platter or on individ·
ual salad plates. Garnish with lime
• slices or watees. Maka 4 lefVinp .
Summer Salad~ great fOr dieters
Summer salads with fresh areens. 1omat~ zucchini or egplant
tossed Wlth olive oil, basil and a
little prtic are some ofthe deli&hts
of the season.
When these inaredients with a
touch oC sunny Italy are combined
with nutritious cooked poultry. the
result is great-tasting salads that are
just riaht for all who are counting
calories.
Neapolitan Salad, with egplaot
cubes coated with a dressing of .
olive oil, red wine vinegar with 1
garlic and basil is so Italian, it
almost sings. Just add a little
chopped tomato, turkey or chicken,
grr.en pepper squares, toss and let it
chill.
Turkey Vesetable Salad with Lite
Italian Dressing can be prepared in
little more time than it takes to slice
the squash. You'll have a colorful
basic mix ture of turkey and veg-
etables, crunchy and so good. .
An advantage of th is salad is that
all the preparation may be done
several hours or even a da y ahead,
then it may be chilled and tossed
together -just before serving. Add
some hot garlic bread and your
favorite soup, you'll have a com-
plete summer meal.
You can make a deluxe Green
Bean and Chicken Salad by adding
biJ chunks of white chicken to a
cnsp bean mixture. Add an Italian
tone with a dressing of olive oil,
garlic and chopped red pepper.
What a delightful change for your
next picnic instead of the same
usual bean salad.
NEAPOUT AN SALAD
% caps cabed egplaat
% tablespoons oUve oil
% tablespoons red wine vi.Degar
1 large clove garUc, minced
1 teaspoon dried basil leaves,
cnaslted or 1 tablespoon chopped
freslt basil
Daslt pepper
1 can (5 ouces) premium cbuk
wbite cbicken, drained
'fa cap cltopped tomato
'fa cap greea pepper, cat in 'fa.
lnclt squres
•;, cap cltopped onion
In boiling salted water, cook
eggplant 5 minutes; drain well. In
medium bowl, combine oil ,
vinegar, garlic, basil and pepper.
Add eggplant; toss to coat .
. Add chicken. tomato, pepper
squares and onion; toss gently to
coat. Cover; refrigerate until ser-
ving time, at least 2 hours. Makes
2112 cups o.r 2 servings. Cal ories per
serving: 260. ~
TURKEY VEGETABLE SALAD
WITH LITE ITALIAN DRESSING
1 can (5 onces) premla.m clauak
white turkey, drained
lf3 cup prepared redaced calorie
Beef
~Jj~
Sale!
l&aliudretl ...
1 et1p len.ee .. n .... ltlae-.lle
pleees
" etlp HCClalal, 1Jiee4 ... etlt la Mii
" e11p yellow squM, 1llced Ud C11tlalaalf
1 taltletpooa eMppe4 fresll
panley
In small bowl, combine turkey
and dressinf; toss gently to coat.
Refrigerate. n medium bowl, com-
bine lettuce, zucchini, squash and
parsley. Cover, refrigerate until
serving time, at least l hour. Just
before serving toss turkey and
TYLENOL
EXTRA-STRENGTH
3~~.
dressing with vegetable mixture.
Makes 21'1 cups or 2 servings.
Calorics per serving: 124.
GREEN BEAN AND
CHICKEN SALAD
1 c•p IJ'eH beaas, et1t la Z·hlcla
pieces
3 tabl6pooas olive oil
3 &altlespoou lemH jalee
! med.111111 cloves 1arUc, llllaeed
14 teaspooa coarse &r0u4 pep-
per
1 cu ( 5 OtlllCfl) preml1m clallllk
wlalte cWekn, dralaed
'fa c.p sll~ mnllreoms
SCOPE ORY10EA
! &ablespooes diced sweet ~
pepper
In 1-quan saucepan, place green
beans: add water to cover. Over
high heat, heat to boiling. Cook S
minutes or until tender~risp;
drai n. Return beans to saucepan,
cover with cold water. Let stand S
minutes; drain.
In medium bowl, combine olive
oil, lemon juice, ga rlic and pepper.
Add chicken, mushrooms and red
pepper; toss gently to coat. Cover.
refngerate until serving time, at
least 2 hours. Makes 2 cups or 2
servings. Calories per serving; 302.
EKS
ST. IVES VIDAL SASSOON
MOUTHWASH ANTI-PERS Pl RANT S.•e Pt,"' 2.66 HAIR STYLING 2ss 237 A,ttt ,~ .... ,. -2.00 8!!. '!eO.!e
YOU,_ .66 FINAL COST
KLEENEX PLAYTEX
F"ACIAL TISSUES TAMPONS 99¢ 329
Our Regular• 27-4 47 Our Regular 3 59 Our Regular 3 49 Our Regular 3 97-3 99 Our Regular 12 99 ea Our Regular 1 59 Our Regular 3 99 ea
60 Tablets or 50 Caplets 24 ounce, original
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Our Regular 7.88 Our Regular 7 33
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24 Caplets or
Capsules; 4 oz. Elixir.
..._ __ _. COMPARE TO· 8enadryl
•13 59-3 87
OXY 10
SKIN CARE 2!!c,
OOLAIOS ANTACID
TABLETS 149
Our Aegullf 2.29
75 count, eatof1ed
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2 5 ounce Roll-on all types 36 oz 101al Shampoo & Streamers Angular 250 count 2 Div 28 count all lypes
Cond•lloner 19 oz • 20 oz Slyhng Iron model •151 o•
Skin Treatments a111ypes Crompong Iron mooel •142
SPECIAiS .....
0 Hiiis lros. Calfee 1ss -~ I I POUtlO r911 O< a o c Our Regular 2 99 --flestea Tea Mix 199 ·200 .-10 ... 1 Natural lemon flav0< & SU9l1r
m"es 10 Quarts
Our Regul.r 2 99
MEAD 77¢ FILLER PAPER Lay's Potato Cllips 88¢ r ounce oa9 Ou• ~ula• 1 29
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Over 50 shades to Powder Blush Pressed
choose from Powder or 1 25 oz Makeup
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443
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200 sheets 10·1 2 1n " Our Regu4ar 2 19
8 '" wide ruled
FASHION
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. ..
PLAYTEX
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B~USSIZE
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Our Regular 89' ea
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Small, medium
or large
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Peanut Bunef Cheele or Aye n Cheese
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Our Regular 83" •
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fOf dogs Of cats
NON-.PHARMACYSTORES
LAGUNA HILU
La9UN ....... Miii!
11 loro Ao.o 1?0-4387
11 lllON VII.IC)
---..on~ ... _.,;,.,
WW
,, " """' °""'le .... --·
WRANGLER
TUBE SOCKS
466
Our ....,.., • 29-7 •
• pee\, ,,., .• °'
~..,..
oms Line' su·uts sharply at OCC
8j TOM TlftJI (strOftltv en.IC1ed by Paul Klees),
............. forces nis auditionm to bare not just
Tbc immeue popularity o( ••A their danci• lkill• but their IOuh 11 Cbonla UM/• tbe late Micbld Ben-well. The diverse bec~unds that nen·1 tribute to tbe YCJWll men and forse to create a smoothly functionina womea who 1e1alda out 1 tenuous unit are the stuff that the production li · ..., ...__....1 • is made of. vtlll.,,, uua;1D1 an music.al tbea.:!i Even in such an impressive
has llM&ned 1 plethora of ensemble, a solo performance often produetiom. indudina three in Or-n· ... above the others, and in the case •nae County this year aJone. ,, .... .. The latest -and possibly the most of the OCC show it is Pepper
fully_ realir.ed -venion is currently Hamilton as the Puerto Rican dancer
kictina up ill heels as Orange Coast who enjoys two rivetina moments in
concee·s 33rd annual summer musi-the show. Hamilton excels in the first
cal I the skilled band f · f act with her bittenweet sona · .n .s 0 a patr 0 "Nothino •• recallin° her disappoint· creauve veterans, duector John .. . .. Ferzaoca and musical director David ments in early dramatic trainina. and
Antbo 'th ""--•· leads the company in the show's ny -WI some \MM.Lima anthem, "What l Did for Love," near cborecJllapby b)' Emily Kramer -fi it's a .. Chorus Line" to be savored no the naJe.
performance lacks dimension and
deals too often from an embittered
monotone.
The poipant story of the drag show
dancer looking for a place to belong is
liven a superb rendition by Daniel
D'Bolero -particularly when one
compares lhis character with his
militant Che from last summer's
"Evita." Christopher Blake plays
another homosexual, o( the more
flaming variety, with a campy in·
tellcctual disdain that is both enter-
taining and believable.
while Steven Madrid abines in the
early "I Cao Do That" exercise.
These and other company mem-
bers -Aud!C)' Wilson, Dave
Hutchinson, Adnan C. Muldrew II,
Mart McHenry and Keith Wolfe -
gel their chances to excel in ihe
lengthy production number "Hello
Twelve, Hello Thirteen, Hello Love,"
which1 next to the precision-packed
"One, ' is choreographer Kramer's
finest moment.
~tter how ~ny previous incarna· Vickie Groskreutz puts body and
tions you've Witnessed. soul. with the emphasis on the
CamiJJe Williams' Connie. the
shorty on the line, is magnified by the
actress' stunning beauty and dancing
a~ility. Katie Nutt is quite .Jood as a
ditsy newcomer, while Samantha
Humphrey and Dawn Marie Ashley
lend strong backup to Kaye on the
beautifully revealing "At the Ballet,"
Even if you've seen "A Chorus
line" a few times, the Orange Coast
College production will be an enrich-
ing treat. The show plays throu&h
Aug. 28 in the Drama Lab Theater on '
the Costa Mesa campus with per-
fonnances Tbundays through Satur-
days at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 4 p.m.
Call 432-S880 for ticket information. Vlcllie Groekrftts •trilta ber eta.ff ID .. A Claoru Llne. ••
Ferzaoca, among the more in· former, into her jazzy .. Dance: Ten,
novative of locaJ dii'cctors, has ta.ken Looks: Three" tribute to corrective
advantaac of what must have been an surgery. Doreen K.ayt endows ber imme~ turnout at auditions to fonn hard-bitten .. older" chorine character
a second company of nine dancers with some reluctant humanity after
who are eliminated early in the pushing the flashy image into stereo-Don't 8 , M d M , t t h
selection process, but who return to type city at tbeoutset. ee ac an e on an emp y s omac
back up the full-dress finale. (It's also A curiously disappointing per-•
a fine way to cover the principals in formance comes from Alexis By JOE BAI.TAKE case one is forced to drop out.} O'Donahue as Cassie, tbe onetime him MAC (for Mysterious Alien
It's a finely tuned ensemble show, featured actress desperately returning ~, ..... ._._ Creature) and keep him alive by
but the emphasis is on individual to the line. O'Donahue is a fine ln "MacandMe."afamilyofaliens feedinghimCoca.Colaandthecandy
talent as Zach, the stage director dancer with a strong voice, but her from outer space -parents and two called Skittles. They take him to ;=.================================================;., children -get waylaid on earth, and McDonald's for burgers and fries and the little baby alien goes to live with even buy him a McKids T-shirt. The
an all-American family. boys' mom, incidentally, works at
The two kids in the family name Sears, and there's a totally gratuitous
scene in the film showing the girl·
friend of the older brother eating
Carnation ice cream. Then, the
movie's over.
If this doesn't sound like a movie
review, that's because "Mac and Me"
isn't a movie. It's a plug for products
(most of which are available at the
nps off the plot of"E.T."
I can't tell you who's in the film
(except for Ronald McDonald, who
makes a "special guest appearance").
II LARGER THAN LIFE
MOVIE-MAKING~' ~1i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!i.T~ri':::====~~ concession stands of the theaters I 1 showing this movie), that's all -a
glorified television commercial that
After seeing this product-tie-in·
disguised-as-a-movie. I went home
feeling defeated, turned on the TV set
and saw the end of a commercial that
said, "catch Diet Coke and Roger
Rabbit at a theater near you."
It's a damned conspiracy!
-lltvce Willamsa\, PlAYBOY
T U C .K E R .. THE MA•
A•D HIS DIEAll
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(R)
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IDP OFFER VALID 4 p.m.10 Sp.m. MON THAU FRI I ~--------------------expires 8-31-es ACllOSS FROM THf NEWPORT PIER
NEWPORT OYllBI BAR I ml
2100 W. OCEANFRONT NEWPORT BEACH (714) 175-etn
MACAHOMllNI 1 ........ , ...... ......
•TOPNl-WllQ !WM
1111 DUD POOL • ...........
..... CM&ID ....... ...............
~-·~~~ l~>1 . ,. . ~~~ ~'t; When It
i Has To Be A
Special Lunch
or Dinner
Lunch-Monmy·F ndiy
I I 30am lo 2.JOpm
Olnntr-Tunday Sunday
trom S·J()pm
695 Town Center Drive • Costa Mesa
· (Steps from Orange County
Perf ormmg Arts Center
Reservations Suggested
432-7559
... ,._..c..
COCKTAIL 11J
hJI WI lltJ lilt ltrU
CIDDllWI"' 'IMI KICUI 1N1 ....... -........
~-·..... ••u-Nlll1.-
COCKTM• ...........
·'Spare my feelings, Dad'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This i1 a
reply IO my JO-year-old son's qun-lioa. .. Why don o.ddy keep uyina IO
burt my fc:dinp'r' and an open letter
&o m=usband and other parents who •Y tins and unkind things to
dleirchi n.
.. Arc you blind?°'
•• lMlos
birds. This rumor received publicity
because of a bill introduced into the
Connecticut leaislature in I 98S by
Mae Schmidle .
This wild story resulted in frisht-
ening thousands of brides into put-
ting birdseed in little tulle and chiffon
bags so the guests wouldn't throw rice
and ••kill the birds." .. Yes, o.ddy, I'm blind to your
k>ve when you talk to me that way."
""Can't you hearT' .. No,Daddy,lcan'thcaranycarina DEAR MOM: I lilepe every falMr
in your voice when you make me feel wlao reau yHr letter wtu alk MmwU
like something is wrong with me." laow muy times la tlae last week lie
"Haven't I told you a }ll.ousand w ,.t tlaote ume qt1estlou to Mt
Rice is no threat lo birds. It must be
boiled before it will expand .
Furthermore all the food that birds
swallow is round up by powerful
muscles an grit in their ~ds.
Mal)y birds love rice, as any frus-
trated rice farmer will tell you . timesr· ....
.. Yes, Daddy, a thousand times, at u oaly yoe dads btw ltow mm least. I guess you don't think I'm
I hope you will print this infor-
mation in your column and put an
end to this myth. In the meantime,
keep throwing rice, folks. Tradition
will be served and the birds will cat
well and be healthy. -STEVEN C.
SIBL EY. CORNELL LABORA-
TORY OF ORNITHOLOGY,
JTHACA. N.Y.
worth the time to say something more yMr .... idolize Y" ... laow It
than once. (1 wish you were a little bit crulles dtttr spirits to,bt spokea to la more patient.)" a btUttllag way, yo• d aever do It
"'Can•t you do anrbing right?" a1ala.
... Juess I can't. i you don't think Pleau, pleHe, If YH see youfflf
so, because you know everythinv la t~s col•ma today, vow to t•n over
You're my dad." a 11ew leaf. No dild cu lf'OW •P
.. What's the matter with you. emolieu.lly ltealllly aad lovlq ulett
anyway?" k feels val•ed. PareataJ love ft at Ge .. Gec1 I don't know. Maybe I'm just kart of self-esteem.
DEAR STEVEN SIBLEY: YHr
letter proves eeee apia tlaat if a sa.ry
Is repeated of&ea eMep, peeple will
btUeve It, evea tlaHp It It false ud
defies logic.
blld or oumb. I sure hope you love me • • •
anyway, Daddr· because if you don't DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
no one else wil ." writing in response to a letter and We cltecked wllll u Htlaorlty la tlae
Bird HMtt at Llacola Pm Zoo la
C1ticago, ud site verifle4 you state-
meat. 8'ame .. me for Sela& ......
witlt tlaat crock. I feel like a birArala.
J have tried to help my husband see your answer that appeared in the
what be is doing. Maybe reading this ·Ithaca Journal recently.
will open bis eyes. -CONCERNED There is absolutely no truth to the
MOM. belief that rice (even instant) can kill
,_ ... ,. Mps!.!'h AIUD (Ma.." 21-April 19): Attention centen
around loans. per------~~ ...... --centages, money
held in escrow. Dis-
pute will be settled S ~d!ivo~~ld: YDIEY
deciding factor, cit-Oii••• ina law. Capricorn ..,..
plays dynamic role. •••••lliililiiiiil• TAURUS (April
20-May 20): J!'ocus on ri&hts and permissions, public
relations, ability to deal with individual whose ideas clash
with your own. Special agreement is currently being
~ Focus also on your marital status.
GEMINl (Ma¥ 21-June 20): Stress independence,
style, creativity, wdlingncss to get to heart of matten.
You'll receive news concerning dependents. employ-
ment. pets, relative in transit. Leo tells you about
romance. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Trust your own
intuition, realize family member is undecided concerning
possible move. Focus on reunion, publicity, ability to
recoup recent loss. Property agreement is being arranged.
Aquarian involved. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Maintain sense of fitness.
humor regarding "impostor." Reach beyond the immedi-
ate, oeen lines of communication, accept social invita-
tion. Short trip is part of dynamic scenario. Gemini
rcp1c1ented. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Individual who "talks
beck .. may actually have your best interests at heart.
Money is involved. you could receive check reprc$Cnting
~~ty or delayed payment. Scorpio plays paramount
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on personality,
charisma, ability to put ideas across m ~.ntertaining
fashion. Member of opposite sex means business, but
might insist on "flirtation." Protect interests and
re putation. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 ): Domestic adjustment
figures....prominentJy -you'll learn secret regardina
purchase or sale. You'll insist 10 yourself, "I will not cast
first stone." You have right idea. Stick to ii.
SAGl'M'ARJUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Whatappcan an
illusion may be more real than might be i~ned. Focus
on populariry. speculation. sensuality, ability to win
contest. Secret mee1ing takes place, you get news which
buoys spirit. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You'IJ win friends
and influence people. you'll eme~ from emotional
cocoon. This can be your power play day-push forward,
assert views, get money's worth. Love relationship will
intensify. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Previous limitations
no longer apply. Your own style prevails. you'll go places
and you can accept invitation to travel. Moon position
highlights production. promotion, display, presuge.
PlSCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Good lunar aspect
coincides with communication, spiritual values. psychic
income. journey. You'll make fresh start. love rela-
tionship will be revived. Special note -avoid heavy
lifting.
IF AUGUST 18 IS YOUR BIRTHDA V you are a
natural humanitarian. headstrong, willing to fight for
underdog. You could have mark on forehead o'r face due
to accident with sharp object while still quite young. Aries.
Libra people play important roln in your life. Mi)or
domestic adjustment takes place in August. could include
"new understanding" with famil y mem~r. Money
picture. recently bleak, is due to brighten. You'll perfect
techniques in September. and you could have torrid
romance. October also memorable. ..,.
Penicillin bolstered bullfighters
Sir Alexander Aeming chanled
Spein's bullfiahting. Before he in-
vented ~nicillin, countless toreros
died of anfctted wounds. After. even
the smallest arenas were equipped
with penicillin syrihges. And the
performances became much more
exhilarating. One explained: "Now I
can stand closer to the bull."
Q. Who first sculpted a nude
woman?
A. A Grctk named Praxiteles.
Insofar as is known. In the Sth
Century B.C. Of Aphrodite.
Only one person is Britain is legally
to drive around in a car wnnout
license plates -the queen.
A privately printed book on prison
life was sent off to the bindery with
ord~rs to p,ut it in "something
appropriate. ·The bookbinder bound
it in zebra hide.
Ivory piano keys arc cool, man.
Like to the touch. Temr.erature, you
know? Plastic keys aren t.
If a baseball manager pulls a batter
with two strikes. and the replacement
batter gets the third strike, who's
charged with the strikeout?
, .\. The batter with the two strikes.
O. What's the most popular sort of
wedding gift? ·
A. China .. After that. crystal. Jlat-
ware and cookware.
Hockey rinks get not one but two
la)'ers of ice. First is painted white•
wnh red and blue markmgs. Second is
clear.
Q. What's an ··izzard .. ?
A. An oldtimey term for "z, •·
Insofar as I know. nobody!has ever
been convic1ed oflow treason.
NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY
20%0FF
ALLPOTrERY
S~LEINCLlJDES:
• PO'ITERY' SAUCERS
•REDWOOD TUBS
• REDWOOD flASKETS
• WIRE BASKETS
• INDOOR BASKETS
AND
• PO'ITING SOIL, TOO!
AMLl ·NG'S ·
Newport Nunery and Garden Center [ :~
644-951 0~----~
1500 ... eoMI ....... , .............. (IM!twem ........... a J•·•"'"', .... ,-_-)-J
I opea w . tlan •· laJ0-5138. .... , ......saJO
' ..
Both vulnerable. North deals.
NORTH + I975'
\) J 10 ~
0 A Q 7 5
• J
WEST EAST
• 2 • J 6
CV Ql532 Q A97'
0 13 O K64
• 10 9 • 7 ' • 6 5 3 2
SOUTH + A Q 10 8 J
CV K
0 J 10 9 2
+AKQ
The bidding:
Nortli East
Pus Pus '+ Put 5 0 Pass
Pua Pua
So•tll
1 •
5 •
6.
West
Pass
Pass
Pus
Opening lead: Ten of +
At first glance, it might seem that
South's only chance at a heart slam
lies in the diamond finesse succeed-
·ina. However, there is an addi_tional
possibility. Can you spot It?
The interesting point in the auc-
lion is North's-jump to four spades. BY an unpassed hand, that would be
preemptive; by a passed band, it
dellO(es,a holding that has been pro-
moted to the equivalent of an open-
ing bid. When North thm cue-bid
bis ace of diamonds in response to
his partner's slam try, South decid-
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY llC. ... , ... c... ..... m2 -11.11 .. cesra 1U&-Ma-11sa
•'
•
Complete t....aoft httnge In 8undef'• TV,...
CHARLES
Go1E1
ed thal•slam wou1d offer reasonable
prospects. .
Declarer won the first trick in
hand, and immediately crossed to
th( kin& of rrumps. 't-lext. he led the
jack of hearts. East was caught in a
J)osition where, had he stopped to
consider, he would be givina away
the location of the ace of hearts. So
he played low smoothly, as recom-
mmded in all the bridge columns.
"
Unfortunatd y, this was not the
riaht time, and declarer happily
scooped in his sina1et90 kiq of
hearts and the slam was &\W"Ulteed
reprd)ess of whether the diunood
finesse won or lost
Sou,th's bit of larceny cost not.b-
ins. Had either def ender srabbed
the .acc of hearts, declarer would
still have been able to take the dia-
mond ftneste for his contract. •t
note bow carefully he timed bis psy-
cbolosical lead of the jack of beartl.
He drew only one round of tnunp1,
to try to prevent either def ender
from makina a tellinc dilcard ill
hearts. And be made the play early
in the band, when the defenders
would have to make a decilioo ia
relative icnorance of the actual lie ol
the cards.
-·13Mt-~--------
ACROU
1 Distant: Pf'9f
5 Demolish
10 Scarce
14 Indigo shrub
15 BMt shade
16 "~ysof
17 CWn
20 Hew
21 Feattvel
22 Probation.
23 Gott word
24 Drege
25 T•f'tlOeS
28 Woodsman
32 Brotler
33 Ho1l<>o# places
~Gums
35 Cairo's
W91etWay
38 Destined
37 Tizzy
381ndl8poMd
39 ~1skln
40 Avw.nche
41 Afthy plec:.
43 Steps
44 Roc:;t(: IUfl
45 Murdered
46 More egfle
19 Sponge
50 Pronoun
53 Postponement se Excellent
3 4
57 OOMd cer
58 And
59 USSR agc:y.
60 Pfe9byt•
61 TeaieslMw
DOWN
1 Me•icen'
undwk:tl
2 "Adequa1e"
of o&d
~~
4 Houee wing s Light belms
~ 6 E.x8't
7 Addiction
8 Oki French
coin
9 Scotded
10 NegMgerlt
11 Whtte br9ln
matter
12 Metia IMder
Louis -
13 HMd perts
18 Welklng
19CoelC.e
23 Amerce
24 s....,..,.,
25F"'* n Ouica
27 -Recounts • 28 Ruinous
29 African city
30~
31 0••1149
.,,,
47 C.noe
.... Aeegeft. .....
48 Sew•..,
50 FOdder pft
51 t-....,
52 s..h's eon
54 Sun god
S5 Kida' gM'9
13
by Bii Keane IN THE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore
"We'll ask if we can play. We
should be right out if we make
it on the first ballot."
by Brad Anderson
"I dread the sound of ice cream truck
bells!"
PEANUTS
11Vf 60T TME FOOD AND EVERVT~IN6
P~CKED UP, SIR .. HOW ABOUT YOU ? e
i // I t
~~ ... ~1
GARFIELD
DltABBLE
R08Bl8R08&
UM·~! PA~E
MAS PlttPW 10 I gMW UP 10 CUM .
J
,
~
-~
DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
'. f,'
,,
,,. f , ... , ,
t I' 'f
~
""E's RIGHT,.4Wlrt-Y\ ! lT IS FUN !"
by Tom K. Ryan
~1($~.l-tOW~
l:HOJ..ff'15Ra. t<ll\JA t..Jt.OC:NC>Se~
by Kevin Fagan
u:MAT D\O
l~'< NOW ?
by Pat Brady
LOUU.'r' 1MW'U 90tM ~aGCUa
Mair 'Mtft MWS !
' ----
~/
MY M1Xlt1111SE~ ~~/ A.., .... _..,~....,.~.,
ARLO AND JANIS
SHOE
~---~--~-~
JUDGE PARKER
~WUOO(~~ ~ 1MAT.t<INOOF
PRon;c.TION?
THE MAN STOLE YOUR 64.CKPACK
ANO STRUCK YOU WHEN YOU MADE AN EFFORT TO 6ET IT BACK,
MARtGENE ! YOU M UST S l6 N
THE C OMPLAINT!
N/JIANA! MR. I @
5£;(,ll£TAFtY, n ! / 7Ht GREAT I 1 5TATe.OF
--/NIJfANA ... IA
I I It{!
IA
by Garry Trudeau
... HOM& STATE OrlliWIP
l.tTTERMAN. HAt.$70N
AN() JOHN COOOAR.
!r"aUNCAMP. ..
"'
INC/lJW·
181-Y.
\
by Berke Breathed
by Jimmy Johnson
~~w:JNH£.
fUl,S ~eoor EATI~ AAlO~ll41~.
by Harold Le Dowe ·
......... ~ '""-'• ol .... '°"' 1(10 ...i.lod -d• .... ..... "' ,.,. .. ,.,.,, ~,.,,, .. -do
1. I ~:c:~~lt• uttfts '0 I I I J I I I l
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