HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-04-14 - Orange Coast PilotIUlll Cllll -lllR• llllY Ml
WE ONE SOA Y, APRIL 14, 1982 ORANGE COUN TY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
.;lncuDlhents sweep H;untington voting
lb ROBERT BARKER or .. ~,......,.
Native eon Bob Mandie haa one
more political hurdle to climb
after his convincing victory
Tuf!lday for a lf!COnd term in the
· Huntington Beach city elections.
That aspiration is to become
mayor of the city where he was
bom 40 rears ago.
"We'l just have to wait and
see what happens," Mandie said
Tueeday.
What Is expected to happen
when the council r eorganizes
Monday is that Mandie's city
council colleagues will eelect him
t.o lead the d ty after he became
the highest city coundl voteget-
ter Tuesday.
He also received the highest
number ol votes in 1978.
Jo the city attorney race, in-
cumbent Gail Hutton burled h er
predecessor, Don Borua, by a 2-1
margin.
Here are the complete but un-
off lcial results In which all in-
cumbents were returned to of-
fice:
The City Council (4 elected):
-Bob Mudie, 7,010
-Rada Balley, 6,954
-Doa MacAJJJster, 4,539
-Jolln Tlaomu, 4,190
-Edward Z.Choche, 3,940
-Jay Stout, 3,736
-Bud Belsito, 3,254
-Dean Albright, 1,481
-Betty Clark, 1,270
-Frank Mlrjahanglr, 1,106
-John Valentino, 819
-Mark Juergea, 526
-Michael Mu.sic, 431 -Dan Mahaffey, 3, 113
-St.eve Schumacher. 2,907
-Re Stevens, 288
<See HUNTINGTON, Page At)
'Butt out' of Falklands ..
• ov1ets eagan twea. s
President
mum on
U.S. aid
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reaga.1 told the Soviet
Union, which is reportedly giving
Argentina intell:gence data about
the approaching British fleet, to
"butt out" of the Falkland
islands dispute.
Reagan, questioned about pu-
~it-=..blilhed-repo.ds,,attribut.ed to U.S.
officials, on the Soviet role, first
said "that has been reported and
·evidently been established."
RE T URNS -Secretary of
State Alexander Haig Jr.
speaks to reporters on his
return to Washington
Tuesday night after a six-day
· to London and Buenos
trying to avert further
flict over the Falkland
ds.
• ore noise ~~
l>r AirCal,
;:.~f
t mporarily
::~.
E 's decision to begin ser-
Burbank Airport is going
a spinoff effect for resi·
dtnts living near John Wayne
J\1,i'port -more jet noise.
'~ut the situation will only be
temporary, lasting from April 25
to about June 1, a company offi-
cial stressed today.
To win approval for six flights
daily from Burbank, AirCal was
forced to agree t.o fly only new
and quiet.er jets on those routes.
AH-Cal will mee t t hat require-
m e nt by u si ng its n e w
McDonnell-Douglas DC-9 Super
80. on flights from Burbank.
AirCal has been using Super
80s on 14 of its average 23.5 de-
partures it's authorized to fly
dAily from John Wayne Airport.
After April 25, Super 80s will
be uaed on only nine flights per
day from Qrange County. Older
ani:I noisier Boeing 737s will be
u8ed on remaining flights.
Ai.rCal has five of the new $25
m'tllion Super 80s in its 20-jet
Qeet.
It is scheduled to take delivery
of a sixth Super 80 in May and a
seventh in June, at which time
•lJJhtly quieter skies should re-tiei to Orange County.
WORLD
Then, ~sked if he was confir-
ming the reports, Reagan said,
"No. That's what I've heard and
read."
Either way, Reagan's w ords
for Moscow were blunt:
"I'd like l.O see them butt out."
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
States ia providing intelligence
data to Britain.
"This situation is too critical,"
he said. "Any comment can be
taken one way or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping process."
Reagan spoke to reporters af-
t.er conferring with Secretary of
State Alexander M. Haig Jr. for
about an hour. The president I.Old
reporters, "We are still trying to
be a fair broker in this and bring
peace" and said Haig will be re-
turning to Argentina for further
mediation efforts.
But Reagan said Haig will not
carry specific instructions from
the White House on settlement
temlS. Reagan said Haig does not
have a mandate to present posi-
tions that the president has of -
fered or backed.
He avoided substantive replies
to most questions in the Rose
Garden .question-and-answer
session.
"From the outset, we've made
clear our wish to assist in finding
a basis for resolution of this dif-
ficult issue," the president said.
"The situation is most sensi-
tive. Nonetheless, ideas have
been presented which are being
seriously considered on both
sides.
"Peace is our common cause."
Asked about the prospects that
Haig will succeed in bringing
peace, Reagan said he wouldn't
comment beyond saying, "We
should all be hopin~ and we
should all be praying.'
Haig already has been to Lon-
don twice and Buenos Aires once
in his shuttle diplomacy effort,
seeking to avoid an armed clash
over the islands
59 oil workers evacuated
ABERDEEN, Scotland (AP) -Fifty-nine men
were evacuated by helicopter from a North Sea oil rig
today after it drilled into a pocket of natural gas a mile
beneath the seabed, a spokesman for the operators
said. •
Roget eliminates words
Roget's Th8aurua has tried to eliminate sexist,
bi.aaed, prejudiced, jaundiced, Ullberal and narrow-
minded worda. Page A6.
STATE
Vidal campaisn a l8etl8ed
How can you ..... the Senate campalcn of au-
thor Gore Vidal? Pip A lO. •
IN THE SWIM -Rebecca Putnam of c.osta Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp at
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube wate r polo match . More than 100 disabled
~ ........ .,, GerJ ...,_
youngsters, 7 to 18 years old, were in competitio~ ranging
from basketball to archery. David Kile y , a wheelchair
bask e tball notable, directed the camp s ponsored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
Anaheim's
Sey mour wins
Briggs' seat
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of the Delly ..... '""'
Turnout large
Laguna ousts Boyd;
3 new-comers score
FV's mayor
tops field
for council
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN o(' the Delly ,..... It.tr
Backe d by a $200,000 cam -
paign war chest, Anaheim Mayor
John Seymour rode l.O easy vic-
tory Tuesday for a north Orange
County state Senate seat.
Seymour, who became a mil-
lionaire in real estate investments
and whose political career is but
12 years old, received about 66
percent of the vote. Turnout was
14.1 percent.
Once election results are certi-
fied -a process that officials say
will take about two weeks -
Seymour, 43, will take the oath
of office.
He will fill the unexpired term
created in the 35th district by the
resignation of former Sen. John
Bri'88, R-Fullerton. Briggs com -
plained of "burnout" when he
resigned.
Seymour's term will end Dec.
3, 1984.
(See SEYMOUR, Page AZ)
I NATION
Laguna Beach voters 'tiarned
out in large numbers Tuesday.
electing the slate of Dan Kenney,
Bob Gentry and Bobbie Minkin
to the City Council.
The voting saw incumbent
Kelly Boyd ousted from office.
Here are unofficial final re-
sults from all 11 Laguna Beach
precinct&:
Dan Kenney: 2, 704
Bob Gentry: 2,689
Bobble MJ.Hln: 2,561
Ron Williams: 2,283
Kell~ Boyd: 2,014
Pat Barry: 1,983
Paul Christiansen: 411
Beth Leeds: 216
Rickey Slater: 75
Supporters o f the winners
crammed into campaign head-
quarter about three blocks from
Caty Hall, wildly cheering as re-
sults of each precinct came in.
T V device jams channels
, Are hour children watching too much television?
General ectric is introducing a device allowing you
to jam any channel on your aet for up to 12 hours.
Page A6.
Krystle • 'Dynasty' vi e ws
Krystle Cairl.ngton hasn't had a moment's peace
to herself sin ce sultry Joan Collins was cast in
"Dynasty." Page B5.
COUNTY
SA lreeway . to expan"df
Caltral'\I propOIH to exeand the Santa Ana
Freeway from llx to 10 laMI. Stmy, comment, Plfe
Bl.
Backers of · the losing slate of
Williams, Boyd and Barry, were
less festive as precinct results
were put on a ch a lkboard at a
South Coast Highway restaurant.
"I can't believe it," one busi-
nessman said. ''They took the
whole thing."
Meanwhile. the three winners
thanked their supporters and
vowed to bring unity t.o Lagurm
Beach.
Kenney, the top vote getter in
Tuesday's polling, said he looks
forward to joining Mayor Sally
Bellerue and Councilman Neil
Fitzpatrick on the council dais.
And, he said, he sees no prob-
lems with a five-member council
that he says holds the same con-
trolled growth philosophy.
"We are five people who pro-
(See LAGUNA. Page A%)
INDEX
At Your Service A4
L.M. Boyd AlO
Business ' A8-9
Herb c.aen B2
Callf omia A5
Careen B6
Cavalcade B2
Classified 04-8
Comics B4
Crcmword B4
Death Notices 86
Editorial AlO
Entertainment A12
Food Cl-11
SPORTS
Fountain Valley voters have
selected their former city mana-
ger, the incumbent mayor and a
city planning com.missioner to fill
three seats on the City Council.
Mayor Ben Nielsen, the only
mcumbent running. was the top
vote-getter Tuesday in the field
of JO candidates.
In second place was Fred V 05.5,
a county administrative services
·manager who formerly aerved as
a Fountain Valley SchooJ District
trustee a nd n ow sits on the
Planning Commission.
The third seat will go to James
·Neal, who was Fountain Valley
city manager from 1966 through
1979, then occupied a similar post
for two years in Stanton.
The three will be sworn tn for
four-year tenns at the April 20
council meeting.
Unofficial vote total with all of
(See VALLEY, Page A%)
Horoscope B2
Ann Landers 82
Movies Al2
Mutual Funds A8
National Newa A3
Public Notices B6-7
Sports Dl-3
Dr. S teincrohn B2
Stock Marketa A8
Television m
Theaters Al2
Weather A2
World News A.3
Four sa~es on 88me ni6111
How oft.en do the Kinp. Laken, Docl~ aDd Ancell 1)1-y on the ame nJchtT DNill of dlit faui'
pm.,PapDl.
~ ~ --~--------~~~~~--.--~----------~--------~-----...----........ -...-. ...... .ow,l~~~ ....... --.......................... .._ ..................... "'1-iiiliiiilli ..... ~~
..
VALLEY BALLOTING. • •
lht.' dty'a 28 prt<'incta In w~re;
Bee Nlel,eo, 2,498
Fred Von, 2,027
-James Neal, l,829
-Betty Mlgn~neW, 1,683
-Charles Michaelis, ).~73
-Dan Morton, 1,328
-Linda Moulton, 1,094
-Roy Rodg~ra. M3
James Creighton, 510
-Ken Holland, 195
"You can't feel anything but
great!" Nielsen said of his e lec-
tion victory. "l worked harder on
this campaign than on any past
campaign because it was a very
strong field."
grouPff.
The employees interviewed all
l 0 candidates, then endorsed
Mrs. Mlgnanelli, Michae lla and
Morton, who placed fourth, fifth
and sixth in the voting.
"I hated to see them (the em-
ployee groups) get Involved in
the first place," Nielsen said.
"About 75 pe rcent of the em·
ployees don't live in the city.
They we re trying to flex their
muscle."
Late in the campaign, retinng
councilmen Al Hollinden a nd
Eugene Van Dask distributed
letters urging residents not to
V.D t e for the three "unio n
candidates."
4Tll SLOT -Councilman
John Thomas finished fourth
but won a new f our-year
term in offiet?.
-
Former president declines co mment on rnagazine article
BOSTON (AP) A magaa:Jno
article detcribing Richard Nixon
u often bein(I drunk in the White
Houao and Henry Kissinger
refualng to pa11s along cablet Lo
an Inebriated preal d~nl h aa
prompted no direct public re•·
ponae from the two.
Nixon "only commenta on his
o~n books," Nicholas Ruwe, un
aide to the former president, said
in New York on Tuesday when
asked about The Atlantic Mon-
thly's urticle on tht-Nixon White
House.
"Or. K!ssin.ger has not yet seen
the article," h is pe rsonal a53is-
tant, Christine Vick , said at Kis-
singer's Washington office Tues-
day. "He cannot comme nt on
what he has not seen. After he
has seen it, he believes he will
have nothing to add to what he
has written in htS memoirs."
aay, 'Tht•ru'5 no sense wakl11H
him up -he'd be mcoherent','
Morria N!CA!l8.
The young aldf' was fnghtent'd
by the idea of a president who
wa11 not fully competent aftt•r
sundown. He often wonde red
what would happen if the Sovie!t
Union a ttacked at night.
The article. appearing in the
May issue of tht• Atlantic, Bald Kissing~r used Alexandl'r M
Haig Jr., then hlS chief aid<' a nd
now secretary of state, w monitor
secre t w iretapping of Nutional
Security Council aides so that
K issinger could claim he had tio
direct role in the bu~mg.
"Wiretapping NSC aides wa<; a
dirty business, and everybody m
the White House and the 1''81
kne w I t ," H e r s h wrote
"Kissinger's mN hod of handling
it was simple: he put Haig in
charge"
had no mltutl comment becawie
he hodn't read the article
"Th.-drinking wu pretty Wt-
d.-ly kuown tind ~nt.t.<I on,"
Morrill said todD y by telep~ne
fro m Santa Fe, N.M. "It '+'u
most acu te during ume of ~siJJ
tht.• 11pnng of uno befbre
Cambod111 It wus commonpfoce
ax c.·urly as tht• sprmM of 1969:"
MmTtl !4.lud he and ~.-olleaiues
werr <.:onc.·t>rned about the drin-
king and that word of it "get1ing
out" might hBvc• ll.'d tlw "SovjetB
to do soml'thmg s1Uy " ·
Tht.· arttcll' in the Atlan4<.·'s
May wue is drawn from a book
on K1S!.mgcr that Hersh plant to
publish next year A second ~x·
ccrpt will bl> rur1 lalt"r this yrar,
al'l'01ci1ng to the Atlanttc-•
Because of the lo w turno ut
(about 15.3 percent), Nielsen saJd
he plans to urge that the ci ty's
elections be moved to June or
November to ooancide with state
and national elections.
The mayor s:ud this year's
campaign "got really rough at
the end. I tried to stay out of Lt,
but a lot of campaign signs were
tom down."
Nielsen said he hopes to he lp
restore harmony ii\ the city now
that the election is over.
Of his victory, second place
finisher Voss said, •·r feel a bso-
lutely great!"
HUNTINGTON
The 25,000-word a rticle b y
Seymour M. Hersh, who won a
Pulitzer prize for reporting on
the My Lai massacre an Vie tnam,
quoted Roger Morris, a member
of the National Secunty Council
staff under Nixon, as saying he
often listened in on c.:onversations
be tween Kissinger and "an ob-
Vlously drunk Nixon."
Haig returned tu Washington
Crom London on Tuesday night
At Andrews Air Jo'orce Base he
briefly spoke to reporters about
his Falkla nds Island pean.' m1s-
s1on, but said nothing about tht·
Atlantic arti<:le
Ht•rs h said hE> 1ntcrv1e \ted
many formc•r White Ho use off1 -
t·1als :Jud obttmwd a('C'l•~s to .un-
publl!>hl'<l r('{·ords of tlil' Wa\er·
gau: pr<J6('\:Utors m <:omp1hng. hlS
rl'Sl•Jr<"h Many anc."<.-dotes quotc.-
M1.'(.>nd of third-hand sources,
The city attorney race results
Voss ran unsuccessfull y for a
council seat ih 1976.
are:
-Gail Hutton, 7,727
He also belteves the endorse-
me nt of three candidates by the
city's four employee associations
had a negative impact on the
ca ndidates supported by the
"[ think we put together a
be tter campaign this time," he
said. "And I set a ta rget of rin-
ging 1.500 doorbeUs and I did it,
give o r take a co uple o C
doorbells."
-Don Bonfa, 3,873
The city counc il e lection,
marked by a lack of issues and
apathy on the part of residents,
drew o nly 13.l pe rcent of the
city's 96,849 registered voters to
the precincts.
SEYMOUR CHOSEN. • •
The 35th district includes por-
tions of the cities of Buena Park
and Tustin, and all of Fullerton,
La Habra, Orange, Placentia,'
Villa Parle and Yorba Llnda.
The special election to fill the
unexpired 35th district term was
consolidated with nume rous
o ther mun1c1 pal e l ections
chroughout the county.
Seymour garnered 30,821 or
che 45,809 votes cast. His closest
H~pubhcan challenger, attorney
William Bough~ receiv.ed 6,·
905 votes. The thir.d Republican
in the field. businessman a nd
minister John Keller, received 3,-
408 votes, accorrung to final, un-.
official returns.
Libertarian Less Antman, a
certified• public accountant, rec-
eived 1,543 votes, while In-ie -
pe nde nt Mark Fouche r. an at-
torney, ~ved 2, 735 votes.
It was not immediately known
today h ow rr.any o f the 397
write-in votes cast went to De-
m ocratic Party write -in candi-
d ate Beatrice Foster. Write in
ballots still must be hand tallied.
County Registrar of Voters AJ
Oiron-satd Ure sptti~I el~~tion
vote tabulation we nt smoothly.
Final returns were available
about 1 a.m. Polls closed at 8 p.m :
LAGUNA ELECTIONS. • •
"lbably think ahke on rnanv of the
·issues,'' Kenney said. "Especially
concerns about population.
"But I'm not <.-on cemed about
whether or not we'll be a 5 -0
(voting) council.
"It gives us an opportunity to
show we're not the radicals we'-
ve been labeled. It's a chance to
bring this town together."
GOP te mpering earlier optimism
WAS HINGTO N (AP) -Re-
publicans m Congress, exuding
optimism a few days ago about
chances for a budget compromise
with the Reagan administratio n
and Democrats, now concede that
weeks of priva te talks may pro-
duce nothing.
"It may no!_ happen," one GOP
official sa1d Tuesday. as sources
reported President Reagan had
sent word to negotiators that he
remains adamantly opposed to a
change in the 10 percent in<.'Ome
tax cut scheduled in 1983. Rea-
gan's refusal could set off a chain
reaction that could d oom thl'
privalt" talks, oCficials said.
The results seemed to bear out
the political axiom that the lack
of !&sues genttally spells glad ti-
c:lings for the incumbents.
Mandie also said he believed
that in his and Mrs. Bailey's case
the lower turnout re flected that
th~ more knowledgeable voters
cast ballots.
Mrs. Bailey sajd she believed
that s h e and Mand ie ran so
s tro ngly "because both had
strong grass roots" support.
All four council incumbents
and Mrs. Hutton jumped to solid
lead s even before less than 1
percent of the vote was flashed
on lhe-ser~n·in-crt~ounci
chambers.
The lead changed hands bet-
ween Mandie and Mrs. Ba iley
nearly after every precinct was
counted before Mandie emerged
as the highest votegetter by 56
votes.
The race for individual honors
provided the only uncert.ajnty of
the niRht.
The vote count was completed
at 10:30 a.m., just as predicted by
City Clerk Alicia Wentworth.
LA library burns
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An
arson fire Tuesday at the city's
popular Hollywood branch libra-
r y d estr oyed n ea rly three-
fourths of its contents, including
a collection of rare theatrical
memorabilia, fire officials said .
Gusty winds due
Coastal
fair lod1y 1nd Thursday bul
some high cloudiness IOdey Lo-
cal gusty wetl 10 nor1hwnl winds
15 10 25 mph 81 limn today end
Thursd1y Highs both d1ys 85 10
72 Lows tonight 52 to 56 Highs
10 renge from low 80s 11 lhe
beach•• to neer 70 1n1end Hunllngton-Newpon erea tempe-
r11ures rilngft from I low ot 52 10
II high 01 63
El~•. r1om Pom1 Concep-
tion to lhe MeKlcen border end
ou1 60 mllee Wes1erry wind• 8 to
18 knoea wllh 2 10 3-fool wind
wevee Weaterly swell• of 1 10 2
leel ioc.iry Ind 4 to 8 lee1 In ou1er
waters Some low clouds and 10-
cel log 1111 nlghl •nd early mor-
ning hours
U.S. summary
Rein wl1h enow et higher ele·
vetlon 1p1eed Monday from the PecltlO North-I to the northern
Rocklel, wtth travelers, 1dvleorlet
posted tor hHvy •now In the
mounllln• of Wuhlngton end Oregon.
Shower• covered much ot lh•
Northe11t, with thunderehowen
In Pennaytvanl• end snow In nor·
them Mel,,., Showere end lhun-
derttormt were 1c11tered from
Arkaneu Into the aouthern Ap·
P•l•Chl•n• •nd IOUth Florldl.
Sklee -• moetly aunny lrom 1ne Sou1hwH1 10 1h1 central end
northern MINltllppl v.-.,.
Thi thlfmometer hit the 90e In
northern Texn. t>Yt remained in-
lhl SOI -the nortn«n Gr-.1
Wik• and In Milne
Today'• lorec111 celltd for
Minny •11111 for motl of the ne-
tlon, w1th lhow.1 In the Pacltlc
NOfth-t and 1now 1howe<1 In
northern Miine
Tempttatur" around tht ne-
tlon 1t mldd1y Tuffd1y rang9d
lrom 33 In Mwquette, Mich • to 08
In Del Alo: T IXU
California
South«n Callfomie wtll bl fllr
through Thurld1y. Sllohlly C001tt
1tmp.,11urt1 Thurai!1y Pertly
cloudy l1t1 night end ffrty mor•
nlflg hour•.
Orange County oan expect
high• In the tow 801 11 the bM-
0'-fo ,., 10 Intend i.ow. ..,.
to 52
Inland ~ '*' npecit """' ll'ouncl 70. !Owl In UDPW 40I. Movntllnt un 1JtP41C1 ... 1 to
north-I wind• 11-30 mph at ""'-' HIGN today 12 to ~1 IO to N ~. LO'a'I P lo M .
Wnl lo nor11tw .. 1 wind• of 1"1·*9 mpfl ~ tot cleMf\a. N«t'*11 deMf'I hltN ti to IO
toe14t1, ... to 71 T~ "°'" 14ltoll ~Mett•o._...,..101o•...,.ft•
'
86 Thursday L~i 5( 10 62
Partly cloudy tOday In Nor1hem
and Cen1rar Calllornla. 001 mostrv
lntr tOnJ9h1 and Thu1Sday warmer
Thurldey Snow •bove 3.000 feet
In north. 6.000 cenlrel Sierra
Temperatures
Albuque
Anchorege
At~fl
Atlante Cty
Beltimore
Blrmlnghm
Bismarck
BOlse
Boe ton
Butte lo
Burlington
CharlS1n WV
Cherltte NC
Cheyenne
ChlCao<>
Clncmnell
Cleveland
Clmble SC
Columbus Dal-Fl Wlh
Denver
Des Moines
OetrOll
El Paso
Fergo
Fleg1t1tt
Grut falls
Harllord
~
Honolulu
Houaton
lndnepNa
Jacllen
Jldlttwtle
KIN Ctty
LAa Vegu
Ltttle Rocil
Loulsvltte
Memc>hJa Mlam4
Mllw9ukM
Mpl...St.P
Nlllhllllle
~ Orttene
~ YOtll
Ollle City
Omehe
PNl.01)1111
Photnl• Pitt~
Ptland. Me
Piiand, Or• Pr~
Reno
Alcftrnond Slit Ulke
8liln Antonie>
S..ttlt
NATION
HI
79
35
70
5-4
77 73
82
6t
55
55
50
75
76
66
53
88
6'4
79
87
8.5
71
63
59
86
51
6t 61 s.
66
81
85
57
83
S3
69
80 n
76
7' 8
5o
8( ,.
83
82
88
88
71
89
88 •2 40
87
&e
70 87
100
411
Lo
47
22
51
45 «
56
31
48
38
39
38
63 55
32
46
55 45 55
49
61 39
45
44
58
28
33
37
3t
35
70
85 51
50
52
50
51
60
6'
83
74
42
38
12 82
15
.A
41
42
13
48
37 « 31
35
52
" 58
"
~
S1ou~ Fall• 65
SI Louis 88
St P-Tamp1 80
Spokane 50
Tucson 88
WUhtngtn 77
Wichita 79
CALIFORNIA
Apple Valley
Bekerslleld
Berstow
Beaumont Big Bear
Blsh<>p
Blythe
C1111lna
Eun11c1
freano
l..anca9ter Long BHch
LOI Angelel
Merytvllle
Monrovte
Montebello
Mont trey
Mt. Whan
Neec:I•
Newport 8eech
Oaklllld
Onlwlo
Palm $9'1ngs
Peaedena
p lllO Aoblte
AIWralde Aed Bluff
Redwood City
Se«wnento
Slllnll
Sen Berntirdlno
Sen G1bfW
Sen OieOO San Fr!IMllCO
San Joee
Senta An• Senti Barbara Santa Cruz
Ht
88
70
79
117
59
72
88
64
57
88
85
115
17
115
73
80
6'
57
87
83
6' ee
85
80 ee
80 82
&•
81
113
88
7t
88
88
6' 87 ee
85
;II Rf Rf PIRT
.
•o• Ttw...i.y
32 S81lll M11t1 64 39 53 Santi Mon+ce 63 50 59 Stockton 67 48 4 I Tah04I V1lley ~ Thermal
,4 32
89 8t 48 Torrence 87 49
53 Vume 90 62
Lo
41 C1f9&ry 53 Edmonton
CANADA
bl a4
40 31
46 30
45 34 •& 32
50 37 49 3g
•5 26
:: .Montreal
26 Ott1wa
35 • Rtglna T()(on10 ~ v1ncouver
45 Winnipeg
•8
46
48
50
51
'3
•8 48
38
57
52
5t
45
S3
46
39
Exte11ded
forecast
Frid1y-Sund1y: Felr end HI·
tonebly wwm High t1n1PW1\uree
115 10 75 In co11t11 end velley
"-end Iowa« to $4. Hlgtle In
mounlllN 52 to 112 end row. 30
10 40.
: Smog
52 40
41
44
45
55 82
4e 50
411
51
Thi South Co11t Air Ov1ilty
Menegement Olatrlot predicted
good •Ir Qu1Uty tod1y for the
Soutn.<n Ctllfomla WM. Tht AQMO lorec:a1t1 a POllu-
tlOn Stlndwd lndtx OI 100 fOt !ht
Sen Fernando and S.Ote Clfffla
valley1, 92 for the San 0 1brlel
•nd Pomon1 vtlltye and 42 In
Alv111lde. Sen Befnardlno, Lot
Angtlea, banning, Hemet-
Elllnonl end Ofhtf 1tMt
-.................. .... -..... ._.. ....... . ~ • • • ,...... a leMa Monioa 1 8 10 I I :: ~ a • t1 1 a ew
-oieeo Ot"Y a 4 " 1 a aw ~-~llllM~lllMf .......
H ersh wrote : "The r e w e r e
many times when a cable would
c.'Ome in late and Kissinger would
State Department spokc·sman
Rush Taylor said today, "I havC'
nothing on that." The Washing-
' ton Pos t re portc•d that a Stat(>
Department spokesman said Haig
Rock singer Crosby
arrested a~ain
Rock smger David Crosby, ar
rested o n drug and w ea pon
charges m Costa Mesa last mon·
th, has been collared again for •
assertedly carr ying a gun a nd
possessing a substam .. -e thought tc
be coca.me, author1ucs m Dallas
report.
--erosby, a fUT'mermember ot
the popular rock trio Crosby,
Stills a n d Nas h , w as arreste d
Tuesday in a dressing rcnm of a
Dallas nightclub where the sin-
ger was perform1nR.
Dallas police, who said they
were making a routine inspection
o f the nightclub. claimed the
40-year-old Crosby, a rl'S1dent of
Mill Valley. was carrying a
.45-<:ahber automatic pistol and a
small quantity of a wh.ite powder
believed to be cocaine.
Authorities said Crusbv who
was book e d but not t·h arg ed
pl•ndmg lab t(>Sts of tht· wh1tt·
powder, has been ordered to ap
pear m court May 6
The entertamcr was arrc:.tcd
Ma rt·h 2-8 o n the San Du:g o
Freeway near the Harbor Boule-
vard oU&:tlmp •!~ pJowQd-a
rented car into a frC<>way median
fence.
Crosby was arrested on char-
ges o{ driving unde r the in
flue nce of a controlled substan<.1:,
carrying a gun and possessing
drugs. later determined to be cc>
t•arnc and Quaaludes.
At th e time o r his ar r t:st ,
Crosby reportedly was headed
for an anu-nuclear-rally at Do-
hen v State Beach to join his Conner singing partners :::>tept1.:11
Stills and Graham Nash.
Thl• author not.eel that many of
Nixon's former aides dismissed
thl' s1gni£1cance or his alleged
drinking problem by saymg Ni-
xon had a notoriously low capa·
ntv l11r cill'uhol "and would slur
his words and appt'ar to be so-
m1•what drunk after on€' or twc
highball:..''
Woman jumps
to her death
A 53-yC>ar o ld Wt•stmi n~te r
woman. rt-portedly dl•pressed
ovt•r f1n am·1al d«:bts. JUmped lo
her dhllh this wt>c·k f rom the
fifth rloor of a Newpor t Beach
mt-dtl·al tower
PohCl' 1dent1 fled thl "' oman as
Ant!.<t Ursula Wh1ttll' A witness
ti>ld po hc(> th<' woman Jumped
from a ledge.· outside· thl' Park
Lido Mcdu:a.l bwldmg,._35111~
ptWI R1Jad
Tht• woman. po hcl' said. was
rushtod to nearby Hoag Memonal
llospttal where she died
Chemicals claime d
BANGKOK. Thailand (AP)
Tht· V1c:tnamesc·-backed govem -
mc•nl 1n Cambodia da1ms the
United States has rntroduced
ch<'mtcal weapons into Thruland.
Radio I lanos reported Tuesday.
WAREHOUSE CONSOLIDATION
&IN-STORE
W AREDOUSE SALE
20-60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
J-f'1
Our old warehouse (10,000 sq. ft.) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd.
Prices will slashed 20% to 60% off. All the lines that we are known
for, Drexel, Htrttltge, Henredon, Woodmart, Stanton Cooper &
•---more, wtll be available at substantial savings. Special orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't miss this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low prices.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in "as is"
condition. Cash and Carry or deliver can be arranged at a small charge. .
See you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
"'°"~~'
1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
(714)/ 642·2050
• I
•
Or•no• Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Aprll 14, 1pe2 s
'
-Fickle trends
cloud future
for economists
WASHINGTON .(AP) -Per-
haps it's time for economists to
g~l themselves a new crystal ball.
Their old one keeps clouding up.
Never. it seems, have so many
economists been so wrong about
where they think this fickle eco-
nomy is going to be just a few
months into the future.
.Niii ANA1Y81S
aummer when he said the fore
cast is in line with that of mosl
private economists.
And 1t 1s little surprise that
fears of a coming depression
persist in some quarters despite
assertions by econom1Sts that the
chances of that happening are
remote.
PLANNING FALKLANDS STR ATEGY -British armed
forces commanders study map of South America at Navy
Fleet Headquarters at Northwood, England. They are, from
left, Vice Adm. Peter Herbert, flag officer submarines; Maj.
Gen. Jeremy Moore, Royal Marines commando forces; Adm.
U Wlrephoto
Sir John Fieldhouse, commander-in-chief fleet and overall
commander of the Falklands operations; Vice Adm. David
Hallifax, fleet chief-of-staff; Air Marshal Sir John Curtis,
commander RAF 18th Group; Rear Adm. Peter Hammersley,
chief-of-staff, engineering.
The failure of their short-~rrn
predictive powers has been un-
settling not just to the economics
profession but to the businesses.
politicians and journalists who
have come to depend on these
numerical prophesies for their
own future-casts.
It 1s no wonder President
Reagan's chief economist, Mur-
ray L. Weidenbaum. inatHled
little confidence in the official
administration forecast of a
strong economic recoverv by
For a decade since the late
1960s, when computers were
harnessed to analyze and spew
out nullions of stat1Sllcs about the
nation's business. economists
emerged as modern-day oracles
commanding great attention and
demand for their services.
Th~ 1980s, however, brought a
new !"et of governmen t policy-
makers and economic rules that
have changed dramatically the
forecasting game. Today. mten-st
rate trends are unpredictable. So
are government respon ses to
re(.'eSSions and huge budget defi-
cits.
'~ABC tOps Emmys with 22 awards
··CBS receives 18 for news, while N BC and PBS garner six statuettes each Allen Sina1, a senior economist
at one of the leading forecajl111g
houses. Data Resources Inc. in
Lexington. Mass . says his p ro-
fession must operate an "a totally
new" political environment. A"i a
resuJt, "we're flying by the seats
of our pants," he ronfessl»S.
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC
.emerged the wanner with 22
awards when the National Aca-
demy of Television' Arts and
Sciences handed out its annual
Emmys for news and documen-
tary programmjng.
CBS received 18, while NBC
and the Public Broadcasting
S~!'ltem got ~ix each as the
awards were presented following
a dinner in the G rand Hyatt
Hotel.
In the category of outstanding
coverage of a single breaking
'news story, the judges singled
$26.5 million
·awarded to
victims' kin
•· BEAUMONT. Texas (AP) -
The family of a mother and
daugh~r killed by a truck whose
driver had allegedly been racing
another vehicle has been awar-
ded $26.5 million in an out-of-
court settlement.
Barbara McWhorter. 36. a
Houston marathon runner. and
her daugh~r. Suzanne. 11. were
• killed in the April 17. 1981, acci-
dent near Utica. N.Y.
Mrs. McWhorter's husbAnd,
Richard, suffered "severe inju-
ries in his brain and to his right
-leg" in the head-on wreck, the
suit said. The McWhorters' sons,
John, 16, and Andrew, 13, were
ridmg in the car but escaped with
minor injuries.
Attorney Richard Mithoff of
Houston, representing the Mc-
Whorter family. alleged in the
suit that two trucks were racing
and following too close to traffic
in front of them.
"We were in a position to prove
they were going too fast," Mi-
-,thoff said.
:" The suit said the two trucks
: collided and that the 18-wheeler i driven by Leonard Fleischer of
>.Elyria, Ohio, crossed the median
~d struck the McWhorters' car.
~ Mithoff said the settlement
· was reached through weekend
~negotiations before the start of a
~al on Monday.
., The McWhorter family had
Cfiled suit seeking more than $25
· ·on from two trucking finns
nd both drivers, Mithoff said.
three winne ls _: NBC News'
"Magazine with David BnnkJey"
f o r its program "Insid e
AWACS"; ABC "World News
Tonight" coverage of the Italian
earthquake, and ABC's "20-20"
segment on the Kansas City
Hyatt Ho~l disaster.
Awards for outstanding back-
ground analysis of a single cur-
rent story went to "C BS Re-
ports" for "Murder Teenage
Style"; ABC for "Soldiers of the
Twilight"; ABC "20-20" for
"Death in the Fast Lane"; CBS'
"60 Minutes" for Andy Rooney's
"Grain''; ABC's "World News
Tonight" for a two-part special
on L ibya, and ABC "Nightlme"
for "The War on Opium."
Out of 11 p.rograms nominated
as outstanding investigative
journalism, only one, ABC's "The
Gene Merchants," fai led to get
an award.
The winners were "CBS Re-
ports": "Nuclear Battlefield." and
"The War Machme": PBS' "The
Hunter and the Hunted"; ABC's
"Near Ann.ageddon: The Spread
of Nuclear Weapons in the Mid-
dle East"; PBS' "Why America
Burns"; ABC's "Formul~ for
Disaster''; CBS' "Killer Wheels";
NBC's "Rockets for Sale". NBC's
"Teen Models." and ABC's
"Unnecessary Surgery."
Outstanding 10~1V1ew awards
went to PBS for Clark Clifford
on "Pr~idents and Power"; PBS
for George Steine r o n
"Li~rature. Language a nd Cul-
ture"; CBS for "The Last Ma-
fioso" Jimmy Fratianno. and
CBS for Mike Wallace's "60 Mi-
nutes" interviews with Amer-
1cans accused of supplying anns
and training to Libyan terrorists.
In informational, cultural and
his torical programming ABC
took three awards, for "20-20"
segments on the Berlin Wall ai;id
Ray Charles and a "World News
T onight" segment e ntitle d "St.
Paul's Bells."
PBS won awards in this cate-
gory for "Close Harmony" and
"The Colonel Comes to Japan,"
and a sixth award went to CBS'
"Sunday Morrung" for "Louis is
13."
In the category or awards to
ind1v1dual writers, CBS carried
o ff all the honors -to Philip
Buton Jr .. and Larry King for
"The Best Little Statehouse in
Texas"; Walter Pincus, Andrew
Lack. Howard Stringer and Bob
Schief(er for ''Ground Zero";
Judy Crichton, Howard Stringer
and Leslie Cockbur n for
''Nuclear Battlefield"; Judy To-
wers Reemtsma and Marlene
Sanders for "Nurse, Where Are
You?" and Perry Wolff for
"Inside HoJJywood: The Movie
Busin~."
Craig Lea~e was named best
director for "The War Machine,"
and awards for technical direc-
tion w ent to CBS' Richard Jef-
freys for ''The Assassination of
Anwar Sadat"; NBC's Tom
Woods for "Inside Afghanistan";
ABC's Rupe n Vosgimorukian
and Barry Fox for a segment on
the Italian earthquake; ABC's
Stephen Stanford for "Monarch
Butterflies." and NBC's Sheldon
Fielman on the shooting of Pre-
sident Reagan.
The cinematography award
20 'victims' urge
suspect's freedom
SAN JOSE (AP) -About 20
of the 108 investors allegedly
victim.i7.ed by Larry Leavitt have
urged a judge to set him free,
arguing that the gold swindle
suspect is an honest man who
will regain their money.
The investors offered their
arguments as Santa Clara County
Municipal Court Judge Mark
Thomas considered a defense
motion to eliminate Leavitt's
$500.000 bail.
He deferred his decision, but
said he would take the investors'
views into consideration.
Leavitt, 59, is accused of bil-
king 108 San Francisco Bay area
investors into putting almost $4
million into Alaskan ~old mining
operations through his company.
Leavitt and Associates Inc.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Cla11Nled advertlsi"9 7141642-5e71
All other department• 642~321
The Santa Clara County di-
strict attorney's office has char-
ged him with grand theft and
selling securities without a licen-
se, charges which could result in
10 years in prison, a $90,000 fine
and $3.9 million in restitution.
But the investors said that
they'll have no chance to recoup
their money if Leavitt -whom
they contend is an honest man -
is locked away.
. . '
Thomas P. HaleY .>vblleher 11><1 CMel (•ecutlw OfllOlt
Rober1 N. Weed -Kay Schultz
'llele-_, OlredOr ol ~
Tom Murphlne
Editor
Mike HatveY
Dlt-o! Merhline (Clrc<lle-1
Ken Goddard Dltctor o! Operl!llona
Ray Mael.Mn ~
Qlarlel l009
.......... Edllor
........ w • ..., .. ._ ......
~'"Cle)' II yO\I 00 l\OI -_. -lly 5 30 O "' CIH O.lo<e 1 0111 --cooy .. 11 11e-..... =---~~t.,''?,',..oo;: ~ ,&':",., "'° "°"' coo. .. ". ..._..,
:
MAIN OfflCE JJ0 WHI art St., COit• Mew, CA.
M<tlt eddrnt: 8o• 1560. C•te Me .. , CA. m2t
COPY• ..... "'2 o.-. COHt Pllb41ohlno C-y
No ft.-AorlH, 111..-....... s. ""°"•' ,,._ ...... verllw ....... s Mrein mey lie •ftWodllCecl wlltloul _ ... ~of<-·•-·
VOL 75, NO. 104
The district attorney's investi-
gaton "have not done all their
homework," said Dennis Stos-
cher of San Carl08, who said be
invested $250,000 with Leavitt.
He contended that "it has al-
ways been Mr. Leavitt's intent"
to return their money.
The investors aaid that Gerald
Lee Eastman, who wu AITeSted
in Denver in connection with the case, has assets which Leavitt
hopes to turn over to them.
We'Te Listening •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot., What don't you lik•"
Call the number below and your message wrn be recordtd.
transcnbed and dellver('d lo the appropriate editor
The same 24 hour answering service may be used lo record let
ters to the editor on any topic Ma1lbo• contributors must include
their name and t~lephone numtK-r for vtr1llc1tion. No circulation
calla. please.
Tt'll us whal'11 on your mtnd.
t
) I
went to CBS' B11Jy Wagner, Jan
Morgan, John Boulter and John
Peters for "Nuclear Battlefield."
O ther awards to 1nd1viduals
were for film ed1t1ng, audio. as-
sociate direction and videotape
ed1tang. lighting d1rect1on a nd
graphic design.
"Very frankly, there's a lot of
soul-searching and hair-tear111g
going on here," says S andra
Shaber, an economist at one of
Data Resources' chie f comp<'t•-
tors. Chase F.conometncs an Bala
Cynwy~ Pa. "We missed the
depth of this recession and its
duration . . mainly because 0f
the perverse behavior of intert:~t
rates."
''Once you get behav10r like
that, you're no longer 1n the
realm of economics. you're an the
realm of poli tics,'· she l'Ontends.
Hardly any of the mainstream
economists saw the current ret:-
ession t'Ommg until 1t wa<; nearly
upon the country last year. After
the slump was acknowledged,
none of the major forecasters
expe<:ted it to be as severe and
prolonged as it has turned out lo
be. The Reagan admm1Stration·~
economists have been of£ the
mark the most. having opted fur
an optimistic outlook for poliucaJ
reasons.
For several months. the con-
sensus view has been that t he
re<:ess1on would bottom out early
this year and begin a healthy
recovery soon afterward. But
n o w that vision 1s b ecoming
blurred because of the pcrsistC'n-
ce of high interest rates.
lnterest rates weren't supposed
to stay this high during a dl'ep
recession. but they have. forcing
econ omists to tear up their old
forecasts.
AP Wltepftoto
ONLY WAY TO GO -England's ambassador to the United
Nations, Hamilton Whyte. unlocks his bicycle after having
been interviewed with the Argentine U .N . ambassador,
Eduardo Roca, on WABC-TV's "Good Morning New York."
After spending almost 10 years in New York, Whyte feels the
bicycle is the best way to get around town.
Today's predominant outlook is
so cautious that it comes across
more as a hunch than a forecas t:
something less than a robust
recover y sometime later this
year. but perhaps no recovery at
all unless interest rates com!.'
down.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ct'rt1fied GtmoloRist, AGS
A BREAK ON GIFTS
twlp., em11/o\ c,...
If you have people working for
you, there is a new change ln the
federal tax laws that 1hould interest
you. Whereas there used to be a
limit of SlOO that could be deducted
for the cost of giving gifts to em-
ployees upon retirement or for spe-
cial accomplishment.a. that limit has
been raised to $400. Among other
things. ane ad"'.antage of the new
rule ii that employers are now able
to give nice jewelry to such em-
ployees. U a worker la beinl dted
for lft\gth of ~. productivity or
aafety achlevem•nt, the gift quaU-
flea for the deduction. Anyone who
check• with hi1 employees H to
their favo r ite glfu for 1uch
echlevementa will fi nd that many
prefer gif\I of jewelry. becau.e of
the 1.-Una value ot that kind of ilf\.
It alao 1Pvea the employee eomethlnc
that he can look at dally for many
yeana and know that the company
appreciated hh etfor\I by alvlna
IUCh a atfL Such aentlmenta benefit
both lhct liver and the receiver of
fine jewelry.
•
Skilled Profea,lonal ....
• ervtce
For your valuable jewelry and watches Is as close to
you as J. C. Humprhrles Jewelers where our own
craftsmen carefully do the work under personal
supervision.
v Diamond & Precloua Gem Setting
v Fine Jewelry Care a Repair
v Orlglnel Jewelry Dealgn end
Creetlona
v Fine Watch Rep•lr
v Gem end Jewelry, Appralaal1
' J. C. .JJwnpJ.,ie6 J.wef.r6
MEMBER AMERICAN Gt:M SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT BLVO COSTA MESA
35 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION
81nllAmerlcard-~11er Cher~ PHONl &4•3401
.. I ..
" -
.. .. . ..
------...-·------
Use your
new address
1 DEAR PAT DUNN: I mo~ed la1t montb. Do I pat my new or
1my oJd addre11 on my ltal tax return? Alao, wben 1bouJd coo-~trlb•don1 and medical expen1et paid wltb a credit card be de-
:dacted -wbeo tbey were cursed or when tbe cbarge1 were
(Paid?
'! J .R., Co1ta Meaa
Internal Revenue Service aays to use your new address.
Many people think they should show the address where they
:lived while eamln& the lncome, but the return should have your
.current address to avoid a delayed refund check. C.Ontrtbutions
~and medical expenses must be deducted in the year in which the
:credit card charses are mad~. . • ~off ee and pregnancy
DEAR PAT DUNN: My daagbter 11 pregnant and 1be re-
fHea to drink coffee. Sbe told me 1be'd read tbat caffeine can
ca11e birth defects. Wbat kind of 1t11dy was tb11 baaed on and ts
uy more known at tbt1 time about tbe danger of c&ffelne?
-C.A., Newport Beacb
About a year ago, the Food and Drug Ad.ministration issued
an advisory to pregnant women to avoid caffeine-<x>nta.ining foods
and drugs, or to use them sparingly. The advisory was based in
part on an FDA study with rats showing that caffeine fed to
pregnant rats caused birth defect,., and delayed skeletal develop-
.ment in their offspring. The study's implication for people is not
known.
The concern about the use of caffeine during pregnancy is
based not only on this latest rat study. but also on the facts that
~ffeine crosses the placenta and reaches the fetus and that it is a
stimulant that has a definite drug effec,. In general pregnant
women are advised to avoid all substances that have drug-like
effects.
At this time, however, present evidence does not establish an
·association between ca._ffei!'le and birth defec~ in pepple, acco1-
ding to government scientists' recent evaluation of all available
human studies. Further studies were recommended.
Use drugs with care
DEAR READERS: Antihistamines do more than just help
control the runny nose of a cold or allergy. They can stop the itch
, of an insect bite, help you slip into sleep, quell the queasy stomach
of motion sickness, even slow the stomach acid that can cause
ulcers. • Antihistamines may seem like reaJ wonder drugs, but they
must be used with care. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
:has a new booklet that describes the types of antihistamines on
the market, their side effects, and what precautions consumers
should use. For instance, the drying qualities that benefit the
person with a cold can be dangerous for someone with asthma or
'glaucoma or a pera<>n who takes a MAO inhibitor to control high
blood pressure or depression. Antihistamines also can cause dig-
estive problems ranging from lcm of appetite to fluid retention as
well as making a person teel drowsy.
For a free copy of "Antihistamines." send your name and
address on a postcard to the C.Onsumer lnfonnation Center, Dept.
· 549K, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
"Got 1 problem? Then wri~ to Pat Dunn. Pat wtJJ
cut red tape, getting the answen and action you
need to sol~ inequities in government and business.
Mail your questlona to Pat Dunn, At Your Servke,
Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1'60 Costa
Mesa, CA 92626. As many letters as possible' will be
answered, but phoned inquiries or letters not including the rea-
der'& tun name, address and business hours' phone number can-
not Pe considered. "
Lo"W-fat
diet
touted
WASHINGTON (AP) -Peo-
ple should •wi1ch to dieta low 1n
fat and choleaterol to decreue
the rt.lo of heart dlJleue, even
though there ii no abeolute proof
thtty work, the American Heart
Amodation uya.
A report releued by the ueo-
ciation said "the beat currently
avail.able evidence" 1uppocta the
theory that changing diet can
help cut neart d.19eue, including
the 1 .~ million heart au.ck.a that
strike Americana each year.
The asaocia ti on' s nutrition
committee; composed of volun-
teer 1cientt1ts, said the rela-
tionahip between diet and heart
disease has not been proved
beyond all doubt. But It aaid
absolute proof lan't necesaary
before talc.ing action.
Several kinds of evidence, in-
cluding animal experiments and
llmltecl human lifestyle studies,
strongly support the concept of
modifying diet to reduce the
hardening of the arteries belie-
ved responsible for much heart
diaeue, A.id the report.
The committee of eight 9Cient-
ists from major medical schools
reviewed scores or studies that
reaffirmed "a high correlation
between the estimated level of
fat in the diet and the severity ot
atheroeclerosis," said the report.
Dr. Scott M. Grundy of the
Universit y of Texas Health
S<.'ience Center in Dallas, chief
author of the report. said the
findings justify the association's
belief that modifying risk factors
can decrease the danger of heart
disease.
These risk factors include ele-
vated blood levels of cholesterol
and other fats, smoking, high
blood pressure, obesity and dia-
betes.
About 40 percent of the cal-
ories in the current American
diet come from fat. The associa-
tion is recommending cutting this
to 30 percent, and decreasing the
proportion of saturated animal
Cat to unsaturated vegetable fat.
Even without absolute proof of
the diet-heart disease link,
Grundy concluded, the cir-
cumstantial evidence "is over-
whelming" and more than en-
ough to ju stify preventive ef-
forts.
Finally fired
PARLIER (AP) -Parlier
school trustees upheld the firing
or Superintendent Leo Cardona
after almost 20 hearing sessions
that s panned two months. Car-
dona was accused of 13 charges
of misconduct, some involving
misuse of school district funds.
~ Here's Your Invitation to ~ Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian's
Health Fair '82
S~day, April 25
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Grace Hoag Conference Center
301 Newport Boulevard, Newport· Beach
Free Health Screening
and 1esting
Free Refreshments
Free Health
Lectures
• Blood pressure che.cks
•Hearing screening
•Eye tests
• Coronary risk factors
•Oral screening exam\
• Pulmonary function tests
•Body mechanics demomtrations
• Facts on prepared childbirth
• Da.ncerobics
• Suicide ~vcntion information
• Helpful hints on good nutrition
•Height and weight measurements
• Biofeedback readings
• Stress management
Pl~ displays fron_l the American Lun~ Association, the American Cancer
Society, the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association,
Alcoholism Council of Orange County, and Paramedics.
--
BACK TOGETHER -James Garner
(left) and Jack Kelly rehearse a scene
from an upcoming episode of the new
"Bret Maverick" series. It's the first time
I uwir..-....
the pair have worked together since the
original "Maverick" days from 1957 to
1962. Kelly isoiiow a Huntington Beach
city councilman.
Brahms tribute
hi ts sour note
Carlo Maria GlaUol and the
Los Angeles Philharmonic
want to celebrate the 150th
anniversary of Brahms' birth
West Texas oil millionaire
J ack Grimm, hoping "the
third time will be the charm,"
says he will try again this
summer to raise the Titanic.
cities m June to help celebrate
200 years of friendship bet-
ween the UnHed States and
the Netherlands.
Amway Corp. C hairman
Jay VanAndel, chairman of
the Ne therlands American
Bicentennial Commission, said
the monarch's June 25-27 uip
lO Mich igan was planned be-
cause of the large number of
Dutch-Americans an the area.
by performing a cycle of all
his symphonies and concertos
in London next year.
But a little-known rule,
restricting performances by
visiting orchestras and enfor-
ced by the Britis h govern-
ment, has blocked the plan-
ned five-concert series and
raised a n o t e o f trans -
Atlantic discord which
threatens L ondon's interna-
tional musical reputation.
''The odds are deflnitelr.
coming down in my favor , ·
Grimm said just before the
70th anniversary of the ship's
sinkin~. The Titanic, believed
t.o be carrying a fortune in
gold and jewels in its purser's
cabin, went down on its mai-
den voyage April 15, 191 2.
after striking an iceberg off
the coast of Newfoundland. Peuy O'Neill had her
head an the clouds when
Robert McKearney propo-
sed.
Repeated attempts to raise
the oceanliner have fatled.
''The\ Los Angeles Philhar-
monic is absolutely outraged,"
the orchestra's London agent,
Jasper Parrott, told 'rhe
Associated Pr~.
So is the American Fed-
eration of Musicians.
There's nothing unusual
about Queen Beatrix touring
Holland -after all, sh e's
queen of the Netherlands .
What's unusual is that she's
leaving home to do 1t.
McKearney. a 21 -year -old
S iena college (N. Y.) senior,
said he "wanted to do some-
thing she would remember."
So he> popped the question
1.500 feet above the Hudson
Valley in a hot-air balloon
"He's quite an original,"
said M~ O'Neill.
The queen will visit Hol-
land, Mich .. and several other
The University Diet is a clinically proven, medically su~ supple-
mented fast, prescribed by an authori7.ed physician for those who need
to lose twenty pounds or more, quickly and safely.
Clinically Proven.
The University Diet isn't a fad diet.
It's a medical protocol prescribed for rapid
weight loss.
Over the last eight years. it's proven
itself with literally thousands of test sul>
jects at teaching hospitals such as Harvard
Medical School. UCLA and UCL
TheJoumal of the American Medical
Association has twice reported favorably
on the results and recommended the
prooedure.
Medically Supervised.
The University Diet is a safe, effective
fasting program. personally supervised by
an authorized physician. No shots. pills or
surgery are involved.
Initially, you are given thorough labora-
tory workups. As soon as the physician is
positive there are no contraindications, you
are taken off traditional foods and you
begin the University Diet.
You Can Do It.
Thousands have.
One thing that helps is th.at you 're only
required to make one decision: The decision
to try the program.
After that. thre' s no calorie counting.
You don't have to choose~ ''rUdit''
and ''wrong'' foods or portion SlZeS. l'ou 're t:fletely free of the Deed to deal with
The University Diet is for you if you 're
read.Y to loee a lot of weight. With the help
of a cledicated physidan and an understand·
ing counsel<ro we 1mow you can ed:ueve
yourgoel
Fast. Safe.
A calorie controlled powder. mixed
with water. tea, coffee or a diet soft drink.
provides your body with 45 grams of ero-
tein and 30 grams of carbohydrate daily.
In addition. you get all the vitamins and
minerals you need.
Some people say it's delicious. The
~int is, your nutritional needs are fully sat·
isfied without eating.
Meanwhile, your body does the natural
thing. It bums up pound after pound of
unwanted fat. Quickly and safely.
Reach Your Ideal Weight.
You can st.ay on the University Diet as
long as you need to, burning off fat as
quickly as medical safety permits.
Lab work is done regularly to ensure
your safety, and nonnalTy there's an ECG
test after every loss of 50 pounds.
Once you reach your ideal weight, the
University ~ht Maintknance program
helps you stay there.
We Cost Less.
The University Diet costs less than
similar programs. It's every bit as
effective. And your insurance probably
covers a major portion of the cost.
Ask for our fee schedule.
You 're invited to meet with any of our
patients. And of course we '11 gladly send
~lete details to your personal or
f y physician.
If you need to lose more than 20
~unds, call us for an appointment or
inf onnation.
ln Southmn California ...
1-800-432-8876
OCficea conveniently located 'DIE ~o':'bout Southern California
~~l!Yj)~~
Orang• Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wednetday, Aprll 14, 1pe2
okens
ken
OONOORO, N.H. (AP)
Some New~
v eo came players are
th lr Space Invad-
e t o k ena for a new a : hlahway t.rlvel.
And motorlata have
f und that state tokens
owlna them to ride the
h hwaya allO give them
a ot at Aaterolds.
The tokens the state
a lla for highway tolls
the same size as those
u ed in a chain of ar-
es, named Funspot.
he toll tokens cost
$ .75 for a roll of 30, or
a out 12.5 cents each .
T e video game tokens
t about 17 cents each
bought in bulk. So
using the Funspot
Pragmatic 'princess'
CM pageant contestant eyes acting •In a way, Mariko Palmer's ~uona wanted to become a model," she wd.
for enterina a Hollywood beauty pa-Her father John, an avid photogra-
feant matched tho e of many other pher, had phol.Oif'aphed hil dauahter
8-year-old hopefuls. many ttmea In h er youth, and the
But ln a way they didn'L experience inJtlally encour&Red her.
Tho ueh she says s he was seek· After a period of shyness, she
ing recognition when she entered gained confidence in high 1Chool acti-
the Ml11 Hollywood Globe Beauty vitles, Miu Palmer said. Several pro-
Pageant, ahe was doing so for practical feaaional modeling jobs helped alao.
reuona. Now a fledgling aaleewoman, Miss "I tigured a pageant in Hollywood Palmer aaya she la seeking a Holly-
would be a good place to meet talent wood agent and a professional acting
agenta," she said, coach to land movie roles.
"There were a lot of people there ''If you're In a TV series you can get
handing out business cards" -the stereotyped," she said.
kind of people who can help a young Her sales job. she says, "ls exciting.
woman who aspires to be an actress. It's fun and It's fast-moving. To make
The Co.ta Mesa resident's sec:ond-money you have to work."
place finish in the field of 45 probably When she lan't working, she enjoys
got her 90me of that recognition. calligraphy, singing and dancing.
Her ambition to become an actress Of her finish in the pageant, the
has been developing since pre-teen fifth she has entered. Miss Palmer
years. said ''I was excited and a little sur-
"When I was about 12, I decided I f.rised. Usually when I'm in a pageant
'm so into getting read{ that I don't
look at anyone else. so didn't know
how I'd do." Man sentenced
in mail fraud
ens on the highways
a e s pe nding about a
n kel more than they
h ve to. Those pwnping
s le tokens into Pac SAN FRANCISCO (AP).-A fed-
machines are saving eral judge has fined a meat c utter
She and her local t~alent agent will
probably contact JU St one of the 12
people whose business cards she col-
lected at last week's pageant.
Even if nothing comes of that. Miss
Palmer said the experience "always
h e lps on a r esume for modeling
interviews."
a ut a nickel a play. $1 ,000 in a mail fraud case involving
b Lawson, co-owner redemption of up to $9,000 of discount
o lhe arcade chain, said grocery store-coupons.
it would cost a t l east Paul Robert Cosca, 65, who pleaded s 5. 0 o o c or him to guilty to mail traud. was ordered by Phone hike seen
c ge the shape of his U.S. District Judge Robert H. Sch -
to ens. 0_.., Piiot 11t1oto bJ '"chard K~ nacke Friday to perfonn 100 hours of OKLAHOMA CTTY (AP) -Local
or the hrne being, the PLACES SECOND _ Costa M esa's M ariko voluntary charity work. telephone bills in the United States
pike division and the Cosca was the sixth person convic· will rise an average of 76.4 percent de owners have been Palmer hopes her second-place finish out of 45 ted in connection with the fraud case over the next five to six years because
tent to exchange the in the Miss Hollywood Globe Beauty Pageant that prosecutor Floy Dawson said still of inflation and deregulation, a Com-
to ens~·-_______ w_ill_h_e_lp_Ie_a_d_to_an __ ac_ti_·n_g_car_ee_r. ______ 1_s _be_i_n~g_in_v_es_t_ig~a_ted_. ________ me_r..c_e_D_c~pa_r_t_m_e_n_t _s_Lu_d~y-'-p-re_d_i_ct_s-1.
I .,
I
i •
I_ First
1 •
I I
I
we
it safe. ,.
In 1972, when we started Capital Pres-
ervation Fund, we asked ourselves one
question. "What is the safest invesr-
menc a money market
t-~tS TRE~su~ fund can make?" ~ "«... >-We knew of
'"''V one resource ff people cowd
count on, no
matter what.
The United
States Treasury.
So we decided
to invest our fund
exclusively in U.S. Treasury securities.
Because they're backed by the direct
full faith and credit pledge of the U.S.
Treasury. If the worst happens, the
Treasury will, by law, honor its obliga-
ti ons to the fund . Without question.
Not all money market fund s can
say that. Not even most government-
only fund s.
Now what does that mean to you?
You get the safety and security
you need to sleep nights.
Which is why every one of our
accounts is what we call a Safety Ac-
count.
Here's ~hat happens when you
open a Safety Account. You put in a
minimum of Sl,000. That makes you
an investor in th~ fund. The fund, in
tum, invests in U.S. Treasury securi-
ties. You don't have to leave your
money in for a set period of time. If
you need it or want to move it around,
you simply write a check. And you
dorrr get penalized either.
Capital Preservati on is nor in-
s~red, as a bank is, by the F.D.I.C. But
the F.D.l.C. holds its own emergency
reserves in the same kind of Treasury
securities. Interesting.
I
Then
we • 1tpa}t
72 7l
Sii ll
SIO!l
$(111
S'ill
While the past doesn't pred1Ct thl' /wure, look
what SSOOO would have madt' m tlie last ten years.
If you had invested SS,000 in our fund
when it opened, and left your money
in, you'd have over SI0,000 today. Still
earning high interest. And still protec-
ted by the U.S . Treasury's direct full
faith and credit pledge.
T har's the kind of income that
would have helped protect your capital
against inflation.
What's collling next? We don't
know. These days, nobody does.
We still say thac ic's safe, and
sound, to earn good money on your
money. And so do the 180,000 inves -
tors who have us managing S2.7 billion
in assets.
Looks like we asked the right
question.
If you think a Safety Account
might be the answer for you, give us a
call. Or send in the coupon below. We11l
be glad to send you a free prospectus
which will tell you all about our fund .
Including charges and ex penses. Be
sure to read it thoroughly before you
invest. Or drop by and see us.
The
SafetY
Account.
CAPITAL PRESERVATION
FUND
1900 Avenue ol lhc Siar. Su11c 715
Los Angel~. CA 90067
.... ---------~ I lo$ Angele~ call 1-&XW82-5873 N OCPT I I Outs.Ide Cahfomia call HOO 227-8996 I
Or fill ou1 1his coupon and send 11 in. I I Name __________ _
I Add~~-----------
1 City·-----------
1 State Zi p
I
I
I
I
I L---------.J
A Value -Packed Monthly Feature
of the Daily Pilot 642-5678
1 DOZEN FREE PENCILS
wllh SS purchase & coupon thru M30
GRIFFITH ST A TIO NE RS
EXAMPl.ES: Bic Pens, rtf. Sl.48, sale Sl.69/doz•
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\
~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIWednNdly, Aprll 14, 1982
I [ Thesaurus updated
New edition neutralizes ·sexist' terms, adds new words
LONDON (AP) -A new edl-
tlon of Ro1et'1 Theaauru , lht'
130-)'~ar-old boolt of synonyms
and antonynu, eliminate• catt>-
,orlet that lta ed.ltor says are se-
>tltt, blaM'd, prejudiced, jaundi·
c:ed, iUJt>eral and narrow-minded.
"Mankind" bec ome s
"humankind," a "countryman"
la a "cou ntry dwe ller" and a
"rich man" is a ''rich penl01l" in
the first revision of the Britlah
reference book in two decades.
Publication ls Thursday.
"It reflect.a the language of the
80111
11 editor Susan Lloyd said in a
telephone interview from h er
combined home and office in the
Norfolk town of Harleston.
"It makes much more explicit
the existence of women. Before,
they were just assumed."
Ms . Lloyd, a 41-year -old
former librarian and t eacher
with a master's degree in French
literature, is a homemaker and
mother of two tee n-agers. She
spent 3 ~ years adding or reclas-
sifying 20,000 words and phrases
for the 1,247-page revised vo-
lume.
In addition to trying to elimi-
nate sexist word groupings, she
introduced scores of expressions
that have gained currency in the
past 20 years: punks, solar panel.
genetic engineering, test-tube
baby, jumbo jet and multina tio-
nals, to name a few.
The revised volume also con-
tains entries under the new hea-
dings of micro-electronics and
data proces.sing.
"Language undergoes e nor-
mo~ chllng~ In 20 yt'Otrs," Ms
Lloyd said.
The 'fh<.-aurua ha.a sold an e.-
l1ma ted 20 m11llon copies sin<.'<.' 11
ww1 first <.'Ompil t-d· by Dr. Pt'ter
Mark Roge t, un Engli&h physt-
dun und lexkographer , and pu-
blished in 1852 as lhe "Thesaurus
of English Words and Phrasei.."
It classilil'S words according to
ideas and can bl· used as a die-
' · / t ref I e c t s the
language of the
'80s."
t1onary of lJkt-s and opposites or
by those st'a rch1n~ for a w1>rd
thl'Y cun't r<'<.:all .
Und e r the k eywo rd
"drunkenness," for example, en-
tries include "well-oiled, pickled,
canned, bottled, s te wed , fried,
well-lubricated, smashed. sou.Jed
and soaked."
The category is preceded by
synonyms f or so briety :
"wate r -drtnker, teetotale r ,
abstainer. pro h1b1ll on1st ,
pus.sy{oot.''
M s . Ll oyd was h ir ed b y
Longman publishers to edit the
firs l revision since 1962 a fter
answering an advertisement m
the educationa l supplement of
the London Times.
Although she had edited news-
letters and othe r pubhc:ations, it
was her firs t attempt to edit a
book. M.Ji. Lloyd said she &Ought
"advice and heJp" Crom expert
lexicographers but Wllti given aole
~'llponaibillty for the revtalon
Ms. Lloyd said she did not at-
lempt to elimlnate all words that
might be cons.idered sexist, but
rather changed keywords -the
category h eadings -to make
them "as wide-ranging and neu-
tral as possible."
"Research has sh own that iC
you say 'countryman,' people
thtnk o f a man, no t a wom a n .
Hen ce, the change to •country
dwe ller ' to mclude "men, wo-
men, dogs, what-have-you," she
s~ud ..
Ms. Lloyd said she kept some
masculine keywords, s uch as ·
"master," becau se s he could
think of no suitable substitute.
.. 'Mistress' h as an entirely
diffcrtmt m eaning," she obser-
ved.
A sked wheth.er some men
might object to the changes, Ms.
Lloyd said: "If men take offe nse,
I s uppose it 's because they
thought 'mankind' meant 'man '
and not 'woman,' and that's the
whole point.''
M s. Lloyd said s he did n o t
consider herself a femarust in the
sense of someone active in the
women's movement.
"I'm keen on women's r igh ts
and men's rights," she said. "I'm
not making a statemen t I'm just
reflecting the changes in the
languages."
The revised Roget's will seU in
London for $14.30 or $21.50 for
the deluxe edition.
New TV real turnoff for kids
Parents can block any channel for up to 12 h ours
NEW YORK (AP) -Ame ·
rica's youth may soon find their
"Happy Days" at an e nd and
their TV viewing doled out "One
Day at a Time." General Electric
-it~trilducing a rem ote-control
set which gives parents the po-
wer to block out any channel for
up to 12 hours.
"It's really a parent's aid," ex-
plained Roger Sweeney. TV
products manage r for GE a t a
Manhatta n press confer e nce
Tuesday. "It's designed for pa-
rents concerned with the cal.Jber
of TV viewing and the capabili·
ties of the new cable systems."
The system for blocking ou t
the channe ls is si.lnple : a ll the
work is done on a six-inch -long,
hand-he ld remote control box.
The parent types in "99," the
number of the s tation to be
blacked out. and any four digits.
The process takes about 10 se-
conds; the blackout lasts up to 12
hours. To restore the channel.
the code is simply retyped m to
the box.
"The worst thinR that could
happen with this system IS you
<.'ould lose a c hanne l f o r 12
hours," said Sweeney
The best thing? Sweeney sm1-
lt'CI.
And, he adds. not ony onJy-will
the new sets be able to delete up
to 112 channels, but also they'll
possess the capab1hty to k el'p
h o m e \fideo games lik e
"Pac-Man" or "Asteroids" off the
scrt>cn~.
"It provides parents a ltttlt'
peac-e of romd If mom and dad
arc going to the movies. and they
know that an 'R' movie is on to·
night, they punch m the code and
don 't have to worry about 1l,"
said S w eeney.
What of the prc·coc1ous child
who lnes to break mommy and
daddy's code?
"We tho ught about that ,"
Sweeney answered. "The reason
we put four numbers was that
two would be very easy to figure
and three a bit morl' difficult, but
four just about 1mposs1ble.
"Any kid who can f1gu'rn out
the four-digit code deserves to
0 watch his show,'' he said.
The block-out function will be
available on 12 of GE's top-of-
the·lint~ HI-and 25-inch sets in
June. Swl'eney _sajd the feat.Yre..
will not aCld to the price of -these
models, which range from $660
to $1.500.
T here remains one problem:
Whl'n it's F riday rught and the
folks are settling down to watch
"Dallas," the children could ex-
tract their revenge by knocking
that station off the system. •
Sweeney might have spoke n
for parents everywhere when he
acknowlt.-dged. "Yes. It's possible
-but 1f you did it m y house,
you'd only do it On<'('"
Ch in ese r ead P a ine
PEKING (AP) -Works by
American Revolutionary War fi -
g ure Tho mas Paine were pu-
blished an China and the People's
Daily says the pamphle u arc
useful in helping C hinese un-
derstand "bourgeois revolution.''
HOUSE OF
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HORSEPLAY -Cynthia Aguinaga, 10, of Irvine, feeds her
pinto Lily as the pair get ready for t,he horse show events at
the annual 4-H Spring Fair at the Orange County
Fairgrounds April 24 and 25. Hours are 9 to 5 each day and
admission is free.
WHAT'S UP, DOC? -Heidi Schmidt, 5, and her sister Holly.
12, of Costa Mesa, wiU be entering their Ne w Zealand white
rabbit Cinty m the livestock show at the annual 4-H Spring
Fair April 24 and 25 at the Orange County Fairgrounds.
Daily Pilai
Florida
ranch
sale risk
YEEHAW JUNCTION, rt)
(AP) -A Florida ca ttle ranch
that covers as much temtory N
Dianey World will be aold to the
higheat bidder next month at a
risky aucUon with no minimwn
bids.
With the demand for beef on
the decline, the 40-square mUe
Double Diamond Ra nch. one of
Florida's last huge cattle 1pre~ 1
goes on the auction block M~ 6.
The Double Diamond Raneh
sprawls over the remote noro,,
w est corner of Okeech obqf.
County on the ~munee Ri::'5!
in central Florida. About 4,7~0.
cattle live on its 27,000 acres. (. ,,
Owned bv the Wold family 8(
Boca Raton, the Double Diamo~
will b e sold a t an "absolu
auction," at the Okeechobee Ci
Center. The seller has set fl
minimum bad and must take the
highest bid offered. ~
"We ac.'t.-ep~hatever price e~
proper ty brings," said Kei t
Wold, 57, an o phthalmologist
who wants to retire from \:atf~.
rancl1jng. ·
The Double Diamond has ~
managed since 1976 by Wo14T;:
daughter, Diana Wold -
Wold said the ranc h 1s beit.g
auctioned because of the diffl,..
l'Ulty involved tn assembling eh-
ough interested buyers to sell Uff
the entire ranch. ,,
If the ranch commands tl;ip
average pnt·e for Florida farm-
land, about $1 ,000 an acre, tl,w
Wold family could walk aw~~
with $27 million. : 'J
The Double Diamond Ranab •
will be sold m 27 parcels, rangin&
from 125 acres to 2,500 acres. 'Jl(e
parcels 1nl'lude pasture, a huh-
ung a rea for sportsmen. cauJe
~~ITIJK~n~ an_Q_m .a.ireWle _
runway. ~
Also up for sale are more ttu(ii
4.500 Bra ngus. Braford and ot.~
c rossbred cattle, a ramblin\;.?
farmhouse, mobile homes for tb'e
farmhands and machinery 1
It takes a day to tour the ranoh
by ,eep. Prospective buyers w~
can prove they have substantial
r esources will be escorted on
airplane tours of the prope r!f
before the aucuon. ;
\-
1 ~1
I ..
·~ ·.
t
{
READER APPRECIATION NIGHT t
SUN. MAY 2 -6:~0 PM
LOS ANGELES
SPORTS ARENA
CHA RUE
TICKNER
..
California's Own.
CHARUE TICKNER • World Champion
USA MARIE ALLEN • U.S. Naff Sliver Medallst
BARBIE SMITH • U.S. Naff Silver Medalist
and Canadian Dance Champions
LORNA WIQHTON and .IOHN DOWDING
SPECIAL GUEST STAR
.IANl'.T LYNN
OLYMPIC & WORLD BRONZE MEDALIST
IV
u
11 .,
[
• 'j I
G
if
" t6
q.
vouMfOMLV sc:· l~~-----'.'."'-:'.::'"::;;-;;i;:;~~;;;;;;:'i---;;;~~;;---;;;~~;:;.;-----=~t ~ l==--J~~~-~~l~·~E~~~~2~~oo~~~!b~~M~GL~·r~·:=~·c~U~~~~=·~::=~;~==--=Jr ~Y • Ion and the ecaUl9Y, 16• ' ~~[=-~"~S~pe:c:ta~c=le~, ~·~th:le~t:lc:rta~z~~:~::;,:•:" n:'u:::lt:'•~IC~E~C~:A~:PA:-~~~E~~~t:on:P:oa:t::-:i!., f ure tantllY ente w .
o p ICE CAPADES •t the "I
LOS ANGELES SPORTS AMNA APRIL 20 -MAY 2 1' •
************************************
MAIL OR BRING THIS COUPON TO: ~~~~~~~sR~7sR.i":e~ENA '~')
SAVE $2.00 LOS ANGELES. CA 90037 ',. ...,,..
_READER APPRECIATION NIGHT
SUNO.V, MAY 2 "'I PM
No. Adult I Youth tlcketa _____ @
MAKE CHECK OR MONEY ORDER
PAYABLE TO ICE CAPAOES
-NO LIMIT ON TICKETS -
_____ .$ _____ Total EncloMd
Namt'~-------------------~DayPhont ~-----
Addte .. ---''------------City _______ Zlp ___ _
P'9w tftOloee Mff 1•f I HI d,...,,. ttlYllopt • ... ~_. .. , , ... ....,,.._, . .-n.
. ....
IN COMPETITION
-D S hannon Cleye,
wth o h o 1 d s M i s a
0 1'ange County and
Miii Orange County ~r titles, w ill com-
pve't eat N a t iona l
Orange Show in San
· o for title of
1 2 California Citrus
en. Show starts 1. ;pay run April 29.
QCC sets
.religious
debate
.,A debate on the con-
sU\\ltional guarantees of
rEtHgious freedom and
church-state separation
Is set Friday at Orange
Coast College in Costa
Mllsa.
"'State Control of
C¥a'urch Activism," co-
spbnsored by OCC's
Religious St udies and
Cdmmunity Service De-
plVtments, will run from
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in room
21,_ of the OCC Chemi-
stFy Building.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesd1y. Aprll 14. 1982 AT
'City seeks to dissolve itself to prevent f ~ared guru takeover
THE DALLES. Ore. (AP) -
a..tdenta ot A.ntelo.,. who want io
d l11olve their clty to prevent a
fared takeover by an lnd1an curu
and bit followera have been 11ven
permiulon \o hold an emer1ency.
election.
Judae John J elderb of Waaco
County Clrcu lt Court ruled that
delayl.na the election u.ntil the May
18 1tatewtde primary might c:on·
alUtute a hardah.lp for the dty and
lta 40 realdenta, •nd aaid the elec-
tion <.'OUld be held Thunday.
But Jelderka denled the city'•
...qu"t tt be allowed to po.tpone
1rantln1 bulldlna permlte to the
1uru'1 aroup for a prinUns plant
and two homee. The clty eought to
delay the permit• undl after the
election.
"You win one, you loee one," aald
SPECIAL I
M•yor Mar1aret HW.
Ed Sullivan of Portland, o law-
yer for the commune, questioned
whether the city provided enough
notice of an emerpncy election.
"Everyone In Antelo~ wlll be
aware of the election,' Jelderka
said. "Because of media coverage.
this election probably has more
notice than any other In the history
of Wuco County."
Antelope reeldenta feared that
follower• of Bhagwan Shree Raj-
neeah would take over the town
and force the other resident. out
through excetlivc taxation.
About 280 of the guru'• dladples
have 1ettled here, and aay they
don't want to force anyone out.
The Bhagwan, as he Is called,
teaches that nearly all E.utem and
Western religions have 90me value.
He became controvenial In India
for promotina aex without reetra!nt
or obligation and became known ln
the European prees u the "free-eex
IUl'U·''
Some followen from a c.pmmune
: near Poona, India, moved here
last summer and bou1ht the
100-aquare mile Bl Muddy ra.nch
near Antelo for million.
,SPECIAL I
~Tl(la.)w
UQU9(U -.)
H& 3.31 1.llu ~----._... ____________ "!"!"JI 81° 1.&luUa PAK OF 4
lfTllUMmc:S
ILUll
Lew ... r ...
CASSETIES
=-:;~ 129 (M ..... U.) •
Cil'tlU•
Mas ter Card
' .
FABERGE
>Dav id Llewellyn , an
~e_ County atto==--v->--
anp law professor, will
d~1>ate an attorney re-
, ~nting the American · Liberties Union.
dmission is $4 , and
tickets will be available
at fthe door.
IWUUSILk ----llT1flCW.
FLOWERS
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNESDAY APRIL 14th THRU S ATURDAY. APR IL 17th
BRUT -33
The ftnesl 1n grooming
aids tor men
-"Tit[
TANNERY
Le .. /VI.,.
a.u.l/CC*Dl1IOM(I
Jlor information , call
5~5880. ,,
~Victims
of crime
studied
A series of local events
starting today and run-
ning through May will
foc us on the rights of
victims of crime.
Y.S.P . Inc., a victim/
witness assistance prog-
ram, planned the events
to start near the begin-
ning of the state's Vic-
tims Rights Week April
19-25.
Worksh ops, talks.
tours and consul tations
will be offered at loca-
tions throughout th(
county as part of the sc
ries. For information. 1 ca ll 957 -2737 or
834-7103.
Raising
of funds
scheduled
The Research Round
Table of the American
Heart Association's
Orange County chapter
will host a fund-raiser
May 2 at 10:30 a.m. at
Magic Island in Newport
Beach.
Funds raised will help
. sup,P<>rt the Heart Asso-
ciation's goals of redu-
cing death and disability
from heart disease.
Brunch will be served
and' guests will be enter·
tained by magic perfor-
m•nces. Child r en 5 or
older are invited. Tickets
are'$30 per person, in -
cluding children.
For in form•tion call
547-3001.
Candidate
at YWCA
u .s. Senate candidate
Ma uree n Reagan will
addreu the So u th
Orange County YWCA
April 21 at the Newpor-
te r Inn i n N e wpo rt
a.ch.
The dinner meetln1
wUl mark the loc&l Y'1
Hth annlven ary and
n ew board me mbe rs
fNm Newport, lrvlne1 HunUn~n Beach ana
nba_ Beach will be
.,.b ,....rv1tJon,
~'77.
Jdeal tor your SpnflQ_. Fancy~ 2: Sl
17111 "
MOYU
PLAYING CARDS
"POll£r
•'-•Ami
ggc,..
14~ 1.59
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• L[Ul (Ml ., • #lt)
ktwmTm TAIUTS
PUllwlULD
tOOIMUT1
TOUR a.c:IJ
Mac Kinnon' s
SCOTCH
WHISKY
• IPUSIMNI LOTIOlf
(11-.)
• Dl:OOOltMT Sf'IAY
(15-.)
•UlTIADeYUffi.
f'£ISNMT SNAY
(l-.)
• •oooeMT snc:a (2.5 .. ,
• AlfTI.f'OtwtlAWT snc:a Dl:OOCMWfT
(2.5-.)
YOOI~
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SORRY NO LIQUOR AT: 1450 EAST HOLT AVENUE• POMONA ;a8~· li!~[T12oz.2.09
For llay
lever/
allergy
symptoms
.,,.,.~ DRY SKIN RELIEF
Speeds instanl reltel 2 49 even to skin so dr y
1t hurts
15.8 oz. •
........... ~~ FLEX IAlWI
la PIOTON 16 oz. BEN-GAY TRIAMINICIN pH COUtCT Sltam,oe
or l..t.t Heir
C•dltt•• Gruseless formula
to help soothe
ar1hri1ts pain
SPECIAL I
~ MITCHUM
lm-PlaPllMT
For problem
perspiration
TAIUlS
BABY OIL <10 oz.>
or
----WITH PURE WMEATCEn
B.till~:>l OIL a HON£Y
SHAMPOO or
-
1.99
STD (2.1&)
2.59
SAVB 20'
... ,nn CANOY
... UClmcl
w'aanlnll
A dtltcllblt burst Of
ti.vor In every blttt
__ 1.l9a
INSTANT
CONDITIONER
lSu. · BABY
POWDER Purm ~o:t: 2.49
SPECIALI
SWEET'N LOW
PACKIETI
SPECIAL!
SODAS
All'T.FUVOftl
12&CMI
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:=~lON.) 179 (U-.)
YOW ateleCI! • U.
MR. COFFIE .
FILTERS
Removes oils sediment
and bitterness
Cj.\j Ji••wtLSON "CMAMPIONSllP"
htr1 Ow.Wt
TENNIS
BALLS
Brtght Yellow for easier
v1s1b11t1y 2 29 CM Of 3 rTlMl/4 • CM
•Wll·!·•
PUSTIC).4T.
PITCHER
Assorled b11gh1 179 soltd colors
ll>aa4 • u. • CiQJUii•
COOD Tm "-AST1C
TUMBLERS
:.:.:,~ 2:aac
CMICUN
OF TIE SO
OYSTER
STEW
htra Oellclous•
10~ IZ..
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·I
". Orange Cout DAIL\' PILOT/WednMday. Aprll 1•. 1982
NEW RESTAURANT -This is the way the
Copa de Oro restaurant will look upon com-
pletion in September. The Mexican-oriented
dinner house is being constructed at 633 Anton
Blvd. in Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza.
'Ml' figure affects all
Money supply indirectly linked to people's economy
NEW YORK (AP) -In the
piles of economics jargon littering
Wall Street. you probably could
not find an expression more ab-
stract than "Ml."
And while few people outside
the financial community pay at-
tention to the Federal Reserve
Board's weekly report on M 1. or
the nation's money supply, even
fewer appreciate the effect those
re ports can have on their lives.
The connection bet we-en. say. a
$1 billion drop in the money
supply one week and the cost of a
home mortgagt• seems miles
apart. In a sense 1t 1s. But while
the link is not direct. changes in
the money supply can help ex-
plain a lot about the economy,
including interest-rate trends.
Here are some questions and
a.nswei:a~o-hel!)-e.xplain th.e-
money supply and its influence
on the economy:
Q. What is the money supply?
A. For practical purposes, it is
the amount of money readily
available for s pe nding by the
public. Thus it includes an esti-
mate of how muc h cash people
are carrying around 1n their
pockets and purses. plus deposits
in checking act'Ounts That most
common measure of the money
supply 1s called Ml by the Fed-
eral Reserve. which keeps track
of such things. M 1 d ocs not in-
dude money held in savings ac-
counts or money-market mutual
funds.
Q. Why does tbe government
bother keeping t rack of tbe
money supply?
A The Federal Reserve needs
to know approximately how
much money is circulating in the
country because it is rt.'sponsible
for keeping, it within <·ertain li-
mits Those limits are determined
by the Fed's po lu:y arm. the
Ft•deral Open Market Commit-
tee. Ecol'l o m1s ts watch fo r
t:hanges in tht-money supply
Ix-cause it gives them an idea of
how the economy will act in the
future.
Q. How can anyone tell the
Q. How can the Fed do that?
A. It can add money to tht'
banking system by buying secu-
rities held by banki. In doing so,
the Fed essentially c·redits those
banks' reserve accounts with the
payment. &nks of all types are
legally required to keep money
representing a CE'rtam percentage
nf their deposits 0 11 reserve with
tli ~ Fed . So, by a dding to a
bank"s reserves. tht• Fed allows 1t
to lend a greater a m o unt o r
. money to the publu: That m turn
leads to more consumt•r spending.
By contrast, the Fed can pull
morwy out of the system by sel-
ling St."<.·unties to banks. thus sh-
rinking their reserve accounts
and making them tighwn up on
thC' amount of money they lend
~ o~ f 11 & u re b y.-r.&a di.&g---Q. What dues &tHba1""1nive1o
moner supply r;eports? do with interest rates people are
A In many cases. n<?l very paying?
well. But. economis_ts consider the A Logic would tell you that
money supply an 1mportan~ ~-the bigger the supply of money.
nom1c 1nd1cator because it 1n-the lo wer the cost interest
rlue nces spending patterns. Six rat.t'S would be That would be
t o nine months after the Fed true.• except for th<' c.•x1stcnc-c of
begins to pump money into thC' the Fed For JO months. the Fed
banking system al a rapid rate. has tried to restrict growth in the
the pace of spending by consu-mom•y supply as a way of cur-
mers tends to rise quickl y . In bing mrlation. Tht• th<.-ory behind
c:ontras t . consume r s pending the effort is that rapid growth in
s lacks, off after the Fed damps mont•y allows consumers and
down on money and credit ava1-busm(•sses t o buy more goods
lablc m the banking system th<in thC' economy can pruduc.·e
That -;purs mflallun. It also has
San Diego battling
utility rate boost
wrce1ked havc>1.: with th<' logic of
th!' market
Q. How so'!
A These days. 1f tht· F c•d re-
po1 t ~ ;1 s1zabl1· snt·rN1se 1n !he
mom•y supply. interest ratcs tend
to 1ncr<.'ase That is JUSt the
oppos1tc of what you would ex-
JX'<:t But investors and traders m
th<· fmam.:1al markets are not ac-
ting on normal logtt' Instead they
view an increase in tht• money
stock as a warning that the Fed
rm~ht Ix· inclined to damp down
on th<.· amount of money availa-
ble'. By doing so. th<' Fed would
hope to support 1t.s campaign for
lower inflation To guard against
such an act by the Fed. investors
bid up the yiclds of securities.
which means higher interest
ratc'S.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The city of San Diego is fighting a
yearly $12.5 million rate increase sought by San Diego Gas &
Electric Co., which contends its $166 million boost three
months ago was too little.
In a petition. the utility said the Public Utilities Com-
mission made clerical and computing errors in favor of
customers in deciding on the $166 million figure.
But William Shaffran. deputy city attorney. said perhaps
the rate boost should be reconsidered as too high and that
employees of the utility forego salary increases in 1983.
"Inflation has dropped dramatically since January."
Shaffran commented. "Most of the assumptions in the case
are no longer acx:urate.''
Professional ~.Your
· Florist
FLOAST 2915 Red Hill Avenue
Stone Mill Business Park A-108 Costo Mesa
~ . FLY
~AIR IRVINE
TO LAX
Via Daily Flights
From John Wayne Airport (Orange County)
$35.00
(714) 540-6911
19531 Aipor1 Way-South General AYiition T '"'*111
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money! An AnlWlf P1gt
beeper 1lerts you to
lmportlnt phone c1lls 1nywhere, any tlmt··lets you
keep In touch with home, office, answering servlce,
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Cll tol-l\1ie 1-4100·262-91'1 Of cell Hlformltion to<the
Nrswtf PaOt ofticl '*""you .~-..... -~
Rlcbard J, Ber111rom has been appoln~ u -
11Jtan\ Vitt' prt.'lident or Benken Pension Servlcct. a
N~wport Beach-bued IRA and Keogh admlniatra-
tor
Pete Cral1e has bc.'ttn promoted to vice pretildant
of produc:t marketing by Printronlx. Jnc., Irvine. a
manufacturer and supplier or matrix Unl' printen1 to
worldwide market.a.
Brian F. Rennie has been named a vice prl'81·
dent with the Newport Bca'Ch office of City
National Bank. Rennie wUl alBo serve as commer<.'ial
lending officer. He had been vice president and
district manager for the Newport Beach office of
Chuse Manhattan of California.
Jean Copeland has been promoted to senior itrt
dm.'<.'tOr for King Advertising and Public: Relat10ns,
u N~wport Beach-based agency. She has had her
own design firm
Verne Potter, president of Pacific Federal Sa-
vings and Loan Assoc1at1on, Costa Mesa, has been
appainted to the Committee on Federal Supervisory
Regulations of the United States League of Sav\ogs
Associa tt0ns
The Tustin-based firm of Cangelosi Account-
aucy Corporation named its administrative secre-
tary, Ms. Sunny Rhodes, of Laguna Beach, to re-
present 1t m t'Ollect1on of unpaid.and overdue funds.
Bob Rickerson. d istrict manage r of Laura
&·udder's, has received the Salesman of the Year
Award from the Long Beach Food Sales Asso<:1a-
t1on
Michael Weidman has been named a vice pre-
side nt of the architectural and planning firm of
Ballew/Arbuckle/Martin, 18035 K Sky Park East,
lrvme.
Wesley N. Taylor Co .. Realtors, has announced
the promotion of Leo Hanna to the position of senior
VI<.'<' president and general manager of the Newport
Beac.·h office.
Mark 0 . E llis of Mission Vie}O has been pro-
moted to sales manager of the Orange County Title
Division of First American Title Insurance Com-
pany, based in Sant.a Ana .
-
CRAIG
fUCKlll•ON HANNA ILLta ~ I
~· ...
The most prestigious advertising award m 0... c
western United States was given to Cocbrf*e i
Chase, chairman of the board of Irvine-based arc ,
chrane Chase, Livingston & Company. lnc Ch~ t
was named Advertismg Leader of the Year by * 1
Wt!stern Statei; Advertising Agencies Ass<x:1at.\:)n
(WSAAA). ~ t
David Kramer and Dixon Webb have~ I
named the re presentatives of record for Myslili
Corporation and its newly acquired product (II~ t
Arno Adhesive Tape. Kramer's and Webb's t~;
tory includes the metropolitan markets of Los ~ I
geles. Costa Mesa. Santa Ana, Anaheim and Ga~
Grove •
~·
Pat·if1c Mutua l Life insurance Compan~f ~
Newport Beach annoum·cd the promotion of jht l
uff 1cers: ~~ . 1 Edgar R. Lehman to vice president, hul'M.A .... •' rt'SOUr('('S. ~~ ; •
Geoffrey Tyson to v1ct-president, group ~ I fits .•• ! ~ Roger W. Beck to second vice pres1dt•nt, ~
administration. .., •
John P . Ha rriman to second vice preside~ l
group hfc and health sales. ::; ~ i
William L. Heuelwood, F.S.A., to S<'<·ond ~ I
prl'Sldl'nt. individual actuarial ~·" 1
W. Douglas Lehman, F S.A . se~:ond v1<.'<' p~-·
s1dent. group underwriting · "· !"·· l .. ··..-,, i
~--------------------------------------------------~-I OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS 1 • i ~. I t~1· 1~tl 1¥, I l II " l
76'!'11' ~ s 11
L
1 ,,,..·UPS AND DOWNS •· ' I
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NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
QUOTAT•CMtl U•CLUOI UAOllO• , ...... 'tOlltll, MIOWUT IOACllll(, ..... •0 .. 0111, DIT•OIT AllD CINCINNATI noes
1•c•A1110U AND •1ron10 •Y , ... NHD AlllO '"'"'"'''
s ~·
• nixes
Tahoe flights
Newport Beach-based Golden Weat Alrltnes an·
nounced that the carrier will d.llContlnue service from
Southern California airport.a to Lake Tahoe on April
2~.
Golden West wUl continue, however, to operate
two daily non-stop round I.rips from San Franc&ae:0 to
Lake Tahoe with direct and connecung Olghta from
both Mornerey and Fresno.
Golden West said it 111 auapendlng Southern
California-Lake Tahoe routes due to unprofitable
operations. If the economy should take an upswing.
the earner would reconsider IUI action.
Saf :,ri revc11ut"~ up
Lion Country Satan, lnc., reports 1981 revenues
of $2,043,290 compared to $1,795,563 for the previous
year, an increase of 15 percent.
The company, however, experienced a loss of
$466,711 or 25 cents per share. compared to a loss of
$746,290 or 39 cents per share in 1980.
The company said it expects improved results thlS
year by virtue of rental income accruing for a full
season of amphitheater operation, together w1lh sev-
eral new programs
AirCa l offer s free cars
AirCal announced today it will oCfer Burbank
customers free rental cars as an introductory travel
incentive with the purchase of roundtrip standard fare
uckets between Burbank and Oakland, San Jose or
Sacramento.
Airline officials also announced that AirCaJ will
add Seattle to its list of cities served from Burbank-
Glendale-Paaadena Airport where the airline will
begin operations April 25.
AirCaJ's Burbank fares w1U be the same as fares
offered from AirCal's other Southern California air-
ports. including Los Angeles International, Ontano
International and John Wayne Airport..
Fluor expands board
The Fluor Corp. of Irvine announced its board of
directors has been increased from 18 to 20 members.
Elected to positions were William R. Grant, -
chairman and president, McKay-Shields Financial
Cori>:. and Joeeph V. McKee Jr . executive chairman,
National Un.ion Electric Corp.
Grant and McKee are serving as outside directors
on the board of St. Joe Minerals'Corp .. a Fluor subsi-
diary.
(Ji/ bu.vs qut•stio1u•J
SAN FRANCLSCO (AP) -San Diego Gas and
Electric Co. has been ordered to show cause why 1t
should not suspend pul't'hases of 1.5 million barrels of
unneeded fuel oil, a move that could save the utility
and its customers $25.5 million.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YORK !API S&IJJS Tues proce
-... dllnOI Of "'" .... -~1 Kll~ ~ 'Sloe• EJJCNn9o' ..........
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DarNAr1 I ~·= ll'°"":: ~Al~ 1111;soo ,,,,.. • .,,. ~I 1•,IOO ltV. •I"' Allngl<OI 111,DI Wo \" t,,_QI A G IJ,100 I"'> • .. GDn'l9N CP .-, • JOO •'Jt • t1,.
lllE Cilm J ..S,GI 16'" .. OardWIGM U,..O 17 • '•
MMM Alr1 U,300 S'" • '"
UPS AND DOWNS
l't1 Up 160 Up Ill Up 10 4 Up ti
Up • 3 Up 13 Up 1 0
UP IG Up 16
UP 10 Up 10
UP 10 Up tt Up .,
Up 61 Up 6 S UP 6 ~ Up 61 Up 6,1
UP • !
JI Ind lD Tm
15 VII t6 5tk lrdla ,, ..
~Iii t6 5bi
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YOAIC IAPI """' IJ
luc•
~ , ..
Dlelltwcl $27
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WH~I AMEXO!Cl
NE.W YOl'flt !AP) """ !)
luc~ ~ 11' Olcll""' 1n ~1':'.. 111 , .. -.. ~ 11 -..,,,,. 1
METALS
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1'1 ..., , ... .,
11
NEW YOAK tAP) -Spot nonlen'oue """., pro<e~ luesoay
e-16-111 ceo11 • pouna, us """" naHona I.Md 28·32 _.., •• l>()Und
Zinc 35-39 c;ents I pOl.lnd, oe11-ed
Tift Ml 53:10 Met81s WMk ~te lb
~ 76-77 C9111a • l>OUnd. N 't
IMorcury S39S 00 per flat!\
.... ~ '3•SOO 11oyo1 . NY
SILVER 1 O~S<lny
Handy & Herman, S7 550 per troy ounce
COLD QUOTATIONS .,The ........ ~
Selected world got<! pr1ees Tuesday
l.oftdeft: morning nxlnQ S3S2 50, YI> s 1 oo
S:ll::On-'ott: allernoon llir.lng US3 50, up
.. ., .. ! '353 30. up $0 70 ,, ... Mt: 13S4 00. oft $0 03
Zwtcl\: Lale fllllno '352 00 b'<I. up *2.00
W500 ltl\ed
"•""' 6 HatM•tt: (only oally qu01•1 1354 30 uncMnoad
.,....._., (only Oelly QUOl91 $3S3 50. oft soeo
=':::.:;. ="=.,.. _ -...................... Otl ttw .. .......... .. __ .... ~·•l>Oll lt>eclel ...... . :=: :T:"::. .... -:.= • ,._ ..... -....... :i=------~ ..... -o.c-...... '" ,,_,,.. ,, -..--. ....... _ -....... ....... -. ...-..--.... ----...-....~~ .. ..., ... _, .. ___ ,.. __
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•
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOTIWedneeday, April 14, 1982
Airline's tactics win
no smiles in county
Thoee who follow with inter·
eat events at John Wayne Airport
are 1Ull acratchin3 their heads at
eome of the recent statements -
and actJona -coming from Pacific
Southwest Alrltnes, the giant
~ong West Coast short-haul air-
lines.
PSA, which operates two
flights daily to and from San
Francisco, has never been happy
with its allocation. Its position for
nearly one year has been that it
!\hould, as one of five airlines serv-
ing the airport, have one-fifth of
the jet departures authorized
daily.
The carrier seems to be intent
on ignoring that John Wayne
Airport is in a state of extreme
transition at the present time. The
federal government is saying the
airport must b e opened to all
qualified carriers. County officials
are trying to comply with that
mandate. They've probably done a
pretty good job. They've ke pt the
41 flight per day cap, yet permit-
ted three new carriers, including
PSA to beain 1ervice. Yet PSA remalna unaatlafled.
It seems to think that PSA's cuh
register, not county government,
should have the final aay on what
goes on at John Wayne Airport.
An example of this arrogant
attitude is PSA's recent an-
nouncement that it was preparing
to operate four flights daily from
the airport. It went so far as pub-
lishing the times for the flights in
the Official Airline Guide, the bi-
ble ofthose who take reservations
for the airline industry.
PSA was cooled off a bit
Monday when a U .S . District
Court judge presiding over airport
~ issues told PSA what should
have been rather obvious. Basi-
cally, he said PSA had better talk
to the county gove rnment if it
wants approval for additional
flights.
Perhaps PSA will now get the
message. Strong-arm tactics aren't
improving its image in Orange
County.
Ill-informed putdown
The State Department's ca-
reer Foreign Service officers had
good reason to be dismayed by the
putdown handed them recently by
White House personnel director E.
Pendleton James.
Foreign Service officers, said
James, are "just perpe tuating
their own myth ... fostering
their own promotional ladder,"
--and are abs&Fbed by'the "minutiae
of the operations of the State
Department.''
His nasty remarks came in the
wake of statements made by Mal-
colm Toon, former U.S. Ambassa-
dor to Moscow, who charged Pre-
sident Reagan is going overboard
in making political appointments
to top U.S. Embassy posts.
Toon, a retired 30-year Fo-
reign Service officer. said the
president has put some of the most
important embassies in the hands
of "unqualified amateurs" and
went on to name several.
It is true that Reagan has put
more political appointees in am-
bassadorial posts than any presi-
dent since World War II.
James roundly defends this
political appointment policy con-
tending, remarkably, that close
personal associates of the president
have a better cJlance of getting his
ear than Foreign Service officers.
If this is true, it is incredible. And,
he admits, there is a concerted ef ·
fort to remove all embassy repre-
sentatives who do not share the
president's philosophy.
This sharp-tongued, self-
appointed instant expert on inter-
national diplomacy appears to be
ill-informed as to the background
of the Foreign Service. The ste-
reotyped, striped-pants diplomat
image is largely a myth.
Carefully selected ahd tra1ned
in the skills needed to project the
United States message abroad -
regardless of the politics of a cur-
rent administration -the Foreign
Service officers spend years lear-
ning their craft. Starting at the
consular level, they serve in end-
less out-of-the-way places before
they are regarded as qualified to
handle a top embassy post.
In the process, they absorb
the history, geography, social
practices and usually a good deal
of the languages of the countries
in which they serve. These are not
skills that can suddenly be acqui-
red by a political appointee.
Ambassadorships, of course,
can be one reward for faithful
political servants. But to suggest
temporary political appointees •
should generally be favored above
the career diplomats and are mote
e ffective , as James insists, is
patent stupidity and neither the
president nor the nation is well
servoo by it.
Finding the children
The National Crime Informa-
tion Center stores information
provided by local sources on all
sorts of stolen and missing prop-
erty -securities, motor vehicles,
guns, license plates and the like -
for use by state and local law en-
forrement agencies.
A measure now under con -
sid eration in Congress, S1701, the
Missing Children Act, would add
children to the list so that federal
resources' could be used to help
locate and identify youngsters re-
ported missing by their families.
This would include runaways,
children who have been abducted
by strangers and those taken by
non-custodial parents following a
divorce.
Too often in these times, a
youngster simply vanishes, leaving
frightened parents to wonder if
the child has been kidnapped, is in
•
danger, even if the child is still
alive.
Sometimes, if a child is taken
to another state, the search can go
on for years. And a younger child
may have no way of knowing how
to reach its family.
Under the Missing Children
Act, the nationwide resources of
the FBI could be utilized to assist lo·
cal authorities trying to find the
child .
Indeed, it is rather surprising
that special legislation should be
needed to accomplish this, but that
apparently is the case.
In these computerized days,
the collection and dissemination of
information on missing goods -
and people -need not involve a
great deal of manpower. And if
facill ties for tracking down stolen
cars are in place, they most cer-
tainly could be used to help locate
missing children.
Qp.lniqns expressed)n t~e space i\_bOve are thost of the t>allylPllot."pther ~lews e~-.
pressed on this page are those of tFleir authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . Box IS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7U)
642 -4321.
L.M. Boyd/Talent that scores
You know thoee talent competitions
In the Mt. America conie.ts? A com-
puter analysis ahowa that young la-
dies did not tend to llOOl'e well over
the ye,an when they twirled batona,
tap danced or aa.ng folk aonga. Flute
playen and ventriloquiata wound up
with high mark.a, however.
Now it's claimed that Chicaao's
ORANGE COAST
lailJPilat
..
Halsted Street is the world's longest
-24.5 mUes -within a city's limits.
Research goes on.
Q . What animal has the most
babies per Utter?
A. Countln1 flah? The shark,
probably. Females have been cau1ht
with as many as 70 two-foot·lona
sharb in them.
Thomas P. Haley
Publllher
Tllomal A. ~IM
Editor
B•rwa KrelMc9-
Ed1torJ1I P• Editor
.._ __ _ -------
: -. . I.
TV changes combat style ..
WASHINGTON -One of the first
dispatches reporting the Argentinian in·
vasion o( the Falkland Islands included
this paragraph: "Argentine officers said
today that they had given strict orders to
their troops to try to avoid killing any
Britons to lessen international reaction
a~ainst the invasion."
How "strict" were those orders, 1
asked at the Argentinian Embassy here.
"They were ordered not to fire against
any human .beings,'; said Eduardo Jant-
us, the chief press officer. "We did not
want people killed there."
INTERESTING ORDERS from a
military dictator<ship_ thartms 9"hown
damnably little compunction about kil-
ling its own citizens at home. But in the
Falklands -where no Britons were
killed -the whole world was watching.
The invaders even brought along their
own television crews and correspon·
dents.
Why not? There doesn't seem to be a
rebel unit in El Salvador traveling with-
out an Ame rican ne twork crew. We
live in a world becoming so closely
linked by television th.at when one
American soldier walks down a jungle
trail carrying a rifle, the president of the
United States has to explain why and
bring the guy home. Television, the
technology of instant, pervasive and
persuasive communication. is changing
the watching world -for the better.
Without television, l would argue:
-There would be United States Ma-
rines killing and being killed in El Sal-
vador, and. possibly, in Nicaragua and
Guatemala as well.
-There would be a lot of dead
"Britons" in the Falklands.
-There would be a lot of dead
--~ RICHARD RllVIS 1 ·;.. -... •
"counter-revolutionaries" in Poland. -
Poland. I think, is a good example of
the moderating effect that electronic
eyewitnesses have on official raidmg m
many parts of the world.
The Soviets, as we know. are not
gentle folk when it comes to dealing
with dissent -and they have a very
broad definition of what constitutes dis-
sent. This is the government -many of
the people in it are still the same -that
slaughtered thousands of Hungarians for
disagreeing with Moscow 25 years ago
and sent at least 400.000 troops into
C?.eChoslovakia only 13 years ago.
Now, however , in dealing with the
same kind of counter-revolution, this
lime in Poland, the Russians decided to
use home-grown surrogates. And those
surrogates. the Polish military gover-
,nors. have been surprisingly gentle.
"'The number of Polish civilians actu.ally
killed is quite low," said a U.S. St.ate
Department official "The Polish gov-
ernment admits to 10 people. It may be
higher , but not much. They're being
very careful."
THEY'RE CAREFUL because people
may be able to see wt-at's going on .
Television, the technology itself, is more
omnipresent and much more soph~tica-
1.ed than 1t was in the 1960s and early
1970s. Mobile e lectronic cameras and
satellite transmission are not only tech-
nologicaJly ..rev.olulionacy -they-are
politically revolutionary. Smugglingcans
of film past border guards to be shown
weeks later ts as old-fashioned as tanks
driving over protesters Now, television
1s now! People around the world have
visual information when they can use 1t.
Obviously, telev1swn has not f tte
encircled every part of the globe. ere
are still many and terrible places o f the
beaten ele<·tronic track: the mountains of
Afghanistan and the Jungles of Syuth
east Asia, where tht• Soviets may in-
deed sull be able to get away with using
l'hcmical or biologica l warfare, or the
cracked plains of Ethiopia. where chil-
dren may starve unseen But each· day
more is seen by the eyes of televtkfon.
And the world is better for that. We all
have to be a ltttle better when w e realize
someone is watching.
Vidal can damage Brown • campaign
It is difficult to assess the candidacy ot
author Gore Vidal who has filed to
compete with Gov. Jerry Brown for the
Democratic Party nomination for .the
U.S. Senate.
Brown, having successfully scuttled
former Speaker Leo McCarthy's plans to
run fo.r the office, appeared to have clear
sailing in the June primary. Only State
Senator Paul Carpenter of Orange
County and Fresno Mayor Daniel
Whitehurst were challenging him. Both
are unknown outside of their home ter-
ritory.
Whitehurst, coming from the Number
l agricultural county of the state, figured
to capture the support of the farmers,
bitterly against Brown because of his
Medfly bumbling and other actions de-
trimental to agribusiness. But already his
campaign is showin~ weakness in
fund-raising. Carpenter too Is having
money problems.
BUT VIDAL ls another story. Not only
has he a widely recognized name but he
enchants the liberals, especially the
wealthy ones. For Vidal is a peculiar
breed. He ls to the liberals 'what William
Buckley ls to the right-wlngen. Both are
over-educated snobs who flaunt their
superior knowledge.
On the platform then, Vidal, with his
rapier tongue, couJd be deadly dangerous
to Brown who is also given to bemusing
audiences with displays of his philoso-
phical learnings. In fact so frightened of
a face to face confrontation with the
author is Brown that even as Vidal was
announcing his candidacy Brown's cam-
'
IARl WATIRS
paign manager, Mickey Kantor, was
telling reporters there would be no de-
bates. Author of books and plays. Vidal is the
grandson of the late U.S. Sen. Albert
Gore of Oklahoma. Although with that
back.Rround steeped in politics, his entry
into the Senate race here marks only his
second venture as a candidate. He ran for
Congress in New York in 1960 and lost
while polling 20,000 more votes in the
district than received by John F. Ken-
nedy running for president in -the same
election. "I never let Jack forget that,"
he said.
Vidal has laid out a campaign plat-
form aimed at pulling the rug from un-
der Jerry Brown with the liberals who
now represent the hard core of the De-
mocratic Party. This makes him the
same kind of a threat to Brown that
activlSt Tom Hayden was to fonner U.S
Sen J ohn Tunney sax years ago His
attacks on him in the primary race so
weakened Tunney that he los t to S .I.
Hayakawa in the general election.
Entering the race considerably behind
Brown in finances, Vidal will have to
hustle to raise an amount equal to the
campaign chest of $2 million claimed by
Brown. It wiU be a difficult task in the
short time between now and June, es-
peciall y under the hm1tations set by
federal law. Nevertheless some o1 the
big Beverly Hills money has already
declared its support for Vidal. Whatever
he gets Crom that crowd will be rooney
that wo uld otherwise have gone to
Brown.
I
FURTHERMORE, the same li beral
support which Hayden turned aiway
from Tunney has grown cold on Brown
and wiU certainly rally to Vidal. It may
well be that, given the combinaudn of
the liberal and the anti-Brown votes in
the Democratic Party, Vidal can poll it
off.
Even 1f he fails to wrench the nomi-
nation away from Brown, he may. well
do the same grievous damage to Brown
that Hayden did to Tunney, wealathlng
him SO badly financially and VO\el'lwise
as to make It easy for the Republican
candidate to defeat him in November.
Acronym habit goes back through history ...
Looking through an updated edition of
a book on acronyms, I was only mildly
surprised to learn that the number of
entries had cllmbed from 12,000 ln the
first 1960 edition to more than 130,000 in
the fifth.
In point of fact, the word "acronym"
itself was not coined until 1943 .. when it
IYlllY 111111
wu defined u "a word fonned from the
Initial letten of a name/' llke r.dar
[tom "Radio Dettetlnl and Banalnc·"
TIMre la no doubt tbai mod«n IOdety
ha aone aicronym cruy. Rffd1n.I a re·
cent lllue of I.be .Dtv1ronmet>ca/~AM·
..,_,,, Joum,al, In ooe ~oh I c.me
1crou "BACT, LAER, NS'PS and
Nl'BHAPS 11 ftllUlatory authorhlm f«
polludon con9'l. Who~ -expst ..... .wr hope , 10 know t.ha' Ibey Mnd b Bait Aval·
labl• Conllol 'l'"•ohnolo1y, Lowul
Achievable Emission Rate, New Source
Performance Standards. and National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants? Or that all are applicable in
areas not meeting the NAAQS (National
Ambient Air Quality Standards)?
The acronym, as such, is nothing new
ln Western civilization. The earliest one
ever written In any language was the
ancient Roman SPQR, standing for Se--
n1 tus Populusque Romanus ("Senate
and People of Rome").
And trom the leClOnd century, the flah
wu \lied u a symbol of Christ by the
early Chrlatianl becawie the letters of Its
Oniek "-me Jehl.bus formed an ecro.
nym of the inhlal letters ol the words
Jet\.la Cbriat. Son of God. Savlor. Aa Brewer lnfonn11 Ullo ult" found on many
..U, ru.,.. urns and tomblt.onetl of the
Mrl1 Ouitdan period, and WU believed
to bt a charm of my.deal efficacy."
fn the Middle Ace.a, a boa1tf ul ln·
mcripdon Wll the llC!l"Oll~ AJ:lOU, OM
vuiadon of wbkb nDMded to Ald'lae •t Im~ Q>bl ,fJnJWnlo, or "It ll
Glven lO A\11ll1a to Rule the Whole
Wadd."
----------#!"""-~--~
Although thousands of these mi~ets
are spawned every year, only a handful
(AIM, ERA. and the ill-fated WIN. c.wn·
paign of the Ford administration) ever
seep into general public consciouapess.
The latest, so 'far as I can tell, spr:ings
. from the Solzhenitsyn best-seller The G~ Archipelago -GULAG tMUNl a
Russtan acronym for Main Admin.i4tra·
tion of Corrective Labor Camps. Orwell
would have reliahed that one.
UllY•
la a "~t" or a ·~" • todal te or just another penon With dlf t ~? ( ~
===::r:;::.:-.c.-::=: .. ::::iil.i: .... .. ...,,,.,,. ,.. J •
; '
•
Deity l'tlot ltd l'tloto
R E ADY TO PLUNGE -Five-year-old Me-
h,\jan Kilgallen of Huntington Beach looks
eager to get into swim with help from (left to
right), Eileen Ryder, Shirley Babashoff and
sist er Robin Kilgallen . Compe tition in
~~-a-lap" will benefit teen-age help pro-
-'"Swim-a-lap'
event slated
1• A countywide group trying to reduce teen-age
~gnancies will hold a "swim-a-lap" Saturday in
Irvine to raise money for its programs.
. The event will be staged at the Heritage Park
Aquatic Complex from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
_. Olympic gold medal swimmer Shirley Baba-
shoff will present prizes to age-group swimmers
wl)o have the most sponsors or complete the most
laffi.Prizes include trips to Disneyland, Knoll's
~ry Farm and Lakers basketball games. among.)
others.
Proceeds will ben efit the group. Coalition
Concerned with Adolescent Pregnancy, a non-profit
grqup that promotes communication among families
-.at:Jout pregnaney-and"responsil>leparenlhOOcr. --
1~ An estimated 3,600 teen-age girls in Orange
.COunty become pregnant each year. according to the
group.
, For information , call 972-4859. .
4.rmy tightens
're-up' standards
•'
' WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army. faced with art unexpected increase in re-enlistments, says it has
toJlghened standards so commanders will be able to
keep only the best soldiers.
· "Successes in Army recruiting and retention, to
include a significant increase in the number of sol-
diers w ho have re-enlisted, make s uch a quality
' move possible," the Army told members of Congress
in a memorandum. ·
Among o ther things, the rul es bar r e-
erlistment to any soldier who fails to gain promo-ti~ at least to corporal or its equivalent, specialist
fourth class, during his or her first three-or four-
year hitch.
Commanders also have been given broader
authority to weed out those soldiers with less than
six years of service who are d~mecl to be "marginal
performers or unsuitables," accorJiug to thP Army.
Although public attention has been focused on
the Army's performance in recruiting volunteers,
of~ials long have been concerned about problems
in retaining quality soldiers beyond their first en-
listments.
. . But the latest available figures suggest to Army
officials that their re-enlistment problems are fa-
ding, at least for the time being.
. Officials credit major pay boosts and bonuses
for. their claimed successes in re-enlistment, recrui-
tiDg and upgrading the quality of Army troops.
,. Grudgingly, they also ac\mowledge that wi-
despread unemployment in the civilian economy is
helping the Army.
d According to preliminary figures, a total of 45,-
666 men and women re-enlisted during the first six
mCJnths of fiscal year 1982. which began in October.
This was 2,724 more than had been anticipated
wben goals were set last year.
Significantly, re-enlistments were at a higher
leYel than expected in the combat anns -infantry,
armor, and artillery -where the Army has expe-
".rienced chronic difficulties since the end of the draft
·nearly a decade ago.
.-r' Preliminary figUres for the six months e nding
M•rch 3 1 showed 12,894 r e-e nlistme nts in the
combat branches, compared with an objective of
l L.654.
·; Major James D. Weiskopf. a Pentagon spoke-
-. iuwm. said the Army had a •re-enlistment rate oJ
about 15 percent during the late 1970s.
Last year, 66.7 percent of the eligible personnel
re-enlisted, Weiskopf told the Worcester (Mass.)
Evening Gazette.
Largely because of the better-than-expected
pM-tonnance in re-enlistments. the Army lowered
··• itlJ'goal for signing recruits this year by about 7.000
"16'a total of 125,400 .
• ,. J Meanwhile, Army officials reported improve-
. rrtent In their ability to attract male high sch ool
r ~tes into uniform.
"'' · ~of April 5, Army recruiters had enrolled just
uflder 61,700 male high achoo! graduates th.is year,
-0#180.4 percent of the total.
I •fl
OCC to pi:esent
. faniily workshop ·-A three-hour family work.shop focu1lng on
lmpre>vlna communication will be presented at "-or.n. co.t C.Olleae tn c.o.t.a Meea on APril 23.
·.-., u Tttled "An Evenina to a.ch Out With Your 11,.~i~.L_' the -'On will run Crom 7 t.o 10 p.m. ln ozx:tiJ!'= Kou.. AdmilSion ll $8 per couple or
1 ·vtiP ,.a' Y. The workshop l1 dnl1ned for parent.a and ~ 10 or older. Advanc. reptraUon ta rec-
1.,. ..wWlded.
For ln.fonnatlon phone &&e-&880.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednnday, Aprll 14, 1982
GIGAmC 20th AlllllVERSARY SALE
All thru the month
of Aprll
SAVINGS FROM
503 to 703
or more.
All Items are selected from regular stock, nothing Is held back. Many
Items are limited or one of a kind. To assure the most varied selections
of sale Items, It's desirable to visit our showroom at your earliest con-
venience.
ELECTRIC and
LIGHTING
222 Victoria Street , Costa Mesa
CAcrou tr.. MwMt fl-cl Mttneryl
Phone 646-3737 /646-8194
1.77
2 For
.f
1.44
1-Gallon Azaleas Bedding Plants 1 ·Gallon ftants
7 ~
Landscape Plants
A.• JI"· lS 1r1 OVJ <lr>O Ol()Ot'rl A.slO<'IOO
>l·1f \
Bedo1no plants in Pony Pock po putor •n season assortments '•CA1 P )~ t;;tylor1d1 Of trnl~r C't'
'""'' ·A•~en10 Stot .JOvn11l9
f>gol . IOnd~ope spec1ot Choice ot A•t>or Vitae o• Ve1on1co lake
1.37 ci~~e
5-Lb. • Plant Food
tll)ot',. u' fonY)IO llf Pose fooo 01
,t]l<Jen fe<l·•·llll
'
1
78°
Steer Manure
1 u n stee< "'O'lure
IV .. OQ80 weed 11ee
1.88
Mlx 1N Mulch
' u H A· our c><»e
Donia< """' fOt O OU
..>"lOC DIOnts
\...
7.77 88°
20-Lb .• Lawn Food Vitamin B-1
.) ,,, >Nd'OOl w•"' own Jar rr Jn\PIO• '"'O pion11ngJ
leflM[nt ..owors !> cro 50 " ea '.ln<J cun,nos He~ °"°'° --oton1 Y'OC•
11.66 13.97 15.97 59.97
Double Six Packer hach Umbrella Folding Table Big Red Wheelbarrow
Double S•• Poc•e• Oy lhe<mos• Ideal beach umbrella woth postic Eosv ro store metal table wrtri s1mu ••• .. h'\ tu1dea sfeel rrav Ste-Pt '"'l"lnno1 14'.'Q! Greot to• comping and 01cn1cs corrv•no case lated wOOdg•O•n table too I' 1!1 CY!Oflr\QS
s494
19" :::. Cotor Remote
"~"'"'" flt'mote Scan ContlOI •ets VO<; scan uo •• O<lW'• tri.ougri Oii VHF 01 UHF Channell s1000""\I ontv 01 0<0Qrommee1 ~otoons AJso
1u1ris w1 on and off od1us1s \/Olume FFC 4 7 JW
s2aa
19" ~-Color POftable
Au•v -OIOf cont•<:>' svstem 100<1 on OtC 11.m ona §Ol.ll'1Cl tntegroled c~CUltry fOI gOOle< rOl100ohly
l\M/J M ste reo
console w1tn e
troc:~ ond cos iette recording
'6C~Cl
s244
13" :::. Color Portable
ncn
.411
!r1.48
Sub Sandwiches
're" OUf ..){'ii'" •L'\J~ ""b" N''" luf " -rreot rornoto •Jna 1enuc11
GLOSSY
4x6-Pro Prints
at Hme of • Development
• PrlnHng
1a~
Plus t.gulc:s
Developing Chorge
97~
Tomato Cages
. ,,., J ,.., ... ,I\ .Ju'' I I ''\l JI
n Jh
23" :.':. Color ConlOle TV
8 547
AVAILABLE A T YOUR LOCAL K mart STORE!
l
.,
411 Orenge Cout DAILY PILOTIWedMldly, Aprtl 14, 1882
Sp,icy lyrics
• • get sp1c1er
81 Y A&D&NA AAAft '111 It,,._....,
LOS ANGSL!S -When • lP'OUP cal.lin&"ttRlf .
People Aplnat Oblcenlty potted a plcket line out-
llde a Puadena radio 1taUon to protelt broadcut of
a 80l'\I called 0 Johnny Are You Queer?" lOf\l\lme Uatenen had to laugh. .
The amuaement wH not so much over the
reaction to a tune In which singer Josie Cotton
wonden aloud about a young man's aexual prefe·
rencea, but more because of the many songs the
station haa played without drawing a single de-
monatrator.
Rock 'n' rollen twvo had their problems with
ceNIOn aince the first' electric guitar wu plugged
into an outlet. It's hardly surprising, since rock's
roota are in the earthy rhythm-and-blues.
Elvia Presley's songs were banned in some
oommunitiee; in the 1960s, the Rolling Stones were
considered daring when they recorded a tune called
"Let's Spend the Night Together."
Have things changed much since then? Well,
yes and no.
Once-demure Olivia Newton-John drew prot-
eets from pne radio stations for her recent song,
"Physical," because of its suMestive language -
"~t me hear y9ur body talk' -but that didn't
atop the tune from becoming a No. 1 hit. And the J.
Geils Band's current chart-topper abput a high
school sweetheart who took it all off, "Centerfold,"
has been widely played on radio.
On the other hand, most radio stations won't
touch songs with outright obscenities: San
Francisco-based Romeo Void's "Never Say Never"
is frowned on not so much because of its catchy
refrain -"I might like you better if we slept to-
gether" -but because ,of its off-handed use of a
certain expletive.
· What's new in the field of controversial music
la not ao much that it exists. but that in the last year
or ~o ii appears to ~ gaining more acceptance by
maJOi: record comparues.
Two years ago. Warner Bros. Records released
Marianne Faithfull's Grammy nominated-LP,
"Broken English," which included a track with
extremely strong language, "Why D'Ya Do It."
Another Warner Bros. artist, Prince, has earned
considerable critical acclaim for h.is amalgamation of
rock, rhythro-and-blues and provocative lyrics -
for instance. on a tune called "Head."
Cortez Thompson, the company's national pro-
motion director for black music, says that particular
song got only "minimal" airplay, but d1d become
a hit in dance clubs.
"Lyrics have changed with the times." he says.
"Language in movies today definitely is not the
same as it was a few years ago."
Josie .. Cotton's "J ohnny Ar;-You Queer" has
also had problems getting played on radio, despite
the best efforts of the promotion folk at Elektra-
Asylum. The song-contains no obscenities or·overt
sexual references, and Miss Cotton's manager,
Randy Phillips, accuses radio of "censoring itself."
Burton
playing
composer
VIENNA (AP) -The
19th century composer
and revolutionary Ri-
chard Wagner was seen
frequenting Vienna
courtyards and cafes in
recent weeks, brought to
life by actor Richard
Burton and an indepen-
dent British film pro-
duction.
During five weeks of
shooting here, Wagner
confronted ministers of
Bavaria's mad King
Ludwig, plotted with
revolutionaries, and
created some of the dra-
ma tic operas that made
him the leading German
compo8er of his time.
The $23 million ,
eight-part series on
Wagner's life, starring
Burton and Vanessa
Redgrave, is scheduled
for a February 1983 re-
lease on British TV, to
coincide with the cente-
nary of his death.
The filming follows
Wagner's shifting for-
tunes during the second
half of the composer's
turbulent life.
"CAT
PEOPLE"
11111. ... 1111,,.... ,..
MCCL-*
"MISSING" .......... ,.. ...
"EVIL UNDER
THE SUN" ........... ~ ..
-....... .,..,,,.
5£..r"=
c1neoome ~
Scrczczn ComplczH
Coll 634 2553
Ch an & S t• AN Fwy
$2.50 ·111 3:00 Unlea Notlld
~°' f'UNI ._ lXCIJlMlNT~
•·iWlllli OD9ww ~ Bo.ifftal r.=::::;RBIH;:::::::;~ -:Tr='
12:15 2:15 4:15 6 :158·15 10·15
l ....... a..~s.... ~ QMMy Sound DINd To Vow C:.. ~or l'artll* r T.-ToUSandENJOVI -.}!.
VtCTOft VICTORIA (POI
Also Playin11 .._..._IRI
Chuck N0trrs SILfln'RAGE IRI
Plus Co·F•ture o..11 .... 11 CAI
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Countleu
f et, chewln1 1um and birds have
contributed to the all-around ahabbl· neaa of the 1t.ar1 lmbedded on Hol-
lywood Boulevard'• sJdewuJk, but a
1roup of volunteers is out to make
them 1hiny again.
More than 100 people s howed up
recently to clean up the te rracoua
atan th.at Immortalize film, televtaion,
radJo and music penonallties. A local
preservation aoclety, Hollywood
Heritage Inc., had launched the
"Adopt-a-Star" campaign to clean up
Hollywood Boulevard.
Sponsors hope the volunteers will
make a monthly pilgrimage to their
special star. Their aim IS to clean up
F AMU. Y AFFAIR -Members of
"The Royal Family'' at the New-
port Harbor Actors Theater in-
clude (standing. from left) Jack
Byron, Jim Flynn and Sorrell
Wayne; seated, Mary Sullivan,
Lisa Wilcox, Patricia Gilchrist and
J ohn Szura. The show plays
weekends through April 25 at the
NHAT theater, 390 Monte Vista
St., Costa MeSk.
NOW PLAYING
IUUIA PAllK DfUVl·lll CINEDOM( lDWAllDS NlW,DllT But~ Park 821 4070 Oranoe 634 2~S3 NewOO<t Bt•cn 64' 0760
MUN lllU PWA STADIUM IHllYl·lll UA ClllfMA f
&ea S29 S339 OI~ 639 8770 Wesunttlster (93 OS46
lDWlllDS SADDlHACK l DWAllDS lllllTOl "° •UKt ACc;u•t~o
£1 T010 S8t S880 Costa Mesa S40 74U •GA '""'"GM>t"•"'
Keep an eye out for
the funniest movie about
growing up ever madel
You'll be glad you camel
''Ri11•ls '2001' . .,,
'STAR WARS'''
·~ . ,,
~
~-. lJ .. ...
~
(,--, . . ~ -~ '
--·-+
*BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before S:OO PM
(bctpl Speclal Engagements and Holidays)
l JI M lllAl•.A MAi l Muooo 01 l otecro111 LA MIRADA WALK-IN 994-2400
.. VICTOR YICTORIA" 1l'01 ..... ,. ............. ..
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foeully Al Del A/no
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IMPORTAIH NOTICll CMllORfN UNOER 12 fRU!
"""' tftf WttMt NtA ff'f111 J•1 •.JO• ht 5_.,, "••. 00 , ..
CiNf-11 $OONO • YOUfl lM CAii MOIO IS YOU• ~·
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ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN
,,.••oY 9t ol l•mon St
179:9150
-O' '°"" AC&OettY AW-"tlA.IOERI Of THE LOST ARK"
-(NI '"TME AMAL COUNTOOWN" ll'OI
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SUI '<A PAllK
BUENA PARK ORIVE ·IN
lllW:Olll AYe Well OI C"°"
121·..070
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LINCOLN DRIVE·IN
Lincoln Aw• W•tl ot cnon I 121-•010
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1882
CAVALCADE -92 San Francisco's cable cars. a COMICS 84
TELEVISION 85 Herb Caen, Page 82. ....
County · firms ready to 'walk'
THE SANTA BANANA BOUNCE: Word has come out
four esteemed County Seat that the transportation com-
. on may be pushing la get something done about our
ing artery known as the Santa Ana Freeway. This is
ing to be something:
What is being rumbled about is that Orange County
ants to get the old Santa Ana upgraded. It has been
sugges ted that one item
}YOUld be to expand the
' freeway from six to 10 L ~~ lanes. Likely this means
·u·-.-.-,-1-,-8-11-1-_~lf. ~~~~ng two lanes each
-If accomplished, this
project could turn out to be
'
monumental feat of engineering that would rival the
anama Canal, the Egyptian pyramids and the Caltrans
tch that runs down Route 55 through Costa Mesa.
NOW, IT ISN'T JUST that adding two lanes going each
way on the Santa Ana Freeway is such an engineering
Fenge. That's no big deal, give or take a few taco stands,
amps and gas stations.
It's the matchup chore that's going to be the challengt~.
On the Santa Ana Freeway, for example, you coulda't
just come along with a bulldozer and iron out the earth and
Companies start training for March of Dimes WalkAmerica fund-raiser
At fi.nns from Adohr Fanns to
Bockwell International, lhe com-
)>etitive spirit is building.
Employees, their relatives and
friends are in spring training for
the 1982 edition of the March of
Dimes Walk.America fund-raiser.
More than 100 teams from
firms like Adohr, Rockwell,
Southland Corp .. 7-Eleve n,
Northrop Corp., ITT Cannon
Electric, Allstate Insurance -
even Weight Watch ers -are
readying for the April 24
"superwalks" around Orange
County.
The teams, says Rockwell's
Charles Stevens, chairman of the
TeamWalks, are readying for the
32-kilometer walks with pre-
walk practices and parties. Many
are planning post-walk parties,
sans practice, he said at a recent
press preview on this year's
event.
UCI h istorian
• • g i ven p rize
. for writings
UC Irvine historian Mary P.
Ryan was one of two Americans
to receive the 1982 Bancroft Prize
in ceremonies this month at Col-
umbia University in New York
City.
Dr. Ryan won the prize for her
book "Cradle of the Middle Class:
The Family in Oneida County
New York."
There will be two team walks
lhl.s year,. one leaving frortt ~
bor Municipal Court, Newport
Beach, the other from California
State University, Fullerton.
Tewns walkers last year raised
more ihan $113,000. This year,
Stevens said. the goal is about
$225,000.
Registration will take place for
the team walks between 7 and 10
a.m. at both the Newport Beach
and Fullerton locations.
There will also be two other
competitions for those eithe r
more Qr Jess athletically inclined.
Also being staged at Harbor
court are five kilometer and 10
kilometer runs. For those who
pre-register, the cost is $2, or $8
for those desiring a run T-shirt.
Registration fees the day of the
race will be $1 higher in each
category. Registration will be
open from 7 to 8:30 a.m. on run
day.
For those seeking something a
bit I~ strenuous, county Super-
visor Thomas Riley will lead a
on~-mile long "executive walk"
from Harbor court t.o the Chant-
ecla1r restaurant. where brunch
•
will be served. Executives hope
to raise $30,000 via individual
$500 C.'Ontributions
Among c.-elebrities scheduled to
be on hand for the walks are the
Rams' Carl Ekem, and coach Ray
Malavasi, radio station KFl's
Bruce Wayne; March of Dimes
poster child Steven Olsen, and
the Rams cheerleaders.
Further information on the
day's events can be obtained by
telephoning the March of Dimes
Orange County o ffi ce at
979-22'70. ,
'Short tillle' cons will work
Public service to replace jail t.erms in co unty
People sentenced to six or fe-
wer days at Orange County Jail
may soon be serving their time
r ecycling aluminum cans at
county landfills, pulling weeds at
county buildings or cleaning out
flood control channels.
The county Board of Supervi-
sors. at the urging of Sher1ff-
~roner Brad Gates, approved a
· work release" program Tuesday
that permits short-term jail in-
mates to perform public service
work in lieu of incarceration.
Gates said the work release
program w as needed to ease
overcrowding at the county's
main jail in Santa Ana.
ployment and family C'Ontact."
The program will cost about
$117,000 to implement during the
fiscal year beginning July 1. To
imple ment the work release
program. Gates was given per-
mission to hire a correctional
services technician 1and four de-
puties and purchase an automa-
ted system to take booking pho-
tographs.
Once the program IS operat1or'I·
al, Gates said, people sentenced
to six or fewer days in jail will be
taken to the Theo Lacy branch
jail in Orange for booking and
assignment to JOb sites.
Initially, however. bookmgs
will still occur at the main Jail
where booking times can range
from six to 12 hours, depending
on workload. Between 200 and
300 people are booked into the
main jail each day.
Thad Dwyer, assistant sheriff, 1
told supervisors that work as-
signments could include sorting
trash for recyclable materials and
salvage. weed control. flood con-
trol channel cleanup and janito-
rial services.
Section 4024 of the stat~ Penal
C.OOe permits work release prog-
rams for people sentenced to s.ix
or fewer days in jail. The section
1s efft.'(.'tive through 1984.
I
l I
I
I Bancroft Prizes are prestigious
awarWL in. .the field ~ricaA-
The jail, with a Board of Cor-
rections rated capacity of 1,465
inmates, recently has had daily
inmate ~ounts-e-:Meeedin~ 1,900,
according to statistics provided to
supervisors.
A ldr-W h o n -lJ. S--panel __ __._
:J
"Good grief, HerbJe, that last pothole took the engine dean off!''
~en smoothly apply four new lanes of asphalt.
You do something like that and you'd be creating a
alfic hazard without parallel. Can't you just see what this
ould do to veteran commuters w'bo daily battle the po-
tholes and washboard sections of the old Santa Ana route?
These four new lanes would open one day, you see, and
'the grizzled veteran commuters, fenders flapping and shock
absorbers screeching in protest, would be grinding along as
usual on the old lanes . ..
;-SUDDENLY ONE OF them would switch to one of
ihe new lanes. Everything smooths out. The car settles back
down on all four wheel.c;. The driver's kidneys quit twit-
ching.
_ He will immediately panic. Suddenly aware of all that
tmoothness on the Santa Ana Freeway, he'll figure he just
~ off the road.
~ Frozen by fear, he'd hit the brakes, resulting in a
22-<:ar pileup that would tie up the Santa Ana Freeway for
· three hours.
.. This panic in having our commuter traffic switching
m the ·pock-marked, undulating old route onto a slick
w lane of pavement must be avoided at all costs.
' "' THE DAILY SHOCK of. this would be the equivalent
to leaping naked out of a sauna into a pool filled with ice
-eubes. The human condition just can't take it.
Thus the engineering feat facing our highway techni-
cians will be to construct the four new lanes so that they
·.Fh the washboard ups and downs of the present Santa
, Freeway lanes.
•• Some precise engineering will be demandeq. Bulldo-Zers can't be allowed to just plane off the land ir\to a slick
new lane. The machines must dip here; t hen rise over
..there; then dip again.
A POTHOLE DIGGER will have to be invented to
~h gouges on the old lanes with the new. Innovative
ques will be required in laying the pavement so the
ations M;d cracks match the presently craz.ed surface
old lanes. .
Clearly, the adding of four new lanes to the Santa Ana
Freeway isn't going to be just any old o rdinary multi-
lllion dollar paving job.
This one has to be a re-creation.
Freeway e x pansion
lroject due study
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL °' .. ....,,... ..... '°"8nCe County transportation
comminionera say they aren't If .-the door on • _ to expand the Santa Ana
ay from six to 10 ).anee.
• he commlaaion wants the
1 alternate studied further
by lta iechnlcal advilory commit-
tee and a recommendation made
wtthtn eo daya.
"' a report to the comrm.&on, said expansion of the
from ita 10ulherly ter-n Toro to the San Ga-
ver Valley Freeway ln
Downey to 10 lanea from alx
would eo1t about $719 million ad requ ire relocation of 968 .-W-UaJ •tnactu ..... 22$ ~
mrda1 atructuna, four echoola, -
two churches and numerous
parking lots.
'The estimated relocation cost~
included in the overall pricetag,
ls $246 mlllion, Caltrans said.
According to Caltrans, all
freeway -t o-freeway and
freeway-to-surface street inter-
clwlges would have to be rebuilt
and 1everal rallroad bridges
modified under the 10-lane plan.
Caltranl predicted "teVere im-
pacts" ln the form of traffic con-
gestion during the construction.
At.a under study by the com-
million. Caltrana and the <>ranee
County Tranlit DWtrict are o\her
propcu1I for relievfnl ~
=he route, lncludln1 ex-
to etcht lanel and 9dclJ.
UOn of a npkl tnnllt •)'Item.
•
history. •
Dr. Ryan's book focuses on the
changing nature of the roles
played by men and women in a
representative American com-
munity from 1790 to 1865. She
argues that women created, ra-
ther than submitted to, their so-
cial and familial roles.
The $4,000 awards were esta-
blished at Columbia in 1948 with
a bequest from Frederic Ban-
crpft, who died in 1945.
The program. Gates said, will
"reduce excessive use of jail fa-
cilities, remove less serious of-
fenders from the main jail, re-
duce booking process time, jail
housing cost and bed
requirements."
"The county will receive the
benefit oi labor on public
grounds and lhe inmates the op-
portunity to continue their em-
UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. has been appomt-
ed co-chairman of a U.S. De -
partment of Agriculture commit-
tee to study agricultural , home
economic and youth programs of
the Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice.
Aldrich's appointment was an-
nounced by Agriculture Secre-
tary John Block and President
Robert Clodius of the National
Assoc1atton of State Universities
and Land Grant Coll~ges.
Coope rative Extension offers
self-help programs in agricul·
ture, natural resourcees, home
economics. 4-H. youth develop-
ment and community and rural
-development.
Aldrich. a Newport Beach
resident, is a professor of soils
and plant nutrition.
l ~
f .
t
j
I
I ~ • . • I • ' t , .
Ii
I J
·J ,
I '
• ..
II
I
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•
... Oraf\ge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednwdmy, Aprll _,.., 1982
~ •ANN LANDERS
•HERB CAEN
•HOROSCOPE
Wife needs professiollal help to stop cheating
COUDHllag meaJ. '50 vl1U1 wttll a P•Y-DEAR CERA: Tbe carping relative a DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been
happily married for two years to a man who
is too good for me. He ls very loving and
trusting \
Before we married 1 was r eally wild.
Joe married me anyway -said he was glad
I got all the foolishness out of my system.
The problem is that every time I meet a
man who turns me on, 1 e nd up sleeping
with him. This has happened four times in
the last 18 months. Yesterday I met another
guy who will surely land me in bed.
I am scared to death Joe will catch me
one day and throw me out. I really want to
stop, Ann, but l can 't. Don't suggest coun-
seling. We can't afford it. I am 27 years old
and -DEFINITELY TOO LOVlNG
DEAR LOVING: Anyone who writes, "I
really want to stop but I can't," bas a psy-
chological problem that requires prof essio-
nal help. There's oo other way. Do you have
a clergl mao who will listen? If not, look
under ' mental health., lo the phone book.
Apparently you, like many others, think
• HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
New start
for Libra
Thursday, April 15
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Some re·
strictions, delays actually work in your fa-
vor. Emphasis on er.edits, acknowledgments,
recognition by professiona l superiors.
-TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Accent on
communication, ability to express needs in
graphic manne r . Focus a lso on language.
publishing, education and spiritual values.
Relations hip grows stronger.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Family
member discusses finances. t.aJks of budget,
possible loan and what appears to be a le-
gitiJnate tax shelter. Domestic adjustment is
on agenda.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Lie low, go
slow, define terms. 'see places and people as
they actua~ are, not thr.ough h.aze of s~lf
deceptiori,+ Focus also on contracts, possible
partnerships.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Reward rec-
eived as result of job completed durin&;past
month. Focus on employees. people who
depend upon you and need to keep resolu-
tion concerning recreation. nutrition and
health .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Personal
magnetism soars; you reach wider audience.
more peo__ple are concerned with your views.
actions. Task will be comp1etcd, burden will
be removed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): New st.art in
n ew direction proves exciting. rewarding.
You'll establish base of operation. Focus on
property, security, reunion with older family
member. You gt?t to heart of matters.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Follow
through on first impressions. Be selective
where ideas are concerned -you'll know
what to do and when to do it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Focus
on current situation -avoid scattering ef-
forts and spreading self too thin. Elements of
timing and luck ride with you -you could
strike pay dirt.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar
cycle high; judgment, timing will be on tar-
g e t. Emphasis on wardrobe. personality,
special appearances and positive results
obtained from direct appeals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Answers
are found by looking behind scenes, by an-
alyzing motives. Member of opposite sex
confides feelings. makes special request and
plays significant compliment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Family
member grants request. Dispute is settled,
harmony again reigns on home front. Accent
also on hopes, wishes and possible profit on
business venture.
clliatrl1t. Try Family Service, Salvalloa didn't say whether 1be bas ever completed
Army ud Community Referral Service. I a cro11word. My bunch la 1be couldn't Ket
ur1e you to get some help for yoanelf. beyond a three·letter word for rodent. I was .,;. A UN I ANDllS
inundated with letters from readers defeo· ~ IU'WI Ml •
DEAR ANN: May I say a .word to the ding cro11word addicts. Many were enraged :
sister-in -law of the "total dummy" who at the manner ln wblcb alt-In-law down· '
works crossword puzzles? graded the wizard. A few brickbats were
Someone needs to speak for us pathetic aimed at me because I tald, "What may
addicts, even at the risk of irritating her appear to be a 1uperbrala at work ls some~
further. While we may not be super-times the comblDatloa of perseverance and
cerebral, we are harmless and try to be un-practice." Gulp. gulp.
obtrusive in our pursuit of the elusive word.
As you said, it helps to have a dictionary
in our laps and memorize key words. It also
helps ii we read books, magazines, newspa-
pers, mythology, hi.story and current events.
I wonder if sis-in-law has noticed how
cleverly the puzzles are constructed. I mar-
vel at the brilliance of the people who make
them up. I wish I could, but alas, 1 have no
such talent. The besf l can do is work them
out -which I do, almost every time. Can
the woman who knocked us do the same? -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is for the
woman on welfare who got a part-time job,
reported it and her welfare was cut. She
asked, "Why should I work if I come out
exactly the same as iC I just sat on my butt?''
CEREBRA TING IN ORF.GON
Doesn't she realize working gives her
experience? And it could turn into a full-
time job? If a person is able to work, she
should thank God. Public assist-ance was
intended for those who CAN'T work. The
reason this country is in such a mess is be-
cause too many people think the govern-
BEDTIM E STORY -About 300 youngsters,
in pajamas a nd holding blankets and Teddy
bears, crowded the Huntington Beach Library
for some favorite bedtime stories, such as the
Delly P~ Photo by IUc"-d Koetilef
Red Riding Hood skit (above). Also included in
the Winnie the Pooh party were a movie and a
puppet show.
GOREN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLE$ H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
Both vulnerable. Nort h
deals.
NORTH
+ AK4
1.:7 98
0 965 32
+AK4
WEST EAST
• Q109 3 • 87
1;)53 l.:7 J762
0 Q J 10 0 AK 8 74
+QJ082 +97
SOUTH
• J6 52
l.:7 AKQ104
0 Void
• J 653
The bidding:
North Eaat South Weat
I 0 Pa11 1 1.:7 Pa11
1 NT Pa11 3 I::> PHI
4 ~ Pa11 Pa11 Pua
Opening lead: Queen of 0.
So, you are rather proud of
your dummy play. Study all
four hands. and then decide
whether you would rather
declare or defend four
hearts. We are willing to
make a small wager that you
will select the wrong oplion.
When this hand was
played In a national cham
pionship some years ago.
three no trump was the
popular contract. although
some pairs did reach four
heart.s on an auction such as
the above. Without an in·
spired guess rn the heart
suit, three no trump had no
chance. What about four
hearts'!
. At four hearts you start orr
with seven fast tricks. and
that total r ises to nine if the
jack of hearts were to drop in
two or three rounds. As you
can see, that does not hap-
pen. Another way t.o nine
tricks is to ruH two diamonds
with your low trump&, draw
three rounds of trumps and
t hen try for an end play in a
black suit. However. careful
defense will negate t hat line
too, and you will have to set·
tie for a one-trick set.
You collect the money if
you realized the strength of
dummy·s nine eight or
trumps. Together. they are
equal to the jack and repre-
sent a sure trick if they can
be utilized. And they can be
via a very unusual dummy
reversal!
Ruff the opening lead.
cross to a high spade and ruff
another diamond. Now that
you have scored both low
trumps. you employ the
three entries in dummy lo
ruff three more diamonds.
You have now brought your
trirk total to nine -five
ruffs in your hand and the
ace-king of both rlubs and
spades. What is more, you
still have both dummy's
trumps intact and you are
out of trumps in your hand.
Only one high trump. the
jack, is s t ill out. and
regardless of the distribution
you must score a tr ick with
one of dummy"s trumps
Well done!
Rubber bridge club1
throuchout the eo&111try uae
the foar-deal brid1e format.
Do they bow aomethin1 you
doa't? Cbarle1 Goren'•
"f'our·Deal Bridge" will
teach you the 1tratesiea aad
tactics of tbi1 fut·pued ac·
Uoa 1ame that providee the
cure for uaendioc rubbera.
For a copy ud a acorepad,
aead Sl.75 t.o ''Goren·f'our
Deal," care of th la
newapaper. P .O. Bo• 259,
Norwood, N.J . 07648. Make
chedla payable t.o New1-
paperboob.
ment should provide everything -i~lu
ding incentive. -SICK OF LEACHES IN
DES MOINES
DEAR SICK: I go along with you -•t
only part way. What about those who WANT
to work and can't find jobs? Their numbers
are growing. Should they starve?
ls alcoholism ruining your life? Know
the danger signals and what to do. Read the
booklet, "Alcoholism -Hope and Help," by
Ann Landers. Enclose 50 cents with your
request and a long, stamped. self-addressed
envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, I11. 60611. I.
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
Hike taken
in stride .
Jack Green's reaction to the new ahd
outrageous one-buck Care on the cable cars:
"From now on I'll WALK halfway to the
stars!" ...
-Jn~ they haY.eni.lhea.cd back Lhered.n -
Washington. business is bad. Ite ms: The .
Hyatt Union Square closed its rooftQp
Re flections March 2 1 after a six-wk.
experiment in jazz (Stan Getz, A hmad
Jamal, Carmen McRae) that lost abou t
$15,000. One of our bigger stores laid off 110
salespeople a nd put the rest on a 20-h our
week. ln other stores. four-day work weeks
are the rule. A major men's store reached a
new low, selling just three suits rn a day.
And so on ..
Also for the Things Are Tough All Over
Cile: the Hang On Realty Co. and the What
To Do Investments Co .. w hich occupy offices
at 75 1 Clay. Dan Katz discovered these
hand-wringing firms.
SOME PEOPLE consider Gov. Brown a •
tightwad, but he popped $1 50 for seven silk l
pocket hankies a different color for each f
day of the week -which he presented to
State Assembly Speaker Willie Brown on
the occasion of the latte r's 48th birthday ...•
Assemblyman Don Sebastiani, son of
the late Win emogul Augie Sebastiani, has
scored a coup. Through his efforts, Sandro
Pertini, the Pres. of Italy, v isited the
Sebastiani vineyard in Sonoma March 28,
and every Italian winegrow e r for miles
around was there -from Mondavi to Gallo
to Martini to Foppiano, plus a Franzia and a t
Rossi and 30 more. f
INTE RNATIONAL scooplet: The U.S .•
was represented a t the inauguration of
Honduras' Pres., Dr. Souza Cordova, by
Sacramento real estateman Fritz Brown, an
old friend of Pres. Reagan's; Fritz even paid
his way there and back ...
Dr. Harry Yerby of San Mateo. lost in
the snow while skiing at Incline Village
with his family, was rescued the next day -
"and a good thing," bookkeepe r Cardi
Vedder said to his partner, Dr. Leo Beµ. "If
he'd had to write 'Help' in the snow nobody
w o uld hav e be en able to d eci ph er
it." ... We ll , you know t he ille gible
handwriting of most docs.
NOVELIST Frederick Exley, who
wrote the fine "A Fan's Notes," among other
goocHes. happened to remark at Paoli's that f
"I like Frisco very much ," at which a snooty $
waite r snapped, "Do you mean San,.
Francisco?" "Listen, pal," retorted Exley,
"as a guest in a cit y where they pride
themselves on being cosmopolitan and don't 1 even know h ow to pronounce t he Italian
diminutive for Paul, I 'll call this burg
anything that comes to mind." He's so right,
you know. Everybody calls it "Pay-OH-lee's
when it should be, roughly, "Pow-oh-lee's." 1
Time an ally for heart attack patients
WE STILL haven't confirmed that the
car to be produced by Toyota and General
Motors will be made in the Chevy division ·
and called the Toyolet. However, we do ,
have Cliff Taw 's assurances that the new
partnership will be called Genero Moto. . DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I believe' lD
belng carefal. My hernia, wbicb I have bad
for at least 10 yean, ls botherlD~ me. My
doctor 1ay1 at my age (71) lt'1 lmportant to
take care of tbe hernia before It gets
"1t11ck" and caa1ea gugrne of my bowel.
Lately, it'• trae tat I've laad dlf flc?alty
lD redacl.n1 tlle hernia. Bat tllere'1 aao'9ter
problem. I taad a heart attack about -a year
ago. Tile doctor caDed It a myocardial la·
f arctloo. I recovered wUlio•t aay compll-
catioa1.
My q•esUo• ii: How mac' duaer will I
be eQOMd to? Tiie llenia operadtla lttelf 11
aot 1iaa1ero11, my doetor 1ay1. Bit llow
allMt my Mi10r1 of unaa W a IMar1 at-
tadl? WW I M Ole to wl•tud Rrpl'J
uddte .... tMIJaT My lloder 1a71, la my pr11t1t coadl·
tion there's oo reason wby I can't bave tbe
surgery. Will a beart attack patient be at·
king for trouble la Mvln1 1v1ery lie mlgbt
be able to get along witboat? -MR. T.
DEAR MR. T.: Your question makes
good aenae. Many other heart patientl like
youneU are concerned whenever they need
to undergo aurpry. Any surgical ~date,
especially over the aae of 40, ahould have an
evaluation of hWher heart, lunp and other
orga.na. •
You say you recovered from your heart
attaclc. over a year ago. We have ~lleved
that a well-<0rnpenuted (wwkina) heart ln
a paUent who hu not had a recent heart
at111ck abould not be a deterrent to necemary
awpry. But the q\leltlon oft.en arilll: Suppoee a
T JOUI HEALTH
DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
patWlt has had a re<.'ent myocardial infarc-
tion? What•• the danger?
According to the report in ~riatrlca
they found .. that p&tlmtl whoee infarction
(heer1 an.ck) occ:wnd more than l1x mon-
tha preoperatively wett not at higher riak
than tbote who h a d never bad an lnfarcUon.••
The. flndln1• lffm to conllrm your
own doctor'• dK11lon, Mr. T ., that you
thould be able to wlth1tand operation to
repair your hernia.
POT SH01S
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
'Mott•
t MINE"
MCOMlt so wcu.-LOVSD
•
I
'"' ~\
LITTLE Bl'M'Y BUD DY -When Harry Ka-
han of Laguna Beach goes walking along the
Main Bea~h boardwalk at the Art Colony, he
doesn't have to worry about bad guys bothe-
~'~g-
NUTRITION
VITAMINS
I
Dally Not ll'ftoto by Gary Ainbt-
ri ng him. His little friend, Baron, takes care of
that. Baron is a nine-year-old Great Dane. He
weighs in at 180 pounds.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA
557-6161
LOWER LEVEL CARO USEL MALL
BULK PRODUCTS
OVER 70 ITEMS , RICHLIFE ~ . · ~ t
JAEGA TW,Q Time reJeased -~~ ----. ··---
MEGA POTENCY VITAMINS NATURAL EIERGY MIX 1.52 •.
2.10 I~.
AMINO ACID CHELATED MINERALS 4. 2 5
30 TABs REG. 7·55 • ORIENTAL PARn 11x
. RADIAllCE
·· VITAMIN C
500 M.G. CHEWABLE : 1qo WAFERS REG. 5.95
THOIPSOll
, VIATMlll E 400
· 90 CAPS REG. 9.95
11.F. FACTORS
RAW ADRENAL
' 60 TABS REG. 9.95
. COUllTRY LIFE•
SPIRULINA
50 TABS
500 MG 100 TABS
GROCERIES
'HEALTH VALLEY
I PEAllUT BUTIER
•CHUNKY UN SAL TED
•CREAMY UN SAL TED
NET WT. 16 oz. REG . 2.69
.. THOIPSOll SEEDLESS
RAISINS
r UNSULPHUREO
· 16 oz. REG. 1.96 ., .
EL IOLlllO
•PUFFED WHEAT
('PUFFED MILLET
1,6 oz. REG .. 85
1llTURE'S BEST
l-IPPLE CIDER VlllEGAR
?~2 oz. REG. 1.65
>1RAL TH VALLEY :;1 SPROmD &RllllS
i~lllCllE MIX
'"REG. 1.82 ,,
,. CELESTIAL SUSOlllG ~TU
u .. ID ZlllEI ~,• ILEEn TIIE
24 BAGS REG. 1.89
PRODUCE
•CUllERS
UllLFI SPROUTS
':1Ma1111u
lllPEFRUIT
BLUEBERRY APPLE &RAIOLA • 9 3 1~.
3.50 YORGURT WALIUTS 2.981~.
6.95
5.25
2.95
4.95
1.65
1.59
.69
1.15
1.51
50 CAPSU\.ES
•1000 M.G.
NAT~Al MARIN£
LIQUID CONCENTRATE
SlJ>PlEMENT
REG 10.9~
LUNCH COUNTER
c11ea1tlt,tNut
AN EMPLOYEE FAVORITE. A tasty
combin.nion of A vocado, Sprouts, Sun-
flower Seeds. <ioy Bacon Bits, topped w ith
a ~lice of Monterey Jack C heese, and served
on (\proutcd Whole Wheat BreJd.
2.15
Lunch S,,.c:lal Good Thru April 20th
HEALTH &
BEAUTY AIDS
MILL CREEK
ELASTlll
SKIN ELASTICITY
TREATMENT CREME
3.4 oz. REG. 8.50 5.50
COUITRY ROAD
ALOE VERA
COMPLUIOll BIR
3 oz. REG. 2.29
AL TA -DENA
DAIRY
1.49
OUR LOW EVERYDAY 1.49 112 GAL. MILK PRICES
CERTIFIED RAW . .. -.
CERTIFIED NON FAT . .
HOMOGENIZED
LOW FAT • 25 ••. NON FAT .35 ... 8 oz. YOGURT
NAJtA
,25 .. J MA YA 8 Flavors & Plain'
1.13
• •• 1.03 ••• .ll
,43
.13
• Sale Prlcea Effective Thru April 30th, 1982 •
Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Aprll 14, 1982
Military auction set Project aired
MADERA (AP) An
fl l mJllion hydrwleciric
project h.at bff o propo-
»ed by the Madera trrl-
£8 t Ion Oi1trlct in the
Sierra Nevada north of
Bau Lake.
Surplyt mlllt.ary property will ~·
auctioned to the public at Camp Pen-
dleton on April 29.
Ariwn1 the 200 ltema offered wlU
be refrigerators. car parts, ammunl
tlon cans and boxe1, field mower&,
t.enl8, tires, cola, ga.soline cans, tables.
kitch en equipment, ge.ncra~or set.I,
trucks and more.
The it.ems will be on display star-
tmg April 22. Crum 8 a.m. to 3 p.m
weekday11 , ut Building 2241 In lht.'
c·omp, located bt•twc n Oceanside und
Stln t:lenwnw.
The uucuon will take ploc-e at lht'
same 111\A.' April 29, atanin~ at 9 a.m.
Regunration w1U begin at 8 a.m. on
the day of the sale Biddeni must tJe
present and regiswrod to bid.
They propotie to divttrt
water .to a 9 ,300-foot
channel to produce abQut
7 ,900 kilowatta of power
for sale to uUl.aty compa-
nies.
PlllNIT PllTI
whit• u w•lt ·-------------------------------
DIVES CllEIA
474 E. 17th St.
,Coat• Me1e 848-2131'
e Dally Pilot e classifieds e workfor
• you. call
642-5678 e forquick e cash sales.
: Come on in for a
12 oz. six pack cans or bottles
I special price
I • on Bud & Coors I
only 2.15
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
. Graoes & Hops i ! · Oual~y Beer & Wine !
: 8458 Ealnger Ave., Huntington-Beach •
............ o tter expires Aprll 21, 1982•••••••••••.! ' ....
'A
"£
Plug 'n Talk" by Realistic
• Pleasant "Beep" Call Tone
• Talk-Bar Doubles as Night Light
$30 price-cut on this handy step.
saver! Press Talk-Bar to speak. or
Lock-Bar for hands-free talking o~
continuous monitoring Each station
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squelch for silent operation until a
message is received. FM reduces
electncal noise and interference.
#43-212
3-Channel, 3-Watt CB Walkie-Talkie
Save 120 TRC-206 by Realistic ·
• The Features & Power for Serious Users
39 95
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59.95
• Range-Boost Antenna System for Extended
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Buy a pair for camping, fishing. on construe·
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Channel 14 Crystals Included 8a11e11es. crystals tor 1001toonat Channels 8•1•a
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Save By Realistic
5 40 5995
12 watts per channel for superb sound! Reg. 99.95 "Key-off" auto·eiect, bass and treble con·
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Concertmate' by Realistic By Realistic
Save 520 370/o Off
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. Ctwck Your Phone Book for the 181111 lllllek Store or Dealer N1erMt You
}:~· :"·'
~
MICl.l MA\' YIWf "' INOIVIOUAL &TOftll AHO ot•l l"I • A ~<>' TANO'f ~TtON
---t
I
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• . • l I r
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OrlnQI Cout DAILY PILOTIW~. Jrw 14, 1882
I
TH£,
f.\MILl'
CIRCt8
"The boys are out with their dod and Dolly is
havina lunch." .;.
"Well, can YOU come out and play?"
by ~rad Anderson
C> llllZ "'-... ._ ,.,._... '"'
"May I have that remote control? I'm tired
of dog food commercials."
Jl'DGE P.\RKER
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
4 . ..
1'fp 'f·•t.I
"Do you rHllz1 hbw much chipped bMf costs
now? Only commissioned officers get the stuff
today."
DE~~IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
~~ ~-1¥ ;
' i
' 1 8
by Harold le Doux
NEITHER
l TOl...D JU06E Pt>.Rl<ER THA'f I 00 AM I. ~VE ADDITIONAL.. OFFICE 5PACE SAM'
I WAN'f 'fO DO A &0\.0
PR/\CTICE ... JU5T A5 MV
WELL. THEN IT'5 ALL !)ETTU:D ' WHY OON'T
YOU TAKE 0. O. MCK TO YOUR oi:F1CE WITH
YOU, 5AM ... ANO 5HOW HER r----<"'
THAT YOU CAN U!>E,O. 0 .... t>UT
I'M NO'f INTERE~TED IN AN
A5&0CIATE!
ACROSS 41 Col
I Sci room 42 Turllistl
4 Cook Slaodatd
8 Morll obliga· 43 WIOI a19
lion 45 Conducled
12 Meuw 46 Resor1
13 Ccwemony 4 7 T re fellowef
14 Opera 48 By way of
lllghfighl 49$enaw
520nec>WOMd 15 Writing
imC)lemerll • 54 RalM
17 $dlOOI of 56 Guido's note
whalel 57 Junclur•
19-PllO 58 Small vllley
20SccMd 59 Obtc;ure
21 Famous DOWN
unctt 10nce
22 Poem llOUnd
23Wall tract
.:~ Gii of eong 2 Exist
20.bint•'• 3Streamer
IMllUft 4 Ship'a prlaon
27 Tt*"Of ... S Lubricate
n1e111 6 Pronoun
2'1~ 7 l..Mfful
r~tfOM II ()l)tlrUCI
$~Cttv
J5NHt fOBound
31F,..... ttlyiy ...
MY_...., ldlOOI , ....... ..... tlP..collOllt .,.. •• al ,, ......
FATHER DID'
THE flPACE .YOU HAVE
/\VAILAe>L..E' -~
'(
22 United
23 De90Slts
2. Jc4JIOfl'f
25 Tltle of
respecl
26 Lamprey
28 Nibbled
29 Spread for
drying
30 Stable
dweller
31511111
33 Pigpen
34 Papa
37 Arabian
garment
39Eullld1n .,.,,,
41 Whitker•
42 SlmlMI
~Ah.Mel « Lion's pr ldt
45 ClllneM milt
46 WlttltNd
48 Vigor
49Htndu cymNIS
50 11 Down
llwdlnl
51 ""'°' lfWNI $3.,.
55~
•
PMNt:T8
~MANOS LOOK
KtNP OF SAAl.L, AN()
'ft>ll DON'T MA\IE At«
POCKETS ...
MOW'RE '1t)lJ 60HNA
HOLD TWO 8AlLS
ltMEN VOU SERVE ?
by Charles M. Schulz
by Tom K. Ryan
'"--~~---...--------. G01 srucK IN -0.E MUU!-.,_ ______ _.
GORDO
AJ..L 1lit: f'ASSS~RS HAt1
1t> GE"f OO"r ANt7 PUSH!
4-14
by Ernie Bushmtller
THE GROCERIES WERE TOO
HEAVY f=OR ME TO BRING IN
A BAG, SO I TIED THEM
TOGET~ER
c--·-...,._ ...
by Gus Arriola
I OON'i UNDERSTAND HOW
IHI~ COUkO HAPP£N 10 ME !
.
~~~~~~~!b)~-.:;_.._""-~~__:__=
'fO 8t ~f:5'f, NORMAN,
rf'~ A 61'f 01~\ZEO,
AA~'fll.:i \tltl'f'tt.M I AMO
f'OofU.~ R£'5£.ARC.~et> ...
IF HIS
F~S We.Re.
NORMAL., :t
WOU&..PN '"f" ee Sl1°'11NG IN AN SMP"T"Y WAlllNG ROOM.'
by George Lemont
A Pe:.RSON WHO'S
HSRS PSMANPI NG
A RE.FUNc> P0f;SN'I
ReAU..Y COUNI .'
\
• .
t
.. , ......
OHAAUE'I AHUlA
I wttlTW IHADOW
HA.WAI f"IW.()
I ~
CMNlWS
AllONEWI
HeONEWS
AHD#llEW'I fWO€AI
Our1ng the Clvil W er, I
Nort1*n II))' trlea to lnfll-
trlle rebe4 tetrllory end
capture 1 train ~tel to the
South'• aupply MOii. (Plrt
2)
8 EUCTNC E.St(IMO
An E•klmo boy la llUddenly
endow«! with extraordl-
nlf)I aleetrical powers dur-
ing • meonetJam •JIP8tl-
"*'t 11 the North Pole
8: 16 Cl) UTTlE JOHNNY
JONES
Thll rev!Yal of Ille 1904
George M. Cohan mulk:aJ
comedy about an a Ameri-
can loc*ey who trlea to win
a Ille English Oetby INtur ..
auch faYotltM .. "Give M~
Regerd1 To Broedw1y"
and "Yankee Doodle Oat>-
ay"
1:30. NEWS&EAT WITH
Cl£TE A08ERT8 ID IM 181NE86 REPORT
(l)QIHEWS
9 8AAHEY MILI..EA
A depertment •tote <>wT>«
18 kidnapped and his cap-
lora demand th1t Illa mer·
ChendlM be giv.n -•Y to
the publl<:. (Part 2)
1:4& (%) QNEMASC()AE
7:00 8 C88 HEWS
G N8CHEWS
• HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
8 A8CNEW8 8 YOU ASKED FOR IT
FNtured· "Mlnlllur• Peo-
ple 0 1 C..many" and
"Bird Doctor Of Thi Ever·
QI.'°"-''
• JOKER'S WILD
• OVEREASY
OuMt Frankie Laine (RI
iPORTRAITS IN PASTEL
CIJ P.M. MAGAZINE
A group of lan1 who had
"L11ve It To Beaver" put
blck on their local stlllon,
-fought lat and won QI EHrERTAIHMEHT
TOHtOHT
An Interview with Chubby
Checker 8 LC>Ot< A.UV£
C8)TIMEWAS
"The 1950I" Olc:tl C4vett
tecalll America'• tonne!
entry Into the spac:a raoe.
Iha birth of rock 'n' roll and
the Wll'f Ntly days Of tele-
\1\aion.
(ll)MOW
• • 11t * "G1g1" ( 1958)
MllUlice Chevalllt, L.ellle
C11on. A tomboy being
groomed by hit aunt and
g<1.ndmothet Mis out on
her own to catch a man 0 CHANNEL ZEAO
(%)MOVIE
* * • "Lost Horizon"
( 1937) Ronald Colman.
Jane Wyatt. A kidnapped
diplomat di8coVl'I the
Hlmelayan kingdom ol
• Shangtl-l.a. a ~ of
etarnal peace and 1mmor-
talltv
UPHILL BATTLE -Quincy (Jac k
Klugman) goes to court to help the widow
(Chevi Colton) of a man killed in an a uto
accident by a drunken driver tonight al 10 on KNBC (4). .
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
FNtUred. vlt.ll Ille Hem-
lock Soclely. CrosatOedl
School In Loe AnoelM. LOii
AngelN. biggMt Indoor
lkaling rink G Qt FAMILY F£UO 8 LAVENE & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
LIV«ne Melll Shttley•a
twllp In d....ioptng • more
demure peraonallly G EYEON LA.
Featured a repor1 on
wlnd-11ng. I 1r1p to 1911·
... , Masada, a loolc at
me11t11c halnllytes B 8ULLSEYE Cit TIC TAC DOUGH fD MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPOAT
D HON-FICTION
TELEVISION SPECIAL
"Blood And Sano· w,r In
The Sahara·· lntervlewa
with U.S. and Moroccan
1tal_.,,en and polltk:;i811S
are featured In a IOOk 81
U S l0<91Qn polic:y 1n the
Pollaato Front-Moroccan
conlllct in the Western
Sahara. CJ) BASEBALL
San Diego Pldre.s at San
Franosco G1an11
(!) YOU ASKED FOR IT
Featured "Diving NUrM"
ind "World's Smallest
Theatre ..
(CJMOVIE I
* * "It's Akve" ( 1975)
J<>hn Ryan. S"-'on Fwrell
A oounclng baby com.
Into Ille world wUh fangs,
c:laws. and • 111ong f\Oml •
cidal instinct 'PG'
1:00 II HER81£. n.E LOVE
BUG
Jim and Su..,, decide to
Nit Herbie and buy a ala·
l•on wagon
0 Q!l REAL PEOPLE U MOVIE
• • '"' "In Cwcumstanllal
E•11dence· ( 1976) Ray·
mono Burr. Mark Hamm A
once-succeulul lawye< le
ac;c:used of causong a wit·
nou to periure hlmNll.
U @l THE OREA TEST
AMERICAN HERO
R1lph teerns that hl1
mother'• ltance IS smug.
gllng top-MGtet material
coveted by Arabs. Oii com·
panies Ind tM U S ljlOY·
ernmont B MOVIE
• * '"' "In Search 01 Gre-
gory" ( 1970) Julie Christle,
Mtchael Sarrazln
Cit MOVIE
• *'" "Allen Encounters
( 19751 Documentary s.,,.
erat scientlllcalty docu·
mented eneounten with
e11tt1twr•trlal beings 11e
eumined
• HON-ACTION
TELEV~ SPECW..
"Blood And Send War In
Thi Sahera" lntervillww
with U.S ond Morocoan
atatHmln and polltlGlons
are lellureo 1n a tooi. 11
U S lor11gn policy In Ille
PoOaaro Front-M0<occan
cont11c1 111 tr>o Wve!Arn
Ser>are
Of> MOVIE
* * • The Blues Broth·
ers ( 1980) John Belushi,
Dan Aykroyd T\llro !Jives
singers must contend w1111
the Chicago (>OllC41, lhu
CIA. Neo·NAZll end the
U S Army to pul IQOelhor
a beMhl conoert to raise
money tor lheir parish R
($)81ZARAE
•·world's Oldesl Stun•·
rnan
0MOVIE • • * Caddysha<:k
(19801 Bill Murray, Rodney
Oange;rietct Tht! demen1
ed groundt-kaeper or 0
swanr..y counlry club
wages war a1>91nbt the
goc>r>ers 1nnab1ling .,,, tutl
R
8:30 «D ALL IN THE FAMIL'I'
Arcn1e und Mike 1Mr11 11
bottto of brandy anl1 then
their deepest reet1ng•
When they are accidentally
lodeo in the store<oom .:it
Ateh1t1 s Prace
«!) CALIFORNIA
UNEMPLOYMENT: LIVING
ON AHO OFF THE LANO
A IOOI! al the ns•no unem-
ployment 1n Ca11torn1a
SJ MOVIE • • * '• Tile Odo Cou
plt1 11968) Jack L11n1mou,
Waller MaHh•u Two
d•vorced men with conthct
Ing personalities duc1011 10
share an apartment m Nuw
York City
t:OO 8 THE DUKES OF
HAZZARD
Rosco wins all or I.loss
Haog'1 r!Ches "' a card
game IAI
0 °'THE FACTS Of
UFE
Jo tries to lem1n1ie her
cou .. n, • girl who has
grown up 1n a houllCI tutl ol
boy• 8 ®) n.e FALL OVY
Colt again clastlt'\ ••11lh
1n1urance .1oen1 Kay
Faulkner as th&y each
11tempt to trac.k down a
gorgeous 1ewe1 thief «D MERV GRIFFlN
f1i) MIOOLETOWN
Famlly BuS•OftSS' All 1M
members or a •amity of tO
struggle to koh•IJ Ille
lllhflr s p1u11 l•anch111e
from slldlOQ into bankrupl-
cy U
«!) JAZZ AT THE
MAINTENANCE SHOP
Oe•ter Gordon Quartet
(No II Oe"er Gordon
teM1 M A R.uy1us Retd
11as) Georqe Cabtt1a
p1ann. EdO•e Gladden.
drum• IA1
~------~·-----------------------CC) MOVIE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 KNXT lCBSl o.
8 KNBC INBCI i e KTLA (Ind I Ii
8 KABC IABC) c.
D KFMB lCBSI
0 l(HJ-TV llnd.I tlZJ
D KCST <ABCI f e KTTV (Ind I I
•• KCOP·TV (Ind l • e KCET <PBS) • G KOCE (PBSI
On TV
l TV
HBO
<C1~ma .. 1
(WORI NY , N 'I'
<WTBSI
IESPNJ
1Show11me1
S!>ot11ghl
IC.bit' N~ws N~twortt)
• He Know~ Vuu re
Alone ( 19801 Oon Seard•
no. Caitffn 0 Heaney A
psychotic mu1derer "al~•
attre1c;ttve young bridel·to
be. ~tentty and lelhally
slallt11ng theu dream:. ot
wedded bhss R.
(.()_MOVIE * * * "The ldolmaker
( 1980) Ray Sharkey Tovan
FcHdst1uh A man1putallv11
manager uses varoous
ploys to calapult two teen aoer• into pop .. ngtno
stardom PG
(Z)MOVIE
fl'* 'h "Noghlhttwk~ '
'Dynasty' women
feud on and on
NEW YORK (AP) -Blake
and Krystle Carrington were
happily married when ABC's
"Dynasty" entered its second
seuon last November -at least
as happily married as soap opera
writers will ever let their main
characters get.
But, for the second season .
aultry actress Joan Collins was
hired to play Blake's ex-wife
Alexia, and nobody expected her
to apend her time playing Par-
clteeS!.
used every soap-opera trick to
w in back Blake: back-stabbing,
treachery and taunting. She even
infuriated her adversary by t.a -
k i ng flowers from Krystle's
garden and using them as models
for her painting$.
Alexis first tried to get to Blake
through their childeren. Their
son. Steven, had an accident, and
grief brought Alexis and Blake
cloeer together in the hospital. Of
course, Krystle was there to
record their embrace.
(IHll I~ lllllGM.
IWI¥ 0.. Wllllemt. A 1~
...... Vonr °"Y cop 11M hll "'°"' GUI OUI fOf him -., one ot thl WOtld'• most
<11n9ttO\lt ltrtOtlllt
.,, ..... In hll City • "'
t '° D QI TIACHIN ON.Y (Pf~ A 01ti wr-
IMlflnlt llaV9 MPWlled
11111 l)tt INOl'ter II tlle oen •••v w11h w '°' 1111 .,,,.._
11>0.
10:00 .. ft OUINO"I'
A ....,Illy ._,.. v.. tu
d•unilen d!Mng lawl to
avOld pu"11hment alllt
kllU111 pedeltrlltl (R)
I •• NIWI
OYHMTV
Biii!• i..... out 11 Altm,
I NIC:hl\lk" ~NI-to
111nounoe ht had "' attall'
with 81.,,en. Ind Polio. Lt.
HOiiiman ~tlone CllU--
d ..
G MIOOl.ITOWN 'l'am!IY ~" All Uw
m..-nlltf1 01 1 1em11y 01 10
ltluQglt IO kHP lhl
lllhtt'a piDAI ltlflClhlM
lrorn llldlng Into bankrue>I·
(ll~
*fl' "Thi Singing Cowboy
RldM Agaln" 0 BARRY MAHILOW IN
CONCERT
MllOll<>w perform• 1 .-.c.
ll()n OI hit hll8
10·161 .. )MOVIE * • • 'FIHh Oordon"
( t980) Sam J Jon.. Mu
Von Sydow A lrlo of
a1r1h11nga travel to the
planet MOf'QO Ind helped
111 oppresMd lnhlbltanta
1n the overthrow of the .vtt
Emperor Ming 'PO'
10:30QJ NEWS
Q';) MATTERS OF LIFE
ANO DEATH
To Live Or Let Die .. A V\111
10 a neonatology lntentlve
core unit 11 Included In thl1
look II the ta-s au•·
r oundlng medical scl-
e<ICe s ab111ty to extend the
k•as or cnt!Cllly ill or dam-
99eo newborn• IC) MOVIE * •,., "The Stud" (1978)
Joan Colhna. Oliver Tobi·
~s A wallet udvancatl hla
C818ef t>y ~ wfth hit
ooss swite R (S MOVIE
• • • ··oh Go0r· 1 t977)
Goorge Burns, JOhn Oen·
ver God setecta •n
un~specllng young IU98<·
market maro109< to deliver 1 • mft53Q8 of hope and
good will to the lkeptlcal
people of Iha m<>dern-day
world 'PG'
10:45 Z) CINEMASCOAE
11.ooe Df.l(J)([§J a
NEWS
0 SATIJRDAY NIGHT
~lcm Mlcliaal Samwn
Guest Ke11h Jarrell B KOJAI(• m M·A·s·H
Trapper. c;oached by
Hawkeye. enter• the lntet-
camp boxing tourn8met'lt
to prevent 1111 1tan1ter ot 1
beiiulllul nurM
II) BENNY HILL
Benny plays llYll 109 TV
oetec11 .. es fJiJ DICK CA\IETT
Drugs Addiction And
Re'°very Guea11· Ot
M11k S Gold, JOl>n PNl-
llpt, Mackenzie Pnillip9.
(P11t 1)(R)
(0 JMOVIE
• • • "Stir Crazy" ( t980)
Ri<:/\ard Pryor. 0-Wiid·
"' Two men are mlstlken_..
tor bank robber• and 98tlt
101at1 A'
lZ.l MOVIE
•••"Tim (1981)Plper
Laurie. Met Gibson A
young relarded man and I
~en11t1ve. mlddla-aged
woman d8V9lop • cloM
ra1a11onsh1p of mutu11
need and understanding
thal leads to an unor1hc>-
do• mamage
1 t.30 B MOVIE
• * ··11,. a-· (1978)
Jonn SaJ1on, John Carr•·
dine A stra.ln of highly
1n1e11ioent k•ller beM lry to
stop man's deStrUC11on of.
the env1ronl'ft9nl (RI D ~ n.E B£ST OF
CARSON o....-. Sidney
Oavlel
GueS11 Wllllam
Buddy Rtc;h,
Goldsmith.
fl<>fowttz. (R)
U @l A8CHEWS
NIOHTUNE m n.E JEFFERSOHS
G) SANFON> AHO SON
Q';) HEwseEAT Wmi
CLETE A08Eln'9 m CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
Cl) MOVIE
. She waited no time moving
into her old art atudio on the
Ce.rrlnaton estate. The seeds of tl.lr'mOil" were planted in the first
epilode, enablin1 the romantic
trtanale, the comeratone of .any
ioep opera worth ita fan maga-
zinea. to spin ita viewer web.
When Steven was brought
home to the Carrington est.ate.
Alexis claimed terTit.oria1 privi-
lege and attempted to oversee his
rehabilitation. But the plan went
awry when Mother Nature
intervened. Krystle became
pregnant., and Blake was tOO de-
U&hted to be tempted by an old
flame. In fact, he was 80 happy
that he reacted like any other
powerful man; he gave her an
~vecar.
TURMOIL -Joan Collini,
who plays Blake Edwards'
ex-wifel o n "Dynasty," uses
every soap opera trick to wtn
him back.
La at year, the main love
trianlle involved Bo Hopklna as Matthew Blatldel. Kryttle apent
tbe year anguiahlng between
Matthew and Blake. BUt Hopkim
left the ahow. e.fittinC the lacile
~ of all tnOYtna parta
on Uwee aertaJa. the c:all •ent out
fer a replaa!l'nent. another warm
bodl'.
MJN Collin• &n1were~. and ~ c.arrtnpJn ~·t had •
mommt•a pllll)l lince-Ala» Md
In the aixth episode, Alexis
spotted Krystle rlcJ.tna her horae.
The evU villains in soap operu
mUJt have aome •lxth tense be-
~. lrwtantly, ahe •w another ~ opportunity.
8b1 ffred a 1UP1hot. tn,-hie-
n Ina the hor.e. Kry1tle w1.1
dumped and Iott her baby. HA-vina destroyed that link between
Krystle and Blake, Alexia enac-
ted the aecond part of her
tcherne.
She revived an old affair with
• Middle Eattern oU t~. who
controlled the IOW'CI of Carrtrc·
ton crude. She Uled that~
to entice Blake to come to Bame
without Kry1tle'1 knowlec:t,..
Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/WednMday, Aprll 14. 1982
TUBE TOPPERS
KOC£ (50) 7:30, .KCJ:I' (2e) 8:00 -
"Blood and Sand." A look at th\, conflict
ln the Wettem Sahara.
KNXT (2) 9 :00 -.. The Oukea of
Huzard." Rom> wins allot Boes Hogg's
riches in a card game.
KCET (28) 9:00 KOCE (50) 10:00 -
"Family BUiin •. " A family of 10 1trug-
gle1 to keep the father's pizza franchise.
' KNBC (4) 9:30 -'t'feachers Only.''
Premiere of faculty sitcom.
* ~ "Two-~ tlladltop"
(11171) J-T.,.iot, Wet·
ren Oet... VCN!lg of\11..
*io-old 10 I ot<>M-
eountry cw r-.
-Ml>NGHT-
12:00 e INTDITAINt.teNT
TONIGHT
An Int~ with Chu~
Checll., 89 LOVE80AT
Doc II trNted by I got·
g10U1 doctor; I r911ted
blllertna mMl• '* former
pertnet; • woman lnvftll '* cat>ble to tr1\l9f with
hit (R)
G MOW
+"~A Fiow."
(1970) Jacll Albert.on,
Wiiiet Chlert.
~.~ood Day For A
Hanging" ( 1959) Fred
MacMurray. M1ggla
HI.,._.
• t.pV£. AMEAICAH
STYLE
• AMEM:A: THE
. 8ECOHO CEHTUAY
~MOVIE
***'A "La Cage Au•
Fohl" (1979) U00 TOQ·
naai, Michel Serreult A
nighlOlub owner trlaa to
prepwe hla tranavMlll•
lover I«• v191t by hie aon·a
Ilene••'• father. th• mor• ~of
Frer\09 'R' 8MOVIE
• ••.; "Any Number Can
Pity" ( 19411) Clark Gable,
Allxll Smith. An ~I
Ind car..,._ gemblet'a 1111
18 ti.81 with a -* of
tragedle9.
12: 10 CID 8T!VIE NICKS ...
COHOen' -
F1Mtwood Mac menlbat
Nlc:Ke P«torms "Alt" The
GNttet Fedel." "LMttw
And'--·" "The Hlghwey·
mlfl" Ind "Balle Donna,"
as well M lavorlt• from
the Flletwood Mac repat·
tolre. Tlped at the Fox
Wll8hlr• T'-11• In Loa
Angele9.
11; 16 (I) MOVIE * •,; "lal•nd 01 1000
OeligM8"0n I luah troplcaj
llland, ~ women
-IOld Into ai-y. 'R'
12:80. 8 LATE~ wrTH
DAVID lETrEAMAH
~t: Cllt'toonllt Jim 0.v-
11.
• OOUfl\.E.8
• NEWS
• PEOfUAHO
OAGAHIZATIOH8
(%)MOVE • * ~ "Baby Doll" ( 1957)
Carroll Ball1t, KNI Mal-
den. A \l'Oluptuoua YoUnQ
woman .t\Ole lttrlCtlon IO
vvloue men II quite mutu-
•I IMOt them to the
deelructlon of their pr4M-
OU91y Nippy lives. 'R'
1:00e MOVIE
1t *YI "Wichita" (1g55)
Joel McCrM, Veta Mllea, A
W•tttn town II timid by
IMWIMm\en.
• MOYIE * * *'A "Long Dey'• Joul-
nay Into Hight" ( 111412)
Katharine Hepburn, JMOn
Robard•.
1:10 Ii MOVIE * * ~ "Young OUllnge('
( 11166) Nlcil Ad1m1. Robert
ConrlO ~= * * "Up The Academy"
( llleO) Ron Lelt>man. Ber•
bar• B1ch. Th• wu-
ObaMaad cornmendlflt of
Welnbltg Millllf)I Acade-
my It no metch tor the
ltoublM<>me btll8 enrolled
t1*e. 'R'
1:30!~
* * * "'l<lng Of Kings"
( 11182) Jeffrey Hunter ,
Robert Rylfl. The coming
of "-" Ind the eventl OI
his Ill• ga\11 birth to a ,_
rellQIOn.
1:388 NEWS
1:-46 .. MOVIE * * •,; "Blood On The
Sun" (11M51 J.,,_ CBQ·
ney, SYivia Sldnev
MOVE * * "Twelve Plu8 One"
Sharon Tela.A young
woman aearcnes three
countries tor a chair thlt
contlllna 1 gr .. 1 l0t1une
'R'
2.'00 D MOVIE
• • •,; "Nighthawks"
(19811 Sytveetlf Stallone,
Bitty OM Williama. A loogh
~ York City cop hes his
wOflc CUI out for him When
one OI the world'a most
dangarou1 terrorlata
1rt1v.1In1111 city. 'R'
2:109 MOVIE * •IA "One 01 Our Own"
( 1975) George Peppard,
~ Homotlta The MU·
rology dep811ment of •
large h<>Spjtal bustles with
activity as 1 typk:at day ta
ctttonlcled. 2:a0e MOW
••,; ··Sun9COtd*'" (196-4)
Maril Stewn•. Marianne
Koen. A notorlou8 bend of
outlawl attempt• to lntlml·
date a local lherllt
(%)MOVIE *. 'h "Shot't Eye&" ( 1978)
Bruce 01v11on, Jose
P«R. Convicts •«empt to
118)' elNe In Ille l>Ntal
ltmoephere Of I prison
where cert1in fellow
tnmal• bf'Hll llmoel -
ry known rvte ot ~·
'R'
2:408 NEWS
<If)MOVIE
* * '"Wlille & Phll" ( t980)
MICl'IMI Ontkean, Margot
Kfddet Th••• people
begin a triangular romence
In GrMnWlch VINllQI that
continues thrOUQhout the
mercurtat social mHleu of
the '70.. 'R'
3:20 BaAAAE
"World's OldHt S1unt-
ml/\"
JOHN DARLING
A LOI 0 FUNNY IHINGG HAPPEN
WHEN YOU'RE 001NG A Ll\J~
IAW< SHOW.
IM • ....aeoN:
~
1:10 (I) MOYll * * * ..., "Tiit OOd Cou·
pit" (1NI) JD Llt'nmOtl,
Wetttt Mllthau. Two
Cl"'°'* men with GQnf\ICt·
Ing s-NNllllM ~ 1.0
'\ Iller• Ill IC)liftmetlt In .._
\ Yoril City
~-MOYll
• • "The fillet Conlttct"
( 1ff 1) 8trn He!M, AolMllO
Iha! In the thltd pt11t ol
"The Omen" lfllooy, YoU•'O
Oll/Tlllfl, tlwl IMbodirnenl
ol the AnllCnriat, 11 now II\
adult and a ttulled ldvtlOf
to the prealdttlt ot the u S
'R'
4:to e MOVIE * * "The LMt CIO<>ktd
Mlle" ( 1847) Ad ... M81a.
Donald Barry
4:16(%)MOWE
• •..., "Nighthawk•'
( tN ti Sytveater Stall<>ne.
8111y 0.. Wll.Hlm8 A tOUQh
~ York City cop hU hil
work cut out tor hlm whtwl
one of tl\e world'• mOlll
d1nge•ou• 11rro11111
errtv• In hit city 'R'
4!.IO (C) MOVIE
• "H• Knows You " Alona" ( 1g80) Don ScAfdl·
no. Clllllln O'Heaney
4:40 CID 8TtV1E HICKS IH
eotcEAT
Fleetwood Mac member
Nicka performs 'Alter The
• OlittOt Fadaa," "LNlhet
And l..loa," "The Highway.
men"' and "Bella Donna •
as .... , H 1111or1t .. lrom
the F'"twooc:t Mac reper
toire T1ped I I the Fox
Wllahlf• Theatre In ld1
Anoetu
4:46., MAYBERRY R.F.O.
Goober's pro1ec11111
Instinct ,..,.. when hiS
1-.-age niec;e coma• to
Vllll
Thur•day••
Dayt llRf-.ff ot·ie•
-MORttHG-
10:00($) * * * "Belreyed
(195'C) Clark Gable. Lana
Turner Oeltpite all precau
Ilona, a Oulch under
ground unit 11 betrayed lo
tneGermans
Cl>** 11 CIOod Dancer·
(1980) Oalfld Carradine,
Jeoniler O'Nt\111 A top
11un1 lllflt neglects the
people Who care about him
In the setfllh purSUlt of h•S
danoe<OUI aoo<t 'PG
11:00 (C) * • * * "The .00
Stows" ( 1959) Jeen-P~re
Leaud, Patrick Aufley A
young b<>y deprrved of
perental we.rmth and the
acceptance OI his ~s
turns his 1tiena11on and
despair loward a hie of
small crimes
I 1:46 !..Z) * * *·~"Olly For
Nighl' 1 t972) Jacqueline
Bisset, vatenllna Cor1ese
O"ecied by FraOCOIS Trul·
taut The ttves and loves of
lilm perlormetl are stud·
oed In a movi&-wlthln-•
m<>v>e 'PG
12:00 B * • '" "The Fou• Oeucaa· ( 1975) Jack
Palance. Carol Lynley A
casino owner leads a
tucrattve wnlSkey bootleg-
ging operation during the
dry" days of Pr()h11>ttt0n
«D "* * • 'h A AaiSln In
The Sun" (19611 Sidney
Poitier. Ctaudla McNert
., • *•,;"Lightning
Stnkes Twtce" p951) Ruth
Roman. Rtc;hard Todd
• * "19•1 (1979)
John Betuthi. Tashiro
M1lune Alter the b0mb1ng
ot Pearl Harbor, Southern
C~lornla civilians and m1t-
nary personflel react with
unbodied pan1e to ,._, of
• J1~ attack 1n their
own backyard 'PG'
Cl l * • '" I ha Nude
IJl>tnb ( 11110) ()on ACS-. sy1...,. 1(11t1 .. lec;t1t4 llQlflt
Maawtll ''"lt1 fllCft h18
nl(lll Ol•lQltOUJ lld-HIY
In '" ttchvtMain wh<> 1)1&1'9
to *inch ml...._ th1t wlll
dlltobl the 11111<1 ,,,,_,.,.
PQ9UllllOO 'PO
1t:aoa • •" "HwltnCW. Well" t t978) Wlfrtn ... ,.
ty Julie Cllrlttie Allet 1
• pro lootblll 1tw'1 life la p;am''"'"" ClalmtO by an """" lfl09f, the tnlll 11 o•v·
.,, the boOy ol • mllllOl\alta
lnduttrlal19t to conllnll'f llv
l~ln PG'
1:00(C) •••·Outlaw B•~•"
I t971) P11., Fonda. SUNn
8 alnt Jame• When •
CQunlry·weet11n llnf.,
ale• .. 1'111 eo<IQ, an IA OOfl
trlea d"'peralaly to
rwtrt•v• his reC:Qrllll10
rlQht• wht.. baltt1no t,,.
~·'PG
1:30 ft l • • • ·1 u Cry Tomor·
row I t95!>1 Su»n Hay·
wa1d R1ch11d Conte
Actr ... Llth•n Roth etruo· "le• With lleonoliam And I
lld1ngcar-
1.'6 Zl * * 'Taoe1her" I t1179)
JKquollne Bl11HI Mblll'M·
!Ian Sc.hell
2:00 C ttJ • • 'Nooooy'• Per
let.I' 11g81) Gebe K11D11n.
Ahia K•rras Thf .. unklitlly ""°"" Ml out to ballie 1ne red tepe and bure.iu\..racy
ol Clfty hall PG'
2:30 0 * * "19• 1" f 19791
John Belushi. To•hiro
Mllune Alter the bOmbtng
ul Pearl Harbor Soulhetn
Calllorn1a eov1llen1 ano m1t
nary personnel react with
unbtldlecl panic lo "'IW, of
11 Japanese attack 1n their
own backyard PG
3.00 B • • JI Can Be Done
Amigo ( t0731 Jack
Pal11nce. Bud Spt.r•'81
When t ~oupte ol Me••·
c;ana run inlo trouote
together tnerr temper• get
out of hano
3 t5 Z • • • losl Hor11on
f 19371 Ronald Cotrnan
Jane Wyett A k1dnappe<1
diplomat dlscovtra the
Himalayan kingdom nt
Sh.ingu L·l a plac1< of
etOlfnt\I Pttac;e and 1111m•.><
tahly
3:30 SJ • • • '• Bookoobs
And Broomst1cl\s 11117 1)
Angela l ansbury OlJvod
romllnson Ounng World
War It .o novice &OrCPrau
and "er three young
111~nds set o!I lllf a m.o.gle
1stand where stie intends
10 learn enough oboul
>W1tr.he1alt 10 u~ 11 30a1ns1
tne Nl<l•S G
4 00 C ·w onqs In Thf' W11.1(>r
OP,~<r
4:30 0 • * Hucit lt'i>l'rr (
f.nn * 197~ Jell 8lst.
Paul W1ntl<!ld Ba5"<1 on
tne story by Mark Twain A
~oung l>Oy and a runawny
~lli.P bf>t;Omf' 1nvot•ed 1n a
seues nl ttdven1Ure1 wt.tie
118'ttng down tho MISS•SS•ll·
p1 R1ve1 OI\ 11 ralt
5·00 H • • • Hot leac:l An<I
Colo Feet I 1978) Jt"1
Date Don Knolls In Tl\e
Old Wesl tWin b<Othe•$
0111J rougr> 11 tough the
other a city· bred m11Qu0-
1oa'1 comf)i!te ,., a
g1uelrng cont~l 10 '<l'e
wf\O W iii tOh811t th~lr
fathef \ lor1une G
5: 15 Z, ,. • ' (.;loud Oan<.ur
{ 19801 David Carr~tne,
Jen111ler 0 Nam A loc>
stunt t11er negtects the
oeop1e "'"°care abovl hrm
'" Ille sellosh puosu11 ol h•s
dangerous sporl 'PG
5:30 (C *' * * Bell~ Are A1nq
IOQ f 19601 Judy HOlhOay
Dean Martin A 'nv ;ind
1mpres~•onable ynur19
dn!twettng Set'Vtee •>pPHHOf
i.ocon1/'~ 1n1.1uatoo wlll! a
Ch/liming scf1p1wr1tcr
$, • • • Chaptf'lr lwo
( 19791 James Ca.in Mar
Sl>d MllSOtl Soon Bllf'lr hos
w1lp s death a writer llnds
h1m~I reluctantly l1tll1ng
on love again PG·
by Armstrong & Batiuk ... ----~~~~~~--.... ,o..ND ONE. DAY 1
,A.C..TUAU.. Y WENT ON
THE All~. W~ll-E. 1 W/'6
61tl.L WEARING'
MINE! HEH! t-ei!
1 GUESS V'OU 5.CRT
O F HAD "'ID BE -rHE:RE.!
'Family Business' engaging
NEW YORK (AP) -The American Dream has
a rude awakening tonight in ''Family Business," the
most engaging episode or PBS' captivating
"Middletown" series about life and values in
Muncie, Ind.
The episode airs at 9 on Channel 28 and 10 on
Channel~.
Howie Snider is the patriarch and proprietor of
the family-run Shakey'a Pizza Parlor in Muncie. An
ex-Marine and former divinity student, he's put his
life's blood and savings into the failing business.
For 5 ~ years. Snider has performed heroically
to keep his bu.sinelt and family together under the
aame roof. He's chopped cheese, spread aauce. pro-
vided lAte-nlght banjo entertainment for his custo-
men and hammed up radio commercials.
If anybody deeervea a break today, It'• Snider.
But instead of the work1ethic reaping monetary
rewards and ~ty. Snidet'• buline9I la not being
suppor1ed by a pUbltc that aeema to prefer ham-
burgera. Snlder aaya If he could afford to be on
well-traveled b\U'lft' row, Sha.key's would bring in
$10,000 .. $1~.ooo more a month.
When the rlocumentary waa !Urned ln early
1981, Snider wu cloae to tomnc his last pJe. In fact.
while h.la wile ll c:rytng in the t.cqrou.nd, Snider is
plead.lnc wlth Shak.ey'• ~ment foe man fi-
nancial time "to I can keep operating over the
w'llllkl!!llJCI." '
In hll battle wlth cocporate ~\. Snl·
der 11 autkinc a blow apinlt ch.anciril American
val'--that have aeen mom..anct·pop au. st.rellina
friendly, famUy aervb and 1oyalty Nffer, while
major taat.-foocl chaw and their qulcllie-culafne
Oourilh. •
Snider~ tbt humWatkm of f.aUUft would
dMtl'OY htm JtYCbolotleallY and emotionally. Ht &.UI hla dUJclnn not to milt.ab worry for unbar>-
~ &Ml he'a ptOUd children amlle and aaU him
Mr. Shakeys.
This segment of the "Middletown" ser1C's be-
gins as an examination of crumbling ,American va-
lues. But, in the end, as the documentary builds to a
very dramatic family meeting. "Family Business"
proves to be as much about family as business It's
terrific television.
JIOt EAST Ca.-.sT HIQ l~A'
CORONA Ofl MAA. CA
('114) M-Q.lJ1
I I I
I
\
I ,j
t t
i \
\ ~ I r .
. , r
' ;
l
' I • I
•• Orange Oout DAIL\' PILOT/Wedl*day, Aprtl 14', 1882
.,Whphoto
STARTING YOUNG -Freddie Simmons, a senior at Pontiac Northern
High School in Pontiac, Mich., has just bought two more houses. At l~
)fears old, he became Michigan's youngest landlord, and is saving to bu
more homes and pay his way through college.
Suspect's bill covere~
City must pay hospital cost for wounds
BOSTON (AP) -The city of Re-
vere must pay tht' hospital bill of a
burglary suspect wounded in a police
chase, the Massachusetts Supreme
Court has ruled.
excuse, because inadequate funding
will not excuse deprivation of rights
guaranteed by the constitution." -
Revere will have to pay the initial
10-day hospital bill of $7,948.50 for
Patrick M . Kivlin, whom city police
brought to the Massachusetts General
Hospital after the shooting Sept. 20,
1978, the state's highest tribunal ru-
led.
However, the court ruled Revere is
not responsible for $5,360.41 in hos-
pital bills incurred when Kivlin was
re-admitted for two weeks surgery
while free-on bond awaiting trial.
Kivlin was discharged in police
custody Sept. 29.
K~lin was shot by Revere police
while allegedly fleeing the scene of a
burglary, according to the decision. He
had been spotted with a suitcase and a
pillowcase.
"Kivlin was brought to the hospital
as a prisoner,"' said Justice Joseph R.
Nolan, who wrote the unanimous
decision. "To ensure Kivlin's right to
m,edical care, Revere must be held
liable to the hospital .for the medical
servicei; rendered.
The hospital sent a bill for the first
admmion to ihe Revere police chief,
who replied that the city "had no
provision for payment of the bill," the
court reported.
"That funds may not have been
at>propriated for this purpose is no
The hospital then sued to collect for
both admissions, but lost in Superior
Court, then appealed to the s tate's
highest court.
KAllOtl L4WM-MT. OLIVE
Mon uary •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540 5554
-
PIHCI H OTHHS
HU HOADW A Y
MO ITU AU
110 B roadway
Costa Mesa
642·9 150 . --. UL T2 IHGHOH . SMfTH & TUTHILL . . WlSTCLIFf CHArEL
427 E 17th St
" Cos1a M esa
646-Q371 --.
'1HCI llOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAJIY
627 Main St
' Hunlington Beach
536·6539
--
rACIFfC YllW
MIMOllAL , •••
Cemete'.t Mortuary
Chapel· rematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Drivl!
Newport Beach
644-2700 B
IL:·
I
I
j
I
.J
~ -THI
,!.!!l'!. '-w ... --.
SI Uc 217667
s..w:. r.,... s-. I I Your Ooor
(Col 510<1 ,._ .... Your At•)
cona ..sa 641-1289 , .. ..._.-.
..,_ -495-0401 2"22~~
'(S-..... Pnry ... a__,. ,kw,.)
NOTICE INVITINQ 11101
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
sealed proposals tor lurnlshlng ell
labor. materials. equipment. tran•·
P<lflattOn end such othef le<:•htieS as
may be required 101 1981 -82
STREET MAINTENANCE PHASE II
wlll t>e recetve<I by the City ol Coste
Mesa at the Office of the City Clerk •
17 Fair Orlve, Costa MHa. Celllo1-
n1a , until the hour ol t 1 00 e m .
Apr11 20 t982. at wh1ctt time they
will btt opened publicly end read
aloud 1n the Council Chambers
Sealed proposals shall beer th tllle
of the work and ttte name of the
bidder but no othttr dstlngu•Shing
marks Any bod received alter the
9Cheduled closing ti~ for the rec-
eipt of bKIS shall be returned to the
b•dde< unopened It sl'tall be the SOie
responsibility or the bidder to see
that his bid Is received In proper
time
A set of plans. Speclal ProViSions
and additions to 0-al PrOV1slon1
to the Standard Speclflcattonl may
be obtained at the Ottkl41 of llMI City EnglnMr, 77 Fair Orlve. Costa Mesa,
-----------1Calllornl1 upon nonrelund1ble pay-
r ment ol S8 00. An additlonll charge
' ol S2 00 will be ml<M ii handled by
• man Plans. apeclllcatlon1 111<1 othe<
['.
cl
-.
contract doc:ument1 may al10 be
eumtned 11 the Office of the City
Clerk of the City of Cotti MeM.
E1c1t bid 1h1ll be m1de on the
PropoNI lorm. 1hee11 P-1 lhtough
P-1 proVldld In the con1t1Ct doc:u-
menta. and Shlll b ... ccomp1nlld
by a certified « cuhi«" 1 c:tiec:to. or a
bid bond for not !eta thin 10% or
the amount of the bid. mlOe paya-
ble to the City of COiia Mela. No
propotal 1hall be oonlklerld un ....
accomp1ni1d by auch c11hi11'1
check, CUii. or bidder'• borld.
No bid lh•• :>e oon9idefld uni.ea
It II mlde on 1 bllM form fumilhld
by ttt1 City of Co1t1 Me11 and 11
made In eocordanc:. With the provt-
llOfll of the Proposal requirement•.
Eeoh bidder muat be llclnlld u
reQUlred by llw.
1he City Councll ol th• City of
Colli Me11 rH1rvH thl right to
reject any or ell bid•
Tilt contrector lhell comply With
1h• provl11ona ol SICllon 1 ~o to
1780 lnelullve. Of the Cellfornle '--·
bof Code, Ille Pfallltlllno r1t1 and
Kiie Of Wa9" .. llbl IMd by lhl
Cllty Of ~· Mlal wtllGh -,... wtttl IN City C4ertt Of Mid City: lftd
1ri111 forfeit penalllff pretcrlbed
1111raln lor noncomplleno• ot th•
Mid Code.
Ill.UH P. PHINHIY aty a.n ol tN . CltY of eo.te .,.... ~ °""* COl9t Dell¥ Pt-IOt, Aprl 7, 1', tA2 1-..2
Marketing
t.echniques
studied
Real estate marketing
techniques and the bur-
gcor.i ng office leasing
market are subjects of
two seminars being pre-
sented by the Society of
Industrial Realtors, Sou-
thern Califorrua chapter
''Advanced Real Est.ate
Techniques -Tac tics
For The New Era," is the
theme of the session to
be presented Friday a t
South Coast Plaza Hot.el .
Costa Mesa. and on April
23 at Vacation Village in
San Diego. Both sessions
run from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Scheduled April 23 at
the Pacifica Hotel in Los
Angeles a nd at South
Coast Pla?.a Ho te l on
April 30 is "Office Lea-
sing -New Realities,
New Strategies, New
Tactics." These seminars
are schedule d fro m 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
For information, call
(213) 670-3894.
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP) -Loal1 M . Lyons,
84. a newspaper man and
commentator died Sunday.
He was curator of the Nle-
m an Foundation for 25
years.
CHICAGO (AP) -
Archbishop Joh Gark-
lavas, 83, retired prelate of
the Midwest OIOCHe of the
RUISian Orthodox Church,
died Sunday.
TORRANCE(AP)-
Jou DeVrlee, 82, the de-
puty a>nlUl general of the
Netherland• In Loa An-
geles. died Monday.
CANTON. Mala. (AP) -
N:fl:W lAur Baker, 37. a
1g77 Tony Award winner
for the Bro.dway mu.aJcal
"l Love My Wife," died
Monday.
·POWAY (AP) -City
Councilman CIJ•• llH· ,..., 61, the tint mayor ol
Poway.dW~.
Nuke hit
• scenario
disputed
CAMBRIDGE , M ass. (AP> -
A 1950s U.S. battle plan for
waves of bombers to reduce the
Soviet Union to a "smokln1.
radiatin1 ruin" ln two houra list.a
taraets better suited for a flnt
strike than a retallatory attack,
a historian says.
"The question of whether the
United Stales would have
launched a pre-emptive strike
against the Soviet Union durine
this period or subsequently ls
the central issue raised by these
docume nts.'' David Ala n
Rosenberg wrot e 1 n
International Security.
The quarterly m agazine is
publis hed by the Center for
Science and lnte rnation.al
Affairs at Harvard
Rosenberg's article was based
on two recently declassified
document s : a Navy
memorandum written by Capt.
William E . Moore on an Air
Force briefing held March 15,
1954; and a summary of findings
publis hed by ~he Defense
Department Weipons Systems
Evaluation Group on April 6,
1955.
The documents show the
Strategic Air Command,
commanded by Gen. Curtis
LeMay, now of Newport Beach,
planned for an a l l -out ,
c oordinated attack by 735
bombers that would overwhelm
Soviet defenses, dropping from
600 to 750 nuclear bombs.
Chief targets were airfields
and atomic installations. but
military planners estimated 118
major cities would be destroyed
and 60 million people killed.
Mo ore, a m e mber of the
Navy 's Atomic Energy Division,
wrote superiors that the SAC
presentation was impressive.
"'Many heavy lines, one
representing each bomber wing,
were s hown progress ive ly
con verging on the heart of
Russia with pretty stars to
indicate the many bombs
dropped ... :· he wrote. "The
f inal impressio n was that
virtually all of Russia would be
nothing but a s moking, radiating
ruin at the end of two hours."
Moore also noted that the
e xac t manner in which the
attack would be carried out "is
known only to General LeMay
and that he will decide this
matte r at the moment ,
d e pending on e xi s ting
conditions.··
The a ut hor. an independent
hi s torian and derens e
cons ultant, said the choice of
Sovitl airfields . a nd nucl_ear
weap1>ns armories as prime
targets raises questions about
plans for a U.S. first strike to
knock out Soviet nuclear forces.
·"The ·optimum ' massive
single strike plan by SAC seems
better s uited to ·massive
pre-emption' than to massive
retaliation, .. he s aid.
Rosenberg noted that LeMay,
when asked how SAC plans
conformed lo national policy
that ruled out a firs t strike, said,
··1 want to make it clear that r
am not advocating a preventive
war. However, I believe that if
t he U.S. is pushed in t he comer
far enough we would not hesitate
to s trike first."
Dellr ~ ltaff l"Mto
HANDS FULL -Lewis Dinger, president of the Costa Mesa
Rotary Club, shows off the awards won by the organization at
the Silver Anniversary District 532 conference of Rotary
International.
Best-selling writer
reaps pulp harvest
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Who has nearly 15 million books
in print, speaks four languages
and spends her days pounding
keys on a 1952 Royal typewriter?
Danielle Steel.
So, who's Danielle Steel?
She's a 34 year-old S an
Franciscan who, the past 12
years, has written 21 novels and
had 14 published. Her books a re
selling in 14 countries.
She's a mother of four who
never learned to cook But s he
doesn't need to be good in the
kitchen. She"s good at the
t ypewriter .
F o r ex a mple . h e r las t
pap e rba c k . "'A P e rfe ct
Stranger," was publis hed by
Dell in February with 1.7 million
copies in the first printing.
,H er fir s t manu sc ript ,
c ompo se d at 2 2 , wa s
single-spaced with no paragraph
indentation s and little
punctuation.
An agent. she r e members .
·'told me lo go home and learn
how to cook I never did learn
how to cook."
Now. scads of heroines later,
sh e s a ys s he c an send her
manu s cript s 1n '"with
applesauce all over them" and
no one complains
Romantic c h aracters of
beauty and allure become drug
addicts, break hearts and die on
Ms Steel"s typewr iter. Yet , s he
says none of her books are
romance novels a nd none a re
writte n by formula.
"I think of romance novels as
kind of bodice-rippers, .. Ms .
Steel says. s ipping ice waler.
"The publisher pushed them as
that and it worked I like to
think of them as conte mporary
novels.'"
Outlines for books take about
six months, she says, and the
balance of the year is spent
writing a first and final draft.
When a boo k rea c h es
firs t -draft s tage, Ms . Steel
works 18 to 20 hours a day. At
the start, she produces five to 10
pages a day. When she nears the
end. she's churning out 60 to 70
pages a day
"I am always pretty high
en ergy,'' she s ays . '"That's
polite for compulsive."
When she"s not writing a first
draft. she works on several
books at a time, reading galleys
of one, outlining another , writing
a final draft of still another. She
juggled four novels that way last
year
One o f the m, ''Now and
Forever," is being filmed by
Interplanetary Productions in
Australia
De ll pub lis hed h e r first
ha rdcove r ... Reme mbrance ...
late last year. ··Remembrance,"
formula romance or not. is
syrupy.
Witness the following. '"How
could he love a girl be barely
knew? And yet, he knew, as they
sat. huddled in-the moonlight,
that he did. and as s he felt his
arms around her Serena knew it
too. He kissed her again then,
long and hard and with passion
and hunger ..
Despite the saccharine. Ms
Steel savs ber work follows no
formula·
··Unless people work by
formula. which I don"t. I think
most authors will te ll you they
have no idea how it happens,
wh y it's a success, .. she says. "I
think it's a very epheme ral
thing.
"'When you do the first book.
everybody s ays you can write
one But can you do it again?
"I have graduated . People
used to tell me that their
cleaning ladies loved my book
their secretaries loved my
book. Three years ago, at a
party, some man I didn't know
came up and whispered in my
ear that he had read my books."
By 1981, she says, the praise
f r o m men wa s o pen -a
seemingly long initiation for a
wo man who once cons idered
be ing a fashion des igner
··1 turned 22 that summer,'"
she says. remembering the start
of her writing career . '"It was a
stage when you are not quite
sure what you are going to be
when you grow up.
· · l\gatha Ct\ristie wrote until
she was 94 1 want to write until
I a m 95."'
Only the thumb's green
Nursery managers don't reap cash crop
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY CARllRS
CPR class
scheduled
at college '
A fam1ly 0 orlented
wo rk1hop In th e llfc-
euvtng technique called
eordto-pulmonary retu·
tcltatlon will be offered
April 24 at Orange Coatt
College In C.O.ta Mesa.
The aeuion, which 11
open to families, couples
and mdivlduai.. wm run
from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p .m.
In room 114 of OCC's
Counseling and Admls-
a1ons Building. Admis-
sion is $13 per family,
$10 per couple and $6 for
individuals.
Advaoc-e registration ill
recomme nde d. Remai-
ning tickets wlll be sold
at the door.
For information calJ
556-5880.
Slides
on Paris
at OCC
"'Paris : K e ys to the
City" is the t itle o f a
90-minute slide present-
ation being offered April
23 at Orange Coast Col-
lege in Costa Mesa.
The program will run
fro m 7:30 to 9 p.m . in
OCC's Fine Arts Hall
I I 6. Admission is $3 and
uckets will be available
at the door
The presentation 1s
p~rl of OCC's Spring
Mini-Travelogue Series.
For further thfonnat1on,
l'all 556-5527
Victims
get heJ.p
A self-help group for
lupus patients sponsored
by the Arthritis Founda-
t 1on will meet at 7:30
pm . Apr i l 20 a t the
founda tio n 's Orange
County b ranch office,
900 North BroadllNa y ,
Santa Ana The meeting
1s open to the publtc.
The di sea se, a l so
known as SLE. is part of
the arthritis famil y of
d1Seases. It affects an es-
timated 400,000 to 500,-
000 victims in the United
Stat.es.
For information call
547-5591
Richest
revealed
WASHINGTON (AP1
-The 1.3 million resi-
dents of Kuwait, a Per -
sian Gulf 011 sheikdo m
abo ut the size of Ne w
Hampshire, had the
world's highest average
annual income, 8Cl"Ording
to a survey by the World
Bank. U .S . reside nts
were ninth on the list.
The average annua l
income of a Kuwaiti in
1979. the latest year for
which figures are availa-
b I e, was $20,250 -
nearly twice as much as
the U S. a verage of
$10,610.
The K uwaitis w e re
followed by the Swiss,
$15,360 a year; Swedes,
$12,250; West Germans.
$12.200; Danes, $12,030.
Norwegians , $11 ,230;
Belgians. $11 ,020; t he
Frenc h, $10 ,650; and
then the Americans. Dear Joyce: Few activities satisfy
me as macb aa pottering arou.nd my
garden. I can vow most u~lng and
am considering getting a ob mana-
ging a nanery. What qaa lflcatlon1
will I need other tbaa my green
thumb? I am working on a bacbelor'1
degree lo baslae11.
While some individuals have crept
their way through the ranks to ma-
nagement positions without the be-
ne fit of college. their numbers are
shrinking.
with which mana,ers mus t be fami-
liar, such as spraying for insects and
rot, grafting, selecting and tagging
orders. pruning or handling a nd
maintaining equipment.
-l.E.W., Mempbi1, Tenn.
Before you decide to cultivate a li-
ving amongst the ber ries a nd blos-
soms, be advised that your rewards
will come from the job of what you
do, not from your earnings.
Unskilled nursery workers, for ex-
ample, may start at rninlroum wage.
More experienced employees earn in
the range of $1 75 to $300 a week.
Some managers earn from $10,000 to
$20,000 a year.
With 1pedal sk.illa in landscaping,
environmental horticulture or res-
earch, a few managers are earning a.a
much as $60,000 a year. You could
become a nuraery owner, but remem-
ber the coat of land ia enormous.
A.. a nunery manager you'll grow
and aell pl.anti, prepare aolla, chemi-
cally treat Meda and roou to promote arowth or prevent dileue, dig up ah-
Nbe and bulbe and store \l*1i ln cold
rooms Wltll crln1. You may breed new aped•, ve advice on the choice
and care of 5an.d pacuae rn.11-order trMI. the bolid.&ya. you
miaht make wrm and "°'*' Wartanc ion,. lr'tep1u' houn • the norm for lnGll nW11!tfY mAfttlll'I n
they work hArdelt dwtnc lb9 .,nn,.
You may be able to get the jump on
other plant devotees for the few up-
per strata jobs by complementing your
business training with courses in bio-
logy, entomology, soil science and
plant physiology. Yo u 'll probably
want to concentrate your studies in
one area, perhaps urban planning,
horticulture or landacape architecture.
Do you want a trial run to help you
decide? Part-time or summer work
with nurseries, wholesale growers or
landscaping firms can give you va-
luable experience in a variety of tasks
You're already gifted with one of
the essentials for success as a nursery
manager -a rapport with plants.
READER SERVICE: A one-page
folder, "Careers in Partnership With
Nature" sketches ty pical jobs in the
nursery and landscaping industries.
To obtain a copy, courtesy of The
American Association of Nlll'fler}'1Dell.
send a scamped, 11elf--addreaed, Jong
white envefope ro Joyce Lain K en-
nedy at Box 1560, Ca.sta Mesa 92626.
Ask for "Plants."
y -THES :LINEN TORE
We've ...
Plastered, painted,
and polished.
And now we're ...
Premiering, partying,
and pampering.
•n,, lu.xurits of /ff• 10 lhw with ..
1
)! -.
f ::.
Orang• Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aprll 14, 1ee2
,...-___ ,...~_..a ____ -__ ~1 Nallllll ~~-Nlll~-.-,-a----.... -----P11UC~-11111~------1,--~--~~-11111----~-1:::::Nll::~:m::nu:·::::.~~~~~P11.JC===•=TI=~l===== -------------1-------------'41·.-------------"lll .. -------------ACririOOi ..,..... ·-..O'nCI °' ,...,.,.... W MCmCe TO coNTaACToat -----· UL.I • ... .. tTATI..,,, ' .... ,...... CAL.UNO"°"..,. .... ,_ -·-·-":..'r...... ~-TM lollowtng P«ton• art clOlno
l..,... Ttllit JnN..,._°"1*• -1&\-UA MOTtCt. 'it H'tM~IVlH, tMt t,,. ~ := ......_ ~""J;'.=-:r ~ u lion -~ ~-T.,,.. lift• COfflMOT • 1MtA on w.-~•Y· April 11. 1tl2. II .. TN ~,... .. clOWIO ..,..,_ H a M ElCHllllS, 17U Nonh
dtr ""fOlowll\Q dMGrlll'9cl cleecl CM lol\ool Dl11rlol !'flWl'O" f , t .oo o'Gtoct< a.m. of Mid d•f, 11'1 lht CUSTOM IALLOON c:i.tAll~t. .. N~n.. 0<1fl{1e. C•lllotnll 8260&
tNtt Will 811.l AT "IJILIC A\JC. Ml9A UNlfltD 90HOOL OllT"IO'T room .. , H id• tot oonduollng llUI AIMCNI. Mlukln vi.to. c:.NfO<.... '"° HA•COtil~Ht= ... w.;,'; 011110 y Mu(1m111u Inc •• TION TO THI HIOHllT 11001" llld ONc:ltlne' 1.00 o'CllOc* p.m. of Tl\ll_.I ....... within lllt oft10M <>' tMtl A-,_11111 VIII-,, Ct llforn11 .;orpor1t1011. 33 t flint
JOI' CAIH fpeylblt •I ll!M of Mii 1t11t lttll de)' of Aptl, 1N2. "IAL llTATI HCU .. ITIH H"· ._;::~,'C':!~a'ti,~1 .._,, vwt'~C::.0;Nr.1 ...,_" MllllOf\ Avtnut. Long DH.;h Ctlllo•nle
Ill l awful mo11ey Of Ult Unlttd l'i.ce OI tkt ~pt 11157 fttl• VICI!, loot I I d tt 2020 Nori II 11\le INtlMe• M -~-0y M 111 1'Ne 11-. te eono..ctM 0y 1111 111 908!4
S111"1 Ill •IOhl Uti. and 111i.r.11 oenO• 811914, Cotti MM&. CtilfOt· 8'0llCIW9y, .,.\II 200, In Ille C41y Of -Cll-H•ltl.O 0..ton Inc • Call!Ot ~ .. Mt ftOW lllld tty It""'° ,. tttt1 lanti Ana, COlllllY of Orengelo. Stew lalll• ~ r 1111111-Jiii c C..llO n11 Gorporatlon. 1 t H1c;t1nd1. Ir·
dtf Mid OltCI ol Truel 11\ tilt ~o-P10J•Gt l!l~nllllcallOll Nlmt ot Oa11forN1 A!Al UTATI! alCU· Tiiie etattmeM wu llleCI with lh• Thia a1eteme111 wu llleil •1111 lh• !line, C.illomla 92714 ~Y ~"" ~lb«l1 AU'TOMATIO CONTROL IY'ITtMI ,.mu HRVICI, 1 Ci llt0tnli eot c-iy caw'°' Oral\09 C<lunly on 1o1wc11 County oi.r• °' 0<""119 Cowtr e11 M•cn Tiiie bvtll*t 11 ~dllO•ld by •
'tRVSTO'I· LOUii w. •~t !Incl AT NEWPOAT HA .. 80R HI. CO· l>Of•UOfl ... ~ apoolnltd TNlttt • INI PiM .. i n ... , i'",_ llflll'•I P"1MllhlP
NORMA I I MA"T • hltlO•nC 1ndlAQHA DlL MAR °HI, EST AHOIA Ht Ul\dtt and putUnt 10 lht ~ Of P11Dlltllecl O•enge C9nt Oeily Pllol. P;;t1li.11e4 O,.,•O• CoHI 0 ty Piiot Oil/Id y MutllTlltlU wMI U joint IWlll'ltl 6 ENSIGN Ille oonfetrtd In 11191 Ottllln 0MCt .,..,.,, 11 Aptll 7, f4, 21, 1t12 16't ta M.,Cll a1. •• 7. 14. ft, Ito , ... 11 Thlt ttll-I wu llleCI wltn 1/141 HHEFICIAAV TAYLOR OUNN PttCt P\61\1111 on tu.. 1.157 pt.,. of Tiwt uec;uWO by JAMfl Rut-County Clet'k of Orano-County on
MANUFACTURING COMPANY Olnlla Sllttt. Ootll ~. Clllfof· 9!ll KIAAl and IJARIAAA OAY I PU8UC N()TIC( Apft f2 1982
PAOFIT IHA"IHQ fRUST NI t2t17 KUM., llueband anld Wiie. llCOf• P11JC ~ ---•a '1170ll
PI011TIOUI ..,._ ..
• .._ITAT&....,, Tht~--.. -..-.. !'i.0,.9110HAL IC)HOLAlllMIP %~~t.t'~fjJIH C..•I• Ann1141 l •M•
MFlllY L OM, t tU Cllrla A-. e ... 1e -CA 17107 I~ .. INllMU It COllO..Ctt(I b> ti\ Ill• -.Hftf., L Ott
lhl• tlett"'•llf •U lllaO wllh \ft• o->r, cw~ ot Oranoo County on M.,Gt>
II, tN1 •1..-r
PuDll•ll•O O••noo Cotti Oa11y PllOI. Mwril> ,, ,,,.,111 1f ~t IH:l i4$7·U
Rtcof~AUO"lll. 1N011lna1t NOTICE IS HIREGY OIVIN '"'' dad J 111u1ty 30, 1961, In loolk '=~·.TiMOiT PuDll•h•d Or•n1i• COHI Delly
No 0230 In booit 1Ht4 PtOt 619 ot IM •bO-narned School Oltlrlel Of 13t3, ol Olflcl•I Record• OI H d PICT ... !!'°"'. ,,.au,.!-,..!' • The ............... '*"°" .. OOlng Piiot. AP;ll 14, :it. •• Mly 5, l982 ,IC'TmOUl _11 Official Atclofd1 In lht ottlCt 01 tne Orange CCMlnly, Calllornl•, ectlng Count)'. It p1g1 t75, Rtcord•r'1 ft-A _ "' t>ueJ~'';;.""' 1177-62 NAiii llAllMINT
Atctorder ot Orang• County; Hid by ind '"rough 111 Oow1rn1ng IMINmtnt No 34512, by r...on of ,,.r.h,• .. 1e11owtr111 pe1aon• ••• c10<ng tl<J•I· N"'W HOPE FLOOAINO. 1440 • '"" tot1ow1ng 1H11t0n• .,. d0<ng 1>11.,
died of tru11 Cleterlbte tht lollowlnQ lo11d. htr11n1l11~rr•d to H 1 bftiM:ll Of o.ltull In Pl)'IM!lt or " • ,.. , PlllJC ·~( ,,... .. property "OIST"1CT," wlM ~ up to. bl.It ~fonnanot of the obllgltlonl... TMG Urt Ancl•ot StrH I Coll• •• •••tt COlltOa Blvd ......... An• • "AINIOW ,00~ llllVIC(, 1:)'7
LOI 2' 1t1 llloc* 13 Of !!flt lddltkMi not laltr tlltn tllt ll>OVl•lt .. td d ., b I I di th•I ~ caitto<,... t1t7t htln\. CA 112'0e "--------------,_.I Co1leH 0.IV•, Lo• Atamnoa Cel1I01nla our• '""' y, no u ng """• 0 ~· TllOtpe 191• AAO•O. LARRY 0 Mcl.AUOHUN, 4601 l'ICm10Ue.,..... fl07ao 10 Newport Hllgh11, In 1111 City ot '""'· Mlled bide IOt \ht IWttd ot I bfMCll °' dtl1ull Noltc;e of wh!Gh , ..... c .... MeM c:.lt!Vfl\>• •MM w Roy Cliett Sanft Ana, CA ...... •nn....,-Cftall ...... ,., NO t1 Ut11 p,., •. ~ ~~.c:''::'M~-:· -:..: ::-,:::r:r:pllCt :~~~=~.6c!f 811 .. vr'~~=~::tot1.!.7:,:;.oH1t 97104 , ~ ..... ._,.I*-.,, OOln@ Ml L""~~:~~Ple<>• LOl•O
orded In 8oolo. 4, Page t4 ol M ii lcltnlllltd llbc>ve. Ind lt\1111 bl opt-Hid County, II P•O• 112. RtcOt· lllot INti-11 c.onct..cteo by . u-w.i T'ttll bul!MN ,, conouc:ltC t>y M Tll8 c_ ... hMOet H18 s--. &a.eh, C.i11 90t03 atll•-· M.,,., Ill Int office of lht ntd 11\d publicly rud lllOud " the d • I I 'NO ).4150 WILi. Pllrl""'aNP lndMdull. lorl.t ~ 1182 INIUt 8•••1 g.,.,. '"'' bll-1• OllncMled by."-" Cou~I Recordtt Of Mid County. •""'w•••attd 11"'41 11\d otac•. .. "e • ~·T tPurnUB~llC .f·TION 'T''o T""' AIMa 0 H11111 11><><1>"' lMfY MoLaughlln A .... CA t2707 li•ll-ehii> "" "' Ll" "' ""' Tn1e "11-• wae hie<!"''" In• C0\11\tY Thlt 1•11-1 wu Hied with 1111 IOWAAO OOHALO 80ILEY. 113? Chit'" H..nt and 1'1111 Hvn1 2 Clift Or . N_,. BM<lh, CA Th•rt wlll bt • 150.00 deposit HIGHEST 8100E FOR C •SH ' .",...... ,.. · Ctet• 01 on~ COvntv Uf• Apr11 ~ •M2 Coun•y Clttk ot Otano• Counly on 1nq.,e 811.e1. Sant•"""· CA 9'1'07 '"'' 11•1•1n•nt ..... 11teo w1111 •n• 92680 requlrlO '°' MCll ... ol bid doer ltwful money ol lht Unlled Stllll. ,,~ M Ch 30 1062 AllA MARIE tlOILfY 1'32 ll\Oll• ~.°"",'-'r,.Ctet~ ell Ot•no• Co..111y,IM-•rch
"(It I ltlMI lddf ... Ot OOITIM()(I mef\11 lo ou1r1ntM '"'' ·••u1n n or • CHhltt'• <1h1<1k drawn on I Puoltth•O O••n11• COHI D••ly PllOI " • F 18e2,.C5 s .......... ANO CA t'l707 • .. .
C1t1lgn1llon 11 1hown 1bov1. 110 good c;ondfllon wtltMn 14 dlye t11tr 11111 or n111on1I t>•nk. • 11111 or Al)I l 14 21 '* ••111 1~2 11 Publilhed Orange Colel Dal Pl-,,.,. -tt -eel llf.,."""'" _.,.AM .......... IM
warranty 11 glwtn u 10 111 compte. lhl bid 09lfllno d1lt fldtral crldll union, 01 1 atllt or 1 .. 11 14 21 2• Ml 5 ~962 -~,.., -•IOll 04'* tlliln •()lilt· ..n CMlflllt OtM, .... t t-°' corr1e1nes11." Thi ~ Each bld m1111 c;on101m end be ltdltll N vlno• and '°'" ...oc1111on 01. ,..Pf • • "· Y • ,,.,_..,. New,.,i ...,,, C:• -llcl•rv unde< 1110 Deed ol Truat. by r11pon1lw• 10 th• contract doou _. __ ,_ .. ~In, .. ,, etatt, 111 nay1 ..... ti PllUC MITIC( 1691-62 E4WMd O eo.ter ,_., .. ti-o>IO _, """'""'...., " ,... """ Tnle 1tetetl'le1H wu llled wllh the re111011 ol 1 t>rMCh or 0tl1ull In lht rntf'ltl lht time 01 lall, Ill right. tltlt ind County CMI'-01 o,.,o09 eou .. ty 0,, Matt.II Pub111neo Orano• CoHt Doily Piiot
obllg11t1on1 tteurld thereby, hera· Eacl'I bl<J ellall b• ac:c:omp1nl1d lnttrHI held by 11. 11 TtutlH, In NOTICE Of' Dl880LUT'f<* PUBLIC NOTICE 2t. 1 .. 2 Mt11e1> 31· APfM 7• 14 21 1912 i46A·92
IOIOft ••ecuted and delivered to the by the security •tlerred to In tht lh•I reel property 11tu111 In H id OF PA,.TNe,.IHlll' flll11•
un<Serelgned 1 wrlltlfl Olclarlllon of .;ontrac:t documtf'lll and by thl 1111 County and s1111, dHcrlbed u Public nollcw Is ht11et>y given thet 'ICTIT1008 8UIM88 • P11Dllt,..d O••flll• Coett Delly Piiot. "ill.IC MOT1Cl
Otleull Ind Demand fOf Sall, ano of Pfopotld IUl)(;Ontrectors fOllowa SCHMITZ-DELANEY KETTLE NAMI! 8TATUeNT M .. "' ~1 Ap'll 7 14, 11 1942 1428-82 1-------------
wrltlen notice of btHCh end ol Pur.uant to SectlOtl 4590 Of lhl PARCEL 1 LOI 16 ot Newport PARTNERSHIP and DELANEY'S, Thi IOllowl"O C>lfllOOI 1ta ~no
elec:llOn tOc:IUM lhe undeftlgOed to Governm•nt Codt of lhl Slate of Hllghla Trtc:t, 11 .i>own on 1 Mac> INC . 11•0 SCHMITZ. DECKER & t>ullnelS ..
sell said proptrty to Hlltly H id CalllO<nla, thl con11oc1 Will contain racotdtO 1n Boolt. 4, PIOI 83 ol SCHMITZ. a Colll0tn11 llml1od part· BRANO Y ENTERPRISES. 270
obllgatlona, and lhetealter lhe un· ptovlsfons P91m1111no the tU<:OeSSlul Mlacelleneoue M•p•, record• of ""ahtp, htttetolo11 doing butlnna Briggs .Avl<IYe. Coela Men. CA
d1tstgned caused n od notice ol t>lddtr to aubslltull securities tor Ot•noe County, C•lllornl1. undtt the lkllllloua firm neme end 92628
t>rl8ch and of tltcllon to be Riel· any moneys wlttiheld t)y lhll Oltlrk:t, EXCEPTING lheretrom the Sou· •tylt of DELANEV'S SALTY SAM'S,t PAN WESTERN RESEARCH
or<led Oec;tml>lt 24, 198t II lnetr 10 insure performance under the lhllStlf'ly rtc1angul11 567 foel II 280 South Cou1 Highway, l •· CORPORATION, a C1lllornla cot·
NO. 31873 In book 14338 P•o• concract ALSO EXCEPTING thet•lrom. gun• Beach, Orenge COi.lnty, C•ll· PO<•llon, 270 Bttoo• Avlf\UI,
1003, OI 18!0 Olllelll RecOfdl Tiie DISTRICT ·•~OS the rlQlll B•olnnlno .. lhl moat North•rly lotnt8, Old on the 30th d•Y of NO· COii• Mau, CA 02826
Said nl• will t>• mao1. but WI· IO rejeel any Or Iii Olds °' 10 w1Tve CO<nt< or ukl I.DI 16, lhtnee South vemt>er. 1981, t>y mutual conttnl, NEWPORT PLASTICS, INC . e
thou• COYl<\11\t OI w1u1nly. eJtptOH any lr~la11n .. 0t 1nlorm11tt1 .. In 50• oo· oo· EHi 11ong lhl North· c1uo1v1 lhe seld par1nershlp and c1111orn11 corpotltlon. 3 1948 Alt·
Or Implied. regerd•no lllle, poeaes-eny bids OI In the 1>1001ng. 11111r1y fin• of H id Lot 16. 1 di•· terminate their re1111ona H p1r1n1<a por1 loop Drive. Cotta Mftll, CA
Slon, °' ~btll"ICllS, 10 pey thl The DISTRICT hu 01>1a1neo from 11nce ol 63 39 1111 to the most thl1eln 92626
remaining prlnolp•I aum of the lhe OlreGtor ol lht Department of Nonherly corner o t the Sou-Said 1>u11neaa 1n lhe lulure will be · LESLIE OE WITT, JR , 18124
note(•) H cuted t>y said Oeeo of lndusltlal Reletlona lh& oenerel 1heaS1erly rtctengular 567.00 foet ol conducted t>y SCHMITZ. DECKER & Mescal, Rowland H&lghte, CA
Trust, with lnlttett u In aeJd note prevelllng r111 ot per diem wagee In Hid Lot 18, aald COfnet also being SCHMITZ, a C1tllorn1a llmlled pert-917 48
provloed, aovences. II any. und1t 1111 locaHty 1n Which this WO<k Is to lhl mOll Northtllly c0tner of TrlCI ne<lhlP. who will P•Y 1no discharge This buS!f\1111 It Gon<lucleo t>y 1n
the terms 01 Hid Deed ol Trust, bl ptt101mod IOI tach c<"an °' type No 1583, u lhowtl on 1 Map rte· 111 lllbllllles •nd debts ol 1h1 llrm unlncOf'potattd eseoc:1a11on other
f-. chl!rgea and lllpenset ot the o4 WO<kmlf\ neeoeo to e.aecull thl 0<ded In boolt. 46, PIO' 46 of Mis· 1no rec;11ve 111 monels payable lo than 1 pannennlp
Trustee and ol thl trll9Cs tteellO by aonl11Ct Thesl '''" we on me at celleneous Maps, rtcorda ol 011nge lhe flfm Pin WMl1tn AMlerch Corp
Slid Deed of Trust the DISTRICT OFFICE LOCATED County, C(elllornle, 1h1nc1 South Furthet notice 11 hereby given Henry L SGl\One
Sald aale Wiii bl held on Tllure. AT 1857 Pl1cent11 Straet. Coste 40• oo· 00" WeSI along the Norlh· that the uno1111gned will not be P•eeldenl
d1y, May 6, t982 et 2·00 P.M. 11 the Mesa. ClllfOfnll 112627 Copies may wollerly line 01 Hid Soulh111torly rt1ponalble. lrom lhl9 day on, for This s1a1em1tnt was lllod w11h the
Chapman Avenue en111nce to the be oblalnod on request. A copy ol rectengutar 567 oo feet 111d the any 01>11g111on Incurred by the other County Clerk of Orengo County on
Civic Center 8ulldlng. 300 East these rates 1Mll be posted 11 lh• North-terly 11ne ol said Tract No In Ila own n•mtl(s) 01 in Ille name of April 6. 1982
Ch1pm1n Avenue, In the Clly of job sll& 1583 a distance of 160.22 loet 10 lhl firm MARVIN D. MAYE" Orange. CA The foreooino schedule of ptr lhe mott Northe'ly comer of .. .,, 7 Oeted et Newpo•• Beach, Cell-A ProfelltONll COfl)Oflllofl
At the 11me ol lhe 1n11111 put>llca· diem wages 11 t>eaed upon• wor-of U ld T ree• No 1563; tn .. nct lorn11 lh•s 8th day or Mercn. 1982 AttOfMY 11 U.
llOn of Ihle notlOe, lhe lolll emounl king day ol llQhl (6) houtl The rell Nor1h 50. oc 00" WHI partlllll DELANEY s. INC 2212 Dupont Ori••· Sult• 1
01 the unpaid balance 01 lhe obll· IOf hOlkSay 1nd overtime WOik shall with seld No•theu11r1y 11111 of LOI By F•enGl• M Oetan&y lrvfne, C A 92115
0111on secured t>y the above de· be 11 least time and one-hall 18, 1 41stanc• of 48,39 feel to 1 A oenetal partner of T...,,.._ (714) 7&2-9565
scribed deed of trust and a.t1ma1ed II shell be m1nda1ory upon the point orf 1 line th1I Is patllle4 wllh Schmll1-0el1oey Kelli• F1*40
coals. &~penaea. and advances It CONTRACTOR to wtiom lhe cc..n· ind 15.00 feel Soulhtaste<ly, mea· Pannershlp Published Orange Co11t Delly Pl·
$79,237 85 To determine lh& ope· trecl Is awarded. and upon an) aurad at right angles, from "" Mill.AR, HODGES, 'io1 April •~. 21 28 May 5 1982
n1no bid you may c all ( 7 141 1Ubcontraclor uAdtt him. lo PllY not Northwesterly lint of aald lot 16: IEMIS & DflOZD 1692·62
937-0966 leas lhln lhe a11d 199(111ed rates IC. thence North •O' 00' 00" WHI One Newport Pi-. Sult• 100
Date: Aprll 7 1962 all workmen 1tmployed by them in 150 oo leel lo the SouthwH1etly Newport e..d\, C .. ltomlA t29IO
LAWYERS TITLE 111e 1J1ecutoon of 111e con11ac1 line of sal<I lot 16 lhtnee North so• Published 011nce Co1s1 Daily
INSURANCE CORPORA· No bidder may W1lh0t1w his l>td 00' 00" W&SI along Hid Soutn&· PllOI, Aprtl 14, 1982
TION 10< • period ol •'~ly (60) daya elttK westetly line of 11ld Lot 18, • dis· as aald Tru11ae, the date sat lot lhe opening of bids. ten ca of 15 00 fell 10 the mo SI T • 10044
Sy T 0 Service Comp11ny. A paymenl t>ond end 1 perlOI • West&riy corn" of said lot 18, NOTICE OF TRUSTIE'S SALE
Agent mance bonO wlll be required prior thence Nori II 40• oo oo• · East PUil.iC MOTIG£ I S No 12871 ey Cindy SchOOnover. 10 execution or 1111 contract Thi &lotlQ lhl North-lerly une et-Mid ,...,_____________ On M•Y 5 , 1982 II 11 00 o·~
AllSlslant Siaerary -p\jmetll bOt\d Shall l)t 1n tM fatm lot 19, 1 dlstanc. ol 300 22 feet 10 A M a1 lhe 1ron1 office entrance 1n
0 Cl nk~ w ... _ t 1 "~·-ta ACTTTIOUI auu.11 lhe main lot>Dy Of Safeco Tiiie ln-ne IY """" Ml set 10f1h In U'V (;()11 rec: """"'.......... !he pOlnl of beglnnino NAiii ITATHll~NT Otenge, CA 92868 GOWfnlng Board PARCEL 2· Thi! Pof'llOO of lot 18 surance Company 825 N BroaO·
(7141835·8288 By Dorothy Harvey Flshtt. 01 N-por1 Helgl'llt, IS Shown on 1 ,,.:."".;°''°"''"" -•011' ore -ng ..., ... way, 1n the City ol Sanll Ana, Slit•
Put>llshed Orange Coesl Diiiy F>I-c P.M • map tlCOtded In Book 4, page 83 Of 01\/El1SIFIEOIL VON .. 880CIA ff$, of Cal•IOfnll SAFECO TITt..E INSU·
lot Aprll 14, 21. 28. 1982 Purch111lng Olrect0< Miscellaneous Mop•, record• of 210 s 81111o1 StrHI Su110 201 . Cottr RANCE COMPANY 1 corporallon.
1673-82 Put>llshed Orengo Coast Dally Or1noe County, Calltornla deecrl-Meu C.htoml• 92826 as T,uatae under 1"8 Deed 01 Trust
PllOI. Ap•ll 14. 2 I, 1982 bed IS lollowt Dt .. rttlted Prop•tllH Compet1y, a 1·.eculeO t>y ROMA MEL TON. en 16"~ •2 Cohto•n•• o•n•••I pe1tne .. h1p, 270 s nma•fleO wom1n recorded De· """" Beginning 11 the mott Northe<ly em101 S1reo1 S111tt 20 1 Coa1a Me.. u ~. 16 1980 .. ~ menl No --------------! eot,_ of uld lo• 18, thlf\ce South c.t•t0tn<• 11tt26 ciem.,.,. • 111 uvo.u PVlllC ltO'OC£ 50• oo· 00" Ellt llong lhe No<lh-l/F No 5. • C.l•IOfnll 1•1'111190 l)af1 4'4447 in bool< 13876. pllQI 904 ol -------------1 tasl1tly llne ol H id lot 19 1 dlt· ne<1n1p, 19 Co1po•et• P1a11. H .... port Olllc;lal ReGOtdl 1n the ottlc;e ol the
Nil.JC MO~(
1697-62
ITATIM«Nl M AIANOMIWT
°'UH Of flCTtTIOUI IOllllflU NA• T,,. tollowlnO i>e<llOl't "9ve el>alldon.d
'"• ~•• ot the '"llHOut w11neu n•rn• ReelcHllllel 111 ... 11'1-lt •? at 4750 VOii K.,,,..,. Suite 600 -,,.,,, 8-c:t\ C•
totn1• 12eeo TM nc:tltlOUll Ou..._ n.,,.. ,..,.,,ed to
a1>0 .. wH lllecl 1n Co1mty qn Aprtl ?9, tHO (Fiie No F1370171 ROBERT A STRA THE "RN, 1970~
PHeo PlceHo. Irvine. CA 917 •6 f'AEO P"Ul AlEXANOER & JUDY L V>jNE ALEXANDER at Co l ruatH• ol lh• Freo Peul Aluender 6 Judy l ynne
Aleaendet Tru•t dated Septemb•' 20 1971 4;>00 c:.in-a SuO• 100 ~
8Mc:h CA 112MO Tl\tt bU-• ,. .. ConGU<.I.., Oy ii.t ..,.,..i.i ,,. ... ,,,_ .. •2
Rol>er1 A S1r1th•o•n UH• 111tem1n\ wat tll•d with the
COUlllY Cit(~ OI O••noe County on M•rc.h
2~. 1992
__., llarlpf, A"-Y
4790 VOft K•"'""'-a..ti. 200
-.pott _.,,CA -m-Publlthed 01 •no• Cout Delly P1101
l.491CI\ ) I ,t,p<W 1 14, , I 11181 146~·82
l'UIUC MOTICl
nc:mioua IOI-II NA-ITATlMl!Nl
T"' to<k>Wtng 1>4"t0no .,. OOl"11 bu" ...... C 11 CONS I RUCTtO>j IA62 t O.·
mK>n Lane •A HuntlnChJt1 S..~ h. 4.111h ,.,,.,. .. ~2114~ C-• G o,,,J P .. -l. IJl;Nldon<. 1 e~2 l 0.-mwu Laue. •A ttunt1na 1on
a...i.. c.i.1-8JAMf f\otioor1 W Donald•on 111cm U.moon
t...rw •A Hunun,ct.Mi ~h (."'ahforth• ,,....
Th•~ .. rond""""' lt" • ~·' """""""'p p-L D!l<IOldoon
Th• UA\ftnm' wu fllf'd wllh li'w' County
l1"t. of cx...a. C.Nnly un M...,.., Z2 111112 Fl-17
PuDll1hed Otange CoH I Delly Pilot ... .,.,, 24 31 ""'11 7 14 IH2 13se-&2
NOTICE Of' TIIUITEE'S SALE
No. P8C-41t2
~21M
•3 39 1 1 th t BMcn. ~ 916e0 Record1t of Orange County, C1ll-O-ll880 tine• 01 " 11 10 • mot Thie w_.. "cond""1ed oY • _., 1orn1a. by reaaon of default 1n the flC .. ~.,.~11
NOTICE TO COHTRACTOR8 Northerly corner o f lh& Sou· Pa11-"14P ..-~·5-"' Proflc:t No. 81 M/C lheutlfly rtc1angular 567.00 Itel of LJF No ~ • p111ment or perl0tmanu of obligll· Tl\e ~.,.....,,, 1e clolng .,.,.,_
ACTITI04Jl llU ... ll N.U.ITAlU.:NT
The lollowtng IHfltOn• .,. d0<ng nu•
net• •• 81..ACKHORSE lRAOtNG COMPANY
360 E 12•1<l S11 .. 1, Cot,. MeM Collt"'
Illa 91$11 RonllO fran~Hfl Oovtt 'J50 E 12110
&11 .. 1 Cotto M-Co1tt0t1 .. 9H:t7 KOien Stotlul 3~ E nlld StrHI
Coot•"""" Cailto<,...111621
l Nt °""*""""' t\ COftdu<.ltcl 0¥ "'-t•t>.ncJ: ~ ... ,.
RonalO' o. ...
,,,,. tlll•ff'•"' ••• llltl;J "'"" , .... Counly c1.,., 01 O•ftt10• 1.ounty "" 1.1 .. c., 22 1981 Fl-
PubhthRd Oreno• Co••~ 011ir Piiot
MllCll } I Allf~ 1 14 '1 19$l 463 87
"'
PVIUC MOT1Cl
FtemtOUI eUllNIEH NAME aTATlllllNT
I he I off owing POI' tOn " OOll\Q !NM'-
ONE STOP HOME $HOP 19026
8tOOll ..... •I Hu<•ltngloo Beech C .... IOt""'
926Ati P<H• 0 Keib 10411 -.a .. 1 Cll
liunttnglon Betteh c.i.tor""' 926'16
Thit buain•t• II COf\duCl.0 b)' I n lrt .,,.,..,.,.,
I Pele• 0 K•lb fnt• tt•••menl w•t l1led with lhtt
l.OU"ly (.loot• t>I Ote.•>Q<I Count~ on M•rcn
•6 1982 '11111S M:~~·l'~":"'~·n: ~f·~9.~···r.:;'~'2
PVlllC MO'OO
FICTITIOU.& .Ua•ia
NAME I TA TEllllVfT
IM loliool"'G 1)9't0nt at• d0fl>9 """ ,. ...
1Jl'j10UE EAlER1 11 14'0 S S1•1•
C<lil<!(le ...,..._ Cet.rOOn<t 92806
Jt y Sc:oll E•Hmtn 272 8r ... h•OOO
1,0011 -CeHIOI,.,. 92&27 Jo"""" OO<othy E,_,,.,, 212 9,...,,
'"OOd Cotll Mna CaHto<n•• 9262'
fh1a bu1un1t1& 11 cottcJl.lt.h!O by •"' +n dnndu•I Joy !;coll ~ • ...,._n
l t't•t ... t•me"1 w•t hl•O w1tr't fl'te
County C""• or 0•11'119 C.'lUnty on 1.4wtl> 29 19111
f'111-
Pubflll\ft0 Orang• Coe11 D•U~ Poot
Mii JI ""' 7 14 21 198~ 1446 92
Nil.IC MIT1Cl
-.,
t ., .
Nil.IC llTICE
PVIUC MO~E
PICltltOUI IUllHtH j NAMl ITAftlllllH'T
fltt t<*cl*'l\Q pettOf'! ••It ,,,_, l'°"I ,
,Ou 1 •tr ••N ( Al i 014NIA MANA(.
M( N ' (,(.lN~l)l I AN 1 '. n~n A~O\IUI
f)!fh ~I~ t I ftJIU (..11' IUfnll fU~'.)() "
1_,ttfJftJ J l'IJllllHHI ~,.,,., AutU,~
U•I• IJ,1\1• l I ftHO 4hlt.lfri•• 9?6.JO ~
'''' u~11m11u ' 1;nuw1 1•"9 Oy •n G-o 'f'td~... jJI
Jfttr l'1 I Pt .. l•U•lfl .•
'""' ,,,.tt-n·ttftt ·•~ 1~ ~ lh 1~ Cour,,tf ( """'" .,, OH• .,,... •ANf·I~ '>" .,,, .. *> '"-' ,, .....
l'ulfh1hu1J lhttuU~ C.a•\t U•ll~ P1I~ Al" r I' II 1~ 111111 •SS9 ~
PVIUC MOT1Cl
rlCTITIOUI •u·-·· NAME ITaTt.lffNl
''·• tuno-no peot(>n~ ••• ooono ~
,tt.. ...... 0R()W>j. 8ElAlll AN0 .. 8500AT'U1
ORo•GE COUNTY 11 r.,peu trvt"• Co!llO'nte ~77 14 1111'~.,d " Y<>n" 17 IOI"'"-IMn. C•hlUfnl• 92114 HA1otd 810w,• of I 8t<1Wn 8-.., .-.,
A._ .. 1 .. 1 JI 16 Nolin w .. ,.~ A~ JOO ~n P9<1t1) Cltiolvt"'• 90732
·~·•Ou-• .• c.ono ... lad Dy._ ..
tJ1it1tt•~P
Rxh•O Ai Voma
fhl\ •••••m•nt ••• l!led ... 11n tn'\
i;oun1; Clet> e>I 0"'"0-C:"'•nty Ofl M.u;/t ... 198' '11$146
1-u(llttn•O 01 •nu• Goa11 Oally P1101.
... _ICll )1 Ai>•" 1 1• 1\ 1982 149Cl-t2
Plel.IC NOTICE
FICTmous BUllNEH
NAME STATEMENT
lh" loltow•no persons are domd
b11s1n1t~• as
J L 4 J R BRfEDINa 7682
Rh1n<' Of1ve Hun11n91on Beach CA
92647 t
JERRIE <.REEN 1633 K1ow,~
C•esl D1amono 611r CA 91765 •
J ACK WASSERMAN 7682
Rhine Ofive Huntington ~Ch. OA
92647
This buStness •S conducleO t>Y ll
g•rieral par1netsh1p
Jerne G•-1
J&cl. was&erm1n
This 51a1emen1 •U ltleO with the
Coun1y Cle•I. 01 Or11199 County ~
Aprtl 12 1982
F1171tt
Put>ttShe<I t>y O•angf! Coas1 O-
P1101. April 14 21. 28 May 5. 198h:
Ot1 April 29. 1962. at 10:30 A.M., uld Lot 11. uld comer llto befno ca.llto<nl• 11m<1tod lions HCurtd the11t>y Including the u Pac:lllo Senllrwll Corpo<lllOn, 1 Cal· 'o_.,__. """"""""" wlll be reoallled the mos1 Non.._... corner 01 TrlC'I '*"""'""" b•each or deleull, notice of which MURRAY IHVE8TMEHTS, t~ Monn --------~---' 1689,!'~
Pml.IC NOTICE ltornl• aorporellon ... duly •P· II ;-'•TtPiant Operatlonl -No 1583, u ~on• map rec-av ""'Wlllt11m l,on Co was rec0tded 10111/61 u aocument =.:.~i Suite A Laciun• Bueh. "~~,',.~=:•
polnled Trutltt under and put_,I Chief of Plant ()ptrlllonl Ill, F•lr· Oto.cl In bool< 46, PIQI 4e of Mlt-GarwAI p.,,_ No I 23 13 In t>ook t 42SO, plgl Pu F MUt~rt •28 .............. ~ ,,,. tMow.ng IM!'>Olll ••• -no 0<1w· "CLAIMS ARISING FROM AC 10 Deed OI Trull reco<Cled ~llm· view Siii• Hoapllal, 2501 H1rt>or cellll\eOUsMape,recordsofOtange Th•• siattment ••• lt1eo '"11" '"• l650 ol saoO Otllciel Records wlll &..o<h c.lolornAA~I ~•u TIONS OF INVESTORS LOrir.
ber30 1980 -·I' No 43591 c 966 .. c c Ill I th-s lh County ~OIO..,.c.o..ntyOfllol .. on lotlletput>41Cauct1onto thehtgllell n..._,.....,.,..,.,.......u1ry .... tndJY1 P£EJAYSICC CREAM 1&442GO· CES c ·ND/0 "' • -ns r . • 8 .... d .. Cost• Mltll, A 2 2 unt. ounly, • orn •. •\'ce OU -2tutn,2 -·~.. DIOO~OI cash '" lawtul money Of J H I 8 CA SERVI • IN • .. .. • book 13767, PIO' 965, of Ottlcill 2.00 PM on 4·21-62, 11 Wllleh time 40• 00' 00" Wiit ~North· -~ -1 Pout F M1>1••v ~~~,1~ Unit un in9oon u c;n VE8TOR6 HOME LOANS, INC., Al
Records. UICulld t>y ........ MO· they Wiii 1)1 put)llcly open•d 1nd wnterly line of Mid Southe••le<ly ,, c.._.. "9u tne Un tltO Stlllt!S, wllh~ny Thu...,_,,, WM hi«! Wllh 1h•O-t~ ROBERT E JONES JR 5082 w~ REAL E8TAT£ BROKERS."
wery, I single min, IS tl'\l-10f1t). lfl rotd tor ptt10tmlng work as Furnlllh rectangular 56 7 00 feet end lhe :::",:0-. CA -~~~Ti'!~"~: 1~~:~~e~1~0~:'sa•on, ~ ci ... k of~ Cowuy "" MM<:n 111. tDe2 Wheel Vo<b• L1noa. CA 9l6U All persons who wish to recoi.:~ lhe ottlce ol lht County AeGOfdet of all labor . materlals. tool• end North-tttly llne of aald Tract No. 17141 ~1112.,1 m 1010 ,1..., MIKE o PHIPPS 296 1 w 11om• any amourit 11om or ass•• I an9'
OrlflO' County, S11te ot Calltomta, ecj\tlpmenl necessary 10 "ln111ll 1563, • di.11nc. ol 150 22 Itel 10 • ""* oncumt>rancea. IOf lhe purpose of P11bllahed O••nv• CoH• O•lly P1101. •~ M•"""" CA 92804 cta1m ega1ns1 lht> R"al Es1a1e C61fi
Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION lstacll GH Economlz.1<1." lntllll • the moat NOtthlrly ClO'ntt of LOI 7 p Dll•••O 011no• Cou t Cally PllOI paying Obll09lions loltCU<od t>y salO MtfCll\ 24 31, Apl'W 1 14 l982 t35642 Trill Ou-• .. conOucled by.~., m1ssione< 5 ~-a•ale oc;c;ounl ol the
0 G EST BIDDER FOR CASH 83 MMu 31 Av 1 ta 21 tM1 1....a:i Oeodbl Trust. lhe 1nt1<esl convey9d '*'""""" ~ .. T HI H 111ack 011 w1111 h11t recov•rv of said Traci No 15 . th1nc1 10 H td Trustee by 9110 Oeeo 01 Rob9<1 E JonM Jr Re11 Es1a1e Fund to• educa11on (p1y1t>le II 1lma of 1111 In llwlut sys1em on exlsllf\g 25.000 lb /llOUf North so• 00' 00" WHI p1r11101 d h PVIUC MO'flC( 1 htt .. .,.,...111 .,0 ,,,.0 •rth lh• 11se1rcr1 ano reto•••Y purposu ~ of IM Unlled Stain) 111· In-110 psi bollttt 11 Falrwllw St111 with Slld Norttieutttly fine of lo\ PUBllC NOTICE T rusl In ptoper ly situlte In 1 0 Counr~ C1e<1c o1 OtenQe eo.,.,it on M.,c:h arising from ac11v1lle$ ol Investors
'"""' lhe mlln IOt>t>y of UIWyerl Tl11t 1109S)tlll c.nt11I Pow1t Plant Tht 18, • dlsten.;e o1 46.39 feet lo • FICTITIOUS BUSINESS County 01 Ot1noe Stale 01 CalifOf· '1ClTTIOUI llUI-•• 2~ 1992 Loan S1t•v1ces. Inc 8S 11 hcenseo
lnsuranc:;e Corpor1tiof'I. 1600 North '9)rs1em sl\oll bl 1nt11Jlod as a com· point on I llne th•I Is l)llralle4 wttl'I nta ano descrit>ed °' ...._ llA~ .._ F1-teal ttSl11le t>roket musl me t>y June
Bloadw1y, Santi Anl, CaJltomla, Ill Plett unll '"d)i to operate on eec:h and 15.00 loet Soutneaaterly, me•· NAME STATEMENT LOI 16 ol Ttacl 3176. '" 1he City TM tollo\Mng ""'..,... •r• Oolllg t>uat-PuOhtneo O••noe CoHt Dell~ Pilot 15 on In Re lnveslot' Loan Ser-
tght, lltlt and lnlttnt cor1vl)'ed 10 ndlvlduel boiler Up 10 3 1y1temt aut1d at right ano••s lrorn th• Th& tollowlng person 1$ Going of Newpo•t ee~ch. as ShOwn on 8 ,_ u , M1''" 3' Ap<H 7 14 " 1982 •~4·•2 vices Inc aka 1nves1ors Home
and now htld by It unqer said Ottd ~ bl lnstllleCI (('(\ti per bOllerl 11 Northweeletly lint ol 11ld Loi 16. l>ualness as -nap rec0tdeo "' ~ !Ill, p&gll JU PACIFIC RAtlROAO SALVAGE. 1048 ounoic NOTICE Loaris aka Investors Home lo1n1
of Trust In the propc!f1y sllualed In h ltY1-Stilt Hoipllil. In accor-lhtnea South 40• oo· 00' · WHI THE MASTER CLIPPER. 1620 •nd 3 I Mlscellaneous Map&, t•· Tu.ill\ A-. &.It• M. T""1"' 92Ml ____ r"°'"---------1 c 0 ea n i. r up 1 c y N•
Slid County ln<I Slate 06eer•btd u . ldance with ptens end specillcltlOns 150 00 feet to tht Southw111trly North French. Sant• Ana, C1liloml1 cotos 01 UIO Orange County Celi· l'fO"M~t~ ::..._Eg;,~.,,"::: 9::00: South NOTICE OF DEATH OF LA80·03232-CA Un1180 States
Peroal 1 lot 4 ol Tract No 10211 thtu1for line of Hid lot 18, lhlnee North 50• 9270 I l0tn•• ANCY R l10THENAY 10•11 Tutlln M A LC O L M K I N G Bankruptcy Court Cenl•&I O.slrict of tn the County ol Orange. Stet• ol Preference wlll be gran1ao 10 oo· oo· Witt elong H id South· Ot1na L C1tt1llan. 2458 Santa The ut1pel0 l>lllnce ano esllm•I• A-Sutt• M ru111n c.ii1o<n10 928117 CahlOfma United Slates Cou1111<>u
Calll0tnl1, 11 11\own on a map rto-bl.!ders prop11ly approved u -t&rly fine ol Lot 16, • dlstenc:t ol Ana Avenue, Cos11 Mesa Celllomla of costs. 1txpen9C!S and advences u TNt bu91,_ 11 oor>d<tcleo Dy •oanw.i MASTELLER AN 0 0 F se 312 No Sp11ng s11ee1. Los An ?!1ded111n Book .~43, Page 2d0 011 "Small eusm•u" 1n a.:t.ord1,.cu 15 00 1111 to Ill• ~011 W11Nlttlhy 92627 ~~~~~It ~111~~~,'!a!~S u~ ~.;1:8~~ P¥1,,.,eNo p ET I T I 0 N TO A D M I gel es Caltlor n1a 900 n en he• an
m see an•oue ... aps. racor • o wtth Section 1896, el seq .. Tllll 2. c:otner 01111<1 Loi 1v: tnenc1 Ott This t>ualness IS conoucle<l bV •n Martll\ G Ec;jimann NIST ER EST ATE NO. 'AppllciHon' as deacr1bod in 8us1
Orange County CaUIO<nll Admlnl1trallv• Code. Ap-40• 00' 00" EHi along the North· lndlv1duaL S6le fhlt st•l•m•nl ••• 111ec1 with Iha n15s ano P•otess1ons Cooe section•
POf<iel 2: An undivided 1/12 Intl· pllcillons tor p11terence must b• westerly 11111 of uld Lot 18, • dlt · Otana l C11llehan The sit eel aOd•en ano 01'"' Cou<lty C:Wk o1 Onno• c;o...,ty °" M•c.11 A 1I30J6. 10470· 10483 or 1f ~essary s18'K
resl In Loll 13, 15, 16 & 17 ol TrlC1 eut>mltted 10 the Small 8utlntu tance of 300 22 '"' 10 Ille point or This statement wu 11Hld with •he c;ommon de5tgnallon. 11 any. of the 19 1962 ,,..... Tc.> ,111 hi•ir... bo.•n<'fll'iarles, pr"Cedlno such Appllcauon are 1n
No. 102tt, lfl thlCountyotOtangt, Oltlce. 1823 -141h St1ee1, S.Cr• beginning Th1 slrttl 1dd•111 or Counry Clttll of 0'81198 County on real property discnb~d 11,,t>~v& 11 PuDlltheo Or•RQ• Co•tl O•lly Pltol l'rt•dtl•>rs <i nd lllnltngt'nt complete a clAtm se111no forth the;
Stile ol California, • lh<lwl'I on • rnenlo. CA 95814, not lesS thll'I llvt other c;ommon d11lgn111on of tht APfll I, 1982 purpor lltd 10 t>e 17 1 8 ome "'••Cfl 24, 31 . ....,,. 1 u 19411 1343-a2 n1me aodress and 1~ num
Map rec0<ded In 800ll «3. F>age 20 (5) calendar dlys In advll'ICe ol bid real propttly IS h1tt1lnabove d •· F111a5 Drive N9Wl)(ltl Beech CahlOlnte nc•d1tors of Malcolm King t>er 01 each cla1men1 the amount
of M~aneous Maps. teoo<dt of ~Ing d•t• This prelt11ence 1p-ecrlbod 11 purported to be 2332 Published 011noe Co111 Dally The unoersigneo Trustee dll· Mastcl)<'r and pt>r son s who clo1meo. ano the lac•u•• t>es•s 101
Orange County plies to projecll White the esllm•-15th Sttoet, Ntwport 811ch Cell· PllOI. Aprll 1•. 2 t, 28, May 5, 1982 claims any llablflly tor any lnco•· l'UIUC MelXE m"I/ .... , iithC'rwicn in•-~·-·' lhe claim Failure 10 so &<;t will b11r Th t 1 dd d the 000 t678-82 roetness of Ille st•fft address and " '"' "" "-"~""""' • , e 1 rte 1 reu en o r ted ptoject coSI exceeds SIS, lornla h d 1 ti 1 n 111 the will and/ur c~•~•·> recovery lrom lhe Commissioner s~ common dtsignallon, 11 any, of lhe Bid propoeala muSI be sut>mltteo Th1 und•rtlgned hereby d i•· ol er common es one on. 1 a y, n<:TTTIOU• w ... a ·"'"'"" Fund !
eal properly detcrlbed abov•fs 1or the 1tnllre work described lh• clalms 111 ll•blllty fOf any lncom1ct· PUBUC NOTICE shown herein MAim llAftMl.lfT A pet1t1on has been ftlt-<l All persons who w1Sh 10 recoYet ~ed 10 bl: 392 Seawlnd OrlVe. rein Dev111ion1 from plans and neA In said 111 .. t address°' other FlCTITIOU8 auilNE88 Oalfl(I-Apttl 6 1982 r,.. IOl!owtnO _...,,.. w• cSotng butl· by Margaret J Masteller m any amount h om O• assert any l "'---k CA 92660 .•• -·•"~--' d_.... tlOn 8e~he>ary Bruot Grey and JIG· -n R E Com-,,_.,, specjllcatlon1 ... llnot blc..,.-u.,,,.,, common v-vn• NAME STATEMENT G vco t Ol2C thi· S upt•riiir Court o f cta1maga1nst 1he eel stlle The undattlgn10 Trutt•e di•· and w111 bl caute lor rejKllona of Said ule will b• midi wllhou• Tni lollowino person 15 doing 11ue rey fHE WELBY WA · 01 ffi'lll<lf\9f s separ11e eccoun1 of tlle, dllms tny lllbUlty '°'any lncOrrect· bids. The D1Qar1men1 haa thl right warranty. e•P••H or tmplled. ,.. t>ullneta 89 AOdrftSS 530 Westminst&r Street. =~~ve. IWntlnglOfl ~. C•M Orange Count v rN1ut•s\1ng Reel Estate Fund 101 education
neas ol lht atrt11 address and <>Iller to waive any lttlQularlty In e t>lcf OI girding 11111. pon1u1on. or en· ADVANCED COMPUTER ORA· Newpor1 Be1ct1. Celll 92663 Tele-Barb••• A Scilmat1. 9062 co11>u10 lha l Marga rl'I J Mas teller reseAfch and recovery purposes {
common detlgnetloo, 11 any, llhOwn to 11ject any Of all bids Gumbt•ncH. lo 11tlsty lhe prlnclp1I PHICS. l865 SeaQull Lane. NewPC>r1 '*'$~eF~h~ 6i15j[8E9~NSU RANCE g;;,.~r1w. Hun11ng1on -h. caut0tnf1 be· appoint.eel as personal re-arising from ac11vl\1es of 1nvesion 1
herein. . No bid wlll be con11oeu1d unlesa 11 balance ot the Nolo or other eeich, Callloinll 92663 COMPANY, 8 Co•pora1ton TiuslH llernice wora.... r.ltl4 WetD• Wa•. t llVI to admllw;t er Home Loans. Inc as a ltcensed 1eel t
Said Hie wlll bl m1d1, bul wt· 11 mede on a 1tand11rd form lur· Obllg111on teeurtd by Mid Ottd ol James Jonn Campt>ell _ B ' ' lµ"rtl~s.:_~~ai~ ,,r' Mallv lm King pesrtoav11es1b0rnollse011mcu1s11110comrniiply8uwistthn!~1 \L nout covenant or waminty, expr ... nlshed by the D1p11tmen1 and 11 Trust, with ln1er111 111d otll« auma Swort>rlck 865 Seagull Lane. New· Address· 37oo Wl~hi~e 90°0uig· ~i::.:!.. ~=:,::~ ., r "·"'" ~ " u
°'Implied, ragardlng Hiie, potlet· me de In accordance w ith 1111 11 PfoYlded therein, plus edvancll. por1 8each. CalllOfnfe 92663 vard. Loa An8•les, 111 o.t~ • ·-M asteller 1undt•r the lnU<'· ano P1oless1on1 Code a1ctlon1 t
slon, °' encumbfances. 10 Pl)' the "lns1ruetlon1 to 8~-" It any. under 1111 tttms lheteol and This business 19 conducted by en T~ 12; 1 873-~786 ear-• A Sdlmeb J>('ndenl Administratio n u f t0470·10483 ra11ure 10 do so w111, ~~';'.<~')';:c~:!~c~a~:l~mo:!d~~ ,,:~~·=~=:ni:z,=m~ ~t:.~~:.-,::-~ :~~·=~~':!~~ lndlvldual Jemea John Swarb•ICll F~ec'::! o~'!:°er c.!:,~~:::::~~~~::'~.!,';! EswteS A<'t) Thr JX'llUQn IS :: ;~u°::'y l•om the Comm•llSIO-! ~~1~ .i:i~·~~~~~t•;;,,~ :=.:~ ~~c~~':e ~t ~ ... m~~Q' ~ !~~~~:~: 0~1''\',~~~'.' fr:':-g,~ c~~Y 'b~~:;•o,:~~teg~~~ 1: ioiu:~~.~;~~~f::k ~::t:~ 22~~:.,.,0 Orang• Co Ht o.~:~~ :;t ~fir1 ~~;:~gc1:n~·~tD~11~t>~ ag~~:;,e 1~3~:C~v11t~~:"~~1:~~~! !
II any, under lhe lttmf of said Oted Plant Ope1ellona al the at>ove 1d· emount ol eald obllg1t1on. lncludlno April l2. 1~82 Match 24. 31, AprM 1, 14. 19412 1363_112 W . h C f ., claim 1s based uPOR oeellngs solely, ot Trull.•-. ch1rges ltld •J1pen· orass. tel•phone numt>or (714) 'reeaonably •llmaltd lees. chlfget F117113 Piil.JC tlfl( est, in t <' ity 0 .,anta wllh Investors Loan Services. inc t
ses of thl Trutlte and ol tht trutla 957·S212 1nd expen-of the Trualtt, 11 IM Publlthed Or•no• Coesl Delly _..,. ~r Ana, California n n May 12 Tnose persong musl p.,leci th1tr:
cruted by llkl Deed ol Trutt. 10< A payment bond. St1nd11d F0tm time of 1n11111 publlc1tlon ol thlt PllOt, APfll t• 2t, 26, Miy 5. 1982 ACTITIOUl.,_11 r-.... JlllUtlK 1982 at 9:30 d m c;letm 1g11nst lhe Recovery Fund ln1 ~
ttteamoun111uonet>1yes1knltedto ll07 1ntheltn0Untollll1y petcentof Notlcelt $153,lle567 1687·82 ..._ITA,....,.,. IF YOU OBJECT 10 the thebankruotcv1><oceecJlnQ 111ner •
be $161,712.62 1he contract price must accomp1ny Dated: Marci\ 31, 1982 ""'~ --It~ --nc:nnoua euatNIN 11re cl1lm1n1s who h1Y1 cl1lmt ~
Thi t>enellelll)' under Mid Ottd 1very contrlC'I lnvoMng an 11pen· RMI bgtt 8tcwl1Mt ~ Pml.IC NOTICE • ...,_ sun.NT grantmg of tht• J>l'ltltan, yuu egentl the Rec:overy Fund t>HtO;
of Trutt her1tol0r1 uecut~ ind dlture In eacett of S 15,000 A C1Mtoml1 OOfl!Ofllton, HAHOHflO COMPUTER TERMt '"" 1-.0 .,.,_le clolt>g -should either ;iprv>ar a t lhE' upon 1he11 oealtngs wllh 1nv111or1 J
d II d th d I d T HAL8, W 8-111 Lene N-18-h. " r-e vert to • un trt on• • The aucceullll blddet wlU be•• • tvt1M, FICTITIOUI 8UIJNE88 c.111orn1a t218S CALJf'ORHIA COACHES Ct.IHIC, llO hearing and sti:ilr you r ub· Loan Services, Inc ttnd Investors r l'ffltton 0tc11r1t1on of Det1ull and qulr•d lo execute a con111etu111 D.J. llll«tlf, It• l'rttktlfll NAME 8TATIWNT EOwaro Joh" Mullon, 935 SHgull OtcNCI. Corona del M•. Calllomla llHU J {II i t b Home Loens. Inc:. lhott per~s. to,
D1m1nd tor Siie, ind e wrlt11n 1gre1men1 In the form or • 2020 N. 8Nedwl)', No.109, Th folio Ing pttton 11 doing i..ne. "-' 9-h. c.111-t2M:I s1-c ~.e100«:Nd,Cor-l'l'ttons or (' w r l en ° IM eKlent tha111'\e'f with to rto0ver~ Nolle• ol ~teull end Elect1011 lo "S11nd1rd Agreem1nt, Fotm 2" len'-Ane. Ca. '2'709 bust,!., ., w Thi. bll••-'' 001141fC1.., Dy •!' In· e1e1 Mar. CllllorNa 112'25 J('CtlOns With lht! l'OUrl before from Ille RecoYlr}' Fund t>ICluM o
s.11. Tiii undlrllgnld CIUMd tlld which thell b• b inding upon lht (114) ~10 BUILDING MAINTENANCE OMcllltl Th1111111111e .. 1e--4~..S by '"' 1,,. the• hearing Y our appea· 1hetr dealings w1lh Investors Loa
N8011u of O.l1u~~nd Elecllon to Stitt ol Celllornla only upon •P· Put>ll1h1d Orange Co11t Oell~ ENTERPRISE 10202 eioolt.•ldt Tftlt •U=•Jw~::r.o '""" '"' -s-c COlflMI\ rimre may be in pel"'!l(m or by Sttv1oes. Inc . also must tlke sucl
ell lo be r-In Ille CCMlnty PfoYll by the Siii•. P110t. April 7. 14, 21. 1982 155e-8 Dtlv•. G1toen Grove. Calllornl1 co..ntytloi.rt. o1 0r.,. County on....,,~, fftl• etetemal'lt ... lll.o wtth th• ectoon 11 Is necessery lo pertec
wtlef• tM reel Pf'OPIC1Y 11 toc;eltC In acc;otdanc:. with lhe P<ovlllon• 92714. • n 1 7 • . County Clar!\°' oninoe C-ty on M-your attonwy 1hel1 c111m 1g11n11 th• R1.;owery
DATE. MwGll 23. 1962. ol S«:tlOn 1770 of'"' l.abof Code. "ill.IC·~( Toni• Rene euc:.110. 716 TettlOI P11mtt 22 1"2 IF YOU ARE A CREDI· Fund t>y proceeding In lhl blDk
Pecltlo Seftllnel Corp. tht 01p1r1ment hit 11cttt1lntd "O". long eeach. CtlllO<f\11 90807. P11D1t11\ed 011no• Coe11 D1117 Pilot, ' f11117t TOR or a rontin~ent crt'.'ditor rup1c:y proceeding ThOM e>«son
II Mid Ttvttte that the gene<.i prevelllng "'"Of "'CTlT""Ua 8081._88 Thi. l>ullnet• 11 conducted by an M;arall 24• at, -"PIM 7, 14, 10&2 3Tl-12 Publlthed Or•RQ• CoAtl OatlV Piiot. of the -'ec<'ascd . you must 11owever. mus• comply with Bual 8y Sue Kally w•o•• applicable In 1110 county In .-. "' ""' lndl\11duel 1--------------tMarcl\ :M. 31, Av• 7, 14. ttaa 138042 v ,,.., •nd Prof1n10nt COOi section
AutOOrlz.ed Stgnat~ which lht worlt. 11 to be done 111 NAME ITATHllEN'T Toni• Suotllo Ml(~ file your claim Wlth the 10472(1) by pursuing lhllr rlfnld
at2t 8o ~ 91\rd lhOH rat11 11t•blltlled and PU· The tollowlno parson 1' doing T'ttts st1temen1 wu fifed W1tll lhe ~ MOTi£ <:our\ or present 1\ to the IQ'INt 111 per.ons liablt to them
Lot Anotltl. CA to045 blllllld l>Y the Olftc10t of lnd11a11111 busl~M;UTER OPTIONS, 6000 Countv Clift. of Or1<191 County on • l'10T1TIOU9 ...... personal tepresentat1ve ap· • tr1n11e11on to• wlllctl 11\ey ...it
(213) 718-1201 AtlltlOnt Co9lll ol tht wage ,., .. 0 •• ..._ Or~. ,.323• We1tmlnete<, Mitch t8, 1982 ,.... ITATDmMT _ _. b th rt 'th recovery from 1111 RICOllWY Fund Publllhld Ot1ngt CoHI 0111)' Wt on Ille II l'ttt Oltlot OI the Cnttf _,,...., v•• F1.... The 1u11o"411Q ,,.,_ ara dOit'1I ~ ~~.. point..."' Y C 1..'0U WI in on IG(;OUnl of lhl llotnted ICtlvll
Pllol, Aprll 1, 14, 21. 1982 160342 ol Plonf Ope••tlona. F1lrvt-Hoa-C.Mf0tnla 92aa3 M 6000 Put>llshed Orenoe CoHI Dtl~ .. ",._ •nr.•NT four months from the date of ot investors loen Servlc11. Inc
pltat •nd ~ ':.V Otplr't,,::1 of 0. 0.,J!.~"~~o~~b:~h ~!!~!.'initer. Piiot. ADtll 1~. 21. 28. Mey 5. tN ero!~T~A~:~A~t~~~" r ... follOwlnO .,.,_.'" d"'"9 --!lrst Issuan ce of le\ters as whl.;h lnof\Jdes t>Yt I• nol •;mlttd1 to
vtlOpmlllll le.ea qullfl1r1 Clllloml• 92883 1688-82 0Av10 MIOHAH DOVL£. 1u .. MICROl/lHTURE uo1 EHi Chep provided in Sectton 700 of •11•mpt1no '0 recover rom " offlot ... Id ~ ..... "-• °"'' ...... CA tlNt •.• ="L: , ......... _ Cell> ,.._ VlllOfl Home Loan•, Inc .• by pr~ Sit• lnleleGllOn wllt bl llald WtO-Thlt buliuMI .. con<IUCI Dy en OOAAN GlOrFll!Y MACHIN, 2t ::..::· -·· iw. __ ,, the Probate Code of '-'JU!or-Cffdlno ag111111 lnNttOtl Ho~
..o'nCI cw Al'ftJCATIOM 11Md1y, ~ t4, 1116211 10:00 '-.M lndl'lldual BtMy I\. M-tu P\llJC NOTICE WWow ~.,......,CA t2714. lllllMd 0 Alltft .,..1,...,1ft, 1uoo v.i1111,. n le. The time for fill ng lotnl. Inc.. In "". CaltOmle S
TO llU. ALCOHOLIC 81VI· ..,...... Stttt Hof91111 T'ttl• 11•1-I -llled with tllt ... ,:1.... ~111 ......... llJ I hute•erf, '""' .,., ·-· .. 0•11.a. dalms will no\ expire prior Court. TIIOM ~ wtlO hew• RA_, Vlc:1or 8jtl1jec; ....,......_._ 88 l'tl"·---ClllotM t140a "·-..__ •'--da 0111m .,.11n11 Ut• i..co.,,_,, Fulld To Whom n M~conctM: Chltf of Plln1 County Clltlc of Ofenge County on ..... ''' ...... OeYIO o.,.. . IO four monlfllt uvm ww= te blHCI -:o111y upon ''*' dlNllnt• ..,,,.. It n--Uon 111 AptM 12, 1982 ........., 1~.!'~. ~ d ..... ng ll\lt alettmeftt wn llleO wlll\ lh4 cit!::.~ II OOl\ClllGllcl oY a.n i.... Of the hearing nOtl~ &bcWe. with lllYlllOtt H,...t l.011'11, Inc. MOAITiiOF LIFORNIA,1~ ~..-1 t f'1'71'2 .,..,. .....,.. .... ,,.....~ .. ..,. "' Oolln4l'Cler1IOIO..,..OollrltyonNtnlll ' o AIMnM_,., "''" tll'-
epplyl"O to th• l>tp1rtment or At. Publllhtd Or•ng• Coltt 01lly Publltlltd Ortng• OOHI Dilly bu91nett .. : H .1"2 ,_.,, Thia , •• ,.·m.,,I wu lllU wllfl th• YOU MAY EXAMINE mutt ptoc:>MdlnlhtCellfol'nlaS cohollO tevetlOt Conttol '°' On· Pilot, Apttl 7, 14• lDH tl!ll2-82 Piiot. A...-1 14. 21, 21. May G, 1982 MAY GARDIN & ASSOCIA· _,, C-.'1 a.n ol Or-.... c-tv on Merell\ lhe file kt-pl by tht' court. lf Court egalntl 1rw .. lot1 Homt .... '**II ft{lng Pl-. TyPt 47,1------------'"' TES 29 Slarllgllt lfVlne CA P11Dlle11td O•rf: Coaat 0."J.'~ tt Itta rest.eel I he l0111t. lne .. Ind comply with 8uat. '° ... llOoltOflO .,.....,IOll 111 3333 P\lltJC NOTICC ....---------t_&_a_2-a_21 927;5 • • ~(f\ a1 • .-,..1, 4, "·•tu 1 • ~ you are ln~ n t es· ,_end Pr~ Codll aectlon
er111o1 StrMI. Spec. 154. Co•ttl---....;.-.;. __ ~~~--_.,. -~ENO..SHYONO HUANO eno ~ o ...... c-1 °""' l'ltot, tale, you may Clt. • request 1041t and lolowtng MIN. Oeltomll t2ttt ~ ..._.. .._ ... ,_ MEI-MAHN HUANG.~ Ind '9Jt 9111 ""'"",.,SI, Apt!Y, 14• ,.., talt-12 with the court to r~etVC Put>lllhed OrWIQI eoe.1 Dell>'
Publl1ll•d Orangs Coul Dilly MAm ITA~ wife w..1 1tnlnta 3 tt. .......... Ir I r h I Apnl 14 21 H Ml!r 5. 1"2 "°' Apt1I 1•, 1112. Tht toll owing P91"1on I• doing ftCTTTIOue eullllS• ¥Int, ~{ii11&. • _...,,.... • NmT10U9 ...... .-JC 11'111 epecllllf not ~ o l e nvden-t • • • 1
• tMl ... 2 butintM... ..... ITATDll!ff JAN·MIN HSVAN an<f TIMA c --fTAT9mlT tori 0 C!SlaC.. tllM\l •n 0
VfTlllllNAAV' SUROICAl RE· T ... ~ l*90n to ClolllO ......._ H8UAN, tlutbtnd end""" 11 lolnt Tiit ......... ,.,_ ... °'*" "*" -thtlpetlUon•, accou.nts and .. _ .. -.nee f9& 1911( l'EAAAL SERVICI. 27 ltunp• • I07 Sldclle Of1w Pt --MTmOW-dHcrlbed. ln S«1J ~"" ----;:;;;;;:;~::;::;;:;---i' Oflve, N-s>e>rt IMGll. CtllfOfnl• ......=covc~.:".i.'f"' c~... ~:·cl t27IO • .. Ott JOH OAIOIMALt, ,.. ,,._ .... eTA~ rtptlC'U " on '90'1C8 a. ll'Cnl---t2te3 1 .._.~r,_,....,,,...,..,._ Oii\ M·~Y;TUWANO. 38\Hllloht. ,.._.~t~1"4 ...._ ,.!. .... ""'"""0 " __ ..._ __ =-! ~o Callfornle *lllRPNl...tatUTY
..... .,,::::::,,.-::,. ._ ...!!':''or":."~~~. ~::::.. ~ == :-..: "' I~ ~&.It oonouc1*I t>y I llMt~ ~.:-~ ....... Mlle ~tr"..: T-....._ Jack 0. ....... , WI==:== r.'f9111!Mll t Ill
• celllomll 12tta. . -Ol'*1il pertntrtftlp Cit!•,,,._,, CA..,~ Y" Iii AutT•. ,..., Gllwlf a.. AU.tleJ at l..aw tor ar1y _.... 0t ....,.,_ OOfllr ~ACc:!:.~~~ ~lloondUCltedbflll TlllU~t!;!';:::~wllllllle OM19*ir .. Hl.iMt ~~":c.•:::..·n~ ~W/~~=14,HUOllTllt 011 WlJtall,. Blri., lllt ·~~.....,!NI\~,
AllfTHON'r 0. ~'".t..!!! O«.,.t{lo ' ......_~, ........ ., DVM ~ •• tM"CllflletOt.,..~OllMardl MINlflng l'artnet Tltlll ...... lll.......,..~•......, ,...;.111ero,QAIH30 Ill OI ~•tHtdellt .I 0....... Cetlt ...... CA._ ,_' "" .._ • Thlt .,lltintnl_Wlt 1-.ct wllll IM ~ tw ...,._to........,. IJif ....... Oettd IHI , .. .., Of~ t
,.::.,,, .,.,.,_. i. OIMue,.. 'r .ri .... 1"hll 1t1t8"*1t ... fled ~fl IN ~*"' Ooutl~ C11t11 Of Or.not C1ountY on CM~.,._ ..,,_~ Lei AaipJel. CA ... 11 0..... 0. ..._
....,0.LM =~~OfMoeCOumyGn•~-t"~rn~~~o..i.:r:t ..,,.,, 2• 1t12. ,.m. ~'""~-:u:.::~::·:..= •• 1 •• ,.,:~ ... ,"" .. "'tlll' <II•>·~~ ...... , ........ :~5an.c.•
flllatll lt"!•!llWlllllMW=I Ill ,.,. ' ,..__.~ ~1fOr9'111~,e ~-..._.,_,_,y ,..-. • •. ,,,___ C...CIWlltl0191ft~ ,..,.._..,Orlnfl-..-.-...... l .. 1 .. 11 IJIJ n••• ._...._.,
-. ,..,
91
'11"111MO °'r.1/. CM.ti f:I lell! II! S.ll ! And let 1M. Mrt1 ••· 11 H. •"' ~ °'"'" OMM o.tr ... ,... ic °'"""' 0.-1 CMltr il'liitl, ~ ' .... 8 .. ,,_. I•. llo at, •· ~ °'flllM ~ Otltr ~ "°'· Afltl 1•. 11, • ..., 'Mi=ii c1 ... 1t1ad halp 642·&171 1111).U ....... ,,.,. '· 14 ••• ,... ,.,... ..,. '· .. t\...... ..... 11..,.,. • •
..... ,,, ~ '· 14, ''· ,.. ""-..
\ ~·
I
ltOY AL PIRST -
f>:rlnceu Grace of
f4onaeo will chriaien
··U.S. passenger ship,
\he first time royalty
·has done so, America
Hawaii Cruises has
.,ulOunced . .. . ...
;Mo ID ,,. ·_.
ls Lady
"' Godiva ,..
~COVENTRY. England
(AP) -A coal mer-
chant's wife and mother
of three children has
been chosen this year's
l.ady Godiva for Coven-
try's annual June carni-
val.
Prudence Porretta, 26,
select.ed from 20 beauty
~ns, models and other
~ntestants, will ride a
i_.li,c-mile route wearing
' .:only a see-through body
:atocklng and a long wig,
city oouncil officials said.
• The ride through this
eentral England city ori-
~glna tes with Godiva,
-wife of Leofdc, Lord of
Coventry, who lived
around the ye a r s
1040-1080. --According to legend,
she appealed to her hus-
band to abolish oppres-tf ve taxes. He said h e
would if she rode naked
U'lrough the market-
place, which she did, co-
vered only by her long
t~.
· Another version in-
('ludes the postscript that
slte asked the townspeo-
ple lo stay indoors behi-
lfid shuttered windows
iJ\u'ing her-'rtCle,-Wt one,
a.fterwards known as
Peeping Tom, disobeyed
and was immediately
~ck blind.
I'
Sitton's .
airector
io speak
William Steiner, dlrec-
tl>I' of the Albert Sitton
l;fome for mistreated
cjilldren in Orange, will
address the county chap-
tt!.r of the Retired Offi-
ci?rs Association .on Sat-
W'day.
, Persons who at any
tlrne held a commission
ih the U.S. armed forces are welcome lo attend.
' The meeting will take
place at the Officers Club
• Qf the Marine Corps Air
Station in El Toro, star-
ting with a social hour at
6 p_.rn.
For reservations call Forrest Vick at Ma-9859.
Real estate -
(alk slated
!'Real estate author
Diavtd S1oOe will address
tbe April 28 meeting of
Uae Sales & Marketing
<;ouncil of the Building
blduatry .A.ociation of Souchem California. The .
rireelin1 wm be at the ~heraCOR .Newport wlth
• social hour at 6 p .m .•
loUowed by dinner at 7.
• For information, call
Zena Golby at the u.>-
·dadoo officet 625-~771.
.. -. -. "' ... -..
20-PAGE MAGNETIC
PHOTO ALBUM
91/2" • 11" album
with self-adhering
pages. Smor1 ftlluel
IK.2.0t 11•
MEN'S & BOY'S
NYLON SPORTS SHOE
U.S.A. model With a•• padded ale collor.
UL an 11YU11 •&.
SPOm -•.. 7.9' 11.tt
CASIO WATER SPORT
l.C.D. CHRONOGRAPH__
~~rm'1995 more. With
5-yr · battery. -. IUS #W20
AM/FM HEADPHONE
RADIO AT SAVINGS
;:~1~;999 rvnnen.#HP9000
··"·"
INGLENOOK
NAVELLE
WINES
Croth 'em up fun.
No botterle1
need.d. On .a&el
B.Ut
son "BEACON''
BABY BLANKOS
Slight imperfec-2" tions will not impair
wear. Top voluel
-if P8f.4.tt-4.tf
BLUE DIAMOND
NATURAL ALMONDS
~~.~ 11• Salted or Natural.
6-oz. can. Sovel ~=-
IK. 1.59
• G.L MINI
CASSITTE
....-..----. RECORDER
Easy operating,
·c:aslefte loading
model.
#3-5307 =.sts44 95
CAM MASTER
SLEEPING BAG
=~1,•• soft nylon
tried lining.
-. a ..
somoAPtmm
SWOIW ... 109 ....
10~ ···-·
SALE STARTS
WEDNESDAY
DON'T MISS IT! .................. , .......
llllJ Piiat .
WEONESOA:V, APRIL 14, 1882
SUPERMARKET SHOPPER
OUT OF THE KITCHEN
· MICROWAVE RECIPE
SLIM GOURMET
C4 cs
C7
C9
·~trawherries usher
I
..
I ~--\,.:.._.. ___ _
I
• ID
It's the berries
every spring ... C3
• •• • spr1ngt11D e
We know spring la here when the flrst crop of atrawben1es
appears ln our markets. What a lift from winter doldrwnB to greet
the beautiful 1-,d fruit and the many ways to enjoy it.
Here are thrtt aenaational strawberry deuerts deslfned for
those whoee preparation time la limited. They are beauli ul, deli-
cious and streamlined thanks to the cooperative effort between
fresh berries and convenience products like gelatin. pudding and
fror.en whipped topping.
Eleaant but eaay is a good way to describe this Strawberry
Chocolate Torte that marries two popular flavors in a scrumptious
cake that aerves 8 to 10 people. U you have the time and inclination.
bake four 9-inch layers from ecratch.
• Or, you may prefer to use a cake mix and bake two 9-lnch
layers; cut them each horizontally lnto two. If you choose the quicker
route, be sure to cool the layers completely before cuttlJ18 them with
a sharp knife. You may find It helpful to mark off the layers'
midpoint with toothpic.ka before halving them. '
Incidentally, cake freezes beautifully, so you can bake the cake
layers in advance of rna.k:ing the filling and assembling the torte.
For best results, thaw the layers slowly and do not remove the
freez.er wrapping until you are ready to proceed with the recipe.
For a truly quick and easy dessert treat, try the S trawberry
Almond Pie. The delicious fresh strawberry filljng is made in mi-
nutes by combining packages of fruit flavor gelatin and pudding and
pie filling mix with water in a saucepan, bringing the mixture to a
boil then stirring in the remaining ingredients.
Dress up the pie with a ~arnlsh of froren whipped topping or
serve it plain. Either way, its sure to become a regular at your
house.
Finall{, the impressive-looking Strawberry Tart is a perfect
example o the wonders you can create when you combine fresh
strawberries with handy staples -fruit flavor gelatin and frozen
whipped topping.
• Beneath the fresh, gelatin-glaz.ed berries is a wholesome, crea-
my filling of sour cream and whippe d toppin~. The rich, crisp
shortbread crust is easily prepared in a 9-inch springform or flan
pan.
Celebrate spring this year with a fresh crop of straw berry
desserts made quicker, easier and better with fruit flavor gelatin,
pudding and frozen whipped topping.
STRAWBERRY
CHOCOLATE TORTE
1 ~ cups unsifted all-purpose flour
1 ~ cups sugar
l 'A teaspoons baking soda
~ teaspoon salt
!4 teaspoon double-acting baking powder
~ cup butter or margarine
4 squares unsweetened chocolate, melted and cooled
1 'A cups water
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 eggs
1 package (3 ounces) strawberry flavor gelatin
~ cup bolling water
2 CUDS ice cubes
1 sgn~~ ({J ounces)_ frozen whipped topping, thawed cup weed strawbemes
Combine flour, sugar, baking soda, salt, baking powder, butt.er.
melted chocolate, water and vanilla in large mixer bowl. Beat at low
speed to blend; then beat 2 minutes at medium speed, scraping bowl
frequently. Add eggs; beat 2 minutes longer. Pour into four 9-inch
layer pans which have been lined with paper. (Layers will be thin.)
Bake at 350 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes, or until cake tester inserted
into center ~mes out clean. Cool in pans about 10 minutes. Remove
from pans dnd finish cooling on racks.
Dissolve gelatin completely ln boiling water, stirring about 3 mi-
nutes. Add ice cubes and stir constantly until gelatin is thickened,
about 2 to 3 minutes. Remove any unmelted ice. Using wire whip,
blend in wipped topping, then whip until smooth. Fold in straw-
berries and chill, if necessary, until mixture will mound. Place l
cake layer on serving plate; spread with 1 IA • cups gelatin mixture;
top with second layer. Repeat layers. Chill about l hour. Garnish
with strawberries and mint, if desired. Store any leftover cake in
refrigerator.
STRAWBERRY ALMOND PIE
1 package (3 ounces) strawberry flavor gelatin
1 package (4-servlng size) vanilla flavor pudding and pie filling
l 'A cups water
1 ~ pints strawberries, hulled and sliced
~ cup chopped toasted almonds
14 teaspoon almond extract
1 baked 9-inch pie shell, cooled
Combine gelatin and pie filling mix in saucepan. Stir in water.
Bi;RRY GOOD DESSERTS -Strawberries give a finishing touch to spring meals with (from top) Strawberry Chocolate Torte,
Cook and stir over high heat until mixture comes to a boil. Remove
from heat and stir in strawberries, almonds and extract. Let stand
(See 'BERRIES,' Page C2) Strawberry Almond Pie and Stra~berry Tart. •
It's easy as pie to make a memorable pie
There's more to a piece of pie
than meets the eye. •
• Creating pastry that is light,
flaky and delicious is a rewarding
experience. First start with a
good basic recipe for standard
pastry and here are some tips to
help.
)-When combining shortening
w)th dry ingredients, use a pastry
blender or two knives (cutting in
a ldlsor motion).
·-A.lways use chilled water when adding it in flour, shorte-
ning mi.xtUre and add the water
ooe tablespoon at a time.
·-When combining liquid
with the mixture, lightly blend
ir\IJ'e<!ienta with a fork.
...._ Roll douah from the center
to the edges, Ilfting alightly be-
fp(e reecb.ing the edaes to keep ~ from getting thfn. '.;_ If breaks in the dough oc-~. pinch tqiether any cracka. !·~dclina finishing touches to
~ crust ia like 1ignin1 your
.. k of art. Here are 10me ed.:.
jfia 1UC1estiona you may want .,fOUDw. .:~}LUTED -Trim PMtr)' to \Ii
SIJitb =nd ~!! of pie plate; fold to rim ol .-try. 1flth lndex finpr of one-hand, "'9h putry from lnllde putry
"-to outlfde where thwnb and .... a.-ol other band pUdl ~Into V-ehape.
;.vl'ORK -Trim paatry even
Wllb ... ol p6e plate. Pr.. rtm • tan ..... Olp fork in flout
to.~t ltk:kinc· ~UJ'l'L& -Trim putry \Ii
Inch ,t;/:'d tda• of pie plate; ... . Place thumb and ln·
da ftnell' about 1 Inch apN't on
rim. With index finger of other
hand, pull pastry between
fingers to the outside.
SPOON SCALLOP -Trim
pastry ~ inch beyond edge of pie
plate. Cut outer edge with tip of
inverted teaspoon.
CARAMEL CRUNCH
APPLF; PIE
28 caramels
2 tablespoons water
4 cups peeled apple slices
shell
1 9-inch unbaked pastry
~cup flour
Y\ cup sugar
~ teaspoon cinnamon
Y\ cup margarine
~cup chopped walnuts
Melt caramels with water over
low heat; stir frequently until
smooth . Layer apples and car -
amel sauce in pastry shell. Com-
bine flour, sugar, cinnamon; cut
in maraarine until mixture res-
embles coarse crumbs. Stir in
nuta. Sprinkle over apples. Bake
at 375 degrees, 40 to 45 minutea
«until apples are tender.
Makes8.e~
TUNA SAIAD PIE
1 10-ounce can refriaerated
buttermilk flaky bilculta
1 \Ii CUPI (6 ounces) shredded
lharp cheddar clMele
1 e \t-ounce can tuna, dral·
ned, flaUd
~ cup th1n celery a1ioel r &a~~y chopped
onion
2 iabt.poona chopped par-
aley
ul :=--.. ~~~th ...
cuitl, snmlnl ldpa ~ to
seal Bake at 350 degrees, 5 min-
utes. Combine· 1 cup cheese and
remaining ingredients; spoon into
biacuit shell. "&Ice at 350 degrees.
25 minutes. Top with remaining
ch eese; continue baking until
cheese is melted.
Makes 6 eervings.
STRAWBERRY YOGURT PIE
1 pint fresh strawberries
tine
1 envelope unflavored gela-
\Ii cup sugar
2 egp, separated
~cup milk
8 ounces straw~rry yogurt
1 teaspoon lemon juice
4 drops red f~ coloring
9-lnch pie crust; baked
In a blender or food proce.ar,
puree enough strawberries to
equal ~ cup; re.eme ~
berries for pmiah.
Mix unflavored aelatine with
~ cup sugar ln a ~um sauce-pan; blend ln eag ollu beaten
with milk. Let 1\a d l minute.
Stir over low hea~tll aelatine t. completely ved, about 5
mlnutee. With whip or ro-
tary beater, ble~d in pureed
strawberries. )'OIW't. lemon juice
and food colorina. Pour into Jarae
bowl and chill, 1tlhina occuio-
nall y , until mixture rnound1
1ll1htly when dropped from
spoon.
In a m,dlum bowl, beat eq·
whites until aoft peakl form;
11adually add renaa1n1q aua•r
and beat until 1tlff. Fold Into
.. .. tint mlxtuN. Tum Into .....
pared cruet and&.:.llh with
IWl...S........ •.
-~-----·
0r8"99 Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wedneeday1 Aprll 14, 1982
Italy in~pires spring meal
Th.ink Verona, and the
tmqe of two atar-croaed
lover.. Ronwo and Julie\,
Immediately comu \o
mind.
Althouah one of Italy'•
mo1\ romantic cl\1e1 In
1prlnfl\lme -I\ boaa\1
candleUght concert.s in an
old Roman arena, BCOre&
ot elea•nt ahops, side-
walk cafea and superb
rt..'lt.auranta -Verona is
especially Important as
an agricultural area.
Situated n ear Lake
Garda In a moderate cli-
mate, 'the lovingly gar-
dened Verona hills are so
fertile that vegetation is
of the highest quality.
The famous l ocal
w ines include Valpolicel-
la, a full-flavored red
wine; Bardolino. a mel-
low red wane. and Ve-
rona's Soave, cr isp and
reCreshing -Italy's most
celebrated white wme.
ln addition t.o carefully
tended grapevines. Ve-
rona produces countless
vegetables and fruits.
Although you may not
be ·fortunate enough lo
visit Verona this spring
to e njoy an intimate
m eal , the following
tailored-for-two recipes
featuring the wines o f
Verona will make it easy
t o put a little romance
into your next dinner.
The veal is sauteed m
oil along with shallots.
garlic and parsley, a nd
Trebb1ano. a hght dry
white wine, 1s used to
deglaz.e the pan. Lemon
juice and butter are ad-
ded to the wine to create
a sauce, and asparagus ts
served at.op the veal.
A berry compote fea-
turing stra wberries a nd
raspberries m Bardolmo
completes the mecil.
eed
VEAL ENNIO
4 asparagus spears
2 tablespoons 011
2 shallots, chopped
l clove garlic, min-
2 tablespoons chop-
ped parlsey
4 pieces (2 oz. each)
veal scallops
~ cup Trebb1ano
l tablespoon freshly
squeezed lemon Juice
l tablespoon butter
Salt and pepper, to
taste.
Lemon slices
Cut off 1-inch from
thick end of asparagus.
Pare tough fiber from
... Berries
From Page Cl
about 5 minutes.
then pour into pie shell
Chill until set, about 3 to
4 h ours. Garnish with
thawed frozen whipped
topping. if desired.
STRAWBERRY TART
l package (~ ounces)
strawberry flavor gelatin
~ cup boiling water
1.4 cup cold water
2 cups ice cubes
112 cup sour cream
1 cup thawed frozen
whipped topping
l baked -9 -inch
S hortbread Crust. cooled
2 cups fresh stra w-
berries, hulled and halv-
ed
Dissolve gelatin in
boiling water. Measure
'A cup. add IA cup cold
water and set aside. Add
ice cubes to remaining
gelatin; stir constantly
until gelatin begins to
thicken, about 3 minutes.
Re move any unmelted
ice. Using wire whip,
blend in sour cream and
whipped topping and
whip until smooth. Spo-
on into Shortbre ad
Crust. Arrange straw-
berries, cut side down. on
filling. Chill measured
gelatin until slightly
thickened; spoon over
strawberries. Chill until
firm, about 2 hours.
Shortbread Crust
Blend 'h cup softened
butt.er or margarine and
~ cup sugar together
with a pastry blender or
fork. Add 1 'A cups sifted
all-purpose fl9ur and
mix until crumbs are
formed. Then mix tho-
roughly with hands to
form a aoft dough. Press
evenly onto bottom and
aides of 9-lnch flan or
1pringform pan. Prick
bottom of crust with
fork. Bake a\ 325 degrees
for 25 to 30 mlnutet or
until lightly browned.
Cool ln/1n. Loo1en
1ide1, an remove care-
tully. If c:n.&1t st:icka, heat
1ently a few eecond1
over low hMt.
botto m half. Blanch
asparasu1 In bolling
water ~ minutes. Drain
and set ulde. Heat oll In
a medium 1klllf"t. Add
ahallota, garlic and par-
.te y ; uute 3 minutes.
Add veal; saute 2 mi-
nutes each aide. Remove
and keep warm. Add
wlne, lemon juice, butter,
salt and pepper to skillet.
Heat to boiling over high
heat for 3 minutes or
until sau ce th ickens
slightly. Add asparagus.
heat through. Arrange
asparagus on top of veal.
Spoon on aauce. Gamlsh
wlth lemon alJCt'I.
Makt.'8 2 aervings.
BERRIES
IN BARDOUNO
1~ plnt frMh straw-
berries
'h pint f re1h rasp-
berries
!A cup Bardollno
1 'A tea.spoons fresh-
ly squeezed lemon juice
'A teaspoon cinna-
mon
~ teaspoon clove
'h ttiaspoon sugar,
(optional)
Whlp~"'Cf cream
Rinse strawberries,
hull and cut in half.
Combine with raspber-
nes in a bowl, aet u lde.
ln a medium saucepan,
combine wine, l~mon
juice, cinnamon and
clove. Bring to a sinuner
over medium heat. Re-
move from heat: let cool.
Pour wlne mixture over
berries, add sugar if de-
sired, toss gently. Chill
for 2 hours. Serve gar-
nished with whipped
cr~am.
Makes 2 servings.
Fresh
Whole
Fryer
Legs
per: lb.
U.S. Nol
D'Anjou
Pears
per lb.
Split Topor
Sandwich
Wheat or White
Ralphs
Bread
1V2 lb. loa1
TM
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SWITCH I WIN AT RALPHS· ODDS CHART tFFECTIVE MARCH 25, 1912
..,, ....... ·-·---· .... _,. lltll• ...... ...... • .... ..._. • • .,.... ....-.. u.._..._.. ............. n._ ............. ~ ........... . .... • .. , ....... . .... ··-............... _., ...... ..... ··-........ ..., ................. ~ .......... ....... ........ --··-·"-··-• .... t........... • ...._ ... c.....ep • ...., .. .. ... ., .... ... ··--~-·· .. ....... , ....... ·-• .. ....... .... .. -· .... -.. ·~ .... H tr .. ·-............ ~ .,,_ ·-.. ... ,~ ... .. . . . , ................ ,_ ...... ,...._ ........... ..., ......... ............ ........... """" ..... ... ·----.. tM t • .. ..
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''"" ···-·-.. ... .. •• .. . ..
I
A DUO -Fresh
asparagus and veal
combine for an ele-
gant mea l for two
from Italy.
..
Double Coupon
Present this coupon along with any one Manu facturers ·cents off ·coupon
and get double the savings when you purchase the item Nol 10 include
"retaller", "free·· or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceeu !he value of the
item E><cludes liquor. tobacco and dairy products
Limit One Item Per Manufacturer's Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupons per Customer
Coupon Effective April 15 thru April 21, 1982
«PA
Double Coupon
Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturer's "cents off" coupon
and get double the savings when you purchase the item Not to include
"retailer". 'free" or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value of the
item Excludes hquor. tobacco and dairy products
Limit One Item Per Manufacturer's Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupons per Customer
Coupon Effective April 15 thru Aprll 21, 1982
Ralphs PLAINWRAP
P' .A1N W1AP ...... u . 58 PIADI WIAP .......... 5.39 Egg Noodles 12 or Dry Dog Food 2~1b
P'O bao
ft.All WIAP ·•••• .eo PIA.Df WIAP ·••we .u
B1rbecue Sauce 73or .99 Napkins UOcl .61 bll. p~g
Pl.Allf WIAP ...... 10 .65 PIADf W1AP ·•••• .•o 1.59 Ground Pepper 4 Ot Shortening l lb lln OJI PLADIWIAP ...... u PIAIJI WIAP ...... ao
Trash Bags 20cl 1.69 Biscuit Mix 4001 .89 roll boa
••••••••••Special Meat Values ••••••••••
8 USDA Cl>Olc• Beel Chuc~ r:· • 9 Cross Rib Roast
USOA Cholc .. 1-Cul IMI
Chuck Roast i>e• ~':~:: .....
~ 1. 39 &;~ioksie;· Meat
USOA Chok• IHI Chuc~
7-Bone Roast
USOA Choke IHI Cl\u<~ loneleu
Chuck Roast i:-1.99 6°ro;~1r&881 Patties
':' 2.29
':!' 2.09
':: 1.89
••••••••••Special Deli Values •••••••••• ~; 31s1 iifidHCh1~d°d~r Aalp"1·AHo'1<HI
Sllced Meat ':' 1.99
••••••••••Special Grocery Values •••••••••• Pleln Wr-.i 1 09 Mayonnaise 37';;, •
Oendrull SftamPoO
Head & Shoulders 1!~ 01 2.59 btl
P1iis°buu';i'F1our ~~bo • 89 18 01 1.19 bll
French. ll•ll•n OI 1000 lole
Wishbone Dressing
;;;a'~o·n1 & Cheese l~~: .99 t517 01 .93 ctn
S•nctwicl\ S.uc.
Hunt's Manwlch
•il.·i·c•'"'•o•1·r·i•n•k•••••·1.~~ .68 c·"&"ii s1u111•a•r•••••••• Special Bakery Values •
&lb 1.57 bao
t4 OJ 1.19 p11.o fii"!li'H'~n;; Buns ":.\ .59 ii;ipM.;·;· Pound Cake
••••••••••Special Produce Values ••••••••••
•"tile .89 N CI\ ca~~'ii ~ .29 io~~t~Plants
eoi 1.79 p&o &;ir.rro~llc1ous Apples ':' .49 T'i~~i~°';1ant Food
••••••••••special Liquor Values ••••••••••
11 ot Niii ·-49 IO Pfool Henry Welnh1rd · p~~ 4. Flelschm1nn' s Gin l 7~11•
btl
Prices effective April 15 thru April 21, 1982
8.39
• -]ust desserts . for history's
f avOrite the stJ.awherry
-S\rawberrle1 are
., known u th beauty
'• queen of aU fruJta.
M Dr. William 8u\lcr
': wrote 1n the early 1600.,
· "Ooubtle11 God could
make a better berry, but
-doubtleu God never
did."
The first settlers in
American, howevur, did
find a better strawberry
"tour times larger and
much more exquisitely
flavored," than the wild
strawberries of England.
Tt\e berries were
plentiful around the new
settlement in Jamestown
that, "It was impossible
to direct the foot without
dyeing lt in the blood of
this fruit."
atrawberrtee and given a
light corn -1tu·ch·
lhkk•ned glue.
Ola~ed 1tra.wberrie1
are a red on red aenta·
tlon, that Is, freah
strawberries glazed with
raspberries.
'the Hot Strawberry
Sauce is made with a
mixture of pureed and
aliced strawberries, good
served over pancak
lee cream or cake. Or,
turn the sauce into
Strawberry Jubilee by
flaming it with brandy
and serving it over va-
niUa ice cream.
STRAWBERRY
SPONGE SHORTCAKE
2 eggs
'A cup sugar
,,,. teaspoon salt
'A cup unsifted flour
IA cup com st.arch
rupberrle. In ay-Place 1 cup of the
rup, thawed 1Jtrawberrles In blender
1 tablespoon corn container, cover. Blend
at.arch on hlah aoeed l~ ~nda
2 tablespoons Klnich or u n t 11 am oo th. In
or brandy 2-quart saucepan stir to-
2 plnta strawberries, gether corn starch and
huUed sugar. Gradually stir in
Drain raspberries; res-water until smooth. Stir
erve Hquid. Jn 1-quart In pureed strawberries
saucepan stir together and remaining 1 cup
com st.arch and reserved sliced strawberries. Stir-
Uquid until smooth. Stir ring con.stantly, bring to
in berries. Stirring boil over heat and boil 1
constant , bring to bQil minute. Remove from
over medium heat and heat. Stir in lemon juice.
boil 1 minute. Remove If desired, serve over
from heat; stir in brandy. pancakes, ice cream or
Pour over strawberries; cakes. Makes about 2
to6S to coat well. Cover; cups.
refrigerate until well STRAWBERRIES JU-
c hilled. Makes 4 to 6 BILEE: Follow recipe
servings. for Hot Strawberr y
STRAWBERRY Sauce . K ee p sauce
CREAM PIE warm. Just before ser-
'h cup sugar ving, heat 'A cup brandy.
I
Roger Williams, sett-
ling in New England
wrote that "this berry is
the wonder of all the
fruits growing naturaijy
in these parts. I have
many times seen as many
as could fiJj a good ship
within a few mil es
compass.''
1 cup heavy cream,
whipped
Strawberry Top-
ping (recipe follows)
~ cup com starch Add to sau~ and ignH.e.
Vil teaspoon salt Spoon over ice cream or NO SHORTCAKE SHORTAGE -A one-layer sponge cake can become a strawberry
l >t. cups milk cake a la mode. Makes shortcake for eight with a pint of berries.
Grease and flour bot-
tom of 8 x 'h-inch round
layer pan. In small bowl
with mixer at high speed
beat eggs until fluffy .
Gradually add sugar and
salt, beating until mix-
ture is double in volume
and mounds slightly
when dropped from
spoon. In small bowl stir
together flour and corn
s tarch . Sift over egg
mixture. Gently fold in
until well blended. Pour
into prepared pan. Bake
in 350 degree oven 25
minutes or until cake
springs back when light-
ly touched. Cool in pan 5
minutes. Remove from
pan. Cool completely on
wire rack. Split layer
horizontally in half.
Place one laye r on ser-
ving plate crust s id e
down. Spread with l cup
of the whipped cream.
Top with l c up of the
Strawberry Topping.
Cover with top half of
cake. Spr ead wrth r e -
maining l cup Straw-
berry Topping and gar-
nis h with remaining
whipped cream. If desi-
red, garnish with whole
strawberries. Makes 8
servings.
2 egg yolks, slightly ..:a:.:bo:=.=u:.:.t..:2:..;.1A~· ..:cu.=!:.ps:.:· ___ __.. ___________________________________ _
Wild strawberries
were sold in American
villages in 1700, but it
was not until the latter
part of the nineteenth
century that the cultiva-
ted strawberry came into
being.
As for the same
"strawberry ," there
seem to be several ver-
sions of how the "berry"
hooked up to the word
"straw."
Some say it was be-
cause the berries in Eu-
rope were often found
growing under mown
hay . Another version is
that the plant spreads by
sending out runners that
root and become new
plants -a berry that
strays. or strews itselC
about.
Still others say that
strawberries are so na-
med because they were
originally brought to
market strung on straws.
Early colonists were
said to enjoy s trawber-
ries sweetened with the
"dew of milkweed'' as
taught to them by the
Indians.
It was not long, howe-
ver, before the colonists
came up with all Amer-
ican classic, strawberry
shortcake. The original
strawberry shortcak e
was more like bread than
cake, and to this day
there are those who
prefer the biscuit-type
shortcake.
Along with the
Strawberry Sponge
Shortcake recipe are
three other ways to use
strawberries. Enjoy them
while they are at their
best.
The Strawberry
Cream Pie contains a
smooth creamy custard
t o pped with sliced
STRAWBERRY TOP-
PING: Slice 1 pint fresh
strawberries; set aside
1 llJ cups. With potato
masher or fork crush re-
maining berries. In
1-quart saucepan stir to-
gether 1 tablespoon com
st.arch and 'A cup sugar.
Gradually stir in 'h cup
water until smooth. Stir
in crushed strawbernes;
stirring constantly, bnng
to boil over medium heat
and boil l minute. Stir in
reserved sliced strawber-
ries. Cool. Makes about 2
Clips.
GLAZED STRA WBER·
RIES
1 package ( 10 ounce)
froi.en
beaten
l teaspoon vanilla
lh cup heavy cream,
whipped
~ baked (9-inch) pa-
stry shell 1·
1 pint strawberries
Strawberry glaze
In 2-quart saucepan
stir together sugar, corn
starch and salt. Gradual-
1 y stir in milk until
smooth. Stir in egg yolks.
Stirring constantly,
bring to boil over
medium-low heat ;,nd
boil l minute. Remove
from heat; stir in vanilla.
Cover surface with wa-
xed paper or plastic
wrap. Refrige rate until
cool. Fold in whipped
cream until we ll blen-
ded. Spoon into pastry
shell. Refrigerate 1 hour
Rinse. hyll and slice
strawberries. Arrange
strawberries on filling.
Spoon Strawberry Glaze
evenly over berries. Re-
frigerate at least 1 hour
or until ready to serve.
Makes 8 servings.
STRAWBERRY
GLAZE: Shce enough
fresh s trawberries to
make 'h cup. With po-
tato masher or fork crush
berries; set aside. In
small saucepan stir toge-
ther l 1h teaspoons corn
st.arch and 2 tablespoons
sugar. Gradually stir in
1h cu p water until
smooth. Stir in crushed
strawberries; stirring
constantly, bring to boil
over medium heat anQ
boil a minute. Coo~.
Makes about ~ cup.
HOT STRAWBERRY
SAUCE
1 pint strawberries,
hulled
sliced (2 cups)
1 tablespoon corn
stare la
juice
1h cup sugar
1':1 cup water
1 tablespoon lemon
Sugar still dental culprit
Sugar by any other
name s till tastes sweet,
causes cavities and, once
eaten. should be follow-
ed by mouth cleaning.
"A consumer may be
less cleaning the mouth
after eating a food that
cont,ains a sweetener
other than sugar, thin-
king that by avoiding
table sugar or sucrose,
potential tooth decay is
avoided," according to
Calvin Lau, Chairman of
California Dental Asso-
ciation's Council on
Dental Health.
However, fructose,
glucose, dextrose, mal-
tose, honey, corn syrup
and other sweeteners
also have cavity<ausing
potential and for oral
health should be treated
"Many processed foods
contain sugar in some
form. The ingredient
portion of a food label
lists contents by percen·
tage of weight, so if su-
gar or a substitute swee-
tener appears high on.
the list, the sugar content
of the food will be high,"
Lau says.
Saccharin. a non -
nutritive non-caloric
substance is the only
frequently used sweete-
ner that won't cause ca-
vities.
"Any food that tastes
sweet probably has sugar
in some form in it," he
says. For example, sorbi-
to l is a natural sugar
found in cherries,,lums,
pears, apples an some
berries, xylitol occurs
naturally in raspberries,
strawberries, lettuce ,
cauliflower and mush-
rooms.
"Both sorbitol and xy-
1 i tol are considered to
have minimal ability to
cause decay. However, it
is difficutt to measure
decay potential because
many !actors must be
considered, such as the
stickiness of the food or
the length of time it re-
mains in the mouth," he
says.
"There is no questl-
non, however, that min-
imizing the frequency of
eating sweets is an im-
portant factor in the
protection of teeth
against cavities."
~.e same way as SU-Many happy returns
These sugar alterna-
tives are broken down One of the nicest fea-mustard
by bacteria] plaque at a tures of ham is that it can ~ teaspoon pepper
sllgh\ly slower rate than be enjoyed for days after 8 s l i c e s b re a d •
sucrose is, but the time the feast is over. toasted
difference is Insignificant Leftovers in form of 1 medium zucchini,
if the mouth isn't cleaned sandwiches, salads, soups shredded
immediately after eating, and sauces are among the Sift flour and salt Into
Lau says. many ways ham can melted margarine In
The decay potential of come to the table the te-saucepan; gradually stir
any supr c.an be reduced cond Ume a.round. in milk and cook until
lf food.a hilh in qar an For a hearty one-dilh thickened, atirrlng con-
eaten with mea.11 rather meal, try combining a&antly. Cover and cool.
than u anacka. Snacka atrips of leftover with Beet together egp, mua-
can be restricted to nu-tout cubea and shredded tard and pepper; IUr ihto
tr1Uou.a fnd\a and ve1e-zucchini in a mustard-aauce. Cut to8l\ed breed
tablet, nuta, cheelea and flavored whJte aauce, in-Into ~ to 1-inch cubea.
cncken t.hat don't have cludina beeten eaga, and Combine ham, tout
u much= potential. baklna. cubes and iucchtnl In When are hued TOASTY HAM BAltE larao bowl. Pour aauce
on dally eelectiom from 12 ouncea allced over ham, toalt and SUC·
the four food poups -cooked anoMd ham. cut chlnJ, •tlrrlnc to coat all
mllk1 meat, v.1•table1 into Julienne at.rips plecee. Pour into 1 are-·
and frutu, brHd"' and W cup marprtne Md 8 by 8-inch b1ldn1
cereal• -th• fa\I and W cup flow' dlah. Bake In ~1raie
,. prol.llnt In other f ooda W ~ ult own (3&0 c11tPw r .) 45
'1can Nduoe the add for· i CUPI inUk to 60 rnlnuta Lil Mand '\Muon trlgeted by au· 4 llP 10 mlnutn befot• .. ,.
,,.,. 1 , .. poon pNpan1c1 vtnc. e ltt'Ytnp.
--~ '
GOURMET
MARKET
" ! ;,
DELIVEHY SERVICE
I 1ro•d of 1r,illi1 )Jtn•'~ Or 1u•I 11ul 1•1111UJ(h huur• Ill llw dJ\ .,
(',111 l>i-lJlll'\ ·, .11111 J'~ Jltnut uur frf'c> hH11w 1ll'h\t·n
'''r\lrr. E"·n tlt'liV!'rV 1• full y r,.fra~erat<'d from our ... 1orf'
S:ill n11111rnum, plt>al>C.
Meat Seafood
l'rune anJ Tup Choice Bttf Jl!.ed at least :w d,l\• 141 lhl'
111•.tk of pc"rlt'1·11on a.nd preparf'd for YOU JU'I 1111' -.J' '""
1o1a 111 11 hv rral lave meat culll'r.!!
-Right from the Dela11e.\ limtllf'r:-!!!
Lean
GROUND CHUCK (jtround hourl7 )
StuUed
PORK CHOPS
1hirk rrnlrr rul pork rhoP" ~•uHrd
•ith l ... lenn"• (8mOU• humf'mAd"
applf' dr-•~IC
Bonc>IP!18 Pork
LOIN ROASTS
2"'1 '" 3>,; lb. ••naa.. . . whilr thn 1 .. c:•
van Fanner Style
SPARERIBS
Wine
Oelant'y's PriYate Label
198
lh
198
lb
VIN ROSE o~ CHABLIS WINE 149
1800 <:ASE Of~ TWELVE BOTTLES
Deli
Oelant'y't Homemid ..
CREAMED SPINACH
We reeene tht' rip1 to
limit q ... atlty ,.,, CU11tomu
98~ ..
tore houn 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday ehrOUf'h ••urday. CIOkd Sunday
Frt>!lh filf't Of Padfir 169 RED SNAPPER lh
Fre8h froun Loni 598 SWOROFI H 11.
Ot>lanf'y's f'amou11 98 ~. CLAM CHOWDER
Bo.ton or Manhall•n "•ylr
Groceries
:l-Lb. Bag of Ore-Ida Frozf'n
DINNER FRIES I ? .. s
Frozt'n Oh-Boy
STUFFED POTATOES 49~.
K avli
FLAT BREAD 79~~.
Produce
Deliciously morning-fre!:!-h
LargP Sweet IAK"al
STRAWBERRIES
Larl_tC" olid l«btorg
LETTUCE 49~ .... ,
Sweet Large Navel
ORANGES 3 ""'· r.. .. l 00
673-5520
' 2920 Newporl Blvd., Newporl Beach
• "
I ,
I
i J
I '
~I
;
/
Or.nge Cout OAll.Y PILOT/Wedneedey, Apttl 14, 1M2
.nvesting in market pays high~yield returns
t
l
)
MA&TIN SLOANE cted. ExplrH Aprll 30, ferm1: refund form and a re· 1982. the worda "Quickly R4t'f)
Coc>Clprkwhave 1D83. ANA.HIST, BROMO· 11•1111111111•p11 pttt tape with the price HALLS $1 Refund ltevea Pain" from one1 man)' tmart ahop-ODOR FREE EXO-SELTZER, HALLS, rl r of one Desitln Skin Cue Send the required re-box of Orajel CSM Ex-'
'°look at~ CAtNJ: Caah Refund LISTE.RlNE Cold Wea-L9tton purchue circled. fund form and the Uni-plres Au 31 1e82 ·
tAwetment. lnv•· Offer. Receive a Ure· ther Savtn11. Rec.Ive a Formula, Ll1terlne Lo· the entire outer car1on of Exptra June 30, 1982. veraal Produc\ Code ffere•.8°a refu.iform;
ttn, tn the food that you fund. Send tbt panel $1 ref uncl and tour zenaa .!xpire. June 30, 30-or 7~·tabltt A.tplrin-!XTRA STRENGTH 1ymbola from either five to write for: We lch'• 1
ett hu aome vvy 1nter· from one box of Odor 25-cent coupona. Send 1982. Free Arthritlt Pain for-DEXATRIM Refund Halla Stick packaaea or Popcorn Partv Offer 1 ~ tidvantacea. Free Exocaine contaJ.nina the NquiNd refund fonn ASPIRIN-FREE AR· mu la and the reglater Offer. Receive a $1 re-two 30-count Halli bags. P.O. Box 2200, Arl~
l'lnt, tbeae lnveat· the 1tatement "Faat, and two bottom or end THl\ITIS PAIN FOR· tape with the price cir· fund. Send the required Expltft June 30, 1982. Height• Ill 60oo6. Re~ t u.n't Ukely to 10 deep-penetratina pain. flapa with Unlveraal MULA $1 Coupon Offer. cled. Explrea Au1 . 31, refund form and the re· ORAJEL CSM Cash queats f~r t'he for~ re ..
in value. relief delivered dlrec\ly Product Code 1ymbol1 Receive a •• coupon tor 1982. ga~r tape with the price ~fund Offer. Receive a quired by this 75.cen\''
oreover when you to the p&in area." Expl.ree from any of the follo-Aaplrln-Free Arthritis DESITIN S2 Coupon o9ttre2n01-~:p•uxal~rlEmxctirr~ 75-cent refund. Send the coupon offer must be" .;.. ready to'atart unloa-Aug. 31, 1982. wing: Anehl1t, Bromo Pain Formula. Send th.e Offer. Receive $2 ln cou-De required refund form received before July 31
dtna your lnveatment, Tbttt offers require Sehaer, Halla CouRh required refund form, pona. Send the required cled. xplres Nov. 30, and the panel containing 1982. ' y0u don't have to worry
ut flndln1 a buyer.
l'• you.
, hirley L indner of
°"'mberland, Md., calls
tutr pantry "the stock
"1f,ket." ~ 'Puttlni money In the
~,ik only earns 6 per-
ctnt Interest, and the
higher rate of inflation
only makes it worth
I•as." she says. ··But
p~tting my money In the
sypermarket products
lt)at I stock up on easily
e¥na me 2t> percent and
n10re over the course of a y•ar."
:If, like Fay Bulle, of
McLean, Va., you in-
vitted in chickens at 39
c~nts a pound and are
s¢11 eating them today,
y~u would have earned
a lmost 100 percent on
yol1r investment.
~~toc k ing up also
!'iakes good sense for
~. George Hankins of
O)ympia, Wash., who
~es on a lake quite a diitance from the closest
supermarket. "It gives
me a good feeling to
know that if someone
drops in, I can go to my
s tocked-up cupboards
and prepare a good meal
on a moment's notice
without having to drive
the 11 miles into town
for extra food," she says.
Mrs. Hank.ins recently
added to her stock l 0
pounds of Blue Bonnet
Margarine that s h e
found on sale at 49 cents
a pound. She had 7-cent
coupons to go with each
package.
Susan Cole of Breck-
enridge, Mich., is a super.
stocker. When a store in
her area had a
"Moonlight Madness
Sale," she found
49-ounce Bold and Cheer
detergents on sale for 96
cents a box.
"As the clock struek 9
p.m . (the start of the
sale). I wheele d my
shopping cart into the
check out line. The cart
was filled with 12 boxes
of detergent, and in my
hand were 12 50-cent-off
coupons," she says.
"The detergent cost
me $5.52 and I saved
$22.32, but it is more
than likely that there
will be future refund
offers for these products
and my savings will be
even more.''
Fay Butte, of McLean,
Va., has a good rule of
thumb for stocking up: "I
try to stock up enough to
last through two sales.
This way I will have en-
ough in case I can't get to
the first sale or the next
sale does not take place
when I expect it to.''
If you are not a stock-
er, why not become one?
It is a gold plated in-
vestment that makes
dollars and sense.
If you have a
stocking-up story or tip,
send it to me in care of
this newspaper. Readers
whose stories appear in
this column receive a
copy of my refunding
magazine, The National
Supennarket Shopper.
CLIP 'N' FILE
REFUNDS
Healtla Prodactt (File
ll·A)
Clip out this file and
keep it with similar
cash-off coupons -
beverage refund offers
with beverage coupons,
for example. Start col-
lecting the needed proof•
of purchaae while loo-
king for the required re-
fund fonna at the 1uper-
market, in new1papers
and magazines, and
when trading with
frienda. Offers may not
be avaBable in all areas
of the country. Allow 10
week• to receive each
refund.
The followlna refund
offers are worth t9.76.
Thla week'• often have a
total value of $18.26.
a.JIM t.eaa1l Tllese
effert de.a'C re••lre
f o..-:
NA11JRE'8 RDIEDY
Sew fl, Box NJM&7, m P.o, TUM 79977. a.c1
elve a 00-cent coupon
and • 00-cent refund.
Send the e ntire front
_.. '""" om IC)..tablill 'box ol .......... a.n.ty taW.. IDd Ow ,......_,
~ •llh the ptk'e ctr.
··-~ ~1I'~IB ill PllCH URmYE 1 fUU. DAYS • -• .. -,. SAi
~ ,, 115 18 17 le•
It's oar 18 18 20 21
MEAT that made as FAMOUS!
And-our lcnv ,lcnv priees helped too!
Fresh
Whole Bodi' Fryers
LIMIT 3 FRYERS PER FAMILY
WHILE SUPPLY LASTS.
FANCY CRISP -
LETTUCE
EA
Halfhill•
ChunkJJght
FARMER JOHN
SKINLESS
In aU -water
61/r-OZ CAN
EA
LIMIT 4 HEADS PER FAMILY -:::::-=-=--=--=--=-=-=-' ~====================~-;:::=============================;WHILE SUPPLY LASTS
EXTRA FANCY TEN DEA 2 0 c co RI .. . . .. . . . .. . . ... EA FU~HfMry
'IWTH 000() COl.ofl 111.ANra
'-"ROEFANCY (""RE GOl.O) NAVELS 3 3 c ----!~~.~~AS~!;~~; ... LB . cU1
iPPiii .. L8 33c s2Zt
liiiCiiiiis .... 35C---..;:;:::~z::_---J
Ciiiiiii'UPE,.49 c
Fr1itSt.t a:~~
Clris & Pitts .:a:
' .
NU CO A
MARGARINE •
QUA~~590
,·
STATER BROS. WHITE/DECOR
OR YELLOW/DECOR
DILL.KOSHER DILL.KOSHER
DILL FRESH Pk OR
HAMBURGER CHIPS • STATER . a1os.•x•• PICKLES 4'r<>Z
OLD FASHIONED DROPS,
ORANGE SLICES OR
SPICE DROPS
STATER
BROS.
GANDY
'
• 79°
14-0Z
•' •:
,.
]
i
I
If
Happy birthd~y t~ w;hom?
Celebration ubtract years from parent. ' lives
By MARY JANE SCARCEU.O ...................
Chlldr•n have no mercy. They expect
birthday part.let on the natal day every yeat, no ~tter wnat h&('dlhlpa they wreak on hapleu p6renta.
M the final piece of U.ue J)lper Cloaca down
fr<im the lut preeent opened Christmas morning,
the brtaht·eyed 7-year-old tuna to hia parenfa
and exclaims happily. '10h boy. I can't wait to 1ee
what I get for my birthday."
His birthday ta in October.
For the following 10 months, his mother and
father will be treated to periodic outbursts of
birthday-ilia.
"Eric's getting a magician at hls party," he ·
will proclaim out of the blue at breakfast one
morning. "This guy makes stuff disappear, and
everything, and Eric gets to invite 25 kids."
His (?)Other st.ares into her morning coffee,
envisions 25 little boys in her front room apd
OUT Of THI llTCHll
wonders what magician could make them all
disappear.
"Mark's mother said he could take all the
kids on the block to Disneyland for his birthday,"
he says casually another evening during a luU in
the dinner conversation. "They get to go m the
morning as soon as it opens and stay as long as
they want -maybe even until midnight -and
ride on everything at least twice, maybe more."
Parents lose their appetites at the thought of
spending 16 hours keeping track of kids eager to
swoosh around on the Matterhorn and Spinning
Teacup rides after downing five hot dogs and a
gallon of soda each.
Girls can be worse, because they're so
detail-oriented and at such a frighteningly early
age.
"Only four months, two weeks, three days
and seven hours until my birthday," announces a
small beauty who claims to hate math. "If Aunt
Susan in Chicago sends me the $10 like she al-
ways does and I save up my allowance until then,
I'll have enough including tax to buy the 6-foot
Winnie the Pooh at the toy store."
Or she slams into the house after school,
throws down her bookbag and shrieks, "Michelle
borrowed my four-color pen without asking to-
day and then she broke it. I'm not anviling her to
my birthday party.''
No point arguing that her birthday isn 't for
weeks yet, and by then she and Michelle will be
best chums again.
Unlike adults. children don't have the de-
cen<)' to let a birthday 'Slide by with a mere Tip-
ple m the regular schedule. They expect a fuU-
blown tidal wave.
First comes the invitationalist, for which the
honoree wants to include only the immediate
world.
"No. you can't invite all the kids you met at
camp last summer," a mother says firmly. "We
don't even have their addresses."
won't clMh wtth the new carpetlna, a1nce that'•
where most ol lt wW end up, anyhOw.
No rn.auer what'• planned, the party wlll
dtaenerate into a maelatrom of runnlna, ecrea-mtna~Una children duhtna out of control
thro houat, becau.e they always flnilh
the p pmet and entertainment in about
halt the allotted time.
Pat'Uec are conaidered a 11uooeea lf only one
or two children end up In t.eara, and parent. find
them1elvee pitifully grateful to famillesfwho ar-
rive to pick up party guest.a on time.
~ the last little partygoer leaves, a weary
mother aurvey1 the wreckage. wonders what her
insurance will cover and throws heneli onto the
couch in hopes of alowlng down what has become
a world-record headache.
The birthday child roars through the living
room with two new toya under each arm, and in
passing tosses out the magic words, ''For next
year's birthday party, I want ... "
He's safe, because she doesn't have the
strength f~r mW'der. When she recovers a bit (in
a month or two) she might even fix him some
special peanut butt.er cookies.
Here are some that combine the basic dough
with chocolate for a fancier version of the old
favorite.
PEANUT BUTrER WHIRLS
~ cup margarine or butt.er
~ cup granulated sugar
'h cup brown sugar
'h cup peanut butt.er
1 egg
1 14 cups flour
'h teaspoon baking soda
'h teaspoon salt
1 6-ounce package chocolate chips, melted
Cream the margarine, both sugars and beat
peanut butt.er together and.add the egg. Mix and
blend in the dry ingredients. Roll the dough into
a rectangle about 1,4 -ipch thick. Spread with
slightly c..'OOled chocolate and roll up like a jelly
roil. Wrap in waxed a paper and chill. Slice into
cookies about 1,4 -inch thick and arrange on cookie
sheet. Bake at 375 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes.
a a 5
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdneed1y, Aprll 14, 1982
Beef
• prices
• on rise
Retail ~f price• ln
March lncreued al18}lt.ly'
according to a 19-city
supermarket 1urve.,y.
However, pricee 1tlll are
averaging below the le-
vel.a oI a year earlier.
The survey, conducted
by the Denver-based
National C.atUemen'a Aa-
aocia Uon, shows the
national average price of
five beef cuta on March
11 was $2.37 per pound
compared with $2.36 on
February 11 and $2.36 on
March 12, 1981.
Current price averages
still are well below th
1981 high of $2.50.
Meat produc t ion ln
recent weeks has de-
creased somewhat from
previous record large le-
vels, partly because of
the effects of adverse
winter weather.
As a result, wholesale
beef prices have increa-
sed from the levels pre-
vailing earlier in the
winter.
Of the 19 cities sur-
veyed, Los Angeles had
the third lowest average
at $2.01 per pound for
the five cuts: round
steak, sirloin steak, T -
bone steak , chuck roast
and ground beef. San
Franciaco ranked fourth l~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~ at $2.06. ~
•
• mcy When that has been pared down to a
workable number (if such a term can be used
with children's parties), the fun of negotiation
reaches new heights.
Parents want to play two games involving
balloons and straws. break for refreshments and
call it a day. Kids want to hire Ringling Brothers,
the Los Angeles Dodgers and arrange for a
drop-in visit from Superman. Fried
Re freshments are an easier task, because
chances are slim that guests will eat much in the
excitement of the party. Experienced mothers
know the best cake, ice cream and punch to. put
in front of the little darlings is something that * PUBLIC NOTICE *
150 CASH REBA TE or
10°1. off our regular price
If you own a home constructed before
2122175 and heated by natural gas. served by So.
Cal. Gas Co .. you are eligible for 100°1. financing
at low cost 8°/o Apr. financing . on the purchase of
600 sq. tt. or more of R-19 insulatlon which, when
installed brings the entire accesslble attic area up
to R-19 Standards.
This limited money back otter Is good only on
. insulation purchased between 4/9/82 and 6/9/82
unless extended, amended, or rescinded by this
company by public notice prior to that cut-off
date.
40% Calif. State and 15% Federal tax credits
apply.
"EIER&Y llORllE" J45-6616
AVAILABLE AT: l • AlBERTSON'S • GaSON MARKET
• HUGHES EL RANCHO • MAYFAIR • PANTRY
, • WALK£RS • WELLS MARKET
• BELL'S RANCH MAJJ[T • JORGENSEN'S • FEOCO
6 2-5678
P.ut a Jew words to work for you
in the llily Pillt
I -
Save25¢
on Wesson
• 1ll
\
(
Then Save
25¢More
in May.
·,
•••
1 ..
'"
1
I
'
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIWedneidav. Apr11 1•. 1982
Low-cost, elegant dining . . )
More and more th• 1a1111 ' Elli am.. are calllna tor In·
19ft\dt)' tn ~ and
eookJna ...... that a.re u ---------economical •• po11lble mlna>d aaruc and around gtnser.
and nutriUou.a as well. ~ tea1poon around Add chic ken liven TIMM days lt you can ~r marinate at room tempe~
find a m .. t that'• both ~ pound chicken ll· rature for lG mlnutea.
lnexpenalve and h alth· wn, halved Drain, reaervlnc mnl-
ful. and doll tt up 10 It 2 teaapoona corn· nade. Add COl'nlt&r(l\ to
muahrooml: tUr·fry wiW
mu1hroom1 besln t o
dark n, about l minute.
Add muahrooma; stir-fry
until muahrooma ~&in to
darken. about l minute.
Add chldlen livers; alir·
fry until chicken livers
are brown, about 2 mi·
nutea. Reduce heat; ttlr
In reserved marinade:
cook and stir over low
heat, until hot and
slightly thickened, about
1 minute. Serve over
steamed rice or cooked
fine noodles, lf desired.
LOVE LIVER
Chicken liven com-·
blne with muahroon:s
for a nutritious, eco-
becomes bot~ taaty and starch m.arlnadt; combine well. n<>tn1C41 main ~·
.•le1ant, you ve turned 1 tablespoon oil In a wok or la.rp akillet
tho bat trick. 1.1 pound snow peas heat oil over h[gh heat. Consider chicken 11 -Rlnae, pat dry and slice Add anow peaa and re-
vere. T~ey're low cost mushrooms (makec about malntns 41arUc. Stir-fry
and they·re good for you. 3~ cupe); set aside. In a until snow peas just at.art
Now, what can you do to small bowl combine soy to turn bright green,
make them elegant? aauoe, aherry, ~ o! the about l minute. Add Here are two ideas.
Muah.roomi make any
dlah a touch more ele-
Yteld: 3 to 4 portions.
gant and In the case of
chicken liven there ls a
very special flavor affi-
nity between the two.
Salsa di Fegatinl di
Pollo (Chicken Liver
Sauce) ill highly compa·
tibJe with either rice or.
as many Italians serve it,
over pasta.
Wiit WITH SOMETHllt' EXTRA
AltD YOltl LOW PRICES.
The Salsa, combining
mushrooms, tomatoes
and a measure of Mar-
aala, couldn't be simpler
to prepare. It takes about
a half-hour from start to
serve.
In Stir-Fried Chicken
L ivers and Mushrooms
you marinate the livers
in a teriyaki-style mix-
ture for a few minutes,
then stir-fr y them
quickly with garlic and
snow peas before adding
the mushrooms.
In both recipes be sure
to follow the cooking
time for the livers and
mushrooms exactly.
Overcooking tends to
tough e n li ve rs and
makes the mushrooms
less delicate.
SALSA DI FEGATINl
DI POLLO
(CHIC K EN LIVER
SAUCE>
1 p o und fresh
mushrt>orns
1 can ( 1 po und)
whole peeled tomatoes
1A c up butter or ' . margarine
\4 cup c h o ppe d
onion
1 garlic clove. min-
ced
'h pound chicken li-
vers, quartered
1A cup Marsala wine
1 tablespoon flour
1 teaspoon sage
~ teaspoon salt
V. teaspoon ground
black pepper
Rinse, pat dry and slice
mushrooms (makes about
5 cups); set as1de. Dram
tomatoes. reserving ju1ce:
chop tomatoes; set aside.
In a large skillet melt
butter. fAdd onion and
garlic; saute until onions
are tender, about 3 mi-
nutes. Add mushrooms
and chicken livers; saute
until livers are browned,
about 5 minutes. Add
wine, flour, sage. salt.
black pepper and reserv-
ed tomatoes and juice.
Simmer. uncovered. un-
til hot, si tr ring occasio·
nally. about 10 minutes.
Serve over steamed rice
or pasta, if desired.
Yield: 3 to 4 portions.
STIR-FRIED CHICKEN
LIVERS
AND MUSHROOMS
12 o unces fr esh
mushrooms
2 ta blespoons soy
sauce .
1 tabl espoon dry
sherry
l larg~ garlic clove. _,.,.,
Cooking
meats
P r oper cooking of
meat ia as important as
makin g wise buying
choices. Fit the cooking
met.bod to the meat cut.
There are two basic
ways to cook meat -
using moist or dry heat.
The kind of meat you
buy -tender, or less
tender cuts -dictates
the cooking method.
For example, bottom
roun d ate a k needs
moist-heat cooking.
Broiling makes it too
cough and dry for grea-
test eating pleasure.
Br~~ a nd bolling
(abo stewing) are
moiat-heat me\hoda used to prepare leaa tender
cull. 1be longer cooking
Umea of moist heat help
tenderiJe lea tender cuts
and alao add Uavor• to
rnNt.
Cooklna w ith anollt
beat prodUCll well-done, mea• f/Yet'Y dme.
When cookinc tender
CU1I ot meat. dry heat la
appropiate.
TABLE KING BEEF-BONELESS
UMlT 2 fl>vrc:h4se ~ lrmrt '"9 puce LB"> 781 LB
1>HXJ.,(Efl0n.E oov.-.\
~l l Purt-h.b~ CJ'~ 1.-n11 f"Q ou1 ~ • JA
GROCERIES
' "Iii'" Purina Cat Chow 2 ss
111'-""'' .,v ~ OoroJC Pre-Wash )44
..... "",. l Liquid Plumr )36
TI~; Mlld~~ Remover } 84
" ""'"'°~" .. '"""'• ,,. I Palmollve Liquid ' .69
FRUIT
CUPS
4PACK
GROCERIES
~..,, t.""'"'!Ct aronl Chuse Dinner .26
~ .... , JA•
Ne.stea Instant Tu }79
• lf ""(f ~,.. Swanson Beef Broth .35
" •'~~..,, N' 1' l<Y•CO Au ra Potatoes .83
tJ::Kt ~Tlf rft.an eget.able 011 }65
6>-0<JNCE CAN-LIGHT-IN OIL
U/'\IT 3 (Purchase rrver lirnrt r~ prier 891
BEEF T-BONE
STEAKS T~Blf lll"'C OR LOIN CUI CLIJB
U'llT c tl'v<r!\OM' -1 ltma 'f'!I p1ttt l ll 2 681
MEATS
J:Allll KNG Bllf CHI u; Boneless Family Steaks
f"8L(llro(;llUF ·IUolo ft.""'(JI Beef Cube Steaks
IA81.E.l\~ef__(f-l~U\ll.Q
Bottom Round ttteakS
LAl 2 68
"2 39
1e 268
.11 2 58
lft 2 39
LIQUOR
101 ..... fl r.-.r IC..£•-fl> ~c"
Dos Equls Regular ~
.. "" • lit •lC'T.1 Jose Chavez Tequila
~rl!; R';;°s7'''Jfh~e
t J}tll(lt Sllm Price Blended Whiskey
WE'U DO<JBLE THE DI FFERENCE
OUR O<JARAl'fTEf OF VONS LOW PRICES
to convince you al Von1 commttment lo low pncelf
we re making this c:lfer If you can find lower pnces
ovent11 this Wttk at any other IUpefl'Nri<ft. Vons will
pey you double the difference Just shop at Vons Buy
25 different items wonh $20 Of more Compare prlCes
on the wme Items at any other supe~rkel "If their
total 1s lower. bring your ltrmlted Vons receipt and the
other market's pric~ to Vons and we'll pay you double
the differen"l:!e in cash Vons-Low prices you can bto
lieve In.
1700N(:(PACKACE -WAAPPEO -CHfE!K: f 000
NO Lll'llT -(l!EG PlllCE I 7)t
l()().CT -400 I U -TW1'1 PACI\
~ 2 !IV<Nw .,... -~ "'1<• 9 981
299
3 99
2 99
4 99
8 59
DELICATESSEN
•Ol '1tCG ·-.U.~~r Leo's Slced Turkey Breast
!?OI "'!:&.::llU,o: ~"J>f Vona 5IC:ed DOtOgna
H~ft;'t~lt'Klt;hen Bags 102 Jfiol JAifl ~~ifP• roplca eive.s .59 ~"'Ne~r ·~ .89 ~ .. l.~IUll;? 2 99 ::;pedal Bottling Fume Blanc
PROD<JCE
~•"'<:£ c;_QOl• f"-resh l'lushrooms
f~lll '\~tTll)IW
Roasted Peanuts
• 1u 89
p 99
FROZEN FOODS
HU BTM ~D LI.SS E't'E
Boneless Rump Roast
L 1181.l; ~r-a-l.1.t" BOneless ::;tewtng Beef
~~81kin Pattlea
•8 2 09
lft 2°9
CA 5 19
~H4\ ~10VfttJl'Yi Brown Onions .. 19
... 59
SERVICE SEAFOOD
""''~'··~.,,. ........ Mcintosh Apples
~rP10W."'1' CJtspJlcama
~~~nts
'" .49
l8 .29
.... }99
VONS BAKERY
•• }89
,. 2 59
UI 2 29
L9 8 98
HEALTH &BEAUTY ) )lCW "3611> V~I('.' l!ia.'f IOI_ 9 5 vons N.tun1I Unltn 6retd • DAIRY PF~ODUCTS
g:i;~eShampoo . 14 8 ~~'C.\~ "-"" .89 ~~~;t'C:,'V';rts
.OOUl'•l"l 3 57 .,~~'"'"' ltj_ 79 lf01,,"'G-:..1Wfl!.Jlt<)L (~I Scope Mouthwash Intl. Hnl•llM Roh • PllnC.IY :;on l'\W99f1M
.39
.79
c>'~~·f~p:.'ste .88 8id'F"'~~~ 105 ~°"AivelflW'~ } 59
Al'c:'t 'fa~~ Lotion J 27 ~~ct3Jh Roh • 7 9 ~.i:i'Pu~ Ontnge Juk:c } 69
Jl 91 t :i'\-61•@ ::;ltm J'11Ce Regular Beer
Pltltt!I EFF!.CTM niORS. THll<I WlO.. Al'llll. ,, l'O Al'tlh. ;11. 1112. Cl\U. 121.J) 579-1400 l'Olt LOCATIOf'ol Of'·~ ICMDT 'IOU. HOT AU. fl"fM MO~"' MN> l'l'ftC1M AT\IOl'lt.. llOOW. NX>a.W..9'1 w.eon. """ I.Cl ......... Ml'! oeoo.
SAFEGUARD
BATH BAR
WHITE. BEJGE
~11...a.s 060FFJ .46
tMmNQT091 9IAQ4 _....,a.,..1•nh
FllOttO Al'I> LM lltOl\S. IAl.t8 '" tt'l'M ~ Ofll.Y. "'°9f 8l'O'l£9 ~
iRISH SPRING
BAR SOAP
OREEN. V!U.OW
DERMASSAGE
DISHWASHINO
UQ(JID
l.Ot !"°-' .QI OfPP) .58 22-0Z (tt<:l.S 20 Of'1")
tWTmeTCMl IUCH ~°" IBCff ._........ .., ......
o.:;.. ,._.. -Olle" ,. wi.-. -... 2 I~
o.c.~·lirl!aNt~ ,,..,.,., ...... _ 21,
o.c. ,._.. HeM •60I Ml .,.
LNlll!lcfl•S.-S--tOll'llO 119
16)
~MIVM.Lft _......., . ......, 2.61 . »CL 1.99
ll 1
IJ
(/(
~JI
•JI"
LI' ~ ,.,
.1
0
~
r.
11
)
f}\
..... --r.
" I.
.J
..
-,
'
Dry heat metbocU In·
dUCW. rc..dnl. broillnc. ~.rollln( •. and pan CMTA_,. • •1.119..,_._,~A•
...... ~ -1a.....c ot 1 waDll .,..._
... ... ..... ,._ ..... .,.. ~mlACM _.......,,...Dr. a Vllilllfll ••• 4m ........... -
I 1
I
SALUTE TO SPRING -Oranges flavor a perky Spring Bonnet Cake to celebrate the season.
Hats off to a bonnet cake
The rites of spring derful fun to assemble finish cooling on a rack.. 1 cup orange sec-
have been celebrated and adorn. It turns a FROSTING tions (about 2 oranges)
since long-ago pagan spring dinner into a ho-2 egg whites Invert 8-inch cake lay-
days when t}le entire liday. 1 ~ cupi sugar er on serving plate and
month of April was de-SPRING dash of salt frost side and top. Cut a
dicat.ed to the worship of BONNET CAKE ~ teaspoon cream of thin slice from the top of
the Saxon goddess. Os-1 package (18 or 19 tartar the bowl cake to make it
tata. ounces) yellow cake mix 'h cup orange juice level.
Since then, people all l cup water l teaspoon vanilla I n v e r t b o w 1 ca k e
over the world have fe-1/3 cup orange juice YI teaspoon yellow on top of frosted layer;
t.ed the burgeoning earth 1 tablespoon grated food coloring place in center to make
and the symbols of orange rind CombinP. egg whit~s. an even rim. Frost gene-
growth. 2 eggs sugar. salt, cream of tar-rously and round fros-
Flowers and food play Combine cake mix, tar and orange juice in ting to give hat shape.
a major pa.rt in our wel-water, orange juice, the top of double boiler. Slice small green gum-
come celebrations. orange rind and eggs in a Beat until thoroughly drops and place around
Our menus take on a large bowl. Blend untH mixed. Place over boiling base of bowl cak e to
lighter, happier a ir and moistened. Beat accor-water and beat constant-make hat band. Cut large
meals become festive· ding to package di r ec-ly at high speed of ele<:-gumdrops into 4 sections
A spectacular salute to tions. Turn half of batter tric mixer for 7 minutes, with scissors, being car-
lhe season is the Spring (1 ~ cups) into a greased until frosting stands in eful not to c ut all the
Bonnet Cake. Fashioned and floured 8-inch round stiff peaks. Stir frosting way through. Cut smalr
like a flowery hat and cake panj turn the re -up from bouom~d sides gumdrops into 3 sections.
full of sunshine~flavor, it maining half into a oc_casionally. Remove Separate sections by
is pretty enough to take greased and floured from heat; add vanilla pinching to resemble
to the Easter Parade. l ~-quart ovenproof and coloring and be'lt 1 flower petals. Cut green
Made with a yellow bowl. Bake cakes ln 350 minute longer. gumdrops into small pie-
cake mix, enriched with degree oven , the 8-inch TO ASSEMBLE ces to make st.ems. Deco-
eggs, the batter is enli-layer for 30 to 35 min-AND GARNISH: rate top and side (not
vened with orange juice utes and the bowl cake Small colored gum-brim) of hat with flowers
and grated rind. 40 to 45 minutes. C.001 10 drops and stems. Place orange
Spring Bonnet Cake is minutes, remove cakes Large colored gum-sections around base of
_ea_s_y_to_m_a_k_e_a_n_d_w_o_n_-_C_ro_m__.pa_n_an __ d_bo_w_l _an~d~d_ro~ps _________ ca_k_e_. ______ ~1
Whatever You Like
To Do ...
Do Your Best &
Feel Your Best!
with vitamins from
VITA-~RESH
Substance II
Vitamins
»CT
Vitamin
Vitamin
C VllAFRESH
W/ROSE HIPS
2l!Q.MO
E Vil A 0AAE.SH
NATVRAl
1001.U
V . t . A ~ITA FRESH 1 am1n ,~=l
500 rng W/ROSE HIPS
Natural
Vitamin C
100.(;l
Available At All Stater Bros. Markets
Prices Effective April 15-21, 1982
··~
r---------------------,
You can be a
WINNER
Just by sending us your name and
address and by watchlaC for your
name la the clasalfted ads of tbe
Dally ~llot.
?a~.~o,':~~J·~~~~· .. ~7:., ,m':t'"J.1! ~upon and min It tocray to the.
O...aned Departmn& O.lly Piiot
at W. Bay ltreet, C.... M;ia. CA ...
'
1~ame: ----------Age: __
Street: _____________ _
City:---------Zip: __ _
Telephoae: _______ _
•
----------------------
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Aprll 14, 1882 C7
Diet creates
longer nails
llCIDllll Cllllll I Jtecipe
The aecret to growma
,Joni. beautiful flnser-
n.aJI• MiY Ue ln yow-dlet,
accordtn1 to a UCLA
nutritionist.
"A balanced diet, suf.
flclent in protein, cal-
cium and lron -as well
u other nutrients -la
eaential to growing and
l"{lalntalnlnf, strong,
)iealthy nalla, ' says Ro-
slyn Alfin-Slater, pro-
fesaor of nutrition In
UCLA's School of Public
Health.
Although it is widely
believed tbat taking ge-
latin capsules lS the mo,,t
effective method to im-
prove nail health, Alfin-
Slater disagrees. .
"While gelatin may be
somewhat effective ln
improving nail health, I
think those concerned
about their nails would
be much wiser and much
happl~r with the reaulta 1
if they first made aure .
that they were eatma a
balanced diet from each
of the four food groups
of milk, meat, vegetables
and fruits, and breads
and cereals," she says.
"Nol only would their
ov~rall nutritional health
be safeguarded In this
way, but they would also
be sure that they're rec-
eiving complete proteiN,
as well as the calcium
and iron needed for lo-
vel y nails. These nu-
trients are not contained
in gelatin." Alfin-Slater
says.
"Nails are composed of
I .
BALlBOT IN WlNE
4 halJbut ateakl (l 6 OW\CN)
~ teaspoon ult
O..h pepper
\Ii cup dry white wine
~ onion, al.lced
~ cup lllced celery
4 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 tablespoon anipped paraley
1 teupoon Worchestenhlre .. uce
~ teaspoon dried baail, crushed
l cup cherry tomatoes, halved
Sprinkle fish with ealt and pepper. Place
flBh in 10 x 6 x 1 ~-inch baking dilh. Add wine.
Cover and marl.n.ate in refrigerator for 2 hours. J.n.
I-quart bowl, cook onion and celery in butter,
covered, at HIGH for 4 to 5 minutes or Jill tender,
stirring once. S tir m panley, Worceatershlre
sauce, and basil. Spoon over fish.
Cook , covere<,i, at medium high for 5 mi-
nutes. Add cherry tomatoes. Cook. covered, at
MEDIUM HIGH for 1 minute or Ull fish flakes
easily with a fork and tomatoes are heated
through. Makes 4 servlnp. -
protein, and thus need a -------------------
steady dietary supply of
protein to replenish
themselves," she ex-
lains.
~l~:~\VONDER M:UMg)t
Bakery Thriftshop Announces
SPRING SALE DISCOUNTS
A PULL UMI
WONDER BREADS
HOSTESS CAKES
DI CAatO a.£AD & ltOlLS
OPEN DAILY
9 A.M.-6 P .M.
Bakery Thriftshop
2024 Placentia
Costa Mesa CLOSED SUNDAYS
LOAVES OF WHITE t. 2 BREAD
VALW $230 ~ lO
WITH PURCHASE Of S~.00 m IO£ PO C<UOfl OffO '10C)IJ
MU MAY 1.1912
• ...Cl~
~ • E ~ u j ltlllfollUI ..
"
lll'TH MCHASl Of ss.oo
C. .. POauGI
OffO '10C)IJ
Ollll ., l. 1911
e ..
Zt -• 4 •
SATISFACTION YOU MUST BE COMPLETELY SATISFIED WITH
EVERY PURCHASE OR WE WILL CHEERFULLY REFUND GUARANTEED YOUR PURCHASE PRICEI
riiiiiii ~
If you haven't tried today's Hunt's Tomato
Sauce, you should! Today's Hunt's isn't just
thick. rich and good: Today's Hunt's is
thicker, richer and better tasting than ever: r------------------. -, • FREEi Buy4cansoftluntVTomlltoSauce 1
1 and get one 8 oz.can PREE. •
I folt"•'~ Yt)vffttlllhOf•ltdloeth>OUt-t>nl~~'°""''"'"~ We w•ll"'imbu<Ml'OU I
1111 ~ -!Nlr ... 11p.1Ceulndkeltdonthltc•o•APO'l(0t"°"' .. " .... '_ P<1<-.il-indk't1fdltl-8 ~· g °' c""olHU<11 •• T~o:O...ucwpt"'J<"-"<JllnolfllhN~IAMd1<1M'('O<"-•lllfll>e<vt10'\1ttol!et ~ IMl<"<IM,_ -f(\) ... ltf.C:IOOlyptO.HIQIOH_W_,~ln< ·'-~"--j!Uf<-""1I I 'i <"'"' tlCl(k ICI <<l'tt ~ p<-llttd lt:.f ooeloMpt'°",,,.,.. fie .i-11 Oii f._.e C.....,. wilt ntl'l M
hono<.-1 If p<t~t<I lht°"'fl' --..,nc~• "'~•" Of oct.co -•••nae , ... ,, ,...,llN!on ol Ill
I .._ t' r-oS..C.0< ....,....,,-"of""...,.,.,.,.._ co.cic-1at ,....IOI' ~It.old l5 I
~w•e4 ......... ..t °' oltwntittr"frl(t.-ll>t ..... CUIM-.p.yt9")'-•I•• C.W.-.. lflOOt Oood ti O<>lylnll~A Coui-~-... ·~tfl•-'-""' ........ ,, ..... ,(CIUjMll\tlO """'*'-'*'· I I In( ,1'0 Clo•1<110.ClintOtl io-~Jl<I leQKUtllW('UOnf'ooek,IM Offet•lljlltft~)I 1112 I Re:T AILell: PlUM Fiii in Pfk• c. I
I 27000 ll.7237 fREEI I
L-----~------------------~
\
I
I
,
ca Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Aprll 14', 1982
Soup with French flavor
Eich of the many rt'· :~·.~;=-~~ 111110 ·lfl"! ri~ 3 c up• hot cooked
area• MVO aalnod more ~ Combln~ 11oup. water,
renown than others, but Alld buuUlon cubes; heat
each la worthy of note. rain~ ta surrounded by 2 chlck~11 bouillon to boiling. Add broccoli ,
Lorraine ls known for the French w In e · cubea :<easonings and fish . Re·
the high quality of Ila growing areu of Cham-1 package (10 oun· duce the h eat, cover, and
culalne and the heart!· pagne and Alsace and ces) frozen e h o pJ.it•l.I simmer 10 minutes or
netl of the diahes. Germany'a Mosel region. broccoli until fish Hakes easily
Berhaps beet known 11 So this soup could be Y\ teaspoon salt wilh a fork. Stir 'h cup
Quiche Lorraine, that served with wine. Sher-Y\ teaspoon seaso· of soup into half-and-
mouth-wat.erln.a creation ry or any while w in e ned pepper half and return all to
of ew. cream and lean would be api;>roprlat.e. l pound white fish soup. Add sherr_y. Heat
bacon that is baked in a SOUP LORRAINE fillets, cut in 1 \12 ·Inch but do not boil. Serve In
f'Ak T l can (10¥. ounces) pieces soup bowls and top with
w Y crust. hey are fa· condensed cream of sh· 1 cup half-and-half mounds of fluffy rice. mous for soup, too. 6
"' 0 SOUP DU JOUR1.;:r,
Shrimp and ahelirM
flavor a hearty ecwp
with internationAj).
taste. 'II
I .,.
.... Ii
t.n •. u
18 ,,
More ll{ld more, we are rimp soup (cream and milk) M a k es 6 c u p s o r
appreciating soup as a ,~---l _so_u_p __ ca_n __ w_a_te_r ____ --::=-~-=-cu~p-=dr~y~s=h~e~rry=--=--se-=-rvin--=~gs-. __ --==--==-----------~----~~~--_..:..------~~----------------------
whole meal. And Soup
Lorraine is o n e yo u
won't want to miss.
~I
12
.-1 ..
--ft-
It ls creamy and rich in
the style of Lorraine and
tastes better than you
can imagine.
Featured are fish fil·
lets and chopped broccoli
.in a shrimp and cream
base. A dash of sherry is
the final touch.
It turns into a complete
meal with the addition of
an attractive scoop of rice
on top.
Geographically. Lor-
Prices up
on foods
By LOUISE COOK
The first quarter of
1982 brought bad news
to supermarket shoppers.
An Associated Press
marketbasket s urvey
show s prices went up
more than l percent du·
ring the thr ee-month
period.
The AP also found
that higher meat prices
boosted bills duri ng
March, with an average
increase of almost l per·
c.-ent.
The AP survey is ba-
sed on a list of 14 com-
monly purchased food
and non -food products,
selected at random.
The i terns were priced
at one supermarket in
e a c h of 13 cities o n·
March 1, 1973 and have
been repriced on or about
the start of each succee-
ding month.
Among the highlights
of the latest survey:
-The marketbasket
bill went up in March at
the c hecklist store in
nine cities and dropped
in four cities. Overall, the
marketbasket bills in·
creased by an average of
nme-tenths of a percent
last month.
-Comparing prices
today with those at the
start of the year, the AP
found the marketbasket
bills increased an ave·
rage of 111. percent in the
first quarter. In the same
pe riod last year, the
marketbasket bills de-
creased by an average of
3.6 percent.
-Many of March's
inc reases came at the
meat counter, reflecting
smaller supplies of lives-
tock in wholesale mark·
ets. Meat accounted for
21 pe rcent of the items
on the AP checklist, but
it accounted for 29 per-
cent of the increases re-
ported during March.
Chopped chuck went
up in price at the check·
list store in nine cities.
The price of cente r-cut
pork chops increased last
month in four ci ties and
all-beef frankfurters rose
in five cities.
-Non -foo d items
generally remained sta·
ble. Like meat, they ac-
counted for 21 percent of
the items, but they only
accounted for 14 percent
of the increases.
The U .S. Department
of Agriculture e.xpects
food prices t o g o up
about 6 percent this year,
compared to 7.9 percent
last year.
The biggest chunk of
the dollars Americans
spend on food does not
actually go for the food.
The USDA says the
farmer's share of the
consumer's food dollar
was 36 cents last year.
the smallest percentage
in 20 years. The rest of
the money went for la-
bor, pack.aging, transpor.'
tation, profits and mis-
cellaneous charges.
No attempt was made
to weight the AP survey
results according to po·
pulation denaity or In
t.enns of what percent of
a family'• actual grocery
outlay each Item repre-
eenta.
Standard brands and
ai.z.et or comparable aub-
atltutet were UMd for the
aurvey. The AP did not
try to cornpare actuaL
prlces from clty co city.
The only comput1on1
were made In term• of
percenta1• of lncreaae « dlcr1111.
,
FRESH PORK 98 ~~~~LDER. ROA~r_
LADY LEE ''" ... 159 BACON
Sliced ,
r!~;~OR~'o""229
Wiiter PiiC11
rBISOUICK
MIX
AllPurpow .. o·eo· 185
LADY LEE
COOKED HAM
Sliced 12 Oz Pleg
219
f"MIN~TE 219 i RICE 28 Oz eox
f"TEN HIGH 919 '!2oYRBO~ 7S lfr Btl
f"SUN·IN 247 '~~ ~~HTEN~!
Fllmoe~l!!~lng
s1 .oo OFF C41 Process only
REC NOW
12EXP 2 99 1.99
20 EXP 4.49 5.49
24 EXP. S 29 4.29
36 EXP 7 59 6.59'
PrlCft 1pp1y to su~ tllm on1v. c ,., proc•H wen IS l(OdaCOIOr. FIA)l GA.F and FOtomlt
ASA 400 AdcftlONI n<
The Wyer slze
b the betta buy.
We 1uorar11rf 1hc luser ''" o( ant 4'inncd.
boulrd u1 pll ckil1rd 11rm 10 1lw1)'' bt 1hc bt11rr
hu)' f \<Cn Whtn wt lowtr lhr prttY of I •mAllet•
\llt'd 11rm hl rtfk\I 1 manu(1c1urrr'• 1llmun1:r
Wt' 1u1om111t1ll)' red11tt lht 111,tr '"" coo
FRYING
CHICKEN
WllOte BO<Jy Cr~de A
QUARTER
PORK LOIN
tnch.~ Lotn RIO Bl~
iind SlrlOul Chops
rORANGE
JUICE
lady Lee
... 54
,.1''
ULTRA BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
78 Oz
.99
rDREAM WHIP 119
TOPPING
5 oz 80•
f"NIVEA A LOTION ,.o,229
GENERICS.
MACARONI 25 ~~~!ESE 7'. oz eo. •
GENERIC 75
CATSUP :nor Bt1 • .
lfqBuys
mean extta NVln!J.9.
Kc\ Pu)' llC' •h~nh f"11:cd hclu" 1hr1r tH'r\'dll~
d l\cuunl prtct\ '' 11 rt\Uh ol m1nuh1tlurt't\ ·
1emp1it•t)' pru1nu1mn1I 1llo11.1n~ or t>.l·tp11onal
pur~h1h(') Y1,ui1 11nd hundrtd• n( Kl') Bu\
11rnh t'\ rn 11mr \ 011 •hop
e
Vin
0
b1 .
A
Jt. I
10 I
n' ••
" ,,
•.ti 'I
t l(• t
7-BONE 129 WHOLE BEEF "129:, E~edU£K. ROAST LO BRISKET
BOne~s Bonded BHf
7·9 LbS
,.
CROSS Lb 198 LADY LEE ... 59: RIB ROAST TURKEYS
BOne~S Bon<l«l Bfff OlUCk BilSted Gr.lde A Frozen 18·22LbS 11
I'!
,.If ,.,, /~~ .,...,.,.. .. ,,,..,,,....,
,,.JI _..,.; ... ,, .. -'
..
f"DOWNYFLAKE 99
J,, ~fn\FFLES1g oz Pleg • !OLYMPIA 349 ~!·
BEER 12 Pack ., •
n oz cans .
.~r :
f"NIBLETS 39
J,, f 9e~~I 12 OZ C~n •
f"SWEETHEART 7n
A 2~!~RGE~! Bel • ~l
GOLDEN
BANANAS
Ripe R<1vortu1
u29
FRESH
STRAWBERRIES
Red Ripe, 122 OZ BSkt 1 OSI
J ,..J, .. ..,~~ ~ ?"-X·l. ... -~ cc: "~ ,...,, ~-=~~
FRESH
CELERY
crisp cruncnv
·~·39
SALAD
TOMATOES
WOl\lm Site
st
~.
I ) • ~
If ,) ...
u v
') .,
•1 : ) .,
-<. PINK n
GRAPEFRUIT ·~
CoiiCl'letln Anest ,,, \.. . ,, .., ...
71
I t
I
.,. i' RED-RIPE ,,.. ·
WATERMELON '{:
wnoi..(Cut lb 111 6'
::~· .59 , .. 39 '".17 : ;~ -----------------------------------------------------4£110
I •
c..,,..._ •t1>h lwe-•• ,..,... ~ """"'"• •··....,.. l ...... .,.... ....... ~~~·n 11
Our "1t• = -::: '~"""'-:::...~ ~ ·~.:;effo("'.
"-"QI -fH9Cttvt .. foent• ........ .... hftlutl~C°""'t"'
' ,t
!JI 11 l
bl~ 9,. J
t11tw
Jrn1
The Discount S~~-....A~~
I
~
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /WednNday, April 14, 1882
Gr~wing up to Popeye's favorite ·vegetable
ta.ARA GIBBONS marjoram (or mintl Oefrol\ 1~nach and fat French dresaing calories. bull and nutme1 In a
One of the thinp that Juice 1 tablffpoon emon ~':r~\ ~ t>!,~~.C:t ·llll CIURMfJ jui'-"' 2 tablespoon. orango Q U ~~l~AC~T~bi A N ~~~d'J :P~~~ ~e!~
rMlly eeparatet the boys pinch of 1round ted water accordtn1 to --------1 table1poon aoy WITH CHICKEN AND at the tut mlnut.e and trbm the men -and nutmea and finnamon packaae dln!d!ona; drain sauce NOODLES simmer jult until heated
91411 lrom grownups -ii 8 ounces low -fat well. "Mlx tomato Huce rnano. Bake uncovered, tom fresh aptnach leaves l.i teupoon sround throu1h. Serve lmme-
lptmch. Amerlcan-atyle cheese with marjoram, lemon ·ln • 360-deiree oven 20 ~cup thinly aliced ginger 1 10 -ounce can dlately, 1prinkled with
Many children are allcet juice, nu~g and cinna· mlnute. or more, until fresh raw mUJhrooma chicken noodle 1oup, ParmeHn. Make• two ~h·tffiatant t>ecAu-1 cup dry cottage mon. Tear cheese 1llce1 CU8erole la bubbllnJl and Ha 1 f • n e • t In I Arr• n g e 1 PI n a ch fat-1kimmed 1erving1, 110 calorlea
se thelr· taatebuda are cbeeee into blta. t o PP l n g I a 1 i g n t l y orange, peeled. diced leaves ln a aalad bow. Ar· 11A cups water each.
brand new and auper· (pot cheete) Layer ingredlenll, ex• browned. Mak ea six 111 cup thinly sliced ra ngt! m ua h rooms . Pinch of dried bo.all
1ens1Uve. 1 onion, finely cept breacfcrumba and maln-courae aervlngs. lean rare roast beef orange and ateak strlp1 Pinch of ground More ve11er.able ideu!
Unlike other foodv chopped Romano, In an ovenproof under 300 calories each. round (or cooked flank on top. Garnish with nutmeg Send a a camped self.
that they are more wil-2 ta b 1 ea po on a casserole (•prayed whhi 0 R I ENT AL MEAL · atea.k) onion rings (or IC&llions). 1 cup fresh 1plnach addresM:d envelope and
llngtoeat,apinachi.an Italian-1eHonedbread· cooking spray), adding SIZESTEAK 3 or4 red onion Stirremalningingre-leaves,looeelypacked 50 cent• co SLIM
aaaertlvely flavored ve-crumbs tomato uuce u last AND SPINACH SALAD rings (or 3 tablespoons dients together and pour 2 tablespoons grated GOURMET UNHEARD-
getable. 2 tablespoons grated layer. Sprinkle with (1 aervlag) slfoed scallions) over salad. Makes one Parmesan cheese OF VEGETABLES, &x
By the time you •re a .-•h_ar--=...p_Ro_man __ o_c_h_eeae __ ___:b=..:r:...:e:.::a:.::d:.::c.:..r.=.u.::m::.::b:.::•~a:..n.:..d;,;,,_;;R.:..o:..· ___ 2_c_u_p_s _r_aw_w_a_sh_e_d ___ 2_t_ab_l_e_1~po_o_n_s_lo_w_-_m_ea_1_._•l_i_e_a_e_rv_1_· n_g_._s_o_o __ Co_m_b_in_e_so_u...:.p_. _w_a_t_er_._6_2_4._S ...... pa_r_r.a_._N_._J_07_8_7_1._
grown-up, your taate-
buda are a bit mott worn
~asltwere.
By the time you're
mature, mild-flavored
foods and vegetables
seem bland and boring.
The older you are, the
more delight.you're li-
kely to find in foods with
more pronounced flavor.
Like epln.ach.
Unfortunately. lots of
o therwise grown-up
folks drag the notions of
their former 8-year-old
selves into adulthood,
never giving the foods
they once disliked ano-
ther chance.
I men, for exam-
p em particularly
t to reassess the
hey spurned in
cij ood because "eat
y~ spinach" was mo-t s idea. f
you're a grown-up
w likes spinach, you'll
love these low-calorie
. If you don't. may-
ou're not a grown-
ACB-SOLE BAKE
2 tablespoons all-
flour
1 cup fat-skimmed
broth
10 ounces defrosted
'hil!m~Ml spinach, drained
'ed thyme
garlic powder
l!pound so}~ (or
fiouhder) fillets, fresh or
thawed
paprika
2 ounces low-fat diet
cheese
i mbine flour and
chi n broth ln a small
sau pan. Heat and stir
until Ulickened: spread a
thin layer over the bot-
totir of a nonstick 9-or
10;-inch baking dish. Ar-
r3'1ge drained spinach in
a layer . Sprinkle with
thyme and garlic pow-
der. Arrange fish fillets
in a thin layer to cover
spinach. Pour remaining
broth mixture over fish
evenly. Sprinkle with
pai:a. Crumble cheese ove \he top. Bake unco-
ve 25 to 30 minutes at
4 grees, or until fish
is cooked through .
]
k four servings. 160
each.
ANOKAPASTA
_ ASSEROLE .
ed macaroni, spi-
nd cheese, Greek
style)
10-ounce package
thawed spinach. drained
8 ounces dry elbow
macaroni
-l 8-ounce can plain
tomato sauce
( teaspoon dried
Berry
f a cts
"Strawberry fields
forever," is a line from a
famous Bealle song. But
have 1ti'awberries been
around forever?
We know that as far
back as 70 B .C .. the
Gree ks and Romans
were singing the praises
of the sweet tasting fruit.
In fact, the strawberry
is native to most of the
world's temperate re-
gion. The strawberry as
w e know it today is a
result of considerable
cross-<.'Ontinental cultiva-
tion.
It i. a descendant of a
variety cultivated by a
Frenchman who croesed
the North American va-
riety of strawberry with
a variety developed by
the Chilean Indians.
At this time of year,
the first of the straw-
berry harvest is begin-
nirui to appear in local
~ta.
To make aure you're
1etltn1 the beat ln qua-
lity, look for fruit tha\ la
frnh. clean. bright and
aolid red in color, or at
the leaat, very ll ule
whlte or ~· The caps
1hould be In place and
the truit aboWd be free
ol moMluft or mold.
'n.. II DO correi.ldan
be«wetn .. °' the ber· rt,n and flavor. Since
.-rawberrial aN hlahly ... mv=.:: \.md MIOOn• .
. I Where there's More lo shopping than lust LOW PRICU •••
FRESH PICKED
STRAWBERRIES .
CRISP GREEN
CUCUMBERS
U.S. NO. 1
12-0Z.
CA IT ON
UMIT
6
EA .19
Sprin9field 8·01 SWEET BROWN ONIONS ........ . .. LB .19 WHIPPED TOPPING .
&ultr or Pottit1, ~Not EacMd ~ Fat
LEAN GROUND BEEF . . . ..... LB 2. I 9
E.R Oot1 Nol E.cHd IS4*. Fol
LEANEST GROUND BEEF .. LB. 2.•9
E R Doe• Not Eacetd 1 S'M. Fo1
LEANET CHOPPED STEAKS lB. 2 .•9
U S 0 A Choice lleef ... Center Cut
ROUND STEAK LB 2. I 9
BllFROUllD
RUMP ROAST
~~0?~ ~~~. I • 9 7
I• Ol UG Ol\T Din', l llOOT
'St4MU'OO OI CONOITIONU
RIVLOll FUX
o.o.1o< ............ ~ ~ .,
RIGHT GUARD
lo•...-. 6 01
Oil OFOlAY
l ,,, Cop• IOO't
TYLENOL
1.57
1.83
S.19 ••••
FRESH AMERICAN
LEG OF SPRING LAMB
GENU INE WESTERN GROWN
WHOLE LEG
OR
RUMP HALF
19
LB.
U S 0 .A. Chooce e..f Round C111
.lB. 2 .09 U.S.0.A. Chooct ... Eatro t.on 2.59 SWISS STEAK. BONELESS BEEF STEW ... .LB.
U.S.0.A. Choice 8"f Round Cul 2.•9 E_I Rancho 1.39 OMAHA ROAST .. LB RANCH STYLE BACON LB
U S 0 A. Chc»c. e..f Round Cvt 2.59' E II. Hot & Swttt
.. LB. 1.69 BONELESS RUMP ROAST LB ITALIAN SAUSAGE . .. .....
U S.0 .A. Choi<• ... Center Cul •.• 9 E.11 Port S.Ot0nin9
.. lB. 1.69 BEEF SHANKS l8 BRATWURST SAUSAGE .
Fr .. h N.w En9lond
CHERRY STONE CLAMS ............ LB .• 89 ~ ... ~~ ~ .. ~ •• • . .LB 2 .89 iio*iliimi.IC&u. •• LB. 6 .99
m"i Filt.t of Froan/o.f<Oli.d ... Ceni.t Cul
ocu11 ~••CH ..... . .... LB. I .89 1wonnaH 111&•1 ... le. •· 99
JOHNSTON'S YOGURT
~i_t_r_p e~~~:~ 3 8 c m DAIRY DEPT.
64-<>1 8'0<k & Whole
APPLE JUICE
7 2S·OI Block & White
MACARONI & CHEESE l .•9 .25
200ct 810<k & White
FACIAL TISSUE
8 7S-01. 16 ti Bell B<ond
VARIETY PACK CHIPS l.•9
Blad & White 12 Pok l l-01 CoM
JUMBO ROLL TOWELS .................. 13 COKE, TAB, SPRITE 3.69
HAPPY IAIDR TO OUR ORTHODOX FRllllDS
~ ·~· -· -· ..,.,.,,.. -INTERNATIONAL PIT A BREAD
16-o• loo S & WWALNUTS
,...,, 0.-°'""'" SUE BEE HONEY
,.1 is ... c ...
. ... HUNT'S TOMA TO SAUCE
2 59 1·12.0Z.CAN
• SCHILLING CINNAMON
1..0Z .IOHN$fOH'• . 2 . I 9 PLAIN YOGURT .....
.•I
.79
.69.
U.S.O A. ChOic• llfff. Bon.!.n TOj) Round Cut
TERIYAKl-STEAKS .... , l&. 2 .59
U.S.0.A Choice Fr"" Spring lomb 3 19 LARGE LOIN LAMB CHOPS le •
U.S,0.A Choice Fr .. 11 Sp""i Lomb
SMALL LOIN LAMB RACKS
U.S 0.A Choice Frelh Spri1>9
GROUND LAMB .
lB 3.89
LB l.•9
FRllH IPRlllG
LAMB CHOPS
~M5o?~ ~~~l 3 9 9 La. •
1 ) ,, .. , (f\oOf" ""'"'-•o .. ·
TAYLOR
LIGHTWlllll
I"" BOLLA so.we
loc-.l••• VS O, ,,0, ... 1
NAPOlEON BRANDY
319
S.98
6 .98
1"~·1iWi't~ 1:C• ; ft l .
10-0Z. ASST VARIETltS 6 9 19-01 P\o
TOFU ....... _. .............. _ .• 6 5
aJi@f\i~
INOIVIOUALLY WllA"'!O CHEESE FOOO , • 9 AUllTJIMIMA Ju••o WAnu•-·-···-·····-•
16 01 Swon10n, Ch1<ktn·Tvrk1<y
HUNGRY MAN MEAT PIES
16 01 Snud.I ~
ATHENS Flll_QOOUGH
4·Eon
ORE-IDA COB CORN .
'<>or Lynde<! For"'
SHOESTRING POT A TOES
7 S 01, 8"f. ChHW, (htc~tn
VAllDIKAAP'I
.. ......................... 1.09
......... ' .................. 1.19
I.IS .......................
•1a•ADA1 ...................... .. .... 73
', •• ot~:
I , .... '"Ml
'OI C~lffl otr 41U
.. t OVI Oll'\AY
as ... -Kll(KOMAN MILDER SOY SAUCE ... l .•I
__ ,_ "',_ .... ,,.., c ...
MACKEREl . . . I.JI .,,...,, ......
SAPPORO BEER I.JI -°""" •• 0 ,, .. , "• CUTTLEFISH .tf
NYLON TOWEL
......... , •<+-, •• "'• TOP CHOW M!IN
'-"
.17
HUGHlll.Lll.
AMllllCAM llMGUI ................. . ....
808'S 8LEU CHEESE DRESSING ...................................... 89
I l ·ol l(noc~wur\I or 'ol1d1 ~11\09t
VIENNA 8EEF FRANKS ................................................ l .M
Medi11"' Shorp llo11do"' We19h1
HUGHES CHEDDAR CHEESE .................................. Li . l.39
kl I
GALLO SLICED PEPPERONI ......................................... 1. 79
I ·llt. Mff' ot IMf r::.::~~ ..................................... I. 4 9
We accept ALL coupon• ~
from other luper·M•lll•I• L
, ... ----, I • :, l.:1\, \ti
........................................... "--...... c-.... .............. .
. ·-·-............. ''--·~----... -.... __ ._.., ·-.,., ........... --• ....,._ .. -.. _....r.. -__ .,,._I ........ _________ t •••--
'.''41 __________ ,, ---.. ---·-.... ___ .. __ , ,_ .......
~. .... ,. .... ,. ...... I._. _______ , ..... __ ,, .. -11.-
••
..
Cle Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. ~I 14, 1982
Snacking can add • • nutr1t1on
SnG1Jll Ml become a
perm•nent par\ of
Amerlcan eatln1 p•t· a.ma. And that'• not bad,
nutrtUcn.lata tell ua.
Youn1 children, who
often cannot eat larae
quanUti• of food at one
1lttln1. may be better
nourl1n•d if meal• are
1pread over four or five
aervina times. And there
11 a lot to be 1ald for
allowing adole1eent1 to
eat according to their
aJ>petites rather than by
achedule.
Because of their high
ener~y needs, filled lar-
gely by carbohydrate
foods, and their tendency
to skip meals or eat on
the run. teen-agers ac-
tually need snacks to
meet their total dally re-
quirement of nutrients.
Indeed, many teen-age.rs
eat as often as six times a
day.
and chlld. both healthful and 1ure•
In 1hort, lf children to be eaten -without
don't like the anack food.a artk: t n . offered, they are 11.mply kewile, home-baked
not KOf.na to e.tt them. chocolate items, 1uch u
Chocolate, America'• Chocolate Oatmeal En-
favorlte flavor. 11 one ergy Ban, are lunchbox
1 n a c k t ha t mo• t or brown baa additives
youn11tera wqn't fu11 that may bee.~ either
about. Nor will p&Nnta u · ct..rt at lunch time
who undeutand how or eaved tor wholetome
chocolate mea1ure1 up 1nacktna on the achool
nutritionally agalnat bua trtp home.
other mack foods.
A 1.~-ounce bar of CHOCOLATE
milk chocolate contrl-OATMEAL ENERGY
butea 6 percent of the BARS
recommended daily allo-l cup all-purpose wance (RDA) for pro-flour
tein, 9 percent o f the ~ teaspoon baking
RDA for ribollavin and soda
calcium. and also cop-'A tea.spoon salt
ta.lna iron and vitamin A, ~ cup uncooked re-
plus a good supply of gutar oats
energy-giving carbohy-2/3 cup butter or
drate. Nutritionally, milk margarine
chocolate compares favo-W cup milk
rably with such snack 1 cup sugar
foods as bananas, apples 12 ounces plain milk
2 teupoona vanilla
4 eua ._. cup datet, c.-u t ln
pieces, dUlted with flour
~ cup chopped null
Sift .!:£ether flour, bakina and ult; 1tlr
in oatmeal. ln medium
aaucepan, mt!!lt butter;
add milk, 1ugar, choco·
late and vanllla. Stir
until mixture I.a 1mOOth.
Transfer to large bowl of
electric mixer. Add egp,
one at a time, beating
well after each. Blend ln
dry ingredlenta: told ln
dates and nuts. Spread
mixture into a greased
a~d floured 13 by 9 bv 2 -inc h baking pan .
Bake in a 325-degree
oven 50 mlnu~. Cool in
pan on wire rack. Cut
lnto pieces and aerve, or
wrap each bar in alumi-
num foil for portability
or freezing.
Yield: About 24 bars.
~ ...... _ ·----tl . -.. ----~ -
ENERGY BOOST -
Chocolate teams with
oatmeal a s a tasty
s na c k or i nformal
dessert.
The challenge is to
provide youngsters with
snacks that make a nu-
tritional coptribution but
don't become a source of
irritation between parent
and raisins. chocolate, broken in pie-T ucking a chocolate .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
bar into a teen-ager's
pocket as he or she races
.out the door will mean
one more snack that's
Restructured·
meat products
Most home cooks muscle cuts. Shoppers
know how to make meat have another choice to
patties, loaves and sau-consider when planning
sagei>. You combine bits their meals.
of meat and mix them E .
together with seasonings. xpens1 ve binders and extenders -
such as eggs, shredded d .1 bread vegetables, and bread al y
• crumbs.
With loaves you place
the mixture into a pan or
mold, and with sausages
you use a casing to hold
the meat together. This
iS how cooks at home can
restructure meat.
The food industry has
found a way to rest.ruc-
t u re just the meat
chunks (without adding
bindings and extenders).
The restructured meat
is made from low value
parts of a carcass that are
sect ioned, flaked or
chunked into smaller
pieces (from one to six
inches long depending on
the p~).
The thin flak es
chunks a.re then pressed
back together mech_ani-
call y to fonn a new pro-
duct.
Restructured meat
products add value to
otherwise underutilized
cuts of mea t that are
generally low in de -
mand.
Thro ugh restructu-
ring, meat is transfor-
med into an attractive
product that appeals to
consumers on a higher
level than it did before.
The ne w product ends
up more versa.tile than
co nven tion.al whol e
muscle cuts.
It's possib le that
you've sampled plenty of
restructured meat during
the past few years. Many
fast food franchises, for
example , have served
restructured roast beef
and steaks for years.
Some outlets have
even started to experi-
ment with restructured
pork sandwiches.
Restructured products
are consistent -a plus
for the fast food busi-
n ess. A restructured
product can be controlled
almost entirely -parti-
cularly in portion size.
shape, texture a nd fat
content.
This assures the con-
sumer of receiving the
very same product time
after time.
Restruc tured mea t
products are also making
inroads at the re tail le-
vel.
U you've ever bought
wafer-thin sliced ham
from a supermarket or
delicatemen. you've pro-
bably bought restructu-
red ham.
This is also true fo r
any boneless ham 90Jd in
a tin can o r vac uum-
eealed pouch.
In the frozen food s
caae, shoppers, may find
an auortment of res-
truc1W'ed meat products,
ranatna from thinly sli-
ced "beef undwich steak.a
to tabric9Wd pork bacon
Itri ...
Buyln1 reatructured
meat at the 1tore gen-
erally C09ll leu an.d in
many ~ ii more con-
wnient than ... cradl-
donal whole await cuta.
J'or --:re· • lblnly 1Uced z.;;1ndwlch
..... (JCl!ld tra.n) iaw
Ju1t eo MmQdl to cook. B.tnactund meatl a1lo
off er COl\lumen an op-
dan to Ctlldadonal whole
WASHINGTON <AP>
-Before you know it. a
nickel's worth of wheat
can tum into a 50-cent
loaf or bread.
Th e Agric ulture
Department explains in
a report what it costs to
produce a one-pound
loaf of white pan bread
a nd how ·tb e key
"middle-man" charges
are computed. _
L.D. Schnake, a USDA
economist al the U.S.
G rain Marketi ng
Research Laboratory in
Manhattan, Kan .• wrolf
t h e report . It
concentrates on the
"marketing SJ?read" or
the difference between
the price of wheat at the
farm and bread sold ln
stores.
The period used in the
anal ysis was the
April-June quarter of
last year.
Here are some of the
basic findings:
-It took 2.315 bushels of wheat or 138.89pounds,
to make 100 pounds or
flour.
The value of 2.315
bushels of wheat at the
farm during April-June
was at $9.19. Of that, $7 .72
r~prel.ented the farm
value of wheat in 100
pounds of flour.
Flour , plus other
ingredients, produces
160 .79 pound s of
bread·nearly 161 loaves.
"Thus, the far m value
of wheat in a one-pound
loaf of bread was 4.8
cents for the April-June
quarter," t he report
said. That results when
$7.72 is divided by 160.79
pounds .
The a nalysis said
there a r e fiv e other
ingredients in the bread
derived from farm
products; lard, soybean
oil, high fructose com
syrup, corn syrup and
soy-whey blend. Those
added up to a farm
value or 0.8 cents per
Joa!.
Non-farm ingredients.
including yeast, salt,
mold inhibitor .
e nzymes, a nd dough
s trengtheners and
conditioners, add a total
of 1 cent per loaf.
By the time the
bake r y p ays for
ingredients, prices are
escalating. The flour
mi II er adds on for
grinding wheat into
flour. Other processors
add their costs.
Thus. according to the
report, the baker paid 10
cents for the ingredients
in a single loaf or bread
in the April -June
quarter of 1981.
The "biling spread"
for turning flour and
othe r lngre'dlents into
dough, forming lt into a
loaf, bakin& it and then
wrapping the loaf was
32.3 cents.
That put the wboleHle price of bread at 42.3
cenu per one·PGW>d loaf at the bakery dock.
But t.be bnad bad to
be tranaported to retail
1tore1, displayed and
sold . Add I
'' wholuale-lo-retaU
price 1prtad" or •.• cenu. Total: u .a centl
per IOI.I.
frfthS.1.1tMrn
0...wn "1ifl9 6 8 {l]~. c
~ •• Sofewoy
Ovolity ............
"'" Center C1.1t1.
SAFEWAY QUALITY MEAT
Beef Roast ~~ I~ '2"
Beef Cube Steak = IO s2et
Premium Ground Beef EIUl='J;:,,, lb '191
Boneless Ti Steak S.~•ly lb s2se
IW~woy ••McCoy * 16 9
tlOfS
:;::.. SJ" lb. . "" ,,..,c ..... Jt ">
Hotel Brand Sliced Bacon
Sliced Bologna ~
Safeway Chopped Ham
Hen Turkeys ~~
SMO«•
SAISA" ....-. -·-· •2•• .,...i.•
London Broil Steak ~"T:= 10 '229 Dover Sole Fillets °"-
SloctO
C D S.lew1y orn ogs Ju11 Htu Ea•
Red Snapper Fillets i:.a:~
10 '149 Cooked Shrimp Me~t ~:!'Y
., '1" Raw Shrimp 95:~~
o.llcote ........
.. .................. . • • • • • • ,....... .. _,... .... , ...... ,... ... -..-.. ...... ....__ .... a
•................ "" .... ·-h, ...... ...._ ..... (._... .. ...., • '---.. _ .... ._... ~ • ,_,...., ... ·--a..,, 6 ....
• Jt '"' ... "-"'-..... "'-"' .............. c..w.._ ..... a....~ • ........................
GROCERY DAIRY
~ s1s9 C-S1Cheddar Cheesesiy~~T~ll"''199 ti'": Lucerne Sour Cream ~89'
1 lb s1 1e C-i·Hansen's Apple Juice ~~~ '139 -... Lucerne Buttermilk H• I 95< P\q ~ c,., .. .,,
8-0l '149 ~Dog Food Sco4ch&Jv 25~ •599 -... Lucerne Cottage cheese ~ .. ,,. s1s9
PliQ ..;;:.., c .. 1(111
Ill 69' "'!:f ·Scotch Bu Tomatoes 2~ 75' Lucerne Wh1pp1ng Cream Pm $125 ""'"
Ftoaen Oron91 JuKe 8 9 /a __..,. ~ ¥. • OP _...... • ~ 12-01. • _...sov<e Can " , ... , 7ftc I
t..9f .., t """'~· , ""-< ...... a... ......... • ,
., '2" t!-i Scotch Buy Salad Olives
~ '199 :C-S> Green Giant Nibblers Corn
lb 1699 C-S White Magic Detergent
6
: 75' :::: Mrs Wright's Schnecken ~o o1 s 99'
6~ 1109
•9~ 1119 Bo•
--G b I Y t o.1mo i '' "' 89' ..;;:.., ram e t ogur ,,..~ w. ""'. ·Lai'
~ Pisano Garltc Bread ·~°"~ 79c
Margarine
Scolch l1.1y 3 1 la
l-'5 c....... ' ........
aeus C-i' 1.1b.
:'a 79' Corton
II:! J 1§ i:t.t :JI !ill' •.
Ptus Ellt011tt In l-Slaros lb tfl>I Cltallnll • -• -~ •l""''~' l s5n A F h 100'!1Pl~" '• 01 ~119 ......Paul Masson •l;oh1 RoM t •t• qua res onctuott:is·Ol!1 '~tr ~$01 s3ee Playtex Tampons ~~. orao.:. : •• 249 :C-S>villa Banfi Asti Spumante ... ..........~. ,.
LIQUOR AND WINE
12 f.~1 ,2,9 Safeway Aspirin Tablets :"'t'1119 ~Brown Derby Beer ....... 0Pl<1~0.•1e1 '° 1 7~ ,70 . Contac Capsules , ~Kamchatka Vodka "'oo! l~.. Antacid with Sim1th1con s.1t-o~,
za:t Ancient Age Straight:.;.': ~.~ 1999 lsopropyl Alcohol ':,'f: .~3·• Scoresby Scotch COLOI ,...., v .... ,..,,.,.,'
Fresh Crisp Celery
Whole Watermelons C
Roma Tomatoes ""'flls>t
Anjou Pears t:
Romaine Lettuce = ...
Tropical Kiwi Fruit
Salted Peanuts • ... ":.:r
1unc11 69' Lettuce Salad Abdy "•
lb 25' Crisp Fresh Carrots
io 59' Alfalfa Sprouts ~
,., 49' Fresh Eggplant =
9ur1Cll 49' Fresh Jicama w~~PI
6J 3''
·t...r ss-
Buncll 45'
~ 59'
lb 49c
lb 39'
• , ....... Dr., ... .,. ...... ...... c.... ............... ...
.~ ................ _ . .. . ~
A;,,!9 ~ l!J u1 ..
.,.., _.ties CUl'T _ ... , ... ----. ~ "' 1 II ,. ... ..... llCXIT flCl(fTJ nt11m
" ,, tn4H U"1 • 1 ,, ... ,_ ..... I
~ II.Mt "' -... ,_
11,lllTS cot .. N .. otl••• I One Siu Only
Sf'IOA1 I
5 ~85
._Te la Oweew~1llnMt ....... '• w ••• , '15,0M,IM...._.I .... n..Ge.e-.,w
...... .., ht, 1'11
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wedn.aday, Aprll 1•4. 1982 Cll
. .
IRVINE ,RANCH FARMERS MARKETS
.--------'tOmme___.• 0 F VALUES ~Ed.ltion_XVl_n _____ _
MEATS
TRI TIP ROAST
Reg $3.89 lb $ 2 _89 lb
.
MARINATED
K-BOBS
Reg $3.98 lb $3.49 lb
Lean
GROUND BEEF
PATTIES
Sib box
Reg$8.49box · $7 95
• box
MARINATED
BEEF BACK RIBS
Reg $1.79 lb $1.19 lb
-COUNTRY STYLE
RIBS •·'
Reg $2.29 lb $ ' 9 1.8 lb
~ SIDE OF BEEF
. '
,,.
$1.39 lb
r;
HINDQUARTER OF BEEF
$1.69 lb
85.00 OFF ANY 50 LB PAK
810.00 OFF ANY 100 LB PAK
Available at the Tuatln and Newport stores
only!
SEAFOOD
Large Fresh
.. TROUT
' • ( ' l .. . •, . . . .. . . .
. :
.-c . ~ ,
)
! I
f
Perlect Stuffed!
Reg 82.98 lb
MAHI-MAHI
Reg $2.98 lb $ 2_29 lb
Fresh
SEA BASS
Reg $5.98 lb $4.98 lb
New Zealand
WHITEFISH
Reg $3.98 lb $ 2 • 69 lb
HALIBUT STEAKS
Reg 84.98 lb $3•98 lb
' Available at the 1\.wtin and Newport atorea
onlyt
I Limit Rights Reserved I No Dealer Sales.
l_
Storr /lours: /Oum ro 6 pm. S'ven Da)'s
IRVINE STORE
FRESH
PRESB
STRAW_.... .. DUlll5
ANDASP~GUS
WllAND~ftCKED OD DQ.JVF.11£0
FRESH DA.ILYI
.. . ·-SWE-E-T €ORN-.
4 fo·r $1.00
First of Seuon
CALIFORNIA
CUCUMBUIS
Imperial \hlley'• Finest
BORRA GO
29~ each
PINK GRAPEFR1:JIT
1llla apedal vaTtety ,al gnpefndt·la caDed
"the Orcbkl of the Imperial \Wley!' TheP-e
tbln .. ldnned, super 8Weet, and available
for a •hort time only. be advantage of
tbls outstanding value!
U.S~No.1
R1J'SSETT
POTATOES
3 for $1.00 ·
Sweet large
CANTALOUPE
49~. lb
I
lexasGrown
BILD DD SWEET
BERMlJDA ONIONS .
10 lbO!llo... 89 ~ 4 lbs for $1.00 .,, i
NATURAL FOODS
Carafectlon
BONEY GRAHAMS 4o&.R....... $1.25
Barbara'• Bakery
CHILI AND CHEESE
CORNCBIPS
$oz. llq 81.45 79~
COSMIC CUKES
32 OL llq $2.89 $1. 7 5
L-LYSINE
SOOm1
sollobe 1t.,.n... 110-.w.. R .. u.u
$2.53 $4.55
CAROB COATED
BRIDGE MIX
8'illt Only. R .. 82.39 lb $1.S9 lb
Routed and Salted
SPANISH PEANUTS
llulk Only. llq SU 9 lb 99 ~ lh
VtTAMINS
Prollle 4
LECITHIN, KELP,
B ·I..! AND VINEGAR
SlJrPLEMENT
180111be RtaU .14 MO'IWle RqU .H
$2.52 $4.60
COSMIC CABBAGE
32oz.R••S?.89 $I. 75
POPCORN
Built Only R<>C 59< lb
APPLE MUNCHIES
!I OLll"t•Ut $2.59
PHENYLALANINE s...., and Slatth f Pft 500""
SOlW!e llqSU O 90-.W. llqSl.OS
$4.17 $7.59
Where Tradition u Country Freahneu.
TUSTIN STORE
DE LI
Continental
STRAWBERRY
GLAZE
Ready to Use for Pies!
16 oz. Reg $1.29
Lascco Smoked Salmon
NOVA LOX
98~
Reg $13.95 lb $ ll.95 lb
Whipped Fresh
CREAM CHEESE
Reg $3.29 lb $2.49 lb
San Francisco's Finest
ITALIAN DRY BUON
GUSTO SALAMI
Reg$4.981b $4 .49 lb .
Norwegian
JARLSBERG
SWISS CHEESE
Reg $3.98 lb $3 .29 lb
Available at the Tustin and Newport stores
o nly!
PROVISIONS
De-Caffeinated
WHOLE BEAN
COFFEE
Breakfast Blend
Bulle Only. Reg $6.19 lb $4 .99 lb
Hansen's
NATURAL SODAS
6 pack, 12 oz.
Mandarin-Lime, Lemon-Lime, and
Grapefn.tlt.
Reg SJ.89 $1.69
YOGURT AND JUICE BAR
Strawberry
SMOOTHIES
Reg $1.55 98~
YOGURT CONES
Reg75( 59 ~
Available at the Tustin store only!
BAKERY
Homemade Irvine Ranch
Farmers Markets
100% Natural
SPROUTED WHEAT
SESAME BREAD
24 oz loaf $1.39
Homemade Jrvine Ranch
Farmers Markets
ASSORTED
ri!?~Kl~S $2.49
Prices good through Tuesday, April 20
Storr H our5: 9 om ro 9 pm. 5'wn Days
14002 Myford Road At Santa Ana Freeway
838-2851
13152 Newport Avenue At Irvine Boulevard
838·9570
COSTA MESA/NEWPORT STORE
2651 Irvine Avenue South of Mesa Drive .
631-4404
Storr Hourf: 9 om to 8 pm. ~vtn Days
•
\
J
OrMge Cout DAI.LY PILOTIWedMldey, April 14, 1982
-11114
•AIY ro UM '
REFRIGERANT "1
f.
ENERGIZED FOR LONG UfEI
EICR&l -.....
ALKALINI IAnlRllS
M SIVaM llM & IBP Ul9Y
fOI ~. ron, UDIOS,
WJBAS,nc.
"(., D''
PA• UCI
97! 12! 12!
llTllMATIC Tl I-ALL lOW COST PROTICTIOll .co•ot111 • 24 Hou• TRUNK AND ~:.::.-i A~a:.'Ci . HOOD LOCK
TIMIR W~H ~
r .... ......_,....,-'TV !fl.\ KIYS --'.,. .. ...,... \!.!,/ --.... ~ ...... ,_411 333 ·--·~ ............ _...__ ·~ ............ .....,..-.-..... .._ .._ ... -I • U...-....,__.,•-el""-' ...._ •<wootoir -. ,_ ....... -,_ ......
pola ••-" TM'-r lo W.ttal locll is -' ._., • •-f ....... -., .._w •-"-....... ,...., • ...., ...... of......., duty ,,.... • ~r ...._lot •-""t., fw ...._., -• lfO -· ..,.._ .__....,. ....,. ..
... .... • ....... Willl od ·-·-... .... .. UOI •-,,_,, IAOI .------------------.....
NIW & IX CITING ••• Al'NOXIMA,.& r FAMOUS Masi•
COMBINATION
PROTICT YOUa
VALUAILI WHllLS
•Ar1o•A1.ir ~~c·o IAMO•S .&..IC:JAl
IGNITION TUNE-UP KITS :90::· •SQ.n.
GINUINI PADLOCK McGARD•
· CHAMOIS '"~ CHROME or MAG TACHOMETER
A llOVllG
AIOI Of
UGIT TWS
YOU 1.P.M.'1
• OOOI LE WALL 222 CONSTRUCTION
e 3·NUMll.
DIALING IA. WHEEL LOCKS
• UCntNG,
UNIQUE, NEW
DESIGN oddt ....... to_, .....
·~y
ACCURATE
•.-.::==~EASY 1~ TO
LOCKING
.--... GAS CAPS
HILPS NIVINT THI THUY Of C9fTl Y GAi
A TANK OF GAS COSTS A&OUT $20. ISN'T $5.11
A SMALL INVESTMENT
llAO
uva
ACTIOll
GREASE
Gull LOADS
3 WAYS
fo ........... d.-3" littongo. o-lapo 10,000
lbt ,._ u.. .....
-or cart<iden. UCI
IAatJRY llEMAllllACTrlllD
r;?A/6'~~ CLUTCH
IEM~MJIACTUIED
RUUas MOST All~
MEOWIW OI ElK1llW
BRAKE
MASTEi CYLllDllS
Speedt ttarfine, ............. ...-lock. ttopl -• ay liiiii' '°'_..,.,"".:.UIS•-~ ·~· .<Woiloble In 12 •oft model O<lly. -fOI MOST AMllKAll & IMPOIT CAIS & TIIUCIS
l1uuuik_
'MUFFLOW
Q/STM ..ucl1B17S A Performance Muffler
Heavy duty 14: thot alto 21 • double wrap ~ •
construc'fion youi-ccv. IMI
ClllCK OIJI LOW lfllCIS Oii llSTAU.ATIDll
COVER
&PLATE
CORNELL "200"
78 SERIES
TUIEWS ILACXWAW •2299 A7a.13
'WS $1 Off r
5'11 "ICf •IO llC
M.ACI fUMUH l.U
878-13 27.99 SI .S3
C78-13 '27.99 Sl 78
C78-1"4 •29.99 Sl.68
._v9.1~ .31.99 $1.80
F78-1"4 •L23.99 S2.01
I G7S.1"4 US.99 S2 17
G78-15 l.M,99 12.26
H78-l.S $31.99 $2."43
CORNELL'7 GWIJll'QD
'.3TUalUSS3~~~
SI 51' fl
...................... c--.. ...... ~ ....... ..... ......................... ..._... ...... ......_ ..... ~ .. ..... ....... _.... ............................ -.:. ...... .__ ..
CORNELL "450"
GLASS BELTED
SPORT RADIAL
TUBELESS BLACKWALLS s29ss 15J!>al7
,lUS SI Sift!
"" H -CI flD U C
ti.AC• tuN US.S '""
1!5SR13 _ !36.99 Sl .59
165SRl3 _$38.99 Sl H
175SRl4 _1_44.99 $1 15 -185SRi4 ~6.99 S2 26
165SR15 $41.99 $1 9 1
JO MONTH LIMITED WAllANTY •
SIZE PRICE l(D fJC , ..
PREMIUM HIGHWAY T.-C
700-15 $41." -.i2ii'l
1.so.10 $65.99 $3.5"4
700-14 $44.99 $2.38
700-15 SS2.99 S3 07
G78-15 $54.99 $3 11
H78·15 $57.99 $3 39 ------HIGHWAY CAMPER -800-16 5 $62.•• S3 34
875-16.5 $66.99 $3 78
'150-16 5 ., 1.99 $4 21 --.14.ff 10-16.5 $4 42
12-16.5 •••.•• ·-------$.S.37
PREMIUM TIACTIONtn
H78·15 $60.••
TIUCK SS IV
3hl0 . .50·15
3lal1.»U
»1112.»15
NICUl'lUS
"OMM lJICllt N
t74.ff
171."
'"·"
$3.44 .
$3.92
M.49
M.90
-I -•-·
' I _..
.,
SP CIAL VALUES FOR TODAY T'HRU SUNDAY Seh1b1111111101
COSTA •SA FULLERTON GARDEN GROVE LA MIRADA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER ~~
2946 BRISTOL ST.
SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
PHONE1 !49·1'33
1530 S. HARI OR BLVD.
PHONE1 870°0700
10912 KATELLA AVE.
KATELLA l EUCLID
PHON[1 631·0163
14207 ROSECRANS AVE.
PHONE1 944·~37
120 E. FIRSt ST. AT CYPRESS
PHONE 54 7· 74 77
15221 BEACH 8LYD.
PHONE 893·8544
I•
lillJPllDt
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1982
FOR THE RECORD 03 lASSIFllD 04
tonight Tune • ID
Curfew halts Angels, Mariners at 3-3 ·
Delly Piiot Ptloloa bJ fllctlerd Kffhlef
By CURT SEEDEN Of'tbe D9lly ..... ...,
For such a joyous occasion as
the home opener of 1982, the
Angela, their guests -the
Seattle Mariners -and most of
the 33,574 In attendance were
downright party-poope rs Tues-
day night.
Before the game was over -
I and it wouldn't end until early
this morning -Angel s tarter
Geoff Zahn was gone, his eight
impressive innings of pitching
down the drain when the Mari-
ners scored the tying run in the
ninth off reliever Don Aase.
REGGIE JACKSON was
long-gone, 0-3 at the plate and
' replaced by Juan Beniquez ln the
top of the ninth. Half the crowd
had quietly slipped away as as
the contest went into the wee
hours of the night.
Even Mariners Coach Dave
Duncan had himself thrown out
of the game in the 12th inning.
And you know the funny
thing? They didn't miss much
after they left.
The Angels and Marine r s
struggled through 17 innings -
five-h ours and 24 minutes of
baseball -and when it was all
over, the teams were stiU tied at
3-3. It sounded like the final
score of a New York Giants-
Baltimore Colts football game.
Thanks to a 1 a.m. curfew , the
two teams called it a morning
and will cont .. nue this slugfest
prior to tonight"s regularly sche-
duled contest at 7:30.
''How do I -feel after a game
like this?" Angel Manager Gene
Mauch said . ''I feel tired , like
those players out there."
his way, he'd go with his third
reliever of 'I;ueaday night -
righthander Luis Sanchez, who
was breezing when the curfew
interrupted.
"The way Sanchez was thro-
wing, I'd like t.o keep it going tiU
mommg," Mauch noted.
It was the kind of game the
Angels experienced less than a
week before in Oakland, a
Ladies and gent le-
111£'11. it 's time for the
t rad it ional 141 h inning
sf retch.
Announc.r Pt.II Petty
16-inning marathon which they
finall y won. but not before It
made for some very fa tigued
travele rs who had to play in
Minnesota the following day.
Even Anaheim Stadjum orga-
nist Shay Torrent's rendition of
"Chariots of Fire" couldn't ignite
the Angels Tuesday night.
By the time the 13th. 14th and
15th innings rolled around ,
things were getting pretty silly.
But by that time, most of the
33,574' on hand were not around
to witness the yawner.
Ba re l y 6,000 fans wer e o n
hand when the Ma riners snap-
ped a 2-2 tie with a run in the top
of the 15th. Manny Casullo was
aboard on an error, Richie Zisk
singled and Angel reliever Stan
Bahnsen then walked both Al
Cowens and Jim Maler. Maler's
pass forced in the go-ahead run.
AN ATTEMPTED BREAK -Angel third Tuesday. DeCinces, who nailed Cruz with a
b$eman Doug DeCinces tries to take out good roll block, still wasn't a ble to break up the
UNAMUSED BY the standoff,•
the Angel manage r says h e
doesn't know who he'll have pick
up when the game. rseswnes in
the 18th inning tonight. lf he had
But, in tne bottom of the 15th,
Rod Carew doubled to start the
inning, and Don Baylor's groun-
der jus t did get by Ma rin e r
shortstop P a ul Serna to score
Carew and keep the co ntest
going.
S!;attle .sec~nd ba~eman Julio <;fuz during double play as the second baseman was able to
..,'r~-o_n_d_1_n_n_1_n_~_a_c_t_1_o_n_a_1_A_n_a_h_e_1m ___ S_t_a _d_iu_m __ fir_· _e_to __ fi_rs_t_to double-up Rick Burleson.
• I
f:hampagne sits,
~ings still busy
Vancouver next after huge upset
• EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) -
Th lone bottle of champagne -
t -sat ignored above the
r in the Edmonton Oilers'
room Tuesday nigh!
ere was no celebration for
· ers for the end had come
ly and painfully on the ice.
end o f a m agnificent ,
-breaking National Hockey
gue season was accepted
tly and sadly by the team
had been so dominant since
th first round of the 1981 play-off .
Fundamental errors, which
had cost the team so dearly in the
t.Wo previous playoff losses, con-
t1n u ed to plague the Oilers
Tuesday and Los Angeles Kings
g1adly accepted and converted
Lakers set
r ecords, but
l ose ball game ,
~~·"'-'"D (AP) -The Gol-& State Warriors had to dig in
p to stay alive in their race for
a estern Conference playoff
sp t Tuesday night. And al-
tb1 uah the Warriors nipped Los eles 106-101, the Lakers cer-t. ly weren't pushovers juat
Ule they've already clinched
P.WC Division.
the m into a 7-4 victory in the
decisive game of the Smythe
Division semifinal.
The Kings won tht> series 3-2
and now advance to the division
final against Varn..-ouver Canuck.s
beginning Thursday in Vancou-
ver.
"I really can't tell you what
happened, 30 giveaways in two
Sometim es j ust
switching line cornbi-
nat ions wi II do it and '
·~ure enough Simmer
p o pped in two goals
early.
King• Coach Don Perry
periods; we don't have 30 givea-
ways in.five games," said Oiler
Coach Glen Sather. "I don't
think there's any waylou can
sum up what happene except
we gave the game away; a pen-
alty, two giveaways, a rebound ·
and it's 3-1. After that we just
didn't recover."
The Kings, who finished 48
points behind Edmonton in the
Smythe Division standings and
were expected by many to bow
out in three games, scored three
goals in each of the first two pe-
riods to take the victory.
THE ANGEL fans should have
known they weren't destined to
of the Lakers achieved ae milestones Tuesday.
Magic Johnaon picked up nine
M8ista in the game making him
• third player in National Bas-
Los Angeles Coach Don Perry
switched his forward' lines before
the game and the move paid off
quickly with Charlie Simmer
scoring at 3:22 and 6:20 for a 2-0
lead.
"We were laboring a little bit
and I wanted to try in the firat
period and aee If we couldn't get
juiced up ," said Perry .
UCI hits jackpot • In Murphy
~tbell ~tion history to get ~ rebounds and 7,000 Mlista in
Oie same aeuon -Wilt Cham-
""1lain and Olcar Robert.on a1IO
t{&med the trick.
4'!. ~areem Abdul-Jabbar, who
JIQ bia club with 27 polnta, aur-
the 28,000-point muk in
13-year career. He Is eetond
-Ume 1COring to Chamber-
Wbo net1ed 31,419 points. w.mon. 44-~. are dMd-
wtth Denver cld Phoenix
be race for the final two
tern playoff bertba. They f ~~~eattle to play the ~,~.~tthls f. .. ue le JOU 1•t no Ume to
Ww &e," lt&ld Warrior auard
J'ne.L. wbo bed 20 points
. J .JS. Olrroll led all ICO-• r th. po&n-.
'Sometimes just swiiching line
comblhatlons will do it and sure
enough Simmer popped in two
goals early."
The Oilers recovered some-
what with power-play goals by
Wayne Gretzky and Paul Coffey
aandwiched around a third Loe
Ancelea goal, also on a power
play. .
But the new life that Coffey'•
aoal, acored at 19:28, gave the
OUen died qukk.ly in the aecond
period when Loe Ariceles goal-
tender Marlo Leuard ro)>bed Glenn Anderaon and Marcel
Dionne then ecored fOf' the Kines
at 1:<>8.
.. That waa the bt1 turnln1
paint," laid Simmer ln the ~btlant KJnp• dret1tn1 room.,
•
By JOHN SEV ANO °' .. .,.., .........
With t~::ft being the first day for high
school baske players to sigrl college letters of
intent, UC Irvine Coach Bifl Mulllgan got an
early bonus when the CIF 4-A Player of the
Year, jL_,kewood High's Tod Murphy .• called
Mu~ Tuaday night to announce his inten-
tions to .lttend the UCI campus.
"I told him I wu becoming an AnteateJ:,"
said Murphy Tuesday night of his phone con-
venation with Mulllgan.
"Well, it looka like we've hit the jackpot,"
uid Mull.lpn thia morning after a,ntna Murphy
at 8:1~ a.m.
Murphy'• announcement marka the etchth
verbal commitment Mulliaan and the Anteaters
have received. The UCT coach, after 1l1nln1
Murphy, aa1d he WU hopeful of allo lllnina 8-5
Mike Lopes (LA Valley), 6·5 Ken Barcfaley ,
(Coate Meaa Kiah) and 6·& Jud Beardaly
(Cypnm Collep) raw thla atwnoon.
Also making verbal commitments and ex-
pected to sign later this week are 6-3 George
Turner (Saddleback College). 6-8 Ronnie Gran-
dison (St. Bernard's High) and 6-1 Michael
Beans (Long Beach CC), who told Mulligan of
his intentions Tuelday, too.
In Murphy, however, Mulligan may have
captured hls biggest nugget. The 8-9, 205-pound
poetman, with a 3.8 grade point averaae and a
16-3 court averaae. led the Lancen of Lakewood
to the CIF 4-A championship thia put aeuon,
defeattna Inglewood in the final, 82-70.
"I think it'• the best ptOlram for me and it'a
IOlng to be a auooemf ul pt'OIJ'UD fot awhile,•• Mid
Murphy. "Plus, I liked the coechee a lot."
. Murphy Mid be had narrowed his cllOlcee to L0na Beech State, UC Santa 'Barbara, USC and
&nta Clara before deddlna on UCl.
"lt wu really a toqh declalon," Murphv
added. "I liked Santa Barbera and USC 1 Jot.""
There were jUJt a lot more proe than cona ln
.,&na to UCI.
•
' (
leave quite yet. One inning ear-
lier, public address announcer
Phil Petty awakened them with:
"Ladies and gentlemen, h's time
for the traditional 14th Inning
stretch."
Actually, 'Tuesday night and
this morning's g&me> may weU be
remembered as the night and day
Aase became a long reliever. The
so-called short ma n could have
made it a sho rt night had he
d isposed of the Mariners in the
ninth with the Angels holding on
to a 2-1 lead.
He started off well enough
getting Mariner DH Zisk to hit
into a double plar after Thad
Bosley had ope ne d the ninth
with a single off Zahn. But Aase
then gave up back-to-back sin-
gles to Cowens and Maler, and
Jim F&ian followed with an RBI
double to send the game into
overtime today.
And when the Angels, who
had eight hits through the first
rune innings, stiU had just eight
hits by the time the 15th roUed
around, it was obvious this was,
indeed, gomg t.o be a long night.
Aase. meanwhile , was some-
what flabergasted at the Mariner
uprising in the ninth.
"I made three good pitches,"
Aase said . "Thc.y had two jam
shots and one off the end of the
bat and came out with two sin-
gles and a double. What else can
I say?"
"THE THREE hits off Aase
made me .sick,''.....added Mauch.
Aside from the Angels' cont-
inued lack of aggression at the
plate, things went quite smoothly
through the early going, with
Zahn pitching trouble-free in-
nings.
He pitched to just one batter
over the limit through the first
four innings, but a sudden burst
of wildness in the fifth paved the
way for the Mariners' first run.
Zahn had walked Cowens and
Essian and then gave up an RBI
sin~l e to cente r -fielder Dave
ISee ANGE~, Page 03)
Dodge r s
top Astros
in slugfest
HOUSTON (AP) -The Dod-
gers got run-scoring singles from
Steve Garvey and Steve Yeager
and a sacrifice fly by Ron Cey in
the first inning and went on to
defeat the Houston Astros, 9-5.
Tuesday night.
After Houston trimmed the
lead to 3-2 in the bottom of the
first, Dusty Baker's two-run ho-
mer off loser Bob Knepper, 1-1,
made it 5-2 in the second.
Bob Welch, 2-0, was the win-
ner. He allowed two runs a nd
four hits.
Steve Sax opened the ~ame
On TV tonight
channel 11 at 5:30
with a single and was forced at
second by Ken Landreaux. After
Baker singled, Landreaux scored
on Garvey's s ingle and Baker
came home on Cey's fly ball.
After a s ingle by Pedro Guer-
rero, Yeager's hit brought Gar-
vey home with the third run.
In the bottom of the (irst, Phil
Gamer walked, Terry Puhl sin-
gled, they advanced on Tony.
Scott's grounder and scored on a
single by Jose Cruz.
Sax beat out an infield hit in
the Dodgers' second and one out
later Baker ham.mered the first
pitch from Knepper into the left
field mezzanine for his second
home run of the year.
The Dodgers added two runs
in the seventh off Vern Ruhle.
They loaded the bases on a dou-
ble by Garvey and walla to Cey
and Guerrero. Garvey was nailed
at the plate on Mike Scioecia'a
grounder, but Houston catcher
Alan Ashby threw wildly to lint
tryina to complete a double play
arid Cey acored. Guerrero acored
on Bill Russell'• grounder to
third when the Aatroa again
failed t9 turn a double play.
. Houston got a nm in the eev-
enth on Kiko Garcia'• double but
the Dodcen matched that ln the
ei1hth when Su: walked, atole
eecond, moved to third on Lan·
dreawc' p-oundm-and acored on
pinch bluer ~Orta'• mcrllke by.
A two-nan homer by Nbt1J off
Alejandro Pena ln .......... ol
the •lchth IMCI• it a.a and -. Jlocll9n aot a run In tht....,.
Sdoldl'• RBl .....
II
I
•• Orange Coat DAILY PlLOTIWednteday, Aprll 14, 1082
Ir'!'--------~----------""""!•
Thi caller got
more than score
From AP dl1paltbe1
BECKLEY, W. Va. -For 18 months, Joe
Koch and Melanie Hall Were ju.~t lonR m
distance voices In the night. 1 Koch, a Beckley sports writer, I
would supply Ms. Hall, a West Virgi-
nia sports fan living in Canada, with the scores of
her favorite team.
Fascinated by her dedication to a southern
West Virginia basketball team, the Seeley PO!it-
Herald, lhe newspaper Koch worked for, flew
her to Mullens to see the Mullens High School
Rebels play .
And that sparked a whirlwind romance that
resulted an their engagement. The two plan to
wed th IS summer.
Ms. Hall became an avid Mullens fan when
she was an undergraduate student at Marshall
University m Huntington, W. Va .. where she
worked in the basketball coaches' office. Her
interest conbnued even after she graduated and
returned home to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
She began calling the Post-Herald to get the
Rebels' S<.'Ores, and Koch usually would answer
the phone. Eventually, their conversations cove-
red more topiL-s than just high school basketball
and they began to ask about each other's perso-
nal lives
Quebec deals Montreal a stunner
Dale Hunler poked home a re-~ bound during a goalmouth scramble ,
just 22 seconds into overtime, giving ·
Quebec a 3-2 victory over Montreal in
,its hfth and final game of their National Hockey
League playoff series Tuesday night. The victory
sends the Nordiques into the quarterfinal rountf
of the Stanley Cup playoffs against Boston
Thursday . . In another playoff game, ·John
Tonelli scored at 6: 19 into overtime as the New
York Islanders survived their confrontation with
Pittsburgh with a 4-3 decision. The Islanders will
now play the New York Rangers.
o'onaldson's tree throws llft Seattle
Jam11 D0Hld1oa hit a palr ot m
frM LhroW11 wt th one -=and leh to Ult
SMttle JIM\ Portland, 88~80 .. ro htah·
Uaht NBA. action Tu.day n.taht ...
lriewhett, Doll Colllal .ccna • ~-h.lah 32
polnta and Spaffr Kaywood added l3 of nta 21
In the • cond half, leading Wa1bington to a
109-99 vicfory Ovt'r MUwauk Mike Brah
ICOrt!d LO ol hi.a 14 poln1.a 1n the final period to
key a late rally that carried
San Antonio past Denver,
144·137 ... Houtton'1 Mike
Dunleavy'• three-point aoal
with four minutes left 1park
ed the Rockett to a come-
from-behind 99-95 decision
over Kan.au City . . . Deani1
Jobnaoo scored 13 of his 26
points ln the first quarter as
DONALOI Phoenix took COmm.lllld early °" and rolled to a 105-94
triumph of San Diego ... RonoJe Leiter hit 12
consecutive free throws during lhe last 3 1~ mi-
nutes and Dwight Jonea hit five baskets down
the stretch to lead Chicago to a 120-115 victory
over Boston .. ltay Williama scored 12 of his
game-high 37 points in the third quarter as New
Jersey edged New York, 104-102 ... Bobby
Jone. and Lionel HolllD1 each scored 14 points to
help Philadelphia dump Indiana, 93-89 . . Dan
Rouadfield and Mike Glenn each scored 26 points
to spark Atlanta to a 119-111 victory over Cle-
veland.
Quote of the day
"Opening day is like Christma&-<>nce
you've lost it, it's hard to recapture." -
Mike McClure, vice president of marketing
for the Chicago White Sox, summing up the
arctic-like weather which postponed sev-
eral games during baseball's opening week.
Braves keep the string going
Bruce Benedict'• two-run single •
in the seventh inning snapped a tie
and lifted Atlanta to its seventh con-
secutive victory, an 8-5 triumph over
Cincinnati to highlight National League action
Tuesday . . Elsewhere, Dave Kingman slugged
a three-run homer and the New york Mets de-
feated Philadelph1a ace Steve Carlton for the
second time in six days with a 5-2 victory in their
home opener . . . Onie SmUb led off the top of
the ninth inning with his second major league
home run and his Hrst since 1978, providing the
winning run as St. Louis edged the Chicago
Cubs, 4-3 . . Rookie AJan Fowlkes pitched six
'Strong innings for his first major league victory
and veteran Reggie Smllh hit a tie-breaking,
two-run double as San Francisco won its home
opener against San Diego, 3-2 .
Home rune lead A' 1 put Twine
Duay Meyer h.lt two homo ruN Ill
and Davey Lope. and Jim Spencer
added one aplet"e u O.k.land pounded '
. M.innaoca, 8-3, to hJahliaht American
L.ea1ue action Tuetday nlaht ... &la wbere,
Hal McRae C"t'ACht.'d bue four t.lrne8 and doubled
to key a five-run rally In the llfth inning. l~ KaNu City to a 6-6 decl.aion over Baltimor .
Mike Mor1aa, bolat.ered by Loa PlDleJla'1 two.-
run homer and Riel Cerone'• eolo 1hot, nu.de a
1ucce11ful pitching debut for the N ~w York
Yankees u they beat Tcxu, 6·3 ... Jack Mor-
rtl pitched a four-hitter and Detroit acored two
runa in the elahth lnnl!'a on a throwing error by
Toronto relief pitch"r Dale Murray u the Tigen
edged the Blu• Jaya, 4·2 ... CllarUe Moore H-
ned a one-out tingle to etore Paul Molltor ln the
top of the 10th Inning to give Milwaukee a 9-8
victory over Cleveland.
Weinhauer gets ASU basketball post
University of Pennsylvania basket· •
ball coach Bob Weinbauer was named
head basketball coach at Arizona
State University. His appointment
ended speculation that the post might go to
Pepperdlne's Jim Herrick . Ron Franklin,
who rode Spectacular Bid to victories in the 1979
Kentucky Derby and Preakness stakes, was ar-
rested with two oth ers Tuesday a t Keeneland
Race Course in Kentucky and charged with
transfer of cocaine ... The Tampa Bay Bucca-
neers denied that the recent trade of linebacker
Dewey Selmon to San Diego was related to hlB
status as a union officer ... Former heavy-
weight boxing champion Jack Dempsey was
reported in satisfactory condiuon after having a
heart pacemaker implanted, according to his wife
. . . Commissioner Jake Gaudaur a nnounced
that notice has been served with the Canadian
Football League's nine teams that could lead to
the revocation of the Montreal Alouettes fran-
chise.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: v v v v excellent. v v v
worth watching;, v v fair: v forget it.
II 5:30 p.m ., Channel 11 v v v
DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at Houston.
A.nnoucera: Vin Scully and Ross Porter.
Fernando Valenzuela (1 -0) goes against former
Dodger Don Sutton (0-1 ).
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Houston, 5:15 pm,
KABC <f90). Seattle at Angels, 7 25 pm .. KMPC
(710).
Basketball -Utah at Lakers, 7:20 p.m .. KLAC
(570).
Bu cs 9-5
Gauchos lose to Palomar
Orang~ Cout acorl'd four lirnrl ln I.he IOp ol
the 10th lnnlng nd went on to peel a 9-~ 80bt.h
Cout Conft•rt'OCU 00.CbuU victory over h08t Mt. San
Antonio C.Ollea~ Tut'eday af\Crnoon
In another aame, Saddl ~k'a Gauchos fell to
Palomar College, 7-3 ln Mt.Jon Conference oc"lion.
Here's how It went. ,
Or•DG• Oout t, Mt. Ian Antonio 5
Freshman pitcher .Robb MuNOn picked up the
victory for the Pirates after they scored four lime.
in the top of th • tenth Inning. Munaon came on In a
relief role In the eighth to pick up hia &ee0nd win.
He alao has gevrn S.'\V{~ :md sporta an impressive
0.68 ERA.
Dave Tinoco hit a t.nple to right-center field
with the bases loaded and one out in the lOth to ~t
the hrst three runs across and 1t waa aU over.
Jeff Brown was 3-fol'6 with two RBI while
Rick Hopkins had hts 22-game hitung streak ended.
Palomar 7, Saddleback 3
The Gauchos out-rut Palomar but c.'Ouldn't get
the safeties at the right lune and as a rcsul\. fell to
9-3 m Mission Conrerence action
Palomar started wllh u run m the top of the
first inning and arter the Gauchos ued the score in
their half of the rrume, sc:orcd two more to go in
front to stay.
Randy Cumming had a pair of doubles in four
tnps to the plate Mark Swanc.oot and Mark Henkel
each were 2-for-4 wh1ll' Bob Gray was 2-for-3 for
the Gauchos.
Saddleback is hosting Southwestern College in
another Mission Conferem.'t.' game tb.is aft.cmoon .
UCI explodes, 16-5
The UC lrvine baseball team tagged the Univer-
sity of San Diego's Glenn Godwin with only his
second loss of the season as the Anteaters exploded
for 19 hats en route to a 16-5 Southern California
Baseball Association victory over the Toreros
Tuesday.
Godwin, who entered the game with a 9-1 record,
was staked to an early 2-1 lead but couldn't hold ii
as junior third baseman Mike Rupp blasted a
three-run homer an the third inning to give UCl a
4-2 lead
The Tort.•ros (20-12-1 overall, 4-3 1n SCBA) came
back to tie the scort.> at 4-4 m the top of the fourth
before the Anteaters (22-16-1. 5~4l put the game
away with two more runs m the bottom of the fifth.
Andy Bisnar went the first eight innings for UCl
to improve tus record to 6-2. Rupp finished with a
4-for-5 performance at the plate. including six RBI.
Dave Ghck and Darren Kelchner also had three hits
E"ach
Oilers making things sticky Ill Sunset League •
Huntingt on Beach baseball reaches Top 10 plateau under hand o.l Mike Dodd.· Edison prohe near conclusion
Aside from the current campaign, in which the
Huntington Beach High Oilers are resting in the No.
10 slot of the CIF 4-A baseball rankings. would
someone please come forth with information on the
last time the Oilers were so recognized?
I'm not going to hold my breath.
PREP SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON Doormats, with the exception of a brief period
from time to time, the Oilers' stock in baseball has
risen so fast, n's still hard to really consider them as
a bonafide contender.
But that's exactly what they are as they head
mto tonight's 7 o'clock venture with Marina at-Blair
F ield in Long Beach, followed with Edison Satur-
day night (7) at Mile Square Park in Huntington
Beach.
And, we got some help for Gary Buckets (the Oilers'
ace on the mound)."
"Our kids are excited,'' says Coach Mike Dodd,
who has seemingly transformed thlS club to a power
overnight. "But we realiz.e there is a lot of work
ahead of us."
Brian Patrick and Barry Beard, who usually
reside at first base and center field, respectively,
have added their talents to the pitching rotation,
and along with the anticipated play of catcher Greg
Shirley. the blend has become one of those com-
binations that just keeps workirul.
F.ciison, for instance, IS 16-2 and the CIF 4-A's
No. 2 team, as opposed to H1.:!1tington Beach 's 13-3
record and No. 10 rating. The two began this week
in a deadlock for the league lead with 6-1 records.
. "Winning against St. Paul and &Jperanz.a early
were keys for us," says Dodd. "Once we started
winning ... "
"What has really helped is the fact we did a lot
of work early in the season at key positions," ex-
plains Dodd. who was par' of Westminster High's
CIF 4-A championship success a year ago.
Baseball is a funny thing -there really isn't
much difference from a team like Huntington
Beach and that of Ocean View, which is in the
Sunset League basement.
The razor thin edge is described by Huntington
Beach Athletic Director Dave Van Hoorebeke.
• "We moved Greg De Valk from second to short
because of his arm. lt's one of the best anns around.
"They (the Oilers) are making the plays
defensively,'' says the HB athletic director. "There
Chargers, Barons • win
CdM, Uni, Warriors also post victories
The Chargers of F.c11son High nee-was 4-for-5, while teammate Fred
ded to work overtime Tuesday to de-Tuttle was 3-for-4. '
feat Westminster to highlight prep '
baseball action. CdM 13, Eatencle 1
In other sames, Fountain Valley The Sea Kings (5-1) kept their hold
outslugged Ocean View; Corona del on first place in the Sea View League
Mar pounded Estancia; University ed-by touching the Eagles (2-3-1) for
ged Newport Harbor in a pitcher's seven runs in the first two innings
duel; and Woodbridge stopped the and then coasting from there.
Norte Vista junior varsity. CdM's Dave Rohde went the first
Here's what happened: six innings, striking out three and
Edlaon 4, Weatmlnatar 2 scattering one run and three hits to
The Chargers (7-1) scored two runs improve his season record to 5-0.
in the top of the lOt,ti inning to move a The senior right-hander was also
half-game in front of Huntin~ton 2-for-5 at the plate with a double and
BASEBALL
Beach m the Sunset League stan-
dings.
Charue Guest opened tl)e 10th in-
ning for Edison with a single and was
promptly sacrificed to second by John
Emma. Steve Overeem ~n hit a slow
roller to the right of t~ mound itl .
which the second baseman fielded it
and then threw It away, aUowlng
Guest to•break the 2-2 deadlock.
Mike DeBeJ'on fo))owed with a
walk and Joe Kwolek forced Overeem
at third bue before Tim Leavey pro-
vided an inaurance tally with a single
to a'Ore DeBenon.
l'tn. V...., 10, OoMn View 7
Gres.Arnold drove In a run to
break a 7.7 de in the ~P ~f the sev-
enth, and the Barona~ two more
fnaurance talll~• to defeat the Sea-
hawb (1·7) In Sun.t Leacue p]ay.
DIM Robena i.d the &ron11 (3--6)
a.ttllcll M hi wmt 3-far-3 at the pa.t.e
wtdl w.. """9CIONd and thra RBI..
He allD bJlprovwd hJa ~lO ..wf\
OQM.:\ldW hi• ln .
For 0c .. n Vtew~ n lt.anley
triple. The big stick was provided by
Gordon Moss as the junior second
baseman was a perfect 4-for-4 with
two home runs and five RBI.
CdM's Dave Ariss and Scott Loos
also accounted for two hits apiece,
while teammate Brent Melbon had a
two-run homer.
Uni 1, Npt. Harbor 0
The Trojans (3-2 in league) got
their only two hits and the only run of
their Sea View League contest with
the Sailors (1-5) In the second inning.
Junior left fielder Mike Frei dou-
bled to right to get thino going. He
then took third on a wild pitch and
scored when aophomore catcher Gra-
ham Everett singled to left.
Senior right-hander Orea Eber·
hardt protected the leed unur he ran
Into troUble ln the 11xth lnnlng. Fol·
lowb,, a lltrikeou.t, the Sallon 109ded
the buel on two erron and a aUlaJe.
Den Vaaloo came on to relieve Et>er·
hardt and cloaed lh'e rally wHh •·
IU'ikeout and • popup.
............ 1, ....... Vl9te "' •
Tbe Warrton tmprowd their record
to 4· ll for the '"'°" with a non·
leque victory tNtt the )INDr' vlll'llty
ol Rorte Vilt&.
LEADS MES~ -
Mark Arnold sparkled
Tuesday.
Oilers win
dual title
Huntinfton Beach
Beach Highs men's track
team won the Sun set
League dual meet cham-
pionship as the Oilers
heated Westminster.
92-39, to highlight prep
track action 'Tueiday.
.(n another meet,
Newport Harbor raced
put Irvine, 80~56.
Keith Mlttermete r
poaU!d a double ln win·
nina the h1gb )unf ($-8)
ancf Jona )&m.P <2 -4) to
lead the Oilers. Alao
dolna well In lhe field
even&a wu Carl Satte·
o.kl. who won the triple
jump at 41-4.
Mike 8ruu doubled
In &he low and bl1h
hu.rdlas.
aren't many miStakes ... that's the quality 1 see
instilled in this team."
And, maybe, the Oilers have that hungry fee-
ling -like the Lions rud at Westrrunster a year ago. • • •
An interesting aspect of the JUst completed
"investiga~ion" into alledged misdeeds by F.ciison
High figures involving their highly successful
footbalJ program is noted by Huntington Beach
District Superintendent Jake Abbott.
"If you'U recall," says Abbott. "the unsigned
letter accusing Edison of all these thJngs said if an
investigation was held there would be several peo-
ple who would come forth, but no one did other
than those subpoenaed
IF "The administrative law judge finished inter-
viewing all of the 40 witnesses a week ago (each
separately with only the court recorder present) and
we expect to have something to us within two
weeks."
Any second thoughts for the district about all
th1S probing over an unsigned dossier?
"No, there are no second thoughts," says Ab-
bott. "Unfortunately a lot of people want to believe
something is wrong and any internal investigation
would have just been viewed as a white wash. This
way, at least the district won't be accused'."
• • • Interviews begin on Monday for the head
Vik es perfect
CM, Eagles keep winning • Marina High!s volleyball team kept its record
perfect in Sunset League play with a straight set
win over Ocean View to highlight action Tuesday
In other play, La Q'uinta downed Fountain
Valley in other Sunset League contest. In the Sea
View League, Costa Mesa and E.citancia kept pace
with each other with three-game victories over
VOLLEYBALL
Corona de) Mar and Woodbridge, respectively .
University also had little trouble in beating Irvine.
On the South Coast League scene. Laguna
Beach handily defeated Mission Viejo, while Dana
Hills had a tough five-game Sf't with San Clemente
before pulling out a decision.
The Vikings (6-0) got strong play off the bench
from Randy Bague and Tim Grangruth. The Sea-
hawks' record dropped to 3-3, with two of those
losses against Marina.
Ric Weissinger, a junior outside-hitter, led La
Quinta as the Aztec:s (4-2), with the win. moved into
BLUE CHIPS Ocean View's Jim Usev1t.ch
(left) is headed for BYU; P at Roberts 1s a
candidate for Mater De1 High vacancy.
basketball JOb at Mater Dea High where the Mon-
archs are trying to f ill the hole left by Bill
Alexander. who was asked to step down after two
years.
Athletic Director Bob Gonzales says he ts look
mg for a replacement as an on-campus teacher. but
wouldn't entirely rule out a walk-on.
"If John Wooden applies, we'll take him," says
Gonzales.
Maybe if the Monarchs want to return to better
things they should turn to what got them there -
like Jerry Tardie . . or Pat Roberts .
• • •
Fountain Valley tennis star Leo Capulong isn't
letung anything as mmor as a broken arm stop him
-the Barons senior is playing with a cast on his left
arm, and off of the Barons' winning ways, it's ob-
vtously hardly slowing him down.
• • • CHECKING AROUND Ocean View High's
Jim Usevitcb, a 6-9 1h All-CIF basketball stand-
out, will attend Brigham Young University ...
Former Edison High distance star Jon Butler , a
freshman, Is UCLA's leading 1,500 meters runner
with a 4:44.6 clocking. He's No. 2 in 5,000 meters
with a 13:55.7 effort, having qualified for the
PAC-10 meet ln both events ... The winner of the
Lionel Purcell Memorial scholarship award at Edi-
son High is Tim Leavey, the son of former coach
Don Leavey (and if you knew PurceU and the
Leavey clan. it figures). .Ed Adams and Dave
Clark, a couple of Mission Viejo assistant football
coaches, are in the ruruung for the vacancy at La-
guna Hilla High, but if either is to replace Olld
Gallo, he'll have to hurdle a heavyweight from the
ranks of the Sunset ~e.
a second place tie with the Barona (4-2). r:::::::::::;;;;::::::::::::::::======:;:;::-1
The Mu1t.angs (8-1) got 28 kills from senior -rhe Skiing's Gf'4St middle-bJocker Mark Arnold to dispoee of the Sea ' 1 g'
Kinp (6-3). &nior setter Paul Coenen a18o had a FLY 1 /
good game for Mesa. '··' ~ The Eagles (8-1). with tenior outside-hitter Bill AIR IRVllll ~ Sieker leading the way, had Utt.le t.roUble in beating ·~ ••
winlett (0·9) Woodbridge. TO MAMMOTH .,.,
At for UnJversity, a trlo of Trojans led the-. '~
onalaujrhl u 1enior middle-blocker Jamie Gregg (17 from John Wayne Airport ~
killa), eenJgr middle.blocker Chria M~9 kills)
and lmioc' eetter Eric Hallinan all pJ eo.c.h
Mike Pwitz with their perfonnanc-.
"lt wu a total te&m etfort," aa1d Purhz. "We
played real well as• team."
The Trojans are now 6~3 while lrvlne dropped to 44."
Dana HWa <•·l) kept ln the hu.nt tor the South a-t lAM\.w dtle wi'1\ a hud-fqht. five-.t wtn
onr Ian l:l.men\e (S·2). Senior mkklle-bloctutr
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n. preceded by conclu1ton 01 1u1p1nded geme
Mllw1ukee (\/uckovich 1-0) et C .. vel•nd
(Denny G-01
Chicago (Trout 0-01 al Boston (Rl!My G-0) 0.lrOH (Perry 0-11 al Toronto (Goll 0-01. n
New Y0<k (Pocetla 0-01 al Te•u (Hough 1-0). n
Belllmore (McGregor 0-1111 Kansu City
(Leonatd 1-11. n
01klanc:t (McCa11v 1.1)1 at M1nne101a
(Haven1 1-01. n
Nlllonal L11gu• w .. t•rn OM1fon
W L Pel 011
Allilnla
Dodgen
I 01000
• 'l bl'i< 2
San r r ~rx1!M.o ~ J soo j'
Houc.ton
C1<H..u1na11
San Ooegc.
'.J 5 375 411
2 !o lft6 ~
t • lQO
l!1t1ern Dl•lt lon
New YOik 4 2 661 Mon1<4K1I 2 I 6b 7
SI lOulS 4 3 51 t Cll•C~ J • 419
Po11s1>urgn t l l3J 1 .
Pholodelphld I 4 100 'J'
Tue1dey'1 Sc0< ..
Dodgere 9 Huv5IOll 5
Potlsburgh at Morweal 1>11<1 111111
NPW YOtk '> Pllolucfolphll\ l
SI L 1)<.11$ 4 C.hoea90 3
Sun FI an<.•SCO 3 San o ... 'qt •
Atlanta 8 Ct0c.;mnat1 !J
Too1r'• Oame• Dodgen 1VelPnll.1el11 t 01 •I t1Uu\tor
1Su11on O 11 n
Atlanta tA<J<NS ' 0) 81 L1n(.1nn1t11 •P1t•U,..,
I 01 l'<1is1>urgr1 t~ulomun O 01 JI Mon11~•
1AoqP" I 01
P h1h•CJf.?l&Jtl1a (Ruth'#Ult I) ,, ,,, Nttw vor•
1Sco11 0-11 SI LOuo• (R1nton 0 01 JI Lho<.Of u tJ1•11~ on•
I-Ill '> 1n O•l!ilO ILOll81 0 01 "I San I ranr.•S(I
1l><.hol11etJ~• 0 Ii n
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Anget• 3, Mart~ 3
IEATT\.I! CAUFOANlA
.Orhbl .Orhbl J Cruz 2b a 0 I 0 OowlW>Q,U 4 0 0 0
M.C .. ld.3b8 I 2 0 Clatlo.,H 4 0 0 0
Bochll,11 4 0 I 0 Lynn.cf 7 0 0 0 eo.t.y,11 4 0 I 0 Car-lb 6 1 2 0
Zlsll.c:th 7 o 2 O ~ Jdlsn.rt 3 o o o
Randle.pt 0 0 0 0 Benlquz,r1 3 0 0 0
C-1,rl 5 2 1 0 Grtcn,2b 5 0 I 0
Maler. lb 8 O 1 1 J Moren.pt o o O o
E.ujan,c 6 0 2 I Foll,2b I 0 0 0 D Hndsn.ct 3 0 3 1 Beytor.dh 1 I 3 I sim.,_.,c1 3 o 1 o DeCnc1,3b 15 1 2 1
T Cruz,18 2 0 0 0 Bu<lean.11 4 0 I 0
Strglltr.ph 1 0 0 0 Boone.c 4 O 1 1 s........ 3 0 0 0
Te>1111 60 3 15 3 Totlls s. 3 10 3 k0t•bf._..... s .. 1111 ooo 010 001 ooo 001 oo-3 Celllornla 010 010 000 000 001 00 3 a.me ,..~ eHer 17 1nnioos due 10
curtew
E -FOii, Bahnsen DP -See111e 2, Cel·
ilornle 4 LOB -Sullle 14 C111fornt1 13
2B OeC•nces Boone. 8a'tlOt Carew SB
-Cue ... B1ylor. J Cruz S -T Crur
S...rleson. Boone ::. ll~. Beo1quez
... Ille IP H R EA 118 10 Betti~ 5 4 2 2 I :>
And¥son 2.., 2 0 0 3 I
\/andeBll<g "1 O u I I
Slanloo '" o 0 0 0 0 Caudtn 2 I 0 0 2 ?
NUMl 6 ?1125
Clllllomle
Z..hn 8 5 121
..... 11 7 I 2 5 8lhnM<1 ,., 2 0 2 0
Slnchez 1~ 1 0 0 0
Zenn pOChed 10 1 belle< In 1hl 9m
Caudltt pltcneo to 2 batleo '" •ho 12m
T -S 24 A -33.574
Angel e.erag••
BATTINO
Al Ill H
Bot>oy Clark 2 1 2
Rod Car-23 e..,:llio
Joe Ferguson 5 1 2
Fred Lynn 23 !> 8
Doui! OeClnees 23 5 1
Brt1n 0own1no 25 2 6
Bot> Boone I! I 5
Tom FOli 24 2 4
Reggie Jackson ?4 0 • AICk Burlflsorl 27 3 4
Juen Ben!Quw 8 O 1
Oon Baylor 24 2 2
JoM MorlOO 0 0 0
Deryt Scolllef t 1 0 0
Bobt>y OrlCh 0 0 O
TOlllS 223 27 55
PfTCHINO
Hfl 111111 Pct. 0 1 1000
0 3 435
0 0 400
0 1 348
2 7 .304 2 4 216
0 1 278
0 1 117
0 1 167
0 2 148
0 2 12!>
0 1 083
0 0 000
0 0 .000
0 0 000
4 2S 247
Sten BllhnMn aeon z111n AnOyHISSler
SleYe Aenlco
Oon Aeae Brwe Kbon
Ken F~
LullSancMz
Ange4 Mor.no
Mike Witt
IP H 88 10 W~ Ell• 1~ t I 0 0-0 0 00
11 4 1 4 1-0 0 00
2 1210-0000 9 6 1 3 1-0 1 00
1 18 40-1129
4 8020-0225
19•, 9 3 s 0-1 2 78
3 • 1 3 1-0 3 00
• 8 1 3 0-1 3 00
2f,\ 3 3 1 0-0 10 13
To1111 63 45 22 29 3-3 2 08
.,_.no,....._.,
Mllweullee 131 300 000 1-9 18 3 ciev.nc1 202 011 200 o-8 11 1
lMCh, Be1n11d (8), fingers (7) end Sim·
mon1. Yott (II), Sorenaen. Su1c11ne (4), l•
w111yn (41. Splllner ( 101 eod Bando, w -
flngera. 1· 1 L -Lewellyn. O· I HAt -
Mllweullee. Youol ( 11 C""'9111ld, H•rrlh 121.
ThOnlon 2, 12). A -8,251
TlfW•4,---2 Oelrolt 000 011 020-4 11 I
Toronto 000 200 000-2 4 3 M orrie end Wockenlun. 8omb1ck. J
M<ll.8ugllfin 181. Murrmy (II lf'd Whitt W -Mome. 1 1 l -Murrey, 0.1 A -10,087
.,..,._,...._...
..... York 000 S20 010-8 9 0
TIUI 100 001 100-3 9 1 Morpan, f'fazllr (71. OoeMQI (I) ...cl C.
..-. ~ti. OlnM (8) and Suncltllrg W -~,1..0 L-~t.0-1 S -~ 1). HAI -New YOl'lt, Plnlelle 1 , Cit-(1 Te .... P\/ttlll'll (1) A T 21.~~.
_,... .. o......
llaltll!!Of• 010 130 000-& 10 0
K.,,_ City 000 061 0011-I 11 0 ~ ...... ,.....,, (5) Md ~ Our•
Ffe91(&}.~(n llfld, ..... W -flrOll. 1.0. L -8-.rt, H . -Oulter>-
HrtY (lj. HAe -81tllmor1. -..im •Y (2),
Aoelti• Q). " -19.112
2 2 2 I 0 0 2 I 0
0 0 0
2 7 3 3 2
5 3 • 3 4
....... PNllMe 2
PhlledefPhil 010 000 010 2 7 0
New Y0<k 000 230 00.-5 9 2
Calllon Aeoi<I 171 Ind Ole.z • .ion., Lynch (8~ Allen If) end St .. tnl W -Jonee. 2-0 L
-Cartloo, 0·2 S Allen (2). HA New
York K1nomen 121 A A0,845 •
C~Mh4,Cwbe3
SI Lout1 100 011 001-4 tO 1
Chtcaoo 100 oo 1 oo 1 3 e 3
AndU)tl. Sun .. (Ill and P0t11r. Miltz, L
Smlll't (51 Tldrow (I I Hernander (ti) end
0.Vls. W Andujat. 1-1 L -MllU, 0-1 S Sutler 121 HA -SI LOUii, 0 Smllh ( 1) A
-&,472
Glenfl 3. p-2
S1t1 Olego o 10 001 000-2 9 0
San Fraoctaco 012 000 OOx-3 7 1
MooleluKO Boone 1«11. Curlis (7). Chtner
181 and Kennedy. Fowllo.n Minion (7) •nd
May W Fowlhee, 1-0 L -Montefusco 0-2 S Minton ( 1) A 40,527
lreVff I , Recfl 5
Allanta 000 J 10 301-8 11 1 Clnctnnelr 000 122 000-5 14 0
C&#Mty Ha11na (4), MGWlll1ams (St. G61'bll
(61 anc:t BonedlCI, Srtlrley Edelen tS). Ketn
(71, l111b1tlndl (7). Hume 191 and O'Befry W
Gerber l·O L -Kern O· I HR Al
t1n1a. Murpny (41 A -11,848
Cati.a.
UC ln<tne 11. unn.eniho ot a... o-5 Un<• ot s Oleg<> 002 200 010-s a 1
VC llVIM 103 021 45•-II 19 2
Godwin, Wlll1arna (61. Ttreahuk <71. Can· neoy (81 Rufe (81. CemmeJI (&I end Sc1ecco.
Lofgren 181 BISlllt, Ruther 19) Ind Bernard
W-Bosner 1e-21 l -Go«Jwln (9·2)
2B-Nagypol IUSOI. Glock (UCI), Trinidad
IUCll. Cummings (UCI). Kalch""' (VCll. B1t· nerd (UCll 3B-Ybarr1 (UCI) Haworth
1uc11 Tomlrnson (USO) Nagypot tUSDJ
HA-Rupp IUCll
SCBA tlendlngt
PepPt!f dine W L Gii
ll I
C11 St FullMon
UC Irvine 6 3 2''> s • s•.; Un'-Slly OI Sen Oteoo
UC San11 Berbara
CllSI LOSA~es LoyOle
4 3 3., s 4 3''>
Long Beech SI
Frtde1'10-
Cal SI Fulle<loo al UC lrvlne
s 6 8 6
7 7
Cal SI Los AngtleS 111 Long Beech SI
uni-si1y of San Oteoo •t UC San•• Ber
b1ta (doul>l4H1e-)
Seor•• UC R1va,.1de 10 Cal Stale Oom1n11uez
HUIS 2
Coepman 9. UCLA 6
San OlegO SI 6, USIU I use s 1.ev.,,,e 2
Alul8 Pec1llC 3, 8fOla 0
Southern Celltornta con.ve 1 Pe>1n1 Lorne
3 Cal Slate Nor11111<19e 3, Cal POiy Pomona
1
Community eotlege
Pelotft1t 7, aeddlet>ec1I f
Peiomat 120 200 10 I 7 7 1 Seodlllblcil 100 00 I 100 3 IQ 4
App1ega11 and L•ndreth. Bry1n1, Bou
dreau (7) end In.in w Appleglle. L -
Bryant 2B -Hehn \SI Swancoet ISi Py-brot~1 IPI 3B Cumm'"IJ 2 (S)
Or11ft99 Coeel t, Mt. a.,, Antonio 5
Orange CoaJl 210 020 000 4-9 11 3
Ml San Antonio 10 I 102 000 0 s I I 2
Sanloro. Kellogg (6), Munson 18) end
Pusker1cn V1n11nd Proctor 1101 end Con·
tllnllno W-Munson (2 11 L \/lnsand
13-1) JB-Ttnoco COCCI HA Turney
(MSACI
STANDINGS
South Co11t Conference
W L 08
Cemtot 1 2
Or11no• Coas1 8 2 '" Senti An• 5 4 2
San Oleg<> Mesa 3 3 2'•
Fullerlon 3 4 3
Groasmon1 t 5 4'• Ml San Antonio l 8 5
Tode1'1a-Or~ Coul al Sen1a An• ThlH'edar'• Gemea Gro»mool a1 Orange Coaal
Ml Sen An1onio at San Ol9gO Mese
Foller1on al Senl• Ana
High .chool
Unl......ity 1, ..... por1 Kl<t>ot 0
N-p0t1 Harbor 000 000 0-0 3 1
University 010 000 • I 2 3
Nugerll and Terry! Eberhlldl. Vo1100 (6)
1nt1 t•fitell VI El><'<ha•dl l -Nuqenl S
Vo•IOO 7B •landlt'< tN'11 Freo IUI
CorONI del MM 11, l!llM>Cla 1
Corona <tel Mer 3AO 00 I 5-13 14 2
E11enc11 000 100 o 1 3 2
Ao,,de. WM• 171 end MelbOn. McCehlll
Llnlon 121. Rot>y (71. Jollnaon (71111\d AIQQa ~-Ronde L-McCallllt 2B-Whlle (CdM)
notldt tC.dM) 1B -Aonoe 1CdMI Hlh
Mo<!I ? •C.dMI "1-lt>on ICdMI
tdleon "· w"'"''""'., 2 Edlton 010 010 000 2-• 1 3
Weslmlntlll 000 011 000 0 2 7 6
Steph&nl. Cloney (8), DeBenon 161 and Ltngard, Betz end Herriman. W-o.Benon
L -Beu 2B-Aol<I 1w1. LlnQ•rd (El HR-
NOCOI•• IWI
Fowtlalll V..., t0. 0oeen ~ 7
Founllln \/elley 302 020 3-10 II 4
Oceen View 110 023 0-7 11 3
leMHIH. t...aMerche (21. Grevor (II) end Prell, Sllnley, Oouly (71 •nd Jordon W-
Gregor (4-1) L Stanley (3·4) 2B-M.,,lrtc
IF\/). RelnholU (OVI. Aroold (FVI, Aob•fll
(FV) 3B Tuttle (0\/) HA -MUl!llly 10'/)
WoodlM'ldoe 7, Mont Vleta JV 5
Norle V1at• JV JOO 100 1-S 8 ~
WOOdbrl(IQC 110 041 • -1 S 3 Gllberl, ln1un11 (5) end Olleo, Ortiz (51
AusMll Ind NOien W-Au11au L-Gllberl 28-0an~s (WI OaMn (NV)
.._..., C-tler\ 11, ...,._... I
Nlwl>orl Cllrlallen 111 271 4-17 10 2
H«11• ooo 110 o-2 2 e
Fred«lcllaon -M<;Gown, Grab111. S.-Vlr .. (5). SI Clait (7) and AlflKlndril W
Fred1rlckaon . l Orab•u
2B-Frtdlrrlcltson 3 INC)
HIGH SCHOOl STANOINOI
SunMI L.-gue w L oe Edi.co 7 1 Hootlngton ~ • 1 'II Manna 4 a 2"' f'OUOU1ln Vlllty 3 5 4 WeltlnlM11r 2 • 5 ~v..., I 1 •
... Vlew&.Mtue W L T Ge
C«OMO.... 5 1 0 ~ a a o 1~ itw.. a 2 o 1.,.
Oolle ...... 3212 ~ ''l 0 2 r.lt8nete 2 a 1 a a Tcito t 4 o 3 .....,., "*"°' I 8 0 4 , ..... __ ('atl)
"'""-'"Y Ill ecw-....... ra.-111 """'"" HatMr .,....COllll .....
I HOlaUClll II II Toro --
........ ~.,...
100-1 fl~ (111 10.7, a. H*-'Y (I).
10 e, 3 Oanl (SH), 10 8
220-1. Tremmel (I). 2U, 2 OOldlng INH).
24 8. 3. Dul>Me (SHI. 24 9.
440-1 Dul>Me (HH), 52 1, 2 Hler'Mhy (II,
&2 9, 3 LllCN (NHI, 64 7
e80-' SlllllN 111. a oe 1. 2 1Ubblt1 tNHI. 2 08 8: 3 Wol«d (I), 2 09 0 Mii•-i C•llow1y INHI. • 42.2, 2. (111;
Goel (NHI 9nd Melfl1111 (1), 4:42 .3.
2·,,,..._ I MMl\W\ (I). 10 11 4, 2 Cellowll)'
(NHI. 10:32 3, 3 Alcll (NH), 10 6-4 I
120HH-1 Breur. (NHI. 18 I, 2 Bui (II.
,, 1, 3. Polom• (NH • ''·'· 330LH-I 8'aua (NH). 41 8, 2 Lucien<> UI. 43 7, 3 Potoma (NH). 43.
440 reley-1 !Mnl. 45.1 Mlle r ... y-1. lrvtne, 3·35.9.
HJ-1 Berry (NH), 8-2: 2 Gou (NH),
.. 10, 3 Glem (NH), 5-1
LJ-1 HMl!ln1 (I), 20-2: 2 8l0Chburg11
(UH), IM; 3 L.uellOO (1), 1M'lt
T J-1. BIOClll>ufge< lNH), 44-l'n, 2 Hiii\·
Int (I). 40-10, 3 Wiid NHI. ~
PV-1 e.t_, (NH). 13-0, 2 8lnnll'I (NH), 12-<I, no ttwd
SP-1 G.,. (NH), 48·2. 2 Brau• (NHI
U -2: 3 L .. (11. 311-8
OT I Gaul (NH). 151·6. 2 MWl>le (NHI
116-9°1\, 3 L .. (1), 108-3
Hunllngton 9eeeh 12, W"11111Mt!1< • 100-I Wood (W), 10.5, 2 Tr1ml (WI.
10 5. 3. M«ldoU (HBI. 10 7
220-I Brim (HB). 23. 1, 2 Vlood (WI,
24 3, 3 Mendoza (HB). 24 8 440-1 ~ (HB). 52 I , 2 Blahoc>
(HBI, 52 7, 3 Tram4 (W), 52 ll
880 I Morion (W). 2 03 9, 2 RemMy
(W). 2 05 7, 3. M1r1111w (HBI. 2 111.8
Mlle-I Mar11n (W). 4305, 2 ~
(HBI. 4 31 8, 3 Hernendol (HB), 4 39 8
2·mlle-1 Oulnonea (HBI. 10.15 3, 2
H1rn1ndet (HB). 10 18 3, 3 Cueva (HB),
10 19 0
120HH-I G1rct1 (HB) 15 9· 2 Vin Ootw-IHBI. 16 O. 3 Sole< 1w 1. 19 3
330LH-1 Ven Oor .. IH r HB>. 40 5. 2
Garc11 (HB). 42 4, 3 Ogow1 (WI. 42,5 uo relay 1 Huntington BMch. 45 O
Mlle relly I WMtmtnallt, 3.318
HJ-I MlllHmeler IHBI. 5-1, 2 Saller·
tlelO (HBI, 5-4; no lhlrd
LJ-I Mltleftnei.< IHB). 21-4, 2 Nurlff
(WI, 2G-4, 3 Brim (HBI. 111· 1 I 'It
T J-I S1t11rlleld (HB), 43-4, 2. Nune1
(WI. •3-1. 3 Miller,,,..., IHB). 41-1.
P\/ I McCenn IHBJ1 2-0, no ~ or
SP-I Moore (Hll). 50.5~ •• 2 M-llQ· ~•Y (HBI. 49-9 3 Allred (W). 47-4°11
OT 1 M111ngk•y (HB). 146·0: 2 Ken·
d<ICI. (HB). 139-11, 3 Smllh (HBI. 131-2 %
Wom9n
HIGH SCHOOL
Newpoft H-N , lfYIM II 100 I Murlon (I), 12.0, 220-1 DeLacy (IQH) 27 I 440-I Srnl1h (I) I 03 1, 880-1
\/11que1 (II . .2 23 7, Mlle-I V11qu91 (I), 5 40 0, 2·mlle-I Lam (II. 12 79 3,
I IOLH-1 OeLacy (NH). 112; 330LH-1
Lee (t). 47 e. 4AO r .. ey-1 Newpof1 Hart>o<, 52 2, Mlle relay-1 llvlne, 4 17 e. HJ-1
Plalfoot (NH>, 5-0, LJ I H&tk .. I (NH), 18-0.
SP-1 Pl11foo1 (NH), 211-2; OT-1 011 (II,
85-11
-""9'0fl 9Mch M. WMlmlMIH M
100-1 Sherp (W). 11.I; 220-1 Sharp
(WI. 28 2, 440-I Spencer (HB), 1·05 8, Bao-I Whlallet (WI 2 27 0, Mlle-1 Mc-
Creekln (W), 5 24.0. 2-mtlfl-I McCreekln (WI, 11:47 0, 1 IOHH-1. Betl (HB), 17 7,
330LH-1 Smllh (HBJ, 51. I, 4AO r91ey-1
Hunllngton Be1ch. 53 7, Mii• reley -1
WMlrntnaler. • 29 0, HJ-1. Mendoza (HB~
4-6. LJ-I Beu IHB). 15-r., T J-1 B•H
CHUI. 32· 10, SP-I Ulu (HB). 311.n · ..
OT-I Ulu(HBl.117·10
~ v-, 13, lllWtN 44
100-1 Henderson (F\/1. 11.1, 220-1 Henderson (F\/), 27 5, '440-1 Florlnl (F\11,
I 03 9. 880 I H.-y (M). 2.32 4, Mile-I G~b«t (FV), 5 SS 0 2-mlll-I OJ4b«t (FV),
12 05 9 I IOLH-1 Hallleld (Fii), 14 I ,
330LH-I Hlllleld (FV), 47 0, HJ-1 Hal·
Ii.kl CFVI. 5-0, W 1 Ameye (M). 15· 10°11,
TJ 1 0..1l1leon (M), 31-3...,, SP-1 Gralf
(M l. 32-0'~ OT Grall (M). 94·7. H O
rfll&y-1 Founllln Vellay. 52.5. Mlle
retey-t Founlalo V.itey, 4 28.0
won:;: l~tte.
Coeta ..... 14LJ. o-..._ t45.4
VIUIUog-1 Olive< (CMI. 9.2, U,,._, pe reJlel beN IMlr1-1 Leon1td (CM). 9 1, Be·
l1nce beem-I Ollver (CM), 9 •. Floor exerelle I Oliver ICll II 4, AIHltound-1 Ottv11 (CM), 37 I
Women'• w11er POio COlU~
UC lntN 7, UC Sefl Diieo I ._..,,~
UC Sen OlegO 2 2 I 1-1 vc lrvtne 1 2 3 1-7
UC Irvine 1corlng Marlz 3, M11kolt 2.
NftW!end I, Hedlund I
~ . . " .
loftbell
COllllMUMITY COUIO.
OolCMn WHI 7, Pe•-• )
Puedenl 102 000 0-3 4 1
GOid«\ WMI 070 000 a-7 4 1
O'Neil I nd Moore: Moor•. Ali.ft (4) .,,d Mc Elree. Humme r (4) W -M oo11
L-0 ' .... 1 2B-PrlOI (P).
HtGtt ecttOOl. o-t vi-1, ,_.. v.,.
OcMn \/W 000 100 0-1 3 1
Fountain \/llllty 000 000 0-0 1 2
While end s..iaar: A)olwd end Al1edfa.
2B-s1-1oc1. 8r\lllW\'Wt1 (av}. .........................
Manna 010 000 2-3 I I
Hurltlnglon 8MCl'I 100 000 1-2 8 ?
Klerw1Md lll'ld 8enCfltm; Z..OC. end !llano •
Heth ecMol , ...
c••A I Alghe!U, t. 1-....i I. ....,_ 4, C)ehr,
5. Arcadia: e 8lmt Va!Nly: T. L• Quinta; 8. El Ootldo, 9 ~ 10. 004I Pi;eC)IOI c.w I. SL JoMpll. 2. LB w"-. i w .. 1.11, 4
LA H1br•: L .... Del e. lurMr*: 1. Soult\
Hlllt . I . Bunny Hiii•: 9 81v1nn1: 10, lu<· touofie arw
1 B•llllO•tr: 2. Alema11y: 3. Hiii•' 4
Mon1c:1111: •• llollHI ; • la MlrMll, , I ll
C61fMntl;. Centrlt,. Mlftglort: 10 Cal-
toml&. C#I t·A
1 ~. R .. na, 2. 8t. JoMj)ll, 3 Alm of '"'
World, 4 AN«llOI I Mary lw: e LA lac>-
lltt. , v.., CMl!lln .•. OM.no etwt.llan .
t , 4MI• "'*· 10. ~ °" ........... 1, WMAfWe•I I ~atldtfll ~o~ly. $ ,..ll'IOOpe; 4 ~ .. ........, owe..
............... 1, ........... ; .. c.. .,rano V•ller Cflf1et1e11; 1. 1t10 Hondo: to ---
Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOTIWednHday, Aprll 14. 1982 DI
PWTit llACI. One mill ~
Mr Orehern Biii (LOnvOI 8 00 4 00 3 40 Blue Sumn-(Todd) 3 90 3 20
Gene!ll 811Yer (FOiey) 4 eo Alao re.c:ed: Siar l'llchy, Epic Fare. Tine
l(nlgtlt, FOObh F0t1une. Able Bow«
rime 2"04 t:2 CXAC'T A (3-6) pllO l29 40
BllTH MCI. One mile pece s.pou t~I 3 eo 2 eo 2 40
Jltemlllh't Boy (Siee1hl ? 80 2 80
Tatpor1 Bl~ (811C1lmen) 3 80 AIM> r~ lltUlllllll Jeckle. Ph1ro, AIOlll· rd H.,_., nm. 2.02 216
NValfTif MCI. One mile P•~ Aoulln (leclleyl 21 eo 13 29 11 eo
PrtnllNlll• IPetlter) 8 20 8 00
Mdy't Abl (OIMnl 10 80
AllO rlOld Ou•f-Time. Tenandll!•H. ~zette. Big Oebbll Numtroouno
flrnl. 2-02 4/6 Iii IXAOTA (8-71 pllld S 132 00
S2 ... CK llX 19·7· 1·3·5·61 pelO S718 80
with 28 wlllnlng llckell llive 11or ... 1 $2 Piek
StK COlllOllllOn pelc:t S 18 40 wolh 405 •Ill•
n1no tlClcett (lour 110tae11
EIGHTH RACE. One mile pace GOiden Graztetll 18l'telren)4 20 3 20 2 80
Lynn'1 EJtpre11 (Longol 6 80 4 IO
Se<!UOll Meglc (P1tker 5 40
Allo reced Flying Tonye, Andy a LJly
Squire l.Ualll, Time For frflOI, Holly• Away ldrt.
Time 2:04 416 t:2 H ACTA (7·21 Paid S30 20 ~ llACC!. One mile p.ce Time frl!C* (~ey) fl 00 4 00 2 40 Mll8 Omy Glfl (Todd) 11 40 4 00
Grtl N (Tadd) 3 20
AlllO raced Armbro Brld N, Stan.., Bet·
IUm Oreem
'time 2·02 4/5
t:2 IXACTA (3-1) P1k1 $6e AO
TENTI4 llACE. One mill P1C41
Nol>ll Cad•I (Kuabl11) 5 60 A 20 4 00
Kendell• Boy (8,,.,ren) 3 40 3 00
OuOle Hill (Pwllerl 1 I 80 Alao reced Rocky Direct N, GypfV Sem Glln Inn. Top Line A M1n11er, JUllall't1111 Jan
Timi 2 02 MS t:t IX.ACTA (7·11 paid $17 00
Allendence-4 23!>
Men'• wot .. ybell
Hl<»t SCHOOl 111 .... ,~
Marine <lei Ocean View. IS-I 15-6, 15-J
La Oulnt• Cle! Fouo1a1n Valley, t5-11, 15·8.
1&-1• ... VltwL ... w
Uni-alty def l<Vlne, IS-5. 15 II IS-tO
E11anc11 del Woodbrtc:tge 1s.2. 15·5 1!>-3
Colla Mn1 c:ter Coron• c:tel M11 t5-4
1S-7, lS-11
~thC-tL .......
Laguna 8HCh del. Ml111on 111110 1!>-7.
IS-5, 15-13
Oene Hifft Cle! Sen ClerMtlll, 3-1!> lS-11
1&-14 0-15, 15-7
HIOH SCHOOL STAHDIHQS
SUnMI Leet"9
W L 08 Menoa 6 0
Fovnllln \/elley 4 2 2
Ui Oulnll 4 2 2
ae....11-3 3 3
Hvnllngton 8eeGn 'l 3 3'•
Edi.ori I • 41~
Weetmln11er O 6 6
T°"'9hl'1 0-. (7)
Huntington 8eecn al M111ne
EdtlOfl al Le Ovtnta e>c.an \/lew II Founllln \/elley .,,_...,.., a.,,. (7 P m I
WflV"lnster al E<ltson
Bee View Leegue
W L 08
Cosll MIU I
Ealenci• 8 Coror1a di! Mir 11
UniverM~ 6
INlne 3
Newpor1 Hlrbor· 3
BToro 2
Woodbf1doe 0 'r1dl1'• a-.. (7 p.m.) Eatlt!Cla •• !Mlle
Coll• Mese 11 Newl)Or1 Hllbor Woodbridge at Corona di! Mir
um-etty el El Toro
South Cont 1..-gue
1
I
3
3
6 e
7
9
2
2
5
5
8
8
W L 08
l.aguN 8Mcl'I s 0
Dene Hlll1 4 1
San Clernen1• 3 2 Capl11r1no \/lllly 2 3
Mllllon Vi.to I 4
lAQuM Hilla 0 5
Fr1dly"1 0-('1 11""'·1
Ssn Ctem1n1e •• t...aoune Be6ci'I Oenl Hills •1 Lagune Hfn1
CIQISlfll\O Vl/fley 11 MIMlon \/llje)
I
2
3
4
5
CIF ranking•
1. L .. 1tn• e .. 011; 2 Sen Clemente and
Sen Merco.. 4, laWMle: S. C...la ..... l I
Mw1eos1a 1 Loyola ana Mlline. 9 Santa
Monica 10 Lot Altos arid Founleln Valley.
~ > . ...
Werrlort 10I Ld.,. 101 LOl~t -~11.w-..22.
Abdul-Jllltllr 27. E. Jollneorl 13, Ni•on 13,
Coop« 9, McMoo •• ~ 0. c. Jolwl'°'1
0. TOI• 46 11-11101
~MM 8TATa -KlllQ 1:l, Smllh 11,
CerrOll 28, f•ff 20. Romer 10. Brown e.
Stlotl 12, Wlllllme 0. H-1 $ Totllt 49 15-21 IOI '"'-_,~
Lot """"91 33 te 2t 13-10 I
OOidlll .... 21 36 1t 24-106
Tine poll\t llOll -H-t. Totll IOUll -
Loa A11Q96M 24, OOlcllll 8te1• 28 TeohlllCal -""* " -13.23f T__,.. .....
O<*Mn ..,. '°'· Llillwl 10, ~ti,11*9MM "'*"" 118, ~ 111 W~1ot ......... 99 a. Allfoftlo I~. Olnv. 13t Nt!r J11rwt ICM, .._ Yoflt 102 ClllcltO 1to. loetOll 11 I
Hotalloft •• ~Qty " ._,.. • Ponlllld M ~ 16it:=...~~.
IAll!el~ll
......... 111~11
Wlilllllft(ltOn Ill ...... .-..,. n
Dltlrell el ,.,Nldls: II Olllll•~ oll a.i.ea .. ,.. y • fl
Houllllt -~. " ""'~ .. ,,.....II ~ ............ "
HHL PUYC>ffl
K!fllll 1, Otler9 ' ...,._,,.,.....
Loe At101M ~ I 1-7 l.dnlonfOtl , 0 t ,_,......,....
I. l.oe AnclllM •• .,,,,.,,., 3 lLAwle). 3 H· 2.
1.oe Anoet.t, llmrMt 4 (Hop•1n1, w1iia1.
I 20, 8 l.dmonron Ore11,ky • (AMMfto11, KurYU. 7·11. 4 loe AllolM. 1.v-'· 1• oa. 5 ldm0t1l0t1, ConlY 1 (8llt111.,,, M .. lllrl.
19.H . ll1n1tt111 -H11gllH, edm. 4 t0
CllartrlW LA. 7: 11, 'oeoi1n. Edm 14 • 1. Hcolilne. LA, 1•.t2
~~
0 Loe Moalet. Dionne •(Ev-. Leeterdl. 1 ot, 7 lOI MQllll, NlOhOlle 3 (Foll). I 4t,
I Loe Mgitlll. k\1r 1 (Ctwlrn , 8lmmlt),
15 It Penalltea ~ M Murphy, LA, 011,
Coff41Y, Edm, •oe: L .. Nrd. LA. Hnlld by M.
Murphy, 5 11. Boacllm111, Edm 8.11 Slrn· mer, 4-A. 17 31 Tllltd , ......
9 LOI AngelH. Bo1111 3,08, 10 Ed· mon1on, Un1111 1, & &1: 11 Edmon1on
Lumley 2 (CO!fey). 14 24 Penal!... None
Sholl Of\ C)O.i -Loe A~ 13-10·8·3 I
Edmonton 1°l 14-12«•3
Oo1llt1 Loa Ang1111. l •uard Ed· mor11on. FUii• A t 1 490
Othet ._ ..
NV ltlal•dera 4. P1111Du1gh 3 1011 (ltlano ...
win-3-21 O....~ 3 Montreat 2 (Nord!QuM wm -.
""· 3·2)
P8A leederl
(Th1°"911 April 14)
I Eatl AnO'IOtly
2 Ari lrltll
3 Chlrlle T t4>(I
4 MarartaJI Holmen
S Pel• Weber
6 Mii Acosla 1 Guppy l rouP
8 0 1ve Hulltd 9 Jeme• Miiier
10 Pete Couture
$10 I 440
see 2so
'4S 265
S42,283
S3I sso
$34 410
S34 190
'33.S8S ,3, .390
'30,"9!>
Peclflc SouU1w"t
(at L4e~)
~floundllnolee
Mar1111 01v11 det Bflan Goutrled. 6·3. 7-6.
LIOyd Boutne def Stan Smith 6-4, 3-1 7-6 V•c:•or Am1y1 d•I Hank Pltater. 8-3 3·6
6 -3, Sandy Meyer dol Miii Doyle, 6-3, 6-0,
Brian Teach41r del Bernie Miiion, 6-0, 6·4,
PhH Oent clef Torn IAOrltlrd .... 8-3. Bruce
Manoon Cle! Joh1111 I(~. 8-7, 8-2, 8-4, CNP
Hooper del Ill• N111a11. 7-1. 6-4, Gene
Meye< def Olcll Stockton, 6-1, 6-1
WCT tournament
l•I "--Ion)
Flret Round ••no'" v1c1or Pecci def Kevin Curr1t1. 5· 7. 6-3,
7 & Rod Frawley del Andy KOhl1>e<g 7-6
&·2. Wojllk f1bak del Bred Orewetl. 1>·2
6-2
Community collet• QMdeft .... , s. Rio ltOft6o •
ltnolee Sousa (AH) det ledttmen, 6-4, 6·2. M8'er
(AHi del H1mlllon 6·4. 6 -1 6-3 KOHi
1Gw ci Clef Henry, 8-0 6-7 8-4 Miiier (AH) del Alchnson, 6·•. 6-3 Wiii (GWCI det
Merlo, 6· 7 6· 1 6-0, Sewion IGWCI del Wtlcn t..3 6-3 o-t>IM
Lederm1n-H1m1lton (GWC) det Henry
Metllf 1·6 6-4 6-1. Sou11-M1llef (AH) dol
Kosal·Su1on, 6 4 3·6, 6-3 McCar111y:
A1ch1uon (GWC1 det Welch Merlo 8 2
83
OrM91 c-t t, CM llate F11K. I ......
Ft<lderly (0CC) Clel Moore. 2-6 ll-3 6-2. Kllne (OCCI del Elita, 8·1, 6-3. Rhllorlk
(OCC) del Edw1td1. •·8, 6-3. 6· 1 8on11 IOCCI Cle! Ehel<llanl. 6-4 1·2 Breun 1cc1
del Jonn, 6-2. 7·5, Schuller (OCC1 del
Krt'let b ~ J b b !
Doub6H
Moore-Ems (CSF) def FeddHly-Bonaa
6-2 4-6 7·6 Rlletorlk-Braun (OCCI del
Krater-Eflellhanl, 8·2. 8-4 Cohen·
AICherdaon (OCC) def Qreen·Ec:twarc:tt. 1-4,
8-2
leOdtebecll •• --ot.oo cc 0 .......
Strobl ISi def Ollvler, 6-0, 6-0. Scrib<*
(SI def G T sicoutlu &-4 1·3 Bleck11one
ISi def Wooten. t..1 6-1, MIHer (SI def K
T llCOUllH, •-o. •·I Stephen• IS) dal Cl\rlllle. 6 2 6-0 Leslie IS) del Moody 6-2
8-0 DOlttl6ll
Scro1>ner-S1rot11 ISi def Ofl••·G Tl'Cou-
llas, 4•6, 6-3. 6-4, 8lttekal~Stepl'4tns ISi
dtl Woolen K Ttteoulw 8-2. 6-2. Miiier
l eshe CSI Oii Chrloto•Moody, 6-2 6· 1
Hlah tchool
ldf--Fr. WMtmln•I« ' Slnelee
Stmmooa (El d•I Horn. 6-I. oet Gonzales,
6·0. d1I Engel. 6-4, del H.,lman, 6-0.
Wh lctll!I I( 1 won 6 3 6 -I 6 0 6-0 I urrt ll
IE) won 6-2 6-0 8-0 1-0. HOlmet (El loll
4-6 won 6-4. 8-3, e-1
OollMee
Ball-Zem911ek IEI oer He<n Sanchel 6 1
6 O. del Aamuy.Clement. 8-0 l ·O
MOIO>CllU l urets• y tE' won 6 I 6 0 6 I
8-0
HIHll. lffcft 20, ...,.,._ a
Slftelll Gatme1 !HUI c:tel f•o . 6-0. c:ttl Harko 6· I
del Smllh. &-4 di Scll'lal.itl. 6-0, Creuner (HB) won 6-3. &-3 ... ,, 6-1, c .... oll (HB) lotl
2-e. •·& won, M . 1-4. &e<n1td (HBI won. 8-0, 6-1, 6-0. 6..()
DCMlbtM Aodrewa-Earn•11 (HB) 1011 lo Crea1on Chow ~ 6 6 1 c:tel Curnulle A111a 6·2
8-4, Oodda·BMlle (HB) loll, 4-e. 1·1. raUnlO,
won. fl-3, 8-2
COfona Clef Mar :IA. hlanclo 4 ••no1ee wune• tCOMI dtl Bar11•11 1 ti. del
Studebaker. 6-1, cit! Gllc:r"( e-o. Cle! Ol-
•on 6-1 H1nmen 1CdMI Iott 3-6 won 6 •
&-2. 7-6. Cu)I (CdM) won 6-2. &-2. I091 2-6. won &-1. G11iagh8t (CdM I k>el 3·6. won &-1.
loel 3-6. won 6-1
Do11blH
Brown1bur11.,·Altr (CdM) CS.I 1n1doml·
Brown, 8-0, &-0; clef FllQQ..Sploer, &-4, 7-6. PrOPP·Hoatelllr (CdMI won 1·2, 6°0, 8-3.
8-2
Wom.n
COU..Oll
UC ll'YtM o, l~ ..._ s-. O ........ Merla Myera (VCI) def. C4llM>ll. 1-4, I-~;
Ketllng (UCO def. eon ...... &-2, l-0. Nh1on
IVCll def Berdo1. ~. 8-1, Mellncle M~
UCI) Cle! Tedetco. l-0. 8-1, EJledol (UCI)
del M1rka. 7·6, 8-3, Serr1no (UCI) def
Strech.,,, 8-3. T·S ~ M1'9fa-M~1 (UCt) cMf eonn.r..c.raon.
&-2, 8-1; MllllOry·KM1in9 (UCI) Cle!. 8.,00I·
Merh. t>y dt411U1t, EllOIClgl-Ntllon (VCI) <Ill
Str11<:1'ten f.OMCO 8-4 8 2
--
STRONG OUTING -Angel
bullpen ace Don Alise pitched
six strong innings 1n relief.
From Page 01
ANGEL • • •
Ht.'lldt•rson LO give the Manners a
1-1 Uc
The Angels had taken a 1-0
lead in lhe second inning when
Don Baylor singled and stole se-
cond and Doug DcCmces follo-
wed with an RBI single
DeCinces doublPd in lhe fifth
and eventually scored on Bob
Boont.•'s perfect squeeze bunt to
give the Angels tht.•ir 2-1 lead
The game was so lo ng, the
Angels finally committC'd their
fi rst infield l'rror by Tim Foti
1n th<• 15th inning
It was so long, orgamst Torr<>nt
lucked off the bottom of the 14th
with "Oh What a Beautiful
Morning "
It was so long. Zisk saw his
average dip 107 potnts until he
singled with two uut m the 15th.
Tune 1n today
ANCEL NOTES Al'\Qtll second bUMlln
8obb1 Onch m1de hos 1>111ted del>ul ol 1982
suer beck spasms kept 111m out of the ltrSI •••
games GrlCll showed his rusllnetl, 100. s1rl·
klllQ out 1111 hrsl lwo ttmft •• lhe plate and
11nllhlllQ 1-lor-5 AOQel openiOQ n191>1 1n-
c1uoe<1 • 1 etl'ler t\lbtle array ol ceremonies
Amerl<:all League P11sooent LM McPh.il was on hind to 9rewen1 awards to Grich, Mike
Win , Aldi ~ and Ken Forec:h ror their
1981 ueson1 Ole• M•l1on, producer-
eng"-or Angel radio broadcas11 hes seen
3,347 conMCUtlve Anoet gemes Suc;h en IC·
cornploshmlnt c.an I t>e overtOOlced 90 Nelson
w11 1t1owed to throw out the Urtt ball
MOfe on G11Ch His eppearonce Tuesday night
marlled hll 6001h game 1n an Anoet uniform
Wno was thlll department? M1nneso11 s
K•nt Hrbek and Gar1 01a111 are the e.,ly
leac:tera 1ri the Amerocan L•1ou• home run race Bolh hao three pnor 10 Tuesoey n09n1 s
contest 00119 O.CI~·· RBI on the -
cond inning gave him e1ohl on the se111on
putting him second tn Ille league 1n 1h'1
category t>ehlnd M tlw1uklMI s 8en Ogllvle
The Mariners run In the ftlth 1nntno wes
ll'te llrsl Hrned run allowed by Zahn fn 1'4
Innings lhls seuon Tonight's pitcl'llng mal·
Chup hndt Ille Angels" 111116ie W111 i0-01 0990-
Slng Seetlle s Gent .... eon (0-1) There
WU plellry to Ch-ll>OUI Tuesday night, but
eome ol the biggest outbursts c.arne tollOwtng
pubhc addreu upd•les Of the NHL ptayofr
g1me bet-1he Edmonton Oilers and Los
Angele& Kings on Edmoo1on
Grant
get. fiYt·-year~
$250.,()00 pact
FRESNO (AP) -Fresno State
basketball c:oach Bovd Gran t,
who l<'Ci the Bulldogs to national
ranking this year, has signed an
agreement to a('(.'C'pt five one year
contracts with the school.
The· agreemL•nt announced
Monday was sweetened by the
Bulldog Foundation which of -
fered a deferred compensation
package rcportl·dly worth
$250,000 a t the end of the five
years.
"ft 1s a security type plan, hke
an annuity," said Pat Ogle. the
Bulldog Foundation's executive
director. "If he were to leave at
any time during the t'Onltact, he
would be eligible t<> take what
has already been accumulated."
Grant's basic agreement with
lhe university calls for a salary of
$42,500 a year, the highest allo-
wed by the California Colleges
and Universities system
"l really appreciate this,''
Grant said of the deferred com-
pensation package. "It means a
lot to myself and my family. It is
la mea~ of security. A coach can't
have tenure, so ll is something
that l c.an fall back on if I shouJd
get fired."
Several o ther schoo l sh ave
wooed Grant sint'e his Bulldogs
achieved national ranking last
season with a 27 -3 record.
W ii kins goes
hardship
ATHENS. Ga. (AP) -Domi-
nique Wilkint of the University
of Georgia has announced be wiD
bypaa his aenior year of c:oUete
to become a candidate for the
National Buketball Asaoclation
draft on June 29.
"The btgseet reason w H my
mother,'' the 6-7 forward iold a
new• conference Saturday.
"Sh~'• done ao much for me. Now 1 have a ch1ncc to do
eomethina for her."
Wilkin•, tho flut bard1hlp
candldaie for &.he NBA dntt, aid
he bope• to return to Georata
durina the off ·Muon and com-~.' bachelor'• cle1rH in
\
I
I \
r
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
, ..... , .... Cal
642·5&71
MMESfNUU t:." .... = ~==· c::: ....... t: EQUAL HOUSING
c.i.11 .... °""'" .... 111\n =:~·· I.WO. ..... ............ i:::i: ... .._v .. ,. -.... ..... a.no--. t:.!":.c.,...,_
s ........ _...,_ ·--.. -·'"-IUlCSTAT[
: O(»PORTUNITY -= -I ... ... -MU "" •• ... lfll -... 1• -...
,,,..,...,Matice:
........ ,.,-...
"--•,., s.i. ....
A real dhte ad·
vertlaed i n lh i s newtj)lper b subject lo
the Federal Fair Hous· lnc Act ot 1968 which
rmkes It llle1al to ad· vertlae "any preference,
l1matallon . or d is·
crim1nalion based on
race. color, relig.ion . sex, or nauonal onein. or an intenUon to make
any such preference,
limllation, o r dis ·
cnmination."
:::.. "'T.;:.., :: c......, I.Ob c.,... lllf
C..-mll l'Ttetn, lflll ~-soi. •• :::;::~ ~":~O: :: This newspaper will nol i.-r_, -knowingly accepl any =~..,.."' :: advertising for real :!.\~·~~· :: estate which is in viola· 0r~c. '""' llll tionofthelaw. ~ti~~· = i--.-.~;-.~.=.~.=.'"'~~--.-.-.-.-.-.1
Rutllle,ru.,,a, • .,.. ,.,..
lltol&:ai..E••h•"«• -
11.11 r..111• "'""'" ,. mlOIS: AdYertften llNTAlS .....__. ... _...__L ""'-•-ocl '-"'"·ou~ IHll _......, • ....,... I
-ii;i.,.:;.,. -.., -.,..,.,. .,.. =~~~': ~.,~',. : iwi 5-~. TH ="',:.;:' = DAILY rtlOT 011W1 Tit.."'!:'"'~·' := w.llty for ta.. first ~;::.11•1 : l•cornct l•Hrtlo. =~!~., = .,. ::: . ...,. =~--------i Hot ...... tt. .llt I ~~. _:: for<-1-\' ........... .,J .... ...,,'*a.rt·• .......................... . &;.:r.:.i••• :: I 002 ~·~ :;: ..........• --. .......... .
~~..... !: $10,000 DOWN -·--tmem, lfYCST· MOVES YOU IN MOil fltlAllC[ 4 Bd 2·sty, .dbT gar, C.
-. '. -Mesa, nu pamt, crpt. On· -.= ....
1
. ly $110,000. Vaca nt. :::::::~;; :: Diana Ca ppel. agt :::;:.=. =1 ~TD> -AJllltlllC£ME.NTS,
PUSINALS &
LOST & FHNI .. _.._ c.,,...,
L.t111 Hcltttt ...... , , ... ... ..... _ .. .
Sort.a c.i ... . T'i'utt•
$EM[$
Sirr•W't °'"'"Ot')
EMPl.lnl£NT &
-l~~Qj# ,.. .......... ...... _ ... ,
llOCHAllW
II• w~~t~=·3d Br ~ house on large fol. Easy
1a1 access. Prime corner = localion with ful ure
-commercial Potential. Owner will assist
-w/financ~. Full price -'If!) ...
: 20lfDOWM Cdll"cf~lexi..3 Bdr 2 car
: ga~e ·2 udr I car -ga e· + bach. unit. : Cal im Rhone, agt -------trll ------------
--"" -'"' '1U
MESA WOODS Beautiful custom cabinetry by master
crafUman really sels
this 3 Bdrm 2 Ba home
apart. Lovely gazebo
and bearing fruit trees.
Low rate. new lo:in
available. Full price
SISll.000. 751·3191
• •
·=---=-__ l.The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
Orange Cocut residents bought 42% of
all new car• &old in the county la1t year
even through they comprise only 30o/r o/
the county 's population .
"• .. • •
··' ........ . .
...................... ~.~~ ................. s. .._....,s.. .......... ~ HolllttForS. ....... ..,s. °""' ..... .... I... ....................... . ........... -.;.~...... ····~····· .. ..... ...... ...... .. . .............. . ............................................. . • ••• ,.. 1002 •• ,. 1002 • 100 06t ,.___:_--1-1 ............... ••••••• •' ... _.. ; I C..... .. M• I OU ~ .. ltec~ I 040 Me,,,.,.t ltedl I -~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••1••ut.•,••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ;~••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,...,,,.., I 60eC.
------·-•••--•••• FORECLOSURE ....................... ,
NF llU -~ I SPYGWS SPUSfl! SPLASH! nrvnoPEIS'.'· L ~"-~ Single atory ranr h style Oreanfront dupl ex Kl t X NT TERMS! Remodeled tradltJonal 3 ~ wllh spectacular pool u 5o.ooo with .:ood 4U50 IC! ft commerc ltJ• ~-de" 3 i.. • .i. -..a ......... to •'191. 000 oors away rom and ~·· JuQt $135,900 lot In ~me Founta ttf "1"''"' • ., uaV1, 1~-~ .., ~. • s valued In exceu "' term11 Vall-at:-. City ap....q.
<OZ million. beautifully ~g. W'o~·~Y:sr.o quuli· PfrJa R.E. proved pla~for 111,20000
I appointed 5 bdrm Nan 6J eAft sq ft office bid&, Tolllllc
Pri.zeWestBaybayfront.Slipii!Or2boats, tucltel plan with OWNER DESPERATF...._ __ ···J•J•"-" ___ packaee priced 111 1
modeled 3 bdnn u... panoramic ocean and 5 Bdrm beach GIANT'",.. S7SO.OOO re , 3 bath $1,200,000. • UIYll ...... 81..,...... niCht li&ht views + pool FUU.8 IULTY
Ocean & jetty views. Manne room, 4 bdrm.
3 bath, 3700 aq.ft. $1,385,000.
Beaut.~ bdru. Fam rm w/flranlace, formal an11 ap1, featuring xlnt exPriecutidve56n0eigoohborbho1od ILUffS v... financing w1lh owner ce .O I! ow HST IUY! din rm, 2'h ba. Newly decorated In toft participation Com · mkt. d~wne1 r Sumubst Sl!lt 3 BR, 2 story Plaza C:on
pleaslng colors. Beautlful new cptng & pelitively priced at 1~ iate y. mit on do Near shop . Pool ,
drapes. New marble entry. Pool & spa. as.ooo. Call for appt to pri~ and terms schools Only Sll7 .9SO
view HURRY• 2111 Ill ..t..-a.. .. llM 64,.7211 MANAGER'S C:HOICt: .......... ,... Best buy in H B Super LmllU ...
Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm, 5 ~
bath. Lge L.R., 2 ~t slips $1,500,000.
••nll•f•MTT Biii, U. 144-4111 sharp 3 Bdrm Just /Jn ~l(i[L
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm.
beam reilings, furnished, patios. $420,000.
Ulll ISU UYFIMT
Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, p)ay-
room, dark rm, den, Boat slip. $1,350,000!
UYll•am
SpectacUlar bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2
br. 2 ba dn. 2 boat slips $1,900,000.
TIES llST._.... YIE.11
New French Normandy 4 bdrm, 4 bath, ,
guest house, pool. Near lake. $795,000.. I
MllUllUn
<Aronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
dock. Plans a.-ail. $425,000 w/tenns.
13%
~SUMABLE Owner will carry 20%
dn. Fixed rate for 30 years, lovely 3 Bdrm
pt .. den. Easlside. Call
~11161
OPEN HOUSE
REAl TY
/
SlillHIE Lr& 3 lidrm 2 "la condo
with 2 car garage &
fireplace. Great terms
Full price $1 29.500.
6.11·73'10
TR.\DITIO~\l.
RL\tT'
SPACIOUS DUPLEX
Tob oHr ulltl••
...,,lo-.Owwerw•
cwry balHU W ltll
$65,000 ct... 3 ... .
~ rw NCI! .... .
Offw.dot Utl.500
COUCWUWPORT MAL.TORS
Ull L C:-1 Mwr.
c:...-..i-
675·5511
GAi LEY &
A~5UCIA I E 5
$119,900. Low down. nu
qualifying and Lake ovt>r
payments Won •t last
Ah tote Eua.ti•• Ho.a House o n Beg on 1 a l4l.0709 H.Y.H by Owuwr 123S.OOO. IQt value. pnn ,__llllilliilliiililiim-•I Charmlng Monaro 1n
only. Bkr 213 438·5823. best location 3 bdrm
1044
•CtlNA COYE • •••••••••••••••••••••••
3 bdrm, 2 ba , ocean &
bay view. Buy before
llsled with R.E com· Woodbridm leawtv pany price to increase 3 Br-+aen 1>eiut1(ul-r<fn
when l isted w/brkr do across from lake
Prln . only S389K Comp le t ely loaded &42·<XXl8 w/extras Owner will ---------i carry paper. Assume ex illllng loan Dnve by 31
~h?,C~~''t Lakeside then <'all 67J..15170wn lBkr
ba + 3 br. 2 ba unit & k1cktr SJ00.000 assuma ,_ _______ _
ble at 13'1 Asking sm.ooo Owneriagt. TERRIFIC
&40-9219evs1S40 498f <!l's IMYESTMEHT
Lovely l11e ya rd
Beautiful lrees Onl)
$210.000. Xlnt f1nan Drive by 1946 Port ~·k.slCJi.h. 644-4289
• Waterfroet Ho1111t * $100,000 below ap
praisal 4S' bo11t shp
Like new $525.000
67>0044
Executive condo. ocean &
bay view fp lr.
calhedral rigs. etc I+
den. SI0.000 option mone) Dys 558·9035
ev&67~
Cost. M.so I 024 or starter liOme 2 bdrm. UOADMOOR MAMMOTH ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 2 ba Wrndsor Model in Sli VIEW SNOWlllD CONDO --------•I the Terrace. Everything Port Royal 2 stor). 4
BY-OWNtR luJCury 3 within walking distance bdrm. 3 bath plus for ma 1 • bdrm , 2 b a . Two MESA YEIDIE P(lced be lo" market for duuno and murh much f1tt1>laces. Nexl lo Siu 3 Bdrm 1i0me. 2 baths. q1ark sale $125,000 "
£llC'ellenl oppor1unlly
·for 1nvutor 12,000
1quare fool offt~ bull·
•d1na f'uUy ie.ecs. Ovrr
$160,000 il YNT ck-pre·
C'ia llon Pnm:I to lll'U al
S2 4 m1l11on.Prlnd~t.
ooly Call Will.lam Co~.
Br<ikrr
Corona del Mar 2 stOr)' 1-
com me r c i a I P ricedL· ~low mkt for quick sale-JI
al S3SO,OOO . Owner1
fut1ncing at 101•'~ for :r
yrs w1Sll>.OOO do""· Nru;
neg t'8.Sh flow Own Al!U!!
6.11·10&4 -----._,ropHty 200CllC ..............•.........
4 pleJC Costa M esac
$186,000 Long term fin n
S20.000 dn. S2S-O per mon,
neg Principals onl) , Sopes7~~~ntfin ~~1n!~tr110':· ;1:2~\~01 rn;;::·~ULTY
,._ $19,.500 down Owner will 675-231 1 ~rvice with a s mile OWNER ANXJOUS fan assist in ftnanring 4-P1.£X That's what you get t.asticendun1l4 Bdr11_,
John 846-7660 Agt BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
J ~ fl y . 'l• [;. • '• h f>I) 6'bl
•IAYFIOH'h
IOATSLIP
$556,000 ' WOW! LOwest priced,· bayfront home ON
BAL.BOA COVES. Large
4 bdrm. 3 bath. double
fireplace. covered palio1 plus much mon!! Willi AITD or trade for
Eastbluff · Bayshores or
?!?! !
when you place your Ba gar palio. ya d loy McCorcl., lltr.
chelass1 olilled afd wilh. the poc)i, park $89,00o. As' · 541·7729 A REAL IUY Sl99l500 M oneo ourfnend· sume $59.000 Isl at ---------1 BeautllUTiy oecoraled 2or; dOwn, 2~.'1 loan .
ly ·VisoES. 642·S678 rnW~. Prin only Agt. ·--------i ocean. bay & lites vu. nu no serond Crpts, drps. '
,,_ .,,.,...,. ... " .,,,,,,.,
Inlet ,.,, ... ,.... 1241,111
....... 2 ............ .... ., • ..., a ' a ..,... 1211,111 llUlfltlT ,,.... + + .1 ........
LWa Wt LMtlJ Hr, .... U,111,11 .. ,,..,.......... u ........
.. ....., IW&• tltlh U,211,111
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
~ R.ni•.Pr-~ ~
243b W COM! H->v J 15 M.nnr A~
Ntwpo.1 Boch e.a.o. Island
Hl·l4t0 '7Uttt
RESIOENTIAl REAl ESTATE SERVICES
• OAIYtl SttlylM
Country french famlly home beautifully
decorated. 4 generous BR's, den, huge
family rm, maid's. Surrounded by lo'lely
gardens. used brick patios, magnificent
large pool & spa.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
857-20t0 pool. spa + mur h more bll·m r10. patio. bbq 1 -~ 1-2 Lot Assume low 1n terut law\dry rm., pool 4 ._ POOL.J.PA Welf ma intaine , pride ot ownership home with
many other amenities.
Only $165,000 Ca II now
979-5370
··~ 1-.:~ tt523 CAMP'15Dl·fRVINE rate Greal terms Only i.11 ~.J.~.Y.!>ndln!.!!_AQ_a "' • " $360,500 Bes t a rea New y ecoraled 2 ldrm value Call Patrirk or HUNTINGTON BCH
home on GOX125 ' lot LacJ-oleodt 1041 FredTenore.63112660r All 2 Br. 10 yrs old ~
Room to build. Firsl TD ••••••••••••••••••••••• $458,000 Assuma blt-:1
$102.000 assumable at A Lot loan. Bkr. 536·0123 IN· Asking SI 37 .SOO r___ ... L1&.1.1-For an appomlment to ~"' '""' ~ ~
~ slopin~ parcel s.hort ....................... . llcallS40-115I 1 acre+ bldg site. gent· ~ 2500>1
UJ.Wf.L~I ~c:l~~~o:~:u~:~~~ 1
1
1 ·~-Y·Fl_O_MT_W_~•P•IJl-•I ~:. ~\
MUSTY. DUSTY villa $125,000 Spec owners are nJC1ous 139 arc ay
----larularviews ' to mo\'e to Leisure S<>.Laguna &YACAMT S5900TotalD MISSION REALTY World and w1ll rons1der Yoo are uhe winner of• •l-.ogo• • ow91 494-0731 rarrytng financing ror wour free tic kets; v 7 Modlf Close-Owt ~ 11ualifie<l buyer Mo' e 1n <S16.00) value t uhe ~90k assumab e fmanc BrandMw elegant 2 BR FANTASTIC HOMIE nowlo2 Bdrm home and ~Jullvail]_b_I.! oedn thBis 2"2 ba, f11>lc, 2 car gar I 180 deg ocean views rent out upstairs unit A~~,.MSxow
"""Kl Y UC\.vrat 3 r I &th Bdrms art> master 3000+ and rust om Or remodel and enJo'
l01!Vfthome. V;1 canl & swles w vaulted clgs. Gourmel k1t r h en ne~'hornr S7SO.OOO · C~EVl,.tJPT.~p~25 quick possus1on 2670 better call FAST Total massive livino rm
San Miguel. Newport pymts $1174 mo Call formal dinin it~ roz). 642-5200 r~2 c~~1f&.11~~~1~· 2W".
Beach 7S9·l 50I o r 12·5 631 3405 , eves firpPlaces.pool.spa Lg Ticketsmustbeclaimed'
?Si-7373. 751.3297 I rer area SS89.000 b) Apnl 23. 1982
FORECLOSURE LOIJlllMI Yi~ R.IE ~ •
College Park .UJ.:116J 38R 2ba Lender w111 ;..--------1. ________
1
* * *
SELL BE LO W I lllGH.tff MARK ET! IEMERALD IA Y 21311 Seasprite Cir AViA'lllfWJNNF.R S.C..._:.te I 076 Huntington Bea<'h Playo R•al Estat• I Orean \'iews 3 bdrm. 4 ... •••••••••••••••••••• You are the winner ufi., TOTALP~ACHIE! _ _6D.J 900 ba. kit.~ 1ron\'enienrcs. SS,OOO llELOW APPR rour free llrkets tSl6 00 1 Counlry kitchen, Oak ,_ ________ , fam. rm, lgt> garden. l uxury 3 Br. 2 •,Ba , \'alue tothe
cabinets. s kylights. patio. formal din rm. J03,•, r1nanr1n)(. 01•11 ~loat Show brick rireplar e . pool. Sf.41LUffS lge liv. rm. Quiet cul·dt> Sl24 900 · --AN'Alfrt'M"
C ..... ,o ... ~o oo ss12 ooo o '·iew. · view,4BR.Sensallonal. """"" M sar. · wner TERRELl.RLTY CONVENTJON
U .000. Warm. woo sy. won 673-4411 498 1653 CENTER Apnl 17-25
U.ilOOf ~ufc derlul 2 Bdrm. 211 ba.1--------To claim t1rkets. rall1•. ,... •IV,.. :. formal dining All up ;--------s.toAlla 1010 642·5678, ext 27 2 Realtors 675·6000 graded Sl84.500 ................. •••• • • 1'\cktt.s must be cla1m1.>d1 ___ .... _ ... ._ 675-1771 HOITHUGUMA s.ctpo• tt byApnl 23.1982
AMEllCAN DIUM
$1'5 000 4 Bdrm. pool, spa. Encl
courtyard and much
rmrewilh this beauliful·
ly apPOinled home See·
Ing 1s believing Ca II
nowm.S370
SllS,000 12.~5°/o 1:.,. .. t • • *
IY OWNER ' A beaut1fol customized 4 ~ &tcM ~t.:!1~go~ ~:e !!~ie~I ~~'::r1~0mo1~~~.~~1 &~ 2100>{ lot 3 blks lo beach reel Complete Wllh l ........................ .
Playhouse & r Pnred formal d1ntnjt. breakfast Pnvale Party wishes lOCI ~~~!!!11•111~~ yard. Try SJS,000 do~·n nook. family room and uchange luxur) Sann .! - -KmMarshall.494·~7 TWO fireplaces • Tile Otego Condo & rash f~n ow.&ANXIOUS!!! counters ar cenl the s1milarhomeorcondotnn
flOK 6elow mrkt. this -----k1trhen. plus there's a NewPorl Beach area "
wrp 4 br. 2 ba. fam LocJ-oHih 1050 m1rrowaH Assume 171_4l275-6«6_or642·~-l _I
rm, SJ>a home CAN BE •••••••••••••••••••••••• loans and owner ~111
YOURS ' Come take a S7SOO DO WN ' NO 'I consider helping ....,.
look & we'll r1gure out QUALI FYING Slf».<XX> Phone979 2390 ••••••••••••••••••••••••
how. 142 ~ 979·1138,_ 28r patio home $107.500 ' TARBELL tto.Mt Fwrwkhd
T!r!l...LBk.!,l 497 .3034 _ •••••••••••••••••••, •• • • OHEIHA 100
3Br, 2Ba, A·l cond on LaM Fcnst I 055 Oht-RHI Estah
large R·2 lot Park hke •••••••••••••• •••• •••••
llOat •••••••••••••••••••••••••
rtll
•Ill ,,. ........... n!.~~c;~~toT~1s
super sharp 3 bdrm
home with wet bar.
fireplace and mo r e . c:>wner anxlou1. $129,500.
CaJI 979·S370
yard. Eastside By Lake Foresl 3BR. Den. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br2ba, furnished Shoru1.
owner Sl39,000. 642·9125 2BA. Terms . by owner MolMle Ho.1 term, $900+ pe r mo 11
'
"'11 ms rm ,, ...
'111 fllil mt flll
fl4C. '141 fl<I fl• rm ,,. mo "" "" mi ----flll '"" rm -
•l --•• •II ------.. ---"" ---•t --"" lfll
On Quiet Cul-d•Sac In Old Corona del
Mar. Just Two Short Blocks From
Beach. Comfortable Home On An R-2
Lot Offers Relaxed Atmosphere Typical
cal Of This Desirable Community. Rea-
llstlcally Priced At $290,000. Binnie
Dixon's Listing.
759-911 uc_,..,... ... .,...c ....
i:~::· scc~c4llA-"i~s· =
-----...., .. OAT L -.................... ,_ .......w _.be-i.. ....... ,_ ......
I NITTEY I . I' I r I I . I K" 0 TE
• 1 1 r 1
J ~
LHllY IFFlllll II Spyglass. Char-
m Ing Southcourt model w/
breathtaking 180 degree view of
ocean. Catallna, Newport Harbor &
coastline visible from moat rooma. 5
lg BR. 41ft BA. 3 car garage, pool &
spa and much more. $1 , 100,000.
Myrna Boom 551-8700 (H50)
or6'2-2741aft 5.30PM..:.... __ 770·954_9 _ ForW. 1100 ~ 675~ ___ _
"'--p..i...t. I 026 is--------• •••••••••••• • ••• • • • • • •' Cotto Meto l 12+1 --Newport Bearh De Anza ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fabulous ocean & harbor
view on bluff. 2 Br 2 Ba. leCW'lly. Greal terms.
M see,_~3·3151 coll ------••Toro 1032 ...... c ..... Rare-3 .. l>earoom one·
story e nd unit .
Buutlfally uperaded.
Oloice ireenbelt IOU· Uon In tlils moat deslra·
ble RCWity communllf . Excellent fifttndnf as
available. SUl,500
RCTc1vlor Co . .
•••••••••••••••••••••••
bayfront Park Mint
rond. '78 dbl widt>.
fireplace. brick patio. Iii .<XX>. Also 2 br . 2 ba .
double wide. rorner lot
$39,000. 8111 Grundy
67~161
•EXCITING•
&W.W. Wllh or without furn.
:Mll64 Gretnbner Home
ut Lquna Hills mcesl 5
star part Youn11 adlls
wtlcome
Bta~x,~wesl
Hm • 2Br, 2Ba This la the belt h\11 In town a.usec
MOIUHOMI
2706 Ha~..,te 206 A
ftt.1'17
Obie wide 2 br, 1 i,., ba.
1172 •Pict rent. Adults,
amall pets. Quiet H.B. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml OffOITUM&TY wrner lot. $27,$00 or knoeb Ql\en wfie-n you J!elt.Qwntr,t47-zts4.
oA. 1 UM rwull·&eltina Dally 1 --iu dbl ..... ... .... avP~!!ri ... •UfO PUot Cl .. lfltd Ads lo ..,.~ w1-. auar~
..,.. "' _ ... •L-Or Co t IMeS. ucl att.a. H.8. IP" lie. ~ un: an1e u .._IAn Rtnt St71. Owner
llM
~Jr..,. .. ~ ... ..,. ~~ ..... _ .. :.. ... · ... ~~~~~--~~~~~~~IO'"~ ;'d~' I ...-Wt . • .,.... .... .,,. ,_ , t~~furl"" =~ :: ... :....=t. ···r!P.:.· ................... ;;;"···
1••P ilauUltd ror ..., v tmal;41t·ZJll. Oner1A1t. ~U.:· ltut hu. !:.. ., • ., l• 111 ,..,.i.,-.._ uo... .. .. ,.
• •••••••••••••••••••••••
New 3 Br. 3 Ba. Condo.o
$1500/mo. furni shed ti $1000 unfum. Mo. lo Mo.11
rental. Isl. & las t I
Superb localion, next l•I ~~g & ~heale~~ ..
Ml l!lpOSi •ec11 3 I 6tt .......................
Versailles Bach $6~
Udo Prk mobile .. $70111
View 2Br rondo . $12000
Villa Balboa2Br $1200(1 Npt. Cttst 3Br . SlSOOO Wa~ront Homes. Inc 1
_ _.B.1·1400_ . --
Oceanfront 2 br, 1 b&,t
aara&e. No pell. AnlUi
DOW lo JUM 20IJI. l$SE
Ill). uw pd. Ml-1510.
1 BR. condo, poolJ1
jlcuu;i, o m. blllludstl
uuna. 3Uir atc. GardeM
view. SSts. 7S4 4114.;r. 11157 Kat~ _
W.11 •••• lt• ........................
l
SMled propoule wlll be r-"'9d at th• ottlce ot Plant Oper1t1on1, Chief of Plant Ope<1tlon1 Ill, Fair·
11lew Slit• Ho1pltal, 2501 Harbor
81\id , Coate M .... CA 112e28 until
3~00 P.M. on 4-2142. II wtllc:h time PUlllC llTCE
they wlll b• publlcly opened end 1-------------'ICTITIOUt llUIM:U NA• ITATIMEHT read tor performing wor1c .. Furnllh 111 labor, meterla11, tool• end equipment ..-..ry to "Conatruct
Parking -S Bulldlng" -Con· llruct e new 28 11111 parking lot,
South ol "S" 8ulldlng. complete with curb1, dreln1, catch buln1 end
llght ltenderd II Fairview Stet•
Hoepltel, In eocordentll with plane end 1peclllcetlon1 therelor
Preference wlll be grented to
blddera properly approved u
"Small Bu1lne11" In accordance
wttt1 Section 18ee. et ~ .• Tt111 2.
CallfOmla AdmlnW1111Uve Code. Af>-pllcallon1 tor prete<eflC• mu1t be 1ubmltted to th• Small 8u1lna11
Office. 1823 -1•lth StTW', s.cte-
Tile foflOwing .,.._,, ere dOlng b<ial· ,_ ...
OENE'S MAAKEl , 1080 S CoH I Hlgltway, Laount Beac;h, Callfotnla g26S 1 Edwatd Well•, 135 McKnight Orl•e,
~ e.acr.. Celtforllla 92&51 P•tncle A. W-. 13$ lolcl<nlglll O.MI ~ 8tecfl. Galtf...-92651 f~ll l>ual ... sa It COflOUCted by "" In--· Eclw*CI Wtlls Patrk:I• A Wtllt Thlo tl•l_,I •u lllecl with the eou.
ty c;...,, ol ~ County on Marci! 211. 1912.
WHTl:llN MUTUAi. HCllOW Ca... M141AllcMl'..tiw..,, ...... ,.
u.-.... ~-mento, CA 115814, not leas than llw F1•1,. (5) callndar days In advance at bid Pu1>U1Mcl Orange Coaat Oally Pilot
09Afllng date. Thhl pref«eflCI ap-MM '1· AlX 7 1• 21 11192 T~7-12
pllel to proi-cte wtwe the Mtlme-
ted projecl coet ~ $15,000. NIUC llTICE
Bid propoeelt muat be sut:>mlttld 1-------------tor the entire work deacrlbed the-rein. OevlaUone from plen1 end
IC)edtlcetlonl wlll not be considered
end will be cauH tor rejec1lon1 ol
bld1. The Oeper1ment has the right
to we/ve any lrregulllr!ty In a bid or
lb reject any or fill blcl1. No bid '#Ill be cbnaldeted unllN It 11 med• on e 111ndard form tur-• ~l1h1d by the Department end le made In accordance wlln tne
"lnllructloN to Blddeu "
809'5 HOME REPAIRS, 570 Trt..,.
M om.. Coat• Meu. Cal<fomla 92112& ~ w S-tk-1, !70 T,.._ °""9, Cotti MtM. C:.lorNOI 921126
o~'"'''"'"' 16 conoucteo by an 1n.
~ w. SwalkOWlkl Thlt ll•t•m•nl wu lll•lt .,.,llh lhe ~~f*k OI Orenge County"" t.lareh
Proapeatlve blddlfa may examine ~1U979 end obteln plans, tp41Clflc1tlon1 and Publlthed Orangt Cool Dally P1101.
bid tom1s by calllng et or melllng e M•• 2•. 31. /\Ii' 7, ••. 1va2 t31M2
request to the Office ot the Chief of Plant Ope<1t1on1 et the above •d· dreu. telephone number (7141
957-5212. A payment bond. Standard Form FICTITIOUS 8UllNHS 8()7 In the amount of ntty percent Of ..... STATUlflfT
the c:ontrect price must eocompeny .. rn. •-"II '*"°" os 00ong 11v_.
every contract Involving •n expen-BILL s AUIOMOTIVE nn S•turn
dlture In exceu of $1 5,000. °'""' No w H\illtonglon Beach c.i.tor· The ~tut bidder wllf be ,.. n1a 926• 7 quired lo execu1e 1 conrrecrurel Willl"'" ""''-'Y Andreom 617 is1h agr .. ement In Iha form of 1 StrHl Huntington Bue" c..1110""'
"Standard AgrHmenl, form 2" 1126-tl which shell be binding upon the ~::.,o-mneu" conoueteo !IV •• ••·
Stele of Celllornle only upon •P-""' .,.,1_1 wu ,...., .....,, ,,,. County
provel by the Stile. cw~ of Or•nge County on Aonl ~ 1ta2 In eccordwlQI with the provtsloM w-A ""°"'"m ot Sec1lon 1110 of the Labor eooe. n-1 the Department hll llClr'lllned Pubhaneo O••ng« Co .. 1 Daily P•IOt that the generll prevelllng ,.189 or ""' 1 1• 21 21 1n2 1~1.a2
wagff appllcebte In the county In which the work 11 to be done ere
thosa ratH Htebllahed end pu-
blished by the Director of Industrial
Relettont. Coplea ol the wege retet ere on Ille at the Olfloe ot the Chief
of Plant Operellona. Felrvl-Ho•·
pltal and et the °'91r1ment ol 0.. velopmenlll Servlcee hNdqu11r11fS
Ml.IC MDTICE
'ICTITIOUI 8U8-SI 'IAMI! ITA TfllllHT The 10-•ng .,...'°" •t oo.ng 11\1".--s ••
office.
IRAOE CO INTEANI\ 1 IONAl 10 10
S.yMOe Co .. Cati ~t 8eacn C..I• lornUI 92662
Site lnepecllon wlll be held
Tnuraday, Aprll 15, 1982 at 10.00
OGtOlhV .aon Simpson 1010 BaysiO.
CO"fl E1at Newpon Beien Callto1n1a 92661
A.M. Fairview Sl•I• Hoaptl•I
Victor B)eleJIO
Hoa t>u11ne•" •• conductecl by an 1n~ dlvlClu•I Oo<othy J S1mpaon
Chief Of Plant Ope<etlont Ill
n .. ••••-• wu ""'°with,,,. County Cl4<' of Or•noe Covnty on llo<ll S 1982 ,.,_
Publl1h1d Orange Co111 Oellv PubhafltO Orange Coot Cally Poto!
Piiot, Aprtl 7, 14, 1982 1511·82 Aptol 7 1' 21, 28. 1982 1586-82
B.a'te1
SYNOPSIS OF THE
ANNUAL STATEMENT OF
Centennial lnauranc. Company,
Atlantlc Bulldlng, 45 Wall Street,
tMw York, N.Y. 10005
YNr EncMd December 31, 1911
Total admitted assets $143, 141,857
Total llabllltles 106.363,654
Special surplus funds -0-
Capltal paid-up/Guaranty
Capital/Statutory Deposit 3,000,000
Gross paid-In ana
contributed sorplus
Unassigned funds
8,526,874
(surplus) 25.25 1,329
Surplus aa regards policyholders 36,778,203
Income for the year 71.692.858
Disbursements for the year 60,357,548
We hereby certify that the above items are In
accordance with the Annual Statement tor the year
ended December 31, 198 1, made to the Insurance
Commtaaloner of the State of Callfornla, pursuant to
law.
Isl John J. Mackwoskl, President
/a/Joseph P. Decamlnada, Secretary
Publlahed Orange Coast Dally Piiot, April 13, 14.
15, 16, 17, 1982 ....,
IYNOPSll OF THE
ANNUAL ITATEMENT OF
Atlantlc Mutuel lneuranc:. Company
Attent.tc 8uldtng, a Wall atr .. t,
tMw YOftl, N.Y. 100CIS
y.., 11.nded Oec:.mbef 11, 1911
1663-82
Total admitted assets $431,358,497
Total Habllltles 318,906.099
Special aurplUI funds 102,452,398
Ceplt.al pakj-up/Guarenty
C.pltal/Statutorv Deposit
Grou peld4n end
contributed eurplua
3,000,000
UnU91gnedfunde
(eurplua) 7 ,000,000
SUrptut .. r~Clt pollOyOfdefe 112,452,398
Income for the YMll 214,0<M,040
Dtabunem«lta for the )'Ml' 180, 112.~20
We hereby certify that the above Item• are In
ICCIOrdanc• wfth the Annual Statement for the year •net.ct December 31, 1881, meoe to the Insurance
CommtMk>ner of the State of Cellfomla. pursuant to
law.
111.Jotwt J . MICkowtlel,
PreekMnt
/a/.x..ph P. OecamJnada
8eamary
PubWMd ~ CoMt DallY Pltot, AprU 13, 14,
11; 11. 17, 1812
1e&2-82
I
r.
'ICrmoua aultHlll NA• ITATUtaNt
Tne fot.towmo swtttOni ••• dOttliil butt• -·· Al STAMPING COMPANY t6• 1 I St Gert•uoe Pi.w • ...,,. Ana !Affft>I"'• 9270$
._.ottmartn ~temp.ng. ,,..., • <.;•Mlu.r\•a
tOfpor&l.on 11 Sunf~I lr YltHI (;al••ou ua 927 IS
lhft bua1nesa 11 con<hK t.n by • COfpn
ration
MoHm•nn St&mCJIOQ If\\ Wtfn~ t-totfm•nn l>resocl«fll
IM •••tt.tment WU l1kKi '#fW O\w (.,uun1v
ci..i. 01 0••"91 County '"'"'"'''~ 1981 ,._
Pu1>111neo Or anoe Coast D•••v "''''' l\ptit 7, U, 21 28 198? I~ < d'
PHllC MOTCE
'ICTITIOUI BUSl'll&I NAMI STA T£11111fT
Thoe folto,.,o{; P"'f'SOO ii do.ng bu'"'' .. " .. ENTFIV LEVEi S•SIEMS 1613 W .. t MKAnh<>r BIVO Sutl• 609. Sant• An• Cl\ 92/CM EDWIN OGOr 14 ( HIL OE lie.~' t> '"'t" roun11.n v'•''-ttv t:A t.:"08
lh11 bua•nt~• it t..unductttd bf' •n .n
OMO .... Ec1WN1 0 C.hto.k
lti-& Jtat .. 1*1l wa• l"-0 w11n lhw t,,e>vnlt Cler-. ot 0'•"0• Co\lnty on M .. •t" u 1M2
'11$2T7
PuDh•n•'1 Ot1ng• C..'Je1t IJ• ,. ~''°' '""'~ 1 t• 21 l ll •981 ·~'!() 81
PHUC MOTIC£
FICTITIOUS 8U51NIS5 'IAlll( ITATUUHT
f P\ft toMOW\nQ 1)4!-tlOf\ •~ dfH~Q t1U~11•u .. Cl! MlllNIENAN(.! r<l PAii< 011 fll MOOEllNG SERV•C.E!> 81~ t M••010110
C lrCltl HUt"l••OQWn 8"•rt\ ( t 111Q1t\1e
92646
CahM W 8n<.• 82~1 Man.1 .. 10 Ctr cte. Hunt1ng1on ll<MCh t.oWfor"'• ql&•e
HUI bu11ne.s1 II cnnd"Cl•Ut 11V "" itt O••I01>1ol
ClJtv1n W '"~*' Jh1t statement wot J1..,..., w1tn trv-C.vunty Cteflo. 01 Ot•"V" County on llpt11 ~ •992
'1MS«I
Publl1l'led OflttQ• C-.c1••t 0 "1ly f'tlOt Ao<~ 1 1•. 21 28 1982 I~• U
PUIUC NOTC£
111H m57 nc rmout 1uS1Ml!ll 'IAllll 11AT'lME'IT
The lolowlng !*tot! II clnl<>g -.. HOLIOAV AO~lCA AINI'. ti~ Nh!l/I
WrtflelO 5,,.,., Or""Qe C91.tot" , l(MT tnoma.s .J Par~ 't?87 C•~_,. P!)t11t °'""' Sout" L~QIJ'I• < "'torn•• t~M 1
Ttu• OUI'"~"' It t ~'-•du1='1"'0: "' "" 1n 0-, "Om4t. ... p •tW"O
l ,..... lllat~t w•t t ~ W"ih I•"" t n. M\'
Clerk of Or•no• Ct 1.., r1 "'"' 1 • 1982
Publ1t f'led Or•n91 c. •'' l• • 1) r'·lut
""''' 1 14 2' 28 ·~~2 1~99·&~
P'UIUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUllNUS HAM[ ITATI!lllEHT
tn.t tooow1no Pftfti'ln 1\ oou·u1 ou m,.~ ..
... JC £NHAPRl .. f l'lf! l•mU O••no<! CA 91667
,_,.1oti1e1 Joel (Hnw n t \16 J1mf'\ 01an99. Cl\ 92661
Th11 bu•1neu t• .<'1n,11.H' tt'd hy ,_,, 1n
"'"'°""' M~et J~ 81t1'Nn
Jnr\Stl(etn(tnl IA-iH l!h"'J _..1h 1h4• (.rl\lnt .. Ch!<> ol Oraf'!,le Co.,nty "" Aorol ' 1q91
,.,_
Pub11ahed Otange Co11t l.M+lv hlot
~ 7 u ?t 24 •98/ •'••n 82
PlllUC llT1C(
FICTITIOUJ IUllHEll HAllll ITATfME'IT
The 1-ng pet>on 1t onooq """"<Ii• .. THE Pune RAil •2•0 'ioul" Rfovn BouieV••O Anen.,.m CaM01noe 0280•
Janet N1d1n1 Oul'•w 2878 Ania
Lane Costa MM.a r:..a• '°''''• 126,.r.
Ttua bu1me11 '' conth1c1en hY "'' 1n. OMOual
J•~ N C)vtltW
Tn.s Stll~t •at t i'"2 wr.. "' tN L1A1nt)' Cl•rlc ot Oterioe Cou,.ty .1ri Mlt* ti t9
•992
f'1 ...
Publ11h•d O,anoe Coa1t1 0Adt P1to1
A,ptM 7 t• 21 28 198/ 1~18 82
PUIUC •TCE
~llUllHHI
HA• tT A Tl.lllVfT TM I~ petton It <IOl"O 1>1;t11-
Ml DOW BUOOEI PAEPAAATION, 26
EaatlhOr•. Irvine, Calllornl• 9'7 I• Donna Jtenne Olbaon, 26 ~or~ ...-. Cellfornl• 9271• ~ butJneu la C<>•Ouc1eo by en In·
Donna Oll>to!> Tl'llt llatement •II llled with th• County CMwll OI Or•no<O County on M.,cto
20. 1H2 ,1., .. Publleneo Oreno• CoHt O•lly P1101, Mar )I. Al>' 1. 14, :It. 19112 1430·83
NIUC MOTCE
'ICTmOUI IUllNIH
H.U. ITATllftlfT The l()loow1ng peuon1 art OOtng l>ul' -.. MllAATHO'I l EASI NO GROUP lllHO Atton Sttffl ltVon• Cehl,,,nla 927U
l-Sy.I-• NI< t C9l•lo<""' '°''
PO<atlOn. 16$80 "-'°" S1r .. 1 •f'Wlt CAI· _92,,.
r ..... .,...,._ 11 -•.a 11y • cor.,,o.
tat.oft
l••• Syotamo Inc Timothy S S-hft no Prtal
°""' T1ll6 .... _,wt• ''*' Wltfl lht Cour>ty Clerll ol O<llf'Gt Coutll'r on Al!fM ~. tt12 ,,.....
Pul>llall.-J Orange Cou l Dally Piiot,
.. 1, 14, 21, "· '* 1'86-11
••
.......,.,.
'ICTITIOUt llU ... H ICAMa.ITA~WT
TIMI IOl!OwVlg ~ II OOlng ~
MIO WESTERN CRAFTSMEN, 100 S
11.,t>Or Blvd Unit 0, Santa AN, Cailfof.
n;a 921CM 0•1• Jofln SorenMn, 381 Bay View ,.,,_ Costt M ... Cllllforllle Thtt l>ullntH tt CO<lOucled by an In·
-.l'vtdu•I Dale John Soten..,
T I'll• llalemtnl wu flled wltll 1~• Coun1y C..,,. of O.•noe County ou Mwefl n 111112 ,_
l>uOlltheO 01ange CoHI Dally Pilot, Merch 31 AorN 7 14. 21, 1912 1.e1-12
rlllllC ~E
flCTITIOUI .., ..... NA• ITATE_,.,.
T1>e I01lo•11no person Is~ -•• ta} SPECIALIST I.EASING (bl SPEC.. IAL TY lEllSINO 263 PromontOf)I Ortw w ... 1 Newoort -... c:a;.for.,,., 92ll60 K.,en Joan J-253 Promonlory Ome weal New1><1<I 8Nch. Cefll"'nla
92660 'h11 bu&1nsa1 I& condUC'ted by an ....,.
ftl•M.N .. "'·'~ J Jt~ I n1t >t•t•ment • ., llled wltll the Counly c... Of Onlnge County "" Merell JO 1982 F\lal7 Putiltsn•d Or•ng• COHI Oatly Piiot, Mot 31 Apt 1 U 21 1912 14111-12
PUBLIC MOTCE
FICTmOUl~H NA• aTArn.WT
r ne IOllo"""O pe<son1 art Clolng .,.,... _ ..
MESA El.ECTAIC MOTORS, •81 N. Newpo11 Blvd No 2, Newport Btacto,
Celtlor•~• 92660 P•ul •nd S..ty WlllemMn, 208 Wlllit Forest Rood Cotl• MeH. Calllornla 92826
Th•• 11\1~ ...... ,. conduc:lecl l>y • Qll<*81 per1nertnlp Bttty Wlllemten
J n11 11atem••• wu fllad wllh the Counly Cletlt of O<enge County on Ma<Ch 21 1982
,~
Publ1t"•O Or•no• CoHt O•lly PMol, Mar 2• 31 A{X 1, ••. 1982 1334-1?
PUIUC ~£
IUTIMIHT M A•~
0.: UM M flCTITIOUI llU ... H !&Am TN> 1ouow1ng pe<aon hu al>W1d-
'"' ..... '" '"" hc:tl\low ---lCCAllBEA IHVESTMENTS, 2845 E. l..OHI Highway Sune JO•, Coron• dtl ..... c...1...-111925 Tn. Fict•hou• Bu-N-........,
t abo'4!e w•• flied tn Otange Counly "'' llugull 3 19111 . L•,..rtn'9 J V•enl. 1300 Pwk New· ~MoNo 312 '-POr1 BMc:h, c.llfornla
T"lt bus11-,..,. condUC19<I by .,. lfl..
d•..OUAI L-renc41 J Vlanl Tn1a atetemtnt wu llltd mlth Ill• County Cw• of Oftnge County "" IAr'Cll lO 1987
FW7'MI Pu1>111noo Orange CoHt O•lly Piiot, M•r 31 AP< 7 ,. 21, 1182 ,. ..... 2
PUIUC MOTCE
FICTITIOUS IUllNl&A 'IAME ITATEMIHT IM IOllJw>ng i>e<son ti dO!<Og -•• Tf( .. HNICAL INVESTMENTS LIMITED-(,( NEAllL REPAESENTA TIOH 100 Sholl Plu o No 11• Newpotl 8eecll C.kl0<nll
92663 V"''"' Bau1e 100 Sc"OfZ Plaza *Mw· r0<1 Buen Ca~tornia 926113
f h•t bu1tnM 1 Is c.onducteo bY en tn.
d1-.1du.-f
\'f"th 8tlrr.-
'"'' '1•T~I WU fitied Wflh lhe Cow\ty """' ~· 1'•nge County°" Ao<~ 5 19'2 '111111 Publ~•ttrn Or11nve Coaat D•ily Pllo4, Ar• 7 1• 71 21 1912 t5S7.a2
'"
PUIUC llTCE
FICTITIOUS 8U ... ll 'IAlllf ITATUllEHT
~ ... hoflOo,•ng --.. doW'G II<;-
T Hf COOPER COll..ECTIO'I, 11 l JOlh Stre•I Newpoll BHCh, c .111 .... 1.
"16fl3 D••le C H~. 1i.. Deli Coopef, It 1 JOt~ Sttfft N9Wl>0'1 8ucfl. Cailfor.
no• 91661
l h11 bu11nots 11 conducted by an In·
d1v1du11 Otrle C Hugl>ea I hta .,.,..,,,.,,, w .. 111ec1 with the County cw" 01 O•••oe County on Ai>rM 5. 1N2. ,,.....
PtoOh•"•<I Orange CoHI Dally PllOI, April 7 I•. 21. 28. 19112 1576-82
PtllllC *ITU
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7
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JZ44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... Near new adult cQDdo nr
• ..,. .A.LS 281 nr S.C Plu. Adult 3 bdrm 2 ba townhoutc SC Pl1u. Sft 11tu. r;~r~u1-fi1nt•r. G:tci.t.':aF'"'° ~!:;:_,tf";. !:k 'rr~I!!: ~ndT;,·~ .. !,~·nk~·
••COIS OCRENTAl..S CallU4l~·4lee!tt O 1BR. d1.ni.n1. '"· r•t•u
Ml4 II.ALTY l·Sbr'tl200tol2000 -5'cll.ldcd end uni Nu
, • 0 , I I T y 110-914 Qpenid•n ~::!:lr.,~i::.Urn ~ ~~9$ .. m utll.
MGIS. New Z br. 2 ba condo, frplc, dble 11r . pool & 6l• "'171 micro. pool, Jar, S800 1pa. No ptts S19S Exeruuvecondo,()(ean&
1C11 111>. No~t•. l'fonsmlm 112_.em. 159.ma b ---ly vlf'w Ypl 1•, .... , .... 3207 Dxf'lt. 6/ev751·811H t•11lhl'dr11 elgi, ctt t +
••••0 ••••••••••••••••• HOUie, hone OK. 28r, lb lbllNTALS saso tlt-n. S800 per mo Dvs I'-' Bdr, 1 blk to bc1ch, in>. 20202 Birch St. h . 2,,: l6n SM !KW, cva. 673 48119
ltlt;t:ifJP:.giveta. Ana H a. 551·6931 211t:21Jba '8$0
· --E. Side 3Br. 28a. fam rm 3br, 2ba Sll7S if lwflh r..nt11Md C.-.. M• 3JJJ w/frplc , fncd yd , 3br.2ba 11•00 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.... e .. •••••••••••••••• cardener. cpt1, drp3 3br. 2ba SlSOO furn -..0.1"-d 1706 Xlntz br. 2 bl, saso. llOO mo. 1st & la•t .. 4br. 2ba 11350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213>~1980 wkdys $400. m RobinhOod Ln 4br. 211ba 11100 BAY Vl£W furnished 2
714 9$$3 evl/wknd 173'1aft3PM. L« Rmor Rily 1133 8600 BR. l Ba w 6hower, no
2 br house. 1 ba. patio, 3 Bd, pool. $775 pr mo ~-~~ l7f5 ~ uS600r mo yrll} l 223, llv.tdln. combo. u50 Sl<XX>moves~um Lin ., --'d E oty ront .1 l (' .., da Ha ~ r + eo, 1• a r · Balboa Island 673 4326 76().8379bet.12·5. rt63l·l , agt IJ\lrro. frplr , fenced )cl, -~ -
2 br, frpk. din 'rm. lge Sunny 3 Bdrm. 2•,ba 2 car gar Nr pool, spa labNafleMtwlo l707
kit 2 blks to Big Corona E's1de with yard. dbl ~ 12131837 8339 •••••••••••••••••••• •••
Sch. 00.645·5846 --~.arAck~!r~Mf.1~S795 l.o9-MHJwl 3252 3~m rm•l e~ea~iy ·~~11~i
Wilk to bch 3Br 2ba, --••••• .. •••••••••••••••• 675 5710after6pm ~~!r. cu. avail now. WIDS/PITS 01 Clean. qwet 2 BR 2 Bit ~lsf/last_642 5290 2bdr-m townhouse nr fam rm. dbl gar m:ill ColtoMno 372• c..t.MeM 3224 Civic Center Lrg mstr, bard S150 ltrrh, •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• attchd dbt gar S575 lL729 CASA DE ORO HORSE PROPERTY A : 5S6·6SI&. -~75 2 BR. exet·, 1.i,·h ft!l' AU. L'TILITI ES l'A 111
3 Bdr 2 ea. located tn Mesa def Mar, 2 br, 2 ba, rar. gatl'd, Ylll', 493 1132 .
SA Hgts 1800 sq rt ram rm. 2 frplr, dblt filll·3672
home 1775/mo Call gar , fenced yd Me -rt• II 1269 Traditional Ril y Gardener tnrl sooo.''f"r oc 631.7370 A k f Ji 67J.ll73 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• =-i.. _ • s or __ m Hillside beauty 3 + br
"ei.e" 4 rm ea1lslde 2 BR I Ba duplex, new rf\llc,patio, JlCXll 1825 I
l'OUag_e. pets. !JOiy S395 paint & rpts. gar no OCJ!ENTALS 750 331.t J
OC RE TA~ 750·3314 ~· ~ + dep 1948 5 Bd Country rharmer
2Br 11, Ba $525 eyer.549·J48.4 Npt Hgts. 3000 .. sq ft
2 Br I Ba . . $500 RV a<·ress. Newly 11a1111
Both units pa rl of a ed fam rm. den. \ a('ant
tril>lex Have garages & A~f~'f..~l E Walk to srhools Sl450
pati<ll Tradillj)nal Rily Fresh 1 and 2 bdrm ron Qrnna, a.Jn 631 1266
6.'.Jl.'t370 Ask for Jim d o-m 1 n 1 um s 11o 11 h Balboa Is 2+ br on brh
Oioire3br.2baexec f1replares. skylights gar.sunset pat10$600
showhm.frplr,garS600 patios and 2 rar OC:.RENTALS 7503314 OC RENTALS 750 3314 garages
Rmdld2br "Old World.. 1535 to S595 t•YflO ... T w gar. rnro. pets ok $425 1872Monrov1.i "' " C)(..RENTALS 750·3314 Costa Mesa 2 Slc>n , 4 + bdrnlb l
63l-StOt bat h·s . f1 rt> p I"'' l'
IEOHEOF l•--iliiilliiiilili---t gorgeous \teW Pier .incl slip S3000 Pt"r mu AvJ1l
F'l'b I MESA. VERDE
4 bdrm. 2 ba. fam1I>
holl'll.' Ouiet Area A\ ail
immediately Man)
art]enti~. 675·4912 BK R
3 br. ram rm. dtn rm. 2
associated
81101< E11S Rt AL TOllS
J.' W 9oti":lO &'1 ht!
ba. new paint •drpi. BL.UFF'S 3 "H 2,_ .... frpll'. 2 rar ~ar u ••u Gardener Av:ul S785 fplr. upi:r<1ded. pt1t10 ~ $875 mo or lbr opt
Comp<1rl• hPfor1• .1·1111
rrnt c u,lom 1fr~11:n
features l'uul II BO
('Ill rd ~Jfll!lt' )UI
ruunded w11h plu)h
ldllfbl'aJ>tnl! No P'''' I Rr furn from $4!~1
2 llr furn (1 Olll S!>i!11 ~ w w.r~uo, 1142 0111
Nlt'e I llr clµI x tJuwl
~Jl b~ l!Jr 1 4'mplyct
adult 01·t'1 J5 No l><'b $331~1021
twMqtott leach 3740 ....•..•..••...••......
H.8 's FINEST Spaml>h F-'itale l.11101: •
Heau11ru1 park hkt> 'VI
1ound1nl() Tt't t J• t•d
IJOol Sunkl'O ~"' hti.J i.park hni: fountJtn <.
Sp:i r 1uu \ room'
S<>pdr:ill' cltn1ni: 1r1•.J
\\a l k 1n c l o,1•l'
ho ml'hkl' k111 ht•n &
rab1nrh Walk to 11•1111 IOl!!Oll Ct•nt\·r
I f.klrm furn S541~
2 Bdrm unfurn frum S'il.5
'l.11P<'h \lt1ht1t'~ f rt>\''
,,_LUCIYFEW Rent 1n Costa ~lesa 's
NEWEST gated 20
Townhome VILLAGE
COMMUNITY 2 & 3 Br 21 •Ba 1600-1800 sq ft or
pure luxury Gar11s:es.
hydro·tubs 1n master
suite. d1n1n& rooms.
~ bummic flreplac·e~.
m1rro wave ovens.
pnvale patios & yards
Gardtner provided
Elticanl llVlnl( only 15
minutes from 1-'ashion
Island. 7 minutes lo S C:
1m-8Jll.4 615 5930 3 Br 2' z Ba rondo, pool & • I .1\ (.,ll' INT A llF IDHI !'.A Jll<'. w1oce:in vu 1 m1 Beaullful 3 br. 3 ha hum\' lli211 P<trk~1ti\' l.n I hlk
Plaza or 0 C Airport
Just east of Newport
Blvd & so of San 01r110 Fl'W). St11rt1nl( :it $900 a
month. 631 !1439. 2413 Or11n1te A1·e . Costa
Mesa
rrom brh Lease Pit•ro. overlooking (j(e 1ereen W of Hearh 3 hlk' !'. 11( 1~0900, 646·0449 belt. $10001 mo Edml(l'r
t'amily Home Colll')!e S44"6848 aft 1 ~Opm 847·5'44 I
Park 3 Br 2 !fa frpk. lav Vie¥t Pool H1t1. H•wport leach l7 69
dbl icarage. laundry Lge3 Br2b<t +den Spa ••••••••••••••••••••••• honk-ups . watl.'r & 811( enl'losed yarcl ni:ht
l(a rde ner $1 so mo on B41,·k Ray t'ountn
644-!m9 l>l'llmg SI050 mu 111
Ul>DEG VI t:W CONDO dudes ieardentnf.! & P<>11l
Ntrt' rltan 2 Rr I Ra 2 RR. 2, ;ba. m1t·t'o. "ar sen 752 2197
enrlsd ic11ra1ee. vard " I W NO
LEASE new paint & 1.,,riWt No $8Z> S33 43110, 675 17Kt ~trhH28r ~~' ~ts SS5UtsN•unty "'--P..1-A 3226 t:astbluff3Br Sttoo O . R -_., Eastbluff3Br Sl~l ~ m:ange. house ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• Bayfrt 511r di)( k $32~1
Meer Oce• Wat~rfront llomt's ln1 lA.STSIDE Tn·leve[ lo\ely Ar1•a 631 14UO
2 Br llOOse w1lh den. 4 5 bdrms. 2 b.i, 2 "111 flt1rbor \'1e11o llomt'' 3 fir l(ilrage. w/d hook up~ ered patios 2 rnr 1!~11 2ba. r<1m. rm nl'"' h dl'• 329 .University Or See Fmt'ed ) ard $950 mu Lse ,1250. 644 li97i
manager at S ~--0648 775-0239
Eves DUPLEX Extra lar"t 3 O<.' R•~NTAI.~ ,. I 5 br's S200 lu S2f10C1
Separate house. eastsidr Brnns. 28x 18 Ill rm, 2 750 3314 Op1•n 7 da)" 2 Rr 1 a.. rrpts. drps, foll ba. bltm k1trh. plush stove, washer/dryer hk 11·ps1drps. some orean Nwpt Bluffh. J br 1·ondn up, fncd yard, enrlsd viev. $6501495 14~ on r ho1rr K reeob1·l1
l(ar No pet s . no BToro Hn~hl&i.h<1rp N<•fWI' waterbeds $500 mo + 3232 Le;i~ $1175 644 5~1!1
strurtly dtpo:i;;1t '••••••••••••••••••••••• 548 5'42or 710.5629 ,. 2BR. 2BA almost nt'11o
rondo in El Toro ran yon
Community pool. s pa &
tennis rourts. $650 mo
213-493·1151, 114 1159 1710
•2 BR. den. f"P. 2 ba t·on
do. nr Westrlirr $675
Avl ~..:.David 646 3255
Nr11o'POrt Cr<·'t Hlr l!', hJ
qwet c·ourt,\ aril C'IO\t' lo
pool and tt'nn1l> SIU!ill
rm C:ull 675 5788
3 br. 21 ·i ha ;ufull rnncln
S795. w pool. '11· lloa)!
3 Br.1f~ ~~!nhouse ~.~!!~! .... !~.3.~ ll~p1tal 642 6Jl.l
bybabbhngbrook.frplr . HOMESFORRF:NT Panoram1 r 11l•11 1d
d/w, pool. many xtrns 3 & 4 Bdrms S12!i·S1~0 ocun•puk Jhr 2h.i.
No pels $850/mo lease f' r n red yards & den. 1mmac· 2 fr11k~.
!St + sec. dbl l(araRe Ra rages Kids & pets e I er Kar A' k • n J! Ava114·25646 6423 I wekome SH·20110 $1150 mo 111o1ll n<'J!tll 1
2 BR-1 ba gar wshr w 10 ~~efll~nofee Anx1ou:. (2131 938 7:!71
Hkup no pels S48S ........... leocla 32401 dys, 1213> 662 4956.t'1t'~
2318-C Plarenu:1 5-45-1983 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 3 BR hvnw at .11121
3 bdrm , 2 b a • Exer4br.Jbaw 3·car Port Barm~ut~, :\H
water gardener 1nrl gar.patio. puropt $615 $950 rm A\ I Jlmrt f!9S~JlelS. 644 2718 ~RENTALS 150-3314 213 4261:.11 s Blks to ocean. Elu:ant 2 llarbor \'u 3br m3 n~ ur•
REQUIRED
Spacious \IUO•CI' (In<'
.l"'I ""O Dt'dfoom ilOo)l1
IT'P nl\ FURNISHED
Ind UNFURNISHED
0.1•,.." I a•Y alter\
' All Uhhhes P1td
'lmmed11le
Occupancy
'$I Million in
Recreah0t1
i\n(! M11cl'I M1H•
r nf a mpnf n ilf d t.ff ..
1tmP Mod~·I~ "'~,, h+l1
o=!J!T' 141 fDrT' NO pt!I~
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
Newport Beach/No
ll/JO I vor>e
'' 'ofr (714) 64~1104
Newpon Beach/So
I '()\) 16th :)t
l• ~t'' JI lf,m
(7 loC) 642·5113
Whni ii
means fur
yuur ad
to be clnssifi£d n
Br Family Rm & Den frades 1?.irden1•r I ~Mo. Plush crpts. 2•: 1100 mo 760 0451
Ba Cedar & glass. sun J~toff8ay 2bdrm Xlnt SClftCfefttrnte 3776 deck, dbl car prv rond Ref S100 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• gara~, fully ma 1 n t i 63l·S233 2 bdrm, I'. ha hlk to
active
readers
c
w heft people tied
your ed In
dA111fled. they're
reedy IA buy and
tnlvtly ... rchinc ror the tlUICt Item
to till their nted-
rM ybe il'• in your
td. llllJ 1'1111
claMlftededl
G,~ o~~~re at j elllfs ~iew nr Ne~port hr•1t h ~~ 72:!5
• • --1.4? 2br. 2'' b11 S91S mo
OCRENTALS ...rr1J 645 1014 1-5 br's S200 to $2000 -~fltl 7so.33l4 ~n7da.l§ Luxury pool h ome Unfwwi1~d
--marvelous West ddf ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 Ba. rplr. kids OK. !oral.Jon 4 Bdr. m1rro. 1a1boa fllftinwla 3807 S625 ,mo Ask for Keith, many extras Ye<1r or 962·4411 more lse $1495 Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4BR. 2BA }'rarl) f'rpl<'.
Near Slater & Spr· ~ .. agt~:ll·l266 hit ms Close to ba\ &
ingdale, 2 story. 4 br. SPYGLASS execuU'c Ol'('lln Brkr67S 4912
clean. Lease S900 mo. home. 4 Bdr. 211 Ba. 3 t~ean front 3 Br 2 llo
840-1188 car garage. 2 frplrs . Years lease 51350 mo ...,.._ 3244 po/iular Tradew1nds 714 337 2414 clHJ.
•••••••••••••••••••• ••• m I $1750 mo Mi k r 675-8004 eves & wknd;
Twnhome. new 3 br, 3 ba. Crow agt. 6'!5·3116 ,. __ _._, M 1822
patio. gar. Park. pool. S.a.-wt. 3276 ~_, or t 975/ 833 9057 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J! .mo. · ....................... Walktobeach,2br frpk.
Rand>o San Joaquin con· • • • liee deck, rnrl prk g. do. 2Br 2ba, den , • ......,. ln<lry far $850 mo May
1 7S/im. 645-1101. 121rnoiiea11 Pt w. ~s·8S89
Greentree detached Costa Mesa 1---------home. 2Br, frplc. coun· You ltt the winner of
try kitchen. cov.red four free llckels <Sl6 001
patio, 2car 1ar1ge, com-value to the
inLnit)' pool Ii park. nr ~ .... SIN»w ldlla/lhOop!nL 6 tennis ----ANAJlllV ·
@Smo.~1.ms CONVENTION
CENTER Al>lil 11 25 1\Jrtlend. 38r 3ba, ram To claim tic\ets, r ill
rm. liv rm. frml din .. 642·5678, ut. 272 prol landscape. A/C · Lse Tiditts must be cf aimed opl. 152-ll081 by Apf1 I 23, 11112.
Woodbri<flt Condo: 3Br 2 ~ b a, 2 car 1 ar , 1----""-"-.=....---
COIOHA Dlt. MA.I
Ch•an 2 bdrm . 1 bolh
apartment "''Ith rarpels.
drapes & enclosed garage S600 per mo
17141 '73·4400
12tll Ul.2121
HARBOR
J 1p1nese tand1c1pe S...._ lJIO
1rdener provided ... ••••••••••••••••••••• A 0!1·1~100 or lak•J~ tennis cru. Beautifully maintained lliirbur fnH·stmiont C<1
la . ~1-9155 or •ll okltt borne. Orie wood i-------• 1eo pMtlln&. 1bdr~2 car :Lartt ylf'd. '6SO
. ,19
.......................
~~1fMT Servire Olret'lory Reprtaent•tlve
;~ t4f:lt7!, rd Hi
~··················· ~ ••• ~ ••••• !'!'.~~~.! •••••••..••••. ~~!'!:1 ............. :: •. !:1 .•.•.•••........ ~!.~ ............ ~ ............... ~~~~~!'!'.~: ......... !~.~! .......... .
.. WICl.&SOM CONCRETE/ASPHALT RIVER ROCK ptrtul TM1•1t•UC .. I All around baulln& tr41• ""Ta Bl•hoe>ll ~P•lnt1n11 Pl.ASTERI NG •Expert TrttPrudnlna•
TlilderiSll'icilM1 Ori~'-11· patlOI, blod1 t:N« pool iktk•, patiot, Liwn ltfi.i)lrub 1111,111 utlmatu Call' J 1 m .. ....,. AIMMt 30 yr& up. tn Buch ~t II ext. Rl'1lul'l'o. 'orn1:;.rr1111 Lt1n9~r~
AdtJIUone Rtmocltllna ~·~ -~ walkwa~, driveway•, Tretlrim·removal ,.._._. "No~vlnil n0tll.1r11•" ~· fo'r eat. 548 urn -a<K'k will•* .n2 • rv
boon, window•. P•t~ ntOMPSON'S t'tc 1 Lawn care Rototi\llna 6fZ 4101 a..tv ,...._. n t i 1 Cumpltt•TrttSuvtre
rovu1.1"rtt ••t Reas CONCRETE CONSTR. °"9fHlt Ser.le•• 6*1S78orcal •••••••••••• ••••••••• INCOME TAX lrftenori Ii exifn~ra ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Gt-n'I ~v up' ~fig,4 U UlQIMt s-49 ..2110 Ut G42841a •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ~wrrAd U4t. 842 4300 Want 1 REALLY CLl':AN Se habla Eapanol Wuyn• Lrfntr !IXOYE1 Dra~cleared from SIU A"'.Jlµ
FIN! HOM t Cerrent·MUOfl!')l·Blotk M,A PS ' 0 RA P H S ....,... Stnlcta HQUS~ Call Gtnaham 110 I.IP ~ 81147 m ·9103 ~"rPlumb101 ~epa811~)U JAT'I n• C.ilt
IMPROVEMENTS Walb.Cutt.work Llr h u lanu . Qua ll l y ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._g1rj._Fr ttl.._84U123 ''NEWIOOK" r C*~l· ti 64,. ~j)I ttrv1tf U0f308
Addlllon1 ' Rtmodellna Rn./co'!'!'.; 4 af\JR.m C-'1•1• Sludenu wndw ROBIN'S CLEANING ...... PAJNTING SERVl< . .'l!:S •Plwnbln& •lle1lln1 ' T-£ ft........&.
•
. • ....., .,. ~ "' "--·i ho h •H•••u•••••••• ••• • •• · EI l I I 2 • h ._ .,_.. d I -Drvwtl clng, car waxing, odd .,.,.-y ce al ro1111 ~ly VANDl!:NBtRG lnt/e~t Ref11, 1n11 d • et' r c~ • r ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• _.._....._.__ STAMPED CONCRETE ;91••••\~·-••• .. •••••••• Js!111~)4~WS Tfl12 le . ~0·~7 LANn!ICAPINO (Jfudio a MS 117S e1ner ne,x d 841MIW * * * a M•nycolon&Palttrn5 DRYWM.L/ACOUSTlC ~ HOUSEWORK Malnt.romm'l/retild UC'Sl'AINT.:R ..... M --"'~ Orivew•Y•· I 14 yraexp Fullyllc'd &•• T t I I• E MrA....,.. ..... Palloe·Walk• '"•u--i . 5325549 ••••• ••••••••••••••••• W•llJ'W'ED Br~ek &rtllm.l r c .. ~.ndu1~ Rlntt ~llOyr~exp. ~l>MnretonDr J.J~.•~ 770·M}C Freeesl Lie U77MI ..lut!ll" Otneral Malntenanct "'"' nc e n1,uvn cc , es.i'rece~t 5369898 NONITY Co6ta Mt1ii
·i·-ADD'NSt Rt.:MODEL 5sz.&'JSl0 QRYWALLTAPING Repairs & Deror11tin11 11.Ll! free ~~t 1>79 .$t4G •!>"'l'EVf~NS PAINTING MANAGIMIMT You are th\I wmni·r or
0et111n_ Incl. Wilrert & ---·-.\]I lexturea &, 11t·ou1tlc .. !.~1.11.l!IU.• R•Y 640 $1441 ~.~~~~l~~lo~:e:~d~· ta buC'k 1 Now H~1" 1n ()ninge· co aru-·15 yr~ four free ticket• !Slil 001
Son 5~1H83'1 af} 4pm. Clllld Cert fi es · Kevin 615 9088 HOM i.-; IM PROV EM !!:NT ble honest 'inte~~tnt •••••• ••••••• •• ••• ••• ext t'ree l'!ll Charles. experienre Call fo r tnfn value to tht ......
~ ., •••••.•...•..........
'AlJ..$'J'ATt: PAV ING
Sulooallnlt Striping
Repairs. Comm /Reaid
~..1-tmic1.-111t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............... ...1 REPAIR PLUMIHNC .,,...:.....,. Ph 6'1 1012' BRl('KWOllK Smull 64S·3348t5464561 and rales. Aadl m~~w _... -Lovin& mom will \•k11 amunC• """ ~· onr · ~b N 1 c " r tom rpenlry r 2 r II t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Healine. t•ar,pentry, lll!ttJ.;1lO PM o 11, rwpor , o~ta ~i l"TH lil-llll A • Decks & patlos J S ca.re 0 · 0 me ELECTRICIAN 1 d \lk'C' Ulu t'rel' e~t No . -esu. lrvlnr Rd~ ~ 6.fs CONVl-:NTION
,. ·1~~· 1139']362 64Hl81
Const Co. Top ~·uality' rh1ldren.Reas.rale.ask . ht r ti ptrce 'obtoosmall.64521!ill Expertllle Hou.,ekeeptng 675317~ PA • " 5!13113 ._._ C'Jo:N'n:RApnl17~
k Li uA l!>rGllda.S81·390l ng · ree es ma e on ~ _ --• . Werumlah varuum& • .. INT L'XTP•INTIN'' _,...., To 1·l11lm ll"'·et• rull wor c no Ouvl latgforsmalljoba JACKOfo'ALLTRAL>f.S s•mnlies. Kittv64l 4!1'1o BLOCK WALLS '"' " "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6,2 •6711 ;.~1 ~ 272 Driveways Parkins Lot
_ReJ>alra, seakuatin& ~~j>hlt631 ·4199 l..ir
Dan Hallberg Grading & Paving Co
Restromm
\_.lc . .!._391~ 842 1720
Fr~est 559 5511 La r ho mt t A la r i a , UrJl~I 673·0359 C:..11 day or nii;hl, --rr --~ Pallui Umewuy• LK"d' IMs ~'rl'HSI llubrr Rooftn1t all l)'Pt'll r"i •k., . ,,,. "l"t""·d Jeronimo>. 2 full time l IC'D ELE""fRICl • N •Jark 615.3014 • SCRUB-A DU U Ltr'd Dennis 636 0458 646 1067 Nl'w m .'O\ rr derk~ h (Art~1m23u»1t~ • v .. ~ llllf!lill&! Slll>-2542 • k v · n Ptor. reas. rehab le , p-..i I.Jr 11411802 ~ 9734 y pn . ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Uual wor Reas rates EJCpen home and apt re Refs Jun 631 5616 Uryunt s Landscaping ..,...-••'") HEN • • * RESID/COMM 'L a.M°"od°" i''t~rst 631 SO'l2Tom pair Carpentry, ro.1f. --Bm·k, stone, block . ron ....................... / RY ROOt'INC ·
All An>und Carpentry ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP QUALITY ~lumb~ Etc. 642-8013 Quahly Huuserle11n!ni: erete ~·rpki. B BQ'i.. farthing lnteno1 Ue~1gn SIUNGLES & RF.PA IK Tlllforie9
JQhr\775,8082 Or YooChirw:ractor ELECTRICAL WORK W bd -ll b I I wta m rsonaltouch CM. putaoll & draHwap HANCING SI01ROLL U(' UI~ Wl6213 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cabinet• Remod. Acupr7es7().S~!.,el 24.lhTr~ro Rtas. rates 531 5055 em',.~t JO s . gel ~dm IIY. IB_Belh_MO 09~ r.·uar Lie & IO) 536 0914 tJuahl) Lil' IDS Stnµ s.ctit .. ~ Mei.I SubJfrb. K 12 & 1·01 ~ ....., ~ --au y,uper, 1r Hous 1 d p fiing Dasi: on~aper ''"'J I 25 e f S4 hr S«ybtes RoomAdd'ns ,....::...,,,__,_--~G ol ir....___i_ /Tia.. Bil &~ve 644·9325 es c eane alaceb ...1-.. isa·u C"-ott 5_932• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,efl.t' .. yr::.~~< 76 Cnihsewndws 754·4420 ~on. ttMr ~• .. -• -polished. Sal sen· S.35 • ......, "' ..x " RUDC£1'HATt:!) Lll"d .. fr ... or.ian, ...... 1 .•••••••••••••••••··~··• ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOHN THE llANDY MAN RefsSht 1968 9463 •••••••••••••••••••••• Low S I )K Babysitting in our C M llOM~IM PROVEM ENT ADD'NS/REMODELING Fonmca rounter IOI>!> & • Plumbingeh!I' odd jobs ---:Q'J --AICMOVIMCi-Expert wallroverinl( in min m JOb-1 TYP-JServlu ~s I Yr & up Any LGEtSML. INT/EXT Plans L1t'd Georgl' tabanfis refilced Fret' Freeest1males 638·4068 ~leaning I will do UU.dc.Careful$rf\1l·c ~~~J/~nt R~::11?.~r~:~1 f"'r~~l Ins 1141 75111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jime 642-8482 646 5759 25.l'rs Char 545.3749 ~lmer & Sons, 557.~32 esL642 ~7 --11 for you~~~ t'rtt estimate::. 552 0410 !ISi 8.S90 Skyl91th ·r)'ptng. Wrtung. Ed11m..:
.tareful&lo\•ingmamaof eorp.t~lc• REMODEL/ADD-ONS Gard111in9 fl.AT RATE DAV or•, --•A-I WOVIMG • WALLPAPER ....................... M)offt<'l'Oqour!> 2l ~s~~a);.•foryours. ••••••••••••••••••••••• andCarpentry L1r'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALL MISC JOBS Cao<' Hakpror Hoyu Top Qual1\y ·spec•1ul Allkmd~ fo'reeest * ~liCJhh * Sml~ok 11422142 ~,~lt.t·~L· 6313787 WecareCrptCleaners <'!l_yrs lrwm548 2719 K&DLandsc·ape Ma1nt INT.tEXT PROMPT d~~~~~~ooh~~8~. ~rttf~ t•are in handhnit 25 1ri. Sii roll Lir ~330986 ~'l't't'esl ll:ll 11255 Wladow CIHMtg
BABYSITTING Steam<:lean&uphols -cOMM'L RESl-D Restd /Comm Clean up INSTALLATIONS fluent family Call exp Cnmpetill\l' rales Norm64511880 Stutco ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·, Refs. Costa Mesa Truck mount unit Rerrod-Add'ns-Repatr:. U HauMn..1.: 548·2489 CHET645·47S7 Answer Ad • 5 0 0 NuO\tr1tllll' 730 1353 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let the Sun~hinl' In ' 979·6646 Work guar 645 3716 Veey reas. Lir. 390250 Landscaping· Yd Clnup:. ~~ ... 24,!lr!i STARVING <.:OLLl-:G ~: Wallpapering f',11ntin.: Ill' !!lun·os tnrn p111nkcl t.fall Suns~t~e W~~~53 · ........ tcy Shampoo & steam deuni. Jack H. Bennett, Jr Treetnm Expert ma1nt !),-UDl-:NTS MOVING res 1l'om'I Scandin:n 111n frl'l' Samlhla~t & lmrk e;ininl(. I ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• Color bnghteners. wht Gen. Contr. 552-9142 Ja__m 851·0129 Y-11..... HOUSECLEANING CO Lie •Tl24 436 qual. lhllTlllr 548 7675 Lleetbed 957 11218 20' • Moothl} DiHOUlll
oForall youneed toknow <'ll'IS 10 min bleach. Bonded &lnsured J (9 •• •-"f ISOUR BUSINF.SS' Insured 6418427 •RESIDF.NTIAL• .aboutt>ank~u try.l·ull llall, hv idin. rms SIS; AddU' 1ons & remodel1'n~, f'i'.'~M T<~~~5 ...... o""t1":;r•·J·o·a·s•:••••• EBt IOy~ Jan1··~·s WATCll USC ROW ' P..-Remo•ol Tile Av1< t sty SJ(l, a\I( 2 st\ 17u4 111 9162 av~ room $7 so· rouch --1"'1 ..:, '".. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •• ••••• t..tc. 1u.. 957 .. .,.,a ll.lll.l! · • · bonded Stale Lir 112027 2 TLIE GR •"S•IOPPER &Slllllll Movrn° Job~ Ra~1Ann, 675 2514 BRvAN'r'S 1'11 ""INS'fAl 1 L'I) r-· ., .. na . ...,.,., --Sl : chr SS. Gour. ehm. J G All 49 1810 r "" c I MIKE s" ~ • • I • • • -·· • ,r. Or c w d loah, Moifttfl!ClllC•/ fst odor Crpt repair . _,__._£.IL. 4_· -Complete lwn ma int al 04 ·1391 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wallcovennl?. Rrmcl\ al All Kinds Guaranltl•d anJ(i> oasl 111 ow~
Stnlc• m~vs)e•r1rs. Reexps. 53D1~0,"'01ork c.tom Woodwortd119 GARpoD~:.,Nml1Ne 64G. 2M411A5INI ·r . HAULING student has ••••••••••••••••••• •••. "'ne pu1n11ni: by lltl·hard /\11 lyl!fS 642 1343 Refs John 1140 !1217 "~,.:'~~~l'vreJ.J~rc~kt'~ a .,...................... ,,. rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• r l11e lrUl'k Lowest r<Jle Prof'I ('Oll~le Wlbhc~ lo Sinor Lte', IRS IJ yrs or •-&-/R • l'w.lom (;(-ramie· Till' MARI NESERVICES N St N Sh cusroMCABINETS I A-•" ·r I PrumptCall7591976 haµ~locall'U!>loniers .--..... tpalr Pro~t sen Fr""est t'reeeiium.ite~ 113116111 M h . o eam/ o ampoo 1 1 . b 11 ""'""'raping rec nm 'l'h k J h houses1t. ewPorl ,1rt·a. ·n., . 631 ,410 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "" ec amr. paint. Stain Spec1alisl. f·ast n enors. ars. man es. & removal Clean up:. an you, o n JuJl:', r_efs 644 68J<J evi. 111a )OU • Neat patl'hes & textures 642-<.:huc·k 675 140H Wr,,.._,,, varnish d Fr 839 1.a2 It bra ries. cab 1n els. Fr 642 4889 C .__ Pr.f &..1 ... .., -I)' _ee es.I. "" ""y'·tes. rust. molding ~ esl_!mates Profe~s1onal Sen'tl't' &....--T UITVm lloftQ I:.. a 1•3 1419 l'ERAMIC LINOLL.L''1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Teak.ru9b&wax EXCELCAR PETCARE ~-rs",,,.,,,.......,536·2366 TREES llauhng·yardcleanu" -GJI Z>vn.exp .H· 403941 n ttai. _,. T1leprofms1ali ,. WHITING. RESEARCll 645 7§c6 Cpt. uphol, arta rug ™'--'!!Y"~~ -Topped remo\'ed Clean Quu•k & clean Free U.t ot•••;.j.:o•ERA.Tt:i)••••• lbrided Ins llrb Color PLASTER PATC HING Reas rate:. Bob 675 5651 fJ)ITING An} subJt'll
Peoplt who are seekinJ( cleaning Work guar Crown moulding. redar UJll!! lawn reno~ 751 3476 673 ~ t•xpert !163 0911 01ck I Resluccoi. Int l'XI 30 format, ~I) le 641> ~!165
· · -mantels entertainment GARDFNING Sl'.l'VICE au IRJ/.. gra mg. e 631-41171 1 WORK 30 TL'RIN'' Quallt) work 10 )r~ l'x R('Sull~ th.it i. 11h<J1 ~ou an a~ar1meol look fmil Free est 645 1771 I lmed rlosets. bookcases. = , . . 111 I d d Income Tax Sen lrl' PAINTER N ~; EUS }Mi Neat Paul S45 2977 .. ALL TIU> •
•, an Cuss1f1ed Will your Crpts mstall repaired rabanets' Wood§olut1ons ~ynexper LndsrpinJ(.' moht1on Concrell' & ' yri.up.inl ED"SPLAS r •• u per Geor.ie831 ~19 ort 1111h C'la!lo;1f1t-d ad be lhtre• To place F1ood damage, sttam towoodprobfems' I trees tnmmed. r lean tree rem1)\ dump truck l'lai.s1f1ed Ad~ ~our om· ext A<'oust1l'(·e1hn;:s All Types Int or Ext " our ad ~11642 5678 clng 554 8510~!!.!~·~__j i0l LS28 ~ 64.5-~ Qwrk s1tn 642·7638 stQPShoJ>.Ping l'entrr Da\1~ P.i1ntang 847 5186 645-~ (Q.1' Free ei.t Want Ad Results 642 56711 642 SI.ill
.. . DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Sell your no-longer-needed items for cash .
If it doesn't sell, we'll run it another 3 INES days FREE. One item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads ..
Call today for full details.
(Non-refutldllMe. litre Mnee 11.CJCI)
3 3DAYS
CLASSIFIEDS642-5678
1...-,1 ~.Trv1t
Opporlwity 5005 DHdS 503S Real Estate-the Complete Orange Coast Market Place ;;,~~·M~::;,~;:~::1 · ..... ~~x;·····
1 • ness Grc•at local1on in lh·al E:;Iatc mOflt!}
Thr G1r1 ·, C>m 10 u1a11ablt.>2ndor3rd·ro •~ irL--0 OO R__.al 4400J Laguna Bea l'h Im ludt>• Loans on res1denual or Apcwl""'"'tsu..twft. Apcwt .. 11tsu.fwa. ApcalNiutsu.fwa. Apat .. 11hu.fwa. ROOMI 4000 -to.--T 430 OffieeReftfal 44 Office inn frt'emembersh1p Cht'n tnt'Ome properties w,.
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lelr e~lahhsht•d Ooh hanciJt• a full ran~t' or ColtoMHo 3824 ColtoMHo 3824 CostaMHo 3824 Mt rt• II 3869 CdM rmtoprofmature.M t'forNBhse.•i blk IGl7Wl'!ill'hrfNHWant I MO.Alff SIOOO Jan497~1J!l5 rmrt1?,a1?,eCt1H'la.:e at l wpor OC qi.met M f ref's non bearh. vrl)', prki:. S250 finJnr1al m't 71MHI'> f HeWDOrt Ct"ter 494 5878 H~f) rompeltll\t' r;sle' t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• smkr 640 7845 + I.st last 645 4695 l~t floor Agc·nt 541 5032 First rl4~ roll )er\ ICl' C:ourlt')) to Hrokt'f'
•Jbr nr SC Pla.zu S A 2 BR Ii,., Ba . patio. newly 2 bdrm. 1 ba lo-. nhouse ptDlf NEWPORT I Sm furn rm .. bathroom 3 Br 2 Ba NB apl. to i.hr ....... uxir OFflC "'S * EX 8C oHires, mc!udr:. ~~!0 SO 1 0 714 7b0 I :i5 I .i" k for
C ' I '•~ .. ~. ted S480 New paint. new carpets. Ml\ So ,. 1 Pl f' r d p I "g. .:: .:: Jll ;smeon1l11::. f rom ~• Stt,eorDuane 3f'll0rl. poo . spa ..,75 """'"'a . no pets Sundeck garage ldr) c....i!UT9y CLUI pnv. nr . ..s aza.1 em e!!!erre 00 t'rom I room up to 20\MI $225 tH4 718ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pet ok 752 5822 o r S48 4506 --f;s1· Easts1de ss2S'mo vv"'" I rem pref 556 1737 aft l!'fllllS ~·mo 539 2097 I Mt ft f'rom SI 16 a ~lj !00 WlOO\\' llAS SSS for TD ..
64!)460_ SoCst Plaza 1Br Iba. ruu 646-3420 UVIM(i 3PM Rmmle wanted IM f IR fl "o lease required COSTA MESA • * • Rt, Loan~. IOK l p :'\u
1 stt. pool spa $465 incls .--'• . Barhelors. l&r.2 bedroom ! I Br Sl50 Female pre 20 • s s h r 2 b r 2 b .i AdJ Airµort~r Inn 21.72 Superb 17th St lol·at1011 /~'J2Cfu""t~f~r II l'rt'd11 Cherk. :'loo Penul
Sl!S-S390 mo 2 r I a 9S7-<l222 walk tn C'losets. enrl gar !'Tom '540-JIOOO 644 1900 Mesa &16-~ ITD 6.1I·~ ll33 3223 roo 968 9477 l>.i t'\ Ne,. port a1·h 1173 7311 IMMEDOCCPBMCYB. gas ¥.tr Agent. no fee Ver) sharp 2 BR 1 • ba. ai>U. &townhouses I ferred Westside Costa lownhouse nr bl'h S275 Dupont C.Jl l \\I I room 400 .,q ft $3611 I\ l>enn1,on \ssuc
Pool. beamed ce1hng . -eir $495 mo Ask for • -Yoo are the 11mner or
laWldry room No pets Lge3br.2 ba.crpts.drps. &11,6.11-1266 NO FEE' Apt & Condn S22S upstairs. szso mastr Z>yrold fem lookm.: for Nc¥.port 11••a i·h ni•Jr 11knd foorfreet1rkets 1$1fit1C11 WE BUY 2ndS Nolastmo rent carport Nr OCC No · . rentals Villa Rentals bdrm pnt bath. SIOO ~ametoshare2hdrm in llnai: llo;,p 11"111 "'l ft I Ex Offi S \alue tothe ~LMGMT 642 1603 not~ <(UI 751 3696 I Br.+ E.s1de Isl & 1,ast 675 4912 Broker I sec nr Beach & Adams Costa M~a S251J mo + S4.'n>nd floor orf1C'c·~ .1m N ttc.C A cert pace r •-..... -'-loot Show GRE/\TSOL'TllWt:sT -c-_,..."""" + secunly SSOO (all . ud pie .,11rkm~ lll'll mdon roe irpo thoneo -(.'APITr\I CORP •2br. 2ba nr SC Plaza. CLEA,~ & SHARP 548-~ LIDO VIEW J }'960-6030 '• ulJI 64.5-4369 tainec1 bldi: \'irk\ da" • NB's imst preslll(tou~ ANAHEIM • SA Pool spa SSSO No t br slo\'e & refng $335 -----2 Br 2 Ba _2_pallo Adults Hottfl Moffk 4 100 fem to shr 2 same Bi·h 714 645 4800 · · I bid» l'all 83.1 0440 CONVENTION 615·4190
. . 752·sSz2or_~41-1460 548 i.311 , E Side adult II\ mg, 2BR _pref J!<¥J675 6359 ••••••;•••••••••••••••• dplx S285 mo + '' uul l' M 2 offic:es. 345 bath CENTER Apnl 17 25 /
}BA 1 BR. gar parking, steps ~~ MOTB. lst •lasl,ser 64211603 IUSIMESS ADDRESS storage av:ul S250 mo To rla1m ltt·ket~ C'all ~etftfnh Roomy 3 Br Townhouse 2 br. ne11 ly redec· duplex 646-4549 to beach yrly 5475 mo 1 -An swer 1 n g & m a II 548 3345 494 3803 64 2 56 i 8 <' x I 2 i 2 l'ff'10#tllA1/
apt tn qwel adult rom w single l(ar . la1 gr T70-2AS4 • 7315446 y renta snow ava1 Prof sm;:le person lo shr i.en·in• rnnrHt·ni i: • • lil'keti. mu~t Ile l'laiml•d Lost& FoUnd ~lex Newly derorated. yard j500 mo 559.:-,001 ltMlillcJtoe •oclt 3840 -or SIOS & up Color TV lg N 8 home . man) room AdJ or /\irpurt lndaatriol a..tal 4SOO h> Apnl 23. 1982 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~repraglaec.eSo, ernryrls.dnp0a~1st. F..aslSide 2 BR.-sm yard ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 BR rondo. Versailles. Phones in room ~274 xtras, no pets G31 6313 ttOll f)'V) 71<1 HSI 1342 •••••••••••r•••••••••.. • * • ~etnrfth 51 OO .--•• Wiifflie'w.ADb uke new $550 mo Call Newport Bl\'d l M l"l 1 2 uR . ,. R 3975 8 ·h aa,,.1 • 75 Mo 645 3381 or optional gar ~9Srmo Unf . 11"1 t All R h· d 213 ll30 2323 646·7445 ". ge. neut u ~pt 450 ~q ft rum off11·c· "· . ire "°"' sq .._ ,___,, •••••••••••••••••••••••
675.5949. OOOsq ft 548·4845 _ . um. I rm P · ac ar • · w pool W Ba> St Shr Slltll'I' S4IXI m1> rt or less MIA tone 5(~ "'y".,..."' .
5015
*SPIRITUAL -util pd_ All amen1t1es. 213-82:!-7854 •Onlhebeac·h llotelrms. wguy 26 $250 + SIOO 641u7G3 per sq rt Al!l'nt Opportunity
•Jbr nr SC Plaza SA 28 r w gar 542° Cpts. ~19. Large 2 bdrm. 1 ba. 4210 kitchen & bath, S300 mo ser Cary. 10·2 or aft I ' 541 503:! ••••••••••••••••••••••• REffllMG • Gar' Pool spa 's1so fnrd yrd, wlr pd 2228 Deluxe pools1dt xtra Seashore S750 mo Yrly + UlO drpus1t 2306 W 9PM 642-2078 OestJ(n to ,Wtt! l'Wrlllill' I U>AN SllARK 1815So • Camino Hl'al
Child ok · 752·5822 or "A" Placenlla 636 4120 large 2br. 2 ba. bllns. 646-4419 Oreanfront Ne\\ port -~ ~ o(f1ces 111th ~N·retana l 4,029 Sq Ft WANTED San l'lemt'nt1• 4!12 i296
641-1460 I 5pm dswhr. 1'2 miles beach Beach 673-4154 Roommate to shr 38r sen ite. poos1ble l111ni: Rtt §atilr Ilda Need $10.000 for 911 du1 ~ Hlll he·
Spac 3 br. 21, ba twnhse Adults. no pels ssoomo EAST BLUFF townhouse 28a bch hse. S275 mo area Good loc·at1on in OFF OVE:R RD~A 1 at your termi. M M Pot Lod & Fo.d 5300 FIR EPLACE, Pool P\I apt, dm rm. patio. N apt 3 bdrm. 212 ba. 2 car HEID A PUCE' S48 4069 Cannt'f)' V1lla;:e Hrokt•r I 716 ft off ires. 3 b.a I ter. 892 2254 patio &dishwasher Costa Mesa S600 mo SJ&.8362. ---gar. adults. no pets SGSO lltas Wl>eHy Rates Wanted f rmmte shr 3br 675-4912 shower. wetbar 2100 'II , •••••••••••••••••••••••
Xl.G 2 Br.gardenapls Wkd n 25457214 THE WHI FFLETREE perrro Kitchenettes-Phones Jba condo . "I H •~ N 1uA tr 1 ftfenl•edyard t'ormore lMoeeytoLoan 5025 on Eas tsade s55o ~a :'.' -1·2-3 Bdrm Apls Gym. "'6441010 "'l."rhannelMo\'les S295+ uli I R •nd\ ...-guna '•.iuc ,,.,.au 10 r .... 5571300 d· •••••••••••••••••••••••• 557 2841 4 Bd T dbl u orr11·rs RHept1on1:.l. lR 0 PrNnt' a I wn, iar, Va· Spa, Sauna, pool. tennis. ON BEACll. J8iSeashort Sand&Tr. 1967 Newport ~ s e C'\ ml' s, c n I: er 160-0378t•\ I Pri•ot. MCNMy
Westside 2 BR , I Ba . :!~'17~'c'a11 Oi';f ~!: etr 846--0619. Redec 3br Iba. gar ]ii ta M~.!_645-9137 Lux rondo S285. nr S (.' sen ice L.t"' & Ta' llXXJ sq fl w ofr & o h $I 0,000 Clftd Up
DtW. pvt patio. a\a1I agt 6311266 May go ARLINGTONAPTS S 9 8 5 'I r VocafioeR..tah 4250 Plza or rind plac·e L1btm Xer~11 phone doors.to1let&basin.f,.\ I TomorJeanne I
now ~mo 640·0997 leaselV>ltOfl Spacious & qwet 2 Br 675-3470 213 692 2604 ••••••••••••••••••••••• toget h tr sh l' 11 r, ans11rnn..: horn S350 l'lose c M 675-6251 §42 88S2 .= 11~ Ba S485 T hs ' C'all RJI 5333 , ' . ...... lliedv IClltdscOIN Nt¥.er 2 br. 11 , ba. gar . ., , wn e 2Br yrly , garage. S700 OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br 557-3984 lnt!ustrial Bldg ~ublrt j2nd TD 5 S20.UOO S150.llll0 TBr'. lront '&. rear paho. rNI. bit-ins. 5475 711 w Adults only No pets Nr mo S750 mo Call for Avail no .. Weeki) thru I Primt' OffHe Sp;ire good safe area 11 B 3450 j foll) amort to 20 }rs
frpk. d ,.., pool & spa <nh 548 •900 lhebearh 96C>-86S6 appt Borr White Rllrs summer 67_3·?!73 ,~°f:_,, 435 Corona del Mar 10711,q sq rt. 2 rurn orftre5 Olher 2nds to SI 0011 ooo ~ts ~70 549 2447 1••.,.D -..EW• 67~ Ea t Su e nw '"" ft su1 te S8511 mo Reas 84l-2066 I Ap)ts romm I & non 2 bchl,lbo.~oaAd * 9'An " ser. mmer.reserv 1•••••••••••••••••••••• 6759510 ov.ner_proi;ram Pr1non 1 STIJNNINC large 1 Br oarage. ntw amt and 3 bdrm, 21 a bath. bltins. 2Br Iba. eat 1n k1lch En cl now' Weeki>• rental I S60 singlt' gar. safe & •''d'l div swto. A l'. am .__ 45SO 1) Ca.I l f.n r a gt garden apt pool & rer " 2 car garage. washer pallo & gar SS35. no Bf Apt Sleeps up to 4 SE't'ure 731 w l8th St ... " , , ·--r GS area $425 mo 710 W carpt't Near edco S475 dryerhook·up S650 mo ~ ~2134 Balboa Peninsula CM 6'13-?78i ~le~1k~s.175ul1~c1 2855 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOWNEY SAVIN" I 18th St eer mo-"'-551-6130_ -DA~"""". . 67_~04_13_a_n_6PM . ---• •I • W} 675 00 TOR AGE s p A(' ~:. Brent 963 2611 --· -.....,.""" STEPS TO BEACH - - -' · Cosla Mtsa 24 X 13
2 Br1•, ba lownhouse Lg 2Br Iba, rpt drps. 3bd.2ba,da.blltns.enr 2 Br. 2 houses from Orean fronl Newport s;'!·c~~.g~r:gE·s::~eri~ Near San Diego ~·wy & endosed Ele<'.hOOkup MOltlyW..t•d 5030 Gar, paaut10. sml yrd, no ref rig, laundry· stove. gar. Lndry fa1·il, S600 ocean.~. Yrly lease Balboa Pen1n wkly rtn H s c Harbor 4 OHll'f'S suite & 646-7660 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet.s.SSJ0._645·483'1 d rw, a 1r upstairs 968-1021. tal starting Apr I thru · · osla Mes a front ofrlre & re<·ept - -8111ldt'r ntt<h S82,SO!l to -wibalc gar, no~ts sum mt r 2 & 3 Br IOI~_ b h & Storage Bldg. 20 x 40. completr 12 units in VACANT 1 E.s1delra $475aftll 'm64S W--~ADh Slo N Bh area .2 .al s easystreetacC'essEd R d W i._ L _:_ -•d ~ b 544-0614 ... 838·3232_ rage garage. 'Pl . c, k1tchc>nc.'tle. u1r. & furn mger St Santa Ana 1\ers1 e secun• plex. lg, qwel 2br. lndry. Sharp 2Br. lot or wood & Spaciou.~ I an bdrm Beautiful Palm Desert ser u re. pvt drive. avail. '850 mo. 549.2928 ,170 973 1939 with s100.uoo tst TD clur
patio. adlt~1• no pets wallpaper. new r pt. Pvt among be a u I a k e _ .. _ 2 b 2 b 1 f75/mo. 646·1 lSB C M 2 rr· 34• rt ~ ___ .: _ .:... m 1 year C11ll rnlle1·1 aft 1525 . 359 woodland le 8 11 streams. Pool, jar and ~vi....... r. a. comp . . o ires. J • •~ w_.._~ 4600 5 492 9497 673 3600 pal o. S495 /mo 1 rec Area. No pets . furn. Pool. spa. tennis. ~-Easy arress. ideal bath.storagtav:ul 1250 -ml'R'V , -·--IOH 266__ --846-6591 Fri.Sat-Sun Sl50. Wkly storage safe 3 4 3 5411.3345,494.3803 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• SIO,IXX) to SI0.000.000 for
•2 Br I ba Mesa Verde Studio Ho~e.pvtyard & .m.M_l·2647mornm s Cabrillo,C.M.5-48-9516 _ -OESPHATE gold plated TO's Max
upper. New decor No l)lllo. Nwpt Hgts area 2 Br 2ba1 upslairs apl. ......a.....L.totrL-4300 fk•a..tal 4400 • • • Rt nt or l e.ase year OO'.lo11nlovalucRet \1rn pets Gar $500/mo Gas anc 5350 mo Wtr po . n o pe t s . ---. JIOJIC•rr round 2 bdrm unfurn 3·4 above prime tall ~4--~·1292 balcony/sgl aar SS2.S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1038Sea Lane apt/houst. Heach Area Dennison & /l.'OSOI'
Lux. condo. 2 mstr br's. 3 no fet 5'S·2000 2 Bd, 2 ba duplex lower BAYFROMT Coronadel Mar by Mother and Son. Ex 673-7311
1'2 ba.2balcontes.rrplr. 2bd.2barondonr SC 2 br, l ba. nr Beach & unll.Dshwhr.rrplc,gar ROOMMATE You are lhe winner or rellent l8yrref.To $4~ -------• micro, water landsrape. Plaz.a Pool. sec. gate. Slater. enrl. gar No _@!I ~2 A Prime office. 67l:_l003 four frtt lJckets ($16 00 > mo Ms Woods
2 rar gar. w oJ)fner No pets 1525 mo pets. $495. 641·93411 dys , 1 Bd 1 ba apl Balboa FINDERS Costa Mesa, 2:50 s~ fl valuttothe 213·M2·6'711 . or 854-070'7 fl!Sl~_ 645~~5 f!!1l·l47& fi40.l<r76evs/wknds Penln I bill to' bch No Oldes.t & l~&est agen~y. ~~e 7W5'wrrYJ 1~~ s s~· Anattir~w ~M -
QUIET ADU LTS over JS. DaUXE 211/ I IA prtcg $435 mo 675· 1642 All clients screened with 8Sl · CONVENTION ._jla•ttt/
unrurn. 2 Br. ';fsptr lfeetiB.118 I nu bearll.-l"rf>k. enrl M....... photos' referenres . CENTER Apnl 17·2.S ,.._,
1395. Beaut Ian srap· ··~TM~· S pr .. OW. blt·ins. smoke ir-c*-...e... 3176 Ctedits: Cosmopolitan 5'20 & 512 aq ft SI 00 Pfr ~o rlaim tirkets. call ••••••••••••••••••••••• lna.Nopets LEEWARD lfloT alarm b le w 1 pd --""' GoodMomingA!Mrira. •sq. rt. 3975 Birch .NB ,. Swlmmmg pool rhem1cal APTS. 2020 Fullerton Beauta ully Ia n sca.J)ed · a · a er ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbtTomorrowShow. ent5"l·S032. 642 5671. ext ,72· servire b~lness Costa ~1-03!!1 _ garden apls Pool & Spa ?S. 8!J3..046S --&udlo a~l. ocean view. •..., orr • lo a II new Tirkets must be rlauned Mesa. Hunl. Bearh area
Covued parking. No 2 Br. (1 + lofll. 1'-' Ba uUI incld S3'75 mo 332 "U-'•w .... n---'aplace by Apnl23, l982 No exp oer. Wall-train 211drm, 2ba townhouse. r I dsh h ""-I s Cl t • ~..... ,., """" I *''~· Westside. $49S pets. rp c. WS r. garage, ocnrtno n an emen e I '' execup an • * * SJ0,000 full amount re· ""II bbi •• n 0102 Ba<.'~lor $395 . .847·7699. theM .r A LC • Exec offke xhit N R qu ired Will ntl ~-t:...'""-I Bf $450-$45.5 Bl I d h k ,_ · L...::· 140.000+ Call c·ollert
For Ad Action
Call a
Dai~ Pilot
AD-VISOR
642·5678
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5671
REWARD f'or information Trading
to the recO\·en of GT
HMX rac1nii htkt
l'hrome frame 11old
rrank set. \ ello11 wheel~ & tires Taken from
Ue:irh & lnd1anapohs.
II U . approx . 2 wtek~ ago Pltase call 536·9832
IDJt l1te blk & wht Jo' cut.
Turtle Rork ii rea tn I n ·1ne C..:u 11 85 I 0493.
548 5533 1a~k for
Su1anne1
I.OST wallet. vtr 17th &
Santa Ana A\~ C M
Reward. no QUt'sl1ons
asked 548 6709
Losl Shorthair blHk
male rat "" -1ml ,. ht
marklnR on alldom1•n Approx 3 24. W Oc.·1•an
(root. NB Pb 11•turn tu
IO yt old o .. nc.•r
1 S32 129'1
1''1r11t ilpartmtnl' find
one th11t'i. Jui1l nithl 1n
rhas."fitd 642 ~711 SPAC 2 BR OPEN 2B 11 Ra ••10 2 8r.2 . aun ry oo . 'f .... ,.~ ""' h "~r: C ~.. .....-.~ttr,~ M F' "A M &!JM · r ' .,. up, garage. Must au! -U..•• li•ed 3900 .,..are Newport Bue w OltC gjj6:l779/640-6215 on· ra " BEAM clp 1.bar. lots o( 2250Yang_uard MO 9626 S40-l8l1 -apt. M/F. 2 bdrm 2 ba F servlce/C'US om . 0 11167 0111
*OOd. $425. ~o pets, 2256 ........... •••••••••••• 1.ncl puki111 and ulil office,desk apa<'e 2 omen. rereplton rm. -i......... ........... .... .....
0,••rt.ity 5015 Of•t ._.., SOIS 'Mapl• St. M8·7356 or MAllNllS WALi S£ •Wl .... D Mtf "'° dt p 1250 ren Nr o.c. Airport atora11• rm. 725 sq rt. -A'f'l.~ L 2· Br 2"1 (j liA " tal. 'p ..... f 10°35 to 55 "StttoAppreriate•" F'orred atr htat. S275 0.art.ity SOOS '!!~ '111c:ul~ r g r · a · GE ·~ "' 51.8918 333 £ 17th St l'M u. ''bdrm. 2 ba. no pets. ~LY ~S. Townhouse Apadrtment. VILLA s:u ~1,9 ____ ---7 . MS 'l.&50· 675 0'10'1 ..... •••u•••••••••••• ~r schools and OCC.:. Fr~lc • tncls a a r · New 1'2 bdrm luxury Prof. M/F lo 1br 2 br on '!"_ ~ • Good freeway acceu Bea I u ga n apts. patio/yard. Near Hunt apU In 14 plans. I Bdrm N.8. Ptn. l300/mo. lat & .. DE LUXfo:• • lfPOIJUNITY .... t dep. s.t0.224~ Pallol/decks. Heat paid. Harbol.tr. Children OK. rrom D15, 2 bdrm from tut ttq,'d. Kr\8 675·1217 KOU CIMTB CJrfire spat'e avuil 1m I
.... No pets . Ch i ld r en l7Slm>.940=6807. $510. t ownhouae rrom !!tM0:7317 NIWPOIT med. 750sq (t. lrvlne lo<' oftUfttim!
'tftr". 571 " Joann. Ill fir, ttlrome. 2 kids ot. $415. 2 br. new $640 + pool1. tennla, I -------Elfltnt Exec 11ultes In $1.10/~q_f\ 1'$'1 1204 Ntt<f 10 m11r1' r xpr'cl
"1 J)fts SOO. Sier ra 2Br. I'• Ba. crpt. front unit. avail. watetfallJ ponds! Gu 1Roommate w1nted, CdM. preat111tou1 loc Incl I WlfJ~Je··· ~· t: If
Mfmt,841-1324. 2Br 2 Ba now.S3l·N03 __ _ ror cootln& " hullnic 1 Lstand last.S2'15mo. urr•t a r lal. rerep-I...._,.,...._. RSHll
2.'llt. 1•1 Maplt An . 11t 3 Br. ~w. Wilton 1144 DlicL From San Dl•10 1 no. .r Renee -Uonltl. ~tepttr11 anf.a ~ • S-UMtt P~:./t~IPATl;,N ftr, no pna 2 ,.l'IOns. Frwy drive North on Stir rondo w/protj)eraon1 more. cs rom c;OSTA MISA Mlnimvm lnve111mr n1 a.so. Sltrr• M11m t. 831·$583orM2·1'71!..._ euu•••••••••••••••••• Beach to Mc Fadd en t21S, lJl. tut de~. Al mo. On·call otca tes
1
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WE'RE L()(M(IG ,...,.. ...... MT1'1•n• ··-Wt n11d $250,000 total. Minimum
$25,000 pw lnwetor 10 flNnce growth
In ~ llQhtJna compeny. tn•ID_ 2 Br .... a.. trple, D/W, <lrlocetrettennl•. plobdo1'1m, ·.s~o·. •.!•,OftdMvr'11'1dden lmtnlllu. in. 110 ' ~m~ AlTH£!R r ~a B '3rwcnofrl«1 11" rett.V1\ per/'" before · -""' r "' ¥l p atio 'a ra1e " to -aw n 111. """ES A -1 1 I .,. 1 1•e1 an pay t h e 2 --'11:1'·· "" u . • 730· 12$0: 542· ,. .. : Slll. -,..~. : lbV1HI 01\1 I .. f\ ZoMd ._ .. ~ m ~ct~~=: Cltt Cod TftbH 2 Br. -"'""'-==------t II a.., houM wlll taH ~·:10:;,thf 0 ~c:f~d 1oJ 1nlro1menl. 1714 ) m:io mo~uo·E mh ~f/'Hl commlulon llfllT 1ft ...... -
_ 11\ II.•· t , dfJll. Wlhlap rut with Dally 11/1111 lllriat ,..,.,, turn 1Uttd tvery day. c(.,.. -a,,11u D, CM KtJ 1l ,.._lllliiillTiiiMiiinaiilimaiiilmt4 ... Ill l U 1111• I I I I !!!!!:!!~;;;;;;;~~J411 w ~dllilneita·I!!!__ ~ ---'""':... ..11111J~11:1~=-~-r·-~~;:;~~~~;i.~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'lm!!!~~~!!!.lmllilillil•
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Orange Coeat OAl~Y PILOT/Wedntldey, April 14, 1982 DT
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Found t mo1 old rtm ADMIN AS&lS'l'ANT . C&SM&ll• Ofllvtry ~rlOl\JO\l'r II wmtc:M.AlllST Ptnonablt. tntr-etl' SALES snct>.LPUSOH HOWJt•Jn ~ .. 1nnan Biil/brown hall llmt po•lllon. llOOSEWAlfESALES rorLA Tlmu lo ho1001 INVIN'TOIY _._SST Otflce -nura~ necd'ed pert0~ 1ou1h1 to •ell IAoliln• ror aurn•ivt• Parl 11 mr motfu•r'a r iuion Creek. San ~rat " b0olclletp_ln1 Al)l)ly In peraoo Crown In c M .. 3am hm AialitTnil" rn--~ n. •tart!i\1_~ppr May I natural beauty product• peraon With rl'luil lwlprrnfl'dtd lorfumil)' ~UM Cap. Ml 3IU an ~-rot' Vl('\orla ~ti· Hw'dware 3107 t Cont E<-onomy l'ar rtlCl.ulrtd cl ~al~ :;:ir:.t~= Call~ ox. '11.1nta.11 ollJ In Or1n111• man 1111.-m r n I u d apecial rhild ~:.t.IH!t pm tiw\ RCJl Nwr Brh " HwL_~'dM N 0 r 0 11' (' l l n II rooms Dell ut $ Olunty Mu11 have UWD ~nMlrt Cull ~7 1264 htlpful hut "Ill truln thr
Found Salnt,Bernard ~tttmJnater or Call CATERI NG Servl r e l4fltl.otr'''"° + bonu11 operation ol m~(!hl:e.'. 0wner?tfn~Tt~1port1 tratlll!C•ll49H'124 {.MKSobell r1ghtpt'rMm ('h1ld1••rtj ~!f!lle. Vlt SF. Hunt !l:M n•tda food pnp 646-1hlpplna. rerelvlna fWlfrbolt.NB.wantaa Petlllon ctr eul11or Sale1ma11 required for & v•rrtd hnuHholci
otf\ t411 Ault._... ..,orhr• '' hr Pull Ottllal Aiulant Arll you l~O)I Ufttnp 1nvol\'td ~non 10 work p 1T 1-TtPT, SUB hr Work dnpery It rarpt't rlC'lln dullr11 , Wkn1t. & 2 ~ Found f\lll -rown Grt1t ..._..,... Dl-...A-tlrnt $ AM 1: au p M lookln11 for • rew111dln11 t:xper. prr Fuhlon cleanln& boat. h4'1p cook CJWl'lbll.. "40-~12 in& firm 1'111d 1r111nin11 11vtm1gh~ Pt'' wk l,ook
Dant.fawn color.aplktd N<>~~cntt:will LQrl '• Kitchen 3077 (·1trrH opportunity Island ln\'~'ltment tlrrn on fbh&s1 lri~. hsh & l.ICIPT.ITYPIST f\ill brnt'f11 pro11r11m rn11 ror act1H outdoor
l'Ollar Ml 1124 train NtY.Port ~arh llubor 81 vd • SA ~=!~"'~r:t:~t&I ~~r Cllll6400ll3,8 3U2pm hut" fun vrr ~I Ntwporl 'lif.•eh ttd .,:131i8 :1~~:'t·~i~G~)~~1;1l\'
Found blk I" 0 real ~!. t:n 1~08~1 11i1k 9'190't4Hor a21>'t l'Ot:nlhon'' Wt l>l'rk )'nur ~!;~~~e• 9 7 9 7 4 v vertillin11 •ICM<')' net>da. ·"" .-.. from 12 noon tu 6PM
Dane, Ra n~ho P1to1 •O!. .. Jf...t•OSfl\u.-:rJ_ CLASSIFIED l ;arin6t. ch11lri.idt-u l(IMlf Athti""--_. ..., llharp, tnrr11r11c person Mill A IUCK Sal11r) t·onmll'n~urat1• Verdl:s la&. Hunt Bl·h per\t~e to rumpliment UI -p~j~1 1 Nunnn1 ror front dt'lk Requltt!J START Hiil wjCXpef, 7$4 4126 Af'!.TUMTADIF41GM 0 our lll&hly 11kHlrd tt1am. p0aYii~vtrmo~1~~11 t'So Nffd RN or LVN . part cxet1llenttyplnK ft phone Tue LOI Anaeld 1'1mo • ·h It AM M A~·VIS RS Modern pit nt en l.agW\a 'Vilh•ltl' An1m1i Un for niaht shin In sklll• A11cncy u Ctrrulauon Dept i·ur Stttt'l\(I') loven lnl. r ~'ound BHeDJi. oldtr Nee manaaeme nt fl H11re s • unlq ue op vironrMnt, ~~~client liosj)ltlll 499 5378 Qlnv llOtp Xlnt salary penenre helpful. but not renlly hlll j)()~rtron~ op1•n ~rll needltallft t.a n
red Ii wht neul M. N R Salts, p/11me" ritlmt' portul\1ty for aonll'1>nr benefit padcutir s1250 If · " & btndlt• oHcred rcqulrl'd ·nw Sonborn in ules A• a l11•ld VO$L\hr ~l 6S91l
Airport are• li98 31126 MUJt be mature. l\eut & whoenjoys wurkina with quildied Nrwporl Kron Choeol•Uer of SC 1->teast apply Boerly Co ~I 3086 rrpreaental1H you'll •'nund sat eve In Bii: Mpon CallPalOTun thr publH' on the Beat'h64071l22 l'lau . rxl'lu11\'e Manor 340 Vletorta , cam1nhourly\\ui.:c t Sludl'nlJohs <'•nyon grry Lhull nor (7141m 4930. 1' Jo', lt'le~e. and urnrna l'horolatr uort: has (.' M. ' Receat/Typlft generous t•omml!>~lon~ Api?.~ .. , Wtill aroomed J,am I~. MONF.Y' •Dtntul k cn•p11on111t. Plllmt position 11vu1l IN Oi lorlrvm78'a~l'c!(o Call Hrs 4prn Dpm fo'or HEY! ~ ......., p:i rl Ii me A "M F. x AJ!1>1.J m person W'S g ~111\lle Croft rmre info pleu~t" l·all IOY~IRh? ~~e:~~e &ar:~.1 J'J· ~~~~~::~,:~;; ~~fr~E!iK1:;~~~!~ fi~F:~~~~:liih~,~~;~ Pa!~~~x~~J u un r~!'~~~~1~}D!on\ 97914~1
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Rewa1d_ M2 4215 r Wetkend l.S() per or our Cl11ss1hed Ad 11reut st arr M~t bel lmjlton &·11('h nteded llo~ p N w p I n (' h lllCIPTIO~IST Sales Represent11ll\l' lo '"lllllYtt'N, p11·n11·~. Jll7./.tl ~~ 646_81113 \'l'rtl.lillllt Sales l>l'IJhl'I sharp, sal11 r)I l'>prn for overflow 1~ iirnerul t'hcNful. dedicated lll Rai>Tdl y growin11 In l'&ll on reuder dd llobt partrt'~ lwarh partrc~.
L.()lt. Basset Hound. rl•m menl Newport l'l'nli•r prat'llt'tlLJ" f''rrm 1410 2<.1 pvt c~re Xlnl lnb Lern11t10nlil 1·nmp11ny ness an·ounls for <id plu.~1rwn1 othrrthrni:i.•
Whtlbrown At<'h Rrh t.to O.'W Ill hrs ""r wk Thun. und 2rog_ram Call 642 8044 seeks enthu:.1a~11r 1>elf · vert1s1ng, Moo frt. Yum 1litn )OU "uuht prubab)'
Ills. Lag Reward ~TfENTIOM: The ill'O"le Wl' 'Hlt'k ., 'd •~ . h starting tnd1v1duul us u Sprn Ra i.r t 1·om proballl) l'nJm work1111! 6..'ll·4qO_d_y,4~·3620ev Ambihoub boy8 unit i.holild tw~blctoly~4s l;)ETAll.IMG rri oys t.XIH'r wit r cl' e pt 1 0 n1) t m111blu11 . l"Ump11n1 fiirll' Found Fem sm Cocker iitrls l().IJ )Urs old, 111 wnm • ..,,.11 \\"II "n di• Stevt )-lkta1llng ncl'd,, IRM ()l.)phi) wrrtu pre On.lt'r Processing S\\1trhboard KOLM 1•x benefit&. \\Ill tram Nc-.1t "l ALI FJCATION:.
S work one or 11110 t\tn '' ... ,.... ~ ·" ~ h rd ork 11 t I'd Will triun A~k for "' .... "'GER h r & t "' p11n1el, blonde/ vlt· ph1it11ccural'y1ndelull J w .ini: l'tanru . l'11th1, Mon lhru W1•d M""""" perrl'nl't' i·lp ul .1ppeuranr1• i:ouc l(ht'rl2Vl'Jl)llfallt' Bushara & car it'ld. in gs a week gell1111: work We orll'r exc(•llent , cnergl'll<' pl'rsons for· 841 604t ORDER Outstand111i: 1·om11l'fl\U ~r.;lhnK l't>Wntral Appl) :! !llt>at tiu1w,t ti nil ill·
H B 8•6 9tz6 963-SJ8 l n11wspaper su bb r rr p rompany brneftll> 111 l~g !t'rm emplo1 m1·nt PIOC .. SSl .... G hon & llt>nt'f rll> 1n J I 11n11) <>a' I' r I lili" t:ll'nd.ibk ~ lions Transportation l'ludmg medl('al, dl'ntul., Call6316900 LOAM AUDITOR/ ,)di '" "' plea)ant worl(rng cu Phn·enlta1 l' M 3 Work afl•·r "'houl .mil
and l'Onstant adult llfc rnburorHl'. t•ti· lJom>Sltl'S OUAl y 0 :~11~ iny 0~~~~11~~ 1~~ \•1roonrnl Con1.1rt f'JI Saturd.1)' F~~:e ~~1s:i'bo~~~sar::: su~ervision ~rov idcil Sulary l'Omnwnsuratt• Mature h01hl'kl'l'p1•r for 'rcmpu11~r>~ r~~~~l~ 11011 seeking mu nagl'r ~1iller, AMF Srient1ru Toil ~~sR\l~~ l 1oni: l'Al.I. IOl>A' '
"Kup"_onit ~5 669~ CadlJto530
2P t.Jskfoi wilh!!xpenrncel'l.US,1 1 proressron,11 Var11•1I p0Mt1on f':x1~·r11•n1'l' fl' \\1thexpenence 10 high Dnlhng lntt>rn utrnnal. term assr"nm1•nts No ~593GmS3l 5~~7
--An rea. 64 4321. l'XI great eomm1ss1on pro duties ltu11l•st . tiurrt•d l'a I J1·11n1fl•r volumn, dire1•1 s<1ll'' ISOll Mil!'htll Su · fn c0 ,.;tJI a11•;" llAMtolul'M
Found puppies.vie.22nd 343 gram ener).'t'llt',rehable 5hr' ll rhner 754 IKUI dept Expcrrl'nt·r lrvine,CA Purrell Tl'mpor.t111•, S
& ln•ine. blk M Lab & - -pr da} Mon Fri l'af ~;(I 1-: m.inag111g auto ma tl'd Reliable mature lady for II.SI 00~
Qold Rel F 642 012!_ Auto I u be man . ex 11 Re ad y I u st a r I a refs req'd 714 640-6!160 <>ran11t• rub bl Sa\' 1ni:i. order prn<:essmg ile111 . light nu rs mg duties or
Found Doberman. miss neeessary Hrly rate + Classrfl~d i\dverr1slni: Duughnul maker. oper t700Mami., <: M urellent people l>kllb 1•ompan1on aide. 4 ti *~ory/
lllg 2 legs. "l\fary Jo". 50'1.§13·~ career~ Call our per:-on ~alary open (.'apo He.ll'h Jnd dell'Rating .ib1ht1l',, hours fer week. ot· leceotiOftlst ~~f:,astblul!_S400~i17 nl'ldepartme111foran1n \r 96 711 LOAMPACIAGH/ <:as1ona 24 hrs Jam Hoterml!mt Ot•\ ('o Al!rOMOTIVE tl'rvtew Monday throul(h ' eu 4 '-jl PROCESSOR tr you are se~mg a high boree, &yside Or art•a seeking !'t'rt-orlJllll' rn ~ 5350 *'00tu<HPERS! ~'r1day ORJV~S (h!MOI ~\ill time l)l'rma n1•nl ~ro1111h f?.s111on. contal'I Newpl!rt 720:_1253 d1v1dual with i:ood l)~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• v-.. pleasant \\Orkin•• L42 4321 '"'llt 277 "'T & 0 f" "llrll .~ ... 1t1on L'vnonen"" 10 1kn • ""'acldl•n The Ill" sl.1'11• ror 01·"rl"I'." <:;~d1t1ons 10 Arrpnrt 0 -'"' ~1 rl-q Cl,llltHS 42t~ ~v t~t &2~d T o"t:x Ma,.;h~'11'Group Person Restaurant needs 911 AJ~rt Area or1~1.; ~~· * * * * l'Omplu for experienced ORANGE COAST J)l!nem·ed onl) G • l'UI nel Ser\01ce. lnr. O..·ran positions Apr ly '" ('('!lent starting ,,alury
, Atlantis Mana-bookkeepers for manual DAILY PILOT llr~ rll'unrn1e (.'(lunter \\Ork1ng env1ronmrnt & Lmeoln, P 0 Box A I. Jlt!r500_, 42817!h S , CM full benrf11 program
•S..,...rJobs•
STARTING :-.'OW'\ 1llt'ol Mom~. tl'~ns anti k11h. lU or uldl'r lo ~t>l I rll'\\
SpJl'l' i:amc .,hrrh .11111
me m bl' I ~ h I II~ I 11 r
Astron Sl'i\l'E
DI-SIGNS 631 1155 Jfl
5 ~113.5 777~ X B211
·opei-124 hrs a day'7-entl')' accounts payable JJOW Bay Sl l'l'rwn. Appl) 10 Pl'r~un. Call Jennifer Hebn1•r ('a r me I, CA 9392 t Restaurant Apply 111 pt"rson Mon J,.11
7 days a week & recel\•able Per ma Costa ~lcsa !~~~ .... ~3an Mi.:uel ~ H 7~11801 E 0 E 1Q\625·S700 T-6.CO llll between I 1 PM 10 Mr TYPESrcnER 69 Gorgeous girl~ to Mnt Opp for .id,ancc EOt: Ml'' '""'""" Orangt•CoastSavm~:. "FreetoAaolicClldt" is looking for Tuff. part John Sander~. lllOl3 Sk\ Nl'cded. 11i ghh und pampe~ -~ou1. Jacuzu. rn?nt1to learSn G 1M>rr al· rlencal Gl'n Oh-. inust F o O I> S ~: H V J (' ~: 1700_Adam~ C M ttmr help, day or nr~hl Park C1rl'h:. Su 1t1• ll wt't'kend:o; lh•plan·nwnt Sauna . ...,._-as us well as coun 1ng ec ll'(' WORKt:R . Part 11ml' Opportun1t1es for ad\ an lrvmrCA po1>1t1on for :i month' 711
Redwood 2x &rrkTn•.1 4 3>' long. ulJO rrdwooa
ft11dn11 l.o"''' prtr" ~uur Jim or Ktn
11nflhnr, 715 1491
C-Na& ~ ....... UJO •••••••••••••••••••••••
DAlltlOOM S111rt your darkroom to
da_y ' With u Kue Irr
ZJCll enlarJtl'r, l'nlul(
101' lcrlllct1, hll'hKhl l rllter9. flet1rOnll• tlmrr
'anou.~ r1utl1 & i:vcr~
IYtw 111 d11rkroom "" l't'llSOI) IOlllJllOllble All
1n rxrC"llC"nt rond1nen
Will ~"II a~ packagt on
ly $.'illO 75 I 8406 evea..'\
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K£•~110NU Pu~ Aj{C'
l'h:imp srrt• M r Pol &
show P vt 11t v
213 an l34!> 11116 pm
Chiftest Shor Ptl M JIU1Jrt, 4 moA !)4ti 13!1S
• l'oudll'~ H l'coplr • r rupb TO)' s200, lo
$.Wll l'l'h Hoa1 dru &
<:naom·rl $-16 28-UI -A
l'arr n Tern er. lj wk · t.1 .
Shob & \\ormrns:. SJltq1<ir
1.Jt-:.1 offl·r ti42 9fill2
((Jt'kt•r Span11·I~. to \\ "' bllr rolor AKC \1&-l
~hob f 180 \!Iii 4!1:111
Frteto YCMI 1045 .•..............••.••.•
I o\\ut•r lo" mil1·<1 ~l' uwd
l'al 111.rr•k lon11 hJll
)1'1101\ t'\I'' 'llJ)t'ri,•!12 \l':JI ,, ufd \n~\\l'f' <II
t.1h1tha or t•lel'I ru· C'lltl
•lfll.'lll'f :'\1•1·d' lot' or di
ll'fll llKI & I011' G~l 73Sb l"\ t' '
ffl'l' ('ullrt• lllll\ r .. mJ 1. :I'• mu) old ,J111l ~
II lllOl'fl II.Iii 4484 Io u r 1 s I s 8 a n k Mgr Mon . Weds or Frt be good \\ numbt•r s Ideal for Student 3 PM ptrtl~~·.._.~ l'ement Afiply worcb n.or mmutl' s1~ Americard .• Master H~··sc~ I pleasant olr 110 '1ron 6 r •1 't h u•cHl .... IST vn ""' ••••••••••••••••• .. ~ Charge. Amencan Ex """"""' t•roet rriint. typrni: optmnal lo " 1' on I ru Lase7""man ~al'turer The vngrna t•d late ID9Coast lw_y,La_gRl'h SECRET"'RY month~ l'~Pl'fll'llll' lfa~'l'll llounti ti \f' Dove ' . ua1 Sls l'all 771 -4750 Thur.; 979-0747 ror app'l seeks talented appren Co ~ P t11n1• help to R.est.iurant Meat Shl'er & Stat t.\ lllhl. 7111.101·1,d rrummum rt>qwn•d \SJ male gooct hr a Ith i.;111111 ~~j~~ 07il~ ~~t.3:3~1 NEWPORT B~ACll COOi( Ga.ERAL OFFICE lire or lourn1•yman \\1th lxlx tndividual plat rs I Portion l'ontrol Person stalem>lllb. tax n·turn' pl) 10 l'rrsonnt:I. I with kids 7611 81119 alt 4
2]12 H~rbor !!I. CM AUTO MECHANIC Conv!llesrent lloi.01tal lmnied Ol)l'rllO!(b ~hort lfUll & athc t!Xperiencc 9Jngl'nlJI al.mosphi•re I toupcralc Hoburt Sl11w Type 70 \\PIO tu kt<\ o~ Coast fvmitwe 1050 -own hand tools APPLY 661 Center. Mt'Sa \'crde & Ion I( tcrm .1 ~~11en Excellent Pil) bend1h lall 548 5139l:M Expenenced prcfrrrt:d. Expertl'llt'•' n·~ Ull t'll I D • Pilot
with you Lc~he or CENTER 3000 F.as1 Pun·lll Tl'mpor:mc·s. )Uram'l' vacallon &huh 534ohr to start Merri : lil';\1MonThur6AMl11 SllfliJ nH> CPA r1rm Costu Mesa **I BUY** Coedswouldlovetoparty NE WPORT TIREIC'osta Mesa~S!ill.S m.>nL,To_vpJ) ;-,.1 rce 1nclud1ni: health 10 PACIAGERS b11tw111trarn930AMto Nonsmokl'r s.1la1\ 330 lla\'~I i •••••••••••••••••••••••
SY Iv i a . an Y t 1 me . Coast Hwy CoronJ Del Cook-Day I ~_! !ll~ I da} pa) Appl} at raise~ 1~37 Munro\l.i I ' • M Sunda) Appl) 10 C:06ta Mt.>s.1 Call t'aroh• I An 1-:qual Opet> Emplr I Goud ust'd F'urnuurl' 1. 7~1·~ -.M!r _ Numero Uno Prnerra Laakmann F.lel'lro A NB AM to 12 or 2 Pi! to 4 7~ II~ Ap~hantt>' Oil I will
Linda' Yl'ck1''s AL~~~HIV"'E .... ICS/ ~~:nd~y ~~k ·~ 'r.~< I ~~t!~~~o~~~~lc : ~~a,.'p:,~sldr"aln~ol' 'sl~.~ann52 Jl>\1!1e~~~o' Vt';ART /TIME r~a~bon,:~~~~·-~r1~;~~~; ,Sl'c~t>~ "'••'tl/S•r'y ---------~i~~·!o~;~OM ~ "'" 18120 Brookhuri-1 St ,, "1¥' -'-" '' .. $4/HR + IOMUS I at Carnagt> Ori S,\ ~ ..... r..1;"'" ~ I VacatlOft
TECHMICIAMS GM! Fountain \'<illey HARDWARE SALES ~"~d San _Juan (i(~Ek Natrbnal co 11pcnin1e I Routt Ptm>t1 ~>r.":~~ "a' ''s~ 11~.\ A~,' Relief Pool 6464686• UJ-Ull
PHOTO MODELS County growth rcqwre~ l'Obmetman ht:t'n~ed for f'u rr 11 mt' (' r 0 .. n Roa oll ram pl Ol'\l offt('t' F.Ji.~ ill't't'!>~ With l'.lf ror \\II k1· r I ~1i.t ant Sl'l' ~ In Jn TetWIP Auir ... ""
ESCORTS HOWARD Cht>Hlllt'I e~ F T in top :-; l'" po 11 Hard\\drc 3107 f. l'oast M F 11 to~ & 55 01\ rrs1f1ed basket lum·h 1ervH 1• In me b:m'<I 1·11m11un1 Wt' re !eek•n to l1111ld a MUST SELL BACK&Bf.:ttlrn pansion! salon Call Ul'Ollol' Hw) Cd;\! • workunbehalrof('hen! Mon-fo'rr i:all Jflt•r :.! ~'tilnl'po"twn (ontai-1 lahor pool 11 qu.ihrrt•d ~~hoj!an~ cfoliT>Tt• lied
· TilAN EVER! 24 llRS i 2_13-274·1!575 llo6tesi. Cashier 1 MoiflttttanCt MCltl l'Ol1> Pot11nll~I for ad PM 646 tl!Oll llel·ky_ 557 5111! ~rJphrr an~ pcr,onncl v.1th maure~s Moon 669-0207 I Specrahsts rn tune up . rountl'r l lerk . dq The Good f..i rt'h C:l'nHal mHhan11·al I ~anremenl Cand1dat11s * * • for ont•:ill \\ork 1n thl' shaj>t'd mirror 011 hea..!1_
10u1r3ll > j electn('al. and air l'1tnd cleaners. 3 dyi. pr "k R~t<1u.ran1 &. Buk11n ll> I knowledge f.xp-111 elt'l'-bhuuht be pen.on able. prr pres., art>a .\t ll'a~t ooanl -
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1
needed! )lature lad} prl'r Will lookm1-: rnr 2 full timt> lt1l·al & p!umh1n1-1 ha\e a goosl ~peakintot R. W.Ocltsntr •SECRET.A.RIES• orw ~e11r t'\Jl<'rtl'ncc in S5WOBO 631 i'7!17afn, tram 646 7621 h Jr d " 11 r k 1 n i,; 1 n I helpful Appl) to Larry v0tce & \\ l!lh to l'arn US. 2n'i62 Ptcn "'" Ln T 70. Rea') Di l·t C rc•al I) P<'St'll1n1e. p.1~11· u 11 !.
Telephone Fantasy Line mechanil'i. technr drnduals \\ho en Jo~ Surf & Sand Hotel. Lag aft eve1wknd hrs avail tluntmgton liea<"h Op Ad Agent·} t·amera np1•1 at run nr
Conversation w11h ciansneeded! Coonter person F.xper , wnrkmj?withthepulJllt Bch4974477EOE ~or a ronfidentt'!I rn Vnu are lhe \\tnnl'r or Xlntlicncl1t~SIS.600 pl11tl'm .. ~1111! " llUYFURHITURE Michelle MC \'rs a Full lime Start SJ tlS hr Good pa) com pan) rn ten·1e\\ call Mr S1rota four frel' llC'krt~ cSIG OU> F.xp Consultant Our' nl'n~l>an 'ou m1"1 lit• lb 95; 8133
S39.o:J7_L S12.S5 hr G ?IJ exp pre 496--97!_!_ l>Ur.u11·e & , ac·ation at54.5-5771l I \alueto~hc l..lzRerndersAgy lo~ J\lulable lo 10.Mk on J al Sora, Ill'" ~II l'a 111
PenottalSenlus S360 ~~r~ri:~~~~~tA~~ CREDIT ::;~a~e r.~1lar~~ MATERIAL PART/TIME ~;.J\,.~?how N=~c~~;~Eg~c ~~:t~~l~l~ ·:t'l·~·1:1\~111~ ~~~;;~ ~ ~ti111 \I Jt
••••••••••••••••••••••• Complex No 1ran!-. COORDINATOR R~taurant ~ Bake1) COMTROl (ienca1 hefp-wanted for CONVENTION l'Xpt•rienc·(· r 11r1tJt't Dancer for Ba chelor work requi rt>d See Publishing firm locatt'rl zw Newport (.'enlN L>r SUPERVISOR wholei.ale rash11111 1111 c~:NTt:R Aprtl 11 25 PrNmnel l.}l.M-en we bed " mJll Parties Altrat·trve . Serviee Mgr near J w_ Airport seek' bel\\l't'nJ·5PM AMF Sl'irnulu· Drrlht\ll SJOrtl'r ~o e~pn1enN' To rlarm tu·kt'ls u.111 0 Coast bt1' i.pn,nie~ ~" dul\
legrllmate. must call rn HOWil~C~ roltt abn_ghtindr\'ldualtoas -lnterndt111n.il a ~t'<l 1)'ptnR ·' plul> I 642 56111. ex! 212 SEC'Y~D1iPT ~, f.'I t I rrallll' Kini: Kotl t"<lra resen·atron 5 daH rn ad • sist rn our Credit Dept HOTB. dynam1l' hri:h Rrov.th cul l M T1i·kcts mu~t 1Jc l'latml·J l'ommer~r ~\ e·11,1,1•1 ~!?.1Clif1. f .!,0st I 1.rm_ $~:'>0 h' I '' r r
\I an c e. M o is Fr 1 Dove/ uai lS This candidate s hould SwrtrhboarilOperator. lreld M'n·1ce c·ompany 213153 3776 714 979 ~944 ' ' """ 0 ~ ~ 1.»5.51~askforL1ndsay NEWPO TB£ACH have exper1en1·e rn Resenat1on1~t & ~·ront hasan1mmcd1a!eopen , I b\Apnl:?3.1982 .. nH11·r~ near o I I l'osta ~lei.J • f !.1 I I Con PJn till'¥' I • • • \rrpurt ·~ look Ill~ '1" l~ An 1-:qual l)ppl\ t.mpl) r D 1 IR....... '
~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
7005 ...............•....... ....
~~e~a~t!t've
Costa Mesa
You are the winner of rour rree tickets ($16 00 I
value to the
~how
CONVENTION
CENTER April 17 25
To claim ticktts. call
642 5678. t"ltl 272. Tickets must be claimed
by April 23. 1982
* .. •
7 075
BABYSITIER my home. phoM commumratrons, Offll·e Clerk nerdl'd at 1 •nR or " · 3 ena Aci·urate typist. L1dn I'''"" "-· t ·1 1 I · ~ll~ .-I t H B. Full ·t1me. 2 rns1de credit & collet· luxury Laguna lil':H·h trol Super\lsor If you \'II .. (' 11 S"'ILCUTI .. R ..-,.,. ·~1·> oa,,,is orr Qun•n 4·anof' bed luld I Hotl'I Cont.irt ~1 ar1?1e I ha\e a minimum 3 \•rars 1 a~e ... ornrnJ?~ J "' '" ht•l'l II l 0 m mt• r l' I JI a r mo 11 c 1 r C' ~ s er J:. r~n.!llp·78g!I lions. good typrn!( ~k1 Is 1 1 bt•tv.cen 9 2pm onh pi.t!ithon 0111•n E\pr Ill' Proj)t'rl1t' 01\ C.rn W-\ITRESSES \I. \ITf:H ,. >ht·he,, desk. l'halr
Beaut•· & the w1lllngness lo MarmohJo 497 4477 t>xpenenre '" ma l'na 673-!0!9 ~rrallle hut not nc·1· A~k chdatr muM h1• 1>ll'11san1 \\ rar for\\•• ~t·1 hJ,k1•1 , learn & aC't'ep( Ill'\\ l'OOlrnl ~llj.ll'f\ISl011 we r u z 1. , $11.511 75ll OO!lllarterh Now accepting apphca Cc HOUSEkEEPER I ha'l' a l'halleni:inJ? vusr or ,.,r .aru l ou,•n l)l"O(e:s,,ional & rlc'tthlr lum•h wn 'I JU I 311 lions ror hair sythsts at challrnge~ onlad Expd & maturl' l.1\l' troo J\,11lahle for \OU s.ul:l-1fii : 'l\pe 641 "1in1 ~II HO )Ion r'rr Lim Sl~tl SJ751 1\JN<i l:\'.\ERS l'Hl~G
Forrester Ltd Appl) '" :'ttrs Ev~,!>19·4834 ln Reis 75191iS5l''l'~ Apph,·ants must ha\C PilTTIME \\pm wkh \luq 111' lll't•I r:XTRA FltlM m.i1trt''' person Tue-Sal J9tl E DANCE M F ass1i.t rn su1 I k t>9pm £xpand111i;: youth I SALES Wt• arl' .irfrltatl'll "' ,, Pf.'1"\1>0.ihh• & t'llt'r.:1·111 .!>t'l nt''t'r U~t·d \\Orth IJ_!):i~C M f>!55370 club ballrm da:-.Sl'l> llOl'SEKF.t:PER Ll\'1-: t'Xpen~nce rn "0r '"~ l'ounsehng rrrm has i:;,pl'rtencrd pt•f\011 mJJOr~I. ,ind 11fll'r JO g;qrr;1; dh ltt \\t for I s.'>.~t ''ll' t.!~Kcll'I '\l'\er Earn as ~ou lt>Jrn lo I!' for ram1h :-it• .. port ' \\tlh an )l I< p h~se openings for 3 !i ~harp needed PT or f T for xln1 l'Om!JCnsat1on r•rtt I Jj>j>I us1•cl qun•11 '' "Orth
IEA.UTICIAMS $l<XXJ mo PT l'\t',, Mr Rl·h area \\t'll pa11I 1· t•omputer rnteJ?r<1tell oulgomg mature per.pit> Slll'l"lally .s \\1mwl'ar gram & !)('nt'frh Ir ~1111 '\'A"Tf'() 11 1 1 ,,1 W.t ra,honl\ S2111del Hairdressers with some EILl.s542·4.508 ti4611t93 minulac·tunni; ~ystem to mo111ate ;imh1t1ous .,hop in 'liv.pt lfrh ft't'I \OU t·.in ml'l'I our ' ·' • ''11'1 1 11 hu.111~ hmTll' i5~ 7350
ro11ow10g needed f 0 r --HI' :KOi ex_pt•ncni·e dl' 10 13 ~r olds CJ II 2 Spm 673 ti-I~ I h IJ?h0 st .rnda rd~ l' a 11 1 l"_lllllll'r. lll'.~~00 ro,r tint~ I pleasant. bu~) rull Dl'll\•cr~ Person. full lntern,H1o~~I tompan\ "rable but not man &i2·4J2l.l'Xl 343 Ask for ~hmcrsat 752.866t) da M _< du1h•r t unl.111 l'\\111 h,.1 '''I malln·" servi<"e salon in umr i425hr Mu st wenm~L~~ub111d1ary 1 1tatory Wt>orfl'r l.'X Andrra Jllt'95i83W IH>\ ,pr111).! rrJmt Newport lnl>urani·r ha\e Rood drivtnl! re mOrange(ount) 'l'ek 1't'llentl>alary&v.orktnR Forll.i~i.ift1•d.\d Mhnl ,101 1uncl $1!5
benefits. top pa) cord. relrablr & rng.1dmrnstral1\l·J~)1s l rond1t1on.'>a\\\Cllai.an I \!'TIO:" SEC'YIE ECI WOOD SHOP i5/ll~ltll•
Several position~ ,l\aala eneri:et14· Ap1>l)' in 1 •ant 10 ~tart up nrflrc ou tstand1nl( bent!lrt Placing your l.'lass•f1ed I l'all 11 X , Im lr11t•re~trni: I' ·r Joh 1111 I l\JnK '"" n1.11tn•" 'cl
ble can Marr for tn person at Ne\\port Hill~ x I" l \' t' r ha I & parka~e F or I 111 -ad IS so srmpll' JO~t Dari\ l'tl11t I ~~~al:C:~~p"'::,·~~ for pt'l"SOO \\llh 'hoµ h~r.:rl hk. n1•\\ ~.., ~n·iev.,&4~ 6164 Flon~t. 2642 San MrJ:uel .-.e<'retanal ~kilb good mediate con~1der11tron lll\l' U.\ a call on the I \IJ \·i~oH Ch ldl•al for Mllqtt· ~1ud1·111 1 ti412!>fl.I Newport Jk>at"h rxpc:r n11x1bll• \\. good :-.ubmrt resume v. 1th C'ur phone and \\ l'll h1•lp 1 nu h4~ :'>liiH I nstran organ17atron .. , l'r 21 HI>', rluli ur thr
lo-LL,._, ~ '\('l\.'\e or humor Sal;ir) rent salar) h1~1or~ lo IO.Ord }Our'bd (111 fo,I fl' Hours Ol•xrhlt' ·~ 8 hr' l1Jrb111 .\r1·J l \1 For "'•IJ ""'he.in h,11! t hJlr VU!..--.--r1 r I t bl ,. II '93 3638 \''"" "-If D II I ! da,\. C'hrr~llan lla1. I I ·1 H•1 « •• ..,,, Exper p T lo penorrn, assr !I'< ac \ert1~tnll rs lll'got1a t' "a -. '•ir .-...1110 1 If rr IOI( ~u ts ~2 56711 rl prn f n t rt"I Jppl &12 KJi2 'n 1n11u ~" ·"'· ,,.., • billing and pa)roll and abetter"'a' 1otc•11 mon• lnternatron;il 11!1111 I •1 ,., .£ ~r1oun • • 1 •1 lq·11-.·~~Jl)I'' ~'""r o(fr"e dut1ns ror people about the M'n 11 e Ma~ .. a J:rt'.11 drs<·on•r) M1t1·hell So . In tnr l' A II y I Bl ............ .. . . . . . a ary open <ir<:nfl lrll: n WOHD PHOl. ~-~~ll H uu•• ' ' '.·ou ha\e tootler A'k
1
Shop l'IJ,,,1f1r1I for 9:.1114 . Alln 8111 WrtRhl "· ••\perrenu• < Jll O" lht1.iphonl' \rtcl !um.i.. 'r1dn~ S!-11~. htlrt.. m_~ consulting rlrm F.. 0 E M t' ·. j 11pl~, lnl' G3t illlU I ()u.rl nu.pla\ 1-'li•\lhli· 1> l' • h,•,1 "'"' -.1tir.11:l' 549 1083 about our IOI\ r.lll'S 111 tud.i~ i. h1•,1 hu'' 1 1 k 1·atisi11 5th tl~hll
UNEMPLOYED1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Hskpg m exch for rm & Bookkeeper board. reliable )Oun~
rld),6425678 &-t2567H ' : St•"' 1 n i: M J 1· h 1n1• iour). 3 '·1 ~ "'1'1' llprrator' fap d qu;ih \1 v.~ Thur~ ~.11 ' ~., R\\IHOO 1\111.~ \\1th
Pan ume pC'rson to dchn'r Datly Pilot l\ mrndrcl lll•nerib I pl'r •I E,p.1n1l1nl! i:l·"''"P ~1
I .:: r I( PltOD prep & 0 (' ~t'f\ I('\' N1111-r1111~··r 111; ti:l:!tl auto route in Lag &h-7 days per wk -' .t.'"~1 6-12%.52 1lw1ltfH'l'.f>l!l~tllK T"mh••ih lrl.l'nt'" 1151•11 French Canadian Clerk Liberal Laguna Qlarles, m.-6296 Responsible for ra~h. re COllClhallon or pre'l-IOllS
... Wanted 7100 days sa l11s , phone
••••••••••••••••••••••• answenng. some act m1n1stralJ\l' ;ind
Restau rant ACCOUNTANT Secretarial dulle~
Immediate opening for bookk eeping l'xper
r · 1 helpful but not an assistant lo 1nanr1a necessary Call $49 9322 director or rapidly ex-_for ann1_ paodsng health eare ,.,. ... ,
company localed 1n BUSBOYS Newport Beach. Ex The Good Earth
perr ence in pa)' ro II. Restaurant & Ba ken rs
bank reconc1lrat1on & looking (or 2 rull time
accounts payable re h·ard work ing 10
q1.1red. Ideal candidate d1\'1dua Is v. ho en10}' w1 II h ave gene re I worlnng with the puhlic
knowledge of acrounting Good pay. <"ompany in
through lnal balance & surance & \'aC'atron
be willing to assist 1n a\atlable Apply 1n
putting together an Bl' person. The Good Earth
counting system for Restaurant & Bakery
computer operation F'or 210 Newport Center Or
Interview call J ane.
1
l>elween3·5PM
~l-93.S4
. • • . ... ···~······ .................... . .. . . .
NEED A JOB?
Let us help you find an employer The Daily Pilot. Irvine Mirror
& M1ss1on V1e10 Mirror will pnnt your employment-wanted ad
There is absolutely no charge to you. We will print
your employment-wanted ad on Sunday, April 18 in
the Dally Pilot & ag1. '1l on Wednesday, April 21 in the
Dally Pilot, Irvine Mirror & Mission Viejo Mirror rea-
ching over 200,000 adult readers.
Use the coupon below to list your job title, your
quallficatlons & telephone number. Mall or bring your
ad to the Dally Pilot before Thursday, April 15. This
offer applies to any person who Is presently unem-
ployed. Not applicable to those seeking baby-sitting,
housecleaning, at-home work or other service type
employment.
(Please print in 25 words or less)
My name Is
(not tcw publieltlon)
MJl'lllt W~t tlirrors
I·.·. about 2 hrs p<'r day. M F'. 3.:rnPM IMerehandise I :1 m1111h> SllHt SklllS ···~····••••. •••. ••. ••• ;,41; !l'lK:l Sat-Sun-5AM TUIMIMG _._...._..... 8005 'S.•n11 r · nln on, ... "....... '\1·10. tuil ''II' mdllr••tt!> MUST LIVE IN LAG BCH RE I \OU C.CUI t I........................ I • A .A. No w1•ckrnd l'ac·h mon1h , 'l't ~·' 'l'rtr1~ iv mal
I Ea I l!lr" t\\11 .. t•t-h '"" h I • * * tr1•" SI>~• '-l'" qut·l'n <'<l lc't·tmg mmgs $300 per month and \ l' Jr 1 n 1h1, " rm , Gordon Coll'IP,bell "<'I, $11•1 •Sil !>KJl
up Call Darly Pilot, {l4Z·4321 -lvr nam(' ' I ltl'~1·n 1' Ll'a rn '' 40fi:,-J,i,,mrnt>Aie I ~SlJlrSall' lwau1 p•'l'3h ~kill Rl'l f'Xl>\'rtl'nre ~:, I , l oruno del :'II ar I .. ~rmkl·•I c oflt•l' & en<I & phone for call back & interview Ira rrnnl'\ PX Jnd n· 'oo arl' the \\ innn or tJblt' '''I m.itrhmi: \\~II tlfC"ITll'ol ll\'nl'lrb (',di four lrt't' lll'kct' 1St6 llll• I un1h . "1111! ~1illl' 25 rul
Toda) 'alul' to lht• or nK1.,oll' I' S2:.!:i o;it
Huntmi..'\on BC"h 9fi2 8il:!I Allahei"' loat Show hllrm '''I Iii pt 1 nr~lo(ll . . ......................................... ·· Santa Ana 552 3113 A!llAllEIM <,nfa & lo\1' 'l'al nn1-:
l'ON\ ENTIO!ll Slf~~· ~arr ~1. t-ll•tianr
{ l ) )
WANTED ( { ___ <05 ___ ) )
·NeWspaper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
Fountain Valley & Newport Beach
• Good EamillCJI CALL
CIRCULATION • Super Trips llifRiilt • Great Prizes
' 642 .. 321
•
«F-'-'TF:R .\pnl ti :!5 unu,1•d "lr.thl'd ~o To rlarm t1t k1•h. 1·.111 1unk Ctn hrlp moH'
642 56714 O l ~ H l\.'10 l!ltiO T1rkcL~ musl b(• d.11mr1I
h\ Apnl 2.1 19112
I • * •
Bullet. orndlr mla'
qU(' ~ 545·21l3S K11lybrooke1 CM
um
30211
DEStG,,.ERS HOME tfore p111nn lcl! dt~k i'})l!I orfll'l' desk [n It I
rnrround & m.1n1
tthcr) Must ser to lll>
prrc1.ite' 675 53119 or
675 :J7l! for appl ... ,k ror
Janet
Ant111ue rurn1tu11· for
Milt-. be:iut roncl Call 963 81711
.... C.CH 8010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llARROR AR t:A
APPLIANet:st:1w1n :
Wr sell re4'ond i;uttr
a_p_pllant•cs 549 3017
I IUY AP,UAMCES Les 957 8133
G •: hv) di y 111•uher
w m1n1b11sket SlSO
642-4121
Dishwasher. yellow un
dertherounter GF.. SIOO 642 OlkM
Ktnmort portable du.
hwashtr with l'hopp1n1t
boerdtop ISO 411-4329 l.:iguna Brh
G·E ORYl-:R. like n1•w,
$1.SO or bt-111 otrtr t';i 11
J.a~ at 6'15 3'1M
ADMIRAi. Kt:YKIO
'.J'Dp dr frttttr. $W or
llt;\dftr IJI 31111
r'r l'ro\ r11Ht•1• 1 ah IL'.
Ch1•m $115 Tl\ n hrd
\Ira I~ lrunlt' 111•\\ S1f>
'\at hnt"n ,tuflcll 1 h,tjr
001\n rnsh1t>n h11rk S76
675 41i4 •
t'wc·h lhc111 & l.Jm!)'
< ~nt Concl SiS 91;:1 :.;m
II 1 111.'h 1lr hrn .. n ,ofa (;ood rond $.% '
840 :lliffi
(Jn )/ ~.II) ll1tlt• u h<•4
irHl' pJard $151J
5591328 l'\
W:1trrhM Sohd ouk T1~
hrrl1nt> Mill N1•\ l'r u,,ett m,r, 1·umph•lr or ~
rrame & hilhnl uni\ U:.11
Hob 64S 2117 2
Top 11ti:llll) 1t1tl\ II p14'('t'
broroom st•t Mu't wci ~Ml b'73 11444
Mt:ST SELi. It
Elegunt sofa & IOvl'st•l
in autumn ton"' Lois,~
)mall p1llOWl' XI'~
shape 893 :mo ':It
l\lal'k 8 rt n1&u1tah ·~\
lllftrd roU<'h. Uk<' SIC
$1.SO. ~1 6151 ,..)
~w. ... .................... ,.,
tc .
Orange Coht DAILY PILOT/Wtclnttday, April 14, 1982 .I
• Mill W.W UtO ....._ a,11114 ..._ ...,, t9d ....................... ..•...... ..........•.. ..... , ......••.•...... A.Wt. ..,,L'W UM4 ....._ UN4
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ...... ~~!~ .................. ~~~.! ~~~~~ ... !!~~ ~~ .......... !~.'. & .... hit. 011t Wt11 manntrtd )1)'r old BATAVUS MO PEO WHIJ ~~· ltt ma Ytllow N1ft. Amaton, ~~llentCond $00ml M (0 IMW '727 '750 W~ ttlO Pont tt40
itlilit(_~ U3 ~l~~dy J~·uT~~ _, 1$21499 JO BUY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.... IMO ~l\Mpm t~~~ o~~;n~"• • ~TIMODIL
E ................. Eaa t er n r1a11 2 5 0544 """ ~·• 11\t re Pt1rht1tt> 1ovtb1rd1 USID CARS
" ·bM. aa foal \O Cace 1nrlud1d $50 M-.Cvdet/ I ·t~N ORD A<'r1taflat. Ot l•ware ,1574 Scnhn t ISO m f ~ .,.,.. la foal lo ~cblrcb. Ptarh f'11tf ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• IW aeh Blvd =•tar I ~~I 1 a or. r ts, Pairs · 8rtfdlna ~~l~y B~~~!ri~~e. llunlln&ton Eklarh •-;~ .. P~U(h>~ "' $:()-$7$ ~ 1419 mo 1 t l y o rl gin •I lf1·6.6 l 1
"'"'' bl 1r1lftlft1 Vtl ,._. & 0,,-1 IOtO $1600/080 ......
'ltratariat foal from •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• MS OS~ •~-~ .. "•/ ~~loa mar•, I( uh It r di C 1 mp be 11 Y1imaha cs1. look8 m:w. Oiaalea t 520
latft al tran1011 '1 ConlOle piano, be nth In r n 11 n e e d s w o r k , •tt••••••• •• ••••••• •• ••
t.rm1, 3l U3 cl. l1all1n Prov 8e11ut. tOOLOR<\499·1260 MODll "A"1I ,. t.11 .. Herntl fl~. 84'J.2?fl4 Shay rtpliC11: plrkuJll
COMMEll
CHEVROltT
·~ :, / j 1 I I• r J
OIANll COUMTY"S
J. .....
~~ __ ., lt'MIOll! Cf'4UI
-~l"')..0~
Late '79 7331l low mllea, new ('C)Od toru-ou t. A•·
tWfti ltut with low ln· wrest rate. Call Anthony
da.ys 842·S757. fVH ' · r, I \ "t
'i4'>-1200
t.10'3 Kimball Uprl,ht p111no 1981 SutUICI & ~peg, 4 to rh<?ollt I' .. 1••.u..a.. I065 ~/best orrer Ivrin.-GSI IOOlX from (006711111 1Stk. (..1#1 -area,,? 7260 ' Vanct & Hines pipe A:m3l. Pra,•t•a st11rtln1¢
1
'78 m , xlnt rood. look• ............................ 't"'I' Suiuki fairing 6.000 111 al If t
tNX SDri~I (double I and Wurliht'r F.letl or1111 n nul('fj. Mini Cond $2995 OM, y Sf ,HSI HtG
1
H IUYll ~!~.iuOO'. HS~· ~'M'RES.Cim W/be:nrh, 2 key buar~b. Qill Jam 9$7 sm ·rop. ifollart 1or Sport5 '
• 'lfJ flch x. Ir U<>nd. "100. 541M1419 'tl'l SUZUKI C:S 450 F.X Cara. Bugs, Campers, 72 Green 2002. Mech.
wlmda 631-8630
*'•••-IOIO fiilvertone 2 key buim1, 1500 m1. $1300 C11ll Jd t 914'1i~~~·tic MGR ~~f ~{ia~ O:~e0fr0
-.. •••••••••••••••••. oraan. szoo Ono an 11?.m, M2 6463 JIM u •• 1 .... 0 ~ M.C. t'llhter al&n~d rare 646 3518 · , , ..._ "
edition Scholasllca "V l978 Honda 750 ~ Supi•r Y~WAGIN ~ '715
-... 11 and 8 d 1 • • . Sport Blk w, 1:hrome 11 arh.Blvo ...................... . r., . Eo ,e. s.w-..MocW..tt 1092 Kerker hdr 8500 ml ~c)ll ~n;~ xT' len: ••••::?•••••••••••••••• Mini rond Must set-'-'L, HUNTINGTON BEACH '77 Capri V&, 4 11pd,
8.2n·o d :~ 1
1.m: r Sears Kenmorr sewing tl55010BO. 547 1845 ·~t ~11~Z0~erof1JwRrfd:~= l.U·lDJO ~:~~ ~r;. "r:m~1~·
"333e t I a. , ~~~~~~ r~id ~ HOHDA TlAIL 90 &reblt ena 'Homplete WEMEB> ~ 833-2M2tves
n's beige coat w --~-S48 0091 ~ D~ 557 1900 e\leio YOUI UOTIC Dahm '720
collar. ntwer worn. TYU.~s,:_,.-8098 llooda CT ·70 Mini Trual..._~.7.!M.19_______ &UmSH CAIS •••••••••••••••••••••••
t .6461~ "'"• TIJT-perfe<1 rood1tio11 iioo ,. -lt72DATSUN .\ti Dome pool enrl . ;11~·~~==:·;.v·~~~;~~=· ~ 1~1 ... ~6146 '50UIQ( SPECIAL 1200 11as AM" YM . an him all yr. Save on lstrunmo\laes St591ns1 MoforHOMts Salt~ RIVIERA ~•lh 65.SH good rond1tlon & gel) beaUngbillJ.Xlntcond. 9a1:i:_!h>m 638S724 R--"/Stor • 160 rrules Gara~ed N('\er f reat gas mileage '
olr. 98M n111J CICJe hat Ver) fine $4.000 1100 Call 631·4099 days * l QSC 4 2 Pwr Amphr11:r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 080 673-0851 Eve:. or 3tOOW Coast Hwy <!!160-9382!fter§j> m arkttteer goll rart $.'ISO I Shure PE56D rOH' RENT 26 fl motor homl' early AM Newnnrt Beoirh 1978 DATSUN 2oosx
5 '.With rhargu 645·1236 Anthony art Slps8. fully loaded 1i---------..-; ~7011 _ SPM 645-8616 642·9405 speed transmtss1on. aar
• ---<'ondrtioning, and AM i!~ PmttP•tl 19" Sooy Tnn1tro11 S..'175 Con\'erted bread \Un tcnaHOftCll WANTED ' FM steroo,Newm~talh<· ~lracfor's surplu) Firm Eves &l_g gd, nirt-inside. nd:. YIMcles 9530 Late rOOdel Toyota; and silver finish with deluxe
'12 Honda Clvlrt. 4 Dr -·sTEI <lrnt f11t~r upprr um 1141 + tax per mo ""' R1urk Skyluk Runs.
.nct 48 mo. lute NE/ UDI but nd$ wk S400 or m11kt'
Yel'I (1141834 0189 'cal~rOOf ~\d tlfrr ~ 1141 l'YI
Honda Arrord 'IO, xln1 <iardtn Grovt C.-.C tt 15
cood, 4d:r. auto amtrm s..,.,_.,1c..&.,... ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• rau . air. h .250 ., ... 636 2333 COMTIMPUTING
(JltJ58-20tZ tvt1 ...t-l-"l • CAD,ILLACf
.._. ·mi Poricht' 9'l4 Turbo & Wt' apirTa flt ln timli
'80 Portthf 924 Roth tor lllt butlnt'O e~ loaded 1'akt over 1st-ttut1ve' proft 110niil
J!!ll'?lll• 714/825 lllOll L.Cll S...dla
'18 azt, exctll rond. J7K OfHew ltll mi. m.1111. air lllSOO C.cllocs
'7S 911S: t;ler. sunroor. new tires. 11 ke new,
33.000 original mllu &15,m 142·8632 e\le.,
SH US ~ 1966 912, fll'W c:ngilll', 111 fO• YOUI • loy1, l'OVl'r bru, "Int
MIXTMAZO.. coild. Dlvort•e 11ale ma kt· ""If I j)(fer~.:1115
,. till.. -ltolh lloyct 9756
•ACIUl'YI •••••••••••••••••••••••
141' lllrJ ST. ct$1U UA S.SJU4 #}DEALER IN U.S.A.
1::0MAZD: ~ Tlusli·l1£.Pe1.~ard to """~1ic .. ~u .. •10
hnd "Eastern Zone" .. ~lfA( .. 11"6416"1
gold extenor with brown 1 ciouo SUHOAYS • •
"'elour anlenor, s speed r---9765 Irani.. sunroof ..., ......
How la Stoel&! NABER~ CA DI LC,\~
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Lem. 833 200'J or e\'l'~ 720 1229
THflilGEST
5afCTIOM of late model lu~ m1lt'81(1.' Carl1ll11n rn
~1thern L'ahfor n1J '
HAIERS
~'~~l~I COSTA Mt:SA
' 540-1860
19110 li'ORI> ra1rrnon1
Sq11rr W11icon Cior.il:'ou•
mmt v.hltr w 111lr t·ond •
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l1l>W G\1 rr11dy for v11n lrnn IS47ZAV I Call now. uli for 01\f Jone1
Throdorw Robins l"ord
ro42·001U
WANTED
TO BUY
LATE MODEL
USED CARS
WILSON FORD I~ lk'lJrh Blvd. llunt ani,'lon lk-urh
842-6611
00 FORO l.11l~Xlf WO 2 rloor 39U V tl uulnrnu I rt•
Jtr rnnd pwr :!I &
brb Must bell tu .ip
prel'late Mukl' offer. fan unt'lOjl II\ 11d,1ble
11.I ~11 1 t'11 II no~. ask for ))..1 \ l' J 00 es Tiit~rdorl' ll11b111) l"ord bollWIO
7ti Gr1111adit. 2 dr ti {'}I 1ht'rr)'i\1 n11l10
'2750 ~ 5271
1!17:1 ~, ortl Oh li r .rn
Tunno i.lnl rnnd l'wr
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moonroor. Blaupunkl •••••••••••••··~··••••• AM F M rahette & 1972 Toyota Corollt1
equahur. 111r c·ond111on Wagon. l\.utomJ l it'
ang rear w111dow lrans . radio. heater. def roster leather rool raek & an urep·
armfl'SI. ro11'1aght~. bra. l1onal 10 yr old r ar car rover & ONL y 20,000 pnred to sell ( 4I7G1,0)
low miles• Mu s t Earle Ike Toyota h ne
i.ell ONLY$9,999' Call Used Car Sales
'77 Se\tlle 771\ milt•' 71 I.TO Wa!(on
loaded $65110 H 511m .:•xtd, S15ll ORO Mon l'"r1 s.:i6 03.'iJ b4t. 3518
Reposi.l'li:.1011 ~alt• m<ika• b7l'ounlf) S<tutrt• W<1j.!110 bad on ·19 C1><• dt• Vrlll' •'UO-~ $200 oho !n4·4611 d11ys or 4119 2530 1!166'1970 11~.rbor ~hd . after 1·00 weekdays & Costa Mesu 646·9303 fullyeqwpped 891 5361 1~6 3518 ~l. Highest quality 646-5339 p_a111t. minor rC'pa1r s •••••••••••••0 •••••••• v 0 1\I 0 s ca I I u 5 1 n t er i or Sty I Is h
lnl: Sinclair. Dunn $2500 Bnan646 4524 1978 W1pnebag<?. divon·e TODAY !!~ economy 1263VCP 1 ·72 Cad. run~ xlnl m1wh L'---'-
wards Pittsburgh loah&MariH '7SBo "'" K f(" sale, almost ,!llYC' u~ay $429'J, t:arle Jke Toyota ret·ent work S!lo11 firm _,_, othera in all rolors EqiipMnt m •' ee. in.: o .. e Mukeorrer 000 1115 Fme Used Car Sales Mercedtt It 9740 !*ICressida Wagon. fully 536-~7 ••••••••••••• ••••••••••
weekends 540-9467, 9945
ls OIL BASE Sem •••••••••••••••••••••• Mrnt Homes w only 1966-1970 Harbor Blvd.. M l'qpt, 6 <'YI. auto. 21 26 '6!1 l.INCOI..\ l'O.'IT · ·
1
,.____. 90 I 28XXl m1. In s1ora1w ap, 4 wt.e.t Drhts 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mpg, xlnt cond S7650 'Ill Sdn di.' VIit'. ltk·· nu GOOd tr;rnhportatcon rnr " hi gloss e.namels and __..... prox 2 vrs bel'aus<' of ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOYOJA-YOLYO Costa Mesa· 646 9303 •Ml, r-ftr a 549·0966.._ 551 ·8215 bod)'. motor ~Int. lu 1111 ~I 0110 specialty paints. $3 t,o $7 ······~·······. ••• ••• • dt\'Or<'e. 0 \ N $12 .000 l!rnl l"<>RD 4X4 short bfd I '66 ....... .,., ~940'1_ ·--~ M--.~-, r..a.--a. 9767 '9200, 645 4130 ~ 115!1:1 pergal.Oo saleApri l 17 17 Nona Canoe xtras. ltke ne~ fur stepsade Automat1r, c......... ~--,... -....... ,_ n-• .,... I
& 18from 9 AM lo 4Pm AskangSJ~ $23.500 Retail:. for pwr st & hrakes. ,....O.t)OJerHO.tOl toa11ew •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• CoMaro 9917 T.J Mark IV l.inrnln nc•\\ Jlour~arehousea,t 1261 Qraag 6751372 $47.SOOtoday Used only Taroma mai::.. OVN ~tbt7 1!179 TRIUMPH Sptlftrt• ....................... radial tire~."'-'" varrll
So. Sampson Cir in IOfl PORTA BOAT 6tri.1111 714 ~2 2893 srze<l tarl's, sladang rear Compa,e ·mil.isl' or Im Real dean with only 1979 l'heHoh•I t'am:iro vel'} C'lt•ao Mu•I ''>l'l'
Anaheim, 57 Fwy lo Ball Fol<B 'to 4" flat Ideal · -· wand. removable top Top n .. llar ports Oired lea~c and 60 25.IXXJ milt'S. Low down, f\111 power. Ju <'onrl Wl'ekd:J)'S art~. i51 5l46 Rd. West .on Ball. Sou th dinghy or fishanl( Va lue Trailtn, Trov~ 9170 O o u b I e s h a r p UWI IMS sensible pymts Io w pa " me n t ~ stereo t·a~~l'l I l' l 1I1 u........ 9950
on Sunkast, West on S84S Sell~95 ••··~·······~··•••••••• llU81041 1 Call now. ask Pai'd D r a I 2 I 3 o r t953XWA> Call now and ~llt'd. l'ru1::.1• t11ntrul. ~wv
7S1·7300 . • " n . · for Oa\c, o ne s t 714 r:. (.' r. 1s 213 as or Da\e Jone~ 1a y wo~t:~"' mttr1• ? • , • ,
Winstooloslm~onclr Trailer I• o·~rall ' MdR EDL'S k r I II .. ,, I •-' ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOOK FOR SJ NS. For Beeline. fully equip d A Theodotc Kobtn ' Ford Por Your Car' or714 637 2333 Theodore Robtn1> f''ord .'le~ metallll· bro~ n 7; lolOll) 1," \\ ai:on. ~o645-Q§74 _ 14' lnOalable Ru~aboutl doll! Call 675 8465 art 642·00lu -u-.uuSO._, Ir SO... ~·OOlO_ (rnish \\>llh \Jddll• 10 7.ICKKI m1 OC1< IH~) &
wath trailer k 25 llP 6nmorwknds ""'"" " " * * * tenor c8JJ~''R t •• .,. ... , t.wwu~ \lntrnnrl $1100 indsurfe.r (Sea Mate) s~ .... ---..,.. "'or,ota ·'x4. 2700 or•s 11..-~ 977 "' ..,.,.,.. LO •• I·' .. tandard s ze. goo r pu mr , ded perf l'On .,.,..., bo Bl 1976 Dabun 8210 2 door orro.w '-T'"" ' ' ~ I d Evmrude motor nOO "" 1' • .,_ . ere~ -----~ M Ycluw-0 Earlo lkn T<l\OtJ Finl' I "" .
rend. must sell, S500 or &&S-2028 a 17 ••• o: ~ r r v "' 307 Nesta II Hd , ••••••••••••••••••••••• l::. e d r a r S .1 It·' t.4ust~ 9952 jg!offer.673·W Remington elt>C'l r1 r TINTTIAILER ~ 847 71 I Costa M_esa 54_0·5630 witta an eronomat'al 4 Laguna Beat·h '78 VW Westraha l'mpr 1966-1970 Harltor Khd ..................... .. 9 MBZ ~rts Rephca l typewnler Xlnl rnnrl ~dTup: s1eeps 11P to 8 Tndls 95601 Premium pnres 5~ lrans · radio & You .ire the ~inner of P·Z7. hard to rand vef) Cos1c1 M e~J li~tJ •1303 ;2 '1 l'STA~G Grandt•'.! • car oo 0 VW rra""' t~ 493.Cl987 \ ery clean ~ rth a like ••••••••••••••• ••••••••I paad for any used rar heaRteJrH Vye ry tf· lean , I four free trrket::. 1$16 ou I rlean ~. 496 0314 540-9"167 Door Re .. 1 ~harp rdll~ l' "'"' ~ new lent Lots or seatrng 19711 DOl>G F • Ton Shnrt crore1gnor domestat· t ls.:i6 · 1 ours oqust \ alue to the '76 VW BUG 351 \ 8 ' reblt ena. '·'JComplele ......... Morifte 1ns1de and s toral(e u"d Parku·1,' ., .. 000 lo ~ d. $21'99 f'.arle Ike Toyota '78 Camaro. !'le.in lo" I nrJnl(e " , .
D 557 1900 _., I r IX' "" an ron itaon f'ine Used Car Sales .,..._ .. lo1c at
1
Show Xlnt rond. lo mr. s1hl'r ITU. $4850. al>i.um '" mh .1utnm,111t· A ~I F \f ys · .evei. EqilipMtftt 903 room .a solotso room males~ 6 nl etun . Usf'irst! l966·l970 llarbor Blvd . -ANl\J1£'J'M ~flr_m5590466 1X155able7~04till )ti-reo \ln~I lup
·9'39 •••••••••••••••••••••• to rtrr~Sgear99;~~: p\\r st . .iutomallt'. Costa Mua 646·9303 CONVENTION .74 vwscc; . . . r 111an('l nl! .1\,ttlahlt• .91S1GMBtS HOME . WDIAC CADET IO' traveung 1850 AM FM tape. dual i:as ~!ll!"~ .. 1!111.!~ll!llJlti _542-~ C£NTER April t7 25 l~ Cama!o \ 6 \ I ct(.'G2761 1 Call nu". a!-k ~ -fitllol beautiful I cond $700. call tanki. Real ~harp tru<·k -· To r la1m 11rkets. <·all Xlnt cond.>ello~ P W. P S. 1 tit "ht•i·I f or D .i \ e J 11 n e !-
lirticiues & rare pieces 675 9961 'Ii 9 8 t 11'1$4531 Call no~. ask '71 1200. auto. am rm 642 56711 , ext 2 72 pxlQ firm 559 0466 2.8.tul male:. \Int 1111111 I l'ht'OClore Hobin~ Ford
'Ptiredlosell! Mustsee l EV INRUDE 9 9 11 P, !~:.~ .. 7 ..... ! .. ~Th fo,'.'..,.Oa\Rl'bJ01~,.e sd ~a-~~~rJLl~OBO T1rkt>t.smustberla1med ~ ... ~llA,~1 EBAtCK1 7521650 &C!()Jlll fO appreciate. Call for long shaft . lo hrs gd I axletF&tk-r. i:ood <VUOre II inl> ~vr ~ -i7y1\pntt.s:t982 -..,...,.,0'6t[.~~r ou Che•ralti 9920 fi8CO!'\\'EHTIBU. ~gpl , 875·3738 0 cOnd '500,6759961 mnd,$650 6'12·0010 '12 Datsun 240Z Xlnl • • • '68 F~·tbark.'runs· "'"A" 1·······w··A·N··r·E··o········ ~.,·!. .. a~;:~Jdtlr53. 3i>::.;.~lnt lf!?=S389,ask for Jllflel. Spmnaker Pole. Lt'F'rall 9578606 '73 Che' Suburban, rond New tires. aar. 4 ~ "'""' , ""' ...... ,. ""'"
lfll0.1978Mootttal 0 1ym offshore. '4 1
7" da:c 21' * * * ~li:~t ~~'"96<9;'~5·14ex .!111C8 ll.11lh11 Hl1c1 ~ psoq,915-074& xar. Ju~~.0l>.1°~. new S!mortr~~is17 twa1111ful 110 Mu~tanJ!.
i lics Gold Coin for $200 _H90 (714)675·9390 Mr R.H W'l .,.. 11.-1,1 \11•,,1;..iuo:i:Mt 'TI 280'l. Mell blue. Xlnt uret.833-1361 ,76 Rab·b
1
.
1
F runs "r"at TO BUY .ur radio lo\\ maleagt> *12.60 • . 9040 • • I SOii 1971 DATSUN Kang Cab in/out. AM/FM sound .. , 'llmpg tsJ!lll 760 O!l9H d-p Tbl 1 d loah. .-aw~r !SW Newpon Hill!> Or Pickup Double sharp WE IUY S.Yl!~'!l ~195.._85H76t l~ 450 SEL Beautiful A1C, AM M ras~. 11• ' · ·
"'' ong .x ntcon ••••••••••••••••••••••• E. \\'lthair con<l .AM FM USF.DCARS&'rRUCKS whltt•wathblacklealher ally nire 63179511 LATEMODEL Olc:llM>bilt 9955 /best orr. Irvine area NetUT\l\rt Beach ""u . Austom whA"ls. le) COME IN OR '74 260Z, clean Ca II int.enor All thl' t>xlras ~10B<~ US ·7260 " -Y"'h f ,...,., ' "' Laurie. 851 5000 or 17""'' $35()("' l' II !!"""" I , EOCARS ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71127•1fl HAYLINF:R aouaretewannero down&pymt~ f1nanc· CALLFOR ,uuvma ·."' a
1
1!1110 OLO!-t l'utla'"
Mickey Mouse Phone. "Va<1oria" Fly bridge, rourrreet1cket~ISl600> ingavaalable l lf865761 FIEH•,,RA.ISAL J.2!3l~·Oll!.6-3rt 5 7146317836 ·r:~)·beF.~~~.r~.~·:e~~· WILSON FORD Supreme llroui:ham
Purrhased From Par1ric Vllf' radio. ba11 tank, \aluet.othe Call now. ask ror Dave · CO ~ eLillo 9721 '62 Mereedes Heni 220S tenor and me<·hanmil I IA1acled " 11lt rru1~e Telephone$8Q,645·9284 depthfinder.ootngi:ers. •ul111laotloatSt.ow Jones Theodore Robins rmier·De 1 0 ....................... Vet") dependable 1217~ 4971597 t'FBeadiJ!hclh p1<r , .... 11,. /\M f'~I
• LO-••.uoo ... s with trailer Will sell ANAHEIM Ford 642 0010 CHEVROLET .,..EW (IOOO 645 9510 unlinl!lon •at· , J'settl'. padded top Hl!l •ri:-91 " balance of loan CONVENTION 18211 BEAC H BLVD. n 1980 Rmbit CoftY. 842 6611 Ii 101 lo~ mile'> A r11at Deelivieu-~. P~rufeqcut ertosr Call646·2843 CENTER April 17·25 . CUtilh' tvTn1ek b d HUNTINGTON BEACH DB.OREAN ·73 4SOXSIE Andthsr1oa~~~ U\e new-Wfl1te red an • 'harp t Jr tit27.BX ' •~ "' ---.. -----i To claim ta rkets. call 67 e\''/ nace 0 Y · 847-6087 °' gre} ' nl l'On ·"'"' tenor Low miles Sll.950 SEE US FIRST! lJll no~ .ind Sa\ e Ask tvery 0ecasion 673·4419 6.2 •678 . ext 272 great ev~rythang Real t•06057 1 67J.ln52 114493.2273 w h ood I I r IJ J e --'""' p 600 •" Id 0 Qn() I 1:.o11•n~t ,. l' aH•a11 ~l'l'<'t111n ur J\l' o n" ·DEEP FRY COOK ER au 103 eugeol I mt Tarkets must be rlatmed so I s 15 0 Jl I .il.'U. ~ '7U.1BZ250 Im ma t• antr I 0 f NE vr d. l 's EI> The<AlOll.' ttobans ford
=Citr='s3f!i 7fo or S350 Gd~~328 byApnl~.~~ 6317958 Alltos. llllporttd :fcit::: ~ri544r1rm 6H 7194 1~'~o~h~ or~l'~' chevrolC'ts' t>&MJIO
40' 0-.ens Tah111an It\ e -. 1976 f..150 I••••••••••••••••••••••• I 846-5o660art 5 WANTED aboard Slap arnal Call s.....,, all steel 5x 10 otrl Ford Pic.k·• iGtMral 970 I SA.MT A AMA '752.lll MBZ Yet tan antr 64 BUG. runs good. good
Judy or Han'l'\ 642 4644. trlr. ramp. brake:. & S 2 5 0 O 0 8 O c1 a \ ~ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• 301 W Wamrr t ~p Im ma r load~d bcxh . good tires. $9:.0 TQ BUY wn9AM&SPM s.w_re.j650 642·8915 .752i.:122J\t:.5590319 I JEE~~CARS. _S4D-700 ~are~ $Ht 5110 ~12art 5
SCllU I [JS 16' boat. raban 45 hp mtr. Al mos t ne~ ult I l I} f:B Chevy '•T 1m·kup 6 PICKUPS 9725 ,.68 VW Bu g R<·liu1 It. LA TE MODEL
.....,, trailer. + ('Xtr a~. seml'e body ~llh lo1·k· l')~~~31Tlt'C'('Ond.Sl200 l~'tom, ~G .. :'·~tla~le ~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG 9742 am rm .xlnl rond $2(Ml(I USEDC·Rs ANSWEIS 1_1500/0BO 831 26711 '"It compartment~ for or.,.""' I oca O\ ur ron 11 'ill Spyder red ~ itold ••••••••••••••••••••••• 499-2554 'i3C'be\'v No\ a 35IJ c1uto ""
rruru trurk. S800 Firm Merhanrt•'s dream 77 f or Directory ra tan ant 28K mr '<lni PS. PB. ne" painl Ill''" WILSON FORD a..~ Sail 9060 ~I after 5pm · · k 805·687 6000 Ext 1590 · · ·or BAJA Rblt 2150t•t· f)itJty -Token -~ · · (.'lie\ Lu\' :-J~d~ ~or Call refundable s~~!IOO &466804 ATTtNTIOM Greatrond&totioorp"r tm-s ~noc1 fl'll'l'h.inti,tl l82SSBeachBl\d
Liven -Needle ;:·i~;;;e~~·~~·c~i~:i;b;; AIAo Stniet, Parts $.llXl 675 4366 'Ill Sapporo loaded aar tttfa 9726 MG J iw, the works Ask ml( 3~ (all K.'iil lilll afl..r llunlinl?lon Reath
INVENTED h 45' MolOr sailer x Int & AccHsoriH «MOO 7~ Ll V P1C'kup ('ustom stereo 5 s,id $5900. best ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER§ $21119631-8017 ~!aJs0~~~ts dl~ uffx ~~~ rond. Newport ~lap. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~m~r .~hi'. a•:; r~4 1~;1Ms~. 'Otr 834.1005 dys. 552·8275 1!179 FORD f'iesla Keal TON~EA.lf'~IT". F.R 1971 §UPER IEETLE • CORYITTE I 842-661 I
daddy's breakrast I amiable partner Mu si CLl")1~ rnn ·.eyes eronomy ror S2595 ~"'lts MG s.71 81 1835 l<adron Cit-an MEW l 982 l!lii 01.os l'tttlJ~!-
lhink ir there were no sell ~6679 ATTENTION ........ R 9705 IR24324 ) Test dnve and Never used. $75 fi!OOCl orr 540·4051 Loaded. 11lass lnp:. C'I(' I Suprl'mt' Oarl. p .. r~tm such thing as burnt ---------· '66 Ford Ran<·hcr<t. 302 _.... OMto buy, today Fmanl'anit Maria6317797 lve ms11 . -, Ser 4740 7217 mon " Jll t•\I rJ ~ ~.;i..l ;:.;. she would have MG en!(. runs. nt:eds ~ork ••••••••••••••••••••••• a\la1lable Call no~. ask 19 VW Bug Convt Mell ONLY Sll,498! 1';,irtde<l "htlt.' lt•I'. 111!. lrnu uEDit. CYClOME 13 OWNERS l<uuporu~erorparts. Al!al600 ror Oa \'e J ones Ra\'er Blue. blark top 1 rut~l· ,\~1 F~I 1;ipt>.
Small. run, das!. racer TON~EAUTOVER ~ 751 81176 Ytloce Cot1•traioa7 Theodore Robin~ l"orcl. MGI 9744 Great ~ond to OU I HOWARD c~~nolet Jl"r \\t11rl '"'clout lork:-Mhc~~.., or dayboat \\1th xlras f'its MG's. ·71 ·111 •. All parts to eon\'erl 101 642·0010 ..................... ~ $8~00. Call Mark at Do'c Qua1 .'ti-1\ rirl'll~ IHl·ll~ i·ar w-.-1011 Used 1 t1me c; Sl.000 .Neverused.Si5 , YClllS 9570 1600 to Velo<·e. eXt' tbda-9727 ~cRtstoratiot1 <2 13 1847 2587 . M F NEWPORT HE/It'll i ,151sPTi t',oll rui .. '"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-~l Eves or earl> Mana631·1797 lvl' msg ••••••••••••••••••••••• pistons $1400 979 2748 6;f~1r Reel n cw j 8~5JLm. 8JJ·0555 Io r lJ .11 t· .J "n ,. '
AM '7!,.f'035rdt I lon Et'<·onohnbt: afler6pm or wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• <'hrome paint. lonneau' IYcbo 9772 '75 No\a I O\\lll'r 2dr i; Th1'flri1trt• Hohtn' forcl .....
....,_ It ~ ltstt« ~ PTerv1ew Ln
HWllington Bearh
You are the winner or lour free tickets tS16 001
value to the ~· CONVENTION CENTER April 17.25
'l'o claim lkkets. rail
442·5678. ext 272
T\det.s must be claimed bJ April 23. 1982
*
<JU, en!(. au o. ps p . WE'RE b unhol & bit 0 I 11 I I" '"JIU UTE BODY WORK & am rm stereo rassette. ·73 Alfa Spyder. perfet·t ra. .... re en,., •••••••••••••••••• ••••• l'yl. auto E~ c·1· ••nt '4 "' loah. Sllps/ f!Tt up to 5()'; orr your new trans. many other ror summer, runs xlnt m ~h S: ,'2f 1h more #I YOl.YO DEALER I ~11115 645 7571! •79 dirs.t 2-dr
Dodlt 9070 ~Qll_est 536·9832 ne~ parts. run~ well. ~'-~~p. ant good DEALIN' .P.., · l'NORANGECOVNTY 'I' 1973 Malahu l.Jj.!u n.1 t'l'TI. \SS Sl'l'IH::-.1 E ••••••••••••••••••••••• perfect for (axing up for _ piO(J 4~·6875 ~ 9748 Vl'f'\ d ean hoch & m llROl'l:ll,\M S-17011
SllP$A•all ALFAROMF:OPARTS ram per o r work . IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES SERVICE I tenor f.n l(inl' nttl run Makl'ofrt·ri521i499
Up lo YI rt, COM ar~a ;\ll,J'arts lo ('00\'ert IOI lLOOO OBO 963 4514 1....................... IMMmlATE 19 82s AND WStNG rung ~I() 642 41i5J P'lnto 995 7 se.oo per rt Call Pegu 16 to \'elore. exc '72 Dodge 300 rbll OVF'."RS~AS'DE l\'l:HY ·57 REl .. \IR •••••••••••••••••••••••
or Carne. 714·9SS·2A73 ~~~~:S !Ir~~ 6~~"~;. eng lrans $4000 obo Uy &· ' : DEUVERY ON ARE HERE! EXPERTS 283 \'II au111 $81"1 ~kl!_a85 w1mds __ 7li2-~.e_v 6450315 Come in and dnve lhf 11468IOIJfl 2pm
Shore moonng & boat. ,.,, SL . Cl"'h top. ne~ 13Chev) Van ~towing MOST leading diesel' Avarla EAllLEIKE ·c:o..tiiwMal 9930 pnme Lado Isle location ...,., "' me rh SIOOO tut orr bit' for 1mmed1a1e de t2'f!O I
00-2027 art 7 JQ.PM WsJ'.:SiL seats S500 ~2221 CREYIEI BMW b\ery' Set' whhy people t966COSTarA ~Ir.BJl'l\-d l i;;~·cti;·.;jN·~:~~l~~i:·;
Mi111H190ft Harbour ~$7~to Parting out SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• l1w &ciffltcJ '82 jJi.j3Ql 54-0-9467 red lealht•r 1ntN1or ------' AlltosWCMhd 9590 MODELS ~~~':"11 <' an11 to "' .~ Door Mtnl ~hale· ~llh
Mii l'HffO H RT !'>port\
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mile,, lo chi" n & "'" p \ m I ' F I n J n I' I II I(
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Jonl'!-Tht•oclnrr Hoh1n' 'cif WEMHD YOUR IMW'1~ f'fere!. IUCN IMPORTS '77VOLV0 2HOI. rroon roof & .ill lht• h•):. OMce,.,..._a& ShJl'I avail 14 846 1766 __ CaJlRob~s.2872 A Tew tema101ng 81 SAVE 848 bOveStreet X!nt rond. lo mr. nt·~ F'ananrtnit J\allJIJlt• ,\ · ........ 8015 or.)!3 592· !359 ·m :G V8 C4 trans. rom GOOD USED J;A~! Models & Demos are NEWPORT BEACH 1 tJres .... ~. 760 1393 sui>er t·ar 11t25711l t ('Jll ii Forrl 1'11110 :"t•ed~
•••••••••••••••••••••••Up to••· sailboat sltp, pl reblLS180 An)'lhfngronsa ere • still available' We AT JSZ·O,OO no~ and ask fur l>Jll' ""rk $.l<Mlur h(•,t of(,r Eiiecutlve desk & chr. 6 Newport Beach area 536 4115 1971lhru1980 spec1abze in : European Jonei. Theodor<• 1toh1n.. 586 7007
ford "42 00111
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36
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rtctln . paid $785. hol . looks like new. fees ror air pollution con· I .., Or LHw 30AIJ1 WD" S1lur1ay active readers To Place your Door E<'onom mi 1 G U A
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1
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Drive Into
Spring
~ Or?nge County International
0 ~I @ Aut1 ~21-2s
~ Convention Center
0 .~ Shew
YOU "AUTO"
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1982 ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
seats . Nielsen, Voss, Neal • Will Valley
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or-.o..,,.......,
Fountain Valley voter1 have
.elected lhelr former city mana-
eer, the incumbent mayor and a
city planning commissioner to fill
three seat.a on the City Council.
Mayor Ben Nielsen, the only
Incumbent running, wu lhe top
vote-getter Tueeday in the field
of 10 candidates.
In eecond place WU~ Ve.a,
a county administrative services
man.Ager who formerly 1erved u
a Foun\ain Valley School District
trustee and now alts on the
Planning Commiaaion. I •
The third 1eat will go to Jamee
Neal, who WU Fountain. Valle)'
dty manager from 1966 thJ'oUih
1979, then occupied a limilar post
for two yeara in Stanton.
The three will be sworn in for
four-year tenna at the April 20
council meeting.
Unofficial vote total with all of
the city'• 28 prectnci, in were:
-Bea NlelHD, 2,498
-Freel Vo11, 2,027 -James Neal, 1.829
-Betty Mlgnanelli, 1,683
-Charlee Michaelis, .1.~73
-Dan Morton, 1,328
-Linda Moulton, 1,094
-Roy Rodgers, 553
-James Creighton, 510
-Ken Holland, 195
"You can't feel anything but
great!" Nielsen said of his elec-
lion victory. "I worked harder on
thls c:ampaJgn than on any past
campaign because it was a very
strong field."
Because of the low turnout
(about 15.3 percent). Nielsen said
he plans to urge that the> city's
(See VALLEY, Page A2)
Tops Huntington vote
• an IC
RETURNS -Secretary of
State Alexander Haig Jr.
speaks to reporters on his
return to Washington
Tuesday night after a six-day
trip to London and Buenos
Mes trying to avert further
conflict over the Falkland
klands.
Reagan tells
Soviets to
'butt out'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan told Secretary of
St.ate Alexander M. Haig Jr. to-
day to return to Buenos Aires in
a "fair broker" effort lo avoid
war over the Falkland Islands,
then said the Soviet Union
should "butt out" of the dispute
between Britain and Argentina.
Reagan did not directly con-
firm the reports oC U.S. officials
that the Soviet Union is giving
Argentina intelligence data on
the movement of the British fleet
toward the disputed islands.
Questioned about the reports,
he first said a Soviet role has
"evidently been established." But
when asked directly whether he
was confirming them, Reagan
said, "No. That's what I've heard
and read."
Either way, his words for Mo-.
scow were blunt:
"I'd like to see th.em butt out."
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
States is providing intelligence
data to Britain.
"This situation is too critica1 "
he said. "Any comment can be
taken one w ay or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping procea."
WORLD
Hutton
re-elected
attorney
By ROBERT BARKER
Of !tie Delly .... lteff
Native son Bo~ Mandie has one
more poHticaJ hurdle to climb
after his convincing victor y
Tuesday for a second term in the
Huntington Beach ctty elections.
That aspiration is to become
mayor of the city where he was
born 40 years ago.
"We'll just have to wait and
see what happens," Mandie said
Tuesday.
What is expected to happe n
when the council reorganizes
Monday is that Mandie's cit y
council colleagues will select him
to lead the city after he became
the highest city council voteget-
ter Tuesday.
He also received the highest
number of votes in 1978.
In the city attorney race, in-
cumbent Gail Hutton buried her
predecessor, Don Bonfa, by a 2-1
margin.
Here are the complete but un-
official results in which all in-
cumbents were returned to of-
fice:
The City Council (4 elected):
-Bob Mandie, 7.O10
-Radl Balley, 6,954
-Don MacAlUater, 4,539
-Jobn Tbomas, 4,190
-Edward Z.,Choche, 3,940
-Jay Stout. 3,736
-Bud Belsito, 3,254
-Dan Maha1fey, 3.113
-Steve Schumar.her, 2,907
-Dean Albright, 1,481
-Betty Clark, 1,270
-Frank Mirjahangir, 1,106
-John Valentino, 819
-Mark Juerges. 526
-Michael Music. 431
-Re Stevens, 288
The c.ity attorney race results
are:
-Gail Hutton, 7,727
-Don Bonfa, 3,873
The city council e lection ,
marked by a lack of issues and
apathy on the part of residents,
drew only 13.1 percent of the
city's 96,849 registered voters to
the precincts.
The results seemed to bear out
the politica1 axiom that the lack
of issues generally spells glad ti-
dings for the incumbents.
Mandie ·also said he believed
that in his and Mrs. Bailey's case
the lower turnout reflected that
the more knowledgeable voters
cast ballots.
Mrs. Bailey said she believed
that s he and Ma ndie ran so
strongly "because both had
(See HUNTINGTON, Page AZ )
59 oil workers evacuated
ABERDEEN, Scotland (AP) -Fifty-nine men
were evacuated by helicopter from a North Sea oil rig
today after it drilled into a pocket of natural gas a mile
beneath the seabed, a spokesman for the operators
said.
Roget eliminates words
Roget'• Thetaurua has tried to eliminate sexist,
biased, prejudiced, jaundiced, illiberal and narrow-
minded words. Page A6.
STATE
Vidal campaign a8tleBSed ..
-How can you ...., the Senate campa.lp of au-
thor Oore Vidal? Pqe AlQ.
I
uemayor post
IN THE SWIM -Rebecca Putnam of Costa Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp at
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube water polo match. More than 100 disabled
0.., ..... .,..... .,, o.y .....,,_
youngsters, 7 to 18 y~ars ~· were in competitions ranging
from basketball to archery. David Kiley, a wheelchair
basketball notable, directed the camp sponsored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
High tide
• • m1ss1ng on
Orange Coast
HB trustees back
Seal Beach ll1ove
HB appoints
two to city
plan board
By JEFF PARKER Huntington Beach Union High
oftt. 0.., Noe ltaft School Oistnct trustees approved
Don't hold your breath, fishing action Tuesday that could lead to
pole or surfboard waiting for to-the secession of Seal Beach from
day's high tide along the Orange Huntington Beach district boun-
Coast this evening. We won't daries.
have one. Huntington Beach officials ap-
Don't panic either. This proved a petition for the break-
"vanlshing tide" phenomenon away of the Seal Beach Elemen-
visits the Southern California tary School District and its an-
coast every nine years, according nexation \p Los Alamitos.
to the experts, and Thursday The p4lition was previously
we'll have the two high and two approved by Seal Beach and Los
low tides we usually get. Alamitos.
Chuck Farwell, aquarium cu-The proposal still must go be-
rator at Sc~pps InstitutA; of La • fore the Orange County Com-
Jolla, explained the situation this mittee for School District Reor-
way: ganization and the st.ate Board of "We are having an Apogean Education.
tide, which happena.eve17 mon-u it has clear sailing at thoae
th, when the moon 15 at its far-levels, it would b&"put to vote in
thest point away from the earth. Seal Beach in the Nov. 2 election.
"At the same time, the moon is U adopted by voters, the consoli-
also at the farthest southerly dation plan would take effect in
point in it.a .elliptic~} o~bit ~at-September of 1983.
tern, and thlS combination 0ves Huntington Beach school spo-
(See TIDES, Pa1e AZ)
NATION
TV device jams channels
Are~ children wat.ching too much teleViaion?
General ectric ii introducing a device allowing you
to jam any channel on your eet for up io 12 hours.
Page A6.
Krystle views 'Dynasty'
KrysUe Cafrlngt.on hasn't had a moment's peace
to herself since sultry Joan Collin-. waa cast in
"Dynasty." Page 85. _,,.
COUNTY
SA 1reeway to expandf
Caltran1 propoaei to ex~and 'he Santa Ana
Flwway from llx io 10 Ian& Say, eomment. P.,e
Bl.
k~woman Lyn Henderson said
that Huntington Beach trustees
approved the Seal Beach petition
because Seal Beach "is in a real
bind."
The tiny district has onJy two
schools and plans to close one of
them next year.
lf the elementary district an-
nexes to Los Alamitos, high
school students also must be mo-
ved into the Los Alamitos unified
district, say officials.
About 386 pupils from Seal
Beach now attend Huntington
Beach High School. The state
pays the district about $2,000
annually for each student.
Mrs. Henderson said that if the
annexation is approved. it is ex-
pected that Seal Beach students
could continue" attendjng Hunt-
ington High up to four years
because of inter-district transfers.
INDEX
At Your Service A4
L.M. Boyd AlO
Buaines AS-9
Herb Caen B2
California · A5
Careers B6
Cavalcade B2
Classified 04-8
Comics B4
era.word B4
Death Notices B6
F.ditorial AlO
Entertairunent Al2
Food Cl-11
SPORTS
Frank Higgins and Tom Li -
vengood have been appointed to
the seven-member Huntington
Beach City Planning Commis-
sion. 1 Higgins, 54, ts an official with
the Chevron Land and Develop-
ment Company with headquar-
t.ers in Huntin~n Beach. He is
project manager for d evelop-
ments in the El Segundo area.
This will be his third stint on
the corrurussion. He replaces Wes
Bannister and was appointed by
City Councilman Ron Pattinson.
Livengood, 43, is manager of
the bookstore at Long Beach City
College. He·s been active in city
affairs and was a ITM!mber of the
Meadowlark Airport Committee
and is former president of the
HOME council.
He was appointed by Mayor
Ruth Finley and he replaces Be-
verly Kenefick. Both Bannister
and Mrs. Kenefick resigned
• Horoscope B2
Ann Landers B2
Movies Al2
Mutual Funds AS
National News A3
Public Notices 86-7
Sports Dl-3
Dr. Steincrohn B2
Stock Markets A9
Television B5
Theaters Al2
Weather A2
World News A3
Four games on same nisbt
How of ten do the Kinp, Laken, Doctren and
Ancell play on the aame nJahtf Detaila of the tour
·....-.P-.Dl.
~ .
H/F Orang• Coat DAI'" y PILOTIWedntlday, Apttt f4. 1H2
MOST VOTES -Bob Mandie
won individual honors in
T uesday's Huntington Beach
city elections.
•
RE -ELECTED
Councilman Don MacAllister
was returned t o office b y
Huntington Beach voters.
CLOSE SECOND -Ruth
Bailey came within 56 votes
of top in being re-elected to
second tenn.
B UR IES FOE -C it y
Atto rney Gail Hutton
wallo ped oppon e nt by 2 -l
margin to wirl second term.
HUNTJNGTON. • •
strong grass roots" support.
All four council incumbents
and Mrs. Hutton jumped to solid
leads even before less than l
percent of the vote was flashed
on th'e screen in cit y council
chambers.
T he lead changed hands bet-
ween M andie and Mrs. Bailey
nearly after every precinct was
counted before Mandie emerged
as the highest vote~etter by 56
votes.
The race for individual honors
provided the only uncertainty of
the mRht. ·
Mrs. Hutt.on thanked her hel-
pers. volunteers, friends and vo-
ters for her election today.
''I am pleased with this tre-
m endous measure of success,"
she said.
The vote count was completed
at 10:30 a.m .. just as predicted by
City Clerk Alicia Wentworth.
TIDES RECEDE . • •
us almost no gravitational pull
and therefore no hiRh tide."
On t his nearly ude less day,
('Ven the low tide -a skimpy 7
foot tide at 7:49 a .m . -was
sqJrcely noticeable
"It's very uncommon for us to
5ee this condition," Farwell con-
tinued. "But is at is probably
happening somewhere on the
earth almost every day."
'Ins' out
three • ID
oc • • c1t1es
BY DAVID KUTZMANN ot'IMCW,NMateff
lncumMnt city council candi-
da~ were voted out of office In
three inland Orange Coun ty ci-
tiee Tuesday. In La Palma, both
incumbent council members, Ro-
nald Nyborg and Anthbny Van
Dyke, were ousted.
~lao in La Palma, voters ap-
proved an lruhative by a two-to-
one margin which would limit
city counc il m e mbers to two
consecutive terms. In Villa Park,
the voters rejected by a similar
margin an initiative that would
have restricted the city counca's
powers over Land use decisions by
placing all major roning decisions
in the hands of voters.
Voter turnout in inland cities
ranged from 10 percent in Buena
Park to nearly 27 percent in
Placentia.
The winners, according to final
but unofficial results in the city
<.'Ouncil races were:
B UENA PARK: Incumbents
Donald Griffin and Lester Reese.
FULLERTON: Buck Catl in
and Molly McClanahan.
LA HABRA: William Mahoney
artd incumbent Kent Roberts.
LA PALMA: Norma Seidel and
Kenneth Tipton. Incumbents
· Nyborg· and Van Dyke ran third
ancl tourth, both losi ng re-
election bids.
LOS ALAMITOS: lhcumbents
Ken Zomrmck and David Lander
a11d n ew com e r Anthon y Sel-
vaggi. Inc umbe nt Tim Bunner
was turned out of office.
ORANGE: Mayor James Beam
was overwhe lmingly reelected
while incumbent councilman Don
Smith also was returned to of-
fice.
PLACENTIA: Richard Buck
and Robert Kuznik were elected
to four-year terms while George
Ziegler and Norman F.ckenrode
were elected for special two-year
terms. T he s horter terms wer e
the result or a successful recall
movement last year.
ST ANTON: Incumbent Martha
Weishaupt and newcomers Jim
Hayes and Jean Siriani. Incum-
bent Larry Romagnino was de-
feated.
TUSTI N: Incumbent Ursula
Kennedy and Frank Greinke.
VILLA PARK: Inc umbe nts
Carol Kawa na m i and Wayne
Silzel and newcomber James
Fasbender.
WESTMINSTER: lncumbents
Mel Jay and Elden Gillespie.
YORBA LINDA: Incumbent
Henry Wedaa and newcomer
Mike Beverage.
Gusty winds due
A MTlllln-ur a•t '"'"SO'l' " .. 11..-:
live Thursday !or boaters out
farther than 60 miles from Polnl
Conception to Ille Mexican bOr·
dtr Northwetl winds should
average 15 to 25 knots. with
gulls to 30 knoll and the aea
running 4 to 6 feet
~ ... n.......,
Coastal
Fair today an<I Thursday but
some high clou<llness today. Lo·
cal gusty wnt to northwest winds
15 to 25 mph at times loday an<I
Thursday High~ both <laya 65 to
72 Low. ton.ght 52 to 56 Highs
to range from low 60e et the
beaches to near 70 Inland.
Huntlngton-Newpon area lampe-
ratures range lrom a low ol 52 to
a high of 83
EIMWflefe. lrom POint Conoep-
llon to the Me>;lcan border an<I
oul 60 miles: Westerly Winds 8 IC
18 knots with 2 to 3·1oot wind
waves. Westerly swells ol t 10 2
leet locally and 4 to 6 leet In oulet
water• Some I-ctou<la and lo-
cal log late nlghl an<I early mor·
nlng hOUrs
U.S. summary
Rein ten today lrom the nor-
lhern Rocky Mountains to the
Paclnc Nonri-1 an<I In the eas-
tern 01kotea, H ahowers and
thundefatorms developeo along a
cot<I front lrom n0<thern Alabama
to South Carolina.
Skies -. CINf over much of
the r•t ol lhe Great Plains and
11111 mlddle and upper Mllalss!ppi
Valley, lhe we11ern Ohio Valley.
the Greet Lekes and !he South· -·· Cloudy aklea and blustery.
northwetlerly wln<ll hit the nor-thern Atlantic Coaat, with a ,_
enow lhow«s 0\19' the northern
Appalachlana. Sklet -r• over·
cut and denN fog a.cena.a on
the IOWW MIMlaatppl Valley
More rain wu lorec:aat Thurs-
day lrom the northern Roctde1 to
Northern CaUlomle and the Paci-
nc Not1"-t. with • 1ew .,_, ~ Flori<la. M\ldl ol the reet ol
the nation will heve .un9hlne.
Teml)efatur" around the ne-
tlon _.iy today ranged lom 22 In
Marquette, Mich., to 19 In Key
W•t, Aa .. and Laredo, Tuu.
California
SouthwHt wind• could rake
mountelna 9llO wtll9 a-t dUlt It 30 lftC)h Thunlday, but Ulat lrlO
tome hlOh cloud• are lhe only
wrlnkl•• the Nallonel WHther
~ pr9dlcta for moetty eunny
Closer lo shore, winds should
be mostly lighl an<I variable. ••·
cept for afternoon northwesterly
breezes at 12 to 22 knots that
could generate a 2· to 4-loot
westerly swell an<I 2-to 3-lool
wind waves
Temperatures
Albany
Albuque
Amarlllo
Ashevllle
Atlan1a
Atlante Cly
Austin
Baltlmo•e
Bllllnga Birmlnghm
Bismarck
Boise
Boston
Br-navne
Bulla lo
Burlington
Ceaper
ChartSln SC
Chartne NC
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Clmbla SC
Columbus
Del-Ft Wth
o.yton o.m.r 0.. Moines
Detroit
Duluth
El Puo
Fargo
Flegstatt
GrNt FaH1
HartlCl'd
Hllene
Honolulu
Houeton
lndnaplls
JllC:ll1n MS
NATION
HI Lo Pre.
54 39 02
79 43
112 44
75 49
70 58 07
56 43
98 67 77 39 01
68 44
73 60 07
62 41 t5
61 40
60 42 02
92 72
56 30 .27
50 38 09
66 38
74 65
76 53
66 36
58 33 68 36
64 33
79 57
117 33
82 80
112 33
71 42 63 48
59 29
47 33
88 57
5 t 42 11
Ill 29
82 38 s.c 4() 03
66 311
112 71
85 70
66 35
83 70
---
Jacksnvue
Kana City
Las Vegas
Liiiie Rock
LOUISVIiie
Lubbock
Memphis
Miami
Miiwaukee
Mpts-SI P
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Norlolk
No. Piette
Okla City
Omaha
Or1ando
Phlla<lphl•
Phoeol"'
Pittsburgh
P11and. Me
Piiand. Ore
Pro...tdenoe
~
Satt Laite
San Antonio s.an1e
Shreveport
Sioux Falla
St Louis
St P-Tampa
SI Sta Mari.
Spoll-
SyrecuH
Topalce
Tucton
Wutllngln
Wlehila
83 58
70 48
80 58 77 60
76 4()
87 53
71 83
80 76
50 29
60 38
52 S2
83 69
62 42 04
77 St
77 49 88 St
68 S2
85 66 71 37 02
89 59
88 39
45 4() 18
49 39 75
57 43 02
71 52 58 40
67 47
100 83
50 35 25
80 81 85 46
89 41
80 81
38 2t
50 38 28
58 34 1t
72 47
88 'S6
77 43
79 S1 79
....... &a.,...-!u ....... R_f R_f P_DR_T
CALIFORNIA
Bakarallel<I 72 so
Blythe , 88
Eureka S7 55 1.08
FrllN> 68 48
Lancasttlf 65 47
Lot Angele$ 67 53
Marysville 65 56
Monterey 64
Needles 87
Oaklend 64 57
Puo Roblee 86 47
Red Blutt 82 52 oe
Redwood City 64 56
Sacra.merilo 8 I 52 .0 t
Salinas 63 50
San Diego 84 5 7
San Francitc0 83 S3 .OS
S1nte Barbara 66 49
Santa Marta 84 45
Stoctlton 67 49
T!lermel 89
Ukiah ~s
Barllow 79 55
Big Bear SQ 26
BllhOP 72 35 Cataline 64 50
Long 8Mch "6 48
Monrovia /3 43
Ml WNton 57 38
Newpor1 Beach 83 52
OnlAllO 66 45
Palm Sprtnga 115 53 P...a.na 119 411
Rlverllde H 411
San B«nardlno 118 44
Extended
forecast
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AREAS -Fair and MHOnably
werm. Hlgll \emp.ratur" IS to 75 In~ and v9lley .,_ and
IOW9 44 to 84. High• In mount.aine
52 to 112 and IOwl 30 to 40.
Sou1hern c.ntomla.
Loe Angella could 1111 73 durinr .._.... :=. ::. A;::r T! J-• the dey. 0th« COMtal llfllP«• HuntlnOtOn ,_ t4 ft poor 11 UJeo tur" elloufd reno• ~t-...n ff IMtl Me "'-Jeil1y 2-4 " '* M ~ 1' *"It Newpon t-3 ft t.ir M TOOAY l ceU«ed c!Oude we moa\ .._ 22nd 8t. ~ 14 ft lllr M ' Only tide\~ 1:4t em, 0.7
lllf! ~ eboW UM dMeft. Dey-111t1oe w_. 14 ft poor M TMUMDAY
:-J1i :-~=-~ ,._,,.., IAtoufl• 14 ft tllr II Flr'M NOii 1U7 a.m. 4.0• ~ ..._ t4 ft tllr II l'll'lt low t:'7 a.m. 0.7' Md trom to llO 11 Ill '°""'· ~ootia t-3 Ill felt N leooncl lllgrl t-ot p II\. U ..._.,..,. *° oould ... 1'1111'!1 a.. a.-... PW 24 ft hllr-POOJ N leoond low t :1• P.l'I\. 11
and mor;::: =·-::. o:: Tr......, '"" "" 1oe11r •• t :H o.rri .. -:_ ~ II end to 11• (T..__I t.a ft ...,.poor It rt11e ~ .. 1.n a.m. r: ••lltlfM fowl' b•tWMfl II. T~..ow·e TIOll: Hlgll t:Ot P""· Low •. " • fll. .... Olr#. I r:,, ":' .. r. :;.:,• p.m ...... ... .,. ••w. .
•
SECOND TERM -Ben
Nielsen received most votes,
wins re-election in Fountain
Valley.
WlNS SEAT -In hlS second
try a t Foun tain Valley City
Council, Fred Voss gets a seat.
NEW ROLE Former City
Manager James Neal w ins
Lhird seat on Fountain Valley
Council.
VALLEY BALLOTING. • • Anaheim's
Seymour wins
Briggs' seat
elections be moved to June or
November to comc1de with stak•
and national elections.
T h e mayor said this year's
campaign "got really rough at
the end. I tried to stay out of 1t,
but a lot of campaign signs were
tom down."
He a lso believes the endorse-
ment of three candidates by the
city's four employee associations
had a negative impact on the
candidates s upported by the
groups.
The employees interviewed all
10 candidates, then endorsed
Mrs. Mignanelli, Michaelis and
Morton, who plac..-ed fourth, fifth
and sixth in the voting.
"I hated to see them (the em-
ployee groups) get involved m
the first place," Nielsen said.
"About 75 percent o f the e m -
ployees don't live in the city.
They were trying to flex their
muscle."
Late in the campaign, retiring
councilmen Al Holla nden and
Eugene Van Dask distributed
letters urging reside nts not to
vote for the th r ee "union
candidates."
Nielsen said he hopes to help
restore harmony in the city now
that the election 1s over.
Of his victory. second place
finisher Voss said. "I feel abso-
lutely great!"
Voss ran unsuccessfully for a·
council seat in 1976.
"I thank we put together a
better campaign this time." ht:'
said. ''And I St't a target of rm-
gmg 1.500 doorbells and I did 11,
give or take a couplt· of
doorbells"
For NeaJ, who 1s 61. this was a
first run for publil· office after
watching campa igns imparti;.11ly
for many years a5 a tlly admini-
strator
") really didn't know what to
expect," Neal said. "It was all
new to me. but it wa:. mt.crl'Sting
to go tt\rough the democratic.·
process''
Hc said he found the campaign
"very arduous. I walkl.>d a lot of
the city."
Neal said h e b(•lieves name
re<.'Ognillon for hts work as city
manager helped in the campaign
Of his win, he said, "I was very
pleased and happy "
Film ban ought
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federaJ judge was asked Tuesday
to prevenl prosecutors at the trial
of John W. H inckley Jr. from
showing videotapes lhat would
give Jurors a close-up and slow-
molion picture of the shooting of
President Reagan and t hree
other men. Hinckley's lawyers
said a jury would be prejudiced
by the videotapes and claimed
the evidence is unnecessary be-
cause Hinckley has admitted
shooting the four men March 30,
1981
By FREDERICK SCHOE MEHL
01 lhtl Dally Piiot 81111
Ba<:ked by a $200.000 cam-
paign war chest, Anaheim Mayor
John Seymour rode to easy vic-
tory Tuesday for a north Orange
County state Senate seat.
St·ymour, who became a mil-
honairt.' in real estate invt'Slments
and whooe pohucal career as but
12 years old, received about 66
pt•rc:cnt of the vote. Turnout was
14.1 percent.
Once election results are certi-
ht'd -a process that offactals say
will take about two weeks -
Seymour. 43, wall take the oath
of offic..·e ..
He will filJ the· unexpired term
creatt.>d in the 35th dtslrict by the
r~1gnauon of former Sen. John
Briggs, R-Fullerton. Briggs com-
plained of "burnout'' when h e
rE'tiigned .
Seymour's term will end Dec.
J. 1984 .
The 35th district includes por-
tions of the cit1es of Buena Park
and Tustin. and all of Fullerton ,
La Habra. Orange. Placentia.
Villa Park and Yorba Linda
The special elccuon to fill the
unexpired 35th district term was
l'Oni.o lldatl.:'d with numerous
otht:r municipal elt:t'llons
throughout the t'Ounty.
W ABEBOIJSE CONSOLIDATION
&IN·STORE
W AIEDOUSE SALE\·
20•60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
. ;-~
Our old warehouse (10,000 sq . ft.) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd.
Prices will slashed 20% to 60%·off. All the lines that we are known
for, Drexel, Heritage, Henredon, Woodmartl, Stanton Cooper &
•---more, will be available at substantial savings. Special orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't miss this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low prices.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in "as is"
condition. Cash and Carry or deliver can be arranged at a small charge .
See you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
"'°"~~'
1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
(714~ 642·2050
• • '
BOAT CLUES -Coast Guardsman Gary
Hankoff examin~s life rings and hunks of
debris from the missing yacht Sweet Omega
out of Portland, Ore. Helicopters are combing a
., Wlrepftoto
5 0-square-mile area for the yacht and its four
p engers, one of two vessels lost to high
m a boat race.
Hospital proposed for prison
State panel recommends conversion of Camarillo
CAMARILLO (AP) -A state
task force, faced with a new law
that requires sending mentally
arsotdered s x oftenders to pr"i-
son, has recommended that Ca-
marillo State Hospital be turned
into a state prison for up to 2,000
prisoners and some or all of its
patients be transferred el se-
where. Although prison space is
needed for about 1,000 such of-
fenders, apparently no recom-
mendation has b een made to
house sex offenders in Camarillo,
45 miles northwest of Los An-
geles.
by landlords who waved small
American flags. "We want free-
d om! We want freedom!" the
protesters ctmnted, anaplacaras
said: "Poor Owners Need Help."
The re nt con trol law permits
landlords to raise rents up to 7
percent a year while a tenant
lives in a unit and to boost rents
as high as he wishes if a tenant
moves out voluntarily or is le-
gally evicted for failure to pay
rent to live up to the terms of h is
re ntaJ agreement.
means of minimizing future uti-
lity bills in their Shasta County
city. The proposal to purchase a
25-megawatt share of a nuclear
power plant in PaJo Verde, near
Phoenix, Ariz., was defeated
Tuesday by an unofficial tally of
5,292 to 2,979. City Clerk Ethel
Richter said.
Or~nge Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, April 14, 1882 H /F
Nix on called a drunk
Ex-president refuses comment on magazine article
BOSTON (AP) - A magazine
article deecriblng Richard Nixon
aa o ften being drunk In the
White House and He nry Kis-
1lnger refu.tng to pua along ca-
blea to an inebriated pre1ident
haa prompted no direct public
responae Crom the two men. Ni-
xon "only comments on his own
books," Nicholas Ruwe, an aide
to the fonner president, said in
New York on Tuesday when as-
k ed a bo ut The Atlantic Mon -
thly's article on the Nixon White
Houae. "Dr. Kissinger has not yet
seen the article," his personal
assistant, Christine Vick, said at
Kissinger's Washington office
Tuesday. "He cannot comment
on what he has not seen . Alter he
has seen it, he believes he will
have nothing t.o add to what he
has written in his memoirs."
JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) -
Fire swept through an eighth -
floor detention cell of the Hud-
son County Jail early today, kil-
ling seven prisoners who w ere
trapped inside, authorities said.
"They were huddJed in a comer.
They couldn't get out,'' Fire
Chief John T. Mullins said of the
victims. WCBS-AM radio in New
York said a pr isoner yelled out
the window to reporte r J ohn
Matthews on the scene that ano-
ther prisoner had set a mattress
on fire.
WASHINGTON (AP) -In the
midst of growing congression al
and public support for a nuclear
weapons freeze, President Rea-
gan quietly 1s asking Congress
for another $400 million so the
government can build more nu-
clear bombs in 1982 and 1983.
The president's spending request,
which drew almost no attention
when it was announced March
29, came on the same day that 13
House membe rs introduced a
resolution calling on the Unjted
States and Soviet Union to ne -
gotiate a gradual reduction o r
nuclear armaments.
WASRINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan la trying to focus
national a ttention on what safety
experts say are the two principal
causes of automobile deaths -
drunken driving and the refusal
of nine of every 10 motorists to
use seat belts. ln a ceremony to-
day in the Whit e Hou se Rose
Garden, the president was to
a nno unce a special panel on
drunken driving and unveil a $7
million campaign aimed at con-
vincing more people to use seat
belts.
NEW YORK (AP ) -The
murders of a federal witness In a
diamond company fraud case and
three men who tried to help her
were linked to the disappearance
of anoth~r woman and seem to be
the work of a professional killer,
police say. The body of Margaret
Barbera, 38, was found Tuesday
in an alley in Lower Manhattan,
police said. Authorities believe
s he was the same woman who
was abducted on a rooftop par-
king lot on the city's West Side
by a man in his 30s who wore a
ski mask and drove a white van.
Three CBS technicians who were
walking to their cars in the par-
king lot apparently witnessed the
abduction Monday night. then
were chased down and sho t an
the head at close range, pohce
1aid. Another CBS employee hid
from the kill ~r and saw the
shootings.
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -After
hearing witnesses say Gloria
White planned robberies camed
out bv convicted sov Christooher
Boyce, a federal jury has decided
the 42-year -old mother o f six
children is guilty of conspiring to
rob banks. S he faces up to 58
year s in prison whe11 s he 1s
sentenced May 7.
LA WR ENCE TOWNSHIP,
N.J. (AP ) -The Playboy Hotel
& Casino m Atlantic Cuy ha~
received a regular one-year Ca·
sino license, but onJ y aft.er Play·
boy Chairman Hugh M. Hefner
promised to draft a plan for pos-
si bly divesting Playboy's hol-
dings 1n the casin o At a late
night session Tuesday, the state
Casino Control Commission ac-
cepted a complicated plan for the
operation o{ the casi no whi le
Hefner appeals a comnuss1on ru-
1 i ng that he 1s unfit to hold a
New J ersey casino IJc:ense
WASH INGTON (AP) -The
Reagan admm1strat1on plans to
issue an ex po rt license that
would enable Iraq to purchase six
Lockheed L -100 trans p o rt
pla n es says a congressional
source.
SAN F RANCISCO (AP) -A
27-year-old psych iatric patient
has been a rrested in connection
w i th the killing of his former ·
professor, who was shot in front
of stunned students at a junior
college here. Jose Luis Partida,
27, was arrested Tuesday night
in a restaurant on the city's Mis-
sion District and held on $250,000
bail in connection with the death
of DudJey Yasuda, a psychoiogy
professor at San Francisco City
College. Partida's arraignment
was set for today.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legi-
slation to exempt small develop-
ments from provisions o f the
coastal protection act has stalled
in the state Senate Natural Res-
ources and Wildlife Committee.
SB1918 by Sen. Jim Ellis, R-San
Diego, drew only a 5-6 vote
Tuesday. The bill would, among
other things, exempt developers
of small projects from providing
public access to the beach , pro-
tecting scenic views, and direc-
ti n~ developme nt to built-up
areas.
Moslems on strike
over shrine attack
POWAY (AP) -Voters here
re-elected former Mayor Clyde
E. Rexrode to a city council seat
one day after his death. Rexrode,
51, th e first mayor of this rural
community in San Diego County,
was the third-leading vote-getter
Tuesday in the contest for three
of the council's five seats. Mayor
Bob Emery said Rexrode's re-
election was a triumph for the
ex-mayor's slow-growth deve-
lopment philosophy.
WS ANGELES (AP) -The
City Council voted 12-2 to extend
its controversial rent control or -
dinance indefinitely, sparking an
a ngry 10-minute demonstration
ROHNERT PARK (AP) -A
refe rendum approving a $345
million Hewle tt-Packard Co.
plant will create 6,000 jobs in this
fast-growing r esidential city in
Sonoma County. The plant mea-
sure was a pproved Tuesday by
an unofficial vote of 4,677 to 2,-
013, Janice Atkinson, the election
supervisor, said. The plant will
be l~cated in a 289-acre field,
with the first component to be
built by 1984 and the remainder
completed within 20 years,
Hewle tt s po keswom an K atie
Nutter said.
REDDING (AP) -Redding
voters have soundly rejected a
plan to purchase a share in an
Ariwna nuclear power plant as a
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Cle Hin.cl adveftlalng 7141142-5171
All other ~rtmenta 642-4321
Thomu P. Halev
Pvtl4lllw -CNel lx-.tt.e Ol!W
Robert N. Weed
Pr-I
Kay Sc:hultl Ylee-
-OOrector or~ Tom Murphlne Edllor
Mike Hatvev
Dlttetor OI M~ellnQ
ICirc:ulolllOnl
Ken Goddard
OINdor "" 0.-•l!onl
~ M.cLeen ~
Chattee LOOI
M..,..ing fdllor
MAIN Off1CE
DO WHI ...., SI .• Clllta -· CA. Mell•--: ha U.O. Cotta-· CA._.
c ... ,, ..... 1112 0r-. eo.st "'*'""no c-. Ho,,.._,--.. lllvslratl4lftt. tdttorlal m-or -W~IM-fl ,_,....,may Ila,.,_,._, wfl'-
S4M<lal ~"°"of copyr'9111-r.
VOL 75, NO. 104
By The Associated Press
Much of the Moslem world
went on strike today in protest
against an Israeli soldier's bloody
actack in Jerusalem on on e of
Islam's most sacred shrines, but
Arab violence in Israe li-occupied
territo ries subsided to s poradic
stone-throwing incidents. Gov-
e rnment offices, schools and bu-
sinesses were closed, air traffic
was halted in severa l countries,
some communications were cut
and business sectors in many ci-
ties were deserted in response to
the call for a one-day strike by
King Khaled of Saudi Arabia,
the custodian of Islamic holy
places. One Saudi newspape r
called for a "jihad," or holy war,
to liberate Islam's holy sites from
Israeli occupation. There was no
s hutdown in the Saudi oiJ indu-
stry.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Soviet Union is providing Ar-
gentina with data from satellites
and intercepts of radio commu-
nications on the movements of
the British fleet that is headed
toward the Falkland Islands,
· U.S . officials say. "They (the
Argentines) a re getting intelli-
gence from the Sovieta.'' said an
official, who did hot want to be
identified . Officials also said
the re were five Soviet ships in
the South Atlantic within reach
of the Falklands, but there were
cont.radktory accounts from U.S .
ofCicials on the kinds of vessels
and their location. None of the
officials wanted to be identified.
ROME (AP) -Screaming and
banging on metal cages with
their handcuffs and chains, the
aa:used killers of former Premier
O., ..... he<rwy .......... We're Listening •••
..... ·,--i7--.,.-
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number below and your meuage will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answering •ervlce may be used to record let· ter~ to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors mu1t Include
their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation
call1. please.
Tell u11 what't1 on your mind.
-I
Aldo Moro went on trial today in
what prosecutors call the most
importan t legal battle against
urban guerrillas in postwar ItaJy.
"You're trying to erase five years
of armed s truggle in ltal y. . .
That's impossible," s houted Ma-
rio Moretti, the alleged leader of
the Red Brigades' Rome branch.
Info rme r s said Moretti was
Moro's interrogator during the
former premier's 55 days of cap-
tivity in 1978. The Italian gov-
ernment put 63 alleged members
of the Red Brigades on trial to-
day for the Moro's kidnap -
murder and o ther terro ris t
crimes.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certifitd Gtmologiat. AGS·
A BREAK ON GIFTS
/1rlp~ employer..
If you have people working for
you, there ls a new change in the
federal tax laws that should interest
you. Whereaa there uaed to be a
limit of $100 that could be deducted
for the cost of giving gitta to em-
ployee. upon retirement or for spe-
cial accompl.lahmenta, that limit b.u
been railed to $400. Among other
thinp. one advant.age of the new
rule ii that employers are now able
to give nice jewelry to 1uch em-
ployees. If • wocker ii beine dt.ed tor lenctb of eervice, productivity or
aafety achJevement, the lift quail·
flee for the deduction. Anyone who
check.a with hla employee• •• to
their favorite gift• for auch
achlevementa will find that many
prefer &Jfta of jewelry, becauae of
the 1MUnc value of that kind of Sift.
It UC> llwa the~ aomeU\lni
that he can look at dally foe mmy
)'Ml'll .iid know that the computy
eppredat.ed hi.I effort.a by ctvtnc
IUCb a &ift. Such .wltimen" benefit
both tht ctver .iid the recetver of
ftnt jtw91ry.
AP Wlrepfloto
25TH TIME A CHARM? Glynn "Scotty" Wolfe at 73 the
world's most married man at two dozen trips to the altar, says
he's looking for his 25th -and last -wife. Wolfe, who
claims 41 children, never wed anyone over 20 years old, but
now says he's looking for someone older, say 20 to 25.
Skllled Professional ....
• ervtce
For your valuable jewelry and watches Is as close to
you as J. C. Humprhrles Jewelers where our own
craftsmen carefully do the work under personal
supervision.
v Dlemond a Precloua Gem Setting
v Fine Jewelry Care a Repair
v Orlglnal Jewelry Dealgn and
Creation a
v Fine Watch R•J>8lr
v Gem and Jewelry, AppralHI•
J. C..JJ"'"f'~6 }.w.trtl
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM socu:rv @
1823 t EWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA ~
· 35 YEARS IN THI! SAMI! LOCATION
BanllAmarl°'rd-Mute< Chtf91 PHONE Mt-'401
------
'
.......,... -..
Orange Coal DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Aprll 14, 1982 HF ~· NY E COMPOSITE T RAN ACTION
OUOJ'ATIOlill IN(LUO• '••Oii ON"""'" to .. ,, MIDWIU, .... , ... ~ .... w •OllON. o•••O•• ... o COllCllOiATI UOC• lllCllAl\OH AliO al"OaUO IY TMI llfAH AlllO '"HIHIT
~.... ....,
"t ll4h Clow C"9
it " it:. v. l=i~• I*; p:~ ~
IJD9 ) ,. v.
' , • lift• ... I 'I" ; "i e· ~ • 4 11~ II.
M ~· t n r,v. 11-11
I~ J tl1 llh
orhl I = 1: .~ l1~·: ... . ..... , 214 .....
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llt\• ... -
Solar facility
generates powe r
Special to tbe Dally Pilot
DAGGETT The world's largest solar·powetf'd
eh..>e::lr1cal generating fac1luy has succes:ffully genet'1
ted commercial elc..'<'tric power, St'<'rt"tary "[ 1'.:nL•rgy
James B. Edwards announced today
Elcctrlclly from \he $l41 million pilot plant w1•r1t
LO the SoYthem Cctli(Qm1a EdtBOn Co grid from ttw
facility loc.aWd an the MOJUVe OeAer·t rlt'ar &rstow
The facility, which uses sunlight refle<:h.<cl from
hehost.ats (mirrors) to hf'at water, gcneraw stt.•am ;ind
drive a turbine wwi developE"<J by thl• U S Dt.•p..1 tnwnl
of Energy and 1<:cli8<m
Firs t zinc ore pro duced
St. Joe Rei;ourt.-es Co., a unit of Fluor Corp h~
announced production of the first zrnc ore from 1t.i. nl'w
Pierrepont Mine
The mine IB part of ::,t Joe's Mmmg <.11v1••>11>11 .11
Ballnat, St. Lawrence County, N.Y
The Pierrepont pro.)e<:t, or1gma11y announ1.'t'<I in
Augu&t 1980, represents one of the highest gr~dl.' Wll'
deposits m North America with ore reserves uf 2.5
million tons averagmg 16 percent z.1nc, off1cwl-. s.ml
Runway pact OK'd
The Kasler Corp. of San Bernardino wa!> tht• low
bidder on the Dallas-Fort Worth airport runway c·on
tract at $42,749,000.
An award is expected wi,thin four wC'C'lu
The firm was the pnme c\ontracl(lr for lht· Upµt•1
Newpon Bay Bridge.
Disn ey, Morocco in accord
Walt Disney World has announced tht• l>ll{ning of
an agreement with \he Kingdom of Moroet.'O fut par·
t1c1pat1on by Morocco an World Showcdse 111 Ept·u1
C4>nter at Orlando. Fla.
The agreement was signed in Rabat, Morol'\.'O, l>v
the mjmster of i.rade, industry and t.ourism. AzzL-dtr1t•
Gucssous. acting as an orricer of the OffK't' National
Morocain du Tounsme. Representing Disney wt-rt•
Jack Lindquist. senior viN-president, marketing, .1nd
Ron Cayo, seruor vice president. business affair..
Local firms profiled
Newport Secunues Corp. will present a S<·m1,nar.
"Security Investments m Orange County," on Apr 11 2i
al 7 p .m. at its office, 3151 Airway Ave . Su1ll' H· l.
Costa Mesa .
The program w1U focus on the 100 puhhc Iv traded
comparues headquartered 1n Orange Countv
For information, call 957-1081
Housing off again
Bank of America said that new housing !>Wrts n1
California in Fe bruary were at a seasonallv adjusted
annual rate of 47,000 uruts, \he same rate as Januarv
This 1s down 59.8 percent from February !!IHI
and represents the seventh consC'cutive m1rnth in
w hich housing starts have been !)(?low Hl0,000 an-
nualized units.
DurinR February 3.208 units were ronstructc-d
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
JO Ind ~Tm IS Ult
'5 5'Jo llDa TrM\
l.Alll
0.-. Hilfl Ulw Oow Oil tit II MT~ 113& tf 541 0. O 7t
1"' °' l5'1 'IO )0 33 W i.t • 11 I
111111 11? li 110 i7 111 b), 0 •• m 11 m ,.. JJO l• \l1 11 • o tJ
UPS AND DOWNS
"IEW YORK (APJ -n.. fOllOWf"O llS1 s-111e ....., Yon Sloe:"-e • .,,.,..
--,..,.,..., tlwll ,,. .. oone up
tht 1n01C --Ille mo4I -Oii i::,rmnt d ~ ~lftl OI YOlume
MO =~ lr_,.l'IO --J1 ... in<I
-Ntt 9'° ~<~•""'' c1-..c. -ti. ,.,._.,..°"' ClcnlnQ price end Tu111<1ay·s price
Ul'S I.Ml Cl'G Po:1 ~ + ~ \.Ip 1'0 ._ • ~ Up 1J l UV. + ?~ Up 10.4 '7~ • •V. UP •.I ,,,._ + Vt UI> 8 l I~+ IV. Up ll
U\11 • I UP 1 0 ~ + ~ Up 1 0 ISl'I • 1..-Up I •
'5 Slk
) 811,llOO I 162,IOO t lll l!OO
I WM'CI
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK CAPI "-bl IJ ,,,,
I'll> 621 ~S4 19111 .a "
NEW YORK IAPI "P< I)
fu..,.<.
?SI> 1n )JI I~
" I
"'•• o;r,
1'11 ,,,.
'" If •
METALS
Copper 76-78 cenll a pound U S
0.ShnallOflS
lb
LMCI 28-32 cents a POUncl
Zinc 35-39 cents a POOnd oel••et!IO
Tin S6 .S365 M etals Week COmPOJtl•
Alumtn11m 76-77 oenia e pound. N Y
.._,"" $3116 00 Pl!f llas~
Pletlnllm 1345 00 ttoy ot N Y
SILVER
Hendy & H11men $7 590 Pt• 11o y ounoe
~~: 1!: ~ :.: COLO QUOTATIONS •k-. ! 4v. ~= a London: morning llalng $364 75, up
,... • .. UI) • • '11.25 ~ : :2 ~= ~ ~ Lettdoft: 1tlefnoon llx•no 1366 75. l•l.'I
4\lo + IA Up • ) S 13 25.
lltlf• + 1"-U1> 6.1 .. erta: '383 94, up $10 6-4
lillt + ... U1> 6 I ,'1lftl!Nrt: 1368.98, up S 12.98 ~ • 114 Up '·!, Z11rlell: ltll fllclng 1385 00 bid, up
u.t o.ci "'=1. , S 13.00, ~ 00 ulced
JYt -l-> Off 12.f H•ndr a Htrmen: Only delly quote ~ -... Off 1.7 l3ee 75. up 113 25 rf' = 2t: ~ :.f I......,.: only deity quot• $SM 76. a , -t'-°'' 1.• us> a f3.76.
1m = '!! Off 7 S I~ on~ dally QUOtf labrfoated ,_ _ .., gi ~~ '385. . up 113 1.
15 ~ ~~ i ti , SYMBOLS .= -:: t: -,..,.. ..... -_,. 11'111> IM ="' S• -----·--!~ -I\ Olf S J -..... M04 •• .,_ °" IN -~ '""' -"' fi 1.2 .. -· _...., ...... 1.... ,flK .......... . U-.-1111 SI ._.,_,..._..,_ _ _.,
... -lie I.I ----"' .. ::::-:t... '"4-.16~0.&ILOIDlo.<Ci=:Oi:l:..N-S-~"°".;;.;-;;......; ... ;;_ • • .:=. ::,:,.:.~~-:...-.-·• ,.... .._ OM'-..... kl llt 8•ec:eOl1t9 It _, ... "°"*"'• .., __ -....... ,..... .. ,..._.. _ _..,,.., ... _..._ ..... ...__,... ........ ....... ,.. ____ _ ....... _,..._ ,.__,.., ....................... ~-...-.. ...... _.,_.....,._......_ ----........ ··--.::.•._• .:.:: ........ ~--
·~ ... -... ".""" --____ ..._._
.,,. .:. t:::· ....... -......... .. ............. -............. ..... ~ ...... -----....
\
I
-,. --.... --~-.... ~ -----
WEDNESDAY. APRIL H 1982 CHANGE COUNT V r.At l~ORNIA 25 CENTS
Reagan tells Soviets to 'butt out'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
aldent Reagan told Secretary of
State Alexander M. Hail Jr. to-
da~ to return to Buenos A1J'9 in
a r fair broker" effort to avoid
war over the Falkland lalanda,
then aaid the Soviet Union
should 11butt out" of the dispute
between Britain and Argentina.
Reagan did not dtrectll&io..'i; firm the reporta of U.S. o
that the Soviet Union la giving
Argentina lntelli1ence data. on
the movement of the Britlah fleet
toward the disputed ialanda.
Questioned about the reports.
he first said a Soviet role haa
"evidently been established." But
when uked directly whether he
waa confirming them, Rea1an
said, "No. Th.at'• what I've beard
and read.''
Flther way, hla worda for Mo-
ICOW were blunt:
"I'd like to aee them butt out.'1
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
State• is providing intelligence
data to Britain. . .
"Thia situation ia too criUcal,"
he said. "Any comment can ~
taken one way or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping proce91 .••
The president spoke to repor-
ters after confernng with Haig
for about an hour.
"We a.re still trying to be a fair
broker ln thia and bring peace,"
Reagan said, announcing that
Haig will be returning to Ar-
gentina for further mediation
efforts.
But Reagan said Haig will not
carry specific Instructions from
the White Hou.e on aettlement
tenns. Reagan said Haig does not
have a mandate to preaent posi-
tions that the president hu of-
fered or backed.
He avoided substantive replit!I
t o moat questions In the Roae
Garden question-and-answer
session.
Incumbent defeated ·
aguna e ects news ate
.,.., .................
SHE QUITS -Druscilla
Tyse n is closing h e r
Straw berry Shortcake
boutique in Laguna Beach
because, "Enough is enough."
'I'm fed up'
says Laguna
shop o wn er
The lavender lady is leaving
Laguna Beach, and it's not be-
cause she hasn't been successful
with her Strawberry Shortake
boutique, she says.
"I just decided enough was
enough," said Druscilla Tysen,
owner of the local women's gar-
me nt store, as well as similar
shops in Corona del Mar and
Reno, Nev.
The "For Rent" sign is posted
at her South Coast Highway
boutique and the angry busi-
nesswoman says she'll move out
as aoon as her landlord can find
another commercial tenant.
The move comes just one
month after an Orange County
Superior Court judge ruled she'
must change the color of the trim
decorating her storefront win-
dow from lavender to a color ac-
e.epta ble by the city's Design
(See LAVENDER, Page AZ)
WORLD
'Growth
control'
the key
By STEVE MITCHELL or.,.. o.111 Not a•..n
Thirty-nine pt:rcent of Laguna
Beach's registered voters turned
out 'l'uesday to elect the slate of
Dan Kenney, Bob Gentry and
B obbie M inkin to the City
Council.
The election saw incumbent
Kelly Boyd turned out of office
and his fellow slat~ members,
Ron Williams and Pat Barry,
defeated.
Here are unofficial results
from all 11 Laguna Beach pre~
cine ts:
Dan Kenaey: 2, 704
Bob Gentry: 2,689
Bobble Ml.UiD: 2,561
Ron Williams: 2,283
K.elll Boyd: 2,014
Pat Barry: 1,992
Paul Chriatianaen: 411
Beth Leeds: 216
Rickey Slater: 75
Supporters of the three win-
ners crammed into campaign
headquarters on Forest Avenue,
wildly cheering as results of each
· precinct came in.
Backers of the losing slate
were less festive as precinct re-
sults were put on a chalkboard at
a South Coast Highway restau-
rant.
"I can't believe it," said one
businessman, shaking his head.
"They took the whole thing."
The unofficial final tally
showed eight of the 11 precincts
going for the' winning slate, with
the losers picking up two pre-
cincts in the north part of the city
and a precinct in the central
downtown dist.riot.
Thirty nine percent of La-
guna's registered voters went to
the polls.
The victorious candidates arri-
ved at their headquarters follo-
wing the final ballot count, and
were herded to a raised platform
by their ebullient supporters.
The three, who ran campaigns
based on controlled growth in
Laguna Beach, thanked their
supporters and vowed to bring
unity to the town.
Kenney, the top vote getter in
Tuesday's polling, said he looks
forward to joining Mayor Sally
Bellerue and Councilman Neil
Fitz.patrick on the council dais.
And, he said, he sees no pro-
blem with a five-member council
that he says holds the same
cont.rolled-growth philoeophy.
"We are five people who pro-
bably think alike on manv of the
(See LAGUNA. Page A%)
59 oil worke~ evacuated
...
ABERDEEN, Scotland (AP) -Fifty-nine men
were evacuated by helioopter from a North Sea oU rig
today after it drilled into a pocket of natural gas a mile
beneath the seabed, a spokesman for the operaton
said.
Roget eliminates words
Roget's Thetaurua has tried to eliminate aexist,
biased, prejudiced, jaundiced. illiberal and narrow-
~ words. Page A6.
STATE
Vidal campa;Sn a88eMed
How can you -the Senai. campalcn of au-thor Gore Vidal? P ... AlO.
IN THE SWIM -Rebecca ~tnam of Costa Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp at
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube water polo match. More than 100 disabled
-o.lr .... ,......, ca..,~
youngsters, 7 to 18 years old, were in competitions ranging
from basketball to archery. David Kiley. a wheelchair
basketball notable, directed the camp sponsored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
Bellerue
seeks balance
on coast unit
Crystal Cove park
could face veto
West Street
signal n ixed
fo~ Laguna
The State Coastal Commis-
sion's newest alternate member
-Ma~ Sally Bellerue of La-guna h -says she will try
to "balance the conflicting needs"
for use of the state roastline.
Bellerue's nQtnination as an
alternate for. commissioner Leo
King was confirmed by the state
Senate Rules Committee recent-
ly, giving her full voting rights
on the commission when she at-
t.enda the twice-weekly meetinga
in King's absence.
With the disbanding of the
Regional Coastal Commission.
the state Commialion now is one
of the most influential governing
bodies concerned with the roast-
line of the state.
"I think the original reasons
for .forming a coastal commiaaion
back in 1972 are still very valid
today. And those are to protect
(See MAYOR. Pa1e A%)
NATION
State assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson. R-Newport Beach, has
rema.rshaled her forces to speed
up development of the Crystal
Cove State Beach coastal park
after indications that Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown Jr. may not sign
the measure.
Mrs. Bergeson, who shepher-
ded the measure through both
houses of the state legislature,
called on constituents today to
"express concerns" in letters and
telephone calla to the governor's
office in Sacramento.
Bergeson's proposal provides a
permanent source of funding for
the 2, 791-acre coastal park and
requires the Department of
General Services to move ahead
quickly with development of
temporary day-uae facillties.
The legislation cleared the as-
eembly Monday.
But word from the governor's
office is that the bill could die on
his desk because of his concern
TV device jams channels
Are ltur children watching too much t.elevllion?
General ectric ts introducing a device allowing you
to jam any channel on your .et for up to 12 houn.
Page A6. •
K rystle • 'Dynasty" vi e ws
Krystle Carrington hasn't had a moment'• peace
to herself since sultry J oan Collins was cast in
"Dynasty." Page 85.
COUNTY
SA freeway. to explµJd'!
Caltram pros)oHi' to ••=~the Bania Ana n-way ft"Clln tlX to 10 W.. , CG•••W\t, Pile
Bl. • ·
that it would divert $1 miµion Orange County officials have
away from the state's general concluded that a traffic signal
fund, according to an aide for isn't needed at West Street and
Brown. Pacific Coast Highway near Aliso
"Maybe the efforts of the Beach in South Laguna.
community can pers uade the "The re is no de monstrated
governor the bill s h ould go accident problem at the intersec-
through as now written," Mrs. tion which would justify instal-
Bergeson said after marshalling lation of a ~fie signal,"..accor-
her forces. .. ding to a report to the county
Mrs. Bergeson said that al-Board of Supervisors.
though 1he was not surprised . The report, noting some confl-
that Brown might not sign the ic~ between beach-boun_d pede-
bill into law, she still was diaap-st.i:ians ~~on the ~hway,
pointed. She said she already has ~1d m.orutor1.ng of the mtersec-
opened negotiations with the uon will co~ttnue. . .
governor's office on the bilJ's It also said an existing cross-
fate walk should be moved from the
· north to the south aide of the
The lawmaker pointed out that intersection.
aince the legialature is about to
consider the 1982-83 state bud-More acid foun d
get, she might be asked t.o trade a
vote supporting the governor's
proposed budget in re turn for
getting the Crystal Cove bill sig-
ned.
INDEX
A.t Your Service A4
L.M. Boyd AlO
Businem I AS--9
Herb Caen 8 2
California A5
Careen B6
Cavalcade 8 2
CJM!ified D4-8
Comk:s 84
en.word 84
Death NotlcM B6
Editcria.l • AlO
Entenainment A 12
flood Cl-11
SPORTS
SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A
bomb squad bu safely whisked
two containers of explosive acid
trom a junior high school science
lab and detonat.ed it.
Horoacope \ B2
Ann Landers 8 2
Movies A12
Mutual Funds A8
National News A3
Public Notices 86-7
Sports Dl-3
Dr.Steincrohn B2
Stock Markets A9
Television B5 Thea ten Al2
Weather A2
World News A3
Four_ ••~es on ~me nJshi
How often do-the KlnP. Lakera. Doqef. And
~ play· on ~ aame n,llhtf Dltalli. of the tour .. -D--Dl . ....... ~ ..... ~
----------------------'""(~---------------~--------.-..----------------------~\·~------------------------------------
I
.II
'
''The Good Old Daya" will
be celebrated at the Dana
Niguel Library the week of
April 18-24, with film, barber
ahop quarteta, and allde
ahowa.
Singers, the Kitchen K.lat-
ter Senior Band of San Juan
• The newly formed La-
guna Beach Cable TV Com-
mittee will hold its first mee-
tin~ Thursday at 7 p.m . to
discuss the city's franchise
with Storer Cable TV.
• Lt. Gov. Mike Curb will
address the Laguna Hills Re-
publican Women Friday at
Clubhouse 5 in Leisure
World.
• Wade Turner, son of
George and Carol Turner of
Laguna Beach, has been cho·
. seµ to participate in Clare·
mont McKenna College'E
internship program in
L:aptatrano, and a slide ahow
of "The Roaring Twenties in
Dana Point," will be shown
April 20 from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at
the library, 33841 Niguel
Road.
The public is invited and
more infonn.ation is available
by calling 496-5517.
The meeting will be held in
the upstairs conference room
at the Veterans Memorial
Community Center, 384 Le-
gion St., beginning at 7 p.m
Curb, who is seeking the
Republican nomination for
governor, will speak from·
noon to 12:45 in the clubhouse
at 24362 Punta Alta.
Washington, D.C.
The political science majo1
will be working in the offiC<
of Rep. Robert Matsui, D·
Sacramento, for four months.
LAVENDER LADY. • •
Review Board.
The controversy on color be-
.gan more than a year ago when
more than two dot.en resident8
and merchants near her store
objected to the 90ft lavender trim
on the woman's shop.
The city took Ms. Tysen to
court when she refused to change
the tint, and last year, a Superior
Court judge termed the building,
"attractive, eye-catc~ and not
· offensive to this court.'
But that judge concurred the
L• matter was an appropriate one
for the city's council-appointed
Design Review Boa.rd.
Last month, Orange County
Superior Court Judge Robert H .•
G"*n found in favor of the city,
which meant Ms. Tysen had to
change the color or seek approval
of the review board.
She opted to leave town.
"I don't know what the city's
problem is," the woman said in a
telephone interview. "They're
not helping the economy of La-
guna when they do something
fike th.is, are they? ..
"I think they're against the
business community, and I think
they are ex.tremely petty," she
aaid.
She said she'll be moving her
merchandise to a four-story mall
in Dallas.
''The people in Dallas came out
here and they just loved the La-
guna store," she said. "I guess
they just have a different opinion
than the people of Laguna
Beach.''
She said her 2ttomey, William
Price of Los Angeles, is still ex-
ploring options regarding last
month's decision.
"I told him (Price) I'm moving
out, but he says we can't just
leave it in the air," Ms. Tysen
said.
City Manager Ken Frank says
he has no sympathy for Ms. Ty-
sen's decision to leave town.
"The principle is certainly on
the side of the city," he said.
"The court made it very, very
clear that cities do have legal
authority to regulate the design
of buildings, including color."
"Every .other b~ in town
goes along with the Design Re-
view Board," he said. "The ove-
rall benefit is great. We cannot
allow an individual who does not
want to cooperate and be com-
munity minded to do as they
please. •
"It shows a selfishn~. a self-
centeredness and a lack of con-
cern about the rest of the town "
-By STEVE MITCHELL
Coastal
Fair today and Thurac:lay but eome high cloudt,_. today. Lo.
eel ou-ty _, to ncw1hwMt wind•
15 fo 26 mph at tlmee today and
Tlturaday. Hight bo1h ~ 85 to
72. Lowa tonight 52 to 58. High•
to range from low 801 at th•
beach•• lo naar 70 Inland Huntlngtoo-Newpof1 ., .. t~
raturea range from a low of 52 to
A am alt-er art atl'llSO.'Y Is oHec ·
ttve Thuraday lor bo11era out
farther than 80 mites from POlnl
Conception 10 lhe Mexic.n bor-
der Norlhwaat wlnda should
IVtrage 15 to 25 knota. with
guall to 30 knot• end the aea
running 4 to 8 feet.
• high of 83.
CIOMr to shore, wlnda ahould
be mostly light and variable. U ·
cept for afternoon nortt>-terty
breezes at 12 to 22 knots that
could generate a 2-lo 4-foot
wHterty awelt and 2-to 3-foot
wtnclwavea
Temperatures
NATION
HI Lo Pn:. S-4 39 02
711 43
82 ....
75 411
I ..
C!:!I!l • ~
~ ---
Jacbnvlle
K-Clty
lN VegN
Little Roell
Loulsvtlla
83
70
90
77
78
eia.wt.e, from Point Concep-
tion to the MeJtlean border and
out 80 mllet: Weat«'Y winds II tc
18 tcnot1 with 2 to 3-foot wino --. w .. terty IW'llla of 1 to 2
f99t locelly and 4 to 8 feet In out•
....... Some low douda and to-
c:al fog tall nlgtit and Mr1y mar·
lllng holn.
Albany
AlbuQue
Amarlllo A.,._1¥1
Allant1
Atlante Cty
Austin
70 58 .07 se 43
98 87 Lubbock • 17
V S ' BaltlmOfi • • 8 ummary BIM!ngt • Blrmtnghm Rain lelt today from th• nor-Blemarck
thern Roctcy Mount1ln1 to the 9o1ea
Pacific Nor1"-t and In the..... Botton
lern Dakotas. H ahowera and Browntv11a
thundtf'lt()(ITll ~ •long • Buffalo cold front from n<W1hem Alabama Butllngton
10 South Cerollna. Cuptr
8kJta -• claer OWK IT1'ICh of Ch#1atn SC the rxt of the Gr .. t Plelfll and Chalttll NC
the middle and upper M!Mllllppl Cheyenne
Valley, the "9tern Ohio Valley. aitcaigo
the <Jr .. t Lah• and the South· Cincinnati
.... Clewlanc:I
Cloudy lklH and bluetery, Clmblt SC
northwMterty wlnd1 hit lhe nor-COlumboa
them Atl8ntlc Cout, with a few 09-ft Wth
enow ahowert ,,,_ the ~ Deyton
Appelact1lan1. Stclae _. owr-o.-
c.t MO dtnM fog c:ltacallded on o.. Molnea
Iha lcM9 Mir I Jl~pl V*'I Detroit
Mort rein -f~t Thufa.. Dututtl
ctey from h nor1t1arn Aoc*lee to e p_, Nor1Nrn C.itfomte end IN Ptd-Faroo fto Nol lf:wxt, with a '9w "'°"'9 F1egetafl
_. ~ Mucfl of tht rxt of Greet F•
tht neltOn .......... -*'Int. Hertford
Temperetur• atound Ille n•· Heltr'8 "°" -tr today ranged tom 22 In HonoMu Marq11ett1, Mleh .. to 78 In K9)1 Houlton W•. Aa.., and Larado, TbM. ~
Jec:bn MS
California
17 39 .01
68 ....
73 60 .07
62 41 .15
81 40
60 42 .02
92 72 se 30 .21
50 38 .Oii
86 38
74 85
78 53 ee 36 58 33
88 36
&4 33
79 57
87 33
82 80
82 33
71 42
83 ..
511 29 47 33
86 57
51 42 .11
81 29
S2 38
54 40 .03 ee 38 82 71
85 70 ee 35
83 70
Memphis 7t
,Miami 90
Mllwaok .. 50
Mpt....St.P 60 Naahvttle 52
New Orleans 83 New YO(k 62
Norfolk 77
No. Platte 77
Okla City 86
Omaha 68
Qnando 85
l't!lledphla 71 Ptloanhc 89
Ptt1sburih se Ptlanc:I, • 45
Ptlend, ar. 49
Provlc:lenct 57
Ralelgtl 77
Reno se
Seit l&k• 87
San Antonio 100 Seattle 50
Shte¥9p0r1 80
Sbll!Ftllt 85
St LOUii ee
St P-Tempa 90
St Ste Mane 38 ~ 60 s~ sa Topeka 72
Tuceon 88 Wdllngtn 77
Wldllta 79
• ID
• • c1t1es
BY DAVID KUTZMANN or ... .,..,,...,._
Incumbent city council candl·
dates were voted out of office in
three inland Orange County cl-ues Tuesday. In La Palma, both
incumbent COW\Cil members, Ro-
nald Nyborg and Anthony Van
Dyke, were ousted.
Also in La Palma, voters ap-
proved an initiative by a two-to-
one margin which would limit
city council members to two
consecutive terms. In Villa Park,
the voters rejected by a similar
margin an initiative that would
have restricted the city councii's
powers over land use decisions by
placing all major zoning decisions
in the hands of voters.
Voter turnout in inland cities
ranged from 10 percent in Buena
Park to nearly 27 percent in
Placentia.
I LAGUNA'S WINNERS -Victorious Laguna
Beach candidates Bobbie Minkin, Dan Kenney·
and Bob Gentry thank their supporters
Delly f'llot SIA:ff l'tloto following balloting Tuesday that showed the
slate taking eight of 11 precincts. The winners, according to final
but unofficial results in the city
council races were: A ahe · 's BUENA PARK: Incumbents Il Im
-
LAGUNA ELECTIONS. • • Donald Griffin and Lester Reese.
FULLERTON: Buck Catlin Seymour.· wins issues,'' Kenney said. "Esi:>ec1aUy whether or not we'll be a !>-U
and Molly McClanahan. our concerns about population." (voUnR) council."
"But I'm not concerned about LA HABRA; William Mahoney Br1·ggs' seat "It gives us an opportunity to
and incumbent Kent Roberts. MAYOR show we're not the radicals that
LA PALM ... · N Se"d 1 • • • we've been labeled. It's a chance ~ orma 1 e ana By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL h " h T I b to brmg this town toget er. Kennet ipton. ncum en ts Of the Delly Pllo4 •r.tt and preserve the coast," she saJd.
Nyborg and Van Dyke ran third Backed by a $200,000 cam-"Our coastline is a resource. Gentry said the new council
and fourth, both losing re-paign war chest, Anaheim Mayor something that everyone cn.)Oys "will probably vote difrerently
election bids. John Seymour rode to easy· vie-and needs. The land needs lD be on many issues," and he termed
LOS ALAMITOS: Incumbents tory Tuesday for a north Orange handled in such a way that peo-the new makeup as "healthy."
Kt:n Z.Ommkk and David Lander County state Sen.ate seat. pie can use and enjoy it.
arid newcomer· Anthony Sel-Seymour, who became a mil-"You're going to need places "It speaks about what Laguna
vaggi. Incumbent Tim Bunner lionaire in real estate investments for people to play, open beaches, Beach wants lD be and what the
was turned out of office. and whose political career IS but access to certain places. There are people have for goals, which is a
ORANGE: Mavor James Beam 12 years old. r eceived about 66 conflicting needs. I thmk it's my commun1 ty that 1s diverse,
J percent of the vpte. Turnout was responsibility to balance those v1llage-l&ke in characte r, not
was overwhbeelmingly ilmanreelecDoted 14.l percent. conflicts.'' overbuilt, and where there are
while incum nt COWlC n Once election results are ceru-The Coastal Comm1ss1on 1s a lots of c1tJt.ens participating." Smith also was returned to of-f1'ed -a P""""""" that off1et"als say 12 be h Id. ' •v.."~ -mem r group o mg power k lso fice. will take about two weeks -f c·nal al d . I Mrs. Mm m a sees no pro-or L approv or 1.Sapprova blem with the new council PLACENTIA: Richard Buck Seymour, 43, will take the oath for most kinds of development majonty "These are not looka-
and Robert Kuznik were elected o{ office. within a three:mile coastal zone like council members," she said. to four-year temlS while George He will fill the unexpired term running the length of the state.
Ziegler and Norman Eckenrode created in the 35th district by the As an alternate to King, a "Phtlosophically, regarding
were elected for special two-year 'resignation of former Sen. John Baldwin Park City Councilman, growth, we have similar atti-
terms. The shorter terms were Briggs, R-FuUerton. Briggs com-Bellerue represents the interests tudes, but on nuts and bolts is-
the result of a successful recall plained of "burnout" when he of the South Coast District. The sues you will see a diversity of
movement last year. resigned. district includes Orange and Los voting
Seymour's term will end Dec. Angeles counties.
STANTON: Incumbent Martha 3, 1984. She was appointed by King "Hop<>fully. on issues such as
Weishaupt and newcomers Jim The 35th district includes por· shortly after his appointment a5 growth. we wtll be able to work
Hayes and Jean Siriani. lncum-uons of the cities of Buena Park commissioner in January, and together a nd address the pro-
bent Larry Romagnino was de-and Tustin, and aU of Fullerton, w as confirme d by the Rules ble m. instead of bogging down
feated. -La Habra, Orange. Placentia. Committee as alte rnate March the governmental proc-ess with a
TUSTIN: Incumbent Ursula
0
__ V_illa __ P_ar_k_a_n_d_Y_o_rba __ L_in_da_. ____ l_8_. _____________ po_lar __ 1zed __ co_u_n_c_1I_" _____ _
Kennedy and Frank Greinke.
VILLA PARK: Incumbents
Carol Kawanami and Wayne
Silzel and newcomber James
Fasbender.
WESTMINSTER: Incumbents
Mel Jay and Elden Gillespie.
YORBA LINDA: Incumbent
Henry Wedaa and newcomer
Mike Beverage.
58
41
58
60
40
S3
83
78
29
38
52
611
42
51
411
51
52
86
37
59
311
40
3t 43
52
40
47
83
36
81
45
41
81
21 ~
S4
47
55
43
51
'•· n.....-,
Bakeraflekl
Bly1he
Eurelca
Fr Mn<>
Lancuter
Lo. Angeles
Maty9Yllla
Monterey
Needi.t
Oakland
Puo Aoblal .04 Red Stull
Redwood City
Sa«emento
SatlnN
San Diego
San FranciKO
.02 Santa Barbara
Santi Marla
Stoett ton .18 Thermel
.75 Uklatl
.02 eare1-
B1g Baer
Bllllop
C.tallna
long 8-dt .25 MonrOllla
Mt. Wlllon
Newpot1 8-:tl OntMc>
Palm 8prln0a
.21 = • 11 &In 8etnaNllno
72 50
86
57 55 1.08 se 48
85 47
87 S3
85 56
84
87
64 57
86 47
82 52 .08
&4 se
81 52 .01
83 50
&4 57
83 53 .05 86 49
64 45
67 411
89
55
79 55
59 2e
72 35
&4 50 65 48
13 43 57 38
83 52 se .s
85 53
• 441 811 ..
88 44
.71 Extended
forecast
W AREBOIJSE CONSOLIDATION
&IN·STORE
W ABEDOUSE SALE
20·60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
f~~
Our old warehouse (10,000 sq. ft.) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd.
Prices will slashed 20% to 60%·off. All the lines that we are known
fof. Drexel,. Hlrtl8ge, Henredon, Woodm1rk Stinton 'Cooper &
•---more, will be available at substantial savings. Special orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't miss this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low prices. 1
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in "as is"
condhion. Cash and Carry or deliver can be arranged at a small charge.
·.IURf RIPDRT SOUTH!RN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL AND M OUNTAIN
AlllA8 -Ft lr tncl ... tontbly '
Wtrlfl. Hlaft '""""'""* II 10 I 75 In ooMtal Md Vlll9y -anc:I IOwl 44 to 54. HIOfll In mountalN
52 to 12 Md low9 ao to 40.
See you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
'
"°" , .
1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
' (714~ 642·2050
'
II
BOAT CLUES -Coast Guardsman Gary
Hankoff examines life rings and hunks of
debris from the rn.ismng yacht Sweet Omega
out of Portland, Ore. Helicopters are combing a
u Wlrephoto
500-square-mile area for the yacht and its four
passengers, one of two vessels lost to high
winds from a boat race.
Hospital pro/>osed for prison
State panel recommends conversion of Camarill o
CAMARILLO (AP) -A state
task force. faced with a new law
that requires sending mentally
disordered sex offenders to pri-
son , has recommended that Ca-
marillo State Hospital be turned
into a state prison for up to 2,000
prisoners and some or aU of its
patients be transferred else-
where. Although prison space is
needed for about 1,000 such of-
fenders, apparently no recom-
mendation has been made to
house sex offenders in Camarillo,
45 miles northwest of Los An-
geles.
by landlords who waved small
American flags. "We want free-
dom! We want freedom!" the
protesters chanted, and placards
said: "Poor Owners Need Help."
The rent contro l law permits
landlords to raise rents up to 7
percent a year while a tenant
lives in a unit and to boost rents
as high as he wishes if a tenant
moves out voluntarily or is le-
gally evicted for failure to pay
rent to live up to the temlS of his
rental agreement.
means of minimizing future uti-
lity bills in their Shasta County
city. The proposal to purchase a
25-megawatt share of a nuclear
power plant in Palo Verde, near
Phoenix, Ariz .. was d efeated
Tuesday by an unofficiaJ tally of
5,292 to 2,979, City Clerk Ethel
Richter said.
Or~nge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. Aprtl 1'4, 1882 l Al
Nixon called a drunk
Ex-president ref uses comment on magazine article
BOSTON (AP) -A magazine
article de.cribing Richard Nixon
as often b e ing drunk In the
White House and Henry Kis-
singer refusing to pasa along ca-
bles to an inebriated president
has prompted no direct public
response from the two men. Ni-
xon "only commenta on his own
books.'' Nicholas Ruwe, an aide
to the former president, said in
New York on Tuesday when as-
ked about The Atlantic Mon-
thly's article on the Nixon White
House. "Dr. Kissinger has not yet
seen the article," his personal
assist.ant, Christine Vick, said at
Kissinger's Washington office
T uesday . "He cannot comment
on what he has not seen. After he
has seen it, he believes he will
have nothing to add to what he
has written in his memoirs."
JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) -
Fire sw ept through an eighth-
floor detention cell of the Hud-
son County Jail early today, kil-
ling seven prisoners who were
trapped inside, authorities said.
"They were huddled in a comer.
They couldn't get out," Fire
Chief John T . Mullins said of the
victims. WCBS-AM radio in New
York said a prisoner yelled out
the window to reporter John
Matthews on the scene that ano-
ther prisoner had set a mallress
on fire.
WASHINGTON (AP) -ln the
midst of growing congressional
and public support for a nuclear
weapons freeze, President Rea-
gan quietly is asking Congress
for another $400 million so the
government can build more nu-
clear bombs in 1982 and 1983.
The president's spending request,
which drew almost no attention
when it was announced March
29, came on the same day that 13•"
House members introduced a
resolution calling on the United
States and Soviet Union to ne -
gotiate a gradual reduction of
nuclear armaments.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Presi-
dent Reagan focused attention
today on what safety experts say
are the two principal causes of
automobile deaths -drunken
driving and the refusal of nine of
ever y 10 motorists to use seat-
belts. The president, in a cere-
mony in the White House Rose
Garden, annoum-00 the creation
of a commission on drunken dri-
ving and unveiled a $7 million
campaign aimed a t getting more
people to use seatbelts. "During
thlS short ceremony, at least one
person will be lulled by a drunk
driver," Reagan declared.
NEW YORK (AP> -The
murders of a fede ral witness m a
diamond company fraud case and
three men who tried to help her
were linked to the disappearance
of another woman and seem to be
the work of a professional killer,
police say. The body of Margaret
Barbera. 38, was found Tuesday
in an alley in Lower Manhattan,
police said. Authorities believe
s h e was the same woman who
was abduc·ted on a rooftop par-
king lot on the city's West Side
by a man in his 30s who wore a
ski mask and drove a white van.
Three CBS techruc1ans who were
walking to· their cars in the par-
king lot apparently witnessed the
abduction Monday night, then
were ('hased down and shot 1n
the h ead at close range, police
said. Another CBS employee hid
from the kill ~r and saw the
shootings.
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -After
hearing w ilnesses say Gloria
White planned robberies carried
out bv ronvkted sov Christooher
Boyce. a federal jµry haa decided
the 42-year-old mother of six
children is guilty of conspmng to
rob banks. She faces up to 58
year s 1n prison whc•n she is
sentenced May 7.
WASHING TON (AP) Presi-
dent Reagan said today he had
confidenc(• in the pledge of Is-
raeli Prime Minister Mcnachem
Begin that Israel would turn over
the remaindN of the occupied
Sinai territory as sc:heduk-d April
25
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -
A judge today d1sm1ssed Luis
Mann's c:onv1cuon on 26 counts
of murd<.•r and arson in the
Stouffer's Inn ftre that killed 26
people, saying the evidence
against him was "insufficient."
Marin, 26, a former waiter at the
hotel in Harnson , broke into
tears and hugge d his lawyers
after Westchester County Judge
Lawrence Martin said 1n a pack-
ed courtroom, "The t:h arges
agai n s t Mr . M ar in are
dismissed "
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
27-year-old psychiatric patient
has been arrested in connection
with the killing of his former
professor, who was shot in front
of stunned students al a junior
college here. Jose Luis Partida,
27, was arrested Tuesday night
in a restaurant on the city's Mis-
sion District and held on $250,000
bail in connection with the death
of Dudley Yasuda, a psychoiogy
professor at San Francisco City
College. Partida's arraignment
was set for today.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legi-
slation to exempt small develop-
men ts from provisiohs of the
coastal protection act has stalled
in the st.ate Senate Natural Res-
ources and Wildlife Committee.
SB1918 by Sen. Jim Ellis, R-San
Diego, drew o nly a 5-6 vote
Tuesday. The bill would, among
other things, exempt developers
of small projects from providing
public access to the beach, pro-
tecting scenic views, and direc-
ting deve:lopment to built-up
area5.
Mosleins on strike
shrine attack over
POWAY (AP) -Voters here
re-elected former Mayor Clyde
E. Rexrode to a city council seat
one day after his death. Rexrode,
51, the first mayor of this rural
community in San Diego County,
was the third-leading vote-getter
Tuesday In the contest for three
of the council's five seats. Mayor
Bob Emery said Rexrode's re-
election was a triumph for the
ex-mayor's slow-growth deve-
lopment philosophy.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
City Council voted 12-2 to extend
its controversial rent control or-
dinance indefinitely, sparking an
angry 10-minute demonstration
OAKLAND (AP) -State and
federal regulators, in an appa-
rently unprecede n!e<f move, sei-
zed control of the nation's 21st
largest savings and loan associa-
tion, called for the ouster of its
three top corporate officers and
declared the thrift bank insol-
vent. Officials of the California
Savings and Loan Department
and the F ed eral Savings and
Loan Insurance Corp oration
planned official announcements
today concerning a receivership
plan for the troubled Fidelity
Savings & Loan Association.
REDDING (AP) -Redding
voters have soundly rejected a
plan to purchase a share in an
Arizona nuclear power plant as a
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
ClaHlfted adv9ftfafng 714.1142·5t71
All ottt.r department. 642-4321
Thomu P. Halev ~ -CNlll 6-..t.e ~
Robert N. Weed ,,_
Kay Schuttz VD,,_
-DINCIOr ol ~ltlllg
Tom Murptllne
fdllOt
Mike Hatvev
Olrtctor of ...,i._....
(ClraAIMlotl)
Ken Goddard Olrtctorol~
Ray Macl..een
Conlfoler
Chatles LOOI
MllftllCllng ldltor
MAIN Of'FlCE
DO Wnt a.y SC .• Cci&te -· CA. Mall~: 8oa UilO, Coate Mew, CA. nu.
c...,,..,.. 1"2 Or .... c.11 1'\111411111119 ~· No_,..,... lllvltrMloM, ""or1111...-or • ... ,.__ ........ ....,. ... ~ .. ...._ -111• llH"'ltllM .. ,_ • ...., _.
VOL. 75, NO. 104
By Tbe Associated Press
Much o f the Moslem world
went on strike today in protest
against an Israeli soldier's bloody
attack in Jerusalem on one of
Islam's most sacred shrines, but
Arab v10lence in Israeli-occupied
terntones subsided to sporadic
stone-throwing incid ents. Gov-
ernment offices, schools and bu-
sinesses were closed , air traffic
was halted in several countries,
some communications were cut
and business sectors in many ci-
ties were deserted in response to
the caU for a one-day strike by
King Khaled of Saudi Arabia,
the custodian of Islamic holy
places. One Saudi newspaper
caUed for a "jihad," or holy war,
to liberate Islam's holy sites from
Israeli occupation. There was no
shutdown in the Saudi oil indu-
stry.
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A
U.S . military team today recove-
red the bodies of 27 Americans
killed in the crash of an Air
Force transport in mountainous
eastern Turkey, official sources
said. A U.S. Embassy spokesman
said four civilians were among
the dead, and the Afr Force said
six were from a Strategi~ Air
Conunand unit from Peterson Air
Force Base in Colorado Springs,
Colo .. that waa assigned to eva-
luate overseas military installa-
tion. Identifications were not ex-
pected until Thursday.
ROME (AP) -Screaming and
banging on metal cages with
their handcuffs and chalru, the
accused killers or former Premier
-........ -..., .......... . We're Listening •••
~,Mey ,, -do .. -"°"'-"' t '° .,.. Ull i.lote 7 .... ---·-11--......., -"':-t,,'' "'°". "01 ::.~ c::r _ :.O:.,":.."C:: --..
What do you like aboul the Dally Pilot? What don't you like"
Call lhe number below and your meuaae will be recorded.
transcTlbed and delivered to the approprtalt" editor
The same 24-hour 1n1werin1 service may be' u1td to record let·
tera lo the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone number for verification, No circulation
calls, ple11e.
Ttll ua what's on your mind
Aldo Moro went on trial today in
what prosecutors call the most
important legal battle against
urban guerrillas in postwar Italy.
"You're trying to erase five years
of armed struggle in Jtaly ...
That's impossible," shouted Ma-
rio Moretti, the aUeged leader of
the Red Bngades' Rome branch.
Informers said Moretti was
Moro's interrogator during the
former premier's 55 days of cap-
tivity in 1978. The Italian gov-
ernment put 63 alleged members
of the Red Brigades on trial to-
day for the Moro's kid nap-
murder a nd other terrorist
crimes.
Gem
Talk
By J.C HUMPHRIES
Cut1f4'd G~mologi1t. ACS
A BREAK ON GIFTS
hr/I'' rmplo yer~
If you have people workJng for
you, there ii a new change ln lhe
federal tax laws that should interest
you. Whereas there used to be a
limit of $100 that could be deducted
for the cost of 11vtng glftl to em-
ployees upon retirement or tor spe--
d&J accompliahmenta. that limit haa
been ra.bed to $400. Arnone other
thlnga, one advantage of the new
rule la that employers are now able
to give nice jewelry to auch em-
ployees. If a worker Is belna cited
for length of ler'Vice, productivity or
l&fety achievement, the am quali-
fies for the deduction. Anyone who
check.a with bit employee• aa to
their favorite 1lft1 for auch
acblevementa will find that many
prefer &lfw of jewelry, bec:aUle of
the lMtinc value of that kind ot pft.
1t aJ.o liWI tht employee llOmethlnc
that be ean look at dally fol' rmny
)'Ml'I and know that tht rs appreciated hll effort. by vlnt
IUCh • ~ Such .nUmenta Jt
both the 11wr and the r'IC9lwr of
ftnt jlwelry.
AP W~o
25TH TIME A CHARM? Glynn "Scotty" Wolfe at 73 the
world's most married man at two dozen trips to the altar, says
he's looking for his 25th -and last -wife. Wolfe, who
claims 41 'Children, never wed anyone over 20 years old, but
now says he's looking for someone older, say 20 to 25.
Skilled Profeaalonal ....
• ervtce
For your valuable jewelry and watches Is as close to
you as J . C. Humprhrles Jewelers where our own
craftsmen carefully do the work under personal
supervision .
v Diamond & Precloua Gem Setting
v Fine Jewelry Care a Repair
v Orlglnal Jewelry Dealgn and
Creation•
v f=lne Watch Repair
v Gem and Jewelry, Appralaala
J. C.JJ"'"f'f.,.u,6 }.wetr6
M(MBER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT j)LVO COSTA MESA ~
31 YEARS IN THI SAME LOCATION
l1niAmetlc1rd-M .. 1er Chlf9t PHONI ~1
-~ .. -
1
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wedneld1y, Aprll 14, 1982 L
!City seeks to dissolve itself to prevent feared guru takeover
T HE DALLES, Ore. (AP) -
R.iden1a ot Antelope who want to
dl11olve their clty to prevent a
fMl'td takeover by an Indian CUN and hla followen haw been stven
permllaJon to hold an emer1ency
elecUoft.
Judie J ohn J elderks of Wa1CO
County Cin:ult Court ruled that
delaying the election until the May
18 1t.atewide primary might con·
lidtute a hudahlp tor the city and
It• 40 tell<Mntl, and aaJd the elec-
tloo could bt held Thund.ay.
But J elderk1 dtnled the1 city'•
requeat 4t be allowed to postpone
1ran\in1 bulldlna permita to the
,uru'• aroup for • prtnttna plant ind two homes. The city eouaht to
delay the permlta unii1 after the
elect!on.
"You win one, you loee one," l&id
Mayor Ma.raaret HW.
Ed Sullivan of Portland, a law-
yer tor the commune. questioned
whether the dty provtded enouah
nodce of an ~ncy f'lection.
"Everyone ln Antelo~ wlll be
aware ot the election,' Jelderk1
said. "Becauae of media coveraj(e,
thia election probably haa more
not.lee than any other in the history
o! W...:o County."
Antelope reatdeni. feared that
followers of Bhagwan Shree Raj-
nee1h would take over the town
and foret' the other realdenta out
through excntlve taxation.
About 280 of the guru'• dlactples
· have settled here, and say they
don't want to force anyone out.
The Bhagwan, as be la called,
t.eechee that nearly all F.utem and
Western rellgjona have aome value.
He became controversial ln India
for promoting aex without re9tralnt
or obligation and became known in
the European prea aa the "free-tlt'x
guru "
Some followers, from a commune
: near Poona, India, moved here
laat summer and bought the
100-tquare mile Bl Muddy ranch
near Antelo for million.
BPl!CIALI SAVE40° SPECIAL I
IN COMPETITION
-Shannon Cleye,
who h olds Miss
Orange County and
Miss Orange County
Fair titles, will com-
p e t e at National
·Orange Show in San
Bernardino for title of
1982 California Citrus
Queen. Show starts
11-day run April 29.
OCC sets
.r
1
eligious
debate
A debate on the con-
stitutional guarantees of
re ligious freedom and
church-state separation
Is set Friday at Orange
Coast College in Costa
Mesa.
"State Control o f
Church Activism," co-
s p on sored by OCC's
Religious Studies and
Community Service De-
partments, will run from
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in room
214 of the OCC Chemi-
stry Building.
David Llewellyn, an
Orange-COunty attorney
and law professor. will
debate an attorney re-
' presenting the American
Civil Liberties Union.
Admission is $4, and
tickets will be available
at the door.
For information, call
556-5880.
Victims
of crime
studied
A series of local events
starting today and run-
ning through May will
focus on the rights of
victims of crime.
Y.S.P . Inc .. a victim/
witness assistance prog-
ram, planned the events
to start near the begin-
ning of the state's Vic-
tims Rights Week April
19-25.
Workshops, talks.
tours and consultations ,
will be offered at loca-.
tlons throughout the I
county as part of the se
ries. For information, ~
ca ll 957 -2737 or
834-7103.
Raising
of funds
scheduled
The Research Round
Table of the American
Heart Association's
Orange County chapter
will host a fund-raiser
May 2 at 10:30 a .m. at
Magic Island in Newport
Beach.
Funds raised will help
support the Heart Ass!;).
elation's goals of redu-
cing death and disability
from heart di8ease.
Brunch will be served
and guests will be enter-
tained by magic perfor-
mances. Children 5 or
older are invited. Tickets
are $30 per person, in -
cluding children.
For information call
547-3001.
Candidate
at YWCA
U.S. Senate candidate
Maureen Reagan will
addresa the Soulh
Orange Counly YWCA
April 21 at the tiewpor-
t er I nn in Newport
Be.ch.
The dinner meetin&
wUl mark the local Y's
&8th anniveraary and
new board membera
from Ne wport, Irvlnt,
Huntinaton Beach and
Laauna Beach will ~
"'°"'in. To make rtMrvatlon, c.11 542.-1677.
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WEDNESOA y I APRIL 14, 1982 OR ANGE COUNT Y CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Police hold details on Irvine arrests
Irvine police lnveatisatora ar-
n1t.ed eight people ln two 1epa-
rate cues last week on auapld.on
of ptHe Ion of controlled druga
for aale, but withheld Informa-
tion on the' arrests until Tueeday. .
It was the second time in the
paat month that Irvine police
have withheld information on
drug arrests.
Irvine police spokesman Lt.
Robert Lennert explained It was
hoped a delay in releuing the
information might lead to addi-
tional arrests. It didn't, he added .
One of the cases netted 1.5
ounces of cocaine with a street
value ot •S,700. A.180 seized ln the
same raid, following a two-
month lnveati4ation, were mari-
juana and vanoua types of con-
trolled drugs in pill fonn, police
revealed.
Arrested at 20 Whitecloud in
Irvine April 5 were John V.
Harwood, 24, and Michael S .
Gibbs, 21, of the Whitecloud ad-
drell; Roger A. Kuntz. 20, 14693
Ov•l Road, Irvine; Kirk B.
Hybjkmann, 23, 16381 Holly-
wOod Lane, Huntington Beach
and two Irvine juveniles.
The adult suspects were boo-
ked lnto local jails with bail aet at $1~,000 each. The juvenllee were
'Butt .out,' Reagan says
e
RETURNS -Secretary of
State Alexander Haig Jr.
speaks to reporters on his
return to Washington
Tuesday night after a six-day
trip to London and Buenos
Aires trying to avert further
~lict over the Falkland 1f!!lds.
Woodbridge
·Post off ice
Feopens
s warne on ,
Argentina
• • rev1s1t set
by Haig
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan told Secretary <>(... 1
State Alexander M. Haig Jr. to-
day to return to Buenos Aires in
a "fair broker " effort to avoid
war over the Falkland'lslands,
then said the Soviet Union
should "butt out" of the dispute
between Britain and Argentina.
Reagan did not directly con-
firm the reports of U.S. officials
that the Soviet Union is giving
Argentina intelligence data on
the movement of the British fleet
toward the disputed isl.ands.
Questioned about the reports,
he first said a Soviet role has
"evidently been established." But
when asked directly whether he
was confirming them, Reagan
said, "No. That's what I've heard
and read."
Either way, his words for Mo-
scow were blunt:
"I'd like to see them butt out.'1
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
States is providing intelligence
data to Britain. IN THE SWIM -Rebecca Putnam of Costa Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp at
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube water polo match. More than 100 disabled
taken to Orange County J uvenile
Hall.
Aa of Tuesday Harwood wu
the only person in custody.
In an unrelated case,· Irvine
police the same day arrested a
Santa Ana man ln Irvtne on sus-
picton of possession of ampheta-
mines with lnter\t to aell.
Arrested, police aald, wai
21-year-old Stephen Puhkut.a,
who works ln Irvine. He WM &a•
ken into custody at the inteflee.
tion of Von Kannan and McGew
avenues, where police aald be
attempted to sell drugs to an
undercover narcotics agent. '
s
.,.., Not,......., a..,.,,.,_
youngsters, 7 to 18 years old, were in competitions ranging
from basketball to archery. David Kiley, a wheelchair
basketball notable, directed the camp sponsored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
: A U.S . Postal Service substati-
m_J.s back in operation at the ~bridge Pharmacy in Irvine
aod a Ticketron outlet probably
ii. tn the future there, accor.:ling
tQ pharmacy co-owner Dave
Wells.
"This situation is too critical,"
he said. "Any comment can be
taken one way or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping process."
The president spoke to repor-
ters after conferring with Haig
for about an hour.
"We are still trying to be a fair
broker in this and bring peace,"
Reagan said, announcing that
Haig will be returning to Ar-
gentina for further mediation
efforts.
Irvine man
enters plea
in beating
Turtle Rock gates
face council slaHJ
More noise
for AirCal,
temporarily The 12-by -12-foot, one-
window substation reopened last
week after closing Dec. 31 when
pharmacy owners decided its
$1-a -ye,ar contract with the
Postal Service wasn't satisfac-
tory. Wells said it coot the phar-
macy $1 5,000 to operate the
substation last year.
Wells said he couldn't reveal
details of the n ew agreement
"without violating our contract,
but we feel it's a mucK better
arrangement . . .
"Because they have a little
more money in the kitty now
than before," he said, "we might
get better service."
I
. Service last year from the Post
Office to the substation was poor,
Welb said, noting mail wasn't
always picked up on time and it
l was difficult to keep the substa-l tlon supplied with stamps
"becauae the Post Office often
didn't have them to eell us."
WORLD
STATE
New Brookes
• JBm store
PARAMUS, N .J . (AP) -A
department store auditioning
children for a jeans commercial
was forced to shut early when
more than 8,000 young girls and
their mothers showed up, offi-
cials said.
"It was the closest thing to an
all-out riot that I've ever seen,"
said Theresa· Soltes of Dumont,
who took her 2-year-old daught-
er to the audition at U~e Abra-
ham & Strauss Store in a mall
here.
The auditions, limited to girls
aged 2 to 12, are for Golddiggers
jeans, a preteen version of denim
designer wear.
Vidal camp&;Sn aatle88ed ..
How can you ..... the Senate campailn of au·
thor Gore Vidal? Pap AlO.
~-·----~
A 20-year-old Irvine resident,
Lawrence James Saffell, pleaded
innocent Tuesday in Harbor
Municipal Court to attempted
murder charges in connection
with the 1979 bludgeoning and
choking of a 26-year-old Wood-
bridge woman.
Judge Richard Luesebrink or-
dered Saffell, 20, of 27 Sum-
merwind, returned to court April
27 for preliminary examination
and set bis bail at $50,000.
Saffell was arrested Friday at
his home by Irvine police in-
vestigators Ron VttaCh and Pete
Linton.
Police Lt. Robert Lennert said
he "can't give too much infor-
mation" on circumstances leading
to SaUell's arrest for fear of
prejudicing the case.
He said the victim was living
alone at the time of the attack
NATION
COUNTY
Members of the Irvine City
Council said Tuesday Irvine Pa-
cific's request for two gates on
Ridgeline Drive and on Starerest
will be rejected unless the com-
pany reaches a compromise with
people living adjacent to the tract
at Turtle Rock Glen.
One of those neighbors, Ri-
chard Farrell, told the council
Tuesday most residents don't
want a locked gate at the end ol
their main street -Starerest -
because it will cause drivers to
turn around or park in their
neighborhood.
The council granted a two-
week postponement before ta-
king action on the gates, but
Councilman Art Anthony said he
. won't lift his opposition to the
gates unless compromises are
made.
Anthony was absent three
weeks ago when the council dis-
cuued the gates. At that time,
SA freeway to ezP,.ndP
Caltran1 pros)o.U' to ••=~the Santa ba
Freeway from llx to 10 Jaw. , couwmnt, hie
Bl.
•
council members Larry Agran
and Mary Ann Gaido spoke out
against the gates. After hearing
the two criticize the idea again
Tuesday, Anthony surpr ised
many in the audience by taking a
tough stand against the gates.
"I'm not persuaded by Mrs.
Gaido qr Mr. Agran," said An-
thony. "I made up my mind a
long time ago."
He sald he didn't like the way
the gates would affect those
residents who would find them-
selves living outside the barriers.
And he acfded that the lots at
Turtle...Rock Crest should "sell
like ho~es" even without the
gates, which Irvine Pacific re-
presentatives said were added as
a last-minute marketing feature .
Farrell had first asked the
council to move the gates so hJs
76-unlt community would be
within the Jtates. But after
(See TURTLE, Page A%)
INDEX
SPORTS
' AirCaJ's decision to begin ser-
vice at Burbank Airport is going
to have a spinoff effect for resi-
dents living near John Wayne
Airport -more jet noise.
But the situation will only be
temporary, lasting from April 25
to about June 1, a company offi-
cial stres!led today.
To win approWtl for six flights
daily from Burbank, AirCa1 was
forced to agree to fly only new
and quieter jets on thoee routes.
AirCaJ will meet that require-
ment by using its new
Mc.Donnell-Douglas DC-9 Super
80s on flights from Burbank.
AirCal has been using Super
80s on 14 of its average 23.5 de-
partures it's authorized to fly
daily from John Wayne Airport.
After April 25, Super 80s will
be used on only nine flights per
day from Orange County. Older
and noisier Boeing 7371 will be
Wied Qn remaining flights.
•
TURTLE ROCK GATES .. •
belna queetioned by Aaran, he
llJd moat r9ldenia would rather
not have the pt. at all.
Mayor David Silla told Farrell..
the lllUe WU difficult for oou.ncll
rnemben becaUle "tome of ua are
llnina very mixed lignab from.
fOW' community." Mo.t people
•SW. epoke to were in favor of the
catH , H long 81 their homes wwe ..-ot.ected by them, he Mid.
lrvfue Pacific already bu city
State Senate
approval• to improve the aub-
dMa1on without the gatee. thua
keeplna ltreeu public and
maintained by the clty. Under
the propoaal for the gatea, the
street.a would be maint.alned by
nMlident.a.
Company spokesman Keith
Greer explained the security
meaaure waa added to compete
aaainlt aeveral other ne w deve-
lopmen ts along the coast that
feature gates.
Anaheim's Seymour
Briggs' seat • WIDS
By FREDE RICK SCHOEMEHL or .. o.ii, ,... ...,,
Backed by a $200,000 cam-
paign war chest, Anaheim Mayor
)ohn Seymour rode to easy vic-
tory Tuesday for a north Orange
County state Senate seat.
MacArthur
·resurfacing
job halted
Resurfacing of MacArthur
Boulevard from Jamboree Road
to the San Diego Freeway in Ir-
vine won't begin this week, as
planned, unleaa the strik e by
Teamsters sand and gravel hau-
lers ends.
Stan Dick, resident engineer
for Caltrans, said the strike has
halted the $240,000 repaving
project. which was scheduled to
be completed at nights this week.
"Ju long aa the strike lasts, we
won't be doing the resurfacing,"
he said today.
Dick said Caltrans won't get
involved in the labor dispute
with primary contractor Elec-
trend of Fullerton and paving
subcontractor Sully-Miller of Ir-
vine.
Historically, Caltrans has
maintained th e streich of road.
The repaving is to be done prior
to transferring responsibilities to
the city.
Plane thre·ate n ed
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A bomb
threat forced a Los Angeles-
bound Western Airlines flight to
land at San Diego's Lindbergh
Field Tuesday night. ·
Seymour, who became a mil-
lionaire in real estate investments
and whose political career is but
12 years old , received about 66
percent of the vote. Turnout was
14.l percent.
Once election results are certi-
fied -a process that officials say
will take about two weeks -
Seymour, 43, will take the oath
of office.
He will fill the unexpired tenn
created in the 35th district by the
resignation of former Sen. John
Briggs, R-Fullerton. Briggs com-
plained of "burnout" when he
resigned.
Seymour's term will end Dec.
3, 1984.
The 35th district includes por-
tions of the cities of Buena· Park
and Tustin, and all of Fullerton,
La Habra, Orange, Placentia,
Villa Park 'fllld Yorba Linda.
The special election to fill the
unexpired 35th district term was
consolidated with numerous
other munici pal elections
throughout the county.
Anti-nuc le a r wa lk
sla ted in I rvine
A 15-kilometer walk-a-thon to
prote~t "nuclear madness" is
planned for noon May 2 in Ir-
vine, according to Ellie Cohen
and Tim Carpenter of the Al-
liance for Survival.
The walk.. which is to begin at
Herit age Park, is designed to
raise money for the alliance
which offers educational prog-
rams on nuclear power, Ms. Co-
hen and Carpenter said. Pro-
spective walkers can call
997 -9922 for pledge sheets.
Ins out
in three
oc • • c1t1es
By DAVID KUTZMANN °' .... .,.., .........
Incumbent dty councll c.ndi-
dates were voted out of office in
three lnland Orange County cl·
Uee Tue.day. In La Palma, both
incumbent council memben, Ro-
nald Nyborg and Anthony Van
Dyke, were ousted.
Aho in La Palma, voters ap-
proved an initiative by a two-to-
one margin which would limit
city council members to two
consecutive temla. In Villa Park,
the voters rejected by a similar
margin an inJtiative that would
have restricted the city council's
powers over land use decisions by
placing all major zoning deciaiona
in the hands of voters.
Voter turnout in inland cities
ranged from 10 percent in Buena
Park to nearly 27 percent in
Placentia.
The winners, 11CCOrding to final
but unoCficlal results in the city
council races were:
BUENA PARK: Incumbents
Donald Griffin and Lester Reese.
FULLERTON: Buck Catlin
and Molly McClanahan.
LA HABRA: William Mahoney
and incumbent Kent Roberts.
LA P ALMA: Nonna Seidel ano
K enneth Tipton. Incumbents
Nyborg and Van Dyke ran third
and fourth, both losing re-
election bids.
LOS ALAMITOS: Incumbents
Ken Zommick and David Lander
and newcom e r Anthony Sel-
vaggi. Incumbent Tim Bunner
was turned out of office.
Irvine school
principal gets
Mendocino job
Irvine Unified School Distnct
Principal Marilyn Bou.Ianeer has
been appointed schools superint·
endent for the Anderson Valley
Unified School District in Men-
docino County.
Boulanger, principal of Alder-
wood Basics Plus School ii'\ Ir-
. vine, will finish the school term
in Irvine.
Irvine School Superintendent
A. Stanley Corey said, however,
she ''will take some time to go up
ffiere on a consuJtancy basis."
Boulanger has been with the
Irvine district since 1975. Pre-
viously she was principal at
Turtle Rock Elementary School
and Bonita Canyon Elementary
School.
She holds a B.A. Degree from
Stanford University and an M.A.
from Cal State, Los Angeles.
Gusty winds due
Fair today and Thursday but
eome high ctoudlneaa today. Lo-
cel gutty ..i to nort"-1 wind•
15 to 25 mpfl at tlmw today and
Thursday. Hlglle botll d9)'9 65 to
72. Lows tonight 52 to se. Hlgha to range from low 80• et the
beach•• to near 70 Inland.
Huntlngton-Hewpor1 .,.. t-npe-
raturw renge from a low of 52 to
A amalknft edvllOfY Is effec-
tive Thuradey tor boatera out
farther tnan 60 mllM from Point
eone.p11on to the M••lcan bor·
der. Northwest wind• should
avar•g• I 5 to 25 ltnota. wllh
gulls to 30 knoll •nd the H•
running 4 to 8 r..t.
Ck>Mr to ahOf'e. winds should
ba mo•tly light end variable, ••· .
oept for afternoon north-terty
brHZN et 12 to 22 knot• that
could generate • 2· to 4-foot
weaterly •••II and 2· to 3-foot
wlodW9Y91-
• lllgtl of 83. EIMwMr•. from Point Concep-
tion to the Mexican border and
out eo mll9e: W•terty w100. 8 to
18 knot• ""h 2 10 a.fool wind
---. Weeterty 9W811a of 1 to 2
laet loc8ily and 4 to 8 feet In outer
Wl1era. Some low cloud• and lo-
cel fog late night and early mor-11'"9 lloln.
Temperatures
Albany
Albuque
Amertllo ....,_.....
Atlanta
Atlanto Cty
Au1tln .
U.S. summary ··:::·
Bltmlnghm Rain fell today from the nor-8lamardt
thern Roclty Mountain• to Ill• 9o1ee
Pedflc: Noltl't.-t and In the -Boeton tam OakotH, H ahower1 end 8'0WNY!le
lhundentorma dewloped along a Buffalo
oold front from "°'111em Alabama Bur11ngton
to 8outfl C.rolln&. Caec>« Slllel _.. c:i.t OY9I' mudl of Char11tn SC
ttle reet of tfle Or..i Plelrw and Chefttte NC ttle mldc* end upper M'11l11lp¢ CMyenna
Valtey, Ille w•t«n .Ohio Valley, Ct1ict1go
the Greet Lak• and Iha South-Cincinnati
.... CIMllarld Cloudy alllH ind blu1tery, Clmbla SC
norlhweltarty wtnda hit Ille nor-Ootumbul
them Atlantic Cont, wttl't 1 few Oii-Ft Wth enow .,_.. OY9I' .,. JIC)rtlwn oay,on
~-St! ... --0¥11'-Dlrl'IW C8M end der.a tog deeo9i ld9d on o.. Moll.a
the io--IA111l11lp,.t V...,. Detroit
Mor9 ,..,.. -f~ Tiwr.. Duluth dl1 from e. northam Aoc*i.a to El Paao Nofttlem Clllfornte Ind the Ped-Flf'OO lie Nof1ha..i, wtth a tw .,_.. F1egl1aff
-F1ot1cM. Mucn of the ,_ of Ofwt F ... .... natloft .. Mft .......... Her1tofd
Ten.-1turea around the n.,. .....,,.
tlon .-tr ~ r'lng8d tom 22 In HonoMu Marq~ •• Midi., to 1t In Key HouMOl'I w.t, FIL, M!' IM90o, T-. lndneplll
Jldl8n MS
NATIOH
HI Lo f're.
54 311 .02
711 43
82 44
75 49
70 58 .07
58 43
98 67 n 39 .01
88 44
13 eo .01
82 41 .15
81 40 eo 42 .02
92 72
58 30 .27
60 38 .09
88 38
74 SIS
78 53
88 3e 58 33
88 38
84 33
7g 57
a7 33 u eo 82 33 71 42
83 ..
58 29
47 33
88 57
51 42 .11
81 29 82 38
64 40 .03
M 38 82 7t
86 70 ee 35
83 70
Io• """""" ~ ai--,i~·
• CTII!l • ~
JacQnvlle 83
~City 70
LN Vega eo
Little Rock 77
Loulsvllle 76
Lubb<>clc 87
Memphis 71
Miami eo
Mltwault• 50
Mplt-.St.P eo
Nunvtlle 52
New one.na 83
New VOl1t 82
Nortollt 77
No. Plllte 77
Ollla City Ml
Omal'tl 88
0'1ando 85
Phllldpnla 71
f>tloenl• 119
Plttlburgh 88
Pti.nd, Me 45
Ptlend, Ore 49
Provtdenoe 57
Aeleigt1 77
Reno 56
81111 late• 87
8ln Antonio 100
S.tUe 50 = 80
85
St Louie 89
St P-Tampe 80
St Ste Marie 38
Spoil-50
Syrecute 58
TOC*la ~ Tuceon
WMhlngtn n
WlcHla 79
58
48
56
60
40
53
63
78
29
38
52
69
42
51
49
51
52 ee
37
59
39
40
39
43
52
40
47
63
35
81
45
41
81
21
38
34 47
5$
43
51
Bakamlald
Blythe
Eureltl
Freeno
L.anoatlar
Lo. Angelel Marysvllle
Mont•ey
Needles
Oaklend Puo Roblee .04 Red Blutl
Redwood City s~amento
I Salina
Sen Diego
Sen Franctaco .02 Senta Berbera
Senta Marla
S1oc111on . 18 Tllennal
. 75 Vklatl .02 S..tow
Big Beer
91"'°9 Cataline
Long 8eecfl .25 Monrovia
Mt. W111on
Newport e.ctl
Ontet1o
Palm Springe
PIMdena .28 Rlveralde
.11 Sen ...,....dlno
72 50 ee
57 55 1.08
88 48
8! 47
87 53 85 5e
64
87
64 57
68 47
82 52 .oe
64 56 81 52 .01
83 50
64 57
63 53 .06 ee 49
64 45
87 49
89
55
79 55
59 2t
72 35
64 50
85 48
73 43
57 31
83 52 ee 45
85 53 • 4t
• 4t 88 ....
.79 Ex tended
/orectUt Cal~/omia
:IURf REPORT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
AREAS -Fair and ... tOMl>ly '*"'• Hlllfl *"I*~ ti to
78 In OOMUll Md~ -Md lowl 44 to ......... In mouMllnt
52 to a and IOWll ao to 40.
J
, Delly Piiot P!ioeo by Rlchent l(oef'llef
LONG NI G HT -Three-year 1old J oshua
Goldfield was very intent on infield practice
prior to Tuesday night's game between the
Angels and Seattle at Anaheim Stadium. But
he got pretty sleepy later when the con tes t
wen t 17 innings and was called because of
curfew a t 1:05 a.m today. See details, Sports,
Page DJ.
Challengers score
in Laguna election
Big cl eanup
set in Irvin e
for Apri l 3 0
By STEVE MITCHELL o<ttM o.MJ Piiot ltaft
Thirty-nine percent of Laguna
Beach's registered voters turned
out Tuesday to elect the slate of
Dan Kenney, Bob Gentry and
Bobbie Minkin t o the Cily
Council.
The election saw incumbent
Kelly Boyd turned out of office
and his fe llow slate members.
Ron Williams and Pat Barry.
defeated.
Here are unofficial results
from all 11 Laguna Beach pre-
cincts:
Dan Kenney: 2,704
Bob Gentry: 2,689
Bobbie Minkin: 2.561
Ron Williams: 2,283
Kell}' Boyd: 2,014
Pat Barry: 1,992
Paul Christiansen: 411
Beth Leeds: 216
Rickey Slater: 75
Support~rs of the three win-
ners crammed into campaign
headquarters on Forest Avenue,
wildly cheering as resuJts of each
precinct came in.
Backe r s of the losing slate
were less festive as precinct re-
sults were put on a chalkboard at
a South Coast Highway restau-
rant.
"I can't believe it," said one
businessman, shaking his head.
'"l'hey took the whole thing."
The unofficial final tally
showed eight of the 11 precincts
going for the winning slate. with
the losers picking up two pre-
cincts in the north part of the city
and a precinct in the central
downtown distri~ .
Thirty nine percent o f La·
guna's registered voters went to
the polls.
Large trash bins will be placed
al nine locations throughout Ir-
vine April 30 through May 20 so
residents can dispose of large
ite ms (such as old furniture)
which normally aren't picked up
by trash collectors, according to
Nancy Miller of the lrvme Public
Works Department.
The service ts provided as part
of the city's agreement with De-
wey's Rubbish Service, she said.
Dewey's will empty each bin
once on May 1. she said, and city
maintenance staff will be availa-
ble to spot-check sites for trash
overflow and public safety ha-
zards.
Questions regarding the ser-
vice can be directed to Ms Miller
at 754-3688
IABEDOIJSE CONSOLIDATION
&IN·STORE
W AIEDOUSE SALE
20-60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
Our old warehouse (1 0,000 sq. ft .) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd .
Prices wlll •luhed 20% to 60%·off. All the lines that we are known
for, DrlDI, ttlttlge, Herndon, Woodmark, Stinton Cooper &
•---more, wtU be available at substantial savings. Special orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't ml~ this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low pnces.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in 11as is"
condition. Cash and Carry or deliver can be arranged at a small charge.
·s.e you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
"""'r4'~·
1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
(714',I 642·2050
llllllCIAll Cllll 1111 111111
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 14, 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
N-M trustees to appeal vote ·On USC
lb JODI CADENHEAD O(tMDlllly ..........
Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District wUJ ap-
peal the State Coastal Commis-
sion'• rejection of a permit Cor
\he University of Southern Cali-
fornia \0 operate a satellite cam-
pus in Corona del Mar.
'fhe decision to appeal was
announced Tuesday after a
90-minute executive aeuton in-
volving trustees and district offi-
cials. It was greeted with aurprt.e
by neighbors of the proposed
satellite campus at Corona d el
Mar Elementary School and by
USC officials.
Following rejection by the
coastal commlaion March 8, the
university sought to cancel its
contract with the district. USC
had planned to offer bu1ine11
COU1'8e8 at the elementary 1ehool,
which wu cloaed last year.
"T hat isn't what I had
expected," said USC Vice Pres!-
'Butt out,' ~eagan s a ys
dent Jon StraUll of the board'•
action. "We expected to termi-
nate the contract."
Straua aaid it la too early to
say whether or not the university
will join the district when lt files
Friday for reoonaideration of the
commiaaion's declaion.
Newport-Mesa Superinten-
dent John Nicoll aa.ld he believes
that the diatrict has a ''50-50"
chance of persuading the com-
ml11lon to overturn it.a earlier
dedaion.
''We don't agree with the
comrnlaion decision," said NicoU.
"We believe that the concept of
the satellite campus la viable.
Everything ii still alive."
Neighbors llvlng near the ele-
mentary sch ool have aougbt to
persuade the district and the un-
iversity to terminate the $69,000
contract becauae of traffic they
fear would be generated by the
campus.
e s warne on s
Argentina1
QUITS -Don Porter has
resigned as director of the
Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Porter quits
chambe r post
i n Newport
Don Porter, the executive di-
rector of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce, has
resigned and will put in his final
day of work this Friday.
The announcement was made
in a brief statement issued Tues-
day by Carol South, president of
the chamber. Mrs. South was in
Sacramento today and wasn't
available to comment furthtr. ,
Porter. who came to the
chamber two years ago, said only
that he intends to pursue other
"ventures" but has no immediate
job plans.
"I've enjoyed working with
the chamber, but the time has
come to move on and take ad-
vantage of some other opportu-
nities," Porter related.
The announcement surprised
some community leaders, who
had nothing but high prtise for
Porter.
Members of the chamber's ex-
ecutive committee, which ac-
cepted Porter's resignation this
week, either could not be rea-
ched or said they had no details
on the resignation.
Mrs. South's announcement
said Porter had been of benefit to
the chamber and the city.
Porter, deacribed by commun-
ity leaders as a likeable and out-
going person, is a retired U.S .
Forest Service employee and a
former vice president of an
Irvine-based communications
firm.
WORLD
• • rev1s1t set
b y Haig
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan \Old Secretary of
State Alexander M. Haig Jr. to-
day to return to Buenos Aires in
a "fair broker" effort to avoid
war over the Falkland Islands,
then said the Soviet Union
should "butt out" of the dispute
between Britain and Argentina.
Reagan did .not directly con -
firm the reports of U.S . officials
that the Soviet Union is giving
Argentina intelligence data on
the movement of the British fleet
\Oward the disputed islands.
Questioned abput the reports,
he first said a Soviet role has
"evidently been established." But
when asked directly whether he
was confirming them, Reagan
said, "No. That's what I've heard
and read."
Either way, his words for Mo-
scow were blunt:
"I'd like to see them butt out."
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
States is providing inte11igence
data to Britain. .,-
"This situation is too critical,"
h e said. "Any comment can be
taken one way or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping pr~.·•
The president spoke \0 repor-
ters after conferring with Haig
for about an hour.
"We are still trying \0 be a fair
broker in this and bring peace,"
Reagan said, announcing that
Haig will be returning to Ar-
gentina for further mediation
efforts.
But Reagan said Haig wiU not
carry specific instructions from
(See REDS, Page A%)
Ma cArthur
r esurfacing
job halted
Resurfacing of MacArthur
Boulevard from Jamboree Road
\0 the San Diego Freeway in Ir-
vine won't begin this week, as
planned, unleas the strike by
Teamsters sand and gravel hau-
lers ends.
Stan Dick, resident engineer
for Caltrans, said the strike has
halted the $240,000 repaving
project, which waa llCheduled to
be oompleted at nights this week.
Gold price spurts
LONDON (AP) -Gold prices jumped again
today on world markets, cla.ing at $365.25 in Loodon
and gaining $13.30 an ounce in New York to $369.70.
Silver a1ao was up 16 centa an ounce in New York.
Roget eliminates wordB
Roget's Thetaurua has tried to eliminate eexiat,
blued, prejudiced, jaundiced, llllberal and narrow-
minded words. Page A6.
STATE
Vidal campaip auessed
Row can you .... the Senate campalcn of au-
thor Gore Vidal? .Pap A l O.
I
IN THE SWIM -Rebecca Putnam of C.OSta Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp at
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube water polo match. More than 100 disablfd
0.-, Not f'hoto ~ Gery ....,_
youngsters, 7 to 18 years old, were in competitions ranging
from basketball to archery. David Kiley, a wheelchair
basketball notable, directed the camp spon sored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
Mesa to drop
affiliation
wit h SCAG ?
Ma y or pushes vote
on Banning project
More noise
for AirCal,
te mporarily
By JODI CADENHEAD or .. o.-r ,... ...,,
Costa Mesa might join the
growing list of Orange County
cities that have decided \0 drop
out of the Southern California
As&ociation of Govenunenta.
The council will decide April
19 whether or not to continue
participation on the regional
plarining agency that serves 128
cities in Orange, Los Angeles,
Ventura, San Bernardino, River-
side and Imperial counties.
During a study ..ton Monday
afternoon, council members de-
bated the pros and cons of conti-
nuing membership in SCAG.
Councilman Donn Hall, who
proposed withdrawing from
SCAG, said the organization is
"another layer of unnecessary
govenunent."
Councilman Ed McFarland,
who served on SCAG'a executive
committee for two years, spoke in
(See MESA, Page A%)
NATION
. .
By STEVE MARBLE O(tM 0.-, Not ....
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather said today she'll insist
the controversial Banning Ranch
development project, the subject
of a citizen referendum, be put \0
a citywide vote in November.
"I'm willing to make this a
clear-cut test case once and for all
on the issue of development in
Newport Beach," the mayor said
from her Fullerton hospital
room.
Mrs . Heather, recuperating
Crom a stroke, r eiterated her
s upport for the West Newport
project and said residents there
"stand to loee quite a bit" if the
development is scuttled.
Other council members echoed
the mayor's vow for an election
in November, which would coin-
cide with upcoming city e lec-
tions.
"I'll scream to heaven if it's not
put to a vote," said Councllman
TV device jams channels
Are~ children watching too much teleVision?
General ectric is introducing a device allowing you
to jam any channel on your aet for up to 12 houn.
Page A6. •
Krystle . lnynasty' views
Krystle Ca.rrtn,ton bun't had a moment'• peace
to herself since sultry Joan Collins waa cast in
"Dynasty!' Page B5.
COUNTY .
SA freeway to ex pand? • Caltran1 pros)o1e1 to expand the Santa Aha
Freeway frold lix to 10 Janel. Say. comment. P.ae
Bl.
' &,._ ____ ~----~---------
Phil Maurer, who supports the
project and said he believes most
Newport residents also do.
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart
said it's election or nothing with
her.
Critics of the 75 -acre develop-
ment plan. calling themselves the
West Newport Legislative Al-
liance, turned in 6,300 signatures
Monday. 2,000 more names than
needed to qualify for a referen-
dum.
City Clerk Wanda Andersen
said the signatures have been
turned over to the County Regi-
strar of Voters for inspection.
She said it will be known in 30
days whether or not there are
enough valid signatures to qua-
lify the issue for the ballot.
The council, following confir·
mation, must decide whether to
repeal the development project
or put it to a ci~de vote.
INDEX
At Your Service A4
L .M. Boyd AlO
8111h"'I' AB-9
Herb Caen B2
Calif omia A5
Careen B6
Cavalcade B2
CJe-ifled 04-8
Comics B4
ere.wont B4
O.Ul N<>f-B6
Editorial AlO
Entertainment A12
Food Cl-11
SPORTS
AirCal's decision to begin ser-
vice at Burbank Airport is going
to have a spinoff effect for resi-
dents living near John Wayne
Airport -more jet noise.
But the situation will only be
temporary, lasting from April 25
to about June l, a company offi-
cial stressed today.
To win approval for six flights
daily from Burbank, AirCal was
forced \0 agree to fly only new
and quieter jets on those routes.
AirCal will meet that require-
ment by using its new
McDonnell-Douglas OC-9 Super
80s on flights from Burbank.
AirCal has been using Super
80s on 14 of its average 23.5 de-
partures it's authorized to fly
daily from John Wayne Airport.
After April 25, Super 80s will
be used on only nine flights per
day from Orange County. Older
and noisier Boeing 737s will be
used on remaining flights.
Horoecope B2
Ann Landen B2
Movies Al2
Mutual Funds A8
National News A3
Public Notices .86-7
Sports Dl-3
Dr. Steincrohn B2
Stock Market.a A9
Television B5
Thea ten A12
Weather A2
World Newa A3
Four sames on 81UDe nislll ·
How often do the K1naa, Leken, i>odPn aJ\d Ance1a play. on the 1e1ne nflbtf DNOI of the four ·.-..p._. 01.
.,
,
.u C/N Orange Coat DAILY PILOTIW~. Aprtl 14. 1812
~--~----------------------------------------------------------
I REDS TOLD 'BUTT OUT'
the White Houte on Mlllement
terms. Reqan said ffaic doee not
have a mandate to preeent poei-
ttona that the president haa of-
fered or backed. ""'I
Ke avoided 1ubetanlive replies
to moat que1Hon1 in the Rose
Garden question-and-answer
teealon.
"From the outaet, we've made
clear our wl.ah to ..Ut ln finding
a baala for ttieolution of thil dlt-
ttcult iasue," the pr8ident said.
"The situation ls moat sensi-
tive. Nonetheless, Ideas have
been preeented which are being
seriously considered on both
aides.
MESA TO DROP SCAG?
favor of continuing membenhip.
"I would prefer to support an
organization with people who
have expertfae," said McFarland.
"I don't think we have staff as
capable .a• they are to monitor
billa Oegislation)."
The City of Costa Mesa joined
SCAG in 1976 and now pays.
$1,000 in annual dues.
Bart Meays, deputy executive
direcl()r for SCAG, said only 15
'Of the original 22 cities in Orange
County that joined the group still
remain. Irvine, Tustin, Orange
and Westminster a re among
thoee that have withdrawn.
Meays said he is concerned
that some cities who are con-
sidering r eturning to SCAG
could be in fluenced by Costa
Hispanic
Mesa's decision.
"Thia could set that back," he
said.
Hall told his colleagues that he
would rather see Orange County
establish a regional group to ser-
ve its own interests.
City manager Fred Sorsabal
said that efforts to establish such
an organization have failed no-
ting that 8 group of elected offi-
cials who have tried lo form a
county group haven't met since
January.
"It's been totally ineffective,"
said Sorsabal.
SCAG was formed in 1965 to
assist its member cities in areas of
transportation, housing, environ-
mental issues and other N>Dinnal
problems.
• sein1nar
at Mesa co.liege
"Hispanic Peoples. Culn.u-e.s
and Politics" will be the topic
of a two-day seminar, begin-
ning Friday at Southern Cal-
ifornia College in Cost.a Mesa.
6 1'he c risis in Central
America will be discussed
Saturday from 8 a.m . to 5
p.m. by Dr. Everett Wllson, a
history professor at Bethany
Bible College and Rev. Floyd
Woodwortll, missionary in
Central America.
Dr. Vince Gil, a professor
of sociology and anth ropolo-
gy at the school, will ~
the changing role of the Hi-
spanic on Friday from 3 to 9
p.m.
The free seminar will be
held in the college's Admini-
stration Classroom Complex.
Room 111.
•How to manage stress
will be the topic of a three-
hour seminar Saturday at
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa.
discuss how to reduce atrea
through body awareness, re-
laxation exercises and self-
hypnosis.
Orange Coast College in-
structor Sbirley Lampert will
For registration c all
556-5880. Tickets are $5 at the
door.
CoaJJtal
F1lr today and Thureday but
aome high cloudlneu tod1y. Lo-
e.I gusty _. to nonh-t Winds
t5 to 25 mph It tim. loday 11nd
Thlnday. Hlg"9 both dey. 85 to
72. LOWS lonlghl 52 to 56. Hight
to reno• frOl1\ low 801 11 the
beach•• to near 70 Inland.
Huntington-Newport area t~
ratur• range from • low of 52 to • high of 83. ~ •• trom Point Conoep-
llon to th• Maxtc.n bordet end
OUI 90 mllea; Wwt81'1y wtndl 8 to
11 knot• with 2 10 3-fool wind
........ W•t81'1y 1W8111 of 1 to 2
teel locllly and 4 to 8 leel In OUt81
...... Some low doudl and lo-
c.i log lata n!Qht end early mor-
ning lloure.
V.S. summary
R•ln fell tod•y from the nor-
thern l'loc:ky Mountain• 10 Iha
Paclftc Nort"-1 Ind In the -ttfn Oakot11. H ahowara and
ttlunderttonna developed a1ong a
· cold flront lrom rlOrthem Alabem1
10 South Cerollna. Ski. _.. «='-owr mucfl of
the ,_, ol Iha Or•t Plaine and the middle end upper MlsaiMlppl
Valley, the western Ot\lo van~.
the <JrMt L.ekaa and the South· ....
"' tmalk:<aft adllllOrY i. elfoc.
live Thuraday for boaters OUI
lartlw lhan 60 mllea from P01n1
Conciepuon to the Maxiean bof-
der. Northwest wlnd1 ahould
1verage 15 to 25 knots, with
gulls 10 30 knou and the aee
running 4 to 8 fee1
Closer to allore. wlnd1 ahc>Uld
be moatly light and varl1b!e, ex-
cept for atternoon n0t1h-tetly
braazH al 12 to 22 ltnoll that
could generate a 2· to 4-loot
wHlerly awall and 2-to 3-foot
wind wavee
Te mperatures
Alb11ny
Albuque
Amm1llO ,.,.,...,....
Atlanta
AUentc Cly
All8tln
Balllmore
BllHnga
81rmlnghm
81amarck
8olM
eo.ton
8<0WfllVlla
Buflalo
!kirllnglon
CltC* CMrtstn SC
Cllerttta NC
Ctleyenne Chtcaoo
Clnclnnltl
Clewland
Clmbla SC
COlumbul Del-Ft Wth
NAT'IOtf
HI Lo P..:.
S4 39 02
79 43
112 ....
75 49
10 58 07
56 43 as 87
77 39 .01
88 44
73 80 .07
82 4t 15
81 40
80 42 02
92 72
58 30 .27 50 38 .09
88 38 74 85
78 53 ea 38
58 33
88 38 84 33
79 57 87 33
82 80 st 33
' (!II!) • ~
,c::;:::) ---
Jec:kenvlla
!<Ma Ctty
LUVegu
Utile Roell
l.oolavllla
Lubbock
Mamphla
Miami
Mllweukea
Mpla-$1.P
Naahvllta
New on.an.
New YOt'll Norloll1
No. Ptattt
Okla City
Omaha
0!1endo
PMadr.I• Phoen• Pltt1buft
Ptlend.
Ptlend, Ora
~
Rale!Oh Aeno
a.it Lalla
Seymour
new state
senator
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OftM Deir ..........
Backed by a U00,000 cam-
paign war chest, Anahelm Mayor
John Seymour rodo to easy vic-
tory Tueeday for a north Orange
C.Ounty state Senate seat.
Seymour, who became a mil·
llonalre in real estate lnvest.menta
and whose political career ls but
12 srears old, received about 66
percent of the vote. Turnout was
14.1 percent.
Once election results are certi-
fied -a process that officia.JB say
will take about two weeks -
Seymour. 43, will take the oath
of office.
He will fill the unexpired term
created in the 35th district by the
resignation of former Sen. J ohn
Briggs, R-Fullerton. Briggs com-
plained of "burnout" when he
resigned.
Seymour's term will end Dec.
3, 1984.
The 35th district includes por-
tions of the cities of Buena Park
and Tustin, and all of Fullerton,
La Habra. Orange. Place ntia,
Villa Park·and Yorba Linda.
Laguna elects
new trio to
city council
By STEVE MITCHELL OftM 0..,, PUot .....
Thirty-rune percent of Laguna
Beach's registered voters turned
out Tuesday to elect the slate of
Dan Kenney, Bob Gentry a nd
Bobbie Minkin to th e City
Council.
The election saw incumbent
Kelly Boyd turned out of office
and his fellow slate members.
Ron Williams and Pat Barry,
defeated.
He r e are unofficial results
from all 11 Laguna Beach pre-
cincts:
83
70
80
77
78
87 71
llO
50
60
52
83
82
71
77
Ml
68
85 71
89
88
45
49
57
71
5e
87
Dan Kenney: 2, 704
Bob Gentry: 2,68~
Bobbie Mlnk.ln: 2.561
Ron Williams: 2,283
Kell_l Boyd: 2,014
Pat Barry: 1,992
Paul Christiansen: 41 l
Beth Leeds: 216
Rickey Slater: 75
Supporters of the three win-
ners crammed into campaign
headquarters on Forest Avenue.
wildly cheering as results of each
prP.Cinct came in.
Hackers of the losing slate
were less festive as precinct re-
sults were put on a chalkboard at
a South Coast Highway restau-
rant.
se
48
$8
80
40
53
63 78
~
38
52
89
4f
51
49
51
52 ea
37
59 39
40
39
43
52
40 47
. .. ,.,.,,,.,
04
.02
18
75
02
,..o ... 4 • o. •'
CAUFONtlA
SDarstlald 72 Blylhe se Evrelta 57 Fretna 88
LancM1ar Cle
LOI Angalaa 87
Ml/')'l\'i!le 85 Mon1arey 84 Needles 87 0111111/ld 84
Puo Roblee 88 Red Bluff 82
Redwood City 84
Sacramerito 81 sa11n .. 83 San Diego 84 s.,, Franc19Co 83 Santi Barbare 88 Sant• Marla 84 Stoclllon 67
Thermal 89 Ukiah 55 81tstow 79 Big 8Mr 59 8llhop 72
50
55 1.08
48 47
63
58
51
41
52 .08
58
52 01
50 57
53 .05
49
45
49
55
H
3S
Cloudy alllH and bluetery,
nof1hwwttf1y wtnda hit the nor-
th«n Allantlc Coast, with a f9W
ll'IOW ahowlr9 ci-' the l"IClrthwft
Ap9elldllaM. Sic ... wwe ov.-c.-end deriee too ~lded on
"'8 low Mt rr'I t IF pl V""1/. = 0.. Moin. Sen AnlOnlO 100 71 42
83 48 83 Catallna 84 50 long 8eacfl 85 48
More r9ln -f0f'8CUI ~
de)' ll'om the northern Roc:klel to ~ Cellfornle end Iha P8Cl-tlc Hol1f\aat, with 1 ,._ ._.
~ Aol1da. Mudl of the ,.., of
the netlon ... M¥I IUfllfllM.
Temperat\ll'M around the ne-
Uon ~ 1ocs.r r.ngecl tom 22 In Mltq~. Mlcfl., to 7t In Key W•. Fla., end I.Ando. T-.
California
o.trolt
Duluth El Puo
FlrgO fllostart GrMt Fallt
Hmrtford
HeMne ~
Hoveton llldNplll
Jldlen MS
59 ~
47 33
88 57
51 42 tt
81 29
82 3e
54 40 .03
.. 3e 82 71
'5 TO ee 35
83 70
s..ttla Snr:1.: Sioux allt
St Lovie
St P-Tempa
St Ste Mer18
Spall-
SyrKUN
Topete• Ti--.
WMhlng1n
Wlchlt•
50 35
80 81
86 45
et 41 80 8t 38 2t 50 38
58 34
72 47 ae 55
17 43
79 5t
· SURf RIPIRT
.25
.28
11
79
~rovt1 73 Ml. Wll*>fl 57
Newp()f't lleecll 83 Ontario 88 Palm Spr1ngt 85 Paaedena 89 R,._.,de 89 San BemardlnO 68
Extended
f orec~t
43
3S 52
45
53
48
48
44
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN
"°AEAS -'ilr and MllOlllbt)'
warm. HIOfl t8m9«•turee H to 75 Ill OC*tll and ¥llley .,.... and lowt 44 to &4. Hlgfla In rnountMl!I
52 to 12 and loWe IO to 40.
'
Letter to SCAG
Newport to modify
Newport Beach City Council
members have agreed to take
eome of the atinamg worda out of
a critical ll'tter to a Southern
California Aaaociation of Gov-
ernmen u committee charged
with finding a new regional air-
port site.
A draft of the letter, criticizing
the SCAG aviation commi1tee u
being unorganized, and an ac-
companying report were released
Last week.
The letter said the committee's
airport search has been a "long
and disheveled process that has
produL'ed reams of data but little
structured reasoning."
lt also flayed the committee's
efforts as "suffering from loo
much data, too Little organization
and seri o u s an a l y ti c al
deficiencies.''
Th~ report and the letter were
prepared by Newport's executive
usutont city manager Ken De-
1 lno a t the requeiu o f Mayor
Jac:kle Heather Delmo 11a1d ht>
put two months o r research into
the report.
The council, meeting Monday
eveping, agreed to take sorne of
thl' "angry" w ords out of the
!etter, but to leave the message tntacl.
But the draft letter already has
ansered several people, inclu-
ding Yorba Linda Councilman
Henry Wedaa, chairman of the
SCAG aviation <.'Ommittee.
Wedaa defended the commit-
tee's four years o f work and
rapped Delino as a "hired gun"
who wrote "a report that servL>i>
no useful purpose except to jus-
ti fy his own job "
-By STEVE MARBLE
Huntington Inayor
shoo-in due Mandie?
By ROBERT BARKER
Of 1t1e o.-, Plot at.aft
Native son Bob Mandie.has one
more political hurdle t.o climb
after h is convincing victory
Tuesday for a second term in the
Huntington Beach city elections.
That aspiration is to become
mayor of the city where he was
born 40 years ago.
"We'll just have to wait and
see what happens," Mandie said
Tuesday.
What is expected to happen
when the council reorganizes
Monday is that Mandie's citY.
council colleagues will select him
to lead the city after he became
the highest city council voteget-
ter Tuesday'. .
He also received the highest
number of votes in 1978.
ln the city attorney race , in-
cwnbent Gail Hutton buried heJI,
predecessor, Don Bonfa. by a 2-1
margm.
Here are the complete but un-
official results in which all in-
cumbents we re returned to or·
fice:
The City Council (4 elected):
-Bob Mandie. 7,010
-Ruth Bailey, 6,954
-Don MacAJllster, 4.539
-John Thomas, 4,190
F.clward Zschoche, 3.!MO
-Jay S tout, 3.736
-Bud Belsito, 3.254
-Dan Mahaffey, 3,11 3
-Steve Schumacher, 2,907
Dean Albright. 1,481
-Betty Clark, 1,270
Frank Mirjahangir, 1,106
-John Vale ntino, 819
-Mark Juerges. 526
-Michael Music, 43 1
-Re Stevens, 288
The city attorney race results
are :
-Gail Hutton. 7.727
-Don Bonfa. 3,873
The city counl·tl e lectio n.
marked by a lack or i~ues and
apathy on the part of residents,
dre w only 13 I percent of the
city's 96,849 registered voters to
the precincts.
The results seemed to bear out
the political axiom that the lack
of issues generally spells glad ti-
dlngs for the incumbents.
Coastal
park veto ~
likely?
St.ate assemblywoman Marian
Berl(eson. R-Nt:wport Beach, has
remarshaled her forces to spc-ed
up development of thC' Crystal
Cove Stute Beach coastal park
:after 1nd1cations that G ov . Ed-
mund G. Brown Jr may not sign
the measure.
Mrs BergeM)n , who shepher-
dt'd the measurl· through both
houses of the sta t<' lt1guslature,
called on cons tituents toda y to
"express concerns" tn letters and
telephone calls lo the governor's
offire in Sacramento.
Bergeson's proposal provides a
permanent sourl'e of funding for
the 2,791-acre c.:oastal park ..and
r equires tht-Dep o r tme nt o f
General Servtl·t!S lo move ahC'ad
quick ly w ith d evelo pme nt o f
tem porary day-ust> facilities.
Thl• legislation cleared the as-
sembly Monday
But word from the J(overnor's
offll'e 1s that the bill t'Ould die on
his d£-sk bt·c:ause of h is conct-rn
that 1l would divert $1 m1llton
away from the slate's general
fu nd , according to a n aide fnr
Brown
"Maybe the effo1 ts o f the
community can pe rsuade the
gov ('rno r the bill s ho uld go
t hrough as now written ," Mrs.
Bergeson said a fter m arsh alling
her forces.
Mrs. Be rgeson said tha t a l-
though s he w as not surprised
that Brown might not sign the
bill into law, she still was disap-
pointed.
Woman jumps
to her death
A 53-year -old Westmi ns t er
woman, re portedly depressed
over fina ncial debts. jumped to
he r death th is week from the
fi fth fl oor of a Newport Beach
medical tower
Pohcc tdent1f1ed the woman as
Antta Ursula Whittle A witness
told police the woman JUmped
from a ledge outsfdc• the Park
Lido Medical building, 351 Hos-
pital Road.
T he woman, police said . w as
rushed Lo nearby Hoag Memorial
Hospital where she died
IAIEBOUSECONSOLIDATION
&IN·STORE
W AREDOUSE SALE
20-60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
)~ . ~--~ .....
c~~;~;;~~§;O~ur~o~ld~w~a~re~ho:u:se~(1~0,000 sq. ft.) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd.
Prices wlll aluhed 20% to 60%·off. All the lines that we are known
for, Drexel, Hltltage, Henredon, Woodmartc Stanton Cooper &
•---more, wlH be available at substantial savings. ~al orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't miss this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low prices.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in "as is"
condition. Cash and Cany or deliver can be arranged at a small charge.
'See you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
"""' 14ie#1e'U'4'
\ 1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
(714~ 642·2050
,•
...
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1982 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
N-M trustees to a -ppeal vote on USC
By JODI CADENHEAD or .. ~,... ....
Truatees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District will ap-
peal the State Coast.al Commia-
slon't rejection of a permit for
the University of Southern Cali-
fornia to operate a satellite cam-
pus in Corona del Mar.
The decision to appeal was
announced Tuesday after a
90-minute executive teaion in-
volving trustees and <H.trlct offi-
cial.a. It was sreeted with IW'pri8e
by neighbors of the proposed
satellite campus at Corona del
Mar Elementary School and by
USC officials.
Followln1 rejection by the
coutal comm.laion March 8, the
university sought to cancel lta
contract with the district. USC
had planned to offer buslne11
counee at the elementary echool,
which waa cloeed last year.
"That isn 't what I had
expected," said USC Vice PresJ-
dent Jon Strau. of the board's
action. "We expected to termi-
nate the contract."
Strauu said lt la too early to
say whether or not the university
will join the district when lt files
Friday for reconsideration of the
commilSlon'a decision.
Newport-Mesa Superinten-
'Butt out,' Reagan says
e
QUITS -Don Porter has
resigned as director of 'the
Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce.
.:rorter quits
~hamher post
pt Newport
·: Don Porter, the e xecutive dl-
lector of the Newport Harbor
'.Area Chamber of Commerce, has
~igned and will put in his final
day of work this Friday.
s warne on
Argentina
• • rev1s1t set
by Haig
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre-
sident Reagan told Secretary of
State Alexander M . Haig Jr. to-
day to return to Buenos Aires in
a "fair broker" effort to avoid
war over the Falkland Islands,
then s aid the Soviet Union
should "butt out" of the dispute
between Britain and Argentina.
Reagan did not directly con-
firm the reports of U.S. officials
that the Soviet Union is giving
Argentina intelligence data on
the movement of the British fleet
toward the disputed islands.
Questioned about the reports,
he first said a Soviet role has
"evidently been established." But
when asked directly whether he
was confirming them, Reagan
said, "No. That's what I've heard
and read."
Either way, his words for Mo-
scow were blunt:
"I'd like to see them butt out."
Reagan would not comment
when asked whether the United
States is providing intelligence
data to Britain.
I
IN THE SWIM -Rebecca Putnam of Costa Mesa gets in the
swim of things during recent Wheelchair Sports camp al
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. She participated in
innertube water polo match. More than 100 disabled
dent John Nicoll said he believes
that the d istrict has a "50-50"
chance of persuading the com-
miulon to overturn Ila .earlier
decision.
"We d on 't agree with the
commission decision," said Nicoll.
"We believe that the concept of
the satellite campus is viable.
Everything is still alive."
Neighbors living near the ele-
mentary school have sought to
persuade the district and the un·
iversHy to tenninate the $69,000
contract because of traffic they
fear would be generated by the
campus.
s
OeltJ ..... '9lot4' ., o.ry ......,._
youngsters, 7 to 18 years old, were in competitioris ranging
from basketball lo archery. David Kiley. a wheelchair
basketball notable, directed the camp s ponsored by the
National Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis.
The announcement was made
ill a brief statement issued Tues-
day by Carol South, president of
the chamber. Mrs. South was in
Sacramento today and wasn't
available to conunent further.
Porte r , who came to the
chamber two years ago, said oniy
that he intends to pursue other
"ventures" but has no immediate
job plans.
''Thia situation is too critical,"
he saiC!. "Any comment can be
taken one way or another and
endanger the peacemaking or
peacekeeping procea.''
The president spoke to repor-
ters after conferring with Haig
for about an hour.
"We are still trying to be a fair
broker in this and bring J>Nee,"
Reagan said, announcing that
Haig will be returning to Ar-
gentina for further mediation
efforts.
Mesa to drop
aff ilia ti on
with SCAG?
Mayor pushes vote
on Banning project
More noise
for AirCal,
temporarily
"I've enjoyed working with
the chamber, but the time has
come to move on and take ad-
vantage of some other opportu-
nities," Porter related.
The announcement surprised
some community leaders, who
had nothing but high praise for
Porter.
Members of the chamber's ex-
ecutive committee, which ac-
cepted Porter's resignation this
week, either could not be rea-
ched or said they had no details
on the resignation.
Mrs. South's announcement
said Porter had been of benefit to
the chamber and the city.
Porter, de9Cribed by commun-
ity leaders as a likeable and out-
going person, is a retired U.S .
Forest Service employee and a
former vice president of an
Irvine-baaed communications
firm.
WORLD
But Reagan said Haig will not
carry specific instructions from
(See REDS, Page A%)
MacArthur
resurfacing
job halted
Resurfacing of MacArthur
Boulevard from Jamboree Road
to the San Diego Freeway in Ir-
vine won't begin this week, as
planned, unless the strike by
Teamsters sand and gravel hau-
lers ends.
Stan Dick, resident engineer
for Caltrana. said the strike has
halted th e $240,000 repaving
project, which was acheduled to
be completed at nights this week.
Gold price spurts
I
"'
LO NDON (AP) -Gold prices jumped again
today on world market.a, clming at $365.25 in London
and gaining $13.30 an ounce in New York to $369.70.
Silver also was up 16 cents an ounce in New York.
Roget eliminates words
Roget's l'hetaun&1 bu tried to eliminate aexiat,
blued, pre~diced, jaundiced, illiberal and narrow -
minded wordl. Page A6.
STATE
Vidal campaign l••~d
Row can you.-the Senate campalan ol au-
thol' Gore V~? P ... IJO.
I
By JODI CADENHEAD or .. o.tr,._.,..,.
Costa Mesa might join the
growing list of Orange County
cities that have decided to drop
out of the Southern California
Asllodation of Governments.
The council will decide April
19 whether or not to continue
participation on the regional
planning agency that serves 128
cities in Orange, Los Angeles,
Ventura, San Bernardlno. River-
side and Imperial counties.
During a study aeeBion Monday
afternoon, council members de-
bated the pros and cona of conti-
nuing membership in SCAG.
Councilman Donn Hall, who
proposed with drawin g from
SCAG, said the organization t.
"another layer of unnecessary
government."
Councilman Ed McFarland,
who served on SCAG's executive
committee for two years, spoke in
(See MESA, Page A%)
NATION
By STEVE MARBLE Of ttte o.-y Not St.n
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather said today she'll insist
the controversial Banning Ranch
development project. the subject
of a citizen referendum, be put to
a citywide vote in November.
"I'm willing to make this a
clear-cut test case once and for all
on the issue of development in
Newport Beach," the mayor said
from h er Fullerton hospital
room.
Mrs. Heather. recuperating
from a stroke , reite rated her
support for the West Newport
project and said residents there
"stand to lose quite a bit" if the
development is acuttled.
Other council members echoed
the mayor's vow for an election
in November, which would coin-
cide with upcoming city elec-
tions.
"I'll scream to heaven if it's not
put to a vote," said Councilman
T V d evice jams channels
Are l:fur children watching too much television?
General ectric ii introducing a device allowing you
to jam any channel on yo~ set for up to 12 hours.
Page A6. •
Krystle • 1Dynasty' views
Krywtle c.airlngton bun't had a moment's peace
to herself aince s u ltry Joan Collins waa cast in
"l>ynaaty." Paee B5.
COUNTY
SA freeway to expandf
Caltran• proJ)o1ea t o ex~and 01e Santa Ana
Freeway from llx to 10 J.uw. Story, comment. Pace
Bl.
Phil Maurer, who supports the
project and said he believes m'ost
Newport residents also do.
Councilwoman Evelyn Hart
said it's election or nothing with
her.
Critics of the 75-acre develop-
ment plan, calling themselves the
West Ne wport Legislative Al-
liance, turned in 6,300 signatures
Monday; 2,000 more names than
needed to qualify for a referen-
dum.
City Clerk Wanda Andersen
said the signatures have been
turned over to the County Regi-
strar of Voters for ins pection.
She said it will be known in 30
davs whether or not there are
enough valid signatures to qua-
lify the issue for the ballot.
The council, following confir-
mation, must decide whether to
repeal the development project
or put it to a citywide vote.
INDEX
At Your Service A4
L .M. Boyd AlO
Businees AS-9
Herb Caen 8 2
California A5
Careers B6
Cavalcade B2
Classified D4-8
Comics 84
en.word 84
Death Notices B6
F.ditorial AlO
Entertainment A12
Food Cl-11
SPORTS
AirCal's decision to begin ser-
vice at Burbank Airport is going
to have a spinoff effect for resi-
dents living near John Wayne
Airport -more jet noise.
But the situation will only be
temporary, lasting from April 25
to about June 1, a company offi-
cial stressed today.
To win approval for six flights
daily from Burbank, AU<:a1 was
forced to agree to fly only new
and quieter jets on those routes.
AirCal will meet that require-
m e nt b y u s ing its new
McDonnell-Douglas DC-9 Super
80s on flights Crom Burbank.
AirCal has been using Super
8~ on 14 of its average 23.5 de-
partures it 's authorized to fly
daily from John Wayne Airport.
After April 25, Super 80s will
be used on only nine flights per
day from Orange County. Older
and noisier Boeing 737s will be
used on remaining flights.
Horoacope 82
Ann Landers B2
Movies A12
Mutual Funds A8
National News A3
Public Notices 86-7
Sports Dl-3
Dr.Steincrohn 82
Stock Marketa A9
Television B5
Thea ten A12
Weather A2
WOl'Jd Ntwa A3
Four games on same night
~ How oft.en do the &nta1 Lake!!lwI>oclPn and Ana-la play on tho ume nllht? De of the fOUr
P1"4't P ... Dl.
.,
I.
a a 4¥¥C 2 W 1 I -
ONnge CoMt DAJLY lttLOTJWld~. APrll 14. 1882
. REl>S TOLD 'BUTT OUT'
"From the outaet, we've made
clear our wiah to Mlltt ln finding
a bull for reeoluUon of thLa dlf-
flcult illue," the pre&ldent aid.
"The situation ls rnott seMl·
tive. Nonethehtaa, 0 ideaa have
been presented which are being
seriously conside red o n both
sides.
MESA TO DROP SCAG ?
favot o«i continuing ,.....ahfp.
,.1 wbuld prefer to ~ an
orgattluUon with m•'Jll who
have espertiae," sai ~
"I don't think we haw ttall a
capable •• they are to moaltor
bW. Oe8ialation)."
The Oty of Costa MMe Joined
SCAG ln 1976 and now pays.
$1,0QO In annual duee.
.a.rt Meays. deputy ~ve
dir«1or for SCAG. MW wy l!>
of the CJri8in.a1 22 citiel tn Orance
Coumy that joined UM~ ltill
remain. Irvine, Tustin, Offnse
and Westminster are among
th<* that have withdnwn.
Meaya said he is concerned
that aome cities who are con-
siderlne returning to 8CAG
could be influenced by Coat.
Mesa'• ded.sion.
"Thia could aet that back," he
said.
Hall told hia colleagues that he
would rather .aee Orange County
establish a regional group to ser-
ve its own inten!9ta.
City manacer Fred Sorsabal
said that efforta to establish such
an organization have failed no-
ting that a group of elected offi-
cials who have tried to form a
county group haven't met since
January.
"It's been totally ineffective,"
said Sorsabal.
SCAG WU formed in 1965 to
assist its member cities in areas of
transportation, houaing, environ-
mental issues and other l"Puinnal
problems.
I I
~ispanic seminar
at Mesa college
"Hispanic Peoples, Cultures
aDd Politics" will be the topic
o( a two-<iay semin.at, Mlin-~ Friday at ~Cal
ilbmia College in Col\& Meu.
.9r. ViDce GU, a JfO{euor ~-.dology and antNopolo-td' tl the IChool. wtl1 ~
Ult changing role of the Hl-
splnlc on Friday m. I to 9
p..m.
•How to 11\•n•ff stress wib be the topic o a three--
hour aeminar Satut'day at o.,o,e Coest Coll•• ... ea.ta ~
()ru:ige Coast = ln-stnldor Slltrley I will
The c risis in Central
America will be discussed
Saturday from 8 a .m . to 5
p.m . by Dr. Everett Wlbon. a
history profe.or at Bethany
Bible College and Rev. Floyd
Wooclwort°', missionary in
Central America.
The free 1eminar will be
held in the college's Admini-
stration Cl.uaroom Complex,
Room 111.
di.cwi.s how to reduce stress
throug,h body awareness, re-
laxation exercises and aelf-
hypnosis.
For r e gistration call
556-5880. Tickets are $5 at the
door.
Coaatal
F81r today and Ttlul'Mlay ~
_,,. ... Cloud"-s lodlry. i..
c9 llY'IY -1 10 "°""-' ..,.
15 to 21 mpft .. Im.a loday " ~-Hight bolh deyl ef .. 72. La. tonight S2 to se. HWie
10 renoe from low eoa at Ole
be•cllaa lo near 70 lnla,.d.
A amlllk:t ah .ov11ory i. enoo-
t Iva Thursday tor boa1era out
fW1her lhen eo mlle9 lrom ~' Concec>llon to Iha Mexleen bor·
dar. NISrth•••I wlnda ahould
average 15 lo 25 knota, wllh
guala lo 30 knota and Iha ••a
running 4 10 8 toot.
~·"~--...... ratuNa r-. from a low of II to a hlgfl Oii 83.
~. ftom Paint~ uon to !tie Mnlc:an bc>rd• lf'4
Ollt llO ""'-: Waat«ty wtndl I to
18 llnota wtlll 2 10 3-toat wlfld
Wftll. Wa.t.1y ........ of 1 to 2
.... ~ 1111<14 10 8 , ... In°""' ...... 80me low ~ end ..
cal tl!t 1411• night and Mliy mor-
ning hOun.
California
ci-lo ahc><a, wtnda ahould
be !Melly light and variable, eJI•
..,. !Of afternoon nort"'-'«ly
Or"a' at 12 lo 22 knot• lllal
1ould gen•r•la a 2· lo 4-tool
-'•rly 1we11 •nd 2· 10 3-1001 wind•-.
Temperaturea
NATION
.. Lo l'rc.
54 39 .02 78 43
82 «
1~ 48
70 58 07
58 43
88 87 71 38 01
88 «
73 80 01
82 41 15 81 4()
80 42 02
t2 72
58 30 27
50 3a ot
841 38
74 6S
78 S3 es 38 58 33
88 38 84 33
78 57
fr1 33
82 80
82 33 71 41
13 4' 5t 2t
47 33
N 57
5 1 42 .11
81 28
82 38
54 40 .03 N 38 82 71
" 70 N 35
83 10
I •
@El • ~
c:::;:}
Jactlanvlle
I<..,,. City
Laa Vagu
Ullle Rocle
Lou!Mle lubboc;lt
~· Miami
Mllwauk"
Mpi...S1 P
Hamlllle ..... ~.
New Yor11
No<1o41(
No. Platte
Okla City
Omaha
ONnoo
PllMedphl• Phoenix
Pltlabu!'t'. PUand,
Ptlend, Ore
PrO'lldenoa :::at•
Slit Yk• Sen Antonio Seattle = St Louie SIP·T~
St Ste Mena
~ SyrllCUM
Topete•
Tucaon
WaaNngln
Wlc:hlta
--------~-------------------------------------------------------Sey nl our Letter to SCAG Coastal
new state Newport to modify park veto
likely? senator
By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL
()("tMDallJ"8t .....
Backed by a $200,000 cam-
paign war cheat, Anahelm Mayor
John Seymour rode to euy vic-
tory Tueeday for a north Orange
County state Senate eeat.
Seymour, who became a mtl-
llonaire In real est.ate investments
and whoee political career la but
12 years old, received about 66
percent of the vote. Turnout was
14.1 percent.
Once election results are certi-
fied -a process that officials say
will take about two weeks -
Seymour, 43, will take the oath
of office.
He will fill the unexpired term
created in the 35th district by the
resignation of former Sen. John
Briggs, R-Fullerton. Brigp com-
plained of "burnout" when he
resigned. •
Seymour's term will end Dec.
3, 1984.
Ne wport Beach City Councll
membera have agreed to take
IOme of the stlniing worda out of
• critical letter to a Southern
California ABSociation of Gov-
ernments committee c harged
with finding a new regional air-
port site.
A draft of the letter, critictz.ing
the SCAG aviation committee as
being unorganized, and an ac-
companying report were released
last week.
The letter said the committee's
airport search has been a "long
and disheveled process that has
produced reams of data but little
structured reasoning."
It also flayed the committee's
efforts as "suffering from too
much data, too little organization
a nd se ri o u s anal y tical
deficiencies."
The report and the letter were
prepared by Newport's execuuve
assfstant city manager Ken De-
lino at the request o f Mayor
J ackie Heather Oelino sa1c.l he
put two months of research inl.O
the report.
The council, mectmg Monday
evening, agreed to take some ot
the "angry" words o ut o f the
letter. but to leave the message In tact.
But the cf raft letter already has
an8ered several people, inclu-
ding Yorba Linda Councilman
Henry Wedaa, chairman or the
SCAG aviation committee
Wedaa defended the commit-
tee's four years of work and
rapped Delino as a "hired gun"
who wrote "a report that serves
no useful purpose except to jus-
tify his own job."
-By STEVE MARBLE
S wt.e assemblywoman Mari.an
&r~eson. R-Newport Bea<.'h, has
f(!marshalcd her fort't."'S to speed
up development of lhe Cr ystal
C1we S l&te B~ach coastal park
;after ind1cat1ons that Gov Ed -
mund G Brown Jr may not sign
the measure.
Mrs. Bergeson, who ~htipher
dcd the measure through both
hou ses of the state legislature,
called on constnucnts today lo
"cxpr~ c.'Oncerns" in IC't tl·rs and
tele phont• calls to lht• gove>mor's
ofhce in Sacramento
Bergeson's proposal provtdl"S a
permane nt source of funding for
the 2, 7SJ I ·acre t·oastal park and
r equires tht.• Dt.>partment of
General Servtl'('S LO move ahead
quickly with development of
u·mporary day-use faciliues.
Tht' leg1slatton l'l<•ared the as-
st·mbly Monday
The 35th district includes por-
tions of the cities of Buena Park
and Tustin, and all of .Fullerton,
L a Habra, Orange, Placentia,
Villa Park and Yorba Linda.
Laguna elects
Huntington mayor
shoo-in due Mandie?
But word from the governor's
office 1s that the bill t·ould dte on
his desk bct•ause of his concern
that 1t would d1vNl $1 million
away from the state's gl'nt•ral
fund. according to an a1dl• for
Brown.
" May b t· the e f forts of t he
community can pcrsuadt· the
governor the btll sh o uld go
through as now written," Mrs
Bergeson said aftt•r marshalling
ht•r forces
new trio to
city council
By ROBERT BARKER of tN 0.-, ...... •t.n
Native son Bob Mandie has one
more political hurdle to climb
a fte r his convincing v ic to r y
Tuesday for a second term in the
Huntington Beach city elections.
By STEVE MITCHELL That aspiration is to become
oflha o.-,,..... at.n mayor of th~ city where he was
Thirty-nine percent of Laguna born 40 years ago.
., Beach's registered voters turned "We'll jus t have to wait and
out Tuesday to elect the slate of see what happens," Mandie said
Dan Kenney, Bob Gentry a nd Tuesday.
Bobbie Minkin to the Ci t y What is expected to happen
Council. when the council reorganizes
The election saw incumbent Monday is that Man d ie's city
Kelly Boyd turned out of office council colleagues will select him
and his fellow slate members, to lead the city after he became
Ron Willi-ams end Pat Barry. -the--hrghesrcity council voteget-
defeat.ed. te r Tuesday.
He re a re unofficial results He also received the highest
from all 11 Laguna Beach pre-number of votes in 1978.
cincts: In the city attorney race, in-
Dan Keaney: 2,704 cumbent Gail Hutton buried her
Bob Gentry: 2,689 pred~r. Don Bon!a, by a 2-1
Bobble Mi.n.k.lll: 2,561 margm.
Ron Williams: 2,283 Here are the complete but un-
Kelly Boyd: 2,014 official results in which all in-
Pat Barry: 1.992 cumbents were returned to of.
Paul Christiansen: 411 fire:
Beth Leeds: 216 The City Council (4 elected):
Rickey Slat.er: 75
Supporters of the three win-
ners crammed into campaign
-Bob Mandie. 7,010
-Ruth Bailey, 6,954
-Don MacAllister, 4,5:!9
-John Thomas, 4,190
-Edward Zc;choche, :i,940
-Jay Stout, 3,736
-Bud Belsito, 3,254
-Dan Mahaffey, 3,113
-Steve Schumacher, 2,907
-Dean Albright, 1.481
-Betty Clark, 1,270
-Frank Mirjaha ngir. I.IOU
-John Valentino, 819
-Mark Juergcs. 526
-Michael Music, 431
-Re Stevens. 288
The city attorney race results
are:
-Gail Hutton, 7 ,727
-Don .Bonfa. 3,873
The ci ty council ele<.tton,
marked by a lack of lSSUes and
apathy on the part of residen ts.
drew only 13 . l pe rceq_t of the
city's 96,849 registered voters \.0
the precincts. ·
The results seemed to bear out
the political axiom that the lack
of issues generally spells glad ti-
dings for the incumbents.
Mrs Bergeson said that al-
though sht> was nul surprtsc·c.l
that Brown might not sign tht•
bill mto l..iw. she sull was disaµ-
p<imted
Woman jumps
to h e r death ·
A 53 -year-old Wcstmtn!>ter
woman. Ieportt:dly deprcsst!d
over financial debts. jumped to
her death this week from th£'
fifth fl oor of a Newport Bea<:h
medical tower.
Polite 1dentif1ed the woman as
Anita Ursula Wh1ttll' A witness
told polt<.·e the woman jumped.
from a ledge out~'de the Park
Lido Medical building. 351 Hos-
pital Road.
The woman, police said. was
rushed to nearby Hoag Memorial
Hospital where she died.
r"headquarters on Forest Avenue,
wlltlly cheering as results of each
ptf!Cinct came in.
Hacke rs of the losing sla te
were less festive as precinct re-
sults were put on a chalkboard at
a South Coast Highway restau-
rant.
WAREHOUSE CONSOLIDATION
83 se
70 48
80 56
77 60
78 4()
87 53
7' 63
80 78
50 28
80 38
52 52
83 89
82 42 n 51
77 49
88 51
N 52
85 86
11 31
89 58
88 39
45 40 48 38 57 43
17 52 58 40
87 47
100 83
50 35 ao 81 85 45
" 41 80 81
38 21
50 38
51 34 12 47 ee 66 11 43 78 51
lo• n-..-.,
CAUFOftHIA
8ekenlle4d 72 50
Blythe 88
Eurek• 57 55 1.08
Fresno 88 48
LlnCaaler & 4 7
Loa Angetee 87 63
Marysvllle 85 56
Mont~ay 84
Neod1ea 87
Olkland 84 57
.04 Puo Roblea 86 47 Red Blull 82 52 .Ge
liedwOod Cl1y 84 58
Secramen10 ti 1 52 .01
Saltnaa 63 50
San CMeoo ~ 5 7
San Frendlc:o 63 53 .05 .02 Sanla 81rb111 811 48
Sanla Marl• 84 45
SIO<*ton 87 49 lO fll«mll 89
75 Ukiah 55 .02 S..tow 7t 55
Big Beet 59 28
Bfahop 72 35
C•lallna 84 50
25 Long BMctl 85 41
Montovle 73 43
Mt. Willon 57 38
Newpof1 a..cn 83 52 •
Ontario 88 45
Palm Springe 85 53 p~ 89 48
.28 Rlwnlde " 48 I I s.... 8arnardlno 88 44
78 Extended
forecaat
&IN-STORE
W AIEDOUSE SALE
20-60%0FF
Sat. & Sun only
April 24 & 25
j°l
Our old warehouse (10,000 sq . ft.) merchandise is
being absorbed in our facility on Newport Blvd.
Prlcet wlll allshed 2Q% to 60%·off. All the lines that we are known
for, Drexel, Hetbge, Henredon, Woodmart, Stanton Cooper &
•---more, will be available at substantial savings. Special orders will be
accepted at less 10% during this special event.
Don't miss this opportunity to own the finest furnishings at truly
super low prices.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! All Sales are final and in "as is"
condhion. Cash and Cany or deliver can be arranged at a small charge.
· lllf llPIRT SOUTHl!RN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL AHO MOUNTAIN
AAEAS -,.,, and -eonebly
Wanft. High tempet"etllfae 16 to
15 In coeetal and Willey ... end Iowa .. to &4. Hlghl In mountlllna 112 IO 12 and IOWt 30 to 40.
'See you the 24th or 25th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun. 12 to 5 p.m.
(JO#~~'
1595 Newport Boulevard Costa Mesa, Ca. 926217
{714~ 842·2050
..
\
BOAT CLUES--Coast Guardsman Gary
Hankoff examines life rings and hunks of
debris from the missing yacht Sweet Omega
out of Portland, Ore. Helicopters are combing a
AP Wlrephoto
500-square-mile area for the yacht and its four
passengers, one of two vessels lost to high
winds from a boat race.
Hospital proposed for prison
State panel recommends conversion of Camarillo
CAMARILLO (AP) -A state
task force, faced with a new law
that requires sending mentally
disordered sex offenders to pri-
son, has recommended that Ca-
marillo State Hospital be turned
into a state prison for up to 2,000
prisoners and some or all of its.
patients be transferred else-
where. Although prison space is
needed for about 1,000 such of-
fenders, apparently no recom-
me ndation has been made to
house sex offenders in Camarillo,
45 miles northwest of Los An-
geles.
by landlords who waved small
American flag.41. "We want free-
dom! We want freedom!" the
protesters chanted, and placards
said: "Poor Owners Need Help."
The rent control law permits
landlords to raise rents up to 7
percent a year while a tenant
lives in a unit and to boost rents
as high as he wishes if a tenant
moves out voluntarily or is le-
gally evicted for failure to pay
rent to live up to the tenns of his
rental agreement.
means of minimizing future uti-
lity bills in their Shasta County
city. The proposal to purchase a
25-megawatt share of a nuclear
power plant in Palo Verde. near
Phoenix, Ariz .. was defeated
Tuesday by an unofficial tally of
5,292 to 2,979, City Clerk Ethel
R ichter said.
Or~ge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednead•y. April 14, 1982 N 41
Nixon called a drunk
Ex-president refuses comment on magazine article
BOSTON (AP) - A magazine
article deteribing Richard Nixon
as often being drunk in the
White House and Henry Kis-
singer refusing to pasa along ca-
ble• to an Inebriated president
haa prompted no direct p~bllc
response from the two men. Ni-
x.on "only comments on his own
books," Nicholas Ruwe, an aide
to the fonner president, said in
New York on Tuesday when as-
ked about The Atlantic Mon-
thly's article on the Nixon White
House. "Dr, Kissinger has not yet
seen the article," his personal
assistant, Christine Vick, said at
Kissinger's Washington office
Tuesday. "He cannot comment
on what he has not seen. Aft.er he
has seen it, he believes he will
have nothing to add to what he
has written in his memoirs.''
JERSEY CITY, N.J . (AP) -
Fire swept through an eighth-
floor detention cell of the Hud-
son County Jail early today, kil-
ling seven prisoners who were
trapped inside, authorities said.
"They were huddled in a comer.
They couldn't get out," Fire
Chief John T. Mullins said of the
victims. WCBS-AM radio in New
York said a prisoner yelled out
the window to reporter John
Matthews on the scene that ano-
ther prisoner had set. a mattress
on fire .
WASHING TON (AP) -In the
midst of growing congressional
and public support for a nuclear
weapons freeze, President Rea..
gan quietly is asking Congress
for another $400 million so the
government can build more nu-
clear bombs in 1982 and 1983.
The president's spending request,
which drew almost no attention
when it was announced March
29, came on the same day that 13
House members introduced a
resolution calling on the United
States and Soviet Union to ne-
gotiate a gradual reduction of
nuclear annaments.
WASmNGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan focused attention
today on what safety experts say
are the two principal causes of
automobile deaths -drunken
driving and the refusal of nine of
every 10 motorists to use seat-
belts. The president, in a cere-
mony in the White House Rose
Garden, announced the creation
of a commission on drunken dri-
ving and unveiled a $7 million
campaign aimed at getting more
people to use seatbelts. "During
this short ceremony, at least one
person will be killed by a drunk
driver," Reagan declared.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan said today that ne-
gotiators were "reasonably opti-
mistic" about reaching a com-
promise spending plan with
Congress, but refused to say
whether he would support a tax
surcharge for upper-income
wage earners as part of the deal.
The president said he would not
comment on the talks until ne -
gotiators "feel that they have
something that has a possibility
of success with both sides and
then I will see it." As for the
proposal to impose a surcharge of
perhaps 4 percent on incomes
that exceed $30,000 or $40,000 a
year, Reagan said, "I'm neither
ruling out nor l'\lling in, becauae,
as I aay. I'm on the aide lines."
BOISE, Idaho (AP) -'After
hearing witnesses say Gloria
White planned robberies carried
out bv convicted sov Christooher
Boyce, a federal jury has decided
the 42-year-old mothe r of six
children is guilty of conspiring to
rob banks . She faces up to 58
years in prison when she is
sentenced May 7.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Beagan said today he had
confidence in the pledge of Is-
raeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin tl1at Israel would tum over
the remainder of the occupied
Sinai territory as scheduled April
25.
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)-
A judge today dismissed Luis
Marin's conviction o n 26 t'Ounts
o( murder and arson 1n the
Stouffe r's Inn fire that killed 26
p eople, saying the evidence
against him was "insufficient."
Marin, 26, a former waiter at t,Jle
hotel in Harrison, broke irtto
tears and hugged his lawyers
after Westchester County Judge
Lawrence Martin said in a pack-
e d courtroom, "The charges
aga in s t Mr . Marin are
dismissed."
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
27-year-old psychiatric patient
has been arrested in connection
with the killing of his former
professor, who was shot in front
of stunned students at a junior
college here. Jose Luis Partida,
27, was arrested Tuesday night
in a restaurant on the city's Mis-
sion District and held on $250,000
bail in connection with the death
of Dudley Yasuda, a psychoiogy
professor a t San Francisco City
College. Partida's a rraignment
was set for today.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legi-
slation to exempt small develop-
ments from provisions of the
coastal protection act has stalled
in the state Senate Natural Res-
ources and Wildlife Committee.
SB1918 by Sen. Jim Ellis, R-Sa.n
Diego, drew only a 5-6 vote
Tuesday. The bill would, among
other things, exempt developers
of small projects from providing
public access to the beach, pro-
tecting scenic views, and direc-
ting development to built-up
areas.
Moslems strike on
shrine attack over
POWAY (AP) -Voters here
re-elected former Mayor Clyde
E. Rexrode to a city council seat
one day after his death. Rexrode,
51. the first mayor of this rural
community in San Diego County,
was the third-leading vote-getter
Tuesday m the contest for three
of the council's five seats. Mayor
Bob Emery said Rexrode's re-
election was a triumph for the
ex-mayor's s low-growth deve-
lopment philosophy.
LOS ANGELF.s (AP) -The
City Council voted 12-2 to extend
its controversial rent control or-
dinance indefinitely, sparking an
angry 10-minute demonstration
OAKLAND (AP) -Regula-
tors have taken over the nation's
21st largest savings and loan as-
sociation, ousting Its top officers
and establishing a new thrift in-
stitution. The unusual move -
regulators generally en~ourage
mergers to salvage financially
troubled thrift institutions -
was confirmed today by a state-
ment mued in San Francisco by
the Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, which regulates savings
and loans nationwide. The state-
ment said the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board set up a "new
federal mutual association" from
assets acquired from Oakland-
based Fidelity Savings & Loan
Association.
REDDING (AP) -Redding
voters have soundly rejected a
plan to purch ase a share in an
Ariz.ona nuclear power plant as a
ORANGE COAST •
Daily Pilat
Cl•Hlfled •dvefUalng 7141642-s.n
All ottt.r depmrtmenta 642_.321
Thoma P. HlleV
Nilllfler and ()NII '-oi....
Robert N. Weed ,.,_
Kay Schuttl Ylee"'-
and Dlr9ctOr °' ~
Tom Murphlne
Edllot
Mike Hetwv Olreclotof~ f~I
Ken OOdd.,d
Olreclot of Oiiw•-
~:,ec:Leen
Chert.. LOOI
.......... Editor
MAIN OFF1CE
nt Wett Be\' $4., Coat•-· CA.
Melt.._: ... 15t0, C•IA NWM, CA. 'Mll6
C°"'fttlll NJ Or .... CM• "'*'""'°" ~-... ....,.--.. .~ ........ MleM!al-..... -11M,_. ......,, mey M r~ wtl'-
-IM M1114 ..... of~--.
VOL 75, NO. 104
By The Associated Press
Much of the Moslem world
went on strike today in protest
against an Israeli soldier's bloody
attack in Jerusalem on one of
Islam's most sacred shrines, but
Arab violence in Israeli-occupied
territories subsided to sporadic
stone-throwing incidents. Gov-
ernment offices, schools and bu-
sinesses were closed, air traffic
was halted in ,several countries,
some communications were cut
and business sectors in many ci-
ties were deserted in response to
the call for a one-day strike by
King Kha led of Saudi Arabia,
the custodian of Islamic holy
places. One Saudi n ewspaper
called for a "jihad," or holy war,
to liberate Islam's holy sites from
Israeli occupation. There was no
shutdown in the Saudi oil indu-
stry.
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A
U.S. military team today recove-
red the bodies of 27 Americans
killed in the crash of an Air
Force transport in mountainous
eastern Turkey, official sources
said. A U.S. Embassy spokesman
said four civilians were among
the dead, and the Air Force said
six w e re from a Strategic Air
Corrunand unit from Peterson Air
Force Base in Colorado Springs,
Colo., that was assigned to eva-
luate overseas military installa-
tion. Identifications were not ex-
pected until Thursday.
ROME (AP) -Screaming and
banging on metal cages with
their handcuffs and chains, the
accused killers of former Premier
..., ........ .., ............ We're Listening •••
Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like.,
Call the number ~low and your meaaa1e will ~ recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The aame 24·hour anawering service m'ay ~ used to record let·
ten to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and tel phon• number for verification. No clrculatlon
calls. pleut ·
Tell us wh~t'I on your mind.
•
•
Aldo Moro went on trial today in
what prosecutors call the most
important legal battle against
urban guerrillas in postwar Italy.
"You're trying to erase five years of armed struggle in ltat y. . .
That's impossible," shouted Ma-
rio Moretti, the alleged leader of
the Red Brigades' Rome branch.
Informers said Moretti was
Moro's interrogator during the
former premier's 55 days of cap-
tivity in 1978. The Italian gov-
ernment put 63 alleged members
of the Red Brigades on trial to-
da y for the M o ro's kidnap-
murder and other terrorist
crimes.
Gem
Talk
ByJ.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Gemo/ogiat. AGS
A BREAK ON GIFTS
helps employers
If you have people workJng for
you, there is a new change In the
federal we lawa that ahoWd Int.erst
you. Whereas there uaed to be a
limit of $100 that could be deducted
for the COit of C glfta to em-ployees upon re t or for 1pe-
d&l 81CC01Dpliabmenta, that limit hM
been railed to '400. Amon1 other
thlnp, one advantace of the new
rule ii that employen are now able
to 1tve nice jewelry to 1ucb em-
ployees. If a worker ii belnc dted
for lerlCth of lm'Yice, pl'Oduc:tMty or
aa.fety achievement, the lift quall-
fiee for the deduction. Anyone who
checkt wlth hla employees aa to
their favorite 1lfta for au c h
achlevementa will find that many
prefer slfta of jewelry, becaUle of
the IMtinl val~ of that kind of pf\.
It alto Ii..,. the mnployee IOmlthinl
that tw.. can .Id at dMly for many
,..... and know that tlw·cornpeny
appnela\ed hll efforu by slvlq
IUCh a lift. Such 1mdntn1a i*wtlt
boCh the liwr fnd tht recelvw of
ftne jewelry.
'
AP~
!STH TIME A CHARM? Glynn "Scotty" Wolfe at 73 the
world's most married man at two dozen trips to the altar, says
he's looking for his 25th -and last -: wife. Wolfe , who
claims 41 children, never wed anyone over 20 years old, but
now says he's looking for someone older, say 20 to 25.
Skilled Profeaalonal . . . .
• ervtce
For your valuable jewelry and watches Is as close to
you as J. C. Humprhrtes Jewelers where our own
craftsmen carefully do the work under personal
supervision.
v Diamond A Precloua Gem Setting
v Fine Jewelry Care A Repair
v Orlgln•I Jewelry Design •nd
CrHtlona
v Fine W•tch Repair
v Gem •nd Jewelry. Appr•l .. la
J. C..JJwnpJ.,.;.6 J.-1.l"d
MEMBER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY @
1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA ~
35 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION
8ant!Arnettcatd-M .. ter Cl'l-ve PHONE &4t4401
~ I
1
I
Orange Cout CAIL y PILOT/Wedneeday, Aprll 1•. 19'82 N ". NY E COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
QllOTAttOH•IH(l.UOI TIAOUO• Tllll llllW ¥0••,MtOWUT, ,.CIPIC. ll l W ~fO!lll.01Tll01T AllD CllllClllllt.att UOC•
•llCMAlllOU AND •IPOITIO l 'f lMt lllA&Q A"'O INUlllU
t
Dow Jones Final
OFF 2.95
QOSING131.09
Solar facility
generates powe r
Special to tbe Dally P ilot
DAGGE:I'T -The world's largest solar-powt•u '<f
electrical generating £ac1hty has successfulJy gt>nt•ra
ted commercial electric powC'r, Secrt•Lary of 8nc•rgy
James B. &!wards announced today.
Electricity from the $141 million Rliol plunt w1•nt
to I.he Southern California EchBOn Od5'gnu from tlw
facility located m the Mo,ave Desert near &rstow
The facility, whk h uses sunhghl rerlt-t:l.('<l frnn1
heUostats (mirrors) to heal water, gem•ratr ,r.,.,.rn ond
drive a tur bine was devC'loped by lhC' U S Dt·p.1rlnwnt
of Energy and &:Itson
First zin c ore produced
St. Joe Resources Co , a unn of F1uor Curµ has
announced production of the fu-st Zlnc ore I rum 1b new
Pierrepont Mine
The mme ts part of ::it. Joe's Mining d1vtMon at
Ballnat, St. Lawrence County, NY
The Pierrepont pro,e<:t, ongmally announcf'd 111
August 1980, represents one of the highest gradP zml'
de posits in North Ame rica with ore rest:rvc::. of 2 5
million tons averaging 16 percent unc. offlrn1ls said
Disney, Morocco in accor cl
Walt Disney World has annoum.'t'd tht• s1gm11g of
an agreement with tht> Kmgdom of Moroct.-u fur J>Jr·
ucipation by Morocco in World Showc-asl in E~·ot
Center at Orlando, Fla.
The agreement wa:. signed an Rabat, M11r1xxn by
the m.irust.er ef trade. industry and mansrn. /\zzciffnC'
Gucssous, acting as an officer CJ( th(' OH11•c• N<1t1onal
Morocain du Tourisme Representing D1snl'Y were•
Jack Lindquist, seruor vice president, mark1•t1ng .• md
Ron Cayo, senior vice preside nt, business affairs
Local firms pro filed
Newport Securiucs Corp will prt'M'nt a ~mmar.
"Security Investments tn Orange County. un April 22
a t 7 p.m . at its office, 3 151 AJrway AvC!. Suitt· II I.
Costa Mesa.
The program wul focus on the 100 pubh<lv ua<l1'<J
<'Ompames headquartered in Orange County
For inforynat1on, t·all 957-1081
Runway p act OK 'd
The Kasler Corp of San Bernardino WctS the low
bidder on I.he DaHas-Fort Worth airport runway con-
tract at $42, 749,000.
An award is expect.ed withm four w~ks
The firm was the prime contractor for the Upper
Newport Bay Bridge.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
GOLD COINS
' ., ... . ~
" . "' . '•
" " . ·~ • ''> . ·~ ....
'•
Pct Up II S Up 9 I
Up 18 Up 14 Up 41
Up S• Up S.9
Up H Up S 6
Up SS Up SS
Up S.• Up 5J
Up SO Up SO Up SO Up S 0 Up 4 9
UD • 8
P(1 Ott IJ,
Ott " 1 Ott 10.
Off •• Ott •• Ott ..
Olf I 4 Ott I I
Ott I I
Ott • ' Ott • s Off ., g: U·
Ott H Ott u Ott u Ott S.l Off S.0
NEW 'tOM IAPl -"to.._~ ol
gald oolll8. ~ """ ~· pttc» IC~ 1 troy oz .. 13U.OO, up $4 1~ .......... 1 troy oa.. $371.00. up 14.16 ....._ 10 .,_o, I 2 ll'Oy or . '4M.71. up 16.to. AHtrl ... 100 crown, 8102 troy 01 •
P62.76. up M.00.
METALS
NEW YORK (API -Spol nonll'trOUt
metal prlees lodDy
Copper 76· 78 cen1s A 1>ound U S
dMllnotlons ,
lb
l ead 28-32 Ct'nts a pound"
Zinc 35.39 ~t• a povno Oe41ve1ecs
Tin S6 5365 Melala Weeh compl)Slte
Aluminum 76-77 oenlS a P<>\.llld N '( ·
MefCIWJ $395 00 pet ll8alc
"-tlnum ~5 00 troy oz . N Y
SILVER
l111ndy & l1111m11n P 590 11e1 iroy
ounce
GOLD QUOTATIONS
london: morning ti.1ng $36• 75, up $1125
London: &119'noon 11~1ng S3611 75 up S13 25.
Pllf1e: S363 94 up S 10 64
'renlrfurt: S366 98. up S 12 98
Zurich: Lue fixing S365 00 bla, up
S13 00; $368.00 M~ed
Hendy a Herman: onty dally quote
S388 75. Uj) s 13 25
E,..itlMd; only dally quo111 S36G 75, up 113.75
lnoelherct: only dally quote lebrleeted $385~. up 11301
SYMBOLS