HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-05-23 - Orange Coast Pilot,
HIGH 72 LOWl2 ClllT 1111111
WI lJNI ',f)AY MA Y : I 1'1H I O H A N C.f COUN I 'f l f,: d OH N I A . · ! ~~ !
Teens face ad·ult trial in slaying ,
Charges filed against 16-year-olds ins, similar to an arraignment.. was
scheduled today, Romney said. A
date will likely be set today for a
bearina to determine whether the
teen-agers should stand trial as aduJu,
be said.
after woman's body unearthed in Mesa
By llAREN E. KLEIN
Ol ... Dllr ........
First-degree murder charge1 were
filed Tuesday against two 16-year-old
boys in the death of a 6Q.year-old
Costa Mesa woman whose body was
found in a nower planter in her
Coa•t
LaRouche splinter group
visits county to warn of
world economic collapse.
/A3
The Sierra Club has
jumped on bandwagon,
opposing San Diego to
LA bullet train./ A3
Calif om la
Gov. George Deukmejlan
says he's totally opposed
to a state lottery .I A4
Nation
President Reagan dis-
misses notion he'd send
U.S. troops to Central
America or the Persian
Gulf./A5
World
A 1500-year-old Mayan
tomb has been dis-
covered In Guatemalan
jungles./ A5 ...
Home
Get set for a revolution In
the television Industry -
a set that offers movte-
quallty clarity ./81
They don't look like typi-
cal chairs -but the
Balans llne offurnlture Is
designed with the body's
needs In mlnd./81
Food
Memorial Day and
barbecues go together,
but this year try a change
of pace with duckllng./C1
Having a picnic? Then be
sure you keep cold foods
cold and hot ones hot. /C1
Sports
backyard.
In filing the charges, the district
attorney's office asked that both
youths be tried as adults, accordina to
Deputy District Attorney Brent
Romney.
A Juvenile Court detention hear-
"On a homicide like this, it's a
pretty standard presumption they'll
sta'ld trial as adults. Thit's what
we're pushin& for.'' Romney said.
One of the tecn-aaen. whose names
were both withheld because of their
Church aanctuary rl8e9
8tracta.ral eteel 1oee ap for a new MDCta.uy at 8t. Andnw'•
Preabyterlan Cliareb OD 8t. Andre•• Road in "~
Beach. Tbe cbareb bu embarked on a $10 mllllon ba.lldln&
No candidates at
Irvine nuke day?
Agran organizing
panel discussion
for May 31 event
By ANDREA ADE~N
Of .. O.., .........
Months of efforts by a locally based
group to bring the three Democratic
presidential candidates to an Orange
County forum on nuclear-related
issues have so far failed.
to discuss the issue in Southern
California, a primary base for the
nation's defense contractors.
Josh Baron, a Hart Southern Cali-
fornia campaign spokesman, called
Carpenter's argument "nonsense."
Hart "has demonstrated his wtll-
inJl:leSs to discuss the issues,'' Baron
said, but the candidate is bombarded
with requests for ap~arances. His
May 31 schedule is 'fluid," but is
dominated by fund-raising efforts "to
keep this campaign going." be said.
Instead of candidates, economist
William Hartung, journalist Rohen
Scheer, four local leaden and four
elected officials from throughout the
qes, lived u a ward in the home of
the victim, Euaenia Aora Baker.
Relatives found her body buried in
a planter Sunday after noticina fresh -
ly turned 10il in a prdeo area where
several plant.a were miuina.
Police said an autopsy showed she
had been hit several tjmes Friday
with a "blunt object."
Both youths attended Back Bay
Continuation School in Costa Mesa,
and police alleae that the other boy
was in the Baker's home at the time of
the alayina.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said Mrs.
Baker aot into an arsument Friday
momina with the 16-year-old because
he was lyin& to her about not
attendin& tehool and losina his job. Mrs. Baker's husband, Ira. Rid he
only knew of the troubles between his
wife and th~ boy from what she told
him.
"l can't understand Spanish; they
plan ua4 already bu 88 million pl.teed for the new
9Ulctury and-ed1acatl0Dal wtq. Tiie newMDCtaary will
aeat 1,400 people.
used to araue in Spanilh, .. he told lhe
Anocialed Prell.
Baker said hi• wiJe told the youda to
leave I few months llO• but the ltiea-
qer resisted.
.. Last weekend my wife deaded
definitely that (he) was toina. .. Baker
sajd.
Funeral services for Mn. Bak.er will
be held l 1 a .m. Saturday at Harbor
Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary and
Memorial Park m Costa Mesa.
Patrol
car hit,
woman
busted
Driver charged with
hit-and-run,
drunken driving
A Lyuna Beach woman who
allepdly rammed a sheriff's patrol
car and dipped two parked vehida
several miles later was ana1td early
this mornina on suspicion of drv.D.t.en
and hi t-and-ru o drivin&. the C.ali-
fomia Hi&hway Patrol reported.
Julie Waldrup, 21 , was taken into
custody after resident.a on a Dao.a
Point street noticed the woman's
bettered and smoking Porsche 911
stopped at the curbside.
lnvestiptors said Waldrup touch·
ed off the metal-bendina episode at
about 1:40 a.m. on Coast Hiahway
when she allegedly slammed into the
back of a patrol car driven by 0ranac
County Sheriffs Deputy Steven
Grosskopf.
The woman, CHP iovestipton
said, pulled away from the wreck.qe,
made a quick ri&bt turn and clipped a
parked Dodge. Offiett1 said the
woman \beo continued on a s.bon
(Pleue eee oaun/A2)
Detroit's Tigers are still
kings of the road after
winning 15th straight
away from home, 4-2 over
the Angels./D1.
But in the candidates' stead, local
peace activists including Irvine
Mayor Larry Agran have organized a
panel discussion on arms reductions
to be held May 31 in Irvine's City
~ouncil Chambers.
(Pleue eee N'UCLBAR/ A2) Larry ACJ'aD
Marina, Fountain Valley
post shutout victories in
CIF softball action. /D2.
Entertainment
The Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse has "The Best
Little Whorehouse In
Texas," and it's a red-
llght rouser ./84
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Buaineu
Golden West Capital
Group of Newport Beach
has secured financing for
the $62.2 million Gateway
project. /88
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
California News
Claaslfled
Comics
Croaaword
Death Notices
Food
Help Yourself
Home
Horoecope
Ann Lander•
Mutual Fund•
NatlonaJ News
Opinion
Ponce Log
Pub41c Notloee Spom
Stoett Martc-11
TelevltlOn
Theat ..
Wea th«
World Newt
BS
A3
B6-7
A4
06-8
BS
08
B4 c 1-12
B2
B1 -2
07
B2
88
A4
A12
A3 o~-s
C1-4
88
B3
83-4
A2
A4
All Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates have been
invited to the forum which is to take
place between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30
p.m .. just five days before the June S
state primary, forum organizer T im
Carpenter said Tuesday.
Fans not bothered by 'Tern pie of Doom' gore
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart is the
only .. maybe" in the bunch because
he may be in Orange County the day
of the forum, he said. President
Rfagan has turned down the invita-
tion, former Yacc President Walter
Mondale is "unlikely" and the date is
''open to consideration .. on Rev.
Jesse Jackson's calendar. according to C~rpenter.
He contended the non-<:ommatal
candidates arc "unwilling or afraid"
'
By die Anedat.ed Presa
"Indiana )ones and the Temple of
Doom" began its quest for box offi ce
glory today amid debate o ver its
graphic violence, which some cntacs
say should be off limits fo r unaccom-
panied young viewers.
Directed by Steven Spielberg and
produced by George Lucas. the
eagerly anticipated sequel to the 1982
blockbustet "Raiders of the Lost
Ark" was booked into 1,685 theaters
nationwide, many of which schcd·
uled their first screenings at I 2·01
a.m. local time.
In New York Caty. mov1cgocrs
leaving the Loews Astor Plaza theater
today seemed unconcerned by the
film's gore.
"I felt dazzled after i ust the first 20
minutes," said Leslie Cullen. 22. "It's
going to be a hit.··
"It's real escapism. fantastic fro m
start to finish," said Jeff KJemman.
"If you want a great escape movie, it
delivers from beginning to end.''
In California, cager fans cam~
out for days to be assured of choice
seats. Some wort the slouch hats and
oversize coats affected b' thr title
character. pla}'ed b> Hamson Ford
Daannr El wood. 19. began wa1t1ng
last Fnday at the Edwards Newpon
Cinema an Newpon Beach. which
hired 30 ne"A emplo~ees to deal "'Ith
the expected cro"Ad!.
"The onl~ ~ople ~ho wait an lane
are crazy. but "AC ha' c nothing better
to do at the moment. .. said Gordon
Berg. 17, who stood behind Elwood
"It's like Chnstmas." said Patnck
Labyon eau\. 18. "ho s~n1 thret>
days outsrde the Nataonal Theater an
Westwood. He was first an lane for 1he
Jim Dick Valley's man in motion
Busy civic leader, 68, uses his retirement
to involve himself In community activities
It wasn't u sy to catch up with Jim
Dick one day last week.
In the mornina. the 68-year-old
Fountain Valley man was at the
historical park he's helpina to build
behind City Hall. As president of the
Fountain Valley Historical Society.
he was interviewina a 90-year-old
Costa Mesa wo man who tauaht
school m Fountain Valley 57 yean aao.
ln the afternoon. Dick was at the
Km& of Glory Lutheran Church,
helping to set up props for a pro-
duction of "South Pacific."
He was also preparina the qcnda
for the annual installation of officers
of the Friends of the Fountain Valley
Library set the followma day. He was
about to bcaJn another year as
ptt idcnt of the library suppon
lf0\11).
Th t ni~t Dick atttndcd Fountain
Valley H1&h School's Coronet
Awards propam because his arand·
IOn Michael Koelsch was a nominee.
He had to apol<>$ize for not beina able
to attend a meeuna of coin collectors.
In ldditioa to his club work, Dick is
secretary of the Oranae County
Health Plannina Council. a lf'OUP
that reviewa hospital expansion plans
and tries to eoouol riaina health ~
eo&ts. He's also on Fountain Valley's
Housjna and Communny Dcvclo~
mcnt Advitory Committee, whtch
oveneea the local use of federal funds.
He alto lectutt:a on Fountatn Valley
history bef'on: tchools, 1COut lf'OUS>S
aod service clubs.
.. Whal makes Jim Dick nan and
nan and nan ... ?"
Fountain Valley isa quiet bedroom
community of m ore than S0.000
re tdcnts. Yet, it._ also a city whert
ma ny of the same f~s kttp tumma
P11L
S1E1DEllAI
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
up when you're lookina for the people
involved in civic and tcrvict d ub
aellvlties. Jim Dtck is one or those
fam1har faces.
His wafc Dons, who also is active 1n
many of thetc aroups. says she and
her husband subscribe to a simple
philosophy: tf you want to uptndc
your quality of hfe, you have to do
more than Ju t fi~ up you hou.st You
have to help improve your comm uni·
ty asa whole.
Like many Cahfom 1a residtnu .
Jim Dtck 1s a transplant from the Ea~t
Coast. But unlike most former East-
erners. he never refers to has nat1\C
Connecticut as "back home ..
.. Tbe children hcrc all kno"A ho"'
their parents came from Oshlosh
Wis., or Dearborn. Mich . but the
children should also know something
about the place whert their home 1s
now." Dick 1ns1sts "Dons and t both
10 back East. but ~ don·t go home
(there). Home 1s herc:·
Dick arcw up tn New Enaland and
ev~ntually became a cnmanal 1n-
vcstiptor for the C'onnecucut State
Police Then he bcame an 1n·
vestip tor for the U S Civil ~f' 1ct
Comm1ss1on In 1964. he asked to ~
transfcrttd from Connec:llcut ~
cause of his wife's hc•lth problems
"We ~arched for r.1x months to
find tht bnt climate an the world."
Dick recalls "That wa on the $0uth
coast of pain -but I didn't b.a'c a
JOb offer there."
The Die\ then ~ttltd 1n Fountam
Valley for its part1cularlv mild
(Pleue Me V ALLST / A2)
I
madnaltht sho~
"We were an the ('Return of the
Jedi') la ne for seven d ays."
Labyorteau~ added. "This 1s lund of
routanr ··
The '1oknt scenes include a hau-
ra1stn~ ~uence m which a man's
heart 1s tom from has chest before he
ts lowered into a pit of bo1hng lava.
That kind of action has prompted
womcs and some complaints about
the effect on you ng vtewcrs who Wlll
lakel~ make up a large share of the
film's audience.
JlmDtdl
------~------------------------
-
•
County may bu¥ computer
to speed fingerprint chec~s
81.JBFP ADL£A °' .............
To better finger the ri&bt criminal
suspeet1 the Oranie County Board. of
Supervoon &&reed Tuctday to 10·
vntipie fun6er the pe>ssibility of
teasina or purchasing a hi&h-tech·
nology computer t~t coukf match
fingerprints lifted at crime scenes
with those of 20,000 past offenders in
the county. "
Supervisor Ralph Clark asked for
the board's authorization to look
more closely into such a system to
gather information on the proposal
before summer budget hearinAS.
Among questions county la~ en-
forcement officials and supervisors
want answered is whether police
agencies now using th~ system h~ve
found it effective as a cnme~etect1on
tool. ·
"I ~nderstand. it is being used with
good crime detection results by the
State 0ej>et'lmcnt of Justice as well U
law enforcement qencin in such
cities as Houston, San Jote, Washin,.
ton D.C. and Minneapolis-St. Paul, •
Clark said in a letter to board
members.
The comeutcril.ed system would
allow detectives to randomly search
for fittatrprint matches amona the
prints or 20.000 persons who have
been jailed for past offenses.
Currently, the county sheriff's de-
partment only can attempt to match
latent prints lifted at a crime scene
with those of a known suspc<:t.
.. If there are no known suspects, as
is frequently tbe case in such crimes
as burglary and housebreakin&i there
is no practical way to make effective
use of the incriminating huent prints
found at the crime scene," Clark
noted.
Cost of purchasing such a SY.Stem
has been estimated at SI million.
However. the system's manufacturer.
an Anaheim-based company, has
ind1cated h would be willina to lease
or sell some of the C<[ulpment
necessary to the county for $129,000
while cstablishi°' the fingerprint data
base at its Anaheim hcadquarten.
In a rel•tcd action, supervieon
postponed a d~i1ion oo borrowina
equipment from the l!.S. Mari.ne
Corps needed to provide secunty
during the Olympic Games this
summer.
Before signing an a&reement that
would pennit the oounty sheri.tl's
department to borrow an observation
helicopter and radio equipment from
the Marines, supervisors said they
wanted to know more about what
potential liability the county might
face should the equipment be damaa-
ed. •
The helicopter and radio gear. 60
portable radios and I 0 base radio
stations, would be loaned to the
county at no charge, according to
Sheriff Brad Gates.
---Q.!iili@l'9
NUCLEAR FORUM IN IRVINE ...
From A l
state will try to focus the nuclear
debate at a community level,
Carpenter said.
Topics will range from the econ-
omic consequences of the nuclear
arms race to its psychological impact,
he said. The hall holds 150 people.
"We believe the hearing is the first
such event of its kind and under-
scores our commitment to be part of
the national dialogue to reduce nu-
clear weapons and cut a bloated
budget," Irvine's Agran said.
Tbe event, called the first of 12
hearings to be: held across the nation,
is sponsored by tbc League of Elected
Officials of America, a group founded
this year by Agran. It has more than
100 members in California.
Carpenter said.
The league is a network of local
DRUNK.~.
From Al
distance before strikin' a parked
Audi, which was pushed into another
vehicle -a Ford.
Badly damaged at this point. the
Porsche was pulled to the curb by t.he
driver. who was later arrested, m-
vestigators said.
WaJdrup, taken to South Coast
Medical Center for treatment of
minor inJunes. was booked at Orange
County Jail and is being held on
$5,000. Deputy Grosskopf was
treated for minor injuncs at the same
hospital.
elected officials who sponsored a
forum for presidential candidates in
January with the aid of I SO mayors
and council members from Iowa.
Four of eight candidates attended the
nationally televised event prior to the
Iowa caucus.
The group's membc:n endorse a
nuclear weapons freeze.
A&tan. an attorney, was co-author
of the non-binding Proposition 12
nuclear freeu measure ap_proved by
California voters in 1982. Six Orange
County cities voted for the freeze.
mcludina lrvine and Laguna Beach.
The leaaue was bred from Agran's
campaign to mobilize 65 mayors and
council members to suppon the
measure in their communities.
Military spending on nuclear arms
is robbillJ cities of essential resources,
Agan S&Jd.
Among the speakers are Hartung.
author of the "&anomic Conse-
quences of the Nuclear freeze;" Los
Angeles Times political writer
Scheer; Jean Forbath. of Costa Mesa-
based Save Our Selves; Torin
Scgentrom, scion of a prominent
local developer, and Cun Haunfeler,
president of the Anaheim High
School District board.
VALLEY CIVIC LEADER BUSY ••.
Fro m A l
weather. The city was still rather
young (it was incorporated in 1957)
and in the midst of a transJtion from
farm area to residential commumty.
Soon after the move, Dick became
actjve in a local homeowners associa-
tion, workmg to ease some racial
tensions that had surfaced in the
neighborhood.
In 1965, Dick was appointed to the
city's traffic advisory committee. He
helped develop Fountain Valley;s
first traffic laws.
In 1966. Dick was appointed to the
Fountain Valley Planning Com-
mission. He served as chairman
through 1972 and remained on the
comm1ss1on until 1974. During that
period, Fountain Valley underwent
substantial growth.
Dick said he believes the com-
m1ss1on during his tenure faithfully
adhered to the master development
plan created by the city's earl)
leaders. One exception was that
commissioners permitted more
single-family housing and less mul-
tiple-housing (apartments, con-
dominiums. etc.) than originally
planned.
In 1969, Jim and Doris Dick were
among the founding members of the
P.ountam Valley Histoncal Society.
The society was dormant for a while
in the early 1970s but revived 1n time
for the national 81ccntcnn1al cel-
ebrations of 1976.
In recent years. the group has
channeled its energies into preser-
vation of some remnants of Fountain
Valley's past.
BccauS(· of the cit) 's rapid develop-
ment, nearl y all of Fountain Valley's
early buildings were demolished to
Just Call
642-6086
make way for tract housing and
shopping centers. In late 1981 , a
developer discovered three aged
structures hidden from view off
Bushard Street. The developer said
the histoncal society could have
them. but said the group had to act
quickly before the bulldozers arrived.
The buildings were a 1920s real
estate office, a Japanese bathhouse
and a water tower. The city agreed to
accommodate the structures at an
undeveloped park, but the historical
society had to raise S2.400 to move
them. Doris Dick, who was president
of the group at the time, asked the
members at a meeting to at least
pledge money for the move. Instead.
she had $2,000 in donations in her
hand within 10 minutes.
As it turned out. the development
that would have destroyed the old
buildings never materialized Still.
the threat pressed the society mto
action. The buildin~s were moved to
an area behind City Hall dubbed
"Heritage Park." Jim Dick and other
society member~ have spent many
hours renovating the structures and
adding landscapmg at the park. It
may be opened to the public later this
year.
When he's not working at the park,
yo u can often find Jim Dick speaking
to local school children about Foun-
tain Valley's history. He says most
youngsters are woefully uninformed
about the community's beginnings as
a soggy area full of Artesian wells (the
source of the city's name). The land
had to be drained to permit the
farming of hma beans. sugar beets.
tomatoes, peppers and other crops.
"One of the first things these kids
ask is what Indians lived here," Dick
says. "I tell them no Indians lived in
this valley because none of them were
dumb enough to live io a swampy
riverbed. They lived on the bluffs in
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa."
The local history buff also tells the
children how the city fathers barely
got Fountain VaJley incorporated in
time to prevent most of it from being
annexed into Santa Ana. AJthouah
the founders were mainly farmers, the
construction of the San Diego free-
way through town hastened its trans-
formation into a bedroom communi-
ty, he tells the younJtSters.
Jim Dick hasn't slowed down
much since retiring from his federal
job 1n 1978.
"I watched too many people who
retired from the mills back East." he
says. "They JUSt retired, sat on their
front porches and died because they
didn't know anything else to keep
busy."
Right now. Dick is intent on getting
the Heritage Park finished as a place
for display of historical mementoes
from Fountam Valley. He's also
pressing the city to use redevelop-
ment funds to build an expanded
local library.
Later this year. Jim and Dons Dick
hope to do some traveling, visiting
friends and re la ti ves back East. But
don't expect the couple to give up
their civic act1vit1es permanently.
"This would only be a bncf
1nterm1ss1on from what we're doing
here," Jim Dick sa ys.
What do you llkt about tbe Dally Piiot? What don't you like? Call tbt
oumbu at ldt and your mesaaae will be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to Ute appropriate editor.
The same U ·bour u1werlog service may ff used to record lteten to the
editor on aoy topic. Cootrtbuton to our Letters column must toclude their
name and telephone numHr for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell u1 what'• 01 your mind.
Dilly Piiot
Def Ivery
ORANGE COAST Clrculatton 114/M.2-4333
Clnatfled Mtvertlatng 714/M.2..-n
AH other department• IG-4321
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MOrW1ty r 11<)11y II Y"" "'•
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Ctrcul•tlon , ... phoMe
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Put:>llsher
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(dltOf and Assistant
to the Publl5her
l......_P.Ceruo
Proouctlon
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330 w .. 1 a., St Colle M-.. CA
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VOL. T7, NO. 144
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LMVeQM Fell 11\rouQh Ille ..-eno •cec>t Utile AOC>ll n'Oh• Ind ll'tOt~ tow ~ t::r HlgM ~In Ille 0. -Ille OOUI anCI 78 to In Ille valleyt. l-62 10 \.ubOoolt 65. MelnpNt
Temperature. Tides .. ...
..
" .. .. • .. ..
10
13 u t2 .. 13 IO IO
70 ro ., .. .. .. ..
70 ..
71
t7 .,
" 17 11 ..
90 ...
" ..
70
103
85
79 ..
90 ..
.,
71
40 " ..
2!
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17 ., .. S7
4t M
IO 4t
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53 43 ,,
IO 0 n l'1
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t2
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41
50 71
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et
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.. 71 7t ..
7t u .. 74
72 ..
M 47 .. ..
71 3t
15 47
83 72 u •I ....
71 SI to 74 71 SI
ee '' 90 ..
AltMl!ty .. ... TODAY ~que .. te 8-ldhlQ'I t .37pm 4.3
AmatNlo " IO SuRf REPORT Atldtofege .. • TitUfleOAY ~ 12 t1 Flra1 IOw 12 32.,,, 2.,
Allatt1t •1 .. :=:tiow s·sum 3.1
Atlantic City 72 t1 12:,ISp.m 0.7 ...._Un t3 76 t :&apm ••• teltltnor• IO 71 ::z.,., .. 46
~l\'Oh tun Mia IOdey •I 1 63 p m , ,,_
Tllurtdey ti 6•41 ._,,,. Ind Mlt eealft ...
llZI
1·3 1-3
1-3
1-3
1·2 ,.2
flllf ,.,,
qi, ,..,
79 7:54p.111. ..... ~ 82
8olW 74
:i
t2 Moon•• I" 1:29 p.m today, ,._ Thur9dily el 2)43 Lm. Ind atll ~ 81 '"" '"" ,.., lloelon es IO t'.26p.m. " 7t
Traffic
woes
brid,ed
in Viejo
Portola Parkway
to guard aga inst
future fl ood Ing
An arroyo that served as the
encampment for Spanish explorer
24
Swell dlrection: So11ttMWt
Gaspar de Portola's foot soldiers is rn
now covered by a span of concrete t , rather than canvas. r-, ---'"'"'\ ____ _..:J_
The new S8.3 million Ponolaf '----..!:-*-~. !!__E_l_T--R-oad--.--h--pa~rk_w_a_y_wi-::·1-=-1-p-=-la_y_a-ro-:le--:-in~b-:ri:--n-oi:-ng Bridge and Parkway was opened this countryside trom oro ant e. D"
week after being dedicated over the north to Plano Trabuco Road in the Olympic visitors to the reson. site of
th the modern pentathlon. weekend with the snip of a golden sou · · h Pickups and flatbeds from Coto de
rope by state Deputy Transportation ~our n:iales shorter t an ~ea~-Caza were the first to parade down the
Secretary Dana Reed. denng Live Oak Canyon oah · new thoroughir.are Saturday. . Portola Parkway sweeps over t e 1i
The 5.5-mile parkway ~1~1 ope~ ~P canyon, saving consi~erable t~.vel The six-column, two-lane bridge is
the interior of Rancho M1ss1on Y1~JO, time and ensuring against repct1t1on the longest ever built by county road
and the communities of Mi.ss1on of the t 980 Trabuco Creek flood that builders and is the product of22 years
Viejo, Coto de Caza an~ Robmson isolated the exclusive resort of Coto of negotiations. Novo Construction
Ranch. It's 1,200-foot bridge ~x~e~ds de Caza for nine days. Co. and Steve P. Rados, Inc .. both of
over a stream bed and adJomm~ In addjtion. the completion of the Santa Ana. built the bridge.
Students can screen X-rated film
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
A request that Fullerton College
refuse to show the X-rated film
"Calisula" was rejected by the college
district board as attempted
censorship.
Trustee Chris Loumakis had asked
the board of the North Orange
County Community College District
to request that the Fullerton students
not show the film using district
propeny or facilities.
But the board rejected that in a 4-2
vote Tuesday night.
"I think by whatever t~rms Y<?U try
to word the resolution. 1t 1s
Ge01
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Cemo/ogut, ACS
GOLD
.olid. IJJJ.d, or pl•t.d
So that con1umer1 wlll not be too
confuted by the advertlalng and
marketing of gold products. the
Federal Trad• Carnm1111on and the
Jewelers Vigilance Committee
point out the:le fact•: SOLID GOLD
mMn• a piece of gold Jewelry la
aolld, and don not have a hollow.
GOLD FILLED jeWelry la made from
• bue metal and hu layer• of gold
mechanlcaly bonded to both aides,
like 1 aandwtch. The gold alloy muat
conatltute at leut one-tenth of the
objeet't tot11 weight, unleh It 11
marked otMrwtM. The gold coat-
ing can eventually wNr aw1y. Gold
fitted jewelry may alto be called
"go«d overfay" or "rolled gold
ptate." GOLD ELECTROPLATE
meana gold 11 deposited on the face
of the obj«:t eleetrofyttcally. To be
called by thl• name, the elec-
troplate mull be at leaat 7
mllllonth1 of an Inch thick. AnthytnR
thinner mutt be catted "gold waah
or "gold ffalh." Th«• la a high«
atandard for watches, Which have
750 mllllonth1 of an tncti of gold to
be called gold electroplate. Be aure
that you know What kind of gold
jewelry you are buying before you
apend your money. 0..1 wtth 1
reput1bte ~er.
,
censorship pure a~d simple," boa~d
vice president N1lane A. Lee said
$only before the vote.
"I feel very strongly we should not
interfere with our adult student body.
No one is forced to sec i"" sa1d
Trustee Herbert Warr,n.
Loumakis argued that 1t was not a
matter of freedom. but of giving
campus airing to a film "which
celebrates sexual brutality."
"This film has no more redeeming
value than a child pornography
movie," he added. "The issue is not
one of academic freedom but of
common decency. If our students
wish to show this film. there are many
pri.~ate facilities available to do so
.... However. only trustee Wallace
Hardy voted with Lournak.is.
"Caligula,"' made in the mid-1970s
by Penthouse Films International, is
about the bloody and wanton life of
the ancient Roman emperor. Nov-
elist Gore Vidal wrote the script, but
later criticized the graphic movie.
claiming it had been turned into
"basement pornography."
The Associated Students had
proposed showing the movie. but n~t
yet scheduled it. Student body Presi-
dent Dale Harrison said a screening is
likely.
Welcome to
ourGem Lab
Tl>e 1-•Mtr'l WtllCe ll ~llOWfl OJ ~'Y ANJ wt1wi.•17i.nce. 1M<e'1 O
lobarotory
On Qui ttoll w• ~ o C4Hllfled ~'" ol tt.e ,t,mefi(Oft G9lft Socte!y. Th11 ~Y rrollled iewelef ~,,,.,, grod.s oNJ ~0,,.. fine ~ion.1 .n Oii' AGS
AccredffH Gem Milt ,...Id! 11 tqll•~ w•th ol te<.h1ncol 1n11rumentt M1Ceuoty lo
OCCutOl-'v ClllQlyie ~·~ You're wtlcOIMf to v111t OUf lob anytime w.·,. AG!>,.......,,.. reocty to -v· VOii "1tl>P9d 10 prOl.CI yOll
llOO N(Wf'ORT II.VO, COtl AM( A
llNCl' IW a..,.,,,.,.,.. ....... 0-0. l'..aNI ~1 -( 1\( :"-' ) MEMBER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
• --
Buur 11 N B o~Ro
----
Transit tax debate
at UC Irvine tonight
A debate on Proposition A, the Oraqe County ballot
initiative that would add a penny to 11lcs tax to P.IY for
traffic improvements. wiJI be beld at UC Irvine tooiaht in
the University Center Herit.qo Room.
The debete bc&int at 8 p.m. and it open to the public
and free of ch&rp. Spcaki!ll for the proponents will be
Skip Davenport, an Auto Oub manaaer. and economist
Bob Schaev1tz.
Speakina for the opposition will be fonncr Laauna
Beach City Council member Sall y Bellerue and Jon Brand,
a member of the J..aauna Greenbelt sroup. Questions from
the audience will be taken.
Irvb:ae candlata to •ppear
. The six candidates vying for three seats on the lrvine
City <;:ouncil have been invited to respond to communit):'
quesuons dunna a forum toniaht in City Council
chambers.
The candidates' ni&ht will begin at 7:30 p.m. at City
HalJ. 17200 Jamboree Road. The event is sponsored by
the lrvine Village Forum.
Drug UJJlt meet. Jn Meu
The Chemical People Task Force meets at 7 p.m.
Thursday 1n the choral room of Estancia High School.
2323 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa.
For more information, call 979~6717.
Women '• network group meeta
A new Orange county networking group is forming
through UC Irvine's Women's Opportunities Center and
is holding its first meeting Thursday beginning at ' 5:30
p.m. at 2811 Mam St .. Irvine.
. T~osc attending th~ first meeting will establish
1u1dehnes for the voup. Light refreshments will be served
and a $2 donation is asked. Call to pre-register at
856-7128.
Cblll cookoll set In Niguel
The Sea Country Chih Cookoff has been slated for
Sunday, June 3. in the GSA parking lot of the Zigguret
buildang in Laguna Niguel.
Sanctioned by the In ternational Chili Society. the
competition will be&in at 11 a.m. wath judging at 3 p.m.
Proceeds w1ll benefit the Laguna Niguel Fourth of July
celebration.
A cash pnze of $250 and a first -place trophy will be
awarded to the best overall ch1h. Additionally. there wiU
be a Mister and Miss Chsh Pepper contest. concession
stands and a craft sale.
Further informatton 1s available by calling Bnan Carr
at 831 -8935.
'Night on Broadway' planned
The Jewish Community Center of South Orange
Countf as planning "A NaJht on Broadway" themed
annua meeting and 1nstallat1on of officers J unc 16 at the
Center. 298 Broadway. Laguna Beach.
The evcnang will begin at 7.30 p.m. and wall include
stand-up comed y and cabaret entertainment. Hors
d"ocuvres and a no-host bar will also be available.
Required reservations and anformat1on will be given
at 497-2070 or 833-1017 before June 11.
Summer claues .et l n Irvine
Summer quarter classes began June 18 at United State
lntemataonal Unavers11y·s Orange Count} Extension
Center in Irvine.
The center offers graduate level programs m
education. human behavior and business and mana~e
ment. All the summer hours arc scheduled dunng
weekends and evcnin$ hours.
Further information on the center can be obtained by
calling 83~265 I. The center is located at 2300 Michelson
Drive.
Meeting announcement In error
An American Association of Retired Persons meeting
listed an the Bulletin Board column Monday was
incorrectly dated. The meeting was held last week and
there will be no meeting this Thursday.
The Daily Pilot regrets the error.
Wednesday May 23
• 9:30 a.m. Orange COllnty Board of Supervl1ora,
Hall of Admin1strat1on. I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m. lrvLDe Unified Scbool District Board of
Education, Lakestde Middle School. 3 Lcmongrass.
Irvine. •
PoucE Loe
I
LaRouche prestdenttal candidate
offers plan for U .. prosperity
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of ..............
You may have seen them at an airpon canyina sifns
advoc:atina fcedin&Jane Fonda to the wbalesor1kewmn1
Henry K.issinacr with a laser beam. They are members Qf'
the National Democratic Policy Committee -a splinter
poup of the Democratic Pany led by Lyndon H.
La.Rouche.
Mel Klcnetsky, national director of the LaRouche
campaian for president, was jn Newport .Beach on
Tuesday explainina his orpnization•s propo11ls.
The main theme of the LaRouche eampajan is that
the world is headina rapidly toward economic collasm
because Third World nations cannot produce enough
products to meet the debt payments on their loans to
banks.
The U nttcd States in hcadina toward collapse because
elected officials and power brokers have allowed the
country's infrastructure of road~. brid.gcs •. and water
systems to d1S1n1earate as the nation shafted to a .. post·
andustrial"economy. K.Jenetsy said.
LaRouche has proposed a four-point program to
return the country tO an industrial economy and
prospcnty, he said,
"'The first thing we need to do is develop the credit
necessary to do to the economy what Franklin Delano
Roosevelt did from 1939 to 1944," Klenetsky said.
LaRouche would make low-interest loans to industry,
agriculture and export businesses.
To do this. LaRouche would strip control of the
money supply from the Federal Reserve Board, K.Jenetsky
said.
Sierra Club
opposing
bullet train
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of dM DeltJ ..... 119'1
The concept of getting people out of cars is one the
Sierra Clu b supports. But the 140,()()().member organiza-
tion doesn't believe the San Diego-to-Los Angeles bullet
train is a project it can back. a spokesman said Tuesday.
The Sierra Club has become the latest to support a suit
pending before the state Supreme Court which would
block development of the SJ. I billion high-speed rail
system.
"lt"s not that we arc o pponents of 11, but we arc
proponen1sofenv1ronmcntal quality," said Bob Hartman
of Lemon Grove 1n San Diego County.
A law which exempted the project from the state
Environmental Quality Act leaves the project fault-free
from fut ure questions that ma y be raised over en-
vironmental issues. contended Hartman, a member of the
Sierra Club's California Leg1slat1ve Committee.
A 1'40-year environ mental review of the project 1s
alread} under wa) b} the state Transportation Depart-
ment
"If the findings of the review become questioned and
1f a suit were brought challenging the adequacy of the
findings. a tnal court would throw 1t out because (the
pro1ect) 1s exempt." Hanman said
Court bncfs supporting the suit ha' e also been filed
by two San Diego homeowncr's grou ps and Sacrament~
based People"s Advoca te, fou nded by tu fighter Paul
GaJln.
Nat Read. spokesman for Ameri can High Speed Rail.
said he was .. confused"' by the brief. filed as a friend of the
court last week.
"What they ask for are conditions that already exist,"
Read saad. He said the Sierra Club bnef says it supports
inter-dty rail transi t.
Hartman. however. said th e group supports mass
transit prOJCCts but only if they are "utilitarian,
economical and environmentally sound. I don't think the
American High Speed Rail proposal meets that. ..
Am erican High Speed Raal proposed to start building
the rail system,~ h1ch would shcc through Orange County.
an 1985 It would makr 1hree stops within the county.
ancludmg one at a proposed transportation center in
lrvane.
The c111rs of Tustin. Oceanside. Carlsbad. Del Mar
and San Diego filed suit an January. contending that
lawmakers exempted the proposal from a full en-
vironmental review The suit asks the court to order the
Public Ut1ht1cs Comm1ss1on be made responsible for
reviewing environmental issues along the 130-mile route
as well as considering state permits.
A grou p of 850 Irvine resident whose homes arc next
to the proposed route of the tram made a $1 ,000
contnbut1on in March to aid the cit) of Tustin's legal
effort.
·Newport girl, 15, critically
injured in scooter smashup
A 15-ycar~ld Newport Beach girl
suffered cntacal head inJuncs Tue~
day when she crashed a fnend's
motorscooter into a block wall in a
residential ne1&hborhood.
Kristin Colleen Murphy was nding
the borrowed Yamaha motorscooter
northbound on Seadrift Avenue an
tmne
A 13-year-old boy was arrested
Tuesday night on suspicion of bur-J)ary. linked to four night·time brcak-
ans that occurred on Lucero East. The
95-pound youth alleaedly slid an open
windows and stole chanae. He was
released to has parents' custody. • • • Four wheels were discovered mass.
1n1 this momma from a Portehe 944.
Jen an a carport an the 7000 block of
Apncot Dnve Tuesday niaht • • • Homeowners on Satinwood Way
and Palmcnto Way reported praae
bura.tanes Tuesday Tools were taken
1n both thefts. • • •• Two I BM typewntcrs were rt·
ported stolen from 1 Century 21 office 1n the 18000 block of Mac Arthur
Boulc'vard TuesdaY . ' . A computer was d1~overed m"'"
ina Tuesday afkrnoon from a home
an the I 5000 hlock of t herbourah
Avenue. Entry wa' psnl"d throuah
the front door
the Irvine Terracecommun11y at 9:30
p.m. when she suddenly veered into
the concrete wall. according to New·
port Beach traffic anvcsllgator Rick
Bradley.
The girl was not weanng a helmet.
Bradley noted.
Murphy, rushed to the Fountain
• • • A 14-ycar·old pedestnan suffered
10Juncs when hit by a car at the
intersection of Culver and Walnut
Avenues about 2 p.m. Tuesday The
18-ycar·olddnver wa-. not ci ted in the
incident. WitneSS(S said the anJurcd
a•rl had walked into oppo'11na trnflic
Newport Beach
A Newport Beach man reported the
theft of 1 two carat daamorid nna
valued at SI 0,000 from has home an
the 200 block of 2nd Street Tue1do)' • • • A Newport Beach man reported the
then of S2 I 2 1n tools Tuelday from
has o~n aaraac 1n the 200 hfock of
Ora nae. ........
P11nc Wcoocr 11 4590 Mac rthur
reported Tuesday the theft of two
typtwntcn and a itetto with a total.
valuc of $2,SOO • • • A Newport Buch man reponcd th<'
thef\ of a atcreo valued at $400 and
S t.2SO 1n fumatutt from Im homl' in
the 200 block of Top:11 I uc'Sda)
Valle} Community Hospital trau ma
center. suffered a skull fracture. a
broken clavicle and facial lacerations
A hospital spokeswoman said the girl
as 1n cntical condition 1oda}
Pohce saad they art unsure what
caused the accident and are seeking
witnesses
• • • A New1>0rt Beach doctor reported
the theft of a doctor's bag with S480 in
medical mstrumcntl> from his car
parked int the 2700 blod of lian
Joaquin Hills Road • • • A Bo!iton man reported the thtft of
$200 ca h from his hotel room at the
Newpon Mamou Tuc$da y
Hantintton Beach
A re11dent returned to her home
Tuer.day naaht on the 10200 block of
Kuku1Dnve and found 1t '"m
shamble . .. Someone had entered
throuah an unlocked prqedoor, had
taken 1 telcvasion tel and then
dumped it 1n the beckyard. • • • Someone broke into a locked prage Tuesday afltmoon Oh the l 00
blodt of &th uu&. a rauScnt rt· poned The I , estimated at S230.
included two urfbo&tds and a
t11cycle • • • 4\ re51dent of the 8400 block of
EJinaer venue reoortcd Tuc~y
..
Or-.. CCMllll DAILY .-tLOTtwedn11 •1J. -II. 'W
"Con&m1 wouJd iMUe UOO billioll of~
ttaauty noces for loent at 2 io 4 pm.-nt aaaaaa rates,"
K.leonlky said.
The nation'• cwTCtn lc>ld raaves could blck the notes irthc prkic of told in tfte Uftiltd Staiet WU mled to S7~ an ounce, he 11.id.
a bWJd-up of iluercoau.eeul mlillic atirii'• ...... IU'llC)k~ so mainlaia a ...... ol,...betw•
tht tr ruled States and the Soviet Ullioa.
Thia would crate an indu1trial al*'Jion Laree
enou&h to produce tbe pa& amounu of tt«t and other
producu need to "put tbe country t.ck tOlt(ber. •• •+TM e1d1tiQ11teel mills were built in the 1920s. lfwe
do not rebuild tbem, you deatr0,Y our futwe potential to
produce enouab steel to nwnuin ounelves u an
industrial poweT, •• KJenettky 11id.
Finally. LaRoucbe would ~II llw 4k!b1 ol
Ttijtd World coun&na so that their loaM have ....
··reabstic" inttttst rates of 2 so 4 percm&.1'.ieMUky lllilL
··we -ould itsue npon uediu so Iba& we CM
nchan,1t our ttchnol~ for the oil of' Meaico Ud die
resouroes of.other Th11d World countries;" ~ llid.
One of the larler projecu would be a musive water
system that would brina w11.er ftom Alub lhrouct> most
of North America to the Southwest United States.
HeclaimsuRouche'itolllprosramwillcrea~abou•
8 milliOn jobs and increase the tu but enou&b &o provide
the . aovernment with cnouab fu.ndi for the vlrioua
prOJCCtl.
LaRouchc, who will be in CalifomJ.& M'lt wetk, plaos
to spend about $400,000 in 1.elevdion aad radio
commercials by the June S primary. acx:ordi,. to
KJenetsky. He will be on the DemocratJC t.11ot runnina
ap.inst fotmer vact president Walter Mondale, Cokndo
Sen. Gary Hart and the Rev. Jcste Jack.Jon.
"That would ensure adequate water and food supplies
for America for bundreda of yean," Klend.lky said.
The second ~ of LaRouchc's prop'lm would
include a S200 mdlfon defensive later system to block
ancomina nuclear mluiles.
"We need that by 1988 or before because the Soviets
wi ll have a similar system in place by 1987,'' KJenetsky
said
Klenetsky complained that bis candidate is not aeni~ the same amount of mecba oposure as tht other
candidates.
LaRouche believes such a system is crucial for the
protection of the nation from a first strike by the Soviets.
The third portion of the uRouche progam would be
To counter that probkm. the cams-tan hu
purchased three half·bour slou for television prosrams in
which LaRouche will outhne his campaian platform in
detail. •
Coeta Maa resident. Demm Bollaad, left,
and WaJDe 8tanfteld atart oat for uother
day'• drlYe lD the Great Race to ID-
d laaapolla. Theircar,a 19098alck 8anaey
Oldfield Racer, la tile only entrant which
a1ao raced lD tbe 1914 Great Race.
'30 Cord leads Great Race
survivors at Kansas stop
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -
Texan Ed House. dri ving a 1930 L-29
Cord, continued to lead the pack as
the 3,()()().mile Great American Race
for antique vehicles marked its s1.xth
day on the road since leaving -Los
Angeles.
House, of Tomball. Texas. led the
procession of the 70 surv1v1ng ve-
hicles into the midday stop at Okla-
homa City. Dnvers were expected 10
reach Wichita, Kan .. before putting an
for the night.
Among the other vehicles to reach
Oklahoma City by midday were a
II
that someone broke 1nto his vehicle
someti me over the past four days.
The loss included tools worth S 125. • • • Someone entered through an open
garage door and took property from a
home on the 14300 block of RIVlera
Drive. The loss included a SI 50 lawn
mower. auto parts worth S 131 and
grocenes worth S 1.50 • • • .\ man was arrested Tuesday eve-
ning on suspicion of shophft1ngat the
J C. Penney store at Huntington
Center, 7777 Edanaer Ave. RC'Covcrcd
were table linens worth S8 2. • • • Someone broke into a locked
ga,..e on the 400 block of 11th Street.
a resident reported Tuesday. The loss
included a S75 bicycle and clothing
wonh $100 • • • A juvenile threw a rock throuah a
shdi_nJ &)ass window at a home on the
18700 block of Libra Circle. a resident
rePorted Tuesday. The damage was
estimated at $35. -....
•\ man and a woman were arrtsted
i uesday afternoon on sus1c1on of
shoplift1na at the Gemco c;torc. 7 212
Ed1n1er Ave. The two were susf)e('ted
of11lc1na col<>1ne worth SS2
Coeta lleaa
Two cat bur1lan~ were rcponed
within an hour o( each other 1n the
cuy early Tuesda) mom1na In the
fint.occumn11t l~a.m on thc400
block of Lcnv.-ood Dnve. the thief
removed louvred ~tndows an the
kuchen and tole $63.SO from a punc
an the houk" The l"C11dent woke up
and aJampsed the usr«t but
ptttendcd to be aslttp In the ~nd
cat bufl)ary, ~mna at S a.m on
the llOOblock ofConcsc Avenue, the
th1tf cntcrcd throuah an optn kuchen
'lllfindow but 'lcppcd on a nt"'1paptr
1909 Buick racer piloted by Wayne
Stanfield and Dennis Holland of
Costa Mesa. a 1912 Amencan
ufrancc fire engine and a 1903
Mercedes Benz.
.. They're running better now that
they're out of the desert and over the
mountains... said race spokesman
Tex Smith. Eighty-seven vehicles. all of them
manufactured before 1937. set out
Thursday from Los Angeles in the
competition. which 1s scored as a
time-distance rail)'. Part1 c1pants try
to complete the course an a lime sci by
near 1he resident.,· bed and was scared
ofT. • •• '\ S 1.400 t:.pe'4nll'r "as stolen
from the .\rthur \' oung and ( o . 3200
Park Centrr DnH. 0 ' er 1he '4eekend
Palace said there '48S no \1gn ut forced
entry detected • • • Apple computer rqu1pml·nt. an-
cludang a dn'c unit mon11nr and
printer. was stolen from 1he !\uto
Store. Inc . 695 To"n ( cntl·r Dme
sometime last week The equipment
disappeared p1cc-c ll\ p1e<.·e pohn·
said, W1th a total loss plalt'd 3t SQ ~00
Fountain Valley
Burglars pncd open a <,llding door
tn the 16000 block of Mt M1chaehi.
Circlt and stoic iewcls. t a'lh and coans
valued at $4.485. The th1 e' e\ also
stolt rifles from the homt' but
abandoned them 1n the hark,ard.
apparently an haste • • • Thit'ves stoic a wh1ll' pl:t\lll I '·
1 nch tclev1s1on set 'a I uC'<l .11 S ~ '10
from a re 1dence 1n the MOOO hto._ ~ of
Boatbill Circle • • • c;omeone tole po'4er tool~ and an
the Sports (.:ar Oub of Amenca whale
staying W1lhm a 50 mph speed llmat.
Older can arc allowed handicaps
-the older the car. the more leeway
11·s allowed from the perfect ume.
The competition is bci~ beJd a.n
COnJUDctJOn with thc lndJ&napollJ
500. The dnvttS an scheduJed for
ovemiaht stops in SL Louis and
Chicago before anivina an In~
dianapolis on Fnday.
First place an the S250.000 event is
worth SI00.000. In add.Jtion. the
three oldest cars to finish split
$40.000
air compressor valued at S l .817 from
a µrage in the 18000 block of Aztec-
( ourt
• • • T "0 people w('rt arrested for
dn' 1ng under the influence of alcohol
earl\ Wednc~a) mommg m scpa1'tc
1nc1den1s Lisa Mane Gallagher 21 .
went ofT Laguna Canyon Road in her
'chide casl of El Toro Road at IS
minute' after m1dmght and Kevm
Dana Mc( artcr. 35. struck a parked
car 1n 1he 500 block of North Coast
H1ghwa} 21 minutes later Neither
"'as 5t'nou I) 1n1urcd and both wcrt
released on S 1.500 bail
La&ana Beach
A commercial burglan was rt·
ported Tuesda) afternoon at I 7Q~
Laguna Canyon Road. l'C">Ullln& 1n
the lo'I~ of$2.2t12 m cash • • • A woman wa~ a~ted for auto-
mobile theft Tue-~ay morn1n1 afkr
he was stopped on South Coast
Hi&hwt)' at irca.'lurt lsland1n a
vthtcle bean& sou ht b) the In.inc
Pohcc Department < ame Charlene
Bollman 25. was released on U.000
bat I.
Cabbie returns cash
A reluctant cabb1c returned a
Newport Beach man'o; t-am-on <,u11
ca.e cont11n1f\I $7.500 1n cuh and
another Sl2.SOO 1n Je""'~ll") aftt'f the
taxi dnver wa a u~ b) Oranat
C'ounty henff\ dtput1n he would
not be ch.,.itd ~•th thd\
•\ 44-)ear-old P>gla ' Hill rt''ll·
dent reported the lea\ mg the \Ulh.l\C'
c-onu11nin.a U0.000 1n 'aluahlt' 1n a
lab after rttum1ng from a tnr to l .i'
Yep\ undn
The man checked Y.-1\b tM Coast
't ellow ab C'o-Op but tht com pan)
(Ould not locate the su1t.c:asc. The
cabbae v.as kccpma mum ~u he
had htar'\l the ca!IC contained Sl0.000
1n C'a h ~t when be 1ooked in the
\UllC.l\e therT WI onl) $7.SOO Tlw
dn,er~a .. afra1d he would be dwicd
~•th 'tcahna S22 SOU. 1crord1n lo
the hen ff\ JC'panmcnl
Monda) hcnff•dei>utu.~' \a.lked lo
the 1bh1c and rc\Ohcd th~ m1\
untkt'\t1nJ1n~
-
;
•
DeLoreanontape: 'I wanttoproceed'
B f d In the videotape shown toJurol'6 Tuesday, De Lorean "No," replied 1he admitted drua smuaaler, who sajd Ut de COSe attorneys fSffifSS discusses his Northern Ireland sports car company with he went to te Sept. 4, 1982, meetin& in a WaSbinaton hotel film as •two salesmen talking· ~~:~~t'n~~Iamcs Timolhy Hoffman. the govemmcnl's re~;;::J. by government aaenls to use "clear narcotics
At one point the automaker hears talk of drup and "The function of the tape was to establish John De
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Prosecutors played their says. "I want to proceed." Lorean's true intent," said Hoffman.
trump card in the John De Lorean drug triaJ as they neared "Did Mr. De Lorean at any time io any conversation The S9-year-old automaker was arrested several
the finale of their case against the former automaker, but indicate 1o you he did not want to participate in the weeks after the videotaped meeting and charged with
the defense dismissed the taped discussion of a cocaine narcotics deal?" Assistanl U.S. Attorney James WaJsh conspiring to distribute $24 million worth of cocaine to
d_e_a_I a_s_"_tw_o_sa_le_sm_en~ __ ta_lki_.n....:g_:_· ________ ........::a::.:sk::::ed:::....:..:H:.:::o.:.:.ffi:..:;m:.::.an~on;,,;,_;._T.;;;..ue;:..;;.sd.;;;..a;;.t...;... r;;:=======:::;i raise money for his failinJ car company. He could be
ORANGE COUNTY RELAXES
WITH
KDCM tD!l.t
FMSTERED
~[fu@
illa
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
Ftr th ltat tf y.., Utt
1122 llMIOl llwt.
COSTA llSA -54'·115f
sentenced to 72 years in pnson if convicted.
After playing more tapes today. Walsh planned to
turn Hoffman over to De Lorean's lawyers for what chief
defense attorney Howard Weitzman has promised will be
an intense cross-examination.
Confronted wi th what could be 1he government's
strongesl piece of evidence, Weitzman noted that nowhere
in the videotape does De Lorean himself directly mention' ~~~~~~~~~! drugs. I "If you all think it's a crime to si1 and listen to
somebody else talk abou1 a drug deal, you're wrong." he
told reporters.
We itzman said he would show that De Lorean.
listening to plans for a drug deal. was "stalling," as
businessmen often do.
''You had two salesmen talking and I think you have
to keep.in llJind whal was going on,'' said Weitzman.
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MON.-
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SUN. 11-5
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Phone 998-1721 Phone 831-2980
Home a Garden Ctr.,
15333 Culver Or.
Phone 551-9851
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u ..........
Wounded eagle
Thia fnlmpy-looldn& bald eaJfle. ht• wlna ban~ed. I• one of two wound'ed in Aluu
and flown to Monterey thi• week for treat-
ment at the Monterey County Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to An(mala.
Solldarity hld
Soviet soldier
NEW YORK (AP) -Members of the Solidarit>
underground 1n Poland say they have hidd~n a Soviet
Army deserter since manial law was imposed in 198 1, the
New York Times reponed today. .
"I si mpl)' did nol want to go back. I did nol set.'. any
f u1ure there." the soldier said in a clandestine 1n1ervie<A .
'The soldier. who was not identified, said he had be~n
sheltered m more than 20 homes since he deserted in
Silesia in 1he fall of 1981 . when the now-outlawed union's
campaign for liberalization was al ils height.
"We can las1 many years:· said a woman who helped
hide the soldier. referring to Poland's undergroun~
movement. "We have food. clo1hing. doctors. all that 1s
necessary for a normal life.
"It was easier in the beginning." she added. "Now 1.1 is
gelling more difficult because people are becoming
afraid."
The sol d11:r said he defecled to Poland because "I used
10 think thal maybe Solidarit)' would take power and on
such an occasion I co uld stay in Poland or I could go to the
West ."
The Time~ ~1d the mten 1ew was SC't up through
underground channels.
MAYAN ,TOMl3 ~
DISCOVERED
NEW YORK (AP) -A Mer-perfect 1.~-
0ld Mayan t0mb, wtih elaborate palntfnol. pottery~
a male 8keleton wrapped In a lhroud, hM ~
dltc<Mnd In the remote Pewn JUno1e of nortMm
Ouatem81a. offlciM MY·
''Wedo MY• a MnM of .aatlon.1
' Or. AlcNwd E.W.
Adami;lMUntverattyOfT .... an~a..dlng
the expedition. told the New York Tinwe In an
lni.vtew ~ today. ••tt11 a time c:apMM that
..-.Cta the behavk»rlf ~of the peftod. You
never know whether you ,.. qotng to dJg down 8nd find
juet a bunch of rodct ...
The Rto Azul Pro)eet. named after • n ,_..,,. rtver. w .. the fnt painted ~ tomb to tie ~ed
atnce the 1NOL ,,_ arch•*Ollta blliwe the tomb
dat• approxJmately to U. ~ 420 to 410.
The txPedftk>n to locate the tomt> 11 a Joint .non
of the Un,....,etty of TtDCM and the Guatem.a.n gowmment. Guatemalan gowmm.it guarcSa armed
with t1flee Md rnac:Mt• hhe etood SP*d O'/W the
tomb to protect It from vend.ala.
The wchHologf9tl epeculated the lite WU
constructed for the ,.,.tlve of a ruler bwted Jn a
nearby tomb. TMt tomb h .. be«\ •tripped and tooted
.inoe hi dtlcovery.
. The expedhk>n haa bMr'I WOf'klng the ttte for t~
p• month. In 8ddltlon to the s*ntmga and PGl*'Y. a crafted Jlrwfth h~ and a tcrew-t.op Id wu
afto d'11coWfed.
•
NAT ION -, Reagan nixes n0tion of troop deployment
Hart takes Idaho 8 Sayshe'snotpreparedtosendGls . •He doesn'1 believe tbe uni~ Scata anct Soviet haPPtnift9.Atdainet.'1and~.-.1~·, ......... be +v t t 2 1 Union are any cloeer io a .. cooft0nta11oa thaicould lead IO Ja a nearty icleotic:al ~ -dlil -WWW , I &U.3 COD e& -to Persian Gulf. Cen al America anuc.~~::.nn.r,~~~~~C:i=~cinpite trn.-.!~r:t'fo';...V:,':.':!==r~
the rite in interett rates. ..There m aJwaya aome 1he pret&dnt • : By lite Alsoclace4 Preti WASHINGTON (AP)-President Reaaan IA)'I he'• pe11iml1u out tbert," lleapn comPl&ined. ··we'd lole all thole fiieGdl ud ...,.,,. (ia -
BOISE, Idaho -Sen. Gary Han it hopina bis sweep not prcparina to send American troops lO war in Central •The increase in the number o(Soviet aubmariMS otr felion) if we did that. They wa.at our help :.~19ut ~ dall't
of Idaho's nonbindina presidential preference primary ~;:~=~~f~bpee :f;;'~~ln~~~;..11J:s0p~t~! =~~s\os U.S. shores doesn't worry him. ''If I thoU&ht thtte was want A!Mrican maa~r thttt." provides him a spun of momentum apintt Walter F. h 1111-... some reason to be co~ about thml, l wouldn't be At Uothtr point, the prnidtnt tWM -.S Wlty •
Mondale when deleptes are cboten Thunday in mt e rq.ion. slcepina in thas bou1e IOn.iabt," be Mid. muy people believe the wortd it moVilll dollf to ..
Democratic caucuses around the stale. Wilhl 99 percent of However, when pressed, the .J?retideni refuted to •·•1 just hope and pray that the Soviet Union will do ralber tbu l)taCC ... I would uy that it '*-'* dlal'1 Ill ,
thestate's 873 precinct• rePonina, Han had 31,S37 votes, unequivocally rule out the possibility of sending U.S. the humane tbina .. and allow Yelena Bonner, the wife of that moat of the people have been bewi• ill potiticill
or '8 percent, to 15,834, or 29 percent for Mondale. The forces lo either re&ion. Soviet di11ldent Andrei Sakharov, to teek treatment of diaJoaue ... that I tomehow have an itchy ftneer ud am
Rev. Jette L. Jackson received 3,ti7 votesJ !'' 6 percent. Au nationaJfybroadcasl news conference dominated heart and eye ailmenu in another country. aoi.Da '°blow up t.bc wOtid .... " •
Followina Hart'• 2·~1 trouncina of Mondale, the by forc:ian Policy questions Tuesday niaht, the president Durina the East Room talion, the president was But he uJd he didn't know of anyone mote
Colorado 1enator'1 camP9iP chairman hert, Steve Shaw, also said: asked about the likelihood that U.S. ICt'Vacetnen would committed to peace than he. &>red.icted the victory would bolster Han's turnout in the •The Soviet Union may not return to the nuclear become involved in a war in the Middle East, where Jran R.eaaan bepn the~ conf~ with a saatemnt
Thursday caucu1es. arms reduction barpining table until after the November and Iraq are at warand have attacked oil t.anken plyjna the ursina ConiJ:eu to approve his requat for S62 millioa ill
presidential election, but he is not willina to make any Persian Gulf. emeraency aid to El Salvador, now awaittns action in tbe KJJJer 6'Ve. HJf Up concession to Jtl them back earlier. "I think very sliaht," he replied. "I can't forctee that House.
COLUMBUS Ohio -A convicted murderer who
ulcd 1 fake aun to disarm prison guards at a hospital clinic
and then took two of them hostqc aave up peacefully
today after more than 12 hours of neaouat1ons. The
standoff with Paul Brumfield, a 37-ycar--old inmate from
the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville,
ended shortly before 3 a.m., said p<>lice sp<>kesman Ralph
W. Webb.
Ca.ey received document.?
WASHINGTON -House invcstiptors have con-
cluded that some of the Carter adminastrauon documents
leaked to President Reaaan 's 1980 campa1in went to CIA
Director William Casey, sources say. A 2,400-page report
naming Casey, who was Rcaaan's 1980 campaign
manager, is set to be released by the House Post Office and
Civil Service Committee, ending its one-year probe of the
briefing papers case, the sources said Tuesday. speaking
on condition they not be identified.
Non-drinken r ewarded
WEST MILFORD, N.J. -Graduating ~niors who
do not drink alcohol or use drugs durina commencement
weekend will be rewarded with a dance and a trip to the
seashore, says the principal of West Milford High School.
The offer is being made to the 376 seniors graduating on
June 23 in an effort to prevent alcohol-and drug-related
traffic accidents, Pnncipal Thomas Kraft said Tuesday.
Actre• avoid• Injury
NEW ORLEANS-Actress Brooke Shields. taping a
television comedy sketch with Bob Hope at the World's
Fair, dove into a pool while wearing a microphone and
battery pack but escaped a potentially dangerous shock, an
official said today. Miss Shields. dressed as Becky
Thatcher for a sketch about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry
Finn, was on a raft 1n the pool and started shivering after
being soaked by a ratnstonn. The actress decided it would
be wanner in the pool, so she removed a pair of Army
boots before diving in. Hope relied, "Don't," but it was
too late to stop her, the officia said.
CALIFORNIA
Duke op~ lottery
PALM SPRINGS -Gov. George Dcukmej1an says
he'll oppose a lottery initiative if it makes the November
ballot in California. Supporters turned in more than a
million signatures last week, apparently enough to qualify
the proposal. Profits from the lottery -at least 34 percent
of the revenue -would be earmarked for publtc
education programs. But Dcukmejian said the proposal
would take money from the poor without guaranteeing
additional funds for schools.
Moleat tapea on lea•b
LOS ANGELES-The court wtll keep a firm hand on
more than 200 taped interviews with children allegedl)
molested at the McMartin preschool, a judge ruled.
Superior Court Judge Ronald George said Tuesday that
defense attorneys in the case cannot copy the videotaped
interviews but may view them in four centers around Los
Angeles. The 76-year--old founder and six fo r:mer teachers
of the Virginia McMartin Pre-School 1n suburban
Manhattan Beach have been indicted on 115 counts of
rape, sodomy and other felony child-molesting charges
Dunpby•u•pecm ln court
LOS ANGELES -Four men pleaded innocent tn
Municipal Court to charges of conspiring lo commit
murder and attempted murder in the shooting of
television news anchonnan Jerry Dunphy and a compa-
nion last October. Prosecutors contend the shooung
occurred during a bungled robbery attempt as Dunphy,
62, and make-up artist Sandra Marshall. 36. drove up to
the KABC studio an Hollywood before the 11 p.m.
newscast on Oct. 24.
CIJlld-•teallng rap denl ed
SAN DIEGO -A fundamentalist Christian banling
her homosexual ex-husband for custody of their 12-ycar-
old son bas pleaded innocent to charges of felony ch1ld-
stcaling.. Betty ~u Batey, 39, of Aurora, Colo .•. e!'tered the
pica during arraignment Tuesday before Mun1c1pal Court
Judge Robert Coates. She wa~ allowed to remain. fr~e on
her own recognizance pending a June 27 prehmtn~ry
hearing..
Glrl 'freeze•' on stand
LOS ANGELES -A 5-year-old girl broke down an
tears and was unable to continue her tesumony on closcd-
circuit telev1s1on an a hearing fora private school principal
accused of molesting Deputy District Attorney Ken
Freeman said the girl would not be called to testify today.
and a decision would be made later on whether to recall
her al all during the preliminary heann' for Campbell
Hugh Greenup. 57. charged last month wsth 16 counts of
sexually abusrng eight girls at his Greenup School 1n
Northndge.
WoRLD
Ma.cow trip •tlll on
LONDON -Bntain'sexpuls1on of three Soviet bloc
diplomats has not chan&ed plans for an upcoming v1s1t to
Moscow by Forcian Secretary Sir Geoffrey How:,_ a
Foreign Office spokesman said today. The Foreign 0 111cc
rtPorted Tuesday that First Secretary Arkadi V. Gouk of
ttle Soviet Embassy in London left Britain after a May 14
order to expel him. Gouk had been menti~ned 1n
testimony dunnJ in a recent spy tnal tn Bntain. In
apparent retaliation for the expulsion, Moscow ordered a
Bnush diplomat to leave the Soviet Union
N. Korean vl•lt. Soviet.
MOSCOW -North Korean leader Kim II Sung.
whose nation maintains ties with the nval Communist
aovcmments of China and the Soviet U nion, today t>eaan
his fint official v1stt to Moscow in 23 years Kim traveled
to Moscow by tratn and was11ven a formal welcome at the
Kremlin by President Konstantin U. Chernenko and
other top Soviet officials.No details of Kim's schedule
were announced .
...
Dl•tall dlety denied
EDINBURGH, Scotland -The Presb)tcna.n
Church of Scotland has brushed 111de a study aroup s
sugesuon that God could be addre sed as "Our Mother"
instead of "Our Father ... The aroup suuestcd that God I~
not necessarily a male deity and that the cha,..ctensuc
attributed to God m the Bible resemble "evcryth1n1that1ci
best in the female way of beina human."
ROSI c1n•• IN ao. CALIP.
• ThouNnd O•kl. TMUM.
Wut Hottywood • Tornnc~/Old
Towne • Tornnct/Cout Hwy. •
NMWalk • Qtendor• • ~ntt
Hilts • On'" • ~ • Ful
lerton • s.nw AM • Cosw ~
• El Toro • Ocunslde • San
~go/ Clalremont
MOOIOUTM~ll'.AT
WLOWll• AC.-oll'"°" '°""' COA8T ..... u PCMmeMYkWa '°" A "°" 111M'• ..aatT YOU CALL TOLL ntla 1800) U.ltlt
STORI MOU9'S! Mon -,,., 'O AM -e M, a.t. 91M AM• e N & hft. U AM -e HI
9'oH w•toomH your perMMI c9'M9'. ~ MaeterCartl or Amertcan ••P,.H .. ,.. ..
• I
OilESS FOil LESS
..
OPD •MORIAL DAY 10 AM -8 Pll
..
r
. -
-
A8 Or.nge Cout QAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. May 23, 1984
Viet vet
gets .lif~
term
Doggone rain
CONCORD. N.H. (AP)
- A Vietnam veteran who
contended that delayed
stress from his war ex-
periences caused him to
~--··············= murder his fiancee was I convicted today of first-
degree murder.
When you live In Portland, Ore., you baYe to
have foul weather gear -even If you're a
pooch named Panda. Panda'• owner, Hach ~ken, takea care to keep hi• pup dry.
CHRISTOPHER W. STROPLE
JUDGE
VOTE: Judge STROPLE for Superior Court
Judge Strople is knowledgeable, decisive, and experienced. An
overwhelming majority of The Superior Court Court Judges
endorse Judge Strople as the best qualified candidate.
Judge Strople believes our courts must protect the public from
violent and habitual criminals. The Association of Orange County
Deputy Sheriffs. the county's largest agency of Law Enforce-
ment endorses Judge Strople as the best qualified candidate.
Judge Strople' s legal and leadership abilities are well known in
the legal community. The membership of The Orange County
~r Association rates Judge Strople as the best qolified
judge.
Orange County deserves the best.
Be sure to vote June 5th
Paid for by Committee for Judge Strople ID ta40581
FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO A
B.A., M.A., or PH.O., fro m the
University for Humanisti c Studies, call
DR. WM. PARKER & STAFF AT
645-0971
AFTER THE M.A. + 3000 HRS. OF TRAINING ·
ONE MAY SIT FOR THE MFCC EXAM, CLASSES
HELD IN COSTA MESA.
Early Bird Dinner
Specials s6. 95
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
Complete Dinner with choice of
soup or salad and dessert ~
673-7726
Of!(_ THE PENINSULA
BALBOA 801 E. BAL BOA
Humana Hospitals in Orange County
Tallethe ~.
''Carefree''
Pledge
If your medical emergency turns out
to be a minor one -you won 't have to pay
any emergency room charge at all!
They're not nice to think about, but emergencies happen in all families.
And, when you 're Ill or hurting, you want medical help right away.
When possible, the first thing to do is to call your family
physician. When your doctor lsn 't available, however, you know
there is only one right place to go for emergency medical care ...
the only place In the community where qualified medical help is
always available 24 hours a day, every day ... a professionally
qualified. fully staffed and equipped hospital emergency
department!
But we understand that cost is also a concern.
That's why the Humana hospitals in Orange County have
taken the "Caretm" pledge.
When In doubt about whether a situation ls an emergency
or not-It's best to play safe. What if that bump on the head
Is not "minor?" What If that "'heartburn" Is really a heart
attack? We would rather have you come to us and not
pay anything when It isn't serious than have you stay
away. and pay the ultimate pr1ce. when It Is serious.
For care of minor medical emergencies -such
as simple bandaging. a couple of aspirins or some
good medlcal adVice-we won·t charge you our
regular hospital emergency room fee. In feet .
thtrt'I bl no 1mergtncy room char91 1t int
There wtll be a physician's fee. but It wlll be
nominal.
On the other hand, if your emergency turns
out to be a major one, you 'll have the peace of
mind of knowing all of the professional and
tethnologlcal resources of a modern acute
care hOSt:Jltal are available. You pay tor
whar you IHf8d . . with charges scaled In
accordance with the amount of diagnostic
tests, equipment and treatment required. ·
If you don 'r f8811y need anything, we don't
think you sttoul<l flave to pay anything!
Wt Invite you to make us your hospitals
of chOice ••• and the fine doctors on our
medk:al statrs your physicians of choice.
Wt hope you'll never have any emergencies .. ,
but If you do, we hope all your emergencies will
be "Ctrtlm, ..
..._.Na ... .... ,,,, .......
3033W ~-~CAHI04
ffl•l t27·IOOO _ ........ ,,._ .... .., ..... of..._,.°""'"
A Merrimack County
Superior Court jury re-
jected Gary Place's claim
that trauma from the war
was responsible for the
strangulation and stabbing
death last summer of
Wanda Olsen.
French prepare
for D-Day fete
Immediately after hear-
ing the verdict, Place asked
Judge William Cann to
waive the mandatory life
prison sentence and order
him executed, but the judge
CAEN, France (AP) -Paratroopers, warships,
airplanes, seven heads of state and thousands of veierans
are expected to take part in D-Day ceremonies June 6
marking the 40th anniversary of the Normandy landings.
French Veterans Affiirs Minister Jean Laurain, at a
news conference Tuesday, detailed the ceremonies in
which President Reagan, Queen Elizabeth 11, President
Francois Mitterrand of France and the heads of state of
four other countries will participate.
refused.
Cann said the law gave
him no choice but to im-
pose a sentence of life
without parole.
"AU right," Place said.
Jury foreman John Cut-
ting read the verdict shortly
before 10 a.m. The jury
reached its decision a half
hour earlier, ending 91/2
hours of deliberations over
three days.
He said provisions have been made for mor'e than
20,000 spectators at the main ceremony at Utah Beach the
afternoon of June 6. Thousands more are expected to
attend individual French ceremonies or observations by
the countries that took part in the landing of 180,000
troops that led to the Allied defeat of Nazi Germany.
Laurajo said heavy security measures would be in
effect to assure the safety of the heads of state, with 6,000
gendarmes mobilized .
Our _._
money llHlnl8I account won't tie up
~' lllOlleJ.
l0.6610 10.0°10
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SAVINGS ~~~:.ON
IN.w fountain Valt.y 8taMh 1?01 8,....hul'M Fnun1•1n \':llln 17141 QW cM.I
INfw\a"<l C•nl•r Rranch W'l"(I flc.Mh Rlvd Hun11n1tl"I' liooMh
f 7141 ._... 7l.\2
11-blnOflkelA'l?W..rM /\w lt1Jn<1nitt•"' 114-¥11 •71411M2ll<IOO
• 11 b.IA1l<r l•ll• '-lnw ~1 'Oil , ... Jn..,.. Ill \ • , unlll t...i..n.~ """'"' to S2. SOO
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..
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Orllt'Qe CoMt OAJl.Y PtlOT/Wedl....,, .._, D. *4 A7
ER · Ll¥1NG SALE LJ ~
T
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I
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Selection may vary by store. Limited quantities in some cases. Sorry, no mail or phone orders.
SPORTSWEAR SO'S
Juat 10.00: Striped stretch shorts are yours
with any purchase from our '84 Jantzen
swimwear collection, 22.00 value. For
example: mitered·stripe maillot, 38.00
or bikini, V .00.
21% off: Striped bandeau bikini.
Reg. 30.00 .......................... 21 ..
~ off: Matching maillot.
Reg. 45.00 .......................... 32.tl
21% off: Matching wrap skirt.
Reg. 38.00 .......................... 27.11
lpec:W purdt••: Cotton gauze
active sets .......................... 21.-
8pec:W purdl&89: Our own cotton
shorts .............................. 11.00
21% off: Gloria Vanderbilt polo top.
Orig. 20.00 .......................... 15.00
8pMW purd H•: Gloria Vanderbilt cotton
sheeting pants ....................... 25.•
113 off: Designer summer separates: skirts,
pants, knit tops.
Orig. 30.00 to 49.00 .......... 11.• to 31.19
33% off: Famous maker spring blouse, skirt,
jacket. Orig. 23.00 to 120.00 ... 14.11 to 71.19
30% off: Chaus three·in-one cotton skirt.
Orig. 36.00 .......................... 24.99
IO% off: Famous maker cotton chambray
separates. Orig. 23.00 to 86.00 10.• to 42..99
~ off: Lloyd Williams two-piece dressing.
Orig. 42.00 to 58.00 .......... 24.11 to 33.19
25% to 33% off: Cotton blend sweaters;
Counterparts trousers and skirts.
Orig. 30.00 to 38.00 .......... 19_. to 21.99
PEttTES
21% off: All Personal Petites polyester
blazers, pants, dirndl skirts. 4 to 14. 5 days
onlyl Reg. 34.00 to 70.00 ..... 23.IO to 49.00
DRESSES
30% off: Petite sundresses in prints and solid
colors. 6 to 14. Orig. 36.00 to 38.00 .... 24.99
lpecW pwchMe: Mel Naftal short sleeve
wrap dress in assorted prints in misses and
petite sizes .......................... &1.•
8pecW purchl!H: Striped cotton summer
dresses from Prago, sizes 6 to 14 ...... 31 ..
SpecW purchl!11: Soft special occasion
dresses in solid color polyester georgette
.................................... 61.19
33% to ~ off: Assorted long and short
prom dresses, orig. 70.00 to 136.00
................................. to 71 ..
113 to 112 off: Cotton and cotton blend
dresses from our summer collections.
Orig. 54.00 to 78.00 .......... 11.11 to 41.99
S,.CW purd 11: Cotton gauze dresses
with two-tone sashes. Sizes 8 to 18 .... 24_.
SpecW purdl£81: Stripect polyester/cotton
seersucker dresses. Sizes 11> to 18 ..... 21.11
INTIMATE APPAREL
H off: All our women's ahtfts, dusters and
sundresses in Loungewear, ff/.
Reg. 22.00 to 30.00 .......... 17.a to 2UI
20'M» to 2l'M. oft: Strapless bras from Henson
and Wamer's. Orig. 14.60 to 16.00 ..•.. 11.99
~ off: Vanity Fair travel gown, robe, p .j.
Orig. 18.00 to 26.00 .......... 11• to 1&..-
~ oft: Vanity Fair French·cut bikini. 5 to
7. 6 da)'I only! Reg. 4.00 each ........ a•
~oft. Kayser strapless bra-slip, 32 to 38.
6 daya onlyl Reg. 15.00 ............... 11.-
~oft. Cotton/potyester summer pejamas.
Reg. 14.00 ........................... ...
21-w. oft. Meidenform 'WIN Buys" camisoles
and hatf-tllps. 6 daya onlyl
Orig. 10.00 ea ..................... 1.-...
I
ACCESSORIES
33% off: Large cotton canvas tote.
Orig. 20.00 .......................... 12..99
33% off: B. H. Smith leather handbags
and clutches.
Orig. 19.99 to 24.99 .......... 12..99 to 11.48
21% off: All fashion body wrappings.
Reg. 10.00 to 30.00 ........... 7.50 to 22.&0
40% off: Our own drop earring collection.
Reg. 6.00 to 12.00 ............. 3.• to 7.20
SpecW pwdw11: Encore bright bangles and
earrings .......................... 3...91-.
8pecW bonua: Buy a pair of sunglasses,
get a aecond pair of equal or lesser value
free . Collection .............. 12.11 to 50.00
~ purd1&H: Colorful plastic
san~ .............................. 7 ..
30% off: Our exclusive Biagi earrings.
Reg. 6.00 to 12.00 ............. 4.20 to 1.40
Specml purdt•H: Straw obi and
pull-through belts ..................... 111
30% off: Snake buckle stretch belt.
Reg. 13.00 ........................... ...
25% off: All our cotton active hats: visors,
baseball caps, and more.
Reg. 5.00 to 14.00 ............ 3.76 to 10.IO
20% off: Textured hose.
R~. 4.50 to 12.00 ............. 3.IO to l .IO
4'% to 60% off: Monet jewelry.
Reg. 7.50 to 35.00 ............ 3.99 to 17.49
WOMEN'S SHOES
37% OH: Jacques Cohen striped canvas
"Marilou" espadrille. Orig. 32.00 ....... 19.99
30% off: 9-West "Claire" pancake flat
sandal. Orig. 29.00 ................... 19.99
113 off: Naturalize"® "Pier" wedge slide.
Orig. 30.00 .......................... 19.99
20% off: Nike "Oceania" jogging shoe.
Orig. 25.00 .......................... 19.99
32% to ll'M> off: Nina«i pumps and slings.
Orig. 59.00 to 63.00 .................. 39.99
33% off: Caressae "Russell" snakeskin
pump. Orig. 53.00 ................... 34.99
24% off: Calico's open-toe "Corky" pump.
Orig. 29.00 .......................... 21.99
SpecW purd' He: Our own leather
moccasin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.99
WEST COAST KIDS
21% oft. All girts' 4 to 14 famous makers
swimwear. Reg . 12.00 to 28.00 . I.II to 20.19
21'% off: Girls' 4 to 14 summer rompers.
Orig. 10.00 to 12.00 ............ Lii to 1..11
~ oft. Print sundresses for girls 4 to 14.
Reg. 14.00 to 38.00 ........... 1.-to 27 ..
...,_._ pwd ••·Toddler boys' 2T to 4T
shortall .............................. IM ap.cw 11'8"dt•• 1: Toddler girls' 2T to 4T
sundress ............................. 1.-
lpecW purct •u· Carter's terry stretch
ooverella for newboma and infants ...... ...
~oft. All regularly priced diaper bags.
Reg. 14.00 to 30.00 . . . . . ..... 1.-to 21.-
..,_ ... pwd u1: Care Bear print romper
and long 8'eeve nightgown .... 1.-and ....
~off: Already reduced canvas/mesh
totee. Orig. 6.99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • ..•. ••
~ oft. All ~ifia' femous maker
IC)Of190Ck1. Sins 4 to 14.
Reg. 2.19 to 9.00 .............. 1.M to 1.11
YOUNG MEN'S AND BOYS
25% off: Boys' 8 to 20 0 .P. sportswear and
striped Shah Safari shirts.
Orig. 13.00 to 22.00 ........... Lii to 15.11
30% off: Boy's 4 to 7 O.P. shorts.
Orig. 13.00 ........................... ...
26% off: All boys' 8 to 20 swimwear.
Orig. 8.00 to 22.00 ............ &..-to 15.9
20% off: All boys' 8 to 20 Levi' se denims
including 701's.
Reg. 16.99 to 22.00 .......... 13..11 to 17.to
21% to ll'M. oft: Selected Tomato tops and
all swimwear fOf young men.
Orig. 8.00 to 25.00 ............ I.II to 1 ...
33% off: Young men's short-sJeeved striped
shirts. Orig. 15.00 ..................... 1.-
21% off: Young men's walk shorts and ber·
mudas. Orig. 15:00 to 24.00 ... 10.. to 17.11
~ pwda11· Boston Ory Goods young
men's short·sleeved oxford cloth shirt .. 12.•
21% off: Angel's Flight dress pant for young
men. Reg. 28.00 ..................... 11•
21% off: Young men's silk and silk/polyester
4/40 blazers. Orig. 90.00 to 95.00 ...... -..
21% off: Young men's J .J. McWays duck
g_ants. Orig. 24.00 .................... 1 ... 5Peclel pwdt.M1; Young men's RPM
polyester/wool dress pants ............ 21.-
36% to 48% off: Young men's Kennington
tropical shirts. Orig. 20.00 to 24.00 ..... 12.11
MEN'S
~ off: Arrow Kent tone--0n -tone dress
shirt. Reg. 18.00 ..................... 12.99
25% to 37% off: Designer fitted dress shirts
for summer. Orig. 24.00 to 28.50 ...... 17.99
30% off: Neil Martin cotton knit ties.
Reg. 10.00 ........................... l.99
25% off: All designer and famous maker
suits. sportcoats and slacks. Selected stores.
Reg. 49 .00 to 265.00 ........ 31.76 to 1a16
25% off: Munsingwear classic white briefs
and crew neck T-shirts.
Reg. 3/11 .00 to 3/13.00 ..... 311.2ti to 311.7S
36% off: Sportsphere short-sleeved summer
sportshirts. Reg. 20.00 ................ 12.19
30% off: Levi's~ E.S.P. stretch blue jeans.
Reg. 32.00 . . . . ............ 21.-
~ to 32% off: Arrow and Puritan short-
sleeved sportsh1rts. Reg. 17.50 to 19.00 12.99
27% off: Harris cotton summer slacks.
Reg. 26.00 . . . . . . . . 11.99
25% off: Every pair of walk shorts by
Recess. Orig. 18.00 to 24.00 ... 13.49 to 17.11
25% off: All YSL cotton socks.
Reg. 4.00 to 4.50 . . . . . . ... 3.00 to 3.37
~ to ~ off: Designer long-sleeved dress
shirts. Orig. 28.50 to 29.50 . . . . . . . . . 17.99
30% off: All our men's sunglasses.
Reg. 12.00 to 21 .00 . . . . .... 1.40 to 14.70
SpecW pwdMIH· French designer
polyester/cotton pincord robe . . . . . . 11.19
21% oft: All men's bikinis .
Reg. 13.()0 to 20.00 . . ... 9• to 14.99
33% off:· Famous maker cotton lisle knit
spof14hirt. Orig. 30.00 . . . 19.•
21'% to M% off: Selected spnng designer
sportswear.
Orig. 28.50 to 78.00 . . . . . 14.• to 34•
~ oft. Arrow short·sleeved stub sportshirt.
Orig. 16.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
21~ oft. Haggar Expandomatic stacks.
Orig. 29.00 . . . . . .. . . . . . 1 ...
.W. oft. Sportsphere walk lhons.
Orig. 16.00 ... . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . ...
3" off: Our exclusive Members Only ,.cket.
Orig. 60.00 . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ...
THE BROADWAY
IS SOLJrHE llN C ALIFORNIA
FURNITURE
221.00 off Rattan swivel rocker in a dark
finish. Orig. 350.00 .................. 12IAI
221.00 off Contemporary Barcalounge,e
recliner. Orig. 725.00 ................ 4••
212.• off Queen Anne -Mng chair in 4
decorator cok>rs. Orig. 400.00 . _ ...... 1 ...
401M off Transitional 2 pc. sectional.
Orig. 1200.00 ............. -......... ,.._.
411• off Transitional 2 pc. sectional
sleeper. Orig. lG.00 ............... ....
la.II off Rivefview 5 pc. bedroom set in
rich oak. Orig. 1825.00 .............. __.
_.. .. off Matching chest.
Orig. 700.00 ........................ -..
., •• tD 311.11 off Apartment/condo ...
oonven:ii* Metionell, wfth polyfoetn or
Spinal Guard mettrell.
Orig . 1:.>0.00 to 1450.00 .......... , ...
STEREOS m.• off Sansui 70 watt audio system
with cabinet. If purchased
separately 1195.00 .................. Ill•
Iii.GO off Magnavox compact stent0 system.
Orig. 219.00 ........................ 1 ... IO.• off Symphonic compact stereo system.
Orig. 229.00 ...... -... -........... _ . 111.•
TELEVISIONS
70.00 off Sharp 19" diagonal remote color
portab6e. Orig. 429.00 ................ . ••off Sharp 19" diagonal cok>r portable.
Orig. 329.00 ........................ -·
40.00 off Sharp 13" diagonal cok>r portable.
Orig. 269.00 ........................ "'•
VIDEO RECORDERS
100.00 off Fisher VHS video recorder.
Orig. 599.00 ........................ fll •
100.00 off RCA VHS video recorder.
~lo ~·~a·9~~~~~ ·vHs ~ici~·;~,ci~~
Orig. 499.00 ........................ 49 ••
CONTEMPORARY GIFTS
__...., purchM1 18 pc. red and white
plastic picnic set ..................... 1 ...
25% off Portable durable plastic travel table.
Orig. 20.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12.9
StJ«W pwct H 1 Natural wicker wine
caddy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14.11 S.-CW purchM1 Large natural wicker picnic
basket with insert tray . . . . . . . . . .... 21.11
Spec94 purchM1 Rattan picnic basket
for 4 ........................ 11.11
SpecW pwdt.M1 Rattan picnic basket
for 2 ............................... 12.9
HOUSEWARES
33% off Bowl 'n board 4 pc. seNe set from
Lipper International. Orig. 30.00 . .1~
STATIONERY
Loui Miehe,. brass or silver frames, assort9d
sizes . . . . . ................ to 11.11
~off Walter Le frames, ctear curved
patented ~n.
Orig . 16.00 to 46.00 .......... 12.• to ...
50IMt off Burnes of Boston• wood fTamel In
cherry finish. Orig. 20.00 to 30.00 ....... to
1UI
.._, off Burnes of Boston• ftor8l 08f-.mic
frames . Ong. 15.00 to .0.00 .... 7• to 1&11
lfti off Burnes of Ba.t~ epoxy flnWi
frames in blue, b&adt °' burgundy.
Orig. 12.00 to 20.00 ..... Lii IO ...
~ off Burnes of Bastone matted tr.m..
Orig. 14.00 to 20.00 . . ...... to ...
•
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Orange Coeat DAJL Y PILOT /WedMlday, M~ 23. 18~
_-Day clues 'leaked' through newspaper crossword puzzle
• • • • .. • ..
~
•
LONDON (A P) -A 14-year-old schoolboy ap-
~ntly was the unwittina culprit who led Bntith ntelli~nce 10 suspc(t that secrets of &be 1944 0.0.y
ndings m France were beina leaked tbroua,h a London
~wspaper's daily crossword puzzle, &he paper reported.
the minor but most baffi1na mystcncs cnacndercd by the
Normandy landinp has finally been solved.
The trouble bepn with the May 2, 1944 puule which
contained a clue whose answer was ''Utah," followed by a
May 22 clue whose solution was "Omaha." Both were
code words for Normandy beachn chosen by the Allies for
their landinp.
On May 27 came a clue whose solution was
"Overlord," the code name of the invasion, and MIS, the
British counter-espionaae scrvice1 bepn to aet interested.
If the Daily Telegraph's findings arc correct. one of
Mo1nP 0bs1er 1n or st-nP sauce sa lmon pooched with cavi ar
and vodlto tr"'n slices <" t boneless breast of duck c hoteoubnond
tournPdos of bt:'ef flombe d with wh1s1<ev and more
Elegantly new decor and menu. but still at the some p la ce
9 tloJrs 'Jbr111e 1r-p spor1t11ng stretch of the Poc1f1c Ocean
1 H f f 0 w [ k)
Al tri=-.ur! & Sand Hotel
On the 0~Por a t Laguna Beach
For t)r1-1okfost luncr. or•d dinner Coll I 714) 497 .44 7 7
The May 30 crossword hao "mulberry," the code
name for the artificial harbors bein& built for the invasion.
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Great American G:r
Feder.ii S.ivi ngs 8.ink . -. lENO(ll
And oo June I, with the invasion !USt five daya a~y.
..Neptune," the code name for the ().Day naval Ol)ttlUOO.
turned up. . . To MIS, the only ponable Cllpla~uons were an
uncanny coincidence or a spy opcrauna throua,h the
Telcaraph'1 crossword puzzJe.
Leonard Dawe and Melvi~lc Jones, the paper'•
crossword compilers. were questioned at l~ngth. ~ was
Dawe's bro1her-1n·law, Peter Sanders. a senior Admiralty
official who was living with him. But no answcri we~
uncovered . Forty years later. the Tclearaph rcponcd that a
WolveThampton property manager named Ronald
French. has provided a possible solution .
f r~nch said that when he was 14 he _was 1 student at a
school where Dawe was the headmaster. Dawe u.sed to
1nv1te boys 10 his study where. as a mental cxercase, he
would have them fill m blank crossword puzzles and
aficrward make up the clues. then send the puzzles to the
newspaper, the paper said. . .. .,
For instance. when French filled an . mulbcny,
Dawe made up a clue that went "This bush 11 a center of
nursery rcvol uuons," using the children's .~hyme that
begjns "here we go round the mulberry bush.
French told the paper that as a boy he spent a lot of
ume wuh the Canadian and Amcncan troops .camped
near his school. and he had picked up five mvas1on code
words. ~ French told the Telegraph: "Everyone knew. the
outline invasion plan and they knew the vanous
codewords Omaha and Utah were the beaches they we~
going to and the' kne" the names but not the locati ons.
We all knew the operatio n v.as called Overlord."
French said Dawe called him in soon after D-Da) and
asked to see his notebooks 1n which he had wntten what he
learned from the troop! .... He was horrified and said the
books must be burned a1 onrc. He confiscated them and I
suppose the) were (burned)."
Dawe then gave him .. a very stem lecture about
national securtt) and made me swear on the Bible that I
would tell no one about the matter. I have kept to that oath
unul now," French said.
The D-Day landmgs launched the maJor Allied
offensive against Naz1-occup1ed Europe which cul-
minated 1n Germany's surrender and the end of World
War II in the European theater 1n May 1945.
Before his death in 1963. Dawe told the BBC how MIS
..turned me inside out and .. gnlled my brother-in-law."
Jones. the other crossword complier. also was ··put
through the works. But the) cventuall) decided not to
shoot us after all." Dawe said
The paper said "full corroboration of the stol') 1s. of
course. 1mposs1ble to obtain." but added that 11 had
contacted schoolmates ofFrench who recalled clements of
the affair
When GI came
to French city
it was for good
'I've got everything here.
I've got friends ... a home
LE MOL.\Y-LllTRY. France CA P) When
Ho"ard 01lhngham rolled into this Normandy-town 1n
June I 944 with the L' S 2nd Armored D1v1s1on. the you na
~rgeant lrom Iowa ne'er dreamed he would one day bt
mamcd to one of its c1111ens and running a typical French
cafc.
But lxing a .. "ar husband .. has never bothered
Gtlhngham In the ~cars he has been here he has become
pan of the \t:cne~ melted into the local populauon,
ind1st1gu1shabk from most of the other 2.500 inhabitants
-e>.cept v.hcn he -;peals
Qq:r a beer at the Cafe de Pam 1n Le Mola)-Llllry,
(11ll1ngham·~ v.1fe. Janine. nb<i him gent!) about his broad
accent. and he acknowledges that he never really tned too
hard .
.. Whate,er I picked up at the bar. I did. but the
tustomers got used to 11." he ~1d with a smile .
·· <\ lot of people 1us1 clJdn·t understand him," added
Janine. ··1 could sec 11 on their faces. He was Just lazy. He
got the Herald Tribune (an English-language newspaper
published in Pans) e'er) da) and didn't make any effort.''
Gillingham landed in France on June 9, 1944, three
da)s after D-Day 1n the beginning of the massive
operation Overlord and the final push against Adolf
Hitler's Na11 German). Le Molay-L1ttry was liberated
June 10
Ci1lhngham\ tank maintenance unit set up camp on
the outskirts of town, and Janine Masse) was among the
man) )Oung Fre nch gjrls that came by in the evening to
listen 10 th e radio and give fresh fruit and vegetables to the
1
1\mencan soldiers .
.. His fnend Charlie' was always talking to my
_ girlfriend in English:· Janine said ''He talked loud." ~--------But Howard was much calmer and quieter and she
' ' I
hked that. she rC'Called.
··1 was 17 years old and he was 21 He was old."
Her parents were not too thnlled with the budding
romance.
"My mother told my father: 'Did you notice how she
1s seeing the same Amencan every day'> rm afraid she's
going to lcam a little more than English.'
"There were a lot of Ci ls engaged to French girls who
never came back."
I j Bclic\·l· II< H nc >l . he >l "lllll
• llH:r d~ty~ :11HI high l'lcl tril inskk: tc:n1 pcra -
tun.:. And u:-.,ing
your pc X>l -pun1p
Sudden!). on Jul) 25. G1llingham·s unit pulled out
and headed for the front fan her cast.
"He sent a note on a cigarette package saying that he
was lea' ing ... Janine laughed. "Somebod y brought it to
me and said:· An <\mcncan gave this to me to give to you.'
I didn't e'en know enough Fnglish to read 11. I didn't know
when he kfl 1fhe would e'er come back." I hill" nccdn ·1 gc > h,md 111 11.tnd
t
' f
\\ 1111 Jll"t .1 k\\ 1111nor .tdJll"t
lllC.'IH". \ (HI (. .lll .... l.1\' l ( unf< >rt.thk .. . .
.111d "·l' <: t ·11c.·1g\ .di through
I IH' "llr1111KT
It's free and easy.
I >id '< n1 kn<)\\ tll.tt 11\
kt ·<.·p1ng \ < >11r .ur c. < >11dll1< >ncr
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11
c Ill \ I >lll' l < H >Ill lg h1Jl 1
I • H:r g\ "·" tng <..Ill hv .l'-
nnplc .t" <>pt 111ng \ < >lll
\\ 11 1d 1 >\\..., 111 I llv V \ vn111g I 1 >
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onl v a.~ oftc:n a~ nl'cc"-. ~a ry to properly rnaintain
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Invest and save.
I nstalling cncrg~ efficient
appliance~ and< >lhL'r \\·cathcriz.t
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caulking and \\'Cather ~tripping
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n o -co~t o r lo\\'-<. o~t \Vays to "a' t '
cncrg)'. And< >nee
\'< >ur survc\· 1~
• #
u >n1plc:t<:. you
n1a\' even he
d1~blc f<>r rdXlll'"
and lc)\v int crc:~t
financing on
1nany co~t effective con
"l'n ~ttion n1c~L~ure~ ~o l~ll tod.t\
\X'uh IU."t .l little: hdp tron1 Fc.h"<;n .
you'll have you r ~un1n1t:r clcc.:1ril
hill \Vc:ll in hand.
-<E -Southern California Edison
But he did ..\fter tx-ing sent from Germany to a
hospital in Re1ms . France. Gillingham took a couple of
da)s and h1tchh1ked back to Normand). And that was 1t
unul 1947
"We wrote to l'3Ch other for a couple of years,'' said
C.iillingham. who had in the interim returned to Oelwein.
Iowa. But in Jan uary 1947. he returned to France. They
we re married 1n April and left for Iowa.
The) came back to Frante in 1952 when Gillingham.
a welder b} profession. got a JOb with a Belgian company
cutting up wrecked ships on the 1)-Day beaches.
"Finally we had to go back because 11 was too hard to
make a living 1n France." G1ll1ngham recounted.
"Then in 1961. my father wrote he was ready to give
up th1~ place and retire. and wanted to know 1fwc wanted
tu take 11 over." Janine said. So they packed up their
daughter and four sons and made the final move
A )'Car ago. (11lhnaham ~tired and turned over
management of the cafe to h1111 son. Marc. Now. for
C11llingham. tt'\ huntmg. fish in~ cards and above all. golf.
"f'vc got everything here.' he ~1d. "I've 1ot fncnds. r .. r got a home:·
·\nd 11omet1mcs he even forgeb he's an American.
Noted one of his fncnds. Claude Dupont: "He's
alwa)' talking about pohucs. about unemployment The
other da~ he was talkinJ about how the)' ouaht to act nd of
all those forttgncrs tak1n1Jobs. He forgets he's one 100."
642-4321
Direct or collect.
to .,ubscnbt> to your
homrtoum popt>r. th~
Baily Pilat
Mystery shrouds couple's
post-prom disappearance
'lie· d rath er be fishing than be
with a woman, it's simple as that'
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -Twelve days qo, Brian
McEwen took Beth Ann Brooks to her high school prom.
They haven't been seen since they set out for a post-prom
party, ~nd par~nts, friends and law officers investiaatlna
their disappearance arc baffled.
"lt'SJ.USl like they were swallowed up by aliens," said
Dou&las County Sheriff Richard A. Roth.
1"he herifrs department has tracked several lead$,
but nothin' has checked out. Now, detectives are hopina a
national m1ssina persons bulletin will tum up information
on the whereabouts of McEwen. 20, a sophomore
engineering student at the University of Ncbraska-
Omaha. and Brooks, 17. a junior honor roll student at
Millard South Hiih School.
They were last seen about 12:30 a.m. on Saturday,
May 12. The couple went to the prom Friday ni&ht. then
dro ve to McEwen's house where he chanacd from bis
rented white tuxedo into blue Jeans and a sweat shirt.
From there, they went to Brooks' house where she changed
clothes. .
They vanished on their way to an after-prom party at
an Omaha motel. and the mystery bc&an.
In vestigators beli eve the coupfe may have been
abducted or had an accident. They say the evidence does
not support their initial theory that McEwen and Brooks
ran away.
'That's the first thing that came to my mind. that's
the fi rst thing that came to everybody's mind," Sheriffs
Sgt. Marty l)llek said Monday. "Every time we tried to
confirm that happened. it turned out we discounted it."
"Everything doesn't add up," said Kenneth L.
~cEwcn. noting that his son was supposed to go fi shing at
8:30 the morning he disappeare~.
"He'd rather be fishing than be with a woman," the
cider McEwen said. "h's as stmp&e u that."
Cannella Brooks sajd her dauaht.er was ••haP.PY-t<>-
lucky J..~ly involved in, life and livina·~ -not hkely to
run on ~th someone she d been datina off and on for only five or SJX weeb.
"I'm just completely baffled," Mrs. Brooks said.
The parents say their children left for the after.prom
pany with no check books, credit cards, extra cash or extra
ctothina. Friends who went with them to the prom have
sa!d the couple had no intentions of runnina away, Bi&ek
said.
''They're the kind of kids you'd want your own to be "
said Brian Tracy, assist.ant manaacr at the ~ry store
where McEwen and Brook.I worked. "There s nothina in
any of their back&rounds that they'd run away."
.. We wanted" all alon• that they really did somcthin1
dumb (like run away)." said the cider McEwen. a wrilCT in
the advertising department al Nonhwest Bell Telephone
Co. "I've come 10 the point that they were abducted ...
Aaent Chuck WiJey said the FBI was trcatina the cast
as a ••possible kidnapping." But the elder McEwen said no
one has received anythina resembling a ransom demand.
.For a few days afler the couple vanished. search
partrM combed wooded areas of Douglas County for
McEwen's burnt-orange Jeep Wagoneer. But the search
turned up no sign of the couple or the Jeep.
Bilek said authonties arc checking several telephone ·
tips from Nebraska, Iowa. Missouri, Kansas and
Wisconsin on possible sightings. The sheriffs department
and the FBI were working together on the case.
"We're treating it as a very serious incident and we're
giving it a great deal of a1tt nt1on." Bilek said. "We care a
great deal for the welfare of these two juveniles.
"I'm not going tocall 1t a kidnapping. I'm not going to
call it anything." he said. "I'm not going to speculate on
what happened. We'll assume that a worst-case scenario
has taken place. and hope for the best."
Double apoeure
Pbotc_ICrapber Lord Patrick Llchfleld (left)
etanti beelde bl.a wu Uken-. a.n•elled lD
Sae
WOOL CARPETING Q-AND-A
SAVE 20°/o-35°/o
-
ON OUR BEST FROM KARASTAN, INSTALLATION INCLUDED
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBER, 1984*
BEAU CHATEAU,
;.'f.{::et plUlh i.·11'1 111htk
c hei rrm t1/n t 19 rnlri r1
Reg,. S5fi \(/ \d "11/UllcJ
5.ile $37. 9S
WOOL CELESTIAL.
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wm,otn 1:1''1..~1 plush
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Robm con ·, <harp;t (s11'1J«t to cmilf apf>"Vt!o'I}
BEAUT£, sumpcuous
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5.ilt S45 9f
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TREASURES, J K'V"P
of /ti d1/ftrrm1 tM.t1ars..
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AIO Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT~. Mey 23, 1114
HB lifeguards wa:nt ·
to 'oceanproof' kids
Marine department
starting Jr. lifeguard
program this summer
By JERRY HIRSCH
OflMO.., ..........
Newport Beach lifeguards want to
"oceanproor· your child.
The Newport Beach Marine Department
1s starting a new junior lifeguard program
for children ages nine to 15 this summer.
The five-week, five-day program wi ll
give children basic instruction in first aid,
beach and water hazards, life saving, skin
diving. manne safety. ecology, surfi ng and
physical conditioning. said Jack Lincke, a
Newport manne safety officer.
"We want to accomplish what we call
oceanproofing -teaching the kids the
different hazards of the beach environ-
ment.
"We .... ant to help them to develop the
ph)'Sll'al !>kills to that the have the strength
to reall~ enJOY the ocean safely," Linclce
said
ome of the skills the lifeguards will
teach include how to recognize a dangerous
riptide from the shore. how to swim out of
a np11de once )OU arc in 11 and how to enter
the water without nsking a spinal injury.
Spinal inJunes ha ve become increasingly
common among local swi mmers and the
lifeguards and Hoag Memorial Hospital
OCC programs set
Children\ theater groups. international
tours. )'Outh orchestras. swim programs
and business seminars are among the 350
di\ erst• programs being offered at Orange
Coa~t College th1!1 summer.
JackLlncke
have embarked on a public education
program at local schools to make students
'aware of the problem.
The lifeguards will offer two sessions of
the course. one in the morning and one in
the afternoon. starting June 25 and two
more sessions starting July 30.
There is a $75 fee but the Newport
Lifeguard Association is offering at least
one scholarship and Lincke hopes to offer
more.
The programs are detailed in a 56-page
free brochure which 1s available in the OCC
Student Ce nter Building. The office 1s open
9 a.m to 7 p.m. weekdays and from 8 a.m.
to noon on Saturdays.
For more information on the course,
contact the Newport Beach Marine De-
partment at 640-2154. A tryout will be held
at the Newport Harbor High School Pool at
9 a.m. Satuday, June 2. AIT potential junior
lifeguards must be able to swim.
But Lincke knows how popular surfing is Scholarship winners
in Newport Beach and the program will Five Huntington Beach area atudenta recently were
include teaching basic board surfing. body &lven acholanhiP8 by the Huntington Beach Chamber
surfing and boogie board skills. of Commerce to punue bualne.e-related counea In
collejle. From left are, Donald La. Hantlnfton Beach
Hl&h School and Krlata lllller. Lori Mefford, Kennetlr
Pierson and Chrl• Caawell. all of Ocean View lflCh. For 1nforma11on. call 432-5880. :::::==========:::::::.:::::::::::::=;:::::::==:==============~1
Coloring Contest
l _J
ItS A Horse Of A Different Color
Orange County Rlirgrounds • Costa Mesa • July 6-15
\\'l~NERS! One winner in each age group will be chosen. Each winner will receiH
i tickets to the Orange County Faier. Winning pictures will be posted in the Fine
i\rt& ex hibit at the fa irgrounds.
°'Al\-1£ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
i\OORF:SS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AGE GROllP 0 3-5 yn .. 0 6-8 yrs. 0 9-11 yrs.
f(I I~"' & RH,t L'\TI0\'°1
I \II rn lrt~ mu111 bf' "omplt'ted by a child m age ~oupa liated.
l ""nd ,.nlrtf"I to ( olorin~ Cont~t. P.O. Box I 560. C..oata MHA. C:A 92626
.~ \II rntri.-11 mu111 bf' rf'('f'ived by June 15 th.
MV gas station
worker burned
in gasoline fire
A Mission Viejo gas station attend.
Mary P. Ryan. professor of history ant was listed in serious condition
at UC Irvine. has been elected to the Tuesday with second-and third-
UC Irvine prof
joins national
antiquarians
American Antiquanan Society. the degree bums following a freak
governing organization for a national gasoline accident.
research library of Amcncan history Barry Tiemann. 37. sustained
in Worcester. Mass. bums over 20 percent of his upper
The soc1et} sen cs a .,.,0 rld.,., 1de body when the gasoline he was
community of scholars and re-draining from a car "Oashed" and
searchers. Its libran holds more than caught fire.
two-thirds of all material kn own to Tiemann. who was burned mo~t
have been prihted in 1h1s country severely on his arms. was fl own ~
before the year 1821 helicopter to the UCI Medical Center R~an 's field is American social and burn ward following the 5:30 p.m.
fa mil} history. Her book. "Cradle of mishap on Monday.
the Middle Class: The Family in Firemen said Tiemann was crank-
One1da Count~ Ne"" York. 1ng the engine of the car to speed the
1790-1865." won a Bancroft pnu in draining of the ~soline when the I ;~*********;;~::;******·:·;;;;***** * * i ·Harbor Lawn Memorial Park i
* * : CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO : * ATTEND THE 30th *
: ANNUAL MEMORIAL DAY :
: SERVICES :
* * a 1MONDA Y,MA Y28th , 1984 ll:OOAM 1 :
: DEDICATION OF :
: "MEMORIAL TREES" :
* * * * * SPEAKER * * OF THE DAY * * * : NAVY LT. JAMES G. PATTERSON, JR. : * Chaplain * * Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro *
* * : THERE WILL BE A ROLL CALL OF VETERANS *
: WHO HAVE ANSWERED THE LAST CALL :
: AND WHOSE C.OLORS WILL BE PLACED :
* IN THE AVENUE OF THE FLAGS. * : a
: Harbor Lawn Memorial Parll :
* * : 1625 GISLER, COSTA MESA : * 540-5554 Jt-(ADJACENT TO THE SAN DIEGO FWY. & HARBOR BLVD. SO.) :
L._ __________________ i******************************.:
.. t
~ .. -. ..-.....__, ___ -
.,
'I ,.
' ..
. -
Podiatric l~~urgical . Group
of Orange ·County
DR. CRAIG EDMOND LO.WE
Podlatrlc Surgical Group
keeps pace with research
LAS·ER SURGERY
The average person
walks three times
around the surface of
the earth In a lifetime.
"That's a lot of miles
of wear and tear.·· Dr.
Craig Lowe, founder of
the Podlatrlc Surgical
Group of Orange Coun-
ty, said.
Within the last five
years, foot surgery re-
search has taken great
strides. Advancements
such as laser tech-
nology, microsurgery,
and computerized or-
thopedic medicine are
now speeding up the
healing and dlagnosltc
process for foot ail-
ments and Injuries, ac-
cording to Lowe. Lowe
Is a board-certified
podiatrist with fellow-
ship degrees by The
American College of
Foot Orthopaedics,
American Academy of
Podlatrlc Laser Sur-
gery , Amer i can
Academy of Podlatrlc
M icrosurgery, and
American Academy of
Podlatrlc Sport Medi-
cine. -,
At the Podlatrlc
Surgical Group of Or-
ange County, quality
foot care Is provided to
each patient to ensure
reduced pain, disability,
and time off work.
Laser technology In-
volves the use of carbon
dioxide lasers which
vaporizes diseased tis-
sue with retatlvely no
bleeding. adhesions, or
scar tissue, according
to Lowe.
This type of treatment
Is used for routine
procedures such as
heel spur surgery. In-
BOARD CERTIFIED FOOT SPECIALIST
grown naJls, and wart
tumors, or for the cor-
rection of bunions,
hammertoes with corns,
and calluses.
Microsurgery, which
Lowe performs by look-
ing at the Injury through
a surgical microscope,
Is used when nerve
tumors, traumatic ar-
tery lacerations, or
forelgn bodies are en-
countered.
Compurterlzed or-
thopedic medicine re-
quires the use of an
electrodynogram
(EOG). Similar In func-
t ion to the elec-
trocardiogram which Is
used on the heart to
discover the causes of
heart abnormalities, the
EOG finds out the
mechanical causes for
back, leg and foot dis-
ease.
DR. CRAIG EDMOND LOWE
SPECIALIST IN LOWER EXTREMITY INJURY, DISEASE & SURGERY OF THE FOOT
American Board Certified Podlatric Specialist
Fellow American Academy of Podlatrlc Laser Surgery
Fellow American Academy of Podiatrlc Microsurgery
Fellow American College of Foot Orthopaedics
American Academy of Podlatrlc ~ports Medicine
NEW TECHNOLOGY AND ADVANCED PROCEDURES NOW MAKE FOOT & LEG PROBLEMS LESS PAINFUL TO CORRECT
* RECOllSTRUCTIYE FOOT SURGERY
'· l
" ·'
•
)
* LASER SURGERY
Immediate Ambulation, minimal bleeding & swelling, faster healing
* MllllMIL lllCISIOll AllD MICROSURGERY
* SURGICAL IMPLlllT PROCEDURES FOR ARTHRITIC
JOlllTS OF THE FOOT
Advanced Ambulatory surgical foot procedures. Immediate Ambulation.
Reduced swelling, speeds healing with minimal trauma.
* SPORTS I REHABILITATIVE MEDIClllE * HOSPITAL I OFFICE AMBULATORY SURGERY * COMPUTERIZED ORTHOPAEDIC IEDIClllE
Benefit from new state-of-the-art computerized analysis for foot, knee, limb & back disease .
CALL 646-1619 24 hr. phone.
\
MARINER'S MEDICAL PLAZA• SUITE 105
355 PLACENTIA A VENUE • NEWPORT BEACH (Next to Hoag Hospital)
•
ADDITIONAL LOCATIONS OPENING SOON
• • • . • . , . . • • . . . . . • . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . . . . .
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneectay. May 23. 1884
What summertime blues?
Sometimes there are advantages
to NOT live right along the coast ---
I remember a time whrn my biggest
ambition was to work very hard, savl·
all of my money and bu) a house right
on the sand in Newport Beach. Yup.
That's what I wanted to do alright. I
guess that you could chalk that one up
to the ignora nce of youth. I've learned
a lot since then and I learn even more
each time that Ann and l ventu re
down to the beach during the summer
month s.
As I ma) haYe men11oned somc-
ume before. we hw fairl\ close to the
beach. at least close enough to where
we can hear the surf at night. .\nd lhc·
yelling. And the screaming. And the
music. We have to make special
concessions during the summer. For
example. if we plan to go out onto
Brookhurst, we have to go up
Bushard till we come to a street that
has a traffic signal on Brookhurst.
It's that or sit there for upwards of
20 minutes waiting for a break in
traffic at an uncontrolled inter-
section.
Those breaks in traffic can be
1ncredibh few and far betwee n. For
example:·
Last Sunda~. Ann and I decided to
Central America
beginning to look
like S. Vietnam?
WASHINGTON -Shirtl) after
the last Americans left f;"etnam. a
friend of mine got into an argument
with a noted hawk who contended
that if the United States had onl)
persevered 1t could have wo n the war
My fnend did not argue with that
America could have won. he agreed
-but at what cost to the country.,
The noted hawk got his point Some
wars. he conceded. vou win abroad
and lose at home. ·
We are fast approaching that point
when it comes to Central America.
The area 1s not yet another Vietnam.
neither in scope nor 1n the ex tent of
Amencan partic1pat1on. but alrcad}
we see one pattern being repeateq. It's
harder and harder to believe what our
own government 1s sa~ing.
That was the hallmark of the
Vietnam era. Sure. the United States
was in"olved 1n an unpopular and
unwise war and there would ha"e
been dissent in an' case. But "'hat
gave the dissent its impetus and
so metimes 1\s nast) edge of '1olcnce
was the belief that our O\.\.n go' crn-
rn enl was lying to us -conducting
secret bombings. fals1f~1ng figures.
deceiving Congress.
.\II of that 1s present no"' in Central
America. President Reagan·s
speeches on the suhJl'l t Jrc full of
Lyndon Johnson-like h~ perbok and
.. facts" of his own concot1on -
Nicaragua's official an11-Scrn1t1sm.
for instance. We continue to conduct
a coven war against the SandinlSlas
which was launched \.\.1thou1 an-
nouncement or debate. Its e\lstencc
was re' ea led in the press -not in :.i
press release -and 1t sttll g~s
offic1all) unacknowledged b} the
adm1n1strat1on itself -much li ke the
so-called secret bombing of Cam-
bodia
S1rnllarl\. ·\mt•ncan 1n\'olvernent
in the min.ing of ~icaraguan harbors
- a '1nual act of war -also was
done secreth . It was done so secrell\.
IO fact. that some kC\ members Of t))c
Senate lntelllgl:nce' Committee -
notabl\ Sen~ Daniel Patrick
Movn1han and Barrv Goldwater -
complained that they were JU~t plain
decci\'ed.
It turns out no"' that the l ln1tcd
States pumped '>Orne $1.4 rn11l1on
into the El Sah ador elections. mos th
to secure the clcct1on of Jo<;i.·
Napoleon Duane The rca~on Wl'
know this 1s that Sen. Jcsst' Hdms
shot his mouth ofT. WhatC\ er \Ou
may think of his alleged secur1t~
breach-and some senator~ think 1!''i
awful -11 too conta1m lhl' umtakd
bleat of dett'pllon I klm' 1' all hut
sa'ing. "But I thuught Wl' V.l'H'
LETTERS . --------~ -
RICHARD
COHEN
neutral" -a complaint echoed by
'iOrne Salvadoran politicians.
And no"" the press is reporting that
the administration seems to have
fou nd ways of circumve nting con-
gressional restrictions o n mihtar) aid
to Central America. The government
allegedly has shuffied budgets. taken
Pentagon money and given 1t to the
CIA. The Defense Department. for
instance. has altesedly provided the
CIA with gun s. ships and planes -in
cfTect subsidizing 11 and alloY.ing 11 to
skin congressional resmcttons on !ls
acttvn1cs. And there ha\.e been even
more recent report!> tha1 the CIA has
pre\allcd upon the Israelis 10 func-
tion as A.mencan surrogates and help
the Contras.
We haH' seen 1h1s !>Ort of thing
before. Tht' operattng rncntaht) 1s
arrogance -the conv1c11on that the
si tuation 1'1 so critical. so stark. that 11
justific~ either unethical or e>.tra-lcgal
actions. In thl.' end . .\mencans and
their elccted representatives get
treated like the). too. are the enem\.
Information 1s w1theld. Congress is
c1rcurn ve nted and rhctonc 1s inflated
to Justtf) what has al read) been done
.\lread\. much of what the adm1n-
1stratton Savs about Central Amenca
has lo be taken with a grain of salt. A
kind of Vietnam-era nnic1sm hovers
over this t0\.1.0 - a suspicion th at the
announced age nda 1s not the real
agenda and that despite assurances to
the con trar). the worst 1s yet to come.
Central Amenca 1s not vet Viet-
nam. Amencan troops are not rcall)
engaged in the fighting and few of
them are there anyway. But 1t re -
sembles Vietnam in the adminis-
tration's con\'1ction that it has a
rnonopol) on the truth and 1t multi
pursue a t't'rta1n pohc} rcgardle'is of
popular op1n1on. This was the ul-
11rnate m1'\takc of Vietnam.
In Central Amcnca. the winner has
)el to be determined. But the lost'r is
becoming more and more obvious.
lt'c; the adrn1n1stra1ion's credib1lil\.
Richard Cohea I~ a syndicated
columnist.
BILL
HARVEY
treat ourselves. We hadn't been out to
breakfast in what seemed like a verv
long time, so we headed up to Costa
Mesa. It was also an opportunity to
ride our motorcycle. While we were
out. we decided to see 1fwe could find
a T-shirt store.
We decided to go to the beach. We
decided that since they sold all sons of
tourist goodies there. they'd be likely
to have T-shins. We mad(' it down to
Balboa fsland alright. and there were
two T-s hin stores. but neither had
what we were looking for.
We wcnt to catch the ferry . That's
when we should have heeded the
warning and gone home. There were
about 35 cars in line. Now. with
regards 10 motorcycles and the ferry.
it's generally accepted that motor-
cycles are very like bicycles and so we
usually ride to the head of the line and
get on. keeping to one side. This in no
way effects the number of cars that --------------------------------------------• can board. We did th is. lfwe had only
gone home instead.
There used to be a T-shirt store on
the peninsula at the felT) landing. h
was still there. but had changed. No
T-shirts. We decided to go up to the
Newport pier. There had to be a T-
shirt store there.
Heading west on the peninsula. we
came to the street where vou have to
tum left to get to the Newport pier.
There was a car ahead of us. waiting 10
make a U-turn. so we pulled up to his
nght.
There was a sohd hne of traffic
corning. And still coming. And still
some more comm~! There was now a
string of cars behind us. waiting 10
tum left. The traffic kept corning~
Somewhere. back up the street. a light
had to change to red and cause a break
in the traffic, didn't 1t? Well. d1dn '1 it''
Apparcntlv no t. There was a stead\
'itrtn& of bumper-to-bumper traffic as
far as 'Jhe eye could see. I didn't time
the thing. but I'm certain that we sat
there for at least six mmutes. and the
traffic showed no sign of lessen inf.!..
I suppose that at that point I could
ha ve decided to continue up tile
peninsula to PCH and headed for
home. but after investtng all of that
time in th is thing. it had become a
matter of honor. rm absolute!) sure
that the people in the cars behind us
felt the same ~a~.
I was sudden!) struck w11h msp1ra-
llon! I turned to Ann and suggested
that she might en1oy a little stroll
along the crosswalk. She agreed.
She ~ot ofT the bike. went to the
island m the center of the street and
\'Cry bravely inserted her left foot rnto
the now of traffic. It obediently
screeched to a halt and Ann started
across. I zipped across the street and
waited at the comer for her.
Now. Ann 1s one of the most
cons1dcra1c people I have ever
known. She always thinks of the other
fellow. I'm sure that she was doing
just that as she very slowly strolled
across the street and allowed full\ fi, e
cars full of waving. clapping. chc.enng
folks. all of whom loved her at that
moment. to cross.
You know. I've alwavs known that
Ann 1s prett y enough 1·0 ~lop traffic.
but on that Sunday. I was treated to a
practical demonstration of that fact.
I don't leave home without ht"r.
Co/umai11t Bill Harvey lives in
Huatlagtoa Beach.
F ALN may be making plans
to terrorize Olympic Games
' WASHINGTON -Intelligence
reports warn that the radical Puerto
Rican revolutionary group. known by
the dread leners FALN. has set up
mobile camps across the Mexican
border to train terrorists for attacks
on the Summer Olympic Games in
Los Angeles.
Ominously. the reports also predict
that the FALN's violent leader.
William Morales, will soon be re-
leased from a Mexican pnson and
delivered into the custody of leftist
authorities in the Tijuana area. That's
as close to Los Angeles as ht' could get
to set up terrorist headquarters
without crossing into U.S. Jurisdic-
tion.
The So' 1et gncvances against the
Los Angeles Olympics. meanwhile.
will encourage the terronsts to strike
all the harder. U.S. 1ntelhgencc
sources fear. The FALN is led b)
hard-hoe Marxists who ape the
Moscow hne and tend. in the way of
young revolutionaries, to translate
propaganda into violence.
This group 1s regarded by the FBI as
the No. I terronst threat to the United
States, and Morales is this nation's
most wanted terrorist. According to
an intelligence document, ··the F ALN
has been responsible for over 150
terrorist bombings in the U.S. since
its founding in 197 3. ... (It) has
developed an extensive terrorist
network stretching across the U.S.
and into Mex ico. Morales is also
developing links with insurgent
movements in Central America."
My associate Jon Lee Anderson
spent most of a day with Morales in
the max imum security wing of
Recl usorio None. a model Mexican
prison on the outskirts of Mexico
Cit). This was supposed to have been
the first of a series of meetin~s.
leading up to a visit to the terronst
camps.
But rhe dialogue broke down.
Morales was willing to con11nue the
screen ing process but left the decision
to his FALN comrades in the United
States. They finally said no.
But A.nderson did not come back
without a story. He's th e only re-
porter. after all. who has been allowed
to meet the FALN leader. Morales 1sa
dc1crrn1ncd revolutionary and Marx-
JACK
AIDEISOI
1i.t zealot driven at once by idealism
and hatred, a would-be usurper who
justifies himself as the avenger of
terrible wrongs. Yet he's the mere
boss of a small gang who seeks to stir
up a mass following.
"I am a member of a revolutionary
movement which is at war wtth the
United States go vernment." he told
my reporter.
· The 34-year-old Morales. a shm
man· with a cofTee-colored complex-
ion. is shocking to look at. His mouth.
chin and both hands were blown ofTin
a bomb explosion at an FALN bomb
factory 1 n New York 1 n 1978. He has a
single digit that passes for a finger on
each stump. It's all he needs. ap-
parently. to feed himself and attend to
his basic needs.
With these stumps. he escaped
from the fourth floor of a New York
prison hospital in 1979. Incredibly.
he used wire cutters, smuggled into
the prison. to cut his way through a
wire-mesh window screen. With 10
feet of elastic bandage, which he wet
to strengthen, he lowered himself
down the outside wall of the hospital.
He then had to drop more than 30
feet. Police found deep footprints in
the grass under his window.
Morales' dramatic escape occurred
on May 21. 1979. He disappeared into
the underground and, according to an
intelligence report, "began operating
between Mexico and the U.S." Police
located hi s wife. Dylcia Pagan Moral-
es. in Chicago and traced her incom-
ing calls from Mexico.
The FBI tipped ofT the Mexican
authonties that Morales was plotting
to bomb a joint U.S.-Mexican legis-
lative conference. This led to a
shootout in the city of Puebla on May
28. 1983. Morales was captured after
his companion fell dead in a hail of
bullets. A police officer also died in
the exchange
Morales was sentenced to 89 years
in prison. which would keep him out
of circulation for a long time. Out
Anderson found Morales confidm
that he would soon be freed. Tele-
graphed my reporter: "U.S. lawmen.
who want Morales extradited. might
do well to worry that he could slip
from their clutches in Mexico."
Not long after I received this report.
my associate Donald Goldberg
lea med from intelligence reports that.
indeed. Morales is e,,;pected to be
handed over to left ist authorities in
Tijuana. They are expected to give
him free rein to direct the terrorist
training in clandestine camps in
northern Mexico.
BLUNDER OF THE WEEK: The
National Gallery of An. which pndes
itself on perfection in matters artistic.
has a king-sized goof in its richly
illustrated new catalog: On page 30 of
the "Catalogue of Color Repro-
ductions No. 6:' the multi-milhon-
dollar Picasso, "'Family ofSaltimban-
ques." is printed backward.
The reversed picture was spotted
by a gallery employee -but not
before the $25.000 press run of some
50.000 catalogs was virtually com-
plete. But buyers of the S 1 catalogs
may be winners after all. Like
inverted postage stamps, such print-
ing errors have a way of increasing in
value. The next press run will display
the picture correctl y. making the
imperfect catalogs collectors' items.
KITCHEN KUTS: Remember
when admin1s1rat1on budget cutters
tried to palm ofT ketchup as a
.. vegetable" in school lunches? Now
the Office of Management and
Budget has dropped a SI 0 millton
program that provides stoves, re-
frigerators and other equipment to
schools starting up lunch programs.
Aides of Rep. Stephen Solarz. 0-
N. Y .• spotted the omission and are
detennined to put the heat on the
administration to get back in the
kitchen.
Jack Alld~rsoa 11 a •yadicate4 co/umal•I.
Nuclear evacuation plan ~~~1~·'~e~.t~~~·l~l1\ mom·~·~ "a,tt:d DALE BRADFORD
Newport Beach
the police were to begin issuing
citations for littering the word would
spread and the response fro m th e
public would be positive and quick.
Our local judges should be en-
couraged lo le vy hea vy fines or. as an
alternative. require that the offenders
spend one or two weekends cleaning
up the beach. wearing apparel boldly
identtfying them as httcrbuits.
Please. if you have any respect for
our beautiful beach and for the
residen~s and taxpayers who pay fo r
ns maintenance and upkeep. do
something posi11vt> now.
leave this reader nervous Paper not place for Playmate
fo the Ld1tor
I am wornl·d Jhout thl' 1.1\ II
defrnsc rn<i1!. rt•lnrn11on plan for
Orangt.' ( ount' that tht• h'lkral go' -
ernment t'> prt'\cnth "'ork1ng on I
don't 'il·c ho"' 'iuch a plan rnn \.I.Ork
Bas1call) the idea ~hind tht<i plan
1s that when our govcmml'lll think'>
nuclear attack 1'> 1rnrn1nc111. wt• < )i.
ange Count1ans "ill dn \ l' oul into tht•
desert and camp out
But how l'an \uch an <lpproach
work., For 1nstanrt'. ran H>u 1mag1m:
hal f of the care, in Orange Count'
trying to get on tht• Rn cr.,1dc f rrcwa~
at the s.am<" 11mc -""h rach dn,cr
foanng that a h\drogen hornb ma\
explndr 1n th<' .-.k \ aho\.c at aO\
~ond" \Cl a\ f understand II
somt·thmg do'>e In thar 11; what tht·
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
•• 1f ~-••• . .. ' ..
: I
federal 11\d dctcnsc pcopk ha\.c in
mind for u'I 1n th e event of a nuclear
alert
E\ en though 5UC'h thinking•~ nutt ~.
11 1s sttll dangerous Th1o; l'I IX"1.'a11.-.e
cns1<; rclocatmn planning - on thc
~urla<:c. at least -contnhutcs to the
1lluc;wn that ..afcty can tx: pro' 1dcd to
tht' puhltl m tht' even t of a n1.ll lcar
awwk Nuclear war thus becomes
pc.·rcc1 vcd a') a k!ts l'atastroph1c and
more acceptable cvcnt than 1t rcall)' I!>
-leading to a greater poss1b1llt} that
out govemrncnt "di nsk fighting
sudt a war
Th1'i t\ a \C~ important mat11.·r
< on.-.eqUl'ntl\, tht•rt' should t-H.· puhlit
hcanngc, lo l'J1<lrn1ne all :J!>fX•t'h of a
crt'>I!> rl·lm.at1on plan tor Oranitc
H. l. Schwartz Ill
I f 11 t r~
Chezy OoweUby
£1111,,, "'"A, .. , 111111
,, H•'4 ~ 1hl14-hf111
Frank Zlnl "'', ,..,, r 11i1
Tom Tait
c, ~ • 1r"
To the Edttor·
The Saddlcback Collet n>t•d \\hu
made Playboy maga11ne\ "Playmate
of the Year .. should be "'-''1 proud of
accomplishing 1h1~ recogn n1on Hn"'-
cvcr. I don't think the Dail) Pilot
should be very proud ofthe1rdrt iswn
to display the huge f)hoto on thr front
page of the Friday. Ma> I I t•d1tton
\how 1ng her holding th e Playbo}.
\\Ith the nsquc front cover photo.
Anyway. that was a great plug for
the magazine. Maybe 1 should cancel
m y Daily Pilot subscripti on and
!.ubscnbe to Photoplay.
CHARLES HERMANN
Balboa
NB 's sands a public disgrace
To the Editor:
I read with intcrc•-.i and ~mr
amusement the Ma)' 7 an1clc 1n the
Dail) Pilot C'onccrningour soon-to-be
"three whl"eling cop'i" and the long
ltne of volunteers for th1~ new "fun"
tx-ach dut) Thereafter I went for a
walk along our ocean front from the
pier north to the HOO block and came
back mad as hell. Wh >? B«nusc r
rcahtt'd that. under the present
poltC')'. two. 20 or 200 officers on foot,
hor~back, JttP or moton1ed tncy-
clcs will do absolute!)' nothtn& to ~tem
the ever 1ncreuing use of our beauti-
ful beach as a dumping around The
trash and garbage deposited on our
ht-ach . ''dcwalh. 'itf'T'tt\ and to the
ocean hv the uni:" titled ingrate!> who
enjoy the free use thereof 1s appalling
and sickening to tht' stomach.
I invite the mayor. city cou ncil and
chief of police to v1s1t West Newport
Reach af\er a busy day. particularly
on weekend evenings and ~e for
~ourselves the unbelievable trash and
filth. Aside from the aross ugliness of
what you will sec is what you won't
sec. that is. until you enter the water
for a swim and encounter the bottles.
C'ans and a variety of prbagt
1 have en1oyed this beach si nce the
early 30!> and have been pn v1lcged<~o
own an ocean front home for nearly
20 years during which time I have not
'>een or heard of anyone, be1na arre~ted for httcnnit Unenforced
law!i arc ~or<;(' than no laws at all If
PHJLLIP R.
MCGRAW
Newpbrt Beach
Coastline College costly tenant
To the Editor.
In r~rd to your editorial in the
April 4 tSSue entitled "College d1stnct
gets a blueprint for the future" you
reported that the Evans Management
Services repon supports Coastline
Colleae -the unique "college
without a campus."
I was surpnsed b~ this becau5e thl'
fact remains that Coastline College
has to pay rent on all their difTertnt
locations. Why can't we put thei;e
classes for adults in Oranae Coast and
Golden West colleges'? This would
save the taitpayers much money. This
money could be used by our two-year
colleges and for our young people
from kindcrgancn to 12th grade.
The money that 1s spent for adult
education is taken from our young
people.
At a time of light money do we
taxpayers need 10 P<lY $2 million a
year to operate KOCE TV station'>
• MARY PEARSON
Costa MHA
Prevent
tragedy
in pools
CHICAGO (AP)-If you own one
of the 4 million residential swimmint
pools in the United States, it's time
for a refresher course on swimmint
pool safety, says Tod Turriff, man-
qer of the public safety department
of the National Safety Council.
"Each year between 600 and 700
~pie drown and another 6S,000 arc
injured in all types ofswimmina pool
accidents," be said. "About one haU
of these accidents happen in residen-
tial swimmint pools. Most could
have been prevented with proper
knowledae and training in swimming
pool safety." I
He has these safety tips:
•Pool security: swimming pools
must be enclosed by a fence or wall at
least 4 feet hiah to prevent small
chjldren or unwanted users from
gettina into the pool. The fence or.
wall should have a self-latchina pte
mechanism; latches should be hiah
enouah that small children can't
reach them. Gates should be locked
when the pool is not in we.
Ideally, the fence or barrier should
completely surround the perimeter of
the swimming pool. When the house
is used as a part of the barrier, extra
care must be taken to prevent access
to the pool area (through doors and"
windows) by young children.
Although security latches arc often
used to prevent this type of un-
authorized entry, remember that they
may also prevent escape in the event
of an emCf1Cncy.
T h ese chairs were designed
to keep the body aligned
By Mlc;HALENE BUSICO
Of ... ....,,.. .....
rwo newly imported concepts in home furniture arc about to bit the
Orange County matkct -and it may never be the same.
On first glance, the weary shopper miaht not realize that skctchy-lookina
Balans are ·'chairs," and the conventional looking "Pack and Carry"
furniture has made its name by collapsing.
Balans was conceived. the story goes, by two Norwegian arohitects
having a casual dinner. They were sittina on a sofa, watcbina television and
ca ting off a low coffee table.
"Sitting up and leaning over bunches up your stomach and isan
uncomfortable way to cat." Danica furniture store manager LaGrecia Eason
sa1d. "The architects decided that there bad to be a bener way."
The pair collaborated with physicians and physical therapisu, who
maintain that some conventional seating can contribute to chronic beck and
muscle pain.
Though the resulting seating varies from low padded round hollows to
wooden easel-like structures. all are based on the same two princip&es:Tbc
optimal sittingan&le is I 20degrees, not the conventional 90depees;aod
wciaht should be distributed over the knees and lower pan of the body, not
the middle.
Eason said the pieces automatically alian the spine, promote beuer
circulation, leave the diapbra&m completely uninhibited for freer breathi111.
and give bener space to the internal orpns.
"A lot of people come in here to try out the chair bec::aute their doctor or
physical therapist recommended it," she said.
But customen often buy them for sewing chain, dinina room chain or
just because they like the modem. sculptured look of them.
Of course. some people arc intimidated by the outlandish dcsisns. Euoa
coaxes them into trying the innovative furniture by usina only Balans in the
store's office area.
"For a second yo\lbave to forget about the prejudice you miaht have and
just sit in it... youbavetoseeit won'tbunyou,"sbesaid. .. In the recliner, you
arc sort of suspended in air-this is the chair people are really IC&Rd of-
I've had people lean back and scream."
She said older customers arc usually the bard.est to convince, while
children can't wait to play on the furniture that does look rather toy-like.
• The 8a1ans stool, the most popular desi&n. costs S 17 S for the stationary
•Deck a.rca and pool: Keep a rina
buoy with a line attached and a
slrOllJ. liahtweight pole I 0 to 12 feet
Iona in the pool area at all times.
Take a load off your feet -lean back into a ~ poettlon ln the Stand-In (left), wblcb
often npport for an arm and tee and an
or port.able model. The Balans T ripodis, the scary combination of stool, chair
Aa...·tabl b dr Tb • -:f:b t• andrecliner,scllsfor$430. •""-e ea eat. e ~ut o &en ThosethrecstylesarecurrentlystockcdintheCostaMesaDanicasto~ an upbolatered.eatandabeadcu on that (Piea. wCJIAIRA/82)
A telephone should be accessible
and emergency phone numbers
placed riaht next to it: police, fire.
hospital, rescue squad, paramedics,
doctor. etc. In case someone falls in or
is injumt you will be prepared to act
fasL
doablea u a backreat.
Water depth should be clearl)'.
marked on the pool deck and, 1f
possible, above the water line of the
.pool wall. Markings should be d is.-
played in feet and inches. and in a
contrastint color to the deck and pool
finish.
Your future may hold a better TV set
High-definition the tube may become the biggest
revolution in television since the
introduction of color in the 1950s. It's
called high-definition television. or
HDTV, and it could put the clarity of
TV on a par with the movies.
m ea n s movie
.. Divina into shallow water can
result in cervical spine injuries caus-
inJ permanent paralysis," Turriff
said. "Prohibit diving into abovc-
around p<?Ols. Strictly supervise the
use of diving boards and water sJides
-and make sure this equipment is
desisned for use in your type of pool."
cla rity on the tube What makes HDTV so aood? A
hiah-definilion TV system has more
than I ,000 scanning Jines, nearly
twice the number of today's TV
screens. The dot.s that make up each
line arc closer t0$Cthcr, so the picture
has four or five tames as much detail,
or resolution, as contemporary TV.
By CHANGING TIMES
Tllell ................
Deep and shallow water areas of a
pool should be separated by a semi-
permanent float line, he said. This
serves as a visual reference for non-
swimmers and can be used to support
a swimmer in an emergency.
Scene: your living room. Time: the
1990s. You sit back in your easy chair
and press a button, and a huge TV
screen lights up with the brilliant
colors and clarity that you now see
only in movie theaters. The screen is
extra-wide, and the sound is high-
fidelity stereo.
This impressive transformation of
Furthermore, the screen would be
25 percent wider than the screens you
sec today. HDTV would transmit
more color information than ordi-
nary TV. showing differcnc,cs in hue.
saturation and intensity.
YOUNG VOICES
A BIG HIT WITH
MUSIC GROUP
By ANN CONWAY
...,Pll9tC.1 J 1 ~I I
Moist eyes, lumps in the throat and hearty applause
arected I()() kinderprtcn and first-jJ'3dC students when
they provided the musical entertainment at the Hunt·
ington Harbour Philharmonic Committee's rcc.cnt board
installauon and luncheon.
Performina in the pool area of the Newporter. the
children had dressed in thcir"Sunday best'' to salute the
success of the Orange County Philharmonic Society's
musical reinvestment program.
Annually, each Philharmonic chapter isawarded I 0
percent ofits fund-raising proceeds for musical enrich-
ment prOifams.
For Huntinaton Harbour. the reinvestment op-
ponunity is sizable. Last rear's proceeds from the annual
Christmas Symphony of iibts (nightly boat tours through
the harbor) netted the ~oup $63,000.
The chapter uses its funds to hire music teacher Carol
Gilfoy who works with students in Harbour View ai:id
Smith schools in Huntington Beach and McGaugh m Seal
Beach. All arc schools that harbor area children attend.
The aroup also arants money to the Joint Co~ncil for
Education Tccbnolo1Y that suppons Channcl 12 1n
providina musical programm1n1 for primary grades.
Installed as new Harbour board members for 1984
were Su4n CIMH, chairman, and Yvoue llelley, Nucy
&.asakll, atriey StJtl.lqer, lletemary Sml' M ...
M•teleo11, R•t~ Rowe, BettJ WatlM and ltay MJluo.
Jerry Railey(Cruiscofli&hts cbiirman) and Joyce Wel11
(Boat Parade chairman)afso attended.
Enjoyi'\I thedaywcreJeyceReHme. county
Philharmonic chairman; Jama P'eltoa, president of the
Philharmonic county board; 89' El1a1, executive director,
and BM Wat.-, 1983 boat pantde arand manhal. ••• It t.a.kesa heap o' lovin to make a house a home - or
a restaurant a refuse, the way Andrei no de Santis does.
At a ~nt dinner party benefitina the Huntintton
Harbour Cancer Lcaaue in bis intimate Andrcino's in San
Ocmcntc, de Santis hovered over bis aucsu with wine
pourina. platcclcarinaand a dotina .. tseveryt.hintall
risJttr' attention to detail.
The results were decidely dctainina. Second rounds of
espresso and encores or· Am verderci Roma" on the
acoordion punctuated an evenina ftllcd wit!t aencrous
portionsofantiputo(proffcred toauesuas they
"debuted .. from chartered Grclhounds), alorious ltahan
varietals (poured while they waited to be ~•ted) and
tonellini, vcal, IClmpi and dessert. Two thousand dollan wu the result of the effort
spearheaded by Mama lMPlla. which wau fund-ra1san'
fint forthearouR, In the past, the leque'sannual .. Debut'
fa hion show, held in the fall, has been the only money·
maker. Enloyin1theevcn1nawerc~lld and Jerry llaUey,
Ktnderaarten and flnt-&rade atadenta
from lruntln&ton Barbour AD& when the
ar ea'• Phllb&rmontc Committee offtcen
were lnatalled. Seated In front are Sandra
Sa.rd and BlUWU..., Oelornand Dr. Mwa~Ollvatts,
Su4ra and Dr. Robert a .. ae, Jeu and LHZlmmermu,
&.arya and Merrit StoH, Nick and Joyce SUa1ea, Dine
and Mario Aas.cl (just named national president of Home
Savinpof Amcnca), Sally and Roser Feai., Aqe .. and
DH 8artle14er and Dert1 and Fcrydoun Ahadpour.
Alsoapplaudinade Santis' self proclaimed "aod·
fathcrina" for the event were Tom Lo•1llll!11 Jayae and
Ralpli Clave,8'1rley.and MlkeSUhlqer, Myra and JobD
Stillmu, Vlr1ta1a and FnU 811ttlla, Joun and 1tt1
Olxoa. Uoy• and Bob~ Irma and KUTJ RJe1el,
Jouu and Georse Chae, Mlfltry Colemu with Dan
OoneJ, YvOllH and Pat ltelley, Pat and Otto Stre~ow,
Olut and Enle aoea.1 and Joa1 Motola
The basic technology for HDTV is
already available. but because of high
costs and other complications, it
could take a decade or longer to reach
vour living room.
First, the Federal Communications
Commission would have 10 allocate
vast amount.I of new wnnel space,
and broadcasters miaht have to invest
in expensive new cameras and stud.lo
equipment. To receive HDTV broad-
casts, you would have to buy a new
type of TV set that could easily cost
more than twice as much as the one
you have now.
Would the picture be wonh the
price? Manufacturers arc betting that
the movies you watch on pay TV.
cable TV and videocassette recorders
will make you long for cinematic
quality.
Because one channel of high-
dcfinition television could require as
much bandwtdth as five of today's
TV channels, HDTV is considered
impracticaJ for VHF or UHF broad-
casu. Instead, the propammina
wouJd probably be transmitted by
satellite and beamed straiabr from the
sky lo• dish antenna on your roof, or
satellite signals couJd be sear to •
cable TV operator's dish antenna and
then transmitted to your home by
cable.
The satellite would probably be a
special, high-powered type called a
direct-broadcast satellite. The first of
those may be launched m 1986.
lkfore the FCC st.arts allowing
HDTV programs to be bounced off
satellites, there's a chance that you'll
be able to watch high-definition
movies on video cassette tapes. Of
course, you would need a new typC of
videocassette recor<kr as well as a
new TV .
lronica.Uy. It~ video couJd come to JDOYJC dllellen bidbtt
ir ear.en tbe home. By usiJ111 u
HDTV videocusette a.pc in place of tum. theaters c::ouJd eliminare I.be
need to hire • C01t1y projection
cnaincer. Theaters could also receive
hi&h-definition video movies direct.ly
from production studios via satellite.
Some movie producers a.re already
trying to repla~ 35mm film witb
high-definition videotape at the pro-
duction stage.
PERSONAL STYLE
Dell't ............ .., 0.... IWllftMfl
Cloaae, chairman; Kay Miiano, board
member and pa.t chairman; and J oyce
Reaume, OranJ.e County Pbllbarmonlc
Society Women •Committee. cbatrman.
Junona thoee emofin& the pYOtftm and
lancb were, abon left, C-rom left, Jud.Ith IYeJ,
Joan Land and Suan Qaqa.ndab, and, a hon,
from left, Lindy Smit.Ii, Cindy Jla.rrtaon and
Vlrjtnla Boccella.
PILAR
WAYNE
CAftA&cu:nl ...... ._ ___ ._ .................. .
I I '
al Ot'MQ9 Oout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May 23. 1984
fParentless children need love, too
1
• OBAR ANN deH&,htparentswith word or deed. This isa terrible
' LANDERS: l feel sad depnvation. .
I forthcwoman who The emptiness onife without parents is indescribable. wrote"Musingsofa A i Childless Couple... II Only otberparentlesschHdren can understand the depth of
'
But if people who art pain and despair that never aoes away.
crying buckets be· I •ID£1$ We arc parcntlesschildren -not by choice but b}' 1c.ausctheycan't have I.JI fate. Please pray for us for we have not11ven up hopt. Pray
children oftbeir own ••••••••••••• that even though we arc not "fruit of thy womb" or "seed would take a less than of thy loin" some wonderful people will take us in. Perhaps
·•perfect" child. a whole new world would open up to them. the reason God made parcntless children was to fulfill
Here is my contribution: childless couples who wish to become parents.
MUSINGS OF PARl;NTLESS CHILDREN Please overlook that we are notall infants. not all
We arc parentlesschildren, not by choice but by fate. perfect, and perhaps not even of your race. Just remember
Do you know us? I doubt it, because we are kept in that we have a great deal oflove to give and are waiting for
"homes ... Some ofus are handicapped, mentally. someone who wants it. All we need is a chance. -SAD
physically or emotionally. We come in a variety of colors ALL OVER THE WORLD
-yellow, red, black, brown and white. .
1 We are parentlessch1ldren. Even 1f we are put in foster
, homes, we still don't fit in When the conversation turns to
DEAR SAD: My tbaaks for a poipant and aenaible
cootrtbatioo. l llope somebody Hsten1. Any adoption
a1eocy will direct people who are interested ln a "lea a tban
perfect" cbUd. Sucb children are plentiful and tbelr
gratitude is boundless.
parents and families. We really don't have any to call our
own.
We will never know the feel ofloving parental arms
, hugging us, or see the pride in our parents' eyes when we
•accomplish a goal. We will never have the opportunity to
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 happen to be a person who
I . enjoys moments of silence. I find il soothing and restful.
• ·-
)
I HELP y ~~RSELF --
:chest pains? Get diagnosis
~ Heart problem
·not the only
· cause of pain
have a heart problem 1s actually very that appears m the middle of the chest
small. Numbers, however, nse with after exertion. exposure to cold or
age, in males and according to the !.'motional stress. The pain is usually
following risk factors: a family history accompanied by shortness of breath,
of heart attacks, tobacco usage, high sweating and, on occasion. nausea or
blood pressure. diabetes and elevated an upset stomach.
levels of cholesterol. In addition. the pain should disap-
Q. If my heart Isn't tbe problem, pear as soon as you stop exerting Questions about chest pain are If. f h Id 1 1 j answered by Dr. Coodley, professor what's causing tbe cbest pain? yourse ,getouto t eco or re ax. n
A. Chest pain may arise from the other words. the pain would suggest
' of Medicine at the UC/. College of siomach. intestines. lungs, anhriuc coronary heart disease ifit stops when
Medicine, ChiefofGerontologyat the joints. neurological disorders. the you remove the precipitating factors.
V.A. Medical Center. and author of heart lining, or the chest walls. Only Be aware. however. that although
''Clinical Heart Disease in the Older chest pain that anses from coronary the above symnptoms are the usual
Patient" and "Clinical Diagnosis of heart disease leads to hean attacks. ones, not every has the usual symp-
Chest Pain... Gastric acidity. commonly known as toms.
Q. From time to time, I've felt a "heartburn," is a frequent source of Q. How do I know when to call a
pain ln my chest. How common Is chest pain. doctor?
chest pain? Does it mean I have a A patient's chest pam may even A. If any of the above symptoms
heart problem? confuse.' physicians because patients persist. calling a doctor 1s the first
A. Chest pain 1s extreme!} com-don't always descnbe the pain the order of business. No matter what the
mon. Like you. most people who have way a text book might. An orderly cause of your pain. there 1s probably a
chest pain worry that they might have approach to locating the source of the treatment for it.
a heart problem. For this reason, pam. however. will usually determine Chest pain is a serious matter. With
chest pain is the number one reason the cause. a headache. lhe pain will usually
Silence allows me to be reflective. h <'9lnu my nervt"S. It
repain my soul.
But more and morel am be~3:Cnied this pleasure
because some folks hold the m is n notion that music is
welcome anyplace, at aoy hour of the day or niabt.
Yestcrday_I encountered music in the beauty salon,
the dentist's office, the grocery store and the bakery shop.
In the evening I aot it again on the telephone, waiting for
m y call to be completed.
Am I some kind ofa lone nut or do othen feel as I do?
Please reply and tell me what. if anything, can be done
about this latest form of pollution. -WEAR AND EAR·
SORE IN KENTUCKY
DEAR W. INK.: I've deal I wlda t11J1 problem la die
paat ud believe me, yoa're aot alODe. Complala IMlt doa't
expect uytlll~ &o clluge. I'm afraid tMre are more wlto
like lttbaD clon t •
••• What's prudish? What's 0 . K? If you aren't sure, you
need some help. lt'savailablein the booklet: "Nt:ekirt1•nd
Pettins-What Are the Limits?" Mail your request to Ann
Landers. P.O. Box I 1995. Chicago. Ill. 6061 I, enclosin150
cents and a Ions. stamped, self-addressed envelope. .
ENGAGEMENT S
Cook-Urie
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Cook of Newport Beach have
announced the engagement of their dauJhter, Cynthia M.
Cook, to Samuel D. Urie of Salt Lake City.
The bride-to-be is a 1981 graduate of Newport Harbor
High School and attends the Unjversity of Utah where she
affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
Her fiance is a third year pre-med student at the same
university. He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. David Urie of
Richfield. Utah.
A July 20 wedding is planned at the McQune Mansion
in Salt Lake City. After their marriage, the couple will
reside in Salt Lake to continue their studi,::s.
[. ~
Ma.ncer-Hllllard
A July wedding is planned by Nancy Munger of
Newport Beach and John H. Hilliardof Costa Mesa, who
recently announced their engagement.
The bride~lect, daughter of George 0 . Munger of
Newport Beach, is a graduate of Corona del Mar High
School and Cal Poly San Luis Obisbo.
Her future bridegroom is the son of Hugh and Isabelle
Hilliard of Fallbrook. He is a graduate of Ohio State
University and the University of Akron.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach
will be the scene of their July 7 wedding.
The Sit-In comblnea atandiDC and •lttinC
on a laminated frame with beech veneer.
Soft red and black glovea cuahlon the
butcher block aeat.
CHAIRS NEW •••
From.Bl
and other models can be special ordered through them or
other Scandinavian furniture stores.
Eason plans an exhibition of the entire Balans line in
late June.
Meanwhile. New Zealand furniture designers have
been working on another common seating problem with
an equally innovative concept.
that people visit their doctors. Q. Wbat are tbe usual symptoms of disappear with time. resl and Kin.llf Loml
Chances are. however. that your chest coronary heart disease? aspirins. regardless of the cause. .-nae
The small.er li~ins areas and more mobile culture of
today was the msp1rat1on for the "knock down" furniture
developed by Brugger Industries.
Th~ sofas, chairs and. loveseats look like any other
convcnt1onal modem furniture. But unlike the rest each
piece can be quickly and oompletely disassembled and
compactly packed away in a cardboard box.
•
pain is caused by something else. A. In most cases. coronary heart Chest pain, on the other hand. Mr. and Mrs. Harold V. King.of Huntington Beach
The percentage of people likely to disease 1s indicated b~ a pressure pain requires a proper, early diagnosis. have announced the engagement of their daughter, ~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::::=;;;;:~====~=======--========:;;;=:;;;:::;:::;;;;;::;;;;:::::;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'1 Kristina E. King, to David H. Lominac of Morgan Hill. The bride-elect is a graduate of Huntington Beach . . "The Pack and Carry seating is designed for smaller
hvmtt areas, people who have jobs that require extensive
moving. and for more options to eliminate or add things " CJ • ~ • Largest Selectlon of [?f LJ I•] if= l I f§ Y: Party Supplies In
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High School and Westmont College. Santa Barbara. where
her fiance is a student.
He is a graduate ofSaratoga High School and is the son
of Louise and Harold Lominac of Morgan Hill. Eason said. '
Eason expects the Pack and Carry fumi1ure to arrive
by the end of the summer. An Aug. 18 wedding is planned in St. Andrew·s
Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach.
THE ORANGE COAST FAMILY YMCA
CELEBRATES 100 YEARS OF
'Y' CAMPING
This summer you and your family can be part of the great tra-
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DAY CAMP (grades k-4) ... ADVENTURE CAMP (grades 5· 7) lots of
special aetivities and day trips for the younger camper
RESIDENCE CAMPS:
Cemp Big Beer (June 23-30) for 6th-8th grade boys & girls
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Cemp Oaceol• (August 4-11) for 4th & 5th grade boys & girls
Hiking, swimming, archery. canoeing, crafts, nature study
CARAVANS: Peclflc Coeat Adventure (August 5-11)
grades 7-9 ... Northern California's finest State
Beaches & Parks; visit San Francisco, Hearst
Castle, Solvang, more
Coeatel Bike Toure (June 2 24-30)
grades 8-11 ... blke along Santa Barbara & Magic
Mountain
Aquetlc Adventure (July 5-10)
grades 7-9 ... southern coast water activities:
surf, boogie board, swim, visit Sea World and
San Diego
Whit• Weter Expedition (July 22-30)
grades 8-10 ... 3 days ratting on the Trinity; camp
at Big Sur, spend a day In San Francisco and
much more
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for 13-16 year olds ... sall, swim. fish and snorkel
your way to Catalina
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days horseback camping, fish, hike, swim
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grades 7-9 ... vlslt majestic Grand Canyon, ex-
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Jamee ea,ney •ta.n wttb Irene Pappas in
.. Trlbate to a Bad Man'' tontcht at 8 on KCOP,
Channel 13.
~MCMI * """ looalne" 11•11 Aacca ......... Fttd Uc:cerr9n. -1:»-® llllOf HM:lllTT: LM l
UNCe•OMD
-1a-
IHIALTHMJ>
AU•THlfNA.Y =·MMTWt~ * ''Zapped!" (1982) 8cott Belo Wl-.. AllMI.. '
-2:00-
1 Cl) Cl8 NEWS llGHTWATCH
8Nl!W8
-2:20--l:IO-
.Cl)MOVIE 11980) CID MCME *** ''The Grey Fox" (1913) Rlcb-ard FlmlWOrth, Jackie Burroup. * *\t "Ewry WNch Way But LOOM"
(1971) Clint Eutwood, Sondra
Loc*e.
I TIC TAC DOUQH
LCMIQAT
'.II.MAGAZINE Al.YIN TOffUR'8 THE THR>
WAVE _.._ I l~ACTI Of LR
"Lowe Thy Neighbor" (Prlrnlnl
John """'· Penny......,. l =CINFAN Al.Vtf TOffUR'8 THE THR>
WAVE l:' .. MOTlOH
..... ''TWllgM Zone -The McMI"
( 1983) John Ulhgow, Vic Morrow. <R~~" (1913) Matttw
Brodltlck, Olbney Cdeman. _....,_
ILDOta!~
* * * "The Elger Sanction" ( 1975) Clnt Eaatwood, Gtorge Kennedy.
•flfl'aGUNN
-10:00-eL =r~
tlTL.a'8 ..__,.ONE
:MMD ALM -~OEMY
-2:10-1: * * "Blondll Hll 8eMnt Trouble"
(1940) Penny~ Ar1tU I.Aile.
-ts-
~*Ml *** ''Ouyl And Doll" (1955). Frri Sinltra. ..., Slmmona.
-atl)-
~=ANDTHE MAN
** "From ~ The Gme"
~ DonlAd Dl1111noe, ~
(%)MOVIE *** "W.aam." (1M3) Matthlw
8rodlrtc:tt. DIDney ~
-3:16-
(J)MOYIE * ''The ~ Terror" (1911)
SuZlnne Low, Aobett w ....
-a:ao-
(!) FAm420 e IWICUI WELIY. M.D.
-tll-
®MOYIE ** "l<Wlg Of Comedy'' (1982) Rob-
ert De Niro, Jerry La4a.
~-
'Saturday Night'
maps 10th year ~MCMf • * "tntlmlte Momlntl" (1111) AIWndra SIUett, lernard Frt.on. Pl••• .., ., , ... ,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
.. Saturday Night lave,"
NBC's popular comedy
series. will return for a I 0th
season and the network will
introduce a weekly news
series to com~te with
C BS ' p op ular "60
Minutes."
"I think we have success·
fully hved up to the
challenge of presenting a
comedy-variety program
that works consistently
well for 90 minutes," Dick
Ebersol. execu ti ve roduccr
of "Saturday Night lave.''
told NBC affiliates Mon-
day.
An 11-pan weekly news
scnes. "Summer Sunday.
USA ," will be broadcast
Sundays from 7 p.m. to 8
p.m .. beginning July I. said
Lawrence K. Grossman,
president of NBC News.
The program will feature
some of the network's best-
known correspondents. he
said. The show "will feature
provoca1ive interviews, rc-
poners' stories and a
probing look at the week
ahead, at politics. at what-
ever is uppermost on our
v iewers' mind s,"
Grossman said.
Roger Mudd will anchor
two programs on the na-
tional pohucal conve n-
uons and will provide re-
pons on Democratic and
Repubhcan party tickets.
Grossman said.
"Saturday Night Lave"
premiered October 11 .
;----------·Nominees
: get 'Tonys' .
I I NEW YORK (AP) -
Th as year, it will be Tony at·
the Tonys -desianer
Tony Chase. that is. at the
Tony Awards.
Chase is dre~sina at least
three of the nominated acu~sses for the prestijiou
theater awards: Glenn
Clo~. nominated for best
actress for her role 1n "The
Real Th1n1". Rhetta
Hughes. up for best actress
• in a musical for "Amen
Corner": and Lt7 Callaway.
1 featured 1ctreu 10 the mu·
~1cal. "Baby "
He'll also dress some of
the invited auesu. includ-
101 sin1cr Jennifer Holli·
day who won a Tony for her
perl'ormancc 1n ''Dream
01rl "
At last year's Tony
awards show, C'hasc'\
bended dc•uan for dant-cr
Natah Miarkarova tole
the "how.
1975. and concluded ats
ninth season May 12.
-12:00-
1 EYE ON HOUVWOOO •u.-.
The series. broadcast live
from New York, brought
such comics as Che vy
Chase and the late John
Belushi to natio nal atten-
tion.
MOYIE ,. *** ''The Proud Onel" (195e)
J:-~
last season. "Saturday
Night live .. featured hosts
including New York
Mayor Ed Koch. former
NBC news correspondent
Edwin Newman and Betty
Thomas of NBC-TV's
"Hill Street Blues."
~..:r· i TllCKI Of THE MGHT eHAMYo
O*Ml
h t,; "Thi Sct_,q Woman"
( 1972) OIMa de Havlland. JOttph
Cotten.
-12:30-
~.~ NIBKrWmt DAVID
·~f*E (15 FO#M I awnws LAIJOH.af
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LroALLY SPEAKING
"OcMMtdl kilt&IM:
Untying TM bot •IUI 09ky
""'~'
Who pays the attorneys' fet'S?
Is it necessary to have a lawyer in a divorce case? What formula does the judge use to determlne
the amount of child and/ or spousal support to be paid? How is the child custody ls.sue dedded7
Moderated by Orange County Judge Richard D. Hamilton,
this one-hour, live, caJ~in program is your opportunity to SttJ\ advice and have
your~I q:;;;ed ;~;~~are=~~:a;
GfT THE ANSWERS! ~
CALL (714) 895·5050 • TONIGHT • 7:30 ~l'I.
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();Mge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedcy, Mey 23, 1984
''Dallas, '
'·'Crest' f.)~o out
Dlazing
).J •
n• • NEW YORK (AP) -
The cliff-hanaer season
finales of .. Dallas" and Jill!• uf "-· . alcon ~·~t" went out in
.rdt• a blaze of top.secret, top. ''"J rated glory, leaving fans of
b1.'i· the two CBS soaps to spend
'b11 the summer wondering
on who shot Bobby Ewing and
who rnshed tn the plane
in , crash. .. :i,: ''Dallas" finished first,
''Falcon Crest" second and
,.. ' the "Miss USA Beauty
.,, ~ Pageant" third in the A.C.
'"' Nielsen Co. rankings re-
... : leased Tuesday, giving CBS
. , . a slim victory over ABC in
~.. the week's prime-time ra t-
'": ingsrace. J ,1 The ABC programs in
the Top 10 included the
,. "Return of Marcus Welby"
movie (fourth). part one of
the "Mystic Warrior"
"''' miniseries (sixth). "Three's Company" (seventh) and
"The Fall Guy" (ninth).
Lee Rich. president of
Lori.mar. which produces
"Dallas." "Falcon Crest"
and "Knots Landing." said
the American public enjoys
scraping its fingernails on
cliffs. "The cliflhanger has
to be one the audience can't
guess." he said. "It can't be
obvious."
Last Friday on "Dallas:·
Bobby (Patrick Duffy), si t·
ting in J.R's chair. ended
the season a bloody mess
after being felled by a spray
Cut members of Costa Mesa High School 'a
.. Godapell" include (top row, from left):
Chrlatln Bail•tone, Carlo• Jaramillo,
Sharon Tet1eh, Ariel Vapor, BUI Kelsllng,
Nerrlaa Azurln. Bottom row: Jim Lewt.,
Ponzer Berkman, Stephanie Oldla, Joell
Farris, Audrey Guzman, Tien Le. The
show runs Thursday through Saturday.
Mesa High staging 'Godspell'
'My-FatrLadY'i)resented by
Ocean View High st~dents
Final performances of the Costa Mesa High School
musical "Godspell" will be presented Thursda} through
Saturday at the school auditorium.
Derrick Spiva, a student at UC Irvine. is directing the
rock-gospel musical freel y based on the life of Christ. Ariel
Vapor stars as Jesus with 8111 Keisling playi ng the dual role
of Judas and John the Baptist.
being staged by the performing arts class at Ocean View
High School in Huntington Beach. The show opens
tonight and plays through Saturday wit h a 7:30 p.m.
curtain.
Michael Frym is directing the show. which stars John
Masse~ and Beadie Pompa as Professor Henry Higgins
and Ehza Doolittle. Others playing major roles are Davi d
Cham bers. Dan Schoonmaker, Kim Harris. April Gray
and director Frym.
Tickets are SS for general admission and S4 for senior
cit1zens, children under 12 and students with Superhawk
cards. Call 848-2964 fo r additional information. Others in the cast are Sharon Tesch. Pien Le, Audre}
Guzman. Stephanie Oldis. Ayana Chambliss. Ponzer
Berkman. Nerrisa Azunn. Jim Lewi s. Chri stin Hailstone. The sixth grade class f;o~ Bear Street School in Costa Jodi Farris and Carolos Jaramillo. Curtain ttme is 8 p.m. and admission is $4 for adults Mesa will present Irving Berlin's "Annie Get Your Gun" June I. and S3.50 for students. • • • Curtain time is 7:30 p.m. and admission 1sS2. Further
• of bullets that presumably
'.P. were intended for his
wicked older brother.
Lorimar was so protective
of that surprise finish that
four versions were filmed,
with J.R. (Larry Hagman).
Sue Ellen (Linda Gray) and
Pamela (Victoria Princi-
pal) all taking turns in the
hot seat. The Lerner and Loewe favorite "My Fair lad) .. 1s information may be obtained b) calling 556-3478.
~~--::;;;;~~~~~~=-~~1;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;::::;;=:;,
Good for you!
)i. ,. L:.
ctas<:.tf1ed ad~
Chone 642-56 78
FASHION
SALE
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Sizes 2-14
Store Ope1i1g Postpo1ed
EVERYTHING
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For l1fon11tion Call Uada
759-1206 PM, Weekends
557 ·4343 9-12 AM
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
'Winds of War'
to blow again
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Herman Wouk's "War and
Remembrance," which continues the story of Pug Henry.
"latalie Jastrow and the others 10 .. The Winds of War ...
will be made into a 20-hour miniseries for ABC.
The 18-hour .. The Winds of War ... which starred
Robert Mitchum and Ali MacGraw, kept audiences
enth ralled for seven nights last year. More than 140
million ,·1ewers sa\\ some or all of the series.
Thl' new m101senes will pick up the stof) a few da~s
after Pearl Harbor and weave in such historical figures as
Winston Churchill. Joseph Stali n and Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
There was no early indication whether any oi the cast
from ··The Winds of War" ~ould continue their roles in
the new series.
• COSTA lllUA
Eelwan!s Clll4!!ni
S4&-3Hl2
COSTAIHJA
UAVntrNS !>IO-~
• ltUllTlllGTOll IUCH •OIWl8l
H adventure has a name, it must be Indiana Jones.
~ EOW111dS tiunl'11Qtcn ~ C....ma ~03ll8 634 2563
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STARTS TODAY
l70MNI
SIX-TRACK CXJ(~sttHBJ)"
PRESENTATION
~OU"AKlllS llEW"Of!T HACM OfWIG{ (d'lll.l't1<-1~,. ldw~rd\ r ""'°°""' .qun• 11 "41 'ir'#l)Otl C..itfN 6.14 7$53
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;-INTERMISSION
• Harlequin's musical-
'house' full of laughs
By TOM TITUS °' ... ~,... ....
They wear cowboy hats and sing a lot,
but the show at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse is a good many country miles
from "Oklahoma ...
To appreciate how fa r the western
muwl has progressed since Rodgers and
KaQlllherstein days, one must pay a visit to
"The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas ...
Ifs the show's first staging in Orange
County and it's a good 'un.
True, the Hollywood version with Burt
Reynolds and Doll y Parton came and went
before local audiences had a chance to view
the origjnal. But the Harlequin's pro-
duction (the first, incidentally, before a
dinner theater audience) is a Texas mile
higher on the enjoyability scale .
Director Richard Vath has whipped up
an enthusiastic, energetic production of the
ribald collaboration between authors Larry
L. King and Peter . Masterson and com-
poser-lyricist Carol Hall. based on a true
incident involving the notorious Chicken
Ranch. which fell victim to a moral
minority.
It's all done wit h down-home gusto and
as much flesh as the law allows for the
family trade (and even with its lusty ladies
of the evening a,nd raunchy dialogue.
"Whoreho use" still falls into that cat-
egory). And it's a splendid entertainment.
especially if you've seen "Okla homa" once
too often.
The show is particularly strong at its
core. with Cary Pitts as the sheriff and
Li nda McClure as Miss Mona. the Chicken
Ranch proprietress. Pitts uses his physical
resemblance to Andy Griffith just enough
to sell his character and turns in a full-
bodied performance. while McClure radi-
ates an aura of class as the principal
purveyor of the world's oldest profession
and sings beautifully. ·
The comedy of the production takes a
turn for the farce in the performance of Bart
Will iams as the prissy TV "watchdog" who
leads the anti-sin forces. The hyperkinetic
Williams makes his movie counterpan .
Dom Deluise. appear subtle by contrast.
Also impressive are Da vid Holmes as
the shifty. sidestepping governor; Anna
Pagan as the feisty maid at the Chi cken
Ranch. and, especiall y. Cathy Susan Pyles
as a plain cafe waitress bemoaning her
unglamorous existence. Sharonlee
Mclean is excellent as a hard-boiled
hooker. while Leigh Scamtt turns in a
butterfly-like transformation from an
awkward kid to the sexiest siren in the
house.
Robert Bingham's two-level setting is
splendidl:r designed. and orchestra leader
Jim Ishii keeps the musical pace humming
well. The show's downbeat ending could
have used some tuning up from its creators.
but there's enough raucous entertainment
in the first two acts to compensate.
"The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas"
should prove another summer sizzler for
the Harlequin. which will run the musical
at least through Aug. 19 at its plush
showplace. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. just
Cary Pitta and Linda McClure.
north of Costa Mesa. Call 9.79-5511 for
ticket information.
CALLBOARD -The L.P. Repenory
Company will hold special audiuons to
complete the cast of its production of"The
Little Foxes'' Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Fullerton Senior Multi-Services building,
34Q W. Commonwealth, Fullerton .... two
middle-aged men and one black woman
are needed. and should bring a prepared
monologue .... call 73 1-2792 for further
information ... .
The Huntington Beach Playhouse will
hold tryouts for the musical "West Side
Story" June 3 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and
June 4 at 6 p.m. in the playhouse, located in
Huntington Beach's Seacliff Village shop.
ping center. Main Street at Yorktown
Avenue .... Roben Conrad is directing the
show, which opens July 20 ....
Ballet Pacifica will hold open auditions
for its sum mer season June-2 at l p.m. at
the company's headquarters. 1863 S. Coast
Highway, Laguna Beach .... the programs
will include -Giselle" and "Moldavian
Dances ... running from July 8 through Aug.
26 .... dancers must be 14 or older and
further information is available at
494-727 1 ....
Orange C'oast College's Five Penny
Opera Company will hold auditions for its
1984-85 season on Tuesdays. June 5 and
12. from I to 4 p.m. in OCC's Fine Arts
Hall. Room 119 .... audition reservations
may be obtained by calling artistic director
Carole Chardonnay at 493-3222 .... the
season's shows will include "Manon,''
"Ha nsel and Gretel.. and Manon
Lescaut'"_ ...
Toni goes for the oldies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer Toni
Tennille has wanted to sing standards from
the '30s and '40s for the fast 10 years.
Her newest album. "Toni Tennille:
More Than You Know," includes some
golden oldies. In addition. it's her first
album without her husband and musical
partner. Daryl "The Captain" Drason.
"I wanted to be singing something else
but 1 didn't really mind singing current pop
music." she said. "You've got to be realistic
in this business."
As for the Captatn. she said the standards
aren't his kind of music. "He's into blues
and boogie." she said.
But don't worry, the C.Sptain and
Tennille are still working together.
'Tm still tounng with Daryl and I'll
make more albums with him, too," she
said. "I can't ex plain the thrill I bad
planning it and recording it. It was heave, it
was like floating on a cloud.''
WALK IN DANCE OUT
READY FOR THE JUNE WEDDING!
GRADUATION PROMS!
Lea rn Foxtrot, Waltz, Disco, Hustle
Rumba, Samba, Cha Cha, Tango
A).ASK ABOUT OUR MAY SPECIAL!
< . ( ) '11 >I . I 'I I·::\ 'I'.\ I~ '.
LESSO:\
~' I ! ~I t ~ 11 ' ·' j ! ( .t 1 I I 'f ,t I 't I'
11tf1·J ~:ood 1hr11 ti Ill ti·'
Newport Dance Studio
'111:1 Newpon Blvd. Stdtt lit
NtWD011 Beach '7.l-f421
above W ells Fargo Bank
Dear Homeowner.
Good news!
Armstrong 1s putting
Collectors Solar1an·, one of Its
finest. noora, on sa.le at. exclusive
Floor Fashion Center· stores. So,
beg1nn.ing Ma.y 7 . I'm t.a.lUng
t 2.00 off t.he price of every
aqua.re ya.rd of this ma.gn.Ulcent.
floor I call it t.he "Exolu,etvely
Yours" Sale; you'll call It t.errlftc
Stop 1n now and see
Collectors Sota.Ma.n's 17 classic
destgns a.nd colors. all w1th the
protective toughness of
Armstrong's easy-ca.re
MU:QJ>ond · no-wa.x surfa.oe.
There's just one t.h.ing a.bout.
the "Exclusively You.re" SaJe-11.
lasts only until Mt\Y 26 So come
see me soon. And see for yourself what. a t.ruJy
rema.rltable vaJu.e Armstrong Colleoton
Sola.rum ts d\J..rtng t.h1a ·Exol\11Jtvel,v Youru"
Sa.le ('
Oollee10n lolar1an
•1111
Now only sq yd r ,,/,,,u1vly Y'J'IU,
= CARLTONS LINOLEUM SHOP
1 )32 Newport Blvd.
646-8991 Costa Mesa
GOKH
--
. 61'RFIELD
52~
PO \JOO ~NOW
WMAT l MAT£
ABOUT Pt£l'S ?
TRE
F.4.WILl'
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"This time of the year school is just like TV.
Nothin' bot reruns!"
M.4.R~.4.DUKE by Brad Anderson
"You can come out ... the dogcatcher wants
to apologize for his assistant trying to
catch you!"
PE.4.NUTS
SEE '? l1VE LITT nus FAUCET
RUNNIN6 ..
TUMBLEWEEDS
MOW, WHEN YOIJ WANT
FRESH WATER, YOU CAN
6ET IT YOURSELF ..
HOW A?~ L.IKl=1Hf! NE:W fA~1 .ACIS? ~
•
BIG GEORGE
. -
by Gus Arriota
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
~
J
I !
Both vulnerable. South deal~. NOITB
•st
i;;i -'QTU o 8'7U
•Jt
WEST EAST
•tU •H
c:?JtU 1;;>11084
O KJIO O QU
•853 •KIOU
OUTH
• AKQJ IOS
<;? v.w
O AU
•AQH
The bidding: s .. t~ Weet NC>JU Eatt
2 • PaM 3 ., p.,.
'• P ... '• Paa1 Pu1 Pa11
Opening lead: Thrf't of •.
Once you have opened
with a demand bid. there i1
no need lot you to be overly
auru1ive. You have
deaeribed your hand. ao you
can afford to make minimum
bid1 thereafter and leave it
Lo partner to preu on.
After rettiv1ng a positive
response to his two spade
opening. South simply show
ed his second suit. When
North could do no bette r
than t.ake a preference to
fou r s pades. South wisely
elected lo pass. The fact that
'he was void in his partner's
suit was a serious drawback.
Had North had anything 1n
the way or extra values. he
Or81'.111C...DM.Y"°'M1t I-·-·-
would have found.-. ot-r
bid.
Weal «ot Off M Uw httt
lead of a ~N .. p. and w~
dummy appeared even lour
1pade1 •H no laydow11.
Jle(larer wal faced with lht
poa1lbillty of lot1n1 two
lridt1 in Hell minor 1uil, and
he could not take adva.ntare
ot lhe ace of hurLs for 1
ditard btcauae there was no
quick entry Lo dummy
While dfftarer could havf
ruHed 1 club had Weat not
led a trump, to puraue this
course now would be throw
ing good coin dler bad. II
detlarer ltadt the ace ol
l!lubs and another. tbe
defendera will win lhe kin1
and play another trump, and'
MWdedlnf 1111•~ .. ..................... ,_...,Md&t.
A .ou8f1er pla1 II a. ....
.ate of clu.iuny't jKl ti cllla
l»etartr 1ito.W n l'-
truap aad '•medii&eff a...I
the queen of tluM ,,.. lillMf
The def.-dtrt Mvt ..
salitfadory r.joit*r.
If Eatt wiu the k!ac oe
dubs. tilt tab'f 's juk of do .. ·
bttomt-1 an Hlf1 ~ t9't Mlf
of Marts. and dtdattr ta1
discard OM o( hit loetn. •t
by relu!Jnr Lo win the kill« ..
dubs Eut don t'vtn .......,,
Now dt'clarer conlinun wit.II
the ace or clubt and a "'"·
and ht can makt an owrtrick
by t.akJog a dltc:ard oo Ult att
of htarLs.
by Jeff MacNllty
f DR-'BBU:
DEN~IS THE ~EN".4.CE
~~
I • ~
.....
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
IF YOU HAVE ANY
QUESTIONS, LET ME KNOW
by Charles M. Schulz
HOW DOES HIE WATER
GET OVER TO THE DI SH ?
by Tom K. Ryan
f!Sl'r:(LAU.'( 0NS HOt.PIN<7
AN INS~l.ICTON JCXJK IN
HIS Rl6H1HANP.
&R£AK M~ IA.hl-!00.&> AA0
~OS~ IN 816 IRD061.£. \
FOIUIETfER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
w~ ~V~ING oor OF 5Tlff. ELLY. f\ND1HE Sf\.E ~'r
END fOf'. f\NOfti~ ~ \
WArr ! 1·u. ~ 1Klol~
KaJSe. ~ f\t-() ~E.
l"'\ORI:. -Ou~ ~
FUNK l' WINKERBE.4.N
OH ,OH ... !
DR. SMOCK
I . I 'M ~. Oo'OOY1 I
OON'T WANT TO LIE TO
MISS T£MP\...ETON I
I ~ ---~--
ANSWER MV OVESTION.
CARLA t Wl-ERE OCO VOU
(,() TOOAY?
by Tom Batiutc
by George Lemont
IF You't..1..-i"AKe A Ct..oseR
L..OOK A'f' MY CAc::>uceus,
You'L.1..-see IHA"f i"HOSe
ARe e:e:t..s, NO'f" SNAKe::S .'
by Pat Brady
by Harold Le Dcux
t WENT DOWN TO THE COURTHOuSE lO SEE A
TR11'L BUT IT W/IS SETTLED OUl OF COURT ' SO
SAM TOOK ME TO LUNC.H ~
~0 THEN 'TO HIS Qf=FtCE
CRED IT L1Nl
Reggie Jackson -t bat
for Wienerschnitzel
Reglt Jacllaoo of the California Angels baseball team bas been signed to
a two-year contract as celebrity spokesman for Wlnerscbitael laterutloul,
be. The campaign features Jackson, store employees and amateur athletes in
a song-and-dance routine touting the chain's expanded menu. • • • Pat Ytl1tr, principal of the Yelaer-Garlud & A1IOCtate1 design firm an
Costa Mesa, wall offer do-1t-you~lf ideas for home desjlJl and decoraung an a
C'a p1221 Rothrock Yeiser Jackson
two-hour session at the new ( ountry Knoll res1dent1al comm unit) in
Fall brook June I 0 Yeiser-Garland specializes in the design of model homes for
new rcs1den11al developments • • • Ronald Caplul has Joined Jan1eo Auoclatea, lnc.) a1 advtrtl1LD1 accout
executive, wltb rt1pon1lbllly for tbe Suioll.I outboard dlvl1lon, lSSCO and
Pyramid Data acco1LDt1. Caplul is tht former owner of Caplul ud A11oclate1
In Newport Btacb and is a member of the Balldlng lDd a1try of America, the
Orange Couty Salts and MarketLDa Council, and the Orange Couty
Advertblag Federation.
• • • Joan Rot!trock has been promoted to pubhc1t) coordinator for O.bor11t
Adver1l1ln1. an Irvine-based agency spec1almng 1n real estate and financial
accounts. Rothrock. a resident of Fountain Valley. as pubhc11y chairwoman for
the American Bu1lne11 Women'• A11oclatloa, Mar Monte Chapter.
• • • Eleaoor B. Saltier, Ph.D .. R.N .. F.A.A.N .. has accepted a national staff
appointment as director of education for the American A11oclatlon of Critical·
Cart Nuret1. Saltzer was most recently director ofnursmg research and nursing
quality assurance at UC Irvine, in the nursing education and research d1 vision
of the nursing serv ice department. Widely published in clinical and research
Journals. Saluer 1s also expert reviewer for the National Science Foudatlon'1
program 1n social and developmental psychology. AACN's national office is
located in ~ewpon Beach.
• • • Costa Mesa resident Vicki Heston, owner of Vlc~l Heston & A11oclatt1,
has been elected member-at-large of the Orange County chapter of the National
A11oclatloa of Women Bu11..Dt11 Owners. Heston's community involvement
has included directorships on the YMCA and the United Way and the first vice
presidency of the Orange Chamber of Commerce. She has served as treasurer of
the Cali fornia Unemployment Insurance Council and 1s acuve in the
l.Ddaatrlal LHJ11t of Orange Cou.oty. Heston & o\ssoc1ates 1s a temporal)
personnel service in Irvine
• • • Laguna N 1guel resident DeForest D. "Skip" Spindler 1s the new senior vice
president and regional manager of the income property and construction loan
d1v1s1on of Cal Ftd Mortgage Co. In his new post. Spindler will be
headquartered at the rliortgage com pan) 's new d1 v1s1onal headquarters.
o~ning an Newport Beach this summer. He Wlll be responsible for financing
apartments. office bu1ld1ngs and retail complexes throughout California
• • • The board of directors of Newport P barmaceatlcal1 hittruatlonal, Inc.
has declared a d1V1dcnd of 80 cents per share on its 8 percent convertible
perferred stock. payable July I 0 10 shareholders of record as of Apnl 30. 1984
The firm develops and manufactures therapeutic agents for rcgulaung the
human immune system.
• • • Jolla Diiion, long-time account supervisor for LeAace/Htrbert/Bowere
Public Rela1loa1 and Advertl11..Dg, has been made a partner in the agency and
promoted to vice president and general manager of the firm's public relations
group. Dillon c;ucceeds Alita T. LeAact, founder of uAnce Pubhc Relauons.
as head of the public relations operation.
• • • John McConnell of Laguna Ha lls has been promoted to the post of
Southern Cahfom1a account sales manager for the R.T. Frtacb Co., with
rcsponsib1hty for ma)Or cha an and wholesale accounts. R.T. Frtnch produces
food and household 11ems.
• • • PSI, a busaness commun1cat1ons company in Irvine. has hired Candy
Caraba as production manager and Mark Barattl as camera operator Bara Ill
heads the camera department and operates op tical printers and a computer
graphics camera. Caraba is responsible for traffic coordination. typesetung and
producuon.
• • • Dr. Beverly Morgan. professor and chair of the ped1atncs department at
UC lrvlat, has been appointed chair of the American Academ)' of Pediamc·~
Committee on Pediatric Manpower.
The comm111ce reviews issues and sets pohc1es that affect pediatric
practice As chair. the Newport Beach rcs1de101 also will become a member of
the Council on Pcd1atnc Practice.
• • • The newly elected president of Manufactured ffoaalag Educational Trust
of Orange County 1s William Lee Miller of El Toro.
Jo1n1ng him on the necut1ve board are Robert Olander and Gerry
Dougbtr, vice presidents. Sam Rlela, secretary; Leon Joaea, trea~urcr: Paul
Bostwick, Ed EvaDI, Norm McAdoo and J.R. Pbllllp1, past pres1dentc;
Others on the board include John Curci of Newport Beach and Roy
Tbomas of ( osta Mesa
M HET 1s an association ul mobilehome park owners throughout thl·
count) Home Health Cart of America ol Nev. pon Beach has promol<.'d William
Walker to 'ice pre\1dent of finance. ch1el financial officer
'Nalker was formerl-. dar<.'l.IOr of reimbursement sen Ill'\ for thl·
Cahfom1a-ha..ed com pan)·
Before Joining Home Health (are of Amenca. \Valker held po~111on~ a!i
vice prec;1dent of financ.<.' and e\crul1H' "'ce president ol Bergen Brun!lw1g.
Med1<.al<:lurg1cal
Walker replaces ( hark'> F-rcnl.'h who resigned from thc firm to pursue
other prol<.'srnmal interests
a
to to
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Ll8TING8 B-1
Drawina •how• how the 10 -•tory atrium will co nnect the
hotel, left, with office. in the $62.2 million Gate wa y
compla In 0.rden GroYe. Golden West Capital Group of
Newport Beach ha• 1teeured ftnanctnc for the project.
Gateway hotel funds secured
Golden West Capital Group of
Newport Beach has secured the
financing for the $62.2 m1lhon phase
one of the Gateway hotel office
building complex 1n Garden Gro' e.
according to an announcement b)
Golden West President Anthony M v ltll.
Phase of Gate. way the largest
construction project in th h1sto11 of
the ci ty of Garden Grove. will consist
of a 16-story. 390-room hotel and a
I 0-story office building connected b)
a I O-stol)-h1gh atnum It wall be
located on 36 acre~ of land at the
nonh"'est lOmer of Chapman Ave.
and Harbor Bh d
V1tt1 said the loan package of
obtained b) Golden West. a d1v1s1on
ol thc West Companie~. ,~rough Bell
Sa1. mgs and Loan Assoc1at101; of San
Mateo for Gateway Properties. a
partn<.'rc,h1p of Dr. Robert
Beauchamp and ( 0' e Development
co. "'It ,., thl' \Ingle most sat1sy1ng
project with which I've bttn in-
volved," sajd Viuic, "because it's one
where everybody 1s a winner. It
means more jobs. it means greater tax
base forthccaty of Garden Grove, and
it means further cnchanccment of
Garden G rove. and it means a further
cnhanctmcnt of Orange County as a
resort destination and prestigious
business center."
He said groundbreaking will take
place within the next 60 days with
completion schedule for mid-1985.
Phase two, which will include an
entertainment center and shopping
complex. is still in the des1gn stage
and ts budgeted at approximately $20
million. Phase two funding will also
be handled by Golden West.
When completed, Gateway Wlll
consist of 2. I million square feet of
offices, restaurants hotels faci lities.
an cnterutimcot complex, shops and
housing units. Architect is WZMH
G roup California. Inc., of Irvine.
IRAs getting bigger and better
(Editor·~ note: This 1s the final pan
of a six-part sen es on a maJOr ne" ta'
la" nov. being considered b~ a JOtnt
House-Senate conference )
oder the new tax bill mo' ing
4u1etl) but steadtl) to President
Reagan's desk. the lnd1 v1dual Retire-
ment i\ccount (IRA) IA-111 beLOmc a
bigger and better tax shelter thane\ er
You. as taxpa}ers. will be ahlc 10
make bigger IRA con1nbu11on<o
ome of you "'II be able to nail do" n
bigger IRA deductions. others "'II Ix'
able 10 set up IRA~ for the first time
Result· More mone} "'II go to }Otir
pocket. less to thl' Internal Re' l'nUl"
Service
Staning an 1984. the Housc bill
would let you make add111onal con-
tnbut1ons of up to $1.750 o'er and
above your regular $2.000 IRA. con-
tribution . .\!though the extra S 1, 7.50
1s not deductible. 11 does grow tax-
free. You don't pa' lax on the
earnings until }OU retire.
Starting "-Ith the 19~4 I.I\ )Car. you
v.111 ha"e to make \Our IR.\ contnbu-
11on b) the .\pni' 15 la\-retum due
date 10 gl't a dedud1on lor that )car.
You no longer can l'\lend )Our
contnbutaon deaJlim· tn gelling a
fihng C\tens1on for ~our tax return.
It"\ .\pnl 15 -period But lf}OU get
an ntcn\ton for 'our IQ83 return.
\Ou can still make \Our contnbuuon on or belorl' .\ug 15. 1984. and
deduct 11 on >our 19~n return.
The Hou\t.• tnll g"i:~ \OU more
tontrol O' c.'r "'here 'our rt.·11rc ment-
plan munc\ "1n\l'Sted. 'r ou can pull
out a big lhunl-of v.hat\ in your
mm pan)\ rctm·ml'nt-plan al·count.
roll 11ovt'r1 n10 an I RA w11hin 60 days
after reccl\ ing 11and1n,cs1 1t as }OU
prefer . .\nd you don't have 10 retire to
do 1h1., Etfcc111.e dati:. d1stnbut1ons
after date oflav. ·._ enallrncnt.
Before this. in gcncral. ) ou could
onl) roll o"er into an I RA the lump-
sum d1'itnbu11on )OU received at
SYLVIA
POITER
Ex PERT Aov1cE
reuremcnt
New law ellcepuon: Now, before
retirement. you can elect to roll over
most or all of your fun ds from a
retirement plan or annuity in to an
IRA. And you're in a position to
invest your IRA funds as you wash .
There art special rules that come
mto play -tough , too.
• You cannot roll over partial
distributions into another plan or
annuity.
• The distribution must be at least
half your account balance.
• The distribution cannot be of a
series of periodic payments.
• Most import.ant, the amount lcf\
in your plan account -the part you
did not roll over -is not eligible for
the special I 0-year income averaging
or capital-gain treatment that lump-
sum distributions generally receive.
What's more, the present rule still
applies to what is rolled over: no I 0-
year averaging or capital-gain treat·
ment when the rolled-over amount 1s
distributed by the IRA.
This is the end of my series of six
columns on the massive, blockbuster
bill to move through the Housc-
Senate conference before it becomes
law. I will return with columns
explaining the law when and as
completed and signed -and how 11
affects you.
What happens 1f you w1thdra"
funds before age .59111? You pa) a
penalty and tax on what you
withdraw w11h this exception. rcpons
Eh J. Warach. a d1v1s1onal senior' ice
president of Prentice-Hall. You are
not taxed on the amount )OU con-
tnbuted on a non-deductible ba<,1\
This total 1s subJeCt to ncllher ta' nor
~nally. But the earnings on non·
deducuble rontnbut1ons mu'it be
withdrawn first .
Seminars, meetings slated
The Senate. though. "-Ould alllm
)OU to make a bigger full} dcJuc11hlc
contnbut1on on behalf of a non·
working spouse'~Wh1lc the ma'1murn
combined con nbu11on 1n '84 ,.,
S2.250. 11 Jump~ o $2, 7 50 in "85 with
periodic 1ncrea'iC after that Begin-
ning in 1991 . you would be able to
con1nbu1c and deduct $4.000 That"'
a \1gn1fican1 increase
The Scnatc 1.ers1on '"ould make 11
easier. too. for di\ orced 1nd1' 1dual<,
111 count altmon) pa) men ts as l'arncd
1mome lor JR.\ purpO'>C' Ho" 11
v.ork' .\ per'ion ren't' ing ta\ahk
alimon' -hut no t•amed 1momc -
rnuld put S2.ll00 of 11 into an I H .\ Jnd
get a S2.000 dcdut.11on
EfTect1,e date ~tartrng 111 11/1\S
Before this pro' 1s1on. a dt' orlcd
person n~ccl\ 1ng alt mom '-ould nuh·
a drdut11hle rnntnhu11on uni\ und1.·1
'Cl) ltrn1tcd urcum111ance"1
The \cnatl· also changl"'> thl· ruk\
on thl· t1m1n~ of IRA contnhut1on'
Marketing talk
\pt.•a l.cr [)a, 1J l dman wall talk
about mult1-lt.·' cl markl'ting Thurs-
da\ at the mce11ng of Orange Count\
Women 1n Management. at the
H ungr~ f1gcr. I lbX \ ~late College.
in •\nahc1rn •
I he dinner ht'g1m at<1 pm. Further
information can h<: obtained by
l:tlhng ll \6-170:!
Women'• referral
I hl' Orange< ount\ t hJptc.·r ot the
V. omen·, ReferrJI 'il·n itc 1s holding
a m1\cr June ft r1 111 Ill pm .. at the
Hcgl\tof\ Howl I Xl\11 MacAnhur
Bl\d ln1nc
T hl· V. omt.•n \ ~l krral ~rvace as a
proln\wnal net" urk. "hose mam
obJet ttH' '" 10 heir 11s members
1ncrl.'a\e the1r c.uMomcr base and
hnttnm line rc,<.'nul.'s The meeting
pro' 1dt''> an opportuntt) for members
and non-member\ to incrca!te their
hu\lne'" ronl3Cl'>
I 1nda Da) and l yndn Powell
T cam works Consortium wall d iscuss
the important issues that en-
trepreneurs face.
Refreshments wall be served. The
cost 1s S 13 for prepaid rcscrvauons
and $16 at the door.
Reservations may be called to the
Orange County office and placed on a
Master Card or Visa up until oon, the
dale of the meeting 62S-8737 or (8 18)
445-1893.
Buelneu development
Tony Moiso. president of Rancho
Mission Viejo. will speak to the
Business Development Association
of Orange County June 13 at the
Irvine Mamon Hotel.
Mo1so represents approximately
40.000 acres of South County ranch
land which 1s the second laracst single
land ownership m Orange County.
He will discuss the ranch's history
and development ~Jans for the prop-·
crty. The presentation will emphasize '
plans ror 5.000..acrc Plano Trabuco
project.
1 n addition to this special guest. a
slide show will be premiered dcscrib-
ina the Business Development As-
sociati on of Orange County and its
activities.
BDA/OC was organized to provide
the latest marketing concepts for
individuals involved an marketing
and business development for the
architectural and engineering indus-
try. Members share information.
contacts and other resources in ad-
dition to hearing speakers.
Activities begin al 6 p.m. and
rescrvatopms arc required. It is open
to members and guests.
The deadline for making reser-
vations is June 8. Call Kathy Prater of
Coleman/Caskey Architects to make
reservations at 476-1010.
Financial planning
Prudential-Bache Secunt1es of
Long Beach will host a tu and
financial plannina seminar May 31 at
6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Milcsquare Park
Golf Course Club House, I 0401
Warner. Fountain Valley
Seating is limited. For reservations
call Prudential-Bache 827-08 13.
D yes. I want to lock in your current high yields on a short tenn
Investor Account right now.
s!
J MONTH TERM 6MONTHTERM
MI MaER
11 oo ~ ... I • Yt~kf· 11.85 ~1
10 48 ~1
• R•te 11.07 ~ Sntnp Insured 11 1100.ID>
•
•1 .,,, .. no'" 111 •h•"'" "•" I • "' '"'"'"' '"·1•"" "' \:• 1Wll •"" • "" """' .,,,. """u•I 11t'ld b•~ rm 1~1u1<ttnl •fll'..,hl• h" •n 1nnuel 1.-..
Jhf:-1 Hlff',,t f4'• f\ \hh1"4 I t1 hA, "' \•1• Pt rf'rt,...._,,j
~.,,,...,.,, h•'•"• •· \u1101 , ,.,,,. 11• ..,,.,, I• ""''"'i .... ,, •• ~·•1 '""' ''"'.,. •h<11a ... •l 111"'"~1µ.i .,,..,, 10 m•1ur11., ... 1ll r•wl11n \u~tant1al u\t1>r-.1 JM'f'•llt
'' h·t• f ,., .. •Uhl•"' I'' ""''tff d.•11
Huntin&'On Buch
Fount•in Vati.y
Bilbo• P9fl1nsula
Balboa llltnd
Ntwpott Oekh
Woodbnd1•
Lacun• 8Hch
Monarth 8ity
l11un• Nlfuetl ~.n Ju1n c ... ,.,,, • .,(I
C"11ttr1no Ba"11
'>en Cltmtntt
G For~ Information or to open your a count, call the
tolt.free Financial LiM now: (800) 272·9000. Or visit any
Cr at American office today.
-.. . . .. -..
Or9f9 C.. OM.Y fl!ILOT1Wedl Cl ... ,-·
Nl!W YOfUC CAP> -The followlnt lltl howa fht Ovtr·lht·Counter
Irvine 's Telefile Computercltesiowerea
toek• ·ro~.,J:"' ""' hlvt oone utt mot:,t ~ror"~r=v~*' Oft
Ne MCUrltlet trtdlno betoW u ~ 1000 .,. lnducftd: . . -
.. ~ lftO .!f!c.tll~ ~ -ct,.= bi01>r'I:' .n;;·,:-1 '\aat ~II :f:.
\
N.me &';f Che Pct. ~ w l. '2' a ' ~\,~II ~ t i fip'l 51t. T~~ un +J·3z. \ . ,w~cn 1f ~ i 1~ : :
Tdcfile Computer COf'J). 1n Irvine
has reported an unaudited fitcaJ 1984
second.quaner net income of $70,019, or 2 cenll per lharet on total
revenues ofS2. 77 l ,606 for tnc three·
month period endina March 31.
Tbouah the current reponed earn-inas a.re down by 6$.2 percent from
the fint quaner net income o(
$201,07, or 7 cent1, on 1liahtly lower
revenues or S2,450.S36. chey remain
quite favorable compared with a net
lou of S 12.824 reported on revenues
of $2.394,862 for the second quaner
last year.
Year-to-date net income for che
first s1• months of fiscal 1984 was
S27 I .4S6, or 9 ccnts1 on total rcv-
em1es of SS.222, I 44!, more th.an double the net income of$ 123, I 67, OT
~~ •• ~ ~~ f given tentative OK
•=l" :2 ~ ~= Prehminary ap~val has been would aJso ierve as president of BloTCC Y.i ~ Up . ed I". h Ill". I n... Statewide Savings Bank. rcceiv irom 1 e iom a ~pan. So1.1thwcstcrn Bancorp currently is
Usc•f.t Hydr0p !vncr wtlS ex on llos s;~Am A~.~: I ~'r=
~~n Mun
PMI 91~\ I ,,., nd ~Odn WI
1: 1,;
'I~ '~
J: •!Ml ll~ i
,..., 2: ,,,
~ I = rn -l't'J -'I• .,.., -~
-..., I l!l
-1•;.. _,
-~ -llh .,..,
-'I• -v. .1
ment of Savings&. Loan Associations
If". • ba k · h • -· the holding companv for Sa vers ior a new savmM t n in t e a..c;asurc Thrift & Loan Associatfon and Sa vers
World are.a of l.aauna Hiiis. it was FundirtJ, both of Laguna Hills.
announced by Donald G. Zellner, Griffith reported that space for the chairman of Southwestern Bancorp Inc .. a Laguna Hills-ba$Cd financial new sa vings bank has been lea~d in
fiolding company. the recently completed F1oanc1al
The chaner for the ne-.. financial Center at 24022 Calle de la Plata.
institution. wh ich is expected to be
known as Statewide Savings Bank.
was conditionally granted to the
current directors of Southwestern
Bancorp Jnc .. a Laguna Hills-based
financiaJ holdinJ company.
The chaner for the new financial
institution. which is expected to be
known as Statewide Savina,s Bank.
was conditionally aranted to the
current directors of Southwestern
Bancorp who applied as individuals.
It is expected that stock in State-
wide Savings Bank will be offered to
Southwestern Bancorp stockholders
and the savings bank will become a
subsidiary of the holdina company,
with Zellner serving as chairman of
:,0th companies. John S. Griffith Jr ..
Southwestern Bancorp president.
Toastmaster s
to meet in Irvine
Toastmasters International has
chanered a new club serving the
Santa Ana-Irv ine area known as the
··Eye-Openers Toastmasters."
The group provides training in
public spcakmg.
The meetinJS arc held on Mondays
at 11 :4S a.m. 1n the training room at
Coopcrv1S1on. 17701 Cowan Ave .. 1n
Irvine.
Membership is open. For funhcr
information call Linda Hill at
474-5900.
l 1 ) 1 Yo ()ocuOI
21 2111) Oo1rG11 '
11'f ·~ Oovl08
APcM.c
AOklMI "'ftE " .. lll "~.!t' i~, El.
6 614 Dtle!Cn l•Y» 1"-OunkO ,,,.. •-Ourl<on ~ '1'4 EetV11 l
S'-• EconL.11 J14 4 EIPet 11,_ 12 Elcletl 1'11» 31 EltNuel
4 cents, on total revtauet of
SS.009 ,21 S, reported at Lhe fllC&I
1983 mid-year point.
"Tbe contin1.1ed 5trona eaminss ptrformance, panicularlyM reflected
in the cunent year-to-date com-
parison. with last year, 11 very
encoungina for us." said Samuel V.
Edens. Tcldile pm.i<Sent. chief e•-
ecutivc, and cbaarman of the bolrd.
The lowri t«o_nd.quan.er anti• is attributed'° abt purchase, made try a fORia,n 1ublicliary. of a new com-
puter toftwatt PfOl"IJI\. The purchase, wbkb was fully
amoni.z.ed durina the second q&WWI',
prodUced a $300,000 Opttltilll k>M ror the subsldiar)• that reduced Olber-
wise healthy eonsolidat.td eaminas for the period.
How to tell our newsa · s accounts
from your savings account.·
Tiered Money Market Savings
Account: rate up to 9.003
yield up to 9.3813.
If you wa nr a aving::-. account chat really rate:-..
open one of our tie red money market :-,;wings
accounts. All it take i:-. a $2. 500 mini mum deposit
Like any ::-.a\'ing ·account. you can make deposib
or withdrnwaJ.., anytime you chno c But unlike
other ·avings accou m~. you'll get higher market mtrr-
est rates for a higher -,avmgs halancc Ma in tain
an average daily ba lcmcc hetwccn $2. 500.00 nn<l
$19.999.99 and you'll earn 8.84'\, interest per annum .
$20.000 to $49.999.99 earn~ 8 .94"~ inte re~ t per
:m num. $50.000 00 or more earns 9 >H I\':, inte rest per
annum. Average dai ly balance::-. under $2. 500.00
't1ll ea rn a 5 2 5°1, intcrc l rate
\Vc'll even J?lVC you chl~ck wrnang pnvilege*' of
up to 3 chccb per mnnth
\Vhcre cl c can you find a "tlvings :tccounc
that t>ffors this typt> of flcxihility a~d hig~ market nm·
interest' Proh<1hly nm where you re savmg now.
An 8 '>0 n race -y1cid'i H.84°., ltn111wlh An 8 6"~" rcHL'
-y1dJ~ 8 94"n annually. An 900"" rate y1dds 9 381'\, an nu
all'I lr1et:rc,1 i:ompuuwcm 1~ \tmplc mh.'ll''' .:ak·ularcd
ot1 a 36c; or J66 da-y ham and crditi:J monthly Race~
cm! rnhJed te> f>enoJ1l thm1Rr
' .,
Passbook Money Market Saving
Account: rate 9.503, yield 9.9253 .
Fnr tho"t' 1)f vuu keeping $1('.l\.\."' l'r llh'rl· in
a 5 ) 1\1 rn\:-.hook ,JCCPU ll l. 1 lht fnr the ('011\'l' l)l<.'r\l°l'
of a rasshnnk, \\'t'.\'l' gnt .l h1.'ttl'r 1Jc;1 Dcpu:-.lt I h.tt
mont'Y in a Pac1t1C Fedcr,11 ra ........ huuk ~ 1P!ll'\ ~ 1.11 kl'{
a\'lng" Account ;md vou ·11 c.irn ~ 92 )''., 1ntt'rl'"t
per .rnnum. T hac·-. pr:Kl1t.1llv dnuhlt· \\ h.11 \1\u'n ·
mnktng now
You ·11 get a r ;i.... .... hrx)k chat \\'()rk.... Ill"! likt• \'PUr
old one. One ch.u let:-. ynu withdraw or depl'"ll ffHHll'\
anyturn.' you likt'. \\11th .11! thl' ~akt\ .rnd "t'l.°llnt\
of a pa~:-.hook It your h;1lancr ever drur~ ht·ll '''
$10.000.00. you 'II still l·arn a 5.2 5°~ tntl·rc"t t .Ht'
But ;H a q ';0°,, rate lll"tc;"ld of 5 )\\,, it 1..il'l'"n I
pay for a "t'noti.... ..,,1ver to ha\'t' anvthtng hut <'Ur ra, ... honk ~ tonl'\' ~ 1.ukt•( "avmg AcnHtnt
fnll'Tc::-ol dlfll/>Hl<lllOn I\ \lmf>/c IJl(l'Tl.'\( u!kHi<Hl'c.l
on u Jo1 m ~60 1.la' bus1' cm1J\.-rcc.lucJ monrhh Rell<.''
<m.• '"h/~CI w />l'noJ1L. L·hclfll.!C ·
PACIFIC FEDERAL
l~\TI )'~
,
Monthly Money Market Savings
Account: rate 9.753 yield 9.75%.
Thl'rl'\ .1 h1~ d1tkrL·n1.·c hl'tween ''U r monthh
ffhln<.'V rn.ukt•t ..... 1\ 1ng" ,K(PLJnt ,1nd nthl'r monthh
Cl1 • .xnunt:--Our (Urn:nc l} I)''.. rl'r annum lntL're .... t r<ltl'
lt · ... ,1 high r,ttt..> vuu 'd ex pL'l.°t tn find univ on
longt'r term o nr 12 mlmth .Kl'l'llnt:-. But wtth Pa ci fK
Fedcr.11·.., monthh .ll..Y<.)Unt . W'U c.m 1.•,1rn tht'"l' m,u-
kct rah.~" tor ,1.., lmk· J:-)l~ day .... JU"t h, m.1mtamtng
cl L 2 .1L"\") \.\.~ minimum h.11.UKC Juran).! th.It time
Ot (nur-.c.· 1t \'t 'u \\,lnC vour mPrW\ w n'nunut.'
tu grl'''· Yl'U 1.·.111 .lUtom;iucally rl'tll'W the ,K(OUrH
,lt the prt•vailin~ high market rtltl.' <..'.lCh time your
\('-Jnv crrclf 1rntc m(lturc:\
sll don't wa~tr any cimt' (nllccttng high mtercst.
Opt'n .1 Mlmthly Mone.·,· M.ukrt S.l\'mgs Account
,11 Pacifi c Fl'dL'r,11 ;rnd ... t.irt t'arnmg lt,ng term i.ltc"
Pn \'l 'U r l.~\\'n term-.
Thi! mt1.•rt:\l •. :ompurcwon 1' ''mf'k mtl'n.'St '"'1l1.itlutt:d
on a ~b~ or lM Jw, ha,1~ m1J cri:J1ccJ mcmrhh Rae~
urc ,uh1cd co [>t•nod1l" i:han~t.' Call \our loail hmn(h
or I St\" PACIFIC/or .. urr1.•nt wt~~ h.'Jcrcli regulauoru
Tt'(/um• cl \l<h\ltlfllld interl!~l fk'nulry fur cllrh u 1chdrawal
•
On
the ,
•
W Hl I NYSE Dio
NEW VO.IC (AP} IMV 23
~'=' ¥~=Uft New I ~WWI
NYSE LlA OlRS
WHAT AM£X Ow
NEW YORK t AP) Mn n
' 55
NASDAQ SUMMARY
• NEW YORK (AP) -Most ~Ive •vtr· -the-counter stocks suoollflt v NASO. /
N•,,,. II '~ A ~ Cho ~lli l; ; ~ J J; =1~ I lr.~dl. s ti 1
h 'fl"' -w = 'I> ~-·.6
!exH l·l Jf~ 1l~ ;':~: .wr.. ~ ·~ l _,~ Convet , ~ "' -v. Inlet a j_ f Ve -1..-,
Goto Quons
M£T AlS Quon s
, That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are goin~and which people are helping
them get there.just watch Credit Line' -everyday In the
Business s ctlon of your new lllly Plat
I
I
COAST
~ •
ire up the gri~l for the holi~ay
becue succulent duckling
r a delightful change of pace
Memorial Day and backyard barbecues seem to go together. But
· year, trygrillingducklingforadelightfutchangeofpace.
By using the right accessories, like a roast rack. aluminum foil
· p pan and covered grill, this elegant. yet simple-to-cook en tree is
to become an outdoor favorite.
Since ducklina tends to be a fatty poultry, be sure to follow these
pie tips to prevent flare-ups:
• Set drip pan on the grid; place duckling on roast rack and set in ·ppan.
• When using a covered grill, be sure to keep the lid down with
events open.
•Score the duckling by the joints so the fat can drain out as it
ks.
And for successful overall barbecuing, remember these basic
nil es:
• Baste sweet sauces onto meat during the last 15 to 20 minutes
.,t' cooking to prevent burning.
•Avoid having foods stick to the grill by spraying first with a
aon-stick cooking spray.
•For extra flavor, add woods like hickory, mesquite or oak.
Orange peel, garlic cloves or herbs to the fire. These flavor enhancers arc great for everything from hamburgers, steak, ribs and chops, to
whole fish, poultry, vegetables and nuts.
With these simple rules, grilling two ducklings is as easy as
&rillingjust o ne. So invite friends to enjoy this succulent en tree,
basted with either a sweet or tart sauce.
GRILLED DUCKLIKG '"'to S pond dad.lla1, frm or froiea. daawed
1 Soyu~
Remove neck, giblets and fat from cavity of duckling. Reserve neck and
giblets and use for soup stock if you wish; discard faL Rinse duckling with
cold water; pat dry with paper towels. Twist wings to the back to bold neck
skin down. Oose cavity with small pouJty skewers; tic legs together.
With two-tined fork, pierce duckling skin several times at joints. Rub
generous amount of soy sauce on skin for color and flavor. Place duckling on
roast rack set in a heavy-duty aluminum foil drip pan. Place on coolcioggrid
of grill.
Cover and grill duckling about l 'h to 2 bours; remove fat from drip pan
as it accumulates using bulb baster. Duckling is done when joints move easily
or when juices run clear when pierced. Makes 4 servings.
Prepare sauce according to d irections. Serve duckling with either Red
Cherry-Almond Sauce or Burgundy Cherry Sauce ..
DD CHERRY-ALMOND SAUCE
I cu (%1 onttt) clterry pie ftllbag 1 tablespooa segar
% ta1pooes lemoa Jelce
"' tealpooll ult 14 taspooa almeacl extract
Place cherry pie fillinaand remaining ingredients in blender or food
...,~•cnr, blend mixture until smooth. Brush cherry sauce on duck.ling the
t IS minutes of cooking time. Heat sauce and serve with duckling. Makes
about 3 cups sauce.
BU&OUKDYCllSRRYSAUCE
1 cu u• a,; oaces) ctan sweet clMniet
'i'I np red B•rs-41 wtae
t to z tables,...• near
I tablespoo11 corastardl
i,i, teaspooa lem• jelce
14 teaspoon ult
Drain cherries, reserving syrup; sctasidc. Combine syrup and wine. In
small saucepan, combine I tabldpooo sugar and cornstarch. Add syrup
mixture and stir. .
Cook over m~jum heat,. s~irringcons~tly until bubbly. Boal for 1
iJllinutc. Add chcmcs, lemon Juice and salt. ~dd more sugar to taste. Serve
aaucc with duck.ling. Makes about 21h cups sauce.
rTrying
f . new
ecipe
er joy
. For Clarice Musser, the best gift as a
took book.
Although. she says, she has quite a
:COiiection, she is overjoyed each time
•he receives a new Qne.
, Of course, the books don't just sit
~>n the shelf ... she uses them.
• "I lo. vc to cook, especially gourmet.
ut that's a little tough on the ~udgct," said the Huntington Beach
.mother of two.
Fortunately. her family likes to cat
nd will cat most anything, so that
encourages her to experiment with
new recipes. However, when her
husband Guy, after tasting a new
dish, says, "It will be OK if you cook
this af:iin next year," she knows he
docsn t care for it and the recipe is
eliminated from her repertoire.
She said she likes being creative,
and to expand her talents she has
taken classes in gourmet cooking and
now is learning cake decorating
techniques.
1 Musser said she has been cooking
since she was 8 and has always
enjoyed it. "I learned from my mo~
who is a great cook. She let me help in
the kitchen all the time ~nd was ~
patient." which Musser said she tries
to be with her 9-~ear-old da~cr. .,.., .... ,.....,, ~,.,.. Her mother still sends recipes and
they are "always by touch, taste and
feel. I've adopted a lot it. . .I suppose
you have to do a lot of cooking to
achieve the touch, taste, feel."
Clarice Maeeer cbooem Stir hied Porll for an entree and
often a cbotce of Chocolate Marbled Cbeeeeca.IEe and
Almond Coolllee for deeeert.
When Musser prepares an extra
~al menu, she says, .. it dctervcs a
fine table. I act out the crystal, silver
and china. even if we're not ~.•Vll\8
auests for dinner. Aftcrall. s~c
reasons, "who better deserves this
treatment than my familyr'
Her favorite cuisine is Oriental~
and a recipe she is especially fond or
.. because the kids will eat sr,inach in
thisdish" 11 Stir fried Pork. t'1 low in
calories but ~eked with nutrients,
and h is ooloif\.at, she says.
She shares this recipe. one for
Almond Coolacs and an Avocado
Soup, an original. With Daily Pilot
readers.
STIR FRIED PORK
I a,; pea41 C!9bed po,. .U.Wer
I eg,beata
l ta .. etpOOU water
Corutardl
'4 np peaa•t oil or ve1ec.ble oil
1 clove prUc, mlaced
l ODIODS SJlffd Ulla I a carrots par.d ud sliced
...... 11,
l lar1e s&alb celery sliced
dl.a1oaally !:;r s:rea pepper aeeded ud
I 1ar1e red pepper lffde4 ucl
Ctlbe4
I me41•m-slie yellow 141udl
trtmme4 u4 etit .. 1Uca
'" ,.... anea btus
\'I etip ~-brotlt
'.A& Ctlp IOJ U~
14 poDM mHkfooD'll, lllced
(Pleaee tee QW UCIPU/Cl l)
Sweet art easy to master
Cake decorating no longer
for professionals only
If you've aJways wanted to decorate cakes wi~ a
creative flourish but never had time for a class, there LS a
way to learn at your convenience.
A new cookbook. "Betty Crockcr's Cake Decorating."
simplifies instructions and details techniques with
illustrations.
The 160-page book. published by . Rando~ House
($ 13. 95), includes I 00 easy-to-follow. TCClpes ranging from
simple cupcakes to elaborate w~ddang ~Ices._ The~ are
cakes for every holiday and special occasion, ancl~dmg a
Flag Cake for the F~urth of July to .theme c~nfcctaons for
showers, annivcrsancs and grad~ation. pan1~. .
Appropriately, the book begins w1th an antroduc~aon
to basic cake decorating, including detai.led instructions
for using a decorating bag and other equipment to make
borders, drop flowers. roses. lea vcs. shells and scrolls.
There arc also many fast and simple dccoratmg
creations requinng no special equipment. like Gumdrop
Cats, Frosted Cranberries and Orange Peel Tulips .
Illustrated lips on mcasunng ingrcd1ents. cooling a.nd
splitting cakes. removing cakes from pans and frosting
them are also included.
The cake recipes are for such basic favontcs as
chocolate. spice and butterscotch as well as angel food and .____..:;:m...__~
(Pleue eee SWEET ART /C 11) Try thla Sprt.nc Flower Ca.ke.
.,
A CAt$PY SWEETENED 2·GRAJN CEREAL
Get up to 16.00 In CMh
Md coupona by
collecting "Hot Savings
and Coki Cash'' letter-
seals found on the right
side panel d specialty
mart<ed bc»ces d Big ~
Cereals this summer.
Participating brands listed
at right.
-<!)-
PLUS UP TO
0
IN CASH AND COUPONS
~ 00 00 [HJ c. .......
Clllllltll • .....
~· ~ .... ...........
~•..0.0ft C.r..oon C....., ....... 111111• .....,...
1'1• ......... a-tee •
ICla•
C...a..1111•
fllllllll ..,, • .....,.
The more times you apell CASH (up to three), with
"Hot Saving• and Cold Cuh" letter-seala, the
larger your refund.
SPELL CASH
Once-get 12.00 ($1.00 cash and .. 25e Big a
cereal coupons.
l'Wlce-get 14.00 ($2.00 cash and .. S<>t off 2
different Big It cereal brands coupona)
ThrM tlmee-get sa.oo ($3.00 cash and 12-2se
Big • cereal coupons)
1---------------------.-----------~--------Offlclal Refund
Certificate
Needed to Qualify , ........................................................... ,
: DU.1'~..tl'lll.a4'a>OLU.> :
! r:T .:'.':r-= :-.:.: :: .... : : ::.:.:: •. :::.-----· : . ----' : 0 o. ~T:::.::.~·--:
: :J -. :r··~, I
• I
' ' ' ' -I '. • .. -=-:.·.:= ...... _ ~ - -: ~:TI ....... ::::::::--.-:.-. .... : ....................... : ........ : .. -.. -. .. -... l
I FREE
I Cinnamon Toast Crunch. I BONUS CERTIFICATE!
I 10 gel a free box d new Cinnamon Toast I Crunch Cereal, )OU must spell C-A-S-H three I timee and send this official "Free Cinnamon I
I but Crunch Bonus Certificate" along with I
)OUr Hot Savings and Cold Cash Refund I Cenmc. and the required letter-eeal8 I I ~ling CA-8-H to the add,.. Indicated on I I the Refund Certificate. I
I By return mall )OU'll receive a Free coupon to I
Watch lof the "Hot Savinos an<1 Cold CUh" Offic•al I try new Cinnamon Toast Crunch Cereal and I
Refund Cert1llC81e in apec1ally-marlced boX8s ~ Big ~ I $6.00 in cash and coupons. I
Cereals Ofter exp1res September 30, 19&4 l.--------------------·--------------------~!.I
Organizt• ~·our coupon !'>avings with The Supermarket Shopper .
appearing Wednesday and Sunday in the Daily Pilat
Salads wish for Wish-Bone ~
Give your salad its fondest wish . New Southern Recipe and
Southern Recipe With Bacon. Two thick, creamy Thousand
Island dressings. Crisp chunks of real bacon, fresh tasting
sweet relish and fresh, sweet onions. All the freshness you
could wish for from Wish-Bone.
• ETHNIC FOODS GO LIGHT·~
Make hearty rtce salads
for wholesome main dishes
Traditional ethnic specialties are Uk.ely to be eclipsed
in popularity by Oriental and Mexican foods. predicted
~staurateurs rnpondios to a 1980 trade survey by
Institutions maaazinl .
The restaurant operaton also forecast a steady
increa~ in the consumptfon of poultry, fish, <Jtreal grains
and fresh produce. Both of these predictions appear to be
coming true. And now is the time of year when menus
featuring ethnic dishes prepared with lighter. mpre
healthful ingredients arc most appreciated.
•
Among the liahter. more wholesome main dishes
expected to appear on menus this summer is the rice salad.
Salads made with rice arc perfect for warm weather menus
because they are both refreshina and satjsfying. Cooked
poultry or seafood, vqetables from the garden, a favorite
pourable drcssina and cooked rice are the only ingredients r'!'~~~.;..;;
needed for the simplest American-style salad.
But don•t stop there. &cause cooked rice adapts
beautifully to the flavors of many cuisines, you can crcate
excitina ve11ions of favorite ~thnic dishes.
Streamline salad preparation by k.ecping cooked rice
on hand. It's easy if you plan ahead and cook an extra cup
of rice whenever rict is on the menu. Refrigerate the extra
to we in a Salad a day or two later. · .
Team cooked ricc·with chilies, avocados and other
south-of-the-border ingredients to create a cool variation
of the tostada. Tijuana Shrimpy Rice Tostada Salad stans
with a spiq shrimp and rice millture made extra easy with
packqed chili seasoning mix and canned green chilies.
Prcparina the salad ahead saves time later while
allowing the flavors to develop fully. When ready to serve.
spoon salad onto crisp lettuce rafts and garnish with
tomato, avocado and tonilla chips.
Oriental dishes are known for their light. fresh fla vor
and varied textures. and Gingered Far Eastern Rice Salad
is no exception. The crunchy texture of fresh bean sprouts .
radishes and celery complements the fluffy separate-
graincd rice.
And the slightly sweet vinaigrette is as full-flavored as
it is light fo calories. Its intriguing flavor comes from fresh
gi~er. a popular, readily available Oriental seasoning
which can be kept on hand in American freezers.
TIJUANA SHRIMPY RICE TOST ADA SALAD
3 YI ctps dilled cook.eel converted rice
1 pond cooked mecllUD 1lartmp
~ ctp dairy 1oe.r cream
1 can ( f oacea) ~opped 1ree1 claJllea, udralned
1 eavelope ( 1111 onces) clam 1ea1on1D1 mlx
% to 3 tabletpooa• water
% tabletpooa1 lime J•ice
1 larce lilead leeberc lett•ce
1 mecUUD tomato, corasely claopped
1 small avocado, peeled, seeded and sliced
Tortilla claJps (opdou.l)
Combine rice and shrimp in large bowl. Blend sour
cream, chilies, chilj seasoninJ mix. water and lime juice
until smooth. Add to rice mtxture: mix well. Cover and
chill several hours.
When ready to serve, slice lettuce into rafts 11•-inch
thick. Divide nce salad evenly between lettuce rafts.•
Garnish with chopped tomato. avocado slices and tortilla
chips. Makes 6 servings .
•1f desired. salad may be served on lettuce-hoed
plates.
GINGERED FAR EAST TUNA RICE SALAD
i"' cups water
I e11p ce11verted rice
3 tabletpooDI soy sauce
"' et1p ve1etable oil ~ ctp red "Ille vinegar
1 to 1"' teupooDI grated fresb gta1er
1 teatpooD Hill
1 cu (13 oucea) tana packed ln water, dralDed•
1 c•p frn• beu 1proa&1
1 cap sliced celery
i,., cap &ktD.ly 1Uced radlslles
i capt 11lredded freslll 1plnacb
Bnng water to a boil in medium saucepan. Stir in nee
and I tablespoon of the soy sauc.c. Cover tightly and
simmer 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Let stand covered
until all liquid is absorbed. about 5 minutes. Transfer to
large bowl and cool to room temperature.
Combine oil. vinegar, ginger. sugar and remaining 2
tablespoons soy sauce in small bowl. Add to rice with.tuna,
bean sprouts, celery and radishes; mix well. Cover and chill
several hours. Just before serving. stir in spinach. Makes 6
servings.
~wo 7-ounce cans tuna packed in water may be
substituted.
Hostess prefers English trifle
By CECILY
BROWNSTONE ,.,, .......
Barbara Beaumont was
born in En~and and grew
up there. With a degree in
Romance languages from
Oxford University tucked
away. she taught French
and English in Italy, Switz-
erland and South America.
Because cookery is one of
her great interests. she
always delved into the
cuisine of the countf) she
was working in.
Now married and living
10 the United States. she
keeps track of what's cook-
ing in various comers of the
world through her work as
North American represen-
tative of PPC (Petite
Propos C'uhnaire). the in-
ternational JOurnal on
food. cookery and cooker)
books published an London
by Prospect Books.
When I asked her for a
reci pc for a dessen she
liked to serve to guests. she
said. "Nothing 1s better
than a good English Trifle.
ll fits an after so many main
dishes from other coun-
tries."
BARBARA BEAUMONT'S
ENGLISH TRIFLE
Custard, recipe follows
I YI caps fre1l9 orange
1ectlon1
1 ~ e11p1 fresa. pineapple
cllDDkt
3 doleD lady flngert
~ cap (about) raspber-
ry jam
11• cup cream 1berry
1 cup lteavy cream,
whipped
Toasted silvered
almonds
Candied violets, lf de-
sired
Make custard.
In a colander over a
bowl. toss together the or-
anges and pineapple. Drain
fruit; set aside.
Split lady fingers: sand-
wich each pair together
with 11. teaspoon jam.
Brush one side offilled lady
fingers with sherry. Re-
serve I 0 filled lady fingers
for the top.
Linc the bottom and
sides of a 3-quart straight-
sided glass serving bowl
with the remaining filled
lady fingers. placing sherry-
coated side against glass.
Spread 'h cup of the custard
over bottom layer of lady
fingers.
Top with I cup of the
orange and pineapple mix-
ture. Repeat layenng with
remaining custard and
fruit: top with reserved lady
fingers. Cover: refrigerate 3
to 4 hours.
Just before serving gar-
nish with whiP.ped cream.
almonds and. t(using, can-
died violets. Makes I 0 to 12
servings.
CUSTARD
"' cup 1u1ar 2 table1poo11 eorn-
siareb
% cups milk
! en yolks, 1ll1l9tly
beaten
1 ~ teaspoons vuilla
In a 2-quart saucepan stir
toaether the supr and
cornstarch. Gradually stir
in the m ilk until smooth.
Whisk in esa yolk5. Over
medium-low heat. stinina
consta ntly. bnng to a boil.
C'ook until mixture is
thickened and boils 1
minute. Off heat. stir in the
vanilla.
Tum into a bowl: cover
with plastic wrap without
presslna down on surface.
Rcfriattate until ~oot -
about I hour. Use as
directed 1n Barbara Beau·
mont's Fnah h Trine
Makes about 21/1 cups.
·~ .~
I
I
I
I
One of the best lh1np about home cn&ttWniq today
11 the trend toward kttpana menus 51mp&c. The ilavisb.
time-Q)nsumina blnq~u of tbe not·too-dista.nt ~·
simply don,'t fit our bus~estyla anymore. . Ever since fitness me a nauonal putune, pany
planners have been li&htenio' up meals for suests by
cuttina back on the number of dishes served. and by relyina
on popular liaht meats such as breast of turkey.
The convenience and versatility of thete fully cooked
portions of turk9 breast have made them a menu staple
for streamlined dinner parties.
Sometimes. a new and intemtinJ recipe creates an
instant theme for a dinner party. mak.ioJ the selection of
appetizcn and desserts a breeze.
For example, Chinese WaJnut Turkey is the kind of
specialty that m~t be found at an Oriental restaurant.
Almost a meal in Itself, it sugests eu rolls or a liaht soup
to st.art, and almond or fonunc cookies to complete the
menu.
lfa wok 1s available. add a bit of showmanship to the
presentation. Af'Tln&e the cut-up breast of turkey.
vqetables. walnuts. 11nacr and combined spicy sauce
in&f'Cdients attractively on a tray, then quickly stir-fry the
meal at the table.
Anothcrtime.10 new-style Italian with Parma Turkey
and Fettuccine Verde, a iesty combination of turkey,
mushrooms and tomatoes in a creamy sauce accented with
Parmesan cheese. Serve with al dente spinach fettuccine. a
simple tossed salad in a vinaigrette dressing. and crusty
rolls or Italian bread.
CHINESE WALNUT TURKEY
I pouct brea1t of blrkey
Z tabletpoou oil
3 11lce1 fret~ P.1er
3 creea onloa1, cat lllto I ·lac .. plecn
% greea peppers, cat lato l·lnc .. c .. ukl
I cap walaat hlve1 ----~ fUAll! U)ufO,
..... "'ai,••Mr . ~ .. , .... '""~:..,~ l f llfllMC.. ......
%11•11., .... ~
.~ ........ ..... . ................... ...... •;.....,._,.,.,. ...
• -----
4Mn~Ma~rtee Cut \u;ey into thin 1tri1>1: ICt uide. fry sineer ia bot
oil in wok or Dutch oven until eo&deD brown; remove IDd
djscard ainaer slices. Stir-fry onions and sreen pe.,.,en l
minutes; add turkey and walnuts.
Stir-fry S minutes more. Combine sa~ ~ta;
pour over turkey and veaiet.ables. Stir and continue to beat
until sauce thickens. Serve over hot rice. Maka 4 servi ....
PARMA~AND -
PETrOOCINE VDDE
1 ,....a breast ef a.rkey
I~ Ctlpl llWf .... .UU
I C9p (%...en)~,,_. • ......_.
14 ~ Parmeaa ckele
% taltletpMM .,., wllice wille
% tabletpNU COl'Mtardl
I taltletpeH cti.ppe4 fretla bull or ~ lealf • •• .,._.
ba11J
'4 teupooa oalOD pow•er
% &omatoet, et1t la&o l·llld di.ab
I OUCH lplaadl HOdJes, cooke4
Cut turkey into V•-ioch slices; set aside. Combine next
seven ingredients; pour into tarse skillet. Cook and stir on
medium heat until mixture thickens and boils. Add turkey.
Cover. Simmer 10 minutes.
Place turkey on platter. Add tomatoes to skillet; stir
and heat through. Serve with turkey and noodle1. Makes 4
servings.
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PROCTEA A GAMltl(I 05<4980 l 61 1 ~A A QAMeLl.l 05-4980 l 37000 36120 I ·-------------------------· ·--------------------------
NowLuvs Is
vs
disposable diapers
With~ Refastenable Tapes
M9dklm -for crawlers 12·26 lbs. D..iv clnd N1qht uS<'
•
48
Diapers
BY
MAIL
SMART MONEY VALUES
Better.
REFASTE
TAPES
LE
The easier to use
ref astenable tapes.
They fasten and refasten
anywhere on the diaper
in one simple step.
And New Luvs is even
thicker and more
absorbent to help stop
leaking better than ever.
Your baby's comfort
begins wit~vs
r----------------------------------------------LUVS REBATE CERTIFICATE
ANO ltECEIVI
THIS REllATI
" (0'1\/f'<lot r><t P.l(k\ 01 11 Rrquf.lf C..1t llJV\ \ .. '!.
l C 0'1V!'n 1tfl(t PM:k\ Of 8 Rf'quMr 'i<ll' luv\ \] '>
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Pl,><p on \I~ P~ uSP \Ulf1< tl'Ot po\t ~f' .. "<1 " 1411 t
LUVS REBATE OffER
P.O . Box PM664 EIPaso,T•xas79966
o n.-. q<>XJ Ot•ly " u \ fHI~ CE IHIFt( -"Tf MA'r 'l;QI 8[
MECHANIC -"llY Rfl'ltOOUCEO .&,NO MU\1 ACCO'V"""''
vouR REOUHt 'f0ur otft'I rogN.\ "'A)''"' Of' -'\\f9"\!'t1 OI """'
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-you can s5 85 • save •
0. OrMge CoMl OAtLY PILOT/Wednlildey, May 23. 1964
qan the U.S. government shut off the cows?
There's too much milk
being produced in the Unit-
ed States, Both cntics and
supporters of the federal
government's dairy price
support program agree on
this.
Supporters of the new
dairy legislauon. which was
signed by President Reagan
late last year, hope to
reduce the nation's miJk
output and cut the amount
of money the aovemment
spends in buyina and stor·
iDJ surplus dairy products. Critic~. however, con·
tend that the new prosnm
will be difficuJt to adminis-
ter, that there is no cap on
payments to any one
producer. and that some
AD•--..._.Mkb.
wlllbe ..... ,..........
u.rtrom
98mto
7PDL
farmers will be pa.td for
output reductions already
made before the law took
effect.
Another criucasm is
there's no auara.ntee that
troublesome surplu es
won't re-emerge after the
I S..mon th di version pro-
gram ends March 31. 1985.
The new program is the
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMfT OA R£FVSE SALES TO COMMERCIAL DEALERSOA WHOlESAURS
.EAT
FRANKS
16-0Z. PKG.
fifth piece of dairy ICIJs--
lation since 198 1 that at-
tempts to reduce surpluses.
The ftnt four were not
suoceuful. And 1983 ended
with record production and
record aovcmment expcn·
ditures.
So what docs all this
mean to you, the con-
sumer'! As a taxpayer, you
pay for the price support
proaram; as a consumer of
dairy products, you pay
hi~er prices than you
might pay if a free market
economy existed for milk
as it docs for most food
crops.
Many low income con-
sumers have benefited.
however, as recipients of
the "free" surplus cheese
and butter distributed
throuahoua the country by
the O.S. Dcpanment of
Aaricuhure (USDA).
School food proa,rams also
have received the surplus
dairy P.roducts.
Whale the d.airy industry
produces more and more
milk. consumers have not
been incrcasina their con·
sumption proponionatcly.
As the population has
arown, the total national
consumption of dairy
products has aone up, but
per capita consumption
has aone down.
The result of the growina
gap between production
and consumption has been
Stater Bros. Wiii Be Open
Memorial Day, May 28,
From 8 am. To 7 p.m.
For Your Shopping
Convenience.
i~ Meat!
MEDIUM SIZE • Pork •.
$pareribs
\ BEEF BONELESS 'T°lt=.oln
llllPGRT ... YU ..
IDETEUI
..,,...,_...t .............. ··-·
! -Mecadanda Nuts
_. .1N-~""";,. -cJ' FARMLAND !>LS
Sau-age Canned
Roll Ham ~:u79 SS.99&A
I
$2,.54 SIYdtCncken t
•t.89 &.;ft' &;.rd. Coale.. !
'4-29 ow;~· I
LARGE SWEET VINE RIPE
BARS
Sliced
Bacon
Smoked 8All PARK ,. ........
Wieners S..•p
LB
Service Dell 4Y41~8LE Al STORES WtTw SERV>Cf Oh 0 "1 • ~ood Sea lectiom
"'""' Potato s.lad
.__ ______ .... ~~~ .~lo.69 sI.99 ... e.oz J•• Wmtern Oysten
'"'h.L OH .Jumbo Shrim p
.. .r
,.'2.I9
..... 99
koCCD ro D"Dl• ewt.Cb-
,,.CfO '0 Ollll:Oftl
BoUedHam
... 4tr
.• • •• 99 '··•.89
•1.09 ·•.39 •t.I9
~ .. [ ....
VAN CAMP$
PorkUBeam
•01 ~9
¥)0lfJT I
I J•O/~
'~ftitCl'ICOWU"'fl.•41111
Steak
Rolls cw
6PKt20 Z
'~I f '"'Briquettes •• ;S •• 99
-J HILB
MINUTE MAID CRYSTALS
Lemonade I
4·VARIETIES·HANSEN NATURAL
Soda •
tZ •lOl
307.oz sz.89
&12·0Z $I .89
I ·001 S~ 3 VARIETIES.PILLSBURY FUDGE
2250Z si..69 Jumbles ·t •60~~
Vl.ASIC SWEET D•l l OR WO! DOG
Relish
•tASI(; HAMBURGER Cantaloupes
\: ...... Corn f A'I\...., S\"'Efl TENOEP C"..OACHELI>
MangCJiS •A"IC•SWffTT~,t.,41/QA
Cherri es fYTR,4 ~ •N<. y SWEET REO SINGS
Onions SWEE' JU,,.BOAEO•T•u AN
'-AEMOAIAt 0'1' '-Al•EO
Floral Bouquets
P('ITH()S SPIDERS ORACAENA IV'
PHIL00£NOAON ANO OTHERS
Assorted Foliage~ .PO> •2.99
DIDChlps •• I
I
Frozen Food
SpedaW
,,o,*I.88 STATER BROS 1 PLY
140·CT 59e Napkins t
Tab, I MINUTE MAID FRUIT PUNCH OR ~40Z 99e Lemonade ,,
Sprite, or •VARIETIES-KRAFT PHILADELPHIA
80Z si..os Crea111 Cheese I
STATER BROS SLOCES SJ. 49 Cheese Product I · 12oz •
RUFFLES-REG.DIP OR SOUR CREAM & ONION
s oz sI.I9 Potato Chips
LAYS REG.BBQ.NO SALT OR SOUR CREAM & ONION ~oz si..1.9 Potato Chips I LEA & PERRINS 1~oz SJ..79 Steak.Sauce
s-:.a-· v .0. C8nadlan
~~
.or Gin
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.., .. •k ~ ~ ......... .,,. .... 1l.A o.n. Wlne ·•• ;,.;/1"7
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27 28 2• 30
• ~
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-------~---
excess fluid milk th.at is
manufactured into butter,
cheese and oonfal dry milk..
Much of it end up in
aovcmmcnt atoraac.
The expandin.a use of
imitation cheese in fresb
and frozen paztt , snack
type foods, and as 1 compo-
nent in packqed cheese
sauces has contributed to
the surplus cheese prob-
lems. The primary ingre·
dicnt in imitation cheese is
casein, which is a nonfat
dry milk product, 90 per.
cent olwhich is imported
from New Zealand, Aus-
tralia and European ooun·
tries.
The problems of proV1d,
ing fresh milk to consumers
arc more complicated than
the y are for some othtr
commodities. Consumers
expect fresh milk on the
shelves whenever thoy
shop. but they shop mo~
frequently on some days
than oth ers.
Further complicating the
situation are seasonal fluc-
tuations. Generally, a cow
gives more milk in the
spring and summer than an
the fall and winter. Like·
wise. the demand for dif-
ferent dairy products fluc-
tuates seasonally. We eat
more ice cream m the
summer, for example.
Therefore. the mdustr)
must produce some over-
supply or reserve of fluid
milk, especially during the
flush production season, to
make su re there's enough
fluid milk to meet con·
sumer demand at all times.
And the excess goes into
processed products . • • •
QUESTIONS WE ARE
ASKED:
-Q. I've been reading
tbal some pl11.a manufac·
t11ren are asln1 Imitation
cbttse, bat I baveo'l been
able to find any piuas tbat
tell yoa on tbe label that
Imitation cbee.e was used.
Isn't this reqwred?
- A. Not at present.
Current USDA standards
permit pizza manufac-
tureres to use a blend of
nine parts non-dairy (im-
1tat1on) cheese to one part
natural cheese. without rt·
quiring notification to con-
sumers.
Without such notice on
labels. many consumers are
under the false impression
that most. if not all. frozen
pizzas contain 100 percent
cheese tnSlead of the lower-
cost imitation cheese.
Some amendments have
been proposed tn US DA·~ ' grad mg standard to require
that pizza contain a mini·
mum of 12 percent natural
cheese and that a pizza
label be required to include
the name of the natural
c heese , the c hee se
substituted. or the imita-
tion cheese. and that the
product be qualified as
.. containing imitation
cheese and cheese" 1f the
cheese substitute 1s nutn·
ttonall} inferior to the
natural cheese . • • • -Q. I have a problem
digesting milk -It gives
me stomach pains and gas
-and tbe doctor says I
have lactose Intolerance.
So I don't drink milk. Coa.Jd
I tolerat e sweet
acldolphilus mllk?
- A. Probabl y not.
Sweet ac1dolphilus milk 1s
simpl) ord 1nar )
pasteunzcd milk to which
bactena. L. ac1doph1lus.
have been added. A recent
stud} showed that this un-
fermented milk was no
better tolerated than ordi-
nary milk by people with
lactose intolerance.
't'ou might. howc"er. be
able 10 tolerate fermented
milk products such as
yogurt and buttermilk.
Dunng the fermentation of
these milks. bacteria con·
sumc the milk sugar -
lactose -to which you·n·
mtolcrant and replace 11
with lactic acid • • • -Q. How macb Ice
cream does a clllld bave to
eat lo get calcium
equivalent to wtaat be gets
from drinking a glass of
milk? My 5-year-old son
refu1es to drtnlr milk but be
will eat Ice cream, and I'm
concerned tbat lte get
enougb calcium.
-A. An 8-ounce glass of
milk contains about 300
milligrams of calcium. To
get this much calcium your
son would need to eat
about I 11 cups ( 14 fluid
ounces) of regular ice
cream or I"• cup of ice
milk.
The maJOr problem W1th
this substitution is ugM.
fat and calori~s. While or·
dmary milk has about 3
percent fat and I 50 calone~
1n 8 ounce\, reaular ice
cream has about 11 pel"l"Cnt
fat, much added ~ugar and
405 calone .
Ice milk ha le fat
(about 4 pen.'tnt) but more
llugar than ice cream and I'• cup \\OUld have US
calor1e5 Thu , ubs1ituu11a
ice cream or ice milk for
milk wouldn•t be 1 prac·
t1Lal wo) for your child 10 get the 800 milliarams of
calcium he need ('\lfr>
d. \
1Beans
gaining
favor
By TOM HOGE
Al WIM Miii ,_. Wrtt.r
The country cuisine of
America has been growing
steadily in popularity and
nowhere has this been
more pronounced than in
bean cooke ry.
For generations, both
here and abroad, beans
have been the ma~nstay of
the laborer. They ate heany
and usually cheap. Even
today a bean dish that is the
centerpiece of the meal can
be cooked for a family of
four for a little more than a
dollar.
Bean spec1alt1es have
also shown up in the
gourmet field , such as the
Brazilian special composed
of black beans and sour
cream laced with spices and
a little rum.
One of America's
favorites is the Boston ·
baked bean classic that is
still a Saturday night stand-
by in many New En~and
homes and a Sunday break-
fast special as well in some.
In Am erica's southland
the blackeyed pea still
holds sway. It serves as the
base for the "Hoppin'
John" stew, which includes
salt pork or bacon, rice and
seasoning. along with the
beans. This is a New Year's
tradiuon in many southern
homes.
Amencans arc also be-
coming fond of an old
Italian favorite. It comes
from Florence. wbett the
white beans of Tuscan),
cooked and spaced with
lemon juice and olive oil.
arc garnished with chunks
of white tuna. Americans
can substitute canned
white beans for the Tuscan
variety.
Many varieties of dried
beans have become popu-
lar as the centerpiece in
salads, including red beans,
navy and lentils.
Red kidney beans,
refried and laced with chili
powder, have long been a
standby in Mexico. And the
Arabs puree chick peas
with sesame paste to serve
with dinner.
Some cooks consider It a
must to soak dried beans
for hours before cooking.
but others feel it 1s suffi-
cient to simmer them until
tender. There is also a
theory that beans arc more
digestible if you bring them
to a boil and then soak
them for about 12 hours.
Beans have always been
key ingredients in such
soups as this mixture of
white beans and frank-
furters.
BEAN SOUP
'iii pound dry 1mall
white bean•
·Water, 11 needed
% teaspoons chicken
bouillon granules
"'I onion, chopped
1 teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon ground
cumin
.,_ teaspoon pepper
8 ounces frankfurters,
sliced 'iii lacla tllllck
1 cu (8~ onces)
canned whole keruel
con, drained
1 cupcllced red potatoes,
peeled
Cbopped parsley
Wash beans and soak in
3 cups cold water over-
night, but don't
refrigerate. Drain and ri nse
beans. Add five cups fresh
water,
bouillon, onion and
seasonings. Cover and sim-
mer I hour, until
beans arc almost tender.
Add frankfuners, corn and
potatoes.
Simmer 30 minutes until
beans and potatoes arc
tender. Ladle into
bowls and aarnish with
parsley. Makes 4 scrvinas.
Sell idle household
items in Dail~ Pilot
C'la sifted ads
. Dilly Piiat
642-5678
Save over $29.00
with Ralpu S,,.aaI Clrt:ular.
11 rou don't h~• a dlcular,
plclt on• up at your n.arHI
llalpM. WhJI• mppUn lmt.
:;;--.
lieam tangysaace,
The nal ut&J flavor ofbtt t.raijht froai the bai'bccue is
uobeaaable.
But 11Wl)' ou&door cbd'• enjoy lef'V~ a teem •~e
or rtlisb on the sidt for that extra finisb1na touch. iTbis
chunky Horttradisb Sauce, an American ldaptatton of \be
tr1ditiona1 En&Jisbuucc. oft'ena tanJYflavorcontrut toa arilJcd steak.
Chopped l'ldiihet, areen pepper and areen onions add
a unusual crunchy ~ture to this zesty borseradisb-bued
sauce.
When cuttin1 a porterhouse steak, a sharp knife is a
must! Cut alons both sides of the T-bone with at little
tcarina of lhc meat 11 possjble. The bone ahouJd be practicaJly bare.
Then carve the steak into diaaonal slices. Each aervina
should include a piece of the top loin and a piece of the
tenderloin.
A ponerhouse steak is panicularly juicy. Use a
carvin& board with a wtll so you can eitch the juice. Pour
the juice over the sliced steak just before serving.
Gl'Dl.£0 IT&il WITll CllUN&Y
Uta I ta._ n#rh1,..,. ,.., ... 1...a.,..,....,,...,.... .......... ,...,.,.,....,
t ........... _,...,.,.. ...,.,., ••
I t .. ln•rr• ~ .. ......,..
'.4 ........ ....
.~ ..... ..., ............. ...
Place radiahcs, areen pepper. peen oaioal and....,.
in food prc>cnaor or blender~ procea until= MG with horseradith, mustard and •11; cover.le•
least 3 hours no lonaer than 24 hours.
Trim exoeu fat from steak. Cook steak on be"*-
grill 4 inches from medium-hot coals. I to 10 minuteS per
side for rare or un Lil desired donenas. Seuoo with lllt and
pepper, if desµtd. Serve with Chunky Honendiib Sauce.
Makes 4 serv1np.
' . ...,.... ~ \
First ol the Season ~.~f'r9sh·l
ellow Peaches
USDA Insp.-Gold•n Prem.iwn·NOI to bce.d JO% Fat or lleat
save
.40
per lb.
per
lb. II
COJWlfS ot. llteollt Wl .U.. TbJgtu.
~err,· Dnuu9• WU19gs
~rlb.
per • lb.
Ralphs Hot
Dog Buns
Tc:.39 pkg. ota
a.g 01 D1•t 01 f'ab 01 s,,n,. •.u oe ccm
Save
.62
l lb.
pkg.
~~f J.09
1
gal
btl
Sav• .ao
IO& pkg.
CblUed A.uonea
.79
.67
SaT• UoaHI
r ·'
per
lb
-~
II
CaU/omJo
JOO ct
pkg. J.29 •acb .33
or Hamburger .. LI.Lil 01 Bot Dog hlU/J
99 Colot1uJ Mut..:1 J 99 ..:. l. Bouquets ..:. . rr..ii C\11
Stock
'DalS'liint. 99 ,..,.,11 C\11 3 99 ..:. l . Carnations = .
1~~1 4 88 pack • ~k3.J9 ,;r 2.ss 2 99 ,.., .. ,, C\ll 3 99 ..:. . Gladiolas ..::: .
..:; 2. 99 Aiijnm Piants _ 4. 99
nwA C'\11 PomPons
~C\11
bis
· Special Values
'Beei'i(;ck Ribs i:-• 79
1tHb Val11• Pot:k-(fhJglll lb I If) 99 Fryer DrumsttcJcs ,.,.~ . reiiow omons ~ .19
atHn land·l'Nab J9 Crisp Celery -" .
Vla#IC.QJJI~ Wbole OI ~
Deli D1JJ.s ":, l.29
aalplll ,,.,,. '°""'',,.. l A'i9 Potato SCtlad ::.~ ••.
;;;::or;;uciwd "= i. 09
"Oii IAl»l·llf#rrr °"" l 99 Purex Detergent ".: .
Special Values
~ • .. ':""J ••• ., Tasty Light Ham·!;: 2.49
Mtad l'rlf lloll""'1fwol1C111t1Wt1 IQctJc t lletb 2 6 9 Ntw Holland ChHSI. :.n: •
IO hoo/.I 11 111 btl 6 88 FleJschmaDIJJ Vodka .
KabiuaLiqueur "°= 7. 98
0.lJ otOat•
Ralphs Rye Bzead :.:. .89
'CirmamonRaiis ~·-: . 99
•'9dloo Ivory lJqu1d .• 79 -.
... 55 -. ,..,....., .... •• ,..._.., o ..... , c-~· .. 11..,. .. ,..,.._ ····-" "°""'' ~, ... .,,_., 1_. ... Oiii. *• .................... .._ .... , ..... "' ,.,., .,, , ....... , • ..i ..... " ,_. .,..... .... , '*"""' ...... fft •• ....,~ •••r." ,....,... .,. ..... ,.,, .... .,. .... •• • ·••·14 r te• •M...c•_.. •• ,~ ... ., ....,.11 .. .., ... .,.,,....,._ .. .,t( ..
•••••"o A ,, .... "' ~ ff'h"' "" ... "" , ..... ,...,. flllit .._M '" •U 1111..,•1111 ••·c•• ..... , ..,.,. ..,.... ....... t#., "'*' ..... ._.,.,..,.... ...--tecM c-""""•"-' ee't ~ .... , • ..... ..,... •••"""'
ztMmll..~lMlll
llt4 IWl. TUSTle, ...alt a IM atO m1 t111ST .. ta
Prices effective May 24 thru May 30, 1984
tJe'1 Lower Prices.
Higher Standards.
1 ~n ' llOOlJUSt mn.sro Sloat IOolS t 11 Ollr t t S!Mat
)
.. , . .... --
Otenge CoMt OAILY1PILOT IW~Mltday, May 23, 19&'
Flsh en tree economlcal
. Team seafood, vegetables
: In two easy main dishes :.'--------------------,• Whet your family's seafood appetjtc with two new,
: low-cost entrees that combine the best of fish and
: veaetables in one easy dish.
Families looking for low-calorie meals will find this
:• crustless quiche ideal for quick dinners.
It's a healthful blend of frozen chopped spinach and
: any frozen white fish, be it haddock. cod, sole, turbot or ! perch. This fle)(ible recipe lets you take advantage of the
:·frozen fish specials at your local supermarket.
• For an elegant main dish, here's another combination
• of fish and vegetables, this time featuring frozen sole and
t frozen zucchini slices. The low..cost ingredients in the Sole-
• Zucchini Casserole bake up into a rich, bubbling casserole ~: that has grc;at eye appeal and color.
FISH AND SPINACH QUICHE
1 package ( 18 ounces) frozen wblte flab flllet1
! eg1, U1bt1y beaten
Egg Qeverages
provide mini
meals in a glass
D11~1crs. break out the egg~ for nutrition-packed drinks
1hat are surpns1ngl~ lo~ in calories'
One large egg. for a mere MO calones. supplies
natu rally good protein. a liberal supply of important
minerals and all the v1 taminscxcept vnamin C. And. if you
combine that e~ w1th a Yltamin C-nch fruit or Juice. the
end result 1s a m101-mcal in a glass
Apple Yogun Nog 1s a compatible comb1na11on of
eggs, yogunand cnsp. bright apple b11s. Pineapple Pick-Up
1s a refreshing blend of eggs and pineapple mellowed with
a dollop of honey.
Either can ~ct your day ofT to a wide-awake start or
beat the "hungnes" at a later hour. Serve them to balance
a mid-day meal. satisfy the kids after sc hool or quench
your thirst as a la te-night snack.
Apple Yogur1Nog1s more healthful with about 11. of
th e protein. 17 percent of the calcium. 20 percent of the
phosphorus and 19 percent of the riboflavin you need for a
day. It's great as a light meal to ofTset heavier ones.
Pineapple Pick-U p 1s just what its name implies -a
savory sipper that provides substantial amounts of need ed
protein, v1tam1m and minerals for the calories 1t costs. Sip
1t any time of da> to sat1sf) your cravings with calone~ that
count!
APPLE YOGURT NOG
1 cup (8 ounces) plain yogurt
2 eggs .
2 small unpeeled apples, cored and chunked
2 teaspoons brown sugar
•;, teaspoon almond extract
Cinnamon sticks, optional
Place all ingredients except cinnamon ~tic ks in 5-cup
blender container. (over and blend at mediu m speed until
smooth. about 45 seconds. Pour each SCI"\ 1ng into 12-
ounce glass. Serve 1mmed1ately wnh cinnamon-stick
stirrers. 1fdes1red. Makec; 2 c;ervtngs
PINEAPPLE PICK·l 'P
1 can 18 ounces) crushed pineapple In juice
2 eggs
l 'fiJ tablespoons honey
11, teaspoon vanilla
Mint leaves, optional
Place all 1ngrcd1cnl'. except m1n1 ka'c'> 1n 5-tup
blcnderrnnta1ner. (over and hlcnd at medium speed un til
smooth . about 45 <;econds. P1wr each scr' ing into 6-ouncc
glass. ';erve 1mmcd1atcly garnished with mint lea, cs. d
desired. Makes 2 servings
SAFE PICNIC •••
Proa Cl
l pacu1e (lt oucet) froaea clloppecl apJuc*,
defma.H
i tabletpoou 1ra&ed Parmesaa clleeae
1 tabJetpoo11 dlvet or clloppe4I sreo ollioa SaJc, pepper ucl srou4 .. rmea to taate
1 aabletpoo• marprlae
Preheat oven to 400 degrees, si mmer frozen fish in
salted water I 0 minutes, or until fish flakes easily with fork.
Flake fish into lightly areased 9-inch pie plate.
In small bowl, combine eggs, spinach and seasonings.
Pour over flaked fish. then dot w1th margarine. Bake 20
minutes. Serve hot, or cut into wedge' and serve cold with
green goddess dressing. Serves 4 to 6.
SOLE-ZUCCHINI CASSEROLE
l packa1e (II oaace1) froiea aole, tltawed
l &ablnpooD &llawed fro1ea lemon jlllce
l packa1e (10 oa•cea) fro1ea iacclttal 1Uce1, &llawed
~ cap fro1ea cllopped 1reen pepper
1.4 cap froiea cltopped ollion
l tablespoon mar1arlae
1 cu (10~ ouces) cream of masbroom soap,
aadlluted
1 cu%•/, OUJlCH) 1llced ripe olives, drained
% lablespooa1 dry wltl&e wlae •
l lablespooa cbopped panley
1 &ablespoon cbopped pimento
~ teaspoon dlll weed
Sprinkle fish with lemon juice. Roll up each fillet, then
cut in halves. Place rolls in shallow 11/J-quart bakin$ dish.
In saucepan. saute zucchini, green pepper and onion in
margarine, cooking unul dry . Stir in remaining ingre-
dients.
Heat just to boiling. then pour over fish rolls. Bake at
350 degree 15 to 20 minutes, or until fish flakes easily with
fork. Serves 4.
LB.
RED RIPE • WHOLE
WATERMELON
•'f\11f!l ll .. ""''
I ""ll)t11'\ t-i..41""'
4A(f l\lot\11 .-...,.
lh1-.-ti1 .. ( ''"P"'"
I u_., •·
th•u ~·~ tn l'f'"i1 12-0Z. CANS
PEPSI COLA
PRICE WlTHOUT COUPONS 1.49
"~,,ff SAVE ··a1im+·: ~"' ~I ~ 50¢ ·•qll• :
1 on one 6·Pack ot any Peps1·COla produci 1 with this coupcn I c.ooo Al AU SOlltHFJIN CAllfOllNIA I I ~KA<.L' ALJ>HA llLTA AND .tJ.PHA 11nA .. m111, I
I ... ~·~ Off.. Upl••• I
. ~.if'" Mav 30 1984 L-------------------~
C:QOY"O"' 1944 Afl ngtit• '•••"'td Wt (...,..,.'"• "O"' tn ••m•t ou•nooet
COCA COLA
OR TAB
p~149
• 12-0Z. CANS • COKL CAFf£1NE FREE
COKE. DIET COKE. CAffDNE FREE DIET
COKE OR TA.8
BEST FOODS
MAYONNAISE
15~
• 32-0Z. JAR
LB.
LARGE • CALIFORNIA
PEACHES
~\
41EA9
30-INCH
WIRE GRID CHAIR
9~.
• 12 PAK • 12·0Z. CANS
• YOUR CHOICE
•LITE BEER
•BUDWEISER
• COORS ~~G~Wr
29
EA.
WIZARo
CHAifcoAL
llGHTER
1!' • JI Ol . """' .•.
10-LB. BAG
KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
• UNBREAKABLE LINER • GREAT FOfl PtCNICS
...... h • C.Ol••ct9<1O'I 111 T1 .. ol• ll•m• ""' W•n• 'l•llvo• "'<ii -"·•~•DI• tn "'" SIO•H Price• Effective at all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beta Marketa
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS
•
PEOPLE ARE MORE INCLINED 10 TAKE SOME
DIAN LEAVE SOME.
TRY Ola Hn-Of·lltE·PARTYTRAVS.
Remember your lut party-bow much
lime and trouble it was to pre~ au the
food and make it look just npt? OK,
now fo~t it. Call us and order a beautiful
HoneyBaked. party tray. You can still act
the complimentS without all the f ussT
•SANDWICH TRAYS
• CH££SE TRAYS
•MEATTRAYS
ANAHEIM-The Ville.Jo Center. 1222 S. Brookhun11 lat Ball Rd.I• 17141635-1461
CO•ONA DEL MA•-3700 E. C~ 1 Hwy (7141 b 1J.9000
EL TO•O-Bell T~r Plau Nonh. 24601 Raymond WaY #l 111 El 1bro Rd I• f71418J7-.l8l2
HUNTINGTON HACH-19069 e.ach Blvd tar
Oerlleld ne11IORalph•l •17141 ~7~
ORANGE-1419 N. Tustin fal Katelle 1•17141 997·99ti.l
UH.A ANAHCIM t OllONA DEL MAil (L l'04ll.> e.tt.,r"IA~ FllfloM I Hlff'ITlllOTOo; IFACH LA HAHA LAKEWOOD. ,_UllTH ll()ll'I' WOl)O -llllllX.l OllA>l(.l ~ALTO l"UAl>l"A llAhCHfl MIRN'll 11vn s1ot SACllAMUITO. SA'f OIEOO u .. .l()Q. ~AVIA IAllAllA \Al•TA MONICA SU .. l'IYVAl[ TOllllA ... Cf 11'1.4°"[) \IAUNCIA WlSI Cl~IM WES'fLAKr VIUAL.I V.IWJOl.A.,OltllU
ONE TASTE IS AU IT TAKES!
V•PYr11h1 c 1!184 Hllllf'Y Bakt'd llam. Inc
Save money and shoppingJ~~·the Dli(J Pilat
LB.
• BEE.F
ROUND
WNDON BROIL
MIUER'S
• 2 OR 3-lA eM;
100% BEEF PATTIES
Thursday, May 24 through
Wednesday, May 30, 1984
OPEN
MEMORIAL DAY
MONDAY, MAY 28
REGULAR HOURS
/
~ -.&&I
t
•fR07£N·
OEFROSTFD LB.
•BACK
RIBS
BEEF SPARERIBS
ARMOUR OR NORBEST
BONELESS TURKEY
ALPHA BETA
SOUR CREAM
'>A\ I~' Mil I\ Tl TCH'IUVI04. ~~HK ..,
• 16·0Z. CARTON
Al NIA Kl 11\ l'Rk. I OR l AST (lA n PRIOH
I !l lNlllAl l'RK l RHlt K TIO:'ll f XCI l \I\ I
0 1 All\ f HTN f) OR l'R0'40 TI< >NAI l'MK I ..,
• Orangeeo.t OAJLY PtLOTIWM~. MerD, 11M
MORI SWllPSTAJCIS!
MORE CllANCIS TO WIN!
41NCO .. ..,__, . .,.... ......... ---...... -........ ..,..._., ....... 1.i.11.-..., ... Ut,_.rr~•---•• I • .,.. ................... ....,c..•c...........-..... --"· .. ..................... _" ........ ---. .... o.r.. c.llltlt ,_ .......... ......................... -............ _____ _
........ ...in .. .-...................... ...., ........... ., rru. -......... ...,., ..................... _ ... _._
c.Mlr1llt .,,_ ..... , ... ---........ _ .......... _ .... , .... _ .. _ ..... _ _._ ·---·-·-·-··-··1-,, ......
SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS!
ANNE SCRUGGS
125,000 WINNER!
LUCY ELKINS
CHEVROLET EUROSPORT
WAGON WINNER!
·CV-L ___ ,_-_\Jc ,
1ERESA QUINTANA
CHEVROLET EUROSPORT
SEDAN WINNER!
MIX, MATCH
A HOLIDAY
COOKOUT
Shout hello to summer with a Memorial Day picnic.
Invite the neighbors to this backyard smorgasbord of mix·
and-match meat and sauces to crate Saucy Grilled
SandWlchcs that easily serve I 0 to 12.
There's something for everyone at this picnic! Grill
tender chunks of steak, chick.en and frank.furten on
skewers and serve in pita bread pockets or crusty rolls. An
as.sonment of toppings and fresh vegetables kt.I your
guests create their own individual combination sand-
wiches.
Pick a topping. Each one is a snap to prepare. Sweet
Mustard Sauce boldly combines spicy mustard and
currant Jelly with chili powder and oruon. For a mild and
creamy accent, choose California Toppina. lts smooth
base is quicldy made from a pack.aged sour cream sauce
mix. Shredded cheese and zucchini add a lively texture and
color. Let the traditionalist choose Zesty Tomato Sauce
served warm from the grill. The touch of Worcestenhire
sauce Wlll be an inviting surprise.
Complete the picnic with aced tea and homemade
strawberry ice cream for a delicious welcome to summer.
SAUCY GRILLED SANDWICHES
11Uce 1lrlolD •teak. abo•t l·l.Ddl Wet
' claJckea breu t laaJves, skiued ud booed
"" poud fn.nkf81"terl
Cra1ty roU1 or pit.a bread
Tue Sweet MHt.ard Sa8tt
Califon.la Toppi.De
Zaty Tomato Sa11«
C ut steak... chicken and franlcfuners into \-inch pieces .
Arrangt on separate sk.ewen. Grill ovtt bot coals, tunnna
frequent!)'. I 0 to 12 minutes for steak and chicken. S to 7
minutes for frankfuners. Serve on rolls or pua bread Wlth
choice of sauces. I 0 to 12 scrvinp .
TANGY SWEET MUSTARD SAUCE
"" cap currant Jdly
14 capmHt.ard
! t.able1pooa11~rry, If desired
l t.ablespooa lemoa jaJce
l teaspoon cblU powder 'I• teaspoon onion salt
Combine ingredients in small saucepan; simmer 5
minutes. st1mng with fork or whisk until smooth. Makes
about 112 c up sauce.
CALIFORNIA TOPPING
.,.. cup 1bredded anpeeled zocclliDi
Vt teaspoon salt, If dHired
l envelope (1 1• onces) 1oer cream sauce mix
~cup milk
"'a cap 1bredded Monterey Jack daeese
Spnnkk zucch1n1 with salt. let st.and while prcpanng
sauce. Combine sauce mix Wlth milk., sumng with fork
unul smooth. k t st.and 10 minutes. Place zucchini in
s trainer and press out excess hqu1d. Sur in drained
zucchini and cheese. Makes about I 'h cups sauce
ZESTY TOMATO SAUCE
l small onion, ebopped
l tablespoon oil
l caa (8 0W1ce1) tomato sauce
11, cup water
1, cup lemon juice
! to 3 tablespoons brow11 sugar
! tablespooDI Worce1tersblre sauce
l chicken boullloa cube
Cook onion rn 011 in saucepan 5 minutes. unul tender
..\dd rc mar nrg 1ngred1cnts. Simmer. uncovered. 15
minutt'\ -.urnn~ to dissolve bouillon cube Makes about
11 1 cup-. <,aun~
Serve fish, pasta
ltalrJn' hJ' t' Io ns rnns1dered fresh fi sh and pasta a-.
the stapk\ o t lht•ir drct Fish. a high protein. low fat food
combines "'di \.\Ith the carboh~drates 1n pasta
Tm ltalran Butter Crumb Fish. dip fillet an melted
butter roll in a -.easoned crumb mu.tore and bake Just until
the fi'>h llJl..c' \enc "'1th noodles Parmesan. buttered
zuclh1n1 and ..c'M!m1: bread 'ltlc~s.
ITALIAN BUTTER CRUMB PERCH
"• cup flnt dry bread cramb1
.1-oonct packa1e Italian salad 4re11ta1 mis
l teaspoon ore11DO leaves
I teaspoon rosemary leaves
• , teaspoon paprika
1 pound Ot'HD pereb fillets
...., cup 1wHt cream butter, melted
Heat ovcn to '\50 degrees. In 9-rnch pie pan combine
all 1ngrcg1ent'> U.t'tP* Iii It-ts and butter: mix wcll. Olp fiUcts
in melted buttt'r. the n roll in crumb mixture to coat. Plue
in I'\, Q-1nch baking d r<;h IJmzlc with rcm&na"f butter
Bakr for 24i to '\O minulc'I or unttl fi«h flakes with fork.
'\ 1cld 4 \Cf' mgs
Spice it with green chilies
'ou \an u~ m ild or hot JV"('n ~h1hes for this ma.m-
d"h soup
l'THWEST SOUP
'• C'tlp cliloppM oaJoa
~ "' chppe4 ll'ffll ~' 1 &ablHpooe vqttable ell
tt~-oe.ace C'U NeduH4 tomato ...,, _.lht.._.
l 11 ceps dalcba •rod!
l 4 "t -OHC'e CU Collla Mmhl)', d.n.1M4 __,.
t-MHt C&D ChppH SftU 6llia. ·~
In 1 medium Yuctpan cnth cook onion 100 arecn
~pprr 1n 011 until the)' •~ as t.rodtr as )OU ILke. dd
tomato taup hmth homin) and ch1h~ Heat, 1imn1
ot\rn tu \1mm<"nn1 \1akt~ 4 R"f\ tnJ\
t~e ~DIA qtJi~ off m'~W~
btAf w;nf-11
~Vet'tift L,fO(,((
h ouf)e 1 boi-,
CQ!,~-~
Sm.11 S.IP
OeltOSll'd
Boneless
Turkeys
Armour Star fresh
Buner Basted
Great On The Rot1ssene
$ 48
lb
~---........ --Top Slrloln
\'1110" Bo N.'SS Beet l.lJ
Soil l'l TPIP B.!Q
~148 ~199
Chuck Steak 5.llPV,/, fJud f;
Bee• S..l 1" Cu•
Sliced Beef Liver oP1·we~ • 89c
f B ts Bont P)~ Manor $239 ryer reas HOuSt' J •v1nQ Cl'l1C1<P•1 lb
Boneless
Ha1111
lb
Smok·A Roma Whole
Fully Cooked
48
(
Previously Sliced ) H:lr Your
Con..en•erice lb 1169
f h F '.4a'lo• >l:JIJ~ res ryers :Jtioe Boo,
'O 79c P1<9
Sliced Bologna ~~1;· ~-~ 99c
fresh Perch flllets s.,,m t$219
Beer
M11wauktt s BP st
In Cans
Chablis
franzra
• ~se • Burgu11<11 • Rrune
~$139 ~~399
Daily Pilat
642-5678
Ice Cream
Snow Siar
C1eamy Smoo111
Mangoes
Tre»UI Tfea1
Grear T~e
c
~$199 ~$159 mm>99c 3•$1
PllQS Gat1on 2 For heads
~ SMn Seas ~ Buy One Bunch Ill ~Dressing :~~~~~~ ~99c ~fresh flowers ~~~mE
mm)HotDogBuns~r~:~;2 ~$1 mm)Green Onions ~:! S oonc!I
mtO Charcoal Scotctl suv I 0 :o $I 79 mm) Mushrooms 5.18~:,'n lb$ I 4 9
Bar-B.Q
Sauce
Co r •' C.,1 med Beef 8r \•"'
P c;'<~ astram1 ~· Mt:t.,.,
Sausage .;~:~;.
S l l'l"ll'.Ofl hnmp r '°'"'''""'"
Burntos ~-~·
Hoffy Bacon .,. •.
0 '1'9
~ s339
0 S189
~~ S169
4 ~~ s100
~ s1•9
Mustarcl
Frenchs Bonus Pack
40-ol FREE
Chns & Pin's
Great Marinade
c
D!I> Spam "";::r •2 °' spg
~ J !.M11t.,•1 ,.,. am s1_.., 1111 s199 Int Del Monte 'Sa~~~ 5 to:~s1
mm> Top Ramen 4 J.~ s1
DO Detergent x~~,~ " 99<
EZtO Star-Kist r..·1 ~ 69<
Town l'ioust·Serve
With Buroers & Fnes
DIOHoneyclew Melon fb 39c
mtOstrawberrles 3 ~,~'1 s1•9
mm) Potatoes .::e ~~
mm>cucumbers Fres11
'b 29c
3 ,o,99c
8uSlls Besr Gru t H:lr Picn~
Paper Plate
Scolctt Buy Uncoated
9 Inch &le
12 Ol Can 39c mm)Pennsoll ~~I "'11/!·mrrr:r.m:,;m ~ ~~. ,.., co..oot1 ~ •"' 81>\' on. ........ •x1o1.-' c.-.•i ott ~ -09' I I .,...._,..""""11" .. ._..,..°',rt-~-...,. ""ui. ._ .,..'1"'.,.. I
• 1000 Bmldt 0.. Ntwpoft BHch
• lUI So Btlitol S1nt1 AN
'4 oz
Jj• 69c mm> Tylenol E.i"ra:~r
mm)Jnt Whlstle ~ I o..<tn.H t~• g. .. ,.. ,..., one CIQM' 0t •• ..., ..-• ..-O' ,.,. '•" ( , ,_. I
..,,.,, •O(M. ro..,.., a.-. o-oe1vt1a '"'"'II'• covoon ~ ·-l...., ·~ .157 I •-•••J-"'°""'"" l' lO a~·"' s..• ...... .,.,,.,,., ~...,.." c • .. I
Ea(l'I "''Si-, .. • I I
I ~"'' 1.u I ?ric•~ Efltc.11 • May m ·l · !1I1~71'1:11ll;!; m
2• 3o 19e• 1n Sovt'*n I " .. ....,..... "" .. llO"O ., ... ..., .,,,. ~'"'" .. ' t'"'" cM ,.,._.,.. ot; I c.tom.a 1Eiccep1 91y1r14t & I -h -...-.-.~,.,. _... ..,, ia~ -._ "°'..., I C..i.lina, Sllllt In Aet t»i •..;-. c~ _.,..~ON -°' •• ...., ,... -C( N ,_ IC.... I a..,, Only I --co.,.., •• ll'lll>.<'-l---..... l-MCI~
WE Z:~EPT USOA FOOD I ":;,. ;:,;~ ~ ...... ,.)I) '9~•··~·..., • .,. ... ~~ .. c.;.tor.... •• I
STAMP COUPONS I I
I ..... IA• ' ·---------~-------------~ • 636 No CouJINrtiw1y, L111m 8t1ch • l4 Monarch a., rim. South l arim • Santa Ana frtt••f at l1 ru. •• Viejo
• 14417 Clhtt Dt . al Wlhlt. lrme
------
Keep stuffing
moist with
grapefruit
A wonderfully new stuffing for your Sunday ro~st
chicken combines rye bread. onions and cel~ry with
walnuts and Juicy pieces of grapefruit. This flavor
combination ts guaranteed to send everyone back for
seconds. . The zesty grapefruit adds its special m~1st texture and
taste to the crunch of the nuts and the savoriness of the rye
bread (if you favor carawa}. a seeded rye works utrcmely
well). Another wa} to add savory zing to chicken. turkey or
lamb is to offer a Savor) Grapefruit JeHy. Made with .frcs_h
pink grapefruit, the color of this sh1mmenng concoction 1s
an attractive pale rose. ·
SAVORY GRAPEFRUIT JELLY
1 lfa cups bolling water
14 cup ctrled leaf savory, crumbled
% lar1e srapefnait, peeled and sectioned I re1erve jalce)
5 caps sa1ar
% bottles c• ounces each) llqald pectin
In a small bowl combine water and savory. Cover. Let
stand I 5 minutes: strain into a large saucepa~. Add
grapefruit sections. an} JU ice reserved from sectioning and
sugar. . Heat to boili ng. sumng to dissolve sugar. Add pecun.
sttmng constant!}. Boil rap1dl} I minute.
Pour into hot. sterihLed Jars. Seal. Or. Jell) can be
stored in refrigerator. unsealed up to 6 weeks. Yield: ~ven
'h pints.
SAVORY GRAPEFRUIT STUFFED CHICKEN
6 tabletpooDI batter or mar1artne, divided
~. cup cbopped onion
,,. cap cbopped «lcry
Va teaspoon salt
lfJ teaspoon dried leaf marjoram, crumbled
.,_teaspoon pepper
1 gTapefr11lt, peeled and sectioned
4 caps cubed rye bread
4 caps claopped walnuts
1 3 'fa to 4 poa.od roasting chicken
In large saucepan heat 4 tablespoons butter: saute
onion and celery until tender. Stir in salt. mar)oram and
pepper. Add grapefruit. bread and nuts: mix well. Spoon
stuffing into cavity of chicken.
Place chicken on rack m shallow roastinJ .pan.
Spnnklc chicken with salt and pepper. Melt remaining 2
tablespoons butter: add an) Juice accumulated from
srapefruit sections. Brush on chicken. (Roast, uncovered.
in a 350 degrees oven I to 1 11~ hours. until chicken tastes
done Yield: 4 servmgs.
Tour scheduled
for Chinatown
Taking some of the m)stery out of shopping m
Chinese markets will be Hugh Carpenter, food expert who
has devoted the last I 0 years to promoting Chinese cuisine.
He will conduct a tour through markets and
restaurants of Los Angeles' Chinatown May 31. The tour
will begin in Corona del Mar at 9 a.m .. returning at 3 p.m.
"The best ingredients are essential for creating
outstanding flavor in Chinese cuisine," said the renowned
chef. who abhors the use of the controversial MSG.
"Just as the vanous brands manufactured in the
Unttcd States differ in taste and quality. so do those
produced in the Orient," he said. admitting that he has
strong opinions on which brands to bu y and which ones to
avoid. Carpenter. who has taught more than 1.000 cooking
classes in the United States. has presented elaborate
banquets for such notables as Julia Child. James Beard and
Baron Philippe Rothschild.
The six-hour event will cost S30. and tndudes round·
tnp transportation by bus. the guided tour and lunch at one
of Carpenter's favonte restaurants.
For reservations and infonnation call Fassero's, 2919
E. Pacific Coast Highwa). 6 73-2343.
How sweet it isn't:
Recipes sugarless
A suprless cookbook featuring recipes for such
favontes as cream puffs. applesauce spice muffins and
banana ice cream. all prepared without su&ar. The book is
available from the California Dental. Assoc1at1on.
With more than 40 taste-tempting recipes, the CDA
Sugarless Cookboo~ 1n~ludes everything from ~esscrt.s to
lunch entrces, highhghuna several award-wmnma recipes
from CDA 's Sugarless Bake-Off.
Special sections of the cookbook feature a suprless
snack1na aujdc. lisuna-' for sugar content in several
popular breakfast cereals. and aeneral dental health tips for
both children and adults The cookbook 1s available upon request b) send1na a
check for $2 or money ordered (payable to the California
Dental As~t1on) 10 : 'ugarlcss CookbOOk. California
Dental A oc1at1on. l'.O. Box 13749. Sacramento. 95853.
The cookbook is bt1na distributed by the 14,000-
mcmbtr dcntal as:soc1at1on to raise the public's awaren«s
of the nqauvc cffecu of suaar 1n our dicta. Suaatless
cooklna as an important bcainnina to healthier smiles and
a nutntiou1 diet.
Shop th<• mnnl'' sann~ vulut.>s
:irh t•r11~wci 111 t ht· DlllJ Piiaf
-
ak Ridge wine: New and improved Ea t -_
You·ve prol).
ably never heard
of the East-Side
Winery unless
you live near. or
frequently visit.
the small com-
m unity of Lodi.
East-Side has
bttn in Lodi with
ill winery and vineyards
since Repeal, which means
UM! operation is now half a century old.
East-Side is a cooperat-
ive winery owned by the
growers who supply the
grapes. Historically, c<>-0ps
do not make very good
wine, because their reason
for being is to use the
farmers grapes, whatever
the quality, not to attempt
to make the best wine.
Until recently that was
exact!y the si tuation at
East-Side. Wines under the
Royal Host label were ade-
quate at best, and sold at
very low prices competing
in the bottom level jug wine
, market.
Enter a new president. a
11ew marketing director-
nsultant. and gi ve a tai-
nted winemaker the go-
ahead to make the best
instead of the most. and all
of a sudden the picture
changes.
Ron Kent. the new mar-
keting director and
oenolog1cal consultant.
knew instinctively that just
making better wi nes
wouldn't be enough.
The folks who had been
buying the jug wines for
years wouldn't appreciate
the improved wines and
probably wouldn't pay the
·higher prices that would
have to be charged. That
meant a new label. a new
brand. to reflect the new
style and quality.
The new label is Oak
Ridge. the name coming
from an oak tree that
dominates one of the wine-
ry's major vineyards. This
regal tree has stood its
ground through three gen-
erations of winemakers.
and is depicted on the new
label.
Before anyone is misled.
let me say that Oak Ridge
wines are not the greatest
wines in the world. but they
do offer some of the
greatest values. The pricing
of all the wines is very
reasonable. and. when
compared to wines of com-
parable qu_ality. generally
less expensive.
Most Oak Ridge wines. it
should be noted. are meant
for immediate consump-
tion. though a couple of the
reds will benefit from a few
vea rs in the bottle.
· Basically the Oak Ridge
wines arc intended to be the
"house" wines at your
house. offerin$ quality su-
perior to the "Jugs" at very
little more money.
Barrel Red SO ( $ 3. 99 for
1.5 ltter): Here's a non-
vintage $eneric red that
you'll enJO} drinking day
after day and th at would
make a good "house" pour
for restaurants.
What makes at so good?
The blend features three of
the finest red wine var-
ieties : Caber net
Sauvignon. Zinfandel and
Petite Sirah. The wine is
soft and easy to drink with
some really ~ood flavors.
Blanc de Blanc ($3. 99 for
1.5 liters): Would you be-
lieve I 00 ,Pt:rcent Chenin
Blanc in this bargain priced
quaffing wine? Very fruity,
off-dry (slightly sweet) and
very. very easy to drink: An
absolute summertime
"best buy."
Do not be confused by
the fact tha1 Oak Ridge
makes a wine labeled
Add rice
to diet
Although rice may be the
staff of life for half of the
world. in America it takes a
back seat to bread as the
favored member of the
breads and cereal group of
the four foods group -
milk. meat. vegetables and
fruits. breads and cereals.
But the California
Dietetic Association sug-
gests you remember rice
when planning meals. 1:he
ancient grain is versatile.
relattvely 1nexpens1ve and
a good source of B vit-
amins.
While there are more
than 7.000 varieties of rice
1n the world. only a few are
commonly fou nd in the
United States: brown,
white. which is generally
enriched; parboiled or con-
, verted white rice . and
precooked or instant nc~.
None of these vaneues
should be rinsed prior to
cook1na or food value will
be Jost. .
Be ~urc and cook nee 10
only the amount of water
that will be at>sorbed dur-
1na ('()('lkina -generally
one cup raw ncr to two cup~ water If water must
be dn.11ncd oIT cookt•tl rice.
un 1nordmutc umount of
vitamins are lost.
Jmy
I m
Chenin Blanc that costs
nearly twice as much and
isn't nearly as tasty.
Califon.la Rote ($3. 99
for l.S liters): Made from
two top grape varieties,
Cabernet and Me rlot, this
wine has a gorgeous color,
t~meodous fruit aroma
and Iott offrult flavor. It is
a bit too sweet for me, but
the mltjority of people will
proba~Y. Uke it Just as it is.
Serve tt icy cold.
PIWdl Celoma..r. Ital
($3.50 or lea): My favorite
wine in the line, and the
kind of white wine that
causes me to ~fill the glass
&pin and ~in. II is low in
alcohol which encourages
consumption, but mainly it
just castes so fresh and
fruity1 with hints of melon,
and tne bit of SV..eetncss is
nicely balanced bX acid.
Another "best buy.•
"WMte Tall" IHI ntte
Ztaf .... J ($4 or lets): The
·'White Tail .. name comes
from the b.ck sidt of a deer
that fmtuently dines in the
vineyards, and whote love
for Oak Rjd&e arapes
earned it immortality on a
wine label.
This is another wine that
is too sweet for me, but it
absolutely super u this
style goes. Fans of Sutter
Home should love it. While
it does have the sweetness I
find distracting. it does
have more fruit than most
of the gentt.
The only wine I really
don't like ll the Cbeain
Bline, IO don't hailak IO
try olhet wi9el in the line
that include a Wbite
Burpady (misnamed in
my opiftioll), Blanc dt
Noir Zinfaodel and Oran • • Sarah.
The wines are just beina ~ieuect.. IO if )'OU have
difficulty findin& them con-
tact the winery directly for
the outlei nearat }'OU: Oek
Ri• Vineyards. P.O. Box 440, Lodit...CA 9S241 .
WORLu'S LARGEST
-MOR than 150 Cali-
fornia. Washinaton and
Orqon wineries will sam·
pie their best It tM ICVfflth annual Orantt County
Summa Wine Extrava-
aanza at the Di&neyland
Hotel Conveotion Center
onJune 10from41.o8p.m.
To my knowledle tbtt is
the larsett poblJc nhi-
bition of wines under a
sin&)e roof. You can visit
mott wineries in a ainak
afternoon than you could
visit in a week running
around wine country.
Tickett may be ordered
by tbote over 21 by sendina
$20 to: Wine Extravqant.a,
P.O. Box 397, Garden
Grove, CA 92642. A sell-
out in pttVICMd years.
tickets, if available, will be Sl5 as t.be doot. A wJi.
addreued, 11ampcd
envelope ao diie above ad-
dma will ~t.e tht re-
turn of your ticbu ~mail
DINNER A BRONOi
-If you·~ viliti• wine
country thi1 1ummer, or
happen to be fcirtwaat.e
enouab IO live there, I can't
think of a m~ detilhtful
way 1.o 1peod an l.ftetnoon
or evcnina than at one of
Weibel O\ampqne Cellars
deliahtful events titled ''Brunch in the Vineyards ..
or .. Starliaht Dinnen."
nc ....... ....
~ ........ ~-~ CUlllM II~ --Northern Cali oraw•a
fiae11 cher1. A•4re
Melder. ne..,...."' S2jj die diuen 145, _.
prices iDdaldc ctsn': meal (muy cour.). toand.,.m1y.~ of'wiat, na,.c
WeibelfiOrctilln ....... llill
the winery o&n --el the bat values in mm.e
~ wines available. for data aod mceaa.
write to: Weibel EYC:Dtt,
P.O. Box 3391, Millioa
San Jose, CA 94B9.
r1 Ii VONS IDW PRICES ON ·llB
II g HOLIDAY. FAVORITES .II
FRESHLY 89 GROUND BEEFLB
TABLE. KtNG-CHOB Pf\CK •
APPROX 3 L6 tNOT TO EXCEED 30'1. Ff\T 1 UJIUT J·f'&Ga.
PORK 99 SPARERIBS
FROLEN OR DEFROSTED LB •
'IEDl<JM SIZE
BARTON
VODKA
11~ LrTfA eonu llO PQ()()(
UllUT S·PltGa.
699
T-BONE 239 STEAKS
Oii LOIN OJf CUJB l B
TABL.E lllNG BEEF PORTERHOUSE STEAKS LB 2 •9
COPPERTONE 2 59 !~rtJ~N nn nwl\11111~
FOL.GER'S
COFFEE
t...fKlru...,0 ~I I t,,~1'0'
I POU..,O ~ ''
22.9
aana
LIQUOR II l1 DELI
~ ... "' "-f\•""\ ,~..,., ....
Cribari Mt. Chablis
Milwaukee's Sul Beer
I 'I"'"' 1T I ........ ,.
Booth's Gin
., .. ftl.1"•f
Canadian Club Whisky
3 s9
1 39
8 75
6 99
BAKERY m
.99 --~ v I\ ....... ~""""" ,._,
Danish Nut Rolls
~ ., • \· .,.,p "''-'' * 41• t ~l\I 10s
Cake Donuts
Olant Sesame Bun•
HOT BAKERY
~ ._..,.,, r..r" i•cc. 5'/l te 2n.1 199
Monterey J1ck Cheese .e
'"'V"'\._.., ~"'~llC .. \T•ltWf ' 5 91 Dubuque Pullman Ham
1101 '4W .. HOH M HAl H\ 1 19
Cleusstn Kosher Plcklu
.. 01 '"" , .. ,,, 00 "''"' c-~ •C<IO 1 s9 Kr1rt American Singles
DAIRY
I QU"'llC( c.-... '~"-lft1LO 'l •l 0-\
Knudsen Yogurts
,_. Oll"tCf ('"'I Ft()ti1 t'"O"'<l "''U"1'f
Citrus Hiii Orange Juice
u
.47 1••
1 19
SUNDRIES fJ
fo~pe~ ~r Kaiser Rolls 4~.89 IOCOiJ"T -"'°""""'"""'O zs1 Scott Biby Fruh Wtpu
I ~Afll.1 l-' lllt'" °"""' 11• llOUICf 90l'TU llQLOD za• Chocoi.te Chip Cookies "'-'<>• AntAlc:ld
••f" P'l.I'-. Hlt~I 3•• 0000ill()l1 r.,_,~ 211 Oerman Ch«ot1te QM 1. SMrnpoo & Conditioner
~ 89 WILSON
~TWIENERSe
PACKAGE
'""'t ~eu~ KN:lt\."
Top Sirloin Stuks
BANQUET
FRIED CHICKEN
J200NCE 80"<~
239
YAN CAMP'S 59 PORK & BEMIS • JIOONCE c11N uura
WHOLE 15 !~T£RMELO~.
CUT WATER/'\ELOM LB 17
PRODUCE
llll.O~ft l9 4 ~100 Cuaimbers
,,.., "-"<,kf' 9(.,tll,()e 1"
8ondus Round Roast ll
•--'lJOIO ~•O 5~89 White Role Pbt.ltoe.• •
'''"' .... llfto ,.,. ~•rW"'ll atr• 1•• Bonelus Chuck Roast 1 e
1'1\!t ~fl• .. ,, ftlft
Boneless H1m '"'1fl "'°' D 1•• t9
FROZEN . "'~' ··~"" ... \~·~' Birds Eye Cool Whip
..... -. -~""" .. l8 ".89 Latve~
"°"'"(OC'OO<"l• U 5 ~100 88Q Com
C"9 •'Cl "C~ 3~100 lbnllne Lettuce
rltl.ll4 """°"''""' lB .59 o..., Buns
BING
CHERRIES
1'1EW CROP
SWEET -'NO PWMP
YELLOW
PEACHES
SWfET f\~D .J(JICY
FIRST Of" THE SEASOl"'
~-77 .
EN GUSH
MUFFINS •. 49 l-0""'> ~ "'-C" pt_ "i' ()40' V)llf~,..
KINGSFORD 249 CHARCOAL
f\lllO<.JI r-.
'> l'Ol 'o "'' L9'IT a
GROCERY 11 a GROCERY a
.79
117
.. OUl'ICl eartll 1 39 ~ T09 Apple J~
.-tt("'("H"" • llJM'f ~·T •
Squeue ~ustard
•OI l~i ~•lfl t "~'' "t ~.,. ~ 83 Chris & Pitt's BBQ Sauce •
_,OO""f<l llJll.'1'1 r
Sunsweet Prune Jul«
.44 •01 • ,,,. ••ttt .,.,,fO 8 9
Vons E11tre Large Olives•
II OU"" f •' •rfr· ... .u r'lllt'
Kern's Necters
JJ OJ...._ t •M Olltt,1""..-t'• Appletlme Appleseuce
l.1.J/&*' ... """' .......... , .... 69
01tor1de, Fruit Punc:tl •
f .., .... t •f 111i•'J• .... , •• J39 Durkee Sturfeed Olives D:i Mo~~' Swut Rell sh• 99
46 llU-.Cf ,. "<XI 'Sl 139 Vleslc Diii Pickles Artichoke Hurts .8 5
t ,,.._,I h•
Klneret Polito Latkes
a
.79 1••
.75
ALL srom OPDI ON llUJllORIAL DAY FROM • AA. 10 • PA.
VAUff PA('K S a
IJ<f<V -,_ <JI WICIU i.Cll 99 ChldM Orumitk:ks ....
1-kl •"Co ICC• 10'11 t~i .. 1" Chuck Alrnlly S4Mkl
, ... , ~Mt• IO"ofl"' .. 3 4• Rib Eye Stub
-.~
l(c
19'CJ l A 0..--~ Al
M.;tN Food &,,.,fir to the 19/U Olympic Gama ~-
• ••••w ~
POWITMI ¥MU'Y _. ..............
CAMTIWIO llACtt
,..., 0...-, .... °'·. ~
• '
• '
• •
'
Potato pancakes spiced up
Althouah the Rio
Grande divides Teus and
Mexico, the cuisines flow
toacther. Wisps of Teus
barbecue moke and P,e
punaent perfume of Mex-
ican chilies combine in
Tex-Mex, a spirited cuisine
of Southwestern United
States.
Tex-Mex is a casual,
colorful mixture of vibrant
tastes and vivid South-
western inaredients. That
wonderful blend is the in-
spiration for these crisp
potato and com pancakes.
Potatoes and com arc
combined with garlic, on-
ions and chili powder for a
spicy pancake that will add
zest to favorite arilled or
barbcc:ued meats. A cool
YOIUrt·bued chile salsa is
srcat on both the peneakes
and the meaL ~djust the
hotness of the salsa accord-
ina to your taste.
Potatoes aivc these pan.
cakes a great nutritional
boost. A medium potato
supplies 35 percent of the
U.S. RDA of vitamin C, 20
percent of 86 and 10 per-
cent of niadn. iron and
copper, along with smaller ...
but stHl significa-nt
amounts of other vitamins
and minerals. And all that
for only 100 calorics.
Potatoes add a touch of
Tex·Mex cookery to many
d1sbcs. Spice up a Sunday
brunch with poached Cf.I$ ~rvcd on a bed of cnsp
hashed browns and topped
with a spicy salsa. Or add
diced arecn chilies and red
kidney beans to a vinaigret-
te-dressed potato salad.
Sauteed potatoes with
onion and chili powder
help stretch the more cx-
w. nsive meat ingredient for
cos and enchnadas. And
you prefer a less exotic
dish, try a hearty baked
potato topped w1th your
favorite chili con came
recipe. It's an easy and
GROUND BEEF
3 -LB. PKG., LIMIT 2
FRESH HIN TURKEY
HALF BalAST
LOUIS RICH BRAND
WINGS
Ott DttUMS .•• La. .73 L&2.1•
Former John Skinless 8-0t Pkg
PORK LINK SAUSAGES ...... EA. A9
DOIS NOf
I XCHD 30% FAT
CINTIRCUTI
CHUCK sriau I
BEEF ... 1.29 I
Grode "K Frozen
MAPLE LEAF DUCKS LB .ff
c
LB.
BONILISS
FAMILY STIAKS
OR CLOD I 99 ROAST
BEEF CHUCK L& •
:?·lb. Pkg. Heot & Eot
TYSON FRIED CHICKEN LB 3.29
CORNID •llF
B•ISKIT
HUGHES
POINT CUT
R AT CUT.La. 1.ff L& 1.29
1-Lb. Pkg
BAR M SLICED BACON. EA 1.39
l·LB. HOT DOGS
WILSON MEAT WIENERS
.~-~ SAN FIRNANDO alPI OLIYIS
EXTRA LARGE
PlnED
6 OZ CAN .99
•ILL BRAND
POTATO CHIPS
S·OUNCE
TWIN PACK
ASSORTED .79
Kingsford 8 lb 18-o z. Regular H1cl~ory or Hot
MATCHLIGHT CHARCOAL .... 3.59 KRAFT BARBECUE SAUCE. 1.09
c
LIMIT
2
CaYSTAL LIGHT
DRINK MIX
MAKES 8·0T
ASSORTED
FLAVORS
64·Ct Small 48--Ct Med 0< 32-Ct Lorge
WV'S CONVENIENCE DIAPERS 7.ff
MA.ZOLA
CORN OIL
.cs.oz ~ 59
BOTilE ~.
I-lb. (Ouor1ef St.du)
NUCOA MARGARINE .69
CANTALOUPES
SWEET, RIPE MELONS
Crisp Tender 8-0z. Boaket
FRESH CUCUMBERS .... I Poe ., FRESH MUSHROOMS EA .79
••••••nm ••••n
M1TSUKAJ1 su -. • a•ru
lllCI Yll•IAll 1•1111 10PU
»OUNCE 79 BOTllE EA •
.... 0' '°'°'"""° lb log ..
GENMAICHA (nA) .59
19-0UNCE 69
PACKAGE EA .•
-Gaftor, SOY SAUCE
.IACGUA•D
UACH TOWIU
-~~Ul
.-.-. ~ a O..lch
ZORIS ~.S9
Ul•lalH L•1u•e
COPPIRTONI
SUNTAll OIL .. LOTI
.. OZ IUG OR lilt
100-COUNT
MR. COFFEE FILTERS ..• 79
.........
WI• IN A MX
PLAIN LABEL 349 CHABLIS, RH INE
OR VIN ROSE IA.
l .7N.na
•Ol•ICO llUM
... IA.
OPEN
c
LB.
1.5-ounc.e Snock 5.,_. Salted O< Buttefy Rich
ROASTED PEANUTS. • POii ., HASS AVOCADOS
PlllMA
ICI CHIST •. 'CUlll••• 1BAft
:K> OUAAT OR
b-PI< CHEST
WILSOll 548. ALIX 1111.AllD
CA-llAM POTA10 SALAD
l\\IA~H~Hl\I 149 .~. EA 93•1. •"EA »OUNCE I 29EA FrlJ FftEE CONTAINER
I/bl< ])..,. Whole .. Hoff .klrltber9
DELI DILLS 1.19 SWISS CHEESE t1 l.69 • '°"'~ lomboo Po~r
PLATE HOLDERS ·" .............
Nlnm'S
1a C111AM
:o 21• ~1£TIES IA.
12-0UNCl 69 CAN IA. •
LOWl8 YOU. TOTAL .... 81U.I
W• ...... II JHI ...... ALL ..._ l .. 1,.e rtl ... t -........ _,, ------· ......... ·-· ---' CovPo" comb·"<l••o•" wtuch •«~ ,,,. •Olue of ,.,. ,,..., py<ehO•ed not 0«9'1llld
1 ( '"""" CoupoN ...,, OC<"P•«I l (.,.,,_.,,. pr--onct gtoc..-y ,,..,......._ c~•
no• or<9'1•«1 • Only "'°""loctur., • '°""'°"' ol SI 00.., , .. , con b9 dovbl«I 5 s..!Khlu
,,.,... o' ,..,.., O" "'<>"uloeturer • cw...,.. ptohoboted by low • Volue ol '"" olem• on
r••o·'•'' 1ou~' de• .. m·n-ed bt f"tVf \hett P't<• 1 tt wie dei "Ot uoc .. tt\• ''~ tpei«1f...t _.,.:_;.."';..-;~:·.:, • .. 4!9'::.'• ! :: ::. •......
ori r••o·'•' '<Ovoe'M\ •• will •ub•t1tul• on •f9fft .. fiQVHtOt.'u •Olve I ltqv<>r tobofto ·-.. _. -.. • •·• •• ..... ,..,... e do·"' P'odv<•• ••d..o.d • ~bt«I 10 loft"" ""f,.11,lecl on "O(h ~OllllO" 10 OI ... fOOd AMy ,. 30 1"4
1WIPLI H Ul&IMlft9 MU-.. COUNll
OPPaa NOT ACCIM'llt
NICll "'9CnYI J CIA'fl I AA Mm., MAT t4
.,., ... MJ/11 ......
nutnt1ous meal.
These Tex-Mex Potato-
Com Pancakes were de·
vclopcd by noted food
writers, J1ox and Jeff
Morgan. The Morgans are
the authon of the "Coo~·
ing For T~o" col':'mn an
Bon Appet1t magazine.
POTATO·CORN PAN-
CA&ES WITH CHILE
SALSA
% table1pooa1 batter or
mar1ar1De
'4 c.p cllopped oaloa
I clove 1arUc, miDced
3 tablespoou noar
I tea1pooa ult
'4 tea1pooa pepper
lift teaspoon clltll pow-
der
3 eg1, separated
'4 c•p fren, fro1ea or
canned, drained, corn
kernels
3 medium potatoes
(aboot I pond )
Pinch cream of tartar on. for fryin1
Cblle Salta, recipe fol-
lows•
Green pepper rings (op-
tional>
In skillet heat butter.
Add onion and garlic; cook
over low heat until tender
but not brown. Turn into
mixing bowl; cool. Stir in
egg yolks. mixing to blend
well.
Combine flour. salt, pep-
per and chili powder. Stir
into onion m ixture. Stir in
com .
Peel and grate potatoes;
place in cold water for 5
minutes. Squeeze as d ry as
possible, the n drain
thoroughly on paper
towels. Beat egg whites
with cream of tartar until
stiff but not dry. Add
potatoes to corn mixture;
blend well. Fold in egg
whites.
In skillet heat about I/a
inch oil . Form batter into 3-
mch pancakes; cook until
bottoms are brown and set,
about 5 minutes. Turn~
brown on second side.
To keep warm, arranJe
on cake rack and place in
warm oven. Serve with
Chile Salsa. If desired, gar-
nish with green pepper
rings. Makes 6 servings.
CHILE SALSA: In small
bowl combine I medium
tomato. peeled, seeded and
chopped, 'I• cup each
chopped mild green chilies
and green onion and I cup
unflavored yogurt or sour
cream. Stir to blend: chill.
•NOTE: BouJcd sal,.
ma) be substituted for the
Chile Salsa.
Pea soup
Olllits
the salt
When you arc havi ng
lunch or supper for half a
dozen of your family and·
or friends who arc cutting
down on salt. you may be
interested in serving the
following green pea soup.
It has excellent flavor.
interesting texture and
good color - and no salt 1s
added during its making. lf
some of the group you arc
feeding use salt, you can
have a shaker of 1t, along
with a pepper gnnder. on
the table.
NO SALT PEA SOUP
"'4 cup tblaly 1llced leek
(white and pale 1reea
part only)
I clove garlic, minced
I lablespooa sweet bat·
ter
Two 17-ouace caat
sweet peas (no salt
added ), andraiaed
\la cap beavy cream
\la cup milk
\la cap unsalted chicken
brotb
I cup parsley leaves,
finely chopped (\la cup)
4 teaspoons lemon jalce
"-teupoon dried
crashed marjoram
Daab of ground autme1
Dash of freshly groaad
pepper
In a medium saucepan.
over low heat cook the leek
and garlic in
the butter. sumng often.
until softened. Turn into an
electric
blender with one can of the
peas. the cream and the
milk; whirl
until smooth. Tum into the
saucepan.
Turn the remaining can
of peas, the broth. parsley.
lemon juice, ·
marjoram, nutmeg and
pepper into the electric
blender and whirl
until smooth; tum into the
saucepan. Simmer, stinina
occas1onally, fo r IS to 20
minutes. Makes about 6
cups.
USE THE
DAILY ftlLOT
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
OlaECTOAY
.. 111 1<1 ·-.1111
"I I \ 11 I' ( • ti I
642-S678
ht JU
.•
NEW RECIPES •.•
From Cl
cro11wtse
t tarce ~ .,._cla, •111Md u4 trlmm..t
Water dletla•ll, allce.t
Dtpport d•.W.r •s.a mtxt...eef ., ... walel'la a
1m1U bowl; ~t wt• c.....tardl • wu ,..... 8-t ...
wlda prUc la a la~e fry ... ,.. er wet; ... pert, pU't at a
time, ... browa •&II ....... a. ......... t.., warm
wklle browatq remala&ia cea&H pen.
• Ret•na all pert~, lower ... t,cev.,..,.. ... c.M
11 mla•tes. Remove pork ud t"' warm . .._t oil la
,... alh'·fry oaloa, l'M ... .p'ffll peppen, earnta, yellow
....... aM pea beua for a mia1&e1. Ret8nt peril to pu
wltla cMctea brotla ud IOJ Mice.
Brta1 to boll; lower Mat; cover pu, ateam 10 mla1&e1.
Add m11taroom1, aptaan ud water dles&111&1 ... coot 5 ,_,.._~..,_.-..... ·
mla1&e1 loa1er or atll veaetablff ar.e crtlf a.der.
Serve wltla rice. Mates 1bo1t I aervlao.
Note: You can vary veactables. CheclC what's in the
refrigerator and use what's on hand.
t 'H c1pa flour
1cup111ar
ALMOND COOKIES
i,., teaapoon bakln1 soda
.,.. teaapoon aalt
1 cap lard or ve,e&able 1borttllin1 or .,.. e11p b8mr and
.,.. cup 1bortnatn1
1 1ll11tUy beateD eu
t &ableapoona milll
1 teaspoon almond extract
U blandled almonds, balved
In a mixing bowl stir tejether flour, sugar. soda and
salt. Cut in lard until mixture resembles cornmeal.
Combine ~· milk and almond extract; add to flour
mixture. Mix well.
Shape dough into I -inch balls and place 2 inches apart
on ungreased cookie sheet. Place an almond half on top of
each cookie and press to flatten slightly. Brush with beaten
egg r.olk. Bake in a 325-degree oven for 16 to 18 minutes or
unul done. Cool on rack. Makes 4 dozen.
AVOCADO SOUP
.,.. clove prlJc mlaced 'I• cup diced onloe
% tablespoons butter
1 clllcken boalllon cabe
1 cu milk or 1 cap balf·ud-balf
1 8-ouce pacb1e cream cbeese 1 lar1e avocado and 1
small oDe for 1anll1b
Da1la wbUe pepper
Saute onion and garhc in butter until limp. Add
chicken bouillon cube and ,112 cup m ilk or haJf-and-half
along with cream cheese and heat over medium heat to
start mel~ng cheese.
Put large avocado and heated mixture in a blender or
food processor and mix until smooth. Add remaining milk
and mix.
Soup can be served hot or cold. Garnish with avocado
slices, croutons and a sprinkle of minced parsley.
SWEET ART •••
From Cl
chiffon, sponge and pound cakes, cake rolls and cupcakes.
Each cake recipe has a specific frosting and decoration
accompanying it that reflects the theme.
Time-saving cake and frosting mix substitutions arc
offered wherever possible. There also arc special cooking
and decorating tips, such as how to make sugared roses,
how to cut and assemble tiered and cut-up cakes, and
storing instructions.
Each recipe bas been tested and refined by the Betty
Crocker kitchens. The result? Try this Spring Aower Cake
and see.
SPRING FLOUR CAKE
Yellow Layer Cake, redpe follows
Lemon B1mr Froad.q, recipe follows
Red, yellow ud JrffD foocl color
Bake Yellow Layer Cake as directed. Split cake to
make 4 layers. Reserve 1h cup Lemon Butter Frosting for
decorating.. Fill layers with about 1/J cup frosting each,
alternating pink and orange layers. Frost cake.
Tint 3 tablespoons reserved frosting pink with 1 drop
red food color, tint 3 tablespoons frosting orange with 2
drops yellow and I drop red food color and tint remaining
2 tablespoons frosting green witn I drop green food color.
Make 6 to 8 rosettes with pink frosting on top edge of
cake; make rosettes with orange frosting between each pink
flower. Make leaves with green frosting.. 12 to 16 scrv1Dgs.
YELLOW LA YER CAKE
% capa all-pnrpoae Ooar
l'i'I cups 11pr
.,.. cup 1borteDIDg (ball mar1arlae or batter, softened,
If desired)
1 cup milk
3.,.. tea1poon1 bakla1 powder
1 teaspoon 111t
1 teaspoon vanllla
3 e111
Red and yellow food color
Heat oven to 350 degrees. G rease and flour 2 round
pans. 8 or 9 x 11/z inches. Beat all 1Dgredients except food
color ID large bowl on medium speed, scraping bowl
constantly, until blended, about 30 seconds.
Beat on high speed, scraping bowl occasionally, 3
mmutes. Tint halfo(the batter pink with 6 drops red food
color. Tint remaining batter orange with 4 drops yellow
and 2 drops red food color. Pour batters into separate pans.
Bake until wooden pick inserted in center comes out
clean, 30 to 3S minutes. Cool 10 minutes; remove from
pans. Cool completely.
LEMON BUTTER FROSTING
• cepa powdered su1ar ~ cap mar1arlDe or batter, 1ofteaed
'4 cap lemOD Jalce
Beat all ingredients on high speed until frosting is
smooth and spreading consistency. If necessary, stir in
additional lemon juioe, I teaspoon at a time.
Rotettea: Usina a star tip, press out frosting. usina
steady, even rressurc. into a circ~e. Then, wit._hout
stopping. spira the frosting on top ID a smaller cll'Cle,
finally endina the swirl in a peak as you decrease pressure.
Baaic Leaf: Us mg a leaf tip. hold the dccoraung baa at
..., an anaJe to the surface. Squeeze and bold tip in place to let
\he frostina fan out to form base oflcaf. Oecrcaae presure as
you slowly pull the tip away and lift sliahtly to draw fbe leaf
to a point.
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CHk's Cl11t••11nc c .... ,..... Lt Otm1tne Ea111 ary ....
llyltr =~
P1ut MHHll ca-""•..,•...,
JKquta Binet £:!'~:
Roudon·Smlth
Husch , .. , .... .,._ ,..._,
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6undl1ch Bulldachu ''::.!::"
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150 .. '2"
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Ch1rdonnay '"' ,_.,, ,,, ... '6"
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Fume Bline "'' 151 .. '5"
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SUMMIT
WINE·IN·A·BOX
ID,.,..,
Crown Royal
80 l'rM1
Canadian Club
H l'rMf
Walker's
ID l'rMI
Mac Naughton
ID"'-'
Canadian Hill
H "991
Hedges & Butler
H "'"' let!IH Ill Scttlallll
lauders
IO"'"'
Old Smuggler
""'"' Clan MacGregor
10 "'"'
ID l'rNI. Stfn r tr Am1M1
St. Elmo
Wn.le 01 Geld 10 PrMI
Don 0
Wfttlr t• Gtld ID "'"'
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ll1lt1 s499
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RUFFLES
POTATO CHIPS
12 oz.
5176
10 ,.,..,
kavlana
ID"'"'
Popov
ID l'rNI
lzmira
IOO P'tMI
Smirnoff to•"'"'
IO P'tMf
Stanton's
10 "'"'
Booth 's
9D l'rool
Fleischmann's
IO"''°'
Jose Cuervo Wft'''
IO l'rool
Senorita eo ''"'
W'"1r If GtlO
aaa •
CHEESE ADD
SWEET TASTE .
TO CHICKEN
Ch-...,.;,. ia ddi<iawly lllod Md =q sweet.
A N~ treat. tbe aop.oOlda cotrw ii
with cut up cbJCken pans coated iD a CSeliabd\al auuure
bread cnambt aJ>d Oje1ost cbecte. Tbe claicken ll
1prinkled with eeame seeda and Pl(Wika.
About IS mfout.es before terVIJll add I toppiaa oe
apple wedats aod the remainina cheae and you will blW.1
a fabulous dilb W I ia perfect for anytime easenainine,. ,
NORDIC CHEESY C111CK.EN ll1&PllU
'M ft! Mtter er...,...,.._, ... _.
......... _ ..... jlilee"· "' -.... .,a .. ie... peel 'it e.p flaely ~ GjetMt
"' "'''-4ry bred era-. 1 cMcS-. c.t ap (abMt I~ ,.ads)
% taMapuu bitter, m~lte4
~-........ rib lt.U~Hllme aeedt % lust apples, cered ud nt lato we41a
14 C9J Gjetoat
In shallow bowl or pte plate combine I/• cup melted
butter. lemon juice and peel. In second pie plate c.ombine
1h cup GJetost and bread crumbs. Dip chicken into butteT
mixture. turning to coat both sides then coat well in
Gjetost mixture.
Arrange in SIDgle layer in buttered fballow bakina dish
skin side up. Dazzle rcmaioina 2 tablespoons of butter
over chicken. Sprinkle with paprika and sesame seeds.
Bake at 375 dearces for 45 minutes, baste frequently.
Add apples to dish and continue baking l S minutes longer
until chicken and apples an done.
Tum apples once during baking. Just before serving.
sprinkle remaining cheese over apples. Makes • to 6
servinp.
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m• $658
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50 ..
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S•ve on your next purchase of
7-UP, DIET 7-UP, LIKE
COLA or S.F. LIKE COLA • '·---.... -~.--.i: __ .. _c. ... : ::·,~ ;,:o::,..:,,~.1 !'8~, .. ,,: ._1:;: ..:~~c=
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50'---.0FfER EXPIRES JUNE 30. 1914, .... so'
Coors , Budweiser,
Miller or $3600 Stroh's
1/2 Keg
BEER BONANZA
lite Beer 1? l'ack 1? 11 t ans s431
W . rd ........ s499 Henry emha .. o." ., ,, ,, ..
S h, s499 tro S t ans •1•111
Burgie .; '111 '""'
5299
s211 Schaefer ~rtuUi .. l"ft' •2 ,, ., c••• s3u Ringnes "" .. o ... .,,.,. k •i., ~· ....... s3u Oortmunder ci. ....... ,,....,., • •: 11
BELL BRANO
POTATO CHIPS
s1•' KB Lager Aes111111 n .. CM•
lohrer .,..... ,,,, .-~.._.. •• ~ .. gge
Twin Packs 79C
All Flavors 8 oz
. ....... s411 South Pacific Lager ,_. , •101
*
or . Get whatever you want.
For less.
1726 Supenor Ave., Costa Mesa Phone : &•5·1601
25176 Mutnands. Mission Vieto · Phone: 855· 1437
10932 Westm nster. Garden Gron · Phone: 631-4145
263 South Eucted Avenue, Anahe m ·Phone. 991·1812
14417 Culver Drive . lfVtnt • Phont: 55 1 2757
DailyPilai
•
wtiY a beer with
only Jialf the alcohol?
Today you've created new options in
the way you live, relax, and play. You've
got new priorities in recreation and
physical fitness .
There are times when you want .the
taste and refreshment that only beer can
provide, without the alcohol content of
traditional beer. And now, you have an
additional choice.
Now you have a
real beer choice. Anytime.
One smooth taste of LA and you'll
know you've found a beer thaf s a good
idea anytim e.
As a matter of fact, LA tastes so good,
that if we didiit tell you, you might not
ever notice it only has half the alcohol.
LA truly delivers all the taste and
drinkability of a premium pilsner. Thaf s
because LA is brewed with the pure
natural ingredients and uncompromised
quality you've come to expect from
Anheuser-Busch.
LA A whole new
brand of beer enjoyment
from Anheuser-Busch.
LA is the newest member of Amenca's finest farruJy of beers
.. wluch mcludes Budweiser. Bud Light, Micheloh
M1chelob L~ht. Busch and Natural Lig~t
.. .
.. .._ ---· .. ,,.
r
All the taste
of our regular beers ... with only half the alcohol
L------------------------------------------
How we take out
half the alcohol and leave
in all the taste:
The Anheuser-Busch brewmaster has
developed a special natural brewing
process which produces less alcohol.
All oth er steps, from our fin est natural
ingredients to our slow natural aging are
perfonned in the same traditional
manner as oth er Anheuser-Busch beers.
For the way you live today ...
Ifs a whole new ball game out there.
And LA is a whole new brand of beer
for today's lifestyle. For people like you
who enJOY the taste of a great pilsner
beer, and the benefits of a little less
alcohol.
If s a beer whose time has come.
For the way~ "
• ;LA •
LA. BudwtlMf. Dud light Mlchtlob, Mlchelot> Light. Natural Llghl end
Busc.tt ere tl"ldemarkt of Anhtuaer-Butcl'I. Inc; • St Lo1.111, MO
etrott' s wins in Aprt and May are just
s cructa as those at the en of the year
Nobodycameinon the noon
lloon from Saskatoon and asked
me, but. ..
•Detroit outfielder Chet Lemon
says cautiously, "You can't win a
c~pionshipinAprilandMay,"but
be 1s wrong, of course ... Those pmes
count exactly as the ones in Septem-
ber.
•Rams runnina back Eric
Dickerson will be the "star" of a
cartoon series of the Superman type
entitled, "Eric Dickerson and His
Irvine
tumbles
in eight
Vaqs let four-run
lead vanish in 7 -6
CIF loss to Artesia
l y HUGH SO.ER .......... ..., ....
ARTESIA -Irvine High's
baseball team came within three outs
of advancina to-the CIF 2-A quar-
terfinals Tuesday before suceumbina
to Artesia Hiah, here in eight inninas.
7-6.
"You make it to the playoffs and
anything can happen," a dejected
Irvine Coach Bob Aint said. "There
is not much I can say except we fell
apart."
Irvine jumped to a 1-0 lead in the
first on a single, a walk and a RBI
ground out by Bobby Hamelin.
The Vaqueros made it 5-1 in the
second when Jeff B1clman started
things with a walk. That was followed
by a fly ball by Jim Martin to right
field that wa.s lost in the sun. A
sacrifice fl y followed by a base hit by
Darin Wallentine brought Bielman
and Martin home.
Pals" ... Can you picture pals Kent
Hill, Bill Bain and Jackie Slater in
cape and leotards?
•ThedifferenccbetwcenAI Davis
movin& the Raiders here and Donald
Sterlina brinaing the Clippers from
San Diego is the pockets oft he two
owners ... Sterling's are empty ...
Davis has a sportscaster and sports
columnist in his.
•If the word for the I 984 summer
Olympic Games is not "tarnished."
how about "diluted':'
•Sbowmea1uywhohas 12
martini1watchingsportson TV and
l'U show you a IUY who docsn 't know
the score.
• lfJcrry Buss bolds stiU for the
Oippers to move to the LA Sports
Arena, look for the Laker owner to
have a substantial piece of the San
Diego cable sports TV action.
•Perhaps the supermarket chain
which brags about feeding 10,000
Olympic athletes will get sued for
false advertising.
•Somethingcalling itself a scout-
ing combine isstaginga pro football
tryout camp in G lendale and charging
the free agents $78 to sign up.
•It is too bad San Diego couldn't
keep the Oippers and send us the
811
TllCIEI
SPORT S COLU MN IS T
Chicken.
•If you think pitching coaches
aren't important, check out Marcel
Lachemann ofttic Angeli aod De-
troit's Roger Craig.
•Today's ratingquiz ... Which is
more overrated-Dick Williams.
Al'Wt14l1t
John Scott then added an RBl-
tnplc into the aJley in lef\-ccnter,
which proceeded to roll almost end-
lessly throu&h the Pioneer outfielders
and when the relay was wide, Scott
scored. Detroit'• Alan Trammel loou like be'•
oat, bat note the ball between hi.a lei•· The
ball popped looee from Bob Boone'• flo•e.
and Trammel acored In the 8th lnntna.
FOUlltllln v-.,,
llei'IM8dVence
lnC.eoftMll
~D2.
Don Shula or the Frmc:b bread you
buy in airports?
•The l.aken are a Iona way from
the best bulc.ctball team of all time
but far and away the best basketball
team of 1984.
•The last United States Football
League injury and sickness report
contained the names of91 players .•.
and four franchises.
•When theOippen play night
~es at the LA Sports Arena, the
mjurics will be outside in the parking
lot.
•A Dod&er-Dctroit World Series
soundJcorilfortableatfd the next best
thins toa Freeway Series.
•LA Express quarterback Steve
Tigers (33-5) now
15-0 on t he road
after 3-1 victory
By RICHARD DUNN .......... ...., ....
Motown's latest bit, the Detroit
Tigers, climbed on top of the Cali-
fornia circuits Tuesday night, at the
expense of the Angels.
The Tigers are riding the wave of
the finest st.art in their history, and
ultimately remain undefeated on the
road (I 5-0), as they roared into
Anaheim Stadium with their road
show and nipped the Angels, l-I,
before 41 ,253.
Indeed. the Tigers seem to be
playing music -not only on the
road, but at home, as well. Tbeu
overall record is now 3l-5. and things
just seem to be going their way.
"It seems like every ume (manager)
Sparky (Anderson) sends somebody
out to do something. it gets done -
very well," TiJC! catcher Lance
Parrish was saymg. .. and now that
we've gotten out to this start. it teems
tilr.e everybody believes in each
other."
The Tigers' road win streak 1s now
one shy of the American Leaaue
record of 16. set by the J 9 I 2
Washington Senators, and two shy of
the Major League ru:ord. set by the
1916 New York Giants.
"Nobody cares about records or
Y ouna •YI be lidm.ites Viaoe hr·
rapmoa.nd Jim Pluakett wbo ~
ably admire Y OUJll'I aatnt
•WbeoABCannounced its Olym-
pic roster, twouai&nment1 that stood
out were Lynn Swann on wei&bt-
liftinaand Howard Cosell, wfio swore
to the world be would never apin
cover boxina. coverina boxina.
•Tbetwohappie'Stdaytana boet
owner's life arc the day be buys it. ..
and the day be sells it
•TheTripleCrown in hone racina
is bcoominaaJmost as difficult u the
Triple Crown in baseball.
• A IUY at Gasoline Alley at
Indianapolis says Dennis Firestone
rides on Good year tires.
anythi na -we're just hun&rY,"
Panisb said. "we just want to act to
the World Seri~ and everybody on the club has the ri&ht attitude ...
But the Tigers, now worltina on a
seven-game winning streak. dcfi.-
nitely bad the ball bouncin& their way
Tuesday night.
They not only executed properly
and got clutch base bits. but they
made tbinp happen offensively -u
well as defensively.
With two outs in the first innin ..
right fielder Kirk Gibson singled.
stole second and took third on Angel
catcher Bob Boone's throwing error.
Good teams will always take advan-
tage of mistakes and poor execution
by their opponents -and Dctriot did
just that.
Parrish got his club on the board
first with a sharp, clutch single to
center, scoring Gibson. "It seems like,
the last couple of weeks. we always
score in the first inning," Parrish said
later. ''a_nd it carries over and gjves us
momentum."
Rod Carew homered in the bottom
half of the first. but that was all the ~ls wef'C to be heard from \he res\
oftnePIJlC.
Deuoit fint bueman Dave
8eTpnan dou~ with OQe <>Qt in the
second. moved to third on Boone's
passed ball. then scored on Chet
Lemon '1 around out -mistake No. 2
for r.hc Aqcls -which. indirectly,
led to the r.,en· run. ··w~ come after you one way or
(Pleue .ee AllfG&LS/DS) Irvine starting pitcher Mike Hen-
tpn breezed thro uah the first five
inninp and at one point retired 13 of
f4 batters.
"Henigan threw a heckuva pme
for them. I just kept tcllina myself that
we would get them next inning." a
happy Artesia Coach Tony Gugiana
said.
Like a vacuum, Kirby cleans the house
Artesia fi nally got its offense un-
tracked in the sixth when it scored
two runs on three hits to make things
close apin at S-3.
Ocean View catcher's two-run homer
propels Sea hawks past St. Paul, 7 -6
Irvine added what appeared to be
an insurance run in the seventh when
Remy Rahmatulla walked and came
around to score on an infield out by
Wallentine.
By ROGER CAR~N °' ... o.lly ...... ...,
slammed a two-run homer 1n the
ninth inning to snap a 3-3 score and
ignite the Seahawks to a 7-6 triumph.
Artesia. faced with a do-or-die
situation in the bottom of the
seventh, received the three runs it
needed to send the game into over-
time. A walk, a single and a triple by
Jeff Grant, (who was 4-for-4) sliced
Irvmc's lead to 6-5. Grant then scored
SANTA FE SPRINGS -There's
one with every contender -the .297
hitter (.279 in league play) who
doesn't really do much in the way of
individual honors -he just wins
games and makes a season.
So it went for Ocean View High
catcher Mike Kirby Tuesday at St.
Paul High School in the second round
of the ClF 4-A baseball playoffs as he
The victory sends Coach Ken
Moats' Seahawks into the 4-A quar-
terfinals Friday against Bay Lea~ue
champion South Torrance, which
advanced with a 9-6 victory over No.
2 seeded Camarillo Tuesday. Friday's
game will be at Ocean View, begin-
ning at 3: 15.
Ocean View dodged bullets all day
long Tuesday -as St. Paul left I 0
I
(Pleue eee lllVIIU/DS)
Dodgers outhit Phils, 8-3 ...
"I'm not getting the stnkeouts just now bul J on't
worry about that as long as I'm getting them out." ... But it's runs that count,
and Philadelphia has more
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Fortunately for the
Philadelphia Phillies, runs and not hits arc what counts on
the baseball scoreboard.
The Phillies rqistered their I 0th straight victory
Tuesday night with just three hits -one a broken-bat
blooper over the pitcher's head to the shortstop.
But all three hits fiaured in the l-1 tnumph over the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
They got two in the third innina, the broken-bat single
by Ozzie Virg.il and a slicer to riJht by Ivan DcJesus.
Virgil scored on a wild pitch and DcJesus came home
on an infield out to make it 2-0.
The Phillies added a run in the third on a pair of walks
and Vil"Jil's solid hit to center. And that was tl. The Phils
didn't get another bit.
Meanwhile, lefthandcr Jerry Koosman pitched a gutty
seven inninp against the wounded Dodaers, who have
four rqulan sidelined.
Koosman aot out of a two-on, one-out jam in the third
with a double play pitch. He escaped with ;ust one run 'in
the fifth despite a bases.loaded, none out situation. In the
sixth he aot Franklin Stubbs for the final out with two
Dod.&en on the bases.
Then. in came Al Holland to work the final two
inninpandeam his 10th saveoftheseuon, tn·nahim with
Goose Oossqc of San Oiqo for the Nationa Lcque high.
Holland allowed one hit and eucnded through I 4'n
inninas his strina of not allowina an earned run. lt was Holland's sixth aavc this month and fifth in his
last six appearanca. Not bad for a auy who last year at this
point in the season had one save.
"Health baby, that's the diffcn:ncc," said Holland.
He started last season on the disabled list. Still. he
wound up the teason with 2S saves for the National Lcaauc
champion Phils.
.. l'm throwina the ball the way t want to riJht now,"
11id Holland. ••And the more I pitch the more coos1stcnt I
set. "I had a aood breakina ball toniaht and had my
fastball down and in the strike zone. My velodty and
location were there. •
Koosman said he was able to get the Dodgers to hit the
ball where he wanted when he had to.
.. And the guys behind me did a heck of a JOb," he said.
"I'm very pleased."
Koosman said he made some good pitches in key
s1tuauons to keep the runners on third. He no"" 1s 4-5 af\er
a 1-4 record, with a 1.98 ERA tn his last four starts. winning
three of four games. ·
Phillies' manager Paul Owens analyzed the nigh t:
"When you're going good you wm these games. Once you
get it rolling the players don't think they can get beat. We
got clutch pitching and the hits counted."
Two hitting streaks were stopped and two other
conunued. The Phillies' Juan Samuel ended a 15-gamc
string and Len Matuszek a nine-gamer. For Los Angeles.
Pedro Guerrero and Franklin Stubbs extended strings
through nine games.
Dodgers' manager Tommy Lasorda felt loser Bob
Welch (3-5) deserved a better fate.
------Lakers seek clincher
INGLEWOOD (A P) -While Coach John
MacLeod of the Phoenix Suns 1s aware that his team
is on the verge of elimination from the National
Basketball Assoc1at1on playoffs. he's not about to
give up )USt yet. "It s not the best of s1tuat1ons," admitted
Macl..cod. whose team trails the Los Angeles Lakers
3-1 in the best-of-seven Western Conference final
scnes. "But we're not out of It yet. We suit have a
chance. All we ~n do is give it a &ood shot.''
Game five will be played at the Forum toni&bt
and will be televised on Channel 2 bcpnn1naat 8:30.
If the Suns Wln 3nd prolona the scncs. game six
would be at Phoenix Friday niJht.
However, the odds are stronlly against the uns
prolon,ina the sen~. The Lake" beat the Suns by 16
points m each of the first two pm es of the series at
the Forum. and Los A~lts hu a 7-0 rttord 1n
playoff pmcs at home this year.
runners stranded. and m tum. hand-
ed Ocean View a dozen baserunncrs
with free passes on a diamond which
was definitely in the rough and
without fences -unless you want to
count the ones that are some 500 feet
to lcO and right and 700 feet to center.
But two can play this game and
Kirby's rocket to deep let\ off a high.
fast one from the third of four St. Paul
pitchers, sent David Tinkle home
from first ahead of him.
Had he hit this one m Fenway Park
it would have been a single -maybe
a fielder's choice with the runner
forced at second -the ball was hit so
hard.
Douty
Moat:a
In a conventional hLgh school
facility it might well have caromed off
the wall and the runner held at third.
But Kirby's belt bounced to that
wall 500 feet away and in he came. It
rattled St. Paul pitchmg to such an
extent, two smglcs and a walk
followed to set up Chris Spaniac's
two-run single. which appeared to be
just frosting at the time. making It 7-3.
St. Paul rallied with a two-run shot
up the middle by St. Paul catcher
Chuck Graham and Dave Camey's
two-out smash down the left field line
went for a solo homer to make 1t 7-6.
Matt Jones $Ot the final batter to
bounce to Tmklc and Ocean View
was home frtt.
"Kirby is the most underrated kid
we have." said Moats. ~The reason
we're here is because of Mike Kuby.
He gave a summer to baseball and he
has become an excellent receiver with
no passed balls. throws out most of
the people that run on him and 1s 7-
for-7 in ClF.
"We're here because of Dean
Doutv. Matt Jones and Mike Kirby."
St. Paul began as 1f 1t were 'omg to
blow the game open -gettmg two
runs in the first innmg without a htt.
But Ocean View rallied wtth two m
the second inning.
Ocean View pair
top Sunset team
Douty selected
Player of the Year:
Moats also lauded
Ocean View H1gh's Dean Dout~
and Ken Moats were named the
Sunset League's Player of the Year
and Coach of the Year by the league's
coaches -selections that were domi-
nated by runner-up Ocean View,
third-place Fountain Valley and
fourth-pla~ Westminster.
Edison. which swept lo the tit1e
with a three-pme cushion, picked up
just three first-team benhs -gettmg
no one on the second team. nor on
honorable mention.
Those from the champ1onsh1p
squad honored were catcher Paul
Ellison, shonstop Chip Damato and
outfielder Todd Nash
DoutywasoneofthrttOccan View
playen on the first team. 1oined b)'
fellow pitcher Matt Jones and in-
fielder Robbie G ibbs.
Fount.am Valley. which bepn 0-3
in lca,ue play, but rallied 1n the latter
stqn to nip WC$tminstcr 1n the ra~
for third pit«, finished with four
ptaye"' on the first team -1nftcldtr
Gary Schoonover, pitcher Bob S~
nack, Ray Uamasat dcst~tcd hitter
and David ~nard at utility
Westminster's two first team play-
en arc infielder Gres V1lleps and
outficldcrGu1llenno Roses. Manna'
t'had Rttd and Hununaton Beach'\
Pal Gordon round out the fint team
First Team
Player, scbool Year
P-Dcan Douty. Ocean View Sr
P-Bob Sharpnack. Ftn.Valley Jr
P-Matt Jones. Ocean View Sr
C-Paul Elltson. Edison Sr
I B-Pat Gordon. Htn.Beach Sr
Inf-Robbie Gibbs. Ocean View Sr.
Inf-Gary Schoonover. Ftn. VI)' Sr.
Inf-Greg Villegas. Westminster Sr
lnf-Ch1p Damato. Edison Jr
OF-Chad Recd. Manna Sr.
OF-G. Roses. Westminster Sr
OF-Todd Nash. Edison Sr
DH-Ra)' Llamas. Ftn. Valle) Sr.
Ut-Oavtd Leonard. Ftn. Valley Sr-.
Secoed Team
P-Ron Wcatrowsk1. Wstmnstr Jr
P-Ed L1dyoff. Htn. Beach Jr
C-En c Shirley. Htn. Beach r
I B--Oms Spaniac. Ocean V 1ew r
lnf-Davtd Ttnkle. Oc:ean View Jr
lnf-Chns Bugbtt. Ftn. Valle)' Jr
Inf-Ed Pimentel, Westminster Sr
lnf-M Rodnguez.. Westminster Sr
OF-Adam Buder. Ocean View Sr
OF-Jeff Olson. Ftn. Valley Jr
OF-Bob Rehling. Htn. Beach r
OH-Tim Han.on. Westmtnster r
Ut-Dav1d Emmon . Manna Jr
HOMrable Mau.a
Jon Gulhon (Ocean View), M1k.~
Kiri>) (Ocean View). Jeff Moone)'
(Wcstmtnsttt). Jeff Lona (West·
min ter) UrT) CufTln (Hunungton
8cach). tan Andttson (Huntin1ton
Be.ach). Rieb Rector (Manna). tevt
MoJtea (Manna), ·Brian lkkbcr
(Fountain Valky). Tro)' StJ~-cn
(fountain Valk)).
•
•
. Clippers denr
report they'l
stay in San Diego
Prom AP111,_&dn
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Officials of 01e m
National Basketball Assoclltion SanDicao
Oippen steadfastly denied a pubHshed .
report Tuesday that they will back out of an announced
move to Los An,eles and remain in San Diego.
The San Diego Tribune. quoti~ what it said were
sources close to the team. said the Clippers may stay m
San Dicao for two more years.
But Glenn Mon, as!l1stant mana,er of the Los
Anceles Coliseum Comm1ss1on. said he s still plannmg
for a pro basketbaU franchise under his roof next
season.
"When (team President Alan) Rothenberg heard
about the rumors, he said 'There's no truth to them. We
arc the Los Angeles 01ppers and you can find us at the
Los Angeles Sports Arena.··•
The Tnbune cited unnamed sources. who said
team owner Donald Sterling met with Peter Graham.
operator of the San Diego Spons Arena. last Thursday
telling Graham that he would keep the Clappers tn San
Diego for two more years.
"Our understandmg ti that the Cltpper manage-
ment might be hedging on whether to move or not."
..aid Bob Payne. president of the Greater San Diego
pons Assocaauon. "It look!I lake they might not be
w1lltng to give up their lease on the Sports Arena. They
don't want to break that and then find the) have no
place tu play. which could happen."
The Cltppers have two )Cars remaming on their
Spons Arena contrarl. which would cost a reponed s:ns .ooo to bu) out
The NBA own er<, are eApcl'ted to consider the
proposed,mo1,e during meetings June 26-2 7 in Salt
Lake Cit) ·
Quote of the day
... ..-...., Phil• third bMlmln, on '"9 • a pubic flour« ••t look at MlchMt Jec:bon. who
hM to WW cf911c angll 1111 lnd·heW bod)rouwdt
wound hfm the re9t Of hit Ate, llnd t U*lk I ought to b9..,.. to get by wtth the problemt l'w got.''
Brett's RBI-single lifts Royals
George Brttl doubled in the ue-m breaking run tn the seventh mntng and
Dant Jorg drove in three runs Tuesday
night. powering Kansas City to a 7-6
American League victor) over the Chicago White Sox.
Dan Qulatn~rTy pitched the final two innings.
allowmg two hits. to claim his 11th save ... In other
American League action. Milwaukee's Cecil Cooper
drove 1n five runs w11h two s1n$]es. a double and a
homer and Rick Manning also delivered a home run to
carry the Brewers to a 7-1 victory
over Texas. Winning pitcher
Cb a ck Porter, 4-1. scattered
seven hits over six 1nn1ngs ..
P1nch-h1tter George Bell singled
home the wanning run with one
out in the eighth tnnmg and
Damato Garcia wenl 3-for-4 as
Toronto edged Minnesota. 3-2 .
Bruet Hant worked out of a
bases-loaded Jam tn the third
mnmg and finished with a fi ve-
Brett hitter as Boston romped past
Cle veland. 7-1 Matt Yoa.ng pitched e1gh1 scoreless
innings and rookie Alvlll Davl1 belted his 10th home
run as Seattle lopped the New York Yankees. 5-3 ..
Carney Lansford put Oakland ahead with a two-run
homer to cap a four-run rail) 1n ahe fifth inning and the
A. 's snapped a seven-game losing streak b) defea11ng
Bah1more. 6-4. The A0!1. 6-17 on the road but 13-6 at
home. spotted Balumore an earl) lead v. hen Rieb
Dauer hit a three-run homer. his first of the season. in
the second inning off winner Ray Burris, 3-2.
Drleuen. Soto key Reda win
Du Driessen sinaJed home the win· Ill
nina run in tbe seventh inning and Marlo
Soto threw a four-hitter as Cincinnati
celebrated Dne Parker'• return to Pit·
tsburah Tuesday with a 5-3 victory over the Pirates in a
Nauonal League game. Soto. 7-1 . yielded ll pair of
homers to Toay Peu and Lff Lacy, but threw his
founh complete game in his last five starts. He added a
pa tr ofhns and drove in a run ... Elsewhere. Jack Clark
drove tn three runs wi th a pair of home runs as San
Soto
Francisco edged the New York
Mets. 5-4. Catcher Bob Brenly'a
two-run single an the sixth inning
and Clark's two-run homer 1n the
fourth and solo shot tn the eighth
supplied the runs ... Gary Carter
broke a tie w11h a two-run homer
tn 1he sixth inning and Charlie
Lu tossed a four-hitter for
seventh victory as Montreal
downed San Diego. 3-2 ... Pinch
hitter Kevln Ba11 delivered a two-
out single to send home Mark
Balley -who had doubled -1n the 11th inntng to give
Houston a 4-3 victory over St. Louis. With one out in
the 11th. Bailey doubled in front of diving Andy Vu
Slyke 1n nght field. Bailey went to third on a groundout
by BUI Doran before Bass' clutch hit ... The game
bet\\-een Atlanta and the Chicago Cubs was rained out
and rescheduled as pan ofa doubleheader on Thursday.
Driver Chandler Improving
INDIANAPOLIS -Race car dover II •Michael Chandler was making steady
progress and may be dischar ed from
Methodist Hospital by the end o~the week.
officials at the hospital announced Tuesday.
Chandler. 26. was hospitalized after his car
slammed into the third-tum wall during practice for
Sunday's Indianapolis 500 on Ma) 11. He wa~
unconscious with a severe head injury for 21h-days. A
hospital spokesman said he is now an good cond1uon.
making slow progress.
Chandler suffered cerebral contusions. cuts.
bruises and lacerations tn the May l I cra sh. He was
taken directly from the track to the hospital b}
hcltcop1er after betng removed from his race car.
Chandler. of Dana Point. 1s the son of 011s
Chandler. board chairman and editor tn chief of the Los
Angeles T1mcs-M1rror Corp.
Kings hire Perry as aide to GM
INGLEWOOD-Don Perry. fired as ~
coach of the Los Angeles Kings last winter. ,
has been hired by the National Hockey
League team as a special assistant to the
general manager. 1t was announced Tuesday.
Perr). 54. coached the Kings for pan of the 1981-82
season, all the of 1982-83 campaign and pan of the
l 983-84 season before being dismissed and succeeded
b) Roger Neilson.
Neilson wasn't retained by the Kings at the end of
the \Cason Los o\ngcles has been without a head coach
'>tme thal time
Perry live'> 1n upstate New York. which will art a~
h1'i home ba!.C while he works w11h the Kings'
organ1.tat1on. the learn said, adding that his first role 1n
his new pas111on will be to assist the club at the NHL
amateur draft on June 9.
El•ter •tin• with New York
Golden West Collqe sluger Kevin 111 Elster hu sianed a contract with the New
York Meu and will report to Utlle Falls,
N.Y. in the Ow A New Yolk-Penn
Lcaaue in the middle of June.
Elster, a ahonstop who had sjaned a letter of intent
with Anzona State Un.ivenity, hit .330 with the
Rustlers this season with 14 extra-base hits, includina
five home runs.
Elster was chosen second by the Mets in the winter
drat\.
Margerum to underao •uraery
LAKE FOREST. Ill. -Chicaao Bears s WJdc ~iver Ken Maraerum, a product of II
Fountain Valley High, will be aidelincd for • •
the upcomina season by a knee iajury and
is headina for his West Coast home for surgery and
rehabilitation because he says he'd "go crazy" watching
his teammates prepare to play.
"One of the reasons I'm doing the rehab at home 1s
11 will be easier than watchina the other players pracuce
every day," wd Margerum before.depanina Monday
for his home in the San Francisco area. "I'd go crazy
doing that.
"I think this could be lhc year for them." he
continued. ··Not being part of 1t. I'm jUSt sick to my
stomach."
Margerum suffered ligament damage to has lef\
knee 1n the last I 0 minutes of the final practice at last
week's mini-training camp and will require major
surgery and a long rehabilitation process. said Bears
trainer Fred Caito.
Van Fleet leaves 49er AD poet
LONG BEACH -Corey Van Acet. • the athleuc director at Long Beach State
since September of 1982, has resign his post
at the universny, effective June 30.
Van Acct. 47, took over the position afttr serving
10 years as the athletic director at Oakland University
in Rochester, Mich.
In a prepared statement. Van Acct said: "l have
enjoyed my associations at the university and with the
49er Athleuc Foundation family. I look forward to
trackmg the success of our 49er teams during the nexl
several seasons."
Schnellenberger to USFL?
CORAL GA BLES. Aa. -Howard [i]
Schnellenber:ger, coach of the national 411 •
champion M1am1 Humcancs, said Tues-
day that he hopes to decide on a possible
move to the United States Football League within three
days, but emphasized that be won't ta.kc a pos1t1on with
the Washington Federals unless the club moves to
M1am1.
During an 1nterv1cw with The Associated Press.
however, the SO-year-old coach gave strong indications
that he as leaning toward accepting a reported five-year.
$3 million contract that would give him pan ownership
of the USFL team as well as a sill-figure salary for life.
"There's a lot more to it than money as it relates to
the exc11ement of betng with a new team. (having) pan
ownership of the club and being president and general
operational officer." Schnellenberger said.
Telnlalon. radio
TILftlllOll . 4:30 p.m. -MmAU..: Dodger'a 8' ,...._
phta. °'*""' 11. 8:30 p.m. -MO 9AIKn'8ALL: Phoenix at ........ a.wwe2.
RADIO
pttta. •:.rem~~-· Al • .: DO-o.od:9'l-Qe1•rara at PNedet-
7:30 p.m. -aAIEaAU: o.trolt at Anoete.
KMPC(710).
8:30 p.m. -MO 8AIKl'TaALL: Phoentx at
Lak•t, KLAC (570). •
THURtDAY'S TV, RADIO
<4:30 p.m. -!Ume\U. · Oodglf'l at Phlladef..
phla, Channel 11 , KABC (790).
•••
CdMreaches
semis with
easy vlctory
But Uni, Estancia, Artists
ellm•nated from CIF playoffs
Corona del Mar was the lone survivor amona area
high school tennis teams competinJ in th~ CIF plaY.offs •. as
feOow Sea View League members Estancia and U niversny
were ousted from 4-A competition and South Coast
League champ Laguna Beach fell in the 3-A.
Here's how it happened:
Corona del Mar 1wup1 to 511' 1tral1~t
The Sea Krngs, defending UF 4-A champions,
although seeded third tn the playoffs.put host Rolling Hills
away, T71h-61/J with the last round ofsiniJes left unplayed
with the verdict already lucked away.
It sets the Sea K.mgs up with a se · I b
agatn~t South Torrance High Thursday
at South Torrance .
It wasn't one of the Sea Kfogs' more
memorable victones. because, as Coach
Dave Heffern pul it. "It was just
wmething we had to get out of our way.
Our attitude wasn't good. but we're
going to be ready to P.lay Thursday
against South Torrance. ·
Once-beaten South Torrance is
seeded No. 2 and thrice-beaten
Miraleste as seeded No. I in the 32-team
elimmauons. something that obviouslv Betren
rankles the Sea Kings. who have been seeded third despitt
their glowing record.
''Miraleste should be playing South for the ri&ht to
play us," says Heffern. ''But Santa Barbara wilf give
Miralcste a run."
Tuesday's victory was keyed by the play of sjngles
st.a.rs Scott Brownsberger, David Propp, Mike Brigs and
Bnan Bennett. along with doubles stars Frank Hinman
and John Hostetler.
Trojao1 oa1ted by Sula Barbara
Sant.a Barbara's depth in singles proved the difference
as the Trojans were eli minated from the CIF playoffs.
17-11. at the Racquet Club of Irvine.
The two teams played dead even an doubles, but
Un1vers1ty was swept in No. 3 and No. 4 sinates and that
was the key to the match.
"They had a couple of crucial servic~ ~rcaks in singles
that hurt us," said Uni versity Coach Gary Sise!. .. We Fiad
a temble stan and almost came back. but had to win the
last two doubles sets and couldn't."
Standout Chns Greer highlighted the Trojans' efforts.
winning three of his four singles matches. but was tripped
up by Santa Barbara's No. I player.
University. the Sea View League runner-up and
founh seed tn the tournament. finished the season at 18-5.
Eagles over matclted by Soatlt Torruce
Estancia found second-seeded South Torrance too
strong. and saw their season come to an end after a 23'1z-4'h
loss at home.
The Eagles played w11hout singles player Ron Alarya
(sidelined w11h the flu) and were lorced to use a Junior
varsity player an No. 4 singles. but it didn't make much
difference.
The Sea View League's third-place team finished the
season at 17-7
Arti1t1 ml11 tbelr cbueea
Laguna Beach High had Its opportun1t1es to pull out
its match against Sierra League champion Los Altos, but
the second-seeded Artists fell for onl[ the second time in 23
outings. 15-13, in a 3-A quancrfina .
"The kids played too ti a.ht," expla ined a disappointed
Laguna Coach Art Wahl. "We needed one more paint and
we would have won the match on total games."
r-----------------------_,....----------------------------------~I
Olympic official: More willjoin boycott The cause seemed lost as Laguna entered the final set
of four singles needing to sweep. but won the first three and
had Todd brumfield leading the Conquerors' No. I player
Steve Jung. 5-2. That's when Jung, rcahzing his team
n~dcd the set. came alive to win the next three games and
pull even at S-S .
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homemade soup, crisp green salad and I choice of dessert (pudding. Jello. ice cream
or sherbet)
NEW YORK (APJ-lalh ng the Sov1et-
led boycott of the Summer Olrmp1cs "a
blatant political decision" Co F Don
Miller. executive director of the U S
Olympic Committee. predicted Tuesday
there would be 20 to 25 nations -and
possibly as many as SO -absent from the
Los An~eles Games
nauons. Maller ne venheless predicted the
Olympics would be "a complete success."
He termed the Soviet-led boycott "poltt1cal
oven ones of self-serving nonsense."
Miller also predicted that the Soviet
Union would compare the medals earned
by the United States this year w11h 11s
medals in the 1980 Moscow Games.
boycotted by the United Stales.
Brumfield rebounded for a 6-5 edge, but Jung forced a
11e-breaker which he won easily, 7-2.
Despite the boycott of the Soviet bloc
--
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"You can't blame Brumfield, he did a helluva job to
play their No. I kid so tough," said Wahl. Jung had beaten
the Artists' other players by scores of 6-3. 6-2 and 6--0
before com mg up agamst Brumfield.
/-So FT BALL
Marina erupts, 18-0
Barons, Conquerors,
Monarchsalso win
Manna. Fountain Valley and Mater De1
each advanced with shutouts 1n the second
round of the Cl F 4-A softball playoffs. with
the V1ktngs sconng an eye-opening 18 run!I
agamst Ba) League champion Rolling
Hills.
In the small schools d1 v1s1on. top-seeded
Newpon Christian marched into the
quarterfinals wtth a wtn O\-er Wcstndge.
Here'c; how 1t went.
Marina 18, Rolllog Hlll1 0
Vtkmg Coach Su~1e Calderon wall as
\urpriscd as anyone with the ea~ 1n which
her team advanced.
"Yes. 1t was surprising because they were
No. I 1n the Bay Lea.ue." she noted. "but
the leads were just hitttn~ the ball hard. We
had some nice solid hits and they made
good contact with the ball."
The Vikings will play Nonhern waue
champ Ri$hctt1, which also pounded out a
lopsided victory Tuesday. The pme will be
R1ahetti's home pme.
For Marina, Julie Larsen to sed a one-
hitter. a leadoff sinale to lcf\ field in the
third inning.
Team tennis rosters
announced by King
INGLEWOOD (AP) -81lhc Jean Krna
announced Tuesday the: rosters of the sax
teams that will compete m this year's Team
Tennis season at the Forum July 10-1 S.
The six teams Wlll compete in a six-day
s1nalc..eliminataon tournament Wlth last
year's top two tams. the Ch1C140 Fire and
the Los An,clcs Stnnp. rcoetv1na first·
round byes.
The abbttv1ated formal was dopted b)'
the lcque to avoid competataon wiq.-Jhe
Olympics.. The teaaue Ytd n will n:t~ to
1t normal. mo-nth-long ~n ncxl year.
Kina will play for Chicago and be JOIMO
by haron Walsh. Ttty Wahkr and lk'n
Te .. 1crm-.,, ,
Chnsty Larsen went 3-for-4 wtth 2 RBI;
Lori Crouse had three hits and knocked in
a pair: and Jill Bellamy chipped in with two
hits. Tracy Ferguson doubled in a pair of
runs tn the third inning to ignite Marina
(now 24-5)
FoWJuln Valley%, Simi Valley 0
Th1ngsd1dn'1 come quite as easily for the
B3rons as 1t did Marina. but Staci Haynes
made a pair of third-inning runs stand up
with a three-hitter.
Haynes struck out four and walked thrct.
escaping a first-and-third. one-out predica-
ment 1n the top of the first.
Fountain Valley tallied its runs an the top
of the third on the same play. With runners
at s«ond and third. Therese Puchalski laid
down a two-strike squeeze bunt. scoring
Lea Young from third and. when the ball
was overthrown, Christy, Alvare:z raced
home from second.
The Barons (I 5-10) next face second-
seeded Garden Grove (27·1), a 1-0 victor
over Cerritos Tuesday.
Mater Del l, Villa Park 0
The Monarchs lldvanccd with the 13-
innina verdict as Noel Manfre led ofTwith a
si ngle. went to se<:ond on an em>r and
scored when Debbie Wainer's bunt re·
suited 1n an overthrow at fint.
The Monarchs' Came Sullivan went the
d1stanoe to earn the win, stnki~ out e1&)\t
and walkina lh.ree. She e1C1ped a Jim tn the
11th when Villa Park placed the ty1na run
at third and one out.
Mater Oet, 18-8 overall, next face,
Kennedy on Fnda)'.
Newport Cluiltlu •. Wnlridf• i
W1nnina patchcrf<clly Dav1dson helped
her own cause with a solo homer in the
third and Darcy Oeacle tripled m the
second and scored on a wlld pitch to key 01e
C'onqueron' attaclc .
Oeaelc also had a sinalc and ciuendcd her
streak to c1a;ht straiaht fi1Ls before Oy1na out
the lut two at~bats.
On 1he mound. Davidson struck out
"vc:n and walltcd onr
Newport C'hn,t1an ( 18-I I pla~~
Paudt'na Pol~ un fnday.
l
·Buehan in command at sailing trials vou 1
Veteran skipper wtns sec~nd straight John Dane 111 orEKou .. ,.. Mia c:oukl knoct him OUI ohccond place --· -· WK. .. ·-club eyes t d finilhed accond to keep him in fifth in the ltlndiJlll. (Yachts ~ con-~-=-~·;:.,..n -i .. ..,. n 1 ti al 0 w1 en ts point lead over Cayar place wilh 3S.O penalty point.I. sidered lO be nadna from 10 minutt'S I. a.k'd. JI.A,..,....,.,...,,, I Cwtll ,.,, • na on s
Dave Chapin of Sprin&fickl, Ill. be(o~ the 1t.art1na aun). ,_,.,.,~ 21.A '--*" •otan, s. DeMJ• 11.....-,
By ALMON LOCKABEY . won Tuesday's race an the Solina Perry d«lined to state after the race a.~ 1 LAull. Mii ... ·~· • O'INlll. c ~i 7' °"",.........,....., Sconna Tuesday was based on the Oau but the win failed to move him under what n.tle he was protestina. but =-~~!.0;..t~· '"' '°
LONO BEACH -Veteran Star best fi~e-of-seven. races with the race abov~ •Old! place in &he st.andinas. it wu pmumed to be a riJJ:l&-of-way i1.,. CM¥t11t11 rK•> -t •• lud\oll,
sailor Bill Buchan is showint 1 likina 00!1\m•ttce allow1n1 two throwout&. Robbie HaJDet of Coronado is still violation. Perry 11id he dJd know if w.w.. Wash · '· John Dtint 111. c.c.1 .....
for the liaht, southerly breeus off the Wtth1 two t!lrowouts, Buchan has 16. 1 leadlna the class with 23. 7 penalty Bajrd was fllina a counter-protest. =c.!..~~ct1er~'.:.11~·i. ~~ ~=-to;: ~ch brea~;ater. rni:ri~Jfifi'h1(~~~~b0~?nt:,r!hl~~ ~inti despite I third-place finish Tuesday's mults: ~r~~a.r:~ ~ ~t t-°'~
ki e -year. o Bellevu~. Wuh. h~ must hold after throwina out two u~ird, St. Petenbura. Fla. who Sol "~· hi! Oltoo; ' ~-Wrltf\t, Mllrow ~ phr won hls second llf'llabt race e11th·pl1ce finishes finished second, is beina protested by 1or~'.~"'e:=~o:-s1 ';.:;.:,:,~~· "-S~~ ,;.1!.1:'t~-~-~'Tucrie11. '' '' an. t e .Oly~pic trials Tuesday to Buchan's throwo~ts at this st.aac of Dave PH'I'\/, Southpon. Conn., who <l*'ldlnt orot"''' J. lllOCltlle Hatntt, coron.oo; • 2. C1yarc1. n .o. 1. lllevllOlcK. MO; '· Alt•
widen bis point lead over Paul Cayard the competition have been an 11th w• 'I ··--Grlllttl, llltdOnCIO IMdl. s Don COhan, SmlMt$kl, Ml ArUnoton, N.J . 3' 1, s. o-. 350, of San 9.... 7 placed seventh, because ofa p~stan lorlntfltlcl. 141.; t. D•ve Curtis. Mar1MM.ad, • wrr.iit, '71: 1 Dlar, S2 l, 1. '°'""'· sso.,
I .. no. (I points) JlOd a 6th ( 11. 7 points). collision. If Bain! is diu.ualifi--', ,.. Mau. 7. o ..... Pwrrv. Soul'-'!, Conn (PfMlno lvldr-.Menkar!, M«~ntvllle, HJ . SS... 10 \.' .... ~ arOIHl); • BIN """"· W ino Park, Minn; •. Mee~. $0 0
~ f I • "
MAJ0tt LaAGU• STANDING~
AIMf'kan L .. tue
WHT DIVISION
W L ~cl. GI
Mell• MlnnetOll
Clllc•oo
Sffllle
Oakland
l(en .. , Cllv
TexH
n 20 .S3S
11 n • 20 21 •7•
20 n •76
19 23 •S2
1S n l9S IS 26 .3'6
Detroit
Toronto B .. llmort
Mllw1ukH
Bo1ton
N-York
ClevNncl
aAST DIVISION
JJ s
26 l4
n " " 19 1t n
" n IS n
T..-Y'1~
O.trolt l ........ I
Botton 7, Ctewtano 1
Toronto J, Mlnnnota 2
Mltwauk• 7. Tex .. 1
Kan .. 1 Cl!y 7, Cllkaoo 6
Sffttlt S, N-York l
O.lllaf\d •· k tllmor• • TNIY'I0-
.... .6'° S79
500
•S2 '10
.OS
I .,....,
l4
1'
17...,
11'h
0.trolt (Petry 6·11 at AMlh (.Ohn l-ll.
(nl
Baltimore IMcGraoor S·ll •I Oekl•nd (Warr9n l-Sl
Min-•• (Vlola >-•> al Toronto IClan· CV l ·l ), (nl
Cltvtlana (Btvtevtfl •·21 at Bolton
(Brown l·S), In>
MllW•~-(H•H 2·]) ., TexH (Tanana
•·•), (n)
Clllc.allO !Burn• 2·21 •I Kanw1 Cllv !Black •·l ), (n)
N-York (Fontenot O-•> et S..1111
1B .. 11le 3·•>. <n>
lllun4lllY'• GMlet Detroit et A,.., :•I
Balllmore et 0.kland
Mllw•ukM el TexH, (n)
New York •• s..111e, (nl
NatteMI L .. tue
WHT DfVIStON
W L ~cl. GI
DMlw1 2• 20 .ws
Attente 21 II S3I
ClnclnNll 11 20 S 12
S.n Dleeo 21 10 512
HOY1lon 17 2• •IS
Sen FrenclKO IS 2S l7S
Cllluoo
PtlllaOelollla
,...,.,York
Mon I real
St LOUii
Piii~
•AST O.VIStON n IS
n " 10 17
11 10
21 n
ll 23
T.,..-Y', Sair-.1
Pt\li.delolll• ). DMlw1 1
Attenl• el Cllkaoo. PH , rein
Montreal ], S.n Oleo<> 2
S.n FranclKO S, New York •
ClnclnNll S, PlllJburtll 3
60S
SfO .S.1
Sl2 ...
361
II)
l'I)
l'h 511)
1
Hou1ton •• SI. LOYll l 111 lnnln1n>
TNIY'I 0-
0Mew1 1veten1uala l·S) et PtollaOtlPl'll•
!Carlton 7·21, (nl
Hou1ton (I(-l ·S or M•OOtn 1·1)"
SI Lout• IAndular 7·3)
Allen!• !Perez l ·Ol '' Clllc•oo llhlntv
M l
S.n Olaoo IH•wkln1 3·1) •• MonlrHI
(R~rt 2·2), (nl S.n FrenclKO (l(rukow 2·SI at New
York (Terrtll l-ll. (n)
Cincinnati IRuneH 2·4) at Pltht>urgn
IC•noelarla l ·•I. (n)
T'IWndll Y'• GMftltt OMew1 a l Ptollaoelollla, In>
All•nta et Clllc:eto ~" Francl1«1 '' New York, (n) Clncl11Nti et Pllhburon, In>
AMERICAN L•AGUE
Tl9en J, Antels 1
oaTilOtT CAL.,otlNIA
Mrllbl AIHlllll
Whltakr 71> Tr1mm1 u
Gll>M>n rf
LNP•rth C
OEvn•Oh
l(untr or
Hern6on "
&.romn It>
Lemori cf
HJllMn lb
Brokn1 31>
TttMI
5020 Pelll•cf 4000 • I 1 0 Carew It> l I , I
2 1 1 O Lvnn rf • 0 I 0
l 0 I I O.Cnn lo 2 O O O
3 0 0 O Plcclolo Pf 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 R1Jk'" Oii 3 0 0 0
3001 OownlnQ" •010
l II 0 Wllton9 2'> • 0 I 0 3001 Boontc •OOO
3 0 I 0 SchOlllO n l 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
)0 J 7 J Tetth
Sc-..., I"'** Jl 1 s 1
O.Wett 110 000 010-J ~ 100 001 000-I
G•me Winning RBI -Nona.
E-Boont OP-<:•llfornla I
LOB-Detroit 1. C•llfornl• 1 2B-Ber11man,
Lvnn HR-<erew 13>. SB-<llt>IOl'I (t )
5'-LNPerrl1n. SF-Herndon.
lfl H 1111111 la SO
o.trett
Ber•neur w,3·2 •
Looe1 S,6 l
c~
3
2
I
0
I
0 ' •
Wiii L,•·• l 7 6
Corbett 7 0 0 0 I 0
Wiii ollchtd 10 2 t>•llen In the I th HBP-8ergman, GIDwn (t>v Witt)
Belk-Beranouer. Looer PB-Boone
T-2 S3 A-41,2S3
NATIONAL LEAGUE
...,.., l. Dodttn 1
LOS ANGILH flHILA
.. rll~
S.• 71>
B•tlor n
Mlller ll
Guerrer 30
MldlldP rf
YHotr c
$tu1>1>1 11>
llllllnlOHf
Wel('l\P
MOr•l•on Htr'1\lt.f o
Lnd1tv on
COIAI o
Tettl•
' 0 0 I • 0 2 0
• 0 I 0 • 0 1 0
) 0 I 0
3 1 0 0
• 0 I 0 • 0 7 0
I 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
Samuel 2'>
VHavnd
Schmdt )0
L~rrf
GWll.onll
Holtand II ~IUkll>
Vlrolt C
0.JHUI H Koovnn o
tMOOoit Cf
ab r II bl
• 0 0 I • 0 0 0
• 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
3 1 0 0
0 0 0 0
7 0 0 0
l I 7 I
) I I 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
~ J J, JJ111 T9'11t
Sceffll'I......,. .... A...... ... 010 __ ,
,........... . 002 100 OOX-J
Game Wlnnlntl 11181 -Nona.
OP-Plll .. 6'111111• 2 LO&-t..ot AlltM•
7 Prtlladt!Pfll• ' $-Koo1man. ' lft HlllltlHIO .............
Wlldl L,l ·5
HtnlllMf
COlea ,..., .....
l(QOlmen W .•·S
Holltnd s WP-Wtldl.
A->0,lfO
• 1 , l
0 0
l
0 0
1
7 I 0
KOOV!'ll n
3
0
0
2
0
I
2 7
0 0 1
T-21\
MAJOtt LIAOUI LIADIRI
~ .. ~
IA TTINO (fO 01 Dahl • Law Cl'llc.ffO, •· ••· ~t•. ,1'l Oante. Tor· CMllO • ..)49, O.vl1, S..Hle. lti. W . Tor
onto, l'S •uNS Tramt!WI. o.trolt, U ; 111._lfl .. "'"""·a.; Wtlltllk«. ~t. lO, '"""· CltvNnd. ti,~ ...._a 11111 #NfraY. a.ttl!M't. 401 1(1..,.n, O.._leftd, H, ~. OotrOlt, lJ, O.vl1
... ttte,)I; llllce, lolttill, II
HITS Olt'Clt. T~. "· Trammoll. o.!nllt, 51, Wlllt-'•• Oelrolt, 51, lel,
Ttnlllle, 90.L lllltll!MI, lelflmoA, iG °°"ILd lttt, Toronto, ii. o.c--. .,..._ u. oorcla, Ttroftt•. II, ._., .,_., tt, OM!ll, Mlnnet0t1. 10, U"lle11t,
Tortf!IO. 10 TllllPLIS Ill LOW, Cl'llcHO ••• MoMOY.
fwoni. &; O.tfl, ,..Ole, '4J e ate tied wllll
l
HOME lltUNS. Klnom•n, Oekland, 12,
1111'*811, e.lflmor•, 11, Oavl1, S..llle, 10,
Mt/Trev. Baltlmot't, f. Arma1. lotton, I, IC.11111, CNc.aoo. I; UMl\AW, Toromo, •
STOLEN BASES Gard•. Toronto, 20, Buller, ci.011nd, 17; aernuaro,
Clevtland, I•, ....... Allelh, 14; Htn·
oerson. O.klend, ll.
PITCHING (S oecl11ont) Wl"oa, O.· "°''· 6-0. l.OI; Morrll, O.troll, I · I. 2. It, Petry, O.lroll, .. 1. 2JM, CaualN, Oakland,
S·l, 3.ll, J•d,,.on, Toronto, S·l, l.S7, Stieb,
Toronto, S•I, 2.33.
STRll(EOUTS· Btvlevan, Clevuna. SI,
Sli.tl, Toronto, SI, Witt, ......... SI, SmllhM>n, Mlnne.o••· 49, Mo<rll, O.lroll, ... SAVES: Oultent>errv, Kan .. , Cllv, 11;
Flnoer1. MJlwlukM, I, S"nltv, Bo"on. I,
Caudlll, O•kt1n0. 7, L•mo. TO<"onto, 1.
Oavll, MlnntlOla. 1
Nattonal Lueue
BATTING ''° at 1>111). Francona, Mon· trH I, .lit, Gwvnn, San Oleeo, .l62, llttdUI, ClnclMall, ,3.tt, wunlnoton, Atlant1, w .
Clark, S.n FranclKO, .lll, lltelM•. Mon·
frH I, .lll.
RUNS: Wlooln,, S.n Oleo<>. JJ, R1lnt1,
MontrNt. 31. Samuel. Pfllledtlonl•. JO.
Sdll'nldt, Phli.de!Plll•, 2', MallhtW•. Clll·
caeo, tt. W1'1llno1on, Atlaftta, 2t.
111&1· C¥1«. Montrn t. 17; $Cllmldl, Pto~•. 33, Clark, San Frencltc0. ll,
Dumam, Cnlcaoo. 31, 01vl1, Cl\lcaoO, JO
HITS: Gwvnn, S.n Dleeo. SS, Franc.ona.
MonlrHI, S3, S.muM, PtllladtloN•, SJ.
R•lnn, MontrHI, S2, S.ndt>erg, Clllc.aoo. so DOUBLES Fr•ncone. MontrNI. 12.
Cev, Clllcaoo. 11, Carter, MonlrH I, 11.
S.nde>erg, Cnlc:eoo, 11, Devl1, San Fran·
CIKO. 10; Tnomoson. PllllburOll. 10, Su.
~10. TllllPLES· S.muet. Ptollaoatolll•, 6,
S.nooerg, Cntcaoo. s. McGM. St LOUii , ••
S are tied with l
HOME lilUNS Schmidt, PhlladtlPtll•, 12,
DurMm. Chlc:eoo. 9; Clark, S.n Fr1nclKo,
9, MurPllY, ""'"''· f, MllnMI, ~ • , W•lltcll. Montrnl, I, WunlnQlon, Allan· ••••• STOLEN BASES: Wlooln1, S.n Olaoo. 2S; S.muet. PtollaOelollle, 2', llltdu•. Clncln·
natl , 19; Miiner, Clnclnn"I, 13, lt•lne1,
MonlrHI, 13. PITCHING IS dKl•lon•)' Soto, Clncln·
netl, 7·1, 2.61, H~cvtt. Oedlilh. 6-1, 1J7
• Lvncn. New York. •·I, l."4, Of°OICO, New
York, •· 1, 2.29, Sanderson, ChlcaOO, •· 1,
2.J.t. STRIKEOUTS Rvan. Hov•ton. 71, Soto.
Clndnnall, '9, Goooen, N•w York, 59, V~. 0Mew1. SI, Carlton Phli..stl·
onla," SAVES Gonaoe. San Dleoo. io. H~. PflllaOe10nl1, 10, Sutter, St Loul•,
9, L1Smllll. Clllcaoo 1. ~.
~1
Communltv c-...
Seull!WH'9m t, ~di l
South••""" too 102 01)-4 11 0 S.OOltOACk 003 000 000-l S I t<Olb ano CamHOf\8, Lomalll. Marl<tl
Ill. Shaw (fl •no CamKllO 21--<uclan
ISol HR-Stacv ISol, Be<rlO•n !Sol 1.
DtAnoell1 IS.I
Ottlaf Sc-
P t tomli r •• S.n Olaoo MtH •
TilllndlY'• O.me
SouthwHtern •• PelOm•r
SaJUrCIAY'I o.tne
Petomar·Soulllw111ern winner et
Se<ldltt>aCk
Hitt\ schOOI
CIF •·A ~LAYOl'l'S
( Sectnd ll.und)
OcHn View 1, St. ~•<II 6 0cH l1 Vltw 020 100 00.--7 I 7
SI P1ul ?00 100 oo:>--6 I 1 Ooutv, J-• IS) •nd l(lrbv, Sa1l1,
Wiiker ISi. Olaz (I), S.IH (9) •nd Grah•m
W-Jonfl L-Olaz 7B-Mortno ISP> HR--Klrt>v IOV), Greh•m (SP) Carnev
ISP>
Cll' l·A ~LAYOl'l'S
( S.CMll Reufld l
Arte"9 7, 1n11N 6
Irvine 1.0 000 I~ 1 l
ArlHI• 100 OO'l l l-7 9 1
Henlo•n '"° Martin, S..Ot>o<g Mo"t gom trv 17l •nd Guool•n•
W-Montgomerv L-Ht nlg•n. a l
2B-Guotl•na IAI 3B-Scott Ill Gran!
(A)
LattUN Ha1 S, ... GaNMlll ,
Laouna Hiii• 001 003 0-S 11 l
Bell Gardtft• 100 001 0-2 7 0 Ward, Pternel 16) and Roman. Garcl•
AlarnlllO (61 •nd E•11lnoaa w-waro lt·21, L-G•rd•. Hlil-llom1n (LH), tlllro Inni ng,
one on.
NOTE Laouna HIM• "°''' APPIA V•llav Frld•v •t 3 15 In the 1·A Quarltrtlntl•
CIF scor.-s
HCONO lllOUNO •·A Noire Oame 4, PHaoene I Bl•noo ilomat I, Aolllno Hiiia ~
Arcadia t. ltowleno e
Miiiiken 13, Beverlv Hiii\ 12
S.n Goroonlo s, L•kewooo 7
Hoover 10. Buen• •
Oc:H n Vl1w 7, SI Paul 6 It lnnlno•I
South Torrance t , CamarlllO 6
J·A
Lomooc s. Footnlll •
El Oor•OO 1. Rlver1ldt Polv • G•hr 2, W11tern I
S.nl• ilon• l . Harl 2 Canvon IA> 1. MIQflett1 ,
Sonor• S, Cerrito• 2
P•ramovnt •· L• Quinta O
R•mon• •. S•v•nna l , ..
MtHI• 1, lrvlne 6 ca 1nnlng1)
Ca11von lSl 6, Ce1on S Norco a, Pioneer S II tnnlnoll
H•wtnorne e. RIO Mtu 7
Laouna Hiii• 5. Bell Garoen• 2
APPie V•llev 1, Hemet ,
Sauou• S. Mountain View 2
llllJblOOU• 11, S•nta f!t •
l·A
Temote Cltv S, Glad•lont I
Cnemlneoe t, St Oon•venture •
AIUM •. LA Lulntr•n l
•••te.t~O 20, SI Barnard ' L• Canaoa IJ. l llhOO Montoomerv )
B•ldwln Park •. LA laollll • San Merino 13, Perrll 12
tMrv Star 11. Whittler Cllrl,tl1n t
SI
Cronroadl 7, C041'' Union 1
FllntrldOe U. S.rrano t
WtOb 7, Beker I
Buckltv e, Woo«rost Cllrl1ll•n 6
ltotamond s. llo ~'"' 0 llllo HOl'ldO Preo 11, Wnltnev s
Or•noe Lulhtrtn 20. ()akwooo I
Aree .... r~
M8WJIOlllT llACM WOMIN'S AISM.
Club c.'M!Mlon Martt o-.. '1 I
111\IMOf•UO IOlt Oow111, tM
L-Ht!, '''°"' A CerOI ltlrkllar1 15' ....... 1
Low Orot\ LUCY C.idln. tS4
•unner ·ua "" Lenot1. Ut Low ...., SvM• Htfldt(..on 1 ..
""" c Low Oroo Mtrv Atlee L"""''. 1\) •Ut11W·ua Ll11M111 C1rr, 2., I.ow .,... lllel Jarrv r rn eno Gr~
ll't1na IM
L• Allrnltes
TUHOAY'S •1su1.n
11"" .. 92 ........ ~ n--.> .... IT llACI. lSO vards.
L• Ptunotr (Creeoer) 6.20 4.00 2.60
Drltllno LM <FrYdevl 6 .0 l . .O
Polley Minx (Pllkantonl 3.00
Al.o recld· •note Btua, llltotk:• o.cr...
Blnarn Roc1t111e, t<ar1n1 Luckv C•I,
Trace Ot ThrM, Summer Claulc. V•lua
Out. Time· 11.n
U IXACTA U·ll 11110 '30.20
SICOND ltACI. 3SO vard•
lllHI Ea1v Clllcti (Mv!H) S.20 3 60 uo
Gloolo Ooo !Gard•) 6.00 3.60 Tort~ s.11or (CrHoerl •.OO
Alto raced: Or BurO.nl>., Stomp II. A
Zure Caret, llteollftl~ncl
Time II O'l
TtO•D llACI. JSO vard• RMI Ea1v Jet Two I Hart) l .O 7 80 2 20
Hll Ga .. nt Buo (Ward) •IO 2 IO
Olellft Otcar (TreH ur•l 2 . .0 AIM> racao Luc:kv BIOw. Tiit Armenl•n
Time 17 '2
f'OUttTH llACI. JSO v1ro1
Klno Ot Junolt (Wero> 16 '° a'° • 80 N•llvt llleflectlclll (Mvlftl 16 .0 t 10
Liiiie Pod lk rdl • 00
AIM> ractct: lltldl Pocket, Rocio.ti Bar
MoOn. IC.atlel H•"· Some Tnvmu•. Tiny
Carl, Too Moon L.over. Heevan Sll•k"
Time· ll.2S.
U aXACTA (l·•I PtlO Sl'1.l0
f'lf'TH llACI . .00 varos
lltHI Rtl>el lllule< (H•rt) 6.IO 4 . .0 2.60
Rebel• G-W <Creeoer I 6.60 3 . .0
$oectacut.r P•n (B•rdl 3 .0 ""o raced. S.mural W•rrlor, I Wiii
Never Tell. Hltd\111, Snow Hart, NMr Monev, Sumoln Sllctl, Mvrts Pot Ot GOid.
Time: 20.52. u IXACTA II·•) oald ur..o.
SIXTH lllACa. 350 vards. Nlohl Traca1 (Plkntn) 5.90 3 . .0 2 60
Tll>llV J•I (Creaoerl •.OO 2.10
A1l1t ... Wr•"9itr (Hart) 2 80
Al.o rec.a· Burnam, On. Arur• Elalnt,
Miio P•lll, AllOUO• Aocket, B.Oulnoi Coov.
Poll1ht<I Glau
Time 1111.
s•v•NTH lllACa. JSO varo1.
A1k Ooltv (Mllcnttl) ?7 80 IS.to 12 60
Cooled Nlce!V (Creaoe<l IUO I .0
Molhtr S...0<emt (Gtrcl•l 7 .0
AIMI racao Peoov Gtflle, Oetla"
A/Ifft. Conftu. Tru!Y She•. Wtftrk:h, Ftv
Lkkldv Sollt Time 17 ..
U IXACTA (9·2> paid s.SUO
llGHTH RACll. 350 varos
OMI In Ceil! (Pilk9ntonl •.20 3 IO 2.IO
Junie Boonl (Frvelavl 12.IO UO
L09\c.al Lu" (Aoalrl l.AO "''° racao O•shln Bl•H. OlltnO,
Rock•ll• Elaine. RHllY Ftvln. BPllOM• Uo Jet, Miu LUCkV Metodv
Time 17 11 n ~IC SIX ,.,, ..... ,.,.,, oald
U.•ff 60 with ltY9n winning tlcktll (llX
non .. 1. U Plctl Six conlOl•tlon o•IO 1201 IO
with 12• wlnnlno llckel• lllve "°'"''
NINTH llACI. '70 varos.
Booov Oh Oh IGarcl•l S IO l olO 3 00
Greclou1 Rib ITraasure) •.olO 3 IO
Oulltl Llttte BHr (lroolu) '·'° Al•o rec.a· R~r Young, Cllarnolon Al
Pl•v. Think Sl11, SP«kled Oence. ToulS
Moon DH n
Time "6.51
12 IXACTA 11·'1 11ald SUIO
Attena•nct· •.f4f.
NIA playoffs
CONf'lllllNCI FINALS
, ... , .. s.-tAft)
WUTalllN CONl'IRIENCE
T ....... tGama
Pnotnla •I L.allan ILo• Anotle•
\trl" l · 1> f'riCIAV'I Game
IH O•
Lalleo '' Plloenl• 111 nec•• .. rvl SUfMlay er ~Y'• Oame Pnoenlx ,, L.allen, t BA (If ntCHMfY)
IASTalllN CONl'lllllNCI
T ....... tG•me
MllweUkff et Bo•ton IBOSIOl't IHd\
,.,, ... 3·11
f'rldlY'I G•me Bo1ton •• Mllw•ullH (If nKHHrv)
SundaY'I G1me
Mllweui.H •I 80\lon (If nKtuarvl
~ 0 I . "
Women'1 s.-.1
HIOH KHOOL
Cll' 4•A ~yeftt
( S«Md llleuftd)
l'.unt111n V•lleY 1, Simi v•v o
Fovntatn V•llt v 001 000 0-7 • l Simi V•llev 000 000 ~ l 2 H•v,,., •nd PU(llal\ltt, RtOCllff l ftel
l(ln(•ld
Marini 11, lllelille H .. 0
llloU1ng Hiii• 000 000 0-0 I S
Marin• 10. 771 Jt-II 20 0
Btu•cn Tom ISi •nd T\Cll•O•, J Lar.-n
•nO C L•"•" ,B--B•ll•mv Fe<ou..on
lB-J Laraen
Mlttot D.i I, V .. f11rtl 0
Ma"r Oel 000 000 000 000 1-1
VIII• P1r11 000 000 000 000 l>-0
Sulttvan •nd 7emor•. O.eroorfl
J1t11tn
Cll' Small ktlMI• """"" (S.C..-tlwnd)
Ntw"'1 Cllnltllll $, Wt1"1det 2
I I s l
t ncl
NtwPOf'I CllHlllt tl 01 1 100 1-S 4 •
WettrldOt 000 200 0-? l I
Davlchon encl Andt'\Oll, Coltrin 1no
McCaulev JB-Dt9M (NCI. leN\noff
IW) Hlt-01vld1on (NCI
Clfl K.,.S
llCONO lllOUNO
4·.A·
N~ovrv Pon. I H"t o 117 1nn•no•
L• Oulnte 2 Cenvon I
........ ti 10 S.nl• 8arMr• 0
MarlN 11. llt .. l"'f HIW\ 0
KtllllM'll ), San ~COi 1 Ma.., Otl I, VIiie ...,._ 0 11) innl1'91)
• '~niain v•v 2. Stl'llt Veltv O O#Otfl Gr.-te I, (tn'llOI 0
l·A
M.wanellle ) flllntrlOM SeocrH Helf! o
WNlllef Olfltl..-n '· II"-0 i.n Mef lflO 4, s.tito Clef• J $1 8-Vtf'llUA J St Jo.-1
COllMllV J Ho!fw e>.me •twnlde I
111'-t 10, We1""11 C"'f"''" S •to MHa I, LA '-'111 t 111...,-., 4 LO CtNMSa 0
ffNI~ New~• Ctlfl•llan s. we11r1"8 1
Pe..oena ll'olv 11 f tMOlflOtl '
Ml\ Jatlnto 1•. ~"' S -'Hfe l Llnfleid Cllrlttlen 7
Woodcr .. I Ct'lfl1tla11 1' Nl'Mttl i
AQ\llNt •• OwtM YOlle'f 1 " lnnlne"
Marlcooe JI. O.ts Hiii •
VWwl>Ollll 1, C1I LutNr•ll I )
W9'1d T•m T_,.., Cup
tat OU..Mldlf1, w"' GenNllYI UftltM ltlltet J, Wt1t <MnNl'l't 0 ~ Jonn McEnroe IU.S > Clef Andres
Maure< 1w .. 1 ~m•nvl. 6·1, 6·2, Jlmmv
Ari•• CU S.) Clef lltotf Gthrlo IW"' c;.r·
manv>, •·•. 6·l O.U.t
McEnrot·Peler Fllmlng IU.S.l def
tMur1r·WoltOAllO Popp (Wnt Germanv). ,.,, •·2
OtMf Sewn
Crecno,1ov1kl• 3, lletv O
Sw.otn 3. Au11ratla 0
Soaln 2, Ar09nllna I
Htltl sa..I
Clf' 4·A ~LAYO .. f'S
( Qua""'11Mh)
C-... MM 11\.'a, It .... Hat 6i,,, san.s
Brown•t>eroer (CdM) loll 10 Mor•vec,
•·6, Off Wallace, 6-1, Off Ono, •·3, ono v•
C1nllne, Brloo1 (COM) won 6·•. 6· 1. ono
.. l. Prooo ICOMl Ono. won 6· I, 6·2, 6·•.
~t (COM! '°" 2·6, 011P won 6·l , 6·2
~
Hlnman·Ho1tetter (COM) Ott IC.nUOM>n·
Marrl•, 6·2, 6·7, Ott Po·SllenQ, 6· 1, •·•.
Jank:ln·Smltll <CoMl IO\t l ·6, 1•6, \Pill 7·6,
S·7
s.ntt aart1era 11, UlltwnltY 11
MNlel Greer IUI loll to Trlourlo, 3·6. Ott
Miiier, 6·•. Off B p...,,, 6· I, dtf Kront>erg,
6·2. Plnct\H (Ul Iott, 2·6, 3·6, won, 6·2,
6· I, WHwrman IU) IO•I, 0-6, l ·6. 0-6, >·•·
Hoffman (Ul lolt, 1·6, 2·6, •·4, l-6.
~
P•ulwn·Ollver IUI def HH•·EClll, 6·2.
6·2, W>lll with P P11Jt·Nl1tl, 6·3, J·6;
CorkerrGlt>alevlcn (U) •Pill, 6·•. l ·6, loll,
0-6, 2·•
Seu111 Ttn'-.e 23Vt, a1t•11da 4V. san.s
SandOv•I IE I lo•I lo Dadl•n, 2·6, '°'' to tMtter•. 2·6, Clef Imel, 6·•. lost 10
IC.•ractonv. 3·6, RODt>ln• (EI IO•t, 2·6, •·6,
won, 6·0. 6·0, Baroer IE > lo\I. >·•. 2·6, •·6, 2·6, Ha1ll110• IE) loll, 0·6, 1·6 1·6, l·6
0..-.. Fl•oo·Solce< IE I lo•I lo Yetn·Talt>ot.
2·6, 2·6, loll to Hunt·Hunt. 1·6 6·7
8rown·Slu0tl>Aktr (EI loll, l ·6 •·6 sot1t
2·•. 6·3
Clf' >-A 'LAYOFFS
( Ouan.r1IMh)
LM ........ lS, YW11A ... OI U
MMIH 5'"8nlr (LB> lo\I 10 S Juno. l-6. Off
Treinen. •·2, dtf Gf"ooeetlw. 6·1, oef Allll,
.. 2. H•w0ttll ILB) toll, 2·6, won, 6-0, 6·1. .. 1. erano1 lLB) IOI!, 0-6, w Ofl, 7·S, 6·2.
loll,•·•, Brumfl~ (L B) IOI! 6·1 won 6·3
6· I, loll. 1·6
~
Parrv·Frosl <Li l lcnl 10 Juno
LIMCllUll. 7·•. 7·•. H~lfl with Ciiano· Plowmen, 6·4, l-6, Emcl'l"911•m·Wallece
II.Bl IOst, 2·6, , ••• 10111, 7·S. S·7
cur scorel
OUAllTallf'INALS
4·A
Mlrallllt 701/t, Pelot Verde• 1 .,
S•n" Bert>ara 17, Unlvtnllv 11
Corona oet Mar 17'1), Aolllno Hiii' •,
South Torrenc• 13'1>. E•l•n<I• •' 1 l·A
C•l•l>A .. , 19''>. S•n Marino ,,.,
P•lm Sorlno• II, Ceoo V•ll•v 10 Le C•nad• 141'>, Le Quinta ll l
LOI Alto• IS, L•gun• BHcn ll 1·A
Indio 20 i . Cres11I 7•, Cul ver Cllv 70 MOnte~IO a
Lovol• H . Centr1I l
Ole mono Bar 1l , v atencl• • i
°"° ... flll\lnt
OAVIY'S LOCKllt INew-1 ... di)
-7' •noter• l3 catlco ti.tu, l1 sano t>u\
• 1>arrecu0a, S6 bonito. a ve11owt•ll 11 roe•
"'" I ntllt>ut, ISO meckerel, 10 •hfto,neeo NIW~OlllT LANDING (N•woert
BMdl) -II anoter• 3' cellco t>•o. a ••"0
t>an. I 1httP\,,.td, I ut>a1on . S m•cker~I
Thia WMll'I trout "'°'"' LOS ANGaLai -Bououet Cenvon
CrNll, C•"•lc Lekt Jack•on L•'-t l •lllt Roell L•kt. Puddtno1to,,. Lake Pvr•m10
'-'"'· S•n G•l>rlel liltver ''"' en<I wu• lorll•I llllVIElllSIOI -Oarll. C envon Creti.
Futlar Miii CrNk. Fulmor Ltkt H.,,.,,,
Like Perri\ L•k• S•n J•c in to Iii 1ver
lno4"1h tori.> Strewt>errv CrHI<
SAH 1a•NAlllDIHO -Arrowt>eer
L•k• Co1or eoo lillvt r t NHdlf\
Cucamonga CrHk GrH n ven.v L11••
CrtOorv Lelle Jt nk1 L•kt L vii. (rHI<
lmlddlt .no nottl'I IOtk\l ~'"'' An• q ••' Sant• An• liltver c 10Uln tori..·
SAH OtaOO -Cuv•m•c• Lek• Ooen~ Pond Si n Lui\ ltev lttver S•ff••••tr
River
USflL
WUTIRH COHflllllNCI
Denver
Arlrone LA••~• 0.klenO
~aclfk W l T ~ct. ,., .. A
1 • o ua ,..., JO?
• , 0 '62 l31 209
• 1 o ,., n t ,,, • • 0 .lot ,., , ..
Centl'al
Houu on I \ o •IS •2• "' Ml(hloan 1 • 0 ~ 29' 27 3
Otlr.l'IOm• • 1 0 467 103 )~
San Ant01116 J • O >I\ 107 24.J
ClliC'aoo • f o .lot ,,. J5 t
aAITWllN COMf'l•aNCI
PflllacMIP'\1•
New JMM¥ Pit~ ...
WUlllftilltln
ll""'nenam T~llY
NewOtlffn•
MerMfll\
Aleftftc
12 I 0
10 l 0
1 II 0
, 11 0 ...,.....
nJ >tJ 151
,.. )11 '" IM 71) 711
IM It• lS1
11 r o ... •1 106 10 > 0 , .. >S1 Ul
I S 0 615 167 m
S a 0 lfS m>OJ
4 • 0 • , .. >10 ,,...,,, o-
T•mM 8av Al~• 1'4o\nlOll ti JeO\Oll,,..
09n.-« •I San AntOlllO
.._.Y'IO.....
Arl1one "' l.A 1.---.. at LA Co~"um CS•ml
0e1o:1ano et Otlla~
lllMIY'• o-
l1tm1nenem ot New Ot'-•"' Wl\lllMlon 11 Plll\N'tf'
Pfll e~elll• at Mk. .,...II
~.,.,~
Hew l.r'" •' ChlUtfl
lndV SOO wlmen
Winner• of tilt lnolenellOll• SOO·mlle rec•
1no ·•~ 1n 1917· t• ano 19•2·'51
1911-llAV Harroun
1912-Jot D•wton
)91)-Jule• Goux
191~-Tnomn
191s-Relon 01PalrN
191..-0•rlo ltnta
191,_Howard Wllco.l
1920-Guton Cl'ltvrotel
192 1-Tommv Miiion
ltn-Jlrnmv MurOl'lv
192)-TOMmv Miiion
192~ L.C0tum and Joe Bover
1'2S-Pete 0.PtolO
192.-...Frenll LOCkhert
1m~oe~•
1911-1..CKill W-0.ver
Im-Rav KMdl
1930--BIMv Arnold
l'3~ou1, Sc:nneiaer
1932-Freo Fr-1933-Loul• ,.,,..,.,
lfU-elU Cummlnu~
lfls-Kriv Pwtllo
l~oull IMvtr
1937-WilOur Sllaw l~IOvd RGW11
1'39-Wllbur SMw 1'.c>-Wllllur 51\aw
lf•l-Ftovd Devi• •nd l\ltaurl RoM
19~oe Ro«>.on 19'7-Maurl Row
19~url RPM
19..-elll Holland 19~JOMnll Parton• ltSl--LM wan.,d
1fS2-Trov Ruttman
19U-BI• VUk.ovlc:ll S< lfSl--elM Vukovich S<
19SS-BOD Swelkart
ltS6-P•I Flahertv
1957-S.m H1nki
1950--Jlmrnv Brven
19Sf-llloooer ward
iHC>-Jlm Reinmann 1961-A J Fovt Jr
1962-Rt>Ooer Wero
196>-Parnetll JoM• ,,.._A J Fovt Jr
196S-Jlmmv Ciart.
1966-Gr•llam Hiit
1967-A J Fovt Jr
19'1-Booov Un"'
196..-Marlo Anortll•
1970-AI Unser 1971-AI unwr
19n-Mari. Oonon.,.
19n.-<>oroon .>onncock
197-Johnnv Rut~IO<O
1975-BoOOv UMt< 1'76-JoN>nv lllut'*10t<I 1m-A J ~OY1 Jr
1'71-AI Um.
1979-«ktl ~· ~Jol\M't ttutl'ttr'lor<I
1911--eobl>v U"M< i~oon JOMcoc•
lfl>-Tom W¥t
lndV soo '"*'" 9' ., .. , lndl•naPOlt1 SCIO rOOklel of tne YN r tint•
1ne '"'"d'• lnceotlon In lfS2. •nO '"' 001it10n u cn llnlsn.o '" rrw race 19S?-Art Cron Stn
lfU-Jlmmy Oavwell, 61h
195'-urrv Crockttt 9tn
19SS-AI Harman, 71'1
195'-BOD Veith, 71'1
t9S7-<>otl Eomvna,, lftn
1950-Gaoroe Amlell. 7no
19S._8oot>v Grim. 761n
t~Jlm Hurtuoi.t lltn
it61-PerMlll Jone• 11tn en<I 8oOOv
Mar•hl'l'IAn 7th
1967-Jlm McElrH tn 6tn
1963-Jlmmv Cieri< 2nd
19..-Jol'lnnv wn111 '"' 196S-Mario Anortt11 lro
1966-Jack•• ~tewert 6tl'I
1967-0en" Hulme 11n
196f-B•M Vur.ov•Cl'I Jr ''" 196f-Mar• Oe>nc>h\A Ttl'I
1970-0on"'• ,1.111~ "" 1911-0ennv l lmmerrnen t in
1m-Miae Hin 1111 ltl~r•hal'l'I MclllH .. tll
tt7•-P•ncno Carttr 7tn
191S-Bnl Putert>evvn 11" 1916--Vt<n !>cnuo111n 1111•
1t11-Jerrv S,,.va 10th
l97'-lf1c" M••rs 2lro •no Ut<• • ~'"
111n
191-Howdv H~mt\ It" I~ Tim lil•cnmono fin
1911-JoHll Gerz•. Ura
19'7-Jlm H;ci.man, 1th
19'3-Teo Fel>4, 761n
..
TuHdlV'• tun~Cflon•
aASIEIALL
Am..-1cen L••eu• MINN~ ~OT A TWIN!.-Ac• .. a!f'<l •••
')<l'f()t" l"'<"•r r>·-c•O A W· .~, "•r•
., o-'"• "oa• o ••bfll ,, Hahaf\11 LH9Ut
... Q,,.IW(Al Eitr>O\ !ta a •ll Y•t
'Slf nh \.ol\. utl ~Of"'' ''OIT f~d A~•OC \ I
'~ A""ttfl<•~ A\\O.C. •' 0"' 0C-" 01"t•O A•w•
' S• .,., '"<>' ''' 10 •n '""•"•(\OJ' o• "~
ll"tern•' 0"• ••Out' tASl(&TaALL
Ht~I a..Jt~ AU.C141118'1
OfNVf A NUC.GI! T~ Ne"'f'<'.I ''•
Pn100\ 111(f Oftl\·0."'t and~·'• ,..... ·~·1
l'OOTtAl.L
NA1'IMAI l'Mfbal I.Neu• P1THl!UA(,14 HEE:Lflil\ !.~""Cl
C:eri.v A .. u nae1 Mer•, A~ ... ~.,., •• •
G0<don t"<I L F Med·\VI' 111••t>A• I.pr'
Antnon• Corte• •unn1n9 I>••• Tl'IO"'•' It"""' d•lan\lvt onemar •"<I Ma•• Mt11
1'4IO W•d• rf(t lv•• !O •rH •O•"' "'"' •• " UNIM i'•tM llwtNI LNeue
P1TT\l\UltC.l1 MiloUL L It\ W11 ••d
Amo' L•wren<• '""'"''"'II D••.. \19.,.., HOiii\ P•vtort run"'"" O.c II HOCk&Y
HatteNI H•O•'ll LNtue 8 0\TON BRUIN\ ,,,o..,ao Do.iv ..... ,
OOAllen~r
l OS ANGL l l ' ~INC.\ ........ a Clo•
P9rr~ ,~ 1•1 .,,,,,.,,, •('t ,.,,. v-ntt' • rnan•-WINllllPEG Jl I\ \111n•d JCi t
leikarQtO<l '~' ,.. o t(I • ...,. I ••••
Cll"trac• wcca1t
~ A~Afl McH' l -
(0\MOS P.•<41(1 H •t>t•t & '"''"""" t • "°' t.-r J... O.iroan •"<I ""9f!ll
Otll«naroo ~..-0.•' •nd \•••e Mch•tr•.
tot'wttd Cit! w•'•" \ (OLLIGI
A TL ANTIC i~ An.......nc:tei tl'lt '" •
"tllOft Of 1. ... 1\0 l•rO '°"'""''~
ION ... -AflnO\in(H flW ·····-' ('t Bflall C~v. l'IH G Po9iNI <Olt<ll Ill;! •Ill
remain •• '"''"nt et11,.t1r direcior LONG l (A(H STAT(-A-tcl 1"8
'">OllAllOll 01 C0tev Van ,. .. , •tllletlC
d ff(IO< irtltttt•"t Jt.IM • NOIUH CAltO\.INA Ott«i N\101110-
Anl'OUll«d the ''' lf\Aliofl ot t• ~ "-AO l)a1Jttlllel «>ftPI
OHIO STATE -•MO<)l'l{ff llW •He
nehon fl Wnl't .\ltl'lle• •n••'•'" hlCllll•· c .....,,., ,~. '
•OCKHUltST-Ne....... A'lfh '''"" "8.0 \ktfDI " ~ II fl
\Ol,.ITHWE~H T ll.\' ··u ff N•"'a.l
, .. Jtfirt• ,...a n•..O." rna "
NcWpOrt Vo~bell Club, after I
months of' traioana; will ltDd fi ..
,iris' tams to~ Juniot Olympics~
the University of Rhode Island. JIUlll
18-23. The club's I 3-yea.r-<>ld team it
coached by M ik.e Omldurfl' and 11 t.W
No. I seed. with the ~or com~
uon expected to come from Wu>d
City of Chicaao. the defe.od.tna ~
pion.
Newport's lS-and--under enuy ii
expected to enter as the No. 2 ~
while the 17-and-undtt squad Ud
two dcvelopmtntll teams -a 1~
year old and a 13-ycar-old bmua:ni
group. com pine the entn.cs.
The 13-and .. under team 1nctuckf
Stephanie Af'IYT'OS, Bonnie Carb~1 Jan Molls, Shauna Slinot>Y ana
Laune Wooten of Newp0rt Beach
Terri Gilbert and Becky Sherwood of
Irvine. Fountain Valley•s Son~ Coo,
Huntington Beacb's Mavn:e.n Flan-
nigan and C hino's Jackie Moons.
C <><aptams and scners Laura Fori
of Mater Oei and Jennifer Noonan of
C orona dcl Mar lead the I S-and.
under team, c:oac-hcd by Steve Bu.-
ch.an, with the sq_uad row.ded out by
hllttts Mindy Adams (Woodbri·)~
Katie Hunsaker (Connelly). DioOM
P owers (Editon) and Karen Ritt
(Mater Dei), and Tomomi Kaneko
(Woodbrid&e). Jill Wooten (Corona
del Mar) and Kem Boothroyd
(lrvmc).
The 17-and-under team of Mqpa
Buchan. c onsisu of Cammy Ooda
(Corona dcl Mar), Amy Hayes (C.
nyon). Demonic.a Gales (Hueneme).
Chanssc Simon (&pcranza). Lindsay
Alstrom (Newport Harbor). Step.
hanie Noonan (Corona dcl Mar).
Nancy Bower (Irvine) and Monique
Parent (Marina).
The IS-year-old development
team, under Coach Rick Evans of
Fountajn Valley, indudes Ami Oid·
dens. K.im Peck and Loren Newman
from the Irvine a~.a. Kat Scllwood.
Nancee Castner. Robin Hubert. Gina
Cook and Shellie Walsh from New-
pon Beach. Kathy Hays o f Hunt·
1ng1on Beach and Came Sullivan of
Fountain Valley.
Lisa Conolly's 13-ycar-old de·
velopment team consists of Ah Gar·
rett. Mamie Price: and Amy and
Diana N1cgnn&haus from cwpon
Beac h . Irvine's 1'.cil) Gnbbcn. Costa
Mesa's Anastasia ArooMi and Santa
Ana's Tracy Rice.
ANGELS. • • P'ro.mDI
another." Anderson wd. "Tonttht
our hitting was all right, but our
defcn~ was superlative. Parrish in
front o f the/late and (Alan) Tram
mdl bchin scco11d: those play-.
happen when you're playi naaood.'
~nderwn was rcfcmna to Pam~h\
phi) in the lifth innmi. when ht'
bounced o ut from behind the plate tt.1
~nag Roh Wtlfong's bunt attempt.
and. o ff balance in one m o tion. thl'l'v.
him oul h' a step . .\nd 1 rammcll''
pla). al!>o 1n the fif\h. "hen he c,teppcd
across deep 1n the hole up the middle
ont'·handc:d Boone\ around ball and
threw a 4'tnk c to Bergman -naahn
the .\ngt'I catcht'r b) a hall step
The T igc"' fi nail}' got to nae I
'>tarter Make Wm 1n thc eighth, when
Trammell singled and C 1th'>On was hll
b) a pitrh v.1th nobod\ uut -end1n&
Witt. v.ho wt'nt ~'<'" plu~ 1nnin~
allowed all thrcc ()(tr<.HI run' and
~trud out s1~
* ANGEL NOTIS -Tne Tl9tn ,,. now 7' 0
tnl• ""on wnen tl>eV ta i.e • lt•<I Into tr.
"ven1n 1nn1ng TM Anoe-I• '°" "'41Pco.d •
1'1"10d41lt th•H o•m• wlnntno '''"-RM
Carew, who nao • hOmt run ano • ,1ne1t
Tu"d•v n1011t now "'' 7.•71 career nil\ one
'"" ot 1v1no ,.. .. auniet1 for 771h Ol6C• on tllt ell lime 1111. eno two ~tna l•be •111t1 I•
, .. m, tflt lo• .. t>•ll I• '"' "'"" It)< tn." T1-ollc,..,, no"' .Nell Mettlt •no 0111 ~ 111v1
a.en •omtwnet ternou\ 10< II ll\lt now Miit
Wk•• '"° T ..e•d•• n1on1 ' winning potf'ntt ~ ~-u•• 11 on • r~u•er bell\ S.r11v
Ander"" on ~' "'"°'"""nc:• Tue\d•" '"0'" ~• \ come uo •"" •n o ceu.nt tort.bel er>d lnet I w"al nt \ ~ Of!ltf'IO nl\ \lrt~• OUI\
O" ne \trvc~ ou• ,,,,.. 1n ' • 1r1n1no• !all n10111
No lllt•w naro,.. •o•,.Ql'll "''" na dod "'t "'' """' "" ••~tO ,.....,.. P11cn•no 0<0Nll4e• to.
'Oll•O"' ' ",.,,. Petrv • t aoe•n\t T-y ~
1 )t f"'°'r\Ol v Mw'r'll It· I ega11\\t 0.... IAI""
~ J 0.frO•' '''"-lint tM:l'l'I ever lo •<"••••
ll w '" n n ••w n )I ff~ Tiit ... Wt' •
tor,1 MO'l(lav N1on1 •ac T v G•me ot ""' """• ,., t t>t ,.,.. • ,.....,.. tna To~\ !\Ott t"t Toron1<
B1u• Jevl •S P,.. il>OTt .._.. Gnc:11 l\a•
~ow ""'"° "" c•ot> ' '•'' tO ••~ -·It
oa11,,n9 ,,... •"" '""'' ot -nu Al -'°'" ~ "•O orol>HO 10 "°""°' 0.l"f ....,.~ ..,no .. I\ ,,_..!\ •fOttwnt Ille ll>Qf\t\I '"'°"
•o•• \l"fe Ca,... "e<I 16 1n 1911 -t 0 • IA•'
n1(11'1' \lrl~ 1nq out e~ lour ftme\ W~IOOf
"'"", Kar• SC"-.., .. nonoreo lltlfor• I uf\Oh \ b• ""' Aft\'>tld Forc.t SM wH lf'lt r8( o.-n• ol tne U !> Army ltntf.,.'1 k~r
All11tt• of 1na Veer or-•.a bv LI. C-... 0 t r\\,..w, ~ 10< ••~e Ill alfl4t110 CWI
41vb"ll Dellltll>AH •nd te>ttt>a•I encl • • 0 G,A
I !If II noma G•lll Ille Antef1' all.ndance •l'I·• \tAM'n ''no .. ~II.Ji~ Pef'l<llOO In .. .,.., J""" ~ ol !ht T'"" WU lrtWG _.,,..,,,
OtlO" ,,,.. O•mt T""4ev .., rn • ICJutll °' ••'ld•"'"' ~l"I f"ll~ rtght tor"•.,."'
IRVINE • • • P'romDl
110 .. around out to lnot thinp ., b
\ffcr fa1hna to re 1n tt~ half ot
the-c1ahth. the V~ueros i.ttmcd
'l'!t\ured of k.ul ano\Mr ch.a~ to bll
altt'r Htn1pn qu1clly rruru1 lhl' lint
1v.o tieucn he faced Ttm was not thr
l ~ ho•~\ tr. pe.o h·hmer Todd
Or111 \anatcd and ...:ol to \ttand on•
\IOllt' b) Kell) Rasar
ii. n CTTOf •Oldcd lbt bite ln.d ~
the 111ar fOf Grant. •ho prompth
rt' ponded •1th the pmC'·wtnn na hll
-h" th1N RBI of \he pme
"In the iila 'Offi )'OU Ott'd I d1f·
fC'rCnl her~ mth p mr You·\ie U.a
,., \ e 101 ol cn:du 1<.• flur h,
the\ 0l'l' tht onH who 1ot than (, r U\ ... Gu ana ldckd
•
J • t • ~
~ C099t DAILY PflOTIWedMlday, Mey 23, 1144
~ INl&etlMJJ camp
Tbe City or Costa Mesa ua•ure Scrv1CC$ u
otrerina 1 bukctt.11 camp for boys and ~rts C).14
)"Cll"S o1qc. The twO-Wttk camp II ICt for June
) 8-28 and Will nan Monday throuah Thursday
each week. Estancia H a&h basketball coach l.afTY
Sundemun wiJfbe the camp director.
Individual daily aostruction, dally team gam"
and guest spcakcn will hipli&ht the camp.
For fUnhcr information, phone Glen Stroud
oflhe Costa Mesa Leasure Services at 754-5300.
OYer-tbe-UJJe tourney
The Eadith annuaJ Santa Ana ( ullege over·
the-line baseball tournament will be held
Saturday, June 23 on the Santa -\na Collrac
baseball field.
The tournament annually dra" s profcuronal.
semi-pro. collqe and h1ah school pla ers from
all over the state. Only woodcn bats will bc used
this year and there wall bc only onc dr" 1S1on S~tasucs wall bc kept throughout thc to ur·
nament and pnzes and T-shans "Ill be awardcd
to the winners
An entry fre ofS25 per team (thrt"C pla)crs and
one altematc) a~ required. For more an formation
call Santa Ana College baseball coach Don
Sneddon at 66 7-3503
HB you tb 1JOftball
Hunun~ton Beach Commun1t) ~rv1ces De·
panmcnt 1s offenng registration for first through
eighth graders for ats 1984 youth sof\ball leagues.
League pla) will be Monday through Thurs-
day bqlnning the wcck of June 18. Boysandg1rls
rl'gistenng for leagues wall receive a team shin,
league champion patchcsand city champ1onsh1p
trophies for their S 15 registratio n fec-s.
Regmra11on wall take place' at Murdy Com-
munal) CC'ntC'r, 7000 Norma Dnve, phone
950-8895. and Edison Communlt) \enter
213 77 Magnolia Strttt. 960-8870
For funher anformauon contact on<" of the
league sites
a.Iderette rn-oac.
TryoulS f'ot the tfl4 Raaderc:ucs will be htld
Sunday, June 10 It the Los Anaclcs Airport
Hyatt Hotel, located at 6255 West Century
Boulevard,
AU candJdalC'$ for thc danc•n& and pubhc
relations unit. which performs at Los AnJelcs
RaideT home pmcs and Other special funct10n•.
should n:port to the Pllll.A Del Oro Room ofthr
Hyatt at 8:30 a.m. on Sunday. June 10.
Raidercue candidates must be at least 18 years
old as or July I , 1984. Previous chttl'lead1n& or
professional danc1na cxpcrient.-r is not necess·
ary. For the tryouts, candidates should v.t'ar
sundrMses, tenors outflu, shons. skins or
similar attire -but no Jeans or slacks.
Candidates seltetcd by the panel of Judaes at
the June 10 tryouts wall pan1c1patc 10 a final
compcuuon at a later date.
All St'ssrons of the tryouts arc closed 10 the
public.
Additional mfonnauon ma) bc obtained b>
calling thc Los Angele~ Ra iders at (2 IJ)
322-3451
Ba.eba.11 Card Show
Wallie Ma)\. Walhc Mc< OH'~ and Bob Fl'll<>r
will sign autographs at the founh annual
Anaheim Spom ( ollcctiblc' ')ho" June 9-10 at
the Anaheim C on,ent1on ( t'ntC'r (Pacific
Room).
The \ho~ ~ 111 con\1s1 of 0 ' er 130 exh1b1t
tables w11h 90 d1fft·rcn1 c\h1b11ors on hand to
appraise. bu). ~II and tradc baS<"ball cards.
programs. autographs. non-spcm cards, g.amc·
used bats and uniforms and othcr rdatcd spon\
memorabilia.
There will also be a sports memorabilia
auction each da) at 4 30 p.m.
The sho~ ho urs C'aCh da) are 10 a.m.-6 p.m
P-nce of admission 1s $2.50 (adults) and SI 25
(children 10 and under).
Mays and Mc('ovt'y will appear from 11
a.m..i p.m . both days wh1I~ Feller will be on
hand from 11 a.m -4 pm each da).
For further information. phone Vince Ja~so at
996-J l60or 996-3351 or the .\nahe1m ( on"en·
tron Ccnter al 999-8950
:Houston will get Olajuwon
NEW YORK <AP) -The Houston Rockets took
advantage of an incorrec t .. tar ls" c.all b) the Portland Trail
Blaurs today to wrn a corn flip and the nght 10 select 7-foot
A.11-Amenca AJceem OlaJuwon with lhe first pic k rn the
June 19 National Basketball Assoctat1on draft.
Both teams had announced previous!) that the)
would use the fi,...t sdectto n to take the 7-footcr from
Nigeria and the l 'n1vers11~ o f H ouston 1f the) won
Co mm1sst0ncr Da,1d Ste rn's flip ofa 100-)t'ar-old s1her
dollar
Since both teams e"<prcsscd a desire to make the
dec1stve call, Stern made a prel1mtnaf) flap that "'as won
by Portland owner Larr) Weinberg. Then Stem fl1pl){'d
again. We1nbcrgcallcd .. tails ... and the toss came up heads.
. Gauchos stumble
: in playoff op ener
h will be the seco nd )Car 1n a row that the Rockets v. rll
have the first c hoice 1n the draft In I IJ83. Rockets· o wner
Charlie Thomas corrcctl} called "heads" 1n a coin toss
with the Indiana Pacers.
They used the firs t pick 10 select 7-4 Ralph Sampson.
who could team w1th OlaJuwon to form a potenttall~
a"csome fro ntcoun. bamng a trade< 5addlebad. College's baseball team," hrch had beaten
Southwestern four tames dunng the regular phase of the
Pacific Coast Conference schedule h11 a road block
Tuec;da> against the Apac hes rn the first ro und of the
l)haughness) Playoffs
The Gauc hos' bid for a filth straight wrn over
• • outh"estcm ( 17-1 SI "'as den 1ed as the v1s1tors rallied for
• an 8-3 \'ICtOf)
Pon land had hoped to ha' c the coin fall rls "3). JU'I
as 11 drd an 1974. ~hen Phtladclphra incorrect I~ called
.. heads" and lhc Tr:ul Bla1cr; were able to choose Rill
Walton. who led the Tr:ul Bla1ers 10 an N B~ tllk 1hrct•
vears later.
· The Blazers had said that 1f the) lost the t11p. thl"~
w o uld take Sam Bo" re. the 7-foo tcr fro m Kenwck~.
.. We're all 1n the same boat now," said Saddleback
Coac h Jam Bndcweser, refemng to the fact hrs team rs on
the "erge of elrmrnat1o n fro m post-season play A.s the
conference champion. the Gauchos must be beaten twice .
v.hrle the rest o f the field will he eltmanated wtth a single
setback.
No". the Gauchos a"'a11 an oppone nt for aturda) 's
nCllll ro und at Saddleback, needing a vrctol) to avo id
ehmrnat1on.
Newport youth vies
This Fnda} through u nda}. N e"port Beach "d s
hane Thuesen v.111 be rnmpet1ng for the Caltfom1a state
c hamptonshrp o f the I ntcrnatro nal Kartrng Federation rn
R1vers1de,
Steve DeAngelts put the Gauchos ( 23-13) rn front with
a 1h1rd-rn01ng three-run ho m er -his 26th career home
: run -which followed walks to Ken H enry and Mark
Webste r. But Saddleback's offense was silenced after tha t.
Thuesen rs an crghth-gradc student at H orace Ensign
Junior H igh School in Newpon Beach . He has been racing
karts for 2111 years and finished ninth rn the natio n a t the
Grandnatro n als rn Quincy. Ill. last August
The Apaches pushed a round sophomore starter Mike
Lomellt (9· 7) and a pair of relievers. producing three
ho mers among their 11 hr ts.
In the o ther PCC Shaughness) matchup, San Otego
Me$a was eltmrnated b y falling to Palomar. 6-4. setung up
a Southwestern-Palo mar matc hup Thursday.
At the state champ1onsh1ps last year. he finished
second and 1s hoping to '"n rt all this year.
The kans are s mall car!I weighing approximate!)' I SO
pounds and use I OOcc e ngines that produce about 20
horsepower. Thse "chicles can obtatn speeds of I 00 miles
per ho ur on some trac k!>
;~ HARBOR LAWN-MT OLIW
MOl"1uary • Cemetery
Crema1ory
DEATH NOTICES PtB.IC NOTICE NlJC M>TICE
F1CTITIOUI BUllNEH F1CTIT10Ua .,._ ..
NA.ME I TATDllNT NA• 8TATW..wl MOSES The followlng l)«tona ere doing The followlng per.on 11 doing
"
•
•I -·
..
,J ..
162S Gisler A11e
Costa Mesa
>4(1. 5554
PIERCE BROTHE,.8
BEU BROADWAY
MORTU ARY
'10 Broach1ra t
C0s1a ~esa
6•7 4 •'>f)
BALTZ BEtoeGt.HOh
S MITH & TUTHILL
WE S TCUFF CH APEL
'J ,.. ••• ,'
I It 'J) •I
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
• n,,,....,,,. • ~~ , tu,tr ,
(.,h,4' ..,, • t.,f~fUdf Jt,
f'', t>,_4(.1f,, Vi..-...-. r,, .,._
• : !
McCORMIC K MORTUARY
• ·9~ .JQ 111e Ca .. r Ao
••QU'18 '3~1(~ \,~ ~??!JI
EDITH WOODWORTH b\nlneu u : bu1lneaa ea:
MOSES' born Aprll 1' lat\i\' ,._ ~ "• .... •l~t·-~ SECURITIES MON ITORING .,,.,, Newpor1 ... ..., ....., • -... EQUIPMENT CO.. 17895-A Sky·
Pacific Beach, Califorrua. Ca. t2lllO park Clrcle. lrvlne. CA. 92714 died peacefully at home Newpcwt Onion, Inc., • C91tt. Ronald Steinberg, 1711115-A Sky·
with Htwnice care on May OOfll.. JilOI Newpoft INYd, H9ws-1 perk Circle. IMM. CA 92714 -r . 9Mcl\, Ca. ..., Tiii• bullneu It conducted by en
20. 1984. She rs SWVJVed her TMe tiuelMM le oonducted bf: 1 tndlvldual
loving husband of 5-4 years, Corpofettoft. Aon Steinberg
Horace 1rvi.ng Moses two Newpon On6on, Inc. CounThls 1tetemen1 w11 flied wtth tlle ' Ndt C. L-ie ly Clerk of Orange County on daughte r s , V1rg1na A Vice "....,.t May t5. t984
Hunsaker of Coron.a del Mar ThM •t~I •• "*' wtu1 itMlllt
and Margaret J Dorst of ttM Count, Ci.ti o4 Ofente Coun· Publtlhed Orenge Coast Deity
San Joee, California·, seven tJ on Aprll 2, 1184. ..... .. ~ Pilot Mey 23. 30, June 8. 13, 1984 ,.._ 2734-84
grandchildren and one great Published Orange Cout Dally -----------
1 grandchild. Memorial ser · P11o1 Aprtl 24. May t, a. t5, 1984 PllllC M>TICE
I
Vlces will be held at Sa.mt 2232·8" FICTTTlOUI BU8MH
James EpascopaJ Church, P\ISLIC NOTICE NA.ME ITAn •NT
Newport Beach on Friday 'ICTmOUI aualNEH t>u~':i!:~ penoni 11• doing
May 25, 1984 at 12 NOON NAMI ITAT'l•NT WESTERN INSULATION, 251,
In heu of flowers, famlly re· The follOwlng person 11 dOtng Sou111 8roedWay. Santa Ana, CA .b l)\j.,,_. ... 92711 I quests contr1. uuo ns, In THE BOWSERY. 42e 3111 Street, memory of Edith Moees be N.-wpor1 8Mctl CA 92&83 ,::,:old M Moor. ''*''••Ion CaN-
sent to VNA Hospice, 17952· Carolee Jort;.,.,, 2001 Lemno. Tiiis bullneM la conducted by •
F S k ypark Blvd, lrvt.ne, CA Or. Coet• M .... CA 92828 corporetlon
92714 Thia bu81nea:s le conducted by an Linda Marie Bulllnton. secretwy 1ndlvldua1 Thia 111tement wu ftled wttll the EMMES C1tolee Jortner County Clert< of OranQe County on
ALICE R EMMES ...... -4 Tiii• •tatement wu filed wull ahe Mey 3, llNM
· ,,_..."' County Clertl of <>•noe County on ~
away May 18, 1984. She waa M•y 15. 1984 PYbltll'led Orange Cout Deity
a Jong time resident of New· ~ Piiot May 15, 22. 2t June 5. tM4 port Beach. She U1 survived Publlshed Orange eo..a Diily 2575-&4
b h Da d C\-.---f PMo« May 23. 30. June e. 13, t~ -----------0)' tt 901\, V1 -•un-0 2738-M
Huntington Beach and four Mt.JC NOTICE P\11.JC NOTlCl
grandchildren She and her F1CTTT10U8 .,....1 husband Sam Emmes were F1CnTIOUI .,..... ..._ ITATDmJfT
Involved ln yachtrnc and NAm ITAT'lmNT ni. folloWlnQ pwaona.,. ~
•nlli .. n f D-.. The fallowtng perlOn II doing ~I U , 09UU'6 or many yean. ~-~... THE DOORMAN BUILDER'S. 130 vices w ere private. SOUTH S!AS TRADER. , t25 E 17th St .. Sult• T Coe•• ~. l-----=~------1 \lictorie, Coeta ..._., CA CA 92827 111111-.IC llllMll'r Cr•t:: Gleme9f. 242 E. 19th, Akin Serenot. 2M t Orange A"" ~ 11Ue9Sal f"\KK. "'"rw. Cotta , CA 021827 Coate M ... , CA 12827
MAMl ITATDllJfT ~TITIOUa llUIMU Tiits bualneel Is oonducted by an Thia t>u.i-11 oonduGteO by e
',.. .....,_R.,, ..._. ....... .,, Craig aa.m-AXln SeJ:9nOI n..-1~ ,_..,., le ..,.....,. NAM9 ITATl.MINT lndlYldu• I general part,,.,..nlp
bu.liM8I u The t~no pereons •• doing This etatemenf wu nted with the TNt atatement w• llleO w1tt1 the
CNnot1e A Fulk.-.on 8 Ciey, J.,,,._ C Raia, 322e S Oovgla. P\lblllhed Orange Cout Ody Pubtllfled Or.-ve eo.t Deity
.:~!N1~~ ~~~ M~~ t>u:':,. ~OY Tec:tln06ogy... )22e County Olwtt of ()range County ~COunty Clet1t Of Orenge County on M..-CA 92e28 s Oouvlu Sama Ana. Ce -t?n• May l$ ,~ ,.,.,.., Mey 10. tM4 ,....
lrvffte. CA 02714 ";'~~ ~ ~2~., .... en Pftoi Mey 23. 30. June 8 13, ,,... Pltol May t$, 22 ~.June 6, 1"'4 " an:~ .. OOt'dUCled by "' llndMdual .,, 2733-lo.c 2$,....
CMttott• A Futt.eraon Jamee C Raia ' ---Thll etet.,,._,t wM m.cl wltll 1"'9 Thll 11alem.tl WU fllied wttll the
F'ind mon •\·~a \.'lnR yet t 3!-ol.)'
rt•<·1pes in Wt>dm·srla\ 's DlllJ Piiat
Col.lnty Cient of Or-. County °'1 County Cllirk o4 Orange County on
r MIY 8 1NA "P'l4 f 11184 ,,... nQ1'7
I ""~ Orange CO&IC Delly PuC>lllfled Orange Cout Delly
PllOt Mey 15 22. 29 . .Nne a, '"" Piiot Msy 2. 8, t8. 23. 188-4 2'17·8' 7~1-M
...annoua. I m• MA*eTAT ff
The fOloM'I ""'°" .. dOlnO ~-: (A) N£WPOR'T TAUKr l MU8IC
8E.W.CU (Bl N!Wl'Ofn MUatc & TAL!HT SUMcU, Peoe flfo--..onat c.nw 404-40I w-..
rnlnlt« A\'9., Ne9por1 '--CA. 9*3
ThotNI '·~ .... Tom Mo ....... 3et N. ~ ltlla,, New-
pot1 9eectl, CA. l2tN TI*~-~b)':an
lndMduel.
Thom9a '· ww.rn. Th6a lte1*Mnt Mii Ned wltti the
County Cler\ °' 0renoe County on Mey 10, 1984 ,_
Pvblllhed 0r-. COlllt Delly ---Nl1C--NOTIC(----N1JC NOTICE Piiot Mey 1&, 22. 29, June 5, 1N4 -----=;;.;....-.._..._... __ _
tal2-14 ACTmOUll llUW.. PICT1TIOU• llU-N
tllAMl ITAftllmfT NAm 8TAftmMT Nl1C fl)TJC( The lolowlng pwlOl'I le ~ The toltowlng per.on • doing
-----------~ •: bu9it1'IM ... PICTITIOUa ._.... PARAGON WALLCOVERINO, THE DESIGN CONNECTIOH, 05 MAim ITA,._..,. l~28 Perk Dr.. a.ma A/Ill. Ca. S.. IUNS Or , NewPof1 Beech. CA
The tolOWlng peraona are doing n704 02eeo ~ • C'*'-Cecll Johnston, Jr .. 2328 Regine A. Humphrey, 05 See
tST CLASS COHSTl'UCTION Plttl Or., Senta Ana. Ca. 112704 lt&end Or . NewPof1 8Mctt. CA.
ANO DEV., 1111 .. , .. -t!Mt Ahon. Tiiie bulllne9 .. =n<IUC1ed by, an 92eeo
Senta Ana. CA. 92707 indMdual. Thia bull,_. ltl conducted b)': an
Eddi. C. Mcflldden, 204 6 22nd. CMnae C. JohMton tndMduel. Costa Meea, CA. 02827 Tllltl 1tatement -... nled wlttt tM Regina A, Humphrey
Shifley c. McFedcl.n, 204 E. :OUnty Clertl Of Orenge County on This statement wu ftl«I wttll the
22nd. Coete ...... CA. 02827 Mey 2, t984 County Clerk of Orange CountY on
nit. t>u.ineea le c:onducted by: en PM4f1' Mey 2, 1~ 1ndM<S~ ("'-bend a w1r.1 Pul>lllhed Orange Cout Delly ~ Shtriey Mdedden Piiot May 9. 18, 23, 30. t~ Pubttltled Orange COMI Dally
Tllla ltatement ... flted with the 2'65-IM Piiot May 8. t5, 22. 29, t~
County Clet1c of Oreno-County on • 244444
Mey 8. 11194
P'Ml411
Publtlhed Oranoe Coast Delly
Pilot May 15, 22. 29, June 5. 1~
25-411-&C
Mt.IC NOTICE
F1CTTTlOUS ., .....
NAmlTAn•NT
The following peraon la clolnO
-----------oullnell u : Ml.JC NOTICE flCnTIOU• .,_ ..
NAmlTATllmWT
The foliowlng perlON ere ~
bullneu u :
L'ENVOLEE, 112·8 Eaat 18111
StrMt, eo.te Mee&, CA. 112927
Van Le , 303 s.tlta !Mbel. Coet•
Mee&. CA. 92e27 M.i Anh Trinh. 303 Santa laabel,
Coeta Mee&. CA. t2t27
This ~ Is c:onduc1ed by: a
gener.i par1nerwhlp.
l.9 Ven
nit. atatement WU filed wtth Ille
County Cieri! of Oranoe County on
May II, 1SIM
UNIQUE PRODUCTS, 2420 E.
15tll St.. Newport BMc:h, CA. 112&83
St9VWI i..e AndrtlWI, 2420 E.
15tll St., NewPM1 BMc:h, C~. t2ee3
Tbll ~II condUC1ed by-an
ndlvldUll.
Ste'lelll .. Andrewa
Thi$ statement -flied wftll the COunty C*1t of Orange County on
Mey2. tW
fM4l'7I
Publtlhed Ofanoe Cout Delly
Pltot May 9, 18. 23, 30. 1118'
2•ea.-84
PtB.JC M>TICE
F1CTmOUllU8Mla
NAm aTATW!llbT The tollowlng per.on II doing
busl~u:
FMll10
Publllhed Oranoe Cout Delly
Piiot Mey 15. 22, 29. June 5, 111M
2578-M DENNIS MURPHY CONSULT·
-----------'-NTS, 19'40 Swan Orlv9, Coste P\llJC NOTICE M .... CA.112828
-----------Dennis E. MUfPh';, 1MO SWWI RCTmOUa .,_... Driw. Coete Meu. CA. 112829
MAm ITA~ Tt\19buslneM11 conducted by en
The lollowtng per.on .. doing 1ndl\ilduM.
~ u : DenM Murl)hy
MCERIN ASSOCIATES. 304 Thia statement wu ftled wltll lhe
Rochelter St.. eoeu ~. CA County Clet1I of Orange County on
92827 ~· 27, 1~ Mlcheel O McNutty. 39 4 ~
Roctlelter St., Co.ta Meu, CA. Publlll'led Orange Cout Dally 92827 Piiot May 9. 18. 23. 30. 1984
Thi• bull,_. II cond1JC1ed by en 2•37-M
Individual. Mld\le4 0 McNulty
TJ\11 11.atemenl WN ftled wltll the
County Clet1c ot Oranoe County on
Mey 10. 111M f'Mla1
Publlthed 0ranoe eout Delly
Piiot Mey 15. 22, 29, June 5, 111M
2581-84
Nl.IC M>TICE
F1CTmOUI IU ... 11
NAlllll IT A n..wt The followlng peraon It doing
bullneaa as:
K·D MACHINING, 2950 W Cen-
tral Ave. # 19, s.tlta Ana, CA. 112704 Kennett\ Deen Reynolcn. 2805
Sonoma Or .• Arter91de. CA 92504 Thll ~It conducted by .,,
lndMdual
l<enMth Deen Reynoldl
Thia atetement wu tiled Wltll the
County Clertl of Oranoe County on
Ap<lt 30. 1~
f>Ml'OI
Publllhed Orange Cout Delly
Piiot May 15, 22, 29. JuM 5, t~
257 ... 84
Nl.IC M>TICE
flCTTnoua ., .....
NAmaTAftmNT
The fOllowlng P«ION are doing
bull,_.U:
SEASYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL.
19030 So Eudld St.. Fount.In v-.
tey, CA 92708
s..pro Inc.. Calttornla corp ..
19030 So. Euclid -St., Fountllln V•
ley. CL 112708 Tiiis bu91neea le condueted by: a
corPor•tlon.
Larry Scott. PreekMtlt
Tlllt ltltement WU filed wt111 the
County Clerk of Oranoe County on
April 26. 1984
~
Publlahed Oranoe Cout Dally Piiot May 8. t5. 22. 211. ,~
2435-84
Plll.IC M>TICE
'1CTITIOUI IUaMU
NAm•TAftmNT
The lollowlng penon II doing
butllnesa ..
PERSONAL CONSTRUCTION,
12091 ~·St . G.,den Grove.
CA. 92845
Robert E Oevla. 12091 ~
St .. Garden Grove, CA.. 92846
Tllla bullneaa 11 eon<lucted by 1.n
Individual.
Rot>en e D•vi•
Thia mtement wu flied wltll the
County Clerk of Orange County on
May 2, t984
11'M4174
Published Orenge Cout Deity Piiot Mey 9, HI. 23. 30. 1984 2487-$-4
F1CTTTIOUllUIM ..
NAME ITAT'lmNT
The lollowlng penon II doing
t>ullneaeu;
KEACO. 21372 Broollhurst Unit
# 111. Huntington Beech, CA
92848
Jamea Welter Kerr. 21372
8rookhurat • 111, Huntington
BMc:ti. CA. 92848 Thll buslneu It conducted by: en
indMdull.
J-WaltwKerr Tiii• 1tatement wu !\led wttll the
County Cler1c of Orange County on
May 2. 1984
~
Publlthecl Orenge Cout Oelly
Piiot Mey 9. t8, 23, 30, 198-4
248-84
F1CTTTIOUa IU ... a l
NAMlaTATl....r
The fellowing penon It doing
businela 11:
PtB.JC NOTICE
F1CTTTIOU8 BU ... H
NAME aT A TIMINT The lollOwlng pettonl ere doing
bullneu u : RITCHEY PLAZA SOUTH, 1670
Brooilholtow Drive. Suite 200. Santi
Ana, CA. 112705
Lee w PllelP1. 9778 Creetvi.w
Circle, \lllll Pllk. CA. 112887
Oennl1 I< Senti. t570
BrOOkhollow. Sant• ena. CA. 112705
Thia buslnees II cond1JC1ed by: •
gener.i pertnenhlp
Oennll K Senft
nvs 1tatement •• nled with the
County QeB of <><MG9 County on
Aprll 25, 1~
f'M4112
Publllhed Orange Cout Deity
Piiot May 8. t5, 22. 211. 11184 2~2-84
P't8JC M>TICE
F1CTITIOUa llU ... U
NAME aTA TUIENT
The tonowtng perlOnl .,.. doing
bullneel•. C.F I.. 8332 KlngtllMt Or , Hunt·
lnQ1on s-cti. CA. 92848 Salvatore Anthony Le c.Qjlne,
8332 Klngtleher Or.. Huntington
BMetl, CA 92848
Gar; Kuytlendlll. 5752 Fuli.rton
•6. Buena Perk. CA 90821 This bullnaa 11 conducted by: a
general pertnenhlp.
Selvetor• A. L.a Cegjlne
Thia statement wu tll«I wtttl the County C*1t of Orange County on
Aprll 28, ,~ ,,......
Put>IWled Orange Cout Dally
Piiot May 8, 15. 22. 29. 1984
2'3e-3o4
PtB.JC M)TIC[
F1CTmOU• llU ...... ..,._ITAT'lmNT
Tiie tollowlng peraon la doing
bvllneal ••;
FOLLOW· THAU SERV ICES .
2879 ClubhouM Ad .. Coate Meu.
CA 92628 Petti L. Berg, 2879 Clubtlouee
Ad .. Coeta ....... CA 112828
Thia bul4neal II conducted by .,,
lodlvlduel
Patti L Berg
Th•• statement ... tiled with the
County CW1l of Oranoe County on
April 30. t 984 ,,..,...
Pul>ltlhed Orange Cout Deity
Piiot May 8. 15. 22. 29, 1~
2'39-M
PlllJC NOTICE
F1CTITIOUa BUaNaa
..,._aTAn.WT lhe followlng per.ans .,. doing
bu*-SU:
CONTINENT AL Oil TOOL IN·
TERNATIONAL, 1584 Rlvet1lde
PIKie. Coeta Meu. CA 92627
Trent ...,..,.. Betemen, 1564 RIYer·
side Pl«le. Cotti Meu. CA 92827
u .. Jeanette Bltemen. 1564 Riv·
erllide Pl«le. Coata Meea.. CA.
92e27
Tiiis butlrleel 11 condUC1ed by• 1
general pertnerlhlp.
LIN J. Bettman
This statement wu flied wlttl the
County Clet1l of Ofange County on
April 30. 1984
f'IM77S
Publl5hed Oranoe Cout Delly
Piiot May 8. t5, 22. 29, 19&4
2440-M
Ml.JC NOTIC£
(Al PHOTO MART. 18) PHOTO
ART, (C) PHOTO UNLIMITED. (0)
FILM SEJMCE CO , (MAIL TO. P 0 PlllJC N0TIC£
Box 10867. Coate M .. 1. CA -----------F1CTTT10Ua~ll
NAllllllTATW.•NT The lollowlng perlON Ire doing
bull'-1 u :
RITCHEY PLAZA NORTH, t
8roolllloltow Drive. Santa Ana. CA
92705
Stanley K. Genttlef. t 7 DMtwood
Eut. IMne. CA. 9271•
Bradford H Miiier, 31952
A,puesto Wey. Trabuco Cenyon. CA
112878
This busl"9M II conducted by-a
o«*al partnerthlp
Sten19Y K. GentVer
Thia s111ement wu n1«1 wttll tlle
County Ctenc of Orange County on
AC>fil 25. 198.4
f>Ml11 Publlthed Orange Cout Dally
Piiot May 8, 15, 22. 29, l!HM
2•41-8'
PtB.IC M>TICE
'ICTmOUaMl ... U
NAiii ITATDmNT
The followtng ~ .,. doing
t>uem..11
DELMA PROPERTY MANAGE·
MENT, 18800 Oelew11e Street.
Sult• 1100, Huntington a..dl, CA
92848
HMC Manaoemen• Company Inc.
• Cllllornla. 18800 Oeleww• Str.,.t Suite 1100, Huntington 9Noll, CA
92848
Tnlt bV'1"'8t II QOnduated by •
CO<Pof•llon Robef1 J Zlnngrebe, Pr...oent
Thi. ltatement wu flted wttll the
County Cler1c of Orange County on
AprM ~4. 108.4 ,....
PubllaMd Orange Cout Deity
Pltot Mey 8, 16. 22, 21 1tM
2424-64
92827}. 7532 E. Chapman. Oranoe.
CA. 92669 Kenne1h A. Smllll, 1827 But·
lonlhell Lil . Newport Beec.11, CA.
92860 This bu81neaa 11 conducted by: an
lndlVldual.
Kenneth A Smtih
Tl\11 llllemtnt WU flied with the
County Clet1I of Orange County on
Msy2, 1™
f'liMl11
Publlahed Orange Cout Deity
Pilot Mey 9, 18. 23, 30. 1984
24ea.-&4
Ml.IC M>TICE
F1CTITIOUa IU ..... 11
Ht.Ml IT A TRMIWT
The lollowlng pefSOOI ere doing
bualnea1 u :
NEWPORT WEA THERSTRIP,
2424 Newport Blvd . Cotta M ... ,
CA 92827
RCTmOUalUaMU ..,._ITATDllNT
The followtng ~ are doing
butlneee 11: RITCHEY JOINT VENTURE, 1
Broottllollow Orlw, Senta Ana.
Calif. 92705
Ritchey Plaza North, • CaHfornla
generel partnerlhlp, 1 Brootthoaow
Offle. Senta Ana, CaHf 92705
Ritchey Plaza South, • Cellfornla
general pertnertlllp. 1570
Brooilhollow C>ffle, Suite 200. Senta
Aan. Cell! 112705
Ttib buslneu 11 conducted by: an
unlncorp«ated IMOcietlon other
than • pertn«9hlp
Stanley K. Gentzter
Thi• 1tatement wu filed wttti the
County Clett( ot Oranoe Couf!ty on
May 3. 1984
Hwwood I Adlllfteorl
MO ,.._pen Cent9f Dr ..... -Newpon ...._, c.elf. ems
Pub!ilhed Orange eo..1 Deity
Piiot Mey 15. 22, 211, June 5, 1"4
2506-84
Tllomll H. Ba.II.,, 177 E 22nd
St., Apt t1. Coeta Meu, CA 92827
Joe W Nagy. 1'371 Megnoffe,
W•tmlnstw. CA 8112e3 -----------Donal P O'Sulllven, 404 8ernetd P't8JC ll)TIC(
St . Coeta Meu, CA 112e27 -----------Tni. bu*1eA 11 conduc:ted by. a IM tMI general partnership '1CTTTIOU9 ., .....
TllomN H. B&ker NAiii •TATWMSNT
Thi• 1tatement waa fll«I with the The followtng per.on II doing County Cler1c of Orange County on butlneea u :
Msy 10, 1W INSTITUTIONAL PROPERTY IN-
,..._ VE8TOAS, 1201 OoYe StrMt, Sta.
Publllhed Oninge COMt Delly ~. NewC>Ort BMoh. CA 112eeo
Pllol Mey 18.23,30,JuM8,1H4 Rutll Forman, t!f23 S .
NILIC NOTlC(
2818-M Brootthum. Apt 3(M, W-1mln9t.,,
CA.t2U3 TNI buelNel 19 oonduCted by-an
lndM(MI
"6tll Formen
TNe 1taiemen1 -m.o wttl't the County Cler1c of Onange County on
Msy8, 1914 ..........
Pubtlltled Orange CoMt Deity
ACTTnOUa MJ I lmM
NAmlTAW IT
The follOWtng ps90M .,. OOlnO
~-COLLEGIATE COM .. UNICA· nOHS CO .. 27018. ,..,.._IHI,
Santa Ana. ca. 8270.t
Larry 1'hOIMa. 11•' ....... Cir'
No. tot, Tuetln, Ca. t2tlO
Thl9 t1ue1t.a .. oonducMd by: an
1ndMdullil L.Mry Thomel
TI\le 1tetement ... !tied wlttl the
County Oient of Otenge County on Aprll 2. 1~ • ,..,.
Publllhed Or.,ge Co-1 Delly
Piiot Mey 2. 9, 18, ~. 1~
2313-14
flCTmoue .,_..
MAim ITATllmlfT
The followtng per80N •• dolnQ
buelneea u : PYRAMID DESIGN, 27554 long..
#cod Court. Coet• Meu. Ca. 11288
Jiii Ann Gonulel. 2754 Lono-
#ood Court. Coat• Meu. c.. t2Ue
Thi• bulineel ltl oonduc1ed by: an
indlvldulll
Jiii AM Gonu.191 Tt\19 statement _.. flted wttl't the
County C*1t of Otange County on
Apfll 8, 1~ ......
Publllhed OrenG9 Co-1 Dielly
Piiot May 2, 9. 18. 23, 11184
2341·84
NlJC fl)TIC(
1Mtt11 flCTmOU•--·• NAmlTA,.._..,.
The following pet'90N .,. doing
bullneeau:
J & 0 ENTERPFUSES, lt5 Dove
Street, Newpor1 Beech. CA. t2MO
J&me9 8. 8'emoM. Ill, 1111
Grow IAM. NewPof1 &Mch. CA.
92eeO Olan• McDon a ld , II 1 t ~g. NewPof1 9eectl. CA
92eeO
Thia ~ .. oonduc1ed by' •
gener.i partnership.
C 0 Defy, Attorney
Thie ttatement wM flted wt111 the
County C*1t ol Orenot County on
Apfll30. 11184
l'MCN
C D DAl.Y LAW C°"'°""TIOM f7 CerpenM,.....,,...
M9wpen..._CA. ...
Publllhed Orange Co-1 o.lly
Piiot Msy 9. t8. 2'. 30, 11184 2<tn.14
F1CT1TIOU8 .,... ..
NAMI ITATl....-T
The lollowtng pet'90N .,. doing
buslneaa aa: NEW DIMENSION PROPERTIES,
10101 Slat., Ave., Sutte 240, Foun-
tain Valley. CA, 112708
Debofeh L (Miier) Wal.7.. 115'0 v ..... Cir., Hunttngton s-cti. CA
HMt
Robert J. WatL 111580 V ..... Cir ..
Huntington Beectl, CA. 92Me Thie~ 11 concMc1ed by-en
unJncotporeted ueooeUon ottw
than • pettnerthlp.
o.t>oreh L Miier
Tiile ttetement wu flled with Jhe
C¢unty C*1t or Orange County on
AprM 30, 1 IHM ,....,.
Pubtlehed Orenge Coeet Deity
Piiot Mey 9. t8, 23, 30. 11114 2~.-..
NlJC NOTIC(
'1CT1TIOU8.,.....
NAmSTA,._..,.
The tollowlng peraona ere clolng
bullneM•: WARREN FOX LEASING, 2582
N9wpor1 Btvd., eo.ta MeM. CA
ne27
Werren Cortland Fox. St .. 1221
W. Cout HIQll'Mly, • t21, Newpor1
BMdl, CA. f 2e63
Berwar Enterprlaea, lnc:i., Ce*-
lomla. 2582 NewPof1 &Nd., Coeta
Meu.CA..112827
Thia bulir'9lls II condueted by• I
gener.i pettneretllp.
Werren Cortland Fox. Sf .• Pt•
dent
Thia atatement wee flted wt111 tlle
County Cler1c of 0renG9 County on
Mey 1, 1SIM """" Publllhed Onange COMt Delly
PllOt Mey II. 18, 23. 30, 11194 2~
Ml.IC NOTIC(
F1CTITIOUa llUIMU ...... ,,.,....,.
The lo4lowtng peraone .,. doing
bullneee aa: (A) OMNI GROUP (8) ORANGE
COUNTY REALTY. 1'5 Terocco
Ad .. lrvtne. CA. 027 1'
Ronald K. Loder, 1'5 TlfOCCO
Rd , lrvlM. CA. 112714
Yolande R. Mertine, 144 Tarocoo
Rd .. lrvlM, CA. 11271'
Thi• bu91neee le concluCted by: •
general pettnen1Nc>. Ronald K. Loder
Thia ltllemertt WU lllea with the
County Clerk of Otano-COUnty on
~e>rll 27. 1~ ..,.,..
Pubf!IMd Orenot CoeM o.ly
Piiot Mey 9. 18, 23, 30, tN4 2.a1 ....
P1o1 M_, 16, 22. 21. June 5, 1M4 i-----------25M-14
NCmCa wm1NG ..,. .,,.,
Notice .. her9by gMrl ttm the
Board of Educlltlon of the lnllne ~
Ii.cl SCfM)()I Olltrie:1 of Orange Coun-
ty. C911tomla, wilt recel-le ..._,
bldl up to 10:00 A.M .• Ff'ld.ry, tM
111 dtry of June, 1914, 11 wtlk:tl time
Mid bldl wtll be publlcly opened
end reed fOI' TIMESHARING COM-
PUTER SERVICES FOR BUSI-
NESS/PERSON N El/ PAYROLL
SYSTEMS. 8'd condition• end ln-
ltrue1k>N end bid tonne m.ry be
obtained at the offlcle of Aecal ~ Port s.rw-. 2941 Alton Awnue.
IMM. C8111ornla. (Pnon.: (714)
Ba-1044, Ext. 25).
The Olltrie:1 ,......,.. the right to
~ ll'fY Of .ii bld9 Of to WlllYe ll'fY
lrregulllttlee or lntormattti. In ll'fY
btOI Of In the bidding ..
IRVINE UNIFIED SCHOOL DIS-
TRICT
4. StaiMy Cor9Y
4uthoftled AQent
Pubilahed Orenge Coelt Dally Pllo1
Mtry 18, 23, 1914
\
Q -
•
, o;-.e COMI DAJLY PILOT /w.dneld8y, tMy 23. 1"'4 .. ..,
MOTllC9 CW~ IAU T&llO ... Oft .M1e 1S, 1tl4, ac tO:OO a.m.
LAWYl"I TITll INIUMNCI
..
To llleOe rout m 11111ge • befoft IM rtedln8 pubic,
pttor't
Ody Piiot etualfltd. '42·54171
Lllll llLI
Private, leCUli &y gated community n h . on the bay, w /ptcr and float
for large boat. Well landlcaped
courtyard wlfounta.in & ape. Mag.
nlf~t 3BR. 3ba home Fully
equipped gounnet kitchen For
leue ynrly at $4000 per mo. OC' 3
1ummel" montha at $5000 per mo.
CALL 631-7300
Dalebout
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
I
' t
Far Ad ktia
Cal a
Daly Pllt AD-• 642-5&71
.._ ,...,..._. ..... ValualaW b Uaf. butlM9b. Vat. f1catlea utrial l!'!•t!••!!!!•h!!...-...!!!!!I
e.lta... mt lut. .... IMt lt!Jld .... utt I ..... utt C..11.... 24 l!!J!11 INcll Hit lntab 1117 ....... .. TllmM IT ~ ==~~-=--:..._~liiiil 43,!~ D~.':!i :=: Nr ol town 38( 2L 4 tam 3000 " Weetc:llff NM au YUILi UTIU,.. I • 1 Br tipt. Cdm on beech, lndlMtn.1/Comm'I ..,. NANCY.
Pete751-3191.Bkr hm •/mod kit & owage 4Br :.. pool/epe.. den. lmmac 3 Br 3 a.~ Condo 1tyte w/cathedral 11=~~~· pvtgate,see>Owkln.Juty, for rent. toooa.r .• eo.te IL:A:tea.. 4111 .,._._.,..,,~.Mo kld1 S650 otherl evell. fwn r din .-..... • age decotfrp!Q OW xtraa c.lllng 1 Br wlloft ex "-"· ow. $700 wk In Augu1t. MeH. 1400/month. ~ ..... PIT-. Qll
l800'13 Br 2 ltory 2 Bi nr 539-8190 BEST Atty tee ,.,., .~1 rm7~;r:73 llll .... • enctld 'gar.,.. b8k:ony. condo/ • ....vxe 2 br, 2 bl. 87S-3834. 2131926-1844 2131775--3435 •---~ oerN: 912-6144 So Co ptza dbl ow kldl -· --mo. ............ ....---· · w ocean lflew & tull MC. ...-. _....
ok, evall June 1. V!~NT 2 Br. fncd YMS. 3 Br+ FR, tum 0t untum. *1n-11M* ~~'Is=5 ~JC''· OoQ avail. 873-3504 4 Br home, ~~· ••eeun• 1111 Mn Prlma~2 APT ~ COUP\.E 53M 190 BEST Atty ... ...,,_,., & ~ <*. seoo. """"* Ot yrly Avell 6-1 CheQ( thla styllltl 5 rm two . . S900/Wk Ot _.,.,.,/mo. sPIRffOXC RbDiACi!i WMh ....... tor 982~71 or M&-9153 330 Walnut AQt 140-a208 atory 2 Befrptc ac>Pla end QUii1 E.llde 2 Br 2 Ba 2Br. 28a. den. qui.t arM. 494-5289. Laguna Bc:tl AcMce In All ~ & ·i-ti 1.-A 80 _... ....
Brand MW 2 Br 2 Ba~ lniM 1144 gar 1700'• J:l •t•JI• twnhM W/tpKlous pvt ctean, no pet•. $775 yrly. CounMlng. 1815 So e ' r..~ ~I ..... apt. CM • ....,+ ...... tomcondoW18thSt.1~ BAYFRONT CONDO: 53M190 BESTAtty ... ~tlo. Pool. carport. no 873-e200or87U127 lntaltte CMMoRem,Senoem. I . ..... +tiPt.No ,..._ta-41D7
ml beech, 09'· S795. 2 Bdr dn upper unit Urge 2 bed. + den on p e t. . s 8 5 0 I m 0 . lbn IHI UC'd. 412-7298 mtm: P90Ple ™ ...... M
Slerrl Mgmt &41-1324 condo, CIA. $150molmo. l I cf 0 p 1 n In 1 u 1 a . WESTCLIFF'S qutet &42-0965, 831-12&8 Large 2 Br Newport F ™ ;; 2&/2C pvt TO 11' $10,000 up. A88EM8 LER8: APPLY
Cute Eutalde 2 Br. 1 Be Ag1. Inga. 786-7&98 PenttlouM unit w/VU dlgnfty, 4 Br 4 Be pool STUNNING lrg 2 Br 2 Ba Penlnaula $800/mo. yrty. lrvlne twnt1M: pool jac ·=~ ~:. ~ No credit *" · no perwlty. 7ern: ~.y ......
Petolit,ho<*upsle75 + CALLUSREOAROIHG S1800/mo.N0o&'."• home,v.yoount~ garden ~t, pool 0$585. 720-tHa tenrua.S395 +utMI: . mattW.; icw.. rnerneae. DenilonAlaocl11-71f1 1131,....c.M.
$875 w: .. Jon 5-48-2497 IRVINE LEASES S!7~~~I~. ·c= ~=.f11. No 71 W 18th LEASE 11500: 2 muter ASAPAownaty857'""88 bualnele, NB. 831·'3t.., ltlJ ..... SlM 111'1 .. Wllff
El8'de 2br, 1~ba. petlo, ~ pool. $1095/mo ywty. petlllS1850/mo. Cell THE VICTORIAN 2 Br 1'n brt, 2 bathl, MCUltty. Femtolfvnloe2Brcondo Led I..... .. lel .11 .. llllF .._. be .... d In al
09'· w/opener. fplc, Jae, 'fiiS. or'j WATERFRONT HOMES 873--7544 Ba with gar $590, crpt1, 875-7570 evat873-889e w/pool, CM. 850-9287 Ful/ttme _..,.. houri.. p... of..-,..._, j~i:o•,722:~MCl4!.t:e RLTRS. 831-1400 Lit1lu Bli :::t!~=t~.>:~ eve.S285 +12utll. ~~:.:...c:.:. p, ... ,~ oer1Med, for ~u:..~
HOUM w/pool deelgMr 3 ealty BNutlP• ~3!!..~e:12='~ XBOL+ COMPLEX. 2 ltry Victoria 836-4120 1-5PM Spacious single. one F~~n~ :::,·,:" .!:: H2-M74 e =...:::: ~ th TAM ......
Br 2 Ba "*'Y cWux xtra 786-1172 cflli~'i4&.7171 c~ndo, lmmic. 2b r, Upper 2 br, 2 ba. frplc, bit & two bedroom apts $350/rno. te2~552 a.dtl42-6181 ClllLArry1l1-1m
upper see>O't kkll pet1 1~ba, pool, So. S.A. lna.Avall.6/1.~Hamll-111'1•111111 539-8190 BEST Atty,_ e.autlful executive home, $575, 540-0374 ton Av. S600. 831-4402 HOUSEMATES fNIU\ ADS Atd9. ho.-...,., com. -•••••• 4 Br 2'n Be, Irv. T..,., ,......... daya; 6-46-1212 ...,.. · UNLIMITED UU1111 panlon, llve In, Mght ....... tor ~ = N~ 2 Br. new ~. near FUhlon ltland, Npt WILL LOOK FOR VOUI IDf' FREE houNIC~. NB on ~ be kncut 01J1 paint. Im baok yrd. Ctr. $1850/mo. eu eeoo Uafuabll.. uu WE OFFER A CHOICE "Gain comfortable rent & ~ ...... care for~ In .. p... & ,.. own see>O/mo. 850-173-4 3&80 Mlchelton Or1ve Want a aetectlon of gr•t then~ feellng of finding ly *IY MS ~ Own toote. 1HI Mtwpott
PENTRJOGE COVE • lrvlne Big canyon 2 Br 2 Be llAIJll .. •... llvlng? We can oft• any-1 new friend"! Cal: room. beth, TV. ~ 8t¥d. c .M. 842-eHO
2 Br 2 Be apllt 1ev91 frplc Turtteroctl· clean 2br/2ba, townhome, S 1850/Mo. 28r 2 ~Be. d/w, w/d hk· thing from 1 tml apt to a NEWPORT & TUSTIN , 1Pe11k Engllh. Valld drf¥.. ~
pool, apa. 2 car ' With den. Avail. June 18. No 759--0708 Ownr/Bkr up, gw. frplc. $850 4Br h ... If looking In CM FURNISHED or 832~ 134 •n aall .. 11c. fW req. '75-2042 ~ ~IC9d
opener $875 55r9200 pets. 11200. 833-1795 BLUFFS 3 BR/2~ BA H.B. 9e2-nH/9e0-1193 NB HB think of UI flr•t for UNFURNICH[D M/F non··-kr. 2"35 •"'r 2 ---pert/t, '""" be fllllldbla. · · i:::;:::: --1 .. that cho6ce of ldMI IMng ~ _,, .... ... Allfi 7 1 ml• 18 mo & 3 rra. 131 4048
Sharp hOUM 28r tBe Univ PW11 exec hme, 28r Fam. rm, cul 0. uc. Avail . ...-•-h 1auuU TSL MGMT &42•1eo3 Br 2 Ba Prom. P1, $275 T•ephoue Opwator 8A8YSITT9 .....S.
ended oat crpts& dfepee 2ba on grMnbett. lmmac June 1· •1850· &«-2.807 NB REAL TY 675-16-42 HEALTH • 12 utll Gary 54M728 Found· M & F '"'811 blk & Afternoon SMt/Top Pey home 8·30-5•30 u'!l.
fncd patio w/d rm no cond S1050. 87S-539'3 Cape Cod 38r 2ba, huge CLUBS TENNI~ wrl(, 873-7814 rea. wtit ~.Vic:. Pleclntla. 3e23rdSt.Uiounea.dt MaU-. ~Loft~ ~-S580mo + w:. ~ .... , 214i yard, quiet cul-d.-w. 1a1M1 WlllUllYILUI( SWIMMING plu) ~ rnohveMlnlnC09\SCosta· ~~~ C.M. &46-2929 .... =···· 752-1222,.,..131-11t7 Muet •tand credit c:tlec*. shutt.,.., flower bow, 1.1._,a .._.. 1 & 2 Br. aplt. pool, IPL h , S """"' ...._ --• W-5442, 770-5829 Ba, Arch 8-dt br1nd new remodel. ...,... ...,, llr, patlo/bal. No pet1. muc more orry w/30tlh fem. 1 haw cata. Found: White dog with l.D. ltlklng IPP(k:atlona few BARBER S'TYUST
He6ghtl 1950/mo. Tom $1400/mo. 2424 Sierra 18A nwmwtthpetio. $52S-Se25 no pets Model~ $250/mo +utll .&42-8058 ~ ... ~a.aAnlmM °'*' mtnded opere1or • ..tttl~tortnt..-~ ~:enc~l:~ll ;!! 851-8928 vi.ta. Dyl 873-1395 Avail 6-1 to e.-1 Futty TSL • Mgmt 754--0081 or open daily 9 to & ~-·· ~ ...,._ ~ poeltlon. b · In COM. o.y '1&411S
'h utll9. S250/mo • dep. pelf °' weddlnG rtnge ...,._ progrwn. ~ -0 _....._ 539-8190 BEST tee "NIGUEL SHORES" HARBOR VIEW 3 br/2 ba. tum. $850 mo. 875-7"41 &42 1803 ~ Rmmte ..nted Mlf. 21+. LARGE REWARD Lott ~ ..-Y ~ ~ ~....._.you buJ.
feutlla Qutcf( rental•. 38r. oen. tam '"'· nu pnt/~. •.!9" '-l 1111 Dul •ut flM Ap~rtm~nts CM. IM&-1934 eft s wi'PC*I In _,. *' °' Mon . .,-n.. 2t50-0356 ~ -• ~-apa. Wiik to beech & rec Grdnr. 11295. 844-4 (~· 30UQ; Semketlfed ot 1M 2 Br M ~ & E. CoMt 1--------
fallty W4 center. Pvt guarded LIDO ISLE 8AYFRONT .toe mobile HorM. oou-IOEll YllW apt M/F, ::. Bluffs. ~-Mey 11, 1914. • • A 3 &1L. SMUt. a;co;. = ~ V:frsJ· LOV'lty 8 er. poo11tp1, pte or lklgle. Small pet Only 10 minute• .rrom N~wport Bueti so. 644-6518 an 5. John 840-2858 875-3880 Dally P1111 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ..
ated, plush cpta. frplc. Alao have othefa Rtt; apec'tac:ularvtew!YrtylM. OK.S1200tmo.957-0221 Laguna.your own private 170016th Streel Sh 2br , .... .,.. .. _..._ Loet~CNca&W.,,. ·• 111 + dep. Set5/mo. · 67S-7873 oceen view from Dana r .,. -· .......,.. . : 86-4-9918 831-0440 NEWPORT PIER aree, 1 Point's most eec:kided (at Dover) Pen S300 + u111 Avalf now 2 .ml wM• non delCr1pt : • -------~ OoMn vi.w from thlt big 2 Newport He!Qht1epllt i.ve1 Br, lrg, oe .. n view. scenic bluff ocean aide 642_5113 115'h 28th SI. Sat SUn dogs, "Spot & Peppy''. . : Int...... fl4i Br clUllc:, frplc appla 2 Br 2 Bl kid•<* $865 prkng..t _ _n_o pell. Avail of PCH. Uke new 2 Br Streight M, n/smkr. 25-3-4, Not pretty but I lovetnem PART JlllE balcony gar SIOO't utllt 53M190 BEST r.. now. ~Imo. 87~ widen, x1ra large private Newport Beadi No. to stir di• E/slde C.M. REWARD ~7~ Nothln·~ ~w/frptc pdl 53M"190 BEST... Newport Terr. 3 Br 3 Ba. A ..... tatl Vat. patios. Call 960-6331 or 880 Irvine Avenue 2br, 2ba apt w/prof. M. Loet: Ltg reward, v.y een-
fnod 4 Fido nr ocean + ltwprt ...,, Bit prof dee, patio, ~· nu / drive by 24585 Santa (al 16th) S290/mo. Rick 631-6741 tlmental gold engage-
utll1 pdl BEST Rlty tee -., ... --cptS795 +aec73 -6311 lalMI BClar•t .. oaee~ 645-1104 ltatal1W1atH Hit ::-'~~~~!nd~~
*llM1M* r--•• Oe.antrontdeluxeCU9tom Ptalatall 2707 Ht. IC. 2740 F· Ctlprofwomanteekt Vly 5/19 536-8787 _ __,.. ___ .......,...-=-=-Wherlyou ..... optlonthl• 3 Br, family rm home on 21 IOIS Fllll •-2tlO ren •--·--·----........--HOME FOR RENT Immaculate Harbor sandy beaeh. $3300/mo. 2 Br 2 L . be9t bay vi;:, l -•• 1 Br apt for 1 yr In NB Lott: Min. Siiky Teniw.
Huntington a..cti 3 Bdrm. Ridge b .. uty. herdly IMs-4778 8191340-1284 unique layout, lrg llv· WCI c;g BCfi #Urn. pvt ant. ba: C 0 M are• W 0 r k ans. to Mias Mldg9t. 11
2 BL S775. Fenced ywd llved lnl 75e.-0510 Ing/dining. w/covered . TV. pQOI. Mat/prof/but 957-0171 yrs old, tl!Yer/bl.ck/red-
& garage. Kida & peta ' Tllllft deck, micro, utll pd Oellghttul ocean breeze•. nonsmkrS350.494-045t Mat prof woman Mekt dish tan. on Balboa 11-
welcome. 883-0755 2BR28ACondow/guard $1250. 673-8247, redecorated 4-plex. all Private entrinee, bath. nice 2/3Br re1ldence land.PleeMretum.lhell
Agent, no fee. gate, pool, )lie. pvt beach 213/463-3071 nflW plush carpets & v..,.. n•-for at·· .. -t. w/ ar $700-S900 ~June so loVed. Reward. 11500 mo 875-5e07 drapes, dtswuheB. new _, ..,. ...,..., g 675-~ &40-9060 Low rent & ocean cloM · Small 1 br beyvtew. No oven/range, lots of micro, ratrlg. 840-7348 15 Exit ref•. 786-6l0 ------=--=·,,..----.,-
Moto r Route Ava ilable
~ewport Beach area. three
hours per day. Earn approx.
S600 per month. CaU 11 :00
to 4:00 PM. Ask for Bruce
Em le}·
modett 2 Br crptd decor lj1 .... t4 WANTED: HARBOR VIEW pets. Yrty rental: $425 Closets, private garage, Room stir bath woman 35 CUlfft fn Lost PARROT green w ~
kldt/sm pet <* $515 HOMES.,..'°' ..... Of Incl. utll•. (818)790-5428 flreptaoea. some prlv1te & up Newi>Ort Beectl. It I nn low heed lc>l1 5/19. 3eth CIRCULATION DEPT.
539-8190 BEST Alty,.. option. Famlty. 54M80t emu ••• Jiu nu 2'=~: 2 Ba, $205. 6-45-2590 10 x 2o for storage ontY ~~~2 N:,-~ 642-4321 IDE
oc:;;; Vift. 1 biOd( to 2211 ... St SEA & SUN LODGE E11t1lde. Costa Mesa. LOST small white Fl lhW O RANGE COAST DAIL y PILOT
beeet\. tbd 1ba• efftc. apt 980-6331 536-8~1 30~~0~ ~:t ~ JV1 S75tmo. M2~10 Ap9o vie e..cti/Garfteld llO W BAY ST ·COSTA MESA CA 91f>1f> 185<>/mo. 888-4005 9-5 • · • P Otlict intala Hl4 H.B. REWARD &42-7122 ., , , • , v ....... • , ..,. • .,. , o
SYD
.. EY celti.... tl24 2 Br. 2 chlldren. no pets. sn~O:r ~lly~m~~ 1817 Westdlff or. N.B. L~: Tan puppy, 4 moa, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... .
HOROSCOPE n 1 er.1 L'. UOO/mo. $425 plus d•P.Ollt. $250 + de9 493-3490 $1.30 sq ft. NlctlOlas. 20th/Pomona '
S500depc*t 842-7052 Agent ~1-5032 R.ward.831-4188 I I •• ,, P1·111 0 all utlll lneld. 6-42-3098 •S400tup. a.ch. 1 Br. Bettis tttll $330/up crpts drapes ale LOST white lhrt hatred MARR 1 Br gardet'I apt, ttove & pQOI, 1pa. 18992 Florlda. LA I.A I A I 17301 Beach. Huntington fem CAT named Cotton. ·········••! refl'lge. no pett. $430. 842·2834. M2-3172 llTlll Ill Beac:n. 842-283.C Vic Hlfbor RJdge H.B. 5-48-1377 $399/mol Bachelor Dream Balboe llland amall of. REWARD 780-1877 ,
Tb11nday, May U t Br. pool. S440tmo. Padl EZ move In term•. w~o~en~'.s. ,~:;5 c!tt:: flcH. S250 & up. ,• •• •-.rM..,.aiiii1,.la..______ GRAPHIC ARTIST
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19): Time spent alone w~ll prove ~:-=t.931-1979 841~209tee heated pool & steps to 752•2841 °'673-5374 UIM.YllllLIY
productive. Accent on spiritual v~lues. ~rfection of techniques .. Be SUWlll ocean. Kitch"• avail Busy Npt Blvd C.M. newer Call Jot\n Blow 786-6814
sensitive to needs of one who 1s con med. to home. or ~osp1tal. 2 wBr 2 ::.C ~:_:!;; YILUIE Lag~~; ~h~!9H4~294 $~~~:~64::~2:·10
· lmmmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Temporary delay will actually prove beneficial. Know it, gain inner n,9v:;atertai1 & 11r .. m.·'N~ 1 & 2 Bdrm 1uwu"' WI W mu.-I .,_ ~ . ' •RH •111 llnl EXECUTIVE SUITE .,..._ strc°Jth. garage w/opener. no, apts In 14 plant. t Bdrm. -C S550/$775 And running 7AM-10:00
( "120-M 20) M · ·t t " d Y get ••75 ...... "11"' Wkly r-tals now 1vall Nf!Wpor1 ntr · A UR US Apn ay : 8JOr comm1 men 1s ma e. ou pet• . .., . ,___, " 2 Bdrm and Townhomes .... PM a d1y 7 d•"" • weett
F $119/wk & up. Color TV. 640-~70 Pr-I t0hl1 .!.-·-'" r• what you want. you 'll have more re~ponsibility as result. ocus _on 2Br 2Ba newer twnhae. nol + pools, tennis. water· -· .., .,..,
desire. aspirations. romance an.d imnnrtant career. oppo. rt unity.. pets t918 Wallace # 102 falls, ponds. Gas paid. phones In room Offloe apacest Exec. Suite e91ve a two maaMgel lor r.-. d F om San ~ Frwy 2274 Newpor1 Blvd C M In Cotta Mesa Area. the p~ of one.
lndl.v1"dual who aided in past 1saollin available-know 1t. on t penmt Open $575 831-3871 r au H S O"" --------• drive North on ac:ti to _.,.. .... $150/450. Call 631-0141 CllOIS If IHSAll
pride to block progress. * 3Br 28a nr SC P1za SA McFadden and Weat on I S I GEMINI (May 2 1-J une 20): .Study T!i~rus. message for val_uable carport lrg ~tlo pool apa McFadden to Seawlnd ant tan Orange County Airport 111I.11111
hint. Focus on promouo n. prestige, part1c1pat1on in commu~ny or sn5. no pets. 752-5822 VIiiage. (714)893-5198 lrlMtHtlttn W11t•• =-=::~,,..~ FIUllTll
political project. Potenualls tremendous and .you'll be aware of 1t. Get S375/mo, klddlel OK. ezlwiau ltacll l14 24 Hr. Car• Lovely lioenM 400 sq tt to 3350 sq tt l l M111
rid of burden which 1s not your own to carry 1n first place. dep terms. Cati Wiim• . hOme. 17141979-5466 s 99 NET wm build 10
CANCER (June 2 1.Jul·y 22): Stress independence .. willin~n.es. s to &41~208 ,.. 1 BR apt Compl. kitchen· au1; tenant SIAlllJ U IPA
I 1tte. wet bar. tg b1tconey 11 I •---a 111 --UIUll plan ahead for education. travel and long-range commitment. pm tu~ 3 Br 1 Br. Cottage. East· w/p1noram1c ocean w ltatal1 DH ..... , ·-· 4320 cemP:. DfiW. ault•
values come into focus, you'll know where you want to .ao l!nd you II aide C.M. $885/mo. 28251 Pvt entr .. ProfMllOnal or e/iide C.M. ttudk>. 1vah Laguna. Prof ofc IUl1•. 190, N"wpl Bcti. 556-22e0
Orange County daily newspaper is
seeking a quick layout artist w ith
knowledge of typesetung repro-
duction. reproduction. camera ready
art Must be able to get long well
with sales reps and mterperet their
ideas m layouts. Addiuonal prospects
may include flyers. brochures. maps
and sales presenuon visuals. 3 years
expenence -newspaper·preferable
Send resume or Jetter" of qualif1-
cat1on to
ORA '\GE CO.\ST D.\IL \ PILOT
gain rare insi&ht into methods of aniving at chosen destmat1on. EkMn apt B 831-1755 I student only. $725 •um. 8115 Nr beaeh 4 lhops wlndOWI ForettAv. 2 pvt
LEO (Jury 23-Aug. 22): Accent on studi~swhich inc.ludetheocc~h. 3 br 2 ba nr SC Plaza I 497·2154 ev/wtmd. dys Pvt yard, prkg. $700/mo ores+ 1ge recept.+ ti&. ESCOITS/ll•LS po Bo 1560
the mant1c arts. unsolved mysteries. Dtg deep, reject su~~c1al Spa.'oarpor1. S750/mo. 957·8181 ask tor Judy L Incl. utll1. 6-42-2045 875111. al90 adJ 225ft agl. Outcalt ONLY 83S-9tt9 Costa. N~.xCA 92626
rcsnnnscs. realize financial potential can, be m_uch more than ongrnally 545-7 t3t. ~5-5323 OCUI YIEW _ ..... _... bOth 11 pr"· 4M-t474
o:-. 'gh d .._.... .. _,. R---......... * I w ... 1111 At"tention: Melinda Thackery
anttcipatcd. Protect legal n ts -on t co-s1.gn. . . Only 10 minute• from IAYJlllTI *u .......... ..,.. • U iiiii.miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiijl VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22): Go slow, he low, avoid scattenng metltiBJllf Laguna. your own prtvate SUMMER RENTALS 1 MO FREE RENT
efforts. You'll become more aware of body ~m?&e, of publicity, of oc.an view from Dana W~11~~ rg: ~
Public relations, of 1-1111 ri'•hts and perm ... 1ss1ons. Lon1r-d.1stancc BMutltvllylandac:aped Point's most MCtuded _
--&'' I l Ge " fi g1tdenapt1 Pool&apa acentc bluft ~ aide Sult• 14, N.B. 831-3851 KIDS C'ARN GR£•T TRIPS Aut PRIZES!' communication relates to f uturc travel or manta P ans. mini igures Petlo/dec*L No pet-. · of PCH. Like new 2 Br -t;;.ft " nu
prominently. . 8aqhelor 1470 widen. xtra large private ••
LIBRA (Sept. 23..Qct. 22): Focus o n payments, fi~I rcspons1-1 Bdrm. S&eO patloa. cau 960-6331 or ltatab ltll
bility, employment, care of pets an~ dependents. Be specific, attend to 131 E teth 8*-e118 drive by 24585 Santa Penln oc:Nnfront hm•. \W AtrbOf. F.V
detailsand become aware offine pnnt. It may be necessary to ovenum 1 Bdrm. sssz $535 Clara to.... Jn/Ju/Aug, remod OUI• A t t2«> sq ft.
previous methods, to imprint your own sty.le. Scorpio pl~ys key role. 2250 Venguard way tom 3 Br $5000tmo gen 541-6032
SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 2 1 ): Emphasis on speculallon, pleasure 540-"28 Kay P 720-9888 1tvlne .,.... 1200 9q n.
principle. chanJC. travel, variety and associat1ons wi~h children. Summer Rentalt 2 a 3 S550/mo small ottlce.
Romance dominates, actions tend to be based on impulse, as Brand ,,_ condoe ror Bdrma. S300 10 11000 Tom 851~28
contrasted to IO&Jc. You could receive f:ublicity, planned or ~the~se. rent. 4 unit• 1vll 1n MW weekly. On l off the Newport Blvd Coat•
SAOtTl'AIUUS (Nov. 2270«. 2 ): Important. domestic ad1ust-~':,~~~&~ INNEWl>OATBEACH ::r'~":.'t!:: ~~~mo 1~~:ion!;:.~~
ment dominates. Be d1plomat1c:. stress safety, secunty •!td lona~ra~a.e Hcurlty o•r. From >i great ptace to 11ve on the ae1ecnon ~ e75-e700 Mitt•
policies. Purchase of art object or lu.xury •.tem could aid in be&ut1f)'1na se711mo. Cell 24,_,275 Upper Bey Prlv•t• NB Reelty 675-1"42
surroundinp. Taurus, ubra, $corp10 natives play key roles. . Noon--SPM eiccept Wedi clubhOUMI & hellth •CdM dht auit.a AC. rsr
CAPRlOOllN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): _ ~fine t.crnts. open lines of or oome by 110 a.. St apu. 8 teMl9 court•. 7 'i!.tua ltll ~t = tr,°~5
communication, expect v is1t from ~lat1ve 1n tnns1t. ~~pie u they POOL trptc PN1 patio ~C:::°"A=r:o =n 1_ ........... ___ .._ ,..-,.---.-..,,,...----
are, not merely as you ~sh they mif.ht exist. Ro.manttc ba1son lends dlhw9flr X4o , ., on IUnd conwn..,, lhQPI IDOi l l lTALI •• 11
mystery, excitement. spice to scenano. f>lsces. V1rio natives plly key ~ 1535 557·2 ... 1 on ~t. Avell now MIY Balboa lntala ltlt
rotes.
8
Y 1.d fi . 1 u.rve 1 er. Apt. Cf'Pta. 1 a 2 Bdrm Aptirt-Newpcw1 RJty e>w110 \MO ;A .r.; &'. 58C
AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Fcb. I ): ou arc on more so 1 ntnCla d.,,e, poo1, a.4eelped mentt & Townhou ... COM 4 Br 2 ba. fl.Illy tum P'' 3 l>f*e. ~
around. Lunar, nummcal cycles hi&hh&ht achi~vcmcnts, .mon~y poot .,..._ $400/mo. No from SMO (Mic about hme TV. ·phone. patio 2 St. CM ~1853
bonanu. 1b1lity to mike most of talc~ts. possession Rtllt1ons.h1p peca. 14fr3111 att S:30 tul'l'\llhed eptt ~ blk• to beeC:n Avell Jun. 2000. 200d & 4000 aq "
intensifles.1. )'OU SCl what )'OU qnt, )'OU II be pleased and ~lcf\lt lrQ 18t1 ... Poof N9wty with TV.~& ut.nale. Oct &eo0 .-1y • dtp l87! Bild\, NB PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20~ Lunar cycle bllh -you II be at naht decorated. ,,... ecSY1t1. mty be rented f'of lhOr1 Auerv1t1on1 r1q · d S 50 IQ ft A;t 541·!5032
MO 'CCII (714) 548-7058
pl.ace at" pedal" moment. Timina.judgmcnt arc on tal)Ct. Know it. '410. 87s.-o&M term °' !ongtf), On Jam-173..a349 "=ox3000aq n ~
we inltlauvc. make personal appe~ces and appeals. ~JCCI w11l be Newport ~~· 3 br. 2 t>a. ~'!" ~ .. ••1s1an00~ 8:/~ c:in!''trs 100: r,::-10 ~ ~
completed, you'll pm added ruoanmon and you could be awarded aoodlOC. 1oomo.Ava11 ...,. n._t 957 e:mi ewa St500/mo ~THO
W\I uc honor. June 15 831'2918 '"'' Llllllllllllllllllll~~~lll!!!!ll!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!l••••••••••••llll
I I •
T
I ,;
.. .,.Ii .....
•Full~
• AcMncltd tr9tnln0 •~or pert tlm9 ... ...,.
U1·1111 ... , ......
Went INGent 'fMI round.
Ap9fX 4 tire M , your
time. Mon. """ Thun. CallMdys 71435 ...... 51.
Week.nde t73-4082
IOPl/ ..... MI
Prof. Exp. Non/amltr.
281-2020.nyttme
Bookkeeping & ~ p,p.
~ oompeny/lltnall of-
fice, wtll Mt up own IY9-tem of operation. Min 50
wpm, Santa. Ana .,.._
Call Miiton 800/321-7095
Brlcklayert '*'*· must have gOOd trana. and be
dependable 875-3175
Butper900/0iahW..,_
Men's club, non-1mkr
M·F 7:30-3 PM 752-7903
IELIYEllY PEllSOI
Part/time Good drtvtng
record. Caltf licenae r•
quired. 642--0621
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 52 G0f''> undP•
ground
1 Removf'd 54 Group:. o t
h Staves people
10 Pr a1tlf' 58 A S1t1n riv Pr
14 '1'./Paker c,q ChrJp typ1·
15 Brighi I sl'l 61 Cut <.hut I
lG L•gl'll c.11c.1e 62 1sinq1ass
1-Move upv.ard 61 9,., ,i.
IP, S 1ri(1111m row 6J ':.l'lu'
1rJ Blac.• c•tH•t !)' G•PP~
• fl Re,,o, l+>r rP<,1<;\.1nc ..
• Patk.j<p11q bf> Sleep
matPr 1 11
iJ Pun•~t1
~ iNiHC.llf'r
C.••ftl
' ~iPQdlht
, ' Pia ;PCI ,,,tr Is
l Af111.1 or 1(l1J.i
' H,Jnc! ·,I
lR W.ilk1•(J
1(.r O'>'.
jl.; BtOtllf' ,. \l
10 D·•, t•rr11rir;
.J 1 <.;!ti 10 M t
! , f~t'() 'I rdlll
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no•ftll.J•''
l' Tr r'il I• t •
~ 7 A•,1.1r ; li1 ,. ..
1 Prot tc,
2 3
14
17
20
38
4 1
52
58
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OCIWN
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10 Uu.1c,1t11I
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5
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL VEO
• ' P11c l1t•r I 1•1
, (I I I .tlr tf
I '"l'i"flqft ,
Iii
1 ~',it ·1 ..... t
I Kio ti •·t I
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H«lq•· 11•11 ' • ' I
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1(1 ~< ii t ' f
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F I I
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RN'a
NURSE AIDES
LIVEINS
Immediate assignments
avallabte lor private duty
tlome care Varl .. y of
ahltta & area• Flexlble
llour~rk Is available.
call ual
IAITEll IUL TIUll
953-0899 EOE M/F
PAITSMMI
Apply In peraon to Parts
Mgr. Mission Vlefo tm-
poru. 28701 MatgU9'1te
Pkwy, Minion Vlefo
Par11 driver wanted. Mull
ha~ good drMng record
e.4>8566
PUT/TIM
PlllUlllT
u oeoent opportunity WI •
plea .. nt working envt·
ronment. Our Newport
Beach offlcl• 11 looking
fC>f mature, r.-ponslble
lndlvlduals to do lnt..-.t•
Ing t~ work on
l>eh•ll of national com-
panlet Good IC>Mklng
voio. •must. Celi Hugh
5'6·5771
•.
ll
'
WORLDS L.ANIUT
MUICIOHHNZ ~
'"4 MEACEDl8 lllNZ
Elloelent ····~Oft JIM8L!MON8
IMPOfllTI
1301 Quell St Npt kfl
13S-9300
..........
lllTI
CllllTY
YILllWIMI
11K1.llT
lllllDIU"
Volufne a.a, a.rvtce 117~~.·.·:~.
Huntlngt~ leecf't (71t) Ml·llll
Wlllll .......
Bill YATES
' VW -POR~CHE
8i1 48 0049J 4 ~1 1 ..... , ......
llA ... M
ltOltllAC
~f"UllJM
a11m11m11
onANGE COtJtn ( (_A l II OH Nit~ I' (f NT '~
rvine agrees on civic center site·
.
ouncil votes unanimously in favor After about 4S minute of dis-
cussion Tuesday, which had been
preceded by years of debates over the
best site, the council finally took the
plunge and committed itself.
T he vote is only the first of many
decisions city leaden will face in
desfan in• the new seat of govern-
ment, estimated two ycan ago to cost
$22.4 million. It was envisioned as a
"City Center." for a city hall, police
station, county branch library, civic
auditorium. school and water d is-
tricts' headquarters and with centers
for day care and for the elderly.
tives from homeowner aroups io
Culverdale and Woodbrid&e express..
in& concern about how t6cir neigh-
borhoods will be affected by traffic
and commercial development ex ..
peeled to be built near the new
complex.
dents, told the council. •
••TM beat place for City Hall is in :
f 25-acre Culver Drive location Costa Mesa, Where it won't affect :
anyone," V ardoulil joked. •
y ANDREA ADELSON .. ...., .........
Irvine's leaders made city history
uesday night, unanimously agreeing
r the first time in 13 years on where
break gtound on a permanent civic
nter.
laRouche splinter group
visits county to warn of
world economic collapse.
/A3
The Sierra Club has
jumped on bandwagon,
opposing San Diego to
LA bullet train./ A3
Callfomla
Gov. George Deukmejlan
says he's totally opposed
to a state lottery .I A4
Nation
President Reagan dis-
misses notion he'd send
U.S. troops to Central
America or the Persian
Gulf./A5
World
A 1500-year-old Mayan
tomb has been dis-
covered In Guatemalan
jungles./ AS
Home
Get set for a revolution in
the television Industry -
a set that offers movle-
quallty clarity ./81
They don't look llketypl-
cal chairs -but the
Balans line of furniture Is
designed with the body's
needs In mlnd./81
Food
Memorial Day and
barbecues go together,
but this year try a change
of pace with duckllng./C1
Having a picnic? Then be
sure you keep cold foods
cold and hot ones hot. /C1
Sports
Detroit's Tigers are still
kings of the road after
winning 15th straight
away from home, 4-2 over
the Angels./D1.
Marina, Fountain Valley
post shutout victories In
CIF softball action. /D2.
Entertainment
The Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse has "The Best
Little Whorehouse In
Texas," and It's a red-
llght rouser./84
Bualneu
Golden West Capital
Group of Newport Beach
has secured financing for
the $62.2 million Gateway
project. /Be
:•:•:-::•:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Business
Callfornla News
Classified
Comics
Crouword
Death Notices
Food
Help Yourself
Home
Horoto0pe
Ann Lander•
Mutual Fund•
National News
Opfnlon
Pottce Log
Pubtlc Notlcet
Sport• Stock Marketa
Tetevlalon
Theater•
Weather
World Newt
85
A3
86-7
A-4
06-8
85
08
8-4
C1-12
8 2
81-2
07
82
86
A-4
A12
A3
0-4-5
C1--4
88
938.f
A2
A4
The council set in motion long-
awaited plans to build a government
hub on 2S acres at Culver Drive near
the San Diego Creek channel. The
parcel is now planted with cro ps and
ts part of a new residential village
being planned by the Irvine Co.
"To have a S-0 --vote is history
tonWit," Councilman David Sills
told h is colleagues. -
"It will change," retiring Coun-
cilman Bill Vardoulis said as a parting
sho\. VardoL\liS will step down from
office after June S.
Church ADCtuary rlaes
Structural •teel aoe. up for a new tMmctaary at St. Andrew'•
Presbyterian Cliurch on St. Andrewm Road ln Ne~rt
Beach. The church bu embarked on a $10 mllllon bulldlJlC
No candidates at
Irvine nuke day?
Agran organizing
panel discussion
for May 31 event
By ANDREA ADE~N
Oftllel)elJf'loCllaff
Months of efforts by a locally based
group to bring the three Democratic
presidential candidates to an Orange
County forum on nuclear-related
issues have so far failed.
to discuss the issue in Southern
California, a primary base for the
nation's defense contractors.
Josh Baron, a Hart Southern Cali-
forn ia campaign spokesman. called
Carpenter's argument "nonsense."
Hart "has demonstrated his will-
i n~ness to discuss the issues," Baron
said, but the candidate is bombarded
with requests for appearances. His
May 31 schedule is "fl uid," but is
dominated by fund-raising efforts "to
keep this campaign going," he said.
Instead of candidates. economist
William Hartung, journalist Robert
Scheer, four local leaders and fou r
elected officials from throughout the
The first voices of opposition
surfaced Tuesday, with representa-
"I realize speed is necessary, but
you're not planning ahead" to accom-
modate traffic and future demands
for expansion, Bea Shapiro,
spokeswoman for Woodbridge resi-
plan and already bu $8 mllllon pledCed for the new
tMmctaary and an educational wtDa· The new M.D.ctuary will
eeat 1,400 people.
But in the candidates' stead, local
peace activists including Irvine
Mayor Larry Agran have organized a
panel discussion on arms reductions
to be held May 31 in Irvine's City
Council Chambers.
(Pleue eee NUCLEAR/ A2) Larry ACran
AMistant City Ma~ Paw Brady 1.
said the vote only ••sives a fix for !
future planniQC," which can be de-~ sianed around the proposal. ~
lrvine presently conducts city busi-~
ness from leued offices and from a :-
utilitarian industrial building put up ~
(Pleue eee CSPf~/ A2! r
. . · .. Games 1
scam
endsini
arrest
Police allege HB man
illegally solicited
funds for Olympics
By ROBERT BARI.EB
Of ..............
Fountain Valley police have ar-
rested a 28-ycar-old Huntington
Beach man who allegedly was &<>in&
door-to-door soliciting contributiom
to help support U.S. Olympic ath-
letes, detectives said today.
When Edick A. Anderson m was
arrested Monday on suspicion of
illegal solicitation of funds and falsely
representing a Huntington Beach
charitable o~tion, he had dona-
tions of $37 ID bis possession -$35
in checks and $2 in cash, police said.
Officials were unsure bow long
Anderson had been soliciting dona-
tions and didn't know how much
money he might have collected.
Fountain Valley detectives said
Anderson allegedly was ca~ng
papers indicating he was soliciting
funds for the Minor Sports Foun-
dation of America when he was
(Pleue eee GAllU/ A2)
All Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates have been
invited to the forum which is to take
place between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30
p.m .. just five days before the June 5
state primary, forum organizer Tim
Carpenter said Tuesday.
Fans not bothered by 'Tern ple of Doom' gore
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart is the
only "maybe" in the bunch because
he mayl>e in Orange County the day
of the forum, he said. President
Reagan has turned down the invita-
tion, former Vice President Walter
Mondale is "unlikely" and the date is
"open to consideration" on Rev.
Jesse Jackson's calendar, according to
Carpenter.
He contended the non-commital
candidates are "unwilling or afraid"
By tbe Associated Press
"Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom" began its quest for box office
glory today amid debate over its
graphic violence. which some critics
say should be off limits for unaccom-
panied young viewers.
Directed by Steven Spielberg and
produced by George Lucas. the
eagerly anticiP.ated sequel to the 1982
blockbuster 'Raiders of the Lost
Ark" was booked into 1,685 theaters
nationwide. many of which sched-
uled their first screenings at I 2:0 I
a.m. local time.
In New York City. moviegoers
leaving the Loews Astor Plaza theater
today seemed unconcerned by the
film's gore.
"I felt dazzled after JUSt the first 20
minutes." said Leslie Cullen. 22. ··It's
going to be a hit."
"It's real escapism. fantastic from
start to finish.'' said Jeff Kleinman.
"If you want a great escape movie. it
delivers from beginning to end."
In California, eager fans camped
out for days to be assured of choice
seats. Some wore the slouch hats and
oversize coats affected by the title
character. played b) Hamson Ford.
Dianne Elwood, 19. began wa1ung
last Friday at the Edwards Newpon
Cinema in Newpon Beach. which
hired 30 new employees to deal wnh
the expected crowds.
"The only people who wait in line
are crazy. but we have nothing better
to do at the moment.'' said Gordon
Berg. 17. who stood behind Elwood
"h 's like Christmas." said Patnck
Labyone~ux. 18. who spent three
days outside the National Theater in
Westwood. He was first an line for the
·Jim Dick Valley's man in motion
Busy civic leader, 68, uses h is retirem ent_
to-tnv-olve himself in community activities
lt wasn't easy to catch up with Jim
Dick one day last week.
Jn the morning. the 68-year-old
Fountain Valley man was at the
historical park he's helping to build
behind City Hall. As president ofthe
Fountain Va1ley Histori<;al Socicty1 he was interviewing a 90-year-ola
Costa Mesa woman who taught
school in Fountain Valley S7 years
aao.
ln the afternoon. Dick was al the
Ki~ of Glory Lutheran Church.
helping to set up props for a pro-
duction of .. South Pacific."
He was also prcparina tM aaenda
for the annual installation of offic.en
of the Friends of the Fountain Valley
Library i}thc followin& day. He was
about t ~n another year as
preside~ of the library suppon
aroup.
That night Dick anended Fountain
,
.J
Valley High School's Coronet
Awards proaram because his grand-
son Michael Koelsch was a nominee.
He had to apol~ for not being able
to attend a meeting of coin collectors.
lnaddition to bis club work. Dick is
secretary of the Oranae County
Health l>tannina Council, a group
that reviews hosphal expansion plans
and tries to control risina health care oosu. He's abo on Fountain Valley's
Housina and Com m u nity Develop-
ment Advisory Committee, which
oversees the local use of federal funds.
He also lectures on fountain Valley
history before schools. IOOut uc>ups
and service clubs.
"What makes Jim Dtck run and
run and run ... r'
Fountain Valley is a quiet bedroom
community of more than 50,000
rt51dcnts. Yet. at't also a etty where
many of the same faces keep tumina
P111L
SllEID~llAI
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
up when you're looking for the people
involved in civic and service club
activities. Jim Dick 1s one of those
fam1har faces.
His wife Dons. who also 1s active in
many of theS( groups, says she and
her husband subscribe to a simple
philosophy: 1f you want to upgrade
your qu.ahly of life. you have to do
more than just fix up you houJc. You
have to help improve your comm uni·
ty as • whole.
Like many Cnlifom1a midents.
Jim Dick 1~ a tran~plant from the East
Coast. But unhkc most fonner East-
erners. he never refers to his natJ\e
Connecticut as "back home."
1lte childrtn ~ all know hov.
their parents came from Oshkosh,
W is .. or Dearborn, Mich .. but the
children should also know something
about the platt where their home 1s
now," D ick inststs. "Dons and I both
go back East. but we don't ao home
(there). Home 1s here."
Dick grew up m New England and
eventually became a cnmmal in-
vestigator for the Connecucut State
Politt. Then he became an in-
vestigator for the U.S. Civil Scn 1~
Commission. In 1964. he asked to be
transferred from Connecucut be-
cause of his wift·s beahh probkm~
"We research~ for six months to
find the best ch matt ID the world,"
Dick rttalls "That wa~ on the south
coast of Spain -but l d1dn'1 have a
JOb offer there "
The Dlcks then scttl~ an Fountain
Valley for tl\ pan1cularh· mild
(Pleue eee VALLEY /A2)
' ..
midn111.ht show
"We were in the ('Return of the:
Jedi') line for seven days,"
Lab~oneaux added. "This is kind of
routine."
The violent scenes include a hair-·
raisin$ sequence in which a man'S:
hean 1s tom from his chest before he
1s lowered into a pit of boiling lava.
That kind of action has prompted
womes and some complaints about
the effect on young viewers who W111
likely make up a large share of the
film's audience. _,
J lmDlck
.J
~ *__Or_,. Cout DAILY PILOTfVtedr.-day. May 23, 1914
Oounty may buy computer
81 JEl'P ADLEll °' ... ..., ........
To better finaer the naht cnminal
suspect1 the Ora.nae County Board of
Superv11on aareed Tuetday. to in· vestiple furtfier the poss1bilily of
leuana or purcbasina a hi&h-tcch·
notoay computer that could match
finacrprints lifted at crime 5CCnes
with tbote of 20.000 put offenders an
the county.
Supervisor Ralph Oark asked for
the board's authorization to look
more closely into such 1 system to
pthcr information on the propoal
before summer budtet hcannas.
Amona quesuons county Jaw en·
forcement official• and supervisors
want answered ii whether police
qencies now usma the system have
found it effective 111 crime-detection
tool.
"I undent.and. it is beina used wtth
aood cnme detection results by the
state Department of J u1tice as well a
law enforcement aacndes in such
ciucs as Houston, San Jose, Washin&·
ton O.C. and Minneapolif. t. Paul,"
Clark 11id in a letter to board
memben.
The comeutenicd system would
allow detect1ves to randomly search
for flnacrprint matches amona the
prints of 20,000 persons who have
bttnJailcd for pa t ofTensn.
Currently, the county shenfrs de·
panment only can attempt to match
latent pnnts hf\cd at a crime scene
with those of a known suapttt.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~
:NUCLEAR FORUM IN IRVINE •••
From Al
$tale will try to focus the nuclear the national d1aloauc to reduce nu-
debate at a community level, clear weapons and cut a bloated
Carpenter said. budget." Irvine's Agran said.
Topics will range from tht' econ-The event, called the first of 12
om1c consequences of the nuclear hearinas to be held across the nation.
arms race to its psychological impact. 1s sponsored by the ~ague of Elected
he said. The hall holds 150 people. Ofl1c1als of America, a group founded
1 "We believe the hearing is the first this year by Agran. It has more than
such event of us kind and under-I 00 members 1n California.
1~:~;;~~~: ~:;;ED ...
'From Al
tarrtsted 1n the area of La Luna r A venue and Ash Street.
But officers said the organizauon
'underwent a name change about two
tyears ago and officially became the
fAmerican Youth Sports Foundation
· Detectives also disclosed that the
onginal president and founder of the
.Amencan Youth Sports Foundation
,-39-)'ear-old Donald L. Green of
Huntington Beach -was convicted
1n Long Beach Munc1pal Coun
~Monday of making fraudulent solic1-
,1at1ons that prosecutors said involved ~hinng youths for door·to-door fund-
: raising that supposedly was to help
Olympic athletes. Police believe the
two incidents are unrelated
solicnat1ons for his salary, Menna
reponed.
Foundation offi cials declared
Anderson wasn't an employee.
Menna said.
Menna said poli~ were alerted to
the sohc1t.at1on by a resident.
He added that Southern California
1s a particularly vulnerable area for
orgamz.at1ons collecting money for
athletes. especially 1n the year of the
Olympics.
''I'd be very. very lee ry of making
contributions 1f the sohc1tor had no
valid business license signed by an
appropriate official," he declared.
•
The league 1s a network of local
elected officials who sponsored a
forum for presidential candidates an
January with the aid of I SO mayors
and council members from Iowa.
Four of eight candidates attended the
nationally televised event pnor to the
Iowa caucus.
The group's members endorse a
nuclear weapons freeze.
Agran. an attorney. was co-author
of the non·bmdmg Proposition 12
nuclear freeze measure approved by
California voters in 1982. Six Orange
County cities voted for the freeze.
including lrvinc.-and Laauna Beach.
The league was bred from Agran 's
campaign to mobilize 65 mayors and
council members to support the
measure in their communities.
Military spend mg on nuclear arms
1s robbinJCllies of essential resources,
Agran said.
Among the speakers are Hartung.
author of the "Economic Conse-
quences of the Nuclear Freeze:" Los
Angeles Times po hucal writer
Scheer: Jean Forbath. of Costa Mesa-
bascd Save Our Selves: Torin
Scgcrstrom. scion of a prominent
local developer; and Curt Hauofelcr.
president of the Anaheim Hi&h
School District board.
In the Fountain Valley case. Detec-
tive Dennis Menna said, Anderson
didn't have a city business license.
Menna said Anderson claimed he
turned over proceeds to an uniden-
tified official for the sports foun-
dation each Fnday at a Denn) 's
Restaurant in Fountain Valle) He
said he kt'pt JO percent of 1hc
IRVINBRBCOGNIZED •••
CENTER .••
From Al
for SI 5 million e1gtn :rears ago. incc
incorporation 1n 197 I. c111uns
groups haYt' looked al nearl} e .. er)
available piece ot land as a prospec-
uve site
Kate Frankel. chairman of the
commtttee. said 1f the cit' makes no
move 1t will be pay1ngoul S56 mllhon
tor ka~d 'lpacr over the next 20
~ears
Pnm41
VALLEY CIVIC LEADER BUSY ••.
From Al
weather fhe nt) was st1ll rather
\Oung (ii was rncorporated in 195 7)
and 1n the midst of a trans1t1on from
farm area to l"('S1dent1al commun1t\
Soon after the mo .. e. D1ck became
act1' e 1n a local homeo" ners assoc1a-
11on. working to ease some ranal
tensions that had surfaced in th<'
neighborhood.
In 1965, Dick was appointed to the
city's traffic advisor) comm1tl~ He
helped develop Fountain Valle) 's
first traffic laws.
In 1966. Dick was appointed to the
Fountain Valle} Planning Com-
m1ss1on . He scned as chairman
through 1972 and remained on the
commission until I Q74. Dunng that
pcnod. Fountain Valk} unde~ent
substantial growth
Dick said he bellcHs the com-
mission dunng his tenure fa1thfull~
adhered to the master de' elopment
plan crt"ated b\ the cit~ 's earl)
leaders. One exception was that
eomm1ssioners permitted more
<tingle-fam11\ housing and less mul-
llple-hou1.1ng (apartments. con-
dominium~. etc.) 1han ongrnall~
planned
In 1%~ Jim and Dons Dick "erl'
among the founding member' of lhl'
I ountaan Valle) H1stoncal Soc1ct)
The !><.x-1eh 'l.\3'i dormant for a wh1k·
1n the earl 1970\ hut re .. 1,ed 1n t1ml'
tor the ndtional 81ccntcnn1Jl C<'l -
cbrat1on\ l11 I 97b
In n·ccnt )l'ar\ thc group ha~
channdetl its t'Ol'f)Lll'~ 1ntn prcsl'r
"a11on of some n·mnant!> of I ouniain
Valle} ·'i pa~t
Becau~ of thn 11' ·.,rapid dn t•lop·
ment. near!) all ol i ountain \. alk) ·,
rarl)' building~ "'l'tc dcmoll\hed to
Just Call
642-6086
O .. ty Piiot
OeflYery
,. Ou•r•nl-.d
"",,_., ' ,., t ,..,.. '" ,. ,. ... frt ,,._ ~ 0-;
• .ll)pm ••~7""' .,,., '°"' """ .. 0. ·~
....... o.. il<'CI ~. " "°""" •Jo ''°' ,..... 'f!:'U'
make wa) for tract housing and
shopping centers In late 1981. a
de' eloper disco' ered three aged
structures hidden from view off
Bushard Street. The developer said
the h1stoncal soc1et) could ha' e
them. but said the group had to act
qu1ckl} before the bulldo1ers amved
The bu1ld1ngs were a 1920s real
estate oflice. a Japanese bathhousr
and a "ater tower. T he c11y agreed lll
accommodate the structures at an
undeveloped park. but the histoncal
soc1et) had lO raise $2.400 lO mOH'
them Dons Dick. who was president
of the group at the time, asked the
membcr!i at a meeting to at least
pledge mone) for the move Instead.
she had S2.000 in donauons in her
hand '-"llhan 10 minutes.
As 11 turned out. the devrlopmcnt
that '-"OUld have destro)ed the old
buildings ne'er matenahzcd Sull
the threat pressed the soc1et} into
action. The bu1ldines were moved to
an area behind C-1l) Hall dubbed
"Hentagc Park." Jim Dick and other
\OCl<'t~ members have spent man\
hours reno,ating the structures and
adding land!>capmg at thr park It
ma) be opcn<'<l tu the puhlil later th1\
\car
\\hen he\ not v.ork1ng at the par!..
\OU 'an often find Jim Did. speaking w llxal \\'h0tll children about Foun
tarn vau~, .. s hl\tUf). He SU\S mo<;t ~oungstcrs arr '-"Oefull} umnformt•d
about the lOmmun1t> 's beginning' J\
.1 \Ogg} area full of .\rtes1an '>'t'll'i (lhl'
source ot th<' l'll\ ·., name) The land
had 10 be tlr•11ned to permit thl'
farm1n{l of hma hcans. suga r bech
tomatoes. peppers and other crops.
.. One of the first things these kids
ask 1s ""hat Indians 11' ed here," Dick
says. "I tell them no Indians hved in
this valley because none of them were
dumb enough to hve in a swampy
nverbed The) hved on the blufTs 1n
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa."
The local history buff also tells the
children ho"" the Cit) fathers barely
got Fountain Valle) incorporated in
time to prevent most of1t from bcmg
anne,ed into Santa Ana. Although
the founders were ma1nl) farmers. tht'
construction of the San Diego Free-
wa}' through to"n hastened •ls trans-
formation into a bedroom communi-
ty. he tells the \>Oumts ters
Jim Dack hasn t slowed dov.n
much '>Ince rct1nng from his fe-deral
JOb in I ~78
··1 "att hcd too man) people "ho
retired from the mills back East ... he
says. "The) JUSl reured. sat on their
front porl"hes and d1rd because 1he\>
didn't l..nov. an)thing clSt· to keep
bus>"
Right nov.. D11:k 1s intent on gelling
the Hcnta{lc Par!.. finished as a plall'
for d1spla\ of h1'itoncal mementoes
from Fountain Valle' Hc"s al\o
pressing the nt~ to uSc redevelop-
ment fund\ to hu1ld an expanded
local hbral")
Later this 'ear Jam and Dons D1l i..
hope to do suml' lraH·hng. '1s111ntt 1
fnends and rdatl\es back East Bui
don't e'\pect the coupk to gnt· up
their Cl\ 1c act I\ 1t11.•\ pcrmant'ntl'
"Thi s v.ould onl\ he a hnd
mtrrm1S!>1Un from "tia1 V.l··rl· doing
here." Jim Dael.. \J\~
What do )OU like aboul the Da ll) Piiot" \\hat don't )OU like" <.all tbt
number at left and your message will he recorded. transrrlbed and dt ll\ ered
to the appropriate t4ltor.
Tht ume U -bour aoswerln1t ten ice may bf ustd to rtrord lt'tlen 10 tbt 1 editor on an) topk. Coo&rtb1non to our wllers column muse lnr ludt their
name and ltltphone nambu ror verlfleatlon No rtrc-ulatlon calls. please
Ttll us wbat't oo your mind
ORANGE COAST Ctrcul•tlon 714/M2""'3Sl
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publ1«thfU
c t .. 11fted M V9f'tltlng 714/M2-M71
Alt other ct.pattmenta M2-4321
MAIN OFFICE
~ I>\' , • ,,, c IW'· .. • 1 •0 .,,. t"'CI '°" ...... ,.._
Clrcufetlon
T.a.pfton.e
Chay Ooweltby
( d1f0f a ncJ Assistant
to I~ Publlshef
ROMtMry Churchman
Controller
~,.Cerao
f't C l()u( I o(lf1 .... , '~
•
OoMldL ...... ,,.
Al~
~Afl9Qi"'
VOL. n , NO. 144
Sllnny, a little Cooler on C-
Coaatal
Eztended
,elf llllOUOft Ille --t llcec>t IWQlll end mcwnltlQ ao.. ~ H~ motlly 111 lht °lOt -Ille OOMI
ltlCI 711016 in I""' •elley9 lows 52 lo '5
Temperatures Tl dee
... ti rt 71 .. '° .. 11 ....
.. 17 .....
10 " Ill ..
12 .. t2 73 .... a IO 10 74 IO 17 70 41
70 ... . , ., ... , .. ..
14 IO .... 70 ,,
•• 41 71 6l 17 q ., 17
II IO
17 0 17 7'
.. 71 IO M .. u
" 70 ....
10 80 10) 76 H 17
71 ..
.. 12 IO 87 .. lie
"""'9DAY
11 )2."' 2 1 6.11 ."' 3.
~ .... t pm !OT.~
.. rs
.. 12
10 5.4
72 ..
83 .. 77 II 11 ee
91 ..
1t 39
11 II .. 411 .. " 101 " 17 ..
1()4 711
83 13 73 47
6e 4f 75 5a ., ..
.. 37 .. 50
SuRf REPORT
~ s.o-•o St l-it Pet•TAl'IPOI aa11 1. .... en., . .,, ... ,.,_
Sein OitOO 9.,, Franc.teo
a.,, Juiltl p " S1St1 M-
S..11le
snre~1 siow. ,.,..
Spolt-
SyrtcUM
T~I
'""°" , ......
WUl\lnQton
WlcNI• w-...a.i ..
WllmlnOtOI\ 0.
am
1·3
" .. I ..
' .. .. .. " . ...
~ .. ,,. ..
"':' • ... .
" ... . , "" It' . .., .. ., ., .. ... •• ,..
'° ,. . , ., • ., ... tit ...... .... ....
I t 80 Ill 31
12 •• It 65 72 II
t3 76
IO 71
.. 4$
79 13 62 3t 74 12
II IO ,, 7t
12 1'pm 0 7
1eoonc1 NQtl e·se p.m •.a '~ t 3 tuft ..... IOdlly ti 7 ~ p "' • "-Tillndty .. 6 41. "' and .... aoMI .. 7Mprn I .l
I 1 Moor\ Ml.IM Ut p.111. toelty, r1-
Thundily11 2:4Se.m end••~•• 2 21 p"' ' ' 2 3 s ..... dlttetlon. Soutl'!wett
Traffic
woes
brid~ed
in Viejo
Portola Parkway
to guard against
future floodf ng
An arroyo that served as the
encampment for Spanish explorer
Gaspar de Portola's foot soldiers 1s
no" covered b} a span of concrete
rathrr than canvas.
The new $8 3 m1ll1on Portola
Bndge and Parkwa) was opened this
week after being dedicated over the
weekend with the snap of a golden
rope b) state Deput) Transponat1on
'iecretal] Dana Reed
The 5 5-mile parkwa) will open up
the intenorofRancho Mission V1cJO.
and the commun1t1es of M1ss1on
V1eJO. ( oto de Caza and Robinson
Ranch h's 1.200-foot bndge extends
over a stream bed and adjoinin11.
.. 1 ..
'\.. . .,
If
countryside trom El Toro Road in the
north to Plano Trabuco Road 1n the
south.
Four miles shorter than mean-
dcnng L1 .. e Oak Canyon Road.
Portola Park wa} sweeps over the
canyon, savina considerable travel
time and ensuring against rcpeut1on
of the 1980 Trabuco Crttk flood that
isolated the t'xclus1ve resort of Coto
de Caza for nine days.
In addition. the completion of the
parkwa) will play a role in bringing
Olympic v1suors to the resort, stte of
the modem pentathlon.
Pickups and flatbeds from Coto de
Caza were the first to parade down the
nev. thoroughfare Saturday.
The six-column. two-lane bndge is
the longest ever built by county road
builders and 1s the product of 22 years
of negot1at1ons. Novo Construction
Co. and Steve P. Rados. Inc .. both of
Santa Ana. built the bndge.
Teensmaybetriedas adults
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of IN o.-, "°' llaft
F1rst-degr~ murder charges wen-
filed Tuesda} against two 16-year-old
boys in the death of a 60-year-old
Costa Mesa woman whose bod) was
found 1n a flo""er planter 1n her
backyard.
In filing the charges, the d1stnct
attorne\ 's office-askt'd that both
>Ou th~ he tried as adults. according to
Dcput~ D1~tnct .\llome) Brc.-nt
Romne'
.\ Ju~rn1lc Coun detention hear-
ing. s1m1lar to an arraignment. "'as
Gem
Talk
Bv J.C. HL'MPHRIF.S
Ce;t1fied wmo/"!JSI, ACS
GOLD
•olid, 1111.d. or plat.d
So that conaumera wlll not be too
confused by the advertising and
marketing of gold products, the
Federal Trade Comml111on and the
Jewelera Vlgllance Committee
point out theae facts: SOLID GOLD
means a piece of gOld Jewelry la
aolld. and does not have a hOllow.
GOLD FILLED Jewelry la made from
a base metal and hu layer• of gold
mechanlcaly bonded to both tfd•.
!Ike a sandwtch. The gold alloy mu1t
constitute at leUt one-t«ith of the
object's total weight, un .... It It
marked otherwlM. The gold coat-
ing can eventually ~r .way. GOid
fllled Jewelry may at90 be called
"gold overlay" or "rolled gOld
plate... OOLO ELECTAOPLA TE
m .. na gold 11 depoefted on the face
of.th• object ele01rOlytlulty. To be
called by thlt name, the elec·
troptate muat be at leUt 7
mllllontha of an tnoh thick. AnthylnP,
thinner mu.t be °*led "gold wash • or "gold fl.Mh ," Th«• ll • hlaher
1tandard tor watc:MI, Wf'ltch hive
760 mllllonthl of an Inch of gold to
be called gold -.Ottoplat1 h eura
thlt you know Whit k111d of gOld
jewelry you.,. buY1ng ~ore you
lpend your money Deal with a
reputabl• Jewellf
scheduled today. Romney said. A
date will likely be set today for a
heanng to determine whether the
teen-agers should stand tnal as adults.
he said.
.. O n a homicide like this. it's a
pretty standard presumpuon they'll
stand trial as adults. That's what
we're pushing for." Romne) said.
One of the teen-agers. whose names
were both withheld be-cause or their
ages, lived as a ward in the home of
the victim. Eugenia Flores Baker.
Relatives found her body buned in
a planter Sunday after noucing fresh-
ly turned soil in a garden area whert
several plants were missing..
Police said an autopsy showed she
had been hit several tjmes Friday
with a "blunt object."
Both youths attended Back Bay
Continuauon School in Costa Mesa.
and pohce allege that the other boy
was in the Baker's home at the time of
the slaying.
Police Lt. Jack Calnon said Mti~
Baker got into an argument Fnda}
morning with the 16-ycar-old bccau~
he was lying to her about not
attendin1t school and losing his Job.
Welcome to
our Gem Lab
lhe 1--t KM!fl(• '' '"°""" Ot ~ And whett thet'1 K7.nc t, lhett1 O
1c0ota1ory
C>1 our flOff •• her¥• o (.,tif«f ~'" ol 1Nt ~<CWI ~ Soc,.iy Th.1 h'gHy t10tlltd ...... ldtnlot,., gio6t1 CIM opclfO ... 1.,,. ~tl('M>tt .,, our AOS
A.ec:re4it1Mf Chfft Ltilt w+t1Ch It 9"'~ w olll ~ ltch•fl(QI ~ltl/llleftlt lle< .. tar)' 10
oc<"'O!tlV onolv~• O-ttOl!tl You're weltOl!lt 10 v1t11 °"' lob 011yt1-
We t• AGS '~' ttodv •o ,., ... you eQV•ppect to PIOleci Y°"
ID ~ lt.¥0 toeTA "'FSA t.IHCI , ...
..,,.4._.uid-u.ttr CMr1'I ~I!: Ml l-401
~ ( ' ;.-,;; ! MEMBER AMERICAN QEM SOCIETY
fllll Emlll
0 HANG t C 0 UN l 't' C A ~ 1 I O I~ t.J I A •' 'J CI t~ T ',
woteens etrie
Rouche splinter group
Its county to warn of
rid economic collapse.
A3
he Sierra Club has
umped on bandwagon,
pposlng San Diego to LA bullet train./ A3
Gov. George Deukmejlan
says he's totally opposed
to a state lottery .I A4
Nation
President Reagan dis-
misses notion he'd send
U.S. troops to Central
America or the Persian
Gulf./A5
World
A 1500-year-old Mayan
tomb has been dis-
covered in Guatemalan
jungles./ AS
Home
Get set for a revolution in
the television industry -
a set that offers movie-
quallty clarity ./81
They don't look like typi-
cal chairs -but the
Balans line of furniture is
designed with the body's
needs In mlnd./81
Food
Memorial Day and
barbecues go together,
but this year try a change
of pace with duckllng./C1
Having a picnic? Then be
sure you keep cold foods
cold and hot ones hot. /C1
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Sports
Detroit's Tigers are still
kings of the road after
winning 15th straight
away from home, 4-2 over
the Angels./D1.
Marina, Fountain Valley
post shutout victories In
CIF softball action. /02.
Entertainment
The Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse has "The Best
Little Whorehouse In
Texas," and It's a red-
llght rouser.84
Golden West Capital
Group of Newport Beach
has secured financing for
the $62.2 million Gateway
project. /88
Bridge
8ulletln Board
Business
California News
Classified
Comics
.Crossword
Death Notices
Food
Help Yourself
Home
Horoscope
Ann Lander•
Mutual Funds
National News
Opinion
Polloe Log
Pubflc Notlca
Sport•
Stock Market•
Tetevl1lon
Theeter•
WHther
World New.
85
A3
86-7
A4
06-8
85
08
84
C1-12
82
81-2
01
82
88
A4
A12 A3
04-5
C1-4
88
83
83·4
A2
A4
e
ID
Church sanctuary rises
Structural ateel goea up for a new aanctuary at St. Andrew' a
Pre8byterlan Cfiurcb on St. Andrewa Road in N~rt
Beach. The church baa embarked on a $10 million bailcun,
No candidates at
Irvine nuke day?
Agran organizing
panel discussion
for May 31 event
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of Ille Dally f'tlo4 llaff
Months of efforts by a locally based
group to bring the three Democratic
presidential candidates to an Orange
County forum on nuclear-related
issues have so far failed.
to discuss the issue in Southern
California, a primary base for the
nation's defense contractors.
Josh Baron, a Han Southern Cali-
fornia campaign spokesman, called
Carpenter's argument "nonsense.''
Hart "has demonstrated his will-
in$ness to discuss the issues," Baron
said, but the candidate is bombarded
with requests for appearances. His
Ma y 31 schedule is "fluid," but is
dominated by fund-raising efforts "to
keep this campaign going." he said.
Instead of candidates, economist
William Hartung, journalist Robert
Scheer, four local leaders and four
elected officials from throughout the
e ID e
1
plan and already bu $8 mllllon pledCed for the new
aanctauy and an edacatlonal winC· Tile new eaoctaary wl1l
aeat 1,400 people.
First-degree
murder charges
name 16-year-olds
By 1.AREN E. KLEIN
OfllleOlllr ........
But in the candidates' stead, local
peace activists including Irvine
Mayor Larry Agran have organi zed a
panel discussion on arms reductions
to be held Ma y 31 in Irvine's City
Council Chambers.
(Pleue eee NUCLEAR/ A2) Larry Agran
All Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates have been
invited to the forum which is to take
place between 9:30 a.m. and 12:30
p.m., just fi ve days before the June 5
state primary. forum organizer Tim
Carpenter said Tuesday.
Fans not bothered by 'Tern ple of Doom' gore
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart is the
only "maybe" in the bunch because
he maybe in Orange County the day
of the forum. he said. President
Reagan has turned down the invita-
tion, form er Vice President Walter
Mondale is "un li kely" and the date is
"open to consideration" on Rev.
Jesse Jackson's calendar. according to
Carpenter.
He contended the non-commital
candidates are "unwilling or afraid"
By tbe Associated Press
"Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom" began its quest for box office
glory today amid debate over its
graphic violence, which some critics
say shou ld be offlimtts for unaccom-
panied young viewers.
Directed by Steven Spielberg and
produced by George Lucas. the
eagerly anticipated sequel to the 1982
blockbuster "Raiders of the Lost
Ark" was booked into 1.685 theaters
nationwide, many of which sched-
uled their first screenings at 12:0 1
a.m. local time. .
In New York Cit}. moviegoers
leaving the Loews Astor Plaza theater
today seemed unconcerned by the
film's gore.
"I felt dazzled after JUSt the first 20
minutes." said Leslie Cul len. 22. "It's
going to be a hit."
"Ifs real escapism. fantastic from
start to finish." said JefT Klei nman.
"If you want a great escape movie, 1t
delivers from beginning to end."
In California. eager fan s camped
out for days to be assured of choice
seats. Some wore-the slouch hats and
oversize coats affected tn the title
character. played by Ham\1>n Ford.
Dianne Elwood. 19. began waiting
last Friday at the Edward!> ;o.!ewport
Cinema in Newport Beach. which
hired 30 new employet'.'s to deal v.1th
the expected crowds.
"The onl) JX'Ople who wait 1n line
are crazy. but we have nothing better
to do at the moment." said Gordon
Berg. 17. v.ho stood behind Elv.-ood.
"h 's like Christmas." said Patnd.
Labyorteaux. 18. who spent three
days outside the ~allonal Theater 1n
Westwood He was first in hne for the
Jim Dick Valley's man in motion
13 c1vtc· 1eader, 68. uses his retirement
to involve himself in community activities
h wasn't easy to catch up with Jim Valley Hiah School's Coronet
Dick ol}e day last week . Awards program because his grand-
ln the morning. the 68-year-old son Michael Koelsch was a nominee.
Fountain Valley man was at the He had toapolo_f.ze for not being able
historical park he's helping to build to attend a meeuni of ooin collectors.
behind City Hall. As president of the In addition to his club work, Dick is
Fountain Valley Historical Society, secretary of the Oran&e County
he was interviewina a 90-year-old Health Plannina Counctl, a iroup
Costa Mesa woman who taught that reviews hospital upansion plans
school in Fountain Valley 57 years and tries to control risina health care
ago. costs. He's also on Fountain Valley's
In the afternoon, Dick was at the Housina and Community Develop.
Kin' of Glory Lutheran Church. mcnt Advisory Commi~. which
hclp1n.a to set up props for a pro-oversees the local use offedcral funds.
duct ion of "South Pacific:." He also lectures on Fountain Valley
He was also preparina the agenda history before schools, scout lf'OUPI
for the annual instaJlation of officers and service clubs.
of the Friends of the Fountain Valley "What makes Jim Dick run and
Library set the followana day. He was run and run ... ?"
about to bcain another year as Fountain Valley iu quiet bedroom
president of the library support community of more than S0.000
aroup. rcs1dcnu. Yet, 1\'s also a cuy whc~
That mp.ht D1ck attended Fountain -many of the ~me faces keep tum1na IJ
P11L
SIEIDEllAI
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
up when you're looking for the people
involved in civic and service club
act1v1ties. Jim Dick ts one of those
fam1har faces.
His wt fe Dons. who also is act1 ve in
many of these aroups. says she and
her husband subscribe to a 11mple
ph1lo50phy: If you want to uPlfldc
your quality of life. you hive to do
more than just fu up you house. You
hive to help 1mpro"e your communi·
ty asa whole.
Like many ('1hfomta rn1dents.
Jim Dick is a tr'1Mplant fmm the Ea\t
•
Coast But unlike most former East-
erners. he never refers to hts native
C'onnect1cu1 as "back home.''
"The children here all know ho"
their parents came from Oshkosh.
Wis .. or Dearborn. Mich .. but the
children should also know something
about the place where their home 1s
now:· D1tl rns1sts. "Dons and I both
go back East. but we don't go home
(there). Home 1s here."
Dick grew up 10 Nev.. England and
eventually became a cnm1nal in-
vestigator for the C'onnccucut late
Police. Then he became an tn-
vest•ptor for the ll.S. C1v1I Scrv1Ct'.'
C'omm1ss1on In 1964. he asked to be
transferred from Connecticut ~
cause of his wife's heahh problems.
"We researched for sul month' to
find the best climate in the world."
Dick r«aUs. "That wa on the south
C03M of pain -but I didn't h:l\c a
job offer therr •·
The Dicks tJ\Cn \tttl~ in Fountain
Valle) for tt~ part1cul1rl\o' mild
(Pleue eee V ALL&Y I A2)
m1dn11tht show.
"We were in the ("Return of the
Jed1 'I line for se\en days,"'
lab)orteaux added. "Thi s 1s lond of
routine."
The '1olent sce nes include a hair-
rn1sing sequence in which a man's
hean 1!> tom from his chest before he
1s lov..ered into a pit of bo1lina la va
That kind of action has prompted
womes and some complaints about
the effect on )Ou ng viewers who will
ltkel) make up a large share of the
film's audience
JlmDlck
AS 0...,.. eo_. DAIL V PILOT /Wedne9day, May 23, 19'4
County may buy computem
to speed fingerprint checks
·I By JEFF Al>LBJl .... Ollllf .... _
To better finltf the ri&ht criminal
suspect,-tbe Ora-. County Board of
Superv1sors qreed Tuesday to in·
vestipte further the possibility of
leuina or pwcbuina a hiih-tech·
nology computer that could match
finacTJ>rints lifted at crime scenes
with those of 20,000 past offenders in
the county.
Supervisor Ralph Clark asked for
the board's authorizat100 to look.
more closely into such a system to
pther information on the proposal
before summer budget hearings.
Amona questions county law en·
forcement officials and supervisors
want answered is whether police
agencies now usin& the system ha ve
found it effective as a crime-detection
tool.
"1 understand, it 1s being used with
aood cnme detection re1uhs by the
st.ate Department of Justice as well as
law enforcement agencies in such
cities as Houston, San Jose. Washin~
ton D.C. and Minneapoli..St. Paul, '
Clark said in a letter to board
members.
The computerized system would
allow detectives to randomly search
for fingerprint matches among the
prints of 20.000 persons who have
been jailed fo r past offenses.
Currently, the county sheriffs de-
partment onl) can attempt to match
latent pnnts lifted at a crime scene
wnh those of a known suspect.
"ff there arc no known suspects, as
1s frequently the case in such crimes
as burgla ry and housebreaking. th~re
1s no practicaJ way to make effecuve
use of the incriminating latent prints
found at the crime scene... Clark
noted. Cost of purchasing such a system
has been esumatcd at SI m1lhon.
However, the system's manufacturer,
an Anaheim·buc:d company. baa
indicated it would be willin1 to lease
or sell some of the equipment
necessary to the county for S 129,000
while establishin' the finicrprint data
base at its Anaheim headquarters.
In a rtlated action, supervisors
postponed a decision on borrowina
equipment from the l!.S. Mari,ne
Corps needed to provide secunty
during the Olympic Games this
summer.
Before s1gmng an agreement that
would permit the county sheritrs
department to borrow an observation
helicopter and radio equipment from
the Mannes. supervisors said they
wanted to know more about what
potential liability the county might
face should the equipment be damag-
ed .
NUCLEAR FORUM IN IRVINE ..•
From Al
state will try to focus the nuclear
debate at a communlly level,
Carpenter said.
1 Topics will range from th e econ-
: om1c consequences of the nuclear
I arms race to its psychologlcal impact,
he said. The hall holds 150 people.
. "We believe the hearing 1s the fi rst
, such event of tts kind and under-
scores our commitment to be part of
the nauonal dialogue to reduce nu-
. clear weapons and cut a bloated
: budget, .. Irvine's Agran said.
, The event, called the first of 12
: heanngs to be held across the nation.
1 1s sponsored by the League of Elected
: Officials of America. a u ou p founded
this year by A,gran. It has more than
TEENS ...
From A l
he was lying to her about not
attending school and losing hi s JOb.
Mrs. Baker's husband. Ira, said he
only knew of the troubles between his
wife and the boy from what she told
him.
··1 can't understand Spanish. the)
used to argue in Spanish ... he told the
Associated Press.
Baker said his wife told the youth to
leave a re~ months ago. but the teen-
, ager resisted
"last weekend m" wife decided
definite!) that (he) was going:· Baker
said.
Funeral sen ices for Mrs. Bakerw11l
be held 11 a m aturday at Harbor
Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary and
Memonal Park, 1625 Gisler .\ve .. in
Costa Mesa.
l UU members in Cali fornia.
Carpenter said.
The league is a network of local
elected officials who sponsored a
forum for presidential candidates in
January with the aid of 150 mayors
and council members from Iowa.
Four of eight candidates attended the
nationally televised event pnor to the
Iowa caucus.
The group's members endorse a
nuclear weapons freeze .
Agran. an attorney, was co-author
of the non-binding Propos111on 12
nuclear freeze measure approved by
California voters in 1982. Six Orange
County cities voted for the freeze,
including Irvine and Laguna Beach.
The league was bred from Agran 's
campaign to mobilize 65 mayors and
council members to support the
measure in their communities.
Military spend mg on nuclear arms
1s robbini c11ies of essential resources,
Agran said.
Among the speakers are Hartung.
author of the ''Economic Conse-
quences of the Nuclear Freeze;" Los
Angeles Times political writer
Scheer; Jean Forbath. of Costa Mcsa-
based Save Our Selves; Torin
Scgerstrom , scion of a prominent
local developer; and Curt Haunfeler,
president of the Anaheim High
School Distnct board.
VALLEY CIVIC LEADER BUSY ...
From Al
weather. The ci t) was still rather
you ng (1t was incorporated in 1957)
and in the midst of a tranS1t1on from
farm area to res1den11al community.
oon after the move. Dick became
active 1n a local homeowners assoc1a·
t1on. working to ease some raClal
te nsions that had surfaced in the
neighborhood.
In 1965. Dick was appointed to the
city's traffic advisory committee. He
helped develop Fountain Valley's
first traffic laws.
In 1966, Dick. was appointed to the
Fountain Valley Planning Com-
mission. He served as chairman
through 1972 and remained on the
com mission until 1974. Dunng that
penod. Fountain Valley underwent
substantial growth.
Dick said he believes the com-
mission dunng has tenure fa11hfull~
adhered to the master development
plan created by the ci ty's earl)
leaders One cxccpuon was that
comm1ss1oncrs permitted more
singlc-fam1ly hou'>ing and less mul-
11ple-hous1ng (apartments. con-
dom iniums. etc ) than onginall~
planned
In 1969. Jim and Dons Dick "ere
among the founding members of the
Fountain Valle) Historical ociet~
The soc1et) "as dormant for a "-hile
in the carh I 97CK but re' 1ved 10 llmc
for the nauonal Bicentennial Cd·
cbrat1ons of I 976
In recent 'cars. lhl' group has
channeled 1t-; energies into preser-
• vat1on of some remnants uf Fountain
Valle~ ·s past
Because of the city's ra pid develop-
ment. nearl) all of Fountain Vallc)0S
earl) bu1ld10gs were demolished to
Just Call
642-6086
D•lfJ Piiot
• Dellvery
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Motldlty '•>Olly " yOu Ou
-,..... yOur ~Dy !')JO pm UIC lle!Ore 7 P m
!Ind r<I'" c 00-, ..... 0.
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•
make wa y for tract housmg and
shopping ce nters. In late 1981. a
developer discovered three aged
structures hidden from view off
Bushard Street. The developer said
the historical society co uld have
them, but said the group had to act
quickly before the bulldozers amved
The buildings were a 1920s real
estate offi ce. a Japanese bathhouse
and a water tower. The cit y agreed to
accommodate the structures at an
undeveloped park. but the h1stoncal
S0C1ety bad to raise $2.400 to move
them. Dons Dick. who was president
of the group at the time. asked the
members at a meeung to at least
pledge money for the mo\e. Instead,
she had $2,000 m donations 1n her
hand within 10 minutes
As 11 turned out. the development
that would ha ve destroyed the old
buildings never matenahzed . ~llll,
the threat pressed the society into
action. The bu1ld1n$S were moved to
an area behind City Hall dubbed
"Hentage Park ·· Jim Dick and other
society members have spent many
hours renovating the structures and
adding landscaping at the park It
ma} be opened to the public later this
\Car
When he·\ not working at the park.
\OU can often find Jim Dick speaking
io local school children about Foun-
tain Valle' ·s history. He says most
)Oungsteri are woefully uninformed
about the community's beginnings as
a sogg~ area fu ll of Artesian wells (the
source of the city's name). The land
had to he drained to permit the
farming of lama beans. sugar bcc:b.
tomatoes, peppers and other crops.
"One of the first things these kids
ask 1s what Indians lived here," Dick
says. "I tell them no Indians lived in
this valley because none of them were
dumb enough to live in a swampy
riverbed. They lived on the bluffs in
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa."
The local history buff aJso tells the
children how the city fathers barely
got Fountain Valley inc~rporated. in
time to prevent most of 1t from being
annexed into Santa Ana. Although
the founders were mainly farmers, the
construction of the San Diego Free-
way through town hastened its trans-
formation into a bedroom communi-
ty. he tells the youn~sters.
Jim Dick hasn't slowed down
much since reunng from hi s federal
JOb in 1978 .
"l watched too many people who
reti red from the mills back East," he
says. "They just retired, sat on their
front porches and died because they
didn't know anyth ing else to keep
busy."
Right now. Dick 1s intent on getting
the Hentage Park finished as a place
fo r display of historical mementoes
from Fountai n Valley. He's also
pressing the cit)· to use rednelop-
ment funds to build an ewanded
loca l library
Later this year. Jim and Dons Dick
hope to do some traveling, '1S1t1ng
fnends and relauves back East But
don"t expect the couple to give up
their c1 .. 1c act1v1t1cs permanent!)
"This would onl) he a brief
intcrm1'i!i1on from what w(''re doing
herr "Jim Dick 'i3Y'i
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Controller
S«Otlel Clett !)OSI~ 1141'° 11 Cotta ..._ Calrforlllll
llM tu 8001 9u09e"OICll'I or cau• '4 76 fftOnllWY
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Donald L. WNtlemt
C.o•c:ulllhoo
M11n11~•
VOL. n, HO. 1'4
'
Eztended
Flit llWOUQll IM ...... encl l&QeOI
nlgllt 8nCI morning io.. Cbld1nM1 Higlle moetly In lhtl 70. ,_ IM cOaal
lt>d 78 10 8S In IM v811eya Lows 52 to N
Temperatures Tides
TOOAY
Ml Le ....
"15 81 eo 68 39
82 81 81 15
12 81
93 7r.
90 71
.. 4$
19 93 82 38 ,. 82
15 IO
91 79
Second Noll 8·37 p m • 3
THIMSOAY
12:32 Lm 2 1
6:51am 3 8 12:13 pm 0.7
Second hlgll 8:51 p m 4.8
Sufi -loday et 7 S3 p m , ,_
Thut'Mlay at 5:,.. a.m and M1• I09ifl ••
7'$4 p,m
Moon Mta al 1 29 pm today. rlMe
T""'9d8y •1 2.43 Lift 8nCI MU I09ifl .. ~25p.m
Traffic
woes
brid~ed
in Viejo
Portola Parkway
to guard against
futu re flooding
An arroyo that served as the
encampment for Spanish explorer
Gaspar de Portola"s foot soldiers is
now covered b) a span of concrete
rather than canvas.
The new S8.3 million Portola
Bndge and Parkwa) was opened th1'i
week after being dedicated O\er the
weekend with the snip of a golden
rope b) state Deputy Transportation
Secretary Dana Reed.
The 5.5-milc parkway wilt open up
the 1ntenorofRancho Mission VieJO,
and the communities of Mission
Viej o. Coto de Caza and Robinson
Ranch. It's 1.200-foot bndge extends
over a stream bed and adjointnR
.1 ...
countryside trom El Toro Road tn the
north to Plano Trabuco Road in the
south.
Four miles shorter than mean-
deri ng Live Oak Can yon Road.
Portola Parkway sweeps over the
canyon. sa v10g. considerable ti:a.vel
time and ensunng against rcpet1t1on
of the 1980 Trabuco Creek flood that
isolated the exclusive resort of Coto
de Caza for nine days.
In addition, the completion of the
em 1.3
1-3
1·3
1-3
1·2
1·2
2-3 s ..... ~ 8outnwl9I
13 71
" 81 14 16
IO 72
71 .. .. ,.
11 ..
7t u .. 14
72 .. ... 41
.. 15
71 " 16 •7 13 72 ,, .. .. ..
71 5t
80 7•
11 51
.. 73 '° ..
felt
felt
fair
'"' '"' ""' ,..,
parkwa) will play a role in bnngina
Olympic visitors to the resort. site of
the modem pentathlon.
Pickups and flatbeds from Coto de
Caza were the first to parade down the
new thoroughfare Saturday.
The six-column, two-lane bridle is
the longest ever built by county road
builders and is the product of22years
of negotiations. Novo Construction
Co. and Steve P. Rados. Inc .. both of
Santa Ana. built the bridle.
Students can screen X-rated film
By tbe Auoclated Press
A request that Fullerton College
ref use to show the X-rated film
"Cahiula" was rejected by the college
district board as attempted
censorship.
Trustee Chns Loumak1s had asked
the board of the North Orange
County Community College D1stnct
to request that the Fullerton students
not show the film using district
property or fac1l1ties.
But the board rejected that 1n a 4-2
vote Tuesday night.
"I think by whatever t~rms Y<?U ll)'
to word the resolution. 1t 1s
Ge01
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified ~mologist, ACS
GOLD
•olid. lill.d, or pl•t.d
censorship pure a~d simple," boa~d
vice president N1lane A. Lee said
shortly before the vote.
"I feel very strongly we should not
interfere with our adult student body.
No one 1s forced to see It,.. said
Trustee Herbert Warren.
Loumak1s argued that it was not a
matter of freedom. but of giving
campus airing to a film "which
celebrates sexual brutality."
"This film has no more redeeming
value than a child pornography
movie," he added. "The issue is not
one of academic freedom but of
common decency. If our students
wish to show this film. there arc many
pri,yate facilities available to do so
.... However. only trustee Wallace
Hardy voted with Loumak.is.
"Caligula,'' made in the mid-1970s
by Penthouse Films International. is
about the bloody and wanton life of
the ancient Roman emperor. Nov-
elist Gore Vidal wrote the script, but
later criticized the graphic movie.
claiming it had been turned mto
"basement pornography."
The Associated Students had
proposed showing the movie, but not
yet scheduled it. Student body Presi-
dent Dale Harrison said a screening is
likely.
So that consumers will not be too
confused by the advertising and
marketing of gold products. the
Federal Trade Comml11lon and the
Jewelers Vigilance Committee
polttl out these facts: SOLID GOLD
means a pleoe of ~ jew(Mry I•
aolld, and does not have a hollow.
GOLD FILLED Jewelry Is made from
a baM metal and has layers of gold
mechanlcaty bonded to both aides,
llke a sandwich. The gold alloy must
conatltute at least on.-tenth of the
object'• total weight, unleaa It 11
mark«' otherwlM. The gofd coat·
Ing can eventually wear away. Gold
filled jewelry may alao be called
"gold overlay" or "rolled gold
plate " GOLD ELECTROPLATE
meana gold la d~ltld on the face
of the objlC1 atectrOfytlcally. To be
called by tl'll• natM, the 9'ec·
troplat1 mu•t be at leut 1
mllllonth1 of an Inch tnlok. Anthytng
thinner must be called "gold wash"
or "gotd flutt." Th.,• la a higher
standard for watcnee, whloh have
750 mllllontha of an Inch of gold to
be c.lled gold ei.ctropl1te. a. aure
that you know what kind of gold
Jew.fry you ire buying befot• you
1pend your mo"4r)' Deaf with a
reputable Jew ler
Welcome to
ourGem Lab
fNI 1--""' t IC~e 11 .llOWfl 0\ ~y And wMte Iller I tetenee rheft't O
latlototory
Ori Oii! 11011..,. hov• o Certtf.ed G.moloQ•t1 of •ti. A"'8t<Otl ~ SocH11v Th•t
hoghly tro.ned ~ .... ldef\llf,.1, groou ono 1JP9toite1 lone Ofl"t'Oftel "' °"" AOI
~ Gem ~ wl\tch 11 ~1le>9d .... 111 o' •echrncol 1nitrumenti neceuory IO
O((lltOl41fv Oll(Jlylt gem1tone1 Yo./1t wCOIN to'"''' Oii! lob OllY'-
Wt 11 AGS ~...,, reodv 10 W•t ro.i eouiOP«f to prOltcl you
teol ~ ILllO , GOeT II MfJA CJNCf' , ....
11tMeN.--Mutmr C11ttve PttONC ~4~)401
~
( 1~d•t l MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY