HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-06 - Orange Coast Pilot•
Her wish now helps
those of dying kids
"".
lb rn:vz MARIU: or .. ...., ........
JW O.vSa w• 2& and had been married thrw weekl WMI\ the
lHrned her bone oancer had
•tarted io ,... apin.
Her huabana recall• her
dianlty and 1tren1th when
docton told her. a ahort time
later. that the cancer would be
tennlnal.
"She waa never afraid," her
huaband aaya.
Lut Easter -ntne month•
Jfter the cancer flared -1he
died. She wu at home in Cotta
THI DRAllil CDAIT
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 6. 1983
Meta with her h~.
Now -a year later -John n.w hu fulfilled hia yllf•'• final
wllh. He hu 1W*I Bout.hem
C.WCllTQ'a flnt chapter of Make
a Wl1h, an or1an(1atlon that arante J.ttt wt.Me io terminally W children.
''We talked about i\ a areat
deal -what I lhould do when
lhe died. We aareed I ahould do
IOl'nethina. Th1I ii It," Davil said.·
A televl1ton 1how on th•
Phoenix-hued pro,ram cauaht
the you.na couple'• attention one
(See WISHES, Pase Al)
Sun back after fr
Dllr .......... .,.., ......
~eim firemen reeeue Nancy Gilbert
)and her son Craig from 1tranded Skyway
gondola after ( reak storm halted ride
yesterday. .
District: Recall,
~
,eaching don't mix
jty PHIL SNEIDERMAN ... ...., .......
~ Coast Community College
Sl>iatrict teachers have been
attorney, governi ng the
diMemination of lntonnatlon and
partisan campaigning In
connection with 8Chool political
meuures.
The executive committee of
the American Federation of
By STEVE MARBLE
of' tM Delly "'°' IWI
A surpriae storm that battered
Disneyland and left 104 people
trapped on a gondola ride in the
howling winds has given way to
clear, sunny skies that are
expected to remain through the
rest of the week.
Yesterday's violent storm
packed tornado-like winds, rain,
lightning and claps of thunder.
The winds tore a roof off a
Fullerton business. smashed
windows in a nearby shopping
center and blew a man through a
plate glua window in Anaheim.
The National Weather Service
said the brief but intense storm
was the work of an unstable air
mass that came roaring into the
county under tar-black skies.
The weather bureau has not
determined if the wind was a
tornado. The bureau reported lt
is extremely unlikely that
yeslerday's unexp«ted violence
will be repeated. The forecast
calla for clear warm days with
variable clouda and daytime
~lntbe70..
Rlden aboard Dlaneyland'•
Skyway gondola, diMbled by the
lt«ln, were re9CUed by firemen
aboard cherry pick.era and ladder
trucb yesterday afternoon. The
react.le operation took more than
twq houri.
"The toughest ones to rescue
were the ones h.ana1ni over the
water in the Submarine
Lagoon," aaid Al Flores, a
Disneyland publidst.
He said the wind IUSt8 popped
a cable off its pulley wheel,
leaving riden stranded 30 to 40
feet in the air. Riden endurt!d
stiff wlnda that 1wayed the
gondola and then rain that left
(See STORM, Pa1e Al)
tt.'arned not to I.Ille clal9 Ume to
i;nimat.e a rec:a1l campelgn aimed i t uneeaUna five district trustees. ~ dlatrlct includes Oranae
Golden West and c.o.tU.ne (See RECALL. Paae All Norman Watson ,,....
WARNING: No trucks ::?In recent week1, ~ton at Orange Cout And Golden West ilaued warnlna :;,otk:a aft.er eome studentl anc1 There'• a move afoot to keep vehiclea lea.Uy parked on the
te.chen complained that recall tq trucJm from p.rking on major aide of the l'C*I.
'..-Utlonl were ~ clrc:ulated Huntln1ton Beach atreets Clty Councilwoman Ruth
:&lurtna 1nltnlCUoo time. becau1e they allegedly are a Finley, who l1 leadlna the -: District Chancellor Nonnan E. ''aerioua" threat io public l&fety. campalan. aald tru~ka pose ;was.on 1Umequently asked the Four or five people have been another hazard when they park
~ti ol the three coDeaee to killed tn recent years when can In bicycle lant1 by forcins
ai.nbute a U.t of ,Wdefinee, lD which they were ridJ.n8 drifted y~ and othel"I to weave
John Davia
grants kids' wishes
Pageant promoter
faces f rand raps
lnw.u,aion appe.rently aren't
belleviN the clalml ot would-be
Coeta MHa beauty paaeant
promoter Frank John BipUat
B11Jey. They've tlltd three
char1e1 aaatnat him tor
a d vertl1tment1 he placed
promllina a •10,000 prize to the
winner ol hia papant.
Deputy Diltrict Attorney Mark
Foeter J r. said the charaea -
mt.demeanor count. of t&1ae and
rntaleadtna advertialng -were
baaed on ads that ran ln three
different i11uea of a local
shopper.
The ads, tout.Ing Bagley'• Miu
California Prlnceu Beauty
P_,..nl. ltart Wlth ~ qu.tJon
"II Your Dauahter A~·
and promlM a fl0,000 prize to
the pqeant winner, Fotter Mid.
Aooordin8 to F01ter the ada ur.
the s-geanf will &ake elace April
24 at the S heraton Vnlveraal
Hotel ln Loi An1elH. Hotel
official.a have conffrmed that a
ballroom hu been r.erved for
the pageant that day.
F01ter aa1d ho dote not know lf
an arraignment date for s.&Iey
had been 1et in Harbor MunJdp:ll.
Court. The clerk'• office at the
court would not re1pond to
Inquiries today,
(See PAGEANT, Pa1e A!)
caum 1011111
ORAN GE COUNTY CALl l On NIA 25 CENTS
,
Ominoua storm clouds awept aeroee the Southland yesterday.
Riley asks flight limits
I
while propOsing • increase
By STEVE MARBLE
ud JEFF ADLER
OflMO.., .... ~
Orange County Supervisor
Thomaa Riley has at irred
optimi1m in his hometown of
Newport Beach with a proposal
for freezing dally jet departures
at John Wayne Airport.
Four held
in Mesa
robberies
Two men and two women
were arrested In Huntington
Beac h late yeste rday ln
connection with two armed
robberies which occurred in
Costa Mesa Monday night. police
said.
The four, alone with another
suspect picked up Monday nlaht.
allegedly lt.Ormed lnto homes on
Vallejo Circle and Adam•
Avenue between 6:30 a nd 7
Monday nilht and stole $5,600
worth of cash, jewelry and
cloth ina after tying up and
=the vk:tlma, aaJd Sgt. Bill
Moel of the atolen property
was recovered at a Hunt!.nston
(.ROBBERY, PAI• Al)
• Riley -walking a political
tight-rope -at the same time
s u1ge1ted Increasing dally
commerdal jet takeoffs from 41
to 66.
'The auperviaor, whoilit dlatrict
includes the airport and nobe-
weary Newport Beach, has asked
his four collea1ues to order
environmental studies for flight
increases. Supervisors are
expected to select among 13
alternatives for airport expansion
next Wedneaday.
By iasuing his propoaal, Riley
bucks put county legal opinion
that stat.es supervi8ora cannot tie
the hands of future superviaor1
by enceri.n2 a bindtna agreement
. that would put a lasting cap on
airport operatlona.
''Thia 8eelllS to be the tJ.me to
exami n e and de t ermine a
meclw1iam that would be able to
legally limit the number of
departures at t.he level th.is board
chooees aa lta final plan for the
airport." states the proposal that
Riley drculated yesterday.
Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn
Hart aaid ahe Is pleued with
Riley's suggestion and hinted the
council might be willing to
diacuas more ~Uf takeoffs as a
tndeoff for a btnding ~nt.
Newport, In the past, has
1teadfa1tly inalated daily
departures should remain at 41.
The dty went to court last year
and auccesafull)' tu.med back a
plan for tncreMin8 takeotf:a.
(See FLIGHTS, Pa1e Al)
Will Nixon documents
he available to UCI?
By GLENN SCOTI' o<111ea.., .......
Jon W iener, the suddenly
famous UC Irvfoe historian,
knows how bard It ta to obtain
federal papera from the Nixon
era.
Ria concema are part of the
reMOn why UCI faculty members
are Involved thl1 week in a
detailed 1\Udy of a propoeal to
locate the Richard M. Nixon
Pre1identlal Library on the
campus.
Wiener made headlines laat
month by fllln1 a lawsuit in
federal court in an attempt to
force the FBI to releue all of Its
files on former Bealle J ohn
Lennon.
He cla1rnl the partial amount
of FBI data alteedy relu11d to
him ahowa that •overnment
(See NIXON, P ... .U) :prepared by the d iatrlct'a from traffic Wlel and struck bla (See TRUCK, Pqe Al)
~; llSID1:.---------------------------"!'--~~___,
EPA revisited
~at'• EPA really
been up to 1ince
Reagan eet the
tone? Page A9 ,
It wa1 a claMic
volleyball match whe-.
Laguna Beach raced
San Clemente. The
1'ritoDI triumphed.
P-.eDI
'
A• Otano• OoHt DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, Aprtt '· 1tn
Ld' \\.\t. Continued stories
RECALL WARNING. • •
Teachtirt chaplt-r represenuna
full-time instruct.on at the three
colleges, distributed a pointed
"'ply thla week.
''It looks like the recall
movement is making the dlatlict
run for cover," the AFT letter
stated. "Norm Watson's memo
... Is just another feeble
attempt to lilence the faculty and
students. We won't let It happen!
To Norm's memo we have only a
single, almple reply."
The reply llat.ed in the AFT
letter was a copy of sections of
the U.S. Conatllullon deallnt
with freedom of speech and the
requirement of due proceu of
law
The recall campaign was
launched after dlatrlct trustees
approved a pack.age of program
cuts and the layolf of 114 full·
time teachers and adminLstrotors,
citing a reduction In state
funding.
The rec.all campaign picked up
the fonnal support of the local
AFT chapter 1.ut week.
FLIGHTS PROPOSAL. • •
Ken Delino, the c ity 's
e xecutive assistant to the city
manager, said city poUcy states
41 flights should be the limit. But
he admitted the city expects
supervisors to push for 55.
"Once this idea of binding
agreement gets out 'and
supervisors start talking about it
-that's all we ever asked," said
Delino. "The n~r or flights is
something that would be
considered Uiter."
Riley also propoeed Phuins in
the additional flights as aJrllnes
meet noise reduction standards.
His plan also would permit
residents living under the takeoff
pattern to convert property to
commercial or office zonina.
The proposal would allow
reeidents ln sound-impacted
~like Santa Ana Heights to
remain, but only after panting
the county an eaaement for the
alrapace over their property.
PAGEANT A FRAUD?. • • •
Foster would not detail what
information I~ investigators to
file the charges, but he
acknowledged th.at the filing waa
an indication that Bagley's
advertised promises were
suspect.
Contestants have been paying
$150 each to enter the pageant
since local advertising for It
started in J anuar~'.:
But organiz.er Bagley. 30, has
allegedly left a trail of canceled
~ants, angry contestants and
disgruntled merchan\s behind
him in the past.
Bagley, who also used the
name Shaun de Young, served
four months in a Texas jail alter
TRUCK BAN.
around them into traffic.
"It's become a major problem.
particularly along map streets
like Brookhurst and Magnolia.''
she said.
"We get complaints from
residents of one neighborhood
and then the trucks move to
another area.
"It's like squeet.lng a tube of
toothpaste. Police clamp down in
one area and the trucks po~ up in
another."
"We (the city) are providing
Huntington Beach
A 8-r--old HumtnQton 8Mcfl llOy tOld
police he wn pu•Md off hi• l>lcyct•
)'99t«der II)' WI older boy wllO then ll06e Ille
l>4eyde The lnclderlt occun9CI ,_ ~
and ne1t Adam• Avenue In downtown
Hul\Ungton BMcl'I
pleading no contest t o
misdemeanor theft charges
relating to a Houston benuty
pageant that never took place.
In that cue 8-gley left town a
week before tl\e_pageant. He
later said he had to cancel the
contest after hi.a hotel room was
burglariud and $2,500 in entry
fees taken.
Bagley said that seven $100
savings bonds would be the only
awards at next month's pageant,
and that the $10,000 prize will be
given at a national contest. the
date and location of which have
not yet been decided.
Bagley lives in a Costa Mesa
trailer park.
• •
public awrage for these rigs," she
said. "It's a subsidy."
Councilman John Thomas.
who operates a fleet of heavy
vehicles ln hi.a trucking and crane
buslneu, said he believes the
truclu -n:efu;wner-<>perated "811 -are to Huntington ~ to park from other areas
that have parking bans. .
It's legal for trucks to park on
the streets u long u they don't
remain more than 72 hours.
door I lle ••Potl•O IOU lncluoeo two
_, -valued e1 11.eoo -• o1c1eo
....,. --worth 11.000
The own•r of • red IH2 BMW auto
reported 11111 tll• cit wu l>•oll9fl Into
)'99t«dey ...... II -l*l<*I In • ~ e1ong 1M qOC> tllOC* of Pleil-Dme
Entry -INlde b'I --'*'II • .wlow Tiie _ ,,__ • s...f.i0001* .---t
_. ve1uec1 •• ~so.
Fountain Valley
A lflaCJlfMr -1 -app ..... lded el Thrifty Drug & 01.eount Sto••. 17804
~1~c•,t,::•~°'~ .. ~u~
poelll • ......,,... WU. 9)"I lt\4Mlow ltld Ol1*
~ lflet -·t -!*cl '°' In • -··put9
NIXON. • •
From Page A1
offh:l•l• con1ldered waya of
expellln1 Lennon from th•
t'Ountry In 1872 to prevent him
from takln1 pa.rt In antl-Nhcon
prot.oti. prior to the Republican
National C.Onvenlion In Miami.
The FBI haa rofu.d w releue
the re.t.
SellM>ned by hl1 experience•
with the FBI, Wiener wu one of
•everal faculty members whu
lnltlully calle!d for an ln·depth
study of the Nixon Ubrary
proposal. He noted during an A~ademlc Senate meeting that
pl.ac.-emenl of the library, archive.
and muse-um at UCI didn't
necessarily mean researchers
would enjoy complete access to
ull of Nixon's presidential papens
and tapes.
"My experience with Nixon
era documents has made me
aenaltive to the problems of
access -more so than mo1t
people," Wiener explained
during an interview yetterday.
Wiener. however, la no longer
dlrectly involved with the Nixon
library Issue . A faculty
committee headed by Patricia
O'Brien, chairwoman of the UCJ
history department, is
iove1tigating the proposal this
week. The committee will aubmit
written findings Monday and the
Academic Senate will meet on
the matter April 14.
The key issue to faculty
members Is access. Many
professors have hailed the Idea of
stDring the presidential papers on
campus as a tremendous research
aid. But they want assurances
they'll have complete freedom to
consult the records.
ROBBERY. • •
From Page A1
Beach residence where the
suspects purportedly were
staying. he said.
The first suspect. Steven Peter
Fansega, 25, of Santa Ana, was
arrested on a fluke Mondaynight
while riding his bicycle in
Huntington Beach, Bechtel said.
Fanaega apparently gave a false
name to Huntington Beach
police after he ran a stop sign.
The name Fansega he gave
belonged to a man who had an
outstandln" traffic warrant.
Fansega, along with Michael
Desmond, 22. of Fountain Valley
and Richard Breckenridge, 25, of
Tustin is being held at the Costa
Mesa Jail on suspicion of armed
robbery.
!Uren BarretD, 22, of Garden
Grove. al8o arrested on auapiclon
o f armed robbery, and Lori
Brusseau, 22, of Newport Beach,
being held on su•plcion of
~esslon of stolen property. are
lng held an Orange County
Jail.
A golO ctlaln Melllec. Vll..ed 11 ll>cMlt
l300 -eto1en ttom • P'KM 1n t.,. ,,.,,.. .• oftlce et U. Nnlgoe High 8cflOOI
Irvine
A tlllel ,,_ to pry lllol T ·toe> Oii 1 1179
CO<Yelle p1tked on Caaa.Oe Av_,..e In
ININ ... , lllQllt but lllled tO do 90 and fled,
pollot Mid
A bur11'W Ct-led thrOUQll .,, unloe*ecl
-o1 • -on s-""* St.-... t night Wld llOM _..I nigtll cioU'llng
Weather fair
Coastal
4..oHtal low 50, 1n11nd 40
Coaetel lllgfl 97, Inland 72. Wat«
68.
L.laht, varlet>M wind• tonight
ancJ tomorrow morning , becoftW'O .-t to ~ s to 11 ln'Ott t~ afternoon with
2 to ~ wind --. W-.rty
...,... 2 to 3 Miii. Molltty dMr.
Plk• County In IOUlll••n M~. lluadey. Aori. 7
Snow fell from tll• tOUtllefn
Rodi• to NM>raeka to Ille TtUe
Ptnll&ndle, lletlfng lra#I wllll Cllt8C~ drlfta
Tempera lures
.. Le
Albany 41 30 Albuquarque 42 25
Amerllo S7 2t
Al'ldl«llQll 48 30 ,..,....,... 51 ..
Attenta 82 53
"tJan11e City 5e ..
Au9tlrl el 45
U.S. Summary llWtltnort 51 48
N ... -.....iw••·•""•' !'-<t,,."'•• "f()A.A ti "'Ii 0."f'll uf C omttw •.
~-42 19 Fronts· Cold ..-. w. ""' _.. _,,_..,_,, ... 17
A n1ullv. "°'"' tormen11ng IMlmerdl 45 21
IM w .. 1 w1111 dMJ> enow and :::-on ISO 31 GrM1 'en. ~ _. blMned fOt et 8rownllVlle : ~ HartfOfd ... elClht deelM flooded paru Helena of~ Md MIU1111$~ with 8uflalo :: ~ Honolulu
up tO 1 ~ of rein tocs.y • ='°'1 21 10 Houe1on
vlotent lllundaretotme or-'*I CMrtMlon.8 C 74 II lndWlapolle
fhrOllQll IN ........,.,. """"· a.tM1 W V e 1 53 Jeakaon,MIR. Aeoord low temperetur•• on, · .. 1 51 Jlld!eorMl!e
llCWerlng erOUftd ~ In p1ecee CMrlotte. N.C v Jut-. .,.. ""'°""' tocMIJ 111 Coior9clo. ~ • 25 03 ~ OOy .._. ...... T~Mo.n., ... ..._ 41 35 l.MVegee
......... Coiondo ~ Cllnannatl &T 52 Uttlo Rodi ~ruue a 0e1reH lfi =a.c ;: ~ t::z-
w11" flundred• of people ~Worth :: ~ l..ulltlodl ~ toroed trom ...., ~ Mtmpflll ~ ao~\.~.~'L Wwl Ooyton M 41 Mllml ._ -,,....,__..,.... O.W 17 OI ... •'*-•"f ,_.1uo11rl, Ult H ve re 0.. ~ 40 11 ,.......,.,. ........... Ill ~ Md °"'°" ... .. .....,.,..
,, '" p' todey ._, OIOeted ~ 11 • 1 .... °"'°"'
....... ~ Mf '*'-,.....,,.. : = ._ Yn ._.:.::;... .. i.e..:=::;.: ,.__ 47 .. =:-......
« 19 63 30 46 19
12 64
78 112 57 51
10 eo s2 eo
48 28
42 311 eo 41
12 41
87 41 .. 65 40 la ... 64 11 12 41 n
47 ~
t2 66 11 70 t2 41
81 IO 34 24 47 ... Cfl'"o ~ Nd rtMn 10 ,......., • la Oii__. Ofly --~_, ........... tl'l'!P-_______ ....... _____ ..._ ___ ,.
••• lttoctcof 11oar tfl• &r a .1111 ;;1......,, ....................... 1t•••••1t Amit• anf ............. u.
f'tNfl flood *""'"t: ,-;:r: ...... "' .. ....... , ......... , ftltjlp•lt••· wu""''•"· u ~.,., .. ,.,, MfOa ...... ............. '" :..:'J~'&::': ;:•:r _. • .. TFH&tll ... ,..., ......... _
~-----...... .., .. ,... ................ ... ._ ........ ..
•
~'" ~ Snow rrB
Stlowfislll/J Fluuie1(!ll
S1.1tlO<""Y ••
Onlehe 37 32
Orl•ndo ee &5
Phlladelpnla e1 44
Plloenlll 70 &2 Pin= 57 41
Por1 ...... 58 33
Potttand,Or• ee 42
PrOl/ldanca eo 39 =~ ee 5J
3t n
Aetlo .. 24
Alchmond 111 a2 SI Louil 57 41
Sl."-l•Tamc>e IS Ill
8al1 Lall• 411 2t San Antonio to 47
8tn OltgO le 66
San FrenoltoO 114 11
81 Ste Ment 44 " S..111• 93 43 ~ 71 11
4& 33 •po41-54 M
8yr-50 33 Tc>pllte 42 37
Tuoeon eo 41
TlllN 41 ..
WMll!nOton 11 •• WW\lla ,. ~
'
r
Victim of wind
Strong winds in Corona del Mar took the ir toll yesterday on this
large pine tree in front of 427 Poinsettia Ave.
~::2~:~:m~,~~~~~:ed
By KAREN KLEIN interest had flagged since
ot tile Delly f'tlot It.fl January, when some of their
The last in a long line of terms were renewed only until
standing citizens' committees in April 1, rather than for a full
Costa Mesa was dissolved by the year, whale council members
city council without public reviewed the committee.
discussion this week. Jerome Vandewalle, who has
The ·Housing Community served on the committee since its
Development (HCD) Comrruttee, mcepuon. said the committee was
formed in 1974 to oversee wortpwhile "only as long as the
distribution of federal housing co uncil was willing to pay
funds, was phased out by a attention'' to its rec om -
unanimous vote of the council at mendations.
Monday night's meeting. Vandewalle said members of
Mayor Donn Hall brought up _ the council and the planning
the HCD in his councilmanic commission had not regularly
remarks at the end of the attended meetings for some time.
meeting, after much of the Hall confirmed thac. Hertzog
audience had left, and a vote was had not attended HCD meetings,
taken with no objection from to his knowledge, in at least alx
council members. months. She was "bored with the
The issue was not scheduled on meetings because "there were no
the council agenda due to an problems or challenges" being
oversight. Hall said. rliscussed, he said. Information
In his remarks Monday, Hall needed about committee
said the HCD Committee meetings was obtained for the
meeungs were not well attended council through recorded
and at the last two monthly
minutes. Half added.
The council's decision reduces
the committee to an ad hoc group
which meets once annually -
the minimum level of citizen
participation allowable under
federal law, Vandewalle said.
Regulations governin·g citizen
'Participation in distribution of
federal funds have become less
s tringent under the Reagan
Ad.ministration.
''This makes it seem that they
were respond1ng to federal
requirements, n ot really
appreciating the need for our
group. It's a put-down to us,''
Vandewalle laid.
The HCD Committee has been
instrumental m the approval and
construction of several housing
projects. including the Casa Bella
senior citizens' development,
designed to meet the needs of
low and moderate-Income
citizens. said Allan Roeder,
as,,iatant city manager.
meetings the committee did not
have enc>U8h n)enlbe.rl present LO
establlah a quorum. WISHES GRANTED. • • Council mem ber Norma
Hertzog, th e c ouncil 's
representative to the committee,
said HCD did not have "the same
drive and goals that it had
originally."
Hall sajd loss of interest in the,
committee was due t o the
decrease of Housing and Urban
Development Agency funds
available to the city .
But Jean Forbath. chairwoman
of the committee, said members'
STORM.
From Page A 1
them drenched.
• •
"I was so scared I thought I
was going to fall o ff." s aid
Renete Huegel. 38, a vacationer
from Ontario. Canada.
"I wasn't too ecared but it sure
seemed like forever," commented
Carol Ba.mes of Brookville, Ohio.
Disneyland passed out free
Mickey Mouse sweatshirts to
people drenched in the rain and
dried wet clothing. Passengers on
the gondola ride al.90 were given
hot food by the am\13ement park.
The Skyway will be cloeed at
least t.h.rouah tomorrow.
Limited to eupply on hand.
Offer gOOd thru 4111/83
From Page A1
day when JIU was undergoing
chemotherapy treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
"It had just started to hit ua
that she was going to die.
Suddenly, there's this program
about helping childr en with
tennlnal il.lnem. It attracted her.
She wanted to know more,"
Davil laid.
When h1a wife died, Davi.a said
he carried out his wife's desire of
making a donation to Make a
Wish.
"But I wanted to give it to
them in person. I wanted to meet
them and see what was going
on." the young Newport Beach
builder said.
He fle~ to Phoenix, stayed
several days and later returned
th~ to attend a fund-raiaer.
Re became hooked.
The program offers a child one
final time to do .omething with
his parents. It could be a trip to
Disneyland, a hot-air balloon ride
or, as it was in Phoenix, a day
spent being a policeman.
Davis claims a reward of Make
a Wish Is not only allowing a
child a chance to have fun but
pennlt him to be with h1a pa.rents
when he's having fun.
"Just for the child to see his
parents smile is great," says
Davi.a.
Davia has clear memories of flYinl with his wife back to her
Pennsylvania hometown to eee
her parents. It was to be a last
visit.
"Even if you've accepted your
death, the pain comes ln seeing
the hurt in others_ The idea that
'this is the last time you 'U ever
see this person again' is tough.··
He says Make a Wish attempts
tD bring about a pleasant, happy
moment. A final get-together
that will be upbeat.
The Orange County ~hapter
that Davis has organized will
hold its first meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thunday. It will be held at the
Newport Sheraton. It is open tD
the public.
Information on the local
chapter can be obtained by
writing Make a Wish . 1825
Weatcliff Drive, Suite 221,
Newport Beach. or phoning
642-6601.
BEACH
CHAIRS
Our Most Popular Sand Chat
s9"
more thsn you expect In s hardware store
••••• HARDW•RE
EJ
fllSA.
W..edlft 1Ttfl 81 •I ll'VIM • ......,,, leeQt\ ~t· 1133 ........, W ... 8111 Mlguel Df. '1 &.n
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AMMIM ... t.n11 Ana ~ Ad at lmpertal ~. "'·'112
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NATION
Jet flameout blamed
on empty fuel tanks
MINNEAPOLIS /\ Republic.: Airlines jetliner
tempotarily loet power and dropped nearly 21,000 feet lut week
becawie wtna tank.a feedlna the e.ngJ.nes were empty, an 1tlrllnc:
offictal aaya. Tho enatnes of the OC·9 Super 80 jetliner were
res\atl.ed about 12,000 feet above Utah on Saturday n11ht when
the pllou awitched to a different fuel tank, accordlnl( to
Republic 1pokHman Redmond T_yler The wing tank1
appanmtly ran out of fuel In flight, Tyler said In a copyright
story in today's St. Paul Pioneer Prea. The fuel wnk# had not
been u1cd In their normal aequenct!, he added. The
McDonnell-Douglas jet, bound from Minneapolla-St. Paul to
San Diego via Los Angeles, made an emergency landing m Laa
Vegas.
Boy, 16, bitten by d eadl y viper
WASHINGTON -A youth who was bitten by a deadly
Gaboon viper s tolen from the National Zoo was reported
recovering today at a hospital, but may surfer permanent
damage. Doctors at Children's Hospital said ,Louis Morton, 16,
was taken off the critical list and was oonsidered in aerioua
condition. But his d~tors said yesterday that Morton probably
would suffer perman~arnage. The youth was carrying two
four-foot-long Gaboon vipers in a plastic bag when he was
bitten on the shoulder, authorities said. He had taken the bag
onto a transit bus near the wo late Monday night, rode about
three miles and then got off ihe bus m lhe downtown area,
slinging the bag over his shoulder. Soon thereafter. he returned
to the bus and told the driver he had ~n bitten by a snake. Zoo
officials said someone broke into the repule house and smashed
the glass on two display cases.
Adelman con! irmation predicted
WASHINGTON -Senate Ma)Onty Leader Howard H.
Baker Jr. is predicting arms control nominee Kenneth L.
Adelman will be confirmed m a ught vote, but a leading
opponent thinks he has e nough support to defeat the
nomination. "We have gotten reports that we may get up to 15
Republicans," Sen. PauJ Tsongas, D-Mass., said yesterday. "If
that's true, there is no need to filibuster."
STATE
Deukmejian to -decide Fain I ate
SACRAMENTO -Gov. George Deukmejian has ordered
the state parole board to keep Wilham Archie Fain Ill prison,
two days before a court-imposed deadline to grant Fain the
parole date he was denied because of public outcry. Fain, 37, has
spent nearly 16 years an prison for murdering a high school
student and raping three young women near the Stanislaus
County town of Oakdale in 1967 In an executive order to the
Board of Prison Terms, Deukmej1an said he would decide
whether Fam was s u itable for parole -an assertion of
authority never made before by a CaliCbrnia governor.
Buono d enied mistrial motion
LOS ANGELES A judge has derued a mouon for a
mistrial m the marathon Hillside S trangler trial of Angelo
Buono, accused of killing 10 young women whose nude bcxHes
were dumped on Los Angeles area hillsides in 1977-78.
However, Superior Court Judge Ronald George agreed
yesterday that prosecutors withheld mfonnation about the Las
Vegas arrest of a key witness a month before the man was
scheduled to testify. Buono . .\8, a Glendale auto upholsterer,
could face death m California's gas chamber if oonvicted, but his
adoptive oousm. confessed Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi,
has pleaded guilty to five of the murders m a plea bargain to
testify against Buono and avoid execuuon
2nd condor watched closely
SAN DIEGO -Zookeepers kept a 24-hour watch on the
second California condor hatched an captivity after the rare bird
pulled through a complicated delivery, while the first chick
appeared to be improving after briefly losing its appetite. The
new chick . given the lnd1an name of Tecuya, was "resting after
its ordeaJ" yesterday in a sterile plast.Jc 1S0lette, the type of
container used for premature human Infants, zoo spokesman
Jeff Jouett said. Zookeepers were concerned about Tecuya
because the new chick was not as strong as Si.squoc, hatched last
week
WORLD
China protests Hu Na's asylum
PEKING -China lodged a strong protest with the United
St.ates today, calling the Reagan administration's granting of
political asylum to Chinese tennis star Hu Na untenable legally
and "condemnable morally." Vice Foreign Minister Han Xu
handed the protest to U.S. Ambassador Arthur W. Hummel Jr.,
Qi Huaiyuan. director of the Foreign Ministry's information
depar tment, told reporters. The United States announced
Monday it was granting asylum to Miss Hu.
Franco-Soviet ties at low point
PARIS -France's expulsion of an estimated 47 auspecied
Soviet spies has plunged Franco-Soviet relations to their lowest
point since the French elected a leftist government two years
ago. The Soviet EmbaMy called yesterday's expulslona an
unjustified political act and said France would have to bear the
negative consequences. Neither country would say exactly how
many Sovieta left France aboard a special plane sent from
Moscow, but the French Interior Ministry said the expelled
officials had tried to steal military and technical secret.a.
Orange Co tl DAILY PILOT /Wednead•y, Aprll 0, 1883 ,\
President flays Dem budget plan
PJTTS8U ROH (AP)
Prctaldtint Rea1an toutod hl1
economic polklet todey In thla
econom ically d epreaaed 1ttiol
town, and c lalmod that the
Oernoorata' apundlni plan would
throw the: nutlon 6ack Into an
oven worte rt!Ctlllllon.
hli~"r lntorc~1t ratea, more
aovcrnmcnt 1pendln1i and a
recculon wonr than th~ unt•
we'ro ju.It C'mur6flna from.
Thol'aand• ot unemployc.·d
work.e,.. were m .. lnai to prot8t
Reagan'• pollclaa, which thl'y
blame for thf'lr pll1ht Oraamz.er.
uld they expet·tt•d ~.ooo
demon.etratCJn1.
Tumlng up the heat on the
propoHd Democratic budae t
a lternative approved by the
House, the preaJdent .. id:
"The American poopll' h ave·
1uffered Iona c:noutih bec:nUM• of
economic m[1tako1 of the paat,
and l'm not about to Jct them bl•
plun~ed Into thst Hmt' rneaa
again.'
In an area where jobleuneN
h1u nuurly doubled aln<:e
Reagan'• elK-lion In 1980, the
pre1idc·nt uld government ,
bu.lnese and unions should 11harto
tht• burden of ht•lplng dl.sJocated
workora find tlt!W jobs. "I've n ever seen a budget
proposal with a more flagrant
diaregard for I ta coruequencee -
and thoee oon.sequences would be
more unemployed Americana,
Reagan flew hert-to INpect a
JOb retraining progn•m Intended
to teach <.'Omputer skills to laid-
off workers and to addre111 a
c:onfe rencl' on unemployment
caused by tht-dtJCline In heavy
Industry.
"I believe we aa a notion owe
an obligation as well aa a helping
hand to th05C who pay the prke
of t'l'onom1c readjustment "
Shuttle crew
goes to work;
walk. slated
CAPE C ANAVERAL , Fla. (AP) -
Challenger's astronauts, awakened by a sultry love
song, plunged into a day of tests and experiments
today, including a dress rehearsal for tomorrow's
space walk. Specialists on the ground said they
expect to salvage the satellite ejected from the
shuttle early in the mission.
"Teach Me. Tiger," sung by the sexy-voiced
ApnJ Stevens, was the wakeup music beamed w
the orbiting ship by MiMion Control in Houston. /
Capsule communicator Mary Oeave asked if they i
were reading and got this reply: "Loud and clear." 1
The astronauts were also relieved that they
were not to blame for the problems enoountered by
the communications satellite.
The space travelers had asked several times 1f
anything they had done caused the rocket failure
that sent the 2-Vl-ton payload tumbling into the
wrong orbit after they ejected it from Challenger's
cargo bay Monday night.
MiMion Control, a fter analyzing the problem,
assured them last night they were not at fault.
"It was a rocket problem; it was dehrutely not
a crew problem, and you're being congratulated on
the job you did," capsule communicator Guy
Gardner radioed the orbiting ship.
"That's good news," re plied astronaut Story
Musgrave, who more than the others was
responsible for the checkout and deployment of the
Tracking and Data Relay Satellite.
Musgrave and his crewrnates. commander Paul
J Weitz, Karol J. Bobko and Donald H. Peterson.
also were pleased to learn that ground controllers
had regained control of TORS and successfully
commanded all of its systems into operalJon
Musgrove asked 1f the experts were opumisuc
about moving the payload out of its egg-shaped
orbit into a stationary outpost 22,300 nules high.
"They're looking a t ualng the on-board fuel to
boost it up to geosynchronous orbit," Gardner said
"It looks like they'll be able to do it and that we'll
have a good TORS for future shuttle mlSSlons."
TORS ts the largest. most complex and moot
expensive communications satellite ever built, but
to be e ffecuve it must be in an orbit matching the
spin of F.arth It i.s designed to serve as a space
switchboard between the Earth and as many as 26
satellites. including the shuttle fleet.
Motel fights
'whiplash'
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. (AP) -Days Inns
of America lnc. plans to ask a judge to review a
JUry verdict awarding $25,000 to a man who
clauned he permanently injured hlS neck after
walking in on a "sk1mp1ly clad" woman in a
motel room.
James L. Hardy Jr .. 56. of Nederland, Texas
sought $150,000 in damages from the Atlant.a-
based motel chain, saying the company's East
Ridge property was negligent for giving him the
key to the wrong room and exposing him to the
nightgown-clad woman ln 1981.
Days Inns denied any negligence. A jury
deliberated about two hours before announcing
the verdict Tuesday.
FIRST
SHUm.E
SPACEWALK
EMU (r.-,. tr ............ ,
uil for first sh~tl ~pa c<'wa lk.
Panel hacks
worship • issue
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Senate's
Judiciary Committee has voted to close a loophole
that is preventing the prosecution of terrorists who
threaten worshipers or destroy places of worship
The 7-0 vote yesterday sent SB780 by state
Sen. Ed Royce. R-Anaheim, to the Committee on
Finance.
Royce said the bill evolved from a case in
whJch an avowed Nazi threatened destruction of
Perunsula Temple Beth El m San Mateo County if
its membe rs went ahead with Hanukkah
ceremonies. He wd the man who made the threat
was apprehended but could not be prosecuted
because of a 1981 decision of the st.ate Supreme
Court.
ln that optruon. Chief Just.Jee Rose Bird wrote
that Lhe state prohibition ag&Jnst issuing threats "to
achieve social or polillcal goals" was constitutionally
vague.
Royce's bill would make 1t a felony, punishable
by 16 months, two or three years in prison, to
threaten the safety of a place of worship or the
safety of a per9C>n attending services there.
Reagan 11.1id halt of currc11t
untimploy~nt, now rUl\lllna at 11
rate of 10 3 percc:nt. la a n.•ult of
thC' rtl«Wlon "The bt-.t cur~ for
thl• I• to get the economy
moving. and we're dolni just
that,'' he 110ld.
Reaaa11 cited the Januory
aurge i n l e d ing economlt
lndkalon, th!!' sharp drop 1r1
Interest rates and lnllatlon 1lnt(·
he took o ffll'C, 1.1nd tht>
improvement In houitlng starts
and permits, now lit their hlght!tft
level since late 1979 He 1ald
unemployment 1a "11Ull painfuUy
high" but ls de<'reaamg.
-Reagan
defends
defense
buildup
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Reagan said today he
will resist any congressional
m ove to curb his plans for a
military buildup, leaders of the
Senate Budget Committee srud
Sens Peter Domenici, R-N .M ,
chairman of the panel, and
Lawton Chiles of Florida, its
rankJng Democrat, said Reagan
to ld them in a White House
meeting that he remain s
adamantly opposed to any cuts in
hrs proposed $245.3 b11l1 on
defense spending blueprint for
next year -._
Domeruc1 and Chiles met with
Reagan just before the committee
convened for the first of several
days of debate and votes on
federal spending priorities for
fiscal 1984. which begins Oct. 1
Reagan's proposal would
increase defense spending by Ill
r p11rcent beyond inflation . That
has prompted calls by influenlJal
congressional Republicans for a
slower military buildup. Leading
Democrats say the defense
s pe nding increase should be·
limited to 5 percent after
inflation.
"He firmly believes that we
went throu~h two decades of
miht.ary reductions and that the
world is not a very safe pla~ tu
live," Dome nic1 told reporters
aft.er the meeting with ReaRan
Refund due
after charity
walk sliced
JACKSONVILLE. Fla . (AP>
Refunds will be offered to
anyone who pledge d
contributions to a March of
Dimes "superwalk" withou t
knowing that sponsors had cut
the length of the route. offu:iaJs
say.
Organizers decided an
February to shorten the Mart:h
19 walk from 30 kilometers (1 8
miles) to 18.5 kilometers ( 11
miles) because police were
concerned about the safety o{
.youngsters after dark.
H owever, they did nut
announce th e new r oute
"because it meant we would lose
at least a third or the pledges,"
said Jo Campbell, the chapter's
e-xecutive director. More than
$110,000 was pledged.
Hiker rescued
from Canyon
A 49-year-old Anaheim man,
found yesterday in the Grand
Canyon where he had wandered
for five days, has been released
from an Arizona hospital after
treatment for exposure.
Gem
Talk
~ ~ r~, \ I'm proud of
,,. where he bought
Donald Johnson lost during an
outing o n Good Friday. was
found incoherent, kneeling and
unable to stand. R escu ers
followed a trail of dlscard ed
clothes to the man.
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Cut1fi~ G*molo11i1t, AGS
THE ENGAGEMENT RING
How Much Should You Spend?
my diamond !
We're
Listening •••
What do you like about the Oally Pilot7 What don't you like~
Call the number at left a nd your meaaage will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
Tile engagement 11ng 1s one of the
world's oldest e11prewons of love. The
rrod1hon wos developed by the onc1en1
Egyp11ons. But 11 11 only wtlhtn the poll
century 11'to1 diamonds l'to"e become
ovo1loble 10 lhtt e111enl tho• the ordlnory
citizen con ofl0rd 10 gi"e o diomond
engogemenl rtng Tho d1omond, In foci,
llOs become our culture's mo11 widely
occepted symbol of love. How much
thould one spend on o diamond
engogemenl r1ngi A good rule of
rhumb 11 lllOI you ah<wld poy 01 i.o11 the
equlvolent of one or two months tolory.
After all, you Ote giving o llfehm• gift
to 1ti. most ~tol J*son In your life.
In moklng such on lmf)OftOllt J>UfChoie,
rreot It with rhe procti<:ol view !hot yov
would toke In buying o hollitl, o car, Of
o fine stereo tystem. Do some
reseorc:tt. 8e coreful tO deol wilh on
esrobl1an.d lowelef' recognized In yout
eor11111unlty Don't wait unlll the loil
mlnure Vlsll your l•weler, os~ for
odvlce1 then moke up your 1'111nd. A
diamond Is o rore ond loating tf'llnQ.
Mole o thote• t~ wdl pltO•• you ond
YOAX loved one for !tie
642·6086
-=.:: II Otta •Ind
......,,.,._ II '°" oo ,... """ ,_ ~.,. •JO'"'_...,.,,,,.. ..,. yovt eo11r •II •• .....,
letl#Oly el\O .._,. ,, , .. "° llOI lk .... .,_ °'!!"I..,,.,,. ---· Ml •I'll Olld '°"' ~ .. ...........
Cll rt Un
T1t1,i.11e1 .... Or--~ -...., ..,,_
~==-... -................. . ..,
,.
I
The same 24·hour answerin& service may bf' used lo record let
ten to t he editor on any topic. Mailbox contr1butor1 mutt lnclu~
their name and telephone number for verlflcatlon No clrculaUon , . .,tis. please
Tt'll us what ·s on your mind
ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat
Ctwtftecl ........... n"'°""7I Al ..._, lllp9'tmente '°4111
MMf OPPICa =~.:.·:=~CA9*t
~ 1~ °'""" c.... "---e.,... "° n1•• •t•• .. •, ll!uttrauone, et1101lo1 111111t• " ......... 11_,,.,., .. ,........._ ...... .,.,.,,......°'~-
VOL Tt, NO. II
Will she be proud or tmbarrused when frltnd.t ask
whore you bouahl her diamond ? And, will you be
embarr&Med •bout the price you paid for the quality
received? Today, there arc no "baraainf' in diamond~.
You save no more-often l~c-when you try to cul
comers. Your knowled,eablc American Gem Society
member ~weler-onc with a local reputation to aafc-
auant and ~andarcJ.s 10 maintain-II your wbat cboKc.
Mo"°var, ah• wlll be proud lo know her diamond
came from us. Don't disappoint Mr. @
... _. --'°' 100C"I ~ J. C.JJumpfu."16 /j.Wfl/.r6
MEMBER AMElllllOAH OEM eooim @ 1809 NEWPORT 9l\ID., 008TA M£8A ~ llHC! 1'41
&tnkAmerlc:effJ-Maatet Chafte PHONB ~,
A.j Orange Ooa1t DAIL. V PILOT !Wednesday. Aprll e. 1883
COUNTY DIGEST
OCTD wants views
on proposed changes
Oranae County Transit D\ltrkt
bua service may underso aome
major changes later thll year and
early in 1984, and OCTD riders ar~
bei~ asked for their opinions of
the prosxieed chal'\ges.
A public wor kshop to discuss the
changes will take place April 13,
from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., at the
Garden Grove Community Center
at 11300 Stanford.
OCTD officials, aayll'\g they muat
con c entrate 11ervtce where
ridership will be highest, have
proposed changes that could acrect
service to many shopping malls.
employment centers in Los Angelee
County. local Industrial parks,
schools and some less densely
populated areas.
The hearing is the first of two to
discuss proposed September
changes. Another wiU take place in
June.
ONE BUS ROUTE THAT WILL
{'Onunue to operate thtS year is the
popul ar "Anaheim Stadi um
Express" from south county to all
California Angels' home games.
The route starts at the Mission
Vit'jo Mall o n Mall Wgy lolnd
Marauerlw Parkway a~ minutes
before game timt' It alao at.ops at
the Laguna Hills Mall Plilrk ·And-
Rlde opposlw the Scars store. It
arrives at the stadium 30 mlnut.e.
before the first pitch and departa
15 minuws after the final out.
Exact change for the $1.50 adult
fare and 75-cent chUdren's fare I.a
required. No bills or silver dollars
are accepted
JAMES BYHAM. A 20-YE AR
veteran of the Orange County
Mar shal's Office, has been
appointed Marshal of Oran ge
County by the Judg~· Personnel
Committee.
The Marshal's Offl<.'t' currently
serves municip£il courts across the
1:.>:.mty, with marshals acting as
bailiffs and guards They may soon
take over similar duties in Orange
County Superior Court, replacing
county sher1fC's deputies.
Byham. 43, IS a graduate of Cal
State FuJll'rton and IS a Diamond
Bar resident He IS marned and has
four chtldren. He JOtned the
Marshal's staff as a deputy in 1963.
Irvine councilinan
_due Reagan briefing
Irvine City Councilman Davtd Sills
goes to the White House tomorrow.
Sills is one of 150 locaJ and state
officials from throughout the country
invited to the latest briefing organized
by the Reagan Administra tion to
present Its point of view on key issues.
He received an invitation eight days
ago and promptly made plans to
attend. It will be Sills' first visit to the
White House as a public official and
more meaningful. he said, than his
other trip when as a child he toured
the buTidmg during the T r uman
presidency
President Reagan is expected to
meet briefly with the guests. A White
House s p okeswom an said the
president stages such gatherings
periodically to discuss issues or mutual
interest. "It's som ething he does a
lot," she said.
Sills said he wasn't sure why he
was selected He is the only lrvmc
off1c1al invited and he said yesterday
he didn't know of any other officials
who'd been contacted by the White
House.
A Republican, Sills lost last June in
a spirited primary race for nomination
to the 69th state Assembly seat. Nolan
Frizz.etle beat him in the primary
election and eventually won the post
in November
Sills took some hea\ during the
election from estabhshed Republicans
who chastised him for challenging
Fi;izzelle, who had been elected to the
Assembly only two years before in a
costly race.
However. the White House
invitation suggests that Sills is in
Reagan's good graces. The White
House spokeswoman said today that
both Republicans and Democrats are
invited but offered no other clues to
the selecuon process
San Diego man tried again
in Disneyland murder case
A 30-year-old San Diego man has
gone on trial a second time in
Disneyland's first and only murder
case.
Jury selection began in Santa Ana
yesterday in the retrial of James
O'Driscoll, who faces a maximum
second-degree murder conviction. The
jur y i n t he first trial voted
unanimously that O'Driscoll was not
guilty of first-degree murder. but
jurors deadlocked 11 to 1 in favor of a
second-degree conviction.
O'Driacoll is charged with fatally
stabbing 18-year-old Mel Christian
Yorba of Riverside during a pnvate
party at the amusement park March
7. 1981.
Defense attorney Alan Obon has
said the stabbing was accidental.
The incident resulted from a
disagreement between O'Driscoll and
Yorba, sparked by Yorba's alleged
overtures to O'Driscoll's girlfriend,
and O'Driscoll testified in the first
tnaJ that he drew a knife he always
carried with htm.
Yorba lunged at tum and fell on the
open blade, he testified. Deputy
District Attorney Pat Geary contends
O'Driscoll pulled the knife with the
intent to kill Yorba.
However, a second-degree murder
conviction does not require evidence
of premeditation as a first-degree
conviction does. Second-degree
murder carries a 15 years to life
pnson sentence, while a first-degree
conviction carries a penalty of 25
years to life.
1~'60<z;j( ~
851-8350 ..
497-4262
DRAPERY CONNECTION
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OUR MILL CONNECTIONS. DECORATING EXPERTISE &
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QUARAHftB> -LOWHT HTWATm
In search of man's beginnings
O<>n1i1ld Joh1uuon, ontt "' thtt world'•
luadin" an t hropolo1Jlat•. will speak
Tua.day, April 12. et UC lrvlne on hla
dla'Ovt-ry uf "Lucy," • thn.~·mlUlon·yl'&r·
uld IJkelt'ton that hu bt-com~ • nf!'w link In
human t'VoluUonary theories.
HI• apt-t'C·h begins at 8 p m In UC1'1 J.'lnc
Aria Vlllagt! Theater.
Johan11on W69 co.director of a 1974
l!xpt"dltlon In the Afar region of Ethlorla
when ht' uncovered 40 percent o a
foeaillwd skeleton of a femalf' who atood
less than four-feet tall. lt was the oldest
partial skeleton ever found and led to
revl1ion11 of theories on evolution of
humans.
Johan.son aa1d the skeleton repreRnt.ed a
then-unknown species of hominid which
he termt.>d "Australopithecus afarenaa." It
was named Lucy aft.er the Beatles aong
popular among workers at the d11COvery ~le I
Johanson has theorized that Lucy's
species is the ancestor of both the genua
Homu, which eventu•lly led to Homo
aaplena. and tho fen""' Auatraloplthecua,
which becamf' t-xtfnct. Both ro-exlak'd for
mllllona of yeara until the Homo line aurvlv~ dl.l to It.I LncN»Sed brain capacity
and meat.eating practice.
JohaNOn'a speech la tilled "Lucy and
the Evolution Revolution," Ticket.a are "4
general admwlon, •3 for senior cltlzena
and atudenta and •2 for UCI studenta.
They are avalwble at the UCI Associated
Studenta Box Office at the University
Cent.er, 833·5MY.
The speech la sponsored by the Oral'\ge
County Natural History Foundation in
a11Soclatlon with the L .S .B. Leakey
Foundalion and UCI'a Campus Lectures
The foundation is offering spec1al patron
pack.ages which include membership in the
group and attendance at a reception for
Johanson. More in formation on the
package can be obtained by calling the
foundation at 545-8967 -Donald Johanson and "Lucy."
Warrant seeks dad, miSsing girl
By The Associa ted Preas
Arrest warrants for a man accused of
molesting two little girls have been
sworn out after the man allegedly
disappeared with has 2-year-old
daughter while he was free on bail.
Kevin Michael Reilly, 21, failed to
llppear for his trial Monday in Santa
Ana, and daughter Melissa disappeared
last week w hen Reilly visited his
estranged wife, authorities said. / •
"I'm very worried about my baby,"
Nancy Reilly said after court, although
she said Reilly loves his daughter, "very
much. and I know he just feels that he's
getting cheated out o( time with her.
"It's no t like she was taken by a
stranger so she's probably not afraid. I
;ust want her back," Reilly said.
But she said it has fmally hit her that
he was "not going to bring her back on
his own"
"I'm not sleeping or eating too well
these days," she said. •
During Reilly's visit last week in
Santa Ana, Nancy, 21, said she went
inside her house to write down his new
address and came out to find both father
and daught.er gone.
Superior Court Judge Luis Cardenas
issued a $I -million bench warrant for
Reilly's arrest on grounds .he failed to
appear in court, and Municipal Judge
Robert Thomas 4;sued a $500,000 felony
warrant for Reilly's arrest on charges of
child stealing. __ -------
Defense attorney Ronald Brower said
he was "real surprised" Really failed to
appear m c.-ourt.
"Kevin k ept all his office
appointments. When we last dulcussed
his case, we both felt very positive about
his defense. He asked me If the trial
would go on Monday and I told him he
should be ready," Brower said.
Reilly was free on $25,000 bail March
29 when he and the child were la.st seen.
Reilly was to have gone to trial on
charges he molested girls ages 6 and 7 in
his neighborhood last year. He was
arrested in Tustin last October, said
Tustin police Detective James Hein.
Nancy Reilly said she and her husband
separated aft.er his arrest.
Good News About
Emergency Room Care at
Hun~on Intercommunity Hosettil, .
s ~· \ ___ ,
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Our basic Einergency_ Room
cluJ.Tge was $37. Now it's $15.*
Besides costs, though. there are
other considerations you should be
aware of -such as the type of care
you receive at Huntington Inter-
community Hospital in an emergency.
Our goal is to make sure that a
quaHfied medical person sees you
to evaluate your emergency within
sixty seconds of your arrival. The
paperwork can wait.
We also believe in personalized
care ... and it doesn't always end the
moment you leave. Many times we'll
call a week or so later-just to make
sure everything's going well.
We believe your private physician
is prima.ry to your health, so when
possible, call your family doctor
A message in the pubUc UW!ratjrom
first. Howeve r. if your doctor is
unavailable or unable to see you,
remember we're capable of handling
every kind of emergency: and that we're
open 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, backed by the full staff, facilities
and technology of a modern acute care
hospital.
We hope you don't have an emer-
gency. But if you do. remember that
Huntington Intercommunity Hospital is
ready to pr:..ovide the personalized care
you '11 appreciate -while trying to keep
the costs down.
-SIJIVect to change June 30 , 1983. For Sentor
Cittsens, the basic Emergency Roomfee will be
waived dwiny thl.s same period..
Huntington
lntercommunity
Hospital
17n2·9EACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH. CA 92947-(714) 842·1473
Prouldlng rt.. Or'anQe Q>Q.lf areCl wtch qUaUW lw!aUh care MrVWn R\ce J961
' •
"ftt ...,.,.. Pnt• 1
8UJlLINGTON, Vt. -.......... Su•ere1 ~11 IOdalllt mayor, bepn hll llC'OnG tira' Taj ca1Un1 tor common people to
lhalltnc-U.. rCch and powerful by t.akina ~"'~t.
'l'Tbe time ill now that ~~· ~ and all people of lnde nt
iD&nid s::r-eptnt ml.let tt8nd up, • their • diinands clNr and learn hoW to fiaht for what
U.y er. entitled to,11 &nct.n told the 200
people ptheNd. at hit lnau8W'a1 th1a week.
Kil vktory two yean llO wu conaldered
1 Ouke by eome but he ptOved them wrong
U\19 ~ by wtnnlftl ~2 ~t o1 the vote in a three-way nace.
U the wwkinl ~ple and poor do not ~ up and fllht' for a bet1er quality of
Ufa. he said, "the f\lture of UU. country is
bleak.''
Frost loses h'ost spot
LONDON -Davtll Proet, co-founder of
Britain's newest breakfast-time television
ahOw, ''TV-AM," hu lost h1a job as hosL Frost. 43, who haa a flnanclal stake in
"TV-A.M, •• will become a feature reporter on
------th e a udlen ce-atarved
~-"'------
mom1nf show on Britain's
commercial rrv network.
Jou._. Altkm. who
too k over as .. TV-AM"
ac~ chlef executive in a
boarcfroom 1'hakeup last
week , announced that
Frost'• transfer from the
aru\Qunc:er'a couch was one ot !, aerle9 of changes that
wlll 1.ake the prosram "out
to \he i"US roota."
. ORLANDO, ru. -lt'• been Or\ly two
weekl .a-he cr..-d the Atlantic alOM In a
boat ~arcely bt11•r than a bathtub, but
computer technician W•JH Dlckl•aoa MY'
hO'I fMd)'. fClf anotMr IOlo .ea-P· · ·
Looldna 1aunt and walklnf wlth a cane.
Dlck1Nc>n, ll of Satellite S.Ch, arriwd at
Orlando Int.e~tJonal Airport from London
with h1a mother Pew, and oa1led the haPf.Y
endlna qf h.la 142-dly voy.,. ,.precMl&lned. •
OlckinlOI\ Ill.kl he mnain. in cornpedtion
with Briton Tom McClelli for the w-..eut
AtlanUc ~ tn the amallett boat.
Chicago likes 1"asbinston
CHICAGO -A poll taken two weekl
before next Tu.day'• mayoral election aaya :u percent o• the respondent• favored
Democratk nominee Baroid WaPlllrton. 37
percent favored Republican ch allenger
Berur• Ep&o•, and 12 percent were un-
dedded.
But the Gallup Or anizatlon, whlcb
conducted the poll for the Sun·Tlmes
and NBC -o wn ed
WMAQ·TV, warned that a
14-polnt apread in the
increaa1n&1Y bitter oontelt
may not be u 10lld u It
appeared. Many of the
undecided botera we~e white, the pOllsten noted.
and race "confound•
traditional demoaraphfc
anal)'JUI."
The marafn of error in Wa1hin ton
the poll la plua or mlnua 4 percent, the
ne~per aald.
Sunset
plan OK
sought
The it.ate Coast.al CommiMlon
will be asked to give ti. aiamp of
endorsement to a local coa1tal
zoning plan for the SuNCt Beach
area, approved lalt week by
Orange County 1upervlaors.
The Board o f Supervlson
voted unanlmoualy a week aso
today to approve the plan
for the 4r>O-home Sunset Beach
community, situated on the ocean
side of Huntlnaton Harbour In
unincorporated Orange County.
The local coaat.al plan, required
by the Coastal Commlsslon of all
communities located in the
coastal s trip, governs new
construc tion, re modeling and
wrung
IC the plan as approved by the
Corultal Commission, c.'Ommunily
residents no longer wall be
reriuired to submit plans to
commissi o n scrutiny f or
construc tion approvals. The.y.
could 1.rim as much as four to sax
m onths from the approval
process, according to county
planning officials.
The Coastal Comm1ss1on is
expected t o review the plan
within the next three months.
Laguna physician
due county ~onor
Al
Or. Wllllam Wickett of Laguna Beach will be honored
April 17 with the Western Youth Services community service
award for his work with that organization at the group's 10th
anniversary celebration.
The fund-ralslng dinner and musical revue will be held at
8 p.m. a t Baxter's Street, 4647 MacArthur Blvd .. Newport
Beach.
Wickett, 64 , was a pioneer planner of Western Youth
Services, a private, non-profit outpa ue nt chnac which haa
served North Orange County for the past 10 years
The event 1s open to the public at a $25 donation. Call
871-1770 for reservations
• "The Economics of the Arms Ract'" wall be the topic of
a free lecture at 7:30 p m. April 19 at St Mark Presbytenan
Church an Newport Beach
Dr. Thomas D. English, director of research and
development for Damt:s and Moore, wall be the featured
speaker. The event is sponsored by STAND, an affiliate of the
Alliance for Survival
• The new "fill an the blanks" wall as the subject of a
two-hour seminar April 21 at the Newporter in Newport
Beach .
Dan Santucci, an Orange County estate lawyer, will cover
the new statutory will and describe how people can and can't
pass on es tat.es.
The lecture is sponsored by the American Cancer Society.
Admission to the 6:30 p .m . seminar is free. For more
infonnation, call 752-ll60~ '
Valley woman
attacked in
her driveway • • "Conversational Skills," a two-part lecture series, will
be presented by Coastline College from 7 to 10 p.m. Th~ys,
beginning tomorrow at the Robinwood Learning Cent.er, 5172
McFadden Ave., Huntington Beach. Jurors .weigh molesting· case
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Of !tie Delly "°' ltaft
An Orange County Superior
Co u rt jury continued ats
deliberations I.Oday in the se<:ond
c hild molestation trial of
Huntington Beach resident
Michael McDonald.
Jur ors began their
consideration of McDonald's Cate
yesterday after Prosecutor Carl
Armbrust led them through a
detailed listing of the allegations
against the former Long Beach
police officer.
McDonald's attorney, Gary
Bohlson, argued in his closing
statement that there was too
much drcwnstantial evidence to
conVtct his client.
McDonald is facing 15 counts
of lewd and lascivious acts with a
child under 14 and a single
misdemeanor count of child
annoyance. His first trial an
September, which did n ot
include some of the current
charges, ended in a mistrial when
the jury deadlocked.
Santa Ana councilmen lose
Two inc:wnbents were turned
out of office in Sant.a Ana City
Council elections yesterday.
Al Serrato was def~ted by P.
Lee Johnson in Ward 4 and Dan
Young defeated J . Ogden Markel
an Ward 6.
Bob Luxembourger ran
unopposed in Ward 2. Election
officials reported 10. 7 pereent of
the city's registered voters cast
ballots.
A r m b r u s t , r e p e a t e d Ly
hammering at a defense
contention that young witnesses
against McDonald were lying,
detailed testimony against
McDonald and asked jurors if
they really believe the st.ories
could have been made up.
The wil.nesses; all girls now 9
to 12 years old, claimed that
McDonald foncUed them, pressed
them against his nude body,
showed them pornographic films,
placed their handl on his body
and asked them to remove \heir
clothes in numerous encounters
over more than a year.
T hey s aid they went to
McDonald's Cape Cottage Lane
home to play plnball, and told no
one of the sexual encounters for
a long tJme because they were
afraid they'd gel into trouble.
A Fountain Valley woman was
mugged late last night an the
driveway of her home in the
17000 block of Santa Rosa Circle.
Police said the woman was
grabbed from behind and st.ruck
several times in the neck and
-shou lders by a b1ack·clad
intruder.
She told officers she was
attacked when she arrived home
and was unloadina her car.
About $48 in cash was taken
from her wallet. The suspect fled
in an "old beat-up" Chevrolet
van with a KMET bumpe r
sticker, police said.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC. ........ , .. __ .,..,,.
1922 HAllOll llVO.
COSTA MfSA -Hl-11'6
Lecturer Kent Nethery wall disc uss how to start a
m nversation and how to encourage others to talk
Fee for the series is $15 More mformat10n as available by
calling the Coastline Community Services office, 963-0811, ext.
256.
• Mary Housel has been appointed children's librarian for
the Fountain Valley Branch of the Orange County Public
Library. She will be resporuuble for programs, storytime
sessions and information help for children
Prior to this appointment, Housel worked for the Cal
Stale Long Beach Library tn the te<'hnical services
department.
LITTLE JOHN'S ANTIQUE ARMS, INC.
ANNOUNCES AN IMPORTANT
I I ON
"I wish the opportunity to
open an IRA Account had
been available to me 20 years
ago to ensure a comfortable
retirement for my wife and
myself."
OF FINE CUSTOM DESIGNED
AND ESTATE JEWELRY.
"Why not take advantage of
the opportunity I didn't have
and open an IRA at
NEWPORT BALBOA
SA VIN GS -make your
future work for you. 0
Interest Fixed~t 10.6% For 18 MONTHS .
Invest in your IRA plan by APRIL 15TH to guarantee your
1982 Tax Year Deduction Benefit -And, deposit Into your
1983 IRA plan to earn the same high tax-deferred Interest for
the entire year. Accounts are Insured by the FSLIC.
ihNEWPoRT
BALBOA
Savings
OPEN: MONDAY• THUASOAY t AM TO 5 PM
l'M>A~ t A~ TO 8 PM
SATURDAY t AM TO 1 PM
~ WDTCUl'l'·PLAZA, 17th and IAVINI AVENUE
~· NEWPORT BEACH• 714/645·8505
~ OOllOllA DSL MAR, 3021 E. COAST HIGHWAY 11""" CORONA DEL MAA • 7141875-8080
' I
SUN AY APR l 10
FEATURING AN ART DECO PLATINUM
PIN WITH AN EMERALD-CUT 1.10 CAF1AT
CENTER DIAMOND SURROUNDED BY 5
CARATS OF DIAMONDS.
ALSO FEATURED WILL BE LARGE
SOLITAIRE DIAMONDS, EMERALDS,
RUBIES, OPALS, BLUE TOPAZ, RINGS,
COLLECTIBLE ANTIQUE JEWELRY,
WATCHES , NECKLACES, BRACELETS,
PENDANTS, CHARMS, FANCY CHAINS,
GOLD COINS, GIFT AND DECORATOR
ITEMS, VALUED FROM s5 TO '25,000 .
APPROXIMATELY 250 ITEMS IN THIS
SALE. CATALOGS AVAILABLE AT THE
DOOR. NO MINIMUM, NO RESERVE AND
NO BUYER'S PREMIUM.
TO BE HE~D AT
THE NEWPORTER INN
(PATIO ROOM)
1107 JAMBOBEE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
. PREVIEW: 11 A.M. TO 1 P .M.
AUCTION BEGINS AT 1 P.M., 4/10/83
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL:
LrrTLE JOHN'S ANTIQUI! ARMS, INC.
714 172-4121
I
\
F
At Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Wednetdl , Aprll e, 1983
~ f'lll#Jlt-:
, r', • J • i.,' ...__ ...... -L... t• ,.t I i -~ "'~
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Hospital
group
to f ete
leaders
"Telecommunications
-Now and in the
Future" will be the
subject or a talk given by
Jo Caines, assistant
d irector of community
a ff airs at KOCE ,
Channel 50, at the
annual Hoag Hospital
Auxiliary Luncheon
tomo r row at the
Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel.
According to Francine
Arena, president of the
auxiliary, "this is the
first time we will be
hono r ing our past
presidents at the annual
luncheon."
Past presidents
attending will be Frances
Sm i th (196 0-1961).
A melia Lockney
(1961-1964), Sally Jones
(1966-1968), Bev
Langston (1968-1970),
Alex Shaffer
(1974 -1976). Edythe
Bulloch ( 1976-1978), and
Jacquie Mille r
(1978-1982).
Expo fair
slated
at college
Orange Coast College
will conduct its seventh
annual exposition fair.
"Coast Week," April
18-22 on the campus.
Coast Week, sponsored
b y OCC's Associated
Students, is designed to
focus on t he college's
clubs, classes and other
organizations. Booths
and displays will be set
u p in the OCC Quad,
2701 Fairview Road,
C.OSta Mesa.
The fair will run daily
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Admission is free and the
public is invited.
Highlight of the week
will be a two-hour
lectu re by Marilyn
F erguson, author of
"T h e A~uarian
Conspiracy.' Ferguson
will speak Apnl 21 from
noon to 2 p.m. in Fine
Arts Hall 119. H e r
lectu re is titled, ''Our
Past is Not Our
Potential."
"Earth Day" is
planned April 22.
Births
WWITaftN •DtCAL
Cl:NTU
Mercft I
Mt eind M,_ Gene Devi•, IMne.
t>Oy Mlwchl
Mr. and Mre Kennelh Palmer eo. ........ t>Oy M<. eind Mrw St-Pelrllle. Irvine,
t>Oy Marc:fl 7
Mr and Mre Mlcheet O'Meere
IMne, t>0y
Mr. and Mr:-T~ 1lm11t1, lrvlne.
l>Oy
lllltlrctl , ' Mr. eind Mrw ~ o.lgedo,
Wtafmfnll.,, t>Oy
M t. a nd Mr• Guy M••••.
Weattnlnltar, girl lilaf0ft 21
Mr. 1111<1 Mrw. Jerry Kelley. Coet•
~::1 Mrt. Latry Taylor. Fountain YMey. Day ...-.n
Mr. and Mre. Jerrlld Axelrod, t..aoi-Nlgual, gift
Mr. and "Mre. Chuck Walker.
Hwillng1on a.en. l>Oy --D Mf. Ind M.-. • ....,_ S-. lfVIM, r:. Ind MB. l'tlUnO Duo ~.
Hllntlngton 9Mctl. boy
Mardi• .. ,. and Mre. Jat1 Smith, Coate
IAVI MONIY ON YOURINIUIANCI
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WT~ .. ,ow .............. ............. c.. 611-7740
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MUL Tl-POSITION ·
CASUAL LOUIGER
99
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9.99
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CHEEZ·IT
SNACK CRACKERS
89~PEI
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16-0Z. While 1toc~1 1011 l1m11 6
Feotures duroble
PVC stro ps on
weother resisto nt
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FOLDING
1
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MYLAITA
LIQUID ANTACID
1~~
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CAIDVBARS
HERSHEY'S PACIC OF 10
199
3.00
VALUE
Your choice of Milk Chocolate
M ilk Chocolote with Almor>d• Kit
Kot. Whotchomocall11, or Ree•e 1
SNOW'S MINCED 01 CHO,,ED DOLE SLICED 01 CHUNK CLAMS PllEAPPLE
&9 1!.. 39'!. .. 'llCI NICI
6'h·OZ. White do<h lo.t l1mll 6. 1-0I. While tlodu Iott, llmlt 6.
or car
8-traclc
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CASSETTE ADAPTOR
99 • ·ror-•f CAITRIDGI
• HOU•lS NO
INSTAUATION
• rLAYS IN STlllO
• rLAY /STOr SWITCH
MODH
llSCA-10
LONG-HANDLED
• IND·Of·TAPI INDIUTOI LIGHT
• lOCllNG FAST
fOIWAID COHTIOl
GARDEI TOOLS
99 Your choice of Hoe,
Bow Roke or Round
Point Shovel 5ove1
CUlTIYATOI OI 411 IEG. SOUAH SHOY£l
S.99 lfG '·"
REGAL MOUNTAIN
TABLE WllES
49
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SALE STARTS WED.
-100-PAGE DELUXE
PHOTO ALBUM
99
REG .
8 .99
UASELllE
INTENSIVE CARE LOTION 199 ™·--JS<elfloMI
IEG.
2.94
1 S ·OZ. Regulor o• Herbol
MISS
CLAIROL
CREME FORMULA HAIRCOLOR
1~P
Selection of \hode•
Vinyl covered b1nde•
with gold1one de\1gn
hold\ 50 mognet1<
,heeh lor photo\
of oll \11e\
JHIRMACK
SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER
1~~
a.oz. E f A O• Geto~e
9 OZ . Choice of formvfo>
IUITONI MUT o• CHHst MINESnONl 01 TOMATO RAVIOLI SOUPS t\,£u l i e 5 •c. SUHI SUPll PllCI PllCI
lS·Ol. Whtie ttocltt lo&t lllflh 6 10·01. While tlodu Iott limit 6
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A cure for hiccups?
By n. A11oel1ted Pre11
CHIC AGO -A Maaaachu.etta
doctor •ya he hu found a aure-fl.re
cunt tor hiccupe that can "eaaJly be
performed at home" with only one
piece of equipment -a cotton awab. T
During the put lr!ears, l&ld Dr. Steven Goldamith, he hu 1top h.lccu ps by ma.ssa ing
the mouth'• palate wit a cotton swab for a~ut
a minute at ltl center polnt, ju5t beyond the spot
where the 10ft and hard palates meet on the roof
of the mouth.
"It involves no 1pecla.J medical equipment
and can e asily be per formed at home by a
layperaon who 11 trying to help a friend or
relative suffe ring from h iccups," Goldsmith
wrote ln a letter published ln the Journal of the
American Medical Aaoclation.
"Without exception , the hiccups have
1topped," he said.
Contact warning 'phony'
NEW YORK -There 1s no truth to a
w.arning that contact Jens users can be harmed
by aeeing the sparks of an arc welder or electrical
switch, a uthorities say.
The erroneous warning has spread across
the country during the last two weeks and has
been circulating in various fonns since 1967, said
an official of the National Society to Prevent
Blindness. The hazard It describes does not exist,
he said.
Patient load declines
SACRAM~ro -T he MediCal patient
la.d ln Ca.lilornia hospitals dropped 16.29 percent
ln the last quarter of 1982. compared to 3 percent
fot private patien ts, the hospitals say.
The report by th e California Hospifal
A.Dociation said the drop in the MediCal pauent
l~d uppurt>ntly rc. .. ultt'd trom ~·hon~1:1 In tht•
MedlCal progrom that W(!nt h1to utfect ~pt. l.
llltl:t.
Thl' chang~ tl&htt•ned ellglbUlly atanc:U&.rd.8
and reduet.'<1 ben('flta to only those nece.a.ry to
protect Ille or prt'vent slgnllkant d1sablUty
Cancer Week declared
SACRAMENTO Gov . George
Deukmejlan haa proclaimed this week Cancer
Awareness Week and urged all Californian.a to
seek early diagnosis and treatment.
Deukmcj111n quoted American Cancer
Society estimates that 85.000 Callforruans will
contract cancer this yl'ar, and atalittlca indicating
that survival chances increase dramatically with
early detection
f
Help (or overeaters
CHICAGO Rftlearchers are testing a new
drug that may tnck the brain into turning off the
appetite and helping a fat penion lose weight.
"If present clues that are now being pursued
prove fruitCul. the day may not be far off when
we will have enough firm knowledge to arouse
pharmaceuucal chemists to produce appetite-
control drugs which are both l'ffectJve and safe,"
said Dr. Allen S Levine, a research chenust at
the Veterans Admin1Strat10n Medical Center in
Minneapohs and member of the University of
Minnesota's Department of Food Science.
"The onlv way to tontrol obesity ... is
through the discovery of a means to control the
desire for food ," he said.
The new drug. naJtrexone, 1s among several
newly discovered compounds that regulate
neuropeptides, tht• brain's chemical messengers
for a wide varwty of moods and behaviors -
including hunger, sexual activity. pain and
pleasure.
Arizona gets .
present from
happy citizens
State's renters facing
computer fraud checks
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -
Three people, noting Arizona's
budget crunch, sent checks to
Gov. Bruce Babbitt, saying they
dld so because they like their
eta~ 10 much.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Mallory of
Apache Junction mailed their $50
state income tax refund check to
Babbin, aaying they "have been
very happy liviJl8 in Arizona, not
ju1t because of the excellent
climate, but because w e feel our
elected o ffic ia ls s h ow r eal
concern for the people."
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Renters who file state income tax
returns solely to collect the
renter's tax credit are being
screened by a computer becaww
of a I 0 percent fraud and error
rate in the program. says the
state Franchise Tax Board.
The computer checks. which
started this year, shouJd save the
state about $5 million of the $46
million paid each year to those
who list no income on their
returns and are seeking only the
renter's credit, board spokesman
Will Bush said yesterday.
hit' for the renter's credit each
year. and 540,000 of them report
no other income and file for the
sole purpose of getting the tax
l'redit. Bush said those 540,000
returns are being processed by a
computer to detect fraud and
mistalsPs
Th e renter's-credit-on l y
program is vulnerable to fraud,
hl' said, bc.'Cause someone who
wanted to defraud the state
wo uldn't have to concoct a
f1cttt1oui. employer and W -2
forms if no income was being
reported
In one recent case, Bush said. a
Orange CoH1 DAILY PILOT/WednNd1y, April e. 1983 ~7
'Eight ·students per frog'
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
SACRAMENTO -Thl·
ch.anct.•llor of th"' California Swu.+
Unlvenlty, W Ann Roynolds.
say1 1he's been told that tht-
labor1torle. art! down to Onl• wst
tube tor every 12 11tudent1.
"At San Joee lt'1 eight studenu
per f rog," Reynold11 told a
hearing of a ataw Senate Finance
subcommit.we
thut Dt·ulun1.•JUan'1 propaled fee
lncl"\!llle.'I S 160 a year at UC,
$230 a~ CSU, 1&nd a flr1t-ever
$100 lt't' at community ooUeges
would drive uway thouaanda
of low-income and minority
1tud1:ntA1.
But P or t er Meroney of
Deukmt•jian's Finance
Dt!partmt'nl sold the fee
I n c rca1c1 were ni!eded to
pret1Crve th• 111c:hoo1'1 pfOil'ama,
and would leave Californ ia
student• below the national
average In fee levela
UC 1tuden t1 would pay an
average o f $1 ,350 a year,
compared to $1,449 a t 1lmlla r
public unlver1ltlea el1ew here.
Meroney 1aJd.
She added, "Our studt•nt.s mUBt
eel a larms and act over to
computer centers at 2 and 3 n.m."
Reynolds and other orrlcials of
California'• publk colleges and
unJversltles contended that Gov.
George Deukmejlan's propo1wd
light budget and fee lncreasl'S
would hurt students. lt'lll'ht•rs
and programs
A porker makes good
They said teachers at thl•
University of California and the
California State University art'
already paid below the nauonal
average, and the budgets of th<'
laiu few years havl• ~tra1m·d
'school fac1ht1es to the hmll
.The legislators wcrt· ali.o told
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)
The hall of fame gaUery at
the Nebraska Capitol had a
surprising nt'w addition -
"DeCamp's Pig "
Statehouse v isitors
yestt!rday discovered the
gold , t·eramH.· pig atop a
concrete pedestal among the
busts o f memor1aliz<•d
Nebraskans
The pig sits on its hind
quarwrs and we&n1 a hat and
denim bib over a l11. Mo1t
rt.'<.-ogniu.'<i the statue aa one
that long has occupied a spot
in the office of state Sen.
John OeCarnp.
A plaque on t he pedestal
dubbed the new hall-o!-
famer "Oeeamp's Pig" and
bore the words for which
Dt.>Camp ts most famous as a
legislator -"Tr\Jjlt Me."
KDCM tD9.t
FMSTERED
If the beautiful music station
·you've been listening to
isn't quite the sallle anyniore,
try 103.1, KOCM • • •
easy listening you can turn to
• • • anytiine.
Easy listening you can turn to. Stephanie Rusaell of FlagstaCC
sent a money order March 10.
saying she wanted to make "a
$20 cash contribution to the
Great State of Arizona."
The credit 1s $60 for
lndlvid.uals and $137 for marned
couples and heads of houst'holds
who support dependents
Lo8 Angeles man was sentenced 1-------------------------------
lCI two yean. m pnson for filing
About 4.5 million Californians
sale! new cotton
Jockey® For Her
Look who's wearing Jockey~• The active
woman ... and it never looked better.
Right now. you can enjoy the 111. comfort
and quality men have known !or years In
comfortable combed cotton with elastic
waistband that won't ride-up or bind
Briefs, In white. beige. and light blue
Sizes 5-6-7-8. regularly 4.25. sale 3.40
Hipsters. in white. beige. ltght blue. and
blue stripe. Sizes 5-6-7, reg 4 00 3.20
Bikinis, in white. beige. light blue. and
blue stripe Sizes 5-6-7. reg 3 75 3.00
100 renter's-credit-only forms in
each or three years.
PrlcH effective through Sund•V, Aprll 1 o
I
Shop Mon. through Fri. 9:30 to 9:30 •Sat. 9:30 lo 8 •Sun. 10 to 6
Anet\elm: Anaheim Plaza, N. Euclid St. at Crescent St.
,ullerton: Yorba Linda Blvd. at Sapphire Rd
I
Cypre11: 10201 Valley View St. at Ball Rd .
Tustin: 18182 Irvine Blvd. et Newport Avo
Huntington Beach: 9811 Adame Ave at Brookhurat St
The$15°0
Alternative To The
*NEPTUNE
SOCIETY®
You prefer cremation. Some time ago you signed uµ with the Neptune
Society! You paid a me mbership fee. Why??? At i'acific Vie w, all serv-
ices are pe rforme d within our property, by <'t.1r personnel and with
our equipment. We own and o perate our OW'• cre matorium. Neptune
Society does not ... they subcontract with other orga nizations miles
fr om our community.
We invite you to compare FACTS and PRIC ES. Pacific View does not
cost more. So why spend more l
Bring us your Neptune Socie ty membership card, and we will "RE-
FUND" to you a $1 5.00 c redit to be applied to wards our charges.
There are no membership fees at Pacific View ... you pay only fo r
services needed and authorized .
At Pacific Vie w, you will receive the service you thought the Neptune
Society • itself would pro vide.
_________________________________________ .., __
1nt
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PM~K
0 MOltfUAltY 0 CHMATOlllUM
l SOO P.telflc Vltw Drive
Newport le.uh, CA 92663
(114) 644-2700
"A l'lfllCE BROTHERS COMPANY"
PUASE SEND ME TH E FACTS.
NO SALESPERSON Will CALL
Addrett
City
0 Mafrltd O Slnsl•
PC
Zip
Commtnt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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I
48 Orange COu1 OAIL.'t' PILOT/WedntedJy, Aprtl I, 1N3
Keep door open
on housing need
Orange County supervisors are trying to take a middle roud
n tentatively approving a three-year phase-out of th£-"ounty's
'Ontroversial affordable housing program.
The mandatory program requires builders to St't as1dt• :t5
>ercent of their units for lower-income buyers in rt"'turn tor
10me concessions on density.
Builders contend that the requirement has forced up thl·
>rice of other housing and, with the advent o f somewhat lower
nterest rates and better availability of home financing, there
.vill be enough demand to encourage voluntary construction of
ower-priced homej9.
In a stormy eight-hour hearing last week. speakers on both
1ides of the debate aired their views. Some insisted that a
nandatory program is the only guarantee of a sufficient supply
>f affordable units. Others sought an immediate end to tht.•
-equirements.
ln the end, the preliminary vote went to a three-year
>hase-out, during which the affordable housing requireme{lt
.vill drop to 10 percent, then 5 pe~nt of new developments,
>efore being eliminated entirely. Defails will be worked out by
the Planning Commission for final approval May 18.
Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley was well-adv1st'Ci to
:ry to keep. the door open by proposing another public heann~
.oward the end of the third year so that the builders' response to
.he phase-dut may be examined before the program is dropped
mtirely. -
If they are correct in their contention that the free market
.vill take care .of the need, it will be time to eliminate this extra
ayer of government intervention. If not, there still would be
ime to restore all or part of the program. Developments in the
'lousing market over the next couple of years will brmg the
UlSWer.
Opinions e~pre~~t'<I 1n the \P.ll t' dl>0\11' <1re lhOSl' Of tnl' Dcl1ty P1lnl Utn••r ... W\ I •
P<ts\edon tn1s PclOt' clre those of their clvthor~ ,rno artl\I \ Rl-.Hl•·• .,,,.,,.,,.,q ,, 1r1vo1
e<I AOClre~s The Daily Pilot P 0 Bo.c I~ Costa Ml''>d CA "'l'>llb Pr.uni· /IJ1
1>42·4311
MAILBOX
. flolsa Chica 's 'Friends'
ro the Editor:
As president of Amigos de
~Isa Chica, a 1.000-member
upport organization for the
~lsa Chica Wetlands, I wish to
>Ublicly di.8claim any associauon
with an emerging group called
l'riends of the Bolsa Chica
~Marsh. Since Amigos de
~olsa C h ica translated into
!:nglish means Friends of the
3olsa Chica confusion between
h e two groups is likely. and
>ttha~ the attempt to confuse ia
ieliberate.
The reaaon for this disclaimer
1 that last week every
:iuntington Beach residence
·eceived a Chamber of
::om.merce booklet containing a
two-page color advertisement
~red by Signal Landmark
..;ompany. The ad featured the
nuch touted development plan
for the Bolsa C h ica that is
rtrongly opposed by our group.
fhe ad suggested readers con t.act
Friend• of the Bolsa Chica
Marina/Marsh at a Huntington
Beach post office box address for
010re infonnation .
There ls little doubt in my
mind that Friends of the Bolsa
Chica Marina/Marsh will become
Signal '• new publi c
relations/advertising vehicle for
creating the look of grass roota
support for Signal's development
plan for the Bolsa Chica.
A similar group, C1trrens for
Ocean ~ & Recreauon (COA
& R), was used earlter as "grass
roots support" until unmasked
late last year. COA & R was m
fact orchestrated by employees of
Wayne Clark, Signal's public
relauons firm. Ct:JA & R having
no apparent source of money In
that it never solicited paid
memberships or cash donatJons
spent thousands upon thousands
of dollars. A blitz of COA & R
newsletters, actton alerts and
mail back support petitions found
their way into local homes. COA
& R material was also malled
direct to boaters ~d dtStrlbuted
in elaborate exhibits at boat
shows.
Does the emerge~ ce of this
new name. Friel'\Cb of the Balsa
Chica Marina/M arsh, mean
anothe r propagarida blitz is in the
making?
Signal's attem~ to play upon
the good name al our group at
best can be qonsider ed a
complime nt to our effective
opposition A t worst, it can be
considered both unimaginative
and tacky.
LORRAINE FA.BER
President, Amigos de
Bolsa Chica
Restore power cut level
To the Editor:
Airport noiae nationwide is a
proper concern for both ne.arby
residents and airport operators.
Here in Orange County we alao
have a nolae problem at our only
commercial airport (John
Wayne) that causes considerable
controversy.
On March 15 the Board of
Supervisors, which has made
honest efforts to lower noise
leveb, paued a resolu tion in
support of reducing the preeent
1,000-foot de par tu r e p ower
reduction rule to WO feet. This
can be of significant help in
reducing noi8e and, tndeed. was
used for eight years without
• incident.
The resolution requesta our
five Orange County congressmen
to work with the FAA to obtain
restoratio n of t h e 500-foot
procedure. Safety, of course,
should be of primary concern.
However. one letter from the
FAA tn reference to the
1,000-foot level states, "the
primary purpose of this policy IS
to prevent the unregulated
proliferation of customir.ed noise
abatement procedures " Past
performance al this airport
indicate it is a safe procedure
We suggest some flexibility
should be shown to meet our
situation and all can play a role
by contacting Congressmen
Badham, Dannemeyer, Lungren,
Pa tterson a n d Packa r d
requesting they take an active
part in asking FAA
reconaiderallon of the existing
directive.
JOSEPH E. IRVlNE
Executive Director,
Community Airport Council
' l. M. IDJdl Show goes on
If anything goes wrong during
a dma performance, the 1.J&htlng
c:nwa have their orders: Focua a11
spotl on the Rinlmaater. lt'a then
hil job to decide pronto whett to
direct audlence at~tlon, to cue
other act s In th e
abow·must-<go-ot'l tradi don.
Q. Can a polar bear on lee n.&n
• t.i. • a man on a track! A.. J'lfier. Top kit speed for a
polar bMr ta about 25 mph.
OMHGE COAaT
D1ilyPilat
~-z=:-... ·-:i..-i:. =-... ..:" 0 ...
Author Truman Capote is
another noveltst who always
wrltea the last chapter flrat.
Margaret Mitchell handled
"Gone With The Wind" that
way, too.
Q. You uld the bodlH of
drowned men when found afloat
are alwaya face down. II thla ln
11ltwater or frethwater? How
about women?
A. It'• face down ln all ~.
T~~.._, -CllQr Dewel'-1
~-= ::,;!:'""''
LMrrD,.,._. ........... -
..,.. •• r.-..JI u.-·· ......
·--------------
the • into Plugging new
NEW YORK -Tht· machine
arrived three weeks ago l put it
on a cabmet in the dinmg room
and pluggt.>d 1t in Nothing
happened.
It became more and more
embarrassing The screen, Like a
wlevtSion set, and the keyboard.
hke a typewriter, might as well
havt! been made of stone for aU I
could do with them. ln fact~ the
Kay Pro II pcn.onal computer -
the machine has a name -was
funC'llomng only as a sculpture in
tht.-dining room. surrounded by
its own incomprehensible
instruc tion manuals and the
usual melange of salt and pepper
shakers. candlestic ks and
rond1ments.
"Are you planning to do
linything with It, or 1s 1t just
going to sit tht.>re forever?" asked
my Wlfe -without charity. hope
or faith
CHARITY CAME , finally,
from the most unllke ly l'Om er -
tht.• back bc>droom whe re our
16-year·okl ltves among posters
or monsters and MiC'k and harsh
pounding rhythms that could
come from either. ''I'll come
down and look al 1t," said Cohn. a
~ ----------~ J RICHARD IHVfS 1 ,; ,,
high school junior.
He came down. He saw. He
conquered. H e pecked at the
machine, muttering abou t
"menus" and ''getting back," to
say nothing of "byte" and "bit."
Part-words Like "DIR'' and "y''
began appeari ng to the
accompaniment o f mechanical
humming and clicking sounds.
The damn thing did work .
Colin is "computer literate." I
looked at him with new respect
-awe, almost. At the same time,
my back teeth clenched over the
unspoken words: "If he can do it,
I will do 1t"
And I will -in fact. I've
begun -because I have to 1f l
want to func tion in the
increasingly romputerir.ed world
that even writers must
comprehend. I have no doubt, for
mst.anre, that before I'm finished
wnting them, book manuscnpts
will command two separate
pnces from publishers. One, the
lower one, w1ti be paid for the
good o ld-fashioned pile of
typewritten pages The higher
price will be paid for the same
words buried on a floppy disc or
a hard disc or whatever other
hunk of plastic will activate the
computer-driven machinery
attached to future printing
presses.
Bey o nd that, 1 am n ot
interested in living in a society
where I can neither read nor
write the langua.ge. And the ti.me
has come, at least for me, to face
the fact that a new language is
required in the United States
today -and the world
tomorrow. They changed the
rule6 on us in midlife.
"EACH GENERATION tends
to assume its definition of
literacy is the ultimate; literacy
lS, however, a dynamic construct,
a bundle of culturally relevant
skills that change over time,"
said Benjamin Compaine,
executive director of the Harvard
Information Resources Poltcy
Pr.;gram. "Some people are
going to have trouble grasping
the fact that we are on the verge
of an era in which the ability to
read and write may no t be
sufficient to define what it Ls to
be literate. Literacy may 800n
mean being able to access,
manipulate and store in.formation
in a computer." ·
The new generation -a
16-year-old-knows a language
their elders could barely
conceive. So, they are learning
something in school, after all.
Son of a gun. I al\Vays thought
that when I was their age 1 was
older
More power to them. And
more computers. too. There
should be one an every classroom,
even on every desk. Who needs
illiterate kids?
The eenius of America over
the years has not been native
ability or unique powers of
innovation: it has been that in a
free society so many people do ao
many things on their own, for
their own reasons, that
worthwhile a nd c r eat ive
achievements are inevitable. The
more students we have now
playing with and learning the .
mysteries and the logic of the
new literacy, the ri cher
American Life will be in the next
generation and the next.
Silver tongues attract gold
Tius country IS full of people
who make their living from their
abillty to talk: Salesmen,
preachers, pubhc relations types,
televisi o n and radio
commentators, auctioneers,
politicians ... all engage In
commerce that requires and
rewards loquaciousness and
qwck repartee.
Of all the professional classes
whose silver tongues pave the
route to success, probably none
has a larger impact on American
society and the Individuals
therein than the politician.
PEOPLE WHO follow t he
political trail are a cunous sort
g ene rally , pursuing and
8<."cepting -for whatever reason
-the responsibility for shaping
and guiding the conduct of
society's members T hey have
111111/ .....
offered themselves up u leaders
of the people, and some have
eucceeded. Probably as a
consequence of these c hosen
chiefs' actions, there does exist a
certain s m oothn ess and
peacefulnea in the daily lives of
most who inhabit this country.
Americana have an apparent
love-hate relationship with thet1e
self -ascribed leaders, reviling
them o n the one hand and
adoring them on the other. It ia a
strange reaction to a group of
people who 08tensibll work for,
and at the pleasure o , the whole
of society.
California's Legislature 1B the
product of rapid development,
evolving over a few short years
from a part-time, occasional
lawmaking body to the fully
1talfed and expensJve machine
that It ls today. And with the
institution has c hanged its
oocupanta. The men and women
who come to Sacramento to serve
in the Aaembly or Senate have
metamorphosed from citizen-
legialators to legialator-dtizena,
viewing their efforta as careers.
It ls small wonder, then, that
California's lawmakers have
followed the lead of Congress in
the practice of extracting so-
called ''honorariums" from thoee
grouP8 to whom they speak.
During 1982, this state's
political public speaking
sweepataket1 was won by Sen.
Most collledians fear reject.ion
When yo u are afraid that
people will laugh at you. the best
defense is an offense -and so
you try your hardest to make
them laugh with you. This is the
psychological history of almost
all comedians, clowns and
satirists.
In the customary cliche, the
comedian's heart is breaking
inside, becawie he secretly yearns
to play Hamlet. This, I think, is a
misunderstanding: what he
really yearns is to play Romeo, or
Lancelot or Robln Hood. That is,
he wants to be a hero, but Jacks
the stature or the substance
ALMOST ALL the comic men l
have kno wn personally and
professionally have boon what
we might ctll "uncomfortable"
people l!l private. Groucho Marx
wat a cli..-lc cue t.n point -he
was unplNMnt to you before you
had a oh~ to be unplcu.nt to
him, or eo he feared. He didn't
want to be Hamlet; he wanted to
~Shakespeare hlmtelf.
Theee thouahts are provoktd
by a.tancln& through the recent.
aut0bto9raphy by Std Caeur{
who dltcloeed h i• monumenta
crack-up at the crest of hit
comedic popuJarlt.y. Hl1 1tory,
rather than being unlqU-0, t. MOil
typical. Comedians, on the whole,
do not Hko J>OC!ple, bef.tnnlns
wlth thtmaelvea. Moat y they
ftar people, and recoil from what
they an1lclptto N ridlcuM.
The reuon to comparatively
few fctmalea have become
profnsJonal oomediana, It llMml
to l"Nt, I.I tha' women ieneraUy
IYllH 111111
~·
,y)
have a more secure aenae of self
than men do. Thoee who do not,
like Joan Rivers, make a living
by maki ng fun of their
deficiencies, auumed or
otherwt.e.
One of the funniest men I ever
knew was not a comedian, but. a
lawyer . H e was fat and
extremely homely, and had been
taunted aa a lad ln school.
Because he had a reMtv wit. and
Wick
''What'a thl1 Item "nder
travel expenses
''Mayflower, 75,000 plteft of
elghY?"
this was his only weapon, he
developed this Into a superb
device for diverting attacks upon
himself -a sort of psychological
lightning-rod, which gained the
applause and admiration his
a ppearance otherwise w ou ld
have denied him.
ln a professional comedian, the
"sense o f humor'' is as
ove rdevel oped as t he
mU8CUlature of a weight-lifter. ,
W e kn ow th at many
weight-lifters began as the
famous "90-pound weakling"
d etermined to overcome this
Initial deficit; ln the same way.
the profeaional funnyman haa
learned to overcompensate for
rejectjon.
OF COURSE. nothln& ls unit~ true for all members
of a • es. Fred Allen, whom I
knew, wu an e xception to t.h1a
&_enerallutlon: so, 1110, does
~ Bums 11eem to be -but
ln tht latter caae, w e must
remember. Burnt s~nt mo1t of
hla pr,ofemional life a1 a 1tralaht
man: It was his wlft, Oracht
Allen. who provided the bulk of
the lauahJ. It eeenw a pty that comedlana
ahould have to be such tortured
penonalltJes within, but we mu.t
Nmembet that It ll an ulcer ln
the oyster that produoH the
pevl. It I.I doubtful that Lord Byron wltbou\ h l1 clubfoot
would h•v• 1tvtn u1 ''Don Juan," or 'bat If Chaplin had
l'all'bMu' ~nee. he would
have nwde wwld lauah at h1a
Utt» anmp.
William Campbell, a Republican
from Hacienda Heights. Sen.
Campbell attributes his extra
income of $30,000 to the notion
that he is a gifted orator. It may
also be connected 90mehow to the
fact that Sen. Campbell ia leader
of the Senate lninorlty party and
a close associate o f the
President of the United States
former Californian Ronald
Reagan.
Other m e m bers of th e
Legislature earn ed smaller
amounts for their appearances,
and as often as not, theae total
revenues parallel each member's
relative Importance In the
lawmaking process.
It waan't too many yean ago
that an elected politician would
fall all over himlelf to make a
speech -tree -to a gro up
whose consti tuency was
attractive to the prospective
speaker. It was a practice that
made g ood business 1en1e,
because these groups often would
prove helpful when election time
rolled around.
TODAY, ANY leg islat i ve
member who can carry on a
conversation is going to pick up a
few bucks for talking to some of
his lobbyist Crlendl at a luncheon
or dinner. The caah paymenta are
called "honorariums" in the
fineat academic sense, but ln
reality they are nothlna but
br l bes cloaked in m onetary
respectability. Rather than make
a contribution to the politician'•
campaign, theee groupe now a.re
lining their pockets directly.
Penonal lnrome, af1er all. can be
spent on personal purcbaaea.
Campalsn cont.ribuUona (under
the law) cannot.
Campbell's top henchman,
Sen . Ken Maddy, R-rt.no. hl9
pro posed a constitutional
amendment which wquld limit
the a m o unt of th•••
honorariums. lt1 chanc. of ew.r
reachlna the people for a voe. are
predictably alJm.
CllllY•
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Or1nge Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednead1y, Aprll 8, 1983
Profit or protection: EPA 's • • m1ss1on mulled
By MARnN CRUTSINGER ............ ,,_ Wm.t
WASHINGTON -Under
Ronald Reaaan , the
Environmental l>rotectlon
Agency has wiped oul the
backl<>a of 1tate air quality plana
awaiting approval and has
broken the loa.Jam of rulea on
dumplng of h.uardoua chemicala
lnto the nation's waterwaya.
But critics HY the Reagan
admlnlatration's ruahing out
relUlaUons wanted by industry
has been a sloppy effort that haa
1et back the nation'• efforts to
clean up the environment.
During the 1980 presidential
campaign, Reagan complained
the EPA'& bureaucrats wouldn't
rest until everybody was living In
"rabbit holes or blrd's nests." He
pledged to replace these
"no-growth advocates" with
officials who would eliminate
"the unnecessary regulations"
and pay more attentio n t o
lnduatry needa.
Now two year1 later, the ICPA
llea in ahambleta. Rea11an'1 tup
appolnues have departed, amid a
variety of alle1ation1 o f
wronadolna.
Beyond the charaea lle1 th•
question of juat h ow well
Re~'a EPA hu handled ill job
of protecting the environment.
Reaaan olflciala aay they have
made lt a more efficient reau!ator
of the nation'• lnduatry.
But critics aay the s1na of the
Reagan admin.l.atration go beyond
the charge• Involving the
agency's "auperfund" programs
that have spurred a half-dozen
congressional Investigations and
helped force the resignation of
EPA chief Anne M. Burford and
a dozen of the agency's highest
officials. They cont.end problems
can be found in the air, water.
chemical and pesUdde programs
where sharp budget and
pe rsonnel cuts left regulators
WMablu w handl an •Xl)IU\dlni
workload.
Burford liked to aay the
EPA had cleared out the
backlo11 of permit• awal\ln1
approval, a problem lhat has
been a thorn In lnduatry't aide
a1nce EPA wu founded In 1970.
Before the Reasan
admini.tratlon took office, the
EPA had manaaed to l.llue only
one of 29 regulationa governing
the di.charge of toxic chemicals
lnto waterways. Now, 22 of the
guldellnes are either completed
or have been proposed.
Since Reagan took office, the
number of pending chemical
reviews for new pesticides Wa.'I
slashed by 71 percent. The
number of state air quality plans
walling for EPA approval was
cut by 98 percent.
But criucs say the pressure to
reduce the backlog led EPA
ti>xicologiats to conduct slipshod
reviews of dan.gerous pesticides.
Last August, for example, the
EPA gave the Uniroyal Chemical
C.o. approval to market Harvade,
a new chemical to be used on
cotton at harvest time.
There was just one problem.
Airplane engine lands
without the plane Large sections of the EPA
evaluation of the product had
kids play. It's a good thing It was been lifted verbatim from DALLAS (AP) -A smoking
hunk of metal 18 Inches across
that fell into a family's back yard
with a bang has been identified
as a piece of an airplane's turbine
engine.
nap time." The Wicks have three Uniroyal's application.
children. A g e n c y o f f i c i a 1 s , w h o
discovered this by accident when
t•xemptlona the aaon cy la
sranUna to allow tho U10 of pelt
and weed klllen by farmers
which are either beMed or have
not yet cleared asency review.
In the 1982 flteal yoar, 606
Tiie decline In EPA 911&1111111
lf~A t'•Alt 10 tt•M IOC .. 90 .. ,,,....,.,. "' "'-......00 Of_,., ----.....--....
,.
ll J"""ll ..
12 ., -" ....
" -10
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·euo9 .. 1 a111ho ,,1v
· ·o peratinq pli\n
1' 11 19 IO 81 e1· u ·· •' ·.... . .. "'Ille house shook, and 1 heard
a loud bang, and I looked outside
and saw this white smoke,"
Judith Wick said aft.er the piece
fell Monday.
The Feder a I Av lat ion another scientist questioned
Administration det.ermlned that Harv ad e 's safety, say the
the piece came from an engine plagarlsm was an Isolated
made by General Electric Co. incident and was not related to
FAA spokesman Tom Graves any work speedup. But the
said the unidentified plane would chemical remains registered. EPA 's grants lo local governments has declined
have suffered engine failure but Also alarming to critics has in every area except hazardous waste
the craft probably had another been the dramatic increase In the
auch exemptiona were .,-.nted,
mor e -\han doubllns 198
emergency exemption• arant.ed -
In Ci1C&l 1980, the laat year of the
Carter admlnlatraUon.
The EPA approved pe1Uddel l
auch u pennethrtn and benom)'l.
although testa lndlcate exposure
to thete pestlddes could cau.e
cancer rates u high u one ln
every l,000 people. Previoualy,
pesticides have been banned
even when the riaka were one ln
a million
Many of the looser cancer
standards were put lnto effect by
Dr. John Todhunter, uaiat.ant
EPA administrator for toxic
substances and pesticides until he
was forced to resign March 2~.
Todhunter . in an Interview,
maintained none of the changes
he institute d had increaaed
da ngers to public health.
But environmentalists
disagree, c1tmg a litany of how
the Reagan EPA has in large and
small ways set back efforts to
c lean up the e n v ironment.
Among their complaints:
-While proclaiming that
more needs to be known before
acid rain can be controlled, the
EPA has approved revisions to
state a ir quality plans which
increase authorized emissions of ,
sulfur dioxide, the prime cause of
acid rain, by 1.5 million tona per
year. The EPA says the changes
were made because state plans
set unrealistic goals.
-The EPA killed a holdover
proposal from Jimmy Carter's
administration that would have
r equired the r emoval of
asbestos-containing building
materials from hundreds of
schools. David Wick said it hit "not far
from the swing set where the engine and continued flying. number of emerge n c y management since Reagan took office.
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Toxic playground may
have killed youths
BOSTON (AP) -A high rate of cancer has
been found In a group of friends whose favorite
teen-age hangout was included on the federal
government's list of worst toxic waste sites, the
Boston Herald reported.
The group lived In the same area, went to the
same schools and hung out in ''The Pastures," a
square mile of woodlands in the south Boston
suburb of Holbrook, the newspaper said.
Four died of cancer or related illnesses before
they were 30, and four have been diagnosed as
having similar diseases, the Herald said.
"They went from worrying about how long it
would take their pimples to clear up to worrying
about how long they would live,' said Joanne
O'Donnell, whose son, Mark, died of metastatic
adrenal cancer in 1980 when he was 28.
The Environmental Protection Agency said the
area where the eight con.gregated Mi the 18th worst
site for toxic waste in the country, according to the
Herald. On Friday, the EPA ordered a fence placed
around the site, which includes the Baird &
McGuire Inc. chemical plant.
William Baird, an engineering consultant for
Baird & McGuire, told the Herald last week that he
doesn't believe chemicals from th.e company caused
illnesses In the community, but said groundwater
behind the plant is contaminated.
"Sure we were always over there; that was the
place to go," said 32-year-old Hugh MacNeil who
was among the teen-agers who spent time In ''The
Pastures."
"What has happened to my Criends; what has
happened to me?," asked MacNeil, who suffers
from Hodgkin's disease and rece.ntly had his spleen
and part of his stomach removed.
'The group also included Kathy McEleney, 28,
whose Hodgkin's Disease is in remission; Ray
Surrette, 30, who now lives in Florida and suffers
from a form of blood cancer called sacroidosis; and
Dale Moss, 30, who has an inoperable brain tumor.
the paper said.
. ' (?A(9
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Or1nge Oout DAIL v PILOT /Wtdnead1y, Aprtl e, 1983
Mf.V. QARFlfl.-P. WHAT 00
YOO TMINK OF TMl5 SMIR1
FOR OUR VACATION?
'(b
THE
t~i\MIL l'
CIRCl'8
by 811 Keane
"Yoo talked to it too much."
,_AR,_·\ Dt:Kt: by Brad Anderson
--""'°"'~
"You call that the pitter-patter
of little feet?"
.00:\ ,_ l' LLl'.\S
E FOR EFFORT
I nus IS FROM M JEl6mH CHAPTER Of THE
1800t( OF PROVERBS"
11 WlsrotA IS BETTER
TMAN RUBIES ''
00 VOU KNOW
HOW MANY
1t.JRKEV5 WERE.
Pf..9TROV£P ro
MAKE. THAT
&HIRT?
by Jim Davis
"." "One doe1n't ... many fl1tlron1 nowadaya."
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
1 WAS ONLY TRYI~
MY BEST TO SAY
SOMETHI~ NICE
.ABour you ·'
by Charles M. Schulz
I 60T A 11 0 MINUS ''
AND NO RUBIES !
•. ~ .....
·~\,
vu nera t .
NORTH
tKTU
,
GOllll 011 111001
av CHARLES H GOAEN ANO OMAA IHAA,, :_ I
--c•h•a·m•pl ... o-ne"""h""lp-• -p-r-od,..u-u'""'d-•w~or"""e·n~o .. t ..,ro!'!'ll".!"!nr!""'P.l0!""'!'6r~•'!'!•'~· --m-ond 6.Sf.f!! "d ,.
much rood brld1t. The Since Wul 1ur1ly had •t hold lour 1padt1 and thrtt
junlore 1howtd remarkable lea•l 111 diamond• for hi• club• lo protect 111lnet
o AKQIOU
Ot
Wt:.tff t5 EAtfT
maturity In all phut1 ot the w11k Jump overull and ht declarer rwu1ln1 tbt blael
1amt. Watch th• technique had ahown up with lhrtt 1ulte, ao he wu torud to let ,,
of A. Ea•twood of Ensland heart•. he had at moat four 10 all hie dJ•mondt. Tht rett
• t• tJ IOU
O ?U 0 0
OAJIOU• OQU
•Qt •Uo lfOUTH
•AQ8
<:;>Jt
OK 72
+AK 1018
The blddinr:
WHt North Ea1t South
Pa11 1 <;:> Put 2 t
3 o Put Put OWe
P111 3 • Pue • t
Put 4 <:> Pua 4 NT
Put 5 O Pue 8 NT
Pa11 P111 Pa11
Opening lead: Seven or c;;i.
The European Junior
SHOt:
on thla hand. cud• In lhe black euill. wu tuy. Declarer whtd
North ahowtd hi• dlatrlbu· It you plan• tqueeu play. the ac•kln1 of clubt aod totl·
tlonal hand by pu1ln1 over you uaually mutt need to ceded 1 dub to Eut, Nttltil
Weat'a preemptive jump and make the rett of the tricka. up the fourth club In bit
then pulling hi• partner'• To brln1 about auch • poti hand. In all. ht mad• thrtt
double. After North tubae-tlon, you tomtllmee have to 1pade trlckt. 1lx heart• and
quently confirmed a ahi:-tard concede • trick to the op· three clubt, while not loeln1
h11rt 1uit, South drove to ponent• to correct the eounl. a diamond trick.
alam. He nlected air oo South could not afford to do Bnt 1" .._ ,...,... la·
trump to protect hi• king of that hen becauu he wu t• clt•~lt trH~lt? Let 1
diamonds rrom a lead mlulnr both the ace and Cliult1 Cena '-'11" W
through. queen of diamond•. There· yov way ....,. di. aue
Weal did not want to pre fore, hi• only hope wu to tf DOUBLES f« ,...W.•
senl declarer with a diamond play for a squeue "without ucl fer takttet. F., a._,., 9'
trick, eo he chose the 11re the count" laJ1 DOUBLES fietldtt. ....
lead of, heart. Declarer won Declarer cuhed all or dum Sl.85 e. "Gert•·DNWH,"
in hand and caahed two more my'a hearta. coming down to care of ~· ... .,.,.,. P.O.
heart tricks. When West three 1p1des and four clubs IH ZSt, NorwMCI, N.J.
followed to both. it was ob-in hia hand and (our 07648. Make eheb pay.W.
vious thal the black suits spades, two rlubs and a dia 14 New1papert.eb.
by Jeff MacNelly
I~TETO~ GWU, AAl~4;,
GUffER ·
,, ........... ~ ...... tlw:..,
//fll!. • .. 0...11 ...... ., .......... ~ .......... .-MJ -
DRABBLt:
NEXT TIME. I 50MEBO()C.(
8..5E. CAA 8E ON THE
NE6dr1ATIN6 TEAM !
I see ...
"fHIS ONS
Pl FFf:RS FR.OM -rHe 01"'HeR
ART"IFICIAL.-ONes e>ecAuse rr HAS
CAN PISS INSI Pe?
OKAY( Sf:NP HIM
IN, ANP a...e1"''S
1'RY -ro 1<eEiP A S1'~AIGHT" FACf!;.,
eH, RU1"'H ~
~M.
~rov 611'1~(,
'fO\J~
N~ll..'5!
WORKING W!Tt·l THE 'X.J100L
~D lti LIK£ IJ.X)RKIN& wrrH
CNE Of m.;~ ...
U.S.
PATENT
OFFICE
TODAY I'LL
WISH FOR A
DELICIOUS,
CREAMY,
CHOCOLATE-
COVERED--
Tom Battuk
NEJTHER ONE DOEb Tt-IEIR
HOVIE.WOR K I
by George Lemont
By Mark Lasky
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' ·~.iu
• f
I .U Ill THI aim
The Rev. Robert B.
Shepard (oval inset), is
the present pastor of
ist Church by the Sea
New~rt Beach which
will h'1d a centennial
celebration Sunday.
llllf Plllt
WEONESOAV, APRIL S, 1983
WEDDINGS
TELEVISION
COMICS
Henry Darrow portTays
Zorro as he returns lor his
20th incarnation on the
screen. Pase B4.
D
0
entennial. • • Christ Church by the Sea celebrates I 00 years
Lost the first set of
dlnga ln a fire.
Began construction on the pr~aent site during the
Depreeaion.
-Launched a boat service to ~rt worshipers to and from
cKurch on Sunda)"'.
-Wu dubbed the "churpJe"
While Shir Ha Ma'alot Harbor
Reform Temple shared the
Methodist facilities.
These are just some of the
anecdotes to be recalled at a
celebration SWlday markina the
centennial of the church'•
founding and the 50th
anniversary on its current site.
Highlighting the program will
be a visit by Bishop Jack M .
Tuell, who will preach at the 9:30
a.m. service.
Although early history is
sketc h y. records of the
Methodist's Southern California
Conference show a Methodist
church was established in the
Newport area ln 1883. However,
the current name did not emerge
until the dedication of the first
pennanent building
According to these early
•
church records, there were 31
meinbera by 1884. The pastor had
been promUled a salary of $500
for the yur, but only received
$343 of lt.
By 1899, aervices were held at
the McFadden Brothers' Dance
Pavilion near the Newport Beach
Pier. A1J it was necessary to clean
up the hall from the night
before, services were not held
until later ln the day. A piano
from the nearby Sharps' Hotel
was moved to the hall each
Sunday and r eturned after
evening aervices.
Meetings were later moved to
Citr. Hall, located above the city
jai . "Sometimes on Sunday
niehts the prisoners became
rather nony . One night,"
atcordmg to church annals, "the
congregation heard a terrible
rattling of ban beneath, then
someone shouting, 'Shut up!
Shut up!'"
Another entry:
"It was a day of rejoicing when
the little congregation secured a
residence at the comer of Balboa
Boulevard and 24th Street,
which they could convert at last
intO a church of their own.
"Later it was one of the
preachers, Grover Ralston, who
personally did the major work of
adding a parsonage on the same
lot. By 1926 there were 56
members.
"In March 1931 disaster st.ruck
when the church and panonage
burned to the ground. The
congregation moved from dance
hall to store room."
The dance hall referred to is
now The Old Spaghetti Factory.
The building, n ot only had
housed a dance pavilion, it al8o
had been a roller rink, a movie
theater and an indoor golf course,
according to the Rev. Robert B.
Shepard, pastor.
Two years after the fire. the
first building on the present site,
now known as Goodell Hall, was
dedicated.
Although it may seem
courageous to build the structure
~during the Depression, funding
was not that difficult to aecure,
Shepard said.
A member who summered in
Newport held the mortgage on
the property without a note and
without interest for a number of
years.
The new location was not
without problems, however. &
transportation waa a major one, a
boat service was started on
Easter 1934 and continued W'ltil
just before World War Il.
Until the '40s, this was the
only P rotestant church in the
Newport Harbor area, according
to church historians.
With the war-ti.me population
growth, other denominations
entered the city. ''In a real een8e,
our church 'mothered' the&e new
congregations by .ending to them
large bloclu of members."
nstruction of what is now known as Goodell Hall was completed John Siegel Jr. and June Shook are shown manning the shovels for
groundbreaking on Ocl. 16, 19~2. with dedication services on Nov. 18, 1932.
Humming babes
It was touch 'n' go, but
mother and pabes t;loing fine
f
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Retired school nurse
Maxine Blake ly has been
taking care of little ones
most of her life. Recently
she i nh erited so me
particularly small patients
at her Mariners-area
home in Newport Beach.
Working his way 1
&lowly out on a twig,
Dally Piiot story and
photot by Patrick
O'Donnell
Arriving with the \torms
of late January, a mother
humminifbird set up
housekeeping and nested
In a flower pot near the
entry way. Heavy winds
had the pot swayln' so
Maxine's husband om
anchored It to a llsht
fixture . By the end of
JanuarY. two tiny esss had
been laid. Fifteen days
later the fint eu hatched
and the second followed
soon.
By mid-March the babes
were begslng for
nourishment and mother
was returnlns to the nest
every 10 minutes. A few
days later, with Maxine
peeking from the kitchen
window, the first fledgling
flyer tried his wings.
the baby hummingbird
(left) is the lint to
leave the nest, while a
pair of babea (below)
prepare for tlaeir flnt
Qlsht. \
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Bl Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/W!j!nHday, Aprll e, 1813
R ape victim seeking hel p WeJJing~ & Vows repeated 1
~llE~·~::i· .E:ng.!!g.emfnU DEAR ANN LANDERS: Deer 1Chool chum1,
teachen and coUNelon: Gmaip 1.ravell tut and by
now you all know I am the 16-year-old airl who
Ben&rott-Gillett
was raped W\ Wedneeday night.
Please don't treat me any differently than you
did before. Don't at.are at me u we pue In the hal1a
and elbow your friend in the rlba. I toe all of It.
Th• DaJJy Pilot wanta your WfHJd.lrW and
Mary Ann Glllett and
Bryan Lee Bentrott
•xchan1ed weddlns
vows on Mareh U) in St.
John Vlanney C hapel,
Balboa bland. Their
parent.a are Mr. and Mn.
Horace G. Glllett Jr. of
Newport Beach, Anne
Bentrott.-Wbe of Seattle
and the late Mr. Boyd.A.
Bentrott.
I a1lo know you are whlaperin1 behind the
back of your hand, "Yes, ahe·a the one who was
~fll~moru nows. To help you •ubmit the required
ln/ormatlon, lorma an availabl• •t I.he Dtilly
Pilot ofl/«1, 330 W. Bay Sr., C.O.ta MeM.
raped Wt week."
I'd appreciate I\ if you wouldn't flock around
me and complain about how lousy the justice
•)'Item la. Nobody knows be\ter than I how rotten it
iB that the guy la ou\ there 10mewhere. Jwit a few
doUara for ball and he waa sprung, free to run
around and rape 1e>mebody elae. Funny how many
of the.e guys are repeaterw. By the Ume they come
to tnal \hey already have four or five r~ on them.
NOW. Wiien tile lean, aoxletlea, feelln11 of
la1mlllatlon1 ra1e lnd violation /o auder1ro1ad
tlley lnvar ably erupt later an ca11e 1ertp11
p1yclaolo1lcal 9roblem1. Voa mu1t talk tlll1 out ol
your 1y1fem. Tiie police department wlll pat you I•
toucll wltll tile Rape Hotllae and 1ome excellent
tber1pl1t1. Good lick, dear.
For weddlnga, only • black end whJi. photo
of the bride u IKX.'ef.C.ble. S~hor., PoluoJd
and color phoio. can t be Wied,
The photo muat be aubmitt.ed no h~r &Mn
three week.a alter the wedding, otherwlae Jr wm
not be pubU.hed. Th e newlyweds,
seniors at Stanford
Unlvenity. will Nl8ide in
Palo Alto following a
Engagement lnlorm11Uon u to be .ubmitted
DEAR ANN LANDERS: To that eentleman
from Saruota who th1nQ fat wdmen are .exy and
loves to see those broad-beamed dames with
curvaceous hlp1 and heavy thighs "like the old
masters used ta paint," this letter la for you.
•t leut .even-weoela before I.he wedding.
Fomu and phoio. can be droppt!ld oll •t the
of/Ice or malled to the &J.Jtorial Department,
!Mlly Pil(lt P.O. Box 1$80, Ca..ta Meu, c.aJJ!. Don't ask any questions about the psychiatric
h09pl\al. It wu hell. And yea, I needed it. Your
cards and letters did help. I do wan\ to thank you
tor being ao thouihtful.
I hoped I couJd come back cheerful and hold
my head up like nothing happened, but I couldn't
hack it. Just for now, until I get used to being back
m the swim of things. let me pretend that you
aren't feeling 10rry for me and that you are not
Cilled with curiosity about what it was like.
And, finally, lf I seem to be staring into space
and you get the idea that I am thinking about last
Wednesday night, you are probably right, so say
something funny. Tell me a joke. I need to laugh a
little. Just don't avold me and i:re.t me as if I am a
different pel'IOn. I am the same girl I was before,
only a terrible thing haa happened to my life and J
must get over lt. Pleue help me. -KAREN
DEAR KAREN: Voa didn't .. y wltetller yoa
are 1ett1D1 coanaellD1. There are many facllltles
that will help. I ar1e yoa to make use of them
T rou1 HIAL1H
DR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I 'ueas It's ID my
genes. I w11 born to love reading. am 17 and am
a voracJoa1 reader. I've read everytlliDg from the
comlC1 to Tolstoy's "War and Peace!• Tie sl&e of a
book doun•t fan me. I'm a rapid reader.
However, I've been worried lately by wbat my own
parents and friend• .. y: that I'm likely to 1traln
my eyes so macb, I'll 1pend the rHt of my life
wearing tldck lenaet. Wlll reading hart the eyet?
-MISS 0 .
DEAR MISS 0 .: I'm not an eye specialist, but
my colleagues in ophthalmology who should know,
tell me that reading will not produce eye strain. Nor
will it lead to the need for extra-strong lenses later
on. And whether you read with the light over your
right or left shoulder isn't important either.
To lessen eye strain, just be sure you have
adequate light. Take occasional breaks: close your
eyes for a few minutes or look into the distance. Of
coune, make certain whether you need glasses. Be
thankful for your love of reading as long as it
doesn't interfere with your other 90CiaJ obligations.
Whatever the habit, good or bad, it's important
to fall back on moderation if you hope to eecape
harm. Perhaps your parents believe that
immoderate reading takes the time away from your
being an integral part of the family. Keep on
What about their h igh blood pressure and their
heart problems, not to mention the abuae thatJa
caused by lugging around all that excess tonnage? It
raiaes havoc with the feet and legs and other organs
of the body. Pleue Ann, tell that joker the real
beauty of being thin la being well. -LEAN AND
LIKE 'EM THAT WAY
DEAR LEAN: Bravo for tbo1e words of
wisdom, Bu1ter. You're rlgbt on.
DEAR ANN: We are In our 60s, in good health
and want to go to Hawaii. (We've never been.)
Should we wait till the economy get.a better and
prices go down? -L AND D
DEAR L AND D: Make tile trip NOW! Detroit
l1n't tlae only place wbere tbe Maker can recall bit
product on a moment'• notice. Beside., wbo knows
wbether price. are 101Dg up or down? I don't.
reading, but don't be too "voracious."
92828.
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLl;IGH BRILLIANT
THE SAME
PIECE OF TROUBLE
CAN SE BIG
OR S MA~L,
D~PE:N[)ING
ENTl~ELY
O M WHOSE
IT IS .
If you 're in the 25% federal tax rate that chandes periodically, based
bracket and you deposit •2.000 in on the four-week average yield of ·
an Allstate Savings lndMdual Retire-six-month T-Bills.
ment Account (IRA) you11 pay •500 The Fixed pa~ an interest rate
less in federal income thats fixed for the full
taxes this Aprtl 15th. ..., ,, term you· select: 18. 24,
If you're in the 35% I~ 1o;:,_ 36 or 48 months.
tax bracket you11 pay The maximum yearly $700 less. A· .,_...._... • ... ,..,,.... deposit is •2.000 for an
And if you're in the 106'r99 10.6'r99 indMdual $2,250 for a
50% bracket you11 pay couple with one worldng
•1.000 less. .,__$oily~.,..-°'~ spouse. or •4.000 fpr a
Not only that. the andlfl(-'111 ~··1u.1e11m111or•)llW couplewith both working.
•2.000 deduction from your gross For more infortna.tlon. stop by
income may well put you in a slll!htly any Allstate Savi~ office or call ·
lower tax bracket overalL so you'lfbe our Bank by Mail Department cdlect
rewarded there. too. at (213) 240-5913. IRA A retirement
And you won't pay any federal plan you benefit fromwlthout\vatttng
tax on the deposit or the Interest it tll your hair turns gray.
earns 'tll you re retired and probably "~tllhea....~ ~ tna~~~a AllSfale
Variable Rate or Axed Rate IRA. sav1nna The \9rtablC pays an fnteteSt UG
Mary Bentrott Hawaiian honeymoon.
Edgcomb-ff unsak er
After a Caribbean honeymoon, John Lewis
F.dgcomb and his bride, the former Deborah LoW.
Hunaaker are at home in Corona del Mar. They
were married March 12 in the Community
Presbyterian Church, Laguna Beach.
The bride, daughter of the Richard C
Hunaakerw of Corona del Mar, attended USC anc
now 1.9 employed by Hunsaker Development Co ..
Irvine.
Her husband, who also attended USC, is the
son of Mrs. Lewis Edgcomb of Pal06 Verdes and
Guy T. Edgcomb of Laguna Hilla. He la employed
by Health Care Development, Newport_ Beach.
Smith-Kimbell
Mary I. Kimbell, of San Diego and fonnerly of
Costa Mesa, and Scot R. Smith, of San Diego, were
married March 26 In Seagrove Park, Del Mar.
Their parents are Betty Kimbell of San Diego
and John and Shirley Smith of Placerville.
The bride, who graduated from Orange Coast
College, Is employed by Securi!)< Pacific. Her
husband. who worka for Electron Corp .. graduated
from Mesa College, San Diego. The newlyweds
honeymooned in "Jamaica and are residing in San
Diego.
Engagements
You probably shouldn't change careers, but maybe you should
change firms and go forward In the real estate business. Here are
some signs when it's time for a change.
1. bow tob ., f\I'\.
How's your job? Is It tun? Can you approach fM1rY deal with such
unbounded enthusiasm that there's a bit of your heart in
everything you do. No? Then you're probably not making the kind
of money you'd llke.
2. ._,,,. c-..ght In I oomw.
You've exhausted your leads and contacts. You don't know whete
'(04JI next listing Is coming from . Prospects are sllm. Yb.lldn't it be
better to wOftt Where there Is 1 large referral netwcrt and dozens
of aouroea of Income-fight within your own office?
l. 'tbu'N worth more money.
57~ of the nation's real estate agents Change their jobs for one
reason: more money. No matter how much you made last year,
you11 make more It Wiiker & Lee. c.ome '° where the winners are
multlplylng and earning Wftf abc:Mt 8Y8r8g& money. ·
An,OUJMdV?
If you heve a burning desire to shake the doldrums out of your
career we think you're l9edy to come to walker & Lee.
Elepefienoed eg&ntt are COfTllng In the door fM1rY day. The reason
Is slmpte: we offer more lnCi*'tfw. mont Mf"Vlcea and more
strength, as pert of en. W.tem Anancial OorpotatJon. Goodbye
problema. HlllO rnoM eectowa. Wiiker & Lee mow. wt*9 It's
going we·re •Pl"dlng n we went you And the tttM fl nowt
ca• Shaf'Ofl Rotondo •t (1 r4) 836-4242 or (213) 135-1'00.
C.H Mon. ·Fri.. 8:30-6:00 IHtd lwr abOclt ,,,. ~ •t
tO<My'• Welk# & .....
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, Aprll e, 198S Bl
Oscar-winni~g art director . active
By BOB THOMAS -......... ,,...~ LOS ANGELES -How doee the art director
fit lnto f llmmakinl'f
' Lyle WhMler can tell you. Hla art dintcUon hal
drawn 2Q nomin.aUona from the Academy of Motion
Picture Aria and Sc:lences and five o.c.n, lncludina one for "Gone with the Wind." Ht tta.r1ed ln the
movie bulinet1 In lHO, and at 78 he 1Ull hel1>9 youna filmmakers.
WhMler. "But I may adviM him on how the •tory
can be •'-"l~ without breakina the budcet."
When the ecrlpt 11 completed, the art director
at.arts maklna 1ketchea and explorln1 loc•Uon.a.
Th"n ht worlCa on the plans for OONtr'Uctlon.
.. It takee Ume for an art dlrec1or to 'unleam'
architecture.'' aald Wheeler. "You don't destan •
buUdlna the way lt would be ln real life. You have
to di.Icard what la unimportant, ao it won't clutter
up the picture. It'• important to have a ailhouette
and to avoid havtnc too much ct.tall too hiah -lt
...... hcol!c •• ft.,.. ...
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HO•On
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VltjO loUR
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"The art di~tor really detlif\I the physical
background of the picture," aaye Wheeler. "He
creates the .eta and today he alao advt.es on color.
He hal to know architecture, and he need.a to know
how the picture can atay within lta bud,et. In 10me
cue., he will help the director flnd locaUona."
won't be eeen. .!..====================-
When an art director wlna an Oeca.r, the 1et
decorator on the aame film is alto awarded. "The set
decorator actually dreuea the aet, finda the
furniture, fixes the props, under the aupervialon of
the art dlrector."
Wheeler waa born in Cambridge, Mau.,
graduated from the Uniyeralty of Southern
California ln architecture, lndustrlal desian and art
history. Jobe ln architecture were acaree during the
Depn!Saion, so Wheeler heeded a friend's advice to
aeek a job at MGM. He left the studio a few years
later to join David 0. Selznick's "Gone With the
company.
He worked on Selznick's "Gon e Wlth the
Wind" for three years. During that time, Wheeler
also designed "Rebecca" and other Selmick films,
always returning to "Gone With the Wind." He
toured the South for research, then deellJ\ed and
built Tara at the Selznick studio In Culver City.
Wheeler moved to 20th Century-Fox, where he
worked 18 years and won his other 09cars for
"Ann.a and the Kina of Slam," "The Robe," "The
King and I" and "The Diary of Anne Frank." He
virtually b u ilt the back lo t , which was a
,,
Oscar Awa r d-winning art
director Ly le Wheeler.
wonderland of English villages, 1890. New York
Streets, lakes and jungles. h now contains the silver
towers of Century Oty.
The art director's work oft.en starts even before
the writing of the acrlpt. He advises on how and
where the story might be filmed most effectively.
"I ne ver try to Influence the writer," said
"You deal1n • column not how lt. would
normally be, but how lt would look when It la lit on
a eel. You deallfl a corridor with pertpectlve ao lt
looka three to flve tlmee longer than lt really la.
Otherwt.e lt would require three at.ages."
Art dlreciors have learned to work with actual
locales. "Advile and Con.nt" wu filmed ln offices
and hou.es In and around WuhJ.naton.
''The one place we couldn't lhoot wu the U.S.
Senate," Wheeler recalled. "I wu lflven penniuion
to spend a day ln the Senate cnamber with a
photographer; I made 1ketchea and he
photographed everythlng. The Senate waa rebuilt
on a stage at Colwnbla studio, exactly to ecale and
with every detail, down to the carvlnp on each of
the deaka."
Wheeler has designed the ornamentation for
Hoover Dam, the Hanalei Plantation In HawaU, lite
of "South Pacific," Jungleland and many public
and private build.lnlOI. l-0.s lo~ studio experience
has taught him to improvile, espedally during labor
disputes.
"We had no paint.era during 'Anna and the
King of Slam,' '' he recalled. "Everythina had the
color of "{hlt.e plaster, it wu a black-and-white
movie. D\.trlng 'Leave Her to Heaven," the
carpenters were on strike, IO we had to cut the
doors ln plaster."
Songwriters compete against themselves
~ ... ~U~BELL
NEW YORK-Songwriters Alan
and M arilyn Bergman like to
compete. Thia year, they're competing
against themaelves.
Three of the five songs nominated
for awards by the National Academy
of Motion Picture Arta and Sciences
have lyrics written by the Bergmans.
"I'm delighted," Mra. Bergman
says. "It is like winning, if not better
than winning.
"We went to bed the night before,
not even remembering Oacar
n ominations were going to be
announced the following day. We felt
we were out of it this year. Two of the
pictures had just opened and we
didn't think enough people who vote
would have teen them and the other
one didn't do very well at the box
offloe."
The 90np are: "It Might Be You,"
with compo.er Dave Grusin, from
"Toots!~'; "How Do You Keep the
Music Playing" with compoeer Michel l.Mzrand. from "Best. Friends"; and
"it"'We Were in Love," with oompoeer John Williams. from "Yes, Girogio."
The only other time in Academy
hiatory that three Oscar nornlnatiolll
for best aonp went to the same writer
was In 1943 when compoeer Harold
Arlen was nominated for "Happi.ne91
Is Just a 'thing Called Joe" from
"Cabin ln the Sky.'' "My Shining
Hour" from ''The Sky's the Limit"
and "That Old Black Magic" from
"Star Spangleci Rhythm." Harry
Warren and Mack Gordon won ln
1943 for "You'll Never Know" from
"Hello, Fri9co, Hello."
There were 10 nomination.a that
year. No one has received three alnc:e
the nominations were reduced to five.
The Bergmans' other competiUon
Songwriten Alan and Marilyn Bergman haYe
received three Oscar nominations this year.
90ng for "Yes, Giorgio." Two to three
weeks la typical, they say.
When they're working under a
tllht echedule, they write and aleep
ln the same room In thelr houae, don't
answer the phone and "have
sandwiches pushed in under the
door."
The three nominated songs are
explorations of love relationships. But
the Bergroana alao have written off-
beat and zany 80np.
"When it firat came out, people
thought 'Wlndmilll of Your Mind'
was very odd," Bergman says. That
10ng, written with Le~d for "The
Thomas Crown Affair,' won an Oecar
ln 1968. They also won in 1973 for the
title song of "The Way We Were"
written with Marvin Hamli.ech.
"In 'The Heat of the Night,' the
murderer, a short-order cook, plays
the aame 10ng on the jukebox all the
time," he said. "The director wanted
us to write a aong with Quincy Jonea
that could lndk:ate IOme part of this
man'• character. So we wrote 'The
Foul Owl.' It 1tarta: 'There's a foul
owl on the prowl tonilht.'
"Quincy llill calla me Owl.
"And Warren Oates u the cop In
this BOUthem town peelu ln a window
at a naked girl while the country
atation on his car radio plays a IOI\&
we wrote, 'The .Bow-Leged Polly
and the Knock-Kneed Paul Can't Get
H b T~ther at All' " this year is "Eye of the Tiaer" by Jim Bergman says. " ow they contri Ute e write ...... na. fot _..._fi .. -only Peteri.k and Frankie Sullivan ID from to the dramatic function in the picture ..... _... • ._... ...... ..,.
"Rocky HI," and "Up Where We is suppaeed.ly the criteria. on requesta from frlenda. With Dave
Belong" by Jack Nitzsche, Buffy "1 don't have an Idea' which la the Gruain they wrote "A Smile. a
Sainte-Marie and Will Jennings from strongest and I don't think lt would be Memory an'd an Extra Shirt."
"An Officer and a Gentleman." The politic to answer if I did.'' Mn. Bergman love. to recite the
Bergmans will not say which one of The Bergman• had five days to lyrics: "A smile, a memory and an
their 90ng:s has the beat chance to win. write two songs for "Tootaie,'' alx extra ahirt. That'• all I have to peck.
"The songs are looked at as an days to write two songs for "Best Outaide of that, m09t everything I
extension of the acreenplay," Mn. Friends" and two weeks to write one have la on my back." :..:..:~_;_;::...;_~~~-.:...._;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---
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I Lii OITIOTOfl
YOU *'ED A)fll IT MlmnL WOYll
• • "Spollert Of Ti. F0tt11" ( 19M)
Rod Camlton. vn Aeleton
~~. Mad M~ttl"
( 1974) Ftlllk Gilgaenlnl. MlcllMI
l>ttlkl
-t.-00-
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MAL P£OPl£
.~. (19UJ Cldl Roben·
llOft, caw. Bloom.
I (fl THE FAU. OUV YOUR QtOICE FOR THE FUt
WAllDI i: t•• "Myst-*' F1om Beyond Ewttl" ( 19Ttl Ooc:lllmentwy ~TlONAl~
{C)MOVIE
t t "J 0 And The Siii Flal Kief'
( 1978) Slim Pick-. ®MOYIE
H * "Excllibur" ( 11181) Nlgtl T •· &'=lilmlon.
t * "Mourltain Family Robinson"
(1979) Aob11t Logan. Sunn
Olnwlte SNw.
llMOW ** ** "The Stunt Man" (11180) Ptt9r O'T OOll, SleYe Rlbblcll
-t:30-~CI) SQUARE P£GS
ctwu'8 AHOE.1..8
UEOETtCTOR ~ttru)CAU8T: ARTISTS
-8:<45-CZ> CHAALES QWWUNTAU<.S
wmt l..EOfWID NMOY
-~-8MOYIE
"In OeflrlM ()I Kids" (Prtmllr•l
Blythe Dinner, 5-11 Waldon
l 'ACTI °'I.ff RYNra ll'OtM 'l'H QllA.ll~TI
IOUNDITAOI YM OHOICI Rift THI
~F-:~ OI Tttt0t" (tM1)
fdwtrd Altllrt. !tin Motln
Cf>. ~II Tr9 II. The Wrath OI
Kllan" (1MZ) WIWMI &Miner, Aimw·
doMomtlC)lll -t:»-•'AXI 'f.~w.nty-T"'-P.-To
Bak• Slrllt" ( 1961) Vtn JolvllOtl,
VIit Mlltl
I M•A'8'H
MAAIHAl DI.LOH
MO'tW
... "Clllh Of The Tlt1111" (1981)
Herry Hamlin, l.tu<enot OllYter
-10:00-
1.NEWS
AU1T1H cm UMfTS
THE VIAOINIAH
MOW "Metty-Go-Round" (No Oett) Maril
Sdloeldtf, Helmut Berger.
-1(>.30-
• IHDEP9llEHT HETWOAI<
NEWS
THE YfSTEAOAY SHOW
AOCKOHTV ITAXI
MOVIE
• • • \\ "The Genlng Of Wisdom"
(1978) SuMMAh Fowle. Hilary Ryan
-1UIO-
ltJ8Cl)9 QINEWS 8AT\RlA y NIOKT
lfSEAACHOf_
THE JIEfffRSONS MARY HARTMAH, MARY
HARTMAN
I llOSIHOS AfllORT SOtN>8T lilJE.
~ EJMl.OPE P\.EASE. •.
* "Felicia" ( 1980) Jean Roche. Miry
Mtndem.
(%)MOVIE
• • "Gel To Know· Your Rabbit"
( 1972) Tom Smothers. John Astin
-11:30-
9MOVIE * t • "Conln The Blrbarlan" ( 11182)
Arnold Sdlwlfleneoglf. Jamel Earl
Jorlll
-12:30-~~NIGHT wmt DAVID
I ~TT\.E: UP Cl.06E
LCM, AME.AICAH 8TYl£ MOYIE .. ~ "Blow Out" (1981) John Tr•
¥Gitt. Nancy Allen
• -12:.0-
8 Cl) MOVIE * * '4 "Outllde Clltnc:t" ( 19781
Y¥1411 MlmieUI, 8e¥erly Hope Atkin-
son
-1:00-
9MOVIE * t t '4 "Oetth Tak• A Hollday"
( 1934) Fredric Match, Evelyn Ven·
able 8MOVIE * * * "The Undefeated" ( 1970)
John Wayne. Rodi Hudson. (!)MOVIE • • * • "You c.n·1 Get Awrt Wltll Murder" (1939) Humphrey Bogltt.
Gile Page. .MOVIE
H I\ "Thi O.W'a Hind" (1961)
-t:M-
(C)MOYIE
U '~ "~At S." (1.,.) M
Bogllde, &ngltte 8'rclot
-Z:G0-1 ~NM NIC»fTWATCH
-2:11-eMCMI * • ''Tiie Sword Atld The SorClll•" (1912) Let H<lf1ily, Ktlh!Mn Beller
-taa-• =-U \l "The lone Ringer" (195e)
Clay1on MOC>ft, Jay SllYerhella.
(%)MOVIE
.. "The GltcSllW'• Son" (t977)
Bred Oour1fl
-2".A6--4:36-eMOVIE H "Clp(tin Ptltntom" ( 19591 • 1 Sl'Y
Frri L•lllllor•. Anna Merla Sandri -4:50-
-3:00-CID MOVIE CD ... A ... ~ •• "Honky Tona FrflfNl•'I'' (1981)
(JD MOYi('' WJlatln Ol'lane. 8e\oerty O'Angtlo
8M complete Hating In TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 l<NXT CCBSI
D KNBC INBCI e KTLA (Ind.)
• KABC (ABC)
Q KFMB CCBSI
IJ KHJ-TV !Ind.I
ID KCST CABCI
e KTTV !Ind I
• KCOP·TV (Ind.)
•• KCET <PBS)
e KOCE CPBSI
(QJ On·TV
IX Z·TV
Cltl HBO
ft> (Cinema•>
(!) IWORI NY , N Y
!Ill CWT8S)
I[) (ESPNI
Cli (Showtlme l
• Spotlight I'
• !Cable N•ws Network I
Zorro hack for his 20th incarnation
By JERRY BUCK UT...,......,._
LOS ANGELES -That sly fox
Z.Orro is back for his 20th incarnation
on the acreen since Douglas Fairbanks
first played the aria~tic Don Diego
de la Vega in 1920.
In "Zorro and Son." you get not one
sword-wielding adventurer in Old
California but two. Henry Darrow
plays the senior Z.Orro. who is getting
on a little and is training his son. Paul
Regina is the apprentice Z.Orro, Don
Carlos.
The new comedy. which premieres
tonight on CBS, is from Walt Disney
Productions. Disney a1ao produced the
first "Zorro" series, 1957-58, and aome
of the same sets and costumes are
being used.
"Z.Orro can still handle h.imself but
he's not what be waa 30 years ago,"
says Darrow. "fm 50 years old. It's
great that I dort't have to do all thoee
physical things. It's the father trying
to hand over the family business to his
son."
Pico. Richard Beauchamp is Sgt.
Sepulveda, Barney Martin has the
tWi.n roles of Frandacan monks Napa
and Sonoma. John Moschitta, the
fa s t -talking man fr o m the
commercials, plays P ico's human
recording machine, Cpl. Cassette.
Darrow, attired in a light gray
costume, is on the hacienda set. The
story calla for Z.Orro, his son, and
Bernardo, to try to hide a flamenco
dancer from Commandante Pico.
When they find her dancing shoes,
Bernardo puts them on and does a
dance.
Darrow looks like an older version
of Manolito, the impetuous 10n of Don
Sebastian Montoya, in the "High
Chaparral" aeries from the 1960s.
Bill Dana also stan as the faithful
servant Bernardo using his Jose
Jimine1 accent. In this version,
Bernardo has gained a voice, unlike
the first series when he was unable to
speak. Gregory Sierra plays Z.Orro's
new adversary, Commandante Paco
"Some people called Manolito a
rogue," says Darrow. "I don't think if
Manolito had straightened up he
would have become as good a per90n
as Z.Orro. But I aee Zorro aa Manolito
grown up. I was young then, now rm
older, a little gray, with a pot belly. I
think Zorro aees h.imarlf as still that
young man. But he's got a few
infirmities. He get.a out of breath "
Th.is is the aecond time Darrow has
portrayed Z.O~. He was the V?ice in a
Saturday monung canoon eenes.
Henry Darrow (left ) stars as the aging Zorro, and
Paul Regina plays his son, in "Zorro and Son,"
premiering tonight at 8 :00 on KNXT (2).
'Thorn Birds' takes top spots • 1n • ratings
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The last three
segments of ABC's "The Thom Birds" took the top
three places in the latest Nielaen ratings, giving the
network a big victory over CBS for the week that
ended April 3.
"The Thom Birds" surpassed "The Winds of
War," telecast by ABC in F'"ebruary. It now ranka
second only to ABC's "Roots" aa the highest-rated
minlleries of all time. ABC said "The Thom Birds"
reached the highest number of homes of any
mi.n.iaeries in history -34.9 million per average
minute.
ABC said an estlmated 110 million people
watched aome segment of the 10-hour, four-part
mini.eries, still short of the estimated audience of
135 million for "Roota" in January 1977.
"Thom Birds" had an average rating of 41 .9
and a aha.re of 59. The "Roots" average for 12 houra
was a 45 raung and a 66 share. In 1977, one ratings
point equaled 7l2,000 homes, while today it equals
833,000 hometl.
The ratings are the percen\age of all TV 1et.s
that are tuned to a show. The share is the
percentage of sets in wie that are tuned to a show.
The third chapter of "The Thorn Birds"
ranked the highest, but it was only a tenth of a
rattna point ahead of the final chapter \elecut 1ut
WedJleeday. Show No. 2 waa in third place. All
three ebowa ranked hl1her than the opening
IT'S TIME TO FEEL GOOD AGAIN.
1
MAX
DUGAN
RETURNS
., .. _TMC.OJWl'/,IOll. •
,.. . ' . '
f n ..
chapter on Sunday, March 27. which led the ratings
the previous week.
ABC ended the week eight rating points ahead
of CBS. The A.C. Niel.en CO. rating for ABC wu
24.3. CBS had 16.3 and NBC was third at 12.9. The
networks say this mean.a that in an average prime-
time minute, 24.3 percent of homes with television
were ttmed to ABC.
CBS ia still ahead of ABC by aix-tentha of a
rating point for the seuon to date. CBS has 18.3 and
ABC has 17.7 for the current aeMOn, which ends
April 17. NBC WU in third place with 15.3.
Completing the Top 10 were CBS' "Dallas" and
"60 Minutes," ABC's "That's Incredible," CBS'
"Magnum, P.l.," "Simon & Simon" and "The
Missiaeippi." In 10th place was the ABC Sunday
Ni9bt Movie, a rerun of "The Sting." It was the
highest-rated ABC theatrical movie of the year.
The premiere of the CBS eeries "Goodnight,
Beantown," which stars Blll Bixby and Mariette
Hartley as two Boston television newxasten, was
in 11th place.
Another CBS premiere, "Foot in the boor."
about a middle-age aki.rt..chaslna widower, ended
up In 50th place. A third premfere, ABCa "Baby
Makea Five," a comedy about a family's new
addition, finlahed in 28th place.
The NBC movie, "~ la Forever," in which
Michael Landon played the true-life story of
Australian joumaliat John Everingham, tied for
42nd place with NBC's "Family Ties."
Here are the Top 10: "The Thom Birds," Part m. a 43.2 rating or 35.98 million households. A.BC;
"The Thorn Birds," Part IV. 43.1 or 35.90 million,
ABC; "The Thom Birds," Part U, 42.4 or 35.3
million, ABC; "Dallas," 25.6 or 21 .3 million, CBS;
"60 Minutes," 23.9 or 19.9 million. CBS; ''That's
lncredlble," 23.5 or 19.5 million, ABC: "Magnum,
P.I.," 23.3 or 19.4 million, CBS; "Simon & Simon,"
22.9 or 19.0 million. CBS; "The Miasisslppi," 22.7 or
18.9 million, CBS; ABC Sunday Night Movie, ''The
Sting," 21 .9 or 18.2 million, ABC.
Here are the next 10: "Goodnight. Bewltown."
20.3 or 16.9 million, CBS; ''Laverne and Shirley,"
19.1 or 15.9 million, ABC; ABC's "The Love Boat"
and CBS' ''The Jeffer90ns," 19.0 or 15.8 million,
tied; "Tucker's Witch," 18.5 or 15.4 million, CBS:
"The A -Team.1." 18.0 or 14.99 million, NBC;
"Newhart." 17.w or 14.91 million, CBS; "Gloria,"
17.8 or 14.8 million. CBS; "Fantasy laland," 16.9 or
14.0 mllllon, ABC; "Happy Daya," 16.8 or 13.9
million, ABC.
Here are the five lowest -rated shows:
"Monitor," NBC; "The Pope and Hia Vatk:an," ABC
Newa Special; "'Ille Renepdes." ABC; "Grahdpa,
Run with Me," NBC special; and ABC News
Cloeeup: "Adapt or Die."
Chicken Planks~
Dlnner•2.79
It'• the best pert of the best pert ol
the chlekenl F'our tender at rips or
whltemeet chicken cerved from the
bfeelt, better·dl~ end fried ao •
CNnchy, golden brown.
I09IH....._atw ..
tn Cosca Met.I~
ScM.1Ct1 OI Sin 0..00 '1111· Across"°"' 'edCO
01c•r Fevers BALLOT
l .. IT~TUU
0 l .T.
0 Gandtll
0 M)Mlng
0 Toottle
0 Tt\t V«dlcl
•llT ACTOfll
0 Ben KtnoeleY o 0ue11n Hottman
D Jacil L9"VTIOn
0 Paul Newman
0 Pet« O'TC>CM
NIT DMICTOfll
O W==eltirNn 0 8ttwn 0
0 AleNlfd !Wnbofougtl
0 Sydney PQll9ck
0 Sidney Lumet
811T ACn.111
a Julie Andtewe
D Melca Lange D61ety~
0 M8fYI 8treep
D O.b11 Winger
IUPPO .. TIHO ACTOR IUPPOftTINQ ACTM
0 Charlet OumlnQ
0 Louis Goaeelt Jr
0 John Llttlgow
D Jamee M1eon
D Rot>eo Pr"ton
0 Jelllcl Lange o Glenn cioe.
0 T«rl Q11r
0 Lesley Ann Warren
0 Kirn $1Aniey
BEIT IONG
0 Eye ol the Tiger
D How Do You Keep the Mvalc PleylnQ?
0 If I W8fe In Love
0 It M~t be You
0 Up Whefe We a.tong
l>Mdllne Midnight Aprtl 10. 1•
Oscar Fever la sponsored by the ..., ....
Prlz .. preeented by
THE HARLEQUIN
DINNER PLAYHOUSE
NAME -------------------------------
ADDIUSS-----------------------------crrY--------------------------------PHONE ------------------------------
*BARGAIN MATIN•RS *
Mondey tflru leturd•Y
All Pertonnance. befOfe 5:00 PM
(Eam,I l,.ml E11111 11t1 • ......,.,
.,~ .....
"HIGH flOAD --TO CH9tA" I "GAllDHI"-
----: • -..y ITSMO ---•ft~lti• JocvttyotCo,,.,lewoOd1 •• .l .• ;_ciJ_
1
21s1n•·•uo _
lAICfWOOO CE NHA
SOUTH WAI' ...
••, ..
ANAHE IM l>lllVf IN _tl .. i-k
·~
~ l ••
BUENA PARK :,•vi "' i------IJMOJO
' ' '•'
LINCOLN t>O•Vf IN
FOUNTAIN 'WAIU\'
Oii.VE IN
-~ ....... -~, Ml•Mtl
-~ .... _.,,_ "TOOT_.._ -----·
... AD90YS"• ____ ....
--'"THI -.ACK
ITALUON llmTUMll" -
-.AD90Yr .. -"ffAIT,....AT
MMlllNOllT .........
.~ .... .._...,_
.... T. THI -
DTM-,.._ITNAL" -'"THI DARK CflYaT AL" -
"10 TO ....aitlT" t111 -"VIGIL.ANTI" ..
C:.·"-............ ..,_.,_,. .....
• 191•1691
-··-.... •••.,!MAK" ..
-..AVY .-TM."" -··-
This • IS
New mortgage
rates show drop
WASHINOTON (AP) -The avera1e lnt.erett rau-
charaed Americana for new mortaiqee declined In Maret\ to
13.3! percent, tl\41 lowett level linoe S.p~bor 1980, the
government haa eaid.
The decline wu tho elshth in a row, the Federal Home
Loan &nk Boa.rd eald in a report ntleued yee~rday.
The new averap effecUve comm.ltment ra~ on long-
term fixed-rate morta•l'-1 fell two-tent.ha of a percentaae
point early lut month from February'• 13.~~ percent.
It wu 13.23 percent In September 1980 and 17.-49
percent 1n Much 1982.
The rate I.a quoted by .,,_jor lenden for newly buJlt
single-family h<>rne8 with a 25-y• oonventJonal mortgage
that makes up 75 percent of the purchase price.
on
for each $5,000 ~ ~t
in a 2Yz-Year to 10-Year
Great American Investor Account!
It's new: a ll1-year account that qualifies for our
\100 inlerest bonu<;! Also new: a l-year account
that qualifies. 100. Ye,, on April 1, regulatory
changes allowed us to r,horten the term of the
Great Amencan Investor Series'"' to .30 monthc;.
That's why we extended our bonus otter beyond
March 31 . . to properly introduce our rwo
Grt'•t Amt'ric•n
Investor Account
211J·Yeu Account
3·Yeu Account
4-Ye•r Account
9.bS'\o
9.80'
10.00'\
10.15~
Yield•
t0.99'\.
S·Ye.u Account shorter-term a(counts.
Now you can lock 1n today'<; high interest for ao; &-Ye.ir Account 10.30' I 1.18%
-,hort a penod as 2lz \NI'S ... or as long a term as 8--Ye.r Account 10.60'\ 11.42'-
10 years ... and ptek up $100 cash for each SS,000 10-Ye.u Account 11.00'-11.81'\
you deposit. Take the interest bonus in cash when •yot14"'°""11 Nied on dtoowts 111 u ooo •nt•tmen11 ·~~ lllltmt 11onw11C10td 10
you open your account ... Of add it to your de-tht~lu« l'nllc11>1l111d1nwut11111$1kl.ot•nKCOont11111~111111H1tyor1'f1os
rv-..:it and watch it collect more interest over the 111114 ... not .. ru11tco Acu1in11 ~·to 111111111•• i..1111tc IH111t1. cwn•llll!
I""-U.000 000 Ofltr ~ 10 .. 1h•h•l 11 ..., llllt """nl "'' ""~ It dlPCt
term of the account. '""' S.lltl•Moal ,."'"'"' uri., .. , ..... ,1
It's a great way to build a <;0lid inv~tment . ·to i-----------1 save for college or retirement. The wide seleclion $
of lnvl"'itOf Accounts allows you to pick the terms I 100 I
you W<)l1t and tailor your inveo;tments to your I I
11metatile.
If you choose to use interest as monthly in-I Present tb1s c.oupon •I any olhet ot ei .. t Amtnun hdent I
come, earnings can be automatically transferred and s100 '"bonus interest l0t ewe1y $5,000 deoos1ted •Ill be
to a Great American Federal checking Of savings I citd1tedtoyovroptn1111balanu1n1G111tAme11cantnnstor I
account at the end of each month. Auovnt You may Wlllldrn llus llOllvs 1111med11tety 0t al~• •I
I to """11111tllt1«ou11t to earn rttn lllOf• 111tt11St Tiits offtt I If you halle a maturing IRA or Keogh Account upires Aptil I~. !983
of $5,CXX> Of more, now's the time to move it here I llOTl: Eern111p may btwi(hd!a•n at 1nyt1m1, butwllhdrawal I
and pick up a big bonus. And savings in a Great ot p1tnc1P'I prt01 to malurrtt will resull 1111ubslant1tl 1nt11est
American Investor Account are insured up to I pe11.1t1y ,iin torf11ture al tnllrt 1ntemt bonui. -'
S100,CXX> by the FSLIC. ----------
for lnfonn•tion on lod.Y• hll!I> ••••• c.11 The fln•ncl.11 Un• (800) 211-'JOOO l§T
Great American rederal
...... bll ........ ....................... ............. ._ ..... .......... _,_ .. ...... ........... ) ........ ,.. ......................
................ C&Mlt ....
..
Orang• Coa1t DAIL V PILOT /W.OnMdey, ~prll e, 1983 U
MUC NOTICE
• WN NOTIOI °' JMllTU'• IAU MO~D .. ,.. '--.... H1111-..ITHOMTC*
IMIN!Nftt .... tMTUI T .11 ..... IMt?U WV. HMI uwr COOi 0 Ttlutfll UL• NO. H I ,. M I! I I' I H A H C I A L
NOTIC I 01' DIPAUL T ANO COAPOAATIOH H duly ~eel
ILICTION Truetu Ulld81 Ill• tolfO•lng
TO HU. t.*oa9' OlllD CW TIWIT OMCttbed d.ed of truel WILL HLl
...oftTANT NOTIOI AT l'UILIO AUCTION TO THI! IP YOU9' l'f'0,.9'T'f' II IN HIOHHT llOOl!A 1'09' CAIH
'09'10LOIU9'1 HCAUH YOU AHOI OA THr. CAIHIEllS OA
A A I I I H I N D I N Y 0 U 9' CtrATtl'll!D Cti£CKI .-tctMD IN
,AYMINTI. IT MAY II 101.D CIVIL CODE HCTION 2U4h WrTHOU'T ANY c~ ACTION. lP•Y•ble .. the ume o4 .... In lewful 8114 p941 111er heft ttM ..... ....... money of fhe United 811tH ) .i1
lo brlllt reur 108811111 rn IOOd right, 11118 llld 11119' .. I OOllyeyecl 10 ti~ bJ ~ ell ef ,_ ..... and n-lletd by It unci.t TAUS TOA:
due l'IJlllllllt 1'1111 1'•r111flted MICHA!l. THO"'NTON
OMll 1N11 ... ,__ wttMll tfVw 8!Hl!FICIAAY MERCURY
lllOfttMlfeMIMRte!MeMttee IAVIHGS AHO LOAH
ol deteull WH tHetded. Tlllt AS30CIATION lecofcMd M111Ch 4,
ll'IOIUll le '7A1Ln ..... .......,, IHt ae 1n11r. No 6773 In 8ook
end •Ill 111011 ... Ulllll , ... , 1)089, P•Q• 774 . of OlllClll
180011111 .... 111•1 ourront. YIU Aecordt In the ott•c• o f 1111
MOJ 1101 ltewe to ,., Uto entlro llecorder of Or•nge County, hid ....W ,.,....,. ef ,_ -•· d••d o l tru11 d1to•lb•• lh•
HOii th111tll fvll l'•f"'ent we• fOllowlng ............ ~ ,... ,,. ... t ,., "'° LOI 1 or Ttacl UIO. CUy of Colll
MIOUftt ltM9d .eow. MMI, "por Mep recorded In 8ool!
Al111 111111 month• from thl d•t• 89, P1ge 42 of MIKll4lllOO<lt Mape.
of recoro1llon of thlt document Record• of MIO County
(which dell of rOC01d•t1on •PpNl'I YOU ARE IN Dl!FAULT UNDER A
hOreonl. un .... thl obllQetlon being 0 E E D 0 F T R U S T 0 A T E 0
fOUICIOIOd upon ~mrtt • IOnQOI FEBRUARY 27, tNt UNLESS YOU
porlOd, you hew only thl 119tl 11ghl TAK! ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
lo 11op thl fcnc;IOeure by peylno PROPERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A
Ille enllre 1mount oemendOd by PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEEO AN
your creditor. EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
To find out the 1moun1 you mutt OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST
pey, or 10 lll•lnQO for P•vment to YOU. YOU SHOULD CONT ACT A
••op the 101eclo1u(.• or II your LAWYER
proplfly 11 In lorecloeure for eny Tiie ti•••• •d<lreu or t•ld
othll' rMton, eontecl property It 637 W Wilson. St
AMERICAN SAlllNOS. • F0011at Co111 MeH, CA No werrenty II
A11oc11tton. 15725 E Whittler given n 10 II• eomple1en1tt or Blvd • Whittler. Cellfornl• 90607. C01r1C1neae) The benellotery und«
l714) 773.7214 LN No Bt·t91012 1110 DMd ol Trull. by reason or•
2 72 (!) breach or defeull In the obllgaflonl
If vou heve 1ny quettlona. you secured th•teby heretofore
enould oonl1et • 11wy11 or the •••eull<I and dellvereo to th•
government eoencv whlc:h m•y h•ve utlOeftlgnOO • '#nlten Ooc:ler111on
fntured your lolltl of Deleull •nd Oemend for Sile,
Remember. YOU MAY LOSE end wrllten nollce ol breech 1nd of
LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOT elecllon lo eeuae Ille undettigned
TAKE PROMPT ACTION to NII 181d properly 10 1811sly Mid
NOTICE IS HEREBY 011/EH 11111 Obllg1llon1. eno lller11fler the
First Ch111111 Flnenclel Corpo<1tlon, uno«tlgned COUMd 1110 nouoe of
I• now ouly 1ppoln110 Trulloo breach ano of lleellon to be
unoer 1 0 11d of Trull. Oiied recoroeo November 10, 1982 u
Oeceer 111. 1978, IUCUIOO by: lnttr No 82-398287 In of Offlcltl
J1m11 w Juttlco and Joyco A. Record• In the office of the
Justice. II utb•nd end wife •• Rocord11 of Orarige Counly,
Tru1tor 10 toc:ure obllg1t1on1 In Seid S ele wlli bl med•, but
tevor ot AMERICAN SAlllHOS & without covenent or warranty,
l 0 A N A s s 0 c I A T I 0 H a • ••Pf'M• O< lmpllOO. reg.,dlng litle
Beneftctary po1uaelon. or enwmbrenc:et. to
Recorded on Oecemb er 28. 11178 pay the rem11n1ng prlnclpal sum ot
,, ooeument No. 3!'>589, book the note aocured by aald Deed ot
12010, page t4!'>8 o t Ofllclal Tn.111, wllh lnlerHI a1 In said note
Record• In 1h1 office or th• proV'Rloo. 1dvance1. II eny, unoa1
Recorder of Orange County, the 1erm1 ot H id OooO of Trust
Calllornl•. lndudlnO 1 noll lor the f-. cna1ges eno upon-01 the aum ol S 176,000 00 Th•t Iha TrullM end ol the 1ru11t created by
benellclll lntOllll under MIO Deed Mid Deed Of Trull S•ld Hie Wiii bl
of Trull and the obOg1t1on1 aec:ured lletd on Wednndey, Aprll 20, 1983,
thereby are pr-tly 11414<1 by the 11 2 00 p m. at the Cllepman Ave .
beneficiary Thet a breech of, Ind entrance to 1111 Civic Center
oeteull In. 1he oblogellon f0< which Building. 300 E Chipman Ave •
Mid OooO of Trust •• MC<Klty has Or1noe. CA. • oocurred on thll the peyment hU At tho time of the inltlal
not t>oen m•de of publtcallon of 1h11 nooce. the totll
Fallur• to make the 1-t -83 amountoflheunp1ldbel1noeo1the
peymont of prlndpll ano10< 1n1er .. 1 obllg•llon toc:ureo by trll above
end ell tubsequent p1yment1, <111crlbed d110 ot truet anO
together with lete c111 rg1a. H llm•l•d coett, ••P•n•e• end
Impound•, Impound oepoellt, If eny. •<lvancot II $ 101 248 88.
under 1111 111m1 of Hid note or The opening bid mey be oblllned Died ol Tru11. and lllT eut>IOQuonf by calllng (714) 937-0tee ttll aey
paymenll which b1c1me due t>llore th41 Hie.
th••••ller, Including any 1111 Oete March 2t. 11183
charge• or other 1umt payeble HERMES FINANCIAL CORP
unoer 1111 term• ol H id Note or u said Truatee,
OeeCI o4 Truet and ell tubeeQuent By T 0 SERVICE CO AQOlll
paymenta which bec1m1 due M11co Br-1, AUi SEC
tll•r••lt••, Including eny l•I• One City Blvd W111
Chl!QH or other sumt p1y1bl• Ofange. CA 92868
unoer the termt ol Hid Nola or (7141835-8288
Deed of Tn.ttt Publl1h1d Orange Coaet Delly
That by ••••on 111er1ol the Piiot. M1re11 30 Apr~ 8 . 13 1983 presen1 benf'flc111y unoer such 1~4-83
PlmlC NC>TIC£
YOU AM • Dl•AUU .,...... A DllD Of T'IWIT DATID M't D, t•1. u&lll YOU TMI ACTN*
TO NOTaCT YOUfl~ •--.-,
IT MAY M IOU> AT A "*"' tA L I . ti' YOU NllD AN
tJUl\.AlllATKMI CW .,,._ UTUM
OP T ... "'OCllCNNO .....r Y~J.. YOU tMOUt.O CONTACT A LA'"P. NOTtCI CW TWU91"1tl U&.I
T.1 ..... -NOTICI 18 HfAfBY OIVIH, 11111 on WldnoedlV, AprM IO. 111), SI
tO 00 o'otoc:ll 1.m ot Mid cN)' lrl
lhe •OOM Mt Nido fOt ~
Truet"'' a.io.. wtthln t!lf'"~·Ol
REAi. E8TATf 8ECUfUTlll
S!RVICf, looeled II f020 Nonh
Broodwey, Suite 209. 1t1 IN CftY of Sll\11 Ane, County of 0.llflOO, .....
0 1 Cllllornla. REAL f8TATE
81!CURITIE8 8E!MCE. I c.lllOtnll
CO(por1llon. 11 duly appointed
lrutlM under and pur-t to tfll
power of HI• confe11od In thel
~eln Deed of Trull tlllaouUd b'Y
Kl JUNO LIM Ind l<EUH 800K uM,
hueblnd Ind wife •• IOllll toMnle. r1C01ded Augull t7, fN1, In loott
14183 of Otflc:lal Rocord• of ..
County, 11 p1go 731, Aocordlol''•
lntttument No 19781, by r-of
I blMCh Of def IUll In P41'f"111'1t 0t
p11lorm1nc1 ol 1111 obllgello111
H cu11d thereby, lncludln9 t1111
break or oefeull. Not'" of wftlCtl
wH rec<1roec1 Oocombor ~2. 1tl2.
a1 Recoro11'1 ln1trument No.
82_."8895, WILL SEU AT PV8LIO
A UCTtOH TO THE HIGHEST
BIDDER FOR CASH. llwfvl lnOllS\'
ot II•• Untied 8111 ... or • c:aeNar'I
ch41Ck orawn on 1 11111 °' netlOnal
btnk, 1 ti ate or tederat crodtt
union, or 1 11111 0< fed1111 llvtncM
and loi n lllOCletlon domlcllod ln
11\tt 11a11. Ill payebll at I/la tlmo of
ule, ell right. lllle llld ln1oreat hald
by 11 . u Truell•. In thlt 1111
proper! y altu•t• In Mid County end
State, deacllbod ae toltows:
lot 7 ol Tract Ho. 7213. ae
recorded on a map 1n 8oofl 2&e. Pages 45 . 47 and 48 o r
M1-4lllMIOUa Mape, In the ofllol of
the County recorder of Mid County Tha &1re11 1odr1u 01 other
common oellgnatlon of tho rell
proper1y here4n11bov1 d41ac:tlbod le
purported to be · 1457t
Countrywooo Lene, lrvtne.
Calll0<n11
The unooret gned herlb'f
011c1a1m1 111 t11blllty for eny
Incorrectness tn MIO 111111 ldclf-'
01 othe< common ~tlon
Said Hie will l>O mlllo wtthOut
... r,.f\ty. ••P••n or lmpllod, '
regarding 11111. poueulon, or
encumbr1nc11, to satlaly tha •
princlpat balanco of tho Note or
other obllga1oon toc:ured by aald
Deed ot Trull, with lnternt I/Id l)ther aum• u provided tho11tn,
plut advancet, II any, undor the
111ms thereof 111d tntwoat on llUCfl
aovancee. end pk.ts •-. chlTOOI and ellpollaet of ..... TNttOI and Of
the trualt crNled by Mid Deed Of
Trust The 10111 emount of H id
obllgellon, lncludlng ro1eon1bly
nt1m11ed I•••· c111•g•• 1nd eapen ... of the Trutteo. al the tlmo
ot lntlial publiclllon of thl• Hotlcl, le
$29.581.08
Oatoo-M11ch 25. 1983
206,
Rl!.Al elf ATE
SECURITIES SERVICE, a
C.lllO<nll eo<potatlon, u Ttulleo.
By 1/1 0 J MOfVll,
111 Prllldent
tSEAL)
2020 N Broadway, Ste
Senta Ana. CA 927oe Telephone (714)963-M10
Publl1'1ed 0 11nge Coal! 0 1lly
Potot Mer 30 Apr 6 13. 1983 t526-e3 Deed OI Trutl has ewecuted and
Oeltvered tOMkl lr.,~IOI, 1 wrt1ten
Oocla•allon or O.f11u11 and Dem.mt -----K--045--1,-----P\llUC M>TlCE
for Siie. Ind llU Oepo91t00 with M UN f C Ip A L C 0 U fl T O, IN TH« ~ COURT, llld Truttee. tuch Oood of Trutt CAUFOA*A STAT£ OP CALWOMtlA
and Ill thl documen11 oYld«lClng COUNTY Of °"-'NQ1E COUNTY Of' ~
lh• obltg1llon. toc:urod tn.teby. CEXTilAL OftAN01! COUNTY In the Mitter o4 the '"° haa Oec:lllred and dOl9 '-oby .IUDICl.u. OllTNCT AOQotton Potlhon ol
ooct11e Ill tun11 secured thlroby 100 Cl'fk Coni.t Dt1ve Woet I.ONO VAN TRUONG
lm....Olltlly due end PlylOll and Sant.I Ana, Celttomle l:l'7V1 Adoptl p t
llat elected and does hereby eMcl p l A I N T I F F W I H S T 0 N ng ::.' Aoam
to ceUM the trusl PfOi>OrtY to be NETWORK INC 1 Oel1w1re PETITIOM '°"ADOPTION
1010 10 1alt1fy lh• obllg1t1on1 oorpo11tton (ShPfi• -•> ~~I~ 0 E F e N D A H T c A B L e Petlllonor. LONG I/AH TRUOHO. # Amartcen SaYloga. a ADVERTISING & MARl<ETINO. 1 allegea
f:.-at AMoclallon ~llllflhlp c:onli811"G ot MichMI 1 The name by wNch the mtnor
Vlrefnll M. Sllckor Britt. co-p1111nor. and ShlMy wflO I• the IUbjlet of '"'-p«ltlon Alllltllllll Vic» PtMl~I Lff, CO•partner, MICHAEL HEIL w11 reglaterld II birth II SCOTT BRETT. 1n lnolvlouel, SHIRLEY HUV-KHOA BUI
By Rot>er1 c Maltllero lEI!. an lndMduel Doll I to x. Doe 2 The ·~ mlnOr cNd AaalltMt s.cr.i.1ty Co Dos r~11on Published Orenge Coatt 0111y • ~--wH born In llVClty of Or1ng1. 30 k'WOMS County of Oungo. Celttornla. on P110t • .,.., t8. 23. . ""' 1. tM3 c..a NUl9IJI 1111M Seplomoer 22• 1979 l327-e3 NOTICSI YCMll llawe Molt IMtOd. 3. Petitioner .. an adult par.on ----.---.,.-..,,.-TICE----TM MWt lllaJ doetde ...-.. JOU and dH1r11 to edopt aald c:fllld. ~ "" wltMllt ,_ bolftt hNrd tMlaee Potlllonor It the HU1benC1 of DONO -----.-..-11------JOU ,...,.... Wttlllll IO dip. "8ed Tttl BUI, the mother of Mid dlld, tllo ............... Milew. wN> rw\alna her rigrlt of ouatody of ~,.:.:,.~ ~ ti you wbh to Mlk !hi ~ o4 th• child Petitioner 1nd 1110 l'NVATI IM.a 111 ellomay In this miller. you ~ ano Mid mM« ctlld reeldl
tnould do IO promptly to tho1 your 111 the County of ~. Stets of No. A-1•• written rnponaa, II 1ny, m1y l>O Cellf0<nl•
In IN 8upar10r Coun of the Stato nlod on time. 4. The mother of the cMO. OUHG
o4Celttoml-.lnlllldfortheCoun1)1 AVISO I Ueted II• llclo THI BUI. w1a m11rlod to the of~ do111111daclo. II trtb11n11 '""• It ....... 27 1""'1 t "--·-In tho Mitter or the E1111e ot dlotdlir -l19 Ud. IHI ~ a Pll '°'* on ......., • • .., 1 OW'UI
HENRY GRUMET. DloMMd --Ud. ~tro Ana. CeillOtnle, and la Pfoperod to ,--oona.11 to the chld'• llllo9tlon by Notic. .. hetet>y glwn that thO • ao c1tee. Loe I• .,. the petitioner 111a1n1ng e1 of hit' u~nod wtlt Mii •t privet• sale, Mow· tlghta to custody and controt to the hlgheet end beet bidder, ~I u1teo oeaea 101tc1tar el 5. The tither of tho chllo. 11
1ubjac1 to conflrmallon Of H id con1ejo d• un abogaoo en Hla unttnown. Under the prOYlelonl of Supor10rCounon«1florthO~ 11unlo, debert1 hacerlo
dl'f o4 Aptll, 1883, at the offlca of 1nmoo1a1amon11, d• "1• manor1. ='=• 2::;,:: ~~~~::
OAV10 E. WALD. ESO .. 333 8ay90e tu raepuwt1 MCrlt1, ti IM'f llguna, adoption 11nc1 thete It no
Ortvo. Newport Beedl. County of puede -reglllrotd• 1 tlempo Pf°""'*' fllhlr .. CllfemWned by
Or1111g1, Steto of Cellfomle ... the t TO THE OEFENOAPfl: A OIYll Section 7004 (I ) of the CM1 Code.
right. 1111• and lnt11Ht of Hid complalnt hH b"n lllod by th• 8. Thoc:Nldlsapropereut>jletfof
Olcodent. In and to elf the oor1elt\ ptalnllft agetntt you II you Wllh to edQ911on. the petitioner'• 11or1>1 le
,_ Pfoperly tllul~ In tho City ol defend thl9 I-It. )'OU ll'llm, within IUl1al>ll fO< the chlld. and he II Ible S.el Beoch. Counly of Orange, H d•Y• •fl•• 11111 aummone le' 10 11UPPo'1 end C8l'O for u .. Cfltld
State of Cellfornl1, P•r11cularty ~ on you. hie with this c:ou<t a propat1y The 1n1-t o1 the c:flllcl
delct1bod • tolowa. tCMott wnlton rwponae 10 the complaint Wiii l>O promotOO by thla eooc>tJon,
lot 1oe of Tract 2691, • per UnllM you do IO, your default wtlt The polltlonor ·-to llMI tho
"'IP reoordod In Book 83, PSQM 14 l>O entorld on eppllc.tlon ot ,,.. chlfd In ell 111poct• .. hit own to 18 lnclullvo, of MltcOll1noou1 pl11nt1tt. and thll cou11 mev enter a lewful c:nllO
MIPS. In ttla <>mca of tlll County ludgment 90alna1 \'OU IO< the 1elltf Wt4EREFORE. petlllonor pra~
Alcordor of Orenge County, motw domendod In the Q()fTlplelnt. wNc:ft thel thO Court odjudgl th& ltdcJC)tlon oommonly known .. : 50S t.gune could rHull In garnlehment ot of tr.. c:t*I by pet!Uonor. dacllrin9 '*'-· Seal Boedl. CelHolnle 90"740 w.eeo. tPlng of money or properly th•t ,,,. petlllol* Ind thO cnll<I Term• of H I• c11h In 11wful or oilier retie! requ11110 In 1111 thencefor111 shall 1ut11ln 1ow1rd
money ol Ill• Unlled StltH on complllnt Heh other 1118 IOQ•I re11uon of
conflnnlllon of ..... °' l>er1 cuto 01ted Octol>Ot 11 t982 parent and Child, Ind hOve .. ttia
and b1l1nc1 1vtdencod by note Rot>ort B Kullet. tights eno l>O aubject to 111 the
MC:UtOd by Mortgege °' T ""' Deed Clor1t. dlltlea of 11111 re11tlon: ltnd thet the on fhl property IC> eold Ten pot By ShOfyl CMj)OrlOI<. child 1hall 1>0 knoWll 11 SCOTT
Clnt of amount bid to bo OspOllted Deputy HUY-ICHOA TRUOHO.
wftto bid. Ctwtll & Ceroy, Deted June 6 1981
8ICM « ofletl to ba In wnung end Altorllaf Lone V1111 Truong. wm be rocolvod 1t lh• 1forM•l<I autto lt1, Potlltonor
ottic;o It 1ny time 1tter th• flrat 111• loMll llwd., uw OtftDa1 ef
pub41Galion ~end before d•t• ....,,....... leoctl. CA l2M7 VAN DAO a UNTNEI
of..... (714) .-.a• 110a ... , 1m at.•• m D•lod Ihle 30th d1y of Marcf't. Publt•hod 011no• Cout Dally SM\& Ana. CA .,..
1983 Piiot. Met 30. API 8, 13. 20. t983 Tiil (714) 1414m HAARY GRUMET 1635-13 AttomaJ ,_ ........,.11,
&ecu1or of ttltt DI ... I( NOTICE Publl•h•d Orano• CoHt 0 111y
&tale of niu&. Pllol. M11ch 30. April t . t3. 20,
Henry ON!na1, 'ICTITIOUS IU .... H 1983
OeoOIMd N,4M1 ITATa...,.
DAVl:t I. WALO The lollowlng porton 11 doing MCtC &.ON MLDMTH, & but11r-. u: =::'.:. '::,. 80,HISTICA TEO SERVICE.
-....._.. OA -13224 ~ Aw .. •OA. Tul11n . .._....._, -CA 928IO l'lllltltMd Orengo Ooist O.lly Aon11d A. Grltfln, 13224
fltl04. /ttl11. I. 7, 13, 11a Newport Av1 .. llA. T111t111, CA 1ll..a3 IHIO
I
Thie bueltltll .. ~od by 1111
~ "<lnlld A. Ortlftn
'"'" tl118l'Ml'll -fllld with the Qounty ~ ~ OfWlOI Coun1Y on
M1tlh 2~ 1te:l m-Pu1111t11M Or1nge C.tt 01lly
Piiot. MllOl'I to. Apl'tl I. 1~.l 20, tD13 • t491.a3
----------
Bl Oran11• Coast DAILY Plt.OTIWedn .. d1y, Aprll e, 1183
Pair revives ancient power plant
STOCKBRlOOE, Mau (AP)
-Mary Heather wo 1 •
younaa~r when the powrrhoUM-
w11 built In 1906 to provldv
elc:ctriclty for thf' Monum<-n t
Milla factory cm the Houstmtonk
Rlvl'r
S y the lime 1he reached
middle age In 1946, the stone
bulldlng wat abandoned.
Now, at age 79, she's
r eaurrectlng it as a working
power plant.
Heather and h e r brother,
J oseph Guerrieri, 74, a r e
pioneers in small hydroelectricity
seneration. They have formed
the H o uaatonlc Energy
Conservation Association to seU
• g:,~'" lCJ M UU<.'hwiet ta E1f'Ct rlc
"lt'1 catchy -an old lady
dolni thla kind of thlna." y1
Ht'atht'r, a widow •nd former
tehool ~achcr.
"She'• no 11louch Sho acta llkt>
buaineamen half her aje." aay1
Charle• L ord of the l'edoral
hrgy l«lgulatory CommlAhm,
which overaees rejuvenation of
abandoned powerhowee.
Lord 1&id Heather and her
brother were among the first to
try restoring a small powerhouae
when they received a fede ral
license In 1977.
The two spent six years
cleaning out generations of
plait'On t.lropplni• anci lnvmllnK
m o rl' th un Ua0.000 In th ~
puwerhouac, llCl 1tmon1 rutilJed We1~rn Mauachu1M1tt1 hllla.
Guorrlerl. ea ~tired enalncer
l lvl na Jn Oakland, Cal.it ..
cr lucroued the '-'<>Untry ~veral
tlmH to l'onduc:t a fe aalblllty
1tudy and buy equipment for the
pl&nt.
On New Year'• Day, water
began to tum the turbinN, and
the plant ~enerated 300 kUowatt.s
of electricity, enough for Lampe
and appUances In 200 homes The
electricity la generated by wawr
channeled through a canal from a
dam a half mile upstream.
The plant has been plal'ed on
Savings 1nanager appointed
Carolyn Guley ls manager of the Santa
Ana-Bristol branch of Home Savings of
America in the Bristol Town & Country Plaza
She is assistant vice president.
Mlcbael A. Rivello, Huntington Beach.
has been promoted to senior staff accountant
for Dennis Klarin Ac:countants, Inc., Newport
Beach.
E dward J. Hoke has joined B.J. Stewart
Advertising and Public Relations, Inc ..
Newport Beach, as account executive:
Tbomaa J . Burnham is a senior associate
with Korn/Ferry International, an executive
research firm in Newport Beach.
Jane L. Mutz has been named regional
administrative supervisor for ColdweU Banker
Commercial Real Estate services. She
supervises 13 offices in Orange, Los Angeles,
Riverside and Ventura counties. She ioined
the firm in 1970 at Its Newport Beach office. .
Robert W. Bein, president of Robert Bean,
William Frost & Associates, an environmental
engineering !ind land-planning f irm in
Newport Beach. has ~n elected secretary-
treasurer of California Council of Civil
Engineers and Land Surveyors.
Ronald E. Robl1on, Corona del Mar, is
western region director of Mergers and
Acquisition for t he international public
accounting firm of Ernst & Whitney. Los
Angeles.
Michael Ercanbrack as system marketing
ma nager-Disney for Pacific Southwest
Airlines, San Diego. He wiU be responsible for
development and implementation of programs
relating to PSA's ties' with Disneyland an
Anaheim. PSA serves John Wayne Airport an
Orange County.
Toda\s Today's
Plan Annual ield Annual Ri te
11.00% 10.30% 30 Mo
11.23% 10.50% 5 Years
• • •
SAME OLD GUARANTEED HIGH INTEREST FOR 30 MONTHS TO 5 YEARS •
SAME OLD CHECK IN THE MAIL EVl!RY MONTH FOR 30 MONTHS TO 5 YEARS .
SAME OLD FSLIC INSURANCE GUARDINO YOUR FUNDS FOR 30 MONTHS
TO 5Yl!ARS. • • NO WILDLY EXCITING INTEREST FLUCTUATIONS FOR 30 MONTHS TO 5 YEARS •
GET INTO A WESTERN FEDERAL QUARANTeED RATE ACCOUNT. ENJOY
TERRIFIC INTEREST AND TRANQUILITY, TOO. '
lSubstantlal penally lor early withdrawal )
WESTERN FEDERAL
NEWPORT BEACH
·~"-, .... c.-HW-fl
tufO• {714)644-fJU
MM..~ 9AM-4PM ....., ,,,,.._.PM
I
,
COSTA MESA Ml~ION VIEJO ... ,, .......
926». (714) J4Ml41
Mon..n..... fAM-4 PM. ~ fAM41'M ._.. IOAW.2PM
\
'
tho Nouonal Regltt.er ot Hilt.aric
Pl11ct11, ond 1tato offlc lah
att~nded a tpt."Clal "-eremony ln
1979 to mark the 1t1rnln1 ot a
contral't with MaaHchueetta
.El«trtc.
lfouther aayw con.acrviaUon and
civic pride interetit her more then
n'oney.
"'fhi=re wa1 talk o f
demollahlng the plant and a dam
In 1975, and at the aame time
there wa1 the energy crunch ."
she .aid. "lt aeemed to UI that
alone It wasn't much electrlcity,
but you show that It can be done
and othera will try it. And
together it begins to add up."
Electricity fr om the
powerhouse is bought at a price
that varies depending on C09t and
availability of other fuels, says
Ron Howland of New England
Electric, a holding company that
includes Musachu.aetta Electric.
H ydroelectricity and other
alternative energy s upply 8
percent of the energy for New
England Electric, which Includes
several retail subald la r les,
according to Howland. Coal
provides 52 percent of the power,
oil 25 percent and nuclear 15
percent.
Lost in his work ,..
Worker checks center fuselage of F-20
Tigershark fighter plane during assembly
at Northrup Corp. in Hawthorne. Flight
testing of the Mach 2 Tigershark, the
world's newest fighter aircraft, is under
way at E dwards Air Force Base near
Lancaster.
I 980s financillg meet topic
The Building Industry Association of Southern
California, Inc. (Orange County Chapter ) is
sponsoring a dinner presentation on "Financing in
the 80's," Monday at 7 p.m . at the Airporter Inn,
Irvine.
Guest speakers William McKe nna, ch airman of
the President's Commission on Housing and
president of the Board of Directors of the Federal
Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, and Anthony
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
PlonHI PlnUIW Poul•. Pl"HGM Pr.stevn ~~:c P1it1a... ~ Rey
A-1 Ao.6 AoCIOMy AOUM s.dller S.leco SllWGCI SIP .... Sc;rlp+i
SeeQAt• s...-. S¥CMer
5¥<""1 Sii-. Sftwmul ~eRa con• IWlt
"°'EIS.. St_.,..,
StclMkro Std~
St-11.,151 =j =:x
Frank, chairman and CEO of 1st Nationwide
Savings, will provide insights into the current
structure of the building industry, interest rates and
the outlook for the near future.
Reservations tor the event are required and
1eating 14 limited. Cost for BIA members is $25,
non-members $30. Reservation deadline is noon.
Friday. For more information call (714) 547-3042
,.II)~" 1 l:: Slllit 12 AND DOWNS 11\lo 2114 UPS t\IJ 10\IJ T.c""P •'h M\IJ ~ 41\lo Ttl<mA Ullo~
Sl""Sl"• T-It lt\lo .... ·~I TIP<'T()l ~ ~ HEW YORK (API -T,_ IOllOWlnQ htl
Wu 1•1f> Tom I 1il>o It. -"'" Ow r lhe """'' ... &> U "' ToYota th 9 ttoo.1 -••rt•nh llWll ..... -uP 1ft 1~\li TVOlb INmo&I--n lhe moll t>a-on I._ I IS.16 i:•unt of ci..noe •IQllrOIMI of ..,i....,. :i.1.. 2'\<i lrlcoPd JO Jl'h "'r-.l!:. 21 .... ,, .... ~r:;..RI •11.•y, Ho 1«wrll lreOl:;'r. i.1-IJ .,. •t><l .~ ...... •Y> ..... -· IWt --c.n -cr..n9u .,. tho •• lt\IJ U$~ J2 J2V. dltt ... ence i.t-the prolOUS CIOtlnQ 21V. 11\l't U$ Trcl< IP\ 13"-bid prlOe ...0 T.-Oey'a 1 .. 1 blO pr&c:e 4"a Sii. UValllll ...... _
S21't U~ ~~~ ..... s UP'S 41 .. 41\o ...... II ....... VMIA ~110 u U lh YelHU ,,_,.I ... ......... I.All ~., .. Ptl 11'h ,. ... YenOut. 1J ll\IJ PecSIOl l ..... Up )0 ....... 4611> Velcro 1911) """' Mlh M ... Ylctt.st ... lh STV E1' ,.1 1 • Up n .o
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l>O-S --LU I c.i. Ptl
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NASDAQ SUMMARY 2 ·~""" ,,, \. Ofl HO
J TIM r, 2 .,., Off to 0 4 SNll•, ··~· •h 011 II.I
HEW YORK CA"I MOit e<11¥1 OWf'• s OffA INJ 11 .. M• Off 11.5 I'-<_., -k• "'It..., Dy ~o • OWTll , .. "' Off 1'0 .. _
VOi...... "-11.ed ~ I '"'~ "" I Off ...
MCI l '""°° 0 4.S\lo • • Vee •"-I Oii 14.0
GIUH \ ..a,j()() 12'!0 12 .. ... • T-..... I Off 1J . = WS,100 -40'h -.. 10 Cllnl un J .... .., Ott 12.S 5'11,100 """ 2Ut + .. 11 SMllnc: JV. "• Off IU
#>GF Oil 420, IOO 1'-I .. -.. ., htr'll"" ... '" Off ". Hml"<SSO 411,tOO 17 .. ""' . "' u o.ne... .. ' I .... Off II S 0.-.S 221,IDO J1 11"> 14 C..IEI• , ... l Oii II • ::t=·· Jli, 100 2!1VJ ,. .. • I IS ~' , .... Oii " I 312,100 ·~ UY! . "' •• , .,. Oii II I
FujlP 1 Jll,tOO t>"" IJl't -II. II HYT1t ' 1 .... Oii " I •• let<» • , "' Ofl IO S
Ad¥.-c:ecl .no " CoOnl .., ... ' Off IO.J Oe<ll..O ff9 JO r~ .... , .. ·~ ()ti "'0 UftC......., J.1112 Jl r..-un Po " Oii 100
Total 1.-1 S,.01 n SIGm un ... ~ . Off ,.
Hew 11l911t 110 n AplGSol WI H• .... Off •.s Hew IOWS ., ,. SY"COm , .. .... Off 's Tola! ..... i0 .. 14.tOO " T•-IE• , .. ... Oii t I
MUTUAL FUND
.
' ,
i . . .
•
NY E (~OMPOS ITE T RANSACTIONS
ClllOfAYICMO ll'ICl,.UOt UAu••O• , ....... •o•ic. ~·o••n ... c;.,1c, ••w, •0••011 OIUOlf •110 (tN(INNA11 \fllC• llCNA.•e1•AMO llO•oaraoey fl .. 114l•O&ll0111\fllflf
... , "'-'•' H•I "t hth Ctn ..
~ ..... .... .. ...
\\ \II ~.
·~ i..
I. I. ... .. ..o~ • .... ....
~ to .... lft
"' 11~. \, .. .... ""'' ~
"' ~ . .. n~ ..... 12~ ..•• """ -i"" >'I u~-~ '2 + I'> 11
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March best month
economically in 9 years
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
American•' confidence ln the economy roae
sharply In Match for the best monthly g,aln ln nine
years, the Conference 'Board said yHt.crday. But
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan warn.cl \hat
economic recovery "could st.all" It lntereat ratm fail to
fall aa he predlcta.
Labor Secretary Ray Donovan aald government
alone cannot reverse the problem of lost jobt In
America, but 1ald the Reagan admlnlstraUon will
double lta 1pendlng for displaced worken next year.
Regan told reporters that lnfiation hat been low
enough. for long enough, that fears of risi"I priciM
should not be a worry that would cau.e lmden \0
keep interest rates relatively high .
But Regan said two thlnp are still nH<ied to
assure a further decline In rates: Congress must
somehow cut Into "potentially huge" federal budget
deficits, and the Federal Reserve Board mu.st slow the
growth of the U S money supply.
Produc tivity output revi sed
WASHINGTON-The productivity of Amencan
busiess rose an average of 1.5 percent a year from 1948
through 1981 , the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported
today. The bureau based its finding on a new and
broader measure of productivity in the nation's private
business sector. The new measure includes the money
businesses spent on plants and equipment, as well as
the output per hour of workers. Previously, the
government had said that private business
productivity rose an average of 2.4 percent a year from
1948 to 1981. But that was based on a more limited
measure which Involved only a computation of the
goods and services the economy produces in an hour's
paid working time .
Petr olane buys R aleigh Hills
LONG BEACH -Petrolane Inc. has reached a
new agr~ment \0 sell its Raleigh Hills alcoholism
treatment subsidiary for $65 million , the Long
Beach-based corporation haa announced. Horizon
Health Corp. of Dallas has agreed to pay $65 million in
c.!a!h, notes and preteni:!d siock for the 24· alcohol.lam
centers· plus the management of a nwnber of general,
acute care hospitals in rural areas, Petrolane
announced yesterday. Petrolane's entire Advanced
Health Systems Inc. subsidiary, Including the Raleigh
Hills centers, has about 3,000 employees. (One of die
Raleigh Hilla locations is in Newport Beach.) 'The $6~
million is substantially less than the $87 million that
the Beverly Hills-based American Medical
International Inc. had agreed in December to pay for
only the Raleigh Hills part of the subsidiary. 'That
company backed out of the deal last week. declining to
publicize the reasons for that move.
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW Y()lllK IAPI AP" ~
DOW JONES AVERAGES Hi!W YOtUt(API Fl ... 1 Oow-J--~-.,,,.,.s
• IN a.-H... L.-C.... Clll
»Tm
" Utt ., $0. ·--,, ...
VIila 61 SU.
1112»1111.51111•.Jll IU0.-1 4> ,.,~ SIOM Ml II fa,._ JM
IJ:S.IO 11S. S 1 124 11 1JAM-0 11 ._Al 4tt.OS .. 1.11 '4 16-Lii 1.Jll1,1'0 l,tlW,tOO 1,SJl,D 10,1 ... 100
AMERICAN LEADERS
HEW YORK CAP) -SalM, T-. pnce
and .... ~ of IM ten moet ectM
AIMttcM Slocit bc:harlge --. -*'O Mllonely 81 "'°'9 !Mn I 1
c~ m.oco ,_, ,,,, ........... t HI 1GO ».. -IYI °°'"9Plrl J2iliiiii , l-16 ... ,.
HelJW .... 14 ~' '"·"° ·~ H~ t 10,JGO »" -.. ·~ex. 101;.lllO 1~ -"' MICN Eftl· IOS,lllO 1• -"" IMtl'Syt( tl,000 J + \lo K!X!!'"" ' .. ,-J9YI -~
WHAT AMEX DID UPS AND DOWNS . NIEW YO"I( IAP) -llM 1<11-lne 1111
-.. -y-5eoc• £ ........ NIE.W YORK IAl'I -) --eM..S
Cle<ll""' u~ TOlel'-s ..... "'-" ...... ~
METALS
~ m "' .. •
HEW YORK (AP) -9pol nont•rrou1
IMlal ~ locMy
~Id -'°"·13 09tlla • pouftCI. U.8. clMllnlllonl. ~ -74.50 09nll p9' pound. NY
C-x "'°' "'°""' ~ Tue ..... -21-2' -• pouMI. D'9 -at C*'U a pound, __.,..,
Tift -$49008 ........ w ... ~ ID
........... -111 4*11• • pound., N. y ...,_, -1320.00 ,,., ...
,..,...... -~.00-831'1.00 f'l'lltdl. troy OUftCle.NY
SILVER
·---·-· -...... -.. tlle -- -.,,. "'"' -... r:.,_. of C'-9t ,_,...._, of -
No f'-~~itee tracllflil i:..low 12 ate
llldudeO .. -~ c:n.no--111• dlll•t•n~ b•twMn th• prevlou1
doting price Md T......,.. •• p.11\ PfQ UPS uul Ole
41 + '
114 ·~ ,. + s
I~+ 2"' lllo + ....
11"' + 1'-, .... + ..
-+Ml • .. + ..
SYI • 411
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I ·lb Solted or
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FRllH PICKID
llR&WBIRRllS 1.......-.;
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Knvdse" 7·01. Aerosol •s HALCnAM ........................ I .•
6-Pock Porty Treat ' ·' s'' •-Y CWI ............................. S ._iii
•••
ROASTED PEANUTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98• ASSO!ITED
4-INCH PlAt-.ITS ................ u 1.25
r.=======FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS===~===i
CELESTE m. ·iln:ll~
r=:::m ;;;;;;;;;;;:::=DEL/CA TES SEN TREA TS======:1
LARGE HALF GAL. ROUND 2 09
PIZZA ASSO.TEOflAVOllS EA. •
Springfield, 2().01. Wi · WHOLE STRA BERRIES ........... " .. .,.1.45
19-24-0Z. ASSORTED
·2~.~
BONILllS
RUMP ROAST
~ringfield, 12-01.
ORANGE JUICE ........................... . .89
trC>ntce;R·~r~ ...................................... 89
8-01. Turkey or Chicken 3 MORTON MEAT PIES .......................... • 3
USDA Choice Bfff A
TOP ROUND STEAK . . ..... .. LB I. 9e
SWiii Miii OSCAR
.. 4-~~DDINGI MA YER
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9 8 BOLOGNA
PILLSBURY COOKIES ........ ·.. . .1.29
Block & White Lobel Cheese, Rand. Wt 2 3
JACK OR MILD CHEDDAR ... .LB. • 9
Alex Xlnt, 30-01. •. · I 49 FRESH POT J\ TO SALAD .. .... .. ...... •
1-lb. Pockoge I 99 HORMEL WRANGLERS . .. .. ... . .. . .. .. •
17
"first of the S.Oson"·-Spring Lomb USDA Cholce2 49 0 -BONE LAMB CHOPS ......... LB. •
8-0Z. MEAT OR BEEF
LAMB
IHOULDIR ROAST
farmer John 1-lb. Pkg. first of the Season Spring Lomb USDA Choice "FflST OF THf SfASON" SNING lAMI
L
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SLICED BACON .................... LB. 1.59 SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS .... LB. 1.99
USDA Choice Fred\ American Spring lamb 9 USDA Choice Bfff Round 2 39
FRESH GROUND LAMB ......... LB. 1.4 SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ............. LB. •
.~~E,:D I 98
LB. e ~HW~ ~:.AN I • 69
r;::::===FOODI Of -r.=;;:::===FlllllllMAM•I •AY====::::;'I r.=========UOUO• ... ~==========~ U-OZ. l'ACKAGE HAMANAICO UNAOI, .OZ. CAN ~ I FMSH MONTUfY t' FllOZEN FILLETS PLAIN LABEL ~M.--t PLAIN LABll ~"~-~BUTTDRlll I ....... llOUGllY FlllfTS·~·~~ LB. 2.19 " . .' -~ LB. 2.99
HlllODI 880ILID
AGI ................. 89 DL ......... EA. 2.59 6 PACK •••• Ol > CIGA••• ....
'-ltE~TEOll 1.49 ~llt~ llEG."c;;'i~7'5-IMR39
SNroU1.u Otlbo Shiitale, I •'I. SIMrol11'iu On.ow• Nori 0.6-o1.
DRIED MUSHROOMS ..... 1.09 DRIED SEAWEED .. .79 frHI> fo"" 1101..cf fro1en White T '9
SKINNED CATFISH ..... l l 2.•9 SHARK STEAK ........ ll 2.29
P1oon Lobel. 1.7Hoter CARTON •
BLENDED WHISKEY .. 8.79 ~~s:,;,!7.:,:::._~ -
STIWID
TOMATOIS
16·0UNCE 43
CAN •
SPRINGFIELD
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
NA TURAl OR PINK
46-0Z. CAN
~rinqfield, 16-01. COii 59 FRUIT COCKTAIL.. ........................ .
Springfield, 4'6·01. Con 9 TOMATO JUICE ............................ 6
~rl"_ifield, 4'·01. Con
GROUND BLACK PEPPER ............ • 79
HUGHES
PREMIUM
BREAD
WHITE, WHEAT OR SANDWICH
24-0Z. LOAF
3·1b. Con, limit 1 -
CRISCO SHORTENING ............ 2. 11
70-01. laundry: Detergent, Ind. 1.00 Off 6 49 FAMILY SIZE FRESH START ...... •
8·Ct. Double Helpln's, 16-Ct. Varie!Y I 59 BELL BRAND LUNCH PACK ..... •
~ IPILLMATI ~ TOWILI ~'ASSORTED 65 ~ 1 COLORS
,.___ I JUMBO ~ ROll • l~T2
llllJ Plllt
WEON!SOAY, APRIL e, 1983 .
SLIM GOURMET
SUPERMARKET SHOPPER
MEAD ON WINE
C4
C7
08
Inexpensive dishes simple, elegant
By BEA ANDERSON or .. o.1r,.. ...
A Berkeley restaurateur
shared secrets in preparing
healthful, inexpensive dishes
that are simple, yet elegant.
Jeremiah Tower, chef and co-
owner of the Santa Fe Bar &
Grill, selected recipes that are
quick and eaay brunch entrees
and an appetiz.er with emphasis
-on advance preparation.
The demonstration, attended
by about 30 people at the
Broadway in Newport Beach,
included Black Bea'n Cake,
Avocado 'and Pasta Salad with Salsa and Spring Vegetable
Salad with Fresh Tomato
Vinaigrette.
Tower, who began bis career
at Berkeley's Chez Paniase and
later became its co-owner, touted
the versatility of salsa, saying
"it's wonderful on grilled fish,
tossed In a pasta or vegetable
salad and as a colorful garnish.''
In making salsa or vinaigrette,
he emphasized using fresh
tomatoes that are peeled, seeded.
coanley chopped and drained.
To peel, flnt dip In boiling
water for a few eeconm and then
emerw in cold water. Seeds are
removed by cutting the vegetable
lenghtwlte, then squeeze. He
cautioned not to cut crouwise
beca1.&1e aeeds will be retained.
Pasta for salad should never be
much larger than spaghetti, he
said. To prepare, cook in boiling
salted water until tender ana
drain. Add oil -he prefers
virgin olive oil -and tou ao
pasta won't stick to ltaelf, and
chill.
Tower said larger pasta will
stick and 10ften.
The trick to cooking
vegetables, Tower said, 'la to cut
them about the same size,
preferrably julienne style. He
fil1a a wire buket with a medley
and dips' in boiling water until
crisp tender.
"I know there are a lot of
theories on cooking vegetables,
but I feel with this method the
fresh taste ls retained and
vegetables cook evenly."
Tower doesn't pee) avoc.doa -
"you loee 90me of the areen that
way." He cuta it len1hlwiae,
removes the 9eed and .:oops the
meat out with a apoon about the
same size u the avocado. Once
cut, he adviad, equeezt"f, lemon
juice on it to prevent t from
turning brown.
Steps for vinaigrette begin
with adding eeuc:min&S to lemon
juice or wine -"the acid
diaaolves s,l\.'' Instead of a
whisk. he suageau quickly
at.lrring with four fingers. "It'•
faater and you get a better
emulaioo."
H.la recipes follow:
BLACK BEAN CAKE
I pound black turtle beans,
cleaned and rinaed
l small onion, coarsely
chopped ~slices bacon or pancetta
l quart stock, chicken or
duck
2 aerrano chllles, seeded,
finely chopped
2 tablespoons ancho chill
powder
l tablespoon cumin
Salt, pepper, olive oil.
Uaina a heavy bottom pot add
olive oil, heat, add the oniona and
bllcorl and cook foe 3 minutes.
Add the bladt bMnl, llOCk. just enouah to cover, and salt, and cook until cam~y t.nder.
Drab) welL Put the beans,
onJorw eel bliicon throuah a meat
llrinder .. i food mm. If ualna a food lDl11 _. th9 mMium tude.
8eeecm the bean put.e with
1erraao eblllea, aneho chtli
DOWdli. cum1n, alt and pepper. TaU ~ pMte to roll up Into
the tiM-'ol a aolf ball. Pound
betwHn wax .,_.,... until you ,.t
a \it-inch thick cake.
Heat l8UOMd crepe or non·
8'ick pan. add olive oO and the
bean cake. Heat MCh aide for
about a m!nut.e. Serve cm a warm
plate with aour cream In the
cenw of the cake, alM on top ot
th• 1our cream and ellantro
around &ht cake.
Pl\1811 TOMATO IA.LIA
G lar1• totnatOll, P"led,
Chase April showers
witb cheery dessert. C3.
, I
When you're trying to pare down, variety Is ttle
key. The most successful diets are those that Include
carefully chosen foods from each of the food groups.
It's much easier to go on and stay on a diet when
meals contain an appealing assortment of different
colors, textures and flavors.
The_ secret Is In selecting food wisely so you get
the maximum nutrients available at a minimum calorie
cost. For example, eggs are a good selection from
the meat group. At a cost of about 160 calories for a
2-larQe-egg main-dish serving, you'll get high-quality
protein and generous amounts of needed vitamins
and minerals.
Slim cooking Is more palatable, too. when you
vary preparation methods. With eggs, don't limit
yourself to plain poached or soft-cooked eggs.
Sprinkle them with herbs or serve them atop a
bed of steamed vegetables. Top them with low-fat
cheeses. Scramble them with skim milk in a
non-stick-finished pan coated with vegetable
spray-on. Whir them with fruit juices In a blender.
Start with Pare-Down Pizza , Meal-in-a-Quiche
and Chocolate Soutfle and have fun adding spice to
your diet.
Pare-Down Pizza
111 cur. •11-purpoH ftour _
1 t•b Hpoon gr•tM P•rmesan ch ....
111 tHspoon g•rflc salt
114 t•••poon oreg•no Je.vH, crushed or ltala.n ....onlng ..
I egg WhltH
1 teaapoon cre•m of tartar
1 c.n (I ouncee) tomato sauce
111 pound frffh muahrooma, allced or 1 c.n (4
ouncee) ~llced muahrooma, dr•lned
1-medlum green pepper (•bout 3 ouncee), cut
Into !Ing•
YI cup (2 ouncee) shredded mozzarella cheHe
Stir together flour, Parmesan cheese, garlic salt and
seasoning. Set aside. In large mixing bowl. beat egg whites
with cream of tartar at high speed until stitf but not dry,
just until whites no longer slip when bowl is tilted.
Gently, but thoroughly, fold in reserved flour mixture.
Spread evenly in greased 12-inch diameter pizza pan or 13
x 9 x 2-inch baking pan. Bake in preheated 375 degree F.
oven until firm and delicately browned at edges, about 8 to
10 minutes.
Remove from oven. Spread with tomato sauce. Top
with mushroom slices, pepper rings and mozzarella cheese.
Return to oven and continue baking until cheese melts and
browns slightly, about 7 to 10 minutes. To serve, cut into
wedges or squares. Serves 4. Calories per serving: 11. pizza
-177.
(See DIET, Pa1e Ct)
Jeremiah Tower in demonstration
teeded and coanely chopped SPRING VEGETABLE SALAD
1 clove garlic W IT ff FR ESB T 0 MAT 0
W finely chopped red onion VlNAIGRETl'E
Fresh bull •
1 teMIJOOO ..it 2 ~ aeaaonal vegetables = ~ 2 to • limes ~ ~rbl (basil. wncon
Mlx and let Oavcn marry for or orepno)
at leut an hour. _, 4 r'pe tomatoes, peeled,
AVOOADO~~IA SALAD ~ .=::o~l~~~ped
M pound lplNw:h noodle1 1 cup olive oU ~ pound ea noodles 2 ~ lemon juice
Olive oU Olive oU '
Fnlb herbl ('-'I. ~n Salt, pepper .
or orepno) C\at Yei'etablill in such a way
1 avocado, halved that they all cook evenly.
Salt, pepper ParboU un\11 barely tender in a
Sabia (recipe above) lara• amount of bolllna. aalt.d
Cook noodlea in 1arp amount waw. Drain well, w. wlth oUve
of boWn8 M11*9 water and a little oU. htrbl. Mlt and pepper and let
oil. When iender, drain w.11, tom cool.
whh olive oil, herbl, Nlt and TO make ~tte: Dl90lve
pepper, and cool. salt and pepper Minon Juke,
Cut avocado into slices jutt add ahallota, klrnatoel and olive
befon .rvtna. oU. Tu. noocl*. avocado anchalla . To 11 v • I e t a b h • w l \ h
and Hrve on chUltd platea. v~U• end ...,,. on chlll«i a....... 4. plat.a. Strvea 4.
I Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wldn .. day, April e, 188$
Side dish selection
• important to Inenu
Planning a 1pedal luncheon or
dinner menu? While aelecllnf the
entree 11 one of your lr1t
concerna, remember to give equal
co nalderatlon to the
often-overlooked side diah.
Too often an unln1plred
aftert hought, the 1lde dlsh
should complement and enhance
the main enlree.
Here are some Ups on selecting
suitable aide dlahes: Make your
aelections based on contrasting
yet compatible taste, texture and
color combinations.
dlah. Artichoke hca.n. 1ea10ned
with aarllc a.re uuteed In butt.er,
1prlnkled wlth freth lemon and
then 1arnl1hed with 1rated
PatmeMn cheeee.
4 tablmpoona butter
2 l*kaaes (10 ounce each)
froz.en artichoke heart.a, thawed
l teaspoon garlic aalt
~ cup fresh lemon Julee
Grated Parmesan che.e
Lemon alicea, to garnl.l.h
Melt butter in a heavy tkillet.
Add artichoke hearta, 1prlnk.le
with garlic salt and saute over
low heat until golden. Jwrt before •
1ervlng, 1prlnkle with 1 n
Abo. aim for nutritional
balance in your menu. For
example, if you are serving a
high-carbohydrate entree like
lasagne, choose a non-starchy
vegetable side dish.
juice and R generous amount
grated Parmesan cheese. Gamia
each serving with lemon slices.
Makes 8 .ervtngs. teupoona sarUc ult
~ cup Ught cream This collection of side dish
recipes will assist you in your
meal planning. Be forewarned -
all feature the pungent taste of
garlic.
FETTllCINE
Cooked fettucine noodl are
t08&ed with garlic season! , U,ht
cream and Parmesan ch for a
.~ cu p gated Parmesan or
Romano cheese
GARLIC SAUTEED
ARTICHOKE HEARTS
deliciously rich pasta e dish.
8 ounce fettuctne noodles
~ cup butter
An exotic and unusual side 14 cup garlic spread or 1 ~
Curry spices
African dish
It's not difficult to
understand why curry
powder flavors· favorite
dishes from many
countries since spice
trading dates back to
early times.
"Curry" technically is
the sauce in which
vegetables and meats are
cooked and "curry" also
refers to the entire dish.
In general usage, though.
"curry" has come to
mean the seasoning used
in making Wiese dishes.
Rice and spices may or
may not have traveled
together around the
world, but they've .ended
up together in many
cases. An especially
delicious curry from
Africa contains pork,
bananas, and ginger.
AFRICA PORK AND
RICE CURRY
2 medium f irm
bananas, sliced
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
1 teaspoon curry
powder
1 ~ pounds boneless
lean pork, cut in thin
strips
Y. c up chopped
onJons
1 teaspodn salt
14 teaspoon ground
ginger
~ teaspoon ground
black pepper
1 can (14 ~ to 16
ounces) tomatoes,
crushed
nee
Y. cup chicken broth .,..
3 cups hot cooked
In a ijlrge skillet cook
bananas 1n bu.tteI and
curry over medium heat
3 to 4 minutes. Remove
from pan; set aside. Add
pork, onions, and
seasonings to skillet; cook
until pork is brown and
onions are tender crisp,
about 15 minutes.
Add tomatoes and
broth. Cover and sinuner
30 minutes, or until pork
is tender . Stir in
bananas; heat
thoroughly. Serve over
beds of fluffy rice.
Makes 6 eervi
'
2 tablespoons chopped
parsley
Cook noodles in unsalted water
according to pack.age dlrectiana.
In small cauc:epan, mel\ t>utler
0 -A~
OF ALL AGES c.,O/wel. ------------------c..p..------------------i FREE! C'aMet-FLYING SAUCER DISC i I WITH THE PURCHASE OF ... COOl<IE PUSS CAKE l
I ' I I 811 I flylq t
I lncerDl1c !:.' t AISOlUTllY FllH I
cS Wltll TH hrcuu 1 If I I
c .. 1&1• '••• l lc1Cra• C1k1 I I•~ Tltll c .. ,_ I I c.-..-................ "' .. _ ........... ~ .. t~ ..... .._ • ..,. •• ,.,,.... ............ ,,,..., ......... Mii ...... """"~'' '"' I , ________________ _,._ c. .... ------------------· .--------c. • .,..--------.. -------·c.. ... --------.
and garlic apread. Add melted
butter-1arUc mixture, cr eam,
cheese and panley to drained hot noodle•. Toa lightly. Makes 4 tervinp. .
ME DITERRANEAN RICE
Elevates thil oommon ataple to
a delicfOUI and fative aide dith.
Faped.ally good with 1eatoocl and
poul~.
2 tablapoana olive or talad
oil
1 medium onion, chopped
2 stalka celery, chopped
1 medium zuochlnJ, halved
lengthwile and thlnly sliced
1 tosnato, chopped
2 (:\Ip& cooked rice
2 t.eupoona pinch ot, herbe
1 teaspoon 1euoned ult
114 teaspoon garlic powder
with parsley
In large skillet. heat oil and
saute onion, celery and zucchini
until just tender. Stir in
remaining Ingredients; heat
thoroughly.
LASAGNE PIZZA . • •
(From Page C 1)
, p{!eled tomatoes (process an
blender for 3 second1 to
crush)
11. cup minced parsley
1 teaspoon dried sweet
basil
Salt and pepper to taste.
To prepare saU(l!3: Heat oil
in aauoepan, add onJons and
garlic and saute until onJons
are soft but not browned. Add
crushed tomatoes, sweet basil,
parsley, salt Jnd pepp&r.
Simmer uncovered about 30
minutes.
Bring water to a rapid boil
in large pot. Add 1 tablespoon
aalt and 1 tablespoon oil. Add
the lasagne noodles slowly to
boiling water. Cook until
te_nder but firm. Dra1n and
rinse with cold water. Drain
again.
Arrange hall the noodles
on the bottom of a greased 15
x 10-inch jelly roll pan.
Sprinkle with 1h cup of
Mozzarella cheese. Cover
with the other haU of the
noodles.
Spread evenly with tomato
sauce and sprinkle with
Parmesan cheese Bake for 10
minutes in a 350-degree F .
oven
Remove from oven and
arrange muahrooms, green
onions, peppers and meat
evenly over t h e pi%%a.
Sprinkle the rest o f t he
mozzarella cheese on top.
Return to oven ahd baJs,e until
cheese melts tabout 25
minutes). Serves 6.
CHICKEN WINGS WITH
PEANUT BUTTER SAUCE
Sprinkle c hicken wings
(one or two packages) with
garlic salt, onion salt a.n4_
pepper. Broil until tender or
bake on a cookie sheet until
browned and tender.
Serve chicken wings with
peanut sauce (recipe follows).
Combine IA c up peach
preserves. 114 cup whipping
cream, ~ cup peanut butter,
sofented, 2 tablespo.o.nJ 8QY
sauce and 1 tablespoon lemon
juice.
Note: Bring all ingredients
to room temperature before
combining. Serves 4.
Use the Dally Piiot
"Fut Result" service
directory. Your
service is our
specialty.
cau 142-5678 ext 322
on
outside
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All 1 gal. sizes All 5 gal. sizes
s1.99 sa.99
• Star Jasmine • Perriwinkle
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Orang• Coa1t DAIL V PILOT /W9dnHd111y, Aprll 8, 1983 ('3
'heery dessert brightens spirits
~ .. I
Dressing up
f ainiliar slaw
F amiliar cole slaw
takes on a sophisticated
new flavor with the
addition oC a Cew choice
ingredie nts suc h a s
raisins, tart apples and
green onions that make
t h e impo rtan t tas te
difference
COLE SLAW DELUXE
l cup cor e d and
diced tart apples
2 teaspoons lemon
juice
3 c up s fi n el y
shredded red and green
cabbage
~ cup raisins
11i cup thinly sliced
celery
'l.i cup sliced red
onion
l me d ium car rot,
peeled and sh redded
2 green onions with
tops. sliced
1A c up c o a r se ly
chopped walnuts
Dill Dressing (recipe
follows)
I n lar ge bowl t oss
apples with lemon juice.
Add r e m a i n i n g
ingre dien ts. Toss to
blend thoroughly; chill.
Ma kes 6 servings (l 'h
quarts)
DILL DRESSING: In
s m a l l b o wl w hi s k
toge ther 11i cup sou r
cream , 111 c up
m ayonnaise , 2 Yl
tablespoons re d w i ne
vinegar, 1 'h tablespoons
s ugar, 2 teaspoo ns dill
weed, 111 teaspoon salt
and 1A teaspoon pep per.
Cooking in clay
rediscovered
T oda y , coo k s a r e
rediscovering what the
early Romans learned -
food is more flavorful
when cooked in terra
co tta o r clay. M ea t
emerges moist, tender ,
tas tier a nd brown.
Vege ta bles com e out
lnt.act and delicious.
Their secret wa1 to
soak the pot in water
before cooking. The
porou.s clay aoaked up
the molature, and when
baked at v ery high
temperatures the water
was released and minaled with the natural
juic es of the food ,
maJdna it Into gourmet
fare,
GARDEN GARNISHED
LAMB STEW
1 pound lamb for
ttewtna 2 medh1m 1lud
onionl
2 clove9 of prllc
~ pound &UCChln.l
1 pound potatoee
4 ounce can corn
Mn.la
4 tomatoes
Salt, pepper, thyme,
caraway seeds
l teaspoon butter
1 cup broth
Parsley
Submerge the top and
bottom of your clay pot
In water fo r 10-l t>
minutes. Drain. CUbe the
lamb, chop onions and
garUc. Brown the meat,
onions, garUc and butter
in a pan, add seasoning.
Place meat In the pre-
IOllked clay po\ and set
in cold oven. Cook for 30
minutes at 42t> degrees.
Wash and 11lce the
zucchini, peel and cube
the potatoes. Open can of
com and drain the liquid. Remove clay pot from
oven after 30 mlnutet.
M i x the m e at. and
ve1etablea, place the
tomatoa on top and J>OUr
the broth over tt. Cover
and return to oven for an
additional 00 minutes.
Sprinkle with par1ley
before 1ervln1. Serve.
four.
'I
®
lt hu Iona ~n uld
t.hat "April 1h o we u
brtng M"y flowers."
Althou~h April mlaht
not be "Pe heaviest rain
month , th e r e ls a
llkeUhood that many an
April day wtll be 1poUed
by a good doullfl8.
Wfien lnc le m e nl
we ather forces you to
take cover, put the Ume
to good ua e whil e
brightening aplrita. How?
B y baking a special
de11ert suc h as theae
delicio us Raapbe r ry-
Almond Shortcakes.
Th ese t e nd e r
ahortcake9 begin with a
baking mix for quick
preparation. Fla vored
with a lmond e xtract ,
they are a d e licious
variation o f a n old
favorite.
T op each shortcake
with Almond S treusel
before ba king. After
baking, fill with tangy
Raspberry Sauce.
RASPBERRY-AlMOND
SHOR TC~ Raspbe rry S auce
(below)
Almo nd S treusel
(below)
2 ~ cups baking mix
111 cup milk
3 tablespoons sugar
3 t a bl es p oo n s
margarine o r butter ,
melted
~ ieaspoon almond
extract
Sweetened whipped
cream
Pre pa r e R aspbe rry
S auce and Alm o nd
S tre uael. H oat oven to
4 20 d e gree.. Ml >e
rem alnlna ln1redlen ts
exce pt s w ee t e n ed
whipped cream until 10ft
douah form11.
GenUy smooth doush
Into ba ll o n surface
duated with baking mix.
Knead 8 to 10 Umes. Roll
dough 1A Inch thick. Cut
with 3-lnch round cutter
dipped ln baking mix.
Place on ungreased
cookie sheet. Top each
round with Almo nd
Streuael. Bake until llgh1
golden brown, 9 t o 1 l
minutes.
Spli t s h o r tcak es
crosswise. Fill a nd top
with Raspberry Sa uce
and sweetened whipped
cream. 10 shortcakes. THE HAM SO GOOD
RASPBERRY
SAUCE: Mix 2 packages
( 10 ounces each) frcn.en
raspberries, thawed, and
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1n 2-q u a rl sau cepan .
Cook over medium heat,
stirring constantly, until
mixture thick e ns and
WE BUILT A STORE AROUND IT.
•Baked and smoked up to 30 riours •Spiro! sliced around the bOne
•Covered wltri our secret gloze
•Best ot room temperature so no rieoting nece$SOry •Just coN. order ond pick ii up ---.---
WE DO CA TEAING • GIFT CERTIFICATES
boils; b oil and stir 1 CORONA 0£L MAR-1100£ Coot1HoQnwoye (114 )<>7l 9000
REOEEMA&.l AHYTIM(
AT AHYlOCA TION
minute; oool. ANA~-1 ... vt1oo-c.,. .... 1rrHo 11t00io'""'"'("'''""11oooi• 114 0.ii, 2""'
ALM 0 ND CL TORO-e.o10 .. .,Pto10 Nom1•2400tllotmor.owonA•E I01ollooo•lll4 &J1 Jen
STREUSEL '*1NTWO TON BlACff-190 0Q B•ocn &i•d ~· GOll•&ld I.A cup baking mix ~!!.'2~~··>•(114)8'8 8!11!'>
.... cup sugar UNAJV(Jf-1419N lu11ot1(Acro11 hon royo1oor0.C>nQ&)•(ll4)001 <no(J
2 tablespoons firm. RANCHOMIRAOl -11 o.;.i .. _, •c11onc....,......,o•~"''"'" 114 )<IO ie.,•
margarine or butter ~R!/ID£-~10AtW>Q1oroA•• '"'""'dro\oti~r.,. •• , •1714)066 Qca•
'A c u p s I i c e d • v-··· ..
almonds A4S0 W; l"-ttAMA IAJ(W()()O W(\T l.lJ'fJtiA r;(>fht ttOUtW(JOO Wf\HA*'( ~'"°'"-"' '""~[A,~• ~t.ifA MJf41,. Nif.A."AltU
Hlil\. NOtltil(.)(.f S."-N .IO!>f SUNt.JtYAlt rAJO AHO ~N OICCO V,,A,40 VAtfr~ ,,,. IC>Olr¥"f At-tfJ ,,,., t A.Mf,."J(;
Mix baking mlx, sugar COQYflQl\1•196H•clf,.y&oloecH•am '°'C and marga r i n e until ................................... -.. ...... .--.;,;,.;.-.;.....,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.J,
crumbly; stir in almonds.
s 00 -
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------
C4 Oranr Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednud1y, Aprll e, 1883
Shopping lis t bes t start for • s erious dieters
By BARBARA The leaa\ fattunlnti mode-rot" 1.1mount nt
GIBBONS Mtndwlch choke: whole-prou•ln to •ti.rt ort thl'
Need to l<>k welsht? wheiat mlnl·plt.a pocket.a, day.
Get out your 1hopplng only 70 or 80 culorlt>• Amuni the rttady·to·
Hat. You can alim down coch (look for calorie cot cel't'ala th t provide
In the •upermarkct count• on the label). the mo.t protein tor theo
slmply by choosing the Next beat choice: high fewea\ calorleJ per cup
less fattening, more fiber diet bread a t &O are Special K, WheaUea,
nutrlliou. alternative& In calories a alice. Cheerios, puffed wheat
each aisle. Becau11e dieter• and ahredded wheat.
If It's time to ge-t usually don't eat meat or Avoid preaweetened
1erloua about weight e~ga along with cereal, rereala or granola-typt.'fl
control, here are some at a important that the with oil added.
"best buys." .-'·-e_r_e_a_l .J'p..__r_o _v_l_d_e_a __ V~cgetables are the
BEEF: Fat-trammed
~f round is the leanest
and least fattening, only
llll GIURMIT
dieter'• be-at frhind -
low In calorlM, hl1h In
nutrition and appetite·
utilfylng fiber. Variety
la uxtremely Important,
10 try to c h oose a
rainbow. He~ are some
of your beat cholcea:
LETTUCE: At only 13
c.·1id orle1 an avcra1e
servlnai, Iceberg 11 the
lowest calorie veget.able.
But dark-leaf lettucea (at
a few calorit.'I more per
1er vlng) are hl1hcr In
nutrition
SPINACH, 26 calories
per se r ving, is a
powerhouse or Iron ,
vltAmln C and vlt.tmtn A.
It can bCI eaien cooked, or
raw, and ln ulada.
BROCCOLI ii another
double-duty ve14Pe with
healthy amount• of
vitamin• A a nd C. It'•
only 32 calorlH per aervtna.
PEPPERS, a mere 22
caloriea a half cup, are
highest in fiber among
the fre11h vegetables.
OT HER GOOD
C HO ICES: S ummer
11quaah, turnip areen•.
carrots, areen be-an1,
cabbuat.".
CANTALOUPE 11 a
fruit that often more
vitami n• for fewer
calories, onl y 30 per
quarter-melon wedge (or
half-cup melon balh).
F or tho number of
calories, It haa the moet
vitamin A of any fruit,
und u much vlt.mln C
WI molt d trUt frult.t.
ISERRIES: Moat an•
l ow Jn calorl ·1 .
Strawberries are high In
vitamin C; ra1pberrle1
are high In vitamin A;
blackberries and other
"11t•edy type11'' are very
high In fiber.
OTHER GOOD
CHOICES: Peach ea,
nectarlne11, papaya,
gra~fruat, oranges.
135 calories a serving
(100 grams for
approximately 3 ~
ounces).
..... . .... ••.,·~.. No Glf11n11c/<.~ No GJmcs f_ve1yo11(.' W111:-; With ,l;f.Jft•t 1310s LOW PRICE:.S' .·~~ ..
Cho<M1e tender "top
round" for roasts or
steaks, for cutting into
shish kebab cubes. The
less-expensive, less-
tender "bottom round" Is
good for pol roast, stews,
soups and ragouts. Or
have it trammed of Cat
and· ground into lean
hamburger
VEAL is generally less
fattening than most cuts
of beef , averaging
around 140 calories a
serving for Jean cutlets,
rump roast or chops.
LAMB : The fat -
trimmed meat from the
leg as least fattening, 135
calories a serving for
lean. Have it as roasts.
steaks, cubes or gound
lam burger.
PORK: Fresh ham is
the least fattening.
Trimmed of fat, it's 147
calories per serving.
LIVER: Calf, beef,
pork livers, all under 140
calories; highest in iron
and vitamin A . Chicken
livers, 129 calories;
Turkey livers , 138
calories.
POULTRY: Skinless,
boneless breast flUets of
young chicken are onJy
101 calories. Turkey
c utlet s are ap -
proximatel y 110
calories. Both are very
versatile and quick
cooking.
FISH: Keep in mind
that almost all fish as
lower in calories than
most meats. Among the
leanest the' flatfishes at
only 79 calo ries a
serving.
These rnclude. sole,
flounder, fluke. sand dab
and plaice. Similar in
calories: haddock, hake.
tilefish. cod, scrod, clams,
scallops.
With all dairy
products, the calorie
count is directly related
to the butterfat content.
More fat means more
calories and Jess protein.
Least fattening milk:
skim or nonfat at 86
caluries a glass. Least
fattening yogurt: plain,
unsweetened, made-from
nonfat milk,
Least fattening cheese:
uncreamed cottage
cheese. 82 calories per
half-cup. Hard cheeses?
Sorry, they're too high
in fat and calories for the
shopping list of a serious
dieter.
Lett uce
in good
supply
Supplies of iceberg
lettuce are abundant and
quality is good. This
head lettuce is one of the
beat buys I n the'
vegetable department.
All varieties of leaf
lettuces are available
from local farms. Prices
are higher than nonnal
this time of year because
of the extensive damage
caused by the onslaught
of storms in the coastal
growing areas.
There's good supply of
Califomla artichokes thia
week. And many 1pecials
are being offered at the
retail level especially on
the smaller 1bea. The
eating qualit y Is
excellent. However,
there may be some
co.metic blemishes due
to the ral.na.
Good quality o f
broccoli, cauliflower.
celery and 1~ch i1 harder to find use of
raln-damaaed crop1 .
Sboppen can expect to
pay hither prices thla
week for fresh produce
becaute 1uppllea have
been drMtScally r.tl.ad.
The Coechella Valley
h 1hlppln.1 freah
suc:chlnl, yellow and
eummer equaehH ln
heavier vol ume thla
Wffk. Mexico al10 la
.upplJine the West with
th ... tMtml. Quality ii
aiood aad pnc. are tt.l1l
Ii11h but ex,.cted to
..... clOWft lal«.
., ·-·
No Gimmicks... No Games!
Wins with the
CE J,F.AIJER
HUNTS Tomato
CHICKEN LEGS Sauce
rawberry
laze 01'll>TOlAZlt"''"""' ,..,..,..,.44f0
I HoUM;i8iit;AHD·~.~•3.99 l
/2)
~
'ialt:DI UM 81ZE
Pork ___ reribs
.... Dell • AV/llUal; AT STOMI WfTW IEIMCE DEIJ ONl 'f
T\ff\fY ~OR FNM.ANO Tark-Smoked LUNCH ...... -, .,_ MEATS~.°' Drwmdcka flll9 __...
09
.... ~"'lib..-... 'w
4~ ~... "(_..h.,_..,,OI
17 L9 L9 ~~ ··~ ___ ...._ __ _
[i iPti!
$\MM& ~.'-=--r-==-,' &aU Mixes Cheerios Ooritos
.. _ Cereal Cllips
-~~· .._ ....
·--..... '1.28 ~ .,..~.oz
REGULAR OR DIET c e c Cola I . ... .. 6112·0Z •I.29
Mazola Corn Oil . 9 .. .a.oz sz.49
I Crisco ShorteninS.a.oz •z.~~
BETTY CROCKER 7 VARIETIES
Haniburger Helper ... 5.w.oz 95°
GENERAL MILLS CEREAL • Wheaties. .. ........ 1Pr0Z . I.57
POST SUPER 6 •
Sugar Crlspw ...... . .. 1PrOZ ~.69
SUPERMAN CREAMY OR CHUNKY • a ~Jlts Peanut Butter.. .. .. 18-0Z .-..._
Cole
89CSlaw.._..,
.. Jack •121~---... .... .,......,.,..q
u 12.29ao.t
.. 12.Ulleel::r."
Shasta
Soft ~•ks
-
Chaniin !
Bath Time
-~
CtlUll Oii ...,.,
Jllos
Ravloll
...... '2.79
..... '4.39
........ '4.59
. .,.,. 5199
...... '119 .... .,. '11• .... l,~U
'"'''" .. '1.29 ...... '1.79
I
I
...
SS a
Veggies
· elcorne
• spring
VeaetabJea should be
pleaalng lo the eye H
well aa the palate. The
simple, but e l e gant
approach, la to comblne
several vegetables on a
platt er In an
eye-ca t c hing com-
poeltion.
With the aid of the
microw ave, th e
vegetables are cooked
quickly and served on
the aame platter.
0 6 a • -
Or1nge Co11t DAILY PILOT /Wedneldey, Aprfl e, 1983 Cl
Variations of rice defined ~
Wo'ro all aa:uatomed to buylna •~lallzed aide dish or wl\h a aaucy entree.
pruducw In the marketplaoo tor •ped le needl BROWN RICE. Thia la the rice graln with
We do buy what we need to do a Job t.he ITlOlt ot the nAtural bran layen 1Ull intact. 1lle
way we want it done. But do you realize lhat name la a little mWeodlng alnce brown rice la jutt
nature al8o grows apedaliud producw to fulfill allghtly tan In color. The rut dlfferencet1 are ln
differing meal and menu rcqulrementa? the cooking time and texture.
Take rice, for example. Do you aJwoya grab Because the bran layer la not aa tender u
the lilme packaae from the shelf? the Inner graln, brown rice take. three Umee aa
There are several dlfterent typea of rice long to cook aa regular rice. But in 4~ minutea to
created by nature, to which man Adda varyifli one hour, the bran layer la cooked, chewy, and
degrees of procetalfl&. The end result la quJte an ready to eat.
array of rice producta · · · each with 8 apeclflc MEDIUM GRAIN RICE. This Is one of job that It does partlcularlywell. REGULAR MILLED WHITE RICE. Thla la nature's varlat.lona. Although the grains are a bit
' the moet widely uM!d kind of rice In the United ahorter than their long grain cousins, the
States ... and generally the moet economical. difference probably won't be notlceabh; until
PARBOILED RICE. Before lt's milled (l.e. after cooking unleu you have them side by aide.
has the hull and bran removed) and packaged, There Is a general rule about rice graina:
thla popular form of rice undergoes a special The shorter the grain, the more tender and
steam pressure processing. T he most noticeable clingy they <.'OOk up. Medium grain rice I.I lees
result of this prooessing la In how the rice cooks fluffy and separate; It la a good choice for dishes
up in the kitchen. It has a finner texture and la such as rice molds and rioe desserts.
very separate and fluffy . These firm and SHORT GRAIN RICE. It's not aseaay to
separate qualities are highly regarded by many !ind but 1l most likely will always be available In
and they show up best served as a side dish. And e thnic markets specializing in Oriental or
because the grains are finn, they hold up well m Caribbean ~oods. It 1s superb for rice pudding. 10ups. salads, and casseroles.
PRE-COOKED RICE. Because this rice has LONG GRAIN RICE: This type ls the moet
been completely cooked, then dehydrated before widely used in the U.S. aJthough in certain areas
packaging, it is the fastest and easiest kind of rice the other types may be just as popular.
to prepare. The grains cook up separate and fluffy. It's
The texture of the grains is somewhat good as a base for a saucy entree, is excellent in a
Primavera Vegetables
With H erb Sauce
welcome spring in a
blaze of co l or by
comblning grated carrots
w i t h p ea p od,s and
ye llow squas h . B y
arranging the vegetables
whlcn require longer
cooking time around the
edge of the platter and
aborter cooking time m
the center, all vegetables
will be done at the same
time.
1 package (6 ounces)
frozen Chinese pea p<Xis,
separated
leaves
1 cup milk
different from regular milled white rice, as a casserole and can also be used in...desserts, salads
platter several times. Let result of the processing method. Its best use? AB a and soups.
stand, covered, 3 to 5 .--------------------------------------
When microwaving
vegetables a cover is
essential. Cover with
plastic w rap to hold in
h eat for t e nd e r
vegetables And quick
cooking. Be sure to vent
one com er, so steam may
escape.
A delightful finishing
touch, c r eamy herb
sauce, is also p repared
easily in the microwave.
For an interesting entree
aerve the vegetables and
sauce ove r spinach
noodles.
PRIMAVERA
VEGETABLES WITH HE RB SAUCE
Vegetables
I .cup grated carrots
2 medium yellow
squash, V. -inch slices
( 1 lfl cups)
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine, melted
1 tablespoon water
V. teaspoon sa1 t
14 teaspoon garlic
powder
Sa ace
1 tablespoon butter
or margarine
2 tablespoons
chopped onion
1 tablespoon flour
IA teaspoon salt
V. teaspoon freshly
ground pepper
1 teaspoon basil
1 tablespoon grated
Parmesan cheese
2 tabl espoon s
chopped fresh parsley
Place p ea pods in
center of a 12-inch round
platter. Surround with a
1 ·inch band of carrots.
Cir cle with a row of
overlapp ing squash
slices. Combine butter,
wate r. salt and garlic
powder; spoon over
vegetables.
Cover platter with
plastic wrap. stretching
to fit. Turn back one
edge to vent. Micro-<:ook.
on high power setting 7
to 11 minutes. or until
almost tender. turning
m inutes. Serve with
sauce.
To make sauce, place
butte r in 1-quart glass
measure. Micro-cook on
high power setting 30 to
60 seconds o r until
m elted. Stir in onion;
micro-cook on h ig h
power setting 1 minute,
or until tender.
Stir in flour, salt,
pepper and basil until
smooth. Blend m milk.
Mic r o -cook o n high
power setting 3 t o ,5
minutes, o r until
thickened, stirring every
minute. Fold in cheese
and parsley. Ma k es 4
servings.
"Sleak your claim at Pacific
Ranch Markel. All our meal
is USDA Choice Eastern
cornfed and •Ked to
perfection the rery best
arailable!
USDA CHOICE CORNFED ~599 AGED TO PERFECTION ..
N.Y. Steaks Reg. se.•'~~-
USDA CHOICE CORNFED '-599 AGED TO PERFECTION ..
Fllet Mignon Reg. se.99 :::
USDA CHOICE CORNFED $489 AGED TO PERFECTION
Top Sirloin lb.
USDA CHQICE CORNFED $429 AGED TO PERFECTION
lb . T-Bones Reg. *4.99 lb . Reg. $5.29 lb.
Terlyakl
K-Bobs
READY FOR THE BBQ
Chicken
Cordon Blue
11ot••Chktten $299 ...... NffM
WIT e,,.,n Hein
Mu1n1ter 6 lb Mont....,ChMM •
R . S3AI lb.
resh
Mushrooms
89!.
Gr .. t For 8elede A Beute
Russet
Potatoes
19~
USDA CHOICE CORNFEO $579
AGED TO PERFECTION lb.
Spencer StHk R . '8.29 lb.
Meal Loaf
"Old Fuhlon.ct w/Egg,
Veal, Onions,
Green Pepper•" $169 Reg. S1.-1b. lb.
Asparagus
All Green Stalks
*1'.!
AprJI Is
Asparagus
Month .
We Wiii
Feature
Thia Freeh
Vegetable
All Month
USDA CHOICE
Tri-Tip Roast
Ore•t tor $ 4'&9
8.8.Q. &-lb.
Reg .... lb.
Fresh
Spinach
1/99•
G*G*G*G*G*G*G*G*G*G*~*Q*G*G*~*G ~ COMFORT FOR YOUR BABY, UP TO $ 5 00 ~
~ SAVINGS FOR YOU ~ * Here's how: * Q 1. Juatrnoll In LIM proof-of-purchase dolls from up to 12 G .a. regular size boxes of luvs or 4 LIM ~Offl9nlence .a.
A poci(s, along wtth the completed certW\cate. A
~ 2. We'n moll vou up to $5.00 rebate. G
See Irle ~ '*""=ale t>elc>w IOI ~ d9lall ~ Ot't9 ..c:101e * (maiclmum $6 00)' pet -Of 000.U Oler•"'*-A<ne JO 1913 * r------------------------------------r---------------------------------1
SAVE UP TO $5.00
BY MAii. ON lUVS
: Enctosed we Luvs proof·of·purcnase OOllS from lhe number of :
LINS catl()M checl<ed below (Chedt one) I
I 1m eoefc>Mlg
My reoete 1
w•t>e I
12 regulat SIZO 'J 8 regular size -or -• convenieoce pecks S5 00 1
3 convenoence P8Cka S2 so :
AHDAECEIV£
THISAJBAll
I S.00
$2.60
$1.00
t 4 regular SlZO , 2 convonoence pad<s S l 00 1
iWY
12 Aeguw su. or• Conwn*-.._...
• ~u111r !llm or 3 eon_,..,_~
• A.guw S4ze or 2 eonwn1enoe PKll•
PLEASE NOTE THESE AOOITIOHAL TI!AMS:
f>leue mail my rebate lo
ADDAESS--...,...----------11'11'11 doatty-pr-°'""'Y a.Pl"OS on 1 tomOIOM .,., COt• Kl IOOreu t
CITY --------------
1 OlfergoodonlylnUS STATE -------ZIPCOOE ___ _
2 THIS CERTIFICATE MAY NOT BE MECHANICAL.LY OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30, IN.J REPAOOUCED NtO MUST ACCOMPANY YOUR
REFUND REQUEST Place 111 stempea ~ LUVS REBATE OffEA
3 YOloX off• ngNs mtrt not be euigned or tr-:e<Ted su~~= P.O. BOX PM2e2
4 Ltmil one rebale (maximum 55 00) per name 0t addresa end mall to EL MS(), TX 79lee
5 Otter e11porM June 30. 1983
6 PLEASE •• •ow ""-8 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY LUVS REBATE OFFER CERTIFICATE
I
I I
t -... "" (cash redemption value 1/2001 tc) ~------------------------------------~-----------------------------------·
TASTE GREAT!
TRY'EM!
SAVE¥645t :
ON DEL MONTE' MEXICAN FOODS.
C.OOk up a festive. Mexican--scyle
meal with DEL MONTE Burrito .
Filling Mix. It's a fl avorful
iilAF com~~nation of ?cans and
tradmonal Mexican
seasonings. Simply add
it to I lb. of cooked
ground beef for 8 to 10 !'
zesty burritos.Try all
our delicious DEL MONTE
Mex ican Foods. You 'II
have big fl avor.
Del Monte style.
2'4000 l.47371
SAVl.PJ?NJllf!~IE MEXi&hrJ FOOO'P'RobUcr
. . ... £u. '··.:.-.:~ . ,.. 1~· .~~. ·-~·"' ·~.' ·•y, ... ;:._[;;_'.l :.-q.. ·:~
... . 1'~:i't!i :r;_~· ·"'+~\:i ., :
_ .J t 'l·f u .. F ... ·_.r.:__\·?r--~~---,. r-r. ·"i'\· .• , '.:1-.. •. ,. ·. :
• 11 .... '-· l ..• . ' -:J.. .
2'1 000 J.47301.
t I I
~ ............................................................... ______________________ ~------~~-~~--~
8 Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wedno1day, Aprll 81 1883
Low-sodiuni
dishes tas t y
Can rm entire ml•ul b\·
prt'par<.'d without any
added salt 1md Ht1ll ta11tt•
good? The following
recipes ahould lay to real
any doubts that tood can
be delicious without
IOdlum.
GAZP. ACHO SALAD
1 call (ti ounces)
tomato sauce (no sail
added)
\4 cup 0 11
2 tablespoons red
wine vinegar
14 teaspoon grated
lime peel
2 tablespoons lime
juice
1 small dove garh<:,
mmced
\4 teaspoon onion
powder
~ t easpoon h ot
pepper sauce
1 'h quarts t o rn
iceberg lettuce
l cup thinly sliced
cucumber
I cup tomato wedges
'h cup red onion
sliced, cut m half
'h cup slivers grc.~n
pepper
Combine tomato sauce,
oil, vinegar, hme pee l,
juice, g arl !c, onion
powder and hot pepper
sauce; mix well Combine
lettuc e , c u c umber.
tomato,'omon and green
pepper. Add"'tomato
dressing. t oss to coat
evenly.
Sodium
T utu!. 2 1i mg J't•r
lit!rving: :111 m~
HERB CllT
GR EEN BEANS
2 cans ( 16 ounct.-s
each) cut green beans (no
salt added)
1 tablespoon swt><•t
butt.er
1 to 2 t t'uspoon1
lemon juice
l teaspoon basil
Drain l1qu1d into
saueepa n. Adel butter.
juice and bu:stl Boil 5
minutes. Add lx>ans. hl'at
through
6 servml(s
Calories
Total: 14:.l l·\·r ::.t·1·ving.
24
Sodium
Total . 14 mg P1·1
St'rvmg 2 mg
ORANGE APRICOT
PINEAPPLE
l can ( 16 oun ces)
light unpet>led apricot
halves, chilll'<i
1 can (15 1-'4 ounc:es)
sliced pineapple in its
own juice, chilled
1~ c u p o r a n g e
liqueur
Drain aprit·ots and
pineapple Plat'l' rrun tn
bowl. add hqu<.'UJ and IN
s t and for flavors to
blend.
6 servings.
Calories
Total: 558 Pc•r serving
93
Sodium 6 servings.
Calories
Total: 736 Per serving.
123
Total: 29 mg Pt·r
serving: 3 mg
DIET DELIGHTS . •
(From Page C 1)
MEAL-IN·A·QUICHE
1 'h cups cooked rice
1 egg . s lightly
beaten
'A c up grated
Parmesan cheese
Vegetable spray-on
1 pa ckage (10
ounces) frozen chopped
spinach, thawed and
well drained•
'h cup (2 ounces)
shredded mozzarella
cheese
1 can (2 ounces)
sliced mushrooms.
drained
5 eggs
1 cup slum milk
1 tablespoon instant
minced onion
blended . Pur ov.er
vegetables and cheese.
Bake in preheated 375
degree F oven u nu I
knife inse rted n ea r
center comes out clean.
about 35 to 45 minutes.
Let stand 5 minutes
before serving. Cut into
wedges to serve. Mak.es 6
servings.
•Drain spinach well,
pressing out excess water
very thoroughly Ro ll
drained spinach in a
clean towel and wring
finnly.
Calories per serving.
1/6 quiche 212
CHOCOLATE
SOUFFLE
1h teaspoon basil
leaves, crushed
~-cup unsweetened
cocoa
2 tablespoons 'A teaspoon salt
Stir together rice,
beaten e gg and
Parmesan cheese until
well blended. To form
crust, press rice mixture
onto bottom and up sides
of 9-inch pie plate coated
with vegetable spray-
cornstarch
on ..
Sprinkle with spinach,
mozzare11a ch eese and
mushrooms. Beat
together remaining
ingredien ts u ntil well
Cooking
with cl ass
Fasaero's international
Cookware. 2919 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del
Mar. will present a class
on quiches learned from
Julia ChiJd at 12:05
Wednesday. Cost is $13.
For r eservations call
673.-2343.
Kay Pastorius ,
proprietor of the School
of International Cui.sine,
Laguna B each , will
present cooking classes at
t h e Sherman Library
and Gardens In Corona
del Mar. Cost is $21 per
cl.us and preregistration
(call 673 -2261) is
uired. ~ead Dinner will
be presented at 11 a .m.
Tuesday; and on April
26 at 11 a.m . she will
fo c u s on N e w
Ideas/Techniques with
Fillo Pough.
~ teaspoon salt
1 cup skim milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
Sugar substitute to
equal cup sugar 1,.. tea s po o n
cinnamon or 1 teaspoon
instant coffee
4 eggs, separated
'h teaspoon cream of
tartar
In medium saucepan,
star together cocoa,
cornst.a.rch and salt until
thoroughly blended. Stir
in m ilk until smiooth.
Cook over medium heat
stirring constantly, until
mixture boils and is
smooth and thickened.
Stir in vanilla, sugar
substitute and cinnamon.
Set aside.
In large rruxing bowl,
beat egg whites with
cream of tartar at high
speed until stiff but not
dry. just un tit whites no
longer slip when bowl is
tilted. Thoroughly blend
egg yolks into reserved
sauce. Gently . but
thoroughly, fold yolk
mixture into whites.
Carefully pour into
l 'h-to 2-quart souffle
dish or casserole. Bake in
preheated 350 degree F.
oven until puff y.
dellcately browned and
souffle shakes slightly
when oven rack i.9 gently
moved back and forth,
about 30 lo 40 minutes
Serve immediately .
Makes 4 to 6°aervings.
Calories per aerving:
~ souffle -151 ; 1/6
IOUffle -100.
Mushroom costs
higher in U.S.
A report Ju-\ islued by
the U.S. Depar1ment of
A#k:Wture ta probably
the fn091 oomprthenalve
document ever
a•••rn bled on the production a n d
marketlna o f
mUlhl'oolm. Commtsaloned by a
pNtldentlal t.uk force
ntabllthed In 1980 \o
atudy &)le eff ecta of
Imported proceuecl
m'*•broom• on the
•-' .
examinet .U upectl of
growing and market.Ina
lresh -and proceuea
mu.shrooma.
At preeent. the coet ot proc:e91J\1 a.nd •hipplnc
muahrooma from China,
Taiwan, South Korea -
th• major mulhroom
expor1er1 to the United
State• -l1 lesa than
Amerlc-.p pr od uction.
The report •UU-tl that U.S. produt'!lnl ~ly
.. ~ • '"""'n,.t,. with
proc Id 1mpona. I
Try zucc hini stic k s
for new firs t c ourse t
CECILY BROW NSTONf;
AHoc:l•IH , •••• '"'°' II you n re 1ntl'r
1·11 tl•cl 1n of fc>r1nJ( a
Ot'W (1r11t l'OUr!W wh1·n
J(llt'Stll un· ('OnllllJ( Ill
d1111w1 , you 11111y w.111t 111
(' 0 ll 't I cJ I' I 1' l' I V I ll I(
Zuu hm1 Sttl k~
Tlw tr11 k 111 m.1k111~
lh1•s1• I s to 1·li1111s1•
7Ul't'h1t11 of u p ill t11·u lur
xi11·. puring und l'Utt1ng
Vilt h into a prc'<'IM· l1·ng1h
u11d tllll·knt·s.-.
Thi~ way till' ZU1't·h1nt
S l I l' k :-0 I 11 0 k 111 11 '> l
a t l I a l' l I v t• J II "
pr ufco-...,iona I
ZtrCCHINI STICKS
Corn oil
4 mL•d1um 1utth1n1
L1liout I 1, pound-.). 1·<1l'h
;.l111ut Ii md1<·:-. ln11g
'• 1·up milk
• C'Up all µurpo-.1 ·
floUI
I , ll'll'>jlllllll .... 111
1 111 I 111p l1rn d1 \
1111'1111 1111111hi.
1'111ir ud 111tu 11 Ill 111
I :! 111( h t ·I 1 ·1 11 II .. k 111 l'l
fllllllH 1111 1111111' 1110111 I I
I u II
W1tli .• '"' IV•·I lal,1d1·
1w1·l1·r . p.1ri· on1 11J11 111111
'1'11111 l'llth \II 11 1:-. ,1
1111 lw-. lu11g Sliuj.11 II 111111
•I "II'\ li1111o{l1·" liV ~lt1 ·111g ., r r ,. n" 11 g ti " 1 1 h ,.
1 ou11d1 ti ou 11•1 p.111 "''
1 li.11 11 11"' I ... 11.11ght
,11ft·, .md 1, I 1111 h th11 k
CS.l\'t t11111111111g., Jlld u-..
Ill !'>111 111' 111111·1 d1,1i1
L,1y tl11· 1u1Tl11n1 1111 .1
1·utt11ig brnll'd anti .,11n• 11
!lllO I :O.lll•k~ t'dl .. ;,
1ru ht·., long Jiit.i • 11H'h
I h I I' k T ,. t• " I l h l'
11 rn;1111111g 7.Ut'I h Ill I I h1
:-.,ltll(' W<JV I
Pour m ii k 111111 .1 p11 •
plait· In <i 't'11111d Jiil'
plall• ... 111 lugi·1l11 1 ll11ur
~~~~~~~~~~~-
.
•• 1111 .. 111 111111 It 11111 ii
lit.Ill 111111 1111' t I IHlll>"
J >1p ,1 /Ult h1111 i.ltc k tn
111111 lli1•11 111 fluu 1
1111,tu11 . "h11k1 · of f
""' , . ..., I lip .1gw11 111 milk.
tlt1·11 111 1111•,JCI 11111nl11,
pl.11 I 1111 W<•>< fJ.lfll'I Ct.I.It
11Ill.1111111~ LUlt hllll !ill!~
1111 -..11111· w.1v
M1 1111wl11h~. hl•.11 oil to
.17~1 dl'l{ft'I'' J"t ':{ /llU'h trll
1'.lll ki. Ill :! Ill :I l11ttd1t1>,
llU 11111g I/lit t . Ullld 1·11:-.p
.1 nd liru\\ 111 ·d I tu 2
1111111111•,
1>1.1111 "" 11.1111•1 tov. tol-c,
kt 1 •p hol 111 " low 11vc•n
S1·rv1· :11 11111 1• 111 ..t
h . .-.kl'I l111t'd Willi jl•lpl'f
llo1pk111' If Yt1ll ltkt
J\.IJkt ., 111
N1111 I-or ;1 l1ghl1·r
11 t I t• I I 11 g I ll I I' ii l h
11111'111111 ·n.,·1,111g11 : 1n111
H •111 k' th1· <.1m11u11t:-. of
• 1i.i111w 111gn·d1('11h will
11111h,1\I'111 ht• llltll'J'L'd
EAT BETIER ••• SAVE .
ORE WITH LOW PRICES
r~
Pork Chops
Fotm., J.hn
Col1f0tnto
G1ewn,
Family
Pvt~
Fry'"I Ct.tcken .. &I "•-led c .... to1m Cenl••
ond Ind Cul
Chopt App<o•.
I~ Freth '"'"
L•ln
t "••" ... , ..
(i d B f '••th h,ulor 3·1b $ 12, roun ee o. •• ~·.,c;.~~·~0% lb
Fol
Round Steak SofewoyOuolily $219
a..,elen hef Round lb
Sliced Beef Liver 0.1 .... 1.d
Ground Tur ey
Chuck Roast S::7Mr.!u~~:v
Chunk Bologna s..rch '"Y
Young Duckling
•b.s 1°'
~-· L ~~-11-......
' Strawberries
J..,ky \Wfft
3 ~~149
Yellow Onions 21M 49'
2~49'
Grap fruit Coic ..... 4For 1100 Yall<l\o
Peart Onions f!.~to:.i "'o 'F'
Rhubarb flt1'>
II> 79' Ttrld«AJuq
Peanuts In 5'1tll 1;: •pt BowlOllMs
~139 • 17-01 ,_,
• lt>-01 ""'"' • 12-o•. N.t.leu
Co.n
7-Bone Roast~ 111 11°Dl>LucerneYogurt5 ~12°°
S.•11'~ S.-I Shoulder Steak ~~ ID 12'' mm> ice Cream sia. 2 Ga~IOM1300
Chuck Roast=~"Y 111 '1"1ZDtBroccoli C::,3'~. 1100
Ground Beeh_'~ .. 11"-0iapers1'"ic!o,."':!.7':fa•sn
Stew Meat ~ t.....,, 1e '2°'IZDt Purina = 20 ~ '5•
Fishsticks ~-= = '~~ •1 l• Cat Food
Corn Dogs :.=
Braunschweiger =
Sole Fillets::
Sh . -kllll nmp w .. Oltr91•
Salmon Roast ~ ...
Cragmont
Beverages .. _..-.........
~ ... 79° .. ttl•
........ -
•' Meol"l••'•Y -~ .......... .... ~ .. -~199
Lucerne Yougurt Hefty Lawn Bags ,. "'• s 1'' mat Gallo Wines 2 L~l;,•s
Gallen of 10 -Min Is S 00 Almaden •:=•\,1.,1211 Buttermilk '""""' Fiesta 3.-. .•. 1 DO ~ 150 o-hf•,.1 '°" Kahula s3 oo1 "" 18 .. Half & Half L.-...
~ '1°'
C::n96'
Pini 55'
Carr°/, 0''!.::C~ Soap
Fresh Celery Hearts ""69C Hanging Pothos 6 ~~" Northern Napkins .,.",'sos 1" llt scotch=1:.'°' ~~:as:• Milk ~! ::·1"
Tanger ines Swtt1 &
IO 49' Mixed Bouquets 8unctl 12-Ill> Gin 80-Piool Ln• '8 ma> cottage Cheese-Ptlll age Jv<y
Pinto Beans 5H>t If 00 House Plants ~ 4~'1" II> Hefty Plates s • .,,., .. ,., "•· 51'' mm> 1 cr.n1n 150 •100 DJt U -lnc.h of 50 Ber nger 8talle 2"" Sour Cream1..cor!lf """age
Fantlly ef Four for 'J.81!
::::!.":' •2 ,, .. , 1 ~h ..,., ..... ~ "'"
FrW
Chicken
,....~.._.., ...... ,.,..,.
"
.WI ACaPT USIA FOOi STAMP _Cow.Gii
.: • j • , .... ,. ... O.., ... ""41...... • ...... C:.-....... ,, L..-. hMll ......................
• ' (
l
-------
Orang Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednnd1y, April e. 1983 CT I
Old coupons, sans expiration date, redeemable
By MAATIN SLOANE
Dear Martin: I have
aome old coupon• that
ahow that the
Npennarket will receive
•&-cent handllng tee for
redeeming them. I know
that the companiea are
now paying the
1upermarket1 a 7 ·cent
fee. Does thla mean th.at
I can't uae these old
coupons? I should
mention that these
coupons have no
exptraUon da\e -Susan
D., McAllen, Texas.
Deer Su.aan: I che<:ked
with the Nielse n
Clearinghouse, the
Iar1eat coupon clearing
howle ln the country, and w• told th.at all retailers are now being
reimbursed 7 cents a
Fresh
herbs
favored
Relativ ely few
Americans grow herbs or
'spices in their kitchen
gardens, but it is a
different story in
Europe, where at least
three doun varieties are
cultivated for home uae.
LetKilnR the field are
the Italians, many
deecended from peasants
who toiled close to the
earth all their lives.
They of\en depended
for a good put of their
food on the yield from a
tiny portion of soil
allotted to them on a
noble'• estate.
Such-Plots. some o!
which still exist in the
old country and ln the
small backyard gardens
of Italians living in
America. usually have a
portion reserved for
growing h e rbs and
spices . Even city
dwellers often grow
aeuonings in clay pots
sitting on windowsills.
Herbs and spices are
important to Italian
cooks, who depend
heavily on them for
seasoning roasts, stews,
llOUpa. .iuLfinp &nd the
like.
Their importance is
enhanced by the fact
that theee seasonings add
to the enjoyment of
mea1a at low cost.
Garlic and its cousin,
the onion, are standbys
in the Italian cuisine, but
there are many others.
Basil. a member of the
mint family. is used i.n
fowl and meat dishes. So
ia the bay leaf, the gray-
green leaf of the bay
tree, which has a strong
aroma.
Fennel, sweet-tasting
offahoot of the carrot
family, is used ln
eeuoning a wide range
of foods lrom sausages to
cookies.
Probably the best-
known of the Italian
herbs ia o~. a key
ingredient in flavoring
pork dishes, pasta sauces
and vegetables.
In onter to have herbs
out of 1e8110rl, the Italian
grower often transplants
them ln the fall from the
garden to boxes or
window pots.
Or the leaves may be
dried an a tray until they
are ready to be crumbled
and stored in a stoppered
bottle.
Here i• a recipe for
· rk chops by a
in Italian fare,
Barrae.
PORK. CHOPS
ITALIANO
8 loin pork chops
about 1 inch thick
l larae egg
2 tableepoom water
1 cup bread crumbe
1 clove minced garlic
W teaspoon oregano
1 teaspoon dry pRey .
2 tab1-poona pted
Bomano cheele
Salt and pepper to
i.-. ~ cup olive oil
81-h fat around ectie
of chop• to prevent c:ur11na.
In a lhallow bowl, beat
., wtth water.
D ehallow dhh ,
c:ombtne bread crumbe,
Odle. onpno, peraley' mt-, ealt and pe&':r. ac9r~r~ cru'!t
mixture. am olive oil ln I.up
lllldU9t. Add POC'k choile '° hot oO Md cook OWi' low a.a. Ull well done
Mid triWn on both 9'da
8'rW9 4. Good wtth a chlla.d ,... wine.
coupcm, even thoush a
leuer amoun\ ia shown
on the t'Oupon 8ecauac.-
of thlt, the~ ahould bu
no problem using thee~
older coupona
lh•H ollen don I requtre • refund form
HUN'f'I Aec:lpe ott.,. P o tlox Hll 1, It Paul, Minn H IU
Reoa1 ... • HI of U 11un1 ·1
"•vored l•uoe r1olp1 oerd•
lll'ld IM f9gl1191 llpe Wllh lhe
l)utotl ... PflOe olrcled from two 0<
mo1a o•n• (•nv ll•vor) l.11p1tH Ju·~~. 1983
LOUii fUCH Comp•nv. p 0
9o.11 Nl700. El PHO, Tnu 79917
Receive • SI coupon for LOul1 Rich Turkey 8n1okell 8euHo• ~ the w0<de "Turkey Smoi<tld
Sll\IM09 from fovr lebeh 01 LOul•
Rich Turkey Smoked 8euuo•
E•p!r" Ju,.. 30. 11184
Th•H ollera rtqulre refund
l0<m1:
DAWN FAllH SteO S•uc:e
011•• Receive • 50-cenl 01 $I
relUnd S...O the •l<lul•tld relund
SUPIRllRllT IHDPPIR
torm •nd 11 ... Oawn l'rMll l1Mll
Sauce tabell '°' • 50-oent relund <1r tlOhl ll bel• IOI I I I refund hplfM June I, 1113
OIJIUCI• F•mou1 l'OOdl
Rfoelve • 11 Cl<MIPofl IC>< mMI Of
P-"'"'Y Send the requlr.CS rtlund
lorm Md •-1•1>4118 from OurkM a•,,.c>uric9 9-..oned a.ii 0< one
l•bel from Ourk•• 16·ounoe
8eUOl\ed 811 ExpUH Mey 31. 1863
GOLDIN QIUOOLI P1no•k•
Ml• Refund Raoelve the purcll ...
Ptlee 1efuno on panclka m111 up to I I 21'1 Bend th• required reflmd
form •nd lwo ntt weight
1111-11 from Ille bottom of the
front l•b•I or either th• 24 or
H-OUMe me Of GOiden Griddle
Syrup, • bo• top from any l>r•nd
ol panclk• mix and the regl11er 111>1 wl111 the purch•M price or Ill•
p1ncek• ml.11 ctrcted Write the
putoMM ptlca OI IM pancak• mla
on 111e form bplrH Aug 31,
1963.
MOllTON HOU•• Sloppy Joe
Reo•P• Seuoe. Receive 1 t 1 coupon for 1 gound t>Mf pureh ...
Send the required refuod l0<m and
the ftont name ~ from """
1.ane Of·~ J0t ~Sa
LOOll fO< IM IOtm on the P.auoe l.11plrM July 31. 1813
AAOU t f CMll fWfund Send the r~red form •nd two I~• fr0ft1
eny etyi. of ~ •p.oheltl sauce
(32 ounGeJ, llotlO with 11\e l"(lftl .. tape 1howtno the purct1He pfie41 bl)ltN Ju,.. 30, 11183
OAllN 01,4N'f The Plllebury
Company ~ • c<Mipon 101
one lrN packao• of one 01 th• lollowlng Gre•n Gt•nt Brend
12.ounce 1ntr1e1 Chicken
L11•on•. 8p1n1c;h L111on•
EnchHad•·Sono<• Stvfe &eod the requited relund form •nd two
proola 01 purch•H p1nel1 from
two peck•o•• of one ol 1he lotlowlng GrM11 Giant Brlnd 12
ounc. Entr-Clllciu1n Laaegna.
Sp1n 1 'h L •••on•.
\N.hll•d• lfonor• Style hplrN
M1y 31, t013
JONIA Minute l rMkfNI llnk1 U 60 R41fund lend Ille r9q;ilf9'(J
••fund form end. H proof1 of
purc;ha ... the picture of the r.cl
lrylf111 µan from """ peck41g41e OI JOllH Minute Bre1lllHI llnk1
[llp!1" June I, 11183 tto IAMCHO '3 CHh '*fund Send the reqUlrtld refund form end
Illa t>Ollom penel from eny lovr
0111erent Tio 8anc110 dlnn••• r.111 ... Jun• 30, 1084
WIAVlll Outeh fntr ... Aelund
Oller Receive t llree 35·c•nt eoupon1 Send IM requktlO refund
form Ind the Unl .. erHI Product
Code 1ymDol1 l1om the back panel
of th••• p•ck•o•• of We1ver Outch Entr-LOOlc l0t the form
Oii the peel.age bplrM 0.C 31
1111:1 wii.e<* Fr .. rooe Aeoet¥9 •
couPQtl IOt one dOnn egge up IO • t 1 mealrt1um ... rue l end 111•
reciuhed r•fund form end lour
apec1111y merkad proof1 01
purc:MM lrom WMaon ~ the
Peck.llO• lronl1 llllY Ille LOOfi tor
the l0tm on tne lifl"ClllllY rnatQd
pDIOf lxl)lf" ~ at 1m .. .,. .,, refund• lo wttt• for
8IQNll " Aef\lnd °"". p .o loll 111'75, MaeMt Plllln. Mll'lf\ 66Mt.
Send 1 Mll•addrHMd. etamped
en...ioc>e IC>< thlt torm Thl8 ofter
eaptrH Jul)< 31, 1913. end e S1
refund "R....ion .. 8klnltoht Ofter, P 0 . 8o) 1181. MaeMt pflltl, MIM.
65341 Tiii• offer ••pl<" June 30, HIM
Copyright 19SJ. Untied FMturt
Svndtc:.11. Inc
Ralphs Double Coupons
. "' . . ' ...
' . '
'4-' • I • •· \ I ""' I • I I •
I "'I j •I I I ........ .. . '
L1m11 One Item Per
Manu.taclwen Coupon
and Limit 6 Double
Coupons Per Customer
Coupon Dlectlve Apnl 7
lhru Apr I ll. 1963
~
Double
Coupon
• r ' "' ' ., t
• '• • • fl'f 'f \o I • ft o 1• ol I' I l
, I Ii I
I t"• I I a 1 I .. ,, .. ' ' . L1m1tOnt lltm Per
ManuJactwen Coupon
and Limit 6 Double
Coupons Per Custorner
Co'-'poo £Uec:11ve Apnl 7 lhN April IJ 198J • _
......
L1m1t One Item Per
Manulactureia' Coupon
and Umu 6 Double
Coupons Per Cwtomer
Coupon E1tec11•• Apnl 7
lhru AprU 13, 1963
Meat Values Dairy/Deli
1.59
':' .89
":' .59
":.' 1.59
ShO:nnOo Point Cut per U> Corned Beef BriSket
?oclry rarms-Coll.I Gtown family Pock Fryer Drumsticks
Golden PTemtwn Fryer Wings
rarmer John·Whola or Rib Holl
Pork Loins
Fisherman's Cove
Salod SIJ.e.rttsh Cooked Shrimp
rtesh fllltl
Dover Sole
":' 3.99
':' 3.29
Liquor Values
90 Proot-1 ~Ur btl 10 88 Kesslers Bourbon •
l~rttd 995 Jlj(B Scotch Wl:. •
AUorltd 39 Buddig Sliced~Meat 1~ •
Ktoft·Sllctd rood 2 19 American Cheese .:.i: •
Hebrew National 2 59 Beef Salami ~": •
Ral1>hl·Peppe1 or Htrb-f'lench Sl'fle Cneese Spread
Notw• a Touch Whole or Slleed Fresh Tofu
Plaln Wrap 4 a 6
Sliced Ham
!alJ>h.t-"rainily SI.a•· Monterey Jack
lot 99 ..... .
i::; .69
:.-: 1.99
':2.69
Bakery Values
ifb'toog°B\irtS°'
Ralpha C1nnamoo Ot Crumb Donuts
~ .39
~ .99
, IEACH & Ullf'ELD
· tunNTOll BUCH
MO 17'!. !h.~TA mA PAJEO DE VMllMI', &MUNA Hll.S
QUO C.., AT WAUllT, IMl
M..a. ... Tta.U
1204 ... TUml ... , ......
1721117• st .. """
fl?D.14-&
Double
Coupon
~ ••• I .,... • ii f ~ ....... '
M11 ..,•:i .. J • • '' I , ... : '"' . .. . "~ ,. -.. ' '
!'Ill ... Pt • '•I '• '' '' '' • ..J • It•• ,, •; ~ I •' I " •I •
""".11,...., t,\ ''" fl•r 11 U 1, ... I· ,, ' •• ....,,.,, . ..,.,. ··~· ........ ' i t.J tu., 1-.
Llmit On• llem Pei
Manulactwers Coupf)n
and Limit 6 Double
Coupona Per Customer
Coupon EJtect1ve April 7
lb.tu April IJ 198J
fl?E:y1'
Double
Coupon , . . ~
I -I '
' ' .. . .....
' L1m1t One Item Per
Manutac1u1eu Coupon
and Ltmll 6 Double
Coupons Pei Customer
Coupon Etlecllve Apnl 7
thN Aprtl lJ. 1963
~ -. .
• 1, .,,
L1m11 One Item Per
Manufacturers Coupon
and L1m11 6 Double
Coupous Per Customer
Coupon EJlec:11ve Apnl 7
thN Apnl 13 198J
Grocery Values Produce /Floral
C..neral Milla Cereal 12 01 boz SttawbenyShortcake 1.69
Th• llrto.llJcut 01 Champions 1.69 Wheaties .. o. boo
Mohcnma .79 Long Grain Rice JU> -Ralph.I .45 Spaghetti IOot .. -g
OemtnY[:Rtd Soc eye Salmon , ~:. 1.69
Ralphs.Sii~ 01 ChopptcS .59 Ripe Olives I • oo ....
na&td .89 Durkee Coconut ,_ ....
Appetite Shoppe· • ·
..I: 2.49
-.69
rr .. h Solid GH•n .15 Cabbage ....
U>
rrHhChpTop Cano ts ,,..
Q> .19
Colltotnto 3/.99 Avocados -· Groc•r a Choice I 01 pkg
Fruit Snacks -· J1,,cy Th1n SILln
Lemons .., ..
RhUE'~bson .... U>
Bell ,.ppen or 4· Sue Tomato Plants -Frozen Food
Stoua.r·.u o& Pko Macaroni & Cheese
SOra i....o o&,_ello °'".,. 01 Butter ~rotssants
.29
.15
.59
.79
.99
149
l
I
___ ......_
)
C::I Oranpe OoHt DAILY PILOTIWednHday, Aprll e, 188:s
Livermore • wine country celebrates centennial
By JERRY D. MEAD
CENTENNIAL YEAR
-There la aolna to be
loia of activity in hlatoric
Livermore Valley wine
country thla year, aa the
entire valley aeta behind
the centennial
celebration of the area aa
a wtne-producina region.
The area'• two ofdest
producers, Concannon
and Wente Bro1., both
ce l ebrate lOOth
birthdays ln 1983.
Because only a half
dozen wineries exist in
Livermore Valley, and
o nly three of those,
Wente, Concannon and
Stony Rldge. account for
much In the way of
volum.e. the region
receives much l ess
attention than other
California appellations,
such a1 Napa and
Sonoma, which both
have winerie s
numbering over 100.
In fact, Individuals
who have caught the
"wine bug" and are
looking to establish small
vineyards and wineries,
would be wise to
consider Livermore as a
site. Not only u real
estate more reasonable,
but there is both
undeveloped land and
previously planted
vineyard sites available.
Several special events
are 9Cheduled, including
a costume party with
prizes awarded for best
costumes of the period. A
hot air balloon
competition and rally is
also scheduled, as well as
balloon rides for the
public.
This all takes place the
weekend of April 22 and
23. Helicopter tours of
the valley will be offered
and local merchants will
participate. There'll be
music and dancing at
both W ente and
Concannon.
On May 29,
Concannon will sponsor
its annual "Art in the
Vineyards" show. which
will feature paintings
and photographs with a
wine theme.
Both Concannon and
W ente will r elease
commemorative wines
during the year.
including a very special,
limited quantity Petite
Sirah from Concannon.
Wente will release its
first sparkling wine
about March 1, which
will ha ve national
distribution in short
order.
In the fall , all six
Livermore wineries will
participate in the annual
Livermore Harvest
Festival.
For details on travel
to, or activities in, the
LivenllOtt Valley, at any
of the wineries, write to:
Concannon. Attn: Donna,
4590 Tesla R oa d .
Livermore, CA 94550.
SPEAK I NG OF
LIVERMORE -It's
hard to believe, but
Petite Sirah as a wine
name has only been with
Os for a little over 20
7fears. The grape has
been around for nearly
as long as California's
wine industry, but was
historically used as a
blending variety to add
body and color to wines
-of lesser stature.
Con ca nnon of
Livermore was first to
use the name Petite
Sirah for a varietal wine,
which became an instant
IUC(.'eSS. It continues to be
Concannon's best red
tvlne in this writer's
opinion.
Concannon 1978
1'Estate" Petite Sirah
(about $9) I don't often
:all $9 wines "Best
Buys," but t his one
~ualifies . Jim
... oncannon, a soft -
apoken man not given to
11yperbole calls it, "The
loest Petite Sirah we've
l>roduced in 21 years,"
which includes all
~urrently releaaed
\rintaga.
How do I feel about it?
It'• \he best Concannon
Petite Sirah I've ever
;Mt.eel, though I haven't
:uted a1 many a1 Jim :oncannon. Further, it la
.me of \he best examplea
of the variety I've ever Liited. and I place it ln that lpeda1 league With sr-t wtnee from Stap'
lAeP1 Ride• and San\a ~ Mowl\ain Vineyard
the &atter ~ the name
burlff J. a •1nonym for
Ptdte tj(rah).
Rich, rlpe (but not
>verrlpe) 19lcy and
>erfecdy balanced for
:ellar&n1 or en.ioylna
M)W ln ... 70Uthtuf and
fWY a.rtJ form. If you
nnt to cfrlnk tt at tc.
beat, 1..-ellar for at lcHt u
dt!eade. There I.I national
dlatrtbutJon, but only 0,
000 caaea llO It won't laat
long.
OTHER CONCAN-
NON RELEASES -Do
not Ignor e the 1981
"M o nter ey"
Chardonnay, which Is
crisp and lean and
perfe c t for
accompanying food. and
sells for a reasonable se
at a winery
1..lv1•rn1or ... Hll'lillnai
I Y82, l• a blrnd of Orny
Rtl'allna . White
(Johnnnl11>\:1 i) Rleiallna
and Chenin Blanc. 1tnd
sell11 for It'll thtm $0 In
most marketa The wine
has u pleasunt appley
uron1a and finishes with
natural fruit tartnl•lis
Very refrl"shlng
I've long been a fan of
Com·annon·~ ZirHand<'l
Rost>, bec·uusl• ll is not
o nly frt>sh and fruity.
MIAO ON WINI
but 11 une o f the few
1·rn1t•• to 11how rt-1llralnt a1
l u Ii w ('I' t 11l'1111. w h I ch
mokt>K It l'umpuubll' with
food.
The JUllt released 191:12
v1ntag(.• is as good 811
t•Vl'l', und should be
pcrf~·t with bakt'd ham.
rnld ch1l·kt·n. all kinds of
p 1 c· n I<' u 11 cJ bur be c ue
food•. und moat pork
dhlhl'tl.
Concannon'• new
winemaker (formerly
with Sterlin g and
Dumaine C hand o n)
Sergio Traverao, haa
developed 1ome new
techniques for white
wine production, that to
the beat of my
knowledge are unique In
California table wine
production, thouaih fairly
l'ommon tn champagne
production.
Traver.o 11 ellmlnot1n1
the cruahlns proceu and
'' ln1tead takln& white
grapes directly to the
preu. TraverlO aays he
haa bett~r control over
extracting just the right
amount ot lree run juice
and ellmlnalea a kin
c ontact which h e
contends adds a note of
b ltte rnc-u to white
wines
The t«hnlque la molt
o ften uaed by
champagne producera
working with red grapes.
who with to avoid
picking up tannin a nd
color from the dark
aklna
Traverso Isn 't
concerned about color in
the cue of white grapes,
but h is work as a
1parklln1 wine producer
tiau&ht him that other
u ndoalrable qualttiH
could be ellmlnai.d by
avoiding the crusher.
A • a result, he a110
lnsl1t1 that all white
grape• be hand -
harve1ted ln1tead of
mac hine harveated ,
beca ua e the latter
method often breaks the
skins of grapes ln much
the aame way u the
crush.Ing equipment.
~ ~ ~' produce
v~-:~ texas' finest pink ~ · grapefruit 11'
... :29 \
onions I~ .• 22 1'
deli l fre~hd ~~:~~~:~:tar demand! I,
\{es\"I oa\\'f ·"
~--"''1\
a\' I SOV0200"1•·4.9U, 2,98 : ,,ti J \ QO I' , ~!~o~~ & bl•u 1~. ~.98 ;
l '" • ----_.c..., t ~ dellce de Ira':~. 6.19 '~· 4.98 I
;......,,---~ st. amoux 1~. 4.98 ~
tustin-costa mesa/newport beach
fresh usda choice
top sirloin steaks
{ 119. •· 4.98 I~.
\ marinated
beef kabobs
..
8 oz. pkg. 1.29
• no dealer sales
• limit rights reserved
gourmandise w/cherry ~A \ %l I~.·~~~ -deli
charlie's pride
roast beef
,.._ •· S.49 I~. 4.49
bl11r rtll1 1.29
\
----------·-........ 11111119f_,........... --·---
..
Ofange CoU1 OAIL.V PILOT/Wednndly, AprU 8, 1983 ct .
Oranges offer refreshing flavor to recipes
Fresh or anges are a
perfect com plement to
pouhry, fish or pork.
Th ey add juicy flavor
without calories or ult -aood news for dJe~n
ancf thoee watchina their
sodium consumption.
Fla h fille t s c an be
ma r inated In fresh
orange juice, then baked
and gaml.ahed with fresh
orange allces.
To make a fresh
orange glue for ham.
combine In a saucepan 'h
cu p fresh orange juice,
g r a t ed peel from 2
oranges. one cup Cirmly
packed brown sugar, two
teaspoons dr y mustard
a nd two tablespoons
prepared mustard.
B oil mixture
vigorously for five
minutes. cool lo room
temperature, then glaze.
Fresh orange juice adds
spicy-sweet flavo r to
carrot. sweet potato and
squash recipes. as well.
Fresh orange desserts
offer a refreshing finale
at mealtime. Top fresh
orange slices with ricotta
or cottage cheese
flavored .with spices and
orange-flavored liqueur.
A fresh orange tart is
impressive made with
fresh orange sections
simmered in a zesty
mixture of fresh fruit
juices.
When buying fresh
oranges, choose heavy
g lobes which feel firm.
Don't pass u p oranges
which show some green
skin -this is a natural
occurrence and does not
affect the fruit's quality.
S t o re oranges in t he
refrigerator or in a cool,
dry, well-ventilated
place.
Beef up
salads
C h ase away those
dieting blues with beef.
One-quar ter pound of
lean beef. when cooked.
has only approximately
300 calories. When
combined wtth healthful
vegetables and flavorful
seasonings. beef makes a
low calorie meal that
certainly doesn't taste
like diet food.
T ry a beef salad. It
uses leftover cooked
beef, so it's an easy and
economical dish
Arranged with a variety
of fresh vegetables, it's
attractive and tastefully
nutritious. The dressing
ingred ients add lots of
zip and very few calories,
making this a satisfying,
yet light meal.
SUNNY BEEF SALA.D
2 cups cooked, cubed
beef
1 large tomato,
coarsely chopped
1 cucumber, peeled.
thinly sliced
3 large mushrooms,
sliced
'h head iceberg
lettuce, shredded
'h cup real sour
cream
2 tablespoons finely
chopped green onion
l ~ tablespoon s
wine vinegar
1 tablespoon capers
(optional)
1 teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce
·~ teaspoon salt t
B lack pepper Ito
taste
Arrange beef. tomato.
cucumber and
mushrooms attractively
on bed on lettuce. In
ama ll bow l , mix
remain ing ingredients.
Serve with salad. Makes
4 large servings. About
384 calories per 9el'Ving.
SOUPER WALNUT
SAUSAGE BALLS
Mix a 12-ounce roll oi
mildly aeaaoned pork
Husage wlth ~ c up
medium-finely chopped
walnuta and W cup aoda
cracker crumbe. Sha_.pe
into 1-lnch balls. Pan-fry
until browned a n d
cooked t hrouah. Use
.everal per tervlna to
enhance the flavor and
heartiness of spilt pea eoup.
TOAST TOPPING
Give buttered waro..
pancake• or toa1t a
differen t open -faced
kdl. Start by~
l1yutn1 e a c h wlth
email-curd c ottaae
ch..... ff •Kt, aprlnkle
over a 1lmple topplD8
eamblnatJon ot medJwn :~ walnuta, darlc or ...wn., a little
..,. And • d.-h
cinnamon. Deliclou1
fMr/ dine for~ bir'unch cw ......
FRESH F RUIT
ORANGE DIP
4 f"ill
'A cup butter or
margarine, softened
\.\ cup sugar
4 teaspoons grated
fresh oranae peel
11'1 cup freshly
squeezed orangt' juice
1 tablespoon freshly
squeezed lemon juice
1 plneapple, peeled
and cut in fingers
2 medium apples,
cored and cut in wedges
2 medium oranges,
J)t'Ult"d and t·ut In 1hct_ ..
2 medium bananu.
1llct!d
ln elt>ctrlc blender,
combine e1ai•. butter,
1ugar and orangt! peel.
Blend 1 minu te. While
blender ill runnilll. add
orange juice and lemon
juice.
Pour mixture into top
o ( double boiler; 1tlr
co nstant l y over
simmering water until
mixture thickens, about
10 minutee. Cover. Chlll.
Serve with cut-up fresh
frullll. Makes 8 to I 0 amount o( butt.t-r, brown
aorvlng1. bread on both aides.
ORANGE Rt!peMt until all bread I•
FRE NCH TOAST u.ed Serve with Glau-ct
2 egg•. beat.t-n Apph• S1tces• Mukc11 4 ~ c u p t rt> 11 h I y 11CrvlngJ1.
1111ueezed orange Juice
8 sllcet1 white bread • G L A Z E D A P PL E
2 tablespoons but~r SLICES
or margarine, dlvidt'd •,, c up t r e ah 1 y
In a shallow bowl , squ('('Z(.'d orange Juke
mmbine eggs and orange •;, l'Up light brown
juice; mfx well. O[J> sugar
bread s l ices in egg 1/a teaspoon ground
mixture. tum1gg to coat allspice
both sides. ln large 3 large apples. cored
skillet, melt a small and thinly sliced ---
01 • nge Fr«>n~ h
Toust
Jn u !urge 1klllet,
1·omblne orange juice,
brown 1ugar and
allspice Stir over low
heat until augar dl.1110lvea
and mixture bolls. Add
applt: slicet.
Simmer. uncovered,
over low heal 8 to 10
minutes or until apples
are tender. Spoon syru p
over apples during
coolung Serve hot with
Orange French Toast.
Makes 4 servings.
Patricia Pearson Maria Navin Sherry Huntley Shirley Mendoza Linda O'Toole
SavedS6.90
Jeannette Webb
SavedS6.58 SavedSS.77 SavedS7.98 SavedS4.50 Saved '11.24
The Lucky 10191 $49 20 The tot11
11 the other 1uperm1rke1 on the same or compareblt items S55 78
The Lucky total $78 39 The 101a1
11 the olher supermerket on the ume or comparable 1tem1 S87 16
Th~ Lucky 101a1 $84 72 The total
at the other supermerkel on lhe
same or comparable items $92 70
The Lucky total $58 16 The total
11 the other 1upermarket on lhe sam~ Of comparable 11em1 $62 66
The Lucky 101111 $53 50 Tne 101a1
at the other supermar-el on the
same or comp111ble 11ems $60 40
Tne Luc:~y total S59 81 Tne total
at 1ne 01her supermar~el on lhl:'
same or comparable item~ $71 05 ... ''• ... .., . "" . . .. •• ••• • .. r .., ~ .. . -
BONDED MEATS
FRYING
CHICKEN
WTIOle 800Y SOUtrwm Grae» A
.,.49
BLADE CUT 119 CHUCK ROAST .•
IOnOeCI llftf ...
LADY LEE 149 ~CON 1 ui PW9
IUOy Lft ICnoclrWunt lb 1 Mt
WHOLE ·139 !2f~~ET lb
1 9 lbS
WHOLE
Ul .65 FRYER LEGS
Ff~
810~119fT'rrt
TOP SIRLOIN Ul 279 STEAK
~ llOnOfd lftf
lOln
PORK LOIN
lb 1 69· ROAST
Stnotn Cut SU> AVll
OUARTER
lO 189 PORK LOIN
ll'IC1UOP\ lOln ltlb ·-OI SW1olll Cl'IOOS
T ·BONE STEAK -·"'°"' . FRESH GROUND BEEF
.. 2.79
.. 1.34 Jll\ 09tlCltt: cmn.,, UClfO ... fat
~'!.~l~!~PARERIBS II 1.69
~~~~~RIBS LI .89
.. 1.79 SHORT RIBS
l~C\i1ICllllGfO ...
SLICED BEEF LIVER ... 79
HOFFY SLICED BAC~ ... ..., 1. 5 9
POl.ISH SAUSACE •-tn .-1n c-..... «Jl.OOI• ll ' 1f l CROSS RIB ROAST _,, __ _ .. 1.99
... 2.19
FI SH & SEAFOOD
ATLANTIC COO ... 2.49 _....,,,.
~~~~·l·O~HO T~O~T .... 1.99
~s~~~N OY~T~Rs .. ar.-1.99
~IFICA s~~o~~,.-4.29
~~~.~~~.~~~~~ER ,.1.49
< /\ r Jr J I I 1 ."'. I' I\< K I\ r , I I •
r RIMllD BEANS 49 ..... ....._."' ....... ,,., "''
l~N~~~~A . ••••~79
l!.~.~~.~ .... ,, ••. 85
CANNED & PACKAGED
fl VELVEETA 309 i ~~EESE L~~~.
LADY LEE 159
SUCAR s ~
Cram Stvlt
r CREEN SPOT 59 ~!N"~ • •s 01 110• • or Fruit PunCt'I s Pac1I
!!!~~!!P: SAUCE '"" .... 86
I~~~PA?HETTI •ll ~ 1.65
l£..HEJ~~f,'_!ZA ~IX>t .or -1. 79
r ~P!~.Y!~EV ORES~I~,. 51
!~V~Y ORE~S11~.97
r~~~~,._. Uorl0••99
l~~C~AMIA NUTS,°',...,3.27
£5!.COl~OlA , , , 111'11\•89
!~~~!,£!!!SODA ''°' ,..., 1.69
CANNED & PACKAGED
r LADY LEE 519 COFFEE
S Grinch .. Oz Can
r BISOUICK 199 MIX
Al PUrllOM to OZ IO•
r COUNTRY STYLE 79 !r'!~~ H OZ lOlf •
WNftOIW!ltlt
r r._,~R~~O TOMAT~; , .... 85
!LADY LEE LASACNA "°' 00 .. 75
r~,~;!.s.? SOUPS JCOW ... 69
!~~1TER CRACKERS .,01 .. ,.69
!HUNT'S PORK & BEA~'~'""'•69
!~!~?.CKER ~~x:;.1.29
!~~~~ .... ·~ l ·OflO .. 79
!WHEAT NUTS
,..._,i.tll •• 101 ... 1.49
!2f'~ CREEN ~HILIES ,., t .... 49
r ~~~!~~. •OOl 900 1.37
£ ~.~~S POP TART,~.,'°'. 79
°" -"'"'" .... ,..., ---'"'"" .. tffl(Twt w-.... -·-·-..,.,, •••
\
DAIRY & FROZEN
rLACREME 79 !~~(j 9 Oz ruo•
~.~.OCENIZEO MILK .,... '" 1. 9 3
LOW FAT MILK
CM l'I 1.89
CENERIC YOGURT
101 c~.33
~.!DY LEE BUTTER ·•cir<•• 1.89
!~OA MARGARINE ''°' ,,. .65
!~~~.~NTREES '°' '°"87
r JENO'S PIZZA SNACKS 89 -IOtllSIOI tU .. &C"4..f'lt lot IOJ•
!SALUTO DELUXE Pl1~~!.3.29
!~!'HE LORRAINE no• .. , 3.37
r ~~.;~~... 1 69
Ot COCOlll/T 1 • CM IO• •
I !!~~~~HRIMP •t ot IO• 5.49
!~~~RS COB CORN ...... , .99
£0RE·IOA TATER TO!~ -1.29
LIOlJOR. AE FR ~ WINf
f~~~~.WI~ '"" •11 7.89
!~UL MASSON WI~,. t i\ 3.59
QUALITY PRODUCE
ll•Pf tuoy 10 Ut
LIQUOR. BEER & WINE
r PABST
BEER
17 PK-
r ~~EV'S GIN ., ..• •· 1 Q .89
!~~.r:!~.,L~EUR ,.,.,.,, 8 .39
r ~~~~·s 7 c~~~~12.99
r ~1!!!3EAM BOURB~"''" 5.49
GENERIC SAVINGS r AMERICAN 179 S~~E~~! ~~ll •
~NERIC BOl.OCNA "°' .. ' 1.99
CHICKEN BOLOGNA
1•~111
CHICKEN SALAMI
~\fl
t 01 W( 1.19
1 01 .. ,.89
@ r ~~1C!READ .. 01 -1.99
r ~~~.~:. ~~~., '°' M<11.s9
!~~!!~:.~~!'!,_IV •01 N> 1.19
£~~!5~.~EAT~oz~ 1.09
!~2~E'S LIVE~WU·R·s,;0, .. 0 1.59
HOUSE HOL D ll. Pf T
rCHEER 319 DETERCE~!, to•
rSKIPPY 2ft ~~rtlft• ~
• \latlttltt
l ~~~ .5~~R ... ., fl\ 2.99
l~~MINUM FOtl ... "'"-.99
r~~~~A.~.~ .... 89
• l~NST~~ 000 ~ ... 4.99
II
I .
I
' l
l
.,
r
Orange Oout OAILV PILOT /WednMday, Aprll e_ 1813
'Besl buy' foods are nutritional bargains,
•
too
fl._ ~~f. Wnek ~"::.:::-
1'J'tllln1 up on
•t•rchH" ta a time·
honored way to eat ~hen money la ttaht.
tooda auch aa bread,
put.a and rke are amona
\he '*' buya and have a Jot golna for them
.,utrittonally too.
All of theee toodl have
~hydrate ln the form
of atarch as 1helr most
p_rotnlnent nutrient. But
they alao are a aood eource of B vitamins and
lron -lf they are
,nriched . And in
Callfomia, by law they
•re requi red to b e
'nriched.
1 Theae fooda also
contain small amounts of
protein, whlcb add up to
appreciable amounts If
you eat these foods in
quantity. Foe example, a
fllce of bttad has about 2 arams of protein.
The protein in breads
and cereals la leas
~omplete than protein
rou get from animal
foods, however. This means it's low or lacking
Jn one or more of the
eseentlal amino acids that
,re needed to be eaten
lOgether -at the same
meal -in order tot our
bodie9 to build protein.
To make up for this
~eficl!:h you need to eata amount of an
•nimal protein in the
same meal -for
example, drink a glut of
• milk, eat a piece of
~beese, or a small
amount of meat. pouJtry,
pr fiah.
Or, uae another type of
plant protein food such
as beans, peanut butter,
or other nuta that will
-tupply the amino aci"'-
(part1cularly lyaine) that
-.re lacld'lf ln the starchy
foodl.
Becauae these starchy
foods are filling. they are
~0ht to be very high
in ries. But the fact is
that they are not
especially high in
ca.loriea until you add
taste enhancers such aa
mar1arine. jelly, meat
aauoes, etc.
An average slice of
bread, for example, has
about 60 calories. A cup
of cooked rice has l 00
calories, as does a cup of
bran flakes, and ~ cup
of cooked oatmeal.
-.Three-quarters cup of
rcooked apaahetti has 140
calorles.. But all of the9e
alternatives are
equivalent to 2 alloee of
bread (120 calories).
Costwiae, it's hard to
get more food for your
money, assumlna you
don't buy brand names.
For example, the "store
brand" of bread may cost
only about 69 cents for a
1 ~ pound loaf. or just
under 3 cents an ounce.
A brand name bread
~! cost almost double .r"! amount. At the pasta shelf, the
large me packs and the
'/'no name" or generic
,brands may coat about
$2.50 for 4 pounds, or
about 4 cents an ounce.
I Remember that when
you cook spaghetti. rice
and oatmeal you add
water whJch adda to the
•weight. Bread, on the
1other hand, already baa
1~olature in it. So two
1llces of bread are
equivalent ln food value
Ito l OW>oe ot uncooked
:spaghetti. Spaghetti at 4
Eenta an ounce is less
~xpemive than bread at
' oenta an ow.ce. Oatmeal is cheaper
than bread too. If you
buy a generic brand
large sin package, lt
COlta about i1.M for 42
ounca. Ot about 3.5 cents
an ounce. An ounce of
uncooke-d oatmeal
measures about ~ cup
and makes a ~ cup eervlnl that ii equivalent
to eating 2 allce1 of
~· Nee la another product
that'• cb,aper than
bread lf you buy l\ ln
•ar t•• eco nomy-siie
j>ecim. A cup of cooked
rice ta a boUt 3 cent.a a eervll\I cbeeper than 2
.UC-of br'Md, but doea
hev• about 40 more
'c:aJ«ill. The tandtt product&
ln all SbMe cateptee an
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than U.O-we've been ~· ebout. JUce, tor ~ ..... , hM been
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DOUBLE YOUR SAVINGS WITH i-----------------.,
SIX DOUBLE COUPONS! I DDUILI COUP• I
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do la eat bran cereal dietary fiber.
ever~ mornJn". But J
hate an cereal. la there Whole wheat bread la
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eat that wt.a better and 8.6 percent dietary ft .
still ta hlah In fiber? Al10. you may enjoy
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thia category. Look for not 100 percent bran.
thote that are made from Raisin bran la an
whole r•ina. Puffed example. rein. read the
wheat, or example, la labela and ook for bran
made from whole wheat a1 a prominent
and contains about 16 ingredient.
FOSTER FARMs5zc FRESH FRYERS
CAU POftNIA QllOWN
WHOLI •ODY CHICKI N8 -~ LB.
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LAMC SIZI
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WIONl!80AV, APRIL 8, 1H3 CllSSIFllD 05
~coniers: An unlikely Angels hero
His bat,.however, helps beat Brewers
!Sl. JOHN SEV ANO ~,...PellJNotltaft
1 I During the winter and throughout 1prlng
training, he waa the aubject of numerous. trade
lalka. In fact, if the Angela hadn't run out of options
Gal him, he'd probably be in the minon1 leaguee
'°'*Y· ' The Angela aimply had no other choice. It was
either put Daryl Sconiers on the 2~-man roster . . .
Of put him up for grabs.
Aft.er last night, Manager John McNamara is
~bably glad he kept the left-handed hitting
YQUngSt.er.
. That'• becau.e Sconiers. •tarting at first baae fo~ the flu-bitten Rod Carew. delivered a home run
~ a key fly ball to help the Angela to a 3-2
opening-season victory over the defending
American League champion Milwaukee Brewers
belOl'e 34,177 at Anahelm Stadium. . j In a game that saw Bruce Kiaon (1 -0) hurl a
SU"Ong 6 ~ innings, Andy Hassler record a save in a
deja vu aituatlon and McNamara pushed all the
~ht buttons in his managerial debut -Sconiers
~out.
In the firat inning, the Orange Coast College
Dl'Pduct hit Don Sutton's first pitch into the aeoond
a.ck in right field. In the fifth, he lifted a fly ball to ~ Thomae in center which was deep enough
to allow Brian Downing to tag up at eecond and
move to third.
The play wu significant in that Downing
acored four pitches later on a passed ball to 1take
the Angela to a 3-1 lead.
"Naturally I waa nervous with it being the
home opener and all," admitted Sconiers, who
didn't know he waa going to start until he arrived at
the park at 2:30 yesterday.
"N. the saying goes, I'm just happy to be here.
Just being here, tnat in itaelf ia very gratifying to
me."
Of course, the home run was a nice way to st.art
the season.
"I wasn't looking for anything. I w~a just
looking for the baseball,'' said Sconiers of the pitch
he hit OUL
''I had a purpoee in mJnd," countered Sutton
(0-1). "I wanted to get a fastball inside. Instead, I
got it over the plate. lt just didn't do what I wanted
it to do."
It was one of only a couple of pitches Sutton
didn't have control of as he held the Angels to six
hits. Kison, however, waa masterful as his
changeup constantly kept the Brewer hitters off
stride.
"I'm very pleased that we won. That'• the most
(See SCOSIERS, Pa«ie OS)
Tim Foli completes
(ourth-inning double
play, d espite the
slide or Milwaukee's
Gorman Thomas.
Rustlers on right course, 10-2
A couple of community college baseball
teams going in opposite d irections got
together yesterday, and when it was all
over_. both were still on their same course.
over the .500 mark in the ~uth Coast
Conference.
Among his hita were two doubles.
Catcher Keith Harrison went 3-for-5 and
has now coUect.ed six hits in his laat 10 at-
bats for the Rustlers.
Headed In the right direction are the
Golden West College Rustlers, who made it
four victories in a row with a 10-2 victory
over district rival Orange Coast.
Golden West, now 7-4 and two games
behind conference-leading Sant.a Ana, used
a balanced 14-hlt attack arid at.eady pitching
from left-hander Scott Marsh to record the
victory.
Bob Grandstaff, the Rustlers' third
baseman, led the attack with a 3-for-4
outing, four RBI and three runs scored.
Golden West sllllpped a 2--2 tie in the
bottom of the fourth with one run, and the
Rustlers then added seven more over the
next two innings.
The Pirates. meanwhile, have now lost
three straight and are just one-half game
Marsh. meanwhile, improved his record
to 6-1.
UCI hitters stifled, 2-0
Cal State Fullerton pitcher Todd Simmons came through when it counted last niJht. strikinti
out UC Irvine's No. 3. 4 and 5 hitters to diffuse an
Anteater rally in the eighth inning and lead the
host Titans to a 2-0 Southern California Baseball
Allllocia Uon victory.
In recording his fifth win against one defeat,
Simmons outdueled UCI'1 Curt Ruther, who was
starting his first game of the year.
Simmons allowed juat six hita, two apiece to
Darren Kelchner and Brad Ditto.
ln the fifth , Thomas. aboard on a fielder's
choice, scored when a routine fly to right waa
dropped.
ln the eighth inning, UCI made some noise
when Kelchner was awarded first base on a
catcher's interference call and moved to third on
Ditto's single.
That's when Si.mmona went to work with three str~ht strikeouts to end the threat.
SoCal College 7, Cal Baptilt 4
The V anguarda came up with five runs in the
last two inninga to win their NAIA Division 3 game
on their own lield.
Yankees manager Billy Martin argues with
~pire Dan Morrison yesterday. As usual,
Martin didn't get bis way as New York lost
to Seattle, 5-4.
Cal State Fullerton, 4-1 in SCBA play, could
a1ao muster just six hita off Ruther. but the ntans
man.aged to put a couple together for single tallies
in the third and fifth lnninp, and Simmons made
them at.and up.
The Tit.ans got on the board in the third when
Frank Mendidna opened with a double, moved to
third on a ucrifice and then acored on a grounder
by Tom Thomu.
Ricky Gonzalez went the distance for SCC,
acattering seven hita while ltriking out five. The
junior right-hander ii now 6-3.
The game included a bench-clearing brawl in
the eighth i.nnJ.ng a.ft.er sec·. Carl Root. attempting
to break up a double play, alld hard into Cal Baptist
second bueman Tom Walsh.
lJCI ranked Freeway Series talk:
9th in U.S. A traditional topic
UC Irvine men's tennis team baa been trying to pin the top 10
rankings in the nation all aeaaon
long. Yesterday the Ant.eaten of
Coach Greg Patton finally made
lt.
UCI, 24-4 on the seaaon ,
Jwnped from 15th to 9th in the
latest college rank:inlJ. And, if
the Anteaters win today and
J'riday, they undoubtedly will
nJl>ve up a few more notches
~en the poll la, taken in two
·weeks.
Today the Anteaters met
fourth·rated USC (18-2) and
Friday they host leOOnd-ranked
1'rinity, Tex. (14-2) at UCI (1:30).
UCI hu def•ted the nation's
110. 1 ieam (SMU) and lost to
Peppm:Une (No. 3). UCLA (No.
6) and Stanford (No. 8).
"We're elated; thU baa been
our pl all 1eU011," IA.id Patton 'tt.hia team'• rankinl in the top
. $MU (1i1t~Ti~--(14-.~t_ a. ,. (114)1 4, ~2)i I . ~LA .......... (t-1); 1. • ,..., (14-6); ~~ (1M); •• uo kw. '23--•)i 10.
• (11'~ ''· °" ......., (7-8); 12.
(10-11); '*i..ll.... ... .. '::!* i4,Qeorgla~ 11. T--1 ·II:
OUM(1 .. 7): 11. llfl(1 .. ); 11. It. 11 1t. Attlrone (1t-4)1 20. TOM AUi
A guy who waa around at the time
recalls that In those daya, the moat
intrlgu:ing sporting event of them all was
the Subway Series.
That wu what they called the World
Series when it involved the Yankees and
the Dodgen. Somehow the multitudes
f<>W)d Is easier to Identify when the two
teams travJ!led from the Bronx to
Brooklyn and back on the subway.
There was never anything like it In
Chicago or Boston or Philadelphia and
the last time it happened in New York
WU 1955. ·
Thia explaina why It ta traditional at
this time of year in thla part of the world
for participants in the cocktail hour
institution to dlacuaa aomethlnl called
the Freeway Series. Thia embnioes the
Dodgen of Loa Anfeles and the Angela
of Oranae County who are aeparat.ed by
some 31) m iles of freeway and lt ia
becoming 1omethln1 of a Southern
Callfomla obMal1on that the two teams
meet in a World Series before too many
80 to that a;reat ~ in the aky.
P«Ullar to SoUthem Callfomla la the
manner in which the dtizena put their
money where their mouth• are. The Dodaera and Angela •taee a preview of a
freeway World Sertea with a aprina
tralnJna Freeway S.rtea and fill the
stadiwna. Therefore, the real thJ.na in
October la more than desirable -
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
it Is downright eaenUal.
Such an eventuality la discussed
briakly every apring and in 1982, it
endured longer than it ever had. The
Angela won In the American League
Weit and the Dodgers made a
memorable run at the National Leque
West and talk of a freeway World Series
pendsted until the moment the J:>Odters
perished in San Frandaco very late in
the home attttch.
The desi.tt fOI' a freeway tournament
ln October la more than a chamber of
commerce hype and tout. The people
involved want the thing.
"I have been thlnkina about it aince I
flnt became manaaer of the Dodgers,"
aaya Tom Laeorda, "I can't Imagine
anythlna more ex.c:ittna. It would be the hl&hlJ&ht of the career of every guy who
had anythinc to do with It.
"U It la an outltandlna eveht like thia
in the exhlbl.Uon IMIOI\, Juat l.ma&ine It
u the falJ clumc. I think It woUld be
unbeUevabl&"
Th,! 1prtn1 version wu almoat
(See POSSIBLE, Pqe Dl>
.
HB's Doyle celebrates
Former IJuntington Beach High star
Kathy Doyle (right) helpB lilt USC
women'• basketball coach Linda
Sharp above the crowd (ollowing
their annexation ol the NCAA crown
Sunday.
Landreaux won't forget, 16-7
.. rve never had a bttw openina day,"
Landreaux aald. "I've had l>euer
performancea, but .never • better openinl da.y. I came to Wt put nd*9
and I W• eJCdt.d •bout dw pine. TN)'
wen mak1na IOOd pt~ J ~ aot the
bat sin the biJI" ... it wtl\t ~·"
Guerrero oontrtbutlld ftve RBla wi\b a
thrH·run home run and • two·run
triple.
.. I'm ~ to have • aood ltart." he
MJd. "1 ve never b.ad • aood openJna
before, but I worked bard ln aprtna ' .
I
Bill Ashen
Marathon
• victory
for Tritons
It lasted five games and more
than three hours. and when it
w as finally over, last night'•
volleyball match between South
Coast League p o w ers San
Clemente and Laguna Beach bad
left both COllChea in awe.
''Outstanding volleyball -one
of the best high school matches
I've ever seen," admitted Art1at
Coach am Aahen, even thouah
his Artiata came out on the abort
end of a 15-17, 14-16, 15-5, 15-12,
18-16 score to the host Trttona.
The victory moved the Tritona
into 1e>le ~ of firat place
In the S~oast Leacue
atandinga with a 6-0 mark.
Laguna Beech la now 5-1.
''lt waa just like the CIF flnala
of 1981," added Triton coach
Jack Ivenon , referrinl to the
rnJtchUp between the aame two
ieuna.
San Clemente'• atudt waa led
by Dave Yoder, Mike Hurlbut
and Matt Hunt. Lacuna a.ch WU ~eel by
Adam Jobnao n (' he waa
unbelievable" -Alben) and
middle blocker Steve Blue. lb
addlUon. middle blocker Larry
Allan kept the Artiata in the ...
pme by ae.rvlnC '°" lix •tnilbt potn~. ~
tn another South c.o.t ~.
match, MllllOA Vlejo def .. W
Woodbrtdc9, 10-U, lM, 1'7-15,
l&-11.
Dana 11.fUa d•f•t.d LUuna
HlU.1 18·14, 8-U , 10·1'7,: Ia-8,
1&· 11 bthlnd the pla.y of I.Cf S.yme and Jeny MwUa.
In the Sea View L•acue1 Sltanda u"9d l• record to 7..u
with a lM, 114. 1&..a vlctairJ
owr C«ilN cW Mar.
Outalde bitter Duay Oua
and middlii ~ ... Cantco ~the ~· "Th•J ju1 coulCln t 1•,t
anythlnc put Nau *'1lb\, '
< ... vou.snw.;; Pace DI>
•
I
I~
OS Oran
Seaver tough in •debut'
Tom leaver made an auapldou. II rtturn t o thu New Y ork Me u
yeatcrday. The 38-year-old rlaht-
handtir, who Jpent lOIA eeuoru whh
tht' Meta prior to hi.I ltlilde to Clll'-1Mllll ln 11177,
allowed thr •o htt.a In 11x tnnlnaa agahul th~
Phllado!phl~ PhllliM bcfon· leaving with 1t minor
Injury. Rookie Dou1 Sl1k wok over, and the Meta
ICOt'ed a 2-0 vlctory on Opcmlna Day before 48'-
Bullet still rolling
Praak Jou1oa aoored 28 polnta, m
lncludlna two crudaJ be1keta down
tho 1t.re1Ch. to lead the Wuhinaton
Bullot.t to their ninth victory ln 10
is fired
as Sox announcer
Blue Jay" roll in opener
Wlllle Up1haw drove In thrt1c 'lit
tuna with a homer and a IJ.nalc llnd
R&oce MaJJlDlk• hit a lwo-run homer
ycttt"rday to power Toronto to a 7-1
63: at Shea Stadium ... In
uther Nation1tl Leaaue game9
Gary Templeton drove In
four runs and scored three
Umet1, and pitcher Tim Lollar
helred himself with three
RB aa San Diego spoiled San
Franc.i1C0'1 OpenlJli Day with
u 16-13 victory The Padr~
led 16-6 at one a~ge of the
game . . John Candelaria
aameoe, a 93·89 National Bubtball A.MociatJon
w i n ov~r tho New Jer1ey N~t•
yMtcrday . . . Mo1e1 Matone 1COred c:laht of
lncludlnai seven In the tau 2:21 to lud
Phll•delphla to ll 116-108 vl~tory over
Milwaukee Bernard Kin& llCO~ elaht uf
his 23 point.I In overtime, u New York broke a
Cour-gomtt lostng streak with a 110 107 win over
Oetrolt . . Geor1e Gervl.n and Mike Mltcbell
acored 21 point.I apiece and Arlia QUmore added
20 JX>lnll tmd 13 rebound.a to lad San Antonio to
a 130-113 decision over K.a.nsaa CJty . . . Larry
Bird scored 39 point.a In leading Boston to a
117 -95 viclOry over A llanta. . Larry NaDCe
&Cort!d 23 JX)inta and aix other Surui reached
double figures as Phoenix withstood a third-
period collapee to clinch a playoff berth with a
126-106 victory over Golden State .. Cllff
Robinson llCOred 24 JX>lnt.s and Carl Nickl added
22 to pace Cleveland to a 101-91 win over the
Chicago Bulls . . Jobn Drew's 25 JX>int.s led a
balanced Utah scoring attack as the Jazz ran
away from Howton in a 126-97 win . Goa
Williams scored 23 JX)mts to lead Seattle to a
115-109 double-overtime victory over San Diego.
From AP dl1patcbea
CH ICAGO -Controversial II
sports commentator Jimmy PiersaU
was fired yesterday from his .)Ob as an
announcer for SporlSvision, the cable
vh.:tory over the Boston RC!d Sox In lhe 1983
American Leaaue openM for both teams Dave
Slleb, a 17 -game wtruwr Jul eeuon, allowed Ju.at
three hit.I over 1hc Inning• for the Blue .f aya
. . . Texas' Jobi MaUack and reUevent Mike
Mason and Odell Jones handcuffed Chicago on
five hit.a and the Rangers roughed up Floyd
BuDl1ter, making h1a debut with Chicago, for a
4-1 victory over the White Sox. Banniater signed
as a free agent for $900,000 a year alter playing
out his opt.ion with Seattle l.aat seaaon . . A
three-run homer by Larry Henadon in a six-run
first inning triggered a 15-hlt auack and
propelled Detroit to a 11-3 victory over
MinneBOta in the seuon oepener for both teams.
Jack Morris went the route for the Tigers,
yielding alx hits . . . Al Cowens' sacrifice fly m
the seventh inrung scored Steve Henderson and
gave &attJe a 5-4 victory over the New York
Yankees as the Mariners opened the season on a
successful note.
NAYI" pitched a four-hilt.er, atriktnl(
television network that televises Chlcago White
Sox' baseball games.
Ln a one-sentem .. e statement released by the
American League baseball club, Sportsvtsion's
chief operating officer, Jack Jacobson, said
Piersall "has been relieved of his announcing
duties effective immediately."
Neither Jacob11on nor Piersall could be
reached for comment. A security guard at the
SJX>rtsvision offices said Jacobson was not there
and telephone calls to Piersall's home were
answered by a tape-recording machine.
Plersall's dis.rmssal came the day after he
criticiied White Sox manager Tony LaRussa
following the team's 5-3 opening day l<>M to the
Texas Range.rs.
out 10 t>.t ters, and Lee Lacy, Dale Berra, Lee
Mautlll and Ja1on Thompson homered, leading
Pittsburgh to a 7-1 vlctory over defending world
champion St. Louis. Lacy homered on the game's
se<.'Ond pitch off Cardinal starter Bob Forsch.
... The Montreal Expos-Chicago Cubs opener
was rained out and rescheduled for today, an off
day for both teams.
Baseball today Walke r now married man
He1sman Trophy winner •
Herschel Walker, who left c.'Ollege to
accept the richest contract in pro
football history, conftrmed yesterday
On his show, Piersall criticized the manager
for letting rookie Oreg Walker start the game at
first base rather than using a veteran player.
Walker went on U> comm.it two costly erro~ in
the first inning of his first major league start.
Rangers surprise Flyers
11182 -A freak winter storm that
brought sub-freezing temperatures and
dumped heavy amounts of snow from the
Northeast to the Midwest forced the
postponement of American League openers
in New York. Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland
and Milwaukee and National League
openers in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
that he married hlS girlfriend of three years ln a
quiet ceremon y last week. The New J ersey
Generals running back married Cindy
DeAngella, a girl friend from the University of
Georgia . . . Larry Brown, coach of the New
Jersey Nets, apparently talked with Kansas
University officials Monday night about the
school's vacant basketball coach ing job, the
Kansas Ciy Times reported ...• Len Stephens
was named to r eplace George Raveling as
Washington State's head basketball coach.
and added an assist as the New York ,
Last season Piersall also criticized La.Russa
on severai occasions and the two were often at
odds.
Anders Hedberg acored two goals ~
Rangers upset the Philadelphia Flyers
5-3 last night ln a first-round Stanley -
Cup playoff game in Philadelphia. The Rangers,
who finished fourth behind Philadelphia, the
Patrick Division champion, and the Flyers will
meet in the second game of the best of-five
series tomorrow night . . . Barry Pederaon'1
second goal of the game at l :46 of overtime
capped a Boston comeback and lifted the Bruins
to a 4-3 victory over Quebec in another first-
round contest. The goal by Pederson enabled the
Bruins U> overcome Peter Sta1tny'1 three first-
period goals and gain the upper hand in the
series.
1977 -The Seattle Mariners played
their first regular-season game and Lost 7-0
to the Angels at the Seattle Kingdome.
1973 -Ron Blomberg of the New York
Yankees became the first designated hitter
in major league history when he walked
with the bases loaded to force in a run m
his first plate appearance against Boston's
Luis Tiant. Blomberg went l-for-3 in the
Yankees' 15-5 loss to the Red Sox, whose
own DH. Orla9do Cepeda, was hitless in six
at bats.
Quote 'of the day
Sbane Rawley, a sometime s tarting
pitcher for the New York Yankees, after
fighting and finally boating a 75-JX>Und
amberjack in the Gulf of Mexico near
Sarasota, Fla.: "Goose. where are you when
I need you most."
Today's ba.rth.6y: Cleveland pitcher Bert
Blyleven is 32.
T elevision, radio
TV: Baseball -Dodgers at Houston, 5:30
p.m., Channel 11 .
RADIO: Baseball ---Dodgers at Houston,
5;1~ p.m ., KABC (790); Milwaukee at Angels,
7:25 p.m . KM.PC (710).
Wolf pack
greeted
by hysteria
RALEIGH , N .C . (A P) -
North Carolina State basketball
coach Jim Valvano led his NCAA
c hampion Wolfpack h ome
yeste rday to th e cheer s of a
standing-room-only c rowd of
15,500 at Reynolds Coliseum.
Hoisting a bottle of champagne
given to him by a fan, Valvano
wasted little time giving the
crowd a part of what it wanted.
"You've heard of Phi Slama
Jama," Valvano said. "Let me
introduce you to Phi Pack
Attack.a."
PHI SLAMA JAMA was the
name H o uston had given its
"fraternity" of dun.ken in honor
of its practice of dunking shots,
hard and oft.en. But in Monday's
54-52 WoJfpack victor y, the
Cougar fraternity had only one
dunk.
"What time is it?" Valvano
asked, then lifting his arm and
tugging at his sleeve. "Let's look
at our championship watches."
One by one the players made
their way to the microphone,
each greeted by sheer hysteria
from the crowd. For the most
part, the speeches were short,
but left little doubt how the
Wolfpack felt.
"Everybody talked about the
way we got to where we are
now," said Wolfpack forward
Thurl Bailey, one of the squad's
four seniors. "First. they said we
were lucky. Then they said it
was destiny. Then they called w
a Cinderella team. They tried to
find anyway but the right way
-that we a.re a great basketball
team."
"AFTER HOUSTON played
Louisville they took the
championship trophy home, but
Monday we made 'em bring it
back ," guard Dereck
Whittenburg said, sahak.Jng his
red sneaker in the air "They
didn't know it, but we had on our
Cinderella shoes.
new six-meter national champi_on
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
DM!y Not 8oetlne W~
Ben Mitchell, Jr. of California
Yacht Club, Marina del Rey. is the new
six-meter national champion following a
second-place finish yesterday in the fifUll
race of the regatta sailed ln the breezy
ocean off Newport Beach under the
direction of Balboa Yacht Club.
lt was a squeak finish for Msu:hell
who had to put at least one boat between
his California 1 and Carl Buchan's
Chinook out of Seattle Yacht Club. He
did just. that. Buchan finished fourth.
The final scoring was based on a
best-four-out-of -five performance
Mitchell's finishes were 3-1-1 6-2. By
throwing out the sixth place finish , his
fmal score was 6 1"2 points. Buc han's
finishes were 2-3-3-1-4. Thf' fourth place
throwout gave him a final score of 8 % .
The 12-boat fleet finished
yesterday's race before the blustery
winds set in. There were no mishaps.
Third in the sl·onng was Paul
Cayard of St. Francis Yacht Club with
12 ¥. JX>ints. He was able to throw out a
last-place finish in the second race but
good finishes of 1-4-2-6 netted him 12¥.
JX>ints.
UCI settles for
NHYCUSA, skippered by Tony
Wattson, Newport Harbor Yacht Club,
was able to salvage fourth place despite
having to retire from the third race with
a broken mast. H.is good finiahes were
6-2-2-3 for a score of 13 JX>lnts.
Fifth was Irene, sailed by C.N
Versoix. New Zealand wlth 19 % . He
won the final rare. Versoix was one or
four foreign skippers competing in the
series.
Others m the scoring: 6. Ranger.
Argyle CampbeU, Fort Worth Boat Club.
22. 7 Gitana. Laurie Smith, France
a 6-3 • win
Yacht Club. 24; 8 . Frenzy-Redux.
William Buursma, Seattle YC 28; 9.
Perspicacious, Gayle Post, Balboa YC,
29; 10. Toogooloowoo, Jon Rose, Seattle
YC, 41; 11. Pacemaker Ron McFarlane,
Seattle YC. 43; 12. Nuvolari. Tony
Antifari, Italiano YC.
Tomorrow the Six Meters will see
more action in tune-up races for the
world championship wh ich gets
under way Saturday out of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club. The World Cup
regatta w11J consist of six races -one
each day through Apnl 16.
Laguna Beach, Anteater women also win in tennis
Yacht builder
Sayers dies
VOLLEYBALL
From Page 01
admitted F..atancia Coach Mike
Pomeroy. "Right now, I'd say the
team is playing right up to its
ability."
L ikewise, Newport Harbor
needed only three gamea to
dispose of University, 1~7, 15-6.
15-5.
Middle blocker Andy Alllaon
and outside hitter Shawn Droke
keyed the Sailors' vi.c:tory. Dave
Hahn played well for University.
Kellems competes
SALT LAKE CITY -Suzy
Kellems, a former Estancia Htgh
gymnastics standout and
currently with the Unlwrsity of
Southern California, ia among
the competitors here at the
University of Utah at the NCAA
championships.
Com~tltion In the two-day
meet begins Friday.
The UC Irvine tennis team looked by its
OpJX>nent yesterday, but still managed a 6-3 decison
over United States International UniveraJty.
UCI, currently ranked ninth in the nation, was
eyeing today's match al(ainat No. 4 USC at the
Raquet Club of Irvine.
"We overlooked them (USIU) to USC,"
admitted UCI Coach Greg Patton. "They are a good
team, but we could have played a lot better."
Jim Snyder, Bruce Man Son Hing, and Ruben
Perczek each won singles matches in three sets for
the Anteaters, now 24-3 on the season.
"We tta.lly want to show everyone around that
UCI ~ the team for Orange County. not USC,"
added Patton.
On the community college level, Saddleback
took a two-game lead in the Pacific Coast
Conference by stopping Gro.smont, 5-4.
lt was the second meeting between the two
teams, as the Gauchos rolled up a 6-4 win in the
first confrontation with the Griffins ..
Maria Lutera took control (or Saddleback,
winning in straight sets ln singles play and teamed
~ with David Salmon in doubles. The duo took a
pair of 6-1 declsons which gave the Gauchos a 5-3
lead going into the final match.
Bob Grau took a three-set victory from his No.
4 singles slot for Saddleback which unproves its
record to 9-0. Grossmont. in second place, stands at
7-2.
On the high 9Chool level. Laguna Beach coasted
to a 20 ~ -7 ~ victory over Dana Hills. The win
improves the Artists' record to 3-0 in South Coast
League action.
Wade Perry won four sets for Laguna Beach in
singles play, while Rick Leach and Enc Dickerson
were easy victors in doubles.
Perry, playing No. l singles for the Artists,
stopped Bili 1-towie, 6-4. Howie was last year's
South C.oast League singles champ. Laguna Beach's
Kris Kollenda also helped in doubles action.
The UC Irvine women ousted Long Beach
State, 9-0. as Maria Myers led the way with her
straight sets singles victory. The win improves
UCl's record to 11 -9
The Anteaters travel to Fresn o State on
Thursday to begin a northern California trip which
Includes stops at Stanford, Pacific and Santa Clara.
POSSIBLE FREEWAY SERIES? • • •
From Page 01
unbelievable to John McNamara,
the Incumbent manager of the
Angels, particularly on the
Saturday night of the most
recent Freeway Serles when he
looked up at more than 60.000
rumpa ln the seats at Anaheim
Stadium.
"You have to keep reminding expe rt s will describe as
younelf this 18 a spring training questionable, even for a season.
game," Johnny Mac said. "l So it is, then , a freeway World
agree with Tommy. I can't think Series ls not out of the question
of anything more exciUng than for the fall of 1983. The An.gels
for aU of ua to be right here ln say they will be there and that
October. Yea. I tta.lly want it to leaves it up to the Dodgers who
happen." say it is the other wa.y around.
th d Id Meanwhile, more than a
NEW YORK (Al') -Henry
Sayers. who built the yachts that
won the last sue America's Cups,
has died at age 74.
Saye r s, wh o lived 1n
Larchmont, N.Y., died Friday at
the Memorial-Sloan Kettering
Cancer Center in Manhattan.
Under Sayers' direction,
his company built "Constellation,"
which successfully defended the
Ameri ca's Cup In 1964 :
"Intrepid," the winner in 1967
and 1970, "Courageous," the
winner m 1974 and 1977; 'and
"Freedom ," the winner in 1980.
LUXURY
LIASI
PL'N
FOR UNDER
5396
Lakers need rest,
time to re-evaluate
Blockburger
paces Tars
Authorillee of e gran ° handful of authorities say the
game aay lt could happen. best longahot waaer ln the many
The predicting bodies of year• la the National League
baaeball favor the Angela in the entry of the San Diego Padn!e.
American Le-aue because they Thia theory is that the Padres
have virtually the aame team needed more help than anyone
that won the dlviaion in 1982. and t t• Strona wlnda and poor track . • . go -.
conditions weren't enough to stop The pltchina mlaht be stronger No, an An1ela-Padrea World .
• Leasing Isn't right for
everyone, but It may be the
answer to your new car
needs. Lease aluxunous
Continental or llncotn for
under $396 per month on a
closed end lease. with no
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PORTLAND (AP) -For most
of tbct National Baaketball
A.9oc::ietion teMOD, the Portland
offense haa been a two-mao
show.
But ln recent prnea. Mychal
Thmns-on hM eomt to the petty.
The &-8 forward IOOl'ed 24 pointa,
g;rabbed 12 r.boUnda and MncHd
out l1 ..-ta lM\ ~ht to lead
the Trail Bleur1 to • 107-101
victory over the Labre.
The detendln1 NBA
champion•. who could have cUnched the P9d6C DtvtMin tide
wlth. ~. MYet Md tn tHe
1.,.. Their OA.ly Mrtou. rally
cunl an: u. final inlnut.-. Loi AJll!)M 1-t II.a tee011d a•~ la ~•..:!.~ nl•~ta and Cold\ N&~ •warned .tlout bll ..... ,,.., .. Ottt tefUW'
II ... '*" ID ed. • •'•• )utt 1ot to Und
ounelv", get ow runnlna same
aoina.'' Riley aald. "Our team 11
tired with seven aamee In 10
days. What we need most now lJ
some rest and a chance to
re--evaluate. •• n. Ylctory kept Portlanid l ~ aamH behind Seattle In th•
battle for the fourth Wtatern
C.Onfe~nce playoff berth and a
hoawcourt advani.,e ln \he fin\
round of the po.t:Jla.Y· Thom]l90n l&Sd Coach
Jack RamAy felt the Btazen
were ntl)'ina too mUoh on Jim
9axaon and Calvin Natt tor
pc>lnt.t. Lut nJabt he Ft IDClft
than enouah help from
Thompson anC:l center Wayne
Cooper, who Nd • ~ 11
polnta.
"Jacll Mid t ehould take at
leHt 10 1ho\t a 1•m•," qld
Thom peon .
Newport KarboT High'a Sheldon tSecau.e a ball club atarta a aeuon Series could never happen. lt
Blockburger from winnlna no on the aasumptlon lt will be w o u· 1 d ca u 1 e too mu c h
fewer than four event.I yesterday reuon.ably free of l.njurles. dilcomfort, not the least of which
ln a S. View Lea,ue track meet Some me. the ~rs tn the would be the terrible hu.milS.tion
at Unl~enity. National. Some don t. Dodaer to the Dodgent.
blue hu become baby blue ln 8etid4!9, what would you call
The au.rpNe norm which h.it eevera.J positions, molt noUceably tt? Freeway Seriea hu a areat
partl of eouth Oranao County at the comen ot th~ lnlteld, but rlng to It but Hiabway Sena k•t tlmel and dlataneet low, but .. ;...~-dumb ·
Blockbur1er still managed to --;t;h:eee:::::are::::::'nf::::an=t.a==~=w=bue==bell===.,=wiu.====· =::.=:=====~ win tht 100 (11.1), 220 (24.3) Jona 1.
jump (20-11) and triple jump
(43-3).
And w ith teammate Steve
Btuu recordinC a triple ln the
120 ~ hwd!A!i oe.o>. sao 1ow1
(42.7) and dtlcu:I (131-t), ~Tan
ecored a 91-48 ~ OYW t.Mtl' ~
The condltJona were ao bad
that 8allor pole vaulter Cance
8it'8m'I, who LMt week vaul~
14-1 ·~ the Oran1• Counly ~ps. tttlleid tar a M '° ialie llc:iarid paa.
I for you. Order yours today.•
'.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, AprU e. 18&3 DI
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Ot11111te llflnQO) I to I IO t IO HOWCly lcoot (l.llCkayl 3 20 t IO
lllil't Allytllm (MettlMll 'oo Aleo raoecl Detlflg lrlafl, lumber
Ohatm1•, l'1p1 Jor•. Andr·• Ub•I. t11e CoMeclr Aw110, '°'..._ Wllh LO... lime t 01 110 M &I.ACTA (4· I) pelCI M 00
llCOMD llACI, One mile 110• Wytt Oet,.. (Mliat) 4 IO 3 40 tto
Twtce "8fe'led ITffflet) $IO :r 10
M1 COl'llanl fOleen~ 2.IO Al.O racect Nev ... ,, Mini "reeto. 0Np OH. OIUOlll Speed f'l9, l'I C Coiillown, HIQll
llMI
Time toe VII
THIMI llACI. One m4le ~
p-lln8f 18hOtll • 40 :1 IO 2 '° Hunl .. 't Jewel lllltclltel 18 20 7 to Jauy ltar (1111•1 4 00
Al•o llCed RIGh N Spicer lklppe1'•
lnvaaar l'unChkln, MacKen1le, Slavonle
°"'llMa, Mt• Up 8kl00at Time 2 04 216 ti HACTA (3-41P4lldSU90
,OUllTH filAC&. One mile trOI.
C"-lul MOON to..on-l& 40 J 20 2 90 Noble RYie (81-mAll) 3 40 2 90
Mont., ay Judge 1 llghlhlN) 3 90 AlaO rec.a Flllal Chip, Mono• Bound,
Otyan • Cuo. lltude. 1(1tamoun. Andy a Mal80f
lime 2 02 21S
''"" llACI. One mlle p-Llfe Time (Vlnclnglwn) 36 40 15 20 S 40
flenM •Chance (Balltargeon) 13 40 6 90
RHI Lu"IO.. (Kuebler) 3 00
Aleo raced Charterll Play. f amoue
Knight. Honall Yan~••· Barium D•e1m,
Mlnf11 ... Kayat on• 'roll
Time 2 03
fi2 &XACTA (3·111 palO IS45 20
llXTH llACI. One mlle p-
Nallve 8re1 f0ennt9) 3 90 2 90 2 10 R Curn11o.aom..1 3 20 2 20 Inc• Gold (Longo) 2 10
Aleo tac.cl Pet• Nero. Ettll'I Foy. Fr•
Pour. Batdwell, Et8fnet Rock
Tlm<t 2 0 I
'2 llCACTA (5·71P8k1 $1290
H'llNTH llACf . One mlle p-
POPllCle l OM (Patkerl s eo 4 20 3 00
lahtllan Wino (Crognant 4 00 3 40 Stolcea IFllCOI 4 00
Allo raced Boomer Hiii, Fa•H••Y Biii. locn N ... Monll8fm Anclya Hulagtr1. Cool
NIOnt tw-205 115
ti HACTA 17·5) l>lld 123 20
t2 l'ICll SIX (5·3·2·3·5-7) ~Id l2,893 eo
o1111n al• winning llcke1a (Ill llor-) 12 Plclc
St• conaolallon paid S 16 40 with 371 winning llckell (llva hor-).
flOHTH llACf. One mile pece
Marak Boy (BalllatQ4M>11) g 20 3 90 3 40
ltl Ab-fAnderaonl 3 00 3 00
tionOa Matry (Vllllanc!lngllaml 3 20
Aleo raced 0oeca Rew1td Biogo BW>QO.
Unaw11e OungatM Roll Cokeetu nm. 2 01 115
t2 HACTA (Ml paid 132 40
NINTH llACI. One mile pac;e Happy Vine• (AnOe.aonl 3 40 2 40 2 20
Andy'• Mound (Ka.zmaler) 3 40 2 80
Majftllc Aura CB•aerl 3 00
Aleo ,~ O.aert Son. ~tlllbtll)' HN Yan, Beauteoua Bella, flaahy F•Allk, P1lntmak•.
Sophllllcated Ladt
lime 1 ~I> :115'
12 •XACTA (&· 11 palO $ 11 20
TENTH MCI. One mtle pa.:. 8•~•n 1e.i11.,geon1 • eo 3 00 2 eo Schutu (Sherren) 4 20 4 00
Tawhal Chief (Croglllnj 2 80
Allo •aced lnl Etto•I, Calgaty, Tutor,
Ro.mtng Hano-, Anolnet Frlaeo. SG01c:t1
ano Kahlua
llma 2 02 21~ U l.XACTA 17·31 paid $2120
Allendanoe -3 433
NBA WlaTfM CONl'l!MMCI
•·IAllett •Phoent• Seellte
PorllanO
OOlclenS111• San Oleo<>
.. Kiiie DM9lofl
W L ht. Ga 6-0 20 730
•7 29 827 7•;,
45 31 592 10
43 32 573 "'" 26 19 341 2''AI
25 SI 329 30
Mllhteal Dhlelon
y·S1n Antonio 48 27 6-40
0en-40 35 1133 e l<anHa City )9 38 520 I o.n.. 38 40 47• 12-..
utal"1 29 48 ~ 20'Ai
Houflon 13 83 171 35'AI
IASTEANC~
Atleftllc:OfwWen
Z•Pt\lledelpflt9 12 1' 127
• Botton 52 23 N3 10
•·New ,,....., " 29 613 18 ~ York 29 36 520 23
Wa111tt101on 3t 37 507 24
Centr• Dl'tlelon
Y·Mtt .. tNk• 47 29 e1e
Allanlt •O 37 1119 7\.\
0.ltotl ~ 42 447 13
C1"11G9QO 28 49 341 20'AI
c-and 20 s8 2113 21
tndl¥• 18 ~ 263 n·;, ~ pla)'Oll 9!>01
y-clinched dMllon title
r-cttnclled dtvtt+on and confer.,_ 101e
L.Mt ...... t•aac-P0<1lancl 107. L.aiian 101
Boaton I 11. Allanl• 95
Waahlngton 95. -Jeney 99 N-YO<ll 110, 0.lrott 107, OT
Phll1delpNa 116, Mllwaul\M 109 s.,, Antonio 130. Kan ... City I 13
CieY91tlnd t 0 I. ClllCIOO II
Utah 121. Mouaton 91 ~x 126. Goldef> State IOI S..ttl• 115 s.... Diego 109 12 otl
T-"ellt'•O.-
New Yor~ at Boaton lnO..,,_••-JerMY Sen Antonio at PN/aclelphta
Whl\tngton 11 Oe1rOll
Houlton •• DaHN
Denver at Kan ... City
lluers 107, Lair.,. 101
LOa ....Ua -RM!bla 7, Wiik• 11.
Abduhllbtllr 21. Jol\naon 11. Nluon 4. M COQPet 14. Wortlly 17, .ion. 4 McOM 0
TOI .......... 13-17. 101.
~TI.AMO -Hall 21 ThOmC>eO<\ 24
~ 18, Lever •. Paxaon 18. Cet1 I. Vll•nllne I . Townee 6, NO<tla 2 Totalt
4440, lt-30. 107 ._. llf a-twe
Loe Angelea 24 24 23 30-101 Ponlend 32 211 27 22-107
Tot• Foull-Loa Angelea 21, PO<llend 20 . Reboufldt-Loa Mgelaa 49 (Johnaon It).
Por1111nd 37 (~ 121 A-I-Loa Angel .. 21 (Johnaon IS). Portland 32
(Thompaon I 11 Tec11nlca 1a -P1 non l>orUand illaOll ....,_ A-1Uee
SCONIERS: UN LIKELY HERO • • •
From Page 01
lmJlOl1ant thing," noted .K.iaon, who surrendered
only five hit.a, three in the third inning when
Milwaukee 1COred lta only run off him.
"~ Ki*>n pttched about u well u .anyone can pit.ch," pralled Sutt.on. "When you hold .ua to ~ run !Of' u Iona u he dJd tonJaht, and you hold
1.11 to only \wo for the pme . . . let'• juat aay lt was
• k>na night."
The Brewen, althouah anemic: ln tenna of httAa,
were oot without t.Mlr aI\.are of cba.neel. They left tw,> numen oo In tht tlxth (both reached hue on
walka), and two more In the eeventh (a pair of lhWJm).
Milwaukee then h-1 • aolden opportwtJty ln
&he nln~ tugbt fMkter Charlie MoOre, who had
W1lked 6Dd wen' io thlrd on a 8lncJe to center by
Jbn Gantner. eaond to miUut It S.2 on a ucrtfJat Oy
by Paul Molitor.
~ s.nchn. who hid come en In the 11Venth
ln rwlfef ol K.i.on. then pw up a ld.r\IJ• to Rob&n
Yqunt to_put n.annen 1t lint and ~ with two
OUl and c:.ctJ Coop.I' ciomlna '° u.. .,.. ....
Otw tlv 1h:uaUon Jot an~•? Lib the
ll(t.h pme of the AL clWo p ..n.. ex.cept (nnfnl .,. tM ..wnlh. not the nlnth, and
runners were at second and third, not flnt and
9'!C.'Ond. Bacl< ln October, Sanchez, with Andy Hualer
wann.lJll up ln the bullpenhwu left ln the game by
then M•naaer Gene Mauc and l:ooper retponaeo
with a two.run RBI alnile which gave the Brewen
a -4~3 lHd and a Utle.
l..ut nJaht Sanchez. with Hualtr warmtna up
In the bullpen. wu ttmoved by McNamara, and
thia t.1me Hualer Induced Cooper to hi' a gamo-
endlng around ball t.o Bobby Grich. The NtuJt
didn't have tM ea.me impact u Jut yur -but a
wtn la • win. *
AN091. MOTH -.......,... en111ymg 1'111 toi. wlttl the c:IUtt: "I'm
fill• I ltMilnQ pl«lflef wf\o JOI' out ther• ~ fM Of ~ d •. fhoM ovve he~ 10 lie IMMlllY pfepered to do " !Mt Mr .,_..... they know fhw won'I get MOfltr OlltirlOI for ,_ Of llW mott deyt, In • ..,.._ tfleh mt lliuM!On. I 11110tf1r wMt mt tdt II going 10 be I ...... WMI to M
rM4't "'*' ~caM on me." ... ---.. ....., .,. .. ~ " he r..i6td i.i '• ~ -llmMr to tt11-1n oetow. "To tel yOll tlle tM11, I lflOulM II ,... {811111 Oii"' el .. •te '814 ,.., .. he Mid. ''Actllaly, "'°"lho I __,,, ltilnltlnf eoout ft II .. I Ml 04fW
"*I09 on Cl.,..• .. """'*" ..... lltill ...... ...., .. ew If llh•llll•re ... tOOd •• handlflt ,.,......., AeoltH ....
rl8M"'**'1 "U..."" ..... '°'~! .... """ ... Ind to ,., ..... or.for.one.'' ••• o.ww, ... ,. .. ....
better, .. =,...,,., '° tfla...... ''°' "'*' f-..1 .,._ C....... , . TIMI A,_, M Poll.......,,. !t: ._ _. Ooloe., M¥tt WOf\ ,. II\ • row .. ~ ........
............... .....,....,..,_.,"·~· 100 -t llloclit~ IH+t). n . 1, t 1<10. (U). 1 U, a. llOll (NH). 11.&, no -t 11ookb11r11tt (NH>. 24.3, i .
Ou ... 1 (NH~:. I. Werd (NH). H I. 440 -, t~>. u a; 2 ewoc (HH>. 66 I 3 Kltllet (U). M I
H O I Kre«>a (VI. t 02 1, 2 llebblll
(NH), 2 02 I, a G1~ger~Ut._ 2 00 Mlle 1 (lie) lollllltl (U I Ut-0.. ..
(U) • 6&. 3 0-,,...). .. ot
:t·mll• -1 •m11h (NH), 10 10 0, 2 Wallett (NH), 10 2 1 0, a K..,_ (NM), 10 U 0
120MH -1 lkllM (NH). 1t t. 2 llllly
(U). 19 6, no llWd
3JOLH -1 Brue• (NH). 47 7, t Matka
(U), 44 2; 3 Rllt>y !V~ d 4. 4411 telly 1 UnlYVll\y 46.1
Mlle ....... -I HlwPOtt H1tl>Ot, s M 0.
MJ -I. Mlflla (U). a.10: 2 Goae (NHI. 11·6. no third W 1 tllodll>Wgat (NM), 20-11, 2 11!'\1-
(U). 20-0, 3 Watd (NH), 11-11 'T J -I etoc:llbufget (NM), 43·3, 2 Ja Jen u1. •2·1 s Wwd (~), 'T·I
PV -1 hnnlll\ (HH). M ; 2 leleon (NH).
9-6, no third
SP -I Cedtgetl (NH), •I-I 1; 2 ll<uu
(NHJ, 4&· I 1, 3 HOblfl (U), 36-4
DT -1 llMM (NHI, 131·9; 2 a.own
(NM), 1'4·1, 3. RC)Oltt (U). 104..0.
HIGH tCHOOt. WO.N
New(Nft HllMt II. ""'"'9lly II
100 -1 1(-(NH), 12 I ; 2 Otega
INM). 13 3, 3 Ctcioan (U). 13 I 220 1 J-(NM). 21 I , 2 Delacy (NM), 29 1, 3 Moflll (U), 2t I 440 I Oleww>g (HH), 1 06 I,) Delacy
INM• I 05 5, 3 Gtay (NH), 1 07 5
880 -1 Set""" (U>. 2 26 I, 2 Barrio• (U) 2 33 o. 3 Mutr• (NH), 2 36 e Mlle I lllel 80honl (U), Ftlnk ... 111 (U).
Mc010th4n IUI. 5 32 0.
2•mtle -I (lie) NOlltN (U). Armentrout
(U). 81u1oa (U). 12 19 o,
I IOLH -1, D••=(NHI, 17 8; 2 T~omc>aon (U). 19 t. 3 ona (U), 19 2
330LH -I Del.Icy (NM 41 3, 2 0.aqe
(NM). 61 0. 3 Tl\omc)eOn (U). 111 2
440 relay I Newport Hlfl>Or, 52 11
Mlle felAy -1 UnlYenlty. 4 20 O.
MJ I Slit'""' INM). 4-0, 2 no MCOnd 0t
l~lfd
LJ I Drage (NH). 14-8.,.., 2 M .. n fU).
13·11, 3 Olawang (NH~ 13-10~
SP -1. Tll!Qe IU), 30..S; 2. Plallool fNM).
29·0. 3. Mouly (ti). 2~.
OT 1 MOClly (U), 82·1, 2 ColUna (NHj, 89-10. 3 PlelfOOI (NH). 413-2
POft~Opan (al ........... ,
'lrM"-td ......
JON HIQUer .. (St*nl def. l'Wo Coroawo
f Portugual), 8-1. 8·0: Lii> or Pemek
(Crec~o110 .. ~l•I def Ma1>u•I Otal'I••· (Spain) 2-8. W .... 2. ShlOmO Gllcllatell\
(lw ... ) del 8elu T1toczy IHuno«Yl. 2-1.
II·•. 1·3, And••• Oomea (Ecuadot) d•I Cltloa Klmeyr (8'&dl) .... 1. &-7, &-1, Mela
Wllander (Sweden) va. Hatold Solomon (US I. poa1ponec1
w~·•tou~t (•1 .... _ 1tN11 lalefod, S.C.) ,.,.,.._,....._.
8ellln• Buno• (WHI' Germany) del ~· Suttov• ICnc:hotlo•allll). &-2. &-3. Kathy RIM!dl (U 8 l dlll S.... e.n .. (Bt'119in).
fl.4 2-1. 11-3. MlfM J-C'l'uooall~I
del Vicki -aon (US ). ... 2 .... 1; J.4-....
M•I•••• (8ulg1rl•I dal Cottlne Vanier
IV S ). 4-6, &-2, &-3, Barbi 8'amtenCU S l def Nancy V-gln CU S ), 7.5, ... 7. 7-5. LAu<a
Att•Y• fU 8.) de1 Lel9h Ann ThOmpaon
(US 1. 8· I. 7·11. lvann• Madruga O•H•
(Atgenllna) def Sabin• Simmond• (llaly).
9.3 ... 3. RalMI .. Reggi (llaty) dlll Su9*"I
Muc;arln I U S ). 1•8. 11-4. &-1; AndrM J11ge1 cu s ) d•I Ke<ry MeMHe Reid (Auat•Allll,
&-2. &-1 S..o.t• Pot1• IU SI dat W.,.,,., White (US I 2 .. &-2. 7-8; Cltlll>Q 8.-i (Can.Oil de4 Petta ~ (Swftdf18nd) &-3 11-4. DI-l'reMoltr (_.t 911a) dlll Tina
Moc:Nz .... I (US I. 1-6. 7·5, ~
Ahr..-o.-re lnlem.ttonal , .......... ,
Fnt""-dSllla6M
JOH Lule Ctetc IAtgentlna) det Andy
Andrew• (US.), 1·4, 9-4; TomH Smid
(CHc~o•tovekl1) det Tony Glammalva cu S ), 5.7 II·•. 8°4, John Aleunder
(Aulllllll). dlf Chti.IOP'le ~-V....itll, (Fr~I. 7-S, ... 1. Oatldl fomm (U.S) def
A/IOIM Mauter (W•I a.m-y), M . 6-4,
Henri L•conte !Franc•) def Tllomu tioQaled1 IS..-).._.. 11-3. &-2, Or-Giiiin
(U.S I del Cllril .Johnal-1~111). 1·11. 5· 7 I· 1, S1mmy G!arnmalve fU S I del Wollel< l'lball IP-). &-4, &-1. IVln Lendt 1Cacl>OelOvelll1) del. Pablo Anaya (Peru~
8·0, 8·0; Biii Se1n1on (U.8 I d•I Vtjay
AmrlH•I (lndla). 3-6. M . &-1
UCll~~IJ..ua
Snydef (UCI) dlfTfMI. &-3 ..... 1-2. Man Son HlnQ IUCI) del z.tra. 41-3. 5-7 .... 3.
Pe<ci.ell {UCT) def AdlfM. &-2. 3-1. t-3.
Anleton (UCI) def ~. 7-6, 1·5, Ne1aot1
(UCll dlf 0-, &-2. &-3. Klbelllt (U81U)
de4 Hlnlcel &-2. IHI. 0......
Zllr1-Kabell9 (USIU) dlll Amor·,._, &-4. 7·5, 0--Ademe (USIU) def H4nllet-
Chel041t1, 8-4 • ._2; Tllors>-Herf fUCll clef C-·Bltllerdwal. M . 11-3.
CommunltY oo••e• I 'P ,., ... ..._... ...... Lutara (SI def Zimmerman, 8-4, •·•.
81.cJoel-(Bl def lltldOa. &-1. &-2. W4191 101 del SelmOn . ._2, 41-3. Gt., ISi def Elly e., 3.e. 1-e. s..__d <S> def Gelar1. ~-
5. 1 Rernlgt (G) Oell Ctipouol, t-1, 6-4 ......... Zlmrnennan-llt'loOa (Q) clef, Gt9U·L•le.
&-1 , 1·5, 7·5. Lto1t......Slllmon (S) dlf. WMI·
Gellert. 8·1 .... 1: Fromme-OC>tln (GI def.
8tacketone-S,,._d, M , 7·&. 7-6 .............. L..-....ri•Yi.0...-1"' ....... P.,ry (L8109' 8 . Howoe. M . def ,...,.,
7-6 d9I &onmen. ~.def. Simon. defll;ll.
Maworth (L8) loel, J-4. -· 1-2, ~. &-7, ..on. &-2. w••-(l&I toat, 2-e. _.., t-3. ioat 2..f, won .... 1; 8Nmtlald IL81 !oat, 0-8, 1oe• by del4'ull, won, 7-6, &-1 • .........
LH Cll·D•e-eraon (LB) d•I A Howl•· Mu_._, &-1, 11-2. def. Petry-0.-0-. 41-3. 8-2. Sc11antz·Koftend1 (LB) IOlll. 2.. ...2.
won e..o. e.o
c...-w°"*' UCntMl.~ ...... a-1
Mye.a (UCI) def ~-6-4, 1·6, K81111nQ
fUCI) def &rage, 7°6, ._,, MllOTy (UCI) (#(
Poller .•• ,, ... 4 ...... Trenwtt,, (UCI) def
Woll!. &-4, ... 2. 8erlnQ (UCI) def P"'-. •i. 11·2. GIOfdanella CUCll ci.i Ooul, IH>, 6-4.
0..-.. M•llOty·K~ (UCI) def alel,.,.,_WOlll, 7-6, ._,, ~"•"on (UCll def lr'OQ-
P<lnoa. &-1, ... 2. Trlltlwlth-~ (UCI) ~
P~·FOUll. M), 6-4
Track meet
for you ths
A youth track and
field meet at Eatancl•
~.:~=-..,, 0.-11•. ~ IMclo, , .. ,,,
t4·18, TM1 1t-1a1 !f-lt
MIMlon Viele -· WOOdb<IOQe, 10· I&. 1M. t7·1t, 19·11
Deni Hiiia def LIOUf\I Hlh, It 14, I· l6.
1'·17, , •••• 16·11
MA NW LIAOUll bcWIOI• def Colone del Mar, IM, lt-3 ,. ..
N•wl>Ofl HllfDOt d•I Vnlveran~. 10-r , ....... .
!MM def Mat• D.i lt.-6 t&-0 1a.1•
9outlt Coeet LHgue
LMaw o... .. W I W I.
fan Clemente II 0 8 0
Uiguna IMGh 6 1 7 I
Oane HIMa 4 2 6 4
C11>latrano V..n.y 3 t 0 • M_.. VlejO 2 4 t & Legvna H .. 1 1 6 1 1
Woodbridge 0 e 2 1 '"*''•0-(1) C9')1altMO Ve/JWt It L9QUR• lteacti 8an C-le 11 MINlon Vi.to
Leo<ff\I Hllll 11 Woodbridge
High ICIMof rankl"t• c• ... A
I 8111te Monte•, 2. Laguna 8-h. 3 "'" Clemente. 4 1!ttenct1; a Colla MeH 9
S1t1•a Batt>wa, 1. Miia Coate. 9 Marina, 0
La Ou!nll, 10 Inglewood.
~ • • I 0 .. .
Women'• aoftbell COMMUNITY COL.l...IGa OeWeft .... a. ............ cc 0
S....141 Monica 000 000 0-0 3 2
Golden w .. 1 001 001 •-2 s 1
Bird end Wold, Kylar and McEtr••
28-Hotlet (OWCI
HIGH acHO«
""'"""' 10. c ......... ' C<>.11 M .. I 000 100 I-I 4 3 .., Unlv9l'lllly 112 312 x-10 S 4
MoWethy, Hoffman (31, McWetny (8) 111d S alOen •~ Fu and Ci t• W-fu L -McWe1hy 28-8town (UI, Aroett. 38-Btalr
ICM). Sa10an1 ICM)
-~a. Cal*lt-y..., 0
WOOObriOge 001 000 1-2 2 I • c.pialrMO Valley 000 000 0-0 1 2
Schoonovet e nd Tripi, Meroca ana MancllJf 28-ZI _ _... (WI.
DMD ... fletllng AJWa L~ (........., llNdl) -24
Ang!«• 58 DIM, 50 oontto. 110 m-et•.
22 loc:ll flail. 46 ~. 4 ICUlj)ln
DANA WHAllP -49 anglen 32 baH. 40
mldl«el. 18 rock llah, 51 II--· 2
.Wlpln
NHL plarofft
DIVll!OfC ....... ALS
( ... I ....... •)
............ t·e ac....
Boeton •. Oueoec 3 01. IB011on tea<I•
-•-01 ...... y orll Fl8noer• s. Plltiedetc>ll .. 3 , .......
York '-<la --1-0) ,_....t'•O-.. WNNngton al New Yorll lllanc>en
8"1fal0 et MOt>lrNI
SI Louie al Cl\lc9QO
Toron•o al M""-1
Wlnnle>9Q at Eomonton Vancou-11~ I
.... MCAN ~"!HAl.UMOa
{.CtM1411 .. on ....... ) Team 1cotlng; 1. Auttt•ll•. 374, 2
N1llOl'al ScholHUc Surfing AuOGlellon
W•t, 349. 3 Exploran. 1&t: •. w .. t.,n ~ "-llOn, 1~ 6. HSSA E.aat, 142 . 7 [Miern~~.137,7 l ....
&it1lng Auoclltlon, t04; 8. Wl8A. 22
Min'• lndlvldue t· 1 Dougall Walka•
(Aual•Alla). 2 Rober1 Woll! (Aut1ra1111, 3 ,..., z.u.. (A.,.., .... ,
K-'dlng I Hal Luke (Au.•rallel. 2 Phil
Fein (Aue111111r. 3. 8111 Sh#p (AualrAlla) w-·· lndMduel: 1 AHN Scllwerntell'l (NSSA w .. ,~ 2 Jorie Sm/Ill INSSA W•ll, 3 Tont 8ew)'9' (Allet• ... I
UCLA : Area
st ars p lay
key r oles
LOS ANGELES -UCLA'1
1983 ROiie Bowl cNirnplona have
bfaun aprlng practice with three
area products playlni major
roles
Returning offen1ive tackle
Duval Love (6-2 1.tt, 2~7 poun<U)
has two yean of eUgibllity left,
and another Fountain Valley
High froduct, Matt Stevena, la
one o four candldatea for a
starting role at quarterback after
red-ahlrtmg during his freshman
season.
Former Marina High star Lee
Knowles (6-1. 223) returna at
Inside linebacker alter becomJng
one of the major surprilea for the
Bruins m 1982.
Knowles made 74 tackles to
rank No. 4 on the aquad and LS
considered to have the inside
track to the strong aide
linebacker starting berth.
The 1983 season will be t:oach
Terry Donahue's eighth a'nd it
begins on the road at Georgia
Sept. 10, followed by Arizona
State at the Rose Bowl, then on
the road again against Nebraak.a.
Other home games include
Brigham Young (Oct. 1),
California (Oct. 22) and
Washington (Oct. 29). with the
season concluding against USC at
the Coliseum Nov. 19.
Rustlers win
as Kyler fans
16 Cor sairs
Golden West College's Tina
Kyler missed within one of
matching her older sister's school
s trikeout record last night in
pitching the Rustlers to a 2-0
victory over visiting Santa
Monica CC in women's softball
action.
Kyler struck out 16 Corsairs,
one short of the record owned by
her sister Melanie in helping the
Rustlers win their 18th game
against five defeats .
Donna McElrea and Cheryl
Masters delivered RBI hits to
spark Golden West.
On the high school front,
University topped Costa Mesa
10-1 as Marcia Fu struck out 10
Mustang batters. Teresa Brown
went 2-for-3 and had two RBI
for the Trojans, who improved
their Sea View League record to
3-0.
Karen Schoonover had 11
strikeouts in pitching
Woodbndge to a 2-0 victory over
Capistrano Valley
Gauchos roll
to 13-3 win
Sadd.Jeback College exploded
for five runs in the first inning
yesterday. and the Gauchos went
on to 900re an easy 13-3 victory
over visiting San Diego In a
Pacific Coast Conference baseball
game.
Randy Cumming led the
Gauchos' 14-hit assault with a
4-for-5 performance, good for
four RBI Teammate Tom Link
had a pair of hits in four at-bat.s
and also knocked in four runs.
Jeff Holmes and Mark Henkel
had a couple of hits and
ined for three more RBI.
Dodd too much
for Warriors, 7-l
The Caplstrano Valley High
baseball team used the pitching
and hitting of Bill Dodd to stop
Woodbridge, 7-1, in South Coast
League action yesterday
Dodd limited the Warriors to
just three h its, struck out 10
and added a 2-for-3 perlonnanc:e
at the plate.
Woodbridge scored an
unearned run ln the sixth tnning
off Dodd, and aaw ill league
record drop to 1-3.
Use lM Dally PllOI
"Fut Re1ull" atrvlrt
dl..iory Your
Nl'Vice 11 our
apeelalty
/ti •. L ~ • Yo%otess1onal \)(K1\ · Flortst
~ 2915 Red Hill Avenue
Sou<h Coast OM1gn C.l'llet A· 108 Costa Mesa c.11 tu-MT• ._, m in StOl'le MIU 641-0810
Hl&h School iii achedu.led.--======:.....~=========================~ Saturday by the aty of
Cotta Meta'• Leisure
Servtce9 Department.
Boy• and glrla. ln
8r•de1 2-8 who were
born from 1968 to 1970,
can realeter tor two
LndMdual eventAa and a
relay on an •l•·IJ'OUP
bum •t $1 per at.hlet.9.
Boy• re1t1ter from
9-9:45 a.m. with the ftnt oven• bec1nn1nl at 10.
Glrl1 re1llter from 1-1:4~ p.m. with the flrtt
evenl at 2..
Additional lnfor·
matlon can be ob·
talned by callJna Gery Eru at ?64·& !68 or
Glenn Stroud at
764·'300.
Orange Coun~
lntelnatlonal
A«l'l'O SHOW
Anaheim Convention Center • April 13 -17, 1983
COME 8l!E .AHO COMPAm! Join In the Apll •• I
•Men thin 2' new models you '"l!Y !ielll,.g .. ~p
tMM!r hlM ...... befofef ror _:::::-
•FREE cbcaurlt coupons~ 9t -
Oerw,y• ~ c~ RdlUIWU
Ind .. ~'° AutD DMlera.
j
r~· a a 6 ass a a =
04 Orange Cout OAJL V PILOT /Wednetd1y. AP{H e, 1883
Miller comeback complete
Now one-time ·Golden Boy of golf pri1J1ed lor big year
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) Jutt the hint of ai
1ml10, •• lf ho kn w a 1ecrot. flirted with the
comere of Johnny Mtller'a mouth.
"I think 1t'1 aoJna to be: an exdtlfll yt'ar tor
me," lho one-U.m4' Colden Boy -now .a -.euoned
35-ycar·old -said aft.er a pracUce round for thc-
47th Maaters tou.m.a.rn<!nt, the fint o~ the year'•
four major les\a Of &Olfin.I gtta\ne:U,
Hi. comeback hu been c.'Onflnned. And now,
Miller said, he'• primed and ready to challengt-for a
return to the poaiUon of dominance he once held
Miller went into a four-year decline after his
glory years of the mid· '70s. but rebounded with a
victory ln 1980. He now has won at least onl~.
lncluding the Inverrary Cla.asic earlier thla season,
ln each of the lut four yean.
"Each win waa another step back up thl'
ladder," he said.
And now he's looking at still another step, a
major stride.
"Even when I was winning everything, I
wasn't a consistent player. I either won or finished
nowhere," he said.
"Over the winter, I set two goals for myself.
"One is that, for the first time in my c~r. I'm
Jtoin~ to be a consistent player. I had a consistent
year last season. I only won once, but I had a
stroke average of 70.7 and that's not bad. I was top
10 five or a.ix times.
"Well, this year I want to be even more
ro~tent."
And Miller is right on target. He's been top 10
lhree times and has a scoring average of 7U.:i.
"I've alwa)'ll played good on the West Coast,
but I've never played well in the spnng and
swnmer," he said.
"The way I'm putting, the way I'm playing,
Fina Cup tickets·
now available
Tickets for m Fina Cup water polo competition
at Malibu's Pepperdine Un1vers1ty to be held May
7-14 are on sale and order forms can be obtained
from the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing
Committee by calling (213) 209-4343. Prices are $6
per ticket, per day.
The site of m Final Cup is the same as it wiU
be for next year's Olympic Games and will feature
eight o! the top water polo teams from the 1982
World Championships invited by the Intemauonal
S'Ninuni.ng Federation.
Teams competing include Hungary. West
Germany, Cuba, Italy, Spain. "Holland, Soviet
Union and the Un1t.ed States.
The United States t eam, coached by
Huntington Beach resident Monte Nitzkowslo, ts
scheduled to meet Cuba (May 7), Hungary (May 8),
West Gennany (May 9), lhe Soviet Union (May 10),
Holland (May 12) and Italy (May 13), all at 9 p.m ,
concluding with Spain May 14 at 3 p.m
There are four games each day.
0111a 1mc1s
HARRISON
CAROLYN JEAN
HARRISON. resident of
Irvine, Ca. Pasaed away on
April 5, 1983. She was a
clerk for the Irvine School
D!stnct for the past 2 yean.
She is survived by her
husband David and son
Hoben both of Irvine, ea ..
mother J ean Motley o f
Sant.a Ana, Ca. Services will
be held on Thunday. April
7. 1983 at 3:30PM at St.
Andrew'• Presbyterian
Church, Newpon Beach, Ca.
with Dr . Andrew
Aqul1tapace officiating
Services under the direction
of Baltz Bergel"On Smith &
Tuthill We1tcliU Chapel
Mortuary of Costa Mesa
646-9371.
GETJ'Y
MILLARD GETTY, born
August 9, 1900 in Waco,
Nebruka, paSlled away on
April 3, 1983. H e wu the 110n
of Evelyn Garton Getty and
Ruben F . Getty. Millard
worked M a leader o f Boy
Scouta of America for many
years, having graduated
from the Unlveralty of
Minneeota 1922, he was a
charter member of A TO (A
college fratemlty) at Kamas
State.· He 1erve d tn the
Army Aircralt during World
War II. H e leave1 1 eon
Ronald L . Getty o f L os
Angele., Ca., alatere Beth
Zieg and Ervin Getty of
Nebruk.a. Hayward Getty of
Michigan and hla wife
ErdJce, a1*> aurvtved atep-aon
Larry and Georp Stock and
4 srandchlldren. H e also
worked for the State of
California Agricultural
Ol!partment for 17 years in
the field of Chemistry .
Memorial servtces wlll be
h eld on Thursday, by D
Gary Barmo r e of the
Fairview Baptist Community
C hurc h at Harbor Lawn
Memorial Park In Lieu of
flowers donations should be
sent to t h e Fairview
Community Church c /o
M illard Getty Memo nal
Fund, 2525 Fairview Road,
Co1ta Meu, Ca . 92626.
ServlCel under the dl.rect.lon
o f Harbor Lawn-Mount
O live M ortuary of Co1ta
Mesa :'>40-55S4. "
HILL
DORA OWENS HILL.
resident of Newpon Beach. <:.. Paaed away on April 3.
1983 She was the f irst
Woman Mayor of Newpon
Beach. She ill survived by
her hu1band Edgar. sons
Hank of Newport Beach, Ca.
and Thomas 0 of
Huntington Beac h . Ca ,
daughter-In -law Barbara
Hill of Santa Ana, <:. .. 7
grandcKildren and 5 great·
grandchildren Servicee will
be held on Fnc:t.y, Apnl 8,
1983 at lO:OOAM at St
Andre w 's Presbyterian
C hurch . 600 St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beach. <A
w ith Rev . Dr John
Huffman. Jr o ff1c1atlng
Services unde r the direction
of Balu Bergeron Smith &
Tuthlll Weatcllff C h apel
M ortuary o f Co1ta Mesa.
646-9371.
,ACIFtC YlfW
MIMOltAL,.al
Cemetef'( Mor1uarv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Onve
Newoort Beach
64• 2700
ECUERG
JAMES ALFRED
ECKBERG, resident o f
Sacramento, Ca . Passe d
" away on March 31, 1983 In
Hemet, <:.. ~t the ~ of 73
s~ hie reurement m 1974.
he and h.il wife ROR made
their home In Hemet. He
was a member o f the
Sacramenco MallOnlc Lodce
# ~. Soottiah Rue. the Ben
All Temple of the Shrtne
McCOltMICI MOITUAllH
l.aQvna Beac h
494-9415
L4'Quna Hills
7&8·0933
San Juan Cao•slrano
495·1776
MAaOtl LAW"'-MT. OLl'll
Monuarv • Cemete,-, Ct.,,,_ IOr'(
1825 G111ef Ave
CotlaMeH
MO-S5.S4
and Sacramento ReUred Oty
implo)'ftl A9octaUon. He la
1urvlved by hi• wile Roee.
hl1 1l1ter Clara Huff of
Qreaon, hla .on James and
daU&}lter Waterbury and 3
1randdauahtera all of
lAiWla Beach, Ca. A family ser v ice wu held with
cremation and bw141l at .ea. VAUGHN
L!TTIE W. VAUOHN,
resident ot c.o.ta M-, C..
P..ad aw~ on Aprtl 3, 1983
at tho aa• of 96. SW'Vtwd by
her IOf\ Keney C. Vau,hn
and dauf b ter VI vian
Klnnley, frandchlldren
and e &ffat.srandchlld,..n. St.. WM a reiklent of eo.ta
MHa, Ca. for nearly 00
y--. ~ wlll be held Thunday, Aprll 7, 1983 at
l l:OOAM al OM Fairhaven
l with 8ev. Robert B.
bepherd, Jr: o f Chrl1t
hureb b1 the Sea
Ulclat•n1. Jntument at
oma Vlata Cemetery.
ervlcu conduc&ed ti1 elrhaven Mortuary
14'2.
l'm expectlr1411t aood 1prlna aJ\d 1ummer"
And, ht> 1uae1\4"d, It may bo civc.;n bot~r than
aood. "The win at lnverrary wu lmportant. h wu
another 1tep up the ladder,'' ho uld.
"I think I'm ready to mako • 1hot at the leadt'l'I
again.
"Maybe I'm not yet rt>ady to bf' No. I But I
rnliht be No. 2 or 3 "
The s«0nd goal he tel for hltnlM!lf, Mlll~r aatd,
wQ "w in In the majors again, and wln th.ls yt!ar.
"I'm rc.lly excited about the rnajora. AJJ of
them. Look at the courtd. I couldn't hiavc plcked
them better.
"There's Riviera (in Loll Angeles, the lite of
the PGA). I've won there. lt'a one of my favorites.
"There's Oakmont (for the U.S. Open). I've
won lhere (the American national champlonahlp in
1973).
"There's Royal 81rkdale (for the Brlliah Open)
I've won there (the British Open in 1976).
"And then there's Augusta National. I've been
second here three times. There's no reason l can't
win here.
"It's all a matter of putung and nerves If my
putting holds up, and my nerves hold up, I can
win."
BUlllTIN BOARD
~
..
"\
..
'" ~
Ott-road raelng
Tl cke11 f or lhe 1983 O ii-road
Championship Gran Prl1t S arles ere now
avallable. The eerlat, which wlll be held on
lour S aturdays over a loU11<month pe.rlod,
begins Aprll 16 at the Loa Angeles COYnty
FalrgrOYnda In Pomona.
T1<;ket1 for each of the lour d1t" are S15
(bo1t aeata) and $12 (general 1dmlaalon)
Advance ticket buyers recelve a S3 dlscOYnl
Ttcketa a'ie 1vallable at Tlcketron
agencle• and S uper Shop atores
For more Information. phone (213)
369-5117.
#'loor hoekey
YOYngsters, a ges 7-18. can 11111 algn up 101
the upoomlng floor hockey league off&fed by
the Boys· Club of the Harbor A.rea.
Registration wlll close on S aturday
lnatrucllonal leegue1 ere avallable for
yOYngsters, 80" 7·8. Competitive league• are
played for boys and girls. ages 9-18.
Volunteer coaches and referees are also
needed In sever11 age brackets. Peraons
1n1ere1ted should a lso contact the club prlo.r
to Saturday. The leegue begins Monday. April
11
The 141agve wlll be offered al branches In
Co111 Mesa. Irvine and N-port Beach.
For more Information. phone 552-3020.
\.
VCLA traek lnt•ltatlonal
Th9 UCLA/Pepsi lnvltallonal track meet le aet for Sunday, May 15 al UCLA's Dr1ke
St1dlum.
Among the panlclpan11 echeduled lo be on hand are mllet Steve S<:otl, lormetly of UC
trvlne, as well a1 sprlntet·long Jt.ims>« Cart
Lewie. aprlntet' Evelyn A1hlord, pole vaulter
Biiiy Olson, dl1t1nce .runner Mary Decker
Tabb and runne.r Thomas w"1lnghage
Action begin• at 11 a m wtth the favelln
competition and conclvdes 11 2·47 pm with
the men's mlle run.
Tlcileta are priced at $ 12 lo.r reserved
seats and S8 for unreMrved eea11.
lnfOf'mallon Is avalleble by phoning lhe
UCLA tick al office at (213) 825·2101
World Cup bid
to be studied
\
\
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) -A special
commission of the International Federation of
Football Associations will leave for Mexico next
week for an on-the-11pot examination of that
country's bld to host the 1986 World Cup soccer
tournament.
The trip comes ln the wake of FIFA'• rejection
of ap/g~tions from the United States and Canada.
A Secretary General Sepp Blatter told the
Aasociated Preas yesterday that an executive
committee, meeting next month in Stockholm,
Sweden. will have the ultimate aay on aelection of
the World Cup site. But he said there is no chance
American and Canadian blda will be reconsidered.
U.S . and Canadian federations reacted bitterly
Th~! to FIFA'• 8J\l\C1U.ncernet that the 1pedal
C011\11U.SSlon ~ppolnted to study the appllcaUom had
decided to pursue only the Mexican bid. FIFA
contended appllcatiON by the United State9 and
Canada "deViated too much'' from the conditions
laid down by itB executive committee.
"We will now take a cloee.r look at Mexico to
aee whether renllty confonna with what Is on
paper," Blatter said. "And lf that II not the cue we
will report that, too. You know that both Italy and
West Oennany are already prepared lo hoet the
toUmament lf It cannot be staged ln the Americ:u." ....
Lazers fall, 4-3;
Record now 8-3 7
lNOJ...&WOOD -The Loi An.aeles Laun
ended thelr home ltQOfl 1ehedule the lltrn4t way
they beaan it -with a lam. ThJJ time it c:&rQa at the
ha.nda o1 \be Wichita Wlnp, 4·3 whO wae oeced by
Kim Roenwed'• two pla bef~ 3.67G lana lut nlaht ,, the Forum.
Omar Oomn had one aoa1 and one uN\, .,-ld
Oreq Wlllln tcOred tlw other pl for Wk:hlta who ~ tt. l'IC!Ofd to U.18. PoU Oard.a. l'mlUo Rcmero and CUve Charltl
had th• ~ for Loi Ana•l-. whole record
dropped to W1 , ·Laa~ )Oaped to a 1-0 a.ct ewly In m. nnt period on J\cirriHo'• pl wtl.h U'9 elldst aa'lll '° Poll.OM'Cl . •
,
,l0Tt110Ut ™" NA* lfAfl•NT The lollowlng ~ .,, ck.lino ~riff• ..
CO NI U MllU O L U• INTIKNATIONAL, 11' Wlltiefl, •t,
Cot11 MMe. C. tHl1
K1v111 truce ,llltflon. 111
WlllOl1. #9, CO•I• M ... , Cl '2027 llobert OOnlld ''"ltO, tt
J11emlne Ct.-0. , Newl>Ofl 8Mcll, c. T~ butlMM It OOllducnld by 1
gllll' 11 Pit"* tfl4> Ktvln I P11tet10t1
f hi• 1111""*'1 WU ftNod With IM County Clltfk or Orenge Counly on
Mareh 16, 19'1 F21Hto
Publlaned 011no1 Co111 Dally
Piiot Met 30 AIM II t3, 20. tNJ
1476-IJ
----=--
f'ICTmOU• ..,... ..
NAMI IYAtl .. llfl
Tiie lotlowt119 i*eont 111 dOlng bualnMe ..
UNIVEIUAL PA Cl"C
I N~U .. ANOI a1 .. v1c1a 0,
NO,.THl"N CAllfO .. NIA, IH 1 MacAttllut louleverd, lull• 101. ~llleeoh,CAll"° lJnlv1tH I P1elllo 1n1utanc1
Company, • Clllfornl1 OOtPClf'lllOn, IM1. MecAnlluf loulevwd. lulle IOI. IWwpOf1 9Mcll, CA tHIO
Thie butlnMI 19 ~ed by I
COtPClf' • llOn UnlvefMI PIOlllo lneurlll'OI Comp1ny
Wiiiiam Knlghl
l te•llV)I
Thie 1111-1 Wll llllCI wHh tt\e County Cle<-ot Otenoe Co\,n1y on
fel> u . 1"3
MUO flOTIC(
PtCTmOUt .,..... ricTITIOYf ....,..... •• NA.Ml' eTAfllilllNT NAMil IT.A,......,
lhe I~ l*i0n9 WI dOinQ Tile fot!Owlng .,.._... WI doW\o
bull,,... .. bu..,.... ..
MA" Vt8TA, o/o Miiie ....,_ TI LIT A I' I" l! I 0 IN 0
100 ,,._POft Center Drive. lull• A •• 0 0 I A TI I ' • l Im 11e0 '60. N9wpOf'I hectl. CA nteo Ptlf11'99Np to» 09 .....-. a., MIOllMI L M1Y11. MO ~ Clemente, ~Otftl• t:M7f
O...ter OtlW, &VII• HO . ..._po.rt Ch1tl1n O'M .. , UI C•ll•
INofl, OaHIOfnl• HMO Mlgu11, 8111 Cten>1nt1, CallfC>fnl1 ,._., J. Ooh9n. 2007 Highland IH72
Drive, ~ IMch. Clllf«nle Ollberl H Cete, MaClreoot LAil•
'"" ~ .. OC>lldllelld by • flle11c11 , 11 IU Hlghwey 2 W•••.
gen11a1 Plf1neANp Mwlon. MonttM "'28 MIOflMI L Meytt l hit bvtl,,_. le CIOflduc*I by •
Thlt a1et-t •N flied with 1114 Hmlted PlflnetilNO
County Clltk of Ot•nge County on Chatl811 O"MM MltCll 18. 11111 lhll ttll-1 WU fll9d wtlh Ille
,.,, .. County Clett. of Or1ng41 Coun1y on
Puoll•h•d 0111101 Cou t Oelly MwOll t, 1N2 PllOI, Merch ?), SO. Ap.rll 8. 13, '°'11-
-----------AIMn llNf Plett
19'3 fl'ubll1111d 0 11ng1 Coeat Dally 1•21-43 PllOI, Mw It. U . 30. Apt 8. 1M3
1330.-3 PUllUC NOTICE AttOtMJI •• LA•
-----------4400 .... Artttut •twa.. ate. m Ko04417 NMf,ott .. acfl, CA ntlO
'ICTITIOUI IUllNIH (714) 712·1474 NAiii aTATtflll#T n1t11t
Trtl loUowlng P••IOll .. doing Publl•ll•d 011ng1 COUI Diiiy
Ou•IMM u Piiot, M1.roh, 23, 30 Al)fll '· 13 THE REEF, 820 W. 191h Str .. I, 19113 ' Coate MNa. C•lllornl1 9211211
Roger L Emeraon. 111900 Algonquin No 97. Huntington ----.,.-.. ,-1C-NO_T_IC_( __ _
Beec;h. c1111orn11 121149 n-.
Thia buatn ... II ~uctlCI by 811
lnOIYldu•I
ROQlf L Em1raot1
Th11 11a1em1nt wee lllld wUh lhe
County Cle.rk or Or•noe Coun1v on Metth 17. 1983
,21HIO
Publlahed Or1ng1 Cout Delly P~ol. Mir 23. 30. Apr II. 13 19113
··~"-""'
PUBUC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUI IUllNHI NAU IT ATllHHT
The IOllOWlllQ peraona •r• 001no
l>ullntM IS SURFSIDE CONSTRUCTION co . 206'~ South B•v Fron1, B•lboa
1111nd. Ce 92662
Stephen Roblft Thom••· 206'1r
Sou1h 8ay Front. Btlt>oe ltlend. C.
9211e2
1(~71 ,.tCTITtOUI llUl ... H
NAMl ITATl ... NT
The lollowlng peraona ,,. dotng
bu1lnff111 BASTIAN PARTNERSHIP.
4002· lA Colle Sonof•. Laoun• HI"-.
CA 92653 H110•l4ttt1 B BalOwln. 4002·2G
Celle Sonore L1gun1 Hlllt. CA
92653
Virginie M Pelllng. 4002· lA
C1ll1 Sonore L1gun1 Hiii•. CA
92653
Mergu«lle E 8ut1Mt. 4022-A Celle Sonot1 L1gune Hiiie, CA
92653
Sy1v1e w Bultner. 1723
Terr1pln W•v. Newpon Beech. CA
92660
Nit.IC NOTIC!
rtc:TmOUt~H NAm ITATW•llfl
Thi lollowtnq '*''°"' we doing bu.._ ...
A· I TEL..EVISl<>f'j ANO RADIO,
573 W 19th Str .. t, COii• Meta,
Clllfornte '2827
Abld Hueealn. 13501 ~lndA
Wey. 8Ml1 Ana. Clltlornla 927<>4
Judith L Huulln, 1360 1
L1urlnd1 Wey. S1nll An t , c1111orn11 92705
Thia but!,,_ 11 condUC1ed by 811
lndlvldulll.
JuOllh l Hueaaln
Thlt atllemenl wu ftltd with Int
County Clet1t ol 0.eoge County on
Ao.rll 11, 1083
'21m2 PublllhlO Or1nge COHI Dally
Pltol. Apt 6. 13. 20, 27. 1983
1571-83
PlllJC NOTICE
FICTmOU8 IK.l .... H NAMEITA'RMENT
The totlowlng peraone are Clotng
butlntMU:
eecmcl ~ ~\l'TION M'~ P\ibllc nottc:ie ii IWIOy ~ tNll
SOVTHLAHO PAAKINO SERVICE. e n d STAR VALET 8fAVICE.
1 • .,etofOft doll\Q ~ under lhl
llctlUou• firm n1m1 and alyll or
VALET PARKING ENTE"PFUSEI.
177·1 Rtvereld• A.111 , City of
N1wpor1 8Mdl, County o4 Ofenoe.
Stilt o4 CllHomla. did on Ille I 71h
01y of F11>ruary, 1983. by mutual
content, dla101v1 th• t1IO partnerthlp end t1fmln1t1 111111
• .... ion. .. pwtMr• lhlfeln
Dettd 11 Newport Beldl. CA tllla
111h dlY of Mwcn. 1983 Soumland Patlllng Serlllol
J1rn11 W O'SIMlunec:y IM
Publl1hlCl Orenge Co111 Delly
Pltol. Ap1ll II, 1083. 1826-83
PtBJC NOTICE
FICTTTIOUl8U9*111
NAMI! ITA~NT
The lotlowlng perlOlle w1 dotng 1>ualnesa 11·
TerrlflGI MIChHI Sn.tnllll, 220
•B, M11gu1r1t1 Corona dll Mir.
Ce 92875
Thi• buSIMH It conducted by 0
geoer al par'"" lhlp
Paule C S«lville Abbott
600 Slerre Heights
Newbuty Park. CA 91370
Roberl C ScoYllll 5026 E TOWllt«ld Avl .
Frnno, CA. 93727
HAL LADAY INDUSTRIAL
CENTER. 4262 Camput OtlYI, Suite c. ~ Oeech. c. 92660
De ll• D9'•_Jlopme n 1 I (• ClfllOfnle llmlttd pertf*lhlp). 4282
IC1mpu1 Orlv1, Sull1 C. Newpon
COMPUSERV. 3501 W Moore
SI • Ste -0. 811111 Me. CL 92704
lul/1ie Sueza/\11 W.Ob, 2521 W
Sunllow1r •R·3. S1nt1 An• Ce
92704
Dflbot1h Lynn D1dg1r Kl1nl. 2521 W Sunllower ll'R·2. 81nle
Ana. Ce 9270• SllC)hln R Tl\omat
Thll elll-1 waa ftlld wlth lhl
County Cllrll or Ot111Q1 County on
M11ch 25. t983 '-
F212tel
PubllahtO Orenga Coast Dilly P1lol Mer 30. Apr 8. 13. 20. 1983
1481·83
-Ml.JC NOTICE
ACTITIOOI 94.llNl!la
NMH ITATH•NT
The loll owing peraon 11 doing
bullne&a u : -
1) (C.W A I CUSTOM WHEEL
ACCESSORIES 2) (I C C I IMPORTED CAPS & COVEAS. 409
6 Te.r1 Clrole. Anaheim. Ct 9280• Connie C1m111 Buck. 409 S.
T erl Circle. An1n.im. C• 9280•
Thia butlneaa 11 conducted by 1n
Individual
Connie c 8\ICll
ThlS &11temtnt .., .. flied wtth tt\e
County Cl«k ol Oflf\08 County on Ma.rc:n ZS. 1183
F212tea
Publl1h1d Orenge Cont Delly
PllOI Mar 30. Apt &. 13, 20. 1983 1482·83
l'tlllJC NO TICE
ITATIMEWT MAIA~
OF VII! OF
PICTIT10Ua 9UllNlll NAME
The tollowlng p1raon• he ••
eblndolltld 1114 UM of t114 rtcllllou•
t>vll--. neme
FIELD & SOHS ROOFING. 830
Sent11go RC:S • Co111 Men. CA
92826 Devid B Ftelda, 122 40th St .
N-po<t 8each. CA 12660
Oouglll P Flttdt. 122 40th St . ~ 8eacfl CA 112e80 CelYln C ~. 830 SenlllQO
Rd Coall Mesa. CA 92628
Bttnde l Ft.Ida. 830 StnlllQO Rd . Coall M ... , CA 12626
Thlt bulll.-e wu conductlCI by 1 oener 14 P"1"-'lhlP B'9nd1 F181da
Thia Stal-It WU flllCI With the
Counly Cltt1t o4 OrlllQI County on
M1rcn 25. 1183 '2t.a
Publlaned Orenge Co111 Deity
Pllol. Merch 30. April 8. 13. 70. 1983
1537·113
l'ta.IC NOTICE
ec....-ro
ACTITIOUI eUllNEll
NAMa ITATUENT The follo#lng penona 111 dOtng
bual--. u · F STOf> PHOTO. 1011 Brlolo
Drive. C:0.11 MIU CA 92$27
Lomb1td StrHI lnvHlmen11
ltd . Inc . (• CalllOfnla corporlllonl. 101 I 8tloeo OttYI. Colle MIN CA
92827
fhll 1>u11nM1 II ConducilCI Oy e
GOt l)()f lllOn
Lombard SlrMI
1nveetm1nta
Lid . Inc R1ymond Meao
Prnldent
Thia slettmllll WU lllld with tnt County Cl«lt o4 Otenge Coullty on
Mttch 2. 1983 1"21 ....
Publlthld Or1nge CoHt Dilly
Piiot. M1tch 30 April 8. 13. 20. 1183
Th•• bu&ln111 I• conductlO by a
0-11 p1t1neuhtp
V1tg1n11 Piiiing
Thia elltement was hied wllh 1114
Coun1v Cllta or Orange Ce>Unty on Marc.n 22. 19113
1'21MO:t
Publl1hed Orange Cou1 D•llv
Pllol. M1rcll 30. Aprll 6 13, 20.
1983
BMch. Ce 92660 oms o.v.1opmen1 Comc>eny.
nc (• Callfornla c:orpor1llonl. 4262
Cempua Drive. Suite C. N-po.rt
BMch. Ce 92660
TIM• buel,_. 11 conc:1ucu1<1 by •
g.,..,111 pertnerlhlp
·DIYI• OeYelopment
Company• Inc:.. a
California eorpor111on
By: St-H Oevta.
Thlt butl.-e It conducted by e gen«.. pertn«aNp
LUlllM S WIOb
Tn11 1111_,1 WM lllld wtlh the
Coun1v Cllrtc of Or111l91 Counly on Merch 26. 1983 n1..-r
Publl•h•d Ot1ng1 Cou t Dilly Pilot Mii 30. Ao.r 6, 13. 20, t943
1491·82 Pfeeidellt l'tELIC NOTICE Thi• et1temeol wu fllld wllh tlle .,._IC NOT>l't
K-o441t County Cl«k of <>ranoe County on ____ ,.._--. ___ "-'"'---
FICTITIOUI IUllMH Aprll I, l983. '21*211 FICTITIOUI llU ... H
NAME ITAT£faNT ....... ITATl!.-NT The lotlowlng penona 118 dolllQ Publllhed 011ng1 Coul 01lly The lollowlng perton 11 doing Ou~ 11 Piiot Al)f 8. 13. 20, 27, 1983 butlneu u
BUILDERS" MANAGEMENT l82l..a3 UNIVERSAL CARPETS. 3100 SERVICES. 2183 F11rv11w Road. 1----.,.---1-C-NO_T_IC(____ W H1rv1rd Unll •3. Sallte Ana, CA
Sulla 203. Coal1 MHI, CA 921127 ,..._. 9270•
T1ove Riii Et11te Co .. Inc.. ,ICTTTIOUI 9U8INIEll MIOhMI Seolt HIMla, 2111 15th
2183 F1trv11w Roed. Suite 103. NAME IT,t,TURNT St•Mt •2. Huntington Beach CA
Coa11 M .... CA 921127, 1 Calltorn11 Thi lotlowlng PlflOll• we doing 92648 eotpo<l tlOn lbutlON& 11. Thlt bu...._. II con0ue1ICI by Ill
Thl1 butl.-e Is conductld Dy I FIELOS & SONS ROOFING, lndMdull c.o.rponllon A:)() s 1 R Id c M MICNlll S<;ott Hilll9 Trove R111I ;; Int ego 0 . °'11 .... Tho• 1111-1 WU llltd Wllh tt\e .,11111ornl1 92826 Ea111e Co .. Inc CeMn c. Flelde. ll30 SantllQO County CleOI of Orange County on
AllllO M Condon. Rold. Coll• Meta. Cllllornll 9282e March 21 11113
Ptetident B .. nd• Fleld•. 830 StntllgO "121"' Thia 1111_,1 WU nled -...1h the Pt-. Cotti M .... Clftlornle 92826 PubllShtd Orenge Collt Delly County C11r11 of Orange County on Thi• bullrMI .. 11 con0ue1ICI 0y.,, Pilot. M1rch 23. 30 April 8 13.
MIVCh 22. 19113 indM<luel 19&3
Allen, ... lklne. lid!. o.mw. a Mlllofy
F21U. Brtnd• Flllda 1430-113
'5IO Mllc.Arfflw lt¥d. • IOO
Newpor1 lleecll, CA .-0
Altft! "· llllkl\eel "°7c1, aeq. Pubhahed Or11ng1 Co111 Di lly
Piiot. M1rch 30. Aprll 6. tl. 20. 1983
1540-113
Nil.IC NOT1CE
NOTICI M AVMLAallJTY OF ANNUAL~
Puteuant to Section 8104 ~di o4 the lnt.,ntl ~Codi. l'Otlce II
h«lby given that Ille ennual 1eport
tor the C111ndu yeu 1182 of
GEORGE T . PFL..EGER
FOUND ATION. I prlvlll lound1llon, 11 1v1llebl• 11 lh•
1ound1llon·a prlnclp•I olllc• lo• mac>ectk>n during regulw ~
houra ftom I 1 m to 5 p.m. by eny
citizen who reqUMtl « within 180
d•Y• •ll•r th• da11 of fhl a
public:etlon
The loundltlOn"• olficl • loclllCI
11 &.1111 217. 1501 WMICIHI Ortw.
Newpof1 8eech. Cellfornle
The p.rlnclp1I m1n•Q.l.r ol th•
loundetlon Is George T Plltger.
George T. PfllOlt
Publl1hed 0 11ng• CoHt De.lly
Plot. Apttt 8. 1983 1817-33
P\BLIC NOTJC(
rteTtnou• eua•u NAM«ITA~
Thll ttatement WU Nied wllh Iha
County Clefk of O••noe County on
M1tCll 25. 1983 F1*1'2
Published 0•1ng1 Co11t D•llv Pilot Mir 30. Af)< 6 13, 20 1943
1'711-83
Nit.IC NOTICE
'ICTTTIOUI llU ... 11 NAm ITATl•NT
l'tELIC NOTICE
FICTITIOOI llUUNEH
NAMI ITATIMOfT
The tollow1ng ~rton II doing
buSi!>MIH GERt·WEAR OF NEWPORT
BEACH. 20•6 Tuttln AYlllUI. Costa
Mesa. Ctulornle 92627 Mery Murdock Shendy, 20•11
Tustin Avenue Co111 M111.
C.l1t0<n11 92627 The lollowlng pereona .,. dolllQ T"IS ~ .. conducted by Ill\
bu9'11111 u · llldlYl(lull BEVERLY HILLS REAL TY. Maty M Shandy
BEVERLY HILLS REAL TY. l TO . This ttltemtnt wu flied wl1h 11\e
179112 Cowe n Strei! Ir vine. County Clerk of 0.lllQI County on
Celllornll 9271• Mareh 211, 1983 BHS Aulty, Lid 17992 Cowen '212791
StrMI, IMne. Cailfomle 92714 Publlthl d Ot1ng1 COHI Di iiy
By 8'Yetly Hiiia Realty, lid . I Piiot. Mar 30. Al)f. 8. 13, 20, 1183 Cellf0<nl1 limned Plrtnwlhll> u Ille 1 $13-1'3 IOll genet'al pertn« of Reglttr811t, By. STOOT·SHATSKY, INC , 1 ___ .;..MLJC~:...;.-N0...;..TIC£ ___ _
Clllfornl1 eofpotlllon u the IOle '1CTTTlOU8 _, .....
generel pulner of Beverly Hiii• N.AMI ITATEmJIT Alalty. ltd Hot,,,.,. R Nern•ow. The followtng peraonl• doing
Execull,... bu.._ " Vice Prelldtnl (•I AID SECURITY SYSTEM (I>)
Thlt 11e1_,t wll llted wM ttie AID SECURITY. 5122 BOiia Avenue.
County Cllrtl of Orange County on No 10•. Huntington 811ch.
Metc:h 8 1983 Celdomla 92840 ' 1"2tt411 Dennie A Orul>b, 1162 lllth
Publl•h•d Ot1ng• COHI Di lly Strei!, No A. W1a1mln•ler,
PllOI. Mar 18. 23. 30. Apr. ~3;:~ ~r.:.ie: It conducted by .,..
lndMdulf
Dennis A. Grubb
The fOllOwlnQ penon1 -doing ~ NO'nCI
T'htl 1111-1 WU 1111<1 wtth the
County °*" of Orenoe County on M.,cn 17. 19113 oo-a "'9UCATIOM Of' CttMft1ll BEAUMONT INVESTMENTS. COW'T1IOU.IR Of' n9
LTD. 17711·B Mltchett Norlh. C~YTMMuttY
lrvtne. CA 927 t-4 ~~
John W Welts. 2339 Atbulus, M n9 UNl'TWD ITATl8
Newport e.ecn. CA 92660 WA..-OTOM, D.C.
l EUQIM Plcl<llt Co • Inc., 1 WHEAEAS utletactory l\'IOlflQI
C1lllomle corporellon. 17711-B h•• been p.r11ent•d to 1 he
Mttehelt Nonh. !Nine. CA 12714. Comptrollr of the Currency tl\et J effrey A K1plen , 777 NATIOHAL BANK OF SOUTHERN w .. 1hotme Avenue. LOI Angelll. CALIFORNIA localed In Santa Ana.
CA 90024 S tele of Clllttoml• ha• complied
Thotnu T Ttlum, 2U 9elllno ""4tfl .. ptOYlllOlle of ttie ltatut• of
'212111
Pubtl1h1d Ot1ng1 Coeat Dally
Piiot. Mir. 23. 30, ""'· 6. 13. 1983 142443
NI.IC NOTICE
ACTmOU9 .,_..
~aTATl!mWT
The lollowtng penot .. -doing butlnMa ...
°'""· PIClf\c PlllMON. CA 80272. lhe Ulllted Stelee tlQUlted to be -----------1 Thie bull-le conOucted by I oomplled with be(ore being f't8JC NOTICE """'tel pen""9hlp e11thorlzed 10 commence the
MLAJAACHITECTS end ROLLY
PULASKJ encl P.,,,,.,.., Atohll9Ctl.
3 1'88 Cimino Ceplll•ano, Sen Juen ClpittrenO. callfomla 112976
L Eugene Pldtet ~ of benktng 11 I Natlonel
rteTITIOUI IMI..... Co •• Inc &enlllng AMOCiltlOn.
MLAI A.rchlt•Cll . Inc .••
C1lllornl1 corporellon, 31861
C•mlno Cepl1trano. Sen Ju1n
Ceplltrano. CalltOmle 92975 NA• ITATUtfHT L Eugene Plcllett NOW. THEREFORE, I hereby
The lotlowlng p1r.on1 .,. <IOlng Pr1191denl c., II ty I hat t II. • b OVI· n. m. d
bu91,,... n Thia ll•t-t -fllld wtth the 111ocle llon 11 1uthorlz•d to R olly Pul1111 1 1nd
P1t1ner1IA•d\llect1. • Celllornla cotporatton. 5120 Birch SHiii,
Newport Beectl. Calltomll t2teO
UI FUENTE TAPAT\A n 6425 County Cllrtl o4 O.tng41 County on !tie~ of benlllng
Wiii tit Str-•D. Senll Ana. Ce Feb 28. 1983 IN 1 N41t10ne1 BIMlng Allocletton 12703 '210l'll IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, Thl9 ~ .. oondvctld by •
generW partnlt'Nlp. Ro<IOllo G Clfl'IPOI. 801 South Publlahed Oreng• Co111 Dilly wtt-my ttonaluni and Met of
Dllsy. Santa Ana, Ca 92703 Piiot. M1rch 23. 30. Ap.rll 8, t3. olllce thl• 10111 d1y of Janu1ry,
e11nc1 Cempo1. 1101 South 19113 1183. • MLA AtdllllOte
DevltS L Voge Dll•y. Sen•• An•. ca 92703 14~
Thlt l>ullntH II ec>nd~led by -----------
lndMduelt (Hutbend I Wilel "'8.JC NOTICE
Rodolfo G carnpoe NOTICa OP IAU
Tl\11 1111-1 WU filed wllh lhl ,... •u-o-...... ·-a•U County Cllrlt of Or"'O' County on ....,.. .. " _,
M1rch 25, 1983 Hollo• le hlf-eb)' ~ purwuant nt*1 to MCtlone 3071 end 3072 ot the
Publlahed 011ng1 Coeet 0111y CM1 Code of the s .. 11 of C.iHomltl
Plto1 Mer 30,""' I . 13. 20. 18'3 the und•llooed, G & W TOWIHO, 1~ INC , 132 Tnduelrlat Wey, Coat•
1---.,--IC-...,,.------c ...... COunlY of OfanOt. SURI of
,..,_ ""'~ Cellfomla t2t27, wMI ... II publlo
--'1C-TITIOU8---..... ---.-.---I 111Ctlon. I( INlld add..-. II t Lm. ~ STATW•WT on Mondty, the 26ttl di1 of Aprll,
T"9 IOlowlnO ~ -d 18'3. ttle IOlooMng -.It~. lo
bullnMt ... wit: C & H F l! N C I N G & 1971 Ctlevfoee. ~ V,I N .•
CONSTRUCTION, 1700 Cit lQe7ULl2t61t, UC.-HO 81~
Avenue. Newport Baactl. Cllifoml Y~~ fOf the purpoee or
12"i?.,,.,. 0. Hnlmet • 1700 Cll Mtllfylno llen OI the llnderllgOtd tot' towtno and et0taoe toeethtlt wtttt A-. Newport 9eecft. CallfOfi ooeu OI ~ end .,,.,_.
t2M3 °' ... Alcfrard H Centlllon, 1700 Cle Datiad Ihle lilh Mr/ of April, 1113
A-. Newport leedl. Cell1ot "' W • ..._
92"3 "'· ·-This bull-le oonouctect by Publl1"9d Orano• COHt Delly
genetll ~~ ~. Apff .. ital ,......,
™' •ta'-' -111ec1 wtt11 PWUC MJTa Counly Clertl ol Ona11189 Cour\l'f M~ H .. 1M3 MTmOUI MIH•ll ..._..,A,..,,
Pubt1111ec1 011noe OoHt 011 Tiie lolloWlrll Pl8flON .. 4'0ll'O PllOI • .,.., 30, ArK. •• 1i, 20, 1 ~ II&! 1fl._., WHllAN INVISTOM. 1 ... 1-----------i TIMI~. CoMt Miia, OailtorM
No matter
what YoU're
dOlng, your
hometown
neMP-Thi~ f n.
,,
"'" TIM=.=--~!~ t2tat
11'11110!\ K~ Oft~~ TIMI~ Colla ....... Ht2t Tillt ~ .. Oii "' .... .., a .... ~.!.:...a.-. ™'...----..... =:-r.: 0.-.. ~ .. ..._.
..., ......... Ot ..... C...~ "'*'• .. _. IO,'~ a, "-M, ·-,.....
CT. CONOVER
Comptroller OI Ule Currency
Cflal1• Ho. 17~
Publl1hed Orange Co111 011~ p.a.,. Mllfdl t , 18. 23. 30, Aprll ,
13. 20, 27, Mey 4, 1H3
Thlt ·~I -lllld wit" 11'9 County Ctet'k of OtanOI County on
Apt 1. 1983
122343
,..,..,
Publl1hed Orange CoHI Dally Pilot.""' 8. 13, 20.21. 1M3 1624-13
NIUC NOllC(
a-111oe
LWI AND ACCtHNT AND .. Al TM
8YNOPSt8 OF Ttts ANNUAL 8TATDIEfT YaA" ENDID DICIMelR 11, 1m
OP CHARTP NATIONAL LR *auRAMCI COMPANY
ao1 llARYLAHD AVEMI
IT L0Ut8, M1810Ufd ag
Total admitted .... te
Tot .. llablllU..
Statutory Depoett
&Olll bf U.S. Admlnlt>M uaeta owr U.8. lllblfltlea and at1tut~a lnotNM ( ) In Exoeet Of
U.S. lldmtMlble UMtt OY9f U.S.
· Rabllltlea & Statutory depollta
lneurance In force! Nattonwt<M
Aooldt11t Ind '*9tth prem~ml
tneuranoe In F°"* Celtfomla
8utAnelt Peoe
Dollll Amount. "'ThcMte•• 124$,918,874
227.173,381
1,100.000
7,950.000
3,718,4l6 2.W,811,000 eeo.e:a1
Acoktent and '*"" ~: Cellfomle ..,_. Plge Clll>
we hereby qertlf'Y tt\~1 the 1bov• Hem• .,. In eoootdenoe wtth the AnlUI 8tatlment fOr N ~....,
D•oember 31, 1111, mad• to lh• lneur••o•
ConwntMIOMr of the ltate of Celffomtl. ~ '° .... D. CUMM4MG .., .... 11
~.M.PMNK ..... ,
, •• l:=:r .. or:r.,~
l't0"'10Ue ......... ":P ™'• M4Ml lTATltilllfT I TA'iiililif
The ~ '*'°"' -cloll1Q The 1011owlnt PlflOll It dolno ~ ... bu""9M .. IOANOl·N()N)IO to3 Ofc;Nd IAl.IOA '-''O , n IS MurOy
Avenue, Cofone Cit! M.; Oelfornll Cltdt, ~toll 9MOI\, CtlifOIM t,.H ' H-WIMI lllJ41 WOMtuH
01.11lev N11lell, 003 Orc;hld au .... Downey. ~ to242 A~ Cofone Cltl -.., • Oe11ofn11 nu ~ II oondUCtld by '" UtH
0111 Nllltll. 103 0101\id ,..,.,.. Coron• del M.,, e ..-1om1e
92111 c
Tlllt bulinMe II conouett<I by I n•-Oet\lrll Pl'10IAlllO -Ollt Nultll Publl•h•d Or1no• COHI Dilly
Tt\11 tlatemt11t wu ftltd wllh lhl Ptlot, A$>f I. 1f, 20, 27, 111113
County C1tr11 01 °''"OI co..n11 on1---------•"•2-.s-..-u Mileti H . 1tl3 ,.,,,..
Publl•h•d Drtng• COHt O•lly ---,IC-TITIOU--.-.-u-.-... -.-.--I
PllOI, ~Ir 30, Apr. II, 13, 20, tH3 NAM1 ITAT9•NT
1&1&-13 The folfowlng p1r1on 11 doing
MUC NOTICE
FICT'ITIOUI 8U ... H ..._ITAT••NT
The 1011ow1110 pereon 11 do111g
butll\Me .. · IOUTH WEST ACCEPTANCE.
CAUSTIM, 808 CAUSTIN.
A M ERI CA N SECURITY
MOATOAOE. MERIT FINANCIAL.
CHARLES. OOUOl.AS & CO • .JAM!S ANO COMPANY, CAUSTIN
ANO ASSOCIATES. 4000
MacAtthur Blvd • Suitt 470,
NIW1)0t1 8-:11. Ce. 92&e0 ~ "-Ctuat•11. 386 w Promon1ory OrlYt. Newport ~n. ca. 92ee0 Thie bull-i. conduc141d by e11 lndMdual
Aob1rt J-Ctu1t111
Thia 11111m1111 w11 llltd with
lhl Cou11ty Clerk of Orenge County
Of\ Aptll 4, 1083
"21anl
Publl1hld Or1ng1 Co111 0 111y
Piiot Af>' 11. 13. 20. 21. 111113
11120·83
Nil.IC NOTICE
FICTITlOUI .u..-H NAMll I TATl!mlNT
Thi lollowll\Q ptrtonl .,. dOlng
bull-... :
ARCHON PRECISION. 11130 PlllCl!'lll St .. Unit B· 1, l.,;Oltl Miii,
CL 112627
Tony Otv1lk, 16400 Belgrade
St., Apt 103, Wetlmlnater. C1.
92683
leonard 0 Blogg. 1004 Po11
Rd .. COll1 M-. Ce. 02112t
Thie bull,_ 11 conducted by 1
Ol'*lll~. l.IOlllV'd Q. Blogg
Tllil at11emen1 wu n1tc1 wl1h thl
County Cltfk of O<lnQI County on Mardi 31. 1983.
1'211111
Publl1htd Or1ng1 Co111 Dilly
PUol Ap. II, 13, 20, 27, 11183
111()8-83
Nil.IC NOllCE
NOTICI OF AV AILAMJTY
CW ANMUA.L. MPOlln' """"tn' 10 Section II 1()<4(dl of t~letnll ~ Coelt. l'IO'lic:. la
l'leteby given lhll the e11'1Ull report
tor lht c:1l1nd1r yeer 111112 of
DANISH CHEER COMMITTEE INC ,
1 pt!Ylll lound1tlotl. le evllillbll 11
thl 1ounc1111on·a ~ olflot for
lnlPIC'llon durtng regutw bu*-"°"'' from II 1.m to 4 p m. by 1ny eltlun who requeeta II wtthlll 180
Ot)'I 1fl1r lht dlll ol thl l
pu*-11on. Thi lound1t1on'1 pf'lllc:lpal oltlol
la loc:1tld 11 2211 Wtlnut Street,
Newport 8elcll. CA 92te0.
The prlnolp1I m1n1ger of the
tound111on la Holgtf T Chrl9ttnMl'I
f'afmond W. *'-• CPA IOI N. 9footlllW'll
ANIMlm, CA 92901
Publllhtd Oreno• Co111 Dilly
Piiot, APf'lt 6. 11183
l'\8.JC NOTIC£
butlrtlll ..
SHO ENTERPRISE. 2 U
Huntlng1on 81 .. /17, Huntington
• Ct. 921148 Sho10 Inoue. '212 Hunllnglon
St , 117. Huntington 811~h. C1
026411 Thll bull,_. II Conducted by 1r1
lndMOual
s~ lnout
Thl9 1111-1 W11 1111<1 with thl Cou111y Cltf1l ot Or1ng1 County on
M1tCll 111, 1883 ,.,, ..
Publl•ll•O Or1no• CoHt Dilly
Piiot Al>' II, 13, 20. 27, 1983
11107-83
NU.IC *>TICE
l.IOAl NOTICI
NOTICE IS HEREBY 01\IEN thll
pur1u1n1 10 Stc:llon 1llU and or
A 8 750. Civil Code, 81111 of
C1lllor1111 lhll olllor abOUt Aprtl
12 1983 11 M1ty'1 Auc11on, Sin DllOO C1lllornl1, (11111) 233-31 0 .
th• lnt1rn1t1ona1 Sell Storage
•P•Ct. loc:atld at 17801 Morgan
L-. Huntington 8-h wlM Mil 1111
following, lot •b•ndonad 1ndlor
non• p1ym1nt of rent, 11 public:
IUC:tlon lo lh• hlghHI blddlf, •If
perton•I p1opony in eec:h IPICI
01ttd lhl1 23rd day ol Aprll t982
1n11mat1ona1
Sell Storage
17&o1 M0tg1n Ln .
Huntington Btac:h. CA
GT Lemb.
Ownlf
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS.
Sp•c• No. 250 & 26c,
hOUMh<>ld llema. Aol>lrt Davia
Spece N o. tc, L•wrtnc1
WllM>ll Spac:e No 55. houtehold llema.
Join ~ewtoro
Spice No toa. household
lteme, ~ Ounoey s,,_ No 114. hOUMhc>IO ltema.
Laurte OrNll
Sp1c1 No 43b, household
lltma. Klmblr1y Powera
Spac:e No. 112. hOUMh<>ld tttma,
JOhn SIM
SSp1c1 No 103, hou1ehold
lttml. Prim SMe s,,_ No 24. hOuMllOIO It_.. ..
Frid Swartz
Spec. No 23. hOUMhOIO Items,
Jeff Wllket
Space No 11. hOUMhOld •tema.
Mlldtletll Grt«tbtrg
Publlth•O Or1ng1 Cout Dally
Piiot. Mar 30, Apt e. t983 155s-83
P\BJC fl>TlC£
I( ...
tUPllUO " C OU"T OP'
C A.L.WC>ftNtA
COUNTY Of °""Noa 700 Civic Clftlet Drive W11t
tent• Ana, Ctlllomll tr270'I PLAINTIFF UNITED BANK OF
S KYLINE NATIONAl
ASSOCIATION DEFENDANT JOHN E BOWEN,
l11dlvlduelly and dbl AZTEC
ENERGY TECHNOLOGY, INC
Cl.UB INTERNATIONAL, INC, •
Color1do corpor11io11. JOHN C
BOWEN dbl AZTEC ENERGY
NOTICa TO CMDfTORa TECHNO\.OGY, INC . OONAl.D E
OF eulX ~ MARTINEZ dbl AZTEC ENERGY
(a-. t1014107 U.C.C.) TECHNOLOGY, INC . end DA\IE
Notice la htttb)' given to HARDY db• AZTEC ENERGY
c:redltore of thl within n1m1d TECHNOLOGY, INC
lr-ltrort that 1 bUllt tr-let II NOTICE Of t:NTIIY Of
tboul to bl m1d1 on p1t1on1I ~ ON 818Tf"
prooertv hettinlltet deec:t1btd. STATE JUl>QMl:NT
The n-,and ~ ldd,_ CAH ~ _..
of I~ Intended trentflfort ere I TO JUOOMENT DEBTOR
Cl.ET A LANOIS end MARV l.AHOIS, JOHN E BOWEN
177111 F1lklrll \.11\1, Huntington 2 YOIJ ARE NOTIFIED
SNoh. CA 926411 1. Upon 1ppllc1tlon of th•
Thi loc:ltlon In Ctlfomlt of the judgment c:tedltor 1 Judgm1n\ cilltf 1uc:ut1V1 ofliol or prlnclpal ageilltt you h11 bllll entered In thil bu1ln111 office of th• ln1t11de0 rt 11 lollow9·
lr-'trorl It lht SAME (11 Judgmtnt orldllor. United
All other butinna n1mH ind Btnk of Stcytlne Nttion•I
1ddr..... uMd by lht lnltnded ttlon
tr_,.,or• wttJ\ln lhrle ~ lut (21 Amount of ludgm•nl p11t 10 t1r aa ttnown 10 th• tettd 1n 1hla coun: '49,297 10
lnlendld ,,_.., .... NONE. b Thi• judgment WU entered
Thi neme 11\d C>u.x-lddt-blllCI upon 1 llatet ""' JuOQmenl of lhl lnttndld ltwwfetll 1t1: AD-prevtoully entetld egatn11 you u
INFINITUM. INC .. I Calllornle !Owl:
c:orporetlon. 11125 W1t1on Or . (1) Sister 11111. Colofado
Arcadia. CA 111006. (21 Sl11er ""' court. Olttrlci Thll lht properly petlln•lll In and lor lhl Chy of DlnY«
hlrtlo II dtaet'lbtd Ill gentrll U . AA end Stall of Colof1do
ot the 1tqc:k ·ln·lr1d1, furniture, (3) Judgment entered In 11111•
th1lurH. •qulpment, 1nd lrtdl tat• on· November 3, 11182
neme of 1 c:er1tln motorc:yclt OflP' 3. A Writ of Extc:Ullon mey hlvt
m1nul1ctur1ng 1>u1ln111 ind I• bllll laeued agalnat )'OU Unteu you
loc1t1d 1t 54811 McF1dd1n. lie with thll c:ourt 1 motion to
Hun1tnolon e..ct\, CA acett thla ~t wtthlll 30 d'Y!I
Thi bu--. -uMO by lhl flit ~ ~you of this nollca. llld tr""'9ror• II Mid toc:alloll Ir hlS court mey «dtr lt\lt • Writ of
BAJA QRlf>S. tc:ullotl m1y 1-.e « I Writ OI Thl 1 11ld bulk lrtntltt II xtc:ullotl wfllc:h hll bllll ltsued
tnttndld to bl ~ltd et lhl -n 1n "'9Ct, order the 1111 of
office of BURROW ESCROW bit property, end order the
COMPANY. 11179 E Unoofn. vy1n9 olftcer 10 re11ln phylletl
D<lflOI. CA 921165 on or alter Apttt )po_ealc,,, or eny of YOUf property
25, 11M13. 1111 POI-Sic>'\ end to mllntllln
Tllll tMlllt tr-'• la 1<1bjec:t to hi i.vy of eny property not In hla C1lllornle Uniform Commttclal potMUlon
Codi Sct1011111oe oa1.c1 ~"" 22. 111112
Thi n1mt ind •ddrtH of lh• LM A Brencll ~ wtth """°"' ~ m-v bl Cler1l llltd I t BURROW ESCROW 8y Kalhllet\ A Haytt
COMPANY. 18711 E l.lncoln, Deputy Orange. CA 92M5 end !hi lall dl't TOU18 a I« f111ng c1e1m1 by _,creditor lhlll KlltaHAUaD
bt April 22. 1983, which II tht ""'t:. a-tit•
b u 11 n • I I 0 I y b • I 0 r • I h • t2 •. ~ •u..t.
contumm•llon 0111 1p101t11d Floor,
lbOVe A ..... C........ IOO'l1
Ott.cl Apfil 4, 1883 "-C:: ~ AO-INFINITUM, INC. .,
Roger J. Ptlers krlnt Nettonaf Al_..ltofl
Prttldtnt If; (21S) ta-e100
Publl1h1d Or11191 CoHI Dilly Publl1htd Orange Co1st 011ly.
P1ro1, Aprll 6. 19113 ., 111, 23. 30. Apr 11. 11183 11138·83 t331...fl3
Pt.8lJC *>TICE Nil.IC fl>TICE
• •
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wedne1day, Aprll I , 1983 DI
6
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ClASSIFllD Tl1e morl·i<'li>lll <'<' ""the Orwtq<' Ccwst 642-5678
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CLASSIFIED. ~~=liiiiiiiiiiiial -'" .... "'-f!r_f!_l•_l_M_a1-L-''"-:t-ln_a._1. __ ,;:.;;lt;&it!f!,_...11-..1 •'*=--'"""""'!" lmtt ltr lal• It!!!! I!! Ille
Ill t • ......., --!!!!!!!! 1na ....... lMI Ctt!t ""' ttH '"""' ..... _JM!
INDEX ... ______ ..______ IACAl,ICI; Oelulle ' " IAAOAINI IN cue?OM l
,or Tu11d1y through Lllll llU ll"IRT ua• ""' -· Cofldo, 9Y owner. LUXU..V HOMU lotM lo l'lece Your Ad. Cal 811urd1y publlo111on1. The popu111 ·•carmel" Call,,,.,.,_, w/fow down. Agt . .Hirry
&·30 p.m . the prevlou• ll'inelt ma1n "han.nel view from ~llcent Cl MOdll 'nlf• tledroome. W 1111 _1_&_2_·1_4_14_._6_&3-0MO ___ _ 642 -5678 d1y 'o' Sundey i nd 8t • o -pool ., __ n-.1 • .--1 tl • 000 8p101ou1 petlo. Lim>-l&ITA l"..,.0 Tl Mond1y publlcatlon1: • v ._ · ""'',., rwu..._, ,v ' • rllnl o-tclen· Prop91'ty In 3 8t 1~ 81 pool home. ..-v
REAL ESTATE 12 00 noon l••~d1y. llY• PUOI 11"110 top oondlllon You own C1tm kitchen, lmmao LIWllt Pllll
Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, '"'lend. ueuoo. lnlldalout •13&.ooo Townhouee, IOW9I pftc>-ltt ,.., ••
A'1altf·Uu U1lt.
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f.,'01.ifw <kil Mi1111
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"-'"~Y '!'In. SllMvl« REC..~ 11 E w.,,...i
RENTALS
U1~' tutm,hnt
U;iw-.. t 11iUrt\4'h.-.it
tl•llU..•"11 t .1tt11•t11~l ot
l nlufnt'llti'll
l •lollo(tot tMIH
t '"'Ji' L'nt
fu\ltinhuu..,. fwn'
r .... "•··~''."' lJiv11t•-tMth
llru"""'•-l'nf
Ap.wtm-n ... ho1thot.Nod A1•r~n~ lnf
At-M •"""'" .,, \ nl "' . .,,. ... Ko•ot· 6' [\ .. ut
u,., '" M·.Ul• """""' .......... ~ ... .,, .. , ktnt...I.!
\.,.,,,"' f{.t1t..la
'H•f\i.'. 1. "°'h..t•
• K• f'~h \ti. •f'lh"lt
i •• , ... ~ ... ~ ..... ,
4 w1 ... Kt-n~•·
tM••~• K..-01 .. 1"
t toft•Oil t(1 u'-I•
tnd\.91 ""'~'" ~ ..... ·.:· M1• K•f'4WI\
\~ ...... ,,, ....
:~~ ....,.. 1001 ::::; .........
'"" CHh lo true equity 1 :::;~ 11ory, no pool, E1ld1,
iu.u W .. tolllf, Npl Hghll
llliU fl3 l ·fS0&5, 042-2000.
11)11
•ott 1vt• h,,.,
IU•I
l•t"l'I
lltt\"
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II
ltW
11 • .....
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llWPlllT
1001
Wilk 10 the beeett. Spa·
c:lou• 3 Bdrm. 2'~ bath
condo which require•
only 1 mlnlmal amount of
cere. Lero• 11v1no •r••
with cozy flreplace and
c1th1dr1I celllng1 Ju11
reducied 10 Mii II 1127,
5001 II won't t111 Cell
now! 046-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
1111 Mill
1 •• Low-mlleage 3 Br 2 B•
: ;~ 1111odtl, loaded w/extru;
11, flrepl1c1, microwave,
11 • v1ulled ceillng. lllcker
t•!' price 1134 ,050 .
.... 751·3191 , . .,..
:~;;· •C:SElECT :~ ... PROPERTIES.
1~tl0 1---------:~ llWl IS TUlllHlllll
2 k.. d 2......... 0....1 •• .......i •• &JV\ 000 NLIMIT 3 Ir 1 ..... ftmlly rm, ed. o .. ~., .... Owner
UY I ---. & paint In ' ou1. 1138, moved. rice 1 .~vv. .,.. n. .-t •SMKn· ...-.....,.,..-,.,.,,,, . •••-:J• .. n 24X30' garage,..-eip1 • 28 .. ,.,.
PllllllU 1111 HUlflllT 111.y 000 Whtcn 11 121,eoo below
Ocean & jetty vleW9. Martn. room, 4 bdnn. 3 ~~~~~~~~I 3 Br 1 B1llHf,1120,000. ~~Nd value & .....
bath, 3700 eq.ft. •t.385,000. Ootanfront. ll•·l 1IOl lltm flWI IUl.TY i;..;;:·t~:,r~~t5~ LIM llLI C1lh tor true equtty. For ___ 14'_-0l_1_•__ c:aen/llrm.
Remodeled 3 bdnn 2 balh + l.IU' lerge, 1 11ory, no l)OOI, Broker 0»-8182
• 'Ile r«. nn · home. hide, W11tclllf, ut. ltac~ 1040 -.--.-.-0--.. -.. -.-beam ceWn&t, fumlahed, patioa. '420,000. Npl Hgt1. 81v. c:ottl and PAJllAllll llUlll llLLTIP tlm• Elderly rel1t1v11 11&11 Ml UOUIDATION S B r
New • br' .. •L .. _, ~··•-Frtnch N-•ftd" mollv1ted to move tor Ealy wllll to beta, 4 Br 3 MODEL p1rl1c:t home. ,.n.,. ~--" .,..,_, .1 phlllCl l r 1e1on1 Bl. IPIC:IOYI llvlno rm, lmmtd IVlll S20,000 ~tale 1.2 prime Kre hilltop •t.250,000. 83 -5055, 1142·2000. family rm, 11undry rm. blloW mn.i tle0,600.
OlllUll DI'. ••JFllO 548-1347 tar51roe171>a1<;18 ony 1188,000 0-??? down. C .. Plltridl -36--Tenore, 1gt 780-1702.
C.oronado bland CUIL bayfront lot. 85' boat MUI YllW Free equity 3 bd. 3 bl 0pn Tod9Y
dock. Pl&N avail. Now '370,000 w/t.erma. 1411,000 1wnhm1 nr downtown.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
j \, ... ' .. ,,, .. "" I\ 1.1·, fi16l
•YllTlllAI* Unique VICTORIAN
home In prime 1oc:1t1on
featuring atalned gl111
enlry. herdwood lloor•.
gourmet kitchen, newly
decorated & c:erpetedl
Plu1 1 bdrm dellohed
unit In r11r . Ctll
750-1601 Of 752·7373.
WALKIRALIE
Reallll*
m!lj,
llW 111111 114tr
~., .. ,, ...... .
.,. ....... 10~ ••.
.... " 111-1100
CALl.._,OR
t Mirl.IOH
DOLi.AM
PAOPERTIEI
Irvine Ttrr~S.ylder• Pym11 $2060/mo Sue
Sweeping bly, oce1n 891·556&
111d hight light views. 3 1--------~·
bedroom home Reduc:· 108,950, t1keov1r wl· -l'""Ul=;:;O;:;E;:;l=S;:;I0 ......... ,1-tll~
tlon ot 1150,000 reftec1• lhoul blllk approv11 3
owner'• moUvlllon lo Br. 2 be lrpte 15% dn, Lerge be1ul. c:u11om 4
1111 NOW. &M thl• ir .. • 17000 below market A" bdrm. 3 b1th1 In l>ff1
1ure with pot1nt11I tor 8, 213-530·5150 ., .. ol Newp()rl. Femlly
apprec:l1Uon. Aall tor 1M4 rm. paneled otnce, pool.
C 1rolyn Ma 1on • Owner wlH ll1ten to tltY
04'4·7020 lah, p~ htt 11111 otler . Oorl1, Bkr. UHi HAL man II very well c:ould r,,, 95S-0809 or 947-8400.
1127.000 4052 Qer-llTll
And ~•IUIU•""' ·-'I nowl melndlf. 3BR 2'hb1. Thi lh• prlv1t1ly guerdtd .......... ,. .... Proper1y Mart ll40-00t9 community of Be)'9h«11.
Owner wlll wrap • m1y Ml otllt Enjoy tpace & Pflvacy In carry 11 oo lnter111. Et-Wllllll 1hl1 tutefully remodeled
ftctlvt lnler"t could be 3 Bdrm, 1•,i, bl • tuj)ll' home. New kltetlen, i,..
undtr 12%. tt..vou went 1herpf lnvutor wanll lhroom, bHm ct lllhO. your next home to be 1 outl tllke over p1ymen11. __ .. 1 1 t leaded
new custom 3 Bdrm 1116 ,600 . Owner tpa, .,IU 0 • 0
beyfronl, with a 60' dock 752-6030 glen. Owner wlM ttnanc:e.
on B1lboa P1nln1ula'1 &31-7370, 64(M)3l2
IUIJ&H PAii :too
"''"
Oarllng end unit In quiet
MCUrlty glled c:omplexl
Clean u a WhlaUe, pool•, I~~~~~~~~~ , •• 1pa and more. 10.5% fl. Wm Co~. Bkr
main ch1nl'lel .. call Dion
Scflmehr at 750-0100 .. ..
Sharp 2 Bdrm 1 ·~ belh,
eerthlonee throuohout.
Covered plllo. A•klno
1101,900. Clll 540-115f
TR.\DI T 10\, \L
RL\IT' "'" n1hclng. Only 180,500. ;~!: Clll now 9711-637.Q.
l'l' l'JI
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2:w
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Nl'J .-.o;
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l•ll :vu •••
\ ( : ·I l / tl I:.,,
•I l • ' •, t ••t ••
.... Ulllll
c1011 to b11ch, slnol•
temlly detacl'led, RV ac-
ONI, <:Ofnet IOI, low, low
prlc:e 1100,900 .
751-3101
C:::SElECT
... PROPERTIES ··'" ~~·----------! .;a PllL I IP& m~ PLUS 0.25% uaum1ble
CdM CHARM DUPLEX
oeoROE ELKINS co
IHI •II
Fn. Sat, Sun
12-4PM
289 Ulac Lane
631·5055 548-3767
lllMa
Pnla1ala 100'1
~ -HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
11001 Sq condo 2 Bf 1V•
Ba. g1r 188,900 low
BAl.BOA PENINSULA d w n , I l ex term I
Sharp 2 br redueed 10 1-9s_s._2_153_._990-4000 ____ _
$250,000 xlnl nnanctng. htt 10~ ....
O p 1 n w k n d 1 p m . A ooLl. HOUSEi Frtnc:h
,_54_ .. _12_8_1-----·J CbauteauA In Woodbrl<I· Ctrtu ... lbr 1022 O•· End unit V1ull1d
.... ...,m.L
CONDO/EASTBLUFFS
Exc:tlltnl llnanc:lhg.
I 165,000 or wlM trade for
lndl1n w1111 Condo +
cuh •Br 2 1~ baths,
c:loM to ahopplng & pool.
Pvt party. 714/~11
Iv msg, 610/~18
9llT llW
AHHOUHCEMENTS 101n1 F1mlly room, o•·
"' 1 ztbo, l1olll1d m111er
10•• bedroom. Bell buy
1u11 around et only 1 139,950.
l block to the heart of old CdM
shops and 4 blocks to the main
beach from this 2 bdrm w/frplc
front unit with spacious 2 bdrm 2
ba , firplc rear unit+
mother-in-law quarters. New
carpets. draperies and paint in both
units. $1685/mo income. Owner
will con.sider trade and/or carry
paper. $284,500.
SHORECLIFFS ~~~Ji ~~~1·8!'i,·
Just Hated, ocean,
3 BR. 2 8A. "Lindi"
Model, 1lngl• 11ory. In
the B lutl1. Newporl
Bdch. Exeellertl c:ondl-
llort ONLY S 185,0001
Call Agent/Owner
(714) 8-44-8382
"'''"'lUflll• f'nf'fl\> , ..... \/JI t.f\,IMi
•·•1'11tillf\•l-t'I ........... tie.,, .. ,, ,,_..,,,Al to,u1111l1•1ti
BUSINESS L
FINANCIAL
lknl,,...,..-"I foM ~11
•fMJ11f'Y-.. "vl•lftun""'
8out_.. v. 1t1'•d
•ln\t"\l,,,.,.OI CW!t'tun+Ut"'
1 .. ,, ... ,"" rH w.,nl.t"l.l •"1-,.'""' .,, ..,._,. '\41.nr\ ~.,, .... ,
"11llfllll ... lt" 111,
CWLOYMOCT
II••• \A.•fU••t
•J .... \\..nw-1
MUtCHAll>ISl
"'''~ A.1-t.t"""'-
~ .. '•""" U.j;tll M•V'f""'' 1'.tntt•\ AJ t.141AIP-"Ht ,.,,,,,pu•rt ,.,,.. \• v~
t WUllUt'\
l#•r..• ""'''1 tlowit hi•• I t ~u1'1
J, ....... ,,"
M•h1no" M ... .,U•t'W•1'1t
Mi• W•n'-''f
MtJlllii•I JM\f\J•'"'""""
t Hh1t • utmluh A
.. ~~pn-.n1 YLl1"• & 4)ric .. n•
~~:t:M~~~~:,.
BOATS ~fl,. Hrn• .,,,.r .. I ....
I
pHd :,,~.
M..nrt ~\l•J•
Mamt Vrv•...-
1.,. &r l\•tt.•
'"I~
).~ ))10
»2'1
\)JO
.....
. \ t >I l I tl F JI
if: 0 • \ o, I 'JI•'•'
11 TIE IUIT .......... , .............. ,
LIVI In 3 bdrm. 2 b11h
upper ept Commerct11
lhop, ofllot °' tetalt on lower 11v11 plus 4 cer
p1rklno Price et 1305.
000
associated
111 0K [~S 8 (A,1011S
JCl· W l o"co t' ••I
)U) I~~~~~~~~~
COLDWeLL
BANl(eRCl ---n'U.ft-
lllffl sn•• Cherm & economy are
lhe INluret of thl• end
unit Bonlt1 Plan. Well
loclled end 111 on one
level with pe1c1t u1
greenbelt u your bad!
yard end the price ha1
been reduoldll
144-....
llWNIT 1111,IMD
Nl•IUPTttl
In a gated wlltrfront
c:ornptlK. low.t pftOld
on tee land wtth • lergt
clodl. Lerge 3 bdrm. 2'h
ba hm w /dec:orator
emen1t• TRANSPOftl A TIOH fa.TllW
IUUMI ,, .. ~
AUTOMOTIVE
Aulu U••~
lu.1\b ~ "'",.... P••~
AUii• Wamtd ~ •• tf"-t •t..• "~'' ''Aht• 1 lh-t\t• ,, .... \,_
••••• 1111 :.t
fh'I•
Ml)lt
''"' "'111•
""'" •1114 .. .,~
"''"
&II Ull ... "
Panoremlc B1c:k Bey vi.-from lhll prlvall
ttome with gwden entry
and 11curl1y 1y1tem .
Mu"l-lev9! 3 bdrm with
muttt eulte. New on the
martiet. $470.000 tee.
t111.11i HOML~ hie. !IOI) -WATlRFNONl = . REAL ESTATE :'~~ 911-1400
l\1tl1t1Ui• t"l•vM""
AUTOS IMPORTID RJml.I.
,\tt• 1~.... • lllO) ....
l\U•i4H llf-1\\
!IP• ti
l"91wm
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tt•lfY• .. 1 ... ,,.,
1"11\W• J~l\M""ll
l~lJ.lff'hUY , ..........
...... \rll
MA-
M-uu
M1,.,.0.. ~"' w.-.n.
MU
(Ip.I
P~bU
I\'-., ......
11..-.11
111M Pof'lollno 4 Bdrm, owner
~ttlll will help 11n1nc1 every 11111 WI)' poll., 11101 g~t ~:~: room with be1h Alklng
VIiii 131&,000.
v•Jt ••" U,_.1001. OOMl'S 11"\ 17MIOOO • , '; Aelll10t9,
Wllll I
Wiii
t1U ¥1~ . .,,
WI II
VUI .. .,
f 14' .... ,.,,
fl);I
flU 11)1
llilf
.. ,_.
"'WAl1't Attreollve prla. l 11-
nandng .,. offefed on
thl• 1peolou1 Colla
Meaa home. EtlJoy tM
ptti .. of 'f04Jll OM\ lltOt
yerd loaded With fruit ,, •••. •••.100 . 8$ 1-n10. IU-2411
CHINA COVE -CdM
Split level 4 Bdrm 3 bath family
home with extra spacious living
and dining area: partial Newport
Harbor view. Only 30 steps to bay
and beach -yet tucked away from
the hustle-bustle of summer traffic
and crowds. $525,000.
BROADMOOR SEAVIEW
Spacious 2 story 4 Bdrm, 3ba Port
Royal model, family rm , 2
woodbuming firepla<.-es, access to
pool, jacuzzi and tennis courts, all
contained in gated pvt. community.
$369,500 -15% down.
N.B.-VIEW-10% ON.
High above old CdM is this 86 x
158' parcel In the private
community of Harbor Ridge. The
180 deg view is spectacular and so
a.re the terms for a qualified home
builder.
llQ,
QO_j[Q~ RJ.1N;rf
875-2311
Dar•
875-3311
Wknct./EYH
.
'5000 REBATE!
On brand new Towne Homes in
F.ast.side Costa Mesa. 3 bedrooms, 3
baths. attached double car garages
with automatic door openers Large
private patios for all unita. and a
couple even have extra large yards.
AND-you can chOOR your own
color of wall to wall carpeting!!
Builder will help finance with
small down payments. Prkes as
low as $134.~00!! Better che<-k on
these exciting NEW homes for this
low pric.-e TODAY!
IEWPOIT 1£111 OFFICE
111-1101 " 112· 1113
WALKER&l.EE
Real Estate
ACft!lll~ ~ C=l
I§®. ::-.. =n
'=~=· ~\\.~µ-"£~s·
canyon Ylew. •tunning
• Bctrms.
'Ill TWI LllU
Gerry & Christa
673-7761 780-1397
l·F&lllU
Jog by 417 Dlllllla, only
$380,000. 3 br, dining, 2
ba home, 2 br. 2'it b•
view unit, by eppt. °""' thl llar '"'' lli-MN
Duplex by Own/ Agt. l Br &
2Br, 1235,000, lge cash
dwn . owe 12%
67 S.3063 Of S7e-o6e7.
JOSY USYEBI
URE
PLAI I
Meister home, moel po-
pul ar pl1n In C•nyon
Creek 5 bdrm1, 3 bl.
8-.1111\.11 cullom dellgn-
ed 111lned g11ss. Too
m1ny 1menlllH 10 1111
~9.500.
~lsor
·J(8Glty
651-1177
Cull llngle 11ory hOme 1US1 1.,., blodl1 from 1M w--=-..._
oc11n. 2 bdrm•. plu1 ~~~~~~~~~ den. Cu1tom 1hutt1r1, i::
1tag11ooe hrepl-. grNI I I T L E I I 0 I vakll et $249,000.
...&, rr""" ~· REALESTATE 760-1'68
ltM
TEii.
Pllll 50, 3 8f 2"' Ba view
hOme All the emen111 ..
ind prlc:td to 1111 1t
1375,000.
flUD IW.TY ......a1•
ltacl lMI
~--.. -.. -.---:.-:-.. ~,
Heightl, 3 Br. 1
• ..... Ba. hou11. new p1lnt. 1-. .._ .. ...., new root. rellnl•h•d
VERSAll.LIES CONDO
by owntt 2 BR 2 Be.
$134,000. Wkdy1 1tt 6,
631·2502
.am 111111 MAii
(ltt hf 1-+hc)
A t>Muty on Int Penln-
._,.. Pt. ,_, 1et1Y. 3BR
(Mell wtown bath) 1*19
•,i, be. for gu111a. Blodt
well tnc:l, 2 cw gar. NNt
& a-i -Ju8t mow In. All
for 1325,000 end w/
g< .. t .-imat>61 loarl. ..... ,...-aw.r.
11M1H ........,
1017 E Balboe Bl. 00.
PLEX $480,000 owe.
1173-1282. Agt.
11111 • LIAll "'111
Exc19llonal bey l ~
view Totally remodeled
kltc:hen: Oak cabinet•. Jenollr9, .,t>-Z«O ,........
oer1tor, mlc:row1v1 &
oon119cilon -· DlluK.t 1ec: 1ya. Jecuul tub.
Subtn" Ill oft••· $350.
000 L.H .. M~ Whl1e.
~200.
llTlllllH-
11 .....
Lo eeper111 mMter IUltl
& gueet rm & be~. Din-
ing "" tot emell lntlmMe
enteft91nlng. 2 beloOIWt.
5 minute• 10 beach.
Owner wilt hllc> flnanoe,
M ary Lou M e rion.
044...e200. !II: Mar:nah ·Irv me
-..... ........ lwltd'#OOd lloore, forced c.1·..s:.1611 ¥-elr lie•\. detached dbl •WNIT ~ mi;i::i:i:i:' =-~~ 62'1 \f:f9~~ ~'::a 3 Ddnn, a~ belt\ oondo
ii .... -:;180,000. a.411-8041 1ft ~~.'::. 7.::
kOOMIHO wtTH -you ewt wt11 ·to ~ CALl,OANIA COLORI ..... 1111. -uoe.ooo.
1mpecoebly or oom•d >Ont too. 2 Bf 1ba. •111. Lm ll&ft
gerden H U OH lhlsj...;.,000~·-lk_r_._640-l0 __ 1_t __ 1 tlJ..,.
werm-heerted 2 8drm ~~~~~~~~~ home with tkytlghl In .;: -----......... cu.• .. ~-----k1'Chen .,., Of*'. ti.rn
Ctllk'oQI ttwoutftOUt. Cer· efrff comtorl wHI .,.
I I I{ '-I '' , .
•:::-: ~::---~ :-...... ._ ._ ........ _. ~ wMfl ~own "* home on UM £M t_..,
A l'CHtt t CTVll lol. il'AOPfAlt t
5
6
7
"'6 lil(Mll ... _.
llo.olt
T•M~ T,...,,,p11
Vnflu,•"fi''n v.~ ... M._
"" tlU ....
"" ....
1111
111• 111.I ttn
TH \()111 < )\\I
"·\I \I I '1
~ ------
I ti 0 t i,s r I
l LAOVI Ii' r I' I I 1-. l I C f. J G 0 I ! lollr PO'Ntf "111 lllOW UI 10 ... -, ....... 1~ .. r,.......1--4 I>" .. °"' ~,., llOIMI lllO Of· .. ___ ....,..__ f llUI Tiie Olelt 111\llo 1111\11 •11
--------. 11lny dly• will ht (19(11•.0 I Sl U CMY 1-::1:•:1::1::1::1:•: • ~..,.~ :-...:-=:7-:1
..._ ~ 1141,600.
Ml-1111
{ PnE BARRf TT
REAL l Y
LEASE Of'TlOH
Comp. "'"'· One of llO
Cyn'• "'°" -. tiomta.. 46'. ~ .... ~.
pool, •• ONld'• ~J lliell Ofdn1. .1.416,0CKI ,_
8 -'(Iv ........ ,............. -..... rrrrrrr1
'·
..
I J
.
l • . • .. '
• ~ • 1
' I • J
DI Orange Cout DAILY Pll.OT/Wedneaday, APrll e. 1883
"""' ... UM lnm VtlHtlM!f '"'" ,,,,....... . '"""'''· ,... ·::rm.... ... ... RfUu .,,,,,, DH ..... "'" "" .... ...... "" ~i~!Ali!n.. Cnte !tu UH l!llttt ""' IHI !gml h!f' Mii Cutt But EU I 1&1tN\ Utt OOIAN l"llHI . Joa l.loun• l'or .. 1 Ave, prof l'o1o1ncl blk ' w111 M ILUEPAINT OPIRATIA toll40. ll'lteoleoe. 2 .,, 1 Mio• otHn 2 Ir. 1 11 1 1 1 1 0 1 .... or bike 10 boh, 11Qhl1 oltloe lludlo. llllylit• 226 9prlf198t 8t>en. vie. Hew· fOf lltldac:..,. llGtlit4I01u
Ba l"'hl lnletlo<•. Thi• I• lwlCled IO"CI, tnClld ...... NIWl'O"l C"Uf P•O •IClolllVI ludlo TUNNIN lfO• I Ir MA"'HI ... WALK bnghl IUfn rrrt In twrihN IQ"· 900cl ltlllet iow-1 land ' All•nle, HI rel offloe In Irv full lltN .. ... -1 bf 1 b oonoo tHO Apt 11 the l1lb01 lay g11den •Pl pool & reo • & 3 '" ap11 nr Hunt IOt mature r_,, *OtlelnO Plb ,..,.· 1474 MO.·•e.o own Irene "•o c 1·1 the btlt b11y In town -0--tmo 19', IN( a l • T Oh.ID t t,000. I.MN Of> ••H 7 tO W 1tth 8t Mlfbour. Oewllr. rHI weon. Ollen. neet, ....., ~ol!LUXI O"'rrlOU ,7 .. • •20 .._. "1,. .: ,,_ • 132.900 64CM837 IQI NO toH Wlfl.oe. Hou-mo. .. .. ivell tMlt. tlonll ... ,. 1I02 'ti: t br, • bl, I ... 2 ... lplo, ..... dbl car 011 W/O q ................. A--•m"':r' "' .-* ... rv' ...... .,.., ..... . .!___ ........ 5'a.1111 l*l· tto. 91W7H ... • .... -" ,_ ...... ··-· •-P .. • up 10 4000 aq II 1901 l'Ou .. o. Ilg Dog, D•n• htltat1/ V1U• UH ..... llW"•hlfhH .. Luxurlou11 1 I r Oondo, ownhOUMnt l'llMewl ~~/60,'rom l &tO non•drlnket, Ol!ttrlul "'•wport Blvd . NI mix, Ylo '°'" Clllca l lookilllllPI' -·--·----2 bd, ,~ bl Condo. Prol -• OIOH lo Hoeg Hotp. D. k. r N 0 p.,. TV, kll prlY, pool, l•O 5'6-tolll !dlnolr II c., ... Jr H 8 ..... .... UllU IUOI OIOOt Tiie, mlrrOB, •IO TWO ITO"Y CONOO. a !um MOO/mo 940.2143 f46-18U. -3 Ir 2 a •. LR .. D.R .. =r I t300 mo. lnol Utll ~·· IM-!40t evt. Mtlftttlq ..... , 6 unlll on ~ 10 M· I f760/mo ll•t-0011, or bdrm. 2~ be. a c.r g1t f 831'228' Otfloe ~ fOt , .... : 747 , 1 ,. zoned. flH,llOO ,30, 5-46-f48S -1150 mo No pet• Ntwpol1 Height• Heep. Lars• lat4ll a.t OltlOI 876/mo fl, Ht&/ mo. ullla /d f:OUNO Sm blkfwtu dog loOlllng '°' ult Ch.,t'
000 dwn, b1l1noe I I 040·10911, M2·4M2 llonll ¥1ew, 2 8t, 2 11. Ulllll ... ~Id f4 ii ~o HO 1711 Cyp1111 St 2 bile• to bMOl'I HI New· AIC, gtOUNS nr 100 l!l w/grey p1w1 Alley ot 8ookk~r. Alp, Al •
12 110~ tor 1& yre F~~~:":.r::~: g~u:r .:~ HM I 100 turn Of unlUrn. 031·4000 plut 1150 CIHnlng fff, "3-1842 en &·SO Wildye. ~~'. e.:iig.r:n r•ll Camino Dr • Coeta M•t :;~;;.· Btoedwey ~;r:· or:~~ .. ~~~1':1'
Ownr/llcr courtH)' 10 tru 530•8 lll 8111 -•I 1 IJa Cltanlt lftf 382 V1ctorl1 Cell tor 1 BR, P•I 6 amall ohlld 3 bike f of Ptltvtew 6 h
bkra. '101712·3014, Alty F.. Ne WP 0 RT c R ! a T ---eppl. 942-3790 01< $4811 mo. ..... .... ,. IHI Adema LOST 8111 Point• 81•· =~:~ c:.T ~.~~ 11101602·3079 OONOO 28r, n(o81, encl o•reoe. H0-71011 -7114-1040 Mr fraoy meee telNlll lbl 11 mo o 30 1 m 10 12 30 pm
R1te 11GrMQ• bffutY 3 bf 4Br, 2'1~81. O/W, tratl\ wlll 10 boh 1475 mo. 2211 TWt Ml•IM4r11• •• Room a loetd In Prlvlle F. V •t•• Reward lac.at Prmr!J USO entry 11yt• hH frptc comp, bltna Tri-level. I La Pllomt Clll lor appl '306 Plue 1 150 oi...nrn0. TIWI 11111 Chrl11lan home on bu• Liii ILH, "8-6110 or H2·5eee. _5_116.o __ •eo _____ _
,•-If IWlll•-Some hrdwd tire fncd yd mo ,, .. rent 8711·2584 837-71118 302 v101orla Call tor With~ encloMd P•· tine Vic Herborf Vloto-Hu alngll olflcel, lurn or \ IMIUlnl '/O --Kld•I crt111t1 aeoo·1. Cell appt 942·3790 110 L 3 bdrm, 2 be r I a M •tu re 1clu11 unturn, 4 room bey vi.w Founo Gltmen 9hle>l*d. P Otttl .... ....... &311-11 190 8"1 F.. BR, 3 be, cloM to Hoeg oloM to C •nd bMOh 1350/mo c.i1 645·7020 11U11e 11000 nr All• Bell, 8rl1101 l o11tlon with Hewf.orl
XLNT FIN 7119-18112 Hoepttal & 1400 mo. Call Aertatatl Uaf, 3 Br. 2 Ba. 21115 Orenge No Mallon I. no P•I•. •w 33511 Vie Lido 073_. 160 w 1 r n • r • t 1 m a I e Beach tnvee1men1 trm E11t1lde cherm1t A llel 640-ltM,, uk IOt Lerry •·•L-· J·'· • 17M Frplc, lndty hookupa, IOOO mo 752•2197 ltttll, Mttth .. _... 761·11221 Qlldye F/C. EDP. PfR exl)lf re-
lfflffttl LHltl11l 1385 llkH " rm w/appl.. Ot Pam _,_ .ua !! carport No pell H26 Pine Knot Molel on Coul IOO ~· '"'· 1110 quired, tna, ft.-c! .... 1,
2 Yrl. N-. ll-U. t 726K, Klde Ok Low move In. ux. 3 bd. :l'h baCondo, 1 BAYFRONT. l)let evlll 3 Sler11 Mg.nt, 641 1324 Nrp:,:.~:h 2 bri 2f bah Hwy, NB, tlt9llOOCMll ltH, 1nJt1f .... ~. F~: ~~~~~ =c:r~x.;:-:.i~:~~·
l100K dl'I. Alwa)'I Full FH.1139-8l00, 8ell Rlty btkfbch. Security QalM. llory, 2 Br, lrplc, Lge, cleln & 1herp 2 br, u 'newcrp~, rll Wkly rllH. 645-0440 In ltall, llOO ... 1'11114·1·83. 848-1790. 663-0940
Brend New 30-U, $1.• E Side 38r. 2Ba, lrplc, boll ellp. 2 cat gar, lrpl. l1800fmo 875-3097 child & '""II pet OK. petnt. 1415. 525-llell ---------
Mil. l200K dn Bkr epa, $850 mo. tat. tut, Cati after 4 PM 842-6412 lilMI 1460 048-9950 PllYATI I tltfl V1tetlH lnt1la 2to7 :l~ :.: 4 0 2 1 r "C:::'8M• =hund6 DAiii I /Part Tl9t
053-1400 $600 MC. 048-3532 over ShorH, 111 clH• Ptalaaala 2707 BEAUTIFUL 1 Br $4116 Lrg nu 2 Br, 2 Bl, lrpl, Condo. Snowbird, Ut1h • 657•1111:~-· 41 Mature woman aller-
1.tta fn Salt 1400 2 Br 1 ea hM In court, no erea, 3 br. 2 11a, SllSO PRV patio, pool, apa ger & lndry 1540 111 Iron Bloum Lodo-. Aprll llll&HI ltalala 2111 --------~ noon1 Call B1tber1 IOr ger. Lrg loll ahed All Av 1 11 1 mm Ag 1, 1 bd, OCM11lronl, mature TOP erH, quiet, no pell plu1 n o Avail 41111 18-23. '300. 076-2244 Ptr1•!!1• 3012 _8P-'-P_t._5.40 __ ·3_2_80 ___ _
Cornet Loi In DeMrt Hot new No pela. 1625fmo 842-1183 adult, 11ove. rel, u1111, MESA PINES 549-2'447 17111 A•I\. Apl A ROSARITA BCH . BAJA 2 Otllct, 81or1ga, Re1e11 ............ ...., ..... ___ -.....-O&lltfl/lllTIU
Sprlng1. Zoned for Ou-Seo 1360. Credit ~k & 1426/yrly. 876-7743 2B 28 T E S 4911-1817 Br 2 8 11 8 ShOP tpac. evlllabte at CIRCUS Of plu. 842·4816 rei'a raq 111.,,. "B" ........ IQ CANYON, Dover r, • wnl1ae .. Ide, b • • m, ~ •pool, 45' aq h Any atu up to Part time evening• AP· 9-S.. -.... , Model TownhOuM. 2 Br Cereal ••I Mar 27U 5 yre old , new paint, Welk to eech. 1 BR, jec, prlv t>Gh. 641.·9223 1248 aq 11. 549.7249 llSSAIE ply In pereon 11 2 Guy1 ••••ltla, Desert 1450 er. 549-84. Oen. Din Rm, t>Mu111ully cpt1.fdrp1, S640 mo. CaH 1tove and rel S.00 Pl' leatala tt 1 .. att ...,. Coall M .... ZOned C-2 From ll1ly, 2287 Felrv~ -f I l y 11 2a34 kept. L .. 11 $1000/mo Hlde-awey w/vl1w Mo· Olck 998-7300 dye , mo 630-4637 • a.v. 7111 NO HARBOR BLVD Rd, Cotti M ... P~:::, ~:~~tCl~~g B7.92 taa a a I !J Av1ll Mey 111. 844-57•2, def'n 2 Br. 1 81 C*lk, 840-2428 eveafwknda. Studio, cloM 10 beech. Alt M/F to 1hr 4 Br houae, lfLIU lfflOl llml FULLERTON _C_ler_tcal _____ Fr-.. -J-o-bt
Ba 1 itory, end unit, Feel proud not brokel 759-07oe ~t~i~''/.~. ~2PI" UY IUHW utll pd. Pet ok $350 blwn Bly & Oc11n, NB Beyiront bldg. 700· 1,007 110-1112 I••• ... n
vt.w, enc plllo, fully turn Quellly 3 br 3b1 lrplc WPT HGTS-Oulel 211v S3S-41137 1150-21131 alt 8. lq II avell from 11.26 12 noon to 4 AM .. 1 0 8 • 5 0 0 . c 1 1 1 plu1 pool & dbl ger kldf ' 2 Bdrm, lrplc. carpeted, llW AYAH.. BASEMENT I 1 00 aq h I••• Per • pet. 1700 Bell 539-6190 4Br. 3B• home. Sl100 11nge, p1Uo Lee S775, 1 Ill 1 •& ••fO Vecanl, •harp. I Br t Be, M/F 10 •hr bHut Beck 2500 1q 11 Cell Mon-Fri 7 llYl l WEEI I 81111340-.0395 Fee mo. 111 642-7782 Cly• ph 640•1177 • -· -$'426 2 Br. 2 e1. S650. 3 Bey condo Poot, 1ac, 9.6 ATTRACTIVE ... .ltltt
152,000, lovely Joshua But. ltacL •••o 8•5· 2 8 2 8 f 1 2 Ill, 1 IA. lllO Br. 2 Be $800 Kld1 ol< tennli 1300. 6-45-6 l23 842-4844 MASSEUSSES Y101tt.1a
Tr" 3 BR home Beeut • ._ r 8· rp c. open Gu & wller paid, prlvall Ke Ith 9 8 2 • 4 4 7 1 O' Fe to lhr 3Br 2Ba. NEW· "· I 2t I TO SERVE YOU Rtftrtel ht11tl
vu .••• um I 0 II n Beaut utra toe 4 BR. 3 beam cllllng•. aundeclt, encltd oareoe Included. 968-11853. PORT BEACH HOME --• leatala 1 4112-9806 utll rm S850 f mo . Poot jacuzzi. rec room s286 & T 7.,0 76 COEDS-Would love to We.,. htrlno ba, 3 car ger. pre1llge 1175-5611 volleyblll ~our I . gsi La aaa ltac.. 2741 u IL ' -03 COmmetclel C-1. w. 19th perty wfyou Cell Sue or
Duplex, So. end ot Pelm area. rent lo own or IN b · ROOMMATE REGISTRY SI. C.M Prime locellon, Kathy enyllme (213) Springe, welklng diet· opt. $12llO mo 1162-7940 Lge 1 Br. view. glr, decil, bq 1 LAGUNA PENTHOUSE Ill 1 th I •Int 1erm1 2 Br. 1 B1 6 3 4 • 4 5 7 l . ( 7 1 4 ) .... ,tt.a11t1
PulM Board
HorlZOl'I ance 10 dwntwn. see. Lrge 2 bd, 1 ba, nr ocean. utrH $695 plus dep 10 Pm PLWE Fabulou1 2 plua den. 2 s:t_Y/~_99'1 .~00::1 " P<lvate hOuM wtlh 1810-527_7188 5 0 0 8 y 0 w n , $700. 220 GenevL --tllA" _.. 7 1 9 'h M • r I g 0 I d . 387 w. Bay SI. C.M B•. wfwtilte waler VI-. yard UM ee oHlce, drHe
8191323-5-438 an 6PM 536-83 l2 l&J•--(I &40-4265 714/648--0073 Incl frptc, 2 lrg declta, Male no 1mkr tum. prk'g, ehop, anUquee. etc. S1att SPIRITUAL READINGS .._ oourmel kit $1350/mo W/0. S houaee 10 ocean. MAK ING Mo NE y 1 ·Advice In ell mellera I.E. laC .. 1811 1608 Bike lo eand/aur1 3 br All Lovely Cepe Cod home Unuiual bech apt. $325· 12 bd. duplex, encl garage, fncl ulll 494·854 1 9-5 N 8 $ 3 8 5 I y r I y S550fmo. + MC lovt, marriage & bull· S.oreterlts
Dictaphone. snor1hand -crpld _,apple ffyd & 4 8R1, 3 Bathe. ekyllghla. util. Incl.. 67~·5566 l5rg9e_y500rd,,ntoe aree, S560. pm. 7141650-4084 548-6442 77<1-5629 n111 Al10 counaellng 4 Br 2'1\ba, pool, Npt Bch $5 F lo ""I 5 8 5 B El C "-more 75 Hurry c1ll rench door1, epic ue ""t oceanlkle apt, llv rm, Ocean vu new 1 Br wflrg R C 1 1 o. amino noel, (W•lellff) home for lop 539-6190 Beal Rltu Fee petlo Avall May 1 br. kllch. bl & gar E Side 2Br, 18e dplx. d-.. No' "ftd -•-.. 10 mle, auculan, Mid Approx. 3100 IQ. n . llore. San Clem. 4112-7211e E. C.M or Npl Bch In--------''--'--' I E OI S "'""' -· """ 20'1 Snr 2Br 2ba hH, ~tau front. E. 17th SI, ----------1
I h ••"O I 1950 mo die IO!l. 161 ...., Acacia. rent $495 mo + cottage. be e'c,, · $ 5 6 5 1m 0 CM fS.42•2150 '" •~ .•• s 2600 mo Bkr, r.-.-I --.LI
Tni111 50 lo so· plua WPM
come property w I -tllt 144-IHO ssoo. 111 Int S200 $525 mo1o doge 494 7079 .,,..... 6.4S~206 .,...,.,. -=~~~~a~nd llr Nothing fancy Beach 2 cteanlng. 662·6•72 552-8343 • SJ,' w. Fem. w/2 eon• OUTCALL 1135-9199 . .,. ,, ..... .,.
NO CASH
3 unite Bal le, aleo 3 unll!I
N 8. tor TO'S, land etc
McNaeh Rea l ty
1142-1334, 85, -9889
evea.
GEMSTONES tor beach area 11omea or
O.C. Income. 673-7311
ltatal1
BtaHS Fuaia ....
L11a.aa te.c.. 2141
Roomy 1 BR houM, $175
wk. Avall untll June 15,
~~9.:'~~~~ ~':,!d yd NewpOrt ~ per1ecll 3 br C.1t. Mtu 2724 3 Br Wi Be, E&atalde, ulll La aaa Ii HI 2752 eatrea Fem roommeta iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ORIEITIL
wfbbq pool git & more P d • x c e p I e I e c 2 Br 2'A Ba view, e/c. Laguna Cyn •Pl. 1230•
lniat ll44 S 6 5 O I• m 11 y s po I 1615/mo. 1151-9647 S550fmo. Alk tor Greg 111' 1111 & dep 497•5667 IASSl&E
"E"••a 53M100i*t RJty FM "4e!llfie.td 2 Br. 2 Ba. gar, no ""'"· 631""688 Mature Chrl1ll1n desire• -...-to 1here condo In Co· 2022 QUAil ST
I to 4 bdrma. elartlng et 4Br. lam rm, H1tb0< View APUITl!m 1912 Wlltac:e ,,. S.70 I rt ... C~ 271t rona det Mar 2 bdrm, l'h ..... OIAL NEWPORT BEACH
$850 to $1200 Homee. 1635 Port Mar· B111u11ful guden ep11. 831-3671 or 1175-2860 b • Po o I. c" Po, I' llHITllAL 112-1111 gate Sl200 mo Gardnr NO FEEi Apt. & Condo fnel •111 +11111 +·MC dep P11tloe/deck1. Spa, heel 2 Br w/ger. 1440. crptt, reotlla. VIII• Rtntlla. waeher/dryer. S300 mo, 1mmEIT t0AM·12AM
~lsor
·Realty
651·1177
~vii i "a" 1 16191 paid. No pet• fncd yd, water pd 2224 1175-4912 Brok1t ulll lncl'd. 111 and 1111 Proper11a ExelueNety 1 llYS l WEEI " ,.. ' 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. $515 "A" Placenlla 636-4120 · end dep 714f844-ll053 ;::.;~3~~7 o r (6tll} 38drm 2Ba. $655 1-SPM . WflRlllEITlll ROOMFORRENT '144-4110 CUTEGIRLS
398 w. Wiison 631-5583 2 Br 1 Be wfgarage. 3 & 4 Br CIOM to weter, NEAR BEACH & FWY \ TO SERVE YOU
Saa Jan Ca • 2271 Fireplace. pool, dllhwUh· 2042 Meyer Pt $475/mo turn & unturn, , .. ,on· $250 mo. 963-4954 la•aat. leatala 2'20 Prof. Men 1eek1 Fem
2 B 2 Ba Fam Rm LI 1'· pvt patio •Ire lrg 642-0350 ebla, 1 11 emenltlea RMMTE wanted, 1lngte •S775 up. 1900 n lndu· aalllng companion, R,;,: 2 ca; enclad OM"":. garden 2 Br' $5115.00. Broker 675-4912 etrlel Olli'" 18101 Re-wknda & tummer crul· -. 557 2841 Large 3 Br 2 811 Town· liiii~in'ii"mir.T:~ prol. female. no pet1, ~ see. 1•529•3458 encild beck yerd. vehlcie • house In quiet compl••. Charming houM In CdM dondo Clrcle, "R".
a1or 1"°e. cloJe t o olng Benanu rooking t•rJl• pool, garden !91· 1330+ ulll Avail Mey Huntington Beac h
1chool1, good area tor temlly llv1ng . let Mo ting $670/mo 1145-3311 111. Alt« 6pm 644-8228 842·283-4.
_u_t_ll_pd_._4_94-00 __ 7_7 ___ 1 Br & loll. Orengetree,
$525. Ill & IHI, $300
aec 7 52· 1123 The REB
1575/mo. tet , IHI & rent movee you In · COUNTRY CLUB LI ING I ' A cteenlng 32106 Via De We have 2 Br 1 Be l&lll llUI lPTI, IN NEWPORT BEACH Fem. to lhr 2 Br 2 811 apt, In Laguna Niguel. Crown 811atll
Ollva SJC. Call belore $445 • 3 Br . 1 •~ Be Beaulltul 1 Br 1•50. S lngl11 1 & 2 Bdrm upltr/dwnstr s 240. & Veli.., Parltwey, approx Fiaaacial BH1n Uafaraislt ..
Gntral 2202
2 Br 2 811 condo $550. 3
Br 2 Ba nr bellch $850; 3
Br 2 Ba yrly $600; 2 Br 1
ea all utn. 1850
'AOllS RW.TT
PllP IWIAIElllT
lli-1111
2 30 or aft llPM 1475 Pool,lndrylec .no lerge28r $495 Apartmen1s& Townhou· utl l Jen 839-11329, 1644aq It 545-0215.
Rancho Sen Joaquin VII· 6191758-2565 wkdy1 , peta. 546-9556 931 w 1111h. St. MS. Some ere elegantly 1_7_511-_7_116_1 ______ 11100 1f 2 olc & wrhH luiaHI
las 1 er w/lolt Frplc, anytime weekend• lurnllhed Resp M/F. non-amltr 1700 al wrhH apace, rtaaJtlH 4014 brlell llrium. decor wau •--'--------upte11 w .. telde C M 2 IEW otlH From $595 20-35 yra 10 ahr 3 Br NB trwy close . top toe 1-....:;.1~-..==~.;.:;.;.;
covering• & Ille Upgrad-3 H~R~ORbt~NE 2 Br. I B1 Nell & cute, 2 muter bdrma. 2 cu On Jamboree Rd el hOrne $.400 673-2837 675-6251 IEITAllAIT 01&11 ed end unit 1820, br. :>\ •. t-ns, car cupell. dr11pe1, small gu1ge. lrplc. micro· San Joaquin Hltta Rd ---------• s.tllng This Unit Only 857-2914 gar, comm. pool 1 ml. fenced patio. enclad w 8 v 11 6 7 3 . 7 2 o 2 144-1100 Mete/Femele to share 2 2,000 IQ n unll with office PRIME Loe1llon. Oana Merine No pell garage, no pet 1 558.1719 Br. 2 B• Oceanside of Avell lmmed • Cotta Beaut Free al anding
t Br Orarigetr" Condo, STOOfmo 673-3635 $475/mo plus $475 sec 1-------Br 2 Ba $525. No peta. P c H . C d M C a 1 1 M&N 30c eq n Min 1 yr bldg
pool, tennis, evall Im· Cu•tom 2 lu•. 3 bdrm hse 548-5442 or 770-5629 S555tmo I Br I 81 Apt Localed ecrou N.B Golt 673-6-419 lease Cell •lier 8 PM LOW PRICE
IBM
Xerox
Weng
&REYHOUllD Temporary P«aoonel
15401-C Redhill Ave
Tuatln 714-730-4714
COCKTAIL
Weltrt1H1/Welttr
wanted for prlve1e night
Club Exper preferred bul wlll train Dependable &
wllllng to work 1ny
nlghll Sharp 1ppeu-
ence & vlvecloua Inter
view• held on Wednee-
dey April 6\11 betw"n
8·8 PM 3333 Welt
CoHI H\Ny, N B 2nd
floor
CompenlOn, Fem 11v .. 1n
tor llde<ly widowed lady
aeml-embuletory Nelda
11sa11111nce In getting
around her 1p1 Light meal prepuatlon. pvt
room, meefl & salary
Npl Bch 720-01159
med S 5 5 0 I mo W/Frplc , pool 2 gar •3 Br 2 Ba. nr SC Ptza, ~eap~·,:ndor2 rm, carP<>rt. ,__eou_,_ .. _. s_•_s._•_8_5_5_. __ 1-E-m_p_l_fem--10-e-hr-2B-r ep1, '494-3427 Churcl\111 Prop. 540-4470 OMI WllTtl
64._7124 $700 II 539-6190 Best S v• • 2600 n I led 7 AM to 3PM, 6 days wk Ch1tmlng 2 bdrm + den A. pool, IPll. carpon 366 Avocado YJLU •HIOI .213 mo '/\ ulll blwn IQ oca near MtalY II Ltaa 4024 home In ireal tocatlon TURTLEROCK • F111>u1ou1 1_F_ .. ________ Child ok $695 No pell TSL Mgmt 942.941 2 ..._ 11-4 S.-0-5200 e•t 3459 17th & Placenlle, CM Incl wknd z·a BEACH· near bay. 1200 view . apeclou1 condo. I t Aaa 2280 752-5822 1 & 2 Br Condoe evall $695/mo. 646-1 16-4 l&llllPTlft IT"1 WALK CAFE 508 Pac
Chine Cove, 3 Bdrm 3Br, 2'ABa, lg tam rm, U a 1----------E Side 2Br. 1•,;e1 2 1ty 645-6459 llOELY FllllllEI 2500 aq. II. near Hoag. Save home. car. etc Call Co111 Hwy Hun1 Ben
home with elevator. ape pvt decl! & pet101, II· Circle thl1 3 bdrm $575 Br 1 Ba, carpel•. condo. lrplc, bllna. $800 Agent 2Br, 2Ba. C.M apt $300 Ip lltlvl Actl 536-1437
$2000 !ached 2 car ~rage pool nome. Buy wtrent drapes no Piii $500 & mo 6-46-1372 TTR•CTIVE 2Br 2ba. mo. ulll Incl 64!>-9390 Seper lie olllce & re-Wnow k rheven 115 • 56•°"1 --0-.1-..... -.. -,-.--"-,_-,-
$1200 I 5 1923 P C $250 eec ulll pd " etrooma 35' I* IQ n or • op •· .. · •• .. n; Cann«y Vlllaoe-2 Bdrm, mo 91 •11 So 81 P lza 631-5230 Betll
1
N_ I Br wfgar1ge no 1ecurlly. peek view. nr Laguna HouH . Private Bkr. 6'5-8268 collect, 24 hourt Avail now Take tale·
molllte lurnlahed $600 2 Br 2 Be C111dlH In "The 539-8190 Best Ally lee pe11. $420/mo 1>e 11 ch S 8 7 5 D • e Roomf 8elh/Entrence. phOna aurvey 6 10 9 PM WATERFRONT HOMES Terr II c e ' .. Irv) n e Sul It .. 2214 Lerge 2 Br I Ba up1talra fS.45-!1577 6•5-6459 $350 4117~3111 1200·2500 sq.n Weal Ir-... ., Waat.. 402' Mon ·Thure Stans $4 75
INC. 63 t-1•00 $775/mo tgl story con-IC Ni<:I ., ... quiet. gar1ge EASTBLUFF I I IY1rneom.,S .. 5 ·o'ncmldos oHT~om' Need lo borrow $25,000 p I u. b 0 nus c. 11
••
1
...,.,. lal • 4._ do. all 2 car gara~e, 1Br + den condo clean, S515fmo 631-6812 NewerWlth1 &011
2,;rBdrm epac oue ltatala Wut .. 2tOt .. $2500 - -aa -C 1 11 /di br, p1110, ¥law, pool, 851.8928 · ' In min of lncre-964-8150 10 AM thru 2 Agl 11arley Derr ef 1Pacou1 v rm n rm. •Townhouse 2 Br 1 •~ 631•555 $590 mo . No pate Fe•I._ ... , We.tt41 menta. Wiii pay 20% PM BAYFRONT, 2 Br. 2 Be Mu SS9-9400 "'ahopplng&lwyt $550 Be. Patio. gar , dw , 644-4787. '1 1100 IQ ft w/ottlce. ba & APR Call 111 S PM, --------$ 1 3 O 5 I mo He rb mo Ref• ( 2 1 3) ssso1mo 548-lloe4 1----------Profenlonal, married werehou11 Top loc, fwy 640--1287 llCIUTll s&Lfl
213·471-3577 123 E Orenge1r .. condo, 2 BR. 347.34119 .......,.SliBnU ulet2Br.1Ba,pool,ger. couplewlthlwOchlldren, ca 87~251 •---------Carpet end draperies
Bayt 1 Ultle j · 1 Ba. by ltrHme wf WTlllE ~ I'll patio No pell Nwpt local bualneu, looking ---------MtttlllH, T.D.'14021 Full or pll1 llme Selery
ron • 1 relng, tennta, pool, 11c Tutla 2290 Br ••••T11•1Ta · Hgu. 1901 15th s1. for 3 10 4 br, 2 car ger. .Ho PR n . p1u1 eomml$SIOl'I Exper C...u •11 ll&r 2222 No pets Avl Mey t 2 . 1'.t BL TownhouM, .,._ " SISOO/mo. 6'2·7340 home In good neighbor· Older metal bldg In I.I. IATIUI I 1590. 675-9229 011 Redhlll Cnernlng 2 cupo111 garage, 1m111 8Hulllully landaceped,__ ________ hood Excellent refer-eo.11 Meea.. Sulleble tor ·~ le I only 549-6181 Mr Hal
Ocean view, beautllul ,... br, wllfl)lc & epaoe age pet oil, laundry rm, lrptc garden llPll. Pool & SpL ''' IESE·YE m I b4e 5 • • ... Denial Au I • per modeled 3 Br. home, 3 ua ltac~ 2241 kllch shady yd Kida olc. Avlll Aprll Petloa/dacke No pe11 n :=:.,'1!:.tion ~~ ~~000'agse.F.°'c-~001 .. ~1~7t3or70• Specie In 181 & 2/ld Ro A M ..: x Ba. Se 11 or Ren 1 $400'1 llal lak11 111 2543 Oranna or 1 Bdrm $485 GATED VILLAGE COM· .,.. ., ....., T0'1 noe 11149 k ' . h ust \1 8 toH~~.
S C Br. 2'A Ba. gated, walk 53M1llO Best Riiy F ..-161 E 18th 6-42 ,..,..,. MUNITY. 2 & 3 Br 2'n provide gardener end Aalt lor Jim Robt. Sal11er NH/CM II e 10 ave t me o . rty 120 0 I mo 11 I I to bch S lOOO/mo .. 2541 Orenoe --vouv b 1,.,..,. 1800 n 1 home m1lnten1nce.1---------R.E. Br .... -8d "--·i~ 11tary. Newport Beach 7141831 5137 W 22tl TSL u-....1 ••2 1'""" 9• vvv· eq. · o p f S 1300 .... tt lron1 ~. ~ .,.._ .,..... ~ • ,..,. •80 I • Cu1tom Riiy 770-9777, Htaluttr ....,... ,_ • """ PURE LUXURY G re 11 leaie leve or ...., v"' ••2-2171 ... ~ ,..11 .,....,._ BAYSIDE PLACE BAY · Clllre Ler-2 Br. 1 Ba. u...,.alra. 2 Bdrm 111' Ba SS60 .,. Sunn. 645-7300 any-reer drtve In dOOf $4 51-"'"-----"'"-""""--1---------FAONT .necloul 2 br 2 • Older I Br wfyard, E~i1ld1 $475/m"~' No 2250 Vengu111d agu, S PAS In every llme. ~,mo. 1701 Whittler St. WIDOW HAS SSS for Dentel Recepllonlsl Ill· .,... • '. I ' I 2•a2 garrcdener pd garage "'•" 96211 home • m11tar iutle. •---------uya. o5 '0·11352.· eua, T O'a, '"10,000 up. No perlence neces11ry, 4 bl. S1700 mo. Biii Grun-_,... 11at -$465, no peta. 752•5822 pets 631-11155 ~-dining rooma. wood Cot11ge/ prlv living 846-068'i • credit ch.c.. no penally day week. Lagun• Hlll1
ay, Rllr. 675.(Sllll 4 Bdrm. 2 be, NICE VIEW, Lrg 2 Br. 4/plex, SSOO/mo, Dua Ptiat 272' burning llr•plecH. ml· quart«• wanted by IWTll St -•• Call Oen11on Aeeoc _77_0...._2_7_5 ____ _ IPEITlllW HUI S800fmo Call Vicki Cede UaJ. 2410 nu crp1. dw. dn1trs. Wf ••B•llChet=--or""'"'e""'p..,t,-e-l-I -u.-tll;.;;.-pd;,;;, crowave ovena. prlvll• retired carpenter Wiii tf!lt oP-873-7311 OENTAL·PEOO BACI<
I om UllT1 YllW 495-'090 "'-'u• I BR -•.r SC P'-• I I d e 6 4 II • 8 3 2 II . .......... lo ....... Fu'n 1v·•1 palloe & yards, t"dener cor11ldar cerpenlry/ Ill· Id C 0 d I OFC o I latant """' ~ ·-~ ......,_ ""'' • .. provided. EL GANT ch 1 11 11 Ela • .M. ut1I e or * * • • • T I , 1 · r v ng eaa ·
1 oom L 2 I I It ... 2"r9 Reaon-Llke tdull t11ct 645-61125 S360f mo 661~142 LIVING......., 15 mtnul• ange 075' r~75c Y 06' RV, IJ•ller or bo11. • ~ non-amkr Nwpt Cnlr rom every r . ge !!!!' ac. ~ w/pool, g11e. S47o+'40 ._1_1_2-.. -.-,-,---1---------~"' country 1-oo en S351"4> I Id f 11~~** 644-061 1 br, many emen1tie1. 3 Br 2be, lam rm. ffml ulll 1111 d lacounl, or • ' •• 111., IOW YIEW from Fa1hton lll1nd, 7 PM . n1 •rm ot .. ---------11275 mo. Cell PetJlck. •••1111 mlnutat to S.C Pl•za i---------itorage. 10x20, 145/mo. S7100·•12.300 lll'i't% trefts Penet deya 752•1440: evn & dining. lrplc. huge malr p u r ch • 1 e op 11 on _. From Dene Polnl'1 motl J•Jlt EHi 01 Newport ,,,._ f In _12 f.li.y access. 642-8069 HHOned and current wtlnd 72().. 968 aulte w/Grecten tub, pool 775-2580 1---------1eeluded acenlc blulla, wllH er t ,.~ ---------7141831~21 (631-'4341 Pert timer Full llme ar-1 1 ' & nune. 300 11 lrom Lerge. CIHn. I Br Apt llke newt 2Br w/lrplc, ro &F So of Siil Diego $65, .,,, git, 1t,,,_ Oflly -} P/P Chltec1urll dral11 ~
3 bf c:hermer. 2 be, 2 car harbor S 1750/mo Clll CONOO·Adulla, spottese. pool, In dry lac. neer litre lg pvt patio S750 wy rom $1,000/mo 325:J 17th PiaC'e.' C.M. '"Aa=•::.•;;.•=•:.;:C;.;:l;.;:•:::;t=•;.:.11.__ ----------1 wttn xlnt 1111111 for eomm·1
garage, trplc, oak "°°"' 840-5377 <>< 546-3208 2 lrgSBrC, ~.~·all amenl-•S388hop,•. ut!~•. pd .,.,From mo. Cell 661-8H I or 63 t-5439. 2473 011nge 646-5137 en 11AM -apaoe planner. 556-2904
watk to pvt beach L "'"Bl tt Cond 2 1
1
11es r1_... .,~ Nearh mo. "'00 ....,_ M·F 9·5 &43-0212 Ave .. Cotti M... Aaatuceanb ll02 Ea1lt111tat H-IW •rcin••y $l200/mo. Avell. May 1 rg"' u o. • ry. rwy, • rporl o be Nr beech 1ge 2 bf 1 b• ewport Height• excep-Clo•• to S .C Pleu. - -.,_ -.,.
T60-l1M 4 Br. 3 Be Newly rel\lrb, S626fmo 835-1455. lrplc, 0•1w , frlge, bll· Supe< Mal qui.I 1 Br 1 llonel view, 2 Br, 2 ea. l40/mo. Storage only HPllMITITIYE lelt Wut.. 5100 Need •8Cfow eacrate1y
O•I Mar'• Une1t 5 rm
hOme wffrp+c & '4'lew 111
$775. Kida/pets hurryl
53M1110 Belt Rly Fee
Super $ 1295/mo cony. No """II S495 & Be. VIiie. mini view, bal· turn or unlum. 631-4060 Call 754-0588 am• with e•pet. lo work Jn 675-2490 A-·-••11 r.-1..... dep 178Sv Anehelm cony $450 NO P•I• ,_________ Accounll Rec1lvabl•I Huntington Beach Call
GE B ---IUH 873-3313 VERSAILLES Ofllft ........ 2914 .......... Rlolpttonllt for growing E1crow Conceptt LAA LUFFS CONDO a.IL:: 631-1286 egl. Bob Mllll· r---------1 VILLA BALBOA ..wr' property mgm1 co In 7141842•56155 Uk tor 2 11 r y, 4 8 r , 3 Be .-Cati. Spec" 2 Bd S660. 1 8d CONOOS FROM $600 11117 W11lollH, N.8. 278 WI 1A1f H.8 Accounll reoelveble CarOI
$1300fmo. 644-2607 ftalaaala 2'97 .... -2-Br-2-BL-n-,-8-C-Pl-eze-. 1476. Newly decorlled. AGENT S39-4lle0 to 3600 eq. 11 2.•35 aq "Wily not let ua help'1" compv1er ,.q'd, Invoice ---------Herbor VI-Knoll 3Br ............... _ 3 S O/W, Ger No pet11----------tt.Sulteblelormedtc.ior Marl~ Troubla'?/ DI· entn1/ e1a1emen11/ ba-Executive Secretary 10 lam rm, view, s 1400 mo ..,........!Toni home bf, • BAYFRONT • Spectacullt .A. patio, pool, •P• 496-0271 Shorn 2 & 3 8t Clentll. A,_,t s.41-5032 . , ~ I I 01
4114•2890_ ba. $2000 mo. AveM. Mey v1-. epac. 2 br. 2 ba, $5115. No peta. 752-5822 r---------1 2 ba lrplc dahwl\f •-·· YorC4I Family Probleml'? lancing, entry level ~ wor,. or ... cut ve •
111. Mr1Long.850-1190 plua study. Pvt pukg. But. ltaclt 21Pc'a· ger'•g•• ·,.25 •• Prime Fountain ve1i.., of-oomeattc Violence'?/ !Ion. Cell Biii 8AM·t~ rector In non-profit or-
C..t...... 2224 $1175/mo 3 Br 2·~ ea bolt •llP IVlll (7141 WllTUll YILUll S725rmo 1176-1042 Ag~ flee. 81"4 eq It 10529 Child AbuH7f Chlld Noon 536-7551. ganlzatlon Mu11 have
Weatelde C.M. Cleen & I cull om Cond o Nwpt 752-96 t 1 or 5-6491. Bech. 1 & 2 Br. Apia Oelu•• pooltide xiii l1tge · • S 1 a 1 1 r ( o 1 c 11 ) Cullody'? Immigration &tt't , .............. lt..t XlNT aecre11r111 sklll1,
C 2
pool, ep1, VR. ~1 2 b r, 2 b I , b 11 -1n1, T 1'4/llM-I 134 (Ae1Ugee}1 •1-min 2 yr IJU* Job r ..
eharp 2 Br. 1 Ba. car-, .. t car ger, pool. VACA TI 0 N I BAY. No pe1a. lmm«I occup· dlWShr 111\ mllll ~ IN HOUSE CALLS Poeltlon with Newport qulr11 tact, dl1c:retlon,
pet1, tenced p1llo. en-tennla,aoawtdhoollup FRONTAGE fpler 1111 ency No pet1. S500/mo. WWPllTOlltll l14-111 H4l 8eech lnYMlment Amt. and po lu Good
clad g1r1~e. no pell Avell Aprll. 5126, or 2 Br. saoo. I Br. 2 Br $535-$545 638-3362 Fu• ~Sult•• • Account• p1yeble end beMllll/ worlllng condl-
$525/mo p!U1 $525 -Tll .... W -1111 S550/mo. 303 E. Edge-TSL Mgmt 6-45-8122 .. Oil llSTS H Celt collect, 24 hr computer exper rew'd llons. C.11 979-7900 for
Credl1 check req -•«. 1"471·28et •-ta,.... •AA.A C1llt 553-0940 appointment
548-6442 or 770-5629 LUSI I t •-··... THE SEVILLE •676 Furn/unf\lm -~ 3 Br TownhouN, powd-!W1tf -• 2'tf Newly decorated 2 er 1 1 All YOU need tor one Anlmll Hoepltll need• Ml Experienced Rental Car
MeelVerdeelllC home 4 er rm 2 BL Ir""-' com---w/ger, new crpta. drpe, rcl•. pool, gym & IPI. :5•7t5. 42118 1, !~11&5.Pllulxo Monthly~ time kennel peraon. pe<eon needed lo wrl11 br 3be.211""' fem rm • ,,..., ""I f d.... I Ito F s 60 • •v 640-$470 fNIUI\ ADS Mon-Fri. (Coa11 MHa) cont11c11. 7-11 Rent • · -·,. · mly pool. $1000/mo. .,.,na, nc •-w P• · 0 Pll• rom 4 blt·lna, pool. BBQ, no \M1U Call between II AM to 8 Car 650-1180 din rm, wet bar. 3 car 1173-11858 ~pulous single, one wller pd. 846-85111 *aatm 1ff1A11r•*
l arege. Gardener Incl I 20111-0 S1nt1 Ana $520 pe11. no e11oeptlone. Xlnt ".. -•R[ FREE PM 548-3794 1200 roo. 838-5015. HARBOR VIEW • I"•· e1fy & two bedroom Call 1•6 536-4 l20 Huntington CrHk Apll Hpl loc1t1on • Ooverf 1 MO FREE RENT n Experienced Baker· ( 10
9\199 n0-1804 4 Br, 2 Be. S1250fmo. 1p~rtmenh ' · LulWfY ldult IMng. 1 l 2 W11tclltf. Wlllll to W•t· 1 room to 7 room• Adi II NII yra) llell&n and French e40-4099 or 975-0040 S4t6fmo. 2 Br. rn 81. Bdrm, wtth oarlQll. Me1 ottt Plaza.. Cell ,..,111 otc. AlrPot1tt Inn & Frw'f9. No Cal: HouMllMplng, coolllng. ~~~.~~:i:.~.,y.
3 Br. 2 Be, ger. yd & upper unit, bateony, LfR. & water paid, 1.i.v1Md IV m19. 64&-e&48 ..... required. t••-llll blbyllttlng tor 1 yr old. 07 .. 20•0. A~L ,_ P··" ~n. $875/mo 287 PANORAMIC c:e1port. eecurlly. From S510. CeH Clll AM 833-3223 .. a-Ou1Ch 1p1tklng pref, __ .,.. __ .. __ ....,. __ ..,. __ _._
IWOod. 04~73. OCEAN VIEW 527 W. Wllaon 848-1813 trom M IH Jan C. ml AlfPOf1 ll'M-Exec:. Room, bolrd. & Salety. •FASHION COUNSELOR
Eul"llde cluple11. 3 BR, 2 ~~~. ~~s~~;;~~,,:: TSL Mgmt '42-1803 w-1 Br. wltll llOVI & reftlOI. Suhtt from 2211-45011 ~ Bcft. 650-4328 S12/ht, PfT. ~
Ba, ~. encl Piiio, 2 aty. 844· t480 or 830-5050, wtll' A• YIU.All YIUMI g1rege. l300fmo. St per eq ft/Meny xtru ..... NTt AIYt A.,.&f ~ 1~ 7
$080 mo. 040-099T ext 4220 ru Nt• rn -Baell, 1 t. 2 Br. Apia. 497-33te Cell 667-7010 CALL Automo1tw repair 11\()p. --------r ~ """' v• NeW t 6 2 ldtm luxury p_. AndeB 836-11163 Fiim S 11~ T ·• .-Y I PllYAYI Specioul 38r, den, lg fem UNfUINJSHCD AYlll lmmed. pool, ape, APt• In 14 plena. 1 Bdrm ta ha flit dDllTIYI lllTU• Gener •I •hop lebor · P....., r .. nee. P11'1
t tli trllll'. turn or un· rm w/w1t ber 6 2nd •LL UTILITlrS L.A. catpOrt. No peta. from •MO •. 2 Bdrm from DELUXE 1 BR CONDO. 1 MO FRl!E AE.NT Found: Golden Lib, 0 M I n Im um w I g e time. m11ure peraon,
f""' Utll pd. Range & frplc. quiet Nwpl Hgll " L Becll f.4lO f 695. Townhouu from lmmao, pOOI, tennl9, ape, With ehort lt rm teHI, :!~ YUlc;....~1C.,t!',!1! .. 2!1 S3l·T2TO ~::llb~:'ii~~. Ea":~':oh ..
trig. '305/mo. 1•1 p1u1 .,.., Av.II APf 1 S1000 PAID, HEALTH 1 Br 14754495 HH + poola. 1tnnl1, M•n.y ~ored ... Com· NII wvtce aul1•. Keep .. _. 9 ~. _.......,.... BABYSITTEA WANTED 20/llre·wll Call blwn
eec Of!IY. 490-1117 mo. 6.45-05s.4. ClUIS, TtNNIS ~s't·Momt. 764~ wet11l1lla, pondal Q.. m•m•·llCY l.405fmo, your overl'lt1d low l Found: Yn~ M. Cocke r from 8 am-1 pm, Mon-e ·II AM 0 n 1 y M. F
EASTSIDI 2 er, 1'A 81, WNlcllff~. 3 Bt SWIMMING plus 2 8t garaen llPt. patio. 1 ~o:1d~o1:~~ 8l1nl'tec:i~~ 57. 1• ta~Dr~t~: !:."~·?sl~t~.o~ ~-~::~:."',,,2:':1~ _83_1-ee. __ 12 ____ _ ::,C· tnclry rm. fncd Yd, 3 Be. trpc, pallo/11bor, mU<:h mort! Sorry, ol\llcf Ot<. No peta. Slor• f'rwy drive Hori II on I N • w 9 or t a•• c l't 645-7405 boy. 842-tOOll FAIOAY PERSON. typing H'5~iv:i'b~111~~ ~19;f1:;'"'· 11100 noPtts.Modtll •oe rm . 1001mo ~10Mcf~and 831-3051. T 11<llllnMdld.hour1M, Or•~• tllen 0111 optndal"'9to6. Me-M50 wt11 on Mol'adCS.n to llAIAM m'B. FounO:Ptt8ult~M .. &mo9. BabyllUer uee' Thurt Mon-Fri. TIO-HU •
• •1rfront 3 b 2 bl '1 8e1wlnd V1111oe. (71•) Wkl~ r-1.i1 n--av.ti. • ... , IUll tll'llwtll, W. St NB. •flernoon•. refa, 0•n 780.e&n 84&-1 ....:.. ... ~· • .....!; mo. +' Oakwood •.......a...LI-..... ... ' ..... v.. ., •n. n 0 n • m k --------·-......,. ••""" ~ "3-01tl. •to l 11p. Color TV. Of!f!IOI/ WA,.EHO~SE, J,teryenn 031-1 ' · • • r ·
3 bd i\t b• townhouM. ellp $400. 873-1494 Garden ...... ..t.a-H Hew dUpl9x. 2 l 3 bdrm. PhoMt '" room. 2a74 1000 " to 2100 ft. At· FOUND: A4ng In Founteln 173"-1432 nu .... PAY d~..!w,. 111~~· ffpll, excluel~ Weetclltt VIII•. ........ ........... (f800.•a• .. ,50,I). Apt, 2 ~. Q~I I &PTI. Newport 11-wd. OM. tnletlw, well malntllned v,,.,·~ oenl9r leby eltter. reec>. tun. 2 HIT·Tm ... -_ -..... t-6001 t u ferton Ave, u,e , ap1c 0111L neer 846-7446. modern bulldlno• on io.,ttty t82...eaaJ · ~ --. Newport lcfl. opponunlU• 1vell1bl•
COftdo 4 Ir. a ... ..... !!002 ~.· ~.·.!!!'.:.} ltadl.I... • 4 t. 'I. 4 wk n d a bH Oh, 2 I r. 1 .......... , v 405 ~ l quiet •tr .. t. A11lon•d 10 mo. l I yra. Mui\ With tlle LOI Ane•IH ..,.,, .. ,.._ ....... ,...._., HO lmM /we. 142-stfa .. 5 Mon-I' lownl'IOUM . 1595/mo -., • • 1' ,..,Kil pwttlno. oarevee ev11i. lott ..,,! otd dk ~ M fllV'I tfllN. TlmH Qlroutallon 0• ~~u."~·r~e~o'.er~~. prtylte. f1200. (jtl6lll} Ee9tllde ~ 2 Bt. 2 MO-IHI ;2~,:o~a. .. ~t Y, ..._ ut. I . INuftl......... Ml-3204 pertrntnt In M door,.
... SS40 T'hw~-Perk Lido nHr Hoao 6•5-UO• le. yenJ MIS. '* S3t0/mo. up. Baon, 1 & h 141-4IOO, ~ts dtl went. '40-n1• 18ery/~ neectt door-newipa"r Ultd•
Hoell>· ' hire I09 ~. bdi 1314637 2 Br. unlum l Mii. pool, Bdrm w/ ~v. nr • LUii ,ounO. trtlh 8et1er. 1121 oount•r help, Pr•f fte. =~m. G111ten1H 2,t:'ia!e~n2ctc:'1f1~'. ~~·,~· = 700 ~./So lllflNe ..... ltaa :J::2 Flortd,.'2~172 ==-~-1 :" • allllTY ~:1~1 View Hom••I f;t::l~~::~Y· °" ~.:,n-:."i
Meo. fD-21'° w1.11s-~1i. 1110.-1 Ntw duptex, 2 & O l>drm. FIJM rm lrl pvt home tw Pnm. ,._. .. Mela ..., PM, or 4 , .. • • , ... "2 SJll (MOO-MIO). Apt, 2 bl ... "... ao' , ..... •hf b•th, tkln _.... petl! ,ouncl ........ blll 6 ~ ~-T~ II PfO'o'ldlld, Po-
To Pl1c• 1our 2._. .:":foC:C::,,3~i • lUI flulfe rton Au 1 IR. t IA CONDO. H llwl , n/emk:r , tu11~~!n 11~".°· ~~·,::er= .. •11111 =:"~ ~.:::. "P'ut R.-:ult" 144-lth ....,. t • 1·1II4 wk n d • c1own11elr1, frpto, dlltl· ga.11u 142·1llO Mato betOt let= ltnmMftet• ~0 tOf ~1 Ceil •Trot.Mt bl ,, • °"THI IANO 142.-6002 e.a Mon-t' wUll.,, P•tlO. OetpOn. coM Of.,,.. OQffaf. pperlolfotd N•w Ao ,.,.
Slnic• OlredOtY ..,. ~ Ir. a eo.. llPI* llntt, F ........_,._.. ... AUf'IOI!. oonwntY PCloCI ~"'oap11e...,r• ''/u1~1~,..."'o· " -~~~· .._. Antmll ••· *""'' ,.. .... ,iauw . ....;.;;~..;.;:;:;,=-_,;...-_._ td • C&U Now bdr wet ,.,, perl furn., or,._,_,,... 91>1. No P4\e. MIO/mo, • '.... "' ' · """' ...-~ _ .. ..,_, ..... Hit 1U ..... Or ~· 111..,.,IMWlel Mot't ....... n....,.
...... 1671 !.11, :0:.~,t;aa·a~ wu l'ler, dryer 11101•. AC?lON 14$-.IOOOAetm.no • 00.. ,....., •H lebw ,.,.pita tllO C. O.M. ' '°"""""*'""" .i.1 w...,.... .. .._"""·M
• Ill' ......,.., t.M:OtM ,~. Vwt, Of wtrifir, encMd Cll 2 ~"'""""'°"'CM • ~ ·~·ao. Md ... ,. ,, ... fl lleftll ... r .~.11 foll fl•H •
... JU Olflll A .... , ~ T~ fMtH I dr•~ In "" ~. '*"""*'· lilt ' ,... .,.. ............. 'i:.E... , ... •""' '°' ... ""'°"' .....,..,.. ~ ....... ..... I Idle lltme wttf\ • llOt ...... ........ Wnt •••• O•llY flllot ~ p$11el I -.. w \111111'11 ... Dell'/,,,. ,,.. oodltl •IUI • .,..-....... 1.0.. • ... " ,.. -• ~ ""°' Olattlfted Ad. TIL Mom\. 141·1IOI ..., .. ,. Ol••lfl• Ad. 141""11 ............ .,. ... Oii Zr f Ml. ....... n WP ..
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Orange Ooa1t DAILY PILOT /Wednaday, April 0, 1883 D7
' fi ' lessi1n1al Service · Directary 51 ·
l.n.&.n Caattt/ Cmtt!t lal!t1tl•en! 1194,.., ... ff Cl!tala1 l!aea ..,P• ... l.-1!1..,y..., ____ '91 lmtff/ lnetn llkl!HI Cn•M"" $1.14 per day ITAPl.IY CON&nt Concrete1 email or lge P'or your wedding, the ONl CALL ~· IT1 ....... .... IRICICWOAK: Small Jobe L..oGM l)elnlw needt #Otte IMIWUI -.&.'I •AHO"l.A PINTUA4,..
New & ..-iod, lltllah car-Jobe. Remove oldJ re· IOOUttlO-' b4MMlty of VOi· P1lntlng carpentry ~. eo.te Mau, Qu111tr WOfk, eoonomy !Jlperlenced & profM Con.uttant/ Couneellno ll'lal'• ALI. rou pay P•~· door h•ntng. pltoe wi n-. l4S.IDl2 oa a gull1r t73.f4H rool1ng, ~Pl tlMm oin: 8'6-0221 aftwnoone lrvtne. A.fa. 87f.3176 ratee, tr .. eat . ...._7180 llonel. Very reaeonabte In 111 m1ttera of fife 301n~~· ad "3 '1· 8at-1S71 Ille Ctrudt Tilt e.rut '"' le11lr Ing, o-rdenlng, ywd cln-11111 llttt-Frplct bulll, remodeled. Pttnllng exterlOf & Int•· ratea IOf all of yow pool t?&.249& °' t1M714 ,._, .. __ • •-L.1--- --_ up. elo ~t retea I 1 k a 1 b 1 k 1 11 nMd1. rror expert ..,. • ..... tu.I Advtaot -..... -..... .;, ITIYI tt.t TIU UI 8PAING8·HINGE8-NEW 8TAAA 6,.._.471 ~.!o l!.:,.:~;w;J er~~~; ty guarantHd 111oe. c*I ~ 6 pm. 1n ;;:;;l~Ma. marrleoe.
DllY •New ceblneta, cabinet e-1 prtoee. teS-3213 Oc>enef• All tet:>elrt REASONABLE RATES Mature, rMPOM'ble pro----------to 8 Pilll· "no..,_, atr1111roblem1, eto ft facing. bare a rormlc1 l!rnergenoy wv. Loweat feMIQnat looking 10 hou· IRICKWORK. 8m111 or Int Ellt '°' belt., wortt, Pl.EAH klillJ> ttylne 9 3 1 • 4 7 e o 1 an e
counte1top1. t.42-0881 Ckll• Cl!t ra1 .. 11 ti )'fl In C.M All tyr.H of work·rea/ .. 111 for eYmrner mon· lge fob•, repalr1. Local lower prlcH . Call Jack (l1•) •Mllt 13 1~ PILOT --1430t&e Tom 687-4480 comm· 8la & am lobe. the beglnnlnn In M•"· reta &45-8612 138-8713 Ctr•ta t..ovlng a R-c>Onllble Dey or nfgM 6.ca-2174 Wiii Cir• for. Pell .,:d --------20 yr• •Ill>· POOi W'V, ,.. IJriakltr• SERVICE Free Week In April 11 • .....a-ala1 B all 111 I C 11 Muonry & 8wcco: n-& ,,....,lat moldl,..,,, •1rl" compl• ..,_....,....,.....,._ ___ _ Aec>elf·Alletallone F___,. d-Coat M ,...., a a1 g • Y u I t • • · • r-·•r. All ,.,.,,_ Quelltv, .... ~..,.....,._.._____ ··• '" • AM ~*'~ n..--~ ... -., ......... , ..,....., Yll • ... ._ ...... ...,._______ 11• ••7• aft-• pm ......, ,,....... ., F ..... h~ I •~ = •10• melnt • repair """"_.....,.,...... .,., .. , 631 M25 w11-Tllll ·-,.,.. .... " -"· · Loweat prlee.131·2346 .... ntar...,. n ' "· · • · Rep11r1. lie •2828 a NDECTORY Panel·patloa-1~ • wr• DUMP JOBS l~~~~~~-~~~I._._ HANG N0/8TRIPPI Fr .. ..t. 24 l'lr _.., Uc 64M87 14
UI\ Jerry ~ 13 Xlnglat "cilUdh..,!.1119. e·xp~ Spy: J~'~~ 1~~ & Small Moving Jobe FAE!, hon.11 6 reltable. llJ'fllll VIM-MC Seoct &4MG25 283800. MM280 Tilt 4
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Rm add p lo "''... each Ctll MIKE IM&-1391 Reta. av111. Paul Butler ABC MOVING I! I ,_ .. ,n n .. at COV9fl ar mother Eva/wknd1 Landaoeplng-Vd Clnupa i---------1 64&-4840, ext 802 • -xp•rt w1t1ooverlng n· 1 ..... =v.,.p...,..._ _____ ----------
y fNf Dally Piiot
Setvtce Oltectory
~ .. F1ar\CM1 Cll,;l~:o7v:n52t OK. 780-8235 Tree trlm/rarnov-Malnt HAUL·MOl/E-REMOl/E Quick, Careful 8ervloe. 11allatlon. Aeu. Contul• "' ... •H-• TILE INSTALLED ... __. "....,... " Furniture, TrNll. Tr-tmmaculate, r•aponalble Uc T138048 552.0410 tanl A.Nlgnmt. Mt4690 ..._.. All kinda. Guaranteed.
R.mod.llng' 'lnl.h ~ar-CaatrMttn, Gtatral Irrigation Jim 95t.ot29 983·5'416 NORM bu1tneaa wom•n Long Put, Pr...,..I 1 FutUf'e Raia. JoM 893-0487
Aapreaentatlw ~ --time local reeldent with •A·1 UYlll* Blackwelder Peperhano· Lk:'d 71 4·527·3408 . pantry, ooor hanging. Rernodel/~ra, comm. Tll 1•111 MDI HAULING Beet quality. 26 yr exp Ing & Ramov11 Oual. T ... I Maaorwy: MW & r• w .... 11, ut 122 painting, roonng, etec:trl· & reald. Lrc·a. bonded, IAwn·trM-lhrub tn1tt1t Cleanup•. yard/tree ave. ref. A"'all June thru Sapt Competitive ratM. work only. 49'4·3818 l.L Pref!!fl Sertictl pair. Alt typea. Ouallty.
UI, etc. 63 t-8371 Mike Ina. For e1t, 662-9142 Tree trim/Removal RANDY, 842-76A7 or Oct. 873·97 t 2 LIG T 118 428 730-1363 R ... tal su....-.. 1,., h'-e Frea "' UC. 131-2346 Lawn malnt/Rototllllng • ' Pfltl!lrtlltJ ..,, · .• ,. "" ,. Anutieal C.W.11 Cupt Sertiet "·'· l1ffllae I lt1 Free estlma•• 548-6086 Hauling, clean-up & tree lactal Tax STARVING COLLEGE PROF. PHOTOGRAPHER llr. H2·'1l4l Trtt s.nkt
,._ & AMc>rey. Rarnod, No SIMm/No Shampoo UC. 30e888 Remodel, trimming , 1 10 mi n STUDENTS MOVING Model ponfolloa. por-ltflal:l.J:: TrH T-'-/l1••lf
C81'penlry. llc. 1414881. Stain Spactallst. Fut Add'n1 & Cab1Mt1 ~°:~::'~~mng 6S74271 8ob F~=~J: ~ CO. Lie. T124-43e trtlta, waddings, banda, ~ ,_
Ability Bldra 730-1900 dry. Free eat. 839-t582 6-48-8688 645-4844 ee eat. ••2."""7 COiiege Student with large .... t •371 lntured. 84 t-8427 etc. Studio exp. FREE J.O Horn Reflnlahlng FStum!prindJI. ~ ~t1o .,.. • .., I ...,, -W TC US Antlq·-. kit. ••bl--'1. rM.., m .,...,_ D all truck. oweat rate, A H GROWi 5x7 w/alttlng. 548-8918 w-..... ,,., . U'1tlta1/ lea .. tl Shampoo 6 •team clean. !J! Ralptl Cabellero & Sona prompt. Thank you. Oave'1. Moat l 10·S76 or nne painting. 845-0&&4 TREE TRIMMING, rarno-
Color brightener•, wht DRYWALL TAPING Compl. malnt, comm/ Court. 7S9· 1976 20% oft tut year'•. Wiii Palatla1 Plaiter/ l1elr vat, yd ctean-upa, haut-~C::':;~~~ crpt1 • 10 min. bleach All Textur .. a Acoulllc r91. Tree trimming & ,... 1rave1. 6A 1.0929 ... fla1 Ing, Jim t.42-6302
F-eat. Uc. 831·2"•s Halt, llv/djn rm• $15; avg F,... eat Kevin 973-1503 mov1I, CIHn-upa. Free a ••• a.,.111 I ' • .........._.. ftlf Plllnllt Eo·s PLASTERING H ..__ Roofl all 1 .... ,,.. room S7 60; coud'I 110; eat, &4~54 aft. 4:30. -ltrtast ,., .. ,..,_ by Richard Sinor Lie. Ouallty pat~texturee u.... "9-ypea, Tattrlat laMa)t ctir SS. Guar. ellm. pet DRYWALL/ACOUSTICAL Painting . Carpentry I CPA w/IRS wOf'k exper 280&44 14 yr• 0( happy Int/ext. Neat. 645-82S8 Llc~;r~~~34 -Pv_t_T_u_t,.o .. rln_g_/-Re_m_e_d_l•-1 -odor. Crpt r.palr. 16 yr1 ALL PHASES K&D Landacape Malnt. Tiie ·Remodel. Bonded. can 11ve yOu big 11$ on IOc&I c:vstome11. PLASTER PATCHING tnltructlon. >Ont ra.itti.
Ot'lv-•y·Parklng Lot exp. Do work myaell. BUD (714) SS2-9S82 Compl. Garden~np.~29[V89· Uc. 682· 7432/844,..798 · your taxes. Your home or Thank you, 1>83-4 I 14 RHtucco1. Int/ext. 30 llJI rHfl'fi lll·IHI K-8. (213""92-3784 Rec*f'l-8ealcoattno Refs. 654..0t23 Free eat, ~<>-.. my otc. Rau ratea. N p 1 545-"""77 ,.., S&S Aaphlt e31-4t891.k: We C11e c t Cleenar'a llltctrlcal COMPLETE GARDENING ltaH Cltaal11 Randy 895-6004. PAllT YHI OUTU yra. eat. au u Free eat. le. #3e1042 TnUa lenlct
' 09l'I Hallbetg Grading St~-,.._'!'_ & U"""' ELECTRICIAN. Priced SERI/ICE Ull Jerry'1 ROBIN'S CLEANING FREE EST. INT/EXT. ~-.. t/ltnart. ~~ •• -~!.. REPAIR SPECIALIST I _,, ____, ,....... t ht f ti t <>--•-FIEE REFS. LIC. 320881 ..,. ..__ ............. Shall...comp-Shlngle Typjng/WOfd Proceaalng 6 Pevtna CO. Rea/comm Truclc. Mount Unit. Guar. r g ' rae 91 ma• on i..wn ~·-631-439S Service · a thoroughly TEO. 7t4/871-9047 81ocXwatla. 588--4892 761-7718 551-5S52 · Oubl. M9)' revt9lona
UC. 3878804 842-t720 Rae. ratea. 64S.37t9 ~~:'ee~ ~~~3S9 Gardening , cleen-upi, clean house. S40.0857 PtollP 1 llUYllY Rea41onab'8 8s,_,041 labalu.t--trimming, C4tment worti. I upef1tee Housekeeping Your Home or Office INT/EXT. CALL JIM, Pla••'-1 *'"' IEPAll
"-CARPET INSTALLATION LIC'D ELECTRICIAN 545-t604 642-2985 Vee & 1Upplle1lncluded Call Now, 832-Mat 140-IUI •J•4•1a-r.,l'""l•'\J---Ul--·l-l-2-I SHOW. IN* WI .... Cltula1 =~{'<"',.;.. :..~~~~"fb.t ~. ~ ::" T~aJ 53 ~-7~;~~4 WllWf IWIT. Kitty 841-41170 Ladac1Jia1 INT/EXT PAINTINQ WATER HEATER Special Fix any leek. 751-4364 w~:~~r=s
eo.ta Meaa. 842-8482 Thomeoo Cari>at sa1e1 & RESIDtCOMM'LllND. c1n-ups. Raf• S36-1610 H~c~!rn~E~ce FHE lmUTll cu~t~~P~:!'.~. Pool '-'ets•Fumacea Suillutla1 OUallty woni guarentaed 1a11MaJ lnatall1tlon1. Comm/ 20 yrs. oo my own work. Mowing & edging, rus Xtnt refa. 642•8809 Sod, IC)(lnkler and ahn.lb Reel. Steve 547-"28l LOW COSTll 24 HRS Budget ratea-low fnln Free ea11rnate M8-739t
resld, rHtretchet 6 r.. Lk:. 278041. Al 646-8126 ratM, tree eat. lnatallatlon. Our work DAI/IS PAINTING Repalr-Replp.-Remodel Re1. Comm, boat ttlra John'• Window a..,,1ng Balloon Promotion• Unll· pairs. xlnt rel1. 1('430277. CHRISTY & SON Sam 788-8S24 QUALITY CLEANING 1 k DralM. Uc. 850-t030 Free •I. 641•7581 F t2 mlted: bright bouquet.i Greg 556-6324 with a peraonel touch only 00 1 expenalve. Int/ext. Acouatlo oemnga, r.. .... yra exp.
Same de)'. 494-7S50 24 HOURS. LIC'D G11denlng wanted, mow-BETH 850--0933 Check our prloea l>efOfe cabinet relln. Ina. Free lnitall-Replp.-Rapatr-ltcrttadal Strricfl 8'0-1081 · "-eat/ "-acrttt 53M121or850-0998 Ing. ed1g l ng. raking. you bu)'1 Uc. 2045t6. eat #386780. 842-7479 Free eat. Reuonlble. l!!flu/ fin &la.nu ---. ,,~ .._. . & _ _, 1weeplng, tree eatl-House & oftle• cleaning. CALL 646-1013. 1_Uc_'d_. __ Joh_n_83_1_-_1_15_1 Secratarlal ~: ~ Whal a Wonderful World
............. & A •. Cement-Muonry-Block ~.r .... an. MW r....,_r. mates. 6A5-7S4t Rellabte, thorough & u., •.•• .,.. •• IUl'I P&lllml" *'ID unM•n•* Ing, copy, etc. F .. t Mnl. ol Shopping, right It -~al r/~.:;,arma~ Walt...Cuat. work. Lio. Ouallty. Low prlcea quick. I 10 hr Ginger. ---------Top quality/RMI. ralee - • 676-4456. 780-83S9 'f04K ~tpa -vd•yt
.. ~'oommr .............. • #381057 Rob 5'47·2883 Lle'd. Free eat. 831·23'45 Bauyaaa · 754-7321 •tattauct Free •llinate 650-7169 Dratn•Repalr·Replpe Dally llot c rueilled .,..,. .,.. Dallas 6A6-28t1 Have you read today''I Adi. To place your eel, ---------Rod'e concrete & muon· Have aometlolng you want JACK OF ALL TRADES High 0Uall1y HouMWOl'k GARCIA'S MAINT ·,Bldg/ Custom Painting: lnt/eiq...1---------Claulfled Ada? 11 not, cell t.42·5678 and 1e1 a
SELL Idle 1tem1 with a ry. 9 )'Mrl ..,.,,. loc. to Mil? C~ Ida do c.11 Jack anytime. Reta. I am the belll 11'1r pk, 11 cat!*nlry. elec, Quality. Spring Special. Sell thing• fut with Dally you're mtNlng the beat ClaMlfled A6-I/~ help
o.ly Pilot Clualflecl Ad. Free eat 7 14/840-1705 ii welt 6'42·5678. Dey or night 875-30t4 673-7012 aft 6pm plum~ 497-38e1 Free Mt. Dave 873-2031 Piiot Want Ada bargain• In townl you.
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Tlaanclay, April 7
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Family member
observes unique anniversary by presenting you
with token of affection. Lunar position highlights
friendships, desires, opportunity for profitable
b~ invesunent. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio nauves
figure prominently.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Orders from top
may lack substance -have alternatives a t hand.
k~p options open. Grand opportunity exists for
advancement. added prestige, participation in
community pr oject which eventually can be
springboard to new career.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Good lunar aspect
highlights education, spiritual values, knowledge of
international law. travel. You'U have chance to
utilize talents. to pursue long-range project and to
gain a wider audience. Cancer. Capricorn persons
play key roles. CA~CER (June 21-July 22): Be aware of
financial requirements, special laws affecting taxes.
licenses and permits. Individual who would be .1
partner may be withholding some information.
Know it, remain alert, be aware and don't be afraid
to ask questions.
LEO (July 23 -Aus_. 22): Highl ight
independence, creativity, willingness to make new
start and to pioneer a project. Accent also on
partnerships, legal maneuvers, publlc relations and
marital status. You'll get to heart of matters.
member o f o pposite sex will talk about
commitments.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Basic achievements
are highlighted. Take one step at a time. Moon
position accents employment, knowledge of
nutrition and dialogue with dependents. Cancer.
Capricorn, Aquarius persons play significant roles.
First impressions prove accurate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22). Favorable moon
aspect highlights romantic involvement, speculative
venture, a variety of experiences and important
changes. Focus alao on travel. children. ability to
communicate and to reach a wider audience.
Gemini la in picture.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Attend to details,
accept restrlctions in philosophical manner Be
thorough, realize that confinement is merely a
temporary situation. Avoid heavy Ufting, remove
ufety hazards. Aquarius and another Scor pio
figure prominently.
SAGITTARl\JS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be ready for
change, travel, variety and necessity for outlining
project in writing. Short trip may be on agenda -
surprise visit is linked to a romantic situation.
Gemini, Virgo and anothe r Sagittarian play
Important roles.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Major domestic
adjustme n t is highlighted. Expenditure• are
necessary In order to beautify surroundinp, to
placate family member and to begin program of
remodeling, redecorating. Needed material will be
located. Check with Libra. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cycle is
auch that your pet"IOnality aparkles, you exude
charm and you are at right place at right Ume.
InJtial aetback Is due c.o rebound ln your favor.
You'll recoup recent lcm, you'll locate loet article
and t.erma will be deflned in manner which elevates
your pollUon. PISCES (Feb. 19-Matth 20): You gain stronger
foothold leadfng to emotional, financial security.
Look ~hind ecenee, be dttcreet and realize that belfti alone la not necellllrily ..me aa belna lonely.
Foci. UC> on hoephala, lnaUtutions, aped.al interest
ll"OUPI and deallnp with C.aprkom.
\ .
i t
:B•;;I:;;' ;;W;;•;;•';; .. :;;;m;:;S;:;;lOO~B;;•;;;;l'=W;;••;;t;; .. ;;;;;;;;S;;;lOO ltlt Waat.. 9100 ltlt Waat .. 5100 Btlt Wut .. 5100 Stir Waat .. 51001 Btlt Wu... SIM
lllEDIATE OPElllGS
Need telephone sales representatives to
st.art tonight in Cost.a Mesa office.
•Part time
•Must be at least 16
•No experience necessary
•Pleasant personality
•Reliable
•Good earning potential
142·Hll, ht. 312, 1ft. 15:30
PUT /TUii ml S.I Sates
Wanted adult• over 22 llEAll "' • who enjoy wonclng with youth Mu 1t be w ell •Olecount Lono Diltence
groomed, perM>nlble, • phone -wie. po91tlve motivator. Start •Outatandlng Income
S75 .. c 11 •Complete Training at per wee... a Catt Jeff Stone for Inlet· 2·5pm. 6-46-70211..-for view 859-72<>0. Sharron). ·
PAIT TillE Salea/Hardwar•.
IYUIWEEIEln FT/PT, Crown Hatdwere,
Make extra SS helptng 3107 Eeat Cat Hwy, CdM
youth carrlera promote SALES PERSONNEL ex·
their own ealabllahed per'd for tele m11t19'1ng.
routes. Mature, outgo-advertlaement promo-
Ing. attractive parental tlon. Exit pay, 848--0 149
typa peraon, pleaM call or 8'48-0171
2·5PM. M·F. 646-702t. 1---------Saleaperaont looking for
Plttttt C....t.f lalet career In adver11alng.
832-7306 (.,. meuage Madlcel, Oental. Xlnt Co. ----w-..a. wt1h room for advence-r-..-a ment Cell Wayne Chrts-No experience necH -t11n Ltd. Advart11lng .IAllTll Mover-Drl\ler aary SS to 17.00 per Mgmt 6 Marlc•t lng
Weekendl Sat and Sun Clean ~t. hard working, hour. Salary, no Nlllng. 642·1386
7 AM 1 0 3 3 o p M pottte. 24 + yra. Mull Part time evenln91 In 1-Salea--P-T-/FT ____ _
t.42-5&81 4000 Hiier!• have xlnt driving record. Santa An• office. For w Newpor1 Beedl exp.. or wilt train. call appt call: Mr a Curtis. WANTED: Overwelghl ey, STARVI NG A CTORS 862·S844 men & women to try our ltpl ~ MOVING CO. 850-1368 produe11 & lhere In co. ,,__ 1---------1 PIT W.... profl1a. AH natural weight -.-. •. prec. expew, yra ~ 0 t-.,..·-I I ptu1 for atnall Office to-n --O•lly Piiot newapap•r 011 program u11ng
SPEND Y ::>UR DAYS
AT THE BEACH
TEL-1-CIRC
HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
FOR PART·TIME PERSONS IN
TELEPHONE SALES DEPARTMENT
OF LARGE ORANGE COAST NEWSPAPER
•Evenings and Saturday
mornings
·Commission/Guarantee
·Must be ambitious,
pleasant and reliable
·Experience helpful,
but wllllng to train
·This Is not temporary
642-5678, ext. 312
between 5:30PM-9PM
"THE POSITIVE ANSWER"
c:ated near Oro Cty Alr'p 4 30 10:30 PM. Mon dealer In Irvine 1ree. herb1. 100% guarantMd.
Salary commeniurata lhru Fri. 15 per hr. Call Appro11. 20 hra pr wk. LON up to 30 Iba/mo. lll'Y/lltlPT, Tetephone Salee
w 1 th • x P e r 83t-2880 or pielt up ap-Aftetnoon• & aom. -Harballfe Olatrlbutor Take~ type per90n -1&11 ...
714-833-9124 pllcatlon 800 St. An· kand morning•-Muat 780-t6S4. needed for real .. late draw• Rd .• Newporl have depandabla ~. 1-S-.A-LE_S __ PE_RS_O_N_lor-ma--otnoe In Npt Bch. ldeel ·~ llU1 LlUL ll•nUY Buch. St. Andr•w• prefer llght truck wt rtne hardwar• 1tore. #Otlclng condltlona. Ou-•TW 11•1111111
Newport C enter Real Church catnpel' 9hell. Only nMI, Mu.t have axper. In ma-u. Include typing. flllng, • W n. fw a,,t
E1tata Litigation Firm lff1ll a.I r e1po n1lbl e peraona rlne hardware. Marine uM 01 computer. Reel 895-4687, 875-3763 .W:. needl anerp. exp'd legal · • '-' 9'>91Y. Stetting 8'>-electronlc:e knowtadge ta eatata offloe exp. p<et.· Sec'y. Xln1 typing, dlc1a· Reaponllbllltlet Include prox. 14 7~ h< & mllMoe. deelrable. Ouellfled •P-red. Salary commenau-T ........ Weft
phone, and atlor1hand 1 offtce admlnfltratlon,... Call btwn t:30-t0:30~M pllcanla only. BALBOA rate w/exp. C•ll Brue. Wt IM
mu1t. S alary o pen. cretarilldutleaendc:llent only. Mon·Frl ... k for MARINE. 54&-3407 EOE Bartamian 844-7020 1 IM4
&40·6902 MrVloe. Call S.C 1-8868 Oreo Hyde, clrculatlon. MIF/H •---------20 ftdltlea
M1chlne Operator tor Offloe 842..,.321 IALlS, PAIT Tm sal I llAl ,..,a.
Cotlatlng SeMoe, muat llpttrJ fM REAL ESTATE S•......___t ....,,r Income t4eppy Poaltlve A1mol· fer ..... heve med'lanlcal abltlty. ~P plan IUIC*'ae per· Seleamen. Heed 1 expe-b --;-1-· {~ 11 phefe aa you halp pro-• ..._........._ .....___
Woman companion tor•
darly lady, non-1mltr
Over S2. M ust drive.
837-1783 4PM-7PM Mta
8oand (213)896-1884
Jin w..... Hts
Competent Mature Nureae
Aide, companion drtver.
Xlr)I rafl. 549-Nn
Aaiaal1
SSH
Pit Bull Tetrler fOf Nie.
Fematea 8 week•. UKC
Reg
Give a IMng gift of IOve1
Give a Mlnf Doxlet 8 wka.
$50 240-0275
F Poodle. blll. AKC
3 tn09, $200.
873-S732
Male Peklngeu, AKC
r19 • S yra old. Hble,
hOuaebrolcen, seo 080.
CMa, 83 t-3805.
Aatlp" 1111 ......ml ..,..
of nne OUS1om deelgned
&eatate~. ..aY,IPD.11 ,...,,.,a•
(PATIO AOOMJ
1 t07 JAMBOREE ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
Preview: t 1 AM-1 PM
Auc11on beglna: t PM
For further Information.
call (7 t4)
ll2-4UI Call 751-8605 Aak for t I ea. Fr 1 me e 11n0 rlenced P9'90fl In com-Y 0 no nterea ng mote our publication _... .. ,...._ ..-.-telephone ..... work on aervtoa In oc--. Full 14-111,., ..._
Rod. 494-4 118 merctt 1
11, & lnduatrialfureall & benalf of National Com· or PI T. Salary or com· F• _ ...__. "'-· Antique Peralan "rug
UlllUI MDII Hiii TAIH ::c!i~<>;1r~~ ~· 1=Y _:h::: ~~ mllalon. eonuw. Hunt. Al .. -....-;.,: (Hamadan) 7'x3~· o1rca
Earn $450 to S800 par 4 peop .. needed to 1111 Beat worillng ooodltlona gu1ranteed, "'u• lucra· Bch . Call l(rl1tl• It F I .,......_~..a. 1~.· 6~~·· aac: .
......,, H yoo have a atL openings In order dept. In "'-Port Beed! ,... 964-7492 ••••-... _.,.,,
wagon or van and enjoy No experience nee••· 714/1'46-505t ttve bonua program. liiiiiiliiifiiiiill W &•I 1111 w • -llU ___._I ..... h Sa ... expar pr•fd, but 1 llllm Wl1I ... ._...._, """'" ng "'"1 t.-iagara aary, Co. wlll train. Ex· A t/S t Wll Ill t -• the I ht 8: .. ,, .. UTY FOR ALL SEA M'--An..,,._ 1100 up Call Mr. Rountree at c.tient 1nooma. For ~t •c•p •ere ary, w r .. n r g r-~ • T~ Appt. ~ -•...,..-548-7058 btwn 1 tAM & Ca I I . Mr 0 •Br I an Wrlghta Ice Cream IMkl aon. For lnt9'Vl9w II: SONS, natton'1 tut .. ~ 791)..1073
3PM week daya. et2-58'43 · :i'!:~~·0~!'::11i!:: Robin ~Hi =~in:':::":'~: I 11111 I btll1Me1 ltl 1
• ...... ...,., Pelntet wanted Reac>onl--1900/mo. 973-33t3. drobe planning organl· 15.00 pr hr. Stan lmmed. HAR80R AREA
Knowledge or marine lbl•. experienced, own C SALES ~ 11 ...a1ng coneu1-Day I evening •hlfta APPLIAHCt: SERVICE
englnM req'd. 5'4&-3561 tran1. C all Wayne RE EPTIONIST to~ Tllff.HI (....,...) tant1 ~of prate. avalt Santi Ana offloe. W ... recond QU*
761-9t03 • ~::~,~~~ ~~~~ i~~~ Solld IHdl provided, atonal growth I man• ~. r:r:lhl~~ ~ $49-30n 1111111. nllT lfl Palm Springs, mature c:p1 p 9 r week t 0 11ar1 . alao develop new ac-gerlal reaponalbllltlea. v~ whO can think on I ll'f ~ Ex~rlence req'd. Non 10 maintain . manage am $30lday, prater non-oounta.. 855-2120 lntervlaw1 to be h•ld 1 h e I r 1••1 • Ca I I .. -....... 957_. 33 amoker. General prac-hOtal. No exp nee. P.O. wnoket & R.E Uceneee. !Secretary, PIT, Exper_, 4/tlS. Send retume to: 692-7987 or t82·7S03 .....,v 1
Ilea. Hunt. Bch. Ref'a. Box 2658 . Newport, 4~ orgtnlzed peraon lor Cathie Wataon, Execu-btwn 2·", Mon-Fri ..... KENMORE W..,.. 6 yra.. &41-3937 befOf'9 10 am; 92G63 tlve Director. PO Box • ~ after 6pm weelldye; all Beecfl. I bu1y dlaorganlzed La-214034• Sacnlmento, CA for Brad. old. 1125.
day Sat/Sun. PART-TIME ttl•phone ~teurent gun• 8dl Ardlltac:t. Ute 8582t. (918) 871-3685. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ____ ea. __ 2_19_7 __ _
advice, mature reapon.. UL.Ill Ill a.It B::J. Houra Flexlbl•. The Dally P14o1 he1 Im-REFRIOEAATOR ......... ,~ &pet. Blltlng Ina.. ,
1florth1nd. NB rea 760-e0H .... ,... ........
Full time or part time mec hanic with ahop
exper Muat have own
lool•
Cell 842.et70
lbae ~ mlr9d.::; MIT/•1111 ..... -4
._ -...... -
50
-
7
-----T~~ up-=:1:::.=.·~~ ~ s 1~~ .a. 1~ ~~cieo f'"9~• P~ not BrHkfaat. lunch. full 19'11'W-.i81Y 111-er neceaaary. Co wlll time. Great Mr'Nng pc>-.:!.-oriented Flex hrl time. Pleue cell tor appt. 10 Ffrealdent of train 8alety Santa Ana tentlal. Guerant .. draw ReMger•t•. HARV. Gold. . • 9 AM 10 6 PM Reel &ta1• Ann. om . p ' I ......... oond. $100 • Mon-Fr1. For further Info, 846-60()() Ext 62 1 Top Notc:h akllll req. c•. art t me even-agatnat oommlaalon. EJI. """"' ~ oon~ Mr, Jonea ett 3 Accomptl8hed Pereonnel Inga. 5 to 8 PM. Call c•llenl opportunity for
PM. g53-t247 E.O.E. ROOFING &ar'llloe Inc Jo.n ...... ...... peraon with ca reer Refrigerator. whit•, 18
oublc ":: 2 door, bottom ,,__ •125. M7~ 1tt trn ...... ~ 3300 ~. '1ot N.B. .._...,...... ambition•. 8..w rMUme
Stlllng anything with • min. 8 yra . ..,., ru 5'~897 t 1~ F,.. TMChaf to:
Deity PllOt a...tfied Ad Cf'9Wt Do not llPPIY It not ~--------PRE-SCHOOl AIDE °':3; ;::;-• SMr't COLOSPOT AE·
la • almpe mattw quallfled. llmTUY Huntington 8eec:t1 .,.._ PO Box 1680 FRIO. w/bottom rrzr. Od
Clelalfled Adi S.C2-Se78 Jul l call &42·68'71. 8'42·7222 No experience necea· 10 to 1. 147-~M. Colla Mau, Ce 82e.2e cones., S10, 645-4651 ~~I:':~ TwMt ~OE OAYE.R. Kenrnor.. a.ct-
~
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
--
l
-;
r
I
I
I
875-37 ... IW •Y rlc, white, noellent
ln1trumentel & voc1r. Tow True* Ortvw needed. cones. MO, 71lC>-19M .-.MY-Ulll Valid C11lf. •.eaoher'• ~ Hunttnaton Bot\. Obi dt rtfrlm;t150.
N8 er-. ~llC<*I credtlltlll. A#l In per. M8t505 I W..,_ 180 176 1611111, word · Ing eon: Fountain \leller Mlof'o-W.v.. 11 Good
preferred. '1 201 ' School oi.trloJ.1.. 17210 1..-oond lllC).,7107 '
S.c'.'. " I ll Oelt 81., F.V. fuc. --·------,--r,, per me, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiilt Th• Delly Piiot I• eo· Fr'lgldllt9 L.IUndry Oentar knowted9a or get1'l ot· oac>tlne eppMcattona '°' ...,_ & dr,-ec>t ...., ~to 8tYllfna ~·~.m O: TB. • l • -Olettlct .a!:::' Tral· new a aUll under • .,. =~ I tw.to .=.,I -.!. ......... lm~te °'*'"* '" ,_ to Olt'IW rlnty "75. ttt «)A or ....... .... ....... ,~ .. -.. tiillll'IQ bOY' enc1 aina. ..-x a 411-Ult
IOnel c.o. a.A . .,.., tul1eor1PU011• to h Deity oompany benetfta plu• ---------MM111. Piiot. lw.nlng l'loUfl 8"d mllllO• ellowanot & fl•trlgereter, like new. -YllY 8etut~morntno•. OOfnf!llealol• ~. hoat free. 1111.
Mortoeo-1 eecrow ... ~.o;: ittd ::~ur.:: ~= J:.:.-:lfil~--=~eoeo=:·;.liiliii;;;;=:::;-S*l•n~ fle1pon1lblt Cottt"t t4t-H7t tft ~ lnautanoe r--. ~
POlltlon. Satery OOm• ~O!L~~!!!-!·~~~ ury. Houra lpptOJC, •• ~ men1Utate Wltfl tlC~ : 11AM to lftM. ~. t11n1 W ~.,_1c._.-=.,.....=~"-=· =----~·· =-~ .... ~: .~, ' llll.RllT .... """"'.. -,, Coate ..... 0,A Flmt. TYH tO WP.f".t. 10 lley we need good ........ to °'.!r ~ .. , _,., =t'J.'c,.MM~ ••t up =ntn\tnt• ~b:;. ~~ ..._,Min. I~~ =:: :--..._ ...::: :e!!!!!!!!!!~!!!~ll =~::o 0: ~· .;-~ :.,ea:~~. ....... 1len + t>Au1. <>•II UMIM o.111 PU,. ......,..-.. ... • ,,
" l~AIW 711..qn--t N. "P'eet R•vlt" M"'l<'e ......._ ·~
tot ~ lftwiltor. MlllN. .._., Your ..., 'pf.•'wr•· 1• •• Clattlfleel Aft•• the ....._,.our
.-·"'" __ .. , .,..... MllW9r to • w11 ••tM ........... ~ ............. -~-.. ··· ..... , .. " m .... '·a..~ ....... -.. 11111.... an ............ . OCii _. -........ --,.i. .• -I -~ . '
'
DI Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WedMJeday, AprU e, 1"3
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZl.f
ACROSS
1 Loc11t
5 Arliona city
9 More painful
14 Arrowco11
15 Uttered
US -of lndl1
17 Rock: &ufflll
18 Additional
19 Embrotdera
20Ad~ent
21 AIMrla City.
2wd1
23 Trldcery
25 Sp. artl1t
26 Succeaa
27 Playmates
29 Fastener
32 Propounded
35 Departed
36 Quebec
name
37 Soreness
38 Happy looks
39 The East
40 Discontinue
41 Spring
42 Careens
43 Drive aslant
44 Deadline
45 Deg. holders
46 Swedish
name
2 3
48 Quite 1 few
52 lnvlalbl•
Imprint
on fllm
2 Wdl
58 Yore
57 Scrub
58 Bell aoulld
59 Love god
60 Fabric
61 Tall. Sp
82 Pl .. money
63 Equine
TUl lDAY'I
PUZZLI IOt..YI O
8-4 Hummingbird lilliilF.-P.o4"'
65·Kldney -
DOWN
1 Of some
Frankl
2 Celllc
3 -fruttl
4 Scotch uncle
5 Short ttme
6Gnaw
7 Asian dress
8 Fish sauce
9 Play parts
10 Senior
1 t Accuracy
12 Madder
genus
13 Slumber
21 Servant
OllY O MI
22 British -u Banged In
24 Faint sound 45 Mendicant
27 Equanimity 47 Threshold
28 -of Cleves 48 -Rosa
30 Component 49 Bast fiber
31 Social dos 50 Assembly
32 Ago 51 Radar's kin
33 Eight: prefix 52 Female
34 Bootery 53 "Not on
2 wds. --1"
35 Bravery 54 Castor's
36 Grow killer
38 Confer 55 Discard
42 Bathe 59 Vestment
,
'
Her lfisli now helps
those of dying kids
Pf:lgeant pr«;)moter
faces fraud raps
tnweUpton apparently aren't
bellevlna tho clalma of would-be
Coata Meaa beauty paaeant
promoter Frank John BapU1t
Baaley. They've flled three
ch1r1e1 11aln1t him for
adverit1emenu he placed
prom.lllna a $10,000 prize to the
wlnner ol h1a peaeant.
Pa, ant, •tart with th• que.Uon
"11 Your Oauatner A Prlncem?"
and prom!ae a •t0,000 prilt to
che peaeant winner, Fast« uld.
By STEVE MARBLE or-.o.11r..._....,.
JW 0.vil WU 25 and hAd been mamtd three week.I when lhe
learned her bone cancer had
1\arted to rqe a,ain.
Her hu1band recall• her
dignity and 1tren1th when
doctor1 told her, a 1hort time
later, that ttie oencer would be
termlnal.
"She wu never afraid." her
husband u)"I.
La1t Ea1ter -nine month•
after the cancer flared -1he
died. She wu at home In Costa
THI DRAIGI COAST
WEDNESDAY APRIL 6. 1983
Meaa with Mr husband.
Now -a year lat.er -John Davll hu fulfilled hi.I wife'• final
wlah. He hu 1tar1ed Southern
Callfomla'1 tlr1t chapter of Make·
a Wl1h, an oraanliatlon that
lfl'tl\tl lut wlahe1 to term.lnally
W children.
"We talked about It a 1reat
deal -what I 1hould do when
ahe died. We •,reed I should do
eomethJ.na. Thia la It," Davia Ill.id.
A televlalon 1how on the
Phoenix·baaed proaram cauaht
the youna couple'• attention one
(See WISRE8, P11e il)
John Davis
grants kid~' wishes
Deputy Dtatrict Attorney Mark
Foet.er Jr. aaid the charge• -
milderneanor counts of falae and
mlaleadlna advertialng -were
baaed on ada that ran In three
different lasuea o f a local
shopper.
The ada, touting Bagley's Miu
California Prlnce11 Beauty
A.ccord1n1 to Foster the Ida 11~
the peaeant wUl take pl.ce Aprtl
24 at the Sheraton Unlvenal
Hotel In Loa Anaelea. Hotel
offlciala have confirmed that a
bellroom baa been reeerved for
the paaeant that day.
Foster aaid he does not knoW lf
an arrafanmeot date for BaaleY
had been aet II) Harbor Munkipnl
Court. The clerk'• office at the
court would not reapond to
Inquiries today.
(See PAGEANT, Page A%)
COlll IDITION
OR ANGECOUNTY . C AL IFORNIA 25 CENTS
sun back after fr
Dl9r .......... ..,...,.,..,..
?\naheim firemen rescue Nancy Gilbert
and her son Craig from stranded Skyway
gondola alter freak storm halted ride
yesterday.
=Housing committee
'dissolved in Mesa
~v KAREN ~IN the council agenda due to an
if ... Dl9r Nee ...,. oversight, Hall said. ~ The last In a long line of In his remarks Monday, Hall
ttandlng citizens' committee& in said the HCD Committee fosta Mesa was dissolved by the meetings were not well attended
tlty council without public and at the last two monthly
!4iacuadon this week. meetinp the committee did not
The Hou1ing Community have enough members praent to
Development (HCD) Committee. establlah a quorum.
formed in 1974 to oversee Council member Norma
'\tlatributlon of federal housing Hertzog. the co u n ct 1 '1
Jund•, waa phaaed out by a repn!9entative to the committee,
Lmanimoul vote of the council at aald HCD did not have "the same
Monday night's meeting. drive and goals that It had
Mayor Donn Hall brouaht up originally.••
0lhe HCD in hia counclfmanic Hall utd loss of Interest In the
'1emarks at the end of the committee waa due to the
'meeting, after much of the decreue 9f Housing and Urban
audience bad left. and a vote wu Development Agency fund•
&aken wtth no objection from available to the city.
councU members. But Jean Forbatb, chairwoman
By STEVE MARBLE
Of tM Delly Not lteff
A surprise storm that battered
Disneyland and left 104 people
trapped on a gondola ride in the
howling winda has given way to
c lear, sunny ski«!s that are
expected to remain through the
rest of the week.
Yesterday's violent atorm
packed tornado-like winds. rain,
llghtnJns and claps of thunder.
The winds tore a roof off a
Fullerton business, smashed
windows in a nearby shopping
center and blew a man through a
plate glass window In Anaheim.
The National Weather Service
said the brief but intense storm
was lhe work of an unstable air
mass that came roaring Into the
county under tar-black skies.
· The weather bureau has not
determined if the wind was a
tornado. The bureau reported It
ia extremely unlikely that
yt;aterday's unexpected violence
will be repeated. The forecast
calls for clear warm daya with
variable clouda and daytime
temperatures ln the 70s.
Ominous storm clouds swept across the Southland yesterday.
Riden aboard Dl~:Jland'a Skyway aondoJa, diaa by the
11onn, were re..:ued by ftremen
aboard cherry picken and ladder
truck.a yesterday afternoon. The
rescue operation took more than
two hours.
Riley asks flight limits
"The toughest ones to rescue
were the ones hanging over the
water In the Submarine
Lagoon," uld Al Florea, a
Disneyland publicist.
while proposing • increase
He said the wind gusts popped
a cable off its pulley wheel,
leaving riders stranded 30 to 40
feet in the air. Riden endured
stiff winds that swayed the
gondola and then rain that left
(See STORM, Pa«ie A!)
By STEVE MARBLE
ud JEFF ADLER
Of ~ Deltr ,... ""'
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley has stirred
optimism in hls hometown of
Newport Beach with a proposal
for freezing daily jet departures
at John Wayne Airport.
New mayo•, vice mayor
Robert Gentry has been named mayor of
Laguna Beach, succeeding Neil Fitzpatrick,
and Bobbie Minkin ha& been named mayor
pro tem in unanimous voting of the
five-member council last night.
Riley -walking a political
tight-rope -at the same time
sugge1ted increasing daily
commerdaJ jet takeoffs from 41
to 55.
The supervi.aor, whaee di.strict
includes the airport and noise-
weary Newport Beach, has asked
his four colleagues to order
environmental atudies for flight
increases. Supervlaors are
expected to select among 13
alternatives for airport expansion
next Wednesday.
By issuing hla proposal, Riley
bucks put county legal opinion
that atat.es supervUlon cannot tie
the handa of future superviaora
by entering a binding agreement
that would put a lasting cap on
airport operations.
"This seems to be the ti.me to
examine and determine a
mechanism that would be able to
legally limit the number of
departures at the level this board
chooaes as its final plan tor the
airport," states the proposal that
Riley circulated yesterday.
Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn
Hart said she la pleased with
Riley's suggest.ion and hinted lhe
council might be willing to
discuss more dail)' takeoffs as a
tradeoff for a binding agreement.
Newport, in the past, has
steadfastly insisted dally
departures should remain at 41.
The city went to court last year
and successfully turned back a
plan for increasing takeoffs.
(See FLIGHTS, Pase .U>
Cultural f es ti val
nixed in Laguna
By STEVE MITCHELL or-. Deir,...,..,,
The council aaid it liked the
concept of a Laguna ~Beach
cultural fair just fine.
But not In Sycamore Hills.
The flve -membe r ·panel
unanimoualy turned down a
p_ropoul by dulcimer-maker Jim
Fyhrle to uae a mnall portion of
Sycamore Flata out ln Laguna
Canyon for a cultural fntival
that would run on weekends In
the aummer.
Saying he probably couldn't
get the fair together by thla
s ummer, Fyhrle aaked the
council if they might consider the
notion next year.
But oou.nctl members, citlnl a
1erie. of objl!ctlonai_J>Ut the qUMh
(See CULTURAL, Pace A!) tt The 1alue wu not acheduled on (See HOUSING, Pa1e A!)
~ llSID~-------------------------.
Skinny piaa ii a rich
treat. Count your calorie
ble11inp with lillm reeipet
bepnalftl on P .. e Cl
EPA revisited
What'& EPA really
been up lo since
Reagan tel the
lone? Pase A 9
History ,allcs
Ttie man whO
found 'Lucy' visit•
UCI. P .. e A4
h wa1 a clauie
volleyball match when
Laguna Beach laced
San Clemente. The
Triton• triumphed.
Pa•e DI
.41 • Or•nge Cotti OAILY PILOT/WldneldlV. Aprll 8, 118'
Cd'
'''" Continued stories
FLIGHTS PROPOSAL. • •
Ken Dt'llno, the clty'11
execullve assistant to the city
manager, said <.'lty polky statC!f
41 tUghts should be the limit. But
he admitted the city expects
supervisors t.o push for 55.
"Once this idea of binding
agreement gets out and
supervisors start talking about it
-that"s aU we ever asked," said
Delino. "The number of flighlll is
something that would be
considered later"
Riley also propot1t.'Cf phoslnQ h1
the additloruil tliahll a. ulrlfnes
meet noise reducUon atandard11
His plan alto would permit
res1dent.1 llvlng undl'r the tak~ff
pattern to <.'onvcrt property to
c.'Ommerclal or office wnln&
The proposal would allow
residents in sound-Impacted
areas like Santa Ana Heights to
remain, but onJy after granting
the t'Oun ty an easement for the
turspal't! over their property
PAGEANT A FRAUD?. • • •
Foster would not detail whut
information ll'd investigators Lo
file the ('harges, but he
acknowledged that the filing was
an indication that Bagley's
advertised promises were
suspect.
Contestants have been paying
$150 each to enter the pageant
since local advertising for it
started in January.
But organizer Bagley, 30, has
allegedly left a trail of canceled
pageants, angry contest.ants and
disgruntled merchai'its behind
him in the past.
Bagley, who also used the
name Shaun de Young. se~
four months in a Texas jail after
pleading no contest t o
misdemeanor theft charges
relating to a Houston beauty
pageant that never took place.
ln that case Bagley left town a
week before the pageant. He
later said he had to cancel the
contest after his hotel room was
burglarized and $2,500 in entry
fees taken.
Bagley said that seven $100
savings bonds would be the only
awards at next month's pageant,
and that the $10,000 prize will be
given at a national contest, the
date and location of which have
not yet been decided
Bagley lives in a Calta Mesa
trailer park.
CULTURAL FESTIVAL. • •
on the canyon musician's plan.
Fyhrie's fair would have run
concurrently with the three art
festivals in Laguna Canyon, onJy.
instead of featunn,ir thP works of
artists and craftsmen, the fair
Mesan
SUCCUDJbS
Services will be held tomorrow
for long-time Orange Coast
resident Mrs. Lettie W. Vaughn.
of Costa Mesa. who died last
weeke nd at the age of 97
Mrs. Vaughn was born m 1886
in Creighton, Neb and spent
much of her girlhood travelmg
a round the plains in a covered
wagon with her father, who
worked on the railroads
In 1908, Mrs. Vaughn and her
husband. George W Vaughn,
bought a small lot in Newport
Beach. She laved in Newport and
Costa Mesa for nearly 50 years
Costa Mesa
Th..,,_ D<Oll• Into e fenced c;onatruc1lon
site on th• 2•00 block ot Irvine A•enue
sometime Monelay nlQhl. ~ e bOll CUii ..
to -the PlldtOdc on Ille gate They •ooll
• eut-on aaw mounted one "-·-et S.,000
A 1992 ChevrOlet C0<wlle with e .ale
!><lee ol $2•. 100 wa' Ortven of1 Ille lronl lot
Of • dealenNp on HarbO< lloulevatO 1ea1 Frldey The alOlen cer la ~. -4111 -. ..
plet• IEJVSM
would combine art, music, dance,
theater and architecture "in a
social atmosphere."
Each weekend would feature a
new cultural event such as an
American folk festival, bluegrass
music, country and western,
Dixieland and theater groups
Fyhrie said he'd pay the city
$18,000 for lease of the land and
for cleanup costs. Security. he
said, could be prov1ded by pohtt
explorer scouts.
But council members. basing
their decis i on on a
recommendation from the city
manager, said traffic congesuon1
is al ready a problem 10 the
canyon in the summer.
They cited the difficulty of
getting emergency vehu.:les out
the canyon through heavy
traffic
Other concerns, they said.
were the lack or fire protection,
the idea of thousands or fairgoers
tramping over Sycamore Hills
every weekend. and the
probability that the $18,000 fee
would not even cover the costs of
proVlding pohce at the site
S IO•• Olhct•I• ....... d • lhOPliller .,
N0<011rom South eo.11 Plue. yeele<d•y
eUe<noon The women welked oul ol Ille
11ore with $335 WOftn OI dotninQ conceeleO
WI a l"<IOplng beQ pollOa MIO
Newport Beach
Four 11<1~ wortll $1,000 -•pried off
e Rot~ Royce pertced on Ille t600 -ol E•I Coasl Highway ,..,.,Oay
A lll'·)'Mf-old men Oled of en epoerenl
Hll-tnlhc1eo gunaftol wouno yule•Oey
morntng 11 the Peri. ~I Aperlmenll
An an1-1ng mecntne e ci«" enO 1
.,., .. emovnl ol ee.oll -• I .. .., from en
0<1hodon11a1·1 ollloe e1 2503 Eaatblun O< ti wee rec>0<1ed yee18'0ey Tl>e IOea 'Was put a1
SEOS
• •
From Page A 1
or ltu: ''Omtnltll~. uld 111cmbt.ln1'
lnhrt-•t had tl111caitd •lnl:l'
Januury, Whl•n 1omc of their
tt•rma were rt'nt1wod only untJl
April 1, rather th1rn for a full
yuur, whllo t•ouncll mcmbora
n•vlewed thl· l'Ommluec
Jerome Vandewalle, who hwi
• ·rvt'd on th<> t'Orf\lnlttcc 1l11ce Ila
1m't!ptlon. sulcJ the commlttt>e wu
worthwhile "only H lunj u tht'
t'o\.indl wu wllllni to pay
attt<nl1on" t o ill recom
mendatlul\li.
Vandt-wallt> ll81d members o{
the coum·il un.d tht• planning
commission had not regularly
allendl'<.I meetings for somt• time
Hall rnnf1rmt!d that Hertzog
had not ullended HCD meetings,
to his knowledge, in at least six
months. She was "bored with th<'
meetings becau.'!(! ''there wt>re no
problems or challenges" being
discussed. he said. Information
needed about committel•
meetings was obtained for tht>
coun cil through recorded
minutes, Hall added
The t-ounc1l's dec1s1on reduceb
the commmre to an ad hoc group
which ml!ets once annually -
thl' minimum level o f c1t1zen
part1c1pation allowable under
federal law, Vandewalle said
Regulations governing t'1t1zen
partil'1pation an distribuuon of
federal funds have become less
stringent under the Reagan
Admamstralion
Robbery
suspects
arrested
Two men and two women
were arrested in Huntington
B('a ch lat<' yestt'rday 1n
con n ection with two armed
robberies wh1t'h occurred in
Costa Mesa Monday night, police
said.
The four, along with another
suspect picked up Monday night,
allegedly stormed into homes on
Vallejo Cirde and Adam:.
Avenue beLween 6:30 and 7
Monday night and stole $5.600
worth of cash . jewelry and
clothing artc.•r t ying up and
gagging the v1tt1ms, said Sgt Bill
&>ch tr· I
The five s uspt>c ts werc-
1dent1f1cd as Steven Peter
Fansega. 25. of Santa Ana,
M 1 C' h a t• I Des m o n d , 2 2 . o f
F ountain Valley , R1 ('hard
Breckenridge. 25, o( Tustin,
Karen Barreto, 22, of Garden
Grove; Lora Brusseau. 22, of
Newport Beat·h
A 56·ye1• old Costa M••• woman 1010
po11ce te1terd1y tt\el e ran.on 011v1n~ •
C.d1llec CO'llOed .. ,1~ n.r CA• rwo dllf.,enl
hmet on Pac•t.c Cae'1 Higllwer ,,.., B•ll>Oe
Boutev••O end 1nen spea ou
Laguna Ueach
A ....o.nt In Ille 2000 bloc:" OI VtelOfll
Orlve nH repo•ted I"• thell ol befwl'en
$3 000 eno Sll,000 1n 1ewetry l•om lheir
home
An O'POO'um 11\•1 made rreouent ,.,.«,. 0t1
I gerOen II a nome In 81veb1rd Canyon wa>
caug1'1 In 1111 own&< s """ end detl•Mod to
Sycemo<e Fla" wit••• '' .... ,.,..a.a by ammat CO'•''OI otf~•
Irvine
1' lh-ef lroed IO pry llM T IOP otl I 1919
Corvelle perked O'I Ceec•O• Avenue In
Irvine 1u1 nlglll bvl lelled 10 do ao ...a neo, pohce .. HI
Weather fair
Coastal
t;OHl•t tow 50. lnlend •O
Coufal high 87. Inland 72 W91tr
6&.
L:!Jhl, verl1bl• wlnda 1on1Qhl
en tomorrow morning .
becX>mlng -t to nor1h-I 8 to
18 knots tomorrow ette<noon with
2 to 3-toot wind w""" W•tarly
.WI 2 to 3 IMI M09tly cleat.
U.S. Summary
A m111i11e llorm tormenting
th• WHI with dHP 1now end
dM1NCtlw ~ bllmtd for •• ..., eight dN1hl ~ J>Wt• o4 Loull!ana end M~ with
up 10 7 lncti. ol rein I~ M
YIO!ellt tlli.IM!er•lorm1 cra1hect
tllrovgh \lie MlalMlppl Valley.
A•cord low t•mpar1ture1
llowflng •ound Z*'O Ill pl-.
-· ~ tod«y In Coloredo. wtw.11-1=.,-••0en-. 0 ~ •t edo 8prll\Qa.
l "d • b rltlla 3 dtgrt•• In ~ With hundr•d• of people ~ tweed from lllalt lloln. :t., "°:::\ "°"f lhe Ul11'11'"" and • ttlbutlf1tl In lllnoM
and Mlnour l , '"• ••,,•r • ~orrnt lft L~ end
MIHIMIPPI today Mn1 blCMlted ~= "°"' """ '*llt• lno WM r:'j1td lft ~on. La., wtlaf1t ~ Cfln'o Nver hid rlHn 'O ••
... tNdnllgtlC. end anw.t• " ••• blo c~16 n ear 1111 Lo111•-Mt1 lll~pl border. w ........ Ill .,,,..'*'*
betwee n Amite and lndapeooen~. La. "••II flood ••rn1no1 ••t•
pcMltled In IN '°""'*" lowlaw4 e,ertlll•• ol T •nj,lpettoa. Uflll\Olon, t.1 voyeu ... ~and ft::.cllL Aa l'llUdl M t ol rain Ill ;:,:.:•,1~~r:r9°0..:0:
T..-0 M4f on tftt T0tnilftOM ..... ~ .............
'Tir,£!'i"*• .-......... .., .. ..,_,.., ........... In ..................
I
)
Ptke Counly tn 1outh•rn
MIMlM/ppl
Snow lell lrom the southern
Tlusday, AOf~ 1
Aocllles 10 Net>raake 10 the r ....
Penllendle. lleltlng 1re¥el wllh
Cllt$t-hlgh drlfta
Temperatures
"' Lo
Albeny 49 30 AlbvqUtrQVe 42 25
AmerHlo 37 26
Anchortge 411 30
Atnevllle 51 48 Allent1 112 53
lltltnllc Cttv 68 48
A11111n 88 45
8allimore 50 48
81111ng• 42 19 Fronts Ctilrl ..,.
81rmlngh•m 84 57 81emtrct< 45 25 8olM 60 31 Oraat F1ll1 44 19 8ol1on 58 42 Har11ord 53 30 8'ownav11e 82 82 H.+en• 41!> 10 Bullato 49 36 Honolulu 82 114 8uftlngton 45 37 Houston 73 52 Ceeper 28 10 lndlenepolj1 117 51 CllarlM1on.S.C. 74 68 Jeckton.Mlh 70 &O Chll'le91on.w v . 81 53 JtcklOIWllie 82 &O Chtrton•. N C 81 51 JunMy 48 211 ~ 25 03 KanlU City 42 35 Ct11c4tgo •t 35 Lu Vtgat eo 48 ClnQnnall 57 52 ~ 49 41 Ultlt Roell 82 48
Co411tnt>ia,S C 78 60 t:.:r 87 48
59 55 CoMrntlu• 58 50 Lubbook 40 32 0...Ft WM1h 55 42 M«np/111 ~ 54 Dayton 50 40 Mllrlll 78 72 o.n.... 27 oe Mllweult• 41 37 Ott MOii* 40 3e Mplt-81.PIUI 47 33 Oetl'Ott 41 31 Nlllllllllle 82 !15 °'*Jth 37 31 ..,_ Or1Hne 81 70 EIPMO 31 28
Felt blink a 41 29 ..,._YCH1c 12 45
Flif'VO .. , " NotfOllt 11 50
~ ~ 22 MOtUI Platte 34 24
OldehorN City 41 84
SURF RIPORT
icD lOCAftOlil ....... =i: c, J4.ciy I poot
1·2 poot•llllr *" It. Ntwpon l•I p()Of·f.ir HhOlt.~ I poot .... Weclet ,... l)OOI' ......,...._,Ugune t poor ...... ....,,,. 1 poor e.IC...Pllr '" . ''" ".,,...... .. ..,...,_..,.wJW
'
Ra an f:7J Sno• 0
ShowersmlllllJ Flurriesf!:!)
I tth 11 lfy ·-
Om•h• Oflando
Phlt&delphlt
PN>enl1
Pi1t1burgh
Portland.Me
Portland.Ora
Providence
Aelelgh Aep1d City
Reno
Rlehmond
St loull
St Pet• Tempe
Seit l•~• San Antonio
S11n D1tOO
Sen Frane1.co
SI Sta Marie
8•4Utl•
Shrevtp0rt Stoo..w. 'Ill• lp()l(ant
SyrllCluM
TOI*!• T~
Tul ..
Wtlhlngton
WIClllla
Tides
TOOAY
37 32
86 65
61 44
70 52
57 411
58 33
89 42
80 39
88 5.l
36 23
•8 24
81 52
57 46
85 81
•8 29 10 47
80 55
84 51
.... 28
83 43
78 51
45 33 SA ,.
50 33
42 37 eo 41
47 341
57 40
39 ~
84IOOnCI "'9h t :t' p.m 3 T leCond low u TOMOllMW ~high u ' em. 4.1
""" tow '2.ll p.m . 0 1 8eoonct ~ M2 pm If lun Ha t ·O Pm . rlH• •omonow ·~ uft
Moon n.... tCWl!Oft'OW '·'' e "' ' Ml• UT pm
Mourns mother
Con victed first-d egree murderer Willie
Ray Wisely. a ttended m e morial er vices rn
llunling ton Bea ch this morning for his
mother. H azel Bray, who died late last
week after a lengthy .illness. Wisely,
convicted of killing his te pf at her by
lowering a tr uck cab on him two year s
a~o, a tte nded the service in m anacle and
shac kles.
Edward
Dunlap
• services
Friday
Gravetlde lervlces wllJ be held
Friday in Plymouth, Ind. for
Newport Beach resident F.dward
Huber Dunlap. an artl1t and
buslnesaman who died last
Friday at the age of 74.
Dunlap came to Newport In
1971 as director of manufacturing
of a national food corporation. He
also established a reputation as
an artist.
,He was an owner and ranlung
offic1aJ of Plymouth Cannmg Co.
starting in 1937 until hi.a move
west He also started Dunlap-
Pac1f1c and Dunlap's, Inc. m hlS
home town. Both firms were
linkl'd with the (ood industry
The famJ!y suggests memorial
contributions to the Indiana
chapter of the Leukem.ta Society,
220 S. Downey Ave 1 Indianapolis 46219.
L. Carter
dead at 63
Longtime Costa Mesa resident
Lawson Carter, a native of South
Carolina who came west dunng
World War Il, died yesterday. He
was 63.
A Purple Heart recipient.
Carter served with the Marine
Corps during the war. He was a
plumbing contractor, working
out of Redondo Beach.
He leaves his w1Ce, Mae; a son.
Gary, and daughters Susan
Tamney, Sheila Laidler and
Mary. He also is survived by four
grandchildren.
Funeral services are pending.
Recall, classes 'don't mix'
By PHIL SNEIOERMAN
Of the DeJIJ Piiot II•"
Coast Community College
District teachers have been
\varned not to use dass tame to
promote a rec:·all campaign aimed
at unseating five district trustees
The distract includes Orange
Coast. Golden Wto>st and CoastltnC'
colleges.
In rcc·ent weeks.
admm1strators at Orange Coast
and Golden West issued warning
notices after some studenu. and
teat·hers complained that recall
pet1t1ons were being circulated
during mstrucuon llm<'
Distnl·t Chancellor Nonna.n E.
Watson subsequently asked the
prt"S1denlS of the three colleges to
distribute a list of guidelines.
pn·pared by the district's
attorney. governing the
STORM.
From Page A 1
thC'm drenched.
• •
··1 was so scared I thought I
was going to Call o ff ," said
Renete Huegel, 38. a vacationer
from Ontario, Canada
"l wasn't too scared but 1t sure
seemed hke forever," commented
Carol &mes of BrookviUe. Ohio
Disneyland passed out free
Mickey Mouse sweatshirts to
people drenched in the rain and
dried wet clothing. Passengers on
tht' gondola ride also were given
hot food by the amusement park.
The Skyw3y wilJ be dosed at
least through tomorrow
Limited to aupp!y on hand •
Offer gQod thru 4111183
diS&>mination of information and
partisan campaigning 1n
connection with school political
measures.
. The executive committee of
the American Federation of
Teachers chapter representing
full-time instructors at the three
colleges, distributed a pointed
reply this week.
"It looks l ake the recall
movement is making the district
run for cover." the AFT letter
stated
WISHES GRANTED. • •
From Page A 1
day when Jill was undergoing
chemotherapy treatment at Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
"It had JUSt started to hn us
that she was going to die .
Suddenly, there's this program
about helping children with
terminal Illness. It attracted her.
She wanted to know more,"
Davis said
When his wife died, Davis said
he carried out his wife's desire of
making a donation to M ake a
Wish.
"But I wanted to give it to
them m person. I wanted to meet
them and see what was going
on." the young Newport Beach
builder said.
He flew to Phoenix, stayed
several days and lat.er returned
there to attend a fund -raiser.
He became hooked.
The program offers a child one
final lime to do something with
his parents. It could be a trip to
Disneyland, a hot-air balloon ride
or, as it was an Phoenix. a day
spent being a policeman.
Davis claims a reward of Make
a Wish is not only allowing a
child a chance to have fun but
penrut him to be wt th tus parents
when he"s having fun.
"Just for the chJ!d to see h1S
parents smile as great," says
Davis
Davis has clear memories of
flying with his wife back to her
Pennsylvania hometown to see
her parents. It was to be a last
visit.
"Even if you've accepted your
death, the pain comes in seeing
the hurt mothers. The idea that
'this ls the last ume you'U ever
see this person again' is tough."
He says Make a Wish attempts
to bnng about a pleasant. happy
moment. A final get-together
that will be upbeat.
The Orange County chapter
that Davis has organ1%ed will
hold its first meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. It will be held at the
New~rt Sheraton. It IS open to
the public.
Information on the lo< al
ch apter can be obtai n ed by
writing Make a Wish. 1825
W estclifC Drive. Suite 221,
Newport Beach. or phoning
642-6601.
Pte-Sla•n Sale
BEACH
CHAIRS
Our Most Popular Sand Chair
more thsn you expect In a hardware store
CROWll EJ
HaRDWARE ~·
NATION
Jet ffameout blamed
t
on empty fuel tanks
MINN EAPOLIS A Rt•publtc Airlint-1 jt'lll11~r
~mporarily Joet powur und drovped nearly 21.000 f~t Jut week
becawie wln8 wnks feeding the cmaint.'S Wt<re empty, an aJrllnt-
offlclaJ .. YJ. The engint'I of the ac:;..g Super 80 jetllnur were
~tarted about 12,000 feet above U\Ah on Saturday night when
the pilot.a awltched to a different fut•I r.ank, accordinli( to
Republic spokesman Redmond Tyler. Tht' wing tanks
apparently ran out of fuel in Cllght, Tyler said in a ropyright
story ln today's St. Paul Pioneer Press. The fuel tanks had nut
been used in their normal sequence, he added. The
McDonnell-Douglas jet, bound from Minneapolis-St Paul to
San Diego vta Los Angeles, made 11n emergc:ncy landing in Las
Vegas.
Boy, 16, bitten by deadly viper
WASHINGTON A youth who was bitteo by a deadly
Gaboon viper stolen from the National Zoo was reported
recovering today at a hospital. but may suffer permanent
damage. Doctors at Children's Hospital said Louis Morton, 16,
was taken off the critical list and was considered in serious
c.'Ond1t1on. But hts doctors said yesterday that Morton probably
would suffer permanent damage The youth was carrying two
four-foot-long Gaboon vipers in a plastic bag when he was
bitten on the shoulder. authorities said. Ile had taken the bag
onto a transit bus near the wo late Monday night, rode about
three miles and then got off the bus in the downtown area,
slinging the bag over his shouldt'r. Soon thereafter. he returned
to the bus a nd told the driver he had been bitten by a snake. Zoo
officials said someone broke into the reptile house and smashed
the glass on two display cases
Adelman confirniation predicte d
WASHINGTON -Senate Majority Leader Howard H.
Baker Jr. is predicung arms control nominee Kenneth L .
Adelman will be confirmed in a tight vote, but a leading
opponent thinks he has enough support to defeat the
nom1nation. "We have gotten reports that we may get up to 15
Republicans," Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass .. said yesterday "lf
that's true, there is no need to fibbuster."
STATE
Deukmejian to d ecide Fain fate
SACRAMENTO -Gov. George Dcukrne;1an has ordered
the st.ate parole board to keep William Archie Fain in pnson,
two days-before a court-imposed deadline to grant Fain the
parole date he was denied because of pubhc outcry Fam, 37, has
spent nearly 16 years m prison for murdering a high school
student and raping three young women near the Stanislaus
County town of Oakdale in 1967. ln an executive order to the
Board of Prison '1'erms. Deukmejian said he would decide
whether Fain was suitable for parole -an assertion of
authority never made before by a California governor.
Buono d enie d mistrial motion
LOS ANGELES -A Judge has derued a motion for a
mistrial in the marathon Hillside Strangler trial of Angelo
Buono. accused of killing 10 young women whose nude bodies
were dumped on Los Angeles area hillsides an 1977-78
However. Superior Court Judge Ronald George agreed
yesterday that prosecutors withheld information about the Las
Vegas arrest of a key witness a month before the man was
scheduled to testify. Buono, 48, a Glendale auto upholsterer.
could face death in California's gas chamber 1f convicted, but his
adoptive cousin, confesM'd Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi.
has pleaded guilty to Cave of the murders in a pica bargain \.0
testify against Buono and avoid execution
2nd condor watched closely
SAN DlEGO -Zookeepers kept a 24-hour watch on the ~nd Califorrua condor hatched m captivity after the rare bird
pulled through a complicated delJvery, while the first chick
appeared to be improving alter briefly losing its appetite. The
new chick, given the Indian name of Tecuya, was "resting aft.er
its ordeal" yesterday in a sterile plastic isolette, the type of
container used for premature human infants. wo spokesman
Jeff Jouett said. Zookeepers were concerned about Tecuya
because the new chick was not as stcong as Sisquoc. hatched last
week.
WORLD
China protests Hu Na's asylum
PEKING -China lodged a strong protest with the Uruted
States today, calling the Reagan administration's granting of
political asylum to Chinese tennis star Hu Na untenable legally
and "condemnable morally." Vice Foreign Minister Han Xu
handed the protest to U.S. Ambas,,ador Arthur W. Hummel Jr ..
Q i Huaiyuan. director of the Foreign Mmistry's m(prmation
department, told reporters. The United Stat.es announced
Monday it was granting asylum to Miss Hu.
Franco-Soviet ties at low point
P ARIS -France's expulsion of an estimated 47 suspected
Soviet spies has plunged Franco-Soviet relations to their lowest
point since the French elected a leftist government two years
ago. The Soviet Embassy called yesterday's expulsions an
unjustified political act and said France wouJd have to bear the
negative oonsequences. Neither oountry would say exactly how
many Soviets left France aboard a spedaJ plane sent from
Moecow, but the French Interior Ministry said the expelled
officials had tried to steal military and technical secrets.
Orange Coatt DAil. Y PILOllWodn .. d1y, April 8, 1983 * Al
President flays Dem budget plan
1' l ·r ,. s 8 u R a H ( A p ) -
Pri•aldc-nt Rua1&11n loutud hi•
c~unomlc pollcll4i today In thl•
l't·onomkally depr~Hl'd ahit-l
to wn, and c laimed thMt the
Democn1l.I' •JX1ndl11g plan would
throw tht• nauon back Into 1n
even worse "'-'l'CUlon.
hlaher lnt~roet r4lt!t, morc 'rhou1and1 of unt-mploycd
aiove1 nmont apt>ndlnlJ and u workon Wt'rl' mualna to prot.nt
rtoet1111on worse than the one R aaon'• pollc1e1, which they
We'rt• juat emuriitna from blw'ne tor their pll"ht Organlwni
"The American puopl*' hove u Id th 1· y t' x p e ct e d :I , 0 O O
llUffcn'<J long cnoujh becaUl!JC Of d'-•nlOtldtHalurll
t'C'onomlc ml1t kt'a of tho pt11t, ln an area whcn• joblt:.,.nc•u
und I'm not ubout to let thJ!m be ho• nl'arly doubled sann.~
Turning up l~ heat on the
propo1H'd Dcmot•ratlc bud"et
alternative approved by the
Howse, the prt:Kident said:
plunged Into th•t aame me111 Reagan'N el~cllon In 1980. th~
ag&iin." p r ealdent sold .iovc•rnmc•nt,
Reagan tlcw here w lrulp«'l a business und unlon11 •hould 11hure
pb rt'trrunlng progrwn anwndl't't-Mhl' burden CJ( ht'lplng dislocated
to wach compuwr akllla to l&ild· workers find nc-w jubs "l 'vl' never ween u budHt:t
proposal with u more flagrant
disregard Cor Its consequences -
1md lhose consequences would be
more unemployed Amerlcana,
otr workc·rs and to oddreH a "l bellev~ we as a nation owe
confert>nct' on unemployment un obllgC1tion as well as a helping
caused by thl· decline in heavy hand to thost! who pay the P,nl't'
Industry uf e<'onom1c· readjustment. ·
Shuttle crew
..
goes towork;
•
walk slated
CAPE CANAVER AL. Fla . {AP) -
Challenger's astronauts, awakened by a sultry love
iiOng. plunged into a day of tests and experiments
today, including a dress rehearsal for tomorrow's
space walk Specialists on the ground said they
expect to salvage· the salellite ejected from the
shuttle early in the mission.
''Teach Me. Tiger," sung by the sexy-voic:ed
April Stevens. was the wakeup music beamed to
the orbiting ship by Mission Control m Houston
Capsule communicator Mary Cleave asked if they
were reading and got this reply: "Loud and clear.''
The astronauts were also relieved that they
were not to blame for the problems encountered by
the commumcallons satellite.
The space travelers had asked several times if
anything they had done caused the rocket failure
that sent the 2 1 ·2 ·ton payload tumbling into the
wrong orbit after they ejected it from Challenger's
cargo bay Monday night.
Mission Control, after analyzing the probll'm,
assured them last night they were not at fault
"ll was a rocket problem, it was definitely not
a crew problem'. and you're being congratulated on
the job you rud." capsule communicator Guy
Gardner radioed the orbiting ship.
"That's good news," replied astronaut Story
Musgrave, who more than the others was
responsible for the checkout and deployment of tht•
Tracking and Data Relay Satellite.
Musgrave and hlS crewmates, commander Paul
J Weitz, Karol J . Bobko and Donald H Peterson.
also were pleased to learn that ground controllers
had regained control of TORS and successfully
commanded all of 1ts systems into operaliotl.
Musgrave asked if the experts were opllm1suc
about moving the payload out of its egg-shaped
orbit into a stationary outpost 22.300 miles high.
"They're lookmg at using the on-board fuel to
• boost it up to geosynchronous or bit," Gardnt'r said.
''It looks like they'll be able to do It and that we'll
have a good TORS for future shuttle missions."
TORS LS the largest, most complex and most
expensive communications satellite ever built. but
to be eff~·t1ve 1t must be in an orbit matching the
spin of Earth. It is designed to serve as a space
switchboard between the Earth and as many as 26
satellites. including the shuttle fleet.
Motel fights
'whiplash'
CHATTANCX>GA, Tenn (AP)-Days Inns
of America Inc. plans to ask a judge to review a
;ury verdict awarding $25,000 to a man who
clauned he permanently injured his neck after
walking in on a "skimpily clad" woman in a
motel room.
James L . Hardy Jr., 56, of Nederland. Texas,
sought $15-0.000 in damages from the Atlanta·
based motel chain, saying the company's East
Ridge property was negligent for ~ving hun the
key to the wrong room and exposing him to the
nightgown-clad woman in 1981.
Days Inns denied any negligence. A JUry
deliberated about two hours before announcing
the verdict Tuesday.
Hiker rescued
from Canyon
FlRST
SHUl1lE
SPACEWALK
&Mii OS I 1 ---
S uit for first s huttle s pacewalk.
Panel backs
worship • issue
SACRAMENTO (AP) The state Senat<''s
Judiciary Committee has voted to close a loophole
that is prevenung the prosecuuon of terrorist.s who
threaten worshipers or destroy places or worship.
The 7 .Q vote yesterday sent SB780 by state
Sen Ed Royce. R -Anaheim, to the Committee on
Finance
Royce said the bill evolved from a case in
which an avowed Nazi threatened destruction of
Peninsula Temple Beth El in San Mateo County 1f
1ts members w e nt ahead with H an ukkah
"•remorues. He said the man who made the threat
was apprehended but could not be prosecuted
because of a 1981 drosion of the state Supreme
Court ln that opiruon, Chief Jusuce Rose Btrd wrote
that the state prohib1l1on against issuing threats "to
achieve social or political goals" was constitutionally
vague. Royce's bill would make it a felony, punishable
by 16 months, two or three years m prison. to
threaten the safety of a place of worship or the
safety of a person attending services there.
Ruaj1ui 11llq half of wrrent
unt'mplCl)'mcnt, now runnlne at a
rut4! of 10 3 pen.'t'nl, Lii a result of
lhl' n'Ct'Mlon. ''The best cure fur
thl• la to get the economy
moving, 1rnd wu're doing ju1t
thut." he .aid
Reagan cited tht: Jarnuary
1urie in leading economlt.·
inc.Hcators, the eharp drop In
lnt.ercat rates and Inflation ainct·
h t• l o o k o t l I c e . a n d t h t:
Improvement in housing ataru
and pcrmll.s, now at their hlghe1t
level since late 1979 He said
unemployment LS "still painfully
high" but 1s decreasing
. UCI prof
wary of
Nixon
papers
By G LENN SCOTT
01 the Delly Piiot 8t8'f
Jon Wie ner, the suddenly
famous UC Irvine historian,
knows how hard it is to obtain
federal papers from the Nixon
era
Hts concerns are part of the
reason why UCI faculty members
are involved this week in a
detailed study of a proposal to
locate the Richard M. Nixon
Pres1dent1al Library on the
campus.
Wiener made headlines last
month by filing a lawsuit in
federal court in an attempt lCJ
fort't' the FBI io release all of its
files on former Beatie J ohn
Lennon
Seasoned by his experiences
with the FBI. Wiener was one of
several faculty members whu
m111ally called for an m -depth
s tud y of the Nixon library
proposal. He noted during aM
Academic Senate meeting that
placement of the library, archives
and museum at UCI didn't
necessard y mean researchers
would enjoy complete acr:ess to
aU of Nixon's presidential papers
and tapes
"My experience wath Nixon
e ra documents has made me
scns1t1ve to the problems o f
access -more so than most
people," Wiene r explained
during an interview yesterday
HB couple
found safe
aboard boat
A young Huntington Beach
couple were found safe and well
on their boat in Huntington
Harbour early today alter being
reported missing overnight,
according to a U.S . Coast Guard
spokesman.
The sailors. Kevin Hall. 2 1,
and Heather Cashman. 18, took
their 18-foot pleasure boat to
Catalina yesterday morning.
Their parents reported them
rrussmg when they didn't return
in the evening.
Coast Guard spokesman Rick
Woods said they stayed the night
at the USC Medical Center dock
at the Catalin~ isthmus rather
than trying to return home in the
storm.
A 49-year-old Anaheim man,
found yesterday In the Grand
Canyon where he had wandered
for five days, has been released
from an Arizona hospit.al aft.er
treatment for exposure.
Donald John8on lost during an
outing on Good Friday. was
found incoherent, kneeling and
unable to stand. R escuers
followed a trail of discarded
clothea to the man.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPH HIES
Cnt1fi#d G1molo,gi1t. AGS
I'm proud of
where he bought
my diamond!
THE ENGAGEMENT RING
How Much Should You Soend1
We're
Listening •••
What do you hkt' about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
The engagement ttng 11 one of the
world's oldest exPfeSS1ons ol love. The
lradi1ton was developed by the ancient
Egypltans But 11 is only w11hin 11\e post
cen1ury that diamonds hove b.come
ovo1loble to th• e•tent tho1 1he Of'dlnory
clttten con olf0td to give o diamond
engagement ring. The diamond, In loci,
hos becom• our culture's most wkt.iy
oecepred symbol of love How mvch
should one spend on o diamond
engogamont ring? A good rule of
1humb is 1hot you should poy 01 i.os1 th•
9q11ivoi.nt of one or two months tolcwy.
Alter a", you ore giving o ltfetune gift
to 1h• most speciol person in vour Ille,
In mo~lng wch on lmpooont IMChose,
treat It with the PfOCllc;ol view thot yov
would ''*e in buying o home, o tor, Of
u fin e stereo syatom. Do 1om•
reseorc:h. 8t ccweful to deol with on
e11obl1tt\ecl l•welef r.cogn1zed .,, vour
co1M1un11y. Don't wait unhf the 1011
minute. Visit your 1eweler. o•• for
odviu, then moke up your mind. A
dlomond 11 o rore ond lo111no thing,
Mote o choice that w1I pleoio ~ ond vcwr loved one for life.
642•6086
.. 5.,
MoMlfy ,.~ It 100# do
flOI IWWt .,_ ""' lty ,.,,,,, ... ~1pm · •11• 1011• $0PY wm ... ...... .. ,\Qty Wl4 ,_, It t.w do riot rec-,_
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Tlll.hH• ..... ~co....., .....
~--...... , ..... ...,_ ...............
'
.... ----.
Call the number at left and your meuage will be recorded,
traJ'\llCribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24 hour answertng service may be used to record let
ters to t he editor on any topic Mailbox contributors mual int'lude
their na me and telephone number for verification. No circulation
calls. please
Tell w1 what's on your mind
ORANGE COAST Daily Piiat
J
C .... HIN lldW9f'tteolnt 1141~ All other....,..,,..,, .. ~
MA• OfflCI »0 WM hy 81 Oct!• ~ QA ..... tcldr-'°" ,,,, CO.I• ..... CA t2t2t
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~OL 7', NO .•
1
Will she be proud or cmbarras\e"d when frlendt ask
where you t>ouaht her diamond 7 And, wlll you be
cmbamwcd aboul the price you paid Cor the quality
received? Today, there are no "b'1rgalns" in diamonds.
You save no more-often lo<1e-whcn you Cry to cut
comers. Your knowledaeablc American Gem Society
membet jeweln-ono with a local reputation to aaft·
pa.rd a.nd ttandards co malntaln-1.a your wisest choice.
Moreover, she will be proud to know her diamond
came ttom us. Don't dh1ppolnt her. @'
J. C.JJ"'"f''I:;~--1.~ @
,
Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT /Wednetdly, Aprll 8, 1983 NB Bf -
NYSE (:OMPO ITE TRANSACTION ~
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,
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.... , .. , ......
Ji ( n.h ~IVM ("t
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 6.67
CL081NQ 1,113.49
March best month
economically in 9 years
By Tbe Associated Pre111
Americans' confidence in the economy rose
sharply m March for the best monthly gain in ninl'
years. the Conference Board satd yesterday. But
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan warned that
econonuc recovery "could stall" if interest rates fail to
fall as he predicts.
Labor Secretary Ray Donovan said government
alone cannot reverse the problem of lost jobs in
America. but said the Reagan administration will
double its spending for qisplaced workers next year
Regan told reporters that inflation has been low
t!nough, !or long enough, that fears of rising prices
should not be a worry that would cause lenders W
keep interest rates relauvely high.
But Regan said two thmgs are sttll needed to
assure a further decline m rates: Congress must
somehow cut into "poteni1ally huge" federal budget
deficits. and the Federal Reserve Board must slow the
growth of the U.S. money supply.
Productivity output revised
WASHINGTON-The productivity of American
bus1ess rose an average of 1 5 percen t a year from 1948
through 1981. the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported
today. The bureau based its finding on a new and
broader measure of productivity in the nation's private
business sect.or The new measure includes the money
businesses spent on plants and equipment. as weU as
the output per hour of workers. Previously , the ..
government had said t hat private business
productivity rose an average of 2.4 percent a year from
1948 to 1981. But that was based on a more limited
measure which involved only a computation of the
goods and services the economy produces tn an hour's
~1d workmg time.
AMERICAN LEADERS
SYMBOLS
P\t Up IJO
Up •.1 Up 7J
Up JI Up Lt Up L 7
V1> '. Up S 2
UP SI Up S.l
Up S.O Up 4,1 Up 4.J
Up 4 f
Vo • 2 Up < 2
Up • 2 Up <I
Up < l
Up 4 0
UP J t Up J..• Up l I UP 31 Up J I
~· Off ,. •
Olt " ) Off IJ . on ., >
Off '. Off 1.0 Off 12 Ott 1.0 Ott I 0 Olt • ,
Off u
()ft St
Olt u Off SI
Off u
Off SI Oii SI Ott SI Ott u Ott u Ott ) \ Oii s ) Ott H ()ft ))
Off s 2
METALS
NEW YORI< IAPI
....illl ptic.s t()day
Soos nonrerrou1
Gold -eo-.-83 t•"'• a pound U S
-On.ttlOnS c.t>--7• ~ tenta pet l>OUn4 NY
Com.a ec>ot month ciOMO T ....
Leed -21·23 _. ••• pound
Z1M -38 cenll a pound. dell-.cl n.. -~ 9008 Metala w-~1t
IO ~ -78 '*111 • pound. ,. y
...._, -'320 00 -"""' .........,. -*3'600-s.31100 ,.,,.,en ''O'f ounce. H v
GOLD QUOTATIONS
SILVER
"9nd)I 6 ...,...,, 111 230 per uoy ounce
only oa.lly quofl
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
,,.,,
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1 .... . '• ,.
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n·New 11aua r-0.Ctareo O• oaio 1n Pf-In<
12 "'onlha ph.ot ltoei< 0•.,ci.nd t•PAIO Ir
1100 '" 1>1-*11119 12 "'°"'"' ••llfft119C CU ii •.i..t OI\ a .. c!MO...O Ot Ol·dfltrtl>Ul!Ot
dale
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mull•Plt ol Qet•tllatt ..,lllft0t .Otfl¥N D1
OtVtClinQ 11\t lltotl 11•1'1\0ntll -1'11191 ~· onto IU I Nit OflCe
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