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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-06-29 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ... WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1988 25 CE TS .2nd Bo e Ranch refer.endum due oes say Mesa o ce pro~t not scaled back enough, launch new ballot drive - BJ JONATll.AN VOLR.E ... ...,, ........ A citizens• poup that forced de- velopment pant C.J. Scsentrom It. Soas toJCale t.ck plans for the Home Ranch buainess park announced Tuesday it plans to launch a refer- tGdum drive apinst the ~uced Some delegates to the Soviet Unlon•a party con- ference aay Mlkhall Gorbachev•• reforms havenotgonefarenough tohelpthestagnantecon- omy./AS N~oo proposal. Jay Hum~rey, rcpresentina Costa Mesa Residents for Responsible Growth, said even lhouab Seatntrom cut the 93-acrc Home bnc6 proje(t by more than I.I million square feet, it was not cnoup. · "In essence. phase one is identical &o lhe old plans ... Humphrey said. .. The on!y chaoses come in phases thiu or five yean down the line.•• The citiuns' poup launched a referendum •inst the last Hoim Ranch development. apparently 1pu=·· n the latest ~ntrom pro . umphrey said memben of his lfOUP will apin bit the strcd.S this ~kend to tJesi.n ptherina the 4, 180 saanaturcs needed to place the new project before the voters. But o.e Sctmtrom official said he thinks Costa Mesa residents ''are sick and tired of petitions, especially ones Wit attack reasonable and moderate altcrDativn. "We have chan&cd and ~uced the plan and made substantial con- cessions to the community:· said Thomas SantJey, vice president of public affairs for Sqerstrom. .. We have looked at the economics of Home Ranch time and time &pin. TM 2 mimon square feet alternative is the minimal amount of develor,- ment that is economicaJly realistic. · Saotley called the Costa Mesa Residents for Rnponsiblc Growth .. a vocal sutJsroup \Mt Ytants to petition and control everythina in town." The latest proposal actually marked the third time Home Ranch plans-~ submitted to the city. lnitiall) submined more than two )UR aio. the firs1 proposal called for a 32-story skyscraper. Sqemrom then ~uccd the plan to include 12- and 20-story to~ers. a 400-room hotel. health club. child-cart ~nter and rciaiJ space. But those initial cuts were not tnouah to placate the citizens' pup, wbic6 sued to stop the project on pounds tbe city set improper dcft1tty limits for the de\'elop~nt and all of north CO$ta Mesa. Superior Court Judie Tully H . Seymour ultim.atel): clcartd the way for the project. but not before resi- dents pthercd cnouah sisnaturcs to force a citywide vote on Home Ranch in November. If the rcf~ndum succccds. the ~eeeBOllB/A2) Supervisors fin;Q budget f und·SJq ·.'= :-.:.;.;.~'."·; raise their ·s~1ar&~ : ...... ,; Action criticized as 'self serving' by union official - "' ... . " '~ . ,• • t,,, .. pcnob.,.el. '-~ ,: : . . .. '·7 . County officia1' ~:~ P!he1" em-· . plo~ no_nnally ~~ t~ tt .... the bqlnnqoftbc )lear;'i.A.hcy • ·• ICt them Uall. Palto,n sa,td. -..~ "': The ~ocrcasc puu tbe su~-· · " .,,., visors' ·es well at;ov~: thole io ·. • ··"!.. _ 809 v· .. ..i EYllEN San Oteso tnd Santa a.r..~nties.; "" ( u7 ~ wtuch norm&.lly keep pece "'*°' tlaose ~ Of .. DlllJ,...... an Oran.F County. Bd~ ~ :iD-· '~-: County supttVisors voted them-~. Otan.sc County supttVtson-~ .: selves a 6.2S-perccnt pay ratSC Tues-camcd ·S61 ,942 annually, cx?"mpercd • .'1w day, despite an expected shortfall of to S6 l ,927 10 S.O Olea~ aM Satua 1 • • $44 million in next ¥ftr's ~t. Clara counties. . · . , ··· -It ~ the secQnd ume this year Under .th~ ~pay i>aCf.aae, the • ·:-:!~ supervisors have ratscd thetr pay, superv15(>n' salaries wi}l bet bootled puttin& them ahead ofsu~rv1sors m to S63,960on SepL .~and~tcf S6S,873 • t>ei&bborin&. San ()lcao C'ounl)I. bu' · 9n Dec. ~6. t · . :.• · . • stilf Well beh(Jtd,supetvoors 1n Los., "'Shli, 1>0an1 platj_es. ·~:·~ , ' ·~f:ouoty. "' ·" .,, , -xounty &Tt a dlstant SCC'Oft" to u1VX •. '-·. ~·lfTcSt~1~~tj, 1~ ~f!Fks Co~ty. w~ ~ )Yit}r cntici~· . ODC.~~.A\lQ.n ~~~1~64annu&lly., '' \ ·leader. ~9 tba1 line ~P af =.Tbt~ · · afsct"' #.QP'OVfld pay '* c:<>~ Jorkers dhcJl)all)' was ~ , an 1Qr VJunty ~ dlffin~ . , '7G· ao ~ta ranc·1Q. hdJ) ba1anct · the!~ rnanwme:nt o _:icials. ~Court upholds ·lawthat allows Indepen- dent proMC\itc>ra to ln-·. VMt~ .... ged crtme.: by hfgh-ranklng govem7, · ment offldaJa.IM • . •· • ;.~: · :\. ·. • ..... ._ ..... _.,..'--~ .:f!is_lcar'.&.budgcc. r ~-•. • \.., Un1«piizt;d;"'°unlJ. em~ym re-•• Gift to Eneenada · · . . :--. -. -:.. , . · . : .. . · '; .-., · · · .... ~ · · .: .. ' W!lile ·~:pay 1'1kt rs 1ce~1l'-. ~ed pai!~ ~~Jl1n:iate· , 1te..-•wll 11aprJ ea.iiimte ... · .. ~· ...... it~J-'=tftnli~-ioa•to·....-·~-tbe ~f!d .0 f the-),ear.,~bc ,,.[>-~t.:.fC.:::.S~~ ~~- . . u,9 tl9 a lMa ~ft fbe C"" . .._ . -.O.~· r-' ..... ~ deHded to·~tf (E~~~.!, ~' '~CQDtract JWq~fori~)·, ·. ~ SueDada lla,or &ni1no ._ • ~ .~ ~ ta11P ... rat¥r .~.a~ tl .. o« • .-.. JuJY; 1'987,actordl;a.loJo 11 '. ~e<1J.2~QCrc:ept.·e1rtcti\~J'\1}' I. day .... wpwtlleae~ ~·•• ~ tlaa~1•4 .. ~~-•~D*.za·d• toopeD~~---.~PatO,n, the lcoun~s 'dlrcct0t·~of-. .. ~-~~;as~ .. , ' • " •• • •• ,, •. . I • • • " • • • • • } • • lo • ·~ -. : A • •, .. . • -.. -• J.· • • o o • • ' I o • I a 2 0 I ' -_.. • t ; r ; 2 O • • O ', : -:" • . 4 I I . .. ' I . I ' • ( •• • •• , • • :. <. . ' • ,. < ' ,, : . { 1 j ; • • . :.,, IDdQ AdYk:e and Gama C7 Bulletin Board BuMlell .. Cf Mettled Comlca Entertainment Food -. . A3 A7-8 88-10 C8 • 86-7 • , ·~ •. -'• • • . • • • >.• ·• • • ," ·-' • -. • ... • • •• ,. ' • ! ._ ·.' • . . •• . No cbltElie,:.n1et1/!~::1:--a•Btita.J::CO."'rr·~s .. pbd,li~:.\:::·:_;~~ t/!fl , • ~ 4 f "f f. -~ \ •t . I '• \,, ' BJPAULABCJllPLEY "r · •·• '· primaryintbcAeth'Di.sU'icot:sevcril 1 tJian•~~cametoittendaAcrthe -vc5ti.Puons unrl"dedded 'T~y tiaceihecaU•to t.fie Lquna eeac..., · Of.,.~,....... . ·. phone _lines at Cox's Newport .~h telephQne C0"1pany traedi the caO~ t? ~t .to fiJc qi_mina~ c~~ -O~klty f1-ome Of an,Or&qsc Co!fnty,~veloper . ' Criminal cha.rses will not.be filed an ~P&&&n headquan,_ers ~t' t1clfup a l.quM &ach home.. .. said. , , . .,. . an~ tu.s rie., thQ: ... eoUJd not prove C1-8 ~ Mind& Body connection with complaints that op-~I)' for ~ lo!" ~U mmutcs at ~ Nowpon Beich police utvestiptcd The cue was· re1ec~ ~use · wh~ WU.~ Uftcalls.. . (>ODtnts Of CODJTCSSiOn&J candidate lt~ 1 . • the complaint and lUmed OVCf their aulJlori(ies Werf unable lO-det~inC • Tbe ,tnv~~D ~ve&lcd th~ Opinion . .Police log . Public Notlcee ·Sporta W•ther. A3 EM.10 e1-.. A2 Chris Cox were Jammina phone lines ('ox repcaeptatives ~ould answer invqtipti<Sn to the District At· wbd was respom\ble f(1t the cajls. 'SI.id . ~uP,le t!;.:. ~;_ . &cb~·.t'~~ at his hcadQuaners, the District ·aadf-onlytahearadialtom:.Anoon tomcy•s office Monday. said polJtt Oak.Icy. "'oten ~.~ _. .. JJl.llll a .-.t ' , Attorney's office announced Tues~ as they 11'.tq up, tbe phon~ viould rin.t spokesman Bob Oakley. ..It lu1:u1ow prionfy because it's.no ~~~ wJ'1nteer 1.0 Rose-· ,, dal_. . apin: , · .~· . ..?.eputy District Attornc' tongcrhappening."Oaklcyca1ct'1 ·., .n~··~~-0n&l~p&lflL • ·., Durina the rancorous Republican Tbe-barucmcnlwtlidrlastedm~ ~ton bu of the special 1n·· AlthouJh authorlucs WCf'e able to· .. , ~~4A'M"!3D/A2). ' ·N.othiqg s.af e, s·atje -abOutfireworks;· .. · •'1 ~. ~ I . ·4ite·official says .. '• ... BJ BOB VAN BY&EN .._ tbet~ =perty. ·. ....... ,...... 1~ · nt o( .. lbe f:ue . Oiiers "Astocialion, di~· ... t ' Within 1eeondl, flames enauJfed · b • .... the little airl whote clothina had been '"I do•'• believe any itewot arc touched for only a moment by a ~ ~;~'!?~'t.~.,,~ · bumina sparkler. ~int_~ IR ufe for Children. ·. Fonwwely. she wasn't a real little lut.1b,ill9f.lfttir-ainto~bouu~ prt. She was a dummy. aDc( lbcMat 102 ~ Now mink of· • But the real dummies are sments IOCllCdltDa 10 times hotter. lbilt't wbo permit small children to touch boW bOJ • spirt.lei bums-.. : •11000 · ftlt'«tOrb. Foutain Valley Fire Chief dear'Ni. R.icbud £. J~ laid at a news .. ODI)' apt or Oranee County'• 21 ~ ~J~·Oranee County ~c::·~s;:!'~~: F'ue t>etutment'• trainina center in ~. Newport = Hunti.._. • ~ Joraemen ·u it i• tbc 8*b. Llluaa ae.cll and llVinc. offtcii1 j)Oli_tioa of tbe Orariaie County Prolatit alf ftn:worb. • '· • f"ue .Gbid'a Aitodadon that all Coila U. ii the only ci'l in tbe~ • fllTWOfti-even ao-aUed safe.end-Oluiee a.a w tbat pennats _.. · aaDe ODC1 -1.t'C ~ ..... ftreworb. but tbe City•1 flre The demoMtradOri came a day ~ Tom Mct>ufr. laid lae W after aDolhet brieflal by reprueaia· rei:a••.tid tM& tbe Cil)' CouCil .• ti"' or ttae ftteWOftl a:s=-:= bu 11 ••WOlb tbis yw. ne . .~ tbat approVed Cow1I .... ~ al'IUiDI tbat fin>- . ftNworbP.Oteno8'pilkantdalll'f . 1'11111-ftllSWOaD/d) ---. ~,. . . , . ~. ·". b 2 • • • ; • -A • :1· -I . ~ . ... . .. ~~ ------. _.....___,__~ .. Reiside:bts ¢·Qa$tpQ:l)C·~ ~ra~ipg ~fof .. :. :·~~~~~-.. ·h·-t-~; +·· """ .. F .... -~.,.... rt. ·h ..... "'-,;k. ,··~ '~-~ elderly· · a ~c .~1·c·~ ~ ou ~ ·wee-.enu . ·~ ~ ... ~, .. ·; .... · '. ~:;_;· ~, a,.OuoP..Em :"... . . ; ~work 12-hou'r shifts for tt:te ·cnl!rc wccken~ •" s·care ... bome oui11~Nllit... · .. • USlSt'\1 by about 20. Ult~<Qta Hijh~~ Pat[OI • ~ . : _...,. . · · · • . . • .... ' offic&i. 10 Oranec County Shen fr Deput1~ al10 S ' • ~: a ~ful otbi&hly lrainedJ!'~n ~d "'o~officcrsfrornvariousolher~Countylaw .,... '.; . ttent)>tt~~&J!doccupya thill stnp , ert1'orcement agencies.• • ~f beacb fO(~ penod Of'll>P.t"lDmat~y 12 houn. . • As is customary ID Newport Beabh.-. fftentirc 1 They. o.ot ~in,iy insurmountable. odds.~' ·~tion ofbcacbfront will ~oscd to throu&h~ ttaffi.t ' )~tnwnbered more than I 0 to 1 ~ 's«lors, eJtCept etn~ncy \rehtclcs fronf4 e.Ql. JM!y 4 until) : .thty e.c:.· &n·enemy often po~ by ,JkoboJaqd . Un. the followt~min&. Th~ area bordered by .• · otber subiWK:ts. and armed 1rt'tth bottles and. . ·. C~ l:b&bway, ·Boule¥trd.. Prosperi Stred' .. · • ocCujoQUJy" explo.tves.· ' . · ~ 32dcf Strcet ts'° conaestea d~ peak holiday .... Jt't tJac f:ourtb of Juiy, and f0r J~ Po6Ct boun~.ti~wouldbe .. impossjblc .. for.crafficto~t ' 'de.,.,uneats, that tbeaDJ WU • • . •. ~ OUJeysaid. . • . •. . .. AIOlli tbe <>ranee Q;;i. more tbao ,sOO.,law · · · He added tha1 otber pon.aons of ~nt ~-eial:iiwt ~ :...:. 1 sman army ..... :~·be '" ~ tJc or~u the crowds pow too~ or~~ ...,.... ia .. afmostf0Rlridablt•*'1lpt to um io .. ff:1w!f1. Poli(:( 'ln.ay also perf~ ~:-Of ccnanf'~. ~ aowda tblure tllpected &o ntlmbtt-i9 tbe"tb ~. =· t.ed areas.. ~ leams of o~i ~k a · ori'-0 .. . 1 •.. A • • , .... ~to~eepyouths.fiomco~nnaand ...... tbe 10Qlbe$t weekend or •· ~.·· poeit)ly 8'U1bl too ro,!dy. . . . N.wpon 8wll POiiCle Of1ker &ob Oak.In' ~1-• • • Newport 'Beach o~ls are bopi.arfbf &~t ecflld.;1-,.0o.ebuuetJdays «.~for .. : ~lUt~sF,oVJth-OfJUfy ~tday, wbm ~Yl• tbatDll'iOd. lt'11D~:a; ~~" ·, mtbclMlboa~Ne'Npe>f:tPieran:uwasrestivebuie,, n."' --~~·willbt ~mro-Police .... UQ -w1 fW1y tMS wtdad. That me.a~ · ' .OOOcitationifbrtra~ ~-..... · ......, ...... ~andUraa.-e~.: ,.. . ' ~;~~IC&/~) • .. • • • • , ,,. " ,,,, #'J. wL ' . ... ~ ................................ 1111[11 .. llllill ................. ll!llll ..................... l!lml .. lllll!!l'l!i .. _.'-""" ............... ~,~----........ IJllll~ ........... ... -.. . . .. ,, . :·I I . ~ "'·., .. • -.- Fogroll ngtnalon the Coast ... an.d ·~ neW Contract;· ,.. Ill ' • • • \ e~plqy~:~-~ -gr.0~11'1.a:v f~ld ··. • • • <I .. ,,, • • 't . , • .; ouq a.sit~ " ·· AJ!idr-ez;'~ ~•ni ... '"u\a•~~ia~on . t«hni;_J e~plo~ ~ mnina ... .._ ...... · . • · · '.. .. .incmben'dopot hive \be.levp11e to more tban·&he·•vcnttt of..w three TM ·1..--& 'OI ~ ~~ • P.'fa~f th« ri~ in&o .f\lik DelD" bilhcsl~ atiea. .UMI: tbcrefcic.-• It.Kb Profeillb .... a · ;ana Y~hM:al · ua . a • • • • • , • wett Jl04 dw rora raite. -': .... · • ~:::=i:Qal&idbit..-OU ". '· ~ •~i wouldn't ~~ • bve "· . '"lt"isn't.tbat tho dty d'ocm:t.hnt f may ~.in at·-uc. or•taaJ " nu~b :or.~ im~ f« ~-.: •id . CDs>uab'~ncy.orthtt~don'tth.ink • • -.o~uoea·ov!( • ..._, ~ <~ ... ,ANidtti.''' lf.we were• Sf,lice ~~re· ... they'ie .. dQ~l)I a IOQ(l~ job. Il'• Just ifl.aD~ ~ .... , "" .dc~~\t_nwawcU1cwftttenL • pobc:y, 111dW)'no. • :"-. :~Aer, ~·i; • ·;;.,J.'j f;t · Alv1d!Wslid UIPCMatioil memben . Ho~v~, Atvfdttz claims tho aty · ·· ~ "'' ~&OtytouS::v:.Mcr~J:~ :·trelObstratOd.withwhanl)eyffe!lt ~'1ed to 11Kludc certain ~t?'n~e ·~~tao mandatrtbe city'a ldio~r ' ~·~-~tio~ ~t they •~ .. i~ fo,r tht tOR t~~ ciuet. •n41. •"'' + • • ''-.L-: 6~· ....._ ' OOnSiderir\I di$baridift1. , aJ~ ~·~. l\S r.akl11Q10M Wsed On •.• ,.,.,....._ oaa~cotttnCt~tllll: . .rmcm~r · "It doetn:t KCm to be wonb.our tbetopsaJ&tttanaeinbdlcity, · ·• ~ ••".u.oaa,ioo. Tbe oew ~o~ 0~'!~ time. There i.an't any mcet..and.. , "If the1:d "UMdtow'fia\lfes, tbere1• • JJ!Q=-I:~~~~~!!"· eonfer process, it's just meet and be "'wouldn;t~vebcenabiaincrease,but •e I -'• ~ Cl~ ....... ~~rl, "fold,; be said,, •' • • '•, ii. 'tlt'Ouid'Ve '&eetf fD0fe• than ttfO/' 4 • • .e•~ and. da\l ~ -.:a . Cit,Y Man.ta«. Robert "\yynn saitt ,,18fd Alv~rei.: . · · • • · "' , .ma1J ~ \Q COVC!:Jlealth m-the Clty WU umpfy ... follOWlllf policy ~The ( and emplO)'teS' a$$0Cil-' t· ~u~ ~es and an ~ent to in "fulina the auociatiott~~tsf' fJOO.qt urtimcttiodtstµuthenew · ... !~IUdebQhclayus.ov~~work. for a '81ary incrcue. Pay raisCi arc conuatl 1be council had ttie option ~ -N : col)trae'{ ·f~I~ s:Ons•<kT&bly calc\llatedbutdbn libeaveMl-selary MondaY"ai&bt ofalloWina mote time s8on 9.f w~ associ:-t1on. neiotiators of -e,mplO)'CCS in the ~u~_tn three for nesc>ttMJonS, but \n11ead chose to •· • ,,~ 1a$>Plftl·~(o~.-.. wd ~ Mam~cl hi&beSt~.-yifticitits.w.·d wy;nn. mandatethecity'sfinaloffer. •' .j:'. ~~ 1J:'.,.president qi' the associa-ib.iS year, city official$ .OOOclu4cd the city-.bls reacdd aareementS . ._ tto~4· . · .d th ... · . . ·,,,ed thlt Newport Beach prQfessi<>nal and with all ofitsoth«emptoxces. • · • 1a1 e association ab : . • , " : • ~· · tor.. t salary (nCTCUC, a flex · ¥.. ·. ... • ~time · ule, l .merit increase aft~ ~ · · .. ..,. ... · · , · ·.~~nile~~~~~Ki~~~~~; Stubborn Salloma Cbu'ilty· ~ ~y. Tb~et1lr:eJectectallofthose . , . . • .. • .... ~c:oU~•:~Mbnday~t\n~-··briish fire:Mestio'-~ horfies · date \'lrtUaJly closes the boo\ on this ' , • .,. 'J'"-J ·· ~ . .. ' yefl"'s contract n~tiatioos. said HF.SSEL (AP)-FircjightcrS today DistrlCt.. ..... , ,; • !1 ·':" struulcd to wn~r:ol a st'tlbJ:>om fire MQr:e ~ ~00 fifelilpters from tbatoestroyed four.N>mes·an4 m0tt most 'of. tbi' fir. depanments in .: .. · · :.. than a dpzcn farlp,bliildin~ tn the Sonoma•..County 'foupt the smoky SCHOOLS dry. hilly temun nca1 H&.el Jn rural blar.e but were hampered by the biJly • • • ' Sonoma Coum~ . · • ti' .. te~n co..vm:d with .. very dry" pass Pram Al Wind,.wbipped names also caowd with some ·~sh. and oak tleesfo' trustees told her \o 198} that no one eit~!ive darril&e to the l,listonc ~locck:ncr. wd. • .. . .. bad ever been denied a transfer and. S06otn) .County eommunit)'. of •. Jn add1t1on to destroyina fou,r that the policy would not chang~. . Preston, an~ artist eolony where one houses. the fire :tlso bum~ more u~s~ Te~~-. :~s-~ 5 5 Callf. Tem ..... • , .. L9 Oii..._ Olly . • H JO r- Albuqu91q;.e • • 7t M OMtile • ' ' II • High, .• • tot '4 ........ _,.. 91 I Liii. ~ t , '• It Ortlndlt '' •, M '' ..-, AllllWt , : : ... hldllliNI, ...., • ......., M • A~qlly, ' ' .... •. ,.._... IG, N ._.. • U .~. • -C':l.: IO t1 ••• ..,._ •• 12 • . ... ~ •• •• ,~ .. • ....,., .', a 10 ,_,. ' .., Loe~ It M '°"°'1'' '" a ; 10 ~.Ore. . : IO OlltlftCI 14 10 ~&i 'l \ 71 61 =-City ', , II f, "-ftaMlll II II ~ ... ~ c . ·= :: ~ .: :: : ::::::=' :: r, ~ . • . • ,, "\bAI N n =·~ :: l: ~ • • IO II lellt.IU""" .. 72 CllMlend '. f1 11 -·· ....,. f7 .. ~.bNo ,. I, E ~ ::n..AMlli\IO t3 75 11111'*00 •• o.ii.l'I WC1f111 A -71 ....... _ ' .. IO ..,. P'l'Wldloo 76 ... ~ .... ,, f1 --··· ...... .._ u .. oen-~ '• •• • ...... ~-11 ~ 8'"Llofll~ ,, 11 0. ...... :, • :. • ... .,.,...., ,,,... .. 71 ltoc*IOll . .. ., ~ 7• .. i: = 7S ......................... .,"' DIAlll ' 10 64, ~ II ;: ....... 10I 12 ..... -' • " 1• w-.oc • 71 ---101 ., ~" • "· ... ...:::::::.•-.· 11 _ .. ..., n •1 ~ • .,.,., .. -........ 100 .. ~·Ofllnd.... :.: •. : = ... ~ ': :: ~· .&. IO n ~<*Y •. IO • , "°'*°" • .~~ . ·. •·,n SJD.Od Report ~ 1CIO • •--1111• · ,. . !". "-"' • . • ~-= 72 :: ......... • . .-.... ~ ,_..,. ..,._ IPll) MO fl .:-i~ :: .... = : tioed; lt-1GO modW-'°'"* -:..::01-~. : : ic.-eity·. ~ • 10l Tl ~--,,.Ylll._IM,W • ,,_...._. tOI Tl .... Y9ll9 • • ·~ t(ll •., Ind --._ ... ,,.,. .... -.......... • u l.JlW "lldl _. '1'1 n '""'°"' '#(1 ....... tlll ..-,. II ........... ' .. It L..... •! • • "t1 a ";,...._., .... *-\ ---~ II U ......... • 17 72 ........ ~ -.,.,_ 21-41. TlllOI~ 7t II ~ .._., 1.1 , IO blnl. tad A • 1111 V.-W ... _ ... U"9 J-IO a ........ A, u sr U.-9aea11~ .•. -42 ·w.wo. n a ...-.S11>u •· 11 ' lM~~.-... -.. -.• ~ Y-WVl\t M M . . Extended Surf Report Tides Cueci said she h1d notl\ing aptnst resident said t~ l<>Ss · was "in· .than 12 ~utbwitµflllt mostly barn~, Smith School ind that· the. '..!baslf caic .. t.le. ''Other fires were reJ>Qrted fm . officials ~d. Gl~er esu- probJem .. isdista~. not quali~ near PaJodla ~ CalaveTJS County mated .dama1e at m~re than ~ whose district wilf lose ·~ n~Lakcp0n i• lake Coqnty U00.000. . .. . . --· • · . · ... • • • ... · . · • ,, . ~=e:=:~~s:t~ w~~~:~~~~b~ur~ aer1~~~!~~~~?~~ If bicy·:clist guilty as charged ,the Hunti~on Beach District. 1"'~11. and one firefighter 1h. tht mo.mma. The cause of \ho . blue, _ . • • • • 9 "lfwedon•t respond to the needs of ACSS'cl blaze was sent to"a hospital for which bea,an shortly before 2 p.m. Qn h b '" ~ : ·1 d • · · parent~ and =.t choioc on' ~llritn\ofsrno~J~tion. Tu~l~i~uth~ns.w;·gu~ f~ned a e·. ro ,.e· ~. a•n · speed re· cord mat~ . tina eir . children. we The Arc m th1s bamJq. several fire &om a downed power hnc mto an . t • • ,. • are mviuns them to "':llhdraw their i miles JQDlb of Seba.siopol, 1COrched inferno that dcstro~ a 17-room • · • .... -• ~ • lfudents fTC>m the pubhc sys~m and ....._ 200 d '1~ · '-fi · · ~ · turn to private JChools." be '8.id m ~tween an ~ acres ...._ore manSJonandanartco. onym,n~ton, By Tile AtMeta'" ~. "' • .~Ukey poinied out that it be wu Wilkey, who estimates he was doina remarks before (ounty school • fircfiahters ~thed u aoout 5.30 a hamlet two aules 0\111.h of .Jason w~ey 1i:ceivCd a ticket he ao1na 69 mph. he shattered the tinafe-about 35 mph ... hen he reached the lnlStees. . , .p.Q). Tuesday, wd Bo~ Gloecksicr. a Coverdale on the l?Order be~ween claims accuses .him of. brcakina tli'e • rider m:ont for buman·poweri:d intenect1on of Birch Stteet and "'Why do we continue to' shqot director ofJ.he Hes$CI Fire Protccuan Soooma and Mendocmd'co~nt1es. • law aqll the worl~rd fOt sp(ed by bicycJina, •hich the Guinncsa Book Assoc1.1ted Road. ourselves in the feet by lt1'ing 1930 · · .. a sinaJe ridCr on 1 human·powercd of World Records pull at '8.64 mph "I was oomina down Birch and .. thinki.na Jovcm 1988 decisiohs? The • -.• ,., , . , bicycle. b\l,t police .,say it . was all Wilkey was ridins a "belt-up" tumina left on Associated," Wilkey interrupuon of a stodent's educa~ • •· "lt&ll." · Sc:h~nn 10-spttd he bono~ from said ... Birch is ptttty stce\), but there's ti<>Ml process after JnlnY Y:tar'S of SUPERVISORS HJKE PAY Wil~ey. a .1 S-yeuaolsl Btca-0111\da a ociahbor" ratbcr than a h1jHccb, no war. I was ioma 69 miles an hour. eermiis is, in my mu>d, undtinka~le... . • . • .. HIP Schoof ~ior ..... IJCk<t .... -lWIDtl·ltSIOCI. titanium·alioy The bike would &II ........ eoopn said. . P'ro~l -,. L ~k fof all Jy rid.ins a'btcyc.le on su~e.: • ...-: • Wilkey sugested Garcia's radar • -Hewd th.: previous transfcr~hcy and another 3 percent Dec. 16 ed to deny pay raJSes for workcn last thewronasi ofthesfhlet. Heedmiu I! I were capable of doina those aun recistercd the speed of a ps. · worked well for 15 years. e Next year's proposed budlct con-year ID order to balance the budget. M ~on the Wf'on1 side oftbe sllttt speeds, I'm sure a lot of bike aho~ powered vehicle or was in need of "My bottom line qu~estu;>n tO' you tams an upc<?ted shortfall o1 aboµt and' i>robebcy won"f get much sym· would ~nt to sponsor ·me," said repair. (Orange County Dc$ariq,cnt of "' S44 million and ~ounty officials say "My main observation 1s that the~ pathy when 'he appeals the citation .• Education trustcn) aQd the HUnt-up to 400 jobs could~ 1011. seem to have had a . change of July 27. ' ---------------------------1naton Beach City School Dtstn<'t is John SaW¥cr. spokesman for the philosophy that's a bat self-serving for He contc"ds Brett poh_ce Officer. •:>"\. simply: 'Why lrC we doing this m union that ..U,rcscnts._qiost cout'lt) manaaemcnl I hope they're goang to William Garcia, 4sin1 a radar gun, these parents and students?' .. emplOy'tcs, Slifd county officials~ keep that same philosophy an the clocked• barn tt 69 mph in a 45 mota RESIDENTS' OPPOSITION •.• Ocean View has about 8.200 pupils to have chan$cd 1hc1r philosopl'ly future when It comes to reviewing pa~ zone. He °tdl}tends the ticket he and Hunungton Beach has about 1.. rcgafding ddk1ts and pfy.1n~scs increases for other county em-rcccived says he,'was 'oang 69 mph. s.j30 pupils. ' ~!.wwy_ er"sa_.i'd couoty officials waht-ployet>s." But 1h-oa Lt. Tom Christian said Tuesday there Is nothing on the ticket ind1catm1 how fast lbt bicyclist was ... I !. -• -• (. JOIDg. • •• ·FIREWORKS' SAFETY DEBATED: .• "It ~ys '1lpl' an sen pt." he said "The word lcpl as always wntten o.n a citation wlicn speed as not a factor," he satd. trofnAl . .. . works wes arc an important source of revenue for non-profit groups. a~ banned· in CaKfomia. A statement released by the Fire Chiefs' ~tion said, however. that more ftr~s were caused t>y legal fireworks than ~y illegal fl~workl last year m Oranae County. 111&1 ones, making diffkult to detect." them more "Somebody with a constructive r ! •• . ' ·: . ,• Fireworks industry representative5 aly the best way to promote the safe Ute of fireworks as to educate the publit about the state-approved non- explosive products their companies sefl. They say 1t 1s unfair to lump legal firework! together with illegal ones lndustry f1Jurcs 1nd1cate that 92 percent of the senous tnJunes and p(operty damaic attnbutable to fire- works arc caused by bottle rockets, firecrackers and other devices which A fireworks company spokesman said a tot.al ban on fireworks would only cncotiraJC/people who want fireworks to obtain \,be more danger- ous ones. w.Juch cao be purchased m Nevada and in Mexico. "I don't buy that argument," said Jor&ensen. "Wbat 1 do believe 1s thal legal fire~ork.s act as a shield for lndus\fy, representatives and fi~ offic1aJs do air~ on one poml, however; that bottle rockets, fire- crackers and other state and federal!) banned fireworks arc dangerous . To emphasize the point. fire of- ficials shot a bottle rocket into a section of wood shinJJc roof that had once adorned an Orange County home. The shingles began bum1n1 visibly w1than two mmutes and an less than five minutes were consumed ID names. POLICE BRACING FOR FOURTH ... P'romAl alcohol-related offenses. What police arc not hoping to repeat is the 1986 melee m which vacationing youths lobbed bottles and fireworks at pohce on Seashore Dnvc. One police officer was hosp1- • ~ talized when a powerful firecracker 6xpk>dcd an mid-atr near his head. rendering him temporarily deaf " More than I SO J>W>Plc were ar- rested as a result or the mCldcnt. iRcludin1 nmc people who were booked on felony charges of assault with a deadly weapon on a pohce officer and another four on susp1qon of battery on a police officer. Oakley said stepped-up patrols and a very V)Sible presence htlped make the d11Terencc last year. "We're do1na everything to prepare this year that we did last year:· Oak.Icy said. "We're ready to handle Ythattver c~rnes up ... The ordinance, cffecuvcly 1mmcd1- atcly. is designed to make party hosts thank twice before kicking their parties into overdnvc. "It'll act expensive for them," Oakley sa.Jd. With secunty notoriously tight in Newport Beach, many revelers opt to head nonh to Huntmaton Beach or wuth to Lquna Beach. But partien beware: Police an those c1t1es arc ready for you as well. "We didn't have any bis problems last year, and we aren't expectm& any this year," said Laauna Deputy Chief Jim Sprcane. who said the city is cx:pcctin1 between 100,000 tQ I 50,000 v111ton over the hohday- weckcnd. Spreinc said the department will double its patrofs from 4 p..m. F'riday through Monday. and will set up a sobriety checkpoint Friday niiht. adhere to the city's rules, which don't allow the pnvate use of fireworks. even the safe-and-sane variety. "South Lquna as the only area we're a hnle concerned about We hope we won'1 have any problem$," said Sprcanc. Huntmgton Beach pohce said 1hcy too will double their nonnaJ patrols. Irvine and Costa Mesa policeal$ow111 employ thctr full si.ff dun°' ~the holiday weekend. accordint to of- fic&als. Lifeguards will have their hands full too. Morc-'than half ll million s'un 'YOtshipets hocked to Orange COlst ~hes durina tast year's three-day ..-eekcnd,. ind all main beaches in . Huntir\&torr, · Newpon and Laguna- will have fuA staffs plus some auards hired espetially for the holiday week· end. • ,. Newpon Beach pohct also will have an •dditional weapon this year Monday niaht. the City Council p ve final appr<>VaJ to• new ordi~ntt that The one worry of Lqona. Bach officials is the newl)' annextd art• of South Laaona. Last Fotlt\11 o( July. fireworks were permined in that arta because it was part of the unin- corpora~ county .• Huntinaton Beach lifcauard Johr1 Barth said his stafT is bracing for the wont ows police to ch.,.e peny hosts up so s'°° for respondina to a sttOnd ,~diJturl>ina the~ complaint •./v .. . . "' ORANGE 111•1y .... v COAST . r•I . . IWNOfflCI :131> WU! Gay St Coaa IHM (.A Mi14 ..._ 9.>t 1* eo.t. ,.._.. CA tXXI Qtwf~ l\A1 ~78 _.' tcl<fQnltl ..., •11• This year. bowtv~. the area must "Wealwa)'SCXpcct I bi&CTOW' .. he . said. "We try to anucipate thi~ •• best we can, but xou can never tell ~l\&t will happco. • · Just call 642-6086 . What do )OU like about the DUI~ Pilot? Whal don't you like? Call the number abOve and )'Our mCS511C will be rec:otdQt. trantmbcd and dc- li•1ertd 10 the·~ c:idisor. • The seme 24-:boUf'~nt 1UVic:t may be UtN &o l'eCOfd letltl1 IO the editor Oft Inf toplC. Contributots co our Ltum c:Otumn must 1nctude their~ ud ~number Cot vcrirtcation . Tell us •luit"• on your mjnd, . r °::,::' ......... d • ....,,.,<MOt; • row oo '* .... Yo.II CMIM! tw !o3011tfll CllNtor9 7 c"' '"',_,., .. "" .......... ' ... ctuii11•1R , ... , ...... .... 0i-.eo.n, Ai- point of view decided the word leihl · looked like the number 69 and that's the story m a nutshell." Chri11ian said. HOME •.. From Al project would be dead an the water for at least 12. months Earlier this month. however. Segerstrom submitted the newest set of plans. which reduce Ho me Ranch -bordered by the San DiCJO freeway, Hatbor Boulevard and Fair· view Road -by more than 30 • percent. The health club, I 00 hotel rooms and I 0,000 ket of retail space were cut m the latest proposal The City Council approved the proJcct at a special meeting June 22. • P'romAl very ~trona grassroots and lqal grounds. "W~ have the money and the people'' Developer Jon Chnstcson could not be reached for comment this mom mg. NC'ilk'tbors Chairman Len Seltzer said tnat beca\JSC the proposed sa&c has 1>0. dens1tr. designation, the cit) must wan unul tbe upcorningaen'c.ral plan amendment pr.occss is com- pleted to consider the project. The city anorney'1 offict disputes that cootention. After the June 9 heanng. the commm1on concluded that althouah' the Emerald Associates pfOJCCl was not perfect, It was ccrt.alnfy better than the defunct restaurant currently occupyina the propeny. · "I do thmlt the rn1dcnts have the right to the ambiance tJ\cy'rc used to," said Comm1ssionCI' Gary Di Sano. "But I do know that what has b«n there hasn't worlCed." ~ · ThcJitc, forme,lyo«,µpfed by A.T . U.O's lcstaurant. has been plqucd • with occupancy d1fficultie1 thro(J&h• the ycan. · . . JAMMED TELEPHONES ••. P'romAl . The calls apparently started the day the Cox campa1an majlcd out a "hn p1ccc" on Rosenberg. However, police said residents of the home: dented any knowledge of the calls. and the husbal'\8 told the Pilot he didn't even know about lhc allegations. Cox as vacauonina m Hawaii and was unavailable for comment Tues- da:r. • Campai&n nianlfer Bob Schuman ~id tt.ey were leanina towsrd pursu-• 4 inl the case Jn th~ avil courts. My inltaal raction is cons1derin1 what was done., bow much time was involved and how much it cost - both tanaibly and intangibly -al seems ludicrous they would drop it," Schuman said. Schuman said denials by the tui- dcnts weren't satisfactory. ~'Mubc under oath in a court of law they mtWt chanae their story," Schomin said. · .. . . • • .. , . . . ' ... . . • .. . Of9n09 CoeM DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, June 21, 1Ne * Al Class reunions being planned for locaI, LA schools Ailing county judge kills hi~self More blab schools in Orantie and Los Aqeles counue1 have announced their class rwnions for the summer. The latest are: &taacla HJ61J 1978 The class of 1978 from Estancia Hiab School in Costa Me11 will hold its 10.year reunion Aua. 27 at the Irvine Marriott Hotel. Alumni tcekina further information should call SS7-0149. Ne"J)Ort Harbor llJ6b 1963 The class of 1963 from Newport Harbor Hilb School will bold its 2S.yea.r reunion Aus. 13 at die Newponer Resort in Newport Beach. All 1963 IJ'aduates who have not been nollficd should call Donna DuBois Rys at 673-4643. Hrmtlngton Hlgh 1978 The I ()..year reunion of Hununiton Beach Hiah School's class of 1978 will be held July 30 at the Red Lion Inn in Costa Mesa. Reservations for the dinner-<lance may be made by callina Carrie at (213) 475-8507. San Clemente HlglJ 1983 The San Oemente Hiah School class of 1983 will bold its fif\h reunion July I at the Ole Hanson Beach C!ub in San Oemente. The event will include dinner, drinks and dancina as well as a proVam and video presentation for a cost ofS 19. 95. Alumni can resister by writinJ to Reunion '83. c/o George K.nWits, 32742 Alipaz No. 60, San Juan Capistrano 92675. Inglewood Hlgh 1968 In&lewood Hi&h School's class of 1968 will hold its 20l6 reunion Aua. 6 at the Romance Marrion Hotel. CaU Andrea &rman at (213) 47l-222S for details and ~rvauons. Hoover High 1943 The class of 1943 of Hoover High School in Glendale will hold its 4Sth reunson Oct. 8 and 9 at the Newp<>rttt Resort ID Newport Beach. Golf and tennis play will be offered in addition to dinner and dancina. For further mform1t1on, call Virginiia Clark Black at 250-3678 or Don Gallup at 831-0497. ·M9ntebeliolllgb 1963 I Montebello Htah SCbooJ's class of 1963 will b~ld its 25th annivefllry reunion Oct. 22· i}l the Grand Ballroom of the Irvine Marriott Hotel. Tidce( prices are SSS single or SI LO a couple. Rexrvauons can be made by c&llina "Great Reunions" at .S3S. 7971 occ:WstnatesTim Rowe at (213) 594-0068 or Susan Antoyan Franciosa at 968-0188. Glendale Hoover Hlgh 1948 Glendale's Herbert Hoover Ht&h School class of l 9'8 11 pLanruna a 40th reunion. Alumni shoufd contact Carolyn Keehnet Patrick •t 646-02S8 or Pat Quint Smith at 646--09S9 for details. El Modena/VW• l'ark 1968 The 1968 paduauni classes o( El Modena and Villa Park tuah schools will bold a 20th reunson Aug. 19·21 and as searchina for alumni, staff, facult) and mends. Those interested should call Jake Ledesma at SS I ·2440 or Patriclta MulJen Ruddiman at 637-0663. .Alhambra Hlgb 1948 The ~lhambra liiJh School class of 1948 is plan~ina a 40th reuruon to be held Oct. I at Ahnan1<>tCourt in Alhambra. The committee needs help in locatio1 classmates. Call Jackie Dupuy Armstrona at (818) 286-1243 for further Infor- mation. -. CALEN DAR -~-- -- Wednesday, June 29 No mccungs scheduled Thursday, June30 • 6:30 p.m. Lapaa ·aeac~ Board of AdJut· meat ud Detlp Review Boanl, council chambers, 505 Forest Ave. •1 .IONATllAN VOLZU: .............. A Nonh ~ County Municipal Coun jl.leiat suf'fcrina from diabetes and apparently delpondent over his health sbot himself to dealb Tuesday in his Fullenon home, police 11id. Jud&t Sydney Malette. 64, left a note 11ylna bt was depttSSed over personal problems before shootina himself once an the head 111 the bedroom of his Lantarua Avenuebomuround l2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Fullenon Pohce Sgt. Jeff Roop 111d. Maleck was re-elected to the bench earlier this month. fendina off a challenge from I candi(la~ who bad questioned Maka"• CIQCD~ • The .22-caJiber rnolvcr u1ed in tM &hooliftl was rcaistertd in Ma.kck'"1 name. and found &Sons wil.b a su.icide oo~. the sefF&,nt said. He it a.urvtved by bis wife, Chatto~ - who found Mr hu&beod's body when 5he returned from an hour of shoppina-and two married dauahtefl. "There was a note indicatina be was deoressed over some personal· problems. .... h had. to do with some l~I matters I think he was involved 1n,' Roop said. addilll that the problems apparently wett Hanging around ~ Jenny Robera (left) and Sarah Tomlin enjoy their perch on the ~cbor at Corona del Mar~ School. . ·Vititag~ autos roll into vintage town By PAULARCHIPLEV Of .. o.lfr ...... 111111 Contestants 1n the Great Amencan Race thouaht the) had traveled into the past Tuesday when the) pulled onto a restored Main Street 1n St Charles. Mo. where their vintage 'ars and trucks Sttmed at home The compct1t1on remains fierce. "uh more than IOOout of llS entrants still m the race. Fmal results v.erc released for the Monda) lea of the rally·t)pe race. a 440- male trek from Denver to Salina. Kan . with JUSt three seconds separating the first and third place winners Grabbma first were Cliff Palmer of Walnut. Calif.and BobGcoraieofWarren. N.J .. an their 1934 Ford Model A pickup In second were last year's Great Race winners, Alan Travis of Phoenix and Wayne Stanfield of Costa Mesa. The> 're competina in the same car. a 191 S M,1tchell Roadster In third were Ron Ha)slett of El Paso and Dacie Ecclbarger of Tucson tn their 1936 Packard Coupe 8111 Halhda) of 11.lewpon Beach and Maf) Tra\.ls of Phoenix had to take the reQu1red two-mmwe penal!) after their I Q~6 Chev) Roadster su<X'um~d 10 the seanng heat that has plagued the race across the countf). HaJhda} said the engine 'apor-locked repeatedl) during the day He pul 1o~els into ace v.ater and wrapped them around the fuel pump and Imes. enabhng them to tra,el four or fi,e males ~fore ha" mg to repeat the process. The heat has probabl) been a maJor factor in forcina at>out 25 contestants out of the race. Hallada) said On Tuesda>. racers faced their biggest challenge. truehng 490 miles from Salina to St. Charles eh·il PfOCftd•~· North Muo.iap&I Court Prnidina J ~ Marpttt Anderson. however. s ttd Malcck·s poor health may havt-brouaht on his dcpmsion . MaJeck went borne sick Tbunday afternoon and had not returned. &he said. But when 1he talked to him boun btfo~ he shot himself, be wined fine and asked her to schedule a court hcarina in two wcckl, Anderson added. "'He sounded tine," Anderson satd "A ljuJe weak -probably tired -but he never talked about committin1 su1c1dc ... Andenon said Maleck suff~ from daa~tes and had IO&t wrisbt. ..When I wu liven the news &bis anemoon, I was lOWl)'ltWlned ... sbt said. "Ever) body iJ in a state of disbelief ... Maleck was appointed to the bench 10 1986 by Gov. Geol'Jt Oeukmejian. R09P s~ud He was ~lcctcd June 7. He worked an North Municipal C.ounlD Fullerton since October. Andenoa ilaid. Prcv1ously, he worked in West Municiet-1 Coun in Wcstmmster and was a aty attorney an El Monte from 1977 to 1916. Anderson said. MaJedc served in the Navy dunna World War II. Daily Pilot wi.n~ · 1 7 awards totqp· · OC Fair conte·st Oranae Coast Daily Pilot rewners won more awards than any· other dail) news.. paper ID the annual Orange County f a1r Journalism contest. while staff photogra· pher )'lick Souza took two first-place ribbons. Bob Van Eyk.en took top honors for "Best Daily Story" and "Best Sencs" wuh an in-depth look at the bhgbted Com- modore Circle ne1ahborhood m Hunt- inaton Beach. Offictals from newspapers m Los An· JCles. Riverside and San DICJO counues JUd&ed the rrporters' eotrfcs m break.in& ana non-breahna news. features, com- mentann, invesllgauve. entertainment. series, sports and "J)CT'SOnality profiles. · The Daily Ptlot 'A-On more firs1-placc awards than any other da•I> newspaper willl five top honors out of nme catqones. Pi.lot reporters won I 7 awards. the AnahCJm Bulleun won 11. and the Oranse County Repster, Los 4,ngelcs Times and la Habra Daily Star Progress tted wtth su1 each. Datly reporters were JUd&ed in two cateaories, for papen above or under 40,000 c1rcu\alion. Photographers we~ Judged together. Also wionina first place were Daily Pilot staffttS Jonatllan Volzke in the nop- brcaluna ocws category for a p1CfC about fortunetellers in Fountam Valley; Roben Hyndman for a column about his tu&tt school reunion. Paul Arch1ple) m tne sport.s.-wnung category. and Leslie Earnest for pcrsonalit)· profile Souza toolc top honors for soons and feature photos. and also placed th1td m f~tures and founh 1n news Former Pilot photographer Mike Schwartz took Sttond an news photograph) while David Carlson took fourth m sports In ttie brtakina·nev.-s category. Earnest and Joyce Bodlovtch placed third for thrir covtraae of a protest at Newport Harbor / "It ""as a ~al rall) da):· Halhda) said ··" e "<'re on cul") roads. up and down hills .\nd 1t was reall) hot'.. Racers endured temperatu~ of 108 d~rees Tuesda) and Corona del Mar btfh schools. and ~nee tinon ea~ed founh for a story about members of a aul'.s softball team struck by hahtniog. . PtJot reporters took four of fi..,e awards ln tho 11on-~n. news categ()ry. For- mer staffer Jennifer Weber won s.ccond place for a story about ''Ntaht Stalktr" suspect· Richard ~muu, while 'Volzke took thud for~ article about a Jlil mmite ·id need of a h"er transplant. Hyndman placed fourth for a yactlt¥ll nor). In the featurt catesory, Wot ~pon­ <knt K.lrk Wakott placdj foul"tA with a stor) on b1lltanh. Gre, Klerb 'Plaoed second in the 1nvesttpt1ve catciory for reponina on school teachers arrested for molesti114 their students. K.lmx also took set:orid m enterumment for a play ~vtcw, while Pilot wntcr Bonnie Fevergeon took fotsnh an the same category. Coveraac of the Laguna Beach Unified School Distnct's recall election won a founh·placc award for lgnon m l.hc senes compeution. K.lerb toolt sttond place for personality profile with a story on a political consuJt- ant worktna on Vice Prnident GcorJC Bush·s race for the pres1depcy -. Cl ti cons1der1ng tar to fight street gangs. RlALTO (AP>-Officwsa.tt conStder· inc asluna ~1dent.s to GK an anll1&Jll to that would raise money to fiabt street pnp from Los -'ngcles. which authocues say are ("lp1dly movtng into this bedroom commun11)' Such a Gana Auessmcnt Disuict 1.1.X ,,.ould raise an esumated $700.000 over t~o ~~!"$· Toda) 1s a rest d.l) Contestants wtJI ~ able to rela>. for on<' da' ~fore htttmf the road again for the fin.al four days o the 4.SOO-mak race that 1s taking them from D1sM,land to Boston Fathers get custody of boys freed from Alamo commune A punched lock allo~ a burglar access to the sten:o 10 a 'Volkswagen Jetta parked m the 2000 block of M11n Street Tuesday afternoon and po1ntcd a sun at him. He said one pulled the 1rigcr and he could ICC tM m u.zz.Je 1las.b. . " . A s:n1dent 10 the SOOO block of eo.t&lle.a Mo~ than SS.000 was taken from a desk. ofa travel qency. The desk was unlocked. authonucs said ly ftt AIMda_, Prw Three boys wbote motben bclona to the Tony and Susan Alamo Foundation reli&ioua commune weie placc4 in the permanent custody of their f.atbera. who claimed their sons were in da.nler of abuse. Custody of tbe bop Ml awarded TuadaJ: brothers~ Millet,~. IDd R Millet, J6, fOrmcr mem· bcnoftbecommuneand nowOnnae County reaideDts. Orta. County Superior Court Jlldet lkbard 0 . fnaec St. alto orda'ed bolb aneu• ~ ~ IOlved •of Oct. 30, dlDied Vllit1tioa ~ti to the moCben ud prolaibited lberA from comlltl Widaia lOO ~ oldli~ .. JUllioe .. "'' ............ ...... aUOf'.MY ~ bla ~ boys lft doi19 Glrl llJ wel MW &Ml...,..,. CNl... • ..... Miler, .... fJI Kody ~~-.-..~-Ill .. ., .. ..,, J'k Milin. wliD IOW liw ia 4 Oranaie. claimed in court documents . him 140 times wtth a wooden paddle that I.be boys .. were in ~r of for m1sbehavina. phYSical and tmotional abute. A physlcian who curruned Jusun . 1be brotben said t.bey Oed the said he could not say with medical poup•s Arbosas commune in fear certainty whether the boy was beaten last Sepcembct after Tony Alamo .. The buttocb appear to be 10 the allcwed!Y fon:ed thtm to silo over bea.lina stqes of some very deep aueu from a truckina company tbey btuitet... Dr. Mart H. Goodman stanod wilb bily money. wn>ic in a document ente~ in court The Alamo Foundation and the RiCOtdl. boys• inotben. Carol Ann, 3~. and .. It is qui&e J)Ollible that they are at SusanM.iDcr,lO,bavesincemovedto lcatt 3 months o&d and are still tbeSut1Cla.rit1 Valley, northwest of healina. Jftbc history as correct, this LOI A.Qldel. would have bcCQ one very severe The AlamO ~lion did not beatina. .. ret\&lll pbOae c:alb T..aday. But Tony A CtiUd atMe ia~tion qainst Alamo bad prev1ou.aly denied threat· the tOUt coma:uaoc mcmbcn was laicr enias tbc brodwn om-tbc buinm dropped for t.:k ol evldieacc. ..aer. A&amo Ud u llee Wife, Susan. ne MiUe:r brotbCti were atWirdcd c:= ia die 1 HOI to }'Ou.GI s 1 s llf'm'/. aallady ol IM ~ in Oil Holtywoocrs Su.nlct ...... ....... lAI Mellel O>unty Strip. They -... a coaumaac iD -.W. 411P11&. i'aidid tbt com· S......,... mcMd to Arbw. -Md .~ Ole boyt aftci' ~ .... .. ••• ""'..... bas 1: ,. ·"" oldbld llw.. beeft moWd bM* to~ the OililJ Millen -. • ··~ ~batioe .. ... .... io Jllila. tald ......... -Alamo Oiicleo. w-.... Mma• ArbD-......... dleecmmwtobe:it m. nm 7' 1 '91•-6 ~m....., .... &i .. ~. ···: • ·,.· t'J•••• .J ...., • "-!'-... 19000 ' block ol V• ~ AWIMll tlit- cweea 6 p.m. MCI MJ lllill I a.m: Tuadlly. A. wi,._ W •ro' Id IO 91innuy. • • • I l'fewport Beacla Clolhinaand olbtt valuables worth about S 1,200 were stolen from a car oerkcd in the 1600 block of l>oncbarlcs early Tuetday mommi.. A slim jim devtcc was used to pm entry to the vehick. • • • A black I 971 BMW was stolen from l.be 800 blOC't of SeaplJ Road be~ 9 Lm. Sunday and 2 p.m. Monday. • • • A car stereo was sldkn from a vthidc perked in \ht 400 bl()('k of SeawatcfDrive sh9'tly after madn\aht Monday. , Pea.roe Drive said someone possibly used a pass ltey to enter bCT fi-ont doOr to sieal aJ>CB&aD lt.tttcn that• t&id was valued at $600: ' - • • •• A woman said that three jvvailaei m ualver and black VolblJ"ID vu t.bmti food on ber vchide a spit OD her early today at Naua)es RClta.-.nt at Gothard SJ.tttl and Center Drive. ••• Someoac entered a home in tk SOO block of Dela-watt StTeet lhol1!y after m1druab1 a:\d stole Sl.000 ia quar- ters.. • • • A businessman on Owie Slrett complaintd that tranStcnts arc hvtna \Jl cars J)IBcd in bts lot. Offi~ found beer bottles and cbk:k:en wnp- pen to support I.be cla.i.m ••• ~ led . Several midenu ha~ repot 1n rcceoi wetb that windo-M io their can and bomcs have been shattered b)' matblel. Police arrested tevcfal people months llD oa susptCion of usiQI pellet JU.DI ud slinpbou to lhancr ~and can"t c:xplain wby die .... ii ft)ims epin. Countyteacheraccased of having sex with student A bilb dool ~ ._... a biddca micrq)boae ..... • cae-~ wit.la a OnUimt c-tY ..w wtao alkae Illy Mi • '-"' ber~=u... ......... Oil , ~ ... OrulD H. SdtoW4i DI·---lOI' Jama ParMat, SI,-..-. a&uMriae~,IWO ...... Ill.ell phadi111 ..... * .. · 11.,._,. old-..at DOe '° ..... ia. PaifiiiW, aSla•Allll rielictID 1. ._ cMl1ld witll &~ COU1dl ol .... wfW ..... •lH:oufll wi6 a ..W, I •Dl'tlll llict. Ht II lllc9J Md ID ......... ,.,._ ....... ,. .. ,. or ..... ..., owr • .,.... ., ..... ~ ........ Storms cheered by lhoulan<ls at a ~-laauc besebe1l pme in Kan- w City brouabt desperately needed rain to tbe drouabt-bmered Mid-..ua today, but forecast.era said much more was needed. "You talk about a SI million rain -this is a $100 million rain," extension qent Vance Hausen in northeast Wisconsin's Shawano County aid u the storms bepn Tuesday ... We're very happy. We're out danci~ in it. .. Meanwhile, the president of the American Fann Bureau charaed that the drouaht's severity is bei~ eM&- tented by the media and poliucians. "The national media never met a • <tiMsaer they didn't like,." Dean IC"drner 1&1d durina a news con-fereoce at Colorado State University u part of a tour of four Western states. "The ni&btly network news (media) have made up their minds. The story is: no crops in the country, a oompletc disaster, bjper food prices," he said. Politicians are hopina to take advant.,e of the drouaht crisis in an elect.ion year, be claimed. The Farm Bureau is a private, non-profit feder- ation with 3.5 million memben. Tuesday's rainfall was the first sipifi<:ant prec:!pitation for the Chi-c:aao area llDClC Ma)' 23, the National Weather Service wd. Tbe worst drouaht to bit America's midtection since the Dust Bowl bas withered crops, dried up water sup- plies., batted bai)e traffic on shrunken riven and sparked forest fira. Plant closing vote rejectea WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Republicans thwarted an initial at- tempt by supponers of mandatory advance notice of layoff's and plant closinp today to force a showdown with the Reqan administration before the Democratic National Con- vention. On a S&-39 laraely party-line vote, the Senate refused to brina to a balt six days of debate oo the measure, which President Reagan cited lut month as his primary reason for vetoana a massive overhaul of the nauon's trade laws. Sixty Tot.ct arc n«:CSsary to cut off' Senate debate oo a bill. Senate Maiority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.\'a. aclcnowlcdaed the setback even before !allina two votes abort of the number needed to end debate, tellin& reporters wt Re- publicans intend to ''draa this than& on awhile." I Top court backs role of special prosecutor Court rejecta deatll nilfD6, l:Jedge• on teen ~Ule111 'fate WASHINOTON (AP)-Tbe Su· pmne Couft. ia a lltbedc to the Reepn ldminisvatioa and tome of iU key former oftkia.la, hll upheld a law that allows iftdependent ~ ecuton to invesU,.te alJeeed crunes ~~iab-raokioe 11>vemme1u of-W ASHINOTON (AP>-The Supreme Court IUUCk down an OkJaboma Today•17.1 decision dispels crucial man•• dt.ath teDteoce today, but •toooed short of Nli.DC whetber capital • doubts about the convictions of puniahmeat may be UIOd for convicted' ldDen who commi11ed their cnmes tormer R--" aides Michael K. befcwe reachina • 16. ............ In wbat Md been ex~ to be ill mOlt impor1&Jlt capital punishment Deaver and Lyn C. Nofzieer and decilioaoftbeyear.tbejusticelcouldnotmu1tera~ty0f'vote1&oraolve • ~ 1•0awatbey ~oableor•!~Wbbli1!! a key quettioll: Doea execution of u:en.,. killers violate the Cons1itution•1 """".. _.._..,,,..... ~" M' ban on .. cnlel and unusual punilhment. •• • HoUte aides Olivu North. Jobn M. Four juaticet said the Constitution bans the execution of ltillm who Poindexter and two otben indicted in oommiued dacir crimes before reacbina 16. the lrao.COntn affair. lbreejllltices voted to allow such executions. The decision allO allows an in-Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, while votina to overturn Oklahoma death ves .. tion to continue into the row inmate'• William Wayne Tbompeon's deeth 1entcooe, bad oo ddlnitivo activities of Attorney Oenera.l Edwin opinion on tbe law's conmtutionali~. ·. =eN; =~fi:f~~f.'· J.aaticeAnthon~ M. Kenntdy, ojoined the court after the cw bad been The coW1, in a momentous con-111~ ca:~':.ntutional issue been decided ddinitivdy. would . stitutional decision, aid the speaal have atrected only about 30 of the some 2, 100 death row inmates nationwide. J •a.a• ,. 1 utor law docs not violate the llabnnter wulam oTer bumper of car bl Oklahoma City .Et ti of powen between the • · e, lesi ~·ve and judicial that the law limits presidential power A record 1.67 inches of rain feU Kansas City, Mo. branches f . ment JU&{ln\CtCd~1. inv:~dt~te .0-~ Tuesday in Madison, Wis., where the Scattered showers and thun by ~Co . utio · . / \../ ~. \. ./ old mark of 1.62 inches was set in storms extended today from the Hi&h ~1cf Jll;lllce. . 11m H. Rehn-ut he llid there are adequate =ra.::=ni~ . llle1ed hi&h-level aovernment .. wroqdolna. 1928. lo six houn ovemiaht. more Plains to the mid·Mississippi Valley. q~1st. .. m hts op1n1on for the .court, saf~ to P,1"9tcct •inst abuses. than three inches fell in Oklahoma Wb ~ . ,___ falli wd, We observe fmt that this case Jusuce Antorun Scalia was the lone City, where streets were up to three en . t ram .... .,..n . na does not i~volve l;fl attempt by dissenter. feet deep in water. Omaha, Neb., got Tuesday 10 bottom ot'\be ~th of Conaress to lDCT'Clte ill own po~ Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, the 2.6 inches overni&ht and Lacrosse, the ~ite Sox-Royals p.me in Kan-at the expense of the exccuuve newest member of the ooun and one Wis., aot two inches. ~ City, ~ 27•000 spcctaton bro~ branch. of three justica appointed by Presi-. . mto sustained applaU;K. But the ram '*Similarly, wed~ ~ot think t!'!at the dent Reaaan. did not take part in the .Jn Michipn. however, Traverse lasted only a few mmutes, and the act works any Judicial usurpat>On of independent prosecutor ~ecision. City f~ . !Jureau . aaent John Royals lost 4-3. properly executive functions." Kennedy disqualified ' himself Amrhein Sil~ The ra!n we 1ot. .. was Despite the rain, temperatures in Rehnquist continued, .. Finally, we without ahina an explanation. almost nothina. Wun ~.even enough the 100s ICl1'Cd sections of the do not think that the act im-The court overturned a 2· I federal really to settle the dust. Midwest. It wu 101 ctcarees in permissibly undermines the powers appeals coun rulina last Jan. 22 that "It definff'ely helps, but probably a Kansas City, where the old record of of the executive branch or disrupts declared the Waterpte-era special lot more will be needed to really 94 was set m 1978. Temperatures hit the proper balance between the prosecutor law unoonatitutional. chanac the situauon," the weather 1 OS in Sioui· Falls, S.D., one dqrec coordinate branches." Conpess ouaed the law after the service's Huah Crowther said from biaher than the 1931 record. The chief justice acknowledted scandal tbat1ed to President Nixon's In other action, the coun: •Made it easier for workcn to prove their boaes are suiJty of iUqal discrimination. In their most important civil ri&hU decision of the ~r. tbejustioes by an 8-0 vole expanded the way employees can use statistical evidence to prove bias .• •Made it easier for millions of non- union worken to withhold financial suppon from the \lnions that rep- resent them in collective berpinina. •Severely limited atate eff'orll to shield youna sex abuse victims when they testify at criminal trials. Pentagon offlclal backs ·move to veto searches of contractors Feds sue Teamsters in action against Mafia WASHING TON (AP) -The De- fense Ocpartmcnt's chief purchasing official bas defended bis attempt last month to give top Peni.aon political appointees the power to veto searches of the private "COntractors who supply military equipment Robert Costello, undenccretary of defense for aoqws1tion, told the House Armed Services Committee today be wrote the memo after a contractor's office in St Louis had been searched. Costello llid be didn't object to the search, but said it should not have been conducted without a prior review at t.be upper levels of the Pcntaaon. .. The system at that point had been short-circuited, .. Costello said. "The people at the local level bad taken, perhaps, overly aggressive actions. If the system bad been allowed to function u it was constructed to function .... thc access to the infor- mation could have been achieved without l"C$0n to the use of foroc." The May S memo was written before the public ever learned of a two-year nationwide investiption into alleaedlY corTUpt Pentagon con- tractina. The Auociated Press ob- La.ined the memo Tuesday. Rep. Les Aapin, 0-Wis., chairman of the committeei. told Costello that "the memo itseh sends the wrong si.ana.l" to defense contractors. "The wliole tenor of wt (the memo) 1s awfully sympathetic to defense con- tractors.' Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci rejected the proposal, pcrcciv~ it as "interference in the conduct of crimi- nal invcstiptions." Air foroc Col. David J. Shea, a Pentaaon spokes- man, said Tuesday. The plan could have curtailed a crucial tool for inveitipton seeking evidence that tolHCCf'Cl hntaaon information was 10ld to private consultants, who then sold it to contracton. About three dozen searches have been conducted so far. The Costello-to-Carlucci memo comp~ned that DcfeDJC Ocpert-, meot 1nvestiutors bad executed a search last l"ebruary in a "sen- sational" manner by usina some two dozen law enforcement Officers and failina to Jive the comp&ny prior notice. NEW YORK (AP) -federal prosecuton launched 1 "sutJical" strike apinst the nation's liraqr labor union, announcina a racketeer- ina lawsuit to break the Mafia's allqicd domination of the Teamsters. Spokesmen for the 1.6 mtllton- member union called the civil ractetccrina suit "1 vicious anti-labor attack" and said allqations of ties to orpnized crime were ''pure myth." Houn after the lawsuit was fiJed Tuesday here, Teamsten president Jackie Prester was readmitted to a Cleveland bo&pital, wbetc he was in serious condiuon today. Presser bad brain tumor suricry last month. U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani stressed that "this lawsuit is not in any sense an attack on l1'lde unionism or on the many, many Tcamsten who arc honest, bard-workina people." "W~are t seekina overall control of the msten union,•• Giuliani said. • ·,is a use of the ncketeerina statute in a SUJ'lical way to attempt to take beck from the Mafia the Team- sten union.•• Giuliani and Teamsten lawyer JohoOimacospa.rredovertbesuiton momina news shows today. ~ two shouted at C11Ch other on NBC TV's .. Today" show. '"That's the political demaaoauery and (>Olturina that toes on in a situation like tbis ... .lt is not un- American to try to have a union operated democratically rather than tyranically. It 1CCms to me it's un· American to let that IO on vear after year, decade after decade.'' Giuliani said. Through the centuries, fine wood shutters have become synon ymou1 with luxury and good taste. Today. Heirwood Shutters give an easy efegance to any Interior from Colonial to Ultra Modern. AMA urging changes in drug battle Experts discount drop in econom.ic forecast gauge BJ fte A110da~ Preti WASHJNOTON -The aovcmment reported today that its chief CHICAGO (AP) -The American economic fom:astina pqe edpd down 0.1 pm::ent in ':.:l· but analysu llid Medical Association bas approved a tbe slilbt dip did not sipaJ economic troubles ah The Commerce repon callina for expanded treatment Department llid the decline in ill Index ofLcldina Economic Indicators was of drua abusers and other m~or the first aetback since a 0.2 percent drop in January. While repor:MJ. the decline chanp in the country's battle apinst for May, however, the aovemment revised its estimate of A~l economic druas. activity upward to ahow an incrcate ofO.S percent in the leadina index, instead No other window covering performs Its function with such beauty and grace. 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R reduce demand for their illcpt prod-Caro.uue • u.at.uter Dam 1.or tMe ucts by expandina treatment of NEWYORK-CatolineK.ennedySchJossberabasbecomeamother,and abusen. she and her busbend, Edwin SchJoabera. have named their dauabter after the Serving California since 1953 "We are sayina this nation does 97-year-old IC.en.nedy<lao matriarch, Rote Kennedy. Rote Kennedy have the will to overcome the dru& Schlossbcra was born at 3:30Lm. Saturday at the New York Hospital-Cornell problem, but it simply has the wrona Medical Center, and wet&hed in at 7 pounds, 12 ounces, ~ Nancy pme plan," said Dr. Lonnie BriatowJ Tuckennan, a family spolceswoman. Mother and baby are do1na fine. an AMA trustee from Berkeley. Calit. Tuckerman aid Tuesday. Tuesday the aroup's House of , .,. 1r #lld&. s.. Designed • Finished • Installed Deleptes, ill policymakin1 body, Jlee.e. r'B.1 ......... ,. aept .ecret rejected a ban on publishina articles w ASHINOTON -Conpaaional investiptors have learned that about eutbanuia, but held finn Attorney General Edwin Mcae Ill is a frequent mer on FBI executive aircraft. HEIRWOOD IHUTTERS apinst mercy killina. buttbebureauwon'tsaywhertbepsotwbatbedoes. R~.OlennEnaJisb,D- Generel C>mc. end MMUfectory It allO called for blm on toy 1~n• Okla., wbo is direct.ins an inquiry iJato Meer.'1 utc of FBI aircraft. says the 1m Plec.ntla Ave., Coete ...... CA 92127 that can be mistaken for the real tbina ICCteCY raises concern that the ldmini•tration may be tryins "to keep (714) 548-6841 (714) 548-1717 and on real, non-metallic fircatms emban'Usina information from public view ... Enalish alto says that from what PM9dena (818) 793-2718 Long .. ech that can slip throuab metal detectors be'• learned to rar, it appeanat lealt some of Mcete•s travel rMY have violated ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~u~dio~~~~K~~~n~ina~d~~~~~~~~~tR~n~~to~oncom~al~rl~~h~~~- <i ~~~ Court raJ• Goet.1HUJte11ce UJCWaJ . QUILln DESHHIER . NEW YORK-8enlbard Goetz'• six-month jail ICfttence 't:.11 declared SHOWROOM Ill Carp· ets ~-~-Ulcpl~anappcall~wb.icbordetedtbatbeberacntCftcedforcri,minal ~ c:i of a~ iD the 1914 subway sbootinat of fourteen..,.. Tbe'tllte lh1r 1010 S1mpl11 . ==°'~=~=~.~~= . 's./e court * lllDd me SS,000-fine. 2IO bows of community ltrVic:e. ftve years• • ' SlllEI llYlllS ,,,, 50%DFF .MINl-Bllfl> SPECIAL Buy 1 .. Get 1 ·FREE ·s.te · ( ... tioa IDd ~eou11•i .. forOoetzonkred byCrue. ,l c.. .................... .. .............. ,. ...... . ~N'S ............. -.a PM ... • .............. 111111 ··-.... --, ..... ----_,,,.. ----------~ ~ --. ----- Terrorists admit o killing attache MOSCOW (AP) -Dclqates to a nationwide Communist Party con· ference today clashed over the pace of economic reforms in the Soviet Union, with local manqen sayinJ the reforms bad not 1one far enou&h to help tbe stqnant economl' The conference, the party s fint an 47 years, also ordered an investip· tion into a Soviet mapzjne's charae that some deleptes from the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan were involved in corruption. Reporu in the official media on the second day of the conference in· dicated debate was shift.ins from political questions to the economy, with the openina day's pmentation by economist Leonid Abalk.in at the center of the debate. At.lkin, bead of the Soviet Academy of Sciences' Economics Institute and a top adviser to Mikhail S. Gorbachev, told the S.000 del· eptes that the Soviet economy 1s not 1mprovins because 1t still measures its prosress by quantity rather than quality of products. But Gcof'IY Arbatov. head of the Institute of the U.S.A. and C.nada and a member of the poticy-malung Central Committee, said he 0 totally disqreed" with Abalk.in, Tass re- ported. The conference, the 19th in pany history. was convened by Gorbachev to review chanaes he has made since risinJ to power in March 1985 and to con11der funher steps be said arc needed to modernize the country UCI.appoints new director for social ecology Dr. Daniel Stokols hu been named director of the UCI Propam in Social &olOI)'. The appointment is effec· tive July I . Stokols, a 4().ycar-old Irvine mi· dent, hu been a faculty member in the social ccoloSY prosram since 197 3 and director orits focused Research Prosram in Work Environments since 1984. From 198 l to 19U, he wu UIOCiate director of lflduate studies. Tbe IOCiaJ CCOIOI)' prosram brinp an interdilCiplinary problem-solvina approach to questions of psycholoSY and human behavior, criminal justice and environmental health and plan· ~ propam was founded in 1970 by Dr. Arnold Binder and two other faculty memberL Today, thett are more than 30 faculty, I 000 under· lf'lduate students and SO lflduate students in the prosram. Stokols' current research focuses on the effcctl of physical and social features oftbe work environment on employees' performance and well· beiq. Stokols 1uccieeds Or. Salvatore Maddi, who bas been director of the er<>IJ&m since 1986. Maddi is foun· def and president and the Hanliness Jnatitute, which daians wellneas prosr&ml to help individuals dcvd~ ~otical resistance to dcbih- tauoa bj 1tta1. He rcsianed. u director 10 May to devote more ume to b11 cootinui111 racarch in this field. St.ate~tare lJoaon OV~JuetOanld Janet Gamck, a trustee in the Ocean View School District in Hunt· inaton Beach since 1981, bas been named the 58th Assembly District's dtiz.en .of the year by the state Leaislature. Garrick was honored recently in a brief ceremonies at school district beadquartc:n. Assemblyman Dennis Brown, who ~nts the 58th Assembly Oistnct. presented a plaque. A former teacher and math special· ist, Garrick is vice chamnan of the West Ora.nae County Consortium for Special Education. She also bas been a member of the California School Boards Association Dclepte A .. sembll for four years. Shes the founder of the Informed Voten i.e.pe of West Oranae Coun· ty and has been a team mother for IOCXler or baseball for 13 yean. She terves as the aospel doctrine teacher in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She and her husband, Don, have four children. The S8th Assembly District coven most of Huntinaton Beach and Seal Beach, Suntet Beech, Surfside, Sianal Hills. the eastern portion of Lons Beacb and a portion of Rossmoor hlrto,,-.oteoll-tnd. ntelUl•lkneno. The Oranec County fair 8oud has voted to spend SI 00,000 on advertis- The deleptes are meeting belund closed doon in the Kremlin. and only official Soviet medta are penrutted to cover the oroceedinp. The ofl"'acial Tass news agency said Arbatov told deleptes the Soviet Union had made p-eat progress in .. crcatJns the political, spintua.I and moral precond1t1ons for the econ-omic reform." -· But Y.A. Sm1mov, manager of a chemical factory 10 the Ural Moun- tain city of N1zhn.itagilsk, com- plained that he had heard nothini that would help him improve the work of his factory. "I acnerally expected to hear much more -how to transform 1t, what kinds of tactics to use, what sages, what frontiers.," he said in an inter· Dr. Dutel atokola inJ for off-track benma dunna the fa1r's horse race mcctana July 7-17 at Los Alamitos Race Course. Since bone racins in conjunction with the fair bcpn 1n 1977, the racin& handle hu averqed about S 16 million and hu been as hi&b as $26 milhon each year, fau spokeswoman Jill Lloyd said. Broadcastint the races to off-track bettins parlors an areas such as Lancaster and Palmdale could add SI another million to the tote, she said. Ricans revenue as used to rc~y loans by the state and for capital improvements at the fairgrounds, Uoyd said. The board wanted to offer off-track bettin& at the Costa Mesa fair· vounds,. but a Senate bill banntd Oranae County &om holding off· tr1Ck waaerina on the fairarounds. Uoyd blamed the exclUSJon on powerful lobbyina from Hollywood Park. and Saota Anita raC(tracks, the two Los Anaeles County horse race tracks. Newport businessman Pete Vogel ·-• t J ' view with Sov1e1 telev1s1on. Addrcssif\4 AbalkJn 1n his tele-vision anLcrVaew, Smimov said: "You are the economic institute. You should map this stratqy. Abalkan Slld n's necessary, but did not sa) bow to do n. The fate of perestroika deocnds on iL" V.A. Yann, a senior machine operator at a melllluray factory m NizbnatqJlsk. said aovemment man· isters should act out of the "fashion- able halls" of the Kremlin to make their reports m work1ns·dass dJ.S-- tric~ I Abalk.in said naid central planning of production quotas made it imposs- ible to "solve the problems of a radical improvement m the quality of output KIDS 4-11 Legislature receives $44.6 billion budget WIN FREE FAIR TICKETS Enter the Dally Ptlot"s coloring contest f eatur1ng this year·s Orange County FaJr mascot Winners wtll 1tet four f rcc tickets to the Fair. Clip the colortng contest entry form. color the pie· ture. fill In the entry por· lion and send It to the col· ortng contest addresss on the entry form. Enter as often as you like. Watch for duplicate entry forms tn upcomtng Issues of the Dally Pilot or pick up duplicate entry forms between 8 a m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Frtday In the main lobby of the Dally Pilot at 330 W. Bay Street In Costa Mesa. GOOD LUCK! & Happy Coloring Get your entry fonns from the paper or pick up copies from our lobby. But. plMIN, no I phone calls asking us to ma11 you entry forms. Thanks. Coloring Contest COLORING CONTEST RULES AND REGULATIONS • One wtnner In each age aroup wtll be chosen. Each W1nncr will receive 4 Uckcta to the Ora.nae County Falr. Wtnnlqg pictures will be posted tn the Fine Arts Exhibition al the Fairgrounds. • All cnlrlea must be completed by a child In one of the age groups listed. • Mall flnlahcd cntr&ea: ORANG£ COUNTY FAIR • MEDIA DEPT .. COSTA MESA 92826 • Entrta muat be received by 12:30 p.m .. July 8th. • J\.ldillnl. o.y: Frktay. July 8 at 1 p .m. In the F'tne Art• Dept. • All entiia may be picked up at the F\ne Art.a Dept. after Che Fatr. DOeli your hOulehold .ubembe to the Dally PIJof DYES ONO 1 • - . ~ Oftelie' s salary rises above his record of·failure Stan Oftelie is the executtve director of the Orange County Transportation Commission and he must be good at what he does because he is paid well enough for It -extremely well. In the past five years, while frustration on the frcewa)' has increased exponentially, Oftelie has nearly doubled his salaf). The ..0.ycar-old Oftelie. whose forte is pubhc relations. was hired in October 1983 for $50,004 a year. Bcsinning Friday, Oftelie's paycheck Wlll total SI 02,883 annualfy. If that's not a example of good PR, we will cat the press release that announced Oftclie's most rece-nt I I percent pay raise. The transportation commissioners. who advise the county Board of Supervisors on transportation issues, dumped Oftelie•s predecessor on the eve of the campaign to push Proposition A. Oftelie•s public relations skills were to be put to work persuading voters they should vote the-mselves a penn) increase in sales tax for 15 years. The money would have gone to improve transportation. Proposition A and Oftelie failed. Still, Oftelie received a raise. The Transportation Commission's much-ball}hooed proposal to convert avenues like Beach Boulevard into so- callcd super streets with flyovers at intersections and synchronized light metering ran rnto a roadblock of public opposition. Oftelie, the pubhc relauons expert, got a raise. And the installation of car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway was at best a {>Ubllc relations nightmare 1f not a 1questionable transportatlon project. Oftelie again got a raise. In fact, Orange Countts transportation successes seem far outdistanced by Oftclie s personal paycheck successes. And while it is not fair to lay the blame for this count\ 's terrible transportation woes at one man's feet, tt appears equally unequitable to continue to reward the director of the agency responsible with dolJars taken from frustrated taxpayers. Oftelie is defended by members of the comm1ss1on as worth every dime of his six-figure income. And the cxecuu-.e director said the benefit the public receives from his -work ments the hefty salal). "h's a lot more than a teacher. maybe that's not as 11 should be," he S8ld. "But I think I do mort' sood for ~oc1ct> than a bass player tn a rock band. and I certaml> don't make nearly as much." Oft.clie makes more than Gov. George DcukmeJian. U .S Transportation Secretary James Burnley; Kei th McKean. director of the state Department ofTransponation's d1stnct office in Oranae County; James Reichert. county Transit District aeneral manager; and John Meyer. director of the Transportation Corridor Agencies. And maybe that's not as it should be. - Corporate crime As commentators have taken to repeating endlessly. our society 1s fa1hng to impart decent values to certain of its citizens. Hoodlums shoot mnoccnt b)'standers, bu} Jaguars with mooey from drugs they sell to elemental) school kids and terronzc the law-abiding residents of the neigh borhoods the~ designate as their home turf. But moral decay isn't the sole provtnce of street toughs and drug merchants. Take. for rnstance, the case of the Beech-Nut crooks. Over several years. thesetwoguys, topo ffic1alsofthe nauon's second largest baby-food maker. ran a maJOr scam that enriched their company and themselves. Unsuspecting parents who thought the> were buy mg nutnuous apple Juice for their babies were getting caramel- colored sugar water. Now(the officials arc) being made to pay for 1t The Judge has fined them each S 100.000 and sentenced them to a year and a clay 10 Jatl. That's the nght message 10 send, Los ADgeln Herald ExamlJJer Handgun control Maryland has passed the natton's first law banning the sale of "Satll.{day Nia.ht Specials," the cheap handguns that arc used solely to kill people. California bas no ban on such weapons, Nor. for that matter, on the seouautomauc Uzi that can readily be converted to submachine gun status with a mall orderk.iL The Uzi is available over .the counter. or on the street from a pnvate party, along with ammunition. There arc many arguments on many sides about the merits of aun contrQJ laws. But they get down to two: for and apil\SL • Those who me Tor such laws see that any thug. anyone Wlth a vudat or a complaint. any lhriJl-seeker or spotliJht p-abber, any 'f!Ould-be rapist or robber. with the riafU amount of mo~ can buy a aun .... Cabromia lawmakers-m4ny of whom admit they carry s after beina threatened often cnou&h -should look at land's law and beain writi!ll one o1 our o..vn. pen may not 6e miahtier than the sword, but it can help lO put I Wrpe!' and more precise ~ OD it. ORANGE CO'AS0T Piii llMY• IWconl ~I .. ,. t*lllf .. .. ,.., Abociltt [~ •Cl-' ..,..,, .... ......... utrl* I •'A New Y:ri Time.account of the affair quoted unnamed Bush ~p&Wn""'1enu•yl_IJ6lt (the tax Jncreue'=4nndaed · ~·acbancmotb«:omlngBuah"•Vlce tlaltWJ~ :auate. '" Life can be so time consuming Do you believe you will spend five yean of your life wai~ in hnet? And six months of your hfe waitina at traffic liahts? A timc-m~ment e"pen at a consultina firm in Pittsburah says we will. The firm sent out a lfOUP of researchers with stop watches in hand lO study hundreds of people across the DJ ti on for over a year. Those were the ftaures they anived at I'm not sure I can bu~nly six months waitina at traffic · ts. The second hand on my car c ock con- fmns that my life is dribblin1 away wtule waitina for the li&ht to tum areen. ln my nei&hborhood two minutes is the usual tJme alloted for each chan1e in siplals -red light, areen li&ht. and left turn signal. Then more time is wasted waitina Chances for state tax hlke slim after barrage by Bush for the first person in line to move wben the sianaJ finally does tum arcen. I've been behind driven whom I suspected bad fallen asleep while waitina, or couldn't believe the liaht had actually changed. or~ cow- anis and afraid to enter the inter- section. Jn addiuon to the waitina in lines and for traffic liJhts, the researcbcn determined that we spend one year aearchi1l4 for misplaced objects, six years eauna. four yean doina house- work.. two years trying to return phone calls and eiaht months openina Junk mail. SACRAMENTO -The eventual outcome of Cahfom1a's budget cns1s probabl) was determined last week 3,000 miles away in Boston. Massachusetts Gov. Michael Duk.akis agreed to raise taJtes to deal with his state's similar revenue shon- fall. And almost immediately, his Re- publican opponent for the Whtte Hou~. Vice President George Bush. ~umped on the decision. pledging that 1f elected president he would not raise taxes The Bush camp had been hopmg that Dukalm, faced with a budget squeeze m Massachusetts, would opt for taxes over spending cuts to balance income and ouiio. Bush wants the opponun1ty to portray Dukak1s as a so-called ··tax-and- spcnd liberal," a label that has sunk Democrauc pres1dent1al nominees 1n recent elections. Unul the Massachu- setts budget cns1s hit, Dukak1s had been able to sidestep talk about ra1s1ng federal taxes. thus av.:>1dtng the pitfall. Dukakts. who has the Democratic pres1dent1al nomination wrapped up. has bragged about his budget-bal- ancing abilities -contrasting that wath the record deficits of the Reagan administration. But if he emphasized spending cuts over taxes in Massa- chusetts. he also would alienate some imponant Democratic const1tuen- c1es It was a tough poht1cal decision and one that Duk.ak1s finall y resolved by making some spending cuts and agreeing to a $40 million ci~rette tax bool>t and another $75 million rev- enue increase by changing state income tax laws. Bush wasted no time in leaping upon Dukak1s for the decision. "That's the difference -as plain as • day-between us," he said, .. tu cuts versus tu hikes. I Will not raise your taxes, period. (Duk.akis)just has in his home state and refuses to rule out a tax hike for the nation." It would completely undercut Bush's position if California and its Republican 1overnor, Georse Deu- kmeJian, also raised taxes to cover its budget _problem. If the "Iron Duke" of Cahfomia raised taxes, the "Lattlc Duke" of Massachusetts would be off the political hook. A month aao. DeukmeJ1an opted for revenue increases to make up the shonfall alt~ouah he insisted they were not tu increases. But Republicans. the media and JUst about everyone else said they were tu increases and Deular.cjian also received some bed vibtauons from national Republican leaders. Two weeks after announcina his revenue-rajsjna plans. DeukmcJian did a rare about-face and abandoned them. He complained that his proposals bad been misinterpreted as a tax increase, but clearly he was tryinJ to protect bis and Bush's political skirts. A ~cw York Times account of the affair quoted unnamed Bush carn- paiin staffers as sayina it ruined Deukmejian's chances of beconlin& Bush's vioe presidential runnin& mate. The timina was especially bad because Bush1 Dukakis and the national political media were in California at the time for the state's presidential primary. They've de- parted but Cahfom1a's problem re- mains. In the thn:e weeks since, Deu- DAN WALTERS It's hard to believe that we only spend ei4ht months out of a lifetime openina Junk mail. lf jt continues to pour in at the same rate or increase in 1cm~·ian's ~sition on the issue has the future, it will take up more time than stand1na in lines. bar ened. e won't accept anythini, I can think of 1 few other time- he says, that in any way resembles a wastina cxampl~. How about the tax increase. He says he's wilhng to cut spending to make up the deficit. time you spend answerina wrona about $800 milhon. He's even dis· numbers and calls from soliciters - patched appeals 10 Republican durin& the dinner hour" wthful undersconn& his anti-lax I can't beaJn to count the seconds position and blam101 bir-spending -make that minutes -J've ~ted Democrats for the political impasse w11tinafor 8-type persons to answer a on the budget. . qu~llon or to finLSh a senten~ Currently, however, the budget 1s they've started. 8-types never JUSt out of his hands. It's in a two-house open thefr mouths and blurt out conference committee dommated by somethina like A-types do They tum liberal Democrats who would prt~fir eve th1na over and over and over in that wes be raised rather th e mtnds before they utter a word. spendin1 be slashed. ow many times have you bad to Deukmej1an is a stubborn man. not on~y sit thro_u&h ~ home movie. which is why his ongmal flip-flop was but wa1~ and wa1t while the host got so uncharacteristic. everything set up, fouled up, rewound the film and started over'! To expect him to change pos1uons apin is beyond rationality. And that's especially true since Bush has zeroed in on Oukakis' tax increases in Massachusetts. However IO&Jcal some ktnd of revenue-raisin& steps mi&ht be for C.alifomia-and there's no universal agreement on that -the demands of national politics and the strua&)e for the White House will take precedence. Da Wal~n 11 a •J'lldlcated coluubt If you don't have a remote control on your TV, waitillJforacommerciaJ to end ca~teal ume away from a superficia ersation with family members. Time is wasted tryina to open a bottle of pills with a child-proof cap. The most efficient way to co~ with this is to take it over to the ne1a)tbor's S-year-old and ask him to open it for you. I'm not even 1010& to mention waitin& m doctor's offices. State Supreme Court shows deck is not stacked for GOP I waste a lot of time wandering around in department stores, cbar&c • card m one hand, a piece of merchan- dise in the other, lookin& for a salesperson to wait on me. Michael Fortino. president of the consultina firm doina the study said, "If we realize we're wasting five years standina in line, we can shift our time, attend a more efficient grocery store or more effective bank..•• Gov. Georse Deukmej1an has per- formed a IJ'Cll service for the Cali- fornia Supreme Cou rt. The fact that he didn't mean to do it talccs nothing away from its 1mponancc. When he stubbornly insisted on a showdown over his legally weak case that his appointment of U.S. Rep. Dan Lun&ren. R-Lon& Beach. as state treasurer shou Id take effect despite its l"CJCCllon by the state Senate, Deu- kmcJ1an p ve a high coun dominated by his appointees the chance to demonstrate its political indepen- dence By its unanimous and brusque reJCCtton of the aovemor's posjuon. the seven-member coun last week made the most of that opponunity. Five of those members were ap- pointed by Deukmejian, three of them aner Ouef Justice R0tt Bird and two other justices who had been named by Deukmejian's Democratic prede<:eslOf, Jerry Brown, were c» fc.ated in 1tatewide reconfirmation votes in 1916. Tblt elec:tion milked a . 10"# P.Oint for thCC.al.ifomiajudiciary. Until a dcailde •· thc 1taie'1 couru. lo 1n unusual dcatee. bad manijed IO avoid mt.analanetn .in .,.nisaa poli- tics. Never before bid aay Of the coun's membal beelll rqectcd at the polls. the Cahfornia Supmne Coun once was~ u the pre-cminn1 aucb state y in the natioft. TMt chanted drudcally durina tbe Brown-Bird era when die .coun be· c:amt lnttasidsfy COftUOTClliaJ With the public -and cSpeciaUy With comervativcs. Two d«ada 1111> wbaa in •tioMl ~iauon was 11 iu zmida. die C.tibiail~Coun --~ lal tibmt. But Clunt11 die -l 970I u moR or -~··~ ... OlllOUe COW\ ,, .,.... itMI( iDCll f~ antiri>Uld ia ....- id11I IJllal Md nm i11•1 Ml .._. 110~••111 ... ODii i 'ky ... .., and so did its reputation for puttina the law above political consider- ations. Many of the cnticisms ~ unfair, but not all. What anaered Republican Pany leaden most of aJI was not the hi&h court's anti-death penalty rulinas. While the GOP made the most of those rulinp as campaian issues, it was the court's decu1ons that had the effect of protectina the Democratic aerrymandenn1 of election districts for the 1980s that outtaacd Re- publican leaden and permitted them to convince themsclv~ and:' ul- umately, a majonty of votcn that it was Brown and hts a~intees who had politicized the hi court. This set lhe aaqe for the blican-kd attacks on the court t in 1916 ttSUhed io the ousters or Bird and Associate Justices CNZ Reynote> and Jotq>h Grodin. lta1ori111 the coun's reputatioft f0t indepmdence a~ a moau- menw task, esvecmtY after Oeu- tmejian's appointmenu of con· terVative jurists to ftU &be VKancin. Dcmomtic and liberal dOUbu and tan abou& the intatkiel of•t.bc reconstituted c~•tt were ltrenlthcned whea Dtu~ian DrOmOled bit old ... plftntf Malcolm LuQI. '° .-..--()( c11iri' jllllice. no. doebll -..,. lblt tlN "' a ~ coun lhat woUld llck ,IO· do lw r.aaa •ba11.epubins11M-I 8'o.e COWi W .. fDr DI D Cl'MI Mrt -~'',,.... ....... ~ • bt mowinl ~ =.: ia .. -m de- 0.Wm •lze'• ._._ to a, to boe = • Lu1117:E!&· --hi...... die .... ... .,.....~ i._,, ........... r.:'T ... .,..,. ..... i:-... •amt IDS Sit ........ ,... j '-./...._ MARTY SMITH Get serious, Fortino. We don't stand in line at markets and banks because t!\.cy are inefficient. We stand in line because too many of us are shopp1na and bank.in& at the same time. Most of us do business at the bank or market closest to our home or work. Even 1f we heard of another one that offcrcd faster serviceJ how much time would we save ir we drove fa.rthcr to set to it, waitina for traffic li&hts to change all alona the way'! Probably lbe biacsl waste of lime wu readiftl this &rticle. We have to continue aoina to buks. markets, doctors' ofticts and other lOcatJons where 1inea form. And Vt"C can't run red 1iabts eiettina there. CM&maltt AM "elh II._ ,_ W,... Nlpel. Commea,. welcome f I • • Orange Co.I DAlLV PllOT IWedttelltday, June 21. 1• A7 COM~ETE NYIE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, Al C's median home resale price tops $200,000 omc-selllng In state highest ln 17 months; prices on rise LOS ANOELES (AP) -Home sales reached a 17- montb biab in M.y despile ri.sina prioet, a realty aroup reporu. attributlna tbe strona demand to conawners• f'ean that mortaqc rates are on the rise. StateWide, bome Illes climbed 13.6 percent in May. to an annual nase of 6l3,S18, the California Aslodation of Rea.la.on said Monday. The annual rate n:praenu the a umber of homes that would 1111 dwin, tbe entite year ii Illes continued at the pmce Set in May. Tbe May ules 11te wu up 9., percent from May 198-7. Tbe median price of u e:Wtint tinale-f'amily home io California diml'Cd to $160,073 in M.y, up 1.9 percent from Aprir1 median price and up 13.4 pment t'rom May 1987. Jumpina 2.4 pment Ii.nee April, the median home raak priCe in Oranae County topped Sl00,000 for the first time last moo th, the CAR reponed. The record blah of S202. 760 com pt.red with S l 71, l S3 a year aao. • Noci.Qa that the fllW"I ate for bou.tes sold 301to 60 da11, teO ah.at ~ just now U'lnSfarina tide, analysu pRdict that ua bomeCIOlll will continue 1piralinahigber at kut duouab the yeat. Tbo median_ pnce of a Cali!omia condominium in May wu SI 21,456, up 5. 7 paunt from April and up 8. 3 pmat from May 1987. May home Illes were the~ ainoe December 1986, w~n ~ nwbt was 1t.1mulatcd by pcndina c:bulel tD I.be i.ncomc tu law. A a.bonqeofhomes on the mattet failed to dampen tbe aUca boom, said Reahon Praide1n Dale C.Olby. ..Because of the tiabt supply, bu~ ate makinaoffen u tOOll U a 'For Sa.le' sian ps up, Colby said in a news rdease. "As a resuJt. homes in most markrts are moving very quickly." . . B~yen appumtJy are driv~n by fc:an of inflation ud ruu11 mt.crest rates, and by anti-srowtb Pf'Ol)C)U}1 \ht could ltmit construction in t0me areas. said Joel Si,.r. economist for the realty pup. Followma arc median priocs of uistina. sinaJo- family boU1Ct for various rq:ions 10 May. The median iJ that price at which half the homes sold WC"tt mate expensive and half were cheaper. The c~ in {!rice may overstate actual chaqt.1 bec:autc of lbe small nze of the sample. In San Francisco, lhc median price of a home was S 190,246, up 0. 7 peroe:nt from April; Los Aqcks. St 73.982, up 2.1 pm:ent; San Dic:ao. Sl42.2S6. up 3.4 percent: Rivenidc-San Bc:mardino, Sl04,02S, up 2.7 percent; Sacramento, $94,224. up 'j percent. 0 '@i)C ~1; MD-484: F a stest single chip Md>euell Dee&lu bas successfully demonstrated the world's fastest 32-bit reduced instruction set comeuter prooessor. Tbe sin&le chip microprocessor, dubbed the MD-484, bas been clocked at almost 60 mcgahen:z and produces an output every l 7 nanoseconds. Developed under a Defense Advan~ Research ProJccts aaency contract for use in Strategic Defense Initiative studies, the chip is the latest achievement at the plliwn arsenide microelectronics laboratory at McDoa· MU DHdal Altnu•Uet Co. in Huntinaton &ach. Gallium arsenide is a oew semiconductor matenaJ wbicb provides futrr speed of operation than silicon aemi(;9nductor intqrated cin:uits. ''This is a key milcstobe in our plan for development o(pij!iwy pfO<lCSSOr syttem.S.'' said Roger Roberts. v1oc president '°d pera.I ~of the company's Sensors and Otfcnse Electronics djvlSion. Tbc processor chip desi~ is .based oq the reduced ins~on set computer architecture that was ori&inaled with DARPA fundinaat Stanford Univcntty in the early 1980s. This microprocessor chlp, when combined with recently developed bigb-spced mtmory ch1t>1 and largt pte array circwt.s. provides the military with a very h1gh- speed. radiation-hardened computer that will meet the SDI · prooes.sina requirements, accordina to Bill Geideman, propam -manqer. The next step is to complete a siogk--board c-01Tiputer that can process a typical computer provam at an averagt speed ii\ excess of I 00 million inst.ructJons per second. • This will require development of several addjtional chips and should be completed in 1990. The resulting • NEW YORK (AP) -E.F. Hutton & Co. was fi~ $400,000 and ~nsuttd by the New York Stock Exchange in oonncctioo with the firm's 1985 check overdraft scheme, the NYSE annou.need Tuesday. Tw0 former Hutton officers. President Geo~ L Ball and Executive Vice Presidcnr Thomas P. L)'nch. the company's chief finailciaJ officer, also~ censured. the NYSE said in a statement. A censure is one of the mildest forms of sanctions the cxchan&e can impo5e on members. A ocarina psnel found that from 1980 to 1982. Hutton failed to supervise and control its cash1cnng operations and several areas of its business operations, the NYSE said. The panel also found Huiton had .. cngaJed in conduct inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade" throuab the overdraft scheme. which the ex.chanJC said deprived banks of their property bccau~ Huuon did not pay intcreaton the funds it used. Hutton. Ball and Lynch oonsented to the findings of an exchanae hcarin'.I ~el without admitung or deoymg guilt, the exchanae wd. s OTC UP s & OowNs l NtM= oomputer will serve as the baslS for development by the astronautacs company of military processor systems. • • • A unit oflrvine-based PIHr Corp. ha.s been awarded a contract by North J<.al&urli Mmes Ltd, a urut of Dallhold Resources Manqement Ply. Ltd., based in Penh. Australta. The U.S. value of the facilities beina constructed is S80 million. The value of the contract was not disclosed. Fluor Daruel Australia Ltd. will provide pro)«t manqcmcot. procurement and construction mana,i> ment services for a 1old ore proca$1DI plant plus assoaatcd support· scrviocs and utilities in IUJ&oorUe. Wes tern Australia. C-OnstructJon is under way and due for completion next March. Initial plant capacity wiU be 2 million metric tons of ore per year, with an opUon to expand. Nonh K.a.lgurh expcctS to prod~ 160.000 ounces of aold per year Crom the mined ore. Known as the Big Pit. this project is one of the Iarsest in Western Au.stra.ha's eastern P>klficlds. • • • Actl•e Mem•ry Ted!Mleo i.e .• with headqua.ners in lrvtne. has entered into a muluycar agreement to provide its ht&b-per{ormanoc parallel computCT systems to E-Sy1tam l..C., Greenville., Texu. Slupmcots have already oommcoocd. aooorcbfll to Bill Terry. vi~ president·m.arkehng and sales. who added that the contr1ct prohibits duclosurc of any addJttonal details. A pn vatcly owned company, AMT maou.fact.un:t the OAP S 10 nass1vely prOCCWDf system. oontainina more than 1,000 processor elements 10 a urut small enough to fit under a desk. The cxchange's in"csugauon stemmed from a 198S c:heck-overdrafbng scheme that Hutton orchestrated through its ~wl brokerage network. The firm earned up to $8 m1lhon an mt.crest 1Drome at rommerctaJ banks by deltbcratcly overdrawing checkrng accounts and putting the money to use elsewhere. Hutton pleaded gwlt) to 2.000 federal fraud counts and paid a S2 rrullion fine in May 1985 beaust" of the scheme. which exposed sc:nous ma.n.qiemcnt lapses at tht> firm and led to a chain of events that forced Hutton to sell itself to Shcarson Lehman BrothttS Inc last year. The merged firm 1s known as Sheirson Lehman Hutton Inc. In a report on the dJSCtphnary act.Ions. the NYSE wd lhC'T'C was no evid.eno: that Ball. now the chairman of PrudcntJal·Bache Sccunt1es Inc. or Lynch had been aware of excess• ve overdrafh ng before February 1982 but should have questioned whether thert was adequate supervision and control over branch offices. The S400.boo fine 1s among the largest levied by the stock exchange. In 198 J, the NYSE fined Fu~t Wa.IJ Street Settlement $400,000 and in 1982. 1t fined BacM Halse) Stuart Shields the 'Same amount. Uo 7 i ~:"'°" ,:,' ~-·1 N 8: -1, HI-~ --Up -'4 Up --. ll UP I~= I~ Uo Up ·2 ~= 1 :.:\vc -'~ UC> ~~c~r 1-.. H: 14 -Vt ~-? .,.,_ t Uo '4 -1 H: ~ ~-... " -... '· UP -1-'t t -•A. ~''Al -1 t ,,,,, -..., 1~~ ~ -1~ I H ~-~ \* -14 \.\ -\.\ VI Co 14-~ • ................ a. .• .. I f ___.. ___ .._ __ ~~-----L.---~~ ---- - -~ -----~ ~ Ny r,-. T d l. ·..... I •, ' p I I I : f,' .1 ~: I ' I l 1 I ---. WIDNllDAY'I CLOS .. •NC98 . Stock market retreats NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market retreated Wednesday after an early advance faded. Analysts said traders still were expectina 1 continuing rally by the dollar in foreisn ucbaoae. A steady to stronier dollar would ~umably attract money from overseas investors to both stocks and bonds traded in the United States. Worries over upward {>_fCSSUrc on commodity prices cased a bit. meanwhile, after Tuesday's rain an much of the Midwest. However, the bond market turned in an uninspired showing today, leaving interest riles sliJhtiy biJher. Brokers said many investors were reluctant to chase af\er stocks at levels near the hi~ point of the ranac in which they have fluctuated sance the crash last fall . Declinina issues outnumbered advances by about S to 3 on the New York Stock Excbanae, with S71 up, 900 down and 493 uncbanaec:t. WHAT AMEX DID WH AT NYSE 0 10 NEW YORt< IAPl Jun. 2' AMEX LEAD ERS 6 • Golo Quous MrTALS Quon s • NEW YORK IAPl Ju,,. 2' l't'w. lg l ~ NYSE LEADfRS th SIMI E~~ ~ •• • eV~ltf Dow JoNfS A~E RACES NASDAQ SUMMARY ... The Best Kept Secret In Town THIRD ANNIVERSARY PARTY ALL DAY LONG Fun • Gama • Molle •. Pltzel Reservations (714)650·1750 421 E.17th St., Coita Mesa ' • Illy .... WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29. ,_ *ID . Tlgera whip Y•nk111 to rem•ln perfect In five m11&tga. 112. Tyaon.wt19" w• In courtroom following confllcl In rt119. IN. OCC'• jaD1or ftnlty elCJlt, wlllcb beean rowtDt on tbe Tbam• todaJ, coui.ta of couwa1n Dall Allen, Kmn ....,u, hed lloDebela. Jof Abehlre, Da•e BodCkln•. Jeff StraJer, Daft Koncb, Phil Bart, Geoff Scheumann. OCC vies with best on Thames Crew well-prepared for Henley Royal Regatta Com petition means cverythms on the way to s;reatncss. And that is exactly what Coach Dave Grant 1s seek.ins as he leads his Oranae Coast Collqe crew team to Enaland in the search for a little competition in the I S4th Henley Royal Rcpt ta. H avina already prncred four medals in the Pacific Coast Rowina Championshjps Just a month aao, Grant is hopina that his jumor vanity squad of eiaht. the only community coll~ crew in the nationt can t:\old up apinst the tradition-rich Enalisb competition, today throu&)l Sunday at Henley-on-the-Thames. ''Everybodr. here thmks we can win. Other- wise we wouldn t be ioing, .. Grant said. "From the West Cout, Henley 1nv1ted UCLA and us.. That's all; And they only invite schools they think an compete."' Fresh from collectJnJ four medals 1n the Pacific Coast Rowina Champ1onsh1ps just a month aao. OCC hopes to cap a briUant year at H enley. SufTerina losses only to Harvard and Washanaton during the past season, the Pirates finished a sparklina 33-2. Despite the lofty laurels already attained this season, the team stepped up its rigorous training schedule after the Pacific Coast cbamp1onsh1ps May 22, and Grant says it has 1)11d off. "Our stroke 1s stronaer now than It has bttn all season Iona. We've very focused." he said. "We've aot ti&ht group here. We're quicker. technically better and have more endurance than at any time this feason. It has helped us that the ei&ht-man is the o nly boat we have in the water ri&)l t now. There aren't any distractions." Couwa1n Dan Allen and In order from the stem, Kevin Mqill, Fred Honebein. Jof Abshlrc. Dave Hodak.ms, Jeff Strayer, Dave Kovach, Phil Hart and Geoff Scheumann will take on the approiumately 350 boats competina in two-. four- and e1&ht-man shells dunna the tournament "There are three levels of compet1t1on -one for national teams and two for vanity crews -for the Thames Cup (which Grant says hts team will likely compete for) and the Ladies' Plate. presented by the Ladies of Henley. "It's hke being in England at least 100 years ago, that's what the atmosphere 1s hke:· Grant said. "There really is nothing to compare with 1t " Two boats are pitted in head-to-head compe1i- lJon that stretches over 2,300-mcter distances Only the wmner advances to the next round That means that Grant and his crew could tra\CI some 7 ,000 miles for all the excitement of one six to eight minute race. dcpendins upon the wind and current of the nver. ''That happened to us one year at Henle). · Grant recalled "We went all the way and lost the first heat. It Just happened that we drc"' one of the strongest teams ng.ht off." OCC seems to be on the nght track this ttme around. however. t.akm& third place in the vars1t} 8 finals at Markow Regatta June 18. a mere 50- mmute dnve from Henle) The Pirates then improved to first place in Saturda) ·s Reading Rcptta. outd1~tanc1ng a pair of English crcv.~. Panaboume College and the Reading Rov. mg Oub. by more than 11/1 lengths The Reading Rci,atta was the final tuneup for the Pirates before trying their luck at Henle). Blyleven wins· veteran duel with a twist .. Twins make qu ick jump in Lazorko's first start of year --- By RICHARD DUNl'\ ........ Cc;. 0 ,, • Two veteran pitchers. one a cbtef of tbc major leques and the other a mainstay in the minors, v.crc going head-to-head Tuesday night in _two dlfferent direcuons Bert Blylcvcn shO'-"ed wh} he's the winningest pitcher 1n Minnesota h1~ tory and Jack Lazorko proved why most ofh1s years have bttn spent in Triple-A. As the Anscls' three-game wtnnins streak came to a screeching haJt. Blylcvcn picked up career victory No. 251 b} pttchms the Twins to an 8-2 v1ctof) before 27.618 Anaheim Stad1u.m fans Blylcven. 28-14 hfeume agamst the Angels, pitched his founh complete pmc of the season and has now defeated the Angels and the Royals more times 1n his career than any other team. Lazork.o, meanwhile. was a hot pitcher for Triple-A Edmonton before set tins the all to the varsity on Monday night when his team was in Las Veps. Lazdrko. 32. bad bttn told be was p1tch1ng on Tuesday, either in I.As Vcps or Anaheim . He didn't know for sure unlit Monday when the club recalled him. But the way Blyleven. 3 7. aeneratcd more steam in the late mntn:gs. 1t became a mute point for Lazotko -rve always enjoyed pitchins here.~ said Bl)'leven. who no-hit the Angels in Anaheim while wtth Texas on Sept. 22. 1977 ... Over the )CU'S the pbyers have chanaed. and there were about three or four JU)S tonisbt that I haven't faced before. Maybe rve always had better luck apinst the Anacls.- The achedale H°"9W Ton19'11-Minnesot•, 7.35 P.m • June 30-idae. AWAY Jutv l-0.trolt, •:35 P.m.1• Jutv 2-o.trolt, 1:20 P.m. Jutv 3-0etrolt, 10:35 e.m. • Julv ._Toronto, ~5 P.m Jutv S-Toronlo, •:35 P.m. • • On TV, Channel 5 / On TV, Channel •· • Al Nmft or KMPC (710). Strcn&th. not luck, lS what Blylcven had UJ the final five mni!l'5. -1 thous.ht I ~ 1n the first three or four inmngs. he said. -From the fifth 1nn1na on. it kicked in. I started throwm1 more fastballs, hard- er fastballs. As the pmc went on, I just aot stronaer." This one was far from cffonless for Lazorko. who needed a masterful relief job by Shennan Corbett to get belled out of the fifth. Lazorko tbttw 6 7 pitcbn in his f int DllJOr lequc appearance of 1988, scanmna elaht hits. strikina out four. HtS only tv.-o walks., back-to-bKk to open the fifth. sot him m troubk and ended his stay on tbc mou.nd. But Corbett struck out Lark.in and Tim Laudner and Bob Boone threw out Kent Hrbek at third on a double-steal, hit-a.11111-run sllualJon to end the lDnlJ\I.. Blylevcn, 7-6, struck out seven and walked just one He allowed ci&ht hits and bas ... on his last four decisions. ··w·e ran 1ntoa hot p1tchcrtoni&ht." wd Ansel Manaccr Cookie Rojas. (Pl--.ee AROBL8/B2) D9dgers' streak stopped Clippers deal for spee«;t String ends at four; Knepper pitches - Astros to 4 -3 win HOUSTON (AP) -Bob Knepper was aood Too Jood. he thouaht. "My curve seemed to have such a ~ break that it was brcakin& too low, KncpPCf said. .. But the thina that was 1m ponant toni&ht was aettinaa victory. A two-hitter doesn't mean a thin1-" Knepper allowed two h its in 81/J inninp and equalJcd bis 1987 victory tot.al u the Astros beat Los Angeles 4-l Tuesday ni&ht, endina the I , , , The achedale AWAY Todllv-Hou$10tl, 11:35 a.m. JUM 30-tclle. ttOMa Jl/IY l-Chkffo, 7:35 p.m. Jl/IY 2-Chlcaoo, 7;05 p.m. J\h >-<hlcaoo. l:OS p.m J\h f---$f. Louis, 5!10 p.m. JVllY J.--St. Louis, 7:35 p.m. •Al eamet Ot1 KABC (790). C>odsn' four-pme winnina.streak. -cn.dal' would be PRttY close to ~ riibt word for. us so win ~iaht. •• laid ltJieppa' who WU 8-17 l ft f 987. "We'd bave beeft five and one-half ..... out if .e loilt." Jftl1ad. HO\lllOI\ doted to within l'h=f Lot An.,:lea. , a. I, stnact out four and wa vc.. Larry Andeilen relieved in llM nintb and alloWed an RBI lilllle '° JobD ~· Juan Apto IDl IM ftMI out AW bis ftnt •Ye Of' the -. ftDilbi"l tbe combined tJwee. ~a.. •1t1 ~ IO llt ia the win c:olVmn. 90 _..~wt dkt h," Houston ... I 1111 LMiCr llid. "It's ahillys ·=:m--~--'° · ...... ..:.a .. llft .... ms:ew ... i ...... '** ill Tbe Cllppen obtained lll~htaan nanl Gary Grant from Seattle after tb.e Sapenonlca «lrafted lllm 15th. .. Tra de Cage, p ick for Gr ant, Smith ~ In whirlwind day LOS ANGELES (AP) -First. the Los An&elcs Clippers got luck) b) winmng the NBA lottery Now. the) believe they've made a deal which will significantly improve their for- tunes m the upcomins )ean The Oippers, who hne won only 29 pmn m the last two seasons and haven't qualified for the pla)offs smce 1976. wound up with three first- round draft choices for the sttond 1trai&)lt year Tuesday. They did so by tradinJ forward Michael Cqe, the NBA s leading rebounder this past season. to the Seattle SuperSonics 1n cllchanac for the n&)lts to the I Sth player selected m the draft. point guard Gary Grant ofM1ch1pn. As part of a three-team deal. Philadelphia sent the ri&)lts to for- ward Charles Smith of Pittsbu!Jb. the third pick in the draft. to the 01ppen in excba.nae for the nahts to suard Hersey Hawkins of Bradley. the mth overall ~lecllon. Los Anacles had acquired the sixth pick 1n an earlier Engelstad still ey ei ng NBA By JON FERGUSON Of_Olllr ........ Four of the PCA._·s top pla)m were ch0stn 1n the NBA college draft. but one Coast area probable wasn't among them Wayne Enaelstad, who led UC I to the bnnk of the "I( .. A tournament 1n March. expected to be drafted but appattntl) was left out b) the way the da) 's selections developed. Enaelstad had worked out for the C11ppas Sunda~ and was contacted by the Denver Nugeu a da) later. '"The Nuattts called yestC'f'da) and '-"Cre look1na to take me 1n the trade With Sacramento. In addition. the 76crs get a 1989 first-round drat\ cho1cx from the Somes. AJona With obt.aJnmJ the nahts to Smith and Grant. the 01ppcn bco11 the three-round draft day 10 New York by cxemsm• their previously announced selcct1on of forward Dann)' Man.runs of Kansas.. the first choitt in the draft which they aot by winnina the NBA lottery on May 21 "We 1ot three bonafidc AU-Amen- cans. .. said Oippcn' sencral manager EJ&in Baylor. "The) have the type of ta.Jent we want. We want to play an (Pl--eee PCAA/92) u~tcmpo pmc. we want to run. We want people who can shoot from the pen meter "You really an 't predict how it's so•na to be next season. but we ccnainl) look to have an excitin& ~son." . fi "This bas been sensational or our team," 01ppers' roach Gene Shue said. "We hate to lOIC a player hkc Michael Case. but we are buildinaour team around speed and qwckncss."' .. We definite!~ got what we n~C'd ... Shue wd. .. We ended up with the thrtt players we wanted out of the draft Lakers choose Rivers with their lone draft pick West calls character key to guard's chances INOLEWOOD (AP) -The Los Af\aeles Laken, who last week became the first team to repeat as N BA champions in 19 years, IClccted auud David Riven with their lone !.itlect.ion in Tuesday's draft. The 1.akm took Riven. a 6-foot.O. I IQ.. pouodef &om Noue Dame, with the 25th and fiul 1electioa of the first round: Los Ans.Jes =r~.y U1ldod its~ &nd "Ulitd- Riven led Notre Dame tn sconna 1n each of bis four seasons there and was named the most valuable player on the Fi&httna I nsh team in all four years. He fin ished his career as the school's all- time leader in assists (S86) and steals (20 I) and third in scorina (2.0S8 points) A native of Jeney City. N.J., Rivers recovete4 from a near-fat.al aut_omob1lc acci- dent in the summer of 1986 in which he sufTcrtd a 1evere abdominal injury to avcrqc 15. 1 points and 5.1 assists as •Junior and career-hiab totals f22.0 points and S.6 assists as a senior. .. Look.ma at the draft. the one thin& we thoqht M could act was a ball-handlina paard." l..akcrs' general manqcT Jt'f'T) West sa.1d .. David has bttn a lcadcT of the Not~ Dame ballclub for four years. and we hope that play1na apinst that caliber of compet1t1on will be a plus for him com1na into the NBA. "He's a tcmfic kid and I think the quahty of a ~non socs a Ion& way to detcrmintns how the) II do as a pro." Rivers avcrucd I S.8 points and 4 l as.ssst.s as a frnhman and 16. 1 po1ntS and 4 9 assists as a sophomore. . "I've been think•~ about.actt•na to this k\cl for a lo.11 umc," Raven said by tekphonc from New York. "h's aoina to be a lft'l.- opportunity for me. bean& in ~ compa.qy c-f ,.. Martina rallies togain semiflnals ,. WUander a.pd Conners both defeated In upsets wnm.EDON. ~(AP)-ManiM ....... ., .. .,..,._..._ ~-..... -~~ ................. Ii. •wi.»111 ~a._.....ca•d11tl ......... ..... ., hlwdle 116,..-iD ..... Nr?ll'll us .............. 4--2 ..... _... .. _. ........... .... 11111 I la Nd I ti lail6 Aet. 4-'- '°'"" ................................... ""ljlillAllll'I ..................... ,... .. t ~,i-=== Ma&ic (Johnson) and the mt of the pys.. rm ao•aa to do all I can to contnbutc to the team." Raven. 23. appcan better suited. to the Lakers' u~tcmpo pme than to the haJfcourt offense employed 11 Notre Dame. .. J had to make a<lju.stmenu bccaute we weren•t abk to run all the time,•• he said. .. , Lbiuk I pla)'ed well in Chicqo (at the NBA .Pl't'- draft camp)and showed I could push the ball up t.bc Ooor and makt aood ckcisions.."' Tbe Lakcn traded tbcu teCOnd..f'OQnd draft cboitt to Pbomix u pan of the A\llVlt. 1915 deal -bich brou&bt Maurice Lucat 10 the team. CINCINNATI -Lift ii toina '° bedly for the Cincinnati Reds that even man:p: Pao Rose mlde a pffc. opiftl to cbanle hit team's IU<:k. Roae band:carried &.bO liftcup card to the umpira to .,n a aeries apinst the San Dieao Padres Monday 1liabiut be foqot to check it tint. and pve t.bc umplra the wrona lineup card, one that included a player he had tcralCbed rrom &he pme becaute of injury. As a rnuJt. &he Padres were able to .,et the Reds for blt\Jn& ou& of order durina the Rnt inninc. scuttlina a rally: Tbe Padrca then surpd ahead to a 9-2 victory that left Cincinnati with six consecutive losxs and no relief in aiaht from the woes that dropped the Reds to 33-41 and l<>'h pmes behind first-place Los Angeles in the Na.tioul Lcque West. Jl09e ldmined be didn't read the card that Coach Tommy Hdau handed him before he took it to the meetiJla With lbe umpires at bomeplate. RO!e normally lets 10mcooe ebo do that chore, but he altered the routine to~ to cbanee the team's luck. "hook 11 up (Sunitay), too. No one else isswtina a S1raJr. .. Roee said. ""(Coech) Lee May was in a aood llreak. I kt Kai Daniels take it up once. And I let Ron Jtobinloa lake it up. You just try to set someone who can eet a streak piua. Jfthey win, you've aot to take 1t up every niabt. No matter who presents the lineup catd from now on, it's a &ood bet Rose wi!I Jive 1t a cl<>5e read. The mixup Monday ni&bt occurred when Rose had to drop Daniels from the lineup about 40 minutes before the pme started because the outfielder was bothered by a sore neck. Instead of taking the new lineup card out, Rose mistakenly brou&ht the old one - then 9Cnt the new order up to bat m the bottom of the fint. He didn't realize bis mjstake until Padres manager Jack McKeon pointed it out to the umpires. .. You can make an honest mistake like that any time, .. ROIC said. ··As much as I change lineups. I'm surprised I haven't done it up un\JI now. I've changed line~ three and four times LD one day." The card lS serious business." McKeon said. "l spend a lot oflime on it every ni&ht It's so easy to make mistakes." This mistake won't help Rose, who is under fire for the t.cam'5 poor performance. The club bas finished second in the NL West the last three seasons under Rose, and some fans and commentators att sugcstin& be should be ftred if the team doesn't tum around qwck.ly. Rose l&1d be didn't lb.ink the mistake had much of an impact on the pmc. He bnstled when rcponers pursued t.hc matter. Quote of the day .... I Mite D1u, Pittsburah Pirates catcher- outfielder, on lbe art of scoreboard watchm& with the Bua in second place behind the New YoFk Mets and just ahead of St. Louis: "We're not lookinJ behind or ahead an the standings. we·re not concerned with the Cardjnals, and we're not concerned with the Mets. We're concerned w11h the Puates. We have enouab to worry about w11h ourselves. If we~ the way we're capable of play1na. we1J be in September:· Cal football cited by ·Pac-IO WALNUT CR.EEK-The Pacific-10 --' Conference has penal. ized the University of •II• California at Berkeley for four rules violations involving a student football player, Comm1ss1oner Thomas C Hansen said Tues- day. The univen1ty was hmited to granting 28 new and 93 total football scholarships for the 1988-89 academic year, two fewer than currently pcnnitted, the Pac-10 said. The penalties. approved by the conference's presidents and chancellors, were imposed because the conference found that a student was provided unearned academic credit from a Cal1fomia communtty collqe last summer, the Pac-I 0 sa1d. The credits were to make the student eligible for oompetiuon during UC- Bcrkeley's 1987 football season. The crcd1u were provided with the help of a former UC-Berkeley usistant footbaJI roach and a faculty member at the community coll~ who was a representative of the school's athletic interests, the Pac-10 said. The student did not pay the enrollment fees for the counes, attend any class 1CSS1on or complete any classwork, the conference said. The studcn\ is no lonaer enrolled at UC. and the assist.ant football coach subsequently resigned. accord- ina to the Pac::-1 O. ASU track llwm probation . WALNUTCREEJC-The P9cifk..IO m Coafema placed ArilOGI State Uaiver· :'-°" HWC>-)Ur ptObatioo Tuetday (or l I vic*tioaa in its tl1ICk and Reid • ~10 Commiuioncr Tbomat C. Hanten an- nounciDd lhe probation, which rcauhed &om 1 I().. month inveatitation, includel limitlnt Arizoaa State's tnck and fielcJ prosram to oa<amput colleaiaae 'Meets with oo Polt-aeuon competition in 1911-89". The u.nivctshy also Will have reauictions on the "Dumber of arantt-in-aid for the neat two years, a prohibltion qainst off-campus ~itiftl next set10n and elimination of all eJtpeftM>-paid recruitina in 198S..89. The PcnaJucs, approved by the conference presi- dents and chancellors 11 lbeir weekeftd mectinp, were imposed for viola lions involviq the provision of. extra benefits to studeot•tblctet, incfudi"8 a cub peymen~ improper transportatioa: intetttt-(n:e loan tor travel expenses; and ellpenses to indipble studenl-athletes, .. In addition, the fonncr bead track and field coach (Oyde Duncan) was found to have e~ in unethical conduct by submittin& 1 fabt qualifyina time for entry into the 1987 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Oiampionships," the Pac-10 said in a st.atcm~t. The conference oriainally prohibited the univer- sity from recruitillJ otr campus and providina expense- pa1d nicruilJnt visits and ehmination of all new aranu- in-aid for a two-year period. But the conference suspended the second year of the rccruitina prohibi- tions and reduced the arants-in..aid restrictions durina the second year. "The conference considered this a most serious cue, particularly an liJht of the fact this was th~ third ume since 1981 violations had been found m the Arizona State track and field prosram," Hansen said. .. The severity of the penalties reflecu the oonference'i concerns over the history of violations in the conduct of the program. .. However, the university administration bas made strona efTons to take corrective steps." Carter to assist at Long Beach MIDDLETOWN, Ohio -Butch m Carter, a former Indiana University and NBA player. announced Tuesday that he will become a full-tame assistant coach at Long Beach St.ate University. For the past two seasons. Qner. who played an the NBA with the Los Angeles lakers, Indiana Pacers, New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76crs, was the head coach at bis alma mater, Middletown High School. He posted a 30-13 record in his two years, including a 17-4 mark last season. He was named The Associated Press coach of the year in Division I, thus becoming the only person to ever be named Ohio player and later coach of the year. Carter will serve under head coach Joe Hamngton at Lona Beach State. NHL officials oppose ra~ng NHL 's referees and linesmen said Tuesday ' TORONTO -The union for the ~ the lcaaue's proposal for a new system to rate on-ice officials could lead to dasm aesals based on "peT50nahty clashes" rather than per- formance. The issue dominated a four-hour mecung Tues- day. When a four-hour meeting ended, bbth sides ~1d ii was too early to predjct if the officials would stnke before the 1988-89 season bcgms. • The current agreement expires Aug. 31. Talks now have been adjourned until Aug. 8. The two sides have not yet dJscussed money. Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 p.m -BASEBALL: New York Mets at Pittsbuflh, WOR. 5 p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon men's quarterfinals. from Wimbledon. England (de- layed). HBO. 6:30 p.m. -BOWLING: Seattle Open, ESPN. 7:05 p.m. -BOXING: Frankie Duarte vs. Ron Cisneros an a 10-round bantamweight bout, from Reseda. Z Channel. 7:30 p.m -BASEBALL: Minnesota at Ansels, Channel S. 7:30 p.m. -MEN'S VOLLEYBALL: USA Cup-Japan vs. USSR. from Inglewood (taped), Prime Ticket. 9:30 p.m. -MEN'S VOLLEYBALL: USA Cup -France vs. U.S .. from lnalewood (taped), Prime Ticket RADIO 7.30 p.m BASEBALL: MinnC'$0ta at Anacl1-KMPC ( 710). THURSDAY'S TELEVISION I p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon women's semifinal, from Wimbledon, En&)and (delayed). Channel 4. 'Giant' defends Cal title PCAA IN DRAFT ••. Ristina his C.tifomia beavyweaaht championship, Mike "The Giant" White will take on Levi Billups. headlinina the rqulu monthly fiaht card at tlie Irvine Manion Hotel Thunday. Owner ofa 22-7 record. White, 29. ii lookin& for a world ra.nkin& with a decisive win over Billups of Qua1l Yalloy duriq the 12-rounder. l"rom81 third round if everythmg went as expected." Enaelswt sajd. "I'm dis- appointed. bu& I have no hard feelings.. I'm still goina lO get into the camp." Denver chose Pittsburgh forward Jerome Lane and Purdue forward Todd Mitchell with its fint two pack Si and opted for a au.ard in the third round. The 01ppcn chose 6-2 Rhode Island guard Tom Oamck an the second round and 6-9 Kentucky forward Rob Lock 1n the third. Enarlstad wd that the Milwault~ Bucks and Golden St.ate Wamon bad contacted him in addition to the N ugeu and Oi.PPCts before the dt'U\. Year. was selected an \he fint round by the Boston Celtics, No. 24 overall an the draft. San Jose State's 6-8 guard Ricky Berry, the PCAA"s leadi~scorer, was chosen No. 18 overall in the first round b)' the Sacramento Kinas. Lona Beach State's Morion Wiley, a 6-41uard who averqed 1.9.9 points, was taken ~ the Oafias Mavcricb, 46th overall in the second round. Nevada-Las Yeps forward Gerald Paddio, a 6-7 sharp.shooter who averqed 19.3 p0int1andwould likely play off ~uard in the pro ranks if he makes it, was ta.ken 74tb overall by the Celtics durina the third round. Tigers continue run l Tliey m~e It five sttatght overYa:=eeswlth6-l win ...... n. Mleda .. Pna Frank Tanana allowed five hill in IYJ iuinp and Pat Sheridan drove in four run• u the vis!tina Detroit. Tilerl defeated New Yott 6-1 Tuesday !liaht for their fifth 1trai&bt victor)' over the Yankees this year. Tanau. l o-4, allowed only tbm hi is after tbe teCOnd innina. Ho IWCk out six and waited two before bci~ relieved with one out and runnen Oft fim alMS eecood 1n the nintb. Mike Henneman doled. Tbc Tiem moved three pmes &heed of the tecODd-- plaoc Yums in tbe American Lelaue F.uL Oary Penis aot two bit• and 1COrcd twice. Petth. batlina only .2 ~ 5 enterina this week, went 3-fbr-l aftd ICOf'Cld four runs an Deuoii"s 6-3 victory ~ver New York on Monday niabt. Rick Rhoden, ~allowed four runt on eev~ bits lll 71/J inninp. He WU knocked out on CODICCUUVC RBI sinaJcs by Sheridan and Luis Salazar. In other American Leque pmes: Orlolel 1, Bl• .Jay1 t: Jay Tibbs and Mark Thurmond combined on a eeven-hitter and Fred Lynn and Eddie Murray each drove in three runs for boat Baltimore. ... S.s I, I.MIMI l: Wes Gardner a1Jowc:d only three hits over seven inninp in his fint start of the year and host Boston scored five unearned runs for its founb straiJht victory. WM&e SH •, a.1111 S: Dan Puqua homered twice and Gres Walker hit a towerina solo shot with two outs in the eWitb innina to hick the four·hit pitchina of Bill Lona and &bby Tbipn for visitina Chicqo. Raqen I, MarlHn t: Jose Guzman pitched 1 fo~r­ hitter forrus fint ~or·lcaplc shutout and LvTy Parrish and Steve Buechele hit solo home runs •• visitiq Tens snapped a thrcc-ume losina nrealt. Brewen•. AWetkl l: Rob ~broke upa sc'?rel~ tie with a two-out, &w~run homer 1n the seventh 1nn1na and Don Auaust pitched a four-hitter for visiting Milwaukee. In the National Leque: CUI I, PWWa •: Shawon Dunston 11naled borne two runs with a two-out, bases-loa~ sin&)e, ~pping a four-run ei&hth inninJ u host Cl\icaao won atsfourth strai&ht and 10th in its lut 13 pmcs. * lted ... '· IMlaM CUYal.AM> eonotl l'r.,_a ..... Cer'!Wd OOoA• l(l!llt .. ,,,..., rt ~­~w lb -~ .. ~c ,._ ., .... •••• t t I t > ••• It I t •••• J I I I l. t 0 1 0. 0 >••• J ••• ...... ._,_ Sitt ....,.... Sitt Owe-11 > 1 1 I ~· ••t• -.,Ucf J 1 •• ....... •Otl ........ 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LOUlS (AP) -Tim Raines of the Montreal &pos Tuctday WU plaCCJ4~~ on the disabled lul for ~ fitsl time in his eiJht-ycu,.1 ,.,., ca~r. 1111v Rainea pulled a hamstr-.or: ina last fnday in a S-3 losa~ to the Pittsburgh Pirat~ and has not played since. He wu ptaCed on l~ disabled list retroactive t"';; last Friday. •iN Raines is battin& .27f',, with aeve11 home runs an4 • 30 runs batted in and l>"' &tolen bases. Mont.real recalled OUOf fielder Hmn Winninaha~ ftom Indianapolis ol ~Ii American Association us .. replace Raines. Wi"'~ niftalwn, whO had bee .ent to tndiampoHs la(l, week. bitted .253 in ~ p.mes few the Elpo&. Wotka.na on a winnina lttClk that Ml ~ three years, White tw telkd off ttvca 1UtCUaive vtclories i.G carnina his title. Two called Tuesdly to invite bim to camp, but E.n,elstld aaid he will wait to ma.kc a deciaion on· which ieam '•camp to anend after analyzi na witll bis •nt wb:idt eqMd •pPC81'1 to bold the besi situation for him. BLY.LEVEN SHUTS DOWN ANGELS AGAIN, 8-2. • • liUups, a One.-time Hoeman of the DaW«lUnct Lot ~les &pus; i1 1)..l and hasn't Iott aancca February 1917 mae.chup with.White. aedllnd's Lu.is Hcmanda will tab on Pomoaa'a Riel? Fdix in the lb-round tcmifinal f'or the t la.. pound divilioG. Jn Uotlaer iop ~m&nary. un· bea1Ca Jolumy 04Tap Tap .. T•J'i! or Albuquerque 1ritl kc buwnweisbt Manin Pela a/<>aurio. OIM' --~ .Im, Roae--.··1dlolYwocM'Q YI. leo L.opea <ODd);llla....__.,~ ...... ._.. TJ Ai-.IUOBI (Lot Asa '•) w. not JeMM <S...O.. llld) • I ...... 1 .. •twe"iaht ~-T•10liWl(Ptl1dena) va. V...1111 tilf p51filtablr· ........ ,. 1 ~ ' I ~1st.ad wu one of appro.timate-ly 60 players Ytho were lbowcased for pro scouts durint draft camps in Viflin.ia and CbiCllQ. and averqed llPointsand llreboundlinpmc111 the VirJiDia =There were 7> 1elcct.ion1 ia T y'1 draft. .. 1 \boUlht I luld a ICM>d )'CU' and showCd die ahanp at cam~ tblt I needed IO," ~ .ai4-"I(• definitely not over. If anytJuna this ~II make me hllnsry. I tltdy art ~ I usually bave IO'° OUI aDd elfD ii. nd wilf J111t IDMe me eo out •wort banter. I'm dcftaildy-.,.., IO ID IOIM'Whcn ud CUc my lfiot. i.i 111ad •~enlill it lJ.6 ~Otl per ..-and 1., nbouMI Aw the Am.WI lllC...,. Md W81 Voled .0 d.e ANCM .. teem. ucsa .......... u~ ... a... die PCM,..,_ Of'IM I P'romBl ... I ..... ...,..-a. ........ ... ~ ................... . a11112111 .... * t11 .. ttllll 1111, w MO ............. ~ ... ....... ............. °""' ....... di* .. • 1 .... llllcllm • """' cMlr ..... .....,.... .......................... ,.:: ..... "--'· 0.. ., ......... " =·· .. -c..7 ·:· ..... ~··= ... IP9'!' .. ..... .. .. ... ~-.-....... .., .. ...... ..... ,....,. ................ ,.., '-" ........ _ ............ ... ..... .. -1 ... fl .......... .. .................. _ .. ............ =----.:; .. ; ...,.,., .. ~ -'l[@=·T::i:.~ ~-­== . ~-a?t:~ ... .-~----­• ..._ -.-;rwr;A U I .. ~· l I ) I ! Jf'1or ~e standings Ar..._,,_... WD'l'DIVlllON W L Pet. GB Llt •7 29 .611 S·$ 42 32 .'61 4 6-4 39 37 .Sil I J..7 36 39 ."80 ICWJ S.S 34 40 .4S9 12 6-4 l3 43 .434 14 7-3 lO 47 .390 l 7'h 4-6 UIT DIVISION 46 28 .622 7.3 43 31 .Sil ) 3-7 41 3S .S39 6 3-7 31 34 .S28 7 8-2 31 31 .soo 9 J..7 38 40 .487 10 6-4 more 22 S4 .289 2S 4-6 Minnesota 8, A.11aeJ1 2 Detroit 6, New Yonc I Baltimore 7, Toronto 0 TMIM1'1 Scorn Boston 6, Oeveland I Cbicqo 4, K.ansu City 3 Tex.as 6, Seanle O Milwaukee 4, Oakland I ..,.... Lott I Won I Lott l Won I Won I Lost I Lo.t I Won 2 Lott l Lost 4 Woo 4 Woo I Lost 2 Won 2 ..... A .. 21-16 26-lJ 23-16 19·16 18-19 21-18 21 -19 IS-20 tt.21 16-19 14-23 19-20 18-19 12-21 22-14 22-14 22-16 20.18 23-17 20.18 14-21 24-14 21-17 19-19 18-16 IS-21 18-22 S..33 . Toay'a Games M!nnesota (Anderson 4-S) at Midi (Finley 4-8), 7:35 p.m. Milwaukee (Wepnan 6-S) at OUland (Welch 9-4), 12: 15 p. m Detroit (Terrell 3-4) at New York (Dot10n 7-3), 4:30 p.m. Toronto (Key 2-1) at Baltimore (Bautista 3-6), 4:35 p.m. Cleveland (Candiotti 7-6) at Boston (Oemens 10.S), 4:35 p.m. OUcaao (Perez 6-4) at Kansas City (9annistef" 7-6). 5:35 p.m. Texas (Housh 7-7) at Seattle (Moore 4-8), 7:0$ p.m. ,........,.,Game New York at Chica,o, 5:30 p.m. Only pme scheduled National LN1Ue WEST DIVISION ~en Houston W L Pct. GB Llt Streak Lost 1 Won I Won 2 Won I Lost I Lost 3 Home Away 21-18 22-13 24-14 16-21 20-19 18-18 17-19 17-22 22-19 11-25 12-24 14-23 43 31 .581 8-2 Sad Francisco Cincinnati Saa Dieao Allan ta 40 35 .533 3111 6-4 38 37 .507 51/J 6-4 34 41 .453 9111 3-7 33 44 .429 11 111 4-6 26 47 .356 16111 3-7 EAST DIVISION Ne.., York 47 28 .627 5-5 Pittsbur)h 43 33 .566 4112 7-3 Won I Lost I Won 4 Won I Lost 1 Lost 2 25-11 24-16 21-15 18-19 21-17 18-16 22-17 19-17 20-19 19·20 14-23 15-25 Chicaac? 41 34 .547 6 7-3 St. Lou11 37 39 .487 1017 3-7 Montreal 35 40 .467 12 4-6 Philadelphia 33 41 .446 13'12 4-6 T1telclay'1 Games Houston 4, Doqen 3 Chicaio 6, Philadelpb11 4 Cincinnati 4, San Diqo 3 New York S, Pittsburah 2 San Francitco 13, Atlanta 7 St. Louis 5, Montreal 4 Tocla1'1 Games DM1en (Henhiser 11-3) at Houston (Ryan 5-5). 11.35 a.m. Philidelphia (M.Maddux l-0) at Ch1cqo (Schiraldi 4-5), f 1:20 am. San Francisco (Robinson 2-1) al Atlanta (P.Smnh 2-7). 2:40 p m San Diqo (Sbow S-8) at Cincinnati (Birtsas 0-0). 4· 35 p. m New York (Cone 9-1) at Pittsburah (Walk 8-4), 4:35 p.m. Montreal (Martinez~-7) at St. Louts (Cox 2-3), 5 JS p. m nanday'1 Games San Diqo at Cincmnati, 9:35 a.m. Atlanta at Montreal, 4:35 p.m. Houston at New York, 4:35 p.m Only pmes scheduled 1 ~ > . THMO ROUND Sl, Lie ........ ~ R• ~ 6·f, f. C. K..-ctry. SI, New Jerwv, OW• HemltOft, H , f, ~~SJ,~ tlrom Gddlll Stele), ~ Matoft, 6-7 f. Tift· llMMe ~tate. W, Allenle lfnlm S.awnento), WW. Gonulle1, 7·6, c, Areenflne NelloMI T..-n. SS, "-Ix, ltodneY Jofln&, 6-2, e, OrMCI c.nv.n, Colo 5', SM Allloftlo, 8wrv SW..ter, 7~. c, Autllft "-v. S1, fl'll•U1lllhl.I, Her"9ll Oftltneero, 6-IO, f, LoulaieN Stele 9'> Owtottl, J(f/lf ~. t-7, I, Aullurll "· Mle!W. Nell ....,_, H , f. Twrwe. ... W ........... l!f ~. t-l, 1, Kenf\ldly • 1. ~. Her111r1 cnoa. t-1. r. 1.ou1i11111 U , Ch!c.19o (from New Yor1l). 01n1c* i.-1,, .. ,. '· Mervtaftd. ..,, MlwM•. ~ Jonft, 6-7, f, ~I\ .... Qewleftd, WIMIOll ..._II, 6-7, r. 1Cen1uc:h '5. *""· C«w Gelnft, 6-3. •• LO'IOle Mrlmourlt. 6', 0..-Ihm HoUllOlll. Dw• a.td, H , 1. MMwNI State, 61, Utllll, ltldly Gr9ce, 6·1, I , ~ a, Altwlte, OWryf Mlddllloft, H , I, hvtor. 6', New Yon (from Ollc:Mol. "" SllMle, H . t, V1rt1n1e '°""'*'""'""' 1'. o-. •. ..,.., Jof!Mon. S-11, •• ~ Souttlenl 71, ~ Crall ...... t-1, 1. Geor ... T.oi. 72. o.tnllt, L-9 ~ H , I, ~ Slei.. n. lflfleN <"-o.n-lllroullh Lot ....... °"""'" ---....,_., S-11, '· Dnx& ''-9"10ft, G«lld ....... 6-7, r-.. Nl¥ade-Lat V ... s. 75, Sen Antonio (from LOS A,..._ Lektn), Arc:Ne Men1191, 6-7, f, Ken· MK - r ~ ' .. .. ~ ... MUii ,.... .. ~. --•IOTA c.A~ .,.... ., .... • t ' • OwMe• • ' •• SI 11 ... ya ,. " • • • • Jovftw.. .. • t • StJ1 CDntt~ •tll . ,, .. ,.., .... ,. I 1 0 I Howtl3' • t t I •• 10 OWhlle cf • 11 • '.,, .... c , ••• S t I 1 C:WfAr 9h I I I t .-10 5c:rwftld aa n I I 'I I 0 .... , T.-•••• S.. w ....... -·· ... tit lft --· c:........ ., ---· Game WIMlne HI -Lflt'kln <:t). E-<:O.vla 'l, ltav, GHlll OP-Mlllinnete 1, Callfonlll t. Loe ~"°1' t, Ceilferllle 1. ~. Oowlllne. Hit-Lal'lllft (2). s~ m. G""9 m IP M RU UIO -· ..... • I 1 I 1 1 • • • , 1 • I M 3 2 2 I • 21-3 0 0 •• J 1 4 2 2 t I lo 1 blitten Ill the Sitt NATIOfllAl LmAGUa ...... 4, OM9w'I J I.OS ANGllLllS MOUSTOee Sn1" MHtctw 111 Glbtonll Menhalr1 SMlbvd H.mtftlb ..... "' JGoflJll "' o.n-vc AlldeMI .. SulfOft p M I01v1 IHI HoltonP snr. ...... 0roteOP T ..... •r11.i 3. 0 0 l 1 I 0 30 0 1 4 1 1 I ) 0 1 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 l. 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 GYeuned ltemlrt .. Ooren2b GO.VI• 111 ... lb BHalchr If N\Ndwtr1 ... r1 •loolo c "''*"'" AndenllP A90SIOP 17 J l J T ..... SC.. llY ....... •rlllW •o•• • 0 •• • 1 1 l •020 41t0 > I l 1 , • 1 1 0 ••• l 0. 0 I 0 0 t 0001 0 0 0 0 • 4 •• Lal...... "' ., ••-> ........ -., 111-.. Game WIMiftO ltll -•Hatcher Cl) Don't mm the tiuli"9 • • Ir r \ sov~ available · now in our 8-poge : , circular. Hundreds of ~ dealt ... thr0U9hout \ . _ _d the 1tore! lut hurry, \_..:.-~ sale ends July 4th! VALVOll .. MOTOIOIL . .._,,_.. .WO SAlaC> A.lLCUMATf 10W·JO, 10W~ 79!89! flAM OIL ftlTa .,~ ........ .._, . ,;,......,,.,.. Ol'4 °""'*.......,. ......... 2" flAM All ALTB .~, ...... , .. SAU PltlCIS lMltOUGM JUL TRAVEL -----. I ' ' I .... ~ " - • •• . ~: -~-----· -~ .. lOW-40 MOTOIOIL • .. d' .... ~ .... '*' ... 'fWt9A "t"I llltM6'. TS , .. " ....... --..... ..._, NtST aAC9. -.,.,. .. krldafl .. Tewdl CP'\Aitl ...... E•Y CMll (Gerdel .... Of '""' (.,...,) Time: .... ., • , ... ,., S.• , .... .... 11 11.UCTA Ut• 11 NAd mM lllC.O. 1UIC8. uo ...,.. ~ 0.-Chit) f 11 Ht UO UNoN ....--. ~) 10 JO uo a.. Kw( ....... ) 420 Tilftr. a .. ''. 12 •XACTA 0·>1 MIO Jl45.20 TNa0 aAC9. l1t Yll'fa Wlft Ffl' ,., , ......... , Wtldl Et ltt¥ C~l Caeldv• c.. (CafdOu) T1nle: ........ . 660 HO 240 740 uo uo IJ llXACTA 1"'71 _.., WUO ~ tlACL "41 .,.,. AM So II 0... l~"t" l • l 00 110 Helf A L-11 CC,.._l f .lO U1 lmll ~ U.Kkft'I ... T1rnr. 0: ti." U •.XACTA 16-S) N ICI 147 «J "'"" llACL HI v ... dl Soul I.JIN CCwdotal Tt\llY A .. UV Lldy (Lhllt) Hey Holley MIM IP-*'t) Timl• tl7K 720 llO lOO HO l.ot uo U llXACTA C6·S) N od u.. .. U O~Y ft.fta !•·•-> w " Mid WM sucnt llACll. l50 varOL Luc:kv ~ ISv ... ) ltldl TKlk (,,_Ill AIUltreea CCw0ota> Time: ••11 M20 llOO 6.IO 12• uo 1'0 12 llXACTA <>-•> Mid JlttlO SllWWTM llACll. HI ....,di ...... s.edal (Garcia. ... ) • l.10 5"ciel c.mm.•ldel (Whl,.I IS• 1• Chalw:e Tali• C .... tntOfl) S..00 T1mr '"" U RXACTA (2·7) oeicl "6 «I lllGHTM RACll. l50 .,.,._ VIias ~ IL-ill 10 _, UO 1.ot Kl'tdl Mv COPY CBrOOlla) 7 00 UO O.lllM Unda ICr-1 JOO Tlmr 0'17AI st llXACTA C6-n N>O HUO NIN'TM RACll. HO .,.,ca Gebeeho 1~..,l Bv Yawt\ Gel IPlllentonl Ca"' Effot1 C BrOOI< a> Tlme •11'1 , .. uo uo 340 uo uo SJ 11.Jl.ACTA 17 ... ) N.cl 11''° U DAA.Y ftW't..11 <1+71 Nod SIOS.lO. Attandllnc:e l. _, Mt.111191 Handle ...... GREAT DEALS PARTS DEPARTMENT ' . • . • . . • • . . • . . . t • • .. ' ..... -~. • ' I I l ~ Cout k&te61U CU199 Tbete ~ atill openiQ&S remainiq for the fU\h..,.n~ Qran.e Coast Co~ basketball camPli. indudin& a camp for airla tn padea five th~12. ~ f'l&Ddamentals, the camp will also o&rtwolellionsforchildmi(aaes8-11)onJwy l t.l SUM! -!_u.l_y 18-22 at S60 per penon. New OCC women•a ~ co.ch l.aftUe Hendon briAaS her llioe yean of coachina eq,cricocc to iiead the airt'a cam~ the first of iu IOl't otrered at OCC. July S-9. Men's CCM1Ch TaDCly Gill~ will co~ the children's camJ>. f~ more 11lformaoon, call OCC Community ~at 432·"80. ButlUe DllP U nm Le Meridien hotel in Newport 8eadl is the site for this year's ButilJc 0.y 8K run, the lafFSl SK in America. The r.cc and a 3K Fun Run/Wall bc&in at 8 Lm., July 10, with competitors runnillJ thouah the Irvine and Newport Beach financial arus. Last year's event atuacted more than S,000 runners and spectators. includina Sylvia Mos-queda. whoranthcfanest U.S. time fora women in 1987. There is alto a wheelchaircateaory. In addition to the r.cc this year, a Food Fair and Fitness Fair is slated for Sunday mom1na a1 Le Meridieo Hotel. aloq with a pre-event pasta diMCT on Saturday. lteltaurants from the area will tel up booths with different specialties.. The fitness fair features booths on various l>ealtb and n utrilioo tos>ics. Proceeds from the event benefit the United ~ tr.lsy Association of Oranae County. All entrants are cliaJ'ble to win tickets for two to Paris in a random drawing. For more infor· mation.t...call Susan WbetJICU or Leslyc McRae at SS7-Sluu. Aperoximatcly 3SO volunteen will be needed to USJst with rqjstration, awt and finiah lines, aid stations and coune m.&M1tMenL If intmstcd. call Kelly Hahn at SS7-SIOO. Cl_.-~ du •t 816 A The Calibnia Aile* M.nic .... ~th the DctroitT.,.ooS.t~Juty fht '~'?!C:·• ia American Cancer y 0.y •• m S'Uldnun. Followi111 a ..U.w puty wader tk Bia .. A .. hm 11 a.m.to ll:lOp.m.,a......-ceremoey lwill be held to honor~· pitdMr Du Petty, Aftlel'1 trainer Ned ~ ud T•• out-ftelaer Gary Pettis for their v.ort with thc ACS. Colt (« the ClltraVapua ii S 12, which iadudes cacellcnt •tirw at the Jl'!'C• a New Atlnivenary T-tbln and an invitation lo the Milpte pany. Seatina it timid,'° contlC'l the• Mllte\afta ComvuulicatJoM depanment at 7S I "°'41 to purc:haa your tictm. SCAT water l'Olo Pnwram Jbe SCAT water P!'I<> prosram, now in its ~rd year1 has. met With peat sucoea so far and ., aJways 1ook.ina f'or new~ • After a aecond ~ An1ab 10 the Jut iat0n'• final overall . tournament, the l 3"and .. undct team c;amc an tecond apint-at the Junior <?lympics. The propam hopes to talre boys and 11rls CS-end-under and 17•nd-undcr teams ao the Junior Olympics in Florida this AU&ust. For th<>te interested in t ' i:ia. SCAI bolds workouts 11 O.na Hills tfial Scbool Monda thl'O\llh THunday from S: I to 7: IS e.m Ma: tbrouafl No~cmbcr, and Tuadayand ThUndal at tbe.sametJm~ftom Dccembertbrouah Apri Ouldrcn qe ciabt or older can play by comin1 to the pool orcalfma 661-21S7. Foatb NCCer cam..-~ only non-residential youth IOCClCf' camps in Orantt County will be conducted the weeks or Ju!y J 8, 2S ~ Aua, I at Ora. Hiah School by Alt Kazcownl and Paw Kitson, professional aoccer players for the M~or Indoor Sooocr Leaauc•s championship runner-up Ocvcland Force. Fees are $90 for half-day and S 140 for fulkUy campers. Campen will be schooled in toCX:er skills and iecbniquc by a hos1 of.,n>feaional players. and will rueive a T-shirt and otlicial 100CCr bell with . tlltioo. ~ diJcounts are available. To learn more, coniact Oranae County Pro SoccerQ mps 11 S76-2S09. Boxeri saya he didn't know past manMf r was nearing deat deltb. f)loD COAeendl that ii be bid known Ill thia. be .. would not laave aiped tbe document. ..... .. Mib Ty.a Dew Ill •• dial Jim Jecobt and I were bi1 co-~ .. caytaa .... NEW YORK (AP)-Bill Clyton, TbOtUitayttbalTytODancUilcobt ·wbo btlocd Mike Tyson tt.t to the IOP en&ered into a penonal 111Vicea of the boxlna world. said he wu oontnci. bua t.beconttaetctidn'tcover appalled at a lawwil filed qainat him a ~ftc 1enn. h did provide that by the .unbeaten world beavyweiaht 1)tOn would receive tw().tbinlt and cfiampson. Jai:obt one-third of' all money earned .. 1 am di•ppoinltd and outraeect." by l'yton "in diftCt relation to Cl)'10ft said d~a news confeictlce boxina." Tuetday. ••1 never tbouaht Mike On the ame date, the suit said. would rue a lawsuit qainat me." T~n aiPed another document. Tbe auil was filecf in New York with no term provided. bindint the State Supre~ Court on Monday, a champion ud Ca)1oalftom the date few bOun before T)'IOn knocked out J&CX>t>t died to the expiration of the Michael Spinks in the fint round ofa contric:t between Tyt0n and Jacobi. scheduled 12-round title defense at The suit 1&)'1 Tyt0n never read the AtlanticCitf, NJ. contracts, nor were they ever read to In the aw~ T)'IOn said he never him. would have s.ianed a contract allow· With Cayton at the news con· ma Cayton to take over hi1 affairs had ference ~ lawyer Thomas Puccio he known his late maoqer, Jimmy and lbnaine Jacobi, widow of Jacobi, was dyina. Jimmy Jacobi. Cayton, who now manaaes Ty10n, Jacobi, who died of leukemia said that he was served with the March 23, and Cayton, who handled lawsuitjust minutes before the cbam-mosa of the business amnaements, pion's bout apinst Spinb. were considered oo-manaaen of the The suit seeks to djssolve Tyson•s champion. contract with Cayton, who currently However, in lbe suit, Tyson con· acts one-third of all ofTyaon•1 boxina tends that "Cayton bas not beeni.. is eaminp. not now and will not be ... " nis Jn the sui~ l)Jon contends that m~. CaytonknewJacobswudYinaliCfOre ---ry.on sent a oertffie<f letter to the contracts were sianed on Feb. 12. Cayton last Friday, sayina. ·•startina Tyson said he was never told of no~1Jou att to take no action on my Jacobs' illneu or that Cayton would be as boxina manqer ... cake over in the event of Jacobs' ~ He said any money Cayton bad ~ved or wu to ru.eive u •box.ins manqer lbould be fonntded to the champion·s lawyer, Michael Winston. Puccio abo aaailed Tyton ud the auiL "Tyaoo may have been lD top f'orm in tbe rin,. but the a1Jetatioa1 in bis lawsuit a~ not worthy of a cbam- eion," the lawyer said in I lta1emenL 'Tyson mat~ and does dishonor to ""1ht memotY of m.-ct0te iiicnd and mentor Jim J~ who with Bill Caxton and (the late) CUI o•Amato 1u1ded his career, which bas now ieacbed this crownina moment. Worthy oppoliellts hard to find Tyson undoubtedly best, but who remains to bring out fan interest ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Mike Tyson may have fouaht himself out of some big paydays with his devastati~ ftrSt-round knockout of Michael Spinks. Tyson s 91-tcCOnd destruction of Spinks Monday niabt in a fi&bt that may have possed $70 million left little doubt of his total domination of the heavyweight djvision. In fact, Tyson ha1 become so dominant tfiat questions are beina raised about who mi&bt be able to stand up lo him in the rina. "It may be difficult to find an opponent the general eublic will want to see," said Mark Etess, president of Trump Plaza. .. Tyson'• marketability is now mort djfficull because it appears no one can pve him a fi&ht." Tyson is tentatively set to fipt EnaJand's F"rank Bruno in London on Sept. li but even that fipt is up in the air while T¥10n waaes. diff~nt kind of battle in the courtroom IPJDSt manqer 8Hl Gayton. Cayton was served with a suii filed by Tyson only minutes before the fiaht bepn, end after the bout Tyson hinted he may retire rather than fight again with Cayton IS his man•Fr. "Who knows what rm aoina to do.•• Tyson said ... I'm just aoina 1010 away for awhile and think •bout iL .. Tyson confidant Jose Torres uid, however, that Tyson. who turns 22 on Thursday, has no thou&hts of retirina. .. That's bull." Torres said Tuesday. "He's aoina to fiabt Sept. 3. rm positive:· Tyson. who earned some $20 million for sli&btly more than a half round of work qainst Spinks.. may find himself fiahtina for conaidenbly smaller paydays tn the future. With a potentially lucrative fiabt apinst cruiserwei&bt champion Evander Holyfield at leut a year away Tyson bas run out oflesitim:ate opponents. •11 don't see a real bia market for a domestic fiabt soon,•• said Etess. whose resort has fint refusal riahts for a Holyfield fl&ht. "They can probably do some business in London for-Sruno, but not here." NI.JC NOTICE NI.IC M>TIC( IWUIOltCOWIT Mt• atate.)NONE "*-9 II to be Pllld ontr FlNANCIAL SERVICES • COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, OR-1•1211• (CUA · REV. undelllgned to Mii Nici PIUMCtAL MRYICU • llt 721 ~~-18"' ltrwt. OP C~ eecrnca 10 The ptoperty II deecr1bed lift• M6d .,.,.._Ml tie.'! duty appointed Tru•tff TOGETHER WITH All IM-1987) &00 FUT OF THE ptopeny to Nt:lsfy Mid ob11-..W Trwtea. 9' T. D • ..,._ 8utte Ct, ~ Meaa. Cell- Couwrt OP GRAW CMDITOM In ---' •: All atodl In 9PP'oved by 1"9 Depert-under the lollowtng CS. PROVEMENTS THEREON. SUBSURFACE OF THE gattont. Md ther•fler the VCR COl9'AllY, ..-C, ., foml9 t2t2'7. In ttle Manet of "' ~ (Ohfllon e ..... ftx1ine. equipment ment of Alcohollc Be-lwlge ICfibecl dead of tniet WILL. EXCEPTtNG THEREFROM COVER£D PROPERTY AS ~ ceuMd NHS .... Mat••... .... DA T£O: Jllna, 1Me C9tlon of REMO GIAOOMINl of 1N Md OOOd .. of • oartlln Control. SEU AT PUBLIC AUCTION COHDOMINIUM UNITS 137 RESERVED IN OEEO RE· notice ol dafaufl and of alee-.... ......,,, ~ .... MONOelNO. INC.. 8Y· fOf CNnoe of Heme ~ SANOWICH SHOP ~ That ....... ".,...., and TO THE HIGHEST BIOOEA THRouGH 1M. INCLUSIVE COAOEO AS INSTRUMENT lion to be reconsed MWGtl ... Len at., O.uee. CA AAYINO DEIHMUKH. Seo-*· A143982 Code) known • MA. SAHOWICH WIQlimant of thullcnMld FOR CASH (In the form9 LOCATED THEREON. NO. 14.0S715e OF OF-198halnslr. No. N-100ts5 -{114).....,.. ""9rY 0A0EA TO (I) A !Mk T,.,..., i. and loceted et 3"5 BIRCH stoali In trede, flxtUtel, wtlldl .,. WM tendlr tn Al.SO EXCEPT AU Ott., FIClAl RECORDS. In Book paoa of Oflldal.... Publiahed Oran_ee COIM ~ er._ C0eet SHOW CAUIE abcM to be made. ST .• I 102 In ttle City of equipment and good wll of the Ufllted Stet•) and/or Oil RIGHTS, MINERALS. PAACEl 3: c;ords In the ofb of the,.._ 0eMY Piiot June 22. 21 • .My Daly Not JuM U , 21. 1911 FOR CHAHGE Of NAME (b) The nemee and bu9-NEWPORT BEACH, County Mid bualMM Will be con-1t19 cailtllar'e, canMed or MINERAL RIGHTS, NA~ AN EXCLUSIV! EASE-COfd« of OfMae County; I. 1He. W104 W-101 REMO GIACOMINI h.-n•UddrMIHoftNTrw-of OAANCH. State of C.... eummated, and ttle oon-other c:Nc:lcl ~ In AAl GAS RIGHTS ANO MENT APPURTENANT TO Stlld Sale w1I be inade. lll9d a P9Cftlon In tf'lll court fer o r ere: DE flf N I S 1om4a. and trantt.r the ~ lldwatlon lhettfor loeatt-CM! Code Section 292.th OTHER HYOAOCAR90H8 EACH UNfT FOR THE USE bUt Wlttlout COll9M nt or "8.IC ll)TlC( kw an order patl-CHRISTENSEN. SSH E. IOwlng elcohollc ..... wltt'I ttle ooneldalatlon kw (~In fuht the time of IY WHATSOEVER NAME ANO OCCUPANCY OF wwranty. ..... Ot Im---!.==..:.::..:.:.::::--1-!-.t1~~-:M~-rcoa~T~A tlotiar to c:Nl'09 WALNUT STREET. 1RV1NE. 11cariaa (Of lleanMa): ON the ttantfw MCI aaalgnment .... ) .. rtgllt, tltte and KNOWl'f, GEOTHERMAL THOSE PORTIONS OF THE pied, ~ We pc»-NOTICa OP MESA HAI 8ET AN AN- name from REMO CAUFORNIAt2714 SALE BEER I WINE, of the atoreu6d lloai"9 (or 1n1ereet ~ to and STEAM, ANO All PAOC> RESTRICTED COMMON ....ion. 0t enoumbtanoal. ~ NUAL GOM. FOR FISCAL GIACOMINI to RAYMOND The narne1 and ~ l ICE NS E Number llcenaea) 11 to be pelcl on Of now Mid by 11 under Mid UCTS OEA1VEO FROM AtN AREA OUIGNATE'O IN THE to pey the r.-nalnlng ~ TO: FA~OERICIC R. YEAR 1 ..... OF FIFTEEl'f GIACOMINI. eddlmu of the Tr•-. .. 41-216455, now -.CS to after Ula 11t day of OaadofTNltlntheprOC*fY MTHEFOAEGOIN011"AT DECLARATION OF RE-pel aum of ttle note(1) .. JEROME, HOLDER OF PERCENT (15~ FOR THE IT IS HERESY OROEJ\ED are: BONIFACIO V. ~ IOc9llad al 3955 AUGUST, 1118. at the hereinafter da1orlbad: MAYBEwrTHINOAUNOER STRICTIONS ANO SHOWN ClndbyaalddeadofTNat, t ,000 SHARES OF CQM-UTILIZATION OF OISAO. tnat•per90netn..,_.edln GONZALES ANO IOA lllACH ST., II 102 fOf the HCrow department of TAUSTOR: I.ACY AlEX· THECOVEAEDPAOPERTY. ON THE CONDOMINIUM WfthlnWalt•lnMklriote MOH STOCK OF~ VANT~GEO 8Ul1Nl8S the!Mtt9raforeallld~ GONZAL~S. 5 17 W. pr..,,._ located a1 3955 LUCKY ESCROW CO., at ANDER, AUAETTA ALEX· TOOETHt!RWITI4THEPER-PlANFOREACHUNfT. ptOYldad, advlnOalo. H My, BINO, INC .• A CALIFORNIA ENT£RltRl8ES (DIE) IN blllOf'9 tNe court In oap.t-Al.PtN£,SANTAANA.CALI-8JRCHST.,# 1021ntheetty et42 GAAOEH GROVE Bl. ANDER,8ENEF1CIARY:NA-PETUM. AIOHT OF OAIU. YOU AAE IN DEFAULT undertheMnMofUlldDaad CORPORATION: FEOEAAL·AIO HIGHWAY fMflt No. 3 at 700 CMc FORNIA 92707 of NEWPORT BEACH, II 207, In ttle City of GAR-TK>NAl MORTGAGE IN-MINING, EXPLORING AND UNDER A DUO OF TRUST of TRiit, taee. d\erQal and NOTICE 18 HEREB PROJECTS C.. Drive w .. t Sant• Al other~ namea CounayofOAANOE,Stateof OEHGAOVE.eountyof()A.. VESTORS, INC. reoorded OPERATING THEREFOR DATB> 1/05/85. UNL£SS expenaae of the 'rrvst• GMN that Monotllfld, Inc:.. TH! GOAL UTAaUSH- Ane. Cellfom6a. on JULY 2t. and 8ddl 1111 Ulad by the Ce1tom1a. ANOE.. State of c.itfoml8. Auguat22, 1H5Mln8tf. No. ANO STORINO IN ANO RE· YOU TAKE ACTION TO Sald .... wllbehlldon:Juty • c:ellfomla eo1pcnttoo, .. MENT PROCEDURE Will 1tll, at 2:45 o'c:todl P.M., T,.ltlfefor_.,ltna,_,.. Tflat lhe amount ot ptOYldad thet ttle Dlipett-~18000 In 8ooll paoa of MOVING THE SAME F'AOM PROTECT YOUR PROP· 1', 1HI. et 1:30 p.m. In the redeem 1,000 of ttle t ;OOO R AVAILABU FOR PUe- and .... and there .,.., .... put IO .. -known to purcflNa pf1Ca Of coneldaf• mant of ~ Be-lw• OMdal Aacords In the otllca IAIO LANO OR ANY OTHER EATY, IT MAY BE SOU) AT lobbY to the bllldlng IOcalad ..... of Common Stock of UC ttePECTION FOR A _..,If.,.,., tfl9Y he11e. wt"/ die frM.,_ lfe: HOfE t1on In eo1wl9Ctlon wtlfl Mid Control hlll approved Mid of die "9cordef of Ortinge I.ANO, INCLUDING THE A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU at 901 9otlth l.wlS Str.t, Mid eotP01atlon held by PEA100 OF THIRTY (30) ..i ptltltlOn for c:Nnga of (C) The toe.lion and fin-.,....., of Mlldt bnM (Of lnnlllr of Mid llcanea. Cow1tY. Mid dead of trust RIGHT TO WHIPSTOCK OR NEED AN EXPLANATION Oranoa. CellfoMla 12111. FNdarldt R. JafOlna. DA VS AT CfTY HAt.L rwna~notbegranted. •aldeacttpllonoftheptop-**-1.ndlllld~ DaMdJUNEtT.1911 Haorlbe1 the followlnQ DIRECTIONALLY DAILL Of THE NATURE M THE Atlhe time of the lnltlal ThedatafOfNld,..,,._ JOHN LOWER IT IS FVATHER 0tdared er1Y to be tra1laf9l1ed -.: lndUdlnQ the ........_, lft. 8Trlml MAM YAMO. property: ANO MtNE F'AOM lANOS PROCEEDING AGAINST publlc8tlon of thla notice, lion "-bean fixed al July A880C1ATE tMt a copy of thla OfdW to All FURNITURE. FIX-ventory, ta the aum of T'r• ... • ... I' ••· · PARCEL 1: OTHER THAN THE COV-YOU. YOU 8HOUl.O CON-1"9 tot• amount of the ~ 11, 1911 at 10:00 Lm .• and EHWNBR lflOW c::a.e be publllMd In TURES. EQUIPMENT, 1106.000.00. wNdl conalata MICHUI RAM YANG, UNIT 171, Al 8HOWN EMO PAOPERTY. Oil OR TACT A LAWYER. pelcl balance of the otlll-the redamf>tlon pf1Ca Ml •TH flOOA dleer._C09at0allyfltot, LEASEHOLD IMPROVE-of the followtng: CHh T1• .... • ... UDIRlll ANO DEFINED 0... THAT GAS WELLS, TUNNELS 18 WOOOlEAF, IRVINE.. oatton MCUred by the aboYe bean fixed • '50.00 per 77 FAIR ORIVEOITA ME.SA a e:H9"1* of 9'f*al MENTS. MACHINERY, NONE. Checlta depoalt Into MNn aooMIA CM0t. CERTAIN CONOOMIHIUM ANO SHAFTS INTO, CA 1211• "("a meet ad-deacribeddeadoftruetand ahare, for a total of CA ' ~~In tNe 8 T 0 CK IN TR A 0 E, aacrow by buyer 13,000.00, T1 ..... w Md ~ PLAN RECORDED JUNE 11. THROUGH OR ACROSS dW Of CClmlnOf\ deelo-•llmeted oott., ~ '50,000.00. Mid pf1Ca to be t212t county .. IWt once .... GOODWILL ANO BUSI· DEMAND NOTE to be ,.. ,...,........ 1913 AS DOCUMENT NO. THE s~ OF THE netlon of ptoperty II ~ • n d • d v • n 0. I I • peJcf by C8n0eflatl0n of COMMENTS ON THIS kw blr conaec:utlW ..._ NESS NAMt OF THAT CEA. pCecad by buyer's CMNer'a Publllhed Orange COMt 83-255781 OF OFFICIAL COVERED PROPERTY ANO aboVe, no warranty 19 given 1125,StUO. It la Poalltlla tso,000.00 of obllgatlona QOM. Will N RECENEO Pf'°' to IN «Myof M6d llW-TAIN 8U8IH£8S KNOWN c:Nc:1c 151,000.00, Promtae-Deify Piiot June 29, 1Me RECORDS OF ORANGE TO BOTTOM SUCH WHIP-• to lb ~ Of that et the titna of Nia ttle preaantty outt1andlng from IN THE A 8 O VE -~ ' AS:VIOEOETC.O#IRVJNE. ory not .. 145,000.00. w11• COUNTY,CALlfOAMA. ITOCKEO OR OIREC· oorractneu). "Th• oP9fllnO bid rney be ... ,~ A. Jerome to the MtNTIOM£D OfflCE ANO l)MadJUN 1• 1811 53M E. WAL.H\IT ~. :e.PfOPll1YNONE.ln-PAACEl.2: TIONAllY DRI LLED belllflcllllyunderaald Dead than the total lndet>tedW corporation. av THE UNtTEO STATES .._.I.. ........... fll IRVINE. CALIFORNIA 82714 ble ptoperty NONE. P1&JC M)TIC( AH UNOMOEO 1/IOTH WELLS, TUNN!LI ANO of Tr\191, by .....on of a due The piece It whtctl, on OE p A AT M ENT O F .. .., I 1't c..t Cd) The pl9Ca. and deta on It hee bean ..,.._, IHTEAE.ST IN ANO TO LOT 3 IHAFTt UNOEft AHO 8£-bt..ctl OI default In the otlli-" ~ ttle tlll*ted Mid date fol' 1ectemptlon, T RAN Ip OAT AT I 0 N ,_.... T--. Kn.a I Of .... whldl, the 8ull ~ Mid iar.. and MOTICa °' M TRACT HO. 1m1. A8 NEATH OR BEYOND THE tatJona ~ theref1Y, opening bid !Ny be • Frederick R. JafOlna !NY WASHINGTON o.c FOR A Kltlky, A~ tor ,..._ Trenatar II to be oonaum-Intended Tr• ... • .. ,.. 1"MMTU"IW SHOWN ON A MAP FIE· EXTENOR LIMfT8 THEM-,__.eaeo.ltedandct. talnad by c:aA'lg the talow-obtain paynwtt of tba,.. PENOO OF FORTv-FlVE ...... 18181 Voln K#mM ~ tn: THE ESCAOW qult9d by Sec:. 2.074 °'the L.oen No. tooeeMIALEX-COAO&D IN 80<* ..... °'·AND TO RIOM.l. Rf,. lvared IO dleundalllgoad.""' ~ numbat'I on clemptlonpl1ceon...,...., ("5)0AYl~THE DATE Avie., 18ttl FIOor, IMna. CA FORUM, 23131 LAKE....,... and Prof1M1011a ANDER PAGES• TO t , 90TH IN-TUffNIL. EQUtP. MAIN-wrttten OedetlllOn of 0. 1"9d41Ybebeti.lllr(11•) of hll IMra Olftlflc8te fof OPTHt8NOTICI. tt716 CENTE" OAIVE, IUITE L. Code,lhl1ttleconelc*1Jon T.S.No.Al8081 CLUSIVE OF MIS: TA ..... REPAIR, DEEPEN '*'ltandOemendfOfStlla, NMl370t(213)121.._. thellherMtoberedaemadll ""*'*Orange COMt Pu1:111MC1 ()ranee C099I El TORO. CALIFORNIA kw the tranlfer of Mid bua1o-UNIT CODE A CELLAHEOUS MAPS, Fl£. AHO OPERATE TRUSTEE and wrttten noelCe of dltault 0..: June 1S, 1tN the~ executive otllca Olly Plot June tt 1• DlllYPllotJune22,21,Juty 92t300NORAFTERJUlY naaa and tr .... of lllld UNITED COASTAL CORDS OF ORANGE SALE OUAftAHTEE andofetectlontoc.uaethe UMITID COAITAL of the ccif'poratlon, located ' W-108 1.1a.1tee ta.1• ______ w_103_.J;:>~:.,,be.= -~P1&1C=;.;;....;.NOTlC£~.;.;;;___ Ml.JC N011Cl Ml.IC N011Cl Pta.IC Ml.IC N011C( (f) The i.t date for filing dalma la My 15. 1988 (0) Thia liult Transfer II PVllEUIAN ~ec,!1oe of GENEVIEVE "GI Gr' • o M t P A c 1 o y • J'USSELMAN ,GONZALla . IDA _. J 28 GONZAL.aa __.... away une , ~ Orange COMt 1988 In Newport Olllly Plot June 21. 1Ht Beach. S be is w115 aarvived by her hua.-•-------- bend Earl Fl _,..,.,.n; "8.IC NOTlC( one , dau,hter Jaye eu11• Benson; one aon. NOTtCC TO Gene Pickard; four CMIMTOM 0.:t'. pndchlldren. three """'~ peel IJ'andchlJdttn llflDmON 10 and three brotben. 1'IWISNll Funeral services will ALCOttoUc ~ be Thunday, June 30, UCIMl!l!> 1988 at P.dfic View c--..1.,_ Chapel. lnlerment ""u.c..c. Pldtic Vjew Nern-•=:::, .. orial Park. 3500 pa,. NOTICE IS HERHY c:lflc View Drive, CW!N to the er.dlton ot Newport Beach. p._ 8TlVE NAM Y~NG & ~~ ... ~· =~.~l' .. ~~lt:A:~: ..----. ~-.r.•vv ~1 .. MO. &71-51-7010, "";:::::=:::::;;;;:;;:;;:;;;~I Tt a ... Oi Md U• 111 ~ ................ .. PAQJIC VllW ~ ........ ~..,. Moftuaty ~ • CtetMIOfY lSOO Peofie Voew Ot1ve • HewPOfl S.actl • 6'4-2700 M...._LA .... m'T. Oll'V'I Mott1.•r • CeMtiety Ctttmatory 1'25 G4llr A.-. CO...MeN 5..a"~ -...ctt IT.., I 1QI ._ t~ Cl'J of NEWP0"1' BUCH, County .. ~ ANOE. ..... of c•omla t28IO, "* a Wk ...... . -~--.... .. JANET 800N.IA CHOt, locl•t aee11t1t., No. 11•N·704t, Tr•.._.. .......... , ......... ................... ...... 1T .. • •11t .. Qlr el NIW~T llACM. c.-tr .. °"" AW. .... (J/~C....·• ... ,... .......... c ... .. .... ,,,,., 11 .. ... ................ .... ........., •• f •• ...... .,... ... ...-.,~MMCWI ,. ......... _ ..... I ---......... ............... _! ............ .. I 91>TIC[ JS tatty QIYH tft1t the Pub11c *HI OtrectOI" of ~ Cit1 of 1'..,rt leadt. C.Hforn11 1'111 ft1M wit" lite Ctt1·COUnctl of "9IJIPOrt elldl. C•!!!~'-· tth retlOrt ..-tM cost of U.. COfttnctt• of strwt 111Pf•••tutt .._ •• to lot 16 and lots 18 tftrHtfl 26 ..... lots a. lt -JO. 110d s11. t.waster.•s Mdlt10ft to -..t lffch; Md Lota t Uw'Hlll ie. lloct 4)1 la.c11t•'s ...,tt1oa to~ IHch; nf1tt Ute,,_...,.. of a..,ter V flf "'9 lllPf'Of-.t Art Of Itll. Sa1cl ~ttt art locattid at-lllt Str.t ~ 111 .. lrt lollltwti"d IM Y1111 -.,. ~ • + . . ..... ..... 1 • Mltc---19...., ls tap water afe to drink? ( ( I • j Waser, water everywhett, but ~hich drop do you drink? .., To hear Santa Batbara writer Arthur Von Wietenberaer talk. it -=abouJd be bottled water -of any lJvariet.y. He suagests everyone stop drinkina tap water todar. But Oranac County s top water ~rwatchers say what comes out of our '' fauocu isn•t cause for worry. 1 '.1 In the wake of a recent study in San Jose that linked drinkina tap water r'a~d miscarriages, and a. 1987 En- Vlronmental Protection Agency tt- m pon indicating that one in five 11Americans drinks tap water contain- rr int danaerous levels of lead. qucs- '' tions about the quality of the water ·I from our taps keep cominu~I!· ur -nte lacf tliat many people are Ii choosin• to drink bottled water is ' substanttated by the existence of a $2 1 billion bottled water industry incrcas. ina at an estimated 1 S percent annually. Von Weisenberger, an authority in both the public and bottled water industries and author of the recent suide to quality bottled water, cau- tions aptnst drinkinJ taP. water. "What I don•t like pnmanly about I' tap witter is chlorine, because of the ' way chlorine interacts with organic matter in water," he said. "It produces byproducts called trilometbanes -and the more bacteria you have in water. the mott chlorine needs to be added to it." According to Von Wisenberger, the Environmental Protection ~ency bas identified 56 trilomethanes 1n tap water that can cause cancer. "It's not aoina to be immediate death;' be '" said, "but over a period of 20 to 30 ·1 yean, there is that possibility of cancer.·· The Metropolitan Water District. .. which supplies 7S percent of Oranae County's water, ato Jon~ uses chlorine for purification. Said Bob Merryman"' director of environmen- tal hialth 1or 0ranae County, MWD 0 cban,ed over from chJorination to disinfcctina with chloramine. What this meant is that the trihalomethanes are not formed.·· Merryman'• depertment, which monitors the drinkina water through· out the county, iJ responsible for testin• all water systems monthly for bactenoloSicaJ quality and annually for chemical qualit y. Bob Collacou. chief of en- vironmental resources for the county. also says tap water is S1fe to drink.. He cited statistics compiled by Dr. Bruce Aames. a1eadina f-aure in the atudy of carcinop:ns: ''Drinking one 12-ounce beer-ir-2.SOO-Umes wonc tbln drink.in& one liter of tap water, eating one raw muwoom is 100 times more danaerous (than drinking tap water). and eatina a peanut butter sandwich is 30 times more ~rous. •• He cha.rles that 'levels of pol- lutants in Ilic tap water are far below the residue (of deter&ents) left (in containen reused by bottled water comp1nies). •• Aoc:ordina~RonBurke,director of marketina for Sparkletu Drinking Water, Collacott's statement "is not true. We have considerable quality control and are conlinually monitor- ina for any type of detergent residue or contaminants." Von Weisenberacr. who has served as a consultant for companies such as Poland Springs, Vittel, Manitou Corp. and Anheuser-Busch, readily admitted that some tap water may be fine at any one point 10 time, but he said the quality can vary dramati- cally. Quality, he says, is affected sianificantJy by drought conditions -currently pendina in the south- 0 IA ~==-e~~~;· ~ --- land. "As the water table drops, more water is pumped in. Lower quality water goes into the system," he said. "When you have a hlgherdcnsity of mineralization, you get more bad mintrals.100 -hi&hcr Jcvcl.ulOead and arsenic, contaminants that exist in water." A accorchna to Merryman, only two contaminated drinkina water sourocs have been closed in the past five years -both in Anaheim. Merryman concurs that water quality can fluctuate. He cited New- pon Beach as an example. Some of the city's water is pumped from open reservoin. "h (the water) comes from the San Joaquin Reservoir, and even thou&h at is chlorarnine-disinfcctcd comfng m, it sits up there ID the reservoir. Then the water's pumped out and for additional disinfectant. chlorine is used -so there's always a possibility that this fluctuation could occur." When ••state Action uvels" - state-established safety limits -arc reached on any contaminant, the county notifies the water distnct or city water company. which 1s re- quired to alen consumers. In more extreme instances. Merryman said. the county will issue an order to shut a well down completely. -c:...., ") thank the most amponant thing we need to do as a nation, 1s to make more studies into water," said Von Weisenberger. "l thmk people arc still confused over water and the 1m_pon- an1 part It plays 1n your llfc.. ~ heahh expen, nutnlionist and doctor I've spoken to agrees on this one thing -that we should dnnk much more water -eight eiibt-ounce glasses a day. It's a healthy beveraJc. "With enough education and re- search, they can come up with soluuons on how to clean up the tap water. Not all tap water 1s bad, but there art spot areas where there are problems. Until we can be certain that all our tap water 1s safe, I wouldn't drink it." "Bottled water is ccruunly not bad," said Merryman "I wouldn't beliule bottled water. but there are some problems ... and 1n some cases the bottled water 1s simply our local water that goes through some son of treatment process." Von Weisenberger stopped shon of recommending any specific water - nor dad he make any distrncuon between bulk. water and sparkling mineral waters, other than cost. "It's our palate," concluded Mer- ryman, "and what we get used to drinking." Physicians overlook value of magnesium Awake to tbe benefits of mag- '• oesium. Unfonunately, the importance of mqnesium in the prevention and treatment of many of our diseases continues to be ianorcd by the m~orit)'ofphyskians. Magnesium is • helpful an the treatment of miaraine 11• beadacbca. heart disease, diabetes, -hi&h blood pressure, PMS. os-- 'T teoporosis, irrqular heart beats. and ~ falljue states to mention a few. .I. Dr. Nachman Brautbar, aaociate ""3 professorofpharmacolOl)'1 nutrition, ~ and medicine at the Univenity of :>~Sou them California, fceb that the rt1 problem resides in the education of A physiciana. At the first international w symposium on mapesium sponsor- JJi ed by the Amencan Society for el Maanesium Rresearch. held in Feb-;e ruary 198S. he said "Unfortunately, clinicians are not very familiar or 4 intetested io maanes1um because JULIAN WHITAKER ft .. ,, they haven't been trained to think about ma.,.esium." Mqnesaum is invoJved in all the energy..oroducina reactions in the body. ft activates 32.S enzyme sys- t.cnu. The failure of only one of these systems due to rcdoocd or inadequate levels of maanesium could result in metabolic disturbances that lead to or worsen disease atates. Most Americans are not setting cnouah mapesium in their diet The Recommended Daily Allowance of mqnesium is 3'° ma. for. men and 300 mg.. for women, but estimates are that the averqe Amencan gets only 76 percent of that in his food. The researchers point out that a 100-mg. deficit of m~esium is an amount that would poSSJbly prevent mag- nesium deficiency diseases af sup- plemental magnesium were used. It bas been shown in several studies that people who drink hard water have less heart disease. It is thought that the protective mineral is mag- nesium. In two studies. patients suffering from a hean attack were found to have significantly low levels of ~sium m the cells.. yet maanesium supplements, even in a coronary care unit, arc shunned. This iJpoorjud&ment because maancs1um deficiency exacerbates the most dangerous complic.t1ons of a heart attack -irregular heart rhythms. Some of the current treatments for heart disease and high blood pressure, pan1cularly d1uret1cs and digitalis. create or increase a magnesium defiClency and can ulumately work against the patient makinc the prob- lem wo~. Patients with d1abetts arc particu- larly susccpublc to magnesium defi- ciency. Elevated blood.-supr levels act as a diureuc and wash out maanesium. Insulin and the oral dla~tic drugs also deplete mag- nesium. Magnesium deficiency has now been shown to be associated with the most devastating complication of diabetes -blindness -yet d1abct1c patients arc almost never given magnesium supplements. Since there 1s almost no toxicity to magnesium supplementation, exccpl wben there is significant kidney damage, it makes good sense to take 100 to 300 mg. a day. .~:outdoor or indoor tans: Which is safer? 13' 3 ~~ BJ LUlEN M. REED ~ c ...., .... 0-.111; .... • i: .. Chances are you're not g.oing to ~11, put on the proper number louons. ~T· "You are 101ng to be outdoors aJl . day Iona. and how many times are you 1oina to reapply moisture to your ) body? -.. How many times are you 1oin1 to -avoid the sun at the warmest time of Those are arguments against out-controlled environment -which is improvements in equipment. ttgu- door tannina and in favor of indoor what the indoor tanning experience is lauons imposed by the Federal Drug tannins. as eresented by Becca East--it is probably the best regulat~ Administration and sclf .. policin&- man, executive director for S.A.F.E., way for your skin to gain a tan." 1 -: la . aJ the Suntannina Association for A youna trade organization ttp-""""6'1 lion ts so be1na written on Education. S..A.F.E. hosted a three-resc.ntatina some t ,800 members a state-to-state basis. 1 bcsinmna to day educational and training seminar S.A.F .E., has become an advocate for regulation of the industry. The Cal1- last weekend for indoor tanning the indoor tanning industry. Eastman fornia state legislature recently ~scd buaiocsses. aid the foremost concern 1s educa-a bill calling on the Cahfomta Eatman readily ackowlcdged thM tioo and rqulation. Department of Consumer Affairs to tannina -either outdoor or indoor She ellftumerated positive steps draft lioensina standards for indoor Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Wedn.day, June 29, 1118 • Feeling like a guest in your own home .. I ultd to be a super-woman," says DiaM Hambnck. M.D Once upon a ume. nol so very long 110. Hambrick bad a baby, a husband and was doing a med1cal residency in Famil) Medicine and Addac- tionology -all at onc.t •·1t almost lulled me " she said. Now, at 42, with a husband and three teen.qers, she I~ re511Jlltl& her position asCh1efofStaff ofCarcUnit Hospital of Orange. Dume Hambnck says she's going home .. Going home'> Art you moving'>" l asked heT ••No, l'm JUSt gmng to be At Home ... .. You·~ ltaddmg." I said. "After 30 years of school. do ~ou real!)' mean that you are 1ust gomg to tum your back on your caree~· -ut's say 1~m refocusing for nght now," she answered serenely Hambrick explained that for years she bas felt like a guest 10 her own house .. It's hke I don't really lave there .. .ljust visit never even have to do anything. "Now, finaJI)' I can afford not to work ... J have a man who adores me and whom I adott. and three teen- agers whose lives 1 want to shatt before they're gone You k.now. l'Ye never NOT worked. Gomg home means that this as going to be my time." "But what is a woman who has always been so busy and has taken so much of her 1denUt)' from her work going to do at home all da)'." I asked her. "I have this fabulous library which includes everything from classics to theater I'm going to read -and to sleep a lot. I'm going to do thin$$ with my kids and take long walks Wlth my husband and play the piano." She thouibt for a moment and added, "One goal I do have 1s to relearn bow to play 'Rhapsody in Blue.' "You know," she continued, ··t>e- twcen home and the pressures of work.. I'm never alonc ... exccpt when rm in my car. That's goin' to change now. In my new life. rm p:>tng to have a chance to be with my family and to be with myself." I thought about another woman, a wealthy wtdow I had counseled yean ago at UCl's Women's Opportumty Center (an educational and voca- tional counseling scrv1~ for a<fults.) That woman had told me that the reason she "had not done &nything" for I.he 6ve years pnor to our meet.ma was because sbt had functioned as the international president of Parents Volunteers 45-65 sought for study of menopause The Center for the Study of the Menopaust at the University of Southern Caltfoma School of Med1- cme as Sttklng volunteers to partici- pate in research studies. The centeT, a chnac which studies the female change of hfc. 1s ronduct- mg research into the mdocnnology of the menopause and the effccuvencss of vanous treatments. Volunteers should be betWttn the ages of 45 and 65 and ID good health Evaluations and treatment wtll be gjvcn free. Compensauon will be given for travel cosu. Donna Shoupe, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the USC School of Medicine. 1s pnnC1pal investigator for the studies For an afpointment or more infor- mauon cal (21.l) 222-4028. IJ111 hn Withoul Partners. She had been too busy, she said. travelin1 around the world in that capacity, to "have done anythina." Now, she said. she was lookina for a job -one that J>ll',5 money. a.nd that otTers "real 5\atus. • How incredible that that woman could perc.e1vc herself as "un- employed" and as "not doina any- thma.' just bee.aux her contribution was not being p11d for Hambrick IS chanpng her hfe ln a more traditional direcuon; first a professional, she 1s now lookma to fulfill her more feminine needs. Her 1dt>a of '"doma nothmJ" also includes civtc and philanthropic involvement. She will continue to participate in orp.nizations such as the Communi- ty Services Board in Santa Ana for the American Cancer Society, the Coali- tion for Adolescent Prqnancy (m CODJUDCllOn Wlth the Junior Leaaw:), Jack and Jill (an orpruzation of parents and childttn whose purposc 1s to proV1dc social, cultural and educational acuv1ucs). LINKS (a philanthropic national organization of black. profewonal women) and several medtcal associations. As more professaonaJ women of the '80s re~vaJuat.e thtir lives and Go Home -for at least part of the tune -chanlles may benefit and volun~ tcenna may rqam some of the status It has had lD the past. Will Dwte Hambrick 111m in her super-woman cape as she now swi~p.rs'? Wjll oot workln& for rt\O}ley mean that she will slow down? Will she be bo""''? rn call her 10 six mo~ find out, and report back in thiscOlumn. l think t know the answeT. I never did find out what happened to that wealthy widow look.Jtlg for a Job with mo~ status. ) I QUIT S~OKING IN ONE SESSION ·~ MU&. ntY AGADr. 11""1 -· w,u. !he P11maclr Ill~ al H,,,,_ II • UI)' lt 4911 Ena if -IJlmJi ,.... tt a ~., .. a. v .. c.u quit rilmty .,u..,,1 _,. 1t &A<' ..ui-1 CUWll • pc>uncl no. • ~ lo&9" ~ .....,..,,, propaa ...,.4.., _,.. l S «<JIOnOOftl !low~ UUI QDll u..-Ubll m Jtdl -~ '""" « on., pnratt .._, R~ sur· NOW 1149°° THE PINNACLE METHOD THE l""'STITUTE Of HYPNOTHERAPY C~Ll 1140W i-141 2b1·28Jl Oflit ..-loulf'd 1n ln-tM .and fulltortoa LOSE WEIGHT IN ONE SESSION BE HEAL THY AGAIN! I•'°" ~been on <Ml •'-' Olet uMd-polls 01 bef\11"'" modo'tGalOOn Ol'Ogf-°"'Y lo QUoO. ., •9'U<" It VoO' ~ ......... .., F0t "l'IOlll ~ ,,...,_'"II tS a conclotoOne!O l\ili'•I and -ar• "-.t .. 1*11 "' ~'"9 1..:1 tbeday? .... your watch aoina to din~ 11y ·oh, rve been out on the h too Iona. I'd better go insider lt doesn•t happen." Classy Autos Ad\'ertised -when done improperly is not safe. taken by the industry. including tanning cstablishmenlL .. Wbatwebavedone(with the indoor .....-------------------------~-------------1 tannins industry)... she said, "is provide an oplion for an individual. When pven in measurable doses. in.• Reg 1249' NOW *149°° THE PINNACLE METHOD YOURSELF THIN CAL WEIGHT LOSS BBO BEEF"SANDWICH .CONTEST Orange County, Fair Costa Mesa July 7-17 l Saturday • July 9 • 1 _pm • Gourmet Gallery * lat Place Winners * Ri. "hbo *Open to All 12 & Over & Reci Published ns in O:Uy Pilot to lst:Sth Plus Special _Place ~i~~ers Pris.I too! 1n all D1vis1ons , • " . in the Daily Pilat THf 1"-ISTITL TE Of HYPNOTHEIAP\' nu '°110\.\ n41 2'1-2u1 loulf'd 1n In 11~ . .tnd filllir.rtOft Discover Our Special Place THE RIGHT CHOICE FOR YOUR R&91DEN· TIAL AND ASSISTED LIVING SERVICES. • De.lux.e tuita. priYJ.te and aemi-private ltUdioa •Transportation to cJocton and recrutioaal ac:Uvlt.iel • Wum and cariQI envirocment • 24·hour *'1-rity and wr • ~ with mediQltk)ne and bethlnc - • Will: to aboppms.,... • W • otrer care for yaur loYed one fti)t 3"Ml ftcatioG ti-'·"· Q..f~ e .. The Huntinrton Benior •••...._ lWl '1orWa ~--H•tl " ...... (714)Ma.;n I ' -----~--...--~---·-:-----....,._------------------------ Inner peace comes through art for a frustrated teacher 8j CllDYL WA.LKD ........ o ••• ,, , Aftao 10 ftuslrati114 years of tryina to ClllD buic educational skills mto tbe Medi or reluctant inner city IChoiol c:bildreri MicbPn telcher Andrei Smith'• taith in Iler ability to awak=\lDI miDda WU fuWly and · v lbaten when one of her .J. .. Mn. Smith. why do ~ care 10 mucb if I doD•t?" Cresdallen; Sniith tmiined to the welkDDoilited lakeside borne abe sbarecl Wi1h bet butbend (• auccessrul ,• "'asiQCMIND -::rarmaQst). I IOft. '&Dd I daUabter ~a tbreo-year period or aouJ aearcbiDa. Her forays i.nto u.e m~ or Eastern and Westena reliJion• and myths led her to adeltiubOD much cloier to home. Smith redilcovered with.in benelf'a childhood pmion for art· an ~ lhe calls ttantccndent. tnnsformauonal and Oocl-in.IDi.red. art which would act u a c:atafyst for positive human c:atbania. Her bUlband and hiah school sweetheart Qarf, himtelf restless in his cattJer, liqwdated his Mic:hipn aueuand took the family to an island . of peace so Andrea could painL . On the Hawaiian il1and of Maui, Andrea channeled her new-found c:allina onto paper and canvas while Gary showed her brilliantly colored acrylic aad waterwlor vuions of i .... iiiiii•~u iiiiMi·~L:i~m::;iiiiii"iTGUaUi•iil--1 sJobU peace and universal harmony -'.-~._-. _____ ._ .. "'!"_,._,._ .. _~_ ... ____ -.i to local p.Uei'Y owners. pieces, includina acrylic: and water- color peintinp, seriarapbs. atunnina matt>le.buelf German water crysllls, and teleetions from her •'Embodi· ment of Love," .. Rainbow," and "Ho'olau" series. Smith denies her wort is New Aae or tied to any one relision. Every reli&ion, she says. seems to be sayina the same thina; When ID individual Jets ao of everytbi~ be'• supposed to want or need and liatem to what his heart tells him he wanu and needs. be not only di1eoven himself but dis- covers his harmonious onenea with all life. ''WADS OF . IAUGHS!'! . --= DMd ~ s.. i-.. Ulioli D\N AYKll(WI) JOHN oomr GiLrOun>oclls W~ ll!q-. A~-~1! -a.n.o . eu-_.__...._ ......... ~-- .,._ "'... • -lt'll ..cMrr-•-_.._.. ---... ,_ ....... ,. .., --..... --...,..._._ --...,_ ~ ..... ..... ..... cmTA-. •W WWWIWWWllR .... a.... ............... a.. ---· .... CllleTA-•LA ...... ·=:-..:::,i.. ~,_ 1===.1 I 1 • ._...3_ ii' fl ~ The paintiq:I of ientle, nu~na human fiauta terenely at one with a ~cal. m)'1tical environment at first they found no takers amonpt the commefcial art dealers wJio catered to touriau demandiq.canvases filled with tropic:al flowers. palm treeS. landlClpes and whales. l'"ioall)', how- ever, a salesman at one of the island's I .abaina Galleries decided to Jive one of Andrea's works a ti)'. The li&htning fast-ule of this fint and subsequent pieca soon established Smith as one Of the island's most souaht-after artists. On.n,e C.Oun residents interesled in teeina Smi~'s unique visions don't have to travel to Hawaii. Nearly a decade aft.er SmiJh'a fateful move to Maui in 1981, the .first. ~ent Southern California disp1-y of her work bas just opened at llle newly establiabed Lahaina Gallery at Le Meridien N~rt Beach. There visitors t:an see a provoca- tive collection of Smith's newer Sucoeu alo~ thouah vaJidatin& didn't fWfill her dream. With midionary zeal she baa lent her talenu to promote wotld peace mo~ ments and bas developed an inter· national ~tatio,n au peliOHttiat. Smith delt.aned ._ poster for the Hopi and Nav~o Jepl defente f\ands, annually creates the ''Art for Peace" c:aJendar, sales ofwhidl help support the United Nations-orpnized Uni- versity of Peace in Costa Rica, and domated paintinp to .. Art Expo New York," where she and other artists - includina David Hockney and Peter Max -help raise money for alobal peace poups tbrouah the aale of their works. She attends peace conferences and ptherinp tbrouahout the world as well. "Everytbina I paint is about ~,. 11)'$ the 4~year..old artisL 'Especially peace within -that's the first step." Before comina to this conclusion, admits Smitb,._"I believed reality WIS &rim and 1 used to &lame omer-peopl!'" for my unhappiness and frustration. But then I discovered I needed to pay attention to me, what I really needed, and to weed out bad thoughts. Thoughts are somethina we can control -one ounce of doubt c:an short-cireuit everything-that's why I ti)' now not to take anythina teriously. Worryina is praying for failure. "Now I just trust.•• The lahaina Gallery at Le Mer- idien Newport Beach, located at 144S MacArthur, is open from 9 Lm.· to 9 p.m. Monday tbrouab Saturday and Sunday from 9 Lm. to 2 p.m. by appointment. Admission is free. To schedule an appointment or for additional information call SS 1-2328. COMING TO ·AMERICA OPENS ROYALLY TODA YI AT THESE FINE EDWARDS CINEMAS ~ . , . EDDIE MURPHY· •..• · ··• • AP.\IWO.'NrPICTlill:. 1, ··--·_,,,,.,'l!W) __ ..,.__ -c=-• LIDO CINEMA Ne wport L1c10 573-B3SO TOOAY -UNTIL ..... ':..~~) , ..... lUO CINEMA CEN TEP H1tbor·Ad1m1 1179-41•, TOOAY 92.11 UNTIL ..... ..ir <;A -:_ 1,..f I.I • llj ftWC-' r' '~· • ~ '~":.· ........ ~ ... -'I _..,. l:IM:Jl.JM .... . ·~f ..,. 1 t ... 4 A · ' ' • ·1 \ ~ ' .. PMllDIO (R) (THX) ,.._...lUCI( DCUY S1dlO S:lS.1:15-t:IS-ll 9IQ ., .... (PG) 1£Tltmll t.JM:ll.lt:tll ING (PO) TCll..S 5:45-1:45-11:45 .o::l TCll 5:JM:l5-lt:1S ) C...U TOWN CINnR UNIVERSITY CtWm.R COTO • COSTA IEA • • COSTA IEA • • llVll • • mmll Eal • :J:l l 1:15-l:l5-ltll-5:4s.a;tt. H:H MIU DUMAN (R) mllCOSTIO IZ:OG-Z:lM:lMi45-t.tl-ll:OO RED .. AT (R) SCHIMZDOB ll:J0.1:4s.4:tM:lM:Jt..lt..51 HUNTI NGTON TWIN IHKh M11n ~-CJ.8i TOOAY-.,._ .. N 8UU. DURHAM (R) m11comn 1:15-l:Jt..~lt.lS ~ caTM caoWM YAUIY U1 1 PACI •SJNIRI • ....... •lltllO· CHARTER CENTER Werner 11 Beach e.&1-0770 TODAY 11.15 UNT1l MO ... C9'0COOILI DUNDla I (PO)Plll.MOCAI :15-l:•J:4§.1:00-l:Jt.10: .. 91G8U ... ll(PO) llTTC mo 11:1s-1:t0 HO-S;Ot.7:tt. ..... lt.45 == ll:lf. l:Jt.~-.t:l5-10:JI :~ 11:45-f:tM:lM:JM.-4$-10:45 WHO l'RMmD (PO) .. ..., U:•1:64-•.Us.t.Jt.lt.4S M IS<\I('"' , f J') TWIN ' ,. (.., ,, ..; ~ ... ., • ' .. ~) "' c 1' . ,.,,, • . • r""' ,,.., ...... ,.. ............ -~ ....... lolll:tt-J .. CROWN VALLEY CINEMAS Crown Valley P11ri .. •11v ]8lock1North oP'O(l ~,,., TOOAY ll.ll UNTI. a. NI ..:ns:-~ ' •15-lt. f; TOP' r~1NE M A '. ~ l1 ~ • w" ~ t T '.J, 'j i-1,... I"' ...... CWTOA~A(., -~ lt ... •tJMM.1t.a HOUYWOOfJ..Af.> -.. Mo Framed llaeer WM Wlia' 1baD .. Iii" II it .,.SS 11.l aUJlilla iD lbe natioe'a weal'* box oftlce. Tbe movie about I aeedY detective pie-tir Bob HOlkinl wbO come1 to 1he aid oF l caftOOll rabbit let I recoftl &w a Walt ~-rdeued film ud euily beat the Tom Hanb comedy fc>r&st~ .. lloler Rabbit" opened lbunday befOn: tbc Mekend derby 90t \lDder ~· 1be Walt Disney Co. i'epc>r1ed ftve.day ~at Sl4.8 million, 1urpuains comparable fivei ~for~ Men and a Bab at $13.9 nUllion and "Back To FiatW'e" It $ 14. 7 million. "'Who Framed Roeer Rabbit' ap- pears to be ID actOll-'tbe-board hit and we feel it is destined to join the rub of the studio'• cl1uics." said Dick Cook. president of distribution for~·· Buena ViJta division. The Disney-Steven Spidbera col· laboration was shown at l ,04S screens for its debut week and earned $10,742 per screen averqe. Anot.ber $20 million wu expected from the sale of licemed Roecr Rabbit dolls, fiaurines. key rinp. mup, pencils and pens, said BOb SolC>mOa-ofAPPlause lic:enuna com-pany in Woodland Hilla. "Our impression is that the Illes are phenomenal," said Solomon. "We are also the licensor for the California Raisins, and over this last ... I.bey llave IUllD a met IMI IO •:itMWL"' .......... ~ ... die No. l p_oehioe dllphe wave m"-wave OI MW r1h n•, WMdS7.l •illioaz up9 .,_,.~ iu~week.mtMidpllCe .. the Du A~olm ~com. edy '1'be Great Ou1doon... .... ..-ned S6. l 2 miUioii, nile .. Red Heat" with ArDold Scb-•DW' and Jim BelUllU toot IMlr1h plllCe with S6. l l million. -Qocodile' DwMlee II" ... ftftb :~t!fi2 ::cc~ ~B~ Dutlwn," wb.icb remaiaod in sixth pltc:e for ita aecood week with SS. I million. but bad I 9 pm:ellt buainaa 1nmaae. Roundina 01l1 the Top 1 o wu .. Bia Buaineu" in eeventh ~with $4. l million· "Willow" in ~th with Sl.S milli:ij;;Funny Farm at No. 9 with $2.2 · 'on in ticket sales; and Wfbe Presidio" in 10th place with $2.l million. "Rambo Ill" sliPOed out of the Top l 0, eamiq S2 nlillion for ID l 1th DlMle _spot five weeks after iu rdeue. The film which reponeclly cost S60 million to make baa so far earned $47.J million. -Mlttq_: 1u__..,~ ... bu=1.-..t.tbtldw-weet u- ''Comina ToAmeric:a," aJobn Land- iHiftcted film ltltrillf Eddie Murphy u an African pnnee who comes to the United States in ICIJ'Cb ofa bride. Shandltng shuns 'Tonight' off er LOS ANGELES (AP) -Com· edi.an G1!fY Sbancllina bas declined an offer from NBC to continue u a auest host on "The Toniabt Show .. becaute of the pressures of bis IChedule, bis manarr said. The production schedule of .. It's Garry Sbandlina's Show" and the immediate start of production on .. It's Garry Sbandlina'• Movie" prevented Sband.lina &Om acceptina the offer. said man-r:, Brad Orey. "Johnny Canon been one of the biaeat au~ of my career from me ~na." said Sbandlina. whose seria appears on Sbowtimo '~~f:'/o 7:$0 10:10 nm: ... DID., pt) 12:11Z:H1:10 7:40 10101··70MM --... -mcm.1-• .. .. ........... _ .. --~-­.oLTmlllA• ...... .................. ---' ---..... ....... 'IUU DUllHAM ............. ,~ =--"-.-.... , .. ~~-::. .... ..... -.1'-.. .......... . . ............. .... ... __ cmcoeaaw1 .... .............. I ... ___ ---, .. -==-.:-- ---... W•Hlr-• ~­.._, --1"1,.....,1111 ............... ., --u.o• ... . . ........ . --····--· ........ o rft1l drama of AIDS at OCC a,aam11nu .............. • Pt'Od.uctuctiion immediately around krimefa pat-punch dialope. When one cbarlctei' it dilpoaed with AIDS. there ia no ~l\y diatribe. .. I'm IOina 10 die. Tiiarl the bottom line," be 11ya. It'• • bit amuina that Larry ltlamer'a 64Tbe Normal Heart,•• now pla}'ina •i.~ Cout C.OU.. baa neVer 'be1VR been ltapd in 0ru,e Couaty. Each tcene catches fire 11soon11 the lilbu ao up, eneflY and aound levels border on frenzy and tcene c~ are executed quickly, pvina the aUdience no time to recover. The res\llt i1 a lean, powerful play. ht at tbe aune time, the fact that it bu taken teVeta1 yean for the pioneerina play about AIDS to reach ihil ara lllO iJ a &eatament to its ultimate trutb: Whether due to simple iporance or fear, public awveneuabout AIDS bu •s>Rad at a snail'• pece compared to the disease iuelf. County health officials say S63 Otanee County residents have re- poned cont.nletifta AIDS since 1981 , tbe year the disease fint pined public aneation and the ~nruna of a t.brce-J::,..~ covered an °The Normal So 0ran&e County is no more immune to AIDS than San Francisco or New York. Yet one is bard pressed to recall any recent theatrical pro- duction in the county dealina with the subject. 1'be Normal Hean" bqins in July~!!. Jn the .New York Cily_ oftfce of Dr. Emma Brookner. The ~ycommunity there has been rocked deaths caused by an unknown aeue. Ironically, .. YI and beter- oeexuals are united 10 their atneral mu.I to acknowledae the problem. Writer Ned Weeks (Stuart Duckworth) is one who will not ~ ~ new diseue, and be launches a one-man crusade to enlist the world's assistance in combatina tbeplipe. Weeb faces many obstacles: Safe ta does not yet eust. condoms are PUtO and the public and ~ continue to ianore the disease. His life ii further complicated by Felix Turn- er, wbo becomes Weeks' Jover and bis first real chance at happiness. Director Bill Purkiss tailon bis Despite many tine aupportina pe-r- formances, Duckworth 11 Ned Weeks has the wk of carryiq the play on bis shoulders, and he does not disap- point Duclcworth's inlePSity is rivet· ma. and his pleas and mannerisms srow more frantic as be is atretcbed to emotional and pb)'lical limits. On occasion. be tends to let bis enthusiasnuusbhisdelivery, but that problem is minor in comj)erison with his overall excellent performance. Other standouts include PauJ Klees as the quietly confused Felix and David Schuster u Weeks' hetu- osexual brothu, Ben. Their strona pen:onnanoes are ~ial for temper-•na Ouckworth's fiery showinJ: Won- detful comic relief is pr'<Wlded by Deni Good .. dte-unabaabedly Jlam.- ina Tommy Boatwrifbt. ''The Normal Hean" is not for the emotionally squemish, and it prob- ably will be unnervi~ for heter- osexuals to watch men kiss and touch each other liberally. But u the J>laY propesses. the importance of sexual preferences fade, and the characten can be seen for what they really are: Human bei11'5 who Jove, bate and fear and are fiahuna incmlible odds against an afmost formidable pique. "The Normal Hean" concludes its three-week run this weekend with performancu Friday throuab Sunday at Oranae Coast Collqe's Drama Lab Theater. For ticket information. call 432-5880. 0r8"09 CoMI DAILY PtLOTIWedneedey, June 29, 1M1 ., 9THANNUAL CLEAN · ., .. • HARBOR --- DAY Saturday July9 Show your concern for a clean harbor. Sign up now-and recruit others, too -to participate in this year's ninth annual Clean Harbor Day ac~ivities. *CLEANUP _--.,:30-11:30 am *LUNCHEON 11:30 am *AWARDS CEREMONY 12:30 pm Individuals or company teams welcome! Call 650-8501 •Bill Schonlau for more information 1988 -£.LEAN HARBORDAY • 1988 Friends of the Harbor SPONSORS Friends of the Harbor Balboa Bay Club Little Inn by the Bay The Chart House Woody's Wharf Tale of the Whale Newport Landing Josh Slocwna Rusty Pelican SlmpleGreea Hornblower Yacht• of Newport Beada Newport Daae. Se~ock Boau Recycalof8o.Calllona.la ne Caaa.ry Jt.ataDl'Ut Dewey'• Rubbuat -A w .. t• Mua1emeat Compaay Newport Harbor Area Catamt>.r of Commerce Dally Pilot Newport Belcb-Colta Meu Boud oC Realtora John Dominis Marina Bill Blurock Trautwein Brothm Johmon l Higim Tradrmaten Thomas Wilek A.ociales The Raft Rstaurant "MURPHY'S MOST HILARIOUS PERFORMANCE!" -ClltC-----.... _ --~ -· ~-· -111.-. _ .... - "I.well• ·11111T1ME1" -&..\ GlwQlir. VNCMEW YORK PAI.A. HOGAN LINDA KOZLONSKI ~ DutmEElI •U11 IWIYWE£1 To DAY, PRINcE AKEEM DISCOVE~ AMERICA. -P~er Trawrs, PEOPl.E MAGAZINE MURPHY ·- . . ~ ... -~. .... t • : r. • < ~ i j ~ l I ' I I ' I I ' i I I ~ , i • ' , s • • , • • I • , • ' • I ' , I t " J,, .. , .. . ~ ... .~... \ I \ ' ' ~ ' . ' . . . . '· .. :-' . ' ., •' . .. i ---=:i.... ~­... =·-==--.,, .. ~~ =·· --........ ~ 11::.-- ·s::="' =----1---· -::;;.-.. , . . . . . ' ·. ·4 · ... ... . ·' . ,. . -~. -...... .. . . ' ' " . ., ., . . ' ..... .. ~-------~--~~-------------.......... ~8TAllTS10DAY-------~--:.~----~---------.._.. ~-,_..""°' •LA_.. • II ._. ••YI• •ST--; .._.._w ._... .. '-.,.. r...o..-. c...... ....-v-.oi.r ..,..,. ....... ....,. ......, .... .... •CIGITAmlA ... '°"° .......... =--.... ='SS .... u: ... ~ ·-=r--ICMA.!MiN6iGftmJ .~ ...... • • l . ~ 1 .. ' ,. J J ·t· .. t,· .. . .. .. . • CALL 642-5878 You oen now C811 the D•llJ Piiot c .... lfled Dept. on &aturdar morning from l:GO to 11:30 a.na. to plw rour 8undar and lloncMJ ede. ......... .. ........... c-...-...... c:....,_ . c-.... ... .,,,,,.,.,, ...... . ... ........... .............. ................. ........... '-.... . ..__ ... . 1..-....... .......... ............ .......... .. a.-. ...... c.--...... .. ...... __.... .... c.._ .... '-··· ~ ...... MllC. LL ..... -... .... ~ .... c-ri.-.o,,... .. . -1 ......... . .................. OotOIC.. ~ ~ ...... ,,.,....., ... ,....__. It ........ . lJ.,~ .... 0 ca... ........ . ..... -.. ... . .......... c..-.-.... . '-... ... '--....... ..... ....... "'""' ............... .................. -......... . i..,.. ..... . i..,.. ...... . i..,_ ...... . ........... .... -.. .. ....,... .... . a.a.-.... . . ~ .... c..-.-........ . .,. II,, • int . Im , . .I.at IUD ,., . 190 ..... 1• ,.,. CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY FROM SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY ............... ... ... .. . a•• ................. ... . ... .. ..... c--......... .. ......... . .. . 1-.. .... • tltO APAITMINTI °""""' . .. . . .. . . llOI ..... ..__.. ..... . . .. ...... -.MOP c..,........ ,.,, c-•-·· . Mtt c--. M.24 0......-• MM ··-.... • • 1612 ...... "'""'.. ~ .............. ,... ................ MO -... .. ,... ......... ,.. ........ ,,.. i..-...-.Ma '*-MIS _,,_.. ,.., ..._..... ,... -~ ,., . ... .... c:..,,i.-,.,.. ..... _ 1tlO ..__.....,.._ , ... ....'--,... .... '-,.. ,_ J..o MllC. llNTALI ~. ·······"°' ......, ........... ~ ......... . ..... ,,.,.. ...._..... .r11e ~...... .mt ...... ,..... ,,,,. ...... w.... .. ,,,. 0....-...,_ P• ...._ .... . ,,., ............... ,, .. lllMOYlllllT ........_........ ,., . ~ .WO f_,_W-4 "'" ••••••••• ...llCIA& .._............ 2tOO ..__ ,. . ,_ .,_._. ..... "°' --. ,,. --.... .. , "'" ~ T• w-, , . . i . . 1'14 Al•••••=•n• ----·········t······--.................. , ............ .... ......... .................... -,.._....._, ........... .. ......... -.-........ a11 , ..................... ··•·· ................................ ,, fJ ''f 'dt • .... st• .................... JI• °""""'°""" . . . . . . . J9 ,~ ............... ... ............ • ,SSIO ~ .............. .... o.-.t ..................... SDI .....,.,. ............... ..- MBlllAl•m .............................. .OIO ....._ .................. .Oii .......... ••••. ....... .Ol2 ,,.._.. • • • .014 Mlor .. •.OU C-& .......... .01• c__. ......... .. -l•Y• . . .. llOl'J _..,"""',.,. . . . . ..., ...,._ ............ .. ............................ ..... -........... .. "-t&O..,.... • •••• ~ .................................. ...... o... ••••. ······~····..., TV,..._,...,_ ........... ... ... ....... . 0...0. ...................... 61GIJ .................. , ... , .. ..... ,_,,...,,,, ..... ,6101 c-•-.......... 61tt '--... ..61>4 ................. .. •I>• ._.......... 61>4 ........... ............ 6140 .......,............. •10 -...... .... 6164 i..,........ •. 61. w.-........ .. .. .. ., • i..,..~.. 6tn ---·.. • .6161 -......... . ..I .. ---....... ..61• .................. .,., _,,.. •m-.romtY ......., .......... ..... ..... ,.. ......... ..... ,........,....... ~ ........ MllC. .......... ~(T ..... , ~ ....... . l( AUTOMOTIVI .......... _'--, ...... _.._. .......... , ..... , ...... • .. 1011 .... 1011 • .. 11114 ... ,., . ,,., . "'°" ,.., • •• toll fOIS ' talO .. ... ... .. ... . '°" . ..... . •. totO ... . .._._ ...... ... .,, .. ~TA'•·· ... ., ........ "11 ........., ............... ~ Ollot, ......... & ....... : ••••• 16# ....., ........... ........ flOI ............. PUBUCA TION DeADUNE Monday •.......... Set. 11:30 AM Tu.d9Y··········· Mon. 5:30 PM Wedneeday ..... Tues. 5:30 PM T'hur9d9Y······ .. Wed. 5:30 PM Frtdey ............ Thura. &:30 PM Saturday ............. Fri. 5:30 PM Sund9y ........... Sat. 11:30 AM CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS T~Sel'Yloe ~ ' 1:00 AM-5:30 PM ~ 1:00AM·11:30 AM BuM1lel Counter ~rldey 1:00 AM-5-00 PM M2-S171 The Dally Pilot strives for~ and accuracy HoweV8f, occaslOMHy errora do occur. Plea.le llaten when your ad Is read bllCk and check your ltd daily Report 9f'rors Immediately to 642-5878 The Dally Piiot ecc.pta no lleblllty for eny error In an advenisement for which It m9Y be reac>onslble except '°' the .cost of the spece ac1ualty oc:eupled by the 9f'ror Credit can only be allowed for the flrat msertton • t ._. 11tate F• Wt C..ta 11tu 1114 1011 1114 lut. larMu 1141 lnpet! IMcll 2111 ~.... IHI 111•11 Pealu•l• Celt1.... MM Cetta... MM ml~ ··--1-· av : owty up-•11M, .... 11T-··· 28A SUL ™· 2-ow •11 "112 NEW"POA'P m 21; JM! . new 2 EOild• Townm ..,_ _.,_ -• --aded 3Br 2Ba Nwpt EASTSIOE· p.J:t": ex-garage, front & beck 'V ·• 28e Howe. Double OW· HM 11X 1 gs , :::W to decor cathdft ceMlngs. =IQ99: 2BA 28A. fM 1211M C. home. F.e !Md, ec:ut"'-;am1y 38drm yards. 1-year leaH. PENINSULA YEARLY ag•. flr•plac•. new ... cerpet, Trtloe. d/W, cab4e, ow .• petttlng. fillu_p, llt• ,.., 2BR 28A, dining rm. trplc, comm pool lt.W.. walk l~BA famlty rm wltrs>IC (818)141-5380 *Huee 38A + Oen. 28A C8f'Plll & pelnt. e60-2108 atepe co bW:t\ bey. Lndry N00. '50-0e0t : 2BR. new pe6nt, •• ... mllf • 2 car gs, hrdwd nra. to beect\. $295,000 Prln-l '°',;..., dining rm Ha lniat 1144 upper Ouplell In e.lboa. OCEAN View, 28r 18e + 11100/mo yrty. 175-9&50 8PARKLINO cteen. extra ~ Io c · U 20: • .. dpt*lte. 2100llf, 1.000 alt lot wl*°J ec-c1p1e9 only, 842-3579 1 2 Spectacular bay Ylft. 1 end deck. 1 lot to bch. 1wge 2Br 1ea. ground 190 M0-24ae -··· '88. bm91 dlnlno. frplc, ow. Won't._., Cd Liz ~eootmo 1,:' cJcf,Tv; 6ETXcAEbhM§8R/28X ger, wld, trig, fl'plel1575 onw by 8111 &whor• CUTE 18R. 1tY rm. full kit, floor enctgar dlw cable 111'9kerQ9f.U3i,OOO «=7..:-831-12M ******* 111 For Interview can air cond .• frpl, bMutltui •Waterlront!Canal 3BR (upp•r). 11250/MO. =: =~~7~:'c; tv. P.tto. ~t wOod.d *J:"loef~~=~ ......... ....., « '"IM .. 1111'• Scotti s.&-2301 yard. db4e gar, pets ok 2BA ~ory 'I:;':· 1 g~ C>ocblde RE, 722-9730 yrty. Avt 7115. Ma-7225 ground• St75 Avt 111. up. c.bla, 880, g11r, etet 112-.1123 Won't ... u The BEST BUY $1175/mo &7~ age, "i-· w upe,"' TWO TOWNHOUSES . 324 Victoria (btwn 8orry No peea 131-1427 In HarbOr Ridge. Model •28R 18A ~Meaa NORTHWOOD Tlmbertlne IMl'lo 1575 Frplcia trig garagea, pool ........ te llNHI Harbor l Nwpt Bl) • • · .... •.:=c:=..1 per fec:1 SBR :fBA w/pvt ~-:r·t!atlo. poolyd, gar=5 SBR 2'A8a 2 car garege. ~~ "=·oue ~~~l:3~ ape, iaune. acr .. 0t ,-.0: Stud 1 o apt U 7 5 831 .... 215 or &73-0276 ......... . epa + OCEAN VIEW. A up, . Frptc po9tl upgrades • reatlonal epece. •875-5124• A email, quiet comp.ix OOlFCOURSE VIEW VALUE at $645,000. For Conalder pet 722-8011 2 new$1350 552-5"4 age, ry, frplc, . 281'. 2'A8e, w/d. 11100. 1111111.a ~ JI · neettad among Ulll t,... COLD Well BAN~eRO Completetynewlntetlorby appt,PATRICKTENORE *2BROUPLEX,Qutet,Jutt yrs · Avallab49 811·*14ooimo. SBr 2 '.~Ba 11200. SMALL Vlctortan bMch ~•uB II & l8vl.tl !Mdtcape. 18' superior craftsman. 721-1200 « 7eo..8702. pntd/nu Ct"pt, w/d hook il11ln !!tjt IHf YIW lllTW •146-2184* :?51o ~ k~~= llke new w/belcony, <»- Gourmet knc:t1en. 38R. !IP' garage, good ., .. SAA 2L. ~ #l;)IC. 2-car llMl11 La CJmatt 1171 557-1818 ** * u '· IPAITm11 t.Mc1ra1 oalllf\O, frple, g11r. C'...-.a....:~· 2BA. Slnglle famlly home S735fmo 790-07&8 atteh gar pvt JMlllO wlhot Theee attract"'-Apta fM. pool, epa. lncffy. No SMU. ~~u~~ on large private lot. **twwty decorated & tub~ pool & tennis • IAllMWllW • FORSTER Ranch new Ywty 2BR + den 1BA tur• pool spa privet• 1700 +MC. Avt now & 1 -iPllUii 1115,000. Dor\na Wall Mlpel' dMn SBR 28A 11250/mo. 852-8333/~ Palermo 48R 2'hBA, 2 hOme. 381' 28a. \llew, lrg w/d hkup, lrg ~· ~loe Of' 'decki. gtltap av461211Yarne ..... 2447 •t ... 111 154-1802 NEWPORTHEJGHTS $1200/mo Incl water & 45&--0691/evelwhnd 11ory Spa, near lot, d/w $1450/mo IM. 11200/molndudlngutlla Of cerportlnabMutlfUlly •LGMIMVl'deolMnnft ,._, Exc:l1i.v. 4 bdrm home with "rndr 557-8748 ~· a....-L ~Ill.I Anderton School 1 yr 213/897-7304 "'-tn9g 222'h 35th Sir. 175-1140 landscaped aettlng 1~ ·--NtlW dee« F......_opportunl.ty Ex-· ""' " ~ h.• • IM $2350/mo, 780-3124 I L C • _.-' ~ *-W.cel ~ ::::': ~~ E'SIOE 3bf dplx, Hl•BAAVNLLES CO 00 ILIFFS Ht• lllt .•1 1 11 11 ctfeu ... ifu BU Sorry~ 1550 '1~era:I: ~ .. of ~ + .. w ng with fabulous Frpl, end patio. gar No Pool spa Hcurll • 2 L&oom HUL( i506 1 Bedroom IMS =e C:-'!u~= ....... oceen.harbOr l cttyllght m'-a~~751';2.;73:-C· 750/mo . Call Nor~ 48r. 2t,i,Ba ~·~00home. 28R/\8X CONOO nw MQ¥9.tn Bonus! 1 yw 28dtm 28etwnhaeSl50 414•'1 ..... v I • t • I or 771-3"3 or ~7540 lharpl L ...... 1 I mo South Coeaf Ptma.. pooC. ...... St50 + S500 MQ Ill mm ITIUI 18f. 1la,=1w/d ..... end. 2 l9roe lob IU JU M l-1 let 831-1400 S795,000 481', 2Ba Me.a V•de ar... 83i-2207 or 833-2374 ape, ale, ntw/gaa p.-s 900 See lAne &44-2811 COSTA MUA vacMt1 T t1M • H• 1111 Heights •• $259000 -large beck yard $1325 *1&1111..,* UllllWI l1'5/mo241-4151 CHARMING BACHELOR Ml HH •7 * - ... -1 Ownr497-733C) \4.MIR~HO'T NewportPaclflc:Re91 Ea-N~3BR2BA!Mltlo hm. Cn aiE!!tl APARTMENT FurnlaMd • EAST810E28R18ACOC r•f--1 HO~I ., '-· late 845-3M3 Frptc ~ pooC 2 cat Walk to Newpor1 Ir a In Ant""'""' 0.-HOO 111 ...... .__..... • ... 9'¥9 W'O" IM.., In luL llllfll IMI REAL ESTATE AVAJL JULY 1 ow $1(00 onw i,y 424 28R tBA. atteched Qllr· '75-5131 ..... ..... tage. MW crP' & ~ .chg tor a ahare °'own--28R 28A 8 mo new Frptc vi.ta au.ta. then Call age. 2yrsnewt11250 mo S.CUrtty buldtng. aunken wfd Ncup & tafl)Of1 .,,.., .,... You ~ the The Deify Piiot publlehed AEAlTOAS dlw wid t deQ. 875-4912 Agt I ILlffl Tlllllll 111 ·laJaU 1111 Corona Del Mar lrg 2bf· thC>Wert. pool, anclad No pets 722..e294 l'nWy~&we~ anedonJune 18,1land •nctger.~2-131 1 Aleo 28R+Dan. Both Bflaht8t&newwa1;rt 2ba, frpl, encl gar, garagea Remodel•d BAYTIMBEM apprec. You rec•lv• 22 wNc:h unlnl«\ttonely 11tWJe..... •HARBOA VIEW HOME townhotneia 11350/mo uth fr1g & pertclng lndd OCMl*de PCH twn cntr unite. 84 1-6403 18R. ftplc catM pooe 100% ,._ ~ Must mlarepreaent9d Tony f• 1aJt l lM BEAUT Ctipe &e;;ea. 3Br 58R SBA. fem. room, 2 840-5684 atcr YRL y ..... M50/mo. A~ I 1070 Mr. Wllllama 28r 1~Be. patio, ale. patio, Qllr: No~ ... hew oa.t credit. "'9t Corbo of c.itury 21 28acondo,,..eyrect.c., 11ory,frmldlnrm,2f/p,3 7119 154-tm~ Daya &82-1818 or trple,d/W9h,ln51mo. W8ay8ttee516CM167 1157-«>02 Oya. Ev. Wlcnde BMc:halde Rael Estate. EXCELLENT Coate M.a fl'ple, 2 cat get, ~IO. cer a-.. pooC, ale. $2800 38R 2.,.,Be \llew condo • E~nd• 497-5709 ......... . - U TheDMyPllotreomt'the Seniors part!. 28r 28e pooCl1200/mo NoJ*ta. mo. Gardenlt/pool ..,.. w/gw. Stepe from pool, IHltlllllfUftlft LARGE 1aR walk In ... 111UJ .. ~-· Q . error and any ~ +den, pool & ~-132-2474/D 759-00Mji ~Ind. &47-752& Agt. ~· l13SO/mo. Reta. 1BA 18A, with a-age. clOM1 baioonY rnc: .. ~-28R 1™.:. petlo, fl'ple. t1M ... · MIZllll WllW nl•nce 11 may hava S39.500. kr 556-835' 8Hutlful '2BR 2'h8A *HARBOR VIEW HOME AYI 111· 8'75-tlOO Yrty, llOO/mo. 875-14M tlon 0. CdM S750/mo+ dati/Wlhr, •740/mo. 2BR 11A EMttlde lo-~ 'La Tour' model bfougtlt Mr. Corbo. Leta ftr LJt lfil twntvne. Dbl cat ciar-ge, 48R 2BA/jaz. comm. pool, E'BLUFF 68r 38a 29009/f UllD 18111 utll, avl lmmed. 840-2098 Ml-IUI catlori: P.Clo, pool, lnclry .... ~,:h~oom tnlM li44 • ••----pool, spa. Xlnt IOcl Avt 2 cer gar, cmr lot. Xtr•I 2-aty. W/D frig, IQ ywd, Rental 28r, 1Ba mlco, 1 SOUTH of Hwy 2Br 18e 28A Downataln. A9fl Re-rm, 1725/mo. Low c»-e own -•-wn '1f1. 11300/mo. Call Rita '2200. Avt 7/1 380-0271. gardnr, wtr lncfd. Avl 111. garage apec9. AYI 714 completely refurbished. quired. No pets. Cable poalt. bllltl. ~c:lty~tof Luakn:.~:ome Large fairway one. w-.esM281 *LllO ISLE* 122001eaae 646-8355 wknd. 973.4991 o r Ilk• newl 11050. hk~pe. $810/mo. 352 14tE.~ ::;n~, locat~· Highly. Customaed angl Pr.nlum ~ie~o:' Harbor View Home'• .... -;;;;;8;n-3408;;;;;-.~;!;·72ii1iii·1;;304;;;;;°';;7;;2iii1•-1•22·5-~-V-IC11ctiiiOl-la •. ·84·5-·8·1·8·1 ;;.~T8;;;jiLi;;iMOM;;;;:T;;;;;;;;·;;;;1903~ Walt to the OCMll or ram det 3bf 2ba,apa/vu. golf ~~t9 4'4-e23o' · Large e!i~. GrMt Value 481' 3.,.,Ba.. New pnt • enjoy the lovely $50K 3 Rlmrock tor en II In/out, oueat qtre 12400 CIMltlOuaa. pool l 199 854-2599 Owrw LL Waa... liU • 4 Badloom, 'Al Beth... 844-eefO « &73-3174 0.-. community l • ~ IMcll lMt Ul1m 2 UUTIJ S3500/mo. LIDO ISL! Lowty 48f 38a curttybulldlng.o.w.w111 WJ'lt SSS CASH SSS 2aA 1BA • .-aae.1DP9UO. .... ..... lffr houN with .,.._to-W811 csry2ndtruat~ lm-iitWONMARKET* FORYOURPROPEA'TY cul-d•·HC HfO/mo. Ill Mii carp•t l1HO/MO. l'MClat• pa1111a 0" Fantastic \llew In s.wtnct. *FAST ESCROW 23&4 ~.18. Sheryl .. 875-1170 or 87)-3435 S1e4,900. H~ View Comf>jeted *IMMEDIATE ACTION 875-1421Ot831-12tl •H£WPORTCREST. 38A LAO daNxe condo ocean l .... 11• In 17.lh .. 58R 58A has CALL CARMEN HOWi 2'iYA condo. 2 car Q9f. 'MW 28A 28A, trPi, den • • the finest~ thNout. 1~ leMla. w8lc to beech. 'd 11700/ h C.1-~F. ~J KJN~ a..uty. l a ar-t noor l1450/mo(213)427-113& gatea. mont I!!!! I.., ~ll'\:\"I plan. 1'o .. c.ii Marilyn Anxklull 11t-7ZS.t09t 1mii1.1 HHLTOR~ Thomaa844-7302 Agt .. tall llll ...... s:.~.r-~o~ UJXURYTown."lomeo;:· W•WllD ~rn "~11f11A......,_•·• Family pref'd. Unfum, ~oCn vu' ...... liLaMi liii 2BR. R-2 lot w/dock m zffi loec6cNa 21A + o.n. ~ 11500/mo. &45-!784 '3500. Agent, 711-7500 . -• --LL 1340.0 00 Call Ron ~'ABA condo ov•r ••YRtDGE CONDO --. -" Young 831-121& CdM 2BR 11900 ~ & ..... Frptc, """ · Newport er.et,_, nndl & .... la. alrQ ·97 Na PntNe 28R. ram. den, w/d hk\lp Poot JK dbl 28r 28a. dbl a-. pool. app1 very ctn 2 S>f 21~ ba 2 903 Part! Av.. 875-28M vua. 11850 ffll w/oftnr. Avt 07/3. •Pa• w / d · tr I 0 • c gar 4 petloe loft 11400 CdM SBA, FR. ow '2500 l1ot5+1800 min aec No fUn\lunfum. 75 ...... 91 e73-5819/e50-7Mt WM~j, Bal Ill. 38A ... 14250 peita. Velma IMt-2 .. 7 • ··--........ N£WftABT H"""'UTS 38d, hmnJa 1117 ~--..,,.-..,.-.-....,...,~ Summ•r/Wkly _Rental• ..,,.........-,~....,..,,0-:--:::---:--~ -·-•~ ,....,.,, ,_....,..,,. ..... ~ :.. . . . .,._ ... ..._,...,.'!"Ill.,.. BY ownet a.yfrorit w/allp from $875to12750 Cut9 28R 18A Duptex. 2 Exec town.~. View, 1""8a, Frptc. oM ftoora, m FAONTAGE t& 2Br. 2'~8a. Ja .. tt>' 0. ........ ..... .... cer oarate. amei prd, pool,.,,,_, MC. Avt &/1. nu paint, gtdnr l1250mo tum, 2 Iota. pier, pttg, a1gner condo, MBZSL. 28 ._........._ .. 11• MW ~/paltic. 1100 11&75/mo, 780-2571 521Bolaa.873-1353* bdl. 2-18r'•. t-281' SU ft ctncrft tla. One or An. -·-• • 17M812 Aet •871-2ae&• 1425,000 &50-1181 11i'91 £81Dl 38ft Fam hOfM ctlil.... liii ... "'__ ......... 2117 11300 IMiA'f2£flMCconctO 28R 2BA w/beautlful LIKE Dew In Ids 1 Twnhrn 3BR Comm poof 1,.. I f ' decor Commpool& ape. ,.. Pf' ••U 11100 "' m . rom beach, 1199 5oo 7eo.o714 Penln Pt 2 xtra lrg 8"9 W I +• m....-:.....11e aeeum. 1oen 1134,000 • · w/JM1tloe 2aA. 2 cat gar 1 lrw -c.. Larry. Ann Ch1aman a.1225/mo e1s-e129 · •••us 111· 1• AMt.Eatm. 491-1341 cou.EOF Pn 3Br 2a. The Prudenbml' ctilU W Li llU I'• HI I Pl . ~ .... JM. dbl q..-tltreet, lg low malnt 714 ...,(714)760-()714 •2 llORM+ famly room, ~ Ihm. d/W ..,.. cond yd, copper plum, nu roof, ·-· .. o-..-a...-frptc, *9a gwege, w/d 11•225 •-·~7 · t11UOO * 144-9011 Ml.up,,.. un11 of duC*X • stOtS •TI10o01... m121M-: ~ .. -. MerriU Lynch Realty 1111• • MDIII .. 111111 Incredible vt.w from 5 bdrm "'89- ...,,.... Two melt« tuft•, 2 fam """ 2 frplce Md many 191turee. 1726.000. ... 7111111 ' s.·y .. '"''"" Cel 01111111•. ,Ml-5671 for Inf Of'.mation & surprisingly IOW cost. .... 111 .. * ":.-::.. -=· = ca.t9CI community, Ngh ... dllOclMnt. 111.-.. -..,. ~.:· 28R, 1 _ ~~1 .. .,~~· a!_IB.!! , .. £lt£c_•,., llAUT1AJl ,,.. ..... "*"· Nr •• •11 Cor· ...._ 21r28a. 11 new OlWlo t1JIO No ..._ eppttancea, carpet 6 AYI "owl warn• .... Gr•~ ..... ,. wlbeloCM"'8. 1~ 9lf +·ri:-;~~.,~-:::,-,::-:~~-:::c1111=mc-::::-at\ cprt & lndry .... 11500 .,,,,... ,.,.,... orpt.,,.. ~--Cell~ .............. ..... IEAUT 1ne1rior Dealgi•a ltm. -....1c1ep, 1br -.. lfNI dani .. ..,..._,,.,. & --- ~end .... 1'1*. POOr. •!·111 ... daoor, cen- """"" •• .. bwh "" 1111 r ""'" 1111/mo. IOOIMO flt. 11tca a1 AYOCNJO 4n.onf °' .......,, •Ullf I I Ii •1:• ... II •:a , ... .,,.,. ..... poal. J1t•WP1NC•RNAC.Ao ..-. a...,-. .... dfeoe HAMOfl. MM.~ !:;'i.':t.\~· ..... not ~ ---...,...--------· "" °"*" -... ::.:::::t • .... 1111 ..... .. .. 11•~"'T'"1~.----w:rm11 • W .. ·~· *liniiliir'9st:I ,.... ... ...,.,.. ~~ ..... " .... *'• ''"* Nrlr.!lt+ ..... -. ... "' IA Clfllle _,., ow-..._...._..,, r:· =-'~~ 'i.: :--.=a:r:. fepH. l•f· II ti ••1••1 roe..!.t.:... •fl, ... .,. .. , -~ .... ,... ""-.... lilly Plat HEIRLOOM COUNTRY LOOKS IO OUR FAMOUS HAS RETURNEDI !Wclc by ~r MINnd, Ott"MS·A·l.lne Wiii run Friday. ~tur­ day and Sunday in its own c1.iu1ficauon in tM Classlfted Ads Since this 1s a s~Clal otter we have a Thursday noon ~ad!M and ask prepayment for all ads Thts 1s ~n to al private pany cldverttsers for merchanc:h~ not ovtr SSO fprice must ~ Msted Ill adJ and no at>brev1auons wiN ~ K Cl-'J)ted AD ads wil run Friday, Saturday and Sunday Thf're Is a 5-tlne minimum at 20C ~r hne So yout low cost OMles·A·Une aid le onfY ... $3.00. DEADLINE: Thursday noon fl'RtCE: S-h~ mtrumum • 3 days • 20C ~r llne • SJ.00 • All ads are preptttd by com•no ·tnto t~ D~1ty Pilot to place your ad or use the coupon ~IOW Pnvate party merchandise onty Ids No com- mercial ads. ~rs. 1t11estoclc, produee or p41nts • EKh item must bf' prt<t'd in tM ad wtth no Items over S50 II .__ ____________________________ __.!• MAIL TO: Otmes·A·LIM Daily Pilot HO West Bay Street. Costa Mes.. CA 92626 D~•ty Piiot hours· Monday·Frt<Uy 8 00 AM to S 00 PM SMTf ____ ,. _____ _ N«XINf INCl.OUO ________ DATES TO RUH _______ .._ •' LMS ------~-~-r•~---·- ···------ 642-5678 • " . . . J COt.I TO *MFAI* WITH US .... WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO MOO/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE· LIABLE VEHICLE. INSURANCE. ANO OMV PRINTOUT. MON- DAY-FRfOAY 2-5 P.M., WEEK· ENOS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M. NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR & LAGUNA BEACH AREAS. CALL la 41• !XT. 205 AMFORlaTH COME TO THE FAIR WITH US htl let Piii far ill!! The Dally Piiot Is looking for a few good people to help staff our booth at the O.C. Fair. Fexlble hours, possible future employ- ment. (FaJr Dates: July 7-17). If you are reliable. have e pleasant, outgoing personaJlty and enjoy talking to people, PLEASE CALL TODA YI Motor Routes av~1lable in Westminster Huntinlfon Beach Fountain Valley NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. C1H 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney Wanna party all nlgh1 and hang out at the beach alt day? ... ANEJll Just giYe us part of~~ llnd yo4Jf winning~·. We'H gtvie ·you a~ to mek• good money NP'•• 1ntlng.,.. euy to eell. ... known, "'P"tltite l)rodUct. au.tent11d s-.ry +Comm. + aonu.. •SIS lnYOURpcaet C.-C011n m (714) 842-4531 En UO IOr men IMO. Cll Ntw11n w PfY' °'.._.a m1111ge enytln• w n Oii JCMll • I ~ .. .. .. • ' • I . . J • . • , .. . ..., ..... .,..... doourneot9 .,. ... an tit tot pubic: lliepec:ttcM • Qlr,Hlll. .. .....,_..,...lit tM~a.iDO-. Mr••• .. -.. al I AM I & PM MCM-..,...... Fttdl!Y. ~ .. lllii ar&lfllr .. tM OeMrll ~ laomd'·• 1tU T ..... A...,.(Tlllbert I Goldltt&HC). Dllll 1112111 PUILIC llOTIC9 CITY OP HUllJllGTON WCH NOT'lcm OP...,_,. ADOPTION \It .... Oii ... Oilill ...... ,. 'lll .... ......... STARTING A NEW BUSINESS. The ILegeJ Department •t the OeJJy Piiot IS plMMd to an- noura a new Mfvicie now avail· able to new bulklnsn We wWt now SEARCH the MrN tor you at no extra c:tWge. aM Nve )'OU the tifM Md the trtp to the COUrt HOUM In Senta Ane. Then. of courae. after the ...,ch II completed ... wtl ,... your: fte1ttt0ua ~ Mme .. ~with the County Qlrtc, publlft onc:e • ... for '°"" .... requtred bj .... and "*' ... 'lfJ4M proOf of publl· cation With the County CWk • , . -· . . . . . . , L !2. MllC PRUIT POP REClll . , .. =.~ .. ':.::= 112_., ..-~or --~ Combine~ and jUice with 1ltacted fnjt mixture. (Recipes ... )Al• wdlluq. S..wil ind pow ir*> pcpliden'ddl ex.,... . ...., cups. """'1 pq>aide stidc8 ot platic 9POQllS. '*'• 10tD12 pQpl. NECTAME ORANGE "°'8 , ,.. .... c ........ c ........ ctqlped. ' oc:a IT• llHl1d,da1pped . Pam.la==-· ... PEACtt MNANA POPS , ...... c ....... ~chopped , ..... otJOPPN P\de .. ~ .. .... IERRV PCltS 10 rtpetNlli ClllDlftll........., 8llcecl , ... 2S11a1m. 111 ............. .... ........ .,........ • I I • WEDNESDAY, ~UNE 29, 1988 The .... cookie r.ap....,,. Cdbnia pillllchioe. .,.. .... ---1 ... nul.. 'Rte .. )1991' 'IOUnd in lbundln ~ ~ n.;pbll cHo, ............ ~ ..... ... ~nu&. Mdl cokJr ........ Md ...... tD....,. c Ill .. llDia 'l>rYil!liilliln ft ... I 11, )IJl ctioelhould be*119d In• _..,. conlliner Md refriglr•I d . c • •1apeKI'-. Pluma Ind rlldlril•come i9 I I II Dndur· ing~ Ind .. plentiM lvoud\ the mGfllh" Sepeli'nber. The -~ miaBlrllls-'1-~~lnd .... .. .., No¥errmer. Ttw Will. .. blllii tor .. ice CNlflll, IOltlllt iind pops in cu '"C1l1bi• ~·_,..CM be ~,...,while IUPJllll .. bow1llull Clllamia unmer fn.1111 ripen off i'8 ..... proc I I I ~ can tr rt n ~pl*:ingtt'9frUtln a lac I 1t;~ ~big• mn ~ b. dav Of two. Alfrtgll• r1>e p ••Ct-. ph.ml. ,__i• ilnd Blr1fira peens to preuer'lt ouee1..,.li1g.' 2 .. ,.,.. 31• cup ... . 1/2cup .... 112 ~·••Rtdcaud1nud""" ~112 cupe '-IOl -- lri a 881 IC8P9" bell egg YI* Ind mile togilthlr; blend in sugar. Coak ewer meil&lfn hilll. llirrina con.._ wltil rnixtuAt cc-. ,.,.... apoon lghly. Do no1·b0t Coot, llr in .,.a9Bned can- deneed tTA, cnmn and 1111 c9d fruit mbdure. (Recipel talcM.) Oliland"-in~ca11•mcnmn nw:hm•liccDIO- ing to~ dil.m .. Or hue by pcuq mDcbn in a loll,,...; Dllce In ,.__ unll Inn. TtW1y mn... bebw ~ ... ttnrl mbcl\ntofood pot I II CK .Proc B II W1lil -smodhftftft-:; ,.,,881Z8 Until iefwd. Miii• 8 to 8 WW1gS. Ht*: This r..ap. mity al9o be~ In a ndilianal ice awn machine according to~·· diectiol& PEAR CHOCOLATE ICE CAEA111 I rtpe._..C1Mlm ...... ,_.. ... ,,..,, ... 1, 314.,.. .... a ...... u' 0 h c:Mpped. Of dt111al111-. Cambi• ~ S-S Md ch«• I ' •ICID Plm ICE CREA.II ...,. ...... c .... 01,elced 1/lllllJHR•lalU• a 111..t ..... 111 •llJHft ... I l ct ,... .. ~ ... PUCHY N1NHO ICE CAEAM , C7 Cl , 1 ca ~ COMl DAILY PILOT/ Wedi ...... June n. 1tl8 Backyard chefs fired up for barb D ., CdOL DUGAN .......... Al 100D M tbe weather warms. ""M'thlt turn to the lrill and outdOcw meall on tbe &ck and patio. 1t•1 tbe time for bambu.ram, hot dell. and •teaks; beef nl>I and lplreribl· marinate4 1WOrdfiJh or tuna ~i lamb and chicken. Pia ii PoPUlat in the South. In Texas ana Kamas. beef, usually brisket. is prefemd. The Barbecue Industry Associa- tion says more than 70 pen:ent of Americ::an households own a t.rbecuc IJill. Americ:am are cxoectcd to liaht nearly 1.S billion ~ this year, the Association says, u the trend toward atayina home with &mily and friends replaces .. hittina the lOWD" u tbe faVored leilW'e ICtivity • AcCOntina to a IW'Vef b)' fOOd and Wine m•zine, tJubecuinl is one of America•• favOrite --~ of entettaini~ at home. Seventy-five percent of the houtebolcb surveyed said they hosted a barbecue at least once in lbe~year. Rich De co-autborofthe new cookbook. •• are.t American Barbecue Book" (Vintqe) with Shifra Stein. oriainator of K.C. Masterpiece barbecue uucea. and OWDC1' of K.C. M11terpiece Barbecue It Grill in Kamu City, Mo.. explains the difference be- tween barbecuina and arillina: -Grilled food is cooked directly over the ooals. -In barbecuina. the food is cooked indirectly. The food is placed over a drip pan. The coals are banbd eitbel' to one Ude or both lidel oftbe pea. Pood mnaiDa very moist, ~ if fat ii trimmed off after cootins. because of low temperatu.ra and alow cookiAa rate. Devfa ·~ the type of food determines the method to be used. Hambuqen, lteab, chcp . and fiib fillets should be llitled or cooked directly over the c:oals, he U)'I .. Barbccuina, which is a 1low cookina process more like roastina. i1 ideal for J.araer cull of meat. chic.ken halves and ribL There should never be an open flame when barbecuina, Devis uys,just a consistent low temperature over a prolonaed period of time. • The 'Barbecue Ind~ Associa· tion aya "most bubecUen ..,.ee that nothina beats the special. Creamy fudge recipe never fails Better Homes ud Gardena Create a creamy fudge without usin& a candy thermometer or cold- water candy test! CHOCOLATE 'TATER FUDGE % medlam potatoes (about 10 ouces to&aJ), peeled aad cut ap 1 &o % &ablespooa1 milk 1 l-o11Dce pack.a1e (1cap)1eml- 1weet cllocolate pieces 1 e11p peanat batter 1 teaspoon vaailla 3 caps lifted powdered 1qar 1 cap flaely cbopped peaaut1 In a large saucepan cook potatoes, covered, in boiling salted water for 20 to 25 minutes or until very tender. Drain and mash potato with enough of the milk to make fluffy; set aside. (Should have 21l cup.) In a heavy 3-quart saucepan heat chocolate pieces over low heat until melted, st1mng constantly. Re- move from heat; stir in potatoes, peanut butter and vanilla. Stir in powdered sugar. (If necessary, work in last 1h cup of powdered sugar with your hands.) Stir half the peanuts into mix- ture. Tum mixture into a greased 9- by 9-by-2-inch baking pan. Press down evenly. Sprinkle with re- maining peanuts; press down lightly into candy. Cover; chill until firm. C ut into 81 pieces. Makes about 2114 pounds candy. Single . soup thats made ' • lllM:IUUOe • • Lad •a.dlaalb* I I I • ............ O.CboiMttr just for you. ._.._ .. _ .... ........................ ... ,.._.._ ...... ... ____ ....... __ ................... -............. ....... ---...... a. .. .......... _ .. --......... ~--__ ......... _ ... ., .......... ..,.., __ amotx flavor or cbarcolMwoiled food. ..In &d." the auodatioa .. ~_,,. .. while barbecue UUCOI are llWdY auarded tea'Otl. chan:o.l u. tieeD the common denominator am~ barbecue and c:lOOk-oft' winnen for years.•• Tbo auodation say1 70 ~t of houaeholdl who betbecue do 10 over • cbarcoal pill. And u1ina ln)matic wood cbipt adds extra flavor. .. Totaina a bandf\al of metquite. oak, hickory. alder or fruitwood chipt over the coab can create a wh01e new dimension of flavor without addina any extra calories -a boon to dieters," the UIOcia- tion uya. Devu uya to be 1ure to soak woods or bcrbl and spices in water before lddina to the coals. A little l'*•loelway.be• Heaa..-~---= -9lelkl lbould be ;laced 6 incbel8ove tbe cmla. To Cook I 'It· iDcb ltCUI kl ,_r Jikilll. UIO the S-10.5 minute per lide nm fOr rare, medium or well-done, l'elpeetively. Turn teveral timel d . coolri -OaicbD (boDe ~?. ~ over a medium-bot ftre, 6 inches above the com for 30-45 minuta until fork tender. -Seafood ket.bl lbould be srilled over a bot fire for 1-l minU1el per aide. (Chan:Oll with mesquite ii especially complemen- tary to teafoOd. and it imparts a wonderful Oavor.) -To~ fiab and teaf'ood from atickial. JiPdy arease the arid with veteWile Oil or non-stick veeetable spray before lrillina. Or wie one of the new pill 1-kefa with a band.le Take a 'trip to Co~ey Island via its famous saucy hot dog Hot dop were served in numer- ous ways durina the Roarina ·20s. often with special uuc:es. The oriainal Coney Island bot d<>s was served without uuce and became so popular that New Y orken even used the name Coney Island as a aeneric term meanina hot dop. But it wasn't lona before enthusiastic vendon bepn addina steamed onions and a muswd sauce as condiments. OLD-F A81110NED CONEY ISLAND SAUCE 1 ,.... p'OGll beef 1 mMlam--. dMppet I &ablespooM eklll pow,_ . No.eeda ........... , . ........ ..,. .. ........ ......... -.... .. ... ......... reel""" ....... I e.,. water ' Temateeaeee, toeoat,lf....,.. Brown ground beef and onions. Drain. Add remainina inaredients except water and the tomato uuce. Mix well. Add Water. Simmer for I hour. Coat with tomato uuce before servina. if desired. Spoon over &rilled franks and top with cheese. Yield: 6 to 8 lervinp. MUITARNWEET PEPPDSALSA 1 e.p red bell liefper, ~ 8111&11-watermelona are alacnr_tq ap In -~keta acrw tbe nation tbJS Hll80D for tbe ftiwt time dae to ..,.rate eftorta by 8aD World ofladlo tbat laanclaed a aatloaal markethlC effort and Peta•eed Co. lac •• MONEY SAVING COUPONS "' ' I ' .. Made with Real 'Fruit Juice aild . Natural Fruit Flavois ' I I . 1 C9f..,.... bell pepper' diced l a_. ,...... con alblets, ................ 1 JalepeM pepper, teeded ud 11ae11 a•,,.. <tt dellred> .,.. C9p ..... , dtopped l prUe eleve, mlwHd 1 ..Weap11• DlJ .... tJle mu~ tar.a 1~1••• ..... .0 i .... ., •• treU Jemoa Jmce 1 .. l ........ cllutro, ~1,.e• Combine all i.ngredientl in bowl. Mix wdl. Chill in refriaerator for 2 boun to blend flavors. Serve as toppina over srfiled franks. \ II .. ' , . • ~ ' I I e I • ' a l , l I , -2 s • • ' ' > • ... • ·-• " it • ~ b y ,. .. la I r • Holiday dessert glorious Red. white, blue color scheme ts berry appropriate • ...._, for about 30 miAutes or untll ltitr ~lllla let fl'te8 enouah t.o bandk. Pour ~ ftllina Melt peanut buUercbipa in ~of evenly over baked layer in ~ double boi&er over bot (not bollin&) Roll chilled doup between 2 water. stir until 1mooth. Cream pieces of wu peper to form an marprine and 1upr in larte mi•er approximate 13 x 9 x •/•-inch thick America loves the ftavors of bowl until liaht and fluffy. Add !IP rectanate. Cut 'h-inch strips across peanu&t and peanut butter. Ameri-and vanilla; beat well. Blend 1n width of dou&h. lay Vi inch apart. ca also adores cheesecake. What melted cbips. Combine nour, bak-lattice fuhion, over pie fillin& in better way. then, to celebrete a true iDJ soda and salt; add to creamed pan•. Bake at 375 deareet for 20 to American holiday than with Yan-mtXture. 2S minutes or until browned; serve kee Doodle Peanui Butter Divide doUlh in half. Press one warm with scoops of vanilla ice Cheesecake? half onto bottom of an unareue<S cream. About 12 servings. You would have to go a Iona way 13 x 9-ioch pan. Bake at 37S ctearees •Broken strips of douah may be to find a creamier, more delicious for 10 minutes; set uide to cool. pieced totether and will mesh Or9n09eo.t DAtlY PtLOTIW9dMeday,June21, 1tll Cl cheesecake than this beauty, decor-Cover and chill remainina douah durin& bakina. atedwith itsJwy4th accents of .....-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ briJht red strawberries and Polka- dot blueberries. And because no one wants to spend holiday time slavina away in 11 hot kitchen, this no-bake dessert i, just made for liberated cooks. To make it, simply pat the no- bake crust into a spriniform pan, then chill it while you whip up a luscious, easy-to-make fillina featurina peanut butter chips. Simply melt the chips into the f tllina and before you know it., the cheesecake is milled and ready for ovemiaht chillina. Decorate with strawberries. blueberries and ad- ditional chips before servina. Peanut Butter Washington Squares is another colorful and delicious dessert for Fourth of July feastina. A chilled dough, featurina the great flavor of peanut butter chips, is farst pre-baked, then cov- ered with cherry pie fillina and lattice strips for final bakina. Served warm with vanilla ice cream, it's a delightful endina for a holiday lunch or dinner. Y AMIEE DOODLE PEANUT BUTTER CBEESECilE ~ np ntter or marprtne, melted 1 ~ C1lpl va.allla wafer cookie crunbt (aboat to cookies) 14 C9pHpr 1 puta1e (8 oanees) cream neete, softened I &abletpoom lemon Jalce ! caps (1!-oance pacu1e> ,eaHt batter dlpt 1 't\ caps (14-oance cu) 1weel- ned CODdeued milk 1 cap M8vy cream, wlalpped Strawberry UJves ud blae- berrles for pnalO Thorou&hly combine melted butter or marprine, cookie crumbs and aupr. Press firmly onto bot- tom of a 9-incb sprinaform pen or 13 x 9-inch rcctanaular pan; chill while preparina ftllina. Beat cream cheese and lemon juice in larae mixer bowl until fluffy; set aside. Combine l 1h cups of the peanut butter chips and condensed milk in medium saucepan; stir constantly over low beat until chips are melted and mixture is smooth. Add to cream cheese mixture; blend well. fold in whipped cream. Pour over crumb crust Cover and chill several houn or overnight Remove side of spring- form pan to serve. Garnish with strawberry halves, blueberries and remaining peanut butter chips. 12 to 14 servinp. PEANUT BU'M'ER WASHINGTON SQUARES I e9p1 (U-ouee packqe) punt Hiter C~pl 't\ np marprtae lcapnaar ieua I &eupoou vullla I C8f1 ...Uted all·pupote Oov 1 i,\ ........ baklq soda ~ teaspoo•wt 1 cu (ti oueet) dlerry pie flll.lq (or uy otller fnlt flavor Fish just looks, tastes expensive BJ NANCY BYAL ..--. ................. This fibuJoua fish is a fooler; it loob and Wtes like it costs lots of time and uouble. Actually tbe fllh marinates in an euy-to-make mixture and bdes with no attention from the cook. Tbc pm.lab i1 euy, too. Just dip the ~of lemon slices in pepriU. lay on top of the baked fish, and top with. •Pl'il of feathery ti'tsh dill . .., For a cool summer meal or buffet, chill the fiJh thorouahly after bakiq and omit the rice. CITRUS BA&ED llED SNAP· PER 11· ... ~.,....,,.... ... frnea ............ ,,,.,, .... .... ...... .................... C!•D•lnte, ...... .. ...... a &eMl .. 1• ae11111·111;.o 1111.111fnlll\! .. •• ............. . ... .. ...... "" 1 ... ... .r:T.. iltora·. P'8ce ftlll io • 12-"' 7Yr by 2-hd ...... dbb. CmnliMorueej\iice......., (P'11n-~) t ~~---~~~~~ Fmmer John 31 oz .• van Camp's Wieners-1 lb. Pork & Beans Ralphs Fresh Potato =~Ooz.l A9 Sa'ft .38 .... ... (. Butterball ey ~~~rA.98 Fresh Fryer Drumsticks orLegs 69 ~.70~rlb.I ~ ,_ ,,/ ... iiiiiiiiiii.-=~ 2 lti.:Pepsi, Coke, Slice or Sprite or Dr Pepper..ach bU Ralphs. Frozen Lemonade ·. 3 9 hQWar ex ruak 12 ca. CIClll ' • , Serre .16 I " ~&Peiper !~!els .59· Sa'9 .22. Fresh Sweet Com. Yellow~ 6 pact-Budweiser or Coon leer ........ 1.191111-.(J-- All ~tores .are Open ... Prices effective June 30 th~ July 6~. 1988 24 -HourS uly 4th; .~988 1 '.• 4 • .' ... " .. '· . ', , r . . I •' • Co1111tyooolrs :IJo induauy. ODeDiM the --will be c.tlai Hofitenei of Aoabeim, Wbo will demouuaee die -. of kitdaea aooliucel ctiariJla ber .. F.uy Uvinl With Sunbeam" preeaatauoe July 7 and 11 at 4 ~m. both da)'I. Jane Niabii of Santa AU, will pment "California Suabi .. at 6:30 p.m. OD /uly 7. Villa Part resident Jan Montell will demonstrate "Difl'emit Ways With Meatloaf." at 2 p.m. July 7, "Ethnic Meatloaf," 6:30 p.m. July 14 and "Beef Cookout" at 2 p.m. Jul_x 17. Quick and Easy Appetiz.en" wiU bl die topic of ...... Plrt n.icleDt Dian• Smn...,.Mair", 1111111n&atioctat 2 p. .. Jtlly .. 1Allil llGllll Ol AMIWm will di-""LoW-alorie ~" ooJulylud 17aa6:JOp.m. HlllllMd and wilt team Jloeer and letty Huebner, COICI Mela. will ...-.t "HOllMIUde Ice CreuD die Old-•ahiooed Way" on July 9 at • p.m:.i and at 6:30 P.~a Peter Finan or :il.ll Oemen1e, will demomlra1e tbe art or1ce ICV.lfture. catyl Oonzalea of HKieDda Hejp11 will t .. Quiet Cook· iDa with ~e .. at l p.m. on July JO and 13. .....,. HeaWa of w ...... ., wW elem oMlatl -a.dw llkiM witll ~ ............ : .. ~ p.m.oaJUly IOud 13. Allo OD July 10 Suta ADa relident lloy PiMo Will aea11 beef ~at6:JO"P.m. , PraauasooJuly 11 at~p.m.and July f3 at 6:30 ~ wiD .. tutc RiCki Older oC SUta ADI. demon-aua~ the .. 30-Millu1e M.i Pro-' ceuor. PuDenon relident Patty Gomez ' will feature "Veratile Family •ti Binhday Cakes." on Tueeday, July J2at4p.m, I Tbe iinponance of pd foods for kids will be bi&blilbted by Mecca ~~-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.Cerpenterand-shidaFtylinolSl Jotepb Hotpjtal in Oran-. dwina "Do I Have To Eat Tbat'f".on Jaly 14 and 17 at• t>·m. both days. CELEBRATING THE INDEPENDENCE OF "THE LAND Of THE. FREE THE HOME OF· THE BRAVE" ~=====toPEN==================::::;========== r-:~-::::==;Q,,,.~----------=--~:-----=:--:-----i ~egularHoo~ CALIFORNIA SW~ET JUICY .--.e . ........ es / Meat Dept. Savings ... C\oS8 8~ pr1' lidSP ~ice OIY "°"' .)fit " 1• 12-0Z Frin.'s .. . .. M11sta1~ Frozen Food Favorites Canned Ham -~ .~s7" Potatoes :r~~O.W•LES . »0Zs1 45 Ground Beef P.atties ~~~ w.~• Fried Chicken ~ »Ols239 Pork Spareribs = l.9s1 29 Cream Pies ~ · ,~s1 39 Bonetess Ham :::4,nl(( la 11" ·Waffles =':~ •.ol 79¢ . Boneless Turkey ~~D~ 1a~1 49 ·SlJnny .. Delight ~o:.0::_: ~ "~;75~ Rib Steak ..,~£>C> ~'239 .Hawaiian. Punch lllD . ,~79' Halibut Steaks ::,. -r--:. •3~ Frujt Juicee =~.~ ,~'289 . . " . Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials 10-VARJETIES LAY'S OR RUFFlE'S ·Potato ·.Chips Garden Fresh Produce Onion's wm~·rr~MD Bellpeppers ~,~WGIMDH Potatoes u~ ~·, .,llOll · t ~ PINCaaakw .... ··•199 . ==~ 4«POT .. "Hand Di~ Chocolates" will be the topic ·of Ontario resident Marso HaJ.aren•s praentation at 4 p.m. on July IS, and Jim Graver of Miuion V"IC,jo will demonltftte "How To Mab Homemade Wine" at l p.m. July 16. At 4 p.m., Leslie Eckerlina or Tustin will praent ~mtt Slim-Stayina Trim." The Gourmet Oal1ery ii located ~t to the Home Artl and CiaftJ Buildi For additi::-.i information, call 751-FAIR. ... Hints help ease summer entertaining ~ NEW YORK (AP)-Summer is a splendid time to lerVe meals hued OD fresh fruits and veaetables. ' Sue Smith, home economist for Black A Decker Household Prod- UCU. uya cold IOUPI are easy and refreshina for summer lunches or dinners. Fruit IOUJ>I can include peach, blueberry, raspberry or plum, and minted cantafoupe -and honeydew IOUP can be lerVed for deuert. You can allO serve individual mo\llle or aberberu in hollowed-out lemon or Ol"aDICpeels. Oioote from the belt of sum-mer's off'eriap.. Some examples: stuffed tomatoes, pzpKbo with fresh melon, plum sorbet, peach mouue and cherry ft.an. Ute prden herbs everywhere - in your cookina. on the pill and to pmisb food and ~ u decorations. Try different com- binations -~ poached in syrup with bud, for example. Cover bowls of fresh veaetables •i or fruit with a damp towel until the ' last minute -then mill with wata every 30 minutes to keep foods fresh. Keep plenty of beveraaes on ice in wuhtubs, coolers or a wheel- barrow. Serve beverqes in colored acrylic a1aues with cruJbed ice. Inexpensive wicker trays will make lap dinina m~ comfortable. Ute candJes when entettainina in the everun,. You can alto bana small lanterns or ltrina am.all white CllriJtmu liabts from low tree branches. Smith U)'1 formal flowers don•t last well m the beat, and she •UIPU uaina flowers from the prden or potted plants. Malabar Hom blower ~uthor of .. Do-Ahead Din.ina.. \a ne Globe ~equot Press) uses platten of fresh fruits or vqetables for dramatic centerpieces. She ·~ fat bunches of &esh herbs, a mix of lavender and roeemary, saae and buil, with tn.ilina tendrih of tamaon. .. Not only are thae bouquets beautifW to behold, their 1Cent is subtle and intJiau.ina. .. she uya. FISH ••• rn.acs water, oil and dill. Pour half the mixture into fish cavity and re-mainina mixture over fish. Cover; marinate aevera1 boun or overniabt in the refriterator, IPOOnina marinade over the ftsh aeveral times. Drain fish, reservina marinade. Return fish to bakina diJb. Cover with foil and bUe in a 3S()..dearee oven for 45 to 50 minutes or until flab jUll flakes with a fork, bru.shina once with marinade. Ute 2 lar)!t spatulas to transfer fish to a 1etV1na planer. Spoon rice ·to one aide. Heat raa ~marinade and Piii with fish. Dip edeet of lemon slices in PIPrib; tay Oft top of the biked fllli. Oarnisb with fiah dill, if desireil. Maka 4 or S tervinp. J Layered black bean dlp on jlcama a real crowd pleaser llM:k leu Dip Oil chili-tipped j~ 11icee it sure to be a summer ?pwd ..... Thia dip ii a refrelh. U. udao llwnative. 'For a quick at.a.rt. ute canned ~ jut mull or pune and llMOD well. Simply spread the belM in a thick layer on a plat1er ud top with colorf\al, flavorful ~ Then ICOOp thil tasty DICbo mix onto low-Qlorie jic:ama iUcel. Here ii the recipe &Om the lune iaeue of Suuet mapzioe. LAYDl:D BLACK BEAN DIP tTllcetMeea.CMneiJ~1pp1• i...o ...... m1,.111 ~ ....... ~ ....... l eu (Ii taeel) Madl Mua, .,.... (NMn• ¥. c., ...... ) o-ae. •• ~.nct,.f.U.... l at (f ewa) mell•ell Jacll dMM l ~small red ... yellow beU ,.,,., (er I ef el~er), ....................... IJa e., .... , dleed pea oalOll Seu cream Olaatn ....... Jlcama ...,,.,_, redpe f0Uow1 In an 8-to I ()..inch fryina pan over medium beat, stir bacon, onion and chili powder until bacon is crisp, 8 to 10 minutes. Drain off and d.iard faL Let cool. Pinotnoir goes with everything BJ lllDE DUNNE MIC' 5 ........... The posh 1ettina and stylish French/California cookina at Owiterelle, the restaurant within the new Sterlina Hotel in Sacramen- to, hep for a wine of equally captivatina depth, complexity and refinement That may explain why the waiter recommended the 1984 Los Camcros Napa Vall9 Pinot Noir from Boucbaine Vtoeyards, in Northern California (SlO on the wine list; S I I . SO the sugested retai I price). Boucbaine's fint Pinot Noir won a aold medal at the American WtDe COmpetition sponsored by the In- ternational Wine Review. It shows why the Loa Cameros rqion around the nonhern edae of San Pablo Bay ia producina the most etcitina and consistently reliable Pinot Noir in the state. It's a wine layered with aromas and Davon -cherries, berries, currants. holiday spices, mush· rooms (chanterelles, probably). even a touch ofleather1 all coursina acrou the palate witn a texture, ailken and pliable. It went with everythina -the sweetly Oavored fish in the fruity black~t sauce, the routed quail &lazed with Dijon mul1ard ud stiaff'ed with veal mousae, the medallions of sauteed Provimi veal with cbanterella in a deep, dark Madeira sauce, the china, the muaic, birds in the trees outside. It 1*kJ 13 percent alcohol and a~t l 7 months in oak. but while rich and beady, it's also elcpnt and harmonious. Bouchaine occupies a renovated Napa win~ previously owned by Beriaaer Vineyards. It has had aeveral winemaken since it was founded in December 1980, yet bas atuck to its oriainal aoal of produc-int intente Buraundian wines with minimum bandlina and inter- fereoQe. Pork chops saucy with peanut butter ............. 0 ....... Talk about &stJ The Oavotful peanut buuer sauce cooks in just 30 tee:ODdl. POU CBOPS WlTB PBAHUT SAUCE I tlbhilf IW cut .. ell ........... nt~-bd tllk*( ..... 11...-tetal) ,. elf clllet• ..... ............... , ..... . .,_ ...... ......, .... ............. ~ ~ ............. .. ................... l'lthll'••• ~.,, ......... Prd mt a Jarte umet OYCI' me. dim t ... blAt: ldd oil. Add dtopt to Tldlll; ..... beet '° mediwn.. o.t 1-... Tun dllopJ over. Co* J to I ...... more or until ...... ---piat. llaow ...... lkiUlt; ~to.., .... Drala ... in.... . ,. ...... la .. eldDTt ... ..... broda. ..... .... • ..... .... jaiae. llltiC ..,...... .......... Calk ... .. ....... ......... llO- ........... a .... = ___ ..,.._ ... ....... • ..... 2 .. ' In a ......, bowl, c:oenely muh beans; ltit in merved liquid and blcon miAture. Sprad mixture into an 1-incb diameter round on a larie planet and top evently with auacamole. Sprinkle auacamole with cheete, then bell peppen and peen onion. GamiJb with a Sp()9nfW of IOUf cram and cilantro sprip. Tuck jicama dippen; chili end out, around edle of beans. Scoop beans ODIO dippcn IO cat. Serves 6 to I. 0Medlllt= Cut J iule ripe avocado in half; pit and ICOOP out =· c.o.nety mash with. fork, 'aa2tablapooa,slemonjuiQe; 1 f'rcab jalapeno chili. stemmed, seeded and miftCCd: and salt and pepper to Wte. Jleama ..,,.-.: Peel and rime about 1 oouad jicam.a; cut into y,. incb thick llices. then cut crouwite into thirdl. Dip tip of each piece in chill powder. CAUPOWIA WllOl 1 ., ... y ...... ~ FAMllVPAO< 69 l/eal CAUfO .. IA ~ .. Ya ..... -w'" FRESH CHICKEN LIL • FRESH 79 FAMll V ~ CHICl<EN La •• 8-0i. Pkg Pork Sausage FARMER JOHN LINKS................ EA .69 Frozen, o.frosted Danish PORK SPARERIBS .. . ....... LB. 2.69 c ........ llUlll'HAST R~~O LIL 1.89 frffh Aloskon HALIBUT FILLETS .la. 4A9 LB. .... ..... 32 oz GlASS 18 To 20-Ct 9 To 10.0z SOLO PLASTIC CUPS CATSU• .99 .89 •o• ,,.. LOl .. ••aoa. THIO< CUT I 77 BEEF ROUND LIL • H~ R9g ex Hot ITALIAN SAUSAGE. LI 2.29 tt =--~~ : 6 5 OZ VAA 39 f J ,.._ -_. FINAl PRICE . . Bumbl• S.. 6 5 Oz In Wot~ CHUNK LIGHT TUNA .... .... . . .7'J RGI PEACHES c ~~~~ gNIONS ......................... 8UN •• 2S COLORFUL 6-INCH MUMS ......... . 3 99 lndovtdvolly W~ u. e BRACH'S CANDIES ll 1.29 _ ___,C~u!•~·~·~·~·~z~:]•~·~·~·!·~•LJ C •••• •• ••• •••••• ) --C •• •& unmu•w· ) .... llAll1Lll & MY"FI JAPANlSI IG()Pt.ANT .. llAKIKU TlalYAKI •O•I _. _. -- ~· -:-.,. .,, . . .. 74UAll1' ICI a .. T ASSOUED noz 10mes 2.29 LB .79 IOZ Pt<G I 99 SEASONED SEAWEED • '· --SPALDING 7.99 1.7S.lit•. 90 Proof POPOV VODKA ......... .... . ..... 'J .M I• 1 ·0vnc• Noodles HARIMA ITO SOMEN Chablis ~ Whit• G<~ FRANZIA 5-llTER BOX WINE ............................ " 1 9-0unc• s.oson."9 MISHIMA NORIKUOMI 32-0Z ASSOUED 3().()i An'f Voroety ~ ALEX POTATO SALAD......... £A. 1.69 Gold.o 102 SAL.AME p-iUB ....... : ........... , •• EA. 2A9 • • ...... llATIClllAL ••••wan ~..,_--..... -.-.--="°'()It FIN«$ IJ.OZ.I 29 ... -.---• ... AL ..a e ' f 1.'JS 2.25 2 Oz S.-2• 8offl. BACTINE ANTISEPTIC ' 0unc. SPf 2 "' ' COPPERTONE LOTION OR Oil (t11r1m t n .. , • 1 r1111)1--~~ •••o~•• ___ __, ........ ·~iz 1.39 12-01 Juq Red Of Gold Ponion Fruit .. HAWAIIAN PUNCH • C>tl 1oy 211-0z , 2 Podl PEPPERONI PIZZAS ............. 2.'19 -..n•s IOZ '9(G, • •••am 1.M 1.29 .2.M ... Main cliah salads ideal fare fol' summer's lighter menus · Mak.Hbeld sat.ds are ideal drellina to blend and hi&hliaht protein, the beans provi•e warm weather a.re that can be flavors.~ provide coot. simple utiafyina flavor and texture. Tou atjoyed indoora, in the back yard or IWlllDOI' eauna. the colorful salad with a favorile at tbe beach. Trylbefollowinamaindilhsalad bottled Italian dressina and chill The popularity of main dish recipes, new from The Quaker tborouably to allow flavon to Udl idectt summer's trend Kitcben1, to add fresh a~I to blend. toward liabter, fresher. less com· menus. Perfect for li&ht lunches or Curried Barley Chicken Salld plicated meals. Some of the best suppers, they pack easily for pie· combines traditional curry condi· salldl beain with chanae-of·pece nics. too. ments -peanuts. apple, peep pa.ins, which provide the impon· Two-Bean Rice Salad teams rice onions and raisins -with Mrley ant complex carbohydrates nutri· and crunchy veaetables with conve· ud chicken for a refruhina WU1J'· tionilll recommend. Tossed with a nient canned kidney beans and weather entree. The tanaY dla&i111 variety of VC1ttables and a lively pork and beans. Hi&b in fiber and blends yosurt. curry powder, honey -,,.--......-~------___:.---------------------------------------------..., and lime ju.ice for a briaht, fmh flavor. SALE TOOAV THAU SAT. JV\. V 2nO QUANTITY RIGHTS AESER\1£0 299 Our Regular 3 99 ea Nasal deconoestant 24 Tablets or 20 Capsules CUTIER INSECT REPELLEHT 1~?.c, -----'" . .._ ... CVS ASPIRJN TABLETS 2~~. 225 count Butfereo or 100 count Enteroc Coated COMPARE TO Ecolnn 0' Bulfenn at !> 19-8 79 PRESUN SUNSCREEN 4~!. Our Regular 6 29-6 89 SCOPE MOUTHWASH 399 Our Regular 4 99 4() ou nee regular or pepperm1n1 2~. Our Regular 4 19 ea EKS SALON SELECTIVES ~ Pt .• 1.59 ~t~-"' -1.00 '*~~~~ST a 5 9 Our Regular 2 19-2 49 15 oz Shampoo or Cond . 4 oz · 8 oz Gel Mousse Spritz or Hair Spray all types By Helene Curtis SOLARCAJNE SUNBURN CARE 2!~CE Our Regular 3 99-4 23 Our Regular 3 59-4 39 Blush. Powdet. Concealer or 1 ounce L1Qu1d Make· Up assorted sh~ Pl.ASTIC CUPS OR PAPER PLATES 77¢ Our Regular 99'·1 29 PLAYTEX TAMPONS 333 Our Regular 3 99 28 count all lypes PLANTERS SNACKS 7l!c, Our Regular 1 09 ea SENIOR ClllZENS 10%S#llNGS •N.1 ,...,. -·- COKE. DtET COKE OR SPRITE 1~~. 6 pack. 12 ounce cal'\9 LADIES CANVAS STRAP SANDALS 4ss Our Regular 2 69-3 29 6 oz Spray 4 oz Pump 4 ounce. SPF 1 15 •29 •39 or for kids SPF •29 4 ounce 011, SPF •2 4 ounce Aloe Vera Gel or 20 • 16 ounce capacity ptastic 5 ounce • 7 5 ounce Cheez Assorted sizes & colors 1 oz Cream or Stick. regular or 9VergrMn tcent or Lotion, SPF 114 3 ounce. First Aid Spray cups or 100 • 9 1ncn wn1t• Balls or Curls Corn Chips Sotrv no '•·n<"f<'tt.t 2 ounce Facial SPF #15 Ne1tea Tea Mix N11ur11 lemon flavor & tUQ•• mekes 10 quana Our Reguler 2 911 199 ~';:~~ Butter Cookies 129 Our ~ul•• 2 19 Welch's &rape Jelly 32ounu Our ~"''' 1 99 ........ lletcllup 32 ounce. eq_... Our AegWr 1 51 ••. 88¢ 99¢ BAN ANTl-PERSPIRANT 2ss 488 VALUE 2 5 oz. Roll-On. all typea FREE I COUNT NUPRIN paper platea ~IVERSARY SPEclAI $ NEUTROGENA YARDLEY HEFTY SKIN CARE SOAP CINCH SAK 4?HO~CE ~1100 3~3 Our Aeg\11ar e-.199 Our Regular 118" • 449 VALUE 0 75 oz Eye Cream or 4 25 oz .• aloe. oatmeat, 30 tall kttcnen 4 oz Facial Mo•atunzer baby°' engh•n la¥tndef. o•~•oe bags or Pretzel Twists ENTER OUR SUMMER 5wEEPsTAKEs ~-PllZEJ 1,..up •I I llYI •EA• ,..,,..,.,4 ~~r;r..~·~······· 77¢ ....., ... ~_. FREE 10 COUNT BOX ROLAIDS ANTACID TABLETS 24~ Our Regular 318 150 count. regutM or IC!Nr"""' MAX FACTOR GILLETTE MICROTRAC NAIL ENAMEL 77¢ SAVE 1.00 11~ Our Regu!11 1 07 BONUSPAC!S: Out Aegulac 2 75 Al80ft9d eNOel HUNTINGTON llACH lOM'llnaM. 5 Poi!'!l!t ...... t•1-8 MM\ll M9Mctll!l;d (NIP! To T~ '°911 M7~ FOUNTAIN~Y COtMt Of 8t~huf$1 SI & en., A!le lNf•I 0 Luc•y II ' TWO-BEAN RICE SALAD I e9t9 eMkM rtce lll1•eecu~ ... --. ......... ,..... l ll ••e• eu an or Ua't relll ~ ............... ................ l Mi ftf1 aUeM carnta l Mi C8PI cMpped neelHer Mi np ltallu ..... Vealac i tablespoou cMt»Ped srea OlllOD 1Ji &ealpooD pepPet Combine all ingredients; mix lightly. Chill 2 hours or overnight; toss before serving. Serve over lettuce leaves, if desired. Makes 8 1 • cup servings. CURRIED BARLEY CHICKEN SALAD ~ cap med.lam pearlff INlrley S caps water ~ lealpoH ult (opdoul) '4 -poud boneles1, 1ktales1 cllalcte1 breast, cooked, allaredcled ~ esp cMpped apple ~ c., •pped peu1t1 '4 cap sliced IJ'ffll OUODI '4 cap rablu 1 np platn yoprt l tablespoou MNley l teaapoou CVI')' powder 1 tablespoon lime juce Brina water to a boil; stir in barley and 114 teaspoon salt. Reduce heat. Cover; simmer SO to 60 minutes or until tender, stirrina occasionally. Drain; cool. Transfer to large bowl; add chicken, apple, peanuts, peen on- ions and raisins; mix llghtly. Com- bine remainin' ingredients. Pour over barley mixture; toss. Cover; chill at least 2 hours. Toss before serving. Makes 4 I-cup seTVlnp. Microwave timing now accurate NEW YORK (AP)-The micro. wave has become part of the American way oflife. However, using the microwave can largely be a matter of auesswoik, where a few minutes means the difference between din· ner and food that looks and tastes like bricks. Oven size, wattage and storage methods of packaged frozen foods have an effect on tbe accurate time needed to prepare foods in the microwave. "Despite clear pack.qe instruc- tions, and selection of quality food 1naredients, dinner cot.recs won't cook evenly if the microwave time is off only 30 or 45 seconds," says Colleen Foster, marlteuna. 3M Packqin1 Systems Division. "Poor timina in the mjcrowave oven can mean lukewarm meat or fish and overcooked vcsetablcs. resulting in a dissatisfied cus. tomer," she says. To help overcome this problem, the 3M company has developed a doneness indicator for use on packaged microwave food prod· ucts. The doneness indicator is part of a line of products o~ly developed by 3M to aid 10 the preservation and transportation of temperature-sensitive vaccines. The MonitorMarlc Microwave Doneness lndicatorisa l·inch strip of tape, blue at both ends and white in the middle. It is placed on oontaincn of frozen dinner entren and packaaed frozen foods. When the strip turns all blue, wbicb can be spotted by the consumer by lookina throuab the microwavo, the frozen foods are cooked and ready to com~ from the oven. .. We believe · the MonitorMark Doneness Indicator does tor quality and taste what the mi~ve oven did for speed and eftldetacy:• Foster sai"• · "It's the fint atep toward •microwave-perfect• food.• The indicator ii med on the Armour Dinner Clutics line or food producta. 3M aays it is WOtkina with other manufacturers to cu. tomize the indicaton for their food products. .. As microwave penetration and ... of microwaveable fOodt m- Cftele, Pl'Oclucta IUCb u our done- .. indicator will be lft Unlllftl'Wlt lddition10food~ .... .., •)". .. Our e1tim1te1 1DC1icate macrowavc ovaM will be in 70to 90 pen:at o( boulebOlds by tbe 1990a." • e " IC 11 0 d i-n y I• • y b •• d l. D ll l; :r • I, n c 0 I d I· I· ,r r; c - a ... s 5 I t -... s [ r • f ) l J l l ' t ' • . r ~ I I t r : ) : ~Non-smoker-raises stink , D£AR. ANN LANDERS: I wu recently in the hospital for two weeks I in a semi-private room. Until the last fe:w days my roommates were fine. ; Suddenly the holpital had an 1.1n11sual number or admissions and I was ajven two smokers as roommates. ·They said they tty to match smokers t and non..smokers when they can but 1 t doesn't always work out. My first roommate was a heavy smoker and a compulsive talker. The second was a real nut. He amved at 7 p.m.1 scheduled for a lung removal the sollowina momina. (Cancer, of counc.) The man smoked continu- ' ously from the time he amved until be went into the operating room. t 1 was a smoker for 50 years and never realized how offensive smoking can be to others until I quit. It Sttms very unfair thal non-smokers must be forced to inhale smoke that could endanJCr their lives. I believe if enough non-smokers raised a serious stink they would have their way. Do you qrce? -DETOURED FROM TOBACCO ROAD. DEAR DETOUR: It doesn't always wort ibt way. Jt Illa• been proven lbt 1motlq can be u allcUctloa, and dliOle folks wa.o are laooked an ID tlae same clut wltla alcolaoUet ud drv1 abtlRn. Accon11D1 to Time magadne, %8 percnt Of American adtalts DOW -------------. n• areat.er lil•IDIJlatloe. Meuwlllle te ,.,...... ...... bJ ....., A11 luDEIS amoke, •owa from 31 percat 30 yean •I•· B•t nee llloH wllo wffld lib ta ... , wuc .. ,. It Deir way aDd DOt be p.....ved ~ laWI. fte 1moke", IMwever, are fladln1 tUt pUllc aeatlmnt ud lepl eaalet are makbl& It more dllflcalt. Forty- two alas.ts uve pated lawa reatrlc· tta1 1moklq bl pebUc places. UtaJI prola1bltl d&aretie acll OD btllboardl. Travelers la Calllonla cmot smoke on plafft, IHaaes or trala1. More tllaa h1f Uae compUJea la America uve restricted 1mokia1 • De Job. Not 1motln1 may Mve IDOb appeal ud be a 1ta...,.iadlcator. Doaalcl Ganaer, an npert la liability law at SCHltllena Dllaota UalvenUy, aay1 tlaat l5 perceal of wlllte.c:ollar workers 1moke, compared wltll 50 pereeat of bl.e-collar worters. Noa-1moken are btcreula1 ID Hmber aa well 11 lrritabWty. In time, I believe we ear11ed non· 1moken are rotas to force maay more smoke.rs to q.SI, lllde or saffer Rtrac. Greeley: .. A dpMte llu a fin oa OM t:M ud a fool • IM •tliler." ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: How's this for an arsument to tea.ch sex education in the schools, and perhaps m the tqislaturc as well? The follow· inaap~ in lhe El Paso paper. I'm cncJos10s i& so you can see that I am not mak.ina it up. LEGISLATOR DOUBTS RAPE IMPREGNATES H,.t.RRJSBURO, Pl. -The Lea1~ larure's chief abortion foe. Re-- publican Rep. Stephen . F~ind. ~Id the odds of a rape v1Ct1m gettl'!f. prqnant are "one m several million ' because the t.r1uma produces a cer- tain secrerion that kills {Perm. "That is non~nsc," said Dr. Rich- ard Depp of Thomas Jefferson Uni- versity in Philadelphia. Freind said chat he will produce medical documentation in about 1 week. I can hardly wait. Cim to com- ment? -HOLDING MY SIDES IN EL PASO. DEAR HOLDING: S.,. Fret.I oaot to try Mt laud at ftcU.. Pleue keep me pos~. Uk ••oalcl come •P wttla HJ 1tartlla1 sclatlflc cU1coveries, I'd lib to bow. 'n•rMa7,Juest AJllES (March 21-April 19): Individual who "pulls slrinas.. takes no------------- throu&h "powers of persuasion." Domestic adjustment takes place. security is enhanced, long-range p~~pcctS clarified. Financial picture brighter than ongmally anticipated. tjce, realizes you de- serve more than passing attention. s Focus on power, YONEY authority, intensity, ability to meet dead-0MARR line. You'll reach Iii more people. •••••••iiililiiiiil• TAURUS(April 2~May 20): Fresh approach brings you into contact with intellectual in~ividuals who inspire and can help pro~~tc your special interests. Stress 1ndepcndenc~. creat1v1ty. willingness to face bold truth. GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Follow hunch. know that individual who has "held back" with money is now ready to 0 confess." Stress persistence, dig deep. make others know you arc not without allies. Cancer native in picture. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Diversify, make in- quiries, realize that legal agreement can be enlarged. revised and could lead to prestige.journey. Check papers: including passport. You'll add to wardrobe. Gcmm1 involved. . LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22): You're one step ahead of "' c.ompetition -know 1t, be confident. stick to your own style. You'llgct contract offer. but wait and sec and realize something much better is "on the way." Scorpio plays roie. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22): Fina1 papers are drawn m connection with sale or purchase -could include property. major household nem Scenario h1ghlighlS change. travel. variety, gain through wnnen word. Saai&tanus featured. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You get what you want Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH •AKQ65 \J A 10 3 0 '4 •A I 3 WF.ST EAST • '' • J 10. l \J tl61 \J 74 CHARLES GOREii SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Forces are scattered. people ••in Cbaf1C" chang~ their ~lan.s. Kee'? your .own options open, be m touch w1th relative in transn. You 11 be provided with privileged information and secrel data. SAGJ'M' A.RllJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Spotlight on income potential. se<:urity. strong love relationship. You'll have more responsibility and chance to hit financial jackpot. Older man will wortc for your benefit. Capricorn involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Restncuons arc removed, you have chance to mccl people and go places and impnnt style. Your. personal motto shout~ read. "Don·a stop now." Long-<11stancc call leads to prestige and publication. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Fcb. 18): An,swer lo qunuon 1~: "Be direct. get to heart ofma~ters. don t be afraid oflovc. Scenario highli&hts clandestine: maneuver. secrets, glam- or intriaue. Gif\ received, adding to yo ur apparel. ' PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Family member says, "You'll be back on track and stop brooding." Focus on intuition, direcuon, purpose. dedication. W\sh will be transformed into profitable enterpnsc. Anes figures prominently. IF JUNE 3t IS YOUR BIRTRDA Y current cycle emphasizes sentiment: c~t1v1ty. ~u.sineSS<a~r act1v1- ty. marital status. poss1b1hty ofad~mon to family. Major domestic adjustment takes place in July. could include actual change of residence and will affect partnership or plans involvi ng marriage. Gemini. Sag1ttanus people P!ay important roles in your life. You have natural executive ability, work well under pressure. arc touJh but advocate fair play. September memorable for you 1n 1988. tricks. An 11th would come from a diamond Nff, and the obvious place to dcYelop a 12th wu in the spade suit. Since declarer could CJlpecl a 4- 2 trump break, he could not afford to extract all tbe trumps before he had Kt up a long spade. To extricate himJd.f from this dilemma. declarer round a most elepnt solution. O QJIO 0 9753 • " 1• 6 4 • J ' 7 SOUTH • 7 3 IV K Q J 5 0 Altll • Q 51 3 major-suit fit, so much so that that trump boldln1 has become known in the trade u a Moysian fit. This band wouJd have warmed the cockles of his heart. The fint trick was won in hand with the kins or diamonds, and at trick two declarer ducked a spade! East won the trick cheaply, but de- clarer wu in control. He won the club return with the ace, cashed the ace of diamonds and ruffed a dia- mond with the ten. After drawina trumps, be reverted to spades, and the contract was secure once both defcndcn followed to the second spade. The biddina: ScMldl Wnt 1 IV Paa 2NT Pue ,0 .... .... .. .. N~ l. 3 IV 6 1V Openina lead: Queen of O The late Sonny Moyse wu an avid proponent of the power or a 4- Once Nonh showed that bis jump ahift wu based on heart suppon, South correc:tJy judaed that bi& a · c:ellent f our-caril holdina wu at least the equivalent of a five-card suit. He abowed a better-than-mini- mum band with his diamoad cuc- bid, and Nonb wuted no time in aettins to slam. \ Alter the lead of the queen\of diamonds, declarer bad 10 fast Dcdarer chose an excellent line or play. He would be defeated only if diamonds broke ~I . or if either major suit split 5-1. .... 1' TV L1~ flNG~ ~ j &:oo I S:3o j 1:00 j 7:30 I a:oo j s:30 j s:oo j 9:30 j 10:00 I 10:30 j 11 :oo j 11 :30 I ...... ..... ..... ~ W\19glllf ........ D :_ :: '""" z.. w..w11 .~~ ~~~ Low ~· Complete t•vlelon llatlnge ln Sunday'• TV Piiot. They're made for each other Our child returned home last week with good news. He had finally found the perfect partner with whom he wants to spend the rest ofh1s life We were stanled at firsL It seemed so sudden. "Not really.'' he said. "I've bttn looking for a lon.J time." "Where is she ·wt asked. "In the dnveway .. We rushed out to sec the future mother of our pandchtldrcn The object of has passion was a 1984 two- scater sports car, with a sucker still in the window that read SI 8,000. ..She·s too good for you." 1 said flatly. "1got1t all figured out," he smiled ''I'll work two ~obs and have two paychecks c.ommg in. She's ex- pensive, Mom, but she's worth 11:· .. But what do you know about her?" "She's only lived with two other auys. and they traded up ... ''l was always hoping you'd find L.M. Bovo Willpower needed for DJarriages ... r:. E1u ~ •· BOIBECI t-z someone .. -New',.. he interrupted .. I knew you'd say that I look at 11 1h1s wa} We have no great c:itpectat1ons about one another. I've owned other cars too. We're both going in with our e~es open." "I suppose there 1s nothing w~ can ACROSS 1 Abrupt 6 ~ldent 10 Rhymester 14 AuttlOf John - 15 Fattier Arab 16 Turtclsl'I VIP 17 Iterate 18 Hit glancingly 20 Youngster 21 RepetltlOf\ 23 Summons 24 Lyric poem 26 Sufferers 28 L.IQuld no.se 30 Parrot 31 Year's record 32 Instrument 38 Fl .. 37 Partlctpate 38 Vefliel4t 62 Lariat 63 Bu11dlng parts 64 Reports 65 Oregon city DOWN 1 Nature 2 Kojak s nickname 3 Nova Scotian Of Bostonian 4 Penod 5 Weetciy fac- tory 81Cpell9e 6 Dlssipat~ 7 Rose s swain 8 S1aft 9 Rlghttul 10 Enchant t 1 Friendstup 12 M0<e mature 13 Garment 19 Pape!" currency 22 Poetic poeoe 25 Links OP 26 Joms sa) to chan~ your mind. It's not that we don ·1 want vou to settle down w1th th1scar. wc'rcJ.USt asking you towa1ta while " .. 1 won't fttl an) d1tTcrcnt in a ynr than I fttl now.-he said A.sour son got into the car &nd sped awa~. m) husband put his arm around m)' shoulder .. I know you're disappointed. but ifs his life. He bas to find his o wn way and make hls own m1St.1Jces. That's wh.a1 wt taught htm to do. Frankly. r think the payments will outlast her. but that's his problem If I w~ younger I'd probabl) do the same thing. .. It won't work. She's too short for him. but who llSlens to a mother? What's needed most to make a good marria&e? The writer A. J. Cronin said loyalty. He thought infi.ddity was the most dangerous offense. Some put companionship at the top. Others say finanClal secunty Our Love and War man credjts one other thing foremost: the wish 10 make it work. Countless couples with large cause for brukup set aside such for no better reason than that the> ----------------------------------------, want the marriqc more than they 39 Navy ammo 42 -AmerlCll 4• Unpleased 45 Fun times 48 MU91c grooi> 49 Fabric 50 Ber11n'1 - den Linden 51 F1~t..OUS 52 Snout 27 Roman deity 28 Lope e O travelers 37 Margin 40 Mom and pop 41 -no~ 48 Coral reef 49 Rower Thank you for giving. Again and tlgain. 11¥1 ILOOD, ...... + == ._ __________ _. want the divorce. It's a matter of historical record that Queen Victoria never glanced back at the whereabouts of the chair before she sat down. That wasn't her ·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil job. Riaht-handed people hve an aver- • of ctlht months lonau than lcft- h.anded pcopk. New rcsearcb so sugtSts. ls that enouah ofa differcncc to be si&tuficant? Doubt at. VENETIAN GONDOLAS OlD WORLD ROMANCE Mt.OAT ~t l:>ISktts w /ch.lmp.agne & ro'6. IR'VINE COAST CHARTERS 675-4704 This Space Can Be Yours-For~ lnfoqpattoo Call Mendore WEDDINGS AT S~A PllOfESSIONAl. fllANNING Aboard luxury Ya<ht. Al setYliCtS atr~~ IRVINE COAST CHARTERS 615-4704 . The ~mOQS Bermuda Trianak is one of the safest aras in an of ()CICl.J)dom. A Ptnn State plc)list named Robert f . Schmalz is quo.ted as sayina tbaL In all the teas WO~ Is ship& a year di.appear -one wr per I~ mill~ Ill~ miles. Even tbOUlb t.be TnaQllC ll excm.tinaly 1WdJ uav~ its shit> disawcaranceooun1 it nowbcft ~ ly &hat bi&b- Petf\lmecom~ have used rnc1' his1oricaUy u their •noses" to jodlc tea\ts. 8\lt in tilC't. 1'0cnta bavt tfie bettctleftK of andl. Of all~ In all ethnic poup1. l..aJest 1Cienu6c tats pro~\hat.. 55 09Yof - 58 Shun· archaJc 60 Plaid stllrt 61Isac'•90n 29 Oistoin 30 UI< buddy 32 EquiM sound 33 Lasting etQht years 3A Toe part 35 Gulls fellow 42 MOl'1g~ •3 Fi"h Of Madison •5 -oe Janeiro 46 Shudder 47 P~lo 51 Corrode 53 Smell· autf 54 Rafter 58 Crew 5 7 Compass pt 59 Through .. byBH Keene DI nm BLSACBSae by Steve Moore "See, PJ? Never drink and drive.· llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE llltNACB "Tired from work? You re kidding!" AND W~EN T~E'< ASK '<OU w~v '(OU CLIMBED TMIS MOUNTAIN. JUST SA'<. "BECAUSE IT WAS TMERE ! 11 TUllBLEWBEDS feff.ft{ l'M ~' 04t~ I H.A&?1"01l~ VP' fVIY Ra:>M ! J I DRABBLE aoesmaoea 1 j I. .. r by Hank Ketcham by Charles M. Schulz WELL, IF N080DV ASKS. NOBODV ASKS .. 6·lf by Tom K. Ryan "'fffAl\lt{S_. M'P le ~~IER IFMV~~t.P~f'41S 1-rmR '°x_..._~ ...... BLOOll COUllTY r 6'0111111,.,,,,, 11Mr1Nt (At~ ~S'ID'NDI WflllOllO 0 MIO ~ 10 Jll!J(AW1t ... 6/flW' tJWJr.A1)~ ¥M'Y. • / GAMIN AND PATCHES t CAN'T TELL CAtJtJED LAU6~ ~REAL L.AUG~ JPOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~"TFIS_tt:Jr" co;& f't:> QcOD. iAE ~e. ~ASPUTlNn: SHOE JUDGE PARKER WHAi 00 ~ FEEk. 15 by Addison CANt.JEl> LAU6~TER ALWAYS E.Nt>S IN TIM£ RJR ''°'E ~err Cb-N~E.D LAL.k'.;HTEJ2 10 BEGf N by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelty by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk I M051' A'f~fl VE ASOtrf <xX> ~ LEAS'f AffAACflVE ~ .... --r-----'J • r 1 I f)o-----~. l!!i~~~~~:31~~~·---~ DOOl'fB8BURY Fat 6tN!5MBI Ul'6 POPPY, 7b1IKTOI MN IJll'-1Nl!ll6M'45 H6JOWT6~~-W.:, . • 9U.t. ~ AND l<JNl!5.t Ml I lftLS'T at .•. / llCCl!PT! 1¥JECrf • --/ ''" by Garry Trudeau .................. "' .. '"Mllt'•lie __ ......... .. ,..., _....._ ... ... ""1'*"'1" ............. .. ........... ._ __ ... -......-............ . fj•6 ttrlj -lj ....... _. ...... ... .,. ... 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J~ ,n 1-J l!.f t;a i g I I~ S "''< . _, r(I . 1 1111 o f .t . ~:~ 01rf Ii a r1" i· ... fiD t' ~= rti. 1 .,-: a! ( Pl ·fl -_ il·i Ii I~ • IJI!,· . 1if~fi.· ;.iif -..,. ·~ i ·_ ' -·1;J1:1•r ~· 1-. ~t:. lfJ' l: ~ e:l ·1fl1. -~' ·i I! ·ft 1U~l_.I'!: f_: -~ j fr-' f.,, ll , 1r1 1.~J11r...J.1 .. 1 i''."lf ·l{ifl 1 ... ~ . i rJ.r.11 ua!t1 11 1·1 'l1·r!•;l'J.! I!·_ ( .· .' .I:. II~ (I· . I s1 rt . ;l,·f .l,r _.Si -, llrli -l ·1tf• ::r~, ..... I I s .i 1.. .: • l r11f rl , 'H~ t't ,. ~.--!:1 'I( 1(1· ·1·1-I"~· ~!tf1 ·' ··' 1ti .... ~ '* 1•sii l1r1··1 M ·: 1~ ~ii ·l~f la.ii:! .. ,.. fi3 ntr lf lf.le: QQ ~lU 11Jlf~! ~ · l ".:b_·1g.. !trl· , ·r-! 11,1: .. ''Ju .... 'I '·l:B f .•.· 11 11111. ,1 f~tr I 1 1 . ;,. 1~lr1 __ --~. T. ......... a ers win custodyfight with mothers in conunune POLICEPREPAREFORBOLIDAY •••. J'.-Al sweeps of certain ~ areu. where teamt of oftiCen walk a neiabbomood to bee youths from COQll"Clltina and polllbly aiettinl too rowdy. Newport Beach officials are bopi.oa for a . repeat of last year's Fourth o1 July bolidaY.r.wbere putyina iD tbe BaJboe and Newport Pier areas WU festive but snerally restra.iDed. Police made 1 ?o arratl and issued about 3,000 citations for traftic. perk:ina ud alcobok'elated o&mes. What police are DOt booi.n& to rqat is tbe 1986 mdee iri wllicb ncationiQI youths lobbed bottles aad fireworb at police OD Scubore Drive. One police officer wu bospi- 1aliz.ed when a powerful firecncker exploded iD mid-air near bis head, renderina him temporarily deaf. Men than 150 people '-"Cre ar- rested u a result of the incident, indudina nine people who were booked on felony clwJea of assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer and another four on iuqricion of battery on a police officer. OU1ey said stepped-up patrols and a ,Y_e:/ visible preleDCC last year be~,make the difference. We're doina evel"Ythiq to prepare this year that ft -clid last year." Oakley said. .. We're ready to hand)e whatever comes up." Newport Be8cb police will alto have ua additional w.;apon this year. On Monday a.i&ht.-lk City Council pve final approval to a new ordi- nance tbat .UOWS POiice to cbaraie party bo5u up to SSOO for rapond.ina to a second distutbiDs the peace coTbempla;::= Jr-: el . ed. 1unre, ~uQiuV y unm l- ately, is desipeid to~ piiny hosts think twice before tictina their parties into ovadri~ .. It'll tel expensive for them," Oakley said. With ICCUl'ity notoriously lilbt in Newport 8eac:b, many revelers opt to head north to Huntiftlton Beach or IOUth to Llpna Beach. But pu1ien beware: Police in those cities are ready for you u ftll. .. We didn•t have any bi& problems last year, and ft aren't expec:tina any this year," said Deputy Qijef Jim Spreine, who said the c!~ is expectin• betwun 100,000 to 1~000 visiton over the holiday weekend. Soreine said the department will double its petrols from 4 ~.m. Friday throuah MoQday, and will set up a sobriety chcctpoint Friday niaht. The one worry of Laauna Beach officials is the newly annexed area of South Lapna. Lat FCMlrtb of JuJy, JUDGE COMMITS SUICIDE AT HOME ••• ~Al sboppiaa, and two mamed dauab- ten. "'1'bere WU a note indicatina he was depresled over tome ~ problems. ••• It b8d to do wtth IOrDC lepJ matten I think be wu involved in.," Roop said. addina that the problems apparently were civil ~unicipal Coun Praidina Judp Maruret Anderson, however, ~ it&Jeck's poor health may have brouaht on bis deoression. Maleck went home &ick 1bunday afternoon and bad not returned, she laid. But when &be talked to him boun before be shot bimld'i ~teemed fine and asked her to ICMOule a court bearin& in two weeks. Anderson added. "'He IOUDded fine," Alldenoa said. .. A little weak -probably tired-but be never talked about committina suicide." Andenon said Maleck au.ffered from diabetes and recently bad lost weiabt .. When J wu liven the news this afternoon. I was totally stunned,•• she said. .. Everybody is in a state of disbelid" Malect was app>inted to the bench in 1986 by Gov. GcorJe Deukmejian, Roop said. He was~ June 7. He worted in North Municipal Coun iD Fullerton since October, Anderson said. Previously, he worted in West Municipal Coun in Westminster and was a city attorney in El Monte from 1977 to 1986, Andenon said. Maleck served in the Navy durin• World War JI . The ~Ill jud&e said the civil suit Maleck apparently mered to in bis lllicide note WU a lawsuit filed apinst the city of El Monte. Officials °'ere ~ unavailable for comment, but Anderson said Maleck seldom spoke of the suit and did not seem overly concerned about it. Maleclt also was a prolific con- tributor to various lepl publications, writina artides about technical lep1 points in bis speciality, civil law, Andenon said. "He did a lot of the civil work for us." she said. "He wu a real asset." Anderson said tervic:a bad yet to be tel. SAFE FIREWORKS DON'T EXIST ••• ham Al OnJy eisbt of Orute County's 28 cities permit safe and sane fireworb. The otben, indudi.QI Fountain Val- ley, Newport Belch, Huntinaton Bach, Luuna Beach and Irvine, prohibit alffireworb. Costa Mesa is the only ci~ in the Oranae Cout area that pennits sa~ and-sane fireworks. but the city's fire marshal, Tom McDufJ', said he had recommended that the city council ban all fireworks this year. The council refused, arsuina that firework tales are an 1m~rtant IOWU of revenue for non-profit poupt. Ft.reWOrb industry 1ep1e1entatives say the t:'..:bto promote the safe u.te of is to educate the publk about the statc-el!P'Oved. non- explosive products their companies sell. They •Y it is unfair to l:f lepJ fireworks ~ with ill ones. Industry filures indicate that 92 pcn:ent of ihe lerioua injuries and damqe attributable to ~ are cauted by bottle rockets, ken and other devic:a which are banned in California. A statement releued by the fire Oliefs A.uociation said. ho~ that men fires ftre aiuted by fireworb than by illepl fireworb last year in <>ranee County. A fireworb eompuy spokesman said a total ban OD fll'eWOfb would only encoutate people who want fireWorb to obcain the more danler- ous ones. wtllcb can be purcbued in Nevada and in Mexico. .. I don't tMlr that arpment," said J~ "What I do believe is that fireworks act u a thidd for ones. matins them more cult to detect." PHONE JAMMING PROBE DROPPED ••• !l!!!.!~ 'C:a~ V11C&tionina in Hawaii and wa unavailable for comment Tua-•&. paip ~Bob Schuman liid Gey Mn lean toward punu.. inl cbe Cale in tbe ci 00\llU but b8d ~ Illy Piil a: ..U.OMca ........ C...._CA not yet made a decision. .. My initial raction is~ what WM doGc.. bow ma time W81 involved and bow much it OOlt -both ru.ibly and intaalibly -i1 teemt ludicrOus they would drop it, .. Scb&iman said. .... ..._ .. tMOC......._CA ... ~ .... ,6'11..._' ........ ..,41, 11111'1:::-.... .. ... .,.. .... ., ........... ., ... . .. ,.,,.., .. .. ...... ............... ...... ..... ,,.. ..,.,., ......... .... ...... .,.,..,_ ...... a 2 211 u.a. Tempe :=-.. ..,; ....... ==--~~ ... ==· Mxv... .,. ., ? 2 .. .... . ....... :.~-· =: ~ =Olr ~: ~ --.. ,. t:: ...... . ......... = . ?RP tO? I I# t :I : '9 ts --•• m. ... ~ • ., .... o.... ........ =: ......... °"' ........ ~"" : ~ =-~ =•• r.a.c .,. • s:=t w.v.. •• ~ :: :: ,.;;co.., = :: .., ..... a ... ="-c. ... ~ . '40:-: ' :.~ e.:-Ii~ • It . .. = •• " . :rr, • 11 , ....... ...... E --5 F, ~ .. ... ~ ..... c . • • 1.:;*' ....... ..o,c. .. . == Ei .. . .. ':: I ••• •• ' .iilji-.. .. -.. .: : ., .. . =--· ........ -...... •• ... .. M • M • ... . M 11 O...• • •r-------------..._...; •• Tlde9 -. n .. " . " .. "'9A\I • • ,._._ 4:•aa -t.a tt•a ...... LJ . . -.,.,,.... .... ·= .. .. .... u 'I !! -·. "' :: ii ~i: ,::: 'll -" -"' ...... 1.4 • • ..... _,.... u •• . . ,..._,....~ ...... -. " ... JJIL .. .. 1119----···--. " ...... ~ .... -" " . ·----------------::: Bztended " . ~:: ............. ....,_..,._ -.................. ... •• ...., ..,. " ............ llt 11 ... '" .................. ...... . ............... .,... ...... . ... ;..._ ................. .. .. ..., ........ ~--. .. BISTRO FACES CLOSURE BY CITY ••• ..... , ... lbe coacil tlid they Could do :&rand Ibey did, ~rz ~t bad DOC complied W1 City cods and Md beeD pva plmty of time to do IO. .. rm *k·IDd tired ofbavi111 that bull.Dell ...... mockery ottbe aty•a law," llid Councilman Clarence Turner wbo inade tbe motiolt to lbut iowll dm Blue Beet. .. E~ elte complies, Ud they lbould comply." The couDCil w puUcularty eda-mant that 5o&t oblaiD a UIC ~it fot tbe maavut; but Soffet produced a document be deinwl ... a U11 permjL City Pllnq Ditectot Jama Hcwicter' aid the permit wu ill8ed witb the uadenlaadina that Soffer would make cenain ~ iD bis atablisbment. which Hewicker claimed Soffer bad not done. When the council moved to leek an iJtjunction qaiDst the Blue Beet. Soft'erbeon ~at the council and at Hewicker, Callint him a .. liU° Ind states a daim to bavioa the loneest-rwminl tiqUOI' liceDJe iD N~ Bcedl. . . Abo at Monday niabt't meetlftl. the council pve final approval to an ordinance requirina the installation of marine pumpout atatiou for .UH-club& and certain other com· ~ marine &cilities. A nwnberof'DOOl>le, mOltlycbartcr Opeta'°!'t arsued ~ the ~nanc:e WU unfairly waetiOI cet1alll com· men:ial operators. but the council approved the ordinance unaru- mously. The council alto pve final ~ proved to an ordina1lce alJowina Ne1 Beacll police to biU party ~ their ~ices if they are called to the 1UDC puty locatioa ttricc iD the aame day. The Ordinance is dctiped to eocourqe pmty ho.u to tone down their puties, and free up f:'ice to u1e their time men efficient· MARINERS PARK RENAMING TABLED ••• · ham Al Residents laid they were not op- poted to honorina lorsieneen, but uraed the council to seek an alterna- tive to renamil!J the part. .. Althouab Vin Joraemen wu defi- nitely an auet to our community, many othen in the put were eq~ so •.. It would seem best not to let a precedent," read a Jetter from Mr. and Mn. David Beepn. Council memben apparently qreed with the residents' concerns. .. , don't think we want to tWt namina brwd areas of the city after people.~ said Councilman Donald Strlusa durina Monday's~ ... think there could be a lot of problems with that, because there are to many worthy people." Councilman Clarence Turner, who bad led the council effort to rename the put for JolFDlen, made the alternate proposal. but added a •ua-IJCSlio~ that ~ citr look for ways to honor its active residents. .. We have almost a tradition here in Newpon Beach of not reoopizi~ people who contribute to this city, said Turner ... We're not just a city made up of beautiful alflt boets. homes and a harbor. We're made up of people." Mayor John Cox said the alternate ~(>OS&I truly honored JOfllCuen's tptnt. .. Vin WU really a tJCrlOD who came to the battle look.ins for a com- promise," said Cox. Jcqemea WU a weiJ,;tnown ~ iD Newport Btacb and a lJ.year board member of HOii Memorial H()llJital. He was alto a f'oundina member of the hospital's SS2 Club. a board member of Oranie County PmonniDa Artl Center and put oresident of the Rotaty Cub of Newport· Balboa. He wu named Man of the Year in 1969 by the Newport Harbor Cbaaiber of Commen:e and received • Spirit oru. award &om tbe City o( Hope. ; ma e = = 0 ; SC ;c s A3i;J • > ~"NI..~ HUNTINGToN~seAcH Page2 ! t ,. 4Tl-~ OF juL '°'~ <~· l o, o o~ sK 1ndmuchmore ... ft1'.l"(9 r o s e Ne F, r r He . See calendar for MARCH OF DIMES summerevents Pagel l A SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT , TO THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT .j, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1988 ' • " -..:J Local businesses, residents contriBute to Fiesta's fireworks A donation of $2, )()() was presented to the Fountain Valley Fiesta for its fire- works spectaculars by Cort Furniture. Fountain Valley Regional Hospital and Avco Financial contributed St,000 each to the Fiesta. Orange County residents or businesses donating SlOO include: Bob and Julie Hox· sic, Ted Nicholas, Lynn and Barbara Powell, Barry Tabachnick, Fred Thon, Ronald Golde, Howard Bowman, Danile Powers, the-Fountain Valley Inn and Minuteman Press. Donations of $50 were received from: M&S Sales, Philip Koerner, Sally Min· ett, Kathy Smithso~ Kathy Ibbetson, Bruce Larmer, Richard Justice, Jacquelyn Dick, S.A. Ungeheier, Tony Salbarese, Pamela Nix, Or· ange County Commc:rcial Interiors, W.C. Messecar, Richard Steever, Velma Segeberg, Genevieve Ep- pele, Barbara Arrigale and B. Comstock. A donation of $30 was Joseph Jones, Lyle Thorell, accepted from Helen and James Lane, Charlene Joe Ditte. Rossignol, Dorothy Donations of $25 were Bergman, Carmen Katichas received from: . Pauline and the Three Star Nursery. Davis, Jack and Barbara Other donations include: Sorenson, Sharon Butler, Ada Morphis, Sally Wells, William and Colleen Lutz, W.C. Strohm, Don Flaherty, Jerome Beatty, Diddy and Mary Galantowitz. Esther Larry Lammers, Donald Blanc, Michiko Wada, D. Morris, Dan Broderick, Carol Babb, Jay Christ, Sue Evelyn Drennan, Edith and Sakaba, Lucille Kardos, Charles Howell, Fountain Harry Little, Sherry Laufen· Valley Chamber of Com-burger, Gwen Brady,Judity mercc Women's Division, Brown, Gerald Beach, Tim Cheng San Tai,Joe Lindsey, Szto, Marjorie Stanard, Anne Marie Mulieri, Carole Mahony, Baibara W cl ton, Margaret Struhs and John Haro. Other dona.tor$ include: Jerome Parr, Thanh Van Le, Catherine Hanson, Tony anCI Jennie Mortel, Robin and Judy Critchell, R.B. and Ann McGee~ E.C. Johnston, Alan and Dorothy Pocvin, Laura Lethco, Elma Mcin- tosh, Tom and Susan Webb, L.S. Lovejoy, James Haas, T .S. Yashlmura, Roger (Pleue ........... JP7) Volunteers needed to contribute manpower to five days of family fun and entertainment ----Schedule-- Orange County.Fiesta Participants and volun- teers for a wide range of family fun and entertaining activities are being sought for the five -day spectacular Orange County Fiesta, June 30 co July 4th at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. The Fiesta has been a successful Fourth of July celebration for the local community during the last five years, and this year's event is broadening its scope co include the entire county. "This year's Orange County Fiesta will be co- sponsored by the Coors Distributing Co. of Tustin, and will feature spectacular carnival rides, sports, cookoffs, musical sounds with a 50s and 60s theme, along with arts and crafts exhibitions," Dick Gregg, Fiesta chairman, said. "We're actively encourag- ing any and all county residents to become in- volved in an active way," he said. Among the op- portunities for participants and volunteers arc: 5K and lOK runs; 5K., lOK, 25K and 50K family bike rides; sand volleyball competition against top pros; and the arm wrestling competition. Volunteers are also needed for the rib and chili cookoffs; arts and crafts exhibitions; food fair; Chari· ties Day -helping the handicapped; and game booths for fundraising. Orange County Fiesta or- ganizers arc also encourag- ing retailers, manufacturers and services to become' involved as overall or indi- vidual event sponsors. A promotional package will be tailored co any interested businesses wishing to ex- pose products to the ex- pected 30,000 plus Fiesta . goers. Special Fiesta day planned for handicapped There will be a special treat in store for Orange County's underpriveleged and handicapped persons at the upcoming 6th Annual Orange County Fiesta, June 30 co July 4 at Mile Square Park in fountain Valley. They will essentially have the park -its rides and attractions -to themselves free of charge, from 91.m. to 11 Lm. on Friday July 1. The Omni Service Oub of Fountain Valley is coordi- nating the manpower d'fon, and volunteers are ~ing sought for assistance -and more. especially for the anticipated large number of handi- capped attending. Groups wishing to par- ticipate in this special event, and volunteers should con· taet the Orange County Fiesta office at (714) 962-4441. "It all adds up to fi~ days of a variety of entertaining fun for all family members," Gregg said ... Wc'1e l~k.ing forward to the support of each and every Orange County community," he 'd r sat . The Orange County Fiesta officially begins at ~ Interested· ,partici~nts, p.m. Thursday, with a blend voluntttrs and ~ential of attractions that include: sponsors .may contact Joel sp<>rts and musical entertain· Vest at the fiesta office (714) mmt, arnival rides, a food 9624441 for more infor. fair, ans and crafts booths· mation. OPENING NIGHT -Thursday,June 30: 5 p.m. ·midnight -Donnie Brooks -Sha Na Na -Tribute co Elvis -Friday,July 1: 11 a.m . -midnight -Charities Night -Handicap Free (9 -11 a.m.) -5th Annual Southern California Battle of the Bands -Saturday, July 2: 1 I a.m. · midnight -Country Western Entertainment -Charcoal California State Championship Rib Cookoff -Contemporary Christian ~sts: Jon Gibson & Crystal Lewis -State Championship Arm Wrestling -Sund•y,July 3: 11 a.m. -midnight -Lions Pancake Breakfast -Countq' Western Entertainme~ -Orange County Ficsu Chili Cookoff -Mond•y.]uly 4: L1 •.m. -midnight -Continuous Entertainment -Jaycee's 5 & lOK Run · - 9 p.m. Orange Councy•s largest free Aerial firtworks s~ctaculat -Qmivil Ridt!s, FobcJ IJooi:hs, Arts & Crafts ~Daily. ' ----Fiesta Entertainment---- Opening Night -July 30 -Dirty Dan of Sha Na Na -6 to 6:1' p.m. -Ron Holden -6:15 to 6:45 p.m. -Donnie Brooks -6:4' to 7:1' p .m. -Marvin & Johnny - 7:15 to 7:45 p.m. -Break -The Difference -7 p .m. -Reverie -8 p.m. -The Big Band -9 p.m. -M add Hatter -10 p.m. -No Secret -midnight Saturday July 2 -The Penguins -2 co 2:30 p.m. -The Tokens -2:30 co 3 p.m. -Break -Jimmy Vee and The Belmoncs -4 to 4:30 p.m. - Little Caesar and the Romans -4:30 co 5 p.m. -The Music o f The Shirelles -5 to 5:30 p.m. Arm wrestling at OC Fiesta The California State Arm Wrestling Championship, spansorcd by Coors Bttr, is one of the showcased sports attractions at the upcoming 6th Annual Orange County Fiesta, June 30 co July 4 at Mile Square Park. The competition will take place on Saturday.July 2 at 1 p.m., spearheaded by Bob Eazor, the man who taught techniques to Sylvester Stallone and also appeared in the movie "Over the Top." As arm wrescling grows in stature and participation around rhe word, Eazor and several others are working co make it an O lympic spare by 1992. -Bobby Day -8:15 co -Sue Thompson - 1 to 6p.m. -Jon Gibson/Crystal Lewis -8 p.m. -The New Del Vikings riiiiiiiiiiiii--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 8:45 p.m. -Rosie & The Originals -8:4' to 9:15 p.m. -Al Wilson -9:15 to 9:45 p.m. -Break -Paul Casey -10:15 to 10:45 p.m. Friday July l Simi.Finals 5th Annual Battle of the Bands -Resolution - 1 p.m. -Wish -2 p.m. -Idle Scenes -3 p.m. -Hopsing -4 p.m. -Insight -5 p.m. -Hobo Slam - 6 p.m. Sunday July 3 -American Made -1 co 4p.m. . -Jerry Wallace -4:30 to 5:30 p.m. -Finals for Battle of che Bands Monday July 4th -Final Day -The Music of The Champs-1to1:30 p.m. -The Crests -1:30 to 2 p.m. -5:30 to 6 p.m. -Break -The World.famous Coasters -7 co 7:40 p.m. -The Fabulous Drifters -7:40 to 8:20 p.m. -The Amazing Platters -8:20 to 9 p.m. -Break -FIREWORK SPECTACULAR -Tribute to Bill Haley with Bill Haley's Comets - 9:30 to 10: 15 p.m. NO FIREWORKS u...c. 18.102(8) Safety is major consideration for B&B a.. w .... 0 l9COfldarv window plocied .... ol Ille wwdOw ~ ~ ol ocCIUllcol fll*. CMd o v....,4 "-· ~ WitN!law..,. redwc.e Ille_. c~ """"""* o ...,_ m-tioa75" ---•·fill-DtAlEIS WflCOME BTH ANNUAL FOUNTAIN w.LEY CtiAM8ER OF COMMERCE MILE SQUARE PARK (Brookhurst at Hell) 5 GAEA T DAYS • JUNE 30TH THAU JULY 4TH CARNIVAL RIDES OPEN DAILY • FOOD • FUN CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINllENT CRYSTAL LEWIS TltE COASTERS .... , ,.., u.-, _., ._, •JG JU 1 a Tz .. , 3 11'4 ............ ll •lt ...... ll •lt ...... . ........ ll •lt--........ 'IA-c-..-. l--_..,._' ... -.... .... ~ ..... ,....,.. . ., au•...,._ ""-... ... ..,,r_ ,,,.,.,. --s-.r-.. "!'*" 0.C.... ""°"-'-......... ,_.. ...'-'•t·-''-..... _,...,_ -~~ c-..-,.,,,__.., ....... v.r ... ,_ ... ~ ·-1'fC-\ ._..,. ,_...,. --'-'-.,_ .... ... -·'-.. ., ..... o......-._ .. _ .... --·-hooCllO ....... .. ... ~, ... ~ .,._ ........ a.--.. -....... ..r-. ---,_.,... ~l------------ • <I Look close to home for family fun With an abundance of professional entertainment, arts and crafts displays and numerous family type ac- tivities like 5K, lOK, 25K and 50K bike rides, area residents need travel no further than to Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce is presenting Orange County Fiesta June 30 through July 4, and one need only to look over its special events to know that it will be one of the largest events planned that weekend. The award-winning B&B Amusements carnival will set up a variety of rides and game booths that will appeal to families. Rides include the spectacular Zipper, to the more sedate rides like the Alliga~or ride. Discount ride tickets are now arc available from the Chamber of Commerce. These are seven rides for $5, and may be used on all of the rides. The discount tickets represent a savings of up to 50 percent and will be available up to June 30. Information on all aspects of the Fiesta is available by calling the Chamber of Commerce. . Ecll .. -:.-• I N c Hell i Restaentrance' Brookhurst at Hell Warner For Information cal 7141112-4441 Enttanoe.Jul't 4th CMttow perk¥1g Ody I~ - F ~ .. I C::J I 01 c] [I] [] No Fiesta entrance tromEuctid (A) Fiesta site (B) Ody Flalta pall<.lng $2.00 (C) OYerflowpertdngzontS2.00 (0) Restrictedflrewort<szone (E) FountaanValleyreaeetloocenter (F) T ennls courts CW Revcore's freestyle bike racers bring sport to local Fiesta There '11 be plenty of "table tops," "3fl()s," "can- cans" and "look-backs" throughout Saturday and Sunday, July 2 and 3 at the 6ch Annual Orange County Fiesta when the nationally prominent CW Revcore freestyle bike racers bring their lingo and maneauvcrs to Mile Square Park. In recent years, frecstyling has combined with BMX (bicycle motocross) to carve its own identity as an c~tablished, organized sport, CLEANING(, PRESERVING SHAKE ROOfS SINCE I %9 Se.te Lic.na lfo. 4'1IMO which is practiced in 26 countries and numerous contests and demos across the United States. CW Revcorc's team of riders arc ages 9 to 21 and include the nation's number one pro, Charles Townsend. MAKEYOURROOFLASTLONGER The Sun leaches out natural oils and resins, which causes curling. crackin& and splitting. Moss. fungus. dirt and debris on your shakes retain moisture and cause dry rot. Both con- ditions lead to prem•ture l•ilure of your roof. AT A FRACTION OF REPLACEMENT cosrr CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION ANO A FREE ESTI MATE • ••••mra1u. .... r • RII n•• ..... -. ...... 1 • • -•ana-••• ilMitS t• 11 tJI,. ·- ~ ------...-. -~ We clean. repair and preserve shake roofs at a fraction of the cost of replacement. A key to the Placentia-based company's ~ucccss has been the drive of its president, Roger Worsham, who man- ages, promotes and find sponsors for the team, the latter of which includes Surf and Street Mechaniz, a new line of glow-in-the-dark T. shirts. CW Revcore will have a display booth throughout the Fiesta's five days, where kids can drop by and meet the riders, look at the latest in BMX products. '$ KUNG-FU • • KARATE MIM1"•~·-..- 1'BY THE COMPUTERIZED INPAX CllALLEN6EI r..,,_,~,...,. __ .,..,. Ma-sass 11036 Warner Ave . Fountain Valley, CA Euclid at Warner hone: (114) 631-4909 Cocktaila --SPI ll..\1 or FI H f n r .. 11 "'-i • ..,. ~ , l "4 '''''ti• • n H, r .._ r Jon Gibson puts life's experiences to work performing Christian songs FV Chamber of Commerce thanks volunteers, visitors "I had all this talent. but I had no idea what to do with it. I was getting frustrated. I was at the point where it was either join the military or go to jail.,.. Jon Gibson. a Christian performer with two number one songs. said. Raised on the streets of San Francisco where crime and gang fights were forms of survival, Gibson had more than one encounter with the law. But Gibson knows the hearts of those streets. "It's one thing to sing about Jesus, but it's anocher to meet these people where they're at and talk about the things they talk Lile S.vizv ~ fot Litt/• P•~Jt ioclud .. o.nt» ad UT. Rw. fa1 Ft.bud &1& •• . • miIJI. lot~U yean. MMt.er TMCMn, Print. &&mi-Print. L•omAwtil· abM. LiltUe.d BaarollmMt. Fin& ~o/,71ait Kmd~O!f-- I« 1Uo' Tou. ....... W..Ulllt,,..,, .... BAKER STUDIO 84'1--0GN -636-07'73 about," he said. out of me or something," "I was a frustrated kid, Gibson said. ''It would help taking it out on ocher me get my aa together." But frustrated . kids," Gibson he still felt helpless. "I finally said. "I wanted somebody, got out of the army when my but my frustration got the scgeant convinced me chat I best of me. I was going loved music more than nowhere." After droppping anything, including the out of high school as a army." freshman, he eventually fol-When he returned home lowed in his brother from the military he dis. Mitchell's footsteps and covered that his father had joined the army. "I always become a Christian. "I thought he (Mitchell) was thought that's cool, dad's cool, he said. become religious. He· s The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce expresses its thanks co those attending the 1988 Fiesta. Many Volunteer hours have gone into providing you and your family an exciting and entert~ining experience with a patriotic flavor. Sample the tantalizing foods, relax under the big top, thrill to a carnival ride and enjoy the stage entertainment. Re- member that your dollars are helping to support numerous non-profit and charitable clubs and or- garuutions. as well as youch programs and scholarships, senior cmzen programs and handicapped ctttzen's needs. The Chamber ex- presses special apprecia- tion to Mayor George Scocc and the entire City Council. as well as the various depa.rtments of the C1ry of Fountain Valley who have worked closely with the Chamber. Gibson hoped that enlist-happy and all that. but it's ing in the army would help not for me, man. I'm noc ~ ~r~gh~n h~ Li~ out.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "You know, it was like the tr army was gonna make a man Experience the magic of A ~·11. ,v., • ~·~ ,._ • very i?OsJ41l~GS special . tJ~1tt4i rtJ country store. co One of a kind crafts from local artisans, collectibles, inviting scents, lovely furniture ... something to delight everyone OPEN 7 DAYS -SUNDAY 11-4 1874 WilND AV!., al SPIJNGDALB WADBDALB SQUAU -MIM lellbea 8UMTIN6TON BBACB 8'$-11'4 ~==============~' t I COME ON TO l§t COCO'S! Join Us For Breakfast + Lunch + Dinner ' + Fresh Baked Desserts + 11171 Blookhant a Fo41nteln Valley • ....,,. Gibson ... ........... gonna buy into that Chris- tianity stuff," he. said. But Gibson's father had started praying for him and openly shared his faith. He also enc~uraged him to pursue music. After a short time Gibson started attending church with his father, but for two reasons other then God. One was that he loved his father and "wanted to make him happy." The other was the grand piano the church owned. "I wanted to play the piano so bad ..... His father, by then a pastor, had been praying that something drastic would happen to change Gibson's life. What hap- pened was both drastic and peculiar. One day after Follow your nose at Fiesta to pots of chili, racks of ribs church Gibson went to play the piano, but when he looked at the keys .. I couldn't make sense of the keyboard. They all looked the same. I just froze. It was It wiU not be a case of too ditional proceeds ben. scary," he said. many cooks spoiling the efitting non·profit and chan. It was at that point that broth, as a big turnout of table groups. Gibson made the decision to Orange County restaurants Rib Cookoff particapam'> give his life to Jesus Christ. and private parties are being will have the privilege of In 1983 he recorded an encouraged to concoct selling their fixings to spec.. a l b u m f 0 r special recipes for the tators ac the Fiesta, and chtre Solar /Constellation Re-Barbecue Rib and Chili will be a panel of judges cu --------------------~ cords called "Standing on Cookoffs, staged at the name the top winners, alon>-: the One." Gibson then Orange County Fiesta, July with a People's Cho1u. hooked up with Orange 4th celebration at Mile Award. County-based Frontline Re-Square Park. The Cookoffs are JUSt J cords to distribute a second The competitions begin couple of the featured a<. album entitled "On the Saturday, July 2nd, with the tivities being held over tht. California Stace Cham-f h fi d F Run." course o t e ave-ay 1e~tJ Pionsh1p Rib Cookoff, A blend of fam1'ly fun The title cue "Change of ' Heart" reads almost like an worth $2,000 in cash prizes offered, ranging from and trophies to the winning carnival rides, musical enctr autobiography. "There was a chef. The Sl,000 Chi'la' · d tainment, arcs an craft, time when I wanted noching Cookoff will be held Sun-exhibits, a food fair, clas'l1t. to do with God. I guess you d J l 3 d ay , u y r . auto show, bike rides and .1 could say I've had a change Entry fees are S250 and fi k h of heart," Gibson said . uewor s s ow at 9 p.m. on lr==;;;;;~========S3=5=, =r=es=pe=ct=iv=e=ly:::, =w=a=·th=a=d;;i-Monday, July 4th. • Boots • Belts • 8ICttes • Slwts • Slld.s ... •llolles•Sbts • Hits • Sport Coats • Slits • Colts •ltltherVab lea Arllaar'1 Tr1tlia1 Post Gun Smithinq Repairs Fine Tune -Cleaning 9807 88th 8tl'Mt Riwwslde (114) 88l·MU Persons wishing to sa' e on the cost of carnival rid t.., may purchase ride coupam at $5 for 7 rides -up to a (lo percent savings. HENOY'S VIDEO •. . ·,. , E r--------------------------1 IAVE •1.01 859 I ~111 .. -~ •• ~~~-~~-T- I a..-v .... ..,.....,..,11.1•ecc....1r .. 9MI w..., Aw.(at........, _...._ _.,, I IOlie ..,.. ,. ... Calb , .............. Ollie .. [ • I ,_ 11911 ................ ~_:-"_:._~-----~~~~-- Donations ... homPace2 W eigelc. Henry Samson. Janis Ryan, S.L. Smith, Rich- ard Logan, Bessie Kell y, Betty Soule, Mary and James Mills, Irene Hutchinson, Carl Peden, Cao Van Bui, James Manning, George Enzmann, Lowell Klatscher, Leonard and Violet Burton, Allan Brown, Peter Piam- p1ano, Gary Hickman, Becce Kobayashi, Charles Rich- ards and Anthony Tucci. More contributions were received from. Arthur John- son, Sam and Brenda Ar- mour, Danny Morton.Joyce Szelagyi, Edward Webber, Charles Bavin, Susan Weil, Dave Swindle, J .H . Muhlf~lder, Wm. Reid. Doug Ma>r1mo, Larry La Kamp. Pettr Chieh, Barbara Gallup, Elsie Meade . Other individuals who have donated co the fire- works spectacular include: Jack Ham1lcon, Suzanne Moen, Frank Lazaran, Susan Bertotti, James Nail. Bob Backoff, Janet Laske. Allan Buskirk, Cecilia Wetzler. Beccy and Joseph Jennings, Ed and Judy Stephens, Diane Endo, June Pollaro, Thomas T akamoco, Peggy J ohnson, Mary Ann Gierhart, James and Jayne Bailey . Caryl Leavens.James Haslinger. Marcia Tram- mell. Betc >' Wehrman. Herbert Hocschele. Milton Sanders, Helen Fawcett . V 1ccor Summers. Edith Ben- nett, Gina Luc}. Sandra Knutson anJ Dav1J Lufitz. Donors listed were as of June 1 ~. 1988. Althou~h some <onc ribuc1ons were too lace co be menc1oned by name, the I ountain Valle> Chamber ot Commerce w1~hes co excend 1t s ap- prec1at1on co all. Fiesta personnel solicit funds, support Coors named major sponsor for all six years of OC Fiesta For the sixth consccuttve year. Coors D1scribucing Co ot Tustin, has been named che maior spcnsor for che 1988 Orange Counry F1esca. a hve-da) Jul)' 4th festival at Male ~uare Park. and radio advertising," he said. "We are plca.scd ro again be involved w1ch the Orange Count) F1esca,' Gary Cockrum, sales and market- in~ manager for the Tusrin d1smbucor, said. "This yeus' festival has grown in scope co include counrywide par· t1C1pauon. and the many planned .lCClvities Offer something for all family members. he sa id . l nder Coors· umbrella )pomor)h1p . .! hose of anrac- t1om <'re being offered. Including che openang night emertainment The county's largest com-coses involved." mun1ty-suppcrted fireworks Major cloners cu rrently "Coors' continued sup- Port over che last five years (when che event was known a) The Fountain Valley he scot) hot~ made each years· evenc' maior success," Dick Gre~~· Fiesta ch;urman. said · Among ocher chin~s. the compan) 's financial sup- porr enables us co increa~e awareness and arcendance throu~h local newspapers is $3. youth t1ckecs (ages ~~=;~=~==~~===========:;;;~ 6-10) $1, children five and under are free . The event features a ran~e of famal) fun and entertainment. show -the 6th Annual include Cort Furniture Orange county Fiesta at Avco Financial Services and Mile Square Park -is Fountain Valley Regional seeking additional funding Hospital. Voted Best Burger In Orange County ~~S:..1Mio:.1.· Expanded Outside Seating •Thick Malts & Shakes • Original SO' s Diner and support for its lndepen-General adm1ss1on co the For pre-sale discount dence Day spectacular,. ac-five-day Orange County ticker informacion. concacc cording to Dick Gregg, fiesta, fromJune 30toJuly4, (714) 962-4441. Fiesta chairman. flf!~~!!!!~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiliii 1s11w~r11.v~ 16111 Pxrlte CCNIR ~ , Humingtonkxti.CA ~•ah.CA ·This message goes out 111 •1843-,.,16 1211t st2-2a)4 to concerned citizens and JMG SECURITY ~=======~===~=~~~ businesses alike who believe SYSTEMS fireworks should be m re-Uc;• ~,,. sponsible hands, and not (714) 963 g g those of children," Gregg • 22 said. "In order co ensure • YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD PROFESSIONALS these safery-oriented effons, COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL we. re seekjng donations co • Burglar Alarm • CCTV Systems • Fire Alarm • Card Access r-------COUPON •-------· i li() t O·F·F i I With the purchase of s I 00 or more I I ~ Offer expires 7 /3 I /88 I help bear the tremendous _________________ __J ------------------ DERMATOLOGY SPECIALIST IN OtSEASES OF SKIN, HAIR & NAILS SKIN CANCER -DIAGNOSIS & TAEA TMENT SKIN SURGERY & LASER SURGERY. COlLAGEN IMPLANTS • PSOAIASIS ACNE. MOLES. WARTS, ALLERGIES, BROKEN 8LOOO VESSELS Our Offitt A~~ 0. All Mfdka,. aa.a.. Md W• Will 8e Glad To AtsiSt VM WU.la A•1 OtMr i.waoce Plam NISSAN PILEST M.0. flcht Fat t~tefully whh our 1a ex- clus 1ve non-f<1t fl.lvon or our 43 low-f<1t R..vors VUdM 1151' aroou.ntSL ~5>£1111 Fouftil.lll6n v .a.y. ------------------i ONE FREE! I Buy one stMll. medium °' l~rce I I cup ol yocurt & rece•~ another I ol equal Of lessef value absolutely I ,.... I I One per customer. Toppnc not I inducted. LitnJt Sl.2'> I I ~ Offer expires 7 /3 l /88 I '----•••llCOUPON••------- l o.c. '8TA ..,.,.___ FUMIM ~~IL ea••~~ OM. Y N.OT -WEDNESOAY. JUNE It. W J Calendar of Events JULY The 6th Annual Orange County Fiesta at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. Fiesta runs from June 30 co July 4th with a Fireworks Spectacular display at 9 p.m. the Fourth of July. Daily admission is $3, youth uckets {6-10) are $1 and children 5 and under are free . Sawdust Festival in Laguna Beach. The Festival runs from July 2 to August 28. Admission is $3. The 84th Annual Hunt- ington Beach 4th of July Celebration will include a Pancake Breakfast at Sca- cliff Shopping Center, SK run starting at Main Street, a parade and a Fireworks Extravaganza ac dusk in the Huntington Beach High School Stadium. Admission is $6. The Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa will get under way July 7 and run through C4111Maa Jdly 7-17 The Orange County F•ir in Cost• Mesa is "&efm' it up'' for the opening, scheduled for July 7 to July 17. With e~rything from puade1, rodeos, enteminment, carnival rides/ gamts and much m0tt, ck F•ir tvill provide funily fun for ev~ryone. Adminion prices •re U ( cwn J 2 years old), 12 for chililrm (6-12), Tots (1 .nd undt!t) frtt. PvJang 'frill hf 11. July 17. Admission is $4 over 12 years old; $2 for agcs6.12; and under 5 years is free . Parking is $2, busses arc free. A Hispanic Playwrights Project is planned for August 12-13 at the South Coast Rcpatory Theatre. Admission will be $2 to $5. Pageant of the Masters begins at the Festival of the Summerfaire in Anaheim Arts in Laguna Beach July 8 .will run August 13-14. There through August 28. Ad-will not be an admission mission is from S9 to $35. charge. Orange County Com- munity Theatre Festival be- gins at the Newport Theaue Arts Center. The Festival runs from July 14 through July 23. Admission is $5. The Ocean FestivaJ will get under way in San Oemente July 15 through July 17. There is no ad- mission charge. "The Tell Phase" will startJuly 15 and run through September 10 at the Laguna Art Museum. Admission will be $1 to $2. The 20th Annual Pow- Wow at the Orange County Indian Center in Stanton is scheduled for July 29-30. There is a S2 admission charge. . The Centennial Cycling Festival will begin at Anaheim Stadium at 8:30 a.m. There will be a 10, 2), 50 and 100 mile route for recreational bicycle riding. The entry ftt ~ $1). August The Country Fair Jam· borce sponsored by the Lion's Oub is scheduled for ~ugust 6 in Stanton. The fair ts free. The CentcMial Opening Concert at che Pacific Sym· phony in IMM Meadows will hold iu ~ A 6. Admdsion it f7.10 to'f: An Antique Car Parade from Santa Ana's South Coast Plaza to the Main Place mall is scheduled for August 13. Admission 1s free . A Centennial Ball is planned August 13. Lo- cation will be announced at a later date. Admission to the Ball will be $100. The Centennial Kaleidoscope will be held in Irvine August 20-21. There will not be an admission charge for the event. HUNTINGTON BEACH 4TH OF JULY PARADE ·BK TO BENEFIT THE MARCH Of OIMES Centennial Ans Activities will begin in Laguna Beach August 21 and run through May 5. There will be no admission charges. The International Music and Dance Festival is sched- uled for August 27 in Costa Mesa. Admission charge will be determined at a later dare. September Community Night at Anaheim is planned for September 2. Admission will be $7. Arts on rhe Green will be August 9 in Costa Mesa. Admission is free, alchough chere will be a $3 parking charge. La Jaimaca Mex- ican/ American Arts Council has events planned for August 11 in Santa Ana Admission will be free . The Sandcastle Event , sponsored by the United Way will be held in Seal Beach. The event runs from August 19 through August 24. There will noc be an admission charge. The Young Soloists of Orange County will perform with the Centennial Or. chesrra August 25. The entertainment will be held in Laguna Beach, admission as free. The Oktoberfest, spon- sored by the Orange County Lion's Oub, will begin Sep- tember 30 and run through October 2. The festival will be held in Fountain Valley. There will be a S3 admission charge. Fireworks Spectacular I Tht 6ch Annual Orange County Fiesta •t Milt Square Park in Fountain V.ilty runs from June 30 ro July 4th. A Fireworks Sp«t•cular display will begin at 9 p.m. on the Fourth of July. Enteruinment, sporr competitions, rib and chili cookoffs, food fair, •rrs UJd crafrs •nd carnival rides will be featuttd during the fivt-d•y F~su. Daily tdmis.sion is 13, youth tickets (6-10) are $1 and childttn 1 md under •tt frtt. An o~ning-night one-price-pays all cicktt will be tyiilablt for $13. Parking •t Heil and Brook.hurst will be$2. Fireworks Extravaganza The 84th Annual Huntington Bach 4th of July Celebration gtts off with an early start with• Pancake B~kf•sc •t &.cliff Shopping Onter (7 •.m.) sporuottd by The Sist~r qiqM.sociMion and J(jwanjs Qub; an BK run scam •t B:JO •·m on M.in Sttttc, •wards will be ~need •t 9:JO a.m. ac the Oty lW1 Attn.. T~ "Yanktt Doodl~ Founh' Panek will ~lin • 10 •.m. and• Fifntioih &tnv.garm at dusk will M Mld in tlw HuntitJgtoa BeKh fflP School ScMlium.AdnWioau~ · Little Professor bookstore opens Sun west.Steel builds quality structures for animals Sunwcst Steel Structures ing to the country. "We are and large commercial com-save on modular garages and H u n t i n g t o n Inc. is one of the largest equestrian people ourselves plexes. Buildings are manu-animal shelters. Various Beach/Westminster is the builders of barns, corrals, who have the knowledge of factored at the company's merchandise may be site of a new Little Professor fencing, garages and com-safety and durability for you plant, and American prod-purchased or leased and Book Center. it was an-mercial buildings in Cali-and your animals," a ucts arc used mall construe-financing is available with nounced recently. for.n.ia and Arizona. spokesperson for Sunwest t1on. credit approval. Dick and Penny Cam-Sunwest directs its mar-said. Sunwesc offers special Located at 14213 Whit- panaro will own and operate ket to Orange County resi-Sunwest has built areas rates on ~pec1fic items cram in Fontana, Sunwcst is the store, which recently dent's needs who either own for small animal owners up monthly. For the months of currently planning an ex- opened in the Pavilion Shop-horses or who are rc-locat-to larg~ equestrian centers June and July cusromers can pansion of its plant. Ping Ce nee r · 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "A Little Professor Book 11 Center is a full service community bookstore," Penny Campanaro said. "We plan to be a real community resource and provide quality service." The Huntington Beach/Westminster Little Professor Book Center will feature a large magazine section, a large children's section and a full line pf best selling and reference books. Services will include a gift registry, free book offer, free gift wrap, mailing service and special order capabilities co locate hard co find books. The new store will join 120 other Little Professor Book Centers in 35 states. HB board elects July 4 president Donald MacAllister, local businessman and ac- tive communjty member, has been elected president of the Fourth of July executive board for the second con- secutive year. The 15-membcr board, which volunteers hundreds of hours throughout the year. will oversee the plan- ning of the Huntington Beach Fourth of July festiv- mes. Boasting the longest con- tinually running Founh of July Parade west of the Mississippi, the 84th Annual Huntington Beach Indepen- dence Day Pan.de is the centerpiece of a full day of family fun and events. e s p e c a y wt:~ CHAaUSH.aAll OiartllS H. Barr J.we.len for the gift of fine jewetry .•. o 91ft that lam for a hfettme and beyond. MINUTIMAN WAY Wonrt .. hearts of thoM )'OU io.... with 0 thovghtfvl gift Mlection from the ~Way­ Ameritan country itore. Choose from o wide array of country gift itreim and home decor m -11 as a un.quegroup of ch11dr.n's treasures w t h V1DIO WAllHOUSI • ~/equipmel'lf r-"Ok & soles • Camero & camcorder occeuory 1op«iolists • Equipment reporr • Film/Sltde Tronsf~ CIOWN IOOKS Quoflty books for the who~ family-New Y~ Ti!M\ best sellen-25%·35% off. £°"ry boolt & mo9cmne discounted R~. rf 'f04J pod full ~· 'f04J drdn't bvy rt at Crown 8oolr.s 0 u Appantf Chompogl. 6'15-6731 Dione.~ Hollidovs. 6'5-0'92 The Sb 1h111pe1. 6«2-1061 The S10t •. 11 lpel For Her 6'2·1061 n '\A9to$~ ~60-1i97 Oros>e(s a.oanon·,,. ~ Qffts. Speck»tty Stq>I ChorlelH 8orT ~ ~10 Cto.rilr't 8oolcl.. ~ Down HQrdWofe 6C2-1133 magk~ Oloo~M.2·22" MnJtemQnWoy ~ f]ltSlClllNlnelwe... ~leocfl \lldoo~ ~ WI 2 • 'T' W 7 pm • ....,_Q.6 IMAGIS-HAU.MAalC Your Hollow.-pklce! Come SN our loo 9amar ond lots mof'e1 OSCO DIUG Amenco's OfV9 Stof'e w9'tt over 25,000 itetM to choose from~ day CIOWN HAIDWUI Crown Hardware & House- wore\ offer "good °'6- foshm Soef'Y1<e" and o lot more. Come on ift f°' quai- 'Y aierchondiw al com- petrhve price\ m n d ZA ~.,. Spectalty roodl Hed's Frogen Vout. 722-99IO ~Mat1et.~ kalle~'tC>lcie ""klll ........... llOI _ _, .... Pie Shoc:c>e 5'M71'I SeMcel N'flhOn("$ ~ SeMoe s.ce e1 b* d America Tl2~ 0r eoer. Opeor• e •st. 6'2-0120 ..... patt 8ol:>ocJ SOW'(jlL ~ ~~Oeonen. 646--2392 O.C.. FIESTAll/8UMMERFUN/AnAct..¥dlll11gSUpptemen1 to<>r,..Coeat OAtlY Pl.OT-WEDNESDAY. JUNE 21. 1W e 4 I • • • • • ' • • • • • • . . Stay cool, in style for summer with Shipley' s hot fashions Shipley's at Seacliff Vil- lage in Huntington Beach, is looking great with the latest in summer fashions at prices you'll love to sec. "We offer basic fashions, as well as what's new for the stylc- conscious cusromcr," Ray Ross . Shipley's spokesperson, said. Shiplcy's is a step ahead of the competition in fashion. price and service. he said. A family-oriented srorc. Shiplcy's carries today's sportswear and beach wear fashions for the younger and older man,· women and juniors. Quality name brands include Gotcha, Levi, Quicksilver, Billabong, Korct and Beverly Hills Polo Oub. Other well- known brands arc also avail- able. Shiplcy's stores arc located in several areas throughout Southern Cali- fornia. Besides the Hunt· ington Beach store, there is one located in Anaheim, Costa Mesa, Orange, Los Alamitos and Long Beach. Customer service is another advantage of shop- ping at Shiplcy's. The staff arc all trained by Ross to give the customer the best service possible without being pressured into buying. "Our major summer event, the Fourth of July celebration, will have tors of fun, food and festivities at the village," Ross said. The Huntington Beach Parade will end at Seacliff Village, and mer ants will be spon- soring sev l events. To take a vatage of the professional sc ice and ex- cellent prices, c ntact the Shiplcy's nearest you. ... ,. ................... ,...,_r. Courses help protect kids Last year the media gave alarming news about ch1l. drcn drowning in back-yard pools and spas. The highesr number of fatalities in rhe nation was reported in Or. angc County. In addition. reports of children dying from falling accidents were frightening. Concerned over this dilemma, Charley Baker has teamed with Ginny Flahi ve to devise a six-week summer course at the Baker Dance Studio, for boys and girls between the ages of 3 and 6 years old. flahivc's instruetion in· eludes fresh and salt water safety rules. There will be limited enrollment. Parents who are interested may call (714) 847~94 or (714) H~-0773 for details and a starting date . You've Tried At 'The Wrong Ways To Lose Weight ... NoW Find The • tweight. The Rightweight Plan employs the moet cunent atate-of-the-art technolocY. The PfOll'UD ia deeiped to ensure both rapid weight lou and to provide the aupport you need to keep the weight off aafely and effectively. OUr plan offentheee unique features: • Thorouch medical and nutritional evaluation • Complete physician auperviaion •Comprehensive Bio-Nutritional Approach developed by Dr. Jerome Blum • High protein, vitamin & mineral diet aupplement to uaiat in rapid weicht le.a •Individually tailored, computer-formulated diet plans • Computeriud body compoaition analysis • Medication fo-r metabolic control A appetite auppreuion • FJectro-ACUICOpe to reduce periodic fOod cravinp \ • Profelaionally directed individual coumeling and group 1upport aeuion t .] Call .now for a FREE COMPUTER ANALYSIS LAGUNA BILLS 24953 Pueo de Valencia COSTA MESA ANAHEIM PLACENTIA 357 W•t WU.On 216 N. State Colllp Blvd. #A 300 E. Yorba Linda Blvd . Ri;htweiabt~ Groupe• (800) 228-RTWT • (800) 228-7898 • (714) 776-7861 • Eliminate long lines Nick Kline, manager of Mailboxes Etc. USA. offers services such as package wrap and shipping through UPS, Airborne o.r Emery; stamps, passport photos, business office supplies and mailbox rentals. Mailboxes Etc. is located at 10044 Adams Ave. in the Albertson Center in Huntington Beach. ~·· C!.. Now thru 00~t~1' _, Sunday July 3rd -~"'-"' ~ ~\)\1 l'\' t.\'<'o tt• I ~July4th 1CM Seacllff Only •3•• GIT Hlal QUICKI YOU'LL LOVE THl·flllCIS Outstanding buys on Men's-Boy's & Women's Sportswear Values from 991 -3000 •s•• Learn self defense Jack Taylor, top, and Tom J ones have recenclr completeJ the karate course at Black Belt Karate in Huncin~ton Beach. Training centers arc located at 19736 Beach Blvd . in the Newland Center and in Westminster. For more informacion. call (714) 962--0024 or 893-3366. 811111111 Ille 1ra11. Cut down on sah. O.C. AESTA 1118UMMER FUN/An Ac:NeililillQ ~to Or-. COMt DM.Y PILOT -W'EDHESOAY, JUNE 21, 1.. 11 • • Huntington Beach's 84th parade reflects nation's history The Huntington Beach Independence Day Parade, which began 84 years ago, still reflecrs the original idea of families celebrating American pride in our na- tion's history. Traditionally, picnics, parades and fire. work extravaganzas con- stitute the day's activities of one of our most important national holidays. In the year 1904 Hunt- ington Beach held its fust Fourth of July parade with ~.ooo in attendance. Today, an estimated 300,000 will view the tw0-hour parade that will include float~, drill teams, equestrian units, clowns and well-known tele- vision and movie per· sonalities. Originally, the town, with the help. and support oflocal businesses, collectively raised funds in order to financetheevent.Eventually ----,;;==============;::;;;;====;;:::::;:;;:::;:::==:;----, costs increased and local government along with the Your Key to Qullty end Sefety · Many Plana and SIJI•• to chooae from Sunweat hae • ~e line of equestrian products avallable.. We can l&IPPfY all your needs, from a aJng .. wat_.. to a com- plete equestrian faclity. from a smd loaftng lhed to a commerc:lal-slzed rkl- lng arena. All Amettcen Produc:ta· UMd. • FEEDERS • CUSTOM BARN • LONGEJNG RING •CUSTOM CORRALS Chamber of Commerce and the Jaycees recognized the need to take over financial responsibility. Now, how- ever, due to revisions in California's tax laws, the financial responsibility is once again in the hands of the citizens and merchants of Huntington Beach. In 1976, Huntington Beach was selected to host the state"s Official Bicenten- nial Parade which . marketi the nation's 200th binhday. This year's 84th Annual Independence Day Parade marks the culmination of the official Bicentennial ac. tivities. With the theme "Yankee Doodle Fourth," the parade will appropriately reflect the proud values that the city of Huntington Beach and all Americans hold dear. : The personal touch •AUTOMATIC WATERS •ARENAS • WASH RACK • HORSE SHEL TEAS •PALPATION CHUTES • BRIOl.E RAQ(8 • AUTOMA TtC Fl Y • BLANKET RACKS 11 SYSTEMS • HOT WAU<.ER8 JEngraved crystal paper weights, designed by master engraver Seamus Comae from Ireland, are an example of quality crystal products available at Irish Crystal. Comae specializes in hand drilled diamond point engraving in custom designs. For more information, call Irish crystal at (714) ~9-1944. •BULL PEH . BBQ BEEF SANDWICH CONTEST Saturday • July 9 • 1 pm • Gourmet Gallery ~ Orange County Fair Costa Mesa July 7-17 , j) *Open to All 12 & Over * 1st Place Winners & Rec~ Published in Daily Pilot Plus Special Prizes, too! *Ribbons to 1st-5th Place Winners in all Divisions · BQ BEEF SANDWICH CONTEST Spedel Needs S.turd•y • July 9 • l pm • Gourmet Gsllery Send Entnes 10 Electric Outlet Prmt Nam. 0.)llme PtlcH>e Of'ange Coutlty Faw -88 Faw Drive <i _ Wil brino 880 S1r .. 1 Address City Zlfl-Cost• Mesa. CA other •Only one recipe entry •Entries Judged on genetal 92626 per contestant appearance. flavor. UH of Attn Spec1a1Contes11 · beef & ptnef't•Uon a.tore Jut/ 5 FOR MORE INFO CALL:(714) 751-FAIR SPECIAL: CONTESTS OFFICE CLIP & ENTER TODAY Race to benefit March of Dimes If you've ever dreamed of running a race · before 200,000 cheering fan~, Hunt- ington Beach is the place to be on July 4th. An antici- pated 2,000 runners will participate in the fourth annual Huntington ~ch Fourt of Jully Parade SK. · S~red by Nike, Spott Chalet.and Signal Landfl\lrk Inc., the run kicks off the annuAI Hunt~on Beach Fourth of July celebration and follows the ioute of the ~-• n/P18) f : ) 1 l 1 t t • .. il 1 e • Sult ~i. ebown behind the Su.bi bar at Safeway knows that -fun a.. .. little time (or meal planning and litde desire for cooking. For .U. home ...... or picllic» at the beach, be uya Safeway off en not only tbl ...... -... atmlift ..w bu, deli and bakery along with the 6neat in .-produce. Tbse'a no need to be a kitchen slave when delic:M>wi ,....,.,... _.an ....ty to ~ be.De. At they ay at Sll'lleei, .. ~woman 11 •aw.'' lbe deaigner·ownera, Dianne Wheeler and Susan Swain ban produced fabulous wardrobea b many lop cdebritia ther they have an ex· tensive bacqround from the worid o( tele-rilion and film COllUme design. Their cus- tcimera are wdcome to browte through the Stracci Collec· tion/amplea. make a tdection and the 1t&ff of ae&m1tnlllel and cutten will tel lo work to provide the best·fitting gannet poeaib&e. It ii thia kind of penonaliaed aervice that makes every woman fEEl. like a 1w. ..,.... c-.1 "N Pwty ....... ~ al F-111 al ht, picaic _. ,.ny ......... In Caet. diey ...-. iD perty ---... and canla far .,., .,.oai ----. Anil. • tbe Swww time. tbe Ima& _, be .., bat ii could be ...,... .... ii proper pncaa1im» .,..,., taken IMlcft • clay al w · · • or boating. and outdoor fua. .,.. ,.__, ii !he placie 10 go b IUIM.ui loca., IUD KJ-, et~ Cobful '-ch towm and lays. are there to bnghten ··-clay. • ; I I l 1 . . ~ightweight offers progams to suit.individual lifestyles "Statistics show that 97 percent of people who lose weight gain it back in one year, 99 percent gain it back in five years," Dr. Jerome Blum, developer of the Bio- N utritional Approach at Rightweight Medical Group, said. Rightweight ueats overweight individ- uals by reforming a persons lifestyle to assure proper eating and thinking habits to maintain a healthy life. Obesity is a disease • and it is c!_aiming more and more Americans, he said. The disease can begin at any age, including infancy, or at any time a person reaches no more than 20 percent of his or her normal body weight. "We change the lock to fit the key," Blum said. He was describing Right· weight's slogan of finding the weight loss program that suits each individual, as opposed to a program that an individual.has to adapt his life to using. The Bio-Nutritional Ap· proach is a program de- signed to find and treat all the causes of obesity. "Ob- esity is multi-causal, a person can no more treat obesity with diet alone, as any other disease such as diabetees," Blum said. "The only way to help these people is putting into balance all the multi-causal problems,'' he.said. The Bio- Nutritional Approach does this. For more information about the program, cone.ct Rightweight's Anaheim Of. flee at (714) 776-7861 or(~) 228-RTWT. The fac· . s are open by appointment, day or evenings. -----------------------, HRISl il. (CRY_STAL BLACK BELT KARATE Teaching the Chudc Norris United Fighting Arts Method .. FITNESS WITH A PURPOSE" C 0 M P A N Y Ireland's most Exclusive Crystal 400L &OOL BELOW 8UGGE8TED 70 • 70 RETAL PRICE ,, , .. Ind CampDet 20 ~· CUcJt belt master Instructor • colf9r Md prlv•e wet FEATURING:• SpecJa1y ~ ~ • c°"'*'e condition- ing program• Special M!'lf~ course • Av~ nwwt._, .u JUPPks • s~ uairwng '°' wonwn • rout ~ision • SpK.-seer~ courw for chHdren • Private Instruction ~ • No cweedl ''Ttwre Is no b«ter, sattr °' faster W'Y to team etrtttfw lc«atel" OP•N SIX DAYS A •••K-DAY AND waNING Cl.ASS•I 962·0024 ESTAllUSHED 1981 89J•JJ66 NOVI Ol'EN We will s~ip UPS anywhere in the U.S. Free. (from South Coast Plaza, North on Bristol, left on MacArthur, left on Plaza Drive) T~~1~0t5 19736 le.at BMI,. .. 6427 \If ..... ..., Aw. NNttMd C..-falmW8Ndt & ~ -Wa t I :aw. CA a6D -----------------------------.... ,., 549-1944 Cloeecl S-a Mon ONE FREE LESSON WITH THIS COUPON ( > I JI 11 I ' , I I • , :• II l 1111111•-••• (Rlg.l30) Colorful Prints ) -, j ---=...,.,r ·- Just like mom makes Denny's Restaurant in Huntington Beach offers breakfast, lunch, dinner 24hrs a day. Gary Lauchlan, manager, invites customers to try Mother Bueler Pies whole or by the slice. The restaurant is located at 10126 Adams Ave in che Albcnson Center. For more information. call (714)963-8881. ..... .,... • ··-·· ...... *'----.......... For that special occasiqn The Flower Mill in Huntington Beach offers everything from custom flower arrangements to balloons and gifts for every occasion. Call (714) 963-07W. ~ ALL DAY OF SURF & SAND \¢J!!!) ACTIVE SPORTS• WATER PLAY• ADVENTURE• INCLUDES CAT ALINA. DANA POINT, MARINE MUSEUM. LAGUNA SAWDUST FESTN Al. FASHION ISLAND & MORE t-th 6-wttk ~~I s 8 500 WEEKLY ~CATALINA CA'MP OUT \¢J!!!) AUGUST IST -STH tNCLUOES ... FOOD TRANSPORATION S 18500 HURRY-LIMITE·D RESERVATIONS CALL 631-1668 Catch the WJldLife at ~(IO_. older) QMW(3~9) . . .., . 4 -• O.C. AESTA MISUMM£R FUN/An AchiMtillltQ Supplement to 0rwige C09ll DAILY PILOT -WEDNESDAY. JUNE 29. 1918 • Local jockey wins with thoroughbred colt, car Karol's Kids • program is summer fun The third time is a charm;· ond Mercedes at The House a good ride, he said. "I racihg career in Louisiana Eddie Dclahoussay, 1988 of Imports in Huntington shopped around before I when he was a child. "We Preakness winner and Beach. bought a car, but The House had match races -country world-famous jockey, said. Buying a new car can be of Imports offered me a races-where people would Dclahoussay believes in the like maintaining a world-good deal," DcJahoussay bring their horses and WC Karol's Kids SUalmet Ca.mp winning odds, and that is famous jockey statuS, both said. would have two-horse races was born 11 years ago. Karol why he purchased his sec-take a lot of "hustle" to fmd Delahoussay started his on the weekends." At age 16 saw the need to get me IWU --1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiim-I. he started racing at the that nn unsupervised d~ Louisiana Fairgrounds. "I the summer off the streea Nothing is Equal to a Mercedes Benz 560SL Compare Our ••.•.• USMquaW Selection Every model and color •.• European Dell~ You pick up your ar We pick up your flight ticket up to Dec. 31, 1988 ••• Le.tins Factory Sponsored l~sing plan limited time ••• All MU.. . and Modela We locate any other makes and models that fit ones needs .... Trade-Ina R~listic trade--in values Sales • Service • Leasing HOUSE OF IMPORTS Buena Park Santa Ana (1-5) and R.t....w. (141) Fnewa,. Meet DIAL 213/714 MERCEDES started in January 1968, but and beach. didn't win a race till June of Ov h ..... _ that year," he said. . . er t c ·years u1e pro- ln 1978 he was ~ $ram ~ ~ome more Leading Rider of the United mteresung, with local~ States. And in 1979 he _ to visit and to expand t~e decided to pack up the cultural ~wareness ~f chil- family and move to Cali-dren. besides. working on fomia and break into the public behavior and man. local racing industry. ners. The strong points of Needless to say, he has ~ summer camp ~e. ~e definitely made a name for be2ch and .water act1v1t~es; himself. In 1982 he won the the day tnps t? Cata~ Kentucky Derby race and in Island, Dana Pomt Manne 1983 he won another Derby Museum and the overnight race . campout in San Diego with Dclahoussay won the trips to Sea World and the Preakness in Baltimore on San Diego Zoo. Risen Star, a three-year-old The camp opens at 7 a.m. colt from his home state. and closes at 6 p.m. It costs More recently, he took first $85 per week, which in· place in the Belmont race on eludes all costs except the the same colt. campout. Activities include In the racing world, like swimming, hiking, tennis, the automotive business, parties, movies and more. performance and word of for more information, call mouth arc important. "I was (714) 631_1(>68. recommended by a friend to The House of Imports," Dclahoussay said. "And I Dim was impressed with the ea ••• P'l'Gllilft'812 friendly service and reason. oldest community Indepen- -----------=----------'----;...__-----..:......_--..L.a_b_lc-=-pr_ic_c_s._" ______ dence Day parade in the ~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;======FOREMOST~======::;:;i lna;°;~n Scott of the Los Angeles Lakes is honorary ~~Travel Trailers and Fifth Wheel chairman. He will fire the ".ll-..~-.r-~tJl6~-~;2:.. · starting gun at 8:30 a.m. at CIOM OuL •• 1988'• Bur now .. Once They're Gone- TMj!re GOnel ALL 81ZB8 From 11V..tt.-31ft. Huntington · Bcacl) Civic Center. The route consists of two loops al_ong Main Street betWeen Yorktown and Sixth Street. Advance P."oceeds will benefit• the March of Dimes in its continuing mission to fight birth defects, the nation's number OM child health ~em. ,Entry forms are available through the MueholDimes office in C.oa Mell or at $poet ~ 16M2 Belch .l!=~======e~=:==::;===.::;=~======~====~==~~~~~!!11 BlYd. in Hundnpn Beach. • O.C.. .-rA• lltl'=m 11\WAn ,,.,,. •• ..,IE Rlilnt ID ar._. C09ll DM.Y N.:OT-wm•MY, ........ PMt. ..mst 11 a w , .. a • rlehJ' ol lllalt-IAlbe eaten In c...--. Vehicle maintenance priority at Minut-Lube service center If you haven't made your "Costa Mesa and New-!********************************************************: summer vacation check list port residents realize the : : yet (you know • dogs to importance of regular oil : : kennel, stop newspaper. and lubrication maintenance : : have neighbor pick·upmail). for their cars," Davis said. • • here is an important item "We work hard co offer the : that should be at the top: best service possible." • have car serviced. Costa Mest service : In fact, your car needs centers are located at 2175 : year-around maintenance Newport Ave. at Viaoria : and attention, but when that ..SUect, and 300 E. 17th St. at • car becomes a long-distance Santa Ana Ave. These : travel vehicle, it's even more outlets are among 16 QSML : important that it has been centers operating in : properly, efficiently and re-Southern California. Na-• cently serviced. tionally, there arc 288 service : ~W ....... 84th Annual 4th of July Celebration / ' PANCAKE BREAKFAST 7:00-11:00 Lm. Seacliff S{lopping Center Yorktown A venue at Main Street Sister City Asoociation-Kiwanis Club MARCH OF DIMES BK RUN ON MAIN STREET Y ct, it is difficult enough centers in the Quaker State : to prepare for leaving on Mintt-Lube system, the sec-: vacation without trying to ond largest auto quick-• make time to schedule an lubrication chain in the : Starting Time 8:30 a.m. appointment and then leave nation. : Sponsored by Sport Chalet your car for service at a gas A total of 107 service • station or tcpair shop for centers opened in 1987 by : 84th ANNUAL FOURTH OF JULY PARADE days. It is inconvenient and Quaker State Minic -Lube, a : 10:00 a.m. too time consuming. wholly owned subsidiary of : .. A YANKEE DOODLE FOURTH .. ON MAIN STREET The easy answer is Oil City, Pennsylvania-based • On Main Street from 6th Street To Yorktown Avenue Quaker State Minit·Lubc's Quaker State Corp. 2 Hours ol Baods..Aoats. Celebrities and Marching Units 14.point auto lubrication Davis points out another • ZSAZSA GABOR GRAND MARSHAL service performed an 10 advatage to the vacationing minutes. Aod no appoint· mocorist who also is a FIREWORKS EXTRA YA GANZA ..._ d ,:, ment is neccessary, Bob QSML customer: "With ._W~ Davis, owner/operator of more than 280 Quaker State Huntington Beach High School Stadium / ' Costa Mesa QSML, said. Minic-Lube centers in 20 Seating $2.00 Minit·Lubc services in· scates, there's a good chance Sponsored By The City of Huntington Beach elude lubrication, oil motorists will fand a Minit· COME EARLY-Gates Open At 7:00 p.m. To Band Music change, air and fluid level Lube store along the·ir FIREWORKS BEGIN AT DUSK • checks and vacuuming. travels . : The Costa Mesa M.init-To contact the Newport Tickets Are Available At Gate : Lul>e aores, which opened Ave. store, call (714) • Please contact lM Public Information Oftk~ frlf further information. 960-3899 • last summa. employs 16 }tS-41'°, and (714) 548-2~' : . : HtVice technicians. for the store on 17th St. •**********************************•*•***********•••••••*'* O.C. WTA..,...... f\JMIAn AcheiM4118'qt1 t•ll to Of8l'IOI COMe OM..Y "'-OT -~Y • .AME 21. 1W 11 .. , , Couples look to recreational vehicles for new home - Recreational vehicles arc becoming more popular as permanent homes and va- cation residences, rather than just vacation vehicles; and the designs and amenities available in the trailers are reflecting this cl}angc. "Aloe of people look for something to live in -the medium to large units are liveable and can be hooked up at parks," Bob Exum, salesperson at ForemOSt Recreation V chicles in Stan- ton, said. Trailers from 16to 34 feet, are available furnished and are equipped with electric, water and sewage facilities, and in some units, cable television and microwaves, Exum said. Foremost kee~ a selection of (JO to 70 new trailers on its three-acre toe, but what makes them dif- ferent than ocher rec- reational vehjcle dealerships is .. we speciali;zc in trailers and Fifth-wheel units," he said. Foremost carries quality vehicle lines such as the Terry line .by Fleetwood and the Nomad line in Skyline. Both manufacturers are na- tionwide, and have divisions in California. Other brands arc available with a price range from $S9')S to $26,000, Exum·said. Exum and his wife Bon- nie, have been in the rec- reation vehicle sales pro- fession for more than 20 Picnic Perfect • .................. , ............... ......,. n ---Cllllr ............ ... Cll ... ...., .... (714)m-1411 ---•E. c.... ""'·am Pllllt(1M>m-- 'HDM)l1' JI ind lllm ,....,......,.2 .... ........ ..... a..,..., ... ..... (114)111-ml -·----......... ..................... ..... (7M)...,. -----... years, and offers help and advise to persons interested in purchasing a trailer for the first time or the experienced owner. "We are here to help if the customer wants, ocher- wisc they arc free to just browse," Mrs. Exum said. Several financing options are available to buyers. "We try to tailor down payments to a persons needs in most cases," ·Exum said. Down payments normally are a . minimum 1 S ' ~rcent, and payments can be fma.nced for 15 years, he said. Foremost Recreation Ve- hicles is located at 12345 Beach Blvd. in Stanton. for more information, give the Exums a call at (714) 89S-lfl00. Rick's delivers water products to consumer's homes, work A new service called with the opportunity of Rick's Running Water will trying some of the specialty deliver popular water prod-beverages that I have found ucts like Evian, Vittel, to be among the very best." Calistoga, Crystal Geyser, In addition to home or Arrowhead, Perrier, New busin~ss delivery, the com- York Seltzer and many pany features monthly ochers to your home or specials. Weis sells all the office. pr~ucts with a one case The service is available six m.1mmum. days a week, with delivery at · "I want people to know the consumer's conve-that they can have the nicnce. It is an ideal answer products they enjoy and to the problem of keeping have it delivered for the these beverages on hand in same cost that they would the home, or for a special expect from any other party and ocher occasions. source. And, they can enjoy "My initial objective was sa.cppling new pro<lucts as to make the purchUc of they arc introduced. I make bulky and heavy bottled sure to keep up with all the produas faster and easy latest types of natural ~ters without raising the cost," and the differmt flavors. I Rick Wciu, owner of Rick's test them to determine if, .i Running Water, said. "Arid, indeeCJ,,thiy will mttt with i I've done that. But what is my customers apProvaJ;· he I really mrarding is that I am said. f . able t0 proYide more people Rick's Running Water is I based in Laguna ·Beach and • IO offen free delivery from Daria Point to Seal Beach. HONEWAllm Ill SL •fl& I a -Individuals or business • --~ u.o. .. ...., intttetted in this terYice should call (71 •) 499 «JOB. - 1at - ts of lty nd c:· or m- aly he lSC )W he nd he ild lCf oy as ke :he ers . I if, ith he · is nd )ID th. ess ice l. Seacliff's murals, birds create seaside shopping atmosphere When you visit Seacliff Village ShOpping Center in Huntington IXach, you will be overwhelmed by the va~ o( sea birds and tile murals creating a seaside atmosphere and setting the Village apart. As you stroll through the relried and inviting at- mosphere, notice the flower- ed courtyards with foun- tains, sculptures, tiled murals and other clements that maiKe the Village a unique shopping environ- ment. A Merchants Association coordinates Seacliff Vil- lage's promotional events for the indepcndentl y owned shops. "We promote the Center mostly in the local market, as the Village is primarily a community customer center," Ray Ross, president of the association. said. "The service and friend- liness is something you find here, not like in larger centers," he said. Visitors to the Village will appreciate the diverse choice of stores from retail, food, service and businesses. Upcoming planned events at the Village include the Fourth of J uly cel- ebration Monday July 4. Independence Day at Sca- cliffVillage will ~gin with a Pancake Brcakf ast starting at 7 a.m. Entertainment and festivities will ~ scheduled throughout the day. The 84th annual Parade will end its city route at the shopping center. Seacliff Village Shopping Center is located ~tween Goldenwesr and Main streets. , s Cool tastes for summer Penguin's frozen yogurt offers an assortment of flavors and toppings will less calorics. Located at 10176 Adams Ave. ( just cast of Brookhorst) m Al~rtson · s Center, Huntington Beach, Penguin's features delicious monthly flavors. For more information contaet tht-store at (714) 968-6850. Honey Baked brand adds flavor to picnics It's that time of the year again. Get the kids ready, pack the car and off you go on those summer picnics with rhe family. This yeu make it a little easier and a lot tastier with a Honey- Baked brand ham. Smoked 30 hours over a blend of real hickory and applewood chips, sprinkled with rare spice buds and herbs, the Honey Baked brand hams arc a unique taste experience. The hams, fully cooked and sliced, range from seven paunds (half hams) co 16-18 paund sizes (full hams). Located in several lo- cations throughouc Cali- ~rnia, the scores also off er a ~ariety of other quality prod- uces such as barbecue ribs, turkey, deli produces and other foods. Sandwich and party trays are available for special occassions. Honey Baked brand hams San Francisco. The corpar- ation is a licensed franchisor for the state of California. For more information or to order a delicious Honey- Baked brand ham, contact che Corona del Mar store at (714) 673-9000 or the Hunt- ington Beach store at (714) 848-8575. make excellenr gifts during ------------ holidays or JUSt for that 0:.~~ ~~~T special friend or business .. FAST associate. The stores ship RESULT" products countrywide. SERVtC E H B k d H I f DIRECTORY oney a c am nc. o ... ,11 u •. ,1111 California was established in "4·r ' 11 1· • • .11 1968. There arc more than 39 stores from San Diego to 642-5671 h t JU Your Favorite Beverage Delivered FREE To Your Home or Business --JULY SPECIALS-- EVIAN 1 .s urn 90TTU'. S 1.29 CALISTOGA SPARKLNi TO BURN ARSONISTS REWARD UPTO $500 ... RA.I. VIAT'Elt 10 oz......,.. S2.29 OltANGINA SPAltKUNG OTMJS JUICE............... SLZ9 ltA .. OSASPMkUNG M (800) 47-ARSON A sparkJing New J~a In Hc:>rM Del~ry • Gifts • Parties • Everyday use 49M008 • ...aAL \IVATD' u-.. .onu S ~ AvMlat/M ProdXt:s • NeW Ye.it Seiber • ~ • HlnMn's Hant Soda• CtySUI Gt)'W SI. ThafNs k9d T .. • ~ $plf1llltr .... ,~, .... t:.-1-a.,....._ .. \ , . • at Albertson's Center • CHIC1\ENFRED OIMER 10126 Adams Ave, Huntington Beach 714 963-8881 lOSEWElllTIY ElllllG68POUll8C. w11r1 aoart JitAI• DlillleTG•• A Fll.L SERVICE SALON Spedallztng In the &atMt hair con- ceptS. manJurea, full nan MMcea. We carry finely sleeted products. lOCJ, Off Any Penn! lllny ..... ,. ...... We· Take the Hassles Out of Malllng All Summer Long We pack, wrap and ship your gifts the most economical and quickest wa9 ... hassle tree! A CONVENIENT PLACE TO BUY STAMPS AND DROP YOUR MAIL • PO lloll,..... • U PA.JA!rtlOme • ...,.UNlll .......... .... . .._ .......... ........ . ....., ....... ''We carry • selectioe of 1reet1D1 cam ~ aovelty item•" 10044 Ac:s.ms (at 8roo11t1un10 Huntlng1on Beect\, CA 92654e (714) 98&-3778 Thl' Post Office Altcrn.•f1vt• .,.-y -· :....-•> ::!: ~ Ir:-T Vlstt our unJque shop for all your fresh and silk floral needs. We are a full service florist with a beautiful Une of gtftware & anUques. .. SUMMER SPECIALS I SUNNU F1lESH • MIXED BOUQUETS STAR11NO rllOM s59a l 0126-A Adamia A.-cnut, ltunttftllOn Beech -~-. ...,...c...4 a 1t11,.•~ • (1141 96S-07S9 ., I ·····~···-··-·-·----···-······-·······~