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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-10-16 - Orange Coast Pilot1 I -v TOMOMOW: FAIR . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER 16, 1985 25 CEN TS NB chief retired 'under pressure' Cffy Cou ncil m em h e rs point to friction. feud with judge. controver sy on c urfew the Los An&eles Police Department. will re11r~ July I. 1986, the start oft he new fiscal year in the beach city. "I think 1t was his decision to reure but it's certainly not a dcc1s1on the council is upset with," Councilman Don Strauss said. Harbor Mun1c1pal Court Judge Russell Bostrom and for the con- trovers) O\oer the city\ )Ummenime curfew on the Balboa Peninsula "He JUSt had a real bad summer." one council member said. "Things didn't seem to be straightening up h turned out to be kind of embarrass- ing." By STEVE MARBLE °' ... u..1 .......... Newport Beach Police Chief Charles "Pete" Gross' decision 10 retire was prompted by job stress and Richard Nixon Is chosen to arbitrate umpires' con- tract dlspute./02 Coast Free flu shots are one attraction at Saturday's Irvine Health Fair./ A.11 California A Huntington Beach man Is one of 10 Californians with a chance to be the state lottery's fi rst mllllonalres./ A.3 Entertainment Musical ''Evita'' arrives for county premlere./83 Mlnd&Body Overweight teens get help for their eating hablts./81 Food Zip up salads and other foods by m aking your own vln99ar./C1 INDEX Births A 11 Bridge B5 Bulletin Board A3 Business B6-8 Classified 05-7 apparent fnct1on with City C ounc1I members. according to city officials, some of whom said the) are not upsflll to see Gross step down. 71 Gross. a former deput't chief with Four other council members. who agreed to speak only 1f their names weren't used, said Gross was under fire for his highly publicized feud with f) 'l. - Bom b i ng victim b uried But Cll) Manager Robert W~nn !>aid Gross' retirement wa\ not fo rced Family memben of Alu Odeh, an Arab- Amerlcan killed ln a bomb blaat in Santa Ana Friday, carry b.1a body from St. Norbert Church ln Orange ln a funeral attended by over l ,000 people. See atory onPageA3. CostofCOunty Arts Center -inc reased by $13 . 4 million By TONY SAAVEDRA Of ... Oell)l l"lloe ..... Interest rates. cost overruns and rnnstruct1on changes ha vc pushed the pnce Lag for the Orange County Performing Arts Center 1n Costa Mesa 10 roughly S78.9 m1lllon. spark- ing an intense fund-raising campaign to make up the S 13.4 million increase. With opening night for 1he main theater phase onl y a year away. center directors launched the new "( unain Raising Campaign" Tuesday after a closed-door session. So far. more than S5 I.:! m1ll1on 1n pnvate donations have been garnered for construction of the first phase. a 3.000-seat multt-purpose theater and a 500-scat studio being built 1n tht• outh Coast Plaza area. ~nother S6 million 1s expected from fund-ra1s1ng campaigns already under wa ). ac- cording to center officials. For the second time in near!\ 21 : ~cars, directors approved cosi 1n· creases for 1he main theater pha~e Tuesda}. ra1~1ng the construction hudget from SS7 3 m1ll1on to $70. 7 million. The second pha!.e. a 1.00<)-r;cat theater. probabl} won't be built until the 1n1t1al fac1ht) 1s paid ofT. center offi cials said. The~ added the es11- ma1edpnce tag for the smaller arena remains at SIL! m1ll1on Ho"'ner. 11 100 could nse once actual designing and construction begins "It 's a conceptual figure You·.,,c ~llll got to set dl'<.1gn cntena .. said Execull vc Director Tom Kendnck. who took over the adm 1n1stra11 \ e reins 1n cptembt.•r aftl'r being hm·<l away from the Kl'nned) Center 1n Washington I) ( The hoard reat1irmcd II'> rnmm11 - men1 to building thc '>ernnd pha'>t' Tuesda\ but for no"' attcn11on 1<, focu'>cd· on the main fanlit\ v.h1ch v.111 house :1 c,tatc-ol-the-ari theater for \-iirld-class pcrfnrme~ ( onstruc- (Plea11e aee ARTS/ A2 ) "It was his idea to rettre," Wynn said. "That doesn '1 mean there weren't contro' ers1es or that he wasn't under pressure But there wa~ no ultimatum "W11h the Bostrom thing and problems on the peninsula and the curfew, there wa-. '>uml' d1ssa11sfac- 11on with the police depanment." the Cit} manager said .. But. at ttmes. there's some d1s!>at1sfat11on with every department." Wynn said he believes that when Grou took a recent vacation he reached the conclusion that "as Iona as I can afford to rcure. why should I suck around and take this flak." Gross said dunng his vacauon he nouccd .. certain ph ys1caJ changes" 1n himself and a growing level of stress from 37 'ears in law enforcement (Pleue .ee C HIEF I A2) County adopts fee schedule for new freeways Develope rs buil ding near new rou tes will be assessed costs of construction By JEFF ADLER Of_OellJ ....... llaill .\ re' 1sed schedule ul dl'' el11pml•nt Ill'' that lea tu re' ·tone'> of benefit'·in areas near three propo'><d lOunt \ trel'"' ... , '"' ... , ..idopted T uewa~ b' 1he Orange Count) Board of \uper .. 1'>0r'> The fee~ ""ill ht-u..ed to lund \ on,1rud111n 11l 1ht• pn 1po'<'d \an Joaquin Hills. Eastern and Foothill tree"'a"' B~ a .i.() 'ote. )upen 1\or~ apprO\ t•d d plan re\ l'>tng the ke '>tructure and again endorsed the notion ot fi nanung ne" tn.·t·"'J~~ h~ <1s'4:ss1ng developers for new house<. ur commercial build 1ngs built near the propo-.ed lrl'l'"'3' comdors SupeP 1sor Harneu \.\ 1et.kr "'ho was absent "'hen 1he puhlit hearing concerning the much-d1slu\-.ed plan was conducted on Sept 2 5 ab,1.11 ncd The de"elopment fees are c\pt'l'tl'd to pa~ 4~.4 percent of tht• estimated S342 m1ll1on cost of the San Joa4u1n Hills Transponauon cumdur. "'h1"h "'ould course through 1he rna\1..11 foo thills. and 45 5 perl.ent ul thl' esttmated SS 16 million F-ooth1ll .ind Eastern T ransportat1nn ~omd•>r\ further inland. Although the counl) alrcad~ ha\ approved agreement'> cr;tabh'>hing two regional frtc'\A.a' a.ithonues to govern the financing and cnnstru<- t1on of the fr~wa's onh fi,1. 111 I i c111es in'ohed 1n ·thr dndopmt·nt fee program -If'\ int' \Jn luJn Capistrano \an < kmr:ilt' OrJn~t and io\nahe1m -h..i\l' al\u Jppr11\l·d 1he plan C111es that ha'e \l't 111 ..1ppr11' t thl' agreement and fee \lruuurt' Im tht· San Joaquin H1llr,:wthont\ Jfl'{ 1l<.t..1 Mesa. l'ocwpon Beat h and \an1.1 .\nJ Laguna Beach "h1\·h "'J'> a,h·tl t11 101n has rejected thl' program C 1t1cs that ha\ c \t,'I to apprm t' thl' agreement and tee '>trut'turt' ftH tht· Foothill and E:.astt.'rn l 11rrid11r authont\ include In int• \Jnt.1 \na Tustin and Yorha L tntl..i The free"'a' authonttl·~ "'Ill aJ m1n1r,1er the ·kc prov.ram at4um (P lea.e aee FREEWAY I A2) Irvine OKs free\Vay fund r ole By PHIL SNEIDERMA.""i ()I -0.-, -,..,, 1 n a kc' '1cto~ for proponents ol th~ nev. '>OUlh Orange County tree"'a's ln1ne officials decided earh tOda" to JOIO the county and other c1tte<, 1n planning the htghways and rnlle-c ting lees to help pa-. for tht•m In J \. H•tc th1· u1 unul agr(."('d to u1n '"''' tH1ri1 ~1"'er' agencies th.u "'111 nH·r~'t.' !ht' Jcs1gn. tinanc1ng and rnmtrut 11t1n ul the pmpo~ed San Jod4u1n Hill' f rt."C"'a~ dnd the East- ern dnd f-111)th1 11 trct'\\3\'> The ,·oun- <11 ..iho approH'd a !er plan that 1-; C:\f\l."lll'd 111 ral\t' about $1•10 m1l11cin tr11m lutun.· In int· dt•,t•lopment l11hn ount ti ri:atTirm' It'>' 1Jtl' nnt \.\t•t•k fr\ int' 1A.1ll heg1n ,·olll'l't1ng fll'l'V. a' ft't'' 1n m 1d· '\om ember cit~ ollil'ldf, \JtJ • The ll't'~ "''" he ,harged to dc- 't'l\1[X'r' ..11 tht· time the\ ohtain hu1ld1ng fll.'rm11' 11) .:onstrul·t homes 11r 1'u'>IOl',~t'' 1n 1hr areas to be sen.ed (Please aee IRVll'fE/ A2) Comics Crossword Death Notices Entertainment B5 07 08 B3-4 Cata la no n a m ed to Irvine council Coast school workers to get pay raises Food Horoscope Ann Landers Mind and Body Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlson Weather Weddings C1-12 07 02 B1 -2 A10 A3 08 01 -4 B4 A2 A 12 By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OtlMOellyNMll.eft Ralph A. "Ray" Catalano Jr . a l~ Irvine professor and adm1n1s1rator. was appointed Tuesday to the Ir. inc Cny Council to fill the re mainder of David Sills' term. Sill s resigned to accept an Orange County Superior Coun j udgeship. Catalano. hailed as an ex pen 1n city planning, will serve the remainder of Sills' term. which runs throu~h June (Pleue eee COU1fCIL/ Ai) Mesans putting on a happy face , hoping it spreads They·re devoting tt:ne to find out jus t why U.S. does n 't s mtle Wearina only black dots for eyes and a w\de curve for a smile, the ye llow happy faet served as a cutesy reminder to smile and be cheerful. And when it went the way of disco music, mood rings and pet rocks. few bemoaned its passini. Men and women of the '80s, the Yuppie creed now says. are scrious- manded prqmat11ts who approach their careen and personal hves with unamused smuancss. Grins are out; amtrks arc 1n. But there are til"S or a backlash 1neakm1 up on the tclf-ccntcred attitude that hat piqued the first half of1hi1 decade. The mood and spint of &he '60I arc rttum1n .. Paisley's back. Chanty is bc1n1 promoted. Benefiu are to•nt over well. Mu11cians are ruahi na to the ajd of the farme~ .. n America and the 1tarvin1 in Africa. We are the world. .. And a Costa Mesa woman thinks it's high ume to bnng smiles back. lOO. , "We want to find out why Amenca doesn't smile," said Pamela Campbell. who formed WADS (Why ROBERT HYNDMAN THE LIGHTER SID E America Doein't Smile) earlier th11 month with her busblnd Paul and their I l·year-old son Jay "We decided there, must ~ a culprit out thett who ti.s been ateaUna evt7one's smile , bccautc you j ust don 1 stt them as much 11 you used to," w said. The Ctmpbel ls h.eve noticed a .,-owinR absence of smihn• racts 1n (....__al!OU/AI) By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .... Delly ........... Newpon-Mesa school trustees rati- fied contracts Tuesdav with most of the d1stnct's employe·e groups. v.ho will recel\e a 4 percent across-thl·- board pay raise for fiscal 1985-86 Contracts were approved for the 830 teachers. 11 secretanes to dtstnct ncgot1aton. 25 classified superv isors and 75 d1stnct managers. said Super- intendent John Nicoll Add111onall}. thc d1stnct's est1- mated tiOO dasi;11icd wor~er' "'Ill \Ole later thl\ monlh on a "milar contract. ..11'111 calling for a 4 fX'r<.ent ..alar. incrca~ Nicoll \aid m•got1at1\1n~ \.\Ith thl' vanou!i barga1n1ng group'> oH·r !ht• la'it three months ha' e l'lt'l.'n free of an} maJor roadbloc~s or dl\pute<. "The\ ·\l: tx'l·n '>Uper fhe <.1mple fact 1'i our un1om arc as aware ot the funding '>ltuallon a' we are.'' he ..aid. noting the distnct\ reliance on 'itatc allocattoni; t ..................... a..... Paal, Pamela and Jay Campbell It.ope daelr ..U• 8J>nad. The '\e"' pon-\k..a f t'1.kr.11111r1 ''' Tearher'> rat1tied ..i thrn·-q•.lf ..1~r1'l ment Fnda' "'llh pr1" 1'111n, 1<1 reopen talk<. l'\l'I"\ 'l'3f 11n "11,11 ' .11ht tnnge t>t·nefih fhe teacht.'rc, 't'llil'ntl'nt .1, "''II ,1' 1he other ,·11ntrJ' ''·.in· rt•tr•1.t< tl' ,. II• Jul\ I (·1a~s1ticd I non-Ila\ h1ng1 1A.11rl>.1'" r('presentcd b~ 1h1· l alit.1rn1J '< h11PI Emplo,ees .\.'\f)OC1a11on v.ill Ix· rrt•, ented a one-,ear contrall durin~ .1 ra111ica1111n v111e Oct 2' :-....1u1ll ,.11.t J ht· prt>~1~·J agret·ment s11pulates th.11 tht• unum .ind d1c,trt\ t continue 'tuJ\ 111~ tht• "'''r~ero; salane\ ht' Jddnl '\ uill \did thr p;l\ ra1..,1·<, th1c, fi\cal \t'ar .mwunt to hct ... cen) I 'million Jnd ~I 4 mllhnn nf lhl' '111.,tnct'<, \Ml m1i11on total hud~ct \tn\t nl tht• monn v. tll ,·omt• Imm lhl' ' :2 ~·rtl'Ot IOt rl•J<,c !hi!. \Car tn 'lalt Jll1ll..1t111n, LB won't restrict its beach-goers' sound of music By USA MAHONEY °' .... .,.., ......... The Laguna Beach ( 11\ t 11unt1I was on<.' 'ote av.a' T ul·~d.n ln1m requinng beach-gorrc, hi "'t'.H earphones while h~tening to r.1d111<. \In most cit~ beache5 Council mcmbc.>r\ 'ot('d '· ~ to maintain the status quo rather than require music h.wcn to plug 1n \<1 others c•n enJO) the soundc, of c,llenle tn lhe A.rt Colom·., co'e' and on 1t\ narrow strands · Mavor Bobbie Minkin and< nun c1lman Bob Gtntn pusht"d tnr an ord1nan~ that "ould ha \C' alto"' <'<l radios onl\ on M ain B('at h Earphones to quell th<' \ound<. 1)1 rhythm and rock would ha'<' b«n required on other 'trctche' ol \anti But thr ma.iont) of l'Ounul mcn1 bers couldn't quite en"1s1on Laauna u C'o~) bland apparcnll\ the "°'' other plaet whert 'uch radio ""tm- lJons have bttn tntd "l can't com:el"e of u\ hh 1ng radio frtt zon~ or cerphon..-, on th<' tieach," Martha ( ollt!>On ,..,J Wh) C'ln't t>c.ch-socn vrho art d1~turbrd b\• loud mu " JU'\l spea._ up and aitk the oOcnder to tum th<' \Olumc do"' n" ~he ac;ked "I don't think we \h1.1Uld he ut1h11ng nur polKe fill"'l'r thl\ '\A.3 \ .. l olhson. al1,ng "tlh ( ounrilmen 'Jell F111patnl"~ and Dan l\.enney. \Oted do~n Minkin and Gentry's motton to draft an ordinance Minion a'ked Pl1hl'e Chief Neil Purcell Ill .,, ec;t1gatc wavs of rcau· la11n1 loud radio' on the heach after \he rtce1' cd two "ntten complaints and 9C"eral "erhal ones about loud radio\ -pan1cularl\ th~ t)pe known ac, ght'ttO hluter\ or boom boxes that ha' e twin \pcakc~ on the outs1ck. l ndcr current law. pohor mu.at pro\C a person pla\lnl a loud racbo as J111n& '° mahc1ousl) and W1llfully heforr a c1tat1on can ~ 1nuied. So Purt t"ll \U~ted that the only way'° 1r1 < omplete comph.encc with httle ix1het 1ntervent1on ts a law bennina radio' on the beaches unlaa they lft equ1pp('d with ea~na. A.t 1hc 'imc time. Purctll aid police ha' e had little dlfficWty wiU. tieach-toen wbom lbey ask 10 tuna 1ht1r radios down. (Pl .... -aA.DIOe/U) • .U * O.ongo ~ DAILY Pilaf~. Oct-1e, 1999 County OKs $3.1 million contract for autopsies lyJUFADLER °' .............. The Oran,e County Board or Supervit0rs voted unanimou1Jy Tuesday 10 award a five-year contract worth more than SJ. I million to the only bidder for the county's autopsy bustncss -the same firm that currently holds the contract. Contract terms call for the R.ich - 1rd1-Fischcr-f ukumoto Medical Group Inc. of Anaheim to receive $220 per autopsy durina the first year of the contract, $235 in ycartwol $250 in the third year, $265 in the 1ourth year and $280 in the pact's fifth and fimlyw-. ptthOIOIY poup appear to have been cleaned up. "Bued on infonnation We have receievcdfrom youandothel'l, ii does appear lhal problems have been experienced," White wrote. "It alw appears that local etrorts to 50lve them have improved the situation." The investiption focused on the work of the medical aroup's princi- pals., Ors. Robert Richards., ·Walter Fischer and Rjcbard Fukomoto. Amona the &llqations were that the thttt bad misplaoed or mi5handled evidence and chanaed their medical opinions on cues cfurina trial. After the allqations surfaced, Fis- cher apparently took his own life. shoouns him1elf1wice in lhc heart in what was ruled a suicide last July 11 . One of the docton also curTCnlly is involved in a l1wsuit filed again5t the 0111nac County Resister. The lawsuit claims the newspaper defamed Fukomoto's professional reputation and performance as a forensic pathnfn.vi~I in A ~rir• nf11rfirl"'• """''" • coroner1s office operations. Fath also Mti'-1 the li1m has "been doina ellcellent work for us for years." The assit.ant sheriff said that S6S letters were sent to prospective bid- ders and SS packe1s of more detailed infonnation about the contract also were mailed out, but only the single bid was rccicvcd by the county. Supervisors moved to review the cxisuna contract with the medical aroup some five months ago on the rcrommcndation of the County Ad· ministrativc Office. It came at the same time that 1hc professional cxpcniSt: and workmanship of the pathologists was being called into question. COUNCIL CHOICE ... CaJifomia Attorney General John Van de Kamp subscquenlly launched an investigauon into the pathologists' perfonnancc in certain criminal cases. That invcsti&&lion was closed lasl week when Chu:f Assist.ant Anorney General Steve White infonned Sheriff Brad Gates by letter tha1 any problem! or irrqularities with the From Al JO, 1988. The UCI professor was the unani- mous choice of the four remaining council members, who decidc4 to fill the vacancy by appointmcn1 rather than conduct a special election in April. Mayor David Baker said he was rel uctant to wait for an election because of the heavy work.load facing the council. Baker said Catalano was out of town and could not attend Tuesday's meeting. Catalano has served as an Irvine city plannin& commissioner. He joined the UCI faculty in 1972. Currently, he is a professor of social ecology and administration. Last year. he also was named UCJ's assistanl vice chancellor of academic affairs for plans and programs. Catalano earned a bachelor's degree in poli1ical science from Boston College in 1968. He received his master's degree and doctorate from S}'T8cuse University. IRVINE JOINS FREEWAY PLANNERS .•. From Al by the three freeways. No freeways fees will be charged for existing homes and businesses. The Irvine vote was viewed as critical because so much of the funding for the three freeways is expected 10 come from burgeoning development in the city. County transportation offici~ cs- timale the three freeways will cost almost $860 million. About 48 per· cent is expected to come from developer fees , and local officials hope the st.ate and federal govern- ments will provide the rest. Of 1hc developers' share of the freeway cost, 25 percenl or abou1 SI OO mill ion is Cllpccted 10 be collected in Irvine. , Irvine Mayor David Baker and Councilman Larry Agran, who were on opposite sides in lhc 3-1 vote, both said Tuesday 1hat the freeway plan would be in jeopardy iflrvine refused to participate. Councilwomen Sally Anne Miller and Barbara Wiener joined Baker in approving the fee plan. "I think this is one of the most important decisions that's going to be made 1n Orange County history," Baker said. County supervisors and the city councils of Anaheim, Orange, San Juan Capistrano and San Ocmente have already agrttd 10 join the aacncies and collect fees . The city councils of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach are scheduled to consider the freeway plan within the coming weeks. Costa Mesa officials delayed a decision until after Irvine's vole. The proposed freewa y fees tng- gcrcd heated debate in Irvine, cul- minating in a petition drive aimed at ta.king the decision away from the council. T he Commit1cc of Seven Thousand collected enough signa- tu~s on a "Righi-to-Vote" initiative that could require the council to obtain voter approval before collect- ing freeway fees. But in August. an Orange County Superior Court judge ruled the peti- tion was improper because ii con- cerns a statewide, not a city issue. Last week, COST members a~ pealed. At Tuesday night's hearing. COST chairman Wifliam Speros asked the council to delay acuon until after the appeal decision. Bui Mayor Baker opposed a oost- FREEWAY COSTS. .. From Al right of way and authorize final design and construction of 1hc free- ways. The authorities will go out of business once the newly constructed freeways are accepted into the st.ate highway system. ihe free structure approved by the board creates zones ofbencfit in areas near the proposed freeways. De velopers near the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor will be charged S 1.305 for every singlc- family home lhcy build 1n areas closest to the frctwav. while those built farther away will cost Sl ,010. For the Foothill and Eastern Cor- ridors, the charges for single.family homes will be SI,295 and $920, respectively. Commercial property in areas adja- cent to the San Joaqin Hills Corridor will be assessed at a SI . 75-per-squarc- foot rate while buildings in the second zone will be assessed a S 1.30-pcr· square-foot fct. For the Foothill and Eastern Corridor the fees will bcS 1.80 and S 1.05-pcr·squarc-foot respective- ly. ponemcnl, saying that decision could be six months to a year away and could be followed by further appeals. During the public hearing, about a dozen speakers endorsed the freeway ftt plan, while two spoke against it. Among the supportcn were represen- tatives of local homeowner associa- 1ions. lhc Irvine Co. and business groups such as the Irvine Chamber of Commerce and the Industrial League ofOranac County. Supportcn said explosive devclo~ mcnt 1n south Orange County is a certainty, and the new freeways arc needed to carry the accompanying traffic around Irvine, rather than on streets. But Agran argued that the freeways will encourage development. He also sa!d the $860 million cost is a gross underestimate, and that participa1ing cities will end up bearing the finanical burden when that price is exceeded. But Mayor Baker countered, "lfwe never build ano1her home or business in Irvine, we're still going to have to deal with everyone else's growth." RADIOS ..• From Al "We ask for voluntary compliance. I don'1 know of any cases where people have nol complied,'' Purcell said. Mink.in sugges1ed radios could be allowed on Main Beach where traffic noise and sporls activities detract from the 'Qund of the surf and ban them pscwhcre, but most of the council didn't agree that radio noise has reached such a pitch 1hat more tCtulation is needed. 'It hasn't been that big a problem in !he past. I'm just concerned that we arc rcgula1ing the heck oul of too many thinJts." said Kenney, who described himself asa frequcnl beach- gotr. SMILE CAMPAIGN ST ARTS IN MESA ... From Al Winds head back to the The SMle AN wtnde thet f9tln9d cMltrvcrtlw wlldftr• In Souuwn CAllfOl'nte the PMt two dlya !'le.,.. dlmlnllMd, ITl9klng temS*'ltur111 mor1 moderat•. The SMta Mal, wh60h wrtt• bfOuaht on by 11'1 upper i.vel loW ~ 1yatem on nottMrn Baja Callfor™-, W'lf'e llmtcld lo • f9w mountain PelMI today u the aystem l'l'IOY9d eutwarel. the National WMtMr ~ Mid. Forecul.,.. pt.clletlld that f\.lrtMr cootlng oan be expected Thurlday II more normal H• brMZ.a wlnd119turn. I Tl'l1 Foracatl ' ii ~--~ AIOnO Iha Orange Cout It will be fair through Thurlday, Cooler d1Y9 Mar lhecout. HIOht Thurlday In 70. l'IMf Iha coeat and IOt Inland valleyt, Lowa 45 to 58. 7~6 --i~ -(. a -,.J Sfu';;-_______.! eo'~~ From POlnt Conoaptlon to the Mo:letln Bord., -Inner wat.,.: Light varlablti wtndt night Md mo<nlng houri through Thurlday becoming waat to aouthwe.t 12 to ts knol• during •ft•noon and ev«1lng h°'.irt. "·Q" 0 ·•-r .. ,. •· 8 ~ 80 ' U.S. Tempi CHIEF RETIRING 'UNDER PRES: From Al "But there is no issue 1hat the (police) department or I have faced that had anything to do with my decision, .. said Gross, who said the media ha5 sensationalized his retire- ment, Specifically, Gross said his retire- ment is not connected wi1h his back- and-fonh war of words with Judge Bostrom, who angered the police chief in July when he tossed a SI 0 million marijuana cast out of court and blasted the officers who seized the contraband. The fray between Bostrom and the policcdcpartmcn1 heated up a second time in August when the judge asked police to apologize for the way they handled the arrest of a _grand theft suspect. Grou acknowledged tha1 "~me will take pleasure" in his retirement while others will apprccialc his ac- comphshmcnts in his eight years a~ police chief. But one council member !>aid the rt• was a general level of dissat isfaction on the City Council with the oper- ation of the police depanment. • "'Times arc changing and son1c peorlc just don't change," one coun- cil member said when asked about Gross' retirement. Another said: "I wish it didn't ha ve to happen. It's embarrassing. Bu! we have to represent our communuy." Wvnn said Gross has been a superb pol1r• 11ons selecl d1da1 w, lion r in the progr het~'l Cl\} "II "Bu1 too " Couple jalled for tying cb OAK.LAND-A mother and herboyfner year-old girl in a locked car after binding her I been sentenced to less than a year in Jail. Shir eight months in county Jail by Judge Man Singleton was sentenced 10 nine months. Each The couple, both 22 years old, had been hv1nf ARTS CENTER COST UP $13 MIL From Al tion on the JO-story building began in officer, said a revolving credit line adde· Jul y 1983. was needed to covcre.11.pcnses be cause con1 1 pledge money was received at a equ11 Center officials stressed lhe Sl3.4 slower rate than e.-:pected. Pledges ~I · million change was not a sudden projected to be collected in 1wo to 1s n1 increase. but accumulated gradually three-year periods were instead tak -over1 since the las1 S65.S million construe-ing three to five years. \.\o'1 lion figure was announced in May man 1983. "Originally we didn't have a very · good handle on what the now of the ~~~~~ The original cs1imatc unveiled in fund raising would be." Strader Y11d, abl• 1980 for the main theater phase was ~ S34.5 million, with tot.al construction Another $).6 million in increases "\I of the Oranac County Pcrfonning were listed for de sign re visions. have ArtsCenterlistcdatancstimatedS40 including Sl .8 m1 ll1on wonh of s1:ii rr million. changes recommended by Kcndnck C'e The budget changed in 1983 as after a review last summer. Figunng chan directors ordered a more opulent, highly in Kendrick's re\·1sions 1s an prob technically advanced center. improved $400,000 acoushcal '>tage And It was revised again Tuesday to shell. fund recent years. But 11 wasn't until they examined a recent Daily Pilot news ph oto that they put their plan into action. "WADS." Her 50n Jay wenl to work ident- ifying the culprit - a kind of arinch who now steals smiles instead of Christmas. cover construction changes in 1hc Kendrick said the new shell and la1c"1 print bumper stickers and what backstage area. intcrnt mountinJ on canopy were the latest 1n acoustical acou lhcy'll call "laughing stock." the center's credit line and an adJuS\· equipment and couldn't be compared fere n A color photo of a g.roup of partygocrs attending the Salute to the Arts al Newport Beach's Fashion Island showed plenty of faces, food and drink. The story told of the attendees having fun . But no one in 1he pho10 was smiling. "It seemed odd to me that such a pla event should product ex- pressions reminiscent of a bread line of the Depression era. But not one smilina face ,'' Campbell wrote in a letter to the editor. "Could it be tOat smiles arc not 1n fashion at the island?" A draftsman for a San Juan Capi5trano company. Campbell spread the word and the smiles at work. She created a sweatshirt in· scribed with "'I Give Good Grin" and Just Call 642-6086 ~, •· u , 1• '"" oo nol ...... ,_ P90fl' Oy l ·IO p.., -Ol'!Or• 1 ~"' _.,., .,o.J COO'I' .... DO - "We believe he's responsible for a lot of the nation's problems," Campbell said. "We want to convince people that it's OK to smile again," The Campbells are firm believers in the power of a toothy grin. "We want people to be proud of their smiles -brush their teeth and show them off. We hope smiles b«omc an epidemic. We don't be- lieve there are locks big cnou&h to keep smiles ou1." Campbell is just 1e111ng wanned up. There's more. "We want a moment set aside each day for everyone to smile at each other. We think smilina is as impon- ant to a healthy personality as aood nutrition.·· The Campbells are also planning to "We want people to buy laughing men! for inflation. 10 the traditional shrl l structures "l stock in America,'' Campbell said. Boosted by a one-year c•tcnsion in backing performers on other st.ages. from "One side will be printed with the the construction schedule, interest is He added the new shell woul d reduce Wat• official stock insignia and the other expected 10 reach s4.4 million, an opcretin' costs in th<" long.91n. pres1 side will be blank for someone to increase of $4. I million over the Combined architectural and con-of W write their own happy thought and S300.000 budgeted in 1983. suit.ant fee increases totaled S2.3 '\aid ' pass ii along. Tim Strader, center chief ellecutivc million. with another $2.4 mdhon spc n "Then by Christmas we'll send all ·~=================:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;::;::::::::::::: this lau&h1ng stock to the White 1 House, which in turn will share it with the rest oflhc world." Campbell said her cffons to replace frowns with smiles has been success.- ful so far. "It's so contagious, you can't help but smile when someone smiles at you. Let's face it, there arc plcn1y of rea50ns to smile." Job stress, political warring, family divisi veness, 111cial conflicts -..ti can be relieved by a warm smile or car-to-ear lfin, Campbell said. "All men's teeth were created equal and smiling will reveal this." SHUTTERS SPE PRICI What do yo u lllle about the Dally Pilot? Wbal don'I you like? Call lbe number 11 Jefl and your me1'111e will be recorded. lraa1crlbtd and delivered 10 lite appropriate editor. The 1ame %4-boar an1werln11ervlce may~ u1ed to record lellert lo tbt editor on 11y topic. Co11lrlbutor1 to our Le11er1 column mu11 lnclade lhelr name and telesMone number for verification. No clrcolallon call s, plea1e. Tell 111 whal't on yoar mind. Clrcul•tton 71•1"2~ C .... lfled MY.rti.lng 71•t ta-M71 All otMr dep9rtment1 "2~1 MAIN O"IC! llO -h~ SJ Col11 ...._ C• ....,; •3Clt-''" •590 CCIOll• ""-C• tM~e anc wit mo st ...... °'~ -.......,.) " !'°" 00 'IOI ..e-"'°"' "°' "' , • "' ~ De'01f 101 "' --i;oo,o ,,_ .. frank Zlnl fdl!OI "°""'•'Y Churchman Corirr01i.r Cooyr9'1 •MJ °"V9' C.0.11 ~ '-"" Ho ..._. 1101 .. -If•!-"""01., ..... ttfo 01 ~­ -_.,.. P"re-, 119 •!0-..ooo:I """""' _.,, ~ ..,_ gl COO)".gl'\O - C-lofl T 1 la:p."toMa -Otl"Of Coo.r<r .. _ .. ...- ~~ ............. Plobef1 L. C•nlr•ll F'f(>dVC:l•Ol"I M•ri10tr Howard Mult9nary Mark•llng Oirtc!Of Don.kl L. Wlll .. ma C1rcu11110l"I Maf"lllg., .. ._., .... ,"" C1a111!1ed Olrtc:TOf ' s..::""" ~"" -·· °'""' •• C.0.!• -C..•!01• .. IUPS >•• 9001 ~Ol<"OloOI" D~ t.,,_., 5$ ~~ '"'O"'""w O•"'•'tlOO"'O"r~'V • FINEST QUALITY 8HUTTEA8 AVAILABLE ON THE~ AT PACTOllY DNCT PllC181 Call (714) 548-E 1113 1117' I ' ,, ' 'I· .. • • " • i • ' • ' " •• • .. '" e • .. .. ,. ..... """ . ' !UlllOA ·•' ~ ,., ••• ''" . .. ••• '"' ''" . ' 'l 1 • ' !. \ 1 ' ~I I I l . ~ '00 .1 e •e "' -" .. •t>G ..... •• ~I~ 0 • " ~-· ... . ~ • • ·- , ., .. -l'f' ,, ,_ " - . '. 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"•nd' 1n 1•lu1' tin· J ' JI "·"I lrlnt -----·- . ., I ' • } ·, I n ' ' ···' ' ' " ' ' ' ' '"· ' Fo untain ,,, ' I • • , .~ ..... ~I •II n J f . , ' ' ' - •• i)OCt , ] i ·~··1~ , l lt (•.,r c •< L' 1 .. 1 JI np " 'll S lO w ,f'' ... ,,. ' . ' " • ' " " "" .. ""''" 1... i' s ~ ) \. • ' I '' • • ' •' 11lnerable, .tor tells ispytrial LlOr, 1ard <lay .ally 'Uit- the :uilt :ach s in At· !VCf '1ed ting v1ct Id. and 1avc dto 1mn )f to JOV· will um· e now ct or wh o 18 \C iu1n ikes 1jcc- foe cidc 'the ilov !rug e of the thl' can San rugs oum mon 1hine 1dcly o arc ~ ~c- 1cs1 a, ~~c sa•d t " can and nilar city. n its - ' I For · wa ; .C SI X '" " dical 1ut I blc,' 'ork. :k at ntcr. 11, as ! has and said neck It is tcral and pit.al ·\ud- ;lart the the 1sion 1vita, 1nts vinl >ey ; .,., in-- • y man ney- two ·r in and nont ' the oun :eter •led 1ren, ,, .... San 'the -ncd .... Hayman told the jury that two key issues they m us1 decide are whether Miller's lover, Mrs. Oaorodnikov, was a Soviet agent and if Miller himself was vulnerable to recruit· mcnt by the KGB, the Soviet secret police and intelligence service. "There's no question whatsoever 1hat there was a conspiracy in this case," Hayman said, recitina a list of evidence presented to support the contention that Mn. Ogorodnikov was work.ing with Soviet officials to lure Miller into spying. The defense contends that Miller, his JOb performance marred by weight problems, sloppiness and in· competence, was attemptin1 to salvage his FBI career throu&}l a maverick infiltration of the Soviet spy network. But Hayman said those problems, along with financial difficulties and a penchant for extramarital affairs, were why Miller was ripe for recruit· ment in summer 1984. COMPARI-~ $H , .. Choose 1roi!J this spedll collecllon of flmous makec sulto, at a price that makft dresslns for succeu, paYf Select fln&le Of double breasted styffl. luxUJlous wool and wool blends. The latett and traditional designs. All in a range of colots suited to the woman with success on her mlnd. Always save at least 40% off clepar lrnent store prices on sill coot,dinales and suits. + • ' ... WA"Mllt AVI HU#n#GTO# 811ACH ............... , ... _...., •XTTOALWWIW .. alAViOI ·- U#TAMIA ...... 11• _..,,. ... MMWALK .. , ....... .. r1111 eawrii•a .. ROISCM•ML..,_,_. •• """'*""* .,....,..llAU. ~ kVD. a W•ntlOIOZ I ROSS W9k:Omff "°"' ,.,aonel ch«k, VIM , ... ...re.rd. Of Am.ncen £.,,... C.tda . • OfongeCoMt DAILY PILOTIW-, Oct-11, lMI Al .. _ • DileSS Cl 1985 ROSS STORES INC Seven vying for title of Rose Queen • I FOil LESS Ftlll A •••• mal llAI"' CAU .... --- STOllE HOURS: Mon. • Frt. 10 AM · 9 PM S.t. 9 :30 AM · 8:30 PM, Sun. l1 AM -e PM ---- -- Ae Orange Co.t DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, October 18, 1985 Budget-balancing act goes from 'last hope' to 'fraud' WASHINGTON (AP) -Once agam, Congress is promising to balance the federal budget. Senior members of the House and Senate were sittins down today to draft a compromise version of a Senate-passed balanced-budget plan. President Reaaan hails the Senate pack.age as the "last, best hope to come toa,rips wt th the budget deficit." But House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill. D-Mass .. scorns 11 as ··politi- cal fraud." The gap between those two opinions reflects the difficulty of the task confronting the bargainers an the high-stakes poker game. the outcome o( which could well affect next year's congressional elections and define the way the government does business for years to come. trillion. The complex plan would set statu· tory ceilings on budget deficits - now running at about $200 billion a year-begJnning with $180 billion 1n the current fi scal year and decreasing by $36 billion a year until reaching zero in 1991. If Congress and the While House arc unable to agree on actions to meet the annual goals. the plan gives the president authority to impose auto- matic spending cuts to keep the red ink within the ceiling. Following the Senate action. the Democratic-controlled House over- whelmingly agreed to the conference and endorsed the balanced budget goal without embracing the specifics or the Senate plan. United States anned forces into the United States strategic nuclear forces, that it wall not make the Congress an unequal branch of the government and that it will not tum Amenca's struggling poor mto America's aban- doned poor." O'Neill said. Aides indjcated the speaker would make the same points in a Washing- ton speech today. Democratic bargainers arc ex- pected· to press for an accelerated schedule of deficit reductions, forcing dramatic action before the elections next year. "I want to make it clear and unmistakable that 1fwe arc to have an emergency deficit act, then as far as I am concerned" it should take effect like an emergency act -now, not later. This year, not next year." O'Neill said. Helicopter crash kills 15Marines The Republican-led Senate, talcjng an extraordinary shoncut on such a sweeping measure, adopted the budget plan last week as an amend- ment to a measure raising the na- tional debt limit to more than $2 O'Neill , speaking to a meeting of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange on Tuesday night, outlined his reser- vations about the plan: ··w e want to make sure that this bill b·' will not tum a future recession into a C1 .. arl ta ~ e depression, that it will not tum the JJ JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) -A team of divers hovenng overhead was able to "immediately" reach a helicopter that crashed into the ocean after taking off from a ship. but 15 Marines aboard died in one of the corps' worst aircraft accidents. of- ficials say. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~1 contribudon ORGANIZE writeoff stays GYOURG WASHINGTON (AP) -The ARA E House Ways and Means Committee, overriding objections from its chair- Four others were rescued Tuesday when their their twin-rotor, Marine CH-460 "Sea Knight" helicopter. with 19 people aboard. crashed and sank on takeoff from the USS Guadalcanal. Crest Cabinets has the ultimate system in man and President Reagan, is suck- narage stor.age. Establishing new standards for ing with a portion of the special tax The helicopter was part1c1pa1mg tn an exercise with the 26th Marine Amphibious Unit, he said. The CH-46 is the principal assault heh- copterofthc Manne Corps and also is used extensively by the Navy to carry cargo and passengers between ships ·and shore. , • write-off allowed for charitable con-appearance and durability for your garage. Our tributions by Americans who do not finish" are available in Medit• and Formica. itemize their deductions. The benefit would be fi nanced by scaling back higher standard deduc- tions the panel voted last week. Quallty al competltlwe prices • Oean diatinctm lines • Unit. are mount9d off Root foe. easy deaning • Self-latching, nonvi1ible hin9•1 • One day inatallatian CREST CABINETS Fr .. lathntlt•• Buy Foctory Direct Oronge Covnty ................... 714/131-2323 San Fernando Volley .............. 818/957-3413 W.LA. leoch Otiet, Bev. Hilh ........ 213/329~154 Valencio-Newholl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105/255-3249 Coming Sunday October 20. 1985 In the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT A Tribute to the Orange Coast's SUCCESSFUL WOMEN In Business T he committee, whose efforts to write a major Wt overhaul behind closed doors arc made harder by other pressing issues and a lack of public enthusiasm for a new Wt system, al so favors a SI-billion-a-year tax cut for the banking industry. "It's a very safe aircraft for us. It's real good. Its been tn the inventory since Vie tnam." said Gunnery Sgt. John Simmons said. adding he had no details of the crash. "It left the ship Oyan~ over 1he water and crashed," he said. announcing "Interiors" a 1peclal edltlon of the Dally Piiot. call 642-4321 to re1erve advertising s pace. deadline Oct. 24th. -··· ::==-!. I ··- . -. . . The Orange Coast s Successful Business Professionals of 198~ Thia la the Actual Size Ad For best reproduction. a clear black and white photo of any size can be used Your message will accom- pany the picture in the space. II you choose not to public a picture. fill the space with your message National Women in Business is Octo~r 20 through 2~. To honor area wo men in business, industry and commerce, the Dally Pilot will publish a special tribute in its Sunday. Oetober 20 ed1t1on Our Salute to Business and Professional Women is an exceptional o pportunity co introduce a new or longtime associate to the peo ple of the Orange Coast. or co honor awards, achievements or contributions Businesswomen Salute nooces will be two column by rwo inches each, with a photo you prov1d~ The cost of each notice 1s only SW'" Don't miss ~mg pan of this special adv ert1s1ng opportuntty Deadline for reserv1n8 spa <e 1s Monday October 14. Pleue mail or bring 1n you r pho_tO and a<. h1evem~nu to. THE ORANGE COAST D1ilyPilat ..... .., •.. Cotta Me1e, Ce. 92129 842-5878 Troubled company target of two blasts By Tbe AHoclaled Preu SALT LAKE CITY -()<>Tens ol deleCll VCS ~Cl'k111g 1c.~~s on twrn bomb explosions that killed two people 1n "a profl''isional-tyrx· hit IOl'used today on a troubled CFS Financial C'orp and 11:. m~arh \000 Ill~ l'<>tors na11onw1de. The sophisticated bo mbs. which citploded Tuc sda) )ume I 0 mi les and t~rce hours apart, instantly killed a former officer and thl' wait-of the company s founder and president. In a Sept 26 letter. Cl'S hnanc1al tolc.J m che~ts - mostly wealthy professi onals -the in vestment company wll\ $5 4 million in the red. Extra jolts requlred to klll murderer MICHIGAN CITY Ind -Five 1olt\ of elec1nc1t) instead of the prescnbed two were needed 1oda) 10 e!lccute Wilham E Va ndiver. convicted of stabbing his father-in-law to dt>ath, th en t urnng up h1!. body with a hacksaw. A prison doctor said Vandiver . .37. wa:. s11ll bn.·ath1ng after the first round of 2.300 volts and a second of 500 volts were applied at 12:01 a.m. Three more blasts of current were applied before he was prnnounccd dead 17 minute~ later. "I think 11 was outrageous." said auornl') Ht·rhcn Schap,, Vandi ver s tnal laW)er. who witnessed the exccu11on 80,000 strike Chrysler ln U.S., Canada HIGHLAND PARK, Mich. - Eighty thou'iand U.S. and Canadian autoworkers went on stnkc 1oday at Chry~lcr ( orp. plants and parts depots after the collapse oft he first labortalk'> 1naJecadt·'-"1th a healthy Chrysler. The autoworkers. many of whom once grantl'd 'ubs1an11al 4"age and benefit concessions dunng Chrysler's stuggle to avoid bankruptt). prepared fo r picket duty today against their recovered cmplo)a De Lorean seeks to keep property, klds SOMERVILLE, N.J. -The ex-wi fe of John Z De Lorean was not the "sophisticated talk-show hostess you sec 1oda>" "'ht'n she \tgned a prenupual agreement on their wedding day lett1ng the au1omaker keep most of their propeny, her lawyer says. Then a 22--.ea r-old model. C'nstana ferrare Thomopoulos now makes $275,000 a year on a Los ~ngcles TY show. She and De Lorean were 1n New Jersey Supenor C oun to dcn<lc on d1v1s1on of assets and custody of two children. Priest gets 20 years ln chlld sex scandal LAFAYETTE. La. -A defrocked C atholir pnest who scandalized his devout (aJUn parishioners wh en he confcc;sed 10 st·xually abusing more than three dozen children pleaded guilt y 10 a reducl'd charge Monday and :w-a!> sentenced to 20 ~ears 1n pnson. G1lbcn C1authc J r. 40, changed his onganal plea ofmnocent by reason of insanity as coun opcnl.'d lo r the tnal that would have required testimon} fro m the 11 altar bo~ s hl' was charged with molesting. $22.8 mllllon awarded to hotel fire vlctlms LAS VEGAS -Victims ofa 1981 fire that k1lll.'d eight people and injured 198 others at the Las Vegas Hilton agreed TUl'\da} 10 a $22.8 million settlement from more than 40 defendanl\. Allornc~ '>gathered before D1stnct Judge Paul Goldman to ink final paper'> guaran1ec1ng the payment. mmus attorney fees. to 109 plaintiffs. S1it o tha pcople. secunt\ gu ards at the resort. settled separately for a total of$50.000 Dining with • ContiMnl•I Fl•ir Complimentary Buffet! 4:30 P.M. TO 7:00 P.M . MON. THRU FRI. Appearing: Thu.rs. Oct. 17 thru Sat. Oct. 19 c.tll no• tor te'>tiolions 7 0.n,,.r \l\oW\ mt~ly 9 00 P M and 11 00 P M (714) 645-5448 1870 NEWPORT BLVD., CO'S!~ MESA AT 17TH STREET Sheri's If you like HONEY'S in Rancho Mirage, you 'll love SHERI'S. CAAEERWEAR • SPORTSWEAR • SWIMWEAR MON -SAT 10-6 642·5784 lf,10 W COAST HWY SUNDAYS CLOSED NEWPORT BEACH (Across From Tile B111t>01.1 Bay c1uo1 Christinas Bell Ornainent when you make a 95< deposit t•n vnur :w po rtr.ut package. { h1IJrMI .. 1 .. 11.111"' hl•lh\ ~riJ ~·''I"" J.•1Nr ,~lnJ ""I .. "'"Jm~nt n.~i.1., '"" 1<>All<·t 1~•rtrnn• '-,TILL ONLY 2·8x JOs • J·5x7s • 15 wallets $1295 IJ.'nrfl Vttll ltlllk(" I 4\• 1lf-1 • "'' I II V •ur ~Ii J• tt!r.111 r '' ~ ll(t', I •1111 '" f'I\ • I l'<•hU\ ['<~11111 h.-11 rn ,h,.1<> • ~ r "" ,f v""' IC. w.1llrr r-orrr ~II· '\ '"'' r I· n 1 • nt 111 h-11 ,. •ml", o nirk-tl' "uh .; rl'1f'r,1I 't' lrnl m~r v. hk Ii rr.< I-\ltT" ( I"'"''"'' , " l\11'~, 1,,.., I hn\fma< ·· , ... If-rt"•' rc-r .-.l1m1 ..... J I'-• kAll" ~. '"'"ll '"" 101 , • ., h •. ~1.11 .. n.;l •uhlf' 11n unv I'""'~" ""' 1 1!1 I ,..,1, .1111 "'"" fft.t 1 )n,. ••rr1.1rnr111 ~,.., 1.f\rtT1 ..... l 1··"~"~ AofVf'ttl~ rn• k~wr 1~-'''" "''" """ < '"<" .J~o·ni""J I"'' k.111<' 1 .. , "'""" r. "' llf""I' I"~ u~h" Wednesday, Octo be r 16 chru Sun<la y. October 20 Daily. Sunday 10 AM-2 PM .md ~ PM-7 PM 10 AM-4 PM Costa Mesa. Huntington Beach San Clemente· 1 larbor Bo ulevard Ma~nolta Street Camino de F.mella ~c:::m.-1:' THE PORTRAIT PLACE Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneed•y. October 18, 1915 A7 Court will rule on media, public at pretrial hearing 'Rawhide' Reagan heard plotting plane diversion WASH IN(, TC>"' ( \11) -It was over un· scrambled air-to-ground telephone hnes that "Rawhide" and "Fink)" dt)lus~d final US plans 10 intercept an f g\ p11.1n airpl;rne carT) 1n¥ the hijacker!> of a cruaS<' ship quickly makes the rounds amona the scanner UJCR. WASHINGTON (AP) -l'hc u· premc Coun said Tuesday at wall dectdc whether the public and news media have a nght to attend pretnal heannas. the decisive stage 1n nine out of 10 criminal prosecutions. The court thus agreed to settle a question left unanswered by two of m rulings since 1980 that ~ranted the press and public the nght to be present at cnminal tnals and at Jury sclectaon proceedings In the latest case. news agenc1e., challenged their exclusion from a 41- day pretnal heanng for a f'ahlom1a nurse, Roben Ru bane Diaz, who later was convicted of k1ll1ng 12 hospital patients. I~ other development'i Tuesda} the JUsllces: • Allowed Cahfornaa to 1mpoSt: d S2SO,OOO limit on the amount a victim of medical malpractice ma} recover for such non-economic los-;cs as pain and sufTenng. A C alifom1a man who suffered a heart attack wd the limit denied ham adequate com- pensation for a la te d1agnos1s that could shorten has hfc. • Agreed to decide whether the government may proh1b1t lnd1anc; from captunng and killing bald and Top court rejects porn film allegation WASHINGTON (A P)-A.n eflo11 by Long Beach prosecu tors to treat the Lakewood Theater as an adull theater -and thereb) me 11 tor zoning violataons -has failed 10 th~ Supreme Court. The justices, without commen1 Tuesday. let stand rulings that the movaehouse does not fit the legal definition in c~hfom1a of an adult theater. Ir) 1977 Long Beach adopted J non-cru~"adult entertainment" ~ning ordinance s1m1lar to a Detroit plan approved by the upreme Court an a 1976 ruling. Under the ordinance. the Lakewood Theater was prosecuted successfully for being located w1th1n SOO feet of a res1dentaal zone and within 1.000 of a public school. The theater's owner. V incenl Miranda. was placed on probauon for three years on the cond111on that the Lakewood not be operated as an adult theater. In 1981 . however. Calafom1a coum fashi oned a defin1t1on of "adult theater" tha t hinges on "preponderant use" Under the state coun rult ngs. al les' than half the movies ft\own are not pornographic the theater as not an adult theater. The Lakewood Theater ha~ Iv.ti antenor theaters. each with a c;creen ln 1981, pornographic movie'> were shown on each of the screen!> FndaH through Saturda} of each week. and non-pornographic. general relealK' films the four other da~s More recently. one "half·theater" is used ex.clusavel) for pornographic film s and one for general release films. According to cat~ pro'\ecutors. thl' half-theater showmg pom movie\ .. ,., packed W1th patrons" Y..htlc the other as "virtually empt~ " The city failed in state court 10 11' effort to prosecute Miranda for .. 101· ating the probation. ~parking the appeal acted on Tuc~da~ Philadelphia news strike now longest PHILADELPHIA (A P) -The l walkout against the Ph1ladelph1a Inquirer and the Daily News ha'\ reached Its 39th day. becoming the I longest newspaper stnke in the caty's history. Sidney Ginsberg. a mailers' union attorney, declined to say 1fthe unions and Philadeph1a Newspapers Inc were close to reaching an agreement However. Stuart Bykofsky. :i spokesman for the I ,200·mcmbcr Newspaper Guild, the largest of the nine unions, said there had been some progress. "Neither side's position 1s fro1cn tn concrete," he s~ud. Monday federal mediator Robert Kyler met separately with negotiators for Phtladelphta Newspapers and the Council of Newspaper Unions. The council represents all nine striking unions in economic bargaining. The longest previous newspaper strike an Philadelphia was a 38-<iay walkout apinst the Inquirer in 1958 RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. for The Rnt of Your Litt 1922 HARBOR Bl.VD . COSTA MCSA-~8-1 156 golden eagle) 1 he court wi ll review a ruling from South Dakota that allows federal officials to prosecute Indians for selling eagles and eagle parts but bars prosecution when the bards a1e IC11lcd on Indian reservations for u<,c 1n tnbal ceremonies. • Agreed to take a new look at state laws that set time It mats on when the mother of an 1llegH1mate child ma) sue the alleged fa th er for su ppon pa} men ts The court will review a Penns~lvanaa law that requires sup- port claims to be filed wtthtn six vear\ of the child's birth, or wnhm two years from the time the reputed father stops making voluntary payments • Heard arguments 10 a church- state case from Pennsylvania over whether public ht~ schools ma) permit student religious groups to meet during school hours. In the press access case. the River· side Press-Enterpnse contend!> the public and news agencies have a nght to attend pretnal hearings. whl·re nearly all criminal prosecuuon'> art concluded. The newspaper is challenging 1t'> exclusion from the pretrial proceed· 1ngs for Diaz. a coronary care nur-.c .H the Community Hospital of tht· Valleys m Pems, C..ahf. He later war; sentenced to die 10 the lulling of 12 elderl) pauen~ g.aven overdoses of the heart-regulattng drug lidocaane The pres1d1ng state judge con· ducted the 41-0ay preliminary hear· mg an private at the request of Duu's lawyer. In 1980. the Supreme Court ruled for the first tame that the pubhc and press have a constttutaonal ngh1 10 attend cnmanal tnals. The coon said judges may conduct tnals. or portions of them, an secret only as a last reson to ensure fairness and only after telling why such steps are necessary The ruling was extended to JUIJ selection tn cnmtnal cases in 1984 In 1979. the court said the press and publtc do not have a nght to attend pretnal proceedtn~ under the Sax.th .\ mendment. which guarantees a defendant a nght to an open tnal That ruling did not ansY.er Y.hether Fant Amendment guarantees ot free \peech and a free press do provide a basis for opening pretrial heanngs 10 news agencies and the pubhc The appeal 1s supported b) a number of news organizations. tn· cludtn8' other newspaper.-. tn Cali- fornia ThoM'. two people ~ttl·r known as President Reagan and Dt'fen,~· \ecrctar> ( aspar W Weinberger, respectaH·I~ wt'rt' ll\erheard by an amateur radio operator using a tcchnol<>jy available to anyont' w11l1ng to spend$ '50 on a radio scanner Scannen are routtnel~ monitored by peopk interested tn the actt\ 1t1c~ ut pohce and fire department'> r he tup uf thl' lane '>Gin ners can be programmed to search the J 1N<1\ C'\ for .\ar Force One or an) other radio '>•gndl The LOmmander-in-<juef and his defense sec· retaf). eac:h on separate plane'>. u\Cd an unscrambled radio-telephone link to d1~uss plan!> to intercept the plane carrying lour Paltst1n1an!> who htJaCked the Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro Whtte House spokesman Larr) Speakes ..aid 1 uesda> In fact . ~peake•;' confirmation was relayed to Washington on a similar open radw connection. from .\1r Force One. b) reponcr' tra\eltng with the president to Boise. Idaho Pres1den11al air-to-ground phone lalls usuall) are made on Air Force rad1u frcqucnue~ to a sw11ch1ng center at the White House 1A.htre the\ are connected to the regular public telephone net "ork White House repone~. llkl' their police beat counterparts, often use pod.et \canner!. to keep tab<. on the president and once a lrequcnq 1s dtSCO\ ered 11 PTe-sadent Rcapn usei the phone on hi1 plane to confer with asdcs. to call members of C'onpns or simply to chat w11h fnends. ~n. Patnck J Leahy, D-Vt., wd Reqan has called him from Aar Force One and a few times he has been warned at 1he start of the ooovenauon that the telephone ltne as not secure. Leahy sa1d thal m thoee cases he has been asked to refer to the prC1idcn1 as "Rawhide." Joumahst!i who cover Wembe~r say the Secret Service and others refer to the defense secretary as "Ftnle)" President Nixon was overheard t.alklnJ W1th his Chief of Staff Alexander M. Haag. Jr. at the time oflhe Yorn Kippur War in the Middle East Columnist Jack Anderson reported an overheard 1982 conversation between Haag. then secretary of state. and Reagan dunng the Falklands War. Mon1tonng radio oonvers.auons 1s legal. DsvulJ· 1ng them 1~ not A person who reveals a pn\'ate radio con .. ersauon could face up to ~ in jail and a SI 0.000 fine "The) have to realize that they may be intercepted." said Bob Hanson. ex.ecuuve director of the Scanner A~soc1at1on of North Amenca. Speakes said Reagan and Weinberger kne" they were talking on an open. unsccure channel and added that It l.lfOuld be hypothetical 10 say whether the d1scuss1on could have threatened the 1ntegnty of the 1 n terceptJOn ~ WE.,VE TAKEN HOME EQUITY WAN RATES IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION. LAST CHANCE FOR $200 REBATE. If vou applv for .1 home l'q111tv k),')n .tt Rani. of America before l k:tc1lx'r \1. vou'rc ... ull clt~1hlc for a $2(Xl rchatc ~o now\ the t1"1l' to c11l -or [>lop in <ll .rnv B.:1nk l lf Amer1c.1 hr:mch .rnd rnkl· .tJv.ltH.1,1.w of our low rntc ... -.unday Mar(fi' 1 1981 ) --m:• ' 'AD=~ 17.5% ..iesday. March@ Ad~ble 12 501_ Rate • /() huf9day. Maf~ l~ ) < Vctnab4e 6-mo 120% Rate • Q Fnday March " tllt J ih \ ., .• Jt p '' itl • I' IJ' IO.Z5% 10.58% llHl'H"-1 I.II\. . 1nnu 1I ptru nt.1\!1 rtll l \II'• flt 1 111' '11b 11\ t 1• '' h,•'h l y APPLY BY PHO E. 1. JI! 1-''1()()..·nl , , , \\t1n,l.l\·Th11r'-1..!.n "1 n 'I'm frid,n "Im "'I'm \.,1\'l' u' .11..111 .It l1U1 tt ill lrt't' n\lmlwr .rnd 'l'l hP'' l.,.,, tt ,, en .1rrlv \\l' l .rn .lo!'\l \11u .1 prd1mm.1n 1.n.·d1t dn1,11m thl nr\t bu ... rnc ..... d.1, w11h n11 l.'nmpkx p.lfX't wnrl-\dd tt .111 ur .in.J 1t '\.·''' t11 'l't' '' h' '''l'0rt• t .1I1 t11rm.1' k.hlm~ kndn BAN~ ON THE LEADfR' m Bank of America rlHH•W .. i...t.,.. •n•-•W"• ••• \•l''f'I ,, ...... I "'"'"l\.•ar1alo\, , ... ~ .. I\ ...... ,.,, <•P •nJ "'"""""'" ('1oJ~I < l\•Rlt" UUt • }v kllln !• ""°'!. --- I• • • Nicaragua tightens, blames U .s. IJdlieAHtdalMPna MANAOUA -The leftist 1overnment suspended the riabt to free exPl"Cllion, public auembly, strikes. and the pri~ of the home becau.e of wbat it called "brutal aaareuion ' by the United States and the aovernmcnt's opponents. President Daniel Ortep read a decree susoendi~ the rilhts Tuetday ~t over national ~o a.nd television. "The brutal aarewon by North Am.enca and its internal allict bas created an extraordinary situation," said Onep, who also cited the "terrorist potitie1 of the United Statct." DautedafJ61Jteruld a..al.l art SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -Archbishop Arturo Rivera y Damas bas received assurances that President Jose Napoleon Duane's dauabter bas not been harmed by the auerrillas who kidnapped her, accordina to a church spokesman. Tbe Roman Catholic archbishop traveled over the weekend to the northern province of Chalatenanao and althouah be did not see the president's dau•hter be "received auarantces that both women are safe;' Monli&nor Grqorio Rosa Chavez told reponcrs late Monday. Ines Guadalupe Duane . J?u~n, JS, the president's oldest dauahter, and Ana Cec1ha Villeda, 23, a friend. were kidnapped Sept. 10 outside a private univenity here where they attended classes. • Dolby• B NoiM Reduction • End-of· Tape Auto-Stop Personal portable stereo is now 50% off! Metal/Cr01-normal tape bias switch. #14-1022 'TM Dolby Laboratories L'cenaing Corp Batteries, headph<>net extra .. Tower Speaker System Optimus~ T-120 by Realistic 89!it~~ 1' Genuine Hand-Oiied • Walnut Veneer Save $180 on a pair! Space.- saving design. 10" woofer. 5" midrange, 1" tweeter. 351/2" high. #40-2047 S. A frica pollce klll tlJree JOHANNESBURG -Police opened fire with shotauns from the back of a uuck in a mixed-race area near Cape Town, killina three youths and woundina three others who were in a stone-throwina crowd, officials and witnesses said. "It was like a war out here," said a witness who spoke Tuesday on condition be not be. identified. "The firina kept up. Hornet were pep~red with shotaun bluts." Polic.c said three J>COple were killed and three were wounded by the police fire in Athlone, a mixed-race area east of Cape Town. A spokesman for the national police department in Pretona said there had been stone- tbrowing in the neiahborhood throughout the day. Sen. La.zalt warn• Marca. MANILA -Sen. Paul Laxalt met with President Ferdinand E. Marcos today to discuss American concern over a communist rebel threat to the 1overrunent. A presidential spokesman said Marcos told Laxalt the Philippine government cannot be ovenhrown by the rebels. Laxalt, R-Fllevada, is on a mission for Presid~nt Reapn. Philippine ~residential spokesman Adnan Cristobal said Laxalt d1d not deliver a "blunt message of warning" from Reaaan as re{><?ned by U.S. newspapers prior to Laxalt's meeting wtth Marcos. But Cnstobal acknowledacd he did not have details of exactly what Laxalt told Marcos. ~=-~·[I] CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) Come in Today for Big Savings! 13" Color TV/Monitor By Radio~.· h~c; k Save '150 ~ 24995 Reg. 399.95 Low Aa 120 Pet' Month On CttlLlne • Now 38% offl Features wireless remote, comb filter for increased picture detail, 105- channel cable-ready tuner. #16-231 Diagonally meuured. 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Dolby 8-C NA. #14-631 Auto/Home* 6-Band Scanner PR0-48 by Realistic Low Aa 120 Pet' Month on CltlUne • Hear the action of four VHF and two UHF bands! #20-143 Cryat111 extra ·Mobile uH may be un- lawful or require a permit C11eck with luttiofltiet. ·------·----· Klinghoffer body identified, will be flown to Italy Leon K.lt.nchoffer Government of Italy split over h ijack ROME (AP) -Defense Minister Giovanni Spadolini's Republican Pany decided today to withdraw from the government in disagree- ment over Prem ier Bettino Craxi's handling of the Achille Lauro hijack-ing, a pany spokesman said. Withdrawal of the Republicans appeared certain to lead to the fall of the 26-month-old coalition of five parties. The announcement by pany spokesman Martino Guido came after Spadolini and Craxi conferred for more than two hours in an attempt to prevent collapse of the govern- ment. Spadolini has criticized the $Overn- ment's handling of the hijacking and bas refused to endorse a government statement intended to justify the release of Palestinian guerrilla feader Mohammed Abbas. Victim reportedly s h ot twice before being tossed in sea DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -The body of an elderly man that washed ashore near the Syrian pon ofTartus is that of Leon Klinghoffer, the American passenger who dieq aboard the hijacked Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro last week, the U.S. Embassy said today. . The body was put aboard a special Alitalia flight for Rome, where U.S. officials and Italian authorities are to conduct an autopsy to determine how Klin&hoffer died. "We have confirmed that the body is that of Leon Klinghoffer," embassy spokesman John ~urgess told re- poncrs. "There apparently were two gun- shot wounds in the corpse," Burgess said, but he did not specify where the bullet wounds were. The body arrived at the airport in a wooden coffin draped in the U.S. flag. It was escorted by U.S. Ambassador William Eagleton and Syrian military police. Reponers and photographers were not allowed near the plane. Soon after the plane took off at 1: 3 5 p.m. (3:35 a.m. PDT), a ~~stern diplomat, who spoke on cond1tton he was not named, said Klinghoffer had been shot once in the back of the head and once in the back. The four Palestinians who hijacked the Achille Lauro last week have been charged by Italian officials with murdering the partially paralyzed 69- year-old man from New York, but judicial sources have quoted them as denyina the charae. . Buraess stressed that "there ~tdl lw beel'l no autOf?IY to determ1.ne the cause of death, • notina that KJ1ngbof- fer could have died before be was shot. . F The Palestine Llberatlon . ront, to which the hijacken cl11med to belona, has said Klinahoffer, who was confined to a wbeelcliair, could have died of a heart at tac~. . Syrian patholOJ!Sts, a medical examiner retained by the. cmt?a~Y and an FBI aaent who amved m in Damascus Tuesday ni&bt identified the body ''based on dental X-rays, fiOJCrpnnts and physical charac- tenstics:· Burgess said. The body wu brouaht to Damu- cus from Tanus Tuesday and West· cm diplomatic sources and a phy.s- ician said it appeared to have been in the sea for at least a week. In other developments Tu~y:. -President Reagan s~na in Boise Idaho said the Uruted States had ~othing' to apologize: fo~ i~ its interception of the. EgyptJan ~~tlincr canying the terronsts who htJIC~ed the Italian cruise ship. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had ~e­ mandcd an apology to the Egypuan people. -Investigators in Genoa. Italy, issued arrest warrants for two more Palestinians, bringing to seven the number of people charged in the Oct. 7 hijacking. -Mohammed Abbas, the Palesti- nian guerrilla leader whom the Unit- ed States says mastennindcd the hijackinJ, but who was released by Italy, said in an intervi~w broad~st io Italy that he had nothing to do wtth the hijacking. Americans win chemistry Nobel STOCKHOLM (AP) -Amencan discovery in 1980 of the "quantized inorganic and organic chemistry - researchers Herbert A. Hauptman Hall effect," which changed thinking not least within the chemistry of and Jerome Karle won the 1985 on how electrical conductivity would natural products." Nobel Prize for chemistry today for behave under varying magnetic in-The two Americans art not their research in crystal structures. fluences and is said to be important to chemists themselves, but physicists. Klaus von Litzing of West Germany the semiconductor industry. " "Their work is not within won the 1985 Nobel Prize for physics The Royal Swedish Academy of chemistry but is important for for a discovery expected to advance Sciences has $iven the chemistry chemistry," Professor lngvar Lind- the semiconductor industry. prize to Amcncans for three con-qvist, a member of the Nobel Hauptman, 68, is a professor at the sccutive years. chemistry comminee, told reporters Medical Foundation of Buffalo, N. Y., Nobel officials said the achieve-after the announc.cment. He said the and Karle, 67, is a profe ssor at the ments of the two Americans had method helps chemists determine the U .S. Naval Research Laboratory in allowed development of "practical exact structure of molecules. _Washington, Nobel officials said. instruments for determining the The Nobel announc.cmcnt said Von Klitzing. 42, was cited for his structure of molecules within both their work has made it possible to ,!--------------------------. study chemical reactions at the Now SerYiog Fresh L ocal Lob s ter 7 Nighu A Week ~ ,,. Complete dinner including T " soup or salad and choice ~~· of potato or rice pilaf I_•~~-. _ _ _ ~ '17.95 whole lobster ' ~ '12.95halflob111u · ON THE PENINSULA 801 E. Balboa BA LBOA 673-7726 0 molecular level and sec bow molecules change their structure under various conditions, the an- nouncement said. Nobel officials said the Americans' work has been in- strumental in the development of hundreds of drugs. Crystal structure is determined by generating a three-dimensional pic- ture of the positions of the atoms, the announcement of the award said. The picture maps tile electron density within the crystal. X-rays arc used to generate the picture and scientists need to know how much the rays' waves arc displaced in relation to each other, the award said. 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Although illeaal, oyako WOJU IS considered an nonorable way to du~. Japan's Su1c1de Prevenuon As.- soetation rcpons about 300 caSC'S of oyako shinju a /ear Regardless o how sympat.heucally oya.ko shiDJU 1s regarded in Japan. there 1s "no such thing as a cultural defense m the United Stat~." deputy d1stnct attorney Lauren Weis said ltsuroku K.Jmura remains an seclusion after selhng his share of the restaurant ud mov1na 001 of the apartment. He repoftedly VlSlLI Fumiko daily, and they talk about start1na over. The sympath)' &be bu ,enentcd dJSma)'1 the dlicf'bonricidc detoc'bve. Bruises and -. JCratcb oo Kazu taka · s arm indlcate that the ltn.lc boy fought h1s mother u she walked him into the sea. Cooper said. But Mn. Kimura's poems evoke the ocean's sere:ruty, not its v1oleocc. She equates 1t Wlth bfc, not death. .. The sea wdl hold me llgbt, .. she wntC$, ··and I\ helps me forget m y sorrow." S U R G E 0 N G E N E RA L' S WAR N I N G : S m o king Causes Lung Cancer. Heart Disease. Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy . • Kings. 17 mq 1ar" 1.2 m:. n1co•,re ~ent~.o. '8 rrr, •a·' 2 'Tl~ 'l•CCl ne l1ghlS \J 11~. ·ta( 0 .5 mQ '1 t-~\ ~P. ;d'i>"E ~' qc -p•"oG ... ~>. .. •• - I II 25 great tasting cigarettes for the price of 20! I II 250 great tasting cigarettes for the price of 200! NEW! Richland 25'5 Available in Regular, Menthol & Lights 8Med on rNlnUfectUNf'I 8U99"1ed retMt pnce P~tne opttoMI to retaflen Not avllltable tn .. 1 are•• .. ----------------------------------------------------~--------~~~~~~~~~~~-~--~- ·'Justice WJJ/lam Brennan delJvered a thinly veiled attack on the administration that Is also a self-exposing document of his own ca val/er attitude toward the Constitution. ·' Judge shouldn 't have tossed out shooting case Bernhard Goetz became a household name after he pulled a gun on four alleged muggers in a New York Ci ty subway Dec. 22, 1984, and started blasting. J:ie.was seen as a man who stood up for the rights of the VIcUm , a man who would no longer allow himself to be cowed by fear of roving street criminals, a man who had had his fill of hiding behind locked and bolted and barred doors. Goetz became a symbol for America's desire to fight back. He put thugs in their place and, for that, he became a folk hero. • qoetz's name was invoked in Orapge County Supenor Court Monday when Judge Luis Cardenas compared a man charged in a Huntington Beach shooting with the infamous Subway Vigilante. A strong proponent of the right to defend one's self, Judge Cardenas reduced charges against the defendant and gave the District Attorney's Office a tongue-lashing for arresting him in the first place. "'JOO Ml.'{ ~ &mt-6, lf ~ ~~ 10 et o~ A ~~ ()E.T ~ 1<391." We applaud any judge who can tell the difference between a victim and an assailant. As simple a task as it may seem, there are too many judges who can't do it. In cases where the rights of the victim and the rights of the accused ar~ in conflict, where it is clear that the ri~ts of only o~e will be protected fully , the accused prevail with ~ conststency that has nothing to do with guilt or innocence. Constitution isn't private reserve of Supreme Court But, while we stand foursquare behind Judge C~denas philosophicallx. we are troubled by aspects of this case that seem less hke self defense and more like what the District Attorney's Office and the Huntington Beach Police Department thought the case added up to -assault with a deadly weapon. Whil.e Goetz wa~ confyont~d with what he thought was a hfe-threatenmg s1tuatJon, the man in th e ~u.nti~gton Beach case ~as.never in jeopardy. He was nding rn a car that was hit with two bncks, one of which shattered the rear window. Although he thought the damage h~d.been done by a shotgun blast, he told police. he was u,nmJured and faced no further apparent harm. Whtie Goetz was armed and reacted to his situation the man in Huntington Beach went home borrowed ~ gun from a friend and returned to the seen~ to hunt for his assailants, according to testimony. He found the tw o young men who threw the bricks, he ordered them to lie on the ground and, when one ran, be shot them both. . The difference between this case and the Goetz case seems clear. Goetz felt he was in jeopardy and defended himself The other ~an was ~nder~ndably angry and act~d on ~hat emotton, despite the opportunity to get pohce assistance. Certainly, people should have the right to defend themsel~es. Otherwise, only criminals will have rights. ~u.t soc~ety cannot protect the legitimate rights of citizens if people are allowed to take the law into thei r own hands. We think Judge Cardenas' decision in this case actually dilutes the viability of the principle of self defense by applying it to a case in which it seems unsupported. Opinions expressed 1n this spitce are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626 Phone 642-6086. . Wrong to assume we can't decipher framers' intent WASH INGTON -The Reagan administration's campaign to re- populate the federal Judiciary with strict constructionists has smoked out one of the Supreme Court's leading liberals. In a speech at Georgetown Univer- sity. Justice William Brennan de· livered a thinl y veiled attack on the administration that 1s also a self- expos1ng document of his own cavalier attitude toward the Constitu- tion. Justice Brennan pooh-poohs ap- peals to "the intentions of the framers "Some pans of the Constitu· uon are "anachronistic.'' he says. and the saving virtue of the Constitution 1s its "adaptability." He seems almost to prefer the loopholes to the actual text Mr. Brennan turns the tables on those who appeal to the original meaning of the words he is charged with interpreting by saying. 10 effect, "Who knows what they meant 1n those days"" Shade!> of Franlc.hn Roosevelt's contemptuous d1sm1ssal of the Constitution as a "horse-and- buggy" document. The appeal to the framers, Mr. Brennan goes on, is "little more than arrogance cloaked as humility. It 1s arrogant to contend that from our vantage we can accurately gauge the intent of the framers on apphcat1ons ofpnnc1ple to specific. contemporary questions. Apan from the problem- atic nature of the sources. our distance of two centunes cannot but work as a pnsm refracting all we percel\e." So there YOU have 1t. In this bold coun1crattack. Mr. Brennan aban- JOSEPH SOBRAN dons any pretense of fidelity to the meaning of the words in the minds of those who wrote them -and of those who. understanding them. ratified them. And since we don't know what they meant. he reasons. we can make them mean whatever we choose. So much for the idea that this is a 1 government oflaws, not men. To be sure. Mr. Brennan adopts a fi~ leaf of humility himself. He disclaims interpretation according to "personal moral predilections." Evidently he thinks he 1s speaki ng from some supreme "vantage" that is immune to both the claims of objecuve meaning and the subJect1 v1· tY of the mere ideologue. ·The fact is that Mr. Brennan has voted consistently in favor of the liberal agenda throughout his career on the bench - on the quesllons of racial segregation. obscenit) laws. reappon10nment. police procedures and abonion. 10 name a few If he were reall) free of the "personal moral predilections" he deplores. one might expect a less stnct correlation between his poltt1cal philosophy and his "interpretallon." But 1t 1s hard to recall a single case. in which he hal> found the leg.1slation motivated by hberah~m to be unconstitutional. Where the Const1tut10n and liberal- ism conflict. he has presumably f o und the C onstitution "anachron1st1L," which 1s ce rtainly easier than amending 1t. Now nobody proposes to appeal to the rntent1ons of the framers on, !><ly, the specific question of abortion. Abortion foes don't ask what Jame'> Madison and his contemporaries thought of abortion. though they can be assumed to have regarded it as barbarous. The real question is what they intended the role of the judiciary to be. And the answer is that they specifi- cally intended it to be "the least dangerous" branch. because. as they explained. it was to have no power of its own. They certainly never meant the Supreme Court to have the power of striking down the laws of all the states at once merely because those laws offended its own social agenda. This was hardly "anachronistic." It was a farsigh ted awareness of how men abuse power. The framers in- tended the coun Lo be one of many checks against centralizing power. itself subject to checks and balances. But today the court has become an aggressive agent of centralizing power. It is vital to notice that its most aggressive actions have been directed against st.ate legislation - and state legislatures. unlike Con- gress, have no means of defending themselves against an arrogant feder- al judiciary. The intention of the framers-and of the Amencan people who ordained and established the Constitution of the Unned St.ates -1s as clear as it can be. given the muddying work of Mr. Brennan's generation of liberals. They wanted limited and representa- tive self-government, free not onl y from the tyranny of the "temporary political majorities" Mr. Brennan rightly warns against. but also from the tyranny of the son of ideological faction he represents. It is time we realized that the Constituuon is not the private re· serve of the Supreme Court. It belongs to us. the people, the gener- ations of Americans who don't find the intentions of our forefathers an inpenetrable enigma. Josepb Sobran Is a syndicated columal1t. Tragedy in Mexico began -1ZIJ1Mi@illiQfoilHM!lfoi wltli u.s., not the quake N. Korean ship used to assist To the Editor. conversation between the pre'i1dent t • t 1 • t • "Mexico·~ tragt l quak~" In of Mexico and t'WO of his l'ahincl er·ror1s exp 01 s 1n F.ar Ea t res~nse to Jack Anderson's column. minister'>. talking about getting nd of .L 1 S Daily Pilot Sept. 30. the northern states b) having tht•m The tragedy in Mexico did not begrn wi th the ea11hquake This calamity onl) tnggere<l what all of us were expecting: a complete disaster. It 1s true. as you sa y. that the government has been corrupt, but - at the same tr me -the L:nrted State' has been taking advantage of Mex· 1co's situation for the last 100 years. One example· " The Bracero Pro- gram" -a contract signed by the United State~ and Me,uco. The U S. farmers treated the Mexican workers worse than pigs and had them working like beasts in sub-human conditions They starved them. killed them and buned them at the same farms 1n remote places. The fanners abused them in such a way and killed so many that the Meiocan governmt>nl had to call the attention of the lJ S government to it. Now 1f they cross the border. they are sent back in chains. These braceros helped the economy of the l .<;. during SO years. doing what whites. blacks. Jndians or Asians wou Id not do. Ahout Anderson's assertion that I ~ 1ntell1gcnce intercepted a pn v:u<' ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat f\J~ •'"'~ lJoy 01 11 .. yMt •I J.)() WM! 114~ "ii Lul\fl U...... "1"1t.,. ()II~· 10 kn t"lt r ''"' ,.....,. • " m?e JOin the United States. 1t 1c; - preposterous and no one believe<; II U .s. intelligen-ce closely watching ship r ' The bnlhant idea of the DIA to seal ----- off the border with anny divisions is. that visited Japan twice last summer JACK as I say. " brilliant." What about all ~ the states next to the border on this WASH INGTON -While the One North Korean commando was ll ....,, side of the Rio Grande., Are they also world wa s watching the st range saga killed and two others were captured. A11DERSOll ~ 1 going to close them: Yes. close the of the Italian cruise ship pirated by A.tleastoneofthe.mgave the Burmese n n border and let Mexico -doomed by Palestinian terrorists last week. U.S a detailed confession. itself (as there is noth ing else to take intelligence was keeping close watch The assassination squad had been out)-let it pensh. on another sh ip that has been linked brought to Burma on the Ton~ Gon 0nly this will drag down th(• to terronsm. Ae Guk Ho. A secret U.S. military I Inned Stares and the whole world. 11 Twent~·-four hours after Me"ico·s The ship 1s the Tong Gon Ac Guk mte 1gence repon said the ship "was J " Ho a so t h h. tasked to ... put the terrorists and the economy falls down. th•· whole world . me ime mere ant s ip ' db N h K h. h equipment ashore and to exfiltrate will go down with it. owne Y on orea, w 1c uses at t · · the terrorists to North Korea on What "or 15 the ·nit···' ''tates o support terronst operations 1n the 1 . f • 1 ~u • ., F Ea A d' · com p etron o the mission." helping C'c.ntral America from the ar st ccor mg to our 10-h d f h f tclhgence sources, 1t is the only The report added that "the capture or e o t e communists I they thmk merchant ship in the world that has of th e North Korean terrorists to abandon Mexico'> Russ1a'll be there to help Mexico been identified as an engine of st.ate-aborted the merchant ship's exfiltra- sponsored terrorism. The fact that it t1on mission and the ship returned to As you say· "It 1'-fiv(' minutes to masquerades as a freighter only adds North Korea in November 1983." midnight in Mcioco" The Unites to the ship's si nister reput.at1'on. l "ba II · ed · States have five minutes to act t s1ca Y rem.IYJ.1 macttve" 1n accordingly. otherwise Russia will Early this past summer, the Tong or near its home port of Nampo on have the .. h1g ench ilada" ~rvcd on a Gon Ac Guk Ho visited Japan, much the west coast of the peninsula "for salver tra ) 11 is not the minute hand to the ,alarm of Defense lntelli,ence long periods of time." During that moving. it I'> the" hand of the United Agenq personnel in Tokyo. It drop-interlude. the ship was involved in I\ ped anchor in Japan a second time on "limited People's Republic of China tatc'i movrng. hut not remorselessly 1\ug 14, remaining there three day<1. trade" across the Yellow Sea. the J()'ff PHI NL ~l<iNES KI NGSTON These two v1s1ts led military of. rcpon stated. Nrwpor1 Beach fic1als in Hawa11 to provide us Wlth The Tong Gon Ac Guk Ho cx- fr8ftllc Zlfll f.0110< TomT-" Mlfte(llnO (dltn< OOft fenliey C•tv ra"11t CrMI Sheff Sl>O<I• £01111• deta1ls of the terronst ship's known tended its traveb this year with the act1v1t1es in the last couple of years. two trips to Japao. What partkularly Herc'\ what they told us: worried US. 1ntclliscncc was that the TheTongGonAeGukHomade1ts crew manifest. obtained by U.S. first blips on intclliacncc monitors 1n agents. made 1t clear that "much of 1983. when North Korean com man· the crew of approluma~ly 31 persons dos planted a bomb at the "Martyrs' -includ1n~ most of the key offietr~ Mausoleum" 1rf'"'Ranf(mr'I. B'Urrtwc · ".:..:..· t$ · ldttft1cal to the crew which The bomb was detonated by rnd10 too part1c1pated m the terrorist support early to kill v1~1t1ng <;outh Korean voyaae in late 198 3." the secret report President C hun Doo Hwan. but 17 sui ted member<. of thC' Smith Korean dcl-<iumm1ng Ul' 1hc evidence on the cgat1on and lout f.Jurmc'><' were k1lle<l 1 ong <ion Ae < iuk Ho. the report rn thr hla~t made the\C point" and DALE VAN ATTA •The ship has a "previous history of involvement in covert transport of terrorist-related personnel and arms." •It has a "history of involvement in N(!f!h ~orcan agent and smuggling act.1V1t1cs in J~pan and possibly other Asian countncs." •It has been "equipped with soph- isticated communications devices heavy machine guns. small firearms: grenades, a la"er than normal crew and special 'training' facilities." •The ship has undergone "per- iodic subordination" to the Korean Communist Party for special oper· ations "while disguised as a trade ship." MI N I -EDITOR IA L : The proposed censorship of rock·'n ··roll lyrics is worrisome enough to lovers of the First Amendment. but there hu bttn a diliturbing new develop. ment. We've learned that the record industry was considering a blacklist of performers who didn't clean up their act.s . .We fully sympathize w1th the c.ampaign to clean up the music our children listen to. Sugest1ve lyrics arc indeed a problem -but one thst parents, no' aovemment. should \Olve. Jact AIHl~nOll ud Dalt Vn Ar&a ·~ lyH#ufMI ~·-"'···· JOSltPB 80Bll.Alf colnmnlat ANN WELLS It's your day so what now? What would you do if you had 24 hours that were all yours? And when I say "all yours," I mean just that. When you awaken in the morning your fairy godmother is at the foot of the bed. She smiles. waves her sparkling wand and says. "This is your day ... She goes into detail. Your place of employment, for some mysterious reason, has closed down for the day. You are completely caught up on correspondence to relatives, friends and business connections: Records are brought up to date, and there arc no checks to write. No family members have to be taken to music lessons, the orthodon- tist or the vet. Dido 't your fairy godmother tell you that during this 24·hour period all family responsibilities would be handled by competent personnel on her staff? There are no pickups at the dry cleaners, no books to be taken back to the library and nothing to be straight- ened out wi th the computer at the bank. Your car doesn't need washing. or gas or a tune-up. There is nothing to pick up at the market -remember, it's your day: you may decide to go out for dinner. It's hard to believe, but there arc no drawers -kitchen, closet or desk, to be straightened out. No housework of any kind to do. or laundry or yard work. There are no phone calls that absolutely have to be made, or trips to the post office or meetings to attend. Now that your fairy godmother has convinced you and disappeared in a cloud of fairy dust, what arc you going to do with this perfect day when you get up -if you get up? Perf cct is just a word, and there arc a couple of catches even in this set-up. Fi rst, you must make decisions. Do you tum over and $0 back to sleep, or get up and start doing all those things you've been wanting to do for so long? How about heading for the golf course? The tennis courts, the beach? The mall -it's OK to shop if you're doing it for fun and not because you need something for Friday night, or because your husband is out of underwear. Do you curl up with a $ood book - or~ trashy ~n~? Work a Jigsaw puzzle or play solitaire with a clear cons- cience because you're not worrying about wasting time? Maybe you'd rather spend the day out on the patio admiring the garden -remember. everything in it has been weeded, fed and watered so all you have to do is sit and look at it. Of course, if gardening is what brings you joy. feel free to get out there and poke around in at. Perhaps you'd spend the day on one of your long-ncg)ectcd hobbies: Painting. photograpfiy, bird watch- ing. If you have no imagination at all, you m1ght JUSt collapse in front of the TV for.the duration. Don't .feel guilty about 1t -remember, this is your day, You could visi t friends, go to museums, X-rated movies. You could .spe!ld the day walking. biking. pumping iron. How about pigging out -break.fast, lunch and dinner in your three favorite restaurants? Now you've come to the end of "your day." Not quite. There's an<flher catch: Fairy godmothers and dentists have a pact. No matter what she promised, before you go to bed you must floss. Colum11l1t Ann WeUa Jives lD La(11oa Nl111el. L.M. Bovo Life at home can be lonely Arc you e~e~ lonely? The query is mer~ly prchmmary to a report of findin8-' on the subJcct by the surveytaken. To their q_uestions. 2, 700 people responded. Of thete, more people wbo live with their parents complained they wen: lonely than did people who actually live alone. It's not only rude and crude to cuu out an umpire in Massachusetts - it's downriaht illepl. Aristotle stuttered. You've seen that humof'OUI TV commercial wherein a woman on a spit in 1 tannin• parlor is pul on the fast cycle. She spms like a top. It ti not merely th~ fipncnt of th11 producer. Such a aptt -for tannint bu.mans evenly on all sida -earriet U.S. Patent No. 2,667,169. In old EnaJand, beer was also 1 sort of brulcfls1 food L.M. a.,1 I• • •f9t/lkar.4 cel•m•UL Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, October 18, 1185 All Health fair Saturday in Irvine HUMAN A BOI PITAL BUNT-inau>n Beach, boy Valley, boy INOTON aE.ACB .,....., 17 Chan and Curtis Stnckland, Hunt· S.,C..W 1t ~~~Robert Smith. Huntinaton 1nston Beach, boy I J PBD. INEU>&JlMAN Of .. ..., ....... the Vwuna Nwwea Auoc:iaW>a of <>ra.s Cowlty. At 10 Lm., Brad Winther of~ Pharmacy will dcmonatrate wtJedrhair, cane Md walker use. At 11 Lm., Orum C.OU.Uty ~ Bob Bratcher and Wendy 1-forwood will petform aafety skn.1 with the ~Ocriacton," an lrvi.De Senior Center drama aroup. Cathie and Peter Carey, Huntinaton lirl Paula and Edward Biller, Fount.am Beach, airl Hona' ihi Tran and Chi Cona Valley, boy mber U Nau=. Cott.a Meu., boy Cheryl and Daniel Dix, lrvine, boy Denise and Thornton, Hunt-Hae onaand Kitae Yim, Irvine, boy Sep&ember U iqton Beach, Ill' Lo and Marco Hernandez, Dathtyn and Bruce Gardner, Hunt- Sepcember H Cotta Meu., boy inston Beach, airl Mr. and Mn. Miles Kent Francia, s.,teaaber 11 Ana Montoya and Richard Green, Huntinaton Beach, boy Teri and James Horick. Huntinaton Huntinaton Beach, boy September 11 Beach, boy S.,&ember U Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Scott Leahey, Sandi and Mike Mcintee, Hunt-Lori and Richard Lujan. Huntington Huntinaton Beach, boy inaton Beach, boy Beach, boy September II September 11 Traci Holler and Dave Robichaud, Mr. and Mn. Peter Brusati, Hunt-CatherineandEdwardJarema, Hunt-Huntinaton Beacb,Jirl ington Beach, &irl inaton Beach, pl Ann and Michael Geisel, Santa Ana September U Debra and Steven Allbee, Huot-Hciahts, girl Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Westphal, inat<>n Beach. boy September U Huntington Beach, boy September H Jo and John Doucette, Huntinaton Free Ou abou and health tnformatioo for older adults will be provtded at the aeventh annual Kt.alth Fa.arand Au01nic, tebeduled for Oct. 19at the Irvine Senior Center, 3 Sandbura Way. Acriviuea run from 9 a.m. to I p.m. The event is aimed at residenu aae·H and older from Irvine and adjacent chiet. Ju &<>&l is to detect dis.cue in early •t.aae• and to promote healthier lifettyles. More than 100 professional and non-professional volunteen. will provide health screenina and infor- mation to the 800 residents expected to attend. Free flu thou will be available but. because: of a limited supply •. they will be ofl'e~ on a first come- fint served bu1s. The vaccine will be supplied by the county's Health Care Aaency and administered by memben of Allo ICbedulcd for 11 a.m. is an &ppeatUCC by the "firefoxea." local titefiabte:n wbo have poeed for calendar pbotot.. Servioet at the bea.lth fair will include tetu for the eyes. can, mutelet, feet, spine teeth, akin and Junaa. Bus pau idcnttfication carda for seniors will be photoeraphed by the Oranp County Transit District. All services at the wr will be provided fft:e ; no reservations are required. lrvint residents who have no means of transportation to the fair can arnnae a ride by callina 73J..IOSS at leut two days prior to the event. Mr. and Mrs. James XanthWs, Venus and Ma.re Ferber, Fountain Beach, &irl HuntinatonBeach,boy r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.::__~~~~ SeptemberU Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arthur Van- derhovcn, Huntinaton Beach, boy September n Mr. and Mn. Robert Batchelder, Huntinaton Beach, boy Elisa K Hernandez and Jose Fran- cisco Herrcra, Huntington Beach, boy Se_pt.ember U Mr. and Mn. Larry Dorr, Huntington Beach, boy Martina and Peter Eschenburg, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Sept.ember U Mr. and Mn . Anthony Ciarelli, Huntington Beach, &irl October I Mr. and M rs. Paul Snyder, Hunt- ington Beach, boy October% Mr. and Mn. Daniel M. Beaty, Huntington Beach, girl Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wiley, Hunt- ington Beach, girl October ' Mr. and Mrs. Roben Y. DcBritton. Huntington Beach, girl Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Munroe, Hunt- ington Beach, girl October$ Mr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Young, Fountain Valley, boy October I Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mc Hale, Huntington Beach, boy October, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gomez, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Mr. and Mrs. Craig Lefebvre, Hunt- ington Beach. girl Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey G. McGowan, Huntington Beach. boy KAISER PERMANENTE MEDI- CAL CENTE R, ANAHEIM A•ptt 30 Marie and Joseph Balbas. Hunt- ington Beach, boy September I Debi and Tom Wilson. Newport Beach, girl Jean and Charles Harrell, Laguna Beach.boy Sept.ember 7 Christine and Robert Johnson, Irvine. boy FOUNTAIN VALLEY COMM UNITY HOSPITAL Septemkr 14 Beryl and Randy McWorter, Foun- tain Valley. boy September 11 Sharon and John Whistler, Fountam Valley. boy Nanet and Robert Radcliffe, Hunt- HBLibrary to celebrate 10th year A free 10th annual anniversary celebration 1s scheduled 4 to 9 p.m. Saturda).' at the Huntington Beach Main Library at Golden West Street and Talbert Avenues. The first 21h hours will be devoted to children. Activities include a parade, appearances by chocrlcaden. clowns, mqicians, and a chance to play folk instruments and do cancatures. The California Jubilee Singers will pcrfonn spirituals and gospel music at 4:30 p.m. The evenina portion of the enter- tainment will be designed for adults. Classical piano, jazz, tap dancers, a band and rqtime piano music are scheduled. The Huntington Beach Main Li- brary opened in 1975 and is a community cultural center, including computer use by the public. art plJeriea, concerts and other special evenu. The 10th birhday party is co- sponsored by the City of Huntnaton Beach, Arts Auociates Friends of the Huntinaton Beach Libf&i.Y. Friends of the Children'• Library and the Library Patrons Foundation. J Neal appointed dlrecf or of Bren Center at UCI Steven H. Nea.1 bu been appointed director of the Donald Bren Events Center, , now under corutruction at UC Irvine. The 6,()()0.eeat aren&i IChcduJed to o~n in llte J 986, will be bome to ua·. buketbaU pmes and will be the lite of various academic and cultural events. Ne.al baa eerved u uailbl.Dt teneraJ man-.er of the San Oif.91) COaven- tion and Petfonnina Arts Cent.er and u uliltut IMJMlllllf of t.be Lona 8eecb Coctventioa and Entena.ht· meat Center. He received hi• t.cbelor'a ~ at Cal State Lona Beldl. TIM new director will be ovenee ~t of all pbllOI oftbe Bren <Ant«, ~ooutNCtion. --doD~~wpmn~ draNDlmpoUcitl ad~ ltatl'recniltmnt ud booii111 ~ tbe fljdllry, N_, and hia Clmily will reakte in Lonaleach. • New and maturing CDs earn substantial cash bonuses on the spot. Great American announces a safe invest· ment and exlra rash as well. It's our Cash Bonus Plan . And it can make you $10 to $2 ,COO richer by opening an Investor Seri~ ... account. Bigger deposits and longer terms hold bigger bonuses. Deposit the minimum of S5.CXX> in a one~ year account and pocket a $10 bonus. 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Scp(ember ~3rd thn.)Ugh November 2nd See ho"' a -.ate tn\ c'-!ment dnd cash bonu~' can gn hand in hand v 100 Y~ of Sa~ • ~ ~' Over $7 Stilton . , • • All ~ COlllt DAILY PILOT/W9dMld8Y, October 18, 1885 Mr. and lln. L. Sheleny llr. and lln. E . Rohen.on Golden dates marked In 1935, Ernest Robertson bou&ht so many razor blades from a pharmacy clerk in Kansas City, Mo., that she was able to win a sales contest being sponsored by GiUcttc. He also stocked up all sorts of toiletry items as he attempted to stan a courtship. His pcnistencc finally paid off and on OcL I, I 93S. Jo Parker became his bride at Olathe, Kan. Now Costa Mesans, the couple have resided 1n Argentine, Kan.; Needles, Barstow and Los Angeles. Ernest, who started his railroad career as a switchman. retired in 1969 as assistant general manager ofSante Fe at Los Angeles. The golden anniversary celebrants have two daughters-Tracy, born 1n 1941 when they were forced to live in the train station's Harvey House because of the housing shortage. and Confetti, born in Los Angeles in 1949. • • • Esther and Leonard Shcleny. longtime Orange County residents. celebrated their 50th anniversary with a dinner at th.~ Foxfire restaurant in Anaheim Hills. Some 50 fnends and relauves from Is far away as Chicago. Minnesota and Seattle attended. BOYSR-TATLOR An Aut-31 weddina in Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar united Reenie Taylor and Grq Boyer. The Rev. Brad Karclius of the Episcopal Church of the Messiah in Santa Ana officiated and 250 friends and family members attended a prden reception following the ceremony. Renaissance and BaroQ\le music wen: presented by the Martel Trio. Dr. and Mrs.. W1Jliam Taylor of Newport Beach arc the parents of the bride and the bride&rQOm is the son of Mrs. John Boyer o(Manhattan Beach and Los Osos and the late Mr. Boyer. The bride wore a white Mauer origina.l aown with a full organz.a slun trimmed with Alencon lace at tbc hem and train. Alencon lace also edged the scoop neck and puffed sleeves of the bodice. Vickie Boyer Eck was matron of honor and best man was Tom Taylor. Other attendants were Lisa Gonzales. Carolyn Person and Holly Shields as bridesmaids and Craig Eck. Bill Taylor and Craig Wilson as ushers. After a wedding trip to San Jose del Cabo in Mexico, the couple are residents of Hermosa Beach. She is a teacher in Orange County schools and is director of the Newport Beach Junior Lifeguard Program, and he is employed by the Grace Corp. Our Business Degree p~ offers you an intangible boilus. Time. T1mt' '"' 1mporto:1"1 10 tdreer·m1mJecJ peonle Wt' lh1ni. 11., ~" 1mporldnt 10 lhe worlo.inq adult lhdl we crea1ed d new concep1 1n clas!. s1.ht>dul1ng -tht- om~·course a·month study µIan Ir 1akPs 1us1 .i lt'w m1nu1es 10 reg1sre1 for even1nq classe'> 1ha1 yci11 l.cm beq1n .iny monlh of lht: year di any of 0111 l.Onveruenr IO<.dflon!. The B,u:helor of Business Adm1n1st1<111on 1BBA1 c1egree progrdm offers ..,,ou lhe cuncep1s and '>~'""' 11t'te!>sdry to rumpe1e 1n 1oc1ay s resu11-urien11::1l b\.s1ness en11ironmen1 -on d class s1.t1edule vuu tin ""e with Our 1o11ens1ve degree progrdm e11l.ompdsses dll the 111tegrdl business compw1e11•-, -mari..e11119 dcc;oun1tng 1nformdl1011 sy~1errb Our h1qhly qual1fiec! ins1ruc1ori. are dl!.o pro11111ny e~perrs 1n lhetr field!. C<1ll ,J , oqnselor .ir 11w ledrn1ng center nearei.1 vo11 The BBA degree The tune 1s now Nadonal University ORANGE COUNTY Irvine 71 41851 4300•0range l7141851·4352•EI Toro 7148571}78 Los Alamitos (7141851·4356 or 12131 594 4 71 4 . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. Mr .a Mn. Brad.ford Smith BUTLER-GORHAM Kathleen Noel Gorham and Thomas Walter Butler. both of Canoga Park. exchanged wedding vows in St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Santa Clara on Sept. I. They greeted 175 guests at a reception in Aurthur's Second Floor in Los Gatos. Jack and Joan Gorham of Santa Clara are the parents of the bride and the bridegroom is the son of Marguerite Butler of Newport Beach and the late John Butler. The bride wore a satin dress with bouffant sleeves and a chapel train. Pearls and lace were intenwined on the bodice and her floor length bndal veil fell from a beaded floral wreath. She carried a bouquet of white and bridal pink roses, cymbidium or- chids, stephanotis and trailing ivy. Mary Novak, K.ailcilanr Gallagher. Melissa Cloud and Sheila Gorham. the bride's cousin. were bridesmaids. Margot and Tina Zirion. the bride- groom's nieces. were junior Mr. and Mn. Tbomu Bailer bndesma1ds and Ali son and Jcllrey Butler. daughter and son of the bridegroom were flower girl and nng bearer. Attendin~ the bridegroom were William Gillespie. his brother John Butler. Rohen Brunscll and G regg Gorham, brother of the bnde. The couple are at home in Canoga Park af\er a wedding trip to the Hawaiian Islands of Oahu, Kauai. and Hawaii. She is a systems engineer and he is a facilities planning manager at Rocketdyne Division of Rockwell lntemat1onal in C.anoga Park. SMITH-GUTMANN Lon Gutmann and Bradford Sm 1th exchanged marriage vows on Sept. 7 in St. Nicholas Church in Laguna Hills. The bndc. daughter ofThomas and Janice Gutmann of El To ro. attended El Toro High School. Her husband. son of Marjorie Tutt of Tustin. graduated from Tustin High School I Mr. and Mn. Gree Boyer and Umvcrsal Technical Jnslltute in Arizona. The newlyweds arc residing in Tustin after a wedding trip to North- ern California. She is employed by Macho Tire Co. and he is with University Oldsmobile. SAUNDERS-KARR Former Costa Mcsan Colleen P. Karr exchanged wedding vows with Gregg B. Saunders in a Sept 7 ceremony in the seaside home of his mother. Pauline Saunders of Ven- tura. where a reception followed for the 130 guests. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Karr of Garden Grove. Roslyn Hunt and Jennifer G randi were her honor attendants and David Williams was best man. She 1s a diagnostic medical sono- grapher at Santa Barbara Medical Foundation Clinic and he is em- ployed by the City of Ojai. The couple are residents of Ventura. I 11 / f 'I( /I( kf UTlltR mdk C'~ th" \ldtPly _li1J m e't' of \1J/)1 •rl>l'r H ulnted porn·ld1n A fint' gdt for those who hold th1· feline 1t1 high 1•,l<'<'rn 7111 high $755 \1,"tt·r( ard \.''a 1\m1•flc Jn Exp"'''· Donavan Char~w L m /".ngc•ll•\ Olde)t Jeweler\ 3810 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles • (2 13) 939-212 1 11 Fashion Island, Newport Beach • (714) 644-5764 LOTTERY TICKET! Tell·A·Frlend 11 ! .. Dally PHat WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 18. 19$S I: J Ann Lender• thenka reedera for 30,...._ m. Locel th••l•r newa, 'Twelfth Night' re¥19•. llS. Helping over~eight teens deal with eating habits By EVE C. LASH ...., .... c.n 1, •1 Deina an overweight tccn·ifer can be devastating. Sell.esteem 1s low. peer ac.ceptance is strained and family relationships arc hampered. Donna Zaiu, a licensed m&J1iagc, family and child counselor for the Oranac County Institute for Trans- actional Analysis (OCIT A) Center for Creative Livtna is doing something about it. The center is a nonprofit counseling and educational institute. She heads its new weight manage- ment program for teens aimed at the emotional aspects of overeating habits. The program, called Shapcdown, was developed at the U niversity of California at San Francisco's School of Medicine and tested there for the past five years. Zaitz said, "I feel real good about the program. It incorporates behavior methods to weight reduction, as well as the exercise and diet components and the emotional aspects." She said the program deals more with the "why" of eating habits rather than the what. .. And o ne needs to be less concerned with th~ weight on the scale and more concerned with their (teens') eating patterns," Zaitz said. The gro up. comprised of fi ve adolescents. meets once a week for 12 weeks. Group therapy. role playi ng, relati~nship .groups, diet counseling, exercise sessions and parent counsel- ing sessions arc offered. Her current group -four girls and one bo>: rangins fr~m 12 to 16 years of age -1s now 1n Its sixth week. And Zaitz said they arc dorng fabulous. "We shoot for 1-2 pound weight losses a week, but many of our students have lost more than that, .. she added. Of the five current group members. most want to lose at least 30 pounds and one wants to lose 70 pounds One girl, dubbed Jane Smith to protect her pnvacy. 1s 14 years old She is about 60 to 70 pound\ overweight. Zaitz maintains that most o( her overweight problem 1c; due to "reactionary·· weight gain - the death of an animal "She really rclted on that dog. Both ot her upper m1ddle<lass parents work. She is the youngest of four. was a hit lonely and this dog was her real friend, someone to confide in." Smith didn't want to replace the dog. And. for two years she has been overeatmg. Since her body had staned to naturall) put on some ··padding" during puben). she de- vcloped fat cells uoon fat cells All of this was rcallLed Za11z contended, dunng the program ··v. hat she had to do wa., open up to other people her peer<, hl'r famil) and her fnends Vv e reallLed she had been holdinR 1n her teehngs .. Once Jane·~ parents kne"' she (Pleaee see TEENS/82) Parents.: Take the pressure off your kids Imagine being a baseball player - up at bat -1n your own ho me stadium. This 1s the last of a three game series; it's the ninth inning and you're tired. Your team 1s one run behind. No outs. The stadium as packed. The fans arc cheering wildly. The combination of your home field's familiar physical properties. along wttb the enthusiasm of a friendly crowd perks your motivatio n JUSt enough. Arc you hkely to choice? Probably not -especially if a wtn in this game is not all that crucial. It's only when the pressure to win -or to succeed 1s too pt, that failure becomes statisucally more likely. So says a recent issue of "Psy- chology Today." "A home crowd that expects or demands too much -say. a championship victory -can dis- PAPARAZZI LINDA ALWI turb or d1sonent athletes. prohabh rooung them on to ruin:· Imagine being a teen-ager JUSt beginning your sophomore year 1n high school. You have every inten- tion of going to college someday. You're up at academic bat Most colleges determine adm1c;s1on by performance in the sophomore and junior years in high school. "Your life is at stake, son," your dad continually reminds you." All the work you've done up to now has JUSt been practice for the real thing. If you're ever gorng to be anything in this difficult world of ours. now 1s the time you have to show your stuff .. You're I 5, you've grov.n three inches this summer and you're oh-so- sclf conSClous. That's 1n spite of the realtty that the only thing you've ever really done wrong IS tO row pimples. A.re you hkel} to choke It v.ould seem so Ps)'chulog) tcll<i us that choking 1s most ltkel} "'hen- e"er there 1s a rapid 1ncrea..e in self- consc1ousness. If even seasoned ath- letes can become self-conscious and choke with too much pressure. con- sider the average teen-ager. "Self-conscious" 1s his or her middle name. It takes more time for the average I 5-)ear-old to get ready for pub hr obsen a ti on 1 n school each morning than he spen'h stud} mg for most c"<ams Younger children seem to do better under pressure Pnor to adolescence. the) seem to lack the capacity to become self-conscaous and a little extra prodding ma) help per- formance It's not until they become teen-agers that they become es- pecially prone to choking. Mom and Dad· Be careful not to upset the home-team ad' antage Re- duce the pressure on )Our teen-agt.>r<i a little. and )Ou're more hkel) to ha'e results to cheer about Dr. Alga71 is a mamage and fam1/y therapist in Corona de/ War She welcomes your rc.·spon~s lf."ou "'1sh a rep/;. plea~ enclose a stamped. self- addressed em elope. "nte tu Lin<b .\/gaz1. Ph D . cJo Dail" Pilot. P () Bo' J 'i60. C o~w Me~. t/~626 'Ritz' -y search for a Stradivarius By BETTY PORTER ...., .... c.. ;1•1 Compeut1on was on the mind of some 200 spiffy members of the Orange County Pacific Symphony Orient Express Committee and their guests when they showed up in black tic or '20s dress for dinner and "pmcs" at Han1 Pra1er'1 Ritz Res- taurant. No, the guests weren't vying for the best scat in the house or the biggest piece of chocolate mousse calce and not even to set their names and/or photographs in newspapers. What guests wanted to know was: Who stoic the rare Stradivarius? Most of the auests divided into teams and worked hard to unravel what was called "A Mystery on the Orient Express." The "m ystery" and rules for playing the game were provided by Rldaard Dollen. Ptckwick Pro- ductions, Laguna Beach. Carel Olluo (who co-<:haired the party with Warreo Joutoa) and her bu1band MlcMel (president of the Boa.rd of Directors of the Orange County Pacific Symphony Associa- tion) had the best hints and clue~ "Why would anyone steal a "1- oltnT asked Mtcbel Gtlano, "For m oney or to play 11 -or both. so follow 1t from there ·· Tips came from authent1call> cos- tumed .. m ystery" characters. includ- ing Sberlock Holmes, Countess Tbrockmorton, Spintualtst Madame StoUtcluaaya Cltenkov (who con- ducted a seance ~rovidmg additional clues in the Ritz "back room"). The characters m ingled with guests. who were drinking straight Russian vodka or champagne. Even durin~ dinner, guests sought clues from waiters and fro m male and fcmaJe models particpating 1n a showing of "Orient Express" - inspired fashions, selected by Kitty Leslie, Fashion Merchandise Man- ager for Fashion Island stores. A $bowing oflingcrie attracted the most attcnuon from men and women guests. Game participants conferred with team members between courses of fresh supr-snap pea soup "crouton," Norwegian salmon in champag.ne with "chanterelles ... roast pnme nb of plume de "eau. spinach soutlle. Pans1enne potatoes. truffle sauce, chocolate "fantasia.. !chocolate mousse cake). mocha-Ja' a coffee. Laurent Pemcr champagnes and cigars. Congratulauon~ and champagne toasts were delivered to Dr. H. E. Sterllng and has wife Diana (in all-red dress and turban) who we re cel- ebrating their 10th wedding an- niversary. Sttll, the mystery game continued. even when the grand door pnze. a tnp for two on the actual Onent Express. (won by BUI and Ann LHk) was announced . Tt\e tnp was donated b} Mary Romt International Public Re- lations. in cooperation wtth the Ven1ce-S1mplon Onent Express. Other door pnzes included a dinner for 20 in the Ritz Wine Cellar. donated by Hui Prager, classic "his" and "her" Gucci watches. donated by Severin Montres, a Vene- tian gondola cruise with champasne and p1cn1c for two. from Admiral Yachts and a sequin sweater from the A. Spelsers. At least one guest moaned and tore up the "London newspaper" outlin- ing game rules ~hen "Sherlock Holmes.. announced that not Countess Throckmonon. not ptn- tuahst Madame C'hcnl..o' and not a dozen other l haracters '-'l're guilt) of stealtng the '1oltn ··.\11 of the character; were guilt).'. "Holmes" said v1a a microphone "I mpoc;s1blc'" c;a1d one gue<;t who had taken hie; thre-e and one half hours ··s1cuthin11" most senouc;h Oncn1 E"<prcc;!t rnmm1ttce mem- bers included Karen 8t'ISOD, La Vera Barus, Barbara Harris, Grace Hut, Sandy lmpertall. J .J . Je1owskt, Margaret Karcher. Anne Key, Jan Lud, ADD Lask. Beverly Peters. Ce Ce Presley, Joan Rkbardson, Dr. Julia Rappaport, ,Mlcbelle Rob, Flou Scbamacber. ~lua Sterll•1. Kathryn Tlliomp1on. Pilar Wayne, Doretta Wedin, Janel WIU11elm and Barbara Yoana. Paparazz1 1s ed11ed h) Oath Pilot Style editor Vida Dean L ... ~•(1.,.-:.d Lonalne Kaua oftv Cllat and Pat llw~udc ,.pe. o.., .... ..,_.., ........ ~ Donna Zaltz coun9eb teen-acen ln an effort to help them lOK weight by augge.ting alternative eating hablta. Your level of health depends upon you 8\ defin1t1on, the world health means a COnd1t1on IO which all functions of the bod) and mind are normall} acll\ e The 'W orld Health Orgamzatton defines health as a "state of l:omplete ph)s1cal, mental or social well being. and not mere I) the absence of disease or mfirm1t) - How do you define health" For most A.mencans, v.hen we are not sack or injured. ""e erroneous!~ descnbe our 'itate u healthful This 1s usualh not the case Just because wearen·t sneezing_ sn1ffi- tng. coughing or expenencing an ele,ated temperature we ma .. nut be very health> It"s interesting to note that suc h a prestigious organ11a11 on 111..c the World Health Organization de- CARY ROTHENBERG fines health as more than JUSt not being sick Think about 1t -are ~ou reall) as health} as )OU could be'l It \Ou·re hke most of us. the answer IS probabl) no You are "'hat controls your le' el of health Onl) }OU are responsible for the degree of health )OU will obtain Some very bas1c age-old rec- om menda uons are wonh repeat- (Pleue eee HEAL TH/82) Dlllllr .... ,,..._..,. T-·- Ca.role and lllcbael Gllano arrt.e at the party . ··------ 91 °'8"09 OoMt DAILY f>tlOT IW9dNed!y. Ootober 11, 1915 Celebrating 30th anniversary of Landers' column •• ~DEIS My column ia told all over tbe world by News America Syndjcate. Dear Readers: Today i~ my 30th a.nnivenary u Ann Landen. l have written teven colwnnt • week. 36S days a year, since Oct. 16, 19SS. Thia addl up to l 0,9SOcolumna. Never bu there appeared in this specie a not.ice sayina. "Ano Landen it on va· cation." h was my dear friend. Will Mun· necke, then vice president and sen· era.I ma.naecr of the Sun-Times, who suaested that I 10 see Larry Fannina about entering the Ann Landen contest. I was areen as arass. never bad held a job before, never written a line for publication and in fact, bad never been inside a newspaper build- "'1Y dauabter, Marso. Tt'U IS, a freshman at Francis Parker. I desper- ately needed an outlet for my tune and eneray. I wanted to be in a helpina profession but bad neither the train-tnt nor the experience. Larry was underwhelmed by my credentials. (I was a wife and mother and enjoyed writina letten to rela- tives.) I confessed I didn't need the money but if they wanted to pay me it was OK.. Neither Fannina nor Munnecke was optimistic about my chances of winnina the contest. In fact, I suspect they were appalled at my chutzpah. But they cheered me on and wished Rick NCW'COmbe, the chief, is the me lQClt.. M.incle of miraclea, I won. ..... .... tet1 and most eo-·c man in ( .. Good m-1-Ann • __ ..._., •• ) .,. .... ... ..... ~ ... ........, ~.. the bvtioesa AJ you can see, the Larry Fanoina wu m~ mentor. He succet1 of the Landen column socs ta\llht me bow to wnte. He alto fM beyond what limited talent I may edited every word I wrote for IOyean poaeu..k. I have bad every break in the -every column. every booklet. book. tvery book, tvery i:napnne article, I could not let this day pua without every speech. 1 couldn't s-r, him a a word of tba.nb to my dozens of dime. He1V0uld.n'tacoept it.' lfs put conaultantl all over the country who of m~ job. .. he aaid. We both knew 1t pve to teneroully of their time and wun t. couuel.Fortheprioeoftbiapepermy Months before Larry moved to readers have acoea to the most Anchonp, Aluka. be told me, .. If l disti?Jlli~ physicians, def:l~ts, ,et hit by a bread truck, Trez ii your p1ychiatn~ lawyen, aenetJcists, man ... And to be was. Dick Trezc.. business executives, jud&es, cleray - vant. another fannina PfOtcae, bo-experta in every field. came my editor. For 14 yean this bri.lliant. toqh but tender auy kept . ThC?C lut 30 .Years have ~n the Landen oopy 00 COW'le. When in~~ly rcwardin&. l cannot . 1m- Tm: left I wu luay .,ain. Ralph qine .• JOb that OC?uld ~ve provided Otwell. the executive editor of the me wtth ~ore sabsfaction c:>r a better Sun· Times, took over. A (ew ycan opportun.t~ to touch the lives of so later, when the paper was sold. Ralph many. peop · . . left. He sugested VirJinia Van I wiJb do thank you, my 85 million VyNckt, chief of the features copy " readen, for your loyalty. You've desk. rd never met her. She turned st~by~einmy.time oftrouble~d out to be a p:m. reJ01ced 1~ my tnumphs. I consider I could never have made it without you my friends. my devoted and competent staff. I have no ~la.ns to retire. I intend to Tb:Q'k~eep my office runnina smooth cn.n.k out this column as Iona u you u handle the phones that never find me uieful and the aood Lord stop rinaina. arranaie my travel ached-Jives me the strennb to do it. On this ule and speakina dates, and save me special day, I ICtldlove and than.ks to from m)'IClf at least a dozen times a each and every one of you. -ANN week. LANDERS Breakthrough research combats heart disease Nobel prize winners find key to keeping cholesterol in check BJ DANIEL Q, HANEY ,,, ............ CAMBRIDGE, Mua. Research into a rare defect 1n the body' a internal control of cholesterol that won the Nobel prize for two Ameritans is operuna up new ttrateaies for understanding and de- featina heart diseue, the nation's biaest killer. Un. Michael S. Brown and Joteph L Goldstein of the Univenity of Tex.as Health Science Center at Dallas unraveled a flaw in the bodies of people who arc struck by heart attacks at unusually early ages. And in the process, they discovered a key mechanism for kcepina the body's cholesterol levels in check. The Nobel Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, announced Monday that the two men, who were attending a conference in Cambridae, had won the l 98S Nobel Priu in medicine. One outarowth of their research is attempts to rid the lood of danaerous amounts of cholesterol b~ tinlerina with the built~in machmery that ordinarily scours it from the blood. However, their diSC<Overies have also revealed important clues for undentanding how the body's cells abeort> vital nutrients and even how tenes are coUltnleted. The lcieotiltt' work baa focuacd on pc_ople with bypercboletierolemla, an· uiherited d.iteUe th.at affects about I in SOO Amerle&n1. The levels of cholesterol in their bloodstream• is far hi&ber \ban normal, and they a.re prone to heart trouble. The disease acc:ountl for about ' percent of all people who have a heart attaek under aae60. Cholesterol is a wuy alcohol th.It diuolves io fat but not water. To be carried in the blood, it mUJt be attached to a water-soluble protein, known u low-deruity lipoprotein or LDL. that is made in the liver. The body's cells need cholesterol to make cell walls and produce hormones. But when excessive amounts circulate in the blood- stream, it clop arteries and causes atherosclerosis, the m~or underlying cause of heart diacue. Disc.uet of the heart and blood vessel killed 985,040 Americans in 1982 and accounted for nearly half of all dcolths. Brown and Goldstein discovered that cells usher cholesterol into them- selves throuah gateways, known as receptors, that recosnizc LDL "The more receptors you have, the faster cholesterol is removed from the bloodstream," said Goldstein. tein." said Or. O.vtd Baltimore, • Nobel laureate wbo is bead of the Wb.iteheed Institute ln Cambridae. The reaearcb bu not yet turned up practical way• to inc::reue the body's removal of cholesterol, but many scientistl arc workina on the prot>- lem. . ''Practical applications will be forthcomina. we would predict," Ooldttein laid at a new conference Monday. DNa companies have produced aeveraf expenmental druas that seem to lower cholesterol lever~ but n~ne of these is yet available ror rouune use. "There are theoretical ways that one could iniervene in the cycle of cholesterol metabolism to 10duoe cells to produce more reoepton and thereby keep the level of cholesterol low in the bloodstream " said Brown. "There is bope, and there are even some beainnina leads that certain druas work to raise these recepton1 allowina cholesterol to be removed.' Many experts believe that eating food rich in saturated fat and cholesterol contributes to heart dis- ease. Goldstein said animal studies sugest that hiah dietary cholesterol actually reduces the number of LDL receptors on the body's cells, thereby inhibitina its removal from the body. The researchers' work has also helped scientists understand how celfs reaulate their intake of other essential inaredienu such as iron and vitamins. Safer system for fighting pain revealed They found that the number of these LDL receptors is pcatly re- duced in people with hyper- cholesterolemia. So cholesterol con- tinues to circulate rather than being taken away. 0 Wben they discovered the recep- tor in 1974, that chanaed the whole focus of.thinking about the problem of cholesterol metabolism and put the anention on cells and how they interact with low-density lipopro- The team has deciphered the oode of the gene that prompts cells to ma.lee LDL receptors. And they found that it contained chunks of aenetic material also found in o~. unrelated JCDCS. This supports a lheory that cells take evolutionary shortcuts in developing new functions by borrowing parts of other genes. ,.. , .. SAN FRANClSCO (AP) -A new technique that involves in- jecting tiny drua-filled spheres into patients could prove I 0 times more effective than current local anesthetics. says a researcher from the Univenity of fllinois College of Medicine. Dr. Anthony F. Kirkpatrick. says the new drug delivery system could revolutionize the way a variety of druas, panicularly anesthetics, are administered. Under the new method. a 1ar&c amount of drug is released slowly into the body to provide prolonged relief at the source of the pain. "Such single injections in the past b.ave not been possible because potentially harmful amounts of drugs would have to be injected. or because such injections led to local destruction of normal tissue,.. K.irlcpatrick said. .. So far, web.ave a perfect safety record -no scarring. no inf~ lions, nor any destruction of tiuue. We're most encourqed by sound waves are used to break the dru& into tiny droplets. The droplets then are sur· rounded by lecithin, which fonns a thin membrane and produces the tiny spheres. Once the spheres "So far, we have a perfect safety record - no scarring, no lnfectlons, nor any de- struction or tlssue ... -DR. ANTHONY IUJUCPATRICK that." Kirkpatnck.. who developed the new method with Dr. Duncan H. Haynes of the University of Miami Medical School, told the annual meetina of the American Society of Anesthesiologists that are injected into the skin or the bloodstream, they slowly release the drug at safe dosages, Kirkpatrick said. He said the spheres aren't attacked by the body's immune systems .. When the drugs a.re used Doctor, Explain T It. To T Me .A p.,HltG/ /:J"caliottG/ S."'io J1t110'4,ing :Joplc• 0/ J ,.1.,..,1 :Jo Y<HI House Calls By Appt. (714) 854-0226 divorced age42 real estate agent Abnormal or antisocial behavior is usually a cry for help. It can mean the person is experiencing a mental crisis. But, every situ· ation is different. That's why you need to know the different treat· shoplifts COSDletiCS ment altt:matives. The Information Center at Capistrano by the Sea Hos pital has a free booklet on mental crisis. It t)utlines the many options you have available. Hospital - ization is only one of them. Call (714) 831-1787. You 'Jl receive this useful book- let in absolute con· fidence . We've helped people cope with the problems of today's society for over 25 years. We understand. 1-bwro Harxlle a Mental Crisis up, the biodegradable mem- branes a.re incorporated into nor- mal body tissue, he said. About one-third of all drugs have properties that mi&ht allow them to be easily injected with the new method. Kirkpatrick said. In tests, an anesthetic was injected into tbdents' skin. Kirkpatrick. said the anesthesia killed pain for 24 hours -at least 10 times longer than current local anesthetics -and its effects were more localized. HEALTH DEPENDS •.• K.irlcpatrick said plans are in the making for tesu on humans. The researcher said the tech- nique could prove particularly useful in treating battlefield wounds because anesthetic could be inj~ directly into wounded areas without affcctini the respir- atory systems of the vtctims. From Bl ing. These include -moderation in food and drink. The typical American diet bas produced a aeneration of well-fed but malnourished people. Althou&;h we as . a nation 81'.C sbowi~ signs of getuna more physi- cal, individually we a.re just as out of shape as we were 1 O/ears qo. Ob yes, there arc pockets o influence in our society -where people arc jogina, aerob1cizing, lifting ·weights, swim- ming and the like, but the average citizen is grossly out of shape. Many of the degenerative diseases like arthritis, hypertension and heart A N N 0 U N C E M E N T Dr. Daniel Belove, D.C. !Yormffly ,.Jlh Dr Todd AdaaM D.C.) is looking for ward to serving your health care needs at his new Newport Beach location. Belove Chiropractic 1600 Dove Street, Suite 207 Newport Beach, CA 92660 714-476-1250 disease are assoetated with poor health habits. We can change all this, if we each take stock of our poor health habits and decide once and for all to replace these with good habits conducive to &ood health. We needn't become a zealot or fanatic about eating and exercising. What is s~ested is a proeram to start taking one s own responsibility for one's health. Maybe then we can function optimally as the definition of health is sugaested by the World Health Organization. Dr. Cary H. RocbeobeTJ is a chiropractor with offices in Hunt· ilJllOO Beach. TEENS ••• From Bl needed their help and emotional suppo~ they became more involved, Zaitz said. They became interested in her as a person, not just about her wei&ht, she added. zJUtz described Smith's progress as "phenomenal ... In her tint week she lost 6 pounds, started an exercise rqiman and payed close attention to her diet. Zaitz said that when the brown- h.aired, freckle-faced young girl fint joined the VOUp she WU very withdrawn. "She was very quiet She would hardly speak up. Now she is much more assertive. The weight loss has had a <\irect bearing on her feelinp. She likes herself more. And she has opened us;> to the people around her. She said to me, 'I feel better.' .. One of the IC$50ns that Smith and the others in the group work on is the importance of being able to reject offers offatty foods fiom friends. The group teaches the teens how to remain li~==========1}~;;::;;========;;~ part of their peer poup while still maintainin& their diets. The key is to be more assertive, 1.aitz said. Treat your children to the best. With exclusive imported clothing and gifts from the Reed's Baby Carter. Newly located at Bayside Center, Newport Beach. Boys & Glrls Infant through I 0 years Monday through Saturday 10:00 am-5:30 pm (714) 720.3882 • I 072 Bayside Drive Newport Beach 0 0 She explains to the group members that it is OK to say no to fattening foods. She teaches them alternatives to eating in socia.I situations, such as an outing to a pizza parlor. Rather than miss the tnp and the company, ao to the pizza parlor and eat from the salad bar, 1.aitz sugests. Emotional overeating is also dis.- culled within the aroup. Since many people eat becauae of certain fcclinp and emotions -such u being depressed, sad. happy, excited, bored or anxious -Zaitz telll the teens to plan an alternative activity instead, sucb u walk:ina. She maintains many adolescents, u well as adults, cat u a break from work or homework and could easily find an alternative, like ridina a bike. "S<>me kids overeat riaht after dinner, because they are tired of doing homework. They need a break and they don't know what else to do. They are used to eat.in& to comfon them- telves. One thi~ we shoot for is not just loaina weipt, but ~ in behavior for continued ~t lou. •• Zaiu said. In tbe puent aroup tellions. parents are encowq,xl to be cautious u faru monitorinawhat their child is eatina. One focus of the parent poup is to teach paents bow to com- municate Lbeit feelinat about over- eatina. in a politi ve way to &heir offipiina. For eumple. if a youap1er i1 overeatins in &oot of them, 1.aitt said. never call your child a "fat alob" Of other derop\Oty t.erml. .. Iost.eed 1ay, 'It really bwu me to eee you overeath\a. But. I Dow you have to do what~ have to do:·· Zeitz oonteoda this 1ive1 the = st.er full cbarte of t})dr own t ~tho ptOlrlJn is S40 '°' aM:h lfOUP meeth111 with an llddidoD&l U fee per IUfdte lalioD at Racquetball Wortd. Z.aftt added. .. Sba= focuea on ~Ye. small in babi&a that ldd up to a ch&nal o liftstvle." The QCOIC:r I.a located at r 4742 Newpon Ave. in Tultin. Orengo Coast DAILY PILOT /WedMldly. October 18, 1eee ----- 'INTERMISSION 'Evita' set for county premiere Orange County theater, which fi. nally got a production of "A Chorus Linc" this year, lands another musi- cal premiere this weekend when "Evl&a" opens an abbreviated en- gagement for the Fullerton Civic Light Opera. The lone newcomer to the local theater scene arrives Friday at Full- erton's Plummer Auditori,um, on Chapman A venue at Lcmd'n Street, under the direction of Jim Whitson, who previously performed in "Evita" on Broadway. Julie Waldman-Thews stars as the powerful wife of Argcn- tina 's Juan Peron, with Hal Boquist playing Peron and Jim Rule cast as Che. Performances of "Evita" will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m . and Sundays at 2:30 through Nov. 3. CalJ 879-1732 for ticket inrormatioo. It's closing weekend for three other local producuons -"Twelfth Nl&lat" at Saddlcback College, "Tile lid's Radio Hour" by the Brea Theater League and "The Llon lD WLDter" at the Cypress Ci vie Theater. Final performances 01 Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night"' will be given Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. on Saddleback's main st.age on the Mission V1eJ O Campus (582-4656). REVIEW Toi Titus The "Radio Hour" runs tonight through Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Curtis Theater in the Brea Mall (S28-4240). aosing performances of "Lion·• arc set for Friday and Satur- day at 8: 15 and Sunday at 2: IS at the Cyp~ Cultural Arts Center. 5172 Orange Ave. (527-1949). South Coast Repertory, which was scheduled to close its production of "Blae Window" this weekend, has extended the show one week by popular demand. The contemporary comedy by Craig Lucas is playing Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:30, Saturdays at 3 and 8:30 and Sundays at 3 and 8 p.m. on the Second Stage of the SCR theater, 655 Town ~enter Dnve, Costa Mesa, and will now run through Oct. 27. Call 957-4033 for llckct information. Other producuons conunu1ng to attract audiences around the county -- include: •"Dracala: A MotlcaJ?" by the South Coast Musical Theater at University High School, C~mpus Dnvc at Culver Dnve. Irvine (640-6306), Fndays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 pm. through Oct. 27. •"Harold" at the Irvine Communi- ty Theater in Turtle Rock Communi- ty Park, Sunnyhill Road at Turtle Rock Dnve. Irvine (857-5496). Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. throuah Oct. 26 with a matinee Sunday at 2 p.m. •"Going to See tile Elepbaot" at the Gem Theater. 12852 Main St., Garden Grove (636-72 I 3). Wednes- days through Saturdays at 8 p.m . Sundays at 1:30 until Nov. 2. •"A Chorus Lloe" at the Grand Dinner Theater. I Hotel Way. Anaheim (772-7710). nightly except Mondays at varying curtain umes through the end of the year. •"Drac1lla" at the Harlequin Din- ner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-5511 ). ntghtly except Mondays at varying curtain times through Nov. 17. •"Tbe Mikado" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave Pico, San Clemente ( 492-9950). Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at I and 7 p.m .. through Dec. I 'Twelfth Night' a comic carnivalatSaddleback By KATHLEEN CUMMINGS 0.-,,... Coor 1 IJ, ,...,, Saddleback College's Department of Theater Arts is presenting as its season opener Shakepeare's comic carnival "Twelfth Night .. or "What You Will.'' Like most of Shakespeare's roman- tic comedies. this one has mistaken identities. mad. instant passions, assignations, sexual impersonation, music and revelry. It's the story of a young woman. Viola (Ardis Faith) separated at 13 from her twin brother Sebastian (Tom Murray) in a ship- wreck. She arrives in a city ruled by Duke Orsino (Robb Nimmo). who is stncken with a mad passion for the unattainable Countess Ohv1a (Dean- na Watlons) who malingers in mourning for her dead brother. Viola disguises herself as a manservant and goes to work for the duke, falls 10 love with him while acting as his romantic conduit for the countess. who falls hopelessly in love with her, thinking hera him. Enter lost brother Sebastian. who happens to wander in after seven years and 1s quickly mistaken by the countess for Viola. Got 1t? Well, it doesn't matter. Just sit back and enJOY It. There are some strong per- formances. particularly Sir Toby Belch (Donald Formaneck) who knows how to wrap his tongue around Elizabethan verse as well as a JU& of hooch. Buck Stevens canters around delightfully in the role of Feste. the Wlse fool. Stevens has charm and moves well on stage. He also has a sweet singing voice. Michael B1elitz 1s excellent as Malvoho. the prim. pandenn~ stew- ard to Olivia. who suffers the Jests of Sir Toby and his loyaJ loons. Sir Andrew (earned almost to absurdity by Jon Taylor Carter) and Fabian ("Denny" Lee Lacy). Chnsty Sauter 1s full of fun and m1sch1ef as Olivia's maid, Mana Sauter injects vitality 1ntoevery scene she's in. N1mmo's Duke Orsino mopes regally, but I wish he could be a bit more animated, at least after he discards his hopeless love quest Faith's Viola 1s a bit fla1 he delivers her lines well. but her movement is flaccid and she d~sn't appredably alter her beha v1or a fer she becomes a "boy." The same 1s true for brother Sebastian (maybe 11 runs in the famil y). Murray mostly 1ust dnfts through his pan. except when he's called upon to duel. Watkins 1s perfectly adequate 10 the role of Olivia, but I sense that she could be much more 1f she dared It's strange that the "lovers," who are all of the anstocrauc class. are the least 1nteresung characters. especially Orsino, Sebasuan and Viola. They act rather like pawns in the game of life while the proletariat gallop around. manipulating and plotting. But when you come to think of 1t. lovers can make pretty bonng people to all but their lover'> Other members of the cast include Thomas Amen, Ah1n Y Nonaka, David Richardson, Jim Thorpe. Mark A. Nelson. Adam P. Crethar and Dawn L. Stramer Lynn Wells does a fine Job direct- ing. The pace rarel) slackens and there 1s always something to hold our attenuon. Wall) Huntoon·s set 1s beauuful. a winter wonderland for the topsy-tun" 1.1.orld of the revels. Charles c"astagno·~ costumes arc loose. hght and lu~unous. This 1s a play the whole famil \ will enjoy. I The second and final week of performances will be given Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. For information. call 582-4656. Producer picks favorite actor By BOB THOMAS -11111 .. 111 "'-Wrtlef LOS ANGELES -When Gnffin Dunne read the script of "After Hours," he rccogmzed that the lead role would be an actor's dream. "Go for 1t," he told himself. In the 30-year-old Dunne's case. going for it was easy. He was also the producer. Griffin Dunne comes from the talented family that includes his father, autho r-producer Dominick Dunne, and aunt and uncle, writers Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne. Like his relatives. he has pursued on a wide and vaned career For several years, he has success- fully combined act1ng("An Amencan Werewolf in London." "Johnny Dan$erously") with producing ("Chilly Scenes of Winter," "Baby. It's You"). )oo've blown up your neighbor\ mom Your S('Vt>n year·old hrolher has btitt'r 11.l<'k with womPn than you do \ix.tr girlfrwod has a llt'\\' hoyfrieod ~ax. you're fle\'t'r BEi IER OFF DEAD .. =·= --,KR .... ... m. .. .na ... ~CIDM c:ona 17M14l ...,. ... ~TOMI coma 111-4114 -.._.,. .... ...... u-.,._ .. (HJ) •t..U u... ... ~SO.COAST lMlllA UJ.1711 ~au mw.IS SOCM. lMDa ta.LS •ll 7 ..... 11 -STiil an conuu.-2553 -MICoumlMt.l 07 ... -· ,. --~ llJT.I ... -· -PACR•Tll D1••1•1 He does both in "After Ho urs," the new Warner Bros. release directed by Martin Scorsese. He plays a word processer looking for diversion on a single night in Manhattan's Soho d1stnct. He finds more than he can handle: a disturbed young woman (Rosanna Arquette); her far-oul roommate (Linda Fiorentino), an outgoing cocktail waitress (Ten Garr); a garrulous bartender (John Heard); and vanous other den11en!> of New York's night hfe (Verna Bloom. Thomas Chong. Richard Cheech Mann). "Being the producer. rm the most cooperative actor on a personal appearance tour. I'll do an)1hmg the~ want me t~ do," said Dunne dunng his Los Angeles tour .... After Hours' 1s a picture that needs explainmg. It 1s not a 'New York movie.' It is a 'cit) movie.' It could happen anywhere." Eight years ago, Dunne and actress Amy Rohinson both d1sappo1nted by the rolc'i they were offered. decided to J make their own films Thev first produced "The (hilly Scenes of Winter." 1.1.-h1ch "as lirst released as .. Head Over Heel, .. and later brought back w11h Its ongmal t1tle.,Next came "Baby. h's You," directed by John Saylci.. Wnh budgets of S2. 5 m1llton and SJ m1llton respect1vcl), both films earned modest profits. ".\ftcr Hours" opened to whd bus1nes'i 10 New Yo rk where 11 drew cnllcal raves as well ac; a few knocks. Now Dunne 1s a"a1t1ng the verdict from the rest 01 the countf)- ·Tm pleased with the picture: there hasn't been anythmg quite hke 1t.'' he said. "lfit flops. It will be double m) J fault -as a producer for not prcpanng It properl). ac; an actor for not cam IDR It. •"Oliver" at the Curtain (~II Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real, T usun (838-1540). nightly ellccpt Mondays at varying curtain umes through Oct. 27 •"Come Blow You Hore" at the Garden Grove Community Theater. Chapman Avenue west of Valley View Street, Garden G rove (897-5122), Fndays and Saturdays at 8· 30 through Oct. 26 •"Josepll ud tile AmazLDc Tedi~ nlcolor Dreamcoat" by the Buena Park C1v1c Theater at Buena Park High School, Magnolia Avenue at Academy Way, Buena Parle (821-1010), Fndays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Oct. 26 CALLBOAR D -Auditions for the Laguna Moulton Playhouse's holiday production of the children's play "The Red Sh~" will be held Sunday at 5 p.m. at the theateer. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach ... the show calls for three male and three female roles 1n all age ranges ... the show will be presented for two weekends, Dec. 5-8 and 12-15, and further 1nformat1on is available at 494-0744 or 494-8022 Saddleback College will hold aud1- t1ons next Wednesday and Thursday for .. The Diary of Anne Frank" at 7 p.m. in Room 306 of the Fine Arts building .... five men and five women in vanous age ranges are required for the World War II drama. which opens Dec. 6 for two weekends ... call direc- tor H. W)nn Pearce at 582-4747 or 582-4 763 for more information .. Julie Waldman-Thews playa title role ln "Evita." S2.IJO ' WEDNESDAY UCEn HWPtlT, stlT1' COAST ,LW, TIWI CHTER (IMIU llU.S llW. sue TtllNfl (WllTUMI 11.00 WtllHNT) 911-l1 •iM. l :H , lllU edwards LIDO 673-8350 NEWPORT BLVD AT VIOO LIDO Jtr TUEi a MD "Tm .a I .... fltu If CIAll" Ml . l:H ,,., IZ.M Tiii a Ml "RYH IUWT" (Ill --'11111 l:ll, •• ,. .... '9afsJO.•.M "r..-TDf um CMll" lP'SI •1M. l1H . lf!Jt .,,. "P'ff·lftf'I AIYEITUllE" ..... ,...,, ,,., ~A,, ..... ll:lt "HCI ro fUTUlf" ll 11 eawardSCINEMA 546·3t02 H-ABOA !OULEVAAD AT ADAMS COSTA M(SA tt.n Illl I WP! a TIMI _,, nntl AlllU LM11 l :U •N -tJ "nnn •1111·· •• , .. " edwaras HARBOR TWIN 63t ·350t HAA!OA 90ULEV AAO-T WILSOIC COSTA MES. 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JM, I II U :H , l•l·M 11• tti• 1111.1 .... ~ ... , .. au• ,. ,,..___.,., ... 1t• .... sue edwards SOUTH COAST LAGUNA 497. t 7t 1 S<>t '"~''AS' .. ,., &' BAO&ii""'' a.,_i,&81 Ac" R.WDlllMI ''l(TTB"' ....,., ...,.., .... eawards CINEMA WEST 891 ·3935 (~'"'""''"'' ~V..:>(llW[ST A'l \'llil~!-·111 .._ ______________ .... _______________________________________ ~~~~~~~~---------- ,, ,, .. . h: ,, I .. .. ,. ,. .. _ \ M Or.nee Coe9t DAILY PILOTIWedneecley, OctOber 18, 198& I 'Skin Horse' TV drama TV LISTINGS -&00-:1..:. 1=== humanizes the disabled HAM TO HAM Til&"8 «1#1/PNrr Off 81' t'fl0(£8 11•1B8NPORT PROJflCT UNMME CllNEWS AICNEWIQ ..CHIWS till.LfA'8 COURT R~ Of TM Doll"' (lM4) T•· ohl AbQl)Wll, Ma The)W -12:00- 87 MA'M' WOLP All , I ,,.___, LONDON - A atand-up comic in a WbeeJchair mi&ht ICICm like a contradiction in terms, but the creaton of .. The Skin Horse .. use thts openina scene to break down ~u­ dice towards the disabled. 1'berc•s no point in doina some- thina unless you're out to chanae people's attitudes or chanae society~· aaid Nabil Shaben, the disabled 3.t- year-old actor who co-wrote and n.arratea the acclaimed British documentary. The bour-lona film will be broad- cast toni&bt at 10 on KOCE, Channel SO, and RCET, Channel 28. The openina shows wheelcbair- bound Tony Gerrard joking with an able-bodied audience that .. l got drunk at a party and walked home." Shaban, 'born with an inherited condition called osteogcncsis im- perfect& that stunts the ~owtb of limbs and the spine, said in an interview that the irreverence of the opening "knocks people's mis~ conceptions immediately." "lt breaks down their ideas in such a shocking way that they arc perhaps more amenable to subseoucnt ideas." be laid. "It's a deliberate hooker," said Nipl Evans, the show's producer, co- d.iRictor and co-writer. "Most document.afiea tel\d to an over-respectful approach towards the sti&ma of beina disabled. which widens the pp between the audience and the subject," Evans added "We're ~ to throw stylistic con- ventions upsade down: We want to confront an audience with people's disabili.ties, rather than make an apolOI)' for them.·· .. The Skin Horse" takes its name from an Enalish children's story, "The Velveteen Rabbit," by Margery Williama Bianco, in which a toy rabbit and a leather-skin horse dis- cuss the difference between reality and fantasy. Besides its candid beginning, the unconventional approach of "The Skin Horse" includes frank dis- cussion of the sexuality of the dis- abled -an effort, said Shaban, "to be less coy about the subject." Documentary and staged footage are mixed with Hollywood film clips to illustrate the movies' treatment of the disabled. Shaban said that films like Tod 'Cop, ' 'Ghostbusters' set video showdown LOS ANGELES (AP)-It isn't exactly the shootout at the OK Corral, but "Gbostbusters" and "Beverly Hills Cop" arc going head to head in the video market this Christmas. RCA-Columbia said in August it was releasing the home videocassenc of "Ghostbusters" Oct. 31 . Two weeks later Paramount said it would bring out "Beverly Hills Cop" Oct. 30. RCA-Columbia retaliated by moving its release date up a week, to Sept. 23. RCA-Columbia is spending $1 mil hon on an advertising campaign for the movie, its biggest blockbuster ever. The early release day may help "Ghostbusters" only temporarily. It's priced at $79.95, while Paramount's "Beverly Hills Cop" will go for $29.95. GET Brownina'• notonous 1932 "Freaks" and David Lr,ocb's 1980 "The Elephant Man ' reinforce public views of the disabled u social outcasts. ''Here he is with us; he's still being ex.bibi~" Shaban CO!ll~ents in "The Skin Horse,'' poanUnJ to a skeleton of the Victonan~cra Elephant Man, John Merrick, whose story sparked an award-winning Broadway play as well as a film. "When I die, I'm getting cremated," Shaban said. "I don't want to end up like that." He said be objected to the implica- tion of "Whose Life Is It Anyway?", the film and play about a quadriplegic sculptor plcadins for euthanasia, that "people with a disability can't wait to die." As an actor, Shaban said he turns down roles $at equate his disability with villainy and evil , only accepting parts where his infirmity is not an ISSUe. In a recent segment of the British TV series "Dr. Who," Shaban played an alien who lives underwater on a life-support system. "The character was in no way described as disabled," he said. In bis new film. ''The Master Musician," Shaban joins star Peter Firth as a force of good countering the evil music master intent on de- stroying the universe. -. .. , had to tum my character around so he actually had a positive role," said Shaban, cast as a mute dwarf who issues his first cry when a woman dies in his arms. In 1980, Shaban co-founded the theater troupe GRAEAE, which talccs its name from Greek mythology and the three daughters of the sea god Pborcus who bad one eye and one tooth among them. The only full-time theater com- pany for the disabled in the world, G RAEAEaims to provide ··educative consciousness-raising" towards the disabled. • 0 MOYIE ••• ''The Sig Red Ont'" ( 1980) lM MIMn. M~ H.mill, -8:30- 11~ FOR COMFORT AllJY MACNB./LB4AEA I PHOTOGRAPHIC Vl8IOH iL~FORTUNE ID IN THE I.ANO Of THE 8l8l£ QB BEST Of HOT SEAT -7:00- 1 :':AIMMT TONIGHT HAPPY DAYS AGAIN A.BCNEWSQ DAU.AS (f) NEWS I THREE'S COMPANY WHEEL Of FORTUNE Ii> 8USINE.S8 REPORT (I) P.M. MAGAZIHE 8 HEADUNE CHASERS GD PM&SE THE LOAD l~THOTUHE •• "Best Defense" (1984) Dudley MOOfe, Eddie Murphy. (S)~:THEL~ EPtSOOES CZ)MOVIE ***'.it ,.State 01 Siege" 11973) Yves Montand, Renato Salvatori. -7:30-IJ 2 ON TME TOWN D PM:E IS RIGHT 8 WtiArS HAP9ENINOll G EYE ON LA. I w·A·s•H NEWl. YWED GAME Wl.D, WILD WOAl..D Of ANMALS '1!) FACES Of CUL TUAE Cl) SAN DIEGO AT lAAGE 9 P£OPlFS COURT a IE;OPAPDY m RACING FROM OAJ< TREE CC) MAX HEADROOM -8:00- 11 fl:.W~OHEA~ 9MOYIE *** * "Singln" In The Ram" (1952) Gene Kelty, Debbie Reynolds. I aJJ IN8llEA8 JOtcER'S WlD COMEDY BREAK WITH MACK N«JJAMIE eNEWS Gene xen,. will be .. smcm · 1n the Rain .. tn the eluate mo'rie'maalcal tonJcht at 8 on KTL~. Channel 5 . t * t "Tiff The Clouds Roll By" ~r Wallcer, VIII Heflin. ** * "Benji" ( 1974) Peter Breck. Patty Garrett. CID HARRY BEWOHTE: DON1 STOP THE CAPMNAL Cl) AICHAJI> LEWIS l'M IH PAIN CONCERT -8:30- 0 TIC TAC DOUGH (!) LOVE BOAT m P.M. MAGAZINE -t.00-IJ (I) CHARL£ I COMPANY D CllHEU.TOWH IL DYNASTY I STAR SEARCH ISi.AHO CALI.ED El.US Ii) MK1H COPlANO: SB.f, PORTIWT GD PAAl8E THE LOAD CID MOVIE ••Ill "Scarface .. (1983) Al Peclno. Mldlelle Pf!Mtter ©)MOVIE **'ii "The Lonely Guy'" (1934) Sttwe Manin, Cllartes Grodin. CS)MOVIE ** "The Man WllO Wasn't There" (19831 Steve Guttenberg, Jeffrey Tambor. (%)MOVIE TV Debut/Halloween II U Y, "Missing In Action" (1934) • Jamie Lee Curtl1 ·~· Chuck Norris. M. Emmett Walsh. l(C<JP ~ mJMOVIE ** "Hllloween It" (1981) Jamie Lee Curtis. Donald Pleasence. • SMrTHSONIAH WOfU.O '1!) SPACE SENATOR: ONE-WAY JAKE Gil PRA'8E M LOAD mMOVIE -t:30-IJ CJ) GEORGE~ COMEDY WEB< (f) MOVIE ••••.; "Now, Voyaoer .. (1~2) Bette Davis. Paul Hen<eld. (C)MOVIE ttt,; "Iceman" (1934) Timothy Hut, ton, Undsay CrOU$8. 1~~ MOM MM. fl£Oll\.E 100().lJI t ~ Jlglaw M111" (1984) w. dllll Celne. Lanncl OIMlr. -12:30-D QI LATE flBHT wmf DAVI> LfTT8llAN I fllA T PAll'Ol THN!M&O i·[;=-..c:~ INDEP8aNT NEWS OCfANU8 I SfTERTANIENT TONIQHT PfW8E THE LOflO MOYIE *"'"Ctn She Balle A Chlrry Pie?" ~=Bliek, Mk:Nll Emit tt\li "MINina In Action" (1984) Chuck Norn&. M. Emmett WMlll. (%)MOYIE • t 'h "Rocklllow" (1980) Paul McCar1nev ltld WJnga. -12:40- 8 (1) MOYIE *••.it "Cleopltra Jonel"" (1973) T llllll'a Dobson, Shelley Wlntert. -1:00-i=w .... "The Qo.Bet'#een'" (1971) Julie Christie, Alln Bates. eMOYIE t * t \li "You Only Uve Once" (1937) ~°'*-Sytvia Sidnly. 1 ~RYAH .. Ill "The Lonely Gvy" ( 19841 Sttwe Mlrtln. Charles Grodin. -1:30- DNEWS I AT THE MOYES ~TONIGHT AUlfTHEFAMllY ID PRAISE THE LOfl> m A&OOT TB.EVl8ION -1:36- ®MOVIE * t t "' 10" ( 1979) DOOiey Mooft, Bo Derek. -2:00-- • (() C8S NEWS HIOHTWATCH 0 AEOOAD OOIDE 8MOYIE ..,, "Sloux City Sue" (194e) Gene Au~~· I Ml88ION: W088IBlf ~~TODAY • • 'h ''Expenenc:e Preferred But Not Euenrlal" ( 1982) Elizabeth Ed, monds, Roy Heather -2:15- CS)MOVIE ... "Reuben. Reuben" (1983) Tom Conti, Kelly McGllb . -2:30- (f) MCMETONE NEWS fl!) 8EHll> THE scee "A miracle of a movie:' -Guy Flat~y. COSMOPOLITAN SWEE~ Fonda finds 'Agnes' alinktoherfather This is your chance to show off your boa constrictors or bibles, bees or bonnets. What do you have? 1>~~' . 1 r.v 3] . -· ~ ..... t.l ~·) '° . . -----~ IRO :.-.. ... COSTA MfJA A ,.,..,, • . .cO()"/U Mll&IOll YIUO f:JUIO\ -1 ,, t,.,. a:ioWJO lUINA 'A"• l"VIN( • OllAllOI ;,1.,• ·~"''1\/; .Ct• ·)i.,f r f()l)<Tlt61A2~~3 See today's classified section t o find the entry form for •. ' I'<• .. ~. ~~· ~11 WlflM .. ITI~ • COIU MIU •I.A MltlAOA vA !11 Stl 05•6 ICwt•C\ • ,,. ••('•t C.A'hi1l; •f1ttJ\t,_..,..'lll-.: •,.a;..11:i.., ;,,, •• , oo---· the Dally Piiot "Interiors" contest. HURRYIU -0'.toM.t.,r(.ft••'~'-•~• BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Pwformenct1 Mon•v W'ALv INS u .H 1s1 two Matt. WH1<0ar• also lured her to the Im, in which she Tllfll S.i.r.._ (Exe.• Holi•-1 ~ E--11) '"' "-* 0':~:-'l'H9i~i'la~:•uur"o'••srs••.s0u1.n0·' DRIVE · INS :~:~; plays a psychiatrist assigned by the -T "" ,. ~ ................ ' "' court to investigate whether a young LAKEWOOD lt-nfcr '""'" lf'tll OOUT~ IACK TO THWi IN! 121• JIN Jolt , .. ,, .. WMT iiiiHif'i THI JOUllNIY Of NATTY GANN ·-'1'..tft.lr' ''""" LAKEWO D Ct•nfet South ll1l'MIN ....... llLVH IULLn 1111 ,,,. i.• ... ... "" 10.Ja AITIR HOUU Ill 12iU 11U .... .... l+M 10.M LA MIRADA ... \,. ...J~ • .o~~ WMT DllNIY't Tll '°""' Of *"' ..,.. l1'0t ltll a.JI .... •11 Ill» IMO WILUAMS1 THI AOYINNll llON !,._UI 121•"" •.• ....... nDM9e ICINlt'I Ill VU IULUY 1111 121» ""•ii: WJWJ1~ COCOOH IN-UI ,,... ""'s.u , ... , ... COMMANDO (II 1•"91 ... , ....... 11 ... GATEWAY JAOOID IOGI (ll . ..... ,, ... , ... 1 ... HI Wll'I ltO ADVINTUU !NI ,,, ........ l.T. IXTIA lUIUTIW '""1'1 1121 ..,. , .... ST. IL.MO'S "U 1111 u.u~1-.. THI llUAKIAST CLUI llJ MSWJ1MJ JINKA LAH9ll9 ..,... .. swtn DltlAMI c,..,,. '"° ltU ttN ... , ... DOUY ~ ll1YIN .......... ,__,.. IACK TO nt1 nnuu i... 11111a.u141 ..1.,. *PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES• ANAHEIM UTTll Of P DIAD (N ) aJl«Y IUSINllS 111 ORANGE •.&... -,....,. • :'II:: .,..... ..... lfL Ya l4IU.IT 1111 fllDAYTHI llthPMTV A ..W ......... . MNOl.9 'CMflltm II I• COMMMeO _, AVINOffllO AHCMl flll loHABRA .. , i1.:uIJ '·~· ., ..... JAOOID IDOi llJ CllMU Of ,AllfON ca:i NOOM~ 11MLOW9 DAY Of 1'MI DUO IHYAltoH USA Ill lmll Of DUO""" ..,, ...... , ::~~.·.~~.C',~ClfW~(J( CitAMt: nun, portrayed by Meg Tilly and '••u1 UU\ lJ rw r. ~rl HOO~ 6)9 1110 11.,,11, liu• S••d•Un\ cbaried with murdering her newborn CITYCEnTEA 0 I Mt11o!oh11n Plu1 I" rkl•Y the 1 l h S chilcf, is capable of standing trial. ~~A~~l / 3901 J -.v. .. 9UL.l.KT r:1 ·~There arc people who for their own reasons develop a well-defined philosophy to j ustify their atheism, as the psychiatrist has done in 'Agnes,"' Fonda said. Ml.YEa MILl.rT CJ') Numb~ 5 (A) KISS OP n.'. Sft.:.a Shows at ........ .,., 7 :00 I+ t :OO 1 :45 & t :O DAYOFTHC~D Plu1 Co-Hit l"rltht Nltht (A) -•·-•CW. DEAD f'IOI THS OOCJS llUST -Show1 at C.'Wlt::I ...~-7 :01 I+ t :OS ~-=m\ Q#1Ui);43 (,U •I•J,,fl 6) 6l4s!~~1~c:.·'~n) RAMllO Fl•ST aLOOo .-.T DREAMS l:°"'»l TH( JOURNEY PAltT tr (llJ "•us 1 :00 3 :1$ S: 5 °'NATTY GANN Mio M•• ll•11ono 7:11 .. 10:1$ 1 :50 ):IC> 5:90 7:90 t :!IO ThunCl•roome (~·I J) AP'"'Fltll HOUQ t• • CCllNIOO (II) 1 <40 l :40 5:40 "G•UOF GOD \1'G'1., Plue Co+. It 1.20 J 25 s s Porky's Rev•ft99 (R) 7 :40 & t :•O 7·4 5 a. t H eACllt TO THE. M94M[D EDM ,., ST, l:UIO'S ~-I: (II) FUTU•t:(Nl 1 ,10 1:05 l :25 5:4 Plus Co+tlt "But many more people obviously have a need to believe, some deep need to believe in something outside themselves." she said. JanePonda The script lacked tidy answers and left a lot of ambiguous loose ends. That might be dangerous com- mercially, but it was right and provocative as a story, Fond& said. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Best Wish• from: Dr. W. Ronald Redmond & Staff ):JO 5 :501100 1 O;JO I : 1 O & 10:25 The 8r•ekfHI Club (R) " OIUVE...S C:Mdm• Undcf 11 f RCl Unlno Nottd/°'"n 7 30 Wkda'I'> 7 00 Wkendl l.J Bryan Hand Bryn Drace Wayne Hunt Shelly Tombleeon Jennifer MMhan Ke'rin Wit.on Stacy Taylor Ana Tally Jennie Hunt Bridqet Ca.rtar Sean Collier Gilbert Mora Joshua Golden Alicia Jerome Jenny Gula · Irma Qui.el offer good at this location only I l7792COWM Hl·&OeO PRIVATE STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT ev THE MONTH e You ltore It • You Lock It e You T•k• the Ker RESIDENT MANAGER ON PREMISES Your pertoMI btlonolnot Wt Wltnd lndMduelty k>ci.d dOOf't t CONVENU!NT Rent only the epeoe you need. wnporary or tong term. Open .-y d•y except m•Jor hOI• ldey.. EMy Ill Ind out. • EVERY~. WHENEVER THE IVOON WAS FULL ... rr CAME IW:K. JI\•, -----·- NOW PLAYING ... -WWM .......... ,_~( .... ()wow- ~ ..... ., ... --=~-l!R.. u. .... llP• ~ =·-.. u .. -l_,,_ -~-... ,..0...111 ~ ... CPOle ., .. ...... .... =-, ..... ~c...:x~ .,.,. .. , ..., ... 1:.-:-..::.1 ,_,., .... 1lllGll Tiann V aldenama 181 Avenida Vaquero • San Clemente (714) --2141 -L&. .. --_,_ Uf..ml 1:.1.em ..... _,_ -... ~ Jll .. l .. ... ., a---a PICH-TmOlll·-.......... .. ... .· FUNKY WINKERBEAN THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "Would you change your shirt, M ommy? I don't have a yellow crayon." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Someone to see you ... and bring your camera!" DRABBLE ~. '4£6. fL4£ ~-!> i 6U.f !>MEU.b E.~T I GARFIELD MOON MULLINS LOOSE lA1J( SINKS SIP.S. JUDGE PARKER Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wed~y. Oc:tobet 11. 1116 - by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Gatry TrudeaU BIG GEORGE by Vir gil Partch (VIP) SHOE by Jeff MacNally .. f ! i i "It 's electrtc." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham 'My TWHER SAID ™E. WRLO IS ROUNU ,BlIT ~ DAU SA'(S ITS CROOKE 1) • by Kevin Fag an by Jim Davis AAE YOU A5HAMft7 OF YOUR NEW E!>E.O, GARl=IE.LD? by Ferd & Tom Johnson NEV'Efl. A NNOUNCE "YOUR WIFE'S COfv\ING Do WN To GET )bu.'' FIRST SAY .u-~ WUOSE WIFE! ~~:~­~ ~-~ ~ _., . t ...__ J)~r --. (__ ~ J-_)~...J::.- by Haro ld l e Doux !Aa~ ~OE. PL.EASE . '™'5 .4NT"I· 5~1NG TIJWG- 15 GETilNG o.n-~ UA~ .. PEANUTS BLOOM COUNTY MJTHfR lM Of MY I1t1 ~ LlfE .. 14H1 ~ .4IE )(JI/ HOfE ~ l l MEED TO Off C~ YOLJR NOVEL TO SEE 1F ITS SUITABLE FOR OUR SCl400L UBRAR'f '{Ef\t-1, SHE.5 OK -I I LIKE. Yo.JR MOM . ,,_ ( 1 by Charles M. Schulz by Berke Breathed NIN£ RM:MU-' MTHN MY MtEPtlrrE FM!ll.Y C~l/nurKJNj, ~ "IM" IWY OH~ ~, 'MftN ... )W(AIN# {,tf M'l(JfO 1 / by To m K. Ryan JLJsr M.ISI~ •• SA~ tSN'i rr""9r 'bLJlf ~'7TlMer by Pat Brady C/W5. ta" IMCH£5/ BRIDGE l .\(Kl.ETHE Rl<.HT Sl 'IT Neither vulnnable South deal-. ~ORT H WEST +106 ~ K 8 4 0 Q10 7 4 • J 985 • KQ 5 J S 3 953 • I( 6 42 EA ST + J 9H3 ~A QI0962 Vokt • 10 7 OUTR • A 8% .:; 7 :AKJ 862 •AQ 3 The bidding: o.tla WH t Sen.II Eaat 1 O Pau l NT 2 ~ .1 ~ Paa• l • PaH 4 0 Pau 5 0 P ... p... Pua O~nlD(C lud. Four or ;;;; T rump Coup Tommy waa highly Hhtfied with I~ Although t ht' year waa alr.ady 10 1t1 final quar tu. he was w1nnm1 '9 50 -l~ first ume ht> had t>ver bHn plu' et tht dub so latt an l hf' yf'ar A1 our rf"adtr1 know, Tommy hu 1 ~n chant for playing ••II only on thOH bands wher• t rumps brHk badly On the ••mplu t htnd• ht wall go down ~lUff or l lUptd l{lfff \;l)tl' '-orth 'dehcalt' h111 nl lhrl'l' "pades -a dangerouc. t.1C"t11 v. ht·n play1nit w11h Tomm) :-.1n1·t' '\11rth '"-OU ld hav(' "ho" n a '>pal1t' .u1t JI the one le' el 1r hf> had •int' t ht> h11l showed a concentrat111n ur '' rt>n)(t h rather than a redl 'iU1l tn ra'!t' n1 .. partner wanted to pJJ\ nt1 trum1 OMAR SHARIFF Tommy. who had alr eady sho" n his 'tr~ngth with h1~ cuf' hid nf the enemy ~u1t, rnuld do no mor€' than rebid h1~ diamond,, and v. hen ht~ partnf'r a mply ram•d. an .td\ 1•n turous auction t'nded qu1t'th We't won the ace of hurt'l and rf'turned tht' suit Tomm) rufft-d and laid down lhf' act' of diamond .. E111·~ hurt tl1M"ard wa\ manna from h('avtn To makt h1• rontrart Tommy had to 'trip "t''t o( lus 'ldf' tu1t card' and reduce tht> lf'njl'\h of h19 o,.·n trump holding TQ t hf' un1n1t1atf"d. it m11fhl •f'f'm that. ''"<'f' :-.lorth South'• comhinf"d hold m« 1n clubs wu lon~r t han •paO.-s . h m1ch1 two rt11tht lo rlur I ht· 'P•llil'' first A, I hi· rard<. l1t' lh,ll "'uuld ha'" duomf'd the ron t rJ1't v. hen \.\ t>'\l rulfed the 1 hard 'Jlddl' rumm\ rt'ahi ed th.ti ht' l'ould nol mJkt' Int l'ontrart unlf>'" thrf't' roumh ol rluth v.t>nl 1hr11ugh .\r 1•11rd1nicl) ht· r.i<>hl'd t he .tre qut•1•n CHARLES GOREN or dubs. tht'n crossed to the kina of c.-lub'l H '" fort"511fht was rt>ward4-d v. hl'n f,,,, did Mt follow to thf' third rlub Tommy rufft'd lhP t.able °' la'lt duh, C'U ht'd thl' ace or 'lp&de... rro,<1ed to t ht' king and rufft'd a heart :"ov. hf' wu down U> tht' king Jack of trumps and a apade. "'h1lf' Wot held nottunc but trumf>1. IH-clartr 91mply I~ h11 'P•df' Wt"SI wa~ forC'td to ruff. and t ht>n had \0 pr.s('n t Tommy •1tb h11 contract by lead1n1 a tr ump 1n\O h•~ K J tenac. COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88 It's the battle of the boards The Newporter Resort announces changes Ted Gray is the new exccuti ve chef at Tk Newporter Resort. He was sous chef for former chefMJcbel Watne, the new executive chef at the 11'\'iae Hlltoa. Other changes at ne Newporter Resort include the appointment of Gleu Bodaoa to director of catering and the appotntment of Job Rader to food and beverage director. • • • Rick Haa1er has been named director of operattons for ne Bale GRAY HODSON RADER Corporat1oa'1 Rancho Niguel development. He will oversee and coordinate all elements of construcuon of the f>@acre master- planned Laguna Niguel community. • • • Frank R. Herbert has been appointed Vice President of Propeny Management oflDM Properties Corporation a subsidiary of the IDM HAUSER HERBERT VORWERK Corporation. An Irvine resident. he will oversee the management of the firm's commercial. residential and retail developments. ••• KeviD R. Vorwerk. 27, has been named vice president of the Newpon Beach Harbor View branch of CaWonaia First Bank. A Newpon Beach resident, he has been with Callfonaia First Bult since he st.ancd as a teller in the Huntington Beach branch 1n 1976. • • • Nick Homer bas become a panner in the accounting firm Price AST Research of Irvine sues, claiming company stole computer circuit board By FRED VOGEL.STEIN °' ... .,.., ......... In 1981 . when Irvine-based AST Research Inc. started manufactunng a circuit board that would increase the memory of an IBM personal computer, company executives were naturally optimistic about future sales. However, they had no idea that during the next four years the com- puter industry would expand at astronomical rates. and that by June 1985 the company would sell more than 500.000 boards and generate S 138 million in revenues. Few can predict success hke that. But success often has a dark side. AST 1s embroiled in a lawsuit that may determine 1ts future financial success. AST filed suit in Los Angeles federal court in March against Basic Time Inc. of Santa Clara and its subsidiary Qubie Distributing for alleged copyright, trade name, and Koll Center complete trademark infringements. AST claimed that after a distribu- llon contract expired between AST and Qubie. Basic Time manufactured a copy of ASTs board, the "six- packplus," and sold it under the Qub1e name in the U.S. and under the AST name to foreipl distributors, according to Bill King, director of contracts. The suit is an attempt by AST to stop Basic Time and Qubie from misusing the AST name and the product, Kmg said. It also attempts to get Basic Time to pay AST for the money it lost m sales because of Basic Time's "illegal" actions, he said. Basic Time illegally manufactured and sold 20,000 boards at a cost of $390 apiece after its contract with AST expired in June 1984, he said. Basic Time officials say they did nothin$ wrong si nce the contract they had with AST permitted them to manufacture AST's product after AST had sold them 1,000 boards, accordmg to Cynthia Woollacott. the attorney for Basic Time. She said that provision had bcc.n fulfilled by the end of 1982. Bas~c Time waited until 1984 to beg.in producing the boards becuase they weren't sure a &ood market for the product existed until then, she said. Jn addition, Woollacott said, Basic Time claims that under the contract, AST overcharged them by $621 ,000. As a result, Basic Time has filed a $621,000 counter claim against AST. Both King and Woollacott aveed that the case turns on an inter- pretation of the two-year distribution contract Basic Time had with AST that ended in June 1984. Woollacott claimed that although the contract ex{'ired in 1984. once manufacturing nght.s arc granted in a contract, they extend beyond the contract's life. King said that under the contract with Basic Time the manufacturing rights were never granted. He said that Basic Time had the right to produce AST boards only if ASt went out of business or if the company failed to deliver the boards to Basic Time on a timely basis. Thia jut-completed. two-atory building leuecf to Silo-Fed Mo~ace Corp. la the final building In the 125'-acre Koll Center Newport. The center la a 12-year muter- planned project offertna office apace In Newport Beach. HOMER BATISTE McNALLY Walerboose. He will head the Newpon Beach office's management consulting team. Other changes at Price Waterboaae include the transfer of Jim McNally from the Orange County office to San Francisco and BUI BaU1lt will replace McNaJJy as Panner-m- Charge of the office Western Digital plans layoffs Western Digit.al Corp. plans to cul 35 employees from its Irvine factory staff and 60 employees froms Its Irvine corporate headquarters. The staff cuts were prompted by increased production costs. which the firm blames for its an11c1pated fourth quaner losses. Despite the ant1c1pated loss, West- ern D1g.i tal ex peels to post a profitable year with revenues of about $1 77 m1lhon. up from I 984's revenues of S 11 3.5 m1lhon. In add1t1on to the Irvine reductions, Western plans to eliminate 350 temporary pos1t1ons at (Pleue .ee BRIEFS/87) Disney denies European site already picked -111111111aw111rn1--------------- Walt Olsney Productions on Tues- day denied reports b) 1he French and Spanish press that a firm decision has been reached regarding the locauon of Euro Disneyland. Dick Nunis. president of Dis- neyland. Walt Disney World and Disneyland International. said. "We arc in discussions with the French and Spanish governments regarding sites in their respec11ve countnes These discussions are con1mu1ng but they have not reached a defin1t1ve point for us to makea decision We do not have a definne date as to when we will reach this final determination " Walt Disney Producti ons al so an - nounced that it has retained as financial consultants, Lazard Frcrcs in France and the Bank of America 1n Spain. S* S'l'J Ho<lrlh 2lot l M<Crm Jl~ "" Perrne 33 :14 Hvl><llC ,,,,. 27"-MCFerl 11 • 1 lllt PllllC.1 33'"1 l3 • IMS ' ll.lt n . MedCre s s .. Pion HI .. "' .... ISC 17'. 17llo MedEI ' I .. I l " Poul\ 11.., n •1> lnfolhc 2• 10• Mlcom IS IS • Powell 9 t''t lnttrn I) , 11 In· foll,tttaW l 27 ') n.._ Pr\C.M I~ 16 train ,..._ 7 , Intel MdldC• l>\ • • Pre~tv 11 1• • 13 > 73\.o In· Mldl8k 361-31 Pr09ro 16"'> 16l4 trcEnr 1 1"-MIMIM 1'~ 60 PbSNC 11 20 WOOll ' 16 • 26 ,, ""'*• n 31 • PIH18n 6'4 '" ln8Wlll 13•-. 11"-MonfCI 20 > 11 OMS tt tt" lwaSoU •S 4S • MOniA. ll\9 ll'-Ou•or• 17"-17>\ J•mWtr 1'.., ltlot ~eP 26 16'.lot QuakC ' 29 29"• JefMart S1"o 6 ~"n 11 • 11 '> Aae>en 60''> 61 ', Jtrlco 111' 11'-MotClb IS • IS'> Ravmna 6 6''• Jonlcbl S'h ~ Mueller 11 .., 13 Aec:llCr Jl1"o :19•1, Jcnc>n\n 7''t ,.,. Narro<: 41'" 42 AMve\ ••" 14" Jottvn 29 29'1> NOate 1)'4 11 A.ulrH • ''" l(alvar IS 16 1 NMlcrn 3 l"-AoadSv 19'"" l01i. l(am.n 31'1• 31'1> NtwkS ' 111't n''t AobMvr I•~ 14~ l(fVS A ' 3S''-3S"' vlNckOG Aou" \ 13 1, ••'"' l(emo S3" SJ'il s 32 7 • 32 Sadlier ,.,., 1s•1, Klm1>a1 17 '> 11 '" Nli..e e 14,.. "" Safeco 11'<'• 21'\io Kll!Vl nl 7''• 1-.. No<d\lr 47'1• O '<t StHIG<I 2~ 2•'-l(IC>of{. ' 1'-7 11-1' NCarG\ 21'1• 23 StPeul '~ '~ l(na~V 31•1, 31''> NwNG 17" ,,._ Scflere< ... ,, .. ~ Kruoar 11" 12~ Nwll~ 21~ 21''> ScrloH 1" l"' l(Uleke t•.-. ~ Noaall ~~~ S i"' , J"' La~ ' n jt''o NuctPn ~ ·~~ l," ~:. .: ~ 1 .. m~..... ~." ~ 1is. 1H ~ t.. on , "' 1 I) -I' :r.-.~ ~ ~ ~' 6 6l>. L flnvl '6 • 46 lit DI! 6 • llo I j 'j, LjlvTvl 17 ~ l'I §'irTP Jl"ll 11-. lcna "' L 1111ro 1S''t 0<0 1t1-31 ~...,'· .,•IW1 ~ I ~ I " MCI 9''> " A Int ~ EIS. ~ ~'.lot Mec!GE 2S'-'t ~~ PcC.eA •1, Me~PI J 'i'll Panl~ '"" '-'>'t Ma I ,,._ "'PMf t ltJ '' ~I> Mau P '" Pena n j "' 'f• Mav S 11 · 16 Penta1 ' "" ~ '• Mevn04 PeooE • .. 'la 'l'I s 11 16 S '" PeoR t 32 -16 egreatrate NEW YORK (AP) -The tollowlng list shows ll'le · Over • the -Counltr slocks end werrenls that have OOM up the mosl and down Iha most be.ed on oe~~~rf1~nr,e!fi'no ~~~al2 or 1000 shares ere Included. Net end oer«ntage chane>es are the dtfferanee betw"'1 the previous closlno Pf'lct and Tues.d•Ya.Jtst or bid price. l WU~me L]~~. C~ utct~ .. 6 ~ ~M~. nSA T ~ :~ 8~ :J7 4 H~vtrCo ~ 7~ Up . S PlcTel l4 1h UP . l Keypro .,.. ~ UP .• ACMAT Corp 1 'h 3'1• Up .3 lcGrePhlc S l,4 UP .. 6 mpoon 3:1,4 112 UP S.4 lll Cup nc 7:1,4 I Up ''· 'tf/2Kt:~~ !'I• l'I• 8~ ii•: Ft. FdlAuslln 2 'h Up J . 14 CQf'llln1,1um s 1 112 112 UP . 5 HEI Minn 4'h 112 Up l . l6 ~S~ghel l,4 Up I . ~7 rr'k~~~s ~ 4~ 8~ I : MCIC~m 'h ~ UP 1 . Megnellclnt :\4 :i.4 UP .4 GtrWstn un •;. Up 9.1 ~ukonEgy 'I• Up 9. l lv-d 'h UP 9., 4 retdHllh s 1 •;,. 1 Up I· S Novemtrx ~ l4i Up . DOWNS l Ffi1~riCi LTI~ =~~ Pc1~:s $ ~Ynm~ un s ~ -'h 1 . 1 4 ~~~~~If , ~ = ,il l . =~mPlr 3 = ¥: J : mpt Ii\ -'I• . lagns un I/• -1h J . ransn.t ~ -'I• Jmr90lnc 1 '~ -1 'At Homec~ 1h -~ Wastw:rind""P l -l ::·~ ~,.,5s g"' = :~ ~ :.!Pi -:~: ·1::: rewriitv I/• .MoMlevHdO 'i4 I/• US Veaitn "' 'I• Hot«>OMblt 1/• ~ AdvGenetlc ~ -fi 4 lnnovex s l -s lmunogenel 2 3· 16 -3- 8 6 M 6 0NTH 9 • ~0,000 M 8 inimum 3 8aJa 3 nce % T 6 MONTH • $50,000 Minimum Balance _____ _, • ~~~r.nt • ~~;;tn• I .__ ___ _ 8 ao ~rrrnt • Yield• 8 43 ~rrtnt • Rate • ,,., ... ~ •lfil' •" ,~ 1· • .,,.. t ,. •flr111 .~ IUvl! Oofll I~ • •n' •'' .~ ... ~ •".HI~ '' ,,. •l'td ;• 11lf':M ,..,-1 • t•• r•1~ 0-...·~ t·• .,.,.. 'lff'tr\t • ,., ~ ~ dlpo\1t '"' (M't ,. .. fl 1f'tf tJ•t..O "'"'•\f ,,., l'l,,.,..,f" MPIV,.°"°....., Of'• )6~ 16' ~ "•• ..,,,,., llf fl lf't t I "'"" 111(WWI •fll!irwll II:•••,....,~ bf·fl'\ff l! /)tl'l 1'JO 11''1 l'lf\ "ll f -• • H'l/1' f• ;t •"It f w .. t • •Ill • t•t I (W "' ~· " O' I ... , '" h •1fl 1•\wtt fl' \~b ''*II.ti •liltf ff'il OJ'"'tih 11tf1f'tl "'' r\ w•t to dlMtlf d•'f't Open your account today. Call the toll-free Financial Line now : 1-800-423-BANK . IOO Years of Said)'• ~\CU Over $7 81llK"1 Great American '\Our advantage bank. - ' ~uh ••·•ff\;.t"tnlnJOr1ncrCnum}. Analwtm llUI\ f.J Tom Ralbne l\land 1-oull«affl V.alty 8altlnA l'fn1t1'UI• HundftlWI lloic.tt C1pl'1r1.M Ruell l41'1N Atach l.lltf\•"" Hiii• IJIJl.1M "llttucl M'-""' V ""' MoN!r\h l'e' Nt"*pnn ~· C>Bnp ~('ltmnM.f \an Juen C..,-ram w.~ ............. ________________ .,.. ________________________________ ~ ......... ~------~~~~~~--~--- About Basic lime's counter claim, King said he couldn't understand how the company could have a~ to pay for the boards and then claim tt was overcharged a year-and-a-half later. King said he was distressed by the uncooperative stance Basic Time assumed in the dispute. Basic Time's Vice President John Atchison and its President Gerold Harold, president of Basic Time, a~d Mark Malloy, president ,of Qub1e Distributing were unavailable (or comment. The suit. which is sched- uled to go to trial in a year, is in what lawyers term the "discovery" phase where much of the information gathering for the trial is ac- complished. Smee the su11 was first filed 1n March. AST has managed to stop Basic Time and Qubie from manufac- turing a software package that comes with the boards and has stopped them from distributing an instructio~ man- ual which AST claims is a duplicate of theirs. But AST has not been able to keep Basic Time from manufacturing the boards. Fireworks will fly in courtroom By tbe Auoclated Preas The Anaheim firm once operaled by convicted fireworks tycoon W. Patnck Monarty is s01ng eight ex- employces and their new firewor1ts company for $2 million, contending they stole secret client lists. The Superior Court suit filed Fnday by Pyrotronics also seeks a coun order preventing newly formed Red Dragon Fireworks Co. of Orange from using the customer lists. Red Dragon attorney Dennis Doss denied any lists were stolen. He noted that since potential fireworks cus.- tomers must register with st.ate and local authorities, their names att available to any fireworks company. Moriany pleaded guilty to mail fraud charges in March. admitting his panicipation in a scheme to bribe City of Commerce officials to obtain a poker parlor license. He 1s awaiting sentencmg. Moriany stepped down as chairman of Pyrotronics in Febru- ary. NYSE UPS & DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -The foll2wlng 1111 shOws lht New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants lhat have gone up Iha most Jnd down the mos1 bawd on percel'\.! of change regardless of volume for Tues«Mv. No *urllle$ trading below S2 are 1~1-·udtd. Net and "'9f"Centaoe ctianoes art the difference bttW'ten the previous closlng price and T~va~ p.m. price. Name Lest C11g Pct 1 GttRes of! ~~ I Pt Up .S 2 ~IPw 4.2~ 1'12 Up 6 3 olg Palm ~ 21;. UP :i i t nAm wt ~ 14 UP .··~ AL wtA 'Al Up oldnNuo wt 11' UP I ~eln'c!; wt ~ 8~ ::.·l i Ind ~'II 'Al Up I I WstFn '" 211\ Up ~O 1h 'I• UP sl oNA ~1/• 1.1! Up AccoWlcl 1 'I• Up Ret>Alr wt ~ v. UP ··t FloetPH 1'12 Up ~aan nll 'At 'I• Up leek ecli. 1 1/• ~ UP •. , luetPea of 24~ 1 !l't Up 4. an Am 111. ~ UP • 8uti.rlnt ll l ~ UP i Anacomp ~ 'At UP ~ S ~body 1 '12 1h UP • S st~CP ~ l'h UP J·4 4 bd er ~ I UP .4 S max of 'h 111. U11 .3 Peli :i BUSINESS NOTES From86 its Camarillo plant, 200 posauons at its Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia plant. WOC is also planning to increase the work force at its Puerto Rico plant from 25 to 140. • • • Monarch Bank regularly disflays photos of the top students o the month from its adopted school, Moulton. The October students of the month are kindergarteners. Janelle Haseman, Jennifer Darpvel and l;ravis Smith. Small NASO BROKER DEALER Seeks knowl~able operating Partner to guide exparmon of firm in Newport Beach P.O. Box 561 Corona del Mar 92625 FREE INVESTMENT SEMINAR WIND ENERGYTAXSHELTER Theres rio potnl 10 a snelter it you ger no rerurn ARBUTUS the developer !hat s proud 11 tis production record Atlend ou• seminar to 1earn rtow 10 turn ta..c 1tab1hty into 1ong term income Oct. 17th I 1985 at the Arbutus Corporation 4041 MacArthur Blvd., Suite 230, Newport Beach, CA at 7:30 p.m. R.S.V.P. L1m1ted seating. Don McBride or Gary Marks (714) 47&-8800 lladMt~ & COMPUTER CENTERS SAVE s304ao ON A TANDY 1000 WORD PROCESSING SYSTEM 12P Aeg.Sepenrte tteme 1 to3.IO Law Ae MO Per Month on CtdUne • • T.ncty 1000 II Softw.,. CompMlble wtttt the 1• PC-Ctlooee from Thouunda of ProgtWM • DMldlllte Feeturee Six Popum AppNcetloM on One Dlek • HomeWord Word Proc 1 lllng Progrwft .. EMy to U. for Letten., M1moe llnd AlpcM'ta • VM-2 Monootnme MofiltDf ~ IO >e 25 Text Md MO >e 200 ttigh> A11 *"°" Qnipttk:a • Prtnt ~llllty Oftglll• with the -1IO Dot.......U Prt.• ~ CoMt OAJL Y PILOT IWedMedwy. Octob« 11. 1118 Jn Volcker says he's staying C airman of Fe era eserve Board denies he's heading to World Bank post are at the JOOIOalt,•• Vokker llid. Volcbr'1 mnatka. bit ftnl D9btic utterance on the 1peculatioo tince it bepn circulauga lut moolh. bfoclOt a beany round of al)plautt from the 11.LOCheoo a~ of b&obn ud investment otliciala. BJ TOM RAUM ,,, .._ W ASHINOTON (AP) -FedcraJ Reterve Board Chairman Paul A. Volcker declarina "rm here, I'm atayina/· hu put an end to specu- lation that be m.i&ht leave his post to become president of the World Bank. "To •li&htly misquote lb~ put American wnter Mark Twain, the reports of my demise a.re areatJy euueratcd.. •• Volek.er told a busmeu conference sponsored by the Amen- can Stoek Excbanae Tuesday. Volek.er also said this nauon's current trade deficit, approachi~ SI SO billion. was "unsustainable and that basic reforms were needed to ease down the value of the dollar and to restore economic equilibrium - both at home and abroad. He said the United States must reduce its own $200 billion annual budaiet deficn and that other nauons must takt •te"PS to sumulate their economK.. There i• ··no rna&JC 10 marupulauna exchaoae ratca alone" and Fed action to try to drive the dollar funher down with a more accommodatina monet- ary policy is not an option, Volcker wd. He II.id action last week by the Senate -endorsed by the Reapn administrauoo -to mandate a balanced fcderaJ bud&ct in six years was a "very coostrucuve" step toward puruoa th.ts nauon's financial house in order. However, be wd that livina up to such bud&et discipline would be politically difficult. Volcker, whose term as Fed chair- man runs through August 19871 was ukcd by a member of the audience about the rumors of an impendingjob switch to the World Bank. "rm here. I'm sta)"lng. Notlnng as forever -but that 1s the way things •t~ I . Volek.er called lhe World 8aok -. very prestiaious institution f'or ~ I have put respect.. that be wd would play a role of inctea.lint imponance in the months ahead ln ar&PPlina wtth the Third World debt crisis. "The que1uon arose some ume qo, whether that was an appropnate place that I might think abouL And. m m spite of all those thlnp I wd about 1t, my answer is no," Volcker added. Volcker said government 10ter- vention m currency markets - following an aarecment reached at a meeting in New York last month among finance ministen of the five ma1or industnalized nations to work together to drive down the value of the dollar -would have limited impact in easing down the dollar. it. Flexible five-year. 1ooq financing and 11?5% start. You'll qualify for our low rate just by opening a Home Federal checking account and usin g our annual percenta~e ratt' Sure Pay system to make your pay- It's really that easy. Because now ments automatically. Home Federal's new car financing And don't forget. we ca n help you is as flexible as it is affordable. make other important purchases . Along with a great low rate you too , \.\ith personal lines of credit, can get a good long term, up to home equity loan and home mort- five years. And a loan of up to gage loans. $25,000. You can even finance , But hurry. This offer ends 100% of your costs -including tax NoYember 15. 1985. And it could and license. be you r last chance to get both the That means you don't need a car you like and a loan you can li\·e trade-in . And you don't have tocome with . up with a penny to put down. Noth-So if you\e already found your ing could be easier. ~l#i~ ca r. find vour wav to the nearest Except for the way you pay. ~ y~ Home Federal. Or call toll free Because at Home Federal , ~ ~ 1(800)554 -262 6 for infom1 - it's all taken care of at the ation and an application •Examplt-: If your loan tot.1ls $12.000. your60 month!\ pa\111t'nb art' 1u-.1 i..!t1t1 h 1 1 •11l'r m.1, ht·"' 1th111.1"'Tl ilt am 11m1 Certam restncuons applv ll'l."dit appm\'al sub)f'ct to standard quaWlcatk'lf'I' m t·n.1 L.A. COUNTY Arcad&a 445-3220. ~oerly1 u Cienep 652-8562. Beverly Hills 274~. Glendale 240-9333. La Caft8da 790-7111. u T~ra 67().3626. LA Downtown 625-2099. Larchmont 462-6463. Llwndait 371-4613, Uncoln Heigt'IL, 223-1164. Manna deJ ~ 823·4141. Paa~ m -8666. Pllya deJ Rr,i 822-2905. Redondo 8nch 316·3341. 'Rlmnce 378-~. ~tchHter 670-0150. 'f\lett Coma 962-3«1, West Loi ~ 47&-7789 W!atwood 474.3503 SAN FERNANDO VALLEY SA.~ u ·rs OBI SPO COl 'NT\' Canoga Park348-4141 . Sorthnd&'f' Mom1 Ba\' 772·44i7 Paso Rnblt-s 360-2326. Sherman Olks~T40l. ~-5750 Pisrm ~ach iiJ-4804. ¥.bod1and Hills 703· l221 San Lws Obispo fluvmtown ';4} 26()(1, ORANGE COl 'NTY San LUIS Obispo 'Madonna Pln11 D-1--,,,.~L.l-!>«·ill! DUIS&'vuu:r!Yoftt 89M'l934. BnstoilMJlc.Arthur 979-3000 SANTA BARBAR.A C Ol. ·n FUDerton 993· 1200. Hunungton Carpvrtma 684 ·4113 l~ta Beach 536-6511. Huntington Beach 964-3571. Lompoc i36 i502 Ntwtand 964.f1607. lrvV1C 854·8Ul. Montecrto 969 5~. Sant.a Barbara 1...-iuna Hills no-nn. L.iuna Downtown 966-1781 . s B 'Mllpas N'JIUd 495·2880. Nrwport Beach 963 14-42. S 8 r.-.ionnsldr 682....025. ~1634. Sanjuan Upstnno B.ISan Roque 687·5546. Santa 493-0601. Santa AN 667·2400. Mana 922-8481 . Solvlna 688·8069 SW 8exh ~3481. Tustin VE!'m.JRA COUNTY ~ Camanlk> 482-4611. 0,.. 646-0141 , RIVERSIDE COl 'NTY Thouaand Oaks 4~ -9588. \lentun Hemet m 1040 648·5.211. ~UlllVtetona 644..wr; ca; @ ~Vi 4 9500 L 1 ,..;;: "•W1• $" ti.llnl 11...,.. \<.ct.~, °""·1111 llh~11 Hi'"" fMt-r1 ,.., "11' mr1 lr.iir \•-'<llllflll ~ F I K ~ •' ~~~~~------------------------------------------------------------------------~----- I: il~ IHd~fJ,t1Ui l:fJ!tif3ifti!t4 WEllESllY'I CLlllll PlllOU Ol\I ... ~· I.•" '"' ()111 ... '91el u ,, (llf Stock market advances NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market staged a strong advance Wednesday. carrying the Dow Jones 1ndusuial avera~e to a record high. The market ran into some selling Tuesday. But analysts said the prevailing mood among mvestors still seemed to be upbeat. The government reported this morning that industrial production dropped 0.1 percent in September. Nevertheless, analysts said traders were mcreasingly confident that the economy was bcg.innmg to gather momentum after a sluggah first half of 1985. They also said buying interest was stimulated by hopes that third-quarter earnings would not be as disappointing as had been feared earlier. On Thursday the government is scheduled to report on the gross national product for the third quarter The Commerce Department's early "flash" estimate put GNP growth for the period at a 2.8 percent annual rate. after adjustment for inflation. WHAT AMEX DID , WHAT NYSE Om NEW YORK <APl OCt. 16 a:d'::r T1 ¥~~ New l'I Ol'IS New IOws AMEX LEADERS Due to transmission prob- lems In New York. today's listing will not appear in the Daily Piiot. GoLo QuoTES Prev. dlP ti ' NEW YORK (AP) ()Ct. t6 Prtv. Adv~ncld T~t ~~ Oedned ¥nchenffd otel lfisues ~1w l'I Ol'li 46 ew lows 26 NYSE LEADERS METALS QuoTES NASDAQ SUMMARY famoU5 lab<ils ... ~t br.oc.h '+~ ni!lh\On e '°rd, 7\'t/e-t .. ~ ~v\\\ogl. IOOl ~bt-..d. 21Y2C6 Jl.7~ p!'t10d1m" 52'!>!.outh leN~. 018130't 9~3~ mon t.hru Ch 10t.o9. ~l.ufdoy lO to~ l aJrdoy noon to~ You may not realize 1t. but vinegar has been a special flavor secret for cent uries This common kitchen staple was act ually discovered by accident over 10.000 years aqo. probably when some wine left 1n a cask t urned sour But 1t was certainly no accident that cooks m ancient civ111zat1ons from Babylon to Rome t o t he Orient 1mmed1ately began using this delicious new discovery as a seasoning. condim ent and preserva t 1ve Over t he years t hat followed. vinegar appeared as a vital ingredient m some of the world's most popular cuisines-from t he highly seasoned sauces of French haute cuisine to the piquant sw ee t and sour dishes of Chinese cooking Today. t hanks to a renewed interest m gourmet foods and int ernational cooking styles vinegar is being rediscovered 1n American kitchens Creative stateside cooks are taking a cue from the anc1entc:; and taking vinegar out of the pickle Ja r and beyond the salad bowll They're findtng that JUSt a touch of vinegar 1s the perfect seasoning add1t 1on to almost any dish In everyt hing from <>avory soups to dazzling desserts vinegar 's unique natural tang act ually enlivens enhances and freshens the flavors of other foods with out overpowering t hem V1neg<ir 1s also an ideal. economical tendemer Whether 1t c; used as a marinade or simmered in a stew. 1t turns less tender budget cuts of meat into more succulent. Juicy fare And let s not forget that vinegar 1s great straight as a quick and tasty condiment for seafood poultry cooked vegetables and yes. even salads So. 1f you want to lerirn t he true secret of vinegars versatility. t ry these exc1t1ng new recipes m your own kitchen You II discover for yourself why cooks the world over have been saying vive le vma1qre long live vinegar -for cent uries FRESH VEGETA B LE VINAIGRElTE 2 medium t orn<1toes sl1ct>rl 1 I 4 lb mushrooms '>heed I cup broccoh florets I cup caullflowt•r floret<. I 12 cup celery d1Cl'd 2 green onionc; diced 1 cup vegetable 011 1 /3 cup cider vinc•qdf 2 tE'aspoon'> oregdno t edspoon c;ugar teaspoon salt I t easpoon dried parsley flakec; 2 teaspoon pepper 2 t easpoon dry must ard 4 teaspoon dry gar hc or 2 clovec, fresh gar he t ruc;hed Cut all vegetables and plc1ce in glas!> 1 ·•·role dish Combine rema1n1ng ingredients and pour over vegetables Cover and chill 2 to 3 hour'>. basting 0<.(as1onally Before serving top with <11ced green onions Makes approx1matP!y 4 c;erv1nqs SALM ON SAUTE 2 mc>d1um on1nr.., th1ri•y .... CE'd II IT.:>sh ... 11mon st eaks 1abo•1t I t 2 tahlespoonc.. ol1v€' 011 nr ( ook1nq rnl I 4 JP wme VIOPQdr In a skillet lOOI< omon.., 111 011 till t pnflpr hut oot hro,,...•1 RPrnO'-E' from ',I< et <;ct as1dl' Or ci n s~1 pt <1dd salmon steaks Cook salm on uncovl•red 011er l""IN11um ~ll'dt for 1 rn•r· iteo; ppr r.1r1e Ac1<1 onionc.. incl . nf'r; ir Cover s1mmN 2 <'1'111tr-. nr int he.1tt>l'1 through M 11<ec; .ippro• rr ;H l 11y 4 c,erv nq'> FRUIT COOLER I /2 medium hone>vdew m elon 2 orangec; 2 Red De11uoqc., 1pp'l''. 2 avocddos 2 bananas tablec,poon ll·riion Jiii 1 2 tablespoons c;trawberrv v1neqdr I rnp sour cream Sp1na1 h qrt•ens cup dry m asted castww nut c.. Odf<.Pl\o lhOPpl•<l Cut melon int o 12 c;hcec., dnd remove rind Peel orr1nqes and c11t mto thm round slice'> Core ;ind slice apples Do not peel Peel rlnd shce dVOcados Peel bananas and cut into chunk<. 'ipnnkll' lemon JUICe over apples avoc.sdoc; and bananas to prevent browrnnq Arrange altc>rnate layC'rs of fruit on a berl of rnc;r c,p1nach qreens on mc11v1dual pl<1tec; Garrn<,h ge>nerously wuh cr1<>hewc, 'itir c.,tr,iwh<'rrv Vtnl'Qdr into c;our cream dmzle over fr111t'> and serve Makes appro~1m<ttelv 6 servinq<. VIN Al pint frrc;h str 1wbemes 2 cups cider vinegar 1 /2 cup suqar Remove st em s from str awbemes halve str awbemes set 1 /4 cup aside In a arge bowl plale rema1nmg strawberries Pour vineqar over strawberries Cover and set aside for 1 hour Transfer vinegar and strawberries to a large sauce pot Add sugar bring to a boil Reduce> heat and simmer. covered. for 10 minutes Stram out str awberry mixture prec;smq out as much hqu1d as possible Pour vineqar into I 112 quart Jar Add reserved strawberries Cover tightly Makes approximately 3 cups Know Your Vlnegan Whit• Dlstftltd Vln-oar ... The strongest and sharpest flavored vinegar. dlstllled vinegar Is fermented naturally ftom ethyl alcohol. It Is recorrrnended f'or pickling or wnen clarity is most important Apple Cider Vinegar ... This popular vinegar has a sharp taste wtth a hint of fruity flavor which comes from rts apple base. Widely used In cooking and pickling. W1ne Vinegars The navor and color of wine vinegars Wiii vary deptnding on the type of grapes used, Red wine vtneoars are f\Jll·bodled wtVll tM white wine vin- egar Is more subtle 1n both flavor and aroma. Specl11ty Vlneg1rs Herbs. spkes and fruits are often added to vinegar -to aeate speclalty vinegars such as tarragon. basll. dlll. thyme. strawberry. puch ex pear Mitt Vtnegar , Long popular In England sprlntded over Ash arld Cntps. matt vinegar has a distinctive nlVOf and aroma slmllar to beer ,, .... D1ily Pilat WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1985 E•t 2 flah dinner• a wHk for• he•lthler hearL C2. Wok cookery uvea f•ll color• of vegetable•. C10. Y SKILLET -H 2 I / 2 3 lhc, ch1cki.>n pieces 2 r ahle-;poonc; b1;tter 1 or rnar q.iw't' 2 1pr1spoori salt 4 teiic;poon pepPf'r I rnl•rJ1um dove 11ar hl m1mPc1 2 c 'P rt>d winl• 1.1neq ir 2 1p Natt•r 1 l 1p sliced frpc;h m11c,noon " 1 '2 u 1p heavy creilm I"-! iir()t' ...... et t>rov.r ,hfCo<l' r rJ.!lt·• ~·. • t ..... .,,,. pt•ppt:>r .H'Hl riar c l\<lr1 v1neqi1r inn "" 11 t" S ,, r 1·1 o·· l'r •'" 4S m1n11tpc; or 1int1I h1cken '" !Pn<h•r R1•r111.l' -~ ~··• •o riedl er! plilt1 t'r Kl'Pfl w <'lr'1 Rt•rJ., t> liq , J b\ '1 • 1,+ tr • ·n ,c;• roorr.c:, ..i11c1 rt>am ooked 10<1 sa11et nr n A r,1YfT1errq ,, • ..,.... I tr )Q,..' tfft <, qht t tr ~l,,..l'(j ';/H1 r , I ,.t> 1\t'I SWE ET SOUR PORK .I l.1n1 1s1 11 11 ,,.,,mpe.r.r-'> 3 <l C 1p or 0"' 3 ·l l ••P qrec" Pl'r pc·r 2 c11p celerv t lh pork t1111 t ? tf'aspoono; ornst.1r • 2 Ctlp firmly fJaCkt;>('1 t1r•)V1r <.1111 I 2 u1p water J lip Vtn£>Qdf 2 tatilespoonc; c;o" c:.J'• , 1 tec1spoon instant bt.•t-"f h01, r • 8 teaspoon qround q1n11t'r 2 tablespoonc; peanut nr ... ad""! \ Dr a1n pineapple. reserving JUICP Th1rrv ... 11l t' t hE> m1on -qr pen pepper celery and pork. Set <1c;1de ~hc.n1~e orr c:.tarth n p•neapplt> J l e Add the SUQ Ir " ltl'I \ ner;M ') \ sa I \1 bowllon <1nd ginger Mix well Heat 2T salad 011 1n c;k1llet or wok <i.rntl' perk <;t 1rr·rio w stantlv until lender Remove p irk Jr>d t • a-;.de <;1 .te •I'll et ables st1rr nq const antly unt1 r1-;p t•'"<ler Add pinetlpple chunks. por k <1n<1 ,orn-.1arch r11 '<t 1irt' C<wh stirring conc;tant lv until sauce th1ckt>nc; ind 1c; tr 1nc;lute"lt Serve over hot nee Makec; four c;erVlrqc; CONTINENTAL SALAD 4 cup olive 011 7. tablespoons red wine vineqar I eqq lightly beilten 4 teaspoon salt 1 /4 teaspoon dry muc;tarr1 Dash of Tabasco 2 oz Roquefort lor Bleu (hel'W rum~<1 4 5 spears Belgian endive 1 appro\Cmatel\o 1 10 1 I I 4 lb Genoa Salami diced I 2 cup chopped apple 1 2 cup chopped pecans 1 2 m p shced ripe ohves 114 cup chopped on.on I / 4 cup chOpped celery Combine first seven 1ngred1entc; in a covered rar ~ake \/IQ orously and refrigeratP Clean and cut end1ve mto 1· lengths Place 1n a 4'.llad bowl with rema1n1ncJ 1nqredlents Chlll Add dressrnq and toe;<, 111st befof P serving M akes approximately 4 W fV1nqc; Make Your Own Hert.eel Vinegar Seasoned vinegars are easily prepared by adding ~ or d ried herbs-as well as other seasonings -to already bot· tied vinegars from your supermar ket. Simply crush one t easpoon dried herbS 1e.g . basil. tarragon. rosemary. mmt. oregano) ex one clove garlic in a Jar wltti a tight fttting lld. Heat one pint of wine. cider or White vinegar to the bolHng point and pour into the Jar Cover tightly and let stand at room temperature for I 0 days. shaking the Jar once a day. Then strain the vinegar. rebottle It and COYer. For an attractive finish. add a large fresh sprig of the herb t o t he vinegar. ... l,."' 11~tr'"'• .... ,l .t•r • )t 1r>'-i 1p r T ./\""ft t" \. •'t~lci' f"'\ ' ' • t" j1,. ~ t ' :i t • t ~t ._ ~. l l r>r ,•r, 1t > •" '• •' \I • • • , :,. ,., , •'1t 1•, 1•qqc., .., 1(]M t>uttC'r ,1neaar J1 11 \ I~ I • '• r ,.. , '' <;t t'I h·1°'t 1nt "r ~ IOOUt 5( -. .., 'oo I'\' , • • : • • • ' ·.. "l'IPCJ.-r! -.1.t" )r if\.'11p0€'C" •t"ld""' ~ 1t <. rtl1 Quick Vinegar Recipe Secrets fluff/ Rice R)f' whiter. numer nee add a teaspoon of vmegar to the wattr Fmhen Vegetal>Ms Freshen up slightly Witted vegetables by ~ng thMI ln cokS water and VlnegM. Add a little vi~ to tM wat« In wt«tt )'OU a><* v~ to help them retAi1n their bc1ght cotors. Home.mlde ''Buttm'nllk'' Mltce ''tlutterm1Q(' ex sour milk by adc1ing one ~or white ~ to Meh cup of sweet milk; Jet sund tbr ftw mnutes to thicken. ~~Whit• A teespoon of White « c1det' W'ltgillr ac:JOed to ttie Mt• In wtlld\ you bon potatoes will kMp them Whit• KfllP peelled patMOIS eum t\r'tllng csn by cowring ttwm wttn ~ Ind .od!nG cwo tMSpOOnS of Vinegar: ..... ~ Far.,. ~menngue. ldticw.fowtti ~of-­ vlneglr to ttwft fgg WHtws. 2 fish dinners a week can make heart healthier The No. I ttend today amo111 conaumen is cooeem for health, diet ud nerci1e. Seafood can help meet their pl of stayina healthy and fit. Here are a few SRat recipea to keep you fiL Some mearcher1 llJ8ltlt two fish dinnen a week will make your ban healthier. ORIENTAL FISB STIR-FRY 1,........._,.......nu ~ e., wlltte ... 1 ...,,,. ~ •r tred ataa•r l ._., 1 •• prlle ,.wMr er I clo•" p.rUe, mlDce4 ~ ............. ,.w .. r ~ ........ ,.,,., ,...., ... ...., I Id...,._ MMJDe oil 1 &M&elf •• ,.a,....avaled marprtae • "'9 .......... IUeed Scallops.are good value Scallops can be an excellent value when used in recipes that stretch your food dollar. Alternate the larser Sea Scallops with vesetables for kabobs served over rice pilaf. Smaller Bay Scallops are best used in ~s. souP.S, appetizers and casseroles. When usina the la.rgCt' scallops, cut them into the same general size befo~ preparina them. Remember, u aoon u scallops tum opaque, they are done. If over- cooked. they will become tough and chewy. Watch them very closely while cooking. SEAFOOD THERMIOOR FOR TWO I ouces teaDopt, cleuecl .utmp. flail fWeta or leh&er meat, tbwed I leaap 1 au Mher or marpriH llea.lp11alemoajake 1 &Mlespooa flou '4 teaspeoa salt~ np milk l lea1poo11 c~ parsley I sulet,._. sraled Parmesu cllene Paprib Cut large scallops, shrimp, fish fillets or lobster into bite·siz.e pieces. Melt butter in an 8-inch fry pan. Add lemon juic;e and seafood. Cook over low heat for l to 2 minutes, stirring frequently. Stir in flour and salt. Add milk gradually and cook until thick and smooth, stirring constantly. Add panley. Place in well ~sed, individual shells or 6-ounce custard cups. Spnnkle with cheese and paprika. Bake at 400 degrees for S to 10 minutes or until liahtly browned. 1 7 7 2 2 2 ~ .. eelery, ~ -... d1aCMAI ~ ftlf ............. dl•fll•• 1 C9f lncffll, dlcM -... ltaaouJ Cut fiab into I-inch chunb. Marinate fish for JS minutet in wine, linaer, prlic, onion powder, pepper, suaar and teame oil Melt marprine in a wok or fryina pan. Cook vcaetables until under crisp. Add fish with marinade to the vqetables and cook at medium heat until the fish flakes. Serves 4, with brown rice and fresh fruit. LAYERED SEAFOOD SALAD I C9PI cooked, flaked, wM&e-Oeaed flsb ' C1lpl dre4de4 lethlee I 1ree9 oaloaa, flaely claopped "' np .,ea pepper, eMpped 1 ~ C9CWmber, 1Uced ~ Ctlp,,.... p'Ma peal '4 -.,... prUc powder '4 et1p part-1klm m01aarrella claeete, 1r1&ed Tomac.w ..... DRESSING: l C9p plahl low-fat yoprt I ........... mayouaJae ~ teupeoa '8.1 weed "' aea.,.oa black pepper "' tea1poo11 prepued laoneradJlb Combine all ingredients for salad d~ssing in a small bowl and set •side. Shred lettuce, add green onions, green peppers, cucumber and frozen peas in a 9x9-inch dish. Toss liahtly with prlic powder. Place cooked fish evenly over salad greens . . Po ur dreuina over fish. Garnish with arttcd cheese and tomato wed&es. Refriaerate. Serves 4. BA.SIL BAltED OR GRILLED SALMON 1 poud salmoa, nt ID fW•C• or 1seab l tablffpooD polyuutarated marprl.H 1 tablHpooa lemoa jaJce, fr.O 1q11ee1ed 1M &eupoom oaloa powder "' tea•po• dried ba1il "' beU pepper, 1Uced Melt marprine. Add lemon Juice and pour over fish. Sprinkle onion powder and basil over fish. Garnish with bell pepper slices. Cover and bake at 37S degrees for 10 to l S minutes or grill over hot coals unti fish flakes. Makes 4 portions to be served with baked potatoes topped with plain low-fat yogurt and steamed fresh veaetables. Cooking styles 'reel' easy Fish cookery requires little more than measuring, timina. knowina bow to tum on an oven or broiler, to boil water or heat butter in a frypan. Most fish can be prepared in just a few basic ways -bakina or oven st.camina, broilina. poaching and saut.ecing. Follow these easy rules to prepare fish at home. And remember, like frozen pizza, frozen fish is best p~pared without thawing. Meaue ... Tlme: Lay fillet or whole fish flat and measure at thickest part. Allow I 0 to 12 minutes per inch cooking time for fresh fish, 20 to 24 minutes per inch for frozen; i.e. iffish measu~ 1h inch, allow a total of S to 6 minutes cooking time for fresh, I 0 to 12 minutes for frozen. Bake: Brush fish with low fat margarine. sprinlc.le with fresh lemon juice;. bake in non-stick or lightly greased shallow pan in center ofpreheated 450-degrce oven for required baking time. SER VINO SUGGES- TION: Combine melted margarine with curry and lemon juice, pour over fish and bake. Broll: Brush fish with low fat margarine and lemon or lime juice; place on non-stick or lightly greased pan and broil 2 to 4 inches from heatina unit; turn thick pieces halfway throu&h cooking time; season, complete cook.ins. SER ~ING SUGGES- TION: Top with toasted, shvered almonds. Ovea Steam: On lightly greased alumioum foil, place fish and seasonings; seal and bake in 45().dearee oven. Add l 0 minutes for frozen, S for fresh. SER VlNO SUGGESTION: Place sliced lemons, arcen peppers and. tomatoes on fish; sprinkle with orepno before sealing in foil and steaming. Salte: Coat fillet with flour on both sides. Saute in a 1/a-inch layer of clarified butter with a little added oil. Cook with skin or top side down for 3 to S minutes. Ca~fully turn fish and continue to cook another 3 minutes. Fillets or whole fish 1h-inch thick or less arc best for sauteeing. Poacb: Place fish on rack in skillet; add cold poaching liquid. Bring to boil, reduce heat, cover; simmer for required cooking time.SERVINO SUG- GESTION: Poach fish in chicken broth water or milk with celery, onfons, carrots and peppercorns. Thicken poaching liquid for sauce. · Cape Cod favorite rolled up into tempting entree BJ CECILY BROWNSTONE .,,... ... It's a long way from Nebraska -where Maggie Murphy was born and brought up -to Cape Cod, and it took more than a giant leap for her to make it. But she did. After getting her home economics degree at the University of Nebraska, Maggie took nutri- tion jobs in Nebraska, Louisiana and North Carolina, leading eventually to the food depart- ment of the now-extinct Woman's Home Compa- nion in New York City. From there she moved on to head the recipe test kitchen of a large food company, then to work on food publicity accounts. In the late '60s she and her husband fell in love with Cape Cod and moved there. He continued to practice labor relations law and she established "Maggie Murphy's Test Kitchen" whe~ her work -including writing cookbooks -goes o n. "A Cape Cod Seafood Cookbook" by Ma!'P.ret Deeds Murphy (Parnassus) includes traditional New England recipes for appetizers, soups and chowders, salads and entrccs, with special sections on barbecuing fish and preserving seafood. A practical contribution many cooks will find extremely helpful. MAGGIE MURPHY'S FILLED FLOUNDER i poud1 nouder fWet1 •1, cap flDely claopped onion % tablespoon• vegetable oll l 1Uce "bite bread i tablespoons brandy 1 tablespoon cbopped freab ba1U or 1 teaspoon dried, crubed I or 3 1prl11 fresb tbyme or ~ teaspoon groand ~teaspoon salt Freably groud pepper to taste i Iona 1Ucea uhral Swl11 cbeese Softened batter or marprl.De You need four 8-inch-long fillets about 4 inches wide. If you do not have four large fillets, combine smaller pieces, using a small skewer or toothpicks. Place flat on a piece of wax paper. Trim off end pieces to square fillets. There should be at least 1h cup of end pieces, but if you have mo~. use them all. Saute onion in oil until tender but not browned. Add end pieces from fillets and cook several minutes until fish can be flaked. Crumble bread into skillet. Add brandy and seasonings and stir until well blended. Spoon about 2 tablespoons of the mixture down center of each fillet. Cut Swiss cheese slices in halflengthwisc and place on filling. Roll fillets, starting at narrow end. If cheese peeks out, bend shce back so it is covered by fish . Place stuffed fillets in an oiled fish grill. (You cannot do this dish without a grill). Spread fillets with softened butter. Ori II 3 to 4 inches from hot charcoal for 1 S minutes turning to cook both sides. Remove toothpicks or skewers. Makes 4 servings. Perfect for Company Gifting! The great gift idea that gives a tasteful performance whatever the occasion This year let HoneyBaked brand hams represent your company, we've been entertaining taste buds all over the country for more than 30 years W ith HoneyBaked brand hams And Gift Cer11t1cates you can dance through that gift hst in style • Baked tor over 30 hours • Honey Glezed • Spiral Sliced (for .. ,Y Nrving) • Party Trays • Nationwide ShlpplnQ • Gift Certificates (redeemed nationwide) HoneyBa/it.ed brand hams "A Great Entertainer" and a hard act ro follow agrea entertainer r ANAHllM lh, Village Center 1272 So Broot hu1\t 9280, (at Bell Ao•Ol Phone (1t•) 63~ ?•6t COltONA Dfl MAR 3700 E Cout Hwy qm~ Pliant ( 71') 613 llOOO EL lORO 74601 R1ymonO Way 7 IBttt Tower PIH• North 11 [I Toro Ro10) g2630 Phone (m l 837 3812 HUNTINGTON IUCH 1qosg 8e1c11 Blvd 926•8 (N,1110 Ralon, Mark,t Al GA1l1tlll) Piion, (7U) 848 8~7~ OllANH 1419 N Tustin (•I k1t1ll1) 92667 Phone (714) 997 9%0 UNCHOMIUIH 11 83 4 Hwy Ill 97?70 Phun, (6tq) 3.46 38«l4 J i ! I ' HONEYBAKED ,,.,_ Orange eo ... OAIL v PILOT /WfilfJrteedlty, October 11, 1111 ca ALOHA W EDGE Don 't hunt for r are ingredients Herc's a fruit presentatio n that can be a buffet centerpiece to dramatize a company brunch of egs, bacon. coffeecake and coffee. By CP.CILY BROWNSTONE J ~ ~ LAmCE FRUlT "",........ z La.blnpooet ,. ... jam Ripe plDeapple, medium ailed When the follOWln& rcope for Chicken and Fresh Pean was sent to I ca.a,._ aoy aa-ee % 1r1pefralt Z oru1ea me the dono r wrote: "I think your readen wi ll like th1s d1sh because 1t has 11arse d.ldn bruat-4 U..s 1 ~ ,.....,, Ml~M Hoaey (preferably oruce flavor) Oru1e·flavor Uqaeor the d 1st1nct1 vc taste of Chinese-style coolung. yet 11 does not call for an) % me4lun., wae freM pean "\ oflhe hard-to-find ingredients often needed for OnentaJ cu1s1ne " 1 Tned in our lutchen, we found the do nor's descnpt1on was apt Jn In a !(}.inch skillet heat oil: add oruon, prise and red pepper DU.es . Remove pineapple plume: cut a shce from top and bottom of P•.ncapple. With a heavy sharp knife, cut away rind 1n lengthwise slices to remove most of the "eyes." With a small sharp knife. cut fact. one taster was so enthusiasllc about the easy method and the flavor and cook untH onion soft.ens; stir 10 sherry, ketchup, plum jam and IOY that she insisted on taking ho me a copy of 1he recipe then and there. ~uce. Pour over chicken breast haJves and mannate at room You may find this recipe particu larly useful because any vanety of temperature for I hour. away any remaining eyes. Quarter pineap ple lengthwise; cut away core; cut each quarter Western-grown pears ID season may be used ID 1t w1th excellent result~ Remove chicken, rcservina mannade, and wrap ctucken in heavy foil. using a drugstore fold across the top and foldina tn the ends a few times. Bake foil pack.age on a cookie sheet in a preheated ~ oven until tender -25 minutes. Open foil and drain chicken. Slri~ bone and slice chicken. Wrap slices in foil: keep warm in a low oven. lengthwise into thin slices. Arrange slices in lattice fas hion in CHICKEN AND F RESH P EARS center of a large serving plate. % table1poon1 ve1etable oil <;:arve peel fr~m grapefruit and oranges so no white membrane 1 small (% to 3 onces) oaioa, claopped med.lam fl.ae ('I• w "'-> cup) remam s; cut secuo ns from membranes. Alternate citrus sections 1 clove 1arllc, finely claopped around pineapple. Pass honey and llqueur. Serves 8. ~ tea1poon dry red pepper flaket, cra1bed ~~~~~~~~~~~~"'!!!!!!!J!!J!!!!!!!!!!~~:..~·:4~c~a!p~m~ed::•u:m:.:;aberry..,,,riiiiriim Tomato salads zesty Herbs give lf!tri~ue a nd Middle Eastern Influe nce to fillings Nutritious ca n mean delicious. Fresh ~ Fryer Legs , Top Slrloln Ste a k Peel pears, halve, co re and slice crosswise: add pean to reaerved marinade and heat. Arrange chicken and pears on a aervina dish. Add mannade. Serve wt th rice. Makes 4 scrvin . Bananas For proof here are three, tasty, new recipes from the California Fresh Market Tomato Advisory Board. Cal1fom1a Grown Chicken. Safeway Ouahty Beef ' Boneless Loin Ideal For Banana Cream Pies Or Fruit Salads. Stuffed Tomatoes Mediter- ranean combine nee and the 1n- tnguing fla vors of the Middle East ID a hollowed-out tomato -col- orful and easy to serve. Tomato Garbanzo Bean Salad delivers a Foster Farms Or Zacky Farms c tits. $ h igh protein. vegetable entree per-I Ila. feet for lighter. low-fat meals. In a --------- new version of an old fa vonte. I Tomato Potato Salad 1s bnghtened with fresh conander and cum in. Not only versatile and tasty, tomatoes contribute significant, low-caloric nutnt1on to the diet. High in both vitamins A and C and fiber, a medium tomato weighs in at only 35 calories. A bonus 1s negl i- gible fat and no cholesterol. STUFFED TOMATOES ME DI- TERRANEAN 8 large, f reah tomatoes ~ cup allced green onion Z ~ tablespoons lemon juice I tabletpoon cbopped fresh mint or I teaspoon dried mint I tea1pooa fluly chopped garlic I teaspoon salt 11. teaspoon pepper ~ cap ollve oil 3 caps cooked rice ~ cup raJ1ln1, soaked in bolling water for %0 mlDatea and drained. Cut slice from stem end of tomatoes. Scoop ou t centers wtth spoon; reserve. Remove seeds and tum to matoes cut side down on paper towel to drain. Meanwhile, seed and chop re- served centers. Combine chopped tomatoes and next six ingredients. Stir in oil. rice and raisins. Stuff tomatoes with nee mixture. Makes 8 servings. TOMATO GARBANZO BEAN SALAD 3 cups (about l ~ poand1) diced, f re1a. tomatoe1 1 cap cbopped red onion •4 cap cbopped panley I ~ tablnpoo•• lemon juice I tea1poo• flaely cbopped 1arUc ~ tea1poo• lltll !,A, tea1pooa red pepper flake• 1 teaspoon .. u 14 teaapooa pepper ~ C'lp oUve oU 3 caps (two 15 14 -oaace cua) 1arbauo beu1, dra!Ded % urd-cooked eu•. flDely claopped Combine tomatoes and next ei&}lt ingredients. Sti r in olive oil. f old in beans and hard-cooked egs. Makes 6 lo 8 scrvinp. TOMATO POTATO SALAD I !,A, poad1 (abHt3 larae> freala tema&oH, Med ~ C'IP cMpped re4 oelOll Ve C'lp d111pp ed frua. coriuHller (cUutre> I ~ ta1JllU ~mJ.a 1 ... .,... ct.1pp d 1arUc ............. 1.4 tel.lfll•~ 1 ~ ,...., Hw petatoea, ~~C'lbM ~c., .. ,......... Combine tomatoes and ne:u 11• 1naredients. Fold m p<>t.at~s and mayonnaise. Makes 6 to 8 ter'Vinp. Corned Beef Brisket Real McCoy, A::>1nt Cut Great With Cabbage .... Salewwt Quality Beel Cross Rib Roast Boneless Chuck Leg Of Lamb Fresh. USDA Choice American Lamb. Slr1o1n Ott .... s 1 a9 Fresh Salmon Silvert:><ight, Tail Or Collar Roast $199 It:> s1n $1 79 It:> Ila. Beef Liver Fresh Sllc£:d Serve With Onions Pork Chops A ssorted. Fresh Center And .... Sci o'4i • Brusse ls Sprouts Stearn And Serve W ith Hollandaise Sauce Sun Maid Raisins Great Treat For Halloween '1·0Z Scze L ---L Great For a rge M..-roo•ssa1ads IO •1 •• G ..._1 ___ Or A!"d 4 $1 M reen ~~Raoisnes Bu11ches Potatoes U $ No 1 Russets 4 ··,.:_sg1 --~~, I J • ·~ I -. \/' ~~:. ' \' -. \ ) r--../-~~ llclous Appl~ Red Crisp And Crunchy Great For Salads t.99c ••• l•ltatlon Crab Fresl"t For Sdlads 12 oz $2 " Fr ito Lay Chips V.tr•t'f, P-.q $179 G••·dt Coo•" l 3 'uS $1 OO PllQ F-':11 • t t2 Pinto Bean s v1 ,.., c""' Smo~ A Romd 1 lb 99c •5,.rT 5..,,., l , .... G•f• 11 On 4 M>$1 00 S kinless Franks M Pat Pll g Nes tle Morsels •M 1~ ru)1 I 1'• P• ~· $1 •• Ye llow Onions 0 ,,-;, ,, Pot I< • Ott1I A1tr• • Cl1• •rr 1 fiC .. .. Tr_,p.. u ........ 8onf'if>S~ Sdh"M!y RC ...... $1" 39c Steak Ow11ry Beet F1Jff C(·ntL·r e:.11 Cola• RC tOO • 5'1 i;ir F•1••• RC 1 Fresh P~••PP T•P,l' It; Q ~ Apple Juice Or Cider 128 ·0Z Bottle s2•• Tomato Sauce Vegetable Juice Cocktail Hun t s R1r,h And Thi ck 19 ~~" 5 8 :~.c$ I 1 fi • : PkQ Dunca11 Hines< .. ~. M .... ~---~ ; . ~-----. Cream Corn • Peas • Green Bectnc; Town House 16 ·OZ C.m Alax Clea•er 6' 011 Laoe1 3 t4./~~ $1 00 Gravy Tral• Dog Foo•ryl O~~o t4 •• P ... ull Motor Oll ~~h~·;ow~~1~~!87 c () 1n ,1n H1nf"S 16 • 1, R. T.S. frostlng Rl'd I. r., SptPdd ':>1:1 ...... fte lxcltMe SAflWAY·SIDA•l-TWA·Att. ••••• ITALIAN VACATION SW•IHTAKIS And Have A Chance To Win One ~ • Of These Fabulous Prizes ~ f £ £ ~ *Limited Edttion Alfa ~ ~ Romeo "Graduate" Convert ible "Round Trip Air Fare For Tw o Via TWA To Rom e, Italy (I ncludes 10 Days In First Class • Hotel and '1,000 Cash) ,...~:...-·~s-- No Purcn•se Necessary Muat Be Over 18 Years or Older To ReQ•~ter Complele Oet•lls At S•few•y Fancy Feas t Ca t Food 3·oz C(in 3 Per$ I MO Assorted Colors 4 Roll Package Cheddar Cheese Mild Cheddar Or Monterey Jack !I IB i i 1n ·•1;is ~·11 : ... et.............. . : ............ *""'"~ .,,.,,_..~ ...... ...vw~ ... • .......... ,.w.. ........ ~....,..,.o..._.,.. .... ... ~ " • ,..~ ...... ..... r-~. ~,,.._, : •/('•,_.._ ..... >_ .. ..., .... ..,.., ....... ........ ~· ~··-·· .. "W'\'~~-...r- : ':' ....... 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MLIATMlllWAY AMERICA~ FAVORJn FOOD STORE NIA LOI ll•Y TICKltS More Peopte COOd Wri In The New State lottery At Safeway Thtvl Arry Other Food Store In California Pflces Ettect1ve Octobef 17 23 1985 At Safeway Stores In Soutnert'I Calltor n1a 1E11cepl C•t•hn• And Bell) Sates In Re1a11 Quan t1t1es Only I (t t = CoMt DAILY PILOTJWe?Neday, Oote>Mr 18, 1915 Carvelntohealthy surprises Pumpkin qualifies -even though. according to the "New Pumpkin Book," published by the Half Mooo Bay Art and Pumpkin Festival, it's hardly a new American food. Tho~t to have originated in the Tamauhpas Mountain of Mexico between 7000 and 5000 8 .C .. the pumpkin became a staple of the diet m Jamestown and Plymouth co- lonies after the lnd1ans taught settlers how to grow and cook the round orange squash and how to dry slices and bang them in great garlands from kitchen rafters. new Cooks wbo think pumpkins serve fillinas are overlookina a superb, ''If you 're careful not to add too ta.Sty and surprisinaJy low-alorie much of the fat and supr we sou.rec of vitamin A, according to normally add to pumpkin dessert Gloria Brown, home eoonomist and bread ~ipea," claims Brown, for UC Cooperative Extension in "you can have a nutritious. low. San Mateo. caloric pumpkin dish II a vqetable One cup of cooked fresh pumi>-or u the basis for a main coune kin con tams only 80 calories. says dish." --------------------------=====----------~only as jack-o-lantems and pie Brown, plus it has three to five "The New Pumpkin Book" times the recommended daily recipes were collected by Mary dietary allowances of vitamin A for Bettencourt and Terry Pimsleur children and adults as set by from the families, kitchens and files nutritionists at the U.S. Depart· of the committee that l?uts on the ment of Aariculture. Vitamin A is Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival, believed to be a preventative set this year for Oct. 19 and 20 in the against cancers that arise in seaside community famous for q>i~elial tissues and also aids night miles of pumpkin fields. Vlsto:=.:n·'----------~ The best-eating pumpkins. ac-cording to the book's introduction, arc about 10 to 12 inches in diameter adn bright orange in color If ~our market or farmer labels vaneties, they include the Winter Luxury, Connecticut Field, Trick or Treat. Sweet Sugar (or New Eng· land}, Big Cheese and Half Moon types. PRODUCE LARGE EGGPLANT 3 2100 ~ ..... ~ ri..... " ~~~ B<JLK LOOS~ .15 ~~ 10MA10ES .i .39 ~~~H11~ERRIESPtl., .89 f.",_S~~SH APPLES l' .49 FRESH ASPARAGUS l'nunq f•nclf• Sp.-.~ PEANUTS, ROASTED 01 S.ttf"(f S.11 Wm-F...or.1l> 1-H 199 LB .79 !}f1£Y PAC BROCCO~t_ .89 .fK?~.N FERNS , • 299 f 79FREE 1986 f'ORD THUNDERBIJU>S St:RVICE DELI / HOT BAKERY DUNCAN HINES 79 CAKE MIXES e '--<. -Vent11ft IC-Ounco Boo VONS SWEET PEAS 17-0unot c... .53 COMSTOCK CHERRY PIE 129 fllllnQ. 21-0unce ""' ~t_FRUIT COCKTAIL .99 WELCH'S 89 GRAPE JELLY e Or ...... l~Jet HONGRY JACK POTAlOES 179 .._ 26 7 -0unot 8oo SENECA APPLE SAUCE 159 44o..-Jw JP~~~CE .29 !!:':., DIET J 59 12-0ura Cent ~~~ E~ESSING .85 ~~~fl!~ .. ~OOKIES 129 M.J.B. LONG GRAIN RICE 129 l2~P ... ._. VONS GROUND J89 COFFEE A• Cnndo I l'aurld c... •/, PORK LOlft J49 CHOPS UI ~ "lol-1>1>1'1- a09_L9,~~CLOD R0~149 BONELESS CHUCK ROAST159 Tobie Kint 8MI L8 STEWING BEEF r. 169 8on.tleto. T-Kln9 • ~ L1l " lfl .... t.~411 A•I f •0"111 • •1 '1114illt ... •lfH •Un ...... , ,ii ,, M\ ot f bt I I OSCAR MAYER J39 BEEF BOLOGNA )l ~~ .. 8:! ~ '\~ •t PILLSBURY HOT LOAF PPP·" t'Vlit Nt;,,,. n •""'•' .,, s.._ ·~,, FRIGO MOZZARELLA r ~ fin.,,. .. _.o..., .. .,,,. VONS SWISS CHEESE VONS COOKED HAM \I""" ~ °"""' P..-~'I" BORDEN SINGLES "ii"~ c~w r """-' , r""'n.~ r-,,,.~ .89 219 109 139 159 VONS JACK CHEESE lB J99 ur1lom1<1 """"'"'--. Jae~ Famtlv P<Klo. ort .. gul.or °"'" LO .?CMt ~ 1~ Lb ~~<~~~~!.!" ~!!f!!NS .49 ~-Ul! FILLED DANISH 1 ss ?,~f.!9~[>1~~R .. ?!2.NUTS 11s SB.~~ENT CRUMB DONUT • 99 Voaa WW Redeem All Soot.hen1 Callfonda Supermarbta• Current DOUBLE COUPONS OR TRIPU: COUPONS ,.... .... •• _,, ') .., .. ,..,. ..... ...-. •• I • l'f' ,..~_. • """'""" • .. I . )lo+\ .. ~ .. tr•I ,,....,,....-~-\< ,,._, ,.., ti.Ii'~•' .... ,,.,.... II-rJ ~"'9' ............ -~.-•P'I 0""11o I •"'-1;,r 1•••-•h I '( .... t 'lo ·• *! ~~ t;..:;.·o ...... ;.,~:;• .:; ~ ~ ... ;•: t • .. : :::-,,; _,.,"".,.~\'~~I • ............. .,,. . ..,. ........ 1 ..... ,.,., I ........ ~till ............. ..,tf!-, ................ ~-< __ ,..t """f-"" ...................... ·.v ~ •. "" ....... ~.-· ..... ....... _...no-........... .ua...,.-.eo~ B.B.Q. PORK SPARERIR~ 349 Hol Md l6oooy To Em IS-50 L8 t IB ~~!~I SALAD LB 129 HOLLOWEEN CUPCAKP.>~119 °'1col.wd Ft>< 'lour ""'1y • ---.;;, '1 LIQUOR ANDRE CHAMPAGNE \01-oM PW. Co1<:1 Due" 750 11\lll•lote. Boni.. 219 LITE BEER 12-PACK 41s 12 Ounct c.ru ~~~!tY6t~~<!,~.1P~• .n ~.w. 109 ~~16Cfi~'!Y .99 R,~?JU~U~f!!<d F1...,.. .3 9 JERSEYMAID B<JTIER I Pou"' p.,~<14' 4 (uf>n FROZE N FOOD AUNT JEMIMA WAFFLES 2 ~.99 CITRUS HILL OfWIGt ..1c11ct 12 °""'' c.., QUELLE LORRAINE 1..1\i• IW Of 'tpo-t> CJ°"""' PM'k.t9< FIVE ALIVE JUICE I ,,~ P-P\ T"'l>'Ut Cnr..,. 12 0v<>tt '-• 119 169 .79 MRS. SMITH APPLE PIE 275 460.-.""" P,~l~~a!ROIT BARS 199 VONS VEGETABLES r:.:'' 79 G,..... a,.,, ... ot ,_ <.11t °' c ... lrocn>I• • $45.00 VANISH BOWL CLEANER tt 9 Uqutd. 24 Ouna 8011 .. HEFTY TRASH BAGS 265 JO.GeOon1. 20-Cou<lt Poe~ 179 PAPER lOWELS Slim Procrt 4 Aoll• Po.~ -----..,.......~- FAMILY SCOl I~ •• TISSUE 99 !:!lOLLS e Belhroom """ COC1POR W~2a9 T.t>ie King BEEF SHORT RIBS Tobi< Ktng 1.8 149 ~~N~~JS~~~~EAW 169 htGcP! LAMB Le 189 ~~BAILEY'S SAUSAG~ 169 ~~~,~~ l 8 2 98 HORMEL SLICED BACON 179 8lecti Ybo1 I~~ 1..8 CHICKEN PATIIES C-~F.-SS- ~~1~Ce;~H PASTE !l_~l't,r~lJ.~~~ 259 :!:!~~~~9~00!~~~.~lS ~ff!O~S FISH STICKS(A 329 HEAD & SHO<JLDERS ~~269 MRS. PAULS ASH FILLET259 0.ndrul! 9-."'PO<l Ji1oo C•>"d"'°"'f\9. llnc1 60 Oii\ 0. L'IJN 81-.i Soi. 12<>vntt ~ Frot.nCA Value Pack Southern ~l"tl! IN MONEY SAVING COUPONS WATCH YOUR MAIL You don't pay more. FOR VAWABLE COUPON BOOK You just get more. ~·-~-~·;--;.:;;...-;::;::--~~~~~~~~~~ I f ln the spirit offitness, the authors share some recipes with minimal fat and sugar additions. Cooks for dieters may want to experiment with further reducing the recipe requirements for fat and s~. And. for health.conscious chefs who would still like to bake an occasional pie, we've included a low-<:aloric pumpkin pie recipe. PUllPIDN WITH Ol'OONS Combine 4 cups peeled, diced pumpkin, 2 onions, chopped and a small amount of water. Cover and cook until tender. Drain. Add salt, pepper and butter. YOGURT PUllPIDN Ma.kc recipe for Pumpkin With Onions. Cook until almost tender. Place in a casserole. Combine J cup yogurt. l clove minced garlic, 2 egg yolks and salt to taste. Pour over pumpkin mixture. Sprinkle top with grated cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes or until pumpkin is tender. SAUTEltD PUllPKIN Peel and dice pumpkin, steam until tender, then brown in butter in frying pan. Add 2 tablespoons cream, I tablespo0n chicken broth, salt and pepper. Heat and serve, sorinkled iwth minced parsley. BAKEDSTUFFEDPUllPIDN Cut off the top of a small unpeeled pumplc.in creating a lid. Scoop out seeds and stringy fibers. Scoop out I cup of the pulp and chop finely. Combine with l cup half ~ked rice, v. cup raisins, I minced apple and sugar and cin-. namon to taste. Mix well. Stuff the pumpkin with the miAturc, cover with the top and place the pumpkin in a buttered sballow pan. Bake at 350 degrees about 111.i hours or until tender. VEG ET ABLE MEDLEY 1 onJoa, cllopped 1 cap green beam ill %-tacit• leal1)ls 1 cap water l sreen pepper, cabed % tomatoes, cat ta wedges 3 ean of corn, cat la 1-lacll 1 plecet % tablespooa1 batter Salt ud pepper % caps P41mpkill, peeled ud I dJced Combine onions, green beans; and water. Cover and cook for I 0 I minutes. Add remaining ingre· · dients and cook until vegetables arc tender (do not overcook). Makes 6 · to 8 servings. PUMPKIN GELATIN SALAD % packages (3 ouces ea~) lemon or oraage flavored 1elatiD ! ewps bolltag water % ewps cooked maaW pampkia or cuaed pampt.l.D 1 teaspoon lemon JaJce Mudarla oru1e1 aad evocado slices for ganJu Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add pumpkin and lemon juice. Chill until mixture mounds slightly when stirred. Beat until light and Ouffy. Pour into l 1h-quart mold. Ch ill until firm. Unmold on lettuce and garnish with mandarin oranges and avocado slices. Makes 6 to 8 servings. • • • John Minaidis bas been growing pumpkins since 1965 and won the pumpkin title for Half Moon Bay with a 272·pound Big Max, and a 208-pound one in 1976. RENA MINAJDIS' LOW CALORIE PUMP~ PIE l '1'1 C9pa eoolted maMed ........ kta er C..-pemptla Arttfldal sweetner to .-J t teupeoes sqar (or te tu&e) I teas,._ duam• lteu11n•eleftl ............... l C..IJ•••utlla i ..... •llPdJ Mate9 '4 ewp ........... ..._M milll 1 abake4 ........ ealwte,.. crnt Combine pumpkin, aniftcial '"""tener, spic:ea, 11.lt and vanilla. Blend in eua and milk. Pour into unbaked putty thell. Bake at 3SO depeet foT SO mlnutet or until mixture is firm. I.ft Calerte Putry; For an 8- incb pie, u.e 'h cup flour, lie teatpoon ult and v. cup diet nwprine. Follow usual direction• for plain putry but roll douah thinner. OrMge Co.I OAJL Y PILOT~. Octobw 1t. 1... Cl Stuffed, microwaved hens acquire tan from basting Stuffed Comish hens are perfect VEGETABLE CHEESE STUF· medJum beat. stitrina frequently, for . a pany, but a lona ~stina FINO until tender, about S minutet. penod and a lenpby cookina time 1 etap died ... eanot R~move from beat; stir in remain· ~ be ~sco~ You may have 1 c., W-"ed ncdJal ina ina;redients. Makes enouah tned m1crowavina and been disap-~ cep C'°PPM oal• stufftna for four I-pound or two l pointed with the results. Cookina i &abletpooa11M1ner or marpr-VJ-pound Comish hens. poultry in the microwave doesn't IDe Microwave: Combine carrot, achieve the rich brownin& effect ~ cap Hft bread cnmbl zucchini, onion and butter in small you'd like to have. S tablttpooa1 srated Parmnu bak.ina dish. Microwave, covered, But here's a valuable tip -brush clleeH on Hiah until tender, about 3 to 4 a mixture of Worcestershire sauce, i tea1pooa1 Worce1tenll.lre minutes. Iocreue bread crumbs to butter and paprika on the birds aaace l/• cup and add to veaietablcs Ilona before m.icrowavina. You'll be Cook carrots, zucchini and with cheese and Worcestershire pleased with the appetizina, moist, onion in butter in skillet over sauce. brown appearance these inpe-~~~~~~~~~~~~.;;.;;;;...:;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dients live. Here are two new stuffing recipes for Comish hens. Although both are quickly prepared in the microwave, they can also be prepared by the stove top method if you're using the microwave to defrost the hens. The first, Apricot Walnut Stuf- fina, with its use of dried fruits and ' nuts, is perfect for an autumn dinner. The walnuts add an interestina crunch while the Worcestersh.irc sauce lives the recipe a rich, well-blended flavor. The second recipe sugestion is for Veaetable Cheese Stuffina. a unique idea that uses carrots, zucchini and onions for a colorful stuffing that is much lighter than the traditional ones. Add Parmesan cheese and Worcestershire sauce to perk up the flavor of the mild vegetables. To complete your dinner, serve stuffed Cornish hens with buttered areen peas, tossed salad with French dressing, an ice cream pie and beverage. APRICOT WALNUT STUFFING '4 cap cllopped oa.loa i &abletpoou batter or mar1ar- 1De 14 cap cltopped clrted aprtcot1 S &able1pooa1 water Z tea1pooa1 Worcestenblre aaace ~ tea1pooa ID1&ut cbJckea bollllloa sruaJu a cap1 wb.tte bread cabe1 (3 to 4 1llce1) 14 cap coarsely cbopped walDat1 Cook onion in butter in medium- size skillet until tender. Stir in apricots, water, Worcestershire sauce and chicken bouillon gran- ules; beat to boiling. Remove from beat and add bread crumbs and walnuts; toss until evenly moist. Makes enough stuffina for four !- pound or two 1 'h-pound Cornish hens. Microwave: Melt butter in microwave; add onion. Micro- wave, covered on High until onion is tender, about l minute. Stir in apricots, water, Worcestershire sauce and chicken bouillon gran- ules. Microwave, uncovered, until boiling, about 1 minute. Add bread cubes and walnuts; toss to com· bine. Double Coupon .. •• rt' o..., ...... ,. __ ........,....,. __ ,_.._ ___ w __ .., --a.. ."!9"'4P -'°" ,.._ °"" -...... -~ ............ ."'_, __ --...-·---.... --°""-.. .,,. -bc:l-114'* ...._ --. PfOll"'* Um.it OM Item hr Mcmutac1\t.reD' ~and Umlt 2 N••'=' Doub&e Co\u>ona hr C\altOmer. Coupon ectlft October 1'7 tbN October 23, 1916 DSDA lDlp . ..QoJd•D l'J'emJum .... / I.om Save lJO per lb. i»r lb. Alas.tan Salmon Any Bag 50 OFF Candy '"',, ---°' 1\111._ • coupoa UmltO..n.mt CIDd 0.. ~ IW ~. ~ IDWc1fM Oc:tober 11dw ~ JJ. IM ......... 'Sun Gianr' Raisins Imperial Marga:rine ...... .o 6Pack C&CCola .79 Regular or D1•t·U os. emu Save .40 6 pack II Calcium keeps blood flowing OSDA tup.4old•J1 1remJum· ... J Sar• Jlod• cut ,,,. .. ho#D· Wllo» Ol llaJJ +Itta ,,, •• C')op SW-I Jwt:y-$malJ For some people, more calcium may be a biger help than less salt in the treatment of hypertension, ac- cordina to the California Dietetic Association (CDA). "Recent research conducted at Cornell University outlines two typeS of hypertensive people," said Cheryl Loains, R.D., M.S., prc1i- dent of COA. "One type responds favorably to a lowered salt intake while the other seems to do well with a raised calcium intake - some to the point of replacing medication." Calcium, like salt's main inare- dient, sodium, is a mineral necess- ary to maintain an even flow of blood in the body. In some people1 too little calcium causes blooa volume to build up in the veins resultina in biah blood pTCUure. .. If your physician pmcribes extra calcium to treat hypertenlion, tty havina an extra aJ.au of low-fat mik or a cup of yopn.." ~· said. "Thete foods have vita.mtn D and lactose that help the body absorb the calcium." Milk lfOUP foods provide about 75 percent of the calcium in American diet The CDA recommench aettina all nutrienu from food before 1upplement1 because of the nutrient balance food provides to ensure maximum absorption. Accordina to Login1, a aood 1tart to overall aood health i1 a bl.lanced diet consiltina of a variety of food• &om the nutrient-bued food JtOUPI= milk, meat. V*1&blet and hiU. breads and cerea1I. "By eetina the recommended number of terVinp ftom thete food StOUpt. you can be sure to Ft all the • nutnetUI noceuary to optim\lm health ••• sbe said. .40 6~ ,,., lb. i:~. ,.,.~ Sar• .u .69 Meat St"'>afood P•t lb. Sar• .20 16 0& loal ., 9 ,.,,,.., ,, •• .o-.. ,.,..,., lb '"'3 59 Haltbut Steak -: • ...__,,_ Cooked Sbnmp -: 3.89 ,,..~"°"'.,..., lff) " 9 Red SnapPtlr "= •.4 MO•Tiac.t -= 2.29 &~•n&aatwum 2.39 ~tNriaiiCi s.rm a. 99 HitihCOJdaw = 159 ........ a I e g 1•1r $9 OPM CJtrul Pwlcll ·~ • '19 ·-........-., ..... ...-.~ ............... .. _ ....... -........... _____ _ =0.-__ ........................... ._ ....,., ................................. ... =--.... -...-.::.,~ .. ·-~=-..::-:~-=-:,c. ":':.-·Jiii'9"......,= ·----- l.69 .69 .49 5 :SJ J lb. ~1 p~g. lb w. Budweiser smc.ters or Beer MilJcy Way CUmbBrlcmd Stoneware .69 1:2:29 ~~3:99 :::.&ru9 Grocery Values Grocery Fro~en ....,. Tozttlla Strips ean..t Facial T1ssue ·-... IJO<f -G:CrPetruit Juice ~ ~ Apple Juice Prices effective October 17 thru October 23, 1985 .69 .63 .85 .59 Produce /Floral ~"""°° Bulk Candy -:-1.29 nwll C'\lt Mixed Bouquets -2. 99 Bakery Liquor 0 11 .... ftwll ONoabclrd Of Cllell1D Blanc ~,,_, N&ola1 Vod.ta u.: 2.29 "'= 7. 98 .._ __ .,__._......,._ ·---·--........ ---·--__ .. ______ .. ____ -- -----~--·--·­_ _,..._ I_ ' 1 = 00911 OAJLY PILOT/Wed~,~Ootiiowiiiii16ii,ii198iiii& ____________________________________________ _ -------- Carve into healthy surprises Pumpk.Jn qualifies -even filhnp are overlook.ina a superb, "If you're careful not to add too thou&h, accordina to the "New tasty and 1urpri1inaly low-alori.e much of the fat and •uaar we Pumpkfo Book," published by the source of vitamin A, acx:ordina to normally add to pumpkin deuen Half Moon Bay An and Pumpkin Gloria Brown, home economiat and bread recipes," claim• Brown, Festival, it's hardly a new American for UC Cooperatjve EA tension in "you can h.ave a nutritiou1, low- food. San Mateo. calorie pumpkin diah at a vqetable Tho~l to have onginated in the One cup of cooked fresh pump-or at the bui1 for a main coune Tamauhpas Mountain of Mexico kin conL1J n1 only 80 calories, uy1 diJb." between 7000 and SOOO B.C., the Brown, plus it has three to five "The New Pumpkin Book" pumpkin became astaplc of the diet tjmes the recommended daily recipes were collected by Mary in Jamestown and Plymouth co-dietary aUowances of vitamin A for Bettencoun and Terry Pimtleur lonjes after the Indians tau&ht children and adults 11 1et by from the families, kitchen• and files settJen how to arow and cook the nutritjonists at the U.S. Depart· of the committee that puts on the round oranae squash and how to ment of Apiculture. Vitamin A is Half Moon Bay Pumpkin Festival, dry slices and hang them in sreat believed to be a preventative set thls year for Oct. 19 and 20 in the garlands from kitchen rafters. against cancen that arise in seaside community famous for Cooks who think pumpkins serve ~~helial tissues and also aids night miles of pumpkin fields. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~=.:::.:.::.!.:...._~~~~~~~~~~on~l4y_a~s~Ja~c~k-0-~l~an~t~em:.!.!!.s.....!.!an~d~p~ie::....._..!Ev1110n=.'--~~~~~~~~~ The bett-eatina ~mp~n1, ac-cordina to the book s introduction, Sweet and Crunrhy Idaho Grown PRODUCE LARGE EGGPLANT 3 {1 100 ~,._,, .. ~~~~·BOLK LOOS~ .15 ~~~ TOMATOES Ill .39 1~~ .. H ,~.~£i!ERRIES~~ ... 89 ~.s~~SH APPLES I .49 ~~ f.SPARAGOS " 199 p~~4~·,~C2ASTED b • 79 -~t~E.Y PAC BROCCOLJ .• 89 .89~N FERNS I • 299 ~ PILLSBURY HOT LOAF p PO•' .... ,, •• •...,," ' ,. "'• ••I' FRIGO MOZZARELLA VONS SWISS CHEESE '"'ll"d .,,,.,,, '· ,, .,. .. <Ill .... , VONS COOKED HAM \'.-.tid ,..,}.,,... •....... ,,. BORDEN SINGLES .. ,~ .._.., ' ""' '~ .... , ............. ,, .89 219 109 139 159 ,,J99 ~~,9~~~~ ~.'!f!.INS .49 ~.<J1,.~ FILLED DANISH 155 8~~.G.~._l~E,!? ... ~oTS 115 S~~ENT CRO~B OON<JT • 99 ..-.. .............. .,, ·~· ·-... ' ". ... . ... . -·. . .. ....... ~ ...... ·--·· ~--#--• ...... ~ ..... .... ..,,..._ ..... , ............. ,..,, ... ,., ... ..,._... ............ ' -. ,,.~ .. ........... ..... ..... ,, ................. ,,,. .. ._ ..... -. ... .. ,..,,. ff/,,... .... ,.. ...,. "" t -• "" .t " •"' I ••• ..... ..._,. tll> -%'" ......... ..:·:.:.-.~.:.. ':, :=.· :.,--:..~· :: ... " .. :. :.~ ~~ .... ,........ . .,._ .... .,... an • MllD.w&.e .-,. ....,. ~ C09f'F't' VONS COULD CHAftGE THE WAY YOU DRIVE ••• 79FREE 1986 FORD THUnDERBDlDS /-~ --- ~'f-~·- SERVICE OLLI / HOT BAKERY '''""' ......... ··~·· "' ...... , .. , ..... ,, .................. , ... . ~~~~~~Sfi1~ERIB§ ]49 ~~~ ... Rg:tl SALAD 111 129 ,~~~~N CUPCAKE3~119 LIQUOR ANDRE CHAMPAGNE 'M~• P1nti '"<Ad Dt..cM 7')(J ,..,,u,11,,., f:\,Jllfl• / 219 UTE BEER 12-PACK 41s II f Nt><~ r....,, SONNY DELIGHT f +ft\A ~uh' f'I 1)4 '>vtv• ,-.. ,,,,_, ~ V.., • UI ( .JllUI•" SO<JR CREAM •··~ .. ., '"r""' " •, DANNON YOQO RT I " 4 -"'"Ot I I AlflW• r .,,,., • w·,.~1 f ......,.., JERSEYMAID B<..ITIER ..,.,,, 1 ~ ... ""' 4r",,.,., FROZEN FOOD 109 .99 .39 189 ~ 2 ~.99 WAFFLES CJTROS HILL ,,.,vt(",, HJ'' 1/IJvlW,-,., QOELLE LORRAINE fcltJN ,._.,, (Ii 111$,.h# t. I I J!utV• •• ~ FIVE ALIVE JOICE t ,ol:,,,,,..," ''"l• .. I ,. I',.,,..,.,,~ 119 169 .79 ~~~~MITH APPLE P1E 275 r,~1~~11ooFROIT BARS 199 ¥~~' ~~g~,~~~~ .. =~£'.' • 7 9 DUNCAN HINES 79 CAKE MIXES e i.-.~v.,..,,.. l~Bo. VONS SWEET PEAS 17 "°"""' c.. .53 ~~K CHERRY PIE 129 VONS FROIT COCKTAIL 99 »o.-C... • WEI.CW& 89 GRAPE JELLY e o..-19-0unm,,.. HUNGRY JACK POTAlOES 179 ~26 7 0...... lloo SENECA APPLE SAOCE 159 44-0wo• ~~w~~CE .29 7-0P J59 ~G., DIET 12-C>unc. r .. n. ~~~ P.~ESSING .85 ~~~!!'J'1~500KIES 129 ~~ ... ~G GRAIN RICE 129 VONS GROUND J89 COFFEE NIG-l """""C. FAMILY SCOI I~ •• TISSUE QQ ~OLLS •wnt'~ TYLENOL TABLETS P.QVI•' ~t•"Ofh "'' f ,....,.,~ Jv1n • fJ .. ~e_,~ ~..,H,~.~,e~~ :;;.~ 269 rtO I FAMILY scorr 99 ~!~~ ~ • WVTbfii Wl4f P.41ft"-" '"' "'' "' "" .... r w'wd•no ~""'~ °' L.quGI '~ ~~· .,..., p,.,.. ~ c~ l,..,, .. r~ p., 'tmi•l' tf'l•uw a-, n lJ t_, i! rt() l Ii !HB. BAG RED 1~~·99 If• PORK LOIN J49 CHOPS l ll ~~ ~ ... ~~- ~~_l.9,~~ CLOD RO~ 149 ~.,,.f !:_,ESS CHOCK RO~l 59 STEWING BEEF r . , 169 &<....-~ K""J In BEEFRIB 289 EYE STEAK Botwte. 11'1 T~ King BEEF SHORT RIBS '-ll•no Lii 149 ~~ ... ~St!JS~tL~~~ 169 h~~r£.F LAMB 111 189 ~,1,.L~~LEY'S SAOSAG1~ 169 ~.!i~~c!;!~M •11 298 .t!,~2'1f!:,_8k!£ED BAC0ta4 179 CHICKEN PATIIES ,_ ~~ • ..., 11<..- :i:!.~'tP~J f~tL~~~~ 259 fe_,~8 FISH STIC~ .. 329 ~~5e~~~0~~!1_ F1,~~T259 ~~- IN MONEY SAVING COUPONS WATCH YOUR Jiii.AiL You don't pay more. FOR VAWABLE COUPON BOOK You just get more. ·~-~~~--~·~~~~~~~~~~~~-....:. are about 10 to 12 inches in diameter adn briaht oranae in color. If ~our market or farmer labels vaneties, they include the Winter LuxuryJ.. Connecticut Field, Trick or Treat, :sweet Sugar (or New Ena- land), Bia Cheese and Half Moon types. In the spirit o ffitness, the authon share some recipes with minimal fat and sugar additions. Cooks for dieters may want to experiment with further reducina the recipe requirements for fat and supr. And, for hcalth~nscious chefs who would still like to bake an occaJionaJ pie, we've included a low-caloric pumpkin pie recipe. PUllP1Wf WITH 01'101'8 Combine 4 cups peeled, diced pumfkin, 2 o nions, chopped and a smal amount of water. C.over and cook until tender. Drain. Add sah, pepper and butter. YOGURT PUllP1Wf MaJce recipe for Pumpkin With Onions. Cook until almost tender. Place in a casserole. Combine I cup yogun, I clove minced garlic, 2 eu yolks and salt to taste. Pour over pumpkin mixture. SprinkJe top with grated cheese. Bake at 3.SO degrees for 20 minutes or until pumpkin is tender. 8AUTEltD PUllPIUlf Peel and dice pumpkin, steam until tender, then brown in butter in frying pan. Add 2 tablespoons cream, I tablespo0n chicken broth, ult and pepper. Heat and serve. sorinkled iwth minced parsley. BAKED 8TUPFED PUllPKDf Cut off the top of a smaU unpeeled pumpkin crcatina a lid. Scoop out seeds and strin1Y fiben. Scoop out I cup of the pulp and chop finely. Combine with l cup balf~ked rice, 'I• cup raisins, I minced apple and sugar and cin- namon to taste. Mix well. Stuff the pumpkin with the mixture, cover with the top and place the pumpkin in a buttered shallow pan. Bake at 350 dqrces about I 1h houn or until tender. VEG ET ABLE MEDLEY I oaloa, cMpped 1 C11P lfMll beau lm l-t.cil I lnstJas 1 cap water I IJ'ffD pepper, cabed Z tomatoes, e11t la wed1n l ean of cora, e11t lm 1-lad 1 pieces % tabletpooDI IMatter Salt ud pepper ! C11pt. pamptlll, peeled ucl I diced Combine onions, green beans • and water. Cover and cook for I 0 I minutes. Add remainina inarc-· dienu and cook until vegetables arc tender {do not overcook). Makes 6 to 8 1ervinp. PUMPl.IN GELATIN SALAD ! pacb1n (3 ouces ~) lemoa or oru1e navored 1elatta Z npe boUta1 water % capt cooked ma11ted pemptlll or caued pemptD 1 teupooa lemoa Jldce Mudarta oruaes ud avocado sllces for pralA Dissolve aetatin in boilina water. Add pumpkin and lemon juice. Chill until mixture moundl sliahtly when stirred. Beat until liaht and fluffy. Pour into l 'h~uart mold. Chill until firm. Unmold on lettuce and pmish with mandarin oranae• and avocado slices. Makes 6 to 8 servinas. • • • John Minaidis bu been arowina pump~ns since 1965 and won the pumpkin title for Half Moon Bay with a 272-pound Bia Mu, and a 208-pound o ne in 1976. RENA MINAIDIS' LOW CALORIE PVMP&JN PIE 1 ~ ""coM ......... ,...,. kimMC"M_.,...,.. AntllotaJ •• ....., ....... . ............. , . ., ....... ) ................. 1....,1•e'"" ... ........... ........ •lldlla ....... ......, ... .. e., ......... ..... ... mU. J ............ '"'nlerte ... crnt Combine pumpkin, utifkial sweetener, spjcea, ult and vanilla. Blend in eas and milk. Pour into unbUed putty abelt IUe at 3'° deireet for '° minuta or until muturc ii flnn. Lew Calerle PutrJ; For an 1- &ncb pte, UM Ya cup flour, V• taupoon tah and V. cup dJet matprlne. Follow ulUIJ d recdoDt (or plain putty but roll doulb thinner. Stuffed, .microwaved hens acquire tan from basting Stutred Comish hena are perfect VEGETABLE CHEESE STUF· medium heat, aumna frequently, for a party, but a Iona ddfottina FINO until tender, about $ minutes. period and a lenpby cook.ins time 1 C9J wedMd eanot Remove ftom heat; stir in remain-~ be ~ICOUtlfJfll. You may have 1 c.p ,.,..,... aeeftlai 1na inaredienta. Makes enouah tned m1crowav1na and been diaap-'it C9J eMPP•• taMa atuffina for four I-pound or two 1 pointed with the re1ult1. Cook..ina t tabln poon b9n.r or matpr· 'h-pound Comish hena. poultry in the microwave doesn't lae Microwave: Combine carrot, achieve the rich brown.in.a effect ~ c.p 10ft bread cnmbt zucchini, onion and butter in small you'd like to have. I tabletpooa1 snled Parmesu bak.ina djah. Microwave, covered, But here's a valuable tip -brush cllene on Hiah until tender, about 3 to 4 a mixture of Worce1tenhjre aauce, t C..1poou Worceaten~re minutes. lncreaae bread crumbs to butter and paprika on the birda •Hee lf. cup and add to vqetablea Ilona before microwavina. You'U be Cook carroll, zucchini and with chceae and Worce1tenhire , pleued with the appetizina. moist. onion in butter in ak.iUet over sauce. brown appearance theae inare-.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ di en ta aive. Here are two new stuffina recipes forComiah hens. Althouah both are quickly prepared in the microwave, they can also be prepared by the stove top method if you· re usina the microwave to defrost the hena. The fint, Apricot Walnut Stuf- fina, with ill use of dried fruita and ' nuts, ia perfect for an autumn djnner. The walnuts add an L ... ~,:iii!mr~~r,m intere1tin1 crunch while the Worceatenhire sauce aivea the recipe a rich, weU-blendcd flavor. The aecond recipe 1ua&e1tion ia for Vcsetable Chceae Stuffina. a unique idea that use1 carrots, zucchini and onions for a colorful stuffin1 that is much liahter than the traditional ones. Add Panneaan cheese and Worcestenhire sauce to perk up the flavor of the mild vesetables. To complete your dinner, serve stuffed Comish hens with buttered arcen peas, tossed salad with French dressing, an ice cream pie and beveraae. APRICOT WALNUT STUFFING '.4 c-Ap cllopped ollloa t tableapooaa batter or mar1ar· lae 'A cap cllopped drted aprtcota S tableapooaa water t &eaapoou Worce1terallJre aa•ce ~ &ea1pooa la1tant cblckea boallloa sra.aGJea a capt wblte bread cabea (3 to . aUeet) '4 cap coanely cbopped walaata Cook onion in butter in medium- size skillet until tender. Stir in apricou, water, Worcestenhire sauce and chicken bouillon aran· ules; heat to boilina. Remove from heat and add bread crumbs and walnuts; toll until evenly moist. Makes enouah 1tuffin1 for four 1- pound or two 11/J-pound Comish hen a. MJenwave: Melt butter in microwave; add onion. Micro- wave. covered on Hiah until onion ia tender, about 1 minute. Stir in apricota, water, Worcestcnturc sauce and chicken bouillon JTln· ulea. Microwave, uncovered, until boilina. about 1 minute. Add bread cubes and walnuts; toss to com- bine. Calcium keeps blood flowing For some people, more calcium may be a bia&er help than le11 salt in the treatment of hypertension, ac- cordina to the California Dietetic Auociation (CDA). "Recent research conducted at Cornell Univenity outJinea two types ofh~nsive people," aai~ Cheryl Louina, R.D .• M.S., press· dent of co~. "One type responds favorably t<! a lowered ult intake while the other seems to do well with a raised calcium intake - some to the point of replacina medication." Calcium, like aalt's main inarc· dient. sodium, is a mineral necn .. ary to maintain an even flow of blood in the body. In aome people1 too little calcium causes blooa volume to build up in the veins multlna in hiah blood pressure. .. If your physician preteribet extra calcium to treat hypenen1ion, try bavina an extra atua of low-fat mik or a cup of yOIUfl," Loaina said. "Thete foodl have vitamTn D and lactote that help the body abtorb the calcium." Milk aroup foodl provide about 75 percent of the calcium in AmcTican diet The CDA recommend.I ~tlna all nuuienu from food before 1upplemont1 becauae of the nutrient balance food provide& to euwe muimum ablotpdon. Mcordina to LOllint. • aooct IWt to oviraU p>d be:&Jt.b i1 a bl&ancwt diet conltltina of a variety of foods from the nutrien~ t.ood JrOUPI! milk. meat, vestablet aad thdta. bre9dl and oere..ll. .. .., •tina tbe recommended number of acrvinp &om that fOOd pvupe. you can be sure to Ft ~ the auutenta necaMry to optimum health.··· eaid. Double Coupon .. ... S' 0., ........ ,.--=----,_ ..... ________ ... _.,.. ____ a.._ .... ___ ·-..... . .,_,...,_ ----·---11o11m or-ow·-• ,,.. __ ..,.. __ ~ .. - Umit OM nna hr Ucmwactwe11' COupon CIDd Umit 2 N•••r::: Doub'-Couoona hr C\altOIDef. Co\apoD " 0etoa.r 1'7 aw Oetoa.r ia. 1"6 OSDA llllp . .Qold•11 ,.,._m.fum .... t LotJJ Save l.30 per lb. ,,.r lb. Alaskan Salmon Any Bag 50 OFF Candy ,,,,b .,.._ Ol Ilia-• cov,poa Limit 0.. n.m tmd 0.. Cov,paa l'el ~ Cou,poa et.c1f1J'W Oe'floblf" !Ml Oe1ober 2.1, INI IUO .... IM 'Sun Giant" Bur OD..a.t OD• RaisiIJs FREE Im penal Margarine OIDA tup 4c>Jd•o 1HmJu.m•,_t Sar• lkld• CVI ,.,..-r rro.o.WJJo1-orlla11 '-"'d ..... .o 6Pack C&CCola Save .40 6 pack II ,, • .,,0op .79 l•-t JWCT.stnaJJ .40 69 1.69 .69 .49 5 =81 ,,., lb. J lb i:~. ~~ P•I .,., lb p•g lb $aY• .u 460& CCID .69 M eat Sl"'afood n.n rv P1•l1 Sar• .20 l6 OS. loal Budwe1ser Beer CUmberland Stonsware Uosomu ..,_. ... Thu ·-·I r.atv.tw 3 9 9 Saucer 6oni9, .69 !2.29 1 lb .,,,th .acll pkg. • IJ 00 pU/'CbaN • G rOCl"'IY Va lu0s ------. . Groct""TY rroz0n .... Torttlla Str1ps COfOINt Fac1al Tissue ·--..,,, .., GlaP;.truit Juice 11~ ........,.... • ...., v ...... Kem6Nectar Apple Juice Price• effective October 17 thru October 23. 1985 II• - . 69 .63 .85 .59 Produce 1 Floral ~ "°"'°" 29 Bulk Candy -:.-l . ,,...,, C\11 M1%9d Bouquets -2. 99 Ba k e ry Liquo r ......... INeca ~ tll C11en1D llanc ......,,,,.. Nlkola1 Vodka ··:: 2.29 '": 7.98 ....... -----~---·------_....._ .. _____ _ ______ .. _______ --__ .,... __ ......,._ ..... _ ... -.. .....-- r . (. Which foodS put teen in swim? SOUP FIT FOR FABLE In one of today's more popular cookbooks. a fable as recalled about a little boy names Suppenkaspar who refused to cat his so up. He was quite stubborn about it. so much so that he eventually wasted away. To commemorate has demise. a soup tureen was used as has headstone. Fortunately, Wlth wonderful soups available. such as Chunky Lamb and Vegetable Soup. stories such as this will forever remain fables. This soup with an unco mmonly good Utstc. features a list of ingredients that would have won even little Suppe nkaspar's heart. 1 lar1e onion, diced S larae 1talkl celery, cbopped 1 bay leaf 1 teaspoon ba1H i c-up1 water l V. cup1 diced drltd frult 1 packa1e (I 0 ounces) frozen green bean1, partially thawed l package (10 ouoces) froien sliced carrot1, partially thawed I package (10 ouocu) froien corn, partially America's top swimmers arc no CHUNKY LAMB AND VEGETABLE SOUP different than the typical tecn-asers 3 tablespoon• flour thawed • Jn large plastic bag, combine flour. pepper, salt and garlic. Add lamb cubes: coat thoroughly with fl~ur mixture. Heat oil in large Dutch oven. Add enta rt· contents of bag: brown lamb cubes quickly. -they eat too much fat and not l teatpoon pepper enouah complex carboh~drates and 1 tea1poon nit calcium, says a nutritton expert I tea1poon 1arllc workinJ with America's future 3 pound• lamb 1boulder, "4!-iocb cubes, well Olympic swimminJ champions. trimmed Jacqueline Berning, a nutrition 3 table1pooo1 vegetable oil consultant with U.S. Swimmif1$. t cu1 (11 ounces each) whole tomatoes. uodraioed the sport's govern1og body, is i cu1 (8 ounces each) tomato sauce ~nductingan ongoing nudyofthc ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Add toma t0es. tomato sauce. onion. celery. bay leaf. basal. water and dned fruit. Stir t.o. combine, breaking up tomatoes. Cover: heat to boiling. Lower heat; simmer covered for one hour. Add green beans. carrots and corn. cover and heat through. Serves 6. diets of the country's best swim- mers to determine whether they are choosing the most appropriate foods for maximum performance potential . .. These kids recognize the im- portance of training, motivation and rest, but diet is often the last thing given attention," Berning said . .. We hope to help them learn to appreciate what a balanced diet with daily selections from the four food groups (milk, meat, vegetables and fruits, and breads and cereals) can do to improve performance and help them live longer, healthier lives." High-carbohydrate foods are their best choice for fuel because . they supply quick energy and take the least amount of time to digest. said Berning. High-fat and high- protcin foods take longer to digest and can cause indigestion, oausea and even vomiting if they remain in the stomach during competition. Most foods from the veg- ctablc/frui t and bread/cereal groups arc excellent sources of complex carbohydrates and fiber. Whole wheat bread, brown rice, pastas, cereals, potatoes, beans and peas arc examples of complex • • I f • • •Whole FOSTER FARMS FRYING CHICKEN • • carbohydrates. Berning said about 60 percent of -----~ the calories in the diet should come from carbohydrates, I 0 to I 5 per- cent from protein, and 25 to 30 percent from fats. "Total caloric needs depend on age, sex, activity level and indivi dual metabolic rates," she said. Contrary to the belief of many athletes, exercise docs not require increased protein consu mption. Protein powders and drinks arc not necessary and can be harmful. "Most Americans consume more protein than they need," Berning pointed out, adding that two 2 to 3 ounce servings of meat a day as sufficient for most people. "Too much protein can be harmful. dchydratfog the body and taxing the kidneys." she said. Berning said calcium 1s import- ant to help prevent osteoporosis. especially among female athletes. "Like most women, female athletes arc usuall y concerned about fat intake and consume far too few dairy products, which are the best source of calcium in the American di et," Berning said. Frozen entree's upgraded Onion. chives and splashes of brandy and sherry add the .. Diane" to the family-size pack of frozen prepared gravy and Salts-bury steak main dash. Potatoes Rockefeller elegantly accompany this dinner for SIX. SALISBURY STEAK DIANE l package (32-ouncea) froien prepared gravy and Salisbury 1teak maln dl1b, thawed l 1mall onion, allced (about 'It cup) % tablespoons freeie-fried cbJvea % table1poon1 brandy % tablespoon• sherry Separate Salisbury steak patties fro m gravy. In 111-quart oblong baking dish. place patties and onion. In small bowl , combine gravy. chives, brandy and sherry. Pour over patties. Heat in 375-degree oven 35 minutes or until hol. S11r before serving. POT A TOES ROCKEFELLER t medium baking potatoes, baked 3 table1poou1 batter or margar· I De % to 3 tableapoona milk 1 pectaae (10-oancea) froien cMppecl 1ptucll, tllawed and welJ-draiaed 4 1Ucet baCOD, crilp-eooked aad cnmble4 "' cep (% OUCH) 1bredded CHdUrdMH 14 a...,...1toc pepper aa•ce Cut tops off potatoes. Scoop out centers. leavma V•-inch shells. Set aside shells. Jn larae bowl, combme potatoes, butter and milk. Stir 10 sp10ach. bacon, cheese and hot pepper sauce. Sp00n Potato mixture into shells. Bak.t on cookie sheet at 375 dqrees for I 0 minutes or until hot. BUY YOUR CALIFORNIA LOTtERY TICKETS AT ALPHA BETA 64 os bottle .. .. . .. ~ , ~"'I.,,.,,,,, ... lDc:ludes 4SC .. ~~ 9CJ ~ 19 on la.bel In water SMUGGLE SKAGGS UQUID ALPHA BETA FABRIC SOLID 7-UP OR SOn'ENER WIDTE TUNA EA . UKE COLA EA. ~ElNfL- --8.bfki<Jll Din nP.i-; ==--J. t :-"Ef;Q • ...... '"£1NlL."" • !i ....... .. ~ ~ -' -1"1\f.,Hk~J..1.i\ ~ Cereals 'e~ BabyFood ,,.• • A '·,t ~ r .'::'r ~i ~ .. \ -~ 5!. t:rtra Fanq RED OR A»orted Yarietles GOLDEN HEINZ DELICIOUS INSTANT APPLES BABY FOOD FALL APPLE HARVEST! SEAFOOD SPECIALS! BAKERY SPECIALS! Eztra Fanq ROME BEAUTY APPLES SPARTAN APPLES Ctlap • rtrm QRAMNY SMITH APPLIS on A Stlc:l CANDY APPLES Flesh • TcmqJ $...i PDSDDIONS .............. 99~ Whole • 1Jm1t 2 • J'tOMD or Defrosted ALASKAN SALMON .. .. ............... I'! rr.u PQcWc RID INAPPIR FD.LITS F'mb DOVER SOLE FILLETS ....... . • hoeeD Of De«fOlted ORANGE ROUGHY FILLETS f'tesh IASTIRN COD FILLETS Dem McDcS • smau • !'town or o.tr09\ed COOKED SHRIMP ............... 29! 43! ..... 39! 34! - Wblle or wbea1. Scmdw1ch or Round lop 24 OWlCe • SAvt l4C IKMICll AU11A llTA PREMIUM BREAD Danlab Ro111e • 14 ounce • SAvt ~t BLUEBERRY PASTRY luttermU.11, o-u·1 Food or RoneTWh901 • SAvt 3oc IJlAOGI ALINA llTA • I a 01 paclla ge OLD FASHION DONUTS .. 6 count • R~cu or Sourdougb • SAvt 30< IXMICll AUNA llTA FRENCH ROUS 24 owice • SAVI 50t atMICll A.LIMA ISTA APPLE PIE • SAV'l>'GS RrLAn TO rttvlOUS A.l.l'MA UTA rtJCE OP LAST OAn rtlO• TO ll'llTW rt ICC llCOtK"TIOI" [Xf"l\ISl'Vr or MWtmscr l)P PtOMOTIONAl ,,,(" [~ • SALt'S tA.Jt COLU:CTtD ON AU TAU.au mMS. ICU WlNC Al'O UQUO~ l'IOT AVAJIJJIU IN All STOHS. Wt llESC~ Tl4l 91GKT TO LIMll QIJ.vntTll $ ------; . ' .. _____ , I Gt • t ,,o~ I ... • • OU"C ... "lOO ~· \ • • • ·• IU •• KIL' ..... Ii., ·~· 1 DOUBLE SAVINas couPON 1 I "''if"' ... , CO<lpotl J""'O ···~ J•y 01\f ,,., '"'""''' \ ,, ., Gii I I '""~" 1•0 Of' DOVel I fNf ~A~V.~ ,.,.,., y '" °"'', n• '"' .,,,. om• Mt Tt 1«u11111u11u• .. nu ceurou .. ceu,..., ~·I I 11 oo 11111u1u•• let t1UU •u1urnu1 tuM~I 1u1oc." I I Wll llUUlfllltllll 111CCtMIMll,~fl .. •191111• "*llU4 lltlUlatO I I u•n Olf n1• '" IWIUHCfllllff l ctuPOll a11 I 111111 19411 ~I~· rt• (Vll ... t \ cew. ... ,....._ ., ", ......... '" n ,. I ~--------------" ~-----------.... ' . 't:f"i ~ I Uv•• f ..,, • 'llllt r.ooc'A I ... , ..... ~··· p ~~: .. \.~ .. 7.: \ I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON ~ I '"""' '"'' oupol\ '"'"0 "'" •'• O"f ... o!l(I"'''' '"" ~" I I ,.,.11,,. ,114 0,. 00\/tl r r~ 'iAv•IOGS .... , '" 1><·• ""' ••• ·lfl"ll I r.HI llf Tt ~Ull I( flllU .. f IU GIUNll1 DI QllMlll M• I • •1111t..,.. ,., ucm "'-Ill t11u11 auucr '' s1oca Oii I I .... llC4UIU l!Ol*I reucc:e •• "'" '1!004ICU I ...... .,. NICllAll .. OUllll. I u•tM11t•l'f••&1111uc1Ull(fl*'"Ho • I 11•111111 "'*' ~• "' cvlltltf• \ ,..,... .... , ....... , ,,, ........... tcr u ,_ I .._ ______________ ,, -------------, "t lfVflf'1• "": 1 °""'' h ( &I \ ..... ,.,.,,. ,f ... Mt '•4)11. ... I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUP01N I I ,_."'"''hf' l >v~~ O"G ••ltt 1n~_on• "'"""''''""''f" ffr•h c t1 I I ~•PO" 4"4 Ott OOUll I fwl SAv•NG~ ""' yov Ou "•" t•, ·''" Of•I• IOI ftlllCluot MIAllUOl IHlCOU=CMOlt ovt• I I ••• llHUllUAYIOff~'.Y:llltOf•rt• MC11UlllCIOll I I •aa• llCllllUlitUO• I AllllllT · ta • •i.t•lltl P\llllCllA$( M Mt D I I l'"'' Olll •II• 1'11 llUIUflCll/IU. *"" ... I 11•t •tv• ..._I tt.,,.t rt• tvtr••• \ c--t1111U ., 11111M-ll'l• ecr 111-I ~--------------- ' ... 49!. J9!ca. 14!. .69! J9!. •One dozen •Grade AA SKAGGS ALPHA BETA LARGE EGGS 12 to ll SOI pllQ Chlp&l" Grauhop~n. oatm.al Cremes KEEBLER COOKIES 18 5 os pacllage Al&orted .-art•tt•• DUNCAN HDIES CAKI MIX DELI SPECIALS! l&Mel A.LnlA lftA • 12 ounce • Uvt ~ 12 pock 12 en cans LITE BEER INl>IVIJ>UA.LLY WRAPPID PROCDS CHEESI FOOD 12.! 1• ou.nc. • SAVI I 00 J 99 PRICJ.OUS MOZZA..ULl.A CHEESE u. Cbedctar or MOIDCD9UO • I ounce • SAVI 4()( J 3.~ PRICJOUS SHREDDED CHEESE. .. - I ounce • SAVI i~ ...... A&.lllA U'TA CRIAM CHllSI ..... 79! ---·-----------------, I 10 BEAUTIFUL 10 1 1 PORCELAIN CHINA I I THIS COUPON RH>HMAIU f04t : I 10 FREE BONUS : I CERTIFICATES I I Pttf~Nf TO ('lt((I((" .\NO •ttllVl 10 fRU IONU\ I I CfUIJICAH~ ro PA\Tt IN vou• 80NU~ \AV(" fCXDflt I NO fO't<.HA~ IUQlHIU I> I ONI COUf'ON !IP-C Ol PON C.000 ) ' "" CU~TOMI R 1 ' ' Tt••L Ut t118S ,_________ --------- Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOTIWednelday, Octob« 18, 1985 Cl Humble pizza putting on a calzone disguise EA. Fans of Italian food think Lasagna Pizza was made in heaven Like a peasant 1n top hat and tails, puza 1s putting on airs. Long ago a humble snack in Naples' narro"' streets, the sun pie food has been transformed by p1na makers from the West Coast and Chicago l•Stng out-of-the-ord1 nar) combina- tions. Restaurateur\ around the country have Joined in lo introduce their own new world vers10m of the classic favonte. At-home pizza make!'i arc now adapting some of these ima11nauve vanauons. too The interesting new 1ngred1ents and shaplllgs lend themselves well to homemade recipes using shortcuts like hot roll mix. The easy yeast dough mix saves ttme with Its simple prep- aration and quick-acting yeast Crab and Cheese Calzone 1s one of the decidedly high-style van- at1ons of pizza currently popular. The recipe makes six calz.one - individual turnover-shaped pizzas. You simply shape six small balls of dough into circles, then fold the CITRUS HILL SELECT ORANGE JUICE LE MENU DINNERS 29 EA. CAKE-A-RAMA PRIVATE LABEL SPECIALS! GENERAL MERCHANDISE! 16 °' can •cream SfTI• or Wllole Kernel • SAVJ: 1oc SltAGGI A.UNA UTA 39~ 49! CORN ......... a °' poclr:age • SAVJ: 16< SJtAGGI A.UNA HTA BEEF OR CIUCKEN RICE MIX 2$ lb baO • SAvt I &O SJtAGQS Al.PKA HTA TASTY BITES DRY DOG FOOD IS ounce • Bur l SAvt 1ac Sl[MIQS AllKA ln'A TOMATO SAUCE 16 ounce • SAY'£ 4< IZAOCD A1.PkA UTA APPLE SAUCE Put an end fj to your ~ .. ·r,. HoUday bati§ler ( · ~ c;tvc Alpha Beta C~tn C'l·rt lfkat~' f\, "*''"""'""•"""4 ~·~·"''CI .,..,_,,, Y(ly t Mo......,. ,ftv' •"t•f '" ~.: r::;,7: •• t,.;,r. ;;.~r':.~" .. , "' ... , ... ...,., Mia•~··· 10 ~ ....... , rt""""' •Htw ''"" ._.. ......... ._,. ~I/Wt....-,..,,, ,.....,,~tl( .... ff'M ..,.,.tlJCtfl•, n~~IO AYAH.Alli N ALL ITORft "9ft ........ 't • • ·-··· .. t f l \M ·~ ""' ,. • .--•• "• tvN ,,, ,. • tt t'HO.t ''"-•• tO•"ft-t I J ti f ., .~ •• •'·~ r, '' t: ~1"•• • ,_1~1 --__ , . .., .... •• .. OC•lt"""''o "'·--lJM-• ea-.1 l fll\ ,,. "" 30 cowit • O.peodabl• protection With small pod co mJon STAYFREE MINI PADS NO 32$1 ., • OM• 2 0 s .... latt•n .. (NOi lncl~ed) 99.¢ EVEREADY FLASHLIGHT • tcooomy IA so count • 9 owice • tx1rO ng1d J49 SOLO~ PLASTIC PARTY CUPS IA U cowit • Laro• 2 • • .t.uort9d colon PAPER MAID BAKING CUPS 2 ~ lb baQ • w 11.b """-o Gard JONNY CAT CAT UI ID ALPHA BETA ______ ,,, --------... 39! 29! PRICU CIOOD THURSDAY THRU WIDNDDAY OCT. 17 THROUGB OCT. 23, 1985 AT ALL SOUTHERN CAIJFOINlA ALPHA BETA MAilCETS dough over to enclose the fil1iaa. Tucked inside each ca.lzooe is a creamy crab fillina. aooented with red peppers, sreen onion ud parsley. For a aolden crust. brush the calzone wtlh ca and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese before bak- ing. Italian food fans will call Chccsey Lasagne Pizza a food marnage made in heaven. This easy recipe offers the classic flavor of lasagne, with the authentic crust pizza fans enjoy. To highlight the trad1t1onal lasagne ingredients used in the filli ng. a flavonng of dry spaghetti sauc:e 1s surred into the yeast dough. The genero us topping for this heany. dccp-<11sh pizza includes ground beef, co ttage cheese and mozzarella cheese. ~ CRAB AND CHEESE CALZONE DOUGH: 1 package llol roll mis 114 C11pt llot waler ( 118 to 1 %0 degrees) ! tablespoons oil FILLING: CHEESEY LASAGNE PlZZA CRUST: l package bot roll mix LS-ounce package spaghetti !l&OCC mb 114 caps bot water (110 to 1%0 degrees I t tablespoons oil TOPPING- ! pound ground ~cf 1 4 cap water ~ · 8-ouace can tomato sauce 1 t-oQ ce carton f 1 i,, caps I creaned conage cbe-ese 1-4 cap grated Parmesan cbttse 4-oaace f 1 cap I shredded mozzarella cbtt1e Generous!~ grea~ 14-inch p111a pan or 1 5lt1 0-inch Jell~ roll pan In large howl, combine flour m1xtur{'. 'east from foll packct and I tablespoon of the spaghetti sauce mr~: mt'< well. . 11r in I'• cup-; ho t water and 011 un11l "'ell comhined Tum dough out onto lighth fl oured surface Wtth greased or noured hands. shape dough into a ball Knead dough for ~ h l ' minutes until no longer s11d' ~1th grea~d hands. pat dough 1ntn prepared pan forming nm around edges Generous!~ pnck dough v.1th fork. (over dough with plast1t wrap and towel Let nsc on counten op for 15 minutes. PlaC'c oven rack at lowest pos1t1on Heat oven to 4:!5 degrees Mcanv.h1lc, in large sk1 1l~t brown ground beef: dram 11r 1n v. cup water. tomato sa0« and re- maining spaghetlJ sauce, mix. sim- mer 5 minutes Uncover dough Spread cottqc ch~ over douah. spoon meat m1x1ure over cott.qc cheese. SpnnkJe with Parmeun chce9C Bake at 42S dqrcct on lowest oven rack for 2S to lS minute. or until crust is deq> p>lden brown. Spnnkle wtth mou.arclla checx. Bake an additional 2 to J minutes or until checte as melted. Ltt stand S minutes before ICT'Vlna, 8 tcr- VlN(S. C8 O!wp COllt DAILY ptLOT~. October 18, 1915 Bake that apple a day in an untraditional way The old sayina about "an apple a day" is more than just a cute rhyme. Raw apples aid the diaestive pro- ceu. They are also a aood source of fiber and an excellent tooth-<:lean-ina aid. . Baked apples, apple pie and applesauce needn't be the limit of their use in cooking. Try these recipes featurina the apple in cof- f cccakes and puffs. Also, the apple pizza coffeecake is a particularly unusual dish, sure to surprise and deliaht your family and friends. So try your favorite baking apple -Baldwin, Winesap or Courtland -in something different this fall. APPLE PIZZA COFFEECAU Apple Topplq: Z cabletpeo111 batter or marpr- lDe l Iara• cookill1 apple1, peeled ud Waly 1Ucecl ~ capeapr Z &able1poon1 all-perpoee Ooar 1 tea1pooa clmaamon In Larae skillet., melt butter; add apple slices. Combine supr, flour and cinnamon; blend with apples. Simmer 1 S minutes, stirrina oc- casionally Cream Claeese TopplD1 ®APPLE HARVEST 4 ouc:et cream ct.etM, ~ l tablH,,... tapr l cablHpooD lemoa Jalce '4 teupoo• aatme1 Jn small bowl, blend all inaro- dienta. Streatel Toppllll '1't Clp all-perpote flotlr Y, C11pHpr '4 cap batter or m&flart.H, sof&eaed In small bowl, combine all ingredients with fork until crumbly. Coffeecake: ! '4 to S capt alJ-parpote fioar l pactaae qalck rise yeut a &abl11poon1 111ar 1 tellpooD talt "" Clip water '4 cap milk 11, cap batter or mar1artae leg In larae mixer bowl, combine 1 Yl cups flour, yeast, supr and salt; mix well. In saucepan, heat water, milk and butter until very wann ( 120-130 degrees; butter does not need to melt). Add to flour mixture. Addeg. Blend at low speed until moistened; beat 3 minutes at medium speed. By band, aradually stir in enough remaining flour to make a soft dough. Cover; let rise in warm place about 1 S minutes. ~ Punch down dough. On liahtly floured surface, shaee dou&h into a ball. Pat dou&h on ireased 12-incb pizza pan or large cookie sheet, formina a rim around edae. 61! l lb. M'U)OWJ.IA llAIKIAllDll 40 oz. • IWple or Whit• wa.eH'I CDUIJUICI u.. '° ot. • luf'CIJ "" ICOOft•DOO euwam1 YITAMDll l& OIL• No leaDa DDOlllOlrl CRILi LL·A· =:u BOUNTY PAPER TOWILS u.. 340L lllDIZ s-OIHIR--- DILL DU.81 12 OI. POLCIDI DlftUn' CO""'l .. f.,.U• • Sac:ll couw ••• llOlll LDllDWllll 64os. CITllVI HIU. DLICT OltANGI JUICI IEND! SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE TBORS., ocr. 17 TIDOUQB WED., ocr. 23, 1985 AT ALL SOUTHERN CALIPORNIA ALPHA BETA MARJCET5 50oa. box legu1a:r or Lemon Scent CASCADE AUTOMATIC DISHWASlllNCI IA. DITIRCllHT 13 OI 11.Ja IPICIAL BLDID conn r 79! 16 OL • Cteamette IMtllllmOR 11.aOW MACARONI u.. 300 ct .• ~TlPl*l ~ C01TOlllWAU Spread Cream Cheese Filling over dough. Spoon Apple Topping over cream cheese; sprinkle Streusel Topping over applet. Cover; let rise in wann place about 1 S minutes. Bake at 37S degrees for 2S to 30 minutes unti edge is golden brown. Serve warm . APPLE CINNAMON PUFFS ! C11pt all·P9fPOM Ooar 1 pac1ta1e cpjck rite yeut % &ablHpooDI Hpr '1't teaspoon talt '4 cap warm water '4 cap oU leg 1 cap claopped applet I &abletpoon1 batter, melted '4capHpr 1 tea1poo11 claaamoa 14 cap flDely cltopped pecua In 1arae mixer bowl, combine I cup flour, yeast., 2 tablespoons sugar and salt; mix well. Add very warm water (120-130 dearces) and oil to flour mixture. Blend at low speed until moistened; beat 3 minutes at medium speed. By band, aradually stir in apples and remaining flour to make soft batter. Spoon into well JI'C8SCd muffin pan cups. Cover, let rise in warm place until double, 30 minutes. Bake at 371 degrees for 1 S to 20 minutes until golden brown. Combine 1/4 cup sugar, nuts and cinnamon. Dip tops of bot rolls into melted butter, then into supr- cinnamon mixture. Serve warm. FRESH APPLE COFFEECAU i '4 C11pt aJJ-parpo1e noar l pac1ta1e qalck rise yea1t '1't cap packed brown saaar 1 teaspoon ult 'it tea1poon cbuaamoa l cap water ! &abletpooDI lllorteDiDI lea 1 cap sbtedded or cbopped, peeled apple 'it Clip clloppecl walnats TOPPING: Y, Clip packed brown Hllr "" cap all·P9fPOH Oou 1 te11pooa cbuwnoa 14 tea1poon Htme1 14 cap batter or mar1artae, softened In larae mixer bowl , combine l 'h cups flour, yeast, brown sup.r salt and cinnamon; mix well. ' In saucepan, heat water and shortenina until very warm ( 120-130 dearees; shortening doet not need to melt). Add to flour mixture. Add cg. Blend at low speed until moistened; beat 3 minutes at m.~um speed. By band, p-adually aur 10 applet, walnuu aod rema.in- ina flour to make a soft batter. Spread batter in puled 9-inch square cake pan. Prepare toppina: Combine brown supr, flour and apicn. Mu butter in until mixture is crumbly. Sprinkle topPina over do\llh. Cover; let rite 10 warm J>lace about 30 minutea. Bake at 37S cSearea for 3S to ~ minutes until Soldeo brown. Serve warm or cold. SAY CDDlt -Walnu~a~ plea and cbeele make a 'de ' tft&1 autumn lmck or appetizer. op a •mall. uncut rouna of brie witb walnuts and a aprin~ of c:lD-namon and nutmet. DriZzle witb melted butter and bake in a 350- dqrec oven for about 8 minuta. Serve with apple wedeel and a dloed bquette. Craving carrots? Pickle ,them ... By CECILY BROWNSTONE ,,,,.... ..... AJtbough carrots have been with us for centuries, it wasn't until World War II that nutritionists emphasized one of their great virtues. Families, especially those with members working night shifts. were urged to include carrots in their diets to help their vision. "Eat carrots, they're good for your eyes" became a slogan. The reason for this: Carrots supply vitamin A (via their beta carotene) and it is vitamin A that helps guard apinst "night blindness" in which eyes can't adjust quickJy to sudden darkness or to light suddenly flashing in the darkness. During and after the W'/V, Ameri- can cooks started serving grated carrot salad dressed with mayon- naise or vinaigrette sauce. Even the French offered carrot salad, but they dressed it with lemon juice and salt In the 1970s, and probably before, carrot pickles were popular. Because storebougbt pickles and relishes are expensive these days. you may find It thrifty to make a batch of the carrot variety. I find carrot pickles endlessly useful. They go with practically everything from fried chicken to chifi con came. PICKLED CARROTS 1 poud carrot• 1 tablespoon mixed pickling 1plce 3 caps water l cap cider vinegar l cap18gar 'i'I tea1pooa salt Peel carrots; cut each into sticks about 4 inches lo ng and about 'I• inch thick. Tic pickling spice in cheesecloth to make a small "bag." In a large saucepan bring water, vinegar, sugar, salt and spice bag to a boil, stirring until sugar djssolves; simmer, covered, for 5 minutes. Add carrots. Simmer, covered, for 2 minutes -carrots will be very crisp. Remove spice bag. Pour carrots and their liquid into a container and cover tightly. Refrigerate 2 to 3 days for flavors to blend before serving. Makes about 4 cups. ... or grate a few into soup pot This recipe, adapted from "Fast &. Low -Easy Recipes for Low Fat Cuisine" by Joan Stillman (little, Brown), is good for a weekend lunch. CARROT SOUP 'i'I C11p panley leaves 1 lar1• celery rib 1 ~ poad1 (aeaat) carrot1, trimmed ud peeled I mNlam potaco, peeled 1 medlam Ollloa, peeled I ettpa cMdu brotla 1 tabl_,... comaco peat.e 1 tea1pooa troud CHiia '4 t.eupoo11 cntMd t:ff pepper flak et Usina a food processor, finely chop panley. slice celery and coarsely aratc carrots, potato and onion. In a )-quart saucepan, bri na ce&ery, carrots. potato, onion, broth. tomato pute, cumin and pepper flakes to simmerina; boil eeotly until veaetablet a.re tender -about 20 minutea. PuRC in the pn>QeSSOr. Reheat and serve sprinkled w;th reterVed parsley. Makes 8 cups. Otange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedtwildfff, October 18, 1118 C9 FRICASSEE FLAVOR FAST In IM ~arch for fine dinina. Americans are lookina no funhcr lhan Mom or Grandma's favonte recipes. Nothing captum the essence of bomcstyle cooking like old-fashioned Cluc:xen Fricassee. A dubious honor usually reserved for one of the older bards an the coop frica'seed chick.en was tint browned, then s1mmered for hours an a well-seasoned stock till the meat was as tender as a young bird's. Instead of simmering the chicken on top of the range, modem cooks can use a pressutt cooker where this recipe cooks in less than 15 minutes. An added bonus 1s the n ch broth left in the bottom of the pan. Thickened with egg yolk and flour, it makes an excellent rich gravy for mashed potatoes or biscuits. CHICKEN F RICASSEE WITH HERBS 1 ( 3 CO 3 '1'1-poand clllckea c•t ap) or clllckea parts t tabletpooDI cookbag oU 1 Ya caps water or cllJckea brotll 1 medium oaJoa. quartered \'a tea1pooa 1aJt Ya tea1pooa fretb or 1/• teaspoon dry rosemary ~ teu,... frall W 1 ie&IJI I II *J ......... '4 ceu,... ~ pefper DIM p-oad d•ves 'iAa c.p cream 1 egyolk 1 tablnpoq .~,."'9M nev Wash and pal chicken dry W1th paper toweh. Heat 011 tn a 4 or 6-quan pressure cooker pan. Brown chicken 1n 011. Add water. onion, salt, rotemat)', mal)oram, pepper and cloves. Close pressure cooker cover securely. Place pressure regulator on vent pipe. Cook for 10 minutes at 15 pounds pressure. Let pressure drop of its own accord. Do not attempt to re m ove cover until pressure 1s complelely reduced. Beat cream, egg yolk 8{ld flour together u1ujl smooth. Push chicken pieces to one s1de in pressure cooker pan and beat cream mixture into the broth. Cook and star until slightly thickened. Coat chicken pieces wllh sauce. Serves 4 to 6. STOCK UP NOW AT ALPHA BETA'S ;;;;::;:::===:::::;~;:::::;::~~~' 6 pack. r. Auorted Frosen TOTINO'S PIZZA 24os. BOWLO'NUTS PEANUTS LI. 2orllb. bag IGl 1 1n 100% UIPMTl'llS 12 01. JIMMYDIAN PARTY LINKS • Wild Of"°' LI. Bella Donna or Papa Cantella ITALIAN SAUSAGE .eos. IDfUDSIN ORANGI JUICI 12 oz. cans PEPSI OR COCA COLA YOUR 1 CHOICI • All varieties 79 EA. PLANTIRS ClllEZ BA' Is OR CURLS • Miid Of "°' 16 01 EA. ILBURRITO SAISA . ..._ "'° laJt • 9olM4 • ::::s, 5,2& OL CIDCO-IUI RICICADS SALIS TAX COIJ.ECTED ON ALL TAXABLE JTEMS • WE RESERVE THE llGUIT TO LOOT QUANTITIES • HER. WINE • UQUOR NOT AVAJLAILE JM ALL STORES. TELL-A· IEND! SALE PllCES EFFECTIVE THURS .. OCT. 17 TBROUClll WED .. OCT. ~3. 1985 AT ALL SOU'tBEIN CALIFORNIA ALPHA BETA MARKETS •T-e C>..ioD. Pteodl OnioD Of A90C0do l ,_ ~ 7 to 7.5 oz. -.J BELL BRAND CIDPPLES • REGULAR• BARBECUE • SOUi CREAM • ONION 9~ . I ... 4 liter CARLO • Ptnk Cbabl.U ROSSI :~~ctr WINE . Rhin• • Vlll ROM EA. 14 01 IMO ONION OR AVOCADO DIPS 6 pk .. 12 01. bottles 16 0 1 BAii PARK FRANKS • Cbwalry otC,_y l& OS SUPIDIAN PIANUT BU I I iR HllNEKDI BIER EA. 32 0 1 CLAUSSEN PICKi.iS 24 os. • PLANTERS DRTROASTID PIAN1JTS ' ' Orange Co.Mt DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, October 1e, 1986 Usingquick, easy wokco~kery saves fall colors of vegetables Eggplant Eggs promote protein Stir-frying provides change of pace after canning or freezing When fall vegetables abound, when the freezer is packed and the last canningjar is filled, when your family has had Its fill of plain fresh vegetables. it's ume to try some new vegetable combinations. Tast) vegetable dishes can be easily sttr-fned or steamed. In fact. these two cook111g methods are preferred for many vegetables. Both cook vegetables quickly and retain color and precious vnamins. Sttr-fry1ng 1s accomplished by placi ng a small amount of vegetable oil in a wok on a high heat. The vegetables are constantly stirred or tossed by the cook. This constant motion 'prevents the vegetables from being overcooked. When steaming. a small amount of water 1s heated to boil,ng. th e vegetables are placed on a rack above the water, and the unit 1s cpvered so that steam surrounds the food . Steaming and stir frying allow much greater control of vegetable texture and flavor than other cooking methods. Vegetables can be combined with sauces. nuts or other vegetables to change texture and flavor. One vegetable can be served in many different ways. All 11takes1s a lmle creativity and imagination. So liven up your abundant vegetable crop. SESAME ZUCCHINI STICKS % tablespoon• vegetable oil I pound zuccblnl, thick matchstick cut I small onion, sliced Z tablespoons sesame seed l tablespoon soy sauce 11, teaspoon salt Preheat 011 in wok at 375 degrees. Sur-fry zucchini. onion and sesame seeds until zucchini 1s cnsp-tcnder. about 3 minutes. Add soy sauce and salt. Yield: 4 servings CAULIFLOWER AND CARROT STIR-FRY 3 table1pooD1 vegetable oil ~ bead ca.Uflower, cut in small flowerettff 3 canot1, 1llced cUa1onaJJy % 1ca1Uoa1, 11Jced diagonally 1 tablespoon lemon jalce 'I• teaspoon dill weed 11. teaspoon salt Preheat oil in wok at 350 degrees. Stir-fry caul iflower and carrots until crisp-tender. about 3 minutes. Add scallions. continue to cook I minute. Add lemon juice, dill weed and salt. Stir-fry until well coated. Yield: 4 servings. NUTTY BROCCOLI AND CARROTS ~ pound carrots, diagonally sliced "' poud broccoli, t11t las. btte- •lled pieces t tablespoon• batter 14 c1p coareely cllopped cHlaew1 Put steaming rack in wok. Pour enough water to come just under- neath rack, but not touching. Cover rack with aluminum foil . Put carrots and broccoli on rack. Cover wok. Tum wok control to 400 dqrees until water boils. Reduce heat to simmer. Steam 5 minutes. While vegetables are steaming, melt but- ter and nuts in small saucepan over medium heat. Cook until butter turns amber. Pour over cooked vegetables. Yield: 4 servings. RATATOUILLE 11, cap ve1etable oil 4 medlam tomatoes, qunered % small zaccla.lnl, sliced 1 medlam euplut, 1Uced 1 medlam 1reen pepper, chopped I medium onion, chopped 2 tea1poon1 aa.lt 'I• teaspoon pepper 1 clove garlic, cra1laed Preheat oil in wok at 375 dcgrccs. Add all ingredients. Cook and stir unlll vegetables are heated, 3 to 5 minutes. Cover and reduce heat to 250 degrees. Continue to cook. stirring occasionally. for 10 minutes. Yield 6 to 8 servings. Fnedeggplant ha s long been recognized as an ~onomical dinner .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ .. ~~:~e~:!~~·;~~~ s:~;~~at~~ro~h~~e:~~~ti sauce and melted Turkey breast su1· ted to stuff1· ng in th!~~e~ ~f:a~~~t~c~~~~ a~~ cuu~1~t~1~~~~ ~~~~s~ Jrh~1~p~~l~~r~u~ circle with the nm of a gJass and then cut out the center with a paring knife. The eggplant 1s dipped in an egg batter and bread crumbs and pan f ned as usual. After the eggplant slices arc turned to brown the second side, eggs are broken into the centers to cook to desired donenes!>, making this an entree that is packed with good protei n nutnt1on. The stub ends of the eggplant and the centers that you ha ve removed can be served later in the week. They make an excellen t cooked vegetable when diced and sauteed with chopped onion and Italian herbs. Perfect accompaniments for Eggplant Eggs would be a steamed green vegetable and a fruit salad. Add additional color and flavor to the plate b) spnnkJing Eggplant Eggs with Parmesan cheese and chopped fresh parsley or chi ves. EGGPLANT EGGS 1 large eggplut 11 egg1, divided Ya teaspoon crushed oregano leaves Flour for dipping 1 cap seasoned dry bread crumbs on for frying .I Parmesan cbeese and chopped fresh parsley or chives, If desired Peel eggplant and cut off both ends. Save the ends for another meal. Cut remaining eggplant. crosswi se. into 4 th 1c;k slices. l sing a b1scu11 or cookie cutter. cut a hole an the center of each eggplant \Ille that 1s large enough to hold two raw eggs. Set aside. Break three of the eggs into a shallow bowl Add water. salt and oregano leaves. Beat unlit well blended. Sprinkle a \mall amount offlour an to a shallow bowl or pie plate. Dip the eggplant slices 1n the fl our until both side'> and outsid e cdge'i are evenly coated with flour. Dip each floured slice 1n the egg mixture. then in the seasoned bread crumbs. makrng sure each .-.lice is evenl~ coated. Pour enough oil into a large skillet to reach a depth of about 't. inch. Heat over medium heat Place breaded eggplant slices 1n heated oil and fry on first side until a nch golden brown Tum slices and cook for about one minute. Dram otT excesc; oil. Break two eggs into the center of each eggplant c;lice and cover skillet to hold in heat. This wall allow eggs to cook evenly. Reduce heat to low and continue to cook until c;econd side of eggplant l'i golden brown and eggs arc cook-ed to desired donenes'i. If desired. spnnklc each slice wath Parmesan cheese and chopped fresh parsley or chopped chives. Serve immediately. Serves 4. When you buy a whole California turke), do family members fight over favonte parts? Are thighs the most popular? Or wings? Or breast? Today. thanks to modem pro- cessing techniques, you can purchase packages of just those meaty partc; that family members love best. If white meat is preferred. you can't do better ta.an a half California turkey breast. Just one half of a breast will yield six to eaghl servings. But how can you have roast turkey breast and the dressing. too'> You don't need a whole bird to "stuff' a turkey. You can have the dressi ng nestled right under the turkey breast. absorbing all the good dnppings and moisture as the turkey cooks. You'll end up with the same good taste that a wh ole turkey affords The nice pan about roasting a half turke} breast 1s the cooking time -it's shortened cons1derabl)'. A half turkc> breast takes onl y I 'h hours IC> cook Roa'>t your California Turkey Brca\t with Spinach Dressing. a savory combination of chopped spinach. wheat bread cubes and toasted nuts. for del icious flavor and ~ood nutrition. It's an ap- propriate complement to turkey. wh ich rates high 1n those attnbutes, too Moist. JUICY turkey 1s low in fats. cholesterol and calones. compared to most other meats. It 1s low in sodium. too. And next to the prices of most red meats. turkey is an economical bargain. If white meat 1s your family's favorite. use turkey breast often. Turkey meat is so versatile, you can prepare 11 an any numberofinterest- 1ng ways so family members will not ti re of 1t. Try other turkey dishes. too. such as Turkey Scallopp1nc. made with turkey breast c;lices an stead of veal : Turkey Tonnato, turkey breast slices served with a tuna-<:aper sauce; open-faced turkey sand- wiches with hot gravy ... with turkey breast, the possibilities are endless. e MONEY SAVING COUPONS e ., ~ The 5'#1fl0wer Group Lenexa, KS 66219 ., ~ Now Fruit ( •111.v r..,' I ru1t RM.., i'lre softn anrl P<'hlt'r In bite and chew K1<h low I r111t BM., hecause they tr1o;te so good And momc; low t11 wrw th··in hi>cause they'.e a wholesome natural snack mrldt> with r1,,,J f ru1t ~· So put the h1te 1rn u.-. 1 n, n•·w Q1Ul1T CORNERS) f>a'i1er to chew h ull Hr1r-. lr1drly CALIFORNIA TURKEY BREAST WITH SPINACH DR~ING 1 ball Callfornla turlley breast 4 tablespoons batter 1 teaspoon tbyme Z fresb garlic cloves, cut in ball 1 cap eacb cbopped onion and celery l package ( 10 ounces) frozen, cbopped 1piaach, thawed, drained 34 cap brotb or water 3 1Ucfl wheat bread, cubed 1 cap toasted walnat pieces or pine nuts 'I• teaspoon nutmeg Salt and pepper Rub turkey breast with I table- spoon butter, thyme and garlic. In remaining butter, cook onion and celery until soft. Mix with remain- ing ingredients to make dressing. Place dressing in greased baking pan; cover with turkey breast, skin side up. Bake I 'h hours at 350 degrees. Makes 6 to 8 servinp. Deli slices add Ole! Therc's a whole new world of menu ideas in which turkey dch meats play the starrina role. Elevated from their "favorite sandwich" status. these meats have become a lunchtime/dinnertime favorite. Preparation time is minimal and menu ideas are limited only by your imacination. For startcn, try Turkey Bumtos. Thmly sliced turkey ham fills tortillas and Monterey Jack cheese. cheddar cheese and green chili~ complete this south-of-the-border favorite. TURKEY BURRITOS 4 packa1e1 (%.5 onces each) tlllnly 1llced 1molled tarlley llam ! paclla1es (I oaocn each) Monterey Jack clleese 1Ucn, C11t .. llalf len,..wlee % cu1 ( C ouces eacla) wllole, peeled 1reea clallln, cat lD 1trtpe 10 (I-I.Dell) no.r torttlla1 I tablespoo111 bitter or mar1arl.De C"' tables,.... floar ~....,.._dry m11tard a C11pt milk 1 C1lp arated cateddar clleese 1 Jar (I HllCel) 1al1a or taco 1aace Preheat oven to 3 SO degrees. On each tortilla arrange 4 aJicct ofham, 2 pieces of cheese and 2 pieces of chili (chop remainina ones for pmish). Roll up jelly roll f11hion; place seam side down in 9x 13-inch pan. Melt butter in sauce pan over medium heat. Stir in flour. Cook I to 2 minutct, 1t1rrin1 constantly. Blend in dry mustard. Remove from heat, slowly add milk, atamna constantly. Return to heat and cook until thickened. Add cheese. stirring until melted. Pour over tonilla1. Bake at 3S0desrees for 30 minutes. Spoon halfof salsa or taco sauce down the m1ddl~ and top Wlth remainina chilies. Return to oven for S minutes. Serve wtth rema1nin1 sauce. Makes 10 burritos. l Orange Coee1 DAILY PILOT/WedrW/edff1, October 1t, 1MI 011 Lancers' champagne copy is really a sparkler LANCERS REALLY IP A.R&L£8 -That winery in Pon~. tlmous for the rose with the little tin&le of catbonation finally sot around to puttina aom~ teal sparkle in a bottle. Lanoen "Blanc de Noir" Sparklina Wine ia now available in many markeu in both brut and extra dry level• of sweetness, and is ruabina toward.a national distribution in the very near future. vaJ ue, and at the lcaat expentive und Sl.49) it becomes a real n. ile the two spark.lint wines may not appeal to bard~re Cham· pape connoiueun, I 1u1pect they will appeal to a very broad aenera.I audieooe. 'f!ley are clean, weU- made, very ftuity wines that tute &ood. and that'• all that is neceasary for most wine drlnken. The reason they may not appeal to Cbampqne drinken is that the wines are rMde from a different P'lpe variety, and therefore the tute ia not traditional. J£11Y IUI when drinkina thete wines for reaulu of a restaurant W1M lJst Wi.nelovm .. meet"ontheeerviot'• refreahment. Not only do the be~ competition. a F~ncb bre.td jud&-facilities to ei.cha.nat impa 118001 flavon many well with the fruiu-int and a competition for best hon about ~tccl winCI WIW:b oeu of the wines, the berry lookt d'oeuvraanddellertaucreatedby each member tutes u t.be con. pretty in the ala11 and c:rata a Sonoma County restaurants and ference ia beina hdd. ateady aueam olbubblea that seem cateren. A recent tutina. for cumpk. to be comina from the center of it. ONLINE T .unNos _ p~A ... ,_ evaluated California Cabc1'net Fun! ~ .. u Sauv1anona.. 1pec1ficaJly . Louit • • • of computen keep tellu11 us the Martin 1982, Robert Monda vt ~eTUToffi~-~P..81··'!1:,.-r:boo"P'etpoieaf thoef ~~hind r n~rt~ut aby-1982 and Jordan 1981 . The wtints almost perfumy fruit tute wlll '"&Al wa1u .... l0ft an m 1 Y Y to uy are not contau to tee Which wine is create instant acceptance, and 1 Sonoma Harvest Fair are oow the hype" now that they've an-best, but rather opponuruties (OT suspect the "extra dry" will have the available. The 24-paat booklet may vented a way to attend wine taatinp participants to expand their per- broadest foUowina. lt is iust slightly be ordered by tendina SO cenu to: by computen. specttve by comparina 1mprus.aons sweeter than the "brut.'f Sonoma Wine Winnen, P.O. Box The Baocbus Wine Forum 1s with other tasten. For a real treat, drop a frnh 7244, San Franci1CO, 94120. tchcduliD4 rqular Onlrne Wine For further anfonnatJOn contaet: strawberry or raspberry in the alau Aside from a complete hstioa of Tastinp VlA tomethangcalled Com-Bacchus Date Servicet. 6085 Ven---------------------------------------------------------~,~------------71 ____ __;,:wi~n~e:..._:wi~·~n~o~en:.!!.... _y~o~u~'U::_=~~so~~fi~nd~~p~u=Scrv=-~e:__co::.:n=fcre::..:~~c~1=na!._~&=c=il~10=e=s~ .. iceBlvd. · 16, Los An,elct, 90014 (213) SS~328l. Because of a variety of test markets and introductory offen, it ia bard to pin down the price. At the most expensive price I've seen quoted (about $6), it offm aood For mott folb, tbe pleasant, WILSON SLICID llACON v~cL~AC IA. 1.59 . 80NILISS 8UMP ROAST BEEF IA7 ROUND La. IEEF L .. SIRLOIN TIP SftAK BEEF 79 ROUND I L& • LB 2.09 S&WPREMIUM VEGETABLES : ... ~:~_.. CREAM STYLE CORN ~~·~I WHOLE KERNEL CORN GARBANZO BEA 9'S KIDNEY BEANS c IA. f AllCY nAsr CATfOOD 3-0Z. CANS ASSORTED .29 I BADY CUT S & W TOMATOIS Oft ASSlt>. 16~~i.N .59 KllAPT MAYOllNAISI 32 -02 I 59 REG OR UGHT • "-gular 0< Crunch krrle1 IS-16-0z 7-0t. Auoned CAP'N CRUNCH CEREAL.. ............... 2 .09 O'GRAOY 'S POTATO CHIPS 1.29 I', lb. Looi CAl~IOSf 5.19 OLYMPIC MEAL BREAD RED DELICIOUS I APPLES LARGE c LB. Freth Squefted. Half Gollon(At Moat S1are1l ORANGE JUICE ... . .2A9 is.Oz Car1on CHAMPION RAISINS MAll9CllAll YAKllOU 170l 99 l'l<G • HIADOUAllTlll ... .79 c LB. ·" USDA CHOICE SlllLOIN ftp •OAST BEEF 7 9 POUND I L& • • • • P RESIDENTIAL BOO BOO - Recent news repons had President Reapn servma French wme at some state function, wbicb wasn't the most diplomaoc thiQf to do con11derina all the discuwon and anger over cheap, subsidized foreign wmes competina unfairly witb the Amencan product. In the president's defense, I'd hie to point out that he has served Americ an wines more predominately than any other president. especially Cahfom1a wines. Further, a White House spokes- man pointed out that the offending French WJ.nes weren't sought out. but were in government cellars having been purchased by a previous admin1strat1on. One must admit that 1t's a shame to allow an) good winC' to go bad;-but perhaps these alien wines should be served to staff rather than at public functions. Clos du Bois wmes of Sonoma County responded to the nC'ws rcpon m what I thought was a positive manner Winery president I Frank Woods wrote a letter ac- 1 knowledging the president's past use of California wines. while offenng a "reminder" of their excellence in the form of a gift of two cases of award-winning wines to be used at some future funcuon. • • • Reel M<Coy Point Cut CORNED BEEF BRISKET 1 A. I TEXAS CLASSIC -The second lB annual Texas International Wine C lassic at Lubbock was a repeat of 1 last year's success. with even greater attendance and part1c1pat1on If you're wondcnng wh) therC'·s a I wine festival 1n the wilds of west Texas. you simply aren't k~pt1ng up wtth what"s happening with wine in Amcnca. Lubbock 1s home to two ofTexas' very best wtnenes, which 1s saying a lot. what with a total of 18 wmene!I now operating in that great state l and ncarl) that man) again on the drawing boards for the future I While the obvious purpose of this festival 1s to draw ancnt1on to I Texas' growing 1ndustl), California was well represented. -\mong the L-----spcalccrs were Sam and V1ck1 ...----------------------------, Scbast1an1. John Parducc1 and a.oz Jar CIT8US HILL A.menca·s senior "mC' wnter Leon OllA...a. -\dams. ~eanng both (ahfom1a ....,I JUICI I and Tex.as colors was formC'r ~bas­ HAlf CAl I 69 I llant winc:maker Jim Caner, who ... CHILLED I now consulting enologist to Ste CARJO .-• GenC'\le\ c. the biggest winer) in Texas. FOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE 3 .29 How big IS '"b18$eSt''" In I 9K5 II\ first }Car o f ~nous productton enough grapes were crushed to '.Y 1C'ld 1 something hkC' ~00.000 case\ ThC'rc arc a thousand alre~ of vineyard. and thC' capacll~ of the I winery fac1 lit> can eastl) be in- creased 10 the Texas-st-. le size of two million cases You're going 111 be hcanng mo rC' trom Ste Gen· C'VIC'\ e To be on the mailing ltst for nc\l 1 year's ··c1ass1c·· wntc 10 T e'\J\ Wine Classic. P 0 Box 561 l uh. bock. TX 79408 • • • CHILLABLE -I recentl) di'>· covered )Ct another red win(' that takes vcl) well to chilling. which makes 1t absolute!\ great "llh plCOIC fare for thC' last COOk-O Ul\ Of I the sc.ason 2.ff Baeaa Vlata lt84 Gamay Beau- 6 Inch Pot CAMILLE DIEFFENBACHIA .............. ,__ ___ , e•H•AI. ... CTWIC tMCK•--· \()fl WHllf I 99 60 1~ 100 WAil • jolalt (SS 50) I tasted this onC' both I at room temperature' and "Ith a hght chill. and 1t was C'\en tastier chilled. Great fresh fruit aroma wnh hints of chC'mcs and cranber- nes. and more of the same in the ver} z1ppv flavor Not onl\ tast~ great but ieels aood in thC' m outh. 6.35·0t. Pk9. ...........• 11 L LOlllRY TICKl'IS I• Inch Rect009ulor I -. • • 2 .. CONGRATULATIONS -G1v(' CHINA SEA FRY-N-PAN NOODLE .. SEA GRASS DOOR MAT • 1111.• I )OU"1Clf a pat on thC' back 1f you --------------------were onC' of the tens of thousands of IFNM llFI CT .... .r , ICAll SINSIU ~~. . ..... ··-··· ·· ~~-~~ I 29 ~ FOO<' • Phtlodelptlio 12 Or SOFT CREAM CHEESE H~C~ SLICED MUENSTER Hormel, I Lb ~ FRANK 'N STUFF 16-0I IOOO ltlond 808'S DRESSING 1.69 LB 2.as '·" 1.i• 'iiiiiiiiiiiri-•liiliiiiiii1iiriii1iiii1•i Cahfom1a consumers to phonC' or l• wnte tbC' aovemor ~uesting that 16 OZ ASSOtlTEO 79 -.-.RIETIES • 1601 """ ~ BRIDGEFORD WHITE BREAD •••• 1.s• IWTI' 20 Oz Bog WHOLE STRAWBERRIE S DOWllYfL&KI ....... 11 OZ 8UITlltMl\K 79 C» HOM(MAOf • hC' veto sessq, thC' so-called ··pn - 1 m&r) source" leg1slatton. It wa\ I really a pnct monoplv bill that would have doubled the pm'C' ol many wines It was your '-Ol<~rs that made the dtffcttnct I ra1~ my aJus to thC' ··vu' ... too. because even thoua.h the pcopk and the press were I 00 pcrttnt aptnst this bad lcgislatton. thef"C' were powerful ahd moneyed fore~ sup- port1na ll It took more than a little couraac to veto 1n the fact of the dcmocrauc m~ont) that K"nt the btll to the aovemor's dctk .... . I ~-. ·-.... WI ACC[PT DOUDll. TRIPU and PRODUCT COUPONS rAOM All OTHIA SUPIRMARIC IT-. But ht dihaent. the proponents have millions of dollan to pin 1f they c.an find a way to makC' an "end run:· Don't ht surpnscd to 1tt th11 abomination show up nellt tcmon. ued to some morr 1nract1ve lcsa• lauon. ·~·­....... - .,~ 2.69 Wiit\ '1ol Slae lloN • ~ 1.5-lfTH INGUNOOt< CHAlllS. . ............... 1.89 l~Lher FAALEY'S HAltO CIOU ................................. 2.t9 FISH TO BY -For tastier Rah, d~ fillets an ~ncd flour and dip in beaten ea. Heat oil tn lk.tUet. Sprinkle flMly chopped walnuu in the lkiltet and lay· ftlleu over the nuu. Onll fish unUI aolden. lunu.nt Ontt. Walnuu Will ,;~ fish I dclJabtfull)' nch. nutty t.aslt ' ; - Cl.I If you can't stand heat, choose peppers caiefully IJ OOAOTllY WENCK ==·-~•t' Ouli peppers: Some like 'em ho~ tome Uh 'cm very hot And lhen there ~ tbote of us who like 'em mild. Tberein liet the versatility of peppen -their ranie of .. heat" makes them popular with just about everyone. In addition, they ~ hiab in nutrients and low in calories. and they add color and texture contrastl to many different foods. lf you cat one large bell pepper, you set more than twice your day's reqwrements of vitamin C (128 milligrams). plus large amounts of vitamin A (as carotene, the prccunor of vitamin A) and potassium, and a worthwhile amount of iron. Other chjli peppers, including dried ones and even chili powder, also arc good sources of these nutrients. However. you're not likely to cat the hotter varieties in very large amounts! Peppers range in pungency from the sweet bell to the fiery serrano. Their pungency, or heat. derives from a chemical compound called capsaicin (pronounced: cap-say-i- sin}. Capsakin 1s most concentrated in the white tissues to which the pepper's seeds arc attached. It is a general irritant that attacks any tissue it contacts. including your hands, or other parts of your body that you miaht touch after handling peppers. (Warninf Wear rubber gloves when handhng hot peppers!) The white tissue. called placental tissue. has 100 parts of capsaicin for every six parts m the rest of the fruit tissue. and for every four in the seeds. So that's a clue to controlling the heat while retaining the flavorofthe pepper when you sec it in foods. Use as much or as little of the placental tissue as you want, according to how hot you want your food to be. The flavor is located in the outer wall o f the pepper and is associated with the pigment, carotene. that provides vitamin A. The color of the pepper is a flavor indicator: It 1s strongest when the color is at its brightest. As the color fades with age, so docs the flavor. The pungen- cy doesn't fade with age, however. How is the pungency of vanous chili peppers measured? Way back in 19 I 2 an English scientist. W. L. Scoville, invented an organoleptic test to rate peppers for heat. Organoleptk re fers to the sensory reaction to the smell and taste of the peppers by human taste testers. Scoville developed heat units (Scoville heat units) based on the ratings the taste testers gave for the various peppers. The heat units arc expressed as a range for each pepper because variations in growtng con- ditions can result in wide vanations in the amount of capsaicin they contain. Even peppers from the same plant contain different levels of heat. According to this heat scale. bell peppers and papnka rate a zero. having no heat at all. P1m1entos also arc "cool" peppers. The long Anaheim peppers rate a relativel y mild 800 to 1.200 Scoville heat units. Chili powder also falls in this category. The yellow wax or Canbe pep- pers rate 2.000 to 5,000 Scoville heat units and could be considered "warm." Tabasco sauce falls 1n the warm range. too, with 3.000 to 4,000 Scoville heat units. On the hot end of the scale are Fresno pe ppers followed by jalapeno , with 8.000 to 9.000 Scoville heat units. A dned jalapeno may have I 0.000 to 20,000 heat units -the same amount as the very hot scrrano pepper. Ser- rano's are the thin, small peppers that look so innocent and are so very potent. Super-hot also are the cayenne that are used to make Seasoning provides mystique This Onental-like entree can be the basis of a dinner for fou r when served with nee, zucch1n1 , salad, fruit tart and beverage. JANE STREET CHICKEN 314 to 4-poud cblcken. cat up 14 cap lemon jalce l tabletpooa carry powder "" tea1poo• aoy IHCt! 1"' C11p DljoD•ltyle muatard Ya cup IM>aey t medJam 1eamon1, tlllnly sliced Wash and dry chicken, arrange skin side up in an oblona baking dish (about l 3x9x2 inches). In a 2-cup measure, whisk together lemon Juice. curry Powder and soy sauce: whisk in honey and muswd untiJ blended; pour over chicken. Bake uncovcrtd in a pre-heated JS().dqree oven, butina scveraJ times. unt11 browned and tender - about I hour. Serve the chtcken and thin sauce with white 0t brown nee. Maket 4 la,.e pon1ons cayenne pepper teasonina. When productl such u salsa, taco sauce a.ad other chili-baled flavor- inis are developed, the peppers are blended to produce the d.nircd amount of heat. Often you will find a label describing the relative beat that can help you choose the product with the amount of beat you prefer. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ABUD Q, Wiiy do I always set a ruay aote wlta I eat Mestcu food! A. Your nasal tissue probably 1s rcspondina to the hea1-producin1 chemical, capsaicin, in the chili peppers used in Mexican food. What happens is capsaicin lnJIC~· the release of neurotransm1ttcri that chemically excite pa.in recep- tors in the tongue and throuahout the mouth. This stimulus causes your brain to respond and your mouth to salivate, the nose to run and the pstrointestinal tract to speed up the paasqe of food -all with the purpose of removing the irritant. The body also attempts to remove the irritant by increasing the heart rate to speed metabolism and by inCf'Casina swcatina. • • • Q. Wile• yo•'re b•Yllll fretlt cbW peppen, M>w cu yo1 teU tlaat &bey wW be 10CMt, and alao ltow bot daey wW be.T A.The aencral principles for buy- ina hiJh quality fresh pcppen arc the same rcprdless of variety. Look for peppers that are finn, well- sbapcel, thick-fl eshed and of good color, with shiny, fresh appearing skin. Avoid peppen that arc sbriveled.l limp or piablc. Shrivel- ing or sonness may indicate age or poor handling. Peppcn that have been kept too long arc usually in trus condition and often have poor color. Also avoid peppers that have serious surface blemishes as you may have to discard large ~rtions. Also avoid peppers on which there coo BOOK BINDER ***** Large End Rib Roast r1vi: s I AA OUAUT'I' LB f 77 199 • RECEIVE 3.00 WORTH OF FIVE STAR MEAT COUPONS when YOY purchaM the Five Sw C()()kbooll. 11 a bleached, discolored area that may be sunken or may resemble a water-soaked blister for they decay rapidly. As far as predictina the amount of heat a pepper will have, this is di~cult . since the ranac witbjn a vancty 11 so treat However, re- member the varieties that arc mild -bell, Anaheim: intermediate - yellow wax. and bot -jalapeno and serrano. • • • 11 It we to can 9lli peppers by coverta1 tlem wltll llot oll ud aealln1 &be Jar? A. No, this is not a safe way to preserve peppers. Peppers arc low in acid and 1ubjec1 to the arowth of the bacteria that causes botulism food Poisoning. To preserve them safely, you need to pickle them, usma a basic picklina recipe that contains at least one part S perocnt vin~ to one part water. The pickled ~ppen th~n c.n be placed in canmna jan with cannina lids and processed 10 a simmering water bath for IS minutes for pints or 20 minutes for quarts. If you want to can peppen without pickl~ng them, you need to process them in a pressure canner at S pounds pressure, SO minutes for pints and 60 minutes for quarts. r Hansen's f 19 Appl~~~':e FREE RECIPE Fllet of IHI with foreet Muehroom• This week s recipe was creeled by Chef Oa~1d N1chot1s from Walton s Restaurant 1n Lonoon Pick up your hee copy 1n the Meat Department at Lucky ***** Top Sirloin Steak BONELESS BEEF LOIN LB f 77 Russet 1o ~~os9 ~~!~toes• ***** Blade Cut Chuck Roast FlllE STAR QUALITY \ ***** Fllet Mignon ,.429 Steak BONDED BEEF TENDERLOIN rPopov Vodka I 7!> LT A BTl 1!C1 PROOF 779 f-La T ortllla A Flour Tortillas Q1NCH 12CT Pl<G .55 f-Hunfs ~ •1 A Pudding -~""Cups 6 \/ARIE TIES <I PACI< <;OZ CANS f 29 f-Caprl Sun A Drinks "llAl'HETtE', 10 PACI( ff99 California lottery Purchase your tickets at your neighborhood Lucky °""'~.~ ............ ,. .. ,..., .................. ........ ___ , o.-....... ·-o.-" .•. ***** Beef Back 67 f!!~ OHAOST E~ _ _..._·_· _L_e _• _____ _ ***** Brown'. 89 Serve Sa e SWIFT Pl<G • All llAAIETLES ' !"Ital/an ASalame MARCO POLO 'f 0/ l'l<G '>L•C.ED f 99 f-Precious 199 A Ricotta ~~~~~e !Sunshine 1J'l"......-~/S~1 ~~... .,.~·~ Kr/spy ~~ Crackers h ....... ~/~~ REGULAR QA IJN SAL !ED .. ~~RJ$1Y -~ :s 7 r Orv/lie Redtnbacher Popcorn 10 OZ JAR f 99 , I Van Camp's Baked Beans ?8 0 Z CAN .89 Bartlett Pears JUICY RIPE LARGE Kiwi Fruit LARGE OEUCIOUS , .. 29 !-Libby's A Pumpkin Pie Mix 300Z C.AN f 19 f-Lady Lee ct Whipped Topping FROZEN 12 OZ TUB .79 ~ rscotTowels ~ Paper ~ Towels ~ ASSORTED 114 S F AOl 1.. ~.69 ~ rPurex . Bleach 64 O Z 8TL ........ .63 .. lle_!Ldl , ' --_,../ rscott/es nn FAM~~1~/al ~~c~~o~~ .:IA:'I !-Hefty A Cinch Sak Bags TALL KITCHEN lOCT BOX f 89 41 OZ BOX f 25 r Papermald Baking Cups 811 CT PKG .29 f-L/te A Beer BY Mil LE A 12 11.A(,K ''OZ CANS ,449 r Yoplalt Yogurt OAIOINAL S1'1'LE 80 Z CUP .49 o .. r ••t•v•• .. V•l11-Tnm,,...,ci.11tt)f ~l .. ,,l't.netnu c.&a lat •I'd .... ta to g1wt yov more 1.-a11 llav<>r!vl MIVlflVt of ,I~· !\tel ..... , per OCIVllll 11. IO ... , COtl ~· PGIH'd ,...,..... ·-·,~-,-..... ....,._ ~ ..... -... ... ~- \, Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 18. 1865 m Richard Nixon to erbltret• umplrn• contrect dlapute. D2. Newport Harbor'• voll•Jb•ll teem ateya undefHted. D2. Adding 'Juice' to Artist attack F or on e gam e. O.J . Simp son gave mora le s upport to Hardm an ·steam ing tht< 1mpress1on that he has some d istinct concerns "Right now I think. we 're lucky as hell ," says Hardman with his Amstsgelllng read y for Wood bndge Fnday night, a battle of 2-0 Sea View outfits. ROGER CARLSON PREP SPORTS d1sbu ~ to Southern (ah fom1a athletics ovcrthe nut few yean, but 11's still very unC't·rtain how 11 will be done -e v('n in terms of time', according to Stanton Wheeler. who ha\ uiken on the dut1esof runn1nJ thc show Wheeler says 1f nearl) S4 m1lhon were expended annuall\ the money would ne"er run out couple yean back to save the atnleuc foundauon? I fall this sounds rather nep11ve-1t's not m~nt to ~. AsWh~lersays. at'u very tncky uask to decide JUSt where fre( money as to be sent * * * Fontana H 1Jh h.ad to forfeit ns If you were at Laguna Beach H1ah last Friday night and were payin&attent1on, you·d have re- cognized that "extra hand" Ccdnclc. Hardman had w11h him on the sidelines 1n the Artists' game w11h Un1vcrs11y -1t wa\ OJ .Simpson He wasn·1. however, part of Hardman's staff He ~as1ust there to b( w11h an old fnend and former 49er teammate, Hard- man. "I t'sgollen tougher each week It's theanitude toward playi ng football. here it's unlike anywhcr1: else in America, once you get into 11 and find out. Our work as coaches is really cut out for U'> In tame, and I'm talking ma} be a couple of years. I may be able to transmit the type o f attitude 11 real!) takes 10 play the game rorthe record Hardman sayc; his team played badly last we<"k "We.-were homhlc " But 1fthe)' blo"' S2 m1ll1on a year on the' 1 ll-<:once1 ved" um- mC'r Games" oflast ummC'r,a giant play-da~ with no1h1nga1 st.alc.e 11 won't leave much for where 11 could reall) help -and that\ in poor areas where equip. ment can bnng) oung!>tC'rs 1010 organized high '>l hool sports and JUSt ma) bt-awa) Imm a lot of negatl\ e area\ first footbllll victory of the teaSOn and the No I -ranked Stttlcrure 4-1 presto ti> The ~asoo for the' blem1sh'1 lt'r. said the Steelers were going wlth three 14-year- olds on the team, including the coach'sown S<>n. How do you plead 1 nnocence, or ignorance, on that one? * * * Newport Harbor High football rnach Mike Giddings found his weekend tnp to Champa1gn, l111 - no1s. a pleasant one the otherda) when the llltn1 upset Ohw State • * * '>' ould you care to place a bet .. He1ust came to the game," says Hardman. "He was in town , had gone down to see his son the night before at an academy." conunues Hardman. A<1lc.ed if maybe he u..ed O.J 's presence asa halfl1me motivator Hardman says: "I don't rely on J uu:e to do that for me. He and I arc JU!it good fn endsand he has noth1 ne 10 do with 11. He could have ~t 1n the stands. but he said he can't 'i1t 1n the stands and watch." "They know down here it's the Amencan sport and it's the masculine thing to do I hate to be so blatantly honest. but nev1:r- 1heless .. although we do have a couple of people who have a general idea ofhow the game " pla¥ed." H1sson.M1ke wasgiventhc: team's special team\ hustler award after twice put11ng on a hard punt rush. fo ur ke) hl0t ks on lock returns and possibl) lMI' 1ng the v1ctof) when hl· snatched a snap near his ear and got thc ball down for the winning field goal It d()(uppcar ho"'e' er. that a near 50..}eartrad111on of All-Cl r awards for high ~hoot athlc:te\ will continue' under their um- brella. v.h1lh 1s ven good nev.s for Southc:rn ( allfom1a athletes on O<:ean View High winning ltS .tppcal to the 'It.ate t IF in regards to sanctions on its basketball team put down b)' theC'IF \outhem ~t1on'' Crl\ en a choice I'd rather shoot tor th<' Pick Nine at Santa Anita • * * .,.., ..... ,...... .., .... erd u,lft Laeuna Beach HJ.ch football coach Cedrick llardma.n welcomed an old friend -O.J . Slmpeon -at the Artlata• game laat Friday. The Artists are 4-l and some- body must know what he''ido1ng at Laguna Bead!, but Hardman isn't honking an) horns about ht\ team's progress Rather he'sgJ\- Hardman says the road ahead may bt-rocky. 'T m not so na1 v1: to know there aren ·1 people out there who know how to explc11t ourweaknt<sses. hke M1kc(11d- d1ngc;(Newport Harbor) and Jeff) W111e(Saddlcback) .. This 1s G1dding'\' \Cn1or season at llltno1s -and although he never quite madr 11 a'\ a legitimate !ltarter -1 don't think Illinois Coach Mike White !eel~ l'he::atcd Nonhern < altlmnia athktt~ howC'\er, ma\ !ind them'>l.·lve~ · out 1n the cold. hecau'K' thi:) don't fall undc.-r th1<> nev. "~nu them California .. concept Whata<.hamt<the' ma\ lo~ out l')C(.'.aU'><' of the '>UlCCS~ of the 19t<401)mp1d1aml'\ l"'ondt:r1I that'<>Y.hat Pl·ter I eherroth had 1n mind"' hen he \lt:pred in a Irvine ll1gh 's basketball team has a 0<'"' pla ver. a transfer" We hc:ardonl) l 'n1vers11_y High gets transfer<; an that d1stnct. but the \i aquem'I ha' ea basketball pla)'- cr h\ the name of Man Norton "'ho ha!> leh \<tater De1 • • * The Lo~ .\ ngele\ OI) m ptl ( omm111ee has S90.00CJ.OOO to Momentu1n to KC? Be hind Brett's blazing bat. Roya ls pull even in AL series TORONTO <AP) -T he Kansas C tl)' Rt>)'al'i will learn tonight Just how far they can go on thr brav.n} shoulders of one man -George Brett. Playing with a rare intensity. Rrett almo'il ~1ngle­ handedly has brought the Royals back 1010 con1rn11 on in the American League playoffs. Trailing three game' to one, Kansas City rallied 10 deadlock. the series at three games apiece entering ton 1gh t's ch mac11c 'ihowdown w1 th the Toronto Bl ue Jays. And 11 was Brett who led the wa y again 1n ( 1amc 6 Tuesday night, htllmg his third homer or lh t• \CrtC\ tu ltfi the Royals to a 5-3 victory ··v ou can't expect to win three straight. so )OU ha .. e to take 1t day by day, inning by inning, pitch h} p1tth." Brett said. Mark Gub1cza, making his fi r'>t stan of the series. checked the Blue Jays on four hits over the 511, innings he worked to pick up the victory. "You always have a good chance to ~ore with George on your side. and he helpsJou defensively. 100," said Gub1cza. whose hand was re from h1gh-liv1ng the entire team afterthe tn umph. "He''\ great 10 have on ~our side." · Following has "Hall of Fame" performance 1 n Game 3 on Fnday night -he was 4 for 4. including two homer\. drove an three runs and scored four times. mcludtng tht game-wanner -Bren said 11 "would be the all-tame choke" 1f the Blue Jays folded after winning three of th(• first four games. Brett tempered those remarks T ue'>Clay, however. "We're having fun right now, but I'm c;urc they're not having too much fun I 00 yards down the hall (1n the Blue Jays clubhouse)," Brett said. "They're not choking though. They played a good game tonight They didn't gJve us the game. We had to cam 11 " AL playoffs at a glance T~t'I Garn. l<ansa\ Cily l~berhaoen 20-6) at Toronto I Stieb 14· 13}, SIS ~kore1 Game one -Toron10 6. Kanus CllY l Game lwo -Toronto 6, Kan,a s Cllv S 110 inning\) Game """ -i<anus City 6, Toronlo S Game lour -Toronto 3. Kan\a' Cllv 1 Game five -Kansa s City 2. Toronto O Gema six -Kansas City S, Toronto 3 (SerlH lied, 3·31 TE LEVISION A ll games on Channel 4 AADIO All games on KNX I 1070) "I don't think there's an}' (P\)tholog1cal) harm done." Toronto Manager Bohb) < o\ '><lid "\.\l' ha\e 10 walc.e up tomorrow feeling we havl' to win fht'rt' is a definite edge to being at home .. Both teams will hav(' their an:' on the mound for thl' final game The Royals will go w11h Bret Saherhagcn wh1k the Blue Ja ys counter with Dave Such. "Momentum'! I don·1 know," Ro)JI\ Manager Dick HC1Y.\1:r said "I real!}' dun't know what 111 c"<~CI. "They've got their best guy g11111~ .ind l'H· got a ~U­ gamc winner That's probabl} l'\actl} what )<iu'J "'ant to sec 1n the ~vcnth game ol a senes like this .. The World Scncs has nC'' er hcen plaH·tl nul\1Jc the l lnited ~late<> and the Blue Ja)s ..ccm tn <.cn">t· that 1h1: q C'> of all < anada are upon them "Fru\tra11on hasn't happened \Ct ." "tlaan Uluc J.1) dc\lgnated-h1ttcr .\I OhH·r ~td "fhn ·,l. gottrn llood pitching when the' real!} ncedl'd 11 "I'll tell you. lht'> •~what 11\ all about I omorr11\.\ night we'll !ind out whether we rcall) hclong rn thl· \.\orld Senc' We'll ('omc out 10 prm e w1: he long "But . no mailer what hapren,, Y.l' won't kl'I "'l' kt tht\ Ul) down .. .. ~ ............. The solo homer, which put Kansas (tty ahead '-~ 1n the fiflh, was Brett'<; ninth 1n playofT action -a ma1or- lcague record C1anh lorg. one ofthn.•c ong1nal Ulul' J.1) \ -,1111 on tht· tl'Jm. <.a1tl Toronto ha\ RfO~n at'lU\IOml·J 10 \uth natl (Plea.e eee ROY A LS/0 2 ) K.C.'a George Bre tt foUowa througb' o n flfth-lnnlng homer . Logjam in Sea View should break up Friday Wa rriors m eet LB; Mesa at NH ; Eagles battle Saddle back By ROGER CARLWN Ol lMDelfJ .......... Sea View League football enters its third week and the three-wa y l<>&Jam for first place 1s going to be reduced by at least one -when Laguna Beach hosts Woodbndge Friday ni~t. Herc's a look at this week s game\, all startin& at 7:30: Cotti Mesa 0 -4, 0-Z) at Newport Harbor (4-1, Z.f): Harbor Co~ch Mike G1ddmgs is well aware it's top vs. bottom. but he's not takrng Mesa liahtly. had last week in w1nn1n~ Wl·'r1: going_ to have our hands full · Woodbridge Coal.h C1cOl' No11 t'> a little more !>pcc1fiL about ht\ tt:.:1m·., oppos1t1on, stating "fhe~ ha\e a back m particular who·, reall> good Jonathan Todd. he·.., JU'\l a lcg111mJtl· brute: When he gel\ thl· h.:111 hl· l JO make things haprx-n lfr', not that fast. hut he doesn '1 nn·d 10 he "They spread out their throwing prett} good. It'\ a very basic offen\e. and because of that 1hcy don't make many errors. A lot of their \l}k is from Cednck Hardman, a lot of aggressive. old-NFL 'it)IC 1t•'i changed since tht'n. but C'.:dm k played in those da}'i .. Eatancla (Z-3, 0-%1 v1. Saddleback (4·1, 1-1): The games at Santa Ana Stadium and each enter\ w11h press- ure to win or forget some goals Estancia will fall at least two games behind two othen for elayoff poss1biht1es wi th a loss, while Saddle- back's cnamp10nsh1p dream~ can IX' forgotten with a defeat This week's prep football Tbe game Tbt> odd' FRIOAY < o\ta \>k<..1.11 'r"'~in llarhm \.\rn>dhrtd14l· .11 I .1gunJ Fk;H h htanua '' \addkhalk at ~anl.i \nJ 1111"' I ll.11htlfh\ •11 \\ • 111dh11111(1 In \ ,,1ddkh.i1 I.. In 1' ( J \.1 h\ h I tn \.,tlln h .. ' [ d 1\110 h\ (I ~1Jrtn.1 h1' In.inc h1 4 \1 Paul h1 " ( urnna dC'I Mar\\ l 'n1\'crs11~ at 1r .. 11w ll1gh f ountain Vallq \'\. Ou:an V1rw at Or,111g1· < 11.1,1 Edt'IOn at We'\tmln\trr Huntington Bealh '~ Manna at ll unttnl(ton lk.11h Irvine at c.;an { lcmentc Mater De1 at <\t Paul "They're the qu11·kr-'it team we'll face all year." 'kl}<i F'ltanc1a Coach [d Blanton. "Cilenn ( ampllC'll t\ one ol the bc:st (running hatks)" vc seen all year. You have to run th tlall a little bit and control it. I think. that's what Newport did. the)' go1 \ome key ti,-.,1 dowO'l Whether we l'an du 11 or not, those are aoi na to he thl· key-; Wc need to control the hall .. :>al.ldleback ( oa h k rry ~ 1ttc \3)~ ht~ defen.-.c must put the: l·mpha\I\ on ~topping btanc1a'\ rt'll•t\Cf\ -I n1 Dorn and \dam '>' alhurgt•r "Thq thre'>' thl.' hall re.ill) ~1.'11 la\t week v.11h thc return of \.11~e 1((1~ 11101at4uant'rhal k." \a\\ W111r "Uut the) rnuldn't w mc up wt1h lhl' htlL catch. "fhc) hn\1' prnhkm\ 111 1hc11 sccondaf) -.owe m1g.h1 ha' l. tn put the hall upa little bit If we can't thro"' "'<' Corona dt"I !\tar t? 3 l·l 1 '~ l 'nl veuit) 11 4. U ?1 1 d \I ",1111 ir the pf.i\nll ph IUH d1 'Piil' .1 I i.11111" w '>'1HiJnnditl .111d l n"n"'· ( llJ\h K l\~ I urtl\" ,t\.\,lrl 111111\ \('.1 1\1011,' 'ltU,11 11111 I\ "I ti ,I, hi\ 11'.llll ' Ol'Jr·mt\\ ,1l l J8llll,1 lk,11 h "\l.'e "'l'rl' Jo"'n lhrn ltH 11111r' and l11dn't "11rr" '·''' ( 11rll\ '\A. r ha,rn'1 put tnttrthn ,1111mplt·tl' lt·•m1 ,1nd tl'\ frU\triJllO(t ( nmpoundtn!( I n1' pr11hkm' " the Ja)-ltl dJ~ pla\IOl/. u1nd111••n 111 linl•ha1c l..l·r \l,•tt Pl'Jrlm.tn n..•1 .1u'l ••I J u1n, U\,tnn "\A, l' thnuttht < ••T11n,1 d1 \1J r "'oulJ he tht• ..,,1 I 11 ' tr.11n n tht' leal/.Ul' g111 ng 1 n '·'" < 11 rt" l hn rr tx·urr 1h.in .... h.11 p•:opk .trt !l" mg th(·m 1 n·d11 fut " "{ n11 l'f'itl\ <AJ\ in th1 '•HIJkh,11 I.. g.1ml· until 1h1· l.1,1 quarter .ind llHl IJ ' \l' "'11n lh,\I gJ 11W ' ..a\\ ( d \ 1 C o.Kh Da' e H 1111.rnd .. '>' t' · \l' \C.'\'n them a numllC'r 111 t1n1t•\ and thc\ run that dt \ e npt1<1n · I Pleaee eee CAJtL80l'f ·s /02 J Rams win games but no respect Robins on ·steam ha s yet to impress its ba nd of critics By JOSEPH OUOEVOIR Yl1u'\l' JI! heJrd thi: unr "It 1\0°1 "'hc:ther '"U "'1n or lo<,e tt'\ ho"' \CIU plj~ the gaml' .. Ra m\< lld(h John R11h1nson <,U rt' ha!>. morl' time\ th.in he "'ould lt ke l<> count Here \II the Ram\ at M> and .sll an) bod' lan dll t\ cn11c11c how the~ got there It remind' 11ni: of tht• Chuck Knox da~' -li\C' 'ear.; coalhtng. ft\C: dt' 1\111n l h.1mr111n\h1p' Hut l\nP \ "'·t' run 11u1 nl ln"'n OelJuw hr "'J"n 1 t'\l tlrn~ 11r 1n Oil\ 311 \ l' t•n11uf!h K11h1n,un 1' \IJnintt 11 C'\fX'rtC'Olt the -..iml· l..tnJ Ill \.\ll ·Oil IAIO \llU Jtton ·"hi\ run·ltT\t run·'>l."lllnJ .:1nd pa\\-ldlrr phd"'nrh1 h.i' µ1m·J him J r('pu IJ t IPll \I Ill il.H 111 I\ n1 I\ fh1' '' Rt1htn,11n' third 't·.sr "' l'Pdl h In hi\ t1r.;t t"'u \tar\ hl' ll·d th<" RJm' 111 lhl' pf.1,t!tl\ H111 '''II nt1 f('\ fll.\ l Bur "'hat'' rl'.1lh n..·l·n l·Jung J I R11h1n,11n Jrl' lhl· hdrh\ thJI hJ\l' ht•i:n hurkd in the dtr~llton 111 11m· Dtl'tt·t Hr.1<1 I. thl' '14-H·ar-11ld ,. I fthl~H •IU,lrl l'fhJ\ I.. 11111 1lf thl' ( .to .sd1Jf I 1•olhJll I l'JF.u1 .. I hC' man 'ht1"'' 'ouragc 1\ '"" 11mpc.·t111'l' and mJl..t'\ 1h1· nght Jl'll\IOn' '-did Roh1n\on Hut I ttt''dJ' R11h1n,11n ltnJlh [(:Ill' 1111t1 thl• mC'Jl<I lk \.II i!lll'ntl\l' h lil'ld1n[1 ljlll'\11nn' from ml·mtx·r' ''' thr l'fl'" l>1etn 11111~' \IHI nl 1ndnl\t\t h.h ~ thrrr 1•m· ll'fll>nn ..aid lfr ,t,rn,1' 11.h !.. th1·fl' '"" lonl/. d1•n t '"II •h1n~ R 1h "'''" '"'' Jf'<>l11g1ll·d 1111 I >H ll r ' IJ "' m11htl111 tht·n \.JtJ •'llh .l\ITitll• 'I II h,l\l' ,1 I.ill."' th him 1~ u• 1,,.1\..11111" 1fl'-('1 urr h.11 ~ tha1· JOll 'l'l \.\ h,11 "'' l Ill d11 'l'\ I ljUl'\I 111n '\\ ll\ doc.·, hr .tl"'.l'" ~1· 111 thl' pr:m.1n. H'll'l\l'f .1nn1hn ml·mher ... tht• 111\ dtJ <IUl'rll'J fhl· '"'" h "'·l' 1.11t.1·n .1h.11 \. '''mt' "'hJ t .s nd rrpl int 'l'n man rei.:1:1' rr" llll\.\ J11 \\IU ~rl1•"' \lohtl lhl' r1 1m,lr\ rc\t'I\ l'r "•I 1l11n t I. no"' <A ho th1· hdl II l\ "l'\t. I 1 ' pr1·11 1\\ I • 11·11 "'hn hr ' li!11tnit '" 1hr11"' 111 \Jtd .:1n11thC'1 loll'l('f 'l>11c.•,n I h1 l'\l'f i.1<1\.. thl• dC'IC'n'l' 1111tx·t11n·1h r1>\.\lll(t. t11 a gu\"' \lu'I \l' "'UOtkd 11 1..l' J it1~11d td('<I lo R11h1n,11n ) c.·ah I'll t.111. 111 n1et<•r .tntl m,11..r \Utr t lrll him to lllok .Hound .ill o\ t'I (Plea.e .ee RAMS/02) . "They have, Wlthout queit1on. become a better team and they're much better than last year," says Giddings. "They run a very clever trap or ~as offen~ and their quar- terback (Paul Rodnguez) gets the ball to his receivers with 20and 30-yard receptions. That's our problem. al· loWln& too much space: Costa Mesa Coach Tom Baldwtn knows the top vs. bottom theory, too, but he also knows the Mustangs have a psycholO&Jcal edge. For the Rams, a big 'D' equals 6 W sand 0 Ls 11111 thnc on thr tic Id v.ith '"u .. "We're not really supposed to win," he aays, "so we can let it out, we can ao for it on fourth down. We have everythina to win and noth1na to loK , the preuurc·s on them. If we can act a little upper hand. that's aravy." Mesa, however. 11 rcachina a point of aJmott no return 1n terms of pe~nnel. The Must.ants arc th.Jn to bqln with, thinner Wlth the loss of atandout hnet.cker Mike Srypcnlu "'early in the year and even thmncr now with the lou of runnan& back Scott Anderaon. ,. ... ,.... (4·1, t -t) al La,ua hadl (.._I, l-t): ··we've .een 'em," admits Lquna Beach Coach Cedrick Hardman, but ht doesn't add m uch men about hia team'• task in dealtna with tbedeknsive-oricnted Warriors. ••?bey ihut out theu last two oppo- Mnll and I thouaht we looked very Collins. J ohnson say defen se ls playing we 1, smart tn keeping t eam undefeated Three of us were talluna about defense. TwoofuswcreJohnn1t" Johnson and J im Collins. Johnson is a safety Collins 1s a linebacker Both do this for the Rams who are at the moment a newsworthy football team because 1t has won six aameund hun'1 lo1t any. Thia 11 unlikely ucep1 for the defense which has played very well. Jim Coll in11&1d thcrt was more to 1t than that "Our defense h .. played well.·· he w d. "That's for damn sure but wt have also ~ed smart. When you • can plar I (oOtball and 1mart footbel 11 the same lime, you rcall) have It toaether and you are 101n1 to wtn p mes" Of coun.e. the Ram' \Omet1me' Win rather late .. or 1Mtanc-e. in a ~ntpmeat Anaheim Stadium. the Rams did not beat the M innnota v 1kinp unt1l 1hc final play of the pme. The V1kcs wert on the Rams' one-yard h ne with one \CC'Ond on the clock and the home ~tdr IC'adin&. 13-10. Minnesota Coach Bud Grant cou~usly wen1 for the touchdown and the win tnsteadofthdk ldaoal and t.he ue The Rams put the knock on tht bell carnet and C1Caped Wlth their unblemished record Jim Colhna wai11 ven crtd1t for the tackle by the offiC1al •tat11t1c1an ' "Aw &tt," said Collins, digging hi' t~ into the turf. "I did n't deserve thr c~1t. I mc:"an, 1 had lots of help Cirt'{l Meisner wu 1n on tht' thina with ml" to help keep the runner from taking ofTand 11) IJ\I OVC'rthe top Then too Carl Ekem came from the' outside and anb~ the SU\ around tht' ""'*"I 'loCI lhert was real!) no place to 10" Johnnie John!.tm \.ltd< <'lltn-. "•' naht. Said hoawthe whole 1h1ni1nd that wa the way 11 was Johnson al'° ~1d this hi\ a c-h•n•e oh~)'lf\f this way "Th1u111ooddefense.'' J J u 1d. "bccauw 1111 11 auY1 play1 n• t()St\hcr. Thtte 11pndt1n 1h1s bunch and that ~lps make th1\ a happy bunch ·· In fl<"t, theft lrt' tho~ 1uthori t1e1 who s&)'lh11bunch hu cam~ l~ Rams -and its o~n!lt-tot~ unbatcn mark th11 tCU<m J J ..,., nk~ 1f the' defrn\t IJ' rs the ollen\(' the netdkwm1n1ofTthe field L1 kea ~ho1 suue"1n1 th<' offcnK do its J<'b 100 ·• urt •• John~n u 1d, "but 1t "all &ood humor *'II the &Uyton th1H.eam Ii ke ea( h other .. "That's nahl.'' 'itd Jim\ olhnt ··EHf)'bod) on th11team1\1 fnend Of counc. 1r ou play on thH deft0\1ve unit vour bnt fnends arT .......................................................................................... ._ ________ ..._,_, ____ ~--~~----~~~~~~~~'-~- .\n old ddC'n\1\ C' ~'03l'h.'La veme l Ol')e~on once fi,l\td , "If VO\I ('AO pla, def('n~. y11u tan win at an) pme .. "I N'&ll}' don't knov. about that," Johnn1(' Joh Mon \a1d "hut 11 surc h~lps to win a1 lootball •· Jim ( ol11n' nodded h1\ head Tht' Ram,'dtfense l\a tualh pl8' t n& \0 well 11 has a rhancc to ~t some pub That I\ what football play~n caJlpubhlll) lhe hkc1 tbut don'talwaysadm1t 1t Johnton and Colhns are asked ahout 1 name for the dcfcnw. Mott of the &ood defcnlCI OVCT the yea rt ha VC n1clcnamC\ -The Junkyard [)op. the No Name Dcfenae and IO on and \Oforth "Noth1n1 yct," u id JJ andCoJhnt ~ Ho.,,. about the Black and Blue Drfentt"No.lbatwoa'tdo hwould lea~ out Gary Gtttn -------- Barons, Newport remain undefeated Hunun11on Beach took Suneet Leuue- leadina Fountain Valley to f\ve pmet beTore ~liq. while undefeated Newport Harbor held off Laa:.ana Beach in (our to htahllaht airl• volleyball action Tuetday. Here'• a ca.l)lule look: P'ou&a.ta Valley I, Hu~-8Mdl I: The hott Barona improved tbeit record to a &lo .. y .S..O with 1 U·IO 12·1~. 12·1~. U-10, l ~-'win overthe0ilert1 but not without 1 flaht. Fountain VaUey (8-1 overall) received a 20.kJU effort from Jackie Cook and 12 kills from Chriaty Svalatcad, but service erron pvc H\lnunaion Bucb the opportun1uet II needed to U.Opece. The Buont' JlU Myert bad 12 kJlla and I) blocb ln a ttront all-vound aame. The OUtt1 played conaittenl throuaho ut, at tetter Marp.ret Hlllhou.te turned in a fine ctron aod aophomore Sharon Kuter came up with a ttrona bloc~pme. Hunlinaton Beach dropped to 3-2, and into a tie wf th Ediaon for eecond. MJ ... I, Mattu l: The Charaera pulled even with Hunt1naton Buch in the leque a&andlnaa with the I S-8. 16-l 4, 11.1 S, IS· 12 win over the VlkJnp at Marina. Senior outaide bitter Pam Lance led Ediaon with 26 kills, while aopbomo~ K.endra Whisenand contributed 17 serv1oe point1. Whisenand served the 1111 th~ points to asve the Cha,.crt the eeeond pme Marina'• aophomon: middle blocker, O.wn CharTotn, h.ad nine block• while C'hn1ty Lanen, a junior iietter, added 16 ktlla. N•wpert Hartter a, La .... Beacti I 1 The Sailon remain atop the leaaue after 1 I ~-10, 1'-6l!2-1,, 1 '-8 victory over the hott Ani1t1. Newport, 8--0, once apin wa1 p1tood by the 1u~rbeettin1ofl.ara Aeper, whoalao 11ervcd 18 po1nt1. Sara Alliaon aleo turned in a ateady pme, and wa1 credited with crucial po1nt1 and no aerv1c.e erron. Woo4bri41• J, Ualvenlty 0: The Wamort held onto eecond ~lace an Sea View play wuh a I S·8, I '·8, I .S-' win over the host Trojan• Junior aetter Loren Newman tumed an .even aces and a 1tron1 dcfen11ve pme to pece Woodbrid&t (8· I), while Jiii 0.nicl• con· tnbuted nrne klll1 and Allyaon Manox bad tb. ltl&ucia J, 1a..i•c11 I: Tho £aale1 bounced Mc:lt ftom 1 flnt-pme lou to tot the win fl'om the Roadrunnert, 12· IS, 1'·6: l S· 7, I S·2 at Ettancia. The Eqlea (3-6) received 12 aervioe aces from Lclena Shah, and 14 ldlla from middle blocker Stacy Bekemeyer. lntae a, El Tort I: The V aquorot turprieed the Chartert to improve 10 S·l in South Coast 1>.layw1tha6-l,, l$.l I, 16·14, l.S·3victory1tEJ Toro (6-2). Mater 0.1 J, St. P11I t : The Monartha rem11ned undefeated on the seaaon with 1 IS~. I .S-9/ I S--O blowout or the Swordsmen It Mater Oc1 n an A_naelu1 Leaaue contett. Plrates post 14-9 p olo wln Strona defensive effort• by pUt Mike Hinze and Karl Si.wan puthed Oranp Coeat eon. to a 14-9 Pacll\c Cotti Conference victory over Saddle· bKk Tuetday It OCC. Hinze turned Jn 11 aavea In 31/l Q\llrten of play, allowfnt Coett (10-2, )..()) to take a I l-6 ad van· tqe midway throup the final period. Saddle*k dropped to 9-4 and I· I in con(erenCC1. Pirate Rob Mirande took aame-hlah ecorint honort with 1ix pie, while Mike Ure and Eric Kenor had three aoala apiece. Jack Ryan led the 0 1ucho1 with five l&lltet. OCC hom Cerrh0t In non· conference action today. . -SP RT BRf A 0 s Bookies are slow to take queue from coniputer market 8tarlell to coach for Br avea Gifford feels sorry f orCosell Prom AP 4J1pekHI LAS VEGAS -While othen taraet - their computer software to school• or - corporation•, Robert Benuen is tailorina hit fint oft'enna toward a shadowy and untapped market -the nation'• bookies. Bentsen hopes to bnna 1llqal bookmuen into the computer aae with a S.S,000 proaram that can keep 1 bookies' accounts and alert ham when he has taken too much action on either tide of a pme. But the former corporate computer pr<>snmmcr 11 findina the market an elueive one at belt Thia i1 one clientele you won't find in the Yellow Pa,ca and he haa yet to diacover any "National Asaociation of Bookies ... "We're countina on a word of mouth kind of thina,•· said Bentacn. "lt'1 not an e.uy market to reach a1 we've found out ao far." Bentsen and hi1 partner, Martin Meodelaohn, have already aold (our of the proarama, which operate on IBM penonal computert, to people they believe to be bookies. The tranaact1on1 aren't euctll handled in posh boa.rdrooma, and bu1ine11card11ren texchal\&Cd. "We act a call, the 1uy's name i1 Joh.n and he'a heard about the proaram ind wants to tee it," wd Bentsen. "We met one auy in front of Cuaart Palace and h.e even told u1 that w11n't hi1 real name. We brouaht him to the house, showed him the proaram and he boupt it ript away." Bentsen aueatet there are some .S0,000 1llcpl bookmaken spread acrou the country, a va1t mar.ke1 when compared to the 7S 1port1 books that operate leaiumately in Nevada, the only state where 1port1 betllnt II lcpl. He and Mendeleohn also hope to reach the Jqal market1 with a S2S.OOO packqt that incorporate-a the be1t or the small bookie pack.qt aJona with an accountin,1 proaram that can keep fiaures to aend to state pmina reaulatora •• required by Slate Law. ·•we hope to make M>me ulea amona the 1porta books, but that is a very hm11ed market," said Bent1en. "What's the point of 1pendin1 the time and effort o n mak1~ five sales when you've aot a biger market out there?' Bentsen said salet are only made an Nevada, althouah h11 attorney contends the proaragi e&n be lcpll.r, sold in any 1tate. ·It only co1t1 $200 to Oy here from New York. which 11n't much money to a book.le," he u1d, "e1pcc1ally one who's payina S.S,000 for the proaram " Quote of the day Darrea Paq, a S-S aoaltender who pt.yed last winter with the Milwaukee Admarala and hu been 1n the Ch1cqo Black Hawks' traim~ camp, on the constant quet11on1 about h11 he1&ht. 'I IUCIS the bottom lane IS, I'm btger than the puck:.'' Kareem'• contract eztended LOS ANGELES -<enter Kareem m Abdul-Jabbar and 1he Loi Anaeles Lakera have reached an oral aarement to extend h11 $2 m1lhon a year contract throuah the 1986-87 Nattonal Baaketball acason, La.ker General Manqtr Jerry West 111d The 7-2 Abdul-Jabbar. 38 -and about to 1tart h11 17th NBA seaaon. more than any player 1n h11tory - would be 40 years old dunn1 the 1987 leaaue playoff. Abdul-Jabbar'a aa,tnt, Tom Colhna. said 1t was important for hit client to be felt needed by the team One of the dominant players 1n pro buketball since he JOtned the M1lwauk« Sucks in 1969-70 and was chosen leaaue Rookie of the Year, Abdul-Jabbar became the NBA's career aconna leader 1111 1eawn, fin11h1n1 the year with H .262 Po1nt1 GIRLS TENNI S ATLANTA -Wllhe S&arstll. who • wore only a Pitttbuflh Pirates uniform durina hi• 20.year career u a ma,jor lcaaue blseblJI playtr, will rejoin hit former manqer and become a coach for the Atlanta Bravee. S&arstll hat ~ to join Manqcr Chuck Tanner'• 1&aff in Att.n&a, the Bravee said Tuesday. Tanner, fired by Pittabul'Jh at the end of the I 98S aeat0n, wa1 aaven a ftve-yeu contract t.at week to mange the Braves. The Braves said S&arstll was expected to come to Atlanta thia week tcuian a contract. Staraell't duties probably will involve coachin1 firtt bite and actina 11 a hittina 1n1tructor. Sta~ll J_01ned Tanner midway throuah the I 98S season al Pmeburah u a fint bate coach Staraell retirt'd u a pt.yer 1n 1982 after 20 years with the Pirate•. I Rama deal for Lion U,ht end The Rams 91cked up llaht end J1me1 m McDonald from the Detroit Lion• for an • • • undiacloted drat\ choice a nd waived • linebacker Jim Lauahlin, the National Footbe.11 Leaauc team announced Tuesday. The 6-S, 2~pound McDonald was waived by the Rama durina the preaeaaon and played 1porad1call~· for Detroit. McDonald, who 11 in h11 lh1rd NFL aeaaon. first played for the Rama dunna the 190-84 campa1&n. Lauahhn wu 11&ned 11 a free atent by the Ram• last week. The Rams, 6--0, travel to K.anaat City 1h11 Sunday to meet the Ch1ef1. Do nett. Rama• lrrin honored NEW YORK -Tony Doneu of the m O.lt.1 Cowboy•. who on Sunday bealme •II • the aixth player 1n Nattonal Football Ua&uc b11tory to ruah for more than !_OJ.000 yards 1n his career. waa named the NF< 's unen11ve Player of the Weck. The Rams' LeRoy Irvin, who returned an interception for the winnina iouchdown qainat Tampa Bay, earned defen11ve honors. Dorsett ru1hed 2 I times for 113 yard1 in Oalla1' 27-13 victory over Ptttaburah. 1ncreuin1 hia career total to I 0,082 yard1. Irvin had two 1nte~pt1ons 11 the Rama remained unbeaten with a 31 -27 victory over Tampa Bay. The 34- yard TD 1nterupt1<'n came with S:.S8 left in the pme Penautna collect ftrat victory Doe1 ae.Mea, Jeb CMMt and Terry "1 Ra••lkJ ICOred third-penod JC>all to ' lead Pituburah to its first National Hockey L..eaaue victory of the season, 1 3-2 victory over Minnesota Tuesday n1pt. With Minneaot.a lcadma 1.0, Shedden scored JS aeconda after lhe penod bcpn, &app1n11n a ccntennf pa•• from left w1n1 Wiiiy UM1tN111 for h11 tint aoal o the aeuon Chabot acored 1horth.anded at 6: 11 to 11ve Pm1burah a 2-1 lead In the only other NHL pme, Quebec defeated Hartford, 4-1, II Aaa.e S&a•taf acored two aoal• and added two a1111t1. Nordlquc aoahe Marie O....U. klck~ out IS 1hot1 to record h1a second victory in lhrcc st.art' th11 acaaon. Televlalon, radio TELEVISION 12 05 p.m -BASEBALL St Louis at Dodacrs an pme 11.1 of National Lcaaue playoffs. <nanncl 4 S. IS p.m -BAIEBALL Kansai ( lly al Toronto 1n pme acven 11( AmcnUin Leaaue playofTa, Channel 4 RADIO I 2:0S p.m -BAIEBALL. St l"'>u1• at Dodaera KAB< (790), KNX (1070). 5· I~ p.m. -BABEBALl: IUnu• < tty at Toronto, KNX <1070) But ex-colleague says he won •tread controversial book NEW YORK (AP) -"I wo uldn't work: with him," Frank Gifford 111d Tuesday of Howard C'oaell, h11 for- mer Monday Niaht Foott>.11 broad- caatina collcaauc who attacked Gaf- ford -and numerou1 o ther people -1n h11 controven1al new book "I can only feel sorry for eomebody who I thou&ht was a real friend for 31 yean, somebody who may be at the end of a career and literally l11he1 out at all the people and ettabliahmenu that have made that career po111blc," Gafford 111<1. "It's 11d." In h11 book, "I Never Played the Game," Cosell said of Gafford, "l 101 embarra1sed hstenina to ham make m11take after m11&ake. Funny, when you're an the booth, you tend to overlook a lot of frank'• mistakes beau1e you're conccntrat1ns on your own Job. That's 1mpo111ble, however, when you're h1ten1n1 to him on ttlrv•~inn ,4,nd he came acro11 hke a male mannequin, h11 vo1c.e etill too weak and undramatic to have any 1mpac&." Coaell wae on AB<~'• Monday niaht coveraae of National Football Lcaaue pmea from ha inception 1n 19'70. Gifford joined him In 1971 . C'oaell •topped doina the telcca1t1 after the 1983 seaeon. Gifford, in reapona-: to a quett1on at a pre11 luncheon. sajd he had not read the book and didn't intend to. He 111d that what he knew of Cotell'1 comments had been read o r told to him. O.J S1mpt0n, another member of the AB(.' Monday n1aht NFL broadca1unf team, said he had read 1t and w11 ' 1urpriaed the way he characten.ted some and1 v1dualt 1n the book. "Howard haa been a part of my life for IS yeara and I thou&ht a positive {>In... said S1mpaon, another or Coaell'a llrJCtl. 'Tve apent a lot of time with ham the last few years, 11\er pmet h1v1n1 drink•. when I realized he was unhappy about a lot ofth1n11 I wu JUll surprised thal he wrote them." One result of the publica1ion in recent weekt of ellCCrpll from the book wH ABC'a dec111on to remove Cotcll from 1t1 World Senee covcraac team with Al Michaeli and n:plac.e ham with Tim McCarver. "He Wll to be part or o ur pme telee&lll. That WU Our Orlllnal ID• tent,'' Jim Spcnc.e the acnlor vice president of ABC Sports, aaid. "l he book was one of the reasons" why Coeell was pulled from the booth and offered a prepme \how, wh ich he declined. Further, Spence 111d, "we felt 11 wouldn't be fair or proper for Al to have to work w11h Howard on the pme telcca1t1 after Howard had apoken nep11vely •bout him 1n the book." The network, Spence said, is "co m· m1tted to Howard for Sporttbeat (I h1ply reprdcd but poorly rated weekend commentary proaram) throup the end or 1985. We have not announced our plans beyond '8S "In all likelihood, Howard will be workJn&(for ABC) an 1986, albeit on 1 limned bl111 -the Kentucky Derby, the Prcakne11 and the Toumamen1 of C'hamp1on1 tenn11 from Forest Hilla. "With all due respect 10 Howard," Spence 111d when asked aboul the book, "I'm not aoina to comment further " Nixon chosen to arbitrate Former Prest dent to sit in on u mps' contract d ispute TORONTO (AP)-f-ormer Prell· dent Richard M. Niiton haa been aclcct.ed 11 the arbitraU>r an the contract dispute between thC' M&Jor Leaaue Umpires Auoc1at1o n and lhC' two lea1ue1, accord1n1 to officials repreaent1n1 the two 11de1 Nixon 11 expected to hold a heanna either Fnday in New York or Satur- day in the Amencan Lcaaue city where the World Scnea ia acheduled w open 1hat d•y. The 11tc and date or1he hcanna will depend on the outcome o f the lea1ue playoff•. acrordana to prct1dent1 C'hub f-e<ney or the National Leaaue and Bobby Brown of the Amencan and umpires union attorney R1ch1c Phillips The umpare1 had blalked at worluna the ex~nded playoff aene1, which had heen a beti-of-fiv• 11nce bctn& introduced in 1969. but became a he11-of-"1Cven 1h1s year 11 part of baseball'' new ba11c aareement with the player\ un1<>n . The umpire• had threatened 10 work onl)' the fim five pme1 unleu they received more money for the 1wo elltra pmc1. La11 year, they 1truck three Amencan Lcaaue playoffpme• and the first four .-met 1n the National Lcljue aenea, retum1n1 only for the final pme when ( om m11110ner Peter lJeberro1h airecd tlJ arbitrate their d11pule The acttlement a year aao called for 1>41yment of SI 0,000 per um part for the 12 men work1n1 the two 1er1e•, and a contnbution of $160,000 to a p<JOI for d111ribut1on amona the other ml)or le&&u.c umpire• who were not workina The union had sou~t to impro ve both of those fiaurei. in the expanded playoffl 1h11 year The umpires, an makina their a1nke lhrcat, aa1d their contract called only for ft ve playoff pm et. They qreed 10 slay on the JOb when Phillips and the leaaue pre11dent1 •arced to 1ubm11 the mattor to bindina 1rb1trat1on. Phillipe, when contacted in Phil•· delphLa, aaid, "We reached aarce- ment last Saturday on an arbitrator and J aveed that the leque pre11den11 should mike the announcement." He called N1~on "1 lon•·11me rnend ofba.eball and a man an whom both sides place I treat deal Of trull " Nixon, who hvet an Upper Saddle ~aver, N.J.. ha1 attended many baseball pme1 in New York. When he w11 in the White House, he w11 an avid W11h1naton Redakina fan and on at lea1t two occauona offered play1 to Oeorae Allen. 1hen coach of the Na11onal football Lcaaue team. CARLSON'SCOLUMN. • • FromDl I he Vaq1,.:1 Norton, a f>-4 Junmr who w11 on Mater Dc1'1Junior var11iy au aophomore, becauae of a 1iblin1rule, wh1chsay1 ifyou have a brother or111ter at the achool, ind you'recom1n11n with 1 new ret•· dence,youdon'tnccesunly have 10 aoio tJn1ven1ty. Matt'u11ter 11 Mehnd•, a freshman volleyball player And hli dad 11 G ary Norton, Irvine'• pnnc1· pel, currently an the procc11 of movinJ 1n order to make 11 all a.c<:0rdin110 Hoyle. * * • ( iueu what Woodbnd_.: H1fh foot· ball coach Grne Noj1 h111tenc1led to h11 T -than, under h11pme 11cket? You auetited it, a "60-1 butter" I~ If 11 Wamors were labeled 11 No 8 1 nan c1pit-t.cam lcaaue with cham- p1on1h1p odd1of6'>-1 . but I'm not taluns any mo re heat about th11. 'fhe truth 11, 1t waa a typoar1ph1cal error and everyth1n1 wu turMd upt1de down and the odds were 6·1. Sure 11 Wll .. • • • In the past fi vc yea~. who would you fiaure to h• vc the hett wo n·IOU rewrd 1 n Cl F Southern Sect ion football?Of courae, Raldw1n Park <S4-6) A&aacadero'a nelllat Ill· 7, followed by EJ Modena, Foothill and l..01 Al tot area Sea V 1ew team11n the 1 op IO If<' Saddlebaclt at No 6 CH· I'>· I) ind Corona del Marat No. I O(l I ·22 I ) Where'• Newport Harhm'l Well, the 1980.81 recordumountto 4 16, which cut11nto the nellt three years (Jf 24-9-3 Tollner wary of Stanford LOS ANC if;U~S (Al') -Southtrn C'ahforn11 had a hyt' l•lt Saturday, ao Coach Ted Tollner of the TroJan1 1pent a little 11mc 1n fronl of h11 telev111on aet Th1naa weren't quite 11 they appeared The TroJ1n1 arc pl1y1n1 ~t.anford thia Saturday. 10 Tollner had a 1pec1al 1nternt an the lJC'l.A·Stanford pme, which waa televa~d lave 1n Lot Anacle1. II waa a prnc wtm by the 8ru1na, 14-'J. "Like a lot or 11ther people, I'm aure, I thoupt It was a o ne-11dcd pme when I WH w1tchin1 11," Tollnt'r 111d Tuesday "Rut I didn't feel like that at all watchina 1he film later. Marina in control after win over Edison Edison'' 13th on the l11t with a 4S-I 2·2 rewrd. The C'haraen are aecond only to Lona Beach Poly In the 811 Five C',onferenu, and Fountain Valley 11 No. IOonthac httat 41-2-0-1 "You can't t.akt throe o r four play• out of a~me, but 1fyou do, that aame 11 1 d1n'erent blallpme !l;tanford'• defen1e haa played lake th11 all year They play well, they ~lay wclk then bam, they a.ive up a b11 play t'coplc have made a lot ofb11p1Jty1 on them "We believe that If Stanford put• totethet the con1l11ent pme they're capable of. they're capahle <>f bca11na you deaplte their 1-4 record " Vi kes move to 5-0; Sea View remains in a three-way tie Manna Hip's IJrls tenn1t team look the measure o r Ed1~n to take command of the Sunset Leaauf' race T uetoday afkmoon Meanwhile, an the Sea View t.aaue, Ncwpon Harbor, Wood· tmdtt and Corona dtl Mar won 11 upcc1ed 10 krtp tMI race an a throe· way llt' for firtt With each team 'port'"' .., · I "' orda Herc ' ho• 1t went Mar1M U , U.... •: Tht' V1k1np hu1tled throuah th< tira1 half o( lcaaut p!Ay w1thout a ddt•t u lht' Jro pped the~ at Manna. Came Cntelt't No I •1n1lt'' ttfort, a 6-(), 6-0. 6-0 march, put Manna 1n GOfttrol and the team of T1tr1ny Fenton ud Hatblf Cburch at No 2 put LO I ~Hr1 ~&net to aie_ tbt Vi.Im '""· EditOO'• DcbbW Oofdbrr)r'r .... cr9dJ~ With 1 f/OOd dron at No I. .Wnt 6-J af6 6--0 KU (rQfft lht \t1kJG11. Manna, 12-1 and S.(), meets Hunt· 1naton Beach 1n the 1CC-Ond-round opener Thursday Ne.,.rt ~r ll, LapM ~ I: The b11 at.cm for th.t Sailon wu 1n No. l doublet wheft senior Julac E vana and frnhman Dawn S..rd were paired tottthtr for the tint time and responded with wina of 6--0, 6--0, 6-1 Newport was dominant an the other doublet a1 well, w1nn1na C11ht of nine potnll overall. H i1hlt1htin1 La1una'1 per· fonnana waa the ahowina of No I aanaJn player Mindy te.ch, who breatd C.0 VlC'lOnft of~. 6.-1 , 6-1 C.r ... 4el Mar I J, C..ta M ... I: The Su Kanp retained their 1hare of tint plac.e an the Sta V 1ew Leque with the wtn on 1he Muetanp' court• G1 <ltana posted 1 sweep an aan&ln for the loten, while Mcta'a dou&ie. tum of Mana Tuckc'r and Carrie Short won two o( throe, b\lt 11 wu all Corona other than thoee etforu. Melinda Hovoc and Ehubeth Buttaance swept in doublet for CdM, which rnuid many of 1tt rtJUlar players .__..,..,. n, U•••rtity f: The v11JUnt Wamort thowed • 1tron1 aupcnonty an linala -winn1nacian1 o( nine poulbk potntl 1n tflat Ruatler• blank OCC In 80CCer Aftt'r a .cofelett nrtt half, Pat Penntr and Javier CalkJ.11 ~ ttt-Ond-hl.lf pit to lad the Ooldn v, cit ( olqc toCCC'f tam to • U> ~ OVCf °"• C.oett T~y 1n 1 Sl>utb Coet1 <:onfcnnct match on t.bt Plnaet' fldd TM vaaory upped~ wac·1 con(~ n\ari ·to 3-l and ovcnU record to "-6-3 PenMt broke ch.t ICOftkM drad· lock 1t Lhe 6·42 mark of the tee0nd ha.If and Ulltj.at' ,oeJ c:amc with 12 m1nutn rnnaln1na 1n the mat.ch. In pJ, n Sipot "' credHcd with 12 •vn fOf .&ht R~. Alto °"8Ylnt -.JI (Of lht wlnncn Mrc f\ill*k• huJ Pl1' and A.lfont0 Estrada aod m ldnetden Jen Hanorvar ud J 1m lerrott Ooadn1 Wnt bottt s.ddJct.n at 1 neat TUC1dl~ ntsJil depenmen1 -to down the TroJana Juhe Willeu and Knaten S1eamund reai1Je(ed 1weepe to pea the War- nors. but t Jn1ven1ty d11played 1trcn11ta an doubln wt th the team• of GloriJ V1laro-K.ttty Wnaht and In-and Car1eon..('hlnda Orttr c.apturina two of thret matchn. ROYALS • • • rromDl btt1na nn11hes by Ill baeet.JI team "We're the type of team that eeom1 to have to have I ll bide up •lntt the wall," lora said ··l...ook at the Yankee .cnn <that clinched the AL E.at for Toronto) We won that and J think we'll win th11 "No matter what h.app.na, we've had a super teaton You dance with the ,Jr1 that brouJht you here We'll ~ out and twins the blu We won't hold ti.ck.'' Whnher wdt talk 1t atmply bravado1cmaini lb be aecn The talk wu JuJt u 001\lldent Jn the l.oyal• dubhouee. wtwn tht f•Hot It that nptNnct mtaht otrtct Toront.o'• home·lkld tdtf. .. J hopr that e•pmcncc helj)I u1," Royals cent.ct lklder Walht Wilton Mid In theC'.lntral ronrerencc: the only RAMS HA VE CRITICS.) .• rromo1 the 9lacc before he thro~. •• 'T'Mn aomcone aaked if Brock waa aa aood u h11 quart.erbtlck rauna, wb[ch 11101.8 In h11 la11 three pmn. "Aft.et tecina Dieter •• the NFC leader for tht l11t three week.I, I'd have to aay Brock la clearly better than (Joe) Montana or ( O.nJ Marino, no quation," aald Roblneon. If you haven't adtten the me...,e by now, Robsneon waa pulllna the media's coUectlve lqa After tald"t a moment to Jlther hamttlf, Robin10t> .. id: ··r ftnd U 1beolua.ly amuln_t that people MY OINr can't read defen .... or that hie doetn't mab lM rip& decf1ion1. "I mean, ht'• only lhr hi~ nt.cd puM"r tn tht Nfl. That ihould M )' eomc1hl"'" .. And on tht tam ht .. td. ''TltH I &am people c:an love People cert abovt f40tblll tam• I na.n Into oeooM Ill the tlmt trfto CCU mt they could blnlt:!~h ou~ becluM l~f'CtOC • I'm vay happy and impntllld With our team ... And what 1f .omeonc told M.ob- lntt>n he'd he 6.0 at th11 t&a&e of 1hc seaeon? "I'd lell you I w11 one hell of a coach" • - FoR THE RE coRo 'M' • • . ' .. . AM••M:AN L•AOU• 'LA YO,,. •ev•,. s. ~ J•v• u 10_., KANIAt CITY TOttONTO l "''""If lJone111 Wlltelfl t i .,.,, :IO Mc•••Oh \llerldn rl l•lbll/ll ,., \yndbf11 1 Whitt 111 llaoc1n u elh l!M \ 0 I I 0 0 0 0 4 I I 0 I 1 I 1 \ 0 J ' 4 0 0 0 4 o a o J I 0 0 I 0 0 0 4 I J I C.•tt I• 111 Mo .. 11. ,, Mut1n•1 .IQ C.lut11 )b VPtllew lb 011 •• , tlh t '""'"on , ..... " Wlllll r 1 11110.1"" llHflurl 1 le11te111 r1 I e<n1><I•" .. ,llM l I I 0 4 I J I 1 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ) 0 ) I .. 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • () 0 0 4 I l 0 M > I ' u '.' , ... ,. kwe l>w-,.. 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Be yours Jus Ort aeach NeWP , ' - . :;:t::i:;.~utt Paige makes book on free agency Beare to limit sale of beer LOS ANOEl.m (AP) -fonDCT Tnu Oiriltiu U a.ivenity runniaa '*:& Kenneth Davit ii see~ S 13 O million in dam .. from the Nauooal Pooth&U Leaa~,-~hich he accu1e1 of unlairly Pf"Ven~ him from eamina a liviq. By PAUL BARTELT .__ .... °"'' ' t 1 Davi.It who filed a Superior Court lawsuit Tuesday, wanted to play in the Nf1. this season after TCU SUJpended him for aa:eptina money from bc>otten. But be wu barred by a leque rule that prevents athletes from playina for both a collese team and the NFL in the same teUOn. It seeks S3 million in acneral damqet and S 10 million in punitive d.amaan. SEE WHY UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVICE IS THE OLDSMOBILE DEALER -1N ORANGE COUNTY UNBE.A TABLE DEALS ON SALES & SERVICE 'aClllPml • --'llTMal ELMORE ,.,300 e .. 1H.h Hl¥d TOYOTA Wfslmln\\ler (714) 894-3322 • Reasonably Priced • Clean, Secure Faci lit y • Resident Manage r •Open 7 Days 497-6900 LAGUNA .SELF -STORAGE 20522 Laguna Canyon Rd. Laguna Beach SAN DIEGO -C.Clebratina bi1 24th bi.rt.bday Tuesday, K.antu City Chiefs wide receiver Stepbone Paiac bu much to be t.bantful for. Besides beina married and the father of one son, be is one of only a handful of playen to make an Nf1. team u a free qenl After speodina hi• tint two ycan at Saddle beck Collele, Pai&e transfCmd to Fresno State wfiere be teamed with the Rams' Henry Ellard. YOUR CHOICE! '86 '86 '86 '85 414 MONCO s1112•.; $11546 .; s21su .; s207u ; WE l£ASE & SW AU IQ)(lS! •q mos .. 60 mos + 111. OAC I , I I I , I I ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' I / I I Now in biJ third aeuon with the Chieft. Pa1ee baa become an intcpaJ put oft.be team's multiple-receiver otrcn1e. lo a 31-20 lou to the San Dieao Owsen Sunday, Paiae had three rcceptio111 for 70 yards and ran a reverse for a IS-yard pin. The previous week, Paige staned for the injured Carlos Canon apinst the Raiden and totaled four recep- tions for 70 yards. The week before that. Paiac cauaht two touchdowns an a victory over Seattle. This week, the Oiiefs wall be home r ----COUPON-----ALL VIDEO RENTALS to face the unbeaten Rams. "When Canon aot bun, PaJfC came in and there wu no dropofT an perfonnance " said Oiief1 quar- terback Bill Kenney, also a product of Saddlcback Colleae. "He hu the ability to catch balls be shouldn't be able to act to ... With Carson back in the hneup Sunday, Paaae 1s the 0.1efs' third receiver. "When teams doublc-<:<>ver Canon and Henry Marshall and PaiJe has sinale coveraae. he acts the ball," said ~cnney, "especially on third down." Paige, 6-1 , 176, bu caught 17 passes fo r 318 yards and three touchdowns this season. He has caught five passes in three games this Sunday, Oct. 20 Games 0 Rams * O Raiders O Cincinnati * O DaUaa * O lndlanapolls O New Orleans * O Washington * 0 St Louis 0 San Diego O San Francisco * O New York Jets • D Seattle O Tampa Bay O at Kansas City D at Clevelan d * O at Houston O at Philadelphia O at Buffalo * O at Atlanta O at New York Giants O at Pittsburgh * O at Minnesota • O at Detroit 0 at New England O at Denver• 0 at Miami· Monday Night's Game Oct. 21 o ar .. n Bay D at Chicago • • Craig's Picks of t he Week (Craig's Record Last Week: 9-5) (Record for Season: 65-19) \ . year to extend baa con.JeCuUve pme reception streak to 18 pmet. "He baa srat enthuaiam for the pme and pves 120 percent all the time " aaad Chiefs Coach John Mackovic. "Stephone pushes himself to the limit amd baa the abiUty to make the bi& play when ever he tell his hands o n the ball." Pa1ae. in dcfiruna his responsi- bility, said, "My role is to do what ever it takes to aive ua J.ood field position. ru do anythina. 1f it means the biJ catch or Just tryina to act somthma aoina and show we can move the ball throuab the ak" Lut 1CUOn Paiae had 30 recep- tions. He caulht at least one pus an the last 12 pmcs. IN ORANGE ~ COST A MESA COUNTY ,. Ill llOP FAST SERVICE JAcKKAJ.lJAN c;.n $cllt111ftl .rlll Owtr ~ Jf\ npt<ltfttt C08TAME8A, OUN SHOP 1111 tWbot atvd. Coeta ..... •·1111 .. CHJCAOO(AP)-Beerwill not be sold aft.er halftime of next Monday niaht'• NatJooal Football Leaauc pme at Soldier Field between the Oiicaao Bean and the Green Bay Packen, the Cbfoqo Park District say1. Park Diltrict Superintendent E.d- mund L. KeUy said be would qrce to the teCOnd-half ban on beer sales, as sugested by the Bean, but doubted he could 10 &Jona with another Bears 1uUC1tion that would involve aivina free coffee or soft drinb to non- drinken. The Bean proposed beer sale restrictions last week for the Green Bay pme. '86 JEEP COMANCHE Fully factory equipped #010961 •&624 U a..~ lo prtcw .... • W. lc. +dee ...... '88 JEEP COMANCHE 414 HERE NOWI Special Introductory OFFER AVAILABLE ... Call Joe Parkinson FLEET MANAGER For quote at JIM CllCIC AUOl/alNAutf/AP Irvine Auto Center 951·31« (On Your Envetope) ATTENTION: Winner's Clrcle 1 INTRY PIR PIRION. Mutt be 18 or over to enter. LAIT WllK'I Wll•llRI Remme Rulmu Claudia Hiiia Pat Babineau ---------------- I ---_L __ . r' . . . . : . Or .. Cout DAILY PILOT IW~. ~ 11, 1• - CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANG! IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE THE ART OF SBLlll 11 MADE EASY• TIE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAOES. nALISIAll fHSALI HOUSH/CONDOS ....... ,,~ ,,, .-.... '~ (.•,ot' 17) "°"' .. ' '• .. Mio .. d l )11 I~ for ~ I.at;) 'M Cl' Co ,,.,......, •11' .............. \GNI• .,_,_ .......... "9.At ( (IO,t ,,,..,,,.,. ~·­'u•t\#1 MISC. llNTALS ...... ,._,..... c...~-·-· "ot•h ~· '-" l .-........, ~,..., ,.,..,,._ ... ..,......~ Iii.I,, fl.,~ 4 ,.-"""~' 6(.t)Y .. ,_ 60ltl '•''°""""' \e1-•• ~,.....,. fJ/16'• O•DIHCMIA ...CIHY ----~ (.,.N.uw ifA.;1 ""'' oi "'°"• ,,op..., • uo --~·~· ·~·'o"'-.,,• ._. .... ,N~ \it IJIOok " ..., ••• #' ...... ,, ~ .. t•••ui-t ~-.._....... ,,,,,, t ,tll\lthel '°""'' c;,.,.,_., I)!) A'AITMINTS ...... ftAllS.olll ATIOll IOATS ...... ,~IO lt1I •• '°" ··~ • *· "'""' (o.• GA•AGISAUS (~•Ol'Wl .. fMh •• t.,.,.. ~~ )9'.J ,_ .. ---IOIGqet '°" ,.,.. ......... ·-· 4 Of.,... cM ~o• II • t ,.,~.... lllXJ . . ' .. '· ' ',, '• (Otte M.'\O JI • I I <N.-d '~II --~-Y.·W ......... lllftOY Mllrr ,, _., ,, .. ". ' '· I • ~'°""""' 1VIO ..... ,Of"O,e..o.r .. ti IOfO 1t))/ •tlrrALS HOUSIS/CONDOS OfOf'O dlt'I Mftl COMM•GAL •.I. 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()o,po,.. /Vfftf ··-f,.1 ,,~ "J.11: . ' ... ~ .,. ' J• ••• .,, 'ff\ • I fltl1J' ~.......... 1111. ... .-po,.. kOf't<i /t&'# 1• I , ... JVtt., '-.,11~~•#\ .,._.,1-~<t _,,..,, l»-..tt Atteoflt It J~ ....... c .. ,....... )llb .......... (__ 11 )() ~ .. ..,.. '•'"°'""'' )111 li'•I ,.,... "' ."""°' .... ..... ~TION OIAOUN6 IAofl-....... H ... ~ ........ Frt •:» p.m. T ............ _..-. Mon. 4:IO p.m. Wed"lldl)r .... _ ... _ .• T--. 4:30 p..m. l'hurldlr· ................ Wed. 4:80 p.m. ~ ..... -............. Ttwul. •::ao p..m. .... .................... 'rl 3:00 p..m . ~ ................... ·-···"'· a:OOp.m. TMIDALYN.OT CLASSW1IO OffJCI HOUA8 ,.......,...,.. .... ...,,,... t.'00 AM.-6't0 ,..M ..__ Olt.lttlf' ......,, ..... t.<OOA.tie • ..JMff.M . IG-1171 lea1 latatt ltatral l0121Qnnal llt2 lnprt a..c~ 1Mtl1tatala · C.reaa ••t •u 2122 1C"ta •111 2124 lt!J!r1 IHc~ Ult Cetta •en 21 .;.c..ta-.-.•-~-.11-..._.-M..,M._ _r_11_1Ut _____ ;;:======= TIWllllli IAllAlll IPll TllAY~ * Slepa to Lltlle Co<ona 2BR OLU G M MAN::JION BLUFFS-4BR • t>onu• rm.12ar 18• 1981 Maple A,... 1• all IEW ,._. ,_..,,,_ ___ ,_ ** lta1tt/Cea•t1 28A,datlwr,gar Nopet1 1Mualve 2 slry 8t>< Incl nu crpl Avall now, 1 yr C>wnalra 2pel'tonl S~ nA COLDWC!l.L BANl(C!RO ln1tt/"9a " ,3 ~rm w/frplc, pool, IP• 1 IM• WI .. It $1400/mo 6«-4382 1 •ludy mulll·b• apac lee $1600 BKR &.4~259 No peta Agt 550· 1015 + EatPort. nr S. C Pia.ta A Beauty w/luatl land-Gtatral 2102 decor huge trplc & more I melltiBJlll Intra! lltZ $89.900 Call Patrick acaplng pvt patio din ta.... 2124 $1200 ~9-8190 8"1 tee F0< IMM Lido 1•. avan 1BR IA~ poo1 pV1 pe110 1 780-5702 -01 <m. tam' rm. 1rp1c, ~aid'• ; 2 now 3BR 2BA No pet• no pets reta req'd ••ynmil UYFlllT .. Beautlfulty redec:ofated 4 Bdrm home with &O IMI on the Bay and private P* and float Oen, lhop. all new kltel'len and large beyalde palk> A terrific baylron l v alue al S895,000 1--_ .. _.. DOlnMIEIT11 • 2Br l~ba. 2 110fY· c.r Baat.leac~ 2140 s 11001mo Bkr •99-3400 <>•5.31•1 1 •1p~ _. ----· ~uartera • ......... more -gar . 11111u1 S250 aec _ .,.. " .. ...,._ In,_. anractM n9W 79 urn or unfurn Avall NEWPORT Lower 3 Deel. s750/mo 54a.9490 2Br 1Ba Duplex. new Harbof Vu Hma s 1800/mo 1 8 A 1 1ud1 0 a Pt 1 • Apt• teature pool, epe. .lu.f llHI lmmed. Only $3211,990 lrplc, nr beech $1200/mo __ -crpll, drpa paint No 4BR 1 1eve4 IUf*' r• 142511475/mo 111 ...,. I 1 1 tioe or o.caa 1411~ ••ay conalder lM~t 908 CORONA DEL MAR 22BA1BAdup unlr lrgyd ...-•AfV>/ "'"'7 2382 ' ' · u >"' prvae pa · "" no ..,..11 .... ;.. , ..:.,.urlt·y' I ,......1 ~ mo '"' · _ moo.I Agt &.40-~ 599 Hamilton. 986-1711 I gar.,,,. Of carpon, In a Chettool Patrlcit enore bed townhouae. VU. ,..... .,,.,., ~ ......... _..,... Immaculate BR, !amity &31-12&e 1rp1c,garage S15001mo 1952 Meyer S49-34M 1 •wmFIL .. I* LIDO hm 3BR 2ba 2 cer 1er gar no '*' Ava11 ~tu:!!.t':::r:aped room home planned for -~ BALBOA ISLAND Large 4 28( tba. encl patk>. no\Lg 4Br 3Ba • 2 trl*a. 2 gar South petlo 1 1600 1011? $440/mo 150 E ~ 145 grac40Ut llvtng and entlf· • 4 ~ · Deel, 3 ba l\Ome, I dOOf to pell 710 w JamM St car gar Pet ott Only mo Hazel &31-0880 21st St 5-46-8~ 1 Be<lroome ss75 talnlng V~lted entry, Bay $1800/mo 50 7 3 1 1200 IM IMl17 I I te15 wood floora, aon t>elOe BAYCRE.ST BMut 4 Deel. ~4) 8 .7 4 ~~ m~) UWllT lll-Ull Lux 2~ 2ba VIiia Balb<>a 2BR 2t>a E'"6e Twnl'IM 2 Be<lroomt 1'1• 8.attl carpeting, view of ocean. ---------ape. yerd 12200/mo yrty 2B< 2Ba Condo. encl gar.! __ Condo •. '"'"'* ~· 1 Frplc garaoe $790/mo 1211111111 nmT "4-IMO Pflllllf1ll * .. m * LAGUNA Custom VU 3 trplc S899 Quiet arM 8 blocka to oceen Elegant Pool. MCurlty S 1250 & Call 0.C. &M-4()00 dV-I COSTA MESA •--------Dover Shoree ipeetacular 3 BR 2ba, Fam/dining t>ed . 3 tr pica den 641-7705 °' &4&-~ 1 1 cedar & glua 3Bdrm, 1050 64!>-2016 640•2428 evstwtcnd• · (Cotner Center/Plecentl•) n · combo New cpta Owner S2200/mo 3Be Oecorat0< • dfeam M nllc.nl..;;;... 3B, 2 • ..,Ba ----Ooen Deity II 30am-7pm ~.~~':'9ciouw:1::ry:: myat ... , tut. Reduoed NEWPORT OCEANFRT 3 1 •MESA VERDE 2Br 1Ba plush crpla lprlc B-0 C n Condo Av! now 2Br encl gar crpta drpa 142-1Q4 m.,,nll\cenl view 01 Bacti 10 $189.500 Broker t>edl~unll s12001mo pool.patio o.tlwatlr,gar I ""allpapera tllrOYglloul A IOt ~aria 780-0347 773 W Wiiton No pell Sorry No P9tl IEIPllTl11.lll 8 ~ tnd beyond 640-7000 Furnlthed $750Nopet164-0:_2495 Dbl gar Fully malnt yrd g · 2 S600mo 850-7427 · .. Complete privacy In Ihle • 1495,000 •-•--I * NEWPORT OCEANFRT •NEW PLUSH! JBr 2'~B• 980-1331 Pvt home t>ay ~ t>r •Lrg 1 & 2 t>Orm. newty I O&IA • prectoua 3 t>edroom cot· *-•P""'' -1• .. '!. Large 5 t>ed corner 2 atry Twnhme, gar Av! I Choice Jbr 2b• Mt off appl~ provtded pvt lncd I r9dec quiet poo1 1494 up ALL UTILITIES PAID tage surrounded t>y I 1"-IH;I JI 11(;_..I' Only • yeatl new.~ uvrm, l\Ome Furnlahed now $1200 untrn I .. le I 1 s700 1 many other• ivall t88.4 Monrovta S48-0336 Compare Detore you rwnt d C · •7, • ..L. • den w/2'1t bath. Highly l · · I ... demi romant ri> c 539.,e190 Beet Rily lee .. -~at-" --om lat>uloul gar ena •· Reallora ... ::HJUUU upgraded w/hlgll cell· Wlttrfrtllt l•t ftn YIW IEITILS llO. w/cJ llkups apple $700 • *MESA VERDE 2B• 18a ~ 7 -.. .,....., I =·~r=··~ __ Inga. wet bar. fireplace, 111-14'0 llMl1J tr lM-1112 kldl 539-6 190 8"I lee Su Cltantl 2171 N-cpr1 cJrpa Ol w gat g:•g~~:t;:~ r:~. -.. cerpettng, wallt of wtn-Cetta.a ••1 •u 1022 pool • IP•. Secrlt\c.e at LANDLORDS/REALTORS 13Br 3Ba Condo • dbl gar Newly paJnled 3t>r 2t>a 38R.watlr gar SlOOOtmo 1650 No '*' 840•2405 rounded With plu9tl land- dowa on a11tra large lot. 9"i>P l();dj Dramatk rite S399.995 w/lermal Call Fut free 1enant provdra N-decor SC Ptza arM condo F/P nr BrOOICllurat/ 136 Avenue Montery Ofc •STUNNING Lg 3Br 2Ba 1c ap 1ng N o peta WTl&.lff. Piil i Q To ... 11 11 to love It r 4B 2B FR PA TRICK ~NO A E Into 539-6 t94 8"1 Ally Avt 1mme<1 S 1050 111. Adams 1213)498· t&37 497·4'65 llm 498-6e90 Garden Apt Poot rec rm Furnlllled 1Bdrm and Four bdrm Lulk bulh plan s 195,000 CALL &31-1400 $~ ~;K ~59-~70 !ot . Y1:12 NOT A LIST AGENCY IU I, $500 dee 641-0593 lrYiat 2144 SHI~ C1111 ••• ,. $725 710 w 18th FurnllMd Bechek>f "B" I comer IOI . • ·~·~\· ---365 Wllaon 642-1971 ofle~,,P~~ompt e t e ULllAlllTllPLD OHIUllLIUI ••r ' P1~~d~~~~~-~ut~~1~ 3C:P~ .. n(i 1~~,.J°~-**llEITl1.I** 2111 ~~~ ~~Rp1~ = privacy, IP•Cloul rMr lmpoaalt>le to dupllcate OWllO AT ah& w l d, ltlg Yr ly ,.~ lawn ~Ice petl OK No I CALL us REGARDING Lu• condo walk to s c (7 14) 966-1138 Clean Quiet B•cllelor yardwllarge pool & ape lhll ••Citing. upgrltdad •••UJIPI-' I $800/mo 759-1049 or clllldren $800/mo IAVINELEASES Pll lrplc eleg tr drs S395'mo No'*' Call Nft decor within the property New plumbing -_. Ill ••-H •M 959 5103 980 3515 S 200 557~ I--' ._..._.I lty ale 1n name MCYt 2t>< S550tmo :?BR 18A apt Dave Agt ~-1 151 put two yeat•. Sellere & wtrlng, h'Oh l>Mmed 12700 aq tt 5 BR 3t>a. totally -• , · ~--• 1 aec n1ll _ .. , ta l 2t>a enctudes pvt ctut> upper unit laundry tm· are motfvated and loolc· celllnga. and 3 garaoea. updated In 1978 on an Et~ga ~t 3BR ~I\~: 3 Bdrm, 2 t>ath, 1 blk to AFFORDABLE RENTALS I lH-llOO 1enn11 cna. poo11 rac. mediate occupancy OITT&llnPI Ing for off• $3e9 500. Good uaumable lbced oversized lot only 4 door• w poo · apa • enn • · bell. NB, S 1050 2 Bdrm, $510 2br n11 El move aauna beaut clut> llM & 22 76 MAPLE 2Br 28a w/gat PV1 patlO DON O.THOMAs rela loan •••s.ooo to tile entrance to Big Only s21o.ooo. try 10 v. 1 betll .,./yard. E/llde CM bu lc t>ut •PPM' decor I GREENTREE 38A 21:>•. No much· more S900 1nc1 TSl •mT 142-1181 .,.,.,,,..,, rm Qui.t No CALL 873-8900 ' Corona Beach Super dnl Petrlcil Agt 780•8702 $875 Furn 4 Bdrm, kki• fine reMNable at Pfft• LM S 1200/mo 818 mo.I ulll St Alt>ana pell Wat., pd &e90/mo !I I jetty view trom tronl WTllfffYllW ocntrn!WT'ltr.NBl1475 •llM1H* 34&-0440l 8M-551o 0163~~5Et73 t 7528 $750/mo 2Bd 1 '~8 • TSL MGMT642-1903 \lo \I I HI 1<1 ''I deck Off atreet parking Sp.a<>ua Executive home 'AMS IW.n Newly redone 3br S725 ILO 2200 •I Woodbridge A rt ti TownnouM Gar lndry ---~~1~~,E ~l~c[ I torSl~t~P~a7: 5Bdrm. lamlly & dining PllPllAUIE•EIT deep plle crpt12ba gar& &11,omed.Pr~eco<Jbr'J~ba n fl aea r~;29'b~A;~~~v~oc c1~~nE ::~}ba12~- I · Mutt ... 1 5-40-1161. • M t• morel Otha<• avallable an aca.,..... YllTlllAIJlm en-eeoo ...... 1211 114/ll 1. 539-8190 e.atRlty lee IS14001mom1tr 1te.llt>r .. ltatral 2'02 'TSl•mT 142-1111 lt8C ut:st'-63: pell Laroe 2 ltOf'y tlOme on ---__ I elm 216' Attr3Br 28•. !TpiC-Nr ~~·=p~~.~!n~ w ll1h lr• C orr l~or -Eaalllide 18r emall, t>ut huoe IOI Localed In ' occ Lg enc patio No 53&-71750f873-05M SPICIOUI 2Br 2 ... e. "41:tFll!kt Santa Ana Owner wtll THE BLUFFS • Wltl\Out ~ peta 11/1$975751-3898 Pen!llOUM Dine rm. a1c !9 C01)' wl k>ta ol net wood help 11,n:8~c.c!oo Alklng Equal 2 Muter Sult•. DUPLEX 18r lb•.. , .. ULI" IWIU B.che!Of Untt In Santa Ana e11n LIO&Tlll ~r/dryr2 t~~ 3':1"~ &IUT11lm $465 No P9t• l*>-2M2 Traditional Realty 6.11 -7370 Architect ci.tighll Costly s 195.000 717 Fernleet 4Br 3'"'8a l'IOme IOcated In ---Hgt• $350 • S300 MC Lg 4 . 2. frple 2 c ~·r All Utl I P<I ( -Lt lie l:>fand ,_1 All utlttlee Eaatllide 1t>< untum, pY1 & moat CfMll~ remodel. 8 detlrat>M WMt Bay MC-BA BOA ISLAND Ullla pd 20201-C BHctl blln1 S1250 FM 8&1 lhl~ pa1<l Poot ger no petl I i!r, patio No dog• 'One of a Kind·, Prt!-lltle &.40·81 2 by owner llon of Newport Penln· Furn~Unfurn ~tala StrMt 854-1927 Ulllm lll-IH2 Jalaa• 26M 1BcJrm S565-l 585 95 557•2337 Mtlg w/magnlt bay/nlle -0UPLEX·2Br 1ba H aula Pier & 1l1p -fr. 2B<lrm tBa 1690 Eutlide Bache'or for 1 Ille vu• lrreplac:Mble at So-ol-PCH S275.000 $925.000 Call 4 7&-8148 w:~i~= ~ :: =~~';'~ CONDO 3BR 2ba, utll Incl Laru leac~ 141 Cute 19drm yrty unfUrn 301 AVOCADO 642-9850 f*'IOf'I Beam oellt. wna11 dlac prtoa of S326K FM . 521 Carnation By owner Daya 87S..&e20 EV99 ~HORT TERM Baytront 3 Wallr/dryr 2223 Pacttlc 2Br tba home w/gar 1 Rerrig atove d/w No pY1 yd & amall P9I <* All Ha1tlng1 & Co 640-5560 873..0241 or 873-15-4 I --------Bed. tulty turn $2900/mo S950/mo &31 -~~ b~ palio teoo aq '1 nr pell M\75/mo 873 82113 -utlla pd 1475 780-IM2 .;.J:~~==::....:::;.....;;;;:;;;;:;;~;;;:;;=, e.ita .... --rm ....... ( BAVFRONT Yrty , .. 4 IC>famatlc SommerMt Cltl High Sclloot $1500 plue om 2•• &1111 ~field IEASTSIOEC M 28r IBe . ••-&1• t>ed, boat •llP VIEW Home twnhM 2 me.ater 10r/ba down 1telr•len1n1 gar yrty only MOO ••••t1111T1 den uni $825/m o L ESTATE AUCTION 11T I 111 ... Tllll --S2500tmo I aultea. 2 car garage. high· w/M19 patio & entrance I Ot'*• •~all Fee I _._ I A t 645-3&a3 REA Cul.0.MC, ~Br 2ea. 2 car 11 Room, 5,500 aq tt cua-BAYFRONT· Yrly IN UPf*' ty upgraded Comrm1nlty '300 mo or .nll<e llouM Beeut1tu1 Garden Apll gen __ _ LENDERS FORCLOSUR[ garaoe. lrplc a <*ltral tom manM< horM In 4 Deel s 1800/mo p 0 0 I •.• p • • L • • 't 700 497 .37 18 att 7pm TIUIEIT lll-utO P1hoe/d«:k• 8'>• HM 1 E SIDE al'larp 2BR, gwege al 1 VA ble preatlOlou• gated com-rfr ..... , $1000/mo 921 Lombard -11 JL. p i -I P••d No e>e11 emell yard S700/mo ~ UNPRECEOENllO OHERINGS ~ '~aularl~~alr· munlty BMulltul OCMn & Weft tef H &&0-4906 or 95!>-2199 3BR 2BA, trP'<; wry COllY I •ta ta • 11 1 2Bdrm 1 ·B• $700 peta 5<&6-9950 NEWPORT BC'CH occu .t Vl[W CONDO 7 l"'ht-Mwi Beet of all tt'• Ill.... ---1 yur o4d $l400/mo 2117 2Bdrm 28• $720 -- U\ U\I' vl8 751·898 'Vtc.d to NII lmmeol-Eutalde 29r 18a. garaoe avall lmmed 499-3881 1398 W Wllaon 831•5583 1 LA MANCHA APTS J BANK FINANCING WTSllllUJU Pf __ _ 215 Bfoedway SI Sf50 H 11Ml 1U•YSHO 280rm 1Balll 1625--1&75 SUNDAY OCl 27th 4 PM (Sale at Site) and tamlty room. Wont· ;::=;~ G~::!. :~:;~0211 Ocean vu yrty hN <ent off No pet• ~8713 lfWJ!fl ltac~ 21 Extra CIMn. bttln1 Walk 10 1 I No peta 642-~78 _ lhOp Latge lot. Owner offer•. 780-8333 "De Blvd" apple lncld -l! .... ,.-E B~NYON OOf# COYrM l t>eeeh Othert evall FM mestaBAU L8'C19 180rm crpt&, ~· Lou.led 633 ltdo Park [)f, Unit 0-3 ~wPort movtngtoOragon -want• klda/pet S575 nurry ~·• vu,2br2ba condo S1400 TIUlm 171-lllO atOY9 llngleatoryonVIC- Beach CA ()cun & Harbof View 2 BR. 2 BA tee out Bitr 640-7000 539-8190 Beet Atty lea Ill LEllA OllllS Ben 644-0141 87&-5736 BAYFRONT FURN &IUT9UT1 tori• N Newpor1 '416 No hY1f1t ;m, formal dlnina. k1tchtn with "109 ot tht WINTER 4BR. 1·~t>a. up-LllllY un ...... 2BA 2ba. huge t>aleofly 2BR s 1000 ulll pd 303 E lmmeculate leroe Gero.n pell 990-2"2 line" 1peJ111ncts Subterranean park Int a SALi .. Ll&ll atalra. d«:k. frplc. uni 2 bdrm I 3 t)(;fn,; N. w v 111. Ba It> 0 . Edge'ilrater 571·28M --.p11 Beeulffully land· 38' 28a upper G•. ""' cars) ~o· 1889+ sq It full security bide DELUXE DUPLEX 2BR Agate St s 1350/mo PentnouM Vu Harbor I c . p . d gr 0 u n d.. 0340 v 19" I INSP[CTIONS. Oct 20, 26 trom 1 to 4PM & DAY 2ba ea unit. M0-9053 IUYllW Lower unit avail 3BR. Now •1::1~~AILLO ooea.n & Catalina lmmed I Small 2t>r Iba ept wtgar poo11ape patlOtdeck No ~~~ ~ '*' 545~1~ a Loweet prtoa on martlet l '"'t>• f rplc uni po1 ... a1on $1400/mo nr bay 6 bch S750tmo pell of Ult 12 noon iiiiiiiiiiiii"'""'iPiiiijiii!'lllll""-.-I 2121 Y~ht VankM •Br $1200/~ 575-S453 1 blk No of 17th SI on t.45-2252 mao tor Don W/979'"°371 H/873-8278 1Bdrm '606 LOYety 18r 18a, del'IW9hf GAMSON & fLAHS • Tanrna POOi Guard«! --Orange I -1. L. 2Bdrm 1 ·B• 1705 walk-In Ck>M1 g8tfage gate $319,000 lf\CI tea ia1Ma M~t.46-0225 •llZY llTTlll• Ca,htraat tah 2Bdrm 28• S750 1415 No P9t• &:i1:e1&! 16200 Ventura 81¥0 Suite 401 • .......,.. land Call Fran Dodd Ptaiaula 2111 ,. ~\-1 •I neowty pal!'lted, Ing 2'11 2250 VANGUARD WAY Encu'°. CA 91436-2227 PrlYet. gat4d comlftlHll1Y. 833--3e22 0< 832·1990 or i4!!l! 4 • •• Onty $500 ,_ 8504. 5 BR JC PC*~ 540·~21! or &31-0HO llM/• W JU 3200 (213) 872 2771 112 ml to b9ect1 erano 831-5510 0cntm121Jt •Den v"""" --· Ill-.... u -(818) 784· "" luxury 3 Br 2•M>a Furn, MC bldg $1360 tit, • ----Encled garaoe /mo 28drm 28• 1750 Newty decorated luxury ()flt of ttlt tarpst dtwtrsihed real __ ,._ ......... _,,, ...... L t latt • te2-31"'1& 38drm 28ath, 2 car gar-tMI 1-3653 aft tlc>m 151 E 2 tat 541-2408 Apt ""'"' oeteoa Child A """"""'· ,..,_, .............. -. !.ajJt8'0e lg tlJt and oar A--~-...,._ -il~~ ate No'*' e.3t~1&e estal1/1uctionetrs 1n mtrlCI \~,tft~rta.o!!."i~> ........ eei9U .... lfU l)tMepd Qrdn,. $mall pet ~200~:a.!064~ ~ ........... TOP AREA MESA PINES NEWPORT VILLA O( • t~o"J'.f• trefteu _. ftrrl• fAo.1' ltf01t1bled Wfl•<it f • an.... .. '"'"" • .,... ........ p•• ~ h I L E 0 II 0 s I' I I I I' I B L 0 ii y I I' I I I S 0 S I A j wr. ... •• p&11 .. , '"• r-nv• •·•· IC I' I llu~IWI ••• elw•~ O•.., '"' • • _ .a¥M'll H• ~ 1 .. 1, ,,..... "" '"''" ~,__K_ll_O_D_Y--:[--, "'-""" '""'' I>"'°'•"'• 11 '"•• """ I I I I' I J 8 -r •.• .•• • • • • ... 1 -. -... J ... ~.:•·1;:~ : .. " ?.:·.:. • · A t>eeutlfUI 2•xeo Attl~ 2•· \•-il\Jlr no ~ ~ MHtmo 646--8463 -\&, vc;; c:zo;; to bMdl 18drm Ilka -cozy 46t-OOll 1 Ion hofM 28A 2ba. fem-V60l:Y' -.:. IW• E/lide 38A 28A lncd yd 2 AnrectM 11lnl ar• 38r Untvm 1525 mo Utll IT-P'<; enc1 peuo CatPor1, :::rs,_:, ~co.!: ,, .... Gel OMfN cetfl hWWHtTl~• """' e C' I 1 l'ed Ad c.1 ... 2 ... 11 ~r~k~~~·:::: !Mt S300 i.c: 79G-032t _ car gar, gdnf i 1050, tit. =~~~ ~r:;:~ not lndd _!?~t74 ~5 0:~~4~ '*' Plua Mlnut• to Nwpt pllancaa lneludlnQ llQht lut. dee> l400 8-46-2 tet -28R Iba. batlcOny. no peta, Itch Jr !9df'm furn MO--937 WITD ftl'W* --BAYCREST MISO lf\CI utll ~30 1550/mo 18d"" "'m lnterlof'• AG' 5 7 I * Cd E-ekSe dean 18f hofM Spaolou• 3BA, tem rm. 213-914-eM1 -~ UTIUI& NW M 25tmo Poot jlttCulZS, 28r Twntlee In bM1 M w/ef'IO oat M 25 No~ lorm dining Im med 28t 28a uttl 1000 eq " tenn11 & ~ OOUl'U !Oc;.atlott M amenttlea Nr 387 ~ 5•1 Meo ~ Well iocat.S ,_,.. Daocwator '"'" Condo gar I-= Aedeoot"etec! No Aecreetton rOOf'\, ..,,_.. C~ lUI. ~I pat1!t l t475 E/SIOE due>le• ~A t&A Ouo9CI to St700tmo ~ 2ba. tip. gar WID S*• $806/mo ~ I bllat'lt tatMM aorr,, no u~-i:;;;JUOUnt &;; &1~ Ot UW7~ d ~,..; $700 1-...._7211 ,.,.. petto ~/re area au. ••1-t107 ..... -a 557.0075 .,.....,. ·1-yet•.,,....."·-· ••· ....,,.. Near f'aa,,lon !el and .. _ .... .--_. CM. Blue~• t , ptoe ll80 eacfl • 2bt Ml "'118' '-' I ..curlty 531·8213 IEACH COTT AGE tum Of • 1S001mo 491-t434 110, ~ C I 0 . 2 811 OC*W\ oloaa Ot mot'9 lilile 204 Mont• Vi.ta unlurn Wlnt9' rental 2 -·--- 14()() • 2lS-MS-7407 hM appi., ~ 9# Br 2ba lrple 1700 •21Jt 1Be. 09. frs*.""' t.tt . --·1 &3Mltoa.t Atty tea .... ,... ' eh-7~ crpt 51• Ju mine , ll .. DUPO 3 IA 2ba. l'llgfl 2+2 oer .-. fMd yd °"'Y lllSOtmo 57Ml12 111r ~II b bW'Md oelMrlQI 2 Cllf t100ot1'eru~ ,..6'te •tMY•LIAlll -HtoNUrt lurnla,,ed CM Veo-lM:a.. Nf1 a-1 1300/mo lio-.eo2o TD.mlT I~ ~..uc;oua ~· ... Townhouae P.:'1* a PoOI 2k 2 Y't otd All la f'um 2bf. fem ,,;;-;.....,. 2 °'*"' oe••· "" 21A modern oondo l.rg SBA 11 tM/IN) ·~ rem.cl. 111(),000. ~, ,.. 11200/mo ~ 2'.48A oondO f'f'PC. *· 2·~. wtcitn rm. "J)IC. "iiJ"'__ u-&:. Ltlghton. Aot !Mt-~ ..0:: ... ~ 1-5 ~ PoOl I 1000/mo IU-2211 poof. ..,. • TINNl8 ..................... _ ...... __ ... _ • J..,.,..,.. 2 tSIS25-1IOO --a 11Hlmo • 1 1116 .. _.-.fi--~ M! VEN>! 4 ldrfti\, 2 curtty Ctd Cit "ad pet 29A t•~aA 1111/d Ntup, get •·CW--\~P lrWW Terrace 3M fem betPI, "" catpeta & OK unfuf, Cal 7tf>..tf02 No ~t• Aval! now • ~' rm, P"' ywd ttlOOlmo drpe/petnt S11H/mo Ag9nt HO/mo C•ll Craig ~iJ\' Ho ,,_. Joan~ Cal Tarry .... 2J1S 131·1291 ~' ~ HofMa 17 _ ..,.. .......as __ Kio.1'*8 ~ lull )bf Jbe tNt C.... . ,_ W.. .0. ;: 10 4bt ~ lllt ftotc I OI'· OOl9' w .,... NaW 1 2ba. ,ct, peoo. 1oe no ege I 1 100 muet ... l 1too/mo 1e..t021 11160 "'° 114111 UIM1to ._ ""Y ... l~~::-;;.....-:--r==-~ WOOM.AJ• Val AGI AltAnMlllTI .-'#""'' • 111'"11 \lft' .Oh ()v,.I 10flll0tllllif .... IOY ' "f'P•lr\ ' !ill (0 ... 1 P'lau #II* Mil -.ttft IO 1111 lit>• ,, ,,,,_~•••••bit NO Pf IS "IAlif NllU•Ut.l •~- llWIM ,_ I Mii II Ta,,,, .... , • ---lllL .............. ., .,....., 1111---· __..,. ..__ • flW 1111111 ........... Frp6C. v~ OlfMnOt. dbl get, pool & 9C)e No pett 18drm 1720 28dtm 2'h8e '926-'930 eee w 111n &4&-2739 864-4163 Trtplexl Unf 29' tY,Ba Townl'lom• ty~ l et& mo. No PM• ~6e05 . . TllOllfOWI i ESCORTS I .... ~. La ..... ".. ~ 99&-23&& DEcKS-w ooD covERs XDeRICXN AXJIDvDXN 1 Lanc1re ......... LA.,~l"ll.,v"'p•x1'!11P1Nt .. e•"--Dt•"''" j6it Competitive Pr~ Ctrpentry, fencing, wtn-lnt./~t t 1 yr exp!!MJnoe wobto voO CILe to m;Jt. $2.17 per day · 10 reeri exp« 7M-Hl2Q_ dOWI, plumblng, marltte, LANDSCAPE-MASONRY Fr .. "t Aeuon•ble btwn I t90 _1230 ~-•lffl Tl flllll tub enci. hauling, etc Landtceplng, all pha ... 8'50-1924 Of 0&7-HOt ly? Call Kathy, 642-9922 Thal'• ALL you P•Y f()( 3 llnea. 30 day minimum In the " And Y" Jeeu• 11 LOld done Brick, blocil, ttone. -Paul 557-4758 lft 5 (Uc#3Q.4-05) 636-8244 tr .. "' Mike 499.4-072 PAINTER NEEDS WORKI C .. 11..11 Cart Riek 881 ·95~ 1n11~1, celllng•. r.tln cab laJl!J!HI •l • •OEN HOME REPAIRS (28) yra e11p . wOf'k gutr childcare my flome N B . Paint Ofywlll Carpentry OWl-IPI Devi• P11n11no 964'·3837 Ttac~tH 4150 DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIEC TORY c M arM Tran9'>()(1 IO etc Gary 645-527'1 PTL FrM "' D•ve 646-7885 ,., .... ITY , • ...._ -·-· \ChOOI & beck 650-0258 .._.'' -• •-• ~ HANDYMAN LAROE and L1nd1cape-01rden1ng S«vlngOr1no-Co 22yrt FOR CHRISTIAN SCHOOL C.hri1t11n mother wlll :m3~1!"7~ ~801 ~I~-~I Trim Tr .... Haullng· Promptf Reuonat>M ratM 16835 8rookhurll St, r V babyan Moo-Fri CMISA ., .,.., • ~ •Y ......... c.n upa Leo 567.,.'508 Referenoee ttc•334950 962-3312 ;:-:OUND T'-'E 84CL10C-~:: ~tUL-A-WAY Hen<tymen QUALITY TREE TRIMINO * IJl· 1111 * Prtf"1i.a1iv. "'" " ,....,. Type carpentry. tr" Tr• roota-1tumpa remove 7 Oey1-Lerge Yard• 1r1mm1ng. yro c:4MrH1p, clnu~t c.,1722_1171 Pattri•L Malalttrat" SIM S•l•Heetthr-Free Envrm etct Ca11 Jeff 648-7830 . fntH~ INttRioAs Your n......, Piiot ~11 Care' 5-48-ls.4~ HOME REPAIR Carpen1ry Comp..,• C!Mn·Up. gen 1 HAHOtNOtSTRIPPINO ADVERTISING CALL TOOA'1tt All FIR LOIS ~o;:ector" Cl l ltm l I~ & gatM, tr" trim malnt, lrM lrlmmlng, lrM VISA-MC 673-1512 ' ... •• Ct d c M & N 8 .. ,. Mauro. 992-9973 Aec><-t•tM• MMis faElNINd ar:'1~,:~n'f1• M2-720e Full ua1n1 Mawing plant ANDY! wALLCOVER1NO ARTIST M2..U21 ell. I" SERVICE • thrOOUQhty WMdlng r.nutzl,;g .,c tnatallatlon & Remov11 I•-------• clH n "°".. 84S-9741 I laallaJ RMI rll .. 9e6-21l6 11'11 pllntll\Q 648-4-013 Growing dally ~·per a'Ju ___ 1 HOYMGIW!lng eetpet• & 1 lT AXOtlNd · boVllJd ~-• r:_:r_--Expert W•llcoverlng In on the Orange Cou t • uams .,pnoiatery W1ndOW9 etc Oaraoe & Yard Clnup9 .. """" ll•llatlon ~ Conlklll· '*9d1 1meo1nat1~ pro-araJtare II~ lla6et.111 -1Jl2 Jon 8'6-8192 fi(ovDtRf LAW ant AHIOnmnt 581 -8&00 ductlve. layout 1rtltl wN> '"X~P"'P"'["'IX"'NC..,.E""Rll'IE"P!"'!l""1R--Comm9tcltl tnq w9ICome I •CLEEHcO• EmPl'IH I• 752 5008 •WE GALS SHOULD• uncler1t1nd11Mrctt1ndl .. Waah9f-0ryer·R4Jfng et<.. Ci.an-upa & Hauling Attyw Parham & Anoe •HANO TOGETHER • Ing, to dMIOn ldvet1ltlng 722-1737 20 frl up EUROPEAN CLEANERS F .... , Jonn M6..e730 939.0730 ANYTIME I()( • vari.ty Of Cl'41nll HovMCie1n1notOero.,.,1no ' ..... ...!!.. Our dltcrlmln111ng mar AlfaltjC..crttt free .. , ~· 411'\·2'78 H•utlng c .. enupt. v•lnt-ARICkwoRK Small j()i); Pl11ttr/lhyw1ll ktrt «*nend• quallty •nO p= :l're• ic;;;.,,. x I H~ c ... ntno by the I Ing. welding, odd job•. Newpor1. Coate MeH, atyWI '"-·rleal~ • ROl'Jfl'j .\ Dynamic. Duo Comm't, moVlno. 7 d8";' 873·3603 lrvtne Ref'• 676-3175 Int /Ex1 petch plaateflng, .._ ouetom tuturlnn quality New1p1per production W•Wl>f'OO tno• 8'} 1. '~ rlHlld I.'" ref• 850-8278 I ltaltla ltHty ""' work Pro~·~No Prob-know~• helpful Ablll· OrlY9Wsy., pelloe path• I H()f'M 4 Offle4 cleaning Dy rlt~l!f temal •328664 564-7131 tv to wori. undef dMd· 11c No job too arnall JODI Ptesae call tor Ir.. HANEDA DXDXdiNd t Ill--· PJ .. L f 1o: llnet • mulf PrlOr ,,_., RMI Mk:itey !>3&--0~!>1 .. umat., 84?-8748 I •••--... QUICK & CARffUL •:! P9'* HJ* an lldvan· ·-..,." * LO RATE.8, T 138043 J• .._ D • tlf.~I lllQ9 Po.ttlon 11 part Aaphllt-repair-pr111ng IQtl Hou..:i.amno 14 '(f• e11p I {714)875-8178 112 .... 11 *-•"" llfM, 0000 lnQu111M al\d IO't compte,-hMvy rl)llet r"'4iabl• r11e• Ir""'· own Open 7 day..-8 Goodjo«>tdoner r e1ume1 to Ste ve Jo-MS 4280 7arn-Opm trsn• Pina ~·,.oe&e 4-0& 30th 81 Npt 8eeGtl I s.tf torao-Exoerl• Of'AIN8 CLEAR FrOM $16 Hough. Ari Director. Concret•lmu onry •II Hf)IJ8f'CLEANING Prof ... • 't..H--•&.1--· F"euc.MI, OllC)OMI Heel•. Dally Piiot, p 0 8011 typo tr u 1111c d -~ Lr>wfJrl<Af Ouar'd l•I "=11 CLfAN&EXPERT 851-te04M6Md~-O<>ee 1seo. Coat• Meee. Ca Menlnei Co 89!> 7113 Eat II) I l!>'\$18'.l 1.0498 H.., a' llf.1111 I 0.. 2a yMft e•r:;lenCa bpen SeMce ' Repair 92628 R.emoYe MPflelt Ortv._ REf>IDE NTIAL J(lnt R.9t't \t\tHM11ng done r'iQtlf'frl lie. T. t t8•428 30-taS3 32 yra ellP ~'I/Comm llAMl ll&IT wsy., rep4ee9 wl conct'eta A.H f1•t .. No f;b to c A 8 Svt Co 402 M27 ITllYml 111.L.111 LIG 1409038 "4-89 tCI IAl.Y Pl.IT Of'dllb!Odc""' !>39-03'!> io-tamall Mary 4 2-9933 Hto AIC Ref rpn hi EF IJmlrt..,.. •· I All Plumbing repelfa Coe>-aao w ky 8t IN'i llf &l ll&JI SllYMI. Amine AIC aye le 469283 Of9n91 Co OOolNI I* reptpe, wet9r neater• Cotte ~-Ca 92828 coUT &QiNd stJMtf C111t1•1ec.110t1 guar'd .... lemc" St~~' Tneured 111e d, ln-·o 636-WS l)NWweter HuN ci-ntng (,omm l/r..id'I 891 -5741 E.11;;;r.l111 kOU•tb R; lie: T t24-43e 641-6427 NEW/REPAIR OY.llty No MANAGER & Matni 875-739' YOLANDA HOUSECLEAN ~.yea Of remove Ory HEW WW9'10uM Storeo-~ lo amell. r...on•t>M COiiPt..fTE SERVICE SERV R .. a retllble wall Aepa1r1 MT 7001 ~ Jenkt Fr .. "1 · llc'd 631·n45 lmtMdlete ~ IOf tun CMdfMM 6 CMb09tdl •'P'W r-'• 642-0405 1utnctM9 IOndJco;:;;;;c;n m flJt\MI tlfM Ot11rlet MaNQef ,r..,,., Mw11ie MO 444'4 I C..trlf1tfl I fOf ~ At 12 60 per t;;oPMn p~.,(ri Muet .,,.,... wonc1~ wtth •--'--MUSIC LES80H8 Cof· tiout 10 ttv.ln 133-2000 ,..,, • """" • ltt colJsfROefioN .. pl'ofllMOf ~lty Ctrd & Palm PM!, cl'llldten hper enc• d P H"' Remoo11t Addll on• 1 women kid• too /i°"' tala~ Preeent & Future t tr .. ? Mlpful Aou'Type Wtx r~ ' · fS0..21&1 Olene f31-H64 "'O We dQ manu9Gtlpta, 1 122-1131 11c ueoe39 home Qr~• 149-&24 FfRI tRflNd ii; Q . we offer.,, e~1 t>en- m...ing N.i, 9'G 786-3330!C..itncdn PlanolaMOnl e.42-8215 ard etnor 18yt1 ofl'lappy W., ~11 l>l'?ram. paid v•· Art A .. H fCh B•rvlc:• I •·11••--8110n Cle Mu.ique CU9i<>n*'• UC 2aot4<4. mmrmo f900Vet, r•· cation• l'lofldltYI. bonut e.tor• WW.lfnO call for ... LIM A Zecdllnl B A Thtintl·Youl "3-4114 pei(t h01 tar Ille roeti pro0rem •ncl dental ln- bta ~ Mr l104tttna Aft Cornmetdal ~ 1 --L-..I--' MINIOW PAINTING wood. lrM ..f 7&0..e&M 1urt nce 8 111ry plu1 9f6.. I t3el213-374-7544 : "'P«l'Q In Comm I ........ ,..., Ou9ltty 19 tM ~ L J IT--rrrn;r_a mlfMOe relmburwrt tnO I ,, .. eet .......... ~J!,,Llcl6M ~ ... ...,, ..... ,_ A~t mu9t I ,rentclln Aec:tg Taxe•,1 ~em 11e•333924 I 18MAIL'8 O•R~NINO l*IOfl .. o.Hy ::::!~ ftrulnOM ... ,.,.,.,.. Aa-lltttdul MaJnt CIHn us>• TrM ~ ... mt/OT ,, ... ~ w ... ••Y St . Coe1• e1t1t '"'" 001a1n1ng et.CS•t 1 ,..,-,, ,r .. Eat "°"'ea 1e &&t.,.740 Fr•~ 100% 'tnencAna MeM. c. A11f*r t-1 t ltnet ' ~ "46-0345 Pllml ILll'Tm I c.u L.AWN tlAVICe: A A A .. Al I lntl(Jt1 * OUAU'TY WOAK • "' Of 2 .. p"'. (Clrcui.. Suoer1of ()Mc,. ~ ~ woni fr•... Mow..ctoa ~ mo 120-LOWl.IT ~ prtce hecfl CftNle ~ tlon Dlot ) •or al "fOU' Word Proc.-.-j "2S'St oe3-740t 125 14&-8737, e1a-s12e io 1-.P hMce ~.am Phone f13--t122 ~1fi ..rlIR lnQM9dt MM19497 2871 ELECTRICIAN QLAAO()W ,AIHTIHO UC 2014tl ;~:sr11:r~:rii LIC. •233106 '"' .. /lerg9 HAWAIIAN U'llHllf II )() ftnd tl 1frL I ~· r41p4tlra "43 '5203 1 fr .. trim toe>, r~, ~',,,.:' ~ ... rc,. ·~~~'!!"ll"P-"!'~IP.!"!!!f "°"' lfllft a.t/9'in onflt .,.,, ~h rm a.en UP9 l lu s..... ,... ( . on a 14'02 ~-"9nlod'I AdOH'°"9 NFW/AFPAIA Otillltty No M*t ,,..__._ --.., JO IHT/Ul l'AINTltN ,.,_. o-t•. leOUtlty ,.__,, 64 jOtlt 10 It'll ... r~ -......... "--~.... OO«t wtndowl t~ory ..,._._.., t-4MO ,,.,_ .. , llC'd f31 23.48 trM trtm 'r•_..,,..._, ~&Apt AMII r91• pnoee' It•• 'at-162' 8 VIL.0 ()A A(PAI,_ Mt bCrade t45-a3'1 OulMy wort. IM-&7M • Rf~IOt<..oMM'L/IHD 2t WJ.IR tliealet W• ttaw. r~ 11, C>r> my °""' ~ Lie. c-..n Upe• Tr• TrlfnnllnO !HT /IXT 20 YWI bper ':'!r.'1~, 120';°' 1 •?7""4 1 A.1......,121 Y11d ue1n1 •H*AnO ~~..,.,..,., "'°°"'•~~· ~· vwr wlrJO.e c..n1 MIKE M0-32N ...,...not ltUC40 ""' 8eftlOe W"'OOw W-'*'G Ooof• ~ Alt•etlON lnftaJ ltl ""9 ,,.....,,... t42"'°'42 I03 1.-oe • t7M lal ~,~Lodi ... , --IJllim TIDI w.-.i ~ WltldOw .-..ni. ,..,.1. CIOIMl .. Wlndow F.nc. vanou. ~ a ~· Topoed/remowd CleM-fhe bMt lnt«lot P91nf'"O OorfWft'~ a& rr•"P Jetry M2.oM7 j 44-' 178 '°' ~ UC> ,_.I...,. 751-aA71 "'UI N22177 l hU he •UM-7800 . - - I f • P /T lllUTUY Real 1!.ettte AppfllNI Of· rtc.a Pref Wrxo Pro- c.ellng ' WOfd 81ar exp FlexJ!N hrt 873-3772 Enter Now And Win $200.00 of Home Decorating Supplies from VARI-I 17801 FltchA~ lrvlne, CA 927 14 llOPT l lUllllll PIT llOIPTlllllT good drtvtng record • 25 hr1 p.r ~. v«v buty mull Flllng. II tyPlnO. rMI Mtlt• o'11c41, Mon· 1900 mo Starboard Fri. EJcper l>f'ef'd Good Eacrow Corp, 548-7723 telephOM etlquete Mull b9 rell1ble & prM«t11ble Call Joan 83 t 1288 WMtl<~ 1 ti ,\, t 1• I It 1111n11J, PI T 1 girt otflo9 Coii11ruct10nl Oevel09rMnt e1tp pr9f'd, mature, lle•lbl• hOufl 84'2·Mlt 1101naaY P•rt·tlme morning• M·' ~tlon. nung, typing. Ute bl<kpg Small non· tm<>klng otflce Send ,.... 14.lme to Ron Veo F~IA Arcl'lllecl. 500 Jumntne. CdM 92625 r······· Dairy Pilat. : PARTTIME : : OFFICE WORK i : . • • : The Daily Pilot Circulation Office: "' :needa a rl'!liabll'!, rnature and rl'!tpon·: :aihle penon to verify new orderis. NO: :sELLINC : • Appli,·1rn1 mu111 havt' u good phonr• • • :personality . Training will h~ pmvidt!d .: •Learn valuahl,. officf" sk ills, work with• :nicl'! pl'!ople and earn $4.25 pr.r hour to: • • •start! Monday·Frn.lay. 4:]0 to 8:30,• • • •Sat 6:00 to I 0::\() sm. • • • • Plea~ 1:all Eil .. ,.n to si·h,.dul,. an • • • •sppotntm~nt l142 .4:\2 I • & • : EOE : ~··~·~·······~·~f:.t.!~··· Standard Brands Pant Co. ll()Mf (1f U>kATINf1 r.rNTrt1 CATEGORIES ROOM WITH A THIMl-11 your kitchen country? Hos your den gone nautical? Enter your f ovorite room designed around a particular theme. HOllY DISPLAY-Attention Collectors and Hobbyi•hl If you hove dl1played your collection or hobby a1 a port of the decor In your home, thi1 category it for you. CllATIVI PLOOI & WALLCOVlllNG-Non-troditionol v'e of carpet, tile, wall and floor coverim~1 qualify you for on entry in thi• category. IUllNlll 01 OPPICl-0.1ign and 1tyle ore now a nece11ory function of bu1ine11. The category 11 open to off ices de1igned either prlvat.fy or profes1ionalfy. INTIANTI ADDllllt CONTESTS RULES INTERIORS ENTRY FORM NAMlt DAY 'HONI NUMlll1 IVINJNO 'HONI NUMUlt CATIOOIYt ~ ... ,, ... •I• The Oettr , ... , ............ c..., .. , SIG W. a., It. C.tt• .... , CA ~ a •- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT 1WetJf'tJM4/ly, October 11, 1MI !!let lllf W.. !!II !ell 11! ...... llJI .... II ...... HM ,,... '" NII~ 1 • HOUllPLAHT IAL.U PILL Tm •IY ........ Uft ~ • Ym:t ........ , ~-,;;fiii;fpllillrA ... llPl!!l'tlfl~ Pttim. W1tnct1 ArTrD ,.., ........ CLIM '"" °' 'Wt·ttfne .... , Laa. IM ""' w.tlt ·--lbl -~ IMOtWW .., .. I Hr1 • 64&.o210 NITlWI-r '"' RLL.ll ao11Hr ".nlnt eon.."'-' ._ ... "''*'"""'1 141-llll. _,. N1-<>21• Na.. uoo ... 1.., .,.1100 111-DM 0ppot1unlt ... aY .. lab.. scunt\I teat,.,, M02 ~ CQmPMY ll'r~al ,·rr-w~~-...-~~ ~A"T TIMI IALU wfth Lot ~ TllNe f1'M. INcS. C-. MaM 1t11t'*1_..,anoe ,.. ' bper'CI In betW women't ~ Dept. In °"" ~ GMAT WUTl"H IAV· coefnM~ Q11tred LIQlll typing ....... ::~J. 9"/1110111• :., "'::.i~··,~ =tc;,,c;r~ NIN INOI, one Of CllfomMl't 1ct1 Main It. ._.t>oe. uo 7....Wt Hew,perfoond,muttMll. Cen.I "1 ... llU i:o flrfll ...... 1n ~ fOf tmell lllgll • 178/0ay 1ff.tN1 ~-~ ~. ~ [IDM =i. ~ ~ ,.q. C.it etM4~ ua.-•1111111 t&D«IA °"" Ill OMO "'1\IJ.TWWWJ.......... Lono lwf\ 1 ..... eotlvlty offlc•. Good ,,., .. ",.._....' ~ 411tM UVU1 OC>PQt1unlty kw 1 T.._ In ,IT, 1iu-~ IJ'i.U02 rm ..,. 1r..,,ealtt!M-71iiijlf(iiiiijjil-=·~~~ "-llYI ,.... to 9'M Tr11n1~ UNlrV °"' eo.a .._. btancifl M•llLMI 11.WICI ITATIOH-itli I SSLB UXCXw *' Inlet.._ Or C4M ,. ttllln NM. N74200 ~ • ::::=:. : oo-. ~I You ~ lleV9 ~ ,.,, um. owner ~ ettenct.nt AW'I et.won ncs. OOod home lllrtoe °" Mw"*'"81hndcalt1e ...,~~m!~~!!!f'!! .....,1...,l.l•T ( etudlnt1 ~ ... lo PRIZES henctl~n e11p1tta not I Ott •am.ct Hetcl boyt 3190 HwbOt ltvd. CM ' neeot ,,_.. .,._...75 eMta -ffll ... __ , 1 """"M -••• ••--..w...f• .. l =· lllotantlel to ..," 'C: ._ 1 --.~ ... _:I and glrt1 1ot1clt new ---.. 1 J"'i"" .. -It--!"• on1n.... n -•llu1t flavt offlo• .... 'T--., .,._.... ~...,.rlpllont .... their * llM * ""' .. ~" ,.,.., rnele, lll~Ht • UOO/mo C.il .... ..,, "" .. .. .,... --·'°' an TR~ ""'"'Oon and ~ """'I ,.... .... 10 ""'' 171 H1..ot07 ••• -.. perte!IOe, ~ IOwpm, ,,.1, .. " 1ni.rvi.w call H1·2Ht, 1"'1 WtjOy ~ ~bllo paper rout .. Muet .,.ioy 1ooe1 corp hat ......,., '~ . ,..,.,,.... IOA a 41 ii6~rR8 CJOOd phOM mMner Air· .. , • ~ .. .., 1111 1204 OOtttact LIO'lt typing end wortctno wttll 10. tS 'f' op.-.1ng1 even NOWI UI ... Apeo 'UOP4et 10 & ,.., Or ,,.,... Mder H1tb0t ... cranoe 1111 • port trH. • tOOO • -........... ~ "'' ......... .. 10-ltey .,. ,~ I otdl larly ~ hOUf• Mutt fl. .,,IOula1 •• 3 --· O'd. ueo..uoo 6-tprll, ...... t-4PM P""'-leci . 1uoo Iv fNfl 112001mo 5~24'0 1&: ..... ll'IQ 1 p.1im. ITITillDY 1111.Y fl.IT worti Clll'f9/ flew.Ible hr• 'f'• r•. ~ 10 bl 176·7tM ft lia 171.....,1 I06/MMl'2 atn/llln :V..,.::':'c!. ':n.WO: St«a tnCclMWdl..... .......,. w_:,·,:!...:;:~0.,.~: ~~ ~.g:,~~·H• Ill lutnwta Ul,.....t ltloeAV9ll.b6e.2e 2' POlltlon evlll. for 1 ttwp tl\9 llnett Haltm8'1c II«• Ptteon, 'IT. 5 Oey9. >Ont "you .,. IOOlill\o for e111r1 iem oompena.tiOn .,_.1 t0-432 t .. , 2ot 1111 3& 3m W ~ ~ . ..,. .. ,.,,., 10 handle or In ti... u.a. 11 you 11111e wortllng oondt. ~ally .-ndlnU ::n:l• °' •• aoa and ti... ot>P0'1unlt'f , ne.;llllM P/T BMOU "'· compl•f• p..., .. h 1111 NI t -8 Mon.fin vwtecy ot ~·1 otc dut.... high ttanct.re11 and entoy fine o!i«tt•. 116-1010 10 go pi... • MllOIO IOf pereonel Ind rxo-I IUIM llUT l<M.;\~?t ~~~-ptecet Wdwlo' '8' eel iLU o6 ;Ji.,_ 1nctd·o ra·0 11'*· 11 .. vy ::::~=~.....: TILJllllllNI ~:m~:'·~"=-.... .J ~~::=re:=.:= •uPUT .,..~...,1 ~· .,:100 ,,, Deie•, MOOot>o•13 .s...o c..rn .... Z:::u:.~ =-.r:~: cell Julten " 83 1..... APP'flffiiM ~.-pref Awwcsa. c .. ue now1 We In per90tl to· ....... ...2•6717 13 ,, 9oeton WhMt heel eXDm IAitt " Iona tOOll •rand• for. 11'\alt IOI an~ Salary ~!°"""....:....M~~ hWI MV91'81 ~ittiae In OILIVf"V ,, • for Med• cAaWMiCKlT ··--~I~ cond )611p hlnrud• ~email''"'*· wood' oomc>ut• mwketlng llfm -OIL,.~.,:".;111 •·-_., C M . H I or 1. V. llUT WllJlll pwty renllll. full -.,.,... T relter/ooYlf Many 0 wm ~lltlng UOO IOl>o iooated In tt. Alrpor1 Ul.lllM IT.. " .... • _.,.u 23 642..tSD llYml good Clrlylng r•!~ :::ON lll1ttme4 "fo'''e ltlt trN t3000. 76CH)1M c.4tll 64l HtJ •ft lpm .,.. of Co1t1 MM•. Part Time l.aellel' ctothlng TILIPHONI iOLICrl'OA •llU llTllT I r.q'CI M 78 p/hr to e1111. W.-d~ 1422 ITOAAINd iiUdfO uprioM ll"1"AM 21 CIMn 1 Mt-..,.ltt/ Good IMn•ftlt, 11tary b0ut1que 0r .. Up, • ~wort!. M-•1/l'lr ·-_a-•IT IHI, .. ....., lrht Al o ,_,,.,, 642· 11M piano, lllOlllhed (t>ony _.. eQUlpoeCI 142 600 ...... Mii ~:t:1~:. N9wpon8Mch '31-1290 ~~ 131e __ ~::=o-i:~ In .......... llHHf · llUftlf,.... 1111.... a 1200 or 1>911 ofter Pvtpty 780-oe778 ' 'ii HOND'j pa .. jibMf oonte01Cllrt1.H7..0111 ~a-.,, .. ; tauuta L.agune.(213)425-45'1 f~Oppottuntty muetbl tl.prO"lideOWf\ I!=~~~:.·~ 16~32' lalf ... ta ftf4 M O~l!D UOO O I O ' .. m/fr.... _, .... u ... UIY• .... !mP'OyoerM/P'/H lrenec>.caltlCIH1·1M 1 OtMngr«lOfOreqi= 000 1,ntlet .... m ~61600,lf ... 6-'900/D ..... 8th annual ohrlelmN PfO-'' -I ....... w ,..... ..... II .... gram Tec>e •viii lhtn• UI .... /TPIT 1 oNld, .. Cl•y .. w.-. IOOKKllPING ~. lll.MIY/ITlll n '*'°"· ..... """ 21 ....,,., 17-IC)d. llifY9f oono, tully iu•f>C*S Ne Whet>. W~ul Wc..td _a..., •H•-... IYall •••. e dtyt. ~. 7&4-tiii0r1M .. 752t •·2. My hOrM 722-13-42 ~In Pay-Rott,~-. ,,/T lenefttt. Lift 180 lbt Alie, Orll'\08 l>lut "-" .. ulld Pd • 10.&00 eo.aMe.,,. of S t1 o pp1no ttQf'\1 .. __ .. ._ .. ..,., "T PIT Pro.pr_, but lllf& ... all9 •a•.aa•ay ... uruon~1642·90t6 2&00gtel1Col1t-....e ftliiiUlfU..,,.. ~.:Oii~~~"YU&O ol>O •lllTIUl• 1 rour 11ngeru1>9...-yeleyi -..uttfUI ""hair Mlofl wltltreln 414·81711..ag _..,..., --~ I ----Ill only lem to 4 Pf" ~ou -lleefd0f0fl38 Oa11y 1'110• C1an1fleo op•nlng In Newport •-----Orowlngcompenywlbu9y WHIMCA"INO CA"P T LIANtN01 lll'fll. Apply lnC*IO'IMontf\ru --py•a-... C.rult lno Sloop "In• ACle fol)l8G41t<Xi•MI IMofl atM Now hltlnQ NnftMYtwWd Ne . locatlon le lootllng ISTHICUITOM HILPf" lage r I f•peti.noed Demel~ 'Id 1 1 .._ 490 -"' c;aH 64#' ~71 end let• '"" time, mottYllld •• IM LOI A~ Tlmel for • bright energ911C. _., llll'fll amtblll011• Over ,. 111\t '°' Lagune e..cn OI· r •Y """ 0 .,....... ..... (80y9) S76 c;onCI Reeoy •o N II Cell CltMllled Ad "''°' llelO 1t)1191. M111t he11e lull T elemettletlng ofnoe In eml>lllout, rMJ)Ofltlble 0 O O Cl Ip p II r • n c I ltoe 3'A deyt pet wM11 I! 11th St CM 64'·~8 7 '°' de1all1 &48-1330 1ou oH.nt• Cllt '°' Inter· Cot•• M .... With our and hard wonclng pel'ton Poatlng, lronl Cleelc CltltlN ~--93-73 411·ea68 WHKfN08 -------------- view. 122·8 11 t MW eommlNlon eo1i. 10 train ror 04H meneio--a eudlt Computer ••P.· ••••Ill -;-ay llllMI Looker room p111on, --------------, you C*1 ..,n more than "*"' team. Appty In pet• Mlofl;t Celt 646-8000 ext _.. --------FMn'• Club. meture n· laltt H lt 1200 In commtte1on1 and eon w.ct-Thur• 1·6 &20 rrom t 10 4 for 8Mt1 PotttlOn.1 eve1t1ble Apply for Niii, Olub, pert llme etnltr Cell Al 7&2 1900 w-oee by Nlltng only 20 2332 W CoMt Hwy, N I In petton AACO MPIO 71-2807 l.rt~JlM ,. awlllf UUI eubtcrtptlon• per w.-A.a for Jay or v.,... Vo,~!"~ 2 100 I t l<lttOI. Sant• OAtVfA8 CMh paid e11111y a..t tM flnMt outtom )ew· ll'e P<>Mlble lo Mtn more If:___ IS THf CUSTOM Ane Helgtltl I! 0 ! Own tren1 I 10 N PCH f/liry and Swtee WltoMI 10 lhll • 1000 W.-ly Houri ....,. oethler• Legun• IMiotl 4'4·111 t . • national I International •r• fleiclble High tehOOI mllT a.T11 Glleint• lmtMCI poeltlon grtdultM, college llU· .. ...,... .....,,l..,.lf ·~· In unique Newport e..oti «Mntt end Mrtor cltlnnt Tl\9 Ofeng. COlil1 Dally Poeling, lront 0... dut ... la G'O'#lnCI I It now~ Mutt h•~ Met apoMt· llM )9wftliry Nton M.cl .,, encoureoect to 9PC>IY I Pttot I• loOlctna for MIP In I eudlt ComiNter HS* c:Mhlert . pereone It anoe. bflng current OMV l>enilftle. f•C* r.qutttd For en lnftrvlew cell 11, Ad ~ Dept llflliPfut ICSOMble In nu1r1olen I ~oul Apply M0tt·Ft1 "red "--..vef '"" 1,1 ~301 In COOIJl1 IOI • neturll food 23-4 , 1tCNW ,.~. M-. \# .._., ,... • • .,u Retpontlblthlel wllt · ..... ATTlllAIT rMteurenl tf lnt••ttd 6-40:ffi~ '°' manager 644·83'5 SERVICE STATION ctvde plek up end -,.,, time lncld• wtcnct1. In-end witting 10 IMtn end n -an sa ... Pereon FIT or PIT 11""Y 01 •d•. P1illtng terlaol1 wlm.mblr• a grow plMM *fr'Y •• lllYUI WllTll n.-· · tte"h"''· proc.11tng "'2'• • 11 ... c .. 88' I llln. Ovet 18 ,. Old, 1 u llfY, commlMtori ptut Adi. tnCI 1 Ylflely of !JUMI ome eleenlng In• 1 a" '" I. ... l!!xper not '* Wiil tteln no ••l>llf MC e:J.2& 18 ~ti. Apply Cnevron, other dullN Cendlel•t• v0l\40 -••a•• -•n Mu•t 11•119 eoon "-" & 1n1 2590 NewJ>C>r1 81Yd c M ----Cell 1()1 11\IO 78&-tt 12 ---• mutt t>e Hltemef't Of· UllPTillllT For Chrl•ll•n 8ohoo1 __ , .... Lhllt Mlle Muft91 ... on • ganlztd, r~tlble encl Lit• typing ·~er good 18838 8'00llhur••. F " DAV CLeANINO Countlf • ()pc)ortunlty 10 ..," Hire Tullet, along c e m• 1 •1>19 lo worfl W91t with phone tkitte Part time M2·33 12 P1111 & & FuH· Time lee morwy Nlllng 00Utm91 •Pieter end rH d In the othen PM entn lnclc:I 0 t n n Y • I Ir 0 't r o m loodl a gtt11 lor hOllCleye Oelly Piiot Cluellled Send r-..me Attn LIM ' 'wtlnde Ollll CIMnert, CCIM ''-• h" Wiii trtln WMt MC110n el>Out MIN Mui· Smith, to ... IL.... PIT a FIT M11ure a d4t-£A$V A84£MBL V WOAKI cttff Pl&u 642--0972 lt1'• Tu"91 end bought 11 ~ llAIT TY1)ll'IQ &0 p1u1 good 10-P • n d •I> I• E • PI r le()() 00 per 100 Guaten· p~ .no Med peo()le '°' It t& You ce n .... l&I.' Pl.IT key. Mng, ~. bMIC ~/~~~~., w1N~n r~ ,_, Peyment No !•· tnoutd llwrf9 Cf\eGlt lhe your lull•• enCI to•• ol P.I a. 1lll eocto ••P Mon-Fri. l)al1 lor J«ry/Laur• 638-2722 per~/No 8.,.. 0.-~ Otreot In •he 9ther 1111no• •hrouoh • I time tallt Mtld Mll·llddt...O OAILV Pl~T Dally Pllol C1e111fl ed lettl ........ tftJI CeN 64&·8000 ext 520. Find •"" you we nt In lt1MP9d tr'l\1910pe -----Ad• Ctll 642·&e78 Mon-,rl 1·4 8'*1 Diiiy PllOI Clullllecl1 l!LAN VITAL ·9<>3 Aat~n Mii ; i4'tft8 wXNtib 8ronie tlltUM, enttque QllM I furniture, etc 163 ,,13 terty A"'-"Cen 3 Or•- Chet1 2 W w1<M 12? & 0 90 640·~113' Auila.... ..tt I UY Alft.IAMll l l!.8 167·8 1)3 Aeoondlll<>Md AP91llnCM Aef rlgt/W Wier •I Or.,.,• 150 lo l300 1630 8u- perl0<, CM 83 I ·31117 ReltO t200, W..,..,.,ldry« S ti 8 -.at1. dlehwuner I 100 P0t1 cir TV 1125 All In dnt eot\d &4e 6148 Stove, cwen a micro ••111 unll fir .. 1l1nd'g, •oc> cond OOld 1200 &48 700? SYDNEY DMARR Thrtday, ()('&okr 17 AR(ES I Mn rt h ! I April 1111 I v('Ol\ 1,1kc \1111drn IWl\I II\ r1 turnina pr('v1ou' pl11n~ I 1>e.U\ 11n dl\t.rn1r 1.11111.u.i~r 1111,rl m111111 d11rrm1t1t adtu\lm('nt ft'ljuirin" utmtt'lt thplom.H y M onn d111· lr11111 'urptt\C' 'oun(' I 11uru\, I 1hra pc-1,011' play 11ut,t.i mhni 111lr\ TAUR lJR IApnl 21)..M a> 201 't cn1 pm\C"'' "l•lu .. nlr 1nf11rm.1111111 know 11, don't \C'll your\C'lt \h11n I 11< u' 1111 hd11111I ""rnn m.111n1\l'f\ 1nlt'ft'\I 1n thr <>« 1111 u1nt'11 I w11h nor wh11 rlr\Hll'\ '""' m11r.ilr You're du(' to r('1r1H Im rn11vr 111lrr GEMINI (Mu} ! I lunr •1!1) I 111ph,l\I\ 1111 ,1d1kd 111r\\1Hr d('adhne\, f('\pcm\lh1l11 ~ 1n1rn\ltird ltt\C-rrl.1t11111\h 1p I r lf,lll 11\Utlrl\ r ould dorn1n11tr I mphu"' "'111.i11" 1111 po'"hl< 1111111 .-11011\ 111.1111111 \UllU \ CANCER l lunr .'I Juh :!.1 lon1"o1n)'r 11111,r1r.t' '"m<" '"'" \harp , clear fot U\ W 11rli prn< ('du tr\ <1rr 1 l.iriltril 1'l<1tr11t 1.1I "1111tltnr1l Romantic 1n1r t r\t\ 111tr11\ll'I' nwr.111' "m" 11\ rnult '\ttr\ I 1hrn na11 v('\ li1ur(' pron1111rnll) r-------------------------------.. --... ·--------3418 Enl8'Pf'IM Ad, "' Pi.tee. FL 33482 --•IUUI ANT!O Good pey GOOCI LEO IJ uly2 l·Au~ 2.11 I111 ph11\l\nnl!1""''r' 1l4•\\1hlr1r11vrl .a11d randta11 .... ""nrw IOV(' .. \pt1tli&h• 1tl'41 •Ill \llrt lll.1111111 1111lrp<"n1lrnu· I rra11 v 11~ 18186'1 ah1hly 10 1mp11n1'1'•1ur1.v.n '''Ir \.\.rh111nr lrnh 1rn11 q ll\ \tr('\\ ' - I I "J tt ·~~~ & "' ~J ,y ......... Crafts~ ' ~ .,..~~ r. ,.1 ,) "°"'' Call Robbie' I Rao & Moc> 541-0751 .......... Room end bo91CI I Nll'Y 8P9P !'.ngllel'I, 11all0 Orlv lfl llC ~. required Call lor ec>c>t MM1'4 LOOM Culf\IOn• I 11r1~1nah1 y and PHIO('l'rlnR \f>Hll 1v.;;{ ~4~11~E VIRGO I Aua ) \ \.c.-pt 12) I 111111--. 1l1111111th 1111 111,1 1111p1r\\111n' &4 I mpha"' on home-.\('( unt.,, tamd'y rd.11 111n,h1p' \<'11" 111 putpov 8Mul 4 Pc Sole Group, direl'llOO Wiii hC' f("\lllrr(! I ,("all\ h\ trad111ll( C dlH r1 { 11111ll11111 Httlltone C()loft mull Aquar1u\ pt'f\tlO\ pl•y llorn1n11nt rolr' -l#'ttl RCA --~ Colo< LIBRA l\.c.-pt ! l < »t 1 ~ .11 I'" er"h 11 .11 h hn11ntl c IH rrn1 f\/ 1~169~4 cab pro\l)«I\, IJVI' (ult pfa) 111 tnlrlln tual 1 """"" I mpha\I\ 11n H•r>' v1\lta. lonj--Ol\tanc(' \all\ l<rli1t1"r 111 lr.tn\ln1t m.11.r , 11n11\11,1 I rr~1Jr\I l.1110-Ct\lf'rywooo 1r1p1e dr-M.'ORPIO (( )\ t 2' Nn" ! I l I >rt;itl' unn" rl 111 11111111•1 t111n v. 11h 1 ... -a_... wllh mlHor, ' nll• 11end1. ti I u. I • I • •-•• 6 drewtw c~•. d cond 1n11nt 111 manruv('r r..-\p('1 1 11 { hrt .. 1111 h11l11r11 '11111'1.('' < 111111< 8h1n1 for Newport 8eeGh h A h 1.. 1· Mo rning I Afternoon IJ&Olt>et• offr t , 8380 ~l\11('"111n\ l<ral11r ~1>1.t 1fluld he-u11vr1tor1111r wh11 wi111t\ \11111r thtnM Spor11nQ HouM ,,... '°' C , or n111 1n1 , not r r "'11rp111 1111rc·' 1n "rn..1 1111 '------------------·------------------~--------· R)Chor~evt782-0&M :::~~~.1~1-'111 1 SAOITTAIUUS IN11v !.' r>l'1 111 \111111l111r 1l11111"h1, nprr\\ •-c.ot'Cl &&O Bet>y crtb~ 1dcaa. reah1r you om mltlir \l&n1l11.an1 tf.<1111\ 1l110111<h "'111tr11 wo11I Trt.Cllem llllLl-lllllTI Smeno.... 1211 640 ••H Mcmhc-r of u J)po"lr v-ltaurr\ p111m1r11·ntl~ \(rn.11 11• l111thh1hh Arta, Crafta & Boutique• Will appear again on Wednesday, October 30th and November 20th Call 642-5678 to place your ad or for more information • UPlC&AU. Y YHIS • Hend.Crafted Qlfta, New 9th I tOfh, 10 llm· 7 pm, 1111& Sent• vei.r. 81 , F V (~OM etreett Magooll•& Talblr'I ) 141·2241 G1N11~ G10aorrrn I, I n A M I (, ~ 7•• t 0 (j Blvd 8'>11• 0 0.,dell OrtMt 9114 4l41 cws ,._, r;c.. lele , NgNt I -o.m ~ (~ "frtlW ,, ... .,, ,_ P""9C" r')U ,,. _, _.,"'<J hl.,..,. Ar1.t 6 Craft.a 6 CHARITY Wtn•td by 0 C'1 nneet <h•nlC. t"Xl 1tcmrnt. lruvrl. v:mrt'I' V1r1t11 pl.i-,, ro1lr Ltqald Embroidery MrVloe L1t meo 953-8339 1 eJ llY ,.~~,33 CAPRICORN II >rl 1~ J:rn 1111 I am1h mrtnhl"t l11t1l1dn '\('l trl , .... 'hrW>t '°'"' A l • MllU l fk d1plo ma111, d1~1('rt I 1narll 1al 11111\JW't I' hrttr1 1h.111 11ri11.111.1lh 8outllemClllf &OC n 1que L1t1ny·1 Heir Salon A "lOFAB&EtOrlfHB!lAECNlOJIOAN 11nt1<1p11trd \11u'll tW' pr11,11tr1I '"-tlh 11111lulr1111.il d.11.1 '"'° '''11111 lw· CLA8H8 A\/AILAILf L I Cell .... ~2 Pllo•ogrepf'\1(; SludlO SACRIFICE 11&0 ii\&('( to JlllO 11n 1~u(' 11rgan11 .. 111111 li4tl ....... a.r-.o.-IHOW a IAL! Hew Modetl, WOfT*'I ., ,,.,633 3948 •n.-flme AQlJARllJS IJnn ]0 I rh I IC) I >rlrnr 11'1111\ rr11l11r \1111 .111• '" 1T.-.11Tm'9-"Ttlf: tO;RITAf,fo'. ~:&.~~23.~1~ Lenn}'. Roi•. 1011_.1 enalr 1001 11r1 vr r ·, VIII ~rn11n11 l11~hl11tl11' 11111111.ur Kl,111 111111 ··~111.-1111·111 ol •••• Nev.r u..a (,otl 1ll'"11vrr\ You 1111<' 1111 k\ 111111.1111"1\111\f\4'•111.111011 \Pll II hr .11 111hr llllfltlll C.OU.F.<:TION~" 1 766 ..i1121ti no Mn8 plntr •;Kll<'l 1AI rno mrnl Arfl I Ori~ Oct. 11-11, Noon llTtl "Jnla & lov-• Ilka,_ Pl ES H rh l'I 1\.1.111 h '111 \p<tll1r h1 "" .11rr1 lt11\111r\\ ~ llm 1700ot>ot83/6!111 prl'\1181' \tand1n1.i1111111,1K'rl\ 'l•1ullt1r."l 1il111111rr1.tr.11ll1111 "'"1l RXHl91T HALL pr('"Ur(' " on «itllll 1111.1111 ,,.1 1rv. .1111' • .111 hr "1tr11l1• .1111 I '" r Nov Ill At 19, t -.4 pm I JO I ">""""''" A.,.. T IMO n 1'-*ror...i ._ .,._,, .,,. I 4'.tlo,._ ... I Dl!L MAR 11ellet>I• In Newpotl Welnu• din rm IOI,'"'-• rrl1t111n\h1p Rl llW\ ~ll"llft<'I ( 111111111111 pl.n' t11p 111lr ,"'l•Q•OUNDI l'••t h r: •pertenr.e arm c"~1" fupt1nl• -••l 11' fM1'()ftf':R 17 IS YOI If\ RIRTllhA \' '"" .11 .. "11111111 111.11 ~"" preferred , bul nol ll&OSpelmptenll#'Oln neoeuary Mu••h•v•d• tl••k•I #17131\00 1ntrnv. 1np11hlr o t hu ndltntt 11'\flnn\ll>tl1I\ \1111 "''"l "I'll 11111!1·1 PRl!Vl!W NIGHT pendebMI "•neporte tlon 'Wf'\lrlpool wun.r A l)fytlt prn\lllC' .11r 1 apnhlr 11! 111rrt1111t r i..11 I 1h .. 11ll1111'\ '"" .11r '".'"''"1 Oct. 10 end be o..., •a 'fM'• Old v11i.1no -•no met,11 Pen prr"" 1rnt 1111111 o f thr "''\. .111.t '"" 11npr1111 "''" ''"'" '' Ir I .111111\ Ch . t ltw I •·· PATIO/ eom. •o .,.,. n s mas r....!:~· ARTS • CRAFTS (1111\f llllllllAN I lllJlf II Bauar & fiak( Sale , ...... , ,,. 0r . c.. ._ SALE C-Ou~~ .Gl.Oi~ Nov 17th & 141h UU s.t 1 •4 ,_. , ) 8 e m Ii r>m " 8•• Nov 2. 0 em • pm Our t •<IY ,,, "'""" & ... Allcllll Harbor Christian Churc;h 1eo \/lctoria. C:O..• ..._. Mount Carm.tt Ch1m.t1 0c;111~r 11v1nt Av•nut. Htwport litt(h 'OOd, ""'· P''-, !)all• .,_ I« I w Rell)" .. OIWI Nh ....... m r--......... S1lurd1y, Otlobtf 16th '°'i.,., ....... Old ,_, r-~--~-~--4--~~-~~-~--l------~----t-"-"'-·-------......1 C/iriJlmaJ lt O llfl Oll l MIRCHANTI l'loeoe 1v1111 Church pr 1me loo Nwpt lk:h Ocrt 2811'1 f0t1I &tuner 646-tot2 i-1u. ......... '-~· ..... -..-.. C.tlARITV BFNI f tr •1111 Not H <1 1 I p1111 '"" '*>• 1• II ""I ""'' \1 looH him P11 hl1 llall , ... nr,.., .. C...•-._.. __ , __ fS pm-t pm s.v.n dey o.11~ with lak ,.,,.,.. ..... l'fV" ( Urll l"I ( llJ>lll 11111 JK'l\1111\ pl.I \ 1111pn11.trll fOlln Ill \'1111 ltfl' \ •111 .llf' no c.ollectlng Cell Oalty wrn., fraah 1 ompec.1or f,1\t 111111rtl h\ I.iv. .11111 ~1111 vrm 11 tn\l.1111h I•. 1,. "''" 11111 to'' 111\lll r Ou111e n<1tno o .. .., •. eppretaalt, pr•lhOw l.ctur .. a.n.ftl lor .ctucatl<>r1at grOW1h oppor1unlt ... Information (619) 294-9466 Adml11lon $3 .~0 (S3.00 w/ad) J Piiot IOAM 4PM Mon M•k• ()lttN IHl1 141Wl l"\J>rt tnlh for lhr uiulrrdoll It ""II.Ir '"" , 11111.i 111,111 , llil\ \rt11 d•v rrld•y &4? 43:\3 IAN l1Q1Jr S '' 1 act l)("1rmlw-r will hr ynur 11111\t 111r11111111hk 1111111111111 l'llC ' NlJH8fAY lnt.,lor d., tier.k 1 r.r. k Ing r 1'11 Plenlecape Me1n1enen<,. I C.ae>• d••k 1"111• fl•"•~ 648·96811 Ir on• "ll'\a11111u 11and ---------....... 0119'• 111) 1411'\ IPtll'r.TY 'ORAPFRfq ()II WPlll• Men or Worr'Wllfl wnh de j ()pequ• 8 J !•1 114 I 1>8"d•ble cere wented '°' Aoo111:> tW t I'\ i11•1 O•lly Piiot rOIJIM In Hun• I for all ~•'i 1'44• lngton Hetl>Ot I s -11t<111g oak f'\eedt>oerct l 100 Beech ll'H Some oolitic: (.rft> IM> 871 14111 tlon• 1n11otved Cell "" Rro&d••OCk &42·4333 Many llem• •o dllP'lM nll Xlnl r.onl'I q.. 1r I f'\avt1 wflel yf>U ~ 11411 «M SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS After School - Student Jobs! Do You Need t Caab t And A Good Job To Start TM Nr• VHr' I. - -TODAY'S ~ROSSW~~ PUZZLE AC --088 , .. "\I . 1t,."...., uath lfl •• , ••••• ,. •• u,., l .. ( .,.,..,.,,,., .. ," I"'• A• t•1 Ir, t•1~A t 1 '""•' /I t IH' : t ~ Uf'f ft .. t tltW• •. "'·"'• •'""'-J \ 1• .. •0 Ufl tt1• '"'n 1<4 h•...,llft•• • ••; 1 '"1 .. .,t lnoy .. " ./~'f h1og lime ti We+(lhh ,,, 1· .. -~ • ' ''"'''f\e'y' '"' fH•..-mo na1a111 t-. Clf)tnt"a t• Ir\ II• 1111•• t I f111 ••1 h•evlfo; ,,_ u ..... ''"" tU •• ,, .. hea v9f•tt 40 .. lf •• fj •• . '." .. , ... 1n•1teff1 4 i t•t•w • h••''' .. ... .., .. ,..,.,' . ,. ""'"' ,., .tr1 "\wu,ct._• <tV l ao•'•' •1• l a t¥1• ' , ·.11 ... , •• :l••tl . •.. .. .... . .... u• "• .,. f '"''' t "'"' ol' f 0ttfU ~ ,, ..,! "'1H •••v,. '' '" .. , .... ,,._, • 't "" , ..... , DOWN ttuuhfu11111t ..... ,.,. .. .. t ~ ,,.,~ ..... ,, • • .. •ailty iN•ttl '" ,,. .. • ····•1'4'' 1 Afn1y \fl' " ..... •t•ft• v ', .. ,,. t•lt111•1' 10 M • •• "''•U• I It W e• Uh't 11 Ah•ft•f , , , .. , •• t 1llli I •'"• tllth~•• IV •1...,-t\ l•••I• JI ...... _ J 4 I n< ~la1I• JI\ f -~· , .. ,.,, • J(I null 11••' 'Jf r teoc ~1, 1t, 1• tta u1 ""'' ,,., l'tll 'llOU• ~Vl 11 I 101 VI D . '. 'I I t , .. .. . . II I ... II .. ·~ .... ''I I i i I ••• • 'J' 'I "• •• • ,, t •' .. .. ft•I I .. t •• ,,,. ,, .. I I QoleC DAILY P•LOT /Wed . Oc•ow 1e. 1Ns It• ..... ...... IJel Mt.JC lllQTIC( NI.JC NOTICl MUC lllOTICl Mlle lllOTICl Ml.IC !!IJICE CHICK IVl!-.ON • .........__... .. _ • "~·-. ---.--. MO...... 'tCTl"OOU9 ~II rtennout .,_., .Lu ••• ILI IOtflle, Oft Novem'"' I , fMed In Orente Coutiry on NOfllTHWUTlflll.Y I.IN • -,.,__,, ...,_, ... .._,_ ~ l'fAnmwf NA111 ITA1'D9Jff =d:.'~="'en:~ Apfl~t~~ 020 P.~ri~~J~~~ :::~~= et:V~~lf*~ :=: TllelOlio.ingl*MNlf• rtte~~~ 1111 elWlw..,_,~,...11.-.... eemout Of~ 1100 ....... WUTllllY 12IO' IT°' Mettn. -,.,~1119 ~~~W=-:tt: f::~'!i.U.J::: ~IW'°fU 1NC . Me f'()fl H AUDI l HIVMOUf ., .. ~· ·~ 9"49 ~....: l\alN..:.:.,: Pof1o:"1 .,<;,:.·=CM\ ·~~~f:T11 THtfll.,fllOM ~CA t21ot, -TION TO VACATt AON, ,..,,,;.,.,,..,, .. , e>o... DI . a ero ....... Me 200, HR-· oonwftlf...,., ;_-;,~ pu• brMI 1 tOo, ~ All Otl OAI ANO OTHffll louth It .. llMa Ana, Al.I.IV HO,.THlflll. Y II :~ ~ .._,., CA l>0'1 ~· l~~=-"°" AU-Ullll LI.Ill " .. 'Vfll'THI" o~o .._,.. CA oie.o H Y o ~ o c A " • o N CA 12101. =:.• ~ =~H ~l.l:T'= ANO Johft A Ott,~ 460 i a1111f111d Pl • N•wpo1 t 'f1•1•11·1Ml lhlt l1le CWll Of !Mt Court Jotl~ M HWN. 4320 IUUTANC~, ~K M: ~r::z.o 3272 ' 1,, .... ADAMI ITIWIT AHO HT· &wr~ Ottv•. Coton• Del 8-dl, CA 02el0 """"'" Qv.11111 a.i. ....... w. CHIC« IVE8SON UHIVll'llTV ~~flOflOt:::-~~ ~~.:;:; ...... ~,t,. THAT MAY Ii lenOMoo.'c.02101. ,,....7 TINO A OATI '0" PU8LIC M~hlcA:2~~~ ,. 'on ,.;:"~ ~~ Ol.OIM081Ll/HOHOA Tommy llOYel. , 0 JaMM ,ii IMlt. M O , 'fll00VCIO '"OM IAIO ltreet Of 1111 Golde n HIA"IHO • u:,, WW:rvtctual a..Gh CA HMO ' .. "'.... lk>W 'ti. ydolte, Oltla-4320 Catnpua °'' .... '100 LANO. TOOITHffll WITH lanl•n. o.n. l'C)Mt, CA WHI~. ,,. Cl~ di:~ Ollranc.MCO Tllla buelnee. It con· llWI lloma, not 1eM tllatl 10 c:1..,.. N4wpoft a..ct., CA 02te0 THI flllQHT TO a..1~~~-~ t262t ....... ~-.. --.. ~~ ~-~"'. t:'vacete 1111 Thie ettl~t w•• ftle<I duci.d by a c.otpotlllon '4S t-C oe•t It ... ., N•wll')fl S..wh 673-0900 "' "''°' to the llMrVIQ d•t• Tl'll ~ w• oon-THfllOUOH ANO ....,"..,_ Tiie --name -_, .. ,_lV Coo Ci.tll f Of Hal h Q long ,,Mldenl , .... 1A11 11 le 'U"THlfll O"OffllfO ouet.!s by 1 genetal pettntt· IAIO I.ANO ANO TO by Mid trer"'4w0tt at Mid unnemff tl~t ~l~CI :~':e"counlyn::n ~t~t>er fl\1: etatemlfl't w .. 11190 U60 HAAIO" •l VO thet • ~ of '"" Otoet to IC> ""00UCt ANO TAl<I I AIO location II l<•tt•nb1uo northerly of ,. " • " 27 tH& Wiii\ 11\a Col.inly Ci.ttc Of Of COSTA Ml!BA e110w c.... be pul>lillMd In thte t1tttmet1I we.e ftl4ld Otl , ciAI ANO OTHI" Mtrlne, lllbot Mtrln• ~. bet__,, ':"" 11..t · . 'tenD llllQ41 County on 8ec>tem1Mt ~"'40 The O.ily PllOt. I~ 'Wllh the Coun1y Cltttl of ()r. H '( 0 ll 0 C A A I 0 H H.,dw.,t, end Kettenbutg end~·::· ::.. io. Pul>ttel..O Or~ CONJ n tH& "::;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;~! Of oenet• ClllWl4111on, pub-t t1ge Coonty 0<1 8ec>temC-8 U68T AHC!&. All. MIN· Mllln9 lhlt> flleollr WH • = O Pl 0o bet 18 23 ' ,_,.,.1 Pl •PONTIAC '17 2 d Vwi H"*I In Co.ti Meta, C111. 27 tH& l "ALI ANO HOCK IUT Th1t Mid ""' trWtlfw 11 C.tlOn of 1"9 to be . Illy 101..__ ': IH& · ' PuDffllhec:I Uf'111Q41 Coeaf PM~ ... 012. •It cond.I , IOlnl•. IOI~ ..... !Of PuDIJlll\eCI Ofano• Coeat WITH AIQHr 01 I U"IAOI Intended to .,. oo,11um-~ It deo/W,~4"'<::' 30. Novem...... . w 1)6 Olllty Piio t OctOl>lt 18, 23. ---~ .... "'l.!!l!'IP...,...,• ... ml on~ -... , 1 "''· """"' ' "'9 -• ,_ _,,.._,.,,.. """ .,,., o,o._ tt, 23. !HTAV, 10 AIOVe DI· _,,. ot I"° -ol. '""" d<--'::';' ·~ p ;H. 'JO • ._.., 1. ttlO I ! I .. ~• uaoo 100· ' , ;r.'.';1W" ,_. °"" .. "" '"' Nt I" '-"'o M >O ... _.., t ttH ICRIHO LANO A8 Al· i & 1-. eot '°"" """'; L. "~ ' 1 C<~ ol . W '28 • • •---p ..... ~ .. -·75 9 14, bltl/ltYr, I the petition · w 137 SERV!O IN A OUD V< , AY9 , Lot Angelw, CA 900 t Worll• .......-•"*" · , PllllC NOTICE TNe _.,.,. wftfl pit , .,._... Oiled OCT 1 1916 f.CUll!O D'f CHA .. L.ll A I Ott Of •fter HowmC-'· ,._port leedl, l llAC:ihed .. ... c., ti.el ..,. ale nu Cltc;ti, air• C!leen Mutt "8.IC NOTICE ...,.,.... ......... ....... POITl!VIN AND NILi. M tH6 E•hlbll "A". Ind 1" rtc:TITIOUl llUIMH "8.JC NOTICE ~a,,.. ,..,to0cm Miil 1390067~·1879 ., ""'~ c...n l'tlll.JC NOTIC( POITEVIN. HUHANO ANO TllM 1>u111 1r1111t• 1• tut>-OOfJ>Of•ted in th1• R4*>I NAMI ITATIMINT .... T 41111 J Chrlale>ph« Woodw.,d Wl,f , ANO flllCOfllOIOJ .Itel IO CaJllOtnl• Uniform utlon by ,.,.,enoe, Ind The l()llOwtno P.,tt>n• .,. ,..... ......... COAIT To)'Oll Co10ll• 12 4 NOTtcl cw AllOt'My '°' l'e11tl0nef, 106& NOTIC« °' IAI.& f[l .. UARY 3, tH4 IN CotnmetcJel Cocs. 8ectlon WHfRfAI, •1>911donment dOlno ~ .. RIChat<ll ~, ....... __ ,,. docw, EAc.el eond, IO ml, TMllTll'I IAI.& N Mlln • ., .... 6vll• 11 18. O!'T"!!'-v!!.°", .. ~?:Y 8001( 6IOt PAQ 200 Ol•&106 Of the IM.lbje(!t ...... w~-· 81111 0 1rd•n•. 311010 [ -,.._....,, 14t00, c:all 720-1080 T ....... •1fn 8"111 ""'· C A t 210 I .. .. ..... '. -0 , J'.ICJAt A!COAOI Tl'I name end edc:lr-of condition ot llppfOVll. lo ,..._ CONI Hlghwty. COiona Del ,ICTtTIOUI llUIMll NAMllTAT .. NT H24Herbor Coet1M9a ~AWTNOTICI PuoOthlQ O•attge C.0..1 C ... No P1oq11 More commonly llne>wn tne pereon wltll wllom tubCIMllon 707 ( •VV'-M1t,C.At2M3 ...... ,. TO ~ftTY OWHl"1 Diiiy PllOt Oc1ot;et 9 tO :?3 Sui;ertot Court o f lhe 11 6 12 ~ AV911Ue, Seel C1e1tM mey be "'9d It L.,ty Lending PrOjlCt), 11\d Cou Salt .. L A.Illy, 11 W Yale YOU AAf IN Of f AUl T )() 11185 ~··" of CllllfOtnl• '°' the S..C:h CA 00740 'F Miiiet. 2110 C111eton WH!JllfA&, the Cur 1.AJUn I~ trVlfl• CA 11n 14 M21 UN()(A A OHO Of TAU8T w.ooe U>unty of LOI Ang411M T .. m. Of .... c..n In·-· au .... 8111 Oleo<>. Cellfornl• cJI of 1"9 City of Newport rhie DU•ln•H I• c:on 0ATl08 f PT 10 1911,UN· lntn.tMtlter oftheMlall lul mon.y of the United 021ot and the IMt City tor 9elGh h .. c;ontldefed tl\e <IUC.ledby 111 lndMCluel 71 '°"'1 P U (12000) l !&8 YOU fAl(f AC Tt()H .. _ .,. W\TIC( of HAAOl 0 f HAAWOOO &ttlM on ,onlttmttlOn of ltlll\Q c:laltna by 11r1y creOttOt vatlOue eiemenl1 of Ille Gen Sallie I ,_ny lhe IOllC>Wlng peflOnl .,, d()jf\U t>olln.ta .. ,.,, in .. lanl Pr... •1011. "80-C \ HatbOr tMd Coela Mell, CA 111428 Wteft •• ~ ~ TO P'llOT(C I YOUR PAOP l"UIK.n. nu D.e;MMct Mi. or C>lll1 CUh and t>e'-lhall be Oc;loblt 31, 181& •II 1'1111 Of lhe City of H.-fl'llt etalem«11 .... lllec:I (82,480 toOMhlf). With fRrY IT MAY 8( !OLD AT t40t1Ce It "-re«>y given lhll enc. IYl<*leed by l\Ole M wf\l<AI 11 the ~ day POt1 8MGh ptlof to ~lat1ng will\ Ille County Clerk Of 0t ... ..... 5 Run1 A PUBLIC SAlE IF YOU ··-~ ... c--r 11\e uf\d9feion.s Wiii Mii II Wied by rnot10IOI OI !full belO<• 11\e COlllKlll'lml tton lte lntenl lo Wactl• lhe Ille>;, ang.e County Ott ')~'"""" e new olUtct\, .,.,,., • Nf fO AN f XPLANATl()H ........ ....,.. ..,.... pul>llc/prtv•I• .... on OI deed on lhe propeny IO dal• ~ •t>O¥e and 30 1H f> Rten11c:t A l uld4tlwf0. ~o Anctr-Ot l • Palma. CA ~23 NO<ma l luio.tWeg, 6306 AnOr-Of l • P11tna. CA 11()&13 • IN!lt• ~ OF THE HA TUR( O• fHt !!!c~ ... ~ .,,., Octot>et 2& 1816, ',' tOld ren pere.n1 of emourtt Oetec:t Ocnow te. 1tH WHf;RfA8c. It II 111e,1n1en1 • ,..,.. 74 aft• 5 30c>fn PAOCffOtNQ AOAINS l ....,.. .. ...,......._.. the Mflf" Of 8 tell LIYlne bid to be depoejted with bid. WMttatlef Clt')Nfel .. ft, Of the City ouncll o r• PullillllleO Ota1'09 Co.et -----.._..,.. YOU 'fOU SHOULD CON ,~ fHI COUNTY &oollman n 7 WMt l tn Bl buy., lo eAewte IQIMmenl .,1 0..... ~1. VIM Mf\te, 11\d ace.c>t trom Ille Oalty Piiot OctoMt 18, 23. Ml ... TAC T A LAWYf A OC' 0..ANGI l <>e Ang411M, C.A 900 I 7 10 lft fOIM ~ICN to Ctty of ,.,......., lftleftdNI Tr.,... vec1tlon Ille public -w .. 30 Nuvemt>er & Hi&& Jo Anti Leebe<I. 630& An dt-0t l a Palma CA ll08'1J O.J VW rs::= Ven, '°" On °'1°'* 23 19M 11 t.11y Of IMn. • Crier!., tile nigna.1 and ~t b1Clc:let, a..i Beach ~"""'"O IC· ..,.. HMment over, on i nd w 1 us -...,_,._ 10 00 A M G A r EWA ( Clly of lhe 8tt1e Of C.att and euOjeCI to C0<1llrm111on e.t• to utllllllt In ..-nent Publtlhed Otano-Cout unct.f 1119 Ille'(, anct gone, tOO* my mon.y, I ANO 81AVIC( IN(, .. f()(ttlt "'° Ille trvlne Pubtk: by H id 8uperl0t Covn ... 1>4tnea1'1 flructure Deity Piiot Ocnober 1e. 1tl& WHl:REA8. the P'090Md ----------but 111t Piii IUrf/llll ven. d uly a ppo1r1tad T•u•I•• ~1W.,IN1i.t 11\d lntr111ruc.1ure 1ton1. 11111 and lnleo<•t of aid• Of Ott•110 be tn w.11 w. 138 vae.tlon 11 conductad PllllC NOTICE Thi• but1n•u It con du<;tld l)y G<J par1n..e Jo Anni~ IOo*.a & rune gfM I, IYWll ufldet and pureuenl 10 o..ci AulhOllty, an 1nelrumen1a11ty Mid d~ •I time of •no •nd wttl be rlGllYec:I 11 pureuant to lhe ptOvltlon• of --.:...::=:.;;...;.;.;:~.;.;;..-- ""'· e7)-1070 °" t6 tff2, .. •n•I ... (I v• lfll., •• , lhe "'"' h .. a(I time .,,., ,,,. ltrtt e>ul>ll Ml.JC NOTn.«. -~. and s.,vtc:e e... .. ..... ITATl•NT .... M•e of'et Wkdye m of Trull reGOtded &lplam r1I the Clly 111 lrlllt,., l'lalnlltt1 tlealll anc:I a ll right 11111 a110 lt\9 1I01Mald <>ftlce II any irr the PubHc 8treele, High ,ICTITIOUI •Ull•ll • ml! '73 Tr•..._-... t2 324427, of Offlc:lal ~ tlf P .. tot11 lnt.,MllO tn d lllOnally 11CqUlt9d In and to 1.allon l\efeof Ind blofOtt I • 1 -"'41t11e lltea llOll Lew (8ec. rile IQll()wtl'\ij P4t'ac>n• lfe Thie eta1"'*1t •u ftltd wtlh ,,,. County Clerk of Of •no• C:ovfll y Oft Oc:100. '· 111110 """"'9 ...._..,_, tfkA of the ma Mallet 01 th• Valldtty 01 all the certain reallpettonal 1 01 • -rlOnl 8300 e1 ~ of me dtJlng 1>o11n ... u C A r a ... 200. 3eO enci. nn jt:?~ty ~o!., OI Or the l•au•n<A of noH O-t• tiillf-ty P•QPer1y 111u11ed Jn °•0~1.0• ~tobat 1 '· tH& NOTtcl TO 8trMt• I H10hw1y1 Coct• or PAJlnlf!'R8HIP 014' 8<11•• pelnt, euto, 1 Ion, rune County S itt• ol Ct1M0t"r. CAeO 1110,400,000 PMClpll the (,oonry Of O r1nge, 8t••• OW.Ill ~,,.,, leq.., CMOfTO..t.,cw 1 ,. the 81111 of C1lll01nl1/ Ava, 11<., w .. 1mt•11fet, t.A -... • 1180 5'1·1110 AICHAAO J AMQvnt or 111111 .. l'ubllG t •. OI C•lllotnll, Plll'llCUllrly d•· I ..... ·~ * 9'Jl" TfllAH NOW THl!Afr0 "1 flf If D:.ttiti'I ,..,_ Pul')ti.hect Oiange Coett lJellt flllOI 0<.IQl)et 18 , 23. :iO, ovwnbet &, 1886W·128 • nm,FOllD, TIYOTA 1111-YAll :~~~.by an unmerr*' e11111.. 1nc:1 1n1r .. 1ructvra *"'''*' H IOflOWI, to wit ~= ;11.,.,.. ll~MI, <'-· 1101 .. 107 A£80l VEO by the City Ty Huu Pt11m , ISM 1Or-•1---l'tlll.J---C-NO--Tl-C_{ __ man, WILL SELL AT P UBllC Aulhortty 8"Mie 18811 La ... l Or 494'. fra<;I NO 1191, u #'Z70 LM .,...... CA U.C.C.) Counc,il ol tha Clly Of Hew I/alley I 11 . OatOen Orove 0 ,,. ••T BIO Rlv1f1u. 6ond• (CapHlll Im ~ map r9()()(CJed 1n BOOll • ' Notlee te n.<etr; given to POt1 Baach thtt rn. ume ano CA 11264 I I AUCTION T HouHsoo provament PtOl.Cl•I. H <'II I Pagea 4 II Ctl MtlC too?t , ....._.. credllore of lht wllhln pl11G41 lor hearing all pereon• Ovang I Nguya.1 841" 1:,: ~O~~~~~r=.:; authomaa Dy RaeQlutt<>'l Map• 1n ,,,. (>If~ 01 the ~~~ ,... .,. naMe<J tran•f«Of(•J '"" • 1111., .. 1.a in. or obtec.ttno Htllneatf l>ttv•. 11u1111no100 a1" Down 48 Mo•, Cao.d end c;omm'I I ... OAC 8 I t the NO 8() 102 t)f Iha Cny C.0...n C.wnty Hac.<1<d.. ul Mid _,.: .. ...__.......__,~, C.& bulk tra11•l11 '' al>Out 10 btl IO the pt~ 111MAllOn of O.et:h C.A fl:?64~ of '"' U"lled 1 • 1 • 1 c:" ... rh-' "" ,., '"''"' C•ll !'-=....._,ya-... •· · · made on t>etaotill 1>'09efly 1 .. .:.. .,._. d_,,t__. on "aht1>11 Cam 1 nt T, en t •8 1 1 Honll front entranGe lo the " "' ·-"" ' ' C.rNnty -........ _.... d lbec:I ·-_, ...,... .., " C.A C<Nnly Co..rthOUM 700 lornle, lflO R.aolutl()n NI> M<>t• wn1mon1y llnown f'u~ Otano-C<IHI l\lfelntf1er WGt "A thall be I JO p M Of u Purdy 81 Midway (.ttr CIVIC. c,.,,1., OftYe w .. 1. M 4 Of the trw .. Publlc F•· .. '144fltl Oernn1mo l tll41 EJ Oalty Piiot 0<.lnl>« 16 lfl The n411"'M and l>uW-toOll ltltfMfter H the mat 11266'> 'ICTITIOUI llUIMll N.-aun•NT , ,.., rl)llowlno peiaon• .,. CIOH>u 1>1•M,_ a. 1111 UCIO lf\aur •nc:A AoencY. 30" w l)te•n Front, Newpotl 8-c;h. (;A fl 21163 o..twtt Ally LMM au...a&WIUWll l1•1U2·1Hl 6,111, Ana. Calll0tn1a all <.tlni., ano tnlrHtruclura Two CA n 1086 · acJdr-of 11\e 1ntenctec:1 1., may t>e l\aa#d Oc:too.< fht• hu•lfl•u •• t.on 1 '1Qhl tttle ano "''.,"' '°" Autrwny Oel .. idat11a letme or "le i;ue tn law TW 878 l•er..ler0t• 11• ~ci: 211 11186 tn the Chamber• of tluctect by a uei,.,., 1>• 1 1 Vdvo 644 51, only &200 veyecs 10 llnCI now '*d 0y 11 NO ....... ful rnooey of Ille IJnlllCI AutOffla tton Inc 218 the City coune11 olthe Cit'( of ,..,.n111 d t1VM II aw1y 9e2·2331 und4't ~ (>eed of rru11 tn NC?!te.,1~...!,.NTNT"Y StalM 'Jlfl c.onl1rmarl()t1 Of pon1 Ottva lrvlne, Calll Newpo<t Beech tocalld '' I I Huu f'llam Mid ..,... ......,_ .... ,,, p.,, c.a.n llllCI bw 111-'C NOTIC£ 027 tl 3300 Newport eou1ev11d rhtt .,.,~, w•• 111e<1 VOLVO '82 OL T Turbo. the P<~ly eltu•tecl 1~1 OC' VAUOATION illl<"A """'"""1(J try note M ~uuu Tn. IOcatton In CllllfOfnla "'-VGrt tMac;h Cailfr.fnta wllh Ille County C.i.tll. of 0. ... nM ftto tulo loaded ~8K ml Cou~y-:,ict ::.= '=1 r., all i-eone tnl .. •ted c.urect Cly rnongag. 91 1ruet K·2JOll7 of the i;h._f ••ecAJllve Offlee ft( ti FIJATHER AE ~ <,IJIJtll'f r,n '>ef;itetT1bet ™ ·-·· • 7fl80 &42 5800 :'c:nn t:t ~hlllfl A •llllChec:I lfl 11'1• matt .. ()I Ille .... llc:ltly d_, fJl(I 11\e propeny eo NOTM:I cw ,,, P'lncloal C>uellllll omc. 80~ VEO th•llhte RetolutlOO 27 lflll~ Matlt R.l)betl T Obef. 3012 w OG.en Front. Newpe>t 1 lieec.h CA Ci'J&e3 fiery LOl'en Mei<JOlf1 3012 w O<..an Front ~ IHaGh C:A fl:1463 --_.._ I of the ._..,,,.,. <A "<i' IC> ., at lid ren 119<<.ent of amoun1 OIA TH °' o111,. 11\len<Sed tr111•l•0t ,. or Intention thall be pu1>11ati '•neo 01UVERY Of PARTMtNT Votvo OL 8 4 crut.. ,_elo ""' m.,,_ • 114111 tAICI I VO 400 000 1>rtn<.1p11 l>KJ w ,,. ~tect wllh t>td HAAl'Y DONALD ..,, .. H t l>Ove _, ror 1 1 !eul two 121 euc. Publl.ned ()ra~• C.nHt ILi ID£N'S BMW p/toclf.e, ~ueltl*' Quad nereol comp,.etng ' 111 • atl'IOVfll •JI Irvona Publlc..t'a &1tJ•oroffett1o t1e 1n wr11 llUCH-"'OION All otl\ef bulNtlMI ~ ~v• .....,, prior 10 the Datty fltt1;1 O<tr11-Ill n aLM. . do I b Y G • •' • u I 0 Peoe [J(Hl&tT A c1t111et and tnlree1ruc1ure 1,,0 •rid w111 ~ rllCAlvecJ •• ANO Of NmtON •nd 41.ddr-uMCI by '"' hearlno tn ,,.. ottlCJal '-• )() N<m 1m1,.. II. 11111'1 I ht• bu el nan I• co" d1J<,t9'J by • O-al Pllfl ..,_, 111111, S..8 tiff 6 I 7 141822 54,.4 •ti., !lpm .,AF4C.fL I tJnn N<; 46 .. Autnor11y 1>4.rNi• 11111'>, _ tne .,,,, ... t<l offl<A •I i n y TO ~ITI" 1111 .. ldect t1111er .. 0t within J>tpet of the C.lty ol Newpon W t'.14 129 8 fuctlCI 8 1 llOL VOS (2) 70 4 '80 thown end deM;fll>ec:I In tfle A.vet1U41 bfJroda IC.apilal tm I ttme all"' tna ltret pvtJll ttlTATW NO A·tl0t47 lht .. Y .. ,. l&et yeet• Ital 8Mc;h F'utterton.C~ , • 1 · oect °' r-..mi-12 autoomed hy Al•t>tuttQn fl••••i'"le c.r~tltJr• ,,.d c.onuno.,11 tntanded 1renafer" are SOLVED lhtl Not~."" rUU1. nu OL E c.i .nape lo ml C.onaomtruum Ple n re 1J•r>11em1n1 Pro1ec.1e) •• i,...,,,,,, ,_fl(Jf llfl<I r.a1C11• lo '"'*" t>enenotari.t PH I IO 111 u lrnown lo Ille 8£ IT f URTHf fl RE DtlDlfC MnTIC( na.e111p Mai lo H I t>flet 'hit e111-.1 .... flleCI Milh ·~ Coon•t Lier~ Of Of •1iu• C:<ivnly ,,,. S~tamt>et '1() !UM 71....08300 "'"""' m oo • *'300. '::eo '"..;.. "'" ,_ ""., "'"''"""'""""" 1,.,., '""'" u"""'"" ..., -•~• ... ,,.., o•-" "·-· '"" ,.,. ,., ,~, ~• ~~ '"'""°"'""'"''" 213-401 .. 10 t coll .,,_.,., "" '" "" '~"'"'" ot """ "• ""' ''°"'"" Coo ,,.., ..._ a -M-. mo,"',.,_,_ •••-•od l ""I ""'· '"° """''°'· '""° -"~ '"' ..... .,M ..... &f A""""' ----vw . 71 Squatebaclc . o r•11 0 111<.tal R~o1<1e or H id IOtnl• af\CI l~tton ,..,, • ,,0 COfp. 171 .... 7th •n Ill• Wiii Ind/or ...... "' ~~~~~ .. v~.~oan '°"~•1. of Ille Re.oiutl(H1 "' lfi14111 111• lnllr1wt11u J)lf1M1<•• •I• C<>nd n•w int. 8~k mt, (,ounty IS'' 4 r1I the IMr,. Publt<. r e llteet, Loe A~, CA IL.t.IUh' DON/l lO 'lit.Ii IMne.Calll D21 t3, 11180 Jay "',)O .and ,•deat.r• ~l·~t<io1lt~~ dr1lng l>u.tlflau •• Mii) LAACJf SELECTION OF NIW & U6EO 8MW'81 LlmllAll ... •:it""'• nt>O 67'} 77",7 PAFIC.El :i A11 u1tc:ll11t<led t.illltft •n<I tnrr .. 1wc1ura IOOH A'106fJN e ~ p :ip.,..., ..,.. C I j{)(J Ad A e " vvv oni "'' "'""' ( 1/611th) Aulh()rlly l lH4"! N. HlfWood, CTA /I ~tttton nu t-ro !Ilea f lt Otlve, RIC.ll1tdt0fl. T•xu vllt.aled 111111 t>e ~letl 1101 atllu!J (, I ma ~A ••n10 l"1tJh•loetJ Or•~ <.out fl•tly C't1<1t ()l.IQbef 18 23, 30 ~H.vemr-II, 1Glll'l w 1:13 V°'-UMf 8ALE8 lllMCE & LEAS ING 3170 N Cherry Av• LONG BEAC H VW '8 I JETTA A/C, 5 •pd . .,,,., .. , ,: • ten•m '" c,om 14 0 I IC.[ If, Hf R£ 6 Y Put,flelled Oranoe f,nH t liy J•ne St-ert Wh111 1n the 16081 m<>r• th1111 thr .. l\undtld : ... ':~~ 1'-'' M•u MJnr1 gd wnd S.,.600 mt.in In ll\e IM lnlat•I tn alld (JtVl14 lhll t:'ln <><.11>tllf 14. !Je lly PllOI OcltJDer 10 Ill, bu1,.flht (.<JU•I •1f Otange Ml~~"':·~,:o I~!': 1300) 1191 tptlfl lllld al :--.: <l•ll A WOI•• 1'100 Mut t 8911 67~·1787 lfit"4 C.ornmot1 Areaoflot t 1 1111~ j1JOgma 11t ... , n 11111', " <.oun1yreq11 .. 11ng1111t Jt111 tranel.,-'e' Ill Computer thr .. 131 nolltAt thal Allam• /I •• •Ill !l l,oet• ... I at.I ~(> ae I>" maci ,.,.,dele<I lf1 11\e •l.l(Jva anti I TW 8111 6 t-ar1 White be ~nted -• Pollad along the elteoy •• CA {l"fj·,, vw fl ~ Ra bbit Conv r.,;:~' ·h<.<JI.. 4flr. Pe.tJ-A 46 ti.<! ac.1100 "' ''"'" ''' 1ne I •• 1..,.,Jt••I 'lfl'•Mnttttve Au1t1m11100 1 Inc 'J 111 t Ov OOl'T!O 1 :13 0 d " ... -• • ' ''' etlf.O. a11 a11rm ,, ...... ,d '~7 ~r .. ,_· _ _,W1<•• ple1nt1N "'•IJfletitng ma val 11, i armntet.., 11,. "'•'• fJf l>fJlll °''"' trv1ne, C.altf()(nta ~A ,'; 4 ' 6 • 1 •Y' I t11• t1ue111e•• '• '.<in Mt.IC NOTICE "C'TITIOOI IUMHlll NAM• IT A'tlMINT (Ho Cti.ry exit. 4-05) ll1•)1H-llH l't.-.1n1 Wetc:ome ~ lfVEH OA 'f5. .. 7 ..... ,.. ~ ., ... -1 1 1 a P\8.IC NOJIC( i~ll'l 1"""" .. • ,,_. M*Y,,... aur tea 1>y •11 1t1<1111t11•1111 17~oL<> "-.. -.... 0 Map• ReC.t)r(le OI aatd lld llf ,, Ill) ,, ,,,.. lhe det..edem lh ma ""-I --11 Av ... n , .. .,.. <••II .Aw~ . <..oum .. ~h 1.,m t• •Je 1110 40!> OOC1 11r1n1.tr.i •t Itta 1J•llllor1 taQu•••• •• pi . ..,.... Y ,....... AllM1 War1d1 [ Heoglr1 llell VW RABBIT , 80 C.on· ltried ~ 11 .. AttlC.le lf•llllltCl i mr1'ml <ii """,. f'ul.ilk. f• NOTM:I Of' I AU a .. m11r1ty 11, admin11tet ma rtet1J l1ete1f, le ~rtl>IO in Cu C.lenl 1111-•teletNW>I wu ' .,.,.lllJle wh1 )41< am/Im T>eflnlhl)ne ,,1 tne Oec.lar r,illloon et1rJ 1nl11etrU<.lur• Of' MAI. ~y .. iata """"' lloe 1,~ g ene r1t •• Jnv•nlOrt••. ~<JI• E.d llbll A 00 Ille lt1 wlln 111• <:r,.mly <.tet• al (Ji 1.a.aa ~ tlCXl •MAI ~nd •"'"' C1' "'"' .. ''"'• Co<o Autr.i11n1 .,., ... tV8'l L-1AT '1UVAA 170 1))'1 <*•I Admlnt•Hettoo 111 fe latlQlt.la ena 1nltlf\Oll>la aa <.n C.,1et11. • (Jfftee ~no• l,uu11ty 1111 ">9'Jleml>et "'• '''"'-"'11 PlfM>ll• ... tl•1lf'i(j l1<.1elt1... H C<>all I 11e Wtraro 3:11G t fttg &1 I l•t1a "<11111 (;A 11262(1 ltvl-1 r M~ Jr $MOO C.111 87~ 18'.l:.I dill<'-"" alld Aee1t1c:t1<,,-,a 0. 11e ... .,. ... IYM•O• t<,auotal ,,., ... a .. N<i ( ,, I'll 11\1 ,., .. At.I .... IJfeQald ••!*\-a nd ~ubll"-1 °''''09 (,ou t "JI IVll'l nan .. t"OO IJtfJ•emen• Prt1jet.t•1 ena U"4tfll.1' ,r,u , A , ... "'"' l)ft tne i:>ellltoo C.<inlt VI• fellllng l(l Ille Uall Pll<1I 0<;100e< 11) 1'1 (J J ··-· I a .... O.."tlc • avtbe<J '" '>uDjec:I "' lh•IUl<lju<Jomet11 wu l11etl 1'•.'•t• ,,, l.eJlf()frue ""the Wiii be l'MMd ,,,. OC.T0 8(H C.t>mm••Gttl S y•••m• ~ Pul>lltlte() ta!lgl .....,.., .. ,..,_"'!111~.-""".,... _ _,,,~ Ciel<,.. lltMt O.C.1a1atl0<1 ' d ;f ( W"'Y ''' <J•flfll.J& OM11<in uf Computer Auto 1118 W 111 CJally ,..ll<Jt <x..1oi.-If) ;,3 ' AMC 117 Ramble< run1 PA~C.fl '.'.I c.-n.nu .. arid.,.,, .. ., ir1 cne ,.,,,<,1 •' ~ •n ",. m etta. of the •t•la ·;o lllM a.1 tr lO A M .,, mt11(J(1 Inc a/Id II IO<Alec:I Ill ~4overnt.« 6 tflM ~·11tr 1 11cg !>ui O•na l'Olnt c A 11111;.G I 111• ''"""•U It 'on flu<.19') ftt 1111 1110t•l(Juel ~tUl4'1 ( MO<INry I gel 1!>00 ObO 432·V~52 eel lr..fltt tn ., .. &.ctt<lf" anti !1 .. '·"':,· of lf'le( f")tl •t'{I& 111 f ARf)l YNf lflN&<JN da (>efJI 14'1 l II lOO SC,lvlC. t i .., II I Dupont Drive W 1 J'.J I. Ill 1 Cet1em f -te 1,., "-'~•.lhly >ui-v11 "'"' ' <...,-,,.., f>t•~• Wffl W'ltt • .. _.,. MnTIC( •m.J I• ' AMC E.11Qi. Spo<1 WllQOO rlecl S 1 l>4ti ClateO <kt~ lfl Hill'. •A..-i Ana c,,. tr'70? ltvtne Calllor n11 1127 13, ~~ nu ISO 81~/wtll 4#d .,, ,,__. ""' ~" .. UTAN ' TVCKI ... Al· ·~OhCA tal-lfl)'(Jlv .. llltll ,, f(JU OlSJEt.r Ill lloe 1830 Je y EM ()t'1,.. Rien "·21-.. 1.1.1 11emefit •t11Jf11trr>e<..hmet'll -~ ttt 1 11,. .,..,.,MOr.ect Mtt -t at a r 1 7ll081 .. - ""• ,,.,.,"""' ..... l•lea ,..,,, Ilia <.r><t111y C:.lef• 111 Or •''ir' <.ounty C>t• • ..._,,_,,,. .. ·111 IOM -1 • • am/Im/ I •1>•. '401l0 ,,. ,,,. ,..,..,. .. en1111eo r .... '°'::1: IOf ,.._," • ,. "'' •••• •A14t ,,,. ,,, •11., fy, U''"'"IU vf u1e """'""'' Y~ "r ::;·~::::.. name uwi ..one. OC' t fl60 44f>.4 •tt fl W'J pm ,,_,,. ,,, 11.., l>e<Aat•llQr"\ It-Mott( ' I ,,,,_ ""l 1<111•. •I In• 11fl"A .n<.uld el1rtet ~ ., I .. D• ·-·" ,,.ft., ...... ,, Mid A~tCATI<* TO ,IC Tl'TIOUI au•tNlll Pt&.IC NOTIC£ • ~-1dout p f1 f 4 E '"'''""''° > 1eno• ,,,.. r..,amig an<J a111a Y''"' "'' • --.... -· ..,. I ALCO..OUC NAMI ITATl.MINT "' ,1 '83 C.AOtLL.AC 0.VILI.~ A c. l I -=:.',~ CJau, Pnr,, ()( ,,.~ tfl '""'• / "' ')..,,IJll! / ""'-''"· ~all()(lel ,141t.ll(.)flt"' me Wfllllln ,,,,,., flX.tllOn •• (;t)m(>ultr Aull'J • u r11• '''"'JWlflO l>9f lll'>fla .,. ,_.. Xlnl c.on<J $11-400 benlc tuGh ..-neri • .,, W t40 ij1oro• P 0 &1 '1 1"' N-.. 111 1 ""'n lloe c.ourt ~Of• mallon In<. MVlfllAOll ,., 11 ,, 11 liu••n••• •• Al<.11 ===r. =,~ 7:.0 ....... 11117 Mt forth in tn. Atll(.je "'1<' ft4M,11 (,A !lllM8 Altn ". Tht l MIO bulk tran•I., ... te>-t~ f .... , flnl fl<A 1200 mo ~ • lu<><> ltllltleel f ll.t«n<lnfl Of.,,., Mra '-'•"• {,op.latld "'I~ the ,,..,"Iii '1tJ<Jt ~ HJ WHOM II MA Y <.C>N t 1roet11 1tl I).,,,,_.. '111~'1 !---------~ • .. CAO " """~ .. , ••• """°''""" "' ,_,,_.,.,. l'UBllC N(lJIC[ "'"'"" '"" ,_, ...... ..~ ~A mo, ~ ....... ' .. ~~= . .:: ...:-... ::-c:::::· a RN "'" •• """ ""'"' ... l'UBllC N()JICI mt II.,• ,.._, Loc•I 'uwnr &.in<lt11<Jn• ""' Reetrtt,11•.in• I ev!J)"J(' 11, Cl>nlttml1t°'1 Oy t'"'r •:turn-, i:u OtrOR IJlJflf Autom1uon. tnc: '•8' JAW& IN<.ORl-OHA r UJ,. u:ioeo • ..... ·-· • lllQCJ .,48 ')844 '" "Sub)et.1 ,,, rAl<JW lthe I NOflCI TO ••lrJ '>11()etlf)( CrJUrt 111 rtghl ,, f )IJ AIU ~(, adll(J( "' Ovpo111 C>rtv• IMne. (;.all lar•l •IJf>lylf'lJ IO 11 .. °""'•'' H11•-· M1t.11 ... 1 Alt•t ; "CTITIOUI au ....... .. ul1h-1'°" r1r•rioe C.t1eel ''""' P11111 rx.1111,.. Ill J I Jll ~4',.,a•fll-II tUll~ w ,, -~ M••'"' 0-tareftr,n lu"'I., CftlOfTCHll or lllle arotl tnt.,HI <A u ltl d• ''' 1 <.Ot>llngeti t.r 1 Ille Ir/Inti 0'713 (Jrt I)( l f11f Nfi ment <ii Al<..OOOlt<. S.Vet ~t 1""91 C.t N-IJ•/fl baer.tt NA ... ITATIMINT .,..._. NABERS in. kt1or1 n..<11ro11e tr1 tul.h J 9UUC T"AN"I" '"'•-J at time"' ,, .. 111 111111 lhe decAaMCI. yw mu1 veml>ctt I. •G86 (,1,,1tr01 f'Jf 48' On Hala t.A 078111 Ill• toor1wtng 1-M>n• •r• ~ Alllt..le enllllaa H I011t1""• (8-1101 ... 107 ~JI •ogl•I 111141 •ml111t.,Mt tO. Y1J<Jr cti lm wHh the C.Wtl '~ Tht1 l>ul~ lrallllet ta llfJl Q.,..,., I Put> Preml-1 In I Iola l>uet"eH le ""'' iltilrlQ (1<1elr-• H MOHN. (Jvm.,a FltgMa anll C>ullaa J UC C.) 1 .. 1ata1 '••• •<l<llloon.Uly .,; P••-11 11 10 tna 119<1V>n tub'-'.t tr1 Callfornl1 lJnt ... I ak..oltr.AI<. bev•rag.e •t ll11r.l•d by •t• on1J1vttlunl 111r, 1, I /I H r N rf A11f08£8, CADILLAC \Jltlllle• a"d Cabla Tale -N"11<A ta 1,.,etJ/ given lt1 1 ~·me'J ,,, ttnll It, •II ""' r,., r1~ .. 111c.•,:,:1:11t1~~n9ft!::~~:I~~ lrirr:;-(;()fn,...,t.laJ(.00.!>41(. ;t:lllti t~•wpr>rt lllvll C.<1t1a Hntiert M1tll1'tl At•ey '.lj 4 y,,,~1111,, A•et1u e • · vi.ion ~''Pfi'"1 ••1<1 !>al •.1edll<1•• cil Ilia wlllilr• t11or1 re•l IJl'1r.er1y tilualed "' .. ,.... M-ll:tti'/ lhll ll•t•tr-•I wee llletl '"•-••Me•• <,A 117&~/ t r 0 · f t I I II I lt111T1 Iha dale f1I lt1t1 •• llfln """" r•u•·ti-.. ~ f)t11V•e C,tilltl wlllt ltle C.t.1Untf (,,l11tt ~ <if f)r ,,. - 111 LAF10f& r &EL EC. 1 N 11~1 ri<.•''"'· .,,..., "•"••d "•''' .,,,,, 1• •I"'"' <,1J1Jtily 111 <111ng. 8 111• ... 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I amtly Dt1D1 C NOTICE 111/l., 0 1tttin 8;. 'J~l.I ,. ;. IAJIO l<i•d•1' wl 1tra• ~ 21 6 .,,lull rnt '""J owrtf, Hiie ,_'I 11" 1,1,,, 592.3142 <x 8 ', 1 '4'J• lr1 11rJa'1 ,1111 tr.>r.'1 1<11.,,1.,m•1111t1et,1111,1,,, llfoy "'<I• l1111tl ""''"""' C.a11 Isl/I<." r.r11mrr <Jf fJh ~~ :.::. w"Z:., -v• T1-...r.. Vtc:leQ IW!tal• fl')()') fV4.IHI rUU1.I ,..,'7 11-44 ',~'J •1r 844 1f>ll I .,.,,,,,,.,,,,,..., i,1 lloe •If-,,,,,,,.. Allt ii '> r A rf <Jf f,At I l ti e1~1f1< '" a1Jrn1n f'ut.Al"-1 Ofanoa C.0..t 6 1 1(, fjania Afla (,A r teTITIOUI a UIHtllll f'1Jl1llt1...i < J1en119 (,1~11 edd•-•t•fl 11 11,... 1 .t/fT'lrtVJfo r he IO<.at1 1 A m r.a1t1r11r11e f <1hMtA A!. !J•IOWN (JN A u';'~ .. ,,, UIJO'• 11,. et [).,ly l'llOI O<.U>t.1et 18 t08b flf' 704 NAMI IT A TIMINT O•oly P111,1 r >t 1t1l.et If) ~3 IEW CAI l&LEI <leeoyr>alll/f• ,, • 11 1 ""JW" ,,, .... Gtlt« •• -...u ... r,n ..... MAI• f4H,(Jf<Ol (> IN b()(JI( :· ,, <)( l/jt ,.... leGUtOf ,,, W-138 MIQIAI M1t..I•• 'HI n w I he l1Atr1Wl•l(j J>erll'>n• .,. )IJ Novefttl-ll 11'&"> FERRARI 8~ .,,,,, ,, r ">• reel/ten I() mo i-t '·'"'" ""'* M11 U.I (tfr &•,ll !>ll811 ,.., .. ,, •;< "'""'1>•11,., .. ,_ ''"''A ., ,.,.,,f I QI MllJ IJ(twry ~hie With ' V)'•tallane liant•A"• (A 111.>il"' buei,... .... 8 111n1 w ne llEI OU UlEI lsa1<1 Mlle "''"!Al mao. !Jul 111 ll'le 1111.,~ 1t1nererr.1t • (,( l 1 /I r-1f fJIJfl M/I Pli IN 11<1m1n1tlrtl()f ~1'704 .,. WE In .t\IA a W(llttn lllQ,_ 11,,..,11 C,etilet Uflve T .. 1lh witnwt .,,..,.,,.,., ,,, .. ., 'i 11)3 M/IC.F /IVf f.<J8 r,. 1111 ,,, It(, f 0 f 1 Hf I the V>Utl With Ptrli>f 11' 1 .-,,, P'UBUC NOTICE fe4et1t,1i (; VIiiata 1011 J11f111 All<I l!etnt .JM11 llO'l ,.,,,, .,,,, ... (If lthj:;ltec:I ,. Ml f:iA (,,ll IHJ'1Nl.4 f,t11i111 f H((,(JflOEA <Jr II n.elr• "*"'.. 8 Oenfllt 61 6 ante An• C..A (.1"'' Mau C.A Honci. 'I t AGGIJtd t1 & LY lnrl Mull Mii 11,. 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Al4AHflM <.AltHJANtA lt1f' N(J,q11wt8f(ALY I •Mtl7 ,,,.. bual,_ WU <..4)11 NAMllTATl. ..... T "••r·rJ ''" '-•"' ""'' •"''.,' j rne '"'"'-. name v Mll '" '14 fffl Qr 6At0 LOT e NOTM:I TO ""''*'by• Gl)IPoflllOn the r011t>w1no '*~,:,· r_..1 II l f J o•n .. Ln llJ'11 t 8 f M .t1 ft l 'CJ 111JN I IN<1 rr1r1 t1( "'·•• 147·10l71 Ut-au1 r,~tf ./Y II 1 11 r '''"tr 11 flttttttt 1Jr I '·''' 1J 1fr.t r11Wl1t1IJ '"'J 1.'h'1'1 '""' 411 '• ,,,._I/ (Jf~CJ• ~ 'j (Jatl f ,()M 1r ro 1&1 1 • t.., . ,,..., l i'flf.1'1 ,., • 11 •,4 ~ M1,111eng 280V8, (Jf'O 'Hlttr c;et tmr. l lf. fo;ll v,..., 81; -0~ l4•1IMA ,,, ·~loUll 1111() ,..,., t11 11,. H id ltaflaf .. ,,,. .. l .fC,l PI THfRf f ROM CMDIT()tll °' Thie tlatement ... !tied <I~ ~ .. 111111 11, <i.tt I 1'19 "''""'llfll*' I MIO tr,i,.ttfJf'• •• HICtt Al 1 Otl UA& ANIJ OTHFR I IUU( TR.Uf.,lllt with tha C"AUMy Clerll of ()r POR l..ANDt~b 603 c,~ 1.eu_, Hiil 14t>il<A ,,. 0.. 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'1Me ange H& 11r11•, Gltlml may be hied •• A(, WITH()\Jr At411l QI 8UA TM !«Alton In Calff1>tnl• M4 ,._.. 11 1 ~ W-'M 1 TtON IGAOW IN(.. IOO H fA<,F FNTft'f f<) AIOV[ Inf the r,nlef •1et.ullvt offlGe ~ .. ef ,.._ Coeei Tu•lln Av~ •ut11 U (>{l>C.Rllft:l..1 l ANfl Al ~I I Of p;'lnclpal l>ufl,.... offlCA ~-Pubtllhed ""at\OI 691111 Afl• (..alllt1t<ll• 9:.t106 ec AlllD I ... A DUO FlC ,,. Ille lnlencMd ltllleflf()t .. !8ec 11604 Sul'>d I •Dally Pl~ .8T~::' 78. '18.IC NOTIC( I anCI ,,,. laal d•y f()t IMlflg f C,IJTfO ti Y C.HA'4lUI ,. ......... •boY• u c C.) Octl>Mr .. ' t . __ ;..;...;..;.....;._....o..----, "'""" by .,1; U edll,,, ertafl P<)fTfVIN ANO Nf'l l M l All Oll\ef ~.,,_ nwnee NrAIC4 ,. nett«>)' given by w.079 aw.~ couwr I l;4 0<.I~ 3' tH Owt11c.t11e P<JITl lll!CN HIJbijANO ANDt 111d llddf-uMCI by the the ul\d.tttlgflec:I th•l . puo., _________ _ CW THI ITAT'I 1r-,. tlulll'leM <l ey tie4r1ta Ille WIH ANO AH ,.()f11)f0, 1rnenct.11 tr111111fer0< wltl\lfl lie. .... Of I,,. IOl+Owlng CS. rtaJC NOflC( Of CAl.WCMIMA r..on...mmatton d•I• ~· Ff'IRIJAR'f ) 141114 IN rnr .. Y"'' IMI Y"'• ,.., 9'-tlbed GOll•t•• ..... bal--...;..=-----... ..... --'°" THI COU#n fleCI ebove 9(.)()1( ~ PAOf ~ 0. pN1 II) Ill u l<oown to 11\e ~ II Ille hout of 1100 ,ICTtnOUe ., .... . OC' 0..MtQI Oat.., <X.tOber 2 tll•I) <JI f IC.AA! RFC..QAOft ! 1n11no•l'l trlnlflf.. If• o ~P M on the 28111 dty ~ ITAT._.., 1~• llfl MArT(A Of THf MAMAlltONICIC INN, PAAC.ll '1 111100. Mll1nt H1t6w1te , o!O«Obtt. ttl&,91 lt7 lltl Tile fO!towlng 1*.oftl lfe ,. r• P I If, A f I 0 H 0 , LTD., A CAL#'O-A CO.. THC SQIJT H(AO Tf!Rl YI 3030 loulh l'lllQn 61 , hnta N~ 0t . ~'-oh, doMg butlMM N .. Id r, 11 Rt 'J Tr, PH t" L I ti ~TIC*, rt. ~ H "6') ''"Of LOf 14 ANOI Ana C.A t'J707 l4Mbo1 County of OfM09. ltet• of bfle ~11, It• H 'slfJ'IAI • "''"°' 11>' enCI OIOAMI, "1ll11DINT, fHf N()ATHWllTfAl Y M1ttn1 Htrdwera, '700 CallfOlrwa A..acll'led llOI .... CA ll•1tNgf-1 , ... NetUlat Moft\41f "'...,.,.. 1" 6() f(f l Of l or 13 IN Waet Cf.1111 Hlgttw~ ..... IH O OfdlfnObll• I 0 .,.,, I (Jfl(J 117 Mv•teno 3 IC)d r,rmf-1~ ~HAATl I Fo• .....0 . THAI c~ I •l(JCI' e"' fAAt.. T HO 'I llOl1 9-rJl CA t'lllO KM SMtlNAA.4llOl:1 lwart flleod0t•Newtnlf1, '•'O 11 «>0 Gd t>dt M~ (..t!M>09 r,t ,..wne Af'IO., A CAl."O ..... A,114 THf C.l'f 0, &fAl 11nb urg Merlnt UtO t lf10t1 je(lke1 24 bl"'* 7111 ..,«tr A,,.. Oaldefl '·•" ~,., \4NJ to ... ' cu e NO A 1»111 c o• .. o•• f ION , I Y lfAt;H COUNT f OI OA C.lt\ttOll I t ''" °"00. CA 1911r• OtOlll9, CA~ I ... -· OMla TO IHOW CA.UM ,.,.. ... I woe.ca. ,... ... AHOf er,. T[ Of C-All ., tot ... DOI Mlltnli HetO 1 lvll~n 41 ,., IOJ ~ ,,MCll "-udon6t. -.&r W t4 f "-f A I Dl#T, Tll~U.0. l f <>AAIA Al 6HOWN ~A • .,. JA.ct7 ltr..C Of t"9 1 1ut1 tenof.11 41 tMCa ltl H Aieoc*ed llOI ••a •IA ' " '1 •' 1 ', ,. " f " L t r ,.~ Ot.,. ~ MA' ,.t.c;o..oen 1N eoo.r ~ ... .,,...,,, OMe ,.oWit, 1JM1t ""'* U»f .... CA 1112 1 fl\le :1 Or c;om.e wtflt "'' ~Tf)V/ILI • """Ot' ~Md Oelt)t ~Orn~ 16 1tl' G l'A(J( 1 O' Mt& C.l VH21 1<1t11 nbur' ffllt ~le tt-In 1e-..,,.,.. Cnuna. 11 17 I .,,., / trottNIJlo '"' ,.. • ...,. mot'-W 1 If CPl l ANf0U6 MAl"t IN M11tne '""' ~ U 7' CMdanu wftfl lfle !>'owteoftl ,lttl a..t C.. lent1 Atll '"' (-0 fuels!, oo:,c CY-..a!lt.wu. l\elllled.... .._.,.W\Tll'I' IHF f)H tf,( 0 , fH l ltrM I 8 1n 01900 CA Of t.cuonM04.l4111 ....... AIJ70I c-reo . l'ftOf• I I > ""'".,,,., wtell IN Clletti °'""' l"U9Ul,t "" --V'AJHT f Rf(,(Jffl()(f! or 8110, Ill °' Ille UnlfO(m ~ fNt llutlMN •• con PICTITIOUI IUltHIH NAllll IT ATIMl.NT "" l(Jllowlflg P41fl0tl• .,. dOlncl l>vlit-.. 8 [Al1AO P1upert1•• .,,., Pro1J4tt1y Man aoemen1 ')I 1 <:at.1'•11•> C.oet1 MMa 1,A VJ8'7 lt n.i M S1Jllf)n :i If t.abfllll'1. <:r,.te M-(,/I 117821 T n1e tluetneu tt 1.<1t1 d ut 1.S by wt 11\dlvldual Jtl/lef M &ut lt)ll fhl• 1111emen1 wu lllld wttn the C.OoJnt1 C.lat~ of Or 1110f Cwnly t.11'1 &eptemr;., 7 7 •HO ,.."" Pu ll411Ntl Oiatioa C;n141 De11~ 1'111.11 rx.1,.,t.M te n 30 ~l)ylf'lll)er &, tflfjl) w 13:1 MUC lllOTICl ..... '~•..urt '°' ~ to lf'"f•_.._....., I ArO COUNT'( fOQfTHlA Tiie """9(1) and~ INfQtll Coda flf tfle 1414• of ~ ~ I ..,_., '*1 O~NOe COAt r 'n'"8' '"' "·'"· from .. -·..,., WITH THAT POAflON Of .., .... Of 1"9 lflfeno.d C41110fl'M ~/"-'*"' (. H lft 1 T 0 , Hf" L 11 MA911t()f lllWT Of THI IOVTH HAI' OI fHf trlNl•Mll ) Ill ~ten OAflO 0CC... 11, tNt .-oMCHt e11I '74 81+' .1&14 t111tl>Ot C.eMeM • f 0 V A L I. I• U.CW'IC~ All[V t:tOO 'HT IH butg MWW. COrpotet!Otl. Alll•I CA• COL· w/&ein ....,. 1mt c.,ri ....... ,, U d QTO"Wffll LU lliMl· ..,_H •MM WIOTH AOJOINIHO THf 2' 10 c.tleton It l 1n LA~ CO. . .., '-' ~ r..cor.d UOC tr fl t -lller41fot_• .... ____ fl\e~:J 1>9'to';; HC)ltTHLUTlflll f UHf OI 0..00 CA t'llot ...._Dr.••.....,..,. rcp11 e 11.000 "'"' Metwr1 1t c.; Ohle, If • Hllilfl'Y ~ twr~• ,, 1111 ';' .~ •• •AID LOTI VACArl!.D MAY """ IN P'~ pertl ....... CA ....... ,. ~ ~ opC1o1W iu~ not ~b W011it. 1ltlt llM II !*ION: !ht c. ~~· 4u 40,_ 16 tt18 I Y AllOtUflQH "-"' ,_. .. Cl le ~ "' A*tH Ill ._.,, ....... .... .-... to --..i lr"/l>dy S700 !Mt 1e1a tN~ator .. ~ Ntme "'.~-..-()f fH f IOAAO or o--•• A•....U~---.......,.... "' Dliswt"*" • "' tl\e w ... .ny' 1.w, .___., f"*JtTl UOf THICITYM ft10 .rtltouf ~ ... ~ Of"'t' C.... itf:t·200I, ~1 7 Mt v• l')tftetf'""O ~OU ..,.,.,. l ltO•• t r'll lt110 Co11r t 9MOI. CA MteO H AL I UC..H l VIHQ It ~I Wld llTl.111' .. Md Dely Hot °"'OC. ti, , ... in.--.( l IO~ it•m• w1tn e t<J Mil? <.A~ ede 00 .... If 700 GMo Cent.-Tiie '!Ct-"IOu• ~ TWHN ?Hf HOlltTH flll.Y ~OfY ot 11111 Wtr1111'1 W•ttl t. ~.-..-.. A1J M _. !14 'J ~71 OrhttW• llf'lleAnl G .. N~t-r91tt0 1.,.:ivewM PAOt,t)H(jAfl()+f ()I TH( I ~ ""°' o--. t -- t DEATH No11c1s l.EWIS I •• '11ld D 11J1• l.A:'Wltt, r• i.td•·n t •1t llu nt 111~1/m fil•u.i It l'1U1111-d <1wuy <>t 1.t1lw 1 l '.J, l!JH~1 l'11rn M1oy Iii, 111~:1 111 c;J""'" Ari· ''''t·• Sur vlvrd hy 111nlh Hru< t• l ,,.wla, Jltd D1t1Ht Lt-Wll , d1.11iubt.N. Cilltl HtJUf· lurd, f11Jff'l11Ji, Luth11r I' i'!.i V1·lt1111 1...-wl.I, U/l(j ol lflllli'f, Jfltll0.0 Ji·11k111.11 Yun"' 11J ""'' v11 • • wtll 111• hold 'J'hur11J1ty Ot·t 17, 11 110 AM ut Pi.t·ltic v 1 .. w M 11 t 1 u a r y <'lt1J fwl 1rit1e rment f•,., lfh Vlrw Mem ''""' l'.111 k. Nt-wport Bo1•1.tt 11 < ·,. Vi.tt11Uon WNJ (Jr I 11:1, 4 IH'M , It I f' 11 f I t 11 V I • W M111 tuary t'tu.J>t"I In 111.y r1f fl11Wt'f'11 tnrm 1tr111 I <on tr1hut1o n1 m1t y I w m.ttde 111 th.ti J hullf't.rw f''r.iutl(b1Uon P •<l f 11 V te w Mortuwry. rflrt-c u1rw ti.• ~70(1 PllACI aAOTHIRI HU. 8AOADWAV MORTUA"Y 110 Broadw1y <.011• M•e1 ()41 9 t()() "ACl"C V .. W ...MORIAL ,AR• (.,.,,••lltf y • MOftuwy <..hap.i • C 19t?l1I01) lM>O Pac.Ill<. v.._ Or~ N-P<>fl 0.ar.h 644 '700 HARaOfM.AWM· MT. OUVI ~f)(tuary • Cemte«) c.,,.,.,...,ory 1112~ 011w Ave Cotta~ 640·~~64 c I TOMOMOW: FAIR ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOAY, OCTOBER tft, tU!> 25 CENT S Arts Center cost up $13.4 millioil / pt~ectors announce next fund-raising drive to reach new $78.9 million total 111 m ukt" up thr S 1 l 4 m1ll111n 1nucil'IC" W11h cipcn1n& 01"!11 1111 thr m111n thtlllcr ph11M.' only" ynr ltWd)', IC'lllC'r dirtltur' ldum ht"<! lhc nrw .. , 1111u111 K1u~1nii ( 1tmp1111in" o n I uc\day Jhrr u l lc>11cd ·d e 1or ">C\\11111 ne11rin1 111mJ)IC"l111n 10 lhr \1111u1 C "'"' Plu11 111ru A11111her \t, m1ll11111 " riipcucd lru111 l11nd-ra1,1nw 111m pa11in\ 11lre11dy under way 11Hc ord1n& lo u·1llcr CJll1u1tl\ By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .......... 91.-. ln&creat ratea, (;O•l ovcrru11' 11nd conatrucuon c h•naca have pullhcd Richard Nixon 11 choaen to arbitrate umpires' con- tract dl1pute./D2 Coaat Free flu 1hota are one attraction at Saturday' a lrvlne Health Fair./ A 11 California A Huntington Beach man 11 one of 10 Callfornlana wtth a chance to be the 1tate lottery' a ti rat mllllonalree./ A3 Entertainment Mu1lcal "Evita" arrives for county premlere./B3 Mlnd&Body Overweight teen a get help for their eating habtt1.1a1 Food ZJp up Nlada and other food• by making your own vinegar .IC 1 INDEX Birth a Brtdge Bulletin Board Bullne11 • the prn.c taa for tht Or1tn&r C ou111y Pcrformina Arh Ccn1cr 1n < o\lit Mesa to rouahly $ 78 IJ m1ll111n \(>llrk 1n& an tntt"ni.c fund-nu\ln& u1111pia11!1l \o lar, nu1rc 1111111 S ~I ! ru1l11on 1n p11vatt' donation' have hc-c11 p111rrl'd for the lir\I phu\C' 11 \.l.M.M!·'ICat 111ul11 purr><i..c 1l1t"alt"r .ind o 'illlJ \C'ill \luc.J111 -_fl__'{_ Bombing victim buried f uf the M:t1111c.J l1mt· in 11r11rly 1111 Y<"Uf\ dirc-1111" ( un<l11y appruvrd < O\I 1nl rca\c:\ fur the m.ain thr1t1r1 pha\<" r111.inw thr u1n\trul 111111 hud"c:t from \ ~ 1 l m1ll111n 11, \ /() 7 Family membera of Alu Odeb, an Arab- Amerlcan killed ln a bomb blaat ln Santa Ana Prtday. carry bla body from St. Norbert Cburcb in Orance in a funeral attended by o•er 1,000 people. See atory on Pa1e A3. Home of ex-Laguna mayor Bellerue destroyed by fire By ROBl!RT HYNDMAN Of-~,.. ..... r he La1un11 Ucath h1m1e ol lormt'I Mayor \ally Bcllcru<" wa\ dc\truytd ( ucMJ&y n11!hl hy ll fin• that \Wl"pl throuati lht" two \t11ry homr on 11 Hmquc: V1l lor Hcllrrur Jnd h1\ '"" w1·11' homt' 11 I t hl· II lllt' 111 the: II l<i " Ill bla1c. hut <:Mupcd un1 niurrd l 11r l>c:panmt"nl \()C1kr~wom;in I <111h Mann \ll1J \all> Hdlt"ruc who x-nnl 1·11h1 year~ un the< 1ty < 01111ul wJ\ 11111 .ti home at lhr t11nr When lircl1"hl<:r\ itrnvnl al tlw home: at 411J fl Bo'l(.juc: th<" wocul lru111r h1J11')r wu' t1lrr.11ly rnKullrcl hy ll11111n I lrC" \llllikr Miil 11flllll!1· 11J11w lrom 1hr lire-111 lhr n111ht \k) a11d l ould he:' \Ct'rl lr•1m 1oJ11lafL!r prn111\ thmuKhout lhC' c II} A hncl Jlll'lll/'' h~ th• lkllnun I•• \low tht' l11r wll 1 w.1tr1 1111111 .i K;.lldn1 hu'IC WJ\ Ull\1111 r\\lul I h1rty 11111· l11d11£hlr" 1111111 IJ.t&u na Br111 h Jncl lhr t >ianl!r ( •11111 ly tkp11r11nr11t\ l1111~lll thr 1111 1111 .tfll1ut \II rlllllUIC"\ llf'l•irr II w,1\ 1111111olkd I lic• d11111i..11£t" ~I.I\ •·\II 111.1lt"d .ti\!\ I '1)(1 1111 luil11111 \"'111111 111 Ilic tt111 lr11I\ 111 lhc-lr11111r M.11111 \ll 111 Ahh11u11h 11r111.hb111111K h11111n ,11c-'" 1 lo'IC" ,,, I} lrrl .1w.1> 1111» wc·rr 11111 ha1111rcl h~ lhr 1111111· ''"" \J11cl I 11r lllYt"\llj(ollltl\ wnr JI thr \1(1· 1h1\ 11111111111¥ v.111 l11nx 1•11 t lun 111 clr1rr111inc-1l1r 1 Jll\(" nl lhr hli..11r ll11wrv1·1 1111111nl1rr11rd 1cpu1 I\ \,11ol Ille hlJ1r 111.1 ~ h.t~r \la11r1I 111 .111 up\l.tll\ hrd111•1111 whr1r J l1ghtrcl l 111111lr Wd\ lrfl 1111.111r111kd I .ipl I uic 111 I) huhdl.1 .111cl 1111 li1h1c:1 J11h11 Mull111 \ulkrrd 111111111 hum\ 111 thn1 hJlllh li11>ht111~ thr hl.a1c B111h wr11 lrr.itnl .11 \1 111lh I 1Jll\I Mnl11.cl I 1111.-1 Jllll w.-rr 1drJ'>nl m1lhon I he w-wnd pht1w-11 I 11011 'IOI thclll<'r, p111t>albly won't hr llU1lt unlll tht" 1n1111al fa< 1laty I\ paid oil trnlrr u lfo.111h \Mid fliq lidded thr n11 m11cdprllt' 111 1111 th<" \m11llr1 t1rC'nt1 rc:m11n• 111 SIS l m1l111111 liowC"\1•1 11 1110 could flW' omr 111 l11t1I dn1ii11111l! .and lOn,trUl ll<Jll llr,111\ ··11·, u tnnlc:plu.al h1u1r You H fol 10 \C'I do1111 ~ r11cna," Uld Ac1 u11vc U11c11111 Tum K.l:ndnck, whu IUok UVC'I the admtnlll1'8tlVC mn• in \c.-ptcmbt"r afler bt"1n1 hired ttw11> Imm 1hr K<'nn<'dy Center 1n W 1"h11111on I> C r lir hc11ud 1r111f1rmcd u. c.u mmll· 111r111 I ur~)' 111 hu1ld1n1 the tce0nd pli"'>C' hut for now anenuon 11 I Pl ....... C09T/A2) County adopts fee schedule for new freeways Develope rs building nea r new routes will be assessed <'Osts of construction By JEfft' AIJl.l':R Of-0.-,--1\ rr"1'1C"tl '14hnluk 111 dn1 l11p111r111 lr1' 1l1JI 11 JI urn 111111"\ ul lx-ncl11 .. 1n .sft'tl\ Ile.al 1hrrr IH•11)11'>C'cl 1111111h hi'< ""J" ""J' o11l11plnl I ur"Kl.t)' hy lhr I lritnlC C 11un1y U11.irtl 111 ~upr1 ""u" I he kr\ w111 llr u'IC"d 111 I u 11J 1•111\l 1 u1 111,11 111 1111 1111111 .. '>C'cl \1111 J 11u4u 111 If 111• l.a~lc-rn itrHI I 1J(1thdl hc-ewlt~\ B> ii 4 IJ \llltt'. \UflrfVl\ot\ o.1pr1t 11\C·cl .1 plo.11111 '1\11111. the li:C" \lrul1u1r ia11t1 •l!lt 1n en1l11r"M"d thr n111111n ul I 111.i 111 '""' 111 "" hn ""J,' "" .a~M"\\lnl lk "dope" for nrw li•Hl\C\ 111111111111rH1.il hu1ltl 1n1) hutll nt"Jf ll1r 111111)11'1C"1l h rrv..n u1rr11..l111\ \upcr"""' ll.irr1~1 'W 1nl11 wll11 Wd\ .ahv111 whr11 Iii<" pulil11 l1rJ111111 l C111ccrn111111 thr much cJ1\4 unnl plJ11 wa~11111tlu1lr1l1111 \<'111 2'i Jh\IJlllrd I hr drvdop111rnl frf"\ .arr ··~pc·11nl 10 pu~ 411 4 flf'll rot ol tlir nt1111.i1c-d \ '42 11111l111n t •l\l •11 tlir \J u l11 .. q 11111 lttlb I rJll\l)olflJl11111 u11111l111 v.h1t h wuuld 1 our'IC" 1h111u1h 1l1r 111J\IJI Irvine OKs free\Vay fund role foothill\ .and 4' ' r>c11 c-111 111 tlir 8)' f'HIL ~Nl"'.IUf':RMAN c\ttmatrd \~It, 11111111111 I 1.111hall .111d I 1t111r111 I 1.111,r>4111a111111 '"'" 11111" lurtht"r 1nl1111J Althuu~ lllr l •1ut1I)' jl11· .. i1., t110 J pprovtd lt1'rrc111e11h n1 .. hll\h1ni two rCKJOlllll lrrr1Nt1.,. .auth1,r111n 111 ¥11\lt"I II \hr lanoHh 1111' .. nil l 11n\llUl llun ol the l1c-cwJy\ onl\' '".,. 111 111 1 ll1r' 111•ohrd 111 tllr clnrl11p1111111 It(' 1u 111ir" m Ir " 111r \1111 J 111111 ( 11pl\tr;11111 \1111 I lr-111r11lr I laJ11141· Jfll.l 1\11Jthr1111 h,1" Jhll JjlJH11\nl lhc plu11 I 111r\ lhdl l1J \C-\1 I 111 .1pp111\I 1111 .a111rr111rnl 1111d kr \111111111r 11 11 ll1r \Jll Jo.iqulll Jl1lh tlllll11111I) Jll" I •l\IJ Mn.i ''frwpot1 lk-J1 h .sllll \1111IJ <\llJ I J1111111J tk-.. 1 h wll11 h "'J' ,1,kc-cl 111 flllll h;l\ rr1c-1 lnl lhr p1111tlJlll < 111n lh111 hJv1· .,.rl 111 Jl'I""'' 1111 "l'r<"rlll1·111 1.11111 Irr \1111111111 1111 1111 I 1111lh1ll JIHI I ,l\IC 111 I Ill I 1<1111 Julh11111 .,. 1111 luck 11' 111r \J lllJ \11J I IHllll Jilli '•II 11 .. I 11111.1 I hr hrc·wJ ~ .1111111111111·, "'II .ul 1111111\lrl lhr Irr Jll11KIJll1 .11 q111ir !Pleaae eee rRltltW A y I A~) Ot -o-.--ln u kn v11 lt11 ) lor proponcnl• o f thrrr nrw \outh < >nanv C ounty lrrrway\ 11 v111r ot1u 1al• cln1dcd rarl)' 11..J .. ., 10 j'"n the luunty and 11the111l1r' 1fl p 1.nn1n1 tht" h1&Jlw1y• .Ole.I u 1llr1 11 n1 lrn LO help C-Y fo1 1nrn1 Jn o1 I I 'ulr 1J1r '1111114 II a'1rrcJ lo )'llfl , ... ., 1'11111 Jl<!V.("(\ J"t"llllr\ lfldl """ "'c-r\r<" 111.-Jn1w11 11nu111 1na •nd 1 ""'""' 11 .. 11 111 lhr prupoM'd \an J11u4u111 I lath I tc-C"V...c\ .and 1hr f..ut r 111 Jllll I 011ll11ll lrc-e1Nd\\ I hr cuun 111 .ah• .1p111111,l"1l .a Irr pl.ill thlll I) r \Jlrc lr<I 111 fjl'\C" .ahuul \ 1110 rn1ll111n lr •lfll luh11 r l1 1,111r llrH·l11p111r11I 11lhr <11~1111iilrt1ll11111\11\ 1,11tr nr'I ""rr~ I" 1111· ... 111 hc·K111 lt1lln l1llK l1rr"'1t\ lrn 111 1111o1 "'""rmlk'I t It'!' 11lli1 11tl\ "'"' I hr lc-n ... 111 hr , h..cq~c-d 111 Jr dt1flC'I\ ,11 1h1 111111 llrr\ 11hU11n h11ild10fl! llf"l 11111\ 111 I Ull'lll IH I hon\("\ .,, h11\lnr\\t'\ 111 lhr ..c1rJ\ 111 llC' M"f\lrtl (Pl--eee IRVINE/A21 Cl ... lfled Comic• CroNword Death Notice• Entertainment Food Horoacope Ann Landers Mind and Body Opinion A 11 65 A3 66-8 05-7 85 07 08 63-4 c 1-12 07 02 61-2 A10 A3 08 01-4 HB holds off on extra pier costs Coast school workers to get pay raises Pollee Log Publle Notices 8port1 T9'evlaon W•ther Wedding a 04 A2 A 12 llunttn1i111n Heath C 11y C 11u11l ii mrmbcr11 wisnl add11111n11I 1r1l111 mu11on l>cfrirr puy1ng linul c 11111\ 1111 1..on~1rut1101111l 1t twtM,tory fntaur •tnl hu1ld1n& at lh<" t'ntl 111 lhc lily\ ri1r1 < 11y 1.up1ty<'r• 1tlreudy h1ul p1111l i l1~.H4) fm th<' \, ~IJO ~u:srr loot hu1ldtn& Hut ( 1t y Admin1\tr111111 < harlc:\ l homp,un 1111d lhJt 11ll1l 11tl\ h11vr 1111.ornt" up w11h an udd11111nul ~I OH,000 to puy lor 11vt'rrun\ anti o lhcr 1.on•tr11111u11 1111111111t"nur\ (Pl ....... Pl&R/A2) Mesans putting on a happy face, hoping it spreads T el''redevottngttme to flnd out Just why U.S. doesn'tsmll e Weanna only hlad dot• lur cyn and • wide curve for a 1m1le, thr yellow happy flM.:4! tcrvcd a• a "ut.c:•y reminder to 1mllt and tw chccrl'l.ll And when ll went the way of ditto muak, mood nnp and pet rodia, few bema.ned 1t1 pu11n1 Men and women or the '8''-1 tht" Yuoo'c creed now u y•hart iieriou• miftded prqtnltllll W () IPl)fO&th their careen and penonal h vc:1 with unamllleld 1mqneM Orin1 an out; 1mlrk1 an In lu1 lbtn an 1lan1 of a blcklaah tM&kint •P on the 1tlf-cen1tred lllhude lhal hu •* the nn1 half of It"• ctec:.dt. The mood and 1pirlt of the '60l ll"t rttumlna. Pai~'• beck Charle '• t>etna promoted. •n•fl•• .,, ft1 over well. Mu1id an1 a~ rulll •to lhl aNt of the farmtn 1n AmeriCa and tbe 11arvu'1 In Arnca Wt art the world . And a < 11•ta M C11.1 wmr11u 1 1h111k• 11'1 h1ah ttm<' to hnn1 •rniln htu Ii, 100 "Wr want to find <1ut why Amt"n c.a doc1n'1 1mlle," •aid Pamela < ampbell. who formed WADS (Why ROBERT HYNDMAN T Hl L1cHH R Srn1 Amenca Doesn't mile) cattier 1h11 month With her hutblnd Paul and their 11-ytar-<>ld 10n Ja y "We d«tde'.d thttt muat be a cul~l out thcrr who hH been 1t.caUna eve?.onr '• 1m1l.n, b«.luae you ju1t don t ltf' them " much 11 you lllCld tO," the .. ld The «ampbt111 have nou<.t a u owtn& abtence of 1m11tna fecct 1n ,..._..Me elllLS/il) liy TONY SAAVt:IJttA Of I ... Oaltf -•IMI N1·wp111l Mna" h1111l 11u~tt·r\1.111 llrcl t1111 11111 I\ I ur\4IU )' with 11111\l 111 thr dl\llH I' n11pl11yrr lllfllUJ>\ wh11 will 1nr1vr J 4 Jlf"1tr11l .tlflt\\ tl11 ho11rcl pa) rJ1i.c 1111 fi\(JI l'Jli' IH1 ( 111l1nt1 I\ wr1r .app111vrcl 1111 the II \0 tc1t1 her\ 11 'IC"1 l«l1tfln lo dl\t1 11 l ne1ot111t 11f\ !' t IJ\\afll"cl \Uf1t·1v1\1H\ and 7~ l11\lrll I 1111111111'r" \Ulll \11 Jlf'1 Hllt'll<.kllt Johll N11 oll Add11 1onull~ th<" dl\lllll'\ nll 111Jtnl f1fJC I 1 l,l\\llird w11rk1·1\ '"-111 lol1lr l.lln lhl\ 11111nth 1111 ,, \ll11al.11 \ •11111 ,11 I ,11\11 I .11111111 ftt1 •I •I ll<'ll C-11 1 \ular~ 1111 rruw ~l\1111 \dlcl llf"l!OllJllllll\ Wllf1 lh1 \1lll<llJ\ hUIK-!1111111' l(l llllll\ 11\f"I thr 1.1\I thrr1 r11•11llh\ liu\-1· IM·c-11 ltrc· 111 .an~ m.11•11 11rn1l11l11• ~' •11 cl1\p111n · I hq· \1 hnn 'u1i.-1 I he· \1111plc la• I "11111 IJlllllH\ .Hr ti\ JWJll" ol lhc- l1111d11111 \lll1ttl111n •• , w.-111c-' ht· \11111 11111111ii lhr dl\1111 I '1c-lao1111 r •111 \llt11· Jll<H 11111111\ ............. ..,_... ..... Peal, Pamela aa4 Jaf CUl,...U ~ tlletr -11-...... 1 lw "-•""I" •I I Mr\,1 I rd1 1.1111111 111 I r111 hrl\ 1.illl1rtl 11 th1rr ,,.,11 ·•I'll 1 111r11l I 1ul.1\ v.11h 11111\1\11111\ I•• lt"OJX-11 IJll.\ r\l"I ~ \roll 0tll \,1l.1I \ .111.I 11111¥r l11:"11f"111\ I lie· 1r .. 1 hn\ 'I( llh 11w1o1 '" "II .1• 1l1r 11lhri • 1111l1J1 I\ ,11r 1<'11••·" 11 • 1 .. Jul) I C l.1nll1nl I 111111 tr.11h111v 1 ""I~•'" 1r1111 \("l\lr d h, the I .1ld111111.1 \111 .. •11 I mpl11)rr' A\1\<H.11111 .. 11 ... o11 lw I"' 'I n11nl .c uric 'rt'lll • 111111.11 I ol1111lllo' ,1 ratllu .1111111 >11lr ck I 'I '•11 .. 11 '"'ii 1111 I""""''" oAl(trr111r11l 'llpulalr\ 111.11 1h1· 111111111 .Ol•I .Jl\1111 l 11111t111ur \l11d\ll11! 1111 Wttf~< f\ ,JJUll("\ hr .1.l1lnl • ... 'II \J ld 1111 ""' IJ1'4 ' lhl\ "".al <"J I Jll1•1u11l 111 l>c·1 ... n 11 \I I 1111111 .. n .111tl \I 4 11111111111 •o l 1111 ,J"lll• I' \fiO 1111111"11 lt1IJI h11ol11-11 \111\I •11 1111 11111111 \ ... ill, 111111 lr11111 thr I:; pr111'11l 111111u~•· lhl\ HIU Ill \IJlr Jll•1< 11111111\ LB won't restrict its beach-goers' sound of music By LL'iA MAHO NY.Y °'_....,,__ I hC' I a1un1 lk-11• h < "' 1 • •11111 ii wa• 1111r votr llWl'r I ur\4hn 1111111 rc4u111111 hc-11 h 111c-" 1.. ""1 "' <'llrph11nr1 wh11C" li\tr11111w 1111.ul 111\ 1111 m1111 ot)" llt"ac hr' C ounul mrm0.·1' '11trd I .' 1 .. ma1nt.a1n thr \t1&l11• 111111 11&1hr1 1h1111 rcquirc mu•11 111\rn 111 pluf 111 '" o then ran t"OJt>) thr .-11.rltch 11 \1lc-111 r 1n thr An < uh1n) ',ovn 1&11cl 1111 11' narrn1111 \trand• M1 ~or K<>bh1r M1nlt.1n and < 111111 c1lm1n Uoh < 1cn1r-., pu•hr•l 1111 •11 ord1nanl<' th111 woullt h•vr •ll11wcd r1d10• 11nl~ un M1111 Hui h E.arphonn 111 \IU<'ll th<" Mnrnd• of l"hy1hm and n1t Ii would h.1 vt llt"<"li rcqu1rTd on o th<'r 1tr<'tlhrt of wind But lhr m"onty ol u1un,i1 mrrn bet\ lOuldn't qu1tr ('n" 1"011 I Ja&una 11 C onty laland , 1prvu'tntl) tht' onl~ o thtr plat.c wh<'rC' \u1 h 1111111 rr•t111 11on1 hlVt' httn tnt'd "I c.:a.n't 1..on,e1vr of u• h1v1n11aJ10 frtt LOnn or Clfl'hnnn on the bacht" Manha c 001.un "'d Wh) uan'1 MaCh'f')t" who art" d11turtwti by loud mut t<. 1u1t •pc-alt. up and ult. thr 111lr11clr1 111 tulll thr ~11lull1r "11v.11' \hr ft\l.r,j 'I Jun I 1hin~ wo \h1111l1l hr 11l1li1111K tlUI 1)<1111 r (lllWf"I lhl\ 14A\ 1 """"" .ai.1111 with 1 1111111 1lmrn ""ril I 1111)111111 i. <11111 I >.in ~ .. nnrr 'utrcl 1l11v.11 M111l.1n 1t11<I < •C"nlr't \ fllOllllll t111lr•ll l&ll 1lf\.h 01fhf' M inlt.111 11~1tr1I 1'11l11r < h1C'I Nr1I l'ullrll 111 111vra11p1r Wit}\ uf rc•1u l111n1 luud r1td 111• on thr hr111 h after \hr rrlC'1 vc-11 1 .... 11 y,.1111r11 111mpl11n11 ind K \c-1111 Hlhlil unr• aht1ut loud r1d1•11 f)llflll ulall) 1hc type known •• 1hr1t11 hlai.tt"r• 111 hoom hoat'• that havr twin •llC'•k<"" 11n thc-oulllde l fndt'r 1 unt"llt l11w polu~ mull provr 1 pcnon pl1y1 na •loud radio 11 Jmn1 M.1 mahuuu•ly and wtllfully llt"fort' 11 l llAllon t.a n hr 1111ued Pur1.tll •UJit•tf'd that 11\<' only WI) to art <'Omplctt comphana wuh IJtde pohu 1nttrvHtton " 1 law t.n1un1 rad1oa on the be hn un.• they .,. ~u1pptd wuh carvhonn At th llnM tlmc, Puroell II.id puhltt ba\'t had htU. dtlftculty wtlh ~ b oen .. ham they au to "'"' lht'ir l'M.llOt down (,,..... -RA.D109/ AS) JI - Cou nty OKs $3.1 million 1 • contract for autopsies By JEFF ADLER Of .. ~ ....... The Orange County Board of Supovisor1 voted unanimously Tuesday to award a five-year contnct worth more than $3.1 million to the only bidder for the county's autopsy bu11ness -the same firm that currently holds the contract. Contract terms call for the Rich- atds-Fischer-F u lc u mo10 Medical Group Inc. of Anaheim 10 receive $220 per autopsy during the fint ye.ar of the contract, S23S an year two. S2SO 1n the third year, S26S 1n the fourth year .. nd $280 ID the pact's fifth and finaJ year. ~upcrv1sors moved to review the eltlsung contract with the medical group some fi ve months ago on the recommendation of th e County Ad- ministrative Office. h came at the same time that the professional expertise and workmanship of the pathologists was be1Dg called into question. California Attorney General John Van de Kamp subsequently launched an mvestiga11on into the pathologists' performance 1n certain cnminal cases. That invcsti$Jlt ion was closed last week when Chief Assistant Attorney General Steve White 1Dfonned Shen tr Brad Gates by letter that any problems or 1rregular.ues with the pathology aroup appear to have b«n cleaned up. "8ased on informauon we have rectieved from you and others. 1t docs appear that problems ha ve been experienced," White wrote. "ll also appears that locaJ etTons to solve them have improved the situation .. The investigation focused on the work of the medical group's pnnc1- pals, Ors. Roben Richards, WaJter t ischer and Richard Fukomoto Among the allept1ons were that the tbrcc had misplaced or mishandled evidence al'ld changed their medical opinions on cases during tnal After the allegations surfaced, Fis- cher apparently took has own hfc. shooting himself twice in the heart ID what was ruled a su1c1dc last July I I One of the doctors also currently 1s mvolved in a lawsuit filed against the Orange County Register The lawsuit claims the newspaper defamed Fukomoto's professional reputation and performance as a forrns1c pathnl~g1.;t in a vrit--.nf11rt1dr<i ;ihf,111 coroner's office operatJons. Besides perfonnina autopsies, con- tract terms require the patholOIJSU to complete tissue studies. most labora· tory tests. d1ct.1t1on of aJI repons and all court appearances at no extra cost, according to Assistant Sheriff Walter Fath. "The R1chards-Fischer-Fukomoto Medical Group, Inc. has demon- strated the ability to perform this work an accordance with current fore nsic standards," the assistant shentT advised the board in rec- ommending the contract be awarded. Fath also said the tirrn has "been doing excellent work for us for years." The assitant sheriff said that S6S letters were sent to prospective bid· ders and SS packets of more detailed info rmation about the contract also were mailed out, but only the si ngle bid was rccieved by the county. The contract was approved without comment from the super- visors. Couple jailed for tying cldld ln car OAK.LAND-A mother and her boyfriend, both convicted ofleaving a 4- year-old girl in a locked car after binding her hands and feet with a cord, have been scnten~ to less tha!1 ~year in jail. Shirl.cy Ca~ol Dyer was sentenc.ed to eight months 10 county Jail by Judge Martin Puhch on Tuesday. Darron Singleton was sentenced to nine months. Each was given a five-year probation. The couple. both 22 years old, had been li ving in the car IRVINE JOINS FREEWAY PLANNERS ..• From Al by the three freewa)s. No freeways fees will be charged for existing homes and bus1Desses. The lrvme vote was viewed as cn t1cal because so much of the fundi ng for the three freeways 1s expected to come from burgeoning development in the city. County transportatton officials es- timate the three freeways will cost almost S860 m1lhon. About 48 per· cent 1s expected to come from devclo~r fees. and local officials hope the state and federal govern- ments will provide the rest. Of the developers' share of the freeway cost, 25 percent or about SIOO million is expected to be collected 1n Irvi ne. Irvine Mayor David Baker and Counolman Larry Agran. who were on opposite sades in the 3-I vote. both said Tuesday that the freeway plan would be In Jeopardy 1flrv1ne refused 10 part1c1pate. Councilwomen Sally ·\nne Miller and Barbara Wiener 1oined Baker 1n approv1Dg the fee plan .. , think this 1s one of the most important dec1s1ons that's go1Dg to be made in Orange County history," Bakrr said County supervisors and the city councils of Anaheim. Orange. San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente have already agreed to Join the agencies and collect fees. The city councils of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach arc scheduled to consider the freewa y plan within the coming weeks. Costa Mesa official s delayed a decision until after Irvine's vote The proposed freeway fees tng- gered heated debate in Irvine. cul- mmat1Dg in a petition dnve aimed at taking the decision away from the council. The Committee of Seven Thousand collected enough signa- tures on a "Right-to-Vote " initiative that could require the council to obtain voter approval before collect- ing freewa y fees. But in August, an Orange County Supenor Court Judge ruled the peti- tion was improper because H con- cerns a statewide, not a city issue. Last week, COST members ap- pealed. At Tuesday night's heanng. COST cha1nnan Wilham Speros asked the council to delay action until after the appeal dec1s1on. But Mayor Baker opoosed a oost- ponement, saying that decision could be six months to a year away and could be followed by further appeals. During the public heanng. about a dozen speakers endorsed the freeway fee plan, while two spoke against it. Among the supponers wCTC represen- tatives of local homeowner associa- tions, the Irvine Co. and business groups such as the Irvine Chamber of Commerce and the Industrial League of Orange County. Supporters said explosive develop- ment 1n south Orange County is a certainty, and the new freeways arc needed to carry the accompanying traffic around Irvine, rather than on streets. But Agran argued that the freeways will encourage development. He also said the $860 million cost is a gross underestimate. and that participating c1t1es will end up bearing the finanical burden when that price is exceeded. Bu t Mayor Balcer countered, "lfwe never build another home or bus1Dess 1n Irvine. we're still going to have to deal wuh everyone else's growth ... RADIOS ... From A l FREEWAY COSTS. .• ··we ask for voluntary compliance. I don't lcnow of any cases where people ha ve not complied," Pure.ell said. From Al nght of wa y and authonze final design and construction of the frce- wa ys. The authorities wall go out of business once the newl y constructed freewa ys are accepted into the state highway system. The free structure approved by the board creates zones of benefit 1n areas near the proposed freeways Oeveloperc; near the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Comdor will be charged $1.305 for every s1ngle- fam1I> home the> hu1ld 1n areas lln'icst to the free \A.3\. while tho~ built farther away will cost Sl.010. For the Foothill and Eastern Cor- ndors, the charges for sing.le-family homes will be S 1.295 and $920. respectively_ Commercial property in areas adJa- cent to the San Joaqin Hills Comdor will be assessed at a S I. 75-per-sq uarc- foot rate while bu1ldrngs tn the second zone will be assessed a $1.30-pcr- square-foot fee. For the Foothill and Eastern Comdor the fees will be S 1.80 and SI .OS-per-square-foot respect1 ve- 1) Minkin suggested radios could be allowed on Main Beach where traffic nmse and sports acti vities detract from the sound of the surf and ban them elsewhere. but most of the cou ncil didn't agree that radio noise has reached such a pitch that more regulation 1s needed. "It hasn't been that big a problem ID the past. I'm JUSt concerned that we are regulating the heck out of too many thin~ ... s.a1d Kenney, wh o descnbed h1mselfasa frequent bcach- goer SMILE CAMPAIGN ST ARTS IN MESA •.. From Al recent )'ears But It ~asn't until the y examined a recent Da il> Pilot news photo that 1hn put 1he1 r plan into acti on •\ color photo of a group of partygoer\ a11cnd1ng lhe Salute to the \rl'> a1 Newport fkach"s Fashion hland showed plenty of faces, food <1 nd drink fhc story told of the attendee~ hav1nR fun Bui on one 1n the ph<.1to was smiling. "It sremed '>dd 10 me that such a gala event should produce eit- pres,1ons re m1n1~e01 of a bread line of the Depression era But not one smiling face." Campbell wrote 1n a le11cr to the editor "(ciuld It be 1ha1 smiles arc not 1n lash1on at the island''" A. draftsman for a San Juan ( ap1\trano company. Campbell spread the word and the ~miles at . "'ork She created a sweatshirt in- scribed wnh "I G1 vr Good Gnn" and Just Call 642-6086 Dally Piiot O.Uvery ft Ou•ranteed v f"\4~., , 1•· ,, t ,, V •f • •• • t -.,. l}._,_., "' •"' ( ,..-(Afl tft•"W• 1 C .. "-.... ,. 1.. • l• II"_,.,, "WADS.'' Her son Jay went to work 1dent- 1fy1ng the culpnt -a k1Dd of gnnch who now steals smiles instead of Chnstmas. "We believe he's responsible for a lot of the nation's problems." Campbell said. "We want lo convince people that 1t's OK to smile again ·· The Campbells are firm believers in the power ofa toothy gnn. "We want people to be proud of their smiles -brush their tee th and show them off We hope smiles become an ep1drm1c We don't be- lieve there are locks h1g enough 10 keep smiles out.·· Campbell 1s JUSt getting warmed up There's more "We want a moment set aside each day for everyone to smile at each other_ We think. smiling 1s as import- ant to a health) personality as good nutn11on ·· The Camplxlb arr al\O planning 10 pnnt bumper stickers and what they'll call "laughing stock." "We want people to buy Laugh1Dg stock tn Amcnca." Campbell said. "One side will be pnnted with the offi cial stock ins1gn1a and the other side will be blank for someone to wnte their own happy thought and pass it along. '"Then by Chnstmas we'll send all this laughing stock to the White House. which in tum will share it with the rest of the world." Campbell said her efforts to replace frowns with smiles has been success... fut so far. ''It's so cont.agJous, you can't help but smtle when someone smiles at you Let's face 11, there are plenty of reasons to smile." Job stress, political wamng, family d1v151vcness, racial conflicts -all c.an be relieved by a wann smile or car-to-ear gnn. Campbell said. "All men's teeth were created equal and sm1hng will rcve.aJ this." What do you likt a bout tbt Oally Piiot? Wbat don't you llllt? Call tbe numbtr at left a nd your mtuagt will bt rtcorded, tnnscrlbtd and dtllvtrH to the approprlatt editor The same 24-bour answtrlng ~ervict may be used to record lttttrs to the t dllor on any topic. Contributors to our Letlert column must Include their name and telepbone numbtr for vtrlrlcatlon. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what'a on your mind. Kann Wittmer Pu t>lrSl'lel Circulation 714/M2-4333 Cta11ln.d lldvertlelng 714/M2-5871 Alt other depert"""'t• 142-'321 MAIN OFFICE )(J w .. 1 B•t So Co.oe ....... C:A ..... ,.,,,.,... 8<• •W .oolt l.IM.i CA '1711"6 Frenk Zlnl ROMmery Churchman , "-<I'' •11111 r.a"O" r~•· ""Ill!~,_..,, No ~ ttO' .. ""'"1'•''"""' fl()1t)f .. ~ti• Qt ~­~,, ,..~ ""'"• be • ...,,~..,, W'lthnl.1~ '°9<•1 De' ,..,,,. t"t ( • •''9'' ..... Clrcul•lton Te .. phonee r 1.1r r RoMrt L. Cantrell ~ rOdl.K I c,.. Mll''•lQ8' Howard Multen.ry ~nrllet1ng Otrl'Ctor r ,..,, , ,., Donald L. William• C11cul111ton M11n11gi>r P-ogy ... vlna C1as.s1I~<' [)trjlt(;tt>r VOL. 71, NO. 211 taatMAN 1-2 ..., 24 .. 24 ..., 24 .... 24 ,.., 14 ,.., •·2 ,.., TNUMOAY 12:21 Lfl'I, 5:10Lrn, t1:3aLll'I. 1-00 p"' 4.1 2.1 t4 -4.4 Sun Ml.I !Odey 8t ·-18 p.lft • "'-~ 8t t :&t&-111. ---~ .. • 11 p.111 Moon -!Odey at 1:12 p.m.. l'9M ~tll 11:14Ll!'l.,end .... ~et t:02 p.rn. Seniors hit Congress on benefits WASHINGTON (AP) -Two hundred senior citizens carted 130.000 petitions into a congressional hearing room Tuesday demanding hl&her Social Se-curity benefits for so- called "notch babies" -people bom from 1917 to 1921. It was the latest sk.irmisb in a continuing uphill battle to get Con- gress to reconsider the actions it took eight years ago to bring a runaway benefit formula under control. People born in 1916 -those now 69 -who paid the maximum Social Security tax throughout their work.ing careers are drawing benefits that in some cases are as much as S 160 a month greater than from people bom in 1917. Congress. in correcting an error made in 1972 when benefiu and wages were first indexed to inflation, let those born in 1916 stay on the old, overgenerous formula, and provided a transition formula for those in the t 9 l 7-to-1921 period. These notch babies actualJy will get a higher return than everyone born in 1922 or later, but less than those born in 1916. But they left a sharper notch in benefits than most expens had ex- pected, and it bas been a source of consternation ever since for people like those who trooped into the House Select Committee on Aging hearing. Daryl Cooper of Council Bluffs, Iowa, drew cheers when he testified. "If they think we're going to die otfto take care of the problem, thry've very badly mistaken, because we're gomg to live until this problem is taken care of." Julian Stem, an activist who said he is known as "Mr. Notch" back home in Del Ray Beach, Fla .• said, "I was not brought up to be a second-class citizen." Stem, 6 7, would not disclose how much he ~ets from Social Se-curity, but said it 1s $80 a month less than it should be.~ Rep. Edward R. Roybal, 0-Cahf., the committee cha1nnan, has I 04 c<r sponsors for a bill to raise benefits for the notch babies by as much as $184 a month. COST OF ARTS CENTER RISES ••• From Al focused on the main facility, planned to be a state-of-the art theater for world-class performers as well as a home for local troupes. Construction on the 10-story building began in July 1983. Center offi cials stressed the S 13.4 million change was not a sudden increase, but accumulated gradually since the last $6S.5 million construc- tion figure was announc.cd in May 1983_ About $1.8 million in increases were attributed to changes rec· om mended by Kendrick after a design review last summer. The origjnal estimate unveiled in 1980 for the main theater phase was $34.5 million, with total construction of the Orange County Perfonning Arts Center figured at S40 million. Initial cost mcreascs were at· tributed to design features, inflation and other unexpected charges. The budget was revised Tuesday to cover construction chanses in the backstage area, increased interest on the center's credit line, an adjustment for inflation and $220,000 in plan- ning costs for the second 1,000-scat theater. Interest costs, boosted by a one- year extension m the construction schedule, 8J"C expected to reach $4.4 million. an increase of $4. I million over the $300,000 budgeted in 1983. Tim Strader, center chief execut~ve officer, said a revolving credit line was needed to cover expenses because pledge money was received at a slower rate than expected. Pledges projected to be received in two-to three-year periods were instead tak- inf. three to five years. 'Onginally we didn't have a very good handle on what the flow of the fund-raising would be, .. Strader said. Another S3.6 million in increases were listed for design revisions, including $400,000 for an acousticaJ shell behind the st.age. Kendrick said the improved shell and canopy were the latest in acoustical equipment and couldn't be compared to the traditional shell structures backing perf onners on other stqes. He added the new shell would reduce openiting costs in t.he lonJ run. Combined architectural and con- sultant fee increases totaled $2.3 million, with another $2.4 million added for such things as insurance, computer systems and backstage equipment. Also included in the revised budget is a $I million cont1 ngen cy fund. William Lund. c.cnter board chair- man, said directors decided over the years to delay announcement of the cost overruns until a more probable prioc tag could be revealed. "We did not want to come out and have to adjust the cost every five or six months," Lund said. Center officials said the latest changes for the main theater would probably be close to the final figure. And they stressed the privately funded complex represented the latest innovations in architecture and acoustics, and was "radically dif- ferent" from other ans centers. "That building has been reviewed from top to bottom," said Ray Watson, the center's facilities vice president and former board chairman of WaJt Disney Productions. Watson said more than 2,000 hours have been spent studying the main facility. PIER •.• From Al The escalating costs were criticised by Councilman Peter Green and Mayor Ruth Bailey who said effon.s may be made to collect portions of the bill from the engineer and architect because of alleged design deficiencies. SHUTTERS SPECIALLY PRICED Capture the outdoors and create comfort with these custom moveable shutters In the colors, sizes and styles you wantl @J