HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-18 - Orange Coast PilotThe president gets tough
with Congress and says
he'll veto any tax hike.
8torlft on Page A3.
We're earning -and
spending -more money
WASHINGTON (AP) -Amerlcant' pereonal Income rOM I
atrong 0.8 percent In Aprtl, the government reported tOdey. h
wu the blggeet on•month gain sin~ tut aummer. In addltk>n,
the Commerce Department r~rt aald pereonal conaumptton
apendlng rose a full 1 percent, an encou.-.glng llgnal that l&lel
and production wlll continue rtatog. ·
Today's report aald totaJ personal Income roee $20.2 blllton
to an annual rate of $2.879 trllllon In April after g .. nlng 0.6
percent In March.
Other detalla:
American worker•' wages and aalarlea Increased $12.8
bllllon after riling $9. 1 bllllon In March. lnt« .. t Income on
lnveetmenta roae $2 bllllon. Aprll'a total Income tranatatea Into
$9,741 for every man, woman and chlld In the United States,
baaed on a population estimate of 233.8 mllllon.
County realizing
driving. aI1Jbition?
May soon be car capital
By UREN E. KLEIN or ... o.ier,... .._. -~
11 current srowth patternl persist, Orange
County IOme day will be the car capital of the nation, expen. predJct.
And with that diatinction will undoubtedly
come more amos and more traffic, they uy, but
not neceaarily MQre deaths.
Recent atatiatlca from the California
Department of Mot.or Vehicla show that, juat •
you expected, the Golden State hu more can .
than anybody -l~,292,130 on the booka for
1982, to be e>aM;t. And Califomia.na dl'OYe 16~.
(See COUNTY, Pace Al)
THI ORAllil COAST coum EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Hot times
lie ahead
--... for Coast
By STEVE MITCHELL Of'hDl!lr ........
It WU hot today, it'll be hot
Thunday and Friday and, most
likely, ft'll be hot all weekend
long.
The mercury was expected to
top the 90-degree mark in inland
Orange Coynty for the second
day in a row today, with National
Weather Service forecasters
•)'in& 1t will be only a dellft or
two cooler Tbunday.
The heated air prompted
Oranft County Fire Department
offlclala to iaaue a red Uas Waminc for brush fire9 in h1gh-Nk areas of the county.
Department spokesman Jeff
Taylor aid a red flag alert may
be ilaued late today u atron1
windl and high temperatures
continue.
smog season is more than a
month old, but AQMD officials
say it's been one of the clearest
on record.
"We've gone deeper into this
year without a smog alert than
any other year I can remember,
and rve been here for 17 years. ..
Birakoa said.
He said the extended rainy
season, as well as controls o n
(See BEAT, Paie A!)
HB assails
marshland
'blackmail'
By ROBERT BARKER or .. o.-, .........
Orange County firefighters come to the aid of uvictims" injured in a ataged train wreck· .... ...__....,Lee...,,..
The alert would •end
firefighters and inapecton to
patrol wilderness and
undeveloped areas, lookinf for
flrea.
A hiah pressure ridge off the
coast sparked the aeuon'a tint
Santa Ana winds, and Tue.day'•
temperatures were just four
degrees ahy of a record 96
degrees recorded in Loa Angeles
May 17, 1982.
Angry Huntington Beach
officials claim the state
Coutal C-oounission haa Sonte
too far and that it'• time to go
to the mat. County learns from-'disaster' Prompting the hard
feelinp -Councilman Ron
Pattinlon calla it blackmail -
ia the demand by the coutaJ
con:un1llion atatf for the dty
to provide 1.25 acres of
manh1and It anothef-locatioa
in retun for pennlasion to line
a half-mile .ection of a flood
control channel
By PHU. SNEIDERMAN
"' ... o.llJ ..... ..,,
There waa a major train
wreck at the Orange County
International Raceway near
Irvine Tuesday. involving 100
victims.
The U .S . Marines,
California Highway Patrol,
county sheriff'• deputies and
firefighters, Irvine police, six
ambulance companies, eight
hospitals and Orange County
"" Tranai t District buaea took
part in the maaalve reecue and
treatment efforts.
Fortunately, the "accident''
was only a drill, part of a
Bullet train noise
'would he muffled'
By GLENN SCOTT °' ... o.llJ ..... ..,,
A high-speed bullet train
would pus through Irvine in an
etaht-foot-deep trench meant to
muffle noise, promoters of the proJ>C*!d system proml8ed Irvine
.reddenta Tueeday night. .
The trenc h w o uld be
excavated through most of Irvine
and 'tuatin, said Lawrence
Glllon. president of aponaorlng
American Hi8h Speoed Rall Corp.
It would Include room for
lowering the emting Santa Fe
Railway tracka, which Gilson
noted has been a city goal for
aeveral years.
Speaking at an Irvine City
Council study le98ion -in a hot
and stuffy meetins room at
Deerfield Elementary School -
GU.On said feasibility atudJee on
lowering the trac ks were
finished only last week.
Hla promile to foot the bill for
the multi-million dollar trench
project ia the first public worb
oomm.ltment made 10 far to any
community along the propoeed
Loe An1elea-to-San DieRo line
(See BULLET, Pase A!)
c:ountywide maim casuilty test
designed to determine how
local health and afety stafb
would cope If three aerioua
incidents occurred
simultaneously.
In addition to the train
wrec.k (staged with buaes), a
high-riae fire was simulated
in Orange, and a shooting and
hostap criaia waa enacted in
Buena Park.
"The preliminary
indications are that this was •
good exercise," said county
spokesman John Bushman.
He said the results of
(See DISASTER, Pa1e AZ)
J'
Dllllt' ..............
Bullet train proponent Kent Olson explain.a plans
t~ Irvine City Council. • · •
So far, the winda have kept
the smog at bay, but Jim Blrakoe,
deputy executive officer of the
South Coast Air Quality
M&Mgement District, predicts
IOlne unhealthful air beginning
Thunda\,;111~pedally in the Loa Anaelee area.
SOuthem California's spring
A ccord iif. to Fish and
(See MARS , Page A!)
Woodbridge group
• nixes apartnients
By GLENN SCOTr °' .. o.llJ ........
Several hundred resident.a of
Irvine's Woodbri~Je Village
objected Tueeday niiht to Irvine
Co. plan• to build luxury
apattments rather than
condominiums on two choice
lakeside location• in their
neiahborhood. 'nley aid the apa11ment1 will
reduce their property value. and
overload the area and vtlla1e
recreational facilities with too
many l>'Ople. It eeemed ev•ryone who
attended a three-hour meeting at
Woodbridge High School fiad
queatlona for Irvine Co.
repreeentatives. Some just had
comment.a.
"I want to see landowner1
there. I don't want to aee
apartment dwellen," said one
man who explained tbt.t be
bought hia home with the
undera..tandlng that
condominiuma would be bunt
neu him at the IOUthem end of
North t.ke.
He, like manv other apeM:en,
(See APARTMENTS, Pace Al)
--INSIDE-----------------------
ero-.. ... a lo1111lme f .. ort ..
fa Fraaee, _.DOW the new
..... ol Amerieaaa. A. ..ad.,...., daey ....... k
a1141 ... , aMwer lo
~-IM m1meat mealt. For red,_.#-•• p._ Dl._
.'
Good health
Take a look at 10me
of the lateit
developments in
medical reManh in
a 1pecial dJcest of
the batett health
aew1. Page AS.
Airins out
lo Ilia uaul Jocular
----· Aady ROOHJ taket
Naden ltehhMI dte
........ lio4era
airport to look at
people who own
planes. P .. e A6.
No stereotype
' A homoeexual reader pleadt
with Ann Landen 10 make It
perlec:dy clear that not all py1
Iii into one eut•lron mold u
the myth amoaw maay •traiihtl
would ha•e it. Page 81.
In the liaal part ol the Daily
Pll•t'• •pec•al eeriee oa ra~
•tall writer Joell CadeUead
talb ~ ,_,~ .. ., wlao
.._., they now ._,, Utta.
..._, tl9e ,.,.. -enept WI
liii Al a walld .. ,d .... ltomh ...... , .......... ~···
lnine High ha1 i11
CIF ba1eball
inleat.iont t.lly
defined alter
lopping hoel
Mi11lon Viejo
Taeeclay. Page Cl.
I
I l
l '
Orange Coeet DAJLY PILOT /WednMday, May 1e. 1983
~' \\.\'t. Continued stories
.
DISASTER DRILL • • •
Tueaday'a drill will be
eval\aated by. the county's
Ma11 Caaualty Incidents
<:onunltt.ee.
In the train wreck exen:t.e,
the volunteer ''victima" were
examined and tagged
aocon:iing to the eertouanem of
their injuries.
They were then
transported to eight hospitals,
including Hoag Memorial.
Costa Mesa Medical Center,
South Coast Medical Center,
Mission Community,
Saddleback Community and
San Clemente General. The
hospitAl citAffci wt>'N" tested on
how they would reapond to
an unexpected Influx of
eeHoualy'injured people.
Buabman said one aim Or\
Tuelday waa to aee how local
health and safety workers
would respond if they could
not depend on the help of
neighboring cities, which
were tied up with thelr own
emergencies.
"W e le a rned a lot
yesterday," he said. "There
are still a few things to be
ironed out in the system. But
that's what we hoped this
drill would show us."
BULLET TRAIN . . . • for the train system.
He c;a lled Tuesday's
announcement a "preview'' of a
• report to be released in a few
months on improvements his •
firm would undertake if state
agencies grant construction
I permits.
He noted the firm still must I see complete environmental
studies and mitigation measures I ratified before construction could
begin. The environmen\&l reports
I should take until the middle of
next year to complete, he Mid.
Several hud'(.lred Irvine
residents attended the session to
hear Gilaonl his colleague Nick
... Brand and <'the Fluor Corp. 'a
Kent Olsen discuss the train
system. Fluor is project manager
for the estimated $3. l billion
project.
I The meeting lasted four hours,
much of it taken up i.n a
question-and-answer period.
Olaen said the trench would be
eight feet deep in most cues but
the tncka would aft three feet
above the base, or five feet below
the ground level.
Landscaped berm• and
retaining walls would vary in
height· but would average about
nine feet above ground level,
according to Olsen. GU.On Mid
the tra.tna, sleeker thAn Japane9e
models, would ri8e about 15 feet.
Thus, the tops of the traina
would be at about the top of the
retaining walls, at times slightly
above them.
He added that the track
lowering would take place
concurrent with construction of
overpasses at Culver Drfve and
Jeffrey Road. The work would
take about two years, he aald.
APARTMENTS NIXED . . .
said he expects the company to I compensate him for hil la.. But
Keith Greer, the company's
co mmunity development
director, told the crowd he
doesn'l believe the apartments
will affect values.
The company is proposing two
separate luxury apartment
developments: The North Coves
would be 180 units on 10 acre1 at
the North Lake. The South
Coves would be 144 units on
eight acres on the leM-developed
South Lake.
Renta would ranae from $650
a-.. ....... ~., -the..,.. _.. teipor1ed 9lolefl T~. A 1*19 11U
a..., '**"" Ind __, by • c.mtoe m•n wu reponed tllllen frCHn llM 1500 block ol Pecltlo Cout HIQllwey. ll wH
Yelued M '2,000. A )'9low 181'8 Ford l'leete.
IMO wiiu.t .. '2,000, -~ IM_, "°"'IN~ d Odder\ W-~ and Peclllc ~ ~.
A t. -.0 wiiu.I 81 8380 -r..-ted atolen Tueadey from a Pontlec at•llon -oc>"I petlled on the MOO llkM* of O.lotd onw
to $950 per month for the unita,
which would include from 800 to
l,SOO square feet.
The company's apartment
propoul haa juat been submitted
at !rvine Qty Hall. It ltill must
go through a full public review
Residents a1ao are upeet that
their village'• rulea require
homeowners to pay $39 per
month in community amoclatlon
dues while apartment tena.nw
pay only $13. Some aatd inclumon
of apartments would cau.e the
$39 fee to go up.
Two boya -• arreatecl for lllleoecfty
ahopllftlnQ T~ 81 IN Tw09C tlore. *2 Ad•m• Ave. A 132 video 011111d09 wea
.-9d.
Costa Mesa
A 32·y••r·old Coal• M••• women IUC-1uly tougll1 off • _....,. ,..,...
.,iy tNa "'°"*'G wtlo gnbt)ed lier ..... walked a t 4 •.m. elong Sent• An•
Bout.tWd. POiee Mid IN -~ ,_.
PUIM •I IM men deecrlbecl .. • m•le
Muleen, M>ou1 30, -tnci • '*-~ oown. ....
Keltt\ J-HolmM, 20, ol T~ln IOIO
pollc• I'll• Volk•••g•n c•r wu 1101en yee1eroey .,..,_ trom IN penllne '°' et
8olllll c-.... !Mii. A~ -~ aOlln i.et lllgllt from • home along the 1IOO blOck of
Corllce ......
•
Trash fees going Up again in July
By JEn' ADLER o<NIWr ........
Truhy u it may aeem. the COit
of th.rowina It away 1n Orange
County wt1f be 801nl ue July r. Dumptna feea-wilfbe lncreued
at oow\ty Iandfilla, the Board of
Supervt.on &creed . Tueaday, to
more fully recover the COila of
1'UJUUn8 the county'• dwnpL
Superviaora voted. 3-1 to
increue the gate fee from $4.90
per ton to $6 per ton while the
fee at transfer atatiom will be
increued from $8.~0 to $13.20'
per ton. The $1 IW'Charp per tori
for hard-to-handle load.a will
rerbain the aame.
A pte fee at the county dump1
flnt WU inltituted I.Mt October
by the boud. Oranp County had
been the onir, county in the ai.te
that dldn t char1e cltlelf,
commercial baulera and the
publJc for ualna ita landfilla.
Wute management ~ationa
cost the county nearly $10 mWJon
in 1981-82, the laat year the
county plcbd up the entire tab,
said Ron Rubino, usistant to the
director of the county General
Services Aaency.
Acting over the objectk)na of
Supervttor Thomu liley, the
board adopted the fee acbedule
recommended by the county's
Waate MaMcemeqt Advisory
C.ocnmitt.ee, comP<*<f larply of
nipretientat1vea from the county's
26 citlee.
Riley oppoaed the action
becawie he favored the higher
fee suaested by the GSA staff
or aome IU&J"&ntee that the fee
·~ would be reviewed by the ~ next year.
In order to recover the full
oost.s for operattna the landfllla,
the county would futve to a.... a
fee of $7 per ton at t}\e dumps or
a $16.60 transfer fee, Rubino
said.
Ot h f'r r f'rnmmt!ndatlons
embnced by the boerd'• llCdon
include: .
-Autnorlation to c:ic.e the
Huntinaton Belich and Anahetm
transfer ata~ona in early UHM
once privately operated tramfer
stadona are open for bullnela.
-Authorliatlon to llmlt
tranafer atatlon service to the
public to one Saturday a month
at the Huntington BNch station
beginning July 1.
-Termination of the tee
exemption granted to d tie. for
street sweepinp. gram cllppinga
and tree trimminga.
OCC holding
Health Fair
A H~th and Wellneas Fair ia
being conducted through
Thursday at Orange Coast
College in c.o.ta Mesa.
Health care profeaiona.la will
conduct free work.ahop1 during
the fair. Health ~Ding ana
in1onnaUon booths will be •t up
OD the QCC quad from 10 LID. to 't p.m. The booths wlll offer
blood pre9W'e chec:b, vi.Don and
hearlna acreening and cardio-
pulmonary re1uacitatlon
demonatratiom.
--Deir .......... .,._...,_
Patty Sanders (left), Terri Guplil check William Steiskal'e lung capacity.
Lecture topics will include
venereal disease, aulci4e
--prevent.ion and~
The fair ia apo~ by OCC'a Student Health SerVice.
oC child weir are overhauled .: ~
M~RSH • • •
By .JEPP ADLER °' ............. Adopttnc what waa
charaeteriaed • a "wbole new
apprOllCl:i" to Orange County'•
child welfaN l)'Stem. the Board
of Su~ approved f. major
overhaul~. Child welfare and other aocia1
aervlcea Intended t.o ~
abu.ed aDd aeclected • will be reltnlctured wider tbe
plan to emphuae reunlfytnc
children with their families -
maintalnln1 the fanlly unit
under cla.e aupervialon, while
mln1m11.ini the court'• intrulion
Into 1uch matters, explained
county Socla1 Servi<* Aaency
Dittdor lAn'y LMman.
A 1e1 ... 1a1on HI ••• reporleel •lei.fl TuHd•Y lrom • llom• on CHeede 111
Wooelllftdee. ~ lwe*e OOWI\ • doet,te 981 In, polloe Mid
A 8Cll>OOI tltl ~ n.edey lfle IOlll •
dWtnll .._ Ille "'" " befMd ... ldlocl ~ et~ on Smollett• ~ a fiew oeye •·
Fountain Valley
,,_,. "'W> ~ -.,_,..by
• ~put ... ~ In• IOod and Ille -touncl d..o ...... In Ille t:~ • In .,.. tlOOO tla ct of Mt.
The overhaul WA! prompted
by new ltata an4 f~ law that
required the chances.
Supervlaora unanlmoualy
approved the plan. which cal.la
..for the hiring of 48 additional
employees. ~ thoee to be
hired are 21 workers and
10 aupervilon.
The COlll of the changea will
add f 1.3 mUllon to the a,ency'a
~ f« the coming flacal year.
Leeman aid.
Under the plan. child welfare
IOdal worken will be dlvtded
among four unlta: Intake
Servicea; i'amily Maintenance
In-home Servlcea; Family
Reunlflcation: Out-of-Home Care Service•, and the l'ermanent
~. AdopUona Servlce9 unit.
The Intake Services unit will
include a child abuse rellatry,
which will track all cuatoc:f y and
non-custody cuet of child abulle,
aa well u advtae and train publlc
and private aaenclea about
c'1ild-abuae law and reporting
prooedure9.
·HEAT TO CONTINUE ...
From Page A1
lndutUial pollution and auto
pollution. .em to have dellyed
the ~ ax-month polludon
--1. MM.nwhile, another fluke ln
world weather patterns has
resulted in mllllona of tiny red
crabe wuhlnc up on San Diego County~.
Called tuna crab, the amall
crustaceenl have crawled uhore
en maaae -hke a Ciant red
carpet -appenmtly to <lie, ay
marine biologi1t1 at Scrippt
Institute of Oceanqiraphy in La
Jolla.
Warmer waters attracted the
influx of crabs northward and
atrong winds have forced them
ashore.
Scientista have spotted the red
crabs from Mexico to central
California.
From Page A1
Game oWdala. the aection of
channel -near Slater Street
and between Graham and
Sprinadale streeta -ia the
habitat for aome fonna of
wildlife.
Because the concrete
channel would purportedly
di.lplace blrda and animal•,
the city la being aaked to
provide a aubatitute
environment.
Local officials aay the
channel work ia 1* •ry to
stem the major flood tbreeta
polled in the earthen ·channel.
''Thia la blackmail,"
Pattinson told his City
Council colleagues Monday.
Huntington Beach City
Administrator Charles
Thompson uid today the
water in the channel ia
putrid. "I think moequitoea
and a few field mice make it
their home. I don't aee how
anythlna et. can live there.
COUNTY COMING CAR CAPITAL? • •
From Page A1
330,000 mllea lut year.
Alto not surprising is the fact that Loa
Angeles County baa the most can registered in
the state -4,044,469 .
What may be aurpriaing, though, ia the
phenomenal lncreMe in car ownership in Orange
County, laid DMV spokesman George Farnham.
Since 1946, when Orange County waa
prtma.rlly an agricultural area with 64,697 cars
re1latered, automobiles in the county have
muahroomed to 1,198,397 u of laat year.
That make. Orange County number two,
next to Loa AngeJea County, in the number of
can reptered natioclwide.
DMV's Southern California regional manager:
It's only a matter of time.
Does that mean the county will become the
highway death capital u well?
Not neceaaarily, aay safety researchers at the
Automobile Club of Southern c.alifomla. Even
though regiatrationa and total miles driven
increued 1tatewide 1aat year, highway fatalities
and injury aa:idents decreued drastically, said
Steve Bloch, an AM researcher.
Fair and warm
But if Orange County continues to grow the
way lt h.u aver the yean, lt will undoubtedly
catch up to Loa Ana'elel. laid Al Whigham, the
So there ia no direct relationship between
number of cara registered and number of
highway deaths and injuries, he laid. And. if lta
any comolatlon, areaa with heavy traffic patterns
uaually don't have hi8h death rats -the can
can't travel faat eJ1iOU8h to cau.e aeriOlW injurie.
on impect.
Coastal
l'•lr through Thured1y. C:ontlnv.d warm. loc•I gutty
IMWtfl to llOftM8et wlnde In ...
l*Ow ~ Tilur9dey. HlgM 11 to M . ~ aa to 116.
Point C:Oll09"tlon to Mei1Jeen border and out to mllM: Ov9' oute r w1ter1 from Point
C:o11oept1c111 to ~ HICc*ll ...W,
,.. -· --12 to 20 llllOtl throuafl Ttlund~. a-a to• feet . ........,.., light. v•labte
..,. l'IWll end lnOl'N'lg "°'"' .,_,.. ... to"°'"' ... to to 1t 11"°'9 Tllunday ett.moon. .__ .... ,to~ ..... ~
--t IO 2 ...._ '* tlWOUOfl ,.,.,,...,,
Extended
forecast
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• ELEGANT STYLE
• HIGH STMNGTH ACRYLIC
• Dl8HWA8HER SAFE
• QRl!AT FOR EYE'RYDAY USE
• BOATS, POOL a DECK,PARTIE$
• PATIOS, PICNICS, HOT TUBS
• BRIDAL G~FT, WEDDINGS
1"4 oz.
Sale Priced
•&.88
letof4
nilla n .. w.......-,., • WlcMe • a Limited To Supply On Hand -Explr99 5/31/83
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Philadelphia Demos name
Goode mayoral candidate
By Tbe Auoclated Presa
PHILADELPHIA -W. Wi.laon Goode, a sharecropper's
90n 1'\0rninated by Democrats as their first black C8l)didate for
mayor, pledged today "to build a city for ever;'>ne" after
turning back ex-Mayor Frank L. Rizzo's bid for a political
comeback. Goode will face Republican John Egan in
November's general election in a city where Democrafs
outnumber Republicans by a 5-to-l margin.
Airline r eveals 13 incidents
MIAMI -F.astern Airlines officials, acknowledging 13
cues of oil-related engine failure in their fleet, have promised
federal investigators to improve maintenance procedures
following the near-ditching of a jumbo jet with m.i.ssing oil
seals. The National Transportation Safety Board was told
about 12 previous incidents involving similar oil lcm problems
on Eastern jets as it wrapped up two day'!i of hearings on the
near-disaster.
Senate upholds alien amnesty
WASHINGTON -The Senate has killed a move to deny
1lmllesty to millions of the nation's illegal aliens, setting the
stage for a final vote on the largest revision to immigration law
in 20 years. Senators voted 76-21 yesterday to kill an
amendment proposed by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., that would
have deleted from the' immigration reform bill a provision
granting legal status to illegal aliens who have resided in the
country since Jan. 1, 1980.
Cranston asks chance for EPA
WASHINGTON -William D. Ruckelshaus, confirmed by
a unanimous Senate vote to become head of the Envirorlmental
Protection Agency, is being sworn into office with a mandate
to restore the integrity of the embattled agency. Today's
ceremony follows by a day the 97-0 confirmation vote in the
Senate. However, that vote also triggered questions of how
much of a change Ruckelshaus can or is likely to make in
Reagan admin istration environmental policies. Senate
Democratic Whip Alan Cranston of California, a presidential
hopeful, said the public should give Ruckelshaus six months to
effect. real change-. . • •
Senate delays loophole tax vote
SACRAMENTO -The state Senate will wait until next
week to consider Gov. George Deukmejian's $466 million
loophole-dosing tax plan, although the delay could be fatal.
Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti, D-Los Angeles, said
Tuesday he would speed up the hearing p~ on the plan
but would not imitate the Assembly and try to push it through
his house in one day. Roberti acknowledged that delaying
action in the Senate could threaten the bill, but said that "one
of the houses has to deliberate the mues ...
Poll doesn 't bother Mondale
SAN FRANCISCO -Former Vice President Walter
Mondale says he isn't worried about his sudden plunge in a
Loe Angeles Times poll of Democratic candidates for president
in 1984. The nationwide poll reported that Mondale has fallen
from first place among Democratic candidates, and now trails
U.S. Sen. John Glenn of Ohio by 28 percent to 26 percent. But
Mondale told a news conference, "I don't think polls mean
anything now. It's too early. What counts is organizing."
Andy Griffith leaves hospital .
BURBANK -Actor Andy Griffith, 56, left the hospital
yesterday after three days of treatment for Guillain-Barre
syndrome, a viral infection of the nerves. a hospital
spokeswoman said. "He's fine," hospital spokeswoman Rhoda
Weiss said. "I think he felt some tingling for awhile, but I did
not hear that he had paralysis," she said.
Nicaragua seizes U.S. yachts
MANAGUA, Nicaragua -Three Amer ican yachts
intercepted by Nicaraguan patrol boats off the Pacific coast
were being escorted today to the southern port of San Juan del
Sur, an U.S . Embassy source said. The yachts reportedly were
intercepted off southern Nicaragua last night. A t.Qtal of seven
American citizens were believed to be on board the three
yKhts but their identiies were not available. A U.S. Embassy
aource identified the yachts as the Loreli, a 35-foot sailboat
from San Diego, the Pajaro Solitario from Portland, Ore., and
the Sacee from San Francisco.
Pope-Walesa meeting undecided
WARSAW, Poland -Pope John Paul Il's June 16-23 visit
will take him to Warsaw and six other PolAh cities, five of
them strongholds of the outlawed Solidarity labor federation,
aeoording to an itinerary released yesterday. The itinerary,
releaaed by Poland's Roman Catholic bi.shops, did not answer
two major questions: whether the pope will meet with Polish
leader Gen. Wojciech Jaru.zelski and the head of Solidarity,
L«h Walesa.
Support sought for Ireland unity
SAN ~CISCO -Ireland's a,mbassador to the United
States is urging Irish -Americans to support non-violent
unification of Ireland and Northern Ireland and he minimizes
the religious element of conflict in the north. Tadhg O'Sullivan
Mked aup~rt Tuetlday for the New Ireland Forum, a May 30
meetlng iri Dublin acheduled to bring representatives from the
north and touth together for talk.a about planning a united
country. Thole loyal to Britain will be welcome, aa well, he
t .. t•
Study lists shortage ·of workers
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -
The United States l.acka enough
trained workers to fill available
openings in at least a dozen
voe a tions ranging from aero-
astronautic engineering to X-ray
technology, two University of
Michigan researchers aay.
More than two dozen other
fields face a potential shortage of
workers, according to a study by
Malcolm S. Cohen and Arthur R.
·Schwartz of the university's
Institute of Labor and Industrial
Relations. •
Occupations with identified
shortages were aero-Ntronautic
en gin eera, computer
programmeu and 1yatems
analysta, electrical englneera,
industrial e ngineers, nurses,
e l ectrical and electronic
technician.a, physical therapist.a,
medical laboratory technologl.sts,
X -ray technologists, surgical
technicians, dental aasiatants, and
mechanical engineers. ,
The study results were based
on labor market conditions in
Reagan: 'Draw line
on defense cuts'
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Reagan, displaying a
toughening attitude toward
Congress over the budget, says
"it is time to draw the line" on
defense cuts and greate.r domestic
spending.
At a news conference Tuesday
evening, he also had strong
words for the Sandinista leaders
in Nicaragua: "They're not
minding their own business.
Tpey are attempting to
overthrow a duly-elected
government in a neighboring
country."
Reagan, after a three-month
brea k in formal news
conferences, told the nationally
broadcast session that Syria's
Arab aJlies are urging the
Damascus government to pull it.a
· troops out of Lebanon when the
Israeli forces· are-prepared ··to
leave.
In an opening statement, the
Duke lauds
residents
of Coalinga .
COALINGA (AP) -Awed by
the scenes of destruction, Gov.
George Deukmejian commended
resid ent s of earthquake-
devastated Coalinga for keeping
up their spirita for the ta&k of
reconstruction.
Surrounded by autograph
seekers who momentarily forgot
their own problems, the governor
told residents Tuetlday that moet
every st.ate agency is helpins the
cit y recover from a temblor that
measured 6.5 on the Richter
scale.
Walking through a devastated
eight-block business diatrict 15
days after the quake ,
Deukmejian said, "This
destruction is so awesome; it's so
complete. It just couldn't be any
worse, I guess."
The governor said he was
.. especially moved" by a bus ride
through heavily damaged
residential neighborhoods.
president said he had tried
s u pporting a proposed
compromise to cut defense
spending a nd raise domestic
allocations beyond the goals he
suggested for fiscal 1984, but this
was "to no avail."
Asked whether the anticipated
budget deficit of approximately
$200 billion would drive u p
interest rates, the president
predicted that "in the very near
future, we are golog to see a
further drop in interest rates."
Reagan is doing battle with
Democrats and Republicans as
Congr ess ~r1es to pare the ·
anticfpated·-deflclts. So far, he
has failed to muster a majority of
Republicans to su pport h is
overall budget goal.
The Democrat-controlled
House ha·s approved a plan
caHing for ·a-$30 billi(}n-tax
increase in fiscal 1984, to cut the
deficit.
1981. CondJtlons may have
changed 1h1ce the 1tudy was
made, Cohen said, adding that
conditions during that period
"are Ukel)f to resurface in
1983-84" aa the economy moves •
out of recession.
Among 27 other occupations
Identified in the study aa having
potentially inaufficient numbers
of workers were financial
analysts, paralegals, . petroleum
engineers .and a variety of health
technologists and technicians.
_, 71'1:...
President Reagan
toughens stand
Another 18 occupations may
experience shortages as tu
ecnnorny recovers, including
•cooks, 9eCJ"etaries, restaurant and
bar managen, bakers, tool and
die makera, electrtclana.
maohinists, and englneen.
The study listed 20 oa:upationa
ranked as the least likely to
experience ahortases. Among
them were machine operators,
carpet cutter&, millwright.a. auto
body repairers, carpenters, sheet •
metal work ers, butchera, and
embalmers.
W:ith~olding
all but lost
in House vote
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
lopsided House vote to repeal
withholdin g of taxes from
interest and dividends throws the
issue back to the Senate and
fuels a debate over the influence
of lobbyists in Congress.
President Reagan, however,
appears to be backing away from
threats to veto the r e peal
legialation.
Th.e House vote Tuesday to kill
withholding makes it all but
ce r tain that 10 percent
withholding will not go into
effect as scheduled on July 1.
By a veto-proof margin of
382-41, the House turned down
appeals from Reagan and
Democratic leaders and voted to
kill the 1982 law. 1'pe Senate last
month voted 91 -5 to leave the
law on the books but prevent its use. Senators now have another
chance to consider outr ight
repeal.
Storm hits
Rockies
with snow
By Tbe A11oclated Presa
A "freak " spring storm
brought rain and hail to the
Great , Plaint today after
dumping up to two feet of mow
on Wyoming and Colorado,
closing roads. leaving thousands
of people without power and
forcing some voters in Denver to
cast ballots by flashlight.
The mid-May blizzard aent 86
mph winds whis~ling Tuesday
through Fort Carson, near
Colorado Springs, Colo., making
travel impossible in some areas
because of reduced visibility.
As much as 29 inches of snow
fell near Wheatland, in
southeastern Wyoming. and
Interstate 80 between Cheyenne
and Laramie remained closed
early today because of heavy
buildups .
"l can just feel what it must be
like for those families to have
their houses destroyed like that."
Governor Deukmejian walks through
earthquake-ravaged Coalinga.
The blizzard deposited 23
inches of snow on Buckhorn
Mountain, 11 miles northwest of
Fort Collins, Colo.
The cold front was centered
over central Kansas today ,
bringing heavy rain, wind and
hail to south-central Oklahoma. Campaign fund battle Waged Elsewhere, cold weather
settled over the eastern hail of
the country and record low
WASHINGTON (AP) -The The legislation would put a for House seats could spend in temperatures were reported in 17
battle is heating up over political $90,000 limit on what House the general election and provide cities from Wilmington, Del., to
money and who will be able to candidates could accept from federal matching funds for Albuquerque, N .M. The mercury
spend how much for whom in political action committees and a candidates who abide by these dipped into the 20s in Michigan,,
the 1984elections. .-'f2~2~00c.;;.,i.;,OOO=.;;;....;;;:li~d-o~n:.::-w:.;..:.:ha=.:..t~n~orrun==·==ees.=...~~an==d~oth==e~r'-=liml===ta~.~~~~~~~-\Vi9oonsin_.;;;;:;.;..;;..'-==--and~-=Minn=..;~eso~ta= . ..__~-
The Democratic Party went to
federal court Monday to try to
block conservative groups from
spending millions of dollars
pushing for President Reegan's
re-election.
Republicans are ready to file
legialation to take the lid off the
money parties can spend for
candidates, and the National
Conservative Political Action
Committee is gearing up a
cam pai gn against publi c
financing of House campaigns.
S ponsors of the p ublic
financing legi.alatlon say NCP AC
la plannina "an all-out a*ault"
on their bill.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
C*ftifUd G~moio1i11. A GS
THE PEARL
miracle of the sea
.
WHEN YOU CAN HAVE
WHATEVER YOU WANT.
OMEGA SEAMASTER.
These handsome examples of Swiss craftsmanship .u e
w.,ter-resist.mt to 100 feet. Precise Swiss quartz accuracy.
Mineral crystal. The two
w.1tches, ln yellow, .ue also
.ivailable with classic
le.lther straps.
l»A~......_ All-yellow (shown):
His: $525.00
We1re
Listening •••
What do you 1.ike about the Daily Pilot? Wh at don't you like"
Call the number at left and your message will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24·hour answerina service may be used to record let·
teri1 to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include
their name and telephone number for verirkation. No circulation
calls. please
Ancient mythology holds that the
god Vlattnu Ma{ched the bottom•
of tht eea1 looking for tM perfect
pearl with which to adorn hit
daughter on her wadding day.
Pearls were (and ar•) conafdered
symbols of love. happiness and
good luck. Whether or not th• ldee
of adorning brides with pearl•
began wtth Vlahnu, It 11 certainly
one of the moat wldety·tccept9d
bridal deooratlona nowadays .
Pearla 'seem to be th• netural
fCCompanlment tor wedding
co1tumet. Pearla flatter cloth ... and they natter complexlona. Want
another pMtl legend? The Ataba
held that r>e•rtt were forrMd from
dew drop1 filled with moonllght,
wtltch thWIJJ'-41 Into the ~n to be
aiwatlowed by OVttets. The pearl It,
of coune. formed In the.._., of the
oyettr when a coatlnO call•d
NACRE la ~ by the OVtt9f to
t urtound an lttltant, auoh •• a artln of Mnd. 8uoCMdllla layett Of
fhlt aubatan~• form the pearl.
Oultur•d onrlt ere formed the ..,,. ~ .,_. .,, artlfto&lf WfttMt,
Hers: S4QS.OO
Leath•r strap:·
Hls:~7S,OO
Her~: $350.00
842·6086 .. Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST Dilly Pilat
Thom•P.HeleJ
Publi.her and \
Chief Extcu11Ye 011\oe<
Reymoftd MecLMn
Controhr
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All otMf depertmen .. 142-4121
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r>e<Mfttlon OI COPV•'Cllll OWnil
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~4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
Solon to dedicate senior center '
Congressman Claude Pepper
will vilit Irvine Saturday to lend
hls considerable preatiae to
dedication ceremonies for a new wtna of the Irvine Senior Center.
Oraanizers of the event -
whlch includes a ribbon cutting,
box lunch, tree planting
ceremony and banquet -are
clearly pleased that Pepper,
O.Fla., agreed to appear.
Jim Felton, ch.airman of the
tenior council and the one who
arranged Pepper's viait, cAlls the
Bay .cle aning
ge ts results
Dick Kust (bag over
shoulder ) and Linda
Koluvek h a ul off j ust
a sampling of the
litter and d e bris
taken from the
Upper Newpor t Bay
during a spr ing
cleaning. The
cleanup last weeke nd
was organized by the
state Depa rtme nt of
F ish and Game and
Friends of Newport
Bay.
HBhospital
aids lo~al
charities
con1re11man a "national folk
hero" for old people. He aald
Pepper la the congreaional voice
of 1enior citizens.
Pepper la acheduled to give a
speech at the banquet on the
status of seniors in the United
States, with a discuaaion on
recently passed legislation on
Social Security.
Admission to the 7 p.m.
banquet at the center la '50 per
person. Proceeds will go toward
the center's operating expenses.
Eleven charitable organizations
have ~ived checks totaling $3,-
525 from Humana Hospital
Huntington Beach (formerly
called Huntington
In tercorrununi ty .)
The organiza tiona were
selected from among more than
30 agencies which applied for the
gran ts by an advisory panel
consisting of hospital
representatives and dvic leaders.
Receiving awards were
Huntington Beach Community
So far, 100 aeata have been
reserved" many by Orange
County-bued corporations.
The aenlor center. at 3
Sandbur1 Way, haa been
expanded to Include more
meeting and office •J*le u well
as a faraer kitchen . The
improvemeni. cost '284,000, of
which the city pa.id $®,000. The
remainina money came from a
st.ate parKlanda fund created by
voters last year.
The dedication ceremonies will
Cifntc;-L .Y.N.N. -Love Your
Neigh b or N ow (H.un tington
Beach); Boys and Girla Clum of
Huntin gton Beach-Fou n tain
Valley; Oak View Benevolent
Fund (Huntington Beach);
Hun tington Beach Council on
Aging; Assistance Lea1ue of
Huntington Beach .
Also receiving grants were
Mission Suc:icetdul for Multiple
Sclerosis (Huntin(t<>n Beach);
Harbor Area Adult Day Care
Center (Costa Meaa); In te rval
beatn Saturday with
entertainment at 10:30 a .m. and
opentna ceremonies, Including
· the ribbon cutUna, at 11 a.m.
The $3 per per90n box lunch
will be served at 11:30 a.m.
(reeervaUona are required) and
plantina of a •tar pine tree in
memory of center founder
laadore Schnelder will begin at 12:30 p.m.
People wlahlng to make
reservations ah ould call the
center immedlately at 660-3889.
House (Seal Beach); Hospice
Orange County (Laguna Hills);
a nd Comm u nity A d v isory
Committee for Special Education
(Huntington Beach.)
The grants range from $250 to
$500 each.
Hoapital Exect.4tive Dii:ector
Michael B. McCalliat.er said the
funds for the community grants
program were made available by
Humana, Inc. of Louisville, Ky.,
a national hoepital management
company
Red Cross plans
blood collection
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
Open D•ly 9-9; SUnday 10-7
Wedneeday Thru Saturdlly 5ale
The American Red Crou will be collecting
blood thia month at varioua locations throughout
the Orange Coast. Donors should be between 17 and
66, weigh at least 110 pounda and be in general
good health. Donations will be taken by appointment at the
follo~tiona:
-Irvine Unified School District, May 31,
1:15-6 p.m. Appointmenta 835-5381 Ext. 291.
NEWPORT BEACH
-The Centers Network, May 22. 10:45
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Appointments 675-2961.
COSTA MESA -St. Joachim C..tholic Church, May 23, 2:15-7
p.m. Appointments 646-7642. -Connell Chevrolet, May 31, 8:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Appointment.a 546-1200.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
-St. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, May
18, 2:45-7:30 p.m. Appointment.a 962-3292.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
-Fountain Valley Hoepital, May 26, 10:45
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Appointments 835-5381 ext. 291.
Daily Pflot money savers for
women include the Supermarket Shop·
per column. advertised values, coupon
savings and tasty recipes in Wed·
nesday's food pages. DlilJ Pilat
···~-··· .. _ ...... 1922 HAllOll &I.VD.
COSTA MISA -S4t-IU6
CORRECTION
In the ... re Mar 15th
•dwertlalng aectloit,
there I• an
adwrtfMment on .,...
4 tor 30~ to 50% ·off cuatom drapery fabt1oe.
cuatom blind•, and
cuatom woven woocla.
Th• •dverll••m•nt lnconecllr atate• that
there It alao 10~ to
50% off labor. The labor
I• •I It• regular price.
We alncarelJ regret thle
etror.
I Sears I
Do you deal w th Y?
LOANI? MO"TQAOl8? flNANCl 8? Thia 8d 11 f()( youl
If you don't want to mike
money. atop reading here
THE RIGHT COM91NATION to
tncre•H your 1hare of the
market -11 only one wayl
S.nedum/P1ge for the IUOHT
COM•INATION. Call 642-4321
---Flnanclal ---Execullve1 of the Orange Coa1t
Publllhlno Compeny.
~' ~· ~. ·~· "')\ ~
I f4 ~:! ~ '., -. I \\.
JJ.. .. l
... l -·1 · . •. ··.. ;; . L--r· (_,,
Career fair set
at school in HB
Coastline Regional Occupational Program and
Wintersburg High School and the Guidance Center will boat a
career fair Friday from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the quad at
Wintersburg High School, 17200 Golden West St., Huntington
Seach.
The career fair la a jolnt effort of the Wlntenburg Career
Team, Coastline ROP and the business corrununity to help
students look at the real world of work and to find out what
kinds of j6bs and careers will be available.
Participating at the Career Day activities are the
Huntington Beach Fire and Paramedics, Huntington Center
Chevron, the Travel Factory, Fashion Institute of Design and
Merchandising, \'eneral Telephone and Mercury Savings and
Loan.
Also, Security Pacific Bank1 the state Department of
Parks and Recreation, all four military branches; Viet.or
Temporary Services. Weatminlter Memorial Park, National
Institute of Technology, John Robert Powers, J .B. Rogers Co.,
Baker Computing Company, Sight.singer Music and RUl80's
Wonderful World of Pets.
For further infonnation. call Lind• Me•de, 848-1774.
Ice cream party planne d
Turtle Rock Community Park will hold its &ee0nd annual
Family Ice Cream Social and Movie Night Friday in Irvine.
The evening will begin at 6 p.m. when family members
can make their own lee cream sundaes, with all ingredients
provided. Cartoons will be &ereened until 7 p.m. Then the main
feature, "For the Love of Benji,'' will be shown.
Cost ia $3.50 per penon and people can register through
today at the park, on Sunn yhlll. More inlormation 11
available by calling the park at 752-6076 . . -
Anti-nuclear walk set in Irvine
The Orange County Alliance for Survival will hold its
second annual "Walk for Our Future" Saturday in Irvine.
The activities begin at 10 a.m. at the Wllllam Maso'n
Regional Park on University Drive with regiatration and a
smallrally. The walk will commence at noon, with participant.a
strolling through rural and residential parts of the dty.
The walk-a-thon is intended to raiae money for campaigns
for a nuclear-free future. Interested people can call the alliance
office at 997-9922 for more information or pledge aheets.
1~t)~ ~
851-8350 -497-4262
8.96YourCholce 10.48
DRAPERY CONNECTION
Cuscom Dra~ries Ere ....
. . . . For Your New Ouclook
403 SPRING SALE 603 ~
OUA MILL CONNECTIONS, DECOAATINQ EXPERTISE &
CONSCIENTIOUS SPIRIT EQUAL 40-80% 8AVINGd1
SENSATIONAL 8E.L..ECTION1 PAECtlE WORKMANSHIP! M-R.
-'-OWllT HTWAT91 AT TWR
Hawthorne Chrristian School
"For the Right Start in Life"
Join the Summer Fun a,. DA Y CAMP /I
GIVE MOM A VACATION
• Field Trips • Crafts • Swimming • Picnics
e Before-(are and After·care Available
JUNE 20th thru SEPT. 9th
SUMMER SCHOOL
JUL V 5th thru JUL V 2G1h
Today'• Dellgner larble-ti •n Ken~ Dolt•
Oellghttut dOffl fOt children over 3. Save .
•MQM! Irle. -.0. IM
Lovely Twlrly Curts .. larbl•'
With holr atyllng acceaaortea.
• Mol!el 1nC h9 IM
3.87Each 4.96Each 11.88.
lhlft 1uo1cen'11 Con
Mot0tlad mini-racers.
9.97
lporty larble • Dreom'Ve1M'11 Gk>mour on tl"te go tor eor~tfl.
Choice Of leauttful larbte • Poahtona
Fashion Fa ntasy•• or FaahlOn fun••..outftts.
'Mollellne •-O IM
IH 'N loy8' Clock
For preachooleu.
, • • • .. . . ~. ' •.. • • • • e ·, .. ,
-• Y04P Cholee
t l
. .
•
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983 Al
Skin cancer lin~ed to birth control pil.l
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Prolonged use of
birth control pills may increase risk of rontracting a
form of skin cancer, according to a study by a
University of California epidemiologist.
The study done on a group of Washington state
residents found that more women with a type of
malignant melanoma -the superficial spreading
kind -were long-term pill users compared with
women who did not have the cancer.
Previous studies had shown a weak link, or
none at all, between pill use and malignant
melanoma, potentially the most dangerous form of
skin cancer.
Melanoma accounts for 2 percent of all cancer
cases in the United States. Its overall survival rates
are higher than for most other cancers and depend
on how deeply the tumor has penetrated the layers
of skin tissue.
The superficial spreading type of melanoma
remains in the outermost layers of skin for a
relatively long period. When treated at very early
stages, the tumor can be removed by surgery.
The study was conducted by Dr. Elizabeth
Holly, an epidemiologist in UC San Francisco's
Department of Epidemiology and International
Health, and by colleagues at the University of
Washington in Seattle. It was published in the May
rug task force
~expands to coast
1~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Vice President
~rge Bush will head a new national system to
fight heroin, cocaine and marijuana smugglers on
~U.S. borders using military planes and ships, an
official BS100unced today.
Retired Navy Adm. Dan Murphy, Bush's chief
of staff, said the cabinet-level South Florida Task
Force had been relatively successful in reducing the
ltralficldng of drugs in that ar.ea. But he said
6ugglers simply have altered their routes and are
ving drugs through other states.
President Reagan asked ...Bush to expand the
k force inlo a National Narcotics Border
terdiction System, Murphy said. The system will
'divide the country into five regions with centers in
Leis Angeles, New York, Miami, New Orleans and l'E1 Paso, Texas.
Murphy called drug smuggling a "threat" to
the country and said Bush would use his influence
to fight the problem with U.S. military forces.
M urphy said Army helicopters, Navy fixed wing
planes and radar planes, ships and Air Force
surveillance planes would be used to help existing
enforcement programs.
' Murphy, former deputy director of the Central
llntelllgence Agency under Bush. also said federal
lintelligence resources would be used to combat
smuggling.
Murphy said the Florida task force seized 12.-boo pounds of cocaine ,over the last 13 months,
Gding raids in Georgia and Louisiana. But he
.ow1edged that agents have barely made
into the U.S. market, which snorts 40 tons
of cocaine a year.
"The amount of cocaine on the streets doesn't
~ to have gone down," Murphy said. "It looks
5e we might have a glut on the market of cocaine
m overseas_ We can knock off a ton ~d they
smugglers) bring in another ton."
MARRIAGE COUNSEL
By DR. E. C . G. INOE
JUST A LITTLE
DRINKING PROBLEM?
An alcohol!<: Is a petaon who can't control his or her
l(ltake -alcohol controls the person. Not all lleohollcs flt the Hollywood Image of a petson who
tpends most of the day In bars, or hiding bottles
around the house. An alcohollc does not have to be
obvlousty drunk all the time In order for drinking to
Interfere with aocial. business, physical or marital
activities. Alcoholism has been recognized as a
disease with severe physical and psychological
.111npHcatlons. Professional COYnsellng can help an
llcohollc recognize that there 11 a problem; help can
be effective once the Individual la put In touch with
the prOblem and becotn89 motivated to seek a cure. '•A little drinking problem" on the part of one
marriage partner requires a concerted effort on the
part of both partners In order to prevent It from
becoming overtly destructive. Groups such as
Akx>holk:8 Anonymous have a good record In helping
people overcome the problem, once they recognize
ilrld accept their alcoholism, end agree that positive
corrective action 11 needed.
Without the help of a marriage pa.rtner, many former
lleohollca would not be on their feet today.
Brought to you as a public eervtce by TM Cope
Center, 2790 Herbor, Suite 201, Coate lleH
lill-7732.
Paid Advertltement
LUSEHOUER
PRONSIL
The Committee of -4000 wu ma.t encouraged by
Mr. Bren's remarks t ct the pre11 last week
obncernlng the leeaehotd luue. Hl1 1tated goal
"to resolve 11 In a ·manner which 11 fair and
4'1tuttabte to both the lealehotders and The Irvine
Oompany" echoee the longstandlng motto of the
Committee of 4000. At tut It appear• that both
91lde1 1hould be working toward mutual
.-solutton of the lea1ehold 111ue. Mr. Bren
fWrther stated that "my goat 11 to develop Atograme which wtn lnture that no leUfh<>lder
WM have to leeve hie reekMnc8 becauM of hi•
........ With the eplttt of Mr. 8ren'11tatenwrt In
a program wa1 cMflWred to The lrvlne
eny that wlll ln9Ur• the ""'1ual Kh~t
ctMrty defined goel -a taJr and equitable
ton for aJI. We, 16ke Mr. BNn, antldpate that
program wlll re.ult In a letttement of the t'-11.,._ ._,. by the end of the monttt. With
r . Bten acrttv• at t,.. h•lm of The lrvln• iiftV, we .,. confident that com"1unlty
wtty end •91PO'....,. ... wtn be nlltor9d to
1rvtne eom.-w. "'*'·Md ontf then, can we ~to work ~to lneure the~ ~that our~ prodUCed
peel.
issue of tbe Journal of the National Cancer
Institute.
medlcaJ affairs. and A. Jay Block of Gainesville, Fla .. preventa a •
Dr. Holly, also with the Northem California
Cancer Program, found that more women with
superficial spreading melanoma had taken birltl
control pills for five years or longer.
ScienU.ta have found that the tendency to lower throat airway behind the tongue from
develop some types of arthritis la Inherited. F.ach beco~ blocked. Th.e blockage may cauae loud
person has genetic marken, a type of blueprint on-snonrll(, the doctors SBJd.
The increased cancer rates were even more
pronounced among women who had used the pill
for 10 years or longer.
the surface ol white blood cella. Apparently some of The maak la promoted for WJe by men. But
these mat.ken are the ee«is of dhteaae. ~ing a Berry said after he advertised for heavy •~n.. all
person SWIOeptibJe to certain types of arthritis. those responding were women fed up with their
"But having a certain marker ia not enough to mates' nolsy moring.
cause arthritis," said McDuffie. a former research
No effect was found among women who had
used the pill for less than five yean.
director at the Mayo Clinic. "Something must Laser works inside the body
transform theee substances, which lie peacefully on
cells, into disease-causing agents. The evidence The research group also found higher rates of
the cancer among women who were older than 30
when they bore their first child.
That finding. along with the link to birth
control pills, suggests that hormone imbalances
might play a role in supe rficial spreading
melanoma.
Arthritis prevention near?
ATLANTA (AP) -Preventing some forms of
arthritis is within the reach of research scientists,
the Arthritis Foundation said in its annual report
released yesterday
"The newest, most promising are' <If arthritis
research is the three-way link bet~n several
forms of the disease, heredity and al1\ infectious
agent," said Dr. Frederic C . McDuffie, the
Atlanta-based foundation's senior vice president for
today points to bacterial or viral infections.
Arthritis, which means "inflammation of a
joint," refers to more than 100 separate diseases
that attack joints and connective Us.sues in the body.
Each has different symptoms and patterns and
requires different treatments. Together they affect
36 million people, including as many as 250,000
children.
Mask may eliminate snoring
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -A rubber mask
that fits over the nose and keeps a crucial airway
open could prove the end of noisy snoring.
according to the two doctors who developed the
device.
The mask, developed by Ors. Richard B. Berry
11>
23.99 .
22" 31/2·HP Recoll·
141.99
Smokey Joe
Grtll
14Y," dlomete< gilll wlttt ~kettle H~ ..
high, removable fold·up
legs Block
2.99
Clamp-on
Umbrella
Helps keeo the tun off vou ot ttte beach. porti
Your Choice Banana Chair Or Lounge
YOIJf choice ol stvrdy bonona po1lo furniture
Start Mower
Quality oonslNcied mower wtftl
14-go. steel d9ck, side dis·
chorge, Btlggs &. Strottone en·
Qlr\9, helgtlt odJu1ton ... &-tnch ffres and much mote. R\Jgg9d. rust-reslstonl lt9el ax.is Begin
spring wlltl 11\ls remcnoble \IOfue!
22.99
Hinged Hd with safely tolch. drain. tray.
BOSTON (AP) -A medical laser that searches
out specific colors can destroy growths inside the
body with pinpoint accuracy without harming
neighboring tissues, a study shows. •
It may someday allow doctors to r~move
birthmarks and even operate on individual cells.
"The major advantage 1s selectivtty," said Dr.
John A. Parrish of Massachusetts General Hospital.
"You shine a laser on the whole ussue. but only the
target is altered. We have demonstrated so far that
the target can be as large as a blood vessel or as
small as a particle within a cell."
Doctors are just beginning to explore the
possible uses of the experimental tool. But Parrish
said it may be used to remove large port-wane birth
marks and moles, destroy cancers Car inside the
body and even instantaneously repatr the workings
of millions of malfunctioning cells.
Foklng PGtto Table
Deluxe folding wood-grain ~
Deli Special ·· ,
!1.59
laked Mom • ChMM Sondwtchel
Delicious bolted ham and cheese sondwiches mode fresh dolly
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~range Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
.. ...
j\iansion politics
• waste our, t11ne .
George Deuk.mejian was probably correct in saying that i!
· tom Bradley, a Democrat, were governor and wanted to live in
the governor's residence the state built in Carmichael, tie would
be living, there now. Deukmejian, however, is a Republican at
odds with an increasingly partisan and petulant Democratic
Senate, and so he lives in an apartment house downtown.
Deukmejian is the governor of the most populous state in the
union and one of its most prosperous.
There is no point in trying to unravel or retrace all the
circumstances -or even the recent political bickering and
~ttiness -that brought things to this point. In the past decade,
all three of California's governors have. for varying reasons.
lived in quarters both inappropriate and embarrassing to th<:
office that they occupy and the people they serve.
In that decade there was hardly anyone whose vanity or
politics were completely innocent of complicity: Ronald and
~ancy Reagan's in designing the ugly, sprawling suburban "Taj
Mahal" that Jerry Brown refused to live in; Brown's in that
c;onspicuous non-consumption that led to his refusal and
ultimately to the Legislature's decision to sell the place and use
the money to buy or build another.
·Tha't plan -to con s t r uct a decent residence for the
governor downtown -still makes the most sense. But the
Carmichael residence exists now, Duek.mejian wants to live in it,
and the Legislature ther~fore ought to Jet him, wit hout
conditions. That will cost some money at a time when the state's
finances are very tight, but hardly as much as the current
bickering and pettiness is costing in time, ill will and
embarrassment. ..
The state should still proceed with the construction of a
suitable mansion downtown -and eventually get rid of the ~lace iri Carmichael -but for now let's let.the governor live
where he wants to live and get down to more important
business.
Reprinted !rom Sacramento Bee
• Opinions e•pre\!.eO 1n tne SPdte above <1re tno..e 01 tne Oa11y P1tot OtnPr 111Pw' e•
preS\ed on tn1\ Pdge are tno~ ol tneor a utnon .tno arl1\t\ Redder ,ornmpnt t\ 1n111t
ed. AOdre\S The 0 d1ly Pilot. p 0 6oa IS.0, (O\ld Me'>d CA 9Jo70 Phont' I 11JI
1>41 4311
MAILBOX
Stop garbage fees
To the F.ditor:
Last July, the Orange County
Superviaors voted to impose new
fees to cover the COl!lt of burying
our tras h . These fees are
scheduled for a substantial
increase, next July. When they
voted for these new fees, they
al!Jo voted to give themselves and
other top County employees a
pay raise amounting~ about 4.7
~the local inflation rate.
About 500 citizens became
outraged e n ough about these
~ons to fight the fees and we
now have petitions in cireulation. If we get 89,591 signatures of
people regis1ered to vote within
Orange County, the citizens will
t)ave the opportunity to vote for '· I
a County ordinance that will
abolish the fees.
Some of our petition
circulators are elderly or have
physicaJ handicaps and will not
be able to get many signatures, llO
we are looking for others to get
signatures. Those wanting to
help can call the Orange County
Taxfighters at 537-1543 and
petitions will be mailed to them.
The Supervisors have a
commission studying other
services for possible fees, 80 I
think it is important that we
ahow them that we don't intend
to have the benefits of Prop. 13
taken from us.
BOB DINSEN
Garden Grove
t M. IOJd /More fun?
Blondest of the world's
blondes come from Ireland, it's
said. But the most strikingly
beautiful blondes live in
Northenl Italy. aocordlng to an
ln!onnal 1WVey of international
airline pilots. Even so, the
Northern Italy blondes did not
win the pilot vote as the Most
Beautiful Women of All. That
went to the Cambodian ladies.
Hidden -camera studies in
mental hospitals turned up thia
unexplained curioeity: Female
Jjatienta are more likely than the
ma.le patients to cut }DOiie every
now and then with barrages of
fbul Language. , ,
You can't buy a bot dog on a
bus. Odd. Greytte>und owns
~·
Q. What does the dairy lobby
do in Washington, D.C.?
A. Your query is too bie an
onler. Can't say what all. But
they earn thelr money, evidently
Did l tell you U.S . Defenae
•udget l egislation always
{ncludes a clau.e to require milk
tn ftandard military radorw.
'I Q . What'• "positive th.lnldng"?
• A . Here'• an example: 'the ~ttw th1nRr •ya. "Nobody m ~ WOl'ld will 80 out of hfl
..ay to1 help you." The positive IUUnker ... yw. "Nobody In tht.
....m .m '° out ot h1a wa'/ t0 #f~~-
'Rap&d Reply: ~. no. my deer, ~at I .. ,a wu there are 10 ti.1111-oii known t ype. of
C"orpnillm.''
I I
f Cor.:rtpta 1n tb8 Soviet army \.Ye to Mw stripl of white doth Jbllde t.Ml.r uniform collan, .,
n\l>t!etfb'I oUlcera can tell
therefrom whether said aoldlers
washed their necks.
Students at the Zimbabwe
Herbal College earn TMP
degrees. TMP stands for
Traditional Medical Practitioner.
It's a college for witch docton.
U the typical wotk week were
cut by five hours, another nine
million jobs would open up. Or 90
say the theorists.
Said Playwright Clifford
Odets, morosely, "In my opinion,
the univeNe is governed by a
committee."
l1 you can find any word other
than "supersede" that endl 1n
"aede," nanle it. '\
Q . Did Walt Dianey get an
Academ y Award for "Snow
White and the Seven Dwarf.a"?
A. He did. One blg one and
seven little onee.
In that matter ol loclng weteht.
the IWl reduces by four million
tona a leCOnd.
When Mr. and Mrs. Pine of
Baion ~. La .. named their
infant daughter Sue, how could
they pomibly have known She'd
later become • lady of the nlaht
1n New Orleans? Am told Sue
Pine married eventually and
moved. But for awhile there, the c:ollefe tnlde knew more about
her name than she did.
Aro now told one of &hoat
aupennarket ahopptni carta COlta
about uoo. ,
Uquor la Mid to fiawe In three
out oJ tl~ teenaae cfeatha.
i..dyb\qpt run about 10,000 Jo
the quart.
.I
,~ ... ....., -ClleqDe9 .... ...., __ ..... _
L.wrJO • .,_. -...·-MWltll~ -..... _,_
'
J
·-SfO.P (OOl.AlNJii6/ SCM&1 UNION HAS AJWAYS SUPPan'ED YGtJR STRU66LE 1HE ISRAELIS IN l.EBANCM. In 31.lST ~ ~ 11-IAT YOO AND ruE IANS HAVE LOST 50 MANY BATTI.~ WE1RE RUNN~ OtJI OP AAMS 10 I.ENV )W.
1
I STill lHlNK 'Jl.&SEAAE INFERIOR WFAPON5
I a l
Arabs sit and wait
WASHINGTON
Iittelligence sources report, with
aome amusement, that gas lines
have been formihg recently in
the Uni~ ¥ab ~ates.
The UAE ls a collection of oil-
rich sheikdoms on the Persian
Gulf. With a per capita income of
$27,000, cash reserves in the tens
of billions of dollars and a bevy
of prodigal princelings. the
emirates are the stereotype of the
oil-rich Arab countries that were
the target of so much teeth-
grinding anger and frustration
for American motorists as they
waited in gas lines in 1974 and
1979.
How is it ~ible that gas Lines
-the dramatic manifestation of
shortages -have formed in a
country that's sitting on one of
the world's biggest oil reserves?
In an irony that would ma'ke a
poet whimper with delight. the
emirates' gas lines are caused by
the worldwide oil glut that was
so largely the result of the 011
cartel's greed.
HERE'S WHAT happened:
Like all the o il-exporting
countries, the UAE has sustained
a huge drop in revenues as world
oil prices plummeted over the
past year or so. And like the
other Arab sheikdoms. the UAE
__ G.
~ JACI 11111111
had co mmitted itself to
extravagant expenditures that
depended on continuing high
prices.
When their income fell, the
emirates had two choices, neither
of them very appealing: Cut back
on spending or dip into their
huge cash reserves. Risking the
wrath of the populace, the UAE
decided to slash its budget
drastically. Ambitious public
projects were put on hold: free-
s pending princ~s........_~nd royal
hangers-on were orusquely
shoved away from the pulllic
trough.
h shU wasn't enough.
So the government adopted
the tactic familiar to millions of
lesser mortals in hard times. It
stopped paying its bills. Even to
itself. The state-owned oil
company coulldn't collect from
one of ita biggest customers -
the various government
ministries.
IN DESPERATION, the state
oil company went to work on its
other bloc of domestic customers
-the gas station owners. They
were told they would get no
more gasoline delivered until
they paid off their old bills. Even
wone, they would have to pay
for any new deliveries in
.advance, cash on the barrelhead.
It was too much for many
dealers. T hey simply closed up
shop. Oth ers could scrape
together only enough for small
shipments of gas.
Bingo! A shortage of g8.90line,
long Lines at the pumps.
Intelligence sources told my
associate Lucette Lagnado t.hat
the United Arab Emirates' "oil
crunch" is not only artificial. but
certainly temporary. They warn,
though, that this outward sign of
governmental incompetence
could mean deeper trouble lies
ahead.
In fact. some analysts question
the basic stability of a regime
that allowed itself to get into
such a pickle in the first place -
and shows so little skill in
e xtricating itself. There are
reports, for example, that the
royal families are investing big
chunks of their shrunken
lncomee drilling for still more oll
to feed ioto the glutted world
market. Against all economic
reality, they apparently hope to
return to the good old days of
high living. Like the Bourbon
A rich experience
There is a whole world at , .,,
airports that most of us know ""'...\
nothing about. We all know ~· "~-::."}
about waiting at the airline ticket AMBY Rll111:y counters. we know the junky gift 11 Ill
shops and the mediocre coffee • number of private planes lined up chops and restaurants. But there's a private side to every on the runways and stacked ln
airport. and it is occupied mostly the hangars. but it seemed to me
by the very rich. Most of us there were more airplanes in never see it. town than there were houses.
Across the field from the Some people must own two.
regular commercial terminal. or There's n o longer anything
down at one comer of it, there's special about a family owning
always a smaller area for the two cars, but inasmuch as no
people who come in on their own airplane coats le!!S than five times
airplanes or in the private jets of what an expensive car costs, two
big companies. airplanes seems a little much.
I can't figure out where all THERE ARE a dozen major
these rich people come from. It c ompanies that serve this
seems that no matter how small clientele. They have their own
the town is that the airfield mechanics, their own little
serves, there are always a lot of airport terminal building, and
private airplanes. Today, in the they provide all kinda of services
continuing saga of our cross-foe the people who come into the
country flight by helicopter, we airfield in their own jets or
landed briefly at a small airport twin-engined Ceamas and Pipers.
on Hilton Head lsland in South There are tens of thousands of
Carolina. tiny airports acroe the country,
I couldn't begin to count lhe and even the simplest ones seem
'
to be better run than the average
business. I can't get over how
friendly and efficient they are.
Today we went into one with the
helicopter. The door to the
building was open but no one
was there. On the counter was a
simple note written in pencil:
Be back in hour. If you need
transportation, keys to black
Oldsmobile are over vi.aor.
We went into town, had lunch ,
then brought the car back. We
never did .ee the owner and no
money was exchanged. There's a
common bond that ties fliers
together. They trust each other. I
suspect that· kind of trust comet
from sharing the dangers
inherent in flight.
ONE OF my shortcomings i..a
ttlat I like rich people. Generally
speaking. rich people are more
interesting than poor people. It
seems wrong. nontheless, that
airplane owners should get as
muc h from the federal
government as they do.
In the first place. almost all
kings, they have learned nothing
and forgotten nothing.
WARNING COMES TRUE:
The House Ways and Means
Committee recently tOok a •wipe
at independent oil producers by
holding hearings on their tax
loopholes. If the Independent
oilmen saw this as a back.h!sh by
the Democratic majority for the
industry's overwhelming support
of Republicans last fall, they
can't say they weren't given fair
warning.
Rep. Charles Wilson, 0-Texas
a longtime champion of
independent oil producers, wrote
last January to "about 75
independents that I consider
above average in political
judgment." He wrote in part;
"As a friend of the
independent segment of your
industry, I feel it is my duty to
give the bad (news). It la
perceived by the H ouse
leadership. as well as the vast
rn.ajority of Democrata, that the
oil and gas i ndustry only
auppocted Republicans in the 1ut
election, with the exoepUon of a
few oil -state Democrats
(fortunately, I was one).
''This comes at a bad time . .
because the House will be much
more liberal" Wait till next year.
privately owned airplanes are tax
·deductible. They are declared 1111
a b41inea expense no matter
where the people who own therO
go -and no matter for what
purpoee. l have no ob~on to
thia because, for the most part,
these are the people who make
the world work. But I do object
when they take this largeae
from the government and thet:I •
complain about government. U
they had to pay for their own
airport facilities, their own
weather reports and their own
air traffic control systems, many
of them wouldn't be able to
afford their airplanes.
The people who own their own
airplanett belong to one of the
most exclusive clubs in the
world. It is not like having a
swimming pool, three can, a
yacht and belonging to the
country club. Owning an airplane
of any size takes real money. rm
getting just a touch of the life on
this trir and. given a little ume, l
think could pt to Uke living
this way.
What have we contributed?
When you stop for a moment • ~
to think what the world could be ~,...,.
like, compared to what it la. you wn •••• ,;;~"~ cannot help wondering whether ••••• 111-.-man'a pre.ence la a net gain or a
net 1088 to the unJverw. IT WOULD not be IO bed U ../re
When you conllder that d1d not know any better, lf we
everythin1 hu been provkled tor were not crMted with this ~on
OW' needs on thla planet -fresh ol pomlbWUes and potentialities.
alr. clean water, wholemrne food , ,w ith uplratlona t h• t are
flre to warm ua, color to deliaht perpetually defeated and
-ua, not 1 thtnc m.bltnC to SU8ta1n f:naatratect by our llmJt.atSom of
the body and l\lmulate the apiri& love and coopentJon and mere -rt la hard not to wonder il we comity.
are the ultimate apeclu for It mtaht be tolerable U w•
whom th1a Uny speck of dutt in were more like other animal.a,
galactk apace wu devlled. '¥ho can see no further than thelr
When you calcula~ how ahort tmmedlat.e environment, who
II the span of U1e on'thll pJ.anet. comprehend n•lth.r Ut. aor
ln tenm of the COllftlc s-t and de.th , who edit only In a
future. and how we spend th!a ae~etent.
span ln flahUnl and competlna, ' • we have been ,rani.d
In kil1lna and hattna (and Uiualfy the amtquow ,Ut ol ...--..:
I n th • name o t no b J e we. know what. la pcMlbla and a~), lt lllel'M almott • dult'able, but we 1eem
1ronome caricature of what ~ lib 8'1yph'8, co roll c.Mlbadon" W. Intended 10 be. a h"'8 boulder U.P a ...., hill.
and oouJd bi, and ahou1d btt. only IO .. I& roll clown ipln ju9t
before we reach the summit. time
alter time. And each Ume lt rolle
down, lt mortally wound• a
W'JJer number of ua .
It la a man'• atngular fate to
know that he is an Incomplete
creatwe. a kind of monster and
anaoel jDtned topther, wtth the
mOhater forever betraytna the
anpl &l)d brlnglna hJm·rowtr
than the beaai., Nothln1 that
other creawree do to .-ch other
ll t>early M wicked u what we do to our fellowa.
THE P AJN 11 In the knowina.
In the feellna that ~ haw all
the r.n,redienta for a lowly Ute,
ucepl one: the. ~hint ou\ toward each other ln am tty,
lnltead ol the de.nched b.t. the
rock, the club, ot, -.pna oi .U.
the. mooWMntal lndlflerence
~ ~t own kind. • Out wtwkt la fU1l o( ~
• well • delWita -~ to our lntenulty, our
lmaSfnatlon, 01.tr capacity tor
expanding our horiz.ona lnto
1pace ana throu1b time -
enouah to occupy our bodl•.
mlnda and apirita for the brief
duration ~.are ann1ed en this
planet.
What el9e do we wan&? What
more do we need1 And how can.
we bec»me what we yearn to be.
when tt la to easy. and ao fatal, 10
be otherwi91!
. ... .__,
:z.::.ide alnHI Mlt·pelled
No wundt:r JO!ftA1 cin't
rede ~ ~ a.n't rtteJ Loe* bow tbt ,_... do It! .i.c.v. . -
...
..
;
Dally Pilat
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1983
ANN LANDERS 82
ENTERTAINMENT 83
COMICS 84 THICmTllDTHICDUITY
,
In defense of the rapist
Three ways to defend an accused rapist
Dixon Wolcott, 37, formerly with the Orange ~
County Public Defender's Office is now in private
prac tice in south Orange County. Since his
graduation from Hasting, School of Law in 1973. he
has defended many acru.sed rapists.
Q: WHAT ARE THE MOST COMMON
DEFENSES USED IN A RAPE CASE?
A: ''It wasn't me," consent, and it didn't
happen.
Q: WHAT KINDS OF QUESTIONS WILL YOU
ASK THE VICTIM?
· A: I'll ask about her sobriety. Look !or
incon.sistencies between the police report and her
testimony. I don't ever ask intimate details about
the rape. If the issue is consent, then I'll ask how
long she knew the guy, if she had prior sex with
him.
U the case is "I didn't do it," then I'll ask about
lighting and whether he had a moustache or a
beard. You might ask If he had a scar on his arm
even if you know he didn't. Then they'll think that
he had a scar. A lot of times you'll create issues that
are not issues. You'll see whether they're just
trying to make a case.
If a girl accU8e8 a guy of raping
her, his chances of being found
innocent are much leu than 50
percent.
Q: WHAT CBARACl'ER ASPECfS 00 YOU
A'M'EMPT TO REVEAL .ABOUT YOUR CLIENT?
A : You'll bring ln charat.er wttne91es to show
bow he treata women. In a trial of an 18-year-old1 we brought in a preml7-year-old friend who aaJci
he'd never done an .
_Q : WHAT M ltES A CASE TOUGH TO DEFEND?
A: The fact that the IUY £C>ina Into trial hu an
80 percent chance ot .binQ. Ifa slr1 accuaes a guy of
raping her, hM chancel oCbftna found innocent are
much lell lhml DO_~t.
Q: YOO MAU IT 90UND UKE WOMEN
ARE Jl18T POINTING 1'llltlll FINGER8 .. BA VE
YOU SUN MllN YOU BELIEVED INNOCENT
SENT TO PIUION?
A: A friend of mine hed a a. where a black
CU1 w•eocOMd of rapncallrlon the per. He had
Ii" alibi. Hll &eactwr ceme ln and aald tJe was ..S1tn8 for • Wt then. Hiit family i.tified. The ant UllT end.a ln a llunt Jury and he wu
cmnvlcted in the ......Sand ,_t.enced to four ~·
He nqht ~ be bmoclftt.
Q! BOW DO YOU ATTEMPT TO PROVE
CONSENTT
' -
~
Olllfr Not ll'tl4lte
Dixon Wolcott .•. Defense for the
rapist.
A: If they met m a public place I look for
frienda and wi\neaea. U ahe was hanging on and
kissing him, that would be clrctamstantfal evidence.
Q: HOW DO YOU DECIDE WHETHER YOUR
CLIENT SHOULD TESTIFY?
A: Unless your defente la "it wasn't me" your
client hu to tettify or he'• on his way to priaon. I'll
ask how lona he'• known her, where they went,
what they did. I( It'• '1l allbl I'll ask where he wu
and when he left. Q: WHAT IHFOltMATION IN THE VIC'l'IM'S
T&S1'1MONY ARE YOU LOOKING FOR AS A
POSSIBLE AID TO YOUI\ CLIENT?
A: lnconaitt.endes. I'll~ an fnvest.lgator out
to talk with her becau.e you can't alway• truat the
polJce repona to be compl•t.e.
Q: WHAT WEIGHS MOST HEAVILY IN THE
JURORS' MINDS IN BEACHING AN INNOCENT VERDICf?
A: ft .. dependl on the altuatJon, whether they
were •trancen or knew uch other. If they knew
. each other then the cireu.mai.nca and whether
there I• corroboration.
..
The TV networks recently unveiled
their prime-time schedules and in a
word, CBS was all-business. Page
B3.
-
Rapist: A portrait of anger
(Last lo a Serles)
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of IM OelfJ flttot llaff
Rape is seldom a crime of passion. Instead, it's
an act of anger . . . and hate . . . and violence.
The. rapist is a complex individual, ao complex
that psychologists know little about him . . . just
that he's usually a man with a strong rage inside.
Such is the case of Johnny, who, at 32, has
spent more time in prison than out. A rape attempt
at the age of 17 landed him in the custody of the
California Youth Authority for a year and a half.
The list continues from there: two more
attempts at 21, two rapes at 25, and another attempt
at 30. Black, bearded and with a voice so 59ft you
sometimes have to strain to hear, he could be your
brother or your neighbor. '
But he's not. He's a patient at Patton State
Hospital, one of about 200 mentally disordered sex
offenders ordered by the courts to come to this
sprawling mental hospital rather than go to prison.
"IC there's one group of people we don't know
a whole lot about or what to do with them, it's
the rap1Sts," said James Green, a psychologist at
Patton.
Take Johnny. Ask him why he kept raping and
he'll tell you he was angry at his mother for
marrying his stepfather.
Prison is the only thing Johnny ia certain
about. He doesn't want to go back. He knows the
walls of nearly every prison in Califor,nia. He
knows the scheming, the tactics to survive.
"They don't do anrthing for your mind. When
I came out of prison had 22-inch anna. 1 could
bench press 175 pounds," he says. "For my size 1
was the biggest in San Quentin."
After serving 4 'A years on a five-to-life-
sentence for two rapes and burglaries, Johnny
returned home to Los Angeles where he worked for
his dad fixing cars and went back with his wife of
nine years. '
"I couldn't get back the closeness with my
wife," he says. "Wasn't used to th e responsibility. It
was a burden."
One year later he was back in court for assault
and attempted rape. "I knew there was something
wrong with me . 'I've got to see someone,' ( said."
He was sent to Patton for five yea.rs, although
the average time terved ia 42 months.
Since coming to the San Bernardino hospital
J ohnny insists he's changed. "This is the beat
environment for someone who wants to change.
This i.s a different place. It deals with your mind."
• • •
He's wearing a dark brown polyester jacket,
the kind you thought nobody wore anymore. On
this warm day it seems unbearable, but Robyn folds
his slim black hand.9 neatly. Not a wrinkle shows on
his tan pants and clean matching shirt.
Around Los Angeles he was known as the "DJ
Almighty," he says. But that was before he was
arrested three years ago for one rape and two
attempted rapes,
With the steadiness of a worn record, the
25-year-old tells how when he was 9, his dad died
of a heart attack. He found his father's body in thelr
Oakland apartment. His mother was killed In an
automobile accident five years later.
But he believes the rape-murder of his
girlfriend when he was 17 iB what actually drove
him to the crime six years later.
He picked up a hitchhiker on Sunset Boulevard
one night and decided to rape her. Instead, he
dropped her off a few blocks away. The thought
returned. h6wever.
On March 15, 1979, he was driving down
Venice Boulevard at 6 a .m. when he spotted a nW'9e
in unifonn. He drove his car to a vacant lot where
he knew she'd have to pass. She screamed, kicked
him ln the groin and ran.
The next day she N!COgllized him at a nearby
store and he was aent to the county jail. When he
got out his reputation was ruined and he was
unable to land any radio jobs.
He wu hlred as a aecurlty guard at a Marina
del Rey condominium compl~. workina 6 p.m. to 6
a.m. "There were all kinds of aexy gafs coming in ·
and out," he said.
F.arly one moml.ng he saw a woman getting out
of her car. He took ofl h1a unifonn ahirt and began
follo"'1ng her.
He watched until ahe reached a deaerted
parking lot. "l.arabbed her. She didn't fight Ulte the
other one." ,
Two weeks later he raped a woman joatna at
dawn along VeQ.!ce Beach.
''All the W.d that I wu canytna I vented on
t.hJa woman. I cut off her air ... l dr.dn't want her
dolnl what the otM.n did."
'I'he next day two plalnclothes detectives were
waitlnc for h lm at work.. He hu already eerved 11
~t.hl of hJa two-y-.r tentl!Dce. "It'• like 1 have 'two pe.nooaltties,'' he said. "l
Uke women. But another part hate; fernalea."
• • •
U you rMt Frank °" the strwt you probably
wouldn't look twice. iAn ~vera1e lookln1
23-year-old IUY wftb blond hair and an ... uy
for1otten flee, ·
But two women J)CllfdvtlY fdentlfled Nnr• the
man who reped them tn their Otanp ~nt.y
oondomlnlurn complex tn laMt 117'7 and ..,.ay 19'71.
Af&er 41 mon\he et Pat*On, Frank bu been.
thfOUlh d>e et.ory a \hoWand ~. "I WM r..a.d in
Rape victim tells story
to only 9ne prosecutor
Victims of sexual crimes in Orange
County no longer have to tell the painful
details of t heir assault to a battery of
attorneys. .
Beginning last October the Orange
CoUJ'lty District Attorney's Office started a
new sex c rime/child abuse unit that
guarantees only one proeecutor will handle
the case from beginning to end.
In the past, rape and child abu8e caaes
have been handled by aa many aa four'
different proeecutors, aaid Deputy Diatrict
Attorney Charles Middleton, a mem~r of
t he seven-member panel.
Victims often became so harried and
confused in repeating their story that jurors
ended up sometimes not believing their
testimony, said Middleton.·
"Now the victim can identify with the
prosecutor," said Middleton. "She can go
~ over it with him. It will lead to a better
con viction rate."
an upper claH n eighborhood in Norther:n
California," he aa.ld.
"I had a lot of problems. I got IUdted out of the
house at 17 and went to live with my mt.er and
bl'Other-in-law in Orange C-ounty,'' be laid.
"l had problem& from 13 on. I wu rqolest.ed by
my mom's girlfriend, a Mra. RobiMOn kind of
thing." (From the Dustin Hoffman movie, ''The
Graduate.")
At l 'l he had a girlfriend he waa pretty serious
about, but after a few weelu she left him and
married somebody ei.e.
"My relationhipa with women were
superfloial,'' he complained. "'lbey'd 1ut maybe a
couple of weelu and then they'd dump me."
He was only 18 when he raped a woman livtnc
in his condominJwn complex. "She wu very
attractive. I didn't feel there wu any chanl::e to ,et
her. There WU a lot of aneer."
He wu UTeSted the next day and out on bail
four daY11 later. "( wanted to humiliate women. I
felt I was nothfn2. Rape, that'• the wont thing that
could happen toner."
Awaiting trial for the fi.nt rape, he attacked
another woman living {n the aame complex. "I aw
her oom.l.na out of the &bower. I waa r9lly aJ'lC1'Y at
my fi.nt vict1m for .re~ me. [thought about
going beck and •ttlna her .•
After meetina with rape vlctima from the San
Bemard.ino Rape Crillil Center, the 23-year-old •Yll
he feels aympethetic.
"Before I didn't do too much thinkina about
her," he .. Yll· "I hope that ahe'a okay out there and
baa recovered and can resume her life. I don't like
to think about It. It's )llrt hot a nk:ie th.Ina-"
• • •
Patton rellea chiefly on research by the
Bridewater Inatitut.e for the S~y of Violence in
detenninlng the tour clsrcv typa of rapUta.
There iB the aaremve diffuldve~ who
acta on impulae uaually trfaered by a t with a
wife, mother or 00.. He may use a e or sun,
claiming he ii protect.lnl hbmelf.
The 1econct type, the sexually aareulve
diffusive rapUt, uaually p1arw his an.ck. He may
have been ta.Lied in a~ Niwe••ve family and
has a history of •xually fruit.rated relationlh.lpa.
Screamlna or atnaa8lina wW often frlcht.en1hi1Jl off.
The third typi-ia die pndatcry ._,..ve who
often bu a Iona hiatory of criminal behavior.
Robbery la uaually hil f.inrt motive. He may ewn
tell· the victim h1a problerm and warn her to lock
her doon tn the future.
The erotic a11re1alve type comprteea the
.mallelt population ol. ~ and la COOl6dend the
meet ~ He II Ntetic and aftml Pl)'ChoUc.
He ta .umwat.ed ~)'the vlctilJl'• pain and tenor. He
aometimet hu a hiatory of •xual atM.m • • cbJld.
CouNelon et Pattion me FO'lP therapy and a"
phulnl SY111em wtth rewerdl for FOd behaviol'. BoO Mone. a paycblatrtc t«hftlden et Patton.
hae been complllna tiat»tb slnce 1.977 oa ~
rehabUltation of raplate releued ttom the ltaC.
hoepU:al. •
"Treatl'Nmt for the rapllt II of q\mtioMhlil
value now,'' he laYS-"'The~ rac. II dW
eame for thme tnated at blDIPcaJa • thmt .mt _,
priaon.''
lronk.ily the i...-t nte II much ~ far
t.ti.o.--.at '°iC fJun the balPta1. ... ~
bMNI rwbMld ~-"'**" ... .,.,..._ -. --°'1 cu't -lt.. t tt 1'0l'b. .. be mid. :
COil ol OM y.u' in a ~ prtlao Nrll
about f18,000 to 112.000 ~ to tl8,000 .,
"4),000 few m1,te•b~11 . ~
"With .............. ..w In the ......... -..!'
uid Mone. ''W•'w ....... bnpanlnt ...,.. ....
wUh chlld moluawe. UofortunllelJ we hawn't whbn-..•• . · ·
. -'·
D Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband Is a
~111uU1:1.10D worker. He wean plaid shirts, jeans,
y boota and a leather bomber jacket. In our 14
of marriage I have n~ver had the slightest
picion that he might be gay, but since you
ted that d~ption to a "T'' I am beginning to
er. Pleue answer lmmedlately. -NERVOUS
NOB HILL
DEAR NERVOUS: I dld not describe t he
lou a tflt" -a reader dld -but I could have
vlded a4>etter re1poD1e, wbJcb many angry Ann
1 pot..ted H t. Here'• a letter that puts the
tue ba proper pen pedive.
DEAR ~ LANDERS: I'm prett1 burned up
the letter aigned·"Homo Heaven.' When will
ple realize that gays do not fit into one cast-iron,
typed mold?
I am gay, but I do not wear the "clone outfit"
plaid shirt, Army boots and leather bomber
ket. Nor do I prance around limp-wristed in matan:t..,. Mr. Stnught could never identify me by
clothes I wear or by the way I walk and talk.
Letters like the o ne you printed h e lp
rpetuate the myth that gays are effeminate
eena, super-macho-he-men, child recruiters or
tever.
Let's wake up and smell the coffee. Gay people
everywhere -in every walk of life and every.
fession. The vast majoritY. of them look and
have like everyone else. -~AD IN DENVER
· DEAR DEN: Yoar letter was great and a lot
·re laformattve than my non-answer. Thanks for
ting.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The following gripes
ve made my blood boil for years and I need to tell
body.
. Our next-door neighbor's reen-ager is
· t. How do I know? Her doctor told my
~hl~md wh~n they were playing tennis.
A prominent executive and his wife are on the
brink of divorce. How do I know? The church
secretary spilled the details at her card club. The
couple has been seeing the pastor for counseling. 6-_Thi;!_~ my manlcwi$t told me the head or a large i.nsurance company is drying out i:n a
~ital in Minne.ota. His wife has been telling
eyeryone he's in Switzerland on business. •
~. Why do people tell professional secrets? Don't
tiey realize it is a serious violation of eth.ics and can
~ tremendous damage? Please, Ann, speak to this
;.J~ column -SPEECHLESS IN PEBBLE 'tfii· D EAR SPEECHLESS: People w ho b lab
. fes1l0Dal secrets do 10 becaa1e It gives them a
Ung of importance. Tiley also like &o drag down
at tile &op -&o get even for not having made
i m1elves.
• O\ae Fila ProceHl&C
• laatant Pe .. porl Photo• • We Dlaeount All Fllm
~ ~~ .. ~ .. ·· I ! l z
t ~ Ill>\ H a
•
T ennis tourney adQpte d for charity
:k S~~.!~~~EBER
It was 22 years ago thia month when 50
members of the Adoption Guild of Orange County
succeafully staged their first fund-raising charity
tennis tournament at the Balboa Bay Club in
Newport Beach.
What has become one of the area's most
popular and prestigious events, the tournament
has mushroomed from seven coW1a and less than
100 local entrants to 52 courts and 673 teams.
Participants come from throughout Southern _
California and some from out of state. The event is
held during the Memorial Day weekend at several
area clubs each year with the finals being held at
the Newport Beach Tennis Club the following
week~pd.
The event ;ttracts competitors in men's,
women's and mixed doubles teams competing in
open, A, ~· C and D divisions. ,
The tournament has become we U known for
its highly organized and dramatically detailed
planning. which ranges from green and white
posters, banners and unifonns to bright yellow
potted plants lining the sides of Center Court.
The work of planning and organizing the
annual event is done by 50 members of the
Adoption Guild who support Holy Family
Services, a non-sectarian, .non-profit adoption
agency.
Holy Family provides natural parent
counseling, adoption services, children's medical
and psychological care, i;hild abuse prevention and
ATTENTION!
Do you deal wi th MONEY?
LOANS? MORTGAGES?
FINANCES? This ad is for you!
If you d o n 't wan t t o m a k e
money, st op reading· here.
-THE ..RIGHT COMBtNATION to
in cr e ase your share of t he
market -is only one way!
Benedum/Page for the RIGHT
COMBINATION. Call 642-4 321
-----Financial-----
Executives of the Orange Coast
Publishing Company.
Dieting Again?
You can try one diet program alter
another. losing and regaining weight
forever. If you're tired of this. read
Phyelcal and Emotlenal latrlere to
Loelng WetQht (end K"""9 It Off).
Send S6.00 (lncludH postage and
handling) (CA rftldenta add S.30 taxi to
MRI. MURPHY
3157 Birch St., #472
NewDOrt 8Mch. CA 92teO
(...-2 Wb '°' ~
•
treatment, educational presentauons and foeter
care. Money raised by the tournament provides
funding for the adoption agency.
Making up the 1983 tournament committee
are Adoption Guild president Sara Regan, and
tournament chairwomen Nancy Short and Wyn
Wilson, who are being assisted by Kathy Cook
and Betty Svendsen as they train for next year's
chairwomen posts.
The tourney iB also supported by community
and individual contributions. This year's sponsor is
Dos Equis, the uncommon import. Manny
Fernandez, president of Montezuma Imports, and
Dennis Hollow, public relations representative for
J.J. Basso and Associates, have joined forces to
promote and underwrite the 1983 Adoption Guild
Tournament.
George Yardley, who has been active in the
tourney since its inception, has donated a
computer and programmed the software to accept
(/J // . -L ~I ,. ({~If j(. JI
JUT" S tlOUSCHOLD & COOKING SCHOOL
*FOi CHILDREI l to 11*
Chldren Ion ttis Ewopean stJlt 11perienct, whefe they ltam
cood coolill skll, cood mamen and an appredatlon of a
cood social btwq.
Call Jutta (YOO-TA ) in Newport Beach
650-1463
FOR INFORMATION OR PARTY CONSULTATION
Organize your coupon
savings with the
Supermarket Shopper .
each Wednesday and
Sunday in the
llllJPlllt
YOUR FEET
NEED A
DOCTOR OF
THEIR
OWN!
PHONE
and classily entries. Thoma Temporariea
Secretarial Service will furnish the Opttatol"I to
key in the computer when the entriee att
received.
Charlie F..aton, founder of Pa.llaadee Tennil
Club and founder of the Adoption Guild
Tournament ln 1961 and ita director for 10 years,
assists with publicity.
Tournament master of ceremonie. la Glen
Turnbull, tenna director at the Balboa Bay Club
Racquet Club.
bonating courts for the first weekend'•
competition Will be the Marriott Hotel Tennis
Club. the Balboa Bay Club, Racquet Club, the
John Wayne Tennis Club, the RaoQuet Club ol
Irvine, the Mesa Verde Racquet Cfub and Big
Canyon Country Club. The Adoption Guild
provides the court captains, programs and gifts.
The Newport Beach Tennis Club donatee lta
courts for the final weekend. Ted Winaton, tennis
director at NBTC. will assist in detenninlng the
players' positions and times and act aa adviser to
~e tourhament chairmen . During the tourney,
Winston will al.so aerve as the final arbitrator of
disputes concerning procedure. rules and acoring.
Defending cnampions expected to enter are
Women's Open Champions Gail G~ow and
Susan Warfield, Mixed Open Champtons Warfield
and Steve Simon, and Men's Open Champion Tim
Pawsat.
Pawsat is currently playing number one
doubles for the University of Southern California
and is ranke<J number one nationally for men 18
and under.
Jerry Van Linge and Tom Leonard are
expected to challenge Pawsat and Rick Leach,
who is ranked number one boys aingle champion
age 18 and under in Southern California, to regain
the open title. ·
Two new Mixed Open teams, Dick Gude, the
Rossignol representative, and Karen Nixon,
women's professional at Laguna Niguel Tennis
Club, and Dick and Gretchen Galt Miller plan to
participate in the tourney.
WHY WEIGHT?
Win by Losing/ .
Our patients have lost 20-150 pounds
easily & safety.
Safest & quickest way to lose weight. Proven
on thousands of patients over a 10 year period.
Our arthritis program Is effective In etlmlnatlng
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Basic Health Care
1817 WHtcllft Ste. 205
Newport Beech (714) 541-1113
La Habra Pico Riiiera
(213) 945-6488 (24 hOIJra) (2)3194~11
1. Running
2. Diabnes
4. Bumom.
6. Oims/calluses
6. Health and agmg
7. Ingrown ~nails
8. Mnle<1
9. Plantar wart
--DIMENSIONS---
4-Day SUPER SALE
FOR FOOT FACTS.
Dnciors of podiatnc medicine. who spe
oahre m the surgical and medical treat·
ment of the feet, have taped irnporuinl
n1cssages regarding foot care and treat·
menl. Phone and ask for the tape by number.
213-835-3338 1,., An11•I,.. f'ud111ry S.ocM Y
10. Children's fttt
11. Hammert~
· 12. Flat fttt
ror 01utluazJ
rrftwaL ~ '°"' lccal FWiatry S«Vty.
714-635-5680 <Jninct County "'cl .. try S.0..ty
213-775-2203 213-420-7661
.. ..
Thurs., Fri., Sot., &
Sun. May 19·22
DESIGNER TOPS
(Olplchnd)
,...,.~8'' a=.= Ng. 29-36
ACTIVE SHORTS · 199·3!!,
Fomoul~ 1 a 2.Aece MISSES' BATHING SUIT 40·70%
O#MG...:U
Sale Begins
Thurs. May 19th at 7 a .m .
Spec/al First Day Sale Hours: 7 a.m.·10 p .m .
SAVE 40-80%
O" •IOULA• ,.ICll
Here's )1'J/ g 4.QIIJRJJDQ of tne tremendeus IOVlngs
you 'II find during our 4-doy SUPER SALE/
Millet' ACTI COORDINATES 65%~.
PRICES
''9'*!11111 1oo~eotton SWEATERS
6!~ ...
''''*''" Foahlon ROMPERS 9!~~
Farnoue Mc*9f 1 • 2~
JUNIOR BATHING SUITS
. 5''·7!.!
~........ ~~ ...... 1.99·1.99 ~ .. ,,,,.....
SKIRTS •MINIS .. 19g.17-28. .l .99•7.ff
Sold•Pmt .......,. "°""'V
ll.OUSES. . . . . 19g. 1)-16 . • • • . . . . • • . 5. ff
Acthe PANTS . . . . . . . 19g. 1e .............. 6. 99
~ 12-16 •••• 1.99. 6.99
SUNORESSES . . .. r1io. ll . . . . 5. 99 • 6. ff as ......... ..a.12.20 ... l.ff.7.H
............ Coad •DJeee --J. PANT$ .......... 151wo ... 7.Y9"J'.ff
l~I 11••111!!..llf Cl:l
....... ernr.,.-,.... ~c-~ ~ ~-!?wSF ~ i!/,firat-ainr•·--
... --. ........ w...o. .. aa.-..-._......'""'....., .... ..._...__.., ...... .....,
,_ ----
'"'"An••'" "'1dtalry Soarty U>na ~.m ~"""''-
c.utomla'I! Doctors or Pod.latrk MectkiM
(',alifomia Pocllab)I "'->dadon
AT AN
EDWARDS THEATRE
S tarts Wednesday,. May 25th
E dwards bas 18,000 sea ts dally , total
p e rlormanees, for JEDI. There have ltee•
NO pre sales. We have s aved all of ••r
seats at ALL perlormanees for YOU, OUR
CUSTOMER! First Come, Firs t Serve•!
Startin• Wed •• May 25, bex offlees wlll
open at 8:45 a.m. dallf. Tleket8 wlU lte ••
s al e e aeh da y or tbat ••Y'•
p e rlormanees •
General Admission t5.ff -Chll• tz.se
IM •a • L .~ 8 ..... .., . ..,. .. , ............... )' a ...... At New....-t A Tew• C..&er
.... ,, --·~ ..................... 11111
ellwar II~ NL WPORT
, t f ' I I\ f I • 'o-' ' • f ' ' •' Jo; I • l ~
' ' I ' : , f ' S I ~ t ,. I
.J --
,_ -,..-_,, .
~ r~F~~
..... ~ ~t,•=n0f8ruct"(1980)8ruce
' P.M.. MAGAZINE A WOMAN CAU..ED OOlOo\
EVEMHG NA TIOHAL GEOGRAPHIC
-8.-00-II T1tE THREE L.ETT£A WOAD: u::AGAIN TAX =1= ~~-To Love" (1940) Mau.
HAWAII FIVE-4 reen O'H1ra, Adolphe Men)ou.
<MAEASY 'R~ Golden Pond" (19811 ces~ STORY Henry Fonda, Katharine Hepburn
""""'" CID MOVIE ~filvv ** "Siient Raoe" (1982) ChucJc MOVIE Moms, Ron Sil\otr. * S (!) 9 MOVIE * " t Helen$" (19811 Art Carney. u t "Ptrsonll Best" ( 1982) Matlel ~~man Hemtngwly, Patrice Donnelly * * * '~ "M1$$1110" (19811 Jactc Lem--8:30-mon. SISSy Spacek Cl) CHARUFS ANGELS
-1:30-G) UE DETECTOR
8 lAVERNE & SHtAL.EY & -t:OO-
COMPNfY I I COUNTRY COMES HOME I AUCE ~ACTS Of LIFE
DICK CAVETT ""'•"' ~:THE MARINE "T1avls McGee' (Premlete) Sam
9MAONMENT Ellk>t1, Gene Evans.
•
NEWS IM'A'S'H BARNEY MIU.EM 81) THE D1FFEJaT GOMER PYLE OAOMMER: 81.ACKS ,.. THE
MOVIE MUTARY ** "Gift Fnends" (1978) Melanle (%)MOVIE
Mayron, Eli Wallacti. * * * "Personal Best" (1982) Mariel 7 Hemlnoway. Patrice Donnelly I ~~~:~ I~~ _ .. 30_
ABCNEWS n ** "The Way Wes!'' (1967) Kirk SOAP ..,. OouQlas. Rober! Mitchum.
NEWS I M'A'S'H THAEE'S COMPANY THE VIRGINIAH
JOKER'S WLD MOVIE 11U91N!8S REPORT * •,; "FlghtlnQ Back" (19821 Tom
MAGIC Of ANMAl. PAIHTING Sktfritl. Patti lupone.
P ll MAGAZINE -10:00-~~ \~ 1·=~ HENRY FOHOA: THE MAH AHO BUTZ ON BRfT A.c ttS MOVIES AUSTlt CfTY LMTS
(QT!IOXING &109£-
-7:30-t * t "North By Northwest" (1959)
12 OH ntE TOWN Cary Grant, Ev1 Mane Saini
al FAlll Y FEU> <ID MOVIE lAVEJIHE & SHIRLEY & t * * "RIChafd Pryor Live From The COMPNfY Sunset Strtp" (19821 Rdlard Pryor
EYE OH LA -10:15-
HOUSE CAllS 0 MOYE
WKAPINCINCINHATI ** "Looping" (No Date) Shelley
TIC TAC DOUGH Winters. Sidney Rome
MACHEL I LaffR REPORT -10:30-• CAlFOANIA DAEAMS
UEOETECTOA
YOU ASKED FOR IT • DRAGNET
MOVIE **'; "Agent 8 3W (1965) Dirk
Bogarde. Sylva K01elna
-8:00-
• (I) E.T. AHO FMNOS:
~MOVIE VISITORS
(!)MOVIE • * "Lady Chattt!fley's Lover" (1981)SyMa Knstel, NlcholasCtay.
-11:00-
e (l)99NEWS TUN>AYMGHT
8W010f ...
JEFfEASONS HARTMAN, MARY
CBS all-business
in its fall schedule
By FRED ROTHENBERG
UT~ Wrtlef
NEW YORK -Maybe you can tell an
organization by the party it throws.
The TV networks recently unveiled their
prime-time schedules 10 the advertising agencies. In
a word, ABC's presentation was glamorous, NBC's
was humorous and CBS' was all-business.
Maybe that's why CBS has been No. 1 in prime
time for four straight years.
For the schedule announcements, ABC rented
the Ziegfeld Theater, NBC booked the Waldorf-
Astoria, and CBS opened the doors to its own
Broadcast Center studio.
Nearly three-quarters of CBS' 1982-83
schedule is returning next season. When "Archie
Bunker's Place" gets too old, CBS drops it. Business
is business. But CBS' other major hits -"60
Minu•-" "Dallas " "Magnum P I " -d 't ~. • ,,...,.,,., , . . on appear
to be losing their popUlarity.
CBS has only one new sh ow from its fall
1~82-83 schedule -"Newhart" -back next
season. This could mean an absence of fresh ideas.
That may be a problem 10metime, but not now. The
n~twork is winning with its veterans.
While ABC has eight new programs and NBC
nine, CBS has only five -three of them on
Monday night.
"Scarecrow and Mrs. King," teaming Kate
Jackson and Bruce Boxleitner, is about a secret
agent and a mother of three kids, who wants to
s~ce up her humdrum ex:btence by becoming a spy.
, Then comes "After M•A•S•H." with Col.
Potter, Cpl. Klinger and Father Mulcahy -all
civilians now -working in a veterans hospital in
Missouri.
Then on Monday night comes "Navy," the
fourth prime-time soap on CBS' schedule. It's
Dennis Weaver, as a naval commander raising three
daughters, against Howard Cosell and "Monday
N'ight Footbfll."
On Wednesday, CBS introduces "Cutter to
Houston," about three young doctors in a Tex.as
boepital. On Saturday, CBS has "Whiz Kida," about
liudents using computers to eolve mysteries.
Those last two programs are followed by
movies.
11118 LA T9IGHT 100CW8
MOVIE **~ "fOf YOUt Eyes Only (19'1)
Roger M00t1, T apol
-11:15-!:SSAEPORT
* "Thi Honeymoon Is Ovet ( 1971)
-11:30-
liE::LM ~ASKED FOft IT
MOVIE * * t "Flaming Star" ( 1960) Elvlt
Presley. Bar bat a Eden.
l~ANOSOH
-12:00-
1 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
MOVIE * • 'h "How To Commit Martl&ge"
( 1969) Bob Hope, Jeckte Gleason
(!) INOEPENOENT NETWORt<
NEWS • LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
OMOVIE * * t "The Ol.lt11w Josey WllllS"
(1976) Chnl Eastwood, Sondra
Locile
-12'.20-
CC)MOVIE **'Ir "Casey s ShadOlll (1978)
Walter Matthau. AleJltS SrTMth
-12:30-D al LATE NIGKT WrTH OAVIO
l£TTEllMAH' l :::SOHOHE
(!) TOM COTT1..E: UP CLOSE ~ ~ AMElllCAH STYlf * * * "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid" ( 1982) Sieve Martin. Rachel Ward
@ MOVIE * * "Agency" ( 198 1 I Robert
Mi1chum, Lee Majors
CS)MOVIE * U \'I "Missing" (1981) Jae~ Lem·
mon, Sissy Spacek
-1:00-
8 MOYIE
-1:05-%. C::S CHAMP\JN OH THE
. -1:30-
1 QI lee NlW8 OYEJllOHT ~COTT\.!: UP a.OIE
t t "Slrtngt Ledy In Town" (1i55)
Gteer Gwson, Dina Andrews
(%)MOVIE * * "Intimate MomtnlS" (1981) Altxllld11 $tNlf1, Bernard FrltlOll.
-2:00-1 ~NEWS NIOKTWATCtt
-2:05-
(B)MOVIE
t ·~ "The Boogene" ( 11181) Rebecx;a
Balding, Fred Mc<:arren.
-2:15-
(U)MOVlf * • "Th4 Woman Next [)oof" ( 1981)
Gt<ard Oepardltu, Fanny Atd111I.
OMOVIE * "The Boogey Man" (19801 Suzan-
na Love. NlchOlas Love.
-2-.20-
CC)MOVIE
• • "Goodbye, EmlNl1Ulllte" I 1977)
Sylvia Kr1Slel, Umberto OrsiN
-2:30-D a! NEWS
(!) MCtW.E'S NAVY
G) MOVIE
u •; "Bnght Eyes" (1934) Shirley
Temple, James Dunn
MOVIE
.. "V1SthllO Hours • ( 1982) Michael
Ironside. Lee Grant
-3:00-8 MOYIE
H 'h "The Glass Tomb" (19~)
John Ireland, Honor 81aci!man
~~ST!aett * * "F0tbtddiln Zone" (NO Date) 'R'
-3:30-C!l FAITH 20
-3:45-
(B)HOOl<ER
OMOVIE * • * "Pet"sonal Best" ( 1982) Mariel
Hemingway. Patriee Donnelly
-4:00-***'.; "Five Graves To Cairo"
(l943) Franchot Tone. Erleh von
Strohelm 8 MOVIE II MOVIE * * * "Lillie Big Hom" ( 1951) Marte * ••,; "Terroi On The Beach" ( 1973) Wlndaor:John Ireland. ~ ~Y81. E.stelle Parsons. ~=THE MORNNG
t 'lr "In The Money" (1958) Bowery t t t "On Golden Pond" (1981)
Boys. Patnda Donahue Henry Fonda. Kathannl Hepburn. e 1NDEP£NOENT NETWORK cm MOVIE NEWS-** "On.fht Ywd" (~181-Tom 9 ENTERT AINMEHT TONIGHT Wattes John Heard
For complete llatlng ... TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
fJ KNXT (CBS) 101 On·TV
t9 KNBC (NBCl (l, Z·TV
0 KTLA (Ind.) 111 HBO
e KABCIABC) CC) (Cinema~)
D KFMB (CBSI <D (WOR) NV., N.V
0 KHJ· TV (Incl.) @ IWTBSI
I!) KCST (ABCl m IESPNl
ID KTTV (Ind.) (IJ IShowtlme)
II) KCOP·TV (Ind.I • 5'>ottight
• KCET (PBS) • tC•ble Ne111r1 Network) '
Fish & Chicken
Dinner •2. 79
. .
I • •
. . , .. . •
I ' .
Get two greet testes In our Fish Er
Chicken Dinner. Each dinner hes e
crispy fish flllet end two tender
whltemeet Chicken Planks,• served
with fresh cole slew ond golden fryes .
3095 Harbor Blvd .
In Costa Me11
Cjutl *"' of S.n Di.to fwy., a<IOll lr«11 r..-o. 14715 Jeffrey Rd •
I f Weltluo ll"" of! s.nu AN r.,J lrvlne
•
<;>range Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May 18, 1883 -
"THE FILM EVENT OF THE YEAR:'
VIN([Nl CM8Y.~ltl<\ Tomn
MUSIC COMPOSED AND CONDUCTED
BY CAR.MINE COPPOLA
A ROBlRI A HARRI\ IMAGH fllM ARCHIVl PRl\llllAllOIC
A UNIVfR\Al RELEA\E FROM ZOETROPE HUDIO\
~ ~':--I RECORDED IN 001--1
STARTS FRIDAY, llY 20th
&c/111ir• on.,. t:•11•'1 ,.,., •••• ,
edwards CINEMA
HAllOI IOULIY AID 546 3102 AT ADAMS •
COSTAMISA
------
···~ ...... 1., ...... _.ti)
-~tie.
-.. ---
RETURN~EDI ..
TICKET MASTER OUTLETS wu~:t~:1&
LUXURY THEATRES
t•t ,_.,. ... ,.._...,.,,u..,"..,......,
S lliref44•Defl6l654 ~ss/~~ ) * ( FOR FOOi UCITEffiEml VttrtOur ... ')
.-oy Sc:h•lder In In
... 70MM T•Q+• CJ 'lraBm
12•00 '''l ~NII'''° 7111 I
Ac1d1my Awartl Wl11ner
U :JO J:OO •:JO 1 :10 t01JO
Clmt&Cllll ""'~ m Airplln• II Tll• 5 ... Ul l.(ll'G)
*
Ac.demy Awerd Winner
TOO'lliM ~ CJ •
~UI 5trlp•t (R) Allo V11ter Q trl (R)
Orl••lnt Open 7:41Wknltlllt/7:30 Wkeftdt
Childrtn lhtdtrl2 frtf U.ltss Mttelll
•BARGAIN MATIN•••* . ....., ... ,. .. ....,
All P«ton'l'IMCft betofe 5:00 PM
f~ .,...111111 I llt ... ......,.,
'"PLAaHO&MCS" -~-----..,....
LAKEWOOD C U~HR
SO UTH ....... ,,,
"\.Ol9 ~=---....... ,., 09A. _ ---
..
ANAHE IM [)111\.l IN
~-"nllW' IR '"'
C.-·"-
BUEl.IA PA~!'\ ••. .., ..,...._ ..........
llM070
LINCOLN !•II'"''"'
HI WA 1 l q • "
:c:
Cllll·ll-
'MOTOll~-
..... ll.oOlf't ... ... -... ....
IA 11/l~l<A •. .,
"90m'n-WICICm ·
n91 WAY coma--. ------·~
..,..AY Ttll t-.
Pltltf r ... • ------
....-ATK.11 ....... -----
"OOCTOll .. ,..,... ... m:a-.,. ----------'"TOOtl'!·----·-
.,..~.. ~.. -:;;:... ---·
-~--. "TMll1*ae ........ ,..._ _,._
..MU'f91QL•• -.... TVYOr ..
..u. .........
.... Miii _.. .... _ ........... ..,_.._...._
••1·1691
""'•-t:: H .. .. -. ... -.......
...~ ...
19S'f ...... -·II-
-...... ~-~ ~~----~~~----. ..-... ..... ---------~~
Orange Coast bAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
.G\H•'H :l.D
WMA1 BRING!>
YOUTOiME
f'ARM,JON ?
J PROM~(l7
GARFIELD SOME GOOP
MOME COOKING
5·1&
WM.Ai WOULD VOU
BOV5 LIKE fOR
0R£AKf'A5T?
THE
t 'AlllLl'
CIRCl'S
BIG Gt:ORGE
~ " 6 '
"Keep your kite out of our air space." on."
DE,,IS THt; lit:' \Ci:
o I' .. ,\
I "\R'9 \Dl Kt: by Brad Anderson
I
~J r .
"Come back here! It's time for your bath!"
' I '!lilo. ' ......
, ~\
Eaat·Weet vulnerable. South
deala.
NORTH . ••u
<::1 AJ87H
0 1073
•Z WEST EAST
•A •K875Z
<::1 KIO <::1 QU
0 AKUU 0 VoW
•Q50 •AJ10t8 SOUTH
• QJI09
<::1 95
0 QJ54
•K 76
The bidding:
Se•tJt Weat
PUI I 0
Put 2 0
PaH 3 <::1
Nortla Eaet
1 <::1 I •
Pue S •
Pue 3 •
DR.\BBLt: °"· "Eu.o, ~M ...
· ~.l lAtf1' ~
0\)1' 'fOM\CMi ...
GOIEN ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
PUI 4 • P111 PMI , ...
Opening lead: Nine of <::1,
Lut mon th, tbia hand wu
poaed u a problem. Readers
were uked to decide which,
in their opinion, wu the
wor1t bid of lhe auction.
Also, who was most reapon·
sible for missing the ex·
cellent five c;lub contract,
Eut or West. The player
who made the wortt bid wu
not necessarily the party
who had to bear the great.est
share of guilt.
Bridge World Magazine
submitted the hand to a
panel of experts to decide the
case. Their vote appears in
the current iuue of the
magazine.
The jury decided lhat the
WIN~ &tlMJ~E ... v'°"
; .. 6£.l•U*· l. ~Me..
1'0 IJA~ 1'~ ... \JM ...
wont bid in the auction was
West's two diamond rebid.
When your pattern is 6-4, you
u1u11ly rebid your six-card
1uit only on minimum hands.
With a good hand, you should
bid your four-urd suit before
rebidding your aix-eard suit,
even if lt i1 a major. The
opinion of the exper~ was
that West had a clear two·
club rebid on the second
round.
Despite the fact that West
made the worst bid in the
auction, most of the blame
for mining the game was laid
on East. After West had
made a cue·bid and then sup-
ported East's second suit, the
jury Cell that East was not
allowed to stop short of
game. even though Eut had
t'l''K ,. M l'Kt:RBt:A~
C.W HAVEN'T IN\PROV€D I 100LX7HT lJOtJ PROMt5E.D
ME L.A5i WEEK 1Wrr ~
WERE GOIN& iO PAACnc.E
T~lb PIECE!
AT AU..!
• •a void iJI hi• partner'• long
suit.
H you entered the compet1
lion and got both an1wer1
right, you will soon be receiv
ing your copy of the
magazine that contain• the
article on the wmpetition. Jf
you entered but did not get
both right, you'll be aent a
copy of lhe jury's vote.
Hew ct. 1" ~ Uae
bett epealac .._.., Clwie1
Gore• laa1 Uae ..,wer. Fer a
copy ef "Wlu.19c O,.alq
Lead•," ee•d 11 .85 te
"Cere•·Lead1," ear• •f &Ma
.... ,,.per, P.O. loa Z59,
N-rweecl, N.J. 076'8. Make
d1eeb payalt&e to New ..
papert.eb.
by Lynn Johnston
WHATS lHE. Mf\1iE:R.
PHIL ?-l'M
LISIE.NING ! .
'900' '9l'LLl'S
FRINGE BENEFIT ...
by Ferd & Tom John'son OR. SllOCK
--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---.
by George Lemont
DELIVERY ROOM
PEA,l'TS
IF YOU AAVE AH OX TO
6~1ND, JJST SAY SO!
BUT IAM
MARRIED To
YOUR P,ARTNE~(
IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE
WMOSE Ax IS GORED,
DOESN'T IT?
• ·-
by Charles M. Schulz
I NEYER KNOW WMAT
'(OO'RE TAlKIH6 A80VT
~ ~
\
, ,
~~ox
a~ :ifi~~
DELIVERY ROOM
,
Uh.th~~a blank SJeetrf
PopPI', Ftntnn •.
~
SO 'f'HIS IS YOUR
FIRS,.. PAY ON ,..He
~oe., eH, NURSe Fet..,..ON ?
-...
NI.IC NOTIC(
ACTmOUa au...u PICTTT'IOU8 .,._ .. ~ 8TATllmMT MAim ITAT'DmNT
The IOlowlng ~ .. oc.1ng The foUowlng ~-la dotng ........ "'*'-•· t.8.S .8M$ColuN ~'l.llOa-B, DA TAOVAHCf. 1101 W, ~lnol0tt 8Mdl, C. 92M411 Mec1Ar1tu. 8ulle 1'3. Senta Ana.
.Jolin, Tomllnaon . 81·125 C. ~101 ~Rd .. Hel. HI. 92712 Ou y Dean Wiiiett 1t0t W.
Welter R Stelly (Llmlladl, ~. a.ma Alt&. C.. 92707
•·125 P111)1619e Rd . Hel. HI M7 t2. n. bullrlllll • cionduGted by 11t1
We..d J . Moore, 85&5 C<>luea lndMduel.
IOMI. Huntington Buch. C. Gety 0 . WMet1
Thl9 .t•t-t -Ned with the &lww'd J. Moote County a.ti ol Or-oe County on Thia 1tetemen1 wu llled with the APl1I ~8. 1983.
IDUnty Clett< o1 Orange County on l't1el'7 ll!Y e. 1983. Publl1hed Orenga Co111 Dally
' Pl11A1 Piiot Af)I. 27. Mey 4, t t, 11, 1983
IPubll•h•d Or1nge Co11t Dally 11131-8'
loi May 11. 1e. 25. June i1b~ Nl.IC NOTICE
1
1 QJC NOTIC(
PiCTTT10Ue ......
MAmlTA~
The '°':""° .,.,__ -doing
AAOAACH INTEAHAT10NAL
W•tt'n A...nue, Sutte N,
Grov..C...92841 ~ Saudi lnveetrnent•
Cellfotni. ootpe>rlltlon}, 32t
a..t)' Ortw, a.-1)' H ... C... 2
~ .. conducted by • .non.
AMEAICAN SAUOI
INVESTMENTS L TO. w ..... MOll\ey,
Prelldent
Thie lllaternent ..... Ned wlll .... IUl!ty_ an of Or1nQ9 County on
.. 22, 180. ..,,...
cc:oru
MOTICI CW
TRU8T1EIE'8 aALI
Ho. Ta43'J'Odm
YOU AU .. DIU'AU&.T UNDl1' A
DllD OP TltU8T. UNU:H YOU
TAKI ACTION TO PltOTICT
YOUlt PltOPIEltTY, IT MAY H
80l.0 AT A PU.UC 8ALI. IF YOO
... DAN Ul'l.ANATION CW TltE
NATUH O' THI PltOCHDINO AOAIN8T YOU, YOU 8HOULD
CONTACT A LAWYIR.
On June 3, IN3, at 11 00 A M ..
VERDUGO SERVICE
CORPORATION (a Calllornta
corporation). H duty appolntad
TruttH under and purauan1 to
Deed of Trust rec:ordecl Oec:embet
1, lfHll, u Boo .. 129•5. Pege 678.
Of Ollk:lal ~da, eKecUled by
JOHN JUTTNER end MARLENE M
JUTTNER u trustors .. In the olllee
of the County Recorder or Orange
County. State of Calllornla. Will
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
Pl8JC NOllCl
l'tCTmOUt .......
NAMCeTAT'I....,.
Tll<t fOllC)WhlQ pe.aon• ate doing
D<ullneet .. (ti TACVO, 121 TAVCOR t903t
Oelehvrll Cr., HunllllQlon a..ch,
CA 92'46
Tave J<>Mt. 19307 .Plr .. Ave ..
C-lloa, CA 90701.
Cora KlftO, 18031 ~flt Ct,
HuntlnQlon 8Mch, CA 926-48.
Thlt bultlneea te conduct~ by • ""*., pertneratilp. Cor• J KlnQ Thi• ll•ltmenl ..... !Med with lhe CO..nty Clefk of Or•noe couniy on
M•y 16, 1983 ,2t ....
Publl1had Orenge Co11t Dally
Piiot, May 18, 25, June 1, 8, 1983
2308·83
fdlllC NOTICE
flCTITtOU8 IUllNfiH
NAMa 8TA'nMIHT
The foUowlnq persona are dOlng
busln-u:
FISHER 6 FORD. 12177 ValleY
View, Ste. 282. Gar<Mn Grove. CA
92114S
Anne "•her, 88 t8 Almondlne
Oflve. Gerden Grow, CA 92645
Peggy Ford, I 131·73 PllC~llfl
Clrc;le, Tustin, CA 92880
This ouslness Is conduclec:I by •
gen«al P•rlnetlh1p
Anne Fl1her This statement w11 lllild with lhe
County Clerf.. of Orange County on
May 13. 19113.
,21 ....
Publlsfled Orange CoHt Delly
Pilot, M•Y 18 2S, June 1, 8, 1983 230 ... 83
Publlehed Orange Co&1t Dally toe Aflir. 27, May 4, 11, 18, 1983
1944-83 (payable at llma or sale In lawfUI F1CTIT10U9 8Ul*EU
"8JC NOTICE
PlCm10U8 .,... ..
MMmaTATDmNT
lollowlng ~ -doing ~EN-:.:RAL FIBERGLASS
FACTURINO CO .. 5e1' E. LAI
A\19., Fullerton, CA. 92807
Wlntleld Scou Klr'11and, 11681
.... Aw., No. &37. Stenlon. CA.
~•yne Eldon Anderson, 2111 =~ Janet Pl .. Fullerton, CA.
'TNe ~ .. conduc1ed by • r-• ~t Klrtlend
'fNI '*-'-lt WM flled with 1he purtty CWtl OI ~ County Ott ..,. 4, 1983.
'11m7
f'ubtlahad Orenge Cou1 Olilly pc. Mey •• 11, 18, 25, 1N3.
• 207$-83
NI.IC NOTIC(
ACrmou.wu
MAim ITATa.:NT
iThe tollowtng p&rM>n 11 dotng ---THE TREADLE MILL, 11171
1<nMm ~ .. Huntington 8Mdl. CA ~ Jentc:. Lomllne Tun*. 8171 "'"'*" ~ .. Huntington aMdi. CA llM8
Thie ~ II oon<lucted by en ~.inc. L Turner
'Tllle stet-t WM flied wtttl the
M'lty a..11 of <>ranoe County on
"" 27. 19f3. '211• 'f>ublllhed Orenge COHt Diiiy !DC. May 4, 11. 111. 25, 1883
2072-83
f'IMet'I
'ubllahed Oran~ Coot Delly IDI, Af)I. 21, Mey 4, 11, 18, 1983
' 11M&-83
HC 111 IOUe ._ .. llMmlTA~ n. lolowtng S*'eOfll -dc*IO ~ ~ ENTERPAl8E8, 2745 ==d Or .. Collltl ~ Celllomla
Donne G. 01t, 2146 8t11blrd
.. Coet• Mele. Cell9omlli tJ29H Amymond L Ott, 2746 Stettllrd ii.CO:-Mw. Ce11tom111 m ~ ~ .. oonducted by ..
Donne G. Ott n... llllltment -fled wllfl tfle OleR of Orenge County Oft
• 1N3. l"l'M791
1hed Orenge Coast Detty
""'· 27, Mey •• t 1, 18, 1M3 1~
HCIHIOU8 ., .....
money ol the Unllod Slllea) •I f ne NAMl 8TATIMl#T
South entrance to lhe Orange The 1011owlng person 11 doing County Old Courthou111. City of buslf.iesa ea:
Santa Ana. Stele of Calllornla. all SLOPE ENTERPRISES, 19000
right, lltle and Interest conveyed to MacArthur Blvd .. Ground FIOOI Ste
and now he4d by II under said Deed 205MPG, Irvine, CA 927 15.
ol Trust In the property situated In S1 ephen J, S lo au m. 30 4
aald County and State described as: Tangelo, Irvine. CA 92714
THE LEASEHOLD ESTATE IN THE ThlS bualness Is conducted by an REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED AS. lndlvldual.
Lot 55 of Tr1et No. 4892, In the City Stephen J, Slocum
of Newport Beach, County of This statement was llled with the
Orange, Stale of Calllornl•. u per County Clerk 01 Orange County on
map recorded In bool< 180, pagea May 13. 1983.
24 to 211 ln<:lu1lve. Ml&eellaneou1 n1~
Map41, In the olfloe ol the County Published Orange Coast Dally
Recotdet of Mid County. EXCEPT 'Poo1, May 18. 25, June t. 8, 1983
THEREFROM all oll, OU mlnerala 2242-83
and 0111« hydrocatbonl, below a ------------depth Of 500 feet, wlthol.il the right "8JC fl)TIC(
o f 1urtace entry, at teHrved In ------------ln1trumente ot record. The 1tree1 aodreu end olher common deelgnatlon, II eny, of the
rul propertr dH crlbed above ta
purported lo be: 2845 Bamboo
Str .. 1, ~porl Beach, C.lllornla
928e0
The und•<tlgnad Tru11ae
dllclalm1 eny llablltty for any
lncorrectneu of IN ltreet 9ddr-
and othw common deelgnatlon, II
11t1y, ahown h«eln
Said ••I• wlll be made, Oul
without covanan1 or wu·ranty,
npreae ot lnlc»led, regerdlng lltle,
po ..... lon. ot encumbrancea, to
pay the remaining Pflnclpel tum of
the no11(1) Meured by &aid a.cl of
Truet, with lnteratt tflereon, as
provided In &aid note(•>. edvancee. II any, under lhe tenm of aald Deed
of l ruat , teas. charge1 and
expet\Me OI Iha Trust .. and of the
tru1t1 crHl•d by H id Deed of
Trutt, tor the emount re11on1bry
M11Cnlted 10 be: $1118,• 14.38.
The beneflclwy undef &aid Deed
of Trull h«atofore' uecutec:I and
delJvered 10 the undaralgned •
WTltten Oeclera11on of o.lrwll and
Demand tor Sele, and a written Not~ of Default and Election 10
Sell. The 111 ldel algned CllU6ed Mid
Notloe of o.tut end l!Wcllon to
Sell 10 be -ded In Ille county where 11'19 reel 1><099fly Is loc;ated.
Oeled: May 3, 1983
VEAOUGO SERVICE
CORP.
.. Mid Trve1 ..
er o Mercado
Auth0r1Zed Slgnatute
.CO 1 N. Brand BIYd
GlefW!ale, Ce. 91203
fe4 2131500·2'85
Published Orange Coast Dally
Piiot Mey I 1, 11, 25, 1W
2181-83
PlllUC NOTICE
K-OU21
8UNN<>fl COURT Of'
CALIFORNIA
COUNTY Of' Of'ANOE
laTAT1! Of':
flt OCHAN EVETTE FORD,
Deoeeeed.
CAM MO. A1'1'21
MOTICI Of' INnNTIOH
TO MU. MAL ""°""" AT f'RfVATIE 8ALI
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th•I.
1ubj1Gt to conllr metlon by the
•bo-tltled Svpeilor Cour1. on
June 2. 19113. or therNftar Within
th• lime 111o wed by few. the
underlign«I. u Co-Admlnletraton
ol the &1111 of ROCHAN EVETTE
FORD. o-u.d. wtll Hit et prtvete
Hie to the hlghHI end beat net
bidder on the term• end condition•
herelNtter menttoned 1111 rlgtlt. title,
end lnter-1 of ROCHAN EVETTE F<>m>. ~. 11 tt>e time or her
deeth end all rlgtlt. title and ln19reat
thet the H t•I• h•• ecqulred In
eddl1lon to ttl9t of deoedent et Iha
time of h.-r d11th. In the real
ptoperty loQl!ed In the County of
Orange, St1 t1 ol Celllornla ,
de9crlbed .. lollow9
Loi 14, TrlCI 8891, recorded In
Book 3 59, P1g11 28 1nd 30 ot
Ml1eeltaneou1 Mepe, record• of
Of'ange County, State of Clllfornl•.
The property le commonly known
u 231111 Vitti Way, El Toro,
Callfomla
The HI• 11 tubject to currant 11•••· c:ovanan1t, condltlon1,
r111rlcllona, r11erv1tlon1, r~hl•.
right• ol way, and ••Mmenta of
record 11t1y encumbr•noet of record
10 be Mlitlled OUI OI Iha purch-
l)flee
Tha Pfoper1Y I• to be IOld on an ........ b ...
'1CT1110U8 ...... MAmlTA~ The lollowlng peteon le doing
butlMet II: --TROPICAN.4. SPA AHO POOL
SERVICE, 19382 9rookhutel,
Huntington Beed\, Celllomll 82$4t
Wllllam Bradley EIWI, 19342
Brookhurel, Huntington BHch ,
CM!tomll 92Mt
Thia ~ I: <.IOnducted by 111'1
lndMdue(. w-.m B. ENtrr
Thie ll&..-t -fled with ~ County Cleric of <>ranoe Coutll')' on
April 22, t883.
~
Publl•lled Orange Coaet Delly
Piiot, Af)I. 27, M1y 4, 11, 111, 198S
190t-&3
Nl.IC NOTICE
K-41111M
NOTICE Of' DllFAULT AND
EU:CTION TO NU
UNO•R DfilD Of' TRUil
"IWOWT ANT NOTICI"
" YOUlt PltOPIERTY 18 IN ,OAECL08Ultl H CAUH YOU
Altll llHINO IN YOUlt
PAYlllNTa, IT NAY er 80LD
WfTHOUT ANY COUf'T ACTION,
end you may 111111 the legel right 10
bring your eccount In good 1tendln0
by paying •II ol your PH I due
p1ymen1s plus P9fmlt1ed coat1 end
exper1H9 within three rnontne trom
the data 11111 notloa of defeu" w•
rec:orded. The amount la ~t.207 12
aa of January 25. 1983. end wtll
rncrHse d•llY unlll your eccount
1>eeom. current You mey not ~
to Pl!.Y the entire Uf!P•ld por11on o4
your account. even though lull
o•vment was demanded, bu1 you must pay lhe amount 11etao ebolle.
above
Attar 1hr• month• lrom the date
ol reoordallon or 1hl1 document
(Wlllch dtte ol reoOfdallon ~
hereon}, untesa the obllgellon being
loreclosed upon permit• • lonoet
l)eflOd, you h•ve only the legll rlgf'lt to ttop the loteclo.ute by paying
the entire 1moun1 demanded by
your creditor.
To find out the emount you muat
pay, or 10 errange for payment to
atop the loreoloeure. or II your
properly la In fc.reclo•ure for eny
othe< reuon. contact:
LEE H. OUAST, ESQ .. Attorney
for the WOODBRIDGE COTTAGES
MAINTENANCE ASSN .. 895 Town
Cen1er Drive, Suite 800, Coste
M .... Calllornla 928211: t~
(71•11141-1397, II you have any queellon1, you
should conteot 11 11wyu or the
government agenc:y whleln rney have
in~ired your loen.
Reme191Mr, YOU MAY LOa•
LfOAL RIQHTa If' YOU DO MOT
TAKE l'ROlll"T ACTION.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the WOODBRIDGE COTT AGES
MAINTENANCE ASSOCIATION,
having 1 lien upon lhe rN I ptopeny
known at 10 Wlldbrook, lrvlna,
C.llfotnla, which 11 19Qally deecflbed u ro11owt: Lot 48, Trect 1oo.8, u
recorded In Book 472, Pagee •8 to
50, lnclu1lv1, ol Ml1cal11neou1
Mapa, Otlld•I Record• of Oranoe
"';ounty, Calllornle. of which
MOUNIB ATCHAN .• llnole man, II
the o-of recoro end Mid Lien
1rrs1ng by vlr1ue of • ()ecleretlon of
Covenenle, Condlllont end
Restrlc:tlOns (hefe4nafter "CC6R'1")
recorded In Boot\ 13118', Pag11
84-148, lnclullve. Offlcl11 Reci0td•
of Or1nge County. Calilornla, ••
enne~od to the tubjee1 propeny.
Bid• or offete •r• Invited lor Ihle
proc>erly 6<1d mull be In WTltlng and win be rec.lved at the olflee of ANN
L. MELFI, ettorney for the Co·
Admlnlalretore 11 8011 Eut
Chapmen 1'venue. Orenqe, t-~HC~= ...... ,~1t~toU8=:-::•::-u::::1::::11::::11~u:"::"'--C•'"ornia taee. or mey be fu.cl
..... ITAftlmNT wtt1' Ille Oerll of the Superior C<MI
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN thll
e breacn ot tile obllgallon for wntch
Mild Lien WU g4119" .. MCUflty h ..
occurred In that p1yment1 ot
en1nment1 end che1g .. duly
leVled by Mid AMOClatlon 90elnll
the 1Ubjee1 l)foperty -• not p11d
when due. 1nd 11111 rem•ln du•.
owing end unpaid 111 fOllowt·
The monthly ln1tellm•nr ot
regular ..-it• due .J""4111f)' 1,
t9112 et the r•t• ol tin percent ( 10%) per ennum, In eddlllon 10
111orney'1 le11. eo1t1 end 111•
Olhatgee es eet lor1h In Mid CC&R'I
together with eny end ell sum•
tdvenci.d by the AMoc:letlOn Of "' 1g1nt1. under th• term• end
ptovttklne of Mid CC&A't.
~ ~ s--•• dOln9 or deliver ed to ANN L: MELFI ~ Ill: i-90flelly. at II\)' time elter ltr•l CA~ CRl'TIO~. 1bt2& El publlGetJon of thlt notlee 11trd bef0<1 itMo. ~ V,,,.,, ""-tz70I malling tfle Nie
"41Mrt l perrlng. 10t06 f l The PfQperty d Cle told on the ~ FowtU11n v,,,.,. CA nroe t*"'4ng ,_. c:M11 °' Plr't C&t11
Qlllwtne L 8oemna. 1ot26 El end l*1 ~edit the t-of -" ~ Founlaln v*'t. CA. t210t c:redlt to be eciceptebl• to the
,_ ....._ 19 ~ by a vnder.igned end to the Superior
.... pel1irWIHp. c-1. tO per09l'lt of Ille *"OUllt bid
c.IMIW c loerrtnG to ~ the offer by OefUf\ed
• U I ••-... tllliCI wlfl .. died!. lll'ldll IMI .,.._I IO be pe6d Q1f1t OI °'WI09 ~ an on con rmel on o H I• by lhe
1 ~ Superior Court. Te x••· rent•. • • ~ operetlng end melnt1n1nG•
P\IM•ICI Ot~ OoMt Delly expent11. end premium• on .,. ...,,. 11 1e, is 1ta. lnt urenoe ecoepteble to the '"'." • • • 2047 ... puror-lhell Cle prorated .. ol
1he dete Of c:onnrmetlon of Nie. balnlnatklrl of tltle. ,_ding Of -~·-· trwter \Mee. wt4""" tltte tnaur-pollCY .... lie .. tfle ~of IN 11116eiliflllirecl, Tiie undertlOnect r...,,,.. IM """ '° rejeC1 et'rJ end .. llldl ptjOr to 8l"1y of en ordw 0011ftimloo ftle
.,.._,: Afr' 21. 1.i.
Dlel'le y CM'IJ
~a.v.~-OfWol
.. &tlrle of AOCHAN IVITTI ,ON>,a-d.
NOTICE IA FURTHER GIVEN lh*t
Hid AMOdltlon. throuilll It• duly "11>Q01nlall -t. h68 I KICUted end -~ • wrttten decl1tttl0n Of def&rlt end demand for ..... end
llat 1urrendered •II document•
evidencing obllg•llon• MCured
thWeby, end "61 deolerecl end doe.
hereby declare Ill 11.1m1 MC:Ured
thereby lmmedl1t1ty due end
pevllbie, and hM llleeted end doee
hereby elect to -thlr pnipetty d11orlbed 1bov1 to ti• told to
Htlll)' th• obllgallon• due lh•
MIOGilllon.
TO Ol!TER MIH ! lft
RElHSTATl!M•NT II P01811LI
AHO THE AMOUNT, ti" ANY •
NECE88AR,Y TO CURI! DIFAULT,
CONTACT: LEE H. OUAIT. E.IQ.,
Attorney •1 Law, 8H Town Center
Drive, 8ulte 800, 00111 MeH,
C1llf0fnll Ht28: tlilephon« (714)
6"41· 1307. DATE~ Jenutwy U . 1183.
WOOOlf'IOQI OOT1AOU
.._,AINflNANCI AllH.
Clo I.II H, OUM'!:.. UQ, ... Town Centw I.II'., 1-.eoo
Cott• ~ CA t2tM
Publl1hed Oreng• Co11t Delly
Plot MfV 1 t, 11, 2f, NM I, IM3 2111.a
_____ ..._ ............ ~···
t 8
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983 BS
Plate NOT1CE NI.IC M>TICE
NOncl cw uu °' eTAT'lmNT °"~NT ~ICTmOua .uwaa NHOM~ "'°"°1Y 0# Ull Oii '1Cm10UI NAm STA111..wT ( .... ,_ Celt CM 0-.) .,_... ..,._ me iollowklQ pereona 11a j1o1ftO
NOTICE II HERUY QIVEN lhal Tiie loltowlnt pereone heve ~ 11.
under and~· to the tawrneoe &blllldoned N '*Of the Aclltiout Pl!NNINOTON FINANCIAL
end provldedL. the undenlQfted of~ Name: 1110 N. French 81 • 102 Senu; Iha OON M1'"'rlH VAN I 91't>AAGl 8AHO STONE REALTY ~1 Anl, CA 92702 ' '
C() •I 11 Mercont, ~I!, win., 8ellfteld L.ane. Huntington • Peg~renoh, 21e72 Brent•
Clllfornla, wilt ... et publle euaUon OA ttt48. Clf., Hunt on a-n, CA 12648
9t M11tere Auctton. ~76~ ~ The "ctltloue lu1lne11 Heme Oernel L Gtlmm•tt 1310 1
811/d .. Ooeta "'-· •I 7:30 o'olook referred to el>ove w11 flled In Q1r1hon Piao• l ent• Ana CA p.111 Oft Ille 21th day of ... t~ 0ranoe County on l4043. 92706. ' '
th• followlng deectlbeCI periOftil "°9911• Merle Schwenlia. 0712 Thll butlnetl• 11 conduct.CS Dy a
property or ao much ther9of u ~ Bellfleld L.-. Huntington hacll, generel per1nerlhlp.
be -v to Nlllly • lien dul CA '™'· Ownelf L Grimmett the uncleralgned tor rent i nd "Thomu MIChHI !aton. 1618 Thi• 1t1temen1 wu nled wllh Ille
lnc:lderttele Incurred et the al>Clw-Auguet ~. Sant• An• He4Ql'lll, County Clerk of Ofenge County on
mentioned llddr-. together wtth CA 92707. Mey to. tH 3. ooeta of 1dvertlllng end n~ Thie buelneM wu condveted by • Pttt118
or .... : gtinerel ptrt'*'lhll>. ,ubll•h•d Orenge Co111 Dell)' Oncrlpllon. HouMhold lu<nllure AoMlta Merle 8chwenke PMot, M1y 18, 26. June t, 8, 1983
and m11Cieflaneou1. Tiii• 1taternen1 wu nltd with the 2301 ·83
Owner· Baron Von Aldarb uck, ::0Un1)1 CWll of Orange Counl)' on ------------Ambatudor Inn, 2277 Herbor ._.ay 1~. 1983. .,_IC NOTICE Blvd, Room 920 Coata MeN. Ca. Pt1_. ____ ,.._~-------
Amount Due: ~1,282.74. Publlshed Orenge CoHt Delly ftemtOUa 8U8*E81
Oeled lhla 18th d1y of Aprlt, 1883. >1to1, M1y 18, 20 • .Jun41 1, II, 1883 NAMI eTA111MINT
MASTERS AUCTION 2307-8.3 Tne followtng pereone 11re dOlng
By· VI Koutovru , .,_,,. "'""~ bull-11; Secretlll')' n~u" nu1~ PERIMETER PROPERTIES, 3~
Publl1h•d Or•nr Co111 D•lly NOTICE OF DEATH OF '°'eat Avenue. Suite 22. u.gut\l P~ot May 18. 25, 1 83 HARVEY CARDWELL aka Beaeh. Calllornl• 92852. 22116-83 H A R V E y D E B S E Jemee Murar. 332 For11t ------------Avenue. Suite 22. Lagun• Beech. "8JC NOT1CE C A RD W E LL .A N D 0 F c e111orn11 92852. P E T I T I 0 N T O Hugh eiue. 332 Forni Avenue. ADMINISTER ESTATE NO Svlta 22. Lagun• BMc:h. c amornta YOU AM If OIPAUI. T UllDSlt A ' 92602 OHD CW TRUtT OATID ~y 11. Al 183U. HarOld Lync:tl. Jr . 332 Foreat
1t11. UNL&ea YOU TAKI ACTION To all helns, benefldaries. Avenue, 8u111 22. Laguna Beach. 'f? NOftCT YOUR ~. credllon and con tingent Callt0<nla 82852
8 A'f':. ';', 'ro°u"t :.~ cCardr ed i tllo ra d o f H ar vehy Sllv~r~~o",~' 0~1'v~: u~:.·r g~!:n~
IXl"\.ANATION tW Tltl N.ATUM we • an pel'90ns w Q Colorldo eo110
Of THI NOCllDtNO AOAJN8T may be otherwise ml.ereated John Oet>otn. 1701 eu1 Tu1t1
YOU, YOO 8"0ULO CONTACT A in the will and/or estate. Avenue, Englewood, Colorado
LAWYER. A 'ti has ..__ fU-... 80110. • peti on .,.,.,n ""' JOhtl H. Kerwin, 3 Burnl Mt111
NOTICI °'.,.,..,.....a.AU by Michael Cardwell in the Road PIUClllll'ltn New J•JH)I
T.a. Ne. •11 Superior Court of O r ange 07978° '
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. that Count y r equesting that Thi• bvelne•• 11 condUGtlld by a
on Wedneeday, Mey 25. 1983, •t M 1ch8 "l C 8 rdwe11 be generel p1rtner1hlp 10:00 o'clodl e.m. of Mid day, In . PERIMETER PROPERTIES
1119 roomMl Mlde1or conducting appo1nte~ as perso nal ·~alpartnerllllp
Tru11 .. ·1 SllM, wtthtn the~ cil repreeenta.uve to adm.ln.lat.er Hugh Blue. Per1ner
REAL ESTATE SECURITIES the estat e of Harvey Thi• •t•lement wae lltod with th•
SERVICE, located •• 2020 Nor1h C 8 rd w e 11 ( u n d e r the County Clerk ol Orange County on
Broldway, Sulle 20e, In the City of lnde d t Admi . tr ,1 May 13. 1983 Senta Ana, Count')' of Orange, Stete pen en rua a won n 1M411
o r Celltornla, BENEFICIAL of Estates Act). The petition Publl1hed Orange Co111 Dally
MANAGEMENT COAPORATl()flj OF is set for hearing In Dept. Pllol, M•y 111, 26, June 1, II. 1983
AMERICA, 1 Del.-.. oorporetlon, N 3 700 Ci · Ce 2309·63 .. duly appointed Tn.1et" under o . at . v1c nter
MUC *>TIC( '101m0Ut--MAl91TAT'DmlfT
"" lollowlno Plf'90l'll -~ ~&a:
IUllNl!89 C A"D S
TOMO"ltOW. tO 11 ertoeo Or ,
I lot. Co.le Mau. CA t2t21
Chari.. 0011 Per1llnt , 2208
Peclftc All9 .. Unit 1, COili Mau. CA '2:027
Cynthia .Jo Perkin•, UH
PIOlflc A119., 1#111 1, Coeta Mau. CA
92'21
Thie ~ la conducted by •
general P«t'*9hlp Chuok Perklnl
Thie 1181...,,..,t WU Ned with the
County Cltrk of Orenoe County °"
Apttl "· 10113. ,.., ..
PlC1'mOUe ...... ..,._ ITATDmJIT
The toflowl"O P9'toOf\ I• Oolng bl*'-u.
ROYAL OUTCti, 11115 ~
Shell Ln , Newport e .. oh, CA
92MO
81hne m Otlu hltU I, 11 t•
Button-811111 ln., N~ Beedl,
CA 92MO. lhtl~il~D'/M
lndMdull.
9lhlwn Olleltllfut
Thia 1t•t-I -flied llllWI the County aer1c ol Olenge County on
)II)' 18, 1983. ,._
Publl•h•d Otange Co&1t Delly
Piiot, MIY 18, 26, June t, a. '* ~
Publlthed Orenge Coa11 Dllll)' 1------------Pllot, May 4, 11, 18, 25. 1183
2003-83
Nl.IC NOTICE
'1CTITIOOa au ... aa
NAMI aTATWMINT
The tollowll\g P9ftonl 61'1 doing
bUllneU .. : FREGEAU'S OU.SS WORKS,
7732 Telblrl Avenue, Unit E.
Huntington Beech, CA t28411. Alton 0. Conn..-, 17t7 Sierra
Dawn, Onlerio, CA 9 178 I
Debt• J. Conner, t717 Slefre
Dawn. Ontlflo, CA 817&1.
TIMI butlnaH 11 oonducted by
lndlvlduala (Hutl>and 6 Wlte)
Allon D. COl1IWlr
Thie 1111ament wu !tied with the
Coun1y Clerk of Orange County on
May 13, t9$3
F21MM
Publllhed Oreng• COHI Delly
Piiot, M•y 111, 25 • .June 1. II, 19113 2305-113
NIUC NOTICE
ACTITIOU8 8UltNIH
MA.'\I a TA TIE•NT
The lolfowlng penon 11 doln(
bulln-&1:
SAND STONE REAL TY, 577;
Belllleld Lane. Huntington BHch
CA 02648
ROMlll Marie Schwanke. sn;
Belllllld Lane. Huntington S.•oh
CA 92848.
Ttilt buslnese 11 conducted by ar
Individual.
Rouella Marie SCllwenke
Thie S11t1ment wu flied with th(
County Cieri\ or Orange County or
'ICTITIC>Ue auelNU8 NAMI aTATlmlfT
The following pereon It dol119
bvelneu u :
JERRY'S MARINE l'UEl SERVICE.~ W•I CoN1 HIW9y,
Newpor1 a.di, CA 9280.
Gereld A. Mendelon, T 11 W.
881bol Blvd., Giiboa, CA 92881
Thlt bu*-II ~ed by 111t
lndlvldull.
Gerlld A. Mandeeon
Thie atel-1 wu flied with the
County Cl«lt ot Orange Coul'ilY on
May 12, 1983 ,,_..
Publl1hed Or1nge COHI Delly
PUot, May tll, 25. June 1. I, 1"3
2300-&3
ACTIT10U8-ll
NAm ITAT'llmJfT
The lollowtng S*'eOfll -doing bull-.,, TRUMP CARO Ol8TIHCTION.
1570 Brookhollow °'. 1114, Senl• Alie. CA 92705.
H end G. EnletPtlMI, lno .•
1570 Broolchollow °'" , 114, Sent• Ana, CA t2705.
Thlt bu.W-.. oondueted by •
GOrPOf •IJon. H end G. Ent. Inc.
Eleenor M. Gofdon
CMltmen
Thi• 11a1.,,.,,t -llttd with me County Cllttl ol Oranoe County on
May~. 1"3. . 1'11,_
-. • • • J ' I I ~ /~ ,
·' • ' :
. .
•' r . ' -
end purtuanl to the po-. of .... Drive, West, tn the City of
conlwred In that oenein Deed ol Santa Ana, Californ ia on
True t 1 .. cu1ed by THOMAS June 15, 1983 at 9:30 A.M. ~~1~~4 1~~ IF YOU OBJECT to the
May 13. 1983. ACTYT10U8 ....... ,,,.. Publltlled Orenge County Delly
Piiot, May•. 11, 11, 26, 1883 '
2091-83 NAiil ITA~ Publlal'leO Orange Co111 Dell)
Tiie tollowlng per'90l'lll .,. doing PllOI. May 18, 25, June 1, 8, 1983 Rec«de of Mid County et pege granting of the petition, you
5114, Recorder'• 1n11rument Ho. should eith er appear at the
38927. by reuon of • tweed\ CK hearing and state your
defeult In peyment or pert~ objections or file writ~n
~ •: 230&-e:! ------------HU 0 HES' ~ 0 RI Z 0 N 8 ----------"8JC fl)TIC(
of IN obllgatlone --.CS "*'eb'f, b""' h · lnotucflnO that brMCh or defeutt. o ,,...~tlons wit the court Notice~ wlt1ch w•• recorded beior~ 'he h eaPing. Your
.January 20. 1983. u AeGorder'• appearance may be in perion
UNLIMITED. 2172 DuPont Oflve. PUil.iC NOTICE ----...;.. .. .;.,.,_------\
No. 223, irw.. Ce1tom1e 92118 ACTTTIOUa _,..... MO~ Of PU9lJC 8ALI
David Edwerd Hughea, •41 .... aTAT'fMINT ----.. .. , -, w llerl!!lda, °""191 CellfOFnlll t2te8 -..,.,._ .._.... • JH nn• Mule Hugh11, 447 -The IOllowlftO ~ •• doing Notice ie hereby olven th•I
Seranedo ""---Celltomla 92tt1 bUslneN u . purwuant to MCUon tMt ol the CM ,• ~":~r'~..t,~~~~8tow~~ or by your attorney.
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH. l F y 0 U A R E A
ltlWtul tnON)' of the United Statw. CREDITOR or a contingent
or • c;ea111er·1 CheOk drewn on • credltoc of the decoeued, you
ttale Of net!Onll bani!, I .tete CK mu.sl file your cla1m Wilh lhe
i.derll Gf9dlt union. Of • lltate Of court or p resent I t to the
'~-.,,... ~~IX RESOURCES, One Code. Stete or Calllornle, the I ~~ oondvoled by• NeW1>0r1 Piece •700, N1wpor1 underllgned wll ... et pub4k; ....
Oevtd E. ~ 8eac:h. CA 92660. by compet"l"'9 tllddlng on tfle 2tth J Thill~ -Ned with the Labyrinth, Inc. • Nevede day of Mey, 1983. et 3:30 o'Olodt
COunl')' CW1c of Orange County on corporation, One N-P<><t Piece pm • on tt>e ~ wtiere Mid
....... 22 1.., HOO. Newpor1 Beech, CA 92MO property hH bH n 11ored. end
i.derll Nvlnge ll>d loan ..odatlon .
.....,. ' n14a14 Tht1 bvllnMS 11 oonduc:ted by • whlc:h 61'9 loc:et.il et Pub41c: S~.
PuDllehed Orange Co11t Delly CC>rPof•llon Inc . 2oe6 P!Kenlll A\19 . In tt>e City doml(;lled In thla .iete ... P8Yll>l6., perso nal represe n t a ltve
the time of Nie. Ill r1ght. t.ltle end appointed by the court
lntereel held by It, .. Trvet ... In within tour months from lhe
that r... property attuet9d In Mid d f f · I f
Piiot, ~· 27, M~ 4, 11. 1~,9~~ ;::r.,1n~, ~'°" :i.c::-: ~u! :..<>:
PrellcMnt good1. ch•ttl•• or p eraonal
County end Stete, d .. crll>ed H ate f . irst. as~ance o NIUC NOTICE IOllowe: letters as provided an aectlon
"EXHIBIT "A" 700 of the California Probal.e PICTITIOUa IMJltNH•
PARCEL 1: Code. The time for filing The .:::,:T~"=~~. doing
Unl1 8IS 1n tne City o1 trvtne, and claims will not expire prior bualnet• u :
County of Oreng•. St••• of to four months from the date MARINE INSTRUMENTATION
Clllfomle. ---erld deec:ribed of the h~-noticed above. 6 CONTROL SYSTEMS. 2021 In tfle condomlnlvm plfln recorded YOU MA EXAMINE Mtremar Oflve, Newport 8eac:h, Ca. on Augv.t 5, 19n In Boole 12324, 92881 pagee 1220 IO 1273, lnoluelW. of the file kept b y th'° court. If Carter Rogare F\oblnlOn, 2021
Ofltclel RieoOrde, of Mid oounty. you are a penon int.ere11ted Mlr•m•r Oflve. N9wporl Beech. C•.
An unc:IMded 1198 Int.,_.,•• in the estate. you may terve 92881
1-t In common In tfle,.. ~ h t E/lzabelfl Pyle Robinson. 2021 In end 10 ""' OOflW'ftOll -ol Lota upo n t e exec u o r or c
2. 3, 5 end e of Trect No. 1120 1n administrator. or upon the ~~~r Drive. Hewpor1 Beach. •·
the City of nlM. County of Orenoe. attorney for the executor or TN• bUtlneae " conducted by •
8t•te Of Cellfioml&. •per map ttftd ad.mi.n.l8trator, and til" with gen«lll partnerlhlp
In B ook 40~ to •3 the court w i th proof o f Cari .. R ROD4naon lnolullW, of MIP9. • I Thia 1111.,.,,.,,1 wu flied with the Recofd• of Mid OCMlnty, u 9'IClf'I service. a wr tten request Covnty Cler1c of Qfange Counly on
tenntedef!Midln1tleer1iole enlllted statln1 thu you desi re .,.28. 1883
"Oennlttorw .. ol tt>e o.a.retton of apeoal notice of the filing of F21D2t
Covene nta. C ondition• end fan 1 n v e n t 0 r y a n d Publlahed Oreng• Co&1t Dally R11trlotlone recorded In Book . Piiot M 11 111 2 J 1 19•3 t2324. pege 1185. ot 0111c111 appraaement o f es\ate useta •Y · · · una 218'}:63 Aecord• (''The Oec:4eretton'') Md or o f t h e p etitlona or1------------
any wnendmente or ennexatlona accounu mentio n ed in "8JC NOTIC[
1N1t9!0. l«tion.' or 1200 and 1200.~ .. ,.,.,
e.~ung theflfrom all otl, Oii of the California Probate NOTiea M "*.JC IAL.a
rlghla, mlne1111, mlnatal <'Ohta, Code. Of' ""90NAL "'°"'*"' y ~:;'~ ~ll~ = Rey H. N~rmu, Anoney Holle• 11 hereby given lh•t
known tl'Mlt l'MIY be within Pf under a t L a w ' l 5 5 W e ' t purtuant io MCtlon 1Mt of the CIYM
the p erc•I of l•nd hereln1bov• Ho1pUallty La., Suite 1'71, Code, Slate of Ca llfornl1, l h•
d11crlbed together with th• 1., __ Be-··.a•-o ,,..A t•toa Uf'deflllgtltd wlll Mii •t publlo ..,. perpetual right o1 drtlllng, mlnlnf, .,... • ---..... , "' • • by oomc>etlttw bidding on the 29th
explortng Md operellng ttlerwtOf llH-UU. dey Of M~ 1983, et 10:00 o'ctoc:k
end etorlng 1n end removtng lhe Publi•h~ Oran1c Coast O•llY :-,r::P•~Y \,:'=.,=~ :':
-from Mid land Of ""'I other PUcn. W.y 18• 111• "· 11183 22ll9-ll3 whldl .,, tooeted 11 Pul>llO Storage. l and. Including t lle right to Inc:. 13241 Jefll'ey Rd .. In the City o1
wlllpetodl ot dlrectlonally drtl end rtaJC NOTICE lrvtne, County ol Orenge. Stet• of
mini lrom lend• other then "-Calllornl•. the 1bendoned goo<11.
herelnabove ~bed. ol Of 9al T41914 h tlllt I t
well•. tunnel• end •h•tt• Into, MOT'ICS Of TMMTH'I IAU ~~ ~r:iot: ,!~=~l
through or "°'-the"''*"'--of T..a. Ne..-• Und• Hubbard -tbl. 8 Clllllr. bed, the lend ~n•bove dwcr1bed. NOTICE rodler,
end lo bottom euc;h wlllp9todled CK YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOl!R A 2 oheal. II bl!S. 2 OM. golf ctube. 2
dlrectlonlllly drtlled ....... tunnell OU.O Of' TRUtiT. DATED 8-2341. c:eblnet. • rectlt .
end lh•ft• under~~« UNLE88 YOU TAKE ACTION TO Cefol M. Cometlu• -Goll Club•. b9yond tfle exterior llmlta "*90f. PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT oMlt 99 •nd to redrlll, retunnal, equip, MAY SE SOLO AT A PU8UC SALE. bn. '
m l lnt•ln, r epelr, dHp•n and IF YOU NEED AN E)(PlANATION L. G. SlnklnlOn -bed bird oeoe 2
OP«l ll Ill)' euoh welte ot mlnee O, TH E NAT UR f 0 F T H E baby ' '
Thia statement wu llled with the property deec:rlbed below In the
Coun1y Clerk ol Ortnge County on metten of.
May 4, 1983. O•Vld Punlell -bar. tng. bx 19flnQ.
Flt ... ml«o oven. 3
Publlal'led Orange Co111 Dally IUr1 bfda, 3 cn.t. lltlt, 2 tpkrw
Pilot, May 18, 25, June t, 8, 19113 Landlord r_.,,.. the right to bid
2310-83 at the Hie. Purch•M• mu1t be Nl.IC NOTICE mac1e with cuti only and paid for 11 ____________ 1the time of pur®-. All pur~
NOTICE Of' goode 111 IOld u le, lll'ld mu91 be
TRUaTU'I 8AL.E removed et the llme of purcn-
'f OU ARf IN DIJ'AULT UNO£ .. A Sele 1Ubjee1 to prior canolllatlon In
DEED Of TRUST DA'nD MAY rt, lh• eYenl ol Mltlemen1 ~
1llO. UMLIH YOU TAKI ACTION landlOfd Ind ~led party, Otted
TO "'OTIECT YOtM "'°""""· Ihle 11th I tllth de)' of~· UNl3, IT MA'( II BOLO AT A pueuc Published Oreng• CoHI Delly
a AL I . t' Y 0 U NI W D AN Piiot. Mey 11. ta.. 1981
EXPLANATION M THI[ NATURa 2t~
M THIE l'ROCl.mtMO AOAJMaT ·
YOU, YOU IHOUl.D COMTACT A
LAWYER.
On Thurlday. June 18, ttl3 It , t 00 o'clocll A.M • POMONA NOTICI a. TWUITB'I •AU
FINANCIAL SERVICES. INC .• H ~Ilk COIMAD_,.
Trust••· under and pur1uan1 10 T.a • ..._ lo4INI
Deed or Trull dated May 27, 1980. UIST COCl9 I
11tecuted by GLENN A. RAINS. 111 PARKEA ESCROW CO., INC. M
unmarried mWI, and rlCCKded June "'*! llPl)Olnted TNll• ~ IN
15, t9llO In Book 13827. Page 1782. lollowtng delot1bed deed of tn.ief
Ottic:lll Aeootd1 of Orenge County, WILL SELL AT PV8UC AUCTIOH
Cllllornta. will Nit et pulM!o llUCtlon TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER ,OR
lo the hlghell bidder for caall or CASH AHO/~ THE CASHIERS ()A
equivalent ol eun (cuhler'1 ct19C1t CERTiflED CtiECKS SPECIFIED IN
only) p1yable 11 time of H ll In CIVIL CODE SECTION 21Ull
lewlul money Of the Unl1ed SlltM, (pay11ble I t the time of NII In lewtiJI
11 the front entrance to th• money of the United 811tff) Ill
Fullerton City Hell, 303 WH1 right. title end lntweet c:onwrM to
Commonweelth, futlerton , end now held by II under Mid Deed
C1lllornl1, ell right, title, end of Trvst In the property heretnaner
lnterMt oonll9)'ed 10 end now held Oeeerlbed:
by " under Hid 0Hd In lhl T Ru s T 0 R ; 8 J A .. H E
properly eltueled In the County of CONRAOSEN Orange, State of Cellfornla, BENEFICIARY: MICHAEL D. ,.
deecrlbed u : GOLDEN . .JILL 8. GOLOE:N
PARCEL 1. That por11on of Treci Recorded ~ber t8, 10&2 • 7530, In the City of Newpor1 Beec;h, lnatf. No. 112•'4 1113• of Olflclal
11 shown on 1 m tp thereof Record• In th• olllca of the
recordecl In 8oOlc 291. pegee 36 end Aeoorder ot Orenoe County; Uid 36 mlacetlenecu• Mepa. 1-d• of deed of tru11 dH crlb•• the
said Orange County, 1hown and followlng: defined u Unit 10 on lhat oertlln Lot 42 of Tr9C1 No. 4285, M per
Con domi n ium Plen I the mao rec0tded In 800ll 141. P9gll
"Cond ominium Pt•n" heralnJ 29 to 32 lncluelw of Mleolllel-.
1tt1ch1d •• en uhlblt to 11111 Mape. 1n lhe ollloe ol the County
certllln Oec:leretlon or Covenan11. Aecorder Of Mid C0uo1}1.
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w!UIOut, '-""'· the rtgfll to drll, PROCEEOINO AGAINST YOU, YOU cemge, W1oo1 delll. bike. 315 b111.
mine, ttota, uptofe end opwmte SHOOl..O CONTACT A LAWYER frldci-. baby dretMr, 2 child big
thtOUOh 1he aurf-Of IN upper 0 n II· 0 1 • II 3 e t 1 O A . M .tleel vec' TV
Condition• e nd R11trlct1on• tor YOU ARE IN oeFAUlT UHOE.A A Newpor1 8Ucil Townhou-. Lid DEED Of TRUST DATED 12/08/82.
(the "deelaretlon" herein),_<*! UNLESS YOU TAKE AC~ TO
on May 11, 1972. 11 lnll<1;n*'I No PROTECT YOUR PROPEATY. IT
1H12, In 8oo61 t0122, PIQM 313, MAY BE 90lD AT A P\J9LJC 9Al.E..
Offlc:llll Recor<11. IF YOU HEED AH EXPLANATION
•-'
500 ._ of the ~ ol the CHICAGO TITLE IN4UAANCE co. Rounne Johneon -trike, e11n1
land herelnabove d11crlbed, H .. duty ac>Polnted Tn.111 .. unes... twd, 9 bu, ~In 1M deed f\'om IN 1tW1e 1nd purM11nt to o.ed or Truel eultcM , hk!helr, boolloeH, toy1,
Company, • oorporatlon, r-ded recons.ct Qe/29/111, u tnlt No. i.rnp, 2 olllllf Octot>er 2•. 1918 In Boole 12894, 41159, In book 141 tll, pege 153, ol Lendl«d ,__ lhe right to bid ~ 397 ol Oflldlll l'Moordl. Ofllc:lel Aeoonie In IN 0111o1 o1 the et the 1111. Purch1M1 mutt be
PARCEL 3: County Aeoorder of Orenee Coun1y. made with OMh only end paid for •t
E ... ment• H M t tor111 In the Cellton"9 WIU SEU. AT PU8L.tC the lime o1 putch-All purol'IMed u ctlont en tltle d "Certeln AUCTION TO HIGHEST 8100ER goodl ar• told 11 11, end nlUlll be
EIMMlnta for Ownert", ~· FOR CASH ~ "9t time ~.... r9l'ilOV'ld et tfle t11M of puroheM. •"-"*" liftd -~· Md In lewlu1 money ot the United Sele tubject to priot oenoelteltnon
"Montgomery Street e-t" of Stat11) It the north "°"' ent~ In thlr ....,, of Mtttemant ~
the wtldl enttued "e-te" of to tt>e County~ 700 CMe 1~ and Obllg•i.d party. O•led
tfle Dedetetlon". Cen19r 0rM Wiit, Seota Ana. CA thia 1 Hh & 18th day of Mey. 1N3.
PAACEL 4• t2701 1111 rlgllt, tltle and lnter•t Public St0t101. lno., Landlord.
EeMmenti 11 Ml for1h In the !:"~too!:: :r;:.dln~.! Put>lllMd Oren~ CoHI Delly
u ot1on1 entitled "C!,rtal n ptoperty lltuated In &aid County Pilot, May 11, 11, 1
E11ementl tor Owner• end end Stet• dllcribed -21«-83
"Support, 8 1tt1am1nt and Lot 11o1Trecc9022 • lhOw!I
Enoro1ohment " of the ertlcle Oii , map recorded In 'eooti 218
e ntltled "E11am1n11" of the PIO" 29 tllrougll 33 lnclullW of flOT1TIOU8 .uu.aa
Oecl111t1on of Covenant •, Ml~leneou• Mapa. reoord• ot MAm ITATWMINT
Condition• i nd Rutrtcllon• Orenge County, C illlornle. The lol'lowlng per9ons we doing
r-ded In 8ooll t2324. ~ t 100 exeouled by: WILLAAD MUNO & bull.-••: of Ottklll l .~eta ,,.,. ...... .., MA"L.ENE MUND. hu.Uncl end WEST BLUFF HILLS GENERAL
Oeol.,etlon ) end 1111)1 ~ wife .. loin' "'*1t1. PAATNl!RSHIP, 11011 AO a ma or ennuetlon ttweto. ftle ltrM t 1ddr111 end other Avenue. Huntington Beech. Ca.
The 1trH t eddren or other oommon dlllgnetlon. " eny, of the 82W common dn lgnetlon of the reel rMI ptoperty deecftti.d ebove I• Joe ~ 3031 Cedenct&.
ptopeny hlfwlnaboW ClllGrtOed la purported to be: H l etlnwooct, ewtebld, O.. t200t
purported to be: It Cl\e)"enne, Wwy. ntN. CA 1211&. SuHn Carlton. 20021 Pott
!MM, CellfornlL • The ~'*' dlecilelm• eny Olrcile, HuntlJ1gton BHch, Ca
The und•r•ltn•d hereby llMll!t)' kif""" h1conect1-of ttie t2t48
dl1olelm1 •II llablllt)' tor eny etnet ~ llnd other oommon C e ron I( Oa weon. 3JS
h10011ect1-1n lillcl llrwt eddrW ~IMtOll. • .,.,.,, "-' herlln. Coralfeet OflV. • 13. Huntington
°'at'* oommon d11l1111eit1on. Seid HI• wilt be m•d•, but e..cti.. C.. t2t4t
8alcl .... wll be l9lede wtttlout without oovenant or werrenty, Gregory A Hllloren. 16 ThuncMr
werrenty, ••Prff• or lmpll•d, ~ «.,.,..,.... ""fl"lllnO We, Tnrll. IMl'le. Ca ttlt4
PARCEL 2· An undivided 1/21111 0' T H E HAT UR E 0' TH E
lnt-1 In and to thOM p0<11ones PROCEEDINO AGAINST YOU. YOU
Lot 1 ol Trect 7530. ehown and SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. , defined .. "Common Arff" (t 2711 Sen c.toe. Coet• ~CA '-"~mmon erH " herein) on th 92e2t
Condorntntum Plen. "(N 1 ltrMI ~ or -
,,
PARCEL 3• The u.cMMI rlgM to ~lotr Of ~ .. llflowll
poeMMlon and oocupany ot lhoee &bM. no WWT'll\ty It gN9rl • to "9
Po'tlon• ot common ArMt of Lot 1 oompi.tene .. ~ C0<'9CtneH)."
or Treci 7530. dMlgneted on the The benellclery under Hid
Condominium Plan u balconte1, Deed of Trult, by re11on o f
patlol. 11t1d/01 Pofel>el. and ~ • breech or dtfeult In th• ol>-
on 1111d Condominium Plan N being llgetlone MCured tiler.tty, her•
8'>P\lfl-nt to Peroet 1 1olor1 execu ted end dellVtrM
The •treet 1ddren end other 10 th• unoerelgned • wrt1ten
oommon deelgnellon. " eny of ftle D.cleretlon of Oefll.tlt end Demencl rHI property dNCrlbed ebove le for l al•, 1111d written notloa of
purported to be: 4421 W.t COM1 ~end Of...._... to --ttie Hlghwey, Newport &Heh, CA.. undtnlflied to ... ..CS~ to
92880. The underatgned 1'ru1tM ;:~Hid obllg1t1on1, lfld
dl10111m1 •nv lllibltlty for eny It1e 1114'illgiltd OIUMd
Incorrect-of the 1treet lddree• Uld notloe o f breeoll end of
and other common dwlgnatlon. II -.c110n to be ~ ~ 1,
eny 1hown herein. tH 3 It ln1tr. No. ~1324 of
S11d .... wttt 1>1 me.de b11t wltlloui Ofllclel "9oOf'dl In the ofllol OI lfllt
covtnMI Of warr9111y. ••~ or "'9corder of °'--County; Implied, regerdlng title, ~c111uli>n, hlcl H I• w11r b• l!'led•. out or encumbt1nci11, to P•Y the wlthouf ooven1n1 or werr1n1ii
r•m•lnlno prlnolpel aum ol lh• ...,,.... Ot lnlpMed, l9QllrCllng tlllia,
note(•) MCured by H id Deed of po11111lon. CK~'°
Trull, with lnter11t th•r•on, 11 pey tfle ~ ~ -d
p<cwtded In Mid note(•!. ltdvenole. tfle "°'"'• _... by .., -.ct Of " MY under the terme ol Mid Oead TIW( with im.wt • In ...., ,..
ot lru11. f111, ohergee and provided, ldvw-., If-..~
I Xpentee of the TNllM and ol ttle tlll terma of Mid Oead of 1'Nat.
1ru1ta cr11t1d by H id OMd of ._, ~ anCI ~ ol ..
TNlt. The total •mount of th• TNetee end ot tfle tl\llCa llNlled llir
:1 . • I ' . I ~
regerdlng tine, POHHtlon, Of po 0 11'1. « _.,,_, to ftrenk .J, M ote. 03 LOml
anoumbfenaee, to ntt1ty Ille rwt IN rwMllq prtncllpel aum of 9trH t, Hunting ton I H cft. Ca.
pr1no.lpel belMoe of tM Note Of IN ncM(., _..... by ..... o.ct of 1*8
other otll ... llon eeoure.i by Mid Tru1t, with lnte1 .. 1 tll«eoft, N L...-Holder. 10111 Clrdefttl o.ect of 1"ruet, wftll ~ Mel ~ Ill _.. ncM(1). ..,_, A-. f<Mrt..,, Valllly~70I
unpeld betenoe of the obllf•tlon aelCI Died of T'Nll. 9elCI .-.. lie
Mand by tlle Of09l'tY to ti. told lleld 01u
end reMonebly ectlmeted OOlta, Wedi t 1 fl~. June 1. tta3, at~ l 1
1 ~ end ldll-et the time p.191. •I th• Ollepmen Av•nv• f.
Ot..., IUl'M .. provtcled ........ : II ""'· under .. --.... Deed Joe ...,, 1111 l,Ane, phi• ~. K ltf'f, llnClier tM or Truet, feH, et1er1a, •nit ea. nooa W-lllereof erld .,... • """ ~If llW ~ lltd of ttw Jo1eph ,.ommell1nger, 811 ~ end .lllul ._, ~ I fuet1 or .. ted t11 U6d Deed of 1ltll llrwt, HuntlnftOll eMctl, C.. encl..,,.,_ ef'tftl f"""'9 end" Of TNIC, '°411: l71l,014.4a ~). ttMa ~~he°'::.:= «;r..: 'of ~::£W:i:.=. 0: ~;.:.h~-=~t~ ~~,U A1pen.
obllf•llol'I, ~ ,_NftlM)' dellveted to the ltl'lffrllCMMld • P•t•r I!. v.::..!~tC· 17U t&tl191eteel teee, 41llertH tflel ~ °"'*',_.'of Olfliilt erld "•II ... Or., 9Mcfl, ...,.,_of tfle T"""' •.,. 011Ie ,o.menct f0t lele, and a wrl1te11 ca. 82641 'WtllllretlolldDn• .... No9oa. .. NOCloe °' ~ w1 ~ • · Jern .. w.,.,. 1 ... ,.,..ow ~·i li...n,, t •91.....,. !!f._TMOllW1&4:.~..ad ... L.tM,~Qa;l100t, --~-~~· e;i"'; 11eO:... 111 ~ • """n :.r:,we. al• OCunhlll
MAHNHMDIT .._. ....... ~le io..I. ~~C... •Mlllt~ OONIOMTIOH M ~am•. ltfHl Adctrue and 11'1 a •
AMIAICA. =~-~ T~ J. WCI.A
:u=ATI TLI =\01 io .. UH caw..i wtrie, • lllMCt!. ...,. .... _~A.,..._, CA Ttlll F-.... wlttl the
1t11 = laootO t•=• . ~ Of °""VI County on ~ UO. J. ._..., DIS Mey t. t
"' Tl1\I ~ 1010 N. ., ... ,...... INIUfWCll 00.. ,.,... L""' IL'9
IOe..._Ma.CAtt?OI -~ .......,. ......
('7t4} .... ,. ,,,,,.., 0........ ~ ..... ~..,..., ....... c.. ....
Pvbll*"" C)f~ C0Nt o.it., h~ ~ ~ o.ly hb 0(•{111 Coe•I 0 1lly "°'· Mer 4, t '· "· ... !Not. Mer ''· 11. ... ,.., "°' ...., , t. , ... , .. .-. t, 1ta '°""" lt16-a 1181-N ,
•
of the lnltlel publloetlon ot lh• entfanoe to t li• Civic Cenltr 1
Not!Ot of a ... la "201,81UO, 9u1111ne. aCIO &Iii°"""'*' Ava.,~l Thi blMtldlry under Mid Died, 0r-.. CA.
oyr..-oftflebrMGhotdllll.ftlnl At th• 11191• ot tll• lnltle t lM o«lllfltlone MOlired theNlolWe ptlbllaMloft ot ttlll flGllal., .. ._,
auoultd end dellv•red to Ill• MICIUlllot._W.-..,..._d .. ~ llgned, • written decleldon Obllfettoll _..., " ... --f J l ol dtflililt end Clel!\llnd fol ..... Md Cl••.,llteel deed of trv•I 1.ftCI
wrl11en notloe et ~ Ind of ................... 9" --r. '*''°" to c.uM tfle 1111dtu4t1...i ..._._. • 11a,11ut tlll& 'f
to ... MIO~ 10 •"'V NICI Tiie tlllllt lrld .. lld www--.. • .~·
otJ410iltlone and ..... °" ~ . ....,,... -....... °"'*" .... ~ ~ 1.:'.o. tt; =-=:...-:::= :.1~1•-:• .~)-:'11:.::-::'.: M ,
II• recorded •• lfl•t'll"*"t Mo. ~ _., .._ "'~ ~=~~~~O(dA Of Dlltel m~-1~90f'O'f CO,. ~ •; l!
~ l'1f!WIOW. ..... !~. IUMOle, INC.. •Y.P. ~ •MldT,,_.. ~ANY, MO .... ~ Hiil lfl4., ~ I ==.. "='.' 11711 :=i. o;::..,, l ~·· 71WIMl11 -e111..-.--. ~o:::,:.:.,, "'"Jj1DC:...... ,
l'ubll11ied Qt.,... COMt Oeltr Of.,.. 0.-~ "°' Mey 18;M , JtiN 1, 1ta ..... lilllW 11, ti. .. ,.. ntl-D I
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M Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
FROM FAT TO FANTASTIC IN 10 .DAYS!
#
U.S. Government G'rants a
Patent for a New Product
From Japan That Lets You Burn
Body Fat 24 Hou.rs a Day,
••• Every Single Day!!!
Have you heard about the latest
discovery in the war against fat? It is
absolutely amazing . In fact, it's just
about the only thing on the market
that lets you lose . weight without
going on a painful diet!
1 That's right! Belie\te it or not, this r iner~dibJe Rew discovery fets you
eat any kind of food you enjoy (not
just starchest) and still lose all the
weight you want! It's called G lu co-
mannan or "Konjac" Mannan.
This amazing weight-loss formula
is so unique it has actu ally been
awarded two U.S. Patents. The pat-
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BEFORE AFTER (ONLY 10 DAYS LATER!)
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~ Nutritional Research 1982
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•
-1
Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1983
BUSINESS C4
STOCKS CS
UC Irvine standouts
earn first-team
All-SCBA honors. C3 .
'>
rvine's CIF hopes ·are ·well-defi~ed
in quar terfinals a fter 9 -3 win
ROGER CARLSON
h Delly Not Steff
If you want to find Webster's definition for
ccesa, mark lrvme High's baseball story with
denominators:
1. Pitcher Rodney Poissant. 2. Center fielder
ark Webster . 3 . Take your pick from the
ueros' lineup, they have a little of everything to
around.
The Vaqueros moved into •the C IF 2-A
terfinals Tuesday following a 9-3 victory at
lssion Viejo High in a game marked by the
pee of Poissant (his second straight complete-
e victory in the playoffs) and Webster (3-for-4
th a two-run homer, a run-scoring single, two
900red and a key bunt single setting up the
' six-run fifth-inning outburst).
' And, there were seven Vaqueros in all who
ntributed at the plate, including a two-run single
y catcher Jim Martin, a two-run double by
h e h -hitter Remy Rah matulla, a 2-for-3
erformance by Johnny Salinas, a 2-for -4
roduct ion by Doug Brozovich and heads up
fensive hands.
The victory sends Coach Bob Flint's Sea View
gue co-champions into the quarterfinals against
orwal.k.
Irvine paid a p rice in the victory, however, as
hortsto p John Scott was forced to leave the
e with a possible concussion after being
Irvine at h ome Friday
Irvine High 's quarterfinals game in CIF
2-A baseball Friday will be on the Vaqueros'
diamond following today's coin flip at the CIF
office.
The Vaqueros meet Norwalk, th e
Suburban League's No. 3 entry, a 15-8 squad
which advar.~ by knocking off No. 3 seeded
Mountain View, the Mission Valley League
champion, and Antelope.Valley of the Golden
League.
The game is scheduled for 3:15.
Norwalk features left-h a nder Bill
Wenrick, a senior with a 1.56 ERA and a 10-4
overall record. He was the winning pttcher at
Dodger Stadium last year when Norwalk won
the 2-A crown.
Salinas walked and Webster followed with a
base hit bunt. Steve Lipton was hit by a pit.ch to
load the bases and Martin followed with tus two-
run bouncer over third.
Eric Patton relieved Mike Levesque, who had
entered at the start of the inning, and got the first
batter on strikes, but the Diablos hur~mselves
badly when an infield error loaded the bases for
Rahmatulla.
Rahmatulla's soft double to left scored a pair,
Salinas later pla~ anothe; with a single to right
and the Vaqueros were home free. -
olved in a collision with Mission Viejo runner Ton Peace in tlie first inning. BecalJ.se of
lling, X -rays have not yet been taken, but a
j>n>ke n nose and cheekbone are suspected.
~ Webster's two-run homer in the first inning
th Johnny Salinas aboard (via a single) staked
oi.ssant to a two-run cushion, but Mission rallied
filth two in the fourth to tie the game at 3 to set the
page for the big inning.
''Some things went their way.'' said Mission
Viejo Coach Ron Drake. "You can't have that bad of
an inning against a pitcher like Poissant that late in
the game."
"We bounced back at 3-3," said Flint. "We
talked about maintaining that competitive level and
things worked out."
Deitr Pffot Photoe bJ C._... Stwr
Irvine's Jo hn Scott (9 ) ~ Mission Viejo's Jon Peace collide. Sco tt
16 teams
advance
• tennis
S ea Vie w Leag ue tennis
wers Corona del Ma r and
niversity highs didn't find
F
ything different when they
tered the CIF 4-A playoffs
esday.
The Sea Kings, 21 -0 and
tee<ied first. whipped La Habra ~7-1. while the Trojans, 19-2 (th~
1>nly losses coming to Corona del
Ma r) routed Millikan by the
fl8Dle score.
I E lsewhere in CIF playoff
•ction, the third Sea View
League entry, Newport Harbor,
911ueaked by Long Beach Wilson
14·1/J -13 1/J, a n d the S u nset ~eague's Huntington Beach
Q iler s a n d Edison C hargers
9COred first-round wins.
In 3-A action. top-seeded
Laguna Beach outclassed Katella
24-4.
At Corona del Mar, the Sea
Kfngll had no problems with La
H abra. Singles players Jeff
Ewing and David Propp won in
straight sets, but then just about
all the other Sea Kings did, too
Senior Lance McLean also
zed in straight sets for CdM.
!fhe Sea Kings meet Glendale
Friday at G lendale.
University's 27-1 win over
M.Qlikan was Jed by sophomore
George Paulson who didn't lose a 8¥ TENNIS, Page C%) ..
I rvine High's Remy R ahmatulla tries to
score from second base o n a single, but
Mission Viejo ca tcher Steve Mich iel
applies the tag to end the Vaqueros'
six-run fifth inning.
suffered a possible broken nose and cheekbone in Tuesday's CIF
baseball action.
Pinckney . has · a go81
H e wants a volleyb al l title for his coach
By ROGER CARLSON
01 the Oellr PKot Stefl
There's something about Doug
Pinckney, a 6-3, 175-pound
senior at Estancia High School.
that every coach wants included
on his squad. that championship
touch
It was Pinckney, a smooth
18-year-old.~who was one ol the
big fa c tors in the Eagles'•
championship basketball seasons
the past two years. and it has
been Pinckney the past three
seasons in volleyball -especially
this year when the Eagles turned
more and more to their ace
"Light a fire under htm and
he's in a class by himself.'' says
Estancia volleyball coach Nike
Pome r oy, whose team is
preparing for Friday night's ClF
4-A champ1onsh1p showdown
with Laguna Beach at
Huntington Beach's Marina High
(8 o'clock).
"Whe n h e gets going."
continues Pomeroy. "he can get
up so high He 's very
t . It's a Sunset sweep .
in ·e1F sci£tlla1J play ,,,
~ Hi&Q aurvtved a aev..,ih~ .,apriaiJW and
Fountabl Valley and Weetml.nster alM> ~ up victoriel
Tueeday in the aecond round of the CDP' •-A worpen'•
dtb9JI p&a-yotfa. I
J'.d'*-1 aurviwd a two-nm eeventh inn.in& by hoet S imi
Valley tq hold on fot a ~-3 Victory; .Fountain Valley
rode the pltching of .Ttaey Vantman ~ a 3-1 win over
vleltlna Doi Puebloa; a-ftd Westminster blanked hoet
!.fat.er o.t. 7-0 to make it a clean sweep for Sumet ~
tea.ma.
At Simi=· the Charsera' Julie Carpenter attUCk out 10 and w three and Melanie Cooper and TetTY
McAlplne delivered RBI hiti. ln iMtdiUon, Carpenter helped
heneU with an RBI i1ngle in the .ucth.
Sam Ad~ homered. in the fourth and Kelly Winn
added Ul RBI triple tn the sixth to help Fountain Valley get
pest Doe Puebloa.
compet1t1ve. All the college
coaches are after Pinckney."
The Eagles' seruor says he has
had firm offers from UCLA,
Long Beach State and UC Santa
Barbara in terms of a full ride
with a volleyball scholarship.
"Right now rm leaning toward
UCLA." says Pinckney. But a
subject more immediate with him
1s the finals, a rematch with
(See PINCKNE Y, Page CZ>
Irvine 's
Poiss ant
i s MVP
Irvine High's Rodney Poissant,
a hard-throwing right-handed
senjor pitcher, has been named
Most Valuable Player in the Sea
View League as chosen by the
league's baseball coach es.
Poissant. who led the Vaqueros
to a co-championship with El
Toro and the league's No. 1 entry
in the CIF 2-A playoffs, racked
up a 7-1 won-loss record and
complied an 0.85 ERA.
Also earning first team honors
from Irvine was oulfielder Mike
Webster, who hit a t a .319 clip.
Carew gets untracked; so do Angels
Corona del Mar, which lost its
str anglehold on t h e l eagu e
championship a fter four straight
titles, placed 1982 AU-CIF second
baseman Gordon M oss o n the
first team, w hile Cos~ Mesa
pitcher Jeff Goettach , w h o
pitched into hard luck while
putting together a 4-3 won-lo.
record, was a first team choice. S EATTLE (AP) -The
Angela' Rod Carew can afford to
take a laid-back approach when
it comes to hittin g Gaylord
~· "I'm not one of th ose guys w ho
worriea'' about Perry's pitchin.g,
Carew aaid after he collected
tb tee hits In the Angels' 3-1
vktory Tue.day night over the
S.ttle Mariners.
Carew ripped a first -inning
single and sixt h -Inning RBI
dou ble off P erry, 2-5. In the
ninth, c.arew added a aingle off
retiewr BW Caudill to raile hi.
liveratre to .449. ~ flnt two times up I took
the ftnt pitch and they were
both aood pitches," Carew said,.,
'n\e third time he looped the f irst
pitch, a h1gb fastball, over Dave
U.ndenon, pla.Y1n8 shallow In
oenter, to ICOft 1'lm ,.oll with the
pme'• 6nt nm. 'lbe M.arlnen matched that in
their half of the 11.xth when Pat
Putnam rtpped bllJ IOW'1h homer
... ....-on into the eecond deck
inrichL
Bob Boone'• RBI •nale ln the
l9Wllth pve the Anfell the Jeed ~~t~ o'::*b~~o~
4oul>* by Juan Beniquez and
... Valentine In the etlhth.
The Anftll' Bruce J(jp\, ~1.
llwt S.nfe down tilt ...i ol tht
(,
way for hls third complete game
this season.
Kison, a Pasco. Wash., natJve.
notched his flrst victory in the
Kingdome in front of farruly and
friends.
the homerun," he added. "He
was up there trying to hit the
ball out of the park and I gave
him the chance."
The victory snapped the
Angels' three-game losing streak,
its longest of the season.
to atart,'' Seattle Manager Rene
Lachemann said.
Perry, who went 6~ innings
while giving up two runs, turned
m another soUd performance.
"Right now I'm in the groove I
want to be in," said Kison, w ho
has won nine of his past 11
decisions going back to last
season.
"lt would have hurt us 1f we
had had to go to the bullpen
early," Angels Ma nage r John
McNamara said .
Klaon said, "If I give the
bullpen a day off, that's a plus
for the team. Every little bit
helpe."
The Mariner o ffense ,
m eanwhile, contin ued to
struggle. Seattle has acored ju6t
nine runs in ita past six games
and two runs or less in 16 of the
past 22.
"I don 't remember three
t.'Onsecutive games he pitched this
well last year," Lachemann sa.ld.
In his past 20 ~ innings, Perry
has allowed slx earned runs. He
has two losses and no decislon to
ahow for it. "l was really upeet at giving up
"You try to manufacture runs,
but you have to have some pl.ace
Montreal walks away from Dodgers
MONTREAL (AP) -Four houn and 27 a n d moved to 1econd on Al Oliver's
minutes of 1tanding around a chilly ball groundout. When Howe walked Bobby ~k had left M ontreal Expoe lnflelder R a m o•, h e was r epla·ced b y T o m
Bryan U ttle cold, tired and hungry. Nledenfuer. who at.ruck out Tlm Wallach
"I juat wanted to go home," be Mid, and and a ot Andre Da wson to hit a •harp
he did ju9t that af1er drawina a two-out. bouncer to Guerrero, but the ball rolled up
bues-w.ded want in th e 15ih lnnlng to G uerrero'• arm for an error to load the
p rovide Montreal w ith a 3-2 victory' balel.
Tueaday nlaht over th' L?• Ange l ea Niedenfuer went '9 a 3-0 cbunt on Ltttle,
Dodprs, mapplr\8 the EXpoe four-1ame threw one atrtke a.nl. ~ loet hlrn when l~ ltr'Nk. hu next pit.ch fAiled to catch the l.naide
••you never like to loee a ball game Uke comer.
that," H id Dodaer M anage r T omm')ic--"After )le 90\ behind 3-0, I w• &oinl to LMorda. "You -1waya want to make the take eome pU.ch• until i\ JO' to 3.-i:1 aid
othll' dub work for It." Little. "I knew he had to lfroov• tome
An error by Loi Anaelee third bum\an 1trlk• Cll' the pme wu owr.
P9dn> Guerrero ,)1ad ttt the naae for Uule. ~· the Expoe' pltchlna 1taff
A.nM. Daw.on opened the 15th with ao far ...-1er con U'OI prob1-ml.
infield llihg)e off reliever St1tve Howe, 2-1, lllulna 10 wa.lka ln the pme.
•
"You're alw ays worried about walka,"
sa.ld Montreal Manlger Blll Virdon. ''That'•
what drives a manager cruy."
Two walks tn the first tnn1ng were coetl.y
for 1tarter Charlie Lea. After yieldlna a
lead-.off llnCle to Steve Sax, Lee l.aaued
1uccealve wallu to Guerrero and Gre1
Brock wtth two out. The walk by Brock wu one of ftw he received in the Kame,
t~ a National Leque ncord.
Ron Roenick• followed wtth a elna1e lnto rtaht field that ICDftd both run.nen. The
aWitcl\-hltUnc Rotnlckt WU betUJw only
.181 from the left lddt before the cluk h hit.
Af tet Cbr1I Speter•i RBI alnal• made lt
2-1 ta the~. the E>cpoe man..,.ct OC)ly
three harml .. atnal• and n.ver had •
runner put flnt bate until th• ninth
aaalnet 9'al1m' femando Valenzuela.
University placed tw o playen
on the first te am, with Juon
Gentile, a .419-hitting shortstop,
the only junior on the first team.
AJ8o making the first team WU
first ~aseman Collin Cate, who
hit .439.
El Toro led the way with three
players on t h e rirat learn
(infielder Todd lngle h art ,
o u tfielde r Doug Mahe r a nd
pl tch er Gar y P ifer). and
Saddleback , which ftniahed third
to El T o r o and Irvin e , la
repre9ented by outtlelder J esus
Ochoa and catcher Mlke Baker.
"· ~ '°' ... Ir All
"· -.,,_ ... . "'" "· .. It .... ,
~. ·-~ . .m . ...
I
l
-
C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May i8, i983
Just what needed: A longer NBA season
Nobody came m on the noon balloon from
Saskatoon and asked me, but .
•H you think the NBA seuon is Ion~ now,
conside r that the owners are talking about adding a
few games to assist m keeping the wolf -and other
assorted animals -away from the door.
•On C hannel 7 last week, Fernando
Valenzuela's agent, flesh peddler Tony Demarco,
delivered this classic utterance, "making people
happy is more important than makiJlR money."
•In the altercation Yankee Manager Billy
Martin had with the New York writ.er the other
day, it is significant to note that Billy ls cooperative
and gets along well with the media . . . ao perhaps
Billy was in the right this time.
•In the eminent domain matter with the City
of Oakland, Raider executive Al LoCosale says the
franchise is worth $100 million The Raiders
radshaw facing
$1.1 million suit
From AP dispatches
DOYLESTOWN , Pa . -[i]
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback t. t
Terry Bradshaw, who is resuming his
mov ie career with another Burt
Reynolds film this summer, may have waited too
long to return to show business.
The co-owners of the Bucks County
Playhouse -Ralph A. Miller m and Raymond
C. Daikeler -have sued Bradshaw and his
agents for about $1.1 million,
accusing the quarterback of
pulling out of a lead role i.11 a
production of the musical
"Damn Yankees."
Miller and Daikeler, in a
suit filed Monday in Bucks
County Court, say Bradshaw
has cost them $87,500 by
refusing to honor an
agreement to do eight shows a
llAADIHAW week between April 19 and
May 15.
Bradshaw was to have been paid $1,500 a
week to play the part of Joe Hardy, a middle-age
man who sells his soul to the devil to become a
young Washington Senators ' outfielder who
helps the team beat the New York Yankees for
the pennant.
Quote of the day
Ted Williama, the Boston Red Sox Hall
ol Farner, aft.er a security guard failed to
recognize him at a recent Symphony Hall
benefit to aid ex-Red Sox slugger Tony
Conigliaro in his recovery from a stroke: "I
know I'm old, fat and ugly, but I'm STILL
Ted Williams."
SPORTS COlUMNIST
BUD TUCKER
would not be worth $100 m.illio~ If you threw In Al
Davis' wardrobe.
•Baltimore Colta owner Robert !nay, who did
not get John Elway, says, "John Elway will never
be any good" . . . Well, Elway should be aa good a
quarterback as lraay Is an owner.
•Stu Nahan has person.aliz.ed license plates but
the best way to tell his car is by the four flat tinw.
•The Pad.res and Soclcers and Chargers are
worried about wear and tear on Jack Murphy
Stad1um'1 field in the event of a USFL team
alighting ln San Diego . . . Well, the~ certainly
won't be any 'wear and tear on the aeata.
•Guys who have been walling two decades for
an Angela-Dodgers freeway World Series do not
think it is too early to talk about one for 1983.
•Somebody said the Bobby Lane who la a
quarterback for Birmingham ln the USFL doesn't
drink.
•Wasn't It Manager Dick Williams who said
during spring training that the San Diego Padres
would cont.end for the National League pennant?
•You must be a very serious student of
basketball to understand what Chick ... Heam means
when he says the .Lakers match up better with the
Philadelph1a 76ers than the Milwaukee BucQ.
•The Minnesota Vikings and St. Louts
Durham's HR leads Cubs
Leon Durham's tie-breaking, Ii
two-run homer in the sixth inning
Tuesday powered the Chicago Cubs .to
a 4-3 victory over the Atlanta Braves
and snapped pitcher Pascual Perei'a nine-game
winning streak. Perez had won his last four
decisions in 1982 and first five this season
Elsewhere in the National League, Marlo Soto
fired a three-hitter and struck out nine while
Gary Redus drove in both of
Cincinnati's runs with a Kemp haunts ex-mates single and home run as the Reds defeated Pittsburgh 2-1
Steve Kemp, who spent five Ii . . . Right-hander J obn
years in a Detroit uniform, crashed a Denny pitched seven scoreless
• vo-run homer with twcr out in the inninga and singled in a run
11th inning Tuesday night lifting the as Philadelphia cooled off San
New York Yankees to a 7-5 victory over the host Francisco 2-1. The Giants had
Tigers. The homer was Kemp's fifth of the won 10 of their last 11 . . .
season . . . In other American League games. Rookie Darryl Strawberry
Cecil Cooper, whose batting average had dipped CMMMMI slugged a three-run homer to
to .227, drove in two runs with a homer and a rally Tom Seaver and the New York Meta to a
single, and Don Money knocked In three, 6-4 victory over San Diego . . . Bob Forsch
including his fi.rat home run of the season, as ~ a aeven-hitter to lead 'St. Louis to an 8-4
Milwaukee defeated Toronto 9-6 . . . . . Jeff triumph over Houston. The victory evened Barroa~ and Bob KearHJ blasted borne runs Forsch'• record at 3-3. Houston knuckleballer
-to-h1np-O'll(lan'd score a -'1-6 vtrtory over · -~Jff Nlnto,-1-4, took the defdt.
Minnesota . . . Jim Sudber1 singled past a
diving left fielder Alan Bamailter with one out in
the bottom of the 12th inning, scoring Lance
Parrlab from second base and giving Texas a 6-5
victory over Cleveland . . . Rookie Mike
Boddlcker, ca1Jed up from the minors less than
two weeks ago, pitched a five-hitter to propel
Baltimore to a 5-0 victory over the Chicago
White Sox and a sweep of a double-header.
Earlier. Dan Ford cracked a tie-breaking airuzle
in a five-run seventh inning that carried the
Orioles to a 7 -2 victory . . . Gary Allenson
doubled home two runs with his fi.rat b.it of the
season to help Boston 9COre a 4-1 victory over
Kansas City. Jobn Tudor and Hob Stanley
combined on a three-hitter for the Red Sox.
NBA has two new coaches
Two National Basketball m
Association teams found new coaches
Tuesday, including the Golden State
Warriors, who announced that JobD
Bach. who ls known for soendin2 hours sroutinR
and diuecting films, will replace Al Attles.
Meanwhile, Claack Daly, who built his NBA
reputation as an assistan t coach with
Philadelphia , was named to replace Scotty
Robenson as coach of the Detroit Pistons.
Isles win Stanley ·cup
UNIONDALE, N .Y . -An
exhausted Billy Smith sat before
interviewers and summed up the New
York I.alanden with Qne word: guta.
"We had the gut8 to Ignore everything that
was said and writte n about us and just
concentrate on what we were here for," said
Smith, whoee spectacular goaltending led the
lalanders to their fourth consecutive Stanley Cup
Tuesday night with a 4-2 victory over the
Edmonton Oilel"I.
The Islanders, completing a four-game
sweep of the fi.na.la, got first-period goals 1:37
apart from Bryan Trottier, John Tonelli and
Mike Bcmy, then preeerved that lead in the face
of a spirited Edmonton comeback.
Smith, who won the Conn Smythe Trophy
as the Moet Valuable Player in the National
Hockey League playoffs, was the man most
responsible for their stunning sweep. His
spectacular play kept Edmonton's Wayne
Gretzky from acoring a goal ln the four games -
matching the scoring ace's longest a\reak without
a goal during the regular season.
Cardinala are set to play an exhJbilion •ame in
London Aug. 7 and Vikino Mana~ Mike Lynn
aaya. "we are off to jolly old l!!nglaDd" ... Well, 11
the people of London know anything at all about
American football, they won't be 90 )olly about
paying to see the Cards and the Vlk~.
•A fat hor'9e player went to England and lost
30 pounds.
•If Notre Dame la terious about not echedullng
athletlc eventa againat IChoola which "constantly
break NCAA rules," the Fighting lriah won't have
anyone to play against.
•If heavyweight Jerry Quarry ia really aerioU1 ,
about coming out of retirement, ru fight ttlm.
•The NBA la get1ing a good crop of "hwdahip.
cases" this lime around ... A hardahlp cue In the
NBA is a kid whoee father has only one gold front
tooth.
Baseball today
1957 -Dick Wllllams of the Orioles hit a
ninth-inning, game-tying solo home run
against Chicago's Paul LaPlume seconds
before 10:20 p.m. -a time set as a curfew
so that the White Sox could catch a train
out of Baltimore. If Williams had done
anything else. Chicago would have won.
The game was replayed from the beginning
and Baltimore won.
1962 -Bob A llison and Harmon
Killebrew each hit a grand-slam home run
in the first inning to propel the Minnesota
Twins to a 14-3 victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
1968 -Frank Howard blasted his 10th
home run in a six-game span to power the
Washington Senators to an 8-4 victory over
Detroit at Tiger Stadium.
Today's birthdays: Brooks Robiruon.
elected this year to the Hall of Fame, is 46.
Angela outfielder Reggie Jackaon ia 37.
Texas catcher Jim Sundberg ia 32.
Ca!! B~~ks k~ep edge?
Bobb y Jones says t he •
Philadelphia 76era have to steal the
psychological edge from the
MilwauktAe Buco if they hope to
clinch the National Batketball Auociation'a
Eastern Con1erence title tonight when the two
teams meet in Philadelphia for game five with
the 76ers up 3-1 ... World Boxing Council
heavyweight champion Larry Holmes says he
plans to retire at the end of the 1983 aeaaon.
Holmes is scheduled to meet contender Tim
Wltbenpoon in a bout Friday night in Las Vegas
. . . Proclaiming It "the happiest day of my
life," Ewln1 Kaaff man announced the ..,., of 49
percent of the Kanaaa City Royala to Avron
Fo1elmu, a real estate developer from Memphis
. . . Biil Hod1e1, former head basketball coach
at Indiana State, has been hired as an aasiatant
coach at Long Beach State.
Television, radio
TV: NBA Playoffs -San Antonio at Laken
(game five), 8:30 p.m .. Channel 2.
RADIO: Bueball -Dodgers at Montreal,
4:05 p.m .. KABC (790); Angela at Seattle, 7:3-0
p.m .. KMPC (710). NBA Playoffs -San Antonio
at Lakers (game five). 8:30 p.m., KLAC (570).
PINCKNEY.
From Page C1
• TENNIS
From Page C1
• • • Indy track 'very unforgiving'
Laguna Beach.
"We're just lookmg forward to
winrung 1t for the coach," says
Pinckney. "We just want to do 1t
for him."
Friday's finals, the third
appearance m the blue chip game ~
fo r Estancia in the past five
seasons under Pomeroy. is the
coach's fina le, barring an All·
Star game later ..
And 1 t 's one last chance to
cement am ends for a three-set
loss on the Eagles' home court -
when Laguna Beach rolled early
m the sea.son dunng non-league
play.
Esta.l'lCla has lost twice at home
(Costa Mesa turned the trick
during league play). w.hich in
eff~ has turned the season into
an up-and-down venture until
the playoffs.
A se mifinals five -set come -
from -behind victory over San
Clemente last week probably
sums up Est.ancia's makeup.
"The San Clemente coach
(Jack Iverson) commented about
our tendency to refuse to give
up," says Pomeroy. "We've done
that a lot."
<I n the Orange County
Invitational fi.na.la It was a similar
s ituation. Laguna Heach
appeared to be on its way to an
easy win when suddenly the
momentum shifted and F.alaiDcia
won JtOing away.
"Volleyball can go either way
so quickly," adds Pinckney. "You
have so many chances to come
back. You loee one. it's no big
deal.''
Pinckney was j\.wt a shade le8I
than perfect against Laguna
Beach in t h e Or:::Je County
lnvttadonal finall he calla it
"m best game." ~. he had an Inkling about
Friday'• mal.Chup. ··1 knew... 18)'1 Pi.nclc.ney. "lf
we aot to &he fi.na.19 it woWd be LMuna Be.ch we'd meet."
'fhe anewer to th e La1una
Gauchos take title
CA.R.m:L -The s.dd]ebedc eou.ce Pl ~ bu captured
lw tint .iaie communlcy coo.a
tHm ch•rnplonabfp, and tfit
Gaucho• drd it wl&b • com·
tortable et1b1-1tToke cueblon
over tbr e other team• In
oomp9\1Uon ~ here. Coech BID Q,uwrt)"•...,., WU
I by Id Karper who abot a
two-round toea1 1.U.
Doug Pinckney
Beach riddle? "It's just a matt.er
of execution," says Pinckney.
While Pinckney hu enjoyed
the recognition, the Eagles are
hardly a one-man team. Also
primed for Laguna Beach are
out.aide hitters Jim Knowlton and
Danny Gass, middle blockers
Matt Carrico and Gordon Gust
and setter J ohn Wallace ln the
5-1 offeme.
"Pinckney gets a lot of credit,"
continues Pomeroy, "but we
could play without him. Our
strongest suit Is team spirit,
they're all together. Danny Gua
may be our beat all-around
play~r •.. he's certainly the mollt unrecognized.,,
• Losing twice at home,
however , hasn't caused the
Eagles to suffer any emotional
traumas. "It'• juat made us all the.,nore
detennlned," explaiN Pinckney.
"Every teem hlta a Alump during
the year. I...-,una hu. too,"
Aa an oucmde 'hitter Pinckney'•
abilities surface wlt.h h1• well-
Umed lcilla off Wallace'• aeta. but
he ii a1ao a knqwn c:arnmodity ln
the' b9ck row with hi• pMllna'.
serving and diggtng.
Rlaht now the only thine .UU l"f!'l1'Wnlna la for the ti.re IQ-&. I! t.
and Pomeroy uya be and the
r..tanda faithful have the macch.
cr•ll 142-H71. ,,,r. r.w words
to work for you.
game all day. Teammate John INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The Indianapolis
Pinchess recorded 6-1, 6-0. 6-0, Motor Speedway is a difficult track even for
6-0 victories and the doubles veteran driven. For rookles. fike 41-year-old Jtm
team of Chris Greer and Eric Buick, it's "the worst."
Oliver also prevailed with little "It's fut and it'• flat," Buick said Tueeday.
difficulty. "Thia race haa a very rich purse. and that bJin8:s a
Newport Harbor improved i~ "'9t of people out. The track la very unforgiving.
overall record to 16-5 as James There ls no room for mistakes here.'
Myers and Price Kerfoot took 3 As Buick talked outside hla Uuollne Alley
of 4 of their matc:hes In singles garage, his crew waii inside. working on his
play and Mike Haya and Rick damaged race car, a testament to the dangerous mix
Conkey won three matches In~ of s~ and concrete. Buick was not Injured. but
doubles. the Chevrolet-powered Penske .racer suffer ed
The Sailors face a tough Palos extensjve damage to the right rearm a fourth-tum
Verdes squad on Friday. crash during practice.
John Dampman and John " "I got too low. too fast," Buick said of the crash.
Gabriel teamed In doubles to I was trying to give somebody some room to go by
on the right, and the car just got looee.
"1 thought I had the wall cleared. I made one
complete spin, counter~ockwi.ae, to avoid the wall,
then I started to make a aeoond tum and juat ran
out of room, about two feet too aoon."
The car suffered "pretty good damage" to its
suspension, oll cooler and mounting, Buick said.
Neverthele., the four-year-old racer i.s expected to
be ready for practice on Wednesday.
That will give Buick just over three days to
find the' necessary speed before Saturday's
qualifications for the May 29 race. In practice ao far,
he has not topped 190 mph, whJch would almost
&'mW"edly doom any hope of making the race.
Don Whlttington, the fastest driver in practice,
again had the quickest lap on Tue9day, touring the
2 ~-mile spedway track at 204.081 m h .
sweep their matches in leading
Huntington Beach to a 23-5
victoty over OrantJe.
Junior Pat Bedley managed to
win all of his singles mal.Ches for
HB's Smyth sails to title
the Oilers. By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
Edison's 16 -12 win over o.lfrNoC....,._._
large enough lead that 1hey did not
have to sail a final race. By throwing
out the DNS (did not start) they
wound up with a low score of 24
points.
v isiting Ventura was led by
singles player Harry Moloscho,
who took three matches and the
doubles combination of Lara
Wiberg and Larry O 'Connell
who also won three matches.
Laguna Beach had no trouble
with Kat.ella as the doubles team
of Rick Leach and Eric DickenK>n
scored easy victories and Ted
Brandt, hampered by Illness all
se ason, won hia four ainiles
matches. Laguna facn Upland
Friday at Upland.
Golfers win
LOS ANGELES -Marie
Gray of Blg Canyon Country
Club and Marianne Toweniey of
Santa Ana CC have advanced to
the second round In t he
championahlp flilhl of the
women's state amateur golf
championships at HUlettat. CC
here.
Oray. of Newport Beach,
defeated Libby La Bella of
Valley HJah cc, 2 and 1, whlle
Toweraey defeated Caroline
Craddock of RMera CC.
Meanwhile, Sandi Alnal)der·
Coffer of lrvtne Cout CC .feU IO
Ru\h Miller oi California CC, ~
and 1, whll. Anne Hedley o1 ID Ni~•I lott her match to JAM
BoOth, 3 G\d 2.
•
Your
Proftssional
Florist
29 IS Red HtU Avenue
A-108 Costa Meta
641-0810
'·
Skippe r Randy Smyth and his
crewman Jay Glaa•r arrived home in
Huntington Beach Monday with yet
another sailing championship. The
pair sutteS:Sfully defended their North
American title ln the 22-foot Olympic
Tornado catamaran class at Hamilton,
Bermuda.
Second in the seven-race series was
Skip Elliott of Newport Beach and his
crew. Owen Minney. 0
Smyth and Olaaer placed 8f!<.'Ond in
the next-to-lut race but still had a
Fourth in the final standinp was R.
Paul Allen of Newport Beach with
49.4 points under the Olympic scoring
system.
Elliott said he and Minney were
pleased with their showing u they
came to the regatta. "just hoping to be
amona the first 10." 'l"he aecond p
gave them a U.S . ranking and
eligibility to try for \he Olympica.
UC IRVINE
1983 SUMMER SPORTS CAMPS
•
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basketball, aalllng, ewtmmlng,
tennis, track and field, and
volleyban.
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MAJOR Ll!AOUI! ITANDINOI
American LNGIM
WHT OIYlll<* .,... w L l'ct. oe
19 15 558 r ....
OMlend
Kan .... City
Mlnnesot• Chicago
Seattle
BaltMn<>r• 8o11on
T0tonto MllWau~ff Clewl&nd
19 15 558 18 18 ~
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15 21 4 17
13 18 406 12 25 324
EA.ST OIVlllON
21 13 618 19 13 584 18 14 583
17 15 531
17 17 500
17 17 500
14 18 437
T.,.oder'• Scot ..
Aneel•3,Sealt .. 1
Baltlm0te 7-5, Clllcago 2-0 Boeton 4, l<anMt City 1
New Y0tk 1. OetrOit 5 ( 1 I 1nn1ng1)
M11Weu1o. .. 9. Toton10 6
T•H• 8, C-•na 5 ( 12 1nn1ng11
Oakland 7, Mlnne1ot• 6 Todey•e Qa.,..1
I
2
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Oelclend (l<ruege< 4-3) el MtnnffOt• IVIOle
0-2) Toron10 (Lee.I J-3) at MlrwaukM tSuuon 4·1)
Kenut C11y (Leonard 4·31 et Boston
(Btown 3·2), n
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1-0). n
Clllc•QO (Dotson 4..3) at Baltimore (Davie
2-0). n ci.v.iAnd ISotef>een 2-51 et Texu (Hougll
2'-31. n
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~· 24 10 700 Atlanta 22 12 $47 2 San Francisco 17 11 500 7
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Montreal 16 15 5Hl 7'"
PUttbufgll 12 18 400 5
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N-YO<~ 12 20 375 1
T...adey'o ScCH'8o
Montreal~ ~ 2t15 Innings!
ClllcaQO 4, Alletl!a 3
New Y0t1< 8. Sen Diego 4
Phlllldefpllta 2. 8111 f'rancl9C;o I
CH'lelnn•ll 2. Pmsburgll I St loui. 8, Hous1on 4
Today'o a.-
Dodger• (Hooton 1-2~ at Mon11e11
(GU!llcnon 3-41. n Houslon (Scou 0-1) et S1 Loula (AnOu)a.r
2-5) Atlanta IB-na 3-1) a1 CllleaQO (Trout
2·5) San Oitgo (Clt1vecky 6-11 •I N-Yotlo. (TOtrez 1·5) n
S en Fr e nc11eo jl<rull o w I 2/ e t ~la (Ruth_, -2~ n
Clnctnn111 IBeronyo 3·3) et Plltsburgll
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
Anoet. 3, Marlnen 1 CALW~ aaATn1 r ... rllbl ...... .., car-lb S 0 3 I Cruz 21> • 0 I 0
e.n+q.-er • 1 1 o Allen • 3 o 1 o Velen1'1>e rt 4 0 I 1 Htlson"ll 4 0 0 0
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PB-S-t T-2 411 A-7.313
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ellpoe a. ~ra 2
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San OteQo 00 I llO 010-4 11 I
N-YOtk 200 030 10•-8 8 0
Lollar COuc:hM (5). Luca• (81, Sou 171, Tllurmond (8) llnd l<enfl4llly, Seever. Oroec;o
(71. S11k 191 end Hodges W-Sea-. 3·2
L-LOll•r. 1-.3 S -SISk (31 HR-San Otego. Guvey (7) New Yori... Str1woerry (21
A-7550
Clr'dfnetw t, Aetroe 4
Hou11on 000 100 003-4 8 t
St l ou15 0 15 020 00•-8 8 O
J Nlekro, Rullle (3), 0 Smllh (5), l aCort•
18> and Athby. Forscn Von Oni.n (9) end
P0ttet W-Forscll. 3·3 l -J Nlekro, •·•
HR-HOUS10<1. Thon 13). A-40.HO \
Top 10
(aa..d on 15 at ..... ,
AMllllCAN LEAOUE
c.,.w, Anoe!•
B<ell.KC
Th0t<1l0<1 Cle McRM KC
Sh<Mby. B11 Ford Ba.I
Yount MH
Busn Monn
lotg, T0t Lowenlln, Bal
Q d It H Pot.
28 I 18 20 ~3 Ull
25 1111 '17 40 404
3• 115 Ill 41 357 18 I 10 22 38 355
2!> ea 13 2• 353 31 131 211 46 351
32 129 22 4!> 348
29 88 8 30 341
24 71 1 24 333
30 74 17 25 338
HomeR11ne
DeClncff, A~•· 10; Bretl, Kan ... Coty
9 Wlnlleld N-Yotk, 9. Barfield. T0t0<1IO
7 LJnn. ~ 11 You'll llololwaukM 7 17 • ,. tied With 8.)
Run• .. tied In Bretl, 1<1111 ... Clly, 29, l<ltlle, Chleago. 27.
Ward, Mln,,...,11. 27. Hrl>ell, Mlnnnote 28
RlOe Boe•on 26 TllOtnton, Clewland 28.
Wlnheld ~ York, 28, Yount. Mllweuk ..
25
l'ltcll .... (a Decleb\e)
Fl•ntQan. Beltlmore, 11-0; Molflll. Tor0<110,
J·O Allaon 11.lllWau~M 4-0. Klaon. A~t.
5· I. R1gnew. New York S· I Suteloffe
Clev1lend, 5· 1 t e nel\n, Angelo, 4·1:
Sutton Miiwaukee 4 t Whttthouu
M1nnet01a 4, 1
NATIONAL LEAOUIE QdllHl'eL
Hendflel< St. Louie 27 1111 15 35 354
Flannery SWI 0teQo 23 57 lO 20 36 l
Euler Pttteburgll 21 58 1 20 ~6
O.weon MonllNI 31 128 ti « ~
EvlM San Francltco 30 108 27 38 333
Bench Clnc:innatl 3• 133 17 « 33 I
0..1er Clnclnnell 35 134 17 « 328
Cruz Houa1on 34 141 111 4e .328 l<ennedy San Diego 35 121 11 42 328
Hernendc St Louie 29 120 19 39 325 ...._,._
Murphy. Ati.tlte, 11, o-Two, ~
10; Ev1 n1, S i n Fr1ncleco. I , 8rooll, Dclcl!IW9. 1: G1rwy, San OteQo, 7, Hendrlek.
St (oult . 7; HOtM(, Atlent1: 7; Schmidt,
PhUldelpllla, 7
....... aattedtn
Murphy, Atlante. 33. KeMedy, San OleQo.
28, B1ne11. Clnclnnlll. 28: Htndrlcll. !1
louta, 2e, Oewlon. MontrNI. 25; Evan•. 8111 Frllldeco. 24; (5 we tied with 23 I
l'ttcfltfle <• ~) Monge, Phll•delphla. 3·0. •t••••t,
Dodgen, S-0: Dr•vecky. 81n Diego, 9.1. McMunry. Allanll. S-t, P-. Atlante, S-t, ........ Dodfen, ._,: Rogera, MontrMI, S-1
High achoo! ,,,,,,,. ••• ....,, Vlei<> ,
Ir.Ina 201 oeo 0-8 I I ,
MIUIOn Vle)O 100 020 0-3 5 2 P04 ... nl al>d Marlin, ScllUlll. LeYffQ.,.
151 Petton ~5) end Mlcl'llal. Hi ll (71 28-Verner CMV). A1t1metull1 (II. Hll-
Webll., (ii
NeWllCM'I Cl\rte""" t, Cate T
Newc>Ot1 Chr1a111111 000 004 4-8 8 •
C11e 101 212 0-7 4 2
Clllay How1rd 11) ena Honeycull. 11.lueller
and P11elra W-Howud L-Mu1ller 2B-Oeln (NC) 3B-Howard (NC), Oulol(
(NCI HR-Welle< (Cl .
El Tore 22. fl Moflle I El T0to 1112 1152 1-22 13 0
..El Monie 032 ooo o-5 • 4
Plf.,, Arrnt (2), Quell (21 end Applce.
Gonzal11. Acoe11 Weeton (21. 0•11• (3).
HyN>l1 (41. Otu (81 11\d Ot6l. 8ennez w-
GUMl L-Acoete. 211-3'-1 (ET). Apploe
IETl HR-8'-1 IETI
CIF plaJoffa 4-A
Hoo-I . LOI Attoa 7
l.Mewood 4, 811111 Vllley 3 II lnnlnge)
er Segundo 7. BllhOP Amat 8
COiton 8, N, Torrenee 3
Ctllpl •. w .. t T0t1ance 2
Long llNcfl Petr 8. Ecio-ooci 5
11.lilllltan 13, cui-City 3
Loyola 8. C111T11tlllo 6 ....
l\IQl\ettl I . 80nor1 3 (I lnnlng•I Ramona 2. Cen)'Of' (Anlllllml 0
Fulllrlon 11, Notlllvi9w 3
L06tl 3. LI Quinta 2
°'8'199 a, Pectftca o Cerrltoa I, l0tn900 I
Gellf 5, E19«1t1U 2
Uplencl 3. I.a Habra 2 ....
c.p.11r-Vllley I. Meyfllf 4
Ontario), E ~ I
Pllm llc>f inga 10, Yucaipa 4 e Toro at. a Mont• 8
NOfWl8I r. ~ v_, e er tnn1nvt1 ir-. •• Mlellon Vlllo 3 cenron e. 11. OorOM •
Art_. i . "="~
a.,_ 2 1, llletOf Vlllltfy Clwtetlen I
Buekler 11. Chttel '°"°°' OeMrt • Newpor1 CfwMllM •• Cite 1
Brentwood 19, l •n l'•rn•nllo Vi ney
CMttlan . Cr-Clede •. CoMI CMlllM •
l.llfflerM (OrlllOI) II. ~ Un10n 4
l"rcwtdellOI 3. LlnW CMtdlln 1 OtledWlcll t , ~ Vllley I
W~'• Oemlan Open , .. ..,., '"'.._.. ........ Andrei LMnd (U.11) def Leur1 Arr1ye IU S ). 4.111 7·&. 7·6; 0 1tllr1g l 1u111
tCanede) de LIM BonOer (U 8 I. 7•0. 1·6,
Mllhy ~orv1111 (U 8 I del. M•rc ell•
S lo.uharell• cc .. cho1lovlkl•I. 7-&. I · I, lveMa M•dn19• (Argttltina) dt t Mety Lou
Plll•k (U.S 1. 8·4, •• ,. YVOM• VermHk 1sou111 Alrloal del. Ju11e H1rr1no1on (U.B.I.
8-4. 6-4. Pem CllMle (U.8 ) def Oetrln Juell
(Swede n). 7-5. 7-5; Mercall• Meeker
(Nelllllflenct.I def Deni G"ben (U S ). e-o.
6-4
Hallan Open
(etlleffte~ ,~,~·
Plblc> Arr1y1 (Peru) def drteno Panene
jflely). 1·8. 8-4, 1-1!1, Thierry Tuleltle (Fr111oel
del Victor P9Clel (P11111u•y). e-2. &-2; B1leu T1roczy (Hung1ryl del. M1nuel Or1n1H ($pain), e-2. 7-1
Grand Prtx tournament
jet fllllft6cll, Wfft OerlllMJ) ""t llovncl StnetM Jo1klm Ny1troem (Sweden) 011 Mel
Puree ll (U S I. 8-3. 7-5, Tomu Smid 1Cztell01IOYeltla) def WOl1olll(I Popp (New
Zeatenal 5·7, M . 6-4. Egan Ademe tU 6 I
del Dem11 l<er.UC: (Eaet O•man11. 8-3, 2·5.
11·2, Mike Oep11m1r (U.8 ,) d11. Guttafo G-rero (Argentine!,~. 7•8; Jelf 80tOWl•ll
(U S ) def Bruoe M.,,..,,. (U.S ). 3·11 &-2
7·6
Cotleae
NCAA CHAMJIONSltll'
(II AIMIM. OL I
Stanford 6. SMU 4
Hlah ac:hool Huntlngl611 -._II U , 0r..,.. I llnglM
Gant (HBI 1011 to McF1rl•nd, 2·1, def
Segawa. 1 ·2. d el Bucelo.o, 8·2. del M11111ene 6-4 Be<lley (HB) won. 8-4, 7-S.
8-3, e-2. e..g1una tHB> 1o11, 2-1. 7.,9, WOii.
7-8. 6·1, MerQUez 'H91 loet. 1-8, 4·1, won,
8-2. 6-2 Ooublel
Oabrlel-01mpmen (H8) def PrlDlll•-
Doughty, 8-0, 11·0. dll Herma-Joh1neon,
II· I I I. Carroll-Dodd• (HB) won. 8-2. e-o.
won. 11-0 6-3.
l!dleon 11, Ventura t2
llfleNe Whllcher (E) loot to M1p11, t-11 d1I
J1ckeon. 8· I, Iott to Milne, 8· 7. Clef
H•rohberger. 8-0. llololollleo IE) loll, 3-5.
won. 7 -5. 8-1 8-1; H•n (E) io.t. 3-8, 4-11, won, 7-5 6-4. Reid (El loll, ~. 2·1 4-8,
3-8 Dou-.
O'Connell·Holmu (E) c!ll She rren·
J1clo.aon, 11·2. 8-t . split will! McC11lln·
McCl•ln. 8-7. 8·3; Mc:C1111n·Wlberg (E) won 6-1. 1-4. te>Ut, M . 3-8
COfona ..... 1'1, Le .... 1
•tnetM Ewing (CdMI del Senger. 8 -2. del ~ Fr9Q090,·M ,-;M1 -OM-8-0r del-Fleek.
6-0, Suttlvan (CdMI loat 2-8, won. 1-3. e-o.
11-0. Propp (CdU) won. 8-0, 11-2. e-o. e-o.
MCLN n (CdMI, WOii. &-3. l-0, 11-1 11-0
DoubMe
Hottetler-Hlnmen tCdM) del Cllen-
1(-flck, 8-0, 8-2. def PaJme<-Sallnu, e.o.
e-1. Btndettl·Houelll• (Cd MI won. 11-1, I.()
W0<1 l.Q 11-Q
U.V-elt)r 27, Mllllll1t1 t Slfl9 ...
P1ulson IUI d ef l(e nn1dy. 11·0. de f
Sandro. 8-0. det VIII•. e-o. def. FrteM. e-o.
Plncnn IU) won. 8-1, e-o. e-o. s-o: M1tgolla
tUI won. 6-2, 1-2. 11'2, 6-0 Corkery (UI loet.
O·I . won, 8-t 11-t. 8-t
Ooublff Qr--Ollv8' IUI de!. SllC>a-Lerman, 6-1,
8-2. def Sloan·Boonl. 11-0, 11-4. VtnkfllMll·
Vogel (U) won 7-5, 7-5. won. e-o. 11-3
..... ,., ...,.... ,,..,,,, La~ 11 .... ...... Myert (NH) loot to Crow. 3·11, def M
Mlelleelll n 11-2 d•I 8. Mlcheel4an, 11-2. def
Mceormlclt. 11-3. l<er1001 (NH) won loll, t-8
won &-4 11-3 1-2, SVtnc!..,, !l"HJ '°61 o-6 . won. 11-2, loel. 4-8. ~. Sl0tm loat, 0-8, 3-6 4-8. 4-8 ~
Conlley·M Heye (NHI dt Wllh l<Olg9icy·
Dey 7-5 11-1 def J~·Stneky 8-3 11-2
:.•,\18'-AN<I tNEI loll, 4·8 4-6, won. 5-3
L.eellf\8 -... 1( ...... ..,.....
Sch8'\U ILBI de! Patel 1-7 o.i lolleller
11·4 del Mllauo. 11-3. de! D Btunet 11-0.
He"rOftn tlBl '°"'· 2-8, won 11-3. 11-1 11-3. Brendl (lBI won. 5·•. 5·3. 8 -• 8 O, ~rumfleld ILBl lo•t. :1·8. l·I . 3·11. WOii 11-0 ~ L••Ch·O•c-eroon tL81 def T Brun•l· McDon•ld. e-o. 8-1. def Rot~Muf 6-0 6-0 l<ollend•·W•lllC9 (LSI won. 8-7 6-1 won.
11-2 8-•
CIF playoffa
,,,..,. llOUNO
4-A
C0ton1 dtl 11.lar 27, LI Habr• 1 Gland•~·· Collon 4 Huntington 8Hch 23. Oret>v1 S
~ Hiie 18, n.o.-.d Oell• 10
Sent• Berbet• 28. PeMdena O
Mire Coe11 18. Sunny HINI 4'-'
Newport Harbot 14 ..... lB WI'-> 13'~
PllOo Verdel 21, Fountain Y ..... 7
Mlt-te 28. l OOO 8Nef> Poly 0
Royel 14.,.., San Marooo 13'.t
Foothill 27, EIMnh~ I
8o T0trenoe 23, Hoover 5 Ed•OOtl 18, Ventura 12
ROiiing HINe 17''1r. Fullet1on 10',r,
Unlll-ty 27, LB Mllllken I
>-A
Lllll'Jn• 8Hcll 24, Katllla 4
U01'"4 20. North 8 LI CaneCle 18. Alll_,.,brl 7
LI Outnt• n. w .. nu1 8 LQI Allot 21. W1tref> I
LOa "1em1101 23'A, Cerrflos 4Y,
Rl....,.elde POiy 26, Rubldour 3
San Merino 18, Damien 1
11.l•ter Oei 20. Corona a
HH Wiison 17. Sch.irr 11
C1l•t111ae 28, LomPOC 0
Aadland• 18, TU911n 12
H
Canyon t8auqua) 14, Norwlltl 14 (Canyon
•dv1nce1 on O•"-won, 1~1
rnaio 28. V1C10t ve11ey 3
Royll Olli 17, ROle<nMO 11
Sevenna 24'"'· South H ... J'A
Yuceipa 20\'I, Ont1tl0 7
l • Sarne 24'A, 81P>oo Montgomery ;)'A Appia V11Miy 16, Cenirel 13
CrMOI 18, l<tppel 10
Morntngalde 22. W•tern I
N09 .... 2.2'o1r, Olecklqne 5'"' o.amone1 a .. 22•Ar. v...,,aa &\\
Mont•bellO 18, WOtlU'nlfl 10
Loyole 21. C\il'ler City 7
aunoug111 IRIOoe-1 , ...... A.troyo 8'"' NO!r• Oetne 180 ) 18, Ant"°"9 ve1..., t
ormer Trojan Achica signs with Express
LOS ANO" .ES (AP}-A.ll·Amerk:an middle
~ AdUca, pldc.ed b)' Baltbnote f.n tho
UoNJ Foolt.11 1.-cue drats. bu titJ'*I wllh. tho
. ~ E:iqnm ol the UnJi.td States Football
... l\MI •• , .,, .. Mnounoed ~.,.
A.chlu, out of the UnJvertOy of South•m
fomla, ... draNd tn the lh1rd round by \he
"-He b«:caw the ..cond bi,h 111.uon by dmore who will not .,iay for &he club.
The Colta madf" Stanfbrd quarterbec:k J ohn
I
Elway the fl...-t. pick ln the NFL dnh, but he
refUIOd w n~auu.ai.e wiU> t.het'l'I and wu Lraded \0
Den"ctr.
Achlca, a 6·6, 260-pound«r, N.ld 1t a C conftre~ that b1I dealte to si.y on the W•t
w• a major factor ln hla ~ '
"l'm not bel!ll nepUve 1bout BelUrQon or
~ta) Co.ch Frank Kuah." he Mid. "Pve known h Kuah foe a Jona Ume, and 1 know mcl9l of &he
..ltt.C\ta h•'• f()t with hJm. Bulicallv, It'• j\.wt that t want to 1tay on the Weet eo..t.••
I
U. lllllftltoe TUltOAY'e •WLn (14tllllf ......... ~-llflt)
'11111T llM) •• )00 V!llOt Ann AllUf'ed OOCI)'
Crff9W) al,OO 1100 t40 uueer1 .. ~14 (C .... 1 ... 1 4 00 2 80
Crv-1111 Dlatnond1 (Cll'l\Clbell) $ llO
Time 17".
II IXACTA (7-8} Olkl $ t 4'.40
HCOHO llACI. 3&o y1rdl. Jonny ao AeclnQ (PliUHMl 8 40 • oo 2.40
Sniff N Sm0111 (CarOoH ) 8 to 2 IO
D+l-Shllte Khan (MllOllll4) 2 10
Dtt-T'reat MIN Todd ('TrMIUra) 2 20
Time: 18 22
THlllO fitACL 870 yerde.
Tortllll Flat (PauOM) 3 80 2 80 2.80
Oangerout Oel>t tP~llef>ton) 14 80 8 to P•n;:u·~:·2~c1.,, ... , 3 ao
FOUfittH llACf. 400 ylfdl
Gyp Chlek (CrHQ81) 20 00 8 40 8 eo
Clllcado Rab tC.,oon) 5 40 3 40 ~ Hlwil p ... (Tr•Hure) s 00
Tl""' 20 26
12 l!XACTA (5·2) p1ld $81.00.
r::inH llAClf. 350 y81dt.
Ho1 s1oc11 1H111) 3 ao 2 eo 2 20
Cut N Ruo (W1rd) 3 00 2 40
P•l•ro Chtco 1Puk•n1on1 2 ao
Time 17 85
llXTH llACf. 550 ya1d1
Rogef Young (Hert) 7 20 4 00 3 20
Go111 Go Te (Oarclll 5 IO 4 00
Unoio Boy 1w1ro1 8 oo
Alto rec:ed PHI Em Up Deck, Cnlgoe<
Light. Autocr•t•c. Keldedo. Power 9ro~er,
Top Em UP Windy 0110en
Time 27 57
12 l!llACTA 18· 101 0610 $37 00
SEVINTH l'IACI!. 870 yerds
FMno WIN Oeneer IClrM) 1 20
T&nlno Polley (Pauline)
Devine Oenctt (Adalrl
TI""' 41 $4 12 EX.ACTA 17-61 p.,d $27 ISO
llQHTH llACE. 350 ylrdo
4 60 2 40
•80 .IU\I
3 40
R111 e .. y S199 (Her1) 12 oo ~ &O 6 oo
Rootle Toot Tool tAOllll 11 00 1 00
Eu v lem (Flgue<o•I 21 20
Time 17 82
12 l!XACTA (lo.-41 p11d $116 80
12 l'ICIC tlX (4·5·1·8·7·10) plld s'lo.°
1118 20 with thrH winning tlck•I• l•I•
llor-) $2 Pleil Sl1 coneOlallOn peld 116 40 wolh t52 winning lk:llell (hve r.or-1
NINTH llACE. 350 yltdt MlllOUOllloOO (Crgtl 7 20 4.20 3 40
Sov8talgn Eighth (Ch1vez) 13 eo 2 .80 Found the Te (Frydey) 2 ao
Time 11 21
12 EXACT A (2· 1) paid t 2140
A118'1d•nce -8.148 .
Communlt1 eoll91J• golf
aT A Tr t OUflNAJiolllljT
l•I llancllo Canedl CC, Cermet)
Teem aco<• -1 Seddlebaelo. 778 2 (h•l
Cotrua. Ml San Ant0<110. LA Mou oon 784. !>
COlleg• ol 8equOI•• 786 Saddleblci< sc.or1ng -Ed He1per. 148,
Cuey Nellem• 152. Joe F•-153. JeN
Payne, 1". l<u<t Bilben 1$4
Women'• tournament STATW AMATl!Ufl CHAMPIOHSltll'
(at HllktMI cc. Loe ... ,......,
""' llovnd Leeder• Nency H11rleon ($t1rdusl CC) def Diane
BrynlldMn 1C1111l0tnle CC), 2 .no 1. Millie
Stenley (Wllllhlre CCI del Ginger Lembereon !Sheron Helghta CCI, 3 an<I 2; Mdrle Gray
IBIQ Canyon CC) def LIDby La Belle !Valley
High CCI. 2 Ind I, Connie t<etlel (HMICrHI
CCI dtl L)nn McOonald (Rldgemerlt CC). I .no 4. $111)' 0ow'11ng CLO• Angeill CC) def
9e""'1y 8oundl (laa Poeae CCI 3 and 2
9arnloe S1on9man (Lo• Coyollt CCI def
BObllle l(uM (0&11mon1 CC), on 19th h016
CerOI Slene (Aul>utn V&I..., CCI dtl l•na•
MOt-(Monte<ey Perwnauce CCI 2 end I R1111l Miller 1C111fornl1 CCI det Sand•
A .. •6"4er-Cott8' llrvlne Coael CCI 2 and 1 C.oncty Meye<e (Calll0tnla CC) de! Carol
l •y Oroen Ems CCI. 2 and t St•cy
Cott>orna tSton.tdge CCI del Loura Cln'I
IM...,_ CCI 1 •nd S. Clll<!y SclloteflelO
(Lo• A/lgele9 CC> del Debti<e B•ronoltky
iSan Diego CCI. 2 end 1, Mary Ellzeoetn
Celllgh1n !loe AngllH CCI def S elly
Tomllnaon (Clere mont CCI a e nd 5
11.l•,.•nn• T-•n•y ISanla Ano CC) def
C1tOltne Craddoctt (Rivie<• CCI 4 Mid 2. Patricia C0tne1l (Pr..,dlo CC) dfl Barbra
Sl8Pllen (Lelle Arrowll11d CC) 7 Ind 5,
Jene 8oocn (Callf0tnl• CCI def Anne Hedley
!El Ntgvel CC). 3 end 2 Joen FM IAfll Vitt•
CCI d9I 00<1 0 Rouru (ElkhOln CCI. 2 .no
I
~ . . • •
Wom.n'a eoftbell ,_, .... v.-., .. Doe l"ul4l+oe 1
Doe Pueblol 000 100 0-I 8 0
Fountain Valley 001 101 a-3 8 o
E,1,.rt e nd Vtlleg1a, V1nlm1n e nd
Puchlltlo.I 3B-Wlnn (l'V). H0tm•n (OP) HR-AM<lge IF\I) , .. _a. tlfftl v.-.,'
Edleon ooo 212 o-6 8 o
Stm< Valley 000 100 7-3 8 I
Cerpenter Ind Trubov•U, Radcll lf and
l<lncalO 2B-C-(E)
CIF pl•roff• ... Cyo.-2, LA Ouonla 1
fOuntlln Valley 3. Dot Pueb<o• 1
St J-'I 7. S.,.t• 8arb1r1 2
Edleon 6, Simi Velley 3 W"1mkltlef 7. Mel• Dec 0
VIiia Plrfl I. El Dotldo 0 Rlgl\tlll s, .. .,, 2 116 IM!nilll
N-l>ui'I P1tk S, Downey 0-
Tueect.1•1 trenMOtlont
8AMaAU. •---L-.-l(ANSAS CITY 1110'1' Als.A/lnouflced 11111
-Ewing Ktvflm.,. llM llOld 48 P«Olnt o f tll• t••m to TennHHI reeleetat•
dtvelopet A~on a Foge1men
NEW YORK YANK'!ES•Pl•c•d Butch
WynegW. '*"*· on tlll ts..4ey dlMOleO llal Cllled uo Juan fae>lno, qtc;her. from
C01umbu1 of 1111 lnttrnatton., lMOue
SEATTLE MARINl!RS·Cl lled up RICiey
Neleon. outfielder. ltom ae11 Lall• or the Peclllc Coul LMgue Opl)oneCI Jim 11.l-
llral baMnletl. 10 a.it Lei< .. ........ i....-AtLANTA IRAVH·Sent Rl~h Mlhltr.
pHolle<, to RlcflmonO of tne 1n1•n1t10nll
L"""'9 Reoeltecl Donnie M00<a, pltdle<. lrom~ .
NEW YOfV< ME'Tl-AGtlVeled loo 8alor.
lnttefder·Oullle lder Optioned Wiiiy
8aokm1n. Infield••, 10 T·ldewllar ol 1111
fnt-llOllll Leegue •••tteAu. ................... , ........
ClfVlLANO CAVALllR&-Re-Nfed Tom .......... 11..o colGll. -OfTAOrf PISTONS.Nlll'MO 0'1-tl ()ety ...., co.di.
OOLOlN 8tATI WAllRIORl•N1meo Jolln fldl .... OC*fl
toCC:U ........... ._L...-PHOCHOI t~NllNCI TM li'odllellt
~ 11111 Oet*9I ,_.,....
..
Lincoln•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983 C3
UCl's Rupp, Ging
earn first teani
All-SCBA honors ,.
UC Irvine catcher Mike Rupp
and Anteater freshman third
baseman Adam Ging have been
named to the All-Southern
California Baseball Association
first teem by the league's
t'Oaches.
Rupp, a senior. batted 327 this
season for the Anteaters. Last
year, Rupp led the team with 55
RBI while hitting .349.
Ging, meanwhile, hit .262 in
his [reshman campaign for Coach
M ike Gerakos' t eam , whic h
finished third en SCBA play
behind co-champs Cal State
Fullerton and UC Santa Barbara.
UCI's Cas Soma, a sentor
right-handed pitcher, earned
second -team ho n o r s . Soma
finished th~ campaign with a 7-6
record and a 3 57 ERA Also
honored was Anteater second
baseman Brad Ditto.
Ditto batted .302 in helping the
Anteaters fi nish the SCBA
campaign with a 17-11 record.
UC San<a Barbara shortstop
Dan Clark a nd Cal S tate
Fullerton pitcher Tim Thompson
were named the conference's co-
players of the year.
Clark. a junior, led t h e
Gauchos to a 22-6 conferente
mark by batting .351 this year
He a.lso led the SCBA whh nine
home runs.
Thompson compiled an 11·3
record and a 3.13 ERA. He waa
the winningest pitcher ln SCBA
play with an 8-1 mark and a 2.40
ERA.
UCSB's Al Ferrer waa honored
as the SCBA Coach of the Year
All-IC8A
'IRIT TWAM
Poe, Pl•r••, acllool
P -Tim ThomptlOll, CSF Jr
P -Don VOllublllll, UCSB -Ir
P -J•lf RobtMOn. CSF St
P -Todd Slmmon1i CSF So. c -Mllo.e Ruop, UC
Utll Jell Payette, l MU
IB-Peul Smith, UCSD
2B-Steve Moore. LB Sl•tt
3B-Adam Ging. UCI
SS-Dan Clark, UCSB
OF-Jolln Fishel, CSF
OF-Tom ThomH . CSF
OF-John Mullen. USO
DH-Clluclo. Jollneon. LB Sllte
81!CONO TtAM
"'· nlMtr 11-3 3 13
14 .• 3 2.57
7-11 2.7'
11-3 2.0of Sr. .327
Sr. 37S
Sr 315
Sr 322
Fr 2e2
Jr 351
So 333
Jr 359 SI 351
Sr 3'1
P1tch1ts -Bob ltzza. Pec>perdlne. er: Cu
Soma UC Ir vine. ai: Frank Spelt. UC Senti
Baroara Jr Mike Fulmer. UC S1t1t• Barbare,
It
C atc llert -Bob Ferr1ro, UC S1nt1
Barbara, ar; Jon Biiiinger, Long BMctt Stlle, ,,
1nllelOers -Jim Jonea, Peppwdlne. 11,
Brad Broed'"'-d. Long a..cn State. lr. 8'ed
Dttco, UC 1rv1ne. 11. Bob Bfont-. UC 8ema
Bl'bere, er; Shene Turner. Cat Stitt
Fullerton. ao; Dana Seteoeno, Pepc>erdlne, .,
Oullletd•re -Dave Knox. Long B•ech
State. sr. Relph S,,.ffleld, P•ppwdln•. 1r.
Mike C1mp~ll. Cei Stale Loa Angelll, jr,
P aul Collur a, UC S•nll Bubar1 , "
(deslgneted hitter)
Magic's prediction:
'It's winriillg time'
INGLEWOOD (AP) -"It's
winning time," a playoff
proclamation by Earvin "Magic"
Johnson, seems to have bet'Ome
the Los Angeles Lakers' theme.
T he Lakersr whipped 4 · l
d urin~ m eetings with San
Conquerors
come back
CARPINTERIA -Ne wport
Christian High. down to 1ts last
out m the seventh mnmg and
trailing 7-6. used a Steve Dean
double and • Will Honeycutt
single to pull out an 8-7 CIF
Small Schools baseball victory
Tuesday here.
The Conquerors, trailing 5-0
e ntering the top of the seventh
inning, came up with four runs m
each of the final two innings to
e hmmate freelanL-e school Cate
from the playoffs and advance to
the quarterfinals Friday agajnst
Brentwood at Southern Cal
College.
Dean had driven in one run in
Newport Christian's four-run
sixth innJng with a sacrifice fly
that was misjudged -allowing
another run to score.
An RBI triple by Greg Quick
and a single by Jeff Motske
delivered the Conquerors' other
two runs in that inning.
In the seventh, Chris Howard
whacked a two-run triple, and
Dean and Honeycutt added their
heroics. Howard, pitching in
relief of David Cillay, picked up
the victory
Newport Christian is now 14-7
on the ~ason. The second-place
f inishers from the Academy
League cloeed out Cate's record
at 12-2.
OC volley hall
team breezes
MEMPH IS , Tenn. -The
Orange County Volleyball Club,
a team which Includes several
area high school standouts, rolled
ovel' three opponents Tuesday In
pool play at the Open U S .
Volleyball Association women's
national championships here, ·
Coach Charlie Brandt's squad
breeU!d paat Illinois State, 15-4.
15·6. Clenvion. 15-3, 15-4 and the
University of Arir.ona, 15-4, 15-7.
Julie Cook , Kara McOuinnes
a nd Julte Evans came off the
bench to help the Orange County
squad.
Tonight, the Orange County
team w1ll meet Drake University
and Fish Market ln more pool
play. Ftah Market I• a tHm of
former All-Americana. lncludlr\a
former Irvine High 1tandout Kim
Oden.
Oden'• young r 1tater Elena la
a member of the Oranae County
team.
Antonio during the past regular
season, can send the S purs home
for the summer with a victory in
tonight's fifth game of their
Na tional Basketball Association
Western Conference finals.
Los Angeles holds a 3-1 edge
going mto the 8:30 p.m. contest at
the Forum and needs just one
more victory to move into the
championship finals against
either the winner of the Eastern
finals in which Philadelphia
leads Milwaukee three-games-
to-one
Despite having won the NBA
title two of the past three years
On TJI tonight
Channel 2 at 8:30
and being th e d e fend i ng
champions. the Lakers were
rather lightly regarded heading
into this year 's playoffs . But
they've appeared to be building
m o mentum as the playoffs
progress.
The Lakers took rontrol of this
series last weekend in San
Antonio, impressively winning
t w o contests there to build a
two-game pad in the best-of-
seven series.
.. The playoffs really are a
separate season," said Johnson.
"Wha t happened during the
regular season isn 't ve r y
important when the playoffs
s tart. We're the defending
champions, It's our lime."
The a bse nce of two injured
fro n t -line r eserves. rookie
James WorU>y and veteran Bob
McAdoo. was exp ec t ed t o
hamper the Lakers' playoff
chances.
LEASE -A
1913
COUIAR
FOR
PER MONTH*
Leasing lan't right for
everyone, but may be the
answer to your new car
needa. l ..... brand
new 1993 MefCUry
Cougar tor $199.25 per
month on a clOMd 9fld , .....
Come In and let• help rou pk*outtttenew c..., of ,...,.. oholDe.
-----
~c-• ___ o_ra_n~ __ co_a_st_oA_1L_v_P_1L_or_1w_e_d_ne_sd_ay_._Ma_y_1e_._1e_e3 _____________________ 811111 CDllJYIUlllll------------------------~
Costa Mesa Union Bank promotes 3
firm unveils
new product
MSI Data Corp. of Costa Mesa has lntroduced a
versatile new programmable data collection
terminal so small it fits easily into a coat pocket or
briefcase.
Designed for use by sales people, field service
repreeentatives or even customers of a oompany, the
new MSU80 measures six inches by 3.~ inches and
weighs l~ than a pound. 'It is ~pable of storing
either 4,000 or. 8,000 bytes of information and
displaying them via a 16-<:haracter liquid crystal
display. It has a 33-key, alphanumeric kP\LIAtUlifti..
With the MSl/80, a salesman, r example,,
could log in orders from customers t ughout the
day, then use the built-in acoustic ooupl r to attach
the MSl/80 to an ordinary telephone an transmit
the full day's orders back to the ho e-office
computer.
"This eliminates the need for ge
mailing paperwork, as well as the da entry steps
necessry to check and transcribe inf rmation prior
to processing,'' said Paul R. Tue er, MS I vice
president of marketing. The new MSl/80 data te rminal.
Changes at the Wall Street Journal
NEW YORK (AP) -Dow
Jones & Co. announced several
management changes, including
the selecti on of Laure nce G.
O'Donnell as asoociate editor of
the Wall Street Journal and the
parent company.
The changes are to take effect
Sept. 1.
O'Donnell, 47, is managing
editor of the Journal. ln his new
assignment he will have both
corpo r ate and n e w s paper
responsibilities These include
Shiley Co. to participate in career day
The Shiley cOmpany of Irvine
heading the study of a poesible
Latin American edition of the
Journal, directing a new minority
hiring program for the Journal
and other Dow Jones news
operations, directing a training
program for new reporters at the
Journal and other Dow J ones
publications and supervlalng
certain reporting and writing
projects.
I will be represented at the Career
ExE_lora t ion Day scheduled
-
1
rnday at r.Tational University in
San Diego.
More than 70 companies from
Southern California will be
offering information about career
opportunities during the c:Meer
day.
Norman Pearlstine, 40, editor
and publisher of the Wall Street
Journal-Europe, wtll "Succeed
O'Donnell as managing editor of.
the Journal.
. Five reasons
pc;;ople have. a lot of interest
in our savings accounts:
Money-Market Quiksnver Certificates of
Account• Account' Treasury· 'f.Bill. Deposit•·
form I JJ\ 7-Jl d:.t\S 41 Ja\!. IXO dJvs IK months-
S years
Rate L'p co g .80% 9 .00% s.10% g .64% l 'p cu to·os %
)iekl r r 10 9 .zo% 9.42% Simple Simple l p (() 10-57
lnlCfC C inc crest
%
. •j~:;uo f1'1flll1"'1Hf'H h .1tJOH tf,.•quin..•trn:nl • *SJUU·~iOO rtHIWHllH1 hdiJlll'\' U.'.'tllllfl..'111\.'IH'
Open the account that meets your terms today.
\\e last )OU a libime
00\VNEY
~A~
Sl.7 billion in •18.'iets places Downey Savings in the top 2% of savings and loans in the nation.
H brunches thr~l-iout California.
< •m~ MnJ • C:ost;i Mcsa/S<>Ulh Co~st • Fnuntam Vaill'\ • Hununitton lk.il h
lr\lnc11'.urth11011v • Laguna l-l1lh • Lake Forc't • M1ss1on V1c10
NI.IC~
""1TinOU9 • IORH -•11 m'TTT'IOU9 IUIMSH ....._ STA~ aTATDmWf CW NIIMI ITAT'lmNT
The follewlno '*'90" I• doing MAND<ll-lfT °" u. °" Thi fOllOwlng J*90'1• .,. dolno ~ • '1CTIT10Ue MlllMM ..,... bu"'-aa:
BOZO E.NTEAPR&ZE.8, 1122~ Th• followtno pereon• h•V• LARSEN. INC .. 1970 18th St .. ~I Blvd , Suite 223, ~I• abeudoned the -of the llc11tloue N-208. ~ 8-ch. CA 92683. ...._ celtofM 92U7. b11elneu n1m1 o f ALDRICH LARSEN. INC. within lhe Stile 81-B1gna1. 113 2tU1 ..,..._ Tt.LEVl8IOH. looeted 11 1006 WMt of CALIFORNIA, 1970 18th SI.,
*-POr18-:11.c.llornl982tl3 17th Shill. 8enU AM. Celltromle 1 N-20e, ~ 8eec:I\, CA 12963.
Thll ~ II conduet9d by .., The llcttttoua bu1lnH1 n1me Thia ~ le conducted by •
lftdMdull. referred 10 above WH flled on oorporllton.
81-BlglWI --12. 1981 In the County of ll(llfl, fne, Thie ~ -flled 'lllftt1 lhl Oflinae. 0.A. LMMn
County a.ti of Or9"0I County on ~EBRUARY 4TH. INC. I• Chairmen of tr.. Boetd Aofl 27, Miry 4, 11, 11, 1'>9\1. ClllfOrnll oorpon1tton~ HH tlth T'h19 at•l-t wea ftled with lhl ,,.-snec . ..._ a.di, Ollfomla. County Clerk of Oranoe County on ,ubttl~ <>ninoe Coat Oatty Thll ,.,..,_ -oonduclted by Apr11 21. 1"3. "°" Ao#. 21, Mey 4. 11. 11, 1M3 e.rt1eta 11. 8dluttz. """6dlnt. mu. 1eo..a e.rw. A. 9dll.lftl Pullllehed Or1nge Co111 Di lly
Thie .aaternent -fled wftf\ tt1e Pllol. May 4. I 1, 111, 26, 1983
PlBJC NOTICE CounlY an of OBflOe County on
l'lCTlTIOU• .,... ..
U..STATSMINT
Tll4t followlng per1on 11 doing ~-= OLD WEST. 8738 Hummingbird AY9 . Fount.in Veley. C1 92708
Peter R Mendartno, 11738 Hummtngbltd ... .,. , Founllln Vlllley,
Ca 92708
T!111 bullMla la conductecl l)y.,,
Individual
Pel t< R. M.rnl.,lno
T1111 1t1teMtnl w•• nled with Ille County Cletlt o4 Orano-County on
Apr II 22. 1983. •
l'214IS7
Publlthed Oran1• Co111 01lly Piiot May 11. 111. 2 • ~ 1, 1983
2184-83
--------Aort tt. 1913. ·-11o """'TICE ~ C'V DAW>~-..,. r-.n. "" AC'TTTlOU8 .,_ ..
NOnCI Of' P\alC 8AU CADOO .,.TMIWAY, It.-..,._ ITATS•NT Of'~ PMCIPCRh' I_,. PlC11'TIOU8 ....... The fotlowtno pereon It doing
NOllCI II hereby given thll P'-lt.U. ITATWmN'f t>ulinMt 11:
purwull\110 llC1IOn 1981 of the CMI Pul>lllMCI Ortftr Coul Deity Th• followtno peraon ,, dOlng Q ENE CANNON MOTORS.
Code, Ital• of C1tllornt1, the Ptlol Ao#-21. May • 11, 11, 1"3 bu..,._ 11: 91181 Mellndl Ctr041, Hunttnoton ..... llOlled ..... 11publlo1811 ,........, HOUSE OF FAURI!!, 3013 S. 8Mctl, C.. 92848 by~ btddlrlQ on a. aecn °'"""·Senti Ana. CA 12707. Jltn Cennon, HBI Melinda
dltf of Mey, 1983. al t~ o'clodl 1------------RICHARD J. FOM It, 13" 8. Clrct1, Huntington &Hoh. Ce.
p.m •• on !he .,,..... ..._. Nid PWIJC NOTICl MtO'I. 1en11 Ana. CA 12706 t2f'e
pro"''" hH 11 .. n llOfed, I nd ,,.. ~ II oonduc:l.ci by 1111 Thie ~ II oonducted by an =:a:;=: ~In·~ NO~~ ~TIION k.dMdl*JllllOtwd J. fore II lndlvlcll* Jim F. Cennon
Of ....... Oounly of Orange, NOC~lon II hefeOy QI--. that Thie IW-1 -Ned with lfll Thie ellttlnent W81 ftled with the ,, et• Ce11fom1e. the~ Well• Fuoo link, tf.A .. 4'4 County~ of Or1nge County on County Cltttl Of Ofange County on
eoodt , cri111t11 or pe reon11 Oellfornll 81fMI, sen Frenolloo. CA Apl1I 4, 1983. NlfU f1. 1983.
property o.ctlbed below. In Ille f419'. h• 1"9d 1111 ~ wtth ,._... 11111-
INlltlr'I df: the Cotnotrollt Of the Currenoy on 'ut>ll~ Oranoe Co•et Deity ,ul>ll•h•d Oren1• Coaet Detty =.t~1 -cer ..... l>CI. Apl1I I. fN3 • IP«IMad In 11 CFA PIOt, Mey 4, 11, It, U . IN3 PllOI Mey 11, 11. 2 , June 1. 1ta
9f1P eu11oM. 11(1) Of Iha Comcltrolllr"1 Manual ~ 2 I~
.... 1191 01f11, 2 wm dllllr for ~ 8lnka. tot parn I ton ----------------,._.--...,.,...---"°'*1 o.r,.. WlllOn -10t1. a to •MIWI • dol'll9tlo bfWldt ec Pta.IC NOTICE ~ llJta
tied. 11'1, """"'-Ut FOid ~ et Jtfn~, *-POr1 -~==~· ~=~:------iiCftiiiUiiijiiiiiiil--. 4 dlef!1 .._ °'*"· "1dgl9, 8-f\, OtlftOe Coutity, Callf«nll '1C iii 10U9 .,_.. "°""°"9 IU II• H ...,_ 1111 1V .._ ....--. t2llO ..,._ STAT'lmwr ..,._ tfA~ ' ' ..._ ~-... •-'r.w::: ............. 10 oommenl T ............... clol T le .. _, • ~ f'P'Or. ~··.. ......-.,, hi • ..,........".,, petllOM .,. no he fOllOWlftt ,_.... -ne oi--1ng1ne ler'W» a.....,. c/o on In 1 1pp11011ton m •y 1111 ~ 11: ~ • ...... ....., -«*II, 001111'11"'' In wrlllno wllh lh• COAIT LIMOUllNS, 2902 N. CMOKIMON ~ ....
1>111 .. hand 1ooll, Ind!,.-, 40 bl!.I. "9tglor* AOl'nlfllltlMOt Of NltlOn8I Deod8'. 111111 "11-. Ca. ta70I IA 0..... ~~ fOlll'lltllll Vll9J,
Llndlonl ,_.... .. tllM to bW tten11•, Tlllneentfl HatlOnll 181111 Jofln H Aaymond1 2102 N. OllbM tr1ql 11 tile ..... ~ _, tie "9alon. llllult'l ..._ Toww, l4'ltll D9odlr. lanll AM. Ca. 12708 OMN .-.. ~ 1111
INtdl ..... .., .......... 2tD1, On• MerUt ,.u •• l1n Todd M l&Mnll'llCP!lt.1. 1122 ,... a..----. ......... Yllilr.
lfle .._ d .......... M l'!W• 111 f r,.._,., Cllfrotftle t410t, ...... C*1C1111 A ..... ~.Ca. 11117 ~ WP01 fOodl -..., • It. ....... lie 21 d.ty1 attar 1111 dlll Of thlt TNI ~ II COftduOtlel by I T1lll ...._.II -t *1 ~ 91 ,....,.... .. tfle .... of ,._.-... publlcatlon. Thi non~11411 oet*ll ,,_,.,_.,., . WM ...
,_......., •-• s , "''" potllOfl8 of 111 ..,.,ectron .. on JofWI H. ~ o,,.., ~ ...................... --......... ""'°""Mt••---Tiiie .... ~ -fled with,,.. T1lll ............... .. ......,. .,... ~ l*'Y· DllMd • '*' of """ ll'IOlll 111e, .,,.._ lie 11 eounw a.. Of Orange Co1.iMy on OeuntY Clllr'l "' °'Wiii OllMlr • .... 1 '"' a *" *' ot ...,, 1111 av1111t11• for publlo 1n1peot1on Mey 4, 1N1. ~........... ~ ff • ..._ _ fllMO~lnO., ~ N1ftO,......, bullnell houri, ,,__ rwr-PV Moe CO.t O~ ftUMleMcl Orenp Coe.at Dally ~11t>ll1hed Orenoe Cou1 Oelly ~ °'Ml9 0.... Ot111r
1111Ai1' 11, 1a, ftll "°' ~ 11, 11, ,tu 'tlOI ~er, 11, 11, H . ~ 1, 1Ma ,_, Ap • .,, Mer Ii H, tt. 1'11 · 1",. • .,.... lf72-a 11....a ..., ..
Unloa Bw h.u announced the promotiona
of three Orange Cout realdenta. Katbleen G.
Currie, of C.o.ta MeM, hu been named manager
of Union'• North Orange County Office. Currle, a
veteran of 10 yean ln banking, ia a member of
Women ln Buaintw, the World'rrade ~tlon
of Orange County, the International Marketing
A.ociation of Orange County and the Fullerton
and Santa Fe Sprtnp chambers of commerce.
Julie M. Ortadon, aI.> of Costa Mesa, has been
promoted to loan officer ln the commercial loan
department at Union's South Orange County
Regional Office. A graduate of UC Irvine, she IB
a1ao a mem~r of the American A.aaoclation of
University Women. Finally. Clarl1 M. E laner of
Irvine was promoted to construction officer m
the bank's real estace appraisal department In
Rosemead.
• • •
New Direction• lor Womea, Inc., a 24-hour
residential recovery home for wome n with
a l coh o l problems, has anno unced the
appointment of Kay W. Brown to the position of
executive director. Brown, with extensive public
service backgJ'Ound, will serve as community
liaison for New Directions with prima ry
responsibility for fund-r aising operations.
• • •
Gary Stallffer has been named manager of
Software & More, a newly opened computer
enhancement store in Orange. Specializing in
software, peripherals and accessories for the
business and professional executive, the store is
the first of six the company plans to open this
year in the Orange County area.
• • •
ElP Microwave, Inc., of Newport Beach has
reported earnings of $316,000 on sales of $3,992,·
000 tor the quarter ended March 31, 1983. Both
figures were up from a year earlier when the
compeny had earnings of $261,000.
• • •
I'M', with several facilities &long the Orange
Coast has announced the renaming of one of its
divisions and the appointment of a new president
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW VOAW. l"Pl CmwTel !r-m: :µlfy • ll 23Yo Pl'OQ<1>
N"SOl>.O ciuot•t._ Col\Pec> ~ I Pt1$vNC ~llCIN9"fft-Cordi• ........ JQMyn s l2 .... ll1~ Purt&en
--fl often Dy C.,,..IF S7h St"-l(ej>S( P4 b UY> Ouelu'"' men..t ........ , •• of CroaTr u~ 24 K.i ... r 11·1' 2\oo R_.,
• p.m. Prlc.-oo not CIAIF<I • 3 3Y, IC.-,. ,..,. A..,mnd
lnc:""'9'91ellmerlluP ~~"~ 11;. 11'> W..::z!r :!$\'> 11 A-1 ,,_._or <omm-1111.1~ Kl I 3SV. ,. .... ROMS ''"'°" tor
T-y 0.ytM .II ~ Klngl11t .-. s .. _,
Slac:IL 81<1 "~ oe.. • S-1' K-0 SS SSI.. A-
"EL Incl JS l1V· Oeltlll" ~ 20• ... ~=v U tn l1 S...I«
"FM••ot 31 ,. DETCMIT ICHo 11h 141o ''" Sefeco
"VM Co IV. • Dllwey ' 10~. 11"' 1C1;tku lS JSV> SIHelc;.cs
"<.eclln• llh ,. OleCrys ... ... l.Anc• 11"-'It 51p..,,
~.:il'~Jv liq 111,o OllUICru lJll> ,...,, UnclAM o. s Scrtpt1
:16 n~. g:uo1v 32'n """ LM>l'C • ~ S4 ... Se-1•
"""Aou Ho s rGn. l2~· ,,,,. Llln~ 31"" 32 s.-' 41111511 2n• 22Yt ~r~ 21 17>,, Ll118nl 42 o ... Sv#Nr •
Alla>lnc: 0 4S ,.,. l61o ~~ 141,1 14"' 5-.<msl
Amil'• h 1'-I .. °"'*D ' U V>U\oo ... ....,. SI.-. A Furn ••• 101.. ~~ ~m: MGFOll 2 11/o 5l>wmul ... c;. ... )1\,}U \ot ~E 1t~. lt \,J Situ As "'n<it> ' ECOllLI> lO"t 31 ~IPI 31, '"' Sllkafta 14 , .. ,,
AH1111> ltlo ...... EIP• 15"' IH1 IM 1 llo l\f> SCMW\r E-lle f \J '"'· ='°" I\. I .. SwEI~ "°"""' -"' ·-.. 11·1' "'' E.,...1 lllo In~ LP 1' 31 St...,.,,,
EIMlxl• II 11"1 -.,Pl '"' ... SldMl<ro ... .-.. 10~, 10\rot ~ 2A\f> 14'-E"flCOllv Jt'1. 40 ~~ ».. '" SUI"-
116 111 EN-,_ , ... ~~ St-EnRtY )" ).>,, W F•rl IC>\<. 11 SttrtSI ~~ Slh S2 .... _ EntwlSll II 11 .... == 12V> 11"" Stt...CI EqtOil ,,,... ,.,. th IOV. ""~ "' 1V.
"llGtll It ""' Fern'G ft\oo '3 MiclPW u .... 21 ~· "11.,A • 52~• s.J Fldl<or :w-. :M'9 MdldC<lp 1114. 12"' FtllloSy j31,, S3VJ MlcllA.-"' " E DC """' ... Jn. 21tn Fl= :a n~ t:ffl& R:;; ;t. Tamoa 8800' .,,,. O V> F~lll ... "'" !Utlr~ 11 11\o
F$. lO\n -Ml:.'f:IG ~lo 10"' Belly IS ,,,...
Flk 31" 31 .. --· s.v. ,, ... =~ ...... 14 .. Fl•N I lO"' Jl ... -~ 110.. ""' S3 S3'-t Flurocb 11 .. 11" ~ 1*lo :i. .. .. ,,_
""' 11 ForwotO 1~ U'lo lJ'-t 34V> 8-llnt ..,, 101,, Fr-~ IS"-16 """""' 1 ..... ,. -LI> Jt\l't -Fr-...... " MotClb IS'> 1S BlllllCo ""' ""' Fr..sG )I ... Sltn Mwfler 19Y> 31 .... 8 1rd5on ""' IM'o F-29"" Mto N•"QC 4S 4'V. 8 1'1<11< ... . .,, Fu11H8 ~l:J'tll Nl>ele U..U\IJ Blyvoor 11'1. ''"'' llolwlJ "" 4h ~ ... 42~· '2 .... NIMS I , ..... ~
BrWTom I lloo ~m 11\oo 111<. NYIUn '"' .....
&ultel• .. ...... GflOew• , ... n. Nk llOG ..... 4'9
~~ • ti<. ~~~ ~~ ... \ft Niewl s ~uv. Nltt18 I JS u .... ~ 4"1 °'-Sc J~ m~ Nl'-8 • ll'o 1a... CPT ""' ,""
for that dlvlalon. The newly named unit
formerly J'M' Te..,.,,.oae -ii l1T Bulae11
Commulcatloa1 Corp., and the new president I.a
Boward A. LaffJer. Headquanen for the division
is Harriaburg, Pa. Laffler waa formerly with
General Electric.
• • •
Katllie Day has been ~ted to aaaatant
store manager of Chandlers Furniture in Santa
Ana. Day was formerly an administrative
assistant in Chandler's Laguna Hil1B store.
• • •
The designation of Certified Insurance
Counselor ha.a been conferred on Lyue Kauer,
conunercial accounts manager of Du Gormu
lnaarance Aaency in MI.ion Viejo, following
her completion of a rigoroua Insurance education
program. Kauker, who Uvea in San Clemente,
has been in the insurance field for 12 years.
• • •
Gerald M. Reeves, formerly a oopywriter
with Hunter Barth Advertillng l.n Santa Ana,
has joined Jon Sllarabor1 & A11oclates, the
Costa Mesa-based adve rtiaing and public
relations firm, aa account executive and eenior
copywriter.
" • • •
Bonnie Brown has joined the design staff at
Cbandler'1 Funaitare in Laguna Hilla. Brown, a
&raduate of the Chicago School of Inte r ior
Design, is a lecturer at Saddleback College.
1 .... lh T-m JO JOI<. 14.\ot IS Tt<'""P to ., UPS AND QOWNS S2V.11 n.• Te1<,mA JOIO.JO\I> in. 21 T-1 1""' ""' 1~10'"' l::rcJ, t~ ~ u ll ....
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CornCI~ 11 n tw.SOVt 331'. JMV. PresGM Sl Sl\!o N--.... D ,. ll'lllMQ J -.... Off 11
Cmlsi.t .,.,. ,~_,.. J.,.,,...., IJV. 1 lh P"'5Cf'll\ Slllt ff'• Tol•l ..i.tl . '2,114,.00 11 -.ct!"" J -"' Oft I '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednnd1y, May 18, 1983 C4
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOf&TtdMS INCLUOI r••o1s ON TMI! NIW VO•K. Mt DWI ST ~A(ll'I(, ~··· IOSfON OIT•Olf ANO Cllil(llO•ATI O OCtl IJICMANOU ANO llPO•flO I Y tMI NA\D ANO tNHINIT
....
Auto workers elect
~ew president today
By Tbe Atsocla&ed Prut
DALLAS -Tbe United Auto Worken uniOID ~ for a hi.atone chan.lina of the suaro today •
delegate. prepared to elect a new pr-'dent and ftw
other top ottlcJ.ala. Praldent Douclu A. Fruer, M.
and the others are retiring because union ru1et
prohibit re~lection of offlcen over 66 yean old.
Fraser'• deslRJUted aucceuor, aelected late lut
year by the UAW'1 26-member executive board, I.a
Owen Bieber, 53, vice prealdent ln charge of the
UAW's General Moton C.orp. department. Bieber aaJd
earlier this week he wu confident be would be
elected. There were no other formal candldata,
although traditionally diasidenta nominate one en the
floor the day of the vote.
Jobless figures encouraging
WASHING TON -Buteau of Labor Sta tis Uc.
show that 41 of 50 states had higher unemployment
laat March than the ume month ln 1982, but the
changes were not considered extreme by statisUda.na,
who said they could well indicate wiemployment bad
peaked. The highest unemployment raies continued to
be found in West Virginia, Michigan and Alabama.
Brown's 'float' bill advances
SACRAMENTQ -Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown's bill to slaah the bank "float," the in~&.
uee of depositors' ttmda, baa won committee approval.
The Aalembly Finance, Insurance and C.ommerce
Committee voted 10..0 to force the banb to ~ a
customer credit for a deposited check within five days.
Currently, bank.I can put a "hold" on checb -
often lasting two weeka or lonser for thoee from out of
town --to verify the funds, allowtna the banb free
use of the money In the meantime.
"In yea.rs past, the practice of waiting 10 or 15
days or longer for a check to clear may have been
necessary," Brown aald. "But now ... with the
advent of instant interbank tranafen, thia waiting
period is no longer necessary , "
Oak Industries omits dividend
SAN DIEGO -Oak lnduatrlea' board of directors
haa voted to omit the regular quarterly dividend on commo~k and Seriea C preferred stock. Normal
dividends would have been 6 centa a quarter for
common stock and 43 ~ cents on the preferred. In a
terse, three paragraph news releue, the company aaJd
it would uae the money saved for "operations directed
at improving the company's profitability."
U.S. ties worry Lockheed
LOS ANGELES -Lockheed Corp. ii worried
that the aeroepace firm ii too reliant on PJtn~
contracts, even though ita strong military buainMa ha
been growing.
"By the end of the 1980s, we'd like to be about 75
percent military a nd 25 percent commercial,''
Lockheed Chainnan Roy A. .Andenon said Tueeday
after the Burbank-hued company's annual meeting at
the Sherato~ Univeraal. Last year, military work
accounted for 90 percent of the company'• $5.6 billion
in revenues, and Andenon said that was "a little too
much."
•t!Wl
JO Trn U Ult ., St~ ·-Tr.,
Ullt• ., SU.
tiot.n 1211.a 11D.JO 1a1t+ut m.• !M.GI SIUO SolD.50. o.a t•.w uo,OJ 121. t• t1'.G + o • .s •n.• •1•.10 4'1.» "'-'°• 1.01 •.a 1,s um.-2.0M-10.-..
AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YOM I,.,., -a... T......, 11tb
and Mt c11ano• 01 '"• tan moat Kii,..
41Mfic.t\ Stock r-... '-1reOtno -------------~ ,..= .. .....,. _,, WHAT NYSE DID :'~rt" ..!"'~. ,,.~ •. \.:
NEW YOl!I( (API May 11 ~.... :J:: z~ : I~
":::· Fed~ v M6,100 I IS.... • .. #111 owoi10 A s t..s.-u"' •t
1111t Ooa*1dt w1 1 ff ,4111 11 • "-,.. ~I t57AOO Ill> • ~ "~ ~~ ;1!:: .:; !: .. • t-"'.""'"-----------UPS AND DOWNS WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK 14PJ May II
'
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..
~· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983
PAID AOVEATISEMEHT .
USING REVOLUTIONARY NEW TECHNOLOGY •••
:: How many people you know (In-
~:. eluding you~f) 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 disabilities
:. prevent many individuals from the
type of movement necessary to r. . 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.
HOW IT WORKS
Bio-tone Effortless Exerciser
Developed 16 years ago and used in Europe by many
professional and world class athletes, Bio-tone is a
passive exerciser affecting male and female alike.
Bio-tone electronically exercises muscles in a
natural way, duplicating the tiny impulses sent by the
brain during vigoruos exercise. The pleasant sensa-
tion of rhythmic, effortless exercise total relaxation
creates a soothing, calming feeling as it goes to work
firming and toning your waist. hips, thighs and
stomach -any area you wish.
It Really Works!
Each 35 minute treatment at Newport Bio-Fitness
has the equivalent effect of 1500 situps. And, be-
cause Bio-tone stimulates the circulation, muscles
are rid of waste products and toxins which caus~ the
familiar soreness fo llowing vigorous exercise. Bio-
tone is perfect for persons seeking an altwrnative to
the monotony and regimen of traditional exercise.
P11111nt ., ....... Cycle
;; After the 35-mlnute treatment, persons -exper-
ience a 10-mlnute relaxation cycle that feels
.muCh like a dellcloua full body massage.
f
• 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. Danriy started E.M .S . (Electronic Muscle Stimulation) recently
and has already shown signs of improvement. We are excited, it looks like we ha ve
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 for weeks at a time and forced early disability retirement, I started treatments
at NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS in January, 1983.
The results have been simply great. I have never been so mobile or free 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 tru~! 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
AL.USON GAPPA~OAD
"Due to my hectic schedule I don't get enough time to property exercise. I find .
NEWPORT BtO-FlTNESS relaxing and get immediate results. I lost8 inches in only f~our
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 hob~ing 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."
ORANG• COUNTY'S M08T
EXCLUSIVE A COMPUTE
PAUIV• .XERCISE CENTER
INTRODUCTORY OFnR
YOUR "MT TMA .... llT ... OGRAM
MONTH M MAY ONLY
HUGH STEWART
Joy of
cooking
a new
venture
By BEA ANDERSON
of ... °""' ..... ...,, It was only a couple of years
ago that Carol Goldstein began
having fun with cooking.
The former elementary !ilChool
teacher said she had cooked for a
number of years but she really
didn't get into experimenting
with recipes and enjoying the
challenge until a short time ago.
After she and her husband
bough t their Harbor View house
in Newport Beach and "settled
'down," they started entertaining
... and that sparked her
interest.
She says she's not a gourmet
cook, but likes good food and
especially enjoys making simple.
easy dishes that are attractive
and tasty.
Most of these recipes, she said,
have been collected from friends.
"I find I do better with them th.in recipes from a cookbook."
Her next venture will be
creating ethnic foods, focusing on
Japanese dishes -her favorite.
Although she claims she
knows "abosolutely nothing
about ethnic cooklng -not even
where to buy the ingredients,"
she is determined to learn and
expand her enjoyment in the
kitchen.
Here are some of her recipes
for attractive, tasty dishes.
LOBSTER ELEGANTE
14 cup minced onion
2 tables poons butter or
margarine
2 tablespoons flour
'h teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon pepper
W t.eupoon dry mustard
l 'h cups milk
1 Y\ cups granted American
procewd cheeae
IA cup sherry
4 ounces spinach noodles,
cooked and drained
2 cups cubed cooked lobster
2 tablespoons lemon juice
Saute onion in butt.er until
tender. Remove from heat. Blend
in flour and seasonings. Cook
over low heat, stirring until
mixture is bubbly. Remove from
heat. Stir in milk. Heat to boiling.
stirring constantly. Boil 1 minute.
Add 1 cup cheeee, stir over low
heat until melted. Stir in sherry.
Arrange noodles around sides of
10 x 6 x Y\-inch baking dish.
Place cubed lobster in center and
sprinkle with lemon juice. Pour
sauce over noodles and lobster
and sprinkle,with Y\ cup cheese.
Bake in preheatedt 375-degree
oven 25 minutes, or until mixture
is bubbly and lightly browned.
(Sff COOK, Pase 03)
Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY. May 18, 1983
' SLIM GOURMET
DOROTHY WENCK
MEAD ON WINE
04
E2
F1
Croissants
Across the country an ever-increasing
number of Americans are lifting their
glasses in appreciation of a flaky. buttery
pastry that has tong been the "toast" of
France.
Perfect for family or guests. the golden
brown. butter-rich croissant adds a touch of
class to any niesl. whether served at
breakfast with butter and preserves, at
lunch with your favorite deli or seafood
ingredients, or at dinner to dress up last
night's leftovers.
Once discovered. croissants are quickly
fashioned to suit each cook's individual
needs and preferences. The foil owing
recipes should assist you In creating your
own personal "family favorite."
·cuRRIED SHRIMP FILLING
4crolaNnta
3 tableepoon• butter
'" cup chopped onion '1' CUP chopped celery
"'4 teeapoon curry powder
V. cup eH--purpoee flour
1 'h cupa haff end han or mllk 'I• tNapoon ground ginger
1 .... poon lemon ....
'h cup "9ht or dark relalna
10 ouncee medium ahrlmp, oooked OR
1 can (I'll ouncee) tune, drelMd end fleked
•/
Americans favor a hint of
mint in after dinner
treats. E6 r ~ I -
New toast of the town
Chopped peenuta OR allced green
• onion lope, optlonel
Cut croissants In half lengthwlse; leave
together. Heat In preheated 325 degree F. oven
a few minutes. Saute onion and celery In butter.
Stir in curry powder; cook 1 minute. Stir In flour:
heat until bubbly. Stir In half and half. ginger
end lemon juice. Cook over low heat. stirring
untU thickened. Stir In raisins and shrimp. Heat
2 to 3 minutes longer. Serve spooned over
croissant bottom halves. Garnish with peanuts.
if desired. Top with remaining croissant halves.
Makes 4 servings.
CREAM CHEESE AND
BACON MARMALADE
4 croleeenta
I ouncee creem chM .. , eoft..-:1
1Aa cup or.nge mermea.de
I ellcM becon, cooked untll cri8P
Cut croissants In half lengthwise: leave
together and heat. Spread 1 Yz tablespoons
cream cheese on each croissant bottom half.
Spoon on 1 tablespoon marmalade and top
with 2 bacon sltces. To;:> with remaining
croissant half. Makes 4 servings.
CHEESE, AVOCADO, BACON
~ crolMmnh • I
.,, elloee <• ouncee) c..,....... oh•~••
4 .,._. (4 ounoee) , .... c ...... . ..
I allcea tometo, 2 medium
AHeffe aprouta
I allcea becon, cooked untll crlap,
optlonel
YI evoelldo, peeled, altc.d
Cut crotssants In half lengthwise;
leave together and heat. Layer 1 slice each of
cheddar end swiss cheeses on croissant bottom
half. Top with 2 tomato slices: some alfalfa
sprouts. If desired; 2 bacon slices. If desired;
and several avocado slices. Top with remaining
croissant half. Mek"es 4 servings.
HAM ROLL-UPS WITH
MORNAY SAUCE
• allcM belled hem
lalcee ..... chHH
.......... .,,..,.. cooked
4 crolaaMta
MomeJ a.uc.·
Place 2 ham slices overlapping slightly on
flat surface. Place 2 cheese slices over ham.
Top with 2 asparagus spears: roll up. Repeat
process. Arrange roll-ups In lightly buttered
baking dish. Heat In preheated 325-degree F.
oven 12 minutes.
CUt croissants In half lengthwlse;
leave together and heat. Piece 1 hem roll-up on
each croissant bottom half. Spoon on Mornay
Sauce•. Top wltl'r remaining croissant half.
Makes 4 servings.
(Sff TOAST, Pase DZ)
Top off fresh fruit
wltH zesty dressings· · ·
Summer la a time for •ttlnl
toaether wh•ther for a
p-aduation, wedding or family
reunlo11. In keepln1 wilb the
relaxed aummertime a\Utude,
fare fOf' theee rJ:em~ ahould be cool~ yet eaay
on the hasteal.
J'reah fruit la the perfect
toludoQ. And d...-d up with a
tasty yoeurt-baMd topptnc, it
1oea ftom buffet table to 1it-
aown dij\ber In entertalnloa
ltyS..
J'or a aU,htly exotic flavor,
.. rve Ot~ Fruit Topplna
with ,,.. fruit.
OINODED l"l\UIT roPPINO
1 carton (S ounces) plain
yocurt (lbout l\ cup)
~ eu~bcne)' 3 tM lllDDIW flo9ly chopped
~ .......
Mix all tncredlen~s .
Refrtgerat.e until chilled. &9rve
over fruit aalad. About l bap•
f9ppins. '
Y 0 G U R T • A V 0. C''A J. 0 DRESSING
1 carton (S ourKm) Pl
lemon yopn (tlbout M ~p) ~ c:up milk
1 tablapooo ~
onion (wlth top) •
1 tableapoon i.non ~
"' t.elllpOOrl aalt •
"' teupoon dried dill weed 1 medium avocado, ,.ea.ct
and cboDDed PSM.'eUl~t1lab'' "hr
container. COwr and blencl on hlah ..-ct unt0 ~ ao lit te aeConcfa. ..,..... .... ui cblllecJ,
Serve over fruit Mllld or aled ~.AboutlM~~·
'
I
02 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1083
Chicken a la King rules roost Your recipes
are wanted Around the tum of the
century, legend has it,
Chicken a la King was
concocted by a chef at a
beach hotel outside of
New York City. Its
popularity spread.
By the time the 1920s
rolled around, Chicken a
la King was considered
one of the most festive of
dishes.
And it became even
more elegant when the
toast points lt was
originally served with
were replaced by p~
paste patty &hells.
cmCKEN A LA JUNG
5 tablespoons butter
·TOAST ....
From Page 01
•Mornay Saace
2 tablespoons butt.er
2 tablespoons now:
1 cup naUk
1h cup shredded
Swiss cheese
~ teaspoon ground
nutmeg
Heat butter in small
saucep~n . Add flour;
cook until bubbly.
Gradually stir in milk.
Cook until thickened.'
Stir in cheese until
smooth. Stir in nutmeg.
Makes 4 servingl.
EGGS SARDOU
· 4 croissants
l package ( 10
ounces) frozen CTeamed
spinach
4 poached ea-
Hollandaise Sauce•
Cut frozen croissants
in half lengthwise; leave
together and heat. Cook
spinach according to
package directions. For
each serving, spoon Y4 of
creamed spinach over
each croissant bottom
half. Top with 1 poached
egg. Spoon Hollandaise
Sauce• over egg. Top
with remaining croissant
half. Makes 4 servings.
•ffollandJae Saace
2 egg yolks
l tablespoon lemon
juice
~ cup (1 stick)
butter, cut into 3 chunks
Mix e gg yolks and
Jemon juice in small
saucepan until smooth.
Over low heat, add
butter, 1 piece at a time,
stirring constantly until
butter has melted.
Continue stirring until
mixture thickens. Makes
4 aervings.
CARIBBEAN
SANDWICH
4 croiaaanta
4 slices fresh
pineapple, peeled, cored
and halved
1 small red onion,
sliced
8 slices baron, fried
until crisp
8 slices Gouda
cheese
Cut frozen croissants
in half lengthwise; leave
together and heat. Place
half pineapple al.ices on
each croissant bottol1'
hall. Top with 2 onion
alicea; 2 bacon slioe9 and
2 cheese slices. Broil tt
melt cheese. Top with
remaining croi.alant half
Makes 4 .ervinp.
PEAR-POU SCRAMBLED EGGS
Breakfast takes on
special appeal with tbeee
aavory acrambled •Ill·
Crumble ~ pound
l"O'IDd poril •u.et into aklllet. Add I cup
chopped w.-n wtnw
pears, 2 tabl .. p9oos
minced on.km and a dMll
around al.llptce. Cook OY~ med!wn--bJP Maf
until --.. la biowned
and cooked. Dnln ~
fat.
Cambtne e ... and ~
cup mi lk : beat
tborou1h11. Pour •Q
mlx,ure over .......
mixture and K1'&mbt. .... ••"7 UDUI .... are coolltil. Serve at
ooce. lihk•• 4 to e ......
2 to 3 tablespoons
flour
~ cup clear fa~-Cree
chicken broth
1 cup heavy cream
~ pound mush-
rooms, thinly sliced
(l 'A to l ~ cups)
1 large (5-ounce)
green pepper, seeded,
quartered and cut into
thin strips
3 cups diced ( ~
inch) cooked chicken
4 -ounce jar
pimiento, drained &l)d diced. •
Salt, pepper and
peprtka to taste
10-ounce packa1e
(6) frozen patty shells,
baked
In a 2~-quart
saucepan, over low heat,
melt 2 tabte.poona of the
butter; stir ln the flour.
Off heat, ll'adually atir
In chicken broth and
cream, keeping smooth.
Cook over moderately
low heat , stirring
constantly, until
thickened. Reserve
this aauoe.
In a 10-inch skllletr
melt the l-emalnlna 3
table.poon.a butter; add
muahrooml and pepper;
cook briJkly, stirring
often, until pepper la
wilted and mushrooro
liquid has evaporated.
Stir lnto lhe rt11erved
saUC4l with chicken,
pimiento, aalt, pepJ>er
a n d. pap r l k a . He a t
through. (Makes about
4 ~ cups.)
Serve In the warm
patty sheJJa. Makes 6
aervings.
II you've been enjoymg our
Cook-of-Che Week series and would like
to join in, the Daily Pilot wants to hear
from you.
Send us several of your favorite
recipes so we can pick a couple to share
with our readers.
Send your redpes to the l <"'ood
&:Ii tor, c/o the Dai16,r,f ot, P.O. Box
1560, ~ta Mesa, · . 92626, and be
sure to include your name, address and
p_hC!!Je number .•
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3 DOUBLE COUPONS
THIS WEEKI
ROUND
STEAKS
UIOA CHOICI 8UF
80NI'°*
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PICNIC . ............
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GREEN CABBAGE ---MAM--..... --· ..
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GRAPEFRUIT JUICE
BOSTON FERNS
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La 69*
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BELL POTATO CHIPS 101 DASH DETERGENT 311 -. ,_ ·--·····················-····--·-·····-·-·----···· •--.eo-.-\.9.. •-·········-······ ... . .. _ ....... , ...... .
DOLE PINEAPPLI .1u1ce 1" ORc-IDA FRENCH FRIEi 121
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BEST OF .C ~~~!M&CHICKDt
CAUFOftNIA GROWN LB.
CRISP CARROTS
Fl'EIH
TOPI OP'F
HEINZ ~~ure
'2·0Z. HL
,
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COOK OF WEEK • • •
From Page 0 1
Gam.lah with twists of lemon if
demed.
SEVEN LA YER MEXICAN DIP
Place in glass bowl as
follows:
1 10-ounce can jalapeno bean
dip
2 .. vocad06 mashed with l
tableepoon lemon juice
Mix together, ~ package
taco ~aaon, 2 tablespoons sour
c ream , and 3 tablespoons
mayonnaise
1 cup each, grated Jack and
Cheddar cheese
2 or 3 ch opped , seeded
tomatoes
~ bunch green on.ions, sliced
1 2.2-ounce can chopped
olives
Refrigerate a few hours. Serve
with large chips or crackers.
APPLE CAKE
3 c ups delicious apples,
peeled, cored and cut in chunks
3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 ~cups oil
1 cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
I cup golden raisins
1 teaspoon baking eoda
Grease and flour Bundt pan.
Beat oil and sugar at least 10
minutes. Add eggs and beat
another 10 to 15 minutes on low
speed until Hsht and creamy.
Add dry ingredients and vanilla.
Fold In raisins, apples and nuts.
Batter will be very thick. Pour in
Bundt pan and bake in pN!heated
350-degree oven for 1 hour, 15
minutes.
Carol Goldstein
prepares Lobster
Eleganle for a family
treat.
IN
NEW BUTT
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983 03 1l
Soy protein 'not a risk' )
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
AtllC .. led ~Wrtter
Research has suggested soy
protein may reduce the body's
ability to abeorb iron, but a new
study by the Agriculture =~ment contradicts that
"No one knowledgeable about
.. ~ human nutrition ...
thought there would be any risk
from ualng soy protein," said Dr.
C.E. Bodwell, one of six USDA
researchers who conducted the
study. "Yet it's a question that
had to be addressed."
Millions of school children and
military personnel cons ume
ground meat extended with soy
protein each year.
Not only does soy extender
increase the protein content of
ground meat, it saves schools and
the Defense Department more
than $35 million each year,
Bodwell said.
The r esearchers presented
their findings at the 67th annual
meeting of the Federation of
Ameri c an Societies for
Experimental Biology.
A 1981 study at the University
of Kansas in Kansas City had
indicated that soy pro tein
additives ln ground meat patties
inhibit the body's absorption of
Iron by 53 percent to 61 percent.
That result "was greatly
exaggerated -it's not what
happens In the real world,"
Bodwell said . H e said the
conclu.iona were based on levels
of iron measured after a &Ingle
meal Instead of over a lo ng
period.
Also, the flt)Y in that study had
been added in dry form to meat,
instead of being reconstHuted
with water before being mixed
ln.
The question of iron absorption
is most important for two groups:
youngsters and women of child-
bearing age.
The new research covered a
six-month period, and included
52 families who consumed
ground beef patties oompoeed of
20 percent soy protein. USDA
researchers found no s.igniflcant
change in Iron absorption levels
as compared to 62 family
members who consumed 100
percent ground meat.
"Some clinical parameters
show a statistically significant
change over the 180 days of the
study ," the researcher said.
•••
"However, all changes were in
the direction of improved Iron ,,
status." ,.J
~well said a recent survey ')"')
showed schools use mofe soy td
extender than the USDA tot
o~= =~ It into tuna .q
salad and ~ aalad," he Mid. n
"It's a very h 10urce of protein r.r
-50 percent. •
In the military, 15 percent of
all personnel are women of
c hild -bearing age , the
researchers said.
The Kansas City study never
raised doubts serious enough to
cause soy to be dropped from I
school lunches or military menus,
Bodwell said. I Co-authors of the study were
Carolyn W . Miles, Eugene R
Morris, W. Mertz, J .J . Canary
and E.S. Prather,
ATTENTION!
Do you deal with MONI Y?
LOANS? MORTOAQl8?
,INANCES? This ad II f()( youl
II you don't war1t to make
money. stop reading he<e.
TKE RIGHT COM81NATION to
Increase your share ol the
market -is only one wayl
1-'-a >
0
m
J I
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.J
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Now there are TWO Great Criscos ;v'i
When you buy both
BUTTER FLAVOR
Gives you Rich Buttery taste
in your baked and fried foods.
DAWN DISHWASHING LIQUID HANDLES TOUGH GREASY JOBS
Take the 01\WN CREASE
CHALLENGE NOW
when you buy 1\1\1111 one·~ •tze Ltf\R 11
I 2972PG
REGULAR CRISCO
For Delicious Baked and fried
foods without the taste of butter.
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04 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
Lean ground beef prepared in winning ways
Imaginative ground
beef dlahes win a copy of
"Slim Gourmet Sweets
& Treats" cookbook in
Slim Gourmet Reader
Recipe Contest.
Ground meat recipes
are particularly useful
for d letwise cooks,
becaUM you can control
the fat and calorie
content of the meat by
having it ground to
order.
To get the least
fattening hamburger,
choose a lean bottom
round roast or
round.steak and have it
trimmed of all fat, then
ground . While this is
more expensive and less
convenient than choosing
ready-ground beef, the
calorie savings are worth
it.
Ordinary hamburger
can be 30 percent fat,
about 1,600 calories a
pound. Fat-trimmed
ground round, on the
other hand, is only half
that.
Pat Clancy, of
Fullerton , is a winner
with her adaptation of
Zucchini Lasagna. This
version cuts out the oil
and increases the herbs
and mushrooms.
PAT CLANCY'S
ZUCCHINI ~GNA
IA pound lean fat-
tri mmed beef round ,
ground
'A c up chopped
onion
1 or 2 cloves garlic.
minced (or equivalent
instant garlic)
8 -ounce can
tomatoes, broken up
2-ou nce can
mushrooms, undrained
'A cup tomato juice
'A cup dry red wine
1 teaspoon dried
oregano
'A teaspoon each:
dried thyme and basil
Salt, pepper, to \aste
2 medium zucchini,
unpeeled
4 ounces part-skim
mou..arella, shredded
4 o un ces lowfat
cottage cheese
2 tablespoons grated
Parmesan cheese
Brown meat in a large
nonstick skillet with no
added fat. Tum to brown
evenly. breaking into
small chunks. Drain and
discard fat from pan.
Add onion, garlic ,
tomatoes, mushrooms,
jui ce, wine and
seasonings. Simmer
uncovered, 15 minutes or
until reduced to a thick
saucy mixture.
Meanwhile, slice
zucchini in flat qua.rter-
inch thick lengthwise
slices. Arrange h alf of
zucchini In an 8-inch
\ square nonstick baking
pan which has been
s prayed with cooking
spr ay. Add a layer of
half the mozzarella, then
half the cottage cheese,
then half the meat
mixture.
I
Repeat these 4 layers.
Sprinkle with Parmesan.
Bake uncovered, 40
minutes at 350 degrees.
Let rest 5 minutes before
cutting to serve. Makes
four servings, 185
calories each.
Nellie Stacey. of Frisco
City. Ala., haa an eaay
st uffed pepper dish
that's also made with
Add lime
for twist
A fabulously good lime
version of a famous
Scandinavian deaert.
UME
FROMAGE
1 enve l ope
unf'lavon!d gelatin
Y.i cup milk
4 Larre ea yolks
Y.i cup sugat'
1 pint hall-and-half
Grated rind from 2
medJum Umee w cup lime juke
In a cup aprlnkle
gelatin over milk to
aoften. In a l ~.quart
aaucepan beat tbe=
yolkt allPtly; sr:9d
beat ln the waar un
thickened and lemon
color; edd the balt..end-
balf and beat to b)end.
Cook over low IMet, 1t1rr1n1 OOntt.antly, untll
mixtw'e CI09ta a llpoof\ -
about 10 mlnutel; do not
allow to boil-Off heat.
atlr In llme r ind and
1elatln mixture until
1elatln dluolvea;
~=·ually 1tlr in lime
Turn lnt.o ~ i;:::rt
mold; COoYel' ~ to
1et -t boure 'or
overnl1ht. Unmold at .mo, ... aind pmWl
aa dnlred. Makea 8
~
...
lean beet and part-skim
mou.arella. NELLIE STACEY'S
STUFFED PEPPERS
6 medium green bell
peppers
1 pound lean fat-
trimmed beef round,
ground
'A c up chopped
onion
2 slices high-fiber
bread, toasted. ~bed
2 ounces ~oz.zarella
cheese , shredded ,
divided
2-ounce can chopped
muahrooma, drained
2 medium tomatoes,
coarsely chopped
~ teaspoon
Worceate~ saUt"e Salt, to taste
Cut tops from bell
pe ppers, remove seeds
and membrane. In skillet
with no added fat, brown
meat, turning to brown
evenly and breaking into
small chunks. Drain and
discard fat from pan.
Mix meat with onion,
bread cubes, half of the
mozzarella, mushrooms,
tu•tln-#>tte IMM/newpon bMch only
meaty boneleaa
Slim Gourmet
By BARBARA GIBBONS
tonuaioe., Woroeatenhire
and salt. Spoon meat
mixture into the peppers.
Place stuffed peppers
in a nonstick baking dish.
Bake covered, at 350
degrees, 25 minutes.
Uncover; sprinkle with
remaining mozzarella.
Bake 5 to 10 minutes
more , until c heese
topping melts. Makes lix
atuffed peppera, 195
calories each. -
An unusual Shepherds
Pie, using cauliflower
instead of potatoes,
makea Alice Otto, of
Buffalo, N.Y., a winner:
ALICE O'M'O'S
CAULIFLOWER
SllEPHERDS PIE
1 pound lean fa:t-
trimmed beef round,
ground
1 onion, chopped
Salt (or aeuoned
a.alt) and pepper, to ta.tte
'1' teaapoon l.natant
garlic ! cube or envelope
beef bouillon
IA cup water
2 packages 00
o unces each ) frozen
cauliflower, t ender-
cooked
Optional: 1 teaspoon
butter flavoring
• no dealer sales
• llmlt rights reserved •
freah alukan pork roast ...... 3.29 •• 2.79 helllMlt ltMb
...... 2.29 •• 1.69
9roun4 lteef
(not to excMd 30% fat content)
trvlM ranch flltmtf9 malMt
honey dipped
18 oz. pkg.,... 2.99 2.49
Irvine ranch tarmtrt market raw
,.
1
.. 7.49 ••
thr11her 1hark
• ........ , ••. 2.49
relnlttw
trout
.... ,. .. 2.29
••l•h , ....
roaated/Nltecl roUted1nO Nit
.. t.79 .. t.19
Pafrika M need fr eah
panley
Brown meat In a
nonstick aklllet, breaking
into chunk.a and turning
to brown evenly. Drain
and dilcard fat from pen.
Add onion, aeuoninp,
bouillon and water.
Bring to a boll; the n
lower heat, cover and
simmer 10 mlnutea.
Maah coo ked
cauliflower with butter
flavoring, if desired.
Spread half of maahed
cauliflower in a layer _.
over the bottom of • ~ non.tick 2-quart beld.ng
dl1h, which haa been
aprayed with cooking
•pray.
Spread evenly wlth
meat m.lx1ur'e. Top wtth
remaln1na cauliflower to
cover. Sprinkle with
paprika. Bake uncovered
30 mlnutea I n a
preheate d 350-degree
oven. Sprinkle with
parsley before aerving.
Makea four aerv::.t,s,
under 200 calories .
It's cole alaw tlme ... lolld head
cahhage -•.
sweet and Juicy peak of flav~r ...
coachella'a flneat ptnk
, lb.
.15
.. 6.98
24 oz. loet 1.29 ..
I
1• ...
J'\\
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•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983 0
...
Cook once, Side dish turneil into entree
• serve twice
Entertaining
ovemUlht guesia can be
Iota of fun. But it a1IO
meana extra work. for
the entire family,
partjcularly the cook.
Here to help la a new
time.1avin1 way of
cooking. By preparing
extra meat and rice for
dinner the night your
gueata arrive, the next
night's meal can be
ready·to--eat in minutes.
To start , choose
complimentary main
dishes. Because chicken
and rice have a natural
affinity foe one another,
Brandied Chicken With
Confet ti Rice (Meal 1)
and Mexicali Chicken
Rice Salad (Meal 2) work
well together. Each dish
also is unique in taste
and appearance, an
import.ant considertion.
BRANDIED CHICKEN ,,
CONFE1TI RICE
2 cane (13~ or 14\li
ounces each) chicken
broth
2 cups rice
2 teaspoons salt
4 to 5 tablespoons
butter or margarine
While rice la cooking,
aalt and pepper chicken
bre.uta. Cook, a few at a
time, in rema1nin& 2 to 3
tablespoons butter ln
large s killet over
medium heat until firm
and cooked through,
about 7 minutes on each
side. Remove chicken
from skillet. Keep 6
ch icken breasi halvea
warm.
Cover and refrigerate
the remaining 4 chicken
breast halves f or
Mexicali· Chicken Rice
Salad.
Lightly saute garlic in
sk illet. Add cream,
brandy, cayenne pepper
and remaining ~
teaspoon salt, stirring to
loosen browned bits in
pan. Heat until sauce
bubbles. Cook over low
heat, stirring constantly,
until mixture thickens. 5
to 7 minutes. Remove
rice from heat. Let stand coarsely chopped into rice mixture; chill.
covered until all liquid is 1 soft a v o ca d o Before serving, stir in
absorbed, about 5 (optional) tomato. Il desired, peel
minutes. Stir in carrots Cut chicken breasts avocado; remove seed.
and green onions. into ~ -ln c h pieces. Cut avocado lengthwiJle
Refrigerate half of the Combine chicken, rice, into IA -inch slices: cut
rice for Mexicali Chicken green pepper, chilies and each al.Ice in lhil'ds. Stir
Rice Salad. Arrange olives. mend aour cream, into rice mixture. Makes
remaining rice and vinegar and salt. Stir 6 servings.
Tabbouleh, a claulc Middle
Eastern diah, ii transformed from
a side diah into a flavorful, lJ&ht
entree. Drawing on th't cull.nacy
ingenuity of "Californla·atyle
cuisine, traditional lnaredienta
are enhanced by fresh new one.,
to create an Imaginative one-dlah
meal for spring and summer
outdoor menua.
1 Spring Tabbouleh Salad
blends the crunchy texture of
bulgur wheat, an F.aatem menu
mafnstay, with garden-fresh
Calllomia vegetables, herbe and
seaaonings, then adds a surpriae
ingredient: y<>iUft.
SPRING TABBOULEH SALAD
1 cup bulgur wheat
~ cup each finely chopped
green onion, green pepper and•
• parsley ~ cup .uced ripe olives
1 mx.oo. chopped
IA cup chopped cilantro, or 1
teaspoon dried cilantro
1 tomato, peeled, seeded,
chopped
1 teaapoon aa1 t
~ teaapoon pepper
1 cup unflavored yogurt
Bibb lettuce Jeaves
Pour 2 cups bolling water over
bulgur wheat; let stand 1 hour.
Drain well and combine bulgur
with remaining Ingredients
except lettuce leaves. Heap into
bowl and .erve lettuce leaves on
side. Each dine r spoons
Tabbouleh onto a leaf and roll It
up. Serves 6.
-
Salt and pepper, to
taste chicken on platter.r--:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
10 chicken breast
halves, b o n ed and
skinned
1 c l ove garlic ,
minced
1 cup heavy cream
~ cup brandy t> as'h ca y en n e
pepper
2 c ups shredded
carrots t
1 cup sliced ·green
onions
Add enough water to
chicken broth to make
4 ~ cups liquid. Bring to
a boil in large saucepan.
Stir in rice , 1 '1i
teaapoona of the salt and
2 tablespoons of the
butter. Cover tightly and
simmer 20 minutes.
Spoon sauce over
chicken . Makes 6
98M~ALI CHICKEN
RICE SALAD
4 cooked chicken
breast halves
c ·o OK ea r ice
(reserved from Meal 1)
l c up diced green
pepper
2 tablespoons to ~
cup canned chopped
green chilies, drained
~ cup pitted ripe
olives, sliced
1 cup dairy sour
cream ·
2 tablespoons cider
vinegar
1 ~ teaspoons salt
1 large tomato ,
Surprise! This
souffle is easy
Some of the most notable diahe9 ever to be
created have suffered from a mystique that
prevents timid cook, from trying them at home.
The souffle is a prime example, reputed to be
difficult, temperamental.
Coming to the rescue is a Swi11 Cheeae
Surprise Soulfle that can be assembled ahead,
fnnen. and brought from freezer to oven and from
oven to table.
S~ CHEESE SURPRISE SOUFFLK
3 table.poona butter or margarine
11' cup flour
~ t.eupoon aalt
~ teaspoon pepper
~ cup heavy creAm
2 cups dry vermouth or dry white wine
2 cupe c:oanely p-ated Switzerland sww.
(Emmentaler) or Natural Gruyere cheeee or 1 cup
each
~ ~ FRESHEST ICE CREAM
'1/
OUR
PRICES
ARE
DOWN!
America'' FrMh11( Ice Cream
A Proven 8UoOll1 Since 1934
Select your uctullw carveee ... '" .. ctty of ~ dK>toe at pt1me
1ooatton1 throuattocn Or~. At~1ld•, Stf\ Diego and San e.mardlno counflM. For I~ Olll:
(714) 141-1111 ""MClnO Av.alab6t Oft Apptolltd Ct9dlt M_. l:OCM:OO p.m. ••
··········-··········~···· 6 9.!.
············-····· .. ·· s I ~ .. ~
:~~: :r~:;.t ....... ~?1!!~.~.~!~ ......... s I ~~
Bridgford
loneleH Hams Whole or Hall ........................
:~-=~k Fiiiets ............................. $ I !~
~:;ks:~:!.=~~~~~ ....................... S 3 !~
The new chunk driving law,
explained.
-
, .
.~ p!! ~tange Coast·OAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
Turkey is ideal for dieters
In fuhion and home
f)trnishing, the "less ia
more" look ia always ln
the smartest of taste.
Ac cording to the
Am erican Dieteti c
~saoclation, the same
holds true with food
selection. Lesa fat, salt
and sugar In a diet
wiaely selected from the
fQur basic food groups
adds up to a real health
plus.
. One food that can help
guide food habits In a
nutritionally wlae
direction is turkey. This
great-tasting, verl#ltile
food is high in P">teln
'nd other nutr1ents
'Deluding B-vitamlns.
magnesium and iron. yet
has less fat and fewer
calories than many other
protein foods. It's ideal
(or the diets of those
who want to "lighten
"P·" Combined with pasta,
fresh vegetables, yogurt
and seasonings, a pound
of versatile turkey breast
portion becomes a
nutritio.us, low-fat one-
dish meal.
Primavera means
spring, and Turkey Pasta
Primavera, with I ts
bounty of col orfu l
vegetables has all the
appeal of a springtime
day. Select any of the
three varieties of turkey
breast portion -oven
roasted, barbecue or
hickory smoked -to
Onions
flower
for ,~ip
Something special that
speaks of spring ls in the
crackly goodness and
fresh wholesomeness of
a sWeet, mild onion.
hf addition to being
nutritious, an onion is a
good source of fi~r.
If you want an
. exciting beginning for
your next get-to~ether,
the Onion P etal Relish
with Olive Cream Dip
will be unique and
exciting.
To make a flowerlike
onion oenterpieoe, peel a
large JPring onion. With
a sberp knile. cut off the
top of the onion. Make
Sleveral crisscross cuts
from top to boUom,
cutting almost through
the onion. Drop tnto ice
w~ter. If desired. tint ~ter with th'e food
coloring of your choice.
Chill several hours.
When ready to serve,
remove onion from ice
water and place on relish
tray. Spread onion petals
to form f u 11 b Io om
.. flower." The petals are
broken apart with the
fingers and eaten with
olive cream dip. The
recipe follows:
OUVE CREAM DIP
l cup thick sour
cream
!4 cup mayonnaise
1 t eas po o n
Worcestershire sauce
~ teaspoon .alt
~ teaspoon basil
2 tablespoons finely
1ftirK"ed stuffed olives
:> Combine sour cream
and mayonnaise. Add
temaining Ingredients
lhd blend well.
If you're looking for
a'n eye ca t chi n g
converMlion piece for
your next meal, try the
stuffed Springsweet
Salad. STUFFED
8,RINGSWEET
. ~ SALAD ~r,! t.o.G large aprlng
1 8-ounce package
cream·~
I 2 rableapoons
deviled' ))Mr\
•. 1 tiaspoon dry
mustard
· • ~ &ables~ finely
~~io_.,
tw lfainl De»Per ., i'Ni oniona:: "With
appt'i ·~o)'er, l'emove
·~~· .,-of o lfio n •. wnter JOrtioN •'taothefcM.. e.•1r••m ch•••• nn.n. and enemy. a-. ~·led ham.
A • ta. r• m • I a I n • mtll~~~t• Uld beat
U cen~~· of
-..... ~er.lb e-.. m111ttu'9J Chill aiweral
\an ti~ ~.ream cttt•#~ .,.. Ctr'.m· ,..,.;m .. , .um \inJonl
on &Mtuce e t08.
custom wlor the flavors
o f thi s light yet
satisfying meal to fit
pe~ tastes. Start to
lerVi.na time la less '1\an
20 minutes.
2 tablespoons water
1 pound fresh
broccoli
1 cup (8 ouncea)
plain yogurt
floweretles from
brocco li : reserve
remainder for another
we.
TURKEY PASTA
PRIMAVERA
1 teaapoon dried
basil leaves
Add water, broccoli
flowerettes and turkey
to akillet. Bring to a boil.
Tum down heat. Cover.
Simmer ~ to 10 minutes
or until broccoli is crisp-
tender. Toss pasta with
turkey mixture. Place on
platter . Top with
tomatoes.
l pound fully
cooked boneless turkey
breast portion
4 ounces spaghetti
or fettuclni
8 cherry tomatoes,
cut in half
W cup grated
Parmesan cheese
1 clove garlic, finely
chopped . 2 green onions,
sliced
2 tablespoons oil
C ut turkey into
~ -lnch chunks. Cook
pasta according to
package directions. Cook
garlic and onions in large
skillet on medium heat 3
minutes. Cut 2-lnch
Combine yogurt and
basil; spoon over pasta
mixture. Sprinkle with
cheese. Makes 4 servings.
r&7'£ Key Buys ~ · meen uh •vlnga.
Key Buys -Items priced ~ ltlelr -ryd•y dllCOUnt pricea a • mull ol menulac:luNn'
temporary prornotk>nal --~ 0<
UQeP!iOnal l>Ute'-You11 lind hunc1<9<1& of
Key Buy 11ema ew<v lime you enop
¥Bonded a.et
Alt OU1 bMf •pre •l1C1ed 10 OU< own rigid
~ of q.-llly Wit olfe< a mone>y-beeil
8ond on -v cut. guera..-ng you the t>eal bMI value for yo<11 money
a7' Magna Pak for
~ glWlw ,,,.., .,._
~ )ICMI bUy l>MI. "°"'· or c:NQ;en
,.iu In lllrQf q~ you cen .... S -off_., pound wlltl Meglle PM. Megr-. .....
°'*9 .. -qU9llly ..-ta you linc:l 11 04/ll ~low price Ill mra .......
r&7' No ,,_,,,.. or
~ gimmick&
ll\llNd ~ gtll'llM. atempe 0< gunmocU to
lllfKI Cll.._... . .,. off .. <liecount pne1ng, --ino you • io-1 _..,, 1ooc:1 1>111 •n<I no
coatly 111111
f&7' No Mmlta ~ fo •xh •W'lnp.
AMt>er !hen limited ~-.... NfM yOAJ'
MMnglt -.,. pl-no llmlla on the numbe< ol
1tema you cen buy So~ you -Key Buy
1tem1 oll...o at a•tra ..,,, •. you cen •tock uo
a:7' Menut.ctu,..,..• ~ COUll"M can • ..,
you """ tnol9.
Bring In menufac:turera· coupone IOI -g.-Mving9 on the Ii.mt you purcr.e.
$4mpty ~· your CQUPont II the dleekOU1 coun1e< 1nc1 ... ,, tue>t•aet the .. ,"' ~ the
eouoon off our ~ey IOw price
GUARANTEED QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRI CES
WHOLE BODY 4 7 FRYINC CHICKEN
SOUdllm, ~A Lii. e
RESH l.11.119 GROUND BEEF
JUll.Olf ..... DD8110f...,.,.'9t
~~~.~ ........ 1.79
~~.~~ ... 2.19
~~~.~.~~-1.47
~~.~ .. ~~ 1.39
Nina Loveless
s.vect •1t93
The UiClly IOtll: MS.SJ. The IOlal It ltle
OChet' ~on IN..,,,. or com.,.,..,._ ltema: -.ao.
f .. llllell Ap1' It, IM3
Pwll!a-.,...., .......
INCYCLOP!DtAI ....... ., ........ ........
T·BONE
lD 269 STEAK
tonclldleff~
PORTERHOUSE lD 279 STEAK
IOllOlll leff ~
llADE CUT OU)( ROAST 99 -119' ................. 1.1-.
~~~~~! ... 2.19
WHOLE BEEF BRISKET ---..... ftlWtnU ••.•
SROIN Tl> STEAK ----FRESH T\JRtcEY BREAST --m.IY-IA ,, ...
... 1.39
.. 2.29
.. 1.79
~._DR~~~····· ..... 58
~:! ~~.~~~..51.69
~~¥1~~! ........... 1.69
rlSH t<. Sf flFOOO
~~~~.~1.39 ~~~ ......... ~1.69
~~~~~ ...... 2.49
~~~~ ... : .. 1.79
~~~.~ ........ 2.19
CANNED ll. PACKAGED
r *VANCAWS 69 PORK&BEANS ,,oz.cene
I~~~-249
fl=TER'S 89
' • v--. •~ an •
r;;= "" .. ·119
!~.,. ""'"' 149 I~ Doialt,_ wt.S or Diet .,._ COii
I~=t .. 59 -ooe°'-r *PUSBURY 79 CAKE MXES •
I V1111t11t t 8' OI. IO• e
I ~,lrw.tt!".139
l*~C:~~.~~X-1.79
I*~~~~~.~~~2.59
I*~~.~~Ol(All 2.49
t*~~~~··· noua 1.19
l*~~~or-1.29
I*~~.~!.~~ ...... 1.75
t*ICOCll·AI> DftllC fllXES 229 --·""•-:: ..... _
l*~~~~: 2.69
I*~.~~~-1.19
l*~·~.~~--.89
P*TASTER'S CHOICE 2 6 ' ____ .. 9 _,. ...... ····-.
l*~!?.r. . . tOC. -• 79
l~~~···· .... uou•.69
l~~.~A ... 2.35
l~.~!~.~ 1.49 rCACIUtY CAMJY BARS 39 ........... __..,. .,.,,..ran ............... ••or ... .
r~~~~--.69
r~.~~.~-1.39
l!!!t!!S. ~ .......... 1\ .86
I~.~~~W-.99
lPIPSICCLA £~~~~ .. ,.~ 1.89 ----....--l"CW ... _____ ....... ........, .. "'
i
------------------
C/\NNED ~ rACKAGED
fl::=STDAY 35 '~°' let~• --Of,IRY & FROZEN
l*~~JJ!~~~~.I\ .23
l~ .~~.!.~11or(All .99
l?~~.~~'. ...... eorw>.43
~~~.~~ .... -... 1.95
l!!E~.~~~1 .... •or-.93
l~~~R~ . oor-1.65
l~~.~~~ar-1.09
l~Y .. f!! ..... •ar-2.79
.:JUAL ITY PHU!HJCf
C.AUFORNIA 79 PEAOtES
Largf .... ot ""a.... l.b •
FRESH
BROCCOLI
10Dll ClDOd htlnO
LIQUOR BEER & WINE
fl CROWN RUSSE ~
'~ 17Htrltl ,--
l!'~5!'v.sco!~ ...... 10.99
l~.~.~'?~.,. 20.29
r~.~~T ,,,,,..,.11.79
t~~a~11.79
l~~~. WN:S ,.,. '" 3.39
r~T~.~.~~.~~--1.79 · l~.~···· 1lCll~3.49
l~~~.~Cll-.89 r~s~-..... uot~4.59
l~~c:1.l.~~ ....... Cll-.65
DELI DELIGHTS
l*~?.'..':~.~~.~11or c,.1.99
l*~~.~~~ 1.29
I*~~~ .... Cll-2.95
I*!Ss~~~!?!2.29
l~J~.~.~~. tOGl-1.69
l~J~~.~.~~ ...... or-1.19
l~t~~··· '°°'-1.49
l~~S~t~~ ......• -1.19
*'*" durtng our ~BnndeEv.ntl , .............. -..,~---... -·-..... -..... ---·-·-....... ~, .................. ...,
HOUSf tiOL 0 & PF T
r *SPIJ.·MATE 59· MPERTOWB.S
1'1.1' ....
!*BATHROOM TISU 89 _,,_ • ..ell; .....,..,...,.. • aa.rn .•. nt" ,.... •
I*~~~·~"-.79
l*~·~·~1,£~ 1.59
l*~~~S uor-.79
I*~~~. ...or-.32
!!2£>.~~ .. o•m-7.09
r~~.~~Ra~ .... " 283
r~i.~~~.~ ..... 97
l~t~ .. ~ .. ·(1-4.99
l~.!~~······ .... -4.39
!?!!C..£".'!.~~ ...... •otT 1.99
lltftQAM PEARS 68 -·························-·
~.~ ............... 1.49
~.~ ............... 98
~~.~ .............. 1.97
f!Wl5.~ .. -D-t04
' ..
u
,-,
I I
I I I ,.
1,' ,,
I
-
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, May 18, 1983 Bl
Foster Farms Presents ;.
:· ,-,
MONEYIN \
YOUR POCKET i
Start saving today :
Ca 11 642-4321
and ask our
circulation department
for home delivery ..
Coupon Savings -one
more reason people all
along the Orange Coast
value the
Daily Pilat
They taste great. Theyre more nutridous.
And they cost less, too.
Foster Farms Chicken Franks are definitely the
better franks. They're bursting with the delicious
hot dog wte kids love. With all the nutrition
moms love, too. Our ~ are made
from fresh chicken meat, not beef or
pork, so they're lower in fat and
higber in protein than most
. fnulb. And they cost a whole
lot less.
Foster Fanns Chicken Franks.
Better for your kids.
Better for you.
FOSIER
FARMS.·
r---. , ------------,
115¢ Better F~~!~~k~Bol~ 15¢ I I i>ster fanns Olk:ken Franks. The Better Franks. I
10 OE Al [R fOlllf f111111 Will PQlll Wll 11G1 Ill llallal'ld •Pl• I PIT Int lilct value OI !Ills COUOOll ..., "°"" ....... ...-I
l)iUS 7C h1"41111Q Chl lQI PIO· Orot•t. OI odllr1ftO111 llGI
I 'lldellyoullld,outc:llltOll*llM 19111 ....... 1111111..ca. I
com1>11eo wl1h Ille'""'' or this dlM ,,,......., ....._"' Oller l11Y01Cesshow111Qygur our· •10,,....CQlllOlllOI,.... I dlUe 01 suttleoent stoek to c:owet lion fill,,......_ .. "" I
all couoons 1tdee"'td 111uat oe alltllOlllOfolls~.lllC .PO
I sr.own on 1eQuest Vo10 11 010· Bot 1413, Cllrttt111.10wa ~7)4 1 h!Olltlll lh l!O Of IHtrlCteO YOUI Only Oflt c:oupo• •• , llt ,..
Cllllomtl ~ pay 11"1 NleS Ill 1111111111* Pllldml I CUil fllue 1120.11 ol u Cou· C..-....,_ Jiit • • ..._ I
I 76998 6009s1 I
STORE COUPON H>slet F .-rM ll'flllOllDll. CA 96334 L-----------------------~
FOR
60DAYSONLY
SAVE COLD
~HON
REFRIGERATED
DEUDll,IS.
Save SOC on Kellogg's
crisp breakthrough.
Mew Cri1plx cereal is crispy times two.
Look for cold and crispy Deli Dills from
Vlasic in your grocer•s refrigerated section.
Until July 17;--save 20¢ on your next
purchase with thls coupon. But hurry,
great deals like thls can't last forever.
----------------------------------~ 20~ OfF UNTIL 1 /17 /83 ~ ' ~ 'e!Y ONE JAR REFRIGERATED DELI DIU..S e :
I
COllSUllO OM cdv~ Of1 °"""'ic Good o• Otlt Otlls I tt Otto luM & 1•111• C~111111 ont1 C<>•t•INI 11111' 101 ... "' I (;•OCU RHtttOI °" ltlllll lllted l0t COlll•NI •OOo pill 'llf14 .. ptOOwtl llldtUltd AllY OTHI~ \l$f COll~llTUlfS
r•Auo '°' '""""" .. """' o1 tl(I •fl•• "'"' )1 MH tt I \'tiili~· ¥1111< r ..,, Ille , 0 '°' ISSS Clt•toft lo•• S17ll I lflltltt It polldv« t1111C1HM tn-fl Ott¥fnl tlu«~lk OI -· (_... °°"'°"' IMf '°"' .. , ••• , '"""""" I M 4 ~-'"""'" o<OIMMtll tt "'1f'IW Dy ...,., t l':.s ~· Ill "" 0tod11<l1 Cn• •.tlw I · 1001 VII.., I
•,_•an.,....... lffl• I ....... 114111.-I "°' s41ao lll36l I
~~~ STORE COUPON • L-------------------------------~
't!itiSt't OOOVE
~ KelloQgS3 Crfsp/xcereol Is news \~ that's doupty good. Each hearty,
wholesome bite holds two kinds of
crisp: one side is com, the other Is .
rice. Combined, they produce o
taste and texture so slngularty
satisfying, no slngle99r~ln_cereal
can match It. OnJy Cffap/xls
crispy times two.
One side holds the ·
crunch of corn ...
. . . the other holds 1
the crackle of rice. \.
....... I
I l .
--------------------------------------~------~---------------------
Ea I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18. 1~83
Snacks, if nutritious, can be good for children
•
StiN« PORT10N
Smoked
Raw
A
BARBECUE
FAVORITE
Dish !' $ Liquid .... I.I§
Pine Power S ;( ftft
Cleaner ' ev~
BEEF LARQE.ENO
Rib .....
AIHlllCNI I EAUTI' El.90 0
Salad
R•i
49.:
SMOKED CENTER CUT
Ham
Sllees ·
• OAflll!AL Clllll[, CHIHIH
• Oil OllUIHOl't'O
•
Keebler
Cookies
--89°11.0Z
REGULAR OR SUTTER FUWOR SHORTENING 48-•2 I. Crisco ................... 9 ...... oz • 5
MAXWEU. HOUSE INSTANT •· .
co11ee ................. ~ ....... e ..... 1~ •4.35
BAACH'8 AEOULAA OR ASSORTED 0 Clreas Peanuts .... e ........ 14-0Z 99
BON>EN AMEAIOAN SLICES • Cbee•e Food ............... 9 1.oz 2.39
11 VAAIETIU 0 Knad•en Yopart .... tt ..... .oz 47
w~• ~119 On ~ •
I
e ... UI
•
IUlOULAll oa DIST
FAAMEAJOHN
·usageUnks
.. lie _99c
-11.81
ll 11.71
.. 11.11
OllAH°o'..t"~ ""Nctl
Green Spot
Driaks
"°~
a.oz PltO.
EACH
u aUC
.. u 11.U
.. u 11.19
u a 11.11
.~
Prodaee Special•!/. · )
LARGE FANCY T""""""-F\AVOR L ·J Mangos r_.?f>I.,.\
. ( ·;.~ ~ r.,... ;
~'91loo--------.
Ottanaes l.wJE,NllCYl'\.NOCl.QHAYIU
Broeeoll ,AHC:fl"DC>UIOl&H
Onlo1111 UAN0.18W(El 1A01M4
Strawt.errl• ...,..,NICI __ *-_
DOZ M81t&T llACll •1.0S
-.
Seniors focus of market guide
In 1980 more than 25 5 million Americans were
over the age of 65. By the year 2000, th.II group is
expected to number 35 million. Ninety-five pereent
of older citizens live in independent households ln
the community and represent, as consumers, $26
billion in food sales.
As a result of these statistics and other research
trends, the Food Marketing Institute (FMI) and the
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
developed a joint program designed to help food
retailers better understand and meet the needs of
older consumers.
The institute believes It is important to work
with an organiz.ation such as AARP in developing
this program because of their involvement with and
understanding of older citizens.
Program suggestions came from food retailers
who have already established community programs
to serve older citizens. The project was guided by an
advisory committee o f both FMI and AARP
members . In addition, input from the food
marketing industry came from the con s umer
affairs , h o me eco n omics, advertising,
communications and personnel training sectors of
the industry.
The program package, titled "Aging -
Everybody's Doing It: A Supermarket Guide to
Older Shoppers," provides susutestions and ideas for
1\\l'~o \l.· nh: l\~1qocir
Chateau
St. Michelle
'81 Chardonnay
$699
'18 Merlot
$599
1'\c&1 \1:rdr l'Jiqoor
Baker at Harbor
549-4044
store level and community programs to enhance the
shopping experience of older consumers.
'rhe program la divided into four apeclallz.ed
areas:
Community Pro gram Guide for
Supermarkets. This booklet provides specific
information and ideas o n how to establish
community-based programs to meet the shopping
need.a of older consumers.
-Store Manage r's Gulde offers specific
suggestions ro improve store services and enhance
the shopping environment to make the trip easier
and more enjoyable for older consumers.
-Store Employee's Gulde hlghlighta the
· physical and social changes that occur with age. It
offers simple and practical tips for employees on
how to provide extra assiatance to older shoppers.
-Make Your Food Dollars Count,is a
consumer information brochure designed to help
older persons gel the most nutrition for their food
dollar. It includes a menu plan and shopping list for
budget conscious consumers.
Even though research has revealed that older
men and women generally have a positive attitude
toward supermarket shopping, they do have some
unique needs. This joint FMI-AARP program seeks
to identify these needs and to enhance the shopping
experience of older consumers
'
·---·-FRESH SQUEEZED $199
CALIFORNIA 'h 0.1.
ORANGE JUICE or
FRESH
SWORD FISH
FRESH
THRASHER
SHARK
SMALL COOKED
SHRIMP
''°With Coupon Only $1 09
Good lhru 5./24183
Limit 3 Per Coupon Qt. --------------,
FRESH CALIFORNIA GALA APPLES
SWEET CORN
SwHt. a Tender From New z .. lend
FRESH ALASKAN *S~ HALIBUT STEAKS Reg. $8.99 Lb.
*~! FRESH *S~ SEA BASS
Reg. $3.79 Lb. Re. te.91 Lb.
*6~ MEXICAN NO. 1 WHITE*10'' JUMBO SHRIMP Lb
12-14 To • A Pound Reg. $12.49 Lb.
NORDIC PRINCESS FRESH *10!!1e Ceke
FRESH STRAWBERRY
PIES *S" CHEESE CAKE $$00 112 Ceke
Pleln, Grand M•rlner, Pina Cobld•, $~00
Rupberry, Kahlua a Cherry ., v. C•ke
COLBY CHEDDAR
CHEESE
Cut IN Chunk•
MONTEREY JACK
CHEESE
Cut In Chunka
MARINATED
country •trl•
RIBS .
Gr .. 1 For $179 •ao Lb.
.$1.11~ .•
FRESH STRAWBERRY
TARTS ,,.
USDA CHOICE
Eeeterned Corn Fed
FILET MIGNONS
*649Lb. '
Reg. '7.AI ~
WE DB.tYBR
PARKING
AVAILAaLI
AT ltSAll
fWSTCMIC
,
Pacific Ranch Market 3347 E. Coast Hwy
COfona del Mar
673·8110 0.-0lolll'••"' .,,,, ·~··"' .,,,..
P.rtoee Effective Thru 5/2 .. /83
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Wedneaday, May 18, 1983 EP·
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-----
E4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1G83
Perk up fish
'with li:rn~s
Festive hi-unch frugal
When you are looking
for a way to entertain
that la economical and
novel, why not pick a
weeke nd morning to
prepare a featlve
brunch? Our recipe I.a for
Herb Sauced Eu• and
Ham, a aimple poached
egg varlaUon.
HERB SAUCED
EGGS AND HAM
1 fre eze -dried
packet pesto sauce
Prepare peato mix
according t o package t
directions. In a saucepan
melt butter and stir in
flour. Gradually stir in
milk and prepared sauce.
Stir over low heat until
sauce bubbles and
thickens. Seuon to taste
with aalt and pepper.
Fish , delicately
prepared and aerved, has
grown in mealtime
popularity during the
past few years .
Americans are buying
more fish and finding
new ways to prepare the
"catch of the day."
One of the ways l.s to
use limes as a delicate
seasoning, that brighten
up the natural flavor of
fish.
CHARCOAL GRILLED
SALMON STEAKS
2 pounds salmon
steak, fresh or frozen
oU
~ cup melted fat or
~ cup lime juice
2 teaspoons salt
'h teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce
~ teaspoon white
pepper
Dash liquid hot
pepper sauce
Paprika
If using frozen fish,
thaw before cooking. Cut
into serving size portions
and place in well-greased
hinged wire grills.
Combin e remaining
ingredients except
paprika. Baste fish with
sauce and sprinkle with
paprika. Cook about 4.
inches from moderate
hot ooals for 8 minutes.
Baste with sauce and
sprinkle more paprika.
Turn and cook for 7 to 10
minutes longer or until
fish flakes easily. Serves
6.
~ QUICK 'N EASY l OCEAN PERCH
2 pounds ocean
perch fillets
11. cup melted butter
2 tablespoons lime
juice
2 tablespoons
chopped parsley
~ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon pepper
Paprika
Lime wedqes
If using frozen fish,
thaw before cooking.
Skin fillets and place on
1 a greased broil-and-serve
platter. 16 x 10 inches.
Give eggs
European
overtone
Americ a consumes
more eggs than any
country in the world,
and eggs are increasingly
in demand as a substitute
for high-priced meat and
fish.
All egg dishes are not
cheap, of OOW'3e. Fried or
boiled, they may be easy
on the pocketbook. But
there are also gourmet
specialties like Eggs
Benedict on a ham bed
an d smothered in
Hollandaise sauce, or
eggs in aspic, where
poached eggs are molded
with slices of pate de foie
gns or fancifully cut
truffles. o
A claaaic egg dish is
the omelet that lends
itself to innumerable
variations by adding
fresh herbs, grated
cheese. bits of fish,
poultry, meat or
vegetables.
A cousin of the omelet
is scrambled eggs that
are soft and creamy only
if they are cooked as
slowly as polllible.
One popular version is
Scotch \Voodcock in
which acalliona, parsley,
anchovies and capers
combine with 1erambled
eggs to create a dish with
continental overtones.
SCOTCH WOODCOCK
8 egp ~
~cup milk
IA cup chopped
fresh pAnley
~ teaapooo salt
~ teaspoon Tabuco
~cup l>utter
8 allcee of toast ,
buttered
1 can (2 oun~es)
anchovy fWeta. drained
1 tabh151oon ~pen.
drained ln,...bow .. ~ ea-. mDk. pn1ey, ..ii
and Tabllco: beat Wnh
fork. In larce akUlet,
melt butter over medium
•heat. t>our I n •18
mixture.
~ mixture ... pntly
draw pancake turner
acrOll it formlftl tarae
1oft, curda. Contlnue
cooklna ~ntO •at are thJckened but at1D .moist.
Arran1• 2 allcH of
&Ollll on a aerviDI plate
fOf' -=h ponJon, Spoon
eat ~ c.o.t. Oamiah
wHb anchovle• and
C9pert. s.rv.. 4.
Combine remaining
ingredients ex cept
paprika and lime
wedges. Pour over fillets
and let stand for 30
minutes. Broil about 4
inches from source of
heat for 8 to 10 minutes
or until fish flakes easUy
when tested with a fork.
Sprinkle with paprika.
Serve with lime wedges.
Yield: 6 servings of
about 130 calories each.
I
~· 12-oa. 'O<koee 2 ... 9 OICED CHICKEN MEAT .,............. ••
,_ John 1-oa. ~ Sovtooe
SKINLESS LINKS ......................... EA .• 59
~Stot ARMOUR BONELESS HAM ..... l l . 2. 79
FAM" Y •ACK WllOll
,.YmLIU•D ..... •~~1= 89 &a. •
FRESH
ITALIAN
~9E~·~·~"
29~
•
High among the
favorite continental
brunch di1he1 of fine
restauranta are poached
egp, aet on split touted
English muftln1, with
sauteed ham slicea, all
topped with a rich sauce.
ON BROIL
THICK CUT
BEEF ROUND
87
LB. Ullll 2
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
Salt and pepper
4 English muffins,
split and touted
8 slices ham, sauteed
in 2 tablespoons butter or
margarine
8 poached eggs
Top English muffin
halves with sauteed ham
slices and poached eggs.
Spoon over pesto sauce.
Serve at once garn.iahed
with paraley. Makes 4
servingis.
fllliH ALAIKAN CDinll CUT -._ ~ °' ...,, i2... I 69 SWIFTS SIULEAN ................... u : •
HALIBUT 2 99 STEAK ... •
&a.1.99 USDA
CHOICE
....... "' •OUT
~~ 2.49
WEEICORN
FRESH EARS c
EA.
~ ...... ,oMll
WILSON SAUSAGE ................. La:l.99
~~:.'..~:: .••.•••••.•••..•.•.•. EA. 2.69 .........
n••HUT
USDA
CHOICE
lfff
llOUNO &a.
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P1TTED PRUNES ......................... u.. .89 ALOE VERA PLANT ................ u.. 3. ff ue••• Mn. ••1a1.a----~ l~ACKM!lla Giia•·•
•••• ~:~·~:i:s:u;.;.· ........ ...
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icat-. 1-0al •a• I llAllUI' A•A IOY IAua................. UllA8~0
HllM, 12-oa. r....,.,.. 95 6.»-0z. I 39 ••••••x ............ e SIZE e
GALLON MILK
.HUGHIS
87
IACH
1-o .. co~~ •s KNUDSEN YOGURT ....................... ••
12-01. Crys10la 9 FOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE ...... S.2
ICrvft, 19-....... Hlctofy or Hot 9 5 BA•ICUI IAUG ........................ e
22-oa. ~.Ind. 20c Off t.IMI 9
PALMOLIVE LIQUID ...................... I. I
6-oa. COii "-tM
KITIY QUEEN CAT FOOO ............. .aa
YA•CAM•
•
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Soto LM • :::~ ... ~;;,~ .. ' ,.,
10.... ..... c-. ... ·~ llROSFff VEGET S ................. .. ...
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IDGI IHAVI
llO., .---. UMI
INCIMOI • 14.
Orahge Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, May 18, 1983 El ' l r----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------...;...--__ .....;;;;;;.;;..
,.,.
Storms
affect
market
The series of storms
that hit California and
the other parts of the
country during February
and March are catching
up with us now in terms
of short supplies of fresh
vegetables.
Many of the le,fy
green vegetable varieties
will continue on an up-
and-down market until
mid-June reflecting
times when growers
were unable to get into
their flooded fields to
plant.
On the other hand, the
first sign of summer
su nshine ls seen with
some early varieties of
fresh fruits becoming
available.
Harvest has started on
the California ch erry
crop, although volume
on the early Burlat
variety is extremely light
because of the heavy
rains during the critical
par t of the growing
season. By the end of
May the Bing cherries
are expected to be in
good production and if
th e w eather remains
I clear it should be a good
seaspri for cherries.
The crisp, green apple
from New Zealand, the
I Granny Smith, will start
appearing in the stores
this week. Prices on this
excellent quality eatfna
ap ple are expected to
come within range of the
I domestic apples. Prices
will be lower on both the
I red and golden delicious
apples and quality is
remaining consistently
good.
I P eac hes and
ne c tarin es from
Northern California are
showing up in light
supplies. Production will
pick up by next week
and prices s h ould
gradually start coming
down.
I The tomato market I has been fluctuating
regularly. Supplies from
Mexico are dwindling
steadil y while the
California growing
distric t s are slowly
getting under way.
Meanwhile, prices
should remain high but
look for better buys on
the smaller siz.es.
Short supplies and
high prices are the result
of a rain gap in lettuce
crops. Iceberg, romaine,
red and green leaf
lettuces are suffering
from the early spring
wet weather. C.Onswners
will continue to see
.carcitiee one week and
good supplies another
which wlll characterize
the Jeuuce market until
mid-June.
On the other hand,
green onions, parsley,
cabbage, leeks and
carrots are good values in
the vegetable
departments this week.
All of these items are
reuonably priced, good
quality and fresh from
local farms.
Prices are reasonable
and supplies are eooc:t on
the new crop White &.e
potatoea from
Bakersfield. The new
crop of Red Roae and
ruaaet potatoea are
expe c ted to start
harvest time "' about
two weeks.
Yellow onion• are
plentiful and_,.extremely reMOOAb1e. Hoth yellow
and white onion• are comlnc from the deem
pvw1nl dilCricU and UM
quality .. t'JO»llmt.
Manage your money
more emctently
today.
Call '42·4321
to sublcrtbe ..., ....
Chilean Salad sweet 'n' spicy
Thia aurprtaing combination of
fruJta and vegetable• makes a
nutrf tioUI luncheon salad.
Thinly allced Spaniah onions
are t«*ed with table grapea and
other frulta and vegetables to
create a Chilean Grape Salad -
sweet and aplcy, ju.at the way
South Americana like thelr food.
If you wlah to add eome hearty
protein to this lunch, tosa In
chunks of cooked chicken or
turkey , and fQr a perfect
compleme nt to this South
American salad, serve corn
muffins fresh from the oven.
CBJLEAN GRAPE SALAD
2 cups halved aeedleaa green
or eeeded red grapea
~ cup thin slicea sweet red
onion
~ c up thin strips red or
green sweet pepper
~ c up thin half slices
cucumber
1 quart amall lettuce leaves,
or coarsely shredded lettuce
1 large firm-ripe banana
Herbed Dreaaing
Use seedless green or red
grapes or a combination of both.
Rinse and atem grapes; seed red
grapes lf used. Leave grapes
whole or cut in half as desired.
Prepare vegetables and .i;hill
along with grapes. When ready
to eerve, tum lettuce into chilled
aalad bowl. Peel and alice
baiwla. Arranae ifape.. banana
and vegetable& on lettuce. Ta.
with Herbed Dre11ing when
served. Makes <t eervtnp.
Berbed Dreula 1 : Beat
together well: ~ cup garlic
flavored wlne vinegar, ~ cup
salad oil, l teaapoon augar, ~
teaspoon aeaaoned aalt, ~
teaapoon finely crumbled
oregano· and 3 drops. liquid hot
pepper sauce. Beat again before
serving.
Variation: Add 1 cu p strip.
cooked c hicken o r ham, if
desired.
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ONE LOOK AND YOU'LL SEE
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FOLGER'S
COFFEE
I-POUND CAN
ALL GRINDS
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COllA .. A
219
-COKE, DIET COKE,
TAB OR SPRITE I=
8-PACK
12-0UNCE CANS
------VONS IS GOING TO SAVE VOL.------
CHILLED HALF GALLON BOTILE
------VONS lS GOING TO SAVE YOU.------_.
BLADE CU 98 ~.ttK~ ~~ STEAKS LB •
LIMIT 2
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M Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 1)J, 1983
Hint of mint refreshing
J'or after-dinner flavors, mint
la @l<l8l likely America's favorite.
Here are two dinner-capping
d4Werts blending thls refreshing
flavor with summer's freshest
gree n eating apple -Cape
O~y Smith
One spectacular dessert 1s a
Frozen Apple Ice Milk Pie. A
chqcolale wafer crust is filled
with shredded apple and ice milk
laoed with creme de menthe. The
deep green color of the filling
and the chocolate cookies lining lh, sides create a striking color
::ontrast for refreshing warm
westher fare. ~inted Poached Apples, a dish
that's ever y bit as elegant as it is
easy \0 prepare, pleases mint and
apgle lovers alike Refrigerated
berore serving. the minted apples
can be used as a sophisticated
dessert or as a side dish with
pork.
FROZEN APPLE
ICE MILK PIE
1 pac kage (8 1,2 o unces)
=hocolate wafers
2 large G r anny Smith
apples. cored, pared and
s hredded (2 cups)
2 tablespoons green creme
de menthe*
3 pints vanilla ice milk,
softened slightly
1 Cranny Srruth apple, sliced
Chocolate wafer crumbs
Fresh mint leaves
Line bottom and sides of a
9-inch pie plate with chocolate
wafers, cutting cookies where
necessary to fill in spaces. In a
large bowl, toss apples with
c reme de menthe. Blend in
softened ice milk; mix well.
Spoon into prepared pie shell.
Freeze until firm (about 2 hours).
Garnis h with apple slices,
1 clnnamln slick (1 -lnch)
4 Granny Smith apples,
pared and left whole
'h cup mint jelly
In large saucepan, combine
sugar, water and cinnamon stick.
Heat, stirring to dissolve augar.
Bring to boiling; boil, uncovered,
5 minutes; stir tn vanilla. Add
apples, simmer , uncovered, over
low heat, stirring frequ ently,
about 20 to 30 minutes, until
apples are tender.
Remove and drain on paper
towels. In small saucepan melt
jelly. Brush jelly on apples,
coating well. C hill before
serving. Yield: 4 servings.
choc'Olate wafer crumbs or mint D I bl ( leaves. Yield: 8 servings. e ecta Y coo ing
•substit ute ~ teaspoon and ligh t on calories,
peppermint extract and green Frozen Apple · Ice food coloring for creme de
menthe, 1f desired. Milk Pie makes an
MINTED POACHED APPLES ideal dessert for hot 2 cups sugar
2 cups water summer days. ,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---''--~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Cream puffs jus i
:'imple d essert mix
These cream puffs can
be. made ahead. kept
refrigerated and served
at a planned occasion or
spur-of -the -moment
enlertaining. Guests will
be impressed with your
culnarY talents and only
yoca will know the secret
-just a simple little
d•ssert mix from
EQgland. The mix can be
found in SP.«ially shops
or in su p e rmarket
gourmet sections.
CREAM PUFFS
Cream Puff Pastry ;
3 tablespoons (1
envelope) English
custard style detl!lert mix
3 tablespoons sugar
1 'h cups milk
1h cup heavy cream,
whi >ped
PSweet Chocolate
Glaze
Prepare Cream P uff
Paa try as di r ected,
making 10 to 12 puffs;
oool. Slice . topa off each
JMJ#f and remove moist
~~nwbile, combine
~ mix and auiar in
small bowl; a11r ln 'h cup
of1the milk and mix until
.mooth. Heat remaining
milk ln aaucepen to just
t.dow the boiling point.
Stir ln de9ert mix-milk
mJ.xture. Cook and stir
unJil mixture cornea to a
tuU boll Chill well; then fold ln
whipped cream. Spoon
lnto cream pufta and
,.place topa. Top with 8 ~ Chocolate Glaze.
8&0re lo r•frlaerator. ~ 10to 12.
1 Cll&UI PUPJP
PASTRY
r 6 tablelpoona butter
ormarprtne
M cup water
M cup alfted all-
purpoee flout ,..,.
Place butter Qnd water
in saucepan; bring to a
boil. Reduce heat, and
add flour all at once,
stirring rapidly. Cook
and stir until mixture
thickens and leaves sides
o f pan -about 2
minutes. Retflove from
heat.
Beat in eggs, one at a
time , and continue
beating until mixture
looks satiny and breaks
off when the spoon is
raised. Drop dough from
tablespoon onto an
ungreased baking sheet.
Bake at 425 degrees
for 20 mfautes; reduce
oven temperature to 350
degrees, and bake 30
minutes longer, or until
golden brown. Cool.
To freei.e, wrap baked
unfilled puffs in airtight
bag or container. Freeze.
Fill without thawing.
Ncte: U criaper shell is
desired, cut oft tops,
remove any moiat dough,
and h eat o n baking
sheet, f or about 5
minutea.
SWEET CHOCOLATE
GLAZE
1 package ( 4 ounces)
sweet cooking chocolate
1 tablespoon butter
or margarine
3 tablespoons water
1 c up alfted
confection.era wgar
Duh of salt
~ teupoon vanilla
Melt c hocolate and
butter An water ln ..nan
1aucepan <¥Ver low heat.
Combine .upr and ult
ln bowl. Gl'lldually attr ln
chocolate mixture; blend
well. Add vanilla.
For thinner ,i.ze, ed.d
a •mall amount of hot
water; or fo r thicker &laze, cool until mixture
I• deelred con1l1tency.
Mak.et 1 cup.
fuHy
Cooked,
Wolor
Added
(Hoff Hom )
•. '1.79 .*1'9
H AWA i i A N r E S Ti VA l
Wittp~ ~&e fxMl,
ef~lfe!
M I I 0 ......
lolllo
-----------mir-tl) _ ... _ ...... _ _,_,y
.... ,_......., • Mah .W ........ -"" pt I
:::'° -·•·,:::. ~ 0:::-_:: I ::;::-,.:-:r:,~ --::;:;.. ~ I __ _,.,.._... ~---I
0:-M.r U-.::.1~ ~ .:..~:::. I ~.._~._.-:!!;:....~ I .... , ... , __ ,.. , ... ,
~ ------------~ Sliced Beef Liver o.f.fl•.d~. 89c ·cubeSteak = 111
'
2" ll>erisco Shortening 3
Clfl '
2"'MStar-Klst °"'""u.ti·
leef Pork Chops loin 11111 • 111 '2" II> Vlaslc Dills PQlel ~ '1" '"-Chuck Roast Sof~w.:,~~~u"' ..,_ 99c RlbEyesteak=~ ,J3" lll>Buns~~wi:ni~0oo2':r. •100ll>Tiny Shrimp = ·~:'99'
Round Steak ~:-.:;.,5::7°' .... SJ29 cornoogs = 111 '1" •Beverages = 6: ggc•Polalo Chlps .:::z~ ~:89c
Ground Turkey ~S:.., 111 89" DI> Margarine cw. a.,, c;.n,n39• Leg of Lamb Skinless Franks~ ~ggc llr>rreeTop tn~·1°Mlce Cream s-s1.. 2o:::.!3°0
Best of Fryer
California,.., .. '°"'"
0
Ground.Beef
""h i .... ~ •111
( ~, .. ) .......... ,.,. tit.
Grown, 8 Fryi,..
O.i<lion
(.~.) .... 147 .. a.
""-· &~-......
Pol.I Sh S wa-. s I'' Butterf1sh Fillets ,...,, .. 11• .. Pineapple ..,~ 2g: 79• DOM ffl Ml ausage s.....i...1 llt. Salmon Roast ~ • 12,. .. Ch"li 01 16s·~~ '139 U ft J( "'.... ~ I p LI VIC10!11 K•
Safeway Slab Bacon •. 5129 CooicedShrlmp~a.., ~·1" •Pa1mo11ve ~~ ~~·1"•Contadlna
C t S leRlb ......... ,.,." s1s• SllcedBolooy::&:, ~99' D0 charcoalsnw.y 10 .:e•2• Fl s oun ry ty s ~! llt. Flshstlcks r..::'~ 10«. '1" Cat Litter Gentric ... Id 25 :0 11"... esta oap
, ..... ,.
Sowa
-------------------... ..lfll!!!l!!9'~'!!!'1!11!""11~~---
Fusn s.lld Avocados Fa..,...t• 2 Foi 69"
Hawaiian Coconuts EKtt49'
Kiwi Fruit rr,o::"' Eo59'
Fresh limes rqy 4 For11"
M h Frosn, Fi.wor 12-oi,,1" us rooms Fa.or11e ~
Ruby Grapefruit 4Foi '100
Strawberries
....... CallfetM 0.-"
3.,;1•1
Stir-Fry Vegetables
Green Onions ~:::'.
Yellow Onions F=.
Steck-Up l•yl
....... , ..... ., .. •299
s:~~ MPrego Sauce~.:lfl
2 ,..4gc ll>Mlracle Whip 1e ....
Sal1ed Pearu!S:..i"=-,;..· •1• ll>Hunt' s Ketchup
Blooming Dahlias 4-;: 89' ..._, :=J Areca~a1ms '= 10~·1r11>Wlsh Bone ·~o::..,,
Moot ........ ..., ..... , ................ c-.., ...................... ~. ,..------------..... --------------------..... TM Cad. Dlw1~1IMI ,.._.,_Has .....
Disc........._ YH H law• lwil
May-21 Te l ... ni Yeier Certlflc .. es.
'1M0~Dr.,N ............
AMERICA'S
FAVORITE.
IOODSl'OR£
4
...
' ,, -' . ~-----·· -..... _ _. ,, J__ ,
--~~--~--~:..._---..:.-~------------------------.....;.--------------....................... ......,
'
I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983 FI
ashington 's • wine industry growth acce~erates
STE. MICHELLE totally, for the emerging buy" when compared to -------------------term "best buy" again, sufficiently firm to grape, and a juat off-dry DATE -So far, the image of Washington some of the California Mead on wine because I can't think of a warrant a number of flnifh that i• more a
tory of the modern-w l n es . Its f e 11 o w ~rves on the market at s I n g 1 e Ca 1 i f o r n I a years In your cellar. pror!llae of aweetneH
y wine lndustrY. of Washington wineries are twice and thrice the By JERRY o . MEAD example of this variety, Cbenlo Blanc 19U than any cloying auaar
ashlngto n State '1as very fortunate that the price. This elegant red --------------------anywhere near this good, ($5.25) A lovely wine, awareneu.
the history of one firs t winery In th41 wine combines a lean, that doesn't cost at least but this one is priced Flame Blue ltal (t7)
ery. Chateau Ste. market ls allo a quality· muscular, Bordeaux-like ( $ 9 . 5 0 or 1e11) A mouthfeel, with very half again as much. Once bead to head with aome The one wine I didn't l c h e 11 e . That Is or I en led p roducer. structure, with full fruit beautiful wine with forward fruit and some a g a i n , t h e c o o 1 equally lovely Califomla care for. though I must
an gin g . and the dedicated to making ever flavor and aroma and .a food, and another "best oak complement in the Washington climate has examples. It will hold ita tell you that many othen
e will accelerate as finer wines. beautifully developing buy" ranking. Unlike aroma . Great with provided a wine with a own in that company, preaen t th o ught I\
pass Of current releases bottle bouquet. Very m any California shellfish, and the.lively backbone.yet no but it ia fairly priced exceptio nal. Made
the e~ly '60s there from C hateau S t e. enjoyable now, but a Chardonnays that a re acldlty will hold its own harshness. The aroma is rather than a bargain. A entirely from Sauvignon
ere only about 400 Michelle: wine that will improve over ly fat an d with the creamiest, pure Merlot varietal great m elon aroma, a B~ grapes, I found a
res devoted to Cabernet Sauvlgoon and hold for a decade or ponderous, this wine has richest sauce. perfume, and while fresh fruit flavor that slight alcohol awareneas l."-~~fera" grapes (the lt78 "Cbateau Re1tr~e't two. a crisp, almost French Merlot 1978 ($6.75 or somewhat aofter than can be equ a ted with and a &Ught bittemese ln ~pean varieties that ($1 6.50) A solid "best Chardonnay 1981 Ch ab 11 a k ind o t less) The re goes t hat the Cabernet it is still taking a bite out of a the finish. ake the best w ines), 1~--------------------------------'------------------------------...........:-------=~------------------------------_::....._ ______________ _.:. ______________ ~
hile in 1982 total
eage reached around
,OOO acres. That is
dow growth in a
ort 20-year period.
Mo re wine r ies are
ing constructed every
ear, F .r enc h and 1 erman inte rests are
vesting in Washington
iticulture, a nd the
urface hasn 't bee n
tched when it comes
potential. About 150-
acres seem suitable
r growing fine wine
pes. Some forecasters
ict that the day may
p~~~~f;°~
percent of all wine
urned by Americans
and that's a lot of . .
Th e r e a re many
kasons for Washington's
tapid growth as a wine
ucing region , but the
n one is th at the
es are exceptional,
~ the potential is there
tor even better wines.
jWashington's vineyards
are located on an almost
Jdentical latit ude line
[With the great vineyards
Fran ce, and
tically the region is
uall y better suited to
growing certain varieties
than in California.
Andre Tchelistcheff,
often called the "dean of
California winemakers,"
has long been a
consultant t o the
Wa shington win e
1
1.ndustry. He noted, "The
Northwest wil l
eventually have a finer
international reputation
as a wine region than
California. b ecause
California is saddled
with the sins of the past
... and Andr e
Tchelistch eff is one of
those &ins."
On e of those
I !fornia "sins" Andre referring to, was the
lifornia practice of
nGning American wines
afte r European wine-
g rowing regions ,
Burgundy. Chablis and
Champagne being three
examples. Washington
and Oregon have not
made that mi.stake.
By regulation, no so-
called generic wines are
made using European
place -names . Th e
win e ri es o f the
Northwest are doing
\heir own thing, making
atyliatic, individual
wines, and using unique
appellations, with no
cop y -cat European
~· Their technology and
viticulture are the most
modem. and they are not
saddled w i th o l d
equipment, technology
or Ideas.
•Andre's inclusion of
bim8elf as one of the lins meant only that he had
been a part o f the
pioneer California
industry that traded on
thoee old practica and
o&d ideas. Andre ii • very
~ thinker for a man
who hu been making
•fne for over half a
oentury.
Chateeu Ste. Michelle,
... the laraest and most
viaJble Waablnston
winery, and the only ODe
with broad n ational
dlatr1bution, b.u been
reaponai ble. a lmo1t
-L. • • tlub meetings
...,.tf'ct •u ,,,..,,
~-,,
Ralphs Fryer Sale
plus Double Coupons!
••• '1/lliU'& '1f.D flf!D fld?D•••
Double Coupon Double Coupon Double Coupon Double Coupon
1'1 ... n1 ttw coupon olono With any one Manwac l'l ... nt thU coupon alono wilh any one Manwac l'l...,nl lhll cou.pon along Wllh any on• Mam.ilac:· l'l ... nt uu. coupon olono wtlh any one Man\llcJc. twe" «:enl• otr coupon and gel double the sen turen cenls orr cnupon and gel double the liOY twer•' ·cents olf' coupon and oet double the scn IUJers ·c.nts olf' coupon and oet dOUbl• tM ...,,. In~ when you pUJchme the Item Not 10 lnCIUde Ln~ when you pwchalMI lh• 1lem Nol lo UICIUd• lnqa when you .P"!choi41 the Item Nol 10 1nclUd• lnO• when you r.c11ose lh• 1!em Nol 10 ll>C'lUde '18'0ller 'frM ·Q'loc•rv pwchase· couporu. 'telmler hff 01ocery purch<Me· couporu ·r .. Oller "trM ·giocery pwchme" coupona. ·1e1<n1er "!JM ·giocery pwc"'-coupoou. couporu O'ftta1•r than one dollO• 01 eace.d the couporu QUtoler lhan one d0Ua1 or esce<KI lhe coupon. Q'leoler lhan one doUm or ea~ lh• couporu 01ec:r1e1 than one dollat or eace.S l?le
TO!Ue OI 11\e Item £Sc1Ude5 liquor IOboOCO and YolUe 01 lhe 1lem u clud&5 hq\101 IOboCCO and Talue OI lhe Item E:aclUdes llq\IOI IOboCCO an0 TOIU8 OI Ille Item E:aclud81 hquo1 10bCJoco ani2
e1a1ty piodUcts dauy p1oduct1 douy prOcluCU-datrf produeta
Llmil One Item per Manutactwer:s' Umit One Item per Manutactwers' Umit One Item per Manutactwers· Llmit One Item per Manwactwea·
Coupon and Llmit 4 Newspaper Double Coupon and Umit 4 Newspaper Double Coupon and Llmtt 4 Newspaper Double Coupon and Llmit 4 Newspaper~
Coupons Per CUatom•r Coupon titecti·H CoupoDS Per eustomer Coupon E:UectiTe Coupons Per cu.tomer Coupon EUectiTe Coupons Per Cult<>mer Coupon Effec:UT• 19 tmu 25.191J May 19 tmu May 25, 1983 19 UUu M 25, 1963 . 19 UUu 25, 1913
Meat Values
'U!Qy ranm-eatu G.rown·famllf Pocll 79 Whole Legs . ~ •
zoay Farm.Calli G.lown l 59 FrYer Drumettes ~ •
~ rarms.co.ut_i!o~ 199 Boneless -rrughs "It' •
~ P~a1U,jre>wn·llflh ~ 149 Bone1ess ·1-urkeys _
Fisherman's Cove
red'Snapper
,,..PW.et
Thresher Shark
': 159
': 2.99
err Lager Beet ...: 2.27
iahitra IJqueur eoo: 6. 98
Dairy/Deli
Miid'Ch~~ ':199
llnudlen.cl\Wed Orange Juice "\'.: 1.79
Ian Park Franks .:: 1.69
lalpN.~leben FrlMh Cole Slaw w.; .69
Galileo-New .89 Hot Salami ,.. ...
llalpN-fih:f SIN 2 85 Long om Cheese ": •
Portll~t@ !; .89 So Margarine
'-""' ...... ~._...,~,---...._.., ·-----·---~---.............. -.I$ ·---............. --
Grocery Values
Clull' • Pllt's 1.15 Bar -B-Q Sauce u .. ... Glcy Brown-~-· Ion!• .79 ulden s Mustard !Joo .... Skippf<:Teamlr tlE' Chu.nil Peanut u er ·:2.34 Bkic°kound ac Pepper ·~ .69
Scb1Uing Bacon Chips l":: 1.05
l.a:ige SIN Comet Cleanser ·.: .62
~QWd ·::L23
Appetite Shoppe · · ·
...r: 2.79
... ll9
-...----·---.. -------··-.. ---..-----·--·--·-"'""·-_____ _,...,..,_... ________ ......,.._ . .. _ .. ._.--......_ .... ,,...... ... °"" ... _ .... ,.. .. -.. -.-.. --.. ....__...
Produce/Floral
"Co~d· .79 M ooms ·--CaJUomto _J/.99 Avocados
FtMh nmi.on .49 Zuchini Squash -• "Ready Poe" Shredded Red Cabbage or Carrot Sticks :; .39
MUdSWMt Brown Onions ... • .19
Hollan4 2.99 Mixed Bouquets -Plain"~ ql~ Potting il ... l49
Frozen Food
"t:L59
i:.: 2.89
. ,
l
r
F2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May ie, 1983
Syria fly • ID • peace 01n~ment
Philip Habib
4out' in Syria
Laguna youth
cited in Iowa
Could thwart Lebanon withdrawal agreement
By Tbe Auoclated Presa
Syria announced today It will
not. receive U.S . presidential
en voy Philip C. Habib, calling
him "one of the most h ostile
American officiah," and Libya
recalled its ambassador from
Beirut to protest. Lebanon's troop
withdrawal pact with Israel.
But Syria , wh ic h has
denounced the Lebanese-Israeli
aocord signed Tuesday, also ealed
its blockade of Lebanon's roads
to the rest of the Arab world.
Preside nt Reagan dispatched
Habib to the Middle F.ast for an
effort to persuade Syrian troops
to pull out of Lebanon. Unless
Syria a nd t he P a l es tine
Liberation Organization agree to
withdraw their forces , tQe
Israeli-Lebanese agreement will
not take effect.
A s t a tem en t i ssu e d in
Damasc us through Syria's
official ne ws agency said the
government would not receive
Habib "because we have nothinJt
to d iscuss with h i m , and
especially because he is one of
the mos t hostile American
officials to the Arabs and their
causes.''
Khadafy'a g overnme nt had
recalled Ambauador Saleh
Dro uki fro m the L e bane se
capital.
It aaid the Libyan govenunent
also had aske d Lebane se
Ambaaaador Nbar Farhat to
leave Tripoli, the Libyan capital.
The leftist Lebane s e
ne wspape r As-Saflr, which
reported the recall before it was
confirmed. said Libya aho "has
asked the Arab League to apply
against Lebano n 'h e same
measures taken against Egypt
when it signed its peace ... treaty
with Israel'' -measures which
included an economic boyrott.
Meanwhile, Lebanne police
reported that Syria had relaxed a
day-old blockade of road traft.ic
between Lebanon and the rest of
the Arab world.
Police in Beinlt aaid the coast.al
highway linking the capital with
Syrian -controlled no rthern
L e banon was reopened for
normal traffic at. daybreak today.
a1ree m e n t w i ll n o t. be
implemented until Syria and the
Pale st i ne Libe rat io n
Organization withdraw their
estimated 60,000 troops from
Lebanon, and S~ua far has
rejected the accord.
Syria and Libya, both allied
with the Soviet Union, were the
only Arab countriea to reac t
angrily to the signing of the
withdrawal accord. Other Arab
countries either have declared
support for Lebanon or ke pt
silent.
Habib's mission was endorsed
Tuesday night by Presiden t
Reagan, who t old a n e ws
OQllference he I.a optlmiltic about
a Syrian wtthrawal because of
preaaure fro m o the r Ara b
nations.
" Pools sought
for lessons
The Irvine YMCA Service
Center is searching for people to
donate use of their backyard
poola for swimrn.lng leuona.
Newport
man tops
Newp o rt Beach
resident Nicolai Ota.er
has won top hooon frOm
the Oran1e County
chapter of the American
C ancer Society for penonally oollect1na ,l ,-
109 ln an annual fund-raiains drive.
Gluier wins four steel
belted radial tires
donated by Sam WJnaton
and a cruiaer bicycle
donated by Karl Karcher
Enterprt.e..
,tennoua .,... ..
NAlllf 9TATUmJn
The lollowlng S--.er• d<*'Q
~ ... V ILLA PA RK SERVICE S
COMPANY. 1S772 Pstr1dan Drtw,
VHla Pn . C.iifomlll t2te7. Jedi ....._,_ tsn2 Patrldan om.. VIiia ,..,., c.tomla 92667.
Gwynnedd M H.-c>n, 111772 P•t rtcl an Dr ive, Vitia Park,
Callornla 112687
Thia l>ulllMM 11 conducted by • gen« .. pet'tnerahlp.
Jack HMton, Part.-
Thil •tel-I WU fllad wtU\ Iha
County Clatll of 0.ange County °"
M1y 13. 1983.
"-and --.nt• 1m1 intM MYct~ lllfN 101
Tualtft,CA ...
~
Pul>ll•h•d Orang• Coat1 Dally
PllOI, May ti, 25, June t, 8, 1983
2302-83
Former f.aguna Beach
H igh School stude n t
Paul Rich ardson h as
been selected as one of
five juniors at Central
U niversity of Iowa to
take part in the school's
senior honors program.
A ccording t o the Beirut
newspaper Al-Amal, which is
affiliated wit.h the Christian
Phalange Party of President
Amin Gemayel, Habib was to go
to Damaacu$ Thunclay.
Local taxicab aervices in Beirut
reported trips to Syria on the
northern highw~ resumed. But
they safd travel on the main
intematlonal highway through
Syrian-controlled areas of the
central Lebanese mountaina
remained suspended for a second
straight day.
Pools a.re needed for mominga
or aftemoona on weekdays for
one or more sessions. People
interested in donating should call
the service center at 569-1176.
Bi~hday boy ':":l:~~
Two children present Pope John oi'~,::rf~~C::'o..io:
Rich a rdson , a 1980
graduate of Laguna
Beach High, ia alao editor
of the college newspaper
called' ;'The ~Y-" H~ ia
Lebano n and Israe l on
Tuesday staned a U.S. -mediated
agreement calling for· the
withdrawal of Israel's 2~.000
troops from Lebano n . The
ln exchange for allowing use ot their pools, donon can receive
free swimming leeaona for thelr
children or themaelvea.
Paul II with £lowen, wishing him ;:-":U~~~C: !::
a..happy 63rd birthday, during ;~ ! !:~~oc•o~n!a As the Habib ban waa
announced, the Libyan Fmbusy
in Beirut said that Col. Moammar di ' S p ' S war •hout•m•n o n o ood1 au ence ID t. eter 8 quare. tlereln•ll•r deKrll>•d. and du'
--------------------nollc• hiving l>••n glv•n 10 •II penlaa known to dalm .,, lfltar•t
lorida teacher tests
serve aa F1orlda's Boa.rd of F.ducation.
~~~~~O:; Blacks
exam appeal.
LEACH
G LA D Y S M ARIE
LEACH, passed away May
14, 1983 an Newport Beach.
Ca . Belov e d mo ther of
J a c q u e l y n H addox o f
Ne wpo rt Bea c h , C a ..
grandmother of Jena and
Carolyn Haddox both of
N e wpor t Beac h , Ca .
Graveside services w11J be
held on Wednesday, May 18,
1983 at 2:00PM at G ood
S h e ph e rd C e met e ry.
H unt1ngton Bea ch . Ca
P ier ce B ro th e r s Bell
Br oad wa y M o r t u ar y
directors 642-9150
l'ACIHC \fltW
MIMOllAL l'Aa•
Cetretffl Mortuary
C1'4apel-Crematory
l500 Pac1l1c Voew Dr1ve
Newoorl Beach
644 2700
McCOtlMIQ MOITUAlllS
L aQuna Beach
494·9415 •
Laouna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Cap1s1rano
495 1776
KAHOtl LAW~MT. OLIVI
Mor1uarv .. Ceme1ery
Crematory
1625 Gisler A.ve
Cos1a Mesa
S40·5554
f'tYCI HOTHUS
HU NOADWAY
MOITUAIY
110 Broadwav
Costa Mesa
6'2·9150
IALnlHGHOW
SMITH a TUTHILL
WISTCUff CHArk 427 E 17111 St
Costa Mesa
646-9371 ..
By KEN KLEIN Aunt••••"'-Wrtw
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -Edith
Johnson knows all about Florida'•
controversial teacher licenatng test.
She flunked it twice.
"It was designed by the white man
to keep blacks out. It's not fair,"
protests the black woman. "It takes
more than a test to see if teachers are
competent."
But Florida S ch ool Boards
Association lobbyist Don Magruder,
who i.s white, calls the teacher test a
"joke" because it's too easy. Math
questions, he says, are eighth-grade
level.
Florida h as had standa rdized
testing for teachera since 1980, but the
exams have been overshadowed by
the recent publicity given e atate's
functional literacy tests f student&
'"nle standardized ting cli8e88e
has reached an epide c stage and is
causing premature death by testing
st rangulation," says education
professor Walter M e r c er at
predominantly black Florida A&M
University.
Mercer and other black educators
flnd it. alarming that 65 percent of the
black applicants flunked Florida's
teacher-licenaing teat g i ven in
February, compared to a 10 percent
failure rate for whites.
Despite objec tions from black
educators, Gov. Bob'Graham and the
six-member state Cabinet ordered the
exam UPl!"aded., lt's tougher to pua.
The governor and all-white Cabinet
A worthwhile 'trip'
Disneyland fund used to buy guide dog
LEAVE NWORTH, Wash.
(AP) -When a planned trip to
Disney land fell through,
members of the Leavenworth
High School 1enior claaa decided
to Ule their money to help a blind
man get a guide dog.
The $2,500 they raised by
washing cars, raffling cakes and
aell.lng peanuts, candy and light
bulbs will be given tq Jolin
R iehle, 35, so he can vis it
Calltomia to get the dog.
Riehle didn't know apy of the
63 students peraonally, but he'•
been a devoted fan of the school's
basketball team, the Grizzlies.
"I WU greatly aurpriRd," he
aaid of the gift. 'Tm reel proud
of the seniors for doing this, even
if it wasn't me th.at'• benefiting.
You don't see t.hia kind of thing
very often."
The stude nts orig inally
planned a junket to Dimeyland
for their senior trip, but the
s choo l b oard d e n ied thei r
request. They then decided "it
would be more m eanin~~~ helping aomeone et.e," aaid ·
Brooka, clua president.
Jlm Ward, a parent and former
mayor, suggeated they help
Riehle, wbo l09t his aight two
years ago from complications of
diabetet.
"I can't recall .&his ever having
been done before," said aenior
adviser Howard Cook. "Kida of
this age usually aren't that
bwnaniatic in their thinldrul. It's
an outstanding clua and they'll
go out showing that."
Riehle, who baa lea.med to get
around with a cane, said he Md
thought about getting a guide dot but never pursued the Idea
until the .enion' offer came.
· He'll spend about a month ln
San Rafaiel. C.allf ., thi. summer,
workinc at • training center with
his new dog.
Those who fail the teacher test,
such as Johmon, can teach up to three
yean with temporary Ucenaes -if
they can find jot..
"U I don't pasa the test in June, I'm
out," sums up Johnson, 49, fearing
her contract won't be renewed.
Johnson, who attended Florlda
A&M, fint took the exam last October
and again in February. She teaches
third-and fourth-graders who ti&ve
learning dlaablUUes at an elementary
school in Perry, about 50 milee south
of Tallahaasee.
The four-part test cove rs math,
reading, writing and professional
abilities. Applicants, who may take
the test u many times as they want,
muat pasa all four parts.
Twe nty states have t e a c h e r
licensing ex.ams, and rada1 disparity
in resuf ts ia a national concern, says
Chrla Pipho of the Education
Commiaaion of the States ln Denver.
Anti-test litigation is pending In
Alabama and North Carolina, and
civil rights leaden have threatened to
Sl,.le over Florida'• exam.
Some black educators are also
troubled by the state's plan to
withdraw certification from teacher traW.nc programs th.at have produced
too many sraduates who failed the
licensing test.
"From a public relations at.andpolnt,
U would be disastrous." predicts
Florida A&.M F.ducation Dean Joeeph
Martin. "Decertification would
aerioualy dam.ge the employability of
our studenta."
Last fall, fewer than one-third of
Florida A&M's teacher graduates
puaed the llcerwlna test.
Florida also wants high school
students to pus a lit.ency ie.t in order
to receive a diploma. The at.ate
announced Tuea~al it will deny
c:Up]omM to 1,300 high ICbool aeniors
wbo Ounked the tst in March, the
lut time the tat waa giwn for thi.
year'• JP'aduatina clua.
U.S.l>lstrict i-uc1ae Qeorae C. Carr
then refuaed to interfere with the
atate'a dedaion, dmyl.ng a request for
an injunction while opponents of the
Two-thirda of thoee students who
failed the test are black, although
blacks comprise only one-fifth of
Florida's student population.
The exam, introduced in urn. was
designed to find out if high echool
students had learned minimum sk:il1a
needed to function in society. such u
making change, writing checkl and
calculating interest.
Nationally, the Florida literacy test
ruling was viewed aa a victory for
state authority to establish education
atandards and a setback for testing
critics such as the National F.ducation
A.saodation, a teachers' union.
"It's unfair t o use • sin gle
i nstrument, such as a t.eat, to
determine one's 'future," says Frances
Quinto, a professional associate at
NEA headq~ in Washington.
But despite criticism by civil rights
l awye rs a nd some e ducato r s ,
increased use of standardized tests
enjoys widespread public support.
Targeted bank
now an arcade
ISLA VISTA (AP) -The fonner
Bank of America branch in Iala Vista
th.at was burned down during student
anU-war rlots in 1970 has been turned
into a video game arcade.
Tbe establishment opened for
buaineaa Friday under the
management of Food and Fun. a local
flrm that operates almllar aame
parlors in the Santa BArbara County
communltiea of Carpinteria and
SolVllJl8.
Food and Fun la leasing the
stone~and-maaonry building from
the bank, which cloeed ita oUice last
August and transferred depmita to a
nearby branch.
Bank offida1a dted duplication of
aervicee and a lack of buslnela durina
summer months as the reuon for
cl091ng the branch ln Ia1a Viata, a
Santa Barbara suburb where many
University of California-Santa
Barbara students Uve.
Her harvest not off the hook
THE
NEPTUNE SOCIETY
HESPERIA (AP) -Get Gayle Brockman talk1na about her farm, and you're really Opening
up a can of worms -or seven beds of them, to be
exact.
l'-.. n and ,,,. lime tpeC/fled In
IUCh notloe for payment Of e<ICh
chatgee h•VlnQ H plred. notlOa ii
h41r•by g/Yan that .,_ OOoOt wlll
be IOld 11 pul>llC aletlOl'I at the Udo
Van 6 S10<aga Co., lne: .. 2200 ""°" AW , lrvlM, c.llfomla Of'I the 2nd
d•1 of June. 1983 et 10:00 a.m. Sala
o f good• t o contlnu• or I>• continued untu all lot• .,. IOld
lumltur•. ~. Cf\alrl, retrtgarwton,
tlOVH • ..wing mac:hir-. da911a,
pictur•. tablae, ~·· car1ona, etaf•o•. olllc;• lurnltur• & mite:.
"-thel -among the~ aftec:11 t1ored by Of few !tie f~
pat1iel•
Let ................. ._....
10001 Mary Am. S2.6\5.12
10280 KanMth eonca 4,549.eo
10496 Joela Contraru 2 .oee..o 1
10495 Suaan Ollieemo 1.052.IM
l04N Howard OMM>n 2 ,044.95
1().497 Marion Ow1lng 1.992.113
L0157 John Oewn 645.64
10593 Melody Fleming 883.94
!0630 Kamran Giwmrooell2.006.9S
I0737 Tari Hill 3. 149.~
10830 Hwy HunolCI U4.06
I087S BwltMlre Kant 1.911.74 110411 Merilyn Mwtln 1,856.31
11074 MlchMI Mer9f 4112.32
11290 a-~ 549.40 11580 M E 1.495.44
Pul>llt hed Ot1n1>9 COHI oany
Pilot. Mey t8. 25, tN3
2312..Q
MOTICa ~ '""'9TlrS UU! .._ .... ~ T.._ .... _,,._.
BU RLING TON FIHJ'NCIAL
SERVICES. INC .• a Callfornl•
Corporation. •• duly appointed
Trutt•• und•r th• f ollowln9 daM:t1tMld dead of Inlet WILL SEU
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
~ •t lime of .... In i.wful
mon.o; ol lh• Untied Stat") all
right. tttta end ln*-1 ~ to
end -Mid by • llf>dar Mid Dead of TN81 In Iha P'Ol*tY ._.....,..,
daacrtbed:
TRUSTOR; R.ALPH S. LA VOIE
and MARSHA LA VOIE. hutt>end
end wife BENEFICIARY: MIDWEST
PACIFIC FINANCIAL.. INC., an ICM9
COf'POr•llOn Recorded A119ust 11. tH 1 ..
tnetr. Ho. 11988 In bo<* 14178, page 588 of Offtc:l9I Aaoora In ....
offloa ol Ille ~ of Of-oa
County: .., dead ol Wat dlacrll>el
the tOllowlng proC*1y. Lot S2 of Trect NO. t teo, In tfle
Qty ol IMM, • per MllP ~
In BOC* 3", Page 11 arid 18 df .._...,_,. ......_ In IN oftlCe ol
th• County R•cord•r of ••Id
County
·'You -In delalll Wldal' • Dead of Trwl daled JUlt 30, 1M1. ~
you tall• ac1lon to j>f'Otec:t y-
Pf'OC*1Y, " ,,.,. be aold ... publlo
.... " )"OU nwd ... 'I• llllioh of
tt1a nature of hpr~llC )'Oii, )'Oii tflould QOflt8d A • r •
22 hr*• Hm. ntM. CA 714
''(N a elr9M addr.a or --d .. lgnatlon I• lflown •l>o¥e. no
warranty I• Ol••n •• to It• oon'~-or -•-*WI-" TM t>en•flctary under Mid Oe.d of Trufl, l>y ,._ of a IMwadl or
dafa&lll In 1M Dtlllg•IDI• ~
thweby, haNtofote -.tad end
d•ll••r•d to th• unct.ralgned a written Oec:ller9"on of ~ end
Demand '°'a.... Ind~ nOllOe of ~endOl~to
th• undar1111n•d to Hll Hlf
Pf°'*1Y to M1tefY Mid Dl~
and thar .. ftar ""' lln4 _,..,Mid~ ol ~Ind ol
Mctlofl to be~ Jlr1ulry It 1ta • lnetr. No. ~11 of MN CREMATION BURIAL AT S EA
NEPTUNE HAS MOVED
TO COSTA MESA
Mn. Brockman, her husband Jerry and her
father James Lawler ralae the slimy UtUe cril1en
by the thousands and aeD them to gardenen. pet
ltorel and, of ooune, fiahermen. The latter clients
apparently prompted Mn. Broclanan to name the ~ntel'llrile the Happy Hooker Worm Fa.rm.
• ~~Ill I>• mad•. llut without covenant or ••tt•nty, ..,._ or lmplled, ,....,..,. ..,
l)DHIUlon, or ~ '° ~ ,.. Nf'Mll*IO ~ """ Of •
We've outgrown our old offices in Newport Beach. We 've moved
lo a new and larger office in Costa Mesa on Seventeenth Street
near Irvine Boulevard. Our telephone numbtr will remain the
same.
If you ha ve need for our service, or wish to receive mcmbtrship
informalion. plcue call us or use 1he coupon below.·
Our newaddress is:
474 East Stventeenth Street
Cost• Mesa, CA 92627
646-7'31
------------·----~-··------·--·------------------------
14 """' St.ni1cc No Salesman wilt call. Mail 10:
Same 'tHE NEPTUNE SOCIETY
Addrns 474 E I 71h SIR'CI
Cil> S &ate -Cotta Mna. CA 92617 . D
•
On an lndlvidual buia, worma baw a w~ tum1ft1 up in placea people leut want to see
-appl-. lomatoel and atdewal.U ate.er It fUw, But
IMlla produdnC ihem la another matter entlrely,
and not an eeay OM.
"It takel IOCll of water.t ~of IDllD'" and 1ot1
and .lotl of WCl"k.'' Mn.~ aaya. Without
pre>per feedlnl and C&N, womw W'Clft't pow, matwiia
and reprochule . •
At the Happy Hoobr farm. Red WlelltrJ an
cu.ltlvaied ln teven 70· by 30-foot ewer manure
beda.
At leut once flYfrJ cwo-..., Mn: lhc:lunm
Ind her fam1b '--pUchf~ tp cum the aoll ill the
bacl9 -• -perlcnned by fpedll ~ *' 1arftr' worm fa.nm. Man~ Ml to be= rwiWutY owr eech bed to Mep the W«1m ump aria 1-ppy.
l>.W'y 30 days -w.~ttina -\be bedl an~ with a worm~
comlM:lnt of • tote11nl .:r"tl9n • ,.,.,. mach1ne ......... the ~ from their
cmdno and ~ the ~ Into bo.-at ODt
.nd ol the c;yllndll'. Tba ooU9Cted worn..,.. eorted 80 ihal .,.....,.
and Immature wortm can t. l'9CW"ned to the ~
Tb• alabi. wonm. wbkh ~about two tnat. blc wt .. ,.,... &mh In. ....._, an
cJemed.. counted. ......... _, pldd In cnm of
l'DCMt peat me. for ~.
j•.~------~ .......... ~ ~=-=-~~-
... .... 1
Cayle ~bock.man (lelt), Jamee
La,.ler tort through their worm u"* ln Heeperia where tlaey
ralle """'1-en by tM tllOuiaiada.
i
" not«•) _... by ... Deed .. TNll, wfth.,,..... In ... i-..
=~-:-~~= .... cNl'fel .,. ........ ... ,,,,.... .,. d .. ~ ....... ..,
Mid Deed Gil TNlt.
•• , ..... •Ill ... lllfcl 0111• Tllunclrl • .NM t , tta .. L'Ot
p ,m., at 11te Cll .. "'lfl A..-..
e111rano• to tll• Clvk C•nter ....... -... ~~ ~::.---°' ......... IM1 be "' .. .,,,., .....
01ellt•r1 or oer11fle4 •11••11• =led It\ Cl.it C.-....._
A1 tl\e tlMI of ttla lftlHM pt"ellOftoltllll ........... ~°'·~----.. ......... ....,,... by .........
, .. .,, ......... , '""' atlf ~ ............. ... ~ ... ,, ......... , ................... ..... ~~ ... r· ....... -
DMll =:;..~ NWtCW.
~ .. --~..-INC.. I . ... ~
r:-~:..=\.. =-OMllll9 ~ ..:·:aw= ....
Nl.IC N0T1C(
NOTIOl INVmNO NAUID
'°"Of'OIAU (MDI) '°" THS COMIT..OCTION Of
DYllll "OAO Wl.L""l.O COHT,.ACT fH)I. 1, I. lftd I '°' wwu "°.:..:t. U. Md 11 l"'ftOJICT " 1I001 9"vtMll "ANCH WATDt DllTIUCT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV!N lhal
Ill• lrvlne Renell Wiier Ol1trlet
(Olttrlet) Invitee and wlll •Kelv•
-i.d propoMI• ll>ldt) up lo th• hour OI tO 00 • m on W9dl\etdly,
"'-IS, 1943, et the otf1Q9 ol the Olttrlct. 18802 9erdffn Avenue,
lnllne, Celll0<n11 92715 Tne proJeet
la loelle<I In the toulhern portlOO ol
the City or Senti Ane. The WO<k 10
b• done lncludH lurnlahlng ell
labor, m11er1111, end equipment
neeee11ry ror °' lnct<Mnlel 10 th• con11ruc1lon ol thrM water wetla 10
be done a.quenllally b)' the reverM
101ery method Copl .. or the plane
and ~ltclllon• .,, available 11
th• Dlltrlct 011101 The purcllue
price la • ntt~ dOllAr 1$15 OOJ '" (non-refundable) II plciled up et th•
•bove mentioned 1ddrHs Plana ind 1peellle1t1on1 wlll be meneo.
upon r~ll. to propectllle bidden
tor en 1ddlt lon1 1 $5 00
(non-r1lllnd1ble) to eovw thl eo11
01 ~teoe end hendllng. Each bid mu•t be eecompeni.d by e bonding
document not l4IN then 10 percent ol the •mount or the bid, made
payebl• to the e<der or Hid Olstrtct
A perfom11nee bond end p1yment
bond •hall be rurnlahed In the
amount or 100 percent or the bids
Th• Engineer's Htlmete or the
project la S 160.0-00 per well The time or perrormence 11 torty (40)
daya per well Plens and
speclllc•tlona wlll b e evallabte Wedneeday, Mey It, tll83~
Publl1hed Orange Coest Dally
Piiot, May 18, June 3. 1983
• 2323-83
MllC NOTICE
NOTICE Of' TINIT£E'8 SALE lw No. 111~HARVEY
T.l .No.D.-.
UNIT COOED
HER M ES FINANC IAL
CORPORATION 11 duly appointed
Truttee undet the lollow1ng
0..Crlbed deed ol truat WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH AND/OR THE CASHIERS OR
CERTIFlEtrCHECKS SPECIFIED IN
CIVIL CODE SECTION 292411
(peyeble at the time ol seJe In lawful
money or the United States) ell
right, lltle and lnteresl conY1)'9<1 10
end now held by II under Mid OMd ol Truat In the property her .. natter
dffcrll>ed
TRUSTOA RICHARD S. ~ARVEY
BENEFICIARY MERCURY
SAVINGS, a Fede1a1 Savln91 and
Loan Aun reeotded June 21, tg82
ea Instr. No 82-210893 or OHlclal
Records In 1111 o lllca 01 the
Recorder or Orange County: said
deed of trust describes the fOllowlng pre>perty:
PARCEL 1 That portion of Lot 1
of Tract No 9873, In the ctl'f o(
Colla MHe, County of Oran9e.
Stet• of Cellle<nl•. u shown on a
mep recorded In bOOk 425. pages
27 and 28. or MlaceUaneous Mepe.
lhown u unit 8 on a condominium plan. ree0tded In bOOk 12814. PllO•
1081. Olllclal Record• and In
decleratton or Co11 en1n11,
Condltlon1 1nd Restriction•
ree0tded In book 12823. pege 188.
Olfk:lel Reeord1
PARCEL 2· An undivided one-
lourtMnth ( 111411" simple Interest u a tenant In common In and to all that. portion ot lot 1 01 Trect No.
9873 In the County or Orange. State
or Calllornta. u anown on a map
-ded In bOOk 425. pegea 27 and
28. a1 "Common Area" on •
con<1onun1um plan •eco<ded March
29 1978, 1n book 128 t 4, peg•
1os1. OOlcOal Recordl. r«:«ded In
book t 2823, page t 88, Olllc1a1
Recorda.
EXCEPl THEREFROM ell 04l, gu.
mlneral1 end other hydrocarbon•
below e depth or 500 reet. wt1nou1
Ill• rlgM of 1urt1ca entry, as
reseNed In 1n11rumenta of reee<d
EXCEPT THEREFROM ell wller and tubturleee water rlgllts, below
• depth ot 500 IMt, Without the right ot surteee entry, ea dedicated or
r~ In 1n11rument1 ol record.
PARCEL 3 Non·BXCIUllVI
••a•m1n11 tor 1cce11. ongreu . egreu. 1nc101chment, 1upport.
maintenance. repalra. and for other
purpoM• ove< the common area and over tho•• portion• ol th•
anocl1tlon proe>ef1ie. comP'INCI ol
the llCIN llOn l<M ..-nent and
the atrMI ~I. all u ahown
and defined In the ·~bed
plan I nd Ill• above-deacrlbed deelaratlOtl
PARCEL 4 EJtctualve ........,ta
l p()Ur!enant to paroeta No. 1 and No 2 deaerlbed abo,,., tor uM and
occupancy tor (Yard). (Dack),
tGarage) purpoaal , delln•d aa
r11trlclld common areaa In the
•bova-deacrlbed dec:luatlon, •• ualgned In 1111 1bove-deacrlb9<!
l>iln
YOU AM tN O«'AULT UNO£R A
O«IO Of' TMIST DAftD •11.a, IJNLaH YOU TAKE ACTION TO
.. M>TICT YOU" f'tte>f'eltTY, IT
MAY 81 IOLO AT A .. U8LIC
IALI. IF YOU N llD AN
IXP\.ANATION Of' THE NATIMI: Of TMa f'ttOCllOtMG AQAIMIT
YOU, YOU IHOUL.O CONTACT A
LAWYafl.
1097 M ... 8lutf 0. .• Coeta lilteu, Calif,
"(II a atreet add•-or oommon
de91Qnatl0n of property It allown
et>ove, no w11ran1y hi given u to 111
com~-or correct,_)." The
1>en1t1cl1ry under H id Deed of
Truat. l>y reuon ol a breech or Oefaull In Ille obllglllona MCUl'ed
thereby, neretotore neevted end
delivered 10 the underalgned a
wrtnen Oeclet1tlon of Default end
Demand le< Siie, and wrlllll'I notice
of b<MCh Ind of elee110n 10 CauM
th• underal11ned to 1111 ••Id
property 10 aetllfy Mid obllg•tlona.
and thereeller th• underalgned
<*IMd Mid notkle of ll'eecn and or
-.ctlon to be recorded February 8.
1983 e1 lnatr. No. 83-082874 or
Otflclel Reeo<da In the olfloe of the "9ce<der of ~Inge County,
Said 1111 wlll I>• made. bul
•lllloul covenant or warr1n1y.
.. pt-or Implied, regwdll\Q 111141 poa.HMlon, or eneumbretl()H. to
pey Ille AllTl8lnlng prlnCl4p.i 9Um OI
,,_ llOM(1) aeoUf9d t>y Mid deed 01
""91. wtth lnterMI M In Nld note
(lltovlded, edvancee, If any. Under
iM twme of Mid Deed Of Tnnl,
..... dl1tgee Ind ,..,.,_ ol the
TtwtM and of IN tf'Ulta GtHled l>y Mid Deed of Trull
Said 111• wlll b• held on 1'burad1y, June e. 1983 •• , 2:00
p.m. at the Chipman Avenue
entrance to the Clvlo Center
llulldlng. 300 Eut Cflapmen A,,. ..
Of1111ge, CA.
A t I ll• time of the lnltlal
pub41callon of thl• nouw . Ille total amount of tile unpeld .,...,_ of Ille
ebllf•llon NOUred 1>y the al>Ove
eleaorlbed deed of tr11et and
.. llfnaled ~Ill, l l!perlMI. etld ....,_.la W . ttt ff n. total lncMt>t.one. bell'9 an tattmet. on wNoll IN ~ bid .. COfll6Wted "'8Y .,. Otltllned Dy
oa111no 17141 •i7·0fft 1111 day ~ .........
Del« MllY tO, _tMa. H,,.... ,ltfNICIAI.
CO..~flOH
•Mid Trwe.. ~ T.D. lllMCI COMPAHV, _..,, ~Mwoo ....... ......... ._..ery
~iE::~-·
P11bllaned Oranoe Cout Dally
l'Mot, Mt11 11, ZI. "'-1. ilea
2217-N
call 142-M7t,
"'' • , .. WOid• to wortc lor ou.
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
Orange Coaat OAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18. 1983 F3
The mar ketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
Ital l1t1tt It .... fer kit a .... , t11 late
;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiii 1-•-·-"-al---~-1-•::.:2 1e .... 1
_l_H_1tt ........ ft.-1 ..,la...,1-.e __ 1.-1-.H;;;;l_,l-.I .,;.;f1;.;,r,.;;l'""1;.;;l1~-..,l,..tu ...... H.....,ft.-1 ..,la...,l-.1 __ J flat Qad!t llN
IHI Gta11al 1002 Ct1t1 Mna 1024 I rt ltac• lMt ~~ N~i.t~11~ .....
To Place Your Ad. Cd For Tu11dey through
Saturday pubtlcatlona:
5:30 p.m. 1n. prevlout
d1y. For Sunday end
Monday publlcat1on1:
1111,111
s.nta1ion.1 llnglt atoryj UllA llU IAYFIHT 642-5678 Town• Hom1 c1011 to Fineat La1oon view from magnlflc~nt 4
REAL £STATE 12:00 noon Saturday. ==I~"= ~=,bdrm, 4 ~th pool home. $1,450,000.
\.01111.•'
AtWh1 1m tf1U1
lMOt1.,• hl1md f.t..l••'iil ¥''1\HU,Ujft
l 0•f)l•fl ••"-' l\t· .... ,,
l >f•'tlM \h• M111
\••'•' M1w llifl\·i 1'11utl
t I Jrn·• t 114f!l tlll \.fl!~·\
tlvt1l•t.;t;11 f".-.t1
llun1 t1 .. rtuu1
II\ fM
I .. ); .. U·• s. ... t.
I 1..iu ·• lt.11,
I 1.c;uu .• ,1.,....-
L .. 1>.t t ,,.,'°'!, ,1 ... ~, .... \ .. ,
1
..... ,. '"'·'· '-·••• ~ h "''uh
'ol! l\''t .~ t •1u-.ifu1u
.... 11 .• \001 '° ' It., .. II ".,111 I ,1ac11u ••
~llH ... ' u .... I
~·:··::11 01.\i1
,, 11 ••• ,,.,., .•
,, .. tff•
A1•1ll• 11n1A
1i..-11l"t••i"'
Uu 111"' t•1 I'
t th' lo., l •·\.ot
t Mun,t l'r j• rt
' t ltnuu..um ..
I tut•'' l n•·
II,.,.,.• lu •• \I•""'
ht1.•,.h• l't J• I'
htof I tf ,It r it ...... , ••• '-th
1\1 .. t.tl• lt"n I f' .. f~<t
\1•1VIH .. •H\ 0.r1t fl
tl11111t• t.
t)\,+ 111 \ ,.UHi\ I th.ti., "llti1h
IL.uu h• ~ ;.1!"m
Kt-.rtr\ Proprrt"
'l'ln"' Sl\anrlJ II E t:lt<'Nll ..
II E Wan\A'd
RENTALS
14,4"'4.' t UWu.htU ... ...,, l'nfunuat ..... t
II~.., •~•h ,r ... t ••
l1.1.111-.r .... 1
t ...... t .• ,,_
\ .... ~ l 111
T• -. .. t. H1-. 1 ... rn
l \o\r.t .......... L nl ''··•·" ...... ,., 1~,1111 ,, • &·nr
A~t •fh\HU. ~ utnnh•~I
Ar .. .rtt111nb l'11I
AJ1U furn 11.f" Lnf u ••• n,~
H1a1th fV ~Ml\I
H11ti•1 .. M11h·t,
<10•"'' U111rn·.,
'"-1111111 .. 1 H1111.-t.
\,.-.• 11 •• n H111\,.h,
•k101 .. i... I ... ,lolfl
•H1 ol.1111> \\•hh•I '··•-1(•"' ,, • lt1111
CH'l .. 1 k1t11..J1.,,
Hu.'"'"' H1nt•1"'
t tt~fHJ t(tut .. J11t
l1-.1~-.1 Ht·nWI ,.,,..,".
''''"' K· ,,,.,,
\~ lnt1r111 ratel C all IAYlllE PLAOE IAYFlllT 1,~.. llUI All 759•1501 Of 752•7373 Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, :~~! •1t1mt1• WALKER&LEE 2 ba dn. 2 boat •paces. Reduced-U,600.ooo.
:?i~i :1'm':t. °:n~:C~~· ;,:_ Real Estate j PElllllU llOIE OOUIFIOIT
1•1,• tor the ne•I d1y'1 publl· .... M ............. _. I Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 :~~: eallon. For Sunday and r.::n: bnth. 3700 1q.tt. $1.385,000. Oceanfront.
''"" Monday publlc;1t1ona. ~. LIH ISLE
••><1 12:00 noon S1turdey. -:::::::::::::::::;
'"41 Ple111 11k tor • "kltl i I Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. nn., :~~ number" wh•n cancel-IOIU YllW beam celllnp, fum.iahed, patios. $-420,000.
•• :~~ Ung )'OU~ ad ..... Ill ... n111111111 llAICN llLLTIP
1,,:. EHlll Unlquily dHlgntd 3 New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, custom French Nonnandy bdrm. 3 bath home 1 111·11 Check your ad dally and Estate 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1,250,000. '" • report errora Immediate-blocl< from bay•& ocean ::;~; ly. The DAILY PILOT u-~:r•n~~~~' 0;11~r~~~~~ DOllOIAH Dlfl IAYFllOIT
"'"" 1umH llabllltv tor the ltructed bay, Jetty and Coronado Laland cust. bayfron t lot. '85' boat '°"• flrat lncorrtct lnHrllon ocHn \llew1. Thia di•· dock. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/terms. ::~: onz. tlnctlve home WH fH·
11 "' tured In Home & Garden Pllll LIDO 00110 ::~. Btalll fir 1&11 Magazine and wu con-etructed wtth aome o f Ille 3 br. 2 ba, frplc, immaculate condo. On
greenbelt. Comm. pool. $125,000. : ~;; Gntral 1 OH ftneat crallamanattlp you
I'" :~\t· 11111111 1111· ••• '" "" I
II•
II~)
Wll
Hlghly motl\laled teller.
Wiii conalder any rH-
aonable olflf. T utetully
''" decorated foor bedroom homt In Immacul ate
condition . Upatelra
m•\19' bedroom retreat.
$270,000.
~\)\
~ .. J~
lhUU .-trnn
~1'00 ;\IOO
.'l~OJ
.!~M
~"''~ i»'lfi
llLElllT
UY I IUDI
IULn 111-llOO
IAYllllU
Stunning 3 Br 2 Ba home
w/Joadl of 1talned gl ... a wood. Alto t.atur• • ~-Full price 1339,500.
831-7370. 540-031i
Tft\DI T 10\Al.
REALTY
.. ~11
tV.ll't 1---::;~;;;;;;;;;;;.::-;-: ... oi I
.:""IJ :•11 ....... 1 ..
'"" :w.-u ;»u
:~J\
wlll llktly ...,., -· It you are 1 pertect1on111. 81k
to ... 11111 m1gnlllcen1
hom1. Ottered at $976,
000
I 714t '71·4400
12tll U .. HJI
HARBOR
Un.II
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J lo Koy"d' D•·~· N K t>l'> 61ol
CORONA DEL MAR
FRONT ROW VIEW
DRAMATIC 4 Brdm 3 Ba home,
a.1ipt lftl11111l 1 SPECTACULAR VIEWS of ocean and
T1111 la a ~utl• with 31 Canyons. FORCED TO LIQUIDATE.
bdrm•. 2~ b atha, 2 M ll · ed' l A-'·'-frpie9. patio and cloM to ust se unm tate y. n.:mu1g $795.000.
bMch. UM tome Im•
nation and you'll have
your drMm hom. $199,
000 IN/hid.
· W.. ISLMUI
131-1211
UE IOHElll IE/Ill
um111
AppHllng corner pro-lalllea
perty completely remo-
d •l•d and n11r 1hop-Ptala1al1
ping. BHI priced bay-
fronl duplex wtth two 3
bdrm, 2 bath un111. e..t-
ly rtnlt d on 1ummer/
wlntlf bul•. AreplKee,
chefm and vi.wt. $850.
WATLRFRO,
HOMt.!. t-.
Cor•J ••I Mu 1022
nlMllE OIHI
2 bdrm, 2 bl, den. End
unit. 9265,000 Prlv Pty
75i-16&8
ANNOUNCEM£NTS CAU FOR
t MILLION
DOLL AM iii N. Bay Front.
REAL ESTATE
t\111 .. ·u1-..'n"·n~ L..."t /4.. ,,,,,,wl
••• f\iflhtl•
t'i 1.,.11\,el'-l'ht 't
~ 1,,.,j, ~ lt1\1f1~ l11m r .t\•I '
I BUSINESS &
FINANCIAL ..... ,.,~ ..... ,.;f _"-·•
•6'..,..111-t ~l-•••lurulu 11
fl OHM ...... \\ lfll• ~J
• f1t\l"ltlftW IU l}pf .. ~IUl\lh""
1 .. ,,,, ... tll \i\•nt• U
•\t .... "' lu u .. n '\f .,-.,.." Wt111tN
''""'""" .. 'TI•.,
EMPLOYMENT
If, 11• V.;.1nh .. t
., ....... \\4r'!h"11
ANIMALS t".u .. r;_,.,. Hunn L.w .. i.&:k
P•o.
M£RCHANOISE
\ftl ......
\1•1 ·•' ....
\U•IU•O
Hlilat '1111 , ... '
l 111•1••1• ....
• t• I 1•-\ H
• ur •IUro
( ... , . .,. ,,.,,,
ll•l'tl• t .,. l1+••h
j, ""' h \1.-htfh ''
l\t ..... 11 •• 11 ... " ... Mi ... \.\,,,,11.,1
f.h.1 .. M.i1l l1i.1tw11.1111•
ut1,q t uftHIUh " t•pUl'O~ 111 1'•<1411•1\N ,-.,.,,,h
"'••1!1111411 (: .....
r\ .......... -.ltr•·
BOATS
It,, •I H11-o ,,, .. ,11
""""''
~""~··'-' to,.~. "'''''I ... U1p ~"*'"' ~...--... •. ··~it,,,, ... ~"' ... , . .,.
"l'9>h• l"•lrw. 1t"r1 "-11•· ... , ...
ti'-.! ,....,,
• •·1U
Mii~
JO Ju
t•q11
TRANSPORTATION
·' oth
H11 ' ~ .....
•fl·~·' M··+•'f n, .. ,,
.,,,,1101 1>·1 •fl'l, S.t••t .. f ...
M·t • lf,o ....
11 I.,,., JH-.d
I ''"" l 1111'
AUTOMOTIVE
\ut '°Iii r., ... ,..,. p.,, , .. , \\ ·'"'' ~· ~I• P t(,., li••h
•"'~··I u,1\•"' .. , ....
'tll•
AUTOS IMPORTED
\It, H11111
\u I
\11"\llll
11\1\\ ' ,,, '. '~ ,,,, ... ,
111 1 .. , ...
• 11.tll t11• 11 ... 1.
'"'"'""' J,.,,,.,
J111w11 l .. uth .ttChint .. ,,,. ...
l.-1U••
M••O.. M,.·,,•I• M• ""'"'1,.., 8i nt
)11~1t11<i.h1
~ll· '""'' i• .. nu ....
..._ U.t'\I~ ............
K4·rut'll• 6'.utt-Htt""1
lltlYt't "'-'b ~-..
10••"-r .... ~,....
V1-tliui•~O
Vt,fY1t
M"'
PR°"RTIH
Wm. C.Ote. Bkr. '.
r\!,1•1111-1~
•
• I f
•(in ik irpen' siv) not
hlfh in price: reason·
able C011t: d 11aified
1dven.i11in11.
.. , llOld ,,
, liT'Ofl#llt , "~ Dally Piiot."
I ••<elnd many nll1
the lint day and 1old
It the oero11d cla7 for
thr pri<• I ,..111..t. I
hed ae ed la the
Rqlater b111 Noel of
my call1 ca•~ fro•
1he Delly Pllet.
Oat.A ... ,_.
('Hla!lf ....
........ .. ...
PRICE REDUCTION. Enjoy th.la
new CNltOm bayfront 4 Bk home
with iM fine.t views of Newpcrt
Bayt Recreational 1pa1 BBQ & r9frfprator plua pler & llip for 50'
boat.
0 t.on-onoe ie"•tt of ~. '°"' ICfD"'b'ed -otdt b. ~ PO tOl'ftl tovr litf'\P\e WOidt
H E T P l Y
I I I
T E L A X
I I' I I'
F' I L 0 0
I I' I
I •.,, LOii i dplx. oe11 '1021 .u,. Ult Ulll or wrll9: PO 1011 a31e.
3 Bdrm. prim• Co1t1 3 bdrm b11ch home. 8i.t•tne. fMv~ ......
MtH loc1t1on, 1011 of 11ep1 10 ~n. prlvat•
cozy charm for only community Including l.L Wu... HU
S132.llOO. Call 979-5370 comm. pool & play-WANTED: nom. lft Herbcw
\I >I l I 1l/:'1I ground. S 172,500. View or llmllar 111• for UM lUl n purd) ... OI tr.at for ln-111-1111 come properly or land. ~~~~~;ii~~i=~~====~;l 754...()344 oWn/agt
•I I. • , '• 1 11,•t t1 •
• II· FAM • IPA OllT• IAYOlm Te ,......_.,
llLY 1117,IOI Clrcular drive IHd• to ,•,." ...... , .. ..,
Ju1t In time fe< aumm«I thlr tpaelout 3 Bdrm. 3 Thia 11109 home teatur.. bath home. Vaulted I would ht to aeeume •
2 flrepl-.. covered pa-w ood c t lllng1. Oak low Int. loen tor twnhal,
tlo and wood decking. pt111ked lloofl, ak)'llght• condo. 2 to 3 bdrm homl
luge lot and many H · and euP.,b muter "-1111 In New Po' I B •a ch
lrat. Ownart vtry an-wtth llrtplac.. Tl'\lly one (ptlllfably Eaall*lffl) or
xlou1. For an appoint-of the tin••• home• lrvlne. 1 100,000 ran09.
ment. call 540-1151 1vallabl• In Beycreatl Ready to move In fut.
1395,000. 873-1187
• HERITAGE
. REALTORS 142-1200 •••••••
Kaai. ltac~ 1040 '"'" rua1u .. lrYiat 2144
PETE BARRITT
t ,. REALTY WOI HME Turllerock 3 Br. 2 B•.
EH)' walk to bell, 4 Br, 3 1~~~~~~~~~1 TownhouM, highly deco-Ba, 1paclou11 llvlng rm, rat..,. t 1100/mo Ag-t
family rm. lau"dry rm. luta Aaa lOll 75;-07oe · -·
large balcony. $188,000. tllY llOOO MWI •·-ta ... __ llM 53 • 1118 So. Cout Plaza area, lge ..... =-.----.--..--.-
FR EE equity 3Br 3ba 4 br twnhH. Fully 111-Bachelor Condo,_ S.C.
twnhm nr down1n1 eumable 11\o\~loan. Call Pina. utll• pd, pool •
Pym ta $2050mo Sue Stu. 1-4117~338. $ 5 0 0 . 8 3 5 -7 0 0 1 .
9g1.555e T ti 10901_8'0-8 __ 511<>_. ___ _
lnlH l 044 1-;i8i;1 ;i8;miiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;; 1• ltalH DaJaraid ..
I CHOICE .:::1 1tura1 UH OF FOUR 3 BR. large aolld Oak
In orenoe Tree 2br 2 family room with a· tolld
ba. Spa. Oet. Re;;. s12e. O ak bar, waln1co11.
1100 2 br, 2 be. Stacked n1rdwood floora, huge
Condo S108 ooo 2 br 2 counlry klletlen with llre-
ba oei. R .. .'t12'1,1100: 1 place. T .. llfUlly deco-
br, 1 b• Condo. $7<4. rated. Enormous lot.
500. Call tor more d•· Quiet C\11 de ue. Beautl-
t•ll• fully landsc aped with llM11•
trult treu $1118 ,000. -------•---Shown by appt Call "~--.. I .. __ .... ~lsor
·J(8alty
651-1177
Frenk Vaulto, 75e-1501 -----BAYSIDE PLACE BAY-
FRONT epecloua 2 b<, 2
ba. S1700 mo. 8111 Grun-
dy. Rttr. e1s..e1e1.
Near New. Nice 2 BR 21>&.
rear unit. No pet•
'875/mo. 709~ OfClhld.
861-9135 ~ &U-4201
..
..
---~--------
114 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 18, 1983
IHMI O•l•nll\14 '"'" U_.1nlnt4 Af!!1mtat1 hraJnt4 Atu!11•1t1, Oaf. A11rtatat1, Oal Y.cad.ta le11!)12!t1 Otftn ln!tl! RH hnntl1 HJli=;s..;.:;M;;;.;;11,.___._., ...... _ _.! ... e,...l!f __ ,.l..,.lft_
lut. t-• Utt I INc• utt l!!J!!! IMc• Mtt Cetta Jira 1'114 lrri•• l!ff lml NW 81';,~t,~~~~.~ft~'r?:.: II-IF &MdlnoAll T~=-·~~ ~ari
38 • .,_,,quiet GUl•de-• • . mo. . 41 311', 28&, lrplo, petlo, do lmmed POH All weekly nowt. Agl --·-------i "rm naMI Int ... ~ R ........... 2 bd 1 be yrty 1426/ OCEANFflONT APT& 1 NofthWood. 2 bdrm con-3 bdrm, 2 bl, enll. utll P'tlne. 17a.1G03 eu• ....,,.....,.. M• 1660
=•'."~inu 1:0 No oet~...-.2185 ~21'1~o!''~~~u1l~ =ttAn. ~~ciu:'. :er; ;3e'at I••· It 1 o · l 7Mt70. ":.~~~ p~~ ~~~!:'ts~i· 7111 ·HAMOR llVO. ad1pt1~ paoo1a wt1o t;:::t::.=':.;.:
mo. 11t11H t .. c .• no Ull llU No~·"· 549.1930, avai11 = 15. noo mo. • LUXURY c:ondomlnlurn on 2165 E.' c11 Hwy · Fuu.ef'TOH •nJo( publlc contact. OOf'tfeota. 1-11 IW!t 1
peta. 1'4-97a-717 t 3Br. 2B•. lrplc, 2 Git ars-~ &48-1 ..... l'Jlt l:t•11 ~°!\!.:~'~ f7He00 . 11M111 =::-=. ~4:.:r1 t~ _c._._eeo._,...1_1'°----
5 Br '-· nr Weet. Mal1, g1reg•. eunny p1tlo, Completely turn. 1 Bt. TownhouM 2 Br. '-" Ba. NO FEEi Apt. & Condo ••o•. weak of J un• lllecutiw omo. .... 11 ...... .all lllN Fn. '*'' .. t. Op.. Eicpet. ""°"*'needed tor
11602•1 ,1.~moT.~ ~1"105. tennl•. pvl b •ac:hH, Apt. Baec:on e:1&-= trpl<:, pool, !llMI. attached rentalt. Ville Rent•. 18-25, $1,000 n .lul lor SOuttl Coeel Metro .,.. l IAYl I Wiii portunlty for.,,......,. •troll• p1tlent. HouM -· .._... S 1 15 o mo. ( 2 t 3 ) & tenni. lee:. • g1r1ge Avail June 15. ff1Mll12 •ok• "50. 807-3939 Full Swvlol. ATTRACTIVI part ti~ Income. For work 1nct driving 2 II NM 141-Utl 8M-7too Frenk CN1 •ft &PM f.lo peta. M25. 031~884 · Thi~ CO. MA88U88£8 Interview call Jell It S•t 4l!e0
Al.SO t bdrm 1385 UM .. .. .. ... tab .. Pae -546-11222 TO SERVE YOU. &4S...5ne •FASH~ COUNSEL~
Hunt Hlf'bour 2 Br 2 ea Ador1ble 3Br $1150/mo. Atutanta U • mfe8tiB.AU, Fa Non-emllr, 25-$5. Lu•ury ottloe, bay vi-. •Plfl 1&1I .. , .... W..t 112/lv, PIT. Ladl9e ~
w/ger and xtrH $4115 Udo RMllY 873-7300 ...... blad HM Tlnlllll IN NEWPORT BEACH Twflll•~1~::t C M . ~~.~~ LARG EST & MOST PrT r! iiNtj brw rnfg. ~~ '/""6261
kid• -539-etllO BEST 3 Bdrm 2 Bl, lrplc, pvt BAYFRONT, pier •veil. 3 ......... ,., ,... SlnglH 1 & 2 Bdrm 842-8472 or e42~502 Fl. 873-6663 . RELIABLE In !Mnl. 30 to 00 = w ••nm
3 Bdrm S600 4 lam hm patio, comm. pool, ivall •tory. 2 Br. lrflc , 1 Bcltm w. Ba U50 Apartm9flll • Towntiou--::Aoom:---me~t.-Coof-=--""'.'dln:--ll-°"-i.8-H...;A_R_E_o_fflcl __ ee>eoa _____ ~ tOOO'• 0~:.r• •Inc• ~~a':1-~~ .. ~ Mu1t be experienced.
tlnglH fine tool Gar & mid-June. S tOOO/mo. s 1eooimo. a7s-soe 2 Bdrm 2'A Ba S750 -· Some .,.. elegantly All appllcarttt ec:reMed orecwy. Pr•lloloul .,.. 1172-1000, 24 houri II AM· 1 PM. CaH Fifth ,\vaMM Flor-
bltln• provldld no IH PeteJol'lneon03t-t2ee Ctleu .. IMar 2'lU 28drm2Ba+Den S700 furnllhad. WedotlleM&t:foryou In A lrport/~pt Sch.-----------------1 l•h , Hunt . B e ll .
539-8190 BEST Alty I• Frplc. vault•d c•lllnge. O JFr°!:"~l5115Rd t ·~ prloe wt Id ,,...... c:att 752-551111 •lllTIL IPI B!~llllr nH .. ~ "'rory 842...,_,
1-1 ...... Spac:t1cul1r Ooe1n and dbl gar. pool,..,._ n wn.,.,... . • 5"-7077, 24 houri ,..,.,,. or 'f04K '""",. ----...-----.-.1!1 .-.... City llght v1ew9 from all 860 w. 18th St. Sin Jc>.cauln Hiiia Rd. Colla M .... full MrVloe 1111111 14 mo. boy, Mon-Fri Fruattatad1 Stagnar.d amw room•. lmmac:ul1t• 2 ~5-27311 842 ... 905 ...... ,.. WE LDll ollloe. 1176 mo. Furn. 20220\JAiL 10AM1o6.&46-6470 WewantyoulnNleUnd
3 bd ··-·· ba ..... bdrm, 1 ba. Corona del RNI04IOfl'llcl 11w700. NEWPORT BEACH ~ big comm t lo rms. elanl~ at ... -Mer locatlon. Lool<lng for 1525/mo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apl. LUXURY 2 BR 2b•. gar, nr FDll JDll 2488 ..._..... Blvd. Ml-IJll ... , ....... ...., Md rec>6d eclvancemant. 1825 to Sl 150 3 bd. 2 ba, 2 car gar, 1 25 plut. Either 1 pereon Frplc:, balcony/yard, LIA, bHClh. 1800/IH, 5t 19 c;'°ta""'~ IOAM·12AM Aeao. adutta Temp/Full 811 651-2764 aft• 5 or
ml/So C•t PIH. $800 or quiet c:ouple. $635 mo garage, cloee to ltorae. Alv1r Av1. 1172-8881 or ..... /Ill_.... Brand new deluxt eultM. l l&Y I Wiii CHARLOTTE SITTERS. Aon I~ 9:30 AM·l
557-6531 p I u. u t 11 111. I . 810 Center 831--0580-/wllnd•. • .... ..., 700-3,000 ti. G•n•rou• &4~741 PM
$2115 lam etert•r home 714-720-1832 TSL Mgmt. 842•1603 1 Br condo. 1675 mo. Se-#1 In Otenge CO. tenant lmprov•ment•. ~t• Glrlle 8-ltldan, lmmad mar. -Full_tlma ______ pat90fl ___ for-
bltln• here pvt yd kid• 2 br 1 b• duplex So of S8115 /mo. 3 Br. 2 81. curlty c omplex. Cati Mllbllehad 12 yeeral 864 • tt. &42-3490. To S.W You gement poeltton llVllll. to •m•ll Laguna Galle1y.
5311-8190 BEST Rl1y 1.. hwY. Frplc. Avall 911. houH. 2 c:•r g1r1g•. (213)830-2323 Richard. Pllotoe 1.icen1Ref1 c:ttkd llltll ...al beeutlc:l1n w/cllenl.... Oynemlc, OOlllO•Hlal per-
0 I t •• 1 "' .... 25 tr p I c. 1 m •I I y ard. 8 Mo. Guvntd ~ N.B. AppfoJ1. 843 ft. Up-Full dlwge, Mier}' negot. aonallty, knowledge or T•tli• 2lH ~ •a7~~5 on., . .., wuher/dryer flk-ups, all 3 Br, 2 Ba t~wnhouH, • Cradlt• • Eye Wit,_ per offloa. $480. Showw ~~~::.. 833-2584 poe1• wt helOfUI but not
Cool pool all J ne 1 3 . . bll-lne ltplc. 2 patio•. garage, New•. Time Magazine. & kitchen. 84&-2947 -WT..... Beauty 81lon Sta tion n-ury. S..ary plut
B 2 n. :; ~ daCor C..ta .... 2714 1923 l"omone pvt. Nr. Hoag. Avail. 8/1. KN)( Radio 1-••--· ..... 1. -11 •-I G "'t c: om m I •• Ion . r -c TSL M 1 642 1603 SOOO mo tit, lut plu• Newpof1 ~ 832~ 134 _...... .u."' 111-1111 Ill 1111 rent• · rHt " mo• 7 1 4 / 4 9 7. 7 1 3 o o r S800'• 539•61110 BEST Flreplace,pool,dl8hwuh· gm • depo•ll . No pata. ~otttoall Shop w/otc:1p1ce, 800 phere,lnfo.93t~ 213/430-12U. btwn
llW9m tee er, pvt patio. xtra l1g 2 Br. blt-lne. vaulted cello-642·2949-& wtlnde. whO we reloc:atlng. •q.ft. Aauonabfa. CM llrf ,...., 81111ng Qanc, full time. 10 lOAM-tOPM.
Unlveralty Park Town-C.dt UaJ 2411 garden 2 Br. $5115.00. Inge. quiet, gerige. EASTBLUFF _..,..,..,, 1 & Tuetlo Ofc 832-4t34 • r • •. Zone 11 C 2 . Active bu•lneHm1n 311 key~ toudl, heavy typ. hOme 3 Br 2~ BL Den • 557-28-41 1625/mo. 545-3115 ·-~ 548-72411 I f GI IF I d 5 B ... -· -,., small• d . 2 • 3 Br 2 Ba Irv wlg•r & 2 81, pool, qul•t erea. N/emkr, 3 br condo. Hum. look ng Of r r en Ing, . Y 9')j)t. on.,. r-.. •-
1 yar · 1 ~1¥~ re-po ~I Ava II' Im me d Large, clean, t Br. Apt. New Condo. 2 bd, 1 ba, $525 & 18110/mo. No Bdl. S200/mo + .,.. utu., Spece 10 eub-let In ptiw· 25-35. good IOoklng, not Herc:o Corp. 842-7481. PU'f • .,. -::.!• &'!~2353 mo $850l;,,o 552_&468 evee pool. lndry lac, near frpl, lndry llOOkup, many peta. 844"""'787 bdrm rum. 1150 dep. Nr macy, In medlc:el bulldlng overweight. Flex lb I• EOE. opportunltlal ·1vallabl•
· & wkndt · 1t1op1, utlls pd. From .1Ct1&1, no pell. $505/mo cllff 2 br 1 ... OCC.1164-385-4 lobby. 3 45 eq ft, 11 houre. low pay, good Bkpr F/C-Sec:y, ••P•r. with the Loe AngelH
Woodbddge townhouM • 1388/mo. 546--0338. 031-6812 after 4 pm. ~ 0.:~ ';:; furn 1 1.15/eq ft. call, MIC tor l>eneflt9. UpetC"' lef'°8Mnotk mu•t type 50WPM ac:iw-Tim•• Clrc:ulatlon De-
end uolt 3 Br 2'1t Ba lrg -9ft Hr.: .,.11 ••.: eut·• .. -..,......t lean, lga • ••"-" ........ 2· Rmmte wanted to lhr Bob 842--0108 Mon-Fri nec:euary. ,.LL: er ret ..... , 10 k"'J .... toudl, partment In our door·to-
t•mlly ~m . dining ~m. Aerf9t•I• Fuaiu.. .,.,.,....._ .. 9~ 2 BA'i~-b:''t~ po'.,c;h. r,'t3m'· .,.........,.. or hm, tingle, clean & Met. 11,,,;. -e pm. ' 545-2993 w111i•. Irv. 552~ door newep1per HIH
frplc. dbl g11 , fenced ....... B•ch, 1 & 2 r. ,.p11. 1575 mo 940-oet7 · $325/mo. 831-3248 •11 5 p......i progr1m. GuarantHd
yvd, nu paint, r .. 11y nlc:a ..._ pool, spa. LIA, CllfP<>'1•. · 1 Br over gar w/frplc, Very F ss+ ellr 2 br t'A be C.M. c...1. ...... ltll Boat CIHnlng , 8 nre. hourly wege plu• com-
$950/mo, $500 aac:urlty. PtaJ•t•ll 2'07 No pets. lmmed OOCUP-E.slde lu•ury In I pine fo-cute. 36th St Pe nln. ept, rtly lum. '230 + ..... OOO eq tt., pvt bath, water ltrtc!! Silt Mondeyt. M/tlt. mlilalori. Houri; 9 AM-2
Avell 5/20. 873"""'285 VACA TI 0 NS I BA y . anc;y. ~arage ~~aJIS. s r •5 r•I. Lrg 2 8r, OU utll pd, $525/mo yrly. 1155-0096 u l I '. S m k r 0 K . & gu pd, lie 1vaJI. Incl. AT TENT I 0 N BUS I· e42~783 PM, or 4 PM • II PM. 2 Br. 1 V. Ba. ..-2 • ~ BBQ. pvt yrd. 1545/mo. ..7 Tr'""_._,. i. ""ovtcted Po-UNIV PARK, 1erraoe. Car· FRONTAGE w/pler 1111 TSL Mgmt. 831-a741 V«lllllee Single epl. Re-855-1288, 14&-• e4 1800 •q ft of fenced NESSMEN: Attr•cllve __ ,,, ,.. ·
dltl 2 Br. 2 Ba, g11 opri1, 5126, or 2 Br. IOOO, 1 Br, 6-45-8122 642-1603 frig & etove. Wiil lumlell Mlle to 91lr big 4 Br llM. yerd. C-2, SulteT, 130 E. young Ledy wlll Model. ml -.a tantl:.:: ~ S300.:.4"'
nr pool. Jae, t•nnle. S8501mo. 303 E. Edge-llW... If nee. All amenltlH. wilk to bc:h. ISOO/mo 17th St, C.M. SSOO/mo. Call tor Interview Mon-Fri NEEDED. ~San C-. ~. •. C a°:i ( 7 t :')
$795/mo. 831-12118 JoY-wet•. 1-87t-2868 THE SEVILLE 3 BR 2'A b• •tteched 552-1744 plua lat & S100 dep. NB. 548-0479 only. 93g...30e0 manta ID. 4f8..855 1 1157-23e1, aJrt 12'64
ce Wlltt• C..ti .... 2124 :~;!. :!0~~~:. ~r:.: g11. &73~400· Lve 2 BA 2 sa. gar. poo1, 831-7325 IU•at. le•tala 2111 lc~b a
lrvlne llnett 2 Br 2 Ba bllln1, fnc:d yd w/pallo. Clean 1 81. up111lra S375, epa, 1750 mo. 873-11224; Rmmte wented to ehr 3 •1715 up. 2285 tt lndlJ· lutnctlem 3111 Elegen-lf, --un6ql'9 ...... __
pool/jacuz21 newer kltch wat:&4. 11181 Mapl• Ave. No 778-2384 Br nr bell m•'-27 35 ..... 810 n-& --•• , .. / • • -· • • •trial on..... 1 1 .,.. Prlvlte Swim lnslruc:11on ..,25 k .... 1 pet• must... Fnallt4 IMbltr 281 Santa Ana 1520 pet•. ATTN: LANDLORDS , • Ip . I 3 e 0 I m 0 . dondo Circle. #T, Hunt-front bistro Making ...
63M190BESTRltyi.e S3J5 plue MCUrlty dep. Ca111·5,636-4120. Slen1Mgmt. &41 -1324 SuperfMIGnMSltreportt. teg...1895 lng1on8Mch.&42·2.e34. ::~=--~1t yra t::=!oe.~
2 Br 2 Ba condo. av1ll. Incl. c:lelnlng. Off •trMt $465/mo. 2 Br. 1',~ Ba. 2 bd. 1 bl. 1440/mo Cell C'9dltbMa Rmmte needed to lhr 3 Br l200-2500 eq.ft. W•t 11• tlon & flalir w111 edd "Juat
.........
FIT rac:aptlonl•tllrafflc
poelllon "" radio eta11on
Some= w t111. Good te. Call El-
llOtt LRaru8 844-2727
EOE MIF J uly 111. Univ. Prk. parking. Small & quiet. upper unit, balcony, UR, stove, Ref, no peta. pool. 7t4164~ NB. YIM area. 'tnclde offloM, I l A the right louc:tl" to our
1775/mo. Pete Jonoaon Call e45-9804 to-· c:wport. 423 WMI Bay 5'8-11518 Wllfflee 2 br, 2 be. pool, e48-611711 from 1540 mo, Tom, •I 8111 c:r .. tlv• m•nu. Salary
631-1296 • 527 W. Wllaon S400/ 1 1 b clubhouM, frpk:. $700. , ....,.._ 2 er. •ftt In CdM, 851-8928 FiauclaJ comrnen9Uf'at• with •· llLll TSL Mgmt 842-1603 mo, ge r. new S•...,.., e4~-411411 ~~ ""' _._.._ Send & Radio account decutlve CfPl• & paint, rafrlg, OW. -~, • lrplt, b1lc:ony, prlvll• lndua. apce/Offloe to 91lr 1-...1-~ ::;.::,"':'.:..:T, •o~ ..... Short te1m. 2 bt, 1 bl, wtllUH YIUAIE 717 J1mH, Apt C (oil erMllte• 1 Br. v1-ol bath, wehr/dr tn gar to In C.M. Euy etr•t IC• ~ ••lf -1 ,,.. • -nr :':1. hlgflty motivated Poot. June 111 to Sept. Ba.ch, 1 & 2 Br. Apte. Pomon1) 640-411711 oc:e1n. Pool, clbhH . .nare wlfem. reepontlble oeea.,.., 842-4e70 ~tits -chard ~1b1~c:kl, 308 ual to repr._,1
----------1at.Nt OCC 1550mo. Aalllmmed pool.,.,. '625S.ndy 842-411411 m or I , No pete. 1 25000to $50000 Pac:lflc:eo.rttwy.~ N9wport8c:fl tactloete-J.atw.u IMcJt ll4t or $1500 lor 3 mo. v . . ..,.._Extra lerge 2 BR. new $4t5/mo. 720-0353 or lllae .... tab ltU WEEK. LY P"'YCHEC.KS 8-:tl, 92648. tlon. Mu•t have H let -ee2 758e L.A. carport. No J>et•. paint & curtelne. Kid•<*. •2 Bf. 2 Ba. nr SC Pt.au, ,., exper. Call Ellloll L•· Hw w/pvt pool 4 bdrm • . Bec:h 14 tS no p • t 1. up et a 1 r •. S A pool apa, ~ 851·2.2SS Debbie Auditorium, , .. ,. 250. (FULLY GUARANTEED) .. llM Wmll ZMW, &44-2727
, frplc gourmet klld't I/yd Dua P.UI 2121 1 8' 14754485 $450/mo & dep. 752B s5t5 No Peta. 1s2-6822 Fe to el'lara rum Balboe Full A.V. WHtmln•t•r working par1 or full time Co-educational realden-EOE M/F
kld1/pel1 $1000 Hurry ... LUXURY BEACH 2 Br. $5854590 Slllllmw Dr. 842-5717 . l•I• •Pt IOI eumme r , Malt. 8111-0028 12-8pm. II home. Weekly P•Y· tlll lrMtment program --------
53H190 BEST Alty'-"coNDO TSL MgmL 7S4-0081 E/tlde, 2 Br, pvt..,. & n•', C ..... tt ml non-'lmkr, $300/mo + ·~ c:tledle malled dlrec:11y to for adolHcent•. Call Helrdr•Her/8tylli l, w/
STUNNING 1 1 B ,~ -utlll. Call 873-3847 or you from t.:iome Office ~ folowtno. Manager poea.. Lap .. lilla USI 1 Br lor dlacrlmln1tlng erg• r 11ove & frig. Quiet. Baeutllul two lewl • ctty, 72044511 AaatlJIC .. tatl trlW'I WednNday. Start -• aa-. tton tmmad llV9il. to right _ only. pool. lac:. eauna. all garden apl pool & rec 031--0754 OCMn, Cet&llna vi..· 3 _ lmmedlatety. No axperl--_, par•on, 11lery negot
N.-2br,2be,vtew.Pool, utllpaldextetec:l.rllBlk• wea.710W. t8tt1 St. SPACIOUS 2 BA bedroom, 2 bath, c:.r-Lonely retlr•d man, a.a........11 3112 enoe~.Nadonal Temporwy wNlemoctier 833-254SI
llf>ll, tennle. N .. r patk. to m 1 r In •. S 8 2 5 . $«5/mo. 1 er. 1 Ba. Apt Upper. open cell. Mrve pet•. df11P91, bY1114nl. 2 •P•lk• French, play• eompany Do 'f04K wortl 19 i. hoeptt.111. Fin~ my -._--ln-Mlnl4ab---.-.-"'*--1•
i ns. 497-3973
44SS 4eg...soset49S-47o7..a•t !.!_~·1tlndor2 rm, ClllP<>'1. bar, hug• kit, lot• of ~llc:ary. ::-1c11111g;. ~· ~.:::i~:!; 1 ~....,.. right In the comfort and hOml. UY9 In. "2 202 enc• preferred, night
Lab Ftnat .-lut. ..... _, ,,_ 3e6'°;vocado ~·.~~~6~~0':7!; c~rM & 1ennl1 court• = 70 plul. Bowd & f:ml~ :.~~~="age, =rl~~y::dr = CHIROPRACTIC · eNft. pit. 14/hr lo stan.
2 Br & den, 2 ba, 1800 •If Jiii IWI TSL Mgmt 642-11412 548-7358 rtgcl~ behlto :;-rnd pr~~......:.:.; IOCSglng 10< ,ciomt>•knlon· 831· 78 831-81164 Cit~ malled. Send your ASS:~";:!·, PIT M3-Stoo. home Woods 1re1 of _,.. .,_ •hip and I 11 "' pg. 1 ~f A ,.... -.-.. name and addreH to: • Hoe> Sino'• ncM hlflng 1111 Lake Forest. Avlll June almY ESTATE Clean 2 Br nr 110< ... bu•. $545/mo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apl. for 2 or a u It•. Reply Ad 108&, Dally Pl--_ ..-. KE y s T 0 NE 1N0 u. Cwlc:el/Typlet. &Swpm+ poelUonl. DalMlry drfwr.
1. $850/mo Incl grdnr. Beautllul & partl Ilk• pool & belme. 2264 M•· yard, all bll-lne, c:.r port, $830/month. Avallable lot, Box 15110. Co•t• STRIES, HIRING ,.DEPT. 1•5:30PM, M·F. $4.SO pr....,a, fluff 11\d fold.
Dys 833-8300 with I aced pool pie. 1410. 842-11103 or pr small pel ok. ,Ave.II. June June 15, Call owner 11 Mael. Ce 926-te 33, 8480 FREDERICKS-pr/llr. law offlcl rw O.C. Apply In per•on 8-10 "11fPrNate~1tlol , 642"3153 ISth. (Jl 4l 642-0l38. Oceanfront N.8. F nlemkt fNllll\ •os BURG RD., SAN ANTO-Airport. 851-7717. AM. 1000 N. Coat Hwy, l!!p!! ..... l2tt •eov.red Parklno Spaclou•TwnhM2 Br. l'A TSL M~;:i5 M9t2•1603 S1udlo, 1310, t BR, nr lo lht 4 br, 3 be, frpk, ~ ft NIO. TEXAS 78229 .. Leguna 8-:tl. 4M-4G44
Oceanfront 2 yre ,_, 2 *Sp1cloua Apt• Ba . ga r . n r 0 CC · ocean, 1425, 2 BA 2 Ba eunrool, lndry. Yrty S276, ARE FREE p 1111 b 1 fo HouMCIMnar•. PIT. ••· •lory beach llOuM on the •Dining ArM $575/mo. Phone ,,, VILLA VISTA APTS. twnhM, S525. 881-1192 ~742 •r me UI OHi r E•perlenc:ed dinner j)allanced. Must hew car
C 230 " ... 721• ute. reu. 842~870 (Ive _ ........ pt/ti-.... ......, In sand. 4011 Seuhore. 3 •W•lk In IONla : . ,,...,.. • S575fmo. 2 81. 1'.lt B•. 3 BR 2be modem ac>t 1 M/F 30+ to lhr 2 br, 2 I>• C I mag 11 no ant.) """"' Jc>b_....::="',400 end phone. 980-61171
br, 4 t1a. $1950 mo. Call •Home-like Kitchen• l&Y ..__1 Townnome, grHnbell. l>lk to bea ch Ocaen B T I I a • per900: 11 Ho • ...,..... AMl.l"-'i Mrs Long. 850-1190. t blk to Hun tington ,_. llr, car port, balcony. vi ew 1 ,.501·mo P.. ept, N. · enn '· poo • • Marine Synthetic Lubrl-S . Coaat ""I· UiJuna --------Cenl« tren......,.atlon & 1 Br llreplace, pool 2078 Thu11n · " • " J•c. •P•· Smoker OK. •••-Htl c:ente. retail/ whclHale, Bdl. ttou. ~ of -~ • ... ..._ • .,...... Private Patio &~ 881-41142 $350 Incl. utlls. 84&-528e -2 1----------1 Orano• County I• ac· no--,.-• Frwya. TSL Mgmt. &42-11103 dealer lnq. 5 7-717'0 OOK, ltallan cooking Ion ror
plus den. 2 b&. f1ml~ mLmEI FIU 1475. No pet•. 8-9 1Br.1 Ba. dlflwr ..... ba n• 2 Br. 2 Ba utll Incl. o.ic-Ilea!!....... 4114 up. pre4en'ad. """"'In ~:r:.:r~~t h:u .. ~~~ ·P:,.:.1 ~!o. 1 Bdrm. From $560 31111 w. Bay St. 1375/mo. Lg 2Br. 28• nr So Cel. wood Apte. Fem el•. LOST: whit• male cat. -pareon S at 10-3 : ·101 c...,,.,.1. 15 ht. Leave
I I I d ed 2 Bclrm. From $650 54().38efl P1ua l500 mo $350/mo. 54&-98t5 Orange..,.. Md lall. CMll loanl, up to 16.000. 21et Pl. HB. ~· 631-8222 .,c3·2~. •8n4~~:r;,: LAOUll'n'AHEAMOSA I ....... • s-5:Me FetostK28r.2 BaCondo "'~ tlow or bad credit OK. --·
55H198 Off 720-8807 16211 Parkllde Ln. 1 bllt LM&• ..,.,. 2 14 -54 In FV '220/mo '*'8 utll wen 11 unemployed. UM -Houeelleeper needed for • · w _. n .-... 3 bltl• s. ol S800 mo. Plus MC\lrlty Llfnot 1 Br. c:arpon, pool 1 BA condo, eec: gale, llke Poot/i~ 77c ,.141 _· Loet; 518 Fe Brlll•ny tundt for any purpoae, Now hiring llna Cook•. buey prof In Nwpt Bdl. "'.,......, •· I B I t I/ ,_. ..,..... ... .._. Snan. "Gelllee" HerbOf/ ""1-2••<> ""' & Plllme, ir:.----.. Muet be reep w/o wn lewterf ,.,,... Edinger ... 947-5441 depo91t. Closed gwage & laundry, no pell. new. poo , r • o ..--· .,., ....,, • .,.. ,___..,..
Spac ~Br 2.,.. Ba. dNrl Incl. 2195 Miner. To ... 1450/mo. 931 W 19th Wemef area. 1450 mo. Prof. fem. to enare lg• Glaeler, Ben. 548-47-17 S25,000 to 1 500,000 ed prel. Wagae MQOU-~ 5 hra • ay, 5 dy9'
TwnhM. pOoi, Jog, etc. ...... .... 2619 cell &45-9604. St. 5'8-04112 Bobby, 648-7434 pttv. 2 lllY hM CdM. Ml REWARD. 2NDS. Aleo wlll buy 1tMa. The Gr1ndef ~ wtl. Am or pm, Hlary
440 --bdrm, prlv entr. Uvlng L08T: 8maff bllc dog W/ notaa. FAST approval WUrlllt. 1400 W• Peti. open, re f•. 840-1982
$800. Agl, 544-l ..... , APT&. i-=-------..,..-...-lfH 6 b•. I SOO mo. whit• chH t. No tag• and funding. 851-9135, N.B. "2-lllt dyl.. PANORAMIC c.A~us single. Ont 2 ... "71 W •-·--St up 2 Br. $350/mo. p4u• ulll•. II" AD -Sat&. MG-7537 An•w•r• to "Blackl•" Denae Corp. "-'~ Bui-~,_for _Houaek...;... ______ naeded ___ l_or_ OCEAN VIEW &.._.., ...__. ts. DJ." . ...,_"' . No peta. No wlterbed.. -•-_,_ """"' ·HB --...... Hlghly u1>graded 4 Br. twoua1roomap or down . No pell. PteferCOIJl)lewllnfant. Wlcly rentm now evall, MIF 1h1re 2 bd houM. 751-4800anytlrM lly,8kr. drydMn:H ,,,,__ ald•rly l1dy. Balboa
2,A Ba, fr/dr Pvt walled 1450/mo . Slerre Mgmt 2450 Newport Blvd 1105 & up. Color TV. ~ Bc:h, non-emk•. nr Lo•t· Ledy'• Walthem llertt T.I 1 4t2I '*'4221 !Mand. Del)'. 875--4275
c omm . S2 t SOl mo. &41-1324 PhonH In room. 2274 be •deck, 1350 +'A go+ciquerttwrlttw1tcn nr ll!I' .I II ID IMD HOUMkMC*'. WMkend• 844-1480 W•ttlde, 2 bd, 2 be. No Newport Blvd. CM. ut111, Mike , 548·0238 S.W'e So Coat Plua. I.I. UmD --onty . ....,.. woman to
pet•. 820 Center St,_., 14&-7445. •ti• 7 Pf". Reward. 78().11240 ..... ... .... Wenhoule/~ .... In. car.. and cook for N~ 4 s8:7sco:~ r~ IOBa. meataB,,.U 1450· 848-4332 4 Br. F.V. ,_ 405 fwy & ... tala Wu... .. LO•t •m•ll blk le dog. Spac:lallil~ln 1•t & 2ncl ~ ~.,: elderly ledy, fWe requlr· w I y #a . 7 a 0 -9 ~ .f ~ AP&rrmlTI 28' Tri-pie•. g11age, yd. • h 0 pp In~ r Iv. Lab/Cocller S!*llal. red TO'• llncle 111411 • d . e 4 ' • 2 I 2 0 0 , 21315'1~460. Beautllully l1Pnoold1c:&•ped r~250Sc:omott•~~ N1! .. ~· $240/mo. Pr~~n!;.':::.~': coll1r.d"!...?02~~ arH. Robt. Sattler NH/CM N-o exper .. len'e ... ne~•• _a_7'3-_2tll __ t ____ _ FURNISHED Of g111den epte. ap1. .., . ...,.,. ·~ Wrkng Fem 25-40 non-to •here larger view Rewar . .., .. ,,_.,, A.E. Brotier Bel RMltort v .. • HouMk .. pere wented . Nf".~~~'·23 ~/:.~ UNFURNISHED. :::::.'~'·No pe~·20'Dau Put 1721 •mkr, kltch pr1v". gar. t1omeorciondow1tennl•. Found Beegle on Batbol 842-2171 545..oe11 MIY· EJC.c:tttno ~ • ,..._ IAlf'l In per900.
645-9095 or 642~802 All UTILITIES 1 .. A t'""" H b c k 2 B 8 w/d, prv bath, pool, apa. pool. Jacuzzi, ate . with lalend. call 873"""'200 WIDOW HAS US for port~ Dnc1:1 t80l SO eo.t Hwy, i.. ur•LTH .,..."'1. """' " or r" • ' 1• tennl• Nwpt Craet NB prof M/F non amkr To· S10 000 p No · guna BMdl ......... 11117 .,_,In har ..... PA.ID, f'IU\ 2 Bclrm, w. Ba. 75 pool, 11un1, 2 blk• to S350 'eso-1708 aftl · · Hunt . Harbour to L.aouM Loll Cal black & white ~ed~·c:Mc:k no~ 1-3t2~
TWO SToRY CONDO, 2 CLUBS. TENNIS. 131 E. 18th. 846-41818 bch H OO. 870· 7740 · · eeadi Cell WOl!geng 10 tece. Vic. WHtclllf & Call Denlton Auoc' &t. C-1 ll1t•11't/ SWIMMING. plus -.twt1nd1. Room w/bed, & Iott 01 1.m. to s p.m. it (714) Oov•r. 848-3353 or 87$-7311 · Dental~. Tt1hhl1 r r~·2 ..... ~8'2 cargat. muc.hmort!Sony, Bachelor 1425 8 •---L -•• bltln drwre, CIONI. Pvt 838-57110 or (114) 14&-&865. ~Newpor1Beedl0t· Wiii train right pereon, 0 Imo. o pelt. no ,....._ Models 1 Bdrm. 14115 ul. -••-bath~ lhower for 842.0t38 ~. FOUND lo Bio Cyn Blk a 2ncl TO'e from 15,000 to f 1 c: a need • Ro A. -.cttonlc gweoa doon.
845-9005 &42 ... efl2 O~~ly 9 to 6. 2 Bdnfl, 1'/• Ba. $560 DeluJCa poolalde xtra l1191t neat d mall. $2$5 wMe male neutered cat $50,000 hlsh ~eld M-131~ .._.. lleW9 good drtvtno
H.w peirll, new CWJ*, 2 1 2250 Vangu11d 2 br, 2 be. bit-Ina. &L ~ ........ ~-toln~· F~rllmy ~0/duog•• ~~ ~!,: 754-7724 · cured by eng tamlly _ .. 111---a.... ~and ,.._anc:91, ~ bdrmal 2'A be, kid• o-a....ooc1 64C).11828 dlWIN 1'A mllee beech. Ult "....,...""' ,_.,, """ " homH In S in Berner· _,_,~ S and pell e11per to
& '* <*. 1750/mo. No aaw Lrg 2 Br. newly painted, No p e t•. 1550 /mo. p ark. HB. 980-5844 M•u Up to S700. Loet: ldentlfk:atlon Brace-dlno. Prln o nly. Cell 8U.y ptwMt N.8. Of· OI !fled Ad No. 1089,
lee. AQ1 063-3488 G• .. ~ crp/drpe. 1495/mo. ~2.. ~ & at\ lpm. 83t-5357 lat. Sllv•r. S.nt1m1ntel Oennl1 ~4) 888·11128 floe. er· 111 11 sit-P.O. Bo• tMO, Coata
Big Canyon TownhOUM, 832-17efl DELAWARE PINES Room In~ ttorna. untvm. lnt•lllgent , joyful prof. v. I u •• R. w. rd . MOfM'l'I from Ful time. s. ...... CA t2to21
oott courM trontw, 2 Newport Be.Adi So. 2 Br MOO/ nr o c c . '250/mo. + woman dHlr" epac. 751"'8t1. lary open & benefit•. I I o I S h Br -·-$400, 1 Br. refrlge, •low, · mo. 1100 dep. M ~. w/,.JL ouaat quenera with ,.. °"11142-4990, ~,..,_nd nta r or H gn ow
.,,;..,.2 ~Ba. D Rpool-1 .!!!· 1700 16th Strttt pallo, C:IHn, no P•I•. F<~. ~· 545-41()24 aft. 5. lined quellt)' --N.B. 87~ "t.~t Eneed•P AP~/T ~B .. ........ • • .....-. (at Dowt') 731-C W. 11th. 873-7787 ,.. .... a patlO. llom• owner. Reh. " · · · · · lenne. 1250/mo ~"Z·5lll Nopete.842-tac>'/ ..... "'.u. 142-2296,646-t 840-812' or 497-6471 -PINE BLUFF APTS. t1122t Da1awer9 81. ..___.. 8'l9Y ~ oftlcle eallk· 2 Br. 2 Ba. 1BfLoft21--------·I -1nginwttdalkieoep~ INTf;AIOR DESIGN BIO canyon, Dovef, well Newper1 ludt No. ea. with bluff View. Child Wllll IQ.,,. Oft'-....... -14 7sg...13t1 let """ ptaaaant a _ s AL f 8 E • r n
kept large 2 Br 2 8•· 880 IMnt A¥t11Ut ok, patio. lrj)lc:. gu Lrg 1 & 2 Bcrrm .. M1onQ 1817 W•toltlt, N.B. 278 Found: Male Dog, wttt & ~ ~ !:9 In or ~peilOl.-r. 80fM l1oo-MOO/mo PIT Ml* SllOO/mo. Wiii ..... e (at 16th) •tove, dllhwuhar. 9()1. plnH & •traame. Sac to 3eOO eq. ft. 2.435 aq. Tan 8lul ~ ...,_ ~. Cell tor Ina be <:Nett...., ambltloul,
mo or more. Own•tl "S-UCM lndryrm. get•. pool, gym & ..,._ ft.~formadk:alor . a&O-Otn AIOE 10 minor~ tervlew. IH-5111 or wa1~ . .-1..e1
Broker 759--0708. SPMC 831-41107 No P•te. From 1480. IMf dant.111. l<Qent 54t...ao32 pad lldy needed 3 1'11'1 840-1"4 .-
DOVER SHORES 3 bdrm, I~~~~~~~~~·::::::::-:::-:::-:: 848-&691 •WNIT mlll Lo•t: lrleh Setter, Fe, I ~morning. 646-5681 Dentel IYW
pool, new cpl/ e:!:· (:-The fa•telt dr•w In the tCIHllfled Adi ar1 the Huntington CrNk Apia. lJlm ... Fl.Ill Ser'4ca Sult• ::c:•;~bluff. Oental Alll•tent, Bed! ALL AEL.08-AU PAYS
Good credit 1eq. WHI. .. a Delly Piiot 1n1-r to • eucc••~lul Luxury edutt living. 1 & 2 -• II llT -.. A/P CLERK C>moe. E.lq)er. Pr9f. Good St<ILlEl>-UNSt<IUEO S l tOOfiftO, 873-173-4 Claeelfted Ad. &42-5178. O"aQe °' yatd Mlal It It Bdrm. wtttl garagae. ti.I _,_ -•• Loet. Blue Miii Parak•I. Mu,. wttll many ~ ~
Newport Terrac. 3 Br. 2'A better way lo tell more & waler paid, tetevlMd Wkly ,..,-. Low rat•. '576. Furn/unfwn Talkl . 5/8, VICllnlty ol flt•. Cell IOf lntarvl..,,, L.aibcM•• e ....
8 1. 1750/mo. EvH C..la.... 2'114· paop4el eaourlty. From $5t0. Call Color TV. free C:OllM , Ally~~,: one National/ Monrovia. C.M. Celeonlc:. Inc. II•~ IM-511t Clf 14().1914 Pwm.• Tame>.
844-1120 14&-1813 trom 11-5. h11ted = & •t..,a to MG-5410 ~72 *of auto al( condition-Dependable P•rton to mt.-
Lg• IJiieC . hom• on '.It ---~ft---oceres ~·~~. LOST. Handklap card, nr tt't for NISSAN (OetlUn), opera ti perking lot 111-Ua acre. 4 BR 3ba, newly A& A•8 &AU : YIU.Ill Laguna Beedl. 4Ma62f.4 •E.ID ...... Cleerbrook & Newport wllh • ®rr•nt opening •WHJ19r. 81t/8un AM DIAICT AGENCY
deOOfated, Ill eoctr11 In-G•JllJftB JllJIB I 8d 1 MO FAE! RENT Blvd .. C.M. 640-t471 for an Accounta Payatite &4&-2t11 tot,.. W.ti••--
cl'O PQOI, mlllntanMOe & ga UA UIJ: :: 1~ t4 2p1an:."1 ':~~ 1:'~:!4 ;= = 1 room to 4 l'OOIN. AdJ. LOST: Blond• Cocker Clertt. DOMESTIC HELP. ~t ---------~~· $2 lOO/mo, PP from "'46. 2 Bdrm ('°'" do. Sco1t. ~238 :-1""' Frwp. No Spental, Comer Pllfm & Som• of th• dutlM In-8ct1 fllmffY. to MW In I 1911 1911 1911
2-4ttS moo $830, TownhouM rom Cllll~~22t 8alboe. 548·8121 cllJdl pr~ of ao-OWi tor t ~:.:Jt: ........ 11•11.
MOBILE: Lido Park, SPECIALRENTD UN'1' SIU+ pool•. tannl•. t..... FOUN01 M• rt.tv«I~ oounte pay1bla, freight llOuaekaaplng. H9ip-dl•t"*llt• Candy
1dult•. S4!10/mo. Call wat.,.11111. pond•I G11 Ual 8oard & c.. Altpot1 ....e.o. 8hlh Tzu. fern oolffr\I blll1, aJC.panM repone, --ltrlppen Caltdy. Eern
213144M473 aft 69m. On larC• bachelor 8p&rtID8Dt8 for cooking & heeling at ltl 811rtl CASA V£AA ~-from ~50 el wllt Al=· t•m blkl benk reoonclllatlon and ..._ Nvlt ....a «* Of .,,. ~ ci.ity. Hetl>
Clf 7 t4/4~74tt Minds. in qUfet, secure surroundings j)lld. From 8Nan Ol~o °"9r'l e wflOle NEW= It ~~-~'/O . xtt• brown . ltlep. fem ~· ~ booke "'°'°'--. N Ot ~ bultd the nettonal teen l"rwy drlw• orth on ~ ............ _ __.. ...._ "'1·'10f0 • 1 • 1 t 91 a enu ......c-.. "l:""?.' ~el .......... _ 'A blk beech. 3 B 2 8. 8eec:l'I IO McFadden and "' ,.... ...... __ .. ola ... on ame1 · ......_.. tlma.oeFo~·fmmed ate ega • ......,..t _.t..,
elcytfta. wlppfnu kndlan, (eeourtty df1ard on duty). • ••• on Mol'add•n to tty, oonv•ollint tooatlon .WIM...... ~ haeh Animal NqUlr'I ~of wort! echoterefllp fund . g 1 r , c: om po o I . D"' Se1Wlnd Vlll&fl. 17141 Md old wortd ~ 1 MO fAEa MNT Sha tat', 126 MIH Dr, ;'~ ~ aooount• C11: '4&-4MI Ml-Jlt15.
1 1 1 3 o /mo L • • • ~ """-~ ... -... • ....__
1
1113-&tN. tn • oud•n room & Wltft lhor1 tann ...... OM .. 4 lfl lnO Hpartenol, 10.ltey Actull ....,.....
54' te22. Y VA9VA ..,.... ,_ ... anll oounywd ~ ~ ttll tul WW. ...._ K:-f Found; M • ...,.,_. lftbl, by toudl, ..,...... typ-.... 1111
Haltlof View 3 It. a ea. ,,,, All u • .,,.,_ -c.1 •2 ~~..:.'f· .. ~poo1· t ' ~ :~ .!.•:; yo11•r_.ov~~,..~~· Ylo. Hell & hach. HI Inf, baelc knowlildQ9 of 1n 'Pit hOme. Need FfT LJE~ 'ARD 11+g111y upg!'adad lloml. Y ""'-~ "'· _,,.,... ._ .. , • .....---.. , pr.; ow-1110. en.1-. ext 213 ac:oovntlnt prlncl""· M In -..on for 0-W-W
lf,250/mo lnc=x ./ Be&uutul ~ (acWUefl epe. 1*2 "°'*' AH-7t~ 111 Doll9f Or. 4. -sr:: IOiYleOM wi.tl l•man. N .. d1 &Hiii· ~lkWta '*"9 _...__ ,..... .... M2'2134 8424172 .. Newpo r t 8ee cll. 'OUND: Bionda Coc4tar 0" •"P•tla .. c• anct anca. 711·0214 o r d newH ---·..., "' t/ CboloeC{lfi and floor ts14161. ..,.,,..., M. lelbCMI P~ " " .... ?MS acoepte • ••port or 1~ ot _. .. Ml1' ON n. IAND --_ -!ton, 51,3• ~ tn-6144; onootno 1ocount1no O..nH Aquatic '•rk •
....... 4 er. 3 BL 2 '* ./ Prtva&t pat1ol dow1:llCl!r• Mlellofl Vlafo 3 Bdrm. 2 SUMMER Al'.JfTAL 9"W9. -·-IW9. tn-6711 clM9M. aofOW f'WMnMC: ,... t 111 ... -DIM. H. .. oarae-. FW ...._ f\'PC. or l&r,. b&looollt ul'lltAIN I&. 17604786. Ftlhoed 3 lk. 2 la. untt..,.. ..,, ~ tildf. '°'"• i.t.oor f'OUNO! Yftlt. llln. AM. O•l•onlc ottat1 Y°" • orowlnt l1crow tlo.1...;;.a. _____ ~---t ....,, eMC llclfM-AYllll ./ _:t;;:;:-: .. _,..,,. yard & g1raga. Klde & fumllhed....,_, d1Y9t 1QltfttilffOWI t.Jt. • .....,,...&~ C0'1'\Pltltlva Hlery. n.adl ~lo ~ Ulen ... 111•
Jut y 1 • t . l • • 1 • One bloak fPom _...1 ... ,,,,_ pac.-Wltoofna, 545-2000. lncld. lumlMf. ancled MllMENT t1.oo aq ft. H8. eeo.'rae 0~1tandlng b•n•fll• :.""'...:;' ..=::., ~ ~!!!._tl1lo111 l•tt.~
SHOO/mo. b&nD. UIMN, ~\&. Agent, "° .... 0Wl09· HOO eq ft cal: ~rt klOI encl .,, noef. c.1 Ti 1HI --~ -77G-OM7 poll om. Walk to bMotl NEW 8t1r N02 S~ K FOUND: l lrd, Perrot, ent wo~tno environ-•· c.I _. • ...._1 w II loGildl'9 ... YN -a..,.. ·"" Bua -on-.. -of dlo. OH a wat•r paldi TSL Momf, 14ti-1IOS Mt-4144 Hand~Y1 Co111 ,..... mant. 'or rmmadl•t• tot In..,.-. '"A and eo. ......... ...
-• Y --r .......... S310fmo.&H-483'/ ~~torle-.c '/47 .,.,..,.,..,.. oontldaratlon, ,,.... ..=-lOM lll"n111H,. with Trw .... 1ed blG. & Wlfa u.-flu ... .._ · ~ ... • • • H ~ N ..-. lo ,.._ wnMft. a or -............. 2 I r nr ...._a bctt pool , I mo. 111111 pd. '°"'1d: Or. l wflt M • .,.,, ooma to our ~11e11t ... ti_, r _.., ...
fi?Lf)Ome In Thi...... ~ ~ QOncto 'ma' P1lm 8prlnge. PIOhlltl, AJC, ~!Ir. 106f l!I vlo. Ad1m1/Dala•1ra, offttle between •HAM looaMd 11'1 ~ fiM T1'M ....:--........ °' _..,,.. .-.. No B~oy 1fv1D1 wtth oompatible mtt.Dg 1m1 .,.. OK u ... 7m · .-tOI' wtcnct. a"· 2 .. ~ °'" eo.ta w.... HI. • ••40 _, N':_.. --.,., a an1 cwo. ,-. :.l :I. c.1 '°'
c:lllhtflf'I Ot P91•. 0-4'11 l.'-4A-••. l'l II•' WIU :.s: &::.:'~= ~ L::, I . of f'elMft I l'ound: I Klttlfll, 1 bll, 1 ~en~. eb ... ~,.....II fftVtl ApMlflt ...... t. AMII'· 11~1-741ttinn11AM -UllJ&n• ·• 11 .-... 11"1"° H4-t040*--.. btll/wflt. Huttt1~. ~ 1.a WMrt....,. tCAN TIM.,Of'Af'Y « ... --*'Di 2 Ir. Townhouee Apt1. ·-r-. ,,_, ~1. '4CMm A11SOflC 1111' tnoe .... ~.'== •• "v I c I. 4
(1'1 -. of eo.n lel.f CALL POR RJDl'l'AL INlORM.ATJON "1>'0. d.,.,._, lf'O patio, H.-.11. Kone~ 1 •· c.... Mele uo el, ..,. ·-;!!I \IN. rt -""' .,.... ,_., ... Wiied ..,.. °" oinoe. Condo. ~ fumWled. U0011110. uttt ":a, m -__ • Hoillnd ww.. c.. & c«r •• •••• ........ ..... Y~, IJWll 2 W. 2 ~ '!'!· Pboo.e: Ml• 0170 nr Hllflt H'ltbOur. ''°"' ....,_ 4. ~ btoCIC ftom W. 1tll\. 8t.111 MA ..,._ ~ D. ,.._ 19 ~-
fr .. pe1;:e:i= M00/1!*940-Mn. *'910ll, UOO/wH'· lllOI._ -....... Advta. lfl 111 m1ttar1 ""°"°"': T911• .... ""Y ~=/M • ..... ~ :-= ._: llarlM»r Greell8 2 bd, 1\t .. ~ MW 111....._ a/O, *if~ 1=1 ~ lftWfl ... &= M~to UM~ 9'0:-: l'M. '11 141 .... .._.-.; ..... carp•te. fr•:m•· afll l .a..~ --..... 'Lan ~. AIM ~ • _ ~· ........ ~-..... t~·
•••--.... 1n I ....... ,,,. ,..._. frew lft tM _, -.._ 1111•11 ... 1•"---.., "... .._ _.,, =--.. ar-""•--w -;~1 ·-Waet ••. a D= ,1101 9wh.MW9M. ,_;.OlllRl..;n;. °"...,._.'° °'',..~~-. O'M•i ~ :1:r--c: rroo Petereon Plaoe, Costa Kesa w•,,..,. cw Mwtn ~~ ~ ,._ a.:~. .... .. , ... ,. c;..:"' ....
-
'
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Orange Coast DAILY PllOTIWedneed•y. May 111 1883 Fl
lb ler 11111 lre11111r
-Mr!ttlat ...... ..... l!!!trt!!1 ,......... ....... . ..... Cl...... ""1•• """" !tlu $1.84 per day 8A8Y8ITTINO Shampoo & 8'Mm olMn. ELECTRICIAN. Priced ---.,, PAPA CLIFF Spenl1h IPHklng girt STARVING COLLEGE 24 llr D <::? 141-lUI .-r ......
........ In my home, vie. Del Mar COior brlghtene<t, wtlt right, frM Hllm•t• on Let me mate• VfNf oerd· Fencing, ~umblng, .,.,, .. 10 c ... n hou.... STUDENTS MOVING WATEA HEATER 8peolll .... _.,
,.,...,ALL )'OU pay & 0 r • n g •. C • M · cirpte • tO min. b+MC!h. ieroe or emall ~. en grow & your gren odd lobt. 20...,.. Alk for SHvt• 831-2801 co uo. T12'"43e Pool **"*fumecet QUlet I.ct of 1119 le tNd
30 'r...;' ad '424257 H ... llY/dln. rm1 &16; evg Uc:. SOM21. 873-0SH g,,_,I I'm II.Illy inlul'ed, PAINTING-PLUMBING Cteenlng: No IOb too big 1nM.red. 641 ..... i7 :ow --~11111 ~ 00 -, •-n room $7.50· COUCh $10: R S C d u•uLIN"'ODO J088 WATCH VS OROWI Drelne e1Nr9<1 lrom •&. ·-2 ••.. .. ........ 1n the ..., ... , Ohr '6. oui.r. ellm. ~i E ID/ OMM'UIND. 1peek Englleh en you ,,,. "" or 1me11. Exp, rell1ble, Mlllne fforn 116, ~ ..... "',. • ...,..
D'ILY Lift 111.Lml odor. Crpt repel(. 111 yr'I 20 yr'I. Do my own woril. wtll find my ~ eitOll-REAS. st ..... e-45-23115 v reft. M/lw. 067-3341 PalallM guer. Svllwtcnd ....... I. your prwt,.... In tM
" 30 Helklm BaMoone del. exp • .?.~ :10,.r..k '''IYHlf. uo. 278041. Al MM128 lrn~~..!!:.~J~I HOl'M Repalt..C•ll*l•ry lea1t•.W lemc" .. ,.,.. ll51-NCM~2-ao33 =t=~ =-:.~;
PloT •nY11me. Perfect for Ill Refa.<>...-v ''" *Electrk:l&n: ,_,~•Ir. trylngl Kevin Blggal Ceblnete-Eleo-Plumblng thtl?lfncitl"youwoukl oce11lon1 • brldH & C..tJ C...rttt All typH. Low prlcH. L•ncnceo. MalnteMnCe Fencing. DON 066-01411 IRONING JOBS WANTED, ~io:!:~~~d ~~r~ Peel •-L I .....,. Ilk• lnfomwtlon on ..,
SERVICE grltduatlonl 873-4410 ~ -Lle'd. Fl'M •t. 83l·23"'6 & 1n1telle~lon at your FAIR PRICESI Pelntlng. :J',k~~~:,-~~~·,~ 1oc11 euttomen. ....... ..... :.-gy, call Don INnMt
,..,........ w~~ ELECTRICIAN wvlee. rooftng, eerpentry, fi''· qUMI. Phone 6412-5470 Thank you, 983-4114 • NDfCTORY ~OBOOKKIEPER 1381057 Rob 647·2'ea3 Gd rat•. Fr• Ml. Lie. Amblttoue Jep.,,... ON denlng, erpt olHn no. •nY11me. tlAUJY P.1111111 =~-V:;' ,:.~~::; ~ Nl .... 7
Liii\ s 1
418449 Weyne &31-763<> d-*. weectl~edglno: ete. · Stwr 648-4471 ltut llltla Prompt, nHt profe11-retM for 1# of YCN< pool~
DO IT W
RHI. mlll but ne11; Concrete: 1mell or lge ELECTRICIAN --......., ttlm , """'ly. Ba..tt-I I _,. F ,.._....., .... __,.._ ___ _ NO 1 Ml up/malnt 846-8381 jobt Remove old re ""'-""' ...... ~-( lonalt/IO ratM 836-7149 n__.1. or upert Hr-AAA .,.......,..,/lend9c:aoe
W fer S...a C.W.tt ....... .,.aw/MW. 646-&S12 • ~~. ~-~;~• ~~~ng, fertltlzlng. & $~~~:=Job• HouN titting detlred by lu Wnr p......_ ~ ~;r:o~; Re~1~i1c 12112813.
YCN< o.lly Piiot C.aaJc Tilt Johnton & Son: Do own Cell MIKE 8'46-1391 young, rMponlllble pro-Lie. 425-~~4 f7W~5 PLEASE keep tryl1"19... S4 74, 642..a>o7 ~...,,~~ *'"-ceblne11, eab!Mt ""9th Tiit... • ~= work. 15 yr• malnt. & HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE le11lon1I for aummtr OllTM EITEllllJ (114) 4tMlll TU. ........ ., .. ut Ill laelng. ban & formic• Freet. Guer. 963-3283 °'~~ landec:aplng. 764"1999 Furniture, TrUh, Tr... month• beginning In & INTER. Re11. rates. JaeUon'1 Pool S.,W:. TILE INSTALLED -c:ountertopa. M~l .::---,-IS .... "'L'S a .. •DENING ,,_.. 1u16 NOR•• June. I wlll care lor pell S ••7 2 20 n... __ __. -1t1.11.a ,.__ ,,_ ._ ... ~ "" ._-.,.. .., end P•Y utlllll•• Call Fr .. Mt. teve""' -4 SI yra exp. Early com-All kJndl. ---
1
C.blnet1 & Carpentry "uw \tUf ~t. tr• 111m & · letl4 al t I & Reis John 893-4487 •~-..a-Smell.....,., & _......._ _..._. ~..._ ..... 2..,.2 HAULING 87&-44711 after II pm. RALPH'S PAINTING p ~·Fm n • rep2
8 ~-, ___ . ------... -----!-....,.....____ ,..,., . ...,.... ~a ......... .....__.._._ f ... q .,_,.. _.._ --"" C d/ QU•LITY INT/EXT r-• ...,.... , .. eat. 4 '"1· ,... __ _._ -r...... ... ,..._ -Free Mllmet• 845-2003 _..... ,__.,.. __ ,,__ ,_, IH teenuP•. yer tree 111c. ,... Uc: 2 ... ..,,,. .... •2eo ....__,, ... ·-•• ...._ Aceto for em bus.. PR qlr-Fr• weelt. Fenc:»d yd ............ JAPANESE GARDENER RANDY, &.42-78'47 Ladlcaiti.a• Low rttM, lie. 6$6-9898 . .......,... . .,........., w/lnellll. Wc>AI ~·
llH, aale1 tu. FI S. B<oderic:K'a Cullom C.M. 631-8626 wkdyl Antique Rettor/~r Melnt, oleen·up, trH I ,.. ___ ,_ ...,. p•-IHllat George 494-2528-
Comf*tt• Mt up & --01>8ilty Woodwor111ng Child C-In mv home. nr Free eat. Plc*up & del. trimming, 1mell land· ta!!......... na fl.,...lll -•• -•--v I e e . Re a•. Fr In Spee. In Ill typee of ea-Plecentle & iVlctorla 845-&434; ...,. 731-Sl173 ececMng. Jade '42-M55 ROBIN'S CLEANING Sod, •""nklef' llld shrub 25 yrt. Lie. 403941 Ins. Hube< Roofing-ell typee. R & M TILERS .,..,,. ...... ett~a blneta & bit Int •110 • ...,. • ..,._ ....... "-f1. ,... .... _. •·· New-<--.. .-..., Cull Oii\ eeramre Ille .._.._.... -·~· · • · ,... -t C •• ••• "'738 "--""--8:::1.. G ,,,_.._ -1 t .. -,. .. nhty ln1tellatlon. Our work .,.,...,.., """ """"" A __,._...._... " .. """" ---------btrl, docn, p&nellng & ..... .,......... ... ,. -~ ar<Mnl~ wwited, mow-"""'"..... ,..,........, pert. ll63--091l Rlchard Uc. 1411802. S48-973-C wont. free eat . .,7..._,1 AnUaan ltplr mantei.. Xlnt rele. R"pon1lble motti. ""'I SPRINGS-HINGES-NEW Ing, • glng, raking, CIMn hOuM 5-4().-0857 C~lo!~·~·::~. G I ~11 ... IHI 19-t..-lelftn
Dl1count appllanee re-554-4264 839-7427 eare for •o•• 2 & up, OPENERS. All repelra. •weep~. Free Htl· Expettlte Housekeeping you buy! Lie°'.'2<M'5i8. ~T~~~~~~T. .,. ..,,,.......,....,....., .............. __ _
palra everyday. lnetent c...,...._ wk dye, thru 1ummer. L-t ret•I is yr'I ma1• 7641 Vw.; & auppllM Included L •' I .. ......... TOM 673-2668 Free eat. le. #3e1042 Typing/Word Proceatlng
-vie. by beeper. Ola-~!!!. Mau del Mar trH. C.M. uc. Tom 657_..80 Mow. edge, clean-up, Kitty 641-41170 ltJ I "' I ..,.. ladtila tJ.a -OulCk, MIY r9YWone
petcher 831-«iOO 1179-5182 Gar Doof 0 •tort. trim. FrH HI. Reas. QUALITY CLEANING 141-1111 Paerla1 BUOO~ ~~E-LO MIN ~ble 851-1041
AnMttltual oo::.:.:~O:nets C.allacttn Ceural 1p~1. hard:.. For rites Jim 648-1958 with• per10nal louch MaMl!J Farthing Interior Deaton Ret/eom/boet trtr. uc. e:fc'd ~avail. ft98 +
lattrien Panel~tlo6-lencee Aemodel/~ra. comm. demone1atlon. Seeeout 1111111n ..... BETH 850-0933 BRICKWORK: Smell job•. HANGING/STRIPPING Reltuceo •vall.641-7581 is.:19«8at. vie:~~
Jerry SAle-4413 & reald. Llc'd, bond.CS, 2488 Newport Blvd. C.M. Tr•, l&ndeeape, IC>rlnkl-Bachelors, clunlng & Newpor1 Coste M-VIM·MC Scott 645-9325 • • ltnicta
TOTAL DESIGN SER\/. ~llr/llnl )obi. Fenoet. Int. For eet, 652-9142 8'42-3490· 8f .W:.. ctean up. 21 laundry. Relleble. Keren Irvine. R~fe. 875-3175 Blackwelder Paperhang-Nenoy'1 T~ s.vlce C~~o~::.n:r:w lhelYH, partitions. Lo I I .___I... .. ... yrt exp. 846-0565 540.2616, bel II, att 4 BRICKWORK S II Ing & Removal. Qual. --II MfVleee: typ-8ln4no el buelneeeee60
eonltr. by architect & ratae. st ..... 731-3311 ~·309'88aRemodel Springe, hdwe. ELEC. Glall A Jliner Cius Action Cleeners large job• & r:.r,117',!. 0
' work only. 494-3616 ~·=-etc. F•t Nr\I. M 2•7190 667"91
dealOr* team. M0-11466 All~ Catpentry Add'na & Cabinet•' GATES. Bob'• 546-36117 Cullom bar mlrrora, war-aiip. Ioctl home 4 apt Local rel1. 645-8512 Platln/ ltpair 5-44 "l 780-8350 WU... C ....... Aaealt & Repair, etc. Quick Mt· 64M5811 646-4&.44 11at•11ia1 drobe doora, tub & cleaning. Int. 842•9264 Everyihlng In Muonry PLASTER PATCHING To piece your meeuge WE WASH WINDOWS
vtoe. Rea. ~ Ue"d. Drywall 1hower encl. Ola" re-European Houaeeleenlng Llc/bon<*S. Ve<y reae. RHtuccoe. Int/ext. 30 before the Feet • Prof..,onal ~Perking Lot Palombo -3314 _ TIEii plecement. 520-0201 & Hlhld Ulletance Bob 673-6387/536-900e yrs. N .. t. Paul 54s-29n reading pubtlc:, Qullllty wont guaranteed ~ting AFFORDABLE c:arpeMry, DRYWALL TAPING RMI. Exp'd. 876-1430 phone Free ettlmele Ma-7311
S&S A8pNt 831-4l!)9lle plumb, eleo. Quallty All TIJCllK• & Acoualle Topped/remo"15 '1~ .... ,... HOUSECLEANING Mnill v m'S Delly PWot "Let the 8"""*" In''
Den Hallberg Griding wonc/ wWle.. 751-7718 Free .... Kevin 873-1503 up,,_ lawn-,. , •••HOME REPAIR Weettdaya & Weekend• -ABC MOVING-I rt.AST£.allll Cl&lelfled. 842-5871 SUNSHINE WINDOW
& Pavtncl Co. Reeleomm DRYWAWACOUSTICAL 1'11 mll -~Plumb-Carpentry Marte 062-3485 -Quid!, Cwetul Service. I flu\,...., CLEANING 642·15'8
Uc. 397Mo4 842-1720 Mt~e !~ !'!~tlhnole A.II~ & ~ Lawn-t..-..hrub lnlld PatlO CoY81"1-fenoet J.,,_ HouteetMnlng Lie. 1138046 652-0410 ~; ~..,__ ,,. _,...,."' --. BUD 552-9542 TrM trim/Aemo\1111 Remod. Keith 1146-4872 Ex Wkly Own 1 *l·l •"'-• Cadlllce lo Qo.Car1s ~~ year. 11 you have 1 Lawn melnl/Rotottlllng p. · rans. •-H111e you read tod1y'1 Wha'-the Fed
BABYSITTING ~ IMt'I no( getting H..,. ~hlnQ you want FrM ee11matt 548-«>65 The 1111111 draw In the .642-51118 Belt quality. 25 yr e11p. Put your tdvertllllng ,,__ Cldaltled Ad•? II not. Roi 'em off 1he .,.._.
My eo.te MeN home nr l.INd .... It now wtth • to NII? Cl...ifted Ida do WHt ... • Delly Piiot Sell thlnge rut With Dally COmpetltl.,. rat•. aege whir• the readerS )'OU'r• mllliftg the bM1 WICtl • Clle•lfled Ad
Vlctone 8'42-3442 Ci..tfled Ad. It well. 642-5878. Claaltled Adt &.42-5671 Clllllfled Ad. 642-5678. Piiot Went Adi. Lie T-118,428 730-1353 ., •• &.42-5678 bergelnl In townl Call Nowt 642~•
ff OIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
'narld,ay, May 1t
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Be ready for new
starts In new directiona; focus on employment,
cooperation from thoee who share your basic goals.
You'll get to heart of matters, information will be
received which aids in promoting Cl:\reer. Leo
figures prominently.
ltlt Wut.. Siii Belt Wut.. SHI lelt Wut.. 5100 Belt Waatt4 5100 ltlt Wait.. 5111 ltlt Wu... Siii hta HH
u.otlanlc/Outboard9, Im-PllTllm PU t-1 U•TlllllT S.C-«tthue and organized Sewing Machine Opera-Tm LUii ST.a P1::i~r!!."i &';:~~ ::
m«flate opening. Scott Wanted ldott. over 22 5 days week, 9-5PM wtth bkpng. plua ln1, exp tora. overlock/tlngle p,.._~ .-. Open old with eage. 1135. S c h o c k B o • t • • wt1o enioy wortilng wtth The Reel Est1ters for da wt<. Pd vee, hOll-need». 1 ~ min. f.e-Sit. and Sul'I Msy 211t 8574930 ft98 & wllndl..
714/873-2050. youth. Muat be well Alk for Terry, 548-2313 d1y1. Cotta Me•• tory •x~er . Engllah/ ind 22nd. Don't mt111---------
N B h I di groomed, per90neble, ... __. t S48-3000 Spanl• •Pet ki ng. thla onel 824 w .. , 18'hl---------1wport ••c .. ng poeltl\le motivator Start .-.-.euren 650-1S12 St 842..()8.411 •-L--nH
Jeweler• Heklng pert 81 175 per week Call The Rlger RHtaurant SECROARY .......... ~·,~~1!~~e:.::~ 2-5pm. &.48-7021 (Uk tor :Wq~I:.: ~~.·~°i:!~ Active Mortgage co T~~:C P~~ at * TIUllE * 1&atlp!t 1111
ottloe prooedur• lnciud-Sherron). 8')9ly In peraon t>eiw.en needs sharp 1ecretery/ 4110 MacArthur Blvd ,,...... ... , .... 1 V0411 conllgned furniture
Ing Slturdey no even-PAIT Tm 3 • 5 pm. 111 Faahlon recepl. Previout exper. between houra of lmc ITt.1111 & entlquH d"erve •
lngl. Cell 873-9334. --1nn1111 ISiand. N.B. In S&L. RE Olllce, E•-10.11:30 •nd 2-3:30 cteien. bright. bel&rtltul &•&• 1---------1 crow Co. or Tltlt Co. Truck driver, production lltlnclaphefe. It'• II here llllEIJ SILES M•k• extra H helplng Retteuranl perfd. Immediate open-IPA ULll trainee. Valid Call1 drill· at the Enc:ol'E. For ccn-
Nelt .,_getle pe<ton to yovth c1rrler1 promote Brkf1t Cook. Apply In Inga. Phone 545-1402 No experience nee••· er• llcenH, 21 'Ir• or llgnment Info cell Greoe
grow w/well 11t. com-their own Ht•bll1hed p1r1on. Down Home uk for Steve eary. N-11ore. Office older Good driving re-Rfeget at 831-0281, lo-peny. Min. 1 yr retlll rov1 ... Mature, outgo-. Cate, 920 No El Camino 1 k 1111 P, 1 ferr 11 d . COfd. 5-48-0831 c:ated In W-*POrt Sque-
nureery exp. F.T Star1-Ing, ettreotlve parental Reel, San Clemente IEOIETAllY 842-SPAS. TYPIST: ss-75 wpm, gen. re. 3ell E. 17th St. eo.ta
Ing 11tary 1900-11200 ~ pe<eon. plMM call RETAIL SALES-Mature. Newport Beach Tax swlmm""' office & recepl. Airport Maee mo. Pd hOlldaya & vaea-2-SPM. M-F. &48-702l . exper 1ete1 peraon for Lawyer. Mutt h•11• ex-Cert1'i~d Red Cron area. 851-1651 ,-0-•_k_•_n_t_lq_u_e_T_a_b_l•-I.
lion. Hoepltlll lnturance --•m• --exclUIMt Fl'90Ch Country cellenl teeretarlal lkllll. I 2 I a 5 avall. Int.,.,....~ eppt r-• _.,.. SICf•. apply In pereon· Recent Law Arm or CPA Swimming ln11ructre11 Wenled: 500 women., eh• re, eeve1
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You now are able
to express self in manner which creates emotional
impact. Pull out stops -accent creativity, style,
penonal magnetism. Members of opposite sex are
drawn to you and there will be little you can't
achieve. Aqurarian figures prominently.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): You'll have more
working room, communications are received which
relate to entertainment, travel. Social activities
accelerate, restrictions are removed, you'll have
greater freedom of thought, action. Sagittarian
plays key role.
~;:t;i,.} oyd'I ~':et~8~ r~~nJ~a~ #20, FlllNon llland, N.8 . =~'." T ~:-~~~~. ,~~~i ;,~:'i!:~o 1:w:~~~:e::3 ~o!J:·H~d p~C::o1t':: ::t:J:°'3 cones. $250.
1---------1 1900-$1100 mo. Inter-ULD NIPU 752•6 sg5 or 17 141 Telt~W Wtdi State Trame Offleert., 1 ....... Aahf. view by eppt. only. 111111 9111YlTQt 840-1283 PtYd tt1llnlno P'09flm of• * ............ Need~· a.dy to uelat LI o {. d . I Nu r I er y CLEAN APPEARANCE, t Me4 $1788/mo. Poeltlon11 THURS. MAY 11, ePM
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Project whtch
twice failed can now succeed. Foothold will be more
t0Ud, you'll successfully utiliz.e experience, relative
will provide key information. Accent the unique,
break from tradition, displey versatility and
willingness to experiment.
Ll!;O (July 23-Aug. 22): If perceptive, you
make solid gains, increase income potential.
Spotlight on personal possessions, special
collections, ability lo transform hobby into a
successful enterpriae. You'll locate articles that had
been lost, milling or stolen .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Accent on
personality, charisma, ability to succeed by making
spedal appearance at right time and place. Powers
of persuasion are accented; hopes and wishes are
fulfilled in unique, dramatic manner. Libra is in
picture.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Obtain back.stage
view. Means reject superficial. surface indications.
You'll locate items that had been hidden from view.
Accent on illusion.. film or television activity, ability
to create aW'8 of glamour, mystery.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on
valuable contacts, aoci.al activity, unusual hours and
chance to fulfill desires. Relationships intemify,
responsibilities increase, reward factors multiply.
Many of your fonde.t hopes, wishes are clo.e.r to
fulfillment than might be apparent on surface.
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You'll touch
on universal theme, career gets boost and prestige
swing• upwards. Initial opposition melts,
profeaional superior decides there is room for you
at more elevated position. Aries, Libra naUves
figure ln 8CeJUU'io.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Decision is
made which en.ables you to break from put, to
maintain a more independent stance. Focus on
spirtual values, philomoh.ical concepts, long-dia1anc:e
communication relating lo possible journey.
Aquarlan ia ln picture.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sense of
direction la restored; you'll have more contipence as
accolade la received from family member or one you
respect. Emotional brui.e healt, you'U be more
receptive, alert, conlidenl and willing to take
~.<'!!_)'.OW' own abilitie9.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Leave detalla, tlne
po&nta for another Ume. For now. perceive picture
u a whole -potential ta ll'emendoua if you avotd seltlna boaed down ln office pollUca. heedlele red
tape. Oemlnl, Saglttarlu• pereona fiaure
jJl"OIDlnently. ............................ 119
L..oall ... OOWOI • 112 Jl•I .. ,,..... ~
.,_ LOWt PrOOM9C)(9 ~ NM'I. Oo. In ,._ II f• ........._ nMdff tor buey H · ~ orGllllnO ..,_ in. ..,.. ~ .._ ......,.,. cMiety _., ll'IMhalM .... I.....,
..,, .. ..,... lGll'll i.. en111ue1 .. uo m•n end L.oc*lno fof a IN10M end -. ,,., lie•• 1 Flllad women ....,.. to fOllOw • ambltloue ..,.,._ to PllY In IMAIYAIOot_._.., ~ ... PfOO'W" Y1t111 rot. tn tt9e produo-
pt~d ..... W"1.l!OO mo . .,., tn-,._ ol The Qf..t AtMll· ..,. to: & Co, oomt e nd potentlet lce11 Mototoyla lltow.
t1t71 IMM , 9te I 3, 0 0 0 I mo . Ca II Onl w4' wcwtl In ,,.,,.,__
201, ~ CA 12t10 ' 141·200I tltlno. PtOfl'OtlOft end -:~=::'.":::::Jlll•iii'iiiiiil f H f\trH In Merketa I • rnsl•J -zctw lfle Cowmry. n.
l.OOll petlOft eo • .._ c.n "480 to MOO p. °"" wll -. dW'll9 fil up • ,.,..,. • .., ,.,. ..-11 '°" llllW9 a -. 6fftu a.nd eeo11Mfill
,. ... "1 ffl'Plo'/lllMt. WlllOfl Of""' lftCf ~ opeilllooe. ~ ... UH w), 1tarlJ Cell ~ .ai ....,---.. your beotc9roull4f Uct ....., M 1111. ... -.-r= ''t-.. ~ ..,_......,...., .. w Ca I r. ,.ouncrat at to •~.--._. .... '* '*" 11.AM & ,,." H I• lno. Llf ,_ -.U _.--., tl1·0 tllleY•,. Wey,
,., ,_,, .... A Oaf, ....,,... ..., ...... PfT, ::.:coJt lnoh CA
W. I~_... Oilltr t'1I, 8et 84111. ltlzt1~--------1 ;t· P••,I• ,.,,1,. Olerllt. bua Polr,t. ''"d .tt••rou WMt In , UID.. ., m UM Dilll'/ Plot Oii Ts a
w/pettent care 3 1f1er-648-441 GOOD ATTITUDE. DE· SEC RETARY • Type Jt ......... avail thru-ou1 "-le. Ap-AMERICAN AN> ~27o_n2!,! wk l wknd1 11•11 • .._ aay SIRE TO SUCC EED 80WPM,k10 key adder, • .........a.. pllcatlonl et any C.H.P. EUAOPEAH RJAHl'TURE .,,. .....,. r r~w -Pt.EASE CALL ME FOR non-em r, e11per req ,.............. o 111 c • or ca 11 Hlgllboy1 wtmlrtOfl,
-Petition Clirculatort MORE DETAILS EDEE Admln dutle1. Selery tr 714-t92-442e dreoera 11t/mlrror1, _. ... _ Pmy twice wkly, wort own ... 0 u " e l L E c 0 '1000-S 1200 mo. CPA ......... ,,... rocking ehelra ..... ng ~~::r,;:,~~ ~ ~-=~~'8e 1 7141875-51188 IHve ~~·1o~M Call Rannah 14-f11,., llHr =.:.~~!"aun. ~ phooOQfmpfle.
efei a.dglf prooedw•: n-.ge 24 Hrt. Faff tr hit .... 9xper Meg Cefd II ~ llall tr-. ..wra. eetl
eccurate typing peyroll p,._ec:tlool teecher, E. c. •u -It-In retCf need4MS lmmed. 4 of c:hlh. Vlceorten eofa. lnvok:lng, Job C:oit ee: E. unit• required. Full __._ llmTllY LI. _. dsy wor1I wit, good t»-teblH, French tide-
counting. Mstharnetleal-time. Benefits Cott& For Merine H .. rdwtre Seer•terl•I potlllon In ftr 1 ....... wen neftts, Ulery open. Call bowda l dr9aMrl. 8 day
ly eeeur1te. good on Meee ., ... s.40-10111 or store. Must heve exper. active Newport Center W 141-1111 Tracy Deveney 558-1114 grandfather doc*.~
telephone. Stltry eom-S40-38n In both lelllng and me-RHllor·1 office. Front docka. doe* ~ n...
t with blll... rlne her~. Fun time. ottle• ....... ltlon reQulr" Tei.phone , ... Wu... s1-Ing equlpmenl. old ""' men1ur• • • .,. Profe11lonal BreekfHI E.xe.llent Co. benefit•. good r.t;phone voice. t -erme. fremet & prlnta,
Pennanem poeltlon. Ex-Cook wanted. Muat be S48-3407. EOEJM/F/H ....,,. lhor1hand & PAIT Tm Exp'd aotderer eeeb IOb glMnwe, old boolla. cellent opportunity for IHI paced & quallty .,...,ng, 8P-The Nation'• lergHt Spenlth tp98klng. A•k Over 300 Item• In ell. ~ht 1..•raon. Call oriented. Xln1 working PHrence. RHI •llete Tele-Marketing Firm 11 for Refeel 831-2801 Prftl9w Thura. M . 10%
I. 107::, .,..._, Olm envlronmt1nl In 8albOI.. s•woosr '83 :r=~:,.ht::.:1 i!: looklng for a1~ew high buyer't premium. Cell
: llT'I. Only the bMt nMd IC>-n re1ld1nt. For Interview energy lndlv uals to Aal h Ctlw1ee Wlleoe for ._ <>Moe Poeltlon oi-i. Ml ply. 876-78.29 11 ... king llexlble, In· cell Mrt. Duhl. wortt evening and week· aa talla.
ciherga bookkMplng & A.al &tat• novatlve & per1ontble nter ~hh~. =P•~~ C.h IMS Urn..._ ......
typing, itebi., mature, lllllllllll U. people to m•n•o• the :..-=I, T_M-4-4~0 er. ·helpful. 14 per hr 18es"Toronlo Wfl'J, C.M. Nlf ltlr11np lndlvldu1I. Two cerMr o'rt-ted 11_ followlnt 5 po1ltlon1· ..... _,.1 ~· ( •) T S Ir I Boo 1 h guar'd, plu1 lueret111e 11 .. ,...3 •-a ...,......, Hr.. I e )(I b I e . oer.... needed to !Min ' • • b c -.,, ..
714/648-9337. Apply •I the 1111111 of brokerage & (2)Tleket1 & Information SECRET'RY onus program. •II Call 642-8520
770 w. 18th. St. C.M. m1nagement of com-Booth, (3)BMr & Wine n Lind• AnH11w 1111 Booth, (4)8ecurlty. 141-1711 Dita Siii ..... ....,,.RA ...... Or~ County Company merc111 R.E. Income (5)Groul'ldl Mein ten-... •--.. ~"""NCE ,,,,:,_ 11..-1ng • Nlf motlvllt-during tl'<llnO. Excellent enee. 18/hour. DutlH ror Corporate omc.t of ,_._ ,............. ~·~ ad lndMdual to prO'Ade t>en9flt1 • Ille & health lnclucM hlrtng. achedul-INdlng recrwe1lonal Pf'C>-allDYl....sT AKC Great Dtne pup-We ... reoond.. DUS·
1eeretarlel eupport to ln1urenee plus den111 Ing. accounting, ate. duct manufacturer loeet· Need«! 1 Ex 1 plea. Fawn •nd brtndle. ~IOel. &d-30n
top manegement '*"· cau Aeelonomlc:a, No!D a o.nere1 Account-~~. dellreble Sen c... enc• or• wl~aln. ~ti 838-0308 I llY Alft.llml
Aequlree minimum of 6 e?MTOO. Ing Manager (112/hf) to lime. 2 O'clock 'Ill 9 Lm 157-e133
Y•tr• experience In • overH• &II the above ......,.... to .,_..._ "--~ Mon. thnl Fri. Cell etter 1 Lh ... Apto ~ oolor---------__..-<Al ~-......_ ~lonllt plu1 hendllng payroll, ....,...,.. ' ...,...,. ""~ P .......... "151 ed 5 yr old male. M= Relrlg, 1250. WUhW I. ----..__,,, .,,..-...,. n-i..... Studio In ....... ...,. In t1ve1, prepare eorre--..,,_., • 1 .. " h lngetto-70wsitn dicta-"""--V" -r KCOUnt"""· veo-muatMll.$10.751-dryer,•~"' eee .
phone end 9'emenp• tery ~~!. a:.:.;.~q=~ ~~ ~:!: ::::=-.-. ~::r .,=: ~~ day9. 951-1078, ft98 ~~ hr • S 1 O O •
bookkffplng. ereon duel to handl• front at>te " • ton, perlOrm e wtde ot11-.,, • .,_, AKC Bleck Lab Pup•. 8 --------
mutt ~good or-d k T 1 t · ..._.,Of Mefllwiel actlvl--• wki. malet . ......__l•w9d. Weeher, clean, worka ...... tzatlonll a commun1-e1 . YP no • mu1 . Become • pert or the ·-·1 -"~ ..,..... •• c;iion lklll. Word pro-Salary OP9f'. Call Jin, "Stwdull Famlly" & ti•• In thll exciting E.xper. n.c. Sun-Thur1, Mother excel hunter. good, -5. Dfyef, f:·
oeeetng expertenoe ~. 556-1801 "*"' • fun tummet on Otowlno oompeny. 6:30 pm . 9:30 pm. GUM Father Fleld trelned. work• good . & 6 •
Ml ~ 8""~ 1-1Mbiiinftii•W---I the grounde of one of the hourly+ oornm. Plulh & l200 ... 714t i-e74-1758 -~--------ture • -1 lmPIWT moat uNQu9 eHftl & ertl AeQu.lr'M exotllent tyi>tng prote111on11 working German Shepherd pup-Admlf'al dbl door 29 cai ft
GOmft'llr*KllW with •x· Frcttl office pet90n with t11ttval1 In tM South-t«llft, dle1aphone •bllity condition•. Cell .~., 8 plM $7& Mdl 080 c.11 wllc• maker. ISOO.
perienc9. c.11 *'""' Id good phone pwacnlltty. land. (o..dtlne tor 11P9*-ans' pt9Vlou1 eec:reterlel PM, Laguna Hiiie office, an• 5 pm 547.5580, 1 5 1 • 2 8 5 II d a 'I I , 1713, 142-4300, 24 hr. ~ ~ Garden Grov. cation• Msy 23• 1983,) uperlenee. for Imme-Soott. 0~1-2777 • 1161•1071 ewea ~· 1•:.;e.::c,•::i loolt.lcn Sawduel, PO Box t23-C, ~!....~!t':; rulh --•••H L•b Puppl••. purebr~. --------~t ~ ' • JUICE TREE Legune BHeh 112862, -·-,._.._ -AKC, ehoeol1te or yel• WllMf Kenmore, wortll 1 0 you. 801-4425 1t1ent1on Btltbar•-No llll1ri11I (lfllltll, low, 9 wk1 old. HOO. 1ood, ooln OJ>9rlt•d.
Pert"""' weellenda..... phoneeab,~ RALPH DALY ••• la") ,.~·· 714/'41~ef14PM. 150.213/422-e:te6
up pet90n for Ol'dllltrM Aecaptlonle1 Trelnee. PIT ~· RP c•IDL • Teen, mutt have lrene-to etert. Oood P*Y. Abll-• Uft H•••• l••••I •IJ Chlne11 Sher Pel mele 810\'I, WOtt11 good. 175.
port e 11 on . lty to leern MHHO• 8811*~ W * 3801 South Et Cimino fer •H•etle11I ••· g'f~A ~.':I!~;';'· ~,~~ 7,14 .. 1~2~· :.::.n~~~1 ~ob Con-ParMlme. Mutt be ex-San C~ CA 9H12 ........... 1M1 ... Leb Pupa 8 wtce, lhoU, Retrlg lete Model fto•t
•-~ECEPTIONIST T e l*'d In bftdel &nd llne Equal Oppty Empl0y9r pl.rt .... • ltl Ut, 150 .. Ev'e1 842·0318, ~~a.":!:: 7 daya, 2 hrt deify. toWPM 10 key ·.d~!r. gown 111terat1on1. Coet• I& 642 9313 2 .... 1 ..... ,'!':":'" .....
I* mo plu1 bonu1. LA vwled oUtlll. non-emkr.5 MeM..,.. ....... • .... 1821 Uml1WI k .,, _. .... ,._
TlmH. IAgun• BHch Salary 1175-1976 mo. .......,._, .,,_.. (U.'• ..... / ..... ) !!!!!'!. c:p.~11:~ ~~~.~0!.i:~ Dryer, wort11 OOod. 115. 494-t4N EXJ)er req. CPA Firm. co.npere betOf'e you buy. OP9ortur\llY for q\llllfled --·-qu1llty. mele & female, Wll ~ & ~
SELL Idle ltemi with a C .M . C ell Renneh Cleeallledmalt•"MIY· l*ton to d9velop beck WOl'tl eYenlnot In New-pertloolor.~forAllOI 1111422-ntl
Dally Piiot Clllllffled Ad. 764-1040. M2-M7t omo. cperltlOn •e well port leech. 1.Mt week 545-2014 Hot Pointe ~
New9pepef'
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
•
.l~ _-1~i lj
I
;
• wortllng wtttl prof-. ~..1..°'!~'°" putt~ •t<C ,...._.___ ................ ., tl.1 ft. tl26.0tt ndl. fci 1lon1I tredere. Cell ,..,.... ..... brOuQtit ............ .. .........,. ..._ ..... • •: 714-72CM>7CM 1441• eel 751-4122 attw old mete fr" to good '"6Cllo .. -... •n-10n
..,,..... 1 PM. hnl. M2-4021 tft II pm. flee etO'ff w/dbl 0¥9111,
Famll~'l wlpeoboerd TIL.Dmm ..wr 2~ :::-~ ~:o:,.ond . UIO. :iktvr~-:.·u. ~ -tM ~ otd ~ ,.. F,,...,.. ,. ... .._.
Ing • .......,,t pereonelfty. Ouk*~. ~ meie.. Loving. 942-30M. boa'I ....,.. .... lr10
Exp, ortty. ,.,., nm.. Call No Ellpefiln08 ~ Oreat areduetlon Olftl aedl. ·-.1t01 '°' ... 142·1407 ~'.!~icemem. Pff AKC Cooker 8panl•I ~ w..... o.y..
• .,, " t! I ~I......_ t ,11, Xlllt ooM ...,...e.d ~ ;:~·;~•· Oalt m I'/. l4M1n. p91.-. 16411• ·
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ'°"'*' ---.. t-., ~t, MW ""1 4'wty
TM Delly PltOt Ml ""'° AdoieOla t 100 to "'° •••lier l OH iltret ... llP OllL
WETlllTI
'!!!!. ~ &:.t .... "' ..... \
mHl•te ope111ng1 ·tor 84-l'Olt MIGIGM pr. ~1m
.. , .. peraone full or lhan'le'• Poodle .~ w-.. 0ry9r. t1IO ot
oat'• .... Gteet -.nlng TH OuP-tOJ:-minleture bftt ott•r, K ... "'°"· pottl'ltltl. Guar•l\tH UIO & up. ---·~ good oond. ..._.1 •
drew 1galn•t oomml•· ...._ ... .... bcelliln' ~ ....... -.....,.....
tunlly '~:::':.: ~ Mt'M ~ f, ' tr •11• ~·~
=.to: .,,.. old. oentrei. l,,11 ~--~
OMHGI COMT w.a. ,..... .,., •1·•· 'fem •1 mf"" DAILY Pl\.OT ... Jl'9 .-e. • -::--·--
..OBo•IMO .... --~ --·= co.ta~.:--.... &.cwtMO... ........... ~,....-i;
L . f!O!Nre.-........MDI -~--•fAILif ~1~ ••.•·•!"., 1. ·• p; .... ~ knodle ....,_ .._ W. •' --L .. t llalr .. ·r~ ' =..:~~-=--~l}~~i.ft
r..afl .. Or..-·eo. ., .. ~-~ .... ~-~~-:-":""f· :"~ ....... ~~ ...... ~Ji*i ..... I Jf ... 1...._ .. ... ...,...r~!!'!~,~~1i~Z..':t.~ • :r.a·,::·'*-~~ . ·, " .
-
t
. .
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983
•adt&l f!U 1114 A1t1 s.m.../ 4f1!!, 111,.,,..
letpe!!! IW 30· d0wnw1nd ,..9ulf\• f uta Mll !!! t ll Jt1ur l lll 11!Ut Im! !Ill ,...._ llU '
MlnlaCUN Mtwtln UkUW., aloop, 12 b-OI Meda Jeep ~up rol bit. ttt4 aMW 2002 wtltl eu-'fS JAOUA" l!C.112 • • 'H J'il camper. rue
l171!o«>o.146-62M OOlme11ot. •uoo. 171J ()(MAKI!~ \OIUtlO Inna., naw WHIT!. XLHT COHO. ~ Cllllllllc. >anc oond .. IOoU TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUULE
ACROSS
t Lottera
5Boxea
10 Outeamlres
t-4 Footweer
15 Drink
oreedlly:
2wda.
16 White House
on lce
"17 FrM:ture
heeler
19 Me1u1e
20 Prairies
21 Trifled
23 Author
Samuel -
25 Eire militants
abbr
26 Faateners
29 N American
34 Norse god
35 lraq'a
nelghbor
37 Death: Pref.
'38 Meat cut
39 Used needles
1'°Weddlng
~· words
42 Straighten·
11a1,
•44 Mix
45 Try to find
46 Evergreen:
2 wda
48 OeooretM
50 Top card
51 Eleml, e g.
53 -Vineyard
57 Trackmen
61 Instrument
62 Contrite
64 Collections
65 Kiii: Slang
66 Late
dictator
67 Spline
68 Fruit
69 Card game
DOWN
1 Falls bac k
2 Booty
3 Slngle
4 Dancer
5 Arises late
2wds.
6 Fan guy
7 Fiiiing
8 Regretted
9 Wrench
10 Prevented
11 Depraved
12 Scrutt
13 Go-devil
18 Gush forth
TUESDAY'S
PUZll.E 8 0l VED
EANS E TON
22 Stigma
24 Disperse
26 Thong
27 -con
came
28 Bird
30 Hostfle
3 1 More frigid
32 Eve or Enoch
33 Corners
36 Ascend
39 Sailboat
40 Obliterations
43 Best kepi
45 Poems
47 Brought up
49 Noises
52 Une11en
53 Marsh
54 Ca in's
brother
55 Roster
56 Vaccines
58 West
African
59 Herb genus
60 Opening
63 Carpet
otHn fualtut a 11'-1350 1¥91 142-1MIJ """*"'" peln\ uree. 81eupu"kt '6000. ~125 ==::.;:Jim ......... fllt Hobl ta.I. Teq. 8unrl ... 8 Cy! truck e~lrte Ind eteteO oe1Mtte I only '&I Metil t Aotlf type, -
_ --lflPllL 11475 845-te21 VWllll'llMlort 1200. Tire HK mltee Of\ o-heuled ioou & rune JClnt INOO M....O-• llO~CIH'I• ·a JITTA OtEaEL.
2 exec chin. 2 wood c.9-_.._ ohang.lng meohlne 148. ena XLHTI Prl. pty. 9fter? 145-9t21 ' ':'a.t(>o' ... ~-•di, I IPd. *· eunroof, blneta, 6 deek ohra c.i 20• etlO. oovw, Ir-. FlOor Nie S71J. 333 Eeet S&600 flNn .. mutt Mill lfollilM" •w onMe, -.. !Ml. pelnt. S500/0B0.175-M84 13500. 81$-2936 11th C.M. 1424379 Cell (714) 142.0138. ...... flJI K.->Od wn/hft .. eo
Wiim.it eoo cMlke, 1150 ~ ':::~ = '50F0tdNhpllethMdVI ... ....... '73 VW, body l)flklt. eng, fm!f flfl :OVJs.~22-,__
& 1175. Exeo ohllre, t30 Mil i.450 &42 7225 w/3 apd trane, run a 77 UOI Auto. (164) tlrH xlnt, • bugeln ·eo Cellce GP LI, p/a, tltti---· --------.
& 75. 2 dr IMther IMlll • · • 100<1, 01n drive 01r. 71320l41Pd.fl4'l 11700.159-0e60 wheel, 1/o, 1m/fm full '12VW.MWC*n'1 ~ml
oablneta. 135. 4 dr 150. '12 LU« w/trellef uled 400 (you remove). 71 320! 4 IPd. 879 ~ 1141 aplcr .,.,eo, 1671io ot>o. on '"'" eng, xim In •
ers-1011 on1y 8 timee. 1x1t oond. tet-1221 11 530I 4 apd. eaa !!!!!!:! .. 2_.934 out. ltNO. '31-3580
EXECUTIVE DESK eome r~qulp. £1111 Wul!I ... ·7t 320! Auto. ( 171) '70 Cofone. reblt Cllb a •72 K1rm1nn Ohle, red,
Swlv. chair, creden11. '1500· 11 -79 320! 4 apd. =) trena. good tlfee. 11150. CIHn body/Int, xln1
bkcaee. ssoo. 552-1281 ~, ,,.,, "" beer· WE PAY :g :r.: ~~: !ea31 145-05&0 mect1, IM60. 4t7-1et1 Ol~I Editor 4C deluxe In~ a llghta. •1200· TOP IDWll IO IJ2814 IPd. (854) '74 Toyot• CorOll• We-'72 8upet Bug, good
eleotrk: typewriter. m1ny 87 7077 I 81 320I Auto. (678) gon . .ir, 1utometlo. ao, mect1 oond, new redYill
utr1 l .. turH. Juat GrMt Buyl 14 ft Cet-•• llU Ull 81 5281 Auto. (811) 000 MIY mllee. 11950. a lhOC:lla. Prlold to .....
clHned a .. rvlced. r1n. AMF Alcon w/tnr. . AUi lllW !~ !~ !::.·(=)) Reollpll. 536-7278 a1250. Mick• 54M23& 1275. 8&7-3939 Perl. Gond. Relnbow ,... ...... .12 SUPAA. allvet w. bltdt _lfter __ 7_PfTI ____ _
Typewriter IBM correcting Slllel. 11900· "47-5939 NITUI/.... l.111 llMI lft m UI r.J tr1m, teether Int, tunl'oof, '78 Rebblt, am/fm C&M. S.lectrlc Ill, bleck n-O'O.V 23 s ... Boet, 3 big, 2480 Hlrbor Blvd, 3e70 N. c;'J Ave. Joa TOU• deluxe atereo, 1uto w/ Xk'tt ooncl. t2eOO
1950. "46-5115. EZ lo1d treller. power MA oos4~A ~!!At••l (r~ W_..!!! ... KT MAIDA. O\Wdrtw. 562-7178
Pl&w a Ortua H U ::;.. ~.o=.•c: _.. --_.--t _,..... """a 111.100: 844-9189 Yem tltl
GllbNnMn cu.tom aplnet ' • y . • I •• p • 4 . WI ''' LARGE SeL.ECTION OF ... -.. ... '78 Toyot• 8R5 Pk* Up, '15 Vofvo w~ 2.45DL. $;J,:C:0.~1>~•w . s~,~=~83~·==· ~= NEW~&BMWSI . l~~lttlU ll(UUtW. ~~f:::~d:2~ii~ ;~1~.cond.'.3200.
IJ!!!la1 a.Ma llH ~~0x,''iS1~~c:i Liii 11111 ... '78•C1llc1 GT, 55K. 1 1~~~r,:t.:'d,
Bnlnawlctl Pool Table•xl, 540-1077 24 Ml. VOLUMI 8ALE8 '80 RX7 GS. blk, 11lnt ownet, $3000. ~74 D W 3 piece 11111, convert• , E & r .... un Tri :I. l l7l '83 I Volvo 1gon Into ping pong teble . 18 Hobie Cit, nt nu. ell SERVIC L....-lnu cond, lo1ded. 11499. -~ Bleupunkt 1m/fm caM,
comH with 111 1ccH. llltru, end c:atgo box & 3e70 N. CMrry Ave. 496-2229 '73 Triumph Spitfire. white, mint $12,900.
1850. 848-5708 after trlller. "4200. 75e-t387 LONG BEACH '10 Mazd1 RX7. Cl11n 1500, tun trantp0rt9t1Qn. 7to-e215
8PM. 11' w..t t Trtr. 'tl'1~lN> :~~.~~~1~1pe ~o~~~-497-4368 -IUM--. -----1-lt--1
Pool Table, 11lnt cond. 1978 Sol Catamuan. WI 11f t Welcome
S1crlllce $350. Inc Ida Xlnt cond .. rMdy lo NII USED CARS & TRUCKS recs..lne '79 Muaa RX7. A/C 4epd. '7 2 TR 8 Mu 1 t Se 11, Come ~n ~ =:
llght & equipment. plue T.H.E triller! with COMEINORCALlFOR ConvenlentlyLOClted 75KSSOOO.MovtngJ~ ~&lctlb 12800 ~· I d
642-8905 ~~:~i.i~i.!~ nD ....alUL. & Competltlvely Priced 24th. Klten 548-7340. 496-3245 aft• e pm :of.~~~:.u~~dfaw~~d
Steel link w/J velve. tact: Jey. 751•811t M·F Cormler.o.utlo ~ ·7g RX7. 32,000 ml, 1lr, '77 TR1, 5 IPd. llt, Aid/ Vollew~
3000 K"· S90; Aeh Gen, ... ~• .. ~---~ rime, 1t1teo. seooo obo. tan Int, lharp, $3500. ..... •• XLS I II .,.,..,_,.,,.,.... -•-• C le1n. 850-0733 or 4N-4281.91191&wlcnda. •"'· w m na. '87 Eric 30 new dal 18211 BEACH BLVD. Sa ..... SIMoe-Leutng 850-7413 110/pr. 54&-1005 wheel r1r fn' ,_Int wi HUNTINGTON BEACH fO' CARVER --------Ytlbwll• HU 445 E. CoMt Hwy
n t Wl•/ltttMIUI ~t ~up.' 12uoo. pp. .., ... ,, Mt·lll1 IOJ.S·IOICE·ftv1W ~-~~ .... tHS ® ~~
MGA •l•eo -80 wllll 2-7755 Hlghelt cul'I lmmed. f()f ~..,._llD'4WOUICINll~ ,..._ ..,.,.,, ~
11300. 531-8748 ,.-.. 11 r::; vehlc:le, domeltlc or ~8L<C'I< t11o1tbo!O...., Tl( Miff WI ........... de '°"~-+-+---4 8 trick CHI rlCOrder, GrMI buyl Mult tell by ()feign. 5514286 '74 2002, •Int cond., AM/ Ul l&ft ,. l ~ r j ..... p
150. Reel to rMI t1p1 Junt t. Hulla overhlluled, lrula le .. ...... FM 011• .. 1unroof, nu thru our purchue and ~ A ~
d•ck, 1100. Both Ilk• new tr1mp. tre11eler. Uraule wiM Mii your·car tlrea, meoh1n. xlnl. leaM plenl. a '79 Recall Limited . ~-+-+--t---t new, exit cond. 844-4350 Multi-colored main, 2 eny mike, eny modeli 15900/0BO. 842-3433 M II.Dia · All power, ,_ Uree. lrn-
dya. Jib•, trlller, cat bo•. 12. Automot>ill conalgnment John •llTI .. MIMA'I mec. tMOO. 485-4313 lfltl 000 OBO. CALL: Bob brok•ege. 775-4()12 °' 70 2002 '9blt et1Q 12500 1301 Qud.;tr... . ..... 18utctl 'II Ettate Wgn, Welzel I t OCC dya 533-1535 494-81S7 . . NEWPORT BEACH .. ,. wtllte/ b1u ...... fully~ ill--·• 2111 5~904. 11191651-1076 d 21., I _.. t ""'1 lriftl "31 '79 BMW 5281, lo mt, 4dra, 111-1* ClllTY • · "' m • 11 new, New 12' Zodl1k, hHvy l .... /W 11H . ...1 b .. uuru1 driving m•-I 1 2 • O O 00 ,.2, B ,.'!.5•
duty, w/lota ol ••tru. 19 ft. WllklltJ. Bkle/blue -tf ~'l~gRI chine! SHOO/obo. 'ti E lllll IPI VILllWllEI 714-4~111 ; .....,.l...,
$1200. (213)821-3973 metll llM• JllCUIZI jet. "42 18&5 ._,. f.42·9200 Sllller, blue leether, lo ml ... ft.I. llT '85 Buldl Skytwll weqoo. , ••mt 456cublc~Olde.New -nge. •-1117 eng. Aaklng tt0,800. II RIBM1•-Heul 11 1 w 1~5 0 .
-.--..6 uphotetery end much '19 Ford F150, good cot)--110 850-11741 Volume SMee. 8:vtot &42-3379 ~ ~P~J:O:T =D • more. M ,395 obo. dltlon, nMdl clutch. '71 280Z. lo mt one ownr. '88 230, euto. betge w/bm end L.-lng 1-.8-2_B_u_lc_k_C_on_v_•_rf_R_ed_ 54~98~ (714) 536-7820 Secrltlc. t3700 firm Muat 1111. 15700 obo. Int, 2nd O'#Mf, all rec. 11711 8-dl Stvd.
1
wr.ttt top. Compect, 8 1--------J1uiat lp1 7111 751-1878, Tony 76M940 13900. 815-8938 eve: Huntington 8wt'I cyl, 11495, 847-1218 Iv
ZODIAC Mark II 35 HP _f: fl"Mb "35 .81 DATSUN2IOZX 84S-2375 dye (11_.\a ... .._ meg
--+-+--t--1 Ev\nrude, k~t In g1tege, 40 HP Merine dleell. ~ 5 apd, new cond, blue, '88 4-dr MB 280SE by .. ~.,..., 1-c._--•• -.... -----.-._-xlnt oond, fully equipped. built Fotd FectCHy. 18 Chevy C 10, 350, 1111 ,.,.. .,.. -~---_. ~· 82&-5994. 7111 873-0240 ,_. :s~~'59~ s . I 2 5 0 0 .• :110~:~~~25K 5 r~g~ °:'7' :1e1goo ~I: '72 vw BUG.:::;, end ,.. UllUT
.. .,_. . IUp A Itta •-'77 ~ ~ton. 8 cyl .. 8 11 ~~ c::,:. ~. c~ :.~~· 2~.Ad 757, :1nt9 !!w ~ ... AM/FM. 111.111111
CIHalc 18 L1petr1ke 20' 5ellboat Siie>. Newport bed, xlnt cond. Mike Wknd & 11191 141_1913. Rere ,87 MBZ 280SL. MUST SE.LL THIS WEE-of 1Me model. low mi. CentUf}' bav boet, 4 cyl, BMctl Off9r 142-1100 • KENO. S1775 080 age C1dlllac1 In Sou-Grey. 13500. 17M181. Mitt! 873-aeOe . 546-441 Etpn mdl. Lo ml. lmmec:. Mt-1237 thetn c.tfornlll See 119 1967 20tt Slbre Cr1ft FIG Boe1 e11p1 evalllble. New-'~!~:C:o'::' ~~j '79 2IOZX, Alklng 17500. S 1 7 • 5 O O I o b o · p p todeyl
cebln cn111«, held, gel-port Beech 25'-30'-35' oond. Oood WOfk trud<. Good COf\d. CU.t. pelnt 84s-5901 '81 Jene. blue, 14K ml, 111111
ley, 120 HP MetcrufMr Clll 842~ Mak• offW "42_,100 low ml. Hurry to Hll. '72 300SEL 4.5. le11her fuel lnJ. etlQ, front ... ,
110, VHF, 0 /8, luN can-· 7141790-1237 Int. llr, 128,000 ml. 110, ahMplkln NII covera,l I• LAI
vH, all 11l1ty equip .. Newport 181e. Up to 40 ft . '71 Deteun P.U. w/lhell, •73 2401, autometlo, lie, 600. 979-7235 ch11p to own & run I 2tOO H1fbof BNd.
trailer lnc:t. "4995 onet. I 15~873 -8338 or 1n¥i. juet rblt, newly <lflllOI w/black Int. new MB 19 Turbo DI-I. 50 ~erm1ny '1 d1rllngl COSTA MESA ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~5~1-~1~~~·~ft~1t~5pm~·~=I 84~ pented St~~OBO. car~~~con~~ gel t1nk, 1l1te grey, 17~/~. &•l-1111 -flll '71 Sklpjack llb. New Pvt dOClt w/80' llllp, ~ 860-02.58 •ft · r1cord1 avell. 13500. 111ther. 1pec111 r1dlo. 778-4012 Of 633-l535 • free .. ,.. am ,.,...... M2S llhctlluMU eno Cll'lVU 19000. tie, good loc. Aleo 30 . '71 CHEVY LUV 754-4438 121,500. Oya 720-0344: '89 Yeti reblt eng, 11150. -.• -0-0-1.-.-.-l -F-l•-.-,-w-o_o_d
Fr• to good hm, yno *911 WEii• 11111 .. 548-ilsoo elde tie. Fred, 720-7381, A.JC, camper, perf. cond. '82 Mulma, lo ml, IMUme E'Vl/Wknda, 759-1298 962-8138 Btoughlrn, loeded, ,_
bf'Md 4 pc 11111~ wt, -10 llYI l WAY dya $3200I~. 14s-5347 lo 1e1u p1ymenta. '75 MBZ 450 SEL. Blldl. '78 Bue. aome c1mplng • n g & t 1r •1 · :::;:'8f~~· appreo .. 720-0973 : 3
1f00
5c,, ":: = 13, Zodl•c 40 horH Went. Nwpt H•rbor pvt ·eo Toyot• Pick Up SR5, 5 Lo1dld. Wht/blue 111-eunrool. 111oya, cauett'e, eoc.a M800 obo In 2 S 1 3 • 5 O O I O B 0 . 548-5958 111 SPM · mercury eng' Hlghlwlder allp for 30' 11llbo11, epd, 11r lie. cuatom lhell iour. 644-9272 extr• nloe. $12,750. Ph: ..-1.' Klrit 7-1 l .,.,, Of 944-5698, 87~70.
AKC Codt• SPMllel, 2 yr Obi bed, $20, oouch, 120, • .._ ..;i.. • t •2500 qulllty IOCll cpl wtll not w/uph ped. boot, ohrm nat .75 B2 tO H lch-873-n 11 Ive me 11 1 2 -11 pm '80 AMtwood Broughlm \_ old male frM to gooCI dinette 115 refrlQ 125 1 24" n-log w/tr1y S50 tr .. -1""1 ex ra . • dlaturb Owner. Need rt--at-bum--. em/ ..,. eun · • S52 1355 oo 1 D'EI · hm. &42-4027 •ft 8 pm , . 16' ' 2 am:U-., .. ""'"'• '50 l OBO. Day 875· 1978. ahore pwr, occ. frHll ,,:,;-.wc ...... mlrro~ 30K beck. A/C, F/M, ~-'72 MBZ 220. Alo. em/fm, -' 15,0 I'll ' eg1nt. r~.~l~~~~t c'o~:: S35. 646-7889..,.... 846-5707 Uk tor Tony wet• S.CS-21145 rntti. xlnt cond SM00 te. Xlnt oond. S2495, new tlree. 20mpg, comp 'II .. , .-..f, ... '. 110,900. 9"-M21 c:::: r~~~g.1~~ ~~u~· 75t-489t ROMnthll Romencie pet-24' ....... WANT~D the UM of en oft 552.0105 ltt 5. . . 497-3420 ;;oo~:2~ on blue. I I I., I 2 4 I I •~ 1313
854 Center St. #3, C.M. Dinette Mt. pd $600, Mii tern. 1100. 751-2858 Open model, 225 omc. lhor• moortna In Nwpt '81vwPlcltup,28,000ml. Fiat 1113 ,.._.lM ID K f1llT1
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'--'--aa•• $300. 87S-1479 deya, 851-1079 -StOOO. 873-0240 H~. 875-775e -good cond. 14100. •73 124 Spt Cpe, reblt *llZ 'll 211 '* ' ~ --· · G KS____. 846-2278 -Mint cond. l'9blt. nu M~ '13 Sqbk. new tlr•. new We ~ • good Mlec-
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_ _. 7 1011. olf-wht, good P1tlo & HenglnQ Plant• 38 RAND BAN '""""'· ~~~~~·ft'!'..": che llna brn/ten A/C b1tt., reblt eng, HOO. tlon of NEW & USED
t.. ,._ea?7t33 oond $75. 55.._5020 $5 10 S25. ~24 twin dteaal, loeded. T ti fau .... °' fla~. 1700. 873-5JSe Becker' atereo is9oo' ~ Cflew*91
New bdrm M1. s 150. New H.U.0 .0 .L.E. wall hung ~8!'~~~ ~.~ .c;: rauprta .. '71 Dodge Tr•d•amen firm pp Clll P1ula o; '79 Dal Rlbbtt dlx ed .••• ':ONNEll
r ·~'VROLET **I BUY** couch, s100. Dlnett• Mt. tube dellc $75. Deek & 17~54• _ ,75-0924 !ml!! •11 v-.. good oonct. 11000. ...... 1125 Bob M/F, e-s 49&-8500 et.-.o. 4-dr. eu•. tentc.I
150. Refrlg, ne1r new, cheat of dr1wera 175. C 8 Blk ,,. &46-6130 •79 Accord LX allver .,_ Mla..-u.1.a tt•T 231< ml, 14900/080.
... s t50 Coffee a e nd 540-8248 18' boet, Veneon tttr, 50 uatom .. ch •. " ' ' ............. "' 851-3922 I RWE I l•blH, $50 HI. Mlac. hp .-:. atan motOf, Ill apHd, hend breltea. &adtw tomatlc, lie. am/fm ca-All< about our new tow '73 WESTPHALIA
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MASTERS AUCTio.. , lempa. $5 .._All In xlnt LmO lffll ~ t1nk1. 11950. 1200. 494-5317 ~ MH Wl1•. $4000. 494-5857 111 &.P.I. N-eng. clutctl. tlrM. t• MM 111-Mtl cond. Must Mil for beet 1'n lln 11at .-,. 24 Schwinn &iper Sport i.. '76 Honda Civic, gr111 Flnendno Av.ileble on uphol. Elec refrlg. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji~
Ru1t Flor11 Sofa, 8'' on.a. 846-1449 MATTR~ SETS: 11 n I&~ dlll yellow 10 IPMd w/ I a.&lmlll tr• nap or t It Ion . Selected 1983 modelll S3000. 7eo-oe35 '74 alWlla L..aiguni>S/S.
HI>-I 200
~. 1250 King bed w/hdbrd, 1160. S1v• 50% to 1715% odn Volvo 110. xlnl. 13000 m11chlng chlld car~ 1Ml 91 1tlll 11500/080. 751-2402 Cell NOW for detlllll ,..., ..,_ ~"'t ,.._ 41,800 mllea. Loeded, .. ~5& 9 dwr dreuer. $85. NEW top qu11 ty be obo e73-4841 8715-2051 new tne S115. 887 .... _. Extr• cl11n end good '81 CMc:. lo mllee. axtr11, ""' .....,,, new _.. • ~-. powet. Exciellent cond~
NEW MATTRESS SETS: LovH .. t, 175. DHk. ~.·. ~~~~.~. 25, .,~-S• .. lt""". l/b, Uni Cyc:te f°' lllile. gOOd p11n1 . A great lnvelt· lmm1c. Mull .. crlllce. ~~'C:y". ~~rllt~c.~ntt&o~ tlOn. Buc*M llatl. new I 5 0. B • 1 t o 11•r1 . ,_, -•.., ""•' _.. ~1"'--.....-oond sso. 875--0558 mentl Prl. pty. Aaklng M600/oC>o. 979-1883 ,.,.1-3912 tlrll, brelc-. Dek:o bet-T\1111 R seo, tul llze 165. 840·8858 LIIV• mH-95; II.Ill ... 1711.95. SIW '79. V-8, 2215, l/o, Volvo, '8900; ITMllt ... 10 IP--I t ahoctl & "* au... 1105, King 1125. aege. even more on King a radio, w/1 flth, bait eye, Cul..,. NH precl•t•I Cell (714) 'll ~ .......... '10 vw van. penel, ,_ 9~ .:...8:'daya: N«i'f 150-5&32 Queen Mta. FrM ~-blmlnl, 1/t1bl, hMd w/ -541-21118 weekend• & Gr .. 1 oond. Sll"'/blk body MUST
c.tll"on brMkfHt NI, Trp dre1Mr w/mlrror, 5 ery. Cell 751-4391 and m-p,lleepe4,trlller.full 'II WW..... evening• or (714) lnt,5epd,$3500/ol)o. ;'EtL~OOn2:1ae.c I :nyt1me..-erlda.
42 .. round ~111 w/4 dwf cheat. queen hdb<d, uk for apeci.J bonua. cover, clHn, 119,500 . POP TOP, cuetom ln1• ~1129 weekdaya. 963-e313 87~180 •I . 1275. 8 dwr dreeaer w/ ...... 2•5 _,.II pm I h II t 11.11 ..... BUG -..... _..., '81 CMvett• met blue oNlra. wtlt "' ...... nit• 1t1nd, 150. 4 !llt. SMITH CORONA pof11ble ,......., " •n v . ~ o; 'r r .•c . :•2c: ~i . 'II _,. .. .W, ·n CIVIC WAGON :;;:;:::....---~---"'--~bber. 'tlr•: ~ ;1 klauy Hit covera, 4
11200 n-. 1250 obo. c hra, 140. Crpt, ten, electrle typewriter, d"'1t 19' Fantuy, need• work. 7141875-11306 Reblt q ; new top ~t Of'Mt body,~ rnecn. '75 Midget, .... tfl1111 40, '"91de. wry dependable. apd. preaoua llttle gu 857-119t 12x12, sas. 10 IP. 175. & llghl blue Ilk• new 12500 obo. 873-7415 or a tlree. i&tt& «'trlde work . 11100/obo. 000 ml.,,_ peint, BBS IUOO/obo. 984•1393 .._., 12"400. 77S..012,
SICle l>Y Sid• Ref rig•. 842-4582 $175. 8&7-3939 tee-112.ta • ...__&el/ . &.... ...... ~ ,.7• 1 ... ,.5., 173-3388 type rim•. new tlrea, •ft. 8 a wknda. 533-1US
__..,.. '"" .,..., v ...-... Weber C1rb•. Cuatom ------....,...,,....,,.--1--,...-------:-
1 white, 1225. Twin Bed New Couch & LOveMll. Deluxe brUI celllng fan II' ..... ...... ........ Mll 9111 a1 .. Ex~ult, Herd-top, Ind '87 vw BUG CL.A8SIC '13 Ce6ebftty, fully loeded. ~IJ. DelkCotf.:a:~b~ Cont1mporery, pretty (new). wooi,t /cene Loeded. Steble per1ner Honde, •79, 750 F, very Conver11ble, '78 Cadlftlill tN>rel A StMI et 13500. >Ont oond, ,_ Pllnt. tS, 110,000/obo. -.., HrthtonH . 1350/both bladea.~htalnctWM ..med DodledlnNew-s 500 846-4211 El o d Wht!Wht 842-7272or134-3270, 000 ml reblt 1 ng. 644-IS&ee,8~70. 751-41874 Of 953-&4e7. U£..?427 I 4 0 tr.Et a k e I 13 0 . 11'000 ,...,..,,..,,. deen. 1 . ore o , , ~ .. I •• $....,50/-'-1-,_,,.,. :=r_ 130-0980 pof1. . .....,.. -75 Y ~ 350RO Cate Aid leltfler. All extru, -« ... wy .. ,. "''· """""'"" I 'll ......
King IZ Weterbed. aerth 8' IOfe. neutrel color. xlnt 15 HP Johnaon with 14" blk•.,,, -a ·........ FUii lntec. IO mllee, Im-1117 wtcdy ell, eriytlml wtcnd . tonee, t>eeut. mirrored oond 1100 obo 2 Dan-9/18 rebOnd carJ)91 ped. Bolt & Trell« Ilk.Alai • ....; = _. ... m.90Ulete. 110,950 o.y.. Ptr1tM 1980 "-bbft eonv.n .. '°' Estate. 548-2671
tlllcH• hdtlrd, chHt lltl chllrl, 125 e.. Otto-Rolla only. ll.35 eq. ~· cond. 11500/0EfO. _.,.,, 819-748-1139, •11•• I 'et 912 T1rg1, onty 300 ml. new top a tlral, • • .,.... HU ~d:J... •.!,.•.cttk ~~~~t men. 4, ICfc>ee. round, 752.etoe 813-1728 '81 Hondl XL.5008. Xln1 wtlnde 819-747-3451 rnede, xlnt cond, Ill r• rnege. xJrrt oond .. te,000 ;---73 Ch 1 N 1 -•-• ,,_ · .,.....,, 115 &42 7082 s cond. M1ny extr11. 6 _ oorda, St 1,000/Flrm. •-. 1-.....,. rye er ewpor •
M0-48t2 Tom. . • sc•uH.LET -I -·-1111.11&.T 11525. Cll 1131-9197 --4"•-7224 '""' _.......... OllMom, '800. 2~-h~:: ... 'eett~~-~&Aoom~.t.13'38020.; Al\IUllNSWERS :~.,L~·~~!'!~, .. •7• K1w11akl KZ200. ... . 79 Rebtllt, AM/FM etereo "4-t714 lft• &pn . .,._., ,_.. ~-... -· ,..,._,,., ..... _.,......_.. .. i==------'•'•"• '89 1112 Terg1. Mint c:.., ldnt oonct .. 13595. ,.. t~ll
1 .. •Int cond. 1226 ... 855-6480 ~ oonct. 7000 rntlel. tt78 Audi Fox. JClnt oonct Cond~ l'M>tt ~ne. • o y, 8 8 2-19 t 9: • v a ~~-~~---... :!-T IDl-e limp, llke new, Sold Mehogeny end Aft-f'tanty _ Ex8" '58 <>--.~ Expr911 31'. 175 obo. Cll 8~7 euto, AC, eurvf, AM/FM loy1, 1l1tl'l't. I 0,000. 731-ea& 83 Flklon Rendlero. good
•25. 5 lamp ah•dH, ael Sw1gterty dining Follo -Puddle Twin 2113 1• Xlnt Cond.. °' 72CMM6t atereo 0111, 13,500 780-&582 '85 Ven Of1g rebfl eng. & co 11 d , run a good.
15·1 15. 848-0423 •ft t1bl• & 8 high backed EAT tT EaUt• nHd• c uh. .... ..... llM 080. 54&-e588 ·91 1128. dlt brown/ten, Irena. 'reoeipta. 113&0. $1300/080 548-3147
-che lre 11200• Solld Sound r..an""'· er-1 7 9 5 o OB o · ~ 101ded: 111ther, elec ..... ,. ....,,.. °' ~ .....,.. · · _ .... -•~ 7 ..... :..,.,. fet-714/481-2229 For Rent. 20· Motor ... llll ........ ........ M1hog1ny C1pteln1 --....,,. .. ,..,, anrl. c:aae.. n.w Pro tlr• •78 Fleet Ghia. 1 7~•·Jr<'QOnd·1 Deak end Chelr, S350 tentna.ltontymlk•you ·n 23 ft MAKO 235 hip Home, very c lun. &meg1.1owner.1rnmac. ,......,...... • OWM,
. 931-e7 Slate Pool T1ble, $250 fat when you EAT IT. Jollnaon. New belt link, 973-5133 ~~ UIS.HO. 731-8975 4 ..,..cl, llroond. Stereo ~~"':rr ~·
Sof1, loveM•t. chelr a Enallth Geme Tlble enc IBM M11Ttory typewriter rlCllo, outrtooere. oown. pp want• Motor Home .. ~-~ wtldyl calMtte. '4680
ottom1n, never uHd. 4clleh,1275; Englllh 9 duel pltc:tt c/a, tge ~,,.: extru. Trllitlr. X1nt oond. AHdy to buy. Hev• s ... ...-,l..M96n0 .89 912 Cpe, cl .. n, 1 ~856 •n LTO W1gon, cleen,
eetttltonee, coat 1800. Blacll Vinyl Couch, xln ege. Good~. StlOO, 114,500/obo 873-9003 Clltt. 21M20-781g ....... ownr. 10011 cer, •apd, .79 Conv. VW. Black & !Oadad. 11800. a1-IM4
... $2&6. (213182~ cond .. s25o: 494-lOSt 752-0234 °' 1188-7343 or 842-7836 •RV RENTALS'* ...._., em/Im. 17500. 842-7188 yellow. 1m/fm cue, '71 Pinto HB, JClnt In/out,
01n1nQ rm wt, Ill wood, 8 Hide-bed couch, earlh 10' Y1ohl Doraal, 1924 AH atzea trom l1NM. llVllT•Y mage. xlnt cond. 15200, euto, pa, am. tier, bdl.ta..
o II r 1 , Ir Q tab I• tone, $05. Brwn ohr llST SELL U lleglnee, unlqlle mlho-Cell 720-0771 * '71 3_2~.!i& euto., low 63t.eeot Nu dllC bttca, rad. a AV
S3e0/0BO. 751-4221 ottom•n $45. Xlnt 2 Ft BR"SS C"NNON f.•ny & leek, formerly m11aa (1BUH2') .. i-• ,,.,. ..... :N --· ........t belt. Auna fine. 12295. • ....,. ....... , " " .. tur--' In Arohltec:tuet l "'I ..,.. * •79' "'"""' • -_. 'II ...... 1•• ""-... 1 • ·--"""""' 841-1551 • 8C)ld ()elk dining table & 4 .....,..,..,., evw 1360· EMERALDS le M' -!.. !!!! ,,_.,, .. ..,.._., eun Al rnodele & moet ooiote ...-... ... nu r1alel lree. I 1500 c e pt. chalra. 1400. SHIP LANTERNS 185; Olgeat. Twin dleHI•. Apechefoktlngtr....,,Jtlnt "°°!· (547WAO) 1n llOdCI c.n or ltop by ltftr re1t1ttr••· nrm. tel-9028 1'·~1~t~M~u1_t_a_n_o_c=-o-nv_•_r"'.""t.
l40-at1 540-eeat good meoh oond. Tax cond m1ny •11tru * Tf 320!: 4 epd., laW nowt W•lt• wltll •rew1 ·ea'"'-. rebfl --., nut• N1C, ldnt oond. "4200.
•n•fll• ' flna~~ng 122001obo ee2.ooui mlleL ~77YNfl um..,._ a.....&a.. =--=· & ;;-......... ~ ....,, 120-1111. Der*'f eM: buft91. 8 ~ Exctualve M1~e l1l1nd Iv I 11 . I t I & , 0 • 9111 . * '19 :ast: 4 tP<S., 10eO--,_... ·•----------
--& 2 Ifs. Sotld wood GoklMembel...Mt>.11500 e1N20-7778 ed.(111U>Cfl) 1 2t2&Httb0t81Yd. Mllfl... 1...., ult cond, 12100.1111 MU9t•no. 4 cyt, 4
.-. ""6'2·7901 value, ,... plld. 1 1000. aa· JeflrlH rH dy ,0, TraUtn, T1lftl p * •to 320!; 6 'Pd .. ain COITA MUA ................. 1 lM. 645-0let 9')d. S15QO.
8<* lede-"" .,...,._ G It Golobel nu Ph: 491-4182 eumtnet ftlNnG & Cet• pp 1 t buy T a¥11 rool. (tAHV203) I~ _ __, -' •71Bue,111Ctt oond. 12700. ..O-a9 8" epm.
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2 ~ '°' both. e..l-2HO. ~. t:e,..,.. ~ tet>te a Werdt(lt)e dOOfa. Open-llna, lffoO. Ml40t• tra~:'. 1 A:edy to' Buy * '10 5211; auto., low Jult 2 "*""* eouth of ftr wt ........... 5"-5960.....,.-.. ·11 ~ IOUlf'E
,..... Sta. HldMbed 8f1 ~ ~ 1 X 12' lncMlal trect JI ft t 111,.,. 543-tMO ~ (~~o .. loed-the~ Diego Frwy. 1~ '82 vw VAN, new rbll t pw. wgn. ate. Pl. pb,
EXECUTIVE DESK MO. P~llrnp ~ 6· 14~ T tbO cS-.. AbF Lo-21' tHI Ken•lllll full ed.'118T111) Rere H Jeguar XKI ~ 1IOOc:c, 8'nQle We ber. ~to' aoo:44~4W9tt, Rllrl llfTICll ••v pair..... .... • 4 ..._ M tter E u ' ' • .. 200 • 1 ........ "'--o ...-... Ao1d1ter conv1rtlble, --099 ...,_ """-•• loio. I 8wtv. oh~ credenza, etool• MUlt ....... , ....,, O• "'-0 • ran,• 2 r1dlot, tow~. Mtfl, l*up "-· -'* '""""'•., _.. .• _,.. 1 1 cond wire whla ....,,.... • ,.......-.....,---,.~-'"!""'.'--=-~ .._. . 8&2·1281 oner ...._ Moving ""' tox14 ttrae mounted on plenk 1 It•. e'-etlng, ob o . 9 5 3 -o 9 t 9 . ed. (IOOI010I • n 'Int. wtlt t • good. OrM1 ml l OOod '70 Foret ~. Nft
.... •u• weekend Call before whit• 5 lubg rim a . muon' inor•. 1 22.000 142..eo&t. * ·11 rat;• epct,. io.d-:"'9k~/bll 11'2 5o'f· • .,. t1tlC Mlt ~ ... cond . 11200/ be\, ~~~*5.Cal -t em A• ft er 1 pm t 2 2 8 I b •It off e r , firm. t4' Ootct9n Faloon-'71 8C act.,UOOf't4tl a ~ , , Oll)ttonel. t tt ,ll00/080. l4&-520I .._
9'al1•nJ::up: couch, ei1-t1oe 145 5• 179-"40 wk~ Awnlnal. AIC twn ~ * a1 UOI: i .S.. eun 111-Wll tm SMC or IC tn ""•e"='1"='1ug--,ca."'"a-a""'d-C011~1d~--t •• ~ °'11 °""' :::.:: • :c:::.t~ ented 1.-d radwoOd,.. .,.... opt1, like nn SHOO. :'!;\1~0 Ml -MllAlll treele. OJI 557-080, DOOd. ~. 11...0. oal red, ale...,.,,_._:
""" I' etet90 ~ GARAGE SALL MMJ • cuat. ponlbl9. Aee90n-11 ft open bO'lf flllh/ekl. 167-3211 '°"· (10c'iii11) .. w. M¥e or.no-eount-wee .. 121 l41-4m • .,,. Obo tn-1111
droP •••' din. teble: aoned IWMI toola. • ~..!1good oondltlOn. 140 l\/p 0 /8. OeepJ~5 '* ·~ 8-uo., loed-Y'• "i~::!:'11°a' •rn. H•. tunroof, air., 7t vw Coft~•rt, atnt '71 Fft Onn Tartno... ~ ~ din. eerv. IOr t. pl11~ ... I/Sun t-1. -t, l'lrl MIW1. loaded. • ad, (1EJM741 u.d •eo. Yllow wtblC lntr. cond,, grmt Qrlld gift. 'gon, UK IN., AM/At,
'1'00 UMI all! 131-M47 1781 Tuecln Awe.. Coetl For W. bait In hOfM owe ~1S2o CIOMd t0xh7ft ,,.,,.,. * 'M 1aot: l -4. io. _.. ... UI::. XJ8 MIOO, 6454S78 taeoo. M5-JM1 ettont. de p e ndable
,._..... 2 Po~ MIN. Conw "°°"'Itel hO\l ... ere•, .,.reonel 12. Trotlft ~ Jdnt wltl'I 100111n1 doora. mlleL (1lOWMI) ~~ ••m L:::b llft ,79 " bbl •l"t OOftd ~=· oet 1171 "'111. 'i100:' =:. ~ -• TUltln. ewe a rnuttt vttamtn a conct Trede OK. IH 141·2'4&1•8S1-2t2t 11141'1 -'' !!!!!!!!! ---auo310bo·~ '~~-'°--=--=--:---
:: •.~·11ar~02 ~~1l:i HO.'i5N564 ' -~=,,,.. ~~.,..:t· ULMfll .,. vw o·.1. "•bblt. ..,~..._..~.::.,:,.: -.... • .,.; e:.:i:•-=:.•::~ r,'~;,~.,~1or. c.u ..,..,.. 9.91 ~-=~~~J:diffiP~'mt =.:i.• ""-~ad ~ .... In Ill llfttl~ d~ 3~~round ....... ~~~NIT~'J:: knG ~w ,OtOIMlmMM fi!!!JL.' (3t-t0 n\pO), ti "'o ''JI M IH~I 1eod ctn• 1 ~ ~ 111 trip tlcketl to Hewell aa.i • ....,. •-AOTlON •.,_/Cm tape . O, "' • _, """ & ..... Clll'lr lt!OI. • ~ 0 10' 1 · _,. _., .,.. '-* ~ eel °" 1o.cla4 or,..,..... Mftll. • -blllOOf'llll.UOO-.Cll HO. ell e...,..1 . 811t ·21. 240 ••· 11 ft. tto1119 ~ wlltl • The prtoe of "eme.,. '910l to a -'"' •••• e ttr e o •
..,...., 17W208. 141-4409 .,.._, eellbOll. lfll ,_. ---..,_... ctelf-f.ofl tl'le 0...... ~ ~= '11 VW IU.Jef 1 .. ue l1HOIO•O. 4 .... 714t .I. I ... o.~. "Olll Utl• HO ..... '=' & ~ ~ WI In tl'le .... -...... ...... .......T. n-Qlnn. '"" '"'' " ....... Kl...._ bedroom NI, 546-7119 or'h or -.,._, lid .._..... OOlulnrtl ,._.. t41-tt11 ,_ ._ .. ".,..,, MUtt ~~--:::-::,:----:::= .r...., .... b• •'••· vow~ Oflfr M.oo can (714, '41 .. H3 or lloeanot.,..."• .._. 1110%0"0· 111-11 I I!• 81 ·~1411 *eod. HIO • .,....,.140IHI '7.2CIU" ..... ~ <2ta>•••o a •tor _..,........... ·-·· ..... -1 .. -.. ---'" MJI ~ ,,.... 1111 • .,. tMi. tr•n•,., .,.._, nne.M Miii • w..rM W... 'Mle4 • ~ ~ 11~ iiUil1 t._, .a.mt ·~ • 11 4"'*· •• 0~~.,f!Ot ctlnlitO tOI' 0"9'fr truo• rear Cel 147 dll '71. HlnOad .,_..., ... tDr.,.. Of '"°"'"'' ~t at Of l~t. tlfllt e\ .......... ~ ~ ~· ~~*' PIOOl.TMU ......... tll. l40-20U, .. ~. kitlon 0011trol lll••* ~.,........,._, ...., .. _...~ pL-u-.... .. Me= --~ • _,,,. -. -... _ 1 4'J1T ~~wood t12.ol47 meet, rurl b, exu... ---....... ..... Ot ..., , ,.._.. 01....,._. DAfl'" fJlle• Cl...ift9' --1 , ---...__, -~ 8HK. 1 ~ -·-Mii. .... , ' ...... .. • ,,.,, --!!'!-....... a;.-J: ...-·.,;;----.,-~~-=----:~• -i Wll """WIW. .... ,._,,~.-.IO'~ w/+clft .,._ ~':~'r';!l'~,.::; .. .:..-='• 9 ::·.a.: ..... c:r:.r::'...:.: :::-...-.·.;;;-'W.. .......... v-..,.. • laDC* llllr'I IWtlr'*'ll1'1eCJiil1,... .._,.....,_ta.000. otMrMM ••u8fllM llJ Qa111sad M-Vflor .... Cl a f M-v..tr • ,...... eta a fM a--. •'t11 .. tM eor llOO lnft. •t.mT lot ~ML 17M7.Q .. ........ ,_. ,_..
The president gets tough
with Congress and says
hp'll veto any tax hike.
S1orl•• on Page A3.
Lag n•'• not kidding
about nylon freeway,
llY 8!!!9 WTC•U. or .. .._,..._ . .
Thi notion of eektnQ alfreeco attltt thr11to to orMt4t •
nylon fr•wey lhrOugh Laguna Canyon ... ortofnelty IUQOMted
lnjMt.
.But TUeld111 nlghl, the Uiguna 8..ch Ctty OouncH ~the
tdee totM Mftoue thought, then O..det'M tte atty man1ger to fire
off a letter to th• larger-than-art •t1••1 atklng for hi• Mlletanoe. .
The oounoll wantl to lttuetrat• the wktth, height Ind mue
Of the propOMd SM .to.quln Hiiie Tr~ Oon1d0r u It
would p.-through the olty't 8ycarnor9 Hiiie percel, about a ml .. north of the lntenectlon of UigUna Canyon and El Toro
r*!ounoll member• have gone on record oppo.lng the
'propoeec:t 14'-mlle frMWay, which woutd Nn from Corona del
t Mar to San-Jun· Capletrano, blMCtlng th• city'• 522-acre
Sycamore Hiiie property. •
(See NYLON, P ... Al) ·
;
County realizing
driving anJbition?
May soon be car capital
By KAREN E. U.EIN Mtlle 0.-, "9t ...,.
lf current growth patterns peraiat, Oran,ge
County 90me day will be the car capital of the
nation, experts predict.
And with that distinction will undoubtedly
come more.and more traffic, they say, but
not nee ere deaths.
Rece sties from the California
Department of Motor Vehicles show that, just as
you expected, the Golden State has more can
than anybody -13,292,130 on the books for
1982, to be exact. And Califomiant drove 16~.
(See. COUNTY. Pa1e Al)
I THI ORAIGI COAST COAST IDITIDI
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Hot times
lie ahead
for Coast
By STEVE MITCHELL
Mho.9JNotlWt
It was hot today, it'll be hot
Thuraday and Friday and, most
likely, it'll be hot all weekend
long.
The mercury was expected to
top the 90-degree mark in inland
Orange C.Ounty for the second
day in a row today, with National
Weather Service forecasters
saying it will be only a degree or
two cooler Thursday.
The heated air prompted
Orange C.Ounty Fire Department
officials to issue a red flag
warning for brush fires in high-
risk areas of the county.
• Department spokesman Jeff
Taylor said a red flag alert may
be issued late today as strong
winds and high temperatures
continue.
smog season is more than a
month old, but AQMD official.a
say it's been one of the clearest
on record.
"We've gone deeper into this
year without a smog alert than
any other year 1 can remember,
and I've been here for 17 years/'
Birakoe said.
He said the extended rainy
season, as well as controls on
(See HEAT, Paie A!)
Job bank
Proposed
for Mesa
By JODI CADENHEAD Mlheo.9JNot...,.
Orange Count y firefighters come to the aid of "victims" injured in a staged traiP wreck· ~ .... "'°"°.., Lee .,.,,.
The alert would send
firefighters and inspectors to
patrol wilderness and
undeveloped areas, looking for
fires.
A high pressure ridge off the
coast sparked the sea.son's first
Santa Ana winds, and Tuesday's
temperatures were just four
degrees shy of a record 96
degrees recorded in Los Angeles
May 17, 1982.
Costa Mesa community
leader Jean Forbath has
proposed Ufing some new
federal funding to eet up a job
bank to help unemployed County learns I rom 'disaster' • people find work.
Under the ao-<:alled "Jobs
Bill" sign ed by President
Reaaan in March, Costa Mesa
would be eligible to receive
f328 ,000 in funding by
December.'
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
MtlleD.-,Notl..,.
There was a major train
wreck at the Orange C.Ounty
International Raceway near
Irvine Tuesday, involving 100
v1ctims.
The U .S . Marine s,
California Highway Patrol,
county sherifrs deputies and
firefighters, Irvine police, six
ambulance COlflpanies, eight
hospitals •and Orange C.Ounty
Transit District buses took
part in the massive reecue and
treatment efforts.
Fortunately, the "accident''
was only a drill, part of a
i Bullet • • train noise
'would he muffled'
By GLENN SCOTT O('tlleo.9JNotlWf
A high-speed bullet train
would peas through Irvine In an
elght-foot-deep trench meant to
muffle noiae, promoters of the
propoeed system promiaed Irvine
residents Tuesday night.
The trench would be
excav.ated through most of Irvine
and Tustin, said Lawrence
GU.On, president of spoNOrlng
Amerlcan High Speed Rall C.Orp.
It would Include room for
lowering the existing Santa Fe
Railway tracka, which Gilson
noted has been a city goal for
~veral years.
Speaking at an Irvine City
Council study session -in a hot
and stuffy meeting room at
Deerfield Elementary School -
Gilaon said feasibility studies on
lowering the tracks were
finished only last week.
His promile to foot the bill for
the multi-million dollar trench
project is the firat public works
oommitment made 10 far L" any
community4" along the propoled
Los Angel~-to-San DieJto line
(See BULLET, Pa1e A!)
countywide mass casualty test
designed to determine how
local health and aafety staffs
would cope If three serious
incidents o cc urred
siinultan~y.
In addition to the train
wreck (staged with buses), a
high-rise f lre was simulated
in Orange, and a shooting and
hostage crlail was enacted in
Buena.Park.
''The preliminary
indications are that this was a
good exerciae," said county
spokesman John Bushman.
He said the resu I ts of
(~ DISASTER, Paae A!)
\.
f
---L_~
I
D.-,"9t9Wtl'tlo4e
Bullet train proponent Kent Olson explains plans
to Irvine City Coubcil.
So far, the winds have kept
the smog at bay, but Jim Birakoe,
deputy executive officer of the
South Coast Air Quality
Management District, predicts
some unhealthful air beginning
Thuraday -especially in the Los
Angeles basin area.
S-outhern California's spring
Forbath, who started a
volunteer organization called
Share Our Selves to help the
poor, urged the Oty c.ouncil
(Sff JOBS, Pa1e A%)
NB tap water has
'pool level' chlorine
Officials say it's 'not unusual'
By STEVE MARBLE
Otho.9J"'9t .....
Chlorine at swimming pool
levels has been discovered in
Newport Beach drinking water
but city water quality authorities
report the amount of chlorine is
neither high nor unusual.
The chlorine level, which has
been measured at one part per
million in areas of the beach dty,
wu brought into question when
a C.Orona del Mar pool supply
company owner wu trying out a
chlorine test kit.
The ldt repeatedly showed city
tap water registering c hlorine
levels equally the amount of
chlorine commonly used to
sustain a swimming pool.
Peter Antista, a city water
quality expert, said the city
strives to keep chlorine levela
b~tween .2 and .8 parts per
million but that levela 90metlmea
are h18her.
Mlcnael Wehner, a health
sped.aliat with Oran8e County'•
Olvlaion of Environmental
(See WATER, Pa1e A!)
--INSIDE-------.. --------------. --lllDEX-
Croi ... nte, a loqt•me r a.orite
l.n Franee, are now the new
toalt of Ameriean1. A1
tandwie.Me, they are a qalek
-d euy aaewer to
epa.r-ol-tlM-moment meale. For
redpee, aee P .. e DI.
Good health
Take a look at 10me
of the latest
denlopmenh in
meclieal reteareh in
• 1pecial cli1eet or
the latest health
new1. Page AS.
Airing out
In hie utual jocula11
manner, Aady
Rooa~ takes
reaclen behind the
teeDff at a modern
airport to look at
people who own
planet. Page A6.
No stereotype
A homoaexual reader pleach
with Ann l,aaden to make it
perf'ectly clear that not all ga71
I it into one cut-iron mold u
the myth amon1 many 1trai8)1t•
would have it. Page 82.
In the final part or the Daily
Pilot'• 1peeial 1erie1 on rape,
1tarr writer Jodi Cadeahead
talb to p1ychol.,.t111, who
admit they know very Huie
aboat the nplat -ex.cept th••
he it a walldaa time-bomb
.ready IO ~xplocle. r ... Bl.
Irvine High ba1 it1
CIF buebalJ
intention• rully
detined alter
topping ho11
MiHion Viejo
Tuetday. Page Cl.
..
i ' ' I
l t • ' 1·
I
A2 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Wednesday, May 18, 1983
~\
\t.\• Continued stories
DISASTER DRILL • • •
Tuesday's drill will be
evaluated by the county's
Maas Casualty Incident•
Committee.
In the train wreck exerclee,
the volunteer "victims" were
examined and tagged
according to the 11e.riouaneas of
their injuries.
They were then
transported to eight hospitals,
including Hoag Memorial.
Costa Mesa Medical Center,
South C.oast Medical Center,
Mission C ommunity ,
Saddleback Community and
San Clemente General. The
h06pitAl "t:iffc; w<>r<> •PSted on
how they would respond to
an unexpected Influx o f
terioualy lnjured people
Bushman said one aim on
Tueeday was to see how local
health and safety workers
would respond if they could
not depend on the help of
neighboring cities, which
were tied up with their own
emergencies.
"We learne d a lot
yesterday," he said. "There
are still a few things to be
ironed out in the system. But
that's what w e hoped this
drill would show us."
NYLON FREEWAY. • •
"I think we should contact the artist (Christo), and see If
he's Interested," said Councilwoman Sally Bellerue. "He's had
dlfflculty with other city councils and government bodies In the
past.
"Now we have a city council actually asking him to come on
down and do It."
What the council envisions Is a nylon freeway, somewhat
llke tile 24-mlle nylon fence Christ o creat ed In northern
Callfornla.
"All he can do Is say no," Bellerue shrugged.
That prompted Mayor Robert Gentry to quip, "It's got to
be easier than wrapping all those Islands." •·
The mayor was referring to the artist's latest project -
surrounding 11 lalands In Florida's Biscayne Bay with hot pink
colored plastlc.
City Manager Ken Frank said he'd write a letter tor the
mayor's signature. In the meantime, the council approved
spending $500 for posts, signs and paint to Illustrate the size of
the proposed route to motorists on Laguna Canyon and El Toro
roads.
• .....
JOBS ...
From Page A1 Trash fees going up agaiD.
Monday night to accept the
federal funds 1he said could
be used to help a11lat the
homeless and unemployed.
"People who come to SOS
would much rather earn their
money to buy food rather
than stand ln line to get a bag
of groceries," Forbath told
council me mbent.
Mayor Donn Hall called the
sugget1tion "Interesting" and
said it would be discussed
again during a public hearing
June 6.
Forbath estimated the job
bank would cost $30,000
annually.
By J EFF ADLER
Mh De11r Not .....
Trashy u It may Rem, the 008t
of throwing it away In Orange
County wilf be going up July 1.
Dwnpln8 feea wUf be ina'eued
at county IandfUla, the Board of
Supervisors agreed Tuesday, to
more fully recover the ooeta of
running the county'• dumpa.
Supervisors voted 3 -1 to
increase the gate fee from $4.90
per ton to $6 per ton while the
fee at transfer stations will be
increased from $8.~0 to $13.25
per ton. The $1 surcharge per ton
for hard-to-handle loads will
remain the same.
' A gate fee at the county dumps
flnt wu Instituted last October
by the board. Or&n1e County had
been the ontr, county In the 1tate
that didn t charte cities,
commercial haulen and the
public for ualng ltl landflU..
Waste management operations
cost the county nearly $10 million
In 1981-82, the la1t year the
county picked up the entire tab,
said Ron Rublno, aaaiatant to the
director of the county Gene.ral
Services Agency.
Acting over the objectiona of
Supervisor Thomu kiley, the
board adopted the fee .:hedule
recommended by the county's
°"" ........... .., L.M ~
Patty Sanders (left), T e rri Guptil check Willia m Steiskal's lung capacity.
Wute Manasement Advisory
c.ommJttee, compoeed larply ot
repre.entativm from the county'•
26 dties.
Riley oppo1ed the acuon
becaWK" he favored the higher
fee 1uggarted by the GSA 1taU
or some guarantee that the fee
structure would be reviewed by
the boar~ next year.
In order to recover the full
costs for operating the landfills,
the county would have to aaaea a
fee of $7 per ton at the dumps or
a $16.60 tran!'fer fee, Rubino
said (
OCC holding
Health Fair
A Health and Wellness l''air ia
being conduc ted through
Thursday at Orange.Coast
College in Costa Mesa.
Health care professionals will
conduct free workshops during
the fair. Health screening ana
in!onnation boothl will be set up
on the OCC quad from 10 a.m. to ~ p.m . The booth1 will offer
blood pressure checks, vision and
hearing screening and cardio-
p u l mo nary resuscitation
demonstratiooa.
Lecture toptc. will include
vener eal diaeaae, •ulctde
prevention and holistic med.lcine.
The fair is spooaored by OCC's
Student Health Service.
WATER CHLORINE. • • OC child welfare overhauled
I
Health, said research shows
chlorine can reach levels of 50
parta per million in drinking
w ater before being considered a
health hazard.
He said residents closest to
reservoirs typically get higher
doses of chlorine than water
Wiers "further down the line."
In Newport Beach, all the
drinking water is purchased from
the Metropolitan Water DI.strict.
Some of the purchased water,
Antista said, is stored at the Big
Canyon Reservoir on the east
side of Upper Newport Bay.
Water first chlorinated by
MWD is re-chlorinated at the
raervoir, where It sometimes sits
for up to 14 days before being
\.lied.
Wehner said it is common
Newport Beach
lurQlln .-a • -ot -10 tll'Mll IMO Ille tiOt TuO AtolfMI. 3920 8lrd'I St . one!
mede oft wtth Sl,N-4 WO<'ttl Of •-ding
~.
Gold t1ngll *'° --colna WOflll *6,000 -• stOMn lfom • ,...,.,_ on Ille 2900
tlloc:ll of Hatt>Or V'9w Clffle. The c:rOOll pried °'*' • ,_ window to g.in entry
A~· pl~.·.·.;. ... d 9nd • -..1
IUll -• 91olen lfom • VW • P9fl<.O -Ille OC>n*' of s-ior. -:Rlltl tl!T-the ..,. -put ., $380
throughout the c o unty to
chlorinate at a higher-than-usual
level to achieve full chlorination
throughout a city's water system.
In warm months, even more
chlorine is added, he said.
Residents in Newport Beach,
however, have a hi.stoty' of being
discriminating about driJ:lklng
water. Last year, a battery of
tests were conduc ted to
determine the level of asbestos in
tap water.
The previous year, the Uny
worm-like midge larvae -
resembling a grain of pepper -
was found in drinking water.
The larvae was detennined to
be harmless and eventually was
eliminated from the system by
increasing the level of chlorine.
A bufgl11 l><ok• Into • reeldence on Ille
t 500 blodt of BIJbol Boulevwd 9nd •tole S300 In c:Mh.
Laguna Beach
Elu<gl .. ent•9d •,_In tl'le 1200 t11oc:11
of Thureton onve Tueecl1y t811tng at .. eo
-"• tqulpment v•lued •t sa&o.
A "'°"'.,. retur"9d to '-~ In tlle
1100 b10Ctc o1 C.tallNI Str-to 9P01 • "*'
IMlllnQ Ille reeldence tllro;ivfl her front ~
She called l)Oltce ""° _. llMllM to loceie 1119 auepect
Irvine
POlloa -· told TUWCley lllet y()Ung91 .. we<• eluck In • -pipe neer 8ontt1 Cwiyon 0rM W>d SunnyMI, bu1 Ille youtM
-· 0-by Ille time ol!lowa ......0.
A t•l••lalofl ••I wu reported atolen
Tuead•y rrom • llome on Ceaeede In
Woodbridge Th-!><Oh down • door lo
get In, POiice Mid,
A llChocM Qll1 reoortecl T ...Oey -loet I
Clertnet --left " belllnd ... ld>OOI t>ue at09 on SmOICill,.. l-a .... deye
800
By JEFF ADLER o<-.o.-,,...awr
A dopti n g what was
characterized aa a "whole new
approach" to Orange County's
child welfare system. the Board
of Supervf.lon approved a majo1·
overh.llul Tuaday.
Child welfare and other 90cial
services in tended to protect
abused and neglected ch~n
will be restructured under the
plan to emphasize reunifying
children with their families -
maintaining the fanlly unit
under close supervision. while
minimizing the court's intrusion
into such matters, explained
county Social Services Agency
Di.rector Larry Leaman.
Costa Mesa
A 32·r•••·Old Coat• M•n woman auecnatully IOUQlll ott 1 -..O·be r9C)ltt
Mlty lhlt mot'*IO Wl>o ~ '* .. -w1tlled •t • • m along S1nt• An a ~ltd. POllOe Mid tM WOlnlll ~,.,.,
purM •t the min de.crlt>ed •• • m•I• Molean, abOut 30, ~a b11i9 -glell
gowri,
1<91111 JMC>n Hol,,_, 20. of Tumlin totd
police hla Volk•w•o•n cer w11 etol•n
yeeterdey 9ftefr>Oon from Ille 1*1<1nC1 lot ill
Soufll CoMt Plau mal
A .........,,, -reporlecl 91olen i.t nlQflt
from • llome •long tlle 1500 t>lock of Corelea ..._
Founta in Valley
8->ewflo ~lfy-~by • '*"lnO aoo. pu1gi...pan1c:1ma1n 1i. 1ooe1
W>d Ille 0oo -IOund OMd S.turdey In Ille Yefd of 1 honw In tN 1150QO..lllod< of Mt
Mllehell
A 82·~~ F-IMI V..., ono..r wM
punched twtee In Ille noH by anoth••
mocorlet woo -ll>Q9fed by 1t11 lllctlnl'a drM ng ll•btla, pollee Mid. TM Incident
OCCUtrecl Tu.dey, ......, trllfllc -alOOPecl on Ille Sen Diego Fr-•r ,..., Wet'* ,,. __ ,
Fair and warm
Coastal
l'atr through Thurtday Contlnu~ warm Lo<:el guaty
n«th to nort'-1 wt""-In .,_
belOw canyof1e TIIU<.Oay. High• •to"'· ~as to as. Point Coneec>tlon 10 Mexk:wl
border end out eo ml ... : Over
outer water• from Polnl
ConoapUo/I to 8en NloolM llillnd.
""'1fla•t wlnOt 12 10 20 llllOta thrOUGll Thuf9day. S... 5 to S
1 .... 'Ei-tlwe, llght. varla~
--night and momlnQ houn. beCIOflllne .-to~ 10 10
1t llMt• Thuraday af1•-~ --I to J ..._~
--1 10 2 ..... ,. ftlroucltt ~-
Extended
forecast
;,. '''d•Y lhrOVQll lvnd•J ..... ~ OOIMllflow doudl
., ... In .... nlGht and "'°"""' ...._ HWW 111 IM 10t -a.
-to h IOI lnlal'ld. ~ 10 ....
Temperatures .. Le Nlll#pt f7 It ~ .. • , . .. ,.,, ...... .. .. ........ ., 47 ,....... 11 .. ,....Cllly f7 .. ,=.. 11 .. .. • =.,_ • ..
7' •1 --'° ..
lkllM 86 40 Th\ndey, May 1 w
8oeton 54 41
llfownn!Mie ~ 87 70
9utfmo M 32
..... on. 51 34
0..., M 34
CMrwton. 8.C ee 57
~on.WV .. 41
Ctwtotte. N.C. 88 50 gz,-35 29
58 37
ClncllnMtl 89 38
~ 52 40
Colul'llbla. s.c. 73 54
CoMntlw 86 37
~WOfth n S8 Oeyton 86 41 o.n... 33 32 O..M'*-se 50
O..rolt 12 40
Duluth 84 28
El PMO n 64
Flllrbenh 52 38
Feroo 70 40 Mleml 93 n
f\aeMlllT 58 26 Mllweu61• 53 31
~, ... eo 40 Mplt.4M.Paul 17 42
Hlilttofd 59 35 N ......... 73 •2
~ 58 ... ..... °"9elw 79 86
Honolulv .. .. Nft YO!tl 83 '1
Howton 74 .. HOffolll eo 61
~ .. ... Notlh Pia"• .. 40
Jldlaoft, Mia IO 56 Ollllhome City 72 1111
~ " 12 OmtM IM .. ,,...., 62 46 Ol1endO 18 12 ._c-y .. 52 ~ .. 40
Lee ~ 71 87 ~ 12 90
TO 49 :=:r,_.. 11 M ~ 12 t2 81 31
10 43 ftoftlel'ICJ. Or.. 11 llO
~ IS 21 ""~ Ill 40 ........ 1S .. IWtlol1 17 43
lllf lfPIRT
LOCA1'Glll .... IMAN Hw•i:"" 1·2 poor~-
...... ....Jetty 14 .. ...... """"" 14 •-OOod
Hnd ... """"" 1·2 ~ .... -.... 1..a ,..,
="*"·UOU-~: ,..,
... a..t:le~ ,.,
1 DOOf .... ~ ....... OlreGtlorl IW.
l
A8P6d City 68 42
Aeno ee 2t AlclfM •IOI Id ., .. SI Louie 71 48 Sl.P«• T lftlC)9 87 16
Salt Lall• 62 t2
Sen AnlOlllo 711 eo San Diego 80 62 Senf'~ .. 63
8t8te U... .. 26 ....,,.. M .. ::u.-r.: IO 56
at 47
lpol!Mt 12 ,,
~ .. IO
Topel!• 11 112
TUOIOll IO 116
Tulle n M
W-'*'flOll s7, ..
WloNt• .. 63
Tides
a
The overhaul wll! prompted
by new stats and federal law that
required the changes.
Supervisors unanimously
approved the plan, which calla
for the hiring of 48 additional
employees. Among those to be
hired are 21 social workers and
10 supervisors.
The cost of the changes wlll
add $1.3 million to the agency's
budget for the coming fiacal year,
Leaman said.
Under the plan, child welfare
social workers will be divided
among four units : Int ake
Services; Family Maintenance
In-home Services; Family
Reunification; Out-of-Home Care
Services, and the t'ermanent Can!. Adoptions Services unit.
The Intake Services unit will
include a child abuse registry,
which will track all custody and
non-custody -caaes of child abwie,
as well as advi&e and train public
and private agencies about
child-abuse law and reporting
procedures.
HEAT TO CONTINUE. • • From Page A 1
lnduatrtal pollution and auto
pollution. eeem to have delayed
the noxious six-month pellution
ae880ll.
Meanwhile, another fluke in
world weather patterns has
resulted in millions of tiny red
crabs washing up on San Diego
County beaches.
Called tuna crab, the small
crustaceans have crawled ashore
en masse -hke,a giant red
carpet -apparently to dle, say
marine biologists at Scripps
Institute of Oceanography ln La
Jolla.
Warmer waters attracted the
inllux of crabs northward and
strong winds have forced them
ashore. •
Scientists have spotted the red
crabs from Mexico to central
California.
BULLET. • •
Fr om Page A 1
for the train l}"ltem.
He called T uesday'•
announcement a "preview " of a
report to be released in a few
mont ha on lmprovement1 hl1
firm would undertake if state
agencies grant construction
pennita.
He noted the firm still must
see complete environmental
studiea and mitigation ~
ratified before oonatruction could
begin. 'The environmental ttpOrtl
should take until the mJddle of
next year to complete, he aaid.
Several h u n dred Irvine
residents attended the ae9liorl io
hear Oilaon. his coll~ Nkk.
Brand and the Fluor Corp.'•
Kent Olsen di1euu the train
system. Fluor is project manager
for the estimated $3.1 billion
project.
Olaen said the trench would be
eight feet deep in most cues but
the tracks would sit three feet
above the base, or five feet below
the ground level.
COUNTY BE COMING CAR CAPITAL ? • • •
From Page A1
330,000 miles last year.
Al.so not surprising Is the fact that Los
Angeles County has the most cars registered in
the state -4,044,469.
What may be surprising, though, is the
phenomenal increase in car ownership in Orange
County, said OMV spokesman George Farnham.
Since 1946, when Orange County was
primarily an agricultural area with 64,697 cars
registered, automobiles in the county ha ve
mushroomed to 1,198,397 as of last year.
That makes Orange County number two,
next to Loe Angele. County, ln the nwnber of
can registered nationwide.
But if Orange County continues to grow the
way It has over the yean, it will undoubtedly
cat.ch up to Loe Angeles, said Al Whigham, the
·,.cf\YL1C'
The
DMV's Southern uilifornia .regional man.ager.
It's only a matter of time.
Does that mean the county will become the
highway death capital as well?
Not neceaarily, say safety researchers at the
Automobile Club of Southern California. Even
though registrations and total miles driven
increased statewide last year, highway fatalities
and Injury accidents decreaaed drastically, said
Steve Bloch. an AAA researcher.
So there is no direct relationahip between
number of cars registered a n d number of
!Ughway dealha and l.njuries, he la.id. And, if itl
any consolation, areas with heavy traffic patterns
usu8.lly don't have high death rates -the can
can't ::6el fut enough to cauae aerloua injuriel
o~.
All Puir~ose Gl~f
• ELEGANT STYLE 14 oz.
Sele Priced • • HIQH STRENGTH ACRYLIC
• DISHWASHER SAFE •&.88 • GREAT FOR EVERYDAY USE
• BOATS, POOL a DECK PARTIES .., ot4
• PATIOS, PICNICS, HOT TUBS • BRIDAL GI", WEDDINGS
<.
Umlted To Supply On Hand -E.xplrea S/31/83
more than you expect In s hardware store
·····-EJ HARDWARE MM
~ ........ 111h St. el ltvtne . .......,.., a.en. Mt·H3) ......, ..._$MM.,_. ar, • aen
Joaquin H.Wp0<l hacli.1 .. •·11'10 c..-. ... -3107 I eo-1 ~. 11).MOO
.-,_.."" """ sent• Ana Canyon Ad , •• imp.i.1 H\lfi , ..._....
L I
"4 * Oran~ Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983
Solon to dedicate senior center
Conareuman Claude Pepper
will viltt Irvine Saturday to lend
h la conalderable pre1U1e to
ded!catton ceremoniet for a new wtna of the Irvine Senior Center.
Oraanbera of the event -
which lncludes a ribbon cuttina,
box lunch, tree planting
ceremony and banquet -are
clearly pleaaed that Pepper,
D-Fla., aareed to appear.
Jtm Felton, chairman of the
aenior council and the one who
arranpd Pepper'• viltt, calla the ..
Bay cleaning
gets results
Dick K ust (bag over
shoulder) a nd Linda
Koluvek ha ul off just
congreaaman a "national folk
hero" for old people. He aald
Pepper II the conareafonal voice
of aenlor cltlz.ena.
Pepper la scheduled to stve a
apeech at the banquet on the
atatui of aenion 1n the United
States, with a dlacuaalon on
recently paaaed leg"ialatlon on
Social Security.
Admlulon to the 7 p.m .
banquet at the center la •60 per
person. Proceeda will 10 toward
the center'• operating expel'UleS.
a sampling of the ...;
litter and deb ris
taken from the
Upper Newport Bay
during a spring
cleaning. The
cleanup last weekend
was organized by the
state Department of
Fish and Game and
Friends o( Newport
Bay.
Eleven charitable organizations
have received checks totaling $3,-
HB h • J 525 from -Humana Hospital Os~ nj ta Huntington Beach (formerly J:' ca! 1 e d Hunt I n gt on
Intercommunity.) •d J J The organizations were a1 s oca selected from among more than 30 agencies which applied for the
h grants by an advisory panel
C ar1·11·es c 0 n s i s t i n g 0 f h 0. p i ta 1 representatives and civic leaders.
Receiving award• were
Huntington Beach Community
So far, 10.0 ieat1 have been
re1erved; many by Oran1e
County-bued corporatlorw.
The aenlor cent er, at 3
San dbur1 Way, haa b een
expanded to inclu de more
~ and office tpkle u well
a1 a farger kitchen . The
lmprovementa C09t $284,000.:._ of
which the dty paid $6(),000. Tne
remainlna money came from a
alate par~ fund created by
voten laat yev.
The dedication ceremonlea will
Clinic; L .Y.N.N. -Love Your
Neighbor Now (Hunting ton
Beach); Boys and Girla Clube of
Huntin gton Beach-Fountain
Valley; Oak View Benevolent
Fund (Hu ntington B each);
Huntington Beach Council on
Aging ; Aaaiatance League of
Huntington Beach.
Also receiv"ing granta were
Mission Succesaful for Multiple
Sclero1i1 (H untington Beach);
Harbor Area Adult Day Care
Center (Coala Mesa); Interval
bealn Saturday w i th
entertainment at 10:30 a.m. and
opening cer.monlea, lncludlna
the ribbon cutd.n&, at 11 a.m.
The '3 per pereon box lunch
will be served at 11 :30 a .m .
(reeervatJona are required) and
planting of a atar pine tree ln
memory of center founder
Iadore Schneider will be8fn at 12:80 p.m.
People with ing to make
reaervatlOl\f ahould call the
center Immediately at 660-3889.
House (Seal ~each); Hospice
Orange Countt (Laguna Hilla);
and Community Advisory
Committee for Special Education
(Huntington Beach.)
The grants range from $250 to
$500 each.
Hospital Executive Director
Michael B. McCallister said the
funds for the community grants
program were made available by
Humana, Inc. of Louisville, Ky ..
a national h<lllpital management
·company
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC . ............ __ ...... Open Dally 9-9; Sunday 10-7
Wednnd8y Thru Saturday Sale
--------------------....... ~
Scottish games
slated in Mesa
'
Ancient Scottiah games wW be played during the 5lst
annual Highland Gathering and Games May 28-29 at the
Orange County Fairgroundl in Costa Mesa.
Long poles, called cabera, will be tolled during the two-
day celebration that features Scottlah piping, drumming,
Highland dancing, 1heep herding and exhlbita and fooda.
In addition to the caber toel, heavy atones and a hammer
will also be thrown. Those wishing to register for a
<.'ompetition can call 964-0672.
Admission to the games is $6 for adults, '4 for seniors and
$1 for children.
Laguna T axp ayers m eet Tuesday
'the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association wHl hold a
membership meeting Tuesday at Gauguin's restaurant In
Laguna from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Fifth District Supervisor Thomas RUey and officers of the
taxpayer group will be on hand at the mixer to diacuss the
organization.
The restaurant i.1 located ln the San Maarten Hotel, South
Coast Highway at Cleo Street.
'Sound of Music' at H arbor High
Three performances of "The Sound of Music" will be
staged by Corona del Mar High School atudenta Thunday,
Fri.day and Saturday.
The musical will be presented in the Newport Harbor
High School auditorium. All shows start at 8 p.m. Tickets are
$4 and $3.50 for students and senior citiz.ens.
To make reservations, call 760-3350.
Rummage sale aids prom party
A rummage sale to benefit the Senior All Night Party at
Laguna Beach High School will be held Saturday from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the parking lot across from the high school.
Sale items include clothing, household items, furniture,
collectibles, and baked goods.
Proceeds will help defray the cost of the annual senior
party. scheduled this year for June 15.
Red Cross plans
blood collection
The American Red Cr06S will be collecting
blood this month at various locations throughout
the Orange Coast. Donors should be between 17 and
66, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in general
good health. Donations will be taken by appointment at the
1922 HAllot llVO
COSTA MfSA -S41-1 U6
CORRECTION
In the .. ere llaJ 11th
adverllelng ••ctlon,
lher• I• an
ectvertteement on peee
4 for SO% to 50% off
cuetom ck..,.ry febftc9.
cuetom bllnd•, and
cu•lon'I wov•n wood•. Th• edverlleement
lncorrec:tlJ etatH thet
there It alto 30% to
50% off labor. The labor
la al Ila regular price.
We •lncerefJ f'9gret thl•
error.
We've Got It And
We've Got It Good!
foU~tiona:
-Irvine Unified School District, May 31,
1:15-6 p.m. Appointmenta 835-5381 Ext. 291.
NEWPORT BEACH
-The Centera Network. May 22, 10:45
a .m.-3:30 p.m. Appointrnenta 675-29~1.
CX>STAMESA
-St. Joachim Catholic Church, May 23, 2: 15-7
p.m. Appointmenta 646-7642. -Connell Chevrolet, May 31, 8:15 a.m.-6 p.m.
Appointments 546-1200.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
-St. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, May
18. 2:4~-7:30 p.m. Appointments 962-3292.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
-Fountain Valley Hoepital, May 26, 10:45
a.m.-3:30 p.m. Appointmenta 835-5381 ext. 291.
Daily Pilot money sa vers for
women include the Supermarket Shop·
per column, advertised values. coupon
savings and tas ty recipes in Wed·
nesday·s food pages. Daily Pilat
1~ie~/ ~
851-8350 ...
497-4262
DRAPERY CONNECTION
Cusrom Draperies £cc. ...
. . . . For Your New Ouc/ook
I Sears I
Do you deal with Y?
LOAN S? MO RTOAOll?
FINANCll? This ad 11 for youl
If you don't want to make
money, Slop reading here.
THE RIOHT COM•INA TION to
Increase r.our share of the
market -1 only one wayl
Benedum/Page for the RIGHT
COM•INATION. Call S.2-4321
---Flnanclal ---
Executlvu of the Orange Coast
Put>lllhlng Company.
403 SPRING SALE 603 .
OUR MILL CONNECTIONS, DECORATING EXPERTISE &
CONSCIENTIOUS SPIRIT EQUAL 40-80% SAVING~I •
SENSATIONAL SELECTION! PRECISE WORKMANSHIP! JOHN R. Mel< N
QUAJIAln"DD -LOfteT HTWATal AT YOUll $fRVIQ
Hawthorne Christian School
''For the Right Start in Life''
Join the Summer Fun
at ·DAY CAMPI/
GIVE MOM A VACATION
• Field Trips • Crafts e Swimming • Picnics
e Before-care and After-care Available
JUNE 20th thru SEPT. 9th
Enroll Now-Fall Semester
Start• Sept. 12th
Reaonabfe Tuition
SUMMER SCHOOL
JULY 5th thru JULY 29th .
"A Private School of Dlatlnotlon Founded In 19•2"
IN POUNTAIN VALLBY
1 .. MOOKHUll8T IT. (114) 112-1112 I
'
~,,I ~ ~. t):l) 7l ., . \ \
I . I
!L.i l
'> .•• ·I -., . ·_;, ·.
.L .>. ~_.., . ... \ I
8.96YourChoice
Today•• Det19ner lorble,., •n Ken" Dolt•
Dellghtful dolls for children over 3. Sove. ·-11.: hQ. IM
10.48
Lovely Twlrty Curts•• lorble•
With hair styling accessories.
._ .. Inc: •-o IM
3.67£och 4.96'Each 11.88
lhWt IUclC...,'• car; '<>Wer Devis'•
tonzed minl-tocer1. Fun 4-wtieet drlvert.
Sporty lo~· DrMm'VeHe'•
GkJmour on the go tor Barbie ...
Choice Of leauttful lorble • Fath Iona
Fashion Fantasy••. or Fashion Fun .. outftta.
•Maffei Inc: •-o""
8.88
lff 'N lay" Clocle
For preachoolers.
, • . ' ' ..... • • • • • • ...• . ,
._ Your
ChOICe
15.97
Toy Train Or Pony
Mullcal cfl> toya.
1
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 18, 1983 NB CS ~ ;• 1
----------------------------~~~~~~~~~--------~----~~----~~~~---NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OU0'4't0fitt lltClUOI TRAOltON Tlltt NIWYO••. MIOWI". l"A(t,.IC l"llif, ltC)STOtol, OIT•CNf AltO (lllClllNAfl UOC .. l•C14Alt0U AltO llll"O•TIO ev TN& 114'0111110 lltSTINlf
•
., .,. '• •• .. .. ,,., '.
o0w Jones Final
DOWN 2.23
CLOSING 1,203.51
Auto workers elect
new president today
8y Tbe A11octated Pre11
DALLAS -The Uruted Aut.o Workers union
readied for a historic changing of the guard today u
delegates prepared to elect a new president and five
other top officials. President Douglaa A. FTuer, 66,
and the others are retiring becauae union rules
prohibit re-election of offioera over 65 years old.
Fraser's designated successor, selected late last
year by the UA W's 26-member executive board, is
Owen Bieber, 53, vice president in charge of the
UA W 's General Motors C.Orp. department. Bieber said
earlier this week he was confident he would be
elected. There were no other formal candidates,
although traditionally dissidenta nominate one on the
floor the day of the vote.
Jobless figures encouraging
11
... •
WASHINGTON -Bureau of Labor Statistics
&how that 41 of 50 states· had higher unemployment
last March than the same month in 1982, but the
changes were not considered extreme by statisticiam,
who said they could well indicate W\employment had ••
peaked. The highest unemployment rates continued to
be found in·West Virginia, Michigan and Alabama.
Brown's 'float' bill ad..,ances
SACRAMENTO -Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown's bill to slash the bank "float," the interest-free
use oC depositors' funds, has won committee approval.
The Assembly Finance, Insurance and Commerce
Committee voted 10-0 to force the banks to give a
customer credit for a deposited check within five days.
Currently, banks can put a "hold" on chec.ks -
oft.en lasting two weeks or longer for thoee from out of
town -to verify the funds, allowing the banks free
use of the money in the meantime. i
"In years past. the practice of waiting 10 or 15
days or longer for a check to clear may have been
necessary," Brown said. "But now ... with the
advent of instant interbank transfers, this waiting
period is no longer necessary . . . . "
Oak Industries omits dividend
SAN DiroO-Oak Industries' board of direct.on
has voted to omit the regular quarterly dividend on
common stock and Series C pref~rred stock. Normal
dividends would have been 6 cents a quarter for
common stock and 43 ¥. cents on the preferred. In a
terse, three paragraph news release, the company said
It would use the money saved for "ope.rations directed
at improving the company's profitability."
U.S. ties worry Lockheed
LOS ANGELF.$ -Lockheed C.Orp. L" worried
that the aerospace firm is too reliant on Pentagon
contracts, even though its strong military businem. ~
been growing.
"By the end of the 1980s, we'd like to be about 75
percent military and 25 percent commercial,"
Lockheed Chairman Roy A. Anderson said Tue9day
after the Burbank-based company's annual r.'leeting at
the Sheraton Universal. Last year, milltarl work
accounted for 90 percent of the company's $5. billion
in revenues, and Anderson said that was ''a little too
much."
AMERICAN LEADERS
SYMBOLS
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