HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-20 - Orange Coast PilotHIQHIO LOW IS
WE ONE SOA Y JllNE 20, 1984 OHANGECOUNlY CALIFOHN1A :c, C.f ~-i 1 •
BB land fraud loss ·in mill1on
State, county. federal lawmen prob e
files of s u s pect held tn giant sca m
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. DlllJ ........
Federal, st.ate and city investiptors
from th~ different counties have
descended upon Huntinaton Beach to
sift through boxes of seized docu-
Coast
Sisters tell jury their
murdered step-father
molested them./ A3
Orange County Grand
Jury wants treatment
center for troubled chll-
dren. / A3
meots th~ think tell the story of a
muJti-milhon dollar Jand scheme.·
Eva P. Verner, the Mission Viejo
woman arrested in connection with
the alleged real est.ate 9Cam, faces at
least 28 charges of selhn& or tryina to
Games
to bring
yachts
to Coast
~!*II~~
LA Harbor during
San Francisco-based
Levi Strauss Is closing 11
of Its blue jean plants. / A4
Nation
Hostile radio host Alan
Berg had warning prior to
his death./04
Florida man goes to elec-
tric chair saying he didn't
kill clerk./ A4
World
Saudi Arabian pilots told
to 'shoot orystght' any
aircraft In air space./ AS
Home
The bugs are coming I The
bugs are coming I Protect
your house and pets with
lnsectlcldes./84
Build a gazebo party
center for the patio and
keep guests outdoors
this summer ./84
Sports
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
qualified for the U.S.
Olympic team with a sec-
ond-place finish In the
800 meters./91
summer compet ition
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.117,... ..........
Ncwpon Harbor is likely to be
awash with cruising boats during the
two weeks o f the Olympic Yachting
G ames.
That likely will be the major impact·
of the Olympics on Newpon Harbor,
said Lido Isle's Ted Hinshaw, the
-Olym pics yachtinJ _commissioner.
Hinshaw, speaking this morning
before the Marine Division of the
Ncwpon Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, said cruising yachts wiU stay as
far away from the crowded Long
Beach-Los Angeles Harbor complex
as possible, not only because of the
difficulty of sccunng benhina or
mooring. but because of the tight
security which will be imposed on the
area.
The suppon peTSOnnel of the
Yachting Olympics alone will in-
volve about 1,400 pcop&e, most of
whom a.re voluntcefl, said Hinshaw.
In addition to the suppon craft, there
wilJ be 180 small craft from 58
countries racina in. the... OlymP:ic
Yachting Games, a record, said
Hinshaw.
As many as S.000 spectator boats
arc cipected to line the perimeters of
the four racing courses, he said.
More than 90 Coast Guard craft.
ranging from inflatable runabouts to
400-foot long vessels, will have the
task of keeping the courses clear for
the racers, as well as provide security
for the Los Angeles-Long Beach
Harbor.
Regarding the yachting competi-
tion, Hinshaw said the U nited St.ates
is fielding a strong yachtina team with
medals possible in six of the seven
classes.
Most likely gold medal winners arc
Randy SmythofHuntington Beach in
(Pleue eee Y ACBT8/ A2)
sell propeny that didn't btlons to her
without the owner's knowlcd,e.
VemC1', 39, was scheduled to be
area~ today in West 0ran&e
Mumcipal Court but police said the
case has a:rown so rapidly they are
unsure bow many charges ultimately
will be filed against the woman.
"It's a very time-consumins pro-
cess," conceded Huntington Beach
LL Jim Walker ... Each agency literally
Bridging the gap
has to band w.arcb each of the file' without the owner's pet'D'Ualoo or
cabinets and there's 2S oft~m. k:nowled,e.
..We have everyone from the feds The vacant piece of property near
to out-of-state people JOina throuab downtown Huntiostoo was in escrow
the stuff," Walker said. "The cue is· by the time the actual owner caupt
1oina in a k>t of ditte1ions... on, invcstiptors said.
V ernC1', who reporttdly SoCS b}' The woman fepoi'tedly had found a
more than a dozen aliasct, was buycrforlhelandbyldvertisinaitfor
UTCStcd late last week by Huntincion a IOw price and thca attempted to
polK:e who'd bcC11 tipped that the complete lhe deal with a forted land
woman.wasxllin1a piece ofpropcny deed. Police did not identify. the
Conatractlon worker Xmn Dockb•m
poun concrete for the new foar-lane Birch
Street brlqe wblcb wW apan the a -
teuton of the Corona 4e1 Illar Freeway,
~DOW 11Dder coutnetlcm ~ C09ta
11 .. and Newport aeac•.
landoWacr who tbey .........
welJ.knotm citizen who 0-.. lad
.. all over Hu••iQllon 8ada."
At the time of the anat. detectives inclicaled tbe cue was only • .._ al the~ .. And utici_.. 119ca.e
would mushroom as other .._ ee-
fon::ement -.eocies combed lbe ICiz-
ed documents.
Walka' said the file Cahi_... -
~-nAUD/Aa)
Mesa's
marina
'sunk'
Mayor, congressman
fail to convince
budget committee
., liJlEN It. U.P.IN °' ...............
A 2.S-year-old df\2JD to turn the
Colla Mesa side of tbe Santa Au
River into a 2.ooeklip rec:reatioaal
boatin& marina bas been sunk -11
least (or this YQr -by a co•
a;ressional budget committee. ArsYle Nelson, 'luistant to Rep.
Robert W ham, R-Newport Beach,
said the comminec's fundin& rec-
ommendations forfitcal year-1 ~5 do
not include money requested for u sao.ooo prdiminuy study of me
marina COOCCpl.
.. Recreational marinas are ex-
tremely 1ow 01\ their priority list, ..
Neltou said, addina that 6oOd cootrol
c:hannds., dams md other practical
projeas arc hilba' on tbe fundiQa list
than reaational propouk
ADolher CODCa'D was foe the le:lst
(Pl 1 -··••&./A2)
Brass vows
battle over
hospital site
By A.NDUA ADBLSON ................
A Muine COJJl$ JICDCf'8I promilcd thU week to .... mvestipte all avenues
available" to remove the lrviDle
Mectical Center from its site in eat Irvine. .
Maj. Gen. Richard L Cooke,
commanding ~ of the Marine
Corps Air Stanon in El Toro, and a
stead&st opponent of the site cb09Cll
for the 177-bed hosoital lobbed bis
(P1eue eee ll08PITAL/ A2)
It was a bad night again
for the Dodgers and
Angels, as each were
handed defeats./81
Ex-Mesa cop's sex charges cut to 3
Bruce Ibbetson, a prod-
uct of UC Irvine, has been
named to the United
States Olympic rowing
team./82
Entertainment
The Saddleback Com-
pany Theater gets sum-
mer stock season on the
boards with Nell Simon's
"Barefoot In the Park ."
/85
Bualneu
Construction ts under
way on the Five Points
Center In Huntington
Beach./AI.
INDEX
Bridge
Bult.tin Board
Bu81neu
c.llfomla Newt
Claalflec:I
Coma
CrOMWOrd
0.th Notlcee
Food
Home
Hof~
Ann Underl
Mw.& Fundt
Nattonel Newl
°'*"'°" = Pubic Notlcee
8porta
8tockMnet1
T~ ,.,.....
WeMW
WOf'tdNewl
06
A3
A8,A10
A4
01~ oe
03
04
C1-10
84-5
0 2
BS
A8
A4
A7
lM
A3
[)4.6
8 1~
A8 ee
85-e
A2
A4
Woman who claimed officer tried to rape her
now a ppears unwilling to testify In court
William Laacblan
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.lr .........
A Costa Mesa apartment manager
who claimed former policeman Wil-
liam Lauchlan tried to rape her now
reponedly is unwilling to testify in
coun.
The apartment manager was o ne of
four women who claimed they were
sexually assaulted br the former
Costa Mesa police officer when he
Bookseller not
end.ing era, just
turning a page
Creeley's Book.store wasn't the
kind of bookstore where .. Jane Eyre"
and .. Ulysses" would be crowded oo a
back sbelfwith the rest of the classics,
in between psycboloSY and gar-de . ~Creeley wouldn't do tbaL
You would find the classics riabt up
in front, for all the world to tee., riaht
alonpidc collecton' boob on art,
history, enaincerina and philoiOpby.
It was the kind of place wbeft the
latest P9pert,Kk bestxllen -tad
diet boob and pop-movie noveliza-
tions -didn•t cuct.ly dominate sales. •
In fact. .. The Rile and Fall of the
Roman Empire" was one of tho
store' a bisst money maken. And. in
cue you haven't notieed. it basn•t
been on the beat tel.let lilt for 1 lo
wtuli:
KAREN
KLEIN
PlOPLE IN THE NEWS
editions and chatted about wbat out-
of-print manutcript could be traclcd
down and whm.
Cn:dcy's was all abOut Oiris
£reeley, a founh-eencration book·
ttller and the iore's owner and
ma~ for 22 ycan.. ·
And tbert's that word ~in: wa
That'• bec:a ux CreeJ:ey'a Boo ore
is put teme -~llcn lite tbC Roman
Empi_re 1t1elf.
was on duty and in unifonn.
The woman had alleged Lauchlan
arrived at her apartment last year
after she phoned police and com-
plained about noisy tenants. The
manager said the officer refused to
leave, gnbbed her and saned to take
off his pants.
Deputy District Attorney Carl
Armbrust said the woman·s decision
not to testify is moot. however,
because a Superior Coun Judge ruled
Friday there was insufficient
evidence to support the felony charge.
During a preliminary hcarinJ last
March, a Municipal Court Judge
reduced the attem pted rape charge to
a misdemeanor assault and battery.
A more serious blow was dealt to
the prosecution last March when a
j udge ruled that a Fountain Valley
woman was not believable when she
testified that Lauchlan raped her m
the front seat of his patrol car.
The most recent tum of events
leaves Lauchlan. 33. facing only thrtt
scl charges -a misdemeanor and
Creeksy•s WU the kind of place
where bo<>Ponn1 aDd boo col.
ton ptbded to s•p tecttu aoout
wbert to find antique bookl or spttial Cbri Cftcley his a new job now, as
(Pleue ._ BOOmLl.&ll/d) CllrlaCreelqwt.tlllm ltelowd boob.
I
..
two fek>nics. Originally, he faced 12
c~the four women who filed
complaints apinst the ex-officer.
only two will testify in his Superior
Court trial.
The trial is expected to bc:ain this
month apd was scheduled 10 be
assianed a courtroom today.
Testifying against the former pa-
trolman will be a Sant.a Ana woman
who alJc&cs Lauchb.n assaulted her
and hekf her prisoner foDowioa a
traffic stop and a Costa Mesa woman
who charges Lauchlan assaulted her
and gnbbcd her breasts.
f
:
1HOSPITAL BATTLE VOWED •..
From Al
latest attack 1n a flurry of letters to a
local congressman, supervisors and
the Irvine City Council.
No specific avenues of appeal were
outhned. El Toto spokesman Master
Sgt. Jack MichaJslo said. He did say
letters to the state health planning
agency and to Gov. George Dcu-
kmejian arc contemplated.
Cooke formally asked Irvine to
reconsider the site of the $64 mil hon
state .. approved hospital Monday.
That salvo landed after city officials
charged Marine pilots had "buzzed"
400 picnickers attending the hospital
groundbreakln1 on June 9, which
they contend shows that Marines are
violating flight agreements.
plans for a surrounding 340-acrt
biomed1cal/scaence park.
"That wiU occur whether there ts a
hospitaJ there or not,'' Nielsen said.
He added, however. that the 1n-
tensi ty of development planned
within Irvine Cent.er may change as a
consequence of the fallout stirred
over the buzzing incident.
Nielsen said he learned recently
that Marine jets during carrier land-
ing practice arc actually flying shon er
approach patterns than that de-
scribed in military studies, which is
used as a road map for future
at El Toro. They aUeic Manne jets
violated aifCed to flight paths when
they flew over the hospital site. The
middle of the flight path is dead over
the Irvine Country Store, north of the
hospital on Sand Canyon Road.
"From my obscrvauon," said
Nielsen, a fonner assistant scctetary
to the Air Foroc who attended the
picnic two weeks ago, practice
missions "don't pose a threat."
Gen. Cooke maintains "nothing
out of the ordinary occurred on June
9." Michalski said.
development.
The result, said Nielsen, is that the Nielsen said he saw three A-4°
Tida
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There is no present means to
reverse decisions made in December
over the I 5..acrc site at Sand Canyon
and Barranca roads, Assistant Ctty
Manager Paul Brady said Tuesday.
hW~~~e~ C ~t ~as ou
vestjgating the threat. be said.
Even 1f the general is successful in
pushing the lonJ-SOUght hospital
from its site, lrvme Co. President
Tom Nielsen wd that will not change
most southerly crash ~one at the end Sky hawks with landing gear and flaps
of the most heavily used El Toro up and afterburners ~owing. He
runway in reality covers the apex of speculated they weren t using the
the Golden Triangle. formed by the normal carrier landing runway, but
crossing of the Laauna. San Diego and one t~at runs perpendi~ to the ~1:8 Ana~ways. . -· coastl~re an~ used ~sionally when
A" l ~~ nego-. ~~ . ~-~s~~~~-~f6(jt.~~iff~~, ~~171~~~~«!t~~~~~~IS9C~~·
tiated over eight limits on hotels -------------uspec in ewpo unes
plaAft::1 ~~~-:-incident. the City YACHTS .
of Irvine asked the Defense Depart-• • •
menttobandry-landcarrierpracucc :~o::do catamaran class and kidnapping attempt seized
Robbie Haines of San Diego in the
: FRAUD CHARGES ••.
From Al
···found m the woman's home -
indicate the alleged land scam dates
back at least to 1979. Most of the
documents contained in the file
drawers are land deeds from Orange
and Los Angeles counties through
they are some from San Diego County
too. he said.
Verner. Walker said. apparently
passed herself off as being a represen-
tative of at least seven different
financial. real estate or insurance
firms. Police said the woman has
official-looking stamps and seals
from the institutions.
Arresting officers also confiscated
about $15,000 in cash and a bank pass
book from the woman's home. The
pass book showed "substantial" de-
posits had recently been made. police
said.
Verner 1s bem~ held on $50,000
bail.
Soling Class.
The Tornado is a 20-foot two-man
catamaran and the Soling is a 21-foot,
three-man keelboat.
Other U.S Olympic yachting
hopefuls arc Steve Benjamin of
0).'ster Bay, N.Y., io the 470 Oass;
Bill Buchan of Seattle in the Star
Class; and Jonathon McKee in the
Flying Dutchman Class.
The U.S. representative in the
single-handed Finn Class is still up in
the air because of protests and appeals
b)'. three of the leading wlors-Russ
Silvestri ofTiburon, John Bertrand of
Anaheim Hills and Buzz Reynolds of
Summit, N.J.
·BOOKSELLER TURNS THE PAGE .•.
From Al
manager of Coastline Community ter is at RLZZoli's Book Store tn the
College's new student bookstore in South Coast Plaza Mall, learning the
Fountatn Valley. book business from another teacher,
What used to be Creeley's has been Creeley said.
spruc.ed up, cleaned out and renamed: "Books are a basic family culture
the 270 E. 17th St. storefront in Costa for us -we are always reading books
Mesa is now Etc. Books. owned and and discussinJ books in the house. It
managed by Carolyn Cockerill of gets to the point sometimes where it
Newport Beach. drives my wife crazy. She tries to
What used to be Creeley's is part of clean up and we all tell her not to
d · breed I h · nh touch the books lying around half a ymg ; name y, t e ne1&1·· open for fear she'll lose our place." borhood bookstore owned by a book lover who tracked down rare and out-Readers or not, though, Creeley
of-print books with the tenacity of a said he doesn't know if the Creeley
'bulldog worrying over a soup bone. family will tum out a fifth-1eneratioo
just for the love of 1t all. bookseller. As the bookstores go, so go the
Creeley's customers were sort of booksellers, he said.
where to send them now," Creeley
lamented.
And yet he doesn't preach about the
decline of Western civilization and
predict the downfall of the current
generation due to lack of readen.
"There wiU always be devoted
readers. When we first opened we
heard au sorts of gloom and doom
about how television was going to be
the end of reading." Creeley ex-
plained.
But industry studies recently done
showed that television spurred
people to read rather than dis-
couraged them.
Man's reported attempts to lure girl, 14. the airl's uncle and that she was a
runaway.
away from foster family arouse suspicion Golca became suspicous when he
noticed a pair of handcuffs in Frye's
swimming trunks. Frye also was
wearina an ei&ht·inch buck knife on a
belt around ltis swimmina trunks.
Oolea contacted Newport police.
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of ... .,. ..... ...,
A Claremont man is scheduled to
be arraigned in Harbor Municpal
Court today following his arrest on
attempted udnapping charges after
he allegedly tried 10 lure a 14-year-old
girl away from the Newport Dunes
beach, police reported.
The man. 46-year-old Coy Ray
Frye, apparently knew the girl when
she lived near his home in Oaremont.
The girl. who was recently placed
by Los Angeles County social workers
an a Rowland Heights foster home,
told police Frye molested her when
she lived in Claremont.
The suspect apparently has been
trying to contact the girl since she was
placed in the foster home and was
waiting outside the family's Rowland
Heights home Sunday when the
family decided to celebrate Father's
Day at Newport Dunes.
Newport Beach police officer Tom
Little said Frye followed the family to
the beach and offered another teen-
a,e girl $40 to try and lure the a,irl to
him.
Little said Frye told the teen-ager
be was a private investiptor and that
the girl had run away from home.
"He told the teenqer, 'When you
bring her to me I wiU handcuffher and
we will walk over to the car and then I
will give you the money,'" Detective
Greg Armstrong said.
The teen-ager refused and Frye
then approached Newport Beach
lifeguard Frank Golea askina him to
get the girl out of the water.
Frye told the lifeguard that he was
After questioning the family, the
teen-ager Frye offered money to and
Golea, the ~lice arrested Frye on attcm~ kidnapping charges.
Pohce found a loaded handgun and
a falce police badge in Frye's car.
When police contacted the foster
family, the girl said Frye bad
molested her. No molestation cbar)es
have been filed but an investigation is\
under way in Los Angeles County,
Armstrong wd.
Navy pilot identified
in Catalinajet crash
A Navy pilot killed Monday on
Santa Cat.alma Island in the crash of
what an official called "the safest new
plane that's ever been introduced"
was identified as Lt. Cmdr. James R.
Brodengeyer, a military spokesman
said.
The F A-18 had been practicina
carrier landings on a San Oemcnt.e
Island airstrip, 25 miles south of
Catalina.
like Creeley -they were people who The chance to find a small, indi-wanted to read about things. uall · fi .. A typical customer was the man vid Y owned bookstore is ast
who'd worked all his life, was lucky disappearing, Creeley said.
enough to retire at 58 or so and could "The Santa Ana Bookstore, over in
finally satisfy his curiosity about the downtown Santa Ana, has gone out of
War of 181 ~ or Roman history or business in the last 24 months or so. It
engineering," Creeley said. was bought out by another owner,
"The generation reared on TV is
becoming more of a book reading
p:neration than ever," be said, adding
that of his five children -all TV kids tern, an endangered bird species
-two are voracious readers and the which makes its home at the mouth of
other three read less noticeably but the Santa Ana river, Nelson said. As
still read in great.er volume than be long as the bird is protected, the
did at their age. committee does not want to en-
And yet, the book.store "essentially courage development of the river
"It looks like we'll have to wait
until next year if we want to set
fundina into the federal bud&et, •• Hall
said. "But in lhe meantime we'll try to
ti~ some way to act the 1tudy done
wt th or without federal money."
Brodenaeyer, 37, was found
outside the plane in area near Whites
Landing on lbe southeast part of the
island.
Brodengc~r. who was stationed at
Lemoo~ is survived by biJ wife in
Sorin&ficld, V~z and his parents in Moundsville, w .Va., acconlina to a
~kesman at Lemoore Naval Air
Station where the pilot was based.
"I'd recommend a book on a who moved it a couple of blocks and
fi basically turned n into a stationery cenam subject, and then be ore long store. It used to be the biooest, singlc-he'd be back and look.mg for some--thing else on the same topic. That's best bookstore in the county.
where my unique pleasure came in -"We'll see more of those declines."
directing people from book to book, The strongest discouragement to
began to get to be no challenge mouth, he said.
anymore. My input into the store was Badham and Costa Mesa Mayor
declining," Creeley said. "It became Donn Hal~ who testified for the
apparent that it needed new, fresh, marina berore House and Senate
enthusiasticideas." budget makers in April, have long
Hall said be will return to leSt.ify if
he has the opporturuty.
Nelson said Badham will continue
to support the marina project as lona
u the city pushes for it.
The marina would cost more than
S 100 million.
The $22 million McDonnell
Doualu-made FA-18 had taken off
from Lemoore Naval Air Station in
the San Joquin Valley. It disappe&Rd
from a Navy radar screen at IO:S4
p.m. Monday, said Lemoore com·
munity affairs officer Dennis
watching them whet their appetites the independent booksclJer is not the
and them come back for more and competition posed by large, chain-
more." ownership bookstores, but the rapid-
When opportunity knocked, in the pushed the marina as a way to bring a
form of Coastline Commuruty Col-measure of prestige to Costa Mesa,
lege officialsasking him to take over like its coastal neighbors en·o .
the book.store manager's job, be rr=;;=::::::::~~~~ffjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiili answered. "There's a great deal of 11
Crecley describes himself as a ly escalating cost of land and build-
dilettantc, a "dabbler in the arts" by ings, Creeley said.
dictionary definition. "Over the last eight to 10 years we
He's also descended from a line of were in business. our rent tnplcd." he
used and rare-book dealers that goes said.
back to his great-a,randfather. r· Hut the book biJsincss is not a high-
H1s father, Bunster Creeley, estaf>..... J volume trade and it 1s conducted on a
hshed the first student bookstore at leaner profit margin than most retail
Orange Coast College m 1949 and has businesses.
mother, Virgm1a, ran 1t until the "The economy 1s changing to the
mid-l 950s. detriment of small busmesscs -the
Chns Creeley and his Wlfe. Judy. cost of living, land, parking and
opened their own store, on 17th p-oundskeeping. You have to have an
Street. m August 1961 Wlth his folks' immense sum of capital to keep one
help and he broug.ht lus five children going," Creeley said.
up fllmg the hardbacks among the The people that suffer most when
shelves. the old bookstores close down are the
Now, has ncxt-to-younp:st daugh-collectors. be said. "I don't know
potential, and a particularly import-
ant place to play tn the community.
.. And it's more fun than a new
horse. trying to meet this school's
progress and arowth -its needs arc
particularly strong right now."
So Creeley doesn't lament -he
looks ahead, and he keeps on reading.
especially his favorite author. Loren
Eisley.
"He satisfies me most. He de-
scribed his father as a drunken
Nebraska sod buster and
SbakesJ)Ca!C8n poet and his mother
u 1 deaf mute. He wu truly a
Rennaissaocc man -a star with
callouSC1 on his hands."
A man sort of like Creeley.
Just Call
642-6086
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Tell us what's on your mlnd.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. SchwerU Ill
Publrsher
ChuJ DowallbJ Roeemary Churchmen
Ed•tOf and ASSlltant Controtler
to the Pubhsher
'
Clfcutdoft 714/MZ-4m
Cl9Mlfled ............ 714/ta.-n
Al otMf ,.,., ......... ~
MAIN Offtel
330 ~ a.y 81 COlllll ....... C.\
.._. HdtMI 8'ia 15«1 C:.. .,._ CA Ne;zt
~ lte3 o.,.,. COlllil ~ ~ .. -•oi• .... ,_ ...... ,..,. • ..,..,,...
,,,.,.. ... _,, ... ~ ........... pill•
,,...,,.~--
VOL 71, NO. 1n
I
I
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
~rti(ted W:m°"'6i•t. ACS
THE PEARL
June'• Birth.ton•
The peen began u an ecctdent of
nature. It became IUCh a eought-
atter accident that man began
tampering wtth natur9 to make the
accident a planned ewnt. Aocorct·
Ing to an ofd Arab legend, PMl1• wer. formed When moonlit dew-
drope fell tnto the ... Md were
IW .. lowed by oy8tet"I. Feet le, natu·
ral PMtta ar• formed when = of und ot other Irritant oet•
lnetde an oyater, ~ ot ct.In. To
protect It.I Inner t...,., the moMulk
MCretel • fluid, which twdtnl
around the lrrltMt Layer'I or thlt
ftuld, o9"ed "n.cnt" edd to the
8teedy growth of ~· becomee a pewt. Now, ''cuttuNd'' pemrte ....
ptoduciad by mltMlly pteolnQ • tiny
round bMd Into a molfuM, Whk:h It
kept In oontroelld poole. TI-.
poota, autte IH..ity, become pw"I
''farmt.1'-~· the ptoper ttme. the '*'1 wNch Me fonned IWoUnd the
bead I• tlken from the molulk. Cultured ~ .,. )at • ,... ..
natural pewtt. The Cri.Y ~
.. the method by wNch the~
11 tnduoed to form the pewt. Fot
thOM Of you bOm In Jt.tne, the PMf1
can now be Oltebrlted, not • an
ICOldent, but ... mtr ... of the
NI.;
Precious
·gems are
here for life.
So is
Otµ' guarantee ..
+When you choose a piece of
j~wehy &om lntergem1s Royal Gedi
Collection, we'llguaranteethatevery
precious stone is naruraland untreated.
So the m~gical diamonds, rubies,
L.!::====-=s:::=:~ sapphires and emeralds created by
nature will always be as beautiful and M
I
brilliant as they are today. ~
+We guarantee ~int size and quality.
And that'S a written, lifetime guarantee on every gem in e~ l+karatgold ~,necklace, bracelet, eamng or
other piece of jewelry m
The ROyal Gem Colfection.
MEMBER AMEAfCAN OEM SOCIETY 1809 NEWP<>fl'T ll.W, COSTA MESA 81HCE , ...
B uLL£T IN BoARo
Dance r.e~ital tonight
at Irvine High School
The annual recital of the Dance Arts Institute will be
held toni'lht at 7 p.m. an the Irvine Htah School Thc:attt;"
4321 Wafnut Ave., in Irvine.
About I 00 students from several Oranac County
communities win perform, from 3-year-olds to advanced
pupils. Ballet master Richard Adama created a new balJet
set to Strauss waltzes for this performanee.
There is a suaacsted donation of St for children 12 and under. $2 for sen ion and students and SJ for adults.
Further information can be obained by callina 979-1 S82,
Vall ey rable• ~llalc •et
A low-cost anti-rabies vaccination cliniq for dop will
be conducted Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Founwn
Valley R~ation Center on Brook.bunt Street at Heil
Avenue, sponsored by the Southern California Veterinary
Medical Association.
St.ate, county and city laws require vaccination for all
d0&5 4 mon1hs old or older. The: inoculation is good for 30
months, and the charae is $3 per dog. Shots will be
administered by veterinarians.
Flsblng derby elated at HB Pler
The 33rd annual Huck Finn-Becky Thatcher fishing
derby is scheduled Thursday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon at the Hun1ington Beach Pier.
Youngsters 6 to 14 years of age can sign up at the
Tackle Box on the pier on the day of the event. There is no charge.
Mate chooslng semlnar at OCC
A seminar geared to showinJ participants how' to
choose a mate compatible with their personality style will
be presented Thuraday evenin• in Room 111 of the
Counseling and Admissions building of Orange Coast
College in Cost.a Mesa.
Barbara Lee, a private tltera(>iSt who works in drug
abuse proarams, will l~d the seminar, scheduled for 6:3'l
p.m. Admission is $6 and further information may be
. b I callina...0CCL432:_588_0. ~~~-~ v~·· ~'..\i.~~~~J.ll ~~
Rabies cllnlc set for Valley •
A neighborhood, low-cost anti-rabies vaccinatJon
clinic will be held Thursday evening at the Fountain
Valley Recreation Center, at the corner of Brook.burst
Street and Heil Avenue in Fountain VaJJcy.
The cost is $3 per dog and licenses aJso will be
available. The clinic, sponsored by the Fountain VaJley
Women's Oub, will be held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and
further information may be obtained by calling the Orange
County Animal Shelter at 634-7287.
Chlld Abuse Council meets
On&oing information and plannini to aid in the
prevenuon of child abuse wiU be presented Thursday
morning by the Orange County Child Abuse Council.
The meeting will be held at 9 a.m. in building C of the
Orange County Department of Education. 200 Kalmus,
Cost.a Mesa. There is no admission charge and funher
information may be obtained bycallingJeanne O'Bryan at
972-4975.
Cllm~lng a metal web
Jone Sa.klee, 10, putlclpatee lD tbe obata·
cle coane nent da.rtnc eonece Park
School'• Olf1Dplc Gamm 1ut week. Tbe .
Girlsdefe
tirotherat
murder at
8J IM MHda1*' Pi'w -
The liMttl of a I 7-ya.r-old I "lllna Hilli ,...
ICC'Uted of killina their adoptiw father ud ~:llil
wife tetiificd the &tbcr repluty IDOletced tllea ··--their brOt.bct.
CberYt l.ampui. 16. and Joanna LamPMi, 19, mid
lbeir father, Johll Lampesi. puncbed, kickCd Dd daobd
tbetr brother, Ronald Laml)Ui; at the s.lilbtett ~
cation and molested them almost daily.
Their adoptive mother abo wu abusive, tbe lirb
sai.ci She oooc .. took Ronnie by the hair and btoaklJd iaim IPinst the c1olct door and then took his bead aad .._
it IP1DSl the floor," Joanna Lampui told a Qraiie
C.Ounty Su~r C.outt trial.
Both iirtl testified they tc'pUaLCty~ m .ex wttb
Lampui at least five times a week until nc-wu)ai.led for
six months in 1981 o.n one count of child molestation.
.. Nearly every daj' there was somethi.Dst .. )oaau
a.id, even tbouab Deputy District Attorney Bmat
Romney accused the li.steT'S of euaeratina.
The sirls took the stand as ddcmc witoes1a in the
tnal of David Oiristianson.. 18, accused of bciJJta9 the
brother shoot U.mpui and wound bis wi~. ltvtb
Lampui. ,S, on June 2, 1983. Christiamoa a.ad Roniald
Lam.pui arc cba.rJed with murder and attempcid miardcr.
Ronakt, Joanna and Cheryl are natural aibli.ap.wbo
became foster cb.ildren and then were ~·,by die
~sin 1977. ln 1980, the sisters-were laken &om the
N . y ~after~ rcponcd the.-allelDd moksudioDI..
Mrs. lampui testified earlier thatUber IOD tried to stranale her at the family home. abc saw ChristiamoG. C!d' a sun at her an imtant before she was sbot ill tbie
John Lampasi was slain with a single shot to the t.ct.
of the bead. Ronald Lampui confeaed to pOtice ao the
shoot.tnp, but his taped statements have lleeD nakd
inadmissl l>le 'in Christianson •1 trial became he first denied
his friend was involved and then claimttt Ouistiamon ...
shot bis mother. • 1
Oui.stianson's attorney. James Stotler, iJ uaettina that only the Lampui boy bad the motive to shoot the ~le. The Oui.stianson family's .22-c:alibcr pistol was in the shootinp.
Mesa approves
$41 Mbudget
Economlst to sped ln Mesa
Economist Arthur Laffer will speak Thursday
evening in 1he Grand Ballroom of the Westin South Coast
Plaza Hotel in Cost.a Mesa as the feature event of an
evening sponsored by the USC ~neral Alumnj Associa-
uon and the Orange County Young Alumni Oub.
The evening will begin with a no-host reception at
6:30 p.m. followed by dinner at 7:30 and Laffer's
presentation at 8:4S. Tickets arc $25 for students, $30 for
Alumni Oub members and $35 for all others. For
information, call Doug Jackson at 955-6072.
Child treatment center
urged for Orange County
BJ li.llEN E. KLEIN °' ............
Cost.a Mesa's $4 l millio.n budFt, reprCKotina a 4.S
percco.t iDcreuc in spcndina for 1984-IS over this year.
WU appro~'ed by the City Cou:ncil. •
The~ includes $32 million for operuiomo up
3.1 pen:cnt over the 1983-&4 b::a1 yew's fiame. aDd S9
million for capital improvements. a 9.1 percent inaca:.
The capital improvement money will inclode $4.S
miUJOo for revampmg the city's outdated storm drain Too man y emotionally disturbed kids sysfCm. ·
sltp t h rough system, Grand dury says
Archltectural group convenes By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dlllr ..... ...,,
these services," conunues the
citizen's panel that acts as a aovem-
ment watchdog.
.. Often they arc held lonaer than
necessary because ~ is no avail-
able place to send them -incrcasin&
the cost to the county and trauma to
the cbJJd, .. the Grand Jury repon
staled..
The report lists a series of actual
cases in Orange County that have
turned to ~Y because of the lack
of a treatment center.
City Ma..naBcr F~ SorsablJ rcc:ommeridCid the
council make storm drain improvements a top priority
this year. A SS0,000 ~study completed this
sprina identified ei&bt projects needed co uppadc tbc
system. The Orange County chapter of the Society of
Architectural t\dministrators, an affiliate of the American
institute of Architects, will meet Thursday morning at the
OCAIA office, 3840 S. Plaza Drive (an South Coast
Village).
Irvine architect Greg Pitcher will speak at the 11 :30
a.m. session. Those attending should bring their own
lunch and donate SI toward beverages. Call Betsy Nickless
at 549-2207 for further details.
Citing teen-age suicides, wrecked
families and children who tum to
crime, the Orange County Grand
Jury has asked the county to .. get
serious" about t.rcating emotionally
disturbed children.
The Grand-Jury scolded the county
for its failure to address the needs of
children whose problems are beyond
the scope of the county's Alben S1tton
Home. which lodges neglected and
abused children.
In one case, a teen-age girt killed
herself after being .. bounc:ecr from
private facility to private facility. In
another, a teen..qc boy who attacked
his mother and younger brother with
knives and razor blades became a
burglar after anemplS to provide him
therapy failed.
The bud#t does not include any ICl'OtlH.be-boud
salary raises l'or city employees, Sorsab&I said, becaute
nqotiations with the vanous city employee associations
have not been completed..
Tbe bud&et does reflect an i.nc:rase of 10 full~timc
positions in city qencies, indud.ina three police ofticer
positions ~ to improve the city's traffic petrol,
Sonabal said.
CALENDAR
In a report punctuated with grapluc
examples of children who have some--
bow slipped through the system, the
jury uraed the county to open a
t.rcatment center in Orange County
for troubled youths.
"Orange County, although one of
the largest and most affluent counties
in the United States, does not own nor
fund an i:ntennediate treatment
center that provides care to a child
who bas emotional problems and is a
danger to himself or otbcn."
In all the jury found 13 cases in
which youths bad slipped throuah the
county's safety net.
Revenue from retail sales tax continues to be the
largest contribuuon to the city's financial wcll-beina, be
said. This year, S 16 million worth of retail sales iu. made
up 38.8 pcrocnt oflhe city's total resources.
Property tax amounted to $6 million. be added.
Wednesday, June 20
Such a center, which would cost
more than SI million a year to
operate, should have at least 18 beds
and be equipped for t.rcating youths
for up to six months.
The Grand Jury noted that of
California's SS counties, Orange
County ranks 57th in fundina for
mental health care.
The Grand Jury recommends that
with the opening of Oran&cwood -a
new and 1arJer county facility for
abused and nealected children -supervison should designated the
1000-to-be-abaodoned Albert Sinon
Home as a center for emotionally
disturt>ed children.
At a public bud&et bearing Monday, representatives
from the South Coast Repert<>ry lbeatn in Com Mesa
and the South Coast Symphony, which intends to open its
fint 1CUOn in Costa Mesa this fall, asked for the city's
financial help. • 7:30 p.m., lrvtDe Commulty Services Commtuloa
, Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine. The council voted to discuss the S 130,000 bud&eted
for advertisins and promotions durina a study tcssion
ncxtmonthaoddccidcwbethertomakeanyofthatmoney
available to the two cultural IJ'OUps.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapaa Bea~ Set11Dic Salee, ud
Dlauter Prepuedae11 Committee, Police Department
Library, SOS f:orest Ave.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beacla Partiq, Traffic ucl
ctretllattoa Committee, City HaJ1 Conference Room, 505
Forest Ave.
"At the present time, these children
are beina denied adequate psychiatric
services because of the lack of funding
for ap~riate facilities," the Grand
Jury said m Its repon issued Monday.
·~There are dramatic examples of
the failure of the county to provide
Because of the county's lack of a
treatment facility, children often arc
"bounced around" from one place to
another or ..wronaly committed at
Camarillo State Hospital m Ventura
County. the Grand Jury said.
Supervisors should include fund-
ing for the center in the county's
l 984-85 bud&et, the Grand Jury said.
A $10,000annuaJpant toSCRisahudy included in
that S 130,000, Sorsabal said, with $20,000 available for
other unspecified cultural orp.nizations.
Pou cE Loe
Bank depositor grabbed,
robbed of $2,500 in Mesa
A Costa Mesa businessman about
to deposit $2,500 at the merchants'
window of the Bank of America al
1016 Irvine Ave. in Newport Beach
Monday af\emoon was forced out of
the bank and robbed, police reported.
The suspect. a hef\y, Caucasian
man in his 20s and about 6 fee1 tall,
pushed the businessman out the back
Coetalleu
An Enali1hman who befriended a
guest at die Westin South Cout Plaza
Hotel over the weekend wu arTetted on suspicion of commercial buralat)'
and foraery after he alleaedly chataed
food and drinb on lhc hotel aunt's
account Oeorae James, ll. wu
booked into the Costa Mesa Police Oepanm~l Jail 1n lieu of $101000
bail Sunday after I boicl manaeer
d.ilcovm:d be bad cbaracd $103 on
the acc:ount of a Santa Buban man
be bad me& at the pool. • • • Coin boxes io two laundry roomut
the Mall Ottk Al)&rtmcnts. SSS
Paularino A vc.. Yt'Cre broken into
10mctime this month. Residents di•
covered S900 bad been stolen in the
buraJariel. • • • • The offica of the Tran11.mcnca
Insurance Co .• al 420 Bristol St.1 were broken into owr the ~coo
and a S3,S78 computer was stolen.
Thieves apparentl)' pined ac.uu to
'
door of the bank and told the v1cum
to band over his bank bag.
When 1he businessman resisted.
the suspect pushed him against the
wall of the bank and grabbed the bank
ba&. The suspect fled on foot and
eJuded a poHce search of the area.
The teller at the merchant's wrn-
the s.ixtb-floor offices with keys.
Police said the buraJary was mnalar to
othen that have oc:icurred in the
buildina over the past several
months. • • • The hood. fender, beadli&hts and
bumper of a J.,uar X KE were stolen over the weekend while the car was
oarked at Ludinaton Street and St~n Drive. Lost was estimated
atSt,SOO.
" ~81acla
Policit received numaout com·
pltints from nei&bbors in the viaruty
of 62' Patt A VCAue Tuesday ~t
abOut noue comifta trom w Senior
All·Nilbt Party a~ Lquna 8c'acb Hi&b School. Patty ol'llftizm were
ldViled to~ the voJwne. • • • Cbrlstopber J. Kelly and
Chriatopbtt J. Walk~ both 18. Yt'C~
cakd fori~I ueeofnre..worb tn tl'le
city of LiaUna Beach aft.er bcin.a
apptthended by police shonl · af\cr
\
•
dow saw the robbery and gave pohcc a
description of the suspect. The
suspect did not display any ..,.capons.
The businessman. who operates an
auto shop, was taken to Hoq Mem-
orial Hospital where he was treated
and released for lacerations sustai'ned
when he was pushed into the wall.
midniaht this momma at 1390 South
Coast ffiahway. ••• A man was bit from behind on the
head with a bottle shonly af\er
midni&ht Tuesday in lhc Boat Ca·
nyon Shoppina Center. Not.hina was
reported taken from the vict1m. who
\\'U treated at South Coast Medical
Center and rclcued. Pobcc have no
suspccu in the ul
• • • Scube pr \\lorth $500 re-
ported itolcn from 1700 Ocean Froot
Tuesday afternoon. • • • A bW'1&r was $W1lcd by the
O«Upent in . de a residcncc in the 300
block of Monterey Drive early Tues.-
day momina. The iturudc:t QCd with
an u yet undetermined amount of b. •••• 1WO malt •hitc juYCtlilcs reported
to police Monday that ~ •'Ould
re'um money taken from the
Tbunton hoot in a ~~end bfQk.
in. No cha ha-ve been flltd.
• • • A residence in the 300 block of Alta
Vista Way was reported buraJ,arized
early Monday evening. The loss to the
owner bas not yet been determined.
Poantaln Valley
Someone smashed a front window
to pin entry into a rnidcnce in the
1 SOOO block of Meaah.er Street and
stole a color television 1et. a stereo
and jewelry. ••• A srcretary said someone stole a
diamond pendant from a DeCtlace
that she put on her desk at her place of
work at 181440 Amistad St. ••• SuspcctS 5tole apprownately 400
feet of uxd redwood split·tail ~.na
at the La Pu Apanments,, l 737S
Brookhunt SL • • • BuraJan stole a aray Craftsman
tool box conWnina abou1 1 SO tool
from • ..,. in the 8000 block of
Phom.ix A venue. .....
Someooc &tole S1 SO an car pans
after ~ into a storaae unil in
lbc I 0000 block of Slater A \"ea\le. • • • A thld' SIOle S60 in cash from a
eune left iA an Wllocked Mercury
Coupr in the oarti.na lot at Athletes
m Action, 17102 NcWbopc
,..•port811c•
A Newport Beach woman fC'POfUld
the thd\ ~an auto ltcftO \'itued at saoo ber Mercedes DUted i.D tht 3..oo block of Via Lido Tuetday. • • • A Newport 8eacb man repontd the
theft or an auto icrw valued at S200 from tus van puked in \M 200 block
of Via Lido Tuaday. • • • A ~n Beach man~~ the
theft of a urfboard valued at $250 Crom hi car parked on Riptide
Tu y.
• • • A Newport Beach man reported the
theft of a bicycle valued at SSOO from
bis home tn the 300 block of Ahso
Avenue Tucsdav. 6 ••
A Newport Beach man reported the
theft of a Cadtllac valued at S 12.500
from the 1600 block of 16th Street
Tuesday. • • • A Newport Beach woman reported
the theft of$4.600 in Jewelry from her
borne an the 400 block Qf Gaviota
Tuesday.
A homeowner who rcponed a
possible buraJary a.n PfOIJ'CSS about 2
Lm. today on Bluff View dnve
discovered what bad pined entry to
the home was a possum that 51.ipped
in throuah a sH~ fas door.
About $800 in new pauo fumitun
...,-as reponed stolen about 10:30 p.m.
Tuesda)' from a home on Pasco de Vep. ••• Two meTI in their 20s and aiuvenile
•'ere anated for suspicion of assault
about 9 p.m. TUQday on Easuhorc.
Police had no immediate infonmtion
abo\lt the dispu • • • A staw wan.b bttweca $200 and
S400 sioa &om a Volbwletn
pel'bd ill \be 17000 bled of&iunan
A venue T\leldal. • • Scuba ~ -.. stolen rtom an unlocked ¥Chide oa Mootanu .ad
o • tcona val • • • • cash and jeol.dty.were stolen ~m
a home in the 4000 bloc or Vale
Strut. A ICrttn was removed • • • era equipment was en m a
bttak·in on ~ R\lD dilcovdtd
about I a..m. Tucsdav. • • • ~ t)~11ta. VCR and television
was taken from an industrial bu:ildina
m the 17000 block of Main Street,
discovered taken about 8 Lm. Tues-
day.
Bantizacton Beach
Thru people in a red Vcp pWled
up to the iu.rofthe Broadway store at
Huntington Center, n77 Edi1'8tT
Ave. Tuesday. A woman rtl1 inside,
grabbed merchandise ud returned to
the car. which drove off'. The loss
included 52 mC'D'n:hirtswortb more
than S l ,000. • • • Ao employee of Cal Wonhiniu>n
Dodge. 16555 Beach Blvd.. told
polict Tuesday ~t someone stole 1
stereo unit from a silvu 19UMA%da
RX7 at the lol. TbC kia waseaimated
at S300. ••• A resident of the 21000 b&ock of
lockhaven Citde rcponcd ~
that someone buralarizOd his bolne,
cntenna throuab a locked dooi &om
the pnae. The loss iDduded SlOO an
cash. • • • Someone 1tole the buba~ &om a
blue Buick Rep.I l)aked in f'rollt of a
home on the 9600 block of' ~
i on Ori ve. The loss was estimated
at 321 • • • _ A pus key ~dy\llCd in a bW1W'Y It the awdren't Medical
ltt, 17712 ae.ch Blvd.. I pb~
ic:ian rq>Ol1ed Tuclday. 'tbe Iola
iDcludcd 22 twe lets~ s 1,100. • • • A b&ilCk 1913 Honda ~ ~ ltOft n.aday tom •
I&"-on the 9400 block ~ ....
Clrde The loa wu estimated 1•
Sl,400.
A4 **Orange Coast DAILY PIL.OT/Wedne$dey, Jufl6 20, 19&4
Killer goes to chair p_rofessi!Jginnocenee
STARKE, Aa. (AP) -
Carl Shriner, a boyish-
faoed drifter convicted of killina a convenience stort
clerk during a robbery in
I976, was executed tOday
in the electric chair at
Aorida State Prison.
for the Oct. 22, 1976,
shoolina of Judith Ann
Carter in nearby
Gainesville.
J 976. Shrioer's last-ditch
bid for a rtt>rieve wu
denied Tucaday by the high
coun.
Shriner, 30, was put to
death shortly after 7 a.m.
He becarn~ me 20t.h JlCI'· son in the nation and the
sixth in Florida to be eJC.·
ecuted since the U.S. Su-
preme Coun Ufted its ban
on the death penalty in
About 3S oppoaenu Qf
the death penalty hetd a
candlelight viJil in a
pasture across from the
prison, while about I 0 sup-
poncn of c.aoi\al punish·
Hawthorne Christian School
"For the Right Start in life"
Join the Summer Fun
at DAY CAMP!!
GIVEMOMA VACATION. • •
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• Before-care and After-care Available
JUNE 18th thru SEPT. 7th
Enroll Now-Fall Semester
Starts Sept. 10th
Reasonable Tuition
SUMMER SCHOOL
JULY 5th thru JULY 31st
"A Private School of Distinction Founded in 1942"
IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16835 llOOKHURST ST.
Dun Ii vet
Scotch
86 Proof
sa!s~
,~..__ ~-.en
We Will Meet
or Beat Any
Current Locally
Advertised Price!
Black
Velvet
C d. 80 ana Ian Proof $gas
Popov
Vodka
80 Proof
BEER BONANZA
Schlitz • .,..... .. u"" ,,,IC. 12 .. c. .. '317
1311 Beck 's • .,..."°"'' '",., ...
Budweiser or Coors
Stroh's or Miller's
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Smirnoff IO rrtet 111 l•. s911
Kavlana IO~ Ur s311
Popov s411 IO PfMI Lb
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1.11 llr. '2"
111 Llr. s911
B Chi .. '""·.... '8" oca ca 8tMl""""lllnl 'n llr.
C I M IO ....... ~ 1541 apta n organ ,,_ 111c.1 m ..
A I t ao,.,... s911 pp e on .......... 1J1UC11 110 ..
C 'Ba ........ 1411 ora y ...... •• ,...., .. , L1r.
St El .. ""' s311 . mo ...... a• ('firtlo ....... 1 110 ..
TEQUILA
Jose Cuervo w.. eo""' 110 .. '6"
Senorita w11111. w.. eo""' 111 ur. 18"
Sauza Hornltos 10"'"' 11a ... 1841
Monte Alban 't!:'. ~= 1so. 1871
La '81 Mar1ertta lalt • ea. 59c
STRAIGHTS & BLENDS
Jim Beam ......... """ , 11 L•. '10"
Earty Times .......... """ 111 Lit 1911
Ancient Age .......... ,,.. 11a1111'4"
Old Hickory ....... """ , 11 lit
1911
Seagram's 7 Crown .r:.. , ... •532
SCOTCH
S b '9'' cores y .. ,,.. , 11 ur
Old Smuggler • ,,.. lit 1611
Clan MacGregor • """ , ,. t• '911
Dewar's •• l ..... •""" , n l• '1817
Hedges & Butler "'::.!1~'1. Lit '1211
GIN & VERMOUTH
Gordon's Gin
Stanton's Gin
Booths Gin
• ,.,.., Lt< •&11
•""" t 1 lt LI• •111
sgu .. ,.,... 1r1 11< ·
Bombay Gin .. ,,... • ,. l• 11611
Gallo Vermouth °"" .... , ... 1171
L1Me11 Vermouth :2.: , .... 11"
Cft•••ll•r Ch•rrJ lr8Mr , .. • 13" -... -........
·-··.;....• _. -~-........-------~ .
I .,
menlpthercd in an adjoin· tioned to me LO look for the r------.,.._----. in.a field. lipll. but I already saw the
Tho youthful-lookioa liatn when 1 aoocptod Christ as Lord many yean Shrinermetovemta)\t with aao. On~ now I get 10 So
• public defender, death ltandln 1t iDCJ enjo)'Tt wt1b
penalt>-opponenu and the the Lord. Catt E. Sbriner. ••
Rev. Fred Lawrence of He said earlier that be Gainesville before sittina had made peace with God
down to his last meal, a and that be wu ''not bitter
steak dinner, Aid Depart· toward anyone. J don't
ment of Correcuoos believe Chritt or God ~~esman Vernon Bf'l.d. want m~ to be bitter."
Shriner entered thedeatb "I didn't do it, and ther,
chamber at 7 a.m., a switch know I didn't d o it, •
sending electricity was Shriner told repo'1Crs in a
turned on at 7:0S..and the ~n interview Monday.
convict was pronounced 'Police, prosecutors ... are
dead at 7: 12, prison of· powerful. They can make
ficials said. ~~~}~k guilty if they lllllr!!ll-'-
ln a last statement. read Shriner bas said that he
by Shriner while strapped (knows who killed tbe \tore
in the chair, he said: ''Many clerk. but has refused to ----~--.....:-__;._..:._....i
of my friends have men~ ·name anyone. C&rl Shriner
• PART I
10;00 A.M. thf'\I 10:45 A.M. THE P8YCHOTERAPIST
hymour M. K~. M.s.w .. i..c.a.w. P,_tatlon -"SeniltMty & Pwoec>llon"
10:45 A.M. lhru 11:00 A.M. ~ & OuMtlont
PARTll
11 00 A.M thru 11:45 A.M. THE PSYCHIC
JeMlc8 Gre«:Nn P:alrmotlt
Pr-tatlon -••8ef1t11Mty & "-GePtlon"
11"45 A..M. 1111'\1 12 Hoon 01ecue11on1 & au..tlOns
12 Noon lhru 2:00 P.M. Bl'Mk tor L..unch & W°"llhop A.llignmenlt
AFTERNOON SESSJON
2:00 P.M. 1~:30 P.M. WOfQhop & Laba 3;ll0 PM. tlvu 4:~ P.M. Summary -OU.tlonl _.._
9:00 A.M. thn.o 10:00 A.M_
FleglstratlOn &
lnt100Uellona •
'ColtM wtll M ~ In mominQ a attwnoon. · Eacl1 pertlclf)ellt mu11 lllTM09 lot iMlr own tunc11. __._...,. ...... -nu ..... ..._._.,..
(114) t-.-Pre ~lion Fw ISO per.--,..-door MS per~
.,..,.. .
I
/
I
..... ;"
STORE HUiJRS:
Monday · Thursday:
10:<>'am to 9:00 pm
Friday & Saturday:
9:00 em to 9:00 pm
Sun.: 10:00 am to 8:00 pm
From The Snack Bar
I Crtrua tf t rac• 2 s5 Country Coo er ,,, ..... "' •A 11 u r.i
Lays or Ruffles ,.., ... ch .. u., '171
Solo ,.,sttc c.c111d c11p1 10 c1 • •t. 7gc
Wedding Sparkling Wines
Mumm 158 .. s1311
Jacques Troulllard (fraK•l no• sgea
Di Rosi ••• ,,..."'. 1 .. 1,1 1H Ml s3tt
Paul Cheneau ,,,, .. 1 m ""5311
Cit s19n cquot ""' ... 1,,.... 150 ""
F s411 reixenet C-lltt<• llP••I 780 •
Rene Barbier ''""'' m,.. 5381
Domalne Chandon .:':~. m ... 5818
Cook·s '"'"'h'"°"'uu1 m. '2"
Le Domalne 11"' °". 1rv1 m 1111
5211
Summer Blush Wines
LIGHT & AEFAEIHINQ
Sutter Home .... Zill*"
Weibel w•• c.Mn1t1 .......
Sebastian! -.::.:: ::: ..
Segeshlo· w11111 Zllll•"
Weibel ••• lillllftitt
C C llldl!IHI lllllC rosa anyon iw11111 Z111t1M111
150"" s311
190"" •3•1
!10 1111 1341
711"" 1211
110 Ml '2"
no"" 1111
Jug· Box Wine Values
Marlo's
Colony
&ummlt
Clllllll. ,... c...... """"· .... ll'Wy.AIM'
Cllttfl, ... Attl ......... HI . 1211
Hlr 1411
WIN*TIM·ltt Cilltllt. 1411 ""'·"*·........, 4 l tr
Almaden C::-..:r:.·=:..'=· u llf 12"
Imported Wine Values
Blue Nun u ...... 11111(11 1tt • 1311
C Illa L.-.ecu llitloce tufl I Hit 2 '-. 7
Rlunlte L~ • .._.,....,...,.,u. '511
Vouvray ,~.=-... 1 , .... 1317
Cortenay ...... .,,_,, , .... '3"
Chtvdlr dt VtdrtnH ~· 1 .... 1~1
Mouton Cadet :;.=:, , .... 1141 •
Bola "'• '2"
Spumante
Extra Dry, Brut
or Almond
Summit
Whitt Zlnfandtl $299 iu::,: llrtl
1.1 llttf
Beringer Wine
Chlnln lllnc
Sebastiani Specials
Ch1rdonn1y ,..,.ft""' , .... 1611
C1btm11 """' ....,.. 17,1 Sauvtgnon 111• , .... •an Brut Champagne , .• .., , ....
81m1y Beauf"llt '"t , .. .. '3"
81wurztramlner ,.., ,, ... 13"
1721 Superior Avt., Cotta Miii • PlttM: 145-1108
25871 MulNIMla, Miraftri V"fo • Plt1nt: 155· 1437
10932 Wutmiftsttr. 8lnltft Grovt · Phtnt: 131--4145
263 South Eucld Avtnue. Anaheim • PfttM; 111·1192
14417 Cutvtr DriVt. nlM · PNftl: 551·2757
\
Reagan's Star Wars
'viofates ABM treaty'
By tlte A110d.a&ed Preti
-W ASHINOTON -The Reapn administration bat
come close to a clear U.S. violation of the 1972 anti-
beUistic missile treaty by pushing for development of a
1 hi&h·t.echnolOIY defense again.st nuclear attack, a panel of
sccunty and anm control specialists aaya. The panel
opened Tuc"1ay what it called a "national campalJll to
save the ABM tRaty'' by tobbyina Conaress to withhold
funds for what critics call R«pn's 0 Stat Wan" defensive
system, involvina efforU to dCV-elop laser auns and other
space-based weaponry. Sponsors of the ca.mpa.ian include
fonner President Carter. former Secretary of State Dean
Rusk and former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara.
WambJg label• on ma•Jc?
LAS VEGAS, Nev. -Records and tapes that have
sexually explicit, profane, violent or v:ulgar lyrics should
be required to carry warning labels, the National PT A
declared in a convention resolution. It called for a rati04B
system to warn an °unsuspecting p~blic" of music
unsuitable for children.
Hawall boat.toued about
HONOLULU -Ten passengers received minor
injuries when a cruise boat carrying more than 400 people
was tossed by lar:se waves as 1t returned from a tour of
Pearl Harbor.I officials said. 0 The tail end was out of the
water twice rrom the size of the waves," said Thomas
George, one of the passengers on Tuesday's cruise aboard
the l28·foot Pearl Kai. "I mean, it was bad."
AMA backs hlglJer ta.res
CHICAGO -The American Medical Association,
?,?~~.!!!!: t~a~~~~~...! were politically sensitive, voted ~~~~'et·=· taxes on aloohol and cigarettes, and increased payroll taxes 'Were among the guidelines approved Tuesday on a voice
vote by the AMA's 353-member policy-m.ak:ing House of
Delegates.
Houston OKs gay Jaw
HOUSTON -Unswayed by a crowd that LDter·
rupted a debate on gay riJ.bts with chants and Christian
hymns, the city council approved two ordinances
forbidding discnmioation against homosexuals in mu-
nicipal jobs. The ordinance outlawing discrimination
because of "sexual orientation" in the city's affirmative
action program passed the 1 5-member council by a vote of
8· 7 Tuesday.
Sperm not from LA man?
LOS ANGELES - A wealthy man who participated
in a "test-tube baby" program before dying in a plane crash
with his wife did not donate the sperm for two embryos
that remain frozen in Australia, the lawyer for bis son said
today. The embryos have forced Aµstralian authorities to
talcc up the question of whether the "orphans" mar. be
heirs to the estate of Mario and Elsa Rios, who were killed
la.st year in Chile.
Levi closing 11 plants
SAN FRANCISCO -Sluggish growth in the market
for jeans and a steep decline in profits for the second
quarter of this year has led Levi Strauss & Co. to decide to
close 11 plants and lay otT 2.SOO workers worldwide. The
San Francisco-based clothing manufacturer announced
Tuesday that plants in Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas,
California, Canada and France would be closed.
Recluse held In killings
BELMONT -A recluse was booked for investiga-
tion of murder after the body ofbis mother and a man were
found buried in the basement of a house that neighbors
complained was the source for yean of a mysterious
stench. authorities said. Roben W. Black. 53, was booked
Tuesday at San Mateo County Jail in the death of Agnes
Black. 74, whose body was found in a plastic bag buried
next to the body of a man police believe may have been
Black's uncle, Isaac Black.
A villtlon bJ•pectlon• vowed
SAN FRANCTSCO -Following a "white glove"
inspection of 350 major commercial air carriers, the
federal Department of Transportation plans to conduct a
similar review of the nation's general aviation industry,
Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole bas announced.
Dole, speaking to members of the Commonwealth Oub of
California on Tuesday, said that over the next 12 to 18
months the department will inspect flight schools, repair
stations, air taxis and all forms of air transportation.
TV cblmp kJdJJapped
PALMDALE -Mikey the TV star has been
kidJia ped. ~ot'tbe little kid who hates what's on his breakfast
table, but the chimpanzee with such credits as "Dukes of
Hazzard" and 0 Alice," the one's who's capable of turning
that table into splinters. Someone cut into Mikey•s cage
early Tuesday and abducted the 4--ycar-old chimp from a
wild animal compound near Palmdale.
ltmba•y b_lut till• one
VlENN" Austria -A bomb exploded near the
Turkish Embassy today in a car reaisteRCS to an embany
employee, killina a person in the vehicle and terious.ly
injuring three people nearby, police said. Police refuted to
comment on the identity or nationality of the body found
inside the demolished car. which was blown up 011 a side
street next to the embassy.
CllbJ.a Jeader to USSR
PEKJNG -Despite the abrupt cancellation lua
month of a hiah·level Soviet visit to China, lhe Chine1e
Foreign Ministry ennounood today that its top Soviet
expcn will travel to the Soviet Union th.it 1ummcr. The
trip. which also a1JJ for stops in Bulaaria and
Czechoslovakia. wu a pOSaiblc indication that Pekina and Mo1eow don't want their uneasy relations to deteriorate further.
Jet ml8'Jap OIJ carrier
MANILA. Philippines -Two U.S. Navy aviatol'I
csc:apcd injury but their F-14 5tcr plane was t.dly damaacd when it slid actON the t deck of the carriet
America aft.er its left main wheel oo peed on touehclown.
the Navy aid todly. A.iabt deck pcnonnel suffered no
injuries and tbe ship s Oiahl deck v.ras not damaaed, 1 press
rcleue Crom the 7th F1t'et pubhc affain office al ncia:tby
Subic Bay naval bate said.
LlltbJ Amerlca.a debt malled ·
CARTAGENA.Colomtiia-Eleven litinAmenc.an
countnes ficed with more than $300 billion in fore.iin
debts a~ to be dav~ today on whether or not to
defy bln\s pres.inJ them for peymenas on la&ns. Latin
America bU a foman debt of about SJ50 billion. ,
\. ~ c \
-
...
1) .S. economic griow.th brisk
Jy ne Aaoelat.td Preti
The economy is rwina an an estimated S. 7 pertent
annual tate in the 1uU-uncompleted second quarter, the
Commerce Department estimated today in a tepOrt that sent lntemt ratei souina on financial market$.
Not only is arowth stronaer than economists had
expecttd.. b1.il the SoYtmmeot revised upwardit.ulready
brisk arowth fiaurft for the fir11 three months ot the year.
It also said inflation was beina held to the slowest rite
in 17 years. Inflation, IS measured by an U\deX tied to the
~national product. is riaina at a 2.8 percent annual rate
tn the A~t-1 une quaner, ttie sfoWnt arowth since the I .S
percent of the second quarter of 1967, the sovemment
said.
EcQoomi1&1, who bad been projectina-srowth of
under S percent for the current quar1eT, have said that
unless economic activit}' llows to a more sustainable pace,
inflationary pressure Will build and private demand for
credit will surge -something that could propeJ interest
rat.et even bi&her.
ln its report today, the Commen:e Department laid
the .. real" sross national product, the inflation-adjusted
value of the 1ood1 and services produced by the economy,
increase(! at an annual rate of 9. 7 percent for the first
quarter rather than the 8.8 percent reported last month.
The initial estimate of tint-quarter srowth was a 7.2
percent rise. The 9.1 percent spurt matched the explosive
growth of the second quarter of last year, which was the
fasteit quarterly surge since the second quarter of 1978.
Arab pilots told.
'shoot on sight'
MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -Saucli Arabia bas
sSae
SUMMER SALE AND CLE
THURSDAY ONLY!
.15.99
Orange Coast OAlLY PlLOT/Wedowi8y, Jw'9~. 11M Aa
"' .
Alien amnesty
version nlXed
W ASHINGTO_M (AP -MO\ina IOWardlbe di.mu
of tts often emblnCiCd i.mnupation reform ddl9te. d9c
House mused to lWTOW the scope of I ptOpOled am~
that wouid put resi&nt S1atuno a ":'lhadow s;:::J'e0oe
of millions of aliens •ho entered the c:ouatry bdon
1982 ... If you vote for amnesty! you're votina foi dae dleft .:
of American jobs." Rep. Kent Hance. O.Tex., decWed 11
debate resumed Tuesday.
The House, nevertheless. rejected 24s;.111 aa -
amendment to~ the amocsty propcmJ. ooetaiaed la a
comprehensive immigration reform ~.into liM WIG a
Senate-pessed version that woWd put ~
resident status only to those wbo have been in the coUalry smc:e t 977.
Defeat of the amendment wu one of' the few viclona
in the drawn~ut immia;rattoJl det.te for the I I-member
Hispanic Caucus, which opposes the bill but favon ill '
amnesty proVJsion. I
~ Long-sought duo
nab6ed in garage
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Twenty heavily armed
FBI 34ents took two escaped death row inmates from
Virginia by surprise thanks to .. patience and intensive
surveillance" around the home of the convicted
murderers' uncle, authorines said.
James Dyrel Briley and Unwood Earl Briley were
ancsted without a strug)e Tuesday night outside a car
repair shop in a poor rmdenti.al oei&bborhood of nortb
PbiladclpbJa..
The arrests ended a manhunt from N'orth Carolina 10
Canada that began May 31 when the Brileys escaped from
the Mecklenburg Correctional Center near Boydton, VL,
with four other convicted murderers.
NCE
• t
BUYS ANY SUMMER SHORT ·IN OUR
ENTIRE ROBINAIRE COLLECTION
•· .
Reg. SU-$26. wt'w math u short and swttt-o~ da) only, sat,oe JJ%.1 Choose from soluis, plauh
and stripes. all in polyester/cotton bfmds. &cau~ -you can ~ haw enough shorts for summer.
Only in Robma1rP Sportswear, 7, all stores exce/Jt Sherman Oak.s and Santa Monica. No mail or
phone ordns, please.
SHOP MONDAY-FRIDAY 10.9, SATURDAY 10-6, SUNDAY 11-6.
ROBINSON'S NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND • (7 14) &44·2 00
..
I
A8 Orange Coat OAILY PILOTIWednac:tay, June 20, 1984
I SCH OO L NOTES
Paw K.Jo term.an, son of Mr. and Mn. Walter
Klostcnnan ofLaauna 8cacb, was awanted bi1 doctorate
in mcclaClDe at recent commencement exercises of the
Albany Medical CoUeie of Union Univenity, Albany, N.Y.
Klo tennan, a 1973 Laauna Beach Miah School
graduate, was electcd...a member of A.lpba_~ Alpha.
the national honorary medical society, reocived the
Cbarle1 Eckcn Award for outstandiaa academic achieve-
ment in sursery and was one of four lflduates to receive
cum laudc distinction. • • • Katheran J. Fuerbringer, Foun\&in Valley, bas been
awarded a bachelor of arts devte at the 21st annual
Commencement at California Lutheran Collete.
Thousand Oaks. • • • Several Oranae Coast students were amona those
tocluded on the Harvey Mudd College, Oaremont, second
semester dean's List:
Elise A. Sumbera. daughter of Marlene C. Bumbera.
Irvine; Stephen 8. Flynn, son of Elizabeth M. Flynn, Costa
Mesa; Victoria A. Lamar, daughter of Evelyn R. Lamar,
Costa Mesa.
David W. Caress. son of Mr. and Mrs. William J.
Caress. Jr., San Clemente; Michael W. Redmond, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Redmond, El Toro; and DeboTah C.
Bebout, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Alan Bebout..
Mission VieJO.
DouA!u E. Jones1 son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert H.
Jones. NCwpon Beach, was tncluded on the Hillldale
O>lleae, Micb., aecond semester dean's list.
The dean's list is published each semester and lilts all
studeoll who attain &ride point averages of3.4 or better on
<>&den, who was promoted '1urtnl commencement
from cadet corporal to cadet sergeant in the Junior
Reserve Officcn• Tra.inina Corps, wu de ilnated to the
National Honor Society and received a Kemper scroll as
an outstandina student. • •• a scale of 4.0. • • • Vivian L MJdseo~ Cos1a Mesa, was included on the 'Scott Kilpelrid., son of Mr. d Mn Roben Northern Arizopa Univcnity's Dean's List for the 1984
Kilpetric of Mission Viejo, bu been awarded Honors at spnna semester.
Ent.ranee from Westmont Colleae in Santa Barbara for the To be included on the dean's list, a studeru must
198-i ~semester, the hiahest academic rtcoptition liven achievea minimum grade point a veraae of3. S on ucale of
to entenoa students. 4.0 for all course work taken during the semester.
Kilpatrick is a araduate of Newport Christian High • • • School, Newport Beach. Bruce A. Richman, son of Mr. and· Mrs. lsaac
• • • Richman of Newport Beach, has been awarded a bachelor
Eric Steven Sanfprd, son of Mrs. Linda Groth of of science degree from the California Institute of
Costa Mesa, has been awarded a bachelor of arts dcarcc Technology, Pasadena, at the institute1s 1984 commence·
from Colorado Colleie in Colorado Springs, Colo. at the ment.
1984 commencemenL • • •
Colorado Collqe was founded in 187 4 and bu pined Pomona College has awarded bachelor of ans dearces
rccoanition for its adoption of a bJock plan under which at the 1984 commencement to the fbllowina students:
students take one course at a time for three and one·half Anne C. Bunning, dau.ahter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester weeks Bunning, Irvine; David W. Mason, son of Mr. and Mrs.
HoW.rd Martin Ogde~ .. so~ of Mr. and Mrs. Howard RobertG. Mason, Irvine; ~man ¥abtawi, dau.ghterofMr.
E. Ogden of Costa Mesa. who was a hi.ah school junior and and Mrs. Jawad Ana bu wt, H untmgton Beach, and Jeffrey first·Y~ cadet at Kemper Military School and College. D. L~ndberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Lundberg.
Boonvil!e. ~~·· bas been designated to tbe school's Huntmgton Beach. • • •
scholasuc. m1b~.and general (extra-curricular achieve. H~len Claire Sword, dau&hter of Mr. and Mrs.
mcnt) honor soc1eues. • Charles H. Sword of Corona det Mar. was awarded a
~~~~~~~~-I
Orcmge County Music
Refreshing and Relaxlng
bachelor of ans dq.rcc magna cum laude at Princetoi
University's l37th commencement on June S. d wiJ
Sword m~ored in comparative literature an begin araduate work at Jndiana University tn the fall. • •• Joseph T. Broderick, Jr., Costa Mesa. 11 on~ of 2()
araduilillf ~nto11 Who have been awarded cs~uons fo
out1taf'¥1in1 scholastic performance at UC Davis. • • • Wblttier CoUqe tw awarded bachelor of art.I~
to the foJloWina Oraoae O>unty students •t the 198'
commencement: Marprct Krom, Huntinaton ~b
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Krom; Harvey Williama
Jr. Huntinaton Beach, son of Mr. and Mn. Har¥
wlUiams; David Fowler, Costa Mesa, son of Mr. and M
Richard Fowler; and Leslee Neuhauser, Newpon Beac
dauabter of Mr. and Mrs. William Neuhauser. ~ • • • • Christopher Sharon, son of Mr. and Mn. Lewis J
ofHuntinaton Beach, achieved honors, a 3.0 to 3.33
point average, for the spnog term at New Hampto1
School, New Hampton, N.H. • •• Laura L. Merritt, dau&hter of Betty S. and John .:
Merritt of Newport Bcac6, has been honored on tht
Harvey Mudd College dean's List for her final. semester
Merritt graduated from Harvey Mudd Colleae 10 May.
J
Dimes awards glvf!n
The Orange County Chapter of the March of Dimeo
were to Jive two grants to UC Irvine researchers ID(
summer internships to two high school students during i
noon presentation today at the medical center in Orange
Psychologist Lynn Nadel was to receive a grant «
investigate bow stress and poor nutrition affect neuri
development in the womb.
Audiologist David McPherson was to receive 41
award to study high risk infants.
Students Sunny Ryu of Costa Mesa and Margueris.
Sanchez -of Santa Ana were recipients of swnmel
internship scholarships. Ryu will work for th.e CosU
.. "' fflf;..'.:K id!r.i~ ..
FMSIERED
r; ·~~™1~~~~~~~7:~;·11 ~ '~'1'A~"Q..hl>ti~h'lillf6~s Wiit tevrlta~'<lu?ina a mccrlria a
the foundation's professiOnal advisory committee. Twerr
ty..eiaht new members arc to be named to the volunteei
panel, which advises the foundation on bow to bca
support their campaign to prevent birth defects.
When you add a phone,
leasing makes sense.
.. All these years I've been
running upstairs from my
work: hop just to take a call. Well , I
decided. time to lease another 01'
Reliable from AT&T ... and save a
fr 1 w steps."
Low monthly cost
.. For all the great service it
f,rive~ me, I just pay a litt le bit each
... rnonth. And leasing gives me
choices. I chose this Trimlineot from
a hrreat line of AT&T telephones.
And leasing means I can change
colors or models anytime I want."
Repairs at no extra charge
"Of course, the way AT&T
builds a phone, I don't expect any
trouble. But the nice part about
leasing is if there are any problems.
AT&T is there to take care of them.
I just call their toll-free number or
bring it to one of their Phone
Centers. They take care of it at no
extra charge.''
Leasing means relaxing
":rhe whole idea of leasing i~
relaxing! No worry about repairs ...
or anything else.
"After all, there's plenty to fix
around the Griffith place without
adding telephones to the list!"
AT&T Consumer Sales & Service
Call this toll· free number 24 hours a day.
1-800-555-8111
This numl>t.>r will t.·onnl'Cl
\'OU tot ht• offic.:e in your nrea. . .
• ATa.T
t '"1'' I• r 1 I Tr 1 ti 1rL ••I \I~ l «
1h.f \lA.1 I '"'"'''•'-~-' '-4.t~lf t
Anaheim
Anaheim Plaza
500 N. Euclid St Suite 109
Coat1 Meu
3033 S Bristol St Suite A
E11t Anaheim
Irvine
14805 JeNrey Road Suite F
Mlaalon Viejo
Orange
Town & Counrr \
777 S Main St Suit
2236 E Lincoln Ave 24000 Ahc1a Parkway SP 34
I
NB 'Bookf est' begins
The Newport Beach Public Library launches it
"Boole.fest of Champions," a summer reading program fo
children th.is week.
A lar&e number of suggested titles will be provide(
from the library's extensive children's collection. How
ever, book selection is up to the individual child.
The library also wtll stan the "Read-T er Me Oub" fo1
children who arc not yet reading independently.
Other oon-rcadtng acuv1t1es at the library thi,!
summer include a stuffed animal Olympics and films. Fo1
more information, call 640-3134 or drop into your loca.
library.
Early Bird Dinner
Specials s6. 95
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
Complete Dinner with choice of
soup or salad and dessert
673-7726
~THE PENINSULA
BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA
IN MINUTES
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Coa1t Bank Building
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UNDER A
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NAME?
All new bu1lnea1e1 ualng 1 flctttJou•
n1me, mu1t by lew be regtltered with
the County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT
provide• the form• end fHlno ••rvfcea
for our cu1tomera. If you 1re 1t1rtln9 1
new bualn••• Clfl the DAIL y PILOT for
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·'The Soviet -who for years have been't.he world' greats &and
power-arenowchallenglngtheUnttedStatesforcontrolol'.theeaa. ••
Jf cCartlJylsin threatens
pubUclaLaguaaBeach
To the Editor: It is indeed rearettable that the
McCarthyism in Laauna Beach -Kenney adminiitntion, beiq unin·
tbe thouabt is terrifyina. Council formed and naive, acc:epuid bid lep.1
member Neil Fiupatrick raUy be-advice in era~ the above situ·
Heves be is the ••All American Boy." ation. Concerned citittns believe this
Concerned citizens believe he is a will open up a Pandora's Box and
storm trooper, usi.na Nazi tactics and probe~ly ~offa lan~~ of new
c:losopby. This S1-tement is justi· lawswu in Laauna. This is a step
by item 6 of the City Council t.ckward in time. •.
reau1ar meeting held on J unc S. Concemina our lepJ siatus, the city r.lte~ 6 concerned reportina of ofLaaunaBeacbisnowthedefcndant ~units. Quotina from the aaenda in well over 200 lawsuiu. The thouaht
item 6: "Revise the policy concernina is ftiahtcni.nJ.
eg>ortina of illepl units to delete the The illepI unit (rumor baa it that U'IQ~ment for a sianature of the there are about 2\~) hu been a ~poruna party on the complaint ~or problem in i...quna Beach for
fo 1. (Fitzpatnck)." Votina for item decades. Most of the people it
Fitzpatrick, Collison. Kenney· encompasses are needy scnion wbo
inst, Gentry, Minkin absent, why? live on Social Security, SSJ, fixed
. The abov~ raises the followina incomes or small pensions. These
unportant issues that require needy seniors must be protected by a
lhswen: "srandfatber clause." In the mean·
l; Due process would be ~olated. !-im~ the city council should now ?\us must not be permitted to amplement the aencral plan and all iu ~ ~J ramifications permi~ our needy ·
' NOWWEVEG
.JACSAHR•._
eal•••let
Deported
in past,
jobless bi
tutu.re?
Stmpson-Mazzoli
worst of all worlds
for brown-skinned
• WASHINGTON -In the 1950s,
the late Woody Guthrie wrote a IOll
about illepl Mexican &uit picten
who were rounded up and cteponed
from tbe Uniled Swa. TbCy were
P.UtODI~.~~~· ch*MtCilg. '~-t7 :~~~?1J:f ..
~ ... c.oat ·, · ·!'!!. ~J!~out thetr ~~ .-~nu ~... . :;;:.:J:;f1S~~~£1}','!¢k~PJ ~j!i~25~!!!!!!~-~~~!~~Q~-'IXR~ll!"-------~~--!l!il!~l!l!llll~llJl!lll-llJl!lll91!111111 ..... cme·~ ac:cuser. (This is DO lonaer BeacUtope .. ourneedy • ~ ~ "t'rs.;.~;-::':-;_~nj· ' .. Lt ... ~
"Goodbye to my Juan, pJdbye
possible 1D Laauna Beach.) seniors out of Laauna! End Sov1· e s ----Based on the above, the city of McCarthyism in Lquna Beach -In I I a e
Laguna Beach would now become the this it foreian to our way oflife.
accuser and would be held accoun-ALAN E. ADAMS
McEnroe Is tennis' crybaby
to U S t I f th Rosalir.a. Adios mis am.tp. Jcsm . . con ro o e seas =:::1:a;;,°:ridewo::~==
Af1 they will all you will be •
table by the accused. Lquna Beach
·1 To the Editor:
Sportsmanship lay bleedina and
seriously wounded at Roland Garros
in Paris Sunday as John Mc Enroe
was qain an embarrassment to the
United States and the game of tennis.
What a contrast to the araciousness
in defeat displayed by Chris Evert
1!.loyd.
He stood poutin• on the stand,
ryfusina to bold up his bead and then
Hurried off to the locker room without
iworcl. For all the world like a spoiled
Child. And unfortunately be is OUR
spoiled child.
Ood help us all if Mc Enroe is
chosen to represent us when tennis
becomes an Olympic sport I shudder
at the thouahL I. for one, have
watched my la.st Mc En.roe match. rm
sick and tired of his childish antics. I
agree with Jimmy Connors who
finally told him to "shut up and just
play tennis."
I'd ao one step further. Shut up, set
out of the game and leave the field to
the arown ups.
MARY JANE WOOD
Lquna Beach
No lab should use animals
To the Editor:
I'm writing in rep.rd to the June 7
letter about usina animals in medical
research. The letter refers to Senate
Bill 883. It would prohibit the use of
pound animals for research and
teachina p~ses.
I feel the bill doesn't go far enouab.
No animal should ever be used for
experiments. If the researchers can't
get enouah pound animals for their e~periments then they use dop that
are especially bred for this purpose.
This is at the taxpayers expense.
There are no laws aovernina the llandlina of research animals.
These experiments are repetitious.
Qne laboratory does not necessarily
inow what the other labs are doina.
These experiments can be very pain·
fiil. To keep a dog from barlrina they
cut bis vocal chords.
They have been · usina animals
since l920 to find a cure for diabetes
and they haven't found a cure yet.
There have been druas that are used
on animals without harm to the
animals and when they are used on
humans, they can be disastrous.
Animal experiments cost us, the
taxpayers, $4 billion a Y,e&r. Ai>prox-
imawne hundred million arumals ate · in experimenu each year,
three every second!
I ara writina this letter for our
animals because they can't speak for
themselves. I'm sure if more people
knew these facts, they would want to
stop these cruel practices.
MARY PEARSON
Costa Mesa
Don't let Demos fool you
To the Editor: ofti&btina because there are so many
of them.
U.S.S.R building
four Nimitz-class
nuclear carriers
WASHING TON -Deep in the
Pentagon's secret planning councils,
the Joint Chiefs of Staff have come to
the conclusion that a nuclear holo-
caust is not likely. The reason for their
sua.rded optimism is that the Soviet
leadets are too cautious -and the
United States is too strong.
The pcater th.reat, accorcling to our
tOP. military ex~ would be limited
military confrontations, with con-
ventional weapons. The Soviets -
who for years have been the world's
areatest land power -arc now
challenaina the United States for
coutrol of the seas.
It bas been our carrier task forces
that have given the U.S. Navy its
power and reach. Not surprisingl)',
this is precisely where the Kremlin
has decided to challenae us. After
decades of neglect, the Soviets have
seen that carriers are an effective
means of extending their power.
The latest intelligence reports warn
that the Soviets are building four new
Nimiu-dass carriers-nuclear-pow-
ered ships with conventional takeoff
and landing capability that are ex·
pccted to be deployed before 1990.
The carriers will likely have 60 to 70
planes, including MiG-23s. an carly-
warnina aircraft.
One secret Pentagon study . esti-
mates that by the year 2000 the
Soviets max have nine aircraft car-
riers, including the four new ones.
The Soviet decision·makina pro-
cess on the carrien. and what they
hope to .-,in with the ships, are
revealed m bi&hlY classified in·
telliaence reports and other studies
reviewed by my associates Dale Van
Atta and Donald Goldbera.
capitalist world. The proposal sur-
faced again in 1936; Stalin's admirals
wan led a carrier with icebre.a.king
~(>ilbility. In. this period, a pres-
uaious Amencan company offered
plans for three variations of a com-
bined battleship-<:arrier.
The Soviets tried in vain to steal
plans for the Nazis' aircraft carrier,
Graf Zeppelin, before World War II.
At the end of the war, the Russians
captured the incomplete German
carrier, which bad been scuttled. but
not destroyed.
The Soviets raised the carrier and
studied it closely. But it either
capsized while under tow to ~nin
grad laden with war booty or was wed
for taraet practi~ and sunk in the
Gulf of Finland.
Stalin . eventually ordetui a me-
dium-sized curler built, but
Khrushchev balled construction aft.er
Stalin's death. Khrushchev viewed
carrim as floatina dinosaun mili·
wily vulnerable to nuclear missiles.
But with Khrushchev's abrupt
departure in 1964, Leonid Brezhnev
ordered full speed ahead, •nd in 1976
the Soviets' first carrier, the l(jev,
appeared in the Mediterranean. As a
Defense lntelliacnce Aaency report
interpreted Brezhnev's t.hinlrinJ. "an
aircraft carrier would be militarilr,
advantageous and politically useful, ·
aivina the Soviets .. another of the
trappings of peat power status."
Altbouab the ClA pronounced the
Soviets' l{iev-class carrien "no mili-
tary match for U.S. attack carriers.. ..
the new Soviet supercarriers are a
different matter entirely. They sua-
aest to the Pentagon's Kremlin-
watcbers that the Soviets have em-
barked on a deliberate policy of
cballenaina the United States for
control of the world's oceans.
J1c1
AIDEISOI
asked whether bis 2'h-ycar-0lddauah-
ter Uly is eligible for travel expenses
as "a dependent so youna she cannot
be left alone."
-The National Republican Sena-
torial Committer picked up the tab
fer S l OS m registration fees for slafJ
members of Sen. John Wt. R-N.C..,
at an anti4bortion conference lD
Washingt00 some wne qo. The u~
of political funds for office upenses
was "a bookbcpina decision," ac-
cording to an East spokesman.
- A 73-year-Old tuna is I bard fish
to book.. ~ the past yttr, the
Senate's permanent subcommittee
on investiptions made 39 attempu
to act reputed Chicago mob ~
Anthony "B.ia Tuna" Accardo to
testify on Labor corruption. Accardo
bas spent time at St Mary of
Nazareth Hospital in Oticaao. and the
Mayo Oinic in Rochester, Minn., for
vanous ailments. At Jong last. be is
scheduled to appear today for testi·
mony before the subcommittee.
CONFIDENTIAL FlLE: Tbc war
between Iraq and Iran bas been aoina
on for almost four years now. and
State Department sources say it is
taking its toll on morale m the two
countries. Grumblina ts neoessanly
pnvate in both dictatorships, and
sources say that. despite the naaer-
ing death toll. popular support for the
war is greater an Iran than m Iraq.
-The Reagan adnunistrauon was
embarrassed by recent newspaper
photographs of Iranian troops cross.-
ID& Iraqi marshlands in small boats
whose motors were clearly
emblazoned with the name of the
American manufacturer. The motors
bad been awroved for expon as
having no m1htary use.
po~" .
In 19~. the Home of RepreteD.ta·
lives went to work on what is called an
immilration reform bill Almoa im-
mediately, it WU amended IO that
businesses with four or laa cm-
P.loyees would not be bekhaponai....,
if UlC)'.. bad undocumented wotten (i.e., illep.J) on tbe payroll. These
··busineues" may tw"D out to be the
homes of the atnua11 and lhci.r
''WOIUn" will be maids and pr·
deaers. c.an this the .. Maria Amend-
ment" without which there would be
DO time to 10 \0 the pool
.. lbe crop1 l1"e all in a.ad rbe
==~1um~~= lbem bid ro I.be MeDcaiJ border. To i-r aIJ rbeir money ro .me met aaain.··
There was anolbcr ainmdment
anacbcd to the bill. ll would ~
up to S00,000 Ma.icu wortcn who
could be bfouabt in fOI' the harvest.
The sponsor oltbe amendment said
that without the wmtcrs.. fruits and
vcaeables oould rot. He did not •Y
I.hat this could bust the farm workers
union, Whic::b it could, or drive down
the waaes of th<>1e who already do tbe
pacti.Qa. He did not say that now the
iovemment will be the ultimate crew
boss and that the Raipn admini ..
tration, wbicb does little tbt the poor
anyway. will be responsible for ensur·
ina that nondocumented fruit picten
a:re not exploited. "Mr father's own f;itber, be wad«/
WI nver. They rook all tbe mODey be
made in bis life. My brorbers IUJd
siJras come worlci..al r.be frui1 aees.
And rbey rode the trvct fill they rook
down and died. "
Al his press conference, the PreSJ.
dent of the United States supported
the bill. He talked of the amnesty
provision for illcpl immifl'arlu Tibo
have been in this country SlDCle before
1982. He somehow thoqbt that
nervous employers would not shy
away from hirina anyone of dark skin.
althouab be pve no reuon for his
confidence. Anyway, the situation
was aitical: .. The simple truth is that
we've lost control of our own borden
We Republicans don't want to be
fooled by the actions of the Demo-
crats. We must remember what Abe
Lincoln said. He said the Democrau
are like a lot of cats. When you hear
them out there squallina. 1ou think
they are killina each other. What they
are rully doina is makina more call.
The Democrats can atrora the luxury
The Republicans are a different
kind of animal. We win by unit.int
and pullina ~er. We must re-member anoth admonition of Lin·
coln's; If we don ban& tosether, we
well may all bana parately.
JIM BOLDING
Costa Mesa
The Soviet navy's first proposal for
an ain:raft carrier came in l 92S, but
sank like a stone in the country's
overridina necessity for defensive
measures apinst a supposedly hostile
UNDER THE OOME: Sen. Ted
Stevens, R·Alaska, has asked the
Federal Election Commission if be
can design.ate his dauabter Beth as an
.. aide" for a trip on which he'll be paid
travel expenses and an honorarium
by an o~tion bis office declines
to identify. Why does be care? Under
the law, a member of Conaress can set
travel expenses for himself. his
spous;e and one aide. Stevens also
J•ct Allderro• u • •YDdk•tH and no nation can do that and
coJalDIU1t. survive."
E~~!~!~~~a~~~ .:;::~~~~~~bout co~fh~.;~~~~
if they want to. techrucal subjects. have the ability. but not the interest But mostjustdon't want to. Paul So -when she sar,s. "You men
In order for a person to have rcpau the video aame, )Oil mllht as ~t's act a familiar objection out of ability to estimate the number of computer abilities he or she must well. She bas never been interested m
the way tint so that we can talk about darkened and undarkened equares set have both the aptitude and an H•.vrv leammg hov.
omen. ln a panern. On this one women attitude of interest. 1111•~ I But v.c knov. nov. -'he could 1f
Fint, some resent beina performed better~ men. Women approach life's problems she v.anted to'
cat-t\rhed.; insist~· that women, Another subtest involved cbooaina more qualitatively than quantitative-,... ..._ di · ..1~ a • .&-l ... of 1:-..... ·"'·t A.rm a ~phi'c ly mathematics and computer-related PHI R.,.vtJ' I• • •Y•dlc•ltd even u men, have nt &tutu~. Kl..... . ......... uia •u · . . • ed colmnaJ•t dift'erent abilities. proclivities and pattern. Men ac:ored sliahtly h er. They are thus disincltn to punue professions.
interesu. Other 1ubtests ~uired tbe pan.ici·
Not because they are women _but pants to complete a loaical 1equence
beeaUJe they arc individuals. or analasy made ofletter and ll'V.meral .,quences. Havina aclmowledaed that -they Men and women ecored similarly: are individuals -it la nonctbeleu no difference.
aenerally accepted u fact that women lftbi110Uada tcdioua. s11~ with mei
arc not u aoocS at mathematics and I promile women have been f'ouno
that women ate less adept in delli111 out!
with teehnolot.Y. Now we aet to the meuurernent of
Don't you believe it. Women have an indlvidUal't "lntefttt.. in com·
been found ouU puten and computer literacy.
Oamnont Oraduate School hu Women iciOred muth lower.
been two years 1tud)'ina men and Womn mow lcM about com·
women and their computer lkil1a. puten ud care lleta about them.
Hundredlofmenandwomeninll Proa.on Mary ,Poplin. David
staiet were evaluated: their 1P1tial, DrlW Ind RoberfOible note that all
quantitative, teQUential and lotical previ.ou reillardl bu lndicated mott
attitudes. women can't handle matllematic:a u
Ono of the aubtctU iavol\ltl t1'e wtD u men.
ORANGE COAST
Whence the Mexican standoff?
Where'd wt att the elpression
.. Mexican standofl"? That's what I
asked. Client says. "In February.
1847, Mexican troops met U.S.
troops at a narrow pus 12 miles south
of Saltillo. and the battle wu in·
deciaivc. Both commanden rtponcd
put victories. But an fact. it was a
standoff', and became renowned. u
such."
usually date them. prcsumabl) be·
caUJt they're not Hre as they wntc
ex.actl) when thefll commn, af e"er.
Such no1ts cause conccm. In·
vesttpton ~·ontkr 1f any he1n knew
about the not Otnume w ic1de
no it's belie~cd. alibi tome actu.al
murders.
Or. ·"lexas Carttl, the French
surst0n who 1tnerat1ons a,o 1n-
\ cnted the tcchn1que of ICWlftl K"·
crcd blood VHSels back toetther.
learned h1 craft &om a aattmaK:er.
Female aoatc, h&\.C bcardc,, too
Wntes a chent: "True, Pats\ wu
GcofJt Wa\hmaton's n1c.,name for
his wife Manha. and an fact Pus~ was
evC1')bod)'s ruckname 1n th01e da)s
foran)'bod) called Martha. £,·olut1on or lhat name rut from Manha to
iatt) to Patt) to Pu >."
"Some of us are illepl and some are
nor wanted. Our wort ooauacts out
and we have ro mo~ on. Six hundred
miles ro the Mcxica.o border. They
chase us like outlaws. like rust/en.
like thieves."
No one uked the President wby he
thought the situation was so critical
he was talkina about national
survival. No one asked him whether
the country has been endan&ered by
this wave of unmiaration, wnetber lt
was not true that those wbo bad come
hett from Mexico, &om Central
o\menca. were the youna,. the vitor-
ous. Was tt pQt true that they
abhorred. welfare that they ~d into
Social Security and took little out?
Were they dlffettnt from ammpnts
who had come before -different,
that 1s, aside from the color of their
sk.Jn'>
"Wt died 1n your hills. wr dJ«I 10
your d~suts .. We <Ued in your val.kya
and died on your plain.I. We diod
'nealh your rrees, and we died in your
bushes. Borh sides of rM river, w
d1edjust the same"
D1llyPllat
• You're awattJ... ~n"t you, that no
water from the UWJ of MeX100 flowa
in the so-called OulfStreapi?
WalNtcs act unbumcd. too.
Not infttquenll)' are lUlode notH
found in the personal bclonainas of
peopJc who die natur&I death When
thoet not "~re wntten lt ~I).'
known The leaven of same don t
Medico think one out of c~m. t 2
people he"cr catth colds
A thousand )tan before Chnst. the
Olmec c1"'1liut1on alon MeiuC'O's
aulf coasl used J)fn1cilhn .
listen Juan! Usten Roalita! Now
you can have the wom or all l)Olliblic
world$. You can wort as a maid or i.a
the bot sun for a low W1f1C.. You can
work stooped over and you'd bener
do windowi. But you c:a.nno1 work a1
an)'\hina cite. For that. you MU need
proof you are lepl and af )'OU wotk
anyway, your emplo)'Ct can Ft m10
tr0uble. Maybe be woa'l bire anycme
of brown or bi.ct ati.D u a result -
docwncnted. u.ndocwnaued. wbo carcs1 lt'a better to play it d. Sony
Juan Sorry Rotalita. E~ If )'OU'rt
heft \qally. )OU have a new name. It'•
not deponce. It'• unanpk>yed..
•• Is r.biJ r..M best .. , .. cu "°"'
our bil orcmds? II CIW cbe belf ~1
-ie can lf'Of4' our fOOd hit1 To 1111 ~ re lite dry •~ •o n>f oa my ,.,._., And bt c:alJod by DO lWDC UCllJlll
It ~u• count) -1n Frtnct oflona
qo-af at •u n.ilcd b) a count. 0$t
oftbe Unttcd tatcS use that 9-0rd of
French o · n to 1denufy IO' cmmea-
tal subdiv1s1on but curious!)'. v.here
French v."&S so 1nfluenual otheni.iw.
not Lou1 tana h has pan hes
The f Ull football
bucblll shon
h
f
I
I c
fost C'Ommon symptom of dl"-
prt ion. ll' said 1 f at11uc.
ckPo ..
...
I
.
Pacific Federal picks
new key executives
Costa Mesa-based Pacmc Federal SavlD11 and Loan A11octation has
announced the selection of several key executives. Robert E. Botta has been
named executive vice president, and will be responsible for the retatl banlcing
d1vmon. Botts was formerly senior vioe pres1dent of branch administration.
He has been with the association for 10 years. Elizabeth Gaccione was elected
senior vice president, director of marketing. Her previous banking experience
includes matketing offioer positions with Union Bok of Los Angeles and
CtttbaU of New York. Promoted to the post of senior vice president, branch
administration, was Saudra &. Kraeger, formerly regional vice pre1(dent.
Site laaa beai wltil tile anocladoa for 15 yean, and wa1 recently recoplzed as
a "Womu of Actilevemeat" bf tile Su Benaardlno BulDea1 and Profea1lonal
Women's Oab. New with Pacific Federal is Deboralt Torok Pooler, named vice
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE LISTINGS A
Five Points Center project begins
GUcaONE 'KRUEGER . BABBE \ • ~ . "''.or..·-' ... , r-~-.... --,:.-_ ·~ ..... . . ~ ....... \Cl~t..rustion has 1?.1B.u11 on the When the superm,arlcet terminated SCUJ~ feet of space. Trader JQCA.JW ,.will be .df~s;.IS?P!'.d without an_y-frt ;.~•r.:;,, r -P~~s~.<"'·-~~p~~----_,._,-,_,.....,.~ -.~~' "..L~J:~~~t-, .~ ~~~~--~·.--: ..... ~i--'iJ'..U f'~$'.f<iH tf .. flWse~-' • "'~~~~+,,._ 1 ·Y ~ -..i:.. -~'! ~tlt!"'7fOnio\'~~'"fo'Vi~ presfdebt, co~rate counsel wa~Der>ra..,:• Points ·center, a·1l:year-0ld netgh-1 ~riate .... aito%~¥11 setting'Sl0rc, has l~sed ~-;&Jriqua»'feet> Cfiifui emphasize$ ifiThe'rc'tlJ}CTr.
-..
fl' ..
~ ,.
'
~~~fore joinmg Pacific Federal, she was with the, law firm of Rutan al)d borhood shopting cente_r at the for. cont~m~~ merchandising Thirty thousand square feet of About ~5 pcroe~t ~f the existi
· • • • int~rsect1on o Beach Boulevard, while, marnta1rung some of the ~r-space will be added to the existing tenants will remam U1 the cent
Newport Beach resident ft;obert H. Babbe is the new director of the Marn. Street and Ellis Avenue in vices the. center was P,roviding the 121 ,000 square feet of buildings, and including Edwards 1:heaters, D & adva~ccd develop~en.t .opera.lion at Ford Aerospace & Communication Huntington Beach. commuruty. Loehmann sand ~rader existing tenants will be relocated into Toys, Bank of Amenca, Merle N.•
Corp. 1 aeronutromc div1S1.on m N~wport Beach. He succeeds Dr. Allen B. The property is being developed by Joe's market were ~ho~n as pnmary the service wing next to the bank. The man and a few of the comm um
Gates, w~o bas been a~~1:flted. assistant general manager of the new space Terranomics. a San Francisco-based tenants for the project s new focus. balance of the center will be devoted serving local businesses.
mformatJon systems d.ivtston 10 Texas. Babbe was formerly man~er of firm. wh1ch'pionecred the conc~pt of Loehmann's, a chain of off-price, to. tenants .oriented to the upscale, Architects for the remodelinS. E
advanced sensors and fi re co~trol.1!e !'a: been with the firm smce 19 · the .Promouonal center 10 Northern h.igh-fashion women's clothing, has pnce~nsc1ous sh~pper. . . Jacques de Dre.re and Sherrod Hix·
Sandi Maapu, owner of Coutry Flowen in HuntJngton Beach. will Cahfom1a. signed a 15-year lease for 15,000 Unlike most projects ofth1s type, 1t of San Francisco.
demonstrate the art offlower arranging at the Orange County Fair July 6-15 in ---------ml!l------------··---------------------------------Costa Mesa. At last year's fair. Maughan won first place in the cut flower show's
~::k:::::::::::::z::::::~.:~:::::y~~: Irvine firm reports record earnin o-s
therapist for outpatient services at SL Jo1e~'1 Ho1pltal of Orange. In her new ) 0 1
post. Cheney will coordinate all of the department's outpatient functions. as I' · 'dl · well as being involved in staff selection and operational planning. U1trasystems Inc. of Irvine re-systems' recent acqu1s1tion of Probe related business activities. Ultrasystems ts a rap1 Y gro~
• • • ported new records for revenues. net Systems Inc.. which was consum-.. In particular, Ultrasystems' ac-engineenng com~ny mvolved in
lrvine·s CIE Systems, a subsidiary of C. Ito~ ElecttonJcs, Inc. bas chosen inco"1e. and earnings per share for the mated April 30 and which was t1V1ties related to the design and wide range of high-technology a1
laformatioa Muqement Sy1&em1, l.nc. ofFlonda to resell 1s CIES 680 fam1I)' first quarter of fiscal 1985, which accounted for as a pooling of construction of small, gcograph1cally in~o"'.ative p~ojects. ~e. compan:
of busmess computers. ended j\pnl 30. interests. Accordingly, all financial dispersed power plants and cogenera-pnnc1pal business act!v1t1es focus 1
Sales manaoers Ralplt Decker a~d· BUI Rlley have won Signal Landmark Revenues for the quarter increased results have been restated to reflect tion facilities are expanding at a very the design, construction, ownersh
0 • 57 percent to $24.984,000 from the acquisition of Probe. Per-share rapid pace.· and operation of power plan hac.'a new home sales competition for Apnl. Decker is sales manager at the S 15.872.000 reported for the first results for the current first quarter are "In addiuon. the work we are doing alternative energy projects, and foo Landmark Homes/Grandview Series m Lake Forest, while Riley managers sales at ButlDstoD Luclmark in HuntJngton Beach. Decker and Riley tied to quarter of the pnor year. based on 7.765.000 shares and m support of the U.S. Department of processing plants."
top honors in the competition, and will each receive a plaque and cash awards Net mcome rose to S 1.6 17,000, a 6.977.000 shares for the prior-year Defense related to command. con-Ultrasystems also is involved
as the firm's Sales Person of the Month. 103 ~ percent mcrease over the period. trol. communications and in-• • • $797.000 reported last year. Earnings Phillip J. Stevens, president and telhgence (C31) activitJes 1s also numerous defense and space syste1
Bill Kean1 is the new director of pro)ect markeung at Birtcher Pacific per share advanced 7 5 percent to 2 I chairman of the board of Ultra-growing at a very dynamic rate. It is projects, with heavy emphasis '
development firm in Laguna Niguel. In his new post. Keams 1s involved in cents a share. compared with 12cents systems, said. ··u1trasystems' the combination of these two efforts command, control, communicatio
analysis and acqu1S1t100 of prOJCCls. as well as developing marketing reported for the same period of the financial performance is indeed grat-which 1s belp1ne to produce new and intelligence (C31) programs,
commumcations programs for B1rthcer Pac1fic·s present commercial and pnor year. ifyi ng and reflects continued growth records o f financtal performance for well as satellite, missile, and grou:
mdustnal properties. The financial results reflect Ultra-ot both our defense and energy-the company. combat systems.
~~~--'~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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v1dd Cl11n,·t•,1mt.•nt 11rr11r1un1111 ... lik, 1h1"'n' 1'111.Inn1 di·'·" hn '"''' 1h, ..... '·'"'' ~ AMERICAN SAVINGS
\I ri1mi.m r."" 11/ t, <no111'1, 11111' ~:11,1 O I "l•• 1m!•m /, 1•0111 A(>f•11• 1 to t. ""' /•rim IN• to • 1•11/.1" \111"'"' r1oil ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
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COSTA ME A
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ORA GE
l'>M N Tu,11n
~74 lo2l'
I _1_
Debate continues over
fairness of President
Reagan's tax program
WASHINGTON (AP) -New statistics
from the Internal Revenue Service confirm
b.igh-income Americans arc shouldering a
pteT share of the tax burden but the
~W'CS do little to end the debate over the
fairness of President Reagan's tax program.
The IRS reported taxpayen with in-
. comes of SI 00,000 or more paid 17.4
percent of federal income taxes in 1982, up
from 15.2 percent a year earlier. The
number of taxpayers in the highest-income
group also grew -from 654,652 \o 740,206
-and accounted for about 7 of each 1,000
returns.
The tax share paid by the big middl~
income group -those earning between S 15,000 and S50,000, who file 410 of each
1,000 returns -dropped to 56.3 percent
from 57.8 percent in 1981. The loweT-
earning half of all taxpayers -with
mcomes of S 15,000 or less -paid 7. 9
percent of the taxes in 1982, down from 8.8
percent.
The number of couples and individuals
with incomes of $50,000 to SI 00.000 vew
from 3.4 million to 3. 76 million: their tax
share rose from 18 percent to 18.2 pcroent
The figures were released three months
after Lbe lRS made us first prchmma
estimate of how the across-the-board t
reductions recommended by Reagan ai
approved by Congress were affecting t
tax burden.
The newer figures support the conte
ti.on by Reagan and his supporters that t
cuts are stimulating greater investment a1
effort by higher-income people.
But they also show the obvious: th
when all tax rates arc cut an average of.
peroent for rich and poor alike, the rich w
save more dollars than will the poc
Democrats criticize Reagan's program <
grounds it restricts government spendi1
programs affecting lower-income peop
while Jiving big tax cuts to those at hi&h
incomes.
The IRS report covers only the 1981 ar
1982 installments of the tax cut, whit
included reducing the maximum tax c
investment income from 70 percent to ~
percent - a move benefitting only uppc
mcomc taxpayers. It will take another ye
to gauge effects of the fuJI tax cut.
The lRS emphasizes that all these figuri
arc estimates derived from samplinJ fewi
than 100,000ofthe 95.3 million indw1du
returns filed)ast year.
Computer workshop set
Computer Concepts annoynces one·
day. completely hands-on word processing
workshop~J. usina the popular software
program, w ordSw.
Each participant will have a computer
for his/her own use throu&hout the work-
shop doring the week of June 2S • 30. '
UPs AND OowNs
I /
Each one-<1ay seminar will cost SI I 0 an
registration received at least seven days 1
advance will be specially pri~d at $95.
Spaoe is limited. Call Computer Cot
ocpt.s at (213) 592-5902 for rcservat101
and location.
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NASDAQ SUMMARY
Go Lo Ouo rr s
ME TAL S Quons
NEW VOM 1111"1 -9llat • I I , ....... ,..._
~ 0.-·t"-'1,_.•!*N.U•••ir .....
0.-........ "' ...... tt'I Clllla -.......... ,., Ylil·""*'--•.-N . .......... _. ........ .........
"ft!. IUl7' ......... -...... . ..._.._ •• ,_. • ....._NY, ____ __, .......... .._ ..... ._ .• 111,.,..,--.r«o....---
..... T ... __, ......... "",. ......... ...._ ........ -----~ ... _ .. ,.
That's an apt descrip ton of both business and
business people along the Orang Coast. Toke p track of
where com~nles are going and which people are helping
hem get there.just watcf.i ·credit Line· -very day in the
Business section of yournew • •
/• -
'
•
AFTER
21
YEARS
17827
BEACH
BLVD.
LAMPS!
SHADES!
11
•r
-
OVER TH[ COUNTER
.. • t . .... ..
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
(Between Warner
and Talbert)
SALE _ STARTS
THURSDAY,
JUNE 21st
I AM
I SMAR
SELLING OU
EVERYTHING!!
ECORATOR
LAMPS
ACCESSORIES!
DISPOSAL SALE! ~ST COME -FIRST SERVE_~!~
75:;.
Disposal
Sale!
' r )I,
..
....
' •
·' I
Disposal
Sale
HANGING
LAMPS
Di1po1al
Sale
( ' .
I .
SHADES
and
ACCESSORIES
up to
%
Off
J SALE HOURS:
I
Daily 9:30 - 8 DEALERS .
Sat. and Sun. ~ BY ·~
9:30 -6 ~APPOINTMENT<(lli
H"RRY! '-ONL Y!I
El Torito
training
program.
offered
A new program bas been
developed between El
Torito Restaurants Inc. in
Irvine and Mount St.
Maryts College in Los An·
gelcs which enables El
Torito managers to obtain
an associate of arts dearee
in restaurant management
by attending school while
working.
Under the program the
school will offer a 60-unit
associate of arts degree,
whereby 24 units can be
earned by taking El Tonto's
seven-week. phase one and
p~ two management tra.truna programs. The re-
maining 36 units can be
compttted at Mount St.
Mary's College, which wiO
offer many of its courscs at
the El Torito Natiopal
Trainina Center in Irvine.
Other colleges in each of
El Tont~~;:Jor markets have ex interest in
developing a similiar pro-
gram.
Larry J. Cano, president
o( El Torito Restaurants
Inc., expressed hope that
this program will help job
recruitment and the retain-
ing of trained personnel,
stating. "Tb.is new program
is beneficial to both El
Torito and restaurant man-
agen. It will provide man·
aaen with the necessary
tool to improve their career
path in the industry and
will increase the supply of
restaurant talent."
The two.year restaurant
management proaram
combines both the ex-
perience obtained from
working directly in El
Torito's training program
and the courses offered at
Mount SL Mary's.
• El Tonto Restaurants
Inc. is a majority owned
subsidiary ofW. R. Grace&.
Co., headquartered in
Irvine: Recently, with
more than 100 restaurants,
El Torito is the laflCSt
operator of full service,
family style Mexican res.-
taurants in the United
States.
El Tonto had sales of
S58.5 million in the first
quarter of this year. with
pro forma net mcome of
S 1.6 million. The initial
public offering of El Tonto
common stock took place
in January.
Structure
dispute
resolved .
Despite previou& &truc-
turaJ disputes, Oock Con·
struction Co. hu now com-
pleted the three-story, S4'
million Million~ bc:adquanm by ·ns
Miuioo Viejo•a hen Oft
••••• buiJdi ...... ::· . The plan commuruty
had ratticled coDIUUCtion
to E.arly Cllifomia deliP.
A presentation by
MiNion ~uity to the
Misaiod' Viejo Co. in Fd>-
naary propo&ii\lthat tM
ltnK'turc woukf t'nhanct
the 2. 3 acre lite on Pua1o •
Rell. did pin the approval
of the o&arined commun1l).
To6ay the muoruy arid
..... llnlCtUl'C boUlft Gal
land Title Co. and M ttlion
f4u1ty. ~ law and IC'· coununa ftnn1 are \.l~ted
u f\mare ttftlnll .
th t al ti 1 t "Checktheinjuri~"bedemands. ~:::~-==g~e_r_m=--a_n_,,ag-=.:-e__,r_, ....,,...,_.;e_e__,e,-:-m __ o.....;;;p--=-m __ s_,_ .. Cbeot tbeone-runsames. Geei. 1
_w_a_it_t_n.....::g~fi_o_r_c_lu_b_t_o_t_ur_n_i;._t_ar_o_u_n_d ____ ~====~~~
will c~. of course." A periodical visit to the office of Dodier Mana,erTommy Luorda
produces the same answers, not the
mention the same questions.
For instance, Lasorda will always
ask a JUY checking the pictures on the
wall for the same opinion the guy bas
been sivina hbn for all the years the
pictures and the wall have been there.
"Do I really look that di1ferent?0
Lasorda will ask.. "I do? OK then, rm
aoing on a diet"
Asforthequestions, Tommy will
deliversimilara.nswen to those
which have flowed since 1977. He still
bleeds Dod&er blue and be is the
happiest s.o.b. in the world and he
loves bis playen and they will lhow
they still love him by winninaa
pennant.
.. But it won't be easy," Lasorda
adds. "It gets a little touaherevery
yearandthereareasrcatmanythine
that have to happen to us, of course.
Ofcourse. r
For openers, the Dodgers will have
to expetjpnce a turn for the better in
the area ofluct. l.asorda says that up
to this particular staac of the pllop, it
bas been mostly bed.
Milner, Reds get
healthy in a hurry
Dodgers continue
to have problems
as Cincinnati rolls
fifth victory in their last 20 pmes.
"It's about time," said Ocster, who
came into the game with a .198
average and just nine runs batted in.
"l feel like I haven't beencontributina
to the ball club.
"Some~ like thjs pushes you
CINCINNATI (AP)-A tbreo-bit back up. Torugbt I can feel like I've
night filled the prescription for ailing pulled my share."
center fielder f.ddie Milner. Dodgen ~ Tom Lasorda
The Cincinnati Reds outfielder bad trouble cxplainina bow bis ball
drilled a two-run sin&)e to ifnite a club wasted a :J-1 lead -aided b)'. a
seven-run outbunt in the fifth mnina, ~run Reds error -to ~ 1~
then provided an encore with a solo losing streak to a season-high su
homer.Tuesday niabt to subdue tbe ~don't know " Lasorda said. "I strualing Los Angeles I>odaers l ~. . • ...,. .. ; MiJoC'f bas felt a little weak from a JUSt hope we ca~ get evc.1m.111a
virus the last few da"" but his two together. It looked like we Sot a break · d r. rth 'b"'' f th when we got the two runs because s1naJes an . iou . ~n:ier 0 c their guy didn't s~ on the baa-You ~n J>C!'ked up ~s SJ>mta Tuesday thinkthatmaybethinashavechanged niaht while dropping the Dodaen · ..
back down in the dumps with tlieir · · · .
sixth straiaht loss. He was refemna to R~ first
"I've bad a virus the last five days basei:nan c.esar Cedeno, w~o fail~ to
and haven't been feelina very well," get bis foot on the base while ta.king a
Milner said. "I feel better now that ~ow from shor:tst<?P Dave Concep-
l've J.Ot three bits." ca<_>n on a f<_>urtb-1nruna p"Ounder. HtS
Mainer's two-run sin&le off Fernan-llUStake ~th two out and the bases
do Valenzuela, 6-8, tied the pmc 3-3 loaded let in two runs.
in the fifth inning and beaded the But ~~lcnzuc:la was un-
Reds toward their bigcst innina of cbaractensucally wdd and couldn't
the season. ~old the lea~. T_bc left-han.der de-
Dave Conoepcion's sinaJc put the ~1vcred ~o ';\'lid P.1tcbes~d six walks
Reds ahead 4-3, and sJ..ump-ridden 1n 4 1-3 mmngs. 1ncludioa. a base on
second baseman Ron Oester de-baJl.s to Reds starter Joe ~~. 3-4, to
livered a three-run double off reliever bef,n the seven-run fifth ntrung.
Carlos Diaz for a 7-3 advantaae. 'f!e ~ed the, pitcher ~ lead ~ff
Oester 1COred on a wild pitch, and the the mruna. That .s a cardinal SID,
Reds were on their way to only their there," Lasorda wd.
Ofcoune.
Luorda points out that be has the
best team. It is just that certain thinp
bappentoit
"We have had iqjuries, panicularty
toourpitcbinastatr," the manager
says. "This bas left us short-banded
and our pitchen have been tired. It
gotsobadonedayapinsttheQWits
that I had Rick Monday warming up
in the bullpen. What's he throw? A
knuck.lebtil, I think.
·•out our guys arc cominiaround.
Tom Niedenfuer is ready to come
back.. All our pitchers will get well and
No. 1 choice feels like 'a dream'
UCI'sMcDonald. Thornton.
Turner nabbed in NBA draft
all-conference choice, averqed l S.6 points per pme.
Other Anteaters 1elected were Bob Thornton in the
fourth round (87tb ovendl) by the New York Knicb and
OeolF Turner (se~enth rw 1 S3rd overall) by the
Dallas Mavericks.
Fnm AP ...,.teMI Thom ton owned a 12. 7 tcorina avcrqe and was sixth
· the · · ~.tA--.....t •·-at 68 0 Turner was a NEW YORK -Akcem Ol~won said a-:.... ·eked ui nation 10 ._....._. ~-• • . . ......._ te<X>nd-tcam all-PCAA cb<>Kle.
first. by the Houston R~e~ tn opc01na "?~~f the The Antcat.er trio joina fdlow PCAA member Leon =~ Ba1ketbal1Auociati0ndraft Tuaday · feels like a Wood of Cal Sta~Fullerton. nabbed in the. first round 10th
Nicknamed '•tbe Dram" durin. his outsta.ndina o~ by the Phi~lpbia 76ers. W9Qd ts tm<>na the 16
tb U · • (H ~~ •• : ..... , ..... flnaliau tor the Umted Sia Olympe team. carcerat navcnaty o ouaon. uwon ~ Jwn After · uwon. Sam Bowie ofKentudcy was taken by want to be the beat 1 can be, to play cverJ tune C?_UL I the P~rail Blum with the ICICOnd pick. and his
know I can bel~tbat I can rd»OUQd and bloCt lbotS. '1'win Towu" tea.mmate with the Wddcats. Mdvia The 7 . ..0 . uwon left the IOCCCf and team haadbell T\u'pin, wu the sixth tt&cction takea bY the WulliO&IOG rieldt of'N.,ena ree yaruaoaDd t.oOt the Couari to the Bulfcts. • .
NCAA Fina.I F<?W three a~t tima. He ll the founh The rjlbts to 1111' TurptD Later were tndcd to
undetclauman in the las~ aa~ ~ to be .elected No. l. • Ocveland in a blockbUatcr ~-deal.
.Meanwhtlei UC Jmne • ~CMcDou.Jd. 1¥ ~ • BowieandTurpiawercconspicuouab)'tbcitdeciaaoa I~ tcorer an th~ An•~ l'eOtftt cam..-. not to uy out for the U team. All tiaht Olym~
ta ~Cleveland in the third 'romd • the ~d tiuketbell team finalists wbo Mft .dilibk lor \he draft ovc~cDonald wbo led UCl to a ~nd-pl.oe ftnish in taken in lbe fint 1 I pick
the Pacific Coa 'i Athletic Assodation last year and was an ~ ... llBA/llS) , .,
rested and everyduq will tum
arourid, of coune ...
Ofcoune. ••you have ao remember, .. Luorda aoes on. '"that this ia llill the youoi
team. This ia tberebuiJdina of the
macb.ine. Thia is still tbe Baby Blue.
Mike Manballud Orea Brock are
the keys bere. They have beeo IOOd
and tbey have been ... not so aood.
But the future is there and it ii
beautiful.
"Pedro Guerrero was in the wont
slumpleversawaballplayerao
throuah. You know and I know that
Pete Guerrero is a aood-no. pat
-player and bow be socs is the way
this tean.> aoes. He will set1oina aood and stay that way, of course."
Of course.
r
811
T1CIO
SPORTS COLUMNIS T
•''The division, l..asorda mutes.
"The division may~ touaher I»
cause some teams "°t help. San Diego
added those pys from the Y an.kees
-(Ricb)~and (Grail) Ncttld
-SO they are~~ DOW. .. You say Diet Williams is an over-
rated manaaer and will find a way to
1CttW it up? Ma)'bc, but it doela'a
matter becaulewe have tbebaa ....
and we will pu1i1111 toeether:Md
•bm that baDDcu. we will pyt dae othenaway,'ol coune. ..
Of coune.
.. MeOlder'r"Luorda~ IOa
question ... Meootba:rz ?Me
sbort with umpiraand WINfm•ted
with the tam at tiaa?lllat Will be aw
day. You mow l &ove this p.me Md
will never stop bavll!g fu.D -S ~
will bury me i.a dail uliiform Md I will
still work fortheorp.aiution by •
puttina tictet prices OD my
tombstone.
• "But that woo•t ~for awhile
because the ~i.a the sky Joob out for me, of counc.••
Of course.
Wysocki on_
Olympic team
in 800/meters r----·~-->-..,...__._ " ... • 'J '-"" .. .... #., ... -El Toro residen q es
with runner-up finish in final
BJ BOWARD L II.ANDY .......... ..., ....
LOS ANGELES -The ro.d runner came throuP
with Oyina (X)lon alooa with other performen who let two
American records, three C.ohleWD marts and. trials bal-
ever performance d~ tbe foanb day of. tbc U.S. o: track and field trials at the Loi Anades O>tite'U" T y before a aowd of 21,08 L
The ro.c1 runner is Ruth W)'IOCki. a raidau ol E
Toro who trains at UC Irvine and., in preparation a the
trials, concentrated on tbe l,SOO.metc:r mce. ~ lbc
qualified for the Olympic team with a second-p11cie fuiisb
in the 800 ~three women finished under two minu1a
fOI' the fint time ever in the same race.
Kim Gal1aaber won in I :Sl.50, a Coliseum record with W}'IOCki i.a at I :S9.34 and~ finisher Robin
Campbdl binina the line at l:S9.71. Tbe incomparable Carl Lewis pinedanot.ber beiUt OD
the u .s. team bywlluU.na bis specialty, the~ with
a ap of 23-7. 1be mark was a ColilCUl1l and trials recixd
and~ the fourth-best ever in the \cmajump.
It lS also the best ever at tea \eveL He is alto well OD 1he
way 10 another victory in the ~duh, wiu.iat two
beats Tuesday. .
TWo other Americai records were~ 1he firit ia ta
womco'&..00._ vetaaaCbandra~at 4t.ll
cqliallinc the ~th futest petformanCe in m.o.j.
Eart Jones and Johnny~ OT&~ were both credited with a
b0.74 in the men's 400 10 esublisb anomer A.miric:a
standard but Jones abadcd Gray for Jii'st piace.. This is die eia:bth fb1eSt ti.me ever ftCOl'ded ... 6e faSIC:I& over
(Pl 1 Mew U~JmJ
STEWART BACK
IN THE GROOVE
Ex-Dodger pitcher
holds off Angels;
Texas wins again
By RJCBARD DUNN
......... c..: 4 0 1
Texas ripn-hander Dave Stewart
went 81/J Ulllings and allowed the
Aqelsj ust five bits in picking up bis
fourth win of the season Tuesday. as
the Ranaers downed the Angels. 4-2.
upping Stewart's record to 4-8.
4-8? That's risbt, and the former
Dodger property sWted the ICUOn a
dismal~-h bas been nothing but an
uphill climb for the 27.year-old, who
stepped into a prasure-packed situ-
ation in Texas last season after he and
Ricky Wright were ~uiftd from the
Dodgen for popular Rick Honeycutt.
.. I just wasn't ready to pitch to
April.'. Stewart said. who lost six
decisions duri~ that month ... And I
didn't do the thinp It took to win."
Stewart walked three and struck
out five while the ADft:lS lowered the
boom on him twice with solo homers.
before 24.625 fans at Anaheim
Stadium. The crowd pushed the
Angels' season total over the one-
million mark ( 1.0 I 5,335) foT the I 0th
straiaht year. and for ~e I Sth tipie
since the club has played in Anaheim.
"I figure 1t (m)' ou~oa to~t) ~
better than last tlme. Stewanjokina-
ly said, .. l>cc:ame last time I pve ap
three runs and tonight I only pve up
two ...
The outina be was refenina to was
last lbUJ"lday apinst Minnesot;a,
when be Went the di.stance for the first
time this seuoo in a losinacffon. 3-2.
.. He's been pitching in some touab
luck," T cu.s Manaaer DoUf Rader
said, "But he's a rca1 strona individ-
ual -mentally as well as physically ...
Stewart. sbup thrcqb. four, was
punished wbe:n llcgie Jac:bon open-
ed the fifth inning for the An&els with
a towering shot into the upper deck in
naht field for bis I Ith homer of the
year. But Stewart Wenccd the Anlels'
bats until the seventh, when Brian
Downing lifted one over the left.field
wall for his ninth round-tripper.
In the ninth, S1ewut tot Jack.son
on a Iona fly ball but be walked
Downmg. Rader brought in reliever
Odell Jones to slam ·the door -and
be did just that, scttina Bobby Grieb
and pincb-bincr Jerry Narron to bit
lazy fly balls. in regist.erina his second
save.
"l was JUSt lookina to act 'cm out..··
Jones said , "that's all -j ust act 'cm
out:•
Stcwa.n. who started bis career
slowl> as a pitcher after entcrina the
Doctacrs· orp.~tion u a catc~r. and who made his first appearance m
pro ball ID 1975 (Bdlina,bam). made
his American League debut on Aua. 20 last year and alleviated any a.nxiety
over the absence of Honeycutt with
(Pleae eee 8TSW AJlT /82)
U.S. pololsts finish
second in tourney
d .~
I
t
McEnroe facing
a new opponent:
The British press
Prom AP dlspatclta
LONDON -Six day, before ~
Wimbledon's opcoina volley. Jobn
McEnroe and the British {>l'C$S traded Chicago halts losing streak
Area •whnmen break recordli
UNIONDALE. N.Y. -Trilchl Zorn a has never let the fact that she is blind
prtvertt her rrom bCoomina the best
disabled swimmer in lbc counlry.
Compctm& in the thard International Gamet for
the Disabled, the Univcnity or Nebraska eophomo"'
ta world record this week en route to captunna a pair
of sold medals.
She tcayncd with another county swimmer, John
MorpnofHuntinaton Beach, whobrokohisown world
records in both the l 00 freestyle
(56.22) and 400 freestyle
(4:15.91).
salvos Tuesday in what promises to be a new war over the fiery New Yorker's on-court tantrums. Keio Moreland drove in a pair of runs •
McE ked hn b · I ti d 1 with a triple and a double and RJcll nroe, as •rut as atest ra e over 1 ane SetcWfe blanked Pittsbu ...... on r'.our h1'ts call in Sunday's Queen s Oub finals here, said 0 Wben • .,, 1i
people look back in I 0 rean· they are goina to thank me for eight innings Tuesday night in his first
Zorn, who hails from
Mission Viejo, won the Class Bl
(less than one-third normal
vision) I 00-mctcr freestyle in
I: I 0. 14 lo easily erase the old
recordofl:l2.31. She then earned
lhe aotd medal in the 100
backstroke in 1:13.87.
for improvina the tcve of officials." National Leaauc star1 in more than three years IS the
Far from thankin& him, Acet Chicqo Cubs ended a four11me losing streak wt th a
Street. London's newspaper row, 4-3 victory over Pittsburgh ... Elsewhere around the
denounced him. Nauonal Leque Tuesday, Mille Scllmldt and Oule .. 1 used the markinas on the
Said The Daily Mirror. "In a Vlrsil bit home runs and Jun Samael drove m three
four-letter word, be is a LOUT. runs to belp Philadelphia extend its winning souk to
bottom of the pool to help 1uide
me," explained Zorn, who was offered a dozen athletic
scholarships followins her graduation from Mission
V1eJO High Scbool in 1982. "When I do the backstroke,
1 depend on the flags strung across the pool. I can sec
them slightly and that gives me an idea when to tum."
Or, as be would describe umpires, six pmes wt th a 6-4 victory over the New Yortc Mets.
the pits. A moron." The Phillies increased their lead in the NL East to 1111
On Sunday, as he was drop-pmes over lhe Mots, who lost for only the fourth time
ping the sccon,d set in the final to in their last 15 games ... Tim Wallacll slammed a two-
unheralded LeifShiras. McEnroe run double and Jlm Wolllforcl added a two-run single in
blew up at umpire Roger Smith a fi ve-run third inning that carried Montreal to its Maulere In red by $10 m illion ,__ _____ _. for overruling a line call that bad founb straight victory. a ~3 decision over St. Louis ...
11c1tnroe gone in the defending Wimbledon Eric Sllow hurled a two-hitter to lead San Diego to a 2-0 PIITSBURGH -The Pittsburgh [il
champion's favor. victory over Houston. Show, 8-4, struck out four and Maulers not only bavt lost 14 of their 17 •II•
In a 10-minute monologue, McEnroe berated wallced one eo route to the first two-hitter of his career games, they expect to lose $10 million -
S ·th lied h ... d. t" d .. " ... Atlanta rookie Brad Kommln1k'1 first major-league more than twice the league's average-in s::'dim'on~ ·refer: J~~ M:;:,rc !~d {,~0~ &rand slam offset two home runs by Bob Brenly as the their first United States Football League season.
superviscr Kun Neilsen for a tongue-lashing,· and Braves outsluaaed San Francisco. 11-6. Qub President Paul Martha said the Maulen
shouted at them, "You just sit there like two bumps on could have sold out all of their home games at Three
..., ................. u.
Jtarl Jouee (248) leada the .,.ck bome in wtuu•u1 the men •a 800 meten. Stallley
R edwtne (548 ) flnlabed abrtb.
aloganddonothing." M • 6 RBI Ill Ori l RiversStadiumand stHllostmoney.TheMaulendrew The London newspapers agreed the two should urra y • ra ea 0 es a crowd ofover 5 3,000 for their home opener, but rarely
have done something -ejected McEnroe from the . . . t<?ppcd the 25,000 mark aftcr1hat, averagina 22,858 for
tournament. Eddie ~array ~rove. m ~ix runs with a • rune home pmes.. . . .
The Mirror said the "sad thing" is that ... not a single pud slam in the e1~tb mn!ng and a ~o-T~e team will lose more th!lft SS. nullion m
official. anywhere has the guts to tell McEnroe that run, bases--,loaded sm&)e 10 the .moth operatana cost~ an~ about as much 10 vanou~ start-up ~W.11,UJlU~ ~JE a~ ~~jt.~}l~ will be ~nt • ~~ ni&hJ ,~ J!JTY.,.. the Ba1!¥Jlore ,_, ~:e_a~d..,;ap1~ am ~':em.en ts at ~e stadium and
U.S. TRACK •••
F..~~_,_...')-.~till'~..,~..t.> .... _'<F._;.C~~, l~ ~~ ·:i:-~-~"~~--..t..-~~ . "''~~.1~~'*'• ~ Dady Mail columnist Ian Wooldridge siid oithe lost th~1r sixth StraJgu~ game. Munay, ~ Amencao -.-..~~4 • .......-:> ••. . a.~~~--~<'
25-year-old's behavior. "It is obscene ..... Personally, I l;a&ue s ~BI leader wtth 60, struck out bis first th.rec Etzel ahoete • perfect ecore 27:59.08, Karin Smith wcin the woiiien sf;ve With~tbir .
wouJd have punched McEnroe straight on the nose." umes !IPlnst Boston starte~ Bobby OJed;a before of 200-9 and Oreg Foster the 110-meter hiab hurdles in unloadin& for a pand slam against Boston reliever Bob CHINO -Ed Etzel of Morgantown. • 13.21 in other finals.
Quote of the day
Giant-killer Shiru beaten
BRISTOL, England -Giant-killer ~
Leif Sbiras finall y ran out of luck., stamina
and good tennis Tuesday, falling to
Czechoslovakia's Miloslav Mccir, 6-3, 1-6,
6-4, in the S 100,000 West of EnJ.Iand championships.
The 24-year-old from Milwaukee, who ousted
Czechoslovakia's Ivan Lendl from last week's Queen's
Oub tournament and took John McEnroe to three sets
in the final: fell to a strong serve-and-volley game from
Mccir, 20. the Czechoslovak national champion who
will represent his country at the Los Angeles Olympic
Games dcmonstratton tournament in August.
A timely gift from
an old friend
It's yours for
the asking!
Stuley .. In other American League action, Jlm W.Va.,broke600of600tarJClSTuesdayto Wysockiwasoneofthebappiestnewmembcnofthe
Sud.ber1 singled in the winning capture an Olympics berth and the national U.S. Olympic team and bubbled over with pride and
run with the bases loaded in the title in the English Match prone rifle event enthusiasm.
ninth inning to lead Milwaukee to of the U.S. International Shooting Championships. "I've been doing nothing but road racina for 1everJ}
a 6-S victory over Toronto and Eu:e~ who WIS tied for third after two days of yean" she said. "Last December, my husband (Tom)
end the.Blue Jays' winning streak shootin& bit every one of the half-inch targets for his asked me why I didn't t.ry1to qualify for the Olympic trials.
at five games ... Ruty Kutt'• perfect score to tic him with Don Durbin ofLouisville, We looked at the events and figured out that it would
two-run single highlisJlted a four-Ky., for first place with aggregate scores of 1,793. probably be the easiest for me io the 1,500 and that's what
run eiJhtb inning to give Detroita Etzel then hit 589of600targets towin the shoot-off I pointed toward.
7-6 victory over the New York with Durbin, who also qualified for the Olympics. "Now I'm sure I'll run the first round but I don't think
Yankees. A one-out sing.le by my emotions will bold up for that race, too. We'll see after
Larry Herndoa with the bases Tele..a..a0 D -..-a0 the pany tonight." loaded had tied the game at 4-4, .,,. .... • .-..ua M Tiwl'ldlYtlc:MdUle arnay and Kuntz drilled a pitch off .,.. __,........ NOTE: Todev 11 an ott-dav Yankees starter and loser Roa Guidry, S-S, mto right , ... .,_ 9!30 un.-Mtn'• 100 meten, oec.tt11on.
fi Id to th · · G V-'" 1-1. 11:15 a.m. -eocc•: W• ==Ya: ,..JO a.m.-rMn'• dltCUt ~lfYlne e score e Wlnntng run . . . eor1e -ov 11:11 lltt _ --• 10 a.m.-Wom.n'I 200 meters, nrsi round. drove in three runs with a home run and two singles and Spl,I" In Europeen a.ftptor'91p Ill, 10:15 a.m.-Man'• 1one lumP, e11catt11on.
Mille Harsrove and Gerald Willard each knocked in a ChetM 34. 11 a.m.-Wom.n'• uoo meten, first rouncs.
Pair as Ocveland took a 7-4 victory over Minn'"""'ta .. 4:30 p.m. -aAl•ALL: ~at ~ Noon ...,,..,,, 1t10t PUI, deealtlkln. """ ~ 12:05 1>.m.-women•1 200 meten, MCOnCI round. . Jorge Orta drove in four runs, two on a fourth-inning natl, Cnannet 11. • o m.-Men'• 200 me•en. Ml'l'llflnata.
home run that put the game out of reach, as Kansas City ll..., 1f.i':·~~llOle "":Uri~~·
defeated Oakland, ~2. to snap a five-game loSillJ streak 4:30 p.m. -I A•8ALL: Oodgm I 9t Clnotn-".2S 11.m.-Women'• .,..,,,., ... 11unt1ts. final
... Spllle Owen'• two-run homer snapped a 2-2 ue in the natl, KABC (790). us o.m.-Man'• .oo met••· final.
siAth inmng and Pltil Bradley added a bases-loaded 7:30 p.m. -aAmAU.; T_. llt ~ !;;':=~~o:o ~.;l.~tound.
triple as Seattle went on to bea1 Chicago. 8-2. KMPC (710). us o.m.-Man'• .oo meten, cteca1111on. 7:20 o m.-Women'• 3,000 meten, Ml'l'llflnali.
Lake rs
go after
lieight
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
The Los Angeles Lakers,
looking for height in the
National Basketball As.
sociation draft. chose 6-1 1
Earl Jones as their No. 1
pick Tuesday and declared
that the slender All-Ameri·
can can build up bis body
strength.
Jones, who weighs 21 S
pounds, was a three-time
Division II All-American
at the University of the
D1stnct of Columbia and
never scored under 20
points a game during his
four-year career.
The Lakers, picking 23rd
in the first round. hope to
beef up the speedy Jones
and use him as both a
center and a power for-
ward, said Lalcers Coach
Pat Riley.
"This is the first time
we'll have a 6-11 player
who can play center or
power forward and run the
court like he docs," Riley
said.
I P.m.--Mtfl'I 3.000 mefWI l~M, Mmiflnall .
UCI.'s Ibbetson tabbed
for U.S. rowing team
Bruce Ibbetson, a product of UC
Irvine, has been n"med to the United
States Olympic rowing team, accord-
ing to a spokesman of the United
States Rowing Association.
Ibbetson, a Tustin native now
residing in Costa Mesa, will row
stroke on the Americans' eight-oared
shell, which recently captured the
gold medal at a reptta in Lucerne,
Switzerland.
Ibbetson is a seven-year member of
the U.S. National Rowina team and
was a gold medalist in the 1979 Pan
STEWART TAMES ANGELS .
From Bl
Ranger fans by beating the AL West he almost left him in. "Sometimes
Champion White Sox. ~I . Doug is flexible, and you can talk him
··There's not much difference be-· out ofit (taking the pitcher out of the
tween the American League and the pme)." Stewan said, "but those outs
National League," Stewart explained. 10 the eighth and Reggie's out in the
"Except that the ball parks arc smaller ninth didn't make too good of an
here. impression on him I auess."
"I'll challenge anybody over there The Angels. meanwhile, dropped
(National League) with a fastball, and more than the pme. Juan Beniquez
f'll challenge anybody here with it. I suffered a pulled hamstrin• while
think at the beginning of the year(this sliding into second base. while Rod
year) I was relaying too much on my Carew left the ~e aft.er seven
breaking stuff. But now, I'm challeng-innings complaining of a pinched
ing hitters and I've gone back to m y nerve in his neck.
fastball.
"Basically, I've been going to my
game plan. I'm not a trick pitcher." *
Am Games. He survived the cut from
18 to 12 oarsmen.
The team, coached by Kris
Korzcniowski with the help of Or-
ange Coast College coach Dave
Grant, recently took top honon in
Switzerland, rowing to a coune
record S:27.14 to top Canada
(S:30.8S) and Great Britam (5:31.93)
on the 2,000-meter course.
It was also an International Rowing
Federation record. but not a world
mark, since no such records are kept
because ofvariations in conditions of
different COUJ"IC$.
• •
The 1984 Olympics coincide
"Earl Jones as a replace-
ment for Kareem Abdul-
Jabbar is unlikely," Riley
said. "But I'm excited. l
lilc:e anyone who is~ 11 and
can fill the lane." So. It seems, after Rader talked to
Stewart on the mound in the ninth -
ANGaL NOTWS -Tll9 Anoe!• are now •·4
~ 1....ir current homesland wllh tour °'"""
remalnlne. and tiavt IOll lhl'M 11taloll1. TM 1u1 time lflrf IOal """ ..,,,.. In • r-wa1 al home
t-----------~~~-~--------~-----.
aoalml Detroit last Mav 122. 23 end 241.
Soeaklnt of Detroit: The Tloets were U-5 WNtl
1Mv lef1 Anaheim after 1?11 lt\r..-..me twelel,
blll ilnce 111an tne'v• oona 11-n •nd hold a 6\'J·
Mme advantaea owr the atrMltlne 1"'9 Jen. MMnwtllle, Mlt wee.a. 1119 O..rolt rlttll-flandlr whO 1lart9d IN IMSOl'I H , 11 llOW 7·5 ••• JNll ....,_, waa hllllno et a .351 dlo and Nit 1111 In
12 of 1111 la11 IJ home oamn. He w11 be on •
dllV·IO•dllV balll . • . ...... .Md!IM'I 11111
llOmer' of Ille ...aon tlV.. him -In hit C8t'tlr,
four befllnd Leu o.rte for IM No. 11 "'°' on tile all-lime Hat • , • And hOW llboUt IN RaMln'
L.t4'l'"f hmll!, wllO Pick• UP an ltll •"'911 In
Int''°""' lnnln9 Wednelclev. Pan11h now haa J3 ltll In 1111 lall 25 Hmn •nd Ml knocQd In a
run In 10 11ra1t111 to lie a ltanMr NCOrd '""' llwreutM did ,, In hi• MVP veer. 1'74). He Ilea
dr1Yen In 17 runa durlnl ttlat air-. lurrOllllM
Moektd In 20 durlno 1111 ,,,.... . . • Tonlefll
condUdet tne lhr-oame MtlM wlltl Taus.
Cllef1le HWlfl 16-61 w1• lacie 0.... ZaM 11•21 In
tonlefll'• finale. TM Anoell wlll haft en off-dllv Thur14av tMlfotw entartalnlnt tna K.,... Cltv
9'civell for IM llnel ltlrM home MIMI Mor IO
1119 A.I-Star llfMk.
with the beginning of our 100th year, so we have
a timely anniversary gift for you: the Guinness Book of
Olympic Records.
Included is every winner of every event held since the
modern Games began in 1896 (11 years after our founding)
... 260 pages of record-breaking facts and photos ... plus
the complete schedule for this summer's Games.
There's no obligation. Just visit any Great American office
and ask for your free copy (one per adult, please, while they
last). It's a timely gift from an old friend. Come by for
you rs today!
Hunb,.ton hlch
9132 Ad•ms Avenu~
Tel~ph~ 962·2446
Fountain Valley
JOI 7S Slattf A11fllue
Telephone 963 7736
8atbo9 llUnd
301 Marine Avenue
Ttl phone 67!)·3212
l.ebol ftenfnsuta
600 tut Balbol Boulevard
T I phone: 673·3701
Newport leach
S Corporate Plani
Tel phon 6'44·1885
WDodbridce 4520 Batranca Parkway
Telephone 559-8803
l4un.hlch
260 Ou.In Allenut
Ttlephone 494 7541
MoNRhlay
3 Monarch S.y P1a1.J
Tel pf'lon 496 J?Ol
LAcune Hip
30112 Clown Valley Pkwy
Ttl phont 495 6?.10
I
San Juan Capiatrano
32222 Camino Cao11ttano
Telephone 661 ·0897
Capt1tr•no 8Nd't
34206 Doheny Park Re»d
Telephone ,.96 0201
San Cf ,,,.,,t.
601 Ncwth El Cam.no Rul
Telephone 492·1195
San Cftmentt/Altenlda Pico
400 Alltn1d• Pico
Tel•phont 498 6330
• .I
Delicious .Top Sirloin, grilled to you~ taste. $4 4 Served with homemade soup or crisp 5 green salad, choice of tato (baked
potato or rice pilaf avai~le 4 to 9 p.m.), I
fresh roll and butter. ·
"'d Snapper
SttvM a ti• 11.m. Delicately grilled and enhanced wtth melted $3 15 butter. Served with tartar sauce and,Jemon
wedge. Includes vegetable, french fr1ri,
homemade soup, crisp green salad and I choice of dessert (pudding, Jelloi Ice cream
or sherbet).
• J
Good Samaritan
wins yacht race
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP)-Solo Nilor Yvon faconnicr
stopped to help a fellow yachtsman in trouble and thus
firusbed tbe Observer Sinalebanded Traosaelantic Race 16
boun behind the fim bolt but the Oood Samaritan .as
declared the unoffidal winner Tuetday.
Faconnier of France was Jiven a 16--bour handicap
after his 1ood deed on June 7 in a race which waa
dominated by Frenchmen and trimarans, boats with three
hulls.
The fint Ammcan to cross the fillisb line wu Wamn
Lubres of Aorida io the 64-foot Thunday•a Oilld. Luhm
was the fim monobulJ to finish tbe ocean c:rosaiq. He
ended the trek in lOth place at 5:37 a.m. EDT Tuaday.
The f'IQe at fint apipeared to bek>na to Frncl\man
Philippe Poupon who broke lbe f'IQe record !1.:-"Y 1 'h
days when be arrived heft t.arly Monday ev
Poupon arrived at Brtnton Rttf oft' Newpon at 7:06
p.m. EDT.aattinaoneday,U boW'land 16minutceoft'lhe ~vioUJ ttCOfd; let by Phillip Weld ofOlouc:attt, Masa.
'" 1980. But Povpon wu not the winner bcc:autc Mooday
af\.ttnoon Ro)'&I Wesacrn YICbt aub ofrteialJ awarded
Fauconrutr the time be lost racuina anothct compaitor.
Fauconnicr finished at S:42 a.m. Tue.day, 16 dayt.. 6
hours and 5 minu1e1 aft.ct be left Ponunouth. £Dsland on
June 2. The time beat Pou~n by about five hours.
Finialuna 21 manuta aftrr PoU,P.m and in tbiTd Dtaee
wu anothtr Frnctlman, Ma~ Pajo_t in the ridically <kliancd trimaran Elf Aquitaine l. ~ot'a boet bu 1
pavotina c.nltt hull and wu t~ favooie of many race watchen.
r
. .
~boetnohl6· ,,
Baa~. •portll doo~ dowr
Huntm 1ntt'l"C'Stcd 1n lt'1UDJ anvolved WJlb
tr(hay will have the opponwuty to ltam mon:
about it at t.he We1ttm Hunt.ma and po111
h00t1na Show at the Lona Beach Convenuon c.e.ncu.
The C00tt tnd ·~ mma Own-
p10DS!UP1 or Draa Bolt qana ,.,,tJ be held llm
Satutd.ay and u.nday ti lrvaot Lake in Orante ~ eveot, uoned by the Nalionat Draa bt Ass«iation (N08A) Wlll aocludc 20
diffcttnt claslcs.
Tbdidd "'WiU fctiturc-lhr ~own fud ~dro
clua (atkm9t11)J to txm the Irvine Lake apccd rmmt of220.)9 mpb.tn thc_qU&ner mile~ and
five du.cs of champaooah1p Cll'(le boats
includina K·Botts, Pro Comps, Comp Jeu,
Cractcr Bou• and Mod VP oulboltds io five.-
The ahow l"\lna Tbunday tbrouab Sunday.
Amona arcbert 00 band lO &JVO ltmlnafl and
demonsuauon• will be Tom Jcnninp of
Jenn1np Arc~. Thett will be an indoor
an:hcry ranae which will be open to the public.
bow hours wiU be Tbund.ay and Friday ftom
3-10 p.m.; Saturday, noon-10; and Sunday, noon-7.
lap aprina bea1 competition.
lbdna1tartseachdayatapprox.im11ely9a.m.
Tickets~ S' for ldulu and S2 for youths
12-16. Children under I i,.11 bt admitted free '
Admiuion ii SlO on Saturday -.ad St2 on
Sunday for adulta. Cbilcmn under 12 will be
admitted (nc.
Irvine Lake ia located ecvcn milca cut of the
Newport Freeway Take OJapmao Avenue east '° Sa.ntiqo ROid and turn nah•· For.more 1nformauon. pbone649-2991.
Bueball-.oftball COIJINt
Irvine's annual bucball-soflbttl slcills contest
1s set for Sunday at I p.m. at Harvard
Community Athletic Park
Boysand girls born 1n 1970 through I 97S will
have an opponuruty 10 oompttc in this year's
sldlh, oontest wh1c!Eponsored by the lrvanc
lllt. SAC tnc.t meei.
Two ltack and field meets will be held at Mt.
Community $(rv1ce mcnl
The three catcaones o slulls include: Throw-
ing for distance and accuracy. runnma bases for
umc. and hatuna for dmance and 1CCUracy.
For anformauon on reaistration, fbonc 660-385 I. weekdays between 9 a.m. and p.m.
San Antonio's Memorial Stadium. under the
auspices of The "Athletic Conareu (TAO oo
Sunday, July IS and Wcdnc1day, July lS. Both
will be lat.r aftm\oon-cvening events.
Both mCCJI will be mformal, all comcn.-rypc
activitin, with all Olymplan1 mvitcd to paruc1-
pat.c on both or either datei. For more i.nformauoo. phone Ml SAC at
S94-S6l l.
TRIPLES: Samuel, ~. 10;
Sandber9. Clllcaoo, 9; Cruz. Houlton. 7;
Gwvnn. San Dlteo. 7, McG99, StLoul•, S;
McRl"fnddl. San Oleto. S. --~ ~ .. ~~,.~ ~!J'"~
i. r.,_",·tr~~~~
~12.
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
Amet1an LM~
ANlh Cl'llcego
Minnesott
S..ltle
0..kl41n<I
KenusCltv Texts
Detroit
Toronto
&attlmore
Boston
New York
MllweukM
Clevelal'l<I
Wl!ST DIVISION
W L
3' 32
32 3'
32 3'
33 34
ll 37
21 lS
lO 31
EAST OfVlSaOM
• 17
" 2:3 ll 2'
31 :M ,, 36
27 37
2A 31
TUetdlV'• Scwes
Texu '· AMlh 2 Detroit 7. New York ' Mllwaukff 6, Toronto s
Battlmore 9, Boston 1
CleYeland 7. Mlnnnota 4
Seattle •• Clllcaoo 2 1Can$t1 Cltv 6, 0.klancl 2
T .. v'I ~
l"ct. Ga
S29
.41.S 3
4S 3
471 l~
45' s
~ S'h
'" ' ne .'41
5'7 .4n ....
.422
.317
6....,
11
17
19
20....,
22li't
Texas (Hou91\ H ) at AMlh (la!W'I l ·l ),
(n)
Mllwa\AM <Coc.nowtr S-61 at Toronto
IAlexandw S-2l
1Can$ts Cllv !Gul>lcza l -6) at Oeklal'ld
(ICrueoe< 4-2)
New York (Shirley 1-1) at Detroit
(Berengyer 4·0). (n)
Balllmore (80<l<llcker l·Sl et Boston (Boyd 1-4), (n)
Clellfiand (Corner 1-1) et Mlnnnote
(\/Iola S-71. (n)
Cntcaoo (Hovi 6-6) et S..ttle <Lanoston
4·S>. (n)
~.o.m.s
Cteve4eno at Minnesota
Mllwauk• at o.troll, (n)
New Yotlt at Baltlmora, (n)
Toronto at Solton, In> ......... lAll9Ue
WIST DIVISM>H
W L l"ct. GB
San Oleoo 31 26 S'' Atlanta 31 29 .5'7 ,....,
~ 35 3' 507 SI/)
Cincinnati 31 37 45' 9
Houston 30 36 ASS '
San Francl•co 2• ~ .37S 1'
Pf\lla<ltll>flta
New York
Ctllca90 MonlrNI
St Loul•
PlttlburVh
EAST OfVI"°"
37 T1 S11 3A 11 SS7 ,.,.,
lS 29 .547 2
33 33 .500 s
333SAS6
24 3' .ll I 12....,
~.,., sc.r..s
Clndnnatl 10, OedW1 4
MonlrMI 6, St. LOUii )
Pf\lladelollla '· N-y oril 4 Cl'llcailO 4, PlttlburOl'l 3 Atlallte 11, San FrendlCO 6
San Ole9o 2, HOUiton O
T .. v's °*"'" ~ (Pena 7·2) at ClnclnMll
(Ru1Mtl 2-tl, lnl
San Francisco (Robinson 3·7) at Atlanta
(Barktf S·6), (twll
St Louis (Anduillr 10-6) at Montl'MI
(Palmer 2·2). (n)
Pf\~ (Canton 4-l l at New York
(0ar11no 6·31. lnl
Cl'llcaoo <Trout 7·31 at Plttsburlltl 10.-
Laon 3-•l. (nl San ~ (LOiiar S-SI II ~ton
(MaOdtn 1-1), (n)
f'lwnda'f'I ~
Oed9ar'I at Cincinnati (nl
Pl'll~la et Haw Vont
ChleaOO at Plllltlul'lltl, Cnl
San Francisco at Atlanta. (n)
S.n Oleoo •' Houston, (n)
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADI RS
Americen LM9Ue
BATTING tlSO 11 bats) Winn.id, New
Yon • .341; Mattlnotv. N-Voril, ~.
GBel. foronto, .m . UPSlllw, Toronto. 316.
Enole. Mlnnesote •. 324, Yount, Mllwauk•.
324 RUNS: OwEvans. BoltOll, 50, MoM«>Y.
Toronto, 47, RIPlllf'I, Banfmore. '1, Tram·
metl, Detroit, 47, R~. 0.ktan<I, 0 ,
Whllaller. Detroit, 45 RBI· EMurrev, S.lllmore, 60, Rica,
Boston. SS; Klnoman, 0.11.land, S2; L1Par-
rl1h. Texu, '9; AOavl1, s .. ttlt, 1.7.
HITS: Gard•. Toronto, 17; TrammeU,
Oetn>lt, 13; Mlttlnotv. New Yorll, l"l;
Vounl. MllWlukM, 12; 4 era !ltd with 71.
004.IBLES: Garcia, Toronto, 17; Tt\MI,
Mlnnesola, 17; Ge.ti, T«onlo, 16; LllPar-
rlMI. T ..... 16, Mattingly, NW VOi\, 16,
OBrltn. T1xa1. 16; Trammell, Detroit, 16
TRIPLES: MoMbV. TorOllto, t ; Collln1.
TorontO. 7; Owen. S..llM, 7. UPSl\llW,
Toronto, 6. RLaw, Chlc:ltO. S HOME RUNS: Kln!on'lan, OU.land, 11,
Armin . Boston, 16; Kittle, CNcato. 16,
AO.Ill•. S..ttle, 14, EMurf'ay, a.ttltnort.
" STOLEN aA!ES: ltHllldtl'tOll1 Otlli.nd, 2t; Garcia, Toronto, 2S. ,....._ ......., 'M;
autllr, Cltlltlall<I, 221 CollM. Toronto. 17.
PITCHING (6 decltloM): l.OHt, Detroit, .,_O, 2 '3; L.ffl. Toronto, 7•1, 2.7'/ Caudlll,
Qellllancl, 6-1, 2.60; RL.ledlton. Twonto,
6-1. l.13, c ... r. SO.ton, .. ,. ue.
U. •1L ANlll. S•l, 1.6*.
STRIKEOUTS: WM. ........ 121 Morrl•, Detroit, 76, NltkrO. Ntw York, 76, Sitto,
TorontO, 74; I.Ml. Torontot 1S. SAVE$: QuMllOtlrv. UNat CllY. 17,
Caudffl, Otllla!Mt, l'-HWNftdtl, Detroit,
12; RO.vlt. MlfwlelOta, 12J ~. eoaton.
IL
/'
STOLEN 8.SES: Wlooln1, San Dltoo.
33; Samuel, PhlladelPllla, 32; Redus, Clncln·
natl, 30; bernler, Chlcaoo, 25; Ralnea,
MOt'llrMI, 21. PITCHING 16 dKbloM): PPerfl, Allan·
ta, 7-1, 4.57; Soto, Cincinnati, 7· 1, 2.Sl;
Mahler. Allanta. s--1. Ut; LM. Molll!'MI.
11-3, U2; A ..... ~ 7·2. 2.1S1
LYndl, New Yortt. 7·2, .771, 2.11; ltvan.
Houlton. 7·2 •. 771. 1.13. ,STRIKEOUT$: V.....,., ~
1011 Gooden, New Yortt, H. RYM. Houtlon,
9'; SOto, ClnCIMall, 13;artton, Pf\lladelphla,
76. SAVES Sutter, $1Loub, 16; Holan<I.
Pt11~. 1s; Gotsa9e. s.n oi.oo. 13,
La$rnlltl, Chleaoo. 13; Orosco, New Yon,
13.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
R8'181n 4, Aftlllb 2
TEXAS
Rl,,.n<ln
88 .. lb
08r*1 lb
LAPnll r1
Scoll c
WardM
Sample cf
Tollftll 2b
Wllkr111 u
u rlllll s 0 0 0
4 2 2 0 s 0 1 0
1 l 1 I s 0 1 1
4 I 1 2
4 0 I 0
4 0 2 0
3 0 I 0
CAUPOltNtA
Pettis cf
C.rew lb
Wllfono 2b
Sanklul rl
MCBronrl
O.Cnaltl
R1Jk111 <111
OownlnoM
Gr1c:h 2b
Boonec
H.,.,.on Ph
., .....
T911111
SChoflld u
l6 4 11 4 T .....
" 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
• 0 2 0
0 0 0 0
'0 0 0 4 1 1 1
3 1 2 1
• 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
l 0 0 0 n 2 s 2
SC-IW ""*-Texas 100 mo 100-4
c:........ -010 100-2 Game Winning RBI -Scoll (1).
E-Sc:otl 2, Wllllerl0!1. SW. OP-Texas
2, California 1. LOB-T .. 11 11, Callfomla 6
?&-O'Brien. Beniquez. Hit-ward (6). Re·
Jedi.Ion (11), Oownlno (9) S&-0'8r*1
(1). LAPwrfWI m. Petti• (24)
s-wllMrson
H RER U SO Tuu
OSI-art w..-1 11-3 S 2 2 3 4
0"-5 S.2 2·3 0 0 O O O
camwlllll Romanick L,l-6 6 I 4 4 4 I
L.$alldltl l l 0 0 1 0 ltomenlck pltc:M<I to 1 t>atters In the 7th
T-t:'Z6. A-24,62S.
8lf'lkluel
Carew
N9"on
Brown
Wllfono
Lvnn
0.Clncn
Plcdolo
Grldl
Sconiers
Downing
Re. Jackson
Pettis
~ Ro. Jackson
6oone
Teitels
Aneef aYtra9H
8ATTING
A8 It H HR
1)4 20 47 4
1'3 2S SI 3
5' 4 17 I
6t s " 2 13' 15 JI 3
203 32 SS t
230 3S '° I ~ • 12 0
115 17 29 • 4 0 I 0
221 24 57 9
212 30 " 11
"' 33 43 2
"' 21 J9 l " s 13 0 ,,. 16 31 0
2275 in 571 St
PfTCHIHG
•Ull Pct.
20 .351
21 .lOI
3 ..2tl
10 .lM
16 .m
22 .271
33 .261
4 .261
13 .lS2
0 .250
37 .235
3S .231
17 .219
14 .199
4 .197
17 .192
"' .251
lft H 81 SO W·L •llA
K ftc>n s s 2 5 0-0 0.00
AaM I 0 0 0 0-0 0.00
Sancnu ~ :w 13 73 5-1 Ul
Zahn IS'h IO 17 22 l ·l 1.90
Forscti 1611) 14 3 10 1-1 UO
Cor1>ttt JO'I) T1 11 1' 2-0 2.37
Kaufman 31'..._, 26 11 20 1·2 3 16
Joflll 9' I 00 27 2S l-6 :US
Witt IC)21.il.I IOS 41 13 S· 7 4.31
Romanick 1~ 110 35 " 1-6 4.47 Curtis I 14 3 4 0-0 Ul
Slaton 43 '5 11 14 2·2 6.21
Lacorte ~ lO 12 13 1-2 us
Sw1n S I 0 2 0-1 10.IO °''*" 11 " ' s 0-1 ,,00 ,..... ~ .,. tot .. J6.J2 U4
Saves Sanchet 7, Corbett 3, Kaufman l,
Klson 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
'leda l O, ~4
LOS ANGELIS CINCINNATI
Sax 2t>
RRnldS cf
Guef'rtr 3ai ManN1b
Mldndo rl
WNtflld M
YM9"C
Vall If
La~d
AndelnU
Valerl2la D
COlalD
BRUNI Pl!
Rodas p
""1twtv tlfl HootonD T .....
Mrfllll •rlllll
S 1 I l RadUs M 4 2 I 0
SOJO Mllntrc1 4 1 33
4 1 2 1 C~ lb 4 I 0 0 s 0 0 0 Orlnsn lb 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 Plrllllf' rl 3 I 2 0
2 o 1 o Welker rl o o o o
4 0 l 0 CllCllC7I ss A I 1 I 3 o o o e .. s11Y >«> 2 1 o o
1 o I o Krcl'lek :lb o o O o
J I 2 0 BllrOllO c 4 I l I 2 I I 0 O...ler 2t> 4 1 I 3
0000 PrlceP 2100
1 000 Powero 1000
0000
1 0 0 0
0000
Jt 41J 2 T ..... ..... .,., ..... JJll 9.
LaMelM --Mt-4 °"'*"'• •I Wt ttt-lt Game WlMlno RBI -Conc:wclOn (4). E-<eclmne, Maldonlldo, Df'-Lo. An-Ollet l, ClnelnMll 1. Loe-i.ot A119MM 10.
CltlcW\ltl 4. 21-Vteoet. ltMul, O.W • Andlt'IOI\. Hlt-.Mltner (4), ~WO (5),
11~ (2) ~td\1$ ('JO), Cfdtno ()) ~ H ltClt .. IO
4 1-3 • 7 1 6 l
1·3 I l I t 2
2 t 2 2 • •
f tOOIO
...... ....._.auc1 tllll , ................. , ..............
Mao.ii• Wldl tCMCMelt1.-1 •
l.lilf "*• tu.1.t. ' >. 1·6. .. am. ACUM ICllltl ftf ltfl'I ~Mii CU SJ,
H , 6•\, JolWI A1SaaM11t CAWIJl'•l •
,,. Ottttr ... '" J, .. 1 .....
U.S. OMnpic tntdl "'-II
(I t Us Afl9MM)
FINALS ...
ac»-1. Earl Jones, tnk1ter, Mich., 1:'3.74 !American record, old record l:Al.'1, Rick
Wotllll\lter. 1'74); 2. Jol'lnnv Grav, LOI
AlllMlet. 1·43.74; 3, John Manllal, Plain·
flald, H.J • lC.f'l. A.. James llobltilon,
0.klend, Ul92, S. Don Paige, Wftl
Chntw, Pa .. l:il.17; 6. SlaNev ltactwlne,
F 1vettevlle. AR., 1:4S.32; 7. P9te ltlcft-.,.dtoft, Temot, ArlL, I~ 9. Eugene Sa~. Shaw, Miu., 1:A7.0S.
I 1t ..,...._I. Grev Foater. Mavwoocs.
I•. ll.21, 2. Tonlt ~. Caron, 13.34, 1
ltoeer KlnoOom. Plttsburllh, 13.J6; A.. Milan
Stewart, West Covina, 1157; S. Cletus
Clartl, Denton, T111ai, llll; •· Henrv
Andrade, Sacnmenlo, 13.'4; 7. John
Thoml>son, Miami, 13.75; I. John Johnson,
Stodlton, 13.'7.
10.--1. Paul Cummings, Orem, Utah,
2nt.0•; 2. Crale Vlreln, L.aOanon, •• ..
21:02.27; l. Pat '°'1tr, AlamoM, Colo ..
21~; I.. Garv 8~. Twit, Mlm.,
2*.'05.93, S. Mark Cun», Poto, Mo., a.11UO,
6. Bruce 810tord, a.nton, Malne. 21:1U6;
7 Torn AMbtrrv, Tucson. ~ a. Don
Clarf. Eugene, Ore.. 21:21.11; t. Robbie
Penlns. GrMMboro. N.C., 29'.ll.'4, 10
Chertes Bevier, New Paltt, N.Y .• 2UOl9,
11 Marc N.-, Laxln9tori. KY., 21:$3.71,
12. Ed EVMaont. Ooclen. Utall. 21:55.71; 13.
John ldstrorn. Ow1tonna, Minn., 21:57 Ot,
1'. H«t> Llnduv. Boulder, Colo., 29-Al.n;
IS. Tony s.noovat. Len Alamos. HM.,
29:06.45, 16 Miiie Buhmann. ChlcaOO,
29:S2.20; 17 Pat Pelarson, IMID, N.V ,
29' .. 52.23.
LAN iun.-1. Cart Lewi•, W1tllnetlofo.
H.J., 21·7, 2. LM'l'Y Mvrkkl, J.Oson, Miu., 27·~; 3. Mike MdtM, Frttnonl,
26·9, A.. Jason Grima. l<noxv•. 2'-7~. s
Vatte» .Jofvtlon. TllQOll, ArlL. 26-6 , 6.
Mike Pow911. lrvlne, 2'·214, 7. Mike Conlev,
CNc:aeo. 26~. a ltandv Wllllams, Fresno,
t5·7'1'J, t T1ll'I Lffcll, Rateklh, N.C.. 25-7''1. 10 RalDI\ Stlrv, a.ttlmort. 25'-lll'I, 11
Gor<IOn Laine, Venalles, KV., 25'-2~. 12
Ronald Wayna, San Jose, 23~'"'1. w-.-.._, Chandra o-saoor-ouon. Jedi·
sonv18e, Fla., 4'.21 (American ,,_.d, old
r.cord 49.13, Valer .. Brl$C:O-Hookl, lfl,O,
2. Valerlt llrlsco·HoollS, Loa Aneetn. 49.7'; 3. Llllla LMlherwood, ltalpf\, Ala., 50. lt, A..
Shef'rl Howard, Loa Anoeltl, 50.40; S..
0-.n Howatd, Grlftada HI*· SUS; 6
Florence Griffith, LOI Anoetft, Sl 11, 7
Olene Obon, BrooklYn. N.V .• 51.26 •• ltooerta Belle, Balllmore, Md .. 51.M
..... 1. Kim ~. Sall1a MDlllca,
1:51.50; 2. Ruth W'flOdtl, El Toro, 1:59.34, 3
Robin Camc>bell, W1ll\ltlotOll, D.C,, 1 :5' n ;
A.. Di.na ltk:ntlur9, T rov, N. Y.. 2:0 t. II, S. Cvnthla Warner. Los AnoeltS. 2:02..16, 6.
Claudette Gra.ndMI, Salem, Ore.. 2.-0UO.
7 Oellw FIOvd, Detroit, 2:0U7, EW.
Wuhlneton, ~ton, did not f\nllh.
JaWlll -I Karin Smith, San Luis
Obl•DO. 200-0. 2. Lvnda Sutfin, Corning,
190· 7, J. Cathy SYllnltll, South San Fran-
cisco. 112·6; 4. Ke le ~. LOt!O aa.cn.
17'·1; S. Kathv CalO, C.Dt Neddldt, Maine,
171·9; 6. P•ltv KMrnev. EU91N. Ore.,
ln-11; 7. OeOb1e Wllliatn1, E uclld. Otllo, 11s-a. •· Lori "'1MCM, c,..,.,_, 161-9, t Lorne Martinson, South a.net. Wuh.,
1 .. -2' 10 Mvtlua COieman, Soc*ane, 1'4-0,
11 SUsle Rn, Ora1'191. 161-l. 12 Pim
Peuera, Mc.JN.Krav. Pa... 15t·2
SEMIFIMAU
Ml9I
-llnt flW ..... .., TlM'Mlll¥"• ..... )
HNI 1-1 Alonio a.bin, Montoomerv,
Ala .. 44,,S, 1 AnlOlllo McKav, Atlanta,
45.20,) Wldle Smith, Unlondale, N.V., '5.ll,
4 Chris Wtlllk>al, StbHIODOI, 45.35, S. Ma111
WllhtrlPOOn, Chlcavo. 45.37; 6. Mlct\M4
Franks, SI. Louis, Mo.. 45.31, 7. OllVlll'
Brklclts, OlstrlCf Helo11t1. Md.. 4S 69. I
Buteh Rtvnolds, Akron. °"'°· 47.52. Heat 'l-1. Sunder Nill, Ql!Qoo, '4.'3. 1
Walter McCoy, Oavtona 8"ch, Fla. UID,
3 llay Armstffd, St Loul~. Mo .. '5.10. 4
Maril ltowe, Byhalia, Miu , 45.30, S
ltooerlcll i-, Oalle1. 4S 4 , 6 Darrel
ltoblnM!l'I, T~. WHll., 45.70, 7 Wiiiie
McLaUOhlln, EHi Oranoe. N.J .. 45.n, &r1ld McDonald, ~II. ArlL, dlcl not flnllh.
110 111111 IMIN!et (.-st ... Ill eadl .... , _....... .. ,_. .......... , .... )·
HNI 1-1 Gree Foster. 13.22. 1 Miian
Stewart, IJ.6S, J. John ThotWPsoll. ll.71, 4
JOl'ln Johnson. 13 IO. S. S.m Turner, Lo•
"""'"· 13.93; 6. Larrv Cowtlno. BanllltV, 13.tl; 7 Alex WHlllnoton. Garv, Ind., 1401.
I. Kerrv Bethel, ScolCfl PlafM, N J,, 14 ot
HNI t-1 Tonie CatnPC>ell 13.31. 1
ltooer Kfnectom, 13.36, 3. Henrv AnclrMI,
13.AS, 4. Cletus Clark, 11.51; S. Jadl Pierce,
WoodOvrV. H J • 13 • .0; 6. ,,.,,_ IW:.C.r.,,.,..,,, SN~. u , llil. 1 Wavna Ro«rt
Svcamort. Ill, ll."4, I ROCINY Wllsoll,
Phlllldelohla. 13 IQ, w-..... , ...... e9dl .... t ....
.., TlM'Ma¥"• ... ,
.,.._, l-1 Lori Mc:Cau!rt, Hlltown, Pa .•
SUI, 2. Anetll Wflllf\I, Ocala, Fla , 5'.• 1 Shani.ti• 8at11Male, H.atrlman, Ttnfl .•
505; " PIDtr 8!"MMllll, GalNI.,,.., Fl, SUI; S. lAtanv1 SMffleld, ,,_,. 0tMo. 5"2.
6. Colleen C.ouetto, NatnM. ldeM, 57.IS; 1 svt>ll ~. F«t WtVN. Ind., 51.12, •
Kaltrf Fr.-nan. .. f'OI\ ,._, La.. 57 ts.
HIMI 2-l Juel 8f'vwl\', Ent ...........
MKt1 • SS tt, 2 . ._..... M9111t. San Malee,
SS.'1, 3.. ltOlllll\ ~ ~ Ortw JM2;
4. EdN ,,_, llff< .. lttlllhlia, 51.02, l. "-"" .,...., • JOf'l'alOwtl. ....... 57 M; 6. '--Ille
a.cto.. K ....... M8ftl,. 57 .... 7. LMM °''""· ~ ...... S 4'. LE.,,..... Hatc:tw,
"-trk'll Otv, Va , I '00.Q.
Pan aCMMO
MM
.( .................... .... ................... .,...y'a ....
fWlll'~
..... 1-1 Calvin Stnl"'· eolton. #J • tu&; t. 4lltr1 ....... 0... kit, i. ~ ~ A ..... TtXM, aM: .._
Jt/l'My Tltom9• HIM!el\. 21M. S. °'""' ceunc1. ~ N c.. nn. " ~ ,,,,.,... -.omnHa.w..2~ ..... 1-1 • .,.. ........ ......,,.. ...
T aai l. ltWv c:n.M. New Vn. ..... 1,....... ~. ,,..,...,
aM ~ ~ MW"e. llltJllr a'*' ,,.,' o.or..e ~. ..... ' ".Mt 6 MWlll\ • s.n--. na ..._.._, ... ~.~ .
.. ... t. o.MV c.w .... Ollll.. J
.... ~ • .._ Yttt.. 8"1, 4 °""" Dt~ ~. "·· I. JefWI ~. l'tllllt ' ile.1U1
..... .-1 Jtmet eut• . .,. ......
Orange COUI DAJL"Y f'tLOT/W~, JiMii'ID, I-
NBADRAPT •••
Prom8 1
Tiit Nn of 0t)1hpac fiu111111W1Cld ~-Cikllllo ~ 16ok191>M ~ """",Of:IM.
Year Miebad Jordan of Nortb ~Md DlllM
ICleC:icd anodln T1r Hcd~ Sui Patina. No 4. Ot)ttfinwound ld«'Uool Who ..............
16 at lk Ot~m-.~Camp at aoo-m,.~:l!L: ~ of.Alk• 7 NA..lllr..llli.Ali\~·--·--~ Uncuter GOrdon o(LoWsville,, No I lw6et.ol .:6. •••
ClappeB: W~ No. I Oby ,Phlladdobia:"TJJD ~
'of: Michipft. No 12 .by~~ ~ -1.
Vandcrl>U&. No. 11 by New Jency, snd Vern ~of QeorPa. No. l I by Jndi•u
In the same dtaJ lb.at 1eD1 Tu:rpu;·s draft ~ts '° Oeveland, McConnick01 ~ts were traded IO S.lde,
whkb alao acqu1_red v~ 1t.idty Soben &om W 1 b ....
ton. The Bulleu 'lalu.i.red veteJUS Gus Williamt lai:i
Seattle and Clift" RoblniOll frvm ~dud in the ...._.
way deal. Two other playen who n\..se the &al.I lO at me
OJ~pic tryOUU. but laaer were eut; allo Mre 'tateD .. fk
first round. OW1es 8&rtJe')' of~ a ICDllllOG .;tb
hil quiekncss and leapi• abiliry dttpiie cmrrinl 272
pounds on a M fra~. the No. S J1iict a,y·~·
aod John Stock1on ofOonzal,a was t&lcen I~ by u-. UC Imne te1111i. camp
Tbe Patton-lruh Tmnis Camp will hold four five-day SCSJIODI lbis summer at UC Irvine.
Marty Bl&U. the BA '1 director o! ~ Mid be
was ,not surprised by the pot.ential QtymplUI drafted
early, altbo"'ah some oflhem att not wdJ.,kaowa. Grq Patton, men's bead tennis coach at UC
ln-me, and Doreen lruh. womu's bead coach,
will conduc:t the claucs The IC1&ions wiJI run
July 8-13. July IS-20, July 22-27 and July 29-
Auc. 3. 'TM final camp will be dtvotcd to
tournament~
The cost of Lbe first three camps wtth Jodpna
is $280aodS190 withoul Tbeto1imamcot camp
is SJOO with lod&ina and S2 IO without
-rtbe)' "'ett ou~inc ·pla)'Cn in the tint p1ecc;·
Blake said, ... It's a ei'edit to ~r ability that dleJ were
P!Cked so b.jab.. bu& it provn alto that the jacflmc'Dt o(
(Olympic COacb) Bobb)' Kniltlt coincidet With lhr
judgment of the top brains of t.sketbell ...
Tbc ets' selection of'. Tu~. a 6-9 foe'Wlld. wa
,l;l'ttted by bo06 from the larte plJCtY of fans al de draft
&cad.quarters at Madison Sq~ Ganteo'' Fdt Fonun. For more infonnauon, call 856-6985.
a.. 5'1 I :MM (lbl ....... 1111 9Mll ..............
...... ~ tw 'n!iwMn'I WtA•2*>:.
Heal t-1. Oa11e Oanlels. San Btme(dlno, 1:31.JO; 2. K.llY .lanMft, Med·
lord, Ore., l:Jl.65: J. ltldlerd Gerda, '-"' Churdl. Va.., t'.34. 13; .. Ken Martin, co-
QUfle, Ore.. a::w. 16; s. JoM Greeor•.
Hor1tlD«f, H. V ., 1:34.17; 6. Mldlatl VIII·
atta, ColcWMo Scwtnos. ~; 7 Cort
Randall, Scwtnvfteld. Ore., ~·"· I. Rooert llll!'am, San Jose, 1:40.tl; 9. Harold
KUJIMldf, Fair OKs. l:0.14. 10, ..
Mc:Culloulfl. Pwrls. ...D.'3; 11. Pieter
Wfll"ntr, Corv .. s. Ore .• f'lO.M.
Heat 2-t. Ivan Huff. Paso lt0illle$,
1:36..SO, 2. ltkkv Pittman, Oewlancl. I~;
3. Brian Dlemw, Grand Ra.Ida. Midi ..
l".:J7.47; A.. ltandV JtdlsOcl, IOWI City, loWI,
ISJI; s. Tom si.v-. o...111'd, ta..
l:JL.32; 6. ;.,. Heu. Tuaon. l:a.47, 7 Rlll
Hotlnholl. ~. Wvo .• 1..-SSOt; .. Mall
McGutn. Euetne. Ore., 1.5'."; '· Oeorid Frank, GladStone, Ort .. t:oUt
HMI >-t. Fanev G«'btr. Wn l Jord9n.
Utafl, ~.53; 2. Ron AOdlM>n, oe....lend, l~.M; 3. Brtt HVde, Oevton, Oftlo, t:Al.l2;
A.. Henr\' tMnll. SeM lAka City, l:•U1, S.
James Cooper, It~. NC., HUI; 6.
Kreoe ElnsPahr, LlnCOlll. Nee.. l:AU2. 7. 0.111<1 ...,,..,, ~. Arb..1;.4471, ..
T.,.ry OraM, L..-. ~, I .. 21, 9 Daw
OoCllw. Fort ColllM. Colo • t-.51 21 IO s......,. -*'t'lft. Seeltle, """ --a.--, .... ttwt ... tedl .... -· ..... ""' ..... ....., ... ~ .....
--):
Heat 1-1. Clndv Brem-. ~. WIK., t:ol..21; 2. .htn M«Ttl, Wa"'1ord,
Conn., 9:0SM; 3. Marv KnlMIY. Allan,
Texas, 9:05.ti; 4. Maoolt Kewt, San
ltafMI, Hl.25, S. PaltlSue ~. Mon·
lrOM, Colo~ 9:10.17; 6. Kathy Havwt,
Newtltl'V. Ora., t:ll.26; 1 . .Joen Habif,
Cllaftotte, 9:15.tl, I. LYM Jennlnol, Bolton,
9:56.'4.
Hatt l-1. Marv Oeckllf', Eueene. Ore-
t:o1.f0; 2. FrancJt LMr*l·Smllfl, Denton,
Texu . ,_.,; 3. Joan ~ o.lla,
t:OUO; ~ Ellenor SlmonMdl. talttmore,
9:10.17; S. SM1Y Sttetv, ~v ... Fi...
,.11>.2'; 6. LYM Nebon. T.,,_, Arit..
9:16.01; 7. Jo4v Eder, Lek• Elmo, Minn.. 9:20.Al, L It.-Odom, Houston, t:2US. t
Rebtcca Cotta. W.-ton, t•. 9'..37.46. Hatt 3-t. Caltw 8rant1, Hartford,
WIK., t:lUt; 2. Deborah PIN, Faluft,
Kans.. t:lUO; 1 C.ltlv fw~. Goldin Vl llr;, Minn., 9:14.t': 4. Brtncla W...
Knoxvlla. Tenn.. 9:14..'7; S. Sabr1na
Oomflotfel. Fon L..tonard Wood. Mo .. 9:15.04; 6. BetfV SOf'ln9s, Bradenton, Fiii.,
9'15.32; 7. Ma~ COMll, "'ettwlfte. Olllo,
9-17.SO.
SECOND ROUND
Ml9I
-(tlrst .......... .....,..,
TI!urWaY'I WI 0 tr):
Heat 1-1. Kirk &ac»tlite, 20.ll, 2. LMrv
Mvrlcks, ~; 3 BradV Crain, 10.51, 4
Oannv Certw. 20.62; S. Arthur Willams.
20.tl; 6. Alvin McNalf', '°"· 7. ~" Crvt'lllJtton. 21.ll. •
Heel t-t. lt•Y Martin, 20 21; 2 Thoma•
Jtfteoon, 20.37; l. Dwayne Evans, 20.52, 4
Alber1 llOClln'son, 20.SI; S JoMn11 Thoma•.
20.n; 6. OwltJIM Wllllams. 20.14. 7 Don etv.
20.9S; I. Lub Moratn, 21 20
Heat )-1. Cart Lewis, 19 "· 1 Jamft llkllltr. 20.SO; l StanleV llletodl 20 54 .•
Wtlllca 5"1 ftlOll 20.72. s Daron Councl
20 ... 6. aern.td J~. lOIS Heel ~1 CaMn Smllh, 10.33 2 Rod
&anl'4*, 211.51, 3 Wilham ~ 10 n
• Ellott ~. 20.71 ~ AUOt'IY Jonn
10 12. 6. Garv ttobenoft. 20 11
QUAUf'YlNG
Miii
..... ,,...., 1......-"" nursdaY'• llMI>:
1111¥ oi.on. Abll9nt. Teu1. Dan It...,.,
Ollno, Miiie Tullv. Encino. Dall '**''"'· Snyder, THU. .Hlff 8ucklnollam. Gardntr.
Kam., s•-stuoolllfltld. Kama• cnv.
K-; ~ Lvttt, IC_.s Cltv, !(ant., Joe
Olal. Manow, Okla., Earl hi JoNl6Gl'O. Ar'-. O.vld I(..,_,,..,, Manna dltl ttev
..... PunieY. ~. , ..... ~ W.·
PM, L-a..d\, al dltend 17·1 '°'
74 n n n n
.. T·m gcttina a lot of exposure at &be ~pie camp
that 1 didn't set at Vanderbdt,7' Turner said. I bOpe I cu
earn the respect oftbe fans io New Jeney ...
&As Alllmll9I
TUEDAY'S UJUl. TS
(4:JIN .. ft ............ Mrw ..... ,
trlUT uca. m vwa
CauM Im F.W (&ard) JM U0 U0 Eat¥ AM (PMkentofl) U0 U0
Ab Klllll CFlorn) ....
AllO rK9d: CMh K-, ShoW A.Mad, llad H9WIC Paa, Tllleo TOf'I\, Some Kllldlt a.nee. T1ma....,,
12 &XACTA {2·4) -'od Gt&
. ssco.o llACa. "' ..... P11o Jun (T~) UO 2M 1AO
A9D111 WM Ca-d> s.a UO
T .. A.Mill (PllkelltOfl) U0
AllO f'lK'.9d· Ima Oauv ...__., V1e a.ux. Mc:Strldtr. ~... ~.
8uneb0, Paet Rovll, 0 S010 Mio.
Time: 11..216.
TMlltD u ca. a yardl.
Shawne Naflw (Garde) 6.IO
._, EftY Ste (Han) sawo (C,.....,l
Also rac.d Mallen oaa.
Ima R ... Flftlett\. nm.: 20.l4.
POUllTH U CL a y.,.._
Jew9I ~ (Frvellnl '1A 1.111 SA
Endles i.-(Gerdel D.19 11.-
0WI Ab (Mltchll) U0
Alto l"acad.; NtulHY Mw1I. w~...., • •• . MAI Elle 0-. Go AJ~. MevOt PwT. Tlnv Pattern, MluYI Ant
TirM: 211.31
P ax ACT A "°"" oeld lSS2.lO. f'W'TH llACE. l.50 varctL
Jeta404I (Hartl 3.11 1.M 2A
A R ... tv (Garde) a.. U0
S-' Matt IMllCNll) 2M
AllO rac.<1. Dr-..v Octulan. ION IC.lilt'¥.
Euy Pwtv Jet. Red Hot ltl.W. v..-
Countrv, St Seulx llMrta, Uttlll Fattrn&.
Time 17"2.
P EXAC'TA Ct-l) M id s.llA
SlXTH llACE. UI YW1tL
Loeal U.. (Hart) 6..20 3.00 UO
Aft OdDO """" (CardDUt) 2M 2A Miss Ficke T1 tT,_,.I J.41
Abo ,,_.. Miu WM! A Flftltlt, AMI
[)oe>f, SvreefL
Ttrne: 17. to.
SllVaMTM IUC9. "° YWdl. 811 My DaddY (LadlW) ,.. 1.M> 6.11
lta~n Jet (Harmon) IA UO
Mid llatnl!W (Pau«nt> UI AbO read: BraniMn, w.aven T,..,
lttdtxed CoPv. C-*' ......,., erv-
Odct. Smooltl Lulte, °'9mPMnt Ta.I
Time 179'.
5l EXACTA (t-U Deld '211.20.
EJGMTM llACS. l50 verdL
8o6d RIMI' 1k.-(Plknfnl 7:10 UO UI
T1"v Feature (Hannon) I.GO uo OH-lM!e 5*n ~ CT,,_.) 2A
OH·$11Wn111ai 09lll (Han) 2AO
~·tor llllrd.
Also r908Clt This Pie II FIVtne, S. The
Honev, Chklleo Flnf\, Ms EHY Risk,
Euv An.nda. ltovaltv Cornn £My
Time: 11.00.
U PICK SOt Cl-lt-H-t·I} oeld
uo.1to.• with -'#lMine tldtM (Ila
l'IOne). 12 Ptc11 Sb COlllOUtllon oald MSUO
wlltl Q wlnnlftt tickets (five llOnal).
NMnt u ca. 170 verdl. SCnmlln9 Joe ( P9ullne) uo uo uo
Blue Pool (G.rcia) ,... uo
MoMVed c;,._ (Zufelll UO
Abo rlCe<I Oantierow Debi, ~
Ullla 8-Tout• Mo«I Dash, Reel11alor
Stru
Time' 45.'4.
U VlACTA 17-•l Ptld '31.40 •
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(at~~)
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Wt\J Gannlll't teorlfto Otto l , Stamm 7 °'Mime" 1
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I
DlllJ Piiat
ANN LANDERS 85
ENTERTAINMENT Bl
TV LISTINGS 88
Insects due, let Us spr11y
First the good news ... there
will be fewer fleas this year
By SUSAN McCALLUM
Of IM Dellr ..... lwt
As the beauuful, orange summer sun mes brilliantly
every day over Southern CaJ1fomia. something else rises
with 1t -astcady, hovering blanket ofbuzzin~ biting
critters whose sole mission seems to be annoying
unsuspcctm& humans enjoying the warm climate.
These ever-present pests cover the coast like intrepid
Little reporters-they're at the beach. at swap meets, at Decprati...e cupola on latticed aasebo party outdoor restaurants, lazily flying or crawling around piers center doablee u -ntnt for batlt:tn barbecue. andJ ust about anywhere people are around to slap, flick or
New gazebo
is outfitted
stomp them away.
Although insects can be expected to accompany the
beat every summer, a UnivcrsityofSouthcm California
entomologist said this summer should provide a bit more
comfort than the average season -but only a bi l.
Charles L. Hogue, adjunct profcssorofbiological
sciences and curator of entomology at the Museum of
Natural History in Los Angeles County, said that I 984's
springtime dry spell has diminished the flea population
since these bugs flourish in moist areas.
£ But other bugs-bees, cockroaches, ticks, flies and
Spray aer080l ln•ecticlde for 10 to 12
eecond8. Then vacate room for 15 mlnutea.
prudent about coverina your body. And never put your
hands into out-of-si&ht crevices and other concealed places
that may be refuaes for poisonous apidersand scorpions, ..
Hogue said.
He warned that common bi tina and stinaina bup may
be dangerous as well as annoying.
"Bee stinpran~ from mild to fatal, depcndinaon the
victim's sensitivity, 'be said." And altho\1&11 many bees
won't bother you if you don't bother them, some strains
will sting without provocation.
"Your best protection is to stay out of their way and
assiduously a void the area near a bee colony. If you 're
stuna, sec a doctor immediately if you have symptoms like
faintness, heart pa)P,itations, breathing difficulty or
&cneral numbness. •
He said that altbouah mosquitoes are not as
danJerous, repellent should be used when enterina their
tcmtory.
"Some people are especially sensitive to mosquito
bites, and anybody can get infected with a mosquito-borne
disease such as encephalitis," he explained. .
An even more dangerous insect, Hogue said, is the
tick, which sucks blood and can attach iuelfto a penon's
body for lonaerthan a day.
"They can transmit serious viral fever diseases,
outdoors also invnes insects to have populauon c~-including Rocky Mountain spotted fever," be said. He
plosions," Hogue said. added that someone who develops siansoffevcr should
How can annoyance from flying or crawling creatures seek medical attention immediately.
be minimized? He also cautioned not to try to remove ticks by usina
By ED ud STEVIE BALDWIN
"When you 'rc,~~s.10 jn.scct-1ofc1sted ,areas~ be a s~e!Jlical or lighted ciprette. ~~~ ~~,~"fr_.;.·.':~?~~1t~£tittiottd d,1tmayleave -0 ~ mi>tth~~~
-· behind," be said. "A safer method is to pull the tick acntly
Or a nart~· ~~~~~~-willbebappilymult~pl~ngandsprc~ding
~ # "The same warm weather that 10v1tcs you to CD.JOY the ~~.t:if<k .-=~~~:.!!~~~ht~.,--~~M~~~ .j(~':' '1''*4 l~\~;:t.t~i'~~~~ ~
Herc's the perfect solution for entenainina outdoors
and savin& you.r home from the accidental spills of party
foods and drinks.
This 12-foot 1quare p.zebo can be easily altered to suit
~~if. needs. It features a built-in barbecue pit, lattice-work
-walls left open on one side for a bar, redwood deckina
and a decorative cup(>la that doubles u a vent for the
barbecue.
Althouah the party center is not a weekend project, it
is surprisinaly simple to put tosether using step-by-step
instructions and detailed dlq:rams. To order plans, specify
Project No. 2062-H and send $9 to Making' Things for
Home&. Garden, Dept. 92626, P.O. Box 159, Bixby, Okla.
74008.
We used 12-incb-square concrete footings, set around
the perimeter and across as support for the floor joists. We
attached L-brackcts to either side of the 4x6 redwood
posts, and used wasbcn and outs to fasten the posts to bolts
set in the footinas.
We &J.l'dled the structure with upper and lower 2x6
redwood eolian attached to the outsides of the posts.
These collars support the 2x6 redwood floor joists and the
rafters.
We used I x6 redwood for the decking nailed across
the floor Joists and further supported by 2x4 supports
mounted to the frame.
We chose No. 2 yellow pine for the common. hip and
hip jack rafters. The roof framing begins with the 2x2-foot
cu~la/vcnt openina, framed with 2x6 lumber and
reinforced with diqonal braces.
• .We boxed the foot of the ra~rs with redwood lx6s
under the caves and redwood lx8s across the ends. We
then attached the plywood roof sheeting, roofina felt and
shinales. The cupola is buically a two-foot, louvered cube
with a peaked roof.
PAPARAZZI
-------------------------and sli&hllyawayfrom the skin, then wait a minute for it to
uohooX: itself.
MAKE FLING FRUITFUL
With the warm ------------days ahead and a
large variety offruits
available, now is the
time to treat yourself
to a fabulous fruit
fling. This is one
fling your husband
PILAR
WAYNE
or beau would be •••••••••••• sure to appreciate.
Not only is fruit ncb in nutrients, high in fiber and
satisfying to sweet cravanP. without empty calorics. but
also it is a ireat beauty a1d. Herc are some recipes and
health tips that I am sure will send you running to the fruit
counter
FABULOUS FRUIT FACIALS
To treat yourself to a wonderful facial all you need 1s
a blender and 15 minutes to let your skin cnJOY this sweet
treat. '
Dry skm: Purce banana. avocado. honeydew melon.
cantaloupe and apncots.
Oily skin: Purce lemon. lime, grapefruit. apple.
pineapple and cranberries.
Normal skin: Purce watermelon, papaya, fig and
persimmon.
Apply blended fruit to clean skin and let set 15
minutes. Rinse off, gently and thoroughly.
FABULOUS FRUIT DRESSINGS
By using these absolutely delicious dressings with
any combination of your favorite fresh fruits, you can
create a cooling lunch or light dinner.
ORANGE DRESSING LACED WITH HONEY 'I• cup mayonnaise
'4 cup plain yogurt
3 tablespoons freab orange juice
1 teaapooa grated orange peel
1 teaspoon honey
1 teaspoon lemon juice
14 teaspoon salt
l sprl1 of mlat
In a smaJI bowl. combine all ingredients except mant.
Chill for at least one hour before serving. Garnish wtth
mint.
CREAMY CITRUS DRESSING
Ii\ cap beavy cream, wbJpped
t tablespoons Ugbt mayonnaise
t tablespoons thawed frozen fruit juice concentrate
'i9 teaspoon 1rated natme1
'i9 teaspoon cla.aamoa
In a small bowl, fold together all 1ngred1ents. Crull at
least one hour before servangs.
Pilar Wayne 1s a resident of Newpon Beach aod the
authorof"Pilar Wayne's Favorite and Fabulous Recipes."
Send questions to Pilar Wa yne. c/o Dall} Pilot, P.O. Box
I .560. Costa Mesa 92626.
"The most lri vial bite can become a serious infection
if you scratch it or fail to keep it clean."
Hogue said fleas, flies and cockroaches are more
annoyances than health hazards, although flies that visit bomcsjust~rthey visitdumps.orstables may carry
pathogenic organisms.
"If you've got a flea problem at your home, the source
is probably your dog or cat," be said. "The best you can do
is give your pet flea treatments and to apply insecticide in
suspected breeding sites, such as the area where the pet
sleeps."
Other ways to a void insects at home are the use of
screens and patio lights with yellow bulbs that are invisible
to pests.
.,...,... ....... ".,..,.,..........
Lloyd Baron, rflht, welcomed Jacqueline Abel and
Joan Motola for the aunaet reception at her home.
Joanne Dbon, Earl and Janlce Belk and Vlr&lnla Perry got
together for a chat about La Travlata chapter'• aucceu. Mike Moulton make. a point while conventna wttb wife
Suzanne, left, and Fran and Jlm Solum at patron party.
Appreciation for patrons served in good time
Honoree: 'Together we can
create a moment of peace.·
The recipe for a perfect summer Sunday?
Try a generous dash of sunset cocktails by the sea. a
hearty amount of dainty appetizers, floral bouquets of
peonies, larkspur, lilies and roses -season with harp
music and stir carefully with friendship. Fold in equal
amounts of philanthropy and dedication.
The formula was beautifully executed recently at
the Bob Barona' main channel Huntinaton Harbour
home by members and patrons of the La Traviata
chapter of the Huntinaton Harbour Guild. Their efforts
bencfi tcd the Orange County Performing Ans Center.
"We couldn't think of a lovelierwayto honor our
patrons." said Jou Molola, patron chairman. "We held
our party early (S to 7) to allow aucsts to return home for
dinner with their families-we're finding people arc a
little tired of all-niaht aet-toaethen."
More than $2.000 had been donated by patrons
who included Dr. ud Mn. Jamn MarnlleofNewpon
Beach and the Staart Babe«b, Gary ffolludert,
William La.atdaln, B•tler Perrymu1, Joll.D Pratto1,
EraJe Rodlt, IAolW'CI Lady1 and Ray Coupes of
Hununaton Harbour.
Other patrons were Dn. aod Mmes. Carl Raadolpla,
Jam" Sol1m and Mlcuel MCMIJtoa. Flyina in from Lake
Havasu for the event was patron Dlue &omlck.
Er\joyina tbe af\emoon were.Jou Lud, La
Traviata president (with husband Bob), Jim and Jo4l1
M•ll•r( ht'schairman of the Huntin1ton Harbour
Guild), B11nd Jo Dod,J1ckJ1and Harry Ro11, Alice
and Rldlard Zambotti and Harriett and lrv Wieder.
Flowen were b Huntll\Jton Harbour Oonst •
••
I I •
Rev. Maar. Jobn Sammon accepta llllcah
Award of American Jewlab Committee from
Superior Court Jaqe Leonard Ooldateln.
appcuzen by Clara Meyer{80-year-old mother of past
prcsidcn t JacqaellDe Abel).
Also en.ioyma the benefit for the ans were Dorie and
Gar Maulaew1, Delores Olivarez, JOUDe and &ea
Dinn, Noey and Tom KaaabaU, Jua and Loa
Zimmerman and Mia and "Strick" Strickler.
• • • "I can't stop wan. and I can't stop the buildup of
nuclear arms, but I can reach out to you individually
with love and respccund undcRtandinaofour
relat1onstupwith yourGod.andtogttherwecancrcatc
o moment of peace and love."
The Rev. Mon11gnorJo~n Sa.mmoa madcthnt
profound rommcnt uPon ac~ptina the Micah ward
I J J l
from 1he OrangeCountyChap1erofthe American
Jewish Commltleeat Westin South Coast Plaza.
About 200 people helped honor Msgr. Sammon.
vicar for pastoral and communit) affairs for Diocese of
Orange County. at the annual dinner.
Noted for the humorous touches he injects in his
invocations and benedictions. Msgr. Sammon gave the
evening a proper touch with his acceptance remarks
when Judie Leonard Goldstein presented the Micah
plaque.
In mock defense ofhis use of humor in his prayers,
Msgr. Sammon said he docs not believe God is cold and
vindictive: He told the Jews that even in thcirwanderina
centuncs aao.z there must have been some laughter and
enjoyment 01 life as he has observed among the Jewish
people today. "God gave us a sense of humor, so He
must have meant for us to use it.''
The audience was a max of Jews. Catholicsand
Protestants to hear the main speaker Harold I.
F riedman, national president of the American Jewish
Committee.
Amona the guests were UC I rvinc Chancellor
Daniel Aldrtda w1th Jeu,Supcrv1sorTlaoma1and
Emma Jue Riley. Tbom11 and Jolene Faeate1, K1Dcl1
and Hal Beral (she iscxecuuve director of the Coun\y
Chapter AJC), MartlD Browerwttb Tamar,Harlu
Aadenoa wath Adelle (he's cxccuuve director of the
National Conference ofChristiansand Jews County
Chapter)andDr.RenHGold1teJa,dinnerchairmanand ----------;;;;;;..;:o.o...i
vice president ofOranacCounty AJC.
Others on the auest hst were Llcillt Kam, J11dJ
and Michael La11ta and Alan and PbylU1 Jacobi.
Paparaui i cd11cd by V1d• Dc3n wt th rontribu-
rions b} nn Conwaw.
I ·; ;
11
! I
INTERMIS~ION
-------
•Bar efoot' tiptaes at Saddlebac.-=k~ -~·
It'• been a few ____ ...._ ____ ...__
yeart since Neil
Sunon'uecond play, _
.. Barefoot in the
Park " bu enjoyed a
loUi production,
and iu revival b_y the J
Saddleback Com· ITUS
pany Theater u the•••••••••••• openina abot in a
three-show summer stock seaaon is a welcome visit from
an old friend.
Like many of Simon's early comedies (with the
no!Able except1~0 of "The ~d Couple"), this one isn't qu~te as 1Ctea11?11_\&ly funny as 1t once was, but it.remains
sohdly entertatn1na. The characters now as familiar as
next4oor neiahbon, don't have to strain to establish their
eccentricities -and they don't in director Brian
Donoghue's Saddleback production.
Don<>&hue's approach to this well-traveled around ls
to present his four principal fiaures as normal, everyday
tYJ>C' at the out.set -then let the comic circumstances
transform them into htlarious extensions of their
respective personalities. This works well with the two
oneymooners, but more individuality early m the action
wouldn't hurt the charaden of the mother or the upstairs
nei&hbor, both of whom are wrinen as eugeration1:
:rbe standoutef tbe cutis Debonb Pearl, who injects
more zanin~ efferveteence and pure ~ enef'I)' into
the character of the youna wife than any ICtreS$ in recent
memory. Her drunk scene in the ~nd act ia particularly
well fashioned, as is her part in the slam-ban& IJlU!Dent
which follows.
As her newly barred attorney husband, David Mean
presents an almost painful <XJntrast as be endures her
craziness and that of the Continental neiahbor. Mean, a
skilled dramatic actor, shows teeth-afittina mtraint until
bis tum comes to let it all hana out, wrucb he dOH with a
venacance in a skillful performance.
flora Burke is quite natural IS Pearl's widowed
mother, often too natural for peak comic effect. Saul
Siedman plays it more or less straight IS the flamboyant
epicure, deliverina a smooth ponrayal. In cameo roles,
Richard Lawrence and David Manin are fine as the
Riina way warning signals
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Nearly a ' Thinks tor con11denng these wam-
million and a half children' run away ing sianals for your column, Ann. I
from home every year. Some of them believe they could be very helpful. -
telephone repair man and dellvcry man, ~vdy.
.. Barefoot in the Park" run for two more week&,
play1na Tuesdiy• throup Situroays at I p.m. and
Sundays at 3 p.m .. throup July I. Upcomina in lbe Com~y Thetttt't 1evtntb teat0n are ''The Fuauo
ticks, 'oeeninaJune 29 in tbe smaller Studio Tbeatii', aDd
"Oliver,' amvina on the main SadJebeck Colkee ~
July 20. Call 131-46S6 for ticket information.
BACISTAGE-The Lquna Moulton PliyhoUIC i1
offerina 1evefal half tcbolarahips for men in 1u Rtmmer
actina workshop in both the adult and biah IChool aee
sections .... the final day for rqistrauon is June 28 and only
a few spaces ~main in the~ ~n,e study, moyement,
voice and mime counes. ... auchtion 11 by 1nierv1ew and
information may be obtained bycallina Harriet Wbiunyer
at the playhouse, 494-0743, Tuesdays lhroulb Saturdays .
from I to S p.m..... ~
A week-Jon• theater study tour to the QrelOn·
Shakespeare Fesuval will be conducted by Educ;ational
Services Unlimited in Santa Ana. besinnina next
Tuesday .... profeuor Judith Ackley and her sroup will see
four Shakes~ plays at well as works by Tenneuc
Williams and Noel Coward .... call her at 8~9225 for
information ....
Sttve Stanczyk of El Toro, a 1979 araduate of Dana
Hills High School and receotly of the National
Shakespeare Compeny in New York. has !•Ped bis
second contract with the Summer Musical Theater in
Coeur d' Alene, Jd.aho .... bc'll nerf'orm in .. Barnum, ..
"South Pacific," .. Cabaret" and .rMy Fair Lady ......
never return. If parents knew the A Carina In O.C.
wamin& sianals they might bC able to II DEAR CARING: S. do I. Almoat
prevent a Jarge number of children always ~e ruaway 11 ruatac
from runrun,gaway. I .... FROMaomedlias.aofTOtometMac.
Travanti,
Loren star Please pnnt these "warning sig-~ LAllDEIS U pareau cu flpre owt wMt die
nals!' provided by the National cldld mlOt be a FROM, a LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Network of Runaway and Youth peat deal of mllery t be·~ Sophia Loren and Daniel J.
Services: spent in bed. It could mean the child DEAR ANN LAND RS: l m 19,. Travanti are in Italy film-
SACRIFICE
MUST SE~LI
0 .roWing. lsolatiC?n: The child is in a depression or facina problems female and t:ave been seeina Bob for ina "Aurora," an NBC
avoids family pthcnnp, even meals, he cannot manqe. • nearly two y~. We want to get movie about a beautiful
andspendsmoreandmoretimeinbis Diminished Communication: mamed. Bobis21 andbasag · . woman whQ tri .,_~-:r.~Met¥ir..,.__, .J",bt,i.e1Q~A~h1A~.#.illQ..l).~ ~t .. , • ..... ~' ........ ~~ ..c.~~~~~~-wnr~ '11ir<1W'"~-:~%J'!fii1Vttiir'm~ ~ w11t iWC: ~~ion for.her son.
common to llie turbulent teens, ~ut can t t,hlnk of one, and 1t persists, pay years until I finish school. The son ~ played by
watcb out when the smallest thmg attenhon. I have $500 in the bank. My father Eduardo Poon, 11, the real-
trigcn explosions of temper. School Troubles: Plunging grades, isthetrusteeoftheaccountand I can't life son of the Academy
Abrupt Mood Swinp: Take note 1f truancy, class..cutting. di~plinary get it without his signature. He refuses Award-wir;ning a~.
a normally sunny teen turns sullen, problems and fallouts with close to sign. I earned every cent myself. TravantJ, the Emmy
withdrawn. angry, even manic, friends can be cries for help. What does the law say about this?-Award-winning star of
without WllJ'.tlinJ. Parental Stack-Blowina: Arc you, Burned Up In Connecticut NBC's .. Hill Street Blues,"
increased Violations: Rules are not the child, gettina unreasonably DEAR BURNED: I'm DOt a lawyer plays one of Loren's former
boundaries which vowing youths upsetoversmallissues?Yourfeelings tnit I do bve aome advice. Foraet lovers.aformerU.S.Army
must step outside of m the process of may be tryinJ to tell you something. aboat die moaey ud flallll ldlool. helicopter pilot
maturi°" But take heed when Family Crisis: Death, divorce, the .-=~· =-=-===iiiiiOiii.,-----'--'---------i
"border incidents" turn into serious loss of a job, a major move -any of IMIT AllT CASH
rebellion. these can disrupt the family and sen4 Quality otc1 watc:r... 1Ct8P
Increased Sleeping: It is normal for your child spinning out of orbit gold. )ewelry.
adolescents to sleep more than Unexplained Money or Pos.-YalTAGI '1111
parents think is healthy. But beware sessions: Even if not stolen, they may · "'._ Cenydrl •
when inordinate periods of time are be stashed for an impendi.nagetaway. IM I. llUT RY .. u. ----;:============================================;--~11 • .....,. .. aa
Watch tor Kids
u.TTICUMCE
Hon-smoker
Rates
2600 Pairs of French Rat Espadrilles,
packed Individually. Asking •3.00 per pair,
minimum order 500 pairs.
Tonight, see an opera
about a man who wants to be
with his lover forever.
And unfortunately,
gets his wish.
Starring Luciano Pavarotti and Margaret Price
"Aida"
Tonight at 10:00 pm on Channel 23 of Group W Cable
-----
SEAFOOD SALAD $2.69
A tasty combination of chilled shrimp, crabmeat and
whitefish in our own special dressing. served with tomato(,
lemon wedges. sauce f, crackers
CHILLED SHRIMP $3.99
There are 20 peel'n eat shrimp. ~rved in the shell. with
fresh cole slow. lemon(, cocktail sauce
SE~FOOD COMBO $3.29
Tasty seafood salad. 8 chilled peel'n eat shrimp, served
In the shell. tomato f, lemon w~ • sauce f, crackers.
3095 Harbor Blvd. (Just south of San DleOo
Freew1y, acro11 from Fedco), Coste M•N
• (Drlve·Thtu Service Avellabte)
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
ftr ... ••st " ,_ Ult
ll22Ullll lUI.
COSTA l lU -SU.UH
..
131-7740
H«e. for aamP.. an two ways Humana bospttU • .w
you mooey II you haw u uncompbcated vqlnal cWMry:
• first. If you an ~ bv lnilurance, the HumMa .._.
~ haw en adtlnt new maternity plan that olln • 15"
clecount on your hoepltll1 co.ts abr iwlranee, •to•..-.
mum of •500. Slnc• ID09t IDlurance plant COWi' 75" or
more. HwnlllMl'• new program meant you could dellwr your
babv with vlrtully no out-of-poc:ktt ape1111• to~·
• Sec:ond. If ~u'n not COWJCd bv lnluraoce ... ollr • n-
duc:ed lat rate ,_ for ft9IM1 deltwrlee wttb no compli:Mlw.
With a hcMpMal av o1 not more.than three cta,.
0
wt wtdl .. WI
paid ID full Wore dllcMrte. the fw (lldu I c:MI .. t.
modMr encl~) arr.
.
"..... . .... ~-··.
d
494-9589 Evenings
478-3191 Daya
Ask tor Bert
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-E11WV91.,..,. CllfllW; 561 -0555 """"""' ...........
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COAST . .
FOOD 111111 Pllil WEDNESDAY, JUN! 20. 1SNM
alads as American as apple pt
Innovatively combined t~Cdienta
turn an appetizer into an entree
· Salada, in many ways, arc the eaencc of American cuisine. la
contrast to Europe, salads arc an esaential part of an American diuer
and often arc eaten as the en tree.
Around the world and IQcally, a greaser abUndlnce ofinsredients
is used in salads-most to totetbet' in wooderfuJ innovative ways. •
Now, with fast special ~tion, foodshomallareuof'tbe
country appear in almost every local pocci y. Salads with the flair and
flavorofthcGrcatLakes,theGulfCout.theAtlanticandPlcificcan
be enjoyed on any table in the land.
Thanks to careful pljnnina of aops, America's own lettUce-
coo~ crisp ~om.ia iceber& iaaVailable year-round. And While
asparagusdocsn'tenjoyalonaarowingseason,itnevertbdesaiaan
all-time si..lad favorite.
In the past, we didn't consider nuts as a salad i.Daredient, but with
the invention of the Waldorf, they came into their own as a natunl
addition. Not only do they add ftavoc and texture to salads, they alto
arc a good source of vegetable protein.
Americans are some of the bigest cheese eaters in the world, so
it is only natural that they love it in wads. A delicious new addition
t . evastan:ayof isonc · uai ..... ~~~m ( ... -;'"'f':J•
Brunch a nice break
from hurry-up breakfast
Brunches arc a pleasant change
from weekday breakfasts on the
run. They should be an unhurried
delight for every family member
including the cook. Quality con-
venience products and a menu of
simple food superbly served
make meal preparation easy.
Bcgi,n ~th fruit or juice. Then,
try an old familiar standby, such
as eggs or pancakes, served in a
new and unusual way. Hot Or-
ange Sauce, for example, drizzled
over waffles, French toast or
pancakes, with an orange and
almond topping, refashions these
old favorites into exceptional
contemporary fare.
Whether prepared in the micro-
wave or on top of the range,
versatile, two-ingredient Hot Or-
anae Sauce is ready in minutes.
Marshmallow creme makes the
sauce smooth and creamy while
adding a rich vanilla flavor that's
difficult to duplicate. Using
frozen pancake batter or waftles
makes this brunch entree even
more convenient.
Homemade breakfast breads
make the brunch menu special.
Prepared a day ahead, one taste of
Cinnamon Swirl Coffee Cake will
convince.you it was well worth the
few extra minutes. The delicious
swirl is a mixture of cinnamon,
chopped nuts and marshmallow
creme.
Serve the bread at room
temperature or pop a few slices in
the microwave to quickly beat
through. Sure to beoome a family
favorite, keep this coffee cake
available for weekday breakfasts
as well.
BOT ORA!fOlt SAUCE
1 'l-4»UCe jar manbaallow
creme
•.t. cap aa1weeuaed
pucelll'ile4 oraace Jalce
Combine inlf'Cdients in small
sauccpan;stiroverlowbeat until
thorouabJy heated. Serve over waf.
fies, pancakes or French toast; top
with peeled oranae ICClions and
tonted almonds, if desired. 1 ¥.. cupa.
CUfKAllOK 8WlltL COPl'ltS CAD
~ cap marprilte, Mlae-1
1 cwp pualatecl n1ar
ieus
1 teupooa vu.llla
i cap1 Ooar
1 tea1pooa baklas powder
1 teaspoon bakba1 IOda Dau of ult
1 cwp 1ou crum
1 7-oaee jar manUllallow
creme
1 cwp cltopped ••ti 1 tableqoea mm
1 ~ tealpoODI cluamon
Powdered 1qar
Beat m~rine and sugar until
liabt and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a
time, millna well after each addlllon.
Blend in vanilla. Combine flour, ba..lrina powder, bakina soda and salt,
addaltematelywitb sour cream.
mixina well after each addition.
Combine marshmallow creme,
nuts, milk and cinnamon with elec-
tric mixer or wire whisk until
blended. Pourhalfofbatter into
greased I 0-incb tube pan or flu led
tube pan; evenly top wi\h
marshmallow creme mixture and
remainina batter.
Bake at 3S0dqrees, 45 minutes or
until wooden pick inserted in center
comes out clean. Cool 5 minutes;
remove from pan. Sprinkle with
powderedsupr. IOto 12servi~
. .
bluish..geel'l veining. It's creamy moist texture is perfect for aa1ad ..e.
GULP COAST SBRIMP SALAD
1 a.eM 1eeM1"1 Jea.ee ...... ,,... ..........
l,_.•e'l1n me~,.......,.-.w
~"' .... , ....... ~ "P prt6e ftlte wt. ftl 1pr ........ ~......n
·~-................. ... ~ 'Ulf••ea,eme,.....
I a1119 ..._. .......... rice
~m,e:••He•.,._..._
~ e., llkel ..... .-......
~c.,a1.,1•,......, .. "'...._. ............... .
1 e., a.KM o.r.-1e1a d9ee9e
i ... ._ ..................
Core, rinse and tboroulblydrain lettuce. Cut into fine shreds and
refrilCrate in a cloeed plastic t.aor cripler. Snapeadl of apmaaus.. Blaacb
and drain. Pbcein shallow tlat &1UI dish wilh sbeUed swawns.
Combine oil., vinepr. m\llW'd. lemoa and cayenne pepper. Pou.rover
asparaausand pra'WDI. Cover and chill at a. 1 Hbur. Combine rice, onions,
olives and panky. O'lill. ·
When ready to serve. toss lettuce, 'h CUl) almonds and rice mixture in larae salad bowl Drain marinade from iwawm; pour over rice mixnsre
tossing to coat lllsrcdienu well. Arraneeon laf1lt terVina platter or 4dllmet
plates.
ArTaDIC asparagus, prawns, dleC9C md tomato wediFs over rice.;
Sprinkle each wi\h reserved tOU1ed almonds to serve. Maka4 ~
CASSA& M.L AD llUftltll&
1 ,._...,.,....., d11• _. trtmilM
l lteM k e • 1r1 leallCe
! a1119 clnltM, liln freM 1' et
lh•t1 .. 11•WJllleellsr---
lapWJ ........ t1Hqe ..................
,,. e9IJ .......... Mi•••·
lilt "'Gerpm1 .. d9eeM
Soap ends oft'~ Blaocb andcbill Cut into 2-inch pieces. Core,
rinse and thorou&b.Jy drain lettuce. Olt into cbunb (about 6 cups) a.nd
refrigerate in plastic'hla oraisper. Prepare o&Mr ~ts, cutting
avocado last. Toss lcuuoc, spinach and onions tQFthcr with half the
asparqus (reserving tips), red~ and avocado.
To finish slalad, place sreens in large ( 12 cup) 00...... C.Over with
(PleMe ... 8ALAD9/ctJ)
If you
eat late,
eat light
If you skip breakfast, •ta light
lunch and •t your b6g meal In the
evening In order to control your
weight, you should be doing just
the opposite, according to the
California Dietetic Association
(COA).
"Thermatogenisis, or the rate
at which calories are burned,
actually speeds up after a hearty
meal to compensate for over-
eating," says Sharon Long, R.O.,
president of COA.
"So If you eat your big meaJ at
the end of the day, wtwl you're
more likely tovc> to sleep than be
active, you're not taking advan-
tage of this higher rate of
thermatogene8'a.' •
If you eat heerty mMla consist-
ing of foods from the four food
groups -mMk, meet, ~abtes
and fruit• and breeds Md cereela
-earMer In the dtly, you'I be
provtded with energy to ~you
through the day, the nutrtenta
you need for optimum hetltth llnd
(Pleue-UT/c.)
Singlesget Breprieve from frozen dinners
Livinaalone used to be a condition people avoided, bUt no more. cookina. morcindividualsaretakina1t up, as a bobby, and forpractioal
Sinale homeboldl today are the fastest ~win& ICIJJlent of the U.S. reasons.
population, accordina to the U.S. Ceil~:-:--..-.,...,~----,,,---.. The problem i~ most recipes arc desi&ncd for families.·· The
ln fact, in Alvin Tomer•s .. Third Wave:• he llY.J only ecvcn recipes that follow arc desiancd strictly for sinalcs. and arc perfect for
percent of the nation lives in the 0 tridition&l" famtly, where the the summer months.
husband worts. and the wife is a bomemucr with two youna cbildren. Shrimp in pepeya is accompanied by a ainaer and poppy ~
Trends like these affect the way we Ii~ from t.tilc houses we buy dressina and can be served with a lightly berbcd tomato soup, prepared
(they are •ttina smaller) to the fOod we cat; explains Donna Higins. either hot or cold.
director of Del Monte kitchens. · Frah fNit lad makes a li&bt lunch or dessert, while the l'oranae
"Sinalet have 10ft4 been known for consumina larae amounts of refresher can be bra.kfast "on the Nn" or a healthy ~k.
frozen food.and forcat1naout," shesaya. But withaarowinaintcre tin The recipes arc light and nutritio If you a,rc having a aucst for
I I
dinner, it's easy to double.
PllS811 FaUIT &ALAI> WllB COTTAOS cnm ::::::=..
eat ... C'elerJ
1 t1••·· · •• ................ nilllllle , ...... ~, ................ .... .... ~ ............ ....
ic-..-...... .... (Pl•• .. :..,..fW)
• '
Cl Orjnge Coaat DAIL y PILOT /Wedneeday, Jun• 20, 1984 •
You think cinliamon 's • • ·ust sweet seasoning?
~ hink_again,-moneook
!:· ____ __;,,_______________ In Greece, the spice is uSed in beef stew, whle tn Jodaa
: Why. in Greece they use tt it is used in cumes. In our country, the Pennsylvania
• --Dutch sprinkle cinnamon suaar over sliced tomatoes, ' to enhance flavor Of beef stew which I have found very tasty. Cinnamon sticks arc also
• --------used to stir mulled cider and wine.
: ByTOMBOOE
: l#WIMeMl'eM .......
As for other uses, I once enjoyed a PUllfClll chicken
dish that was flavored with cinnamon. Herc as the recipe.
CINNAMON CHICKEN
4·poud 8ieke., rqdy to c.ok
• ( The aromatic spice known a~cinnamon is one of the
world's oldest seasonings, popular ID JOurmet cuismes the
world over.
· Actually, there arc two vaneties of cinnamon. The
reddish-brown bark from the cassia tree is the one we
usually see in the United States.
Buff-oolorcd Ceylon cinnamon from the bark of.a
laurel tree is popular in many lands, including Mexico, but
1t is rarely consumed in this country.
Cassia cinnamon is a native of southern China, where
ihe people in ancient times regarded the cassia as the Tree
of Life. Our two principal cassia sources tod;ly are
Indonesia and Vietnam.
There are several menttons of cinnamon ID the Bible.
% tea•peou salt
4 ceps water
~ e.p cllJckea fat ~ capOoar
% .Uttt bre ... cnambled
% doun allced lreH olives
1 cap (I ouces) tomato .. ace
'i\ cpp 1eedle11 raJ1lna
3 tal>JetpooDI fDttut mJ.Dced OalOU
l cluamon stick, 1 lncll 1001
% tea1pooa1 1road corluder
% teaspoou oreauo leaves
~ teaapooa black pepper
~ tea1pooo 1arUc salt The Lord .told Moses on Mount Sinai to make an
anointing oil which would mclude cinnamon. And the
45th Psalm says "all thy garments smell of myrrh and
aloes and cassia ... "
Cinnamon is culttvated today, much as it was
thousands of years ago. It is barvested during the rainy
season because the bark is easier to handle in wet weather.
Once stripped, it is rolled into long. slender quills -the
sticks familiar here in the United States.
Cinnamon is usually regarded in the United States as
a seasoning to be added to recipes for sweets, but 1t has
many other uses.
Wash chicken and cut mto serving~size pieces. Place
with salt and water in 6-quart pan. Cover and cook slowly
2 hours until chicken is tender. Remove chicken from
stock. Skim fat from broth and set aside. Measure S cups
stock, adding water if necessary. Set aside. Return chicken
fat to pan and blend in flour. Stir and oook until browned.
Remove from heat and stir in stock and bread. Beat untiJ
smooth. Add remaining ingredients. Stir and oook until
thickened. Add chicken pieces. Cook uncovered 10
minutes, stirring frequently. Serve bot with rice or
noodles. Serves 8.
----~----------NO £XPIRAl WW CW£
a
'OWO ClllfS
''"
.._
SOCIAL
CIRCLES.
Old London~ Melba Rounds arc going
in style. And they'll disappear like ~Ill~
they're going out of style. All dressed
up. \\'ith Rom anoff Black Lumpfish
Caviar. The crispy, subtle flavor
complime nts the elegant taste of
Romanoff' Caviar. Be our guest
and try the artichoke-and-caviar canape.
\R I lllk"'-t&t. \\"L\HC\:'\.\l'f.
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c
In -m.111 h. '"I,,•~"'""•:~"" 1 '' 1111. t""''l 1111., 1, '"" •111111, l'. .111,I : 1,1/•/1 •/ .. 111• 1 .111,1r,, 11111. l 11w 1, Ii \ 1dh,1 l\111111.I. •1 ~ ~ •11 11' •111 I I• •"I'""
1.l\l1rllll\•Uf\'.t••1•1111l1 1r1 I ·~•·h •. 111.nm.11111111!• l\l,1r.111Jl',1r•I<'\
r --------...----------, 20C '-torct.ou fa m.'1 12/JI ~ I 50C I StottC,1urunlE\rir~' 11'llt14 I
I
I SAVE 20t ON OLD LONDON . ,1 SAVE soc ON ROMANOFF '1
MELBA ROUNDS. CAVIAR.
I I ··" I
I I I
I I I L I
I 53000 -~35271. I l&bOO -l011b& 50 I L--------l9iL---------~
.J
J_ I I
SA
IMPOIUED UGHT BEER
0n1y96caiortes
' I • I I
..
I
Bisque
with a
peachy
tou ch_~
ln earlier times,
"bisque" referred to a
puree of wood piae<>n• (or
other poultry and pme),
never to a shellfish soup.
But today, bisque is
always a smooth. rich or
tbjck soup made from fish,
uauall>:: shellfish.
California Bisque is so
named for its innovative
approach to this classic
soup which balances
salmon, shrimp, peaches
and veaetables with a little
curry and pepper. The fresh
peaches round out the
flavor, altbouah many
wters miaht not identify
their subtle flavor.
Cook onion, prlic,
celery, pepper and curry
powder in butter in larac.
covered saucepan until ten·
der, about 10 minutes. Re-
move from beat and mix in .
flour. Return to beat and
gradually stir in milk. wine
and pureed peaches.
Heat. stinina often. until
it comes to boil and
thickens. Add half the
salmon and cook 3
minutes. Puree in blender
until smooth. Return to
saucepan and add remain·
ina salmon, shrimp, celery
-'--_-onion wcdaes.
Cover and cook 20
minutes loqer, stirrina
often. Serve with crusty
aartic bread or com muf-fins and salad. 4 to 6
servinp.
1
These ho_t, SQicy Korean ribs will stick to xoui:s
, .
. Korean cuisine, althouah similar in some re5pects to ~~!!!!!!!~ Chinese and Japanese coolina. hu its own distinctive F!
flavor. appearance and aroma.
The ~se of ~f. red chili _pepper and sesame seed
predomu1ates to 11ve Ko~ foods their individuality. -
Fooda tend to be-hearty, qutte hot and hive a rich. nutty aroma. ·
Richly seasoned Korun short ribs taste especially
aood barbecued. The eecret, accordina to the Oriental oookina. experts, is to score the meaty part of the ribs
lenathwise and crosswise before marinauna. This allows
the spicy marinade of teriyaki sauce, toasted sesame seed,
red _pepper sauce and garlic to penetrate throuJbout the beef.
The quickest and easiest way to marinate the ribs i1 to
place the!fl in a large plastic baa, add the marinade, press out the au and then tte the baa securely.
"Barbecued Korun Ribs" take less thad 20 minutes
on the &rill. They're at their best served rare or mcdium-
rarc u they tend to become tou&h if cooked too Iona.
i:-hcse ribs are sure to be a h~ whether· you're at
poolstde, on the. patio. or on a tiny city balcony. Just sit
back, relax, and enjoy -with an icy cold pitcher of thint quenching iced tea. ·
BARBECUED KOREAN RIBS
' poad1 beef ''°" ribl, i ~ lacllet ·-· "' cup bot11ed terlyUJ marinade u4 aaaee
1 tablnpooa leJ&Dle teed, toasted
1 teaapooa 11pr
i teaspoons red pepper saace
i llr1e cloves 1uUc, pre11ed
Score meaty side of ribs, opposite bone, 1h inch apart,
'h inch deep, lengthwise and crosswise. Place ribs in larJe
plastic bag.
~· +rl ~ sa~~~~-=n~\l~bl~, to ·
securely. efrigerate 4 hours, turning bag over oc-casionally. ·
Remove ribs and grilf or broil 4 inches from bot coals
or beat souPCC 15 to 18 minutes, or until ribs are brown and
crisp. Tum ribs over occasionally. Makes 4 servings.
Lemon-filled date torte
a 'prepare ahead' dessert
Today's busy mother bas found "do-ahead" to be a
magic word. Making good use of extra time on weekends
or less busy eveninp to prepare and freeu ai>ig pot of stew
or extra spaghetti sauce can mean less worry on busy
nights.
Desserts, too, can usually be made a day or so in
advance. This tasty Lemon-filled Date Torte atays
deliciously fresh in the refrigerator for a couple of days.
Layers of crunchy nut crumble are alternated with
creamy lemon pudding and sweet date~ Topped at
the last minute with whipped cream, guests will think you
spent houn that day preparing it.
LEMON·FILLED DATE TORTE
1 packa1e (lf OUcet) date bar mU
'-"cap marpriDe or batter, softeaecl
~ cwp ~opped natl
~ cap ltot water
1 cap~..., cream
1 V. C9JN m1l.k
l pacu1e (3"1. ouces) lemon tutu& padcllq ud pie
fllllD1
Heat oven to 400 degnes. Mix crumb mix, marprine
and nuts with fork. Spread crumb mixture in uingreascd
rectangular pan, 13 x 9 x 2 inches. Bake until golden
brown, 10 to 12 minutes. Crumble miAture with fork.
Press I I/• cups warm crumbled mixture in bottom of
unareued 5Quatt pan. 8 x 8 x 2 inches; cool. Reserve
remainina crumbled mixture. Mix water and Date Mix;
cool.
Beat sour cream and milk with ba.nd beater until
smooth; stir in pudding and pie fillina (dry) until mixture
is smooth and slightly thickened. SJ)mld half of the
pudding mixture evenly over crumbled mixture in pan.
Spread date mixture over pudding mixture; sprinkle with
l cup reserved crumbled mixture.
Spread rcmainin,1 puddinJ mixture over crumbled
mixture; sprinkl~ with remamin1 crumbled mixture.
Refriaerate until set, at least l hour. Top each serving with
whipped cream if desired. 9 scrvinp. .
A little meat goes a long way
Are meat prices putting the squeeze on your food
budget?
"Most of us, even if we're not on a ~t budget,
complain about the rising costs of protein-nch foods,"
says Mary Towne, a fClist.ercd dietitian.
''By substituting lower-price alternatives such as
dried beans, peanut butter, tuna fish, cps and cheese,
consumers can stretch their food dollars.'
A common misconception is that adequate protem
can be obtained only by
eatinf. large portions of meat, fish, eus and cheese.
•This is not true," says Towne. "A two-ounce portion
of cooked meat, fish, or poultry will provide one-third of
the daily protein allowance for most adults, which is far
less than most of us eat. ..
break the boredom of plain cottage cheese for lunch. A
one-half cup serving supplies approximately 30 percent of
your daily protein needs.
CRUNCHY CO'PTAGE CHEF.SE SALAD
l cartoa (11 oancn) cot111e clleete
¥. cap Glaly sliced radlsllH
'4 c.p cllopped l1'ffD pepper
'-" c.p 1Uced IJ'Ha onion
i tablespoon ~opped cllll pickle
~ &ea1pooa seat0aed ult
t4 lO 14 teaspoon llot pepper uace
Measure all ingredients into mixing bowl. Mix well.
Serve on avocado half shells, as a stuffing for tomatoes, or
as dip with fresh vegetables and crackers. Makes 2'12 cups. Towne explains that most adults, can meet their daily
protein needs by simply eating the recommended servinas
from each of the four food aroups: two servinp from the r----------------------i
milk and meat aroups and four ICrvinas from the B t) s vegetable-fruit and bread-cereal aroups. • ... a a n ~ 11 lW
"Remember a small amount of meat can 10 a Iona WW.... .. •
way to meet ~tein needs," advised Towne. A pound of
lean meat will serve six ee<>Ple if prepared in a stir-fry
vegetable dish or spaabetu. .
Dried peas and beans are the most econonucal source
of protein. A cup of cooked, dried. beans ~24 ce~ts)
provides nearly one-fourth of your daily protem req~
ment. Combine beans-with tortillas, pasta, rice, or whole
arain breads to get the full value of the protein, advises
Towne.
Eggs and peanut butter sandwiches are also hiah value
protein-rich foods. Two C8P ~ 19 cents) or four tablespoons
of peanut butter ( 17 cents) wdl supply about 30 percent of
your daily protein. Milk group foods are also good protein buys, stY•
Towne. A half-cup of oottaae cheese (2~ cents) or t~
ounces of cheddar cheese (32 cents) contnbuted one-third
to your daily protein requirem~nt. . Crunchy Cottage Cheese is an economical way to
... Never Tasted So Good!
For a delicious flavor
use on Pork, Beef. Ribs.
Ham or Chicken or try
one of our recipes!
FR EE ! Recipe Book
wnte to Woody's • P.O Bo11 1788
1.,ong Beach. CA 90801
AVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE FOOD STORE
GREAT FOR WEDDINGS, GRADUATIONS
&.. FOURTH OF JULY
I
J
ITS UNIQUllY OlUOOUS
And so easy to serve. Because it come
full-cooked and spiral-sliced. So pany-
time. dinner-time or anytime that onlt
I.he best will do. make it HoneyBaked
brand ham. And you've &Ot it made.
ITS ONl GHAT HAM
• Smoked &: Baked for 30 Hours
•Honey cl Sptce Glazed
• Sptrat-Shc:ed fOf' Serv1n1 Ease
• Whole cl Half Hams• Nationwide Sh1pp1n1 a Gift Centricate • Pany Trays
ANAHEl~-1'1te Villi Ccn1er 1212 S 8 ll•r"
111 lell Rd I• 171416"'°2461 coaONA DEL MAJ-J700 E Coast H"">
1'14) 67).9000 El. roao-BtQio-tr Plau Noni!. 24601 A~"'ond ~ •2 Cal El 'Tbft> Rd 1•1'7141tJ7· 2 HUI TINGTO. IKACH".:71 ~h ~w 111
Oatfield ncu 10 Ral&INI •17141 7~
()aAfliG -Wl1'" t•M•• , •• KMtll.l• • 1'7141 "1
ONE TASTE I All IT TA.KE.SI
l•-v•f'lltlll c I 4 lt•ll\c\ MH H11t1 lftc
I
I
Don't rely on aspirin substitutes to
do the job of Cosprin 650.
Cosprin• is Bayer's 650 milligram
aspirin totally C<Nered in protection.
Doctors will tell you Cosprin 650 is
enteric-release. In real-people talk,
tflat means Cosprin 650 protects your
stomach. Each tablet contains 650
milligrams of real aspirin.
Cosprin 650 takes on your arthritis
pain as well as fighting the arthritic
inflammation aspirin substitutes can't
touch. Plus it protects against stomach
upset.
Vlhy be concerned about stomach
upset? Now there's Cosprin 650.
Mplrln 8Ub8tltutle. You don't h8V9
to take them Mymore.
C4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJWednaday, June 20. 1984
Quiz shows how muc11 you ·know.abou't nutrition
Forlnstance~w'hat·docstenn
'cnrtched'flour' really mean?
Bw DOROTHY WENCK -pare your answers with ' those oftbe consumcn the ........ ? >:
UCC111rr ..... ......_
What attitudes do con-
sumers have about nutn-
t1on, wheat-based foods.
and how the American
lifestyle has altered use of
certain products? The
Wheat Industry CouncaJ of
Rockville. Md, used the
following questionnaire to
find answers to these quer
ttons. You m1Rht like to com-
Wheat Council surveyed;
Tltt , •• i:
T F . Married men are
rarely involved in food
shopping.
T F 2. A lot of people pay
attention to and make
choices based on nutrition
anfonnation labels.
T F 3. The four most
1mPort.ant items people would like to have included
on a food label ire sugar
cont nt. c:atorie content,
sodium content and oddi-
tJves.
T F •. "Enriched Dour"
means that vnamina. min-
erals and prnervatives
~ been added to ttie
"natural" Oour.
T F S. More oonsumcn
arc conccrned about a bal-anoed diet than they art
about supr or salt mt.Ike.
T F 6. Most people feel
they att fairly well in-
formed about nutrition.
T F 7. People arc more
likely to exercise than to
snack betwten meals.
T F 8. Most families cat
their main meat t ther it
least il times a week.
TF9. A lot offamihescat
dinntr at fast food res-
taurants at least onoc 1
week .
TF TO. Consumers think
preservatives art a major
irwtdicnt in white bread i F 11. There arc only
five products -white
bread. wheat bread, fruit
juices, 2 percent (lowfat)
milk, and whole milk -
which arc served at least
once a day in one out of
three households.
T F 12. Most people try
to cat a balanced diet but
.
don't make 1 b11 d J out of
it
Here l• *' way tbe ct1Hmeu 11rv11•4
auwcrtd tit• •etdoD·
~----F. I. The role of mamed
men in food shoppin& is
quite sr· lficant (42 per-
cent o th~ surveyed
thoUAht so).
F :r. Only a small Portion
of consumers (20 percent)
arc very interested in the
nutritional Uiformation on
labels: SO percent say they
are somewhat concerned
but don't use the infor-
mauon to corrpare brands
FRESH KING
SALMON
nor do they put bac~ prod-ucu based on nutntionaJ
labelina. Mosr people (SS
percent) ate more con-
cerned with economy and
inarcdicnt 1ofonnation. i 3. The nems con-sumcR want to be included
on t.he food label llte: suITT (SS percent), calories Sl
perQCnt), sodium/ult 4S
percent), and food addi-
tives/preservati v"s ( 44 per-cent).
F 4. There is a lot of
confusion about the term
"enriched flour". Most
people (82 percent) know
that it means added vit-
amins and minerals~ but
many (29 percent) believe
iocontetJy that the term
implies added preserv-
atives.
f:'S. Mo~n umen(4S
percent) arc concerned
wtth eatina too much supr
or salt than with eatina a batanoed diet (39 percent).
T 6. A majority of aduhs
(85 percent) feel they're at
least faitly well informed
about nutrition while only
IS percent think they're not
well mfonncd.
F 7. Snacking between
meals (68 percent) is a
more prevalent activity
than eJtetcl5C (S l percent).
T 8. Nearly two-third of
the families questioned eat
the mam meal toaetber at
least six niahta a week.
T 9. About 3S pm:ient of
the families questioned eat
dinner at a fa.st food res-
taurant at least oncc a
week. Amooa sinJles, 53
percent eat at least one
meal a week in a fast food .
mtaurant. T I 0. About 25 percent of
consumers think preserv-·
atives arc a maJOr ingre-
dient in white bread. Hbw-
ever. preservatives rep-
resent only 2 percent of the
total ingredients 1n white
bread. T 11. White bread, wheat
bread. fruit juice, 2 perccnJ
(lowfat) milk. and whole
milk arc the only five
products which arc served
at least once a day in one
out of three households.
But over a four week
period, most food .sroups
are represented 1ni t.he
Americ.an diet -92 per-
cent of the people served
bread and 89 percent ser-
ved poultry. ·
T 12. Nearly six out of 10
adults (58 percent) claim to
try to cat a balanced diet
but don't make a big deal of
it. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE
-~~~: . ~ w.nia.~ -Q. -' e a rec)pe tut
.......
FAMILY snAK
~CLOD
ROAST 99 BEEF I CHUCK LB •
.....
811f LIYIR
SllCED
DEVEINED
LB .• 89
·-
~
97
LB.
LA Ma
SllOULDIR ROAST
USDA FRESH I A9 CHOICE AMERICAN LB
LAMa
SllOU'DIRCHOPS
USDA FRESH I 87 CHOICE AMERICAN LB •
8 <n Pkg Pork Sousoge l·lb. ~ Pock
FARMER JOHN LINKS ..... EA .• 59 WILSON SLICED BACON ....... LB. 1A9
USDA Choice 8-f
CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAKLe. 1.39
USDA Choice Frwsh American
LARGE LOIN LAMB CHOPS LB. 2.69
1 lb Cello
FRESH CARROTS 4 FO. •1
THOMPSON
SEEDLESS
......a~~·\·: FIRST OF THI UASOll CHIAPIS c
LB.
Washington Extra Foney 12·0z. Bosket
RED DELICIOUS APPLES .......... Le. A9 CHERRY TOMATOES EA. A9 6-lnch
BOSTON FERNS. .... ................. 2.99
---r--~iiiiii-....:--.-_.-... --a-.-,-.--.)--r---lr lm<H & UAUTY AIDS ))--.... ( N••• •nm ••111n )
12·PACK
STllOH'S BIER
1.71-LITUI
GOllDON'SGIN
CHUaS """ ALOI m&Ya
m&aY WIPIS ASPIRIN
KIKKOMAN
SOY SAUCI
JA•ANISI IGO PLANT
12 O\JNCE CANS 3••
LIMIT 2 U.
750 Ml Brut or Ewtro Dry
LONDON
DRY
LE DOMAINE CHAMPAGNE
~I PAMPlllS
~l;:'V1 DIAPas
'
CONVENIENCE 8 59 ASSORTED
VARIETIES •
9••
2.99
THICK
80-COONT
CONTAINER 2 39 m .cooNT 329 TABLETS
16·01. Amino or Silk Pro1ein
GALLON
SIZE
CONTAINER 4s• FRESH 79 CRISP a.a.e
A1itsuke Nori 0.25-0z.
WEL-PAC SEASONED SEAWEED ............... 1.11 HEAD SHAMPOO & CONDITIONER 2.29 .J
KllAn ......
MN:. & CHEESE 3 .o.' s 1 125.oz eox
HANSEN'S
SODAS
69
EA.
65 Ot D11hwo1her Incl •OC OH '6-<n. Cam Assoned Vone11et 6-'·0z Chilled &-Oz. Pkg .. Pototo, Alson.cf Yorl•tl._
SUNLIGHT DISH DETERGENT 2.79 Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS . .. ..... ...... .. .e77 KNUDSEN ORANGE JUICE ..... 1.99 LAYS OR RUFFLES CHIPS ....... leff
.}
•F'C&llll•• ,... ... .......... a,.••
32·0Z.
WHOLE OR HALF
l·lb IMf Froolu or M4tol
OSCAR MAYER WIENERS ... IA9
12·0t M4tot or 8"f Oscar Mor-r
VARIETY PACK .. leH
~ Wt. ~ Longhom °' Mont ~k
DAKOTA FARMS CHEESE LA ~.29
• loult Rich, l·Lb. Pkg
\
RICH'S TURKEY FRANKS ........ 99
I
FOi
DOGS &
CATS
12 OZ HOMEMADE 79 OR BUTIERMILI( •
26·0z Oelu11e or P•pp (2A·Oz Ch .. t• 4.691
CHICAGO BROTHERS PIZZA le99
...
v~/
, ' 'f:J• 10.0Z 2 19 .. A.SSO«TEO e
LOwm y .. nnAL •••• WI
We ...... 11111• .._AU...._ ... , + .... -............ -.. , ___ ....._._ . ._ ........
I C°"O!M ,......,_,,..., ..twit ......... .,q1w el ft>e ,....,. ,...(~ "'01 «<•H , h"""°'~,.. llQ"._..., , c .... -~ .., •• ,..,...., ... ~._~
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,..,_,~_..,... • Wljen•llM"~efteieclil_,e11 IO.ottw..-'-)I,_,.,,.... " .. .,.. • ""'l!N ... ~ '*'"" ..._.. ...........
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I
f ~ -1-I In ~~!\'.· '°i
I I
calla for ~ b•t I
caa't fbad uy bl dae mar-
ket. Do yM tow -'ere
tlaey're available?
A. Cowpeas is another
name for blackcyed peas
(which arc really a member
of the beap family). You
should be able to find them
in most supermarkets. If
not, you oould substitute
another type of bean such
as small white, navy, red.
pink, pinto, etc. Most !dnds
of dry beans are inter-
changeable in most recipes. • • •
Q. I received a canaed
bam 11 a gift ud woald Uke
to save it for ue later tlala
aammer. I'm atortag It hi
tile refrt1erator, u tile
label uyn It mut be re-
frigerated, IHlt It takes "P
too macb apace. Coald I
freae It?
A. Canned hams should
not be frozen in the can
because the expansion of
the contents during freez-
ing could cause the can to
burst. You could open the
can. package the h.am in
freezer wrap or freezer bag
and f ree:ze it.
However, even though
the frozen ham will be safe
and will keep a long time,
you will find that the tex-
ture becomes undesirable.
On thawing, the ham will
lose juice and the texture is
lilccly to be spongy and
unappetizing. • • •
Q. I bave u opportu.lty
to b•y a tarie quadty of
caued tomato aa•ce at nt
rate prices. Row loag coald
I expect tlaese to keep?
A. The keeping time of
canned foods depends on
the storage tempcnsture -
the cooler the temperature
the longer the keeping time.
Cann~ foods kept at
temperatures above 70
dcgrccs will keep a much
shorter time than those
stored at coo ler
temperatures . Few
Southern California homes
have this cool a place to
store canned foods the year
around.
A second factor is the
kfod of food. Acid foods
such as tomatoes have a
tendency to corrode the
inside of tbe can over time
and may interact with the
can lining producina a gas
(hydrogen) that causes the
can to swell and possibly
leak.
Thus, you should not
expect to store canned
tomato sauce for lonacr than three years if you have
a cool storage place, and
less time than this if your
storage area gets warm
during the summer. In any
event. don't store your
surplus canned tomato
sauce in the garage where it
can become very hot in the
um mer.
••••• ••t ., •••• , •u.-.
For C'lllliflfd Ad
ACTION
Cal A DAll.Y PILOT
... NOi
MW.11
Grapefruit Sauce has the wonderful piquancy that ~ tca1pe09 ~r ' J &ab~ biller or marprtae J t.Uletf • • llMr
transforms Salmon '" e11p vfpt.able oU l &abla,.oa flMI l np oraqt ~
Croquettes into a dish flt for aucsu, and would add the In mcdjum bowl. combine I cup bt'Qd crumb&.. l &raptfnlt, peeltd, 1tttlwe4. drat.H ·~ c., cMtkee w.111 -~-.,;:_._,_..__.,...._.__ ....... __ -::--me elepnce to almost any chicken or veal dish. salmon, eaa. onion, milk. Worcestenhirc sauu and i &ablnm• t~P&l'llr.v _ ~---~ c-. *7~..._~
For a chan&e of pace from the ttaditional c.atone-laden J>tpper. miA well. , • In me 1um saucepan, comb1 ne sraorfruitjuice, broth. 1 ~ • ., ... 4rJ mu~
sravics, try Gold Cout Orange Sauoc. This stand-UP-and-Sbape mi11.1urc into 6 croquettes or panics. RoU each carrot. onion, cumin, salt and pepper. Cook ovtt hi~ heat l ~·• e~i"l!ll lf'eQ sSac• •a -., .,. ~ , take-notice blend will makochicken, veal« fish 1akcextra lightly in remaining 'It cup bttad crumbs. unnl liquid is rcdu~ to I cup and Vfl'Ct.ables a.re tender oqu
bows on center st.ace. Heat oil in larac slollet over h1ah heat; (ry croquettes (about IS m1nutt ). ~ &ea.,... clrW leaf IUl'jenm. CfWPHM '•
When makina ygur next sauce, add some citrus juice untd golden., tumina onoe; drain on paper towels; keep Remove vqcablea: discard onion and cut C11T0U ~ ..,._alt •.
to brina an orchard-fresh flavor that will make your taste warm. Yield: 3 servinas. into julienne pte<:es. Da• ~
buda sing. GRAPEFRUIT SAUCE Make a paste of the buuer and flour. add to saucepan. 1 oraqe, tklaly •llced •
SALMON CROQUE'M'ES 1 cap vapetralt jlJee Cook until sauce boll and lhlckens. · In medium aaucepan, melt butter.11utc shallou until ""
l ~ c•p1 packased lfflO•ed bread cnnobt, divided l C1lP dlckea bn" Add vat>efruit sections, Juhenne carrot and parsley. tender. Stir in nour. cook I minute. Gniduatty stir in ti
l cu (714 o••cet) aalmoe, dralaed. boned 1 carrot, cat t.to t·lacll pJeces Serve over fish, chicken, ve.al or croqucnes. Y1etd: About oran~juice, broth and wine. ~
t •a. allply beatta 1 medJam oe.loa, qurtered I 'h cups sauce. Add mustard, sinser. marjoram. salt and pepp«. '
l medJ•m oaloa, llftly ~opped ( ~ cup) J tea1pooa CJOud comha GOLD COAST ORANGE SAUCE . Cook over hi&h heat until mixture is reduced to t c:u~ • ~ clfP mUk ~ teaspooa tall l tablespooa better or marprlae Serve with croqucr1e1., Chicken. fish or veal; prnisb 'MIA '• l teaspoon Worcestel'Ulre uuce '4 teatpOOD pepper t &ablnpooat dlotped ...Uota oranac sliOC$. Yteld: 11.4 cups. · ~---------"'=-=-__;;..;._ ________________________ __,.._ __ ..;._ __ .;..._.;...___; ________________ _;..~
B Ii VON LOW MEAT II•
•• PRicE·s CONTINUE ••
Exciting news for fans of
Jack:ie Olden, the delightful
and friendly star of the
Monday through Friday
KNX-CBS Radio Food
News Hour and NBC TV's
expen in food and cooking
communications of Hour
Magazine. If you have
heard or met Jackie, please
note that she is hosting a
spectacular two-day
American and Inter-
national Foodand Cooking
Expo '84 which will come
off on Saturday, Sept. 29
and Sunday.Sept. 30at the
Anaheim Convention
Center.
his not only an ex-
traordinary opponunity to
meet this fascinatina lady
of radio and television in
person but also a chance to
meet cookbook aulhon,
talk to famous chefs, chat
about new products and
sample new foods and ma-
terials from interesting dis.-
plays. The show will fea·
tu re exhibitors from many
facets of the food industry
-food products, tabletop
manufact~rs. cookbooks,
kitchen gadgets and ap-
pliances, an entire modem
and beautiful kitchen in-
stallation and more. h 's a
chance to meet prominent
folk in Southern California
restaurant's industry, too.
Jackie Olden will be on
hand during the two-day
event and those who arc
devotees ofher popular
K.NX radio show know her
to be not only ex pen in the knowl~e of cooking, food
commurucation, party and
caterina formation but also
able to make listencn feel
that they are sitting right in
her kitchen as ifshe were
talking with an old friend.
There will be special two-
daysof segments of20
minutes each going on in
the Food and Cooking
Ex.po '84's Gallery of Chefs
event. Those interested in
participating in the show in
this category or in a booth
display please call (2 I 3)
656-2742 or(2 I 3)
858-7771 .
I
No matter
what you're
doing, your
hometown
newspaper
The Diiiy Pillt
fits rn .
CHIC
OF THE
CHUN!< LIGHT TUNA
sEA.· 69
6.SOZ CAN-IN V.ATlR ~Oil UIVT2
P\ llJ"IO l"f .39
V.Ht'I \HH ... , )'-.... '[MI
IDAHO . J29 ~BOW TROUT
18
lARGE
PEACHES
HI LOI\ llll'f nctr<.10>or
ORANGE
JOICE
~ ....... t .95 .39
""Tl Ill{• I
VALUE PACKS a
169 Lun
Ground Beef ·-... l\'lt
Extra Lean
Ground Beef ''"° t •. .._ ttrt tt I .. I 1••1' t i I I '
198
~kSte.~ 119
I"''' & _. °"' .. "
Mii.i ER HIGH 399
UFE BEER
111'<1(1\ lUI .,Iii!
'""I I'° ( .. " ~rT 3 13 Pll'CU
•f"-• 1 ,, .. '
TIDE
DETERGENT
"' -~... t I •
LJllllT 4
329
WlllT,
M.D. TOILET 95 TISSUE e
UIUTI
g BEEF ROASTS " GROCERY a m PRODUCE II ii DELI FROZEN
Slrloln Tip
Roasts ,,. t -, ... ,. ... ,....,
189
Shoulder 189 9~~~sts ~ \
"N t ,. ..,
Beef
Chw:k Roasts ::e,!~·. ·~
119
SEAf"OOD fJ
198 81.lverbrile
SilmOn
..... ('It .. "4. • • ... .., .. l .. llfJ•:J0.'1
True Cod
F1Ueta ••\>< r• •
Raw Shell·
On Shrtmp . ,.,
.~239
.899 , .. . . ,,
.79 ~T~
....... " . ]19 Hunt's Hldcory BBQ~
...... ' +. • 219 Tree Top Apple Juict •I•
.• 59
10:100
.• 59
Vons Sliced .. Bed Bo&ogna • 99
a.II Pwk Bttf Franks l 5 9
Kf9ft Swiss ChecSt 119
~t~~u« .73
~~ sik-t Beans .39
~·Lemon Juk'e J 15
RIDmalnt L«t llltt • · .29 Dww>i. ~ Harn .99
J39
.69
,,, .. ,..., ... 1a1
~~ .......
Swee•~ B8Q Styte5 . 100
een ~rs 4 : 1°0
Fruh Ags '".99
LIQUOR
' •• 8!TI1.t Ootdon'a Gir'I
. . ...
DAIRY
.35
II
... C.... • ....... ••I J65 Tropk.IN Oninge Jukt
™~·s~M e99
... 69
Butt~mulk wames . .
Trtt Top Appk Juice
-· 1 1•
.• 79
V<Ml ~ Kamp Fish Fillets 3 79
Oh Boy Ptpperoni Pluas 2 49
c~ Sf>lnedi 3 : 100
~ ' ... 12• ~~ a m
.. " . . .. , .,.._. ~ty Oenl.sh
\lantt) Buns . .
t••
.69
.89
II PORK II a POUi TRY 11
.189
1"
Amon. ~5· .119 frylf\9 Chic~
Drummetta tt' r t• ... ~ Lq °""' lcl 1"
rc1! '1 I IOI'"""'"' Purt.a......,
.35
31•
-:::-.:: ~ --='•=ACM
IAN NM UN'f'RMO _, 0.-. o ............ .....
t I I
I
I
~._¥AUIY _,....., .....
" CAN,..,._ lhOI ,...1 0...., ..,._Or ' ......
r •
I
•
SALADS MAKE GREAT MAIN DISHES •••
From Cl
rema1nmg red cabbage. Arrange re~rvcd avocado slices and asparagus tips
over the cabbage. Sprinkle almond ~hccsand crumbled cheese over all. Serve
with C:ae~ Salad Dre~ings. Make') 8 ~rvina&-
CA.ESAR SALAD DR1t881NG
1 • teaspoon dUJ seed
1 • teaspoon celery seed
l 1maJI clon carllc, optional
1 lUIPoOD sale
~cup salad oil
1 e11. at room tem peratutt
3 tablespoon• wine vme1ar
1 table1 poon lemoD j oke
In a blender. combine spices. garlic. salt and 011. With bknderrunmng.
add egg, then vinegar and lcmonJUace. blending after each add111on . Store in
refrigerator.
ASPARAGUS VINAIGRETTE
1 pound fresb a1parap1 1pears
~ cup ll&lat salad otl '°' cup c rumbled Gor1on1ola c beese
~ teaspoon lemon peel
% tablespoon• lemon juice
1 tablupoon capers
l tablu poon chopped pimiento
1 medlum bead iceberg lettuce
1'• cup diced roasted almonds'
Fresb cracked pepper
Wash and tnm asparagus. Steam unt1IJUSt cnsp tender. Meanwhile.
\Omb1ne 011, cheese. lemon peel and Juice. capers and pimientos. Drain
EAT LIGHT ...
From Cl
a more efTect1' e rate of
ca lone burning for the lime
~hen }ou're most active.
Long 53\S -
"Tr) eating lighter meals
· / .~ ''" lalQd!j1hs.i;tt ~ ~-tr'...,..,.,.·
· tom~tt> '~ frth"; ''With ··
chicken and.cheese served
~Ith crackers. or a pita
pocket packed wath tuna.
lettuce and tomato with a
glass of milk.
"These meaJs, which
conjist of lower-caloric
foods from the four foOd "~~~v::·· mtakc .ftiih. aifcf'(h~ 'tx1..d$
calone level low to ensure a
health> system whale losing
weight."
HOME COOKING ...
From Cl
3 curly leaf or romaine lettuce leaves
Combine cottage cheese. carrot. celery and raisins.
.\rrange fruit and cottage cheese mixture on lettuce. Serve
with Ginger-Lame Dressing•. or lemon or lime wedges. af
desued. I ser. ing.
•GINGER-LIME DRESSlNG
1 • cup fre1b lime juice
1 tablespoon boney
3 table1poon1 oil
• • teaspoon ground &incer
Combine ingredients; max un11I well blended
L'ORANGE RE FRESHER
1 cup pineapple orance juice drink
8 ounces orange flavored yogurt '°' cup milk
1 small ripe banana
Combine ingredients an blender contaaner. Cover and
run on high until smooth and well blended. 2 servings ( 12
ounces each)
SHRIMP IN PAPAYA
3 oWJces tiny cooked sbrimp
'I:! cucumber, 1Uced aod quartered
1 green onion, sliced
Ginger Dre11LD1•
a., papaya, seeded
In bo~I. combine shnmp. cucumber and 001on with 2
tablespoons dressing: max well Fill papaya half with
shrimp mixture: chill. Serve with additional dressing. I
serving.
sGINGER DRESSING
"3 cup plneapple Joice
'•cup 1Ugar
l te11poon 1roand 1mger
1, tea1poon onion powder
11, teaspoon dry mustard
11, tea1poon Hit
3" cup oll
1 table1poon poppy 1eed1
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
as~reausand place 1n an 8 x 8-inch pan. Pour oil m1xtu1tover asparagus
w&ilehot.
Cover and cbill at least 4 hours. Core, rinse and thorouJhly dram lettuce.
Cut into 41&11e raftsabout I-inch th1ck. Ptact each run on a salad plate. Lin
S stalks of asparqus to each raft. Spoon rem11nina marinade over all.
Spnnklc each with almonds and pa sf 1tsb cmckcd pepper. Mak~ 4 ~rvings.
DOWNEASTCRABCOBBSALAD
1 bead lcebu1 lettuce
1 poud fre1ll asparap1
I 11lce1 bacon
'llard cookeCl eu •
% medlam comatoe1 ·
1 poud cooked cnbmeat
"' cap cbopped 1rea oaJon1
l cup cnmbled Gor1on1ola cbee1e
1 cap &oa11ed lllvered almonds•
i lar1e ripe avocado•
DW Dre11ln1, recipe follows
Core , n nscand thoro ughly drain lettuce. C ut into fine shred and
refngerate an a close plastic baa or crisper. Snap ends off asparagus; blanch.
cool and cut into bite size lenaths. Chill. Cook bacon cnsp; drain on paper
towels and crumble. Chop hard cooked eggs and tomatoes.
When ready to serve, arrange lettuce in large salad bowl. Spread
crab meat in a stnp down middle. T hen follow by arrangi ng asparagus. bacon.
chopped cu. tomatOCSi onions. cheese and aJmonds alon~side crab. Shce
avocado: arrange down center over crab. Spoon dill dressangover all and toss
at table just before serving. Makes4generous ~rgins.
Diii Dreumg: Combing 'I• cup saJad oil, 11, cup white wine vinegar. 2
tablespoons lemon juice. l teaspoon grated lemon peel, I teaspoon garlic sah,
111 teaspoon dill weed and fresh ground pepper.
LB.
OREATLAKESCBICKENSALAD
l poacl freO 11pal'llH __ _,., •ead lcebu1 lenaca_
1 larse apple z"' cups c•wed, cooked ~Jckn
V. ctp to11te4 w~ole.utaral ••m0Dd1•
~ cup ~opped panle)' a tabletpoon carrantt
ltaUan Goraonzola C~me Dre11lD1, recipe follow• .
Snap ends from asparaaus. Blanch and cool. Cut 1n10 b1tc-si1e pieces an
chill. Core, rinse and tborouahly drain lettuce. Cut into bite-slle chunks
(about 6 cups); refrigerate in plastic baa. Cut a pie into chunks. Toss asapagu1,
lettuce, apple, chicken, almonds, parsfey and currants with dress1015. Makes
6servanp. ..
ltallu Gorconzola Creme Dre11lo1: Combine 11/2 cups sour cream, 1h
cup crumbled Gorgonzola cheese, 2 tablespoons lemonju1ce, I 1h teaspoons
garlic salt a nd fresh cracked pepper to taste, s\imng until smooth.
•T O"toast almonds: Spread in shallow pan. Heat in 3S0deartt oven 10 to
12 minutes until light brown, stirring once or twice. ·
LB.
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
KRAFT
MAYONNAISE
49
EA.
in the Daily Pilot
BEER
!!419
• 12 OZ ISOTTLU
LB. In blender container, combine pmeapple ju ace, supr,
ginger. onion powder. mustard and salt. Cover and blend
on high unlll smooth. Add otJ slowly, continuing to blend.
Add poppy seeds and lemon juice; blend thoroughly. THOMPSON SEEDLESS LARGE • SWEET JUIC Y SANTA ROSA
Chill. Serve with seafood or fruit salads. Approximately
111. cups.
REFRESIDNG TOMATO SOUP
1 • cup chopped onlon
1 small clove farllc, crashed
t teaspoons ol
l can 114·~ oancet) 1tewed tomatoes
a., te11poon cru1bed basU
l cup chicken brotb
1 tablespoon cbopped par1ley
In medium saucepan. saute onion and garlic in 011
until onion 1s soft A.dd tomatoes. basil, broth and parsley.
Simmer 10 minutes Cool 10 minutes.
Place an blender container. cover and blend
thoroughh Return to saucepan: heat through. Garnish
w11h add1t1onal parsk). 1f dcmed. About 2 CUP.S.
Vanauon: Use all\ e oil in place of salad 011. soup can
be sened chilled
Cherry-banana shak e
easy and appealing
summer taste treat
For those "ho hke to upenment and make
1nno"a11ve be' erages in the blender. here's an easy and
dehc1ou'i one to tr) CherT)'·Banana Shake combines three
favontes. fresh sweet chemes. ice cream and banana in a
luscious drink that's as easy to make as it is appcahng.
All you do to prepare It is simply pop npc banana,
pitted fresh sweet chemes and vanilla ice cream into a
blender and whirl. The result ts a cool, smooth, and
creamy shake. laced with the sweet task and fragrant
aToma of fresh banana and npe chemes.
CHE RRY ·BANANA SHAKE
1 "' cap1 pitted fretb sweet c berrlH
'iAi lar1e banana, peeled ud 1Uced s lar1e 1coop1 vu.Jlla lee cream
t wbole fru b sweet cberrlea wlUa 1tem1
Puree chcmes and banana m blender. Add ice cream
and blend unul smooth. Pour into 2 glasses; ganush each
wath whole c herry Serve 1mmed1ately. Makes 2 servtnp.
lhul\ Pilot m one\. saH•rs for
"omttn in<.'lucfr th(' Supermarket Shop
per colu mn advertised \ alues. coupon
sa \ inj£s linct tast) rer1pes 1n Wed
nc~da" ·..,food J>M~e..,
Dally Piiat
GRAPES
• 2C·OZ LOAI
• Wtllll OR
WU I.Al
• ROLINDrOP
OR '>ANOWll H
SKAGGS ALPHA BETA
PREMIUM BREAD
\~
W(g~~-.~~-
SKAGGS ALPHA BETA
DRINKING WATER
Copyt1gPll , .... All 11g"1• , ... "'ea Wt •• _... IM 119111 Ill ltm•I ciu•"'·····
NECTARINES
• INCWDES
20t Off
LABEL
• I>' oz 80TlLC • CRAN8fRRY
JlllC E CO< K TAIL • (RANi\Pf'l.E
DRINK OCEAN SPRAY
FRUIT DRINKS
• u-0i eonu
• OlAlllT IZf.
PLUMS
-.. f ea Col'-Cttcl Oii ell Te~AOI• ll•"'t 9-W•ne 6 L•QllO' Nol A••tttb'• ' A I $•~·°' Prices Effective at all Southern Cellfornla Alpha Beta Markel •
I
j
DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS
-------•;iiJIM ·m;•·,..;:~~-, I j ............... , \ I DOUBLE UVINll COUPON I I ""Jill !nil COUpoti • "'Ill •"Y O'lt l 'IUl1c1u•11' ctn I oll covoon I t11111 ooueu "' vi .. tniJOll Ntnat• , ,,,
I .,,.. .. , "llCl:~·iu• .. ··~·· .. CIUNll •tt•". I I •r• ••ru •• , oc1 •• ,.,. ., , .,. "*"" turou o• ".. 1 UClUI( l oa t ~ .... •AH ti I l · ,, ..r.,i:i..,~-.~~~r11=rrrot... ... 1 u•r , .. eoua11 ceu11111 110 "'" .. u I \-. CIVNI IHI,..., .. Jll•l 11 , ... •It • .IUlll It.,.. .-------------------
..
-' -'---I
79~
LB.
VINE ~IPE
CANTAWUPES
·69~~;
BACK AnACHED
FRYER LEG QUARTERS
FROZEN OR DEFROSTED
TURKEY DRUMSTICKS
! rrhursday' Jun• 21 through
Wedne1day. June 27, 1914
• 1-0A.l..LOH 'UG
MOST STORES
OPEN
6A.M.
5 00
FOR
FRESH SWEET
CORN
BLADE CUT
BEEF CHUCK STEAKS
BEEF BACK
SPARERIBS
~\Ni~ Htl \Tl 10 l'Hl \I< I( '\\II I\'
Al PHA ~I A l~K t OH I '' l>.\lt 11CIOM
IO l'liJllAI 1~1 llfl>Ck JK)"~ UI )l\t
Of ~l>UH l~UOM Pf!()\ llKl'\.\I 11-Cl<.t'
'
Orange Co t 0,AIL Y PILOTIWednelday, Junt 20, 11M C"I
Summer salads saB tY
Wlthoutkltc:hen 1Jeaf
Don't shortchanse nutntion just ~use ohbe heat.
Tbese cootina
summer salad will pick up their eneray and yours -hto
it'• just too bot to cook.
It's not neceuary to beat up your kitchen to serve
your family a nutritious main disb. It takes only minutes
to 11ute chicken for Chinese Oucken Salad. Adults and
children will love the spicy 0.avor of this protein-rich, tow·
fat salad with crispy bean sprouts, ~lery and tomato.
Sesame Ginaer ~ 1weetcncd with supr and fnatant with &inaer. adds a refresh.in& Oriental touch to
this chicken lllad. Try it with cri py Olinese rice crackers
or whole wheat sesame crackers.
Salada can ftll a dual role in summer menus by
providina the fresh fruit your family oeecli and tati1fyina
the WJt for a tweet. Molded Melon Mousse is elettot
eooup for a party, but so easy yeu can make it in three
steps dunna the early morn.in& bustle. A refmhinasmooth
blend of fresh cantaloupe balls, oranarJuice and whipped
cream is molded into a rina th.al makes an eye-atchina
end to an evenins meal. Served with barbecued chicken
and foil-wrapped ~ed potatoes, you won't need a dmcrt.
When children lose their ap~pc bot weather, it's time for a Frozen Fruit Salad. Tb4! ri&ht color. taste and
vitamins of fresh fruits are frozen into rcf'Rshing
individual salads with proteio-nch cream cheese and outs,
sweetened with supr. You oan add powdered milk for the
protein boost younastcn need.
These fruit salads are easy to malce and store in the
freezer, then simply turned out onto a bed of lettuce. No
need for ao afkr4inner snack lO mike dUt ~---"-.... comp!etc..
CBINEI& CBJC&EN I Al .. O
1 &aWt1111111 ••taMt .U tn.a.~-. .......................... .
IGdl~(lt .. 11 ..... -.. .... , •
1 ........... ~, .......
l medtam cte.t1 prUc, ·~Ir lll'•HM
1 tab~ to)' Ulft
l npbeaa • ..U,dll"''
'l alp ~ celetJ Ir 1 CD (1¥. MIOI) ....
daettaatt, lJ'aiaM ... dllfll ••
1 ilie4Jam comas..~ ... a1,.e•
14 cwp IDilM:ed dlutro -......,
Set&me Gba&er Dnelllla (,..... r.u..t) Len.ct ,
WMte utva.I 1•-•••. _... _. ctie,.1. (.
C1oui)
RJce or ...a.me eraden
Hnt oil in larse sJdUet. Add chicken, onion. IUtic
and So}'. sauce. Saute over medium~ heat for S IOlDUla
or until Chicken is cooked and m01Sture ii evaporated.
Coot Toss with bean sprouts, cekry, tomato, cilaatrol.Dd
•;,cup Sesame Oinaer Drrisina. Chill. •
To serve, spoon lMO &eituce-llDed bowl. SprinJc:Je with
almonds. Pass rema.in1na Sesame om.er J;:>resiina. Serve
with crackers 1f deured. Makes 4 to 6 scrvinp.
Setame Glaser Drffllq: Combine 3 tablespoona
white vioepr, If> cup granulated 1upr, 'AteUpOOnsround
pnger and 1h teaspoon salt in electric blender. Whit Wltil
smooth.
With blender runnin.a. sradually add in cup ~
oil, whurina until thick and smoolh. Stir in l tabletoOon
toasted sesame seeds. Makes about l cup. Maka (·to-6
servings.
MOLDED MELON MOUSSE
1 medJa:m cucalotlpe
~ C"P pulllate4 ..,.,
..... rl'-, -~~---IA£ v • ;s.~ ~~-., .,....,_,___ -,.-._ _.: -.
,,,,..... . ' .. . .... -..
J'I ... -.. • • .. -.. ~-·-... , ..... -...
... -.......
SWEEPSTAKES WINNERS!
KAZEl CAMPIEll
125,000 WINNER!
BONNIE l lOCKIURN
CHEVROLET EUROSPORT
WAGON WINNER! -~ :'Si.. ·-_LI ~ __
'~,.....,------~~
I
1 c.u (I oace) froaa oraqe J1llee a.cw.....,
atbwell
1 &eupoea yuiJla
lcapw~crum,....,.
Miat (opdciu.f)
Quancr melon. Pare; discard rind and seed&. Cut one
quarter into narrow wedges. Wrap and refrileraae for
ganush. Cut remaining melon into b&lls (about l 'M cupe).
usina melon ball cutter or teaspoon measure. Tosa with
sugar. Set aside.
Combine water and selatin in saucepu. C.ook over
medium-high beat. stirrina constantly until telatin
dissolves. Stir in undiluted oru::Juice concentrate and vanilla. Fold m whipped cream melon ball mixture.
Turn into a ~P rina ~old. Chill until set, at leu;t 2
houn. Unmold on scrvina plate. Garnish with reterved
melon wedges and mioL Makes 4 to 6 servinp.
FROZEN FRUft SA.LAD
t caps c:t1t-9P fnit (~ .. meetattw. ,eac:Ms,
1trawberrla or melea)
¥. ~t:°alatei n pr l ,. e (I once) ettam ~
i tablespoeu lem• )nee
'" c.p ~. wabnlb (eiptio911) Leti.ce
Combtne l 'h cups fruit. supr, cream cheese and
lemon JUIOC m elcctnc blender. Whir until mi001h. Finely
chop rcnwnmg 'h cup frwL Fold into blended m.ixnare
alona with walnuts. Spoon into four YJ..cup individual
molds. Freeze until firm. Unmold onto lettuce4incd
plates. Ganush with addittonal fruit as desired.. Mak.es 4
SCrvlQgs.
Bean salad recipes
simplef satisfying
Bean salads have come a long way since Aunt Bess,
Three Bean Salad with Sweet and Sour Dressin&. Becaute
Italians ha'e always been artists in bean cookery we're
borroWln& two of their ~1pcs for bean salads. These
salads arc sat1sfy1og. simplt' to put toscther and savory
wnh the tastes and textures of Italy.
The first 1s a nourishing oombination of potassium-
nch chick peas (garbanzos) and a springy spiral macaroni
called rotelte. These arc tossed with areen pepper and
tomato in an herbed dressina flavored with ~· garlic and onion. This 1s a reaJ find for a vqetarian mam
dash
o\n all·in-one bean, ham and cheese salad starts with
l two kinds of beans -red ludney and white kidney beans (cannelhni). Roasted red peppers and diced celery add
· color and crunch mpecuvely: dJced mozzarella cheese
and ham pro' 1de a double protein boost. Here tbedressina
1s herbcd Wlth oregano plus the on1on and prhc.
PAST A AND CBI CI PEA SALAD
l lar1e l1'fflt pepper
"a cap oUve oU
! &ablupoou cider vlDepr
"I teaapooe rosemary leaves, cnlW
" teaspooD salt l clove 1arUc, cn19aed
3 t.abletpooDa mtattd oalu
8 ouce1 1plral macaroai, coollM (U..t I ~)
1 cu (lt oaca> ~Ill~ peu, dralHd
l C9p cllced tom.to
Cut 3 slices from center of the lf"CD pepper for
pm1sh; dice rema1nder To preparedreuinaciombine ill a
Jarac bowl 011. v10cpr, rosemary, salt, prlic and onion.
Add macaroni, cb1ck peas, diced s;rtt'1l pt'ppCf' and
tomato; to h&htly until combined. Turn into ecrvina
dish. Cover and rcfnaerate at lcaSl 1 bou.r before terVina.
Garnish ~1th reserved pepper rinp. Yield: 6 to I poniona..
about 8 cups.
HEAJ\TY BEA.N AND RAM SALAD
a~,....ae •J•~
'4 C9JohHetJ .
............... la ~
"9 tee111•• ..... ,. ..... seu,_ prtic: ,..._
~ -~ ... p..-.. Wack,.,,., l cu ( • eac..),.. kWMJ ...... .,......
lcu(lt..cee)ee..tU.I....._....._.
l\\ t'WPI~ ......... CMeel (I.__)
l ~~~--(·---· l C9lf .. cM eel ce,~._...........,...,..$:
To pttput dreuina combine in a bowl lemon
J';uce, 011, orqano, onion •odlarlk and bile*
pq>per. dd kidney and QnDellin.i ~a... ll_lm.
cclet')' and rtd ~r. toM until combined. Serve an a
lcttuco-lintd 1tn1na bo l. 1f · Yidd~ 6 panioas
about 6"2 cu
I
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, June 20. 198•
These chocolate desserts onl . .
TASTE 1iKe tliejr ~re f atten.ing
If you love chocolate-
desserts, but you're on a
diet. don't fret and don't
despair. Herc arc some
luscious chocolate dessens
that only taste like they're
loaded with calori~s. Start-
ing with unsweetened
coooa is the ~ret.
Cocoa is naturally low in
calories -about 24 per
tablespoon. That's because
most of the cocoa butter
bas been removed (this fat
adds no flavor). The result
is a powder with intense
chocolate flavor.
Treating yourself to a
luscious chocolate dessert
-and at a calorie savings
-helps to eliminate that
"deprived" feeling that can
sometimes drive you nght
off a diet.
Note: To conven any
baking chocolate recipe to
cocoa use this handy for-
mula: Three level table-
tabt.spoon hortenina
(solid or liquid) equals a
one-ounce.sq~ of baking
chocolate.
CHOCOLATE-BANANA
FREEZE
l eavelope uflavored
f.elatla 4 ctip cold water
14 cap cocoa
14 np bolllq water
1 cap very rtpe buua
Aspartame 1weetaer to
equJ ~ cap aagar
1 coata.laer (I ouces)
plabl yoprt
1 tea1pooa vaallla
1 eanlope w~pPed top-
9l•J mh'
pao and!rccz.cuntilalmou_
furn.
'Ium into Jarae mixer
bowl and beat until fluffy.
Prepare topping mix ac-
cording to package direc-
tions. Fold in 1 cup
whipped topping mix into
mixture. Freeze.
Scoop into six goblets,
sherbets or dessert dishes;
garnish with remaining
whipped topping. 6 ser-
vings, each 11 3 calories.
Popsicle variation:
Spoon into six S-ouncc
paper cups; freeze panially.
Insert sticksi freeze com-
pletely.
REFRESHING CHOC-
OLATE-ORANGE ROLU
Y, cap aulfted cake
flour
I/• cap cocoa
'••i•ltJtu ___ oi,an~ enxelope ~es
14 np Hpr toppina nux accordma to
1 tee.,._.. y..W. -peck:age directions. FofCI in
i tabletpooDJ water 'h teaspoon shredded r·
<>ruse FIU1D1 (reclpe ange peel and Yi cup 1-
follows) drained fmely chopped r-
t tea1poona confec· ange sections.
tloaer'1aa1ar
Sift together flour, cocoa,. FUDGY CHEESE P~
bakina powder and salt in 11.4 copt vuUla water
medium bowl; set uide. crambt
Beat eaa yolks in small S tablespoon• me
mixer bowl; gradually add mar1afi!ae
1/4 cup supr beatina until 1 ctap part-stun rt
thick and lemon colored. clteele
With clean beaten, beat egg ~ cwp skim milk
whites in larae mixer bowl 1.4 e11p cocoa
to soft peaks; gradually add i teaapoou comttarcll
1/4 cup suaar beatina to stiff ~ teupooa ult
peaks. I tablespoont augar
Fold yolks into whites. AspartalJle 1weetae
Fold dty inarcdients into eqaal I tableap
mixture ahemately with 111ar
vanilla and water just until t tea1poona vullla
1 te1poon bakln& pow-
der
blended. Spread evenly in a i eu•
greased and wax paper 8 freab wllole at
lined 1 S x 1 ()..inch jelly roll berrte1 ~
L-_.:.;..;~-i.:::~~~-.~ ____ _. SPoOns cocoa plus one level
Spnnkle .&elatin over
cold water, allow to soften.
Stir over low heat until
dissolved. Combine cocoa
and boilina water in mixing
bowl: stir until smooth.
Gradually blend in mashed
banana. aspartame, gelatin,
yogurt and vanilla. Pour
anto freezer tray or shallow
'I• tea1poon 1aJt
4 ea yolk•
14 capHflar
pan. Bake at 37S degrees Combine crumbs and
until top springs back when margarine; finnly pat into 8
touched lightly. Immedi-or 9-inch pie plate. Bake at
atelyinvertontotowelthat 37S degrees for 8 to ~lO
Here's how to participate in our plan •••
1 'rou will ral'llll' one ~ ll'e Bonus $311 1
• Coupon Inf t'J< h S? 00 pur<h.~w m.ldt· 1n
OUI .,!Ofl '
2 Pate coupon 1n Bonu~
• provid~.
l
3 With one filled Sc.111<'r lold<>r you t d 5
• piece plMt> settinq d ~our chote • loi nnlv
69 , plu<o laK.
has been sprayed with minutes. Cool. J
nonstick cooking_ spray. Combine ricotta cheese
Carefully peel off paper. and milk in blender con-
Starting at narrow end. roll tainer or food pr~r
cake and towel together. until smooth. Add rem•n-
Place on wire rack to cool ing ingredients except
comple~it .. nN'nA.1"1'>.0r. -~~wberries; blend well. ~~~~~h~.
spread with filling. Roll up. 4S to SO minutes or until
Cover; chill. Sprinkle top set. Cool; chill. Garnish
lightly with confectioner's before serving with straw-
sugar. 12 servings. each 115 berries tweetened with
calories. aspartame. 8 servings, each
Orange Filling; Prepare l-212 calories. ~
Pie merges
leeks and
nectarines
'Odd couple' fruit, vegetable
provide winning combination
)
.
Nectarines and leeks arc not a typical combination. In
fact, nectarines and leeks ate ralJlcr uncommon produce.
However. Brunch Uek Pie marries the two and the ~ult
is delicious.
Fresh nectarines will ripen off the tree due to a s:e·a1
npenin$ agent called ethylene that they produce. ace
several in a fruit ripening bowl or loosely closed paper
at room tempertwc for a few days and watch tllem
carefully. When they smell fragrant and yield slightly to
gentle palm pressure. they're ripe.
You don't have to ripen leeks. Just for the record,
leeks arc a member of the onion or lily family. Leeks are
very popular in Europe where the Greeks cook them with
black olives, the Eastern Europeans serve them as hors
d'oeuvres and the Italians tJlinly slice thel)'l into salads.
The Welsh so esteem the feek that they m~de it their
national emblem.
BRUNCH LEEK PIE
t tableapoo111 batter
1 cap leek1, tllJ.Dly 1Uced
5 tUcea bacon, d1eecl
seu1
% tatiletpooDI f1ov
1 cap mllk
1 fretlt aectartae, 1Uced, sllcet laalved
1 cap 1llarp Clteddar cbeeae, dredded
Ii\ tea1pooa marjoram
Ii\ tea1pooa salt
'4 tea1pooa pepper
1 ubaked t-btcll pie 1llell
Melt butter in large skillet: saute leeks with V> the
bacon over low heat until transparent; cool. Add eggs and
flour, blendina until mixed. Add milk, nectarine, ch~.
marjoram. saltaod pep{>Cr and stir gently to mix. Tum into
pie shell. Sprinkle remunina bacon (uncooked) over top of
pie. Bake on low shelfin 37S-degree oven 40 minutes, until
center is set. 6 servings.
Irish potato pancakes
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
•111111•••"-,... ....
Irish potato pancakes, called Boxty, are different from
those I've come across in other cliisines.
DUSH P ANCilES
1 cep alljN~ f1Mr ,,...,,., ....... ,.w,er ., ......... , ..
1 ,._. pelateet
I~ ..... IUPdJ bea&ea 14 cep IHltter. melted'
'tablet,.... (abMt) lllllll
EIU'aMtter
Stir totctber Oour, bak.ina powder and salt. Peel Yi
pound of the potatoes and 11e1.m or boil until tender. maab
fine -there should be 1 firmly packed cup. Peel the
remainina potatoes and finely shred; press out liquid -
thm shoukt be I liahtly packed cup. Add mashed
potatoes, lhredded potaioes. and 9 to flour milture;
mia weU: stir • n butter. Gradually tttr in en~ milk to
make a .oft better. Melt a ltMfC)us amount of extra butter
in a larp heavy tkJllet; add bcapina tablespoon of the
better, well apart; ~ over moderate heat. tumi"a a
necnury. untll cooked throuah and browned on both
ides. Keep warm in a low oven. ry remainina baucr the
same way. Strve bot with
butler Makes 14.
I
Curried soup,
cheese salad
Orange Coat OAfLY PILOT/W~, June 20, 1M4 m
~lam teriyaki tasty in su . ,
he JtYte of eat•na .. lmle mt111.. hU become so
popular that Japanese 1usb1 ban, the equivalent of an
Enahlh pub are appearina all over the country.
As the Japanete have Iona been known for their st)'.lt
of eatinat we also anociate cmain foodl with Japan. Like
plums. Tb~~P-lc of Ja~n ve beH eatinf them for
ceafurics. The)' ute them in wines. sauces, manniaei and cs~ially .. IS ts" for dnim. Japanetc teneralty conclude
their meals with fresh fruit. often IC\llptuitd into fantastic
fpnns.
Now that the California plum season has arrived,
Plum Teriyaki with chicken or Tofu lets you create a
Japanese-style appetizer at home. Made with chicken
cu bet or a l()ybean alternative, tofu, and wcdaet of fresh
plums, this quickly broiled appetizer serves fl •• a pre-
dinner snack or four for an entree serviQa.
PLUM TERIY A&! W1Tll ClllCQtN OR TOPU 1,._..,., .•• u.,......cWd•.,._.t......,
.~
TertJMIMuluM
I or C ....... Ca.Ufwa&I .-U e.a .... •Mies
t~cwa1cara
1 .... , •• ••ler Cut tofu or chicken into ¥ .. inch cubtt. Marina~ in YJ
cup Tmyak1 Mannade for several boun or ovtmiabt,
tumina oc.cu1onally. R~rvc rcma101na mannade.
Skewer tofu or: chickm cubes with plum wecteH on
p1clts. Prace on bll:tn1 shcet~nd btoil 6 mimlla, -tumins
onct.
Meanwhile, mix cornstarch and water until smooth.
Stir into rererved Tenyaki Marinade in sauupan. Bnna to
boil over medium·hllh heat, stimna constantly .. Brush
onto hot cooked kabobs and 1erve immed,..tely. Makes 2
dozen appetizen or 3 to .. entree ~rvinp.
Tertyakl MartMM: Combine .v. cup v.-ater, 11. cup soy
sauce, 14cupbrowntupt:(packed), l larsecloveprlicaPd
3 sliccs (~1ncb each) fresh sinarr root. peeled, in b&eDdef.
Whirl un1j) smooth. Pour into taucepan. brin& to bOil and
simmer over medium-hap heat l to 3 mintucs. Makes 1 cup .
.,.ofu: 1Quarc. custardhkc cakn of ~ pu!Ud
soybeans. Sold by the cake, it's ulU&lly found in OrimtaJ
specialty stores and supermarkrts.
Well-dressed salads are wearing this Italian creation
IT AU.AN DRESSING . Celery lffCI to taste
1 tabletpooD drted ~..... '• cup vlae1ar •
1 table.,.... drted m~ prllc t tablespoou water
Z ten,...1 bit · 'tl.i cep ve1etaWe oU
1 te11,... H1ar In an electric blenderwhirltoaetheruntil VCT')' fine the ~ ttaspooa drie41weet pepper Oakes onion. prhc. salt. sugar. pepper 'flakes. black pepper,
V• teaspooe coenely aroad black pepper mustard. paprika and celery seed. Tum into a' jar: add
'4 teupooa llry mutaN vinepr. water and 011. Shake well. Store in refngerator. D11la paprika Shake well before using. Makes I cup.L
. , .. ;k~~ilMt~!~· ·~-
· Today's interest in lighter eatina bas seen the soup
IUld salad lunch appearina more frequently on the dinner
table. This is pan1cularly true durinJ the warmer months
when these li&hter foods seem to satJsfy finicky appetites.
Curried A vgolemona Soup and Pear and Cheese
!Salad combination is memorable for many reasons-it's
different, Wtes wonderful and, for the chef, it's easy to fix.
Curried A vaolemona is a Greek soup that's equally
delicious served warm or cold. To prepare it, sauteed
on.ions are mixed with chicken broth, cuny powder and
eags and allowed to simmer briefly. Then fresh squeezed
lemon juice is added along with lemon slice$ and panley
for prnisb. It has a sharp, sparkling flavor.
Pear and cheese salaa mixes one of summer's favorite
fruits with an interesting blend of Gruyere and Blue
Cheese flavoring.
CURRIED AVGOLEMONA SOUP
% cap fbtely cbopped oDioD
S t.ablespooa1 b•tter or marpr1De
1 ~ t.ablespooD1 all-parpose flou
1 t.abletpooD carry powder a CUI US'il oucn eacll) ch.lctea brodt s tar1e ew. beatea '4 cap fresll-tqaeeud lemoa jaJce
LemH 1Uces ud c'4>pped parsley for 1an.l.lll
In a saucepan, sauteonion in butter until onion is soft.
Stir in flour and curry powder and cook I minute longer,
stirring constantly. Remove from beat and gradually stir
in chicken broth. Cook over moderately high beat, stirring
constantly until mixture comes to a simmer .
., Beat about l cup broth mixture into cas; add lemon
juice, return cu mixture to saucepan with broth and cook
over low heat about 2 or 3 minutes lonaer. Pour into soup
tureen and garnish with lemon slices and parsley. Makes 6
servings.
PEAR AND CHEESE SALAD
3 tablespoons lemoa Jalce 'I• tea1pooD salt
~ tea1pooD 1roud pepper
I tablupoou olive oll
• tarce pean, peeled, cored, qaanered ud 1Uced
crosnnse 'l•·lacll dtlck
1 cap jalleue cat Gnyere cheese ( • onces)
BostoD lettace leavu
1 np blee cMese croaton1
In a small jar, shake lemon juice with salt, pepper and
olive oil. Pour dressing over pears and cheese; toss, cover
and chill for at least 2 hours. Arran•e lettuce leaves on a
platter. spoon on drained pear mutture and top with
croutons. Makes 6 servings.
Salt substitutes
keep potato salad
"low in sodium
No outdoor meal seems complete without potato
salad. Yet, for tile sodium-conscious consumer, potato
salad can mean hidden milligrams of sodium added to the
diet. It's not the potatoes and other vegetables adding
sodium. it's the dressing and added salt that are usuaJly the
culprits.
If you're watching your .sodium i':ltake .. and th.us
cutting back on this summename favonte. thank again.
You can keep potato salad and other
salads an your summer menu repertoire b~ relyinJ on the
no salt added food products now available in your
supermarket.
Substituting a low sodium salad dr~ssing 1seasy. Start
b) omitting the mayona1sc·ba~ dressings usually found
in traditional potato sa. lads. These salads can have 1 upwards of 1.200 m1lhgrams of sod1~m in one cup. By
using a low sodium tomato-herb vina1areue. you can
make a delicious Garden Potato Salad that has a mere 25
Jllilharams of soda um per serving.
If some members of your famil) have trouble
djushn& to the lower sodium cookina style. let them add
their own salt at the table. . . .
Recipes in which the salt 1s added durina .coo~ana
have a less pronounced salty taste because the salt 1s mixed
with other ingredients and fl~vors. Add~ at the table, salt
,hits your taste buds first. givinaa more intense salt flavor.
GARDEN POTATO SALAD
1 (1-ouce) CH no salt addt4 tomato sa.c.
"' c•p wlae va.e1ar
t table1poon1 bro .. aa1ar
t teasP"• parslt)' flalltt ·~ teatpoo• udl: ore1a .. , ba1U leaves, prUc powdu.
celery 9*, paprika u• pepper
·~ e91oll t petatoa, c:oMt4, peeled aM d.I~
1 sree• bell ,.,,er.'*" ... ··~ 1 cam&, ,.etff ... 1lkff ~ np dle.,d '" •loa
In 1 'mall pan, combin tom~to sauet, v!ncpr.
'
'1 brown supr and p1ces. Bn!'J t~ boa I; cook S. minutes. r Remove from htat and cool TU minutes. Add 011 to sauce m1~tu~ and beat totcthcr unul cttamy. In a latlt bowl.
combine .
ttm11ninainjtcdicnt w1thdtcSS10f. lOU toco.t. ~tull and
rvc on 1 bed of lcm.1cc. Per servll'I 186 calories. 2 am
protein. 2 I am carbohldratc • 11 am fat. 2S n\I ~1um.
Makes 4 to 6 . r\1n
' I I
--·-· Hatn
Smok·ArRoma Whole
F~ Cooked
-59
( ,.,_,..,) sac.cs FOi YW ~
7••••• ..... ~c~iv t> •1•
Mu •••• FfWlllh TiQX.11 FM
•$179 •69c 10 ~ =:>•1••
Dr>Pa•lly Scolt ~4 t:89c
.. _ ...... k ~~lb ·1-DOCo: a Oii Mazell = •2•• ••-••• S11u ...
...... •••I Uwer0e1ros1ec1 lb99c =ocalro•• Rleeeoc.i 10 ~'1" ••r••• O:llo•~ 4~1
(Cut·Up F~ lb 7~) lb.
Fresh
Fryers
La•lt ••••• t:T~ Chotce lb •17 •
............. Smoll-A·Aome ~ •1••
Pra1• Tus•ot Plllets lb 'I"
Sklzi .... fra•UScx»m9.1y ~ 99c
SOON Crab '= 11 S198
fishsticksc.o-~o.u ':..: $149
Halibut Fillets -S298
Bologna·~ ;:c:-~ 69C
Cooked Ham ~ ~ S129
Fned Chicken~ """" ~ s299
~
Pfemun Dog Coad &..
10 Pleese ~ Pup
14'1-0Z Cans
00
Steal< Rolls ,, """* ~ggc
Rices -.. .. £• ~79C
Cat food ,,.., " 100 4 ~$1
Citrus Punch ~ =ggc
Mayonnaise I ' lie s159
Folger's c_....: c.._ • SJ49
••pow •r•• 80 Proof VOOM ScOk:t'I Buy IQNO 12-or ~ ~ 'Mights MiAb M..i •i" •99c .f Sc •... · ····~~ ~"· a ·······= 6 :.;•1• •A••l•'•l1eOld~• =•1•
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a Seiull l
' ~ ~, Fresh s-eet Melor\
A Ae+reatwlg n.
~ere.tat
'~ 3 c -lb
cm)FreshJlca ... ., 59c
mDO Caz I OIS Ci!IO 9'° Free11 2 ~59c
DO Awocados Fr"" 3 ror •I• ..... Onion ~~ 3 .. •1 00
• . I -----------------• ' ttlahL ....
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I •
I
CIO Or~ Oout DAILY PILOTIWednelday, June 20, 10M
'l'he winemaster's salty, butnothls product
Fermented" (usually my
favorite), and finally "Pri·
vatc Reecrve."
The regular sclJs for
unde r S l 0, Barrel
Fennented is about S 12,
and Private... R cscrve com-
mands around S 14.
The regular is the mo t
stmghtfbrward. stylistical·
ly. with onJy the most
subtle oak influence. Barrel
Fermented is often the
richest and most wooded.
but in most vantages it
takes some llme in the
bottle to develop all it has
to off.er. Private Rcscrv
also improves an the bottle,
but is usually more
precocious about showing
its fat vanilla quality.
BEEF LARGE END
Rib
JS.rlater 1 tll .. Prtvite
lleterv• ~($l4
or less): To be released luly
1. this may be the vint11e
that I end up preferrin1 to
Barrel Fermented. l have
yet to Wtc them ido by
aide, but the P.R. is very
appealina. It bas a leaner.
more delicate, and at the
same time more steely,
1truct1.&re than ln the put,
yet with all tht" complex.ity
of earher vintap. It is
put with foOd, Ind will
definitely improve 1n the
bottle for at last two yea11.
Look for diit one . .-.-.--.
BRIEF TITLE -The San Francisco Fair Wme
Competidon was able to
claim the title of world'•
larsest for exactly 11 days.
Otaqe County tOok the
tillc away from tonatimo
tillc bolder LcM A.qeles,
last year, and then San
Francilco passed Oranac
County's title by some';hina
like a dozen WtOCS. with a
total approachina 1900en-•
tries. ti
The oranae c ou21 event. however, JUm
rifb.t beck into fi11t pace
with its 240().eotry com-
petition that ended June
I l. It 1ppeat1 that after decades of beina "the ..
major judaina. L.A. is total·
ly out of tlte runnioa wben
it comes to size.
JUDGING CON·
TROVERSY? -Ifs intemtina to note that
most· of the m.;or wine
judainp are chaired by one
wine journalist or another.
L.A. is beaded up by_ Nate
Chroman, L.A. Times
columniJt, San Francisco is
chaired by Harvey
Stciman, manaaina editor
The Wine Spectator. with
Riverside and San Dieao
led by Dan Be11tr of the
San Dieao Union. The
American Wine Competi-
tion, a national affair, is the
brainchild of International
Wine Review editor Crais
Goldwyn, and Oranse
Couoty is chaired by a
fellow oamed Jerry Mead.
All the judaiflll have dif.
ferent rules and
~~~6uau--:: ,~~"Y+;
BANQUET FROZEN
Friedl ·cken
Meat Dept. Savings
Compare these Low Prices
GENERAL MILLS
Golden
Ch k LI ht T CHIC .. lN OF u n 1 g u na ~~~E~~~i.l
C t Food 9LIVU a ~~~~'ET•U
FI GOl.O MIOAl 0 U r ALL l'Ullf'Olf M O Of' UNlllACH(O
La Pina Flou r
Gelatin ~z:,~"ll
Coffee-Mate ~::~~~rN
Wisk ="'·
Velveeta ~::'
24-0Z
16-0 Z
Frozen Food Favorites
Fudgesicle ~~t~ ·
Little Ears li!..SEVE
Vegetables ~',:~gm
Broccoli Spears 8•ROSEYE
V t b I 81ROSEYE ege a es fe:~.rnw1
Mac & Cheese ~~:~~N
Kraft Singles AMEA~AN
Sh t Sod "SSOATEO as a a :M~~RJ.E,
Cheese OAOIOIA rARMS HAL, MOON CHf OOAA
Fab WITH FAIRIC" SOFl(N(A GIANT SIZ[
Mini Shields ITATlAIAOS
Applesauce !n~~!~~~l
Softsoap tit~~le~"'
Coronet Towe ls
Bap~ies iftMOt
ff!ISlllU Ca ood ~:,\rnu
Bath Tissue ~TIO
t2CI s1.29
8P~C• 51 .29
tOOZ 57c
10-0z 65C
l60Z s1 .19
ZO-OZ
51 .19
1LITER sgc
18 S2.99
•90l s1.n
JOCt
51.29
44-0Z s1.33
750Z sgc
---1 ROU. 65C
\
KRAFT
Miracle
Whip
32-0Z
Garden Fresh Produce
P us ears ~~ ...
Cantaloupes ~S'ESWEEI
Mangos ~"f~~:cy ,,,
FANCY SWEET
Seedlea
Grapes er LB
Bacardi Rum ::;:t:0R
Vodka OIAMCHATU
l~lllEA sg.99
l 7HITEl'I s7 .99
Gin TAkOU(AAY
Vodka .s.:~w~s
Scotch ~~RS
Gallo Wine •v~"''IT•U
75G~.se.99
7»m•S4.99
~.89.89
SUTll'I sagg
Pmcu uncnn 1111U. DAra
... .... ,._ ... ,.._ 111 ...
AOVERTI ED ITEM GU A It ANTE£ .. , .................. __ ,., __
"-•t~ II--·--...~-,_. ... _ ......... _..,.. ... ··~ l llll&••lllP ..... ,......._ • ..,_ .... ..... _...., ... _ ....... -.~ ..... .........
.... ~ ·····:--( ·) No Games ... No Gimmi cks ... Everybc>dy W1r1s VV1th lti··· I 1 l'/'1 Pr1c,. l f\,1r1f''1
:: •• .':· ..... ·~ ·--'•·•
\
besl
To capitalize on these
differenoes of opinion, this
year's California Wine Fes.-
tivaJ on the Monterey Pen-
insula has invited four of
these journalist, judaina chairmen. to partiapete io
a teminar that will explore
the difi'erenccs and settle
which event is really the
best.
COFFEE cl WINE? -
With the exception of Port
and Sherry, l don't rec-
ommend it, but it is, of
course, perfect with dis.
tilled wine, be it brandy,
Co&nac or A.nnqnac. As with wine, however,
the ri&bt coffee with the
riJl!t food makes all the
difference,andaFortBraaa
coffee router spendJ a lot
of time fiaurina out which
coffee flavors 10 with
which foods. As a result.
the products of The Tbanksaivina Coffee Co.
are showioJ up at many
specialty wine dinnen as
well as major West Coast
department stores.
For a chart on ti.ow to
select the riabt coffee, as
well as a list of restaurants
and inns that serve these
special brews, write to:
Gateway to Good C.OffeeJ
P:O:-Box-176'; rorf'Biiu,
CA 9S437.
Here's som.e
top bananas
These may .be new to
you.
BANANA PASTRIES
1 c•p all-p11rpo1e floar
•4 tea1pooa ult
I tablespoons batter
z~ tablespoons (aboat)
cold water
3 Jarce baaaaa1, peeled
ud cat lit bJf CrotlWIH
Melted b•tter
1 tablespoon Upt brown .. ,.,
Stir together the nour
and salt; cut in the 6
tablespoons butter until
particles are the size of
peas. Gradually stir in
wat~r. Roll out dough into
a 15-by I 0-inch rectangle;
cut into 5-inch squares.
Put a banana half
diagonally on each pastry
square; brush bananas with
melted butter and spnnkle
with the brown sugar. Lap
over ends of pastry toward
center to cover banana and
seal.
Bake on a cookie sheet m
a preheated 450-dqrec
oven until solden -12 to
IS minutes. Serve warm
with a lemon sauce. Makes
6 scrvinss.
Pasta ma de
w ith b r occoli
lt looks attractive and
wtcsaood. llllOCCOIJ P AITA ....
114 ...... (leHl'HI)
~~
l"9Cet*8tpa1Mttl .,_ e., .Un oU
~ elev• 1ar11e.
Grate• P armeu
cHeM Cut flowerets from brae~
coli stalks so t.tiey a.re in
sniall even lu: clusaers -
there ahould tie about
cups. Steam until tend •
dratn. (Ute 1talks for so~
other dish).
Cook jNt)ctti • ins to ~ du-ec110 •
drain. ffeat Oil and prtte:
tou with bfO«oli nower-
ets. .pqhem and \(. cup or
Parmetan. SCrve It Onct.
pnsina catra Parmetan .
Makes .. m&Jn-dish ~
\'lf\IS.
I
ROOALS
H..._ t'\unolhtd
~ Uafurnllhed
H,_ f'\'1ftillwd,.
Uni~
c ... """ Condo Uni T.,..,n...,._ lwn
T""'n""'-Unl °"""'"",...,,, Oupi..a ... Unf
ApwlnWnuf........n..I
Ae»nnwnu Uni
Apu """ or Uni "'-Room& 8mtd
H"wla MOlrla """"''H°"" Sum...,. ivn .. la
V ..-a11on R.-n .. i.
·~"'"' wSh&,.. • R.rnlAI. V.anlftl
Car~IO<~l
Of I K.,. RH!lala a...,_ fl<.nlal.o
Cumml 11.tnlAla Indus• lt#niall
S"'"'ll" Mo.. tt.-niab
Annuunc.~-..n\a
l.oal .. f'wnd
Pt-nunalo ........_. So<'vK'ft
s.-Nlolt .. ·~ Tr • .., ... 1
... _1 .. s.i. . ..__ °""'°"""' ... .__W_l4d
·1n-1 °"""'"'""' ... ln-1Wen...S
• Morwy "' LoM 'Morwy Wani.cl
M~TD•
tt.lpWen...S •Jot.w.-
BOATS
t"h.t•\f"f R.on1 ~raJ .........
~·· !-.,..-d Ski
Man"' Eqwp
Main1,.~
Shsa t. DorU s ......... Suppl-lnatNrtion
Sa111-rc1a
AUTOtl>TIV£
3002
3004
3012
3014 ,., ..
:Miii
.012 .014 ....
.011
4022
4024
.o2I
40:8
PE•llU Pl9T 8111 111
Steps to wedge, bay & beach! 'Ex-
ceptionally charming S BR. Large
lot, . terrific sunroom for d.i.ning,
spaaous brick patio, open beam ceil-
ings. country kitchen, etc, etc! New on the market -don't wait!!
IN N C W PORT C ENT[H
6449060
2 Homes/come< IOI S 19K Au1a 1-nc
Auo.o~-,._
Au,.. Wani.d ......U -__..., income $239K Nr bch &
Ocean & Jetty views, marine room. 4 Bi-. shpg 645-2256 SflOMI ""'°" """" • ....,_, °""" Tndo
Vane
Anl-~
3 Ba, 3700 sq. ft., car parking. $1,285,000. c .... •t11 -rm
1)WTSlll Auros ""°'TtD unill PUii umm ls~s: o:· 3 er 2ea
Alf•"'-tt«» Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up. 2~ir•-....
A...t1 1101 2 Br .• 2 Ba down. 2 boats~ $1,350.000. _.,_ AUldln ttOI ,.----lrg 2 1 '~ Ba CondO
BMW ti 12 $&5.000 Perteet' ~= :::~ U1•W11aL1• 1)1-~~ ::~~ Panoramic ocean & dty view, S Br 3 Ba, 1·, Ba $105.000. S15.000 ,.,., tin s--'ous en• ... -.. 1-1 ..... home. $1 100 000. dWn OWNER CARRY at Hon& tl2)l ,......, _. ._. .... '& ' ' 12' fOf 25 yrs
l.w•u em FOf more 1ntoeall Alla BI LL GRUNDY . REALTOR J..,..r tuv Wede,&31·1266 J.._.,, tl31 l.Ambtof•""'' 91"3 i...nn. •1~ ' l' " i' l J ~ ........ fi f"o, 'lt t I/"\ 1
1..<o1ua tlS7~!!!1111!••············~ Ma..i. 111ur
:: &.n, ::~ '::~~' S~ \lei}~ -& t.~S · :: ---,.-... --.,,...;..-11.;...--_;_
:c~uboahl :::; -~ a .o '" ~ -----
t ··~· • ...._ ....... of .... ......... ..),) ...... " ........ _. ... ~~ ··~ i..00 ............... _.. t'ftnrho •u~ "'twull fl~
9'.;llt 1'<·"'· .. ,, "'-.. ., ~ .... , "*-" tllT ... ,,,,
till ... ,,
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T H It I N G
I I I' I' I
EMA G O I ~' -£..I '_...I _..l..o...I ,
.,.._,..L_t_T PQ._U_..., ,~~ I I I' I _
I I ---
DI
642-5678_
IA' •a Lii llPLD waia t shoPS t>MCto Bal So Coast Plaza ar• 21>< A,.rblab Ua
P* ferryrrests 38r 2t>a incl den appts r>ocM too• --'
.. 218 Bal 91673-~43 ~~:6~~ telling S.-75 C..tral 1712
•.wit ... " l l M Bui ·-·ca. ..... Apts fOI! ,..,,, In mr • _. • _._. GrC>Ye 2 ..-. tr• rent
Beeut '*" 14•44 loeded S60() lbdrm 2ba c;;;J oi on the 2nd mo FOf any wlupgredes In adult I* CM u 7 900 28 Iba pet the day snooze u IOOM info. pteaae ca14 the,,,.,,.
OK S 17 900 ~ ke new 539 6190 Best Rlty I• eger ~132
121140, NB $22.900 OTHERS AVAIL WMa l.a.M 1111
Ward Mobtte Homes Why pey more fOf 2br? 991-4990 Ot 645-1806 This homey 111 at>OOe 28r 1ba s.ytront. yearty wtoar wetghs '" •I 1475 upper dplx Oule\.fpl
539·6190 9-t Alty ... VIEW! $950 67)~21
I . Utt 3 Bdrm. 2 ee. utM pd, y..,.. OOj Os REGARbiNd ~J.~st MdWh "-"Y.
IRVINE LEASES
at:rJ ~lsor ~
·Realty 1
786-1112 I Roomy delu•• 2 8r 2 Ba
w/Mstr IUlt pit\ 2 c:w
garage,~. lnct
v.8"*/dlrye#. $1000/IM
Aoent 144-1211
Cetta ...
' ' . 4
Orange Ooaat DAILY PILOT/Wedne.day, June ~o. 1984
Wltlnt/lmt4tU.1 IUl P17b1 Stmce C•U• Cart G1n1al•t H1d=H V1111 CltUlat Paiatla1 ---==-=-·1 ADDITION'S OESIQN Perion1ret11 Pa~ng S9tv. Lit>oe laland Fun Cat• Repalr1. rs:,~.~. Oryw111. uamy nouMCIHntng ITllY• llLLlll -,N·T-,E·x·T·. ""'20-v .. ---,.-~--H lllr a. Nl-tlll $2 17 d AND REMOD L Conl lxld~' anelys11 OC Ac11vi11 1eirnlng & TLC TREES e1c ftH .. t1m1111. ThorO\lgl'I. rqponalbfe A A 529 + , per ay l~ reu 831·23~ 4 )'B. It Inc. 553·9252 provided by Chrletlan Tnn..-/removed Clean· Gary MW277 PTL local ref1 Pal 497·3..25<4 lf•ll• ••• ... M:!C ~2 1 N P\11 .. lllm Tha • ALL _.,..,_. ~ --Ot~ Co Ot'ICllnll t • JOU pay fOf Cua'om "--'"n -2 StlV\J ... , Malit. ltrYlct ~om for girts 6 10yrJ up new lawns 75 t -3•H8 Qu111ty Heec.lg $30/wll. Student MOV9rt.Jneured •-Prt__._ •al•t 3 llnes. 30 d1ys --_,, 875-5n1 • B11Ha~ Haekpara Iv-In/out Lie. T12"'-"'""'. •..01.· ... ~1 llUPlll.I '•••IWW• r••7 ' •-,... add'a. kUc. batl'I ren'lod.i I I Cle.an UpseTr" Trimming " 57 ..... ...., '" ...... 1 ti• 1 f .. .,t L...,.., r.J I •--'en "' ,,. Ullll 1"111 o--np-J_O_B_S_ ,-Exp,rel,lns. ~41· 11 N W S n x . r . ..,.... •• n1•1 llctnHd 838~3190 Y DAY CARE In my l'lome Yard Malnl •Haullng ..., E WtrlhOOM tOf• 10 (7i<4)e38.e911 DAILY ---WecleanY<14Jrhull•ndr9-1•+106y11 Pl/full·llm• M1Kt650-3263 SMALLMOVINGJOBS Reliable, l'IOnett, rtaaon-vrae>ep. Gan rep11r1-carpttlng.
&irllatl CptaJacl e,odrlanyc:tl 8~~ Y0ou79r2 eHp. Lout ... CM 548·80tle Commerclal/Resldentlal MIKE 6<46--13~1 able tKP local couple ITllYlll mMm PAINTER NEEDS WORK! Ult·P•lntlnrclHnlng,
PILOT ~-c011.,,9 lludent w/lg truck Ample reft. 673-7227 llYlll ot•P&IY Int/Ext, celllng1, refln cab. landtctplng 83-7484
Airllne .chedufecf JOgtits to ... L ......... -( ---Coatracttrl Land1e1pe Maintenance -· Cellf rnle'a 0 .,.1 •I (28) vra 111p wot le guar C1talln1 from John aanf .A It l Ouallty Service, reea. lie, low rate. prompt Thank a.... ittl• 0 r •• n D•vl• Ptlntl~ te..-3837 .... ,. SERVICE -• vtltra b d·.. 20 I you Court 7159-1938 CdM Student Mover•. __ ... ___ & Wayne Alrporl. 4 flights PROF BKKP IAvCNTO on """· Yrl n area __ V I lie. CAL T138898 lntured QUALITY PAINTING. FAIR _.. , ••• ND£CTORY ea day It'• "°1 ex· Computer Mod,... Free IE,.lm-lllClCllST. McW-:!'~5~~dscape uHLTB We T•I<• Cat• Of Your ••<714)841·8101•• PRICES FREEESf. .....1,.11~1 .. 23 .. ! •a~•213 UR\ pensive! Only $30 " CounMI Meg 642-7041 RemodellAepalrs comml __ __ _ _ nan Pela, Planta. Pe.per, Mall M l , ~ Call John 831·2050 "' .. ~ "'• ...
way PP Group rates for C •• t M ..:--i -and relld Ltc·d. bOnded, Gardening Reaaon1bte & ·SAFE UVA SUNTAN· ate Howard S.8.~ 1e II C .... 1111 • Oualnv Aoot1ng· Sr citizen plut the IRVINE MIRROR less Charters to Ca., I tat la •I Ina For .st 552·9142 accommodallng 8 yrl FAST -NO 9UAN OA PEEL -Colleg9 prom comet RICHARD HUTCHISON dllC RefJ Lie. #3<4N77
and tM HUNTINGTON Me1uco & Nev 758-1020 * N;# cabinet• cabinet --Free est TIM 845-5133 ·EMC MUSCLE TONING· LH.ICI ia 1o your home Eva PAINTING, 25 y .. ra. K Funke tl<415-0li3 BEACHCOMBER every llQng, ba,_ & form1c1 CUSTOM REMODLING Lote lncl'l .... NO Sweat N 558·9282 419-2779 Cuttom Work. Wa Low --------,.....-~
Wednelday at A,,llHCt countettops 549-5147 We Cost Lus. And Do The LANDSCAPE & CLEAN· .Quick Weight Lou Also-Bonded 20 Yrs In .,.. ' Perlec11on. 9M-0911 REPAIR Speelallat-$200 &
no extra charge• I ltt1ir Best 1714) 241-1488 UP 5 Yrs exper free est Call 752-0224 for appt. T McWeeney 645-15124 Palatial '"' Fr" NI 30yra exp
CALL TOOAYll *KITCHEN CABINET CO Dave 760·9077 RICH RD SfNOR'S fa~ri•l 770-2725 anytime Walt
&SI FIR Liii lar•tr Area IJJlilHI * Free Eat • 1~ Fin * I Drgall LANDSCAPE SERVICE lt11t Cltali~ •1111~ Newport Cu11om Painting ffeXRtAINd INTERidAs
Your Dally P1101 Prompt. courteous set· THE BEST 634"3424 i15RYWALL TAPING. Tree lrlm Lawn Melnt etc, ROBIN'S ctEXNIRd Arb Bloat. Concrete. f6 yrs Of NPPY cuatomer1. HANGING/STRIPPING T1ttria1
Serv1ceDlrectory ~;:,n:.:;~0'J49~~~~r' Carr1t7 All Ta11tures & Aeou111e trH est Juan 548-9448 SERVICE a tl'IOfougl'lty Sturco Low cost, lie,••· Uc 29064• 875:.0383 VISA-MC 873·1512 t•u•t•O<•fng-...,.c"";J~1i"". ,..C""..,-n•ln-g
Representative Ex~ Cerpenlry Service FrM est f!.evln 673·1503 Shrubs Tree Trim Compl clean l'louee 540-0857 per\ work 831·1161 Bob ~INBOW PAINTING Expert Wellco~ng In· Handicap Reading,
142·•121 tit. IOI Arts l Cr1t.laic1 ~epair-Aemod·Addllions gardening compet111ve tiONEST Reheble )'ll<>man Custom BrlCk·Stone Quality Is our policy •tallatlon. Reas. Conti.Ill• Math. Leng M1·6H•
--------· ARTIST e o] Ill Custom Doors-etc 548-4980 EltetritaJ prices Chuck 642-2873 Wiii Clean your l'lome 81>Cil·Conerete-Stucco 650-6648 JEFF lie 8$88 ant Assignmt 581-8590
Ac1 .. tic1l wk.contemp 011 pa1ntngs. REMODEL Repair Res1d P&IUUSll EUOTlllC Refs 551-3225 Ref's Free esl 549•9492 CdM HouH Painter. Pia ..._ Tui•t ltmce ·
CtiliAJI nudes.por1111s 543-0350 Ct>mm all phases 18yrs Ouahtywork. lreeest H1Ddr•aa Uk• a CLEANER HOUSE? Me•ile-Bt•t Handymen Paint/fix. lt,rar, Tyl)lng/WOfd Proc;;;lng
EsaOisift Accousnc A11L1Jt ~a~~~b~·c~~~~~~~~;n5s6~ 4255 t3 968-7401 **•HOME' REPAIR E11pJ•rt1se111Sup5~~eo'l5Llc St,.ice ••;Ir _anytl'l1ng 840·8259 * Sllf ""1t'I * "so" bn" ... 1 ~0"1,:,."t•hoo8s'1'1pero ... 1·
C • Electnc11n S251hr bid or Elec-Plumb-Carpentry tCQue ne ~0• " 1 .,,...,._ .. i.•"'""-"""""""' EXTERIOR-TOP QUALITY By TA~-48-5192 ,.. -• " Resprayed or new all for 1 • .--.. -.. -----R 0 All R 6 6 Sunset Coast Cleanlng REPAIR·SERV· MODEL k I $ F special & free 9519 All 6 Parking Areas • Repairs epatr· oors· era11ons plans lor do 11 yourselter emodels Ke11h 4 -4672 _ !lobby-Mobile Specialist wor or your r" 111 A ROBIN TYPG SVC+
pm 847-7901 Resurtacing·Sealcoallng Remodel.Panel-Patios 446036 968·3189 E•perl Repairs 15yrsexp Lusbru1 cleanlng Apta. =305l70/rels 846·8002 Ref's Dale 846-5637 _ Pl1•~la1 WP' all Corresp, Pranl. &
S&s 63 4 99 Window-Fences-Cabinet ,. ---•------d "'t 6 ... 2 3351 Allll'f /I M J" Ind • 1• 1 35yrs ellp Jerry 546·4413 ELECTRICIAN Gen maml elec11cal , houses. oles Exp'd FrlHf • Hse Painting. Int tut Drains clear from S15 Siu ent pro,.. .. • 1 IO.. t• • llf lie 233108 Smallllge plumb Craig 536-4119 Hllmates 75 l -9038 1.M.0_9_1..,•1_______ OU'allty at lowest rates. Repair faucets. disp. etc
BulldlRemod Spec kit. Aato Det1i.lia1 Ceaent Concrete 101>s repairs 548·5203 AMERICAN HANDYMAN Prolesslonal Services ror *l· 1 IOYlll* Free eat Dave 642-4583 Anytime M&M 8<42·9033 Wiallew Cluai•1
bath olc. rm add. patio -A"'ut•d-0!!'1£!!1f!"!A,.IL"'""'A•t""'v~o•o~R• Driveways. Sidewalks. RfSIOtCOMM LllNO Carpentry windows, Proress1onal people Reis CLEAN& EXPERT Insurance Repair Special· E11pert Ser'llce & Repair WHITE WtZARD
CO'l/dcks, bey wndw lie HOME YOUR CAR LIKE Pauos. spa pads ' L1c d 26 yrs Do my own work Paint fences etc. Yes avail Anna, 759-1936 or l)ver 25 years e11perlence lzlng In Palnllng/Plaater· 31 yrs exp 16 yrs In area WINDOW WASHING
446485 Sta'le 547-8076 NEW 49"4·5854 Ron 558-0034 Lie 278041 Al 646-8126 Jesus is Lord 847-2367 Chris. 551-643" Lie T • 116,428 730· 1353 Ing Lie Chris 963· 1843 LtC :409035 964·8919 OUALITY" 631·2026
Ac",,,'.hl ......... UaJ. 274114 cA .... ,'.'·.·.·.t.•, Uaf.212~ ,.,.... ..... ~·t.27//J.9 Httell)lttell 2904 OfJEWPORVCeNTER ..... 'Foad3004J Relr WHIM 5100 •••• WHtt4 HM ltl1 Wu•• SI~ ltl1 Wu... .. .. " _______ .. _,_ .. ew_r_1_1_1_c_. __ • SUUH MOTEL Full Svc Execull\'e Suites FOUND ADS AooHlh P1r11tl1 Olttt au11n UIEI FU It.DI
206 44t .. St 2 bd ..i. Wkly rentals now avall $550...$775 6<40-5470 For a growing Orange Co for l'llgl'I Quality caM goodl Part tlm9 Mon-Frl 4 hrl .1111 I.I.A. TIUY
" reel, rm,~ S 119/wk & UP"Color TV ARE fR~E I t M 1 h ba, lrplc. encl gar. patio ohon-~ron . oc Airpert-area off '""8Ce. Food MFG. 1 VUT H -manu llC urer. UI ave p/day fteiclble, BOOKS Adult..Catrlet Taem E.am "':'.~~~=~~~ ~2 ~ ..r. " ::">-:-..... 1"91~,~-!>!ne~t .1 own tOOls. Exper only ON TAPE 7.._ ... t..t 'o,., -e. .CV':;~ , -~-...$. . . .., ·.~ ~ " . ·;,.··~ • -~~ ~r···· . u. -_Jr-·"'.:!""
646-74415 pr ng.1 I oraT& al ut111 x-: . ··~ -~ . . cO;Js:. ~e . --. ~LY5J".!o'A"."'Y~W~~~~,,,~,,
tncl From $ l per sq 11 cm: 11111. ASSIST /SEC'Y den. Santa Ana. (nr File cs.rtt pert-time •ft•·
S.••tr Mo-10-Mo. 557·7010 H2-Hll t pe1aon offioe O<glnlu· HatbOr Blvd.I noons 2-S Mon-Fri. Must 5S4-T3388am-5pm
leatals 2906 ICW VIEW 11on11. word pro· Caring older Individual ,0 have 1 '/Mf offlee exp --------• BALBOA ISLAND ~II& IUC Found Dog Blk ltm poo-cess1ng1typ1ng & Ill• care for my wefl·bel'leved 5•9-9e71 EOE M/F/H
2Br furn Sleeps 6 or more Uw I die. bllnd •ve. tumor on blcpg skllla nee. N-Smker. 1'"' yr old daughter MTW FLlllST .UY ....
Brand new 2 & 3 Bdrm Near beach. 2Br. 1'"' ba
condos. chok:e ol carpet Twnl'lse Blllns. frplc, encl
gar S925/up 6<42·9558 gar w/elec opnr Quiet
East9lde2a"r lBa no $695. Call 536-0921
pets/ 1 child 2563-F
Elden $545 831·3671
s3ooi wk 675•2910 1 lOOCSQ. 11. up11a1Ss 412 Jaw Call 0 C Animal Salary negotiable. Mall In my CdM l'lom•. Needed lmmed. part time Laguna 8Mdt
Suwl.D c. C __ N_ oast Hwy 1800 Shelter 548-.3087 resume:o C & S. Box 712, 675--5129 ...... P dol"" noraJ .,,,.,,__ ~II~ ~lcatlon1: ,.1s1de M studio, avail mo 642·3998 Lan na Be"' Calif 92652 ·-... -...-TR s fW•l"""R 6115 Nr beach & shops -Found While dog wltl'l I D -•u "· CASllll menta. Mutt hav. d,.....,. WAI " ''" MESA PINES 2650 Harla
BEAUTIFUL Bach $<475 YILLAIE Pvt yard prkg S700/mo Office & Reception avall Newpon Beacl'I Animal &lllllSTUTIYE Full lime, lncld• wttndt lie. & own vettlcl•. (fuHHOtS~es•xperses.) New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury .. 116iii............. incl uhls 642.2045 450 SQ 11 approx. Sheller 844 3656 876-8378 uk for Eliz ..
apls tn 14 plans 1 Bdrm. FURNISHED or S400tmo 1005 Bnoso. L-OST-~ male germen &SSISTUT Goad pay. Growtll lo· beth bt...,_ 4 • pm (lndullrlou•attractlve) 1 Bdrm $575
PRVT patio. pool spa
• TOP area. quiet. no pets
549-2447
2 Bdrm and TownhOm8$ Newport Beach deluxe. C M 65().-6533 to Director of Mrktg for cations Apply In peraon. ""' ·~ l FRY COOK UNFURNISHED laces beach. sips 8 Pvl snepar . blkllt brwn Red Investment Firm In N. B. Metro Car Waal'I, 2950 F•U/Tlll P•f (full time nlgl'lta) .. pools. tennis. water· Orange County Airport collar Right eye has a s 1 Harbor Blvd Cosla M... • Joi A <400
falls, ponds Gas paid. HEALTH gar. wt~31~:i~~wk PP areanewotticebldg.cor· cateract . REWARD ~~~~n°a'r.~;d · PllT/TlllWlll AG~~th 1~01~'Hwy .
From San Diego Frwy CLUBS. TENNIS ner Bristol & Redhill from 842·7259 responslbllltles. requires C&Sllllll Opportunltlaa available Lagune Beach
drive North on Beach to SWIMMJNG I OCEANFRONT A'lallable 400 sq ft to 3350 sq fl LOST Mon tl/18 E/Bluft slrongclerlcaland Over 21 yra, lull time wltl'I the LOS ANGELES ------------
UTHE VIEW
1 Br w/loft. enclsd garage.
• t>alcony, lndry. blllns. no
pets, S750 855-0665
SPMC
McFadden and West on ·Pu~ July 1 thru Sept. My S.99 NET. Wiii build to admin background_ Non Wiii train. 645-0Q32 TIMES Clrculatron Oa-KNfTIERS
McFadden to Seawind much more' Sorry. oceanlront hm 3BR 2ba. suit tenant. Bkr co-op shop cntr, ladle• Pedrt smoker pref. Call Shelby Child Cara In your l'lome partment In our door lo Wanted l'l1nd·knltter1. flt
VIiiage (7 14)893-5198 no pets Model) San Clemente's best, 11111 llYHt 711-1111 A~:~~0G:~~~i~~=~c~ Cl'leek. 553•0940 Famlly/l'lomay environ· door nawapaper sales or pit. Call 786-279<4
lm1t 2744 open daily 9 to 6 fully turn 498·5392 '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Appt Sellers 5-9S100/wt< ment. CMtNB 894·3854 program Guaranteed LANDSCAPE GARDENER POOL. pvl patio. lplc -
X·LG 18R $535 2BR S635
E side. no pets 557 ·2841
STUNNING Large 2 4 3Br
2Ba gerden apt pool $585
and S595 710 w 18th S1
WOODBRIOGE 2Br. 288. ~ d Summer Rentals 2 3311 L 0 S T . A o IC y s m G hourly wage plus com· Ellper Engllsl'I apeaklng
00 Bdrms $300 to s1000 PllESTllE OFC. SPACE F/brn/wl'llte Springer guat • comm. .ood Cooks. CHEERS. HB. mission Hours. 4PM to drive~• lie ambltloua' crpt $750 Avail 7115 wee .. 1., On • off the Spaniel. Npt Blvd/23rd pl'lona voice. Wiii train. lunch a bteakfut. Call 9PM. Training Is clean cut 845 4835 •
786.0869/646-1769 bea~h Prime :.eeks 81111 IEWPOIT CEITEll St REWARD 968·62 l5/ No selling Call anytime! 842-439" provided Potential to · • -
• I L 27//J.9 Ap~rtmenls I c I 542·3581 751·2382 urn S300 plus P9f wee!!. LEUL sr-n·--..,.,, tlC• • ava1 al loday tor best • Appro 540.,, 11 Cooks FIT or PIT F I tervlew II ... """ l li'Ri ba Deluxe amen Newport Buch So. se1ec11on 11 ..., Lost Set of keys on ARCH DRAFTS PERSON all shifts apply 1400 PCH or an n ·ca : neecMd for teml)O(ary full
Beaut rec rm avail for 1700 16th Street NB Realty 675-16412 * 21gepv1 otcsw1t11 orange cord on Balboa wtxlnl skills only for 6<42-8881 957·2381 el(t 1204 time work In Huntington VILLA MADERA QUlfJl tam
units 2Bd 2ba dish
cptldps. laundry tac encl
gar gaslwater pd Mo 10
----recept area & supply rm Peninsula 673-8586 space planning firm GENERAL OFFICE CLERK Beacl'l llw firm. Mutt bl pv1 parlies olympte Sile (al Do ... er) Vaca lion * ad1acent lo NB 261-6040 COOi Full-llme. M-F Answer experienced Call Cl'lrlat• ~~11 P;~g&g:,or~:11~"'g 642-Slll leatala 2907 ~t~~~~~u:ermonth Ptnoaab ASSEllLHS Torunk1tchenolnewapa· phones. run 10·key by at 847""6041
• mo no pets $575/mo • s
dep 23241 Eldon
vu ol Hbr Call now. avail Newport Buch No. COM 'Br 2 be fully turn Apply 7 AM MacGregor gBelll house In Hunllng1on ~~ •• ::1-7291 Ask torL _ __,,E,.--.,,.G--A.,---L __ _
June 15 2131276.0211 880 Irvine Avenut> nme TV phone pauo 2 840-1110 vacl'lts ,631 Placentia. each Mull be ••· -SECTY/RECEPTIONIST ask for Valerie (al 16th} blks 10 beach Avail June-c M , perienced 675·3158 GENERAL OFFICE op r• 1 Year• axper Good apell·
WE OFFER A CHOICE Oct $800 weekly • dep ES-COllTS/IOIELS -COUNTER HELP wanted. cept fOf small engr olc In •no ability. Type 70 WPM
1 6412-5155
Want a se1ec11on of great 1BR Unturn Apt 2 blocks 645·1104 Reservations req d SAVE '"' Babys111er needed for 2 Costa Mesa area. Npt Typing, flllng ant W0td processing helpful
llvtng? We can offer any-from t>eacn in Newport 673-8349 New OWf'lec no 1st or last Outcall ONLY 835-9199 mornstwk btJ9 Augusl 549.8793 or 581•292,. pl'lone Ulery t rn9dlcal Salary commeneurata
S650 mo 675-6522 montns rent. no secunly Call KriSly at 650-3027 vactillon Ind profit sl'lar· w/exper Non-1motcar
tning from 8 sml apt 10 1 BIG CANYONtWnhse~ull loo•• 2900 Reat11a to depos11 500-2500 sit. TOPS$$ -----DELI perton wanted lor ing plan , girt otc 953-2011 ~~ ~::h:~~ogr~~~.~8~ gall course vu. immacu. f emale non-smkr house Sla1rt 2901 zoned medical. denial, Females pref Models and ltallfJ CM s flne.t haalll'I food 975-0040. ---------
1ha1 choice ol ideal hvlng 2Br 2Ba, sndck, wet bar. '"Corona def Mar $425 '!'2B•r-ap-,-,·o-sh-a-re_w_/m-al-e law Vasi parking Free Escorts (213) 868-1984 • IH' IHtrll store Help0tjentad&de---------IWL IHSI 111111
TSL MGMT 642· 1603 lplc. 2 car gar No pets mo 760-1348 Ive m59 $300 . • u111s OP Nice unlld use ol xerox 1301 TOP SSS 111i1tuts, 111' pendable. PIHM apply IEIEUL OFFICE CUSTOMER SVS REP
N B REALTY 675•1642 S 12001mo 644-2416 area 240.3157 all 5 M-F E Lincoln. Orange June-emales prel Models and t I I at 225 E 17th St, CM Typing, order entry, goad / ood '-•tlon ---Large room private enlr t1on 91 & 55 lwys 71• Eacorls (213)886-198• ra I 11,rtlrl• with flg1:1re1 for local w g commun ....
Hait. lt1d1 2740 Chflhaven 2Br Iba. gar. COM nice nouse. phone 2 rmmts MtF resp creative 998-7120 • lul01tri1h, IELIUllY /P ITI•• . acreen printing company. sklllt fOf advertltlng
2 Bd~ rm ·Duplex. encl ~r & pa110 etc Ideal tor re· 675·34561380-0777 straight. non smkr shr lrg * EXECUTl"E SUITES-Baliatll Orp. 4014 II t II t Deh'ler typewrltera to butJ· Call Bettye, 540-.2650 accnt. s525 - -4bd h L B 11 Y ~--0 II t t It nesses In Org. Co. Sta· __ ....,...., ____ .....,.. SECRETARY:Typlng.llte
yrd K1d/Pe11 ok S4 • llreds. ,No pets yrly Lg bdrm prvt ba, snare I se dag c So3c5e0a&n 1 MO FREE RENT Newpor1 Developer needs HHll8FJ ftr ltHJ lion wagon provided GIRL FRIDAY gen ofo b<>okkeeplng.
$<400 sec 963·8286 btwn 650·48 3 l<ltctlS. walk to bell. 2 car S~O;ii;:, ~~~P W/shorl term lease. lull pertner with S"00.000 taltl excel. driving red .. wili $5.00/l'lr. Cheer'• HB r.... MACHINE OPER.. FOider,
6·9 PM YEllSAILUS gar 3501mo 645-8442 • _ __ serv suites 881 Dover Or casl'I or credit line . train Apprx. 3 hrl day M-laurant. Muat hav. car burater. lnaerter, l&belar
2 BR ~a Condo. 2 Bdr condo former mdl. Room avall. Mesa Verde Are you over 40 looking tor Suite 14 N B 631·3651 to develop local pro1ect Rlol11r• l1tllt"• F $4 501'1r 955-3633 Call !42-439<4. Contact: Paciflc Ad Mall,
p 1 1 a gorgeous plush place to . ---645·6646 200 lew,.rt C11ttr Ir, --------18582 Bu~e lane. 1actpoo1. clubnouse. 1av11hly decorated home ro ess on al ltve? s350 • .., utlls CAT Wont last. Dfaatlcally re-w 1 1 -b-1 HIT&L IYllElllT Huntlnnton8ch. carport $595 • dep S995 631-4960 clean male S300/mo • · duced s 60/11 Bal Island omen a un que us ness Beauty •• 111-••tll I · .. (213)596·1498 ullls 662-3256 0 K 6<45-7480 752·2841 or.673·537" you will en1oy Window HAIRSTYLIST lnletealed In team orlan-.. .,_ 8•2-4993
YOU DESERVE IT Christian lem wanted • Security Prod's 979-462" & MANICURIST led '*'°" 3 daya fo mlllTI MANAGER FOR YACHT QUIET 2 BEDROOM Gat .... village. pure IUXU"' Room. shr bath, woman 30 I ltar1 will lead to 4 d•-WI mu 1110 •• "" ., Proftn·skrtoshareaptnr a11ae11 MOl!JllL·taa 4024 Bal .. -·Penn 675·1 ... 57 ' r-· .. CLUB. Oana Point Loe. I ...... alh S625t-o Walk 10 2 Br 2' t Ba "'-ant ll'ling & up Newport Beach ..,_,. ~ Quall'Y _...__, ... ,_ ....... of ,..., "' ....,. Vic Bch 1n Lag S3251mo lt1tal1 2916 ·----------.,,..,,""' ........ · Fait nrowlng (Hou••· Previous management beach 960-8656 B" appl only 631-5439 $205. 6<45·2590 ·-""'· ., .... ••73 an"'lma • ' incl u111s 494·3281 NEWPORT PIER area LtHl lHYI SI00.000 '""" .............. r· cieannlng S«vlce) loot<· experience preferred.
M/F 3Br 10 shere 2Br to store or office lmmecf Prime Ananclal Services Beauty DENTAL HYGIENIST for Ing for people w/cara. We Weetcend dutlea. S 1200
Tbanday, JUDe Z1
SYDNEY
01111
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): What had been monbund comes to
life. alive and kicking. Focus on action, change, vanety. unique
invitation which could include travel and romance. You'll be at nght
place at special moment. Gato indicated through crcauve endeavors,
especially wnlmg.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): You'll meet intriguing people. you'll
receive 1nformat1on which aids 1n beautifying surroundings. Tempor·
ary chanee of residence could mean vacation travel. Family
relauonsh1ps improve. financial picture 1s brighter than ongmall)
ant1c1pated.
GEMINI (Ma) 21-June 20): Define terms. realize you have fnends
1n "high places.·· Focus on r omance. desires. emollonal fulfillment
Recent business or career maneuver will now pay d1v1dends. You'll
have access 10 "c'<tra 1nfonnation." Pisces. Virgo persons figure
prominent I)
CANCER (June 21-Jul) 22): You'll be playing "hardball." Means
kind elovcs are removed . differences are SC'llk and you'll emerge
v1ctonous 1n arenas of finance and love. Supenor gives credit long
overdue. ( apncorn and another Cancer pla) prominent roles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Tra\el strongly md1ca1ed -)ou'll "1c~
picture rn 11s entirety. What had been a dream becomes a rcalil} Focus
on education. sp1ntual values. special communications and romance
Burden 1s removed. you'll have greater freedom of choice. thought.
action.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 2h New stan indicated: fresh source of
rncome 1s made possible through contact with one engaged in ueau"c
enterpnsc Focus also on resources. investments. news of "surprise
surplus." Leo. Aquarius natives figure prominently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Follow through on first 1mpress1ons -
don't co-sign, keep clear of legal entanglements. Accent on
pannershrps, contractual obligations. public relations and marriage
·You'll be pulled 1n two d1rect1ons -choose happiness. not "nervous
mtngue:·
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ). 01 versify. make numerous contacts,
eitpcnment, enJOY hohday or vacation spirit. Empha 1s also on ba 1c
wks, security, employment. special services. lnd1v1dual you aided 1n
past is ready 10 respond 1n pos1t1vc manner. Gem1n1 figurtS
prominently SAOmAJUUS (N ov 22-Dec. 21 ); Focus on romance. spccu·
latton. wilhn&ne s to revise. review and cons1deratton of "'different"
• format Youna persons arc involved and so 1s change. travel and ! intcnsafcd rel1tionship. Taurus. Scorp10 persons play outc;tandina
role CAPRICORN (Ott. 22-Jan. 19)· Dig deep for infonnat1on. reJect
supcrlkial rephet. d1~m mottves and protect self m emotional
drnc:hes. Defend teni1ori1l n&hts, reallze value of your contnbutton •
RefuJC to Jive up tometh1na for nothms. Virgo playi key role. AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Feb. 18)' Family member suaie ts .. holiday
JIUnt ... lk rcceptavc, revive spirit ofadvcnture. You'll make ch1ngc
you'll ~eve 1mport1n1 communication from 1nd1v1du1I ·on the
road." Purch andiated which involves an obJCCt or huul')' item.
Pl (Feb 19-March 20~ Count r,our change• Someone m1)'
anl )Ou to be ta t of .. una operation • Protect asset • f'C4lli~c 1h11
rour po tr ion arc worth more th.an ongmat appraisal 1od1c.tcJ.
Check soutf • loo IX'h1nd \ttnn. rcali1c t\crv1h1na m1gh1 not be
above-board .
/
rent NB Duplex vu, deci!.. posseSSlon 673•6640 557-3512 llAlllSnLIST Laguna Beach ~ prac wlll train! RELIABLE mo. Ratumet to Mike ~~~~o. ::~ s~oadCX:~,! Ct••trcill -Mtrtfl'-11' llllClllllT .~;~~~;;::;~IT PEOP;~~2~1y*applyl ~~~.;..~2~dgewor11'1.
of humor Av a II ltatlll ztll T.D. I 40ZI ASSISTAIT R 0 A preltrred AM'a Hoateues CHEERS HB Mll&lll
now 642•4420 16040 HarbOr f v WANTED People needing • I only 7 30 to noon Grand Opening 8/27, full Resident In 12 untt apt
Fem non-smkr So Coast 1240 SQ 11 PY1 TO SSS Sl0.000 up II ''llflSS YI CM/NB area Cell or part-time. atudantt complex rent dlacounted
Plaza area $342/mo • Agent 541-5032 No credit "'• no penalty. ltW,lrf ltaoh 759-0882 11k ror Lori OK Call 842.,.394 + Ulary, no up nee·
dep 786·55071786-5520 CANNERY VILLAGE Deni~ Auoc 973.731 t S1l11. Pahl DOCK MASTER and prop. Hotel ceuary. ie0-Stl5tl.
Malure/F non smkr-shf 1140 SQ fl . $800/mo. lse Htlf WaatH SI 0 erty malntelnance man MW llllE
beaut furn duple11 on Bal Ava11 July 1 Ask tor Pele * llOlllEPEll * YIOlfillo lt4ioal needed for mafor New-IMllUT UIAIEI
Penn $350 673-0430 548-66416 or 642·52~ •REAL ESTATE * llS, IYlll, por1 Harbor marina Refa Engllsl'l/Spanlatt speaking. THE DAIL y PILOT II now
M/College students "8eds •CdMdlxsu11es AC. ampl f or real es1a1e de-C fi i req Call 642•1626 Coordln111 and follow accepting applloatlon1
apt & rmle urgently prkg. from $225 2855 E 11etoper/home builder. to II 11111 llllYlll through essential. SURF for District Managera to
Resp meat n-smkr. Gary. Coast Hwy 675-6900 handle payablea and re· tdUOlfiOll Cross country, Calif. lie & SANO HOTEL, LAguna supervlH newapaper
collect (619) 368·3239 a t -300-2 ce1.,.eables. prepare bank I f req. Clau 1 • not nece.a· Beach. Mt McCullough, carrlefa. Mu11 have van.
NPT BCH lg rmlb-a -v-nDDOIDCtaH I rec·s Must l'lave working •rtlflM, tlS ary Apply M1cQragor <497_...77 EOE wegon or pick-up. Good 1en/spa/gym1poo1ie1~· SPIRITUAL READINGS l<nowledge of general werk fill ti••· Yachts. 1631 Plac.nUa, Hotel talary, mll .. gt ~'!W·
Nice• s375,mo quiet Advice In All Mauers & ledger. good typing and 842-8l84 Costa Meae lWllUITlmll :,:'·~~;u~it1~~
nontskr 631_0377 Counseling 18 15 So El 10-key skllls. plus be well Earn up S 1000/mo. Sell ...._1 A"""' In ,,_.ton at Dal Camino Real. San Clem organized Real estate llRll9S ""'7 ,.,,. ..
Pref female to rent room lied 492-7296 axper & non-smkr req'd BOOKKEEPER F/C Nwpt natlonally known prod· Full & P..-t llrne. 6ervlce Pilot Cll'culahon Office
w1priva1e bath S300tmo New offices 1n great lo-Bcl'I Bldr seeks person w/ ucts lor appt call and fvll bar po1tlon1. 330 w .. t Bey, Costa
551 .3225 •Spiritual Psychic. Ad· cation Send resume 10 cons I related uper. 848·454? SURF & SAND HOTEL, M .... Monday thru Fri·
visor & Card Reader * THE 0 HILL COMPANY Some gen ofc. t""'lnn ELECTRONIC TECH Laguna Beach. Marla, day. No phone Cilia. Professional male to share Past present & luture '" ... ..09 .. 9..oeo EOE E OE ATTN EO BRIGGS plus pl'lone1 Salary SEllll 112/"• " ,.. '" .. lovely 2 story northwds 675-2495 or 631·8964 0 p 111 Irv pool hme $400 incl ne Upper Newport 1811 open Send resume lo Know analog digital TTl.I ... IRPll
uflls Share ba 667. 7252 Lost ' r.... 3004 Nwpt Beacl'I. CA 92660 Jim p 0 Bo• 2990. New· tape & disk drive troub .. Big Canyon home, N.B. * 1111111 *
Rmmt wanted 10 shr 2br F 0 u ND Ad ora b I e *SALES l&UIERS* port Beacl'I Ca 92660 sl'loot to loweat compo.. Refa req. 30 ttr week, $8 No ex~. XlntNlary
2ba duple-• tn CdM $400 C111nua11ua mix brown Olympic cl'lallenge 84 BOOKKEEPER Newport nent level Send reaumar hr. LW.-OUt 840-5119 5<48-5431
mo Tim 675·4l299 Iv msg rem Vic CdM aree Book publtshed 1n assoc Beacl'I Real Estatatn..,..1· OMEGA. P 0 Box 4a5, -H------1 --·----.. -----1.-.. -1-1-497-71 24 w 'US Olymptc commit· men1companyse.ek1lull· Sunset Beacl'I CA907421 ouae1teeper 1 ve·ln, -•n ...,
l I W .... 2909 ·--..iiiiiiiiii, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil mature lam. In OOo<I •-.... •-tat a I II ton 1eeo Stave Crockett cl'larga bookkeeper/jr ,,..,,h, eble to drlv., _, ... ,
Eng•neer twriter 41 look· Keir WaatH 5100 554-78811541 -5453 accountant Exp d Secretary ref requktd 495-6Hi. to VP of !Nlot brok1tl09
ing lor quiet one bdrm w/computedz.eclaceount· EIEO SECIETUY firm Broker1g1 Hp
C C 1ng systems prelerred • HouMl<eep«. Liv. In. Eno· pref'd. but not req'd
apar1menl with garage IR LE I MARIUS Send resume to PO llel'I epkg M11ur1, gd Good ore ekllls, typing.
yearly on Balboa Penn BOX 8708· 125, New38°'1 Headquartttf't olflceol TM lllary 673-8325 H,. 7 30.4 00 Call Cheryl Can James 673-3348 ... h C 92658 1 .. 8 Jolly Roger R•steurant 957-e500
..... ac a • ' chain l'las an opening !Of• l&llTH IHHl1 Older employed woman
despe1a1e1y needs 1 Bd
unfurnished apl $500
renge 640-9109
Office ltat1l1 2914
t617 Westcllff Dr N 8
S130sqtt
Agent 541-5032
S300tup crpls drapes ale
17301 Beach Huntington
Beach 842 2834
Appro• 900 sq fl
lcurn1shed with desk 4
chalfs nr t 7tl'I & Newpon
S800 Call Belly 644-2270
DESI< SPACE attr airport
area 1nvsim1 onentad RE
office Paul Frankltn bkr
7S6.0414
URIE UEC.111ns
llWPOIT ILYI AT l&Y
New Bldg can l'landi. 2·3
people per Off1c• SS75·
S&75 Sec Mrv 1va11
Open 9·5 M·F 842·3998
llWNllT IUCI
1640 sq ft ~fOUr\d llOOt
unit tn 111rtct1ve wall
m11nt11ned modern
bldg 1n quiet 4r11 near
HOOQ Hoep1ta1 AlllQ~
p1r1ung AIC gartgea
ava1r Vic~) r..s 4800 04 64~ UJ dv11
NOW
HIRING
CASHIERS
l1t1nten•MHll
114.1 nlra.,
J• 20121
1·11 Al at
517 w. Wison
Cost1 MN, Ca
(714) 631-9'09
101
lllllEEPll en E11ecu11ve Secretary to Cotta Mesa Area. 8AM to lllELS 111111
tl'I• Prealdent Poalllon 12 Noon, (213) 331-3727 &e2-0875 PIT. 18·25 hrl per wtt.
Newpon Beach law firm.
Mull ha'le law office
axp« Ael1 raq'd. Call
requlrea outatandlng -========~=======~ el'lortl'land and typing ,.
714-476-1978
IH11111UUI
SALARY Plus: Outgoing
& antl'lullutlc It.lea P9f·
1on111or• modtl wlttt
futtlOn flair neaoeo 10f
our t•Clutl'/9 women'•
dealgner boutique.
F /time Mull be retpon•
atbla/rellebl• Plaa ..
appty In !*'ton ALEXIA, 2eo '°'.., Av. Lag Ben
E
1klll1 Protectancy on
work procuaor a oatlnha
plu1 Lovely oftlee with
congenial atmoaphert
ptu1 ncielltnt b•n•lll
package Including mtdl·
cal ano d9ntal lnturance
and profit tttartng Apply
In perton from 9M1 10
4pmat
JOLLY ROGER INC.
17042 Gll .. t .. A"9
Ir-Me
(714)2$0-0331
DEPT.
Daily Pilat
U YIUT ARTIST
Southern Callf ornla ditty news-
paper needs expertenold delk
pereon with good llYOUt and
headline wrttlng 1knt1. Some
feature writing alto reqUINd.
=.srJ~~~ ;;:,, ~o OR4. CE COAST DAILY PIWT
Orange coUt batty Piiot, P.O. P.O . .,_ l&eo
Box 1580, Costa Mesa. CA Co.ta Maa, CA 92628
92826. At\.rntion~ U.. SmJth ~-i·--~~--~--l~~~~-----J-!:::::::=:=:::=::==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=1!:========================:::!...
.,
,.
.Motor Routt" Available
~t'wport Beach area. three
hour& pt-r day: Earn approx.
600 per month. Call 11 :00
lo 4:00 P\1. Ask for Bruce
Em<;jle>.
CIRCULATION DEPT.
642-432 1 EOE
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
110 W 8AY SI •COSTA ME.SA CA 9:>6:>6
't I " oflti f i W ~Jf t t .,I ~ f W .........
Daily Pilat · · · · · · · · .•
RETAIL SALES
COORDINATOR
AGES 11-14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK .
Wt llO• ha wt l ~ optnl'1$ IOf YOlllll tJCtl
buvtfs to secure rucltrs fot Tiie Ora,.e Coast
Dally Piiot Our crews slaft al 3 30 P m Incl
wotk until a 30 p m wencbys On Saturday. wt won a It• rno1e tlollrs You "'" urn many trips
and puns _,nc with WIMllC rour own lllOnt1
ltlfrt 15 no dtbvennc or colleCIJOll 111volwcl
" you "' 1nltmlfd pltm can Mt h rl
MD cooc (714) 548-7058
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 51 Grattly
1 Gnnding 52 Gormandizes
6 Young animal 54 Fig -
iO Ne1tt to Ma1 58 Singer Jenny
14 Wtth speed 59 Cruc1trx
15 Steel beam 61 Scrape away
16 I cannot 62 Adolescent
tell --problem
17 Asian garb 63 Pack animal
18 Half pref 64 Light source
19 Baseball st 65 Excel
20 Gradations 66 Boil slowly
22 Ot war 67 Narrow pref.
maneuvers DOWN
24 Journey t Magnitude
26 -Waltz 2 Bnght ftsh
27 In - -3 Zhivago girl
regardless 4 Harsh trial
J 1 Under-5 Aloofness
garment
32 Lasso end
33 Instrument
35 Jr Leaguer
38 Dessert item
39 Work hard .so Market
4 t That woman
~2 Ultimate
43 Drench
44 Wander
45 Culd mon1h
47 In add1110n
• •
6 Box cover
7 Sanction
8 -boy
9 Unfa vorable
remark
10 Per -
I 1 Blue shade
12 Hairy
13 Narrates
2 1 Bishop s seat
23 Lolly lake
25 Nol secret
27 Insects
PREVIOUS
PUZZl.E SOLVED
28 Mr Webster
29 Time past
30 Ttre part
34 Storms
35 Smear
36 In add1uon
37 Sudsy drink
39 Weapons
40 Sor1 of
42 Lose force
43 Abhors
44 T-bar. e g
46 Preserve
47 S American
weapons
48 Throw out
49 Med1cmal
legume
50 Strong brew
53 Foot part
55 Recording
medium
56 Dryer
57 Peter -
60 Morning
moisture
DIMES
A
LINE
WANT ADS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
s.11 your ltema for $50 or ~ In
our famou$ DIMES-A-LINES pub-
ff-'*1 each Saturday In the Delly
Piiot.
DIM ES-A-LINE ads must be
~,,.Jd to mall or bring them Into
,,,. Delly Piiot omc.. S. au,. to
lndt.lt» your phon. number or ad·
drea In your ad. MW a price on
.-ch Item & no abt>rwi•tioN.
Sorry, no comt'IWCllll ad$. QM""1e ,.,.._ fXOduce. plants or ~
ere aoc.pte~.
DEADLINE:
s p.m. :T1MarldeJ
Coeta ..... Olllw ..... .., .......
CoeteM11 .. c.. ...
I d
COMMELL
C HEVROLET
'~ 1, • ,., '
"'. ' \'.
~4 b-11 00
LARGE SELECTION Of
NEW & USED BMW SI
LMlllMI ..
VOLUMI! SALES
SERVICE & LEAS!Ml
3670N °*'YA'4
lONOBf!AtH
(NO a.rye t~l
'11')111-1'111
'frade-INW
OPEN SEVEN OAVS
..
Bill YA TE S
VW.PO RSC HE
aJ1 .av·~•c;_ ~)·
,
1111 NII• Tiii& 7~ u~-:' g :-'12 ~
Sltvef With blat* interior. 536-3181 Of 53&-8421
L'*'9d · Best in Orange ----------County al 128,750 ·a1 8'ARR1T2. •• ,,....
(704ZP0) 29.600 ,,,. s 15,500 Call •wm •At MIU 831-4259
714~
'83 928S pfatin "'9lalllc
w/btlf IMU. Int 171t ml
Astdng 136K llhowroom
eond (805)322-7506
'83 944 . 5 spd ,
White/Moch•. alloys,
alarm dlgltal am/fm
eaas pin strlpetl,
IMMAC $19.499 PIP, Dy
NABERS
CADl.LAC
LARGEST SELECTION of late model, k>w mtfeaga
C8dlllaes In Sou1Nm
Callforni8l See u. todey!
&C0-1110
558-39«, eve 497-3726 2600Harbor&MS
'I l Pltlde l!I COSTA MESA
5 O titer fully optlonal ~It U
equlp 'd 35 K m1, ·63 CORVAIR WWW.
(8.4 1075) A Buuty at in tamlty 11nce '63
$32,900 $950 543-2335
...... , C0TD l-,85--N....,0,....V_A_or_lg_ .. pain--,-. Jt-ln-t
1 i~ c:ond seoo. &42--5504
73 Mallbu NM good, ong owner SSOO. 8.40-4802
H t .,._ In th Id to ,.,.,...,. •• ~ uuae e 0 WD .~,\~s.-., t •If ·.,.vi: ''..JI <~~"'-~ ;~.t' ;+11wi~Zi'..z..-/ ,~ ~· ~ ....-~.~ v~·-,l.._.u 1"1iat~ · coiiund<e ~th ptape the·
prlortothe9tartofaceremonyonthe8oath Wuhin,u>n area, and all othen a t the
Lawn of the White BOUM Tueeday honor-ceremony removed their coata alter Re-m, 1984 Preetdendal Scholara. lllCb heat acan did.
Police probe Berg slaying
DENVER (AP) -A woman who dated Alan BcrJ,
the sharp-tonaued radio personality gunned down outside
his home, said she and Bera found a note rcadina "I was
here" on the door of bis condominium the night before he
was slain. Meanwhile, investigaton were reviewing hate mail
and on-the-air threats against Berg. and two broadcas1
stations in Denver posted rewards totaling $20,000 for
information leading to the capture of the kifler.
Linda McVay, who had dated Berg. told the Rocky
Mountain News that the couple arrived at bis home
Sunday ~t and saw "something hanging on his
doorlc.nob,' which turned out to be a brown paper bag.
Stuck between the door and its frame was a note in bloclc
crayon le1tering sayi ng "I was here," McVay said.
"Alan was very evasive about things that would
bother him. He usually lcept me out of that." s~e said. "But
I had a feeling -and I have no facts to back It up -that
be bad been getting these threats very recently."
Berg. SO. wbo reported several death ~ts during
bis decade-Jon$ tenure on Denver talk radio, was shot
several times with a .45-caliber weapon~ he stepped from
his car about 10 p.m. Monday, police wd.
Gun control was to have been the theme of his KOA
radio show Tuesdar,. The program instead was dedicated
to Berg's memory.' Life goes on," said Ken Hamblin, who
was the show's host, as callers reminisced about Berg.
Denver police on Tuesday formed a special crime
unit to track down Berg's killer, Dcleetive Ken Harris said.
and a major focus of their work was tapes of threats made
on the air ap.inst Berg.
Dctect1ve Division Chief Don Mulnix said Denver's
entire 60-penon major case squad is assigned to the
investigation, 48 of them full time. "We have a man who
generated a Jot of controversy," be said, adding that Bcra's L..:..::......:..... ____ ___.. ... ~::~:......~..:.. ... -••• notoriety meant there were .. many (more) people we want
to contact" than in most other murder cases.
Police listened to tapes of Sera's broadcasts for the
past three months, and went throuah hate letten be bad
received recently, said Detective Jim Rock.
He said that Judain& from the number ofsbots fired at
Bera, "somebody ll very aJW'Y."
Talk •how boet Alan Bera ., .........
bis dog clutched 1n bis nght hand, police said. He
apparently had just arrived at the condominium where he
had lived for the past four years.
DEA 1 H NOTICES PUBLIC NOTICE Plate NOTICE
..... ---------flCTITIOUI IUltNIH P1CTITIOUI llUltNlll WARD NAMI ITATIMINT NAMll 8TAnMINT
DOUCLAS R WA.RD, 77 t>u~~~g i>ertona a<t dOinO ~":~ot~:wtno ~ I• dOlnQ
)'ffrt old, born ln Indian Dl!NTAL. 'LOSS TIPtm, 11111 E T A y L 0 " l A 8 •
Terruory of Oklahoma JWl~ McOurmott Or . ln1>ne, Ct 92'714 SOCIATl!l/A,.CHITECTI, 2111 l~. 1906, WU mamed tt> 125~:-::::.:r'~:::._~r~ ~:~Way, ~ Beacl\, Calif.
Ethel Brown November 24, a..c:11. Ca 92MO L.lllOa 1.ou1at Tl)'tor. 140f Vfvten un1 ln Oklahoma City. Thi• bUll'*I I• conducted by a L9ne. Ntwpofl 8Mch. Celll 82880
Oklahoma They moved tt> corporation Th•• bu.in4Jn 1• conducted by: an ltanoenon Proouctl Corp lndMdual Costa Meaa, Caltforn1a Ptul SanderlOfl Pre1. Linda l..oYIM faylot
Au1u11 1928 and have t'f'· Thi• 1tatemen1 wH flied with the Thi• ttttement wu filed with tne
1lded there a.Ince. He passed Col.inty Ct.,~ of Orange County on County Ci.rte of Orange County on
away June 2. 1984 at Hoag May 22· 198 ,24N07 M•y 23. 1094 ,......
Hospital. leavini wife Ethel Publl~ Or1ngt CoHI Dally ltubll.n.d Orang• Coaat Dall)'
Ward; two IOIµ. Roy and Piiot May 27, June 3, 10, 17, 18M Piiot June 8, 13. 20, 27, 1tM
Don Watd, both of Newport W·'4 W·7
Beach; six rrandchlldren, PUBl.IC NOTICE
Cathy Van Vechtan of
Carllbad. Califomla, Corrie flCTITIOUI IUllNI .. MLIC NOTICE
Ml.JC flJTJC(
~Tlnout IUIMll NAiii ITA,.._NT
fne roltowlnO penone n dolno
butlneel ll: 2ND llAION CHILOA!H'I ....
SAL! SH~. 270 I 17th lltett.
Coeta MeN.. Ctllf, t2t2'7 .Nita I Murray, 1418 VII Mattn&.
Newport hedl. c.111 HMO
Devld D. Mwrey, 2411 Via
Mttlna, Ntwpor1 Beaeh, Calif.
92MO Tlllt blltl,,... It conducted by. I general partnl'stllp
David D. Murray
Thia tlatttnenl WU tllad with ~
C011nty Clerk or Orange COl.lnty on
Mey 11, 198• ,....1
Pubflahad Orange Cout Ody
PllOI June 8, 13, 20", 27, 1114
W·1
NAMl ITATIMINT
Viera of Costa Mesa, Dee Tht ronowtng per1on 11 dolno "CTITIOUI IUllNlll P1CTIT10UI I UllNIN
Ward of Co.ta Mesa, Mollie, bu1lneu u . NAMI ITATIMaNT HAM1 ITATUllMT
Nil.IC NOTICE
Merne and Cil~rl Ward of MASSTEC OFFICE AUTO· Tiie lollOWlng perton I• doing Tiie followlng l*90nt .,. doing
C d MATION, 6200 Edinger Ave., Sulte butlMtt H tiullneea u : osta Mesa, two great gran 326 Hunt1ng1on BNC/I, CA 82847 SUNSET COAST CLEANING, 114 LAREDO IAA·l·O, 3901 !.
dauahters . Erin Van Mohamad E Alrtslabl. 11200 Ed· E 20th Coatt Hwy, C«ona del Mat, callf,
Vechun of Carlsbad, C.ali-inQtf •3211 Huntington a.en, CA 11, Cotti M ... Calif 112427 82e215
forn1a and Jacquelme Viera 82647 Jacquetlnt FranM, 114 E. 20th Phlllp G. cit c.tlon, 1~ L9
o( Costa Mesa. He was l'\ll•l Th11bu11nen111 conducted by tn 1 t Cotta Me•• c am 92827 Loma AY9., Santa Ana, Callf. 12701
,.--1nd1v1d\.tal Thi• bl.ltine1111 conducted by an Dtvld 1. ..... ,.. 3231 W. Ironwood
president and a member of Monamao E Alraslabl 1ndlv1C1u11 Or Phoenix, AJ. l5021
Cos ta Mesa New port Thrs atatemant w11 fltad wltll tile JacqueUne FranM JatMt c Walk«, 6817 1. Moun-
Harbor Lions Club for 38 County Clerk or Orange County on Thia aiattment wa1 llted with tlle taln Ave .. Orange. Catlf 92ee1
May 15 196• County Clerk di Orange County on Paul o. R&ndtll. 13231 E. 1Mth years. a member of Elks f24I011 May 23 1811'4 St. Cerrltot, ca111. 90101
Club of Newport Harbor Pub1tsne<1 Cringe Coaai Dally '*In Rubtn v111av1cenclo, 5115 W.
and the Sant.a Ana Golf and Poot June 13 20 27 July 4· 1984 Publtllltd Orange Coatt Oally, Lambert Rd., Brea, Cam 92821
Country Club Services by W-4!1 Pilot June e 13 20 27· 1984 J amt1 W Smith, 13U E.
h N Soc S PU8llc NOTICE w.21 Sycamore A~, Orange. C11tf. t e eptune 1ety. atur· 921187
day. June9, 1984, ashes over FICTITIOUS BUllNlll JoMpn H Miiier. 1801 w. Mac
sea Memorial services will N•M"' IT•TIMENT PUBLIC HOTlCE Arthur BIVd ... _ d J g O ,. "' '" 160, S1n1a Ana, C.llf. 827CM ut." hel une 24, I 84 at 1 Ttie 1011ow1ng persona are doing Phlllp G. de Carlon
AM at the Neighborhood business as flCTITIOUI IUllNIH Thi• etattment wet flltd with tnt
C C C. f CATALlt'A COMMUTER, 19300 NAMI ITATIEMI NT C k f O Co1J .... on ommumty enter, sty 0 Ike Jones Ao . San1a Ana, Calif The lollowlng pereon 11 Oolng County ler 0 range n,, Costa Mesa. 1845 Park Av-82707 buetneu 11 May 23. 11184 ,.....
e nue, Cost.a Mesa In heu of Ao1and N Duke. 2969 Ginger· EL AANCHITO FIESTA CATER· Publftned Or1nge Cot.at Delly
flowers. donations may be wood Clrcle Fullerton. Caltl 82835 ING, 2101 Pl1ctntl1 Ave. f)jlOI June 8, l3, 20, 27, 1814 Flobert A Frost. ~67 Broadway, B. Cotta M .. a. Callf. 92670 Wot made to Orange County Eye Costa Mesa Calll 921127 s11v1dor C Avlla, 2es Rose Lane.
Bank, 1001 N Tustin Av· Th11 business 11 conoucteO by 1 Cotta M"•· Callf 921127 enue. Santa Ana, CA 92705 general partnership Thie butlntu 11 conducted by· a.n Pl&.IC NOTICE
DAY ~~11:~~a~e~:~19 w11 lltad wtth the In~~=~ C Avita F1C11TIOUI MlllNlll QS~~)'.i.a m1dent of Covn_'!~lerk ol Orange County o~ Tnl11tatement wa1 llltd wt~t~-..z NAMa ITAn~~ ' ~ ~~""v.:-~_:_ --!., . --·" ~~-;-;. ~~N ~..,.""'-A..,£. . ~....,_.,-,... •
away June 15, 1984. She lS Published Orange Coait Dally FMMa SEAVIEW WEST MANAGEMENT
survived by her husband Piiot June 6. 13 20 27 t98" Pubtlthtd Ora.nge Cout Dally ACCOUNT, =C~~~Sulte
C harles E Day, Jr . children W-8 Piiot June a. t3. 20 27. 1984 W·9 B.~Ryan, '"'° Cempua °'·
Charles E Day Jr. Ill. PUBLIC NOTlCE Suitt a. Newpot1 BMc:fl, Calif.
Karen Ann Snuth of West-82=t>uMneut.oonductedby.an
rrunster, Michael A . Robert W~KE'-8' COMPENSATION lndMduaf
J ., Randall S Day, all of OF c-:~,:~~~~OA"D ITATI PUBLIC NOTICE Paul H Ryan
Newport Beach mother BEANAAO WILTJER. Applicant, f1C......UU'I IUl' ... 1 1 Thi• tta\ement WU fltad with ttle
Madeline Jowdy
0
of Texas: vs MODULAR ERECTORS INC . NMHe TATIMiNT County°*" of Orange County on
brothers John, Frank, Al~ UNINSURED EMPLOYERS FUND. Tht lollowtng ptfton It dOlng May 22, 1884 "1Ml14
bert Jowdy, aH of Texas, Otfenda~. u La 127135 bu11neu u · Publllhed Orange Cout Delly
and W11ltam of Saudi OADEA FOA PUBLICATION KEYSER & ASSOCIATES. 2742 Piiot June ti. 13, 20, 27, 1984 W-6
Arabia. Sisters, Vera Aboud OF NOTICE OF HEAfUNO w Orengethorpe A~ .. Fullerton,
Upon reading ano flltng evtoenoe Calif 92833 and V1rgima Pantuso both consisting 01 a oeclarauon u Alcllar'tt M. KeyHr, 21152 Nl.IC NOTICE of Texas, Mary Ann Willis provided in Section 4 Hi.50 CCP by Monterey. Fullerton. C1IH. 82833
of Germany. Recitation of John H Mitchell. attorney tor the Thlt buelnet1 I• conducted t>y:_an flCTIT10U8 IU ... 81 D---d M f h applicant in the above-c1pt1oneO lndMCkl•I NAMI ITAn•MT the .nuM&ry an ass o t e mat18f ano it sauslactorlly apf>9at· Richard M KtyMt ol
Resurrection will be held Ing th~relrom •h•i the oelenoant, Thi• ttatemant wu llted wtlh tlle bu~~~:ino ptf90nl are d "9
Monday 7.30 PM at Our MODULAR ERECTORS INC .. can-County Cltrk of Orange County on ERNIE OWENS DESIGNS, 319
Lady of M ount Carmel no1 be serveo with reaeonal>le May 22• 1884 Marine Street. Second floor,
dlllgence In any other m1nner IP9ci· FM1112 8 lboa taland Clllf 929&2 Church. Newport Beach. fled In Article 3, Chapter 4, Tltle 5 ol PublllMd Orange Cout Dally •Ernest Mee ~. 3310 Patti
Final interment services lhe Code of CMI Procedure. and 11 Piiot June 6, 13. 20, 27, 1984 .,,,,.. .............. ., _ __.. W 3 Newport, Apt. ~v•, ·-~,.... • _,.,, will be held Tuesday June atso appearing lrom tne Appllcatlon · Call!. 926&2
19, 1984 at 10.00AM al Good on lole hereon lhat Ille applicant hll Janette Gray Mou, 3110 Patti
S a valid claim lor workers' com· Newport, Apt. 209, Newpot1 BMc:fl. hepherd Services under pensauon 1>enetl1S ag11n1t said de· Calif 82M2
the d1recuons of BA LZ fen01n1 ano th11 sa10 Oetenoant ls a PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis bulineu It conducted by. a
B E R G ER 0 N S M IT H necessary ano proi>e< party to the NOTICE OF T"U8nl'I I AU general par1nerstllp
TUTHILL MORTUAR y · ci~~~S HEREBY ORDERED that the l.oen No. "ll.·2551/IWM CO. INC. ~~!°;';..~:. nlad with tne
646-9371 service ol said Notice of Htanng be T.I . No. ,.,..,, County C1er1' of Orange County on
made upon oarendant by publt· UNIT CODE F May 22. 1984 O'KEEFE cation lhereot rn the Orenge'Coast TD SERVICE COMPANY u Ouly ~11 MAR y E O'KEEFE. ""'"'"''-4 Da11y Pilot a newspaper of ~nwal appointed Tru1tee und« Ille tollOW· Publl.necl -Or•-• Cout ft&"'-~" Ing Oesc:rlbeO deed of truet WILL -.. .,...7 away June 18 . 1984 crrcuiatoon pubhsned It renge SELLATPUBLICAUCTIONTOTHE Piiot June ti, 13,20,27
Survived bv husband County Caltforma nereby Oeslg· HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH na1ed as the newspaper most ltl!ely
Tobias. daughter Rosemary 10 grve nouce 10 seid OefenOant, ANDtOR THE CASHIERS OR
Locke. sons Dennis and thal 9810 pubhcallon be made II CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN
f I ClVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (P~· Toby O'Keefe, and 6 grand-least once a "'eek or our 1ucceu-1ve weeks •ble II the time of Hit In ta I
children Also survived by IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a money ol the United St1te1) all
brothers Manon and Harry copy or ma sa10 Nollet or Haarlng right tnle ano lnttfe1t conveyed lo
Galarneau, and sister Ellen be ma11eo rorthw11h to defendant. and now held by it unOtr eald DM<I MODULAR ERECTORS INC In ol Trull In the property htrelnafttf
Howe V1sil8t1on Wednes· care of its agent lor service of p10· OescrfbeO
day June 2 0. 198 4 cess Robert K Polfer, II 1'111 IHI TRUSTOR. EWM co .. INC . wata
12PM-6PM. and Thursday known address or 31-423 Coast E W.M CO · INC
S C II BENEFICIARY MITSUI MANU· 8:30 AM lo 7 30 PM Rec1-Highway. outn Laguna al ornla PCTURERS BANK 92677 "' talion of the Ro5ary Thurs-Dated June 7 198'4 RECORDED January 7, 1983 at
day 7:30 PM Pac1f1c View Melvin N Glow lnllr No 83--010680 of Offlelal R9-cords In the office of th• Recorder Mortuary Chanol, Mass o f Judge Workers Compensation
Ch B al.--F d 8 Appeals Bollld of Orange County, nstam un • n ay . Publlshe<I Orange Coeat Dally Piiot aald deed of trust deecrlbtl tht
AM at St Joachim Catholic June 13 20. 27. J4Jly •. 196'4 fotlowlng property:
C Cos P ti Tiie land referred to In thl1 hurch. ta Mesa ac1fic w-3 guarantte i. situated In tne State ol
View Memonal Park dl.l'ect· PUBLIC NOTICE CaHtomla. County of Orange, and 11 mg, 3500 Pacific View. Dr. dncrlt>ad u followt· N t B h C FICTITIOUS aUllNHI Lot 100 of Traci No. 708, Harbor ew p o r eac . a NAME ITATEMINT Addition to 8-nt• Ana Helgfltt, In
644-2700 The 1o11<>w1ng 1>9raon1 are doing the Couty of Orange, State of C.U-
Pta.IC NOTICE
FlCTmOUl IUllNlll
NA• ITATIMINT
W-4
The following PtrtOnl are doing
busfneuu:
BAY ASSOCIATES. 181552
MacArthur l!IVd. «O. lrvlnt, Calif. 927115
David K Lamb. 18552 Mac.At11Wr
Blvd.
4'40, lrvlne. CaUI. 927 15
Patricia Z. Lamb, 11552 MacArthur Blvd. 144(), Irvine, Calif.
92715
Thie bulineu II conducted by. a
general Pat1'*9hlp
Oavld Kiimer Lamb
Thi• 1tatement wu fltad wltll Iha
County Cltrk of Orange County on
June 1. 1984
l'M1ll7
Publi.hed Orange Cout Delly
Pttot June 13, 20, 27, July•. 1984
W2t Investiptors also were interviewing witnesses Tues-
day. "We have witnenes, but I am not at libeny to discuss
Berg was shot several times at close range with a .45·
caliber weapon. ac.cording to Denver Dcput} District
Attomer William Buckley. He said several .45-caliber
shell casings were found near the body, and there were four bullet holes in a nearby garage door.
LA WR ENCE business as fornta, aa per map rtcOl'cled In Boot!
JERRY LEE LAWRENCE, c.':~1~~~=-5La~~~!.N~. ~~;~~ ~n1ir!~m!5;,,~~~~-:; passed away June 16. 1984, Steven w Foster 17871 Ca.ate of uld County what the witnesses have aaid," said Rock..
KOA Radio on Tuesday o~ered a SI 0,000 ~.for
information leadioa to Bera'• killer •. and Denver teleV1S1?n
station KCNC-TV followed swt Lee Lanen, vtce
prcsi~nt and aeneral ~r of KOA, said sec~ty.has
been increased for on·llT personnel, because it 11ves
them a cenain peace of mind."
An autopsy was performed Tuesday but the coroner
declined to say how many times Berg was shot.
Bera, the host of KOA 's morning talk show since
1981, was featured in a "60 Minutes" qment telecast on
CBS· TV in February because of bis on..a1r antics. He once
described himself as "the man you love to hate."
Sera's body wa1 found sprawled beside his Volks-
waaen convertible, a brown paper baa containina food for
Storms feed Midwestern floods
Powerful thundentorms lllJ power lines and trees Minnesota and northwest
battered the Midwest today with winds recorded at Iowa
after unleuhina winds of Brookinp as hia.h as 85 In Iowa, residents along
up to 85 mph on South mph, the National Weather the Des Moines River be·
Dakota and dumpina up to Service said. Up to seven tween two buliina reser-
7 inches of rain on already inches of rain was reported voirs 30 miles apart -
flooded farmland in Iowa. in about three hours Tues· 1nclud1ng those m the city
around the clock, 100 on
each shift, filling sandbags
and patrolling" to check
dikes, said Des Moines
Public Works Director
John Bclliz1.
Dixie, meanwhile, sim-day in Kinpbury, Hamlin of Des Moines -were
mered overniaht after bale· and Beadle counties, wash· warned to be prepared to
1 n a under r e cord ioa out many local roads, evacuate by Wednesday
temperatures that puabed the weather service said. nJ.fht.
Several families had
been evacuated and I 00
more were preparina to do
so. he said.
the mercury to near 100 Heavy rains Tuesday 'We've got 200 people,
dearees also pounded southwest em p Io ye es, work t n a
"We're uraina people
downstream to be prepared
for extremely hi&h water." Floods that darnqed i.--------------
more than 2. S million acres
of farmland in 1ix 1tatc11 cauaina more than $8u
million in damqe in Kan· w and Miuouri alone,
remained biah enouah
today to keep_r:nost of the
more than 2,000 evacuated
resident• away from home
another day.
In Des Moines, Iowa.
where the suflina Del
Moinet River is elpected
to continue n1in1 at least
throuah Thunday, crews
worked around the clock
pi.liq u.ndbep apiost
waicn that have already
invaded City Hall.
The mercury climbed to
99 in Charlnton. S.C.,
Tuaday, the hottest it'•
ever been tbeR on June 19.
Recordi were abo aei or
ued ln Colwnbua, Oa., wbcre ii Ml 98; Wilm· iltl'On, N.C., 91; Huntt-
villc, AIL, 94, and Cape
Haneru. N.C .• 92.
Tbundcntorma blasted
cenuaJ and eastem So\ltb
Dakota on Tuesday. toppl·
FREE .HEARING TESTS
BEACH CITIES -Free electronic
hearlna testa will be 1iven on Thurs·
day, FTiday and Saturday, June 21,
22, 23 from 9AM to 6PM at Beach
Cltiea Hearin1 Aid•.1. 20932
Brook.hunt (at Atlanta), ::n.e. #203.
Huntincton Beach. CA.
A bMJ'in1 aid 1pecialitt will be
available to (ive th81t free teetl at the Huntm,ton Pro! .. ional Plaza
The teltl have Min arran,ed for
anyone who 1uspect.e they .,.. loeina
thtlr hearla,. Such penona aener·
ally ea.y they can hUI but cannot
undent.t.nd conversation. TNtina
with tht lat.tit electronic equipment
wW indicate whether it can be help-
ed 1Jecuonically.
teat at leut once a year. If there it a
hearin1 problem, a free electronic
hearina tett may reveal that newly
developed method• of comction
will be1p1 even for thoee who have
been tola in the put that a hearinf
aid would not help them.
For thOM wiahina th• ftH teet but
want to avoid waitill(, an appolnt·
ment for a specific day a.nd ti.mt
may be arranaed by pbonlq (714)
96-4-7906.
Theae frH hearina c.u an riven
tor the purpoee of maldn1 Mltc1lona and adaptation• of electonJc bear·
int inttnlmenu .
Available for in1pectlon on the telt
da.y1 will bt tht NU EAR All-In·
Everyone, •pecW.ly thOH over 60, The-Ear htarlna wbJcb la •~ly
1bould havt an el.ct.ronfo hearlna deaianed for nerve deatn
Pl••H call ahead for an appohumenl io avoid walU a1)
in Ontario, CalJf He was TrM Lfn• Irvine, Ca 92715 Excepting therefrom tne follow·
born October l , 1941 in nus buSlness 11 conoucted by; Ing· beginning at Ille moet northet1y am 1no1v1duat corner of aald Lot 100; thence Santa Ana, Califorrua He is Steven w Folttf 1outhea1terly 11ong the nortll·
survived by, daughter T111s statement wae llle<I With tne e11terly llne of Mid l.ot 100; 120
L 1 An d V County Cieri\ of Orange Col.inly on lttt, tllenc. eouthwelterly In a es 1e ne; an son. an Mey 21 1984 direct llne to 1 point In tile weeterly
Michael Lawrence. both o f F24al0 Mnt of said Loi 100, Mid point being
Cost.a Mesa, mother Esther Pubhshecl Or1nge Cout Dally 120.48 ltt1 aoutllMtterty of tile
Lawrence. of Newport Pilot Mey 30. June 6. 13. 20, 1864 mo11 weattf'ly cornl' of Mid lot;
2804-84 thence northwttterly along uld Beach; brother Larry Law-w,aterly llne and the ... terty tint of re n c e of San J u a n PUBLIC NOTICE M ... Ort~. 120.48 ttet to tne Mid
Capistrano. sister Teri of FICTITIQU• 8UllNIH molt welllfly COl'ntr, thenoe north·
Newport Beach. Graveside N•M• sT•TEMI NT tuterty along tht northweeterty llne ,. "' .. of uld Lot 92.50 feet, mor. or lea&, services will be Wednesday The to>toWlng person 11 Oolng 10 tile point of btQlnnl~
June 20. 1984 at J :PM. of· bu:~~·NCEO BUSINESS CON· YOU ARE IN l>EFAUL UNDER A
flclatlng Reverend Jim OEEiOFTRUSTDATED11/111112. EPTS, 2116 Easl Wiison Ave . Or· UNL SS YOU T'"KE •CTION TO
M c Avoy. of Church of nge. CA 821167 PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT
Brethren of Santa Ana, Olene Kathleen Arhontea. 21 HI MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE.
Cahf . at Fairhaven Mem· 111 WlllOfl Ave · Orange. CA IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION
P F h 26117 OF THE NATURE OF THE orial ark 11r aven Th11bu11neu11conductedby an PROCEEOINGAGAINSTYOU,YOU
M Ort ua r y, Otrectors ndMdual SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER.
633-1442 Diane Kathleen Arnontes "(If 1 atrttt addr ... Of oommon
HA"•O" LAWN·MT. OUV£
Monuaty • Cemetery
Crematory
162 5 Gisler Ave
Coat• Me.sa
5'0·555•
''l"CI •ROTHl!"I
lfLL l "OADWAV
MORTUAAY
110 Broadwty
Costa Meu
1542-9 1 SO
IAL TZ BEHGtttOf'il
IMITH & TUTHIL.I.
WUTCLIFF CHAPEL
o~ E t 7tn S1
Cos11 Mu~
6•6 QJ7 I
'ACl"C VllW
MIMOfUAL 'A"IC
Cemettry • MortJar'f
Chapel • Cremt10r)
'.1500 Pac1f1c V•@w Orovt'
<Nfllo;o,gort BHcn
6U.270(1
MeCO"MICK MO,.TUA"Y
I 79S Lagune C an yo,, RO
Lagv,,. 81'CPI C1 !U6' 1
•9·•·9• 1!1
c
1
Tll1111a1emen1 w11 llltd "'Ith Ille o..ion•tlon ot property ta stiown
ounty Clefle of Orange County on above. no warranty la gtVtn u to ltt
•Y 22 19114 comp!ttente• or corrtc:tntaal." Tiie
FM1111 bentl1clary under Mid Deed of Pubt11neo Orange Coatt Dally Trutt, by l'MIOfl of -btMCtl or dt-Pllot May 30, June 6 13 20, 1984 fault In tile obllgltlone MCUfed
21183·84 thtltby. htletofort •11ecuted and
P~l.IC NOTICE
flCTITIOUI IUllNHI
NAMI! ITATEM!NT
The followlng pereon It doing
butlneea aa
APPROVED FINANCIAL SER-
VICES 810 Baker • 11 t. Cotta
Mesa. CA 92626
Mary M Wrlgllt, 810 B~., • 111,
Cotta Meaa, CA. 82620
Tntt l>Vtlnett 11 conducted by· a.n
lndlvtdual. Mary M. Wrlgnt
Th1t ttatemtnt wu fllad with the
County Clerk ·of Orange County on May3 1884 ,.._
Put>llan.cs Orange COUt Delly
PllOI May 30. June t , 1~ 20. 1"'
at'4-14
dtllvered 10 tile unoaratgned a Writ·
ten Oeclaratlon of Default and 0.-
mand for Salt. and written notloe Of
brMCh and of -.Cllon to cautt tht
undwllgned to NII aald pr~ to
11t11fy uld obtlgallont, and fher•
atter Ille undertlgned cau..o MIO
notl09 of breach and of -.Ctlon to
be reooreltd March 5, 1984 u 1n11r.
No. 84.o92148 of Otflcltl ~dt tn
tht otnct of tne Aec:orcltr or Orange County:
Seid 1al• will be made. blit
without covenant or werranty, ••· pr.-or lmplt.o, regarding tttle
po1 .... ton. or tneumbf'anoa., to pay 11141 remalnlnO Arlr!Clpel tutn of tile note(~ MOuf9d by Mid deed ot
Trull, with lntereat ae In Mid "°'•
providtd, edVMOM, If any, """' Ille tanna of Mid Deed Of tNlti r..,
cMreet, tnd lllpeM... OT Ille
Tniet .. and Of Ille trutlt Of'Mlad by
NICI Deed of Trutt NIUC *>TIC£ SaldlllewGlbeheldon. weo,,...
....... -.. day, Jl.lf't 11, 1"4, .. uo p.m. .. Ftcnnoua --tt1e CNipmen Avenue ent,..,,. to
H.AMS ITATIMIMT • tile CMo Cent 1*"'9..1. ~Itel
Tht foOowtnO pereon It dOil'l9 Chapman A~ , Orenot. \;A,
butlneu u Al tile time of Ille 1n111a1 pu
CUSTOM SIGN OtslON 20411 catJOn or "" notlCt, the total Camlttld, HunttnglOf'I 1.-c:n CA. amovnt of Ille~~ Of,,,.
92848 . ~I~ ~r9CI by,,,. .ooft 0. C'*YI Lavon Manin,*' 1 Cam-ecfibed Oted or trutt and •tlfTl•ltd fltlO ttunl ngton leeGll, CA HMI COllt. 111pen .... and lld~ I•
Tiiie bullMN conducted by: M 1 111. 11111.
lnd1v1du1t Tiie total lndeltl90Mle belno en
Cheryl Martll\ "1lm11eon~l,,.~bio1t Tiile etatemant .,,. filtd wttn ,,,. cotnPllled may be ootainad bf Mil• C~nty C!Wll ol Oftnoe CoUnty on Ing (71•) IU•OtH or (111)
May 22 1914 ~. 127 .. Nl tlle da~ Mtot9 the M19. .._ Oaled J\lfle tl, 1114
Pvoulned <>•noe Coaat Delly Publltll.O C>far1oe Coe11 o.iiy
Piiot ,..., 30. June I . t3 20, 1114 PllOt Jun. ao. '27, iutY 4. 1m I
2111.f• W·U
Do It the easy
way-shop
claaalfled.
~ .,,..
642·5671
Orange Co.al OAll;Y PILOT~ • .b19 20. 11114 -
Pla.IC NOTICE '~i:.~-:.~=· NOTICI TO CMDfTOf'I bu!:!"~:"'"g ~eona aft OOlng I :. ~~:,~~~~~~I
l<ON Tlt<I MOT El. 2205 H fbew Notice ii h••by 0 ven to the
PllUC "°TICE
FICTJTtOUI •UllHlll
NMlll IYATIMllNT
Tt1t IOllo#ing I* ION .,. OOir\O
bvliMall 81
Ml.IC MOTICl !!!lJe llJTIC( '! ..
'ICfmOUllUIMN ,ICTmOUe.,_.. MOftCITOW .-cnw• 11•11 .. "' .. ' ~ITATW ' ..... fATllmfT °'~........ uminas F 7 ---'T,,. IOfloW\ntl ...., 19 OOol"8 TM lolowln(r PilflOnl "" Ool{ll OP ...... -..... TM .....,. ,.,.., II .._. 71111 ...... ..,_ • ...
81VCI , 'Coata M ... Celtf f2127 r~·~~T· of ,,DUOlE'f AlCH-ANO MlnQ·,Ch&l'IQ Chen 2205 HatbOf " A nlCH tr1n1ferorf1I, SUPERIOR MINI STO,.AO
3300 lrllttlt A\'tltl\lt Ullt 101, .._,
Poll 8e1<:h CA t2600·31tl
~~ :WhM tlth ~~TffUT ASSOC*ATB 111::m:..:. ~-1.MWANlllMOI. '=•Pfflll 'Ut .....
St Coat•Me&a Cellf '2821 t711S~ ef'.Fountlln Oll'M•tlUI If 141•11 "°""'°°° AnlMIMCllt ~1'111 ~Mt..._. lllvd_, Colt• M .... Calll 92127 WtioM bullneu eddf ... la 1h7
Htlano_. Cf\\I 811111 Chltn 2205' 8ayPQrt Way, City 01 Newpor1
Hlrbof. Bl~d Co111 Men Calif ~·rf II. County of Orange, Stitt of 9242f • • Ofl\11 that a t>utti tr1n1i.t la TM~lloondUCl9dt> an tboullot.mtoetol1"'40COt,IHC
LOI.I• R BellON .... leywood ~eii.y, CA t'70t TN ..,,.,. of ... .,.... Ii 10 near . Me oo,,. Nhi*' 1Hct1,ca1.t2te0 w.w.m t: o.nny 1m ~ ~ .. ....,...""',.....~ o.-AIWI ~ .. .,, r 'c:......._a.M llJlr T1vtor 8 Grant, 3JOO l11tlrie Av•
''"" Sutte 101, NtvwPOl'l lltdl. CA 92"0·31H Thie tMISIMll •uonducted by. an Boule¥ard TUllW\; c-. 2taO tlON to M ..._ lbY N City d ~ ~ Clllf ta111 a 0.. ~~!!.'...
nd vld\dl TadOc.tn 111xt 8-' .Mtlll -· Wltl M'I.,: i\•
1nd11tidual r Tranel.erM -~ bualn"' edd""9
MlflQ-Chq Clltrl II 1125 Monrovl•. No C-t, City of
Robert H Gtenl, 4242 Clml)UI Ort~. Suite F, N90titl)Of1 Beacil. CA
92980
LOUllA hllOni Toctoran Tru1t"' under Tfl• I OllorllMlltA_llP1:11 ... U. •ICM._ i ~.-..c.. _,
TN11tatetN1nt.,,... tiled wlttl the Todofltn T""" •1W'INd ."'"9 I , Clar of eo.a .... '11 Fillr ~ DMn -----·-· flf~-
Thi• aletem.nt wet filed with the ~Ottl Mai. County of Or1nge,
County Clerk of Orange County on .. tate or CalttOl'nl•
Mey " 1SIM The propet1y 10 be tr111tftn9d 11
TM bullntta II condUC19d by a
0tntfaf p1r1t\atltlip
Tly!Of 8 Otant
Coun1y ci.11 of Or*"09 Counly on IMO, 11115 ~. ~te F. C:O.&a ...... CA nt21 ..... ~ nw ~ .................. d
June•t 1H• 11:~111nv~.~8210I .. u-...U..lf'llfMfttof ....... .,.. ~~°'°'11'19~• a.Clwtl~
'11ST.,. t<em A Col«naft. 11115 ....,.. Uf'Nn 0..:11°""'*" tHuot to r• ~' 1114 n. iuu -w... •
Publiahed On11ige Coat o.;ty f'IOCMI, e F, F~ v1119r, CA ..... =btde U1'°9t Tiie 1 tJll ,.,.. C4Mitr °"* .. Orw.-C.... • ' F'MIMt OMCr1btcl In QeMral .. : Aft •tocll In
Publlthed Orange Coat o..ir ~~ ~~~'Mr~~~-oc'eogn TN1111temen1 •U lll9d Willi tM
County c1eni of Of1nge County on
Mey 21. 1HA
Piiot.June 13,20.27,Juty•, 1164 t210I "'9 end~ 0.-~ ~ C.... Olly ...,,..,,_.
W33 Tilil ~" eondllefed o, • -.11op'Mfft ot 1t74:1Pl. 1$-Mat ~ JuM 1>,20,1?.,.•.1M4 ,_ ~.tne I . l3, 20. a7. t984 SALE OENEAAL LICENSE
•21-90467 buatneu kno111on ••
"LORI'S LIQUOR" and localed et
-----------2200-02 ~ BIVd City ot
,.,...,.
CAftWIN a WAOMlft
1M01 Von Kenftaft A"4W41. luHe
•10
~PM~ lot Ole 'ClllOMnf l>fQlect& wHdl .,. W2I ......... Of ... 0.... Oii!>'
-----------Kevin A CdMlell .. loM&CI If! the City of CClllMI ....._ ,... Mw I. 1$. ICI, 21, HM P\lltc NOTIC£ Thia 11at.,.,_.t •• tM wl~ Wt& County of Or11ng9, It•.. of eel-W• t0 ~~.~of Oreng1 County elf\ -~Al AEHA8lUT~TiOH PAO-__ ...;;.._..-....... ......, __ _ a1-1C MftJIC£ C0t11 MIM. County of Orlf\Oe ---"-U11L--""-----S111e of canlc>rn1a
lritne, CA. 1'1111
t$f.11N
,,_. OAAflil CMIAll-YMf) Thi c.tJ ol fWUC llJTIC( I-.......... .....,......_ ______ , ~:!.'*:.no l*tOnl .,, OOi1'S1 ca.wt• 1 w...-eo.t• ....._ ~ tor a rental __ _.;;..;;;;;=;....;.;~.-...~--
flCTITIOUI 9UllNIH NAMI 9TATIMINT
The fofloWlng l*IOn It dolnQ
txlliMH U .
THE VILLAGE COMPANY 3~
VII ~o Newpott 8each. Cat1f
92683
NMMtt• L. Pittman. 909 Tll.lsr
way. Coron• def Mar, Ctllt. 92883
This bulln•• II conducted br an
lndMOu&I
N.ennette Pmmen
Thll IMetement WU f~.cj with the
County Clerk of Orange County on
June 4, 1084 ·
P:2A7ao3
Published Orange Coe.al Dally
Piiot JUM 13. 20. 27, July 4. 198•
W29
PUBl.IC NOTICE
"CTmou• •UllNHI
NAIM aTAHMINT
Tiie lollowing persons ere doing
l>ulinetl u :
GOLDEN COAST INVEST·
MENTS. 111841 M11ln1 Bay Drive,
Hunllngton BMch, CA 112649
Robert Chaty1 wa t
Poonsaengsalhlt. 18841 M1r1n1
Bay OrlYtt, Huntington Beach. CA
92&49
Thll bullneu l• conduct9d by. en
Individual ~-c . , ~~. ~.
a'l'ltement wN llled ~th the
Counly Clerk of Orange County on
June 11. 1984
FNJIM
Publllh9d Orange Cout Detty
Piiot June 20, 27 July ' 11 198'
W-~
MLIC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITINO 91C)I
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that aeeleCI propouls will be received by
the City of COil• Meea II the office
of the City Cletk II tt)e City Hall, 11
Falt OrlVtt. Cotti Meaa. Celtfornla.
untll the hour of 1 1 :00 e.rn. on Jut)'
5. 1SIM at which tlmt they wlll be oPtMd put>lidy and reed aloud In
th• Councll Ch1mbera for
FURNISHINO ALL LABOR. MA·
TERIALS, EQUIPMENT, TRANS·
POATATION, ANO SUCH OTHER
FACILITIES AS MAY BE REOUIRED
TO INSTALL PORTLAND CON·
CRETE CEMENT MOWSTRIPS AT
TANAOER PARK. 1780 HUM·
MINOBIRD DRIVE. COST A MESA
CALIFORNIA 921126
A Ml of plens, apeclflcatlon1, and
other contract documenta may bl
obt•IMCI In '"" office of the Dtc>•rl· ment of Lelturs Servi~. 11 F11r
Drive. Co111 Mesa. C1lllornl1, upon
receipt of a nonrefundable fee of
S6.00 If bldc:ier. requea, plans and
apeclflcatlon1 bl mali.ct, the charge
will be $7 ~per Ml
Eech bid thatl bt made on the
propo111 form and In the manner
provld9d In the aontrlCI docu·
men11. 1nd shall bl eccompanled
by 1 c;erutled Or cuhlsr'a Check or 1
bid bond for no1 .... than 10 per·
cent of tllt amount ot the bid. made
payable to the City ot COii• Meta
Tiie Contractor lh•ll. In Ille per-
tormence of lne wOfk and lmpro~
ment1. conform 10 tl'ttt l•bOt eoo.
of the Siil• ot c.kfomla end other
laWI of tile Stele of Calitomi• applt-
cat>tt thereto, wtilcil the exception
only of IUCh vertatlona •• may bt
'i'equlr9d under the apeclal 111tute1
pureu1nt to which proceedings
hereunder ar• talc., and which
have not been auperceo.d by thlt
provtalonl ol the Let>« Coclt'
Pr .. erence to labor lhall bl given
only In the manner provld9d by law
No bid ahall bt conllder9d unless
It It med• on 1 l0tm furnllhed by the
City of Coeta MeN, and II made In
eccordanot with tM provtalonl of
the Pfopotal requlremenll
Each bidder mull be llclneed and
elto prequ1lllle<I N requlr9d by t1w
The City Council of Ille Clly of
Cotta MeN rnervet lhe right lo
r-tec1 any Ot all bids
EllMn P PhtnneY Clty~lertl of tile City of Cotta Mna
Publlahed Orange Coast Dally Piiot
June 15. 20. 198• FW-31
The bulk tran1ter 111111 bl conMim·
meted on or 111w the 9th day ol
July, 1984 11 ACTION ESCROW.
INC ATTN Marllyn Wealmor ... nd
whoM addr... 11 640 N Tu1tln
Ave Suitt 101 San11 An• Call·
lornie 92705
That the 1111 dll• for fthng c1 .. m1
In 1he esc:rovw relerred lo herein 11
July 6. 198•
So 111 u 11 known to the Trant·
leree(a) all t1u11nesa nameJ end ad·
dreases uM<I by 1tte Tr&n1ler0<1a)
tor ttte PHI thr .. year• are SAME
Oiied June 7 l9U
LINOCOT INC
John J Cota, Prn1dan1
Tranaleret
Pub11Shed Orange Coast Daily Ptlot
June 20 t9U
W·51
PUBl.IC NOTICE
.FICTITIOUS •UllNEH
NAME ITATEMt:NT
Tne lottOWlng persons are dotng
buslo.st 11
MARlNEAtMRI ASSOCIATES
NO 1, 7000 Beech Boulevard.
Buen1 Park. Calll 90620
MRI Buslneu Pr()9erty Fund1,
Ltd . ~S_.Bo•e! "oad, San Mat~, ~-.. ~~/; . ~ ar l:fo . 7 Wnl Loop South Houlton. TexN
771)27
Th11 bu1lne11 1s conduct9d by: a o-•' plftneral'llp
Archie Bennett. Jr G-11 Part· ,,.,
This statement """ hied with tMe County Clerk of Orange County on
June 4. 198•
F2'7422
Qlbeon, Dunn I Crutcw
toO Newpoft Center Of1Ye
Ne•PC>ft 9Mctl. cam. e.o
Publllhed Orange Coast Diiiy
Piiot June t3. 20. 27. July 4, 198•
W32
PUBl.IC NOTICE
Publllhed Orange COM1 0.lly
Piiot June 13. 20. 27. July 4, 1984
W-42
B & D ENTERPRIZES. 11311 ...., Yeti KMMft ,..... ...... '9ftatMlit•tion grant Oii My."'.,,. rc1moue eu11 •• ,-... ................ =----~---"'""!"' 1mM CA. 12111 tmoUnt of 143.900. The~ of MMm ITA~ S1n11 Belinda Cr . Fountain Valley. • the ,...,,1 ill few 1 IWllll reNblll-rt. f~ ~ .. dOinl YOU IM • .. MILT -A
Clllf 92708 ~1 HI lit~ Pt"""'IM wfWctl wll Iner ... ~ •· Dl9 Of nueT Do\19 Mf= Olene L Olultll\O, 18371 IMta Publlahed Or~ Cod o.ly tne~ofp(11tel4Mattt•r.,..1* tAICAPf'TALINClHTM~ -.....-YOUT-
-----------~~· Cf Fountain v~. Cellf Pilot ~ 13. 20. 2 • .My 4, 1:-'n hOu"'f ~ 10 io..~ CBI 00 ANAMCIAL (C) QO Y£N.. TO .......CT MUI 0 = ....
P\IJlJC N011C( Bridget Pepey. 11317 Santi ltnant1 by P'OYidWIQ ~I TUREASS<>aATUtOIC1G LEAS.:. fT M Y.-: ea:-.:..:'J ~ ,
P:ICTITIOUI 8 UllNHI Belinda Cr . Fountain Valley, Cellf. "8JC M)JIC( fuodt 10 r.n.bllllale ••111in0 Ufll\I tNO (!) CIG MANAOlMflllT. m M. :UTIOll °' ~ llAt\m --
NA• ITATIMINT 92708 , . tnd 10 PfOYlOe r.-.tal ~to N9wpOf1 Blofcl Sult• s.tO. *"'PM NOeDl•I ~ ...
T"'-fotlowlng l*llOnS ata doing Thll t>uslnua II conduct9d by I fl'ICTmOUI ....... = ~ ~O = ~ ~ ~ ~ 329 H YOAJ •OULD COlft'.ACt A La..
t1u11neu as QeMfel '*1nerahiP MAm 9TATl...-r YD. "
H & A ENTERPRISES S Gretel Olene L Guihno TN fo41owtng ~ .. OOif10 111'0!1'-w4J1 b11 ~-In ~ 8l¥d • Hftpof18Wtl CA MOnc. °' .,._.... WS
Coun Newport Beech, CA 92883 Tl\ls atat~t ... ''*' Wiiii the buSlr*I .. Cotti ~ l!Vougfl IOMI and/Of t293 '.L ......
Robert M Alvey, 5 Greist Cour1. County Cletk of Of&nge Counly on YOSI GALLERY. 2 t3 MarlM, ~: ::::::~:':.~,: Sa~=ar~ ..::,,~ N(>flCt It H£AE8Y OIVIN ....
Newport Beach CA 92663 June 1, t98• Balboa taland. Call! 12882 City proooeiaa to off., the P'oOf*t'll CA 921e3 on Wedi •!Ser. ""'-l>, lllM. • ..
Donald Hull ell. 3633 Camino Del '>C7221 Pet• Jutuu, 30 t Mllf\M. BelbOe 111 1,,_ ~ .,.... Tito• ...,... It condUC1ed br • tO 00 o dodt..., of ... .,. '1 ...
Fl10 So Ste 200 Sen Diego. CA Publilhed Orllfge Cout Dilly taland, Cut 92682 AREA . 80UNOAAIE$ Q9Mlfel pert~ OOM ......... • I ..
92108 P110I June 13 20, 2'7 July • tSIM Yael Cohen, 15154 0owMy Awe . 1 lndllttrlal/ Ptacentla/ 19th/ Alan M $col~ T,_ ......... Wlll*tN.-0.li
Ttna DUii-• II conduct9d br a W24 Pwamounl. Clillf 90123 Pomona Th111llt""*11 -fled with the AEAL ESTAT£ ~ ...
gener11 p1rtnetah1p Th•• bullMM It conduct9d by: a 2. lnCIUltrlll/ Pt9cerlt•&1 C.ty lound· County Clertl of 0renoe County on va. ~ • 2020 ~ ......
TR .. !-4, stA&l1ve9!-1 ~u , .. _ .. ~1th , .. _ ..... IC MftJIC[· llmll9d patt'*9hlp 11'1 June 4. 198• w.y, SIAM 208. In .. CMy ot..... ..
"' """' " .-.. " '"' r~ nu Petet JulMU 3 Pomona/ 1ttn1 H•bof/ Vlctotte f'IQGI County °' Ormnae .... • County Clerk of Orange Countr on ... CmlOUa ••oa-e• Thie ei.l*'*lt wu flied with the • Piecentia/ t9th/ POft!ONll Vic;. PWlitNO ~ ~ o.-, altfornta, NEW,Oln HOU I
May 2!! 1994 .. , --• County Clertl of Orange County on totia PllOt June 13 20.-~'l, .JAltt/ 4 tM4 LOAN. INC. • C1Mc ._ CICIQMf• .. f~ MAME lfATEMENT June4, 1914 s Joann/ v.c1or11/ Pl~tlll W41 8ttOn -~ IPCID .... T,__ Publlahed Orange Coast D&ily The lollowlng pereona are doing f'M1m Hart>or under .,., ......,. eo ._ ~ al
Pilot June 13. 20 27, July •. 1984 bualne.1 N Publllhed Ofenge Coelt Dally Tne meintenanoe of ll'le r9nt., ' tale ~ In .., Cltftmn 0..0 •
w .37 EUCLID CRESCENT CENTEA PllOC June 13, 20. 27. Juty 4, 1984 m¥ke1 In ,,,... neighbomoocb II of Truet ~ II; ~ A ,.
------------i'ASSOCIATES, 31!!1 Airway Av· W30 Ille t1gnillcarit factor wr*=h _,lo ROOTAHOIAHOll'AS M>OT ..... P\8.JC NOTICE enue. s...11e o. 1 Cost• MeN. CA. me~ a1 the ., ... The rant PlBJC 11)11C( be1NS end .... .....,.., N¥ a, ... -------~--------92!~1--1,..,._....._,,. Pr......,.lel laYel In theee ~ 19 llllO 1NCI, tn .,_ t*I al Ofllklll ~ • FICTITK>UI •ua••• ...,. ,,_, ..,,,, .... ,_,. ......., · PtaJC NOTICt affordable to tow lnC:Ofne flMile& GOfda °' ~ CouMy, • ,,.... -
NAME IT A nMENT IV' a Cpfornll ~ P*'IMI ll'llp, and the general Charec:W of t"'9 AacotO&t a IMtNrMnt *-4 m. bf
The lotlowlng P«&on ts doing 3t5t Airway Avenue. &lltt 0-t, P:ICTITIOU9 8U ... M nelghDomood1 lndlcat• the renta r.-on of & IW'MICft of.:::"'~ :
l>uslneaa ., . Coeta M .... CA. 92829 . ..,.. ITATlmNT ... ... ~ • --4.-~
fFIC.£.. filJ~H_l~!._EPO, Ronald p Tomsic. ~ ..,.,.... Tiit ~e'!~ WU: ~ ~ ~........_ > 'liJinCaPl1ir.rio-:'ck~1":> • -• "'~~~lo~ OEN-~4: ~ ": :U, ~ c~N 1!!!T Fl~NI~~ =., iw: ,.:,, .... ~ '~
Edwards. Postal. 31~1 Pueo Roed.Coronedel ,CA t2t2S ERAL PARTNERSHIP, 1171 MM! ;;;_ .. .,. .. 'k,;t;;nex111wyM19 2~;;;;. c'A"1211'i'""-· -1 ...... AilcO!clllr'U••••*
Duran, San Juen Caplttreno, CA · MIChM NIVar«>, 441 Fair Drive StrMt.IMne,Celtfornle927t• . TheCltyofCostaMtuWOUld.~ Mon T~ C.Ot•. t:tct , A,.,.J!!!!!!•TWIU.O T._~~
921175 • 104. Cos11 MeN. CA. 929241 Ptllllp H Mc:Nemee, t17t Main 1 dMlgnale l00% of the f1n1r1 to 1eeoo F c:fllld SW.. 2.50 1n4ne. ""''""" ,..,.. .......,_, _,..
Thts t>uainess 11 conduct9d by an This bualneu II conducl9d by: • StrMI Irvine. CallfOfnll 92114 t!w1modefet• inCofM ,_,.,.,how--CA 927 :;' ' ' DEA FOR CASH . .,.._, ,,_., ~
indtvtClual 09f*ll pertnetlfllp. Mark D. Dorian. 1178 Main -· II tet1a that 7~ I& a more AL TOH TECHNICA.L CENTER. UrWld s..-« • ClllllhW•
Edw&rd s Po1111 Richard c Boatman. Plltner StrMI. IMM. Cehfom.a 9271• rull.lbC ~ '°' the toloWlng two LTD • Cellfomle llmlted pet!ner· df..n on ..... or .......
This ttatement WU filed With the Thia 11llement WU ftl9c2 with the Scott J Banter 1178 Maln reesons-It wll min\mln the --1t11P bMk, ............ ~ :'::i
County Cte<k ol Orange County on County C1«k 01 Orange County on Str•t. ll'lllne, Celtfomt19211• pt.cement ol 1~t1 In pro,.ct1 to By. v..,,ture2t0, Lld..ac.lltoml9 ~,.!=.:.:a·=~ M '"
May 2S. 1984 Mly 2S. 1884 Thia bullnese II conducted by: I be ,.nablll1ated. Md It .... provide I llmll9d pertneralllip, a.... P8f1· It-...:.--.. ___.....· .. -:::. --~ -
· ~ ,,_.,, general partn«ahlp reaonatMe rnatgln kw .,°' due to ner ---...., --"' -• Publllhed Orange Coat Delly OAJllWlM a WAGMEt . Scott J. Banter Ui\fol 11111 rent 0t the failure lo By. Alton TedWllCll c.m.r. e &I,.,_, 1llle lfllf ..._... Miid 0, 1'.
Pilot June 13 20. 2'7. July '· 1984 1MC>1 Von Kenna11 ,. ...... lulte Thia atatemant was fll«S with the c:orns*ta ~of prot-:ta c.lfomlao--WpartJ•iHP.Gen-• f'Nlllll. Ill ... ,.. P'Gl*tY
W-38 410 County C1ert1 of Orange County on Ou• to un1nt1clp1tt0 clfcum-., .. Partns ift _.. ~ lfllf .....
nine, CA. 12711 Mey 2•. 1SIM stenc.a. The Clty propoeea to utflllie Tllll ~ la c:iondUc1ed ~ e • -.
-----------Mf-1191 ~1 70% °' more of ll'le fundl to a.1st llmh«I p8f1~. PWCll 1, Ullll ..._ S1 • Mown Pta.IC NOTICE Publllhed Orange Cout Ody Publllhed Orange Cout o.lly thOM r9lkllng In \llllta contlltq Alan J. o.w.on. GerwW ttartr. ...,.._, Wt ~
Piiot June 13. 20, 27. July 4. 1::.!o Pllol June 20. 27. Juty 4. 1 t. 1W~" two°' more bedroomt P•••ice Thll....,,.,. .. !led-"" the PW\ ~ on fct •• 14.
1 01 NOTICE ..., wlll be QN9f'I to ,.,.,..., eepadely County a.ti Of ~--~on 1111~ ~~·.:a:~: NOTicfAEL~~8~~0AI .. _.,. lllt\Tll'C lerge/llNlel. ~~ .1unee, 1_. PIQW1 County aa M* •Ill' ~
A SCHOOL DISTRICT. NEW· r\llDU\I nuiiw. 11111\ftl't priOt ty to bit ~ , 10 ~ PIM
PORT-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL NOTICI TO COMTAACTOM PtBJC ""'IW. =-=:ooc:;:"v.,y low-In-=.., .......... &.Miii. ...... • on NcMfliber 10. m~
NOTICI Of' T1'UITEE'I I A.LE DISTRICT. Purchaalng Office. 2985-CALUNQ FC>ft ..,. NOTtCI TO COtfTSlACTOM come,.,,,.._ before r~ I CtN ...... ---t2tl8, ,.._ 1to2 8"d 1-..
loen No. JOHNt ONl1t-OIM10.7 B Bell Str .. 1. COit& M .... 924127. 1 O 1 NOTICE CALUNQ POft _,. ll101 tt you M\19 wry quea11on& ~ ............ CA.-Otlldlt "9cOfda of llMll CalilnCy.
T.t . No. u-oM70 Of1nge County. Cellfomla A SCHOOL DISTRICT· NEW• 1 01 NOTICE cer'*'ll tNI P'OQl'lln. pwe eel Ml 1 I ..,_ J. ..... -~~)~.:: =
UHtl TV~~TQ ,.., t POAT·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL A. SCHOOL DISTRICT. NEW· PatncieO.WSa'l'7'14-754-51t7. ~ 0ranaia Co.I Olly ......... -In_. IEC\MITY A """"' ...,.. A,_ B BID DEADLINE: June 28, 1984 DISTRICT. P\lrch_._ Office. 2985-PORT ·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL 0. 11 nu be9t ~ ttwt "'°' June 1S. llO, 1.l . .Nfly 4, 1M4 ~_::__ ... _ -=~-2-: CORPORATION • 2:00 PM ~.. 2985-tor...._ Oii furldll W44 .,,. .._....._. ..._'" --•
as duty &ppotnt9d Trustee under C PLACE OF BID RE<:EIPT: DIS· gr:;~=~~~· 92927' g'=~T~:~:i:a:t2827, =" not~IMe en Ktlon tlignl(I. 6ofTr9ttt151•1*1 ~~
the tollowlng described deed of TRICT ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES B. 810 OEAOLINE· JUM 28, 1SIM Or County. c.lltomla cantly lmC>aetlnO th& qullllty of the ~ '!"• p._.. l to • -•
trust WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC-•• the At>oveAddrlU 2.00 PM :.Tio OEAoUNE, June 21. 1994 enwonnwnt Thet9for.. IN Oty ot "8.JC llJTI( OI ...... ID ........ ,... at
TION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER D PROJECT IDENTIFICATION C. PLACE OF 810 RECEIPT DtS.. 00 PM ec.. Meu hel dttcld4IO not to ~the~-~~';~
FOR CASH AND/OR THE NAME RELOCATIONOFEXISTINO TRICTAOMINISTRATIVEOfFICES c PLACEOf81DRECBPT:OIS-Pf9Pllf'9 an EnwonmanUll lmpmd YOUAM•WMa.T--A = -~--ot CO.••
CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED PORTABLES . lound1Uon1 only 11 the Above Addren TRICT ADMINISTRATIVE OfflCES Statement {EIS) under IN~ DOD°'~ DATm,..,. 1. ~-"~.,., ...... .clare ,..
CHECKS SPECIFIED IN CIVIL from Uneoln Jr H19h & Adema D. PROJECT IDENTIFICATION ellhe Above Addresa En111ronrnenlel Polley Act of 1 ... ,._~YOU TAlm Ae'TIGM ~...,WI ·~ TO-'· ttw
CODE SECTION 2924h (payable 11 Elem Sehools10Celllornia.Cofon1 NAME RELOCATIONOFEXISTING O. P. ROJECT IDENTIFICATION (Pl 91-190) The reaaon tof "°' TO "90TllCT YOWi "'°'Uh, .,._._ __ •. ., -dad ,...... 21
the ttme of sale In lawful money ot detMar Kaiser. & College Plffl PORTABLES . l\and &. ~d rallt NAME RELOCATIOHOfEXISTING pr.,anno 11 the, the PfCltKt la In-n MAY• 90&.D AT A .....C \iii"';w"1ii:M -lit at= the Unh9d St11n1 eu right, title and School• 111 the Ctllel of Cofone det ortty trom LJnco1n Jr High&. Marna PORT ASLES-~.tMg oNt from tencled 10 ~ ~ten-&ALL • YOU -M miR.A. ~ ·"9cordl ',. -'
interest conveyed to and now held Mar Costa M ... a Newport BMd\, Elem School• 'O c.tifomla. Corona LlncOln Jr HIQI\ &. Adami e.n. Ill dllfellltlO units and d "°' *"°" 0. "9 U'W °' "9 Psall 3: Ewa a • _...
by It under Hid Deed ot Truat In the Orenge County. CaUlornla del Mw, KeiW", a College Pn Schools ,o calrtoml&. Corone del edvenaly lmpect ealating con-~OW A~T YOU. --~ • llr1tl pr~,T~·1~:~: ~~-O:oN I School• In'"" cm .. of Coron• det Mar.KalMf.&.CollegePat'llscnoots dltion• YOU lltOULD COWTM:T Au•--In~~....., ·"19a1N'Je/M"
BENEFICIARY SECURITY SAV· E OBTAIN DOCUMENTS FROM: Mar. Costa M .. &. l Newport In the Cit ... of Corone de1 Mer, EtW'wonmental ....,.., Recofda ft1l oft:he~uno.F1lle~
Oocumen11 ate on tile end may bl Beach. Orange County. Calltomle Costa Mna. a Newport llwtl Or-~"'O 11Utltae1 P'Of'8C'I tw1e ..onc:a °' ,.,.-nra w.a heedlnp In .uc:tl ,.,.. ......, • LNo~N A~OCIA TION examined at or obtained from Dis-E OST AIN DOCUMENTS FROM: M09 County. Celit«* beef'l INlde whlCh document the Mo T .a. ..._ a.I toeows-: "Ai9tD and OuUla: ~
RECORDED Decembef :>3. 1982 trict Admm1str11rvs Offleea at ""' Document• -on nte and may be E. 08TAIN DOCUMENTS FROM Wof'lmtntll rwtew of the l)fo;ects NOTICE IS HEREBY GNEH. ttwt end C.. T~'' ''Support.
u Instr No 82-461237 01 Offidat A~ Addrtll examined et or Obt&lned from oe.. DocurMnll are on file Md may 0. "'° mor. fUlly _.forth the rwons on w~ June 27. 19M, • s.ttw•t Md e1aO..:--,i~
"--orda ,·n 1 .. _ 011....., 01 the R• O lrlct Admlnlstratlve Offloet at the tAamtnad at ot Obtained from 0.-wfty auc:l'I atetemenll .. not _,.. 10·00 o'doc* a.m of_, cs.y, in the ~· Eerw Md "'*' _..1 .; """ •• ....,. F DEPOSIT: SSO 00/Set Above Address lrlct Admtnlltt.U..,. Offloet et tM quH'&d Tlltt EnvffonmenUll ....... room ... ..io. for ~ .. lfllf &di.._ "-k_, corder ol Orenge County; G NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN F DEPOSIT: '50.00/Set Abo.,. Addr.. Aeconit .,. on Ne &t thL~ Tn..c.'1 S.., ~IM ofloeaof ,..__:_ .--\.
Uld deed of trult dttacrlbet the thetthe named SCHOOl OISTRICT G. NOTICE IS HEREBY G~ F DEPOSIT. S50 00/&tt addr'War10••~f0tpublc RE.Al ESTAT£ SECUfVTU ~ "";;;' t-~· • eudt tOl~Er~In undivided ,_. of Orange CounTy. C1llf0fnla. act· that te named SCHOOL DtSTRICT 0 NOTICE IS HEREBY OtVEN u.uniNltiOn and cop~ VICE. IOcsl9d .. !2020 Nortft.,... 111 1 ._19 n ~ -b111
__ ... L 1 1 I T ...,.. No Ing by and through 111 Ooveming of Orwige County, Cdfomla.. ecttno ·!Mt "'9 w.d$CHOOL DtSTRICT queat at the Houelng ltlCI t;0rt1 ......_ way. &lite 20I. 1n .,_ Ccty of~ In Wt& N1ta. ......... ~&aataila~ Interest In .. .., to o o r-. so.rd. ,_..netter referred to N lhe by and through 111 GoV'9mlng of Oranoe County. Callfornla. acting ty o...IOCll•tef'lt Oeplttttnent ._.. ""'-County Of OrafWt. W .... of dltt o.dlradon of ~
11•80.lntheC1tyolC0111M..a,u "DISTRICT." will receive at the Board.herel,,._tt•releNwd lOU IN by end thtc>ugh ltt GoYwning tweentheholnotla.m lnd5pm. c.llfomla. Mt0W£ST FINANC«Al Condit.one Md ~lone In
1h0wn on •map tllefeol reeorcs.d In stated IOC9llon. up to t>ut nbl tater ·· DISTRICT" will receive It the 8oard. llenllneft• refwred to• the No turthtf tnwontnental ,..-.. °' SERVICES. INC., • Hol1'I a.iota .. SUBJECT TO;",,__..., Aptt u .
book •92. pages 1 end 2. of Mle-than the et>o.,..1t1t9d time. seaJecl ttal9d tocetlOn, uc> lo but not let« "DISTRICT," wlll recetve It tM IUch Pfotecll .,. popOMd to tte corporation, • duly 11PPOt11'9d ttTI In Bocl* 129>M .... 151 0t-
cell1neou1 Maps. In the office of the bid• lor the award of 1 Contreci for than the •~t•led time. INled 1tated location. up to .,_,. not IMer oondue19d prior to IN requett for Tn.9t• und9r end ~ to 1M tc'91 •Aecoirde. (tll9 ....... o.der-
County Recorder of said County the 1bo~ Project. bids for the awwd of • Contrw::t kw than the ~•l&t.CS tlm&. INled ,.._.. of .,.,... f\Rts. poww of_. C011..,1ed In fllll <*· don") und9r die SectJon ,.....
Excepting therefrom Ille follow-H Bide wlH bt recelv9d 1n lhe the et>ove-named Protect. bids lor t11t ewatd of 1 Contreci tor COMMENTS TO GRANT letn Deed of Tnm _......., by In tudl At1lde ~ • f1111awe:
Ing piece Identified, Ind lhall be open-p the ~ Protect. RECIPIENT LARRY B. MAL.COlMSOH ANO "Aigtlll and Out.-Ut""* Md
(Al Unlll LU 1 through LU8 .. 9d and publicly read aloud II the H Bid• wll1 be received In the H. Bid• wit! be NCelwd In the AJl inter•9d ~. groupe of SHARON A. MALCOl.MSON. HUS-CetMe T~" ·~ S..·
shown upon the Condominium Plan &bov• 11111d time 1nd piece. ptecie ldenllflecs above. end INll be ece lden11fied ebove, end lllall be lndMduala dlugre9lng with eltMr BAND AHO WIFE. ~ Mey 5 ~nt and E;,croach~t".
recorded AP<ll 15. 1982 u lnllN· °'**'and publlelr reed aloud at and publlclr reed aloud 1t of the two Pl'oPOMd llCbOna.,. .,,_ 1H3. i'11'ie ofb Of ttle COllnC)' ••Community F...-F •II"
metll No 82· 131038 of Offlcial Re-1 DEPOSIT. Stel9d depotl1 wlll bt the atxrt.-ttat9d lime end pi.:.. he aboYe-stal9d lltM Ind pica YIWlf to tubmlt written comt1ient8 Aecotder of Mid~. ol • i:.. end . Or1linlge O¥W CoftlW'1Unfty F•
cords ol taid County requited to ~ ... the return. tn I DEPOSIT· Stet9d dt90tl1 wMl bt I. DEPOSIT. Stel9d deposit will bt kw c:onalder1ti0n S4ldl c:ommentl corder's lntaNl'l*'lt No. IS-110341, alt•"
(B) The e.ctua/Ye ngl'lt to pOI-good cond•h drawing• 1nd required 10 guerant&e the return, In requlr9d to guerant .. the mum. In Wiii be reclived et 11 Fair °"""'• by r.-on of • bt9ad'I of d9falft In EXCEPTING THEREFROM .,. oil
1e111on of 111 lhose area• d"'O· apeelllcatlont In FIVE (5) d1ye good condition of of drewtnga and good condition of drawtnga and Co111Meta.Callfomta,oncwbef0fe paymentotpttrfomwnceOftlltlO«*-gu mlnerala e no other
n1ted •• balconies ind y1rd1 as alter the bid opening date. apeclflcallon• within FIVE (5) d•YI ac>eeillcatlonl within FIVE (5) days July 13, 1SIM. All wrtttan comments gatlone aecurecs thereby. lndudlnG hydrocarbon aut>stancn tying
1h0wn upon the Condominium Plan J Each bid mu1t conlorm 1nd be atter lhe bid ()9enlng date. atter the blcl opening date rectlYed wit! bl contldwed and the that bf'8aCh °' defaA NoCk1e of bllOW • o.pth al 500 ,_. from .,.
abOve referred to. reec>ontlve to the Contrect Docu-J Each Did must conform ll'ld be J Each bid mull conlonn and be City of Coat• Mela will not~ wnctl -1ecoded Mardi 1, 191' eurface Ol 811icS i..s bUI ~,.
PARCEL 2 Unit LlJe •• lhown ment• reeposive 10 the Contract Oocu-~ to \he Contrlci Oocu-the,..._ of ..... fundt °' ·-· •• Rec«der'• lfwtnlmerll No. right OI entry ~ tlT'f pot1lon of
upon tile Condominium Plan lbOVe K SUBCONTRACTORS LIST menll menll eny ectton on the deec:nbed Pf'O-84-087857, Will SEU AT PUBLIC IN eurtace abo\19 a 01p01 Oii 500
relerred to Each bidder lhall evbmlt. on IN K. SUBCONTRACTORS llST: K. SUBCONTRACTORS LIST: fecta pr10f to HUD'a wrlll~ AUCTIOH TO THE HIGHEST BID-,_. to laM. "*''"''·mine . .._.
PARCEL 3 The axclustve rtght to form furnished Wllh the Contract iEach bidder lhlll aubmtt, on the Each bidder lhall aubmct. on the authoriutlon to u• thoM IUnda It DEA FOA CASH, leWtul rnoMY ~ °' drll for _.,.., • r...-wect In
possesalon and occupancy ol lhOle Oocu~ts. 1 1111 of the PfoPOI'° 'form f\lr'nlaM<S with the Contract forrn tumtlhed will\ the Contract Is ~9d tNt ll'IOM tornrdtng IN untt9d Stat-. or a ~ • Daedl of A9corcS.
portion• of Lot 1 deteflt>ed In P1rc;el aut>contrectors on 11111 Project u Document•. 1 list of the propoeed Oooumenta., • 1111 of the Pfopotted COl'lltl'*lta apeclfy wtllCh ot the ct-* Orewn on 1 l1ate °' natJonlil AlSO EXCEPTING THEAEFAOM
1 1b<>Ye. designated as Y6 appurt• requlr9d by tile SubtetUng and &.It>-aut>contracton on thlt Protect • 1UbconlrKlort on this Protect as propoeed actions 11 bejng ad· benk, I 1let• or.._... credit YAion. the .,tieuri.._ ..,_ rtgnta. .,_,.
nanl to Par~s 1 and 2 abOve CS. contrecilng Fair Practlca Ac;t. required by the Subletllng and Suf>. requlr9d by lhtt &.lb19tttng end Sub-Oreaed Of I 1tet• Ot .,.,... lllvtnge and wlthoUI the ngM of eurface """1 •
• acrlbed Oovt CoOs Section' 100 et aeq eontracllng Felr Prectlcet Act. conlrlCting Fall Practtc.t Act, OBJECTIONS TO HUD toan anoaauon domlcl*I In thle r..wct In o. deed"°'" The tntne P\BJC NOTICE YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A L 81D SECURITY: Each bidder Govt Code Section 4100 "' aeq. Govt. eoo. Section 4100 •I aeq The City of Costa Meee Mil undttr-stile. ell payebtt et tN tlmt of..... Compeny a corp0t9Uon. recoi~ -----~--------DEED OF TRUST DATED '21111182. mutt aubmll with hit bid 1 c;ertllled L BIO SECURITY: Each bidder L. BID SECURITY: Eecfl blddet l&ll• the protecta CS.Crlbtd aboY& d right, lltte Ind Int._, held by 11. conourr-'llY '*9Wtttl
FICTITIOUI •UlfNEH UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO °' caanter'a cheell pay&ble 10 the must eut>mlt wl,h hit bid 1 ctnlftM mutt aubmll with hit bid a cenlflecl whh RtriUll RahaO f\lrtdl from HUO • fNtt•. In tNt ,... pr~ The sir.t ~ °' otMr
N,._I TATI MINT PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT DtSTRICTorabldbondlnthltl0<m or c;aahlef'a cNctl payetMe to the °' catNef'a ctiectt peyable 10 the underTittaloflNHCOA-197'.The 11ru.te tn ..CS County end SI..._ QOmOndllllignellOfloUhttNlllprQS>-
The followlng P«llOnl ere doing MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE .. , fonh In the Contract Document• DISTAICT °'I bid bon<l In ttle form DtSTRICT °' I bid bond In the fonn City of Coat• Meee .. cierttfytng to deecribtd .. folowl• ertr hereinabOYe deeeribed le
t>uelnels N tF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION In en amount not ,._ lhen TEN set lorlh In the Con1ract otcumttnta Mt forth In Ille Contract Documents HUD that ll1tt City of ea.ta M.a PARCEL 1 Lot 5 of Tract No. purpor19d to be 39 SI. Tropta.
MARZANNE, 2751 DeSoto Ave OF THE NATURE OF THE PERCENT 110%) of the malllmum In e.n amount not teu than TEN In an amount not .... ltlan TEN end Fr9d Sor..,.., in Ilia offld8l 7052.Cltyof~Beacfl.uper Newpof1e.ctl Ce1fom1a.
Catie Meta. CA 92629 PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU amount of the bid H a guaranlM PERCENT 110%) of the mUlmum PERCENT (10%) of lhe rnutmum ce91Cily u City Manaiger, ~ mac> rec:ordtO In bOCl« 301. PIQM 1 The \lltdel~ hereby di.
Merg1rel Ord•. 2751 De Soto SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER that the bidder Wiii enler lnlo th• amount of the bid .. I QUlrltlll .. arnounl of'"" bid .. I guarani• 10 8QCttOt the Juntdlclon of the....,. thfougtl6lnctuliveOIM~ dMM .. MDillty kw any~·
Ave., Costa Mesa. CA 92626 183 Monte Viet& •B. Costa proposed contnicl If the tame It that the bidder w111 enl• Into the that the bidder •Ill enter Into the eral court• If en action la ewoughl lo M9'>1. reoordl of Orange County. ,... In._, strwt .oor...e or other
Suunne E Ord1. 2751 DeSoto Mesa. Callforn1a awarded to him tn the eYWtl of 1811· prOC)Oltd Contrecl If the ume la propoMCS Contract ff the_,. la enfofm respomibilltlaa In retelion Cal•fomla .,.., common dielignatlon
1;.,. • Cos, a Meu CA 92826 (It 1 strMt address or common ure to enter Into Mid Contrect. NKI ewarded to Nm In IM event of tail-awarded to him In tM _, of I• to enwonmental ,......., ~ PARCEL 2 An ~enen1 non-Said .... w11 be n.o. WlthOlll
Thia 1>u11neu II conducted by • oeaionatlon of properly '' lhOwn MCUrtty lh&ll bl forlt1t ure 10 enter Into said Contract aald urtt to enfer Into Mid Contract. Mid malling Ind ecttOn. and itlat lheM ••ctuer.. ....,,_, for lnG,.. and warranty, pPf'ta °' lnq)Med, ,...
general partner1hlp above no warranty Is given N to Its M DISTRICT rnerves the 11ghl to ucurlty atillt be forfeit MCUfilr atiall be forfeit responslbllltl9s have beef\ Mhlfiecl 19""' throughout lot •1 of Tr9Ct garding title. po111111on, °' SICUm·
Margarel Drda compteleness or correctnesa) "The refeet any or au b1d1 or to w1t119 any M DISTRICT reMNtl tile right to M DtSTRICT r"""91 the right lo The legal en.ct ol 111& cettlflc:atton 1• No 7052 • lhOWn on • n'llP ,... t>ranoee. to utt1ty the prlne1pel bel-
Thla 1111emen1 was liled with the benefk;lary under said Deed of irregullrtt'" or l"formalitles tn eny reiect any or alt bktlor to waiV9 wry reject any or all blda or to •llve any that upol\ Its eproval Rental Atlhllb cores.cs In bOOll 301. PIQ9I 1-1 in-ance of""' Note°'°"* ~Ion
County Cletk ot Orange County on Trust by reason of I breech or d• t>lda or 1n the bidding irreguletlh• or lnf«mattlll• 1n wry 1tregutartt• or tntonMllt• tn any funds mty bt ueed and HUD wMI ctullW of Mt.aeelaneoul M.-. ,.. eecur.i br aekl Deed of TNlt. WIC'h
June 8, 1984 fault m the ObliglliON NCUr9d N WAGE RATES bids°' 1n '"" bl<ldtng blOa °'In bid<Stng hew tahafted ••• ~ ... COl'dl of Orerl09 County CatttonM. tnt ...... and other eurna .. pr~
f241713 thereby lleretotore txecul9d Ind 1 Pursuant to the prov'ISIOnl of N WAGE RA TES N WAGE RA TE~ unoer the NetlONI En-wonmentel together wt h ..-metlll tor MWS therein P"lt advMC91 K wry ~
Publlahed Orange Co.st Dellr delivered to lhe undersigned • wrll· secuon 1773 of '"" labor eoo. of 1 Pur9Uanl to the provltlona ol 1 Pufauant to Ille prCMllOM ol POiicy Ac:t ol 1969 HUD will ecciept or ~ ~ IUCfl...,...,. ""' ..,;,.11 tl'tttnof Mil 1n..-. on
PUot June 20. 27 July•. 11. 1984 ten Decta1111on of Dtl1ult 1nO De-the SIM of cattlornla. the OtSTFOCT S.Ction 1773 of the Let>or Code of Section 1713 of the Labor Codtt of an objection to •ts approval ol the constructed In .8CCordancl with~ 9'dl aovanoee. and p1u. ,..,
W-53 mend tor Sate. and written not~ of hH obtained trom the Director of the Stale of Calflomla. lhe DIS· the Sl•l• of c.llfom1a the DIS.. retet11 of funds and ecc:tie>taN:le of ploeeble ~ ordinanCM Md cNtvea and elq)tNM of the
breech end ol elecilon to ceuM the th• Depertment of tndustrlat Reta-TRICT has obtained from the O.ree-TRICT has obtained trom the Dlree· tne certlftcahon only It t 11 on One ot an 9'1P'd1enent non ... xctu9Ye right T""1ee and of the INata CFM19CI by
P\B.IC NOTICE
undersigned to Mii said prop9fty to 11ons the general prttVell1ng rel• ot tor of the Dtc>trt"*'t ol lndultttal '°'of IN Department of lnduatnel 1M ~ ~ (~ ThS1 the to UM tM tlldll1• ioceted on ..0 UICI o..o ot TNM 'T"9 t01al
tallsly NICI ot>11g1hont and ...,. .. per diem wegea Met the general Reteltonllhe general prsveittng rate AelaltoM Ille genenit ~rat• ciert1falion •• not tn *' ••· Lot •7 emount of Mid Ot>lig.atton. ~
attar the undersigned cauMd Uld f>'IVlillng rett for hOlldey and ovef· of per diem wegea and trte general of pet diem W8.G"I end the G«*el eQIMCI br lhe c.t tying Offiettr or EXCEPT THEREFROM al Oii. get '"90f\8bly ..umated ..... ~
'ICTtflOUt aullNEH notic. of t>f'each and of etectlon lo tirn. worll. tn lhe locallty In wt11c;11 prevatllng rate tOf hOlldey end over· pr•vlllllnll rat• tor holklay and 0¥9!· other Off'icer or appficant ~0...0 mtnerell ano other hyOrocarbon•. ano ~ .. ot the Tn.ist•. at the
NAMa ITATIMENT be rec:orcs.d October 3, 1983 &I t"'-WOfll It 10 be performed, lor time work, In the loeallty In which time watk, In lhe loc:Mty In wNcn by HUD: Of (Ill) that applicant I en· below I Clepth of 500 teet wlthOUt tllnt of lnlti.I pi.ibtlcatlon of tNe NC).
file following per90nt .,. doing Instr No 83-•3S•8S of Offk:lal Re-each crel1 or type ol wortter Medecl 1,.,. wortt 11 10 bt perlorrneO. '°' tilt work It 10 be pwformed. for wonmertlel ~ record for IM the rigtlt of tut1~ .,try u ,.. hCt 11 512.4.45 it
t>ullnea .. c;ords lo lhe oltlct ol the ~def to exac:ut• ll'ttt Contract Tl\ele Heh e111t or 1ype ol .otker needed Md\ craft or type of .ortrM ntiedlid e>roiect endleaMe om1t1101'1 ol 1 ,.. Mf'V9d in treltVfNf\tl ol '11COfd Deted *r 21. 191A
SAFARI SAM s ., 11 Olive Str .. t of Orange County. rates •• on ttte In lhe DISTRICT to execule tile Conlract Tne. 10 M~ !tie ~ ThaM ~ °'°"°"· findtnO °' -~ ._ The 11....i ~ °' oti. com-NEWPORT HOM 1.0AN INC •
8MCtl CA 921148 S81<1 Nie "'" bt made. but Adm nillflllYI Ofl'lce 11at9d et>o¥e ret• .,. on ti .. In the otSTAICT rat .. .,. Ofl ,_ In ttl& DISTRICT pliCable to IN projeet In the .,,. mon deelgnellon of the r9ll prop. A C~ ~ Hu~:!.~~IM lnC . 404 t tth withOYt covenent °' .-rrantr. ex-Coptltl rnay oe Ot>taintd on ,.. Admtntllrehve Oftlee 11et9d el)olrie Admlni$Uel•.,.. OftlOa tteted eboW wonmental rftteW ptoci.a ObteC-eirty ,,., .. nabo.,.. o.tcrlbed 1• TNll•
Str .. t, Huntlnglon Beech. CA pr"' or tmpll&d, regetdlng lltlt quiet! A copy Of lheM t•tM thell CQpletmeytMIObllllnedon~t C~meybeobtWledonreq..,..1, tions muat tMI pr9'111'ed-"' .,.,. purpon9d to be. 240t No'M. New-By AEAl ESTATl SECVf'!TlES
j)OIMUlon. or encumbt1ntfl, to be Potl9d al the Pro~t Ill• A copy of lheM rat• lllall be poet· A copy ol ....._ rete& at\&11 be POii• iilltt9d "' aceoroanoe w.UI !tie ,.. pon e.c:n. CA. SERVtCE. 12r.,! DuaiMU 11 condUCt9d by e pey the remeln+ng Pflflcipal aum ot 2 11 lhell be m1ndelory ~ tl'ttt 9d at the Project Ille. ed et the Protect 1111 qulr9CI ~ ""°" l4CFA The uitdel lf9Md her.-,y d• 1 ~ ~aon • .._ AP"
COt"""'lliOn the not••> MCuted by aatd deed of !CONTRACTOR to wnom the Coo-2 11 lhell be rnanes.10ry ""°"'In. 2. n.,.. be mandatory uoon thtt Pw1 "75 of IM IWlm "9vu-dM'nS el llabllty kw~ inoomlCt 19eaQ 0 J ..,,... !ti~
..-.. Trust, with Inter-' U In said note ~reet It awarded. and""°" wry IUb-COHTRACTOf' to wtlOfft IN COn-CONTRACTOR to wtlOfft lhe Con-laUOM bind in ,_.,., ~ nea WI MIO ,,_ eddl.-Of °"* 2020 No1191 ·~ Ntie 20t
CNtl AMOclet•;: Pfovlcs.d edVenciea. 1' any. under contr.ctor under him, to pay not trect • eww<*S, and utM>n Wft eub-tr81C1 It ...,ded, Md "1POf\ tit'/.,.. **' APf'll 12. 1ta. Thee9 "90u-COIM'IOn ~IOn Sent• Ma. Ca t.270I f:':::.~· wu fll&d ~th 111tt the tsrrn101 NkS Deed of'""'· ......... than tNuald IPttellled ,., .. to c;ontrector uf1CStr him. to per not conct&e10t uftCter l!ift\. to per not 11_,. we~ In the OfnCe of ~ .... Wiii lMI mede wlthOUI T~ (?'4. IU-tl10
Or County on cti•rr.:· end ·~pen... o1 Iha ell worllmen ~ Cly them In .... then In& aa1c1 apectnecS rat.I to laM tMn tM Mi4 IP9Ci'*' rae. to IN~ Ooor41netot They,,_ wartatl\Y, ...-or lmj)tllld. ,.. PublllNd ()r.,. eo.. Deir
Countri Clefll of ano-Trut .. end of the trull• Ct .. ltd by the executlOn Of lM Conlrect all WOfllrMl'I ~~ ~ "*" In .. wcwtltMft ~ by """' In be .. .. • • • to lnWonmemel ~ ll p 11 IOlt, Of~ Ptk>t Juns 1s. IO. n . 1 ...
JUM 5• 1"' nieaa aaldo.cloffru&t O WITHDRAWAL Of BK> No lhe~lon .. tNContrKt t'-uacubonof"'9ConfrK't Clelf1Me0f"cler.U$ ~ ~loNI ---~W. W-0
c I Delly Seid ....... bt held on T~ bld4* may llflt~IW Na bid kw I 0 WITHOMWAI.. (JI llO: No 0 WtT'HOAAWAl. (JI llO "° °' ~ -"' ~ ~ ltlCI OI the NC* or oe. ~
PubliaMO Orange °"1 tt84 day. M 5, 1914. el 2 30 pm et IN -iOd of SIXTY (to) cta19 etter the Bidder m•J ~ lllt ..O tor e bidOif ,,_, wmictrew hit bid tOf e merit .. '2'00 WIW*e lo .... sd l• MCllll'td bJ .CS Deed ot TMli. WIVI
PllOIJUM20,af.Ju4)''. 1 ' W·Sf Cl\epmen A~ tnl~ to the daieMttOfti.°'*"'ngotbldt petlOdof$1lCTY(tOlo.pafttrtM ptrl0dol81XTY\t01deytafter'ttle ~.~IOOlf. ln..,_endotMr...,,..MPIOl'IOaO
Civic Center 9ulldlng. 300 Eut P. BONDS: A peymenl bOnd Met dtl• •• fOf ttw ~ng ot 111Mt8. cs.i. ... tor thlt Of*""9 of bids Obl&Cttona to HUO on IN,.._ thetttin, plul eovenoaa. It lf!W, winder
"8JC t«>nc£ Cl\epman A..,. • Orange. CA • ptrtorrn•nce bond WUI be ,.. p IOHOI A peymenl '*"' and , BONDS A .,.ymenl lllOnd Md °' Mm on beela other llWt tfloM ,,. ~ trier.of and rnwwt ~
At the lltne of the lnllltl pul:Jtl. q\M9d PflOt to .. llC\ltlOn. of lht 1 perfonn.noe DOfWS .. be ,. • l*'OrmMCe lllCINI .. Ille ,.. au..o In tr. ~ 1*1111'a()t\ IUCfl ldlllafic. end ,_,. ....
c:atlOl'I of Ihle notice. '"" total Conlrei;I II'° be In tilt torm qunO prW IO ""°"'*' .. die quHO . .,.... lO eaec""9ft of IN .. not be CICIM di .. bf HUD. No dlatft8. and ~ ot IN
tme)Utll of the~ balanet of the •t tortti In lhe Conttaet Qocu. Contrad ano eNI o. lfl • tiorm Conttact. Ind tf\&I tie "' tM """' Ob;eetton ,...._. .,.., NIJ 11. TNMee Ind of f'91"""9 .,...-. ~
otll!O•llOn eecured br th& •tMM""' "*''' ... tortti In .. COMl'ad Doc»-... tcwt!I '" tM Oontf9Ct C)ociu.. '*· .... OOl'l:lil •• ,.. Dy HUD Aid Deed • Tiwt TM tot.II
*11*1 d9ed of trust and Mllmattd o &U8$1TUTl!D SECURITIES mentt 1MntS , fted ~ amount ot Wd a~ll"'10ft. ~
coete. ,..,.,,._ and edvanc;ia& 1• Purtvenl lo hcllon 4590 of In& O SUBSTIJ'UTlO tl!CUfllT11 Q, SU88ftf\lft0 SlC\IMIE C111-....,..., Wtalltreettffl ........ cNf'Oe&
&12".64068 QowfM*lt Cod& Of the SUM of ..urw1 to ledloft....., ot the Pw1Ulant 10 &ectlOn '*of IN OfyotColuM91e .... ..,._oi1 ... r~.•h
Tiit total tndeb1.snw '*"II Ill Ceilfofnia. 1M Ccwtltlt1 wtll oonl• ~., ..... , c.. ot 111 .... or ~ C:.. ol tM "' 7'f Ff/II Df"4 *"to!_.., Pl~· ol.,. ,.._ 1~11an lhtope!WIOIM«lll ~,_1111li1Qtn&e.ecmr,. ~ n-.c-onn. .. ......., c111 ••lleOoidrKt ... contmft eo......-.~tata •• 1151
t9dmaybeot)ta!MdbyQll. to .-...Ute MQ.lltt ... fOr "'"""""'"' $ 'ul ptO'llllOlllPlf .... 'tlr'4tM&9'CI rtd ftl'lll nod°'*9CoMIOeirll'tol 0.0 ..... 4 , ...
(4 tl) tU ... 11 the dey ~ atty rnoneye ~ by lhe 01$-lllldCtar te> wb9tltul9 ~ fOt IMOCfler 10 ~-~ fol ...,. '° 111'4 MIDWUt FlNANCtAI. t!f'·
the aalt TAtCT 10 ~ pertorl'Ml\Cle ol th& f//IY l'llOMY9 -"tlhlld ~ h OIS-any l\'IOtllyt .m.Mld br tN 0.S. W.U VICO INC
O&ttld JUnt •• ,.... oontnct TAIC'T1o .... 1*1om.a•oflN TAJCT10--.nM1b1WIO&oltht • ~ 0111°'9COfpoiiilllOft.
SECUAITY SAVINGS MOMOAGE "AWllHltWGflle~Jor Coflllect Cclntract • f~
COAPORA TIC>f4 .IUnt u. , .... 'at l 00 A'* ... ... A.: Aw UWOUQft 111cl.w.d tor " A Walt1tW'oUgl't tuct. ... .. er MAL UTA Tl tEeUNTD
• a111G T•ua•• noc t1e aooeo•.o""" Contractors ,, , .... 'oo""' '"'1a Ntte ''· tM4, ••,....,., ,.. 1n .. x•pen•atn• E", By T 0 £IMC COMPAHY,llgel'lt not attendlnf c.11 l714) )90 Quni fOt ._to be waplllltl eel __,tor"* to M we c flllltl Clll "(I!\ II*\ til'f) no4 ~ • CtltOtN ~ ,._..
It Cl\fll Molin.. ~Mlltll S.C lotdM... 'M-3* ,..,_ In price: rHtoftabl•, (hlllO.I ~.111,••I ....
relery QOV MtlN080AR0 ~~Alhr ~~,..... ~~Ir_...,,~-. tteO N ClttlOfnla 8lvd Oorol!IY Hefvet ,..,_ ~:bir · P\lfetd)llr llCN9li9'1"' .. fllll lltlta Ml C. N10t TI ,,,....
WlinUt ~.CA M!tt4111 ~ bif QOV't1'MNG 10AJ11D GO'lf. IOARD .r ~ "' -J (1141 •O
• 1 4-M1 ~ 0!9"91 Coat o.lr No4 ~ OrW91 COMI Oilr "9t °""'" Coa ~ ,_ Ctuatfied A.cMWt ~ °""'91 COli!ll Olilr PUbllMd 0r91'19f C0MC Dlllt; June 1J 21 1914 An ~3 20 ,... »w ~. ttlt 842..s87ft JIN a. 1J , ... Not JUne tl 7(1,21. .... w... w.:u w. w .77
I " I
I I I
>1'. OOH >$.
.. ~-.OW· 1;.
~!
'400~~ ~10 ~WU tol5'.P L)N[)O ~.,.
QQ)~
16 OOftoJ~
TO~f b-~ •
GARFIELD
"t'OtJ NEEP A NAME, FELLA.
LETS SEE. •• WHAT PO YOV
NAM( A R088ER CMICt<EN?
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE
'f t1 . ~
I O ,: ; f I;
f .... i-: ....... ...,,....;__. __ _
_____ ,_._ "-" ~I" 1."'f -\.+"
)
by Jim Dav~
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
,.'° ~
"lie still, Borfy. Think of it as o nice massage." "No, I'm not In the m1rk1t tor my very own pellc1n
of happiness."
MARMt\DUKE by Brad Anderson
"I don't know about him being man 's best
friend ... but he's mine."
\ t l
I
BRIDCl
>~ ----
A RlJFF IN TIME
Both vulnerable. South d ala.
NOITII
•U
0 '10
OAU
•AQ853
WEST EAST
• KQJH • lot8
<:.) 108 'V'Q.lt
0 1'85 0 1017 ••u •.11012
SOUTH
+AU
~ AKSSJ
OQO
•14 The bidding:
S•dl Wett N~ Eut
I <:.J I • 2 + Pua
2 <:.J Pa11 3 <:::> Put
4 <:::> Pa11 Pa11 Pau'
Opening lead: King of •
We've never quite under·
SHOE
stood why anyone .t1ould
want to climb a mountain
simply "beeaUM It'• there."
C4!rtainly at the bridge table
you don't want to do any·
thing just because you can
-you need a toundtr reuon.
Normally, lS point.a opp<>-
site 10 will not produce a
game. However, when Wtst
announced poueaaioo of
m~t of the high card• with
hls overcall. North-South
could afford to be aggre11ive
in the auction-knowing the
location of the hl1h cards is a
boon to declarer in the play.
So Norlh·South pushed to
the limit and reached -the
heart game.
West' led the king of
spades, and declarer made
his first good technical play
by holding up the ace. West
WMAi'' A y -ntAT~ A ~aJ~,
Wf'AE~ ~'< M~t.£
-mfE.,Sl~I.. .
I\ \ _,
()V~l 1'~.JA\IU.1~ I~
H£AOf.O r<1CMT foR M~.
6AQ.(,l..f.'5 !JIM~ ~IN \
FOR BETl'ER OR FOR WORSE
~
FUNKY WINKEBBEt\N
~~~I'VE BEEN
~10~1'£~
mtA~ FOR 1ME BEACH &.U..£.>
SAND KICK!
MOO!\ MULLl~S T DR. SMOCK by Ferd & om Johnson --------~-----
CLEANING UP... ®
you CoULDN'T HP..Vc STR,AIGHT~NED · ~
UP YoUR ROOM ~
7H/S \::~~
QUICKLY •· .
PEA~UTS
WELL> P,ART
OF IT'S
N~,AT .
THIS I1V~
GOTTO
SEE ...
by Charles M. Schulz
SHE DOESt·fT
REMEM6ER BECAUSE
SHE WAS ASLEEP !
by Tom K. Ryan
SAY, MA'AM,
WHA1" PO YA
CAL.l-"fHOSe
1"1NY S11CKS
"fHA-r' HAVe A
U 'l-co-r-roN
eAU... ON
E:ACH lSNC'~
ROSE IS ROSE ----.. ...... -...
I fW~rH.'lJ~ ~O ~NEWS.~ ...
CHU LES
Go1EN
continued with a 1pade.
Declarer won the ace and
whed one hlrh trump. It
wu temptinr to ruff a 1pad
Immediately, but declarer
realiied that would produce
only nine trickt. unle11 etub1
divided S.S and the king wu
favorably located.
The ruff wu needed u an
entry to the table in cue
cluba broke 4-2. Declarer did
not draw a eecond trump. In·
stead. he LoOk the club
finesse. When the q11een
held , as expected, declarer
came back to hand with a
t rump and wu delighted
when both defenders follow
ed. A club to the ace was
followed by a club rurr. and
declarer's foreaighl was
rewarded when West dis·
carded on this trick.
o •••.
SHARIF
Now declarer pul h
spade rurt In dummy to JO<
UH u lhe utra tnll'y. H
rurted anOlher club to 11t Ii
the board'• long card In U
suit, croased back to tt
table with th• au t
diamonds and led dummy
remaining dub, on which t
discarded a diamond. Ea•
could tt0re his muter trum
whenever be felt IO ioeline.
but tNt and a diamond to I
with the spade trick they ha
already collected were all th
defenders were entitled to.
HtwdtJ"ei..•1te• .,....a...11c~o.. ............ , .. ~. .. w .... ()pe.a.s a.....
ie .. •US c. "Gwe• L ... •.
care •f tWe aew.,.,., P.CJ
Be1 259, Ntnrttd, N .J
07"8. Make t-'ecb ,ay.W
te New•,ape .........
by Jeff MacNell~
•
by Lynn Johnston -----.......... i-tiW'o 7bU u~ 10 BEIRPa:O
It-JONA ($fill}
by Tom Batluk
! (:J.£JS 1ME't> NEEDED~
E)(fERT !
1
6-20 l: Poue-r 1"HA-r, eu-r ,.,-POes
CONJURE: LJP
A cu-re
MeN"fAt-. PIC1"uRe.'
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
~ 8PD tiWS tS 'M
l'VS. f<XW
PASC¥W.£'S SIDS I
I
•
I
(
• f •
BB l&nd fraud loss in millions
'state, county, federal lawmen probe-
ftles of suspect held in giant scam -
BJ STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Olllr .........
Federal, state and city investiptors
from three different counties have
descended upon Huntington Beach to
sift throu&h boxes of seized docu-
Coast
Sisters tell jury their
murdered step-father
molested them./ A3
menu they think tell the story of a
multi-milhon dollar land scheme.
Eva P. Verner, the Mission Viejo
woman arrested in connection with
the alleged real estate scam, faces at
least 28 charges of sellina or tryi n& to
'Goof'
raises
_water
~·~·-'~. ~ # ~ ,. ~ •• :::' ,JRf ·1fl rates ·
caJlfomla
San Francisco-based
~'vi Strauss Is closing 11
of Its blue jean plants. I A4
• Nation
Hostile radio host Alan
Berg had warning prior to
his death ./D4
Florida man goes to elec-
tric chair saying he didn't
kill clerk./ A4
World ..
Saudi Arabian pilots told
to 'shoot on sight' any
aircraft In air space./ AS
Home
The bugs are coming I The
bugs are coming I Protect
your house and pets with
Insecticides.JIM
Build a gazebo party
center for the patio and
keep guests outdoors
this summer ./84
Sporta
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
qualified for the U.S.
Olympic team with a sec-
ond-place finish In the
800 meters./81
Councilman hits
'wrong button•
but vote stands
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Olllr .........
Huntington Beach residenu soon
will be paying about a 30 perccqt
increase on their bimonthly water
bills and some citizens say they are
finding the hike pretty hard to
swallow.
City Council officials, noting that
there has been no water rate increase
for seven years, approved the price
hike 5-2 -the bare majority for a
revenue-raisi~ issue.
But immediately after the vote,
Councilman John Thomas said he
pushed the wrong button and that he
opposed the ordinance.
Thomas, in requestina a new vote,
said: .. I messed up, I accidentally
voted wrona. I'd rather see us vote
increases as we need and not give the
city (staff) an open check to raise it as
they want." ·
But the rest of the City Council
members refused to ~ &Jona on a
second vote, promptana a protest
from local government watcher St.an
Cohen who said today .. that tax-
payers have to assume the increase of
our water rates due to the lack of
conscience of the City Council."
"Are the people of Huntington
Beach's future to be governed by the
'fickle finger of fat.e' that m~be used
to press the wrong-button?'' e asked.
Mayor Jack K.elfy, an council
members Ron Pattinson, Ruth Bajley
anlt-OOn MacAUistcr-voted to in-
crease the water bills on an urgency
basis (taking place immediately)
along with Thomas. Ruth Finley and
Bob Mandie voted against the in-
crease.
Finley said today she's not against
in~ngJ!le water bill for a tvoical
(Pleue eee WATER/ A.2)
sell propeny that didn't belong to her
without the owner's knowledge.
Verner, 39, was scheduled to be
a.rrai~ed today in West 0ranae
Municipal Court but police said the
case has arown so rapidly they are
unsure how many charges ultimately
will be filed against the woman.
.. It's a very tjme-consumio& pro-
CC$S,," conceded Huntington Beach
Lt.Jim Walktt. "Each agency literally
Bridling the gap
has to hand search each of the tile
cabinets and there's 2S of them.
.. We have everyone from the feds
to out-of-state people aoina through
the stufl: .. Walka said ... The cue is
goina in a lot of directions. ..
Verner, who reportedly &<>CS by
more than a dozen aliases. ~
l.n'C$ted late last ~k by Hunlinaton
police who'd been tipped that the
woman was sell1na a piece of property
witbOul the owner's pemussaon or
know~ .
The vacant piece of property Moat
downtown Huntiniton was in exrow
by the time the actual owner cauaht
on, investipton said.
The woman i'eponedly bad found a
buyer for the land by advertisina it for
a low price and then attemp.ed to
comPlete the deal, with a f<>f'Fd land deed. ·Police did · not identify the
Comtractlon worker Kmn Doclrbam
poan collCl"de for the new foar-lane Birch
Street brlqe wblcll wW apan the a -
tension of tile Corona del llar raeeway.
DOW -der COD8buctlcm tiaroap C...
lleea aad Newport S.cla.
landOwner wbo Dey deiCi illlW ...
wdJ.bowa citiza wbo ,,.... land
.. aUoverH ........ ~"
At tbe time of the arrest. detectives
indicaled tlae calt ... oa1y die~ of
the iicebera .. and antici~ Ge aee
would mushroom as other 18w ea-
fon:emcnc aeencies combCd tbe 1a1-
ed documnts.
Wiilkcr said the fiJe catneats -
~-P'aAUD/A2)
Brass
Marine general says
he'll investigate
options to kill site
BJ ANDllEA ADEUON °' ..............
A Marioe Corps aeoeral ,PmmitCd
this 'ftUk to .. investipte all iveaues
available.. to remove the lrviDC
Medical C.enter &om its site in cast
Irvine.
Maj. Gen. RicbarcLL. c.ooke,
oommandina s=eraI of the Marine
Corps Air Station in FJ Toro, and a ~~~~~~
latest anack in a fturry of letten to a
local oonpasman. supervilors and
the Irvine City Council.
No specific avenues of appeal were
outlined. El Toro ..,..,.r_ ... Master
Set. Jack Mi~ did say
~ 10 the Slate health .. niQa
aecDCY and to Gov. Gcorile [)eu.
(Plwaa .. B08PITAL/A2)
Irvine schocils
set to control
open campus
BJ ANDREA ADELSON °' .............. '
Before students are allowed to
resister for classes next year at
lrvioc's high schools, they will be
required to return a permission &lip si&ned by their parents which sa
thCy .are allowed to leave ICbool ~
lunch.
The mandatory permission slip
process is one of four ideas Irvine
school district ~~ to (Pleue.. /A2)
It was a bad night again
for the Dodgers and
Angels, as each were
handed defeats./81
Ex-Mesa cop's sex charge& cut to 3
Bruce Ibbetson, a prod-
uct of UC Irvine, has been
named to the United
States Olympic rowing
team./82
Entertainment
The Saddleback Com-
pany Theater gets sum-
mer stock season on the
boards with Nell Simon's
"Barefoot In the Park."
/85
Buslneu
Construction Is under
way on the Five Points
Center In Huntington
Beach./AI.
«-:·:·:-:,.:-: .. -.:.:.:·:-.:-:·:-:~·=-:·:-:·:·:.:·:-:-:-:-:.:~:,-.: •
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A3
A8, A10
A4
01-3 oe
03
04
C1-10
84-s
02
85
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A4
A.7
84
A3
04-a
81-3
A8 ee
85-e
A.2
A4
Woman who claimed officer tried to rape her
now appears unwilling to testify In court
William Laacblan
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Olllr,.......,
A Costa Mesa apartment manager
who claimed former policeman Wil-
liam Lauchlan tried to rape her now
reportedly is unwilling to testify in
court.
The apartment manager was one of
four women who claimed they were
sexually assaulted by~ the former
Costa Mesa police officer when he
Bookseller not
ending era, just
turning a page
CreeJey's Bookstore wasn't the kind of bookstore where .. Jane Eyre"
and .. Ulyaes .. would be crowded on a
baCk: shelf with the rest of the classics.
in between psycbolOI)' and pr-
den!n4-Chris Creeley wouldn't do that.
You ..-oukt find t.bc clUaics riabt up
in front, for all the world to tee. riabt
a1onpide collectors' books on an.
history, enaineerina and pbilolopby. It was the kind of place Ytberc the
lates1 paperbect bestlellm -fad
diet books and ~movie novdiza-
tiou -didn't euctly dominate
uJes.
to ~ '"The Ri11 and Fall of the Roman Etnpire" wa1 ofte ol the
atore•a biaelt money makm.. And. in
cue you haven't noticed. it bun't
been on the belt teller list for a Iona
wbile.
Creeley'• Ml the kind of' pla¢C
where bookworml ud book collec:-
ton plbcred to 1wap teereU about
where to find antique books or JPC(iat
Kuti
KL£11
P fOPll IN lHI NH\\
ediuons Ud Chatted aboUt wbat out·
of-pnnt nwnascript coWd be uackcid
down and •here.
-Ctte)ey's wu all about Chri
Creeley, a foUnh..,enentioo book· teller and the store's o~ ud ma...,. for 12 yean.
And thetc's that word '@in:
'Tblt'a becautc Cn:dcy's BOokstore
is put ten.le -fallen tile the RomaD
Empltt 1taclf.
Cbnt ley ha a new job now,
(Pl8ue w 800KUI '·U/.U)
•
was on duty and in uniform.
The woman had alleged l.auchlan
arrived at her apartment last year
after she phoned police and com-
plained about noisy tenants. The
manager sajd the officer refused to
leave, grabbed her and started to take
off his pants.
Deputy District Attorney Carl
Armbrust said the woman's decision
not to testify is moot.. however,
because a Superior Court judge ruled
..
Friday there was insufficient
evidence to support the felony charse.
During a preliminary bearillJ last
March, a Municipal Court JU<i&c
reduced the attempted rape charge to
a misdemeanor assault and battery.
A more serious blow was dealt to
the prosecution last March when a
judge ruled that a Fountain Valley
woman was not believable when she
testified that Laucblan raped her in
the front seat of his patrol car.
The most recent tum of events
leaves Lauchlan. 33, faang only thrtt
sCx charges -I misdemeanor and
two fclorues. Originally, be faced 12
c~e four women who filed
complaints against the ex-officer,
only two will testify io his Superior
Court trial.
The trial is expected to beain this
month and was scheduled to be
assagnc:d a couhroom today.
Tcstifyina against the former pa-
trolman will be a Santa Ana woman
who allqes Lauchlan assaulted her
and held hCT prisoner foUowina a
traffic stop and a Costa Mesa woman
who charges Lauch.lan assaulted bet
and grabbed hu breasts.
I
)
:U• OtMoe COUl DAIL y PILOT /Wtdneeday, June 20, 1884
Jet crash victim identified
A NaV)' pilot bllcd Monday on
Sarita C..tahna lsland 10 the cruh of
..-bat an official called "the Mfest new
plane that'a ever ~n introduced"
WIS identifttld IS Lt. Cmdr. James R. ~ytr, 1 mlliW')' ~man
The fA·l8 had been practicina
camer landinas on a San Clemente
Island aintrip, 25 miles south of
Catalina.
Brodenaeyer, 37, was found
outside the plane tn area near Whites
Land.in& on the southeut pan of the
island.
Bro<Stnseyer. wbo was aiaUoned at
L.cmoore. is W"Yived b)' bl1 •ife in
Sprinsfield, Va. and h11 parcnta an
Moundsville, W.Va., accordina to a
spokesman at Lem~ NaVal Air
Station where the pilot ws bued.
The $22 million McDonnell
OouaJas-made FA·l8 bad taken off
fiom Lemoore Naval Air Station in
the San Joquin Valley. It diaappearcd
fiom a Navy radar screen at 10:54
p.m. Monday, said Lemoore com-
munitv .-fTair~ officer Dennis
McGrath.
McGrath said thecau.eoftbecrath
was 001 known. Nor <lid ~ know if
the plane was supposied to be flyina
over Catalina or bad strayed there
from Sin Oemente.
McGrath sud the twin-tailed Jet
from the fighter squadron nicknamed
the Wildcats, was "the safest new
plane lhat'1 ever been introduced/'
The plane was not canyina any
bombs, mmiles or other ordnance,
said McGrath.
!HOSPITAL REMOVAL VOWED •••
FrolaAl
• kmCJian are contemplated.
• Cooke formally asked Irvine to
reconsider the site of the $64 million
state-approved hospital Monday.
That salvo landed after city officials
cbar&ed Marine pilots bad "buzzed"
400 picnickers attending the hospital
&roundbrcakina on June 9, which
they contend shows that Marines arc
vlolatina flight agreements.
There is no present means to
reverse decisions made in December
over the 1 S-acre site at Sand Canyon
' and Barranca road&, Assistant City
Manqer Paul Brady said Tuesday.
However, Cooke's threat was eno"'8h
for the city attorney to start in-
vestigating the threat, be aid.
Even if the general is suc::cessful in tt --. .
m i Si~ rrvfoe . PrCsi nt
Tom Nielsen said that will not chanac
plans for a surrouodina 340-acre
biomedical/science park.
.. That will occur whether there is a
hospital there or not," Nielsen said.
He added, however, that the in-
tensity of development planned
within Irvine Center may change as a
consequence of the fallout stirred
over the buzzing incident.
Nielsen said be learned recently
that Marine jets during carrier land-
ing practice are actually flyina shorter
approach patterns than that de-
scribed in military studiesi which is
used as a road map for future
development.
The result. said Nielsen, is that the
most southerly crash zone at the end
of the most heavily used El Toro
runway in reality covers the apex of
the Golden Triangle, formed by the
crossingofthe Laguna, San Diego and
Santa Ana freeways.
mission "don't pose a threat.'\
Gen. Cooke maintains "nothlni'
out of the ordinary occurred on June
9," Michalski said ..
Nielsen said be saw three A-4
Skybawks with landing gear and flaps
up and afterburners ~owing. He
speculated they weren t usina the
normal carrier landing runway, but
one that runs perpendicular to the
coastline and used occasionaUy when
prevailing winds shift.
Nielsen said the Irvine Co. and the
Marine Corps have already neao-
tiated over height limits on hotels WATER
planned in the area. • • • ~lh.t..buzziof: ·nc· ~ ;~Ai--, -· .... ~ ..... 1-,. •
m.ent to ban dry-land earner practice · am11r&-si=~S<no 116:1i . a~ El Toro. They a!J.CSC Marine jets two months, but opposed provuions
vtolated qrec:d to flight paths when allowing future automatic increases
they tlew over the hospital site. The when the city encounters increases in
middle of the fliabt path is dead over costs for providing water.
the Irvine Country Store, oonb of the There also was opposition from
hospital on Sand Canyon Road. another quarter. Former City Coun-
"From my observation," said cilmanClancr Yoderclaimedthatifa
Nielsen, a former assistant secretary state proposition is approved by
to the Air Force who attended the voters in November, the city will
l)icnic two week,$ aao. practice have to return the additional water
charges to consumers plus 13 pen:ent
interest.
. FRAUD CHARGES ••• He also accused Mar,or Kelly of
enaaiing in .. double talk 'for rcquest-
ina the council reconsider the water
bill but failing to second the motion
by Thomas for another vote.
From Al
found in the woman's home -
indicate the alleged land scam dates
back at lea.st to 1979. Most of the
documents contained in the file
drawers are land deeds from Orange
and Los Angeles counties through
they arc some from San Diego County
too, be said.
Verner, Walker said, apparently
passed herself off as being a represen-
tative of at least seven different
financial. real estate or insurance
firms. Police said the woman has City officials say that the water bill
official.looking stamps and seals increases arc not a tax or a fee but a
from the institutions. cost for a commodity and theref()re
AJTCStiog officers also confiscated are not subject to cutbacks in the state
about S 1 S,000 in cash and a bank pass proposition written by tax crusader
book from the woman's home. The Howard Jarvis.
pass book showed "substantial" de-The water biU increase controversy
posits bad recently been made, police came as City Council members voted
said. Monday night"to adopt a general fund
Verner is bein• held on SSO,OOO budiet of $59.5 that projects a 3.5 bail. " milhon surplus at the end of next
year.
BOOKSELLER TURNS THE PAGE •••
From Al
m.ana1er of Coastline Community
CoUqe's new student bookstore in
Fountain Valley.
What used to be Crecley's bas been
spruced up, cleaned out and renamed:
the 270 E. 17th St. storefiont in Costa
Mesa is now Etc. Books, owned and
man•acd by Carolyn Cockerill of
Newport Beach.
What used to be Crecley's is part of
a dyina breed; namely, the neigh-
borhood bookstore owned by a book
lover who tracked down rare and out-
of-print books with the tenacity of a
bulldot worrying over a soup bone,
just for the love of it all.
Crecley's customers were sort of
like Creeley -they were people who
wanted to read about thi.np.
.. A typical customer wu the man
who'd worked all bis life, was lucky
eno\U to retire at S8 or so and could
tinaify satisfy his curiosity about the
War of l81l or Roman history or
enaineering," Creeley said.
tcr is at Rizzoli's Book Store an the
South Coast Plaza Mall, lcamina the
book business from another teacher,
Creeley said.
"Books arc a basic family culture
for us -we arc always reading books
and discussiDf books in the house. It
gets to the poant sometimes where it
drives my wife crazy. She tries to
clean up and we all tell her not to
touch the books !yin& around half
open for fear she'll lose our place."
Readers or not, thouah. Creeley
said be doesn't know if the Creeley
family will tum out a fifth1eneration
bookseller.
As the bookstores go, so go the
bookscllen, be said.
The chance to find a small, indi-
vidually owned boolcstore is fast
disappearing, Creeley said.
"The Santa Ana Bookstore, over in
downtown Santa Ana, bas gone out of
business in the last 24 months or so. It
was bouaht oui by another owner,
who moved it a couple of blocks and
basically turned it mto a stationery
store. It used to be the bigest, sinale-
best bookstore in the county.
where to send them now," Creeley
lamented.
And yet be doesn't preach about the
decline of Western civilization and
predict the downfall of the current
aeneration due to lack of readers.
"There will always be devoted
readers. When we first opened we
heard all sons of gloom and doom
about bow television was aoina to be
the end of readin&." Creeley ex-
pla.ined.
But industry studies recently done
showed that television spurred
people to read rather than dis-
couraged them.
"The aeneration reared on TV is bccomina more of a book reading
generation than ever," be said, adding
that of his five children -all TV kids
-two arc voracious rcaden and the
other three read leu noticeably but
still read in greater volume than be
did at their qc.
And yet, the bOokstorc "essentially
began to get to be no cballenae
anymore. My input into the store was
declioina." Creeley said. "It became
apparent that it needed new, fresh,
enthusiastic ideas."
Sunny and warmer days ahead
TlcJea
TOOAY 4 1\9111
10.17 p"'
TNUMDAY
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Liii nuw.y Md*-~ II 1·0I pm.
Emended
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'1' SuRF REPORT
-----
-... liM!ll--~·~----.....-~--....---------
DOGF1oeTsas VAKD IN JAR, •••
.... .&1
CAMPUS CONTROL SOUGHT •••
From Al
consider Tuesday before adoptini a
revised open campus policy with
tighter rules.
The old standard has been a source
of controversy since 10 University
High students were inJurcd Feb. 21
during an off-ampus. noontime traf-
fic accident. Only two bad permission
to leave.
Trustees said they expect to adopt a
policy by Julr 2. It will tentatively
include a cal for a mailing of the
permission slip to the district's S,000
high school students and a letter
explaining the policy, tougher (but as
yet unspecified) penalities for viol-
ators and a sunset provision for
annual review.
In .add~tio~. tr:ustecs said they will
consider inst1tuun1 a parking permit
sy~tem and may seek clearer legis-
!auon over distnct liability in allow-
ing students to leave school.
Sue Dahlgren, mother of the youth
most critically injured in the Febru-
ary incident. pr11sed trustees' efforts
after the 9()..minutc discussion.
''I think they're tryins. Before this
happened, no one was doing any-
thing," she satd.
"f never asked them to close the
campus," Dahl&rcn pointed out. "I
just wanted to make cenain that 10
kids don't ever get in a truck again."
Her soni John, who spent weeks in
a hospita critical care unit near
death. is m~na a strona recovery.
But he will have to ~peal bis
sophomore year.
The Oablpcns and the parents of
Amy Vatde% filed claims totalinaS4. I
mil.lion apjnst the district. allqing
lrvme schools were neali&cnt in
allowing students to leave durina
lunch.
Trustees' recommendations fol-
lowed a month-Iona series of bearings
conducted by a committee appointed
to review the policy. The panel
recommended kecpina school pta
open.
"The accident brou.abt into the
limeliJ)lt the fact that a policy we
thouf!tt we had wun't workin& very
well.• board member GQtdon
Gctchel said. "I don't think any
poli~ would have prevented the
accident," he added.
The committee repon found that
parents who were concerned over
safety favored closin& campuses.
Students viewed closinas u llnjust
punishment.
The report also pointed out undet
present state codes, school districu
with open campuses are .. beld harm-
less" when student accidents occur
off campus. By closing the campus, a
district i.acrcues the potential for
liabjlity, the report said.
The committee concluded the cfD..
trict has insufficient funds to P9Y for
people to adequately enforce a cloted
system.
Woman raped outside Mesa bar
A 35-year-old Westminster woman
told Costa Mesa police she was held in
her car outside a Harbor Boulevard
bar and raped early Tuesday morn-
ing, police said.
The woman, who wu treated and
released from a local hospital, said
two men approached her aa the left
the Kona Lanes bowlina alley and
raped her repeatedly. a police spokes-
man said. •
The men were delcribed u
Caucasian. one about ..O _~ean old
and the other in his mid·30s.
"rd recommend a book on a
certain subject, and then before long
he'd be back and looking for some-
thina else on the same topic. That's
where my unique pleasure came in -
directing people from book to book.
watching them whet their appetites
and them come back for more and
more."
"We'll see more of those declines."
The stronaest discouraaement to
the independent bookseller is not the
competition posed by larae, chain-
ownersbi'1 bookstores, but the rapid-
ly cscalaung cost of land and build-
ings, Creeley said.
When C!J)portunity knocked, in the
form of Coastline Community Col-
leae officialsaskina him to take over
the bookstore manager's job, be nr.;;;~~~======:~fijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiili answered. "There's a great deal of
.·
,.
Creeley detcribcs himself as a
dilenante. a "dabbler in the arts" by
dictionary definition.
He's also descended from a line of
used and rare-book dealers that goes
back to bis great-gandfather.
His father, Dunster Creeley, esta~ lisbed the first student bookstore at Oranae Coast Colleae in 1949 and his
mother, Vifainia, ran it until the
mid-19SOs.
Cbris Creeley and bis wife, Judy,
opened their own store, on I 7th·
Street, in Auaust 1961 with his folks' help~= be brou&ht his five children
up · the hardbacks amona the
ab.elves.
Now, bis next-to-younaest dau&h-
Just Call
642-6086
"Over the last eight to I 0 years we
were in business, our rent tripled," he
said.
But the book busmess is not a bigh-
volume trade and it is conducted on a
leaner profit margin than most retail
businesses.
"The economy is chanpng to the
detriment of small businesses -the
cost of living. land, pa.ricing and
voundskecpinJ. You have to have ID
unmeosc sum of capital to keep one
aoina." Creeley said.
The people that suffer most when
the old bookstores close down arc the
collectors. be said. "I don't know
potential, and a pat!icularly imeon-
ant place to play tn the community.
"And it's more fun than a new
horse, trying to meet this school's
procress and arowth -its needs arc
particularly strong right now."
So Creeley doesn't lament -he
looks ahead, and be keeps on rcadina.
especially bis favorite author. Loren
Eisley.
"He satisfies me most. He de-
scribed his father as a drunken
Nebraska sod buster and
Shakespearean poet and bis mother
at 1 deaf mute. He was truly a
Rennaissance man - a star with
callouses on bis hands."
A man sort oflike Creeley.
Wbat do you like abo11 tbt Dally Piiot? Wut don't you like? Call tbe
number at left ud your me11a1e wUI be recorded, •ruscrtbed and 4ellvered
to &Ile appropriate e4Uor.
Tiie ume u.eiour u1wer1Ja11ervlee may be ased to record letters to "e
editor on uy topic. Coetrtb•&or1 &o Hr Letters c:oJama mut lncllNle tltelr
ume aacl telepboae numt.er for vertflc:alloa. No clrcabtton calls, plea
Tell at wluat'• on )'Hr mt.cl.
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilll
ClrcuMtton 714/M24m
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Publisher
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EdltOf' and Asalstanr Controtler
to the P\.tbl1Sher
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VOL 77, NO. 171
. /
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certilled Gemolopt, ACS
THE PEARL
Jun•'• Bl.rt.J...tone
The ~r1 began u an llCC&dent of
nature. ft became luch a eought·
after accident that man began
tampering With nature to make the
accident a planned ev.nt. ACJcord·
Ing to an Old Arab legend, PMl'I• W9re formed when moonlit «*¥-
drope fell Into the ... and were
IWaaow.d by oy91 ..... Fact 11, natu·
flil ~ are formed when ~ Qraln
of-"' or other ln'ttant get•~
lnlkM an oyeter, mu.-or clam. To
protec:t ltl lnner tluue, the molNak
Meret• a ftutd, which ha.relent
atound the lnttlnt. ~ of tNI
fluid, C*d "NION" add to thie
eteedy growth of What bec:omee •
pewt. Now, ''CUitured'' pem1a ...
produced by~ placing. tlnY
round bMd Into a~. Which le
kept In contro .. td poOte. TMM
poota. autte lttereU)', become peert
"fatmt.1' At the proper time, the PMl'I whk:h hu f°'"*9 tWoiUnd the
heed I• tlken from the mcilluak.
Culturtd PMrl• .,. ""' • ,.., •
neturel peatta. The ~ dlf".a • ioe
" the tMthod by which the fnoluak
le Induced to tonn the P*t. For
thoel of you bom In June. .. peat1 can now be cee1bf1Md, nOI • 1n
ICC6dent, but ... mtf9d9 °' the ....
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So is
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,IY.:JM;MI_/
f 1111111111
rau ·ar oun
e
ID
Coast
Sisters tell jury their
murdered step-father
molested them. / A3
Orange County Grand
Jury wants treatment
center for troubled chil-
dren./ AS
. e ass1ve
Games
to bring
yachts
to (Coast
'
a .n sea
Viejo woman he
aslawmen probe
suspect' s files
By STEVE MARBLE
or .. o..,,... ....
;
Federal, 1tate and cuy in"~IOll
from three djfferent counbe$ MW
descended upon HutrtiQllOft lltadalO
sift through boxes of ICized -.
ments th9 think tcU the story ol a
multi-million dollar land .cllaM.
~ ...... ~iJ~t.=~~~--..·.~-~·~-"'-~ Eva P. Verner, the Million V. . ,. . . . woman
California
San Francisco-based
Levi Strauss is closing 11
of Its blue jean plants. / A4
Nation
Hostile radio host Alan
Berg had warning prior to
his death./04
Florida man goes to elec-
tric chair saying he dldn 't
kill clerk./ A4
World
Saudi Arabian pilots told
to 'shoot on sight' any
aircraft In air space./ AS
Home
The bugs are coming I The
bugs are coming I Protect
your house and pets with
lnaectlcldes./84
Build a gazebo party
center for the patio and
keep guests outdoors
this summer ./84
Sports
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
quaJlfled for the U.S.
Olympic team with a sec-
ond-place f lnlsh in the
800 meters./81
It was a bad night again
for the Dodgers and
Angels, as each were
handed defeats./81
Bruce Ibbetson, a prod-
uct of UC Irvine, has been
named to the United
States Olympic rowing
team./82
Entertainment
The Saddleback Com-
pany Theater gets sum-
mer stock season on the
bf>ards with Nell Simon's
"Barefoot In the Park."
/85
Buslne88
Construction Is under
way on the Five Points
Center In Huntington
Beach.I Al.
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
eu.tneu
CaNfomla New8
Ctallfled
Corniel
Croaword
DMthNotlca
Food
Home
Hotoeoope
Ann Landefl
Mutu.I Fund1
National Newa
~ ,, ............. ..i
08
A3
A8, A10
A4
01-3
08
03
CM
C1-10
EM-5
02
85
A8
A4
A7
84
A3
()4:.S
81.:3
A9
Be BM
A2
A-4
LA Harbor during
summer competition
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
0.-, ..............
Newport Harbor is ~i~·ly to be
awash with cruising boats during the
two weeks of the Olympic Yachting
Games ..
That likely will be the major impact
of the Olympics on Newport Harbor,
said Lido JsJe's Ted Hinshaw, the
Olympics yachting commissioner.
Hinshaw, speaking this morning
before the Marine Division of the
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, said cruising yachts will stay as
far away from the crowsied Long
Beach-Los Angel~ Harbor complex
as possible, not only because of the
difficulty of secunng benhina or
mooring, but because of the tight
security which will be imposed on the
area.
The support personnel of the
Yachting Olympics aJone will in-
volve about 1.400 people, most of
whom arc volunteers, said Hinshaw.
In addition to the support craft, there
will be 180 small craft from 58
countries racing in the Olympic
Yachting Games. a record. said
Hinshaw.
As many as 5,000 spectator boats
are expected to line the perimeters of
the four racing courses, he said.
More than 90 Coast Guard craft,
ranging from inflatable runabouts to
400-foot Iona vessels. will have the
task of keeping the courses clear for
the racers, as well as provide security
for the Los Angeles-Long Beach
Harbor.
Regarding the yachting competi-
tion, J.linshaw said the United States
is fielding a strong yachting team with
medals possible in six of the seven
classes.
Bridging the gap.
Most hkely gold medaJ winners arc
Randy Smyth of Huntington Beach an
the Tornado catamaran class and
Robbie Haines of San Diego in the
Soling Class.
The Tornado is a 20.foot two-man
(Pleue eee YACHTS/ A2)
Conatracdon worker Knin Dockham
poun cement for tbe new foa.r-lane Btrcb
Street brlqe which wtll apm the cm-
tenaton of the Corona del llar P'reewa1.
now ander coaatnlctlon tJlroa&h Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
Now they're both in the doghouse
County ud e jails divorced couple after
court ff ht over custody of pet pooch
BJ the Anoclated Preea
A case of puppy love has sent a
divorced Orange County couple to
jail for contempt of court In a
canine custody clash.
"I give you both very low marks
as human beings," Orange County
Superior Court Judge John Wool-
ley said Tuesday as he sentenced
the pair for contempt. "I would be
extremely embarrassed If I were
both of you."
Woolley ruled that Judi G .
Sullivan, 31, of Anadark, Okla., and
RonaJd Rex Wheatland. 34. of
Bookseller not
ending era, just
turning a page
Crecley's Bookstore wasn't the
kind of bookstore where ••Jane Eyre"
and "Ulysses .. would be crowded on a
back sbclfwitb the rest of the classics,
in between psycholOI)' and pr-
den~
Chris Creeley wouldn'' do that.
You would find tbeclassicsnabt up
in front, for all tbe world to see, riabt
alonp1de collecton' books on an.
hi1tory, cnamemna and philosophy.
It was the kind of place where the
latest papcrbeck bcstsellen -fad
diet books and pop.movie novchza-
• tions -wdn•t eUctly dominate
sales.
In fact, .. The Rise and Fall of the
Roman Empire" was one of the
nore's bigest money makcn. And. in c:uc you haven't noti«d, it basn•t
been on the bctl sclltr ta t for 1 Iona
while.
Crttley' wu the kind of place
wbere bookworms and b66k coll«·
ton pthcrcd to swap 1eettu aboUt
Where 10 ftnd anttque boob or special
'
KAREN
KLEIN
editions and chatted about what out-
of-print manuscnpt could be tracked
down and •htte.
Crttlcy's wu all about Chris
Crectey, a founh"tCncration book-
tclltr ud the store's OYtDa and
~for 22 )ttr1. • •
And there's that word ep.iD: was.
That's bealute C'Tttlcy's Bookstore
i past tense -fallen like the Roman
Empire 1ttc.lf.
Oln C'rttltyha a nc joboow.as
(P ....... 800KULL&•/A9)
Huntington Harbour, violated his
order to share custody of t~r
three-year-old mongrel cockapoo,
Runaway, on alternate months and
to keep the dog out of harm's way.
Wheatland will serve one day of a
ftve-day sentence In county jail,
and Sulllvan will spend two days of
a 20-day sentence.
Woolley aJso ordered the woman
to give Runaway to Wheatland by
noon June 27.
The judge scolded the couple for
carrying on t~r dogfight In court
for more than year, saying the
Judicial system ls a "tremendous
expense to taxpayers" and their
attlude was "emotk>naJ and Im-
mature."
The judge ruled in September
that Runaway, which he had vaJued
at about $25. was a "child
substitute" for the childless cou-
(Pleue eee DOGFIGHT/ A2)
General
begins ·
hospital
attack
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of .. ~ .......
A Mari DC Corps ICtlCTal prolnited
this v.uk to .. iovesttptc au avenues
available"' to remove the livine
Medical Center from its site in cast
Irvine. --.
MaJ. Gen. R.tdtard L Cooke,
commanding ~aera.J of the Marine
Corps Air Stauon in EJ Toro, and a
steadfast opponent of the si&e chosen
for the 177-bed hospital. lobbed bis
latest an.adc an a Ourry o!Jetters to a
local co~. supeoison and
the ltvine City Counol.
No specific avenues of appeal were
outlined. El Toro spok~ Master
Sgt. Jack M1chalskJ said. He did say
leners to the state health plannu11
agency and to Gov. George Deu-
kmejian arc contemplated.
Cooke formally asked Irvine to
reconsider the site of the $64 milbon
st.ate-approved hospital M~nday.
That saJvo landed after city offiaals
charged Marine pilots bad .. buzzed"
400 picnickers attending the hosl)ital
groundbreahng on June 9, which
the)' contend shows that Marines are
.(Pleue eee BOSPIT AL/ A2)
Ex-Mesa
cop's sex
raps now
total 3
I WEATHCR
1--~ --.
HOSPITAL REMOVAL ••.
Prom Al Sunny and '.Warmer dayS ahead
vaalatioa ffi&ht alJ'CCmcnts. Thc:r~ as no present means to
reverte decisions made in December
over the I s-acr-c sale at Sand Canyon
and Barranca roads. Assistant Caty
Mana&er Paul Brady s~ud TuCMlay
However, Cooke's threat was enough
for the cny auomey to start tn·
vcstiptina the threat, he said.
Even if the general is successful 1n
pushina the lonJ·SO\llhl hospital
from its site. lrvmc Co. President
Tom Nielsen said that wtll not chan&c
plans for a surrounding 340-.acrt
biomedical/science i>ark.
"Thal will occur whether there is a
hospital there or not," Nielsen said.
' He add~. however, that the an·
lcn aty of development planned
within Irvi•C.Cntcr may change as a
consequcncl"' of the fallout stirred
over the buzzing incident.
Nielsen said he learned recently
that Manne Jets dunna carrier land·
ing practice arc actually Oyina shoncr
approach patterns than that de-
scribed in military studiesi which •
uted u a road map tor futute
development.
The result, said Nielsen, as that the
most southerly crash ione at the end
of the most heavily used El Toro
runway in reality coven the ape~ of
the Golden Trian&le. formed by the
crossinaofthe Laaun.a, Sao Diqoand
Santa Ana freeways.
Nielsen sa1d the lrvme Co. and the
Marine Corps have already neg~
tiated over height limits on hotels
planned in the area.
After the buzzing mcadent, the City
of Irvine asked the Defense Depart·
menc to ban dry-land carrier practice
at El Toro. They allege Marine jets
violated asreed to fltiht paths wheo
they flew over the h0$pital titc. The
middle of the tliJht J)Ath it dead over thcJni~ Country Store. Qorth of lhc
hospital on Sand Canyon Road.
.. From my ob$ervauon." said
Nielsen, a former a sistant secteW')'
to the Air Force who attended the
picnic two weeks aao. praetiot
missions "don•t pose a thrcmt."
Gen. Cooke mamtams "nothing
out of the ordinary occurred on June
9." Michalski said.
Nielsen said he saw three A-4
SkyhawJcs with landing gear and flaps
up and afterburners f.1owing. He
speculated they wcrcn t using the
normal camer landina runway. but
one that runs perpendicular to the
coastline and used occasionally wben
prevailing wmds shift.
FRAUD CHARGES MOUNTING •••
From Al
Tides
TOOAY
'a11m
10:STpm ' 1 u
TMUMDAY 3:Hu?I lO:Hem s 27 p.ln 11'4tpm
Anchorp • 64 OtanCI Alfllda > 15 Atlanll ti 73 GfMt , ... 1.0 AOen\IC City 14 • H#fford 44 Au•tlft 95 72 .........
2 2 8t1Umore II Ill Honolulll
Sun -1oday 11 I 07 p.m .. ,,_
ThUrtOay t1 5 42 e m end Mte ae-81
I 07 pm -
Moonltl9•112 t4p m .• r1Mlt11 11
Liii TIMlday Md Mii f1091n t1 1 00
pm.
Eztended
~ 92 .. ~Ion
-·-"" 75 M ~ 80IM 12 ~ Jadleon.Mt • 19oelon 72 Ill Ja_..,..
luf!llO 12 ... """-'
Cqpw 14 45 ~City ChltlMtOf'l,S C t5 71 LU Vegae
Ctiariae1Qn,W V 93 72 llttlt ~
~ta,N.C 91 18 ~ 73 ..
IO
71 Tl
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101 ..
a
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49 n 72 70 ..
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t:.=-=:..h ......... ........... ........ --~ ....,y.,.
Nottoll,Va. Ollw.nt City OmlN ~ ... Nldllllhlll ""'°9l'b ::=r ... ~Qt
t1rou•w =City
._~
81 l..OUla ., ...... ,.,,.
lellUl<eCfty
lellMICINo a.no.oo a.n FrtftCll9oo
818te....,..
le&ttlt ::,-:=
~ ~ T~. ''*°" TlllM Wllhlng!Oft
WlcMt Wilk...,...
will be filed against the woman. on. m vesogators said. dr11wtrs arT laod dtt'ds fr<'m f\nlnpt" Nllil"ttndmomlrlll10welouda,_tne ~~u : :.!
.. It's a very time-consuming pro-The woman reportedly had found a and Los Angeles c-0untics through OOMt U1tndlfto 1n1o "'-._.. dutlno ~ " " -
cess," conceded Huntington Beach buyerforthclandbyadvertisingitfor theyaresomefromSanDiegoCounty ::.,..~~~;:: ~~ : ~ SURF REPORT
Lqim W~lker. "Each agency literally a low price and then attempted to too, he said. • 10a11t1tllMdlM~108'1ots1n =~~~" : ee
has to hand search each of the file complete the deal with a forged land Verner, Walker said, apparently .....,.. Lo.... 551015• ~ 90 ~
cabments and there's 25 of them. deed. Police did not identify the passed herself off as being a ttP.rescn· o.n-11 52
"We have everyone from the feds landowner who they described as a tat1ve of at least seven different Temps =~Olnte : ~
to out-of-state people going through well-known catizen who owns land financial, real estate or insurance .. L.-~ 11 ..
the stuff," Walker said. "The case 1s "all over Huntington Beach." firms. Police said the woman has AIOttl'f 10 '1 ~.:U ~ ::
going in a lot of directions." Atthc ume oftbe arrest, detectives official-looking stamps and seals z::l::que ~ :; =:1an ~ ri
llZI
' 2..S )~ ,.....
M
24 1-2
24 s ... dlrectiOn: _,.,....
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Verner, who reportedly goes by indi~ted the case w11;s.o~y the "tip of from the institutions. ~.C..~~"J!l!!!~!!~!l~'!·~!ll'·~··••••••••••••••lill•••••llll!l••r-~ ,. • 'P2,~,.t,ba.J:). _a .dnu.n-ah'~ ~;-t_.' -~~·~-...,.:31~._~.-: .. ~_..i.-~... ·-· ".~ · :. • ~· ~"-..:::,... .,,.,.nibtin)toli,.~wbUJa-1h~ as" )er'~Veif-s· ~ ):,.,.~.1ot'Hfias'11':timt~TE z. ~~:Ji'tif(Jjp;:~-s;:.;;~ ~
!
•.
pobce who'd ~n t~ppcd_ that the forccment agencies c-0mbed the se1z, book from the woman's home. The . -.SK ll?f. q JC7~ S~C~~ •. ..;.~..;i,_...• --~-.._ ....... ;._
w~manwassellinga.p1ecco~property eddocumen~. . pass book showed "substantial" ~e-s t • N t D
wllhout the owners pcnn1ss1on or Walker said the file cab1nents -positshadrecentlybccnmade,pohoe uspec Ill ewpor unes knowledge. found in the woman's home -said.
The vacant piece of property near indicate the alleged land scam dates Verner is being held on $50,000 ~~-;;;:~:eH~~~~~~~;.:~~::~~ r~~;~~~·~~~;!~ ~o·:i.~f~~ bail kidnapping attempt seized
·DOGFIGHTJAILS PAIR... !~RHTS •••
.PnmAl
• ..._ orOiiNit tt...m to t#e Jc)Mt
.-Qlltody.
SuMMln, -.0Na renwrfed, WU
~ In contempt tor tMtnQ the
doa.wtUt t. M*l ehie mewed to ~end.for refUllno to tum
the dog <Mt to Wheeu.id ...
Oeoember *"" tNe Februcu'Y. April ~June.
SUllvan chltged that WheltlMd
endengnd RunaMY by allowtng
the dog to Injure ft• leg and get
pregnant.
catamaran and the Soling is a 27-foot
three-man keclboat.
Other U.S Olympic yachtmg
hopefuls are Steve Benjamin of
Oyster Bay, N.Y .. ip the 470 Class;
Bill Buchan of Seattle in the Star
Oass; and J'Onathon McKee in the
Flying Dutchman Class.
The U.S. representative in the
sing]e-handed Finn Oass is still up in
the air because of protests and appeals
bY. three of the leading sail ors -Russ
S1lvestn ofT1buron.John Bertrand of
Anaheim Hills and Buzz Reynolds of
Summit. N.J.
The teen-ager refused and Frye Man's reported attempts to lure girl. 14. then approached Newport Beach
f lifeguard Frank Golca asking him to away rom foster family arouse suspicion get thegirloutofthewater.
--. Frye told the lifcauard that he was
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of .. Dellf l'tlclC .....
A Claremont man is scheduled to
be arraigned an Harbor Muntcpal
Coun today following his arrest on
attempted kidnapping charges after
he allegedl y tried to lure a 14-year-old
girl away from the Newport Dunes
beach. police reported.
The man. 46-year-old Co} Ray
Frye. apparently knew the girl when
she lived near his home m Claremont.
Newport Beach pohcc officer Tom the girl's uncle and.that she was a
little said Frye followed the family to runaway.
the beach and offered another teen· Golea became suspicous when be
a$e girl $40 to try and lure the girl to noticed a pair of handcuffs in Frye's
him. . swimming trunks. Frye also was
Little sa1.d Frye told. the teen~ager wearing an eight-inch buck knife on a
he w~s a pnvate mvesttgator and that belt around his swimming trunks.
the girl had run away from home. Golea contacted Newport police.
"He told the teenager, 'When you . . . bnng her to me I will handcuff her and After quest1ontng the family, the
we will walk over to the car and then I tttn·ager Frye c;>ffercd money to and
wall gi ve you the money,'" Detective Golca. the ~hcc _arrested Frye on
Greg Annstrong said. attempted kidnapping charges.
BOOKSELLER TURNS THE PAGE ...
The girl. who was recently placed
by Los Angeles County soctal workers
m a Rowland Heights foster home.
told police ff)e molested her when
she hved in Claremont. Woman raped near bar From Al
manager of Coastline Communil}
College's new studen1 bookstore 1n
Fountam Valley.
What used to be Crecley's has ~n
spruced up, cleaned out and renamed:
the 270 E. 17th St. storefront in Costa
Mesa is now Etc. Books, owned and
managed by Carolyn Cockerill of
Newport Beach.
What used to be Crecley's as part of
a dying breed: namely. the neigh·
borhood book.store owned by a book
lover who tracked down rare and out·
of-print books with the tenacity of a
bulldog worrying over a soup bone.
JUSt for the love of it all.
Creeley's customers were son of
Ii.kc Creeley -they were people who
wanted to read about things.
"A typical customer was the man
who'd worked all his life, was lucky
enough to retire at 58 or so and could
finally satisfy his cunos1ty about the
War of 18 Ii or ~oman h1story or
eoginecnng. .. Creeley said.
"I'd recommend a book on a
certain subject, and then before long
he'd be back and loolung for some·
thing else on the same topic. That's
where my umque pleasure came m -
directmg people from book to book.
watching them whet their appetites
and them come back for more and
more."
Creclc} descnbes himself as a
dilettante, a "dabbler an the arts" by
dictionary definition.
He's also descended from a line of
used and rare-book dealers that goes
back to his great.grandfather.
His father, Buoster Creeley, esta~
lisbed the first student bookstore at
Orange Coast College m 1949 and his
mother, Virgima. ran 1t until the
mid-1950s.
Chns Creeley and his wife. Judy,
opened their own store. on I 7th
Street, an August 1961 with his folks
help, and he brought his five children
up filing the hardbacks among the
shelves.
Now. bis next-to-youngest daugh-
Just Call
• 642-6086
Detty Piiot
Defl"'J a. Quetanteed
ter is at R1zzoh's Boole Store 10 the
South Coast Plaza Mall. learning the
book business from another teacher,
Creeley said.
"Books are a basic family culture
fot.~-we arc always reading books
ana"8iscusstn$ books m the house. It
gets to the point sometimes where it
drives my wife crazy. She tries to
clean up and we all tell her not to
touch the books lying around half
open for fear she'll lose our place."
Readers or not, though, Creeley
said he doesn't le.now if the Creeley
family will tum out a fifth-generation
book.seller.
As the bookstores go, so go the
book.sellers. he said.
The chance to find a small, indi·
vidually owned bookstore is fast
disappearing. Creeley said.
"The Santa Ana Bookstore, over in
downtown Santa Ana, bas aonc out of
business in the last 24 months or so. It
was bought out by another owner,
who moved it a couple of blocks and
basically turned it mto a stationery
store. It used to be the biggest. single-
best bookstore in the county.
.. We'll see more of those declines."
The strongest discouragement to
the independent bookseller is not the
competition posed by large, chain·
ownershil> bookstores. but the rapid·
ly escalaung cost of land and build·
mgs, Creeley said.
"Over the last eight to I 0 years we
were in business, our rent tripled," he
said.
Sut the book business is not a high-
volume trade and 1 t 1s conducted on a
leaner profit margin than most retail
businesses.
"The economy is changing to the
detnment of small businesses -the
cost of living, land, parking and
voundskeeping. You have to have an
immense sum of capitaJ to keep one
gomg," Creeley said.
The people that suffer most when
the old bookstores close down arc the
collectors. he said "I don't know
where to send them pow,'' Creeley
lamented.
And yet he doesn't preach about the
decline of Western civilization and
predict the downfall of lhe current
generation due to lack of readers.
"There will always be devoted
readers. When we first opened we
beard all sorts of gloom and doom
about bow television was going to be
the end of reading," Creeley ex-
plained.
But industry studies recently done
showed that television spurred
people to read rather than dis-
couraged them.
The suspect apparent!) has been
trying to contact the girl since she was
placed in the foster home and was
waiting outside the family's Rowland
Heights home Sunda) when the
family decided to celebrate Father's
Day at Newpon Dunes.
A JS-year-old Westminster woman
told Costa Mesa police she was held 1 n
her car outside a Harbor Boulevard
bar and raped earl}' Tuesday mom ·
mg. police said
The woman. who was trea~ and
released fro m a local hospital, said
two men approached her and
raped her repeatedly, a poli~ spolc~
man said.
The men were described as
Caucasian. one about 40 yean old
and the other m his m1d-30s.
~~ijffiij~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
E X-MES A COP FACES 3 COUNTS •••
From Al
"The generation reared on TV is off his pants. the prosecution last March when a month and was scbedUted to be
becoming more of a book reading Deputy Distnct Attorney Carl Judge ruJed that a Fountain Valley assigned a courtroom today.
generation than ever," be said. adding Annbrust said the woman's decision woman was not beUevable when she Testifying against the former pa-
that ofbis five children -all tv Irids not to testify is moot, however, testified that Lauchtan raped her in trolman will be a Santa Ana woman
-two are voracious rcaden and the beca S · C · d I d b I'. fh. who all?es Laucblao assaul•..,.. b-other tfuee read less noticeably but use a upenor ourt JU ge ru e t e 1ront scat o 1s patrol car. ~ ...
still read in arcater volume than be Friday there was insufficient The most recent tum of events and hel her prisoner followina a
did at their qe. evidence to suppon the felony charge. leaves Lauchlan. 33, facing only lhrtt traffic stop and a Costa Mesa woman
And yet, the bookstore .. essentially Dunng a preliminary heannJ last sex charges _ a m isdemeanor and who characs LauchJan assaulted her
began to get to be no challenge March, a Municipal Coun Judge two felonies. Onginally. he faced 12 and arabbcd her breasts.
anymore. MCv input into the store was reduced the attempted rape charge to charges. Lauchlan. a father of two, presently
d li · .. 1 'd .. 1 bccam a misdemeanor assault and battery. isfrecon $25,000bail. He was fired by
cc rung, rec ey sat · t c Armbrust later refiled the more Of the four women who filed Pohce Chief Roger Neth on Feb. 3. He :~=~~~~~~s~~ed new, fresh, serious charge an Superior Court but complaants against the ex-officer. has filed a SI million suit apinst the
When opportunity knocked., in the Judge David Caner refused to accept only two will testify m has Superior city and is named in two lawsuits 6Jcd
fonn of Coastline Community Col· the attempted rape charge. Court tnal. by women who allqe they were
lege officialsasking him to take over n~A~m;o;r;e;se~n~o~us==b=lo:w:w:a:s =d~ea~l~t ~to~~lTlhie~tinial.isleixlpcc•t•ed•to•begiii··n·t·h·is··v11c1ti1m1izcd111b1y1t1h1e1fo1rm11e1r1o1ffi1ce.r1. iih the bookstore manager's job, be
answered. "There's a great deal of
potential, and a ~cularly impon-
ant place to play 1n the community.
"And it's more fun than a new
horse, trying to meet this school's
progress and growth -its needs arc
particularly strong right now."
So Creeley doesn't lament -he
looks ahead. and he keeps on reading.
especially his favorite author, Loren
Eisley.
"He satisfies me most. He de-
scribed his father as a drunken
Nebraska sod bus t er and
Shakespearean poet and hjs mother
as a deaf mute. He was truly a
Rennaissaocc man -a star with
callouses on his bands."
A man sort of like Creeley.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Cemo/~ist, ACS
THE PEARL
Jun•• Birth.tone
Precious
gems are
here for life.
So is
our guarantee.
What do you Ille aboul tile Dally Pllol? What don 't you llke? Call the
number at left and your me11age will be recorded, transcribed and d~Uvtted
to t.be appropriate editor.
+When you choose a piece of
1ewelry from lntergem's Royal Gem
Collection, we'll guarantee that every
precious stone isnaturaland untreated.
So the magical diamonds, rubies,
~=====~ sapphires and emeralds created by
nature will always be as beautiful and The same t•·bo.r uswuia1 service may be 11ed to reeord letten to tlle
edllor on any toplc. Coatrlbators to our 1Anu1 col•m• malt bM:hlft tllelr
name and telepbooe oumber for vertflcaUo•. No clrculatlon ulla, plean .
Tell as what's on yo•r mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clf'cutetlon 7141M2-GS3
Ca...tfted edftrt'91ng 7141..U.Mn
Al °"* depertmem1142..qa1
MAIN OFFtcE
brilliant as they are today.
+We guarantee ~int sjzc and quality.
And that'S a written, li"-..me guarantee on every gem in
every 14-karat gold nng, necklace, bracelet, camng or
other piece of Jewelry m
The Royal Gem Collection.
'• Mon1»y 'N<M~ " yO>J do "°' ..... ~ ..,.. by SJOpn1CAl ~t 7P m H. L. lchwertz Ill
Publisher
330 w.t 9llY $t • Co&i. ..... CA
Mii llOO<-lo• IMO eo.t. ....._ CA "°'"
The peafl began as an accident of
nature. It became such a aought-
after accident that man began
tampering with nature to make the
accident a planned event. Accord·
Ing to an old Arab legend, peal'ta
were formed when moonllt dew-
drop• fell Into the eea and wer•
awallowd by OY1t.,.. Fact I•, natu-ral peerlt are formed when a grain
of sand Of other Irritant get1 lodged
lntlde an oyater. muuef or Clam. To
protect ftt Inner tluue, the mollutk
acret• a fluid, which harden•
wound the Irritant. t.ayer1 of thlt
ftuld, catted ••nKte'' add to the
ltNdy growth of what becomet a
PMl'I· Now. "outtured" pe9l'tl are
prod"°"' by m1nuatty pf ectng a tiny
round bMd Into • mottuek, whleh 11
kept In controtted PQOlt. Theae
poolt, autte llt«alty, becotM pean "farma 1' At the proper ume, the
pearl which hu formed around the
bead It tlklrl from the mollulk.
Cultured PMff• are Jutt u real u
natural PM.tft. The only dlfferenot
It the methOd by whleh the motlulk
II Induced to form the peert. For
thoM of you bOrn In June, the pee,t
can now bt Qllletwat.d, noc u an
accident, but u a' mwecte of the ....
tl'td '°"' r<JP'( .. M ....,.
a.til'dlty .,_. 9'lnOay • '°" do ll04 ,_. 'f0'.11
copy by 1 • m , c:et ~· 10 • m tM pour COO\' ..a
I .. .........,
ctrcua.tton
T1t1pMMI ....
0r.,,.. eo.nr ,._ ..... .....
•
'
Chazy Dow8'1b1
Editor and Assistant
to the Publisher
ROMmary Churchmen
Controller
~'91'1 lll3 0r1f91cci.~~ No -''°' .,.,,.'--~ Of *"'-'--· ,,...., _.,. i. ,.,....., W""°"4 .... I*
ll*'Of\'11 ~ --
VOL 77, NO. 113
•
MEt.tBEA ~M ICAN GEM SOCfETY
1809 NEWPORT BLVO., COSTA MESA StNC 19'$
.I .