HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-04-25 - Orange Coast PilotWf ONf S OAV APl!ll •"• 1'184 <Jl~Al\l(,f-(,fJ lJt4 l ( fl . IJ r >f ' NII• .'' r l ,.,. '
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A court decision against
athletic fees may put
Laguna Beach athletes
on the bench./ AJ
State funds to help re-
store Upper Newport Bay
might survive the ax./ A3
«•:-:•:-:•X-',XV}.!<~<e'~~·:<«•!•:-'.,.:•:.X·!·
California
De Lorean tapes show
references to code
names for drugs./ A5
The seismic reading said
6.2, but Tuesday's quake
Injured only 21 people.
/AS
Nation
Mondaleasksend to
Independent delegate
committees as Hart takes
Vermont./ AS
World
Experts say Iran will have
Its own nuclear bomb In
two years.IM
Rom e
Home Design Expo '84
offers plenty of answers
for home owners who
want a new mood for
rooms./8 1
Scandinavian designer
Katja llkes dramattc col-
ors and the new freedom
to create Interiors that
match a llfestyle. /81
Food
A balanced diet can help
you Increase your work
potentlal./C1
The rich flavors of
liqueurs are the under-
pinnings of desserts de-
signed by a food expert.
/C2
Sporta
Damon Berryhlll's dra-
matic two-out ninth In-
ning homer lifts Orange
Coast to a 5-3 South
Coast Conference victory
over Golden West./01
Corona del Mar turns
back University, 18-10, In
Sea View League tennis
actlon./03
Ent ertainment
"Lavender Follies" Is full.
of female superstars -
all of the male gender -
at Sebastian's West./83.
Bualneu
Investing can be even
more fun If you learn
about It OCC'a way -on
a cruise to Hawaii./ Al
INDEX
Bridge 84
Bulletin Board A3
Bulfnea A8
c.tlfornla N.wt A4
Cluaff*I 04.e
Comlcl 84
Crouwc>rd 06
O.th Notion 85
Food C1-10
Help YourMlf 82
Home 81·2
Horoaoope O&
In the Servfoe A7
Ann Lander1 82
Mutuat Fundl A8
NatlOnal Newt A4
Obhueriel A7
Opinion A10
Pobl.og A3
Pubfto Notlcel &Ml
8portl 01~
8toek Mattcet1 A8
T.e.vtek>n 82 ,..,. • .,. 83
W•th« A2
WOf1d Ntw1 A4
County kills airport pact
Supervisor Riley calls board's action made twfft wort of the = bUMilna _ljJ'CleelncOt Tiitb
Belch. Tbe boud killed tbe pect
without ditcuMion when DO IUpef'·
viaot leCOOdcd ltiley's motion that
the com&>lica&ed lqa.1 document be
approved.
'Irresponsible,· vows t o join in lawsuits
By JEPP ADLER °' .............
Without a word, the Oranae Coun-
ty Board of Supervison ICl'lpocd a
proposed peace treaty with the City of
Newport Beach .aovemina John
Wayne Airport fliaht operatfons
Tuetday. Then the board moved to
Rental
firm for
Games
is gone
Police field angry
homeowners' calls
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. Mfr ........
Police ue attempti~ to learn the
whereabouu of a Huntlnston Beach
company thataUqedly took in tenJ of
thousandl of dollan 1n advance fees
from Joe.al residents who hoped to
rent their homes to tourisu attending
the Summer Olympic Games in Los
Angeles.
Vacation Rental Systems, which
advertised homeownen would make
a small fortune off foreign visitors,
bas vanished from iu leased offices in
Huntington Beach. The firm's I.isled
telephone numben have been discon-
nected.
act oew auideliaes on the number of
OJabtt the airpon will accommodate, ruTes that could allow up to 219 daily
fliAhtJ.
ln a stunning action that left
SupervisorThomu Rile)' fuminaand
vowing to retaliate by joining airport
opponents in lawsu1u, the board
But supervison ~ a lot to say
about new airport acceaa ,suidelines, finally aprovina in principle a plan
that potentially would pemut a
maximum 219 fliabts per day from
John Wayne Airport once a propoted
............ ..., ...............
Coeta lleu police officer 8nace RM9 dlaplaJ8 Teet after
P'ebraary locttt,Dt police MJ WU a fa1>rlcatlon.
Twc> new aittiw would be~ •1 II
thnie fl.tpu fat.b UDds cbs ~ wbile an ldditioul · would be apportioned .. ..... a
ai.rtiw tbat were opera~• Wa~ Airport Wbea tbe ...
1913 ftCbt allocation was .-.
The number of ftiabt1 Woald bi ioaeued to 73 ooc:e tbe new wmiMI ·
f'acilitia envitiooed by aupet rilon are completed.
However. in an anempc 10 miJl1. ~-·~/AS)
CM cop lied
about being
shot chief
·.
BJ STEVE MARBLE
UMI IAREN E. KLEIN °' .. .,.., ........
A Costa Mesa police officer who
boasted that his bulletproof Vest
saved him from a sunman's bullet in
• February wu suspended from duty
Tuesday for allClfdly fabricatina the story.
Costa Mesa Police Department
officials said Bruce ROM, a 3l-yc:ar·
old patrolman, bu admitted Uitlict-
ing a small wound on his bKk,
claimina it had been left by a bullet which be said hit the vest he wu
wearin1-Police Chief Raser Neth said Rosa,
SUJ~ded with ~y. baa been put on nouc.e that be wdl be fired. Rosa bas
five days to respond to the tamin·
ation notice.
Neth claimed Ross allqedly in-
Oicted the small wound himlelf' and
invented the story to .. drawsymJ1atlly
to hinuelf ...
Police detectives bepn invaap.,.
ina the .. abootiJI&" just da-ys after
Rosa stood in froDl of news reponen
and prailed the buDetorooC Yest for
savina hit life. OUd' Netb aid tbe
inve.tiation WU IW1ed Oil a .. pat feellQa..,...-that Rea wun•t 1d1inl me
truth.
Neth said Rosa alto bu admitted to
not beina entirely truthful about two other polioo-rdated iacidentl in tbe
put when we wu employed by the
UC Irvine Police ~t. Neth
said today be oould not deW.I thole
incident&.
But con. spokawoman Cathy
Joocs said ooe of the iocidenu
concerned 1 bomb report taken at the
cPl•tt ... Cll OOP/A2)
Huntington Beach police Detective
Art Droz said he has been
"s.wamped" with calls from worried
homeowners who are still awaiting
word on their summer visitors.
"This was the week that most of
them were supposed to~ confirma-
tion on (heir pesu," llild Drol, who
estimates be has received upwards of
50 telel>hone calla from homeowners
who said they paid SSO to SIOO to the
company.
RFK son found deap in hotel room·
"Some people have already ar-
ranged to be out of town so their
places would be available," the police
detective said. "One penon bas
arranged to be gone for four months."
Droz said police arc attempting to
loc.ttc the company's top officers.
(PleUe .ee OLYllPIC/A2)
PALM BEACH, Aa. (AP) -
O.\tid Anthowy "Kenned)', th~
troubled 28-year-old son of the late
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. wu found
dead in his hotel room today, police
said.
Kennedy had a history of drug
problems but police would not im-
mediately say what caused the death,
except that there was no evidence of
fo ul play.
Palm Beach Police Sgt. Henry
Marchman said the body was found
in Room I 07 of the Brazilian Coun
Hot.cl, wbcre ~nedy had been
sta -akxle. ro~ Capt. William Shetron con·
firmed the body was Kennedy's.
"There's no sian of foul ~Y· The
inveatiption is continuina' be said.
In Washinaton, an aide to Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, Robert Shrum,
said that he had no details on the
death.
A first-aid call was received by
police from the hotel between 11: 35
a.m. and 11 :40 a.m, Shetron said.
' A hotel spokesman said Kennedy
Paramedic tells of vain try to save
patient in Dr. Protopappas' office
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. .,.., .........
A Costa Mesa Fire Department
paramedic told an Oranae County
Superior Court jury Tuesday be
believed dental patient Kim An-
dreassen already was dead when be
arrived at DT. Tony Protopappas'
Costa Mesa dental cli nic to provide
emergency assistance in September
1982.
Paramedic Keith Jones said be fint
saw Andreassen lying in a hallway of
the clinic where several firefighters
were administering cardio-
pulmonary resuscitation.
"She was non-brcathina. pulseless.
She seemed more blue to me than
white. U. pupils were fixed and
dilated, .. Jones said.
"I thought she was dead," Jones
told jurors in response to a question
from Deputy District Attorney James
Ooninger.
But Jones said the emergency
medical team initiated life-saving
measures at the direction-of Hoag
Hospital emergency room phy~
icians, with whom he was in radio
co ntact.
After attaching an electro-cardio-
gram unit to Andreassen, Jones said
he was directed by the docton to
administer an injection of
epinephrine directly into An-
dreasscn·s heart, in hopes of gettinJ it
to restart, he said. However, the efTon
failed . Andreassen, 23. was pronounced
dead at the hospital about an hour
after firefighters first arrived at the
clinic. The woman, who suffered from
kidney failure and other medical
(Pleue eee DSJlffIST I A2)
Wh en does a date become rape?
It's a difficu lt l egal designation
A woman llJ'Ca to a date Tiith a
man I.be bu met at a faahionab&e
niahtspoL Sbe looks forward to 1
pleasant cvenina. Instead lhe is
bonified when the man becomes
aureuive and forcea her to have 1ex
wTth hJm.
Another woman ooruenu to ao to a
man'• apartment after a niaht on the
town. But 1he beco~a an,mcS when the man at~m to ao beyond
kluina and pul off bet clotha.
When she Uia to leave, he bloc:b ber
path.
Ten ycan -.o. c>e>Uco and prot-
ccuton problbly would have turned
the women away when they tried to
oraa criminal cbaraiei 11&1n11 lbeir r.dl-t.C.." The epiaode wo\lld have
been dilmiucd at "a boyfhend-
prlf'tlend thifta. ••
Ten ycan .,o, the encountet may
not even have come to the anention
of oolico with the women ratioftaJ ..
'
STEVE
Ma11u
Focus ON THE NEws
wna away the inadcnt u a m1 ..
adveorure for whjch they abated
aomeblamc. But now, 14>-Qlled .. date rapes" or
.. acquaintance rapes·· 1CCOunt for
more than half the reported 1e1
It filed by dty pol1cc depart·
mentt in Oraqe Coun~.
.. rd eatimate that 60 pm1ent and
maybe even two-thirdl of the rapes in
Newport Beach are cuea when t~"'
woman knows the man,·· says ••
•
Paul Hcniaey, a police deteelivc in
Newport Beach. .. They've usually met the man
before, tee0 the man before. know
him by name and. aomctima, have
even dated him," Heniaey added.
If allc:ptions are true, the cue
apinst Paul William Jenaen ia ii·
lust:rative of what police and other
authorities say is happenioa.
A well-to-do NC'WJ)O.tt Beach resi-
dent. Jcntcn rep011Cdly .... ulted at
least eiabt women, ma11 of whom he
had met in a conventional manner
and arran,ed to date or at leaat 1et
apin.
On the surface, the 40-ye&M>ld
man'• initial act.aOtU were hardly out
of the ordinary. He met aeveral
women in polb niaht1poU.. met at
le.st one at a health apa and came in
contact Tiitb three otbcn tbroqh
newspeper ads.
~--DATS/A2)
'
Md boiD ii \'IOWD on a . -::Z vw:atiola. dd .... been .....
and forth between tbe boteJ and the
nearby winscr bomc of bis srud-
motber, ROR Kennedy.
In 1979 Kennedy reported be was
robbed ofS30 in a seCdy Harlem hotel
in New York City that police de--
scribed as a dope su~rltet.
A police source wd at the time that
Kennedy, then 24, was t~ to buy
coca.inc. Kennedy wu then hospital-
ized with a bean infection IOOletimes
associated with narcotics abuse.
Aftft~~Wlll ......
drll ~ "'sm-waso dnt abuK ~tatdor l>onaJd lull. lo a bncf statement today, Sen.aior
Kettncdy said. '1'bis is a very difficult
time.
"For all the members of our family1 includina Da'Vid·s mother, Ethel, ano
his brothers and silten, who tried so
hard to help tlim in recent yean. All of
us loved b1m very much. With trust in
God, we all pray that David baa
finally found the peace that be did aot
find in life."
Oanman akipe hi• wo rkout
Jeff ADCte. a member of tile <>ranee Cout Coll•e rewtq crew, worb oat by jamDina rope at tile crew..._ ta
Newport 81acla. It'• put ol ~ tm.m '• CODdldon•q.
It'll cost $1.20 m ore
to camp in Ne wport .
It iJ aoina to cost campen about
Sl.20 more each ruah• to pileb their
tent or perk thar llV 1n Newpon
Beach.
The City Counal pu.ted a la•
Monday Diabt brinaina the city'a
campsites under the transient OC>
cupancy tu ordinance. Tb.at meant
campers will pay an I ptfte'Dt ux on
t.betr campsite bill JUlt u bot.el
pesu ~Y an 8 percent w on their
hotel bills.
AD of Newport's 200 campsites are
•
Both sides frustrated over
I couQty's actlon·on airport
Newport council members claim supervtsors
•playing poll tics instead of solving problems·
a.trpOrt. I am rutty sorry to 1ee that
they can't ae1 totethtt on an 8'J'e0-ment." he added.
Tom Williams. tbe dittetor of the
Airport Coalition, a homeownen'
sroup banlin( a!rport powth, Mia t'he
city should fiabt airport ~xpansion
plans at every atcp.
8)' JERRY llJR8CB °' ... ~ .......
Outraae. anaer and fruJtration
cbaracterizied the feelinp of' both
airpon arowth foes and l\lpPOrters
followiJll t.he sudden dumpma of a
proposed ljttJCment with the oounty,
Board of Supervisors to limit John
Wayne Airport expansion.
"We had hoped to tee an agreement
because an agreement was in the
publjc interest. Now we just see years
of litigation and delays ahead," said
Joseph lrvine1 executive director of
the Community Airport Council, a
group pushing for airport expansion.
"1 am totally turned off by Of1U\&e
County politics. I· don't think the
supervisors are even aware of what
the problems are today. It is an
outrage." sajd Bill Agee, a Newport
Beach city councilman crit1cized by
some constituents for being too
lenient on airport expansion.
"The supervisors are more
interested in getting their coffers filled
with donations and getting re~lected
than solving problems," AJCC added.
Tuesday the board reJccted the
proposed agreement without dis-
cuss1on. SuJ>ervasor Tom Riley,
whose Fifth District includes both the
oounty-owned airpon and Newpon
Beach wu unable to obuin a second
on his motion for the qreement.
"I am very disappointed. The
supervisors missed a golden op-
portunity to settle a thorny problem.
There are going to be no winners, only
losers," said Newpon Beach City
Councilwoman Jackie Heather. '
Heather said the oouocil JUlized
the supervisors had concerns about
the agreement but she never expected
the board to drop the proposed
settlement in such a sudden fashion.
"If they would have allowed some
type of discussion we were go10g to
propose a consensus committee of
two supervisors and two council
members to work out the dif-
ferences," Heather said.
"I am sorry to see the proposed
agreement not being at least dis.-
cussed." echoed Ed Buster, a growth
supporter who rs chairman of the
Community Airport Council.
"It 1s a total waste of time and
money to have the supervisors and
the city of Newport Beach going
against each other on matters of the
"We are oot aoioa to sit hen and
become an acoustfcal wasteland, ..
Williams said.
"We are bopifta that the boafd will
come to its senses but at the current tbne that isn't Ukcly;• said Barbara
Liebman, director of the Airport
Work.in& Group, a coaUtion of home-
owner orpnizations lobbyioa for an
alternative airport sjte 1n Oranae
County.
"We will have to become more
innovative in our approach, both
l~y and politically," Lkhman
said, adding that Newport Beach
residents can have clout with their
votes and political donations.
Both Uchman and Agee stressed
that Newpon believed it had made
many concessions and was willing to
discuss a "reasonable and decent"
solution lo the airport issue.
If the county was willing to act in a
similar fashion. a workable a~
ment could have been fashioned, they
said.
"There were a lot of differences
among the members of the City
Council but we were able to come up
with a consensus," Agee said.
~Willfl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
AIRPO RT AGREEMENT KILLED ••.
From Al
mize disrupuve noise to nearby
residents. supervisors approved a
trade-0ut 10ccntive that would allow
airlrncs flying noiscr Class A aircraft.
such as the DC-9 Super 80. to trade up
for additional fligh ts by using quieter
Oass AA aircraft, such as the untested
British Aerospace Bae 146 or the
Boeing 737-300.
Supervisors provisionally set the
trade-out ratio at three Class AA
flights for every Class A flight an
airline surrendered. That potentLally
could allow 219 daily departures from
the airport 1f every airline converted
all ofits flights to the quieter Class AA
j
planes.
Aides to several supervisors di~
counted the possibihty that 219
flights ever would be permitted to fly
from an expanded John Wayne
Airport.
"Realistically, that would never
happen," said Bill H~e, an aide to
Supervisor Harriett Wieder. ''There
would be market forces at work that
would find some level of stability. If
the market doesn't stabilize the board
could come in and say 'no more.' "
In refusing to consider ratification
of the proposed binding agreement
with the City of NeWJ)ort Beach,
(z QI I 41 d ,£41)
supervisors apparently were sending
a loud message to noise-conscious
residents and City Council members
that no compromjse to city-county
differences over the airport seems
possible. And if that was the message
su~rvisors intended, Newport of-
-fiaals were quick to respond.
"We have no recourse but to sue
again," said Councilwoman Jackie
Heather of what course the city will
pursue. "We're not willing to roll over
and play dead. The whole process was
subverted the way they handled it."
Heather added, "If thls is bow they
(supervisors) repay them (Newport
Beach residents) I'd wish they'd go
into other districts to get their
campaign money."
Riley, who worked for months with
city representatives and others to
ready the thick legal document, said
the "kiss of death" was the city's
recent lawsuit challengjnJ construc-
tion of a new airport parking lot.
"They (Newport council members)
ccrtafoly didn't encourage a whole lot
of love and roses," Riley said.
And board Chairman Wieder said.
"The suit substantiated what I believe
in the case of Newport Beach: Their
way or no way. In some cases, there 1s
no possibility of negotiating."
The defeat of the agreement also
marked a crushing political blow to
Riley, whose district includes both
the airport and Newport Beach.
"I think it was the biggest disap-
pointment of my life," the obviously
angered supervisor said.
Riley said he would encourage
related lawsuits against the county or
pr!>vide information to potential
litigants.
"It's the most irresponsible action
ever taken by the board." Riley said.
Directing his anger at fellow board
members, Riley added it was "shab-
by" of the board to kill the agreement
he proposed without the courtesy of
first discussing it.
"I guess they certainly said they do
not have any concern or worry about
the people of Newport Beach's con-
cerns." Riley said.
DATE RAPE COMPLEX LEGAL ISSUE .•.
From Al
Police claim Jensen sometimes
offered his dates Jewelry, Hawa11an
vacations and othtr eJ1.otic gjfts as
part of an effort to show them he was
a freewheeling JCt·sctter
There is no evidence. however. that
the women ever received any of the
lavish gjf\s from Jensen. a curly
hatred. slightly overweight man with
deep blue eyes and a brand new
Mercedes Benz.
The encounters, though, swung
from casuaJ dates to alleged cnmes
when Jensen lured the women into
his sporty car or to his residence near
tht' Newport Pier, police charge
One woman u1d Jensen attacked
her on a living room sofa after locking
the front door behind them. Another
said Jensen drove her to Manna del
Rey and refused to let her out of the
car until she feigned a fa'l11ly emerg-
ency
In all. Jensc·n 1~ accused of raping.
attempting to rape, lodnapping or
sexually assaulting cia,ht women The
allegation' have resurtc<l in 16 felon y
charges ag:unst him
H enisey \aid he has been contacted
by at least I 0 other women who claim
they, too, were v1ct1ms of Jensen's
charm and alle&ed auressiveness.
Some of the cases date back so far that
the natute ofhm1uu1ons block police
from seeking additional cnm1nal
Ch3f'ieS
Jackie Sherman, coordinator of the
Rape Prevention Program at UCI.
~Y~ dc,pite the profound changes 10
both the law and tht aware~51 of
\(X:1c1y, women arc still hesitant to
report "date rape• "
Just Call
642-6086
~ •
She estimates only one in I 0 rapes
goes reported and that many women
sull cling to the belief that by dating a
man. they have a responsibhty for the
eventual outcome of the date.
"Some women still feel that if they
went on the date that somehow they
invited the attack. That's one the the
myths that refuses to die. And that's
one reason why victims end up feeling
guilty.
"The message we have 1s: No
matter how ·many limes the woman
says 'yes.' when she says 'no: then
that ·no' needs to be honored." says
Sherman. "It doesn't matter if she's
said 'ves' 100 times before. It 's her
bod .'·
With S<>-<."alled "date rape" cases.
there 1s always the challenge of
determining where consent stops and
fore~ begjns, says Hunt1na1on Beach
police Sgt. Ed McErla1n.
"They may have gone out for a
couple of drinks and then go back to
her place. She may even invite him
10side and they may kjss. But then she
wants 1t to end and he doesn't.
"Somct1mct 1t's very clear what has
happened but sometime• it's very
hard to distin&uish where consent
stops." says McErlain. "Any possible
hint of consent makes it very hard to
convince a Jury that a cnmc has tAken
place ..
Sherman &ays that consent often is
the onl y I01Jcal defense for the
acculed rapist.
"Consent is always the issue 10 this
type of cue attd it's vay difficult for
the prosecution 10 act past that. .. she
says.
Sherman says she believes there is
both an increase in the number of
"date rapes" that are reported and the
number that occur.
Henisey speculates that some men
have misinterpreted social changes
brought on partially by the feminist
movement and take advantage of
women who are open or aggressive.
"Some men take this as an open
invitation for having sex when that's
not what the woman has in mind at
all," says Hen1scy.
Recently in Newport Beach, a man
being questioned 10 a harrassment
case admitted he had lllken a woman
out for a date, spent $60 on their meal
and eitpected something in return.
When the man's cl.ate eventually
closed the door in his face, he
demanded that she let him in or pay
him back $30 for the dinner,
"He told us the same thina." s~ud
Newpon police officer Tom Little.
"He actually thought that he deserved
something for buyina dmner. He told
us he wanted the $30 back.''
McEtlajn maintains that there is a
flip side to all of th11. He says
occasionally !IO-C8llod date rapes tum
out to be trumped up by &!lJl'Y
&irlf riends or a woman who is seekina
an ellCU§C for havina had a sexual
encounter.
"That's why se• Ctlmcs are m-
ve11Jptcd so much more thorouahly
now,· aays McEr._m.
"You have to find that fine hnc and
you have to be careful bcc•u-P,C<>Ple
can get hurt either way you lo . •
Wt.at do you Uh about tilt Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you Uke,. Call tbt
namber at left and yovr mnuit •Ill be rtcordecl, tranlt'rlbed ud delivered
to Liit approprta~ tdltor.
Tbe umf' U ·llour auwerl11 servlct may be attd to rtc.ord leUtn I• t•t
editor 011 aay topk Coalrtb•ton to nr Lett~" cot1m1 mart lacladt tlltlr
oamt aod u._.,ltont n11mbtr for veriflcatJ011. No dttulalloD uUa, pleaH.
Tf!11 01 wbt't 01' yoer mllld • • •
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Boeton 47 44
8rownl'l!lla 15 71
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13 70
0.2 4,,
1.6 ...,
0.3 4.1
84'n MU IOdl!y al 1(32 p.m .• ti-
TllurlOey 91 5:0I Lm. end -IQll!rl at 1:38 p.m.
Moon ... toeley llt 1:43 p.tn.,,... Thured.y 91 3: 14 a.m. and Ml.I Ill 2:3t
p,m,
CONTINUED STORIE S
'
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Noftoll,\lt. • 47 ....,.,..... .. 40 ~City .. .. °"*" .. eo
ONnc9o IO 61 ........ t2 •• l'Mlfl .... llO ...
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CM COP ADMITS LYING ABOUT SHOT ••.
From Al
UCI Medjcal Center wben Ross was
on the campus police force. She said
the case is still open.
At the time of the February
"shooting" incident, Ross had
claimed the vest - a gift from his
mother and sister -saved bis life. If
not for the vest, Ross claimed the
bullet would have pierced his lung
and heart.
Ross had reported that he was on
patrol when he felt a "thump" on his
back. He said he felt ~in and went to
the hospital for a quick examination.
At the hospital, he said nurses
noticed a welt on bis back and when
he examined his bulletproof vest, be
discovered a small hole. A b ullet was
found inside the vest, be re{><?rted.
The incident drew widespread
media attention and Ross was photo-
graphed holding up the vest. He told
reporters that be bad worn the vest
four years and added, "I'd rather
sweat than bleed."
Ross. a bachelor who Ii ves in
Irvine, could not be reached for
comment today.
Ross had worked earlier on an
investjgation that led to the
OLYMPIC FIRM GONE •••
From Al
The invest1gat1on, he said, has been
brought to the attention oftbe Orange
County District Attorney's office and
the possibility of filing criminaJ
charges is being debated.
An attorney who had been rep-
resenting the Huntington Beach com-
pany could not be immediately
reached for comment.
Vacation Rental Systems is one of
dozens of companies in Southern
California that 1s serving as a middle-
man between homeowners w1shine to
make a profit and foreign tounsts
lookin~ for a place to stay while
attending the Olympics.
A spokesman for the state Depart-
mcnt of Real Estate, though. said
there are still hdtel and motel rooms
available. He said the need for
residential housing appears to have
been greatly "overestimated" by
those trying to cash in on the
Olympics.
The Huntington company, which
bad leased three suites m a Warner
A venue business complex near
Meadowlatk Airport, left its quarters
two weeks ago, according to a leasing
agent. ·
The agent, who said a stream of
upset homeowners have paraded
through the office complex. in recent
days. said company representatives
left no forwarding address.
suspension and eventual firina of
another Costa Mesa police offich,
patrolman Willi.am Lauchlan, who is
aecused of sexual misconduct while
on duty. ·
Ross has been on the Costa Mesa
police force for two years, most
recently work.inJ the araveyard petrol
shift. Before joanina t.he Costa Meta
force, he had worked for the UC
Irvine Police Department and fort.he
Long Beach Police Department.
DENTIST •••
From Al
problems, is one of three patients who
died following treatment at Pr~t·~
pas' clinic in 1982 and 1983, alJele<UY
as a result of the improper admini1-
tra tion of general anesthesia.
Protopappas, 38, is cfwled with
three oouots of second~ murder
in the deaths.
In earlier testimony Tuetday,
Costa Mesa firefiahter Robert Taylor,
one of the first to arrive at the clinic
on the day Andreauen died, testified
t.hc woman was a4minilleftd OX)'~n \htouab I . Portable OX)'ICD Qwk
rat.her than through a "positive
pressure" mask used to ventilate
patients who have stopped breatbina-
Howcvcr. several witnesses, aJJ
former employees at the clinic, have
testified only positive pressure mask,s
were in use at the 19th Street dental
clinic.
ORANGE COAST Circulation 7H/M2-4m
Dally Piiot
Dell very
11 Guaranteed Daily Pilat Clanlfled advertt.lnt 714/M2-M71
All other depwtmenta 142-4121
MAIN OFFICE
330 w .. 1 S.y St Cotta M-. CA "4!¥ot!My F roO•y ti (OU 00
-01 1'\41ve y<AM pape< Dy ~ )() p "' u~ t:>o1t0<e 7 p m "'"° your •DOY ... ~ De <Mlwered
H. L. 8chw•rtz Ill
Publisher
u.~ aodf-Bo•,~ Coela MMe CA 112e2e
C<lpyrlgl>I 1983 Or•~ Coelt PvclilNng Compeny No
,_ 1t0<1et tlluel••tion. • .oitor..i manar 0t aown .... "'*'" ,.,....., mey be rep<~ WltllOUI tpeClel f:*•
moteoon of eopyrlQl1t -
SAturday Atld SuoO.ly H
''"" rso no-1 'f'C.V• yO..n
tlJt11 tly , "" ,.,. U.ft>t•
IQ 4 " ~"0 f<JV COPY wlil
t fl l)"ft .... , .. ,,
Chazy DowallbJ ROMmary Church"1an
Editor and Assistant Controller
to the Pubhsher
Clrculatfon
TelephonH St~ '· Cerezo ProdvctlOl1
M1n1gei
'"il""Jf°t' uur •r Arft•t• M2-4D1 Qk>rla A. Power•
Ot1ec1or ot
Adverttsmg
Gem
Talk
By i.e. HUMPHRIF.S
Certified Gemolopt. ACS
OINQ OVER8EA8
with your 1••••2 With spring and summer a travel
season approaching. we want to
remind our friends of what they
can do to protect themselves and
their Jewelry when going overseas.
If you plan to take valuable jewelry
with you, be sure to fill out a
certificate of registration. which
you can obtain from any U.S. Cus-
toms Office. It Is the aame type of
registration form that la used to
register auch lteme u foreign-
made cameras which you are tak-
ing with you. If you do not flll out
the registration, you may have to
prove where you purchased the
jewelry In order to bring It back
Into the country wtth you. Pleue
be careful, also, to declare any
Jewelry that you buy overMae
when you return to the U.S. It la
Important that you keep all r•
oefpta, becaUM If there la any
doubt about the value c;>f forefgn·
boUght Jewelry, U.S. cuatoma
agent• are authorized to Impound
It and keep II for fUrther ex.,,,ln-
atlon by fteld mgent1 of the Cua-
tom1 Servtce. Oon't let your va-
cation trtp be ma;:!r. probtema
with ct,ar'lng your ry through
cuatom.a •
Donakt L Wltllame
Clrcvta Uon
Menagei 'JOL. 77, NO. 111
To Prince Charles and Lady Diana,
marriage and sapphires go hand· in-hand.
0f a6 the~ '" tb.• Cmu"' }'"'•"'1. Prm1 r Chart,_,
/ou"d a Jl.lff)/Hrr mf>!il "fP't(1nal~ as 1"'1 ~of lxs k.N1t•
fCJl'Wd}Dlana
A RtTyQJ A~fl'• ':Ja/fJIHr. IJ " rtll"l' and ID:t{IJUlt(• Jl''ffl
uo'w oj bril/Janl blmt A na1urol, Ufllrt'(llt<d ~from
tJw <1'1/y lflQ/(J' /Jf\"CICW fl""' ti.poi.ii nt1lbN It> dw / lrrltl'ti :,1"t<'1 It"""°"''"" lb.• /1~ sappht.,,., m"lllinbltr '" 1ht! uorllt ~ tlw mw !pfltkJl f'K>mc•nts uf )'tmr /if.•. t!lfl(AS(• a u't'll
dmJl mw and ~>mt•nt rftlJl 54!1 of H~vl/ Amt'rlwn ~'"'~ ( ( , j(},,'~/"""' H """"',,,,,,um.., ~~::;"
-. Bulu TIN B oARU
Business expansion
seminar in Anaheim
Publ_ic relations executive Olona Z1aner win moder-
ate a 1em1nar on "Entrepreneurship: How to Expand Your
Business .. Thursday durina Sen. Wilham Campbell"s 1984
Conference on Women at the Oi1neyland HolCI in
Anaheim.
Campbell's day-Ion' conference will include 44 other
seminars and table.to~ di1eussioo1, 11 well u 75 exhibits
and counaelina by ma.Jor companies and orpniiations.
Or. Toni Grant, KABC Talkradio psycholoaist, will JI ve the keynote luncheon address. Cost for the conference
11 $20, includin& lunch and printed materials. for
infonnation, call Campbell's district offic:e, 770.SS33.
Taz plannl1J6 .emlnar ton'61Jt
"lnvcitment and tax plannina strategies" is the focus
of a free seminar bcina offered toniaht by the American
lung Association of Orange County during tax season.
The seminar will be presented at 7:30 p.m. at the
Imperial Bank Building. 12th noor, 69S Town Center
Drive in Costa Mesa. An alternate date 1s May 3, also at
7:30 p.m.
Prc~nting the proaram will be tax consultant Allen
KJosowsk1 and attorney Roben Risky. Re~rvations arc
mandatory and can be made by calling 835-LUNG.
Organ transplant lecture set
Swtn11n1 on the sand
Joel Bom&aan of La Mirada 'eta Into the
awtna of tliioC• on a aunny •prln' day on
the beach near the Balboa Pler. He'll baYe
plenty of company th.I• weekend.
IJ DA YID lmc>P
.......... :If, I
The ~u Bach acbool distnct smy not fidd •
many athleuc teams next year in the wake o( a llltir
Supreme Coun ndi~ tbat knocked down extra-curricullt
activity feet u uaconllitutionaJ.
School oftk:iaJ• ia Uslllll Beach are oow wajU.
anxioully while attorneys analyze the decision ..a
prepare advi<:e for the school board which now &tau
even sreatcr budle't deficit than previoualy projec1ed.
The coun ~ Friday m a 6-1 dccilion aptnst tbt
Santa Barbera tcbool distnct. The acbool district bad beta
sued by a parent who •'lued that f~ fouchool-SpOnlOred
extra<umculat activiues interfered wnh equal accet1 so
educational opponunitie1.
Santa Bamara school officials unsucces5fuJJy main·
tained that athletics and other act1V1tin conducted after
the rqular school day are not part of the educauon.al
process to which all students arc auaranteed equal access.
A free community health pr<>&ram on organ
transplants will be conducted tonight at 7 o'clock in the
auditonum at Fountain Valley Community Hospital.
17100 Euclid St .. Fountain Valley.
A panel of physicians will discuss liver. kidney. hean
and bone marrow transplants. A question and answer
session will follow iheir presentation. The program is co-
sponsored by the American Liver Foundation. Orange
County Chapter.
UCiprofessorgiven $30,000
fellowship to pursue research
School diltricu such as Sant.a Barbara and Laauna
Beach have been charaina the fees for extra-curricular
activities to rai1e money ever si nce the state's voters
approved the propeny tax sCutt1ng measure Proposition 13
in 1978. School officials from 6 7 districts throughout Che
state filed lepl briefs 1n suppon of the Sant.a Barbara
district.
Laguna Beach H1ih School students paid $22,000 this
year for 1pons activities. which 1s split into accounu for
transponation and equipment. District business manqer
Clyde Lovelady said the transportation fees will probably
be allowed but the collection of fees for eqwpment.
referees., trophies, maintenanc.c of fields and other costs
probably will end. Lovelady said the district bas collected
an average of SI 0,000 a year for the past three years for
such costs.
Tryoatafor 'Pirates' announced
Auditions for a new adaptation of Gilbert and
Sullivan's "The Pirates or Penzance" -"The Barbacy
Coast Pirates" -will be held tonight and Thursday at
Aliso Elementary School at Wesley Dnve and Pacific
Coast Highway in South Laguna.
The tryouts will be conducted from 7 to I 0 p.m. with
\. the producti on opening July 6 for two weekends on the tall
ship Cali fornian. flagship for the Olympic Tall Ships
Parade July 4. Call Kim at 77().. 7770 for funher
informauon.
Donattonssoughtfororphans
A van from Global Van Lines will be at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club through Friday to collect
donations for the orphans of Ensenada in connection with
the annual Ensenada boat race.
Items needed include clothing, bedding, towels,
furniture. kitchen supplies and appliances. household
items and toys. The club is located at 160 1 Bayside Drive,
Corona del Mar, and the van will be on hand from 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Call the club at 644-9S30 for more information.
Beauty contatants souglJt
Preliminary contests for the Miss Pleasure Companx
Beauty Pageant are being held Thursday evenings unul
May 24 at McCormick's Landing in Costa Mesa.
The top three girls each week will qualify for the final
competition fo r S 1.000 to be held June 3 at the Irvine
Mamon.
The contest will feature KllS FM radio personalities
and celebnty Judges. Pageant hopefuls should contact
Barbara Moss at the Pleasure Company lingerie boutique
in Irvine. at 261-0560.
Wednesday. Aprll 25
• 3:30 p.m .. Coast CommUDlty College District
Board of Trustees, Study Session. District Headquarters.
l 370 Adams Ave .. Costa Mesa
• 7 p.m., La1una Beacb Plaulng Comml11ion.
Council Chambers, SOS Forest Avenue.
• • 7:30 p.m., La1ana Beacb ~lsmlc Safety, Disaster
Preparedoess Committee, Police Dcpanment Library.
SOS Forest A venue.
. • 7:30 p.m .. Foontal,D Valley Parks ud Recreation
£ommlulon, Fountain Valley Community Center. 10200
Slater Ave.
· • 7:30 p.m .. Fountain Valley Planning Commlulon,
Fountain Valley C it)' Council Chambers. 10200 Slater
Ave.
Thureday. April 26
• 6:30 p.m .. La1uaa Beacb Board of Adjustment.
Council Chambers. SOS Forest A venue.
: • 7 p.m .. Recreation and Community Services
t:ommlttee, Re-creation Conference Room. 515 Forest
'Avenue. . • 7 p.m .. Mesa Consolidated Water District Board,
~ 965 Placentia A vc .. Costa Mesa.
PoucE Loe
UC Irvine social ecology professor and former Peace
(•or~ volunteer Ross Conner 1s one of 43 recipients of the
prestigio us W.K. Kellogg National Fellowship.
The S30.000. three-year rcllowsh1p allows employers
to give fellows umc off to pursue special research projects
m add1t1on to taking pan in seminars design ed to expand
the nation's bank of leaders.
"The more I learned about the program the more I
liked it." said Conner of Laguna Beach. "I like the
emphasis, allowing those who have succeeded in one area
and giving them ume to study somethmg ma slight step 1n
a different direction ...
During the first two years. Conner said he intends to
study the status of ch1ldrens' health care facilities here and
abroad by making extended visit s to top treatments
State officials
work 'deal' to
save bay funds
By JERRY HIRSCH
Ol IM 0.-, ..... lltllf
State money to help restore Upper Ncwpon Bay looks
like 1t will survive the ax despite a scare last month when
a legislative budget analyst recommended the SI . 7 million
be removed from the state budget.
A compromise that wo uld give the state a chance to
review bay restoration plans and contracts was worked out
between the state Department of Fish and Game.
Assemblywoman Manan Bergeson. R-Newpon &ach.
aod W11lam G. Hamm. the lcg1slat1vc analyst who wanted
to remove the money
"It is state la nd and they will be using state money so
we wanted to make sure there was some sort of state
oversight before the contracts arc signed." Jeff Shellito. an
assistant 1n Hamm's office. said.
Hamm recommended the money be removed from
the 1984-85 state budget because 11 was not budgeted
correctl}. Shellito sa id.
"It 1s not that we are against the bay:· Shellito said.
The mo}ley was allocated in the operating budget of
the Dcpanment ofF1sh and Game. Shellito said the fonds
should have been handled as a capital outlay project to be
reviewed by the state Public Works Board.
Bergcson's office contended that would have delayed
the project by at least a year.
According to an agreement worked out by the
Dcpanment ofF1sh and Game. the state would put up SI . 7
m1lhon to help dredge the Upper Ba). The remaining
money for the S3.S m1ll1on project would come from the
c1t1es oflrvine. Ncwpon Beach. the Orange Count~ Board
orSuperv1S1ors and the Irvine Co. The ports or Long Beach
and Los Angeles arc also contnbutmg money as an
environmental trade-off for another dredging project.
The S3.S million will be used to dredge Upper
Ncwpon Bay and to construct catch basins for sediment
washed down by an Diego Creek.
New challenges to the state funding_ for the ba)' are
unlikely dunng the rest or the budg'Ct process and
engineering work should stan this summer, Shellito said.
"It looks like everything 1s going to work out fine."
said Julie Froberg. pres~ coordinator for Bergeson.
rraking cab home does·n 't
.prevent motorist's arrest
:• John Cummins. 28. of R1 vers1 de. ~as stopped for allcacd drunken
sfn vina on Sunday and Costa Mesa
~lice called the cab to drive him to
tiis parents' n~rby home.
:· But Cummins and the cab dnver
from Artesia argu ed over payment of
J~c fare . A scuffie ensued on the 3000
~ock of Madison Avenue. according . ..
.j;.tne
.•:Burglars attempted to get 1ns1dc the
,ltincho San Joaquin apanmcnl
itubhousc late Tuesday ni~t. but ·~led to make entry ancr tak1ns off a
·~ndow .creen '.. . .. ·:A video pmc was stolen from a :~me on Pa.co Sc1ov1a sometime
j C$dAy. Police could not detcrmme
: w ~ntry was made nor estimate the
•sir<>peny value. .... . ..
::: Thieves stoic a camera. tnpod and
Ith of undetcnnined value from a , me on Home,tead Street some ti me
• etday •• • •• !:: The Irvine Mamou rcponed the ·~n of 10 microphones valued at
• ut SI ,SOO Tuetday. Motel em-. ,,yccs ,-ve no clues u to how the
l;kctronac equipment vanished. 1·· ••• .;; A window of a BMW was d1s-1~vered 1m11hed Tuesday momina •a., a parluna stall off condominiums
ibn Woodtear. Nothina wa" rcponed ~Jfliuin t··
to Costa Mesa police rcpom
The cab dnvcr said ( ummin<,
wanted to go into his parents' home 10
get some money but refused to allow
thcdnvertoaccompany him Thecah
driver told police he har> been 10-
structed to stay with h1~ riders until hc
gets paid.
The dri ver tned to prevent Cum-
Huntintton Beach
Breakina the glass in a door to
enter, someone buraJarizcd Arevalos
School, 19626 Lexington Lane. a
custodian told police Tuesday morn-
ina. The lo!ls, estimated at $2,026,
included office equipment and a color
television set. • • • A resident of the 6200 block of
Warner Avenue reponcd Tuesday
that someone broke into h1' silver
1979 DodJe van, parked in a carpon.
The lou included stereo l'9u1pmcn1
wonh SI SO and a S2S Oashhght • • • A re 1dcnt of the 8100 block ot
Burnham Circle reponcd Tuc'<lay
that someone stoic h11 camera and
book baa from Hununaton Beach
Hl&h School The lo wa c"1m~ted
at SSSO. • • • Entcnna through a rear sladina
wandow. somenne buralanud a
home rues.day momma on the 20000
block of lntcnor L~nr Thr los"
included Jewelry wonh SI 0,640 nd
$300 in cash..
mans from going into thl.' hou!>C and a
fight broke out
( umm10'\ wa~ tak1..·n into custc><h
on susp1c1on ol m1'>demt·an1H as~ult
and battt'I)
The cahh1c a5kt•J for an add111onal
S20 10 repair h1\ torn 'h11t
He said he m·vcr d1tl collnt lht· $1 ~
cab fare .
A 1982 Toyota Celica parked
Tuesday on 1he 19700 block ol
Estuary Lane wa~ burglar11cd. l he
loss included a radio wonh S200. • • • A resident of the 9500 block of
Cornwall Drive rcponed Tuc'ld<i>
that h1'> '>1lver C olumh1a 12-spccd
bicycle wa\ ,tolen from W1ntenbura
H1fh School The los~ wa~ estimated
at 1 lO • • • <\ re 1dcnt of the I QSOO block ot
Con tell t1on Lane reponcd the theft
of a baby stroller from an unlocked
tan Peugeot '1at1on w11on parked
Tue~ay 1n a dnvcway The lo~~ was
c 11m1ted at S210. • • • A man was arrested Tuesday at the
ponman ~tore. 74B Eding('r i\vc
on ,u,p1c1on of ,hophf\1na. An SRO
baschall alovc was rccovcft'd • • • Someone threw a bnck through a
window to buralamc a red I 9K4
N1s n ~ntraf)ailccd on the 100 blod•
of 14th Street The loss Included
stereo equipment and tapc5 wonh sno
ce nters. H 1'! tours will come after first learning what public
policymakers think 1s ta king place.
The third year will be devoted to compiling a repon
.. to see 1f I can give those same policymakers some in~ights." he said\ ...
The research t0p1c. m pan. stems from Conner's work
four years ago on a ehildrcns health prevention program
stancd 1n Orange County's 17 Boys and Girls Clubs. The
idea d 1cd for lack off und1 ng.
Conner. 37. came to UCI in 1974 after receiving his
undergraduate degree from Johns Hopkins University in
Maryland and master's and doctoral degrees from
Northwestern Un1vers11y 1n Illinois.
The school board voted April S to mcrease the fees for
next year from $40 to SSO for each student ~ spon.
Althouah athletic director WaJt Hamera said that a
confidential hardship waiver is available to anyone who
can't pay, the Justices ruled that such a program still
violates the "free school" provision of the st.ate
Consutution.
Between devces. he taught English as a Peace Corps
volunteer m Na1rob1, Kenya.
"It was one of the most interesting experiences I've
ever had." said Conner. a native of Denver.
Laguna Beach School District supcnntendent Billy J.
Ba mes is bopina school districts won't be forced to
reimburse students who already have paid the fees. Such a
rulina could be "devastating" to the district, he said.
He later returned to the Peace Corps. This time in
Washington. D.C .. Conner said he tried to teach leaders to
make better use of scientific research in drafting public
policy. Pressure politics and slow, methodical scientists
don't mix, he fo und.
Lovelady said the Laguna school district faces a S 146,000 deficit in its l 984-8S budaet, which docs not
include any cost-of-li ving waae increases for dist.net
employees.
"We'll try to patch that (deficit) up and then scratch
for raises,•· Lovelady said. The fellowship will curtail a ponion of Conner's
teaching duties. He most recently taught classes in
research design and program evaluation. His students
created a method to evaluate the effects of such proJeCts as
vapor recovery nozzles and the closure of a landfill.
Conner. a Laguna planning commissioner. was one of
I 13 finalists culled from amons 830 aP.t>licants.
On the spons fees, Lovelady said the district would
attempt to continue as much of the program as possible
under the circumstances.
"My feeling is that wc11 analyze the tJ~nt athletic
program and see if there could be some consohd.a-
uon ... and then try to squeac the rest out of the general
ru nd . I JUSt hope the (court's) decision isn't retroactive." .. , held my breath:· he said. unul after the January
1nterv1ew 1n Los Angeles. Lovelady said a rcpon on the court's decmon from
school d1stnct attorneys 11 expected within about I 0 days
The school board will meet next at 7:30 p.m. Thursday 10
the d1stnct board room. SSO Blumont St.
The foundation. a trust created by the Battle Creek.
M1ch.·bascd cereal manufacturer. has scl«ted more than
200 recipients in the past five years.
Follow the leader ...
A herd of cattle moves along a •tretch of
Irvine Co. land along La&una Canyon Road
u fleecy cloud• •kid acroee the •ky on a
warm •prlng day.
•\ reJ I Y()X f ord rm I.. up with a
camper \hl'll wa<, burgl;m1cd while
parked on the I 77(Xl hlod, of Gothard
\trt'l'I f he lo<,\ indudrd r>mH•r tools
1.1.orth S 'M • • • 1 hl' dn,er a gr('cn .ind "hm· trulk
lkd from a \Cf\ 1n• c.1Jt1on T uesda'
n1gh1 .11 Aul\a \' enul" JnJ \pnngdale
\trt'l'I '>' 11hout pa)ing tor ht'> gasoline
The lo'' 1.1.a'> S~O
Fountain Valley
\ Jm n of a p1rlo.up trull.. thrc~ a
Ii \l',11 old bo\ w the ground and
\Hilt• hi\ s WO blue RM\ (, T bir)cle
1n lhl' purlo.101,1. Int a1 Ralph' Market
170 70 M:ip.noh.1 \1 • • • \110ll'llnl' pulled a rnatlbO\ u0 II\
ptl\I 111 tlw I !WOO hlod ol Ml
Cimarron < 111 lt' l8U '1ng \20 10
damagt• • • • Burglar'\ turn•d open a &araac door
in the ~000 blcxk of l>cb101s A venue
and stule S7<Xl in JCWelr) and mis·
Ct' Ila nous 11em~ affier ranuck1ng de~k
drawer
Newport Beach
A LO\ •\naek' man rt>poncd the
then of h1\ I Q8' Po~ht' Q 11 <. :mt·ra
valuC'd at $60 000 from th(' Rt'ubcn r
Lee rc'lt1urnnt parlo.1n1 lot on tht'
Pacifk ( N'lt H1 h"a' 1 ur\da\ •••• A Ncwpon Rench v.oman rcponcd
the theft ofa ct1c'lt conta1n1n1SI 0.000
tn uerlina silver natwarc from hcr
home m the I QOO block of Mariner\
Tuesday About S Ul<X> 1n Jewell;
also wu atoltn • • • A Newpon lkach worn n rtPQrtcd
the thef\ nf a pla11num nna \OluC"d at
$3.500 and another $3.000 in JeWClf')
\tolen from h<'f home 1n tht> QOO hlod.
of Wt'\t Chan f TOnt
CoataMesa
..\Santa .\n.1 man who \ta\eJ at thl'
Hohda' Inn 31 \I Brmol ~t for \I\
d3)S and chargt•J food. dnnlo.'i and
phone call., to hi\ hill tl1sappean·J
Sunda} night 1.1.1thout 'i<.'llhng hi'> tah
Hotel official<; tolJ pohrl' the man
o"c.-d them Sb4 1 • • • .\n 1lkgal tire taneJ 1n thl' h;u:lo. -.a rd of a home on the I ~110 bind ol
Santa Ana .\' cnut' \fonda' "·1' exungu1shed "1thout ;1n\ damagr
being do11c The formt•r 01.1. nn of tht·
residence. "'h1ch wn~ lon.:do'><.'d on h'
the bank. was seen \landing ncnr thr
lire with some fnend\ .\ <,1mtl:ir Im·
wu rcponc<i ~unda) night
La1una Beacb
\1 1\tl'llancou~ ttcms "Orth Jn t'\ll
mated S 700 were reponcd 'ltolt'n
from an automob1k inside a ltx lo.ell
garage 1n the :!600 hloclo. nf Om·d.1
\.l. a' Tucsda} ('\Cning •••
\ commercial burglar) at I llt(!I
\oonh ( oast H1&h"-a~ Tucsda\ rl"
'ultcd 1n the lo'>~ of tool\ v.onh an
C\l1mated S2.800 and a \t('f'C'O "onh
SIOO • • •
" f'C'S1dcn11al burglal"' in th~· 400
bl<x:k of Panorama Dn\e re ultnl in
the loss of Je"'elry and funi "-Orth an
est1mat('d S 1.460 Tuesda' <'"cninJl
Sex killing witness
granted immunity
By lbc Auoclated Prttt
i\ man cha'led with the dayinas ot
two teen-age girls in a remote w1ldcr-
ne s area agrttd to te'lt1ry ap1n t h1
co-defendant in c'chanae for im-
munity from prosccuuon. a pros-
ecutor \aid
Richard Ht'mandcz. ' . will take
the 'i.nd ap1n\t Fred Berrt Douglu
SS. at" Ma l preltm1nary htannJ in
Nonh Orange t ounty Munietpal
( ourt, pro~utor Ton) Rackauck.as
'ltd Tuetda~
"Hcmande1 ·~ the only witnc1
"'h<.' '8w evC"f)'th1na that h1ppencd to
thr two 11rls. other thin OougJa'-"
Rackauclcu 1&1d. "lt'!. clear that
He11U1ndc1 wa a ~ubttrv1cnt chanc-
tcr to DoualH 1n theu relation hip
The pe"°n here who 1& a real ~nou
threat to othen is Doualas.''
"Thr ev1denet' we had would not
hi"<' convicted Hernandez ol
murder " Racuuckas e'plaioed.
Beth Jonn l 9, and Marpret
K.ruqcr. 16, both of l\ruhcim, disap-
peared in uau't 19 2 after tclhna
fncndJ the wctt go1 na lO po.-for
nuck photo Mid .\naht'1m Oc1ect1\IC
l.alTy Johnson.
Their bodies wtre found ttv~
month' later m 1 remote tCC'hon of
Ana Bonqo talc Par\. about 0
mile southc~t of An.ahcim
rrt~t -.-.mnt.\ wefl: 1 ucd Aur. ~
for Dou&las and HC"mandC'l. The'
wt'rt picked up about W"1ren v.ttl\
aao; Dou las 1n Nonh w Vcp, anu
Hcmandtr '" Lorr•o. M c-o
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Weaker a~?
Be-. Francia of Auatralla demonatratea mua-
clee that helped her earn bllllng ••one of the
mCMJt muacular women In the world. She•u
ba-.e atarrlng role In documentary film.
•PumplnC Iron D: The Women.•
Gunman still
in embassy
says officer
LONDON (AP)-Witnesses saw someone inside the
Libyan Embassy fire at protesters outside, and the
gunman -who killed a policewoman -is still in the
besieged building. a police commander told an inquest
today.
Commander Bill Hucklesby. who heads Scotland
Yard's anti-terrorist squad, said witnesses reported seeing
"smoke and Oames coming from the barrel of the gun."
He appeared at an inquest into the death of Constable
Yvonne Fletcher. who was shot April 17. Eleven people
protesting the regime of Libyan leader Moammar
Khadaf) were mjured in the shooting.
"I believe the person or persons responsible for the
shooting are still inside the bureau and everyefTort is being
made to identify this person:· Hucklesby told the inquest.
British authorities insist the shots came through a
first-floor wm dow of the cm bass) building. in St. James·s
Square. Lib) an officials al first said the embassy had acted
in self-defense but later den red that anyone in the embassy
had fired shots.
C1t10~d1plomat1c pnvr lege. the Libyans have refused
to let Bnt1sh investigators inside to try to find the killer.
Britain on Sunday broke diplomatic relations with
Libya and gave the emba's) staff a week 10 leave the
COtJnlT) .
Hucklesb'. the first Scotla nd Yard member to testtf\
on the shoo11ng. said: .. Sl'\eral C)cv.11nesses said the~ sa"
an au1oma11c or sem1-au1omattc firearm being pointed
from a first-floor w1ndov. ol the L1b)an People's Bureau.
with smoke and fla me') romrng from th e barrel of the
weapon."
Miss Fletcher. who v.as facing masked demonstrators
chanting anti-Khadaf} slogans. had her back to the
embassy and "was shot JO the back b) one bullet:• he said.
Meanwhile. adm1n1stra tion sources say Libya or·
dered rts embassy in London to open fire on demon-
strators several hours before a gunman sprayed the
sidewalk with machtne-gun fire.
The message from Libya was intercepted by the
British several hours before the gunman opened fire from
an embassy window. the sources said Tuesday night. But
they said officials were unable to relay the information in
time to avert the violence.
Afghan rebels '
def eat doubted
NEW DELH I. India ( i.\P) -Afghanistan"s regime
claimed today that Soviet and Afghan forces controlled a
strategic valley after routln$antt-Mar:xist re~ls tn .a major
offens1\'e. hut a Western d1ploma1 said fighting stil l raged
there.
.. Our 'aliant forces have crushed all rebel resistance
rn the PanJshcr Valley." Afghan go,crnment radio said in
a broadcast ]?lon1tored JO India.
..\ Western d1plomat1c source in New Delhi was
skepttcal.
"( ons1dcnng the geography of the large. narrow
vallev. we disbelieve Kabul'~ claim that Soviet and Afghan
forces raptured PanJsher in one si ngle day.'' said the
source who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The 100-milc-long gorge -controlhng important
suppl} routes from the Soviet Union 10 Kabul. the Afghan
capital -ha~ been a spnngboard for guemlla attacks on
nearb) Bagram air ba,e. the largest Soviet installauon JO
the natton.
Battle claims rnuld not be independently confirmed.
since Western journahsti. arc rarcl) allowed tnto
.\fghun1\tnn
Iran will soon
have A-bomb
LONDON (AP) -Iran IS likely to ha ve l\S own
nudear bomb wtthtn two years. accord1na to pre reports
cited by Jane's OefenS( Wetkly.
The mapL1nc. part of the authontat1ve Jane's
Pubhcat1ons on weapons systems. said Tuesday that
reports from Che Persurn Gulf re11on last week tnd1catcd
the bomb was beina produced at a nuclear power plant in
Boushahar. southern Iran.
A Jane's editor said his pubhcat1on bad not been able
to venfy the reports 1ndcpendcntly.
Work on the plant was suspended af\er the 1979
revolution thll brouaht Ayatollah Ruhollah K.homc1m
and his fundamentalist Islamic rcgimc to power. Bue the
map11nc cited prtss reports saying a West Gcnnan
company. which was not 1dent1ficd. had sent 40 experts to
resume work on the plant
"The rcporu quoted un1dt'nttfied West German
u1telltacnct sourccs as~>'"& that production ofa nuclear
bomb ·1s entenna tts final t41Cs... the mapnnc 'ltd
hnc'' cited reports whi ch al~quotcJ the 1ntelhacnce
source ;t\ \:!Yin& the Weit Gennan aovemment had made
completton of the plant cond1ttonal on Iran cndina its
four-)·ear war wi th f mq •
senators s eek end
to lame-ituck term.a
By U.. Auoelaled Pren
WASHINGTON -T't'O senior senator1 are propc»-iq that the nation rid itself of lame-duck prcsidenu.~
members of Con~ by , drutical~y cuttina the um~
between their elecllon and 1uu.au.ranon. Sen1. Oaiborne
Pell. O.R.I., and Cbarks Matltiu, R·Md .. araue ~t t!'e
Constttution's requirement for a several-month •!tterim
was bued on ~ving the president-elect f:D1ple ~1mc to
arrive in Wu lnnaton, but is out of date an the Jet •·
"Sucb delay rntde sense durina tbc horse-and·bUUY days
of our Republic," says M~thias. "In the t ~&Os, with rapad
transponatioo and near-instant commuruc.atJon systems
commonplace, any delay beyond two or three weeks seems
u_ajustifiable."
Ea•ternJet .eued
MIAM1 -Customs officials who bnefly seized an
Eastern Airlines jumbo jet after finding cocaine ~n ~rd
say they hope the airline's agreement to check tts tli~u
more closely for smuggled drugs will prompt other earners
to do the same. Angry Eastern officials said they doubl;ed
whether the U.S. Customs Servi~ had the power to setze
the jet. but federal agents said the age~cr. would make .
"maximum use of its legal authonty. to pre~cn!
smuggling. Agents seized the L-1011 . Jet a.t M1am1
International Airport on Tuesday after its am val .fro!11
Lima Peru and a search turned up 3 pounds of coca me in
a car&o hoid under the. co_ckpit.. It was the 22nd drug
seizure from an Eastern Jetliner since November.
Pregnancy bill urged
WASHINGTON -The Reagan administration is
urging Capitol Hill to extend a federal program to prevent
tee n-age pregnancies by encouraging adolescents to
postpone sexual relations. "Adolescent preg.nanC)'. and
early sexual activity continue to be serious problems!" the
United States:· Dr. Edward N. Bra ndt Jr .. assistant
secretary of health and human services, told a Senate
hearing Tuesday. In pressing for extension of the program,
which also wou ld aid those who do become Pf'Cl1Wll,
Brandt said about 527,000 babies were born to adolescents
aged 15 to 19 in 1981. He said 9.600 were born to gjrls
yo unger than 15.
Gunman had been fired
CHICAGO -A 37-year-old man who sprayed eisht
people with gunfire. killing his wife, their two chi ldren and
a bystander before police shot him, bad been fired the
previous day and could be heard "pacing nervously" that
night, police and a neighbor said. Two of the four
survivors of Charles Hunt's rampage Tuesday remained
hospitalized today. Jn addition, a police ~nt who was
wounded in the foot was treated at a hospital and released,
and a fourth person refused treatmenL
Gordon PIJHllps kHled
LOS ANGELES -Gordon PhiJlips, whose distinct.
mellow voice was a fixture of broadcast advertisements
for the Los Angeles Times for 25 years, was run.over and
killed m New York: Cny. the newspaper said today.
Phillips, 62. died Monday evening when h~ slipped w~ile
crossing a wet Manhattan street and was hit by a passmg
truck. the Times reported.
LA women protest pay
LOS ANGELES-Plasterers earn more than nurses.
and parking lot attendants more than clerk typists under a
county system which shunts women into low-payingjobs.
an emplo)ees union report says. The county Board of
Su pen 1sors agreed Tuesday to stud) issues raised by the
Sen ice Employees lnternattonal Union Local 660. which
represe nts 40.000 of the counl) 's 70.000 employees. The
union said tn a repon that 52 percent of the county"s male
workers earn over $25,000 a year. compared to 15 percent
of women employees.
Prostitute scam feared
LOS ANGELES -Women posing as prostttutes are
lunng hotel guest.s to their rooms and using powerful drugs
to render them unconscious while they take cash and other
valuables. police said. Officials fear the scam. linked to
two deaths in New York, could victimize some of an
estimated I million tourists expected in Southern
California for the Summer Olympics. The phony
prostitute lures a man to his hotel room. slips a drug into
his dnnk and '"then liberates htm of his cash. traveler's
checks and even the rings on his fingers:· said Detective
Doug Sims.
Armenlan recovery lauded
FRESNO -Gov. George Deukmcjian praised the
perseverance of his Armenian ancestors for recovering
from persecution by Ottoman Turks early in th rs century.
··Being here in Fresno this evening and seeing so many of
you makes me realize more than ever that the tyrants
failed:· said Deukmejian, speaking Tuesday in honor of
Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. Armenians
charge that the Turks slaughtered 1.5 million people
beginning in 191 S -deaths that the Turkish government
claim occurred in a civil war in which 2 m1lhon Turks also
died.
Woman as VP poll toplc
SAN FRANCISCO-Nominatin$a woman for vice
president on the Democratic presidential ticket 'wouldn't
sway many California voters. according to a survey
released today. About two-thirds of Cahfom1a·s voters
wouldn"t be influenced tn their voting if the Democrats
were to nominate a woman for the JOb. according to the
Caltforn1a Poll. a statewide telephone survey of 1.253
registered voters. But the poll said about 20 percent would
be more inclined to vote Democratic with a woman vice
presidential candidate on the ticket. Eleven percent said
they would be inclined not to vote for a Democratic ticket
including a woman.
31 di e I n food riot.
SANTO DOMINGO. Dominican Republic -
Troopers stt up stctl bamcades today to seal ofTa bumcd
and looted business distnCl. and the death toll from two
days of nouna over food pnce mcreaSt-S ro5C to least 31.
Police and soldiers used bullets and riOe butts Tuesday in
their clashes with the rioters. h wa1 the bloodiest violence
since the nation's I 96S civil war. At least 26 deaths we~
reponcd in four cities Tuesday. according to fiau~ from police. ho p1tal officials and w1tn~.
Brazn vote prote.t.
BRASI UA, Brazil -Thou'8ods of people defied the
military regime by StAJIOI protests and occueyiq the
national C'onarcu build1na on the eve of tOCS.y pivot.al
vote on when to reinstate direct presidential elections.
bout SOO people demand1na dircc1 elections th11 ynr
took over the bu1ldin1's main lobby Tuesday ind 1nltf&lly
vowed to remain today But they withd~w at\tr ili hours,
when 1he lawmakers told them their prcsenoccould deliy
the vote. The demonstraton. mostl) 1tudcnts. also wa"t
told 1f they Jen toaccher the~ would not be bothc~ b)' 1
contmacnt o( It least 7S white-helmeted rc<tetaJ troopcn
who nn&td the build1ni. Tht troopcn kO 1bout two ho~ 1fttr the demonstrators ,, t
-.
' , MORGAN HILL (AP) -Police
• t10led oft' da1J1qed homes today in
\ht wake of a atrona ~uakc that ttuted millions of doUan 10 damqe ln Northern California, and . ~dtborities marveled that a temblor
• lln>nl enoUS)l to crack bridan and a dam cauted only 21 minor injuries.
Tbe quake struck at l:f S p.m.
f1'elday and measured 6.2 on the
llicbter scale of around motion, the
UJtiveraity of California Seis-
hlbpaphk Station said. It was
oentered on the Calaveras Fault,
about 12 milcseastofSanJoseand SO · mUcs south of San Francisco.
1 Althoush the tremor was felt for
nudreds of miles, damage was
(leptered in Morgan Hill, about 10
pules south of San Jose. Twenty-one
a>eoplc were reported irtju~. includ-IQI two hospitalized with concussions
and 19 treated and released, ~uthorities said.
Hardest hit was the Jackson Oaks
J&lbdivision of luxury homes in
Morpn Hill, where 30 houses were da~. several knocked complete-ly oft' their foundations.
' Ei&ht homes were left un-
liiba&itable, said Dick Maulden of the
Morpn Hill Fire Department. Resi-
dents were barred from the structures
Ind police patrolled today to protect
}he area.
Robin Gaeet. a San Joee toy atore employee, •tanda amid
meae created by TuMday'a 6.2 temblor.
services in Santa O ara County.
FBI tapes
Using code wor ....
(He) spoke for the first time a
LOS ANGELES (AP)-AIJobn Z.
De Lorean'• apons car company
bun.led toward banJcruptcy, he man· euve~ frantid:r to raite fut
rpilliona in a involvina code w~a for. drup, tapes played at hia
cocaaoe tnal revealed.
Ironically, the tapes showed the
automaker placina the fa1e of bia
Northern lrcland business in the
bands of an undercover FBI aaent
who waa secretly tapina his con vena-
tions, aatberina evidence to anal him on drua charges.
. "I J,uat n~ to buy a little mote
tJme, a frantic De Lorean said at one
point. "I'm confident cverything's
gonna work out."
FBI agent Benedict Tisa, assuming
ltie guise of a crooked banker in a .
"sting" operation, assured De Lorean
he was moving quickly to arrange a
$10 million deal in volving
"monkeys," a code word for kilos of
cocaine.
At one point. De Lorean's London
lawyers made a trans-Atlantic phone
call to the "banker" to confirm that
De Lorean had a financing deal in the
works. Tisa attempted to be noncom-
mittal, but implied such a deal
existed. De Lorean thanked Tisa
later, saying his guarded comments
during the phone call had saved the
company for a few more days.
"Their call to you helped a lot," De
Lorean said.
1 . Residents reported chimneys fall-
1.111 into living rooms, broken &lass
Ud crockery, drawers spifling
throughout the house and conCTete
fountains tol>Plin& on their sides. Moraan Hill-City~ Manager Charles
Cate estimated damage at SS million
to S l 0 million in the immediate area.
Bill Berry, 42, a San Jose State
Univenity basketball coach, was at
home napping when the quake woke
him .
"There was no way I could do
anytbilt§ but hold on like a bucking
bronco, • Berry said. "I was helpless.
The TV went off tlle dresser. The
dresser tipped over."
the Calaveras Fault since 191 1,
according to Bill Ellsworth, chief of
the seismology branch of the United
States Geological Survey in Menlo
Park. It was the fourth quake measur-
ing more than 6.0 in the San
Francisco .Bay area since the great
quake of 1906.
Almost one year ago, on May 2,
1983, a 6. 7 earthquake hit c.oalinga.,
180 miles to the south, leveling the
downtown, causing .$31 millio~ in
damage and injuring 47 people.
The agent spent his fo urth day on
the witness stand Tuesday as the
prosecution introduced 21 different
tape recordinp in evidence at De
Lorean's cocame trafficking trial.
De Lorean, 59, is accused of
conspiring to distribute $24 million
worth of the drug. If convicted, he
faces up to 72 years in prison .
Mondale disbanding
~~~~~~e co~1!1ittee& .. It's amazing there wasn't more
damqe or more iitjlJrics," said Jane
Decker, spokeswoman for emergency
The quake, felt as far away as
western Nevada and Ventura, nearly
250 miles south, was the strongest on
U .S~, China close to nuke accord
AGANA, Guam (AP)-American
and Chinese negotiators "are very
close" to a nuclear cooperation agree-
ment and, if congressional leaders
approve, an announcement will be
made during President Reagan's visit
to China, says presidential spokes-
man Larry Speakes.
Another official said he saw no
reason why Congress would object
and predicted the agreement would
bt announced while Reapn is in . .
Peking this week. This official in-
sisted on anonymity.
Reagan arrived here today for an
ovrmi&ht visit and the last stop
before traveling on to China, a trip he
says will "chart the direction" of U .S.-
Chincse relations for years to come.
Reagan's arrival in PekinJ on
Thursday will mark his first vistt to a
communist country, except for an
hour-long drive into East Berlin while
a private citizen in 1978.
Speakes told reporters during the 8-
ho ur, 40-minutc flight from
Honolulu that consultations have
begun with leading members of
Congress to infonn them of terms of
the proposed agreement.
"We hope to complete the required
consultations in the next couple of
days to be able to initial an a~ment
during the president's visit,' Speakes
said.
Was bus hijacker executed
after capture by Israelis?
EDITOR'S NOTE -
The following material was
submitted ro Israeli mili-
tary censor, who deleted
significant material.
Gaza.
The photographs have
raised doubts about the
official version of events
and prompted calls by both
leftist and rightist poli-
ticians for a full investiga-
tion of how two of the
hijackers were killed.
Ha'olam Hazeh pub-
lisher Uri Avneri. an
RUFFELL•s
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
outspoken opponent of
Shamir's government,
wrote in a story accompa-
nying the pictures that "the
picture painted here, and
which has been received in
the world, is clear: two of
the hijackers. who were not
killed in the storming itself,
were executed shortly after-
ward."
lllElllTE GISH
The De Lorean defense is expected
to contend that government agents
manipulated the automaker and his
business in order to produce in-
criminating surveillance tapes.
The latest tapes .traced De Lorean 's
escalating panic in early October,
1982, as the British government and
receivers threatened to shut the plant
that built his gull-winged dream car if
they did not receive an immediate
payment.
Tisa told jurors that the silver-
haired automak'er offered half the
stock in his company to back an
alleged drug deal.
Prosecutors say Hetrick hoped that
Tisa, in his guise as a crooked banker,
could arrange a way for Hetrick to
funnel drug profits from the Cayman
Islands into the United States.
Walter F. Mondale today asked his
supporters to disband independent
delcgat;c committees supportina his
campaign as Gary Hart won another
delegate contest in Vermont's
caucuses.
Mondale's action, in telegrams sent
to individual delegates and to his
state campaign managers, comes a
day after the Rev. Jesse Jackson and
Common Cause, a seltstyled citizens
lobby,joined Hart in condemning the
delegate committees.
"I appeal to you to ~rsonally
accept m y judgment that 1t is not in
the best interests of my campaign for
individual delegates to form or con-
tinue to operate delegate commit-
' TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)
-An Israeli magazine
today published two pboto-
IJ'llphs that it said showed
soldiers leading an unin-lu~ terrorist away ftom a
hijacked bus. Israeli of-
ficials have said all four
hijackers were either killed
or mortally wounded on
the scene.
Ftr die lest If Yw lie
ltUMllllllft.
ctSTA IW -541-1151
GOLD, DIAMOM:>I
.nd YALUAllLEI
... UllU .llWEUll
873-0385 ,,_,,,. a ba6, .. a oery apeclal e11ent In ~ lf/e.
According to Prime Min-
ister Yitzhalc Shamir and
other officials, two of the
four Palestinian hijackers
were killed April 13 when
the bus was stormed by
Imeli soldiers. They said
the other two died of
wounds en route to a hospi-
tal.
One bus passenger was
killed in the assault. and 24
others who had been held
hostage were f recd.
The left-wing Ha'olam
Hazeh, a weekly news
&laFine, published two
A ightly blurred pictures of
1 man with his head down
being led away from the
bljack scene by Israeli
soldiers. One picture was
taken from the side and the
second from behind. The
man's face is not clear in
either photo.
One unpublished photo-
'JT& ph taken by the
Hadashot news pape r
lhows a man in handcuffs
tielng led away by security
men. Hadashot editor
Yossi Klein has said the
photo was shown to friends
and family members who
Identified the man as one of
the bijackers1 18-year-old
Majid Ahmeo Abu Jama of
3111 New Blvd.
Sate
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-. '""" • ntD KCGIAT'llt IDVtCI M 1W llC*l • tTU
Orange County's
Relaxlng Music St•tlon
Is
If could alllMNlt be called ~ae. • f/ ft were not
/or the WO. daat can accompany ).'OUI' w attwl.
Tlae ffUJrMW1 ltoeplta& In Orange Countv
UJm1t to dtange that. £uentfally, IH ~
lrdrocfucfng jfnancfally palnlait childbirth. '
Here. for a.ample, are two way. Humana hosplta.11 wdJ MW
you money ti~ haw an uncomplicated vagina) deJivery:
• flnt, If )'(Ml are COYSnd by lnaurance, the Humana hoe-
pttall haw an adting new maternity plan that offers• 25"
dllcount on~ ho.pltal c09U after ln.urance. up to• maxi-
mum of 1500. Since moet lnsunu-.,e plane cowr 75" or
more, Humma'• new program mans you could deltwr your
babv with vtrtuaDv no out-of~poc:ket expenta to ~·
• Second, ti ~·re not cow:red by Insurance, '" oler a re·
duced lat rate fee tor vqlnal dellwries with no comphcatk>M.
With a ho.,...a stay of not more than thrn day. and wtth the MD
pakl In ful .,.._ dlachargc, the r.. (lndudlng charges lor
mother and baby) arc:
0.. 0., Stay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • 750
Two 0., Stay .•..................•...•.••.. t 1.IOO
111iree 0., Stay ......................••..•.. t 1,500
At Humw hoepltU In Huntington Bach, W.t ~ lllMI
............ we olll' the beet care pc>Mtble IDr moet. and M~. -Ml the Mrvlcll Md proerama olered ln our~~-
......... llJMrM ............ rooma. .... ranee of ......... chld-
.... .-... ...... vtllla. m.dlr!raht dlnMn ._ modW-..IMbs • ....................................
II ••balf"+•~Com&yare1 ... a1t1•,_-... ....... .,.._ ...... n .... .._... • .._ ...... ......
, .............. tJ111hll ........ eo~CM ......... lai ,.....,,. ...................... .
0. ... FI 1~111 ................ l'C'aN ... Cl9 OK Ml .....
.. 1h'J--~. ....................... ..
11112 tji .. ._ ..... , .... ' I .. ,.., I S .. ......... , ....... ~_. .... _ ......... . . ...... .
t1unwta· QBSTErRI~
" r z, 5 n •• .._ •rnt._.. ... .....,_....._CA ... t ......... "
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•
Mondale added, however, .. I am
confident that all deleptes com-
mitted to me and my entire campa1111. •
have fully complied with both the
letter and the spirit of the tedera1
election law."
Hart's margin of victory in Ver·
mont's Democratic caucuses Tues.-
day niaht. .where just 13 national
convention delegates were at stake,
WU short of'-t.be11 percent ~Y'
be ran up in that stat.e's non-bind.in&
presidential primary in early March.
The Colorado senator had 49
percent of the vote with 81 percent of
the caucuses reporting. compered to
33 percent for Mondale and 14
percent for the Rev. Jeste J8Cbon.
Employees op pose €omputer 'Snitch'
Calls monitored to
ensure ·efficiency·
BALTIMORE (AP) -The next time you
call ~n a1rhne for a reservat.Jon or a magazjne
company for a subscnption, there may be a
third party monitoring your call: a computer.
' It's not what you and the operator say to
each other that matters to the computer, it's
how long you chat.
In a growing number of service industries,
phone calls are monitored by computer to gauge
empJoyce efficiency, and some workers resent
i l.
A telephone operator 1n Baltimore with 16
years expenence was fired recently because
com~utcnzed records indicated her speed
didn t meet the .. Average Work Time" stan·
dard established by her employer, AT & T
Communications. a subsidiary of the American
Telephone & Telegraph Co.
Operator Maevon Garrett said AT&T
officials told her "my quaht} of work was good
... but I overextended myself to customers and
stayed on the phone 100 long."
Garrett was later reinstated. with only a
two-week suspension on her record. following a
protest b~ the C'ommun1a11ons Workers of
America.
David Ven2. "We have certain time standards
in which we essentiafty expect agents to make a
sale or conclude a call."
"We know what the averqe conversation
time 1 for whatever activity )'IOU an doina."
sajd Jacqueline Mutnansky. operations man·
ager for the phone banks in Chicaao that take
mapzine subscription orders for Time Inc.
She said Time's Telephone Marketina
Response Center has a standard "call time" for
each type of call. •
"You should have processed a specific
number of calls and averaacd a ccnain phone
conversation time," Mutnansky said.
Officials at TWA and at the U.S. Postal
Service said employees are not fired or
transferred for working too slowly, but a bad
Average Work Time rcpon can lead to
retraining.
"We look at 1t as just a way to see who needs
further training," Venz said. "We feel it's a
perfectly accepted practice. It's just looked on as
a good tool to make employees more pro-
ductive." ,
Some employees don't consider it a good
tool at all.
Average Work Time is "a hated concept
nationall } ... It hits a real raw nerve," said
Jeffery Miller. a rfational Sf><?kesman in Wash·
ington for the CWA. which represents tele-
phone operators.
iet rid of a customer real quickly-tor ina~ncc
those who stutter or can't speak En&)ish."
Eleanor Street, a union official who
rc<:ently rcured after 38 years u a telephone
operator. said operators don't feel a sense of
achievement in aervina customers when the
length of each call is timed.
"Just imagine working under that pressurt
five days a week ... Imagine what this does to
your soul." said Mrs. Street. "What it does to
customers is that they have become merely
voices, someone to get rid of as soon as you
possibly can."
Street. who remains president of CW A
Local 2110 despite her retirement. said, "I W1$
told when l was trained you take care of 9uality,
you take care of accuracy/. and quantity and
speed wiU take care of itscll."
Charles Thornton, assistant vice president
at AT&T Communications, said ope~ton'
wages and training make up the most expensive
part of providioa service. ,
The company's "first and foremost obJCO-
tive is providing high quality service:·
Thornton said. but it's also "very important to
make sure our costs arc low, and we are fair to
the ratepayers."
At the Postal Service in Washincton.
spokeswoman Jeanne O'NeiU said letter ear-
ners art inspected annually by supervisors who
accompany them to sec whether "enough time
has been allocated to deliver the mail."
Another Apple ln the barrel -
this time it's a portable persQnal
,.~~· co mputer called the Apple De,
dealgned to compete with IBM.
Computenn·d trad.ing of Job performance
conunues. and not JU!'.t in the phone com pan~.
"h1ch pioneered the concept
.. We have time standards for r~rvat1on
agents." said Trans World .\1rhne spokesman
The phone com pan} 's evaluation
procedure is an example of"how the computer
can tum workers into a production line type,"
M1llersa1d. He said it causes operators "to try to
O'Neill said the Postal Service. also hires
outside companies to conduct studies on how
long certainj<>rting procedures should take.
Apple r;olls out
fruits of labor
New personal computer seen as
big threat to IBM's 'Peanut'
~..\" f-R ..\~CIS( 0 (..\P l -.\pplc Computer Inc ..
'>tepping up its ba11lc wllh I BM for a larger share of the
rx-rsonal-computl'r market. ha<o unveiled a 711~-pound
portahk rnmputer.
The ponable. called th e .\pplc I le. carries a suggested
ha\l' price of$ l .29S and 1s designed to attract what Apple
WL'' a' a "a' e of ne" personal-computer bu yers.
\ppk rred1Cted that 65 percent of 11s sales will go to a
rl'latl' L'h untappcq mar~et of"h1gh end" home users who
''ant a '>oph1'>t1rnted computcr that 1 cas) to assemble and
U'>t'
I hL' f)t'r,onal--\:omputcr indu!>t~ 1'> about to explode
'"'h aJJ111unJI growth." ..\pplc President John Sculk)
'>aid .11;iprn1c'' ufthc I le. "I think that the tcchnolog~ in
tlw 1ndu\lr' "at a point where "'c can make and market
rn)dul·t<, th:it can n:ach out to a much broader group of
pcopk ..
I hL' Ill "an .. c, olut1onar. .. machine. an offshoot of
thL' wmpan~ ·., popular I le machine w h1ch can use a
· mou<il,.. that ,., !'.tandard on .\pplc'o; powerful Macintosh
hnml· uimputcc ">rnlk~ ..aid
Thl· mm"e is a hand-hl.'ld de' 1cc that "'hen rolled on
.1 dL'\~top mu\l~.,· 1he ruro>or on the computers d1spla~
'l rccn \\ 11hout 11. the lie pm111om the <.:ur'io r "Ith arro" s
d1rc\lnl I" II\ full-s11ed kt•\ board.
1 hl' ha'K Ill '~'>tern "·i111ncluLle a power pack. a T\'
h11ukur .tnd rnhlc. fj, c ''l.ornputcr htcrac~ ·· in!>truct1on
J,.,i,, anJ threL' J\~L'mbl\-and-in.,trucuon manuals. The
111. 1.an u..,c most of the '>Oft"are a'ailabk lor the lie.
l \1.'f' tn1t1alh "111 ha' l' Hl U'>l' the I le wllh a computer
d"rla' 'l rl'l·n or i \' '>l't B~ thl· tall. .\prle '"' C\pectcd to
marh·t ,, ll.11 h4u1d-n~ '>tal d1srla~ srrccn that "ould
atW• h 10 thl· 111. 'o thl· u\er can lulh u11l1t11L' thL· computer
a., J port.1hk
l hl· th \OUIJ lilU'>l' pruhkm'> (Or lntcrnatlOOJI
Bu" Ol''' \ 1ill h tnl''> ( orp \ P< Jr a ho ml· u1m pu In
intmduH·d \\Ith muLh fanfan· la<,1 '\oH·mhcr lndu'>ln
"alLhl'r'> 'a' thl' maL.·hinc-ntL~namtd thl' Peanut-ha'>
not ~l'I ml't 'ak\ l'\pl'Ctatmn'
fhl' I It "tll rnmpetc in thl' pm·c rangL· of P<..Jr. '' h1l'h
\tarh ,11 $ ?(l(J but climb!> abo' e $1,200 when 4£:qu1ppcd
~11h l 2X 000 l'ha ractcr'> -ur I 28K -of internal
rncrnon. thl' cqu" alcnt of about 35 pages of double-
'>pan·d \\ ntten material.
Thl· I It "'hich ..\pplc c\perts 10 market earl~ next
month ha' l 28K of main memor: a!> standard
L'4u1prnen1
\ppk h.1\ed 1n ( upeninu "111 '>JX'nd more than $20
million 1h1c, \Car to promote the: II<.. bu~1ng tcle\1s1on
'Pol' during tht '-lummcr 01~ mp1c-. and alh ert1s1ng 1n
'\c"'"cd1 T1ml' Spane, Illustrated and l\:auonal Geo-
grarh1t maga11m·'>.
fha1·., at ka~t 'li5 mllht1n more than .\pple allocated
tor thl' mL.•d1a hlttt on tht· \lanntmh ~h1lh the compan)
1ntrodu1.L'd in lanuan
·· t ht., ,., ;1 "ar.'· '>Jld l sthn D"on. rn.''1dL·nt of
I lhL·nturl ltolJ1ng-. Im a rl''>earrh lirm 1n 'ic"' Yor~.
\II ''L' .trl' 'l'L'tng hL.'rl· 1-, a batik \ppk I'> bringing on
\Onll h1~ l!Ul1\ \\llh thL· Ill ..
Should executive
salaries be based ,
on merit system?
\\ \\lll'-<il<l'-1 \1'1 -lhl l.t'"h 'alam·, nl
l 1trp11r J ll' l \l'l tJI 1' n hJ' hn·n l r 1 t ll lll'J 111 J pr" all' 't Ulh
"h ll h rn 11m menJ, L.rt·at tng thl· 'Jn1l' mrrll ra~ '' "'L'm
1111 ht"tlll'"-flll'O that " lwin~ urgl·d tor l 13'>'>ruom
ll'.11 lll'I \
'II ""'''' 1' dl'linl'J ,1, 'nnll'th111g tor nuthtng. thl'
1u11n1t 1111p11rate ro' "'tl'rn 1., 11nl' of thl' clL•arc'>t
,·,arnpln ''"d the rt'PPrl '''Ul'd 11' thr Dl·motra<.'
Pr11fL'\ t .i '-l'" ) ork-ha\l'd rl·,1:.ird1 rn\trtull' lll'adt•d b\
\1Jrl.. < 1fl'l'O lorma a1dl' to u1n,11nwr .lt 11' ,.,, RJlph
".11k1
I lw 11 por I l'1ll1tkd "fhl· I rouhk \A. 1th I-\L'l ult\ L'
c 11m1wn ... 1111111 · "'a' ha.,ed on Ml int<.'r' IL''~'> ''1th
li11'llll ''nll'n and u1mix·n..at1on uin,ultant'i
f lw 1n'1rlUll' \ard that In 1477 onh fi\t' corporall'
,.,,., Ull\l'' rt'lTl\l'd more than SI m1llmn annualh .\nd
dl''f'llll' \U\lL''"'L' v. hill' Hou,,· dTon<i to restraint ">uch
P"' .1111.,1,t 'X ,·,ccut1\ec, had nrl'edcd SI million 1n pa~
II\ 1•11n v.1th IX 1opp1ng thL.' $:! rrnll1on mar~
\kd1,111 lhtl'I exnull,<.' ollitcr \al&r) plus bonus at
thl' 111<1 l.1rg_l''' 1nduc,tnah wa\ S655.000. not including
p1111·1111.1lh 1.1\ "h <,tock option S'l'""·" 11 said
\1an,1gtr.. arc tnem.'ath1ng b) o'crpa)tng their
until rrl<:rlorm 1ntt ... the report said .. ( orporate leader\
c11uld pur...Ul' lhl' ~ind of ml'rtt pa) in ncl'Utl\C suites that
j, 11ftrn aJ,01..11,•d tor tl·achcr<, 1n our classrooms··
11 namc.·d 't'' l'n 1.nmpan1C''> a'> having enlightened
t\l'lUtl\l' pa\ rohllC'\ -the .\lltcd (orp. H.J He1n1
( orp R ll'(tl'l I 1.·\t 111• < orp . \; urnr ">t<'cl C orp . Eml'I) Air
f n·1ght R.l\th('11n < n and \m11h Klinr < o
I Ill' 1n,11tutt· c,uggc .. 11.·ct that u>mp~ntt'\ acatC'
cnm(ll•n.,;11111n 1 cHlHlHlll'l'' u1mrx1'>ed cntircl~ of out'>1dl'
<'1n•t llH\ I hr panl'I'> ~ould h~n l' thl'lr own hudget\ and
tl'ta1n 1hnr ,,.,.,n lOn'lult:rnt\. la~H'r'I .ind othC'r prn-
fl'''1onah 1nll<'(ll'ntkn1111 management
· r hl'n 11 11111ld analHl rathC'r than mere!\ rub~r-
11.1mp managerial ,om(ll'n'-'lllon proJrams through a
n·pon1ng and 4ue'it1oninJt \e\'>1110 JI the annual meeting."
thl' rl'(lllrt \aid
Jamt'' lt..l·o11h nnut1H· dirct tor for publtr .ifT:u" ol
thl' Ru'""'" Rnundlahl<' 1n ~rw \ ork rC'fu\Cd comment
c)n thl rCJlOrl until hl' LOUld read II l hC' oraan11at10n
l'\'f11("'t(nt' 'nmr uf the L1qic't l 1 \ rnq)otattOn\
..
AD PRICES PREVAH WED . APRll 25th THRU TUES . MAY 1st
VITAMINS
PLUS MINERALS
Twin P1k
200
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Suootemenc •or Ao "
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SUNDOWN
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SUNSCREEN
Sun pr 011t11on
IOI l'IUlll'lotf
\lut\
•OT•A O• 3• 11100f1114Tf
l'lllOTICTION ••• u "'-u .. I\ •MUIMAl
OlllU\Tlllll 478 ~~?TICTtOH
u "'" .. ,,.
Twin P1k _,.._ __ 200
Q11im::a1g111I TABLETS 99
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VITAMIN C
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~!.~01~ E
400 l.U.
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HAIR CARE
• IHAllll'OO ,, Ot
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CHOtC:I•
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SHOP 1 DAYS I IEEll
SUN 25 PosHlon LOUNGE
Brilliant solid colors wr ao arouno a sturdy heavy
steel frame and ad1us1s 25 ways chaise measures
72 1n • 22 in •SL ·50
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DOUBLE
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11' o••••Olt •I Sa. on .. u, AC hvt C)flnf\
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21> In a 72 In. . .. ,.
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17 In. a 35 In.
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Pull up a matchrng chair
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• O!LIJlll CHAlll ()4 If\. 1 20 In)
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or Prcn•cs •SC 200 "'" .. ,, r
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tout 101 101•1men1
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.,. •• _ ................... ,..wor _tr ••
~Ht .... ·~·"''¥'• ~-..... ,If'• .... tU""*M ... -
Valley readies fOr its second chill fi
Plans are now ta.k.ina 1hape for the vices at the ft1uval. In add1t1on. the de isn of the booth and on&inahty of the scc~!'d annual Fountain Valley Fiesta and cham~r 11 providin1 boot.b contracts for entertainment each booth provides. A
C'hah CookofT, sponsored by the Fountain food or non-food eahibilon and con· $500 prize will be awarded to the winner.
Valley Chamber of Commerce. ceH1oru11m. For those cntcrina this contest, a cooks
The festival will be held June 29 throuah More information about volunteer scr-meetina is beina planned to au1de new
July 4 at the city's Mile Square Part vice and booth contn1e11 can be obtained teama and review \.he rules for cstabli hed
Recreation Center. 16400 Brookhunt St. by caJlinp the chamber at 962""4441 . teams. Applications are available from the
The chamber is hopina S0,000 peop~ will One o the bi4h1a,bu of the fnuval will chambtt.
attend. be an lntemat1onal Chili Society-sane-For those who arc already a member of
The chamber is invitin& individuals and tioncd chili cookofT. Tama will be)~ the lnlttnltional Chili Socjcty. a S2S entry
organizations 10 provide volunteer ser-on the flavor of their chili. team 1p1rit. fee will be charpd. For non-membera, the _;:;.-----=-------..;__------------~fee will be $3S.
The six-day celebration will also include
a carnival, the Mi.as Fountain Valley Fie ta
ContcJt, a bluearus ~stival artd a battle of
the hands. The finale will ht a half-hour
fire worts einrav.-nu belinnanaat 9 p. m.
on the Founh of lwy.
For the ICCOnd c:oDtetutive year, Foun·
t.am Valley Community H05plt.al bu made
the first donation toWard the COil of the
fireworb 1how. The hospital donated Sl .000.
HosP.ial Administrator Craas 0 . Myers
11id, 'By contributina to a fittworts
diJplay that is 1pcc1ae\llar yei safe and can
be ertjoyed by everyone, hopefully we can
prevent any accicknu related 10 private
panics usina illepl firtWorks. 1'
Mc111p att bc1n1 interted in city water
bllls to seek additional donations for the
fireworks display.
Parishioner sues church
EXERCISE BIKE
Bicycle Youreelf To Flt I Trtmne11
Du•l·Actlon Cycle/Rower.
SANTA ANA (AP)-A former member
of a fundamentalist congregation wants $3
million in damages from church officials
who she says publicly denounced her
divortc and depanure from the church a$
"sinful behavior."
Jan Brown. 35. filed her suit in Oranac
County Superior Court; namin& as defen-
dants the pastor and six ciders of the
Fairview Church of Christ an Garden
Grove.
The suit. filed Friday. alleges a church
official read a Jan. 22-datcd letter to the
congregation criticizinit Brown's "sinful
behavior" and banning ha from the
church.
Brown. a member of the church for 19
years. says she lcO the church when she
divorced her husband last October.
Churc h pastor Ken Dan o n Tuesday
declined to discuss the suit, saying. "I don't
really think at would be wise for me to
comment on the matter in view of the
pendins litigation.'' He said no one would
speak for the church until a formal reply
was prepared.
Rites slated for crash ~
victim Paul J. Gomez.
Services will be held Friday morning fot Paul Jay
Gomez. 24, a formet Costa Mesa resident, who was killed
in a dune buggy accident in Imperial County Saturday.
Mr. Gomez. a 1977 graduate ofNewpon Harbor Hig)\
School, was a resident of Riverside and was an auto
mechanic in Corona.
He is survived by his wife. Michele, and his parents ...
Jose and Rosa Gomez of Santa Ana Heights. Also
surviving arc a brother. Jack Gomez of Costa Mesa. and
two sisters. Priscilla Bottolfson of Diamond Bar and
Pamela Zacharias of Riverside.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be recited Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at St. Joachim's Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
Graveside services will be conducted Friday at 10 a.m. at
Good Shepherd Ccmcter) an Huntington Beach under the
direction of Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary in
Costa Mesa.
Ellen McVay dead·:
Services arc scheduled thts afternoon for Ellen Marie
McVayofCosta Mesa, who died Friday at Hoag Memorial
Hospital at the age of 88.
Mrs. McVay, a retired claims examiner for the State
Employment Development Depanmcnt. was a member
of the American Association of Retired Persons. ltlJ you eurc1se both u~per Ind lower parts ol your Dody
Tiit bfllkt rtSlttllnct Ol 11\t l)tdlllS un be ad11111td lo simulate
111 rt011111 cond11tons. lltlls °' land Coml01llb4t padOH 1u 1
l11Cludet sptedorMlt• lo Siio• bow lasl and 111 you have
gone Folds tor easy slOf llQt
MAXI TODDLERS
l'ttG. Of' 40
EXTRA
ABSORBENT
She is survived by her daughter, Susan M. Clark of
Newport Beach, as well as seven grandchildren and eight'
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held today at 4 p.m. at Pier~
._._.4-.Urothcrs Bell Broadwa} ChapcJ m Costa Mesa. Pnvatc
LAURA
SCUDDER'S•
POTATO
CHIPS
YOUR
CHOICE!
C.H.
"'u .. ,,,.
MOTHER'S
Old FalttloMd
COOKIES
•MACAROON Uoa.
•WM.NUT NOQ( tu oa.
•CHOCOt.ATaCHIP' tU
•IUGM tJ.I u.
•OATMIAL tU oa.
MEAD
"REGENCY"
STATIONERY
Ouahly wlthllQ l)iper 1n
a convemen1 pacug1
from Mead
PORK & BEANS
l'ttG 0' IO
REGULAR
l'ttG 0' 72
TODDLER
pt(Q 0, ..
NEW BORN
P'llG 0' IO
SUPER
l'ttG. 0, SA
"' ~U •Mt L-~~~--~~~~~~...;.;;,,
CARLO ROS
• CHAaLIS • RHINE I
•BURGUNDY • PINK
•YIN ROSE CHABLll
Atg11lar 01 L10111
12 01.
CANS
CINCH
CAKE MIX
AUOf1ed F11vor1
11 SOL
OR
FROSTING MIX
12-PAK
DISHWASHING
LIQUID
Giant S1z1
22 01.
SEAGRAM'S
SEVEN 7 CROWN
LA PAZ
MARGARITA
MIX
I 0• a 0011<1~' ICIOSS
lllf OO•dt • COCUillll
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I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
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101' •••r\~.•-•-O"' • •'"•1••••4•' ~ .\<110 I OIA1 I~
if .
interment will follow.
I IN TH[ S lRVIC[
S. Laguna officer
wins wings in AF
Jo .. n M. Yocca, son of N1ch and Bonnie Yocca of
South U$una. has been comm1ss1oned a second
lieutenant 1n the Air Force following has graduation from
Officer Training School al l.Jlckland Air Force Base.
Texas. Yocca. a 1982 graduate of UC' Irvine. will be
assigned to Williams Air Force Base. Anz. • • • Airman Daniel L. WlaitefleJd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ltt
Flanagan of Huntington Beach. 11as graduated from the
Air Force munitions maintenance course at Lowry Air
Force Base. Colo. Whitefield, a 1983 graduate of
Huntington Beac h High School. will serve with 1he 400th
Munitio ns Maintenance Squadron al K.adena A.ir Base an
Okinawa. Japan. • • • ..\1rman Grecory W. Plnman, son of George and
Joyce Patt man of Costa Mesa. has grduatcd from the A.ir
Force law enforcement specialist course a1 LackJand ..\1r
Force Base. Tcus. Pm man. a 1983 graduate of Estancia
High School in Costa Mesa. will serve wtth the 832nd
Combat Suppon Squadron at Gala Bend ..\1r Force
Auxihaf'} A.1rfield. Anz. • • • Pvt. Bob Ben.nett, son ofChnst)' <. arlm and stepson of
Harold Carlin of Costa Mesa. has completed the power
generation and wheeled vehicle mechanics course at the
Army Training Center an Fort Dax. N.J. Bennett 1s a 1983
graduate of Estancia High School in Costa Mesa. ••• Arm~ pee. 4 Terry Htatb, whose former guardians
are Gerald and Teresa Lane of San Juan Capistrano. has
arnved for dut} 1n Neu Ulm. West German}. Heath. a
communtca11ons .,pcc1ahst "1th the I st In fan ti") D1 v1s1on.
was pre\loush tw.1gncd at (amp Hove~. South Korea. • • • ..\ir r on:c Rl'<.t"r\l' -.,tJfT Sgt. Caryl A. Hatbaway,
!daughter <11 Bern1n· Hl·nn o l Seal Beach. has graduated
from 1hc .\1r Forn· a1rrraft loadma!>lrr\ course at
Sheppard .\Irr orcc Ba"I{'. l C\aS She t\ \Cheduled to sen e
at Tra' is ..\1r 1-oru.• Ba'll' ( ahf • • • p, t Daniel. K. llva. son of Al lCl' and Paul ih a ol
Huntington &alh has completed one sta11o n unit
training at the \rnn Infant!") hool 1n Fon Benning. Ga.
">ah a 1~ a I 4!1 I graduall' ·of Win1ersburg High School 1n
Hun11ng1on Realh ••• .\irman Craig M. Haff, son 01 Patnc1a ..\ Huff of
Costa \1l'\a has been assigned 10 the Pres1d10 of
Montcre~ < alit after complctme, baste training at
Lackland \1r J orce Ba~. Teus Hun a 1481 $raduate ol
Estanua lt1gh ~hool an ( osta Mesa. ~111 r«"Cl\C
spec1al11cd 1n\truc11on an thr '01ce processing field . • • • .\irman I 'It Clas\ Karl I. Brandl, son of Jan R Brandt
of In ine. ha\ graduated from the A.1r Force commumca-
1ion~ opcratmns spcnalas1 cour-.e at Goodfellow 4-ar Foret
Base. Tc,as Brandt wall now serve at Tempelhof A1rpon
in We\t Berlin with the 6Q I :!th Ell'Ctronu: Sccunty Group. • • • \1rman James R. Rale, \On of KKhard and .\Ian•
Rule of Huntington Beac h. has been a\s1gned to Chanute
.\1r force &'IC, Ill . after completing basic tra1n1na at
La1.:kland '\1r Fon-c Base. Tcus. Ruic, a I qg3 &raduatr of
Ocean \'1('\\ High hool in Huntington Beach. will
reccn c spcc:iah1~ 1nstruc11on an the fuels SP«•ahst field
Good for you!
Daily Pilat C1ass1f1ed ad'-
phone 642·5678
Ross gets VP post
at Butterfield S&L
David B. Ro11 has joined B•nerfleld S.vbag1 ud Lou A11octaUoa as
executive vice president of the financial services group. Ross. who previously
served as senior vice president of marketine for Beajamhl Fruklla Federal
Savi.ag1 1n Portland, Ore .. wall be responsible for managing and d irecting
Butterfield's retail operation~ and services, including product development.
consumer lending, and banking and operations at Butterfield branches,
including the new financial services center opening in June at the H•HOD
Cen ler headquarters in Santa A.na . Ross brings more than 20 years of
expenence in finance and computer technology to his new post. • • • Richard L. Gale has J01ned Amwest Mort1a1e Corp. as vice president.
wnh responsibility for overseeing whole~le and retail loan production for the
company. Gale. of Newport Beach. was formerly president of Cbarcklll
Financial Group ofln 1ne and director of operations for Warm!Dgton FlnaDclal
Corp. of Irvine. • • • Brenda Glass Peterson has earned the title of scmor residential consultant
for the Newport Beach office of Coldwell Banker Residential Real E1tate
Services Southern California. Peterson. a consistently high sales producer. has
previously been honored as a member of the Gold Circle and the President's
Club. the top step 1n a four-step awards program. Peterson joined Coldwell in
1977 and was named .. Rookie of the Year" that year. The Newport Beach
resident was also honored as one of the top 20 sales agents company-wide in
1981 . • • • Cox & Burch Advertising Agency of Newpo~ Bea~h has added Ned
Madden to its staff as account manager for the public relations staff. Madden
T
UPs AND DowN s
NEW YORK (API -The 'tono~ing llsl
s hows the Over-the -counler
stocks •nd werrents lhet heve oone up
the mosl and down the most be$9d on
oerc enl of ct\ange fM Tuesde v.
No securllles tredlng below S2 or 1000 sha res ere Included.
NII e nd e>trc:entege changes a re 11\e
d ifference belwMn the previous clo5 ng
bid price and lodev's lest bid price.
ROSS PETERSON
will be responsible for public relations activities for the agency's high-tech
accounts. including CIE Systems, Inc., and its new Dlltribated Sy1tem1
Division. as well as Alternate Channel Marketing ~ACM). Madden. ofNewpon
Beach. comes to Cox & Burch from LeAnce, Herbert & Bowen Public
Relations, where he was senior account manager. also servicing several high-
tech accounts. • • • Greg Furlong 1s 1983 Employee of tbe Year for Rogers Cable1y1tem1, the
cable T Y firm sen-ing Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley. Westminster.
M1dwa) Cit~ and Stanton. Furlong. recently promoted to production
coordinator of the programming department. has conducted numerous public
access workshops and \ 1deotaped some 300 local productions ranging from
commun1t) fest1 .. als to football games and children·s shows. He c urrent!)
produces two week!) programs -··Backtalk." a health-related senes. and
··Guess What'~ ... a"' e tnv1a pho ne-in show. Furlong also acts in local theater
productions at Golden West College • • • Memorial Health Services has moved its development and support center
to One Pacific Plaza 1n Hunun~ton Beach. The firm. a parent holding company
for a network of subs1d1anes 1n\.Oh·ed in the health care field. now occupies
some 1~.000 square feet on the fifth and sixth floors of the plaza's Liberty
National Bank building. The Lo ng Beach-based company owns and operates
Saddleback Community Hospital 1n Laguna hills. Richard Shapiro of Fro1t-
Trinen Partners, the cAclus1' e leasing agent for the development. handled the
lease for MHS. • • • Beckman Instruments, Inc., honored five Orange Coast residents for 25-
and 30..year careers with the company during its annual Service Awards
~anquet recent!). Honorees includeded: Paul S. Hanw~y of Laguna Ni~uel and
Robert L. Anderson of Capistrano Beach. who received 30..ycar pins: and
Gerald T. Keabl of Newport Beach. Robert R. Crittendon of Laguna Niguel and
William H. Bardens of San Juan Capistrano. The awards were presented by
Arnold 0 . Beckman, founder and chairman of the firm, and company
President Louis T. Rosso.
MUTUAL FUNDS
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COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, A-9
OvER THE CouNTER
Helio~etics
·is tradlinfl on
AMEXffoor
Cbarl• W .1119eler (left)
oflntne-bllwt
Helloaetlc., lne., dla-
cueeecutomen tracUnc
orden wttb WUHam 80-
Teron tile Ooorof tile
American •tockacllan.ie
ln l'fewYork. 80Yert.tbe
Amaapeclallatfor
Belloiaetlca 8toek. Ames
llonday adm.ltted tradlnf
HeUoiaettc.• common
.iau.GDder dcket.ym-
bol RLX. The newly Hated
laeaeopenedon400
•baraat 1151/e. Tbeflrm••
Intnedlrialon 4•1Cna.
manafactareeandmar-
keta pbotoToltalc (110lar
electric) and otber elec-
tronic powercon•enlon
equipment and •19tema.
NB business women
set meeting May 8 &om $100,000 to $500,000
The second Tuesda) of the month has been
designated as the meeting night for the Newport Beach
Chaner Chapter of the American Business Women's
.\ssoc1at1on.
Contact: Small Busi ness Administration Department
Los Angeles: Orange County:
1800) 472-8529 Toll Free L\. (2 131 645-2673 17141895-2929
The group's ne~t meeting will be at 7 p,m .. May 8. at U/Jerq Nd//Ond/ BanA-
the Registry Ho tel in Irvine. Dinner reservauons are S 15. Alt U/ual Opporttmitg lnltkr. Mrmb#r FDIC and Ft«ral Rrs~n• For1nformat1onandre~rvaft:io~n~si.icialili6i4i2~-7~2i5i9i.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Investing
is focus of
Hawaiian
OCC tour
Registration 1s under
way for an eight-day basic
and ad' anced financial
planning and investing
tour to Hawaii that will be
conducted this summer by
Orange Coast College's
Community Service Of-
fice.
The tour. which is
partially tax-deductible,
runs Aug. 2()..27. L.eading
the tour will be Dr. Errold
F. Moody. an Orange
Count) financial planner
and consultant. He 1s an
instructor 1n real estate
secunties. limited partner-
sh 1 ps. taxation and
financial planning for col-
leges and financial inst11u-
t1o ns.
During the tour. Moody
wi II present four thrcc-hour
lectures on 1nvest1ng.
Topics will include stocks.
bonds. mutual funds. lim-
ited partnerships. rtt1re·
ment. estate planning. in-
surance and tax frauds .
The trip includes three
days 1n Oahu and four days
in Maui. Time will be
available for recreational
activities .
Cost of the tour will be
about S73S. Each of
Moody's lectures will cost
an additional $40 per per·
son. The overall fee covers
air fare. accommodat1ons.
excursions and college 1n-
mranc:e
For more information
about tbe tour. call
432-5880.
For Ad Action
Cal 1
Daiy Plot
AD·VIS(Jt
642-5678
Annual Yield Daily Rclte
'ft,u o;et lhl· term: 32-180 days.
181 days will get you 1Q95/o 1Q25k
Annu.11 Yi('l<.J Daily Rate
\nu 'et the term 181-.304 <l¥
365 days will get you
1l.5I10 1Q75k
Annual Yield Daily Rate
With our Mini Jumbo account. you
ca n set your own term, from 32 days to
l)ne year
$50,000 • minimum deposit.
Interest compounded daily.
Account insured up to $100.000 by
the FSLIC.
Come c;ee Huntington Savings about a
high intt-rec;t Mini Jumbo account today.
Now you know why your neighbor banks at
CD HUNTINGTON
SAVINGS~
t l'oCr,. 1-.tl" Vilt.\"""'" 1-111 lln· t..hur" ""'"'"'"\.on"' '-,~'""' ClllS.l
•N. ... l•ftJ l•l'llrt "'"'"'"I" .. 11. •"' HI '"""'"~1 .... ·~ ... h '"'' °"" ,,, Ma1,.0ffh•~~\\.!!n,-t •1 "'""" .,"" 11. ... h •11••t!tlr\JO
•
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On
the
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Dtw "9 .... &Ml a.
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\ill I
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...
D r'i _I ~' : .
. ·. ~
Dua to lata tl'MllTl:l1ll an
toct.v'• lilting wll not •
pear In the Dilly PMot.
Due to late trantmialon
todaya's Usting wtn not 8P-
pear In the OaHy Piiot.
WHA T AM EX Drn
E .. Tl
• 23
AM EX LEADERS
'
!
'
l
t
,
NASDAQ SuMMARv
GoL o Quor£s
METAL S QuoTE S
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are going and \Vhich people are helping
them get there.just watch ·credit Lin · -very day in the
Business section of your new Dlily Pilat
,
j .
Buckle up
your kids
for life
T hree-year-old Ro bert Davis died tn a bizarre a uto mobile
accide nt last week because -police believe -he was n ot
restrained by a child safety seat or a seat belt.
The boy was on his father's lap: the father. Larry Wa yne
D avis, was d ri ving. The car slammed into a water tank. its hood
~nd fenders crumpled. Larry Davis and another child . a pparent-
ly rid ing in the back seat. suffered minor cuts and bruises.
But Robert. who police theorize was sleeping peacefully as
he nestled against his fa the r. was crushed between Larry Davis'
chest a nd the car's steering wheel.
A uto acc ident injurie are the largest single killer of children
in A merica -bigge r than cancer or heart disease. Each year.
hundreds ofkids a re killed a nd te ns of thousands are injured and
maimed . Ma ny o f these deaths and most of the inj un es can be
avoided if parents use sa fety seats and seat belts.
It has been the law in this state since Jan. I. 1983 tha t
children under lhe age of four or under 40 pounds must be
restrained in child safety seats while travelling in m otor vehicles.
It is a good law, a well-concieved law, but it is almost impossible
to enforce until tt is too late.
Police simpl) do not have the time to spot-check traffic for
possible restraint violations. And. unless the child is very young,
it is d ifficult fo r an offi cer to verify that the child is younger than
four or lighter than 40 pounds.
The respo nsibility for a verting these tragjc deaths falls
squarely on the parents, b ut communities ca n help by making
child safety seats accessible and affo rdable.
Som e enlightened towns and cities -like Irvine, where
M ayor Larry Agran and his pediatrician wife Dr. Phyll is Agran
have been in the fo refront o f the national m ovem ent to mandate
safety seats -purchase the seats and rent them to their citizens.
Irvine's program has met with more success tha n it a nticipated:
the clly had to double the number of seats it makes available.
Accepta nce - and. therefore. child safety -is on the ri se there.
But mo re ~e nera lized statisttcs indicate that only 25 percent
of the kids riding in cars are appropriately and legally b uckled
up. T he grim reality is tha t 75 pe rcent of the motorists who drive
with youngsters in the ir veh icles blithely tempt the sorrowful
fate that now tort ures Larry Wayne Da is.
LETTERS
Gays are protected;
what about others?
To the E:d11or·
( oun1. 1man ( 1cn1r: ,., calling tor a
ci t~ ordinance hann1ng hou\lng and
JOb d1scnm1na11on Jgain'>t ga~· .. ~k
want., th1.• c11' 10 rcallirm 11., 1.omm1t-
ment 10 d1vcrs11~. The people of
Laguna Beach JUSt reaflirmed their
comm11me111 h) decting a ga} 10 the
c1t\ 1.ounc1l. Th.:re "a., no d1s-
cnm1na11on 1n that W11h 2 out uf 5
cit) councilmen ga~. I can"t behe\c
the ~x>ople of Laguna Beach. "hich
include-; 15 10 >U. pcrn.·nt ga~s.
d1scnmma1c an' more or less against
gays than the) would against he1er-
osexuals. blad .. s. Mexican Amen·
cans. sen 1or c1111c :a!>. ) o u ng pcoplr.
dogs. Harl' Krishna butlder'i. prop-
ert\ O\\nt:r\ or IOUn .. lS
Ho" ahout pas'>tng an ordinance
banning d1'icnm1nat1on on the fol-
lowing:
.\gainc;t rrnpcrt) O'-' ners "ho appl)
for a permit and "hose plans are
w11h1n all l tl\ rcgula11ons but 1s
dented a ix·rm11 hccause \umeone
does not hkt tlw lnoks ofh1c; hu1ld1ng.
.\ga1ns1 lt11..il parling to forn·
rnns1ruct1on of needed parl1ng s1ruc-
1urt.''>.
~ga1n.,1 our childrcn b) not .illu'-'·
1ng th1.• linannall} strapped school
d •'>I rill 10 '>U hd I\ 1dl' 11 s u nde' eloped
prnpcn' al fopof1h1.·Worldso11c::in
tx· sold". '-'Ith the profits fina ncing
Laguna childrl•n'seduca11on and t.o"
ahout an ordinance limiting the tinw
1n n:soh 1ng )Ca more Hills -th rec
months or give 11 back.
Councilman Gentf) secs the ga)
ordinance a'> an important symbol.
The '>) mbol of his future political
career. Let's ha'e ordinances estab-
lished for the good of the people. not
1u~1 for Councilman Gentry.
.\fter a11eml1ng the council meeting
111 .\pnl 17. m) porn1on was rcaf-
lirmcd. "11h all the media there.
including TV coverage from KNBC
C hannel 4 and K TTV Channel I I.
C ouncilman Gentr: got the state and
na11onal e\posure he "anted for
himself Put'> Laguna Beach on the
map again
JEFF JAHR.\ US
Laguna Beach
"Now that we have gtven up .. .jlngotstlc marntes tJons of .. Don't-
Tread-On-Me' 'nationalism. where Is the enhanc ttspect?''
NAW f I V01Et> Fd2 ~DALE .
I
'
Windows of squirrely souls
Befo r mating. male and female
squirrel monkeys gaze into each
other's eyes. researchers have noted.
Presumabl~. 11's a son of silent
question-and-answer ntual. T hese
monke~ !>. they've noted fun her. also
gaze into each other's eyes after
mating. And that 1s a silent question-
and-answer ri tual. too. evident!\..
Now here's you r assignment: What
are the que-suons and what are the
answers"
When \.Ou bu\. a car in Australia.
you can option fo r a ··roo bumper" -
a pipe-frame grillwork to protect th1:
'ehicle from damage when you run
into a kan~roo. You \Crv well might
run into a kangaroo. you know. If you
drive carelessly in the countf).
The television script was written by
a hack. If i1 contains this line of
dialogue: "What's that supposed to
mean?"
Q . Where on your body do you find
your ··collop"?
A. Se' eral wheres. It's any fold of
skin. The narrow webbing between
)our thumb and forefinger. Or under
your eyes. 1f bags there be. Or under
your chm, if you go for double.
Q. Is it possible to cross a sheep
with a goat'>
Save Prop. 13, reject Prop. A
To 1hc Ed11or
~n,onc1ndoubt a bout ho"' to\otc
on Propos1 11on ~had on l~ to read JcfT
\dlrr'!> ··Focus on the :-.Jews" about
\\ho "'as bacl 1ng 1ha1 propo~11 wn. to
absohc their doubt Prop. .\ 1s
proposcd to ra1sc$5 m1ll1on through a
I rent per dollar ( 161: perc..-nt ) raise in
sales 1ax for tra nstt 1mpro\'emen1s:
about S 150 per ~car per fa mil) The
reason that thc big de' elopers. that
.\dlcr menuons are backing it 1s
because the Orange County Transit
District propQSC!> to use the mo ney 10
bu ild new roads in to undeveloped
areas. so the de,clopcrs can develop
them Thal will hardl) rehe'e our
present traflic problems. It will only
add more traffic to compound them.
fhc monies for the enlargement
and 1mpro' ement of the Santa Ana
Frecwa) ha"e already been allocated
b~ the state from the gasoline tax we
pa). And the federal roads are taken
care ot with the 5 cents a gallon tax
the) have JUSl imposed. So 1t seems
the OCTD IAOuld have ample funds
to fill 1hc pot holes and resurface
some roads with the S7 billion they
now get fo r the purpose. And it ts
unhkeh that the tax "ould be
removed after the proposed 15-)ear
rcnod because lhe proposiuon also
proposes that bonds ma~ be issued
and the appropnation l1m1t in-
creased. So \OU could bet 1ha1 1he la\
"111 ne'er t>(. resn ndcd
Hut even wo rse than 1h1: hug<.·
burcaucraC) Prop. A. would fos ter.
and the thousa nds 11 would cost each
of us. is that a vote for Prop. A 1s a
vote to dismantle Jarvis-Gann's
Prop. 13 property tax limitation. That
propos111on mandated that no taxes
could be raised without a two th irds
vote of the people. or the Legislature.
California's Supreme Court has
already eroded that provision by
ruling that Los Angeles could raise
their sales tax by a simple maJont)
when the city didn't get the two thirds
vote Qeeded to rai se their sales taxes.
Who wants 10 vote to confirm that
ruling?
Le1·s :.a"e I J b) voting NO on A.
Ju ne S.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
Newport Beach
A. In test tube experiments. it is.
Scientists at the Institute of Animal
Phys1olog) in Cambndge. England.
have done it. The embryo is im-
planted in surrogate sheep and jOat
mothers. They call their hybnd a "geep ..
Q. In wha1 son of horse races are
the horses entered even before they're
born?
.\. Futuril).
Q. \\hat's a ''d1g11onum"?
.\. A silent machine for piano
. practice. ...
In ··Goldilocks and the Three
Bears." Goldilocks breaks into the
hears· house. but gets no punishment
fo r this felony. That's bad. Or so
contend complainants in Church
Hill. Tenn. Should've been won h ·a
couple of years in reform sc hool.
what? Let i1 pa ss. Bnngs to mind an
item ou1 of Jeru!>alem. Mr. and Mrs.
David Lockes there named their bab)
daughter in hono r of the late Golda
Mt>1r. so no" Israel has a hllle girl
named Golda Lock<.·s.
Oon"t sa' 'ou'n• ha ld. 'llf. Be
soph1st1ratl'd '\a' )ou·,e IO">t ~our
""che,l·lun· ·· Th:Jt too. 1s a head of
hair.
lns1.·l"h m''l"r clos<.' th<.•1r e\es.
( an·1 ""o lid\. ·
Not JUSI eels hut all sons of fish
create electrical fields. Sharks possess
small organs in their snout s to detect
these fields. So a shark. 11·s claimed.
can fi nd a bottom fis h bun ed in the
mud.
Did I ~v Nevada casino dealers
make about S600 a week? "No way!"'
wntes SC\ eral of same. "We get about sn 5 a week. total!"
In the largest offi ce building in the
world. the Pentagon. you can walk
from an~ suite to any other suite in six
minutes or less.
L.M. Boyd
columalsr.
Is a 1yadlc•ted
PATRICK BlJCBANAN
colamnl.t
JACK
AIDEISOI
Cuts.In
veterans··~
benefits
proposed
Hospl als would
dump patients to
save 3.3 billion
WASHINGTON -In a move that
can only be described as unrealistic m
an election year. the non-pan isan
Congressional Budget Office is ret"·
om mend ing that mil ho ns of veterans
be denied care in hospitals and
nursi ng homes operated by the Vet-
eransAdmin istra tion.
•'
The proposal would cul $3.3 billion
a year from the VA 's budget. It would
dumpmost ofthe vets, who are now
treated in the agency's 17 2 hospitals
and JOO nursing homes. on the
already overburdened Medicare and
Medicaid systems.
-"No VA-supported hospital or
nursing home care would be available
to veterans without service<en·
nected d isabilities unless they were
unable to defray the costs of their
care." Most VA hospital and nursing
home care is for non-service-con-
nected injun es or illnesses. though
priority isgJ ven to veterans who were
disabled as the result of their military
service.
-1:. ve n help for poor vets and for
those wi th service-connected dis-
abihues could require reimburse-
ment. The amount would be de-
termined by "means tests" of the
veteran'sability to pay.
-A "co-payment" procedure
wo ul d be started immediately. "De-
ductibles charged for a ny hospital
stay up to 60 days in length would be
set at S356 .... "A short hospital stay,
99daysorlcss, would cost a veteran
SIOOamonth ifhe hasS l.OOOin
annual income above the VA pension
level of about $6.980.
-As forthe pnonty patients with
service-connected d1sabll111es. the
draft rt'Commends that ··ehg1b1l1t)
could be tightened even further" b>
ehminatingcoverage for vets who arc
deemed to be less than 50 percen1
disabled.
The most severe impact of the
proposed cuto ffs would be on older
vetera ns who ha ve no service-con-
nected cond1tion but who need long-
term care. A significant number of
these World War I and World War II
veterans would no longer be eligible
for VA medical care. so they'd have to
rely on Medicare or Medicaid-both
stretched to the limit.
In a moment of candor, the Budget
Offi ce'sdraft repon admits that the
annual savings would actually be less
than half of the projected $3.3 billion.
since about 55 percent of the VA 's
savings would simply be shifted as
costs to Medicare and Medicaid.
Jaclt Aadersoa is• syndlc•IH
co/omalst.
Tolerating terrorists breeds more terrorism
Why are ther e
Libyan embassies
in the W est?
\.\-~S H ll\I(., rel"\. -I 1•lh"'"'~ th\
mach1nt'·6unn1ng 111 11 lknh111
strators and ttw 1-.tllinl! 111 .1 Brn 1,h
pohCl''-'Oman -tl\ al 1h,a111l·11orl\I
fl nng from 111\11.k h1' u111n11' ·,
m1ss1on 1n L 11nd11n -\l,1gg1<.·
Thatcher h:i' g1\l0n < 111 "-h.1J.1ti .1
week 10 get ht\ ix·11pk nut ••I tlw
count~.
A hngl'ring 4u<.'\t111n h11"'l".\l'r
remains. What "er<.· thl'~ J11111g thl r<.'
Wh) .... as this ou1r:ig1.· r<.·qu1rl·d 111
persuade Great Rniain ll> ll'rm1n.11r
oormal d1plom:i11l 1111l'1u1ur'l' ""h
Tnpoh., ror a dn:Hk II hJ\ ~'l'll
common lo..no~lcdgl' 1h.11 ( 111
K.hadafi banlrolb tl'rron'>t' lrom thl·
tRA to th<' Red Hngadr 1ha1 hl"'
dispatche$ hit \q11:1cJc. 10 hqu1Jatl'
4.iss1dcnt~ to Wc,t<.'111 u1untm•c.
Wh\ are therl" 'iltll I 1h,.rn ('Ill
bass1e and ml\'>lon.-. 1n"1k r11o't
Western countr1C''>01
T he an.-.wc.·r got•c. lar tll \''pl.1111 "h\
frcs1dcnt Reaa.1n·c. '"'"'" annnunll·d tough lane on intrrna11nn;1I tt'rr"r 1-.
ORANC.F COAS f
Daily Pilot
ltlo.d' tc 1 ht.• '>lwrt-11' cJ and unprnllUl ·
ll'l' I he\\ <.'\ll'rn dcmo1.rac1c~ '>11111>·
h la{ l thc toughnc\"I. unit~ and "111111
p:l\ the rCljUl'>tle pflCl' to hnngan 1.•nd
to \tall' terror T erron't' \\orldw1dr
lo.no" 11
Bt'l,IU\l" \\ 1.·..i f·urnrt• v.ant<. t11 l1.•1.·p
.1hJnd1n '~11h 1he rad1lal .\rab'>. togl't
all'~ UJ"l on th1.· \ ankn.~'> in the L1b~an
1>il tr.Hk 11 turn'> a hllnd l'H' 10
Khadali\ 11:rror Bl'lau'>C thl' ·\\ rst
tx·lin 1.''>. ~l'l 1n pur'lutng drll'nl<.' "<.'
m.untain n•la110n., "1th Bulgm1a
l'' en though Bulganan J\~:l'>'>in~ h,1, <."
operated 1n the ~l''>I lor )t'ar,, and
thr Bulgarian ~UO\l(f1an oftht KC 1B
,,11ned out lirr1hm·, \ nmtract on
1hl Pop<.·
lkt3U\l" Mc\ICO pr11es 1ts an11-
\nwncan1sm and w1she\ to rl·ta1n 11,
l'\1'1t1p11on from< ao;tro"• tcrror. Me11·
1u1 < 11\ mamtain'I lru:ndl) relations
'-'•lh .rn H.iq1na lhJt sends M-19
kmimt\ 10 operate:' aga inst C'ol-
llmh1a. and Puerto Rican tcrron 1~ to
opn att• against thl' lJ n11ed St4te~
"Perd1lans alne or Ra11uh dead.""
dnlarl·d Tedd) Roo~\l·lt This
\horthand for sa)intt that If the
l..1dnapf)<"d .\mcncan were not re-
turned \m<.·ncan .-.hip\ would start
\hl'llintt ~1aghreh pom When l 1 ~
'a1'1lr" "ere roughed up in Tampico.
H. L. Schwartz Ill
t 1 ,I <t•
ChHy Dowellbr
I Jltnt lll'IO Al""IUlnl
IQ Chi' P1Jll 1~
Larry o .• ,,..,.
Mltf' O"'O E0.10'
Frank Zlnl
""'" •1111!' l dtlOt
PAT
Bue HANAN
\\ ntidro" \\II on bombarded 1he
port on up1ed \ <.'ra Cru1 and de·
manoe~ a ~I-gun salute to the·
.\ma11.•an nag NOIA thal W(' have
Sl\<.'n up ~ut h J1ngo1st1l man1-
fcstat1on<. ol ··Don't-Tread-On-Me"
narnrnali\m. "h<.·rc " th<.' <.'nhancl'd re~pert"l
The Amencano.. too. have been
hal f-hearted. 10 put 11 politely. in thc-
lepcrm ng of terrorists. We ma)
ceremon1ousl) 1.lose down the
m1'1$1ons of L1h)a and Iran. but their
"diplomats" then take the Eastc:'m
shuttle up to Ne" York, rc-c5tablish
themselves 1n their l I N m1ss1ons.
and begin reap~annii on Amcncan
tc:'le\ 1s1on with the latest Khomeini
and Khadafi rcfkctr ons on the Great S~tan
Rt'agan dc1.'1<kd no rtiahauon was
the w1~\t re~ponsc for the air
ma~s:u,:rt of K.\l 007 Thc rc'lult Air
Mar'lhal Alck and r I. Koldunov
hn1ltd that act of ~latr terror au area1
feat of ~o' 1ct arms. and one I
/huko' 1houllht to ht-lht' MIG pilot
received an award for hero1~m
The purpose of terror. said I cn1n.1i.
IO tcrron1t And the weapon 1i.
u11h1td bc.-<.·au'>t' 111.-. cost efTectl\c, 11
wori..~ .ind 1hc pn1.r can ht-neahv,1blc
to none-\ 1\tent
On1· \h11t(' fanat1{ ndintt a trurl.
homh k11IC'd ! \'1 .\mrmnn' nncf
broke United States will to remain 1n
Le banon. The 1error of the PLO won
that organ11a11on mternat1onal recog-
n111on and 11s pistol-packing cha ir-
man a standing o' at1on at the U.N.
Nora Astorga und1.·rs1ands thi s
('urrentl) dcput) foreign minister of
Nicaragua. she was celebrated in the
.\mencan lef11s1 press as the '"her-
oine" of the Sand101sta re,olut1on.
for havi ng bai1ed a hone~ trap in
\\h1ch President Somo1a's top gen-
eral "as lured to his death
In the renderi ng of Nora·s rc-\OI·
u11onar) deeds. howe' er. de-tail\ were
no1 \\1dcl} published The) were
tilled in b} President omo1a. wntmg
1n n1k. before h" assassma11on
Herc 1i. how he found the bod) of his
old frn:nd. who. like hi m. had worked
for the-Amrricans.
"What happened to(Gcneral) Vqa
should not happen to any human
being. First, he was beaten into n
hlood> pulp. f hen his eyes wcrr
JOU&ed OUt, hlS throat CU\, h1S body
bumc:'d with cigarettes. and as a final
act. his gennals were cut off and
stuffed in10 his mouth. Attcndina
doctors cstimattd 1t took ~vernl hou~ for the general to die:·
Nom1nn1C'd to be ambac;sador lO
the lJ S . this murderous .,3mp1 rc!>s
wa, reJl.'<'tcd onl)' last wee k by the
OepartmC'n t or State Wh\ was there a"' discussion.,
Hurl.c h.td 1t nght '"When bad men
rombinc. the good mu!lt a~'loc1ntc.
d~ the} will fall one h) one. an
unp1t1ed ~cnfi~ 1n a rnntempuble
'itruAAk"
Pa trlet Burbaun 11•1yndk1IH
N lamalrr
. .. . • . -• . . •
A neaottator craw la oat of the LlbJan embaMJ ln London
followtna the ebootlnC loctclent there lut week. •
...
Designs reach eVe.ryone in family ·
Expo '84 at Robinson's shows how
newest home fashions fit together
By CATHY De MA YO stnpes and tnangtes, with accent
pieces for rooms throughout the
house in bright primary colors.
._.,,...C•n •••• •• 11 Panels of dcs1&ners. videotapes on
china and crystal selection. cooking
demonstrations. craftsmen and com-
puters offered something at literally
every tum at Home Design Expo '84.
The Expo -was planned to assist
shoppers with home decorating ideas
via information-oriented displays.
pamphle\s and consultants available
throua,hout Robinson's at Fa5hion
Island.
"Environment is so important."
she said. Although she still designs
fashions. home fabrics arc a new and
exciting field for her.
''This is the first time any store has
done this on this scale," said Susan
Maples, Robinson's representative.
"There isn't any one style of decorat-
inganymore."
And the Expo. featured in six key
Robinson's stores through May, spot-
lights a wealth of styles and designs.
"I love it because it reaches
everyone in the family," she said with
a smile. "fashion !las taught us how
to put ourselves together. Now de-
signers arc teaching us how to put our
homes tOJether to fit our different
lifestyles.·
Preferring strong. energetic and
dramatic designs herself. she ad-
mitted, "Freedom is finally coming in
expressing our lifestyle. Design is
much more personal in the '80s."
laabelle von Boch
Holding forth in housewares was
Scandinavian designer K.atja. who
has lived in New York for the past
four years. Her new line of linens
shows bold black and white checks.
Around the comer. ArmetaJe
craftsman Pat Sterner was working
with a sand mold for pewter pieces.
which he broke open to reveal the
metal casting inside. Each mold 1s
individually made. he said. "an
Tricks can
alter room
By SUSAN MONAHAN
0..,'9otC001 1111 ldent
If you own a home in Southern California. chances are
the rooms are larger, and more airy than those in houses
back East.
"Even in small hou~s there are no small, heat-
hoarding rooms ltkc we have in wintry climates." said
Joyce MacRae. West Coast editor of House and Garden
magazine.
Consequently. }OU will have different decorating
needs than your New York counterpart. "Large spaces
mean large-scale furniture." she explained.
MacRac was hosunga panel of interior designers who
appeared for Home Design Expo '84 in Robinson's
depanment store. Newport Beach. Ed Edson. the store's
director of home furnishings and Newport Beach intenor
dcsiancrs Diane Johnson and Hank Morgan weTC there to
offer advice on solving basic decorating problems.
Of course, some people hire an interior designer for
just that purpose. "A lot of people cannot see a room (as it
would look) finished." explained Mof'J!n. adding that
interior design has become a highly specialized field.
If you do use a designer. she advised, find one who can
plan well and invest the bulk of htc budget in quality
upholstered furniture and at least "one fabulous accessory:
it can take what is ordinary out of that room."
And if you decide to do it yourself. it doesn't hurt to
think like a designer.
If you want to create the illusion of more space. said
MacRae, try the designer's trick of adding mirrors to the
room.
"And there arc subtle changes you can do with lighting
to create certain moods. using overhead lights and spot
lighting," Johnson added.
And if the shell of the room is short on architectural
details, she sa1d, consider adding ~me. "May.be S?me
windows, a fireplace, some m oldings -give It a
background."
Color is an important part of the backgrou~~· and
Johnson suggested doing some research before dcodmg on
the colors you surround yourself with. "TheTC are a lot of
PAPARAZZI
._..,Net ""9'9.., ........ ....,
Kay Milano. head of the Han~D' Harbor
chapter. l••e lar1eat cbeck to Joyce
Reaume. prealdent of the <>ranae County
Philharmonic Society. at luncheon.
LtiJltinf createe the mood of a room and
neattnc end tablea are moet UHfal when a
coffee table would obatruct traffic now.
colors that are new hues to the same old tints ... Go out and
look at fabrics."
Morgan said that while it is not necessary to have the
same colors throughout the house. "there should be a flow
... you want some continuity."
Edson said that variety and continuity can be
achieved by decorating around floral or plaid designs and
using different colors from the print in different rooms.
One thing that seems to be out of favor with designers
is planned obsolence.
"It used to be there were trends; you'd decorate and
two years later it was out of style.'' Edson said. "But we're
seeing better design in a lot of areas ... if it's put together
well. people will keep It."
Morgan agreed. adding, "People are taking old
furniture and makingit better. We're Just improving an old
design."
65 traveling
agents find
their match
Philharmonic Committees
give $175,000 total -----~-----
Tennis pro Vl r1lDla Wade was the star attraction at the
fifth annual travel agent Rank Amateur Tennis Tour-
nament.
The international event. which was open to all travel
agents. drew about 65players to the John Wayne Tennis
Club to test their skills on the couns.
At a cocktail reception held at the adjacent Newporter
Resort. Barbara Stevea1 of Irvine and Cat by McFarland
of Huntington Beach were among those toastinggood
times in the south-of-the-border atmosphere of the Garden
Room. Ditto Marty Kati of Marina del Rey, Lowell
Cb11den of Dallas. Diane Dyson of La Jolla, Dick Packer,
Fenudo e .. roto and Joyce Nelllgan. • • • It wasa'ood day for the Orange County
Philharmonic Society when representatives of its 30
committees aot together to add up their year-tong fund-
raisingeffons.
CbeckstotaJlingSI 75,000wcre prescnted to
Philharmonic Society chairman Joyce ReHme at a buffet
luncheon in the community room at the La.auna H1llsgolf
course. The largest single donauo n -$63.000 from the
annual Chnstmas Symphony of lights-was made by the
Huntanaton Harbor chapter and prnented bu nschauman
hyMllaao.
Thecomm11tca' mectinaalso voted an a new slate of
Pbtlbarmon1c officers for the 1984-85 year. In addition to
Reaume, new leaders •tt Suan Beecber, ErwsllDe
AJ1fl11tud, LIMa Maye4a, Pat StaYHT and Doro~
R&l1tea, vice prnidenu; Mar-Muy Ban and Be•erly
Wlllte, sccrt\arics, and Reute Qom .... uusuttr.
Some 27S,000county youn,pters benefit from the
Philharmonk's prosrams which mcludc youth concerts, chambcrcon~rts, muaiccnnchmcnt prosramsand
schotanhips. IL~!i:,;&;.__:t!::,_I Papara171 is wnttcn by Daily Pilot Sty\c Edator
Joyce NeJltcan and Diane O,.On trade tennla Melinda Huddleston, wHh a contributton today by talea at the party with a Matcan theme. H untington ~ach comspondent Ann Conway
assurance that each piece 1s an
expression of the molder's skill."
· Jn Robinson's mini-kitchen. chef
Fifi Chao was busy demonstrating
recipes from "The Hollywood Bowl
Q>okbook." Mouth-watering 'mells
mixed with the chatter and color of
the housewares department as she
showed her audience the cooking
chicken. viewed via an overhead
mirror.
The cookbook features recipes
from such personalities as Isaac
Stem. ltzhak Perlman. President
Reapn. Zubin Mehta and Joan
Collins as well as some of the
Southland's best known restaurants.
Its 350 pages include a history of
the landmark and a section devoted
to Bowl picnic menus. All proceeds
from its sale will benefit the Los
Angeles Philharmonic and the Per-
forming Arts Council of the Music
Center.
Down let another aisle was one of
the Expos most fascinating e~hibits,
a color analysis computer by Field-
crest. Designed by a psychologist and
a computer whiz. the Profiled Design
Color Computer will be on display
through the end of May.
When shoppers select a sequence of
color preference. the computer prints
out a personality profile based on the
chosen colors. There are 41 ,000
combinations and the computer has a
vocabulary of 500 phrases, according
to Noni Bertelsen of Fieldcrest.
Customers will discover their color
preference and how to use color to
communicate their own style. Color
charts are available to check the
results.
Representatives from Villeroy &
Boch also were on hand to introduce
the firm's new lines offine china. The
company, established in 1748, is
headquartered in a former Benedic·
tine abbey in Mettlach, West Ger-
many.
Its wares decorate some of the
world's most famous tables, includ-
ing those of Princess Diana of Great
Bntain. Frances Ford Coppola. In-
dira Gandhi and Pope John Paul II,
according to Isabelle von Boch.
Showing off the newest bone china,
first offered an the United States last
PERSONAL STYLE
1--~
'
Scandlna'rian d~er Ka. prefen dramatic, eneraetlc
deatcna and re.ela In tbe ezpraaiTe freedom of tbe 'SO...
year, she explained the four quahtaes
that set bone china apart from other
tableware: whiteness, translucency,
durability(from the bone ash) and the
china's glow.
Around the comer, autographing
posters and porcelain pieces, was
Jean Mercier, a French illustrator.
Commissioned 18 .months ago to
design a new set of porcelain din·
nerware and gift items for Villeroy &
Boch, he came up with whimsical.
colorful panoramas saluting the
200th anm versary of hot air balloon-
ing.
The "Le Ballon" line features aerial
views of Luxembourg. Venice. Ce>-
pen hagen, New York, Paris. London
and Cologne. Chicago and Los An-
geles are next, tie said.
In other areas of the store last week..
wood craftsman Sam Maloof was
signing copies of his book on wood-
working. while strolling customers
stopped to watch videotapes on china
and crystaJ.
O ther demonstrations and consul-
tations were being~nducted in every
nook and cranny by representatives
from a variety of companies., includ-
ing K.arastan. Burlington, Baccarat,
Sony. Waterford. Trans-<>cean.
Manex, Dctdan. Orrcfors, Lcntrade.
Farberware and Coffee Imports.
Few trademarks as old
as the one in salad mold
J ell-o brand -------------
gelatin appeared on
American menus in
1897. Very few p
brands have stayed ILAR
with us much less
gamed such popu-w
lanty as the use of AYNE
gelati n 1n o url•••••••••••• kitchens.
Gelatan's adaptab1hty can open the arena for your
imagination and let you express creativity through
._...,... ........ ..,._, ......
Tournament entrant Dick Packer. vice pral-
dent of GTU Inc., metproatarVu,tnla Wade.
P'e.rnaodo Baaroto and Lowelle Childen
were arm-to-arm budcllee at the reception.
desserts. salads and mam dishes.
Salads can be more than an array of raw vegetables
with a salad dressing. A tangy gelatin mold adds variety
when served on cnsp greens topped with mayonnaise or
sour cream.
Fnlll sclat1n as salads or de-sscns are awakened with a
topping of mixtures of whipped cream and mayonnaise or
sour cream and cream c~.
Tips for umold.lDg gelatlll:
Make certain that Lhe gelatin 1s completely firm. It
should not feel sticky on top nor sag toward the side if the
mold 1s lilted. To release the mold, dip a small pointed
knife in warm water and run it around top edge of mold to
loosen. O r moisten your finger taps and gently pull the
gelatin from the edge of the mold.
Moisten top of ~clatin and the top of a chilled plate.
The moist surfaces will make it easier to slide gelatin to the
center after it has been unmolded. Dip mold into warm
water (not hot).
Working qu1ckl} dip the mold JUSt to the nm an the
warm water for about 10 seconds. Lift from water. hold
upnght. and shake shghtl~ to loosen the gelatin from the
mold ln\C~n moistened plate on mold. Always unmold
gelatin on a chilled plate.
\ ou ma) use thc'>c recipes as salads or desserts
CHERRY WALDORF SALAD
1package13 OllDces> black claerry or cberry gelatin
Oa1b of salt
1 cup bolllng wacer
~ cap cold water
"1 cup diced apples
,., cup diced bananas
'• cup celer}
Dissoh e gelaun and salt in bo1hng water -\dd cold
water Chill until \Cf'\ thick. about one hour Fold an
remaining ingredients: poon into a onc-<tuart mold. 8-
anch square pan or dessert d1shes Chill unttl firm. at least
3 hou~ l nmold Makes about 6 servings
GELATIN FANTASY
1 cu (8~ ounces) c~ed pineapple (In Its own J•lct)
1 cup diced grapefruit 1tttloa1
'• cup diced oran1e 1«tion1
1 packa&t (3 OUCtl) lemon, ltrawbtrry or oraaae-
ploeapple gelatin
I cup botuq water
I &ablespooa vtDe1ar or lemon
(For a salad He a bit of vioe1ar wllb lbe frail, for a
de11ert, aae a llUle lemon jaJce.)
Drain pineapple. mcasunng syrup Drain grapefrwt
and orange sections. adding Juice to pineapple syrup Add
water to make one cup
D1ssohe gelat111 an boiling water Add syrup ml.Aton
and 'inegar (or lemon > Chall unul ver) thick Fold an
fruits Pour into a one-<tuan mold. Chill until firm
llnmold Make 4 cups or 6 to 8 scf'.1ng.s
FROSTY MELON
l pacl.AJe II Matti) U)' fn.lt fl.nor 1elatta
I ~p bolllmt wattr
cep ('914 wa&er or dra.llteid fntt 1ynp
1 meditm tu&alo•pe or Mltey dtw mtloa
1 rwp 4ralae4 frail
t or a pacU,H (I OUttS t'ad) crea
AbMt t Cl ....... mUk
01 l"c aeliun in bo1hn water dd cold watrr.
C'htll unttl ver) thick. about one hour Meanwhile. petl
mrlon, leaving 1t wholt' Cut a "h~ from on~ end. 9e00p
out lttds. and dnun well Then pl~ melon upriaht m a
bowl
(Pleue miee OKLA Tt:N 82)
I
82 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Aprll 25. 19841
HlLP YouRSE Lf
Wid~spread diseases unlikely
Que 11ons about infectious dis-tascs arc answered by Gerald R.
Greene, M.D., M.P.H.. assistant
professor m the UCI Colle,e o/
Me'd1cme'> Ckpanmcn1 of Pcdiarm:>. • • • Q. Hai tbe recent laflu of Latin
and Souitbea1t Aila ref uaen to Or·
ance County brought any new dis·
easea to tbla area?
A . The new refugtt populauons
havC' a higher incidence of infectious
diseases common to tropical areas
However. these diseases cannot be
classified as "new" as most we1e
previously recognized here in one
form or another.
Among newly amved La11ns and
Southeast Asians. common 1nfec·
uons include hepa11us. tuben:ulo-."
and intestinal parasites. Nom· ;w:
likely to cause widespread health probkm~. For example, Hepaut" H"
acquired onl) b} cxposur\' to 1nkl it.·d
.blood products or close pcr~on:il
contact. Close contatt I'> al!.o nere<.<.·
ary for the spread or tuberculc.>s1s.
Hepatitis A and gjardia. a parasitl'.
often tum up in day care centers. but
their prcad can be arrested 1f proper
hand-washing procedures arc o~
served.
S<r<:allcd "exotic" diseases that
have been seen in refugees include
malaria. leprosy and trachoma, an
unusual tyr of eye infection. Only a
handful o md1v1duals with these:
diseases hlive turned up. They are
certainly no reason for concern
among the general population. • • • Q. I 11Ddentand Ulal tbe BriU1b
bave banned &be vaccine 11ed world·
wide to prevent wboopln& coaab.
Tbey cite &be drag's tendency to
cause neurological damacea. la ll
safe for my children to take tbl1
vaccine?
.\ The pt•nu~SI!. (whooping cough)
'at.•nm· ha-; been 1n common use
"nee tht' mid-I Q40s. In this 40-)ear
rx·nod. reau1ons such as fe, er and
1mt1bility have ~n rcponed rn
about 10 pen:ent of those children to
whom the vaccine has been Mminis-
tered. In a very small percent of cases,
neurological comphcations have de-
veloped.
There is a sli&ht risk inherent io
1ak.ina the penussis vaccine. How.
ever, this is far outweighed by the
perils of whooping cough Itself.
Whooping cough -whtch still
1ums up occasionally in Orange
County -1s an illness that lasts from
four to eight days and is characterized
by mucous build-up in the lungs,
paroxysms . of coughing and oc-
casionally sei2urcs and neurological
damage. Infan ts with penussis
usually require hospitalization.
Bactenal pneumonia may complicate
the disease.
When Bnuan banned the pertussis
vaccine. their 1nc1dence of whooping
<;ough skyrockC'ted. Pubhc health
experts 1n the U.S. feel that the
advantaaes of the vaccine warrant its
oontinued routine uae.
• • • Q. Have vacclaea ac&Hlly
ellmluce4 uy dJsea1e1!
A. The use of vaccines has effec-
ti vely eradicated smallp<>x world·
wide. In the U.S., pcnussis, Polio,
diphtheria, tetanus and measles have
been markedly reduced. Also infants
affected by rubella in utero are now a
rare occuraoce.
Unfonunately, there arc always
new infections to contend with.
AIDS, l..eaionnaire's disease and
Toxic Shock Syndrome arc three of
the more publicized of these new
infectious illnesses.
The battle to fight disease is on-
going. Innovations in science and
research are allowing us to expand
our understanding of mfections and
other illness.
DOMESTIC SKILLS AW ASH-OUT
DEAR ..\NN LANDER~. M' w1k
was 81 on Jan. 20. Her duughtl'r ( h\
anotht'r mamage)came up to hl•lp
celebrate ..\ 24->ear-old grand·
daughter also came from 65 m1ks
away.
The granddaughter. who graduatrd
---f~,_,I0....,1-11-college ( w11h honors). brought
six ofher husband's shirts for her
mother to wash and iron
ANN
I.ANDERS
personalny: 1n fact. it is not a
personali ty disorder at all. It 1s a
disease caused by a chemical 1 m·
balance m the brain. Sch1zophren1cs
can not perce1 ve the d iff er~nce be·
tween fantasy and reality. Counseling
therapy is of no va lue forthese
victims.
I asked her "'h' she couldn't do thl'
shirts herself. She replied." I have
nevcrtried and I don·1 .... ant to-in
fac t l don't O"' nan iron:·
Is thl!I "'hat the colkgl0'> arc turning
out toda) ., I am -FL.\ R·
BERGA 1 EDlt\: \ ..\LLEJO
DEAR FLAB: Don't lay that one oo
the colleges. The)' aren't supposed to
teach women to wash and iron shirts.
That teaching job belongs to Mom.
And now I am going to get a ton of
mail from liberated females Inform·
Ing me &bat Mom bad better teach ber
sons to wash and iron shirts too
because time• are a-cbangln'! • • • DE..\R i.\NN: I must comment on
the man who was physically ba11ered
bv h~s wife. She was characten zed asa "Dr. Jekyll and Mrs. Hyde-a
paranoid schizophrenic."
There 1s help out there for families
trying to cope wlth mental illness.
The National Alliance for the Mental-
ly Ill is a parent organization whose
purpose is to establish family support
groups and serve as advocates for the
mentally ill. We speak out against
unfair and neglectful policies in
government and the private sector.
The suppon groups consist of
parents. si blings. grandparents and
friends. trying to help one another
understand and cope with mentally ill
relatives.
Please inform your readers that
paranoid sch1zophre01a 1s not a split
GELATINS ...
From Bl
Fold lrull into th1cl.. gelatm. spoon into melon.
Replan· CUI slice. ra .. ten "-Ith toothpick~. Chill. (Pour any
remaining gl'lat1n into a -;mall bo.,.,I. l'h1ll and serve at
another meal )
Hdorl' '>t:f\ 1ng rndun hll'nd cream l hee')e and milk
until ,mmllh and llulh (. u1 a thin '>IKl' from one <illk of
melon lor a lirm h:t'>t' plJH' nn plall' \prcad cheese O\ er
melon \l1n· to \t'r' l' \IJ\..l'' -l to 1' '\l'r' ing\
P1/Jr\\J1 nc /\J \~ .. ~ --'&·J,h't'"dcntandauthor
•>f"P1/Jr \.\J 1nc·~ f.J ~·<·.J".:! Fatiuh)LJ5 Recipes·· Send
4uc~twm w P1/J ".! -DJ ' P1/1>1 P 0 81H 1560
< osta \fr,J <J_'-._'-.
~&D
PART' RENTAL
'°lpeciali!:>tr, in \\ edd in~ , partit>s
and fund raisin{! t>\'ent ~
642-1184
I.\ nda I.. P ottt·r Part' Consultant
SOME WOMEN DARE
AND SOME
WOMEN WONDER?
Lenny's 675-0823
Corona del Mar by Matteo's
A consultation & cutting
I hr. appt. S25 00
Color and Perming Specialist
ToNIGHT'S TV
b.,__=--_ -----
--&1JO-
• D •NEWS -~WOMAN tD ntAEE'S CCMPNIV
eMD<AOOERS fD MACHEL/ l.StAEA
NEWSHOlJA m BUSN:SS OF w..~OEMefT
Cl) C88NEWS
®J AICNEWSQ a NBC NEWS m DICK VAN OYl(£
,til MOVIE
u 'Stiver Dream Recer" ( 1980)
OaVld Esse•. Beau Bridges 0 MOVIE
u ''Expoaed" ( 1983) Nastauia
Klnslu, Harvey Keitel. _}, SC>UEl'HH1'S AFOOT
-8:30-
G) AUCE m> A MATTER Of TASTE
Cl) HEWS
®)TAXI
a! WHEEL Of FORTUNE m THAT GIRL
MOVIE
••• "Man, Woman And Child"
( 1983) Martin Sheen, Bly1he Danner
-7:00-
fJ CBS NEWS
DNBCNEWS
I HAP9Y DAYS AGAIN
A8CNEW8Q 8 FAHTABY ISlANO
(!)NEWS
G» Tl4fl&'S COMPNIV e WHEEL Of FORTUHE
• BU8INES8 AEflORT Ii> MAGIC Of FlOAAl PAINTING
Cl) p .M. MAGAZINE
®) OO'ERTAIMHT TONIGHT
Qt) LCM OOHHECTIOt4
mMOVIE
t t "Change Of Heart" ( 1943)
$U$111 Hayward. John C&rroll
-7:30-
• 2 ON THE TOWN D alFAMILYFBJO 9 LAYEJIE & SHR.EY &
COWNIV
D EY!ONLA. CD WMP IN CN:IHHA TI
Armstrong Designer Solarian·
.. ... ~ .
Striking New Designs
and Coli>rs
from $2260 Armstrong ~, \"
/\1111·ri1..1 \ l.nofllt' th1111 l>t \111111 r ""IM1.rn " now uHrrrd in .i nrw arra~ of
t.i,h1l111.d1lr ,fn1cm 11 .I < ,,1.,,, < l11 •11'>c trorn l'"rul.ir V1ctor1an nc>\t.al,.:1A look\
• t I""' f'J\tr f)'trrrm • 1intt!llf><•r.111 tl .. rJI .lt•\1,i.:m "\II wuh tht' hu1h 1n rtthnti\ of
lnlA1tl < 111111"• tor A 1ir111111ch 'r.1lt<'d '"'"' 1h.11 nu pru11t'd floor l l n m.uch All wirh
t\rin,u1111~' t 'C tr.1 .J111.ihlt 1\111.1hn11il" \I \1H l•1 t ch" rr\lsts <1cuffs. \Crace hes, ind
,t.11n' \o 11 ktc·r' 11\ 111..t· 111" li111~ v.1rl1011r w~-.1n~ IAr lon1i1er tl111 n ~mvl no wu
floor\ \tot our t'Ct 1t1r11.? u1llt-c111111 ,,f l>fo\11.'0tr \11l.1 r1.m coJav
CARL TONS LINOLEUM SHOP
I'\ 1 ~rv.port Bl"d
646-8991 Co ca Mesa
e 9 P£OfllE'8 COURT e WILD. WILD WOfl.D Of
N9AALS
8 A WAUC THAOUQH THE 20TH
cemJRY Wini au MOYtRS
Cl) TIC T ~DOUGH
-1:00-
• Cl) 0HE DAY AT A T1Mf ., a AEAL PEOPt..E
8 COUSTEAU AMAZON 8 9 THE FAU GUY 8 JOt<EA'S WILD (!)IOAP
I ENTERTAMENT TOtDf'T
AllWIE>MAN
fD Wta 8l.ENCE KIU.S (t)MOVIE
... ,,,, "My Bodyguard" ( t979)
Chns Makepeace. Adam Baldwin.
MOVIE
t t t 'It ''Mara1110n Men" ( 1976)
Ous11n Hottman. Laurence Ollvler.
~:
t t •.; "Savannah Smiles" ( 1982)
M1tk Miiier. Donovan Scott
CZl MOVlE
"Pelu O'Ane (Oonke•{s Skin)" ( 1975)
Catherine DenaM . .leln M1111t
-8:30-
1 Cl) MAMA MAL.ONE TICT~DOUOH
(!)LCM BOAT
.P.M.MAGAZIE m> MARK AUS8a.L
-H0-8 Cl) P£TER NfJ PAUl
G al THE FACTS Of UR ILOYNASTYQ
mwawONFAH Ii> GRACE u.art NfJ 8HIAL.EY
VERAETT IN CONCERT AT CXWENT
<WllE:N mDAAGNET
-l'.30-
~ L DOl.9.£ T1'0Ull.E
• • • "The Seaer Of Stnta Vltto-ril" (1988) Anthony Quinn, Anna
MIQl*M. e GRANO CENTMl ~HOME RACING
AUIUMR.ASH
MOYE
t * * ·~ "The Man Who W<Md Bt King" (1975) Seaii Connery, Mictllel
Caine.
-10:00-D a NIC AEPORT'8 11: I THESAINT
~MN> CD AOU.E.A DEMY
(C)MOVIE
ttt,; "The Lady In Red" (1979)
R00ert Conrad. Parnell Sue Mlf'lil. cm U1f OiARLNC> Wini~
ftOOMfY'
MOYE
t "Nana" ( t991) K1ty1 Berger.
.leln·Plel'fe Aumont
-10:15-itt MOYIE
t t •.; "High Road To China" (1983)
Tom S91111:*. S.. Annltrong
-10:i0-
l lCIEP9CJENT NEWI
M GREAT OUTOOOM
-11:00-
• 8 Cl)1118 NEWI TAXI
-AN & t.WmfS LM8MN M'A'l'H
HAWAIFNM
.IACIUE Ol!A90N OICIC YM O'tQ
OONFllMTION TB11G
-11:30-
~:f°"' If T\llOAY NGHT 0 AIC NtMflGHTLN
tlltN040f._
~UICM'aP\Ael
LATBGn' Ml9ICA
7'00CUJI ) Al8AUI. T'ED NUTI
( )MCM!
"lnM!ieble U" (No Ditti
-11· wow
• t t 'Same Time, ~t Y•"
f t81ll Man Aidt. Oen lint)'ll
-1!!GO-• m ON HOU.VWOOD
Urge your readers to contact:
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill.
120015th St.. N.W .• Suite400.
Washmgton. D.C. 20005. ThC' phone
number is(202) 833-3530. -
LEARNING TO COPE IN
MARYLAND
DEAR LEARNING: I am well
acqualated wlUa yoar oraanhat1on. U
doe1a1pleodld Job. Tbanu for tbe
opportulty to tell my readen about
It again.
• • • Even if drinking is the "in'' thing in
Stocking up on energy
Local entertainer Jeff Peanon and WalkAmerlca poeter
child Tracy Taylor abare a bot dotJ while &ettt.nc ready for
Sunday•• fund-ralaer that will atart at 7 a .m . at the Harbor
llunlclpal Courtboue on Jamboree Roed ln Newport
Beach. More than 10.000 walken from 155 com,-nl• wtlt
ralae money for the March of Dlmee. To join, phone
631-8700.
your crowd, it needn 't crowd you oul. wm the facts from Ann Landers·
booklet, "Boozeand You-For
Teen-Agers Only." Send 50cents and
a self.add re~ en ve/ope to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11995. Chi~go,
111. 60611.
UMOYE
**~ "Kltmet" (1955) Howwd Kell.
Am~ I TNCICE Of THE :r
HAMYO
MOVIE
Disney too violent?
TV cartoons panned
t t •,i, "In Circ:umatltlllll Evidence"
(1978) Raymond Burr, Mar1c Hemlll.
(C)MOYE
t "Nina" 119811 Katya Berger,
Jeln.Plerrl Aumont. Cil MOVIE
t ** "~" ( 1982) MlchMI
Caine, Chriltopher .......
-1ttf-
PATIENATAR
-12".JO-D a LA TE NIGHT Wini DAVID
l.£TTEAMAN
8 TWIUGHT ZOHE
GMOVIE
t t •,; "The Bounty Man" ( 1972) Cllnl
Walker, Richard Buehll1.
Cf) AOWAH & MARTIN'S LA~
8D ART Of aeNG HUMAN
-12:40-
8 (1) MOYE
t t •,i, "More Wiid, Wiid Wiit" ( 1980)
Robert Conrad, Roll Martin.
'1 -1:00-8 MOVIE • * • "Sand• Of The Kaiahen"
I 1965) Stuar1 Whl1man. Stanley
Baer.
(!)MOYE
.. ~ "Sk Rlw" (1e481 Errol
;i~ Sheriden.
... "I eont." (1953) Montgom-
.,., Clift, Anne Baxter. Olrect9d by
Altrad Hltchcodt
eGBESCOTT
(Q)MOYE
tt•,i, "Insatiable" (1980) Marllyn
Chembers, John Holtn11.
-1:10-
®MOVIE
.. "Sil¥er Ol-.n Racle(' ( 1980)
David E.IMJ., 8-1 Bt1dgll.
-1:30-D HEAL TH FIELD m AU IN THE FAMILY
'8 AOWAH& MARTIN'S~
-1:40-c MOVIE
tt "The Prowter" I 1981 I Fiiiey
Granger. Vicky Dawtoo.
-1:46-
(J)MOVIE
t t "Hussy" ( 1980) Helen Mlrren.
John Shel.
-2:00-1 ~ NEW8 NIGHTWATCH
!:&MARTIH'S~
t * t t "Grand llluelon" I 1937) Jeln
Gabln. Erictl Von Strohtlm
8NEW8 .MOVIE
-2:30-
Ht~ "The Raz04"1 Edge" (19471
T_1!ont Power. Gent Tllmey
1g)MOYE
··1n11~ Ir' (No Ditti
-t:16-
r h) COUNTRY JUICEIOX
-aa>-8MOVIE
U ''Thly Clll Me Trinity" (1972)
TlttnQI Hitt, Bud~ CD QICO AND THE MAN
-l:1f-
WASHING TON (AP) -Walt Disney
Productions is treating cntic1sm of its
televi sion programming hke water running
off Donald Duck's back . ...,
The company says it isn't going to
change anything in resp<>nse to th e Na-
tional Coalition of Television Violence,
which thinks shows on t~ Disney ChannC'I
are too violent.
Donald Duck. in fact. comes in for
chastisement by the coalition. which cited
Donald's use of clothespins to silence his
three rambunc11ous nephC'ws in the car-
toon ··Donald's Golf Game.··
The nephews. equally violence prone.
get back by sinking Donald's boat. tying
him up and stuffing a golf ball into his
mouth.
A.II told. the coaltt1on said 1t found 18
mc1dents of violence in each hour of
cartoon programming on the Disney
Channel and nine per hour of non-cartoon
programming. In 43 hours of prime time.
the coalition recorded 55 murders and 57
attempted murders.
"I was shocked at bow violence was
shown as the only way to deal with
problems, .. said Dr. Thomas Radecki, who
says 27 studies have shown that violent
can oons increase violent altitudes and
beha vior in children.
But in Burbank. Disney Productions
said in its first ye.tr on the air the channel
got only six complaints of violence in
30.000 letters from viewers.
.. Programmsing decisions will continue
to be based on the preference of our
audience," said the channel. noting that 1t
has been endorsed by both the National
Education Association and the National
Parent-Teachers Association.
David Hostetler. Washmgton director of
the coahtion. said the "oup wasn't singling
Disney out for crjt1c1sm. He said the
network was the 31st it has monitored ma
systematic sampling of all television aimed
at children.
.\nd he praised Disney Productions for
ketpmg sex and vulgar language off the air
and for ats large amount of educational
material -23 percent of programming.
second on ly to th~ Publtr Broadcasung
System.
:--.onethel<.·ss. the coaltt1on fo und fault.
not only with Oonald Duck's maltreat-
Dlaney violence?
ment of ht!) nephews. bul with the three
lt1tle pigs. for pouring bo1hng water on the
Big Bad Wolf. Mickey Mouse was also
faulted for fighting with a mother eagle for
her eggs.
All told. the coaht1on rated only 27
percent of the canoons and 68 percent of
the other shows as suitable for children.
Disney said such classic American fare
ns Westerns and historical dramas would
have to be purged from telev1s1on "1f the
coalition gu1dehnes wcrc \Cnousl) ap-
plied."
'Police Academy' arrests
attention at the box office
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Comedy
proved a stronger lure than horror. adven·
ture and legend as Warner Bros." "Polict
Academy" scored the top weekend box
office tally of $6.1 million.
In its firth wtek of release, "Pohcc
cadcmy" has srossed a tot.al of $46.5
m1lhon.
The horror story. Paramount's "Friday
the 13th. the Final Chapter" took second
place with a weekend aros of SS.8 million
for a 2-wcck total of $20.8 m1lhon
Close behind was Fox's "Romancma the
Stone." which ~ued SS. 7 million for a
total ofS27.9 million O\'Cr fo ur wtcks.
·•Grcystoke: the ~nd of Tarzan, Lord
of the ApK." the Warner Bros. epic.
brou,a.bt in $4 6 million to boost its four.
wttk total to $27.4 million.
.. plash," a production of Disney's
Touctmone dtvu1on. ta)cd 1n the top
seven by doina $3.8 mUhon over the ~kend. T~ mcrma.td &ale ht\ ~
$47 9 million over K"Ven W«h
"Moscow on the Hudson·· totaled $3.5
million for Columbia to raise its three-
week tally to $1 2.5 millton, while Paro
mount's endurin.a "Footloose" hung onto
seventh place with $2.4 milhon for a six-
wttk tot.al ofS60.4 million.
Herc is 1 ltst of the top seven gros ma
films last v.ukcnd with numbcrofweck.s in
release and total aross to date:
l."PohceAcademy;·wamer Bro.s .• S6. I
million, five weeks. S46.S million.
2. "Friday the 13th, the Final Chapter ..
Paramount, S.S.8 m1llion, two weeks, s20:s
million.
3. 0 Romana n1 the tone," Fox. SS '
million. four weeks. $27.9 milhon.
4. "Grcystokc," Warner Bros., S4 ti
m1lhon. four weeks. $27.4 m1lhon.
.S. " plash," Touchstone, SJ. m11Jion .
~vcn weeks. $47.9 million .
6. '4MOSC'Owon the Hudson," Columbia
Sl . .S m1lhon, three weeks, S 12.S m1lhon.
7. "Footloo ." Paramount. $2.4
mdhan, 10 wtt $60.4 m111ionia
• >;
.J
oys .:ill be girls at Sebastian's West
Hpw would you
kc to see. and hear.
Udy Garland, Con-
te Francis. Diana oss. Liu Msnnelli. I :rfarl Balley, Ann-
:Mararet, Luc ille ;a.11. Lena Home
;ind Cher all on the
~me program? f, Who wouldn't? Well. you can hear them all and -
• nh Q little ima1ina1ion -··sec" them as well at
bastlan's West Dinner Playhouse.
; • Tbesc superstars arc among the rcpenoare of ;~Lavender Follies," a troupe of female impersonators
tO.fTerina something a little different at the San Clemente
:showplace through June 3. And. if you don't mind
;"halfway" 1mprcss1ons. ifs a highly enjoyable evenina.
t Thr 1mprcss1onists. you see. only create thr appear-
:ance of the stars they 1m1tatc and let the performers
•themselves supply the vocalizing on tape. Ifs an initial ~di$8ppointment. but as the show wears on (panicularly
:during an imaginative F1fiies medley), the enjoyment is
:heightened b) the ingenuity of the 1mpersonattons.
• Only once 1s the mold broken. when Toby Lear uses
his own vocal talents in the ··Memory" number from the
-new Broadway show "Cats." Lear is the huskiest. most
mascuhne-look1ng entertainer on the program and our
·suspension of d1sbel1ef 1s put to the test 10 his case. yet his·
;corned) skn as Luci lle Ball doing her famous vitamin
·rommerc ial is one of the highlights of the night.
The bulk of the entertainment -various actors lip-
:nnching numbers like Garland's "Get Happy" or Bailey's
:"Hello. Dolly' -1s pretty routine stuff. Even the comic
~routines (lily Tomlin's Ernestine the telephone operator .
---NOW PLAYING ---
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lfw11fl C.0-(H1" f4wlffl $o1th C..tt ,KtlK I M<uioo 0 I UA °"""'
'" 4141 491 1111 •93_.!>4~ en 0!>41
COITA MUA 11A c..-!>40 OS94 • l6mmcor---
lllCA (l TORO ''''"'"' ;~.~ .,,. ~dn Bru P1,.;a
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1\1\l( °' ¥19' ~ 6310340 COITA MESA
• Ea-aros C4ol'rn.i CtNft q79 '14, OIWIGl UA C11v Cinem.i 63A 3911 . t "° ••U!I OCCI01'0 '«!! !,!'~t.Ol ... ,.!J
G~!§J!?KE
TARZAN
LORD OF THE APES ._ .. _,.o
I ..... , .., Y'I '• • ._,~ y&oA~• . -···· ··--·
UU£11 6398770 lmtl( 5SI 06S5
SYUFY STADIUM OR IN EDWARDS WOOOBRIOG[
HU 990 4021 mSSIOI '1£JO 830 6991
UA MOVllS 4 EDWARDS WJO IWIN
•ctsu Ilsa S46 3102 •tulle( 634 2m
COWARDS CINlMA SYUrY CINf.OOM[
rOUNTAIN VALLEY 962 ?481 IUTltllSm 891 393S
f'AClflf rv ORIV[ IN [DWAROS CIN[MA WlS I
• PIUHUD II tollY STHlO
Daily PilDi· clcl'-.-..tf1Pd dd<;
rhonP ~42-')o 18
and Rutt)' W1rren'1 ribald monotosue.) sufter from the
ablencc oruve voices.
Wlaete ••J.avcnder Follies"· rca.lllworks. however. 11 in Mel~y Wyn&en' impreuions or iu Minnelli, Bette
MidJer and Cher. Wyo ten has the ability to convey visual
imaaes with uncanny accuracy. down to the subtle little
aes1uret r hat subject, and his work is clearly the best of
the show.
The apex of the cvenina. however. is the second act
flnale-1 tribute to the late Fifties and early Sixties. Herc
we get Connie Francis (George Payne) warblina a series of
heart tu11ers while other entenai ncrs from that era muscle
in penodicaJly to do their thing. Payne's pained
uprcuions art a particular howl.
A touch of burlesque humor is added by the portly
"Mr. Eric" in the guises of overweight teenyboppers
imploring male members of the audience to "Help Mc
Make It Through the Ni&}lt." Emcee Tawny Tann warms
up the audience and does a rousing impression of Lena
Home singing her trademark "Stormy Weather" number.
Female impersonation isa rare commodity in Orange
County. and it's quite a contrast from the traditional
musicals usually done at Sebastian's. "Lavender Follies"
F/Obtf 111f 13"'
, .. , flNA( ("4P!(i
7 05. 10 35
BEASTIMSTEA
8.20 (PG) •
NOW PLAYING
COSTA MESA
Eo .. •10~ 8t11.1er ~~ '"'
COSTA Mt:SA
Eo .. 111os Mell~~
£L TOllO
Eow .. os
~· ~I 581l(l
fOUlfT Alll VALUY
F I m.I\' FOllt
911J IJ07
04Wl0l Clfl4dome 63'~3
WUTllllllTDI
EOwalOSC...1111
Wts1
891·393S
LUXURY THEATRE
1st 2 MatinH Showings Only $2. 75 Unless Noted
•3 tai@•X•Xutl6 l 6~ ~553 f~~,)
FOR FUnt EXCITEmEnTI V1s1tOur ...
A•ck Sprlnt fltld IP.Cl
I I \f ~ ) T< ) ... K )l C )
12:00 3150 7 :55 Footlo09t (PG) 1 :50 5 t50 10:00
'2:10 2:l0 4 :45 7:10 9 :25
s Acact•my A w.1rct1 Ar~N J ~ ,_ 1 2100 rvv l et"'-4 g UUI 2 :30 5:00 All -o_-r 1 :•0 a. ~4ffffMI,,{ 10:05 ~ i!ikl!£iil3s1 2J63~ 2553 /~~)
~, Mf6&!1rr I ICEMAN llln~U .,~ llJl 0 Bl)
Shows 1t 5 :00 1 :10 10:20 Shows 1t 5 :001:00 & 10:10
'°
AGAINST
ALL ODDS
I!)
UP111E l!l
CPJII(
Plu1
CO·Hll
Ator
(PG)
AllO
Show lnt Scarface
{A )
Plu1 FootlOOH
(~)
6 639 8770/"fr~~ne:
GREYSTOKE m "''o '"' .. .,.,,... Showlnt TARZAN Suptrm•n 1,,.,,.,. '"' 111-.. 111 (PQ)
-~ Plus _ Tiit
Toy , Ej (PG)
~ ~G'1n~~ ., .... m IT~'t"l
Ah k y euslntu {Al
Orlo ·l n1 Optn 5:l0 WHktnd' / 1:45 W1tknlghh *
C:h•lclren Unt1e1 I:? FREE Unlru No tecf
may not be 1ht bnt onrall ex.am'* oflhe ttnrt, bUt tbe
$how d<>et have so111e excellent mornaus. It continuct
Wednetdays throup Sa1urdays It I and Suadays al I and
7 unail June 3at Sebastian's, l~Ave. Pico.San Clemente.
Call 492-99SO for ticket information.
IACUTAGE -The San Frandtco Mime Troupe
Wlll pre1en1 .. Steeltown.'' a political satire and realisuc
portra.it of blue<Ollar Ufc. Saturday at 8 p.m. in the main
theater at Golden Wett Coneae · in Huntinaton
Beach .... tickeu for the one-time event are avajlablc by
callina the colleae bookstore at 895-8378 ....
The musical "J0tepb and the Amnina Technicolor
Orcamcoat" has become a hot ticket at the Newpon
Theater Ans Center and three additional performances
have been scheduled for Sunday, May 6. at 7 p.m. and
Thursdays. May land 10. at 8 p.m .... reservataons forthest
extra siqings may be obtained by callina the theater at
631-0288' ....
An electric bass guitamt is needed for the Newport
Harbor Actors Theater's upcomina production of "l'm
Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the
Road" .... call 631 -51 I 0 to arran~ an appointment. ... e:. * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ j . M . I •t1WM·10•a1 ,4 * rgo1n ot1nees. ~ *
MOHAY Tlwv SATURDAY FACUlfYCM(ANOltWQOO
All ,... .. _ ...... s 00 ,.. .. ,.., lMl UTM.
lb ltNc. l ..... llltftll & Kth} 1l( fM. CIW11J" (I)
ua;,16r'2:;;1
lA M!J!AQA AT ftOHC8ANI ·u. Stlfl" (P'S)
IH O H O U O .. o .. 0 1044)
"Wliiiil 111 lf&ii) Of TMZM
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12.30. 3.00. 5 30. 8:05. 10 -0
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....,._IDT PICT\m,
•CTOI MD ACTIDS
"TEm cw oa-.r" crs>
12 30. 3 05. 540. 8:20. 10 SS
"ftllAY lMl 1-. M rM
CtWTll'' (I)
12'45. 2:4S. 4:~. 6:SS. 9.00. l l 00
H••C• lll ST_.. (PC)
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11.lO JOO SJO aoo IOlO
12 46. 2 45. us. 6·45, a:~. 10~
..:I cw 5 ACMU'f Miami
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12 30 3.05. 5:45. 8·20. 10'50 .
"fMTUISC' (N)
11 JO lOI I'iG&OI IOJO
.,. 1ll Cllll" (I)
12:30. 4:35. a·4o
"Fl.ASfllMU°' (I)
2:30, 6:35. 10.40 cmttRatr.J
"IUllST Ill •r (I) 100 ).JO 600 • ., 11 00
"SWIS SHfl" (PC)
11.lO 1~ •40 60 I ~ IO ~S
<> 'WSCIWMTll__..(I)
11 JO )00 S.lO too IOlO
* PACIFIC DRIVE -IPtTHEATRES *
''ftUCl Klll9r' (I I
PIUS "IATL lJllPMll'S HCATIOI" Ill
WINN(R Of 5 ~MY AWARDS
··TOMS OF oa.AmJtr (PG)
P\.US
"Tl.MK PUC[S" \a)
" WtO£ Tll llOn Ml '14" (R)
l'IUS "MMD TO IW>" (PC)
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'IUS "W.nllllt''(I) mtl.iMiM• ':s~i3J '°'"O:rlWi*' ..... O''·.-u • (R)
PlUS
"AMAll I Tll SlQW" (l'G) ( * A.ltocint-mot fSPANOt *' )
: . . .• :
:•
Breaded Shrimp
Platter $2.99~~~6
Justf,6.95 and
the choice is yours.
Shrimp lovers! We've got the best little shrimp at
the best little price in our Breaded Shrimp
Platter! Lots of lightly breaded shrimp. served
with f ryes. slaw & 2 hushpuppies
3095 Harbor Blvd. In Costa Mesa just
south of San Diego Freeway across from Fedco
(Drlve-Thru Service Available)
R11th1 1)0\\. ~11•fl \nJc,..o n\ f11noo\ l 1 ~ Chrn~ 1uf' ~ulo1n c>r
l S Chmc·" Tr rt\ ak1 •teak cl1nnc,,., \en cd l-Clmplt'tr. arr 1mt ~ u,
Offer enda April 26.
Give your SccmV) our~ dun~
Sccmaries Weck pril 2..' through 27.
FlllTlfl VALLO, l&ITI &IA, Ulm UIYI,
lllUllll, lllllTll, WIWMI, Wll•, WI Flllll ...
''0<1.DIE BAWN'S BEST ROLE~'
VfllCll/llT CA,.I 1 ,..., ,. .... n...t
MWD1 639-1770
SYUFY Stadium Or In
MD 529-5339
fDPmT BOCH 6".07SO
Edwards Newport
mAMiE 634-2553
Mann Brea Plaza SYUFY City Center
COSTA •SA 751-4114
Edwards Town Cenler
WUTmSTO 191-3935
Edwards Cinema W~t
llSSOt V(J() 495•6220
Edws Mission Vie10 Mall
WESn.GTO 191·3'93
Pacific's H1way 39 Df·ln
'1T MADE ME LAUGH I
'ANIMAL HOUSE'WALKS THE BEATI ..
MWOI 879-98SO
PACIF.:'S AHAHE IM Oii IN
..... .:JO 495-6220
lDWMOS MISSOC YU> MALL
llO S29-S339
~BRCAPWA com IEA 631 ~1
£DWAROS HAR80I TWIN
Mii SS 1-o&S~
EDWMOS W0008RIJC(
GUI& 6J4.25S3
SYUfY CIEXJll[
COSTA IEA 7Sl,.1M
lOWAROS TOWN ClHTlR
Elm810 893-0546
UA WE.Sl-.sTU MAll
. n. 1oao snsaao
£0WARDS SAIXUBACk
EWIEI 891·3"3
PAClflC'S IHAY 39 Ott_,.
LA HMU (213) 691 0633
AMC f ASIO SQUAR£
10 ' ........ .. -....
l~I OIA
TOWN C(NIO SI f e t ...... ,,_
1~1 4114
TOWN C£NT£P
AA~"'"" , ... Sllfl ("' .. .. ~
.., ... ~ /It a-"') •• l(
" u"'I 1-..illltN CJMl)I' ,,, .. _,_
Tiil i SIWI...,.. (I) ... "'" '., ,, a:'" ''' H ,~hf l fl4't.INl.NI
('QI• ~II-
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nt SICll° 11C\
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r OOll OOSI " . . ..
......... 111111:!\
1mKOll Diii II« IMISOll'"
rtl "" • ,, • flt
1101' Ill t•
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BlllSIOl • . .........
Fllbf Ill Ulll
111. •• owre1 1•• • lli t -"' 1r
EL TORO
SAOOtfUCK \ ~111' A#AllOS
'·· .. INCi •~' '1CIUlll
' . '" n:MeOfl* ....
~•1 ~aao "", ...... " SAOOt £8AC• fl Al ClllJ Ill .. -·~ . ·~ . ... Mii r111011•
m ~·~ ... ffrl"' Oii 11~ ,
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SA00t£BACll ~ llll llllS <91 ... " .. . ... fl)OtlOO!I "'' ~II ~HO "'' O•
1GlJCl ~· (II . .. •• 10 ,!JC' ..
LAGUNA HILLS
LAGllll ... lS llMll
u ... \o
()i l•t ... ..
1U 6611
LAGUNA HI.LS MAil
0 ... ,,.
l)ot ... ..
7U6611
lAGlN .. lS MALI
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CIC l iJO 4ot
61\ .. ~
00 5• \11110 ---"'st• (Kl \" I\ • y
IO '"' 'lo I IUOI OOll' 1(1(0
0.1• 1•• 114 ':f\UI"' <"*> 161 "II I • ' l(i 14~ I 00 .. ,
LAGUNA BUCH
SOUlH COASI .. , .... . . , .. ~ .... . ••
.... \ 11, ·----------
,,. • 1111 ll&S lTI fPCl ,
.... IO IQO ("I
b • ' ' 11)111 _,
9'\Allr 4'151
SOOlH COASI ~1 11u .
• w I ' ....
........ .0 ·~ 9'11 Ill llOClll' ""l '•' ,,
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
.... . . ~ . • fllll VAl.lrY -· 1'UW "'' ~¥1 , ' •
fOU aAllJll' <Cl
'It '
'1ICll' ""' I
W'CSTMtNSTER
CINCMA M SI
..
MIKf.V1 IT'S NOT NICE TO MA~E
FON OF P£0PLf.EVEN TMOUuM
TMfV ARI. TRAVELINc;. IN TMIRP·CtA~S ,__ __ ,
THE
FA,.ILl'
CIRCUS
{ •
< t
l
f
BIG GEORGE
:r
by Gu• Arrloll
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"-~(" ~ "Out of the way, P J! That's Borfy's favorite
dog food commercial!" "George, I REALIZE that you're good, but I r11lly
don't need any help.''
,.AR~.\DtKE by Brad Anderson DE,,IS THE ,.£,ACE Hank Ketcham
-tX>Es>.Jr ct ~E.T i.ro< L11<£ OE ~nm
TOO MANY PINE88£8l
liA•l West vulnerable,. West
deals.
NORTH
•JU
<::1 QI0987
0 AQ6
+6•
W~ST t:AST
•10753 •K6•2
''6' '?52
o J932 0 K87
•Q32 +Jl098
SOUTH
•AQ
<;;>A KJ3
0 1054
•AK 75
'fhl· hidding:
Weat North •:a .. t ~outh
PAH11 Pu111 1•a .. 11 2 ~ T
Pa11• 3 ' 1•a11t'I :J , •• "" ~ 1•..... 6
, •• ".. l•ai... , •• "
Opt·nin.I( 1t .. 1tl I\\ 11 111 •
SHOE
WW( tl/N'T W~ RUN
CONTE,~G UK~OT1'fSZ. N6WSPA~~?. ..
BRABBLE
NoRMA~. ~\~£ 5AF€.L..'i
ON '{exlR WA~ iO !XMOOL '·
LOOK BoiH IJ~'{~ 6€.f~
~~-·1
When you flnt lrarn &hu
art of fincuinr. yotl tend to
lukt' every rlneMtl In •l«hl.
A tkr you m1111Ler ll, yott look
for ways lo avoid un ·
nl.'cei1.!lury flnt•ues.
North'" thf'tlt' diamond11
wns 11 lrun•ft•r lo hc1&rlli. anct
four ttiamond1 wu • <'Ut' hid.
South dt•t·idt•d th at, if North
t•ould 11how lntc-re•l in slnm,
hi!> h:tnfi WM worth 11ix
h1•arli1 ht•('all~t· or itll f1nt• fit
and t•onlrol11. dr11pilr tht• fort
lhut. in ll•rm!l or poi nt 1·011nt,
it wa'i a minimum two no
1 rump 01wnt•r.
W1·i1t h•d n low rluh ;ind.
~ h1·n 1l11 mm,v, c·;1m1· '111~ n. 11
"·1·m1·t1 I ha I ch·l'l.m·r 11 oulcl
n1·1·ol ,1 w1nntn~ tl1.1m11nd
lull'"'' 111 I.ind h1• •l;i111
111111 t'\l'f , h1• ''"'" 'hm11•d
t h.11 . 1111 h ··orrn·t 11·1·hn11p11"
&J.25
FOR BETTER OR FOB WORSE
I REP.l.JU: "ffi~E Me
NO KIDS HE~E Tb
PL.f>..'/ WITH ,
MICW\El.
·~ '
FU:\K l' Wl~KERBEA'.\
•
Cmms
Ciiu
tlMt dlamoect '*'"°' Wit 118· material to the auecffl of the
eon tract ,
llfflarer woa Utt dub lead
In hand, drew.two rouadt ol
trump• endlftJ on &he table,
then 1ucce11f 1ally flntaaecl
the c1ucen of 1padt1. With
the klnl( or •p•dea marked in
the •:111t hand. declarer could
now clnim his contract.
He cnslwd lM king of clubs
and rurrt.-d a club in dummy.
. lit• returntd lo his hand wilh
lhe 4('(' or spades and rufCed
his lllsl club. Now he led the.
ja<'k or sp<idrs Crom the board
nnd. whrn ~:nsl covered with
t ht• kinl(. dc•dnrer di!l<'nrdt'd
:1 ch.1mont1 in.;tc•nd or ruffinl(.
E.1"1 "'"' 'atitilfii wilh tht•
lt•,111 ,I nci ,I 1·hOll'C' or lolling Op
11on' \ 1l1amonct r1•t11rn
\\uulcl lw into cl11mm.,··~ .11·1•
queen. aad a apade ntum
would allow declarer to •hatt
hit remalnlnJ diamond while
rufllag on the ublt. No mat·
tcr what f.aat did. thCI •lam
Wll• auµrrd.
R1•1ter 1trt•1+ tl•ltt
~ die C9118&t1 '" Ute ..................... t.
0. ta.., 1t ....... &MN, ..
•t1't? Chrlu Gerti'•
"Ft1r·Oeal lrhl1•" will
tead1 1" Ute 1lr1tfStt1 ud
tactic• ...... fut·,.cff ac-
u .. , .. e &Mt pre•W.• tM
c•~ fer ue.diaa ,.~
Fer a Hp)', 1elMI 11 .75 ..
"Geru·Fe1r Deal," tart ef
thla Hwtpa~r. P.O. In
2S9. Norweed. N.J. 076'8.
Mab tllittk1 payablt to
'i fWllpa~rbooks.
by Jeff MacNefly
by Kevin Fagan
~OU ~°""0110 C:>lvf.
80T, I WRNT'yt)l.)10
FIND SOME.JH!NG 10
Do -uNC>eRs-mND?
~ ~ ~'le: Kl~\
by Tom Batluk
"He'll bring 1t back, Snyder. though I doubt
in one piece." PtClURES '!OO'Rf srosco TO FINO TEN MISTAKES IN?" '---.... ... '1·15
PEA~l'TS
IT'S GET~ Nt-LATE
00 OU \-\INC' IF I
CALL MY BROTHER •
TUMBLEWEEDS
OH, 1H.A T PooR
RICKETY
LINUS!!!
'iOlJ L.00K A:)W~'Wffi'S;
WHAl 5 '°6GtN6 'bJ? MY WASIW L.1~. I JUS1 srr
MOUNC7 R:>ING NO'TlilN6.
•
by Ferd & Tom Johnson D,...R_. s_,._o_c.,...K _______ r-----------r-~----by_G_e_or_g_e..,L_e_mont
by Charles M. Schulz
SOME~Ow I T~OU6~T YOU MEANT !
ON THE PHONE . f • .
r
\ .
.. ~,.·I '<· a a
~~--.,,,,,"",
by Tom K. Ryan
NONSENSE! '™INKOF -::
1li~ HOURS 'QJ ~~
m~f~!
HOW eAD
HAS MY'
PRACl1ce
GOl1"f:N?
ROSE IS ROSE
SO.MeONe MIGH"f" ee L-ISreNING IN
ON ONE: OF i"He
ex-reNs10N CANS.'M
I I ()
by Pat Brady
~Y~WWJ
CHANG£$ HER NAHt. TO ''NIS. JIMBO ~·,
HAS G0m fl IN UJJE. /
•
.... ______ _
" W' \ ,\ \ \
'
Classified
The Uliililate
Experience
Experience the excitement of finding. just what you 're
looking for-i n classified . It's the ultimate!
Daily Pilot ~
phone 642-5678
people rea d
classified
'
World Court
bears claims
against U.S.
-'==-=2 ]f ,... ...... ""°"' .. ~ .........
....... ~Ill IUPP· L V. 1CIDO Ou.ii ........... 9Mdl.llMO ..... ••w.. ff • ..,_..,., .,... c:... '2714 Mrt ...,.,._ 21tCI HerbOf
"""" c.... ....... ,,. bulNM .. condwCteo bV' • ..... ~ ...._ ......
THE HAOUE1 Netherlands (AP) -Nicarqua ~~m:'C::-.,.._,0::,':i: ctwaed today that the U ni ted S&atet carried out .. 11vate. Mer. ao. ,..,.
bfu&al actt .. to try to overthrow its left.iii Sand.iJlist.a NMlllNd CoeM n:
iovem.ment. lt Hked the W otld Cou rt to order the Ptlol APtll 11.°1:.'I:. -2. 1 .... campallJl to stop. 1913-14
ln his opening sta\ement at preliminary bearin_as on · · Nicaraaua's case against the United States. Carlos
Araucllo. representing the Sandinista regime. c laimed the PlalC llJ11C(
U.S. government .. flagrantly violated i nternational law" fltC.,,.,.,. ._ ..
by supponing ~bet N icaraguan forces bated in ncii)l. NAm •nm rr
boring Central American nations. The fOl!Owtnt pet10N .,. ~
.Nicaragua has asked the • I nternational Co.urt o( ~s~~£ TON£ avSl'EMS ~usucc !O declare th~t .t he United States bas v1o~~ed (bJHPVT. 323 N. 8'-. 8'Yd .. er ...
1ntetnattonal law by aiding the rebels and by supervising Cllllf. t2121
the mining of Nicaraguan pons. Lloyd K. Hemavy. M,O. inc .• CWJ.
It also is seeking the payment of reparations for IOl'flia, 207&7 AM\cho Loe c.mtoe . . d d h N' CQY\na, c.r. • am ages to perso ns. property an t e 1caraguan Thlt ~ 1e conducted by. •
economy!' caused by the alleged actions or the United oorpor1t1on .......
States Lloyd Hemavy. M.O c,E.v.
0. A ·1 9 befi N ' • · · h W Id Thlt 1t1tement w .. flied with the n pn • ore 1caragua s pcut1on to t e or Oounty ci.t1c 01 Orange Coun.ty on
Court was filed. the U.S. State Dcpanmcnt announced i t Mar. ia. 1994 ·
would not recognize the court's jurisdiction over Central . ,.,__ ,.A_!M1 ~
A . fi Publilned ..,.ange ..,.,.. ...,_,~ menca or. t~o y~ars. • . Pno1. Apru 4• 11. 18. 25. 19&4
The m ining 1s believed to have ceased after the 1eao-ac
disclosure that the CIA . with President Reagan's
approval. participated in the mining.
Arguello. who is Nicaragua's ambassador to the
Netherland s, referred to the rebels as a .. m ercenary ann>
fighting to overthrow the (Nicaraguan) government."
He u rged the -court to rule that the U n ited States
should "imm ediately cease and desist from all u se and
threat of force" agai nst Nicaragua .. to prevent further loss
of h u m an life and funher debasement of Nicaragua's
sovereign rights.
"W e have come to knock at the court's door ...
searching not for ar maments or troops to defend u s. but
for t he moral suppon o f the highest legal authority in the
world," said A rguello.
Despite the State Department refusal to recognize
Central American cases in the Wortd Court, the United
States will argue its side. Its argument was expected to be
m ade on Thursday.
Jeane J. Kirkpatrick , ambassador to the United
Nations, and other Reagan adm inist rat ion officials have
said the Sandinistas would exploit the World Court for
propaganda.
Pl&IC NOTICE
ftlCTinOUe ., ..... ..... ..,.,....,....
The following perlOn 11 doing
bulineu ea:
DEMAND ELECTRICAL CON· TRACTORS, 721 W. c.nter St 'A',
Colla M .... Call1. 92e27
Miio KeOh L*>nard. 721 w.
Center St 'A'. Cotta MeM. Call!.
92827
This buelneaa is condue1ed by: an Individual
Milo K. Leonard
Thll st•l~t wu fMed with 1t1e
Counly Clefk of Orange County on
Mar. 27, 198" Faa.a
Published Orange Coat Dally Piiot April 4, 11, 18, 2!5, 1984
188e-84
Ml.IC NOTICE
flCTITIOUe --·· ~ ITAT'lmWT The following persons are doing
bu9tneu as·
THE LOUIS CORPORATION,
PROFESSIONAL PROPERTY MAN-
AGEMENT. 17744 Skypartc Circle.
Suite 180, lnllne. Cllif. 92714
C. G. Louie, Inc .. California, 13651
Gerahon Plllce. Santa Ana, Caltt.
827~
Thll ~ It conducted by: a
eotp«atlon
Chri.topher G. L.oolt. Pteal<Mrit
Thia 1tAlt91M11t w• filed Wfth Ille
County CWk of Of'ange County on
Mar. 15, 19$4
FM-Put>lllhed OrMge Coelt Daily
Piiot April 4, 11. 18. 25. 1984
1876-&4
DEATH NOTICES
I n its court complaint. Nicaragua accused the U.S.
government of the .. kiUfog. wounding and kid napping of
Nicaraguan citizens."
FICTITIOU8 .,..... RIVERA
Pllll.JC NOTICE
FICTmOUI Ml ... 11 ~ITATE•NT Tti. lollowlng perton ii doing
buslMU .. ;
NEWPORT HORIZONS REAL TY,
833 Dove< Drive. Suite 18, Newport
Beach, Calif. 92663
Ronald Alan Lowe. 432· 181h Place, Coste Mesa, Calif. 92827
This buslneu is conclu<:ted by: an individual
Ronlld A.. Lowe
Thia stalemen1 was llled with the
County Cle<k of Orange County on Apr. 9. 1984
Ml.JC NOTICE
FIC11110U8 ........
NAm ITAftmNT The following ~ are doing
bulineea .. :
FOLK ART HEIRLOOMS, 14711
Bromley. Wntmlnt19f. Calif. 92683 Julie Lenee & ~ard Marrin
Brown, 14711 Bromley. w .. 1.
mln1ter, Calif. 92683
Tni1 bus!Mu II conducted by· an
Individual
Julie L. Brown
Th11 statement wa1 flied with lhe
oun1y Clerk of Orange Counly on pr. 6, 198-4
NAiii ITATDmn' RAMONA FELIX RIVERA.
The tol!owlng P,ef'9on " doing a resident of C.O.ta Mesa bu9ineta ... •
T AEKWoHDO CENTER. 22!51 passed away April 23, 1984
Hart>or Blvd.. eo.ta Mee&. Clllf. at the age of 93. Beloved 92::ton 0 _ Culhlng. 2340 A-3 mother of .Ramond . Riv~
Santa Ana Aw .. Cotta Meaa, Calif. of Ooeans1de, California,
92627 Nellie R. Delgado of Costa
Thll bullneu II conducted by: an Mesa. Blanche Ocampo of
Individual San Juan Capistrano, Call-
Benton 0. Culhlng f . J . Ri and This ttetM*lt waa filed With the orma. enrue vera
County Clertc ot Orange County on Virginia Rivera both of Los
Mar. 22. 1984 Angeles; sister of Adolph
Put>tlshec:t Orange eo.:a.c:: Felix of Bakersfield, Cali-
Piiot April 4. ,,, 18. 25, 19&4 fom.ia. She i.s_abo survived
1878-84 by 32 grandchildren, 54
great grandchildren and six
f2aGll F1at1S Pllll.IC NOTICE great-great grandchildren.
Visitation on Wednesday.
April 25. 1984 at Pierce
Brothers Bell Broadway
Mortuary oommencing at
2PM . Please contact
monuaryfortimeof rosary
and mass. Pierce Brothers
Bell Broadway Mortuary.
642·9150
Published Orange Coast Dally Published Orange Gout Daily
Pilot April 18. 25. May 2. 9, 1984 Piiot Aprll 18. 25. May 2. 9. 1984 FIC1mOUS .,_ ..
2097 ·8-4 2093·8A N~ ITATEMEWT TM tollowlng persona are doing
___ fltllll __ C_NO_n_c_E __ 1----------b':~~EEN WELLNESS SE.R-
P\B.IC NOTICE VICES. 6343 Via Estrada. An..,..m. FICTITtoUI 8UltNl.ll
N~ ITATEMENT
The followlng persoo is doing
bullnetl u :
TUTORT APES. 3401 Castor.
Santa Alla. Calll 92704
Jewel Bernardine Keusder. 2021
Veehl I/index, Newport Beaeh,
Callf. 92660
This bualneu Is conduc1ed by· an
ndlvfduel Jewel B. Keusdef
Thi• s1a1ement was llled wttll the
:ounty Clerk of Orange County on
FICTITIOUI 8UltNESI
NAMl ITATEMENT
ihe followlng per90n Is doing
business as.
PACIFIC COAST JANITORIAL.
20902 Brool!hut1I. Huntinglon
Beach,92641
Vickie 0. Rltcllte. 26792 ReWhlde.
El T Of'O, Calif. 92630
This b\11lness Is conducted by an
Individual
Vickie 0. Rllchle
Thi• ata1emen1 was filed with lhe
Calif. 92807
Sherry Hobbs. 63-43 Via Estrade.
Anehelm, Cl!lif 92I07
This l>U9l,,... 11 conducted by a
getierel pattner1hlp 1-----------
Randy Edgertow. 315 North-I ELLIS
10191 Circle, Vancouver. We.. 98665 JOHN PAUL ELLI S. JR. a
Sherry Hobbs r esident of Laguna Hills.
This statement was flle<l wllh the ~~~e~ awa~· April 21. 1984 County Clerk of Orange Coonty on ~ J
Mar 29. 1984 H e 1s survived by his
f24Z29 parents, Mr & Mrs John Put:Jllsned Orange Coast Dalty p I Ellis S b h W J
f 2423N ounly Clerk of Orange County oo
Published Orange Coul Dally Mar. 15· 198-4 f241CISI
Pllor Apnl 18. 25. May 2. 9. 1984 au • r . rot er. • -
2099-84 liam, nieces. N icole and Mar. 30. 1984
:>Uot April 11. 18, 25, May 2, 1984 Publlshed Orange Coast Dally 1979•84 Pilot April 4, 11. 18. 25, 1984 Ml.JC NOTICE
Leslie and friend, Steven
Walker. Memorial Ma,s., of
the Resurrection w ill be
h eld Tuesday April 24. 1984
at 12 NOON at Saint
Joachims Catholic Church
I n lieu of Clowers family
suggests donations be made
to the Liver or Kidney
F o undation s Services
under the direction of
Harbor Lawn/M ount Ohve
Mortuary. 540-5554
-------------1888-84 FICTITIOUS Ml ... H
NAME ITA TEMENT PWLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUllNHI
NAME STATEMENT
The following peraon Is doing
)uslness as:
R ANO R ENGINEERING, 6951
Herner Ave. Suite 269, Huntington
3eaeh. Calif. 92647
Rlchar4 v. Palino. 16111 St.
:rolx, Huntington Beech. Calif.
12649 This business Is cooducted by· an
ndlvlduel
R. V. Patino
This 1tatement wss flied with the )ounty Clerk of Orange County on
w4ar. 30, 1984
F2"2MO
Published Orange Coast Oalty
>not Aprll 11. 18. 25. May 2. 1984 1977·84
M LIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The following ~rsons are c1oing
1usiness as
1-K SEAFOOD. 2620 Newport
llvd . Cosla Mesa. Calif 92627
Roy Ikeda. 350 Monie Vista.
:osta Mesa. Calif 92627 Maklko Ikeda. 350 Monte Vista.
:os1a Mesa. Cell! 92627 Thia business 1s conducted by an
idlvldual
Roy Ikeda
This statement w11 filed with the
;ounty Clerk of Orange County on
Aer 30, 1984
F~
Published Orange Coast Delly
•ilot April 11. 18. 25. May 2, 1984 1974·84
Ml.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI BUllNIH
NAME I TATIMENT
The fottowlng peraon la doing
1usm..tas: PHIL FOUR TWELVE OEVELOP-
AENT COMPANY. 2699 White
la.d, SuUe 200. lrvtne, Calif. 92714
Thomes P Lynch, 2699 White
~Old. Suite 200, Irvine, C•llf 92714
Thi• buslneu 11 conducted by an
'ldMdual
PWLIC NOTICE
FICTrTIOUI BUllHlll
NAME STATEMENT
The following pereon Is doing
b\lslnest u :
R. R. ENTERPRIZES, 134 San
Dimas. San Clemente. Calif. 92612
Ronald R. Ol1son, 134 Sen
Olmu. San Clemente. Call!. 92672
This business 11 conducied by· an lndlvldual
Rooatd R. Olsson
This statement was flied with the
County Clerk of Orange County on
Apr. 9. 1984
The following persons art doing
business as:
uo SALES. 31832 Via Pato.
Trabuco C1111yon, Calif. 92878
Leon Emile Oeriger. 31832 Via
Pato, Trabuoo Canyon. Calif. 92678
Jane Frye tiarriaon. 3183). Via
Pato. Trabuco Canyon, Calif 92e78
This buslnes1 II conducted by. a
gen9'al paMefStllp
Leon Denger
Thi• 1tatement was nled with the County Clerk of Orange County oo
Mar 23, 198'
f2417C7
Publllhed Orange Cont Dally Piiot April 11. 18. 25. May 2, 1984
F2aGll 1970·8• Published Orange Coast Dally
Piiot April 18. 25. May 2. 9. 1984
2096-84 PWLIC NOTICE
KINCY
TIM L . KINCY passed away
in Venezuela. Survived. by
mother. Betty L. Hays of
Laguna H ills; brothers,
Kenny Kincy of Fayet·
teville, Arkansas and John
Pantaleo and Jim Pantaleo,
PWLIC NOTICE FICTfTIOUI IU~N£88 both of Laguna Hills; sisters,
NA.ME STATIMENT Cathy R ichards of San J~.
ftCTITIOUI BUllNEll The following persons are Oo•ng Ca I 1 f o r n 1 a and L or 1
T business as Lannh..hn of Costa Mesa NAM£ STATIMEN OCEANVIEW PARTNERS W·•· .'6..,..
The lollowlng per~n 11 da1ng ITED. 2025 w Balboa Stec New-Prayer servlec' Thursday 26,
business as port Bea<:h Calll 92663 1984 at 7.30 PM al O'Connor
CARR & ASSOCI ATES. 3857 James R Oul1X1. 1924 W OcNn-Laguna H ills M ortuary Btrch St . Suite 113. Newport front ..... ~"""t Beach Celll 92663 0 h c 111 92660 ....... ,.._. M ass Fnday at 9 AM at "eac · • This buSlneu 1s condYcteo by a 1 JC Roberti. 10172 Premter Saint Nicho las Church. A11e Westminster. Calif. 92683 limited partnership James R Quigg Laguna Hills Interment. 29 This business is conducted by· en This slatement was llled wtth the Palms Cemeterv O'Connor 1ndlviduel County Clerk of Ora"""' Count" on • 1 Jc Roberts .. ,,_ ' Laguna Hills M ortuary,
Tnis statement was filed with the Mar 30 198" F242la2 58 l ·4300
County Clerk of Orange County on Published Orange Coast Dally ~;;;;;;;:;::;;:;::====:;..;:,_ ....
ar 26. 1984 ,241190 Piiot Aprll 1 t 18 25 May 2 1984 I
1978-84 PubliShed Orange Coast Dally
Piiot April 4. 11. 18, 25. 1984
1881-84
P\B.IC NOTICE
FICTl'TIOUI 8UMllll
N.-ITATE•NT
rtie fallowing e>ertOn• .,. domo
business 11
ADVANCE MARINE TRANS-
PORT. 16102 Conslrvc110n Cr Eut
lrvtne. Calif. 92714
Sinibaldi Co Inc. Calltorn1a
Corp . 16102 Conltructlon Cf Ent
lrvtne, Calif. 9271'
Thia ~ ii conduated by s
O()fJ>Ofatlon
P\&.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUIMIU
NAME ST A TE.MENT
The lollowing persOf'll are dOll'IQ
buSll'eSS IS
(a)NALS lb>N AIL ANO LIGHT
SYSTEMS. 138 Town &. Country
Orange. Calll 92668 HatdonsLTO 138 Town &Coun·
try. Orenge Calif 92&88
Thn buslnn111 c:ondUctecl by· an
unlncOfl)Ofatad auoolaltofl other
than a pertMr*hlp
Harold Nemetz
HARBOR LA WH·MT Oll~
M0'1uary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Cosla Masa
~0-55~4
PIERCE BROTHERS
IELl BROADWAY
M ORTUARY
'10 Broad .... a.
Cos1a M PS.I
642 9 •C\O
ThOmu P Lynch
Thll 1tatement was filed wllh the
:ounty Clefk of Orange County on
Pat Slnibald1. Vice Prealdent
Thi• 11a1emen1 was filed wtlh lhe
County Cleflc of Orange County on
~ Mar 26, 1984 Aar 30, 198A
Thia 111tement wu flleo wt1h IM
County Clerk 01 Ofenge COUl'I~ on
M11 30 198'
f1QJl7
Published Orange Cout Oelly
Piiot April 11 18. 25 May 2. 1984
197M4
BALTZ Bh~G ~ .. Oh
5 MITH & TUTHIU
WfSTCLIH CHAPEl ,:-r 1•1t c;
Publllhed Orenge Cout Dally fl'Mtll2
•1101 Aprll 11. 18. 25. May 2, 1984 Publlth41d Ofange Coast Delly 1976-&4 Pilot Apfll 4, I 1, 18, 25. 198-4
1884-84
P\8.JC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI tuaM ..
NAm lTATW•NT
The tollowlng pel'IClfl Is d0in9 "'"""' ... CALIFORNIA CASH VCCHANOI!, to.o Hlfbof 8IYd , FCM'ltaln Vat·
ty. Callf 92708
Maty Ann E JonMQn, 2007 I
.ftlOn. Huntington ~. Calif
1Jt4e
T'hla bullneM It oonouoted by an
~lvldu•I
Maty Ann Johneon
ll'lla 111141!'1'4nl WN flied wilh the }Ounty C.ti of 0..ange Counr, on
Alf 30, 1914
Ml.JC NOTIC£
,,.,..,.
"'"~I.I ,_.1"1
to 4f, "~ ••
PACIFIC VIEW
"1EMOAIAL PAJU(
..m,•f.-r ~ • ..-cvfu,\•,
Lh•itf!I • ( •f''T'.J'• '.
IC\00 P1,l ihr v ,.,.. O• ....
~••wt " P.-i.r •
t ..1.S ... \(
P'MUl2
PutllllheO Or•~ eo-1 Daily
'llOt Apnl 11. 18. tt May ) 1984
.................................................................................................... 1872-84
Pub*-'*! Or~ ~ 0.lly
Piiot .\pnl 11 1 .. H Mfr; 2, 118'
1971 ••
ACYllMMM .,._ .. *-eTATDllNT
Ttle followlno 1*90N are doing
butl"4111 -(A) CLOS!'t CONCEPTS (B)
CLOSET D!SIGNS (C) CLOSET
P L ANNERS (0) CLA SSIC
CLOSfTS, 2178 Aural Ln., Costa M--. c:.. 82127 Leonard Anttlof\y Aoecttto, 2176
Rurel Ln .. Cotta Mtru. Ca 92827
Sherry Mien.le Rotelno. 2176
Rur.r I.Pl.. Costa Mesa. C. 92827
Thia ~n.aa ta conduct9d by
1noh110ual1 (husband & wife>
Leon.rd• A Roacltto Swry M Rotcmo
Thia Statement was U*' w1tn tne
County Clertt ot Orange County on
Aprll 3, 1984
'242932
Pu~ Ot811Qe Coast Dally
Pilot AQrll 18. 25. May 2, 9. 1984
2101·8•
PUBllC NOTICE
PJCTmOUa MJMitEH
MAME eTATElllNT
The loloWlng persons are domg
bualneal .. :
(•)SOUTH COASTAL COM ·
MERCIAL PROPERTIES (blSOUTH
C O A STAL CO MM ERCI A L
(c)COASH.L COMMERCIA L
(d)COASTA L COMMERCIA L
PROPERTIES. 1 t27·A Baker St .
Cotta Mesa. Calif 92626
R()Qef K. Laule. 26026 Vista Onve
East, Capistrano Beach Caht
92824
James B. Gallacne< 1062 Tulare
Costa Mesa. Calif 92626
Thia bullneu Is conducted by· a
general partneranlp
Roger I<. Laule
This 1tatemen1 was llled wlln tile
County Clefk of Orange County on
Apr 2, 1984
f142502
Publlsned Oral'ge Coast Dally
Piio t April 18. 25. May 2 9 198•
2092·84
PteLIC NOTICE
FICTIT10US BUSINESS
NAME ST A TI:MENT
The tollow1ng persons are dOlng
business u
AMERICANA II APARTMENTS
AMERICANA LIM ITED 18552
MltCAr1hur Blvd
440 Irvine Calll 927 t S
David K Lamb 18!>52 MacArtnur
Blvd
440. trvlne. Calif 92715
Jonn Minar 18552 MacArthur
Blvd
440 Irvine Caltt 92715
M ehrdad Rassekn 18552
MacArthur Blvd
440 trv;ne Call! 92 7 l 5
Alt Raz; 18552 MacArtnur Blvd
4'0 lrvme. C111f 927 15
J()t1n Minar
Tl1t5 51a1ement was llled with ttie
County Clerk or Oranoe COYnty on
Mar 26 1984
f14115t
Put>hshed Oranoe Coast Daily
P1101 Aprtl • 11 18 25 1984
1883-8.4
POOLIC NOTICE
0 4
,ICTITtoUI IU .... N
NOTICE tfMTINCI ..01 ~ STAtt•wr Ml.JC NOTlCE
Nollet Is h«eby glY4WI that ll'le The follOWlng peraon Is dOlng
Board of Truat ... ol the Huntington 1>u11nes1 u ·
Buch Union High Scttool Dl•lrlel PEOPLESKILLS & CONCEPTS.
P.ICTmOUt IU .... a
NA•ITAH•MT
w111 recetve ... ieo bids tor •upply· 245 Broadway
1ng INSTRUCTIONAL SYSTEM FOR A. Coata Meaa. Calif 12827
The tollowtng peraon1 are doing
bUtin .. aa·
COMPUTER ASSISTED DRAFTING Roger W Frleke. 245 Broadway
-GENERAL meeting or equal to the A. Costa MeH. CAUi t2e21
sl)IClllc1t1on1 on llte 1n the omc:. ol This buslneu 11 conducted by an
WORLD LEASING. 1600 Do~
St, Sulla 330. Newpcrt 8N<lh. Ca.
t2e80
a.td District tn<llvldull
Bid• anau be clearly mark9d IN· Roger w Frleloe
STRUCTtONAL SYSTEM FOR Tiits 11a1emen1 was hied w11n Ille
Roben Lawrence Wallace. 1830
16th St . R202 NewQO(t BMctl. Ce 92663
COMPUTER ASSISTED OAAFTING County Clerk ol Orange County on
-GENERAL Bid .,553, lddreued Apr 9 198'4
This busln ... 11 conduct9d DY an
tndlv1dual
t,o Allyn E ROWiey. Purchulng F~100
Man119t11. Huntington Beech Union Pubhs,.eo Orange Coast Delly
High School District. 1025 I Pilot April 18. 25 Mey 2. 9, 198'4
Yorktown Avenue. Huntington 2095-84
Robert L wenace
Tn11 statement was flied with the
COYrity Clerk ot Orange County on
March 30 1964
F242al Beach CA 92646 and received 11
or oetore 2 00 p m Tnursdey. Mey
'3 1984 al wh1cn 11me and place
Oods will be pullltcly opened and
Ptel.IC NOTICE Puottshed Orange Coast Dally
------------PtlOt Al)fll 25 Mey 2 9, t6. t984
ead 1n Bldg C Rm 36 1
each ord snall remain v11td tor •
perrod ot 30 days 1tter tne date
spec;1l1ed for tne receipt ol bids
Tne Board ot Trustees snatt be
the sole Judge di the quettty ot
equipment offered and reserves the
right to re1ec1 any or alt bids and 10
w11ve any rrregutarny theretn
Signed Ailyn E Rowley
Purchasing Managef
Dated April 17 1984
PuOllstted Orange Coast Deily Piiot
Aprtl 18 25 1984 2 111-84
Pll!LIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IMJllMEll 2245--84
NAME ST A Tl!MENT
The tottow1ng persons are dOtr\Q
llusmau as Ml.IC NOT1CE
Defense Systems Engrneerrng. 8UPf"tO" COURT
2009 1 Moontlde Crrcte, Hunhngton OF CAUFOltNtA.
Beach Callt 92646 COUNTY OF OftANOE Gary Lynn Back, 200111 Moonttde tn the Metter ot the
C1rcle Huntington Beech Ca APpllCetlon ol
92646 ROBERT JAY PLOUGHE Tn11 bUsmess IS conducted oy an for Change ot Name
1nd1111dua1 No A 122568
Gii}' Lynn Back ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE
Tn11 statement WIS filed w1tn ll'le FOR CHANGE OF NAME
County Clerk of Orenge County on ROBERT JAY PLOUGHE hH fli.d
Aprrt t6. 1984 1 petition In 11111 court for an order F2A3M5 Published Orenne Coast Delly 11towtng petitioner to cnange ... hit/her name lrom ROBERT JAY PtlOI Aprll 25, May 2. II. 16, 1984 PLOUGHE to ROBERT "J" SMITH.
2249-84 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED lhll 111 NOTICE OF AVAIU8lLITY ------------...... son. Interested In the matter Of ANNUAL .. EPORT Ptel.IC NOTICE O'V• Pursuant 10 Seclion 6104(dl ot ------------etores11d appear before lh•s court
C •... EIS 1n OeQartmet'll No 3 el 700 ClvlC 1he Internal Revenue ode. notice ts FtCTIT10U8 IU '" Center Ornie West, Santa Ana. Call· ne<elly given lhat lhe annual rec>ert NAME ITATUllENT tor the calendar year 1983 of A.JS Tne loltowlng PlflOO 11 dotng tornl1. on May 14, 1984. at II 15
FOUNDA TtON a private foun· business as o'clock AM 1 and then and the<•
dallon, 11 evattallle et lhe loun-HARBERTS ASSOCIATES, 2026 show cause, II any they 111~ • wfly
dat1on s prtnotpal office tor tnspec· Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. Calll. said petition tor change of neme
tlon during regular business hours 92627 anould not be granted.
tr om 10 a m to 3 p m by any citizen Hal Harbert a. 2026 Harbor Bl IT IS FURTHER ordered that 1
1 180 d t c c 11 92627 copy of this order 10 sttow cauM be who requeal 11 with n ays a ter 103. oata Mesa al pubtlsned In tne Orange Coul Dally the date ot this pubti<:ation. This buSlneu Is conducted by an The toundellon's principal offiee lnd1v1duat Pilot. • n-speper of general
1s toclted at 335 East Beytronl , Hal Harberls crrculatton, published tn 1n11 county
Balboa Island Californta 92682 Tnis s1a1emen1 wu wea with the 11 least OllQ9 • week tor tour con·
Tne principal menager of the County Clerk of Orange County on HCUhve wek• prlOr to the day of
roundatton rs Allee J SlelQe<Wllld Mar 27, 198• said he~~';t, Maren 30, 1984 c/o venoe Accounlancy Corpor· F'2A1• FRANK DOMENICHINI a11on Publtshed Orange CoHt Dally 364 Cateveras Ortve Piiot Aprol 4, 11. 18, 25. 1984 Judge of lhe
C 93906 88"8 Superior Court Sahnes. alllorn1a 1 ~ 4 ROBERT JAY PLOUGHE. (IN
I Pulltosned Orange Coast Deity T CE PRO PURI
Prtot Aprtl 25 1984 P\8.IC HO I 24 1t1 Blrdrock Onve
2258-84 El Toro CA 92630 NOTICE Of TRU8TEE'I SALE
------------Loan No. U1~MOZ1NOO 834-2020 POOLIC NOTICE T.8 . No. f -105f7 Publlthed Orenge Coast Oatty Pllol
NOTICE OF A VAILUILITY
UNtT CODE F April 11 18. 25 May 2 1984
T .O. HAVICE COMPANY 1985-8<4 OF ANNUAL R£PORT
Pursuant to Section 6104(d) ot PtellC NOTICE as duty appointed TruSlee under tne
following described deed ot trust the Internal Revenue Code. notoce 1s WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
nerellygtven tnat tne annual repor1 TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR NOTICE OF TAU8TEE'I IALE
tor tne Calender year 1983 ot CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR Loen No. tcttECK
GEORGE T PFLEGER FOUN· 1 CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN T.I . No. l'.(11151
OAT ION a prrvale louodallon IS CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (pay· UNIT COOE"
ava11ao1e a1 tne toundallon s pr1nc1· ao1e 111 1ne tome 01 sate rn lawful FIRST IANTA CLARA COAJJOfl-
oa• ott•ce tor 1nspec1ton du11ng reg· money ol 1ne United States) alt ATION
utar bUsoness nours tr om 9 am to 5 ngnt. mle and m1ern1 conveyed 10 u d~app<Mnted Trustee under the
p m llY any cttlzen wno requell II and now held by tt under setd Deed fotlo described deed Of trull
w1tn1n :80 days alter tne date ot tnls ol Trust in lhe property nerernat1er WILL S LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION
PUllhcallon described TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR
The foundations princtpet OUIClt TRUST OR HOWARD E MOZ· CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR
IS located at Suite 217. 1501 West· tNGO ROSE MARIE MOZINGO CERTIFIED CHECKS'SPECtFIED IN
cllll Drive Newport Beacn Cail-BENEFICIARY THE BANK OF CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (P•Y·
lornoa 92660 ORANGE COUNTY allte at the llme ot Mle 1n lawful
Tne pr1nc1pat manag4!1' ot the RECOROEO January 28 1982 as money ot lhe United States) alt
toundaioon •S George T P!teger tnstr No 82-032705 01 Olllc1at Re· rrgnl ltlle and 1n1eresl conveyed to
Puo1t9neo Orange Coast Darty cords rn tne office ot 111e Recorder end now netd by 11 under sal<I Deed
P1101 Aprot 25 198• ot Orange County of Trust 1n tne property herelnaher
2257 8• said deed of trust descralles 1ne described
------------following property TRUSTOR EDGAR E SCHECK.
K -10852 PUBLIC NOTICE PARCEL 1 Loi 39 ol Traci No LINDA A SCHECK
NOTICE OF D E AT H OF 7301. tn tile Coty ot Irvine COYnty ot BENEFICIARY BANK OF THE
C E C I L R A V M O N D K 10854 Orange State ot Catotornra as per WEST • map recorded on oook 316 pages 1 RECORDED June 14, t983 as
G RAHAM AND OF P E TI-NOTI CE OF D E ATH OF 10 3 inclusive Miscellaneous Maps. tnstr No 83-251170 of OttlCtat Re-
TION T O A DMIN ISTER MARTIN A C. MEN D EZ 1n 1ne olttce ot 1ne county recorder cords 1n 11141 otttee ot the Recorder
ESTATE NO. A l227t6 AN D OF PETITION T O A D -ol saod county of'Orange County.
To all h eirs. beneficiaries, MIN ISTER EST ATE NO. EXCEPT THEREFROM ell 011. gas. said deed of trust describes tile minerals and otner hydrocarbon lollOWlng proper1y
c redi tors and c·on ttng ent A l 2 2712 substances tying oatow a depth of The land referred to In this
credi tor s o r CECI L RAY· T o all heirs, bene f1c1ar1es, 500 reet wilhoul any rignt to enter gurantee I• altuated tn the State of
MOND G RAHAM an d per· "redito r s and upon the surface or Ille subsurface California, County 01 Oral'ge end 11 " co n tin gen t of said 1and aoove a depth of 500 dNCrlbed ••follows.
sons w h o ma y be-otherw i.se cr ed itor!> of MAR T INA C feet as provided •n 1nstrumen1s of PARCEL 1 Lot 84 of Trac1 No
inter est ed tn t he w1U and/or M ENDEZ and persons w ho record t218, In the County ol Orange, esta~: mav bt-o therwise interested PARCEL 2 Non-41xclus;ve ap-State ol C1Nfornle, u per mep re-
r led -purtenan1 easement tor the corded In Book 3T. P999s 47 lo '49
A pellllon has been 1 tn th<' w ill and or estate purpoaes 85 set tortn 1n and over 1nc1u11ve, mlecellaneous map•. In
by PAU L C AM E R 0 N A pt·t1t10n has been hied the land described tn Article v, Sec-the office ol tne County Recorder of
G RAHAM tn the S u perior b y RANU LFO MARTINEZ t1on 1 ot that certain Oectara1ton ot sal<I County
Co f 0 Co In th" S urw»rior Court o f O r -Covenants. Conditions and ReslrlC· PARCEL 2. Lot 1 In Block C of urt O range unty re-" ~ 11ons recorded May 20. 1971 1n Tract No t2 t9, tn the County ol
q u es ting l hat PAUL angt.> County requesting th at book 9647 page 387. Olltciat Re· Or1nge. Stele of Cetllornle. H per
C AMERON G RAHAM be R ANU LFO M ARTINEZ be cords. 11 imposed by No11ce of map recorded 1n Book 38. Pages 26
apJX>inted as personal r ep · appotnled as personal r ep -Covenan1s. Conditions and Restric· and 27 mraceltaneous maps, In the 11ons recorded on Maren 26 1973 tn olftee ol the County Recorder ot r esentative to admtn1ster the resenLatJVl' w administer the book tos12. page 36 Otlrcrar Re-said County
estate of CECIL RAYM OND estatl! u r MARTI NA C cords ol said Orange COYnty YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
G RAH AM (under the l nde-I MENDEZ (under the lnde· YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATED March 15.
I
DEED OF TRUST DATED Jan ery t983 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION pendent A dm1ntstrat1on of pendt.•nt Adm1mstrat1on of 14, 1982 UNLESS YOU TAKE "..c. TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT ~tales Act ) Th(' pc.•t1l1on IS Est.atc.'S A ct) The petttlon IS TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE
set for hearing tn O.•pt No 3 set fu r h(•anng tn Dc·pt No 3 ERTY IT MAY BE SOLO AT A PUB· IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION
at 700 CtVI(. O ·n tc·r Dr · j o t 700 C1v 1t (\•ntN Dr LIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN ex. OF THE NATURE OF THE PLANATION OF THE NATURE OF PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
W est . Sant.a A n ti CA 927111 W1•-..l, S ..inld Ana C A !12701 Tf1E PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER
o n May 9, l9EM di 9 :m A M on 1\-1;1\' 9 IY!H ;it 9 :w A M vov SHOULD CONTACT A v.w-501 Ctott OrovtJ IJewpor1 8e1Gl1
IF Y OU OBJECT to tht If Y<Jl' O BJECT to 1h1·1 "[R ca1o1orn1a 1230 S Ba~e• S1n1a Ana CA tit a street address c,r common gl anting of thf' 1x·1111on vnu "rantmu of th t.· no.ot1 t1on you ., " .--· 92707 des1gna1ton 01 property os snown
sh ould either app<'dr .it thP -..huuld l'llhcr apf)(.'ar dl th l• 111 a street address or c;ommon above no >N1rran1y 11 given as to tis
he aring an d suit<· vou ohj('( h1.,1nnfi( c1nd sww you nb.){'<'-des1gna11on ot property 11 tnown completeness or correctne111 · Tne
tions or fl l<-wnllC'fl 11hj('I. ltttn~ 111 filt• wri tten ob.JC: .. anove no warran1y tS given aa to tts 1>enehc1ary under ,aid Deed ol
• L f completeness or correctneu) The Trust lly reason ot a oreach or de· t1ons Wl\.n I h t• l 'OUll h<' '" 1· 1111n' v.1th I he court be fort.> beneficrary under said Deed ol taun rn tne ob1tget1on1 secured
tht• h Part11g \'our o1pp•·c1r th1 hN1nn g Y our appc•ar-Trust by reason ot a breacn or de-1nereby heretofore e•ecuted and
.1nu ma\ hi• in pr r..iin 11r ll\ J iil i lltJ \ bt> tn pt-r.on or byl taull rn tilt! obhgetions secvred deltvered to 1ne undersigned a wrll·
tt rnl \ t t • \ 111f'•tlb)' neratotore e1tecuted and ten Qfoctarallon ot Deteull and De· vour J 0 ' '•iur ·• CH Ill . oeltve<ed 1o 1ne undersigned 1 wril· mand lo• Sale and wr111an notice ol Ir YOt.; AIU A I HEnI II YOl' ARE A CREDI ien Dectara1ton or Detaull and De· oreacn 1no ot e1ec11on to ttvse 1ne TC >H ,,, .1 nmt111~1 111 1 1 1·1Jitm f( >H 11r ,1111n11ni.:1·nt f rt'(ltlur mend tor S11e and wr111en no1oce ot undersigned 10 sell sarrt property 10
tJ( thi• cit~ 1'.1!>4·d v•iu mu't ,of 1111 d t'\.'l'.J!-<-d. vou m ust oreacn and ot etec11on to cause tne satisfy said 01>1tga1tons and tllera-
1 I h h h undersigned 10 sell said property to a1te1 lhtl undersigned cauH<I 111d
f th· \.•!I.Jr t ,11111 '"' • 1 1• I I th \11ut claim Wit t <• satisfy said obllgi uons and there-notice ot llreach end of etocuon to
l '1H1tt ~·t prt·-.1·111 II I" t lw p• r 'ow I 111 JJr\•sen t 1l t11 tl11• 1.x•r alter the undersigned caused said be recorded January 9. 1984 II
,11n.d r1 ·f.>n·•w1H.tll \• .1p ,1111,.i rPprl'sentativ•• ttp· no1tce otbraacn1ndotetect1on 10 lns1r No 8•·0096•0of 01f1c111Ra-
be recorded June 29 1953 as lnslr cord• 111 tne ottice of '"" Recorder p11111ll'tl b\ th1• ,11urt \\llhin polflta·d b\ th e court Wtthtn No 83_278365010 fflcial Recordsrn QI Orenge Counly
four mon lh' Ir 11111 lh• d.1t1· •1f t11u1 r11u111h' Crom tht-d ale' 11( tne ottice ottne Recorder ot Orange Sa•d sate wolf oe rneoe t>ut
f1r-..1 1i...-.u.int1 111 It Ill r-.. '" 111-..1 1 .... ,u.11w1• of letters a"I County w1111<>u1 covenant or werranty ••
f.>l 11Vldc-ti in -.;., t111n -1111 of fll l>\ 1d1,1 in 8«t1o n 700 o r Seid sate Wiii be mlOe Out press or omptled regarding lllle
P '-· l f • • witnou1 covenant or w1r1anty. U · po1sess1on or entumbrenus. to th • ruu.ilt C 111. 1 " <. .1lt th• Pr11h;111 (ode of (.alt presa or rmptted regerd•ng lltle pey tne rem11n1ng pr1nc1pat sum ot
fm n1a Tht l11111 • f111 I il1nJ{ £urn1u Thi· ume for ftl m g poisesston, or encumbreno ... to the no1e(1I aecured by said deed ot
diurrh will no t t•-cp1i. prwr I d.uin.-. w ill 111.it ~xpire prior pay the ram&tntng princtpal svm ol Trull, wllh Interest at 1n Hid note
V> (ou r months from t h• rt\l(' tu l our month' from thf' rlate IThe notll(I ) MCur9d t:>y .. , td ~~ o1 t provided, advanc" ti ony, undnr r11st. willl 1n1ere11 H n aa.., no e Iha term1 of uld Ooo<1 ot trust feet of thr ht-.innl( nottt t'<I ;1ht1v1• o f tlw lw ,1r1ng not1<'C'd abo v e provided. edvl ncM 11 any under cherge1 end axpenM1 ot th•
YOU M A Y 1'.:XA MINE I \'OL' MAY EXAMINE the terma olMl<I O..OOltrut t, t.n Tru1IM and olthe tru1t1 created by
th t· (1lt kc·pl b\ the wun If th< f 1lt kt'pt IJv the coun U et1aige1. end •-'*""' 01 the •a8•d.~ .. o~T11r~t ...... d on W'""'~
I TruatM end of tile truata creat9d by ""'.... -· .,.. .... -·-· you ar t> anti rc ... tt>t in t h• '" I )OU art 1r1u..n-swd In the t't Mid OMd 01 Truat oay May 9 198•. 112 30 p m 11 the
t.1 11• you m .1y "·rv 1• upon thl' t.Jtt• you mnv ..i·rve u pon th1• Slld..i. .. 11t t>ehald on Wednes· Chepma11 Avef'ue entrance 10 tne
t·ll.r'< utor or .u1min1-..tralor or I ••x•'<·u 111r or <•cim tnistrator. or day. May 9 19&4 11 2 30 pm at the C1v1C Cet'ttr Bulld•ng 300 E.aat
u p<1n th£· .1tturm ·:v for t ht> 1•x
1
u pon thr Rttorney for t he f'X-g~m~~,,.,~1;'~~~'0 ~': c",.er~:_n ti;!· ~'~~·.'n~~1 Pubft·
i. 1Jlor 111 adrnu11,t1·at11r ;and f'lUtur cir adminlstrat(;r, and Chaom•n Ave Orange. CA cation 01 th11 notlCe. 1ne 10111
111' Y.tlh thr• 1m1rt with hit• with tht• <'OUrt w i th At tne 11me of the lnlllal put>tt am0untoltlltunp1ldbal1nc.of 1he
pfrlt}f Of <;('f"-1('(>L J 1.1.nttrn pt!Xlf Uf ... rvl('f', ll WntU!n ~.::t.:·~,::,\9.I.:::~~:: :=':~r:'U:t~::=.:;
r t-yut~t -..t.1t1111t tn11t 1mu c c• I n-quN.t statlr\11 t hat \IOU df' ol>llQ•Hon NQHecl by th9•t>Ov. O.· coeta 811'*'-•nd 9dv1ncee 11
'irt ,Pf"'·i,11 0 0 111 •· o f tht· fl l sm• ~JX'<"llll nn tlct> of t hr fll w •l>9d ~of 1ru11 and H1•mated I 1J6 971 66
111.: o f .tn tn\ f'nt11n dnd <1p i njol n( ,1n invi •nHrr\ .ind ap COfll ex~ af'C:I edvances 11 The t0t1I rn<U>t>ledntq b9ong en
$84 683 e ~ "''mitt on wn1Ct1111e opening 1>1d •• pr.1t'4'Tllt 111 11! c"'t..itc "''-'4'L" u1 I prloll'?f'ntr n t nf 1>statc ~Lt or rite 10111 tndabtedn.., oerng a,, computl!<J mey be obt••n«S IJ'I' ~II
1tf thr· ~·t1 1 1nn' or .t1,·011n l' uf the f)f'ttt11m.<1 or anilut11J1 HllmereonWfltcllthe open1ng b1d 11 1r1g 141S1945-64181ne day before
1rw11t1on t'ti 111 S.'C lion 1200 1rw 11t1t111t'<I 1n ~·tton 1200 CO"f\Put9d may t>e ob111n•d by caJt the "'-
1md l:.!00 .> 11f th1• ( '.llll111n111 .-ml 1"00 5 1,f lhl' C:alifom ta tng (7 t.CI 937 0986 or (2 t31 C>elld AJ>•tl 12. 19114 • • • 927 4866 IN day ~lore tti. u l• r 1RST SANTA CLARA COAPOR·
Pr11hlttf' ( uJ1 Pro b.It• lcidl' Oeteo APfll tO tt 6• • TtON MA1THE~ E. !\EAL~ JACK H Yl'GER, f,,.'i\Q 1 O SERVICE COMPAN' 11 NJd Tru,IM
l 4 IU COl\t fllllh 9'4} 40 1 ('IYIC' Ct"Dlf'r Wt-tt. tl30 •• M•d Tru•l--e, T 0 SCAVICE COMPANY agent
Pana f>olot. C'A. neu . U ll Ana. CA t t70l ',!,'!.':tr.I J 110C)ll•n• ··~·tt•nt Set By 1(.,,,...,, M P1Tnct. AH•Slanl
" -, St<tlUlfy Ill I• I 007 ~JS 7!0 I One City Dlvfl W"t O••r'!O• Ce 1990 N Ce••IOfrl<I 8••11 W11tn.11
U lt1ht'\J t >t 1m~1· c ·, I P1d1h,l1t'tl < )r;injo(• C11u1 t26U C•Hk CA 94.,l!f'l-)7117
1111 ltt 1 1 .!!I D.ith P tl11I t\prtl l R t9, ir1 ~,:;1:.~~~,~~Qf'Co•M O•ilyPllf)t l ''~u~~1~1~nrang111 Co••1 Detty
I 1H I Ar 111 111 ;i• M•¥ 'J •11114 P 101 .&111!1 111 i':t "•• 'J '""' .!1114 11 1 ~I OH k l I 1) 8• .11,, "'
NI.JC NOTICE
P\8.IC NOTICl
G-41t14
COAIT COMMUNITY COU.E~ DflTIUCT 80AN) Ott TMJITH8
"laol.UTION ~ tNTl.NT TO
.. IOUllT, "'CllVW AHO
COHllOf" ""Ol'OIALI •
COASTUNI COMMUNITY COL•
LIOI CE~llt. '"AH ti WHEREAS. Sec1tons 81390 lo
8 1402 or the Caltlornie Educa11on
Code make provlSlons tor JOlnt Oc·
cupancy ol d111r1C1 owned property
wtlh private tndlvtduals, firms, or
corporations, and
WHEREAS, tne d11trtc1 finds ttaetl
constrained to seek eltarnate
IO\Jroea ol funds tor various dlatrlct
requirements. and •
WHEREAS, the dlllrlCt haa 1 reel
Interest In 1 5 27 acf• percet ldenl·
tfled u 11460 warner Avenue.
Fountain Valley. Calllornla, and
WHEREAS. the dt1trlct Intends lo
use a portion of the buildings to be
constructed whleh wltl provide en
area of not 1e11 then e.ooo square
feet for college purPOHI end also
to olltaln on!Mte Improvements tor
parking which wilt provide not lau
than an addltlon11 365 spaces on
lhe Coastline Community College
Cenler Sile
NOW THEREFORE. BE IT RE·
SOL VEO, that Ille Governing Board
ol Ille Coest Communny COiiege
District doe• hereby declere Ila tn-
tentton to receive end conatder
propcsels tor joint oocupancy ol
dlstrrct properly In acCOfdance with
tne provisions of Seclton 81390 et
aeq ot the Education Code. end
nottee IS hereby 01V8n the1 on the
251h day ol July, 1984 11 8 00 p.m.,
the Governing Board Wiii notd a pub·
ltc meeting and Witt conllder 111
plans or propoH IS aubmllled, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVEO. tllal
tile Secretary of the Board ol
Trustees Is hereby directed 10 give
notice of the aforesaid publle ,,_t.
Ing by pubhcatton pureuenl to S.C-
Uon 81398 of tile Education Coda
On motion ot T rullee George
Aodda. Jr duly seconded and car-
ried. the above resolulton was
edopted with 1ne follow.no vote
AYES RIChatd E Olson. Nancy A
POiiard, George Rodd•. Jr . Arman-
:10 A. Ruiz, and Conrad Nordquist
NOES None
ABSENT None
I Norma A Gollle Secret&') ot
tne Board ot Truslees of 1ne Co111
Community COiiege Otstrict ot Or·
enge County Caltforn1a hereoy
c.rttly 1ha1 the above and toreg0tng
Ae$olut1on was duly end regularly
ed0e>t9d by said 9oatd at a regulll
meeting thereof netd on tile 28th
day of Maren. 11184
Dated l/111 3f'lt Oaty ot APril. 1984.
11 Costa Mesa. Ca11fO«lll
Norme R Goble
Secretary
Published Orange Coas1 Dauy Piiot
Aprtl 11 18 25 1984
1982·84
POOUC NOTICE
N OT I CE OF D E ATH OF
J OA N PATTE R SON A N D
O F P E TITION T O ADMIN-
1 STER ESTA T E N O .
A l2U53
To all h eirs. bene hctanes,
creditor s an d contingent
creditors or J O AN PAT-
TERSON and persons who
may be oth erw ise mu-rested
m the w ill and/or estate:
A peuuon h as been filed
b y AMY RILE Y in th e Su -
per ior C ou r t o f Oran ge
C o un t y requ esting t hat
AMY RILEY be-apJX>tnled
as personal representative to
administer th e estate or
JOAN P A TIERSON (under
the Independent Adm 1ms-
trauon o f Estates. A ct) T h e
petition 1s set !o1 heanng m
Dept No 3 at 700 C 1v 1c
unter Dr , W est . Santa Ana.
CA 92701 o n Mav 16. 1984 a t 9·:~0 A M •
IF' YOU OB.JF£T tt> th1·
grnntin~ 111 th t· r1e•tllm n vou
c;hould 1·1thn ,1ppt•Jr Al th t-
h1·dri11~ .1r11t st.1l {' ;vou ob)('
tmm. or ft((' w r1ttt-n ob)t'C'
l w ns w ith th t• <·ourt befurt•
f'tllUC NOTICE
NOTICl TO AGaWT'a
ANO MAMUUCTUM"I
CA1.LIHO fOR M>I
FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOl
OtSTRtCT
PO BOX 8510
FOUNTAIN VALLEV. CA 92728
PROJECT 810 NO 84-20. STU·
DENT LOCKEAS ANO LOCKS
OA TE ANO TlME FOR RECEIPT
OF SEALED BIOS May II. 1984,
200 PM
PLANS ON FILE ANO PLACE OF
BIO RECEIPT DISTRICT OFFICE.
17210 Oak St . Fountain Valley, CA
92708 PURCHASING DEPART-
MENT
FOR THE GOVERNING BOARD,
Jean C Murphy. Purchasing Agent
Approved. Jecll; Mahnken. AUit·
1an1 Superintendent. Person·
nel/Adm1nlstre1tve ServlcM
Published Orange C~at Oa11y Pilot
Aprll 25. May 2, It~
.... 11
NOTIC9 OP TIWilTU"t tALI , ........ ,..Mate
..oRTAJff NCmCS TO "'°""" OWNIRl YOU AM .. D91'AUL T UNDO A
DllO Of' TMllT, DATIO ~
..... 1t. 1-. UNILIM YOU TAKI
ACTfOH TO "'OTICT YOUfl PRONRTY, IT MAY M IOU> AT A
PU9IJC IALi. • YOU •B AN IX~A TlON Of' THI NATUM
Ott THI "'0C::HDtNO AOAMIT YOU. YOU aHOUt.D CONTACT A
LAWYlll
On Ml y 1e. 1984, It 10-00 A.M •
IMPERIAL CORPORATION Of
AMERICA .. duty •PPOlnted
Tru1tee under and pursuant to
Deed of Tru1t recorded September
15, 1"°· es tnlt. No 11139•, In book 13743, page 758. of Olfk:lel Re-
cords in the ofiic. ol tile County
Recorder ol Orange COU1y. State of
camorma e111CU1ed by RONALD w
DUVALL. an unmarried man WILL
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (pay-
ebta 11 time of Hie In lawf\11 money
ot the United Stet .. , et tile North
tront entrance to the County
Courtlloute, 700 Civic Center Ortve
Wast, Santi Ana, Calllomla all right,
hlte and lnler .. 1 conveyed to end
now held by It under eald Deed of
2258·84 Trust In the pre>perty situated In Mid
------------County end State d..crlb9d u : A CONDOMINIUM COMPRISED f'tmlC NOTICE
FICTJTIOUI IUH•H
NAMI aTA TIMIWf
The lotlOwlng persons are dotng
business n ·
Detanae Systems Engineering.
20091 Moonltde Ctrcle Hunttnglon
Beacn. Cetll 92646
Gary Lynn Back 20091 MoonUde
Circle, Huntington Beach, Calif
92646
Thia bustneas ts conducted oy an
lndtvlduel
Gary Lynn Back
Thia s111ement w11 tiled wltn the
County Clerk of Ore.nge County on
April 16 l984
F243111
Pubt1sned Orange Coest Dally
PtlOI April 25 May 2. 9. 16, t9S4
2249-84
P\RIC NOTICE
OF
Parcel I An undivided lnterell In
and to Lot 1 or Traci 10698, tn the
City ol Coste MeH. County ot Or·
ange. Slit• of C.ttfornla, u per
map cei::orded In Book 453. Pages .a 10 50 of Miscellaneous Meps.
EXCEPTING THEREFROM Unlta
1 to 8 1nclusl~ •• lhown upon the
Condominium Plan record9d In
8ook 13•85, P999 1690, of Offictll
Records
Parc.i 2 Unit 7 ae anown upon
the Condom1n1um Plan referred 10
1n Parcel 1 above
The street address end othet
common de~n11ton, If any, of the
reat property deecrllled above II
purported to be 2 t63 Krtstln Lane,
Costa Mesa. Callfornl• 92827
The urideraloned TruatM dle-
cta1ms any t11bllf1y for any tneorrect·
ness ol the street addr ... end othet
common dHtgnatton. tf any. lhown
herein
K-10l14 Satd .. ie will be made, but
Notice of .... of without co,,.-.1n1 or w11ranty, e•·
RMI ftfopattr et press or lmpu.d, reg.,dlng tltle,
l'ffv•t• le6e posaeuton. or encumbrencM. to
No A 119Clll3 pay the remaining pr1nci9&1 sum ol
In the Superior COYrl oT the Stitt the nota(s) ..wred by Mid Deed of
of Ca11torn11 tor the County ol Or-Trust w11n Interest thereon. ea
ange provided m said nota(a), edvenc.ee.
lri Ille Maller Of tne Estate ot If any uoder tile terms of H id DeeO
Nadine Eremenko Stukk1e, De· ot Trusl. lees. cnarges and ex·
ceased ~nses ol 1ne Trustee and ol the
Nottce rs nereby given tn11 the 1rus1 created by said Oe9d ol Trust
undersigned will sell at Pr1va1e .. 1e. tor 1ne amount reasonably estl·
10 ine n1gnes1 and best b<ddet sub-ma1ed 10 be $93 400 00
1ec1 10 cont1rma11on ol said Superior Tne benellCllry under saJO Deed
Cou11 on or alter tile 30tn day ot of Trust nerelolore e.r<ecuted end
April 198• at tile OlltGe ot Jotln M delivered to Ille undersigned a wrrt-
Gustal50n A Proten1on11 Corpor-ten Oecleratton of Oalaull and Oa-
ation. 19762 Mec;Ar111ur Blvd 3rd mand for Sale. and a written Notice
Fl . Irvine. CA 92715 COU,,ly ol Of. of Oalaull end Eleclton to Sett The
1ng• State ot Cahtom•a. all rrghl. undersigned ceuM<I aald NotlOe ot
t•tle and 1nteres1 ol satd deceased at Oelaull and Election to Sell to be
the ttme of death ll'd alt tM rignt. recorded In the county Wfler• the
11t1e and mternt that the M late of rut property II located
said deceased nas acquired by OP-Data Aprll 9. 198.C
eret1on of law or othetW1M Olher IM PERIAL CORPORATION OF
then or '" addllton 10 11111 of •aid AMERICA
deceHe<l al the time or ONtn. In u Hid Trultee
1nd 10 all lhe cer1a1n real property P O 8o11 631 Sen Diego, CA 112112
,,tualed 1n 1ne City of Coste Me ... (619) 292-6480
.:ounty ot Orange. State ot Call-By Ealrellla Cnamt>erteln, AHt
•ornia, par11cu1arly dascrtlled as fol· Secretary
1ow1 10-w11 Publlahed Orange Cout Dally Piiot
North 63 5 teet ol tne South 317 S April 18, 25. Mey 2. 1984
feet ol Block G. tn Traci 81-u per 2 113-&4
map recorded rn Book 20 pages 1 &
2 ot Miscellaneous Maps ol Mid
County
-nore common1y known as 1922
Pomon1. Costa Men CA 92627
Terms or sale cu ll in taw1ul
noney of tile United Stites on con·
lrma11on of sakl. 01 part casn and
balance evidenced by note secured
by Mortgage or Truat Oe9d on the
proper1y so SOid Ten per cent of
amounl btd 10 be deposited with
Old
Bids or otlers lo be 1n writing and
will be rece1veo at tne aforesaid ol·
hce al any 11me a11e1 \hit tir11 pubtt-
calton nereol and Delore date of
sale
Oaled lhlS 1 ttn day ol Aprlt. 1984
Jonn M Gustafson
A11orney tor Adm1nlstr11101
3ererd J Stullkie
Adm1n1sl1ator or the e11e1a
ot said Decedent
Pullllt111ed Orange Col.It 09lly P1lo1
Aprtl 18, 19, 25 1984
PUBLIC NOTICE
1<·10873
Notice of Sale ol
AHi Property 11
Prlu ta S1i.
No A122H 6
2105·~
1n tne Superior COYrt ot Ille State
ot Ci11ttorn1a 101 tnto Counry of Or-
P\8.JC NOTICE
8TATEMDfT ~
AIAHOONMl!Wf M UM Oft
FICTITIOUS BUIMH NAME
The lollowtng peraona have aDan-
doned the use of tile Flctlllou• Bust·
nass N1me ROYAL QUEEN
HEAL TH SPA. 2352 El Toro Rd .. Et
Toro. Ca 92630
The FtclltiOUI Butlnns N•me r•
!erred was loled 1n Orange County
on December 12, 1983 r230252
Marlowe Evenaon, 9162 El R110
Dr Ville Park. Ca 92667
Corinne Evenson. 9 162 El Alto
Or VIiia Park. Ce 92667
Tnta bu11ne11 wes conducted by
en 1nd1Y1dua1
Tiits 11atemen1 wu filed with 1M
County Clerk ol Orange County on
Aprtl •. 1984
Pubhlhed Orll\ge Coast Delly
P1to1 N>ftl 18. 25. May 2. 9 1984
204&-84
PtBLIC NOTICE
K-10872
Notice ol Sale of
Real Propeny at
Print• 81le
No A 122745
•n 1ne Sui>eroO< Court of the State
o! <..ahlo1n1e for the COYnty ol Or.
Ange
th £' h earing Y1)u1 appear I 11noeo tn 1ne Metler of the Eatafe of Leo In 1ne Matier ot tne E.s1e1e ot Knlllin Deceased
ance may l.x• tn pt>rS<m or by Mildred Henry DeceaMd NottG• 11 nereby given that 1na
your attorney I Notice IS hereby given 1h11 lhe undersigned will Mii al Prtv11e sate, If YUU A IU: A CREDI I under1111ned will tell at Pn111te Mle 10 the h19hast and belt bidder sub-
TOH or 0 1 onuna(•nt l'redttor 10 tne nognest end bell b<dder aub· 1ect to conhrmet10n of Mid Superior ., 1&<:1 10 conltrmauon ol said Superl0f1 Court on °' etle< the 30th day ol
of thl' d~·t•J:-...od. You mu!>l Court on or atter the 30th day ol .-.prtl 196• at 0141 olltee of Lawler
f 1ll' y our da1111 ·" llh l h1· Ap111 198• at tne otl•c• ol Lawi.t Feh• & Hatt 695 Town Center Or1va
l l >Ur 1 Ill pn'!.4 nl ti to th<' pl.'r ftol" & Halt 695 Town Center Drive. Ste 1850 Cos11 Mesa. CA 92626
S1e 1650 County ot Orange State COYnty of Orenge. State of CI H·
son;.I reprc•'t.'ntdt1ve ap ot California all nghl. 111i. and toinra all r1gh1. title end 1~e1t ol
pointed b y the l'OUrt wnhtn interest ot sa•d dect11aed al the ume Hid deoeued at the 11me 1 deatn
four month~ from tht' date or ot du1n Jno all lhe nght title end 1nd 011 1ne right 1111e and 1er .. 1 flr~t l'l..,Ulltlt'l' of lf'llCrs as 1nterr!SI lhll tne H l818 Of •aid d .. lhl t Iha eatale of H id deceaSed 11H ceaseo nas acquired by OpetltlOt'I acquired by operetton or law or
prov1d1-<l 1n Sc'<·t11Jn 700 o f 01 law or 01,,_, .. other th111 or •n otherWlse otnet 1n1n or tn odd1tton
tht· P r11hJt1· Cod<· or CJ ll add1t1on to 1na1 ot ...ci de<lM..CS. at to 11111 ot eatd deceased. at the 11me
fornm Thl' ttnw for rilin g 1ne llMe ot daatll. In end to 111 the ol oeath. 1n en<I to e11 the oartaln
datn\S w tll no t t•Xp1r1· prtor e .. 111n r .. l. l)fopeny 11tuatlld In the feat, prQPefty lllulted '"11141 Cl1y ol Caty Of Brea, County ot Orange, Br .. County OI Ore.nge. State of
U> four rno11th11 rrom lhl' dat(' S111e of California. IMl'ltcularly de C.Ufornia, ptftlcultrly deecrlbed H
of the hl'artng not.K'Cd above scribed •• IOllOWS, to-wit IOllow•. tO·wit YOU MAY EXAMINE Anundl't'lded e>M-tw.ifthft112tn+ An undtVidtcS ona-t......ihh 111121 lntarH t In 111 tllet reel Pl~ tltu· lntefeat tn ell that real property allu•
1-hc file kept by the t.'Ourt Ir ated In the City ot Br ... County of at9d 1n the City 01 BrM . COUf1ty of
you a rt' lnlt'f"11tl'd In the es· Orange, State 01 Clllfornla d• Orenge Slit• ol Cahl0<n1a de·
, 'l th acrtM<I H lolloW• Krl~ H foltowt ... e. you ml Y •rvc• u pon e Loi 24, 1n Block C of Tract No Lot 24 1n a1oc1c C. ol Tract No
c>><f't·utur or .idmm1strator, or 1S4 u ahown on • map recorded In 1 ~ u imown on 1 mac> recorded "'
upon lhc attom l'y for the ex-Book t2. Page 14 of MtlOellaneoua eootc 12 P1ge t4 ol Mltc*l1MOU1
t.'<'Utor o r admmtstrator, 3n d Mape. Atcorbt ot Mid Orenge M1P1 Aecord• of aaid Ottnge
f t le w tth th<' court w i th County. Cetllornia County, Calilorni1 more commonly known 11 400 S more commonly •mown u 400 S proof of M'rv1(''('. 11 w riu.t•n S1ev.r1. BtM. CetUorn11 sievers. ert1, c.111orn11
rc>quMit 111.Uling t hat you de Term• of HI• catl'I 1n lawful Term• 01 ule catt'I ltt te~ul
sin · SfX"Cl8l no tJce of the f tl· mOMy ol lhe llnllld StatH on con-money 01111e United StltH on con. ma o f an inventury and ;lp llrmatton 01 ..... or part ClUh Ind llfm.ttlon ol u i. or W t C&th ano .. bal•nc• tvtOar'ICecl by nola MCUred bal~ .,,ioenc.d by not• MCU,_.,
pra1wmt·nt of t"'IUttf' .uset..s or by Mor1gage or Tru11 Deed on lh9 by M«tglOf OI Trull Deed on Ille
o( th<' pc-l1tmns or attoUnt.a Pl'oe>ert't to S010 Ten P9I cent Of pr°'*ty eo tOld Ten I* c.nt Of
m<'nllon l'd In Set tton 1200 •mount Did to be dee>011tMI wtlh amount bod to be del>C*led _,.h
D•d bid 1tnd 1200 !\ 11( thl' \.ahform a D1<1• or oilers to be tn wrt11n; 11'd 8ldl or olt~a 10 be 111 wnttng ano
Prob.it(' Cod•· will be reGetved at tht 11or ... 1d ol-Nill bl racalll9CI at the elot9Said of· ROBERT R II UR W ITZ rout •nr 11,,,. 111., 111e 11111 puttll· IOI at •ny 11me at1er the ftrat publi HUR W I T z • REM ER & cat1Qn t•.,IOf i no ri.fort date of 'at1011 hefe<>I and before da11 ol ••le "" 0 1\'l'tCE,ZO Oatedlllt• t3th dayot•orll •98• Oat9dthla 13ttldey OIAprll 1914
HO ~~port C.fQlfr Dr l AWl.[R F[LtlU HALL LAWLEA. rcux . HAU Salte U SS M Town Center Otl\19 • te.!.O GH Tciwn Center °' •1850 Cot1a M ... CA 9212t Costa M ... CA t212t
t"1porl 8Hc11, A . fU 60 At10<114J)' tor Olenn E~ l<nlrtin Allor~ f.ot Qlertn f1101M Kn.tfln 759-07111 Glfonn (~ Knrfftn l)Wltl (Ugene Kl'•lflfl
Puhhi.hf'<I ( )r """W• t '011~t SPM.111 A1Jm1n11trator of IM> 5pc.1al .AOM~ttllalOf of Illa
"' 1•1• of aaid Dececlent u1a1e ot ... 0.C.08'\t. l l;ulv Pllm Ap11l H :l~. May l'ubhall*I Ora~ Coall 0111, Pilot Pvttllll\ed Qi~ Coad Dlillly PlfOt
1 lffff -1 Aprtl 18 19 2~ t9 • Aptit 1e It ':II , ... ii HI R<I t toe-" 1 tOr·fM
nctmout ., ..... MAM! ITAftlllJff
Tiit loaowlno penotll .. OOlnO
~u:
WORLD AFFAIR PRODUCTION, 121~ s. Douglas, Santi Ana. CA.
92704
Brenda Jq~ HeN. 1210 S.
Oouglp, Santa Ana. CA n704
Mknaal Terry Wiltlarnt. 1210 S Ooualu, Sentt AM. CA t2704
'nils butiMll .. condU019d by •
o-'*al p.ntle'Sh!P· 8ren<la J . Halt
Mlat\MI T. Wllll1m1
Thi• llalement WU II*' with tile
County Clerk of Orange County on
Al)fll 9. 19M ,Ml111
Publlahed Orange Coast Dally
Pilot Aprll 18. 25. Mey 2. i , 1984 • 2100-84
NlJC NOTICE
NOTICI TO C"IDITOH 0, •ULK TllANlf'H <teo•. 1101 .. 101 u.c.c.)
Nolkle 11 her.Cy given to cr9dl·
tor• of tne within named 1ran1-
ler0t1•I tnat a bulk 1ranaler ia about
10 be made on peraonal property
he<elnaltef deacrlbed
The names end bu1lneel ad·
dreues ol tile Intended tranaterora
•re. PA TRICK A M ERCURIO.
PAULA J SCHOPPE. 2813 Vitia
Way. Newport 8M<:tt. CA
The narne(s) end bualnHs ed-
dreu of the Intended tr•n1leree(1)
are RICHARD E COLLIER. 438
Aliso, Newport Beach. CA
That the property Plf11nenl lier•
10 11 described In general u :
1urn1tura, lhtlures. equipment, etc.
and 11 loeated al 2813 Vllla Wey,
Newport BHch, CA
Tiie Bu11nese neme uNd by Hid
1r1nsteror1 11 .. ,d location la:
PAULAS
Tll11 said bulk tranefer 11 tn·
tended to be consummat9d at tile off•~ or GRAMERCY ESCROW
CORPOAA TION. 3"07 WM I Sixth
StrMI. Sulle 711. Loa Angetn, CA.
90020 on or 1ttar May 115, tt84.
Tile neme and addrMI wnere
cta1ma may be flied 11 Gramercy
Escrow Corporal ion, 3407 Wll'I
Slwth Street. Sulla 711 . Loe An·
getes, Calltornla 90020
The fut day for llllng c1alm1 In 1hlt
ac;row rs May 15. 1984 wtllcll 11 th9
busineta day before the conaum•
mation date specified above
So lar as known 10 said Intended
TranalerMC•I said 1nteneled Trena-
lerortsl used tne toctow1ng ad·
dtltonal business names end 9<1·
dresses w1th1n Tile three years last
PHI
Dated Aprol 2 1984
Richard E Collier
Intended Transteree(s)
Put>hahed Orange Coast 0111y P1to1
April 25 1984
Cl'l'-ati7
T.S. NO. V .... /,ll'M
RecOfclad 41>/ ..
tnelnuMftl No .... 1•1to
NOTtCE Oft DlfAULT AND
ELECTION TO MU UMOE"
DHDOFTRU8T
IMPCH'T AWf NOTICE
IF YOU.. l'tU)flERTY II IN FOM·
Cl08UM MCAUN YOU AM
IEHINC> IN YOutt l'AYMIMTI. IT
MAY BE 80lD wrntOUT ANY
COURT ACTION, and you ml)' have
the legal right to bring your account
on gooCI 11andtng by peytng all of
PHI due peymanll plus peonitted
costs and expenses within three
months from tl'le date thlt notice ol
default wu recorded This amount
II $ 15,640 28, II Of 3128/84, and
wlll Increase untll your account be-
comes currant. You may not !'lave to
pay the entire unpaid portion ol
your eccount, even though lull pay·
ment was demanded. but you must
pay the amount ltlled above
Alter three month• from the dete
ot recordation of this documenll-
uon lwtllCh date ot recordlllOt'I ap-
pears hereonl. \hlless the oblig1tton
being foreclosed upon pefmil• a
tonger period. you hi ve onty Ille
legal right to stop the foreclosure by
paying the entire 1mount de·
mandeCI by your creditor
To find out the amount you m1111
pay or lo arrange for paymenl to
stop the loreclOaure, or II your pr()p-
flf1y ts tn loreclOlure for any ot""
reuon. contact AMERICAN SAV·
INGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION,
15725 E. Whittler Blvd , Whittler.
CA 90607, (7141 773-71 24 ,
B 1·21043 t 70 (El
II yOY have any questlon1, you
should contact 11 lawyer Of Iha gov-
ernment agency which may n1ve In·
sured yOYr losn
Remember YOU MAY LOSE
LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOT
TAKE PROMPT ACTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhl t
SUNKIST SERVICE COMPANY, II
now duty app0ln19d TrullM un<lef 1
Deed ot Trust dat9d 11115177 ell·
ecu1ed by PATRICK WILLIAM
HANIFIN & M ARCIA A NNE
HANIFIN. HUSBAND AND WIFE u
T rustor. 10 MCUre obl10atlon1 In
favor of AMERICAN SAVINGS &
LOAN ASSOC IAT ION . aa
Benehciery Recorded on 12/C>e/77
H document no G204 ~ 1248 1
page 109 ot 0111e111 Record• ltl the
olltee ol the Reoorrter ot Oranoe
County. Cattlornl1, tnctudlng 1
no•••I tor the eum of S 112,000 00
Thet lhe beneflciel tntare1t ul'ICMr
11\td Deed of T ruat end the o«>ll·
gattona MCured tllefet:>y are pr•
ently held by lhe ~flelary That 1
brH Cll of Ind de41Ult In lhe ot)l.
gltlon lor wtucll H id OMd of Tr1.111
11 MCurtty hu oocurred In thel the
payment hu not bean mtde ol:
Failure to mtk• Ille 511 5183 Pt)'·
ment of principal end/or lnttr•t
and au aut:>•equent payment•.
IOQatllat with lete tnergee, lm-
poundt, ltn90Und dej)Oslte, 11 In)',
under the term• of MIO no1• or
OMd of T fuel and tll IUbeequenl
peymenta ~~due 1Mr• an., tndudlng a11y tale cttarvae or
Olhaf tum• payable unw the t•m•
of M'<S Note or Dald of T rvet.
That by reeaon lhettol, tlla Pf•
ent bltllllelary under IUCh Dald OI
Tr1.11t. lip exaout9d and ~9<1
IO Mid Trul l .... Wl1tlen Oectet-
•tlon ol o.«autt and Demand '°' s..ie. and h .. deel0s4ted -i1f1 Mid
Trwtw, eud\ Deed ol T Ntt tnd ..
the document• IMOenelnQ tilt OOll·
1atton1 9*:Ut.O thereby, eno l\U
•lered and doaa ,,.,lby daClarl
all tume MCured thereby tmtneol
ataly dvt and payabllt and Ml
.-.c1eo at1d c10t1 1teracv alaCI 10
ceuu tne 1ru11 property to bl tote!
to w 11efy •Ila obllgelione ltCvt'tod
thereby DAT~ 03128114
AMIRICAN SAVIN08 AND LQAN
AUOCIATl()N
l y VttoonMI M St ., Ala t VlCt
Ptteid9n1
By Aolliert C Me llald, Alaltttnl
S.Cratlr)
Pubfltlltd 0.•not I 0t ~1
A!lfll 11 It H ~IY 1 lt84
t ..
I
I -
Double the enjoyment of your decorated Easter
eggs by turning the extras into fla vorful feasts.
Besides the traditional egg salad there are a host or different ways to tum those extra hard-cooked
eggs intocrcauve, del icious dishes.
For a simple layered cas9Crole, try Huevos
Mexican that can be as hot or mild (controlled by the
amount of chilies) as taste preference dictates. It's
convenient. too. in that it can be made the night
before you p!an to serve it. Cover and refrigerate it.
Then. add an extra 5 to 10 minutes baking time.
Make leisure time more enjoyable with-appetiz-
ing Sunlit Cheese SpreaCi. Savor it on bread and
crac kers or on fresh vegetables.
For a deligh tfu lly different combination of
softness and crunch, sweetness and tang that makes a
great luncheon en tree, try Honey ofan Egg Salad, or
for a warm, nutri tious after-school-snack, how about
Peanutty Egg Pockets?
And Egg Dia voletto is an easy~to-make,
eye-appealing dish that's fancy enough forcompany,
but economical enough for an anyday famil y dinner.
BUEVOS MEXICANA
12 tortllla1, halved
Z cu1 ( 11 oances eacb) mild encbllada u ace,
divided
IZ bard-cooked eg 1, sliced
1 cap dairy 1oar cream
Ii'& teaspoon n it ·
Ii'& teaspoon groaad camla
Ii'& te.Hpooa ~U powder
I Ii'& ups cllopped oaJon
'h cap drained coarsely cltopped pitted ripe olives
(about z OUCH )
1 cu <• ouces) chopped creen cltilles
I cup <• onces) 1bredded Monterey J ack cbee1e
DaJry 1our cream, optional
Drailaed pitted ripe olives, sliced, optional
Stand 8 of the tortilla halves upright along sides of
lightly greased 13 x 9 x 2-inch baking d ish. Cover center of
dish with an additional 4 tortilla halves. Spread with I can
ofthesauce. Top with the egg slices.
In small bowl, beat together I cup sour cream and
seasonings unul blended. Stir in onion. 1h cupolivesand
chi hes. Spread overeggshces. Top with remaining 12
tortilla halves. remaining enchilada sauce and the cheese.
Bake in preheated 350-degree oven until bubbly.
about 30 to 35 minutes. Garnish with additional sour
cream and olive slices. 1f desired. Makes 6 servings.
SUNLIT CHEESE SPREAD
1 package (3 OllllCH) c ream cheese, softened
% tea1poon1 prepared mHtard
1 teaspooo lemon jalce
~ teHpooD 1arllc powder 'urd·eoolaed •u•. clllopped ~ c.p (l oucn) 1bredded Qeddar ~eese
V. up mlaced 1ree• oaJoat wldl tops
Z to 3 tablHJ>OOlll toa1ttd seume seeds•
In small bowl. beat together cream cheese. mustard.
lemon Juice and garlic powder until blended. Stir in eggs,
cheese and onions. Cover and chill at least I hour to blend
flavors. Form into a log or ball. Roll in sesame seeds.
Makes 8 appetizer servings.
•To toast. spread sesame seeds in ungreased baking
pan. Bake in preheated 350-dcgree oven. shaking pan or
stirrin3occasionally. until lightly browned. about I 0
minutes.
HONEY OF AN EGO SALAD
,,. cop Honey Llme Dre11lng, recipe follows
WHIPPING UP
COOKBOOKS
NOTALLPLAY
By CHRISTINE DECKER
IPK!el t• , ... Dally Piiot
Writing your own cookbook can be an expensive
horror story or 1t can be a new and profitable career.
The first thing. the chef-turned-author has to realize
is. you don't just write a cookbook and expect the world to
come to you. The actual writing 1s probably the most fun to
do hut it is just the heginning.
It's very rare to find a
publisher unless you're
famous. So. plan on being
your own publisher and find
an artist to design a cover and
illustrations fo r inside pages.
To prepare for her publi-
cation. Dede Napoli. author
of "The Starving Students
Cookbook.. .. attended a com-
munity college course on how
to write and sell a book and a
writer's conference. Then she
had a prototype made of her
small cookbook and took it to
the American Bookseller's
Convention in Anaheim last
year.
"I kept takinJ it around
to different publtshipg rep-
resentatives and no one
seemed to like it. Finally. this
one suy I had bugcd told me
Dede Napoli my book was the most de-
pressing thing he'd ever seen. He said it was terrible. My
cover design was all wronJ. You have to be able to take a lot
of rejection.'' said Napoli, Fountain Valley.
She went back to her college student artist and they
rcde iancd the book and tllustrat1oos makina them more
upbeat.
Now comes the e.llpens1ve part. A printer l\as to be
found who will work with small lots of books at a
reasonable co t. The taraer the quantity. the less the cost
per book but it's not always wise to have a larae amount of
books printed the first time around.
"If you have too many printed. you may find you need
to cha nae somethina and you're money's aJI tied up ... said
Napoli.
She had 1.000 books pnnted for SS.000. Her book has
a ~1mple bindmf and no color. She sells it for SS.9S. The
first year she on y made about I 0 cents per book but she
did sell 30. 760 copies and was number scvc11 on The New
York Times best seller cookbook hst last ~car. She's noN
makina about SI per book and sells 1,000 1n a month.
, Joyce Gardner. a retired curriculum consultant from
Fountain Valle~. rttcntly had 2.000 copies of her "Citrus
Cookbook." pnnted for about $2.400 that included an
t.
Z 14 cap1 chopped apple (about 3 small) t bard-cooked egg1, cbopped
1 can ( 8 ounces) pineapple cbunk1 ln juice, drained
and halved 31, cup chopped celery
'h cup chopped pecan or walnuts
Lettuce leaves, oplional
Prepare Honey Lime Dressingandchill. l n medium
bowl. ligh ti y toss together a 11 i ngred icn ts except Jett ucc
leaves. Chill to blend fla\ors. Serve on lettuce leaves if
desired. Makes 3 servin~s.
Boney Lime Dreulng
1 egg
3 table1pooo1 lime juice
'iii teaspoon uJt
'iii teHpoon c1rry powder
Dasll groud mace or nutmec
'h cup ltoney
"'• c up plain yo1art
In small saucepan. stir together all ingredients except
yogurt. Cook over medium heat. stirring constantly.just
An array of cookbooks published last year by areas authors.
work. a four-color cover and typesetting charges. She sells
her book for $4.95. She's sold some to a couple of
organizations and a few gourmet kitchen stores. She's
hoping to cash in on the Olympic gift sales.
The Corona del Mar Ward Relief Society for the
Church of Latter Day Saints, printed 1.500 copies of the
"Goose and Gander." a family cookbook. for about
$11,250. Their book was on htgh-quality paper, spiral
bind ins, and a thick four-color cover. They sold it for S 10
a book and lost money on 1t. said Susie Gross, artist and
church member.
"We didn't do 1t for profit 10 the first place. We sold 1t
throuah word of mouth and through fnends. AU the work
was volunteer. We wanted to aet our women church
members acquain\ed and more involved. We'd never do 1t
apin. It was too e.llpcnsive and too much hard work. It
would be a hard wav to make monev." said Gross.
Kathy Philipson, Kay Pencc and Barbara Ramet. all
teachers. had I 0.000 copies of their .. Monster Cookbook ...
for youna cooks. printed at a discount by a fnend of theirs.
Their colorful, larae·stylc. spiral bound book sells for
$6.9S. At Chnstmas time. 1t was beint sold at several
bookstores. They admit sales have slowed
"None of us art too aifted 1n sales and organ1zat1on.
We need a markcttnJ company, .. said Ra met.
Of those interviewed, only Napoli has a dtstnbutor
She also d1str1butt, her own and several othc~·
cookbooks
"You need puhhc1t)' and a d 1,trihutor l he mmt
important thing to kno w 1s to share the sclhng of u. You
have to have other people out there selling your book. Get
as many distrtbutors as you can. Ifs the only way to get
your book out to enough people to make a profit. Then,
once It sells. you can interest a publisher." she said.
She has sincc signed with Warner books. which will
increase her sales and her profits.
In the beainmns, however. she "'"-cnt around to bool.
stom and '1ff shops. If you can prove the book will sell
they'll take tt. Most stores want a 40 pcT'CCnt discount and
the books that don't sell. get returned.
Napoh said another wa) to incruse sales 1s to
volunteer to do demonstrations on teJevwon. to groups.
Jlfi shows or club meetings. Newspaper and radio
interviews also help to sell books. She also attends aift
shows throuahout the countn
Philipson. from the "Monster Cookbook... tool.
another strateay to aet ~me media attention She
concocted one of lhe book's fancier rcc1pn and sat in the
parkina lot of the daily telev1s1on show. "A M Los
Anacles" for scvcraJ hours. he made the secunty auard
sample the creation. Finally. he called the producer and
made him wte the dish. The Monster authors were s11ncd
to appur for the Halloween how.
"The be t advice t can live.an)' would-be cookbook
wnter is to thank of an onainal idea and then don't stop
when someone turns you down. Once the ball stans
rollina. 1t doesn't stop." td Napoli
I
unlil sauce comes 1oa simmer. Remove from heat .. Cool
slightly. Blend in yogurt. Cover and chill before tossing
salad. Makes about 1 •1. cups.
PEAIWTTY EGO POCKETS
'h c•p aclraiDed caued cn .. ed plDeappJe la
jaice (abotlt 3 Otqattl)
o 14 et1p peuat batter
li9 tea1pooa salt
(Pleue eee EGG DISHES/CS)
..
C2 Orange Coat DAILY PILOTIWedoeed1y. April 25, 1884
DESSERTS DELECTABLE -------Liqueurs •underpinnings·
of Bert Greene's recipes
lfyou'rcapcrson whocolltttsrcc1pesfora hobby, you
know that tbett are two files to keep: one marked "must
try" and tbe ot.beT, .. maybe tome ~y."
Ben GrttM, well -known food authority and
cookbook author. has desjantct two de sens that belonJ in
1he "must try" catcsory. Both capitaliie on the nch,
fra&r:anl .flayors of liqueurs. which Greene uses in subtle
and in1ngum1 way
Each recipe challenges us to identify lhc beguiling
taste and establish how it was achieved. Greene describes
his use ofliqueurs as ··undcrpinn1ngs.·· 1n other words. the
liqueur flavors arc not bold and blatant but they arc the
necessary ~omplcmcnl 10 the other inaredients.
Chocolate Hazelnut Tone is a sublime combination
of huelnut liqueur and unsweetened chocolate in a dense.
moist brownie-like confection. Petite portions of this one.
please.
Jf you art planning ahead or like to keep a dessert on
hand for future use, the torte may be wrapped in foil or
plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for a day. or
1n the freezer up to t hree weeks with no loss of charater.
Oran$C Scented Flan is a Bert Greene creation at Its
best. Unhkc the Span1sh-s1ylc flan or French Creme
Caramel. which is baked in a shallow. flat. ceramic dish
desisned for this purpose. Greene has chosen 10 bakc his
version in a small soume dish.
'4 e., a1ea.1t llqaeu.r
I lllrae •u• 1 n p pualated 1111r
'Pl np silted all·pvpote hour
'4 CllP l"ffad UHlHtt
I Ctlp cM.,ed M&elaltS
Huvy cream, wllJppe4 (opUoul)
Cllocolate c.111 (optloul)
Melt chocolate with butter 1 n top of double boiler over
bot, not boilina, water until smooth. Stir in liqueur. Jn
larac bowl beat eggs with supr until lisht and lemon
colored. Slowly beat in chocolate miJtturc. Beat in flour,
one tablespoon at a time. Stir in ground hazelnuts and
chopped hazelnuts.
Butter a 9-inch loose-bottom tan ring. Pour batter
into pan. Place pan on a balung sheet. Bake in a 350-degrce
oven 30 minutes, until a toothi_>ick inserted an center
comes out fairly clean. Cool I 0 minutes on a rack; loosen
edges of ring.
' COQI completely before rcmovinJ ring. Garnish with
whipped cream and chocolate curls. 1f desired. Serve cut
into thin wedges. Yield: 10 or more servings.
BERT GREENE'S
ORANGE SCENTED FLAN
t,; cap 1ranulated sagar
I ~ e11p1 milk
J Clip heavy or wlllpplng cream
J tablespoon vanilla When turned out. 11 stands 1all and elegant. The
texture of this flan 1s clo~ 10 1ha1 of a cheesecake -satiny
smooth, creamy and nch "'1th an ··underpinning'' of
orange from the subtle use ol mpk sec. This dessert. too.
can be made a da) or t"'o before sen 1ng. Cover and keep
refrigerated.
l teaspoon grated orange rind
3 large, wbole e11s
3 eu yolks Chocolate Hazelnut Torte la a molat, brownie-like confection.
tf you're looking tor 1hi: ultimate finale 10 a plain or
fancy dinner. tuck these rn:1pes into the ··must try'· file.
BERT GREENE'S •
CHOCOLATE HAZELN UT TORTE
i squres (% ou.n«s) UJUWeetened chocolate
'>la cup usalted buuer or margarine
,,,_ cap rrualated sagar
6 tablespoons triple sec, divided
~cup water
2 tablespoons granulated sugar
Heat oven to 350degrees. Warm a 1-quan souffied1sh
b> placi ng 1t in the oven 510 6 minutes. Meanwhile. heal 1/i
c up granulated sugar in a saucepan over medium heal until
sugar sutns to melt. cook. surring cons1antl). w11h a
PEOPLE ARE MORE INCLINED 10 TAKE SOME
THAN LEAVE SOME.
TRY OUR HIT-OF·THE·PARTY TRAYS.
wooden spoon until sugar hq,u1firs.
Reduce heat: cook. surnng constantly, until caramel
turn!> deep golden. Be careful not to overcook. Remove
from heat. .
Pour caramel into warm souffie dish. turning dish to
coat bollom and sides. reser.ve saucepan. lnven souffie
dish on a buttered piece of waxed paper (10 prevent
dnppings from hardening on any work surfaces); let stand
until cool. (Do not won) if caramel does no1 look smooth )
Heat milk. cream. and vanilla ma medium saucepan
until ho1: do not boil. Remove from heat. Stir in orange
rind. Beat eggs w11h egg yolks in a bowt. Beat m v.cup sugar
until hght and lemon-colored. Stir in 3 tablespoons lnple
sec Slowly beat in milk mixture.
Pour custard into caramel-coated souffie dish. Place
dish in a roastin~ pan on middle rack in oven. Pour boiling
water into roasting pan to 'h depth of souffie dish. Bake
um1I a knife msened an center comes out fau1yclean. about
I hour. (Do not let water in pan boil; if it begins to boil. add
cold water.) Cool flan on a wire rack; refrigerate at least 6
hours or overnight.
To make sauce for the flan: add 1h cup water to
reserved saucepan used 10 make caramel. Heat 10 boiling.
scraping remaining caramel bits from bottom and sides of
pan. Boil. stirring constantly. until mixture forms a thick
syrup; stir in 2 tablespoons sugar until smooth. Rcmov(
from heat: stir in remain in~ 3 tablespoons tnple S«.
Let stand to cool. rengerate until cold. To unmold
flan: heat I. inch of water in a skillet to boiling; tum off heat.
Dip a sharp knife 1n water: run it around the sides of the
flan. Dip bottom of souffied1sh in skillet fora few seconds.
Place a serving dash over the souffie dish and inven;
remove souffie dish. Pass sauce in pitcher with flan . Yield:
6 10 8 servings.
Rememher y(1ur la!lt party-how much
time and 1rouhle it was 10 prepare all 1he
food and ma~e 'l1 look ju~I right'! OK.
now forget it. Call u' and order a beau11f ul
HoneyBaked ... pany 1ray. You can still gel
1he comphmenl!I without all the fu!.'i!
Try tempeh instead of meat
-
•SANDWICH TRAYS
•CHEESETRAYS
•MEATTRAYS
A'llAHEIM l hl' \ 111 .... ,. f •'fllt'I 1:!!' 11 ..... ~hllt\l
I.II llJll RJ I . •"111 hh '11,J
('ORO"•\ 0•:1 \1 \ H -I I NI I c .. J\I H .. '
•"I l i t•'' •1(0)
t I fOHO lkll '''"'"' l'l.11.1 '"nh !-lto111 !<." m .. 11,1
\\,1\ :)r-JI f I J,.,,,~J 1 •1·1~1 1'\..,. \H~1
Ill' fl","" Rt\( II -1·,.111•1 llcJ,h OhJ 1.11
(, 1rltt. l1,f 0\. \I h• l<.1lt~h' • t f 11 )W)\ ,,-...,
OM\'<•• 111•1 ,, lu•11n .11 ".10.·ll.11 •, -1.J •N-<NNt
' ' ,, \ltl 1\1 'I, ... ,,\ •• 4 ,, , .. I I• •N• I ''-i ,,, ,, f ... ,, I
,, 111,IU \t II, \ll\ttW \ J \l>-1 \\1J1tH '\i1WIH ll•,ll\
\• .. I•' •t(IHWll,.,I ••tl\".t l\l1•\llttl\\\l1I'\ lil'\'•lli• \H"'\i I Nl\l k,tl>I \\'W\\ll"llH '\\'U!l1,,,,\\l•1t.I ,\,j\
11 \ • It \ M \ \ \' I \ \ti'' 11 \ I '. '\ \ \ \I t I• •M" \ .._, I i t'I \'I'
\,,,I\ \\I ' to\,, \\I I '"''\lit"·' \\IOlll)i ,,,, ... 11,
ONE TASTE IS ALL IT TAKES! \.. ''°' t_,hl l1tM\tt• .. 1t\ U.t\..,dll.m J11,
For Amcncans scou1mg supermarket shelves for a low
calorie. high protein. light main course food, something
free of cholesterol. but tasty, satisfying and versatile, the
answer is tempeh.
Tempeh (pronounced TEM-pay) is a heany. meatlike
soyfood. made from soybeans. that makes a delicious main
course staple in place of meat. fish. cheese. or poultry.
Tempeh. an essential feature of Indonesian cuisine. 1s
no ..... widely available tn America. Tempeh fits marvelous-
1) well 1n10 a host of familiar recipes which call for. sa).
tuna fish or chi cken. or 1n pasta. pate. cubed-chicken. or
dressing dishes. And tempeh creates a light. d1c1<onsc1ous
cuisine at the same lime
Tempeh. called the .. SO) food with culture .. because 11
is fermented. 1s the up-and-coming brother of the highly
popular tofu.
Emcq~ing from a time-honored tradition. tcmpeh fills
the American burger gap for l1gh1. meat-reduced. even
vegetarian. eating. and i1 provides high nutrition al low
cost. Witho ut anv undesirable extras -such as
cholesterol. ·
TEMPEH PATE
t small celery 1talkl
SQUEEZE FLEISCHMANN 'S
TO YOUR HEART'S CONTENT!
OW GET ALPO "IN THE
LARGE SIZE AND SAVE BIG!
-----~----50( OFF ANY 1
FOURi3%0Z :
CANS OF ALPO: 1
l•et•<• .. -
11000 405115
I
I
I
1
I ------------•
.....
New Fleischmann's. Squeeze Margarine.
The only 100% com oil, 0% cholesterol. squeeze margarine.
En1oy the grea1 taste of Fleischmann s . on hot vegetables or use conveniently
when basting. or for coating pans tor baking
Like regular Fleischmann s. Marganne Fleischmann s~ Squeeze Margarine
1s formulated to be used 1n a diet to help reouce serum cholesterol
196' N~ Branch Ill<
SAVE 15<:
when you buy
Fleischmann'sfk
Squeeze Margarine
29000
II
831536 _________________ ___,
•
% tablespoons celery leaf
t caps water or stock
l poud soy ~mpela
Y. cap batter ( 1 1tlck)
t to 3 cloves garlic, m inced
~ teaspoon ground allspice
•;, teaspoon ground cloves
% teaspoons d.ljon mustard
•;, cap laeavy cream
4 wbole peppercorns
I teaspoo• dried tbyme t teaspooou salt (omit if using stock>
% bay leaves
Vi onion, minced
''• poud masbrooms, chopped
•;, teaspoooa ground Htmeg
11, teaspoon pepper
% tablespoons cognac or brandy
I teaspoon tamarl soy sauce
Cut celery into 1/i inch slices. Add celery. celery leaf.
peppercorns. thyme, bay leaf and salt (if using) to 4 cups
water or well seasoned stock. Cover and simmer 10
minutes.
Cut 1e mpeh cakes into quarters and add to pot.
Simmer very ~cntly for I 0 minutes. then drain. discarding
celel) and spices. Cut tcmpeh into I inch cubes and set
aside. ·
Melt buller in a skillet. ..\dd onion. garlic and
mushrooms and sau1e slow) over medium heat until
onion 1s vel) tender. Add allspice. nutmeg. cloves and
pepper. sautc .2 minute!> more to blend flavors. then set
aside 10 cool.
Put tempeh cubes. sautecd vegetables and buuer and 2
tablespoons cognac in food processor bowl and process
until smooth. Add mustard. cream and taman anJ process
again. Taste for seasonings (more salt. pepper. mustard)
then scrape mixture into a 4-cup temne. small mold or
decora11ve bowl. Cover and refrigerate ;n least 4 hours
before serving. or as long as 3 days.
Let pate stand al room temperature at least 111 ho ur
before serving. Makes 4 cups pate. at least 12 servings.
Extras can be frozen.
MOCK CHICKEN SALAD
8 ounces tempeb, grain or soy
.,, cup mayonnaise
I tablespoon lemon jalce
21, cap chopped celery
•;, cap claopped dlll or sweet plck.Je
1 cap vegetable or clalcktn stock
lfJ cap soar cream or yoiart
14 teaspoon pepper
I bancb green onions, sllced
Lettuce
Paprika
Cut tempeh into v. inch cubes and simmer in stock for
10 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon and let cool. .
Blend mayonnaise. sour cream (or yoiun). lemoQ
1u1ce. pepper. celcl)'. green onion and dill pickle. Stir in
tempeh cubes and toss gentl). Add salt 10 taste. Cover and
chill for at least I hour Serve salad in lettuce hoed bowl.
Spnnkle with papnka. Serves 4.
DEVILED TEMPEH
7 t.o 8 oucH preseasoned tempela (e11tle&1 or bar1erst
I tablespoon salad oll
t or 3 green onJobl, 1Jlced tbln
"I cup sliced celery
4 tablespoons mayon.aalse
2 to 3 teaspoons prepared mustard
1 tablespoon mllk
% or 3 Frencb, onion or kaiser rolls
Salt to taste
Saute tempeh in 011 on each side until browned and
msp. Cool and cut 1empeh into v. inch cubes. Combine
lempeh. celery and green onions in a medium bowl. Mb
ma)onna1se. milk and mustard and add to the tempeh
m"ture. stirring gent I). Sall to taste and chill until !ICrving
time.
Sl1<"e the rolls 1n half and spoon on the deviled tempch.
Broil 2 10 3 minute~. until edges or rolls are cn sp.
PINEAPPLE TEMPER SURPRJSE
t pacllaac (7 or 8 ounces) 1ea101ed tempe .. IHargna
t CtatpooDI oil
I caa ( 8 01nces) cnast.ed pineapple
t to 3 stalks celery, diced
t Jrttll oaJODI, 1Uced
t tablespoon• pick.le reltslt
4 tablHpoMI mayoualM
Put oil in a medium skillet and sautc the tempeh
burgers 3 to 4 minutes on cjch idc. until hghtly browned.
Remove from skillet to cook.. And cut into v. inch cubes.
Drain the crushed pineapple and discard the juice.
Combine pineapple, tempeh cubes. diced eel~
sliced grtcn onion and pickle rehsh an a medium 11r.td
bowl. Stir an the mayonna1~ (try tofu mayonna1ic, 1( y<>u
hove some made up) until the salad 1s well ma.xcd Serve as
a \andw1ch fi lllnll or on a bed of salad ~ns. Serves 3 10 4.
642·4321
Dsrect or collect .
to ,,ub$cfjbft to your
hometown paper tht
•tdwest recipe revived I J An. old Midwest rec1pt that dcoerves revival is plaucr with the Qucso Fresco and cu W<d&c•. Then each
armers Chop Suey. . f11m1ly member can make has comb1nat1on. It really bears no resemblan« 10 011enw cookery ex~pt for the choppina and slicina. Rather. it is a hearty
c.ntrec salad that, bistoncally, makes use of the first
veietablc1 that came to matunt~ in the ba(kyard prdcn.
Queso Frcteo~Mcx1can pen skim cheese) and hard·
oookcd eus add hi -<1uality protein. while the sour cream
docs a beautafuljo ofblendtn& thett fresh flavors.
• . M~em transponation of produce 10 supermarkets ~kes It unnecessary to wait for your own aarden haniest.
10.u'll want to try this recipe now. esp«ially if you were a
lt(lle over realous when d yeing Easter esa1.
•' This colorful collection can be prepared well in ~vancc ~f mealti~e. Just slice and cube the vegetables a ~ted an the r«•IX' and arrange them on a leuuce lined
. . . ·:
TREAT TIME
SAYS IT'S
THE BERRIES
It's fabulous fresh strawberry time! Red. ripe and
luscious. America's fa vorite fruit 1s back in abundance ... to
enJOY an countless way~.
For the easiest treat of all. serve the juicy berries
sliced. topped w11h a dollop of whipped topping.
Or make a quack !lhortcakc with fresh baked
refrigerated biscuits. Tuck strawbeme!I -nestled 1n
whipped topping -between warm b1scu11 halves -then
heap another layer of bcrncs and whipped topping atop
each serving.
Fast and fun are Frozen Pudding Treats ... dessen on a
stick made wnh fresh berries. banana. whipped topping
and vanilla instant pudding and pie filling m ix. The treats
arc great for a children'!> binhday pany and make a
marvelously whimsical d inner party dessert too.
When the occasion calls for something more
·traditional. serve spectacular Strawberry Pie. It's a classic
and showy pie made easily with a baked 9-inch crust filled
with layers of strawberries topped w11h a sweetened glaze
~nd decorated with whipped toppmg.
FROZEN P UDDING TREATS
I 3~-oance package vanilla Instant pudding and pie
filling mix
I 8-ounce container {3 cups) whipped topping with real
cream, thawed
I plat strawberries, mashed
1 cup mashed banana
Prepare mix as directed on package for pie filling,
except using I cup milk:·fold in whipped topping and fruit.
Spoon into 15 5-0unce paper drinking cups: in sen wooden
sticks. Freeze until firm . Remove from freezer: peel ofl
cups. Makes 15 servings.
Variation: Substitute 41/1-ouncc package chocolate 1n~tan1 pudding and pae filling ma x for vanilla pudding
mix.
STRAWBERRY PIE
2 pints strawberries
3 tablespoons cornstarch
I cup sugar
Pastry for I crust 9-incb pie, baked
PAAMER'S CHOP SUEV
·~...,...-.
l (14..e.) ~eQMMFre~o (Mexlcupart1klm
dMele) e MN~ed egs•, n' la wed1es
I budltl rMAIMt, &Maly tllce4
! kDclMt ,,... .._,, dalaly sliced
l tars• net1mbert1 upeeled, cut la llalvet le11tllwlse, &Ilea 1llced
l tomatoes, cat in lar1e cube•
2 1reea ,.,,ers, cat la strips
1 plat ... r cr~am .
Wash lettuce and 5Cp&ra\C into leaves. Linc a large
dttp platter with the lettuce. Arrange round of chet'sc, ega
wedge and vegetables on lettuce. alternating green
vegetables with the other ingredients for color balance.
SPoOn sour cream into a small bowl and serve separate!).
Serves 6.
•Hard-Cooked Eggs
PlacC'eggs an a smgle layC'r in a saucepan . .\dd water to
a IC'vel at least one inch above the eggs. Cover pan and bring
to a boil over high heat. Remove from heat and let stand.
covered. IS minutes for large eggs.
Increase or decrease lime by about three minutes for
larger or smaller eggs. Drain off hot water and cool eggs
1mmcd1ately in cold water to prevent discoloration of
yolks.
To remove shells. tapenure surface of egg against s1dl'
of pan. Gently roll the egg between your hand and thl'
kllchcn counter 10 loosen shell. Peel. holding egg under
running water or in a bowl of water to help ease ofT shell.
~ .... urwoor .....a.-.,......,..........,__v... ,.,...
d'ce..ctD"...,otll'*"'-... ~---... ~ .. 41Pt!"""b~ .... -..~ ......... ~ ~ ......... frlllDIJIM,.. .............. , .....
...... ~ ..... tllNCC..O ~-~.,. ........ co.-, V"' .............. ( ..... .,,,,.., ~..,..,,.....,i .... ............. ,~-:..-.-..
Manot House
Frytng Chicken
With Ribs AHacl"led
. .,
lb.
Short .IL-Safeway Ouall!y U9 Beel P\a1e
Rouncl St •• k Boneless Satew;iy
Oual1tv Bet>!
It> $1••
lb $239
•ti a9c
Fresh Idaho Trout ~··i. ... (I 51 79
Icelandic Halibut ~~ ,, s2s9
~ar\CI' 1, ·..; Turkey Franks H..,.,. P"" 1)9'
Sliced Bologna~;;: ~ s139
Ground Turkey '"''" .. ,. • 89<
•Diet Coke
•Tab
• Catteine Free
Coke
( Except e.snoo)
& Mammoth
l.Jmrt 2
-Fresh Mangoes t•· 89'
~ ~-..,,,.,, ~.... CV. ,,.,,,..,, Apples ~ o.. ••• ·~ 5~-
-Russel Po1a1oes o 45'
-Fresh Carrots 2 P~ 69'
CI!!) Romaine Lenuce !)>."" .3gc
2 cups tbawed whipped topping wltb real cream
Mash I pint strawberries. Combine cornstarch and
sugar 1n saucepan; graduallY. add mashed strawbemes.
Cook surring constantly, until mixture 1s thickened. Cool.
Place remaining strawbernes an crust: cover with
strawberry mixture. Chill un11l set. Top with whipped
topping. Makes 6 to 8 servings.
----------------------.... ------~~~l _ .... ~·t,
BALANCE DIET ...
~~1• i' Safe.ray
~~ ...
Dog Food
Tasty Nuggets
Your Doq Will LD11e II'
~ _ __..~ ..,... __ ,,,
-. : "'7';y,
. ;fr:;
Green Onions
q. n • •. 't"-' (,."' , • 1' From Cl
seeds and peanut butter as eas}'. high-protein foods that
can be stored at the office.
Foods high an carbohydrate such as whole grain
crackers. instant hot cereals. raisins. fresh fruit and
Yegetables. cans of fruit and vegetable Juices. can also be
kept on hand an a desk drawer or office refngerator.
99 ' 5
.. w~ ,,.. w-,,., \ f<I ''•
$· $149
Breakfast. however si mple. should be included 1n
every working person's diet says Rice. "Research shows
that breakfast caters are better able to think during
morning hours. are more productive, react quicker and tire
less easily,'' according to Rice. "Because our blood sugar
drops during the ni~ht. breakfast should also include
carbohydrates that raise blood sugar. and protean . which
helps maintain a steady blood sugar level.
Polish Sausage w~son 10 • 1 •• ~ 11'\o" ""' .. kt. • ~ Bounce in,,,.. ,, "s299
"Research shows that breakfast eaters are better able
io think dunng morning hours, are mQre productive, react
quicker and tire less easily. according 10 Rice.
"We all have workdays when weJUSl can't seem 10 get
anything accompishcd. If these unproductive days are
cx:curnng re$ularly, examine your current eating habits.
"By eaung smalJer but more frequent meals rich an
protein and complex carbohydrates. you can decrease your
fa tigue and increase your work potential." Rich concludes.
Winemakers compete
Amateur winemakers throughout Cahfom1a can enter
'"the Ora nae County Fair Homemade Wine Competition
Cateaories include fresh white, dry arape. frcsh fruit.
arape concentrates and fruit concentrates.
Entry forms and nllt:s are available at the Oranac
County Fair entry office, 88 Fair Dnvc, Costa Mesa 92626,
phone 75 1-3247, or by wriuna to the contest sponsor.
Orange County Wine Society. P. 0 . Bo x 3221. Oran1e.
Calif. 92665.
There '' 11 $ ~ t ntrv ftt JX'r bottlt of wine.
lb $1••
Po_._ ChopsAascx•ed rresh lotg s 1 •• r'a Cenlei End Cut lb
Top Slrloln Steak~~ I> s2••
Ouflloly Beel
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7~·8" . ..
' . .;
I runt in~ ~ ou .and ot h<'r Oranl(e CoaM -fta MarlG~J ~IO<.t
r·t•.,ul<•n1 -.. in thl' Al Ynur St>rvt<'t' col Pr<M>•
umn Dally Piiat rzlOAnclHI ... ~~ • 1000 l1ylldt 0.. ftewpott Buch
• 3'61 So. 8ri'ltol, Santa An1
17!1 •9" l 1•••
~ ~A It> ~Tater Treats '!OIW" '·· s1 19
~ ... "'''11111 " if\<: ~EOQ Breads.."' A E~ • 1:r
CS) Vegetables • .... ~ • :... 69'
~ "'''"'...., .. ~Apple Juice '""... ggc
1 • on \AMI ..... Ught L~~ ~·I"
cs>FrltosCorn Chips ';..0:•1 29
Ct3!)Dlnners ~.· '.r;w~ '!.u 99c
~ cm)
O<Jn< hf lb
~Cup 0' Noodles 2 ~~~s1 00
~MayonnalM Nu m)Ot· ;~o:$1 49
~Niblets Coa 11 <;',.::;
• Slnta w rrtnar at h Pat
• lUl 7 C~tt Dt . 1t Wllnut .._
. '
\
9'MQe C0Mt DAILY PILOT/WedMlday, April 25, 198 ..
·Old ham can be big cheese
Cheesy brioche ~rf ect
or a .party or dinner
~ you're plannina a small dinner ~or JUI& el\iOyina a quiet diooer at home.
Oleesy Ham-Filled Brioche is an excellent choice. Not only is tht recipe a worthy
complement to leftover ham. it's also a cinch to
PttPll"e.
Rich brioche rolls form the base (or this
eye.catcbina en tree brimmina with ham. green
• pepper and mushrooms in a delic.ate cheese sauce. Round out the meal with your favorite ~ sa~ steamed vegetables and a bottle pf
W)l\e, I
. Chances are. you'll want to make the
brioche ahead. (They can be frozen until the day
of your dinner.) OT, you can take an easier
shot'&cut and purchase commercial bnoche or patty shells.
Always read the label when buying ham.
While most hams arc fully-cooked and may be
eaaen ngbt from the package. you ma)' prefer to
serve your ham wann. Cook fu lly-cooked hams
to an internal temperature of 140 degrees. Ham label~ "cook-before-eating" should be cooked
to an internal temperature of 160 degrees.
'A C1IP d11"1ff 1reea pepper
• ·~ ctip a1Jce4 ftt* m..U..ma
l caMtt,... a11.,.,.,... n.-.r
'4 tea1pooe •ry mtt&aN
~ ttHpooa pepper
1 '.4 C11PI mta
1 cup allredded Clleddar elleeH (4 ouace1)
t Brloclle, reclpe follow1
Jn a medium skillet melt butter or
margarine; add green pepper and saute 3
minutes. Add mushrooms and cook over
medium heat till tender. Remove mushrooms
and green pepper, rcservina drippings in skillet.
Add fl our. dry mustard, and pepper to pan
dri ppings stimng till smooth.
Slowly stir in milk; cook over medium-heat
till thickened and bubbly. stirrina constantly.
Reduce heat to low and add cheese, stirring
untH smooth. Gently stir in ham. mushrooms
and green _pepper: heat through. Cut tops from
Brioche. Spoon ham mixture over brioche:
replace tops. Makes 4 servings. ...
BRIOCHE
1 packa1e active dry yeast
1 tablespooa sugar
'I• cap warm water Ult to IU degrees)
'i'i cup batter or margarille, 1oftne4 •eus
J ll~lllpl• Wiler
Dissolve yeast and supr an \he v. cup wann
water. f n a mixina bowl beat butter or
marprine 11 medium speed of eltclric mixer
about 2 minutes or till liaht and fluffy.
"dd 3 egs, one at a time, bcatina welJ after
each addition. Add the yeast mixture, I cup of
the flour and salt; beat 2 minutes. Stir in enouah
of the remainina flour to make a sot\ doulth.
Tum out onto liahtly floured surface and
knead till smooth and no longer sticky, about 3
minutes. Place In lightly peascd bowl, tumina
dou&h once to grease.surface. Cover and let rise till double.
Punch d own. Cover tightly with plastic
wrap or foil and refrigerate 6 hours or
overnight.
On an unfloured surface, divide dou&h
into 4 equal portions. Set one portion aside.
qivide each of the 3 portions an half. Shape each
pa~ into a ball. Place in greased 4-1nch
1nd1v1dual flu ted tube pans or muffin pans.
Make an 1dentat1on in center of each.
Divide the reserved portion into 6 pieces.
Shape each piece into a ball. Place one ball into
each indentation. Cover and let rise till double.
CHEESY HAM-FILLED BRIOCHE
1 ~ c.,. ct1bed fully-cooked ham
! &abJnpooaa butter or margarine
About ! •1, cups all-parpose flHr
s.-, tf'aspoon talt
Combine the remaining egg with the 2
tables.poons water: gentl y brush over dough.
Bake in a 375-degrtt oven for 25 to 30 minutes
or till golden brown. Makes 6 brjoche. Cheeey, ba.m-ftlled brioche makea a tuty main dJ•h or party •n&ck.
:.: Time pressing?
try microwave
-
r ;f,,
I!•
~ >'
Microwave cooker) is a con' cn1ent wa) 10 prepare
sat1sfy1ng mea ls. Qu1ckl). panicularl) tor singles and
fa milies using a staggered meal schedul e.
Microwa ve cooking not only 1s fa st. 11 ran be fa bulous
when you are armed with a bl! of knowledge about how to
best use the oven.
For example. the shape of the food should be
considered when yo u're arranging it in the oven.
Microwa ves work from the outside in towards the center.
Place the thicker pan towards the outside edge of the plate
and the thinner part of the foods to"ards the center of the
dish.
In Made-In-Minutes Pork Chops. the mea t 1s
mari nated in coconut-rum. pineapple Juice and several
spices. Acids from the pineapple Juice tenden ze the chops
even befo re the~ stan to cook. )•}I J The technique of manna11ng before cooking also is
'1') used 1n th~ Fruu ·Bakc to allO \\ the rum's oa,or lO
permeate the crumb-topped pear and apricot dessen
'l .
"
t.n1
I .,
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: it
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.
I•-i,,
•• I• '.,
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11.
fl JI
.1•1
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9l:P
MADE-IN-MINUTES PORK CHOPS
4 pork chops, about "'a -inch thick (completely thawed)
l,AJ cup coconut rum
1 can ( 5' • ouncts) sliced pineapple in its own juice,
drained, reserve juice
1 tablespoon soy sauce
I tablespoon Dijon-style mustard
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon chopped fresh ginger or 1 • teaspoon ground
ginger
Bottled browning and seasoning sauce
1 ~ teaspoons cornstarch
In a 9-inch gla'' rm· plate or <:>hallo" m1cro"a'l' dish.
arrange por~ thop' 1n a <,1ngk• la)er. l omh1nc coconut
rum . 2 tablcc;poon' 1u1ce from pineapple. SO) sauce.
mustard. garlic and g1 ngcr. mix we IL Pour 0' er chops: let
stand al room 1empera1urc I hour.
Rcmo'c chop'> from marinade and brush on both
sides "1th browning and seasoning sauce. Re1urn 10
man nade. co,cr "•th pla\llt \\rap M1cro"a'e on high 31 ,
manutes
Turn t hops 0' er Place one pineapple slice on each
chop: co, er and m1rro"a\l· on high 4 minutes longer
Remove chop~ and p1neappk to a ser .. 1ng plaiter
Combine corn\tarch and 2 1ablespoons pineapple
JU1cc: s11r 1nt0 cooking liquid "11crowa\C on high 11 •
minutes. s11r sauce If 11 1s nnt 1h1cl ened. m1cro, .. a,e 30
seconds long('r Spoon sauce o' ('re hops. Makes 4 sen ings .
Note: Pork mu~t be thoroughly cooked If an)
pinkness appear'> t''rn near the hone. cook longer.
FRUIT BAKE
3 large, ripe pears, cored, pared, sliced
'fa cup cut-up dried apricots
~ cup plus I tablespoon coconut rum, dividt d
3 tableapoons brown sugar
! lableapoons flour •1, te11poon ground cinnamon
% tableapoona buuer
J cup chopped pecans
~ cup beavy cream
In a 9-inch glass pie plall' or shallo"' m1nowave dish
combine pear~. apncois and 1 •cup coconut rum Let stand
'1 hour '1t1mng occas1onalh In a small howl combine
sugar, Oour and cinnamon. CUt in butler Until ffil .Xture IS
well blended 511r tn pecan .. Spnnklc m1'1urc over fruit.
Place 1n m1crowa'c OH'n and cook. unco,ered. on
high 8 minute'i Whip cream "'llh rC'mainmg I tablespoon
rnconut rum \crH fruit \\arm or mid '-'llh "'hipped
l ream ) 1C'ld 4 to ti 'er' 1 n(t'
Classified advert1s1ng 1c; your best
choice for help 1n selling the items you
no longer need It s Quick and
inexpensive and the Piiot reaches
potential buyers who l1vf' 1n lh•S area
CalltodAY
• t·l.ITUI eonu
• C Ot< E. CAITI:INE FR[[
(()t(f DIET COt<C. CAFFEINE
flt££ DIET COt<E
OR TAii
?_/
~
CARNATION
EVAPORATED
MIU<
45 ~
LB.
BLADE CUT
BEEF CHUCK STEAK
FOSTER FARMS
FRYING CHICKEN BREASTS
BONELESS• BEEF CHUCK
CROSS RIB ROAST
• 12-0Z.
PkG.
TYSON
CHICKEN BREAST PATTIES
• 30 oz.
JAR
LB.
•PORK I°'"" OR
'>llOl I DUI
COUNTRY STYLE
PORK SPARERIBS
LIGHT & ELEGANT
EN TREES
Co01••9"' , ... All •'9n" rtw-We, ... ,.,. tne "9'" to"""' IW'""'''~
'\4•et fl• Coo•etl•O Of!•~ f•altC> .. ll•mt t..< W•"9 & loCIUO< ~I Ad••-in Ait 510"" Price• EffectJve •t •II Southern C111fornl• Alpha Beta M•rketa
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS
,------•MWJ1for. -::~~---. I .............. ," \ I DOUBLE SAVllll COUPON I I "'ev~t t1111 cCMipon 110"0 w11111ny Ollt 111•fllllt<l11•t1 \ Ct "'' on ·°''II"" I
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I ...... u. l'lllCllAI( llHUl~D I l t•IT .. , mr ,U •OUUCTllMf'I Ctll'M ~IO U•IT •at llUllf ttuPO•I 'll CUITOllO
' COO,O!l flllCTIYI lllUU O IU " 11111 "'' 1110 • ,.., I ~----------------'
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I DOUILE SAVINll COUPON11 I
I "'"'"' '"'' '911poll .,O"t ••I!\ Olly tllt 1111nvl1<.IWft1 s c111n tH CO\l .. ft I
l'lf Gtl OOUll l tHt $AVllllC$ •llfll Y°* "'''"'" l"t tltm I OfU. .. , 10 111ClUM 11tu 1u1" mt ceu"'' ta cMt111ow1111
I llffllQ 1110 lltl UCIU WAWl " 1n• 1UIJlCt tt mu .. N J tltlUIU UOIJ .. TaACCOAlltAIUNltUClt
I II •tt•v• PVICllASf lllltlllltl ltlil O•l 1lta l'U llA•Ufl~TllM I ClllPtll HI ,1•1T f .. U lllllll Clu'Oll NJ Cllif .. U
• 'l\lftll llllCllVI 11111•1 .,._ n 111-. •U 1.u t , .. -----------------
Ente aining with ease ..
!•: Wcckda.h:d'ter1;11nana. e~ wh'" tune 11 Sbon. ~an medium saucepan unul tender. Add walCf and content1 of :: be accomph caaaly andddk1ouJJy. Advance plannint nee and aeuoni111 P1Ckct1. Brina to a boil. Cover 11atuly : . '"he key· . . anchimmer uaUI all liquid is abtorbed, about 2S minutes.
: • Keep ~'Pff ••mDle and easy to prepare and sc~t .a Wllile rice CoOks. teaton chacken with salt and pepper. qwck-coo~na meat •. fish or Poultry as the enl.l'tt. Paar 1t Meh remain1n1 2 tablespoons butter in ~ skillet. Add
With. quality convenience products and add your own cbicke1 aild oook over medium heat unul firm aod c.ook.ed
•P«&a1tl t1oucd ·~ d "· .... pl thfOUtl, ~to 7 minutes on each side. Remove chicken and
t nc u e '""""'an 1111von .... t cos;n ement tach other keep wann.
n, ~tc and appearance. Ofter a vaneay of food textures Liptly 11utc prt1c in drippinp, Add cream. parsley ~thin~ Mme~· . . . and mustard. Cook, atirrina constantly, until thickened, 3 Chac~n and net ~ake cluaic Aft.'tr:ican dishes that to 5 manutea. Stir romaine into rice. Arranie rice and
oll'er unlnrthed crat1ve flavor vanauons. for your chicken on servina platter. Spoon sauce over chicken Vteekday dinner party, try. a .. new clu11c .. combination, Makes 6 servinp. ·
ready to lt1'Ve In just 30 manutea. Sauteed chjckcn brea1ts
llrved with mu11ard cream sauce and paired with rite, CAIJFORNIA QUICK BEEF "*ales Chicken It Wild.Rice Francais a good choice for ... WILD RICE STIR l'RY entlnainina. 1 small ...... eet a.se •4 ~ weqes
When you need a fast meal for family or friends, call t a.Me1111w IMlt&er er marpttlle
bn hi&h-<auality convenience products to help make the t NPI water
tftcal. Cooked beef, either leftover or from the deli is 1 ,eeb• (1'4 .-cet) fast coot.lal Joq srata ud wU4
combined with com, seasonings and rice in a supcr-<1uick rice
'bne-disb meal such as California Quick Beef and Wild ~ tea.,oee lroatl eamta
Rice Stir Fry. l/e ,.... cooied ree1t beef, eet mse dla. 1tripl (abMt %
-t .· -: . . . . :·. ·.
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CHICKEN &r WILD RICE FRANCAIS et1p1) · ~ po-4 mur.room1, sllced '4.a.dl $Jdl 1 ram c-..1 I oaees) wllole kenel cera, dralae4 a tabletpooa1 better or mars.artae 1 Jar (l "8ftl) 1JJee.t or~ plmleato, drabled t Ctlfl water 1 avoc .. o11Ueed (eptiHal)
t pada1e (I ouces) ort&lul 1oa1 plDI ud wild rtce Cook onion in buttcrin l~inchskillet until tender but
I ckldla breast laalves boaed ud sklued not brown. Add water. contents of rice and seasoning
Salt ... pepper ' pat kets and cumin. Bnng to a vigorous boil. Cover tightly
% cloves sarUc, mlaced an.d simmer until most of liquid is absorbed. about 4
1 cep lleavy cream minutes.
t tabletpooa1 cllopped parsley Add roast beef. com and pimiento. Cook over
t tablespooa Dljoa-style mestard medium heat, stirri!lg occasionally_, until al! liquid i1
1 c•p coanely sllredded romatne lett•ce a~rbcd .• about. I m1!lutc. Arrange av~do shces on top
Cook mu,hrooms in I tablespoon of the butter in of nee mixture. 1f desired. Makes 6 servings.
M.D.
BATHROOM
TISSUE
SUGAR
FREE
CRY ST AL LIGHT
99
EA.
•I QUAllT • PUNCH• OllANOC
• LEMON·UME • ICED T[A
•LEMONADE
FOR
• 12 oz.
BASKET
FRESH PEAK OF THE SEASON
STRAWBERRIES
NABISCO
OREO COOKIES
Thursday, April 26 through
Wednesday, May 2, 1984.
• 20-0Z.
PKG.
SALAD SIZE
TOMATOES
• 1.S·UTER
llOTlU
·-GUNIW •VIN -I •CHA9U) • SAllClllA
fA .... ,..CHAMll"
••HINE • l.l(;HY
C"1""'11
CARW ROSSI WINES
SAV1N< ,., Rfl A ft TO PRfV10l~ \"EEK '>
Al l'tlA f\t 1 A PRI< f OR I A'-T l>A IT PRIOR
10 INITIAi Pf!K..E RU~ll TION f'<CLUSM
Of AOvtRTI~D ~ f'ROMOTIONAl P9' fc;
MAIYK-1
DODGE CARAVAN
WINNER!
S4,000,000 IN PRIZES
INCLUDING WEEKLY SWEEPSTAKES
a t YOUll At.PU lfTUllU SA• CU I TllAl A•U SA• TIClET Willi UCllST .. VISIT .. ~-.-~ lllColft•lf•----.... -· ........... dmll41111-• ...... Ullll•llll• .. -lllywt•_,,...,._,..., ... ll,wlD•IW9 ,_.._,.,. .. _1'C.. I C. ....... ....., ..... Mitt• .. ... ~ ... ...,... .... _,,.,..,..,_ m.•c1111 ..... a-.~!...,., ... ., ..... .... ,. ...................... ~---...... f.....,.. .............. -... _ ............ Lllll_IU _lllt,....llf.-.......... n ........... lt.,....,
ll'lt• ™1 e-e. ..... ,...,.. .... ,.,.,.. ............................... 11-111.11111
talllWW At\Mt ...... , ... ·-........... Alt ... .......... --Jvly l 1 .... _ ... ____ ... l_llOll , __
_.,._ .. ,, , .. _ ........ ,. ... 11 •• ...--....... 111 .......... __
--..._. ____ , ...... i.. .... _,. ,,_,, .... ....
. . ' . . ~ -~ ....
~~ rulllavlil• .. ,. ( ... .-.. lll Al!llllllll ·-· .. .... ..... .. --.
I . ... ·--:--Al"" ........ _,_ .___._ . . . ,. .. _ . -~-:;----~ i
HERE ARE JUST A FEW Of THE WINNERS
IN THE 14.000.000 ALPHA IET A llN&O &AME!
Why not share your
favorite recipes?
If you've been enjoying our Cook--0f.the-Weclc
series and would like to j oin in. the Daily Pilot wants to
hear from you.
~nd us several of your favorite recipes so we can
pick a couple to share with our readers.
The snies a/so i ncludes a photo and shon profile of
our special cook each wttk.
&ndyour recipes to the Food Editor. c/o the Dail>
Pilot. P. 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626. and be
su~ to include ,vour name. address and phone number.
EGG DISHES •..
From Cl
4 llard-cooted egs, cllopped
~ Clip fhlely chpped celery
I ca.a (8 oueet) refrigerated cretceat dluer roll•
Panley 1Prlp, optioaal
In small bowl. beat l<>$ether pineapple. peanut butter
and salt until blended. Sur m eggs and celery. Separate roU
dough into 4 rectangles. Press to seal diagonal pc~
forations.
Place about ': cup of the egg mixture on a sbort-si~
half of each rectangle. Fold remaining half of dough ovc!Jr
egg mixture. Moisten edges of dough with water and PfC1f
to seal.
Bake on ungrcascd baking sheet in preheated 37>
degree oven until golden brown. about I 0 to 12 minutes.
Cool on wire rack and serve warm or wrap in aluminum
foil or plastic wrap and chill. Garnish with parsley, '
desired. Makes 4 servings.
EGGS DIA VOLETTO
8 bard·cooked eggs
'i!i c up mayoDD1l1e
3 'la teaspoons lnstut minced oil.Ion. divided
I 1easpooa parsley flakes
11. teaspoon celery sail
t tablespoons butter
t tablespoons floor
"'a teaspoon salt
t ''J caps milk
J '2 cups 16 ounces l shredded Cbcddar ~eese
1 package ( 8 ounces I splucll noodlet, cooked ud
drained
Paprika, optional
( ut l'g&S 10 hall crosswise Remo' e )'Ol.ks and set
whites aside \1ash )Olks with fork. Blend in mayonnaise.
I tea'ipoon of the onion. the parslc) flakes and celery salt.
Refill v.h11cs using about I tablespoon yolk mixture for
each egg half Set aside
In medium saucepan o 'er medium heat, melt butter.
Blend 10 Oour. remaining 21 ~ teaspoons onion and salt.
Cool>.. s11mng constantl~. until mixture 1s s mooth and
bu bbl~ ~ur 1n milk. all at once. Cook. stimng constantly,
until mixture bcnls and 1s smooth and thickened. Remo~
from heat. llr in cheese unul melted .
Place noodles in 11 ,. 7 ll I 'h-1nch baking dilh. Stir an
11 , cup of the cheese sauce pread evenly in dish. Geatty
press reserved egg halves into noodle miJtture. Pour
remaining ch~sc sau~ over eggs. Cover with aluminum
foil Bake in preheated 35()...deg:rtt oven until bu~~~
about 15 to 20 minutes. Remove foil and li&htly 1pri
w11h paprika. 1f desired. Ma kes 4 scrvinas.
Puffs Italian-style
When 1h1s rtCIJX was demon trated at a COOCftl
school 1n a Brookl)n department store 1t was mOM
successful.
IT AUAN PUFFS
Bake cream puff accordma to a standard rcape bucd
on I cup all·purposc flour Cool completely JuS\ before
'it'n ma. cut off tops and fill ~1th the followina:
Beat together unul very mooth a IS-or 1 k unce
container or ncona. 'l cup confcct1onen' upr and I
tea poon vanilla 11r in '• tea poon lemon nnd. Beat 1 ac>
heaV\ cream until ufTand fold 1n
Fill bottoms of puff.\ wtth maxturT and rtplacc tOPI:
spnnUc with confccuonc"' supr
Note Thr nroua mixture also makes a dthp\tfUl
filhn for la}tT cak"
Walnuts an '1n' cake toj>plng
Whtie food fashions continue to chanae. c. ahforn1a walnuts remajn in tyle. Today.
more than ever, walnuts are prized for theu
Jd1c1ou I) distinctive te>tturc aod $ood taste.
\\ alnuts hinc in flourtc cakes, th15 year's
nc" "m" des~n. rcplacina the old favonLe,
(hocolate mousse. A perfect uample 1s Walnut
\unda) Cake. a luscious. one-layer beauty.
dcn..c with ground. toasted walnuts.
In this nch. European-style tone. the
\Hlln ut!> and rum-soaked graham crackers 41ct as
thl· fl our. It's an elegant dessert, easier to make
1han a layer cake but much more stylish.
Tha~ cake keeps well. so you can make 1t far
in ad,ance. freeing yourself for other dinner
part> chores before guestsarri ve. Because it's so
nrh. one cake }'1elds 12 to 16 servings.
WAIJliUTSUNDAY CAKE
• eus. s parated l ttUpool srated onqe peel
i c.,. powdered Hl•r
4 slaa.le sraum cracker sqoartt i &abletp0tes urk ram
14 tuspooa cre•ID of tartar
3 t,; C'lpt fiaely 1roud toasted walauts
'4 cap IJ'8tff tel.DISWfft clteeolatt
tllocolate Glau, recipe follows
Walnt ~Ives, for garalslt
In mixer bowl beat egg yolks until lem on-
colored. Add peel and sugar. Beat on high speed
until thick. about 3 minutes. Soak graham
crackers in rum: mash with fork. Bearinto yolk
mixture.
In separate bowl beat es& whites with
cream of tanar until sttff but not di). Gcntl)
fold bt'aten whites. nuts and chocolate into) olk
mixture. Pour b ner into wax ~r or
parchment-lined greased 9-inch sprinaform or
deep layer c~kc pan.
Bake an a 3SO-dearee oven 4S to 50 minutes
until pick inserted into center comes out clean
and mall crack appears on surface. Cook 1n
pan: remove and mvest onto plate. Cover with
Chocolate Olaze. Garnish with nut halves.
When firm . cut thin wcdaes. Makes 12 to 16
servings.
Cboeolate Glue: In top of double boiler
over si mmerina water melt 2 ounces semisweet
chocolate and 2 tablespoons butter or margar-
me. Sttrto bl~d. Stir en I teaspoon honey. Pour
over cake. ut stand until slightly cool; spread
to co"er top and ~ides. •
Double Coupon Double Coupon Double Coupon
: ;;:;.~,'I~~-~'~;::: ::::~i;;:,tl,~~y-le"r: a:.•~:•~I 11-;;::,~ ,-.;:~·J~: 7.~l;lf ~;~ ~~; ~v:I ;~ 1•: .. --
1 ll '-'"f" lh tJ••.J1e t ltuUt ••• J .•• II •• 111•1 It .. ..,,,, -I •t ,. 1t•m r. I , .. •1•• .,
'' • 1r t '1mrvr• -'1 .~,
Limit One Item Per Manwactwers Coupon and Llm1t J
New5paper Double Coupons Per Customer Coupon
E1tecttve April 26 thN May 2. 1984
"~''' tl'\u •t>Upon t11tttnv Wllh ony On• MonuJoctwen c.Na oa cO\.lpon arMS 09' <taWA• II\• MJVm'Jl Wh•h f OY pwcho ... the M•m Hot lo ll\Clud• te~Uet be• Qf11.r•1y p...i f'liQ~ ~f°~ u~u~~~ ::::,~hon on• dollm or e1cMd 11\e YOllu. ot lh• •t•m [1"''·A•i11~0'
Limlt One Item Per Manwactwers· Coupon and U m it J
Newspaper Double Coupo111 Per C\&atomer Coupon
EtfectiYe April 26 thN May 2. 19&4
,. ..
·: USDA Insp.-Gold•n Pr•mJu.m-het Blade Cut
:: Save . :: 22 .
per lb.
per
lb
Save
.06
8 oz.
cup
l'lllC~l:;...111 . --~
7-Bone
Roast
USDA lasp ·Gold•O fr•111Jwn·&HI Chuc.t Save
.JO l.29 per lb.
per
lb.
Ill
Save
.16
1!-'J lb
loaJ .49
8 8
.nd'?ugb ~dough \ 1 enghsh mglish
. mu.1~~ns '\n~j~~ns 1
l ·~ . J ------"\ ......__ -----<
p~g.
ot4
"•Mnt ttu.. t"oupon oJc..no W'lthOny one Mon\110C1U1e11 c•nt1 ofl coupon a.no o•• Clc.Ul'>I• tti• .armg ' •h•r1 you putChoM the t .. m Hf)4 fO U\ChJCS• te41J•l•1 h•• QU"W"•ty plitrtv'w
coupon. C"C>upont (lf.m•1 •Mo Qf\• t1oltot •I •IC'~ th• vf\J •• ,, '"• tt•m r a hvM"> hfJ••'M
'"l>OCCO Oncl oavy PfOOl>C ..
Umtt One Item Per Manutactwera· Coupon and Lunit J
Newspaper Double Coupons Per Customer Coupon
EtfectiYe April 26 thru Ma1 2. 1984
.69 P•t
lb .19
MfAT~L
STEW
Lean Cuisine
. Rali;-[
··Sliced Meats
Plain Wrap~
English Muffins
Tina's Bean
Cheese BWTito
or Mont•rey Jac.t Na1uJaJ Cholc•
s~~e a 29 p9tlb
per •
lb
. ·
Save
.04
2 1/J oz.
pig
Auortecr
.37 " -Sourdough 01 R~ar
Save 49 .20
~~ .
R•g or S 1 r 01 Tab or Spn t• • 1.2 o• can
·: 750 mJ
btl
ao PToot save l 49 3 99 1.89
12
pack •
• '$ptll• OOf <JTdJJGbl• UI ,.,.. SplUl"9
.· Special Values Special Values
101a 01 ... f.Jr.OUC#t St11ps 1.19 lmPolf•d-01 1.89 · Switt Sizzlean U0t DanolaHam .... Piii ptg
Zac•r rarms-CaUJ Grolt'tl ~.99 llWI *'"' .JO oa can 6.19 Best ot Fryer Decatteinated Co/Jee
Paci.lie rros•a Detroned Hilll ITC» •lluta1Jt4 OJ pag 1.99 Red Snapper ~· 1.99 Flavored Colfee
1101 can ,..r come 'N Get 1t ~4.49 Old Milwaukee pa.~ 3.39
WhJI• 01 Gold Tequila Deodorant .49 Jose Cuetvo ·~'mJ 5 98 Zest Bar Soap ~ Of
'-'" . .....
llaJpb.s Snac.t S11c.t J 19 AJJ fabllC 2.17 Tillamook Cheese ~ . Biz Bleach """° ,,...
l'•bl• Omwb I/Ubry i..moo 1'1Jd(19ff• Dcmu.O or 1 4 9 1'1dl fT•l'tOHO
11
.: 1.09 Ralphs Bear Claws P:,". • Cool Whip
... ,..,., ·-a,~' O•ete<y '-• A~~ ...... "-•-4
#t •• .,,... ,,_. "f""t te lt"'4t., f'efvu , .... •• c~.,c-tM ......... Ot ~u'~
&tf ... l'tit ... tlel"ftt HI! N\tt N .,. N t•,... ,,,,.,. ,._ ...... "" 4"t .,.,., •ft.r•t •"'-.,_.~ ..._, ....... t(n "-•t ,_, ~ _..,.... ... , c..-...Mt94' tatt ,., ... , ......... h< ._ •••
\•"f'ilf' '•'•1• t• ,.. • .,....., ..... t "-Mtft• ,.,.,. eit IHI.,.,,.-.., to '"""af ll'riC• ,~,.,._. •H•vtfM 4tf 9'f•~•• .. • ~..,, .. ~··
l
•ACH I CMfllO
IUfTllGTON BUCH
1'60 lllGlll.. IHPOIT HllS
1104 ltVlll TUSTlt. ll:WPml I ltVK II. W mt 11t11 Sf TIJS1t
pig
ot J 2.91
0 1 ChJde a A Veg WI VennJdW
:~:1 "" pkg .17
Prices effective April 26 thru May 2, 1984
Ne"! Lower Prices. -Higher Standards.
•~n s . .ooiiusT, mn.sm
ITC. HCU1. t .to o.ly, t-t s.e,
Puffed
up with '
flavor
By CECILY
BROWNSTONE
Cream puffs. often found
en pastry shops, have been
baked at home successfull y
by American cooks for a
long time. At first the puffs
were filled traditionally -
with sweetened and
flavored whipped cream.
And old-fashioned cooks
used to keep on hand a large
shaker of confectioners'
sugar with which to
sprinkle the puffs (and
other desserts) just before
serving.
For some decades now.
the puffs have often been
made into a savory rather
than a sweet. For this they
are made small -no bagger
than a mouthful -and
filled with a savory com·
bination of perhaps chee~
or seafood or both.
Interestingly enough, a
savory French variation of
the puffs made with Swiss
cheese (called Gougere and
from Burgundy) has been a
latecomer to the Uni ted
States. Only occasionally
do you find recipes for 1t.
Now an 1n,en11 ve
Amencan cook has vaned
the French recipe for
Gouge r e b)' add 1 ng
p1stach1os. which con-
tribute $reat texture. These
P1stach10 Puffs are de-
licious served straight from
the oven: they do not need
to be filled .
PISTACHIO PUFFS
1 cup water
•;,.po1lDd stick boner
1 cup all-purpose flour
•;, teaspoon aalt
4 large eggs
'h cup shredded (me·
dium-flne) Swist cbeete
•;, cup finely chopped
plstacbiot
Heat the water and the
butter in a 2-quart
saucepan over moderate
heat until water boils and
butter melts. Add the flour
and the salt all at once.
Remo"e from heat: stir
vigorously until mixture
leaves side of pan and
begins to form a ball.
Add eggs one at a time.
beating well after each ad-
d111on : continue to beat
until mixture 1s smooth
and glossy. Stir in the
cheese and p1stach1os.
Drop by rounded table·
spoonfuls. about I inch
apart, onto a large greased
cookie sheet. Bake in a
preheated 400-degree oven
until $Olden brown -40 to
45 minutes. Serve at once
Makes 15 pufTs.
Note: You can bake the
P1stach10 PufTs ahead and.
appropnatel~ ~rapped .
store them in the freezer. At
serving time. un~rap and
place the frozen puffs on a
cookie sheet: heat in a faarl)'
hot o"en just until thawed
and surface 1s crisp: serve at
once .
Prunes~ood
side dish
To ser. e as a condiment
with poultry or meat.
FRENCH PRUNES
,,,. cup Imported black
raspberry liqueur
2 tablt1poon1 lemon
Juice
tt~ouncu pitted praae1
(about H)
In a I-pent wade-mouth
JU with a screw-top cover,
stir together raspbetr)
liqueur and lemon Juice.
dd prunes. one or two at a
time. sumna gently as jar
fills . to cover prunes with
liqueur
Cover jar lightly and let
s11nd at room temperature
for 24 hours bcfof'l' 1Crvina.
tore any leftover in the
ref ngerator for up to two
weeks.
ln•ex•pen•elve•
• (In "' tC*'I' '"'I not tugh •n pric•, re11onabla.
~·*'"'*' -. .... •Clveflllll\Q -· ,._
Clas11fled Aavert111ng
8•2-587A
'
\
Proce
When 1t comes to fruits
and veactablcs. is f rnh
best? Docs Pf'09tssina """ move all or nearly all the
nutrients from these foods?
Many people think ~
but this beliefis inaccurate.
Fresh may or may not be
best. depending on how the
fresh produce is handled
and stored. and how much
time has elapsed between
picking and eating.
Most nU1rients are rather
hardy . Pro tein s,
carbohydrates. fats. min·
erals and some vitamins
will withstand the effects of
most pr ocessi ng
procedures intact.
A few vitamins. pan1cu-
lary vitamtn C and
thiam1n. are m ore
se nsitive. They can be de-
stroyed in processing. es-
pecially 1fthe food is heated
(as in canning or in
blanching before freezing).
These vitamins. along
with other water soluble
(primarily B) vitamins and
minerals also can be lost if
they leach out into the
water used in washing and
an other processing steps.
Nutrients also arc lost in
the pans of the food that
are thrown away, for exam-
ple peeling. pulp or trim-
mings.
But fresh fruits and veg-
etables you use at home
aren't immune to these
processes that cause loss of
nu trients.
The fresh vegetable or
fruit that was brought
di rectly from your garden
to your kitchen, and scved
immediately without cook-
ing and little trimminf 1s
likely to have almost al its
nutnents still intact. It 1s
likely to have more vit-
amins than its processed
cou nterpart would have .
But how much of the
fres h produce you eat
comes in this form? Even if
you grow a vegetable your-
self you're likely to store it
for a while before eating 11;
and you might cook it too,
which would cause as great
a loss of nutrients as com-
mercial processing.
If you don't grow your
own food. the produce you
buy may have spent several
days at room temperature
1n the grocery store. spent a
few more days in your
refrigerator. a nd then
cooked longer than necess-
ary or 1n too much water.
This "fresh" food 1s quue
likely to have fewer
nutrients than a canned or
frozen counterpart.
Thus. food processing is
best regarded as a nutri-
tional tradcofT. While it
leads to some nutrient
losses, it also provides us
with year-round supplies of
foods that would otherwise
be available in many areas
onl y on a seasonal basis.
When you compare the
different food processing
methods for nutrient toss.
yo u find that freezing is
likely to be th e least de-
structive of nutrients. The
freezing process itself has
little effect on the nutnents.
However. some vit-
amins can be lost in pro-
cessing steps that occur
before freezing and more
nutrients can be lost during
storage and shipping if the
storage temperature nses
or fluctuates. • • •
Decorative
-and tasty
•Red. green and purple
grapes make a dramatic
centerpiece for a company
dinner table. Guests will
enJOY after-dinner con-
versauon while sampling
the decoration. The dusty
"bloom" on grapes is a
natural protection that
keeps them fresh and ap-
pealing. and should not be
nnscd off until )'OU are
ready to eat the grapes.
•Sene broiled fish with
clumps of tangy-sweet
.fresh grapes and fresh hme
J UICe squeezed over. ~pnnkle wuh chopped
cashews.
•Toss honey and lemon·
~asoned plain yogurt with
fresh grapes and drained
canned mandann oranges.
•Make a 10-minute
Ba varian Creme by folding
whipped cream and fresh
grapes into prepared ins-
tant vanilla pudding. Pile
into' stemmed glasses.
•Toss halved fresh
grapes with crispy lettuces.
spinach and crumbled feta
cheese. Add a I igh t
vinaigrcttt dressing ..
•Skewer cu~ of cheese
with fresh Jf8peS. Ref re h-
101 and different.
,, 'Tt'\t'OS
1000
\ \ll '" ....... l ,u4 \lit n\ l ... ,, .. 11h .-, ..
' , ... \lit ~~-i \M ...,,
1 N o matter wh a t
you're d oing your
ho m et o w n
newspaper
The Illy NII ms 1n
QVE8TIONS WE AJlE
AllltD:
-Q. S...daiet froua
fff41. fffffl•llJ Yfl•
........ .... I "-J .... hlll
•f frMt. Wllat eaaa *"' Are aatrieatl ... tT
-A. If you open a
P9Ckaac and find it full of
frost, ou can sus thaw·
in&· and refreeiina has
iakea ~· 1Uwi11 and ref'reezaaa doa cau• loil
of nutrients in your frozen
foods. fer best nutrient
retention and btsl quality
offroien foods your freezer
temperature lbould be zero dearte• or colder. • • •
-Q. I cleued H& my
f....ur ........ , day (di•
ftnt ...... ....,.. ,...n> ............ ~
ef f,....vesetaMet way la
... M8 ... t•11tbe.-Jte .w. w.w 11M1e 1dO be
.... a.eat?
-A. Foods that arc held
in the freezer-auumins
your f reeur works properly
and keeps foods frozen at
all times -will be ufe to
eat in<kfinitely. Howe ver.
the lonaer a food is fro2en ,
the poorer itsquaJity. lt will
dry out. &ott fla vor. and
aenerally will not ht as
&ood catina as a freshly
frozen food.
A aooo rule is using all
foods from the freezer
·within six months to a year
Oranoe C4*I DAIL V PILOT IW..,.._, .. M.
and to have a sy11cm
whereby the oldat fOOds
are used first before new~r
foods are uxd • • •
-Q. I reeetve4 a IUer ,,... .............. ....
...... a ....... ...
eaacer reteard. Soma •f
t.IM laformadea la It U..t
-. nlalltMMf MtwMll
·--~llffdy ~ .... llil&ne!
-A. It CIUlJOUS about
any animnation you re-m~ in tbt mail tn whteh a
donation rcqucsttd, es.
pedally if it comn from an
orpnization you've never
beard of or 1f the infor·
mallon disaarces with
No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everybody Wins With Stater's Low, Low Prices!
---· .-. • ....-.,0;--~'D
BLADE CUT MEDIUM SIZE
Pork Pork
LB (.(JIM(*P ('Jfl •& &40.-.0-Wf • ••.37 Bath'nmae
~llOl"(k·~lillll ! ffC a.thTlmue ..
COlllQINl • A>V80 t 63e ...... Towels
""'-"Wt H 'llll,. fritf I '3.67 llaitexNllPklns
Pears US NO t DMUDU
Apples .NCV .. ~•C-..AtDl'fl(°"'
,A .. 'l ••I I ~09 Butter
Artichokes.--.. ·-lfNO(A~(" l> . .
AUh lllth llQ .. t l -.ia fl1~•. !'Of• ! 99' Marprlne
.. \ICC>. °'-'••tt~ ! :Str Marprlne
Sf•tl• lflli()S 8UfltMV • A~ y1 'I ! .zie Biecula
. , ~ I , ...... , -
Zeb bl es 79e
. 'tr Frozen Food ~-t~-~ r 't· r• ''~ .l.c; S c1-t1-f ..... •• . '"l~J ~~.... .
ORE·ID~
Tater Tots
SLICED
Beef
liver
BEEF ROUND BONELESS
London
Broil
"O'l"'h B 01 S• ClC
Pepperoni
"O'IMH 601
Pepperoni
.. Ofl .. (L 60l
BLUE
'(/BONNET
Margarine
1~QUAaTD8
Seafood
... pn :trizoe..'"° LA •:1.:19 . t··•.39
.~79 ;
.s3.99 ;=
Service Deli
7tr ~ Canadian Bacon
M()AMEl '601
Wran&len
1'101
Dove Oish i sPri~g .Water I s9e
•lt6J' M ., }U, V • • 5 I .49 .liquid BBQ Sauce -f • 60 I• f • 53e SJ..37 .o, CU po-Noodle -.. Y.. ... .. r • • ' .. s3.I3 Coffee ! .... SI.II Rlnso !
G .,.. !>•ll I All ! '2.49 Cheer .. 75c Softique • Detergent -. ' . ' .77~ Napkins I SJ..99 .. ", " •I.89 Orange Julee I
mOodY·M'~ Mb • ~ •i:.39
Cutty Sark
Seots Whisky
Canadian
Mist
.99
"'"~ _CJ<o,..,sCl'l -•"f • \T(ll .....
~ *$.J.9 c-1eR111I Wine
"""Mou: ~o· c,...• "Oii """-.
'"l•l(ll ......
......... Wine
tCl.¥111 CllU-11
"9-*S.•9 Ws -.uamn
MJCD uncvata ' PULL DA n
................ n.r .... -
.... 21.
............ -
......................... _..., .. ....._ ... _....._.. ..... ~~~---·-.,_ ....... ,91( ...... -~ .... --· .. ....__,._ .. ......_.. ...... .........
CS Orange Coaet DAILY PILOTIWedomday, Apttt 25, 1ee.
Win~s from Idaho are no laughing matter
Althouib eve
Martin joked
about Jdaho
wines in a ~nt
movie. they are
no JOking matter
and arc every bit
as serious as other
Northwest wines.
JEnY
lw
I hadn't tasted -
the Ste. Chappclk wines in Ste. Cllappelle U81
several years and was af-lduo Claardouay (about
forded the opportunity at $9.SO): Applcy, nicely
the recent Reno Wine oaked bouquet, true
Adventure at Harrah's. Chardonnay varietal
With hundreds of wines flavors of som~ intensity
there, I only tasted one Ste. with enough character to
Chappelle, but it was super li~er long and pleasantly.
_a_nd_a_ba_rga ____ i_n_t_o_boo_t_. ___ W_a_n_c_·s_m__,,ajor plus is lively
and natW'll acidity that
provided backbone for
Iona life(•$ while wines go)
and a crisp finish suited to
handlina full-flavored sea-
food.
Pour this one for snob
friends who may at first
gigle over its Idaho ori-
ains, and then watch those
guffaws tum quickly to
smiles of pleasure.
MONDAVI GOES
COUNTRY -The Robert
Mondavi Winery has
always sponsored a series
of concerts at the winery
during summer months.
and I can't think ofa better
way to spend a balmy Napa
even1na. Lots of wane,
chttSe and a;reat music.
You 'tt even encouraiect to
brina along your own pic-
nic.
In the past, the concerts
have been jau oriented.
and some wtll continue to
be in 1984 with Dave
Brubeck and the Preser-
vation Hall Jazz Band re-
turning to the Mondavi
Stlge.
Added to this year's hst
are some famous country
acts, includin& Tanya
Tucker. Crystal Gayle and
Glen Campbell.
Tickets ao on sale May
I Oat the MondaviSummcr
festival office. P.O. Box
l06, Oakville. CA 94S62
(707) 96J.96 I I and will
also be available thro~ Bass Ticket Outlet$. Wnte
or call the festival office for
a list of dates and prices.
The concerts run on Satur·
days from June 3 through
Aua.4.
WINE LIST DIS-
COVERY -One of my
best spies recently for-
warded a copy of the wine
list from Carto's Res-
taurant in be.autiful Los Banos. I've been to, or
sho'-lkl I say throuah, Lo1
Banos. but oner to Carlo's.
Accotdin& to my source.
Carlo's has 50me 30,000
boules with a wholesale
cost near $250,000. Look-
&na ovtt a copy of the list. I
believe every word.
There arc some values to
be found, to be sure, thouah
you'U have to faaure in the
cost of a trip to Los Banos.
I can't recall the last time
I saw a bottle of lnaJcnook
1970 Red Pinot on a wine
lisL The winery doesn't
even make the variety these
days. Carlo's pricie 1s only $20.
GROUND BEEF
3-LB. PKG., LIMIT 2 c
L ..
PA• ... STYLI
,\ \ '1 '/ SPA•I •18S
7 ....
____,~CHUCK llOAST
.........
_ ~ ~ PAlllLY snAK , --~ ~-~·· ~ FRESH -eTOH,, ... PORK LOIN . I A7 -,.......,,..../ ,,,...::::_ RIB ENO L& L& 1.39 BEEF USDA I BEEF I 99 CHOICE ) CHUCK L& • "" ·~
You can buy a Charles
Krua 1978 or ZO 1974
Pinot N.oir for the same
$20. or an Jnalenook '69
Cbatbono for UO.
There ls Louis Manini
Cabcmcu (Special Selec-
tion) datina beck to 1969
and 8V Private Reserve
back to 1971. Krua Special
Selectiops go· all the way
back to 1964.
Old Buraundy, old Bor-
deaux and a broad selection
of mature California whites
are also available. Some of
the very best values are
Italian reds. some as old a.s
25 yean.
Former John·Wlth P.pperidge Form Oressin.i =-=I~ ...................................................................... LB. 1.89 Former John Fresh Center Cut
STUFFED PORK LOIN CHOPS LB. 1. 98
Coliforn10 But1ery
HASS AVOCADOS .
JFC 16·0Z
PACKAGE
LARGE EXTRA FANCY PREMIUM c
LB.
Fresh Crisp Extro FQncy
GRANNY SMITH'S APPLES ... LB. A9 ITALIAN SQUASH ...................... LB •• 19 ..... , I
MAllUCllAN
TAKI S09A
17-0Z
PKG .89
Ul•la Ill L •lll''S
............. 1.uTlll
·-LA MZ neuaA
WHITE 4A9 OR GOLD
12-0Z. BTLS. 2 99 REGULAR
OR LIGHT •
16-0Z.
BAG
Clan MacGregor Lo Ptir I ·liler lot l'otmcn '8·01
PORK LOIN CHOPS .............. LB. 2.29
Flavor Trff. 1-0t Pkg.
FRUIT ROLLS ........................... I FOR•I .
......,. --· 29·0UNCE 99 CAN •
ltcMotito lC).01 '°"' Oyno•ly 11> (1 Green or Jo•m"'• Wei Pot. 3 &6 Oz Con
TEA BAGS . . . . .59 SMOKED OYSTERS 1.H 1.75-llTER SCOTCH ... 8.H MARGARITA MIX I.ff ENCHILADA SAUCE ... REFRIED BEANS ........• 91
2·LITER SHASTA
PAMILY SID
FRISll START
DETERGENT 99 INCL $100 5
OFF •
12·0z Bog Assorted
FRITOS CORN CHIPS 1.49
U&MN.An -,...., ..-L
>. :
S1'A•KIST SOLID <&::--:> WlllTI TUNA
' Star.Kist
.,, •• 650Z IN Oil I 19
"' ...;..-.. -.,-1 ~WATER •
Nabisco 16·01 .. R9g or Un•olted
PREMIUM CRACKERS . ...............
SWANSON'S •••••••
·"
5 TO 12-0Z ASST 0 89
LASAOHI •....• 1.6• •
• 01 l'oclr~
OH BOY GARLIC BREAD .as
~1tto °' Cho<olOle
6·PACK TUSCAN POPS . 1.89
ClftVS MILL
OllAll91'9ICI
12-0Z
CAN 1.29
oue .._ lllllCI ''·" a....._ lllllCI 11.7' oue-. lllllCI 11..1• oue -."'° ..i." °""-...au."
SAVI 99c 90" IA.
SAVI
.,.00 ..,, 37•
toi.20 IA.
REGULAR OR Din
ASST'() LAYER
VARIETIES
c
IA.
•••
YI.ASIC
DU.I DIU.S
32-0Z WHOLE I 19 OR HALF •
J,,90 n Or 1'1.9 ,.._, •
SHREDDED CHEDDAR ............ l.H
I lb
HOFFY WIENERS. . .................... 1.69 ..... aa••• MIATS ,.oz. ,KG 69 ASSTl> e
I 24-oz.-:
&OAF ::.
/ \\\'
17-02. Peas Whole Corn or Cream Sty1e Com
DEL MONTE VEGETABLES ..........• 49
Use caution an purchdr,
int the old wines if yo.u.
aren't familiar with t~ir'
aaint capabilities. ~115
mere are aome barp1n13 the list, I have real qu
tions about the sound
of 17-year-old Bardolin
and l S to 20 year ol
shippen' bottlin,as of
aionaJ Bordeaux.
SIERRA SHOWCAS
-Don't forget the u.· ........
showing of wines from
Siem FoothiUs, the Sic
Showcue of Wine to
&>lace Saturday. May trom 2 to 5 p.m. All 2
Siem Foothills produci
wineries will participate
and pour their best wines.
The tasting takes place.a.t
the Amador County f 110:
grounds. Plymouth. an~
tickets arc $10 by advance
sale to: Siem Showcast,
6750 Jackson Valley Road.
lone, CA 95640. For
further info. call (2~)
274-2516. Tickets will be
$12 at the door.
Banana ·
has long
history
By TOM HOGE
,.~ .. ...,,..... . ....,
The banana, rated as tile
most popular fruit ill
America, serves as the ke)'.-
stone in diets all over the
world. Nice to know some-
thing so good 1s still rela-
uvely cheap.
It 1s uncertain to this day
how this remarkable fruit
surfaced in China, India.
Africa and. finally, Spain
and the New World.
h seems certain that the
banana was developed in
the rain forests ofSoutbca~t
Asia many centuries ago.
Arabs arc known to have
grown the fruit in Egypt
and the Holy Land. Later
Arab traders arc said lJ.>
have cultivated bananas ln
Africa. But there are gaps in
the story.
The next development
we know about for cenain
ea me in the I Sth century
when the Portuguese began
transplanting African
bananas o n the Canary
Islands. The plants
nourished aod provided
the Spanish conquistadors
with seedlings for the New
World. This would refute
the old theory that bananas
were native to the Ameri-
cas. as well as Asia and the
Middle East.
It 1s now acknowledged
that Central Amenca and
the Caribbean Islands.
which accoun1 for two-
thirds of the world's.
banana crop. were orig·
inally seeded by Spanish
explorers.
The fruit is rich in v11-
amins, low m fats and free
of cholesterol. Americans
consume 13.5 billion
bananas a year. but nutri-
tionists say we should eat
more for the essential fiber.
In the West Indies and
Latin America. the fru1t 1s a
popular staple m vanous
forms. especially the plan·
tain m cooked dishes.
Some of Spain's regional
dishes fea ture bananas
used in interesting ways.
Sole Granada, for example.
consists of sole fillet and
sliced bananas with a
creamy sauce. A salad from
the Canary Islands is made
of banana and orange
slices. red bell peppers and
coconut in an orangc juice
vinaigrette.
Or take this recipe for
banana caramel ice cream
which 1s laced with fre~h
fruit and topped wtth choc·
olate sauce.
BANANA CARAMEL
ICE CREAM
% table1poona butter or
mar1arla~
~. cap pa cked brown
sugar
! teaspoons Instant cof·
fee
t 11• cupa llgbt cream
I cup mashed ripe
bananas
14 C9p chopped almonds
or ba&ela.t1
I te11poon vanllla
S11r butter. sugar and
cofftt in medium saucepan
over very lc>w heat until
sugar dissolves. Add cream
and stir until smooth. Re·
move from heat and pour
into medium bowl: add
bananas. nuts and vanilla.
mix and chill one hour.
Tum mixtu~ into con·
tainer of a one-quan 1ee
cream maker.
Freeu accord1na to
manufactuiTr's d1rcct1ons.
Spoon into plast1c freezer
container Cover and
"ripen" at least two hour5
in frttzer heforc suv1ng.
Recipe may be doubled and
made in two or four-quan
ice <'~m maker.
ln•ex•pen•1lve•
·11n It! spen 11111 not hlQtl
1n p11c e reaaonar>te
clauihed ..., .._.
•dlletflllnQ ~
Cl11slflod Actvertlslng
842·597R
Garnish
it with
1fennel 'J
Now that cooks 1n the
llll.Jnited States are more
interested than ever before
in exploring the world of
fresh vegetables, fennel
+.ometimes called by its
ftalian name, finocchio) inay gets its due. At one
ti me it could be found most
often in shops in Italian
neighborhoods, but these
days an increasing number
of supermarkets carry it.
It has a licorice fla vor
and its appearance has
some resemblance to
celery. Its broad leaf stalks
1'verlap each other at the
base of its stem, forming a bul~lilce structure (3 to 4
inches in diameter) that is
·firm, white and sweet in-
side. Fennel's leaves -
sometimes called fems -
arc needlelike and a beauti-
ful green color. They make
a lovely garnish.
Fennel, fairl y thickly
'sliced. may be served as
'part of a first-course raw
vegetable platter. Or the
slices may be steamed.
1mixed with a cream sauce,
'sprinkled with grated
'Parmesan cheese and
broiled briefly to achieve a
golden topping.
Here is an unusual way
to use fennel -in a soup
along with pears. Tht>
recipe is included m a new
menu cookbook ... Cuisine
for All Seasons" by Hekn
Hecht (Atheneum). Hecht
-says of her fennel and pear
combination. "It 1s a
pureed soup made wtt hout
milk or cream. It 1s there-
fore lighter and more in-
tensely fla vored than a
creamed soup would be."
Both calorie-watchers and
devotees of light cuisine
may want to try her recipe.
FENNEL SOUP
3 medium-large fennel
balb1 (about 3 po1nd1
untrimmed)
1 large potato ( ~
pound), peeled and
sliced
1 medium onJon, p«led
and coarsely cltopped
Stveral 1prtg1 parsley
3 ~ c11p1 claJcken stock
or broda
1 cap p«led, cored, and
cbopped Bose pear
% teaspoons mlnct'd
fresb tarragon or ~
,; teaspoon dried
1 1cut tablespoon Per-
•. nod
Salt
Frub·ground wblte
pepper
Garnl1b: minced fennel
ferns
'. Trim the stalks ofT the
,fennel bulbs and discard.
; Slice the bulbs crosswide
about I inch thick. Put the
fen nel in a large saucepan
with the potato. onion.
parsley, and chicken stock .
Cover tigh tly, bnng to a
simmer. and cook for 15
minutes. Add the pears and
cook for 10 minutes longer.
or unul the vegetables and
pears arc son. 111 Puree the solids in a food
,processor or blender. add-
' mg the stock in a thin
stream. Return the soup to 1'the saucepan and stir in the
tarragon, Pernod and
seasoning to taste. Reheat
" before serving. Garnish
each portion with minced
"fennel fems.
'
II
Yield: about 8 cups or I 0
scrvini$.
"Spice your
::grapef rult
Easy to prepare and
good.
SPICED GRAPEFRUIT
t lar1e v1pefnJt
t le&lpooDI blUtr, toll
• teupooa1 UOt broWD
1qar (pecked)
Groud ctuamoa to
talte
Cut each grapefruit in
1~ half crossW1St; remove any
, JCCds. With a papcfru1l
knife, loosen se<:trons from
dividin1 membranes. With
a S?.<>On. blend butter. supr
and cinnamon; dot over cut
surfaett of grapefruit.
Bake in a shallow pan in
a preheated 375-<icarec
oven unul heated throuah
-l S minutes. Serve at
once Makes 4 \t'rvinas
. \
Don't spare t~ garlic fo
ID mou oft.he kitchens of ProvNCt, thick
b_raida of5.:c han1 handy for tbt phrl.ina ~nee the, nt bulb plays ati imponant rolt
tn the daily aet. Crushed or chopped, ..,tic as
\lteid in dresuioas and sa~ lddina ao aroma
and wtc to tempt the palate.
A pl~mp hen, rubbed wi\h a mixture of
ltmon JUtce and crushed aartic, Is inaistiblY.
frqrant when cut up and aauteed aently io 0tl and butter.
• Add some mushrooms, a bit of wine, a bay
leaf and some white prUc cloves and act the ~t
to the beck of the stove to simmer aenlly.
allowina the flavors to meld into a liquid bouquet.
COUNTRY SK.DJ.ET CRICltEN
Peel prlic. Finely mash, or put throujh
prticpress, l clovcprlic. Mix with lemooju1ce
an.d rub over chicken piecies. Let stand IO
minutes.
GROUND BEEF:
TABl.£ KIMCi CHUB PM:K.. 3-LBS APPROX L8 • DOES NOT EXC£E0 JOY. FAT
FRESH
ASPARAGUS ·
GC>CJRli\ETS DEUCKT LB. • LAROE~ 3 ~ l.00
Mdt butter with oitowr ae di ... law' •
Add t hicken pieces ud .._ IS eiz-.
tumina once. Add mushrooms; wane. -illl
&ah and remain int 4 wbok doYet .... eq..
and cooJt 10 minutn.
B~ muJtard with cbicten broG.. "*"
ovn ~bic:ken and continue cooki ... ~aed,
until C'b.iC'ken it tender, I Oto 15 miuw ..-...
Remove thicken and whole ptticdows IO
11ervina planer and ~warm. Ditcard·_blly
lea( Brina pen liquid to boilina net mot
rapidly a few minutes to f\'Jduce and tllickri
sliabtly. Pour over chicken and apnnkle with
parsley. Serve a whole clove sol\-<:OC>Ud prtic
with each ponioo to mash into t.be sauce as
chicken is eaten. Makes 4 scrvinas.
J39
NAVEL
ORANGES
SWEET
JUICY
FRESH
CANTAl.OUPE
~~tHE l ll
COONTRY HEARTH
BREAD· l 1/a ·LB.
AU.
lllllnETIES
PRO DO CE
..... _
Whl~ Rose Potatoes
M-*A14"' (i.ll(lW"'I
lMge _Papaya
(,.""''cw "'' Fresh Rhubert>
WY .. '11Jf'!nJ\
C.ello Carrots "°""" 11.nun 1" r • ~ TOtNtoes
l f'lt""'-t W. f -,r•• l "IU
Sun s~t Prunes
••. o
ls.MN Chips
l8 .59
3 n.t .99
.99
·~ .99
UQOOR
'"'"'·~ Bltton's \todllll
DELI am
llO""iel.f.M f49lf .... -.r ""',' Top Sirloin Stuks
H.-n S llcu
.,...d'' "•flt.I,..,. Nt• '' '
Shoulder Clod Roast
t'8ll '"'~ \11 •..,. Nt• •
Bonelus Chuck Roast
1t""(JN"'t W/I,.,,..,.
Swifts Beef Slzzlean
Fresh Rainbow 'Trout
"lt• .. fl( f .. 1\M
Fruh Cod Allets
'l'""'"' 'lnrlf' )ti',..,., .... ,
Hallbut Loin Sluks
II
.249
.329
~ t•• .. t••
.• J79
,. )29
.• )49
lft 149
.• 2'9
,,3ae
II VAWE PACKS m
,. ...... , .,,.. ..........
New York Ste.ks
••d .............. ..
Family StukS
'2a• .409
II BAKERY
•"""" ,..,.,, ··--,.,., ,. J3S Almond Olinlstl Rolls ,_....._ .... ~... 89
SuwM Oi.nt Buns •
2 ~.89
P1t1CD tifb:ilW THUU TH.RC.I ~ A,_l H THRCI MY. 1. llM
c:M.l!IMll .. , __ *""°"°'-,......... -"°' M.I. ---·~~"' -·-• lllC->-.. , •• wni ..... ---·-...,.._. .. ___ ""' __ ,...... -.. ..--at&• -
--· ""10 M"" f _A_ W _ -_ 10.._ _,..,, _ llYM ___, Ol'llt ... .-W -· ·-__,.,
-~
~-45 PEPPERIDGE FARMS
DANISH
DlEP IXSl1
l!Ol f~ "5SC)lrlfD >Al!ln ('
.7~ MOTHER'S
COOKIES
"H)l CH(X (t;IP ........... T
~UIX;I 0'°'1"•1 •t "'-JC.•• "'' •~1 , ..
BAKION
VODKA
' 'f" ~'P t ,_J rw •'1f
FROZEN fJ LI GROCERY a II GROCERY II
.43
J65
,,, ..... , .... ~5
Benlhana Entrees
Trtt Top A~ Juice
Juices~ Bars .. , .. .. '
Slim Prl« • Cut Com ...... ,. ..
Big Valley Str1Wberriu
Vons French Cut Beans
""'!114 •"•I 1•
Crlnkle Cut Potatoes
Straight Cut Potatoes
"~ ........... ~ Hash Browns
" .. ,..,.. . ""' Benquel Chkken Pies
............ ,,.. " -.... t &ust Portion DtnMr
t••
.79
.98
.59
.95
.99 t••
.99
.83
.39
)33
~ t ........... ...
Cran~rry Drink
Hunt's Tomato ~tchup
T~ Top A~ JuK't'
Hl.C FN1t Drinks
}65
.68
}62
.75 ....... ~ .. 1" fll\KMonl & Cllttse Dm'*r
Hunt's Pot-k (, BeMts
Hunt's Chlh Beans
Shoe.string Bttts
... .
<:hocotatr l'W\orsels
Slttanson Chunk Chicken
'II ' ... f fl\JB Long Grain Ri<t
.75
.89
.47
)79
.85
.99
'"...,.I .,..,
Vons SWttt ~
St~ TOl'Ntoe.s
Rosanta Taco Sauce
.59
.62
SchOllng ~ G111Yy Mix • 3 7
c~~r Salad Ot'essing . 8 7
Wesson Oil 2 35
Dinty l'W\oore Beef Stt-fw 129
.
Al~ Dog Food .58
41•
2a
,.., ,.., ,.., ------t!l(!(l [ A ~ 0-rM
Ml!jorFood ~to the 1984 Olympic Games ~-. ,,...... ~
•vm .,. .........
•vwm ...... ~
'°"9ff A91 YM.41'1 _, ...........
CANTUleO 9IACM .. ,~...,.., ...........
~MIVM.UY ,,_ya 2 &T.._.
~t&L.I ... , ..... ......., ....
\
Or~ Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Aprll 2S, 1984
Keep fresh
P!2.!.Yow~~E handy
,,, 33 ,,,....,...... •
When spri ngume comes so do chive • that deltate
berb with its onion-like flavor and intense green color.
In New York City. greengrocers who stow vegetables
and frui t in bins outside their doors often have chives
growina in containers... all ready for indoor gardeners to
take home.
But a while ago. a fnend brought me a gift from the bouti~ue where she works. It 1s so appealing 1 ca n't resist
describing it. A Colorado nursery has packaged chive seeds
with plantin& mix in an attracuve heavy plasuc bag that
serves as a soft "pot" to grow herbs in. Reall} neat
With chives in hand, I was ready to find a use fQr them
that was new to me -and may be to you. We put them m
a hominy and cheese puff and they added welcome flavor. If you try the rccipe. you may want to pass a small bowl ot
yoaun or sour cream -or a comb1nauon of the two -
sprinkled generously with extra fresh green chi ves to
accompany the puff.
HOMINY , CHEESE
AND c mvE SOUFFLE
111• cwps water
14 cup enriched white hominy grits
14 teaspoon salt
! tablespoons minced chives s lar1e eul. separated
! ouaces cheddar cheese. grated medium fine t 1~
suaa.uy packed cup)
In a heav~· large saucrpan. bring 1hl' water to a boil.
Gradually stir m the grits and <.a lt: bring 10 a boi l again and
cook. uncovered. over lo~ heat. s11 mng oftt.>n until thick
-about l'S-·minutes. Off heat. stir in 1he chi\ c'>. \\.h1sk 1n the egg )Olks. one
at a li me. until blended after t•ach add1 11on. stir 1n tht>
cheese.
In a small bo"I bt.•<it egg "h1tcs un11I s11ffpeaks form
and fold into gms mu.tu re Turn into a 1-quan casSl'role or
5-cup souffie dish Bake. unccl\crrd. an a preheated )50-
degree oven un til heated through and top 1s golden brown ~about 45 minutes. Serve at once. Makes 4 servings Rice and vegetables are combined in a aalad that's as fresh .. spring.
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Veectable favorites take on a special flair when
combined -..ith wild rice products. With no extra effort,
tbete deliciously difftrcnt accompaniments provide menu
variety. fresh taste and oonsi1tent easy preparation. Wild
rice and veaetable salads are a parcicular delia)lt.
Sprinatime Wikl Rioc Salad combines the finest Iona
&rain white rice and hi&h quality wild rice with tbe season'i.
most tendtt asparqus and sweet red bell pepper.
Limited time shouldn't mean u crificana freshness or
menu quality. ~ccompaniments such 11 Orienw Wild
Rice transforms any meat or chicken en tree into an elqant
meal in minutes. This 1pring-ljJht combination of
mushrooms, broccoli and fast cookina lona arain and wil4
tioc goes from saucepan to serving dish in under I 0
minutes - just about the right amount of time to arill a •
steak or chops, or to saute boneless chicken breasts.
Wild rice and vegetable accpmpaniments a~ just one •
way to add a special touch to everyday menus.
SPRINGTIME WILD RICE SALAD
. .
% \Aa C9PI water ;
l ,.cb1e (I oueea) ort1lD1l lODI 1rala and wlld rtce ::
.,., poad a1pan1••· cat clla1onaUy lnto 1-lacb plecea :'
11, cap vegetable on 1 •
% tableapooa1 wa.Ue wlne vlne1ar
1 amaU red or 1reen pepper, cwt into ~.U.dl pieces
Rff OU OD riqa
Combine water and contents of rice and seasoni ng
packets in medium saucepan. Bring to a boil. Cover and
simmer 20 minutes. Stir in asparagus. Cover and continue •
to simmer until all liquid is absorbed. about S minutes. :
Transfer to bowl. Cover and chill. Combine oil and •.
vinegar. stir into rice mixture. Add pepper, mix well. Chill. ·
Garnish with red onion rings. Makes 6 servings. •
ORIENT AL WILD RICE
14 poud mubrooms, sliced
t tableapoons batter or marsartoe
l ~ et1p1 water
3 to 4 tabfe1poon1 dry sherry
l to t teu,.... aoy sauce
1 pactaie (114 ouca) fast cooklnc Ions sraJn ud wild
rice
l cup small broccoli floweret1
Saute mushrooms in butter in medium saucepan until
tender. Add water. sherry. soy sauce and contents of rice
and seasoning packets. Bri ng to a vigorous boil. Stir in
broccoli. Cover and simmer until all water is absorbed,
about S minutes. Makes 6 servings.
DON'T BEEF
ABOUT CUT
IN CALORIES
By TOM HOGE ,, .....................
People who watch their weight will be glad to know
that beef today contains fewer calories and less fat than it
once did.
The Nauonal Livestock and Meat Board. which
disclosed this recen tly. also noted that beef accoun ts for 53
percent of the red meat eaten in America. surpassing pork.
which used to be the reader.
The beef ca lone count hH dropped I 0 percent since
the last check was made 30 years ago. This 1s partly due to
changes 1n animal nutrition and meat packing. Catt le art-
being bred today to produce leaner carcasses. And packers
are tnmming more fat from the meat before shipping.
although why they took so long 1s be}ond me.
The consumer desen es considerable credit for the
calone drop . .\ 1979 survc) by the National Restaurant
Association showed that more customers were ordering
their meat roasted and broiled. instead of fried. culling
down considerably on the fat intake.
The amount ofbcefwe ea1 can be reduced a lot 1fwe go
in for combination dishes such as stew. spaghetti or even
hamburger. rather than steak or roast. Actuall) the soaring
cost of meat has made this change a must 1n many
households.
Still. a juicy steak ts a treat once in a while and it need
not be too fattening. if prepared nghl f or one thing. if you
barbecue it. no fat or oil 1s needed for cooking.
A good steak requires little more than a light Jl'een
salad and a crisp roll to make a satisfying meal that 1s not
excessively fatte ning.
And to hold the calories down still fu rther. dress the
salad with a mixture oflemonjuice and herbs such as basil
or oregano. rather than a dressing made from oil or
mayonnaise .
If you arc cooking a cut of top round that 1s larJely fat
free, it 1s a good idea to tcn~nze it by marinating it in wine
or lemon j uice with herbs and chopped onion.
Lean meat poses other problems. As it broils, water
and what fat there is tend to cook out, leaving a dry piece of
beef. You can avoid this to a certain extent by putting the
meat on a preheated broiler or hot coals. sealing in the
juices.
Herc's a recipe for a barbecue specialty that features
top round.
BARBECUED ROUND STEA K
~ cup red wlne vinegar
11• cup water
t tablespoon1 lemon juice
% tableapoou finely chopped onion
I teaspoon dried tarragon
14 teaspoon pepper
l poand top round beef steak
Mix all ingredients except steak. Trim outside
layer of fat from beef. Place steak in glass bowl. Pour
marinade over beef. turmn_g to coat well. Cover and
refngerate for 24 hours. turning steak from time to time.
Cook steak on barbecue 4 inches from medium hot
coals 12 minutes per side for rare. or until desired
doncncss. Turn steak only oncc and baste occasionally
with mannade. Cut steak across grain into thin slices.
Serves 4. Good wi th chilkd beer.
Gl aze a l so a sauce
It has a lovely glaze that's also a saurc.
MAPLE PORK t to 3-poud 1moketl boeele11 pork aboulder butt
Wbole cloves
t tableapoM1 maple 1yr•p •
I tablespooe DtJoa ma1t1nl •
Cook pork 1«ord1n1 to wrapper d1rect1ons. drain:
well. Insert cloves. several inches apan. over surface of
pofk. Place an a small shallow pan -hned with fo1l 1f you
like. Sur togc1h~r syrup and mustard: spoon over pork! •
Bake tn a preheated 325-degrcc oven, basuna once. unul
syrup mixture as hot. Baste several times before Krvtna.
s, lvia Porter' advt e · on finance .
Ann Land ~ hl'IP" "1th dome~llc pro
bll'ms and Sundu~ ·s You Your Money
l'lt.'C t t0n fo('u~t·s on a reu bu me s
l rend uncJ op1>0rt unit 1c s Dilly Piiat
,,
Dalt¥ ... ,.......,.....,..~
Larry Crat.enber& (left) knew lt wu oTer u Damon Berryhill circled the buel, then tbe.<>rance Cout catcher made bla wtnnln& three-nm homer offtc1al.
Berryhill 's blast puts OCC atop heap
Drama tic ninth-inning homer lifts Bucs
to last-gasp 5-3 win over Golden West
It.figure~ to go down to a final blow
and tha(s exactly what happened
Tuesday as Damon Berryhill un-
loaded on a 1-2 pitch with two out in
the bottom of the ninth inning for a
three-run homer to propel Orange
Coast College to a 5-3 South Coast
Conference baseball victory over
area-rival Golden West College.
The victory puts Orange Coast at
I S-S aJone atop the SCC standfogs in
the race for the title, while Golden
West falls to 14-6. Santa Ana, which
shared the lead with t hese two going
in, was upset by Fullerton, 8-7. the
eighth straight time the Hornets have
beaten the Dons.
Jef Garcia ~ot the winning rally
started with a single to left and Kevin
Reimer kept it alive with a one-out
base hit to right.
Golden West's Mike Schooler. who
struck out seven and walked four in
going the distance, got the second out
and was one strike away from sewing
it up, but then Berryhill, a product of
Laguna Beach High, struck for the
winner.
"Damon had looked bad at the
plate his previous times up there,"
explained an exuberant OCC Coach
Mike Mayne who witnessed the
game-winner from the third-base
coaching box. "He hit a slider that
was hanging. The minute the ball
made contact. I knew it was gone."
Golden West let it get away in the
eighth inni ng when the Rustlers
loaded the bases with one out, but Jeff
Osterode forced a double-play ball to
end the inning.
Golden West's only scoring of the
day came in the fourth inning when
Shane Aorcs walked and advanced
on Rod Oark's single up the middl~
Clark was picked off, but the
Rustlers kept the momentum with
Brad Sechawer's double up the
middle to score one run, then Ron
Morello singled to riJht. Brian
Patrick stroked a run-sconng base hit.
then Gary Buckets followed with a
base hit to right to plate the third run,
giving Golden West a 3-1 lead.
The Pirates had taken a 1-0 edge in
the third inning when Jeff Brown
nursed a free pass. then went to
second on Larry Cratsenberg's smgle.
Jeff Gardner put down a bunt single
to toed the bascs and Brown eventu-
~ly scored when Garcia's fly ball to
right was dropped.
Coast cut the maJJin to 3-2 in the
fifth when Gardner walked and
advanced to second on Garcia's
single to right. Mike Senne walked to
load the bases and Reimer got the run
across with a ground out to short.
"It was a great way to win and a
tough way to lose." Mayne added,
reafizing that his team m ust travel to
Golden West Thursday at 2:30. "It
takes a liule of the pressure off
Thursday."
Angel
off en
in gear
Attack features
16 hits, 4 .homers
in 8-7 triumph
BOSTON (AP) -There are DO
trade secrets. When the Aneets &II
behind, they just look to their bitten;
"This is a · baU club capeble of
turning thinp around in a buny. •
said Manaaer John McNamara.
"There's no defense against a ba1I
going out of the park,,. said BostOft
Manager Ralph Kouk.
The Anaels spotted Boston an early
S-1 lead and then roared bid
Tuesday ru&ht. riding a 16-hit attack,
including rour homers, to an g.. 7
victory over the Red Sox.
Reggie Jackson, who had struck out
four times in a row, ~ted a Jooghall
barrage which turned the home plate
area of Fenway Park into a conven-
tion of handshakes.
Facing Boston starter Dennis .. Oil
Can" Boyd in the fourth, Jackson
drilled a l-1 pitch a dozen rows deep
into the bleachers in straightaway
center for bis fifth hom er.
Brian Downing greeted Jackson at
the plate, then crunched a 1-l pitch
over the screen atop the bi&h left-field
wall for bis fourth homer.
Bobby Grich welcomed Downin&
at the plate and showed be bad
received the message. Grieb lined a
shot into the ICfCe11 in left-center for
his third homer. That, too, was on a
1-1 pitch.
Southpaw John Henry Johnson
replaced Boyd and the Red Sox
moved in fron1 6-4 in their half of \.be
fourth. However, Doua DcCinc:a
made it 6-5 with his fourth homer. on
a J-2 count, to start the fifth.
The Anaels went on to add two runs
on Johnson's wildness and an error by
second baseman Jerry Remy in the
sixth.
And. after' Boston tied the soore on
a sacrifice fly by Rick Miller in the
eighth and left the bases loaded.. the
Angels pulled out the victory in the
(Pleue eee ARG&L8/1>2l
S eah a wks r egain
Sun s et leade rship
Guerr e r o finally
e a rns a paycheck
'
Ocean View tops
Westminster, 9-4;
FV wins in 9 , 6-5
Ocean View has resumed its No. I
status in Sunset League baseball wars
following Tuesday's abbreviated
scbeduJe after the Seahawks' come-
from-behind victory at Westminster.
Here's a look at Tuesday's results:
Ocean View t, Westm inster 4
The Scahawks returned to the top
of the Sunset League nest after
surviving a four-run first-inning scare
by the Lions, who got rich with a
three-run s10gle by Greg Villegas.
Ocean View. now 8-2 1n league
play. a half-game better than Edison
(which meets Marina tonight at Mile
Square Park). got started with a two-
run homer to right by Robbie Gibbs.
then took the lead for good in the
fourth inning.
Dave Tinkle got it started with a
single and Mike Kirby and Jonny
Gullion walked to load the bases.
Tommy Smythe's fielder's choice $Ot
one run across, then Chns Spamac
came up with the game-winner,
smashing a double to center to score
two. Spaniac was cut down at third
trying to stretch 1t to a tnplc. but the
damage was done.
The Scahawks added two more in
the sixth when Westminster's defense
feU apart -three cr:rors and
Spaniac's single we~ the big items.
Blaine DcBrouwcr and John
Savidan singled and Kelly Stovall
walked to foad the bases in the
seventh and Ted Gaulin's fly ball to
center plated the final marker for
Ocean View in the seventh inning.
Matt Jones aot the start for Ocean
View, and the win. Dean Douty
struck out three in a late relief
appearance.
Foantaill Valley I ,
H11atlagton Beacb $
The Barons remained in the CIF
playoff picture with a nine-inning
victory over the Oilers at Mile Square
Park. The victory ran FY's Sunset
mark to 5-5, one game behind third
place Westminster.
Fountain Valley scored the win-
ning run when Jim Wayne led off the
ninth with a single and continued to
second when the ball was bobbled by
the left fielder.
When Jeff Olsen bunted on the next
play, the Oilers' attempt to get Wayne
at third was unsuccessful. Gary
Schoonover was walked intentionally
to load the bases and Don Snowden·s
ground ball got Wayne home Wlth the
winning run.
Schoonover stroked a pair of triples
for the winners.
Newport Cbri1tlan t, Hertlaae O
David Cillay. a left-hander, struck
out seven and allowed just one single
in a three-inning stint to pick up his
fifth victory in seven starts as New-
port Chri~tian tuned up for its
Academy League contest at
Capistrano Valley Christian with an
easy non-league win over Heritage.
The Conquerors struck for three
runs in the first and third innings.
keyed by triples from Chris Howard
and Mark Frederickson, who also
shared pitching duties with Cillay.
Newport Christian 1s now 13-5
overall and shares the league lead
with Lcffinfwell Christian with a
matchina 6-record.
Progress in talks?
I
LAUSANNE. Suiuerland (AP) -If the orpnizers of the
Summer Olympics at Los Angeles uphold the 01,mpicChantr, the
Soviet Union will attend the Games, officials o the United States
and the Soviet Union said Tuesday.
Peter Uebcl'T'Oth. president of the Los Anaeles Olympic
Orpnizin1 Committee and the chiefU .S. representative at the talks
between the two countries.. said he would auarantce that the
LAOOC .would comply with the Charter. ..
.. There has been some pl'OIJ'HS, but this as not a brcaklhrouah.
Ucbcm>th emphasized aftC1" a mceuna with Marat Gramov, chief of
the Soviet Olympic Committee.
.. The Soviet Union's National Olympic Committee declares
that Soviet athletes have the firm intention of perticlpetina 1n the
Games m Los Anaclcs at the 23rd Ol~piad under the condition
that the Olympic Chart.er is cnforcod.' a Joint communique uid
The commun1que added. "The Los Anaclct Committee pve
ha wuranccs in declaration!' that the Olympic Chart.er would be
entirely rcsl)eeted."
' ,
Rutler Rodney Clark (right) couldn't find room with
Shane Florea already at 11eeond. Ke'rin Reimer def ends.
Ueberroth must deal
with Russia ns first ,
then baseball owners
Most of the previous com-
missioners of basebaJI gained the
reputation as a laughing stock the old-
fashioned way.
They earned 1t.
Peter Ueberroth. the incoming
commissioner, is establishin.a a repu-
tation of hjs own . . . of sorts. As
president of the Los Angeles Olympic
OrpnizanJ Committee. Uebe.l'T'Oth is
dealing with the Russians who must
be dealt with before be takes on the
owners of baseball.
The latter aroup may not be as
politically hardnosed as the Sov1ets
but the moguls of the vand old game
arc nonetheless emtic and unpredic-
table.
The point being that it 11 unclear
whether UebcrTOtb 's method of deal-
ina with the Ruuians will work well
with the owners of baseball. You JeC,
the president of the LAOOC has been
Im tt\an a pillar of slttn,ath in has
walu with the Ru ians.
The Soviets have played the politi·
cal pmc Wlth more mo•ie than
Ucbcrroth. The Russians have voiced
di usfacuon with cverytluna from
their 11r fliahts to the locatton of their crut~t in Lona Beach Harbor:
Moreover. they have threatened to
stay away from the um mer sames 1n
Buo
Tuc1E1
SPORTS COLUMNIST
Los Anactes.
In thepmeofOlympicpollt1cs. the
pnzesarcconcessions. AJoo. the way.
the rewards art one side gett1na its .
hand kissed. Uebel'T'Oth has been
doma an excellent job ofk.isstng the .
. band of the Soviets.
The LAOOC'boss in one move said
that if the Russians were reluctant to
submit a list oflheir official Olympic
deleptes. he would send somebody
to M0tc0w to pick at up. Uebcl'T'Oth
also went so tans to say last week that
he miaht go to MOICOW eersonaUy to
"act cvcrythins strai&ht. •
This attitude woufd be in contrast
to tellina the R ians to ta.kc a hike.
Obviously, there a~ doubts thal
tht' Russians a~ serious about
boycottina the 11mes. The Soviet
Olymptc team tlaum to tce>~ m~or
triumphs 1n Ofymp1c events and
would 0C1U1nly ruhzt far Jl'Calcr
pin an wor1d presuat by dom10at1na
medal competition than by simply
stayinJ away from Lo Anaeles.
Still, llebcrroth cannot afford to
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pedro
Guerrero, the Los Angeles DodJers'
$7 million man. bas been more lake a
missing person through the first three
weeks of the 1984 baseball season.
The Dodgers' third baseman. who
hit 32 home runs in each of the last
two years and has driven in 100 or
more runs in each of tho~ seasons.
came into Tuesday night's game
against Houston Wlth only a .164
batting average and three runs-
batted-in.
Guerrero. who sat out the previous
two games. showed signs that he·s
reverting to bis form of the past two
years with a triple and a double and
two RBI to lead the Dodgers to a 5-3
victory over the Astros.
It was the third straight win for Los
Angeles and the club's 1ifth in the past
six games. The Dodgers are 11-3 after
starting the season 1-4.
.. It's about time I got two hits an one
game," said Guerrero. who improved
his still-subpar average to 188 'Tm
getting my things together
·•Everyone's wom ed about m\
hitting. But it's a long season. and ·1
know that I'll hit. I know at the end of
call the Russian blufT If the So\lct
team did not appear 11 would
d1man1sh interest in the games. to be
sure. but the conscqucn~ would be
far more damagaf\g_ from the stand-
point of the LAOOC.
It could cost money.
You sec, much of the Olympic
revenue comes from tclev1S1on and
considerable of the TV input 1s based
on the quality of the product This
could be construed as a pnce tag being
placed on the Russian athletes com-
ing to Los Angeles.
ABC paid $225 million for the
riahts to tclev1sc the 1984 games
About$70 mil hon of th as has not been
~d and 1t might not be forthcomina
1f the Russians are not.
ABC is getting its investment back
by selhnacommerical time. Sponsori
will hardly find the taaenna cost of
30 .econds tolerable without one of w prinopal 1ngRd1ents of Amcncan
telcvi ion -a villa10. It 1s of such
stuff th.at ratinas •~made.
Therefore, you undenla.nd Peter
Ueberroth's wilhnaness to k.t the
Russian . . hand. The enure
atmosphe~ of the LAOOC has been
mooey and. most important. wh(T'Cf
1t u rom1na from.
The a suran~ that the 1984 Olym-
pic paacant and 11mcs Will oot cost
the U.S. wpeym a .... pmny has
~~ from an idea and a
col'Kltpt to an o aon. The um of
S 70 milhon bc1na udy, 1t 1 of roncttn
10 Ucbcm>th and worth mort than an
(Pl-... ... TUCUll/02)
the year rJ1 be around I 00 RBis and .Joo.·· .
Guerrero walked and scored a run
10 the first inning on Candy
Maldonado's two-out single. Guer-
rero doubled in the second, when the
~ers added two more runs. And
he tnpled and drove in two runs in the
fourth when Los Angeles took a S-1
lead.
Alejandro Pena, 3-1. earned bas
third straight victory. but he needed
help from three relievers. including
Tom Niedenfuer.
I
~ eo..t OAJLY PILOT /Wedneeday, April 26, 1884
Kuhn rejects plan
of minor league
playoff in Nevada
From AP 6,.&dtff
LAS VEOAS -Baseball Com· •
missioner Bowie Kuho has balked at Las
Vegas u a site for the l 984 Little World
Series, promptina Pacific Coast League general man·
qen to call on Nevada political leaders to intcrocdc.
PCL officials a.nnounocd in March that the fall
series would be beld in Las Vegas. But PCL ~ident
Bill Cutler said Kuhn's office in New York had rejected
the cit aii a aite for a cbampionship playoff involving
winners of the PCL, American
Association and International
League.
The senes has been held
previously in Louisville.
Kuhn has had a running
battle with Las Vegas since the
PCL moved the Stars' Tnple A
baseball club to the city.
Kuhn has imposed restnc-
tions on the type of advenising
the Stars can use, banning any
ltlllua • type of gaming ads.
The Stan have asked Sen. Paul Laxalt and Rep.
Harry Reid to contact the commissioner's office in
hopes of retaining the senes.
Chuck Adams. a spokesman in Kuhn's office,
called the matter "internal ... adding .. We prefer not to
discuss it."
John Johnson. president of the Nauonal Associa-
tion of Professional Baseball Leagues. said no final
decision has been made on a site.
Kuhn would make the final decision.
~oftheclay
IWtr ............... Arnericm1 t..----. on former e.tttmore Oriolee MMeQet est "Neulr:
• .,..,. way to telf the c:turablNty of • Ttmu welCl'I
would be to ltrlS) It to his tongue.••
Lawrence chosen first in draft
COLUMBUS. Ohio-The New York m
franchise selected U.S. Olympian Janice
Lawrence of Lous1ana Tech as the first pick
Tuesday m the inaugural draft of the
Women's Amencan Basketball Association.
Jeny KJssell. a Ne w York pubhc relations man and
the team's general manager. earned the number one
selection in a bhnd draw conducted among the league's
nine me mbers draftmg Tuesday.
The 6-3. 160-pound Lawrence earned a spot on the
Olympic team as a forward However. KJsscll projects
the 21-year-old player as either a fo rward or a center.
She a veraged 16. 7 porn ts and 8 I rebounds in her final
collegiate season.
SOFTBALL
-~ ~ -~~-
..............
Paclra bllts San Franct.co
Gany Temple ... capped a siit-tun •
first inning with a three-run homer that
bounced off tbe outstretched glove of San
Francisco ri&ht fielder Jack Clark as the
San Diego Padres defeated the Giants, 6-1, Tuesday
night in National league action. The Padres went to
work quickly qi.inst Mite ~w. 1-3. as they loaded
the bases with no outs. Steve Garve1'• around out
drove in the tint run, Teny &eue4y followed with an
RBI single and &em McReY110ld1 bounced into a
fielder's choice that made it 3-0 ... 84* Hor.er '• bases-
loaded sacrifice fl y with one out in the seventh innfog
sent the Atlanta Braves to a 4-2 win over the Cincinnatt
Reds. Gerald Perry, pinch-bitting for Atlanta star1cr
Lea Barter. 2-2, opened the seventh with a sing.le,
moved to second on Rafael Ramlre1'1 fourth hit of the
game and took third when Dale M...,.y walked.
Homer then flied deep to center, puttina the Braves
ahead 3-2 ... Job Cuclelarta pitched.six iruiinas and
allowed one run, earning his third victory apinst one
loss and doubles by Jaaoa T~ompao11 and Job.Dy Ray.
sandwiched around a balk by Jerry Kooamu, led to a
pair of second-inning runs as Pittsburgh beat Philadel-
phia, 3-2 ... Rickie Hebaer lined a solo home run with
one out in ninth inning off St. Louis reliever Bnce
Satter to give the Chicago Cubs a 3-2 triumph and send
the Cardinals lo their seventh straight loss ... Tuesday's
aame between the New York Mets and Montreal was
postponed after a one-hour rain delay.
Montreal s tuns Islandera, S-0
Rookie goalie Steve Peuey collected ~
his third shutout of the playoffs while Guy '
Carboa.ae.au, Mata Naslund and Steve Shutt
provided the offense as the Montreal
Canadiens beat the New York (slanders 3.0 Tuesday
night in the National Hockey League playoffs. Penney.
who was 0-4 in a late regular-season stint with the
Canadiens, raised his Stanley Cup record to 8-2. He has
surrendered only 15 goats in leading the Canadiens on
their improbable journey past Boston and Quebec and
into a 1.0 lead over the four-time defending champion
Islanders ... Jn the o ther Stanley Cup semifinal opener,
the Edmonton Oilers snatched the a 7-1 win over
Minnesota. thanks to Wayne Grettky'1 latest scoring
burst and Grant Fuhr'• stingy goahending. Gretzky, the
Oilers' sconng machine. had a goal and three assists -
gi ving him a National Hockey Lca$ue playoff-leading
22 points. with six goals and 16 assists. Fuhr made 33
saves. including a handful of point-blank Minnesota
chances. as Mmnesota outshot Edmonton, 34-26.
Oakley's one-hitter lifts OV
Fountain Valley rallies:
Marina-topples Edison
Ocean Vie" High sta~ed in contention for a playoff
spot 1n the Sunset League soft ball race b} blankmg
Westminster, while Fountain Valle} rallied to top
Huntington Beach a nd Ma nna came fro m behind against
Edison Tuesda) afternoon
Newpon Christian. meanwhile. remained perfet·t in
Academ) League pla>. but Saddlcback College ~as
downed b\ Santa Ana in a nonconference community
college matchup.
Here's what happened:
Ocean View!, Westminster 0
Jackie Oaklev twirled a one-hitter and helped herself
at the plate with an RBI-double 1n the first inning as the
Seahawks improved to 2-3 in Sunset action.
Oakley allowed the one hit 1n the sixth mnmg, while
walking only one and striking out one.
The Seahawks scored the only runs of the game in the
first inning as Jana Darling beat out a bunt and moved to
second on Julie Scruggs' sacrifice. Chans Monroe then
beat out an mfield single and Trina Vlachos doubled in the
tirsl run \\-Ith Monroe being thrown out at the plate.
Oakley followed with her double to bring 1n the
second run.
Fouoiaio Valley 4, HantlDgton Beach Z
The Barons ralhed tr.om a two-run defic1l to pm the
defeat on the Oilers and Sta> in contention for the Sunset
League title.
Kerri Clower and Debbie Dickerson had a pair of hits
and Teri Newman delivered a two-run single in the sixth to
put Fountain Valley ahead for the first time.
Stephanie Rowlett improved her record to 3-1 in
league play, strikmg out eight and yielding four hits.
Fountain Valley hosts Westminster Friday.
--------------------Marina 4, Edison t Julie Larsen struck out seven and sister Christy Anteaters drop
seventh in row
LO ANGELES -UC Irvine. missing a number of
sconng opponun1t1 es. fell for the se\enth straight time
Tuesda) afternoon. 8-6, in a Southern Cahfo m 1a Baseball
Association game at Loyola-Mary mount.
T he Anteaters could manage onl > six runs from 16
hits and left 11 men on base against winning pitcher Scott
HaJverstadt.
LICI did manage to take a 4· I lead 1n the second inning
when 8111 ffCunndl drove IO '"0 ur thl' runs w11h a
double O'Connell had lhree hits on the da\
Lovola countered With two 1n the seco nd and one JO
the third to gel even. lht•n took the lead for keep!> with four
IO the fourth which cha\ed losing pitcher Ken Santoro.
teve Morgan drm c 1n three runs w1 th a solo homer in
homered in the sixth inning to pace the Vikings to their
founh success in fi ve Sunset outings.
Edison took a 2-0 lead with single runs in the first two
mnin~. but Manna rallied with a run in the founh and two
more 1n the fifth to tum it around. A bases-loaded walk to
K.iki Brown tied the game and Julie Bridgeman's RBI-
single proved to be the game-winner for Marina.
Newport Christlu t , Liberty Chriatlu 3
Kelly Davidson. a right-handed freshman, struck out
9. walked 2 and slammed a two-run horner in the fourth
innmg to key Newport Christian's seventh straight
Academy League victory without a defeat.
The winners upped their overall record to I 2-1 behind
a Sl,\·hit attack that revolved aro und Davidson and Denise
Curren. each who went 2-for-2 with 2 walks.
Suia Ana 8, Saddleback 1
In a nonconference community coll ege contest.
v151ting Santa Ana romped to an 8-1 victory over
Saddle back.
The Gauc hos. I 0-18. got their o nly run m the founh
1nn1ng o n an RBl-smgJe by catcher Shanie Lockhan.
1'1ekro captarM fOartb WlD
Unbeaten PMl NMUe ICalcend tiPt Iii biu TUClday fOr bil fourth Amcric:aD ~ viciory ud WU blcktd by._.
W~t two-NO aiJ'l&e and Dia Ma&-•
ttacl11 solo bome run u the New York Yanbcs
blailked Kan1a1 City, 4-0. Niekro. at 4S tho oldest
pitcher in the m..;or lequea, tuuck out eiabt. walked one and allowed on.ty ooe runner to racb dWd buo i.n
uinina hit 44lh career thutout. The Yanbea broke a 2.,__S-iJuU.=~~ICO=-ft;;..;.q"'"i ttreU in the firJl inni1'1 by
oolloctina two unearned NOS oft'
loser IM Black, 3-1 ••• A.I c.w ...
broke a 2-2 Jie wilh ao RBI linale •
in the ei&hth innina to lead the
Seattle Marinen to a 4-2 victory
over the Toronto Blue Ja)'1 ... PMI• Mun.r•• two-nm homer
and a solo shot by Cal JU,a. Jr.
powered Seott MeGreSor and the
Baltimore Orioles to an 8-3
victory over the Oiicaso White
Sox. The triumph was only the
fifth apinst 12 lostes for the
world champion Orioles this seuon and their second in
11 road games ... Luce Purl .. betted a three-run
homer in the fifth inning to lift Detroit to a 4-3 victory
over the Minnesota Twins and a sweep of a twi-night
doubleheader as the red-hot Tigers improved their
recotd to 141. LCMI WMtaker'• two-out sinAle capped a
three-run ninth inninJ !n the opener as the Tigers rallied
for a 6-5 triumph, making a wtnner of Jack Morris, 4-0,
who scattered seven hits.
78en alive; Celtlca advance
Moaea Malo•e bad 22 points and IS m
rebounds and Jall11 ErvlD1 added 22
points as the defending champion Phila-
delphia 76ers held off a furious rally to
defeat the New Jersey Nets. 110-102 Tuesday ni&ht.
evening the openi11$·round National Basketball As-
sociation playoff senes at 2-2. The 76ers have:. roared
back from a 2-0 deficit to force a final game in the best-
of-five series Thursday night in Philadelphia. Mnrlce
Clteeb added 20 points and .AHrew Toaey 18 for
Philadelphia, which is trying to
become the first team in 15 years
to repeat as NBA champions .•.
In other NBA action, Larry Bird
and Deui1 Jolmloa combined for
19 points in the fourth quarter as
Boston defeated Washington,
99-96, to win their first-round
series. The Celtics, who won the
best-of-five series 3-l. play the
winner of the New York-Detroit
playoff which resumes tonight
oae with New York ahead. 2-I ...
Domlaiq9e WlW.u gave Atlanta the lead on an 18-
footer with 47 seconds remaining and Doc Riven
drilled two free throws with two seconds left as the
Hawks trimmed tr.e Milwaukee Bucks 100-97 to tic
their series at 2-2 ... Mark A1alrre scored 29 points and
Jay VlDceat added 21 to lead the Dallas Mavericks to a
I 07-96 victory over Seattle to square that series at two
games apiece ... Guard Darrell Grilli~ scored I 0 of hjs
26 points in the founh quaner to spark a Utah rally that
carried the Jazz to a 129-124 victory over Denver.
UCifund
drive adds
support
UC Irvine's athletic department
has developed a strong one-two
punch for the Anteaters' athletic fund
dnve, gaining Roben Warmington
and Randy Howatt to serve as co-
chairmen for the drive, which begins
in May.
The drive is targeted to raise
$300.000 for athletic scholarships at
UC Irvine, wtlh over 110 volunteers
working on the project.
Anteater basketball coach Bill
Mulligan is the honorary chairman.
The 1983 drive raised $217,000.
Warmington is owner and founder
of the Robert P . Warmington Co., one
of the largest real estate development
firms in Orange County. He serves on
the board of directors at the South
Coast Repertory Theatre, the 552
Club at Hoag Hospital, Orange Coun-
ty Center of Performing Arts, New-
port Water Polo Foundation and
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
Bob Boone
·.
DeBefl traded·to Tampa Bay
DENVER -The Deaver Broacot on -Tuada_y tiped &c e ._., quanert.ck • • • · St.o~ peBef'a ud then lndod the seven· •
year veieran to the Tam.,. Bay Buccanem
for a foW'th·rouad draft choice a.od a oonditional future
draft choice, a team spok.esm.aft uid.
Tbe conditional choice ll.ke~ depend on the
amount or playina time De -t.a with the Buccaneen next seuon; the more pla)'ioa time, the
h~ the draft choice Denver will receive. DeBera. unhappy with hi1 tee0nd-1trioa 1tatu1
behind Denver•• John Elway, became a free gent on
Feb. 1 and oeaotiated with aeveraJ National Football
Leque team• u well u somo United St.ates Football Leaaue •ma. indudina the Denver Gold.
Flyen• llcCtlmmoQ reetcn-
PHll.ADELPHIA -Bob McCam· ~ • mon. the atoeraJ manaaer and coach of the '
Philadelphia Ayers, resiped Tuesday
ni&bt rather than pve up bis ooachina
duties at the club president's request, the National
Hockey Leque team announced.
The Ayen ended the season 46-24-10 and Jost in
the fint round of the Stanley Cup playoffs to the
Wubinaton Capit.ab in three straight games.
President Jay T. Snider, in announcing the
~tion, said he and McCammon agreed on the
dCCJsion after a series of meetings ended 'f uesday night
in a deadlock.
McKinney fired by Indiana
INDIANAPOLIS -Jack McKinney m
has been tired as coach of the Indiana •
Pacers. Bob Salyers, president of the
National Ba.stetball Association team said •
Tuesday niaht :
"We have elected to have 1 different head coach for •
the 1984-85 season," Sal yen said. •
Salyers said the decision to fire McKinney was his ·
and described it as "a judgment call." :
He declined to discuss specific reasons except to ·
say, "It was my feeling it was the thing to do."
Salyers said no successor to McKinney had been
named.
McKinney has been coach of the Pacers four years
and bas compiJCd a 125-203 record. In the recently .
completed season, the team had the worst record in the ·
NBA at 26-56.
Howatt, a graduate of UC lrvine, is
president of Rusty Pelican, lnc. He is
currently the president of UCI Spons
Associates, the official athletic sup-
port group at UC Irvine. ANGELS . • • Howatt was honored as Dis-
tinguished Alumnus at the 1983 UCI
Lauds and Laurels dinner. As a
member of the Anteater water polo
team. he scored the first point
recorded in a UCI athletic contest in
1965.
A tipoff barbecue will be held May
5 on the Crawford Hall tennis courts
and weekly drive meetings will be
featured throughout May.
From DI
ninth on Jackson's double off the left-
field wall and Downjng's single
through the middle off relief ace Bob
Stanley, 1-1.
"( wish there was somebody on
base when they were going out of
here," McNamara said. "It would
have made things a lot easier."
the third and Don Da\ 1s cracked a solo shot 1n the sixth.
Doug Irvine also had three singles 1n the UCI attack.
For the Lions. Reggie Lamtx:rt drove in a pair of runs UCl'S Graham with three hits and Bill Thorne> went 2-for-4. • 1. G h
Things don't get an~ easier for the Antea~ers this Mesa s ices auc 0 All-America
"We've gotta put the bat on the ball
to wm," said Angel catcher Bob
Boone, who bad a double and three
singles. "If we do, we have a lot of
guys with the potential to hit the ball
out of the park. lfwe don't. it's a real
struule." weekend as UCI opens a thn:e-game sc.-t wtth (al State
Fullenon at Anteater tad1um -,lead with 10 -8 win --
@Ii •SA! FS •
I I ti .. ' . , • I •, . . ' ~ "' , .. 1 ~. I . • ~ .• , . I "
SAN DIEGO -Saddleback College's baseball learn
came up with fi ve runs in the seventh 1nn1ng to o~erturn a
7-3 deficit. but 11 went for naught as host San Diego Mesa
scored three 1n the bottom of the frame for a I 0-8 Pacific
Coast Conference victory Tuesday.
Me1a Verde Ceoler
2701 Harbor Blvd
BICYCLE REPAIRS
Servicing All Make•
And Models
751-4882 Co.1a M9M
The wrn shaved Saddlcback's PCC lead over Mesa to
1111 games.
Saddleback slugger Steve DeAngclis went 3 for 4 with
three RBI in the game. including an RBI hit m the seventh,
and Mark Grace and Steve McKee also supplied key hits 1n
the frame to fuel the comeback.
Ct•pll111tntlfy lltglltrltlOll Carda AY ..... It TnlCll lllpa
and Truck DNl«a Tllre419bltd leuttllnl Cllltw•. Wilkes still
doubtful
AdllllllAtll WltW Ce•ol-...., .......... II.•
LOS ANGELES ~AP) -
The status of startina for-
ward Jamaal Wilkes of the
Lakers rtmaios in doubt
because of illness
Three Huge
Halls Packed with
Exciting, Informative Exhibits
An ahelin con11at1an C11t1r
Wilkes missed all three
pmC$ of the Lakers' NBA
fint·ro und playoff scne1
agamst Kansas City Kinas
because of ll aastro-1n-
tcst1nal illness.
Wilke$' pbys1c1an said
Tuetday that more will be
known followtng~an eum-
ma11on Friday. Dr Renee
Rinaldi said Wilkes m'8ht
be ~ady to P"ct1<X t~at
dav
(across from Olsneyland)
Aprll 25, 28, 27 · 1 oo to 8:30 p.ms Dally
THE NUMBER ONE TRUCK SHOW IN AMERICA
UC Irvine ophomore Chen
G raham was named to the Amcncan
Women's Sports Federation's All-
American team. The 6-2 center was
chosen as a third team All-American.
Graham, who broke five school
records tn her first season with UCI.
including most pomts scored (593).
field goals made (240), field goals
attempted (429), free throw per-
centage (8.l 7) and blocked shots
( 11 5). was also named to the All·
Rtgson team for the Far West, which
mcludcs USC-s Cheryl Mitter, Pam
McGee and Paula McGee. Tina
Hutchinson of San Dieao State,
Alison LanJ ofOrqon, Jill Coleman
of Oreson State. Rhoda Chew of San
Jose St.ate and Kym Hampton of
Antona St.ate.
UCT went 20-9 for the season.
"We might just be over the hump m
trying to forget about last year,"
Boone added in noting the Angels'
desire to atone for a 70-92 record in
t 983. "We just have lO go on from
here."
The victory gave the Angels a split
of a two-.game series and was their
s1xlh tnumph in seven games.
The Angels also spoiled the first
offensive spree of the year by Boston
sluuer Jim Rice. With only one extra
base hit, a double, a.nd a .1 S9 average
m the first 16 pmcs, Rice broke
loose. driving in four nmsand scorina
two with a 1in&}e, double and triple.
The Anaels open a brief tw~me
series in Milwaukee toni&ht with a
day pmc Thursday before retumina
home to fi<X Seattle Fnday.
Rustlers sweep Mt. SAC -
WALNUT -Tht Golden West
Collqe men's volleyball team closed
out its ca~ian on a bi&h note Tue~y n t. dispatchma J.1t. San
Antonio. I -3. I S-7. I S·l here.
Coach Albtn Gaspan.tn'1 Rustlers
finished the Metropolitan Con·
frrcnce in tee0nd pit« at 9·3. wi tb aU
the Losse• com 11\I to lequr champion
Sant.a Barbara Golden West wa1 I~
overall. l
·'\\c lbuu~ll Yi-C: IJilJ • real ~
season overall," said Gasperia.n. "We
battled Santa Barbara each time but
came out on the hon end."
The Rustlen u~ a prodom1n~ly
sopbom0tt hneup m the finale Mth
setter Cayae Osterlund rccordina
elaht solo blocks and nmc dias ~nd
outside hitter Scott Cakkrwoocl chip-
pin! in Wltb nine kills.
•• t •'U a IO()d WA~ LO end the
seuon," added O~spanan.
TUCKER. • • FromDl
occasional pucker
Whether all of Ueberroth's guaran-
tees to the Russians can assure them a
peaceful and pleasant stay in
Southern California is another m11·
tcr. but 1t 1s also another story.
The cnsuina story will deal wsth
Ueberroth and his penonality and
traits when he emcraes from the
Olympic hassle and onto the baseball
scene.
The question wdl have to do
whether he will have become a
toU&hened executive who will bt
bAtanoscd in his rtl1tion1 with tbr
owners ora commissioner still willto
to kiss a ... hand.
Memhardt to UOP
Gretchen Mc1nbanh, an AlJ-ClF
buke&b&ll choice from Edison Hiah
School. has •ianed a national letter of
intent to attend the Unavenity of
Pac::iftc in Stockton.
Meinhardt.. a ~ acnaor aVPtMi''ll1
22.0 poants a pmc '~the l1t .
,CdM belt~ Uaive~sity; Ollet:s wia Sunsete.
Sea Kin s brush off Trojans' tactics,
: Norberg. Gabriel ey Huntington Beach
I
Corona del Mar Hi&h's Sea Kin~
, 1 swept to their 17th straight tennis :I victory of the season without a loss
and l Ith straiaht in Sea View League
1 play as visitina University fell by an
18· I 0 count.
The visilinJ Trojans tried to put a
·I twist into their anacl... as Coach Gary
Siscl insened sin&lcs star Chris Greer
into hit team's No. 2 doubles slot in
: 1 hope$ of swetptnJ doubles and get·
• tinasome help m singles. But. it didn't
. work out.
. "The only time I fell uncom-
., fortablc was at the stan when I saw
: their lineup card," said CdM Coach
' Dave Heffern.
..
:1
•
'
·,
~. ,.
s
ti
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FoR TH£ RccoRo
~ t I . . ., ~
MAJOR LEAGUE STAHDtNGS
Amwlcan L-.ue W• ST DIVISfOH
W L P'ct. Ga
Stan ..
0.11.lal'ICI .,....,
Tuu
l(a111a1 Cl111
MIMUOla
Chlcaoo
O.troll
T0<onlo
CtaYtland
New V0<k
Mllwauttff
Boston
Battlmora
10 1 see
10 I SS6
II 9 SSO
• 9 .471
1 • "'" I 10 ·'" 6 9 400
•AST DtVISfON
14 l
10 •
1 6 7 I
6 9
6 II s 12
933
.SS6 S3I w
400
3S3 .?94
Tvndey'1 G-
....... I, 8o11on 1
New V0<ll 4, Kan1u City 0
Tuu al Cle\leland, P9d~. rain
Oelroll 6·4, MIMelOll S·l
MllwaukM 3. Oaklend 2
SMlllt 4 T0<onto 2
Battlmon I , Chk aoo 3
Tedert Gemes
2
'Ii . .,
2 ,.,.,
3
5'1'J
6
7
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lOVi
.,,.... !Wiii 1·11 at MllwaukM (Sutton
1·21. lnl
Chlcaoo (Bannltllll' I· l l al Cltvelal'ICI
<Bellenna 0·0) l
Oakland IConrov 0-1) al Toronl!M~I
2·0), (n)
S.allla (Beatti. ?·ll e r ~Ion (HU!"sl
2·21. lnl Oetroll (Wlkoic 1·0) al Texu (hnana
7· l), (n)
Baltimore !Davis 0·01 at Ka nws Clh
(Sel>ef'l\aoen l·Ol. tnl
New Yorll. \Guldrv 1·11 11 MIMHOla
ISmflnM>n 3· ll, In)
Tiwrwlar1 GatMs
A""4s 111 Milwaukee
Chk•OO al Crevetano
New York at Ml~wla
Oakland at Toronto
Sealllt ar Bolton, (n)
Oetroll al Texu, lnl
Balllmore a t Kansu Cllv. (n)
Nettonal Lfftue
WEST DIV1MON W l P'ct. Ga
San DlaOO 13 S 711 Ded9arl 12 7 631 1' ,
San Francl\CO 7 10 412 so.,
Houston 1 11 39t 6
Atla nre 6 10 .37S 6
Clnclnnall S 12 294 7'n
Chlc;aoo
Pnllaoelonla
Montreal
New York
Pltlsburgh
SI.Louil
EAST DIVIStON
10 ' 9 6
10 7
' 7 6 9
7 11
62S
600
.SM
.563
.400
319
.,., . ..,
1
Tunda'l'S ~
Oecl9tr'I 5, Housron l
New VOf'k al MonlrH I, ood .. rein
~ PllhOurg11 l . Pnlledllonla 2
At1a n11 4, Clnclnnall 2
C.hlcaoo 3, Sr Louis 2
S.n DllOO 6, San Frtncl\CO 1
Tedev'l Games
Houston (Rvan 1·1) 11 ~
(V11tn1ue1e 1·2). (n)
Cnlcaoo tRuthvan 2·0) at Sr Louis
(FO<Kh 0·2)
New Vork (Learor 1·11 et Montreal
(R098rs 1·0)
Pllllburgn (Tudor 1 ·I) 111 Pnlladet1>11le
!Carnon l·Ol,lnl Cincinnati !Soto l·l) ar A11tn1a (Davlev
0·21. tnl San Fr•ncllCO \Lu kev 0· 11 al San
Dl990 (SllOw 2·1). (n)
Tt1Vndl¥'t Oamn
Oedelrl at San DllOO
Clnclnna ll er Alllnla, lnl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Aneets I , Red Sox 7
CALIFOtlNIA M>STOH
Peltl\ cl
Carew lb
Lvnn rf
DeCncs 3b
Rt Jksn on
Downing II
Grlen 21>
Boone c
SChOflld u
abrllbl
4 1 1 0
4 0 3 I
4 0 l 1
4 I I 2
S 2 2 I
S I 2 2 s 1 1 l
S I • 0 • 1 0 0
lilemor 1t>
DwEvns rf
BOllQS lb
Rice If
EHl!tl' lb
ArrNIS dft
Gedmenc
Barre ll or
Ntwmanc
Nkhols cf
Gullrrz" Mll .. rof\
Holfmn n
40 11' I Ttte11
Scare bv '"'*'ts
abrllbl
4 2 2 0
4 l 0 0
4 I I 0 s 2 3 4 s 0, 1 ~I I 0
4 0 2 l
(I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
l 0 2 0
0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 ,. 1 ll 1
Callfer'nla 100 J 12 001-•
•""'" 20l 100 010-7 Gama Winning lilBI -Downl!llJ (1)
E-Remor DP-Callfornla 1. Bo\ton 2
L08-C:alllornle 9 8011on 10 2B-Lvnn,
Boone. R1JaekM>n. Rica, Gutierrez
]&-Ik e Hlil-ReJactllOll IS), OownlM
(4), Grlcn (3) o.crncas 141 SF-DeClnces.
Mllltr ... H ll all aa SO
C.iNomle SBrow n 3 1 3 6 • 6 3
Slaton l 2 l S I I 0
LStncllfr W 3· 1 2 2 0 0 l .......
Boord l 9 4 4 I 2
JJOllnlOl1 2 3 3 2 2 l
Nlooe< l 2 0 0 0 l
StanlevL.I 1 I 2 I 1 0 0
Bovd ollcned to 4 balltn In 4111.
JJOl'lnlon oltci\a<I to 4 baller• In 6th, Slaton
oltclled to 2 ballers 11'1 tlh
H9P-Nkhofs (bY LSancllell wP-sarown Pa-&oone T-3<05
A-12,3)0
NATIONAL L•AGUK Dedelr'S S, A•trwt J
HOUSTON L.OS ANGIL.IS
"'""' altrlllll .... ,,
1!1nns1r n
Cnn It MAllJNyc'f
$9111m~
i<nltfll lb
Gerlltr >b
All'IOV C
Oort n7b
MadOlnD
ltllhlt p
t$COll llfl
~«ou P
Watllnellfl
OSmllfl D ,.....
5 0 0 0 St• 21> 5 1 2 I
4 2 2 0 8ltu\MI cf • I 2 1 ~ O 2 1 Lanclrx cf 1 0 0 0
3 0 I l Ovtrrtr JO J I 2 ,
1000 ,,,.."""'" 3010 S0,0 MlclndOrf JO 11
4 000 Whllflldri 1000 > o l o arocti lb 4 O o o
4 0 2 I VMOtf C 4 0 2 0
1000 Andnnn )110
I 0 0 0 A~ o t I I 0
0 I 0 0 COlta o 0 0 0 0
0000 ZICllrVD 0000
I 0 0 0 L'""lor llfl I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 NltOnfur D 0 0 0 0
J1 a " 2 T..-M S 11 S ~ ...........
......... •I ---J "".,...... ,,. no ... _ s
GaMt Wltlnfnt H t -MaldoMdo I'll &-aannltt« ~ 1 LC>e-
HtWtlOfl 11, LOI •nttlft 12 ta-Ooran. ........ ~"' '· °'*"" 39-Gutmlf'O 1-A"'na
f
··1 went out and talked to John
Hostetler and Frank Hinman and I
told them it was imptirativc they win
apiost University's No. I doubles
team."
Ont'C Hostetler and Hinman. run·
ncrs-up in the Sea View League
doubles finals a year NO. took care of
that chore. the rest was predictable
with Corona dcl Mar's baa three -
Mike Briggs. Scott Brownsberier and
David Propp -sweeping in sing.Jes ..
Also standing out for the Sea KinJS
was Brian Bennett. a senior playing 1n
the No. 4 singles slot. Bennett. despite
a bout with the Ou. won three of four
for some icing .•
1.-H " tut aa so .._ .....
~L .O·l
ltuhle
LaCon
OSmllh
LMAMl!IH
~PanaW.3·1
COiar
Zacllror
Nleclnfuer S, l
WP-<0111
1 2·3 • l 3
4 1•3 s 2 1
I I 0 0
I 0 0 0
6 1-3 1 3 3
1·3 0 0 0
1·3 1 0 0
2 2 0 0
T-3;0.t A-37,9S5
3
I
1
0
3
1
0
0
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Amencan LNllUe
1
3
0
l
3
0
0
0
BATTING (30 ., bats) -TrtmmaN,
Detroit, .41 1. UC>lhaw, Toronto, .393,
8ernarard, Cltvt land •. lts. G8111, Toronto,
.371; A. Dave,. Sollie, .Jn. Garcia, Tor·
onto • .371.
RUNS -Trammell. Detroit, 17, Rlokan,
BalllmOf'e , lS. Uosl\aw, T0<onto, IS, Whit·
aker, Detroll. IS, LYNI, Aneetl, 14
RBI -Kl119ma n, Oaklend, 19; Re-
Jadl-. ,.,....., 111 DeClncft, An9111, 17;
Molebv. TOl'onto, 17, Rlolltn, Balllmora, 15.
HITS -Garde, Toronto, ?t; G Bal4.
TOl'onlo, 21; Hrbtlt. Mlnl'lftOia, 23, RIPlltn,
8alllmot't, 23: Trammell, Detroit, 23
DOUBLES -G. 8el1. TOf'onto, I;
UPlhaw, Toronto. 8; ia-. Allelh, 7, Ow.
Evans, ae>iton, 6; Gtl'clt, T0<onto, 6
TRIPLES -I are Ii.cl with 2.
HOME RUNS -Klnvman. 0 1klend. 7.
Rlollan, Baltimore. 7; RaJadlsen, Aft91b, S
, 6 are lied with 4.
STOLEN BASES -Butler, Cltvtland. 9.
G1rda, Toronto, 9. 8tt'nazard. CtaYaland,
t, """'-Aneetl, 6; Tra mmell, Detroit, 6.
P ITCHING (3 deel1lon1) -CaudlH.
Oakland, 3·0, 2.70; Gura. l(anMI' Cltv. 3·0,
4.26; Morrl,, Detroit. 4·0, 1.91, Nltto.ro, Ntw
Vork. 4:0. O 91; Stlet>, Toronro, 3·0. 2.•5
SAVES -Qulwnoerrv. Kan1u Cltor. 6,
Ca macno, Cleveland. 3. CaudlH, Oakland, 3,
11 are tied wll11 2.
Netlonal LNtue
BATTING 130 al ba1$) -~.
Ded9ar1, .467, Gwvnn, San Diego, 462.
Lelebvrt. Pnlladetonla . 386, Ulllt, Mon·
treat . .316, Temoltlon, San Dleoo. 311
RUNS -W'9Qlnl, San Oiaoo. 18.
Gwvnn San DiaOO. 16. RalnH, Monrreal
16, Mallntw,, Chicago, 15. Lllllt, Monrreal.
14.
RBI -G. Carler, MonlrHI, 20,
Manhal, Dedeln. 11, WaMach, MonlrH I,
17, Garvev, Stn Dla9o, IS, S art 1180 wlln
14.
HITS -Gwornn, San Oleoo, 30, Liiiie,
MOntrM I, 21, Sex,~ 2S, Temoteron.
San DleOo. 24. Raine\, Monlrtal, 23
OOUBLES -G. Carter, Monlrtal, 7,
Lllllt, Mof'lfrHI. 7. Fra ncona. MonlrH I, 6, I
art Ii.cl with S
TRIPLES -I are tied w11n 1
HOME RUNS-ar9Cll. o.d91rs, S; Ma""81, o.c191n, s, Wellacn, MonrrH I, s,
Washlnvlon, Atla nta, S; Schm id!, Pnlladel-
Oflla, 4, Strawberrv. New Vork, 4
STOLEN BASES -Samual, Pnlleelel·
Oflle, 10, Wl1J1Jln1, San DltOO, 10, Ra<tus,
Clnclnnall, 7, Gwornn, San Oiaoo. 6, Sax.
Ded9tn •• PITCHING (3 dlcli lonl l -B Smllh,
Montreal, •·O, 2.17; "-Vcvtt. o.d91n, J-t, I .... Hudson, Pllllldtll>flla , 3·0. 4 43, A. ,._, o.-n. l•l, 1.14, Canoelarl•, P ll·
lsl>urgh, 3· 1, 1.15, LH , Monrreal, 3· l , 2 62.
SAVES -Gos'8Qe, .S.n Diego, 6, Lt
Smith, Chica go, 4, RHrOOn, MonlrHI. •.
Sulltr, SI Loul1, •. 8 ar• lied with 3
Cole9e
L..,"8 Ma'"'"*'"' I, UC lrvlna 6
UC lrvlne ().C l 001 ooo-6 16 4
Lovola Marormount 121 310 OOx-4 11 0
Sanl0<0, Ca rr (4). Martin (61 and
Morffn, Halve<sladl and McAnanv.
W-Halvanladl, 4·7 L-Sanl0<0, 1·2
2B-Andtoon (UCll. O'Conn&ll (UCll,
Muronor (L). 3B-La mt>trt IU HR-Davis
IUCll, Morgan IUCll
Cemmunttv cole9e
Ora,..a CMs1 S, 0..... Wttt l
;ota.n W111 000 300 OOt>-3 11 3
Orange Coa11 001 100 003-5 9 1
SChooltr •nd Florn , Osreroclt ancl Ber·
rvhln 2B-s.etoawe< <GWCl. H&-earryhlll
(OCC>
Safi 0-.. MtM 10, Saddtbllc:ll I
Saddtet>tck 001 010 SC»-I 11
San DlaOO Me\a 023 007 JOx-10 10 2
Lomeli. Markel (71 and CamachO,
Ktooo. Perkins ( 1l e nd Argus 2B-Jonnson
IM), Gr•ce (SI 38-McKae lSI
Hlil-DtAnvells (Sl Argui IM l
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
South Coest Cont.rence
Orange C~st
Golden WHI
Sanla Ana
Cerrllos
Futltrton
W L T GB
IS S 0
l• 6 0 u 6 0 u 6 0
Ml San Anronio
Core>ress
11 9 0 4
1 13 0 8
4 IS 1 10'"
Como Ion 019 '"" T~Y'sSCartt
Or•nge c~it s. Golden wesr 3
Fullerton I, Sante An• 7
Cvonu 9, Mt. San Anl0f110 7
Cerrltol I, Comoton 1
Thundl't'• Gamel ( ?:lO)
Oranva CoH I al GOiden Wttl
Sent• Ana at F ullerton
Cye>rtu at Ml San An1on10
Carrilo• al Comoton
PecHk Coest CenterefQ
W LT
Stddltback n • o Ga
San DltOO MeH
Palomar
Southwnlam
GrMsmonr
MlraCotta
10 ~ 0 ,.,.,
San D'-9o
TllttdaV"I karas
9 6 0 2'"> 7 6 1 ,,.,
7 1 2 ~
s 10 0 '"" 1 I) 0 • ...,
Sen 0'-9o Me$a 10, Sa~Ck I
P•tomar S, MlraCotl• 4
Groumonl 16, Sen 0'-9o 4 n-MltY'• 0..-(2:)1)
PalOl'nar at SaddltCIKtl
San D'-9o ~ al MlraCMI•
Stn OltOO ti Sou111~1tf'n
Hlth lc:Mll
~ 'lltW •· w"'"*"""' 4 oc.tn vi.-200 311 1-t t 1
Wftlmln11tr 400 000 •-4 S • ~. 00\llor (6) t"<I ltlft>v ""1oofttv
Wf1row.-1 ISl Carnell (7) and Lono
W-"-L Moone" ~ IOV).
Htn"Ofl (W) HR~lbbi <OVl.
.. _.. V*'Y '· .. _......_ ~ S Hunt~ ~ 310 100 000-S S 1 '°""'•'" v.-v '11 000 001-t ' l Haoadl, 1..lcldvOff m. cun°" m tnC1 SNfltv; htcMf, Yan (4), SNrpMdt (7)
•nd L.aootrO W-$Ntr0ne eil 16•21
l.-Curron. >e-H..O IHI !. kflroofto-
1,v1 t. ~~ tFV), WaVM (FVI
,
' ··0nce Hos~er and Hanman woo wc knew wc had the match," said
Heffern. "When they won that we
knew we bad at lea.st 12 in sinalcs and
that makes l S points."
Unjversity, despite pickina up its
xcond loss in lcque play, which
virtually assures the Sea Kinas of
another Sea View League cham·
pionship. remains as the lequc's No.
2 entry and a certain power in lbe CJF
4-A pla¥offs. Huntm)ton Beach. meanwhile.
wrapped • up an unbeaten Sunset
League campaign, disposing offoun-
tain Valley. 201h· 11h.
The Oilers. who finished second in
the Sunset last season, were paced by
No. I singles player Patrick Norberg
and John Gabriel (each unbeaten in
league this season).
OCH n View
Edison
Weslmlnsttr
Founlaln Vallev
Hunllnvron &eecl'I
Marina
Tllftda'l'I Games
OCHn View 9, W111mln1ter 4
~ L Ga • 'l 7 2 .,
6 4 2 s s 3
2 • 6 1 • ,.,.,
Founraln Valltor •· Huntinllton Baacn S 19
lnnlno11l T__..sGamt
EdlM>n 111. ,,,..rlna al Mlle Scauara Partl
17)
HIGH SCHOOL
ClF raftkln9s
4-A
P'eL SChMI, 1Mt1U8 Raurd P't1..
1 Notrt Dame ISO!, 094 Rev 20-'0 100
2. Lal\ewood, Moo<• 14·2 90
3. MllllUl'I, Mo«e 16-2-l IO
4. CamarlllO, Marmon!• 20·2 65
S. NogaltS, Sltrra 20-1 64 6. Butna, Channel 20· 3 46
7. Culver Cltv, Ocean 14·3·1 44
I. E...._, SUMtt IS-4 II
9. Redondo, Ocean 12·S·l 17
10. Pawoana: P1elfk 11·2·1 9
J.A
1. Cerritos, San GaMltl Vallev
2. Lome>OC, lllorlhel'n
3. Santa Ane. Centurv
4. Sonor•, Fr-•v s. EcllltWood, vane v l,t•
6. Hart, Foothill
1. Loara, Emplrt
I. RIGhtlll, Nortllarn
9. Gahf, San Gabriel Vallev
10. E$08rarua, Empire
2·A
1. CIPO Valltv, South Coast
2. Norw1tk, SubU!"ban
3. Hawlhorna. Plonff<
4. Caleba18s. Frontier
S. Calon. San Andrtas 6. Chino, Hacienda
7 Gltnn. Sudurt>an
I. Santa Ft , Whllmonl
9. Canvon. San Andrtu
10 8onll•. Hacienda
l ·A
1. Temolt Cllv, Rio Hon<IO
2. Blshoe> Monl., Camino Real
3. LA Salle, Sa nta Fe
4. Fiiimore. TrH latltv
s. cna mlnade. Santi Fe
6 Whilllar Chrl1llan, Olorme>lc
7. LA Lutheran, AIC>fla a. Ata1cae1tro. Los Padrn
9. PHO ROOln, Los Padfl
10 ArulA, Monlvlew
17·2 99
lS-1 91
16·3 '° 16·3 63
16·3 S2
14·5 " 12·S• 1 42
14·4 30
IS-6 29
13·4 9
17·2·1 100
IO·S N 12·4 .,
12-S 63
14·3 61
12·4 43
10·6 32
13·4 T.I
ll·S 20
12·6· 1 1'
14·2 96
12·2 91
13·2·1 79
13·3 61
13·• '° 14·2·1 51
IJ-2-1 l9
1•·5 l9
14·3 n
ll·S 14
• Sm.-SdlMll
1. Cro,voad•, 17·2. 2. Orange Lultwrtn,
10-6. i. New..n Owb_.., 4. Ltfflnv...it
C11mtla n, 12·3; S. Coal! C11ris11an. 11·4. 6
Fllnlrldge Pref>. 1·2, 7 El PHO di lilOblff,
14-2, I Roumond, 10·4, 9 Rio Honoo Preo,
9·7·1, 10 Faith 8aotl•I, 10-4·1
Lot Alamftos
TUESDAY'S RESULTS
147ttl ef 49·nleM NrMU IMttlfle)
l'NlST RACE. One mire oact
Morg1n Hill (Olsen> 10 00 4.60 3.20
Sklootrs Starlet (Anders.on) 6.00 3,IO
La Balla Fella (Crene) uo
Al10 raca<t: PlenliwOOCI Gren. Board Biii
Bet>Y, Oranotrk Blossom , Twlll11n1
Pleasure. Po"ullon SOiution, SklPotrs Ty·
coon
Tlmt: 2:0ot 3/ S.
12 •XACTA (5· 1) oeld SS2 20
SECOND RACE. One ml!« 1ro1
Cleuk Casi (A~rmnl S 20 S 60 2 IO
EHtern Pageanr (Rllcnlt ) 37.20 14.20
Staroolnl Sorlie \Bavltul U0
AIM> racect: 1-101 Chlo, Lador L , Cheek
Book, Diamond Hunrer. Ma;an Sharanne
Tlm9' ?-0.. 1/S 12 •XACTA (9·21 oald S19S IO
THMlD RAC•. One mli. OICt
Coe>awlnna (Vlndnghm) 4.20 3 40 3.20
Juantlla (Merriam) 9.IO 5.20
Flora Danica CPltrcel 9 20
Also raced. Andvs Hulagorl, Hlghl•ncl
Lanie, Glvll Dtslgn, Ladv Sissie. Row dvl
Treasure. Too Sub1ec1
Tlmt 2:03 1/S
S2 EXACT A (2 11 e>e•d S62 20
FOutlTH "ACE. Ont mire rrot
Nllu St•r (Lacll.evl 10 00 • 00 3 00
DO·lllU<lt fF'iKO) ) 00 2 20
Brenda !>oeed (Kuebler l 3 ?O
DQ-Flnlshed llrsl, d1squ1llfl1d anct
otaced second.
Al•o race<! Srr.otd BH\ Otar Sir
SkhOOI, Sotela l lnltrtsl
Time 2-00 4/S
l'lfTH RACE. One ml .. oace
Cf\a ff B1n<1ll (Croghan I 10.40 4 to 4 00
Lumbtr Slllo 1w 1n1am1> 3 40 2 IO
smoo111 Gt"9t< IAndafsonl 7 00
AllO raca<t Heal Blesl, Loveaore Rogue
Four Card Malor, JOllMv Cnance , w1111e
Smile, Burn D Oil.
Tlmt 2:01 4/S S2 EXACTA (6·1) paid S4to
SIXTH RAC•. Ont rnlll oace 800'8 T l (TOdd It) 10 60 hO 0 0
B011hol ( De-r) 13.IO 11.20
Sailors Sti r I Aubin I 9 00
AIM> raced. Oranoark ArlO, Mellow
Flllow, Regal Monlarev. Concllos Star.
Ski_, Invader. Hav Fun
Tlmt 2'02 315
U l.l'.ACTA II 9) oald Sl6UO.
s•v•NTH RAC•. One mllt Pict
Karav•r ( B1ktr) 10 .cl 10 20 S 20
Pav Ca.,, (Merrleml IS 60 13'0 vouno Havdln (Shafnn> S 60
Atso raced· Flt And R1tdor. RHI Sunnv.
Rouxclon, Prince Dollar. Good FrMI
HUOhlt Time Ut 21 S
U IXACTA ( 1·21 D<lld i!O 60
llOHTH RACI. Ont mite PK1
Vallnllno llakarl 10 20 4 60 3.60
FrM Poyr (Otnnl1) 1 IO 4-60
Stftlltr• .., ICla ( °"'°""" l l 00 Alw r'M»d a.ron Moc:IUle, ,,,..,,er Notl.
Jult\ lk>v. FldfllOO. A~. Va Wt41td
TIMa 1 ~9 JI~ U •XACTA "·l) PllO 11'3 20
MtNTI4 •ACI. One mllf oece Hant'I\ Sitter ( SMtTan I 4 00 ) IO UO c'*"'*' ~ 1o..omtt1 1060 U>
ll'anltlllfte ACI t•-> UO
AIM> rtetel. Proud Covntrv, •IO Soflle.
ArmOr'O Cooltlt. Ntvv Cnttr. LOCl'lllm9.
PsYctlo Tlmt H l Ill tt l•ACTA 11·2> D<llcl U6 40
U PtC1C SIX It 6·1 M II Plld s76t 00
with 22 wlMlne llcl!•lt (flw llelnftl
C~ JIOOI U7,J4UO
TINTH •ACL One mile MW
Hol .. '°'""" (5-ttl) I,. uo uo
OMe a-tea ~I HO l .40
Loval Laci u .. acluwl uo
Alw ractG· JtMort Laci, Sarnmv Q Purclut, HWlouJ artw, ~ Lore
,,,,._ CO.,,., #'Mor ~ nm. HI 1 i
l' 8JC.ACTA It 61 Mid*'° "lltndaM!I. U11
Tbt doubkf team or Chris Oan1
a.Dd Pit Bedley alto oos1ed a pair of
victonn. wiMina a de-breaker in the
ftnt set in each cue.
Gan" and Bed&ey, &Jona .nth
Gabriel in sinales, wtlJ be competina
in lbe Ojai loumament this week.
Gam and Bedley art teedcd and will
have a first-round bye.
The 105S knocked Fountain Valley
out of a playoff spot an the CIF ttam
competition as Marina and Edi&on.
alona with Huntington Beach. quali-
flect
Marina sewed up second place by
beating Edison in a match that
fin ished in a 14.14 tic. but resorted to
a tic-breaker which Marina won.
II 5-103.
Gordon Wong and Jerry Lock·
wood posted sweeps in singles for the
Vi Icings.
w.,,,...,, teut"Mmeftt
tat us• a-VIAi, ,,.,,
"Int Rtulld SIMlet
AndrH TamHYtrl IHunvary) def. Ellia·
0ttn SaYt n IAintralle), 6·2. 6·3, Kattly
Horv.th IU.S.> dtf. EllUko lnout IJaoenJ.
0-6, 6·2, 6·2; JtMy l(ntcn 1u.s.> c1et Joannt
Ruu.11 (U.S.), •·3, 6·7, 6·1, Tine ScMur·
Lar'8fl (o.tlmark) cltf Rowlyn Falrtl9/lk
!South Africa), 6-0. 6-0; Jennifer Mundel
(South Africa) cltf. Karan Smlttl (Au11ral·
ta). •·•. ,.3, 7·5. Fr~ka Bon•lenorl lllaM def AJvcla Moul!Ofl \U.S.>. 6·4, 6·4,
Mar1lna Na«atllova tu S ) def IC Im
Shaefer (U.S.>. 6· 1, 6·2
Cenvnunttv celeee
Sl,.l.ICll ~ C.11 4
Salmotl (S) dtfE..;J/I. H . M , 6·1,
Bonfa (OCCl def. Wallln, 4·6, 6·4, 6·0; Wftt
($) def. h rnard, 6·2. 6·4; Parker IOCCI
def. Sltohans. 6·2, 6·2; RefllOf'lk IOCCI cltf.
si-rd, 7-6. 1·•· 6•2; Franll (S) ci.t.
Matlal. •·2 .... ,.
Deulllel
s.trnon·SttPMM IS) dtf. ~nard·
Bonte, 6·2, ... 1; Ewlne·Parkar <OCCI dtf.
Walfln·Frllf'ltr. 7·6. 6·4; W.Sl·Sl'ltNrd ISi
cltf. Rentorlk·Matlas. 4·• .... 3. 6·4.
Hlth idtMI
.,,,.,. JS, c:.... Miu J
~ Warrtar ICM) '°" lo Cllrlne. 0-6; Mt.
Carter, 6·4; def Oils. 7·S; cMf. Nt.ulvwak.o,
bor de1aun. Nuec111arleln ICM) toll, G-6, 1·6,
2·6, 2·6; Ma ICM) toll, 0-6, 0-6, 0-6, 2·6,
Quach (CM) loll, 0·6, 4-6, 0-6, 6·7.
Otullllls Tanaka-Anh (CM) losl 10 Cox·Hid<s,
0-6, 2·6, lost to 8ull·8ellf\tld. 0-6. 0-6,
QuK11·Su< (CM) IOSI. 1·6. 1·6, IOll, 1·6,
3·6
c ... -• Mer 11, U!Wtnlt\I 10 StMllet
8rt119\ <Cl cltf Pinc~. 6·2. cltf
Vtmtatesn, 6·1, dtf Was~man, 6-0. de1
Hoffman, 6· 1; Brownsoerger IC) won 6·2.
6·1, 6·1, 6·1; Prooo CCI won 6-0, 6·1, 6·0.
6·1; lltnnetl (C) won 6·4; IOll 2·•. won ......
6·3. o..a.
Hotlttlar·Hlnman (Cl clef Pa\llson-Oll·
var ..... l . 6·2; tosl lo Gr-·COl"karv. 1·•.
0-6. Janlcln·Smitll (Cl '°'' 3·6. 4•6, 1os1 1 ·•. 1·6
........., ... ,.. 161{), •talMlll 111.'t
SlnlMI
Rlnvllonro (NH) dM Sanooval, 6·3; cltf
Barl>ef', 6·2; dtf Aleorra, 6·1, cltf Hasllng,
6·1; Kerfoot (NH) won, 7·6. 6·2. 6·4. 6-0,
Ml,_. (NH) won, 6·3. IOlt, 3·6, 4·6. won,
6·2, Donat (NHI won. 6·2, toll, 3-6, 0-6,
won . .-3
OelMet Conkev-R1ad (NH) lost to Ha1111·5Plcar,
2·6. 2·6, dtf. Brown·SludttlakM, 7·S, 7-6,
Brosnan·Abtl (NHl iOlll, 7·6. 6·7; lo$1, 2-6.
4·6.
H"""'"9ltll ... di 11\'i, F_...111 V...., 7....,
Slnllel NOf'dl)tt'IJ (HB) Clef. Ca olk. 6·0, def
NllUVtn. 6·2, dtf Do. 6· l, cltf H1s.eoawa,
6·0, G1brlt4 (HB) won. 6·2. 6·1. 6·2. 6·0.
Maroutr (HBI won, 6·2. 6·3. lotl, 4·6. 4·6,
Kelreor (HBI won. 6· 1, lost, 3·6, won, 6·4,
6-4
~
Badlev·Ganr (H8l dtf Ma91·0floo1
7·6, •-2, Clef. Nosw man·Nguven. 7-6. 6·1.
Blll'glund·Fowlaf (HB) toll, 2·6, 0·6, loll!,
6·3, 1·6.
Marlfla 14, EclMfl 14
(Mar1M wlm "' """"" 11 s. 1 OJ)
Slftlles Wonv (M) dtf. Gumoet. 7·S. cltf. Ho. 6·3,
cltf Taub, 6·3; cltf. Holl'M\, 7·S. Lockwood
\Ml won, 6·4, 6·0, 6· 1, 6·4, Tevis (M) won
6·4, 6·4, loSI, 3·6. 4·6, Kerr CM) won. 6·2
lo\I 1 ·6, 3·6. 4-6
°"*"" Hulla<l·Lowa (M) lOlll Wtlh Mololllc:O·
O'Conne~. 3·6, 6·2, SPiii with Hen·
McCaaltn, 6·0, 4·6; M lklas·81vtns (Ml Iott
2·6, 4·6; loll, •·6. 3-6
~ ... di l4, Dana Has 4
Slnllel
SC111,.,1r ILBI def PelOIO 6·0. oe1
Fenske, 6·0, def M ~edllll. 6·0. won bv
oei•ull Tim Br1ndt CLBI IOSI 6-7 won
6· 1 6· I dllfaull Mager, !LIU 1o11 6·7
won. 6·l . 6· l, default, Wallace IL8 1 lo"
~-7, 4·6. won. 6·4, default
Oeublas
Ted Brtndl·Fro\I (LBl a.t Howoe
Onovar, 6·3. 6·2. dtt L Mer41C!llh·Tav10r
6·2. 6·4. Penv·Haworth (LBl won 6·3
6·3. won, 6· 1. 6·1
C*9eWCWMn
UC s. .... aariMtra 7, UC lf'WW 2
SIMlet
Trenwllh IUCtl def srroz* ISBI 6·3.
6·4, SnH (SB) def Malloror IUCll 2·6. 7·6.
6· 1, Black$1\ear CSBI dtf. lilhortr (UCI) 3·6.
6·2. 6·4. Argus CSB) def Bering (UCll 6·2
7·6, Neuman (SB) oef Pallon IUCll 6·4
6·4, FroMo. <SIU dtt GIOrdtntlll CUCI) 6 •
6·1 ~
Artondtr·8 1ackshear ISB) del
MallorY·Rhortr •·I. 5·7, 6·4, Shff·Strozlt<
ISBI def Trenwlln·S.rral'O IUCll 7·6 6·1
6·0, kln9·0t\POI !UCll def Nevman
Gle\MI ISBI 6·7 7·6, 1·S
Aree-~
LAGUNA ••ACH OOL' ASSOCIATION A ,.....
..-Alber'! 0~, ,._Jttrv .,OWll
Don ElllOI '1-Ar1'0ld CartM>n. Franl!
Roni. JoM McK-lne. ....... '1-Ktn Stnolfl, ~ Ca,,_tef
.t-l.O'nl ~. Joflll S..ldlflt c ......
.-Wat! HV't, ~Vici SNnd • ..,_Joa
Mule
D ......
,,_ T"""°" Oemttra lloma11 Cel(WI,
7 l-f'foOll Pllllllot Olck ~. ~OW'! ·--........ ..-arvc:. ~: tfo-01rrtll f'aoan,
ltlc:IW"O l"el«Wn. H~ Fafl 71-Vtrf'I
Mallonfv
""" '°"" • .._ an_ Ge.-""'9 Jlr
let --c...... °"' 12 ..... , 1 C~ Ill. k. 2 Olltol\ (f ), 56 ) L
S.llool !OVI. tt, > I( S. I (0Yl 6'. ~
~ (0Vl, 61 6 lllwadenv'ra (El t.1. 1
Mel( 11\tle (I). ... I ,,...,.., ( l " '
ktolKlow IOV), ''· !O Wrltfll COV) ..
Schantz won his three mat.Ches at
love.(the other was a ddawt). while
tbe Artists continued their dom1·
nance in doubles. with Ted Brandt
and Bema.nS Frost and Wade Perry
and Ja_n Kawonh tunina up for lhcar
tri p to Ojai with declsJve victonCJ
over their Dua Hills foa
Newport Ha.ri>or exchanse student
Ola Ranptonn and fellow juiUor
Price Kerfoot swept in sin&ks as the
Sailors trimmed Estancia. I 61h-l I 1h.
The victory avenged an earlier
Newpon defeat to the Eaglci at
Estancia. 21-7
HIGH IGHOOL Sea View~
L-.ue W L
E slancla 13 O
Ntwoort Harbol' 10 3
C0<-oat Mar 9 •
lntlnt I s
El T0<0 6 7
Maltr Ott 4 ' Unlvtnltv 2 11
Cotta MMe 0 13
TutM1¥'s se.re.
O¥w1ll
WL
16 0
12 •
11 4
10 s
1 I
5 10
2 14
0 14
NewPO'I HarbOr def lrvlne, 15-11, 1S·7.
IS-11.
E1lancla cltf. CMt• Mela. 1S·4. 1~·4.
IS-2.
Corona dtl ,,,..r def. El Toro. "'*"' ~ (7) C0<ona clel M¥ at Ntwoorl HartlC>f
Ellencle a t UnlY1nltv
trvlna at El Toro
Matar Otl al Cotra Mftt
S4lnMt L...-
~
WL
Fou111a1n v alltv 9 o
EdlM>n 9 1
Marina • 3
La Qulnra 4 s
HUlllll>Oton Beach 4 6
Wfttmlnslaf 1 I Oc:een V1tw o 10
ovwal
WL
11 2
12 2
6 7
4 6 4 I
1 10
l 12
T......-1 G-5 (7)
Founl•lfl Vallev al EcllMNI
Huntington a.tel\ al Marina
Wntminslar al LA Qulftla
S.UW. CMst LMtlUe
Dana Hll11 Clef San Clemtnre, 15·3. IS-9
IS·9
t.aouna lkaCI Clef. ""'"'°" v1e1o. 15· 12. IS-7, IS· 11
CIF ,_..._
4-A
1 Mlr1 Ce>1ta. 1. •ltMda; 3. s.n1a
hrt>era. 4.. U..-ile9dl; S. Santa
Monica, 6. ,,_.... V .... 1 7 Redondo. I.
....., '· c-.. Mer; 10 °°' PuttCllot.
~ . . ., .
Wemlft"s MflMI
C:oMMUNITY cou.•GE
S.... AM I, Se PS t m I
Sanra Ana 210 140 o--e I 1
Sacklltl>ICk 000 100 0-1 6 2
Ible, Eral'O (4) 111C1 Winn, ,,,_.nv 1nd
Lockharl 38-Saallon ISAI
HIGH SCHOOL
OcMll Vltw l. WftllNN• 0
Wesrmlnsrer 000 ooo 0---0 1 2
OcH n View 200 000 a-2 7 3
Martin and O'Conntr, Oaltlev I ncl
MortlOd< W--Oallltv. 1S·6 t..-Marlon
28-Vlacnoi !OV) Otklev \OV I
Faumalll V ... Y 4, H""""'"" ... di 2
Founlaln Valltv 000 012 I~ 1 2
Hunlinvron BIKll 007 000 0-2 • •
Rowlett ancl P\ldlal\11.i, F009 and Owen
Merlfla 4, Eiben 1
Mar In• 000 121 G---4 9 3
EdlM>n 110 000 0-2 3 2
J Larsen ancl C La r.-n. Caroente< I ncl
Baker. ~OUtr (6) HR-< LarMn IMI
Ml.,..n °'"'""' t, ~ Chrlsftan 1 Nawoon Cnrlsllan 201 311 1-9 6 I
Libtftv Chrl1lla n 000 003 0-3 4 2
DavidjGn ano AnderM>n, G11ton and
Brown 7B-<1Nav \NCI Cunen \NCI
Trorman ILCl Orever ILCI, 2 3B-8 rown
CLCI Curren (NCI HR-01v1<1\0n (NCI
Hkltl sch..i r•'*lnvS
CIF 4·A
I Hart 1 Gardin Grov• 3 R 1g11tt1 •.
Me<INI; S Kenneov, 6 NtwOur~ ?er-. 7
Ocean Vo•w 8 Cvoren. 9 WHt"''"'"r 10
Vina Peril
CIF l-A
I Mllkkan 1. irw-1 3 Walnyl •
!>avanna S Fullerton. 6 lllel Brea·Ol•nda
•n<I wnrern I Fonrana. • Mavnohe 10
Norco
CIF 2·A
I Soutn HI"' 1 Roval Oai. 3 D11mond
8 ar 4 Atemaf'lv S. W II• r1d9e1 6 B•l"OO
Montgornerv, 7 Workman. I Cha rier Oa1o.
' Mlss•on Vla.o. 10 L• Siert a
USFL
WHTIERN CON .. •••HCE
°"'"" Arirone
LA •ir.,...,
Otllltncl
~
W L T f>rt. "' 120771109
•S0 644 'll6
>•Ol33U3
Ot0000t1
c.-.i
...
111
Ul
200 m
MlefllOtn • l o 641 ns 1eo H~ton 6 3 0 647 2'• 7lS
Ollletlome • , 0 "' 147 1'7 Clli<AIOo 3 6 o ll3 20t , ..
San Antonio , 7 0 m * .. 7
at.STIER" COM"•R•..C•
AIMii<
I l 0
1 2 0 , , . .. m II~
111 -1)4 m l j.4 111
I I 0
~
111 120 JU
e1m1-....m .....,Or1MM
Tl,,,,,. .. ~ *'_.... Mtmlll'l<s
I 1 0 .. H1
1 1 • m '" •>O .. JllO
J • o m '"
' 1 1 m ''° ""*"'' ..... New On1t1nl a t PNladlMDfll• ""''*'"' •t ~k Jt('.lt '°""'9t at Olllal'lon\a
Sdlrflt'f"• ~
Wa5"•"9!(WI et T-.. ._
'8n Antorno al Af\Mll8 ..,...,.,.....,
''"'"'""*" ., o.n...r OklitflOfne ,, Oltceeo
Mltfl"oa'I •• l'ttw ...., ,,....,...,..,...
1.-.reu ., Holnton
"' m 180
1 .. ,.,
In the sin&Jes maldt between t.bt
two No. J players, O.vid s.&moin
survived a lha.ky st.art &o outlast Jdf
Ewin., 2-6. 7-S. 6-1. Jwo other
matches in sinaks went the tllRe«t
Ii mat in the compctiuve conlell.
.... •W9fk
NIT llOUND , .............. ,
T__.,..I SC.-
ae>iton 99, Wetl'illWton "' {~ton wiM .., ... >·ll Atlanta lOtl, ~ f7 lW'l9I "811,
2-2) DMIM \CJ7, S.ltlt 9' (Wies tied, 2-21 Pt\~ 110, Ntw WWY 102 (Wlft
tl9d.H>
Utatt m . De11¥W t24 '""* lied, 2~2> Port'8ftO 1 ll, Ptloen!Jt I 10 (Win tied.
2-2) T.......,.._
Ottrolt al ..._ YOt'k (..._ Yorll IMdot
..-!ft, 2-1) ~·-.... J8"wY at PtifbdslliNe
Attem• Ill MllW~
S-tlla at Dela•
Otn¥W al UAtll
"'-'• at Ponllllld ""'"'' ~ ... , .. -'*,
PMw VOl"k at Ottfolt
CON'•••NCE saMt"IMAU ( ...... ._,
w......c f ==
l.Mtn -o.11\·s.tttlt wi-tS.tur·
OllY, 12":30 P.m.I ~-'"'-111 wwwr ""'-Utall-Oen·
ver winner ._..,.c la w
aoston on. ~~ YOl"k ..,.._
Pl1114tllhta·New ....... WW.""'-,,.. -~-Attem• ---
NHL_.,..
c.otWD•tee• f'*ALS , .... ..__,
T.....-tS-...
MofltrMI 3, NV l""'°'" 0 (Mofltf'eel
~wrlft. 1·0)
ECIMOnton 7. MlnnftO!a 1 (E°"'°"'on '"°' Mf'ift, l-0)
'"-"-'1"1 G9rM'I
NY ·~ •• Monrreal Mf""f'Ota al EdmOnton Sa_,,..,., 0-
Montru l at NV ISlel'IOar'
EOtne>nlon •I Mlnnftof 1 ( S. turCM or Of'
Sl#lday)
T..-..sGefNI
MotltrMI at NY ~S
E omonron 11 MinnetOta TlwfMlly, ,,,.., , ~ cw--..1
NV lsanotrs at Montrwl
Minntsol• •t Eomonton
s.1vnlay, -· s c.-(lf MCellWV)
MontrHI at MY l~I
Eomonton a t iw-ott !S.turoav °'
SYl'>dlvl n.Mlv, ,,,.., I ~
(If _,.)
NV tllandtn at Montrn l
MIMHOta at Eomonton
.. Xlnf
(at C""'9r Of'f >
Llgnt l'INvvwellJftts -J.8 Wlllla mMIOI
cSanra Mottlcal KOd James W!IM1rn1
1 Portland) Mtvtntfl rOUlnd
TUftdlY'I tnlMltcflens
aASEaALL
~L-
AMERtC AN LE AGUE-Announ<1d
lUS1>1n1ion ol Tonv ~nazard. ~~
Dalemtn C ...... ancl lndtanl IOf two ffl'Wl
~r.ve oendlno •-I Mid finte 111m llOO
!>E ATTLE ••• U,RINER!>-Rec•ll•d
Darnell Ce>i.s thord tiauman, lfom • 20·
du rehab1hl1toon oe>tk>n with Sall Lat" Cltv of'"' Paclhc Coasr LHllUt ODtloneCI Atei.v
NelM>n OVlfltldef '" Sall Lelle Cltv TORONTO 8LUE J~ YS--$19Md auck
Mar1tne1 calef>t< 10 • two .,..r conir.cr
Ultnslon ......... " ...... CINCINNATI REDS-Trao.d Alu
Trevl"O c1tdoef to !fie Allenla Brevet fO<
• Dll.,.. to 0e nemtc1 PIK.i a1tt Pocorotla. ca tct>t<. on ... ....,,, for 1111
PUr'OOM ol rtteHlnO ntm FOOTaALL ................ '---"
ATLANTA FALCONS--~ t?W
,..tir-t of Jafi ""8rfOW. ~ tn(I
DENVER 9ROHC.OS--Treded S,..,_
0.11«'$, -rtartledo., lo !tit T-a.or Bue~~ "I tllc:tlel'IR tof a toutttl•round «•" Cho<• encl • COl'ldltlOftel lvlllr• ratt
cflooee
MIAMI 00\.PHINS--Sl.-o MVvln
Cl\atr->1n ano Anor1 ~. 09'trl\1¥e
lleCil\ TOOd C~ ........ .,.. IKklt a1'CI
Dan P'tooc1' now lactlla
u..M S19toK ....... '---"
P ITTSIUll<;H M~ULE•S-Sltf'laO
A"C1'1of """ OflotmlYa I~ W~ .... .""11 Ha.--cet1te•
M ICHIGAN P4,..THElt$-Slened No¥0
~. PIK9-lllO.car IOCC .. .... ~ .._ L.-..
l.A.MltA aAY ltOWOI~ ._... Koa~. Cltftncltt, Mid ~ ll'wn ~
COVI* toot ~ ~. ;;cW'I 111 , u...tsec.ru..t
JACl(SQHVILL.'7 ,,_,. ME~S4Noa
IWlle Fat ~ti•.
FO.-T l.AUOEllOAL ~
Jotlll ~t. al'<d T.-y ~. •••• HOUSTON DYHANIOS ........ CO-... ,...,.,..., • lant coect\
9Uf'FALO ST<>aM-•a 11' "'9f llran
l:tcrM ,... CMd\
Haw YO. N.ATQtAU.-~
.., Jl1'll ~. ,....., CMCll. --.... ,.,..,,. ft ..,.,... ,,_....,
CCM.LIOI
U N I V llS tTY OF kl!'f •
TUCl(Y-ti'I ...... Ufllf'.Ct t# ..... • Mil
M\ll C...-JI lo f "' "90 9'1IK '"
j;J/'v 1
.,
..
I
......... , ...
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
Te Pllci Yu Ad. Cal
642-5678
EL DTATI
~Hlllt
llOlboe WaM
a.it.a. ~ ... i. C.11Q~a..ft ~O.I MN'
C.C.t.a M-°"""' ""'"1 a~
"°""1111.11 Vall.y Hunu...,,.,.......,
Hunt. ltarbow
ll'VIM '"""MN JWMh w,u.,.. Hlll•
...... naNicwl
IAJte f'br.i M_,V..,p
N. ......... ~
S.n C14nwni.
S... Juan C.ptolltono
S....i.AN
So.i lkach
Soulh ...... na
8-\ 8-ft
Tu.on
WftlmiN\H" Muboi. .._....
~ "~ .. ... h l'roptth
&u.. .... l'Y"Of>'y
Cftnr1'Pty L<N
t«""'Tll Prvprrly
l'""°""""'""" Dupl.-.. Uruu
H ...... IQ~ MIW...S
h~"""' P"'Pl'l"h I n<1 ualrl&l Proj>h
l-•u lut Sak
Muti.h< Honw P.ri..
• w1wn1a1n 0.Wr•
l)un&<' C'o
Out uf Counh
Out vi S1a ... kanc.hft t••rm•
"-"' Pl'Openy Tlmr Shatv\c R&~
R & Wanll'd
RENTALS
H.,._..f'umiahtod
H,,..... Unh;rn•.n.d
H....-t•urnia/>t<d .,,
l'nfurnW'Mod
t:oi• furn
Condo Uni Town.,._,..,...
Towl\hou9ft Uni
Oupi.uo rum
Our*•" Uni
A pat11tWni. f'Amo.ltod
A-11tWni.Unl A.pi. Furn .,. U nf -...
Room .. Board
""'"""' Moc..la c ..... Hom..
SWTVYWr R.nl&la v .. ._Rmw.
• R.mlAll IQ Shon
• R.ml&ll Wan led c.,.,.. for 1Wn1
Off .... Rft>W. a....,_ !Wnt.ala
Comm! Rcm IAla lndufl ~nt.ab
S1&t•1• M,. fknt.al.a
l= 642-5678
100. 1001
i iiiill ...................... lllllliiilillll !i!;:J!!!:l!;!!::::::niii!i!L!!:i!i!!:::::JJliiiii~;::Jlili::::::illi!iiil!i!'.!iii:JJ.!lr 101• t. lalt !5 T HE DA ILY PILOT -.. ----......... -----~~ ....... -----~ mm.m..mL..1-... -.w • .......
ion CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS .!!=•;r ;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;-!J!!!!!:i=:::!:!!~!!~::':=~!Z! pit. s ,._.. fWldolph ..... .....,_ .......... ~ ... 10)4 • lllll -at, CM, Mt-1113 · Wmnut ~ 2 br t 1:! Telephone ervice: UM Ill.I bt ~ 8hort _. to ht 11 ltatt · ~~~;-~1:
lo.I Monday-Friday t>Hch. Spec. Uv. rm, Jr•""1 llll ~; 752•18oo deyt := Beautiful 3 Br. 3 'ti Ba, Baytront, pier & tam.tdtn. rm, tr~ l*o. l:UI. 1"IJ acn, s;;_. ~.... 1111 ·~~ 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M. fioat for 65' boat. Best buy at $950,000. wvcete~d. •1 ,ooo. Alvet Vat'-1. orizon. hitn .. ~IO =
1°'1 Busa'ness Counter·. a.. at 14 20th 8" •.oootobo. te0-7 1 -.. peta 0blt-ML '* 536-1718 n-....... llil -··1i no yrty. 4it-t1tl
::: Monday-Friday Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba. playroom. fireplace, ... L......, IAI ~ViiiiTs e.~ :~=E :EW .2 " a ..
::: 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M . beam ceillnp. Xlnt. finand.n&. $420,000. """"·to bot.. Pool . ...w.. ::"~:::·1n ioc.i iwm..,::a: r:z~
::: DEAD LI ES ""*' llM um1n -t 13tK. Owner HtOIOe .,.. 540 ~414 Agent ,.::;~ 87M041 !ffi Pl BtU:ATIO:\ OEADLl~E ~y2&Br Ba/~:C,·. ne~ly ~~t.ed Mai ... ilL A~:W00o 2·L2~;'; 11~ \l onda~ Sat. 11 ::rn a .m . ' ' • pa o. ' • FllTAITIO lt!ltl ruall~.. F•~ & Hahn R.E. :~ TtlE>~da, \1011. i::rn ~.m . llW. TdUll l&IUll a..utttu1 3bt 2t>e tfl)lc. :~~ W .-d ne ... da'. Tt1.. . • '1 () •--o 3 bd liliii liJIM llM l.undry room. vlft 0' 111· ' t :.> p.rn . Panoramic bay & ocean view. 4 Br, 4 Ba, l(l trv".. rcwee. rm, gtMnbett. pool~· •* Thur!lda, \\ t>41. \::rn p.m . F • 7 2'AbaTn.w..thomewtth patlo'a.BIUffa.
m . Frida' t.''() patio, pool home. ee price •7 5,000. ~,~Tia,!!':=,! t•IR MITIU HARBOR VIEW~ er, 2Y.
IJ)( Thur.... t .. > p.m . __ .. a .. -·--,,.... 1t• ._ be, fem rm. ecrote from
l3H Saturd<l\ f rid1n, 'J 00 n--. --· lot. •149•900· ...... a pool atdener :~ ' : p .m . Ocean & Jetty views, marine room, 4 Br, '*" ~1~ i'
14:.<: Suiuta\ Fri. :i;f)() P m 3 Ba 3700 sq ft car parlri ... n •1 285000 ~ 11800/mo . 1'IOl1 . . • · ., "'"'6· • • • · l I 0 C1' BAY F R 0 NT
•~i'.· UYllll .. ••i UYfl-PENTHOUSE: Oramatle :~~: CA~CELLATION & r-. ... vlft. 2Br/ct.n Ot 38r.
ueo Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, 786_1172 1 1800/mo. Propert~
1* COR R ECTIO~S: 2 Br, 2 Ba down, 2 boatspaces. $1,375,000. HouM&42-385Q := Car11·dl.ation~ and l'Orrt•l·tio11:-. lllU\ Ctrtal ••• 1111 lib LOOKIE HEREI
mio 2.2()(
bt' rnarlc· 0 11 !>amt' d c:adline!> a~ a Lo ,~. a:auti#Uiiy furn Twnha, r:::•~eiux
Plt•a!,;. a~k for a c·aru·e lla tio n 3880 M~ori.... ;r,is1~e1J~~ ct. Rent t'!~~~~:!''
number whe n 1·a 1wc:llin g )OU r c.rl . ..-.nme ...... ...... ltit ;u::,~~r::.Ctuo'!.c gar
ERRORS: llWI ...... , w••W 4 Br, 2~ b•. lingt. famlty txrm c:onao on ca;:, )'Mr!y. Juat $950. kid/pet
noo rw.1.-.r -deteched home. Turti. dHl;ner, completely *53M19011'
2400 C h eck ~o ur ad dail~ a nd r eport Mesa Verde'• flMtl tree PllllllF1ll Rock Ridge. lrg yard, turn.11H5moU3-08te CdMflatatyttth2Bt
2•10 flowing floor plan with 4 Exlenlive UM of mirror., ale. Intercom I MC ty9, 2 Ba frplc MW9I' tcltCh m~ e rro rs immediate h . The UA ILY Bdrm38aand3cargar· terrazo, plu•h white C*'ltvec&muc:tlmore.30 Modem 2·•ty baekbey. 41876k)d1ftnemuat ...
wo PILOT a1>1>umes liabilit\. for the fir t age. Secluded M•tr autte carpet. Kenllngton floor yr below martiet rate 8dr 3 e.. pool/l9I, 2 53M190 BEST Rtty fee
W$ hH Hparate ltudy plan with edded loft. 4 Bt flnan t:M0,000. F« Info frptca, 'A ac.. S2300. ----=--..,,.-=--:c zeoo incorre c t insertio n o nl). w/batconyoYWtooklng2· 3'h 8a,famHyrm,formal 552-ot17 (1rvtne Peclflc) &42·13ee Newport Terr. 3 BR. 2 = CLASSIFIED 642-5678 ~tr1c~v~no 1 ~00:'.111":i :=':fon'~·H~~=~ lew!!d..... lilt ...... llfw1l1W ~~sa~!~1=· :i----------------$225,000 751·3191 $599,000. Maureen 111L81P•llM leMrll nt2 Oc:MntrontdeNxecuetom = ••••n ltr 1&11 , ... m ltr Ille • SElECT w h It e /Ed E. c. n 0 . Luxurb.I• 2 BR. 2BA View iS68 M:fttill' xsoa; :pp; 3 Bt, tamlly rm home on ~ Gtatral 1002 Iner I l OOZ PROPERTIES 6«·8200 COndo on wet•. Fu" eeo-furn pf'lme 8adt Bay loc aandy beach. S33001mo. ~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimli;;\iiliii;ii;iiiiiimli~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ur1ty. Reduced 1oot< for utlll ,, .. alngt. only &45-0778 819/~1214 ._. ' quiet! Nie or tr•. 560K 53M190 BEST Alty tee ::! AIKMKll Of l'Htsu.llS~HCTWOM 875-193eor851..&394 •••• ., • ....., ~~=T~~~
~: But Newport buy I Miia IULn Utll pd. Refa. 87M39Q
:w22 __ L_l_Wl_IT_Pl_lll___ G:;rc:•· brlgt\_t 4 Br. .... ''ltlmlt Spec. Udo late home: 3 bt
291& • M4 PllDD ..... '°' coupte. 12500/mo i.e.
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ANHOUNCEMEHTS tor 1hl1 trg 4 Br 3 Ba and all for onfy 1259,500. A.. WESTWOOD TOWERS s>911. S 1800. 875-3&80
Announ<'Pl'Wfl.. JjX)2 WTILIFF den home In e .. tbtutt. aume 200K 1st at 9¥• rm
i...-1 a. r ovnd 3004 MS1ovm•l 11t•l tsr•rt SEllVICES wood ahultera and FIXEOll Thi• 19 a BEAUTY 1";i~:.'~'! :'.rieetwood. 28'. futia Mn
p,,_,..1a :io12 4 Bedroom, large pool, Spanish \11411. Land In· that won't lut. You own ... T ... 2A! E!l t;:J; ~""""' 9trv..,.. 3014 nice view. one owner the land and lt'a IMMEOI· S725tol2000 WO ••°'Y ... """ ·~ t~~. lnltrunoon ::: Ill OUYOI n••,ooo home, pyrchaM fee or It ~rtdhed.th':· tf:n~: ATEL y aveltable. To ... Utllltlee/Valet Incl. 2B•,,..., k~c:h 2 oar
A peaceful & private lifestyle is S285.000 Leuel'lold. $299,500. Mk for Mary call PATRICK TENORE Call(213)474-3575 UPP« l800. kid• AOKI
BUSKSS &
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found w /this lovely 2/story, 4 BR, 3 U,_.IVUf t1f)M t i Oenlla. &«-7020 780-8702 cetm .. l llu Im 53M 190 BESf~~~
Ba home overlooking Big Canyon Ree1tor1. 875-6000 II• I EUii 3 Bdr executiW si;;;::: ,,.,...... ..... ...
golf course. This home is built FormertyUngoR.E. home. 2 e.. famlly rm, --------
around a private pool for your en· IOUlflllT 1211,111 many amenltlee. Approx Olm OUlllO Lovely 2 Bdr condo with • .. ••-._. 2400 a.f., 180 deg. view. lut. INQ JOyment~ PllROT LllATlll den & balcony. Perfect _, .. .._. s2500i mo. 1''· IMt +
. U4t , ••••••
COllTIY .
IHHH tt •at• fOf young couple or va· Form« model with lull golf MC. dip. Refs. Df1w by
DIMES
A
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PRIVATE PARTIES
Se// your Items for $50 or less In
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• S d COUr99 view. Pool. tenNI, • 1 little River Cir. Calf 5 Bdrma, 3 baths, lnctud" c ation home. an · 191. 1220.000 full price. Don Bolton 875-Hl36 tor master au11e end large ocean and view of Balboa 75% uaumabte ~ appt. to .... ~~~tlr~I ~.~:.:; tr!~~ Pier avall. c.11 Blu. &44-742 Rent i1eoo Sale 1295,000 ESTATE
10 7 ear• Ooty 4 door• 3BR. 3BA. Lrg IMng rm. 8-utlf\ll & peril lltce
lrom the entrance 10 Traditional • lllTll--oc..n Vu. (714)831·5137 "'PrlVate PatlOI
Main Beach NOW on the Realty Lowest priced gott cour .. 1t::11 u::: rm "'Co....,.ed Pntng market at only $489,000 cullom home In ca Big ~ ,.... UM vSpaciovaApll 144-1211 631·7370 Canyon 4 Bedroom•. 4 "IX~or,.a•u•pi;..,..x·. ""2""1e•r·. ""2""1e•a·. v Olnl"9 ArM
both1, private pool and 1200 sq ft . w/prv y111d. "'Wllk·tn-Cloaeta ~ tpt. Ultlmate In privacy. $800/mo. ~-9063 vHome-llke Kitchen• ~ =-~ Reduced 10 $995,000. 3BR 28A Tottnhoute. New 1 blocic to Huntington &
Ll¢ CNtl Mna 1024 lto-1• ~~,67~158~onv loc. UTILITIU.FlllE
.Ll,llllTIH• LA QUINTA HERMOSA CIST& IEU 111 •,00I Mutt sacrifice gorgeoua Brand new luxury condo. 16211 Parkllde Ln. 1 Large lot • nice home near condos! Lovely 2 Br 2 Ba. 3BR, 3BA, Jae. 2 Fire-block we1t of BHch, 3
school•. Low cash down Only S89·000 w/ 1o.so-1e ptacea, Yard. S 1050. mo. block.,.. of Edi....., and low payment• will let u1um1ble flntncl"9. See: 2530 Santa Ana A..... .., ···~ ·
you own lhls 3 bed home 3 Br 2 Ba only $79,000. 85 1~226 Ul-1441
wllh aasumable loan at Oellntt;'li won t iaatl Try By ownet: ~ Canyon E .. tllde 5Rm H .. Cheery lniat
8 5%. Call ro ue only $ 000 dwn and Monaco. Small down, dec:Of frplc crpta thru-out 631-1400 $800/mo. Call Patrick 11% ftxed rate. WIN con· $&40 Rent opt to buy 1 BR Condo by atreM\.
llWPHTIOUIFIHT
Tenore 780-8702 aidec' trade. &40-1533 ...... 1"" BEST Alty,_ Pool, Jee, Tennla. Av-'1
<Nr'V"" 8/1.$525.891-0999
Wonderful locatlon on the
sand Typical 3 bdrm
beach cottage with graat -------
potentlal Yoor own 2nd 11011 Tl Piii home or s perfect weetl· end re11ee1 or income Neal 4 Br Of 3 & Oen home,
property $448 ooo 2 Ba, over 1800 sq ft . r• ' modeled kitchen, auto
arlnklerl. Prloe reduced
lo S122,900
IPIOE Fii IY
14.ATI HI HO~l
HOMI., 19<.
REAL ESTATE
131·1400 Lovely 2 1tory, 4 Br 2 e.
--------home. wrought Iron fence, 15 • 40' covered HYEI SlllEI patio. 74' ot paved AV
IUll lfW 11orage. $139,750.
Magnificent view .. 1111 C John1on Rltr 549-2644
custom 5 Br , famlly rm. & BY OWNER
5 Bath. new pool, ape. on $157.000. 4 Bdrm
11 acre · all refurbished • Mesa Verde. 540·4061
lmmed move 1n, trade or =---------=--lease opllon ok $975.000 By owner. charming 4 Br,
tor itlnt financing R & H 1.,,• ba lrg IOI. 60 x 110.
Investments 751 ·5989 Covered palio, trees, new roof. new plumbing.
$115,000. 673-7794 41111M J U
11H ,IOO By Owner: upgraded 2
muter BRs. 2 112 BAI.
Bar Bull1ln1, W/O,
Fridge, 2 car garage,
Gr"I wood1y E/llde lo-
cation S 111,500. Call
549-7756 ()( &45-5697
llllT,....... E.utllde large 1 Bdrm, I ..... Bit $12K & Take owr pay-crpt1/drpa, 1 car gar & ~-I
ment1. (714) 83Me08. c:arport. L ..... 780-83M 1lt80X8XYclOI
Sub rent 1 rm en. -s>t to 111~111.1 ... 1 ~·~3:.'~ec:!,~7"" Ju~,\= =:~bt
._ w/frplc a oar the others --------3 Bdrm, 2 ba, large play. Not tar from Newport ~APT
room, turnlahed. Only 539~ 190 BEST Rlty fM Winter rental to 8/23, by ~N'=t Alt" 875-8181 BRANO NEW 2 Br 2 Ba W.-°'month. No P9ta. Cu.tomiz.cs Condo, w 54&-1930 or 873·78«
....nllf ... 1,111 18th St 1~ ml to beech La Clt9fttt Bfl
4 br home °' 2/2 duplex. garage no peta. 1795
Beet bMct\ 6109 a.a. Sierra Mgmnt &41·1324 2BR 1~•. encl ow. c1oM
lhore °'*' dally 2·5 to bMctl 1500. 225 La
Ownr '545.2141 91&.23"8 =~~~~1~~r 2 Ba Paloma 837-7918 collect
• ...... SM5 53M190 BEST... • ......... ,Val.
NLY t1a.111 PrHtlgloua 3Br 2~b• ·
3 Bdrm 2'A Ba fn -one of condo. 1700 sq ft , ma.ny lalMa
our moit aought after extr11. Nr but a 1hop1. PtaiaaaJ. 2717
areeal BUI gr..nbella, S 1050/mo. 642~823 2BR 1BA y•rt ' uth Incl.
bike 1r1ll1 & community Sharp 2 Br EHt•lde, $700 mo. 316 Al11arado actMtlM. 10 mlnu1 .. to beam c:ellllng, w/d hk-up. Place. Call 752-5710
the beactlt Juat Hated. Chlld & pet ok. U95/mo.
Batter ... th11 one FAST! 1eo.aae2 ct11a1 •el llu ftH 75t-1501 4 Bt 2'h Ba dpb1 Nr SC ciOM to BMCh. g l(j L'.
Pt• .. • V'"""'nt ••2" mo Rent or leae. A11allable F;' aPPt52&-5oto 'J lmmedlatety. 875-8771
l ut IHc• U4i Vlft 2 Bt 1 e. ,.., un11. • . garage 50e'h Jeamtne 38' m S:. f/p, ,:;;a: no P91a. $775. &4&. 1812.
Ideal 1oc1oon nHr tehoot
& shopping C11m w/w
crpllng, low maintenance
g111den & MCluded brick pallo Just put on market
Beller see thra one IHtl
759·1501 acaped fncd yatd, gar. u llU llL IAI dener Included. New· C:..t1 •na a1M
4 Bdrm, 2 bath, fireplace, YllW1 ftlWt YllWl I end II n d 11 nap oll a . 1et Condo iPlii r:;;J, -~""lll!!!!'•sa.•11 new root. MW turnac.. Unobetructed OCMn/clty s7ooimo• MC. 538-2789 lak• & 1treame, frljto, AUTOS IMPORTCD _, n • w d 11hwa1 h • r . llt•I Owner Mys Miii 3 Br condo. 1 'A Ba, mlefo, 2 cat oar W/09fV,
11.1. 11..... v1o) DEADLINE·. S 135.000 Recently Mitt Miil 4 Bed 3ba, carport, renovated. !Ike PoOI & te>a. M25/mo 11""' ~1" pelnled Owner wHI llte l alfy. "l.-utremont" new SU5 • dep . S45--3115 A~tttu »IO~ ll&AAA -..,.--.,.---.....---hMYo "11, finance with email down. In gated Harbor • --&I. 213/598-1498 No 1911 1 br gar«* apt, l'low &
l "• " "114 3 p.m. Thurldey lltJ ltltrMt lltr. All F• I , m1I 4 Bdrm, w. bath. ftr• retrlg. No pet•. "'10. ~~"..~ ... : : : ~ Coete Me .. Office ILIFFI 141. TlH 551_.se21v mao 720-9859 ptac.. Newty decorated. s.a.1311 !;~;·" ~:;~ SPAOIHI • 11111 -------· -W & LMBkr 759.1501 $900/mo. 982·7277 2 BR down. Olah'#_,.,
11 ... ~1. w1 H Highly upgraded end unit IEIA YllH IALllA Lii ~ Affordable 3Br 2Ba $895 garage. Avall 512, 1110
hull.I m : 330 Weit a., Stl'Mt wllh partial bay view Drive by 2912 S.ang. Walk to thopt bMCh e.1 luturlatlc deelQn kid• ok Victoria. Call to ...... 0 ~;:'.~:; rnv Coete ...... Ce. 12121 Bright ind aunny with Adorable 39A 2ba, AV pltr '"it''""· 38r'l2ba 539.9190 B£"ST Riiy ,.. doga.1580/mo 831·8112 ~11?,,1 dramatic vaulled t>eam 1tor1ge, Sl89.ooo . ..,2'1a ·•&1873 ""' .. 3 •3B 2 n-s c t...mt.,,r«hmi • " Ownr/Bkr 1-879·2880 .. ·:u.. ChOloe find crptd 28' ' ... · ' tia A. L-:.~· ::~~ _ _, ______________ ,....... celling• and expanded WANT Harbor View home w/blllna oar •·lam or pool, P•tlo, apa. oaraoe
•1 ·1 atone fireplace. Large NIL ar .. to'-·-. buy ... :Gt -1~ ..... t "•'I mid Ma~ $895 No peta 152•1822 Mu.i. • • ",''u',,•1'111
1' C.. ~ 1) h'\.,.. .( _ "> 'C ~C:..• woo enclosed patio ne.r pool -Vf .. ._ ... :=;:i::_ ii..., :::~ ;J~ 1'"!,J N " (b l:J<,r-;:J ta•• Large 1MUmeble loan. 4BR 2be, Mna d .. Mar. tlon. MM S4 5 539-8190 BU ,.. $300'1 Poolaldt Apt,
M'"""'""' viu ••·•·• ~. <1•~ • '0"1"• -----S225,000 Call Se11y Ship. Mutt ... • WlfY nice. Appft 8St-t1to
Ml. rn~ 1ey or J<1y01 Debolt. Call &41-8833 lllNlt .. M 111f 8! BEST Alty lee ' ~~.. m: 0 •• ~·"· •"•. ' .. • SUOClSS REAL TY 11U Fuqua 20xU. ' Ir. 1415 Sq"· 2bf, 2be home --------
............ 01 \' ' , •. ;D.., -dbl wide, lull front porCh, for ...... trpl, mtcro, s>er· I •I .,_ "* vm . ~o • Piil drywall Int, upgraded quet, dbl gar, w/opn, no W.alde, all new. 1'h la,
""""uh t l)f FfD 0 0 C E l 38R 2ba, S15K dn. OWC cptt & appt In partt w/2 S*t .. 50/mo. 844-2227 patloa. 0/W, no peta.
R<.llo "°"''" :.•e.~ -belance 30 yr• 12~ ciubhc:luMI & pool, pvt Cell ua for lrvtne kid• OK. avail lmmed t:';.' •••) I I' I I' Pf••• Prln onty. A1k tor Hu1ch. merlna A11um loan. L._ 1875/mo &4s.e648
""'-'" 1111 CALL 141-1833 Terma or trade 139.toO 3BR 2b&. chwttlt, ff'PiC:
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1 r~ Er""€!;€ ~U~: 788-~::~ I "=~~~ . no... 724 o J.,,. a1' 873--7711
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For 0.1\ed Ad
ACTION
Call
A DALY N..OT u-mo.
MJ·Nfl
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•
.lil=:u... ........, C•••• .111!1--!lllm---~ """"' to .!!!l._ -AMINCAN HAHOVMNll $2 A lMJXAC@ NC ~-"-a. ~WW. LAHD8CAPEl!AVICO Carpentry, Wlndowe ltoc*;.eo.icr• 8-IODO ,l 7 per day .. lw-11~Aep8t 'iltC M ,._ ~ Aemodee/....,...: commf ~& Melnt. ~ .. ~ tee-vei Aef'a. ,,.. ._ ltl 1•12
Thef•• Al.L you pey b 1 W.:...'S63.· · · cu.tom eom,uw lldcCIQ Md rtekt. UC'd, tionded. L~ AU8, IN8. -· Lotd .... 7·23e7 'MAIOHAY * :nli Loc9 ,,...... ~ wooo CATfiCI CdWiii ,._,~daYI ~ ~ ~~tfftdtm .... 1~· in..'orwt:552·91<42. 6421:!27·~t_7 lnll!L AllT~.~-aUo. men. Low~ Dtnll• ~a T-..-dPVll I '4 In the t rom-vmo • .,... .,.,., lrJwtll ......,., Or............, 4 "n -1""-borttood,.,.e.--.,..._-..1aa11i;..._ Milli.-.,:.;.-...1...,..
DAly A;;M • §WMI...... ~([fXPINde lANOSCAPE8EAViCU SMALL:o:!oes ..... wp I 1--n._Y,i IHi: ..... .., JJ••·•~1041
eclng•lftd, • · ~. rn AllTmur .. &Aeouttto O=~~fl~= MIKE841~11 ~iiOWICi -lnt/eict.free~--~rwt w-~ Ri;j;I; G\ .. . PlOT llMlll1-t1• feolna, blrt a fOtmlca ffrMMt. Kevln873-1603 llc.pt0f.642..t007 HAUL·MOVl--AEMOVE Oulc:tclc:MIM.t..ow,.._ 10yralOIP.(714,.._.11 .._ lft.fW ~
I " coun~. &4t-S747 DRYWALL: HAHO, TAPE CLEAN UPS•HAUUHO Furniture. Trlllh, Trw UC. T13'CMf M2-o410 PAINTP NUi)i WOii(j no.;on4 0t W-116'7t1E Low ..... SERVICE A:COndliion:d C1tilY4ic cue.~ a PATCH. FrM .... LANDSCAPE•TAUTRIM "3--M15 NORM ... 1.... Jnt/Ext.Otlfnga.NftncM>. WHIT£Wi'Zlli)
Con*1Mt. Hiit Price in. ~try rm STEVE 5'~883 FREE EST. 842..ff07 College t1Udent w/lg lrudc a.t queltty. 21 yr. IOIP· (2t) Y"I -.p., ":!' = · WJHOOW WASHINO Dl£CTORY ettlt9d.Jerome83&-e833 Aepair·~·AddH!oM c..tlUpe•Tr .. Trtmmtng low rate, ptomP1."rlw!lc Uo .... T-118,dl 730-1*'3 Dt""9PtlnQng 7 P\ASTPPATCHIHO OUAUTY'"l11 202t
'*4 lfte IAVINE MIRROR
and the HUNTINGTON
B!ACHCOMBER tvety
or94a.m.1rt.,8:30 0oor .... c. MMNO p•--u-.. v.,dM.int.•HllUllnQ youCourt 759-113eCdM STAAVINOCOUEGE Painting, Carpe ntry, Al9tlolCC09 IM/eoct. ao~ ~ =W!I FENCES&. DECKS ""~ ..,••-MIKE 860-3283 KRUEGER HAULING STVOEHTS MOVtNG CO. Orywelf l Plumblng, ..,,_ NMI. P9'al 54&-77 11liail"""'.,..Ll9 _____ •
ExQerlenctd her~I ......,,y....,.... ........ Furniture, trMh, deen-4.lpa Uc. T124-<13e. lnlur9d. Home Condo l oMce G;:;;;;;; G ii wUI ewe for a honest Wife & 3 kldl ~ 425513 988-74'01 Commetc1911RM!denllal ,_ Melt 845-5089 841..f.421 Int. Phi! 8~ !0'1 PlAITMHG. concrectol'I -.0 pertorm Wedneedty at
no ntra Charge!
CALL TOOAYll
All .. Llll
YtNr 09lfy Piiot
~tec'/~i;. ~ ?'~ feed. LARRY 754-1820 REDUCE Electric BILLS ~n:::n: =~ WATCH US OAOWI QUALITY PAINTINO. FAIA .::--..._ ~ ~ wottc,,,;., l200 NiudlnO ' · Apt/Condo/Church/But. bonded 20 ' In ' ' _ _ pai-&.1--PRICES F e.tim.... -___. lllbOr Md.,....,....,,.... Mother will b•-H In my Repalr·Ooort-All.,allon• ,,. .. Contult 964-M11 u-w . Y'I .,... r .," mt;a In ...... ,.. .......... ~ ... ,WA be lloeNed u. ...... CM ...... _,_, R1model·P1nel·Pltlo1 """ Mney Land~ ,.-..,.. ....,.,., ..., ·.o;vuv •
. 'home. dependable. Wlnd~-Fen~Clblnel RESID/COMM'LllNO 6-45-512• l Melon W/hypnother9')y ...,.. contract0t9 ~ IO
Ca11Marcel546-1808 35yruxpJ«ry5'1-44l3 28 yra Oo my own wor11. TIHI Oorby!lmaRHS-48-6401 BYRICHAAOSIHOR ,.., •• .....,,. te•ln1Nilr*'*11eing 8eMce Directory Ree>rtaent•tl~
w.a111at.111
Mottler wlfl babyal1 In my Lie 278041 Al 6"6-8129 .... !~~ LloenM 280044. 14 ~ Of IMt9 Anl HeWiU ContrectOtt and :n-home. RM9onable ,..1.. t rttl Topped/remowd. Clun-S cili happy local cuttomera. HANGING/STRIPPIHG SpeQelia. Pool Equip., ws, eotllecl ~
Mra. Uttleton 85()..t()18 . Ddveway1 sidewalk• ~··rt up, MW '-wnt. 751-3478 s~~~:~e . thor~ Thant! you, 875-0383 VISA-MC Scott 873-1512 w ... ..:.... ~ :von:-.:= 48:trec-
PENNY'S DAYCARE Patlot, epa pedt. Llc'd• IMllialU!at 1ar.......a..• W..tM cleln hou~. 540-0857 12 YRS EXP: 1'm emalf, *HANOING/AEMOVAL * . °"Slo ..... Ftu09ta, etc. 1or'1 Stele . Llc•n_.
Lunctl/Snact<a Inc. Ron 55e--003• Alm IPllLITllY Mow---. twk:ie a mo My prlcet are amalll 1 t+ yra uper~ooe Board. 28 ~ Cenw ... liq Ref./UC. 8<46-7939 Cit~ Cuttom Made Furniture. 120:,~ 450_8018 0; Oependeble HouMkeeper RON 850-8477 MIKE 1151·1800 Draine de9I from 115 PW.a. Room eeo. Senta
at. X.n&:nJnG n rn 20% dltc. 21 yrt exper. 645-5737 Experlenced/o:-" T~. CUSTOM PAINTING BLACKWELOE~ Pa • =-.-=:·~~ Ana, CA 92701. •IJ!'!!Adft'IJNmOCJr"~P:•o,.rc•."'k"'lt-. •rm· ., Bonded/llc'd we do wtlat Guar. work. FrM p,u a I Celle 850 32G;) Commerclal·Re1lden1111 hanging & removal ~
9dd +bey wndw, Frenctt C010t Analytl1 & Makeup. you don't hav. time fOf delivery (71•) 55"'-7128 J!U GENERAL OR SPRING frM .. 1. Stan 549·5088 worl( only. 2<4()..31i3 . Ex'*1 SeMce & ReptMr
dr, patio oovtcMc:k1. Lie. Se6ectlon I• key. Unlock 850-1711 Lr..alal ***HOME REPAIR Window. & Appllancet 31 yra •l(I). 18 yr1 In., ... To PhH'4' H>Ur
·· ... a,1 lfr,ult ' ""48485. Steve 547-8078 tour winning~ com· -Elee-Plumt>-Carpentry Free .. t. eve'i 852•1007 HOUSE PAINT,NG Expert Wallcoverl!lg In· Lie #408035 ~8919
ADDITION'S DES ION lnetlon. 846-3540 CadllMlc::I 10 Go-Carta 1'1111111 Illa Aemodeta K .. th e..e-..872 At reduced eprlng ratn tlallatlon. Reu. Contult· St•fVIC'(' lhfl'('I llr\
ud ('all Nolo\ ANO REMODEL Are you "Jual looking"? · Whetevw the Fed Lawn-1,...lhrublnatlll HouMCllHnlng, gen'I & Free"" Dave 875-3901 ant ~nmt. 581-8590 ;l;ttti;~;;1i.,...,.'9'"!',.._•I
Lie. reH. Prore11lon1I We llke brow1er1 1ri ROii 'em off the mlll"ket Tr .. trlm/Removel Repalrt, Painting, Drywall, apec. clelnlng epecillltt. ln.uranoe Repair. $peolaJ. Let cl11slf,.d dc)"Yo'U'; REPliKSf):Ciell1t-UOO I
oomp1 NrV!oe. 831·2s.5 clastilled. 842-5878 With a Clalelfled Ad Lawn mllnt/Rototllllno etc. Fr .. •llmat .. , Oependebte. free ••ti· I.ling In Palnllng/Plutet· door-to-door Hlllng. 1ell Free ..i. 30 YI'• u,p. Call Now! 642·5878 FrM•tlm1te 64a..ac>e5 Gary 645-5277 PTL ,nat .. , 846-4232 Ing. Uc. Chrlt 983-1843 6•2·5678 770-2725 lln)'tlme W.it 642-5671
AIUtllnta. Vaf. lawr OW.. lntal1 2t14 Ptntu11 Jill •11 Wu... 1111 1111 Waa... 11• .. WaaW I ..... lntal1 ... ---
HoRoscoPc
iimM~;,:t;;":;~:tft·'~~l::"::-:::;:"7.:::;:;:"'":::: 2 blkt OC Airport: 800· BEAUTICIAN. GEN: f.-n wtlll/YOu train. HOT BOOS..
S Furn wtdy rental• Aprll· 1200 tq rt. 4-1 MC>. or. WI 111 ITIJ. IPll ~ 8Meh 9oldtcn (toot) lml'nedt-Ha-.. you got one? MoOeet
YONEY S •Pt. S le PI Io no... 8k tq ft. 97~9941 And running 7AM-9:30PM ~ <494-1800 ate openlngl. No 8elling. nNded for poatcerd
ocean/bsy. • dsy, 7 deyt • week Hourty '* '*-com-compenlH. Call now
0 f1Ha ..... ltl-812 EXECUTIVE SUITE Pr...,..1 thlt ed end r• BOOKl<EE~ m1191on. FWI co. benllftts 21i.592-3113
.ARR Newport Cntr 15501S775 celv• a two mwegea for Pttmanent PfT, exp. only. lor full time ~--· --------
" Heven 2 Br, 1 a.. 640-5470 the price of one. N9wpc:>rt a.ach ctwt.tlan PermaMnU~ned Hotel
••••••••••••• Flr-i ...... G•· -c Ideal IOffllT 11111 Futl .........._ 11 /~ 111111 If •111111 ~opertyN-~17 IUl!l/ofh. .,...., 1(-.p fh lal1MJ1•• e,er&llf ,_._, ... •• ·· 2 bdrn'\9 + den, 2 bathe, -·-tu e 111 LI ·-· ..,.,....,,..r. ·""' r. with P•Y or Hklng 2 days: 71m-3pm. 3 days; Tlaanday, ~1 ZI tor retired couple. No 'fulty fumltMd Incl. linen• Ctr. Two Offtoee ev.U sy HI• Reeome 10: PO Box 7878, S*>c* tr they hl\1'9 My 3pm. l 1pm. Must be at>M ARI~ Marc~ 21-April 19): Dispute is settled "out of court.~ You ~·· L ..... 8so...837. ON LIDO ISLE. Lovely 1. The ExecutlW Offloe, ra.LllTll Newport BMeh, t:reeo utableit.em,to~to to wottc wnds. Margie
have upper nd in any controversy, whether or not you rcali.ze it Cllff'haYen 2 &. 1 a. Fir.. patlow/gu BBO. 2 bite• 110 Newport Center Or, ttM112 lllllllPll F/I Choe Thr1ft ltor ... Pwt 487-4477. Surf & S•nO
Move ~cad, accept responsibility and challenge. You'll be given more place. ow. etc .. Ideal ror + ut>ot. '800013 monttle '200• NB. 644-"'92 s18,000 + must be tarn-= ~ lnll!lo ~ Hocel, Lag. Bell. EQE
authonty and chance for increased financial remuneration. ~= ~faNo pet•. (June. JUiy, q .) Fuml8hed, 10 deea• & SU•I U IPA mar with IBM P/C oper. Choe nwtrt Store., 2025 •11= , ....
TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Personal horizons arc broadened -Ull IUl.n ct111r1. kitchen. CM. Jutt Ulllll atlon 1n lddHlon to AIP. Weet Am St. Santa Ana. Part or fltlme. Mu9t r.ci a~~~~r~~:,ceti~ee,~~~·a~~~sy~~p:SiZ:~~~aJY~~·fr:f~ ,,1 •. lfJ:•,;·-~·,1·~:·11•1·.·r Ill-UM :/&~ B~~o & ~~h ~:: s~~~~':'em!..~n. =8j =z:: ~~~~r:.11:.err. General oftloe = :..._~~
emotional fulfillment. Aries plays significant role.1~1 'U'.ii Imo. "44--2270..,.. daya. 10.2AM. VIM & me, ere a growing company & PT/Tm ... ILlll tatlon. HBJFt Vly & W••·
GEMINI (M 21 J 20) · b · · · lacatiea Udo Penttloute 2 beeut 4320 ~ Or. # 190, nd an enthU9taltlc lwn Bu1y clrcu11uon offl~ mlnleter .... 895-7106 ay • une : ACCCP,t new JO , respons1b1ltty. chance IN NEW ORT BEACH ... tab 2tt7 tum Offlcee avlll. S.C'ty, NB. Acfoa rrom oc Air· membknn ti; ... &~-~11aroer of need• a part/lime cterk •--------to move towards top of ladder. You II irct to heart of matters, you 'II A great place to llve on the a f M port 5se-2280 .... --Mr. tor en1wer1ng pbonet ........_... p fT
learn where you stand with "s"""'ial"' member of opposite sex. U1 B rec.pi con rm. utt Reynold• •• (714) and dltPetdlf,.,. meee-MUS\ be-H~~, _... pper 1y. Prlvete Wlterfrtlf .... IH IMI 873-<4803 873-3313 TOP SSS 8"'6-001 1 or ... 8-3024 ... Highlight independence, creativity. originality and daring. clubhou1H a health • F 1es ef Model d ae-. 14 hourt per week. Oood ::l. + Bonu1. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Intellectual curiosity dominates _ 1pas. 8 tenn11 court•. 7 S....rltllbh&Yall, 53~.c. ~l=ORTrtAREA , ~ •. ~~13)868-1~n BUS DRIVER: PfT, lnot Fri. 2:3o-7:30pm, Sat. 1300
questions will be answered, you 'll also receive information concerning poola, cloee 10 butlneu, Oall ter htalh '0 1 tq • Iott 0 wtcnd1 & nlgt111 for dbl· and Sun. 9:00-1o:30am. HOUSEKEEPER OC Airport. Fuhlon h·--Ill 1_._ pncg, Janitorial & all utll• l•1latt)On. 41. 14 decker London Bu1. Sluc:Mnt1 & homemakera Uve 1 possible vacation in foreign land. Follow through on hunch, share 111end. convenient lhopa ... ..-. • -Incl. From S1/1Q ft , mo to ~ Mutt heve Cius 11, OMV enc:ouraged to eipp1y at: n for matw• woman
knowlcd. ge. open lines of communication .. Aquarian figures in ·on tight mo OK. 557-7010 Orenge ty hMM IP• print-out & med. c:.rt. 330 W, Sey, C.M. 2_..ptn 875-9388
· for-.ate. ort.'I mBMg41S (Mk for Debra) IFMNE ORY CL.EAHERS scenano. Slnglea 1 & 2 Bdrm Ap•rt· ltatal1 tt Office: 525 rt. 1420 mo. end aaun1, Annual grou Mk for De 752·7363
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Answers come from unusual sources. ments & Townhouaea lbtt 2tOI Utll pd. Air cond. Ground '960.000. net profit CANVASSERS eouc::,erM~ tw;.3ary
you'll gain support and you'll be surprised in pleasant manner. lrom $680 (Alk about floor. 1055 El Camino Dr. before taxes. $480,000. Hourly rite ptu1 com· •Ill IL.,. · 552 1~2 ·
Popularity increases. money picture is brighter a nd you'll become more furnllhed eptt. complete 2500 tq rt Condo, View or Coet• M ... 3 blk1 E. of Cuh bulinesa. long term mlalk>n. No MltlnQ. we F " -·~.._ • ·
aware of "body image .•• Consider travel invitation. Watch Sagittarius! with TV. llnena & utenallt, Bay, swimming pool a Fairview end Adam a le&M. Price S1.500.000. wlH train you IOI' full or u time.,..._...,.,~ ~
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Empham· e "'actual data -.__ awar• of mey be rented IOf lhor1 t>eeutlful greenbelt. Wiii 754·10<40 Mr Trecy Owner retiring or would part time poeltlons. Im-tor lquellftedl o ......... ~to Dey Pol«lon evalleble ,, ~ ~ term°' tonger) On Jern-•cc e Pt ch 11 d re n . lfe •· a....-lie not eYefl consider Mlllng. mediate openlnga, AWIY a11 • --eneo-. Recquet Ball Woncs
source material, keep up to date on Latest mfonnat1on, buJlctins t>oree Rd. 11 San Joaquin 557-7883 ew. 640--8339 •-.. "-l lf Fabulout opportunity In peraon mon-trl. Outlet to lndUde: dlrec:t Cell Rend)' 962•1374 concerning your special interest. Possible contract should be reviewed Hiiia Rd. Shire HOUM w/pool. M/F. Sult• 10 3000 t /ft Thia unique bualnes1 11 10-3pm Choe Thrift phone contact with cus-l_Liifiiiiiiiil-
by competent professional. You might have chance to renegotiate 144·1100 Nice! Al S320. HB 54971~f~~~~ ottered with fantestlc Stor• 2025 Weat Rm tom. .. blllng& .... ,.I Lllftllllllllll aoreemenl. 53&-38&5/M&-4375/600 • .._,., terms, 20% down, 9'..\% St. Santi Ane. leted cletlctl dutlH. Part time ell~rlence
.,.. Quiet 2 Br 1 Ba. p111o. Spactoo1 824 tq fl w/fun Int. Arnonttzed t:IYer 30 I .. ~ GConoodt~~::,_~3 · nece11ary Newport LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be analytical. do some personal Pool. garege, no peta. A1t.11reetyte M, ltUdent ok, kit. In colorful marine NI· 'fM'S, lntereet onty pey· -••-• -· ...._, -ew:n MO. c.a 640-7412
detective work, stnve for fair play. Focus also on people who rely upon $600/mo. 1801B15th St to lhr C.M. condo, jac. 1 ting, nr Udo Shipyard menta tor 5 rw•. • PIT to wen In th. Of· .... lllllttit ,..,._.. l litwMiiiiiiiiinl9'r
you, ~s. resolutions concerning diet, nutrition and ·genera~ health. ~t Hghl1. 8!50·8213 ml. from t>Mich. S300 mo. avell. lmmed. '670/mo. beloof\ ~ •t the nc.. FemBler with Unix 117<41 ~.!Nine LlllL llm111Y
Gemini, Virgo,Sagjttariuspersonsfigurcinscenario. ut1lapd.83l..aoo9 Ptiotocopylng&otherof· end of S 'fM'S. No col· 83t~780btweenl-5 Fast peoed NB RE Ll1
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Chano""' are em~hasized. could IUl•llNM F n/amkr to lhr lux. 2br. flee Ml'Vlcel 1va11 Cell literal n«:etAty, u the con1truc1lon firm seeks mot1v1ted . . -~ Yearly 2BR lba. Avail May 2b NB I pool I LIN 875-0132 bullneu generatee the ... ·-··--m aper Legal Secretery include rcs1den~. love and marriase. Focus also on c ildren. variety. 15th. 1800. 548-5&82 • · · I?• · ec. profit•. For Info call Mr FUllW · -•621.1. T"'-Challenging pos req
speculation, travel and creative projects. Gift is on the way. member of jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliil $400. 863-1111 X<402 dys WATERFRONT. 800 IQ rt. Lewis. 213-928-8471 or & layout crew~. Bk~'g, llte ot::9' wont, exoeptlonal 1111111 & strict
opposite sex desires to impress with sincerity. Gorgeous 2 t>r N.B. condo, open offloet, 7 cublclee, write to 7808 Florence lmmedllle opening• ~~v 20 hra ~1~~ at1entlon to detail Ref's
SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Emphasis on real estate. basic Spac.lous single. Ont pool, etc, on golf courte. eleg1n11y lurnl•hed. Ave, Downey, CA 90240 Yates Conlructlon. lull lime. 17/hr 10 start. req 6"0-6962
values, professional appraisal. Transaction can be concluded o nce & two btdroom apts. !Pref. ssoo. 780-8181 Lauree 646-5015 ••J••ts Call Bob 980"8035 Call 9AM· t2:30PM. lOAN PROCESSOR
terms arc outlined and meaninoc defined. Lobk behind scenes, take Laguna OcMnvlew 10 lhr c .. atrclal T ,._ ' .ao•• Mimi 111' 2PM·SPM. Muat be • IW. Pllf'Eln o-r Prof M/F over 25. $326. • 1 "' .. Full & pert time avalleble. pendebte. e50-38&0 nothing for granted. realize importance of being ~If-reliant ... tali 2111 I I Lender/Bkr needs expd
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What seemed nebulous will 1'1· i .. t. tee. "97~787 ~ UTn.11 G..ood P•Y· Good •tmoe-Hair ltyllat & ... ,. needed. loan prooeseor to handle
bee I'd F · h · 'b' · Lg. Beckbay houM. Pool. 180<4012~,.8'~~· F.V. ~· It IH phere. Call for eppolnt-HIS muat have c:Uentele. loan• and front office for ome more so 1 . ocus on ideas, s ort tnps, added rcspons1 1hty Jee Lrg mat awt S500 ..., .... 11• Ill • , ment. ask tor Beth °' Bal Ill. 873-4013 non-amoklng Newport
and chances to substantially increase income, Emphasis also on Meture Fem. 662:1542 · Agent 5• 1·5032 S Zing In 11t & 2nd Ride, 957-0717. 8Mctl office. Salery -.
romance, promotion. production and completion of creative project. 0111 /Sh IS TD'aSlnce 1949 c t tor d • ... ITYUIT bonu .. 851-6936 Unda
AQUARIUS (Jan.2().Feb.18)·.F1'n1'sbrathcrthan1'n1'n'ateproiec1. M/F28-<40Prof.tothr2Br ce op to.reg• Robt.Sattler NH/CM ouner peraon ry Fullor pltlme 8Mctl ...... 1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim , FURNISHED or 1 Ba Sm cozy home 2 epace 250.350.750 r ... RE Broker 8d Realtor• clHnlng. Rftpqntlbl• . • 1•
What appeared to be a lost cause will be revived, found to be alive and UNFURNISHED. blka to l>dl. CdM. $350. c Me11 C-2 548-7249 642·2171 545--0611 Experience P.....,red Oltver• '· 640-2050 'l'MD
kicking. You arc going to make more money, personal possessions will All UTILITIES 'h ulll. das 662·3380 •htHtttt ....... WANTED: People needing 648-5l10 HARDWARE ASST MOR iHE DAILY PILOT II now
increase in value, you could also fall madly in love. PAID, H£AlTH M/Fem to lhare 2 Br. 1 Ba. 1 MO FREE RENT pvt TD m a10.ooo up. IEUYllY MIYll F /I R:,~ L.lg'::BJi"° ~cceOlpsttlnr1c10 Mapp1lc1t1on1 PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Get to heart of matters. refuse to be CLUBS. TENNIS. Apt, Balboe 111and, w11t1ort term lelte. full No credit""· no penalty. POUlble 1p111 ahlf1 Apply 497-4403 Jonn or anegers to
intimidated by one who is boastful, Cycle continues high, you'll be at SWIMMING. plus l350mo yeerly. Non MN aultn. 881 Dover Or Denlton Alloc 673-7311 12~. W.F Clrcultt Inc ' supervlee newapeper
right place. you'll imprint style and successfully pioneer a project. much mort! Sorry. smoker 875-g564 Jerry Suite 14, N.B. 831-3651 ltlt WHt.. 51 1281 Logan, unit J CM IELP II lllE =O, M~~~veG~
Stress independence, creativity and romance. Leo. Aquarius persons no pets. Modtls Proteulon11 10 there la•11tri1J -IEITIL llRPTil•ST Car. for 2 Children. coot. salary, mlleege allow.
figure prominently. open daily 9 to 6. Lerge 3 BR home In CdM ltatall 2120 •u -&lllllT A.re you a Mlf-motlvated help run hOUM tn Corona ~. company benefit& No amokers. S510. end --peop. loving person who del Mer· 759· 1835 and bonua opportunity
Daf. S525. mo. 760-2537 or 2000, 2000 I 2000 IQ fi mwnn ,, looklng for. ctla'*'O-Apply In person at Ody ........ ti, Vaf. t1, Aprtantl, Vat. leeve me11. 937.5411. 3975 Blrcti. NB. The Orange Cout Deity Ind opportunlly? 1heve 1 HIRlll Piiot Clrcutatlon Otflee C..ta .... Z714 c:tlft. Z714 Bot. •ac~ ' ZHI A__.__... Prof. Mele Mek1 M/F. 3br S.50 IQ ft. Agt 541-5032 Piiot hat en uoellent 09-amall. high quality !)fee· 330 Weet Bey, eo.t1
...-_....... CdM houae 1vall May 111 CM, 800 IQ ft w/olc end '"' portunlty fOf • career lice that needl • epeclal Outgoing, enthualullc Mesa. M~ thru Fn. "85/mo. E/llde 2 Br, ,.,,, MESA PINES 2850 Herfa 2 Bf. 2 car g11. covered Newport~ So, & June 1,t. 675•819<4 ba. $300/mo. Ownr/Agt oriented Ma)Of Account perton to manage and edult• • pert/time .,.,,_ <Sey. No pholW calls.. ba Twnl\M. Frple, yerd, LIKE NEW Bach or 1 Br patio, v. mlle lo bch. 759•8008 Executive with • ptoven sllmulete growth. 4 deys lngt. You must enJoy E.0 .E.
0.,, lndry rm. Nice loc PRIVATE Petlo, pool, spa. $895/mo. 213·925--•796 1700 16th Street Resp neat per.on thr 2br trick record. Greet 1 week. Selary open. woriclng wit~ youth and
2314S•nlaAna. TOPer•,qulet.nope11. S400 (at Dom) 1'nba C.M. ept nr OCC. AaaHactanh potent111, guarenteed 644-1601Coronede1Mar beepotltlWmotlvatOf. ---------
TIL llllT N2-1111 SUO/IH UlaJ44l *pool,~~: ,::~·F1~r1:~: 642-5113 pool $288. Call morn or s~IRITOXL READlNGS drew 1g1ln1t com· OE T Cell for •n Interview: F~p~~~h
8'42·283<4, 842-3172 N •Mer 9pm. 241 '8™ Advice In all matter• Love million. Oetlr• to move 4 d N 1*oa:c'r7t1bkpr 141· 10211 .....
&YllUILI HW N~~'rs .. ~~~rS:~ ~:;: -IUl--1-1-EW--I0-1-=r:'~n:· Rmmte. ~1-. non·emkr, marriage & bua1ne11: ~~~d~:~t • plui. 9~ CM. C.~ •v•ll --------• =::'~0~08'~~. i~f8
1 Br refrlge. renge, leun-Carport• & pool. No pets. 2B 2, B d &r (at 6th) Hunt. Hrbr. Guerd gate. 2 Also counaellng. 1815 p 0 Box 1580 Orlvers/Leborera S 10 hr Colta Mesa, CA 92826 dry. pool, carport. no 989 Victoria. 5411-0130 r :.; a, /w, w/d hk· Br. gar, WtO, pool, sp1, So. El Cimino Real. Sen Coate Meea 92626 mtlll/MIT
pell. 14g51mo. 931 W. up, gar. frplc, $850 645-1104 S 4 5 o /mo. George Clem. Llc'd. 492,7296 EOE · 539-8244 Direct Agency Preatlglout Orange Coun-
19'h. St. 5<48-04g2 Small t Br. 1918 Maple 962·7789/980-1193 213,532.5300 x266 •Splrltuel Reader & Ad---------• 10294 Westm1n1ter Fee ty Mercedes Benz deel-Ave. up1111ra. refrlQe. no ,..,,,., 3B 2B & 2B 2B ----------,._._ ...... 1 -&"Ip ___., "H-t ..... For Ad Action
a.cn.lor Ea1tllde ell utll1 pets. 1 peraon $395. vvouxe r • r • laa Cltatalt 2771 Shere View hOme. 2 F/plca visor Advtoe In all Ille --_.. .... ... ,...., .,.
paid. $395/mo. No pet• Sierra Mgmt 841•132<4 In 4-plex crpts drp1 .... ..----~""""--rooftop patio. S285 maller1; love, merrlage. lllllmH OLlll $75 per 100. no ••per tmmedlately Some Cal a
Daily Plot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
piMM 780·8882 · bttlnl gar S725-lt00. 2 bdrm, new crpt, down· 111,lut & Dep. 966·8"79 bualnna. NB. 631·939'7 Coeta M"a mfg firm Part°' full time Stlrt fm, modeling uperlence ---------::re-,. .. "'"' Stunning large 2 Br 2 8a No peta. MO ..... ltalrt unit. S525. 231 I u r • 3AA..I need• right lndlv. w/3 yrs mediatefy For d•t•ll• preferred Outgoing per. Bechelor. E.tlde .... garden apt, pool & rec Avenlde Aregon # 1 or Shr 4Br Condo Npt Creal .,..t taa .,.,,. minimum exp In eccoontt aend 1911 addreued sonallty Apply tn peraot1
Cath. celllng1, petlo, .,. .. S545 710 W 18th SI ....... TH 0110 call 498· H 19 Billy (mgr) nr beech tennll pool peyeble Mfn & com to 1001 Quell St. Nwpt kltch., very cleen,,_________ ••-S300+ulllM5·254J .,. , stamped envelope 10 Bcti Jim Slemont Im· 1 41 5 /mo + dep. WllfFlll-8211SANANOELODR. 2 Br. clOM to beech puter beckground help: CRJ,53,Bo1190 14,
850-4180 Iv mag. Went • Miectlon or "' ... 1 br. 2 br & bectl .. or eptt. $500/mo Shr"" 2br 1b• duplex Npt FOUND ADS ~=tu~~~,::::; Slulft. Florid• 33495 ports/R:;t~Mslon
llvlng? We c:a.n ofter lllY· T9'ev!Md MCUflty, encl 223 LI P1lom1 837. 7918 Hglt IOC S250 mo Cell 71'1979-3993 Eacorts. ettrectlve fem11et
thing from• amell apt to garegee. pool, jec. tennl1. l Lerit 831·2126 Iv mag ARE FREE pre1emtd Mull be over .....ai91iBJIU a 4 Br hOUM. If looking In clubtlouM w/lull •xerclM nta alttr Unlum. Penn. Home Avall
1
&911. ltl.UllAIUI 21 831-6300 x54 Iv mag ~ CM, NB°' HB think of ut room. 8"'8-1613 lmmed non amoker Cal·. A~1t~~otno1lb .. l•1 lllllW ••-rw••y
first IOf tha.t> choice or IUWlll $400. mo. 673-8"'92 .,_,_ ,....,_, --·-heutlful landlCaPed 91t· Ideal llvtng lftl for t••·Mll eppta tor our toelal ctub s.cr.t1r1a1 lklfla t0< busy
den apt1. Pool a 591 TSL MGMT 842· 1803 YILUIE -No cold c:aJtlng Ac:tvance-bulll .... & rNI property PatlO/dectcl. No pelt NB REALTY 875-1842 .... 2tU ment po11lble Good unit By appt 855-6971
2 Bdrm 11/• B• "35 NeW 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury t•& ........ Coetl a ... 20 x 20 --------~ Yotce nee.nary 1•1 E 2111 .. ~.2~,.. W•ttlde, 2 Br, 1 t>a. new •"'11ln14 ........ 1 Bdrm """""• =--------op com-'a•.__& paid HOUW llllnUY " . . ......... ....,.. crpt1/drp1. $800/mo + 28drm tndT~horMt It. Storeo• only Found Mele rtvr mix. Call Mr. L~'S..'5-7686 One or Or~ Countlea
2 8dnn 1'1• Be $825 5250 MC, Call S.IPI 1rt + poolS. tennlt, w11.,. S125/mo• MC 8<45-7234 blond Fem blk/whl oldMt companM.t. c;.,.....
2 Bdrm 2 Ba $880 5PM •I 831·5230 tall•. pc>ndt. Ou paid. IOI llUll 11 I.I. I 0 ... ,., ••u mixed d L•b F (blk ~~lar lllWll• IDYlll opportunity '°' right I*·
From San Dllao Frwy Muter tulle In I•,.,,. home • '.... -w/atu 9• •m •P Tel1phone op et ton exper or treln.-2280Ven$'eard Wey drive Notth on 8eech 10 .,..r8Mch&Ati;;11 Pvt New 2-•~bldg,goodfwy tln/blkpuppy MShlhtzu 7-.3pmlhltt. Top:~,~2 w/llrong secre11r1a1
54(). 2t McFldden and W•I on beth belcony Cl~ TV acc.e. rom eoo t I. up blk/wtlt, fern t.,rler mix 3rd SI, Legun1 Beec:t1 lkllll and cletlre Mull
E'tlde 2BR 1'h be twnnM. II ti /bal No McF1dden lo Seawlnd ho<>k. up kllohtn & llun-IO 3900 l.f. Wiii bulld to pit bull. rec.nl ~pe Fem type 80 wpm S1l1ry
Patio & gar. 278 Cebrlllo 19•· r, pa o · VIiiage (714)893 51g8 dry prlvtiege. Fem l>f•I aull tenant. Some epece tlfrler m111 tan/brown. Appointment tetter, PfT. open e.nefil• PfOvlded
8575. ~t · T~t•J:~~~lf.ooe 1 or · · ~ S400 mo. ut1i1 lnciuded: ~~~l~med. U9 net. _M4-__ 3_8_se_____ ~.~ :,~'~i':':~:; Ring Lynn 547-5825
i!itlele luxury In. pine for· 8"'2· 1803 LatHI ltlcfa IHI eee-1221 •rt &pm Ra H . 751-5989 Found: Smell long heired Plftow .. $upe>fy •fl SPM. rmew Sll'Y, /T
eet. LO 28A 2t>a, oM/W1r 1 Am for rent furn. pool. tac. Single oateoe ne.r bMch ~/b:=:~~w!ri~ M4-1a-t 1 Mon -Frl N B 955-0650 c*d, "'°patio, dlw, frig, IOWI VllW w/d, 111 prlv. CIOM to C M . • .,. .. 1 • 1 /S 1..,.,. i.& bbq '515/mo. 9"2·18'M 1515: 2 Br. decb, gar. Nr lhoe>t & fwys M2-<>584 ottl e11, ..,., mo. m lllltlf •p< • ._a,. nr APPT SETT£RS· C:.-ff°"1 f"ORKLlirT $8410 hf
Dena H.,bOf. 8-25081 Lt Only 10 mlnu1e1 from . 831.e063 H B 193-49 tO hOrne CC>mf'ftl9tlon 538-624' Dir.cl Agency ... TlllH• er.ta. <494-8848 Laguna. your own privet• Room w/p'll beth Kit. prlv. ...tall Loel Cit. ~ at~. 83&-t03S aft 4PM 10294 W•tmlns1• F.-
Ou"4 2 8t 6 3 Br w/1'A la OOMtl vi.. from Dene Pool, frplc, d /w, HB. lhort hair "'* Nr Su---------------. P'tl patio, P<>Ot.::V· t.rQ a Br -+ den. 2 ea, Point'• moat NCluded 1285• 1211ec Me-.3715 1111 Weetdiif' &. N 6 l*1of NB ~19 F--&llT1on !!!!~... .. . ,_ -y
oerporte, no pell & Oceen vu, encl. Olf IClnic blUff Uk1 new 2 S"filSuN LOOOE $130 Mi'°"· ,...--. ---::::' --....,--..,,....,,.,--· _.., ---.·-.. ._, •-r-• tet:s. Curt II, aot w/autoopener,newty,.. Br a a Bf widen. xtra SlOS~/up ColorTV Agent Mt·5032 Loci Femlly dog 90% t>oullQu. Eaperienc.d PllT/1m ...
131·12H cari*td & decofated, ,.,0• prlv•I• petlOI 3028 W. Cout Hwy, Npt ~''"" -t• dr-ale codler epan1e18 , rvtty red Aett f':ullltlme Te0-9333 0PPof1unlll•• 1vall1bt• <493-1030 From SHO/mo Ca ll --.. _.... -s>PtOX 1 lbl. lMt...,.. IU wtth t,,. LOS ANGELES
POOL trpfC ptVt patio 980-8331 or dffve by 80 Lag,"' bctl, Mt)' rum.. Stller & Ctty Partt H8. 111110 TIMES Otwtatlon 0.-°""""' x~ 1 Br on ..... l ..... 24585 Santa ca.re lo... pv1 kit flM:. PoQI, tennta. Eet1lf aunday v.,., v:e!Y. '°' 1 c:Nld, In "'f'1 l'IQma, partment .,, our Ooor to !Mttlele NS! SS7·2141 9WU--HSW jac lht 91. ootor TV frllndly dog "Pancake ' 8-4, 4 daya Mt 8314842 doot ~ ..,_ ..--.,,,..-::::--:::::--:::~~ n-i.. 10 rnlnut• from SMALL STUDIO GREAT empt nn-ernlitr a.350 & We ha\1'9 to¥ed her 1 -pr""rem Guerentffd
1 BA with _. "''"1 LOCATIONI $290/MO 1325 (2 rma) <493--3"80 1111111 pllaM c.n If you -~ lllTllTTD (lift .. ) -·
No pea. Aec*O. W/f/dt :' J:' =~ UTil.S PO • .......oe7 N9w 2 l"Y bkJo. good trwy wti.re lhe It 841·2451 fof 2 ~ Qfr'9 ~~~o
Cell lf't tpm 946-3417 Polnt't mo.I MC~ .... ft tcetaa, f:rom 750 9f up. Cllll ~. 42-1477 Gpn\ Tt~ ii pro.
HR. 1 w/dectt, .oentc blUft. ~· ,,._ 2 ... ...-....a Wiit build ~ Nt tenent, LOST Clreyl\lltlft• Iona heir Benklng vtcMd ~till 10 tetn Ind. ger, tat, leel & Seo It l 2 Br w/Otn, Jrtra v-, wtr .... lft W....-1.99 Ml·_. eoop wllM!r Femele oet REWARD. -a ,_ TIUD S300 Plue per ... F0< 1 • ..... MIO 5-41-11341 woe ortvete patlOt. Cell lndr'r. pool: 24 Hr 0.. Lovety llcenM • S900 aq ft ground floor ,. <41M-0348 ... ....,,, ,,_ an Int.,.,.._ ~
_r ~1 Of drtw by Qt'P0'1 11t +-19' No home.(71")t'7 .. 64te wilt\ t"ttrm, GS*' floor p .la Excallilnl CICIPOf1unlty tor 957 23e1tal tao.
• I.la 3 •· t M. No~ 246U8antaCtarato .... p•t• 29041 Aloma I plM, Plual'I upgred ... tnau. HU •xp9fleladpenon1n en 9'26/mO. 2 Ir, 1 .,., O..tPM Mont <411-1221 ' •• ... 11t11&,_ ....... Avalt. A & H 751-$.. lllll,../.....,...I attrKtM .. vfnQt a loatl. Fumtturl-Dllpley ...,S*
EHtlld•, HoJ•'·· ut. ... •n. •• ····"· lmmecM1•0S*'lnOoftWI Must be ,,..,, hullly & '621/mo. 131.,1 8u1lnH1 Profe11lonal Ou1Cllll ONLY 831-1199 'fitted dUt• C911 htly. able to th<nk 75t-te22 ~11tinr"al;;;;~: Furn 2 Br ,,_. 8t hat. llPa MMI aatM 10 ICtt9 7&4-1901 E0£ --rm. 1 bectl1 !MllkSe, 11 I , •viii 8111 lhN 918 l)flYllt 4 room fVmlthed GOOd looklng Went• one I a • 1 All 101tt ol ~,. uM
CAREER
OPPORT ~ITIES
TJU DAil' rll OT, 0~11111• ( ftunh •
ruuHol l'Oft'IOluDoh ltf"••P•pt'r. hti • ••nrh 1>1
full and pare ttm .. rn•]llOOa a.-allahlr >\n• on"
ol th .. followlnjl I• •n Opl)Oriun11y lo ""°'"' ,.,,h
an MUaca1uf11\• •••tf. 1n: ........ 1fl<J 10 ar h1r• "''
noh tlw-hf'.-1 .. ,1h10 an """""ll 1ndu•ir•
\l>\'t.RTl'I ~(.
• Oultldf '-•I"" U•••1f1,.d & Kf'tad llaH
dl•pl•) ff'mlnf\ o~t1inp for rand.ct.at• "'"h
f'\P"'f'ifllu and • Prt'""" :rarli. ~i>rf ~\.,-•
plu• c-omm1•10:1
Bl• •~ 'S.' on1
• \tC'ou•ta Rf'ttt'•blt (ln .. -bun lnrl
po-1uo11 'o "'Ptnf'tlff t1C'C'~_.r, t ..and1da1 ..
•Ill bf. tr11ntd rvll ti-. IMvrh
t.OITORl4l
• nnt..1T~pi.1 -ran 11.tnr f>O'lU011 l11pu:11111
rop•, •«t'-' -.ll aad srett•I rlrrli,h11
'"IMI'" b1li:-216 a. ... ,.__ "•OU'h
"''* CTIO' • PrrM-• Tra1--ft•n "~" Of>f"""ll••h
t• ln.rw .. d ru• thr pn-v ••tit .,.,,. ef •II-t-1
flt"'"' &rMod :ul hnvn.. hovrh
'r efln tltftft .,.,.,..._ d~rlop•nil. ••ii
• , ...... Ma•ftb .,..~. If t•l~'"'"'·
111in.. ~•r •• •ad •M>ll rr•• 10-,? J .. 1.h. H _ .. , __ •• p., .. ,~ ....... ...
Daily Pilat
••••• , .. , ..
H 0 p • ' • . tta <41th It. Hpt 8c:h. lu.iuty offlCle In Irvine Of two gl41t to party C•N ....... cfantl~ '"'' IO W ll ...
aaasrmo 13 , ... 55 to.. u"'' 85(). t208 *315/mo 151-MM 8ob lnY'ime 549.~ne '700 ·~. Coeta Mpa M)rtS ot tllings 8'~·!6 HI ~!!'!!!!I!!!!~~[ ... ~!!;;!!!"!""'*'!!~~;!!!!!!~
( I
TODAY'S CROSSWORD "1771 E
ACROSS 49 Boga
1 Lord's houM 50 Make joyful
6 Lodge 5i Crooned
----PMYaou.---PUZZLE aOl vm
10 A Leewerd Is. 52 Dinner bill
14 Pax'a equal 55 Unllkeness
15 ()pefe 58 L of AWOL
tMtocly 60 Of the USA
16 Soc111 group 61 Mideasterner
17 Uaed sutures 62 Join
18 Links needs 6S Quality: sut.
20 8.runch meat 6'4 Venture
21 Proof of 85 Ship section
ownership OOWN'
23 Notched 1 --mash
Irregularly 2 Space extent
2.,. Tinkers to 3 Neighbor ol
-to Texas
Chance 4 Pronoun
26 1899-1902 5 Blushes
C4mpa1gn 6 Wise ones
28 Burdening 7 Walked over
30 -de Leon 8 OPEC's
31 Alao named product
32 Major score 9 US fly-9111
36 Surname 10 Badly
prefix marked
37 Held up 11 Perm11
38 Contend 12 l1gh1 wood
39 Did well 13 Goose genus
42 Belgian city 19 Tree
• 44 St. -. W I 22 Work pref
45 Scotch VIPs 25 By means ol
46 Pred1ca-26 Tied up
ments 27 --over
50
55
63
WE NEED NEW FACES
For placement 1n modeling
1obs in Orange County
HW Hiil WEST
, .... il&HCJ
141-llH
Models Male/Female
WE NEED NEW FACES
For placement in modeling
1obs in Orange County
HWYORIWEST
T1l11tlct1CJ
141-HH
MOTEL MAID Apply In
person Newport Channel
Inn 6030 PCH. NB.
Part time day & eves help.
start training now tor
summer, hard working.
dependable only. APPLY
IN PERSON Tues. &
Wednes 2 30·5 00
Laguna Beach & Dana Pt
A ~ranch1ssee
PAllTTllE
LMAL 00 HllllH
Start at $7 45. seeking 11
H.S. grads, US citizens
hard workers Need auto
Call 3-6PM
Hunt Bch 964-2890
Part time. public relations
customer service Irvine
foe. 261-123.C
PART-ilME. Vaned hours
to Include early A M
weekend• Must have de-
pendable vehicle !small
truck. van station
wagon) to assist news-
paper dealer 1n Irvine
area Must be depen
dable Contact Greg
Hyde Monday thru Friday
between 9 30 and 10 30
a.m. only 642-4321
28 Pound down
29 Wtngltke
30 Skin
openings
32 Wrongful
1n1unes
33 Exaggerate
~4 Air
movement
~ F1st11ng gear
37 -noire
40 -Waltz
41 Musician
42 Mouth-
washes
AGES 11-14
EARN tJ-TO $75.00 PER WEEK .
Wt "°" 111vt I ~ optninci tor you111 uatr buffls 10 wc11rt reaclels 101 Tht Or1111t Coast
Daily Piiot Ou1 cre..s start at 3 30 p 111 and
WO!• unt~ 8 30 p Ill tfff\dm Oft ~tllf~Y Wf
iwor\ 1 It• lllOI' llouri You tafn ll'liny triiis
and pntn ~"''II Ulf\111 JOUI O•ft 11\0My
thtrt 1s no dthm1111 OI coftfc.bon 1ntotved
It yov '" 1nttrt1ll'd plftaJ« Clll Mr I Ari
(714) 548-7058
43 Hasten
45 -Yutang
46 Portable
chair
47 Region
48 Good notices
49 Perhaps
5 1 Self-lumi-
nous body
53 Verily
54 Swiss city
56 -sack
57 Gershwin or
Sankey
59 W1thm. pre1
10 11 12 13
16
llRUT JOI
DEPElllOl I
IHllUL.
CIHS
1 ''· &,tri1101 111,1lr1d
He<e's whet TGI
FRIDAY'S otfe<syou
OtliH·r Oail) Pilot by auto in
LAguna Rt>Rr h/Laguna iguel
area (approx. 2 hours per
day) weekda) afternoon•
earh marinin~ on Sat.& . un.
Earn appro . 1400 pt-r
month. Ask for Brur Emsle-y
11 a .m lo l p.m
CIRCULATION lJEPT.
642-432 1 WE
ORANGE CO ASr OAILV PILOT
lll'I w nev St • cosu" SA CA t:H.1• .. . . .. . ,. ' '"" ' . "' ... . .. ....... ..
r ---
--
.........
lllTI
0011n , .......
"WIWILLllT
IE lllDllLI"
VolUme S... Setvk:e ,.~~
Huntlnil~ 8MCtl
(l 14) Ml·HIO
WEOllE ......
Bill YATES
VW-PORSCHE
.... I J I ' I •i I
637-4800 49l-4SI I
.
brown w/wht t op.
$4000/080. 49"4-e HM. eves 7f50.0941
83 ~-ron. pert cones.
10.000 ml, ell the extru.
$10.500. 644-2119
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of late model. low mlleege
Cadm.c:s in Southern
CallfOf'nlal S.. us today1
&•0-1880
ITADIUM
llONTIAC
M l I U 1\.1
. .
I
Cout
A court decision against
athletic fees may put
Laguna Beach athletes
on the bench./ A3
State funds to help re.
store Upper Newport Bay
might survive the ax./ A3
California
De Lorean tapes show
references to code
names for drugs./ AS
The seismic reading said
6.2, but Tuesday's quake
Injured only 21 people.
/AS
Nation
Mondale asks end to
Independent delegate
committees as Hart takes
Vermont./ AS
World
Experts say Iran wlll have
Its own nuclear bomb In
two years./ A4
Home
Home Design Expo '84
offers plenty of answers
for home owners who
want a new mood for
rooms./81
Scandinavian designer
Katja llkes dramatic col-
ors and the new freedom
to create Interiors that
match a lifestyle. /81
Food
A balanced diet can help
you Increase your work
potentlal./C1
The rich flavors of
liqueurs are the under-
pinnings of desserts de-
signed by a food expert.
/C2
Sports
Damon Berryhlll's dra-
matic two-out ninth In-
ning homer lifts Orange
Coast to a 5-3 South
Coast Conference victory
over Golden West./01
Corona del Mar turns
back University, 18-10, In
Sea View League tennis
actlon./D3
Entertainment
"Lavender Follies" Is full
of female superstars -
all of the male gender -
at Sebastian's West./83
Bualneu
Investing can be even
more fun If you learn
about It OCC's way -on
a cruise to Hawaii./ Al
INDEX
Bridge 94
Bulletin Board A3
Bu1lnen A8
California New1 A4
Cluslfled 04-6
Comlcl 94
CroMWOrd 06
Death Nottcea 95
Food C1-10
HelpYouraeff B2
Home 91-2
Horoecope 05
In the S«vtc. A7
Ann Lander• B2
Mutual FUnd1 A8
National Newt A4
Obltueriet A7
Opinion A10
Potice log A3
Pubflo Notlcel BM
Sport.a 01-3
Stoek Marketa A8
TeleYtlk>n 82
Theater• 83
WNther A2
Wond Newt A4
\ ... •
County kill!$. airport pact
Supervisor Riley calls board's action
'Irresponsible.· vows to Join in lawsuits
By JEFP ADLER
Of .. 0.-, .........
Without a word, the Orange Coun-
ty Board of Supervisors ~pped a
proposed ~ce treaty with the City of
Newport Beach JOveming John
Wayne Airport flight operations
Tuesday. Then the board moved to
set new guidelines on tbe number of
fliahts the airport will accommodate, ruTes that could allow up to 219 daily
fli&hts.
In a stunning action that left
SupervisorTbomuRi!qfuminaand
vowina to retaliate by joming airport
opponents in lawsu1ts, the board
made atiift 'WOr'k of the propoted
bindiq apeeement with Newport
Beacn. The board killed the PKt
without di1CUuion when no super-
visor seconded Riley's motion that
the complicated lepJ document be
approved.
But supervisors had a lot to say
about new airport access auidelincs,
finally aprovina in principle a plan
that potentially would penmt a
maximum 219 fliahts per day from
John Wayne Airport once a proposed
Oanman alr.lpe his workout
Jeff ADCte. a member of the <>ranee Cout
conece rowt.na crew. worb oat tiy jump-
iDC rope at thecrewbue lD NeWport Beach.
It'• part of the team'• condltioniDC.
.
SU.spectinFVwoman's rape
apprehended in Chula Vista
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Deltr ..... IUlf
A 22-year-old man was stopped in
his red Toyota sports .car in Chula
Vista Tuesday and charged with this
month's Friday the 13th rape ofa 32-
year-old mother in her Fountain
Valley residence.
Fountain Valley police Detective
Rick Christensen said William B.
Bauman, a former Fountain Valley
resident, was arrested on suspicion of
forcible rape, rape with a foreign
object, oral copulation, sex ual battery
and burglary. All charges are related
to the one incident, Christensen said.
The suspect allegedly peeped
through the window of the victim's
home, according to Christensen, and
made his entry through a bedroom
window after the woman's two young
children had depaned to bu y ice
cream.
Christensen said the suspect was
hiding in the bedroom. She saw him
and fled down the hallway in a panic,
but the suspect chased after her and
dragged her back into the bedroom
where he allegedly committed the
acts. according to Christensen.
The detective said the victim
suffered "super big bruises'' on the
arms and legs wltile being assauJted.
Christensen said he sent out a
photo and a teletype that included
Bauman's description to other law
enforcement agencies in Southern
Californ ia and Chula Vista police
stopped Bauman 'scar after attending
a bnefing.
When does a date become rape?
It's a difficult legal designation
A woman agrees to a date with a
man &be has met at a fashionable
niahupot. She looks forward to a
pleasant evening. Instead she is
honified when the man becomes
~ive and forces her to have sex
with him.
Another woman consents to 10 to a
man's apartment after a niaht on the
town. But she beClOmcs anaered when
the man attempu to JO beyond
kiuina and pulls off her clothes.
When she tries to leave, be blocks her
path.
Teo yean aao. Police and pros-
ecuton probably would have turned
the women away when they tned to fl'CSS criminal cha,..es qauiat their
•data." The epi!Ode would have
been d.ismiued as ••a boyfriend-
. rlfriend lhina."
Ten years -so. the encounter may
not even have come to the attcntlon
of poUoc with the women rational-
STEVE
M111u
Focus ON THE NEws
llina away the incidtnt as a mis-
adventure for whJCh they shared
10me blame.
But now, so-<:alled .. date rapes" or
.. ac:quatntanoc rapes" account for
more than half the reported su
attacks filed by city pohce depart-
ments in Oranae County.
"I'd estimate that 60 percent and
maybe even two-third of the rapes •n
Newpon Beach arc cues where ,., ..
woman knows the man," says Sa•
Paul Henisey, a police detective in
Newport Beach.
"They've usually met the man
before, seen tbe man hcfore. know
him by name and, 110mctimcs.. have
even dated him," Henuey added.
If alleptions are true, ~ cax
apinst Paul William Jensen is il-
lustrative of what pohce and other
authorities say it happen1na.
A well-to-do Newport Beach rest·
dent, Jcnxn reponedly assaulted at
least eiahl women. most of whom ht
had met in a oonvcnttona.J manner
and amnae<t to date or at least see
apin.
On the surface, the ~year--0ld
man's initial actlons were hardly out
of the ordinary. He met several
women in posh niahUpots, met at
lea.al one at a health spa and came tn
contaet wtth three othen throuah
newspaper ad
(Pl-... ... DATB/A2)
ttnninal expansion project 11 com·
pleted. Boerd members, oo a '91 vote
oppoted by Ri&ey, dmcted that a new
draft acceu plan be aubmiucd to
them in 30 days. ·
The new access plan would permit
the nwnberoffliabtt from the airpon
to be increued ftom 41 to SS per day
onee environmental impact reports
and a master plan of the expansion
project are certified by the board.
That could happen as early as
December. .
Two new airlines would be :ms three fliabtt eacb ...... ... whi~ an ldditioaal ~ would be apponioned UllOlll ...
airtines lbat were ~ • Jcltle. Wayne Airport when me .o...1111'
1983 flilbt allocation .......
The number of ftilbtl We.Id 191 inaa.ted to 73 once the new tern· d
facilities envisioaed by ""* •ilmw are compleled.
However, in an attempt to miai-
(PleMe ._ A.IJO'mT/ASI
HB 'Olympic'
house rental
firm vanishes·
By STEVE MARBLE oe .. o.1r ........
Police are auemptin• to learn the
whereabouts of a Huntmgton Beach
company that allegedly took in tens of
thousands of dollan m advance fees
from local residents who hoped to
rent their homes to tourists attendin&
the Summer Olympic Games in Los
An~es.
Vacation Rental Systems, which
advenised homeownen would make
a small fortune-off foteip--vi-·-..-
bas vanished frOJD its leucd officel in
Huntington Beach. The firm's listed
telephone numbers have been ditcoo-
oected
Huntington Beach police Detective
Art Droz said he has been
.. swamped .. with calls fri>m worried
bomcownen who are still awaitina
word on their summer visitors.
"This was the week that most of
them were supposed to eet con.firma-
(Pleue Me OLYllPIC/A2)
RFK son found
dead in Florida
PALM BEACH, fla. (AP) -
David Anthony Kennedy, the
troubled 28.year-<>ld son of the late
Seo. Robert F. Kennedy. was found
dead in his hotel room today, po~
said.
Kennedy bad a hiS10rY of drua problems ~ut police woufd not im-
mediately say what caused the death,
except th•t there wu no evidence of
foul play.
Palm Beach Police Sgt. Henry
Marchman said the body was found
in Room I 07 of the Brazilian Court
Hotel, where Kennedy bad been
staying alone. Police Capt. William Shetron con-
firmed the body was Kennedy's.
"There's no sign of foul play. The
investigation as continuing" he said.
In Washington, an aide to Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, Robert Shrum,
said that he bad no details on the
death.
A first-aid call was received by
police from the tao.el bc:t-CCD l 1:3~
Lm. and 11 :40 &.ID.. SbetnJo said:
A ~ sooffsynan laid Kamedy
bad been in town on a family
vacation. and bad been aoin& beck
and fonb between the hoteJ and IM
nearby winter home of bis pud-
mother, Rose Kennedy.
In 1979 Kennedy reported he was
robbed orS30 in a seedy Harlem hotel
in New York City that police de-
scribed as a dope su~arkct.
A police source said at the time that
.Kennedy, then 24, was there to buy
cocaine. Kennedy was then hospital-
ized with a heart mfection sometimes
associated with narcotics abute.
Deltr ........... .., ..............
Coeta Meea police omceT Brace Roee cUap1a,ya Te9t after
Febnaary incident be now admlta wu fabrlcaitoa.
CM cop admits lying
about being shot
By STEVE MARBLE
UM1 1.AREN E. nEIN
Of .. hlr .........
A Cona Mesa pohce offiOCT who
boasted that h•s bulletproof vest
saved bun from a 1unman's bullet tn
February was suspended from duty
T~y for allqcdly fabncatm& the
story.
Cost.a Mesa Police Otpe.rtmcot
offioals wd Bruce R a 3 l ·yttr·
old patrolman, has admitted 1Dfl1ct-
'')&. a small wound on his bact and
cwmina it had been ltft by a buUct
which he said hit the vat he wu
wt9rina.
Pohoe Chtef Roatt Netb said R-.
USt>tnded Wllh ~y. bas bem put OD
notice that be wtll be firtd. Ro. baa
five days to respond to the IU wi&-
atton nouce.
Neth cla•mcd Ross a°*41 iD-fbcted the small wound birMd and tnvented t.be SIOI')' to .. draw sympalby
to himldf."
Police dct«tiva bepn anveatipt-iftl the "ibootina" l.ust days after R stood in front o ae-s reporUn
and pnitcd lhe buUetoroof Vat ror aavina, his life. er ~ aid \be
investtplion was at.aned on a .. pt
fcclina thaa R wua't lilliAi tbC
~-CllU./AI) .
.. -
A2 * 0t-oe C0Mt DAILY PILOTIW~, Aprll 25, 1964
Botli·stdes frustrated over
county's action on airport
Newport council members claim supervisors
'playtn politics instead of solvtn problems·
IJJ'PO"-1 'am really sorry to see that
they can't aet toaetbe.r 011 an aa,ree-mmt." he added.
Tom Williams., the director of the
Airport Coalition. a homeowners•
aroup battlin1 airport srowth. said the
city should fiabt ai11><>rt,e~panlion
plans at every step.
By JERRY 111UC11
Of .............
Outraae, anaer and frustration
cbancterizcd the feelings of both
airport arowth foes and supporters
followi"' the sudden dumpana of a ~ qrcement with the county
rd of Supervison to limit John
Wayne Airport expansion.
"We bad hoped to sec an agreement
because an qreement was m the
public interest. Now we just sec years
of litiption and delays ahead," said
Joseph lrvine1 executive director of
Lhe Community Airpon Council, a
group pushing for airpon expansion.
"I am totally turned off by Orange
County politics. I don't think the
supervisors arc even aware of what
the problems are today. It 1s an
outrage," said Bill Agee, a Ncwpon
.Beach city councilman cnticized by
some constituents for being too
lenient on airpon expansion.
"The supervisors are more
interested in getting their coffers filled
with donations and getting re-elected
than solving problems," ABee added.
Tuesday the board rejected the
pro~scd agreement without dis-
cussion. Supervisor Tom Riley,
whose Fifth District includes both the
county-owned 1i11><>n and Newpon
Beach was unable to obtain a second
on hia motion for the aareement
"I am very disappointed. The
supervisors missed 1 golden op-
ponunity to \cttle a thorny problem.
There are goiaa to be no winners, onJy
losers;· said Ncwpon Beach City
Councilwoman Jackie Heather.
Heather said the council realized
the supervisors had concerns about
the agreement but she never expected
the board to drop the proposed
settlement tn such a sudden fashion.
. "If they would have allowed some
type of discussion we were gomg to
propose a consensus committee of
two supervisors and two council
members to work out the dif-
ferences.:.· Heather said.
"I am sorry to see the proposed
agreement not being at least dis-
cussed," echoed Ed Buster, a growth
supporter who is chairman of the
Community Airport Council.
"It is a totaJ waste of time and
money to have the supervisors and
the city of Ncwpon Beach going
agamst each other on matters of the
"We a.re not goiQJ to sit bcn: and
become an acoustical wasteland."
Williams aaid.
"We an: hopina that the board will
come to iu senses but at the current
time that isn't likely," said Barbara
Liebman, director of the Airport
Working Group, a coalition of home-
owner orpnizations lobbyina for an
alternative airport site in Oranae
County.
"We will have to become more
innovative m our approach. both
l~lly and politically," Llchman
said, addina that Newport Beach
residents can have clout with their
votes and political donations.
Both Lichman and Agee stressed
that Newport believed it had made
many concessions and was willing to
discuss a "reasonable t nd decent"
solution to the airport issue. •
If the county was willing to act in a
similar fashion, a workable agree-
ment could have been fashioned, they
said.
"There were a lot of differences
arnona the members · o( ·the-City
Council but we were able to come up
with a consensus," Agee said.
~5iijWi~W:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
AiaPo a T AGREEMENT KILLED •••
P'romAl
mi.ze disruptive noise 10 nearby
residents. supervisors approved a
trade-out m centive that would allow
airlines fl ying noascr Class A aircraft.
such as the DC-9 Super 80. to trade up
for additional flights by using quieter
Class AA aircraft, such as the untested
British Aerospace Bae 146 or the
Boeing 737-300.
Supervisors provisionally set the
trade-out ratio at three Class AA
flights for every C lass A flight an
airline surrendered . That potentially
could allow 219 daily departures from
the ajrport if every airhne convened
all of its flights to the quieter Class AA
planes.
Aides to several supervisors dis--
counted the possibility that 219
flights ever would be permitted to fly
from an expanded John Wayne
Airport.
"Realistically, that would never
happen," said Bill HodJe. an aide to
Supervisor Harriett Wieder. "There
would be market forces at work that
would find some level of stability. If
the market doesn't stabilize the board
could come in and say 'no more.'"
In refusing to consider ratification
of the proposed binding agreement
Wlth the City of Newport Beach.
supervisors apparently were sending
a loud message to noise-<:<>nscious
residents and City Council members
that no compromise to city-<:<>unty
differences over the airpon seems
possjble. And if that was the mcuage
supe_rvisors intende.d. Newpon of-
ficials were quick to respond.
"We have no recourse but to sue
again,'' said Councilwoman Jackie
Heather of what course the citr will
pursue. "We're not willing to rol over
and play dead. The whole process was
subverted the way they handled it."
Heather added, "If this is how they
(supervisors) repay them (Newport
Beach residents) Id wish they'd go
into other districts to get their
campaign money."
Riley, who worked for months with
city representatives and others to
ready the thick legal document. said
the .. kiss of death" was the city's
recent lawsuit challenginJ construc-
tion of a new airport parking lot.
"They (Newport council members)
ccnainly didn't encourage a whole lot
oflove and roses," Riley said.
And board Chairman Wieder said,
"The suit substantiated what I believe
in the case of Newpon Beach: Their
way or no way. In some cases. there is
no possibility of negotiating."
The defe.at of the agreement also
marked a crushing political blow to
Riley, whose d1stnct includes both
the airport and Newport Beach.
··1 think it was the biggest disap-
pointment of m y life." the obviously
angered supervisor said.
Riley said he would encourage
related lawsuits against the county or
pr~vide information to potential
litigants.
"It's the most irresponsible action
ever taken by the board," Riley said.
Directing his anger at fellow board
members, Riley added it was ''shab-
by" of the board to kill the agreement
he proposed without the courtesy of
first discussing it.
"I guess they certainly said they do
not have any concern or worry about
the people of Newport Beach's con-
cerns," Riley said.
DATE RAPE COMPLEX LEGAL ISSUE ..•
From Al
Police claim Jensen sometimes
offered ht~ dates Jewelry, Hawa11an
vacations and other exotic gifts as
part of an effort to <,how them he was
a freewheeltng JCl-~crn~r
There 1s no evidence. however. that
the women ever rtCl'I vcd any of the
lavish gifts from Jcn!>Cn. a curly
haired. sltghtl} O\'erv.e1ght man with
deep blue eyes and a hrand new
Mercedes Benz
The encounters though. swung
from casual date' to alleged cnmcs
when Jensen lured the "omen into
his spony car or to his residence near
the Newport Pier. police charge
One woman "31d Jensen attacked
heron a hvmg room sola alter locking
the front door 0ch1nd them Another
said Jensen drove her 10 Manna del
Rey and refused to kt her out ot the
car until she feigned a family emerg-
ency.
In all. Jensen t'i accu~d of raping,
attempttng to rape. k1dnapp1ng or
sexually assault mg eight women The allegation~ have resulted 1n 16 felony
charges aga1n!it him
Hen1scy said he has been contacted
by at least I 0 other women who claim
they, too. were Vt<:t1ms of Jensen's
c harm and alleged aggress1 veness.
Some of the cases date hack so far that
the statute ofltm1u.111on~ block police
from ~king additional cnminal
charge~
Jackie C\hermon coordinator of the
Rapt Prevention Pr~am at UCI.
u y, despite the profound changes in
both the law and the awarencs' of
'><Xtet}. women arc '>1111 hc~1tant 10
report "date 111J>('~"
Just Call
642-6086
•
She estimates only one in I 0 rapes
goes reported and that many women
sull cling to the beltefthat by dating a
man. they have a respons1bltty for the
eventual outcome of the date.
"Some women sttll feel that 1fthcy
went on the date that somehow they
1nv1ted the attack. That's one the the
myths that refuses to die. And that's
one reason why v1ct1ms end up feeling
guilty.
"The message we have as: No
matter how many times the woman
says ·yes: when she says 'no.' then
that ·no' needs to be honored.'' says
Sherman. "It doesn't matter 1f she's
said ·yes' 100 times before. It's her
l'>od)' ..
Wtth so-called "date rape" cases.
there 1s always the challenge of
determining where consent stops end
force begin!I, says Hunttngton Beach
pohce Sgt Ed McErlain.
"They may have gone out for a
couple of dnnlcs and then go back to
her place. She may even invite him
inside and they may loss. But then she
wants it to end and he doesn't.
"Someumes it's very clear what has
happtned but sometim~ it's very
hard to d1stinau1sh where consent
,tops," says McErla1n "Any possible
hint of consent makes 11 very hard to
convince a Jury that a cnme has taken
place "
Sherman say~ that consent often is
tht only IQiical defense for th<'
accused rapist.
"Consent 1s always the 1s1ue 1n th1
type of case and 1t'\ vtry difficult for
th<' pro~ution to get past that ·· 11he
says
Sherman says she believes there 1s
both an increase in the number of
"date rapes" that are reported and the
number that occur.
Henisey speculates that some men
have m1S1nterpreted social changes
brought on partially by the femm1st
movement and take advantage of
women who are open or aggressive.
"Some men take this as an open
mv1tation for havtng sex when that's
not what the woman has 1n mind at
all. .. says Henisey.
Recently 1n Newport Beach. a man
being questioned in a harrassment
case admmed he had taken a wo man
out for a date. spent $60 on their meal
and expected somcthtng in return.
When the man's date eventually
closed the door in his face. he
demanded that she let him in or pay
him back $30 for the dinner.
"He told us the same thtng." said
Newpon police officer Tom Little.
"He actually thought that he deserved
somethmg for bu)'ing dinner. He told
us he wanted the $30 back."
McErlatn maintains that there 1s a
flip side to all of this. He says
occasionally so-calJed dAte rapes tum
out to be trumped up by anJt)'
airlfriends or a woman who 1s seeking
an ucusc for hav1na had a sexual
encounter.
"That's why sex cnmcs are in·
vest1plcd so much mort thorou&hly
now.' says McErlain.
"You have to find that fine hne and
you hav<' to be cartful becau~ pcopl<'
can aet hurt either way you go."
What do yo11 llkt about tbf' Dally Piiot? Wb1C don't you llb? 111 tilt
numbtr at lt'fl ind your mt1111t will be recorded, traa1cribt'CI and dtUvtrtd
to tht approprl1tf tdllor
Tht same !4·bo1r uawt'rlog atrvlct m1y be uaed to rtt0rd lttttr1 to tbt
Mfltor ()fl any topic. Contributors co ou Lettert columo mutt loclude tlltlr
oemt and ttltpbont' numbu for nnfJe1tlou. No clrnlatlon call1, pluu.
Tf"ll IH what'• on your mind.
Low clot.ids, but mostly clear
Eztended
Temperature.
,,. N
• 11 .. .. to .. .. M
II II .. .,
'7 ..
.. <M ... ., ..... " .. 411 II u ., .. ~
11 N
"' 40 ... ,
10 41
42 " ., ~
ti! 40
41 II '° 17 M t7 ao .. ,, .. ., . .. ..
M 40 13 112 n 52
<M 2't 10 50 87 $3
Ill ff
72 &I .. 41 tt IO n eo
13 70
HIL• 49 « ., 41
Tl dee
From Al
78 41
49 M eo 34
70 48
511 50
90 Ill lie 47
52 32 7~ .. 57 S\ 47 33 41 <M 15 ,,
.. 4' &3 42
tion on their guests," said Droz. who
estimates he has received upwards of
50 telephone calls from homeowners
who wd they paid $50 to$ I 00 to the
company.
"Some people have already ar-
ranged to be out of town so their
places would be available," the police
detective said. "One person has
arranged to be gone for four months."
Droz said police are attempting to
locate the company's top officen.
The investigation. he said, has been
brought to the attention of the Orange
County District Attorney's office and
the possibilitv of filing criminal
TOOAY
12.1tp.m
8:6'p.n1.
12.43&.m. 1:211 a.m
12.46p.m 7:13p.m.
02 4S
charges is bcini debated.
An attorney who bad been rep-
resenting the Huntinaton Beach com-
pany could not be immediately
. reached for comment.
Vacation Rental Systems is one of
dozens of companies in Southern
California that is serving as a middle-
man between homeowners wisbinf to
make a profit and foreign tounsts
looki~ for a p lace to stay while
attendmg the O lym pics.
A spokesman for the state Dcpan-
ment of Real Estate, thou&}l. said
there arc still hotel and motel rooms
available. He 5aid the need for
CMCOPADMITSL~ING ••.
From Al
truth.
Neth said Ross also has admitted to
not beina entirely truthful about two
other police-related incidents in Lhe
past when we was employed by
another police force. Neth said today
he could 11ot detail those incidents.
At the time of the February
incident, Ross had claimed the vest
-a gift from his mother and sister -
saved his life.
Ross had reported that he was on
patrol when he felt a "thump" on his
back. He said he felt pain and went to
the hospital for a quick examinatipn.
At the hospital, he said nurses
nottced a welt on his back and when
he examined his bulletproof vest, he
discovered a small hole. A bultet was
found inside the vest., be rc~rt.ed.
The incident drew WJdnpread
media attention and Ross was photo-
graphed holding up the vest. He told
report.crs that be had worn the vest
four years and added. ''I'd rather
sweat than bleed."
Ross. a bachelor who li ves in
Irvine. could not be reached for
comment today.
Ross had worked earlier on an
investigation that led to the
suspension and eventual firing of
another Costa Mesa police officer,
patrolman William Lauchlan. who is
. ,
JI d nu ,. 13
• t7
: :1 a 47 ~ 72 a 40, rr :: . ,.
IO 22 .... ,, 60• ., a
16 •• ., ..
73 51 : :J.
residential housing appean to have
been greatly "overestimated" bx
those trying to cash in on tho
Olympics.
The Huntington company, which
had leased three suites tn a Warner
Avenue business complex near
Meadowlark Airport, left its quaners
two weeks ago. according to a lcasina
agent.
The agent, who said a stream of
upset homeowners have paraded
through the office complex in recent
days. said company representatives
left no forwarding address.
accused of sexual misconduct while
on duty.
Ross has been on the Costa Mesa
police force for two years, most
recently workiDJ the graveyard patrol
shift. Before joining the Costa Mesa
force, he ~ worked for the UC
lrvinQ Police Departmel'\t and far the
Lona Beach PoUce DcpattmtnL Otief Neth said Ross has been
notified that he will be fired for
violations of the department manual,
including allegedly lying to another
police officer, filing false information
and destroying evidence-the gun tic
is said to have used to shoot a hole in
the vest.
\
ORANGE COAST Circulation 714/142....ua:t
D•lly Piiot
Detlvery
11 Gu•r•ntMd Daily Pilat Cla11lfled lldverttelng 714/142-1171
All other depertment1 142....a.21
MAIN OFFICE
330 W..t Say SI Co.ia Mfta. CA Mono.y r.-oa, 11 vou oo
"01 r I~ ;01;• Piile' Dy ; 30 o .,. 1• Of'IO<@ 7 o m
•ncl ;ou• (t{ t ..., o.
Ofo'..,~, .....
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Ma~ Mlclt-Boa 1S60 Costl MM&. CA 82e28
Copyugt>I 1983 0.ange Cont PlltJWling Compeny Ho
-11oroes 111u11ra1oons. eOolor• ,,,.114r or ~ "-'• ,,....,. mer ti. •IP<OOUC«I ..move _, '*
,,_, ~ COC>yrtgtll -~fu• 1•t M'>'l ~u008y ti
,.i)J ')' '"'QI •..Cf'Vf' 1('U1'
co, t y ' .. ,. , •• ~'°"'
10 .a "'" ~"tl •?v' CO()y •"'
ChNJ Dowellby ROHm•ry Churchman
Editor and Ass1s1ant Con1roller Sec:ono Cle• ooa11g11 o..o 11 eo.11 MeM C1Mor-
1uPS 14'·8001 Suoect°"loon by cam• $4 75 mor>1llly
b; ,..... Ml 50 monmly
... }fl ..... ~ 10 the Publisher
Clrcul•tlon
Telephone•
M I
8teph9n F. Carazo
Proouchon
Manager
,,,"'-~' <'111.lffy
..... "' M3~ Olor .. A. Powen
OtreclOf of
Adven!Slng
Ge01
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Cemola,isr, AG.5
QOINQ OVERSEAS
with your J•w•l!'-
Wlth spring and summer s travel
season approaching, we want to
remind our friends of what they
can do to protect themselves and
their Jewelry when going overseas.
If you plan to take valuable jewelry
with you, be sure to fill out a
certificate of registration, which
you can obtain from any U.S. Cue-
toma Office. It is the same type of
registration form that Is used to
reg later such Items as f orelgn-
made cameras which you are tak-
ing with you. If you do not flll out
the registration, you may have to
prove where you purchased the
jewelry In order to brlno It back
Into the country with you. Pleaae
be careful, alao, to declare any
jewelry that you buy overMu
when you return to the U.S. It Is
Important that you keep all re-
ceipt•, becauae If tMr"e Is any
doubt about the value of foreign·
bought Jewelry, U.S. cuatoms
agent• are authorl~ed to Impound
It and keep It for further examin-
ation by fleld agent• of the Cus-
tom• Servtce. Don't le1 your Y8·
cation trip ~ marred by problems
with clearing your jewelry through
cu1tom1 .
Donald L Wllllem1
Clfcu1aoon
Mtnagef VOL. 77, NO. 111
l b Prince Charles and Lady Diana,
marriage and sapphires go hand-in -hand.
OJ tJI th1• 1l'!'m m th.«.nt•Ht /c•tH-0.. Prlrtu• < horlc'}
fwmd o ~Jinn.• tt1< ot ,.,'(,,, pnm AS th1. • wml)(;I of l11J kll • •
few I~· f>1t1ll<I
A Hmal Am1TK1:m'" "tallf'bm• 1.1 <1 re1n• und '911/1m111• /ill""
\llmt· of"""'""' bl1w A ""'""ol. 11ntrf'(l/t'tl ~,... /mm
the• c>nl) "li.l/(irprt, 1<11u Rt"'' dt1"Jtcilftl '"'''"' (() tbt-l 1111tc'<I ""''"
It '•P""'"'t.' tb1.• /mc'<I ~rt.· ctrttl/klh4• ltl the.• ufJrld
I 1.r tl>t m161 '(ll'\kl/ ,,,,,,,14•11r;r 11/ 1rn1r hf<'. l lltlfN.'" 11\'fl
rh1w "">l "'"' •'"ll~lll''"''"'' '"l>t 4''f 11/ Hrl\ttl Am1'n1 r111 '"If"'"'"
m1>1111tnl 111 14' kurul 1,.•<l<I .,,.,,,,,,
-~
1eot~T&'IVO C08TAM llNCl , .... a.-,,,,,.,,_._.._., cn.tOI "'"°"'' W .. l4() I
~ -( i'i(_f~ ~ MEMBER AM~ICAN GEM SOCIETY
I
LOWIO
W£0Nl ·>D A~ Al'llll .' l'ltt·I
ou·nt e sa1r
Coast
A court decision against
athletic fees may put
Laguna Beach athletes
on the bench./ AS
State funds to help re-
store Upper Newport Bay
might survive the ax./ A3
California
De Lorean tapes show
references to code
names for drugs./ AS
The seismic reading said
6.2, but Tuesday's quake
Injured only 21 people.
/AS
Nation
Mondale asks end to
Independent delegate
committees as Hart takes
Vermont./ AS
World .
Experts say Iran will have
Its own nuclear bomb In
two years./ A4
Home
Home Design Expo '84
offers plenty of answers
for home owners who
want a new mood for
rooms./81
Scandinavian designer
Katja likes dramatic col-
ors and the new freedom
to create Interiors that
match a llfestyfe. /81
Food
A ba,anoed diet can help
you Increase your work
potentlal./C1
The rich flavofs of
llqueurs are the under-
pinnings of desserts de-
signed by a food expert.
/C2
=~=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•:&:•:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Sporta
Damon Berryhlll'sdra-
matlc two-out ninth In-
ning homer lifts Orange
Coast to a 5-3 South
Coast Conference victory
over Golden West./D1
Corona del Mar turns
back University, 18-10, In
Sea View League tennis
actlon./D3
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:!:::•:!:·:·:::·:!:!:•:•!!!•!•!•!·!·:·:·:·:·
Entertainment
"Lavender Follies" ls full
of female superstars -
all of the male gender -
at Sebastian's West./83
·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•!·:~:·!·!·!·!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•:
Busineu
Investing can be even
more fun If you learn
about it OCC's way -on
a cruise to Hawaii./ Al
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:;:.:;:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
INDEX
Bridge 84
Bulletin Board A3
Business A8
Callfornla News A4
Ctaaslfled 04-8
Comics B4
Crossword 08
Death Notices B5
Food C1-10
Help Youreelf 82
Home B1·2
Horoscope 05
In the Service A7
Ann Lander• 82
Mutual Funds A8
NatlonaJ Newt A4
Obituaries A7
Opinion A10 Pol~ Log A3
.,ubllc Notl~ 85-8
Sport• 01~
Stoek Matket1 A8
TeleVfalon 92
Theat9rl 83
weather A2
World Newt A4
New ort
Oanm·an •kips his workout
Jeff Anele, a member of the Oranae Cont
Collete ro1"1nl crew. worb out tiy jump-
lng rope at the crew bue in Newport Beach.
It'• part of the team'• conditioning.
SuspectinFVwoman's rape
apprehended in Chula Vista
By ROBERT BARKER
Of lMO.., ..... IWf
A 22-year-<>ld man was stopped m
his red Toyota sports car in Chula
Vista Tuesday and charged with this
month's Friday the 13th rape of a 32-
year-old mother in her Fountain
Valley residence.
Fountain Valley police Detective
Rick Christensen said William B.
Bauman, a former Fountain Valley
resident, was arrested on suspicion of
forcible rape, rape with a foreign
ob1ect. oral copulation, sexual battery
and burglary. All charges are related
to the one incident, Christensen said.
The suspect allegedly peeped
through the window of the victim's
home, according to Christensen, and
made his entry through a bedroom
window afier the woman's two young
children had departed to buy ice
cream.
Chnstcnsen said the c;uspect was
hiding in the bedroom. She saw him
and fled down the hallway in a panic.
but the suspect chased after her and
dragged her back into the bedroom
where he alleged!) committed the
acts. according to Chris1'nsen.
The detective said the v1ct1m
suffered "super big bruises" on Lhe
·arms and legs while being assauh<'d.
Chnstensen said he sent out a
photo and a teletype that mcluded
Bauman's descnpuon to ocher law
enforcement renc1es m Southern
Caltfom1a an<' nula Vista police
stopped Bauman 'scar aner attending
a bnefing.
When does a date become rape?
It's a difficult legal designation
A woman agrees to a date with a
man she ha.s met at a fuhionable
niahtspot. She looks forward to a
pleasant evening. Instead she is
horrified when the man becomes ~ive and forces her to have sex
with him.
Another woman consents to ao to a
man's apartment after a ni&ht on the
town. But she becomes angered when
the man attempts to ao beyond
kissina and pulls off her lotbes.
When she tnes to leave, be blocks her
path.
Ten years qo, Pohoc and pros-
ccuton probably would have turned
the women away when they tned to ~criminal ctwaes ap1n1t their
'dates.·· The episode would have
been dismissed a "a boyf ncnd·
'rffriend thina.''
Ten years qo, the cncounlcr may
not even have ~me to the attention
of polioc with the womeu rauonat-
<
STEVE
MARBLE
Focus ON THE NEws
1zin1 away the incident a a m1s.-
advcnt1Jre for which they shared
some blame.
But now. to-ealled "date rapes" or
"acquaintance rapes" a<lCOunt for
more than half the re~ncd sex
attacks filed by dty Pohoc dcpan.
rrcnts 1n Oran,i County.
"I'd estimate that 60 pctttnl and
ma)bc even two-thirds of the rapes 1n
Ncwpon Beach arc ca s where the
woman knows the man," say'l t
•
Paul Henisey. a police detective m
Newpon Bcac-h.
"They've usually met the man
before, Sttn the man bcfott know
him by n•me and. sometimes. h.av<'
even dafcd him." Hcniacy added
If al'ept1ons arc true. the ca!(
apins·. Paul Wilham Jensen 1~ ti·
lustrauve of what poli<:c and other
authorities say 11 happcn1na,.
A wtll·to-do Ncwpon Beach resi-
dent., Jensen reportedly assaulted at
lcut elJ)tt women. mo t of whom he
had met 1n a con "tnt1ona1 manner
and atranatd to date or at least see
aaa1n.
O n the urfacc. the .CO.year-old
man's 1niuaJ 1ct1on5 wert hardly out
of the otdmary. He met several
women an po h ntaht pot . met at
lea t one at a health s and came m
C'Ontact with thrtt others thmuah
news~J)(r ads
(Pleue Me DA. TS/ A.2) .
Supervisor Riley furious, lashes
board's action as 'irresponsible'
By JEFF ADLER °' .. ..,,... .....
Without a word. the O ranac Coun-
ty Board of Supervisors scrapped a
proposed peace treaty with the City of
Newport Beach Jovemin& John
Wayne Airport ni&ht operations
Tuesday. Then the board moved to
set new guidelines on the number of
flights the airport will accommodate,
rufa that could allow up to 219 daily
flights.
fo a stunnfoa action that left
Supervisor Thomas Riley fuming and
vowing to retaliate by )oinina airport
opponents in lawswts, the board
made swift work of the proposed
binding agreeement with Newport
Beach. The board killed the pact
without discussion when no super-
visor seconded Riley's motion that
the complicated legal document be
approved.
But supervisors had a lot to say
about new airport access guidelin'es,
finally aproving in principle a plan
that potentially would penmt a
maxjmum 219 flights per day from
John Wayne Airport once a proposed
tenninal expansion project is com-
pleted. Board memben, on a 4-1 vote
opposed by Riley, direc1ed that a new
draft access plan be submitted to
them in 30 days.
· The new aocess plan would permit
the number oftl!ghts from the airport
to be increated from 41 to SS per day
once environmental impact repons
and a master~ of the expansion.
project are certified by the board.
That could happen as early u
December.
Two new airlines would ~ allotted
three flights each under the ~
while an additional eiabt fliahts
Would be apportioned amona the till
airlines that were operatina at Job.a
Wayne Airport when the December
1983 tlight allocation wu made.
· Tbe number of ffi&bts would be
increased to 73 once the new lemlina1
facilities envisioned by supervUon
are completed.
However, in an attempt to mini-
mize disruptive noise to nearby
residents, supervisors approved a
trade-<>ut incentive that would allow
(Pl--eee ADtPORT I A2)
HB 'Olympic'
house rental
firm vaniShes
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ille Dlllr ........
Police are attemptin~ to learn the
whereabouts of a HunllnJlon Beach
company that allegedly took in Lens of
thousands of dollars m advance fees
from local residents who hoped to
rent their homes to tourists attending
the Summer Olympic Games in Los
Angeles.
Vacation Rental Systems, which
advertised homeownen would make
a small fortune off foreign visitors.
has vanished from its leased offices m
Huntington Beach. The firm's listed
telephone numbers have been discon-
nected.
Huntington Beach police Detective
Art Droz said he bas been
"swamped" with calls from worried
homeowncn wbo are still awaitina
word on their summer visiton.
"This was the week thal most of
them were supposed to ft:t confirma-
tion on their guests,., said Droz, who
estimates be bas received upwanh of
SO tele~bone calls from homeowoen
who said they paid SSO to S l 00 to the
oompany.
"Some people have already ar-
ranaed to be out of town so their
places would be available.'' the police
detective said. "One penoo bas
(Pleue Me OLYllPlC/A2)
Earthquake aftermath
Jeanie Blermu (left) and JlDa ~ .., ,., ._
damace caued bJ an eartbqaake heedQ at dM --.u,
Farm• atore at the &utrtqe llall la Su Jw. fte Ma~
which meuared 6 .2 on tbe IUclater Scale, ca-...•
ln property damafe and 90IDe a1Aor lDJviee. Maly ...
additional photo cm Aft.
' •
• ·-
• A2 Or_,. CoU' DAU,.Y PILOT/Wednesday, Aprll 25, 198A
Newport officials outraged
at county's airport action
By JERRY RIRSCB
CM ... D.er.._._
Outra1c. anaer and fru tntion
characterized the feelinas ofNcwpon
Beach officials following the sudden
dumping of a proposed agreement
with the OraJ'\le County Board of
Supervisors to limit John Wayne
Airport expansion .. •
.. Jam totally turned ofTb)' Orange
County politics. l don't think the
supervisors arc even aware of what
the problems are today. II is an
outnlge," said Bill Agee, a Newpon
Beach city councilman cntictzed by
some constituents for being too
lenient on airport expansion.
.. The supervisors arc m ore
interested in getting their coffers filled
with donations and getting re..elecred
than sol ving problems," Al'ee added.
Tuesday the· board rejected 1he
proposed agreement w1thou1 dis-
cussion. Supervisor Tom Riley,
whose Fifth District includes bo th the
county-owned airport and Newport
CONTINUED STORIES
Beach, was unable to obtain a second
on hls motion for the agreement.
"1 am very disappointed. The
supervisors missed a golden op-
portunity to settle a thorny problem.
There arc goina to be no winners, only
losers." said Newport Beach C'ity
Councilwoman Jackie Heather.
Heather said the coua<:il realiicd
the supervisors had concerns about
the agreement but she ne ver expected
the board to drop the proposed
settlem~nt in such a sudden fashion.
.. lf they would have allowed some
type of discussion we were going to
propose a consensus committee of
two supervisors and two council
members 10 work out the dif-
ferences." Heather said.
Tom Williams. director of the
Airport Coalition. a homeowners'
group battling airport growth, said the
ci t) should fight airport expansion
plans at every step
··we are not going to Sil here and
become an acoustical wasteland:'
W1lhams said
"We arc hopma that the board will
come to its senses but at the auTent
time that isn't likely," said 8a.rtleta
Uchman, d irector of tlie Airpon
Workina Group, a coalition of home-
owner oraanizations lobbyina for an
alternative airport site an Orange
County.
"We will have to become more
innovative m our approach, both
l~Uy and politically," Liebman
said, addina that Newport Beach
residents can have clout with their
votes and polhical donations.
Both Liebman aod Agee stressed
that Newpon believed it had made
many concessions and was wilhng to
discuu a "reasonable and decent"
solution to the airport issue.
If the county was wilhng to act in a
similar fashion. a workable agree-
ment could have been fashioned, they
said.
"There were a lot of differences
among the members of the Ctty
Council but we we re able to come up
with a consensus." Agee said.
AIRPORT AGREEMENT KILLED •..
From Al
airlines flying not~l·r <.la~ ... .\ J1rcraft.
such as the OC-9 uper !W. to trade up
for additaonal flight~ b~ using quieter
Class AA aircraft. such as the untes1ed
Bntish Aerospace Bae I ~6 or the
Boeing 737-300
Supervisors pro' 1s1Unall) set thl·
trade-out ra110 at threl" Class .\A
flights for ever}' Class .\ fl 1gh1 an
airline surrendered. That potent1all}'
could allow 219 da1 I y de pan ures from
the airport 1f e'er) airline converted
all of its flights to the quieter Class AA
planes.
Aides to se\eral ~upcn 1sors dis-
counted 1he poss1b1lit) that 219
flights ever would be permitted to fl~
from a n e"panded John Wa)nc
Ai rport.
"Realisti calh . tha1 would never
happen:· said 8111 Hodge, an aide to
Suix·n 1sor Hamett Wieder. ··There
would be market forces a1 work that
.... ould find some le .. el of stabil ity. If
the markel docsn·t stab1hze the board
rnuld come in and sa\ 'no more.'··
In refusing to consider rat1ficat1on
of the propo~d brndang agreement
w 1th the City of Newport Beach,
supervisors apparently were sending
a loud message to noise-conscious
residents and C'lty Council members
that no compromise to ci ty-county
differences over the airport seems
possible. And 1f that was the message
supervisors intended. Newport of-
ficials were quick to respond.
··w e have no recourse but to sue
again." said Councilwoman Jacloe
Heather of what course the city will
pursue. ··w e·re not willing to roll over
and play dead T he whole process was
subverted the way they handled 1t.''
Heather added. ··1fth1s 1s how they
(supervisors) repay them (Newport
Beach residents) I'd wish they'd go
into other d1stncts to get their
campaign money."
Riley. who worked for months wtth
ci ty 1'eprcsentat1ves and others to
ready the thick legal document. said
the "kiss of death" was the city's
recent lawsuit challengintt construc-
tion of a new airport parking lot.
"They (Newport council members)
certainly didn't encourage a whole lot
oflove and roses:· RiJey said.
And board Chai rman Wieder said.
··The suit substantiated what I believe
in the case of Newport Beach: Their
way or no way. In some cases, there is
no possibility of negotiating.··
OLYMPIC RENT AL FIRM GONE •••
From Al
arranged to be gone for four months ··
Droz said pohce are attempt• ng to
locate the company·s top officers.
The 1nvesugat1on. he said. has been
brought to the attention of the Orange
County District Attome) ·s office and
the poss1bihty of filing criminal
charges 1s bei ng debated.
An attorney who had been rep-
resenting the Huntrngton Beach com-
pany could not be immediate!)
reached for comment.
Vacauon Rental Systems 1s one of
dozens of companies 1n Southern
Cahfom1a that 1s serving as a middle-
man between homeowners wish me to
make a profit and foreign tounsts
lookm~ for a •place to stay while
attendmg the Olympics.
A spokesman for the state Depart-
ment of Real Estate, though , said
there are still hotel and motel rooms
SOVIET FOES ••• .,_Al
In r.tttbutk>n for the downing of Korean Alr11nee Flight 007.
In tM put months, however. the group's purpote has sNfted to
organtzlng P<Otests agaJnst the Soviets during tM Gen:--Md
encouraging Soviet athletes and \llsltors to the Summer O.mee to ....
l)(>Ntlcll uytum fn the Untted States.
Soviet otftctals, who have been sent teklgrams from the ~
~ It waa formed, have said they fear Soviet atha.-• wtll be
"lddnapped" by membert of the group If they attend.
~ hu pledged hla group wm encctoraoe at.ciOf"S and Mt up a
numb« of "safe hou998" throughout Southern c.Mfomta where
def9otora can be taken white they negotiate pollttcat uytum.
In a ~am sent to Ueberroth, Balsiger and other coeffttonl•dec 1
Olll.o the r.-naix an "Insensitive, lfenderoua, antf..ethnlc r9CMI tlur/' '"'9 grouJ)1f leaders threatened that If they dO not reoeWe en
~ 1 they might ftJe a lawsuit against Ueberroth for tlbel and ellndlr.
, "The Ban the Soviets Coalition Is made up of 185 d~
Of'Olnlatk>na. Net!onally, thele ethnic, rellgk>uS. poflt~~
eduoattonal and veterans organlzatlon1 have • lpMre Of lnft that
9Jdendl over 40 to 50 mllllon ~·"the group Mid.
An employee at the coalition s office said the group dOM not IWy
ecpect Ueberroth to apologl~e. ''Given hls record on human rtghta--. we can't really expect It.'' ane said.
available. He said the nee<S for
residential housing a ppears to have
been greatly ··overestimated" by
those trying , to cash in on the
Olympics.
The Huntington company, which
had leased three suites in a Warner
Avenue business complex near
Meadowlark Airport. left its quarters
two weeks ago.
The agent who said a stream of
upset homeowners have paraded
through the office complex in recent
days. said company representatives
lef\ n9 forwarding address.
Vacallonal Rental System. owned
by a corporation known as the Harbor
Corp .. landed in hot water last fall
when the state >\ttomey General's
office fikd a 1a .... su1t alleging 1he
compan~ wa~ no1 proper!) licensed
by the '1ta1e Departmenl of Rc:al
Estate
At the 11mt·. the pres1dcnt ut
Vaca tion Rrn1al 'ys1em was 1dcnt-
1fied as James B. Ventch. Authont1es
said 111s unclear whether Ventch was
still actl\e 1n Vacation Rentals.
The su11 which rcsulted m a
prehm1nal) inJ unct10n agamst the
company, claimed It was using decep-
tive ad vert1S1ng and charged that 1t
was not placmg the advance fees
homeowners were putting up in a
proper trust fund.
The housing firm. according to the
suit, had advertised that "ad ven-
turesome" homeowners could expect
lo make $1 0.500 10 rents. The
attome}' generar s office charged the
claims were untrue and misleading.
DATE RAPE COMPLEX LEGAL ISSUE .••
From Al
Police d;11m kn'>en <,ome11mcs
offered his Jalt'' 1cwclr. I fa,,;111an
vacations and other l'\lllll gilt<. a'
part of an dlnrt lfl ,1w1A. thl·m ht' \\J\
a freewhl·d ing Jtl-,l t ll r
Therc1!.nol'''deme h111A.r\l"r thJt
the women l'\l'r rele1 ,eJ an' 111 the.'
lavish gifts from Jen,cn J l urh
haired. sltghtl) OH'r .... e1gh1 mJn IA.Ith
deep blue e)es and ;i hrand nc"
Mercedes B«nz.
The cncountcr<. though <,wung
from 1,;asual datrs 10 alkgt•d r nmcs
when Jenscn lured thr IA.omen into
his sport) car or tn h1' reo,1dcnce nt•Jr
the Newport Parr. police r hargc:
One woman said Jensen all3l l..cd
heron a hving room sofa aftcr lod..1ng
the front door behind them .\nother
said Jen~n dro'c her to \1arana dt•I
Rey and refu!>ed to k1 her out ''' the
car until she fc:1gn t•d J tam1 1\ l'mcrg-
cncy.
In all. Jenscn 1\ anu,e<l nl raping
attempting to rapt'. k1dnapp111g 11r
sexually assault mg eight wnml·n l lw
allegattons have rc'iultcd 1n I ti ft•lon)
charges against him
Hcn1sey said he: h;1' hccn contacted
by at least I 0 other women .... ho l latm
they. too. v.cre v1<:t1m\ ol JcMen·,
charm and alleged aggn·\\1\.Cnl'\\
Some of the C'3<\CS datc balk \Otar th<1t
1he statute of ltm1tat1on~ block rx1hn·
from scckmg add1t10nal rnminal
charges.
Jackie Shcmian. rourdanatm of the
Rape Prtvcntion Program at IJ('I,
says despi te the profound changcs in
both the lav. and thc awGrcnl'~\ of
~oc1ety. womrn arc .,till he\1t:Jnt to
report ··<late rdpcs
Just Call
642-6086
%e e-.11malt'S onl) one in 10 rapes
gol'' rcporteJ and 1ha1 many women
\till cling to the bclicf1ha1 by datmg a
man 1he) ha'c a rc~pons1blll} for the:
e' entual outcome of the date.
"Some ""omen still feel that 1f thC)
""ent on the date that somehow the)
1n' 11ed the attack. That's one the tht'
m}ths that refuses to die. And that's
one rc.1<;on .... hy v1ct1ms end up feeling
guilt)
"Thl· mc'>!.age ..... e have 1s: No
mailer ho ..... manv times the wo man
says ')cs: when ·she says 'no: then
that 'no· necds to be honored:· says
~hcrman "It doc'in't matt er 1f she·s
~rd °)c•: 100 lime., hefore. It's her hod .. )
\\.'11h 'iO-rnllcd "date rape" cases.
thcrc 1\ al .... a)s the challenge of
determining where consent stops and
force heg1n'i. sa)s Hunu ngton Beach
pohu~ Sgt. Ed McErlam.
··The)' ma) have gone out for a
wupk of dnnks and then go back to
hl'r place. She ma) C:\CO invite ham
1 n'i1dc and th<.') mny k1!ic; Ru t then shc
want<; 11 to end and he doesn't
"Somrt1mcs it's very dear what has
happened but sometimes it's vet)
hard to d1st1 ngu1sh where consen1
\top' .. \a~\ McErla1n ··Any possible
h1n1 of con~nt makes 11 very hard to
wn' 1nl'C aJUf) that a cnme has taken
plJCC"
Shrrman \Ays that consent often 1s
thr Ml\ logical defense fo r the
a1,:cu\ed rap1'it.
"( onscnt 1s alwa)'s the 1$SUC in this
t~pc nf ca~ and it's very difficult for
the pro\<.'cu twn to 1et past that ·· she
\a ....
Sherman sayc; she believes therc 1s
both an increaSl' in the number of
"date rapes·· that arc rcponed and 1he
number that ocrnr.
Hen1se}' speculates that some men
ha'e m1s1nterprc1cd social changcs
brough1 on part1all> b) the fem1n1s1
movemeni and take advantage of
women who arc open or aggrcss1vc
·· ome men take this as an open
mv1tat1on for havmg sex when that'~
not wha1 the: woman has in mind at
all." sav' Hen1sey.
Rrccntl) m Ncwpon Beach. a ma11
bcing quc:'illoncd in a harrassmcnt
case admitted he: had taken a woman
out for a date, spent S60 on their meal
and nncctcd c;omething 1n return.
'When the man'!t date c-.cntually
closed the door m his faca. he
demanded that she let him m or pa y
him back S30 fo r the dinner.
"He told us the same thrng." \31d
Newport police officer Tom l.1ttk,
''He actually thought that he deservl'd
~mething for buying dinner. He told u~ he wanted the $30 back "
McErlaan maintains that there 1s a
01 p side 10 all of this. He sa)'s
occasaonally S<>-<'allcd date rapes cum
out to be trumped up by anV>'
airlfnends or a woman who 1s Sttltina
an cxcu5C for havina had a sexual
enrountcr
··rhat"s why sex cnmcs nrc tn·
vc~llP,ted so much mort thorough ly
now.• says McErlam.
"You have to find that fi ne hnc and
you have to be careful bee.a use P,COPlc
can 1et hun either way you go •
\\ha t do you Ilk• a bout tbf Dail) Pilot"' Wt.a t do n't you like., C.IJ tbt
numbf-r at lt ft 1nd )Our musaae will M rttordtd. tran1c-rlbfi.d and dtll~trd
lo tht 1ppropri.ale editor
Tiie 'amt %4-ltoor ~.a1wtrlo1 n rvfre may bt' ustd to rt'{'Ord lelltrt lo lbt
tdllur on o)' tuple Contrlbutou to our lAUtn column muu IJ2d udt lbtlr
namf and ttltpboat numbt r for vtriflullon No clrf'ulatlon t'all1, plHH.
Tt'll uc what'• on your mind.
-.
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Extended
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SID COMllTIOM
1-2 POOt 3~ pool' -3~ poof
~ poclf .
3-4 pool
1 pool 1-2 pool s ... ~~
Paramedic tells of vain try to save
patient 'thought she was dead'
By.JEFF ADLER
Of 11'9 o.-, ,... •Ulfl
A Costa Mesa Fire Depanment
paramedic told an Orange County
Superior Court Ju ry Tuesday he
bclivcd dental patient Kim An·
dreassen already was dead when he
arrived at Dr. Tony Protopappas'
Costa Mesa dental clinic to provide
emergcncy assitance in September
t982.
Paramedic Keith Jones said he first
saw Andreassen lymg 10 a hallway of
the clinic where several firefighters
were adm10'1ste ring ca rdio-
pulmonary resuscitation.
dreassen's heart, in hopes of getting 1t
to restart. he said. However, the effort
failed.
Andreassen. 23, was pronounced
dead at the hospital about an hour
af\er firefighters first arrived at the
clinic.
The woman. who suffered from
kidney failure and other medical
problems, is one of three patients who
died following treatment at Protopa~
pas' clinic in 1982 and 1983, alleged!}'
as a result of the improper admfois-
tratio n. of general anesthesia.
Protopappas, 38. is charged with
th ree counts of second-degree murder
an the deaths.
Jn earlier testimony Tuesday.
Costa Mesa firefighter Robert Taylor.
one of the first to arrive at the clink
on the day Andreassen died, testific:(j
the woman was administered oxyMn
through a portable oxygen mask
rather than through a "positiv~
pressure" mask used to ventilate
patients who have stopped brcathioa.
However. several witnesses, all
fo rmer employees at the clinic. have
L~sufied only positive pressure masks
were an use at the 19th Street denCaJ
cltntC.
··she was non-breathing. pulsclcss.
She seemed more blue to me than
wh ite. Her pupils were fixed and
dilated,"Jones said.
"I thought she was dead." Jones
told jurors m response to a question
from Deputy District Atto rn ey James
Cloninger.
Robert Kennedy's son
found dead in hotel roo1n
But Jones said the emergency
medical team in1t1ated hfe-saving
measures at the direction of Hoag
Hospital emergency room phys-
1c1ans. with ..., horn he was in radio
con1ac1.
PALM BEACH. Fla. (AP) -
David Anthony Kennedy, the 28-
year-old son of the late Sen. Robcn
Kennedy. was found dead an his hotel
room today, police said.
staymg alone.
Police Capt. William Shetro con-
fi rmed the body was Kennedy's.
"There's no sign of foul ,Play. The
in vestigation is continuinJ he said .
.\ftt•r a11:ich10g a n ckctro-card10-
gram uni! to AndH·assen. Jones said
he was directed b\ the doctors to
adm1n1!>ter an · 1nJec11on of
epLnephnnc directl) mto An-
Kennedy had a history of drug
problems but police would not im-
mediately ~a}' what caused the death.
except tha: therr was no evidence of
foul play.
In Wl:shiogton. an aade to Sen
Edward M . Kennedy. Robert Shrum.
said that he had no details on the
death.
.\ first aid call was received by
police from the hotel between I 1:35
a.m. and 11 :40 a.m. Shetro said.
hru m declined to say whether
drugs were involved in the death.
Palm Beach Police Sgt. Henry
Marchman ~·d the body was found
in Room I 07 of the Brazilian Court
Hotel. where Kennedy had been
Dally Piiot
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Talk
BY J.C. HUMPHRIF.S
Certified c~mologist, ACS
GOING OVERSEAS .
with your Jewelry
With spring and summer's travel
season approaching. we want to
remind our friends of what they
can do to protect themselves and
their jewelry when going overseas.
If you plan to take valuable jewelry
with you, be sure to fill out a
certificate of registration. which
you can obtain from any U.S. Cus-
toms Office. It Is the same type of
registration form that Is used to
register such Items as foreign~
made cameras which you are tak-
ing with you. If you do not fill out
the registration, you may have to
prove where you purchased the
Jewelry In order to bring It back
Into the country with you. Please
be careful, alM>, to declare any
Jewelry that you buy overseas
when you return to the U.S. It Is
Important that you keep all re-
ceipts. because If there ts any
doubt about the value of foreign-
bought jewelry, U.S customs
agents are authorized to Impound
it and keep It for further examin-
ation by fleld agents of the Cua.
toms Service. Oon't let your va-
cation trip be marred by problems
with clearing your Jewelry through
customs .
Oon•ld L Wllllam• Cucu1a11on Managof VOL. n , NO. 118
'I(> Prince Charles and 1~1dy I )iana,
marriagl' Ji1c.l sapphires~<> h~u1d in hand.
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