HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-
Can we afford improved schools?
School oCficials agree with 'mediocrity' report, but wonder where funds are -By PHIL SNEIDICRMAN OflMW,NetlWt
Staie and local educaton have
reacted favorably to th• ·~la
U.ied in • federal report cawn,
for IChoo1 reform. to ...vene a
"rl1Jn1 tide of mediocrity" In
education. But they have
queeUoned where the money will
be obtained to 1upport 1uch
UPlfadinl· In • report 1-ued yeete.rday,
the 18 -member National
Comml11lon on Jtxcelltnct in
Education, appointed by th•
Rea1an Admlnhtr8$ion, called
for lonpr IChool daya and yun,
hlaher •~•demtc 1tandarch tn
hl1h 1chool, tou1her colle1e
entrance requlrementa, more
homework and h11her teacher
ularlet to attract 1uperlor
inltructon.
California School•
Superintendent Bill Hont1 •Id
ye1terday he •1ree1 with the
federal panel'• concluafoN. He
aald the educational fallurea
outlined In the report are
"probably wone" in CalHornJa
th.an 1e>me other atates.
H o nts uld he recently
propoeed leptaUon with 1lmHar
reform• auch H lon1er 1ehool
day• and tougher graduation
atandarda. He alao endoraed a
commlMlon recommendaUon that
each American 1tudent be
required to complete at leut •
half-year of computer aclence
ln.U'Uctlon.
At the 1ocal level, Bill Bamee,
1upertntendent of the Laauna
Beach Unified School Diatrict,
aaid llOm9 of the reform• called
for In the report already are
being_ put into effect. He aald ht.
(See SCHOOL, Pase A!)
THI DRANGI COASl COUNTY EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Prison time Prop. 8
for teen-age
felons urged
mounts
in OC
By JEFF ADLER or-.°"" .... ..,. By JODI CADENHEAD °' ... °"" ..... ...., A Sacramento woman'• slaying
by a 14-year-old neighbor has
aparked le"lslatlon -co-•J>ONIOl"?d by two Orange Coast
lawmakers -which would
require aocuaed murderen and
raPlta under 16 to stand trial as
acfulta.
The same legialatlon, which
wu to go before a key All8el'l'lbly
committee today, alao would
require state hospitals auch aa
C.O.ta Mesa's Fairview facility to
admit young prlaonera who
oommlt .erioua crimes and who
are conaidered either mentally ill
or mentally defident.
State hospitals now can retu..e
..... admlwiona,
Enibattled
councillllan
lights back
'By ROBERT BARUR or ... ...., .......
The bad thing• that have
happened to GU Hodges in the
last 10 montha or ao can make
grown men cry.
What's happened to the first-
t er m Westminster city
ooundlman you can't find on the
1-to-10 rating llCale. It'• down in
the mlnt.18M:
-Hodges' brother Barclay
wu JZUftDf)d down and killed in a
hotel bar near John Wayne
Airport latt June. A couai.n is
bct.ni trial in the ahoottng.
-Hodges and four other
Orance County residenta were
lndict.ed tlUa mcnth by • federal
arand jury on alle1atlon1 of
CXllWplrinc to commit home-loan
fraud.
-Hodgea wu the taraet of a
mDll\bl.loruz investigation by the
Oran1e County Dlatrict
Attorney'• Office into alleptklna
of Dliie••!duct whlle tn office.
But after a summer, winter
· and aprina of diacontent. there
.,. tndicationa that 1J.od911' luck
ma.y be turnlna· 4 dej>uty district at1Qrney aaid
y.aerday that he couldn't find
evidence to aupport criminal
c:barJll8t tha1 Hoda-lied about
bl.I r"Jdence or that he wu ~ for tri .. be allepdly
didn't.a. Hodfla uld be feela rellm!d *lh•td. " ut my bone• have been
~ cleul. rm havlnc to prove cw· aooo• P .. • AZ>
The bill ,is sponaored by
Assemblywoman Jane.
Moorhead, R Sacramento. It la
co -sponsored by As-
semblywoman Marian
Berget10n, R-Newport Beach, and
Assemblyman Nolan Friuelle,
R-Huntington Beach.
The impetus for the bill waa
provided by Jeff MartlnJ, 27,
whoae wife Wal rared and
atabbed to death in 198 , Martini
ea.Id he \Vas angry and ahocked
when the 14-year-old defendant
was tried as a juvenile and aent
to a California Youth Authority
facility for the slaying of Erin
Martini, 24.
Under existing law, offenden
tried u juveniles and aent to a
CYA facility muat be releued by
.,.., "°' ..........
Fairview State H08pital in Costa Mesa, wh\ch now serves severely
retarded patients, may house youthful offenders if bill is passed.
age 25, although the average
time eerved ta only 30 montha.
"The ki)t.. got away with
murder," Martin.I a.id ln a phone
interview from hie Northern
California home. "It'• bad
enough to go through llOlnethlng
like thia, but then to have the
1yatem totally ignore you.
Hopefully, I can do something."
He took ht. cue to Moorhead,
who introduced the leaWation
lut December.
Under the propoaed bill ,
known u AB 10, 14 and 15 year
olda may be tried aa adults. If
convicted of murder, aex crimes
or kldnapplnl with death, they
can be aent to a CY A facility
unW 18 and then"tnmsferred to a
atate prlaon to serve the
ttmainina 11e11 tence.
Now, only defendanta 16 and
older at the ti.me of the offen9e
can be tried as adults, following a
determination by a judge.
"I th.ink the bill ls great.'' said
Orange County Juvenile Court
Judge Byron McMillan. "They
(youthful offendera) have no
compunction about killing a
human beinf and I don't want
them beck out there at 21."
FrizzeUe could not be reached
for comment, but an aide said the
(See PRISON, Pare All
~ Orange County aupervison
are diacovering, puaage lut year
of the Victim'• Bill of Righta -
Proposition 8 -h.aa eent the coat
of juatioe in California I08Jing.
1'he Boa.rd of Superviaon WM made· painfully aware of that fact
yesterday as it approved an extra
$800,000 to rover the coat of
hiring private attorney• to
represent indigent criminal
defendanta.
The extra appropriation waa
needed becat.18e many more cuee
are com.Ing to trial aa a result of
Propocition S. That meana the
Public Defender's omoe ii bein&
forced to decline defendina many
more clients becauae of varioua
(See PROP. I, Pqe A%)
. egun _
----a
Irvine grower hits
raids for aliens
i,q 3 e3~ !/!
J ~, 1933
.,.., ........... ., ....,_ .....
Virginia Sullivan shows "Tweet-tweet Segunda" her 1peeial birthday card.
Her best friend's chicken
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN "' .. °"" .........
ViiiElnia Sullivan's pet turned 6 yeara old
yeaterday. The Fountain Valley woman
celebrated by plactn1 a giant hand made
birthday card in her window and invttina frlenda
over for cake.
Sullivan la proud that her pet comes nmninl
al the mention of her name and"•~" when
ahe'• hungry. In fact. the pet won t IO to sleep
each nJaht unW ahe'• been fed a little llnldL
Unlike moat bouH peta, Sullivan'•
companion allO puts fd on the table.
Hw neflhbon may be utiltied With their
dop and cata, but to Vlrlll\la Sulllvan. then'•
· no pet like a chicken.
y ..ierday'• birthday alrl t. named Tweei-
tweet Seaunda· The "twee~tweet" ODID99 from
the happr, aounda ahe made u a chick, and
"ae1unda ' ia Spaniah for second. (The first
Tweet-tweet died.)
The pot birthday card re.ct. ''Mama Still
Love• You, Tweet-tweet Sepn~•· Happy Birthday.~ yean old. 693 f!881L A.,..u 26, 1983."
Sullivan, a retired Loe Angeles achool
teacher, admit• that her pet doesn't really
understand the tXrthday fua. "It'• just monkey
bull.-for the pown-upa.'' lbe •YI·
But ah~ atandt firm ln her belief that a
chicken can make • pat pet. Tweet-tweet
spenda the nl&ht in a chicken houle located in the
family room. But durtna the ct.y abe can roam ttM throuah the r9lktence and into • fenced
yard. ··u people can u.p a pMl'l"Ot in the ~. ••
(lee CHICU:N, P ... Al)
By GLENN SCOTT or .. ...., .......
An Irvine strawberry arower
aseert.ed lut nllh t that frequent
U.S. Border Patrol visita to his
fielda are worthless meaaures
that merely barua ht. workera
and threaten ht. business.
Arresting undocumented
workera and buaing them to
Tijuana Is ineffective because
workers often are back In the
same fields within four daya. uid ..
Don Wall, a ~2-year-old grower
who leuea 140 acres next to Lion
Country Sa.fart from the Irvine
Company.
Wall made his comment.a to the
Irvine Oty Council during one of
ita regularly acheduled, televt.ed
meetfn~fll .. He waa invited by
Mayor Agran.
The Bor er Patrol was not
invited, acconUna to Chief Dale
Musegades in San Diego.
Wall said his a"Op already ts tn
bad ahape because of heavy ratna. and constant vt.ita by the
Border Patrol don't help. He uid
agenta aometimes simply drive by
slowly hoping to apook workers. Acients have visited his flelda
th1ft t1mes in the put aix daya.
he said, adding that 14 of his 240
plcltera have been arrested aince
March 9, abo~the time the
"berry" harve1t an.
"Vie don't n help," aaid
~~~il who noted that farmen y don't show up to speak at
dty coundl meetinp. "We just
want to be left alone to try to
aa1 thi. thine• II w:iJ objected to the same
Border Patrol pracUct the City
The RaDM are hoping
that top clraf t et.Glee
Eric Dickenoa from
SMU will bloeeom lato
a1tarnnn ... Mck..
Robert Walde~ "Joe Firin6 up ROMA" OD Trt "Lou "
p ... 01.
GNat" allow, wlll be
fMhl.red Sanarda1 ••a
Lap.aa Momao. ...., ................. ,..cs.
Council had of>PC*ld two weeb
before: RaJding fields without
first ~taJ.nlng aearch wura.n1a.
Urged by Agran, the cound.l
agreed to send a letter to U.S .
Attorney General William
(See IRVINE, Pa1e AZ)
SCHOOL CRISIS ...
d1atric:t la mak.lna lta CW'ric:ulwn
more demancflna and hu
1ncreued the number of math
and -=ience c1amm required for
lf9duaUon.
He aald additional math and
1clence clauea are betns
demanded by the atudents ·
lhemaelvea.
"The blageat clau we have
now In the hiah echool la the
phyaica clua," ~es aald. "A
number of yean ago, that wu
not the QM."
He added, ''I'm entirely
pleued with the content and
thruat of the report, but the
mystery la where the flnancial
reaourcea to make theae
bnprovementa will come from."
Local educatora noted that
CalUomia 'Ii now near the bottom
nationally in education funding.
''The at.ate Legialature la going
to have to 1quarely addre9s thla
problem." aaid Frank J . Abbott,
aupertntendent of the
\{untington Beach Union High
School Diat.rict. "lt'1 not KOllli to
go away."
He aareed that atudenta ~re
anxious to take more math and
aclence courHI but aald It la
becomina difficult to find
t eachera qualified In theae
1ubjecta.
Abbott aald he knew of a
recent UCLA math graduate
who had just entereQ the job
market. He aaid the high IChool
district would have started her at
$1~1000 per year. Instead, ahe
took a job with an ael'08pace firm
for $24,000.
The 1uperintendent aald he
hopes the federal report will apur
local buaineu and community
leadens to keep the pressure on
state legialaton to flnd a way to
channel more fund1 Into
education.
If the current level of funding
continues, Abbott warned, his
district may soon have to cut
courses Instead of lncreaalng
tJ1em.
IRVINE GROWER .. •
French Smith c1aimlna auch raid.a
violate conatitutional rights of all
residents, illegal ones included.
Agran commented on repon.s
that Border Patrol aaenta
Monday had chued six workers
on foot acrou the San Diego
Freeway near Wall'• field.a.
''It doesn't take much to realize
if you keep that up,Jou're golng
to have some dea people on
your handa," he said.
Agran predicted Border Patrol
practices will change if the U.S.
Supreme Court. which thia week asreed to hear a cue involvfna
factory raids, rules that aearch
warrants are required.
PROP. 8 COSTS ...
confllctl of lntere1t. board
memben were told.
Alto, the actual coat of
defending a client on a cue-by-
cue buia baa lncreaed bealu.e
the averqe number of trial dayw
haa IJOl'le Up ~ plea barpinlng
wa• curtailed H a reault of
Propoaitlon 8, the County
Adminiatrative Office aaid.
Man enters plea
in girl abduction
BJ TM AaNda&ecl Presa
A 21-year-old man accWled of
moleettnc two Tult1n Qirb haa
~IMded Innocent to abducti.n& hit -year-old daupter, Melima. to be&IJi a new life ln ArlJiona under
an -qned name.
Kevin .Mkbael Reilly'• trial
date ln the 88pC81e moi.tation
cue a.bo WU •t yesterday ln 0ranae County Superior Court
for June 20.
Supervisor Thomas Riley
recommended the board
appropriate the $800,000 to
supplement the f2.4 million
budgeted during fiscal 1983-84
for the hiring of private
attorneys. He added there ia no
alternative.
But the supervisons al.lo agreed
that the board should direct a
letter to county judges asking
that they carefully ICl'l.ltinize the
bills submitted by prlvatP.
attorneys for their Mtrvlces in
these caaea.
Riley said such a letter would
make the county judiciary aware
of the board's concern over the
~ting costa.
Superviaor Bruce Nestande
noted that the pasaage of
Propoaition 8 "dramatically
altered" the manner In which
indigent defendant• are
represented. Pa11age of the
measure was a "very costly
item," he said.
Orunu end en elec1r1c orge11 were
_. .... 1n·~~Ollthe
11400 blodl "'~ t... The• •• ~MS1500
Fountain Valley
~put~ In l**-V-mwtleel
tor ,.,.. "' .,.,,,.. end mede • profit during ... ~ M e .......... lneU!utlon on HwtlOr
lloule¥9rd.
An AM/FM tadlO c ... etle ete<eo end
iapee. ..-..ct • 9331. _. Mo6en ffom • '* In 11111 GOCIO DIDI* of e v .. A_....
Irvine
POllCe C4<111Kal9d • ll'tro.1119 •let. • ,,..,. .,,. --..on, lrom • ......,,. M Loe _.,..Bia•= ... , Sdlool ,_.,.,end
lll9o ...., up • ---"' "-'°""" et lrw. Hlgtl 8d>ool.
" .,_ Oflcs -.cc; ..... ptllCI Ooor
......... ..,._ Ofl .... 18000 ~
Coast cities fight arbitration bid
Stale interference in salary disputes 1 seen as eroding of local control
BY ROB!RT BARKER of"tMo.11 .........
Oran1e Coaat oftlclal• are
marahalina thelr forcee against
propoeed ata te lct1l1latlon that
would lmpoM compulsory and
blndlna arbitration on
munJclpMHtiet.
Their main concern IJI that the
blll, Introduced by •tate Sen.
Ralph C. Dill•. D-Oardeoa,
would wrest control of local
matten from local officlala.
"It would be a move in the
dlrectJon of 'Bta Brother' and
control by the 1\ate,'' HY•
Huntln1ton Beach City
Admlnhtrator Charles
HODGES.~ .
From Page A1
my innocence a'ainst crazy
charges. The 1hoe a kind of on
bKkwards. lan't It?" he utd.
The 39-year-old Hodges -
deacribed In some circles as a
bright Democrat -said he
lntenda to hit back.
"I hope to file a defamation
suit agalnat at least one of them
next week. And I'm ~g to
include about 100 John ."
He said allegedly alanderoua
statementa were made about him
in poUUcal flien and he believes
they helped to fuel the DA'a
lnveatigatJon.
"Maybe I've thumbed my no.
at my detractor1 and have fueled
the controversy," he aaid.
"l believe I've been lnnovative
and progresalve while other•
may be realatant to change.
There may be a fear of the
unknown," he aaid.
"It'• -well it'a more th.an too
bad -that the c razies with
un1ub1tantlated rumors can
Inflict ~I.Ac~ ~ef at-a.u~~n -
emotional cost," he said.
Hodges said the controversy
over his trips for the city
developed b ec ause he
procrastinated on providing
recelpta for all travel expenses.
He's made an agreement to pay
back the money.
Hodges also claim• that his
permanent residence has been in
Westminster all the time, even
though he lived temporarily in
Huntington Beach, he said, while
s tudying for his law degree.
While Hodges contends that
"political crazies" swept him lnto
the Orange County district
attorney'• inveat11at1on. he
prof..._ to be an Innocent victim
of circumstances in the federal
home loan fraud probe.
Hodges, a native of F.ag.le Pass.
Texas, d enied allefations he
agreed to verify alse loan
ol Co11e1111ct1011 C1rc1e W••I A 01011•1
tr~ •~end P0'1•1>1e 1lereo
equ1pfnen1 _. r-'90 MoMn
A ve11 puke<! In 111e Perlle< Hennllln
PMklnO lol ,. .. robbed 191•4"1' of i-
•-_... ... ......., .. 1160 ,..,.,. u.i.I
bfOlle In by ~ e wind "'"Cl, pollc>e Mid.
Laguna Beach
Anlmel control Ofllcer9 -. lo ,... .. ,. to .. -. Slfe91 8Mdl lodey .. IOw tlOe In .,,
elton 10 ·-• 0-' --lhel -~l>le~eroey
_., .,.., el l200 -MoMn ffom e llome 111 tl'te UOO lllOCll ol l • Mired•
.,.....,,,..,. tM -...,
Thom peon.
The arbitration luarl•l•ll<>n
would mandate that economic
dlapute. betwMn police and fl.re
om ployee auocla tlon1 and
a overrunent offlclab be turned
over \0 an arbitrator for • final
dedaion.
Both 1lde1 would have to
accept th~ arbitrator'• ruling.
Amomblyman Nolan Frl:u.ellv,
R-Hundn1ton Beach, recently
met with leader• from
Huntington Beach, F ountain
Valley, Coata M ... and Santa
Ana on the 1-ue.
'n\e ClOnltNUI, llODOrdlnc to a
Frliselle alde, waa that local
Councilman GU Hodges
beset by problems
application.a ln the pun::ha.ae of
homes ln Huntington Beach. He
aald he misbt have become
implicated becau.e he had agreed
only to answer telephone calls
and take memages for a company
which la involved ln the lnqulry.
official• oppotc:d thet meaaur~
~U9e they would loee control
over local flnancee
The Oranae County Learue of
CltlH al.lo ls worklna aaalnat the
leatalatlon.
Execu\lve Dlrector Bo b
liaakeU aatd the P.ropoula come
up reppatedly ' and we h•ve
o ppose d the m from lime
lmmemortal. ••
Haskell 1aid he believed the
leiialat.lon waa a form of payoff
from the poUticiana to police and
tint uniona for their aupport and
oontr!but.tona.
"We (the league) have been
wnUna and aalllna offk:iaJa and
at-neraUna oppo9itfon," he aald.
Thompeon uid hla chief fear la
that the Jegl•latlon would put
lmporwnt flnandal dedllona ln
the handa of an oullfd• party,
who doe•n't know about city
flacal co ndit io n• and .
furthermore, may not care about
them.
Ho l&Ad that current collective
bargainlna proced'1re9 have been
"very aallafactory."
. Hearings on the propoaed
legialauon are acheduled by the
Senate Finance Committee for
May 2
Man held, brother
sought in holdup
By STEVE MARBLE of"tll9~"°411.tf
A Iona. tedious eearch through
mug sbota of f orm e r 1cill
prisoners led Newport Beach
police to the identity of two men
they believe took officers on a
wild, bullet-punctuated chase
after allegedly robbing a jewelry
shop. 'I.
One of the identified men -
Art Angullar. 20, of Rosemead -
was in custody at Orange County
Jail today on s u apicion of
robbery. burglary, kidnap and
UM! of a firearm, police said.
An arrest warrant haa been
issued for the man's younger
brother, Frank Anguliar. Police
said he ia still at large.
The brothers, police alleged,
held up Clinton Jewelers in
Corona del Mar April 15 and
exchanged gunshot.a with police
officera before jumping in a
stolen car.
Officers pursued the car
through Coat.a Mesa. where the
chase came to a metal-cnmching
end at Newport Boulevard and
FairviPw Rt\l\li
One of the bandtt.a, police said,
took off on foot while the second
commandeered a van after
forcing the o wner out at
gunpoint. Officers said the
gunman plowed the van into a
tree a shori distance later.
After abandoning the van,
police cl.aimed the bandit broke
into a Hamilton Street home and
held a woman and her husband
hostage for more than four
houn.
Police student arrested
The w oman told police the
bandit made a series of phone
calla Crom her home and finally
arranged to have someone pick
him up. A Golden West College Police
Academy 1tudent who was
"highly thought of" haa been
arrested by Costa Mesa narcotks
inveatigatora on suspicion of
sell.ina cocaine.
Aspiring officer Edward
Corneliua Palaoro Jr., 25, of
Fountain Valley and Douglas
Lavam Austin, 25. of Carta Mesa
were arrested Friday in the
parking lot of a Huntington
Beach apartment after allegedly
selling undercover officers one
ounce of cocaine valued at $2,400.
Costa Mesa detective James
Wataon said Palaoro was a aeU -
sponaored recruit at the police
academy and waa scheduled to
graduate June 10 from the
18-week ooune.
"He waa highly thought of and
doing well," said Watson.
Both men were releaaed from
custody after posting $25,000
bail.
Newport detectives said the
man, at .everal poinll, mentioned
h e 'd recently been in Los
Angeles County Jail. Police laid
they searched jail photoe until
they came up with two men who
matched deecrlptiona provided by
witneaes.
The older Anguliar. who ill
being held on $100,000 bail at
Orange C.ounty Jail, was arrested
at h1S Rosemead home Friday.
CHICKEN CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY ...
From Page A1
Sullivan a.aka, "why not a ch1cken?"
Not surpri.mgly, Tweet-tweet's favorite
pasume lS ea ting.
"Her favorite food as sour cream," says
Sullivan. "She likes null, aunflower seeds and
fresh grapes She abo likes snalls. rn09qwtoes
and flies.
"She knows every sound m the h~. If I
swat a fly on the sliding-glaa door. she hears it
and cornea running.••
Sullivan rlll.9ed several other ctuckens before
Tweet-tweet, but her current pet has been ~
hardiest survivor Though Tweet-tweet is
getting on m years by chicken standards. she
continues to produce eggs.
Still, Tweet-tweet does demand a little more
attention than aome other home animala might.
"When you have a pet like thia," Sullivan
laughed, "you can't get aomeone to come in and
chicken-siL"
PRISON TIME FOR TEENS. • •
From Page A1
aaaemblyman la concerned about
the arowing number of young
offenders who are committing
aerioua crlmea.
If approved, the bill would
only apply to a amaU segment of
the overall priaon population,
since less than~ percent are now
under 16.
Only 36 percent of the ~.800
prisonen serving time ln CY A
facllltlee were tried u adult.a. aocordlnc to a apokemlan
for homlclde and 273 for rape.
Sixteen of thoee .erving time for
murder are under 16. a
apokesman said.
Dr. Francis Crinella, executive
director of Fairview State
~C!la.l• said It '9 doubtful his f ty will be forced to accept
any criminal palienta.
There are 61 inmates now
under Youth Authority
jurisdiction in atate hospitals.
Bergeson u id ahe would be
willina to dhlcuas any oonoems of
Fairview offidals with them.
An aide in Mool'head's office
said authorities were concerned
that youn1 offenders needing
hospital treatment are not now
~vtnc psychiatric care.
Clouds lingering A breakdown of the three
major crimes ahowa that 1,517
are Rrvin8 time for robbery. M8
"I think that moat of the
~ realizie that Fairview la 981 up Ior the .everely retarded and
the adm1ll1oo of indlviduala with
crtminal-type behavior would be
moat Inappropriate, .. he said.
"Secondly, we are In the middle
of an urban area.••
Oppesitlon to the bill haa came
from PrA orpnilatiooa. Friends
C.omm.ittee on Legtalation. the
st.ate Public Defender'• Office
and the Callfomt.a ~ Officers
Aaod.ation.
~ " 1t
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11 =
Pittsburgh Paints
WM;tHIDE
L:ATEX FLAT W~L ffAINT
Spring
SALi
IA.LI PIUCI
'14.1&
SATINHIDE
L~LUSTRE
LATEX ENAMEL
NATION
National War College
rocked by bomb blast
Bf Tile Asaoelai.d Pre11
WASHINGTON -After repeated telephon~ warnlnp, •
bomb exploded in a flowerpot at the National War College at
Fort McNair, deltroytna the vee991 and ahatterina wlodowa but
cauat.na no injuries. The-bomb went off lut nlght 11 memben of
the 67th Ordnance Detachment, a bomb-diapo1&l unJt balled at
the fort. were on thelr way to the three4tory brick buUdtng. A
1taff member at the Waahlngton office of United Presa
lnt.emational aald the bomb went off about 15 minutes aft.er the
office ~ived a barely audible call, apparently tape-recorded.
rneneion.lna "U.S. imperla.llam" and "U.S. buee in Guatemala"
and aayina that a bomb would go off at 10 p.m.
Time sought Hitler diaries
Orang• Co111 OAIL.V PILOT/W.ctn .. day, Aprll 27, 1983 Al
Can't ignore Central America 'fire'
R eagan asking Congress, T V audien ce i o com bat military threats
NEW YORK (AP) -
Pr•1ident Re•aan uraed
""w1~p1tr · publlahen today to
keep in mind the 1l1n1 of a
reboundlna 9e0nomy when they
encounter "/lea1 from
Wathlnaton an maybe: your
own edltortal wrlten'' for mo~
1pendina and higher t.axe1.
The prealdent aho aousht to
enl11t the publl1her1 In hi1
campaign to publlcl:te what la
r1gtat about the Unl\ed States and
said: "I think the generosity and
compassion of moat Americana
towards those who suffered
durlna the recent rtCHlion
d•Hrvea a JUtlo more 'new1
ooveraa than lt'a ~ved."
The pre1ldent 1poke to the
W7th annual convenUon of the
American Newspeper PubUahen
AlloclaUon before returnlns to
Wuhinlton where he planned to
deliver a apeoch to Conjre11
ton.laht on hlt Central Amirlcan proeram. ,
"We are not accu1tom9jl to
worrying abou\ a military thre.tt
In our own heml.aphere," Reeaan
aatd. "We have almoet taken for
granted friendly, lnd~pendent
neilhbon."
"But w.,. can no tonaer tanore
the fire that is buminc ln our
own front yard We mu1t
reepond both wllh unity and
flnnneee of purpoee. The peoples
of thla hcml1phere are all
Americana, and au of ua 1hare a
vttal atake In a future of
democracy and freedom," he
uJd.
However, yesterday the House
Appropriationa autx.'Ommittee on
foreign operations cut ln half the
prt:1ldent'1 requnl for an
additional MO million In mJlltar§
aid for El Salvador )
Reapn aaid he would puah for
restoration of the full $60 mJUlon
"The cup'• half full. We need th~
full cup. We will 10 back to¥
more," he said. ·• .. Meanwhile, Rep. Edward
Boland, D-Mul., chairman of the
Houae Intelllaence C.Ommitteeo.
propoaed to cut off all aid tO
lnaurgeni. fi&hting the Jeftl1t
goverrunent In Nicaragua aft.en
4~ days. I ,,
-
NEW YORK -Time m.aaa.zine uys It negotiated to buy
the rights to the purponed diaries of Adolf Hitler from the West
Geiman new1 magazine Stem. but the deal collapsed when the
iwo aides could not ascee on a price. The diarle1, whose
authentici\y bu been queetioned, had been tracked down .by a
reporter for the German maaazine in East Gennany. Newsweek
magazine al10 decided not to buy the diaries because of
que1tion1 "of how to authenticate the materials," an
unidentified eenior editor said.
Recall victory
helps niay or
solidify city
' 'U.S. Still; 1
Ruling d elayed in A-test suit
SALT LAKE CITY -A federal court ruling on whether
atomic testing cauaed the dfftha or Ulnemes of 1,192 people is
being delayed becaU8e the judge must lift through thousand.a of
docwnenta. In the suit, the plaintiffa claim they or their relatives
became alck or died from cancer cau1ed by exposure to
radioactive fallout from atom bomb tests in Nevada between
1951 and 1962.
STATE
Reagan attorney's son 'incompetent'
TORRANCE -Mlchael Miller, son of President Reagan's
ta.x attorney, ia schizophrenic and incompetent to stand trial in
th e rape and slaying of his mother, according to a court-
appointed paychiatriat. The opinion by Dr. Blake Sk.rdla could
bohter defense attempts to have Miller, 20, committed for
psyd:rlalrtc cannirther than stand trial ift the -M~ ~ dealh..of
Marguerite Miller, 52. Her husband, attorney Roy Miller,
diacovered the body at the family's Palos Verdes Est.at.es home
Guilty plea in Disn ey bomb plot
LOS ANGELES -A 29-year-old drifter haa pleaded
guilty to threatening to explode apparently fictitious bombs at
I>isneyland wtlesa the amusement park gave him $100,000. U.S.
Diatrict J ud.ze Lawrence Lydick accepted the guilty plea from
James Michael Camp who was already in custody on charges of
aggravated rape and buralarY in Gretna, La., when booked in
the Di1neyland case. No bomb was ever found.
Prosecution r ests in Strangler trial
LOS ANGELES -The Hillside Strangler proeecution has
rested its cue after testimony by more than 2~0 witnesses,
including actor Peter Lorre's daughter and confessed strangler
Kenneth 1MarncN. tbe del9ndant'• cowin. Anaelo Buono, ta, an aU1o upb I.Cu•, a c:bara-t wfth mUl"derina'-10 ~ ,...,.,..
wboee nude bodJea were dumped on hillsides around Los
Angeles from September 1977 to February 1978.
80 pounds of h eroin seized in LA
LOS ANGELES -F.ighty pounda of heroin hidden in the
lining of cardboard boxes was the largest~ver teizure of drugs
from SoutbeMl Mia'• ''Golden Trian&Je," say federal acenta
who arrested two men and hope to arrest othen. .
Efforta to capture everyone ln the alleged smuggling ring
fell apart when two Thai men who picked up one box at a post
office reallzed they were under surveillance, tried to Oee and
were arrested, authorities said Tueeday.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Mayor Dianne
Feinstein, who turned a recall drive into a mandate
for her moderate politics, says she's "abeolutely''
confident of re-election In November after a
landslide victory in the recall election.
The 49-year-old DemcxTatic mayor'• $450,000
campaign to retain office was backed by hundreds
of volunteers who handed out absentee ballot
requests from behind ironing boards. That strategy
drew 45,343 votes for the mayor to 5,690 in favor of
her recall, secured yeaterday's election and helped
Feinstein "solidify" her campaign organization.
Her total vote in 709 precincta was 127,043 for
Feinstein and 29,269 for the recall -80 percent
against the recall. Another 5,000 abeentee ballota
will be counted by FT-iday and 800 ballota were
challenged. The election turnout was 4-4.9 percent.
about the same as in the city's last recall vote 37
years ago.
-rrwe·re-golng-to have a victory tontght/'
Feinstein told a crowd of about 1,000 cheering
supporters as the returns came ln. "I aee this . . . aa
a mandate for strength, as a mandate for courage, as
a mandate fo~ bringing the people of the city
together ....
She S81d the. results created "a unity that we
have not aeen here in many, many years," and ahe
promised to be "a mayor that's not going to let the
tail wag the dog."
The failure of the recall, organized by a
20-member 1960s radical group called the White
Panthers, was blamed on the absentee ballots by
Panthers leader Tom Stevena.
"Our reaction ia lll court." he wd after the
count was announced "The absentee ballota are
illegal."
Two courts, including the state Supreme C.Ourt,
threw out the group'• argument that absentee
ti.llota violated • CIOIW!itutlonaJ ~t \0 • .ecret
ballot.
The mayor wept when she flrat learned the
drive had collected the necessary Signatures to force
the recall. But she campaigned vigorously, touting
her 411\ -year record Instead of defending it and
gathering a momentum expected to carry her
~h the fall election.
Her atrang lhowtna 1n the recall vote and a
political war chest estimated in the millions could
scare off serioua challengers in November. <
And a strong showing. cou~ with her role as
woman mayor of the hoat city for the Democrauc
National Convention next July, will focw national
\
' -
San F ra ncisco Mayor Dianne
Feinstein claims victory a(ter she
easil y su rvived recall election.
attention on Feinstein as never before.
Her adminiltration of this frequently eccentric
aty-rounty hu generated a $1M> million aurplw.
Unemployment is several points below the state
average, downtown construction i. boom.lng and a
$54 million renovation of the city's historic cable car
1ystem is rolling along smoothly while other clues
are pressed for masa transit funds.
11
strong'
Kissinger:
1
~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --..
Despite a declining world'
economy and a shrinkinf
military advantage, the United
States still la the strongest ainglq
nation in the world, formef
Secretary of State Henr~
Kissinger said.
,
'
"A-3 late as 1950, we produced
52 percent of all the gooda and
services in the world," Kissing~
said yesterday. "Since then oul
military advantage ha.a shrunk.
According to 1ome, it has
dlaappeared." ,
The United States currently
produces only 20 percent to 22
~rcent of the world's goods. he
said, but "we are still the
strongest single nation in the
world." •
Speaking to about 7 ,000 peopl&
attending the National Schoo4
Boards As8ociation conventlO!l\
Kiss.inger deecribed the selection
of Yuri Andropov aa Soviet
leader as unusual and said Ll
produced a government
"combination of military and
secret police" faced with th•
''huge task of taking over th~
Communist Party." •
Only m.inu t.es in to his speech in
the Mos~one Center, a11
unidentified man raced down an
awe yelllna repeatedly, "Mn
KJasinger, you are a murdettr,'I
and nanung as the victim Ilalian
Premier Aldo Moro, who waa
kJdnapped by terrorists m Rome
and assassinated March 16, 1978: .
K.iainger, aomewhat ahaken
aaid after the man was ~
out that Moro was killed -~~i months after he left offk:.e ~
that no U.S. administration hast·
had anything to do with the'j
Italian Red Brigade, which took
credit for the killing.
Composer Bronislau Kaper dies
BEVERLY HILLS -Oacar-winning film com~r
Bronialau Kaper, wh~ aonp included "Hi Lili. HI Lo,' "On
Green Dolphin Street" and "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm.~
has died at 81 of cancer. In nearly 30 years at Metro·
Goldwyn-Mayer, he wrote 9COrea for films including "Red
Badge of C.Ourage," "The Brothers Karamar.ov," ''Butterfield
8," "Lord Jim," ''Tobruk," "A Day at the Races," "Gaslight"
and "Lill," for which he won an Academy Award.
Judge says father can visit burned son
WORLD
Shultz r eassures Israeli l eaders
JERUSALEM -S«:ret.ary of State George P. Shwtz
declared today that while the United States wanta t.raeU forces
out of Lebanon, the Reagan adminiatra\.ion t. "committed
without quaJification to hrael'a IW'Vival, aecurlty and well-
being. Praident Reagan hu 1ent ~ here to work cloeely with
you on new atepa toward peace, Shultz said at Ben-Gurion
International Airport. •-our immediate task is bringing peace to
Lebanon, rt!Storfng Lebaneae sovereignty, withdrawing all
foreign forces, and eruuring peace and security on l.arael'1 northern border .•.
Help for Pisa's leaning to wer
ROME -The government today asked six university
profe.on to design a plan to prevent the Leaning Tower of Pisa trom fa.lllng over. It earmarked $7 million for the job. The
toWet'• famous tilt haa been '°"8<1ually ~and experts
haw aid it will eventually topple wtle. a support system is
devt8ed. The tower ia 17 feet off the perpendkular. It t>eaan = ahortly after construction bepn in 1l73 bec&UR the
thlfted underneath.
Charles Rothenberg, charged
with selling his 6-year-old eon
afire in a Buena Park motel room
March 3, won the right to visit
the critically injured boy
yesterday -providing both the
youngster's doctors and mother
agree.
But the boy's mother, Marie
Rothenberg. and his physlciana
Housing bias
• seminar set
Oranae County re1ldenll
concerned about diecrlmlnation
in employment or hou.lng can
get information on theae illuea 9t
a con1umer lnformaUon and
education day planned Friday at
South Coast Plaza ln Costa Mesa. TP.e CalifomiA Department of
Falt Employment and Houain&
will participate ln the event,
which i9 1pon.ottd by the Offke
of Conaumer Affairs of Orange
C.Ounty.
State repre1entatlvee will
provide ql!e'tlionna.lres for people =to file a dia:rimination
t.
We're What do you hh about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like?
Call th• number at left and your m8Ale wlll ~ recorded,
traNCribed and delivered to the appropriat.e editor.
.. '5,
--~ ....... ,.. flew .-~ " ....... JJl!ll '
::.::."' ...., Ml .. ........... ....., . ...... -. .... _.,, ........... :=.=,_.., ..
The Hml' 24 hOur an1wertn1 tervtce may be u1ed to record let·
tl'ra to Uw Ntltor on any topic Mailbox contributon muat Include
thf'lr na~ and tell'phonc number for vertficallon. No clrculatloft
calla. pteau Tell us what ·1 on your mind
OAANOI COAST Diiiy Nat
have said lhey don't believe
Rothenberg's visit would be U\
his son's best interests at lh1s
time.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Luis Cardenas al10
ordered yesterday that $13,000 in
cash aeiz.ed by Buena Park police
when Rothenberg was arrested
be placed in a tru1t fund and
uaed to help pay for the boy's
medical care.
David Roth~nberg waa bu.med
Gem
Talk
ByJ.C HUMPHRIES
C~rtifwd G,molo6u1, !\GS
YOUR DIAMONDS
• • • flOllll to ~ tor ttNlm
over 90 percent of his body and
subsequently lost parts of his
fingers and ea.rs. He remains in
critical condition in the UC Irvine
Medical Center, according to
hospital officiala.
The boy's 42-year-old father
was In court to be arraigned on
charges of attempted murder,
arson and causing great bodily
injury. But arraignment was
postponed until May 5.
Deputy Public Defender
Ramon Ortiz said the delay was
granted because research into
several legal issues relating to the
cue has not yet been completed.
Ortiz also said Rothenberg has
oft.en asked about the possibility
of seeing his aon.
Prosecutors indicated they h~ no objection to the release of th
lmpounded money or the visit
the meantime, Rothenber
remains in the 0rat1Jle Count
Jail.
Seiko Quartz.
lechnology that performs.
Handsomely, afforda~
I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIWednted1y, Apt1121, 1Na
Trustees
accept
arson
payment
Fountain Valley School
D8trtct tnlltell haw acr-..d to
acce9t a t34&,841 lnaurance
aeU[ement for a portion of
Harper Scbool that WU ptted
j twice by anon tine.
Tbe lmurance llttlement will
allow the dlmict to proceed with
p&w to demoHah the damapd.
•l1ht·cla11room Wln1 D at
Harper, an elementary acbool mted at 1888& Santa Ynes St.
Allbtant Superintendent Jack
Mahnken aid tbt achool dktrk:t
Neelved a U 17 ,000 lnaurance
ltttlement foUowtna the f1nt fire
lD 1977. The dlatrlct bad been
1eekln1 addltlonal funda In
connection with that fire, but
Mahnken aald the additional
tMe 000 ~t, which coven
an Q;;tober, 1982 blaae, wm
conclude the dlltrlct1 1
I ne10Uatlona with the Aetna
lmUranct Co.
Dlatrlct truateea voted to
demoHah rather than rebuJJd the
Harper wtna becau.e the achool
la achedulecl to be clmed next
,_,. due to ctecJtn~ enrollment.
Mahnken aaid moUUon la ~ to omt about tl00,000.
He aid the dilltiict will -the ... b' penm.ian to keep 76
percent of the remalnln1
IDIUl'UllCle ..ulemmt fer u. 1n
malntalnln1 dlatrlct achool
bulldln11 . (Harper waa
comtruded with state fundl. 10
the ..ate la entUled to money ameratec1 by the achool.)
The Wln1 D demolition
achedule, alao approved by
dlatrlct tru1tee1, calla for obtalnlnC bKla tbJa aprtna.
Cocaine
seized
i~ Laguna
A Redondo Beach man hu
been an'mled 1n Laama s..:h
and an e9timated tl.t.000 worth °' ..... •" ~in, --frcm hla vehicle, ranae County
Sberlffa Department oUldala
llid. Patrick M . Pueenhelm, 38,
•aa followed by 1berlff'1
clep.lu. from South 1.-,una and
pcked up about 3 p.m. Manday
after they 1u1pected be wu leDinc narciodca, aald aberttt'a Lt.
Wyatt Hart.
Offlcen who .arched b.11 car
alleodly found 1 \Ii pounds of cocalne, five ouncee of mu1juana
and ps,ooo 1n mah, Bart llid.
P..enbetm WU booked into Oranft County Jail CID awplrVn
of po1H11lon of controlled
aabmncm fer ..... B.a -been
, ~ at '50.000, Hart .ud.
A#"', ...
Cave explorer John Wisher (right) claape
rescuer Tom Staubitz' band after be and
seven others were pulled from a Kentucky
grotto.
Explorers relate
ordeal in cave
MOUNT VERN~. (AP) -J:aabt .peiunken trapped
fer three da~ in a c:.ve mJd they wenn"t aure anyone
wu Jooldna fer them u.nUl they bee.rd the aound of dlvera who
finally racUed them aafely.
"UnUl we d!a:oYered the pump nol8e and the dlver'a line, we
didn't know what w.a ~ an. Tbel"e could have been no one
out there for all we knew,' said Jack m.oaa. ~ of the
expJoren.
In bet, their dlaappearanoe '°'4Ched of1 a muaive reecue
effort which lncluded dlven from• far away• Bloamlrict.an.
Ind.
By Monday ni8ht. the ~ had made contaet with the
l"OUP. wbJch bad taken ahelter ln another part of the-cave from
the wacer that flooded the entrance. By noon yeaterday, all eilht
of the apelunken were free.
JW Vedder, 24, the younaest explorer, wu the first to
emeip ~ 10 a.m. from the Roduwtle <Minty cave. TboUah the apelunken were cxincm nec:I about food and fuel,
Vedder, an adWl'tlain8 ~ employee from Ondnnatl, Mid
"We alway. knew aomebody wu &o'nc to come in and pt ua or
we would pt ounelvea out."
Althouah Vedder WU only Clll her third cavtna expedition,
two members of the group had a oombtned 40 yean experience in explorinc caves. They and others in the l"OUP had viait.ed it
~fore.
After the trapped expklren moved to a led8e and stored
their suppliea. they aanc. told )>ks and ate to i-the time.
"'We ta1k.ed to -=b other about pomtive th1np. whm we
could atpect you. wbmi we ODUld a;pect the ..-to IO down
and for most of the time, people'• aplrtta were up," Vedder t.o1d
rmc\left. ''We told all the joka we knew and we talked about
food.'' . "I literally abook foe 48 to 50 hou.n," aid Mark Rocklin. "We
were &ettina cold. a little b&t hypothemUc. A lot of it probably
wu nervea. not lmowtna what WM PD8 on outside."
The blgeat problem after tne iecond day 11wa1 the
exhaustion ~ In." Rocklln aaid. "I really dldi'a't aleep but
about two houra..
The expklren ~r~ acme to the tWle of a country· western lament while at canned meat, beam and apple
juice.
~after noon =r· the apelunken made their way to the end of the JW8e, only 70 feet from where
~ were pump&na to 1awet the water. 'nie explaren left a
note. which was fowid by two diven who entered the cave
Mcnlay afternoon. and by Monday ntaht the 8l'OUP bad been
found.
I
Ice cream truck ban due?
Third cbnd's deat.b renews call lor probibition
_p C1-.m tnacD WU dlfeet.ed by a 4-2 vote of the
'Santa Ana Qty Coundl ln November, aay. the
council II at fault fer the latest death.
"I told them then, •How are you aotnc to
explain lt to the parmtl of the nut child who pta killed?' We told them the blood would be on t&elJo
banda," Riley akL .. I hold them. coundl memt.n.
reaponalble for lt .... They, chlldren are
expendable evtdently. 'lbe blame for the chlld'•
death nm dely upon the aty °'"mdl"
A 17 • .,... ordinance to rel\ll&te lee cream
truclm WM drafted Dec. '¥1 by the Qty Auomeya
Office. and may be corwMs by the Qty 0.mctl
next month. The ordinance nquhw Ice crellll truck
operaton to haw a ti mUlJon JJ.abWty policy and
restric1a the .... from ice cr-.m truck chlmel. but
doean't ban the truck• from re1ldentlal
ndahborboodl. Councilman Dan Orf.let aald be wanta the
cound1 to ~ that lhortcamina.
'"'l'beN are other rlah.. belfde the rlaht of
people U11Q1 our suwta to earn • Uvtnc wlthout
about the blk In .. Mid.
GOLDEN STATE UNIVERSITY ~ ~. CAl.WOlllNIA == ......
••• HIP nm
Cl.-.. Ulil, ..... Ac**~ ... ,... ...,,__
"111•ar11 .,_..
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, ...... ~ ..... ... ....... ,.. tt••---* •R.M'alS.#11~-
Accused
freed in
• • • • new 1ury
deadlock
A 29-year·old HunUn1ton
s.ch nlldent walkaCt away a tr. man alter' a Superior' Court
jury acquitted him ln the
1tran1ulatlon-1layln1 of hla
20-,.,...old ftancee i..t AUC\All-
lt w• the teCOnd trtal fer Val
Norman Owen, accuaed of
eecond-detrH murder 1n the
death of Susette Adami. A
Superial' Court )Ary oonllkWtna
the aame cb.atp 1ut February
WU unable to reach a verdJct. fordnc the ntrial. The aeven-woman, five-man
jury deliberated for two day.
loflowln1 three weelu of
t.esUmony, ~ to Dlputy
DtlCric:t Attorney Tom GoethaJi.
who prmecu1ed the CMe.
He aald )Ann lndlcated after
their verdict WM read Monday
that there waa lnaufflclent
evidence on which to baae a
aul_lty verdk:t.
Goetbal1 called the cue a
"dlfflcult" one becauae the
~tlcn'I ~ WM '-'! on
cll'cumstantlal evidence rathe.r
than eyewttmm teettrnmy.
Owen and Adami bad been livtnc toaether in an aputment
near Olli View Park 1n C9Dtral
Huntin,ton Beach, where
Adam• body wu found
annpd the mom1na of Aua. 2, ~topolice. 'l'becJ:2 a""°' Owen'• f1nt trial ~ when It could
not rwh a W\U)lm<NI l'l}IWM .....
on Owen'• tnnO•!Jile or decrw of
8Uilt. Both trial.a were conducted
before Juda• Robert Polla In Santa Ana.
U canvlc1*S. Owen would have
faced a .nt.ence l'ADCinl frcm 15
yean to Ut.e lmpri8onment.
vie for grants
Fourteen Oranae eo.t hSO achool ~ are arnona
them compettna in the Irvine Co.'1 fint Le.denhlp Awardl J>ros:ram. 'lbe ttudenta are oompetina fet t25,000 In acholanhipe ln
the oountywlde competition. Fllteen of a total 81 atudenta will
earn acholanhlpa. with five f1nalilta w1nnfnC '3,000 .-ch.
Local m.identa are:
K.ev1a Annatroq,. Woodbridae Hlab 8c.hool; R•ecea A. McPaM-. Irvtne Hlah Schoo~ Bale 1'l Neaer, Unlvenlty !f1ch School; ftlme1 WMte, 1..quna Be.ch Wah School;
De.W 8. 8arM Jr., Hunttnaton lie.ch H1ah Sc6ool; Mary
Beall BeHellamp, Corona del Mar H!in School; Kea
Drubwlki, Edlaco HJch School; Rehl L my, l'.standa fftih
School; Alldtomy Blakemore, Loa Amlp HJch 8c.hool; Dona
M. Fuep. Oceit.n View H1ah School; Duse.e Jay, Fountain
Valley Htsb School; Ketti M. Dere1. Coeta Meaa Hip
8cbool; Jeff~. Marina HJch School. and CadlertM N.
SMa, Newport Harbor m,h School.
• A one-day workahop on career plannin1 wlll be
conducted from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturda_y at the Roblnwood Learn1na Cent.er, 5172 McFadden Ave., Hunu.n,ton Beaich.
A f2~ reglatratton fee wlll be char1ed. For more
lnfonnation on the program, call the Coutllne Cunmunity
Servicea office, 963-0811, ext. 256.
• The member cltiea of the Public Cable Televialon
Authority have received francht.e fee dMICb for the aecond
quarter.
Huntinaton Beach, with the lar1eat number of
1ub1crlbera, leada the way with a check for $~8,525 .
Westmimter receives $21,499; Fountain Valley, $20,182 and
Stanton. $3,M>5.
The money comes from a franchiae aareement with
Diddmon Padflc Ca~.
• c.outl1ne C.ollege will preeent "The Inner Game of Beina Happy: A 8eml.nar on EmoUorw and Happlnem" from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at Robhlwood Learntna Center, 5172
McFadden Ave., Buntinctoo Beech.
A $20 re1i1tration fee wlll be char1ed. For more
lnfonnation. call the c.outline Community Services office,
963-0811, ext. 256.
Law and youth study set
Junior' and amSor bilh achoo1
atudmtl from --a::booll wlll oonwrp on the Oranae County ~ Saturday lor a day-
~ confeNnce deMni into the
reletlomh•p betw.en law and
youth.
Sponaored by the
Conatltutlonal Rl1ht1
Foundation. the oonfwence la to
be a part of the annual Law Day ot.rvance in <lranae County.
Thia year'• conference wlll
focua on the theme 11 Sbarlnft
JuaUce: The Role of Youth,' eccordlni to conference spamon.
s..tdee di8cuaio.na of auch .__ • c:rtme. di• < e vtollnoe and n•rleer arms, studenta will
partid119w 1n a mock trial and
ot.erve -• lie detector tart la
adm1nlstered.
The Corutltutlonal Rl1bt1
J'ou.ndaUon., which la decilalt.ed to
~~ln1 youn1 people better
ntand the C10UDtry'1 J.esal
and pemmental stnactu.re. hu
been conducttnc almllar
~~1863.
8e.tunll.Y'• .,., -caat.nnce la open to any junior or aenJor
blah 1chool-a1ed 1tudent1.
Reservationa can be made by ca.ll.lnc Daphne Dennia at the
Conatltutlonal Bt1bt1
Found.a 213-473-609 .
GIVE MOM A NIGHTIE TO REMEMBER
SEL~CTED SLEEPWEAR AT:
/
Thia Mother't Day, g:lw a 9lft that ls both lovely and pr.aticaJ. O\oc. from a lptCial
9fOUP ot.IPM9 end IWNMf -.P"* ftom Acctnw•tt• by L.ana. t.ont liid 11\ort
poly/cotton pna ln ...ud ftoral prtntl and lpring colon. Silea XS. S, Ma L.
NOW $12.85 and $15.85 .iued at: s1a. • S21.
I
'
Orange Coaat DAILY Pll 0TIW9dnMday, April 27, 1983 ~· '· -
FBI orders restraint of domestic spying .
WASHJNOTON (AP) -Prt11urtd by l'Dllnbtn ot eon,r.. and a t.deral Judp, the FBI
hail onMnd Ua. -..nta to interpret narrowly the
bur99u'a upandld authority to inveatlpte domestic
poUtkal ll'OUPI-
• Lut mcnth, Attorney General Wllliam French
Smith lllued We.er cutdellnes for FBI domeetlc
ltCUl'tty lnveeUcatlona. They ,..placed thoee 1et
durlnc the Ford admlnlatratlon by Attorney
OeMfil Edward lAYt to prevent a recurrence of
• .,__ uncovered by eonp...
The~ probes found that ln the
llMIOI and 1910. the bureau spAMl on and harU8ed
dtl.nl lep.Uy di.llenUCfrom IOVfJ'nunent policy on Vietnam and dvil ta. · l'BJ Dtrector W H. Webster aaid the
Can court ban .
use of drugs
·in pregnancy?
, BAL TJMORE (AP) -A physician hu gone to
court eeeklnc to force a aeven montha' pregnant
woman to atop tak1ftl narcotics. w)}ich he aays
threaten the well-beinl of her unborn child.
'the woman'• lawyer and an expert on
domeatlc relation• both aald the case . raiaed
important questions about when a fetua becomes a
child with legal fiahta.
"Th.la probably will start out before a juvenile
muter and then eacalate to the district oourt," said
Ru.ell White, the pregnant woman'• lawyer. "It's
pomlble that it could go all the way up" t.o the
Supreme Court ". . . What aeemed like a very
minot, routine matter tuml out to involve national
i.u...··
The physldan contenda in legal papers filed in
the juvenile division of Orcuit Court that the fetus'
haa been retarded and that the mother's
' buae during pregnancy will "further retard,
and prevent the respondent's (the fetus'
IJ'OW1}l and development.'' .
The mother, described aa in h e r 20s,
"continually puta herself and the fetu1 in
danproua, life-threatening situations," aaid the
~ymdan, who asked the court to order the mother
'to immediately stop taking anr, drugs that are not
pracrtbed by • meclical doctor .•
A preliminary hearing haa been 9Cheduled foe
tomorrow, White aaid.
Becau.e the cue la in juvenile court, the names
of the people involved have not been made public.
The phyaidan claims that the wqman already
hat a ~t.er who "waa born prematurely and
WM cl--' aa a child at great riak for sudden
infant death syndrome ... a direct conaequence of
the mother'• willful abuse of drup during her
pregnancy.''
He said that during the flnrt pregnancy. the
mother con1umed "aubatantial amount• of
Quaalude, Valium. cocaine and morphine.''
Fat suctioning
procedure OK'd
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fat auctioning, a
controvenl.al new French method of removing fat
depmlta fJ'Clm the hips, abdomen or thighs, haa been
called effective by the American Society of Plastic
and Recomiructive Surpona.
However, a committee of plastic aqeona alao
warned that the technique can be miauaed and that
it 1' lluitable for patients who are thin in most areas
rather than tboee who are generally obeee.
The committee, which made a trip t.o France to
study the procedure, reJeued a report concluding,
"lt would appear that we -now have a relaUvely
atidac1ory IWlPcal method for the treatment of fat
outcropplnp on otherwbe alender patlenta ...
when utilized in the banda of appropriately trained
-~~·" In fat auctionlnl. a small hole ia opened in the
akin in the fatty U'e8 and • tube-lill l.nstnunent
called a cannula la lmened. The cannula ia moved '**and forth between the akin and muacle layera.
dWodaina fat ceu. that are sucked out through it.
'
YoUQg greeters
new sutdtllnel were aimed at new tarrorilt l"OUP9
and were dellped to lmprove the bureau'• ability
"to de'*=t violence befon It OCC\.ln."
But even before the new JUJdellnea took ttfeci.
they kkked up• flurey of proW\11 and que11UoN
from e.on.n. and dvtl UberU• IJ'OUJJ9.
Sena~ Patrick Leahy. D-Vt.; JOMph Btden,
0 -Del .. and Walter Huddleatonh D·Ky., wrote
Smith to que1Uon the intent of la propoeall to
authorize, for the fll"lt time, the u.e of lnflltrat.ora
and fnfonnania dW'fnC prellmlnary lnqutne. where
"there la not yet a reuonable lndlcation of crlrnlnal
activttlea."
The aenatora alto queatloned Smith'•
authorization of "full investJpUona" of tho. who
purportedly advocate crime In their public
Back Bay burn
atat.ernenta.
Ten day1 after the ntw rulea camt out,
Weblter tent a teleprinter memap to FBI .,enta
around the country txpl&ln.lns them. Weblter'a
lnterprttationa took • narrow vtew of tht new
inve.UaaUve powera, but they have not quieted the
dlautilllW:Uon.
Laat week, U .S . Ol1trlct Judie Suaan
Getzendanner permanently barred the FBI from
conducttn1 lnveattaatlona ln Chlca10 bHed on
public atat.ementa advocatln8 crlmee.
She noted that, In hT1 meua1e to a1enta,
''Director Webater narrowed the 1uld ellne1'
lanjuqe *>meWhat., atatlna that an lnveet11atlon
ahowd not commenoe unfea "the atat.ement of advocxy taken in context prmenta •credi ble thttet
of harm."
;
I f t
Worken for the State Department of Fish and Game conduct a
controlled burn in u.;..er Newport Bay near Irvine Boulevard and
Santa Isabel Avenue to get rid of trash and old wood which they
have cleaned out of the area.
Oceanside
seeks base,
nuke plant
Greee Al~ 77. WU all amllee wheD two Girl seoaa troo~ lrom
Corona del Mar abowed ap at FlaPhip Coavalwent Hoepltal jut
so •y llello. Mary Jane Yealtoff (left), Heicli EdmllDCls .
and Jeantler Reed llaow AIWoi haadmade peet~ CU..
I_ .. \\.., .,..---..r
Billy recalls l
booze battle I
By Tbe A11octa1ed Presa
BWy Car1er aaya he never would have r~overed from alcoholl1m If hia family, j(.J
In clud ing forme r President Carter, had
preau.red him. 10 •• The former pre1ident'1 brother told
1tudenta at Gc."Orgia Southern College that be
probably would nave "flat
aat there and drank mymelf
to death" If he had been
pushed to quit drinking .
H e said h e first
realized he had a aertoua
drlnklng problem when he
was about 23 but continued
to drink into h i.a 40.. By
the time he »01.1ght helo, he
said, he waa drinking '1beer
Jf
"'
....
a ll d ay long and then CARTD
finiahing off with a flfth or two a day." ~~
"At one time, I waa the m08t famou. M drunk in the United States," he said.
Carter, 46, spent several weeka at the ~1
U.S. Navy's alcohollam treatment cent.er in L -,, ong Bea ch i n 1979. He now lives in
Waycross, Ga. ~~
LOS ANGELES -BUlle Jeu KJaa hu
filed a $55 million lawsuit agalnat her former
lesbian lover u the result of an unauocie.tul
''palimony'' suit againat the tennla star.
The lawsuit filed in Superior Court
Monday, claim.I Marllya Baraen breached
oral contracts when she
sued King, 39, and her
husba nd , Larry, for
lifetime support and
ownerahip of a Malibu
house.
The agre ements,
reached In 1980, called for
Barnett to le ave the
disputed houae , return
"private letters" to King
and "get out of King's K..a
life," the lawsuit said.
In return, King was to pay Barnett $125,
000. But Barnett, a hairdre9er who became
King's secretary and companion, only took
$25,000 befOC'e tiling her lawsuit, said King'• .
spokeswoman, Pat Kingsley.
In 1981', a judge rejected Barnett's cla1m
to the Malibu home, and the lifetime support
part of the auit waa dlamisaed last November.
LONDON -Britain'• PrlDce Ckarlea
and PriDcesa Dlau plan to relax for 10 daya
on the laland of Eleuthera in the BahamM on
the way home from their six-week tour of
Auatralla and New Zealand, Buckingham
Palace aaid.
The royal couple'• pn9 eecretary aUd
they had planned the vacation 1Mt J>ec-nber
when they realized they would both be"• bit
tired'' after a month and a half ol carrytna out
up to eight different eDpll!!Dmta a day.-
The couple and their 10-month-old 80ll.
Prince WUllam. will fiy from Auckland to Loe
Angele• Saturday, where they wlll put
William and hla nanny on a plane for IA)dcm
and be flown privately Sunday to Eleuthera.
LOS ANGELES -The M1nnmoca model
who became Nlet Nolle'• live-in lover when
he WM an unknown 9Ctor'
and 1pent 5 ~ ye.an with
h i m went to court
yesterday see.king half of
the fortune he made aa a
movie and TV atar.
But h e r lawyer
indicated the cue may be
aettled without a trial.
"I am aulns for $4 ~
m illion ,•• aaid ltaraa B.WllD
Eklud. "I feel that'• half,
and my goal la to get equal rtghta. I'm not interea~ m hurting or slandering Nk k'a
~i just feel I sh.ould have aotten more
than two dresaea and a ldck out the door."
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4e Orange Clout DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, April a7,·1883
0
Violence leaves its
mark on us all
Tbe death of John Louil Evana min the Alabama electric
chair lalt weekend evoked varied responses.
To 1ome of our readers it was a just and equitabl~
punlahment for murder. A man who took a life violently was
h1rme1f violently executed.
The electrocution, the first in Alabama since 1965 and the
aeventh nationwide alnce the Supreme Court reinstated the
death penalty In 1976, required three 1,900-volt jolts of
electricity.
Evans' lawyer caUed it a "barbaric ritual.'' The state's
attorney general said it would serve as a "general deterrent" to
criminals.
The underlying questions for those states, Like California,
which have reinstated capital punishment, is not whether death
11 a fair punishment for death, but whether brutal execution is a
reuonable punlahment for brutal murder.
In Alabama, where John Evans died, legislation is pending
that would change the method from electrocution to lethal
injection.
In Califom.ia, the penal system sentences criminals to die in
the gas chamber.
A. a nation we strive for "equal justice under law." But
justice, like our culture, technology, social mores and political
system, has evolved over the put two hundred years, to reflect
our acquired knowledae and wildom.
With knowledge and wisdom ahould come understanding
and camp don.
If that aggregate wisdom requires the maximum
puniahment for the maximum crime, It should also reflect the
collective oompuaion of our civilization.
And we are known by our deeds, not by our words.
A eociety which aeta an institutional example of public
execution -like the prolonged and needlessly brutal death of
John Evans-cannot hope to delude the best of it.a citiz.ena into
believing that killing la wrong, let alone deter those who
auppoeedly bold life le11 sacred. ...
If justice demands the death penalty, then it should be
quJddy and painleelly meted out.
U we as a people ahow no respect for hwnan life, then we
cannot expect auch consideration from any individual among us.
•
OpintOflS t'Kl)rt'Ssed 1n lht' SP.Ct' .uiovt' •rt' lhO~ o t lhe 0 •1ty P1101 Ol'ler views e•
pressed on 1n1s p.tge •re tnow ot tMir •uthon •'ld ••lists Re•der ,omm•nl ·~ inv11
•d AdOreu The 0.111v P11ot. P 0 Box 1~. Co\l.I Mew CA 'i2o2o PMnt' 11 u
442 431 1
MAILBOX
What about defense?
I To the Edit.or:
Recent anti -nuclear
clemclNtrationa eeem to indicate
an alarming bent toward
unllateral diaarmament. To thoee ot ua who foucht In WWll. UU. la
extremely di9quietm,.
O:Jmidtt wheJ'e we came from.
We were emeralng from the
depth. of the geet DeprelGon~
We worked to pt a little .food on
the table 11 we worked at all. We
had no cars. A drink of c.olte was
a windfall. America waan't
giving ua much in the way of the
gooda and matmala that make
life ., pleMant today.
Yet, when the call came to
defend apimt Hitler and Tojo.
we went. We cuned the t.ailure
of tbe Maainot Line, the
diplomatic frail1* of the Neville
Chunberlalm, the treechery of
the Japanese, but we went.
There WU aimply DO question in
our mind• of the fact that
freedom w.-. worth defendlnl. Have we beaalne ., enamoured
of our Wd-beck Ufestylea, our
hedoniam, that It l1 no longer
worth defending? For that la the
baaic queatlon . It la not
imperialistic aims of the U.S . we
are aaked to defend. Anyone who
thinka that we have lmperialiatic
aima ia a fool. Anyone who ia
certain that Russia does not have
Imperialistic aims is a double
fool. la it aak:ina too much for the
American people to be 1trong
enough to defend ourselves? I
had a bellyfull of the services
once the war was over, but I
would not hesit.llte to go again
under dn:wnltancea where our
freedoma are at riak.
Look apin at Dale Bradford's
letter in your Sunday April 17
edition. Did I .erve almost five
yean for my country; did I lc.e
five of my cloeest high echool
frlenda to defend and protect the
freedoma of people who haven't
the fortitude or the aeme to want
to delend thesmelvea? 1 hope not.
· J .W. REID
Costa Meu
l.I. IQd/FuJJ fraud
Five fat ladles ln Sweden
recently loet a lot of weight
without are.t dlacomfort.
Balloon• were lnaerted by
catheter into their atomllcha, then
Inflated. Thereafter. feeling
well-fed, they didn't crave much food. and the pounds fell away.
How do you llCJC!OUllt for the
ltatistical f..::t that people who
eam i.. than $50,000 a year Uve,
U:.Otbett!.~:==
that fiaure!
Blldt velve\ in the auwhine LI t.ooo dmea briahter than snow
unda' a tun moon.
Q. Cen any u.narmed animal on
.-th Uck Ua ... t in wtldcata?
A. Oa1y one -• 'Wildcat.
An ~a pvbliebed in 1804 wl)eopie to 1hMld
their .,_ from a whale oil lamp.
Same (l'.-dol\ .... tbm • to
whlt.lw buman e)W could and
tb• briahtne11 of th• nine·
cmdle-power A.rpnd Oum.
Thi ..-pint of a CIO'W ...
dlidm.1tYe • tbe Onjjjiii pi Int of •
..... bl&nl.
Q. What pUt Of t.be ,.,._, Ivy _...._ &M lrftlaU,.. OUf
'A. AD ot tt. You_, ll_t lt fram
tearing down leallea vines or
from digging up root&, too.
The "lock" in "wedlock" didn't
ltarl out to be anything like the
"Jock" ln "padlock.." Oric1nallY, It
alluded to a word like "lark"
meaning "sport" or "play."
Q. Who waa the man who
wound up with the lncredible
dlatinctlon of beina the aole
aurviV« in atx ahlpwncka?
A. Suapect you refer not to one
man but u diffettnt males, each
wtth the name of Hugh Wllliama.
On Dec. 5, 1HO. one Hush Wl.Waml ._ tole survivor when
a 1hJp aank in the Stralta of
Dovw. Qi Die.&, 1781, a eecond
Bulb WWlalDI wu .,le marvtvor
when a ah.lp tank ln \he aame
wateta. On AAC· 6, 1820, a third Hup WUU.... .,. 5, waa de
IUMYor When a w.e1 sank In
the 'ftlimM Rlver. On July 10,
1040, a Brtdlh trawler sank.,._
bJttiq 1 Gerpian mine. Two men. in uncle and hJa nephew.
both named Hu1h Wllfiame,
... the only IW'Vlvon.
· No laternatlonal border la
.......... bJ • 1MDY .._du. •the llimllllr bdwem U. Unttild
8'atM md ....... Twelw..,.....
haw th* ON)~ '°*"' Clft
... --*le.! ... ~ 1Nit. the t.Uow an UM .-t lfOCll can't ...... u...u.
A record of terror
WASHING TON -FoJJowtna
laat week'•· bomblna of the
American embuay ln Beirut,
U.S . lntelliaence a•enclea are
taklna a cloaer look at the
tetTor1lta in the Middle Eut. In a
hl&hlY oompeUUve field, one man
baa emeraed aa the moat
bloodthirsty, t.rn.ponalble Arab
terrorlst 1n the world.
He la Abu Nldal. and he hu
written hla record In blood. Bia
fanatical croup'• latest victim
waa Dr. Iaaam Sartawl, a
U .S.-tralned cardloloalat who
wu the Palettlne Liberation
Orpn!satioo'1 Western European
repteeentative.
The .. crime" for which Sartawt
WU murdered In Portucal WU
beinl a moderate, the hi&hest-ranldna PLO 1eeder to advocate
tt!COIJlltion of Iarael. That wu
enouah to mark him for
.. ....tnatloo by Nldal'a gunmen.
NIDAL'S SINOLE·MINDED
a1m la the destrucdcn of laneL
Like the Serbian "Black Hand"
terrorUta who touched off World
War I with the .....tnatlon of
Auatrlan Archduke Franz
Ferdinand at Sarajevo, Nldal'a
killers don't care how many
people die as they PW'SUe their
£'\ four hostages just four years "1.. 1'.' ~ earlier.
--------~-..,.~ -INMAYlt81,Nidalclalmed JICI 11111111 1~ credit for the murder of Heinz
aoal· In fact, Nida! al90 ~ted a
war.
Here la Ntdal'a aorry ~ •
revealed by aecret State
Department document• and
interview• with intelllaence
eourcee by my a.odate Dale Van
Atta:
-After defect.Ina from the
PLCY1 mainstream orpnizat:ion,
Falah. In 1974, Nidal tried to
...... tnate Yuaer Arafat and
waa aentenced to death by
Fatah'a military court.
-Nldal took refuge in
Baghdad, and with the Iraqi
government '1 help. aen t
Pale9tlnian death squads aptnst
Arab opponent& In the Middle
Eut and Europe. In 1978, bia
•unmen -numberln1 fewer
than 100 -...ualnatecf at leut
eight PLO repre9e11tatlvea.
-In 1980, Iraqi Prealdent
Saddam Hussein kicked Nida!
out. The Syriana accepted him.
even though he had seized a
Damucua hotel and murdered
Nlttel, chairman of the Austro-
larael Society and a personal
friend of Austrian Chancellor
BrW\O Kreiaky.
-In August 1981, Nldal's
thup attacked a synagogue in
Vienna, kllllng two pel"'IOna with
pollah WZ..63 machine platola.
-On June 3, 1982, Nldal'a
group aerioualy wounded Iarael'a
ambulador in London, Shlomo
Ar gov, uaing the same Poliah
weapon1. The aua11lnatlon
attempt waa the immediate caua
for larael's invuion of Lebanon
three daya later.
-In August 1982, Nidal'a
group uaed machine piatola and
grenades in an attack on the
defenseless patrons of a well-
know n Jewiah restaurant in
Paria. Six penona were killed, lncludJ.na two AmericanL In the wake of the laraeJI
invasion of Lebanon, one aecret
State Department report
apeculated that if Arafat were
toppled from hia shaky control of
the ~LO. "the Palestinian
movement w ill probably
diaintegrate into radical splint.er
groupe, which, in combination
with other revolutionary forces
in the region, would poee a grave
threat to the moderate Arab
govenunenta.''
T .he report added
myateriou1ly: "larael 1eema
determined to vent thla threat
... and can be expected to
greatly expand lta covert
oooperatlona with revolutionary
rnoveroenta.''
Aaked what thia meant, two
well-placed intelllgence aoun:ea
explained that it wu in brael'a
interest to "divide and conquer"
-to disrupt the PLO by aetting
one faction apinat another. The
90Urcel aaid l.arael had lleC!"etly
provided funda to Abu Nldal'1
group.
No credible aource ,
incidentally, auggeated that
Israeli leaders knowln,ly
aupported the aaaaulnatton
attempt on their own amh ad«
to provide a pretext for the
Lebanon invasion. Several
sources pointed ou t that
intelligence agencies -
including the CIA and the KGB
-have been known to provide
money to groups over which they
have no significant control
Some homespun propaganda
CLEVELAND -Sen. John
Glenn, who wu more famou.
before he became a politician,
returned to Ohio thia week to
declare hla candidacy for
president. But none of the words
ln the former astronaut'• farmal
ltatement may be .. Important to
hla chancea .. these:
"Annie, lf you dicn't want the
vlce prealdent or the TV
networu or anybody elae to
come into the bou8e, then that'•
It M far aa rm caacemed! . . . I
don't want Jobrwcn or any of the
rest of them to put ., much ..
one toe lmdde our bowel"
The John Glenn aylnc that to
hla wtfe, Annie, la weartna a
Sp11C9 .Wt. It ta Jan. 27, 1962. and
he hM )lat spent five houn In a
Mercury apace capsule -before
the United Stat.m' first attempt
at orbital apace fli8bt waa
pmtponed.
He'• out of the capa&le after ~ tel* houn, pi'OteCt1na hil
family eaalnat the •lf~
intnlllON of LBJ, CBS, NBC and
ABC. The other Mercury
aetron•uta are bealde him,
becJrlDC blm up, cheering him on.
111:111111011
THAT ISN'T euctly real. What
lt t. II a ICllDa flun a movie, "'lbe ~t Stu.ff." The Ulm. adapted
by Phillip Kaufman from Tom
:~'~ ~==-~ .._ve ita ift WMhinpln
on Oct. 1. Then everybody in
th• tbeaten of America can biP' m-mc Glenn• tm,. did 20y.n_,o.
To IMt you ... ldN of bow
th.II tDoYte ta ..,.. to make you
feel about Jolul Glenn u the
pa..w.r.tial campaio beClna, I
wtl1 u.t the IMt three filma rMde
by lta ~ Irwin Winkler
and Robert Cna.rtoff. Thoae
fUml 'W'8'r. .. Rocky'" "Rocky JI"
and "Bodq m."
So, 1•t ready to root for
Altronauta VD -Alan Shepard,
John Glenn, Gua Grl11on>,
Gordon Cooper, Deke Slayton.
Wally Sc:hirra and Scott
Can>enter.
Especially Glenn. The acript
introducea the freckled Marine
colonel, played by an actor
named Ed Harrla, with thia
direction: "He may talk like a
Boy Scout. but he can aure look
touah·''
IN THE FILM Glenn acta
like a Boy Scout. talking of God
and the Wright Brothen,
warnln8 hil 1001er-llvln1
comrade• not to hurt the
p~am or the country. "I'm
tallEinl about the plaYtna around
that'• 80ina on here," be aaya
~ rtahteoualy. ''I'm talk:lng
t keeplq our panta lipped
and our wlcki dry around hen."
ln one scene, Glenn plays
"Amuina Grace" on hla trumpet
and Annie 1tn1a along
beautl.fully. c:onquerinc for a few
momenta the cbronlc stutter that
made her terrWed of t.eleviaion
apeearancea and vl1it1 from
pushy vice presldenta.
"MOC'e than anythina," Glenn
telll the other utronauta, "I'm
t1red of beina eecond to those
BUllWw.''
A perverse neligion
lf anyone atlll doubt• that
8ovMt Commw1llrn ta .. much a
0 reJ1aSon" • It la • political and economic eyatem, the recent
re1l1natlon of th• Ru11tan
chapter from the World
Payoh.l•bic AleoclatJon 1hould have cleared up that
miilConctpdon GnCle and {CW .U.
The Soviet bnDi:h wltbdnrw
from the ln ... tlonll ~ In •tkl~dtlft of betrii .... oded ,. ap.Jled th.la IUIND8' an the
1round tbal It I• mi1u1&n1
plYChiaUy •• IOol Of the ltate
ra\htr than aa a form ot
h"'91Yldual or 1roup tbetapy :J.::&.:'JJ:.'Y m•cUul and
If IAI 18SN known for
f_OtDe ~,..,. ..... d ........ '" ............ ~ if:ir.l!fi
~·
..... :..I~ ----------------r.~
1ben. when be ia orbitinl the
Earth, hi1 1pace1hlp literally
diaintearating, panic aweeplna
gJ'Ound-control at.lltiona arouna
the 1lobe, Glenn, accordl.ni to
acrtpt clirectima:
..... laloW11 he'• in trouble,
but what ia remUkable when we
look at the actual Wm on hia face
la the ca1mneaa wtth which be
faces thla danaer ... The
capaule beglna to buffet. He
flahta with the controla u hia
humminc grow1 louder, 'Mine
eyea have aeen the aJory of the comtna of the Lord . . .' "
WE CUT FROM there to the
ticker-tape panide, Glenn and b1a
wife moving throuah the streets
of New York. The dJ.rectiona in
the 8Crlpt read: "Grown men,
grown polloemen, are crying ..
Forfet the worda of Senator
Glenn a announcement. Wait for
the movte.
"'The Rleht Stuff" will be the
greateat political commercial
America hu eeen ~ Ronakl
Reqan played The Glpper in
"'lbe Knute Rockne St«y."
RuHla hU turned not Into a
aedatlve like opium, but
1ometbin1 more Uke ahock-
trea'1Dmt to jolt d.lllenc.n out of
th.tr mlnda. while ~ 10
treat them back Into thtm. R.-t.orlnC 1-.lth ~ toftil la
like 11be*JJJ\I'' by -liurtina -
even lf '' happen.a to kill the ~den
t
l
..
• DllllJ .... ..,_.._ .., ...... "....,
The roof to this building has been propeny ventilated to prevent it
from collapsing.
Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Aprll 27, 1983 ~7 '
Ventilating hot roof
OC firemen take advantage of big training
It's one thing to know how to douse
a structure fire and quite another to
climb onto the roof of a burning building
to get the job done.
COllapsing roofs and walls are among
the hazards that firefighters must avoid.
To help its crews learn more about how
to ventilate roofs -to k eep them from
collapsing -the Orange County Fire
Department took advantage of a rare
opportunity this month and staged a
compre hensive training program on a
building in Irvine .
The 68,000-square-foot structure at
19000 Von Kannan Ave. was donated to
the Fire Department by the Leighton
French Co. and Equ idon, the co-owners.
The private firms have plans to build a
new IO-story off ice center called "The
Atrium" at the site, so they made the old
building available for the 45-day training
session.
Al last report, the soon-to-be
dem olished building was extremely well
ventila ted .
Capt. Lou Funt (left} uses chainsaw, while Capt. Je rry Kerstine
(right) gives instruc tions .
Old Trail Town • • • Without people
"".--
-I ..
Bob EtJjar •lands before the IJl'&t'e of mountai.a
man }OIJa Jolmstoa, wbo is buried on tlae
pormd. of Old Trail Town aear <Ady, 1f'yo. He
wu aI.o Jmowa.u Jeremiab }olm110n.
II
I
EDITOR'S NOTE -'1be IUtt
of rhe Old West ~. deaplte
changjng times and technologies.
Lest that hutory be forgotten,
there .re people Wee Bob Edllar.
He and ma wife have MCrificed
much to retain tb<»e ~es
by creating Old 7n1l Town with
all /ta prevloua glories, • ~t
of the fJIUf.
By TAD BARTIMUS • 11'1•11• ,,,_ ..... • .
OODY, Wyo. -At sundown.
when the sky blazes crimson
behind the disant mountalna and
tinges the prairie graaea with
gold, the old Western town aita
silent and empty .
The door to Butch Cuaidy's
cabin stands ajar. There's no
smoke spiraling from ~h
Crow's chimney. The stag
Is halted In front of the saloon,
but no horaes paw the ground In
anticipation of the fut run to
Y ellowatone.
Old Trail Town ia a 1ettlement
without people, only a place of
hand-h ewn logs that cannot
speak of the Iona-ago outlaws,
ran c h ers, Indi a n scouts,
bartenders, occasional dancing
pla, and countleu characters
who llept under t.hoee cabln roofs
to .aape the emptb:Mm of the big
~t 1f thenl II a hero among all
thoee other heroes and vtl.la1nl, it
ia Bob F.c:taar, the man who has
pre9erved this historic pocket of
the Old West for all who wbh to
stop by and lee it.
Alone, with almost no money
but a lot of stubborn endurance.
F.dpr and hia wife Terry have
created Old Trail Town on the
western ectae of um cam.munity
t h at la 1ynonymou.s with the
frontier.
Born a nd rai1ed in
northw estern Wyoming, Edgar
grew up roaming the vaat
ranches and exploring the hidden
caves ln the Big Hom Basin.
''There wasn't m uch to do
ex.oept wander around the hills
and that's when I first started
collecting artifa c ts -
ar rowheads, old tools, a lost
bottle," recalls the 44-year-old
veteran archeotostat.
"I started noticing that little by
little a lot of theee old abandoned
cabins out on the range were
e ither falling In o r being
destroyed by grazing cattle.
Some were even being sawed up
for flrewood. I thought somebody
should uve them. but nobodr,
was doing anything about It, '
says the tall, lean cowboy with a
neatly trimmed beard.
The Idea of praerving thoee
relics of American history nagged
at Edgar as he worked for the
Whitney Gallery of Western Art
In Cody, photoeraphing and
mapping the prehistonc Indian
campe In the area. .
M eanwh ile, In 1957, h e
di8covered a bie cave between
C.ody and Yellowstone National
Park and In 1961 he joined an
excavation team to explore it
Two years later the group found
a 1,300-)'9&1'-old mummy in the
cave and 38 levels of prehistoric
occupeUon.
"We found that people lived In
Mum.my Caw • lone u 9,000
years aeo," aavs Edsar •. "and
padually we turned page after
pap of civtlluuon aa we dua
down to a depth of 40 feet. That
experience made me even more
oomcioua of the need to praerve
the more recent hlatory of the
West."
In 1965 the FAaara married
and bouaht the five ac:rea wbJch
eventually w o uld become Old
T rail Town. He abo acquired the
first log cabln, circa 1883, wruch
had been uaed as a traciing post
and was moved to Cody ln the
1930a. ~
T hen the couple went to
Nebraska for a year while F.dgar
·worked at the Smithaonian River
Basin Laboratory.
In the spring of 1967, he had
an offer to go back to school at
the Univendty of Wyoming and
eventually pln the Smit.h9onian
Institution staff, "but Terry and I
realized a lot of thia would be
gone &00n, so we decided to come
back and try to 1ave it. We
returned with no money, no job,
and lived in the old cabin with no
water."
From the beginning, says
Edpr, he had good cooperadon
from sheepherders, ranchers, and
the atate fish and game officials.
He ae t t hree crite ria for
acquiring memorabilia for Old
Trail Town; It had to be pre-1900
vintage, have some historical
significance. and be in aalvagable
condition .
Alone or with Terry, Edgar
would 80 to a cabin site, number
all the lop, make drawi.np of
the structure, then dismantle it
and haul It back to C.ody. There
he'd build a new foundation and
put it all back topther again.
"Everywhere I went I'd talk to
peop~ about what I was trying
to do. U they had an Interesting
old cabin r d offer to buy It oc t.ry
to penuade them to donate lt to
ua to ~rve It. Some would,
others wouldn't. Many would aay
'maybe later.' It took 10 yean to
get CUrly'a cabl.n."
Curly WU the only surviving
acout of Gen. 0eof8e Cuater'1
debecle at the Battle of 1.Jt ti. Big
Horn. The cabin was erected
near the battlefield in the 1880s
and Curly hved m 1t until his
death in 1923.
During the formative si.ge of
Old Trail Town, Edgar supported
himself, his wife and three
caughters as an artist, trapper
and hunting guide.
"I barely made enough to
survive. We had groceries and
gas," he says. "Wheu I'd be out
running the trapline sometimes
I'd use an old cabin for shelter. It
wasn't the most fun way to go
but It helped me get a real
understanding of how the
oldtimers lived out here in the
wildemee. In the harsh winter.
They were brave, strong men,
• real pioneers."
Today he and his family live in
a modernized old cabin at the
entrance to Old Trail Town,
which has slowly trown up along
both sides of the wagon wheel
ruta that mark the Red Lodge to
Fort Washa kie trail running
through the property.
Throughout the years, friends
have donated to his effort ,
Including artist J ames Bama,
w ho baa used F.dgar as a model
for aome of h ls Western
paintinga. TourisU driving put
on the way to Yellowstone and
Grand Teton National Parka allo
stop by to look and kick into the
kitty.
Edgar bu never charged an
adJnlaslon fee to his authentic
museum town because "I jwit
refuse to stand out there with my
hand out. I hope they give a little
because we're alway1 low on
money to buy old artifacta that
are skyrocketing In price, but the
main th1na ia to eQjoy the place
and remember It."
Orange Co11t OAILV PILOT/Wedne1day, Aprll 27, 1983
Parent demands kill love
DEAR ANN LANDERS 1 think you made a
iltake In your advlc. to the dau1ht•r who 1.t
uated from vialtlna her mother four tJmea a
k ln a nunina home. The old !Ady la hoetlJe and
't reco8Jllse her. She calla her by her 11ater'1
, or her nlece'1 or her dau1hter'1. After every
t the poor &lrl hu to so to bed for two hours.
told her, "Keep going. You won't l'elJ'flt It."
My father wu lick for 13 yean, the Jut three
a nurslna home. I t~k care of him almost
handed, ~~n thouati I waa workJna at a job.
et It wu my duty. My mother really knew how
eet me up for a guilt trip. Her f avorlt.e line:
ou'll be 80 80rry the reet of your Ute If you don't
e care of your father."
Well, when I look back at what I put m)'Rlf
h I feel like a damned fool. It wu terribly
n me and my family, and I don't 1ee that It any sooct.
L My mother la now 85 and I am terrified that I
WW 80 through the same thing with her. How sad it
J1i that love for parenta can be killed when too much
ja demanded. Sign me -ONE WOMAN 'S
OPINION IN Q~
DEAR QUEBEC: The opinion you expre11ed
wu not "One Woman'•" -at least 500 othen
11111111
By PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna Beach
"He wanta to know if you're seething because or him
or the company in general?"
For a-itltd Ad
ACTION
CaD
A DAIU PILOT
AD-V\SC>a
MJ-1671
RUFFELL'S
urHOlSTERY, INC. ............. -.. ....
1911 HAlllOll llVD.
COST A MESA -S4t· 1 I S6
y:I -llrtfJ(. JI
lltl 1 ~ \ HOO~[HOI 0 & COOKING SCHO(.ll
*Fiii CllLDllEI l to 11*
Chldren lne this Ewope111 style eaperienct, wtiere lttty learn
pod ~ sUI, 1oocl mamen and an apprtcbtion of 1
pod social ~.
Caa Jutta (YOO-TA) in Newport Beach
650-1463
FOR INFORMATION OR PARTY CONSULTATION
REAL EST A TE LOANS
s110,ooo-ssoo,ooo+
•NEW SALES
•RESALES
•REFINANCE
.COME
to a happy, practlcal, and Inspiring
~ presentation Inviting you to
' "Claim The Kingdom
Of God Within You
It's Yours"
l Given By i
KAY KYSER, C.S.B.
Member of the Chrtttlan sci.nee
Board of Lectuteehlp
AT
COSt1 Miu ,
N~ eomnuity Center
1145 Pn Aw11111
~Ewriic,
Aprl 21111 It 1:00 , .M.
~ MIN IANDEIS
wrote to aay tbe ume tblaa. No mea wrote,
however, ud I found that 1Atereatln1. TbaDk1 for a
1ood letter.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'd like lo aay
flOmett)lng to that girl named Ellen She kept
gettlfll dumped by &UY!I aa 100n u they got what
they wanted.
I never had a boyf'ilend until five months ago
and we have not done anything more than kill. I
don't plan to go all the way. But just ln case the
thought enters my mind, or If thlnp begin to get
out of control, I will remember a certain aaying a
friend wrote down for me. Here it is, an caae you
would like to pass It alo~. Ann:
When I met hlin, I liked him.
When I liked him, I loved him.
When I loved him, I let him.
When I let him, I lOHt him.
I love my boyfriend too much to lake the
chance of losing him, so I have decided not to let
him until we are married. -SAFE IN STERLING,
MD. I
DEAR SAFE: It'• .,.Uer to be safe than sorry.
Thanks for 1bar1D1.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A lot is said about
rude sales clerk• theae days, but no one has
mentioned the customer. May I speak my piece?
I work ln a aupennarket. It's unbelievable how
many people get to the checkout counter with bills
crumpled into a ball or checks that aren't made out.
Don't they realhe It's inoonalderate to make people
wait while they 1traigh~n out their money or write
check.a?
My main gripe 1a letting kid. eat the produce.
I've seen kida munching on our carrota, bananas,
grapes -anything that isn't canned. None of these
I~ la free to ua. Th.anla for the apace, Ann. -
GROSSED-OUT CHFXX.ER IN DA Y1'0N
DEAR GROSSED: I wender ltow many
1apermarket cauten wlll tape till• to "elr caab
rep1ten. Let me lmow lf you aee It.
Ann Landers ~ tttn~age drinJcing -jrs
mytha, ittl rNl.JUa. LHrn th~ tact.ti by reading
"Booz.e and You -For Teen.,.n Only," by Ann
Landers. Send '° amts and a long, aelt-addretoed,
st.amp«J enwlo~ ro Ann LAnders, P.O. Box 1199,,
Chlcago, m. 60611.
WeJJing6 &
___ Gi_ng~g.emen/4 _
The Dully Pilot want.I your wedding and
engugemenr nt'w s
T o h tt l p you submit rh~ rt'qulr•d
1nformatJ011, formt1 are avall•bl~ at thti Dally
Pilot offiCf', 330 W &y St . CO.u. Mes.
For wedd1111r.1. only n bluck and white photo
of the brldo l• 11c:c.1!ptabfo SnapshotJJ, Polaroid
and color phot<:» can 't be used.
The phoio. muat be 1ubmiued no l11t1.·1· than
thrc."C weeks alU!r the w«Jding, otherwi.te 1t will
nor be publlt1h«i.
Engagemt>nt information lt1 to be submwed
~t least seven weeks before the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped off at the
office or mailoo to the Editorial Department,
Daily Pilot, P 0 . Box l '60, Co.sta Mesa, Ca/Jf
92626
Weddings
Bench-Vander Molen
Susan Jan Vander Molen and Cory Allen
Berach were married April 9 In the Community
Chrlatian Refonned Church of Founuin Valley.
Following a honeymoon in Big Bear, they will live
in Fountain Valley. .
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs . Milton 'J.
Vander Molen of Huntington Beach and Mr. and
Mrs. Larry G. Bersch of Costa Mesa.
The bride l8 employed by Comprehensive Care
Corp.; her husband is with Hillcor Plastics.
Almaraz-Hess
Maree.Uno Alfred Almaraz and his bride, the
former Jeanne Ann Heea, will reside in Gardena
after they return from their honeymoon ln Hawaii.
They were married April 16 in Our Lady Queen of
Angela Church, Newport Beach.
The bride 11 the daughter of George and
Marianne Heu of Newport Beach. She earned her
BS degree at Loyola Marymount College and her
MBA at UC Irvine.
Her husband holds a BS degree from Loyola.
His parents are Marcelino and Virginia Almaraz of
Gardena.
I
T rou1 HIA11H
DA. PETER J. 8TEINCAOHN
DEAR DR. IT£1NCROHN: Like many I
i»Uenta, I'm truat.rat.t about how to take uplrln. 1
I've had rheumatoid arthritis for the put hatl-
dozen ye&r1. While tak1na rqu.lar uptrtn, 1 wu
fairly comfortable. But after a while, I became
anemic.
My doctor Hid the aaplrln waa cau1ln1
lnleatlnal bleedlna. I wu put on enterlc-coated
aaplrln, but the ..-In returned. My question: Doee
enterlc-.coat.ed aspirin work u well u reaular
aspirin? If it doesn't, I may be forced to 10 beck to
reiUlar' uplrin. '-MRS. P .
DE.AR MRS. P.: Like aittina on a picket fmce,
you'll be uncomfortable unleu you make the
decialon to jump off one way or another. You
1hould know \here'• a difference of oplnlon about
how to take aaplrin. For example, oonaider two
oppoalng suggeetiona by physk:iana ln the JAMA.
John Baum, M.D. of the Monroe Community
Hospital, Rochester, N.Y. write. (In part):
"ln addition to our study apedfically comparing
enterlc-coat.ed aspirin and regular uplrin were ln
most cases equal to, or In 90me cues slightly better.
Enteric-coated aspirin I.a a valuable {and cheap)
addition to the physician'• therapy."
But John H. Bland, M.D. of University of
VemlOnt differs (ln part): "There remaina doubt
that the enteMc-coated aspirin at.orbs with enough
predictability to make It worthwhile to uae. For 20
yean, I have uaed another method of admlniatertng
aspirin that I.a aaodated with little blood W. anc1
results in satisfactory aerwn concentrations.
"The aspirin la taken• food -the patimt eata
half h1s breakfut and ta.lea 3 aspirin placed ln a
tablespoon of yogurt, oottage chee9e or appleuuce,
and repeata this regimen at lunch , dinner and
bedtime. The aspirin la taken at a time when the
stomach ia madmally involved ln digestive activity,'
whJch reduces the probability of gutric initatlorr lf
aspirin is cru.ahed or chewed, It la more raptdty
absorbed, presumably through the atomach. I rarely
have a patient unable to take aaplrin adhering to
thla method." Let your doctor decide.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Our old family
doctor died last year. We have a new doctor who'•
supposed to be good. But not only I, but all
members of my family, think he i.a too curt. He
won't answer a civil question. He acta u if he'a
handing down the table t w ith the t e n
commandments when he hands over a preacrlpt.lon.
No questions allowed. What would. you do in a c.ue
like that? -MRS. G .
DEAR MRS. G.: I'd be busy looking for
another doctor. I'm allergic to doctors who act like
little gods. The patient comes fint, last and always.
STOREWIDE
MIWON DOllAI
JEWELIY SALE STARTS
THUIS. ANIL 21tlt
1 O·oo A.M. • SHARP!
MOTMU'S DAY IS MAY Ith
"00111110 THE caowos .
OUR FRIEIDL Y STAFF Will
BE EASER TO SERVE YOU"
DlllJ Piiat
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1083
MEAD ON WINE
YOGURT RESEARCH
SLIM GOURMET
Celebrate
c?>eason
83 ee
C3
Strawberries are simply sensational.
Now that they are in plentiful supply, their quality Is
good and prices reasonable, It seems appropriate to
celebrate the season.
What comes to mind Is a lot of out-of-hand eating,
topping favorite cereals or dipping the fresh berry in
powdered sugar.
But why not put something extra In the ordinary ways of
serving them?
We suggest a change of pace for the standard
shortcake by substituting a sponge cupcake as the base.
A lavish ending for any meal is French Strawberry Pie,
with a flaky butter crust and lemony cream cheese filling.
Or how about joining the latest dipping craze and serve
Chocolate-covered Strawberries?
The dipped berry is simple and fun to do. but there are
some rules to follow.
Since they are made with only strawberries and
chocolate, the quality depends on the quality of the
inQredlents.
Berries, preferably with stems or hulls, must be ripe but.
not soft. The large berries are more dramatic. Do not wash
them; just brush gently with a pastry brush.
You can use any kind of sweet. semisweet, bittersweet.
or milk chocolate.
For a faster set of chocolate, refrigerate berries a few
hours before dipping. but don't refrigerate afterward, except
to let chocolate set. Then store at room temperature.
Ra1pberry Quail
chers innovation. BlO
D
D
served. the chocolate will be brittle and the berries wlll be
difficult to eat.
Although they are perishable. they do keep for the
better part of a day.
Chocolate·covered Strawberries
Reprinted from Maida Heatter's "Book ot Great Chocolate
Desserts."
4 cupe trMh atniwberrlee
4 ounc.e ohooolate
Break up or coalMfy chop the chocolate lln<1 plae4l It In the top of a small double boiler over warm water on low heat Cover
until chocolate is partially melted. Then uncover and stir until the
chocolate is all melted and completefy smooth.
If melted chocolate Is too thick, add 1 scant tablespoon
vegetable shortening -not butter or margarine -for each 4
ounces of chocolate and stir until melted. Shortening not 'only will
thin the chocolate, it also will give It an attractive sheen.
Remove the top of the double ~ for easy handling but If
the chocolate starts to thicken replace It over warm water.
Hold a berry by the stem or hull and dip It to aboUt
three-quarters of Its length to let some of the red berry show et the
top. Wipe excess chocolate off against the rim of the pot, but
don't wipe so much you leave a section uncovered.
Place the dipped berry on a tray lined with wax paper or
aluminum foll. Continue untll all berries are dipped.
I
' I : t . •
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..
If they are refrigerated, the chocolate will sweat when
returned to room temperature. And if they are cold when
Place the tray of dipped berries In the refrigerator only until
the chocolate is firm. no longer. Then gently lift each berry by the
stem or hull to release It from the paper. Store and serve at room
See BERRIES, Pace Bi . l
It's time for a
• session
Strawberries are Ideal for
combining with other fruits for
tasty Jam or jelly duets. 'l'heir
sweet, bUt slightly tangy flavor Is
the perfect complement to
peaches and red raspberries that
are preaented in these jam
recipes.
Any one of the jams makes a
terrific breakfast acoompaf)lment
on fresh, hot biscuits or muffins,
waffles, pancakes or the atandard
-tout. They also add a special
ftavor to dellerts. topping off a freah pound cake or hidden In a
layered cake or torte.
Strawberry Peach
Jam
room tempefature 2-4 hours; then
store In freezer. Small amounts
may be covered and stored In
refrigerator up to 3 weekt. Makes
aboUt .-~ cups.
Note: Addition of ascorbic
acid helps mal~taln color and
flavor of fruit. May be purchased
at local drugstore. ,
Stra wherry Red
Raspbe rry Jam
IY. oupe prepared fruit
(about 1 pint f UllJ ripe
..,......,.. .cl 1 y, pint """
rtpie NCI r11-•arrtM)
4\\ ........ __ ...., ....
1 ••• powtl•r•d fruit ...-
---Cook-of-the-Week ---
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Turkey tacos rate 'Oles'
Oood nut.r1Uon can be
fun and dtllclou11 ioo.
For proof, look no
further than thtH
Turkey Taco1 Ole.
Tacm may be on their
way to becomlnl tht
national AIMrbn dJlh.
Their popularity k"~ arowtnc tn all areu ot the country, nQt ju.ft tn
the Souttiw••t where
MexJcan·lmplred foOdl
have become virtual
... in the diet.
'taco• •s>real to all .... and jl Uf .. tylee.
Thty're Jierfect for a nlcht wheb the family i8
on the run and a
lel1urely dlnfter with
everyone around the
table 11 l~)OHlble.
'lbty'N equally Ideal fOf'
informal entertalnJn1
where eech penon can
make one or more
taco• wlth Juat the
accompanlmenta he or
lhtllkes. TURUY
TACOS OLE
1 ~ pounda around
turkey
1 1mall onion,
chopped
Shrimp st8r in· classic dish
l t1ble1poon
vegetable oU ~ te11po~n leaf
orepno,Cl'Ulhed
1 table1poon chill
Food it an Integral part of
Cinco de Mayo, u it la fw all
Mexican holldaya. Special diahee
are prepared for lrtendl and
family to celebrate the day. ·
A claalc f.iah diah i8 Shrimp
Veracruz, a quick-1nd-ea1y
recipe that offera authentic
Mexicu taste and texture.
SlllUMP VERACRUZ
Veraau-style IUtmp
1 can (4 ounoea) whole green
~ pound medium frHb
ahrimp
1 med1,llm onion, cut ll'\ wedaet ,
1 dove prllc, minced
2 tabliNpllUll olive oil
l ~ pepper, cut ln stri119
l bay leaf .
l Jar (12 OUD11:8) uJaa roja
10 ltUffed ~ olivw
2 Wiil oon capen (opdonal)
Rinse cbllea. Cut In half
len1,hw&ee,.-&.b•D in &birch
J:TOUWlae; aet aalde. Peel and powder deve1n tbrimp. S.ut.e onion and 1 teupoon ult
prlJc ln oil unUl tender-crisp. ~ teMpoon pepPer
about 2 mlnuta. l\emove from 1 twpoon papr1.ka. pen. W teupoon garllc
Baute abrlmp untll opaqu!!; ~ t.co l!hella
remove. In aame pan, 11mmer O'°PJ*I tomato
IJ'teD pepper and bay leaf ln Chopped lettuce
aalaa 10 mJnutea. Add onlon, G r a t e d m I 1 d
ahrimp, chJles. olive. and capers; a.ddar chee9e
heat throuah-Serve with rice, U Bottled tllCO aauce dallllld. atDn 4 Saute ground turkey -----·----~nrm·--1••-+
QUICHE DEVOTEE ~ until turkey Jmm
ltt red color; atir to
crumble. Add oregano.
c hili powder, aal t ,
pepper, paprika and
garlic powder. Cook
uncovered. 1 ti r rl ng
occasionally, until
moisture la evaporated.
Continue cooklng,
uncovered, 3 to 5
mlnutea , 1tlrrlng
occasionally.
From Pase Bl .
calls "Quiche of Death."
And he's had fun
cooking moat of hi•
life. For a number of
years his livelihood
depended on his
expertise.
He learned to cook aa a
lad under the tutelage of
his mother, who was an
executive chef for a
number of summer
hotels In upper New
York state.
"I started as a salad
chef and worked up t.o
manager.''
Retting, who hol<b a
master's degree in
French from the
University of Alabama.
left the hot.el busine9I for
a career in the Navy. He
was commlaaloned in
1939, and for 12 years
served aa a language
instructor at the Naval
Academy In Annapolla,
where, among other
students, he taught
fonner President Jimmy
Carter.
During hla military
catftr and as host officer
for the Royal Cruise
Linea, Rettlna baa
traveled moat of the
world pkldna up redpee
and cooldna leCJ'eta aJona
the way."[ always made
frien<b with the coolm
aboard every ahlp," be
says.
And now that be'a
retired, be la able to
devote more time to hi8
No. l bobby, and be alto
encourage• other•
throuab a Sierra Club ~t aroup that be
RetUna plant the
menu• and aulan•
diahea. "If they don't
know bow to make it, I
tell them how."
And now he t.ella ua:
QUICHE OF DEATH
l 9-inch deep pie
crust shell
1 cup cubed cooked
ham 1 packa1e froien
apiMch
,: -4--.._
~-\ . . _,
~~1:~~1 ~(':J~
Enter recipes
for cook series
' I
Meanwhlle, heat taco
shells 5 minutes in 3M
' degree oven. To serve,
spoon turkey mlxtur
lnto taco ahella. Top desired with chopped
tomato, cho~ lettuce
and grated c . Serv
with bottled taco sauce.
Makes 6 1ervinp. 2
each.
Correction
I An inaredlent waa
inadvertently deleted ln
the recipe lor Chicken 1 Salad ere.an Putt ~ appeari.na on 'the l'ooCI
\Cover page 111t
Wed.ne9day.
! 1be pMtry calla for 4
1
eaa. alonl with 1 cup
water, ~ cup marprlne,
1 cup flour and ~
'TC°"~~ rear-eta
• thia enw.
A p
A
Great ·tasting nachos start with
NACHIPS® brand tortilla chips from
OLD EL PASO~ These great·tasting chips are
perfect for nachos. They're made flat. round and
crisp. And nice 'n thick so _you can Qile 'em high with
your favorite nacho fixings. Plus, N ACHIPS tortilla chips
taste terrific tight out of the box.or with our favorite dip.
ELP~So
m f . " .. -m
ps
--------,.__"' ~------
'
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, Aprll 27, 1883 U
More Calif orni.a wiri.es off eved at auction
The Heublein
Premiere Natlon~l
Auction ol 8a1'1t Winel II
tlnally ~equal'°
le.a name. For the flnt
Ume ln the hilt.err of the tamoua event. California
winea produced by
wlneriea ou~alde the
control of Heublein·
owned brand1 wlll be
offered for Nle.
The auction haa
b4tyond the ll1tinc1 of
wine offer.cl, wnd 13& to.
Heublein C.talo1. P .O.
Box 505, J'annlJ\ltoft, CT
08032. SIER.RA SHOWCASE
-Another ~ event la~ bom on Mey 7 ln
1old and wtne country
north and ea1t ot
Sacramento, when \he tint Sierra Showcue of
Wlnel will take place at
the Amador County
hirarounda, Plymouth.
It you have never
vl1lted the Sierra
FoothUla wine re11on, ------------------here'•• chance to do u Mead on Wt'n up rlaht.
Vlrtuall=very 81 JERRY O. MEAD winery from , ________________ _
the tooth.ll11 u. be Blanc, Sauvtanon Blanc, member of the family
prtHntlns their 1983 Cabernet lfauvlanon, will find the vt1it
releuu, and it the Chardonnay, Barbera intereauna. The area
Heublein t,at,n1 i1 a and P'rench Colombard. offen countleu hlatorlc:
baraaln at ••o. thla event There wtll be very 1pot1, antique 1hopa, ta a ateal at $9. 1peclaJ tabl wines, fun re1tauranc.a and iualnt W l n e r l e 1 I r o m fruity everyday wlne1, bed and breakfut n.rw.
Amador, El Dorado and and even deaert wines For advance tale
Calaverp counties will and portl. tkke\a eend $9 and a eelt
participate, with TakJngplk-eaaitdoee addreued •tamped
e v e r y t h I n a I r o m In the heart of Mother en v e 1 ope to: Wine
Zinfandel to t:henin Lode country. every Showcue, No. 1 Barbara
C.OUrt, SutUlr C.:rt.-ek, CA
86686, or call (208)
274-201& or 274·2616 for
furtber information.
Tickec.a will be on eale
the day of lhe event at
•10.
BEST BUY -
Francilcan la at It aaaJ.n,
offering 1<>me very iood
r e d wine at an
unbelievably reasonable
price, with the wine
produc.'ed from premium
N o rth Coas t irape varleltea.
Francilcan "Caak 321 "
8uraundy t3.49) Don't
be 1urpriaed a thla one
Hill for u little u $1.99
In tome mark.eta, which
ia 1lmply unhet.rd of for
a red wine or any quality
at all. What It La made of?
Try 76 percent Cabernet
Sauvtsnon (mo1tly from
Alexander Valle~) plu1
amal, percentagee of
Merlot, Zlnfandel and
Qamay.
But do no t let the
wlne 'a ped igree , it1
varietal make-up, lead
you to expect a Cabernet
~auvl1non 1tyle wine.
That wa1 no& th•
lntenUon of F'ra.nd.Dn'a
winemaker, nor la l& 1n
keerlng with ~h·
trad tlon of award·
wlnnlna Francl1can
BurguncUee.
What the winemaker
wae attemptina to create,
and he 1ucceeded, wu an
lmmt"dlately drinkable
red wine for everyday
uae that hu complexity
beyond the ordinary
"Jua" wlnee u1ually
found ln thia price ranp.
· alway• oUered a wide
variety of European
wines, lncludln.I brandl
no\ controlled by Heublein, bu t by ,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
c orporate edlct, no
California wine. of
existing brands had ever
been offered for 1ale
other than Heublein-
owned Inalenook and
Beaulieu.
Whoever made the
decialon to offer old
wines from the likes of
Heitz. Martin Ray,
Haruell, Louia Martini,
Mayacamas, Stony Hill,
Freemark Abbey and
Chateau Montelena and
Dthers, is a very wlae
individual.
A prevtew t.uting on
May 25 and an auction
on May 26 w ill take
place at the Beverly
Wilshire Hotel.
For the price of an
auction catalog, $35 by
mail or $4-0 at the door,
you will have the
opportunity to taste rare
wines from throughout
the world. Poaession of
the cataloa is your
• admittance to b oth
tasting and auction.
Have you ever even
dreamed of tasting 1899
---~MU.l.~ 1928 Chateau d'Yquem?
I've tatted this one a
couple of times and it UI
memorable ln it1
greatn~u . The taste
experience of a lifetime.
There will at.> be 1924
Chateau Margaux, 1952
Lafite-Rolhachlld, 1959
Mou ton-R othsch ild,
great growth Burgundies
all the way back to the
teens (plus an 1865 Clm
Vougeot) and a couple of
selection• from the
clasaic vintage of 1934.
B.V. Prlva~e Reserve
will be offered from as
,.. beck -1"8, pl~ •
c ompJe&e verUcaJ
collecUon from 19Sf
through 1970. And you
• might have a chance to
taste Inglenook
Zinfandel from 1891 or
Inglenook Cabernet from
1897.
There'll be Heitz
Cabernet 1Q68 ,
Montelena Chardonnay
from 1974. and • m.unt>er-
of other lnterHtlng
California wines.
To order your cat.aloe,
a thick tome full of
interesting Information
.Be~ry
teacakes
si:mple
chicken breast
,... .. 1.91 •.
red snapper
2.49 ...... 2.99 ~.
•z to carve beet frHh dungeneaa
crab ...... 4.49 •. 3. 79
1now
tfp roast
.... 3.491~.
lean tasty ground
VIII S.98
whole cootled
..... 2.911~. lo~lt•r
coachella's flneat...large pin k
grapefruit 4 /1.00
sunklst'a finest extra large
navel .
i ... /1.00 Ori II
fresh & crispy \
bean 1 routs JIM. /1.00 I
sour cream
16 oz. ctn. "I-1.H
near eut
rice pillf
9 oz. box
pure and almple
taoo uuoe
12 02.. btl ..... t.49
pure and atmpte
UIM mlld, hot, no aalt
fresh today
alfalfa sprouts •.. 98
deli
. 9
ch1r1le'1 pnde extra teen
•
lfrl•I ,... .. 4.91 •· 4.49
99 1
.. S.49 ••
-~ pesta •114 .. 4.49 •. 3.49
morrel 1moked or poll1h
.. .......... 2.99 •• 1.99
Je~•'I IWltt ' ..-.. -~.91 •. 3.98
ft'd Ukt to lrwttt you to fOln u. '°' our 1n-
1tor9 demo'• on OUf fancy germM c,__
IPfll 29th & 30lh llt OVf .,._.., 111111, tu1tln &
,_poft beech II~.
cambozola ••••Mrt w/70'ft 9119onnle
12 oz. ar 1.49 1.29
r.w. knud1en
plnuppl1 Julee
.99
• •
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f
...
IM 0nange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdneeday, Aprll 27, 1813
Herbs
spark
flavor
Savory apk:a enhance
flavor and add color to
food, and a blend of
leMOninp can be Wied ln
place of salt -eooordina '° your own tute ana
preference.
Uaually a combination
of three herbe such u a
mix of thyme, marjoram
and •vory ia sufficient.
Try 10me of the cluaic
• combinations such u dill
... wlth""flth, ~age wi°lh
pork, and roeemary with
lamb, too.
A spicier blend might
i n clude powdered
mustard, onion, garlic or
curry powder, or white
pepper.
Sweet spices are
useful in reducins __ the
sugar added to puddinp
and custards, cooked
fruits. breUfaat cereals
and bewrage9.
This aroup includes
cinnamon, cloves,
nutmee. allspke, ginger,
cardamom. arme, 1erine1
and mint.
Theee eeaaonings ar&
not necemarily sweet ln
themaelvH, but they
enhance tweet flavon.
Most of the packaged
spice blenda can be made
at home if you have a
(lOOd aipply of berbe on
hand. Herbe Provencale
is often a mixture of
onion, garlic, thyme,
bull and black pepper,
while a typical Italian
mix would depend
heavily on oregano,
garlic and basil.
Some poultry
seuooinea contain white pepper, 1a1e. thyme,
marjoram, aavory,
alnger, allapice and
nutmeg. Pumpkin-pie
spice la a blend of
cinnamon. gi naer.
nutmeg, allspice and
clovea.
The moment you <>pen the can or jar. the aroma tells you ~
there's something ver,.apecial and deeply satisfying about new ( 'F
8rim9 Decaffeinated Coffee. , ..
So try the new rich•roasted taste of Brim. --
, ~1.ifoOO\(ll!Pt'••l•lll l'llll
. ---------------
OJ.0'43 l035'4l.
1 -----·-....... -........ __ ,, ... _,... ........ _ _....,._. ____ ,, .. _..,......_ .... __ ,__.,.,_,...,,,,.._,, _,,_ __ .. .....,_ '-·...-.--..-..
_.,.._ ... _ ........... -..... C...-t/lle --...... ....-............... -.
E3 :::Air .....
21000 l.31553
....:;:-=~--. ~-~_.:-.-
-., ~ '
It's the softest
baby powder ...
l
'
•
only from
~~
•
~SAVE~
~s
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Orenge Co11t DAILY PILOT/WednHd1y, Aprll 27, 1883 •I
llll'IH OOOH Now! Save 1Sc
on your nellt purchase of
Kellogg's Corn Flakes · cereal.
IOffHl•-•"" .. -·--~--J 0·~ , .... , ... ~~·.:_. ... .: 1.1~~1 ~ ~ ,.;:: ";,· ,~::o,. .. (;!':;;:,r c!.::~'::.::
,~, ''"! ~-:: .. ·.-::. ... :: .. ; • .._ ::. -:;.· :· •. -: •. :,,,,.-.. : ~:~=t-z=-.:..":.'!!
-:::~·r·' .~:.-:-7~':.•.I ',~': .. II.:·::.,-=·~~.:;'• !.~':.~~:!'.l··~:;,:;;:I;:::.::
··-" .... .A'•• ... _ .... ~··· ........ ' •• ,;.,. I 10 1' f f.fllU~ \A. I\ f ,,,_,..,,, "'°' 0000 °"'\!HOU uev...cr 11u MCllM>f 3l!OOO U4777
• '''"11¥' ..-.. _, I tJt)•··~f , .. .-. ---------------
---------------STORE COUPON (EXPIRES 10/31/83)
15t OFF
on t~ real cream taste ci Lu Creme .whipped topping. ...... ,, . " .. .. ~ --~· ...,.,, 6' oll' , I ,..._,_. .... ~ • e I ~ l'•t-• ~ ...... . ..... . -Ct ~ '''"-'•• ..... _,... · KA•FT • ,.. · · · ~-.. · • ... -•r t-• •'"" •D .. . ... . ... ... '
1113-44 21000 123550 ---------------
Save
On Milk-Bone·
Dog Biscuits
4 LB.BOX
44000 603546 ---------------IOCOFF
''' .,., •luC• IO c •w•t "••• ef ,....,.__..,.. •• .... •..e..cH 9" IC ..,.. ....... c ............. .-.... ,.., ••• Of ... ~ ... ~ .... net. • ,.,, • .,.._ >~\' 0-A .. t W-40'°'°""' Ot • "°"" ' ••••O rr~ttcteo P'Oftie>
•O f''ht" •• c.-n•"'"I P.•~'-"'°" ' ,,..,,......,"°" .,.,,._,,. C~9 COl"M
t ,,. • 11114-4..'0 Cw•t~ ~· ..,..,. "PO'<-Mt'e
••• ,,. t .,.-. '°"""°" oe~ ~ tOI C..,...,,...,, c .. ,, .,.--. • .,.. ·~· 1 10Ci,, Of • C.,.I lt..,.00t.ie1._., P'O" r .. ••o ~,o,.. .. •Ull'IC'\of« ... 1.....,.. 8o• •tlf& ~ r~ Hl'-•~J1 1• ~u~ • .,_,-IN•
Good~..__ 10900 l.05213
...,....., !:>IOl'l£L0v , ______________ _
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SAVESIH
On any to lb. or .. ..,., ut of Come 'M Get" Dot Food or Puppy Formu .. ·Puppy Food.
...... I .. -••• ,. •
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f ,,.,..,. ... .,.. ...... , -~ .... I •• ..... I,. • .,.. .. l9c, ........ .. ..... r... ........ ., 5JJOO 119235 ---------------~ ... save 15(.._·.
ON ANY SIZE
ultra brftee
TOOTHPAan
·1~ ·~1~· .. ,
. . .
.__...._... ........... ._ ........ ~ .............. ....,.. ... _ .......................... .
.., w.t ... ,., ..,_. . ...,.,,. ~ ........... .-. ............... _ .............. . .. ............... ,., .......... ._. ... . ................................... .... ea.-.. ............. ..-tit .... ....._,." .. ............ ___ ................... ... ......... _ ... ..,..._, ··---·~ ........ ,..................... i _... ............. , .. ,.., __ ........ . ............ ._.. ....... ,., ............. ._.
~ ......... .._.. ..... _ ......... ... :...-n :-,...--..:=: :.-: ;:-..= ..,._ . .., ..... ,,.._. ...... _ ..... ... ............... __..,. .......... .. ...... .-.. .... ~ ... ----.....-•• c...... ........................ . ........... ,............ --·· =-:-~ ..... CS1t
c.-v ... 1'"•'• ....,..,~,.~ _._._._., ...
... 7'1
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.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneed1y, Aprll 27, 188S
'Natural antibiotic' found for yogurt, milk
' LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -helppreventandt.reatcancer. that their 1tandard of llvtna. Moat yo1ur\ and mllk lndkatea h.la addophUua )'Ol\lrt
ln1tead of nffdin1 expen•ive Shahanl 1ay1 he hH been their 1tandard1 of hy1tene, of marketed in tbt UnJtod State. and milk ii parUcWarly eff«Uve
doctors' prucrtptlona for dotna research lot the paa\ 36 medical au.enUon are not u hip 1edu ..:idophilua, Shahan.I M)'I. ln combetdnl Ule becteria which
antiblotic:a 1uch u penk:iWn and yean on the health beneftta of u ourt," he aatd. The bacteria'• health· CIUM dyaentery, cholera and ~yctn. peop&e in the future yoaurt and other fermented "Thu1 It follow• -and I promoUJla propertJ• have been dWThu. It hu alao helped tiaht
may te\ YOIW" and drtnk milk fooda. The profeaaor aay1 the •tronaly bellt!'Ve th1a -th.at the touted for yt1ra -albeit ita ataphylococct and atrept.ooocd,ne
made whh a bacteria 1tratn lon&er llfetpaN of people who Wlde1pread UH of fermented 1uppmed CUN-all propert1ee have uJa.
••veloped br a Unlveralty of ea\ auch foodl prompted him to fooda in theae countrlea does been viewed with akepticlam by However, larae acale and
Nebrulca prote.or. lnvnttaate and laolate the have 10methln8 to do with thll aome. But lt appeara the prolonaed experlmenta
Dr. Khem Shahan!, profee.>r componen1.9 of the foodl which extended lor\levtty." akeptlciam i1 llftlna H aome me11urln1 the acidophllu1' ot food IClence and teclmolOI)', promote iOod health. But Shahan! .. YI belief• have dai7men report rtatna ulee of •blllty to Kt u an antibiotic for
.. ya ln addition to beln~ "In aeneral, ln theee Mlatic yet to be fully proven, deepite ml k and yo au rt with humane have yet to be done. Mtunl antibk>tlc, hJ.I contin countriea, the eastern European extemlve reeearch ln the put acidophllua. Shahani la now walt1n1 for
rffHl"Ch lndlcatH yoaurt an countriel, their dtlzem achieve a few decades at the Unlvertity of Shahanl uye hil work ln the clearllJ'lCe from the World Health
ml1k with the "Sh.ahani ltraln" areater lonaevity than we do In Nebruka and ellewhere Into the laboratory wlt1' te1\-tube Organization for hla propoul to
hunareaa ot people tor at leu' •
few decact. In Czechoalov ...
Upnda, !'cYpt, ~ arid
J>(*lbl)' inaia.
He l&ld Univendfy ot NebrMka
reaearcheu would put ih
1tudy'1 partldpanta on dt.tl wt
varloua levell of acldophllua
and yoaurt, then track their
health recorda.
Shahani aald nd\ until 1uch
larae acale, prolon.iecl tt.udies ate
done wlll reaearchen realty
know how effecUve addophilua
yoaurt and milk can be .. a
natural antibioUc. of lactobaclllua addophilua can America, tnt. deeplte the fact benefit. of yogurt. ex fer Im~ n ta and an l ma la beafn raearch project.a lnvolvlng .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---=:..:=:::::::=---=~~~~~~~:__~~_:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BERRIES
Pnm Pap Bl
temperature. Serves 4. FRENCH
STRAWBERRY PIE
l cup 1Uted all-
purpoee Oour
W cup eugar w \elilpoon lalt
~ cup butter or
marprine
i ea yolk
2 to 3 tableapoona
water ·
2 8-ounce packages
cream cheeee, eOftened
3 tablespoona lemon
juice
2 tablespoons arat.ed
lemon rind
~cup 1upr
1 quart freah
IU'awbenies
1 cup atrawberry
pn!9erVel
. 3 tablespoons lemon
Juice ~ble1poon1
~cup water
Canbine flour, ~ cup
auaar and salt. Cut In
butte!' OI' nwprine. Add
e11 yolk and 2 to 3
tablespoom w•ter; mix
li&htly. Prem Into t>.11.
Roll out on lightly
floured 1urface to
~ -lncb thic:kne91. Line a
9 -tncb ple pl•te •nd
prick well. Bake ln hot
oven (450 dearee•) 15
minutes. Cool.
Combine cream
cheese, lemon rind, 3
tablespoons lemon juice
and ~ cup augar. Mix
well. Spread cream
cbeeee mixture In bottom
of putry ahell. Top with
11nwberries. Combine strawberry
praervee, 3 tablMpoonl
lemon juice, cornatarch
and ~ cup w•ta". Cook
over low heat untll
thickened and clear.
IUrrtllg oonstantl~l. Pour aver atraw ee:
, Ol11l \Dltil 9el'Ved. Makes
..
one 9-1.ncb J>ie.
SPQNGE CUPCAKES
WITH
STRAWBERRIES
2eat
1 cup ""Pf
"" teapoon aalt 1 te~n vanilla
fla~lespoon melted
butter
~ cup milk. heated
to boiling point
1 cup sifted cake
flour
1 teupoon bakina
powder •••
3 ptnta atrawbenies.
cleanecl
~ cupsupr
1 cup whlppln&
crmm. wblJ>l*l 2 \abletpoorw a.pr
Beat eat with rotary
beater until vuy llaht.
Beat ln ....... ult and
vanilla. Beat ln melted
butter and bot mOk.
Sift topthet flour and
baklna powder and
quickly beat Into •II
mixture.
JmmedjatelY pour Into
12 lined muffin CUJIS. Fl1l iwo.thtnla full. Bake In
preheated 400 de1ree
oven 18 co 20 minutes.
Coal Cut atrawberrlea,
nileMllC 12 foe' pmilb. ,,.. c:ut ......... wtth ~ .....
bJp cream with 2 ,.,.I ~ _. aupr.
Ort cupc:ialcm In half.
8pooe 1trawberrtea on
baaoliiD half o( c:ab, top
..... OCblr ball of cake
~ apool) .... ben1el . oa top. Top with
w•l ~eam and
FRYINC
CHICKEN
WMlt IOdy, $OUtNf'll
~-.44 ..
=~ST ·99 larlClld .... lD •
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
IOnOIOIMf
T·BONE
STEAK
larlClld .... l.OW1
LADY LEE
BACON
UOY lM MDt l"*S I.II , 1tl
.. 279
--
CANNF 0 P. i·ACKA(,f D ~!!_'!.,~~T .. 1.99 !2!:,~~~TEAK .2.79 r~~ 1s9
~~~TION HAM .. 1.29 "'0t 10
~!.~!.~~r .. 2.19 r STAR-KIST · 159
PORTERHOUSE STEAK 2 89 2!~K T~ ~
--,_ .. • Oii Of .... '9Ctl
7·80Nf CHUCIC ROAST 1 39 ---------~~~BEEF : 1:29 r ~~ ... 1ss
~i:t~~RISl<ET .. 1.39
ENGLISH CUT SHORT RIBS 1.69
••• • •. • • • • • • •• • • LI
WHOlE FRYER LEGS .... 59
BU BAil.EV PASTRAMI 2. 29 .. .. .. . ..
~5!! •.T~~~ ~U~ACE .. 1.99
~~"!:'.!A~~ .. -2.29
F ISH & SE A FOOD
~!.~.~~~. ~ .. 1.89
~~.~~.~~~~~ .. 1.69
RU.ET Of BUTTERRSH 1 59 ,....... .................. ,. . " .
CHERRYSTONE CLAMS 99 ............................ ••We
~~R~~~~~. !~~ .. 2.29
Oltl!llll or llWlnut Mttr t0etm111
r *PILLSBURY 79 CAKE MIXES
I V"*'" 1~ Ol IOll e
l*~~.~~~ .... 79
I*~~1.19
'*~~ ..... u.5.89 I*2~ ....... 3.39
r~~~.~.~-11\ 1.19
I~T.!.~~.~~ ....... 97
r~~~~ ....... 97
r~~.!~~~CM 1.05
r~.~~~~.~~ .• l!\.69
l~ .~~•~•·• •• tMlr85
l~~5.~.llWCM•39
l~~~~~--u..99
r~ ~.~~5.~~ tMl.56 . l~.~.~ .......••. 33
r=.~ ............ 1.75
l=~~~~ ....... 11• .... 69 •
CANNF 0 fl. PACK Al.FD
r~:r: .... 95
r * ROSARITA 79 iDREDBEMS ::-01 IOOt cane
f11 BRAN l HONEY79
• ~· J•Oz.LOlf•
l!!'!!~.~~ ...... -1.99
r~ ~?. .~~... . ... ,...69
GfNERIC SAVINGS
LAUNDRY 99 DITIRCENT
OINrlC G Ol. IOll •
~.~T~l~ ........... 65
~~~~-1.79
~~Al·N·~ .. ,' ...... 1.19
~.~~~ .. ~~!0 8.F.~!-1.19
~~~~~.~ ............ 69
~~!~~. "" ... 1.07
~ ~.N.~~~ ..... ••<M•32
~~.~~~.~ ......... 72
r~-~.~ .... 1.79
~~~.!.~.~. , o•M •79
r~.~~~ ..•• 1.45
r~.~~-1.79
r~~~~.~~ ..... 1.35
Basic ¥slue
fll * AtMT .EMMA 69 '~~~OOZIO••
~~~~~.~IL~ (A"' 1.91
~~ ~~T ~·~. .. _, (A'" 1.87
@r~.L!!-~R:,. tu>.39
I~~v .~~.~.~~~ 1.29
l~~z~ .. tltOI -1.89
l~~~ •cs-2.57
LIQUOR & WINf
I~:~~ ..... 219
I~~~~~~ ... uul\ 7.99
rs~~~.~':."' 9.99
r~~~-11\e.89
l~~~.! ..... o•N 4,49
I~~.~ ,,.."' 7.09
'~~~ .......... " 2.89
r~~~ ••. "1.59
I~~~~--9.49 ....,........,......,.,._ .......... """" ........, .. If"'"'......, ..., • !tit ,,,....,,.. .... .....,.._ ..........
........... -(Wllllt
f
Q UALITY PRODUCE
~N
BANANAS
lllOe. llelllY to IM
FRESH
BROCCOLI
100!& Clood btlnt
us "° 1 IM9'
FRESH
LEMONS
... 25·
'°.13
H O U SEHO LD & PET
I ~u:i:: _299
DllPOUllll. TOOCMr or oavnnw
r * AIM&HA3u9B 129 DETERCiENT
... VV DufY IS OZ IO•
l !'..2!,~ ,!1.SSUE -"·'"'-l*~~A~R~~.!1.59 r *~!_APER NAPKl!!50 roe. 79
!2~~~R POtOll 1.19
l~~ ~.WA~ .. uar "' 2.15
@l~~~~ .... ~-7.09
l*~~v~D0C~""•32
Of LI DELIGH TS
"*IEEFWIENERS 159 ' .. _,_ ....
•-•'-"°' -• I~,!8~~.!.~TS ...... 23
r~~~.~~ ..• -2.19
l*~~. ltOt .... 2.29
l*~~~ ~~.~POI .. 1.99
l~~-~.~.~..r ... 1.69 1
r SHnOOID CHEIS! A 29 IJMlll-·-··· ..... , •.
\
I
I
I
Introducing Oregon Farms Pound Cake.
Wonderfully moist. Delightfully light. And, like all
Oregon Fanns cakes. made with the same fresh.
wholesome ingredients you'd use at home.
Try Oregon Farms fuund Cake w1th fresh
fruit or whipped cream. with ice cream.
even all by itself. Any way you
slice it. it's a delicious dessert
-at delectable savings.
E • Orange Co11t DAILY PIL.OT/Wedn .. day, Aprll 27, 1983 (llT t
Ill
Standby given • new twist )
SomeUmea~ 1 slmple blt of k.l\chen w can tum an old
menu 1tandby to a IW'~ new di.ah. Hot Tuna-Puta
11 1 1r•1t eJC1mple of thl1
effortlftl cullnary=. It combtnel the touchea
of Muieed wcchW, onion, and
bU• of aweet red pepper with the
tradiiJonal fhc:lng1 -tun. and
1hell macaroni. Then they're
dreued up with another
dependible favorite, mayonnaJJie.
But fh1t'1 where any
reaembl1nce with the u1ual
routine enda. lnttead of betnt
beeped up ln • ulad bowl. the
t\f.P.t·J>Ub·veptable-mayonnaile
mixture f.a apooned into a two-
quart QUlerole and baked until
it'• plplna ho~. For extra texture
and eye appeal. coaraely
crumbled potato chlp1 can be
1prinkled on top a few minutee
before baklna la completed.
HOT TUNA
PASTA SALAD
2 table1poon1 corn oil marprtne
1 large zucchini, halved
lengthwlae, l&ed (about 2 cupe)
~ cup chopped on1QJ\
1.4 cup chopped 1weet red
pepper
2 C81\I (7 ounces each) tuna,
drained, flaked
1 s-cka1e (8 ounces) 1hell
macaroni, cooked, drained
1 cup mayonnaile
1 ta61eapoon lemon juice
1A teupoon salt
IA teupoon pepper
FRESH
ASPARAGUS Atd .. ....
month tor thle
,,....vegeteble
FRESH ,
CANTALOUPES
NewCrop -
Vwyl ....
69i
Coaraely crumbled potato
chlpe (opUonal)
ln a larae 1klllet, melt
maraarlne over medium heal.
Add zucchini, onion and red •
pepper Stlnina frequently, cook •
five minutea or until tender.
ln a 2-qu,.rt ca11erole toll ,
to1ether tuna, macaronJ, may-.
orfnaiae, lemon juice, Nit and
pepper. Add zucchini mlJCture;
tou gently until well mixed.
Cover. Bake ln 3~ dellft oven
30 mlnutea or until heated
through Servea 6.
Optional: After 20 mlnu• of '
cook.Ing time, top with crumbled
potato chip•. if desired, and
return to oven, uncovered for 10
more m1nutea.
FRESH
SPINACH
NAVEL
orange•
2 !
VALENCIA
ORANGES
19!
KAHN& ALL BEEF
BOLOGNA
$24!
l -o .. noe C-t DAILY PILOTIWtldnMdoy, April ar, ttl3 ____ .....;,;~.;..;.;;;;;.;.:;;~..;.;:;.;;.;.:..;.;.::~~~~~~------------------------------------------------------------------! Calcium is esSential nutrient throughout life
f
What do l,132 cupa of
popcorn, 440 pc>tato
chipe, 04 l trench frlee, ~Se saltine crackert, 88
cups of dry rornflakea, 9
pounds of tuna. 117 hot
dop. 7 pounds of pork
chops. a 6-pound beef
rout, 7 quart. of beer, 88
· cupa of black coffee and
2 ~ quart. of roee wine
have In common with
one 8.ounce cup of milk?
They all contain the
I same amount of calcium
~ -352 milUgrams (mg).
That'1 nearly one-half
the 899 mg dally
I
I ,,
1 . l • I I
I
requirement for calcium
established by the U.S.
Government,
Eating quantities of
food like those listed
could, at the very least,
give even the be,.rtiest of
eaters a stomachache.
Except for the glass of
milk. Since we all need
this essential nutrient.
we should know which
foods are rich in calcium.
Milk group foods
account for three-fourths
of the calcium 'coosumed
in the American diet.
And it doesn't take
tremendous servings to
gel large amounts of
calcium. Two slices of
cheese (1 ~ ounces), one
cup of yogurt, one cup of
chocolate pudding. 1 ~
cups of Ice cream or two
cups of cottage cheese iall
contain about one-half of
the required daily
amount of calcium.
By consuming just two
servings from the milk
group each day, you will
come close to meeting
your 800 mg daily
requirement fo.r this
essential nutrient.
Other good sources of
calcium Include dark
Market
a roller
coaster
The unusual
California weather has
caused what some
experts in the industry
call a "roller coaster
market." l'or the nexl
two montha there will be
ups and downa in the
fresh produce market
that will be extremely
d.Wicult to predict.
During tho1e brief
period.a in Late winter
when fa.n}llers were able
to get into the fields to
plant. vegetables will be
abundant and prices
1hould drop aocordinily.
But when the bad
weather delayed the
plantlng:a, the pps will
be felt Clown the line and
th.ere will be shortages of
most vegetable varieties.
The weether bu had
no effect on apples Gnce
they come out of a
specialized 1tora1e p~ that keeps them
.. fresh .. the day they
were pdu!d.
Another fruit that is
weathering well is the
enormous navel crop.
Oranges are in good
supply and quality 11
good. Red and white
arapefrult are a good
buy and quality ii
outatandin1. There are
abo Valencia oran1e1
avallab)e oa the market
but larpr volumes won't
be here until mid-May. a ... avocadoe are a
super buy and quality la
excellent. All other
varieties ane finishing up
thia week.
There are small
"quanUUe1 of early =~e~n:; will b• fatrly hi1h
4 prlc•d. Other early
1re«-n lufy ve1etable1
Hke collarda, kale or
broccoli. 1ardlnt1 and
canned red salmon
(lndudlna the bone9), u
well H tofu, almond•
and kidney bean..
Calcium la the key
1tructural mineral in
human metaboll1m.
According to Hecktor F.
DeLuca, f>h.D .. chairman
of the Department of
~
Blocheml1try at th•
UnJverslty of Wt.conatn,
Madhon, calcium i1
nece11ary throu1hout
tht" life cycle. .
''lt ta e11entlal tor
structural arowth.
maintenance of bonea
and teeth, and reaulation
of body proceeeee 1uch u
blood coa1ulatlon In
fact, all cell1 need
calcium to functJon."
Biz ~'2.. 29 Bleach 3•
l' varJetlea from Central
ca11fomla are expected
to .-t ln a month.
l . The best iomato buy .. •
\la• small atie. Florida
Jolt most of the larle ..
, . tomatoes and wfia( 11
r -.vallab1e It hf8b priced.
: The wet weather it
~r,*c~
Mparaau1. When the
... &her dean •'.ApplJ• ·at~.-~-up
-~~-. l Romaine, red lHf,
butter leaf and 1reen leaf l•UUCH .,. all
ea,...-&encln1 troubl• ..... ,., .......
A-1;1·0-eeler1 and .. ~ ... ,. ........ .
ind -..now..
a part of the
:..•r,•r•na.1r ....-.·· ntle aad 1rH• ....... Jet 10 .. ~~n•r --·.-r-r.fn
Dairy producta are nol
only the 1ln11• bt1t
1ource of calcium, but
thdy alao 1upply other
nutrients, 1uch a1
vitamin D, which help1
tran1port calcium
throu1hout the body.
At certain time•
durln1 the life cycle
more calclum 11 needed,
primarily durlna periods
of 1rowth. The dJetary
,~
lnft -•-
roqulrement for caldum bone development ln the
lncreaan for children, child and future bone
trenaaert. and prqnant health of \M mo1her.
and nuntni worn.n.
Preanant women muat
supply the developtn1
fetu. with calcium and
other e91entJal nutrlenta.
The nuuln1 mother
muat replenl1h calcium
loat durina milk flow, In
order to aaure healthy
Since milk and other
dairy producta are the
primary source of
calcium, the recom·
mended number of
dally tervinp lncre ...
from a minimum of two.
to three for children and
tour for teena1er1 and
pre1nant and nuralna
women.
Much can be said
about calcium , but
perhap1 the moll
Important tblna to
remember 11 that the
body need1 c alcium
throuahout the Ute cyde.
AJthou1h an adult'•
bona may no 1onpr be
arowlna, th•Y are
con1 tantly betn1
remod•J•d, with •• much aa eoo io 700 mi of
calcium enterln& and Jeavtnc the bonee dally.
•·tntere1t1naly
enou1h." DeLuca
explalna, "every two to
four year• the entire
skeleton tumt over; that
ta, it hu totally new bone
1t ructure from what it
had befor9."
t -::-11•
---· ·--II' ..... -.
_,_ __ .... ..
llA
· sl&CAM
,_,,. ,_,,.
,_.,.
·-'' ,_,,. ,_,,.
·-'' 1!1.M
' .. lie
IA 11.01
IA•1.u IA 11.11
8nal11l.......uwt
~'2.78
Nutrition
care role
changing
With an l ncreasln1
number of mother•
enterln1 the American
workforce much of the
re1pon1ibillty for
educaUng children and
husband• about good
eatina habit. hu fallen
into the hands of oth«
family membera and
thoee outldde the family,
aay1 the California
Dietetic Auoclatlon
(CDA).
"We can no longer
a1aume that the
American mother ha1
ellduatve OOl\trol ol the
nutrition education.
re-lna," 1ay1 Dorla
c.c..teniua, pnlklent of
the CDA. "Houee-
k e e per a, baby -
1itten, 1randmothen
and fatbera are now
dotn1 more 1rocery
1hopplng and food
~i·~I to the
Bureau of the Cem\ll,
the proportion of women
in the workforce baa
=i~b~
percent. In -.ddltlon,
since 1960 the number of
hot.mhoJda betided by •
divorced penon -the
majority beG'8 women -hM ll¥ft than cbah)ed.
"Althou1h mothers are 1tfll the pndomjnant
teacher• of proper
nutrl ti on within a
t.ally, i&....., a..,.. .W. claJJclren, fatben and
other close adulu to
make an extra effort to
become more aware of
developing aood •tine·
hablta and to U.lat tn
educating the ..... of
the youn1e1t family
member•," 1ay1
ec..tenlw.
The CDA advocate.
die u.e of the four food
group 1yaiem -milk,
meat, veaetablea-fruit,
breacta-cereal -u the
mast mamceable way to
enaure Jou eat a
balance diet and
maintain your well
beinl· For workill8 mothen
who still want to ownee
and keep tabe on their
family'• nutrition, the
CDA often the followiq
tii-;
-Prepare a weekly·
aboppinc list for penorl
buying the pocertea,
maldn1 1ure the llat
includes a varlety of
food.I from each of the
four food poups.
-Give children and
bu.bud bu.le (O()klna
ie.on..
-Develop assorted
menus of easy-to-make,
well-tel•mecf meU for
the family for times
•hen you're not home or an too tlNd to cook.
-Purpoeely ~pare men of an entree than II
needed to feed your
family ao that there will
be Jeboven that can be
eMlly reheated.
-.Double reclpet that m.ae well and you will
have created an almost
'111i1&9Dt" meal for a Lltllr ....
-----""-,. ~ ------= --
Orange Coatt OAILY PILOT/Wedneedey, Aprtl 27, 1983 -Cheese spices· fish fillets ••
11 you're looklnl for
1omt1thln1 deUclouely
dJlf rent and perfect for
a family treat then t.ry
Nordic Stutf ed FU1eu.
Simple to make, the
fillet• are filled with
broccoli, muehroom1,
onion•, bread crumb•
and Nokkelost, a 1plced
che.e. With lt• wlique
tHte combination .of
clove1, c umin and
caraway 1ee d1, the
cheete add1 a dellcloua
1plcy flavor to the fWeta.
Add a aalad and your
meal la complete.
NORDIC STUFFED
FILLETS
1 c up c h o pp e d
muahroom1
2 tabletpoon.a butter
or mar1arlne
\.\ cup 1Uced green
oniona
1 cup small broccoli
floreta
~ c up fine dry
bread a-umba
1 ~ cupa 1hredded
Nokkelotl ch~
6 eole filleta (about 2
pounds)
Salt and pepper to
taste
Paprika
2 tableepoona melted
butter or maraartne
2 tabla.poona lemon
juice
In 1kllle t , bro wn
muahroonw ln butt.er and
cook onions and broccoli
until ju1l t e nder .
Remove from heat. SUr
Ln bread crumba and 1
cup cheese.
Olvlde broccoli
mixture amon1 fllleta.
Roll up. Secure with
toothpicks. Place •am
aide down In buttered •
1hal1ow bakln1 dlab.
SeHon with aalt and
pepper. Sprinkle with
paprika. Drlule butter
over eole. Sprinkle with
lemon juice.
Bake at 400 desr-F.
for 20 minute. or until
fl1h la done. Top with
remamtna \!\cup cM.e.
Bake until cheme melta.
Makes 6 .ervtnp.
VtPERIE ... CE THI OflUXl t40SPITALllY OF HYA'_!.':!~"::!~AU•
HYATT HoTELSG)HAMil HYATT_'!~::······
OOMPL!ll DITAll.I & IHfllY 'OllMI AVAii.AiU AT ALL VOHI ITOMS r-----------------, ••• I 1111,~ 111 ... ,,, ,111II11 11 I
:~ Ito I BI I ~
·~ ((){f'()'\...... ;. C>
r -------~---~-----\ ' t I ' ' •I t I I I ~ I • I
I... IH>I Bl I 'I I . .
1... <(fl l'O '\'-. ,I I
I c.nlt oH COUOOft •t>d ':::'-Die~. UV'ftO• .. _ VO<'ll I' I ... 01 IO •rclu<I• •ti••• .... COUl)Oftt COUpoN O•H•., I I '".,. on• 4o11.., Ot ••c.eo ,,.. • ...,. "' ,,.. ,,.,.. II '--:..-::..... =c...-:.:.. ::;;...-~ -~ I'
I ~-·-= .. = I ..........................
'-----------------~ ' I j I I I • I • • I ' ' j I
1.; IH 1I Hll 'I I . . .... ( Ctl l'O '\....._ ,I , I
' .
Orang• Coa1t CAILY PILOT/Wednelday. Aprll a7. 188~
Salads keyed
GREEK CHEESE
SALAD
6 sheets phyllo
fiouah 1 package ( 11
ounces) montrachet or
pther goat cheese , cut
Into 6 equal pieces
Y\ cup melted butter
pr margarine
1 cup each cut up
~ucchlni , carrots,
radlahee, bean sprout.a, ~Y sliced fennel and
ftivered pea poda
DRESSING
~ cup olive oll
'A cup r ed wine
vinegar
1 teupoon salt
\4 teupOOn pepper
~ teupoon oresano
1 1 tablespoon Dijon
mustard
1 tablespoon sesame
teed.a
Preheat oven to 400 ~egreea F. Fold each
jheet of phyllo dough in
half lengthwise. Place
f}lee9e pieces a\ one short
aide . "'rurn in a idea
lengthwbe. Brush dough
wi th butter or
margarine. Roll up like a
jelly roll brushing with
butter at every turn.
B ake for 1 ~ to 20
minutel or until brown.
Place cheese rolls on
serving plates and
surround with mounds
of veaetablea, ln •
mixing bowl combine
salad dressing
ingredients and beat
Jalla 0.lld, Pahlie TV'a gourmet
cook. tamed field worker in
Salin• for a day to learn
fint-haid aboat artichokes,
which ahe will inelude in a eeries
on different food. of Ameriea.
• 1crowave ovens
oak beans la$t
Stuffed q11:ail innovative
A la Carte
BJ Olort PtekJJat
l\ASPBBIUlY IAUCE
~ OW"9 dry whice
wlne
1 ounce lhaUc* a ounct• heavy
cream
1 pound butter
1 pint ba•k•t
rupberrie1, reeerve 12
berries for ~
Combine wlne,
1hallota, rupberrlet in
uueepan and cook over
low heat a minutes. Add
cream and continue tc
cook. etirrlni until •uce
is reduced to about one.
half the volume.
AMERICA'S FAVORITE
FOOD STORE n.. c.tll ltwW. .. ,...,.._
........ '-4 .. , 4.
, ........ htll .., 21
Te ..... Y .. Certlfkate1.
~ ....
Wet• ~.
( "-" .._.) •. fl.It
.. •1&•
Fresh Fryers ._.,..... ..-, """" 551-Chlcti... "
i..
Round Steall ......... w.-y s22• Rib Eye Steak::..c::: '3" O..allry..., lb. ,__JIM ,109
Fried Ch ·1cken ,.,.." ,. ... " 2 ·lb. s21• Pork cnops =· ,_ .....
AtMrted P'lettt lea ~Corned BeefMc:~lC:" 111 I
Skinless Franks Sc••ch av,
Chuck Steak ':!:.7;.:t~
Porlc Spareribs o.c .. Mey•
USDA Oloa
1.ii.. 99c Leg of Lamb JT.""' 111 •2••
rt.,. &ound Turkey °"'':'. • 89•
f.-Jt/IWI lllllHI '1 .. SmoUd., :z:. •
":: ~159 o.frHte4 •• = *1'' ....... _ ... .,...... .... .... . ,, ,.) ..
Polish Sausage~
Sllced Bacon,..,.. .•.• _
•
Chunk
"'· s1••
14.S 1st ~·
Braunschwelger = 10 79'-
Link Sausage~ Ill '1"
Cltllsh wi::.:.· Ill '1"
Cod Fillets ,::t., • 12 ..
Raw Slwlmp =:: • '5•
""-'•'• 5 ~.1 ~··
DOeeverages1~=·i4~ '1
Fflskles cat Food 3 ~ •1
Bath SOap o!.o,~
5':*1
..Margartneed>es'=9'~9' tl!IMtt. C Hoff s , ••
Oa"-' .. e1scutts!$ st:.•1 ,..,Ice rea~lv<••"•
.. Yogurt~ sr!:in mm>Kraft Corn 011, ....... :::.; s 1" M 0ove ._.. ••gg. ~ 10~5::1"" Cheddar Cheese.::!'~~ ... ~ 1'' Discreet Cit Litter -~-..,...
--~--------------.......
RedApples t.= 3.,'1"
Russet Potatoee,,_ 3•'1 ..
r.-4.. ... _..__ Al¥tr ,, .. ·-nWZ)ll -WUUlllll f-111 "'9 1··
YellowOolons= 2 .. 49'
Crisp CllTots= 2,:. 49'
Fresh Limes :.-:,:. 4 "°'•1•
Hawaiian Pineapple i. 39'
Salted Peanuts..:...
Hanging Pottios
GrMtleerluyl
udweiser
leer
AMWtFer y_ ....... ,
'*" 12 ....
Con•
*219
Oval Sardines c. .......
Vienna Sausage uw.,. •
4 ~!1 ,.. ..
'
Feasti~g
with
'best'
• recipe
•By CECILY
BROWNSTONE
A111ll"'9d Pr-,ood Editor
A few weeks ago I
received a letter
co nsisting. of one
sentence: "l would like to
have the best recipe for
bouillabaisse."
I was startled. When I
label a recipe for a
particular dish the
"best," I mean it is the
best recipe for that dish I
have come upon to date.
One of these recipes
for bouillabaisse is in the
newly published book,
"A Feast Made for
Lauah'ter" by Craig
Claiborne, food editor of
The New York Times.
CRAIG CLAIBORNE'S
LONG ISLAND BOUILLABAISSE
oU
3 tablespoons olive
1 cup finely chopped
leeks
3 cloves garlic.
finely minced
1 ~p chopped onlon
1 ~ cups chopped
tomatoes
2 sprigs fresh
thyme. or 'h teaspoon
dried
2 aprJa• freah ~yleal
1 cup dry white
wine
2 cups water
1 large teaapoon
crumbled leaf aaffron
Salt and freshly
ground pepper
~ teaspoon Tabasco
sauce, or to taste
1 (l lh·pound)
lobster
3 tablespoons butter
l 1h teaspoons flour
1 pound fresh red
snapper, striped bass,
porgy, or other white
fish, cut into serving
pieces
1 quart fr es h
mussels, ICl'Ubbed well
2 dozen cherrystone
clams
12 raw shrimp,
peeled and deveined
1 tablespoon
Pernod, Ricard, or other
anise-flavored liqueur,
optional
Heat the olive oil in a
large saucepan and add
the leelu, aarlic, and
onion. Cook until wilted,
then add the tomatoes,
thyme, panley, bay leaf,
wine, water, saffron,
salt, pepper , and
Tabaaco. Simmer 10
minutes.
Plunge a knife into the
center point of the
lobster where tail and
carcaa meet. Split tail
and carca.. Cut carcass
in half lenat}lwise. Scoop
out the liver and coral
a nd place In a small
mixing bowl. Cut tail
section into 4 plecea
cnmwt.e.
Add the carcua and
a.oy ICl'apl of lobster to
the tomato mixture.
Cover and almmer 30
minutes.
Meanwhile, blend the
buUer and flour with the , tm,.n, then mix with
the retiel'Ved coral and
UYer.
Strain the tomato
mlx1Ute thtouch a sieve,
pu1hln1 throu1h a1
many a>Ud8 • pcmtble. Return mixture to
Hucepan, brin1 io boll and add U1• red lnapptl', __ .... daml,
1hrtmp, and rHerved
lobuer tall. Simmer
ur11con1id 16 mJnuiee.
ldr "' .. __. anUtWN 8lld llflftl:·to "• boU, Mil tM ''Plftiod, ..,
... hot ""' ,.... lnil -r.-...l ........
&oneleu
BEEF STEW MEAT
l& 1.99
l& 2.09
freth!Y Ground, leu lhon I 5Cl4. fol
EXTf(A LEAN GROUND BEEF ta I .89
CINTIRCUT
CHUCK ITIAK
c~~~.1.49 --. -
12-or Anorted Vofletiet .. 1.59 FRITOS CORN CHIPS
I l ·or hoporoi.d •• 9 CARNATION MILK
6-Podl, 12-ot. Cont 1.99 A& W OR SUNKIST
12-01.
IPAM
• 1.37
la.91. •••ao.-nv1 AUVI
CITWI 0. ••UIT 'VMCH
Orang• Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Aprtl 27, 1983 C:I
Vegetables wildly appealing
Sprln1tim• ve1etablH are
wonderful treat• all by
themMlvea, but they become
"wildly" delidoua and wke on an
excltlna menu appeal when
combined with lon1 1raln and
wild rice.
ASP ARAGUS AND WILD RICE
1 clove prUc, minced
1 tableapoon butter or
mar1artne 2~ cupa water
1 packa1e (8 ounces) long
grain and wild rice
1h pound fresh uparagus,
cut '"-aonally into 1-tnch pieces
8 cherry tomatoes, quarte~
2 to 3 tea1poon1 lime or
lemon ju.ice
l.Jahtly MUte prlic in butter
in medtwn UUC»pAn. Add water
and content• of rice and
NUOn.l.na p11ek.eta. Brina to a boU.
Cover tl1htly and 1lmmer 10
minuta. Stir in upa.raaua. C.OVtt
and oontlnue to aimmer unt.ll all
water la absorbed , about 10
minutes. Stir In tomatoes and
lime juice. Makes 8 1ervinp.
MINTED WILD RICE AND PEAS
2 ~ cupa water
I tablespoon butter or
margarine
1 packa1e (8 ounce9) lona
lfaln and wild rice
l pound fi.h pe#, ahelled
or 1 peckqe (10 ounc:a) frw.en
peu, thawed
2 teaapoona finely chopped
fnsh mint lnvee or 1 teaspoon
dried mint f1akel
Brln1 water, butter and
contenta of rice and 1euonina
packet• to a boll In medium
aaucepan. Cover tl1htly and
simmer 20 minutea. Stir in ,,_
and mint. C.OVer and oonUnue to
1immer untll all water la
absorbed, about 0 minutes.
Makes 8 •rvinp.
HAM and EGGS.
... COUPON SPECIAL!
GROUND BEEF
3-LB. PKG. LIMIT 2
DOES NOT EXCEED 30% FAT
LB.
--------FllHUMAN'I •AY
Freih loke, lro1I or Frr. li .. fo" likt Clom1
ATLANTIC SCROD filLLETS l& 2. 99 EASTERN MUSSELS L8 I .29
SO<Jtt. Pocoli< froren
MAHI MAHI FILLETS ta l.•9
BONILlll
FAMILY ITIAK
USDA I I 99 CHOICE a.a. · e
Froren O.lro1led
PACIFIC BAY SCALLOPS LB 5.99
CORNIDBllF
BRllKIT
HUGHE!> I 69 I FLAT CUT I p~~~T
w . I .ff L•. e
SOUR CREAM
6'·or Corton
SNOW CROP FIVE ALIVE
32·or Jor. We19h1 Wokh•n
MAYONNAISE ..
1 1 ·o•. ""P'\.7A'm•ol. 1t0ber»c BAKE Y AGON 00 IES ..
MORTON .-;o
I IALT
26-0Z
ROUND
16-0Z.
CARTON
••• 9
1.09
1.09
KllUDSIN
HAMPIHIRI
6 5-01.
FRENCH'S MASHED POT A TOES
French'•. 5) 6 or Auori.d
SPECIALTY POTATOES
I 6-01 llo11nd1
DUNCAN HINES FROSTINGS
.59
.79
1.29
DUNCAN HINll
CAKI MIX
EXCEPT
ANGE L
fOOO
WASHINGTON
IXTaA FAllCY, ...... A••Lll
..
t<1nelen Moll••P••<e
WILSON HAMS l& 3.79
5·or Pkg
LITTLE JUAN BURRITOS
Smoked llffl or Pol>l<o
HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE
EA .35
l8 2.•9
LARGI MIATY FRYIRI
ITUfflD· FOR ROAlnNi
7·~~t.-z . 79 l>llSSINO • .{ lt1 ~~ L•.e
48-0Z.
MAZOLA
OIL
PUllf ( OIH~ 219
6• or Heovy Oui l...:I 50' Ofl lobel
YES LIQUID ETERGENT 3.•3
Golden Groin. 7 ) 01 .. 39 MAC. & CHEESE DINNER
16 01 With Trigger
WOOD PLUS l.•9
lr.J PALMOLIVE
Q DIRRGINT
41-0l. LIQUID
tNCl •OOFF2 7 5 lA8El • -5-
'1\9.
Cl Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Aprll 27, 1883
Quantities
scaled down
Penons living alone or
with just one other
person now comprise
more than half or all
U.S. households.
Cooking for one or two
mean1 scaled -down
quantities or looking
ahead and preparing for
two meals at one time.
Either way, chicken ls a
good choice.
Whole broiler-fryers
a r e often (eatured
specials at 'ihe meat
counter. They can be
roasted whole with slices
served for one meal and
the remaining meat uaed
to prepare a cagerole or
salad for another day.
Or, cut the whole bird
into parts or quarters,
portion out enou1h for
the servings needed and
freeze the remaining for
a later mMl.
It's even easier and
o nly slightly more
expensive to buy your
favorite parts pre-
packaged in the exact
quantity you need to
avoid left-overs.
CURRIED CHICKEN
4 broiler -fryer
chicken par1a
l tablespoon cooking
oil
1 tablespoon butter
or margarine
1 large onion, sliced
in rings
1 clove garli c,
minced
'A teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons apricot
preserves
3 tablespoons
vinegar
l teaspoon curry
powder
~cup water
In small f rypan, place
oil and butter and heat to
medium temperature
Add chicken and cook ,
turning, about 10
minutes or until brown
on all sides. Add onion
rings and garlic and
saute until onion is clear,
about 3 minutes.
Pour off all excess oil.
Sprinkle chicken with
salt and pepper. In small
bowl, mix together
apricot preserves,
vinegar and c urry
powder; ~tir m water.
Pour mixture over
chicken and brmg to boll.
Reduce heat to low
and cover; simmer about
20 minutes or until fork
can be inserted in
c hicken with ease.
Remove lid and continue
to cook about ~ minutes
more to reduce liquid.
Serve over ~. Makes 2
.ervin~.
Wine future:
Fewer varieties
al.reedy the most highly-
regarded California
white wines.
In the past, he aaid,
California winemakers
have intentionally made
Chardonnay wine1
wblch were heavy-
bodled, high ln alcohol,
and wt.eel 1trongly of
the oak banels in which
they were aaed-"lt'a ICl't of like using
a aledaehammer where a
tack hammer la all that'•
needed," he aaid.
Winemakera now
realize that lighter
Chardonnay. are more
compatible with food,
and are reflnln1 their
~ Auowood said.
wit truly .. the queen.
of white wtn.." be aaid
of Chardonnay. ''It takes
lta pl8ce next to caberne\
-the kin& af red wina I think you are ju1t
aeeln1 the tlf of the
I ceberg o what
California can do with
Ow-donnaya. Stick with
us."
All the wlne1'\akera
predicted a further
lowerl111 of alcohol
leveh ln wine• i n
re1pon1e to market
pre91W'e9.
Martini aid California w1nemabn have in.de
~...ioobol wtnee ln. the
pelt beca\189 the publlc
wanted a bmvy-bodled,
full-flaWNd drtnlt. M
the Amerlcaa palate
b ec ome• mbr e
.aphtstlcated, be wd,
wt.nm wtD ..,..,,.ne more be'9!"*' wt oomplmc.
Counting calories? Staftdards help
By LOUISE COOK AUN'MM ~ .,.._,
Wel1ht-watchlna Americana
don't have to rely on au-.work
to flsure out which diet foocb
and beverasea are loweat In
calorlea.
Federal reaulaUona Ml 1trlct
1tandarda tor the calorie content
or product• that claim they'll
help you lo1e pound1 or keep
them oft. And knowln1 the rulea
can make that trip to the
1upermarket a little le11
confualnl.
The standard.a for foods are set
b~ the Food and Drug
Ad!nlnlstration; the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
regulates light alcoholic
beverages like beer or wine.
Under the FDA regula\. ions, a
food labeled "low<alorte" can't
contain more than 40 calories per
serving and more than four-
tenths of a calor ie per gram.
DOUBLE YOUR SAVINGS
WITH SMITH'S 3
DOUBLE COUPONS!
That'• equal to about 114 c:alortee
per ounco. The Urnl t on the
number ot calotiel per Jram ii
deelaned to pnivent rich food1
like aalad d.tollinp, which arc
eaten ln 1mall amount• and
therefore contain fctw calorie•
per aervJ.na, from betna deecrlbed
u low-calorie.
Food label ed "re -
duced-ealorle" mual be at
leut one-thJrd rower in caloriet
than 1lmllar food• in which
calories are not reduced, and they
mutt not be nutrltlonaUy Inferior
to the unmoditled items.
Labela of foods that naturally
have few calories cannot carry
the term "low-calorie" before the
name of the product .
Mushrooms, for example, cannot
be labeled "low-ca lorie
mushrooms'' althouah the can
could say: "Muahrooma, a low-
calorie food."
UMA CNOtCI •• ., CDITlll CUT CNUCll
All foods labeled low-calorie or
reduced-calorie ai.o muat carry
nutritional labellna 1tv1n1
nutrlenu like vltamtna and
mlnerall, the number of calortes
per aervina and the aervtna llze
to whlch the flaure1 relate. The
1nformatJon muat be exprewd in
identifiable unlt1 o f
mea1urement -cup , 11lce,
teaspoon or fluid ounce.
If a food label lmpllee that the
number of calori~ In a product
ha.a been cut, It must back up the
claim with numbers. The label
must. for example, compare the
reduced-calorie version with the
regular version, lfving the num-
ber of calones per aerving in each
type.
Products that are labeled
"sugarless" or "1ugar-free" and
are not low or reduced ln calories
must carry some 1ort o f
disclaimer indica ting they are not
BRl!AIT Of fRYRR -.. 11• CORNED llEl!f BRISKET .. 1" BEEF W ... MAiMA.C*O ........... T '""M -.-.CO•,Po-TC"'
BHF BACK Rlll8 CORNISH OAMI HIN8
uteful for wel1ht reduction.
Suppoae, for example, the
sweetener torbttol haa bMr1 \&IOd
lnatead of 1up.r in a "aaaar·free"
candy. Since aorbttol haa the
aame calorie content u ·~•r, the
label would have lo uy
aomethin1 like: "Thia ii not a
reduoed<alorie food."
The worda "diet" or "dlet.etic"
can't be applied to fooda unte.
the product. meet the 1tandarda
for low or reduced-calorie it.ems.
or It they are clearly intended for
1ome 1pecial dietary f.urpo1e
other than weight contro . A food
that Is low tn 1odium, for
example, could be deecribed u
"dietetic" u long u the label
explained that It wu deslaned
tor people on low-aalt dleta.
An e«planat1on of the
regulation., called "That Lite
Stuff," ii available free from lhe
Conaumer Information Center,
Dept. ~32L, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
GROU SlllC
,_._., 11tKo. o" 1111<>"1 -.n ...,..., • ....,.. U1 98' -.0&~ ...... , u 121
UIOA CHOICI IU, 1~LUN,U•'71.~• LB.
"ID fUN, IWHT Alll IAIKna
~~NADA W!_NI_ ------•Mfll 1at
nROUA WINI 1u -_____ ,.,. ....
llAOAAWI 1-CROWN
.._._..•~•r·---
0-llONI ROUTS .. 1" V ... C:#M8 ..... .._ Ctwc:C
CAUF. A
TROPICAL MANGOS .... 79• .... -FRl!IH JICAMA 3:11 c-
HOU81 PLANTI 111 ·~ .............
Ill
..eNATA llV....,.01 4i'1 -·.-.-.------, ........... HAM 111 ..-.-.--
1" --~--....,. _51•
,
PACIFIC RaD &NAPPER •• 2a1 .._ ... ,'"'-."
BROWN ONIONS --AN.IOU Pl!AR8 .....,._..
PHILODENDRON .....,...., ... .c. .. ,..,.
lllOMTIRIY .IACK CHl•M ___ ,_...,.. ___ _
CHICICIN 90&.00NA ---------
IL.ADI CUT
IWllT ANO
JUICY
TROf'ICANA. CHIU..D -.oz. en..
'·
-'--
Orange Coa1t DAil. Y PIL.OT /Wedne1d1y, Aprll 27, 1983 c;I
Margarine cups perfect containers for slim desserts
If you're \he kind of •trlni uver who 1t11l hu
every empty maraarlne
conta in e r you ever
owned, I finally have uae
f o r them: p o rtio n ·
controlled low -calorie
detaertl.
Portioning out deaert
recipe• in\o seve ral
alngle-serving containers
In advance h elps aave
you from the temptation
of diahinf out an oversit.e
portion or yourself at
dessert time.
Margarine cups are
just the right size for
single-se rving s li m
awee t s. The lids flt
snugly, so your personal
d1et-w1se desser t will
s tay f r esh 1n th e
refrigerator.
The cupa ar e
lightweight; ypu might
eve n like io pacK a
"light" dessert in your
Insulated lunchbox.
You can use margarine
cups for "light" desserts
lik e fruit , o r fruit
mixtures with cottage
cheese or yogurt ... or
decalorized gelatins or
puddings made without
sugar
Or you might hke to
try these special single·
serving sweets:
SINGLE-SERVING
FRENCH
"CREAM PIES"
6 milk lunch biscuits
1 e n velope p lain
gelaun
W cup cold water
1 cup boiling water
h alf of a seedless
eating ora nge, p eeled
and d iced
6 o unces l o wfa t
unc r e ame d cot t age
cheese
1 cup ice cubes and
water
4-serving package
Frenc h vanilla insta nt
pudding
Use 6 e mpty 1-cup
margarine containers
with tops. P lace 1 milk
lunch biscuit an each and
set aside.
Sprinkle ge latin on
cold water in blender.
Walt 1 minute for gelatin
to aoften, then add
bolling water.
Cover and blend until
all ge latin granules
dissolve (ICl'8pe sides of
container). Add orange:
cover and blend until
orange is pureed.
Add cottage cheese .
Cover and blend Ul')til
graininess disappehrs
and mixture is creamy-
smooth.
Fill a 1-eup measure
with ice cubes, then fill
lo the top with tap
.water. Add to mixture:
cover and blend until ace
iB melted.
Add pudding mix;
cover and blend smooth
(mixture will be thick).
Spoon into the 6 cups,
c ove r and store in
refrigerator.
Serve, or pack with
lunches as needed: keep
refrigerated. Makes six
servings, 150 calories
each.
CHOCOLATE
MINI-MOUSSE
l envelope pla in
Pancakes
delicious
Po1ato Puca.kn
6 medium potatoes
2 eggs ' 1 .man onion, grated
1 ~ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon ground
nutmeg
l \ableapoon all-
~ flour
ve,etable ehort-
enin&
gelalln
I larae oag
I cup bolling waaw r
4 tablespoon" pluin
cocoa powder
1 teaspoon ln11tant
co ff~
substitute to equal 6
tablespoons sugar (or to
taste)
pinch of salt
1 c up p art-s kim
ricotta cheese
1 cu p skim milk
Blend gela un granules
a nd eg g togethe r i n
blender. Walt minute lor
gela tin to soften , tht1n
turn on blender Slim Gourmet
A d il bolllna w 1a t<-r
slowly through amall
openlna ln blender cover
Con tinue to blend until
gela t i n ara n u les ar~
dluolved.
By Barbara Olbbou
•m ooth P our Into 4
slnglP·&ervlng cupa and
d'\ill until set Ma ke1
fo ur ser vi n gs. 1 55
calories t.>ach.
Add cocoa , coffee, SINGLE-SERVING
sugar aubaUtute and salt: CHOCOLATE "PIES"
blend thoroughly Add · Arrange a ch ocolate
ricou.a: cover and blend wafer in lhe bottom o( 5
until thick and creamy one-cup con tal n e r s .
and free of graininess S p oon pa rtiall y se t
Add skim milk, blend mousse ma ><ture on top of
t h o w a f e r I n t• a t· h
container
Cover and refrtierate
un t il se t , kt•t•p
refrlierated Makes five
i.ervl nga, 150 calor ies
each.
SINGLE-SERVINO
NO-BAKE
MINIATURE
CHEESECAKES I e n velo pe pl1.11n
gelatin
1.4 cup cold water
I <.•up bolllni water
2 c u ps lo wf a l
C'Oll4ge Ch l'C.'SC
half of a 4-aervang
pat:kag~ lnauant vanilla
pudd.ini mix ( 'h cup of
the mix)
p inch of gru t l'd
ll•mon rind
substitute to equal 4
tablespoons sugur (or to
taste)
6 mi l k l un c h
Meat Values Dairy/Deli Grocery Values
rre111 Poc:Ule Red Snapper
rrtllb rw ..
Dover Sole
-= 1!59
': 1.59
... 199·
l99
L1quor Values
!2 P1oomtur btl, 719 Kamchatka Vodka •
W~ilelob Beer -: 2 .. 39
;;;.15 I
t·rackt•l'b
Sprinkle gelatin on
cold water In bltondc:r
Walt I m in ute until
gelatin 10(teru, then add
bolUng water
Covc:r un<.I blend until
gt.>lat ln dasolves. Add
cottage cheest.> Cover
and blend un ti l creamy
s m ooth a n d free of
grainlnl·11s
A d d pudding mix ,
lemon r ind and sugar
subst 1tut<'. l ove r and
blend smoo th (Save
u 11u 11c d p o rti o n o C
puddlni mix tur anotht>r
llnw )
R4->Cr1"l'rt1tt· 10 to 1 ~
minute• until ml><tur«r
beguw to llt'l
Place I milk lunch
t·r ill kcr 1n euh o C 6
1>lnfile-1u~rv10g de111e rl
c:ups o r pl ai;t ac
l 0o nta1ne rs. Spoon un
pa rtial ly set C'hee5e
Cover and rcfragf'ra mixture. ~
un til set. Ma kes 11
servings. 150 caloric
c•ach
I •
---
' >
.-' j
.I
·'
Produce /Floral
~ead] Pac-l'r91n.Canot Stldla or ~adM1.x
SICJQI • ScrtY1m·A.llOrtec1 Sunflower Seeds
FrMh Koden Mangoes
Freeh Clip-Top Carrots
£'1'CY·1bl.D Sic.In Lemons
f'rMh C\11 Rose Bouquets
6 Stae Potbo Plants
~.39
..... 59
_ .. 59
~ .17
-.15
-2.49
... 3.49,
Froz£.•n Food
J
I I I,
i
C4 Ottn09 Oout DAILY PtLOT/WedneedlY. Aprll 27, 1913
E.at less, exercise more sensible weight loss pPogram
mtr:=
When phyalcal
condlttontnc and lOltnl
wel1ht are the main
1oal1, then exerct1H
1hould be aerobic.
Aerobic exerclH1 are
vtaoroua tnOUCh to oau.
lnc:reuea In heart rate
and breathln1. The1
make you huff and puff
bees...-you need extra
air (oxy,en ln partk'War)
for the chemical
reaction• that releaae
to Ult the caloriel In ·• ~ut; 70 mtnuc. to
&om the ca1orSel In a ptece
of frwWld cake OC' a al.Ice
of apple pi., and H
mlnu\H to uae the
c:eAorie. In • malt OI' milk lhake.
Trarialattna the eneray
value of food lnto the
exerclle It takee to UM
the calories may help
you avoid eat1n1 10me
food1. You can uk
youraelf U eatln1 the
food r. worth the
exerdle It would take to
Ult the calorl•.
QVBITIONI WE ARE
A.RED.
. . .Q. When reheet.lna
fooda In a mAcrowave, ta
It better to cover the
container With waxed
p11per or pluUc wrap?
. . .A. Either plaatJc
wrap or waxed paper
make a aatllfactory
material tor coverln1
contalnen of food ln a
microwave. Plutlc W111p
c.an make a tfahter IHI
to hold In more mot.ture,
but uaually you need ca
leave U open at one
corner to allow 1ome
•team to HCapll. H the
food In tht microwave ,.ti up to temperaturee
of 190 dear••• F or
above, t~ plaaUc wrap
may melt.
(The meltlna point of
pla1tJc wrap varln by
brand -1ome brand•
don't melt until the
temperature l1 210
deareea to 220 de1rees
F.) • • •
... Q. 11 lt aa.fe to at.ore
leftover food In
aluminum cookln1
utenlllt or the alumlnwn
pan• u1ed tor f ro1tn
fooda?
. . .A. lt'• not wwafe
\o 1\ore food1 In
aluminum contalnera.
However, It the food II
fairly h1ch ln add -for example, a tomato uuce,
uuerkraut, IOme typn
of ciwe. -the add In
the food wW reect with
the aluminum and
actually d.1-olve aome o1
It.
Th1I "'*" ca'* ho!-. or pita to develop tn tht
uteNll or container and
may even cau1e It to
leak . h aho add•
aluminum to the ltoNd
food. Thua, ltOrtnC food
ln cook.Ina utemill mact.
of aluminum ,.,.,.Uy II
not rec ommended.
PlutJc contalnen with
tlaht lld1 are a better
choice for atortnc foodt
In either refriaerator or
freer.er. • • •
. . .Q. 11 lt all riaht to
freeze ch.lcken, mut and
flah In their orl1lnal
padc.aatna?
. . .A. No, because the
wrap u.ed ln marketl la
intended to let the
pacX.,e<l food breathe
(unlus h'1 a vacuum
peckap made of heavier
plutic that cllno tfahtly
to the food). 'ftte wrap
will allow molature to
escape from the food,
which la dettrable with
refriaentor •toraae and
undesirable with freezer
1torqe. (The dry, cold
air 1n the h"ener rapd,ly
oullt mo6ltwe fnlm the lood and thi.I evencually
reaulu In "treeser
burn''.)
lt'1 be9t to rernow UM
market wrap and rewnp
the meet, poultry, or flah
ln heavy freezer foll,
fr eezer paper, or
freeier-wel1ht plutlc
bap. Theee materiala a.re
mol1ture-vapor proof
and wW help retain the
moisture In tile food. enersylnbodyti..ue. .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Body fat .ions aupply
the fuel tor the mef1Y
uaed In aerobic
exercbln8. Thua, lt you
do aerobic exerclaea
often enou1h and 1001
enouah, you lhould la.
aome wetsht -If you
don't Mt more than you
ate before you 1taned
uet"Cbdna· .
And lt your major aoal
la to loee wetaht, then
you lhould cut down on
your food Intake u well
.. exerdle. lt'a the molt
effective way to take off
pounda aenalbly.
Moat people
overeettmate the number
of caloriee they expend
while they exerdae. '1lMt
reality II that you have
to exerme Jor'i and hard
to u•e a 1t1nlflcant
number of calorlea.
For example ,
aedentary activitiea IUCh
aa readln1, wrlt1n1,
t)'piJll and other clerical
work done llttina down
U8e 80 to 100 calor1ea per
hour. Walkln1 at a
normal l*l9 may u. 120 '° 130 cakiriee Per' hour, while walkln1
moderately taat and
other actlvltlee that
require aomewhat
vl1oroua arm or lea
movement u.e 170 to 240
ca1orim per hour.
Feet wa1ldna may uae
250 to 3&0 calories per
hour, dependJna on your
speed and the amount of
arm movement you
Include; while only
atrenuoua acdvitiea IUCh u runntna. awimm.lng,
dancing and blcyclln1
(hard pedallna, not
coaatln1 or 1low
pedal•nc) \om more than ~ calariee per hour. Lookina at It another
way: you would have to
walk 20 minutes to uae
the caklriee you pt from
two stripe ot t.ui or 10
potato chis-; 30 mtnuiea
Exchanges
calculated
Diabetlca and others'
on modified diet•
recommended by their
ahytddula often u. the "ixchance u.t" method '° determine food9 that can be •ten. nw IJ'OUPI, • broken
down by the Amerkan
Diabetei ApgdeUan and
the American Dlet.et1c
Aaaoclatlon, are milk,
veptable, fruit. breed,
m.t and fat.
Per•ODI foll~ apedaldletaare
a certain number of
•• .........,....lnwhof
the~-deilJ ...
• ctiffv. fmt to m.ter'
lf the reel.pea beln1
prepared do not Utt
provtatona for each .mna. >.. an aid lD preparina
dellclou• and v-arted
menu• for thoae on
•J>eCial dleta1 &be Blee
Coundl of America la off~ • ...-i Ndpe
leaflet contalnln1 14 rec:t_pee and lilttn1 the
UC~ and caloriel
b' ..ch. The leeflet lncludea
rectpea for beef, fuh,
pari. )llDb and poultry
Ind a. a..oable &. of
~ J'or a :l;Y, Hnd a ..... ~ •& .. mw)ope to Jakie CGundl, P.O. Box 74e121, ...,...._ Ta.
7'72'7•. Aeil for
"'()ties' 1 t ~ '"•
1726 Su...,, Cotta Miu
Pllone: 645-1608
25876 Mui111nds, ....Ion Viejo
Pllone: 155-1437
10932 Westminster,
llrden Grove
Phone: 631:4145
263 Eucld Strftt, Anahllm
Phone: 991·6192
VISA AND
MASTER CARD
GLADLY
ACCEPTED
Johnnie Walker Red:!:. 1.1u •. •l9''
OldSmQlller ~ 1.1su...'998
ChivuRepl ~=~ 750.1•1395
Cuay Sark ':.::' u... S 12"
u ... NRt399
u ... NaS]J9
,
LIQUOR BARN
CUSTOMER/PRICING POLICY
• Wt dilcouiw t~tr( -.. to Y'* pt dw .. _
c6ilcoun1 °" a.._.,, lloedt or• c-.
• Ow pricn an cOMilundY low.
• Wt'I ~any cUlftflC edvtnlMd prict.
• Wt'I ~ldt ninctl«llt o-. any of ow M¥tft.ilc.d M-.
• If wt doft'1 havt whee you'rt loolu.'l b . •t'I °'*" it '°' you.
STORE
HOURS:
Su"J"' · Thur...b\
10:00 A.M. T11 l4:<.'IO P.M.
FriJ,., & s .. 1ur.1..\
Y:lX' A.M. T,, Y:ru P.M.
& 7'f"d4------~ 1Ut4~.,£4~!.----
Ahneden ,i...•3"
Gallo Uvinptoo ~ .... ~ l.J La. $279 .
Paul Mwon =: >to. S488 ·
Mario't v .. .-.CWMt •t.o.S288
no..i•S97
1so..i•t2n
1so.i•S91
1so..i•788
Roudon Smith 1979
Cbdu Val 1979
Stertint 197•
McDowell vo1ry v.....,...... 1919
Sebudani vi-.~· • ...,.
1
(
•
Orangtt Oout DAIL y PILOT /Wedneeday, April 27. 1983
iSCR's 'Freddy' height of ,infidelity
IY TOM TITUS pl..-. of •nMmble performance. the knife •di• of emotional on the oomnuml~ ctrcuit). Dtao ~ ... ...,,.....,. The charaotera, with one oollapH. BarnH, a newly hal endow.ct herchanc1el'e wTih 4 ContMon IMY be 8ood for the e1'Ception. are drawn to ecale -DUbU1hed novell1t who ha1 1uperlatlve dimen1lon, and~ IOU!, but it CIU1.&lnly p1ayl hell that la, rea11aUc and outwardly r•peyt.on Placed" her trimda -Aaron and hll cpt flex their
wtth IDM1'i.lp and fi1endanSp. normal human belnp. Hank and Shelion ln particular -holda interpretative mu1clH with ., That, HHntially, la the Kat.e (Andrew Prine and Pamela court wtth a~ lnd.ictnwnt au'=. ,, ~ conveyed bl_ "~bye Dunlap) are ho1tln1 a wak.e ot monopmy. •• bye J'reddy" lJ -.. ~." Elisabeth DllP new reque1ted by the departed The othen pt ln their Uck.t ln exped.ed -the pnmJer pJay of a • DIAY and South Cout l\epe11.0ey'1 Freddy and attended by the the HCOnd act with Dul'\lap pnm1.ere -..on on the 8cond I..
Chc:iceamonaeame900entrieau happily mamed Paul and Allee ventlna her 1pleen in an Staie (althou1h Geor1e / lt8 NpNMntative ln a national (Charlee Parka and J011n Well.a) a1tonllhin1 di1play of outrqe. Sibbald'• "Brothen" WH a 1 plaY"Wrttlna competition. and the unhappily divorced By the tlme Park.a and Wella worthy challen1er). 1t1;', Now ln Tta world premien on Andy and Nena (Timothy arrtve at .word'• point, however, enpcmnent hail be9rl exwnded. 11 SCl\'1 Second Stqe. "l'Nddy" ll Shelton and Suaan Bamel). it aeema tomehow anUcllmactJc t hr o u I h M a y 1 5 , w l th .. 1
a thMtrtcal catharlll much ln the Prine carries the first act, wtth and wone obyioualy contrived. perfonnancm 'l\..saya throuCh ..&
vetn of Reilna1d Role'• "Dear a 1arp ..tat from &mee (the T'hat lait.el aequence l1 the Saturdays at 8:30, Sundays at 8 1 l'rMndl" or Juon Miller'• "That aforementioned exception). He only hint of unreallty ln an and weekend matlneel at 3p.m.,1 Champlonah.lp Seuon." It thNstl brl1tlea at the dlctate1 of hi1 otherwlle exceptionally crafted at the SCR complex, M5 Town • ,
1lx lonstime comradee Into a friend'• Jut requeet and 1pendl drama by the author of "CU-Center Drive, Cotta Meu. Call
al t u a ti o n ~ 1 re a d Y m a d e the early part ot the evenlnc on Tiet" (lut year'• top production 957-4033 for ticket Information. uncomfortable by the death of ---~....:..... _________ __;_::...___:: __ ___;_;,.., ____ -""_..-..;;...;..._ ________ 1
1 one of their number and
lnten1lflea lt by a 1hockin1
'*
revelation of infidelity.
To detail that lnfidellty would
be unfair to future audiencea.
But the confe11lon, which c»me-. the first act, creetee a
1hatterln1 moment whlch
renden an already lntrlguln1
DJay lrn!lilUble.
Aidrew Prine and Pamela Dunlap play an
• .1W. Aaron, who directed the
SCR lll'Oductlon. p1Ce1 h1I actors
beautlfully. •tarting at a.lmoat too
pedestrian a level and sradually
increa1lng the volume of
lntenaity until they -and we -
are caught in a mael1trom of
emotional tunnoil. It ll a peerleea
emotional ICeDe rrom "Goodbye Freddy" at
South Coast Repertory.
'Joe Rossi' :headlines seminar
Robert Walden, "Joe Romi" in the TV aeries
"Lou Grant," and Marvin Paige, caatina director for
tht IOep opera '1General Hospital.'' wt1I be featured
Saturday at a Showca.e Seminar at the Laguna
Moulton Playbouae.
The aemlnar, which will be held from 1 to 5 p.m. at the theater, 606 Laguna Canyon Road,
i..,una Beach, will be preRDt.ed by the Marian
Benml Talent ~ ln ea.ta Mesa. Producers are
Bill Purki8, SteJ>bmJ:e Lloyd and. Judi Kurt.
Highlights of the 1eminar will include a
d.19cuasloo of how to survive creatively between jobs
and how to be hired by the catting director.
Partidp61lta are invited to bring two aetl of photos
and resumes.
The eeminar ll the flnt in a planned aeries of
eventl ~ to supply information on all facets
of ahow bualnea, accordina to Beru>n. •
Reptration fees are $35 ln advance and $40 at
the door. Deadline for raervationa ia today, and
information la available at 631-5386.
Liz and Richard head for New York
BOSTON (AP) -Elizabeth Taylor and Lawrence in the 19308.
Richard Burton have taken their Noel Coward play "It wu aold out totally," aaid Anne Malloy of
"Private Uvee" to New Yorlt after 1elling out the Deedee Cbereton & Amod.at.es, the &.ton J>l'al
111141 11 7:11 6 J0:11 •. ID ht Show Oftl
11:10)1001:00 7 111 l tJI 12141JtOO1:11714110111
*
OMarWlll11er
~IEE
At .. The To)' (PO)
HIGH RoAD
b CH1NA a
JOY'tlCIU I")
~m -,;
41 Houn l"l
OtcarWlftfter E-r THI' EXTRA· IEE
• •• 'n.RHESTRIAL
Al•• O•l'tl Cryetal (PO)
.....-0.....,,..~-* cMWntr u.derl2 f rtt U.lns titted Shubert Theatre here for a two-week pre-replfteDtativee for the show.
Brc.dway run. But the perfonnances did not meet wtth much -------------------! Taylor and Burton, twice married and aitical !MX'laim Kevin Kelly of ~ Boston Globe
twice divorced. left fot New York after Sunday's-deacrlbed Taylor u beinR ."like a hefty
matinee, the final -...#ormance at the l ,700-8eat houMwtfe weighied down to her anklel ln ~
__. • intent." Burton. be aid, "does manqe to eke out a tba~~re 1cheduled to open May 8 at lhadow of ~tion. a ahadovr only ... "
aro.tway'a Lun~Fontanne 1beater. The play la In the Boat.on Herald, Ellen Pfeifer Mid the
about a divorced husband and wife who meet on e-Y bu "•tar power, potent aexual cherniltry
¥i""'"' balconiee of the bot.el where eacb la --~.-~.~~r18 ~ :;::..~.b~~!~~ hoDl't;:~ with a new lpO'-__. .,
-i-v mlnon the ...n..+. Uvm al, .. etan. psfclrmen are '¥not well...Wted to Uwlr on-~ :;d°'wroielt forr~and Oertnade-...-!t!fe:.:::J~"°~~'"~·~"~~~~~~~~~~~~
....c .... -..c llJlll
T.._ m'1m Of',_,... UU
----~w.a .._ ... WU&&l90ll I ,._......,_.. u..-~ .-rcomo Oii Mir 11, W. • 10:GO LM. VAL MN CONIOMTIC* • _,,
llleeuonlA••rto•n l•~r•H eppolnted TruttM 11nder th•
••• , .. Oo111penr. for111er1r • ....._ •• 1 ~-~ ... ~ .....,, a... 1earow ~ W1U. llLL AT .........., ,..._.,..,..
•T ...... Ofll-T"*99• TOT ... HleHUT ~ '°" I aim ttt T,.._, of ... --CMH ~ TMI CAii_. OR o..11 fll TNll _,... 11¥ LUfO. CPT-..o CHeC*8 INCIA!D IH DIN UAW ... UNCMilfJ UAW, CIVIL cooa llCTION 20t2~h ..._.. end...., Md ,._... i::z,.ebfe et tM u-of .... lft JW 14 1N1 • .._,......... no. "'°""of fie~...._
17114. in '** 141 .. ,... tnt .. ,... ........... __,_ a.. ...... of Or...-Colllley. '° end -..... ., " .... .... c.1fofNa. Md .,..,_, to ltld OHd of Tru1t HI t!M propenr oet11ln Notice of O.feult lftd ,.. .. ....., 1111 "ttled: .......,to ... .._...NDOnled T"U8TOfll: JOHN CAfllNU,
.-...,y ti. t• • ... _._.no. ALYCI IUIAN ~ ..... ..., ..,.,.,_ of °""*' ..._. of mllPICINff: v___... --.
Hid oou'ntr. w111 ""'•' end ......, DH , .. a. t•1. • ............. o.d of fNll .......... No. ... In IOCltl 14'18.,... • ,..._ .,.._ tor C1M11, ...._., 11 Of Oflallt....,. In .. CllllOe Of
1MM1 of tM UnttM Stat .. of ttle flleoOnter of ~ c-ty:
A .. tlo1, It "'• Nortll front Mid deed of truet 6-'tMe ttle ..... to .. oount¥~..,,..,. 100 CMD C111W DrM W.. lerM Lot a, lliDC* M of 111 Adlllol'I
AM. 0..... ..... l1llM. .. '° *-'*' ........ '" .. c::e.r Of .................. '°ind -~ 9-:111. ~of ar...,., 111M ., I U1101r lmicl Dlld Of Truel It• of callfomte. M per IMP
"' Ul9 proper1Y lltueled In Mid reoonled In boo« 4, peoe t4 of ~ ... , ..,. 1•111t1n10• :,,._"90onll of
Mr, Cler :.L~Lo.:.::, :!.:: °'= ::t:/r.,MA.T .... A
IA Moll 412 ....... 11 to 21. DllD OP TauaT DATID
........ of ............... C« ~ .......... .. ~~f Orant• Oountr. TUW ACTIOtl TO NOtl-OT "°"" "'""'9•n, rT MAY • ~ E11 lrenlll • .. eoLD AT A~ W& • 'fW
f•rtlll In tll• MOtlon1 •ntltl•CI -M IDl~~oc .. • 119111 ·~ 1&11 .... For 0.....-' llAW W ,,.. .------·-lfl4 .. h.oort, httlement AllCI aeA•eT YOUwll,U 1ttOULD ta.foeafilMftl" Of tit• Attlol• coerrAOT A LA
laUtlM .. , ... "'."''" Of .... Ot11ar•t1on of Covenanu. O• .. U•n• end fll11tr1ouon• ~ -#Ill .... kl ,,..._. To''! (Tlie .,. • ._ ..._Ot....aR
:"fl' I•~ I lllg ..._ of 11'°""1 It ...._
TM 1tr..t e4dr ... or othM .._.. .. ~ii--•"• ••••o" •••l.1net1on of Hid ooi •111 -•m• .... 11• tfffet'tY! 11 Hllltr .... trvtn•. lllft......, lilMW MM1 Died .. C19M* 11714. Tniet, '1 ,_ llf • .,... OI
MUI• ..,, add, .. • of u1e ....,. IA ...... r • ...., woe~ ....... ,...... .. .....,,..,..,, •• _.... ..
.... le Mlllf oondwofed: ottr ....,,_eel to tM ".-...... • '•••r•t a1wln11 '"' Lo•n ...._ $ el D111Jii'9 • A••Ml•U•• ofo lll•arHn/ .,........., Mii-..-~...-hPt••• t1ort1•1• fll..,.... • ....._ • ~ 110t 1. ~-= th• Wftder!!I!!!_ I• Mii Hl41 .... .. ....... :.~::.-1 ... -:.:=1::~ a I ... .._.~ _.. ............... ... ::;~.:::..,_~ =-:.·..:,~ :r.m. ii i:• J?: = lh• flret :.,-:.--.,..:.-a.:.,
..... 11e ..... ..._.. ••If .. 1. ·w11r •• ,,...., " . ...,...,, --.............. " ... ' ., ,..,, .. , •• .... V • ..,_.,.,....,_...~ --·-·~-...... • II ll
0
ln. or ............. '9 ... ,.. .. ___ e ......... .,....._ .. .. '=-3;;4.,· .......... " ......... ....... ......----·--:..:. ·= = = :;·.:. ,~.,. = ~::-=-=m~ ;:..-=:.= • .:a.~1r,i
........... "·"",. ... o..11 fll n.. .... _.. ....... lllf Hie Wiii It• llelf On • ..._ ...... ,.. ••• nw .......... w ~;::;; .. t 5 ... •·•· et Ala ~-A...,._ • • -· E"-;:-.• 'li: a.. • ., .... ~ a...-.. (
Al tl.;"iilie et lite laltl•I f 17 I ... -. ........... .... ~-
We're~ yoa a ICCoad cbtlnc:c co tee a flm
yo.'I ... to lee ... md ... and ....
-:r.,.'!~ ~=•·~~
• a&RQAIN MATIN-• ...... ., ...... .........,
All,~ M'°'9 5:00 , ..
(~ .,...111111 lrtl ........... ,
...... ROAD
10Clm&" ------=
I A IC h\I l.H.1 f' C f N Tf Q
\OUfH ,,...., • ""'
. ..
ANAHEIM (>~'I'd IN
..
BUE NA PA~·~ •. , "
LINCOlN 11r. .1 ,,..
~----UM070
I ''llN! l\IN \11\l 1 I~
I. 'I "'
"TMl•A--• ------
----....... _..
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..., TUTOlll". -----·-
---zcra P ---·-_ ... _
"TMIOUTW.,.. -"9AD90Ya··
"Tttm •• __... --..ooo mAClf",.
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«Je Or~ Oout DAILY Plt.OT/Wednelday, Aprll 27,.1983
-l:30-
~~I 8HR.EY I
I AUCJ OOCCAVfTT
OCfANUS: THE !:WINI
ENYllOtMNT
1(1) :v all..LER
AU IN THE FAMll Y ~m.E MOYIE
t * "J.0. And The Slit f111 Kid"
i9781 Sllm Pidu1n1.
SHEENA EASTON .. CONCERT
MOYIE * t * "The Mid MIM Mtnton"
119311) 81fblr1 Stanwycll, HllllY
Fonda.
i*•"=':=-~=O.U ~HMNAH.MMY '·~~l'OUR .=-:'~ MAM llJUUIU 100 ClUI
ITIADV Al H GOU > MO't'll
l MOYll • • · [rota llNOl llflOiU• \.INjt (11111 liKt IWynoklt. Sally FMl<I U • "Ghoet llt0ty" ( 1118 t) fttcl Pu Raymond
-7:0I-Mtllitt, Jj)M Hou.llln I I ) lO\/INO FMHD1 AHO e OMHO! COUNTY TODAY l?lMOYll NM!CT COUPl.D
-7:90-••• "Tiit Ptldt OI The Yanil..... -tuo-
UOH THUOWN 111421 Gwy Cooptf, r., ... Wrlgllt I i HART TO HAlfT QI 'AMI. Y mJ0 -t.JO-TONIOKT l.A~ I 8tMl..IY I U '!j.!!fJ A1C N1W9 NlaKTUHl
,..., (!) --·~ YOU A1K!.D ~IT I IYI OH L.A. • • • "Tiit Pumph1 Eater" (1964) MOVll ~ CAUi AMt 8ancrolt, Pttw FlnQh • ·~ "8onj0ur Tritt .... " (19691
WKllPlfCINCIHHATI I M•A•a•H Dtwtd NM!n, Otboflh Kerr
TIC TAC DOUQH ITV.DY A8 8H£ GOU ~ 1ANFON> AHO 110N MACNEIL I L.EHfP AEPORT ATM "°8! 1UO l A H1W OA Y .. EDlN
MMAM WOOOHOUH 000 TH! V1AG1N1AH MOVIE
llY!N.YHIU.I _10;00_ •• "Strlj)tt" (IHll Blff Mutrey.
IE· UJI~ ~~.:.~""'""'
I iMOYIEAEAl~PEOPU~-SOH ~Of NATIVE -11:40-......, _._...... tt>THEYE8Tl~YIHOW
'1!> AUSTIN CrTY IMIT8 -11:50-t I MOVIE C MOVIE
.. "Obaster On The Coastllntr .. • HerOCOI• (1979) 0.0,gt c •• 'Allllt Merbltt' (la81J Peter
(1979) Wiiiiam Shatner Lloyd Btk!Q Scou. SMIOl'I H11b1ty Felk. 8ut1 YOUflO
• HlMOVIE -t~-
s= NIOKT Wfn4 °"VIO
i=UPCtOH l~AaaCAHfrtll
* * "Hi9ht 8clloar · I IM 11 l.IOl*d
Mtnn. Aac:I* Wlfd
-1tA0-
8 CtJ MOVll
• • \<\ "fletll Md Arecat" ( tt78)
Roger 0.1/lt, Trtcil Samber•
-1:00-
BMOVIE • * '.'t "Tilt Hlgl'I Commlllionlr" ( 19") RoO hylOf, Chrl1lopllef
Plummtf
UMOVIE * t ,,_.. "Tilt An<ltrt0n T~"
( 1971) Sun Connery. Dyan Cannon.
Cl) MOVI£ ** "Spook Buttari" ( 19~1 Leo
Gor~UHlll ~•It "Pr111Urt Point" ( 19e2) Sid·
nf1J POltltr. 8obby Olrtn
Ill EHTt.RT AINflllOO TOHIQHT
-1:15-
1l )MOVI£ * t The uterm1n1tor" I 1990)
Cl'lrlttophtr GllOfgt S1m1nthl
Ego1t
8 ~ FAU GUY • * • Art Amtrican Werewoll Ir I ~AMIENT TOHIOH'T G ""'•'"' London" 11aa11 Oevld Ntuohton _,.'"' -1:30-* ** tn Ukt Flint" (19671 J11T1tt Jenny Agiit111 • ~ "CMlt SO." 119721 T Illy Sava· 0 Of) NBC NEWS OYERNOKT Coburn. l• J Cobb OJ DIONNE WAAWICK IN Ill. MtonlO Sibeto fD TOM COTTl.E: UP ClOG i 5:MNlAZJNE := LINOEPENOEHTNrlWOAK !i~""' (tN2)RyenOMNI,
• • 'P111ntr1" (19821 Ryen o Htll. -l"""" AMUllCAH mlf JoM Hut1 U "The Crimton Pttllt ' ( 11152 John Hurl it) MOVi 0 ~
lklr1 llN*ttr. Nicll CtlYlt -~ • "Th• H1p9y Hooktr Goet HOiiy· ... ~"Tilt Elephent Man" (19801
• IAAIAAA ~GOES e INOEPEHOENT HETWOAK wood" ( 11178) Mt1tlllt Bttwtekt. John Hurt, AnthOny H~lna
TOllVSl.Y HIUI NEWS Ad1tn West -1:4$-e MOVIE c MOVIE •• "A Utile en OI Helwin" (1940 -11:00--12:10-I l
Gloril JNn. Robt11 Steck I DSA"'!..'Fyt!!.9! NEWS IHI MOVIE ;,:;;IC ~~.::..=a:; ( 19351 Nil.IC NOTICE (CJMOVIE -,.,.,.... .......,, ••t "RJ<:h And F1mOU1" (198t) JiCflTIOOl IUllNtH • * '"' "HlllCM( Strati" ( 1979) Hlf· CiJ If SEAR()4 Of... Cllldlce Betgtn, JICQUtllne Blsaet !(()HEW8C88 ,;e.::>~ATCti NA• 8TATWMENT
rlton Ford, lMy·Anne Down • THE JEFF£RSOH8 -12:30-r~ totlowlng Pttton• are doing ~MOVE bullin.u "
u .,; "Wolf«l" 11aa 11 Alber! F>n For complete lletlng ... TV Log 1f • ~1,. .. 119821 WIHlt Mmel, MAi~TRE~tN'6~.r :10 B ~~~~ ~~~ ~. Oilllt V111«a. PtlOtbe Caln. Cotlt MtH, Ctllll>rnla 112627
fQ)MOVIE CHANNEL LISTINGS John Oawaon Cumming• Jr., t * t t,; "fOUf Fntnds" (1981) CrliG --2:\0-210 Monte Vl•la, Co11a Mtu.
WllUOO, Jodi Thelen !H} SHEENA EMTOH .. CONCERT c .. t!O<nl• 921127 ,_~7:00-(l)~CHASE -2:30-0t¥1d Allen Gtbaon, 210'"' = = 0 ..,...'"' 0 atJ NEWS Monte Vlllt, Coste M .... Callf0tnlt
---***~"Tilt Ellp/llllt Men" 11980, ,..., WCHALE'SHAVY 92627 HAIPY~YS~ u.1 Donald Gran1 Hauck. 26227 JM;tlEWSQ JoMHutt.AlltN>nyHopluns .MOVIE Hllt•IOfd P1au. El TOfo. CtllfOfnla SOAP -8:30-••• "The Seventh Voy9g11 Of Sin-112680 NEWS 1J (() SOUAAEPEGS bed' (19581 Kerwin M1lhtw1, Gle nn Humpllery Trtylor.
THNF8 COl/JPAMY Cf) 04All.JF8 AHQEUJ KaUvyn Grant 30931 Pueo Miii Azvl, Stn Juan. --"' I LE~ Cap11trano. CtJllOfnle 92675 __. • ..,.., ... ,:;::..'""'~, -S:OO-Thl9 bull,_ 11 conducted by a e ..... llEPOA'T ....,.. ~ D MOYIE Qtf>9flll per1nanNp '.M.MAGAZltE -1:15-** "Gunpo;ll" (19641) Auc:til Mw· Jann Cumming•
EMTIRTAINMINTTONOHT (Z)CHAllLESOCMIPUN TALJ(.5 :itiy, Joen Stai.y Tt1t1 tttt.....,,t waa fl\td with tllt
MMY HAllTMAH. MARY WITH JOHH HUSTON ]) ZANE GREY ntEATAE County Cler11 of Ortl'Qt Counl\' on HMTMAH -t.00-?)MOYIE AprU 16 1983
,.._........._ .t * "The I.Ml OI The Kruckllmen" "21._. .......,_...'"' 8 Cl) MOYIE Publlthed Ortnga Coatl Ot llY
SPECIAL
Aprl 27. 1913-Mly 3, 1983
leporbis faacbha 4.99
I am 1ndi1enous to South
America A &<>Iden yellow body
with black verltcal bands A
handsome 1dd1t1on to the
aqu1num I am active and swim
With my head down so as not to
m1s.s any ataae or othtr httlt
bd-brt. I am on sale at Aquatic
T ropQls fot only 4 99 -...
1510 W BMw•C.St• Mtu
54'·13'1•C11Mr 1Urt:er & ¥•
V,
65%..
lini lli1tl1 *'*'~ ~Smokty Attd Tiit Blndlt" t t .. Slrtel Cop" 1a8 I) Get1td K«lnedy P110I Apr 20. 27 Mty 4 11. 1983 '.::::::::;:;;:;i;::;;;;;:::::::~=::::::.;j~;=;;:;;;;=:::::;:;;~:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:=::=::=;::::::==::;;;.:~;::;:::::::::~r-:~:::::::~:;:;::=;::;=::::::!1-::::~~~~---_:_~__:1~1!96~-t3~.~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!-1 Del Mar m1n1 bhndsorethe Ml.IC NOTICE PUBJJC M)TJC( Pl8JC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTIC[ rtaJC NOTICl styhshly shm stats Incl open ___ ..;.; _______ -----..M:;i;;;----1 close and liil a t the twist o f ~ _.... 11'1C"'10U8 WU flCTTnOUS ..,..... '1CT1'TIOUS .,._.. l'tC11110U8 .,.._.. MOTICC 9MTIMO 8Ge .. Ult ~ ITAT'qllmff NAm STATDmlfl' ..... 8TATW•NT ..... 8TATOllNT Malm aTAftmlfl' Notlee I• hereby gl-..n ttwlt ,,,. ITATll9WT °" 0 plelltglas control wand
The 1o1towtr1g pertont -The IOllowtng per.ons are doing The ICJllOwlncl Pf'-.,, doing Tl'lt following pereon I• doing Th• 1011ow1ng penon I• doing 8ottd ot Tru•t-ol the Cou1 AIANDOl...,.T OP uu OP Avo1loble 1n a rull spectrum ~-.: ~-.: oo.,_. ae t>u.in.t .. ~ •· Community College Oletrlct ol l'tC'1TT10U8 ....... Nam r de t I lh A·I TELEVtSION ANO AAOlO, HALLADAY INDUSTRIAL (1) REEL IMAGES. (2) REAL BALBOA MFG . 7313 Murdy SOUTH WEST ACCEPTANCE, Ortnge County. Celllornlt . •Ill Tilt tollo•lng per•ona have O Coro or CO ors ey re
573 w. ltth Strwt. Cott• MtM. CENTER. 4262 c~ Drive. Suh• IMAGES. 24862 Tabu9nca. Mltalon Clrc:lt. Huntington 8Mc:ll, Calltornla c Aus T IN. 8 0 8 c Aus TIN . ,....... ~ bldt up to tw1 no tbtndoned the ute of the llatltlout perfect for ony w ind ow 1n
Callfofnla t2e27 c. NtowpOt1 BMc:tl. Ca. 92&e0 Viejo. Calif(l(nl• 9261n Hant WltM. 13246 Woodruff AMER I c AN s E cu RI r y let• than 3:00 p.m .. W9dnMday, bualneu ntmt of ALDRICH the house
Ablc:I Hutaeln, 1350t Delta Development I (I Mlcl'IHI w Harklllt. 24882 Street. Downey, Calllomlt ll02•2 MORTGAGE. MERIT Flf\IANCIAl, Mrt 11, 1983 ti the Purc:ftaalng TELEVISION, located t1 1006 w .. 1 ~
We.y, Santa Ana, Cefffomla 92705 callfornla llmtttd pvlntrthlp). 4262 Tabuenca, Mlu lOn Viti<>. Ct Ofornla Thie butl-. It conducted by an CHARLES. DOUGLAS & CO . Depet1rne11t o1 Mid ooi1-oe dWIJtCt 17111 81rtet, Senta Ant, IO:alltomlt. 'jil~-(T)()(
Judith l . Hu11tln, 13601 Campu• Drive. Sullt C. N-porl 92692 lndlvldual JAMES ANO COMPANY. CAUSTIN located at 1370 Adam• Avenue. Tiit llctltloua bualnau ntmt l!!J .... -~ Laurlndt Wty , S anta Ana, a..cn,ca.92660 Carol JHn Harlo.lne. 241182 Htn•W._ ANO ASS OC IATES. 4000 Cotta M .... Calllornla at wllloll reftrrtd 10 tbove •H lll•d on ~QOl'\'OU_........,
Ce11forn1a 92105 Devil ~1 Company. Tat>uenca. Mlulon VltjO. CallfOfnla Thi• 1111_..1 •ta flltd wuh tlM MacArthur Blvd .. Suite 470. time aald bid• •Ill bt publlcly Auguec 12. 1981 1n Ula Coun1y of
Thia ~ 11 oonduc:1td by tn Inc: (a Callfomla OOtP«atlon). 4262 92692 Coun1y Clertl of Orange County on NtowpOt1 Btactl, Ca 92ee0 «*led. and rtad tor: Ortl'Qt. 'J2ol., ', '7•utltMu ga&c#
lndMdual. Camput !>five, Sullt C, N-pon Thia bu"'-le condue1td by an April h . 1983 Rober1 J-c-tln, 385 W. THE LEASE OF TWO (2) VAN FEBRUARY 4TH. INC Ct
Judl111 l HutMifl a..cn. C.. 92MO lndfvldval ~ PrornonlOtY Drf'.te, NtowpOt1 BMdl, V£HICLU Ctlllornla c:ot'l)Ofallon), 1 tH 18tl'I 1'S1 ~CIENTIA AYE..
Thia atat-1 -Ned ....ttll lhe Thia~ It c:oMuc:ted by a Mlclhatl w Harktna Pub11111ed Orane-Cout Otlly Ca. t2&e0 NA btdt -to be In eccordance Street • ...._ 8eacft, Calllom6t COSTA m.8A Coun1Y Clertl of Orange County on gener91 pertner9Np. Thi•'"'"'*'' ... tlltd w1111 the Ptlol. "Pr 8. 13. 20. 27, 1983 Tllil ~ •• c:on0uc1eo by en ....tt11 the 111ct Oooument.t wNcfl.,. Thia~ -conducted by Acwtl 11, 19113 ~ Oevalopment County Cltt1c ot Orange County on 1623-83 lndMdual lOW on lie and """I be WlUr'9CI In Bart>ar• A. SdtulU. PraillOenl 148-3181
,.,... Company. Inc .. • APftl 11, 1983 ----.. ---.,.-..,,.-TIC(--.;;.;.;~ RoC>er1 J-C-tln 111• office ol th• Director ot 9efb9ra A. 8dlo.llU
Publl•hed 0ra"99 Coul Dally Celltotnia QOfl>Ofallon m-,._,,. "" • TIHI tlllament •H llltd •1111 ~ flf Mid oollefa dlMrtclt. TNa ~ -lllad .... Cha PllaC. •·a, ti, 20, 27. 1983 9y. ~ H. o...ta. Publl1hed Orange Cout Delly _M011C9 ___ 0P_TRUS __ TB"a __ IM..8 __ Iha Coun1y Olerti of Oninoe ~ty EO Wdllt ""*....,. ~ '* ~a.II flf OrMGe Count)' on
1571.a P-rtllidenC Pilol, Afi# 13, 20, 27, Mty 4, 1te:1 T ........ -.-Otl Aclrtt 4, tta _ l*I a taellter'a ~--. ~ APll tta -Al"DmWT OP wrncNIAW~
----.. ---.,.--------Thll •ta~I,.... l'lled 'M1tt lht 1737·83 O 983 10 00 .,.._ checll.. ~ blddet't ltOnd lnMe CYOA ~-,. •• .--..,,,,.., Coun"' C1tri1 of Ortl'Qt County on n May 4· 1 . el t .m PubJ1thtd Ortnga Cou1 Delly ~ to IN Ofdtr Of ttie Co.t CAOOO, IMU•WAY, "'OM~~ ... Ol'mtATIMO -iiiiCiiiiii•iUiiiii•-. ' M3 •-.,. MftT'M'r S 11 e •"on I Am• r I ctn E • p rtH Piiot Apr 8 13 20 27 1913 Community ColleOa Ol9llict 8oar'd ~ a ~ UNDEI! "C Tl TIOU8 8U81NtE88 , PKOllllOUI • n•• 'Aotll 1. 1 · nu. l"UUU\I nui-. Ctc:row Comptny formerly, · · · l&20-a3 ol TNel-.,, tn-"" "°' ._ ,,.._ MAm
llAl9 tTA..-r Southern cu ... Etctow COtnPWIY -----------1 ... , ~ ..._ Tl'le tollowtng pe r eon h •• Tiie ...,_. ~ --Publltlltd Oreng• CoH I Dally flCTrTlOUa .,..... .. Trust .. °' Succwtar Tndt• or ·-.,. ..,,.TIC( l"8n tt... percent D .. .,. ,,_ """ PYbllttled Oranr Cout Delly .nhdrawn •••~al partn« trom ~ -• _, Pt1o1 •• 6. 13, 20, 27, 1983 N,,,_ 8TA,.....,,. Suba1ttutecl Trual•. of lf\at Otrtllln ~ "" bid• a guarwttaa that Vie blddll' Piiot /4,fK V , Mfr/ • 11, 11, 1Nl 11141 pannenhip opewatlng under IN
O A O EHTl!AllNeU, 2746 The lollowlng pereone ••doing o.ed of Tru11 a•IQlttd by LYNNE NOTICa Of1. flMPAAATIC* "111 enter Into ll'I• propoHd 1~ llctlllou• but lneu namt 01
•.............. Or ..._....__ __ .,. MftnH: bu~.. K GINSBURG en nMarrlad °" •GA"lWW HCLAl'ATIOM Contract II Cha -.. .wWded to -----------·•s u NB E L T EN T E RPRtS ES --v ~ --c.orftla ~ """''~· MEZCO, nn Colgate ,,.,,.,_, • u '*"-'" IN _,. of ,..,,. to am• Nil.JC NOTICE ._.Donna o. on. v .. ttarllfrd ___ ...;. ______ --1 wtat"*-. Callfornle""' =·:. =:=.d:. Ma:.2~ 11Rr:'ot::~r=n:~::= 1nto-" ~ U: ~~~,~~!~. ·~~~:"!~~~ ::.
0r.,c:io.e. ...... Cellb'nlat212e Ctauc:te H Kouc:N, a Celllomla 110011. 13991, Paoe t821 Offlclll Oecl arallon tor tllt protec=t ::.a::i:::e._.,....,:'v..oi Ct~fornta92e47 ~Lon, 1'7 .. ewttlrd -. ~YOU TAKS AC c;orporatlOn. 7721 Colgate A"9nUe. Record• of Ortngt Counly. dtacrlb•d b•lo•. A "Or all" wt" ti. fort91teo 10 Mid collegf Tl'lt llctltlou• bu11ne11 name
Or., eo.ca ..._ Cellb'nla t2Gt TO "'°"CT YOUlll .....:WWtY W•tmln91er. Callfomla 111683 Calllornla, and puttutnt to tllat ~ Daatel"don II on .. ti the dMtnat 1111-11 lor the partnertHp ..
Tllll ~la~ b)' 91 t'T UY • IOU> AT A P\aJC Thie t>u.ir-It conduc1ac:t b) a cert t in Noll ca of Otlaull t nd Dl•trlot olllc•, \1102 Bard Mn No btodtr """I ~ Illa bid rued on Marcil 17. 1980 In 11'1• lndMduml. tAll, If YOU MllD.A CC)(JIC>tatlOn Elecllon tos.ttthereunderrecorcled A,,.,_,!Mne.CA.andle.......,.. Coun1y of Orange FILE NO
Dome Cl. Ott ID'lMATIOIJI °" ntl NATUIW MEZ Company Oclot>et 8. 1982 .. lnattumenl no. '°' public lnepMtlon A Nta•tlvot tor • ~ of ::rt,t1w ('6) 0..,. 134430 Thta .....,_,. -tied_.. .. OP THI '91()CUDMQ AOA*IT ~ H KO<IChl 112-352305, of Oflleltl RtGOnl• ol ~ wll be COl._,.,.ed tor after dftt Ml Irle oparq Full Name t nd Addrau of Ille
County a.ti o1 0r-. County on YOU, YOU 8"0UlD Co.TACT A "21.... utd County, wlll unde r and approval or dlHpproitaJ by the ~lo.rd of T~ ,__ P9'.an WllhdrewlnQ. Acwtl :IO, 188:3. L.AW\"lk Publlahad Orange CoHt Otlly ~t to aald Otad ol Truat ult 9oerd of Olnlctort of ltle DlltrlGI at IN PfMltge of Nfec1Jnll eny and el Pttl'leill Catron. 11662 Berm.>c:tt,
ntG9t NOTICI °" TRUe ...... •AU Piiat. Apr 20, 27, May 7, 11, ttt3 at publle auction fOf cull. lntut • melUnO IO .,. Mk! .. 1:00 p.m. bide Of IO wlWa lllr)' ~Of w .. tmlnsttr, Calltornla 92883
Publi.114Mt 0ranoe Cout Dall)' T .t. ..._ 40117 180043 '"oney of the Unlttd SttlH ol Mey 9, 1tss In 1tla Dllltrtat Otftot ti lnfOfmallU.. tn any bid or In the Ptlflclt Ca1rlll'
Plol, f"11. 27, Mii)' 4, 1t, 1a, tta NOTICE IS HERESY Glvt;;N. lhlll Amarlea, at t11e Nori II front 1M a1>0¥e ........_ ......._ IA.Ill.ML CuaaTm t...a on Wedn .. dty. May 4, 1983. ti Nll.tc N0l1C[ entrtnot 10 tlM County~ Protect*"* IMne C.W 0rtw _,., Att-r ti Law _________ ,;..;.;;....;...;. 10:00 o'doQ t.m. of Mid day. '" 700 Civic c.nter OrMt w..i. Sant• DomeltUo w... "-cll'rned Waw lal HOMIAH £. WATSON I071 8'attt> A-.
rtaJC llJnC( the room Mt ..ioa '°' conducting rtCTITIOU9 auttNR•• Ana. CaHtomla, tit tlM f'IOhl, title and a-er ~. .wt• 2111 Truet•'• a... within the off"'-of MAMI 8TATl.-wf and tntt•tal con~ to and ,_ Prot-ct location: lrvtna Cenl., :::::Tt "untlfteton 9teotl. CA ..,, ACnnoue •'I 1 llU NA.-t'TA~
The fOllow1ng perton It doing
REAL ESTATE SECURITIES Tiit followlng ~raon It doing IMldbyltundttaaidOtadofTIVtt OftW (,_~~10::,':"J ao.11 ~ Publlan•d Ortnge Cont Dally
SERVICE. located at 2020 North ~T'"'E aa;P~THFINOERS GROUP In 111e pr09erty tltutltcl In Mid ~ ...... OM and =-~ PllOI. Apr 20 27. May 4, 11, 1883
~-8r0tdwf¥'/. ~· 206. In IN Qty of n ,.. • County and Slate dteCftbacl-.: ALL Avenu.., Hwwlld A-.. ~ Md 0t Coa o II 186&-83 Santa Ana. County of 0r-.. 8tete '242 Ctmpu• Drive. Sult• E3. THAT CERTAIN LANO SITUATED new lnlne Center OrlH and llublllfltd anoe 11 • y
OAAOEN OESIONl!I. 131 S
Ma9no1te. No 10. Anaheim.
CelJomla 92804
LI•• M. Parker. 131 S =·~·· Ho 10. Analltlm 92.acM
TNe ~ la oonc:tuc:ted by en lndMdulf,
U.. P.ur
Thia ...,..,,. -llted with .,..
Cowtty Oei1I of Orange County on
Aplt •• 1913.
PIU'7lt
llubllthtel Ofange Coaat Dally "°'· """· 13. 20. 27. ~ 4. 1M3 1817-'"
of Ct lllornla . REAL ESTATE Newport 8-11, Callfomla t2MO IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Harvtrd Athlttlo Partl, Moulton Not, •. tr, Mii)' 4· 1M3
SECUM'IE.8 SERVlCE. a CallOmla •A l .. Wllhtre, U 11 SH COUNTY OF ORANOE, CITY OF Pwtlw-r 120!Mt10 tlO fellC-' of 1957..a
corportllon. 11 duty eppolnttd Spray. HuntfnOton Beech. CaldOfnlt COSTA MESA. OflCAIBEO AS ,...... ~ ClleflMt a.n1ertlll9 P\BJC NOTICE
Trust• under and punuant to the 92e441 FOLLOWS o-1ptlon Oii Netwe, """°" ~ of •af• conferred Jn tttat Thia ~ " condueted by • Pwotl 1· and leneflclerlH of ProJeot:
csta1n Ottc1 Of TNlll tuQlt4ld by lmlted pattntAlllP lot 56 of TrtC'I No. HN u CotwetrvctlOf\ of ..W, redlllmed PETER M. TSAI tnd KIM K TSAI, A. L win-. WIOWll on • map r-otd In booll •••• ,. end ,_., Un•• In new
llu•b• n d tn d wll t . a AT A Thll llat-t -flled with llM 411. pegea '1 to 60 lnctldllle of roedwey *"*' tar ClllNllNOtlofl. ~ URSUCU and VICTORIA F County °"11 of Orange County Otl ~Mapa, In the onlce Of Utlilttet ""'" MMflt tvtun ., ..
TURl!IUCU. hu•band t11d wt!• & Aprl 11. 1913 tl'I• County "•cord~r of H id ~ ownss. "--'Ct ~ HOW 81£HO HUA_, ~T m-. County ,_ .. be...,._...,......,,... CHUA 11utbanct tnd ....... rtCOrOed Publllhed Orange CoHI Delly Parotl 2 .....
July i. 1110. In 10011. 0 13657 ot Plot, A4>< 20, 27, May 4. 11. lt83 An tuemen1 for lngreu. o.t.d: Apit 22, 1Ml
Offlclal Atc:otdl of Mid eoun.y, at 1181.&3 egreu 1nd en107rntn1 o.,,., the ~ .J 'Wllelfltr
page 951, Record9r'• IMt~t ·-.,. W\T'M'r common ..... o aald Treat No ...,_..., No. l680, by ..-on of a br.-:11 0t .--nv1-. HH. at Mt tonh In Artlcle II. llW'9 "8ndl WIMf ~
dtlaufl 1n ~or pertolmanot '1CTTTIOU8 .._.. Section 1 or lh• Otclaratton of 18802 l9'dWI A¥e.
ot the~ -.s ._....,, ..._ l'TATllmllfT Covenanta, Condition• and lrflM. CA n11t
1nc1uc11-th91 ~ or o.teult RMlllGUOtla ,_ded Ftlt>NarY 7, """*'*' °'::r CoMt Delly ··• · Tiit lollo.wlng ~raon 11 dotnt ttra In .. -.... 12•st, -Hl11. -.. .. --. 1 Nolle• of •hlCll ••• rtce>td•d Uualneet ... .,...... "' ....... -.. _ ...... ••
Jtnutry 3. 1913, N Rec<>tfff'• K I' D 18 T R l 11 UT 1 fll G . 4 ~ :=:-a~d=•°::"Zther ~
lnat•-t No 13~711.:. WILL E-.-M eoun. Newpor1 IMch. common .. ,,1g:at1on ot alld __ .,. -ULLAT P\JellCAUCTIOff TO THE Callfornla t2"3 " ~ ""'-HIOHEST ltOOER FOR CAIH, Karl l'tnat Richardton. 4 ~Ol*tY 1117 t l>rf¥9. Ooat11 !--;;;;;:";M"'iiiiim:ftiiiiil--iew"'9 -ot IN United SUMa. M9N. Calllornla 9212CI .. __ ,, Eaoaptdt Coun, Newport lffcfl. Name tnd a .. dreu ot th• °' • caalllet • cflectl dr....,, on • Calffornla 92~ " 11t1e or 11atlofttl bet*, • et• or TN9 t>utMiltl 11 conduc1tel by en bentllclwy et wflOH 1'9queat the Mder1ll ~ union, or e .. .,. Of lnclMdual Nit It belnt c:ondlloted: Cltleor9 tectertlMW!OlencllOM~• Kari Rtchttdaon lndu1trltl Credit tno .. c /o
clornlClled In \Na "att. .. ~et T,,.. llattment ... llled wtttl the Slltarton/ American EapreH
!tie time ot ..... "OM. tine Ind Colln Cllf1! of °' County M==·''G• • Ootpor•tfon, t20t E
'""'"' l*4 by it, .. Trve1-. '" ~ 11 1.., tnfe on A.,.,,ut, tan lltmllrOlno. tlltt tttl Slfoc>ett)' tltutte ln'•ld • nUDM C omla 92404
County and ltett. d.-crlbed a• Publl•lltd Orana.• CoHt Dally OINGllona to tilt t11ow property ~. t • 1 _ ~-..... , u •, • Mot, Ai"' 1'. to. al', Maw 4, 1913 m1~ be Obttlnad t>y taQu .. tlng ...,.. • ... ,._ ,_ ..... ,.... _, tame In writing trom the belw.1dery
per !NIP NeO<cled 111IOOll11. PIOlt 1_.t..a wltllln to d•y• tro111 tl'I• tint
G of 11'1'11111111 IDW ..... Ill tfiil P\llJC M)TIC( puOl!Cetton of t1'ltt f'Otlot ofllot of IN ooumy raoonMr of llld .. Id Mlt wMt be ,.,_ wtthOut ooumy. f'tC'mlOUt .,_.. oo.,.,.ent of wwrltlt,y, ..,._ or
..CUTIOUI ..,. ,... Tiit atrMt addreH or otlltt MAm STA1'W lfnOlled, M 10 Utlt. pocp H'r..1 or
llAl9 ITA~ oommon ~tlon of the ,.., The rouowlnt per-eon It •otnt ~to..._ tM w.peld
The tonowtne "'Mn le dotng ll'oC*tY lwlllrllltlolol ~ It ~ • tllllil'40e ~on the"*_..., by .,_._. purported
1
10 ba: tC71 and 111 KAI' MAN<rTJHQ OOMllANY, ellld OMd of fnlll~ ....!:'!~~ ltn-~llf
llf'IClttON O~ICI 111 Aool\ .. 1er trfft, oata w .... 500 Newpor1 Centre °'1'19, tulle 12, ptvt t~ tot_... .. ,. -""_,_ ..., ...... w. tfth ltr .... Untt Q_., CO.ta ~T ~o. Newport teAGn, C1t1I•'"'' ooata. •'**" and ~• •t ....... ~.., Ila 11nd•,.ltntd llereby nteo 1Mllmeof"'9lnlllal~U09tlo11of
f'IOMld 1 Anft<aon. 200-.. dltolallne alt l,.bltur for lily ..,_ Kurd, I02 ~ory 11111 HotlOe of._ ~~·t ""'°'' lteott, :,":'.:::..."'::.~ ~~N•wport 1 .. oh, ~~t'~~--":.,';..U:
,__..... .... , ....... "' le6ll ........ ,_ WIWIOl.lt TNl---llMl!h.Otlfb,lfl 111~ per IMUfft on tM """'° •• fr' warraftty, .. _,., ... or lm11tlee1, ~ ~ b~ "°"' 1-f-etito ~a.~ r9flrdtne tltle, ....-aiot1. or ....., Kurd .. ,, pt11• e11y •••UHi '"•
ftlla 1 ••'4 .._ ll9d""" tlllt •ntwl'll•rtno ... t• Htlefy U1a TNI ....._,, -...., -"" tf1e ._.-.... ~ !MY Ille ........... or ~an • er.,.. Oallnlr • ~ ...._ ., .. Nole 0t c-. Ollll1I et ar.,... 0011ft1Y on ......., '° ,_ ~ ..., ..-All' f. ~ ..,. tlf'tl•I I ...,,.. " .... Apt9" 9lt3 .... ~ ~ Deefeff' ............... and • ~ "" ....... ,._.
-., ..... ._. -~ ,. __ -...._ _.... • "......, 1'*eln: '"4'flefleel Oran .. COM! Dlllr -,.,.Y IMTW lll:tlClft ... -.,. -· -c-~, .,.... ~ If "'Y• ~ Ille ...... •-. 1J, IO,~ •• ...._ 4. 1• ... ,.._ W&.Ut OU 'F. ...._ """1· ta, IO, 'Nlfr~·,::a ..,. ...., IN....._ 01t Mfl ,.... -..... AOTIO'* TO PMT T Y
----------~~~--... -. .,.. .r.: .... :-=: ,ff•Y• A ..... ==-'= ... :-.,,':-Dead=~-.&.. • .. ~.arnp• !&~ :--:r. .. 4:i: ~ ......... ..,_ j. delfte NtANe•4 fffe, elllt .. e Ind f .. .._ ium1-..
....... ~ ----.. ~ .......... -"illkliW-
1 •TOltlf "ii-:'F: ti..... ...,...... I • t ,. "::' -=--•Wil r;i·= tf THll'l ... 1;11tt , r~. OtllfWllil•
OfflCI OP TM
....... ..c°"°'11R. COUNTY Of' OMNOI NOTICI Of' 8ALI UlllD«a
04EC ... M FOMCU*.IM PARK PASEO HOMEOWNERS,
ale Plalnllfl, vt CHI KEUNO
WOHO, et al . Otltndent, No.
38CM66 I 1"' ~ltd. BAAO OATES.
Shertfl.coronar. County ct~
Stet• Of Cellfomla. dO ~ o.1lty thtl by virtue ot Decree of
Fo rtcloaurt end 8•1• In Ill• Super10r Coun of the county of
Orange. State of C.ilfOrnla. entered
on Oecernber 14. 11•2. end reoordld on Dacember 14. 1982 lft
the al>Ov9 anthtad eritlon. ......,,
l'a rk P•••o Ho1nao•n•r•
AMOClatlon, a CaltfOmla ~ CorporaUon, Ill• tbovt·nlMed
ptalntllf, otllelned • jUdgmel1t and
decrH ol lortcloaurt and "le
1gtlnt1 CHI K!UNO WONG,
dtltndant, tor Illa aum Of 1!1111
Hundred Thlrt .. n and 201100 Oo11at1. 1-'111 mOMy or a.. l.Wted 8ttt... end by vtrtut of a wrtt of
enf0<cernent In Mid IC1ioll ""'*' on December u . 111t, t em
eommandtcl to • all \tit llt~ In the COunty Of Ortnge, ••• ~
Calltoml&, deeorlbed M ~
LOI 21, of Trac:I No. 9048, .. recorded In .,. ,.., . "IOel I to ,,
lnCluelw .. ~ ........... "' t~ omoe 01 ttlt Ofanoe County
"9oOtdtr. Cellfomlll..
The proper1)' " ttlOf9 oornmoi-, II-• 18 I( .. IMt. WW.. CA. Toaett-wtttl ... AM ... ._
1tl\•m•nta, h•redttll'l~ll end ~~....,....
Otln~= ... llUILIO NO ICI II Ht,.llY OIVEN TM on ,,.,....._, Ml'r ti;
1MS, n 10':0C O'OIOClt. &Ill. OJI M dey It Main LoM>)', ~ 700 CMo CanW DIM W., °"Y of
ltt11t An•, I wtll Mil U.. UOW
..., .. pl'OIMr1r, "'*' ... .. ~ ~ Of eo """°" ...... • fNY M tlU II~ to ~ .... ~-......... *' io h.,...,. lllcMef, tOt .-..
... IMNJ .... ~ ...... Olftlf ...... AM. CA; ,,.,,. ,-.; .... ' ,....,..,_IM I VM ~
fiflRltO by Gus Arriola
MERE'5 'ft>UR. C.AT FOOO.
GARi=lf.LD. WILL THERE ef ANYTHING f L5E.?
~M 17AVf~ 4 26
THE
t'A~ILl'
CIRct·s
"I hope I don't hove to send anybody else to
his room." •
'9.\R'9.\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson
"Be fair ... when I have the chair, let me
have all of It!"
P£-':\l.T8
I SAW SOMETHIN6 AIMNV
ON TV LASf NIEiW'
THIS 8ASE8AU TI:AM MAD
A ~AL LOUDMOVTH ON IT ...
Tli IMIWB. COOLOf(T TME
IT. SO ME P\ILLEP THE
LOUDMOVTH'S CAP DOWN
O\'Elt MIS MW!
•
by Virg il Partch (VIP)
"Inasmuch as It's your birthday, Princess, how
about splitting a can of cavair?"
by Hank Ket cham
.l'.I -..
~I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson ---WH YDOI
l WONDa IF TMAT
WOOLO EVEft AAPPE~
IN ltEAL LIFE ...
Do THINGS
L.IKE: THAT?
by Tom K. Ryan
,,.,,,.,....... .....
<7 .
Orange Co11t DAil. Y PILOT /WOdneadoy, April 2 7. 1983 C7
Eut
sucn:
GOif i 011 BllDGI
BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
lluri• a hand Lhal will ht' a
atrong u ndldft ll' ror lhl' 1983
llol• Hrllliant'y l'ril.A'. II WH
playrll 1n l hf' atar 11l11ddl'd St
JanwH·~ lnvilntton l'nira 1n
Mnnrhl•wlrr Our ~ro in thtt
~;,,t ,t'al 1• Robcrl R•ip
hn1e.-r ur frnlll'l'
Art..r South 01wncd tht'
bidding wllh ont• no trump,
Nort h t'mployt'd th1· Stay
man convention lo <'ht'rk on
the pomibllity of a 4·4 spede
fit. \\ ll h a nor maximum
opt>ntnl{. South naturally pro-
Ct'eded lo thrt•(' no lrump
over North's invllal1on
~ l''t ~"t t h1• 'la!(I' (or
what was to follow wl>t'n ht'
'tJrled tht' bJll rolling w11h a
lo11o diamond llummy and
E.l\I played lov. and drrlarl'r
won thl' ten. A low hearl wa\
lakf'n by Wul'a Jark anti
batk camt: anol~r diamond
Ut'rlner playt'd lht-nint•
from dummy and Jktphnf(N
duckrd 11icalnl
Arter tM•rLaklng wit h tilt'
queen or diamond•, dtdarl'r
t aahed ht~ ~arh 111 E.ul
1lurted a apack-. and now IL
fftmrd hl' wu pltylns for
overtrick1 1111 be•t 1hot wa1
lo find Wf'sl wilh Lile king of
apadu, 10 hr tried act 11(
1p1dn and .i 1pade to thl·
queen. ~:as1 won th1• king and
cle11trly rt'fraintd from
cashing I ht• rrst or his
~pJdl'' ln,tcad. ht' 1h1flt>d to
~ 1•tub l>t>clarr·r ho11v1·d up
10.1lh tht' are and tonf1dcnlly
f1nl'\\f'd t ht J.tr k of
J1Jmonds . Rt>iphnxrr fin.illy
.i:ut to win his king of
I l
c11JOWnrl1 .tnd t h1• 1lt•f1•ntJtor'I.
look 1 ht• r1·~1 of l ht• I m k• for
down lwo!
N1·1•dl1·~' to "•'Y. thul wu"
lop aron·. No olhl•r p11r 1u1·
ft•1•dtd 1n dr frallng lhrtt nv
lrump• two lrlru . lndr.-d. al
1n3ny ta blr6 that tonlrnr}
w.u m1rl1· via an end pl11y 1f
1padt>\ I
Hatte you bffa niulq ~I
'' dtublt trH~le1 Le
Cbrle1 Corea IMlp , .. fl
yow way thro~li t~ m~ of DOUBLES for peaaltJe
ud fM takeout. For a topy •
hit DOUBLES bookkl. M
fl.85 lo "Gorta•DOl&blu,
aH of thl• .,..,,.,.,, P.O,
Bn 2S9. NenHM, N.Ji
076'8. Make tlietkt payab14f
t4I ~ew1paperbec*1. i
by Jeff MacNell~
:~~Wm~ -I
SU~.~~
7=
DR \HBt,•:
&u~~R
~.,_,SUN
!>C2A't'C."1"4C:I
A U>l
LA'f~l.i
.r
•'OR BETTER OR •'OR "o R~o:
MICHAE!.,'PJ 1101ED BUT-AT LE.AST
)b(JR ROOM -BUT I DID WHAT YCJJ fHREW YOJ ibLD
EVER'{THING-ME.
,.. IN"R:>TtiE
CLOSET I
LOOK Ai 005€
KID5 ~NCING
()()WN "'THERE I
DR. SllOCK
eAc::> SHOW',
DOC"f"OR.!
lH£~'RE ALLRJPUL.M
AND PAAT OF 'THE:
I IN' 6ROOP !
WHA"T" we HAve HeRe
IS A JURY
OF YOUR ex-w1Fe's
PeeRS .' ~~=~!!!:~:::::;>
by Lynn Johnston
by Tom Bat1uk
I 'D 5ELL m.;
~DMOn-IER Tl>BE
ro.oN -rnERE W11H
1MEM !
0
0
z O-
by George Lemont
By Mark Lasky
i
C8 Ore_ngt Ooaat DAILY PILOT/W9dne1day, Aprll 27, 1813
flAIO ADVl .. TtlfMlNT
REVOLUTIONARY NEW TECHNOLOGY •••
'
How many people you know (in-
cluding yourself) actually enjoy
hard physical exercise -jogging,
push-ups, etc. In fact, there's a
lot of people who can't exercise,
even if they wanted to. Arthritis,
broken bones, or other dlsabllltles
prevent many individuals from the
type of mov~ment necessary to
exercise muscle tissue.
Now there's the Bio-tone Effortless Exercisor. A
revolutionary new way to exercise and tone muscles
electronically. So you can firm. tone and shape-up,
effectively, and without effort.
It Realty Works!
Each 35 minute treatment at Newport Blo-Fltneu
has the equivalent effect of 1500 situps. And, be-
cause Bio-tone stimulates the circulation, muscles
are rid of waste products and toxins which cause the
familiar soreness following vigorous exercise. Bio-
tone is perfect for persons seeking an alternative to
the monotony and regimen of traditional exercise.
"
1'11111nt M111111 Cyill
AfW the 35· minute treatment, ~"°"8 •xs>fr· ""°' a 10-mlnute relaxation oyclt that fMll
much Hu a d1Ho1out full body m•••I'·
THE RESULTS
SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES
"My son Danny Pruitt was severly injured 2 years ago. As a result he is paralyzed
from the chest down. Danny started E.M.S. (Electronic Muscle Stimulation) recently
and has already shown signs of improvement. We are excited. it looks like we have
some hope in the right direction."
"I have found the treatments invigorating as well as relaxing and the inches are
coming off."
KATHY PRUITT
ANITA BLANCHARD
"After suffering with lower back pain for the past two years, to the point of being
bed ridden tor weeks at a time and forced early disability retirement, I started treatments
at NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS in January, 1983.
The re~ults have been simply great. I have never been so mobile or tree from pain
in years. It feels great!
Your staff is to be commended "
"After losing 110 pounds I realized a serious need to begin an exercise program that
would tighten and tone my muscles. When I discovered NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS
it was a dream come true! After only 12 visits I lost 21 inches. The individualized
treatments are great and the staff are truly caring people".
"I recommend NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS to all my friends."
SAM AMBURGEY
ALLISON GAPPA-FORD
"Due to my hectic schedule I don't ~et enough time to properly exercise. I find
NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS relaxing and get immediate results. I lost8 inches in only four ,,,-~
treatments with no dieting. Fantastic!" ,..-~~
MICHELE DAWN
"Following arthioscopic surgery to my left knee in June of this year, I was unable
to run or bend without severe pain. I tried three types of physical therapy with little
success and literally couldn't play tennis without hobbling around."
"After only six sessions with John Benson at NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS, I can not
only bend my left knee and run without pain, I am on the court and playing
tennis again. I can't believe it, but I am a believer now."
ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST
BXCLUSlt/E • COMPLETE
PAaltlE EJC£RCl8E CENTER
INTRODUCTORY OFP•R
HUGH STEWART
l l
j
i
..
Dilly Piiat
~· W!ON!SOAY, APRIL 27, 1883
ClASSlflED BUSINESS 04
STOCKS 05 07
Rams counting on Dickerson
By JOHN SEV ANO or ... Delr .... ...,
Eric Diclcenon hu alway. dreamed of
playtna ln the NFL. He even bypueed a
lucrative contract oUer from Arlz.ona of
the USFL ln order to fulfill hla fantasy.
"The USFL ia a good Idea, a good
le.gue, but I didn't think It was for me,"
uid Dlckers:>n yeeterday. "I could have
maybe played M?ven yNn there and got
ln the ~rd book.a, but people would
have alway. uid I didn't play with the
best. Rather than beiJll looked at as a l'OOd running t.ck, I would have been
thought of aa only a good USFL running back .••
It ii the Rams' hope that Dickenon,
their first pick In yeaterday'a college
draft, becomee one of the NFL'• premier
backa. Actually, they're counUna on It.
So la Dlckenon.
of 4,UO yards, a fllw'e whl.ch broke the
Southwe1t Conference career ruahlng
reoord aet by F.arl Campbell. He at.a
ICOred 47 touchdown.I, 36 coming during
hia final two yean with the Muatanga.
Baltimore had pulled an uoeet and taken hlm over John Elway.
"It would have meued me up totally. "I think I'm real good," aald the SMU
standout. "I'm not trylns to be cocky or
arrogant, but I have confidence and l
think that's what you need to play ln
this league.
"I'll play hard every down but 1 don't
want people to think I'm aolna to come
out and gain 1,600 yards ri1nt away. You
need 11 guya to make thinp work rf&ht.
"I've thought about playing for the
~ for a long Ume," said Olckeraon,
who flew In from Dallu yesterday. "I've
alwaya liked the colon (blue and gold).
and the ~ on the helmet. I've alway.
been a Rams fan."
It would have really screwed me," uid
Dickel"90n with a trace of a smlle, "I had
a couple of former teammates (who play
at Baltimore) tell me, 'You don't want to
~ here. It's not a good tet up.' "
"For me, It's going to be like •tarting
all over again. Juat like It WM my firlt
year at SMU. I'm golni to have to work
hard no matter what."
Dickel"90n said it wu hia hope he'd be
.elected by the Rama, Dallaa or Tampa
Bay. He added he would have played for
Houston (which owned the No. 2 pick
until the Oilers swapped with the Rams),
but would have defected to the USFL if
Dickerson said he followed the Rams
cla.ely laat aeuon, and actually rootec:i
against them, for personal reasons,
toward the latter part of the year.
"I didn't want them to lose, but then
deep down I did," said Dlckenon, still
smiling. "I remember when they played
that last game against San Francisco and Dickerson comes to the Rama with
impressive credentials. He gained a total blocked that field goal, I almoet died." Eric Dickerson
Deir ........... ~ ...............
Anteaters dumped from first
Th~ UC Irvine bueball team continues to
have It.I problelllll coplni with prosperity.
After ril.lng to first place again In the
Southern California Bueball A.saoclation
1&1t Saturday, the Anteaters had an
opportunity to pad their lead against vimtina UC Santa Barbara yesterday, but
missed the opportunity, falling to the
Gauchos, 6-4.
Santa Barbara's Bob Gray was the main
thorn In the side of the Anteaters, first
breaking the scoreleu deadlock with a
two-run homer in the leCOnd inning, then
folloWir\8 with sacrifice flies in the third
and flftn innlnga. Gray had four RBI,
despite getting only one hit. .
But with the tying runa on bue, a double
play killed the -rally and the Anteaters
didn't threaten aft.er that.
Gini provided Irvine's tint run of the
cont.est In the bottom of the second with hi.I
third horner of the aeuon. But that, along
with UCI's aborted rally In the seventh,
waa all the offense the Anteaters could
provide.
UCI starter Maa Yota was troubled by
wildne., wallung six batters and allowing
tour hits and three runs in his three innin3I
of work. Soma, who has ~n suffering
from a sore ann, was making his first start
in a couple of week.a.
UCI made a bid to get back in the game
In the bottom of the 1eventh. Mike
lnglehart and Darenn Kelchner each
singled and advanced on a groundout. .
A double down the first-base line by
Paul Hammond knocked in one run. Mike
Rupp singled for another and an error on a
grounder'by Adam Gina 9COred the third.
With the victory, the Gauchos, who
swept a double-header from Cal State
Fullerton Saturday, leapfrogged past UCI
into fir1t place. The Ant.eaters open a
crucial three-game series against Cal State
Fullerton Friday afternoon.
Newport
in r()le
of spoiler
Newport Harbor High;a Sailors
upeet rival Corona del Mar last
night in Sea View League
volleyball and Ed.Won High'• up-
and-com.lna Char2era applied a
hammerlock en third pbce and a
potenU&l berth In the upcomina
CIF 4-A playoff• to hl.ghlight
area action.
Aaide from Newport Harbor's
upeet It waa buainea aa usu.al
with Sumet Le.,ue letlder La
Quinta, 1!'.ltanda and Costa Meu
In the Sea View and San
Cleme'l'lte and Laguna Beach ln
the Sout h Coast collecting
victoria.
Newport Harbor's upaet of
Corona del Mar. a 10-15, 15-8,
15-6, 8-15, 15-12 dedaion, failed
to take the Sea Kings out of CIF
4-A playoff• contention, bu t it
did aoothe aome wounda for the
Sailora, who'll be wat.ching the
playoffs from the standa.
Middle-blocker Andy Alll90n.
David Frazelle
the Pine at 7, then surged ahe.d
to ta.Ke it, 15-12.
The Sailon are back ln action
tomorrow n laht (7) aaalnat vialtlnc c.o.ta Mesa in a make-up
~ame. Mesa upped Ill record to 10-1
In ill drive to lhare the Sea View
League champlonahip with
Estancia by breezing put Mater
Dei in three, 16-10, 15-6, 15~ as
outaide bitten Mark Zachary,
Tung Van and Mike Ure, alon&
with Charles Cutene.e, showed
some 1park for the Mu.tangs.
Blazers' Paxson:
We need 6 players
to stop Jabbar
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Don't
try to tell the Portland Trail
Blazera that Loa A ngeles'
Kareem Abdul-J'abba.r ia not the
domlnant Qellter be once waa.
"We're fOlng to have to do
ac>rniethlng,' Portland guard Jlm
Pauon aaid of the 36-year-old
Abdul-Jabbar. "I don't know
what, maybe put alx guya out
there ... Maybe &et him before
he &eta to the pme."
~ Trail Bla7a-a had tried to
'\lee just one d efender agalnat
Abdul-Jabbar in the first game
of their best-of-aeven National
Buketball Auociation playoff
series. He acored 32 points to lead
the La.ken to a 118-97 victory.
In the aecond game, they tried
to double-and triple-team him
when he had the ball. Abdul-
Jabbar responded with 37 pointa
and a team-high seven~ In
last night's 112-106 triumph that
gave the Laken a 2-0 edae in the
series.
Ramsay, whoee club will now
face the Lakers in Portland
Friday night and Sunday
afternoon.
"K.attem'• playtna greet." said
Por11and center Wayne Cooper.
''He's carrying them. 11le others
are playing well, but when we
make a nm at than, he ju.st takes
over the pme."
Abdul-Jabbar, aix times the
le-.ue'1 moet valuable player
durinl h1a 13 pro II llC1W, uJd he
atlll 1eu char1ed up when
playoff time arrivs.
"I haven't loat any of my
intereat," he uid. "I think entire
teama get up for the playoffs.
You can feel the intensity."
Paxaon 1aid Abdul-Jabbar
appeared perticularly lnt.eme.
"He wa1 ready for these
playoffs.'' Paxson said. "You
could see it in his eyes. We've
played well enough that we
might have won, except for
him."
Newport Harbor's Rob Goubert goes high
Rob .Goubert and Sean Sheward
were the major thorn• in
Corona'• aide. In the deciding 9el
the Sailors were down, 4--0, tied
Estancia took Ill 11th In 12
league outinp with a 15-2, 15-10,
(See PREP, Pase Dt)
"I don't know if rve ever seen
K.arftm play a better game," said
Trail Blazers Coach Jack.
Although the Trail Blazers
lost, they played much better
than in the aeries' opening game
tut Sunday. They held an 89-85
advantage hE:adina into the final
to spike a s Sean She wa rd looks on .
~Rustlers tied for top; OCC snaps streak
Golden West'• Doug Irvine hit a
three-nm homer tn the botuim of the
ninth to Jive the Rustlers a wild 11-8
declsim over Mt. San Antonio yesterday
in community college bueball action.
· The victory propelled the RUltlera Into
a vt.rtual tie fOC' tint place ln the South
Cout Conference with FuUttton.
Mean9'hlle, Oranae Cout moved to
wlthln two 1ame1 of the top after
ibapplng a t h ree-game loelng 1treak
wtth a 5-0 verdict over Cypre91.
Here'• w hat happened:
Colden West 1 1~ Mt. SAC 8
lt waa a dramatic finiah for the
Rustlera. aa Irvine'• bl.alt came on the
tint pitch aerved up by Mountie rel.lever
Mike Wynn. who~ retired the first
two Golden West hitten in the~-
But wit h two out1, Ron Morello
sing.led and Steve Mottllo walked on
four pit.cha to aet the ~ for Irvine.
whoee ahot cleared Uw left-field fence. It
wu hi.a tint homer of the 11euon.
The Rustlers Md to come from behind
twice In the aeesaw battle, tytna it with a
run in the bottom of the et&hdi u John
Altobelli cracked a tw o-out triple to
bring home Tim Zahanon, who had
walked.
The RUltlera built a 7-5 lead m the
1ixth, scoring three times by
sandwiching five tingles around a
l&Crifice. But Mt. SAC regained the lead
ln the top of the seventh with three
rum.
Altobelli had abo tripled In the bottom
of the fifth to 9COre Zahanon, tht:t came
home hllmelf on a sacrifice fly by Kevin
Elater.
Orange Coast 5, Cypre11 0
RJaht-hander Cory ColJ.lnae gave the
Pirates a well-needed complete-game
performance. lh.adc.ling the Chargen on
six hita.
Damon Berryhill. who went 3-for-4
with three RBl, opened the 9COring with
hi.I thlrd homer of the aeason ln the
bottom of the third. a solo shot to center
field.
In the fourth, ic..vin Reimer 1in3led In
Mlke Carou.a, then Reiroer ipited a
sixth-inning rally with a leedofl double.
Joe Kwolek linlled up the middle tor
one run and Berryhill found a p p lb
center fOC' a two-nm double td complete
the 900rlnJ(. Co1linge lm.pcoved hi.a mark to 5-3.
I quarter of nme 2. but went cold
In the final 3 ~ minutes aa the
Lakera pulled away from a
104-104 tie.
Lot Angeles wound up
outa'Ori.na Portland 27-17 in the
final period to wln golni away.
Norm Nixon c hipped in 23
points for Lot Angeles, the
defendfna NBA champions, and
Earvin "Magic" Johnaon ~ · 18.
Calvin Natt 9COred 26 poinll
for the Trail Bluen, but only
four ln the aecond half. P&XIOl'l
added 25
"Both team• played well
enou gh to win," 1ald Abdul-
Jabbar. "But we worked very
hard in the laat couple of minute
to pull It out.
Carew, Brett on .490 trail?
'
~,Cini blld plteb, and that WM
• ·~ ilUdm' '° Mike R.amey.'' I Bowe, maklq ht. eeventh
relle t :f P••ranc•. w a 1
tUIDW after Ho0ton, l ·l ,
,tr'• a1 IC.tUb ~ bOme
n.m In .... k UM.di ~th. Dloi'rill ..,.. Uo ...... off &he Do•1•n' 1tar&erJ.. who =:1.,_ Nt1rtN ~ ..
'
The season is still young, but talk is being renewed
IPOATI COLUMNIST
BUD nJCKER
08 0rt"9• Ooaet DAILY PILOT/Wedneac:tav. Aprll 27, 1883
!PREP VOLLEYBALL. • •
1From Page D1
16·4 viciory o~r Univen.lty with
outalde hltt_,r David Rou
•W'fllC.'tne tn • ~ effort..
ltv1ne dealt JJ:l Toro a 16-12,
15·13, ll·l~, 1~·4 •tblek In the
other S.. Vt.w encounter.
Le Quinta ldlt Ua flnt aet of
the aeaaon tn Sun.aet Leaaue
play, but rebqunded to take
Fountain Vall•y, 8-16, 1&-10,
15-11, 1~..e.
The Berona of Fountain Valley
got aome 1tan~out play from
Brent Hanlon and Tom Pow•,
but Junior Utu t C.O. proved too tou1h In the on1 run.
Ed.laon. under flnt-year coach
Rocky ClareW, a pean ln line for
a CU' 4-A playoff berth after
atopplq Hun'1naion Beach In
four se&a. u K•nny Bual, Joe
Krafka, Dave Fruelle and
Randy Hetrick led the way In a
15-9~ 16-7, ll-16l 15-7 win.
... va..~ ~ ..
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IN!ne I 7
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COel• MMe el~ HttbOf ,.....,.. ...... (7)
EalllnCle .. ~ ..... .,
IJnNWlfty .. N9woott Herbot
ll Toto et eo.te W.. ~AI Melwo.I
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Mll9loft Viejo • 7 • •
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---------
. .
FV rallies
• to regain
league lead
Fountain Valley ffiah'a &ron. have retaken
.ole leodenhlp In the Sumet Leque r.oe tollowtna
laat night'• come-from-behind declaion over
Weat:m.lntter at Mile Square Park to hJ&hllaht att9
baaeball action yesterday.
Here's how It went:
Fountain Valley 9, Westminster 3
The Barons. down 2-1 through 3 \oi tnnJnca.
rallied with six ruN ln the bottom of the fourth
when Westminster obliged with four walU and a
two-run error, combined with Mike Lopei'a two-
run single up the middle.
Relief ace Duanne Madge got the victory, hia
fifth against no defeats, ball.lna out Greg LeMaater.
al.so a relief artist who got hi.t llnt start and held on
to a 4-0 record.
Jerry Meunier led Marina to a
9-15, 15-8, 15-10, 15-l<S wtn over
Weatminater, but the Vikings
must wln again Friday, ~
vialt.ing and W\*ten La Quinta.
in order to force F.d.ieon Into a
Saturday playof( for No. 3.
Scott Fortu"'e turned In a
standout performance for
Laguna Beach.
WOOObtldge 0 11 2 12 ,....,. ...... (7)
San Clemente el ~ 9-:11 Woodbfldol 11 MiMlon Viejo UV-.. el Dene ....
CdM's John Schisler finds opposition in
Newport's John Bostwick (2) and Rob Goubert.
Ray Llamas went 3-for-4 and Pete Piamplano
was 2-for-3 in the Barona' 11-hlt attack at Mile
Square Park.
Ocean View 4, Marina 3
Caldwell, Dotterer
~~m~~~~ !~ NFL draft
A pair ~r,ormer Sunset League [i]
football stal)douta were chosen ••• yesterday u }he National Football
League held im annual draft.
Bryan Caldwell, a 6-5, 245-pound product of
F t an Valley High, currently attending
State, was nabbed ln the third round by
CaldweJJ was the 77t.b player choeen
overall In the draft.
Running back Mlke
Dotterer of Stanford. who
attended Edtaon HJgh, was
aelected by the Loa Angeles
Raiders ln the eighth round
and became the 222nd player
to go overall.
Caldwell was an all-CIF
Divtaion I tackle at Fountain
Valley. He wu a member of
the team that featured Willie 'CALOi.:i~-~ Gitt.ens and Caldwell, upon
graduati.on, ch• to continue echool at Arizona
State after don\µlating the high 8Chool scene in
the CIF Southern Section.
Dotterer was abo an ~-CIF ctdoe dwinl
his senior .eaao~ at Ed.l..>n, after spending hit
junior year at Mater Det
Dotterer waa a four-year 1tarter for the
Cardinal and a1ao is a bueball prospect.
Quote of the day
"The only ibad thing about my awing
right now, i.a that I can't stand back and
watch it. It's ~ one of UMl9e tbinp that
when you're IWiJlCing the bet good. you
can hit anybody. When you're swtncin8
bad. you can't hit anybody. U all nlghtJ
were like th1a, l'd play for fn!e." -°""le
Breu, Kanas City third bueman after
hitting three home runs aplnst Detroit in
an 8-1 win.
Spurs outscore Nuggets
SAN ANTONIO, Texao -m George Gervin ecored 42 points and
Johnny Moore 24 as the San Antonio
Spurs buried the Denver Nusgets
152-133 last night in the first pme of a Western
C.Onference .em1-tinal playoff match ln the
National Buketb.n Amodation.
The Spun and Nuaeta •tan NBA pla)'O(f
record for most points scared ln a &1Jll! by two
teams.
lnado:mi
noniinated
for award
I Eatancla Hl1h'1 Davld
'lnldoml, a standout in water polo
and tenn!•, la among the 20
ft.nallaU ..i.cted from a field of
375 c.ndldatea throu1bout
c.alllomia who were nominated
for the hllh school Scholar-
Athlete of \he Y ee.r.
Candidates muat have
.chlaved no 1 ... than a 3 .70
a.unu1*tlw .,-point averp,
baYe pa.rtidpaua in vanity ..-W lor at i..t two yeuw and
N¥e cWnnrwwatecl • bJcb .._ of~ ln~ty N'MI iood
d~p.
Brett's streak reaches 14
Gf1,r1e Brett smacked hl.t fifth Ill home run of the aeuon, e'xtending hia
hitting streak to 14 games, and Orea
Pryor lined a two-run double In
support of winning pitcher Larry Gara aa
~Qty knocked oU the New York Yankees
ln an American League game. 10-4, lut night
... Elaewhere, Carney Laaafonl drove in two
Oakland runs as the A's snapped a four-game
losing 1treak by plnning a 4-3
setback on Baltimore . . .
Rick Sweet drove in two
runs, lncluctlng the game-
wtnner, and Gaylord Perry
notched his 309th career
victory, as Seattle edged
Boaion, 7-6 . . . Bea 01Hvte
llned hia flrat homer ol the
year to lead off the
Milwaukee ninth innln& as ..n the Brewen beat the Ch!cago
White Sox. 4-3 . . . Lu1 Soreaea pitched a
three-hitter io map a pencna1 10-game loRnc
streak and Broderick Penta delivered a ptnch
single io map a aeventh-innlng tie aa Cleveland
stopped Minnesota, 7-1 ... Mike Smlt~IH
allowed juat five hill and BlddJ Bell and
MJctey ltlven each doubled ln a run to give
Texat a 2-1 decision over Toronto. Dave Stieb,
3-2, was the hard-luck loeer for the Blue Jays.
Sraver's return spoiled
Bnce Bereayt tomed a six-hitter Ill
and Du Bllardello and Roa Oater
each drove in two runs io apoU Tom
Sea•et'• Ctndnnatl ~ and give the~ a 7-0 decision over the New York
Mett in lfatlonal League action last night.
Seever, l·l. Luted just five 1nninp ln hia first
start aga1Mt Ondnnati since bei..na traded to the
Meta last December . . . 1..urJ McWWlama
pitched a one-hitter, allowing only a fifth-inning
aingle by Freel BralJ, and BW Mad.lock belted a
two-run double a• Plttaburgh blanked San
Franchco, 3-0 . . . Terry K.eaaedy, Steve
Garvey and Tim F1auery homered to pace a
17-hit attack that powered San Diego to a 10-8
victory over the Chicago Q.lb1 . . . Bob
K.Depper ltn.lgg)ed lila. way throu&h a four-hit,
teVen-walk shutout aa Houston edpd Montreal,
2--0, in a pme ln which the Expos llranded 11
bueNnnen . . . Dale MUJ*J drove ln four
runa with a atnale and homer as Atlanta
unleMbed a 19-hit baJ"ra&e '°down Philadelphia,
10-4. '11'e Braves won thetr 10th straight at home
th1s ~ without a to..
Islanders spurt to win
Tomu J•aaOD, Mike Bouy and ~ Daue Satter 1COred goals within a ,
ded.alve aeven-minute span In the
aeoand period to carey the New York
lalancMn to-:a 6'-2 victory over Bodon in the
opener of the Wales Conference final round. The
l8landen, bidding for a fourth atralaht Stanley
Cup champlonabip, built a 4-0 acfvUltqe in
jwnp&na to a qWdl lead ln their belt-of...ven
aerta . . . Man Mettler aeored three aoa1a to
.et an NHL record for playoff hat trida (three)
u Edmmton routed Chicaao 8-2.
Raiders
beef up
line corps
Henkel, De~elia
lilt Gauch•, ~3
Ryan gunning for record
MONTREAL -Just five shy of Ill breaking the mark, Nolan Ryan of the
Houaton Aatroa resumes hia hunt for
Walter J ohnaon'a career 1trikeout ·
record tonight when h e pitches against the
Montreal Expos.
After two 1ta11a In '83, one of them against
the Expos, Ryan had 10 atrikeoute and 3,504 In a
career that entered its 16th full aeaa<>n this year.
J ohmon, wM.e playing career ended 55 years
ago, struck out 3,508 betters ln 21 major league
aeuona.
Baseball today
1944 -Jim Tobin of the Boston Braves
no-hit the Brooklyn Dodgen 2-0 at Braves
Field and became the fint pitcher to hit.a
home run during hia no-hitter.
UM7 -Babe Ruth, h.la voice hoa.ne from
the dl.aeaae that soon would claim his life,
stepped up to a microphone behlnd home
plate at Yankee Stadium on "Babe Ruth
Da" and thanked a cheering crowd of 58,-
000 for the opporttinHy or playing In front
of them. Spud Chandler and the Yankees
then went out and lost 1-0 to Sid Hudson
and the Waahington Senators.
1968 -Tom J>hoebua of the Orioles no-
hit the Boston Red Sox 6-0 at &!Umore.
Today'• birthdays: Toronto first baaeman
Willie Upshaw is 26 . New York Meta
aecond baaeman Brian Giles is 23. Chicago
Cube coach Fred Koenig ia 52.
Lacheinann clinging to job
Seattle Mariners owner George • Ar1yro1, a resident of Newport
Beach, and General Manager Daa
O'Brlea have given Manager Rene
La~mau a vote of confidence -for now. ''I'm
not a petient man," said Argyroe. "There 1.t no
question In my mind. nor ln Lach'• tni.nd, that
UU. club is better than It has started out t.hia
season." . . . The United States Soccer
Federation has submitted an appeal to the sport's
lntemaUorial aovern!ng body in an effort to keep
alive lta bid to boat tlae 1986 World Cup. The
USSF asked the executive committee of the
International Soccer Federa tlon for
recmafdenation of a decision by a aped.al ae1ec:tion
coquuittee not io vlatt the United Statetl for
lnapectlon of facilities in thia country ...
Cent.er WaJM Grebty of the Edmonton Oilers
has been named National Hockey League player
of the year by the Hockey News for tlle fourth
comecutiw year . . . The Soviet Uni.on, with
four ioala in the second period, downed Sweden
6-3 yeaterday to earn Its lleVenth stralght victory
in the World Ice Hockey Championships
pr:eJ.1Q)inary round ln Munich, Weat Germany.
'l'he tinal iouDd llCtion wu due to begin today.
Television, radio
TV -No events llCheduled.
RADIO -Bueball. Detroit at Angela. 7:25
p.m., KMPC (710).
Keith Mullally amuhed a line shot to left-
center to score David Carroll with the winning run
in the bottom of the lle'Vellth l.nnina after Marina
had fought back to tie the game at 3 ln the top of
the seventh.
Mullally's ain8le gave Dean Douty the victory
after striking out teVen and walking two In aotnc
the diatana? for the Seahawlu.
The verdict drope Marina inio the Sunaet
League cellar, a hall-pme behind Ocean View.
Marina took a 2-0 leed with single taWea ln the
first (an RBI-double by Shane F'J.orea) and MCOnd
(via an Ocean View emit) and tied it in the lle'Yenth
when Chad Reed linaJed and eventually acored on a
wild-pitch.
Ocean View raponded with three unearned
runs In the llf!CXll\CI and third lnninp, then got the
winner started in the eeventh on ~ by David
Carroll and Ted Gaulin, setting the situation up for Mullally. _ .
Dana Hills 2, Laguna Beach 0
Dana Hills pulled out of the South Coast
League cellar, exchanging places with Laguna
Beach and Woodbridge aft.er surviving a pitcher's
duel broken up only by a pair of unearned runs In
the second Inning.
Soren Lipson was the hard-luck loser for
Laguna Beach, striking out five and walking one
around five bue hits.
Lipeon was 2-for-3 at the plate, but the Artists
were unable io move any runner put .econd bue
on the Dana Hills diamond.
Capistrano Valley 4, Woodbridge l
Tom Gates atruck out 15 and wa.lk.ed five in
going the dista8ce in the 12-lnnlng marathon.
The C-Ol~ the aw in the 12th Oil a
walk., GU")' '• ain&Je and an error, d.Mn
acored with • walk, acrifice Oy and RBI~
from Frank Banda.
It was acoreleaa through nine lnn.inp. then
Capo struck for one on Bill Dodd'• RBI-double.
Woodbridge knotted it ,in the lower half of the
inning when John Moreland's aqueeze bunt aoond
Rick Lee. -
Newport Christian 19, Herit~ge 6
. Mark Frederlcloon, a 6-1 junior. homered and
doubled in three at-bats and limited vialting
Heritage to three hlta in four Innings in the
Academy League victory.
Carpenter builds
another gem, 1-0
Ediaon High'• women'a 110ftball team, behind
Julie Carpenter's sixth one-hitter of the .eaaon (a.he
al.lo bu two no-bitten. including a perfect game),
moved Into a tie for the Swwet League leaderthlp
with Fountain Valley yesterday by virture of a 1-0
decision over vi8itl.Jll HunUngton ae.ch.
Carpenter at.ruck out 14 io give her 217 in
156 ~ inninp and it was her 12th shutout of the
year.
The 110phornore wu .touched only by a aingle In
the top of the sixth inning.
The victory givee &liaon a 5-2 record In lf!eiUe
play (19...J ovefall) and aeta up Friday's match at
Fountain Valley (3 p.m.).
CdM still unbeaten • ID • tennis
Edison, Fountain Valley tune up for Sunset showdown
Corona del Mar High'• No. l ranked Sea Klnp 28-0 wln over Westminater.
swept io their 16th 1trai1ht victory, Newport Fountain V~lley and Edison square off et
Harbor ttayed within ranee of Univeraity ln the Fountain Valley Frlday ln a match wbkb lhould
Sea View Leque and Edi8on dealt Huntin,ion give the winner the Inside tr.::k to the league title.
Beach a key km ln Suntet League action yste~ In women'• action It wu UC Irvine takina the
in ~ ~~ DOW l&-0, u.d a revamped meuure of Cal S-.te Bakenfield an \ht wtnnlr'a
lineup to -the done ln a 24-4 u1--. at Oc.ta campus, a 9-0 lauaher led by slncJ-ltarl Qndy
.... T ... -;, Keeu.na and Marie Myera. = =i:. ~ou.ela and • pair of doublea The non-<Onferenoe victory u .. ua. record to
Junlon Dave Propp and Jeff Smith combtned .--1;;..;8-~l;;..;O,;_. --------------
for one half of CdM't doublm1-. while Jun!« DaV1d Wallre:r and aophomore Brent 1:tUm8 oornpoted the
other half aa the two swept M•.
Rick ConkeY pec9d -Wewport Harbor'• 20·8
victory OYW J:I ' Tciio ln the 9a1Jon' bid for third
place, while £:iplicer wt \he tetun of Davtd ·m.daml and Joo . ~ llNnda to • 28-0 wV>
OYel" ~ lillli Newpcn and r.tanc:ta IUD
tn a dtedJock for thtid ........ ~ remeim Iii a U. wtt.h J'ountaln Valley f~ .... &amlti_l.AillUI ~ foUoWtnC l11 10 ~-11 ~ vtdor'Y. owr ~ BliilCb, ~ by Nib Whi~• ...... In ......... 8cOlt Lei lid ~ Y~ In ltl rouww
>
~ . • • . ..
MAJOR LIAGU9 8TANOINOI ~~ W L ...._ M ..... ,
10 • 111
10 I "6 I
10 I 6M I
7 • ~7 3 • 11 '21 3-.. , 14 333 ....
IAaT OM9tON ............ • 1 ~
OelrOll I 7 W ...
~· •• 521 ... 9oe1on a I 500 t
~ 8. 471 I'"
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lu112.Toronto I
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" MIMHOll (Oelkefl 0·3) 11 Ct1vel1nd (8~1-3)
C111caoo (81nn1111r 1·21 11 Mlh1111ukM
("-tllne 1--0). " If.-City (L-d 2·11 11 Hew Vo<k
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T«onto (Cl1ncy l·I) 11 h•e• (Darwin
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WWITDMllOM W L
Allel1t1 13 3
'°'-oe 813
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Clncliwitl 10 8
TIS ~ a.. OleoO 8 10 444 Houeton e 13 318
S... FrMCleco 5 13 271
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(Jenklnt 1-2) Pllllldetphl1 (l'lull•••n 0-01 11 At11n11
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Clndnnd 001 132 OOll-7 12 1 s--. Allen (I). Sltll (7l .,.., t+Odpl
lle<en,4 and lllwcMllo W_..enyt 2· I
L-S--, 1·1 HR-Qnclnnell • ...,_
(I). A-11.129 .................. a.t ,-,...-,o 000 000 000-0 I 0 ~ 002 001 CICb-3 • 0
lrelnlno, Minton (l~nd l••"'l· MeW.W•• .,., ~ y(. w.m.. 2 2 L~. 2·2 Hll-~ l'ley (II A-7,IOI. .,_,..,.....
Pltlldt¥lillll I01 000 000--4 • & ANMA 380 001 Ot•-10 It 0
Otw .... -.. ,_ (2), ""81Nr-11~ Mt:G<-(fl, M~ (II end DIM, ..., .. , Fomer <•l lfld ~. W-,..,_. 4-0 l,.(:fll .... -,. f.t 8-f~ (:2). H"9-
"°"~ 8dwNdf Ill: ......... ~ (4).A-ll.111
~~ ,.,_ 001 oao 000-1 a o
Clewetlflll ICIO 000 11•-7 It 0
CMlllO, ~ (7), 0..... C11 end fl!llle ..,_ _, 9-lo. ~ (I )
w -iioranMn. t•a L.-Ou tlllo, 1· t ,,_,.
...,...,., .... _.
KINU Clly 000 IOO 11 t 10 11 0
-Yo<\ 103 000 000 4 7 I
0..11 end ei...;111. l'llOnetU, f1ul4lf 141
Ooe1a11• (?I HQ-..11 ltl. Mllff•Y (II i nd Caton• W Ouu1, 4·0 L l'l11111t1111 ' 1
Hl\t-K-Cl!y, lrett (0~ "'"9t110t1 I 11
New Yor'-. I~ (I) A-11,MI
...,.,_.,,llN ... 1
loeton 000 )Of 010 I 10 I llMllle 410 100 10< 1 11 I .,own, •110 (4). Aoo<'itl 111. c .... 111 and
OedtNn, Petry, CeudHI (I) Ind ·-W P•ry, 2·2 L-lrOIWI, 1-2 11-CIUdlH 141
H!l1-Boelon. Illa (II. AtmH 2 (21. 8M111e, T Crui t3i A -8,at~
..... o .......
Utin.or. 000 000 210 a I O o.-.1a11c1 200 200 OOa -4 10 0
Pelmet. Oe'il• (41 T t.terllnei (II eno
o.,npMy. NOllll 1•1. COOlroll, , .. ,Cf 1•1.
"4C1Uy 181. llurgmllet (9) ano 11 .. 1nev
W-Codlroll. 2·1 l -Pllmef l·I 8 -
llurl)IMlef (21 A -8.Mll
Cot6ege UC ..,.._ ...-..a I. UC !nine 4 UC Santa B.,.,.,, 021 012 000-1 11 UC lrvtne 010 000 !)00-4 1 I I
Y«*wbalOI, 8peet (11 end ,.,,.,0 Voll
Miiiet (4), Ruther (81 Kenl C1I ""' R .. pp w-vo~ub11t11t•1 ·31 L-\'ot• t2·31
211 Hernmono 1uc11 311-11~1114 1ucse1
H!I-Gray (UC881 G•"9 tUCll
1e. ea.. e ..... a. e• llafltM• 2 c.i 8"1)1111 000 000 020-2 1 t So Calif 000 000 12•-:S 4 O
Smttll 1no Saoete. A•ll• e no P1n1
38 -Kr.iaa (SCCI
ICU et-"41nt• W L Ge
UC Santa 81tt>era 12 4 uc........ 12 !I ..
LOll(I &Mell St11e 11 e I''\ Cal Siii• Fullel'lon 10 5 2
Pepperdlne e 8 4''\ u ot Sen OleoO s 10 5'~
Loyola S 12 7''\
Cal Stlle LA 3 14 ti'"' y....,., .• ac-uc Senta Bltl>et• 8. UC ll'iine •
Long 8Mdl S1111 6. LoYOle 2 u. of Sen Diego&. Cal 8111• Loe Angelel 4 ~din• 7. Cal 8t•te F<;llelton ' ,,...., .• a-
uc lt'llne 11 Cal Stet• FUllerlon (71
Cal 8tllte Loe AllQllM et LOf'll 8Mctl Stele 12·30)
Loyola 11 Pepciefdlne (2:301 uC Sent• llfba11 at U. ot Sen Diego
(llOon doubl9-r..-I
Community collecM o....w..t11.lh.1Ic 1
Ml San AnlOtllO 101 012 300-I 9 1
Golden W• 002 023 013-11 10 5
Qr-McCoy (0). Wynn (I) end ZOllNdl.
........ ..._ (7) end --· s MOtelo (,&.! W -t.tallo e 14 ·2) L-Wynn
11 ---Q•al!Qllll (GWI. "'•lion (M8AC)
38 -Altweftl (GW) 2 HR-ltvlM (OWi.
Turney (MSAC)
OfMp c.-I. c,,.,... • ~-000 000 000-0 • 2 Orenge Ca.el 001 103 00..-5 10 2 Outler•• end CoddlnlJ'On, Collnge and
lletryflttl 28 -,.._., COCCI B«M!IH
(OCCI HR-Bwrryhll toc:C~
• '
0 1-u11 1. ... .,....cea
Sen Diego City 000 00 I 020-:1 10 s~ 200 001 01.-4 e 2
Rodrlguer eno Trlolo end Pr1n111e (7;. Bonlll1, Cw• (I). Sh.,.. \II end lllorgen
W-Carr L-RoclriQUeZ. 28-0eAn(IMlt (81,
2. Correll ISO~ H~-8alelo (801. 14enk.i
ISi
louUt Coeet Cont.I eooe
W L Ge
13 •
9 •
• 10
1 II
14 ' 10 1 ' ' 3 16 y_.,-.......
Oolclen West 11, Mt ..... AnlonlO. O..,.C-5.~0 ,.-,.., I, Oentlol I ...... ,.,. 11. COlllll*"I •
T .......... ~ OolOlll Wesl et 0...,. CGMI
Ml S... Antonio 91 ~F~ at Serita Ml 'Twwwuuu•w ..._ ('l::lll
Or ... <:.-Ill,,...,.,..
~ .. Qa1Jd911"W-c.moe et Mt 8arl AMoNo
C)'P'e9 .. aa.t• -.
,ecltlo Cwt CCMI .........
NOMHDM~
2
'" '"
4 .....
II
W L Cl9
~ 13.
P...,_,, t I 3 a.. OleoO -• 10 ,.,., Mnco.t1 1 1 I &'-1
M>UTHmlN OM8toM
a.-1 14 4 ~ 10 ,,.,.
San OleoO City 9 • & •""*1• v..., 3 11 'I'" ......... ,.. .......
s~ 4. San OleoO city 11
San OleoO .... 4, Soulllweetern 3
Ml<eColte 14. Gf...,on1 1'
PelorM< 7. ~ \/11119y>5 T_,_.. 0.-. Cta)
tledllUnc* .. ..,_... Vellifr/
Sen 01eoO M.a at S.-OleQo City ~ 111 MlfeCoet•
P-FIG,_I
,_...,,,~~ .........
W...,.,._ OC>t 100 1-3 I 3
"-v-., 001 I02 ·-· 11 3 H1n10,., Plm.,.tel (5) •"d Harrlm1n
~. Mad(le ~Pratt W -Meclge L-H-29-00 Har""*' IWl.
.....,.IWI
0.-. ""*" .......... , M.-110 000 1-3 • 2 ~v.... 021 000 1-~ • 3
Aeltadl. Emrnone (5) end ~: Douty
ind Klrbr W-Oo111r L-Emmon1
29-Florw (Ml ~ (Mi S.-(OV)
DEM ... I, Llle9M ._.I ~ a.di 000 000 0-0 4 I
0... ... 020 000 •-2 5 0
l.Jpeon. end C<OWI, llMtllr end ...,,._
Cc' t_Y...,t,W'118 ..... 1
Clplec.--000 000 000 lila-4 • 3
WoodtJrlOtF 000 000 000 100-t 4 2 ···u.-~~t~. Ooolt 17) end l•n.1. W:-O•tH L-Coolt 29-.--(CY)
.......,. Ctwtwtla> ..........
Merit• 400 toO-l , ' ~ etir. l30 H•-11 10 a
Or1b1eu, "'•teon (4) encl St Cit Ir,
frecl«lcltlOll. 8tulf\ ii) encl HoneycMI W-f1od11lc1taon l.-Grab11u
21-0eYllH (H), Frederlcltaon (NCI
33-0••"'41 (HI. 0•1114eo" IHCI Hlill-f~ (NC)..
Hlth .ohoof renlilnt• c., ...
I Hoover (" 111 2 A•ncll• I 11-21. J TllOllelllld Oeh (14·3), 4 !ledondo (16·3 t).
6 C::JI~ 4), I North TO'f-(16-31, 1 ~ ttJ·4), a NOlre OllM, t/letman
O•ll• ( 12•31. • Ml•• Co••• 1t-31, 10 ,OUnleln ..,....., (13 ... 1) c••• I , ,IClllO• 11 .. a.11. 2 Nonh. Rlvetlld•
ll6"4), 3 l1perent1 ( 11·4); 4. llFMOnl
IMI 6, lllOllOtll 117·n I. Megnolle (14·0t.
lo11a 1••·•1. I lant• An• ( 14·6). I C1nyo"· nehelM ( 13·:1· I~. 10 Lompoc
112-•1 C.lf'W
1 Chino (1•·31 J Mount.in Y-(IW· 11.
:I Cepl•H•no V1ti.y ( 11·3). 4 Yuc•IP•
I 14•$1, 5 Leu1lng11 (13·4• II, I Cejon ,,,.._II 1 N_ .. 111·'1. t P ..... Spr11191
( 1'·41, t llCldlffKll ( 12°1• 11. 10 (lie) C1nyon lauc>W (~)and ArlMll .._,,
c~-=l:u (e.ntfJll .._,
y .. ..,., .......
NV 1"81lcler• 5. llolton 2 (NY llll!llden
llad ...... 1--0)
Edmonton &. ClllcaQo 2 (Edmonton IMO•
....... :1-0) T_,oW'• OMle
HY ltlanele(e 11 8ollon ••tllfdef'e ca.mo
8o1ton 11 NY tllendlrt
How ...,,.. dr.ftlld
1 Elle 01ckeroon. rb, 8MU; 2 Henry
EMatd. wr ft-Ill . 2 Mike Wlic:Mr, lb,
No1111 C11011na, ' Clluck N1t1on. pk,
WHhtngton, ' Vince N1w1ome, db, WutllnQlon. 4 0ouo Reed di. Son Olego
St & 0... Grant wr MlcNgan 81 .; 6 Gery
1<owe1u 1. 01 8011on College. 7 Jell
s1rnmona. wr, use. 1 T•oV W••. db. use. t J1cll lelcMr c. loeton College. 1 I
Oenny T11p1,11, tb, C1em1on, 12 C111e
Cell* qb, W ... ln(l1on 81
How ftaldef'I sen.ct
I 0on MOM()ll, ot, USC, 2 M Pbel. di.
~lgen.. 3 Tony Caldwell. lb. WMINnlltOft, 4.
Orl(I T _,,_,.,, de. TCU, 5 Oo«le Wlllana,
Wf, IJCLA, 1 Joft M<iCell, ID, a.-, I
Mike OOt••· •D. Sl1t1lorcl; II K.,1 Jordan. le. St MllY'•· 10 MetVtn ~ Wf. Sin Jo11 81 . 12 Scoll Ltndqu111, qb. Nori,_,. Art~one
How a.n DtMo Chergen dNfted I IM.., Rey 8Mltfl, lb. M.,,...; I Owy
Andeteon .... .Ark..-; t. Giii Byrd. db. San Jo .. Ill . 8 T•umllne J011n1on, 'Wf.
Gr1mbllno St . 7 8111 E.1110. di. LBlr. 8 E~1 Jeckeon, •b, Tlllll A&M; t . Mllce
OJ11n. ID . Okl1hom1 St , 10 8ruc•
Mllhleon. Qb, Nlll<llllll; It Tim~-. wr.
S111 JoM 81 . 12 Cl-.dl IE!lln. de, B'l'U
c...,=.n=..1w.1 ~ .. ._, y.......,.. .....
Uil:... I 12 Porlll/ICI lot (lltl<Ffl teed
-NII S•" Antonio 1&2 Oan~•• 131 (len MlonlO ~-. 1-0! T ......... e0oa<o1 "'-Yorlt 11 ~ (l'llli.oel.,.1
._ ........ 1.Q) "
.,._ .. 11 eoe1on ~ GPer*l °'""" .. 8en Ant-~ a.-Lalo-. et Por1l4flO ten Antonio 11 Olili-..._..._ .. Bolton
Lah n 112. Tr .. 91enn 1Cll
l'Ofl'T\.AllD -Nan 21, ~ 12,
Cooper 14. P..-. 26. VllofltlM 1t, C.... 4. ~:ref~--3, NOtril 0 Toter.: 4M&
LOT ....._._ -l'llmbla 10, W*• 14,
Abdul·Jebbar 37. Jol!Mon 11, Nt11on ta. Cooper&.~2.Mla3 T-.44-71
23-32 112 .... ..,oe.r-e
Por11anc1 32 28 31 11-1oe
Loe Angelee 37 20 28 71-112 ~polnl (IOelt -None. Fouled --l>fOfw ~ -Portland 21 (Cooclor 1). LOI Ano•IH ,. IWllllH ti Afflll• -Ponle:rld 35 (Vllellllne 16). Loi AflOlnn 30
(Abclul..Je-7) Total IOUll -PonllncS 25,
Loe Angel" 21 Tecllnleete -POflland :'9!."'1~, LOI AngelM ltegel ~
~ • • .· . -w.....n·,_.....
---~r--· HuntlnQ10ft 9-1 000 0-0 I 0 fd<eon 100 o0o a-I I 0 Pn1tllp1 end Owen Car~ellltt 1nd T~ ti-Gendron {!). Trvbow!l.t (E.~
3e-ford If~ • ............ u.c..,.v...,.
Caplt41-\/..., 000 (JOO o-0 0 2
WoodbfldOe 020 411 A-11 I 1
CUllrov enf ~. HerMnOw &Id Tltpl
39--AAa! d CW1
• wan
Orange Coa1t O~IL.V PILOT/Wednnd1y. Aprll 27, 1983 DI
MewpettO......,..
AIH ..... IA ........... .__.. ..... .._
Pl'IHC>rNT °' MIXICO Tlill()ttHY llOfl-9 I llu• l(eoltJI, Cteuu Kinne,,
Hun11n1 1on Her0011• Veolll Cit11•.1 2 t,,_oci*, l'lot ll!llMy, Loi Mot19 Y1,; a
!lod•o 011••· 11911•• Cihullum, Jecl11c M11tn111 VC, .. tpjrll, M.L. luMMI, Kini Herl>Or YO, I ~.Coll............,.,
KHYC
MEXICO HClllTAl'IV 0' IJCTl!llOll AILA l 10N8 (IOl'l·AI I Cillf'llllne, ()ery T!ngtlFd. Aeclon<lo 8eaoll VC, 2. ,.._,
Ftlld OkHllHI. Sen OleQo YC. a lllllllOn. ld Mc~I, 1(14YC. 4 .l.tnlllle, Mel lllollloy,
Lido lele YC. S Elu11v1. Jolln Paq11t".
COtonlClo C•Y• VC MllCICO 8fC!lfTARV Of MA!llNA
TAO PHY (IQA·CI -t G~oet, Al a.ro, w1no1~· YC. 2 1401 Polelo, 8HI Cottlltt
SOVC, J Aocl<el, Riek BlldtWIU, 80YC, 4
Oec111on, Paul l••o•r. Del Rey vc. 6
C•Mlornl• Gold. Fled o·eonnor. Deft• W•t YC U 8 COAST GUAAO TROPHY -l"'-1 Ma/Iner CINI -I !langet. lddle Arnold.
woooen Huft Owner• A11n.; 2 l!v-~.
Tom Worth. Liiiie S~IOI F-3 lady Ad ..
SI••• AlnH . WHOA 4 Oebr1, Alcllafd
Rault Souoll 81>ore VC. 5. Blue Bell Oon
HFllY WHOA PRESIDENT OF US TAOPHV (PHl'lf·I)
I Nlf•anl CatYetll<nlQlll 8'lvet Olla
VC 2 ll•Nk-•y o.nn11 Hibdon. CebflllO 8Utll VC 3 Cepl 81uoQO t.t•ke lll;tke
Santi lktb6<• SelllnO Club; 4 IW!leh. 0ouo
C•1'1190lil 8a!D04 YC. s O un L-ana
JOlln Wike llalllF Corinthian VC
US SECRETARY OF STATE TROPHY
(P141'1,·Al I Sage Oenn<1 C/loete long Bead\ YC. 2 Metlln. 1411lk Scholleld. LBYC.
3 Wlnlerh1wk. 01y/Meteetl llCYC. 4
K11hmendu John Landon, SOVC. &
A""*"• Roge< MeoGregot. Lido I ... YC U 8 SECRETARY OF NAYV TROPHY
tPHl'IF·ll -I f'lyln9 CIOuO. hn Devl1.
S•l'I• 811bera \IC. 2 Comedienne. Ce:
8u1ger1, South-••" \'C. 3 Ceumar. Bob Oaln. MIHlon Bey VC, 4 Sage. Fted =•· • ~481c 8MCll VC, 5 TOfctl. Albert GO~ERNOR Of' BAJA CALIFORNIA TROPHY (PHAF·ll -1 R•••l•llon. Ill
Fo1dlenl, \/oy1Q_1n vc. 2 Tilft••. Woody
Selldefl. ll111e llhlpl Fleet, 3 Cllocolate O
Hefti H1lllnQ, 8ael 8Hcl'I YC, 4 Flfecr111.'
Pat Glulet. Yoyege<I VO; II Biu.Rockel 111,
BIN lll\ltoct., llal~ VC. GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA TROPHV
(PHllF 0J) -\ Second Hill. Peter
Joilnetone, B'/lboe YC. 2 JaMI, J eck Setellel4, 8111'11 Monlcl YC. 3 S~.
Jolln o.n.mate. Yoyagwe YC. 4 Joyride,
Lee & Rlla Kiley. 9-' 8eacfl VC, 5 S..
Shell. f\lclletd HanMfl. CBYC CITY OF NIWPOl'IT BEACH TROPHY
(PHRF-HI -I Oullo. Gao•(ll N•lll Aneeep1 YC. 2 D1nOellon. Rob Grlllln,
l BYC. 3 L.e!1ACY. Cati• I Virginia Gege, Mont•.., 8aY YC. 4 P..agw, Aon T-. N1vy YC, 5 Avlll'lll 11 Fted MIMlo, v-VC • -•....--
CITY OF ENSENAOA TROPHY 1l'HRF·F)
I A91tyrntle. Mency Hvlc:Nneon. __,
HWbor YC. 2 Runewey II John & ~ Wle.,_. l/oylgefa YC. 3 Molly Muldoon
Gordon He n11n. Wlnd1emme1a YC, 4
0....19'. Ed Wellt. Cll41ornle YC. S T•ll
Oordo. H.-tPtlca/Pu1Cll. 8CYC ENSENAOA CHAt.tBER OF COMlolfRCE
TROPHY t PH!IF-EI -I Vend•I. L••
GOf OOfL llllll Slllpe Reel, 2 Hugle Too. JWrl
& Karen Nugent Balooa YC. 3 Miier Time.
Olvld t.tlller. ~ YC. 4 lllue 11-.
EUQene Penne41, SOYC, 5 01 .. 1 Eecape.
14emlllon 8tocllen, K14YC EMIGH FAMILY TROPHY (Pl4RF·D) -I
Hatalrl . 1'10111< Ludwig, SDYC, 2 SMll. Ken"•lll Koci\, Pacific Corlntn:en vc. 3
WlnlOfM. Suton/Scllmoc:ll. An-vc. • RoDln, Rick Reynoldl. SOYC, 5 Cell
PejatMI. C.,, Laat. Voy9(191• YC CONVERSE WUROEt.tANN TROPH'r'
tPHRF-Cl -I Bolder. Pelat1on/Voblln,
PCYC. 2 Pe111pllone, Jecl< Woctdhull.
Ceillornie VC. 3 LIC:l<ety 59111, OIQenl\ardV Platt, 8CYC. 4 Squall Line, Ao_, L-d.
C1p11tra"o Bey YC. 5 Rainbow, Don
OllllllOfl. LBVC
CLlf"F CHAPMAN TROPHV (SORO) -1
Gambler. Dlc:k Sewald. LSf. 2 L.Jrtc. Cy<M
T 1mm1dge. SOYC. 3 Redline . Ye•non M11~11on. YYC: 4 Wtnd1wlll, Cho•o•
Cn111on1, ,.._ YC 5 Helur•. Moy.,,
L-Wf//l/ICoMt YC PAESIOEHT OF HOS.A TAOPHY (OflCAI
-I A""''" JolW> 0-, ANiC11P9 YC, 2 C•o11llre. Norll'len Oreee, 80YC; 3 F .... ~ ..... 0--.... YC: 4 Alla Cat, Don ~ Navy vc. 5 fJln
lowie ~.18\'C
HOSA 'i'"AO,HY (Flrll boat to 11111e11
elepMC) ti-) l>cMrbM 8'11111. loC> H .....
CTYC
.. OATlfll &INCJ.,Alll T"Ol'HV ~=:: ~ ............ -s.oa. ~ ~U MEMORIAL moPKV -= qAC-' ftd\I . ....,_i lllM) OouOle
TNi&AMN AS80CIA TIOH T!IOPMY (Arel
~ corNCMd ..... C>C1911N. ,__
Cf-SOYC, .-w YORK YACtO' ewe TAOPHY"'""
etn9le•llull divided ttg, el•P••d 1lm1) ~ ... aw. \ACet'. Dene Point YC. LAH~~ YACHT Cl:IJ9 TROPHY (Arwl
PHl'lf :::.::!.s ol9pMd Orne} seoe. Dennie o.o.te. Lan; SE.fl!ENA Tl'l'OPHY (Fltat 1c1>ooner.
00trocted time} lilatlg«, IECldle Welnbort,
~OA.. CALLE.AV TllOPHY (l'lfll PHAF ketctl,
elapMCI time) "-"el•tlon. 1111 Fo•dlano, V~V~YC. JIFF Di!'A111A TAOPHY ~hi club w1nn1n9 rnoet !foplltae) I Sen YC. 10.
2. \/~ YC. I; 3. LOfl!I ..... YC, 7, 4
BelOOI C, 5. 5 C.brllo ~ YC. &
NOSA SPECIAL TROPHY (Liii lloll,
~ -· LA ...... StepMnle Arnold. Cl\eMel"""1cla,YC
........ tndl c:-11:1--~· 100 -1 Merlin (Cl. 10 2. 2 8-1 (C).
101.S E_.(Ul, IU
220 -I ~(Cl 23t. 2 Mwlln te~ n e: > McGldl <Ct. n • 440 -I Mc011tnn1t1 (C). 61 t . 2
P...,._ (Cl. 53 7: 3 FlOrMr (Cl. SS I
uo -' --"if). 2'03.1. 2 Schultl IV). 'l Ol 1, 3 OuW1t 2 12.7
Mllp -1 ~ ... 13 t; 2 w.......,.
tlJ). '318.3 ~(U),4)91
, ........ -I HOIMd (Cl. t 510. 2 KrWI
tUI. 10;02. 1. a. °'111 (01. 10:14 0
120HH -1. S..-(C). t& O. 2 kMuQ
(C), 11 2. 3. "°°911-!C). IO 0 »OlN-l,r...(C).41.l.2 ..,_(C).
44.0, 3 VII• (Cl. 44.0. 440 ....... -t. Catone tlOI Met, 44.8. ..... l9MY -1. c:or--Mer, 4:08 o. K.J -1. ~trlla (U). 11-2. t Fon. (Cl. t-t: 3 .....,(C}.t-0 l.J -I fV..-(U). 1 .. 10. 2 Ireland (0).
It.to •• Jal (VI, 1 .. 1. TJ-t Jrertl\J)..,_..,.,2 ~
CCI. 42-4~, 3 1-.u (VI. -..0
l'V -'· tdWW8 (0). '"'°' 2. "°"""'""' CCb__!l.O. 3 ~CC). ., ..
--I~~). .... 11W., I . .,_ CC). 90-t, a. fllNldl 1. ~ OT -I ~ L 14M, 2 lt-.(CI.
1174; 3 -......c IOt4
................ T_I ....... Con!l.., (Nl41 dlll Zaino, e.2, dlll .,...._,
5-3, IOnl 10 "'*"· 2-4. o.i Trern. a.2. Slo<m
(NHI won a.s. 7-4. loet 2-4; won..,., K-1001
(Hl41 won 6·2, loll 3·t, 2·8. won I · 1
M0eraon (NH) loeC 2-4, 1-', o-8, 5-7
De-..
Read· ... ler (HHI NI M1tllef\·Le. t-0,
•1 . .., ~-a.1. a.z. Ryan-
~,,., (NHI won •1. W , won 8-3 ....
..._. ... 200 •• ........
Spicer (El dM TorNllin. t-0. dlll Gunter
t-0, Oel L• t-0, dlll Tong, t-0 ltown (El won t-0, 8-1 t-0. 8-0. e..v-!El won 8-3.
t-0. tl-0. 8-0, 0-.t (£) -1·5. w . 8-0.
8-0 0..-... -Allell tEI dlll v ... Yt. 6-0. a.2. clel
Abel-GrllNDer. 6-0. Ml, SanOcwel-~n
tEI won 7·5. 7·5. won 6-0, 8-0 ,_.,.,. y..., ......... _ • ........
L• (FVI o.I HarllNEll. Ml. clel -· Ml. Oel L•, l-0, o.I. Tfen ... 2. ~
tFVI won 1·&. l-0. a.t ... 3. Ouren tFV) won
8-3. 1-1, t-0, 1-2. ~ (l'V) won Ml. 1-1.
a.2.e-1 0.-... Wendret·Metl (FYI del Hgvyen-T11n e-o. a-o. o.1 UyeNt .. o·AoutU. e-o. a-o; Hollaman·~ (FV) won 8-2, 8-2. won
&-4,8-1
R49w 1''4, , ... , ........... 1''4 ........ O'Connell (E) IOFI lo G1111. 1·7, OBI
hdleoy, 7-1, del hfetund. W . 1091 lo w..-. .W. M. WNldier (f) WOft. W , e.2.
•2. •1. MOIOlflCO Cfl 1011t. M , -t-3. 1-3. • 1. ""'1 IE> ICll9t. M . -. •t. •2. •2 ....... W......... w..,_ CE! loe1 .. O.W-. OlMftPfM"· 2-1. a .. : -etlt w1111 OMd•
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1·4; Tetlne·M~• (I) def 8trOMMCll·
Petron.I ~-I, 1-2: Oetl>04 ...... tll (II ... ....,.,.~. e..a. ...
LEASE A
1913
COUIAR
FOR
PER MONTH*
Leasing lan't right for
• everyone, but mat be the
enswtlr to your ,_ car
Medi. l .. M a btand new
1983 Metcur / COUO-tor
S189.2& p..-month on a
dOMd end ...... w1th no
down payment and 38
month tr.-maintenance &
warranty. Come In and '*P
UI ftnd the tight IMM plan
lor you •
• . .
D4 Or Ooa1t DAILY PIL.OT /Wedne•day, April 27 , 1883
' /ti •. L ~· _, • Yo%011ss1onal ~ · F/ortst
~ 2915 Rea Hill Avo"u•
8ou1n Co111 O.lllOn Cenaer A 100 Costa Mtu
Diiiy Piiat F lier s
Clatalfled ada phone 642·~78 honor 111 Slone Miii 64 1 0810
~National
Mortgage Co.
Has tht-program ·' ou are l00Ai111' for:
WE SPECIALIZE I
TYPES OF:
ALL
Resident ial Loans
Industria l Loans
Gov ernme n t Loans
Apart m e n t Loans
Jumbo R e s idential
Delta
Delta Atr Llne1 hH
been voted the top·
ranked air carrier ln the
U.S. by re.ciera of Travel
& Holiday rnquine.
Reeden1 evaluated the
&lrlJ.nel ln auch areu aa
courteay of f•raonnel,
on-time arr val• and
departures, etfk:iency of
bagage handlln• and
ln·flilht food tervice.
The A tlanta-bued
airline finlahed first In
each category.
Reader• who
reaponded to the
ma1a:dne'1 poll took at
least one flight ln the
U.S. ln 1982. Twenty-six
percent of the
respondent. took at least
flve flight..
Financial
planning
seminar set
F.qult.ec Securltles Co.
wrfu OUR EXPERTISE AND QUAL IFIED STAFF
~E CAN HAVE A FINANCIAL PACKAGE
Is 1pon1orlng a free
aemlnar on the
advantaaea of flnandal
plannlng at the Regi.siry
Hotel, 18800 MacArthur
Blvd. In lrvlne at 7 p.m.
Thunday.
Geoffrey Dohrman,
vice president of F.quitec,
will be sueat speaker.
Topics wjll Include why
people loae the money
game, the value of early
plannfna, why it I.a never
too late to improve your
financial strategy and
what finandal planning
I.a.
TO SUIT YOUR FINANCIAL .NEEDS! .\' VU..•• PrOCJ"._ Are 511b)ec1 To A••ilablllty Aad C..111el
GARY ANDERSON
:\sst. \'ice Pre~ident Sale:-; \tanager
400 North Tustin Avenue • Suite 101
Santa Ana, California • 92705 (714) 541-2983
Toda~• Today's
Annual leld Annual Rate
•
10.783 10.103
--
•
11.123 10 .403 .
I»
Plan
Call Jeff Hamren at
851-1883 for details or
reervatlona.
30
MONTHS
5 Years
SAll~OLD GUAAANTEED HIGH INTEREST FOR 30 MONTHS TO S YEARS.
SAME OLD CHll!CK IN THE MAIL EVERY MONTH FOR 30 MONTHS TO 5 Y.UR8.
MM• OLO FSLIC INSURANCE GUARDING YOUR FUND81FOR 30 MONTHS
TOIVMM.
110 WIL~ llXCITING eNTEREST FLUCTUATIONS FOR 30 MONTHS TO 5 YE.AAS.
GaT INTO A WISftRN RDeRAL QUARANTUD RATE ACCOUNT. l NJOY
ftMltlttC INTIRUT AND TRANQUILITY, TOO.
(SUbstantlal penalty lor .. 11ywtthdrawal)
-------------------------------
Rllllll:IUITY 11111111 ~~-----·
NB builder promoted
E4wl8 O. S.1J1 of La.luna S..Ch hat been
appolnted vice pcwidont of Vllanov• Bullden
Inc. of Newport Beach, a 1•neral con\l'actina
firm 1peclall1ln1 In commercial and maJor
rHldantlal remodelln1 projec:t1. Saul1 fiat
previoualy 1erved with Hyatt Development Corp.
and Sunw•t Pacific Development. Inc. • • •
After four years ln the pJann.tna and ap-
proval phHe, Bear Creek, the new Jack
Nlckl111 Golf Community ln Temecula, 11
movlna into tho ftrat phHe of realdentlal
oonat.n.let.lon. The development featW'M 68 home
alt.el, 100 condominJwn 1Jte1, an 18-hole golf
coune delligned by Nlcldaua, and a IWimmlna,
tennia and clubhoUle fadllty, designed by Davfcl
Kl11ea and A..uclat.es of Newport Beach. • • •
CommerceBank ha• announced the
appointment of Peter R. Ramires u regional
vice p~ent of the new South Cout Regional
Office, located In C.O.ta Mesa'• South CoaatPlaz.a
Town Center. Ramirez haa prevloualy aerved
with Imperial Bank in San Diego and with Bank
of America in Loi Anftla and Vernon. ,-~-..
Pleaey Peripheral Systems Inc. o! Irvine
has announced a new agreement under which
Janaen A.uoclat.es Inc. of Sant.a Ana wW provide
public relation• 1upport for the computer
product. manufacturing firm. • • •
The Mlalon Viejo Co. haa retained Creative
Dealgn Conaultants of Costa Mesa for apace
plannlna and interior design of Its new design
centera located in HiShlands Ranch (Denver,
Colo.) and Miaion Viejo. • • •
Prealdent and Chief Executive Offlcer
Tbom11 L. Beradoa haa announced that the
~ NAauel Bank of Dana Point haa 1W'plllllled
the $10 million mark in total amei. ln Its fl.rat
four mon\hl of operation. The bank opened on
Dec. 16, 1982. • • •
Karen Le1ere hu been promoted to the
J)OliUon of ual.atant ~resident, operations at
Jiuntlngton National In Huntington Beach.
LeJere, who formerly served at operations
officer for the bank. a1ao has been a traininR
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
officer for Security Pacific National Bank and a
banking operatlona l.rwtructor at co~ and hilh
achool fevelt. ' ...
Jim Lel1bman, aalea mana1er at Sllft&l
Landmark Inc.'• all-adult community of
Huntington Landmark In Hunttnat.on Beach, baa
been named the company'• top producer for
March, according to Signal Landmark Senior
Vice President Don Scbala.
• • •
Clifton H. Jellk1D1, formerly with Pacific
Capital Corp. in Newport Beach, hat been named
general manager of Waikoloa, a 31,000-acre
re90rt community on the K.ohala Coast of the Big
Ia.land of flawall.
• • • Capro Inc. has announced the promotion of
DouglH TulUo to vice president of tales. Tullio
previously eerved as Capro's eaatem regional
sales director and was fonnerly with Mlcrodat.a
In Newport Beach.
• • •
Jody B. Henry of the Lee John8on a,ency of
The Bankert Life of Des Moines In Newport
Beach I.a a suoceaful graduate of a recent career
school dealing with medical insurance
underwriting, policyowner eervica, ~and
estate markets and other topics. Henry waa one
of 48 a,enu from across the natl.on attending the
~
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DI
Mixed earnings reports
from big oil companies
By Tbe Auoclated Pffti
Three of the nation'• leading oil companle•
reported flnst-quarter earninp today, but only one dl
bett{!r than w t year. Standard OU Co. of California
the natJon'a fourth largest oil company, ..Ud lta profl~
jumped 34.8 percent from a year ago.
But Phillipe Petroleum and Atlantic Richfield Co .
both reported lower profit.a. Phillipe ..Ud eaminp
were down 32.8 percent compared to the same period
in 1982, while ARCO reported a 14 peroent decline.
Socal's eamlnp were $310 million, or 91 centa a
share, Phillipe had proflta ot $129 mlllion, or 84 centa a
share, and ARCO report<.-d return. of $330.4 million, or
$1 29 a share.
Milk production up in U.S.
MADISON, Wis American dairy farms
produced 34 b1Uion pounda of milk dunng the first
three months of the year. a 2 percent lncreue over the
first quarter of 1982, the Wiscoruln Agricultural
Reporung Service reported,
UPI moving to Washington
NEW YORK -Uruted Pre98 International will
move most of Its world headquarters' operations to
Washington and some of lta business operations to
Nashville. Tenn .. this summer, one of the newt
service's owners las announced. William E. Geiaaler,
co-owner and senior vice president for planning, said
150 of the more than 400 employees now ln New York
would remain here
GM happy with detect ruling
WASHINGTON -General Motors Corp. says at
will be able to resolve complaints about all~ed defecta
in several mill ion a uto m o b ile engine• and
tra.nsrnisslons more effectively through an arbitration
program approved by the Federal Trade Commiaaion,
which voted 3-2 yesterday to approve a consent
agreement that settles 1980 charges that GM failed to
notify consumers of serious problems or defects ln its
cars. The automaker 's acceptance of the agreement
does not constitute an admission that it violated the
law or that its parts were defective.
Shaklee has best quarter ever
SAN FRANCISCO -Shaklee Corp. hu reported
the highest quarterly earnings in the company's
hlBtory, the result of a strong showing by ita new line
of diet products, company officials said. Net income
rose to a record $9.5 million. or $1.47 per shatt, for the
three-month period ending March 31. Th.at doubles
the $4.7 million, or 77 centa per share, reported for the
same period in 1982 Sales were $152.4 million, up 27
percent over the $119 7 million a year ago.
AMERICAN LEADERS
... .1 .. .. "' . "' ...
METALS
GOLD QUOTATIONS
SILVER
"•"-' a "•,..•" (Only tlally quot•I
112-2161* "°"-• ., c-·· "'°' _, .. CIO-.cl Mon ..
1 '2.2161* "°"-·
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
--.p -----~--' ... -......... ~
-__,,__ ---~=-_........ -,..
D• Ortnge Oool D~ILV PIL.OT/Wednad1y, Ap,11 27, 1983
Facing charges
A 1herilr1 deputy open1 the police car door for
Ginny Foat after the feminist leader returned to
New Orleaoa from Loe Angeles to face murder
charges from 1965. Her lawyer says he'll seek her
immediate releaee on bail.
John Davies rites today
Memorial 1ervicee were acheduled
today for John Hywel Davies, a
raident of Newport Beach and Palm Dlllert. who died Saturday.
He had been a reaident of Newport
Beach for 22 yean. Following hi.a
retirement from Hunt Fooda aft.er a
36-year a.>dation, he and hia wife =. who survives, retired to Palm
Alao surviving are two ION, John
Jr. and Gregory; five grandchildren,
and his brother, Peter 0.vlea.
Services were held today at St.
Andrew'• Presbyterian Church In
Newport Bea c h . M e m o rial
contribudons have been requested to
the Assisi.nee Leafue of Newport
Beach and Children a Dental Health
Center, 505 32nd St., Newport Beach.
Martin J. Murphy, 45
Servklel will be held tomorrow for
Martin J . Murphy of Se.l Beach, who
died Friday at the ap of 45.
He la aurvived by hi• wife,
I Maraaret. aona Martin J . Murp~Jr. and Wi.lllam J. Murphy; a da ter,
Janet M. Murphy; hla mother,
Murphy, and an aunt, Blanche Azua.
Rou..ry will be recited tonight at
7:30 at Duday Brothers Chapel, with
Maas of CbNtian Burial to be held
tomorrow at 11 a.m. at St. Anne's
Catholic Church In Seal Beach.
Interment will be at Good Shepherd
Cemetery in Huntington Beach. I : Murphy; broth.en Wi.lllam and John
Harland B. Jordan rites today
Funeral 9eJ'Vicee were held today sister, Agatha Atkins; three
for Harland B. Jordan of Costa Mesa, gnmdaona. Mike and Brad Nickel and
who died Sunday. M a t t h e w J o r d a n . a n d a
He ia survived :t,.~ wife, Teresa; granddaughter, Ashley Jordan. dauahter Lana N. and two eon.a. Services were conducted this
Sarle and Richard Jordan. mornina at Pad.f.lc View ~pel with
Ai.o 1urvMna are three brothers, lnt.ennent following at Padfic View
I· M:~~h;1·M:~~:·o,.;;:;.;, 90
Services are acheduled tomorrow
for Martha Marie O'Connell of
Corona del Mar, who died Monday at
the age of 90.
She ia survived by her husband of
66 yeara, Ph.Wp; dau1hten Jean
Struder of Corona del Mar ftnd
Virginia Milla of Rtd1ecreat; six
1randcblldren, and two great-
H"*" LAWf'-MT. OUYI
M0tluat\' • Cemet~t\'
Crerre 1orv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
~S554
1 tO Broadway
Costa Mes.a
642 9150
grandchildren. Alao surviving la her
brother. Claude Barbee.
Visitation will be held until 9 p.m.
today at Pacific View Mortuary
Chapel. Funeral services are
cheduled for noon tomorrow at Good
Shepherd Cemetery in Huntington
Beach.
1B.m=r f M IO#oWlnt PeftOl\e .,. OOinO
buW-N QlllllHA I001, 1701 WHtCllll
Otl\te. Newpott IMch. c.ittorn11
loll by l MoOenlel, 2011 I
Hunter L•ne. H11n11neton •••ell, Cellfor1111 t2t41
lherry McOenitl, 2011 I Hlinler L-. Hvnllneton leech, Cllltfornltl tH4t
Tiiie l>utlMN •• conducted by ~~~&Wile) L Moo.Ml Thlt llllemtnt w .. llted with Ille
Couiity Cleril of ar_,. County on April ,, ,..., ,,.,.., ..
,111>1111\ed Oreng• COHI Olllly
Piiot. At>t '°· 27, ~by 4. 1 '· ,..., 1184-H
mnnoue .... u MAM9 ITATUmWT
Th• following p.,1on 11 doing
bu.,_••:
8HO ENTEAPAlll!. 212
Huntington 81., •7, Huntington
8Mch. c. 92t4t
811010 lnowe. 212 Huntington St., 17, H11nt1n11ton BHch. Ca
92Mll
Thie bull-11 oondueted by 111
lndMduel· 8holo Inoue
Tlll9 1taltment WM ll4ed With the
County Cieri! of Ofenge County on
Mll'Ctl 1e. 1983 ,,,_
Puttll1hed Oreno• Co111 Di lly
PllOI Af>t 6, 13. 20, 27, 1N3
1807·83
ACTmOUe ........
MAim 8TAftlmlff
The tolowln9 ,.,._. -dc*lg buew-•: HUOHl!S' HOAIZON8
UNLIM1no. 2172 DuPont om.. No. m. irw.. Ce9lornle 12111 Oevld l!d•etd HughH, 447
Sennedo. ar.,.. ~ .... Je1nne Merl• HugllH, 447 a.1NM10. 0r9noe. c.Mort* neee
Thie ~ .. oon6ucMd by •
gener'll p.eth• ••. De.tdl!.~
Thlll ....._... -llild wfttl .. County c.ti of Or9noe Oounty on
Apr« 22. 19113 ~
P11btlllled Or1nge COHI Dally
Piiot, •• 27, Mey'· 11, 1~ •• ~
Ml.JC NOT1Ct
IWITa~MU , ...... ~ .,.,.,. . ._,
110 OP Yau ~!.i__OAY
"1tlNM'f .. --.,... .. y TA•& AOflO• TO 'aOTJ YOU ,.onan, rT MAY ... AY A...,.., IM&. 'I ... ,....,.....,.,.. ..
UTVM OP lMI NOCI •••••l'f You.,..:_u INOUL COWfAOT ALA
Oii Mey 4, Itel, al I~ '-"';:i 8UCKl~I ~ICONVIVANO• COM,ANV, • Cellfotnl•
eotPof•tlon, .. owly eppolnl,d
Tr11tl" 11n0et end p11re111nl O
DeM of '''*· dll1ed Jltf'NMY •• Ila~~ 21, 1112, it
hlll. NO. H ·OU111. of Olflol., Aeoordl In .... offlCe of tM CoufttY
fWofdlr of°'""' County ...... of CtlltonM. ...,... by JAMii
.-OY HAMH. en \llftlft¥~rled mM WILL llLL Af 'VILIC
TO HIGHf.rT llOOtl' f<>f' ~ .. ., lllM Of .... In .....,
~ of Ille Unhtd ltalwl .. "" front 011t1ld• entrance to tit• Conllnental HOl'l'le Loen Co.
t1u11c1n9. loc-.cl .. 434 ' !ld4I.
NwlfMllm. ~ .. rtght. -and lnt•WI _,.,..,._ to end now
Mid by II under Mid OMO of TtUlt
In the pr<»erty 1lt111ted In Hid
County end State deealbed 11 ..........
P•Oll 1·
"" undMded 11106111 ~ In encl to Loe 2 of TrKI No U41, In the City o1 coaca ..... County Of
Orange, Stat9 of Callfornla. • W
IT\8'I -ded In fklOll ~ 1. Page 12 of ......__ ..... In Ille oMoe
of th• Count~ Recorder ol Hid
GllSllfllD
CLASSIFIED·
INDEX
f 1 fltlct Yow Ad. Cd
642-5678
lttAl nu TE
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RENTALS
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
AllflltWN, m.ni...
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FINANCIAL ........,,,. ............ ~ ..
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.. !!. I m. . condo. s.ooo plut lq "· ... ,,.. N.1•1, .... 1~ ~m· 640·7•llO °'
'"1" • -C.U.... ltM -· :I • CD
Nice 2 •. Condo In The Monttoetlo1. only Nt.
500. lt0,000 down.
Webb Realty, 131·2170
AM or 416-104t ~vw.
Orange Co11t DAILY ~ILOT/Wednnday. Aprll 27, 1893 DT
Tl!f' mcrrket p/<H'<' 011 tile < >rem ~/<' Coas t 642-5618
Daily Pilot
Classified
Phone
642-~678
Mall the attached coupon to place your message.
Please don't delay -closing date is Thursday, May 5.
To order, print your Mother's Day message below,
allowing 21 letters and spaces per line. Then mail
coupon to:
GrMtlna• to Mom
Dally Piiot Ctaaalfled Ads
P.O. Box 1560
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
()(call
842-5878
(Private parties only, please)
Include lllustretlon: 0 111Ua1fetlon A 0 lllustretlon 9 0 lllustratlon C
Cllld type: 0 VISA 0 MASTERCARD
Cher~ Cetd It ------------=--------------
Cerd Expwetloo Date-----------------------
Ycxi inay cherge your Cluelfled M. 9e IUtl lo Include YOUI Cerd type. (Vlta/MutetCerd). VCM Cerd number, end the EXPIRATION DATE. YOU MUST INCLUDE YOUR TELEPHONE NUMBeR eaow.
I j 11111111111111
'
M ed tun mco mt of Dally Pilot fam1llt1
trcerd1 134 .t>OO a ,11ear Your ad rearhta
tht county's most alflu.mt bu11ing
auJience
~Mar.nab · Irv me
I
I R\DI ·1 I<)\. \I
~·1 \I I)
I V OWNER. Dupllel, ""'° ~ newly ,_, Midi •
Ir. tit le. ftplo. tt2 ..... ~ ..........
Ouldc ..... N0-740I.
llnml'
Penln1ula charming 4
bdrm. 2~ battl. Plef & I float. 11750 mo. 8111
I Grundy, Rltr, '1M181,
CAUTKJNI ic;r;u ... ..,.1111 ~ do not cweleally r.::;-... for tM ...,..
run O¥et -1n ....... t Ive . 3 Br ~.-~.l -··-~ •-11900/mo. Pvt vu--med l'Ullh to .. ttlll 3 Br .,.... }24 hr) pvt ..,-..
l!MtbMI hom9 '°' 1148, prof decocat9d oomm. aoo. can ~011 *-"l .. r pooi11.,,ni.. Pfin. onfr. .. AW' 551-0181
R&IM~
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DI Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Wtdnttday. ~pr0 111, 1H3
•
Attmm:
SlllJOB t i .. 1 . t . : I
SPECIAL RENT DlSOOUNT
on 1aqi bachelor apartments
in quiet, secure surroundings
(security guard on duty).
,., ca.ok t-. fllbnls
~ ADUWDl,US
~ BeauUtw NoNauon ta.ctl1t.1tl
~ a.. of lat Cl' iDd tJoor
~ ~ »Mtot.dlnrnNlrt
or *" baJoallW upttalrl ~ One blook tNll'melltnt ~
bUU,~M\aWU
pMamo.
.I. b *'DI OD oorJMP of Mui. llatbal'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOl /Wedneadey, April 27, 1943 D9
er l•e llre•l•r
$1.14 per day I "I IM ew.t/ c.,.... lntdttl h:fnlec ly4ntt1 ...... tu ft4tdM htl fmtn/ lm!n
1
.t ... u. _____ _
Al'N ...,, of \ICMlt loc*1, Oonorata: •mall or lo• ALI. ILICTNO -1111 U.1111 Homa l'WIWI. carpentry, 'adefa1ad Tu a.vtoa Mf111 ,..,.. ...._ m'I TILi IH8TAU.IO
n.t'•AU.-.Plir tor a •'" ~ ...._ Jobe. "•MOltf Old, ,.. OulM'I wortl, ,.., r...._ lpeolat~dml'ft/rHld oablnate. •l•otrloal, Homelofflea ~· 21 yre, uo. ~1. IM. bperlanoed a Pf'Ofae-AM lclnda. ~-o 0 "l.t.J • • P 9 · pl!O! w/NW, ....,...,2 14 IW ..,..., lndtcp/ malnt wv. 11 =~· tenolng. Don '1.....at bonded. fWa. Color _.. alontl. Vary r..-ona.ble iw.. John MIMMf1
"'Wl~ad -----1
---i CUM Cut 146-11'2 ~· ,,.. •· 131-14'4 14 Dew'•· Mott t10.t76 or P9t1 -.ott t Aldwd ,._for aill of yout pool C.Mlle Tie•°°" l lllllL ___ _J .. -~:=--:ic:::::-1 •-~ .. •·-•t •-....... ....____._a c.rp.ntry-Muonry ~ ott lut )'Mr'•· w111 Paino--"" tt Ito. nMde. '°' ••part -· w/IMUlll Wortl .,_ DAlY
Pl.OT
SBVICE
DIECTmtY
LoWlg&...,_.iblll "'"' --·~-.. -.._ ~""'"blna 1r1Wll .... 1~21. '"'"""" ~ vlol.oe11~6p.m. Qecwg9M1·1IOI...;. ,,... ....._ ,.,._. Y'd 'o' your waddt~e. th• .:::A'i': :1; ~twooo-Tlla __, 14 •PL., ... ,. ~ t e.m. If no .,_,, _______ _
C.M. 131.-a wtldyl eoouaclolil ~ & ,,... JI "''"'"° ....... r!I ... ....., ........ PLUM llaep ttytnt... '"' .....
Low,.._ Lovtng child oeta In my OI & guitar. IJ N JAP.CMU! GA"DINl!R WI DO ALLI fllooflng, PIO UTIIUnt lie. 4258~4 . .;~5 (114) .... lll •-,...._----...-a ~'!~=:·~ =::-:.~ "*· bpltpt Wala''" ::.1~0::r;~·.::n~· :=~,: ~~nP:O: ~-=~ ~ :~~: to yre ..,. POOi ..,.,, r• i• ;,;.~ • Nlkt. btd8 ..,.,._ Antlqw AM1ortAIHW ....... UI... AeM. ,.., 54M471 Int/Ell Pailtil& molcflng. !any come> ... ,,... e.c """'...,.tO Quaff~ orlentad. Call Cetrtf!!n. letel ,.,.. 91t. Ptoltup a dat, _.. ... .......... g~o:,~•~e:;~ Uon, malnt & repair. T ......
141 S30t tor lltlmat& lllamodat/Aloalra. oomm ... 6-Ma4; 9119131·1173 --laal YG" IMIYf Uc. 204618. OR!O 7S0-7075 ,,.. .... 24"' Nr'/. uc.14-111·------~---
Uo. IWIOTU & ..id. Uo'd, bonded: fantt ..., 1g!k ~loUe J..,.,_._ VAf· DUMP J088 ~~ ~ 1013. ART'S PAINTS 2a:st00 ... M2.80 Pvt Tulcwlng/ Aemed&81
DO IT NOW1 CHIMt...... tna. '°' •t. 552 .. 142 SPRI..-... IN0"'8-NllnAI __.,,, Madlng. t' • · ad9"'9
0
--'. & Small Moving Jobe ....,.,, .... ..., PertonaJ toucn. 10 yr1 l1!11abMM ~)6t2~n..,.,..._ .. W ..... - -....._... '" "'" ....... ".y• trtmmJng ...,._, Call MIKE Me-1391 aJIP, ,, .. eat. 145--9120 JD Hom ~
Yout ~ "°' ..... -blnat•. cablnel u. ... •• • ... OPENI!"'· AM r~alr1. Cultlvallng. f•rtlllalno. !l!!!uz LOCAL PAINT!" doll ~. kl1. Oii •• Tutor w/M.A. ~ for 8ervtoa Dlnloeoty teofng, beta & tormlca UO. aoeaet. "'9modal, LowHt rat11I ti yra M4-20t7 HAUL·MOVE·REMOVE 8~1<WORK: Smell jobl. CUiiom WOttt at economy ftne painting ... 5-0864 ,'9ndl, lpar1lltl Or~ ~ ~ 142.ota1 Add'ne & ~ c . M . LI e. d . Tom Johneon & Son· Do own ~[a~R1,... Newpcwt, Coat•~. rat••· ouallty a.aured. 1111. Cel and'/ ......at1 Ml .. !!, .. UI Ctgwlg 841 Hat .......... 567...wao work. 15 yrt 'malnt. & lrvtne. Reft. 076-3175 FrM•t. Dan 953.e721 ...... """..,,,,
---.M " .................... Oltl!Qa Door <>9ar•tort. lanclacaplng. 754-1"9 ,.._ __ ~6Av.U~~,..1Ve M•.,,..,.. l Stuoco: new l .. ,. ----· Hu~ ~all typea, T~ ...... p, .. c11• ... !=•-='"=II&::: ..._--,.--·"-~-Mnonty, plumbing, ~~:,."-,~dwar~t:.', Jim'•• ............... & Malnt ...,_......, ~··· -•5 -._... ............ ~ ... v "· ,,_ ... !!!!=!!!!! ~.!!!I ......, _ .... _._,... _""',. ..,., ........ __.. RAND , 842·7 ... 7 rapalf AM typea Quallty l INTER. R .. 1. rat11. UC 1411902 641--9734 • ~ ~
New a ~-""'* ~&....... painting, cerpantty, ttac. 2.U Nft1>C)ft Blvd. C.M. RMIOnabla & Aellable ·Haulln . c•··n·"P & trM Loweat ptlee. 831·2346 Fr .. eet. StlYe 5.47-4281 ' ' ~ 861·1041 -·· • Jerry &46-4413 dfywall. plannlng MMoa. 842-3490. ...8-1961 g ... v ..,. ~ ........ '*l*ltry. L !!!4'11,..!. ~I-...._ r~, 25 yr• 9JIP. IMU781 .. ..... ..__~_.-=::: trlmmlng, 110 min BRICKWORK: Sm1ll or ........ Nanoy'I Typing 8erv10a AIMlt'/lltdra ·-_, _,,,.,.... ~ -!! ~ 657-4271 Bob large )obi l rec>&1r1. 1 _ Fr .. eet. . 1381042 a.Mng all bullMIMI.
-.... --... ---,-.-.-.. -,-t IVff, partltlont. Lo "eall S~ tldM ELEC ColMGa Student with large ~ '9f1. 146-8512 F~~~Cwiml= l!uttadal lenlett 142·7180, 567·t1IO ... ..,..~ • !... --819¥9 752-1668 I ORYWAU TAPING OA e.s. 'Bob•1'646-8M1 INT1..,'af!!cPHACINTI,TIESNG truck, IOWUI rate, Cullom Brlelt·Slone VIU·MC Seott 546-93211 Sacratarlal NMcaa' ..__ ........... ........ _: .-nuu. N!MOOELS/FACE Uf'TS All T.nur.& Aoou9t6c I ""' prompt Thank you. Bloek-Conc:r•t•Stuoeo · .,,..-_ -• _ Toe> quellty. Low pnge. Cu1tom wood patio• "-eet. ~ f13..1!I03 ....... Atao home/cornm Im· Court. 7H-1178 Refs. Fr• aet. 5411-9492 Blackwatd• P9')erhang· lnG8 S..:· ele. F7~ ~ WE WASH WINDOW8
,,.. ... Lio. 13f·t348 dec*a a fenoaa. All oen'. DAYWALLIACOUSTIOAL mll r,rovam•nt1 & rep1lra, ... Ing & Removal. Qual. eft ............... FMt . Prot11•1 Ill AnUJt 11ome raoM-. ,,.. eet. AM p11.-1 Aapalr9 net. t ..,,., work onty. 41M-3ete lelu Quelty wen ~ :;;-~==::P.=:it:i'-~·~~RANO~~yy~ , ... !_;1~-oe22~!_ 8UO 562_96'2 , Toc>CJad/removad. Clean WINDOW CLEANING Painting_ Carpemry ·ABC MOVING· ,,.. 91t1mate ~nt1 om .. ., Pntnt Lot CUSTOM CAAPENTRY up. MW i.wn.. 761-3478 CARPENTRY Tiie . Aamoclel. Bonded Oulck. care1vi 8arVlcle Pkett111Pt I ~ WUTI "LAC 1t1e &.Nl*lil "'"
._... l1tlcl)I=., All typee. 20 uc ll!!tr!p1 L.ar:dacaplno-Yd Clnup1 F~.~~1=11 Uc. M2·7432/644-47t Uc. Tt3e048 662.()410 WIMIM 1,.1lallst fm t ~ SUNSHINE W1HDOW
8&S MpM 131 .. 1 PMJmbo ~14. ELECTRICIAN. Prleed Tr• trtm/~~•nt Raae. •t. by the Job or .... Cleaal.at ••• , --* ColoriBi~. 876-4018 A quiet llllC1 of N1• .. that CLEANING 142·114t ~eo•g ~ rlgtlt. frM Mllmate on tmgatlon Jim 561.()129 hr + materl1l1. Local ROBIN'S-C' .,.NING "'-t -··ff ... 26 'Plu / •-·•-your IMrCl"I bit .. may go John'• Window,............, & · Aleloomm CIDlt lenlet two-or emall JoOe. Tll ••--... ,.,. o.my 4ff..4810 aw .....,. .... ....., .. ,. ~ exp. tn ~ up 2 to 3 ""-11 high u Free ..._ 12 ;;;;.•
Uc. '417 '4a·1720 Lie 3Me21 873-0S!lt --. 8et'<lloe . 1 tftOroughly UC~~ ;;:,~353 PL.ASTER PATCHING ~ ~~ ,.,_ lnAlhe 640-1081
--------~ ' ....,, claen. . . Lfttn·tr....nrub lnttal olMn llouM. 640-08117 RHtUOCOI. lnt/elCI. 30 ·-· •vw .. ~,... re --------........... C04of bflofltanan. wht UC'D ELECTRICIAN TrM trim/~ 6 Jllrnr ~ HQllMl!aaplng STARVING COLLEGE ~Neat Paul S46-2tH you Qolng to 111 ltlll for--------
8A8Y81TTlHO Cl'Pl8 • 10" min. bleach. Ouel. WOt1t·Aeea. r.... Lawn INllnV~ eu.tom ber mtrrora -Vet; & auPOllea klduded STUDENTS MOVING . t*?lf not & "you woukl .... u. ..... llt• MyC.taMeeahomenrl Hal,llr/dln.rmel15;1"9 Tome31-6072/t73-7544 Ff9e•tlmate I droba door•. t~b l K1ttyS.1 .. t70 CO UC.T124-438 rD'l llllalnfonnatlononlOlar T'Ntailloontrectcnwflo
Vlolol'la Ma-6412 room 17.60; ooudl 110; RESID/COMM'LllND. C1ean-upal~ lhowar an<:I. Ola11 r lnturad. 841·8427 v.' ' 't.ASTOIHG -gy. cell Don Inman oerloml wart! over azoo I dw sa. Gulf' .... m. pet 20 ytt. Do my own WOt1t ~.,.,...Trim -~t. 520-0201 QUALITY CLEANING WATCH us GROWi . ... ..... ~... It # includl
ltD!91 odor. Crpt f'IPlllr. 15 yre UC. 2780'1. Al 14M129 FrM ..i. ...2.0907 with• PWeonal toueh p-•-a.t--"'"' ..,.,. .. (l1C) 111 .... ll ,:;::~,~!~: ~~:~r.,:~~ Liii iN I Hll :t_ ~:;: myHlf • Elactnc;lan: new l ,..,.,. Ralph Caballefo & 8one luftau BE'l'H 850-0833 uaump l45-12S1 lpiUl!n oenaad. U!*-.acS oon-
ao HeMum lelloofl9 dat. CARPET INSTAuATION All ty~ Low prlcff. Com.r.i malnt, oommt ***HOME REPAIR B~or~:nlng & •• ,..,. -~------1 tnc1ort ~ ao ....,. :'f.~~.~·y :J:.,~~.~:;i'· Uo'd~~=~-2346 :-va1~=~r': ~lo~~ 64G-~1e.b9ft.ln~an ~~h~~d:i;:r~ Pl..W.t ~:~'~. ~~-==:.=:
.. ............._ -oim=-• , ..... 1 Gd m... F,. •· Uc. 19t. ~aft. 4:30. Aemod. Kltttl ~2 For • ""* clean houee. local cwtornert. H 1w D <:::.1 141-1121 ~74. 842.eoG7 con~ MatY Grondla at _, ... ......., .,._ .. __ t/ C .. 11 Ch I d t Think y<>u, 983-4114 WATER HEATEA Spac:lal fH-(714) 56840M wtet: any
mltad: br1ght bouqc..._, ,_,,...... 41&449 w_.,,.. 831•7630 I A.....,. lllllJ, OAACl.A'S MA.INT. 9ldg :C... 8:,~·.J: .:.~ 4~r--••"" p•-Pool hMtara•Furnac:.a ....,. ........ ______ , 3:11on1. Contrector'1 a.. dey. 4f4:.71S10 c.w.it-MWll~ El.ECTRIC(AN ~-Reta ~1810 t.r1r pk." ~ry • .i.e. ,.._.,I -·-I Tiie l Maaonty: MW & ,... uo.n. Boetd. 28 W~. wort!. Uc. Lie. 233108. Small/I~ plumbing. 487~1 Juet Ilk• l'Nlg6C daMlflad Prompt. n .. t prof .. •· Drain• clMrad lrom 5. pa1r All 1ypea au.ltty. Civic Canter Plaza. Selllng •nY1hlng with • 1111057 Rob 547-2983 Jobe,~ 548-5203 OatdenlnQ warrtad, mow-turn• your unneeded lonelallo rat• 838-7149 · Miine from 116. Repalre F=r.e .._ uc 831·2346 Room .. o. Santa Ana.
Dally P11oe Clalalfled Ad Ing, edging, ra911ng, Horne ntpalrt. Sml !Obi 1tem1 Into c11h lrvln• guar. Evlwltnd NIN I . · CA 92101 . .. • llrnota matt• ... s.11 lhlngl ,.., With Dally Have aomethlng to NII? IWHplng, ,, .... 11. 01(, painting, etc. Mirror Claulll•d ad1. INT/EXT. CALL JIM, M&M CIMalftad Ada. your
II* call M2-5e78. Ptlot Wam Ada. Claatflad act. do 11 wel rna ....... ~7&41 Gary ~52n PTL 842-7887 •• .... "1-4NI04/842•9033 atop~ Dllnter.
HOIOSCOPI
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Tlaanclay, Aprtl H
ARlF.S (Mar. 21-April 19): You get what you
want only lf patient. persistent. willing to face facts
u they exist. Dia deep in CONteCtion with finandal recordS, tax or -license requirements. Individual
who makes prornim!s ahould be asked to put them in
writing.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): C.Ontract can be
renegotiated -your position la stronger than
orl8inally antidpated. Highliabt independence,
wekome mau.n,-and make new stuia in new
d1rec:Uona. Leo beli-you pt to heart of matters.
Avoid~~. llftma. GEMINI (May 2l-June 20): Seme of dtn!ctlon
rm be rtll~ -atick to f•mUtar ground, welcome
aid from an Aquarian, Intuitive flaah cou1d provide
amwera. Focus on lpllclal eervioes, attention co buk: mue. and a review of etnployment pcmibtlltia.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Look beyond the
immediate, open Una of commui\.lcation, accept
invitation to IOclal affair. Accent creativity, be
ready for a variety ol experiences and be open to
travel ~ Gemini, Sqlna.rtua natives play
,import.ant roles.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Focus on bluepdnta,
bulldina plana, bMk rwWcm and chance to remove
Umit,,ationa. Individual you aided in put Ls now
ready to repay, to return favor. Focua also on
public relations, pomible pertnerahip and marital
status.
VIRGO (Au,. 23-Sept. 22): Keep options open~
lnvest11ate vartoua poaalbllltiea, be aware of
potential Give full play to intellectual curiosity -
pin lndk:ated ~ reading, writing. Member of
opposite MX plays key role, could Introduce you to
exciting aabjecta. ~· LIBRA(~. 23-0rt. 22): Focua on 1>9yment1,
ooUectiom, p(lm1ble pu.rchue of art object or luxury
item. Genuine baraaln la available. You a.re on
brink of mapr di9covery. Article that had been
misplaced or st.oJ.en will be located. Another Ubra
plays Uy role.
SCOl\PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your poeiticn ls
1tron1. requett wlll be granted. tocua on
penooality, tpedal appearances, wear1Jl8 apparel. HJcblicht brt&ht cokn, come out of ahell, make
known your view in tped.fic: manner. Cl.eek With
Piloee.
S.AGl'M'AJUl.JS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Focua on
produieticD, aU1bmity, responl(bWty and chance to
Correct recent erron. You'll be oo.ncemed with
wtder areM. aicWf donal fundlna can be obtained and
you'll be encrx.npd to expand acUvida. ~ native plays by rUe. caRIOOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Element of
au.rpri8e workl ln )'OW' favor. Support received
from unorthodox IO\l.lft. lnvttatlon received to
a«ald dandeWa ftllletln& con.terenae. You'll be
ptOVkMd with t.hlide tnrormaUon. ~ Vfrlo ~~~0-J'eb. 18): Hlthllaht
~co inaQ new start. to \wain~ to rely upon your qwn e.pe111.&n-. w~i uu~
of reaCh will now ._ .... available. You1l 1-tn
ioucb with ~ creative lndMdual who will
help mMe llQoartut ~ PllCltlf'(Peb. 19-Mar. 20).: Family
rel.t~ In empMUed -put II rm.wed, rnuoh:.la ,~¥en.. Cona$ct bdwMn bOme and ._....,.. '"" ~ wm r.. l'edved. un-... ~ lt twftlliid, wtll ~ Of lmmenlt benefit. N:twww...._.,.
5100 111 Wu ...
•
HU
Side by SkM Nff1Q: Jdnt
cond. USO. &45-1433 or
56&-t3ee
Refrlg, 1250. W&IMr &
, dryer, 1136 each
1 D1llw1hr , 1100 .
846-684f
----~-----~ -··
Die Orange Ooell DAILY PILOTIWednetday, Aprll 27, 1983
ACAOSS 48 Gett tanned
1 Foul alt 48 C>Mtton
5 PtMMd 82 C~ht
I World: Pref. 61 ln1trument
14 Vttof\ 57 P90e tint
15 8wl11 rtwt 61 CIOU1.e
11 Perf<>nMd 59 Olty tllctter
17 Aloud eo Ruttlan guild
11 8candlnavlan 81 Thorough·
chef act er tar ..
TUllOAY'I
PUZZU80lVID
tt Lengthy look 82 Two of a kind ~ri-li+rl~"'"r;.t:;;WI~ IO~: e3Lager1 aun. 64 o..,ti.-
21 Belltti.t woman
23 Briee 85 0P9"1ng
25 Slipper DOWN
H l!ncountered 1 Pat!Wlt
17 Garment 2 Bog
2t Pop'1 mate 3 Harangue
32 Heroic 4 Harden
PQeml 5 Stone
35 Ooetrot. e.g 8 Commend• 3e Halt: pref. 7 Eng.
37 LCMWI' -compo..,
38 Oeek a Elk's kin
38 w .. ve 9 Ej«:t: 2 wd1
40 Edge 10 R.,atlng to
41 Tumult eight
42 Slmpfe tong 1 1 Utterance
43 High priest 12 Bare
,... German 13 Veraea
phllo.opher 21 Occupies
45 C(>ly room 22 Strike
1 2
24 Cabaret hoet
27 Stitt shoe
28 Rhythm
30 Falltoaay
31 Paraalt•
Infested
32 lnatud
33 Contalnef
34 UnrNOlved:
2wd1.
35 Profit
38 Cheat1
38 NonMnae
42 Washed up
MAGIC -MemberlNp !ft
exctu1lve N.I . ti~=
Qub. "°° Ind .... Clll M2""4S1.
44 Bend• down
45 Chic
47 Proddet
48 Bordered
49 Regular
50AM or FM
51 Exerci.e
52 Bedouin
53 Skin opening
~ And other1:
abbr.
55 -Scotia
59 War victims:
abbr.
~ •••
t
Can we afford improved schools?
School officials agree with 'mediocrity' report, but wonder where funds are
lb PHIL INEIDERMAN °' ... "" .......... State and )oca1 educaton have
reaci.d favorably to the c~•
U.t.ed ln a federal Nport call1Jll
for achool reforma to revene a
"rlaln• Ude of mediocrity" in
education. But they have
qu•Uoned where the money will
be obtalned to aupport auch
UJ>lradlf\I.
ln • report luued yesterday,
th e 11-member Na t lonal
Commllllon on Excellence in
Uucation, appolnted by the
lleaJan Adminiatratlon, called
for Jonaer achoo1 daya and yM.rll,
hl1her academic atandarda ln
hlah achool, tou1her colle1e
entrance requlrementa, more
homework and hi1her teacher
aalariH to attract aupe rlo r
lnatnacton.
California S c h oo l•
Superintendent Bm Honi1 Mid
yeaterday he a1ree1 wlth the
federal panel'• concluatona. He
11id the educational failure•
outlined In the re~t are
"probably wone" In fomla
than eome other atai..
Honla uld he recently
propoeed leglalaUon with similar
re form• auch aa lonaer 1ehool
day• and tou1her sraduatlon
atandarda. He abo endorsed a
cornmt.ion recommendat.lor\ that
each American student b•
requir9d to complete at teMt a
halt-year of computer science
lnatnac1.k>n.
At the local level, 8W Bame9.
auperlntendent of the Laauna
Beach Unified School District,
said aome of the reforms called
for In the report already are
beln& put Into effect. He lllid h.la
(See SCHOOL, Pase Al)
THI DRANGI COAST COAST IDITION
Prison time
for teen-age
felons urged
By JODI CADENHEAD o< .. o.itr ..........
Prop. 8
1nounts
in OC
By JEFF ADLER or .. o.itr,......,.
A Sacramento woman's slaying
by a 14-year-old neishbor has
sparked lel(islatlon -co-
sponaored by two Orange Coast
lawmakers -whic h would
require accused murderers and
rapiata under 16 to stand trial as
adults.
The bill is s ponsored by
A ss embl y woman Jan e
Moorhead, R Sacramento. lt 1$
co -s p o n s or e d b y As ·
st-mb ly w.-0 m a n M a rian
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, and
.Assemblyman Nolan Friuelle,
R-Huntington Beach.
The impetus for the bill was
provided by Jeff Martini, 27,
whose wife was rape d and
stabbed to death in 1981. Martini
said he was angry and shocked
when the 14-year-old defendant
was tried as a juvenile and aent
to a California Youth Authority
facility for the slayinl of Erin
Martini, 24.
o.ltr ................
Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa, which now serves severely
retarded patients., may house youthful orrenden if bill is passed.
~ Orange County supervisors
are dixoverlng, passage last year
of the Victim's Bill of Rights -
PropoaiUon 8 -has aent the cost
of · tloe In California aoe.rtng. /.:e Board of Supervisors was
made painfully aware of that fact
yesterday as it approved an extra
$800,000 to cover the cost of
h iring private attorneys to
r epresent indigent criminal
defendants.
The aame legislation, which
was to go before a key Assembly
committee today, alao would
require state hospitals such as
Costa Mesa's Fairview facility to
admit young prleonera who
cqmmit aerloua crlmea and who
are consldered either mentally ill
or mentally defident.
State hospitals now can refuse
such admiasions.
Man held
• j wel
.robbery
'BY STEVE MARBLE o< .. o.itr,... .....
A long, t.edioua aearch thrOugh
mug shots of former jill il
inmates led Ne wport Beach
police to the identity of two men
they believe took officers on a
wild, bullet-punctuated chase
after allegedly robbing a jewelry
shop.
One of the identified men -Art Anguliar, 20, of Roeemead -
was in Custody at Orange County
Jail today on suepicion of
robbery, burglary, kidnap and
uae of a firearm, police said.
An arreet warrant has been
iuued for the man'• younger
brother, Frank Angullar. PoUce
said he ia still at large.
The brothen, police alleged,
held up Clinton Jewelera in
Corona del Mar April 15 and
exchanged gwllhots with police
officera before jumping In a
stolen car. Offlcera pursued the car
through Costa Mesa. where the
d'*9e came to a metal-crunching
end at Newport Boulevard anCl
Fairview Rood.
One of the bandits, police lllid,
took off on foot while the .econd
commandeered a van after
forcing the owner out at
gunpoint. Officers said the
gunman plowed the van Into a
tree a short di9tance later.
ter abandonin1 the van,
clalmed the bandit broke
Hamilton Street home and
Mid a woman and her huabend
(lee AllREIT, Paae Al)
age 25, although the average
time aerved ia only 30 months.
last December.
Under the proposed bill,
known as AB 10, 14 and 15 year
olds may be tried aa adults. If
convicted of murder, aex crimes
or kidnappinl with death, they
can be sent to a CY A faclllty
until 18 and then transferred to a
atate prison to aerve the
~ .efltence. Under existing law, oftenden
tried as juveniles and tent to a
CY A facility must be releaaed by
"The kld g ot away with
murder," Martini ea.id in a phone
Interview from his Northern
California home. "lt'e bad
enough to go through IOl'Dethina
like this, but then to have the
system totally ignore you.
Hopefully, I can do -.e\hinc.''
He took hit case to Moorhead,
who introduced the legislation
Now, only defendants 16 and
older at the time of the offen.e
• -. •• , 1 ll\es you_. . 1r ~ !i·'·'
~'arn 8;rtTi Jay f j
_,.,_ -·
~ Vt>. li $ old!:' &q 3 e39s II!
J~, 1933
o.ltr .......... .., ......... ....,
Virginia Sullivan shows "Tweet-tweet Segunda" her special birthday card.
Her best friend's a chicken
By PHU.. SNEIDERMAN
Of' .. o.itr ..........
Virginia Sullivan'• pet turned 6 yean old
yesterday. The Fountain Valley woman
celebrated by placing a giant hand made
birthday card In her window and lnvtt.i.nl friends
over for cake.
Sullivan la proud that her pet comes hmning
al the mention of her name and "•~" when
she's hungry. In fact, the pet wont 80 to sleep
each night until she'• been fed a little snack.
Unlike moat house pets, Sullivan'•
companion allo pull food on the table.
Her netahbon may be aatlafled with their
dop and cata. but to VlJ'&i,rila Sullivan, there'•
no pet like a chicken. Y~rda)"a birthday girl I.I named Twee~
tweet SeiUJlda. 'nle "tweet-tweet" ClOl'M9 from
The Ra.mt are hopiq
that top clralt ehoiee
Erie Diekenoo from
SMU will blOllOrD iato
...... rupni .. Mck.
f>ale Dl.
the happr, sounds she made aa a chick, and
"aegunda ' ii Spanl.ab for second. (The fint
Tweet-tweet died.)
The giant bUthday card read, "Mama Still
Loves You, Tweet·tweet Segunda. Happy
Birthday. 5 yeara old. 683 eap. Atd} 26, UJ83."
Sulllvan, a retired Loa An1ele1 achool
teacher, admita that her pet doean't really
undentand the birthday tum. "It'• just monkey
bush"9I for the srown-upa.'' she aaya.
But she stands firm ln her belief that a
chick.en can make a treat pet. Tweet-tweet
spends the nlaht in a chicken hou.e located in the
family room. But durinl the day ahe can roam
free th.rouah the retddence and Into a fenced
yard.
"U people can mp a parrot ln the hou8e,"
(lee CBICKEN, Pace .U)
Robert Walde~ ••Joe
ROMl" oe TV'1 °Loa
C....t" 11-w, will be
l••..-.4 Sa ...... y •t •
IAPUNoelaoa
Play...-.Mlnhlar. ....cs.
can be tried as adulta, following a
determination by a judge.
"I think the bill is great," said
Orange County Juvenile Court
Judge Byron McMillan. "They
(youthful offendera)-have no
compunction about killing a
human beinf and I don't want
them back out there at 21."
Frizzelle could not be reached
for oomment, but an aide said the
(See PRISON, Pue A!l
The extra appropriation was
needed becauae many more cues
are coming to tria.l aa a result of
Prop<»ltlon S . That meana the
Public Defender's office la being
fora!d to decline defending many
more clients because of various
(See PROP. 8, Pase Al)
It's 'Crane City'
in Laguna Beach ' .. . .,,.
By STEVE MITCHELL o<.,.o.-,,...awe
The bulldozed blufftop on the
ocean aide of South Coast
Highway in mid-Laguna Beach
has taken on the appearance of a
crane convention the past week.
Heavy equipment. some of it
three s tories high . dwarf
workmen on the site, as well as
frequent spectators and passing
vehicles.
A apokesman for Beach
Construction Co. In Laguna
Beach aald the cranes are being
uaed to inatall 111 giant pillara
into the earth prior to excavation
for an underground parlcini lot.
One crane is boring 30-foot
holes into the 80il. followed by
another th.at installa a a1ee.l cage.
A third crane, called a concrete
~':fih (~~.steel encued
The reeul ting a tee l and
concrete soldier piles are
expected to hold t.ck the earth
when ~vaUon begins on two
levela of undeqvound parking.
Race pnimoter Mike Goodwin
plane a three-story, time share
resort on the blufftop property at
the hue of ~ Street.
Architect'• draWingl show 26
luxury, time-ah.are unlta on the
brick and redwood structure,
fronted by retail shops on the
Cout Hilhway level.
~ the shops will be •
public walkway leadln1 to a
stairway at the bluft. wbkh will
Firins up
dek'end to the beach below.
The project at 611 South C.oaat
Highway ia e xpected to coat
between $2.~ million aq.d $3
million, the owners aay.
-llDEI----
"' • Orari~ Oo.tt DAILY PILOT/Wtdnnday. Apria 27, 1983
Woes p i ling up
on councilman
BY R~ERT BAl\UR °'""" ........ 'rhe ad thln1~ ~hat hav•
happened to OU Hodp9 In the
tut 10 mont.ha or eo can make
lf'OW'n men ary.
What'• happened to the flrlt·
term We1tmln1ter city
councilman you can't find on lhe
1-t~lO ratlnj ecale. lt'1 down in
the minueee:
-~od H' brother Barclay
wu down and killed ln a
hole bar near John Wayne
Airport laat June. A coualn ls
racing \rial ln the shooting.
-Hodges and four other
Oranae County ttsldeni. were
lndkted thJ.t month by a federal
grand jury on allegation• of
conspiring to commit home-loan
fraud.
-Hodge. was the taJ'lel of a
mont.ha--lCf'I investigation by the
Orange County D istrict
Attorney's Office into allegation.a
of mi9conduct while In of flee.
But after a 1ummer, wlnter
and spring of dlecontent. there are indications that Hodges' luck
may be turning.
A deputy district attorney aa.id
yesle.rday that he couldn't find
e vidence to support criminal
charges that Hodges lied about
his residence or that h e was
reimbuned for trips he allegedly
didn't take.
Hodges said he feels relieved
and pleased.
"But my bones have been
picked clean. I'm havinl to prove
my innocence •fainst cra%y
charges. The shoe s kind of on
backwards. isn't It?" he said.
The 39-year-old Hodges -
deacribed in some circles as a
bright Democrat -said h e
intenda to hit bf.ck.
"I hope to file a defamation
sutt aptnat at leut one of them
next WMk. And I'm c• to
include about 100 John ."
He uid alle1edly 1ianderoua
ltaternentl were made about him
ln poUUC&l fllen and he beUevee
they he;d to fuel the DA'•
lnve11Up on.
0 Maybe 've thumbed my noee
at my detracton and have fueled
the controversy," he said.
"I believe I've been lnnovatJve
and progressive while othen
may be resistant to chan1e.
There may be a fear of the
unknown," he said.
"It's -well It's more than too
bad -that the crazies w ith
un1ubstanUated rumors can
Inflict such 'rlef at such an
emotJonal cost, ' he said.
Hodan said the controversy
over his trips for the city
developed because he
procrastinated on provldln1
receipts for all travel expenaee.
He's made an agreement to pay
back the money.
Hodges also claims that his
permanent residence has been in
Westminster all the time, even
though he lived temporarily In
Huntington Beach, he said, while
studying for his law degree.
While Hodges contencb that
"political crazies" swept him lnto
the Orange County distric t
attorney's inveatlgalion, he
profe91e9 to be an tnnocent victlm
of circumstances ln the federal
home loan fraud probe.
Hodges. a native of Eagle Pua,
Texas, denied allefations he
agreed to verify alse loan
applications ln the purchase of
homes in Huntington Beach.
PROP. 8 COST S. • •
From Page A1
conflicts of interest, board
members were told.
Also, the a c tual cost of
defending a client on a case-by-
case basis has increased because
the average number of trial days
has gone up slnoe plea bargaining
was curtailed as a result of
Proposition 8, Ule County
Administrative Office said.
8upervisor Thomas Riley
recommended the board
appropriate ~e $800,000 to
suppleme nt the $2.4 million
budgeted during fiscal 1983-8-4
for th e hiring of private
att.omeys. He added there is no
alternative.
8ur91an 100• ll,3H In lool trom a r~ on the 1100 blocll Of a91boe eoul•vard alter entering throu911 an unlodl*' Window n. ._ lrw:t.ldi9d • Olllnv
Ian. • l•l•phone Cll•l•r and •••••o ~
Sul the supervisors also agreed
that the board should direct a
l~tter to county judges asking
that they carefully 9CfUtinize the
hills subm itted by private
attorneys for their services In
these cases.
Riley said such a letter would
make the county judiciary aware
of the board's concern over the
eeca1a ting costa.
Supervi.1or Bruce Nestande
noted that the passage of
Proposition 8 "dramatically
altered" the manner in which
indigent d efendants are
represented. Passage of the
measure was a "very costly
it.em." he said.
eo.e-......,.. lndllClln9 a 1172 -•lno lfom Lo.-a Hlgfl 8chool, wu.......,
ffOt'I\ • ,.....,.._ on lfl9 200 -ot "4Jal• St,_ on Belllo9 A-.a PollcA MH1 !he
,..,.,_ -"" unlOclleCI
Costa Mesa
Tr-.. brolt9 Into a oental oflloa •t 300
Victoria tarly yeaterday •nd •tole =----c:alaAMon, ""'_......., ..
Huntington Bea.ch
A c.n••t., of nnroue oxide ("l*'Ofllng
O••" I WU f9P«19d ltOlen from I afled
acti--t 10 • """u.t'e olll09 on th9 5100
-of WlllfW A--TN .,_.. cerllaler.
dflerlbecl .. ""-!Ml tall, ... .,......, "'
1.420.
Amale~81'4•SJ-• .,.,.... on""'*'°" Of t.i,....,..
• tM 8r09dwl!y ·-· .... nw. ... of ..... Md dne ..
...._, 81 S110,-. __,.
ff B's Charles Thornpson
fights state cont.-ol
Cities fight arbit;ration bid
State inter{ erence in salary disputes erodins local control
Oran1e CoHl olf lciall are
marahal1ni their' fol'CH a1a1nat
propOffd it.ate te1l1latlon that
would lmpoao J.'<>mpuleory and
blndln_f arbitration o n
munic1p&J.ltl~.
Their main concern la that the
bill, introduced by state Sen.
Ralph C. Dll11, D -Gardena.
would wre1t control of local
matt.en from local offlclala.
"It would be a move In the
direction of 'Big Brother' and
control by the 1ta\e," eays
Huntington Beach City
Administrator Charle•
Thom peon.
The arbitration legislation
would mandate that economJc
disputes between polia! and fire
e mployee auoclatlons and
government official.I be turn~
'
over w an arbitrator for 1 final
d«lllon
Both 1tdH would have to
accopt lhe arbitrator'• rullna.
Aalemblymen Nolan Frizzelle,
R-Huntlnaton Beach, recently
me t with lead er. from
Hunttn1ton Beach, Fountain
Valley, Coeta Meu and Santa
Ana on the luue.
The c.-oruenaus, according to a
Frlnelle aide. wae that local
offlclal1 opposed the measure
becaUM they w.ould lose control
over local flnanoes.
The Orange County League of
ClUes allo la working agalnat the
legf.alatJon.
"l:xecutive Direct or Bob
HaakeU Mid the propoMls come
up repeatedly "and we have
o ppo1ed them fr om time
Immemorial "
HulLeU •Id he belle-ftn the
leplatlon wu a form ol payoU
from the polit.k:iant to poUce and
fire uniona for their support and
oontributlona.
''We (the Je~_aue) have been
wrtUnc and cawna officl.a.1.1 and aeneraUnc oppotJtlon," he utd.
Thompion Mid hJa chief fear ls
that the leat.lation would put
Important f(na.nciAJ ded.1lona ln
the hands of an oui.tde party,
who doesn't know about city
fl1cal condition• and,
furthennore, may not care about
them.
He aald that current collective
bargalnifli procedures have been
"very satisfactory."
Hearing• on the propo1ed
legislation are ICheduled by the
Senate Finance Committee for
May 2.
SCHOOL CRISIS. • • Top .N e wport, CdM
s tudents honored
From Page A1
diatrict la malung its curriculum
more demand ing and has
lncreued the number of math
and lclence classes required for
graduation.
He said additional math and
science classes are beinB
demanded by the students
themaelvee.
"The biggest class we have
now in the high school la the
physics clasa," Barnes uid. "A
number of years ago, that was
not the case."
He added , "I'm entirely
pleased with the content and
thrust of the report, but the
mystery ls where the flnancial
resources to make these
improvements will come from."
L ocal educators noted that
California is now near the bot1om
nationally ln education fundlng.
"The state Legislature is going
to have to !IQuarely address this
problem," said Frank J . Abbott,
superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Union High
School Distnct. "it's not going to
go away."
He agreed that students are
anxious to take more math and
science courses but said it 1s
becoming diffic ult to f ind
teachers qualified in these
subject&.
Abbott said he knew of a
recent UCLA &aath graduate
who had just entered the job
market. He said the high school
di.strict would have started her at
$1!5,000 per year. Instead, ahe
took a job with an aerospace firm
for $24,000.
U the current level of funding
continues, Abbott warned, his
district may soon have to cut
courses Instead of increasing
th.cm.
Thirty top scholars from
Newport Harbor and Corona del
Mar high schools were honored
at the 22nd Annual Scholarship
Breakfast today at the Newport
Sheraton.
Elizabeth Susan Phillips, a
Newport Harbor student, was
presented with the annual Agnes
Blomquist Award, given to the
top female student.
The awards ceremony is
sponsored by the Commodores
Club of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce.
Irvine Compan y President
Thomas Nielsen was the guest
speaker
Students honor~ were:
Deborah Gardner, Daniel
Goodsell, Kristie Lea Hebler,
Daniel Kaufman, Marc Morosi,
James Myers, Elizabeth Susan
Phillips, Mary Katherine
Rabbitt, Edward Ranchigoda,
Marci Ann Scidmore, Catherine
Nicole Shea and Lisa Marie
Vincent.
ARREST . • •
From Page A1
hostage for more than four
hours.
The woman told police the
bandit made a series of phone
cal.ls from her home and finally
arranged to have someone pick
him up .
Police s tudent arrest e d . Corona del Mar High School
-Enc Cox, Sherman Dom, Julie
Jazayeri, Carolyn Johnson.
Colleen Kerrigan. M ary Ann
Logan, Daniel Pflaum, Philip
Reilly, Neil Ridley, Linda Robb,
Karl Wolff, Scott Woods, Todd
Wulffson and Gregory Wynn.
Newport detectives said the
man, at several points, mentioned
he'd recently been in Los
Angeles County Jail. Police said
they searched jail photos until
they came up with two men who
matched descnpuons proVlded by
Witnesses.
A Golden West College Police
Academy student who was
''highly thought of" has been
arrested by Costa Mesa narcotics
investigators on suspicion of
selling cocaine.
Aspiring o fficer Edward
Cornelius Palaoro Jr., 25, of
Fountain Valley and Douglas
Lavarn Austul, 25, of C.O.ta Mesa
were arrested Friday in the
parking lot of a Huntington
Beach apartment after allegedly
selling undercover officers one
ounce of cocaine valued at $2.400.
Coata Mesa detective James
Watson said Palaoro was a self-
Je•elry end a cotn colle~11on were
,_,.., , ...... In "' ....,"*", burglery "'
IM Huntlnflon VtMge compi9• Entry WU
-by k~ing OOet> t"! ltonl OOOt TN
10!9 .... ---led ., Sl.25o'
A 11174 brown .:C, • ,;., C-o cat ...
nioorled 11<>4en lrom the 16000 blOCll ol
TOtlCIM Clroltt TM aulo -lfaiued •• '2. 000
Orum• end en eleclrlc organ were
~ ,.,..., 1n • e-11ge bufgi9ry on u ...
11400 btOC11 Of~ lane Th9 IOM ... ..umeted at • I 500
Laguna Beach
4nlmal contrOI ~ -• 10 , .. urn 10
8rOOlle S!re91 8-:t> t<>Clay et '°"' ride in an
etlort 10 •-• deed ... oon .,,., wN ~ Y91letdey.
~ ........, et S200 wu atOlerl lrOt'I\ e
home In th• 1300 !>lock ol La Mirada
~terday. th9 -Mid.
4 WOt11et1 Wf'C> Pet1<ed ,,.. cat on For...i Avenue retur~ to llnd H 50 wOlth ol
dotNng ........ "°'" ,,,. ...._
sponsored recruit at the police
academy and was scheduled to
graduate June 10 from the
18-week course.
"He was highly thought of and
doing well," said Watson.
Both men were released from
custod y after posting $25,000
bail.
Newport Harbor High School
-Day Mari Bishop. Ellen Marie
Christiansen, John Doedens,
The older Anguliar. who is
being held on $100,000 bail at
Orange County Jail, was arrested
at tus Rosemead home Friday.
CH ICK EN CELEBRAT ES BIRTHDAY. • •
From Page A 1
Sullivan asks, "why not a ctucken?"
Not surprisingly, Tweet-tweet's ravonte
pastime is ea ting.
"Her favorite food 1s sour cream," says
Sullivan. "She likes nuts, sunflower seeds and
fresh grapes. She also likes snails. mosquitoes
and rues. ·
"She knows every sound in the house If l
swat a fly on the sliding-glass door. she hears it
and comes running."
Sullivan raised several other chickens before
Tweet-tweet, but her current pet has been the
hardiest survivor. Though Tweet-tweet is
getttng on ln years by chicken standards. she
continues to produce eggs.
Still. Tweet-tweet does demand a little more
at~ntion than some other home animals might.
"When you have a pet like tlus," Sullivan
laughed. "you can't get someone to come in and
chicken-sit."
P RISON T IME FOR T EENS. • •
From Page A1
assemblyman is concerned about
the growing number of young
offenders who are committing
serious crimes.
If approved, the bill would
only apply to a small segment of
the overall prison population,
since less than~ percent are now
under 16.
Only 36 percent of t he 5,800
pnaoners serving ume ln CY A
facilities were tried as adults.
according to a spokesman.
for homicide and 273 for rape
Sixteen of those serving time for
murder are under 16. a
spokesman said.
Or. Francis Crinells, executive
director of Fairview State
Hospital, said it is doubtful his
facility will be forced to accept
any criminal patients .
There are 61 inmates now
under Youth Authority
jurisdiction in state hos pi t.als.
Bergeson said she would be
willing to discwis any concerns of
Fairview officials with lhem.
An aide ln Moorhead's office
said authorities were concerned
lhat young o>ffenders needing
hoepital treatment are not now
receiving psychiatric care.
Clouds lingering A breakdown of the three
major crimea shows that l,!517
are .ervinl lime for robbery, 548
"I think that most of the
judges rea.llie that Fairview is set
up for the meven?ly re\arded and
the admi.saion of Individual.I with
crimlnal·type behavior would be
most inappropriate," he said.
"Secondly, we are in the middle
of an urban aru."
OppositJon to the bill hu come
from PTA organizations, Friends
Committee on Legislation, the
state Public Defender'• Office
and the California Peace Otficen
Aaociation.
•
Pittsb·urgh Paints
Spring
SAL'
&ALI
PNC•
SALE
PRICE
'14.9&
SATINHIDE
LO-LUSTRE
LA TEX ENAM EL
A4 • Orana• Coelt DAIL y PILOT /Wtdnteday, ¥'11 27. 1813
rrustees
flCCept
arson
ayment
• ocaine
eized
·n Laguna
A. Redondo Beach man bu
arnnd in LMuna Be.ch
an esttma~U@,ooo worth f cocaine y tleized from
la vehicle, ranae Covnty
bertff•a Department offtciall
atrtck M . Puaenhelm, 38,
H followed by aberitf '•
dell from South IAcuna and
up about 3 p.m. Monday
1 r they auspec:ted he wa1
narootics, said aheriff's Lt. yatt Hart.
Oftioen who eearched h1a car
llMllllKll"'".Y found 1 \.11 pounds of ~alne,, Ove ouncea of marijuana
$26.000 in CMb. Ha.rt aaid. P~elm wu·booked into .
pnin,ae County Jail en IUSJ)idoo
f poHeHlon of controlled
llUllStalW:. for aale. &fl bu been
at ~.ooo, Hart a&id.
u..,......
Cave explorer John Wisher (right) clasps
rescuer Tom Staubitz' hand after he and
seven others were pulled from a Kentucky
grotto.
Explorers relate
ordeal in cave
MOUNT VERNON, Ky. (A.P) -Eight 1pelunkers trapped
for three daya in a flooded cave aald they weren't sure anyone
waa looking for them until they heard the 90Und of diven who
finally reacued them safely.
"Until we d.Wcovered the pump nol.e and the diver's line, we
didn't know what waa goq on. There could have been no one
out there for all we knew," said Jack Hissong, co-leader of the
explorers..
In fact, thel.r disappearance touched off a masaive re9C'Ue
effort which Included divera from aa far away as Bloomington.
Ind.
By Monday night, the reecuen bad made contact with the
group, which Mod taken lhelter in another part of the cave from
the water that flooded the entrance. By noon yesterday, all eight
of the apelunken we.re free.
Jill Vedder, 24, the youngest explorer, wu the fint to
emer..s_e aro_und 10 a.m. from the Rockcastle County cave.
Though the apelunken were concerned about food and fuel,
Vedder, an advertising •ncy employee from Cincinnati, aa.id
"We always knew aomebody waa goln& to come in and get ua or
we would get OW'lelves out.''
Although Vedder wu only on her third caving expedition,
two memben of the group bad a combined 40 years experience in
~ cavea. They and othen in the group had viaited it
After the trapped ex:ploren moved to a ledge and atored
their supplies, they sang, told jokes and ate to pus the time.
"We talked to each other about positive t.hinga. when we
could expect you, when we could expect the water to go down
and for most of the time, people'• 1pirlta were up." Vedder told re.:uen. "We told all the jobs we knew and we talked about
food." .
"I literally ahook for '8 to ~ houn," aaid Mark Rocklln. "We
were getting cold, a little bit hypothennlc. A. lot of it probably
waa nerves, not knowing what was JlOing on outside."
The biggeat problem after tne lecond day "waa the
exhauatk>n ae~ in," Rocklin said. "I really didn't sleep but
about two bot.In.• ·
The exploren made up a aong· to the tune ol a country-
westem lament while nibbling at canned meat, beanl and apple
juice.
Shortly after noon Monday, the spelunkers made their way
to the inside end of the blodted passage, only 70 feet from where
reecuera were pwnpl.ng to lower the water. The exploren left a
note, which waa (owlet by ttvo divers who entered the cave
Monday afternoon, and by Monday ni&ht the group had been
found.
ce cream truck ban due?
'liird child's death renews call for prohibition
I
Ice c:remn trucla wu defeated by a 4-2 vote of the
Santa Ana City Council in November, 1aya the
coundl la at fault for the latest death.
"( told them then, 'How are you going to
explain it t.o the parenta of~ next child who gets
killedr We told them the blood would be on their
hands," Riley aald. "I bold them, council memben,
reaponaible for It .... They, children are
e xpendable evidently. Ttre blame for \he child'•
death resta aolely upon the City Council."
A 17-paae ordinance to regulate ice cream
trucks WU dnfted Dec. 27 by the Oty Attorney'•
Office, and may be oomkler by the City CoundJ
next month. The ordlnmce requ1rel Ice cream truck
operators to have a $1 mllllon liability policy and
reatricta the oolae from Ice cream truck ch1mea, but
doean't ban the truc k• from realdentlal
neighborhoods.
Councilman Dan Ort.et aid he wanta the
council to addre9a that ahortcomlna.
"There are other rt1hta beefde the riaht of ~le ustna our stree111 to earn a livinc Without
about the blk in " he aaid.
GOLDEN STATE UNIVERSITY
SAN MARCOS. CALIFORNIA --.... ...... ......,_,.,,,.
CrMll lelllll,WM ... ~~.Wt'ICIN
Sllldy l'lolr-
"M • nPFDt '9IOlr' :::..,---~ .............. ......_ ...
,_., ~ U1111t •u
1K:I ••-' p.111. Fil: U0.00 ..... ""'1dl •D AIM 1$4* ""Mm JOM
LOOATKJN: -••lllOnl JllflfJ ........ ....C&
CONTACT: ..... a...-~,::_o. ,,,_.
1Accused
freed in
, .
new 1ury
deadlock
A 29-year-old Huntln1ton
Beach resldenl walked away a
flw man at1er a Superior COurt Jury acqutued him In the
atranaulatlon-alayin1 of hip
20-)'91'-old ftanoee lut Aucwt-
lt wu the aecond trial for Val
Norman Owen, accu1ed of
aecond-dearee murder In the
death of Suzette A.dam•. A.
Superior Court jury CONiderlng
the aame cha.rle lut Febn&ary
wu unable to reach • verdict, forctnc the retrial.
The aeven-woman, five-man
Jury deliberated for two days
lollowln1 three weeka of
tesUmony, aocordtnc to Deputy
District A.nomey Tom Goethala,
who pr'09flC\.lted the ca.e.
He aid ju.ran indicated after
their verdict wu read Monday
that there waa inaufficlent
evidence on which to bate a
IUilty verd1ct.
Goethala called the caae a
"difficult" one because the
pro9eCUtion'a cue was bued on
clrcwnatantial evidence rather
than eyewttne. testimony.
Owen and Adam.a had been
livfnc topther in an apartment
near Oak View Park in central
Huntintiton Beach, where
A.dama body waa found atrancled the IDOl'1Unc of Aug. 2, acciordins to Police
'Ille jury aurtna Owen'• tint
trial deadlocked when it could
not re.ch a unan1moua oorwensua
on OWen'a in.nocenoe or degree of IUllt.
Both triah were conducted
before Judge Robert Poli.a ln
Santa Ana.
U convicted, Owen would have
faoed a 8e!\tence raJl8inc from l~
years to life impri8onmenL
vie for grants
Fourteen Orange Cout hJah achoo! 1enlors are among
thote oompetlfla in the Irvine Co.'a tint Leadenh!p Awardt J>rocram.
The atudenta are competina for $25,000 in acholanhJpa in
the oountywlde competition. Fifteen of a total 61 atudenta will
c!arn acholanhtpa, with five flnallsta wlnnlng $3,000 each.
Local students are:
ltevia Armtt~I•. Woodbrldae Hi8h School; Rebecca A.
MeFaddea, Irvine ffi&h School; 'Bale "M. Netur, Univemty
High School; Wllltaey Wlllte, Lquna Beach H1ah School;
David 8. Bartoa Jr., Huntmaton ~e11ch High School; Mary
Bella Beucllamp, Corona del Mar High School: &ea
Drukowafd, F.d.Won High School; Rebel L. Ely. Fatanct.a High
School; A.atlaoDy Blakemore, Los Amigo. High School; Doreen
M. Faaop, Ocean View High School; Wrleae Jay, Fountain
Valley High School; Kelti M. Jt•orey, Co.ta Mesa High
School; Jeff Sdlosaer, Marina High School, and Catllertne N.
Sllea, Newport Harbor High School.
•Nutrition will be the toplc of diacuaaion Sunday at a
meeting of the Multiple Sclerosis Support Group of Hoag
Memorial Ho.pit.al in Newport Beach.
The aeaaion -free to the public -will start at 2 p.m. in
the iKwi>ital'a rehabilitation gymnasium. Nutrition specialist
SaMra McKay will be the 1peaker.
For more lnfonnation, call 760-2353.
•Volunteers are needed to answer phones and arrange
placement for ani.mala at t)le LagW\a Beach A.nimaJ Shelter.
Lquna Beach baa a pro-life shelter and dop and cats are
adopte<f out at the Laguna Canyon Road fad.lity.
Volunteera would be aaked to work only four hours a
week. U you're interested, call Nucy Goodwin at the shelter,
497-3~52.
•The Mardan Center, which operates a day-school Prosram for children with perceptual, emotional or behavioral
problema, has been awarded a $100,000 grant from the Harry
G. Steele Foundation.
The grant will enable the C.OSta Mesa achool to establish a
loan ftmd for families of children Wl,.th learning problems who
are unable to receive other funding.
The echool haa been operating for more than 20 years.
Law and youth study set
Junior and aenior high achool
studenta from area 8Choola will
converge on the ~ County
Cou.rthOu8e Saturday Ioc a day-
lon« conference delving into the
relationship between law and
youth.
Sponaored by the
Conatitutional Rl1bta
Foundatiml, the confennoe la to
be a put of the annual X..w Day
ot.er'vance ln Orange C-ounty.
Thia year'• conference wUl
focua on the theme "Sharing
Ju.lice: The Role of Youth,"
accordlnc to conference aponaon.
Bealdea diacuulona of auch
l8aues aa crime, domeatlc violence
and nuclear anna. atudenta will
particip11te in a mock trial and
ob9erve aa a lie detector test la
edmlnJstend.
The Conathutional Right•
Foundatkln, which fa dedicated to
helping y oung people better
undentand the country's legal
and governmental structure, h.u
been conducting similar
programs alnoe 1963.
Saturday's law day conlerence
ia open to any junior or 8el\.lor
high achool-aged atudenta.
Reaervationa can be made by
calling Daphne Dennil at the
Conatitutlonal Righta
Foundati 213-473~5091.
GIVE MOM A NIGHTIE TO REMEMBER
SELECTED SLEEPWEAR AT
Thu Mot her's tny, 9Jv• a Qift that is both lovely and pr~ical ChOOl9 from • s;pec:lAl
group of sprin9 and summer de.pwNr from Acantu•tt• by Lans. Loll9 tJ\d short
poly/cotton WQWna in usontd noraJ prints and spring colon. Slaes XS. S, M & L.
NOW $12.85 and $15.85 valued 1t: s1a .. s21.
----------.......
OMPO ITE TRANSACTION
OUOUTIOIN,llfCUI•• ....... o .. , ....... , •••• MIOWltr.•AC"'' ,.. •OtTON 1Uuo1t ..... CINCINllAfl tTOCI IA(MA .. OU ..... •1100•UOeT Tiii ...... ANO 11101 .. lt
;
•
DAILY PILOT IW9dnttday, AprU 27, 1N3 N DI
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 1.08
CLOSE 1.20IAO
Mixed earnings reports
from big oil companies
By Tbe Auoclated Pre11
Three of the nation'• leading otl companie a
reported lint-quarter earnings today, but only one did
better than last year. Standard OU Co. ot California,
the nation's fourth largest oil company, said its profilB
Jumped 34 8 percent from a year ago.
But Phillips Petroleum and Atlantic Rlchfield Co.
both reported lower profits. Phillipe sald eantlnga
were down 32.8 percent compared to the same period
In 1982. while ARCO reported a 14 percent decline.
SocaJ's earnings were $310 million, or 91 cents a
share; Phlllips had profits of $129 million, or 84 cents a
share. and ARCO reported returns of $330.4 million, or
$1.29 a share
Shaklee has b est quarter ever
SAN FRANCISCO -Shaklee Corp. has reported
the highest quarterly earning• in the company's
history. the result of a strong showing by its new line
of diet products, company officials said. Net income
rose to a record $9.5 million, or $1.47 per ah.are, for the
three-month period ending March 31. That doubles
the $4.7 million, or 77 cents per share, reported for the
same period in 1982. Sales were $1~2.4 million, up 27
percent over the $119.7 million a year ago.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
WHAT NYSE DID
N~W YO AI\ tAIJI Apr 1•
ToO.y
Ad .. •nc.eG 1019
0.<h..O Si.cl
U11< ... ngo<1 •1
lot• t\i.uR\ )010
N•w fUQIP\\ I ..
tow 10W1o ,
WHAT AMEX 010 ,_, ,.,. . ..,..,.., as o.<11""' l .. Ul\CN"'Ol'G '°' .. 11-. ~ N•w lllQM u ...... -s
METALS ., "". t•d ..._
. ~ . . '• '· ·~
Pr it-. a:r1 lot' >U Miii
JO' I
....... ... y , ..
401 '" .... " )
S90C nonllrr-...... llftoee IOOlrY. ~--~~~ -'-. iiiViWJ u. ~ ~ -11 '5 I* pound. MY CorMlc '°°' month OIOMll Tue LAad -21 ~ Cln'-• pound.
Zinc -38 °""'" • pound. --..., TM -$6 Ml75 Melall WNI< OOfYIPOlll• lb ~ -71 Clnll I pound, N.Y ..._, -9320 00.1335 00 per ,. lb
"* ......_ -"',,. 00 ~ ""'chant
troyounc..NY
SILVER
M1ttdJ a ... ""''" (only dilly quOll), 111290 per troy ounce.
NY C-•· apot monlh c:loMCJ Tue1 , •it 330 per tror ounce
GOLD QUOTATIONS
I SYMBOLS
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DOW JONES AVERAGES
11.,. " 1110 a 1111 n 110t ... n u JO Tt"n IS Ull u ~I•
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AMERICAN LEADERS
t , 1'3.100 Ull,AOO 2,111,tOO
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