HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-25 - Orange Coast PilotJ ~hat price education¥
-\
TllllD•ClllJ.
By ROBERT BAUER .,,. ..............
· Ia • tide IW9epinc over <>ranee County demandlnf ech&(atlon
refonne and enoul}l morMY to
operate IChooll?
Huntlnston Beach
Superintendent Frank "Jake"
Abbott 11 one of a 1rowln1
number of educaton who th1nb
eo. He'll know for aure on June 3.
That eventna a 'relly In support
of t'ducat1on will be held .at
LeBard Stlldiwn at Oranae Coat
CoUtae ln C.O.ta M ...
It'1 supponed by all Orance
County pubJJc ~trictl and all
but one « two t:4 the county'• 11
le1t1lator1 1ay they'll attend
~with Jtate Superintendent of PUblic 1n1truct1oti 8i11 HonJa,
"Thh time lt'• not jult
educaton caUln.I fO«' help. It'• the
parentl, ~ii and community
and bualneu leaden," Abbott
said. "I believe we'll a«r1ei 7,000
to 8,000 people,
"U we ~t only 1,000, It wll1 be
.1:11m 110111
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 7'l CEN rs
Gideon, Pinocchio and Mickey Mouse coax Goofy into the 0 Daring
JoUJ"lley" in the newly rebuilt Fantasy land that opens Saturday.
I
Fantasyland enterS computer age
BJ JACK.IE BYMAN • 1 9 llPN611 ....
ANAHEIM -PISt.. Wanna .e
a Blue Fairy van1lh right before
your eyea? Wanna pau right
throu1h a waterfall without Ptdnl wet? Wanna eee an apple
transformed into deadly pol.ton
and a queen turn into a withered
hafi..iton to Disneyland will be
a ble to do all those things,
beiinnina this week, thad.k.I to
the wooden of holoiraphy and a
revamp job estimated at $35
million that has bro ught
Fantaayland into 'the computer
age.
"We're exdted about it," aid
~k spok.-nan Joeeph Acufrre.
'It'• the ainlle mQ9t expensive
project ever undertaken at the
park."
Althouah final flpres aren't
in yet, "the cost 11 more than
twice •• much a1 the park
ori&inallY coat beck in 1955, and
that wu $17 million," he Mid, addina that $35 milllon WU the
e1tlmated fi1ure for the
c::'t~AaYLAND, Pace AJ)
• diauter," he edded .
Or.a.n1e Coat educator. sa'J
they ..... a.lanned that the ltlte.
delplte haW.. one of the hllbest ~ u:e.!.n:~~= for education. Califotnta, allci baa
the ht1he1t pupil-to-teacher
ratio.
And what •.Pl*l'I to 1nU.tle
educators furth~r la the hlah
pen:entqe of money ~ 11
j[Olna to welfare mid p at tne ixpen1e of llChooll.
'"lbia wW be an llCDOUafMllW~ rallj," wd Abbott, the h
ach•dl tuperlnter»ideat w o
returned from Sacrame.nto
Tueaday, where he helped
~t.e the aftalr.
Abbott aatd h19 hl1h 1ehool
dlsti'kt a1anda to ~ about tl
mUllon lf Gov~~~.
echool 1pendln1 plan remalna
intact.
Irvine c.o. Prem.cs.nt Tbomat
N ielsen \VlU be master of cenmom. •t the rally.
'Jedi' marathon
'worth the wait'
for. movie fans
By LORENZO BENET or .. .,..,,... ....
Many of the moviegoers who NJTounded the Edwards
Newport Cinema at 7 thia momlnC had been in line Jona enough
to have witnel9ed the Uu-oino leavfnl the midniaht and 3 a.m.
ahowinp Of "Return of the Jedi."
A stroll around the theater after dawn meant 1tepp&,w over-
aleeplfti bags, avoldlng lawn chain and Frisbees. and llatefilna to
radioa blaring rock music.
Except for the darkneN, the scene wu tt\e aame late Tu-1iay ni.iht.
,At precilelr ll:i5 p.m .. the doors swung open, lettina in the
flnt (torrent o Star Wan-crazed fanatics to view the long-
awaited premiere of George Lucas' "Jedi." The crowd, 11W.19&1y in
ltl 20., had camped outlide the theeter for hours. even days.°
giving the acreeninl the aura of a once-In-a-lifetime rock ooncert.
'They wore jeans and aneakera and Jedi buttons and T-shirts
(See 'JEDI' MARATHON, Pqe A!)
..... .... ~~'-,.,_
"Jedi" fans wait a& 6:30 p.m. for
midnight show at Newport Cinema
UCI professor
gets Tyler award
B~aril sets airport appeal
By GLENN scorr .,,. .. ...., .........
UC Irvine cMm1stry profe9IOI'
F . Sherwood Rowland waa
awarded the 1983 ~,Prile in ecololY and erwl'IY for h1I
ploneerln1 research a med at
preventlna depletion of the
l'Arth'• ~dve osone layer. Row ~tld will •hare the
Jntematianal awwd md 111f150,-
000 Clllltl 8Warcl with both Mario ,,.,.,., who Ml been on Jeave
from UCI 8DC9 Ian October to
work at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, and
Harold Johnston of UC Berkeley.
All three were recocnlzed durlni a ceiemony today tn Lot
Anaela. for their ICienUfk: work
concenUn& damap to the en.one
layer. \
Ro'WJand and M o lina
collaborated on etudlea
meHurina dan1era poaed b,-
chJorofiuorocarbom rei...,ct into
the a'tmoaphere aa aero1ol
propellanta, refri1erant1 and
aolvent1. Their work led to <See TYLER. Pqe A!)
Supe.rrisors challenge American Airliaes access rulins
8YIO'IADLEll ...............
Tbe <>ran., Coul)ty Board of
Supervleort tiH aulborlled county attoraeye to appeal a
federal coun dedllon, arantJn,
Amet'fait ~ .... iq John Wayne >Jrpwt. .
'!be bolftl•• icdon, ~ on a
M wee dUftnl •special~ Tunday, further oompUcatn
American'• Plan to beatn ..-ya
four mi. 4a1J1 ftcm the airport
be8inn.inl June t.
County attorney• were
direcwd 10 appeal U.S . DWritt
Court J..._. T9"'1 Hatter Jr.'1
rulln1 Monday and seek •n
~ 01"der that effectively de y the airline'• plans to
atan ~p eervlce.
••Dftplte the di1trict court'•
order, I continue to believe that
the board acted ntpoN!ibl)' and
lawfUlly in Mekina a brief period
of time ln which to atucfy the obvlow fac:tllU. problema at the ·
airport before takina action to
t urther a11ravate thou
~robl,.m1,!.' ••Id Supervl1or
TbomM Rile~y, who poled the declDorl be • . h waa ley who first
~.the boM'd tdopt a
moratorium bloclrinC any new air
carrten from the alrpcri unUl a
1tudy uaeulnc what imp.c;sta
new alrllnee would have on the
already overcrowded facUit~
could be pnpend.
The board lmpoeed auch a
mortltorium two weeks eao .and
American .lmmed1-tely aued tn
federal coun.' Hatter ordend the
COW\\)' to ab6de by ha 1982 ~
plan, which alloc:a* 41 dally =.crw amonc 1he oompetinc
Con(ronted with ibe taint Jecal action undel1akm by ..
( ... Al&PORT, .... Al)
'.
,
AIRPORT APPEAL ...
county, American Airline•
1pokesman Al Becker aald hls
company "hu every confidence"
ln ita lepl position. He added the
~udce'• decl1lon wa1 1'unrnJltakably clear."
Becker al8o aald the Dallu-
baaed airline ii movtn1 ahead
with plan.a to tneuiurate aervlc:e
to Dallas-Fort Worth and Chica&o on June 9. ''We'll presa
our <'asP W•'rf' tf•tf'rmlnNf to
aerve the airport," be uid.
Supervi8on called the 1pedal
meetfna followtng a cloeed-door
aelSlon Tueeday momlna. dw;na
which the court's dedilon wu
d'-:ussed with county attorneys.
The appeal first will go to
Judge Hatter and, If denied, on to
the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, county attorney
Michael Gatzke explained.
JEDI' MARATHON ...
procl.aimins, "I Saw Return of the Jedi First." And when their
prized tickets were tom in half by theater employees, they
sprinted to their seats, yelling "th.ls way, this way," and "run."
For some, like Robert Lee and Charles Baden. buth of C.OSta Mesa. it was the culmination of nearly a week's worth of sleeping outdoors. ,.
"We met a lot of interesting people," said Baden, who, along
with Lee, waited in line for about 127 hours just to be first in the
door fOf' the 12:15 showing this morning.
At 11:10 p.m., Lee and Baden were personally escorted by a
theater official into the cinema and given choice seats before the
rest of the crowd entered:
For others, like Becky Roode of Irvine, arriving at the
theater with aeveral friends, it was a "group experience."
She said she has seen "Star Wars" and "TJ:ie Empire S~kes
Back" 15 times each. ·
When "Jedi" was 9ver, some viewer& expressed dismay with
the storyline, but all were thrilled by the special effects.
"The plot in the other two (Star Wars) movies was still
hokey," said Lee.
"The special effects were great," Baden said. "You don't
notice the miniatures or the map work. It all seems real. It was
well worth the wait. I really loved the Ewoka (the tiny, teddy
bear-like creatures destined to be a merchandizing hit from the
film.)" •
One aleepy-eyed blonde leaving the theater was iUke<f if
she'd ~nd others aee the movie.
"Don't bother," she replied with a yawn. "I juat slept throu&b it... #
Alts all, it was 3 Lm.
TYLER AW ARD. • •
regulaJ.lon of use of
chlorofluorocarbons In North
America and Europe.
Johmt.on drew attention to the
poaiblllty that nitrogen oxide
contamination, such as that from
aupereonlc aircraft, allo might
threaten the ozone layer.
Ozone gas makes up only a I small part of th-e Earth's
atmosphere, yet it abeorba about
99 percent of the tolar ultraviolet
radiaUon whkb is considered
destructlve to living orpnlllma.
Sciendatl predict ~ er'Ollcl1 of ~ OIODe layer c:ouJd ca~ an
lhcrnn in *1n cancer « caUR
v8riatiom in the Earth'• climate
Huntington Beach
A bleclll Diie-8210 WM butglettnd ,......., ....,_ ....... _ perMd ...
Huntlngloft .... .._,. lot. !ntry -,,...
by ~ lfle lide p 111 l\fW window,
Ind • l200 -· -...... -l.Mllnt lac> -l'tpOr'9d .. .-n.
due to alterations in the
stra\osphere.
Rowland came to UCI ln 1964
as the founding chairman of the
chemiltry department. Molina
worked as a doctoral student
with Johnston in Berkeley and
later aa a faculty member In
Irvine with Rowland.
The Tyler prize, in ita 10th rear. was established by Allee Tyler and her late husband, John
C. Tyler, the founder and past
chairman of the Farmers
lnaurance Group. It is open to
c:andidaie. from throuchout the
world and reco1nlze1
environmental ~t.
OfllG9r9Niiiano.dto1 fWnly ~ In Woodbridge Tu .. d1y In wlltoll 1
...,, ..... Cllllld '° ..... ""*"' -• ..,,.,,. to ldl ---........... -80fle .... h pOllol WIMd.
FV ·re·ca11 battle
~aged at forum
BJ PBD.'INZIDERMA.N °' ........... Three l'ountaln Val.Jey St.hool
Dl11rlot trustee. and tb'ree
candldatel tldYocet.tnc thetr recall
.quared off Tueaday ftilht over
questiona about district ~.
IChool cloluret and the creation
of a middle tcbool. •)'Item for
aradea a1x throuch ef&bt.
The trustees and their
opponei\ta took part ln the fint of
fOW' candidate nlchta •pomored
by the Superintendent Parent
Council. About 80 people
attended Tuesday'• three-hour
forum at Nleblaa School.
Police nab
• suspect 1n
NB slaying
A 2~-year-old Newport Beach
man ii dead and hi.I Sl-year-old
friend In jail on au~pici_on ot
mamlaughter today fo1Jowin8 an
early morning &hooting epiaode
at a Newport apartment complex,
police report.
Reyes Betancourt, a resident of
Salt Lake City, Utah, wa1
arrested at 2 a.m. on auapldon of
Involuntary manala\,IChter after·
he allegedly 1hot and kllled
Thomu William Gale, a resident
of the Oakwood Garden
Apm'tmenta.
Gale w.. shot once in the chest
and died an hour later at
Fountain Valley Community
Ho1pital trauJDa center, autbaritm Mid. The~ at• ~tawwwt
complex, 100 Inlne Ave.,
reported1J bepn w• ewe and an apartment leC\lrlty pant,
Lyle Vemon Bort. iot In• an -=-allhru Gale ...W~ ~-,;;~i:.:=. to cake the ...,,. •• I'm.
The JUard, offlcen aald,
repined control ot • weapon and wa1 placina Gale under
arreat for auauft and battery
when Betapcow:t llfttwd on ~ acesw.
Betancourt, police reported.
intervened and 1rleCl to .. tbe
1un from the MCurity guard.
Police said the IUD. dJ9charaed, ltrild.na Gale in the chest.
Police .. Jlart, the -=wtty
1uard, waa queaUoned and
released peadlnl furth~
lnv.Ueltlon.
A l8COOd fonun wtll tak~ place
tonlcht •t Fountain Valley
2lementarl'_ School, 17911
Bwbard St. 'l'he others will take
place Thund•Y •t Maauda
School and next Tuetday at
Talbert Middle School. All belln
at 7:30 p.m, v otel"I will '° to the polll JU'1t' 7 to decide whether to recall
tl'Ulteea Cheryl Norton, Roser
Bel1en and Suzanne Moore.
Voten who favor recall may
aeJect Devon Dahl, Kurt Hamlen
and Sidney lA.ndon to take over
the achoo! board eeata.
Du.ring ~· forum, the U'Ulteel def theiJ\ nlCOrda and branded the recall .aklvocatee u "one.t.ue c:andldaf.&" who
dila&ree with the tr\llteeS' planl
to c1me tome IChoo1a and convert
othen to middle IChoot..
The recall advocatee cba.rpd
that trustee11 have au.u.ed funds
to build a "plu1h" district
beadquanen, and have failed to
properly plan and check the
commwlity's deatres conoernJ.nc
school cfosurei and middle
achoo la.
"We're not talklnft about a
personality conflt.ct, ln1llted
recall advocate Dahl. "We are
talking a!.Jout fiscal
ml1management. The current
board should be retired."
"It's h..-d to believe fl~al
~t ii an ilsue w~
we have-D)Ohey In the banlt -
$1.9 million In re1ervea."
~ trustee BeJaen. advocate HaMclQ, who
said he moved to Fountain Valley
becau1e of lta nel1hborbood
.cbool aywtem, u.raed that the
di9trid'• c:u.rrent system be held
"in the 1tatu.1 quo" for one-
,_,. while additlenal rmeiarch on
Clofu.na and middle llChoola ii
~
Norton claimed she waa threatened with recall lf she
refuled to ~ ber vote on
middle IC'booh. She a1.ao aald
oounty 8Cbool offlciall and the
Otan1e County Dlltrlct
AtU>mey'1 office have studied
the d.latrict's flnand.al recordl
and have taken no action.
Recall advocate Landon
aHerted the tru1tees closed
Nleblal School one yee.r earlier
than their or1&lnal ~ became
of oppo.&tlcn ID that tbmnW\lty.
He charged the tn.wteell have not
liltened to parena
Tru1tee Moore lnahted
auUident 1tudy went into the
tcbool cbure and middle 9Choot
decUiona and that the board
ahouJd .. behind them.
Baby whale beached
f Orange County Harbors, •achee a~d Parka
rangers Gary Ponsolle and Rick R•"ii kneel
beside careatl8 of baby ft;male ·~ whale
that washed up on Selva Beach iii Dli.na Point
Tuesday. The 15-loot Whale wu !O be
traai1ported to the IM Angeles NatW'il History
Museum today lor an autope)'.
Five charges filed
in f re~w8y killings
By JEFF ADLER orttie~ .... ...,.
Randy Steven Kraft -the
Long Beach computer operator
who homicide tnvefllaaton ln
three 1tate1 believe may be a
1uspect in more than 30 slayings
-was forpully chareed
Tuesday with the rnurden of
five men.
Orange County Central
Municipal a>w-t Judge Robert
Thomas ordered Kraft held
without bail and aet a June 17
arraipment date on the charpa.
'!be aa.year-old suspect ~
only of1Ce during a brief court
hearing, acknowledglna be
undentood the lmpUcatlom of
postponing the arral1J1ment
hearing ln Santa Ana. Garbed In
the yellow jumpW!t of an~
County Jail Inmate, Kn1t
forcetullr, said, "I Undencand :
that, yes.• ~
Costa Mesa
Radioactive waste
transport delayed
Besides the a1ayinel of Wyatt
'Loainl. Eric Church. G.ltfr'ey
Nellon, Rodger Devaul and
Terry Gambrel, Kraft also la
charged with a variety ol felony clu\rees. lncludina mutilaq one
of the vlctlm1, sodomy and •
robbery.
Following the hearing, Kraft's
attorneys -Bruce Bridgman and
Doualas Otto -told report.en
they have interviewed their
client for a total of 20 hours since
his arrest.
A ..,,_-o6d ColCa .._ bO)' • lllMd In ~ condhkln loelly In IN IMenllw c.e
un11 o1 F-11111 v~ eon-.nity ~ lftlt being hi! by 1 CM T..-My nlglll. ~ 1llld .._d "°9rll llllnk• ~ ....
oul In rronl or 1 vlfllc.. on lenll An• ,,. ___ ICnoa.
AboUI 1100 In -I 9«1~ WU
rec>0r1.cl m1•11"9 TU.Ider from flludy'1 111c1no. 1131 W!llttl« A... ,
BJ KAREN E. KLEIN °' .. .,.., .........
A ltate plan to cte.i&nate over
which routes radioacdve waste
materlah will be t~uuported
throuah C>ranae County hu been
stalled for at feast six montha.
The State Attorney General'•
office must first settle a le1al
question raised durln1 the
controveny, Callfomia ffiahway
Patrol offida.la aak:l Tunday.
Lat yew, public bearinal on
the adoption of four major
frttway routes ln Oranae O>unty
for ablppinl waste matter,
mainly from the San Onofre
Nuclear GeneratJ.ne Station, out
of the state railed oppo11tlon
from citlRna aroupe and city
counctla.
be completed before the proposed
routes could be adopted, aaid Dan
Parker, a CHP spokesman.
The CHP turned that question
over to the Attorney General'•
Office.
"We're in suspended animation
now."' Parker said, "but the
Orange a>unty routes are still
under COlllideraUon. ••
The freeways propmed are the
Santa Ana, the San Diego, the
Rivenide and the Costa Mesa.
The wastes would be
tran.ported ill huge. steel cuks
which nuclear lnduatr y
spokesmen 1ay are virtually
lmpre1nable If an accident
OClC\.U"l'ed.
"The things he's been ch.arpd
with a.re at right angles to the
kind of penon we know him to
be," said Otto.
Kraft was arrested near
Mission Vie,·o May 14 by
California Highway Patrol
officers, who pulled his car aver
because lt had been moving
erratk?ally. Beside Kraft, they
di1c:overed the body of Terry
Gambrel. a "-year-old il Toro
Marine, who police allep wu
strangled.
Partly sunny The heart~ allo railed the
question of whether
mvtronmental atudle9 needed to
Local offlclalt who taU11ed
last year in Santa Ana u.id they
preferred to see the wastes
tran.ported over freeways away
from demely po~ted areu..
Deputy District Attorney
Bryan Brown aald the county
Sheriff's Department baa
oraanhed a t~al MVen•man
task force to act u a cleartna hm* for Information pef1ain.lna
to the ala
Coaslal
i.-Ol6udt becomtno p.niy ~~~llundey 1tternooft. ~Mtotl. Hlgheln
._ 'CIP9' tot et tt1e beect'-to ..... 70I..,..,,..
lleewller•. l ro"' Polftl Coftceptton to tll• M .. 101n
•order •"ct 0111 aq 1111111:
.... -.... 18 .. 22 kncM9 ...,. ..,onoer ..-. 1111c1 • to a feot co111blMd NH tl'ltou91'1
fl"ftlCt•r OVW Ot11et OOMtel ••• ., •. a..ceb'"tflt ¥1(1 .... ... nlgrlt_,,_............,
•1111 ..... "°.,.,.... '° .. 11 llnote • UM etMnlffn
niur.-. ,..., 1 • ' --wind .... ._..... .... , .. 2 .... ~ ... "°"*-· llwt 10111• P•rtlel Oleerlnt ,............_.
-&tended
lorecaa1
Mn.
t r
NATION
Tuition tax credit bill
moving ahead in Senate
By fte A.noclated Pre11
WASHINGTON -Bruahlng uide concern about the
record federal dellclt, the Senate Finance Conunittee la movinl
abeed with Pneident Reapn'• bW 1fantin8.tuition tax credit.I
foe puenta of private 1ehool puplla. The bUI. approved 11-7 by
the panel TU.day, eventually would allow a credit of up to
$300 a year for each child att.encUnc private IChool. It would
add about $3. l billion to the deflclt over the next .five years.
'The tuitlon-<;Te<iit bill, long a pet project of Reapn'a. would
help famlllet with incomes up to »Q,000 pay the cost of mendini their children to parochial and other private achoola.
Kentucky selects candidates
LOtJISVD...LE, Ky. -Lt. Gov. Martha Layne Collins,
trying to become Kentucky's first woman governor, narrowly
captured the Democratic gubernatorial ta~mary to set up a
campaisn ~ainst former major league ball pitcher Jim
BunnJna. With more 'than 600,000 Democratic votes from
Tuesday'• election counted unofficially by early today, Mn.
Collina, a former achoolteacher. had a 4,211-vote lead over
Lou.i.lville Mayor Harvey Sloane, who was making his second
successive attempt for the state's top office. Bunning, a state
senator who was supported by the state and national
J\epubllcan parties, swept hia primary against feeble
opposition.
Reagan lauds .MX vote
WASHINGTON -President Reagan says House
approval of the MX mi&aile is a "wise, courageous step forward
for America," and he looks forward to a similar victory when
the Senate votes on the giant new nuclear weapon. The
239-186 House vote Tuesday "aend.s an important signal to the
world: Americans att uniting in a conunon search t.o protect
our security, reduce the level of nuclear weapons and
strengthen the peace," Reagan said. "We now look to the
Senate to send this same rnea&&e· •·
Jackson speech 'sig11ificant'
MONTGOMERY .. Ala. -The Rev4 Jesse Jackson,
siindir\g fu the lootsteps of Confederate President Jeffenon
Davis, said his invitation to be the first black to address a joint
aes&on of the Alabama Legislature "is an act of reconciliation
and healing." Comments from legislators who ,...listened to
Jatkaon's speech Tuelday in the House chamber echoed his
view. "It's significant becawie this state bas a longer history of
repression of blacks than apy slate in the nation," said one.
STATE
Property tax increase lower
SACRAMENTO -Property taxes will rise only 1 percent
this year for mast California homeowners -hall the annual
rate of the put five yean -becau.ee of the sharp decline in
inflation. That wW save the average homeowner $6 to $10 on
his or her property tax bill over the coming year. It ia the lint
time since 1978, when Proposition 13 put a 2 percent
constitutional Ud on annual property tax increuea, that tax
bills will go up by lea than the 2 percent limit.
LA de.lays information law
LOS ANGELES -The City Council bas poetponed action
until July on a Freedom of Information ordinance that would
allow citizens acceu to their police files. The ordinance
mustered only .even votes. one shy of the majority needed for
passage. It would pennit revie~ of file. except in ~ w~ere
doing 90 would jeopudiz.e an mv~ation or~· tdenufy a
confidential IOW'Ce or interfere wtth peraonal pnvacy.
Cyanide leak forces evacuation
CX>MPTON -A 55-gallon drum of poisonous potaalium
cyanide haa leaked furnt!9 at a trucking yard, and authorities
say they evacuat.ed evefYone within 200 yards. A truck driver
and three loading-dock workers were taken to hoepitah
complaining of nauaea, were treated and releued, Los Angeles
County Fire lnapector Michael Lee said Tuetday. The Orum
was among 52 l.naide a truck trailer.
WORLD
Aral at blames Khadafy for mutiny
BEKAA VALLEY -PLO chief Yuaer Arafat is blaming
Libya for engineering a mutiny against him, and aome of his
troops say Syria a1lo la helping the rebel Palestinian factiona.
At a news conference Tue9day near the PLO rebet.' hue in
the Syrian..oontrolled Bekaa Valley of eutem Lebanon,
Arafat said rebel leader Mohammad Moussa bad been
"deceived" by the Libyan leader Col Moammar K.hadafy. One
PLO officer said the rebda wtte armed with heavy weapona
that Libyan transport p1'ne. landed at Damucua in the lut
few days.
Racehorse search abandoned
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -Police say they are
convinced the $13 million racehone Sherpr la deed and have
• called off their teareh for him. Four gunmen stole the auper-
lllallion from the Aga Khan's 1tud farm at Ballymoney in
County Kildare Feb. i, and demanded a $3 mllllon ranaom.
''We're convinced he'• dead," a eenJor police officer in Belfaat
said Tueeday.
' Gunmen seize $10 million in casb
PARIS -Police aearched today for three or four IUJUDen
who robbed an armored car and ~peel with u much u $10.7
million in cub. Authortt.lal Mid the armored car had vilited mope. bank.I and bultn mea and WM I09ded with cash tram
the Pentecolt holiday weekend.
NEW YORK (AP) -Mon
than two bll.Woft l*>DJe ju:nined
both bank.I of the &ut River,
brtaht wtth ...a.cdma from New
Yor&'a ~ ti.reworb dllDi.Y,
tor the fGOth birthday o{ di•
clty'a endurln1 hom•-1rown
mon\lment -the Brooklyn
Briqe.
Yacht• and fiahtn1 boats
1warmed Tunday beneath lta
atone towers and 1teel cables •
proud resident• and curloua
tourt•'-crammed atreeta, fin -=apes, rootto119 and p6en to pey
boma1• to the 19tb-c-_ntury
en1lneer\n1 marvel whoae
Gothic Unee have hem llbned to
the p-eat catbedrala of Europe.
The day of feltivttle. beaan
with a parade of 15,000 peOple
and ended with a rendition -of
"Happy Birthday" at the foot of
the Brooklyn tower, when -ta
at the South Street Seaport cost
$7$.
On May 24, 1883, the day the
Brooklyn Bridl• opened,
MontcomerY Schur,ler wroCe ln
Harper'a Weekly: • It ao happens
that the work which la likely to
Loophole
tax plan
changd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
George Deukmejian'a loophole-
cl<*ng tax plan -w balaooe-ihe
budget la lnchln1 throu•h the
Senate, but not Without chanCet
that Deukmejian and fhe oil
compenles don't like.
The upper hou.e'a Revenue
and Taxation Committee
approved the bill 8-2 Tueeday
night, after a 10-hour hearlna
that produced a 1erle1 of
amendmenta.
And the plan faced the
poeaibWty of more dwl&M a> a
Senate Finance Committee heari~ that · wu .::heduled to
beatn late ihia afternoon.
A11embly Speaker Wlllie
Brown, D-San Frandaco, who la
carryln& the blll for the
Republican governor, uld any
amendments could kill the
measure, AB1428.
And Michael Franchettl,
Deuk.mejtan'1 finance dlJ"ector,
said the aovemor would not lilJl
the bill if it contained one
amendment added Tuaday, a
provision f reventln1 oil
companies rom deductln1
federal windfall profita taxe.
f.rom 1tate taxea.
Supporten said the provision
would force oil companies to
shoulder their fair share of the •ta~'• financial problema, but
critics contended It dlanminated aaaJnat oil producen.
Mississippt
capital still
under water
--------------------
be our molt ~ monument. and to oonwy ...,...DOw .... of
\.W to the mast ,-note pmt.ertty I la
a work of bare utlllty; not a
1brtne, not a f orttHI, no' a
palace, but. bfldle."
On the centennial, M~or
Edward Koch aald: 11The
Brooltlyn Bndae r"ta the dty of Nnr York no other
~ty or monument .•• It hal a
Cbancter •• atrqth that " the mirror lmap of t.JMt ~of thil
dty."
Police aaid more than two
mllllon apectation turned out to
wltneu the celebration,
patterned after ''People'• Day'' in
1888 when the bridP connected
the then-tndependnt dtiet of
New York and Brooklyn. lta
5,981-foot apan made lt the
1arp9t auapemkm bddae in the
world, and it connected the
nation'• 1arps\ and third-1.a.raest dtiel. .
Many pedeatrlan1 wore
Victorian m-Tu.day, and 8$
~ flah1na bodl, t\181. fen1ea and fire bom -spewtna red,
white utd blue pl\.U!8 of water
-ulled under the span.
EGYPT
Ri•er tngecly depicted
""" . Nile steamer
l>ums; sinks;
many perish
'
Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/WtdnMday, Mt1Y 25. 1M3
Fireworks. explode over th'e Brooklyn
Bridge, marking the structure'• lOOth birthday.
Israel and Syria
clash over Lebanon
BJ TM A.laoda&ed Preti
Wavea of Israeli jeta drew
heavy anti-aircraft flre over
Lebanon'• Bekaa Valley today
after Syrian .m,.nes shot down-a
pilotleaa Israeli drone
recmnalaunce plane, Lebanae
radloe reported.
The Israeli military command
reported that Syrian warplaneil
tired air-to-.alr mi_.Jee at brael1
jeta but scored no blta. The
hraell1 uid they had no
Information on a drone being
ahot down.
It was the first Syrian-1.araeli
air encounter since Iarael invaded
Lebanon lut Ju.ne. Iarael and
Lebanon~ a U .S.-mediated
trooP withdrawal agreement lut
wees. but l'rael's pullout la
contln1ent on a Syrian
withdrawal, and the Syrian•
have ao far refu.ed to remove I their troops. ,
The incident.I occurred at a
time of rlaiD8 tensloD between
litraell and "Syrian force• ln Lebenon. ----
Sta~ and private radios in
Beirut 1ald the hraell
reconnaiuance drone waa brot.lcht down by a Soviet--ma
ground-to-air SAM t m.luUe
fired by Syrian fon:c!e at 3:35
a .m . PDT. Initial r•porta by
Lebanon'• atate radlo aald a
mlulle fired by a S_7r~a'b
warplane downed the pU.otlela
aircraft.
The l.ncident prompted IsMI
to aend wavea of ....,,.,.,.1wuyie
jeta over the Bek.a.a Valley in
ea1tern Lebanog, drawin1 barrafe8 of anti-aircraft fire flcm
Syrian and Palest1nlan politlcm,
according to the brmdcMta.
F ANTASYLAND REOPENS •• .'
From Page A1 CA.IBO, F.cYPt (AP) -A Nile
IUvw n.tner with 827 people The project hasn't result.eel in their own children.
abovd cauabt fire ancf aank any chan1e in the general "All of them were from the
today in muddy, crocodile-admiaalon price of $12, which Oran1e County area and
tnfes1led waten. AuthariU. l&ld includel all rides. apparently they were kids who
at i...t l9Wll people were lmiawn He added that Fan tuyland w~ outatandln,J as far • their
cs.d and 120 wee m....,.. waa one of the five original academic reconl in their acboola,
th a-• in the 77 -~ IO We looked~ tMt lilt and Interior M.lnlatry 1po~ eme _,.._ --..... ·
J'akbreddtn Khaled Mid 000 Two other areas, New Or conducted a and we found
IUl'Ytvon ._.. -·n-1 tram the Square and Bear Country, have quite a few," he uld. ..---l1nce been added. The new Fantaayland river and the reacue effort "We realized that Fantuyland resembles a fairy tale vm.,e,
Clalltfnued 11 boun after the boat WU atllJ b9Ck in 1955," Aguirre with cobbled IU'ftta and lh1na)ed
aank mare than 800 mOel aouth explained. "Some of the other root..
of Cairo. areu of the park had aurpuaed it "Within the attraction, we're
The of.flda1 Middle l'.Mt Newa as far aa technology goes. takina advantap of IOIJle of the
Agency reported from Alwan Redol.na Fantasyland la part of latest technol<>I:)'," he laid.
th t th fire " 1 tel Walt Dlaney's philoeophy which Thanks to-holo1rapby, a ~"·the~:ri~ was a• long as there's method ot Ulinc 1uer beum 1ID w• no tmmediet.e WOl'd on the imagination left in the world, create three-dlmemional ~ ~of the blue that broke out Dlaneyland will never be visitors can tee a Blue Fairy
before dawn on a boat filled complet.ed." vanilh before their eyes in the JACKSON, Mill. (AP) l 1 b s d d The new Fantasyland will new "Pinocchio'• Darln1
About 8,000 realdenta forced =..i~-w t u an:!e ~,'!.. officially open to the public Journey" ride and pMI throu._lb a
from their bomm ip thJa capital .iith t:" &et'::enien ve.,.... Saturday, but the presa opening waterfall without ~tting wet in
city waited for the swollen Pearl waa today. the redeal1ned ' Peter Pan'•
River to cre1t today, but Muatafa Abdel-Ghatour, When the area first opened on Fllaht.''
window-blah flood waters at 1eneral-Hcretary of the Julyl7,19~5,al(.f0Upofchildren "Snow White's Scary
many ~ and h111ke•e' are Southern ,..,,,_ iowmate. Mid ran acrou the drawbrldae to Adventura" preaenta 1pedal
expected to 'Infer for daya. . he had NCelved a report th.at Sleepina Beauty'• Castle. Today. eUeda that tum a queen into a
.. If you want to vt.lt my plKe, aome pamenpn 1wam uhore AcWrre aald, many of the ame withered hal and a temptini
you'll have to UM a boat oi a and otben.,.... Wnc l*ked up people -now 1fOWD up -were apple Into poiaon u viewers
helicopter," aa1d Robert Davia, ,.....:.b7,:_,,mlH:.__tary _ _:_bel __ u._'....:°'*' __ .. _____ io_ club __ acra. __ th_e_brl_dae.;;.___wi_th __ wa_t.ch_. _______ ~
after he and a nelahbor mumed
from paddllnl a small boat -------------"'1•••~1_1m••111!11!1•~~~~-~~~~---· Tue9day to hit~ ln nonheMt
Jtdmon. urve aot llx Inches of
water lNdde and the water's stOl
'°""up." Forecaster• predicted only
widely acattered thundentonnl
today for the Mt•mld Valley
and mmt of the Soutli.-NauanAl
Weather Service, me~t
Huch Crowther at u.. Severe
Storm• Warntna Center in
Kanaa1 City1 ,.o., old any
r~ .f'l'Obabl.Y •1wouldn't be
too ~, •• b the ~··
IWoUlft rtvwt and ---Since IMt Wectn.lay, offldak
have reported a4 atorm4
relat•d dHtb1 acrOll Dixie.
What do you lib aboUt the Dally Pilot? What don't )'OQ like!
CaU tM number at left and you.r rM1UP will be recorded,
tran.cri.bed aod delivend to the appropriate editor.
Tbe Hrne %4·hour an1wmn• aenlct may be UHd to f'ffOC'd let·
tera to the ~llor on any tOPtc Mallbox contributoH mu.at Include
their name and telephone num~r for verification .. No circulation
calls. please. .
Tell us what '1 on your mind
j
-~ '
I I
~ + ! ~
l.
i
A4 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, May 2S, 1983
AIDS disease still no threat to 'general p~blic'
WASHINGTON (AP) -
AIDS, the dbeue which makes
the human body prey to
infections by eruma ita immune
1y1tem, atrtkea several n ew
victim• each day but doe1n't
threeten the general population.
the aovemment aaya.
Dr. F.dward N. Brandt Jr., the
asalatant MCt"etary for health and
head of the federal Publlc Health
Service, uid Tueaday that nearly
40 pen.-ent of the 1,460 American
vlctlm1 dta1noaed wlth the
dlleue have died.
They remain primarily ln
certaln sectors of the population.
Abou\ 71 percent have been
hornoeexual or bllexual mm with
multiple Hxual partnen, 17
percent have been tntravenoUJ
dru1 abu1ere. 5 percent have
been Haitiap and one percent
~ve been hemoph1lu.ce.
"What I'm tryina to 1u.g est to
them (the publtc) 11 they
shouldn't be panicked about
thla." Brandt uid.
"We have no evidenee that it le •
breakln1 out Into the aeneral
'population ln any~· he continued, •rm 1UN that
I'm not concerned about rilk
of A.IDS to rne or my lamlly."
Jobless health hill advances
Measure opposed by Reagan clears House committee
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Deapite objections from President
Reafan, legislation providing
· hea th coverag e for jobleu
Americans la going to the Houae
floor with what appears to be
broad bipartisan support.
The llouae Energy and
Commerce Committee approved
34-8 TueadAy a bill setting up a
federal-state health Insurance
program for the unemployed.
'The fuU Houae is expected to
act on the legislation soon, Rep.
Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif., said
following the committee's vot.e.
offset by new revenues.
Waxman called the bill "a
measure to provide basic
coverage to the 10 mllllon jobless
Amer icans and their families
who have lost their health
insurance and have no other
coverage."
Rep F.dward Madigan, R~ru .. a
ro-sporuor of the legislation, said
it ·•reaches out for people who
are not welfare-class people -
working men and women of
America ou hard times for the
first time in their lives."
However. they could designate
areas of high unemployment to
participate.
The program provides
coverage for nine hospital daya
and 10 phyaidan and clink viaita
per year and full prenatal and
delivery care. People choosing to
enroll would ry • premium of 2
percent o their weekly
unemployment compensation
payment.
Saying the measure "reflects
broad, bipartisan consensus,"
Waxman predicted Congress
would have legislation before
Reagan by July. He also
predicted Feagan would sign
such a bill despite the president's
opposition to spending any new
federal money not specifically
Under the bill, stat.es choosing
to participate would receive
federal matching payments
varying in amount from 50
p erce nt to 100 percent,
depending on the state's
unemployment rate.
The bill would cover people
rece1 v i ng unemployment
compensation aa well u those
who have exhausted their jobless
benefits within the last two
years. Thoae w lth exhausted
benefits would not pay a
premium.
A doggone long wait
States with unemployment
rates of less than 6 percent cc-uld
not participate as a whtfe.
The comm I ttee added a
provision specifying that the
program not pay for abortions
except in cases wh-;re the
mother's Ufe la in dangef.
Wally Bryant's dog, Patricia Lynn, joins him in a quick nap in a
line of more than I 00 people in Gahenna, Ohio, waiting for a
bank offering state-funded 9 .98 percent home mortages to open.
--; ----
ME E
STARTS TOMORROW.
SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 10-9, SATURDAY 10-6,
SUNDAY 11-6.
wo••ws FA ... ONS
• f19.t9. Orig S30 Cotton separates from Carole Little for Sa1nt-
Tre>pez West Ol009EI shorts. 2 and 3-tone polos Pacesetter. 80
• S-44.99, $49.99. Save 33% Gatole uttle for Saint-Tropez West silk
separates Camp shirt 1n penw1nkle. khaki, fuchsia. jade or cream
Orig S68 Sale $44.99. Ooubl&-wrap skirt in periwmkle. khaki Of
cream Ong S75 Sale S49.99. Pacesetter. 80
• $15.99. Oru~ S24 Save 33%. Our own cotton tees in stripes and
solids Dolman sleeve tee in royal, khaki, black. or red on white
stnpes Bo\Y8d V-neck tee in black. white. bllrgundt/ °'navy
Sweaters. 1.
• S12.99. Ong S20 Our own SQuare neck t-5hirt in white. red. hot
pmk. royal. black, camel. plum. teal. denim blue or pimiento cotton.
S-M-L Sweaters. 1
• 519.99. Orig S30 JOhn Henry short sleeve summer shirts in wtute.
blue or pink Polyest8'/cotton. 4-14.
Young Designer Sportswear. 105.
• f21 .99, f25.99. Save 33%. Oiristian Dior playwear. Long sleeve
striped cotton tee In red. blue °'yellow on white. Orig S40
Sale $25.99. Cotton shorts in white, blue or yellow. Orig. S33
Sale t21.99. Weekend Wear. 130.
• $39.99, '42.99. Famous ma)<er with a sporty logo: ootton PoP11n
bermuda. white, plnk 0< driftwood. Orig S58. Sale $39.99. Cotton
sweater. white. yell~ green Ong. S72. Sale 542.99.
Sportswear, 114
• M4.99-S108.99. Ong s60-S146 Save 25% unen-look
coordinated skirts and jackets by a very famous maker
Coordinates. 147
• S29.99-S49.99. Reg S42-S69 Coordinated bamboo-weave ~. tops and skirts by Uoyd Williams, 4-14. BIOU988, 25.
• $11.99-$20.99. Orig S18-S32 Catalina• shorts. pants, tank tQPS
and tees f0< summer. 10-18. Robinaire Sportswear, 160.
• '11.•. Orig. S18 Save 331, on our own striped cotton t>oatneck
tees, S-M-L Robinaire &>ottawear. 116.
• t22.tl. Orig. S36 . .1NR belted po6lin pants In white. khaki. navy.
raspbeny, or royal polyester/cotton. 6-16. Robinaire Sportswear. 7 · •22.91. Orig. S35. JWR snap-front skirts in navy, red. black. or
khaki tk:t<lng atripa on white polyester/cotton. 6-16
Robinai<e Sportswear, 7.
• t29.19. Orig. ••~. Save 33%. Chaus tee in luxurious 100% sllk.
In peacock, fuchsia. violet, red. blue and taupe. Rot>lnalre Sports\N8ar, 4.
• •11.tt. Orig. S18. Save 33% on solid color cotton boatneck tees
wtth contrast color cuffs. S-M-L Robinaire Sportswear. 116.
• •39.19. Orig, sse. Save 28%. Our exclusive Pol~ dot dr9Sle8 by
Vifv<> If. D'etHS, 60.
• '31.•. Orig. seo-te2. Save 33%. Collection of dresses by
A & K• P8tlte1. deelgned for women 5'4" and under. Petites, 55
• M9.te. ()10. 164-'80. Cotton thittdresses by Just Oloon In a
coklrful ~of atrlpes and dots. Updated Oresaes. 136.
• M.99. Reg. S7.50 Lily of France• Cotton Lihes• brief in white or
nude ungerle/Daywear. 91
WOl•N'S SHOSS
• •<49.99. SQeciaJ. Our own low wedQe. all leather sling sandal m
white. blue. red 0< yellow. Women's Shoes. 47.
• S39.19. Special. Our Italian-crafted sandal collection in puffy,
blltter·soft leather that barety COYef'S. Cont8fnl)OrWY Shoes. 6.
• $39.99. Orig. S56. Our Liz Oaibome moc in blue. white, red or
barley leather with low. feminine lines. Shoe Collections. 103.
JWR.IR'S
• '14.99. Reg. S2<4. Our colortul oolleciion of cotton sleeveless
sweaters In assorted stripes. JWR JR'S. 150/186.
• S9.99. Reg. S15. FabUlous cotton twill shorts In khaki, white, navy.
turQuoise, green, red or purple. JWR JR'S, 150/165.
• '29.99. Special. Hooded sleeveless Jogaultl tn white, pink or black
lightweight polyester/cotton pique. JWR JR'S. 37
• S19.99. Special. Our own polo-style shirtdressM In red, turquc»ae.
r6yal, purple, dark rose or black intenock cotton/polyester.
.1NR JR'S, 117.
• S12.99. Special. Cotton argyle sweater vests in black/white or
pink/white JWR JR'S, 52.
• H .99. Special. Our fwo.i>oeket cotton camo shirt in ¥A'llte. pink. lilac or turQUolae. JWR JR'S. 52.
• S12.99. Soeclal. Our five-pocket ankle Jean in white Polyester/
cotton .MR JR'S, 52.
KIDS
• H .99. Orig. S15-S18. Boys8-20potyester/cottonlhorta. Kidl, 39.
• H .99. Orig. S1 5-S 16. 8Qys 8-20 cotton and potyesler/cotton knit
shirts. Kida. 22.
• H .99. Orio s 10. Our own bOY9 8-20 piped twill shorts. Kids, 39
• '5.99. Orig. S10, Girtf T· 14 ecreen print t-efllrts. t<Jdl. 45.
• •11.99. Orig. S18. Girls 4·6x print sundresses of POiyester/cotton.
bright oo&ors. l<ldl, 49.
• •7.99-•t.89. Orig. S12-S15. ToddlerS sundrelMS. prints and
bright•" potyeater/cotton. Kida. 113.
• H .99. Orig. S9. Todd!« girtt 2-4 ecreen print tope of
polyester/cotton. Kida. 113.
· H .9i. Orio. s11. Girts 4 ·8X ecraen printtope. tOdl. 4&.
• H .4t·t15.19. RGo. 11•.50·124. Infant bOY9 aid glrla ptaywear for
stzes 12·18·24 montha. Polyester/cotton, nwnyl(ytel. Kldl. 63.
• •4.48-•tA. Aeg, *9··t19.SO. Sonng ~for Infant girts end
ba'19 •lz• 12·24 months. Kida. 53.
• 3'13 .•. R~3/S5. Boys 90dcl aina 4-7. Alto awllebfe: boys IOCtcl 8·20. . 3/$8.25. Sale 31ftll.....,1t Olttuocka 1'·14.
Reg, S2-S3.60 31'1.41-•2.la Kida. 120.
PA•ION ACCll88G,_S • •4.99. Orio $8. Girtt 4·& cuffed ll'IOltS, morted cotora. .. ... ~_, , _ _....... c:t18d< i potyesterfc:otton. Kida. 49. · ~ ~S.:.t~ ~1secretar1ea n asaorted colors • H .88. Orio se. ~ 4-1' swimwew. cottqn/potyester Kida, 32 · n.• Orig. 112. s.w 33% on tube tOc.1n IOlld white. blade. red. • =-. ~ ·~ ~.,. 7 knit lhlm. ~/cotton. MIOrted
~·=~~=.~=~~~ripes. · H .•·t11.ll. Rea. '6·•24. Toddlel'l2·4PitYWMrfrom'YoongSet • ... •·taA.•. Orig. t14·t38. Hends)elrUd doteonne jewelry In end Alben. KJdl. n3.
peod111ts. wnnga. h8'roornb9and ptna, Fllhlon Flne Jev.1elry, 141
• M2.tt. ReG. see Sell9 33i on Letltle '8ether hlndblQI In ¥lite.
bone. blf1ev. or Qr'llY. HandbeQI. 188. • .... PAIMION8 .
• t17.91. $pedal. Leather ahouldetbags and clutchet In white. bone. • Mt.•. Reg. tee. CMtlll oxford st'°9I from JoMlton Ind Murphy
red. 0t nlN"j. Handbegl. 149. After Houri collection. In tan 8'*'8 Ind bOne ....,_, •
Men'• Shoee. 2. UNOm,_ · t1t.tt. 8pedel. F8m0Ut mlMr ptald dreea lhlm Cf otJlltOnl
• •t.11. Special, A Choice •i.ction of Jennifer Oele llMolWrts Ind pOlyWter. Men's Or.-8hlr1a. 20.
bltl7tdOlt .,.,.,.,. ,. •""' lnctedlble price. • •11.11. OrtQ:. •17.80. Siik print t6el from a flmOUI ~ ' Junb lntlfrilte ~I. 83. detf9"'.9f; Men't T1et. 158.
• a/M.41~14.28 ucti. Formru• 'fbu• talloted t>tt« In INhtte °' · •1•·•11f. :'J:'0&·1288. &Mtl from VO'J' f&l/Offte ~ nude. /~ 91. and European 119'*'1. M9f1Y ~.all~
• 3/M.• t,_28 nctt. Lace-trirM-2 tf'llrtY flY10n bfklnl1 ti'! Mln'1~1nQ; 38.
Oaxton• In_..., Unoerie/0.VW-.. 01. • ... ., •• Rag. t125·11t5. ~· . •2.•. Reg. M. Wimer'•• ll'nOOth-flt brief In whit• or nud4t nytoo. Men'• ~ Qott\lng, ~
Ungerle/DlywMr, 91. ·MT.• fi'ea. te&. ~Men'• EIPO*...,aa.Noe, 95
• S19.t9. Orig $38.50. Save 48% oo famous designer cotton
sport.shirts fOf men. S-M-L-XL. Men·s &>ottshirts. 107
• $24.99. Ong. S36. Save 30% on belted chino pants in tan. aeam 0t
loden green polyester/cotton. 30-38. &>ottswear Casuals. 123
• 52 ... 99. Orig S36 Save 30%. Belted twill trousers 1n creme. loden
or tan Polyester/cotton. Sportswear casuals. 123
• f22.t9. Orig. S32.50. Save~ oo famous French dealOI* cotton
lisle stripe shirts, S-M-L-XL Men's Knits. 21.
• S15.99. Special. JWR cotton knit shirt in white. red, n/NY. yellow. Jade. turquoiae. ecru. wine or light blue. Men's Knits. 21.
• S28.89. Special. Famous American desi~ner jeana in a lighter-
weight indigo ootton denim with white stitching for summer.
New Directions. 145.
• sa.99-•32.89. Orig. S14-S45. Save 25%-50% on famous name swim'N9ar for men. Men's Active Sportswear, 118.
Nominal charge for alterations on sale merchandise.
HOl•STOM
• •13.99. Reg. S20. Glass 7-pc. salad set made In Franoe, with one
9" bowl, six 5" bowls. Gift Houtewar88, 28.
• •12.tl. Reg. S20. Save 35% on the Drink Collection from 1'91d One red 10.oz. pitcher and six 12-oz. CUPI In aseorted OC>k>rs
Gift Hou18WW81. 28.
• $1.99. Reg. $13. Copper.plated wire chid<en besket.
Gjft Hou8ewares. 28.
• '14.11. Reg. $20. 10"x 7" teakwood cheeee 8'1oer with adJustat>Mt
cutting wire. Gift Hou98Wllles. 28.
• 154.11. Reg. S76. Krupa 10-CUp coffeemaker in white. Houtewerea. 121. .
• •1t . .ll. Reg. S30. Krupa electric coffee grinder with 3-oz. C8PldtY
HolMwant9. 121.
• f19.lt. Reg. S25. The Q.ip cake from People Producta. keeps your
hot drinks hot. Hou98wares. 121.
• '42.tl. Reg. S59. Save 2~ on our Melitta ~cup automatic drip
coffMmlker with free box of filters. Housewlr•. 121.
• f15.tl. Reg. '32. Steam vegetables. mem end other favorites In
our bamboo steamer. Houeeweres. 62.
• •29.99. Reg. seo. Save 50% on our generous ~Qt. cookware ateemer. Houeewares. 82.
• tt.19. Reg. 120. Save 50% on our aluminum-clad 12" oolendet
from Metro. Housewares, 82.
• •17.99. Reg. MO. Our 1Q-Qc. wok aet that WOf't(s on electric or oaa
st0\18. HOUl8Wlree, 62.
• '7.88. Reg. S12. Solid bfasa berware in wine, water or champagne
goblet•. Glfta, 59.
• S28.tt. Rea. seo. Save 50% on Colony handcul crystal wine eet wttn t1ora1 decant• anc:s e metd'llng gtw. ~. ee.
• •111.11. Reg. ssee. Silllerplated flatwtn In emoreee. lntet1ude or
Waverly, 5'-oe. MtVioe for 8. Aue a wooden ltoraQ9 d'8lt
(14& vatu.) • vr:u gift with~. Sliver F~. 191 .
• 2~1 prioee on 'M\lte Wilh Ironstone. &-po. ~ eettlng, R9D. 122.50. Aleo avallabte: Ulad ptate. A9Q. M.80. Sele •ua. Frult -..cer. R90. 13. 75. Sale tt.21. O\lna. 87.
• ... .._ Reg. t130 ... 550. Slve q.~ and more. Collectk>n
" beautlfutty etaft4'd IWnpe In IOlld brW. bnleplat•, ~ ,
Otyltll Ind men. From St"'ei. \\4ellV«>Od~. Ffedertc:k Cooper, Koen & Lowy, SunMt end LaQtn. • 12. • M.• '°"' oholDe. Special. Burnee of Belton• frtlmM In• -~ coOeQtlon d S"x5~ 5"x r. S"x 10" and co1a. itY*,
St1Uonery. 1s.
• t11.•'"' ...., SMt ss,.q and more. i.oui.vtii. CUlhiOned
11tettr .. p.mwttht11af1tirr.aullrttlll. OoYINdln~
wtlh ~ flberltl[ In 4 .-. -:wwtn. It perfect •20. Full. H o.tfct
12'&. Queen, "S*f9ot •;_tong;· tt ~MO. 8eddlng. '7.
• t11.11-llllt. SllY9 M.eQI tiltd ...... Gold Llbtt OuPont-Olcton-11' pMkJwl wtth ~ ootton tleklng and~
flberftll, ~ tr9lllld lo.,. ~le. AemCMlbte OOftOf\I odf-. ztooered CCMW .... ~ fl5 t29. Queen, fllO, t3Cl MlnO. Alo.942.,~87. • .,. . .,. ... AWntum=nr.a 111• bv s.111~ S6mlnOne and 111rtna NI~· • 'f04/I otft wtttl ~). Dll'::"~:.t=~---~·"""·"°'-
., •
{ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wtdneeday, May 25, 1983
I
Al
IRS make returns less taxing?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Internal Revenue Service 11
comiderln1 \a.X·llmpllflcatlon
plane that would allow mllllona
of people to abandon the
canpUated 1040 form and atill
ltemla aome llMtjor deducUona.
Another IRS project In the
'WOl'lm would •t -..ceptable llmita
for certain deductfona that a
taxpayer could claim without
aubnantiation. IJJwldy the law allowl IUCh a .._,. harbor'' for
deducttna 1\ate and local aalee
taxea.
Starting next January, the
abort Form 1040A will allow
fllen In aeveral teat area• to
claim a credit for child-care
expenses and an exclusion for
money 1et aside In an Individual
Betirenent Account.
Those benefit• now are
available only to thoee who use
the long form 1040. Their
Mesa school cited
or patriotism
Costa Meea's Carden Christian
School has been awarded the
preatlgiou1 Freedom Shrine
Award for ita patriotic teachlnga.
The exhibit on d.iaplay at the
school at 1025 Victoria St.
includes 28 reproductions of
hiatorically famous American
documents.
absence from the 1040A and
1040EZ apparenUy wu the main
reuon that a mllllon more people
filed the Iona form thia year than
lut.
Another change belna tested
would permit 1040A flleu
limited Itemized deductions,
eapecially the big onea for
lntenisl on a home mortpge and
properbt taxes.
''The-reault of theee i.ta will
help us determine if the potential
OCC student
chosen for
turf parley
Orange Coast College
horticulture student David
O.tis of Costa Meea ia one of
20 students from acre. the
nation choeen to participate
this week in the Jacobsen
College Student Turf
Seminar In Racine, Wia.
The seminar ia conducted
by Jac:obeen Textron, one of
the nation's largest producers
of turf equipment.
Oatis, 26, will graduate
from OCC in June. He
alreedy has been accepted at
Cal Poly Pomona.
diMdvantacea ot a llJ&htly Joaaer'
1040A would outwel1h tne
advanta1ea of ha'(ln1 fewer
tqpayen Ul8 the more complu
IMO," IRS Commiamoner Rmcoe
L. J'.aer told a Senate Finance
1ubcommlttee lut week.
Simpllf1mtton of tax tonne and
inltructiona II a major aoa1 of the
IRS becauae a almp1er form
meena le. wark fOI' IRS and 1-
chance of error by the taxpayer.
The buic problem 11 that the
David Oatis
a1ency Und1 lt dlfflcuh to
explain compllcated lawa ln
llmple terml. The IRS 11 claimlq 1ucceu
with lta lateat try at almPllfjcation
-the m.nci.P1P. 10.fine Form
1040EZ for a1n8le people that
WU Wied by 15 million people
thia yMt.
"The lnatructlona for ualng
Form 1040EZ 1ay abaolutely
nothlnl about whether you
ahoUld U88 Form l<MOA or even
Fonn 1040," Davtd L. Keatilll.
executive vice president of the
National Taxpayera Unlon,
complained to Che Senate panel.
'"nle new aplllhy and llmplWed
arapblca do inake the ahol't fonna
e..liel-to wocit with," be added.
~·But they don't do enouah to
alert people to poHlble tax
refunda or meana of reducinl
their tax." For example, criUca note,
parents who hire a baby liner to
care fOI' their cb1ldren IO they
can wwk qualify for a tax credit
for part of the~ but they have to file the Form 1040
to get lt. Many people, unaware
of the credit tf they look only at
the atmJ>)er Form 1040EZ. mill
that tax benefit altd8ether.
However, Al Brook, who II In
cbarae of improvtna IRS fomw.
aa1d 1le has T::mto receive a atnale complaint a 1040EZ filer
who felt cheated by the n~w
(orm.
A Rob1'1S()Q'£ Sae.
1 0 0 Y E A R S 0 F S T Y L E
A free rock cqncert will be preeented Friday night at the
Heritage Park Youth Servk:ea Center In lrvtne to kick off the
Memorial Day weekend.
The concert, featuring banda "Refua•." "ToUClb" and
''The Proclaimen," will 1tart at 7 p.m. It II open to all teena.
The park la located at 4601 Walnut Ave. In Irvine.
Drama classes slated in Huntington
Dramatica clUlell for younpters will be 1p<lll90r'ed by the
Huntinpm Beach Park and Recreation Deparunent.
C1aues at Ediaon Community Center will be held on
Tuesdays, beginning June 28, 9:1~ to 11:45 a.m.
Claaaes at Murdy Park will be held on Mondays at the
same hours.
Call 960-8895 or 840-5819 for more lnfonnation.
Workshop studies 'relationships'
A free workshop on saying what you really mean in a
close relationship will be offered June 2 at Northwood
Community Puk In Irvine.
The workshop ia aponeored by the clty'a Family Services
Program. T. Patrick Stember, PhD, will diacusa way• of
communicating to promote a growing relationahip.
The workshop will run from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at the park,
4~31 Bryan Ave. More lnfonnation may be obtained by caJ.J.ina
the city at 660-3814.
\
MEMORIAL DAY SALE AND C CE
SIMMONS
MAXIPEDIC "312"
Twin each piece
Twin exira long each piece
Full each piece
Queen sett
K1n9 sett
BEAUTYREST SUPERB
Tw11'\ each piece
Twin extra long each piece
Full each piece
Queer sett
King sett
BEAUTYREST ELITE
T w11, each piece
Tw,,.. e~tra !Ong each P·ece
Ful eacn piece
Queen self
King sett
BEAUTYREST ANNIVERSARY
Twin each piece ~win extra long each piece
Full eacn piece
Qufff! sett
King sett
SEALY
POSTUREPEDIC AOYALE
Twin. each piece
Twin. ell.Ira long. each piece
Full, each piece
Queen sett
King sett
POSTUAEPEDIC P"EMIER
Twin each piece
Twin extra IOOg each piece
Full eacn p1ec•
Oueen sett
King sett
SAVE 200/o·SO°/o
I
ON ALL OUR PREMIUM QUALITY MATTRESSES .
AND WE'LL GIVE YOU THE BED FRAME AS A BONUS.
5 DAYS ONLY
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL DECEMBER, 1983 •
We have the biggest. the best collection of premium qualtty mattresses 1n Southern California To show ofl, we·re havtnQ a
5 day sale on all these mattresses-24 styles in all Select Sealy Postureped1cs, Simmons Beautyrests. Spring Air Ultimas and more We
feature 1ust a few from our c0Uect1on And with your set purchase, the bed frame Is our free gift to you.
Robinson's Sleep Shop, 75. To order. call toll-free 1·800·345·8501
·No payment unlll December. 1983. on all area rug. carpeting, electronics. furniture and
mattress purchases of $200 or more on your Robinson's charge (sub1ect to credit approval).
POSTUREPEDIC SECOND CENTURY
Reg Reg Sale Twin, each piece S299 95
$199 95 S99 Twin extra long. each piece $329 95
$259 95 1129 Full, each piece $349 95
$299 95 1148 Queen sett $89995 $699 95 $~8 King sett $1.199 95
$999 95 $489 SEALY POSTUREPOISE, ULTRA ARM
Twin, each piece S239 95
$319 95 1229.95 Twin. eKtra long, each piece S299 95
$344 95 125'4.95 Full, each piece $33995
$379 95 1279.95 Queen sett S799.95
$879 95 $&49.95 King sett ... $1,()9995
$1 14995· 1348.95 SPRING AIR PREMIUM
Sale
S231.15
$251.95
1271.95
1179.96 setus
$119
1149
s1•
1311
$541
$339 9S $248.95 ULTIMA UCK SUPPORTER
$374 9S $274.95 ULTIMA I
S4 t9 95 1299.85 Twin, each piece $219 95 S15t.t5
$949 95 H99.95 Twin extra long, each piece $249 95 S11t.t5
S1 29995 1848.95 Gift wtlh purehue Full. each piece $26995 ....
Outen &elf .. $64995 l4IU5
$209 95 S14U5 Klng sett $89995 a.us
S239 95 S174.85 ULTIMA II
$269 95 $199.95 Twin. H eh piece S259 95 S1tl..t5
$619 95 s.459.95 Twin, extra long, each piece $289 95 12.at5
$879 95 1659.95 Full, each piece $309 95 1247.tl
Ouffn sett ...... .. $749 95 .... ..
King sett ... . ...... $1.049 95 .,... ..
ULTIMA IV $199 95 1149.85 Twin, sett ............ $679.90 ....._. $229 95 SHl9.95 Twin, extra long, sett $739.90 1141• $249 95 1199.95 Full. sett . $799 90 .. , .... S599 95 s.479.95 Queen sett $999.95 S751.t5 S799 95 S63t.95 King sett $1 ,199.95 .....
EMPRESS 11, IUPEA FIRM $239 95 Twin. each piece. $199 95 SUit S269 95 Twin. e~ra long, each piece. S25995 ,,. $28995 Full, each piece S299 95 11• $69995 au.en sett $69995 1171 $959 95 King sett .. $999 95 .... .. ..
tSold as sell only OuMn. 2-pc King 3«
'
I ,
i I
I I
' I
A• Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT/Wedneeday, May 25, 1083
0 ..
... ... .... __ .....
Science isn't
al-ways scary
The 100,000 or 10 people who crammed into a hot and heavy
National Computer Conference in Anaheim last week couldn't
help but feel that life will never be the same.
Computers are everywhere, designed for everyone. There
were oomputen that didn't uae keyboard.a. You could point to
what you wanted by touching the ICl'eell. There were buainesl
computen that chart accounta better than a bevy of book-
keepen. Communications computers that linked anyone with
everyone around the world. Wort! prooeaon that made paper
ot.olete and letter writing a non-error operation.
Word proce.ors are probably the computers lll06,t of ua will
learn to live with and enjoy during the next few yean. Thia
commentary is being written on one. The Daily Pilot has come
into the computer age with the installation of computer terminals
in its newsroom, claaified and retail advertising departments a'1d
its compmina area. our staff looks on the green and blue video diaPlaY term1nala
with the same cwiosity visiton to Anaheim exhibited. The aBetl
creatures of plutic, metal, glaal and cables are replacing
typewriters and heavy lead pencila. Report.en take not.ea on their
video display tcreena and editors move paragraph.a around, delete
worda, oorrect punctuation with the low key clicking of touch
.ensitive keyboards.
For thole of us who still like the feel of paper and Ink, the
finllhed product has not been replaced by a cltgitir.ed alphabet
on a grey-green acreen. Newspapers are still black and white and
crayon colon. Still 10met.h1ng to hold and fold and cut up Into
file-ld..zed pieces to save for future reference.
The technology of computers baa indeed revolutionized how
· !fe_tO about our daily buaine9I and the bi•linees of tomorrow. -And. as the seven and eiaht year olds who mastered Pee -Man
and went on to develoo a houaehold bwket for their parents on
the clusroom VIYr have shown ua ''techno-peeunta," computers
and the future are nothing to be feared.
• Opinions e•pres~ 1n 1r.e ~Pd<e •OOve •re th<>w of lhe Oa1tv P1lol. Otner v1~ws e•·
pressed on 1n1s pctQe •'• 11\o~ ol their •ulhor\ •nd ullsts Re.aer <ommtnt •i 1nv1l
ed AOdrus The L>a•tv Pilot. P 0 8o• IS.0, Cost• Mew. CA 9142'. Pl\OM 11141
U2·021
MAlllll
A recurring theme
To the Edhor:
Helen McLaughlin la no novice
at accu1ing hard-working,
dedicated city offici.ala of being
racist. Her recent remarka about
our Police Chief, Charles Grom,
are reminiscent of late 1979,
when 1he made the 1ame
remarb about the then mayor,
Paul Rylwff.
When Paul Hked for her
resignation from the Planning
Commimion, if memory .erves
me right, in addition lO racist
(M&. McLaughlin ia of Oriental
extnction) she al.a accu.ed him
of being lle'Xist. Theee remarks
were u untrue u her recent
comments, since it wa1 Paul
Rykoff who WU iNtrumental in
nominating her for the
commission post.
The prob1ems of being Pol.Ice
Chlef, in a beach city, are
difficult, and some of the
problem• are in and of
themselves unique. Our police
force are not only enforcers of
our laws, but alao forced lO be
diplomata to the large influx of
tourists. I have found Chief
Grom to be an exemplary public
8et"Vant: hardworking, responsive
io the citizens and very fair. I
take umbrag e at Ma .
McLaughlin'• remarka, and ask
all of my fellow netahbon to be
thankful that we have a man like
Chief Grcm aa Police Chief.
KIP KENNEDY
Newport Beach
Did scratch
improve art?
To the Editor:
Your AP report of the Z
ecratchc!d on the moC:lem art on
exhibit in San Frand.aco UIW'De9
that this "defaced" it. How can
you be aure it didn't improve lt?
PHIL LANSDALE
Corona del Mar
l. I. BQd /Suitable gift
In the African nation of
Burundi llvea the renowned
Watusi.I wboee men averaae 7
feet in bei1ht. The Rea1an
Adminlstratlon'a newly formed
U .S . International Sports
Committee recently 1ave
Burundi $10,000 worth of
ballrdba1l par.
Am DOW told there'I a national
oraanlzatton called the
"A90ciatkln of Physictana Who
Do Not OWn Me.rceda-Ben.zea."
Stron1fft expletive in the
BU>Je ia said to be: "The Devil
tab you! ..
Saudi ~·1 Sheikh Yamani
hlil a waterbed on hia jet plane.
Cbembta know how but not
why met.11 OOl'l'Od-.
Q. Why do we refer to a burial rt:;., f« .ttanpn .. a "potter'•
A. OMCk out St. Matthew 27:7.
TbM CJl'IClnAl ootter'• tield ... boulbt wtth tfw ._of lllver
thM JUdM ~down before he h11191dbl~
Q . Bo• old doH a 11n1l•
......, haw to be befcn abe'a
drdWMa~
A ... A 1phuter," 1aid ~Pat 8ululd. "II a pl
wllo ftl'YS i..med how to tit •
tMev." Quaint, but not cnwt
Crwl la WMt "Playboy'' once
a.u.d • lpinlter. .. An unl.-.d
number." Al• a 1 ta the
1iatl1Uctan. •'-ndard line of
demarcation between "1inale"
and "apinaterhood." The
clauificatlon is rarely drawn
anymore, however.
Maybe you recall when
Baltimore police arreaied more
than 100 men in a raid on a strip
joint. ln'118Wna precedent came
out of that caae.~'!:flstrate Wllllam Laukaitit it out,
aaytna men who-= their twMi1 in appreciative a u. for a;lrl
who Jldree off her clotht9 ant not
cor(cfocttna themaelvea in a
di.torderly manner.
In Norwich, Vt., la a ten~
library for to)'I -a "toy-br
-where members pay year y
dues lO borrow toys for three
weeks at a time.
Median ace of can on the road
now la 6.2 years.
Qi(--
, 'r~ Ii. Goot> SROE,<st~, rr CM '~ ro rAt<e UPllfE ~ StR\OOSL'f. /
Synfuels' sinful story
WASHINGTON -The U.S. G.
Synfuel• Corp. 11 one of the
biaest aovemment boondoa1ea ~.
of all time. Creeted' ln 1880 to --~ encourage the 1earch for JICI lllflUI ~
alternatives to fQlldl fuela. it la
-tunded by-tt(e.-iaxpayers-t>ut--pey aca1s; the recorumenutiGna ·
without the reatrlctiona that are being implemented with apply lO other publlc qende9. guato.
Synfuelt wu-given t"l~ billion £iaht Synfuela offid< earn
lO 1pend. The American people more than Cabinet aec:reiartea .
wUl be lucky 1f they est a nickel•• Five othen are paid at the $89,
worth of return on their ooo Cabine\ l.eWl. ntty.ftve of
investment. _ tbe~l77 em~make .
In a lin1ully unrestrained orgy more than ~.ooo.
of 1pending, Synfuels officlala Synfuelt preaident Victor
have lavilhed money on Schroeder is paid $13~.000 a
themaelv" In huae salaries, 'fU!· H.la wife, Kathryne, earns
outra1eou1ly 1enerou1 frtn1e $45,000 a year as a 1pecial
benefits and lu.xurioua quar1erl aulatant to the corporation'•
that would ah.ame a lheik. My chairman. One vice president,
aaoclates John DUlon and C.Orky Leonard Axelrod, make $108,000.
Johnson found thelle examples of Two others recently 1ot rat,...
the way they've been alwpin& at that put their aa1arie8 above f10,
the public trouah: 000 a year. One well·paid
executive I.a Ed CQx. who married
-SALARIES: A $40,000 tormer Prealdent Nixon '•
conault.ant'• report ordered by dau1hter Tricia. A1 aeneral
the corporation'• big 1hota in col.Lb8el and .ecret.ary, he eama
1981 recommended that top $76,000 a year.
ularies be lncreued to a h.ich o1 •
$190,000 a year. Since Synfuelt ia -Jl'IUNGE BENEFITS: All
exempt from federal control of Synfuels employees are allow~
to 1ock 1ix percent of their
aaladea away In a aavlna• -
retirement plan -with the
1overnment contrlubtlng 50
percent -more. The corporation :!: =tal~=-of,=
of in other gov~ea. -LwcuriO\.a. tiona:
Synfueh beadquartera la
en.aconced in four f1oorl of prime
office apace in downtown
WHhin1ton. The bulldinl la
equipp~ with aauna bath1,
aquuh and racquetball courts
and 1eaaet apace for $30 a aqua.re
foot -50 percent higher than
leaa elegant offices lea.ed by the
General Services Ad.ministration
for other agencie1. Synfuel•
officials signed a five-year, $10
million leue.
To achieve the appropriate
dejfff of splendor, the Synfuels
1heik1 1pent $522,919
refurbiahing their belldquart.en.
The cost.a included $14,661 for
the services of an Interior
decorator, $374,739 for fumlture
and '83,26-0 for carpeting ln the
executive auitea.
-Consultants: Though clearly
top· heavy with well-paid
profe81ionala, Synfuels atill felt
the need of outside help and
h ired 13 con1uhant1 at fees
ranging up to $600 a day. Two of
the9e exper1& were hittd at a 009t
of $35,000 to "develop an
orgaJU.z.aUonal ~worlL and _
lnterim operat:ina capecity for the
Office of Inapecior General."
They never turned in a report,
but were themselves hired lO
work in the IG'1 office.
-Conlllct of lnterest: Several
.Synfuel• executive• have-
1ub1tantlal 1tock holding• in
energy companies or affillaiea
that have applied for grants from
the corporation. And an
engineering firm that OWN stock
in the company of a board
member, Milton Maason, baa
offered to provide advice for
those aeeklng Synfuelt mQneY.
Footnote : A Synfuels
spokesman referred inquiries on
1alarie1 to a "compenaation
committee" report prepered for
the Synf uela hoe.rd. 'That report
noted "•pedal facton ," lncl~
the "need to be competitive
with wagea offered by the
private aector, which justified the
high aalariea.
A Reagan push for Bush
By JAMES GERBTENZANG All lats.-,.._.,,..,
WASHINGTON (AP)
While waiting to decide whether
to run for a alecood term -or to
announce a dectalon already
made -Preaident Reagan it
doing everythlna he can to make
aure that OeoraiBuah has a head
a tart on .any competition If
another Reapn campaip la not
ln the stars.
Reapn and hia vice J)l"e8ident
walkeCI into the White llou.e on
Jan. 20, 1981, u •tranaen. In
f.act. that WU probably the nicest
thing you could aay about their
relaUonahlp after a bitter
primary election campailJl ln
which Bush held out until the
very end to CODCede to the roWna Reaaan rmchine.
But CHU the pMt 2\-i years.
there bu been no li8lt that the
anlmm.tty of the 1980 campa!p
for the GOP preaidentlal
nomination hu Md any apWover
onto thelr day1 tn the White
House. In fact, all qna lndk:ate
that the two have developed a
good woridna reJationahip.
OF COUBSE, there is no word
about whether the praident will
1eek a MCDnd term. lie appean to
be layln1 a foundation for
runnlna apln, dropplna brpad
hlnta about needJna more time to
flnlah Im job. ma ... all aay
they think be will nan.
But he baa said nothlna that
would be difficult to awallow lf
be announca next October that
one term ta enouch.
And In recent day1, the
president ia taJdnc all the rtaht
l1ep9 to make SW'e that lf be dO.
no.-nm foe re-elecUon. Im vice
pr'ellldent can take advantap of
the admlnlm'atitln'• ~· F« one thlfta, ~ pnalden'
bM on at 1eut two <'11•9PlDI aid
\hat 8'Mh it hill only cho6ce fOC' a
ru.nnlni mate. ror another, be
bu sent Buah around the
country to campalan for
Republicans, and around the
world to repreaent the
administration.
Buah haa been actively
collectlnJ IOU• from GOP
candidatetl around the country.
He hu travelled 3~1.791 miles aa
vice president, lncludlna nearly
37,000 miles this year, wlth villta
to 46 1tatet, 33 other nations, U)d
three U .S. ~ona.
AND HIS FOREIGN travel
baa been more than just abow-
the-flaa work. Lut winter, be
completed a mlaalon lO eoothe
European feara abou\. the
pnlllldent'• arma coni.rol polldes.
An extention of that trip, to
Britain and Scandinavia, ia tn the
worb for June and July.
Such a trip cannot but help put
Bush ln a ltatemnan'• role that
would ctve btm a leQ up on any ~ble competition Ioc t.be UO!'
nomination.
None of th1t, of coune, la to •Y
that 8-pn la out and 9'ml ia ln.
A ~alter Of degrees
One of Uw pua11na par.so... ~ of peaocaltiy la that, 1A ao muiy cues, tht P9"IO" who ...m to ,,,.
have an extra lay.r of ••aJdn° ---~--~~"!'I.:,. ~~ .. '::= lmlll_, M'
thln.,.Jdnned at the ..,... drae.
&om.m. I .. Ol)'N&m•tty tn . la.Yet of peyebk ·~ but
my bwldln1. and know only doe•n't quite know bow to
CMUally, 11 tJw perfect prolOCype communicate autbentlcally ln
of aach a fMnillar c:harildw .. ·a. J*IOll.
want• dHperatel1 to Hem
affebJe and one ot the ~ bUt
,,. .. ""91' hem lblie to ...
It.:
He 1lv• the lmpr"81on of
pompomt)' and IUperlcrtty, and
9Wfl bat tentative .Uorta to be
Jocular •••rn 1tralnecl and
laborioul. Re llCta .. 11 be woWd
U1ce to brilU ~ tM& ah
much h environmental or
eonditioned by early expertencea,
we cannot determine wtth any dell'" of aocuraey.
"I·m 10 convinced the
prealdent i1 running for re·
election that I don't see any
acenario that baa him setting
Bulh up," said one Republican
1tratept. But, be added, ''if for
any reuon Reqan falten. Buab ii the odds-on favorite .••
Meanwhile, the preaident
continues to do all the right
thin11 for a non-declared
candidate.
AT EVERY chance he reta,
the prelldent aeem1 to be
dropping hinta about hia pl.am -
or at lNat maklnc light of the
decision he ia fadna. Thia week, the 72-year-old
Reapn WU talJdns with a l"JUP
of corporate executivea about the
MX ml11ile and the need to
rer,lace older weapons.
'We've be1un retirin1 our
Tit.an ICBM. becaUM of their
:· he said. pauatnc. and then :rd.inl: "Don't think what rm
\hinkinc.''
111111
"The very purpme of the Flm
Amendment la to fora:J.cm public
authority from aaaumln1 a
iruardJ,anah.l.P of tbe public mind
i'hrouah riautatinc the preat,
speech and rWtpn In thlS fleld
every penon mutt be b.11 own
watchman f°" truth, ~ &be
forefatbera did not trust an.1 aovernment '° Ml**• thi uu. from the t.ai.e foe' UI. ••
Juttiice Robwt H. J.ac.i
•'The fundatnantal tl•j."""Gf
1peecb and pr••• have
contributed 1reatly to tbe
dewlopDeftt arid well·bellllc oi
our fr•• 1oclety and are
lndlJ~nNbl• to lta contlnu41iid __. .... ...... -.... . J~ WUUam J ......
j
_ lntroduc~
Flayers MentJiol
~~s.
J
r
I}
~
j '
I~
I .,
1\8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 25, 1983
.,.., ......... 'ir MIMN IC...._
Laguna hoopster
_: Skip-Thorell-mak• -h~hot on-die
coart at Bluebird Park in Laguna
Beach on an uncrowded, sunny
afternoon in between storms.
Red Cross facing
red ink following
'.'disastrous' year
ATLANTA (AP) -"An incredible year" of
dilMten. including tornadoes and flooding in the
South and a eeriow earthquake in California, bu
bced the American Red Cro. into an emergency
effort to rai9e money to continue ita work, offidala
mkl Mmday.
Red C..-0. officials, meetiq in Atlanta foe their
~donal oonvenUion. laid the orpnization bu SP.tDt
a{l lta dtsNter relief funda -more than 833 million
-.ath IDCl'e than a month to 10 in its ~year.
Relief efforts to mc>re than one millioo people have
-.nptied the Red en.· $18 million dJ.suter budaet. i~ $10 million raerve and another $5 million in
private CXJlltributkma.
~ "The Red en. does not intend to cloee ita
doon or abut down the services the American
people have ccme to depend on ua for,'' Red en.
Pre.liiderit "Richard Schubert said in announdng a
drive to rai8e $12 miDkln. ~e have been there
when the American people needed our help, and we
bow they won't let -u.a down when we need
tl)eln,.H I
Even without any more diaaaten, the Red en. would wind up with a deficit of more than $3
IDilllon by the end of lta &cal year on June 30,
offlclala aald. However, experts have told the
organhatiop that the nation'• recent spate of
unmual weather oou1d continue.
1 "Thia has been cauaed by the weather
patte~," Schubert said. "It'• been ju.t an
~year."
I" Although the orpnization'a 1982 annual report
*1wed that revenue exceeded expemes by almost 915 million, offidala aid most of that came frcm
Red en. Blood Servx. and la needed ct:. finanoe
oontinuinC blood operationa. Under Red rWee,
that money cannot be spent Oil other ~
Schubert said the Bed en. will "do whatever
it takes." including borrowing money, to continue to
ph>vtde ~ee food, shelter and other relief to
d' ter vk.1lmL How~. be added, "We are very RnllUve
about movin8 into the new f1aca1 year borrow1ng on
MXt yeer'a re.ources."
Be aid~ built of the Red Crom' money -70 ~t -FS to direct relief operations, w'lth
I ...,.._. 10 percent going to ma9 care 'and feedln&I
.W 20 penient t.o administration, including travel
UICI IUpport expemes for volunteen and staff
on relief m1lliom. ·
ve-minute promotional film for the
shown t.o reporten Monday, ~tained
.,.._.of. ~in the Midwest, tornado damap1n tie South and the effects of an earthquake in S-"np, Calif. ,
-anet Riach dead at 88
Summit µation~ soft pedal S ,oviet trade
BJ SALLY .JACOBIBN At:111t11Id ......... WASHING'OON -World ,.......
Mp!' to avoid another aammlt IDlit
over tndinl with the &viet Unlan.
will likely treat the IHU• very
~ly at this weekend'• meetinc· lftdeed, pre-1u.mm1t work by the
allies may well have defueed the
potenUally exploslve subject enouCh
10 that lt will be only touched on at
the seven-nation mee~~
Will1amlbura. Va. <>then a
will be the le.den ()f Britaln. c.n.dA.
France, Italy, Japan. and Wdt Germany. .,
"To a very comidel'able extent, I
think that iaaue ha1 been dealt
with," Secretary of State Geor1e
Shultz told report.en at a Tueed.9y
briefing.
a.rop.n IUblldftm that help fhMnoe
~'ran"= Mtnltter PmN 'fruMau. In a ~ In ... wttb the Totc:nto Star, llld he bid ,..,. I
th• Sut·West uade l91u• would repre11ent "the maJn dan1•r of
oantrootaUon at Wlllllmlburs· But be 1atd 111• concern ••• diapell.t clurtnt ....... &allai with
....,,. He ~ the Jftllldmt -aayln1 "the 1tudiH ... are
prolf' ... ln& well and th• United s..-II cmlent wt.th that nport ot .........
The appuent h.umolly over the
iaaue mi1bt be snarred if the ~ dldde t.o onmp1eln about
the 8dmlnlltnUan'• own ~ to u.htm it• cmtrolt '1flWI the ahtpnwnt
of lmllldve ... to Ma.:ow. French Ambaaaador Bernard
Vemier-Palllez, ~at another briefina, .,.-ee_d. 'I we lhouJd
not face great dlfficultlea in th1a area."
be taid. Soldien from Fort Eustis, Va., tour colonial
Williamsburg, Va. They'll be part of the aecurity
foree for the economic summit this weekend.
A key aection It of lta plan for nieutborllina tbe J:xpart c.ontrot kt.
wblch ~ Sept. to, would let the ., • ..,.._,, .... ,., ... ,, United Stat.. bu' fcnlp flnm from
ahipptna their aoodl (W tecbnoloey
here lf they ~ cstain ..... of
the act.
That wun't always the CMe.
Not lorll after Jut year's veraam.
summit. rancor broke out over tradJnc wit!\. Ma.cow.
President Rea1an an1ered
European nations by Uahtenina h1a emt.ao an the ablpamit of. olf and
pa equipment to the Soviet Union to
lncl~roduCed abroad by tJ .8. • of litw I I el Four Wesiern European naUom
held major contract• for the
3,500-mlle pipeline from Siberia '°
Western EuroPe, and ._. C1C11Dpm1ea
defied the prohibldam and *ippec1
~line~ to tbe 8oYlet Union. N r, the prelldent lifted
the embup, ortamallY lmpoeed to
prot.eet the mWtary crae&aown in
Poland. !{e announced intemadonal
~ and WGl'ldna pouJl9 would
undertab ltudi9I on ....._Welt trade, includfna an examlnadan of. We.fem
enero ati.m.Uvea and th8 queadon
of de=:;ce on eneray · lmporta frcm • .
Ila a cwuh ~ tbaU1Udy. ~Qltecl ..... 8nd ... J'mopean atue. ..-
to tr¥ to •vold Jllurppean
averdapmdence on Soviet naiu.ral 181
suppUee. They also decided to try to fill my ppa la thetr enefl)' IUDPUel
ao that "no one producer ta-In a
polltion to eJlllldle monopoly power''
OWll' tbe am..
litanoYw, they've been woddna to
u.htm ~troll OW!6 tbe flow of II • gocKll that would help~ the mWtary buildup
They've alio a1reed to set up ~ for· monitortna (tnand.a1
.... fldlnll'I MlllJ"""'
Clrtlftc8111wllll10 Jiiii•~
......... nttli .. 111111111 ID I
•ll-llllwlll llllll 11• ......
With all the excitement about the
healthy eamin&' and everyday cash
convenience offered ~ Home
Federal's Insured MoneyMarket
Plan,.., it's imponant to remember
your long-term goals too -and
guaranteed long-term interest to help
you reach them. .
We've discovered that many
relatiom with the Soviet Unkln and to
~ "harmonile" export credit
C:lnll"'DC up. Shula .ad. ••rr.n w ~t I can see ... what ha•
happened la that all of the lMCHftl
~triea haw come to haw • view \that ttie atrateetc and mWtary and
security dlmenalona of z..t.w .. t
econcnlc relationl are a Jesltlmate
md important point of ccmcem."
He a18o Mid the ~ ~ to
have acreed ~t It WM Important to fQllow '"market prtnciplN" in tbe
tndlna of llOOCt. that are not mllltarll)'
temlUve, 'r.lc)\ve don't ...... in a
pl'OCl!IS of aublldbatlon." The United States baa been unhappy 1'lth
,
The 10..nadan J!'A.aropean ~le
Community already baa formally
eXpl' d its "deep concern" about
the propoaal, labelina the moves
••contrary to international law."
But aldee to BrtUlb Prime v.....-Martaret Thatcher uJd she WMD't
expected t.o ralM the 1-ue at the
awnmit, feelina It should be dealt
with at a lower 1eveL
Rec brochure out
Co.ta Mesa's summer recreation
bi:ochure la available now at local
librarlea and community centers.
Cultural. athleUc and youth~
are listed in the brochure• that were
malled this week to all C.osta M-
relldenta.
of our most successful customers use
a balanced strategy -always
keeping enough (at least S2,500) in an
Insured MoneyMarket .Plan' to earn the
daily money market rate. And ...
eoough in our guaranteed Money
Market CenJftcates to take advantage
of our very highest rates.
Certiflcate suited to mo$t any goal.
And, you can be sure of ~~8 your
goal because the rate Is guarahteed
and your money Is Insured up to
'100,000 by the F.SL.I.C, an agency of
the U.S. Government
C111., .... .., .., ,. ............
The overall effect Is co increase the
average yield of your UM:stments.
0. ... , W ClillliUllll ....................
111111111,.... m 11 ...... ID1 ,... .....
With maturltles from 18 months up
to 10 years, there's a Money Market
A Personal Finaoclal Reprc5entatlve
can help you select the Hptne Federal
investments which keep your balances
in balance with your lndiVidual goals
. .. and even show how you can
borrow against your Home Federal
investments if you wish.
-. ~FEDEML
........ 2-0Satt toll-free.
ASSEl'S• llWON O <Mii 110omcE$ stllM ~ 0 l«M fUMl SN!N6SAllJ l~MSOCIATION
I
tt1 •1 *> ...... 447 N. Francilce A~. 31e-Me 0 ,_.... 22200 HMvthome Blvd. (111-122' 0 .... c...... 1440 w. ~ne ~wy. ~.siu1 o
'llM I lxM• IT&o $. Stpulvflda BIVd. 77&olt0
0 W.elwM toeee Wll•Nfe Blvd. 47 .. ·350S 0 'Ill I .. ., ... 832& 'roplngl Canyon~· 1Qlt.1tt1
,..,.
I WEDNESDAY. MAY 25, 198S
ANN LANDERS
ENTERTAINMENT
BUSINESS
Relucta·nt .. bou,icer..
,. .. ' ;1"
One of lif e'e lint leuons in
sharin1 ie playing pus and
catch. Lindsey Woll, 11
months, of Huntington
Beach, ian 't sure she wante
to ~ve op the ball, bot
finally gives it a happy
heave. Or has she 1een
another toy she'd rather play
with at Wilson Park in Costa . .-::-., 1neaa.
Ummer fun. • • Recreational groups .finalize programs
LYNN lillN .... c. ....... ,. .
Bef«e June sta111 busting out all over, a ll"eet
ol bwtJinl la aoma cin in local dty recreationaJ
ta, where directon and penonnel are ftnlabtna tou1Cbea on tun-filled plans fer the
• ...,of. UNl3. . =ScbedW. are aeued to include everyme from
to ~ Alretldy in the handl of
ten. the afl-inclusive brocburea will be malled • .,.. boomboWI
a.ta ..... NN.MMiwpollirl!ltlrll't u..h and HWlUDct.on ~ .... ~ a wide ftJ'lety of lpCl"tl, cl.--.
-.ii special f!Ymlll fnxn which ftllidentl can pick.
Some are available in all dUa, while others are
.,.aullve to tMt Wwn. Mllny ue poptlar ~ta,
but there are many brand-new, Innovative
~ .. f'ollow1nC la a llft'Ylew for -.ch dty:
.. NEWPORT 8L\CB
Mon thmi a dolm\ new c1-and lldivltiel
bave been Mlded to the aa.dy exteolfve IJI08l'8ftl or the Newport Beach Parka, Heach-.a and
~Um~ , !'or tennia buffs, intermediate and advanced
yen will be able to practice playing doublea
I four-week teUiona for both men and
.... nen.·
Several new Mlf-lmprovement cluaea are
, incluc:!kf introduction to the world of
-ll>U1ten. w will be divided into three age
~,PS; oooldna worklhops fer both children and
edl.llta; and a 1peakin1 and writina claaa for
~ aodal and ...... ,,,.. aldlla.
The physkal fltnem aectico will be enhanced
by a water workout, comiltina of two ..i.ona of
.$e weeb ..m; a full-fiau,re fitnem c1-fer thme
25 pounda or more owrwe,ht and a COIDbtnation
aerobic and stretch workout that will meet twice a
week over a llx-week period.
Along tliae eame nn., women may Qi up fore
a one-day beauty make-up, akin care and iiair ~Je
analysia workalx>pi a two-def, color COOl'dlnadon
HK'®· called .. Uniquely You. I for orpnlziQI and maintalDlna a w~ and an eJIL'W'llm1 to the
prmenl dlatrict In Loa Ana'eJel.
For the younaer aet, t6ere la a new pentom•ine
c1aas and new naiure atudy "°"~:!led, .. Stems. Bones. and Animal HO'l'9," • T...,._ to
TomabawJm,,. and ,.Arn wlJlne ID~"
Special upcnmtnc ewntll are the 0.-. del
Mar SCenic five-~ nan OD June 4 and the l\oucb Water Ocelm Swim fer .._.. ....... on
JWyt.TMW.,._wtD ... ~tm ..... per
to the Newport plw, and Wl(uwn 1D 9tlht clltfeimt
... P"QUP9 will be awarded 1rOJJhlaa. Swtmmlnl, ""1h or without I 1 '"-wtll be
available on a dally bMll' to all ..... Ont apedal
event will be the llelly-flop Ccmt.-t at Newport
Harbor H1ah School OD A\al. 2'1. ~ Clft
IUlfina ana bodY'IW'fiq II on the .... allo.
T&ere will be a~ down~ ia.. River
and the p.irmet bay~ acunklm .. beml
offered qain. For aallon, there an clula on
ubota, aai.1-~ i...n and C.atlli'Darana. 0-and pm19 In odMr' IDGrti Include aolf.
basketball, aof tball, v0Ue1ball, cbffrleadlna,
racquetball, lce·lkattna, t.mmla, ·.rat Cb1 Cbuan,
y op. Karate, Ken~ Kuoa Fu .and Allddo.
Other areu of lnterelt are caDtcrapby, art.
drum, theater, dance, interior dellp. Wallpeperina
and pa1nttna, Infant and toddler developneDt ana
dos obedlenoe. In addition, the Community Youth Center,
located at Fifth and Jrta. C.onloa del Mar, bM P1am
for many paru. and wfll be open OD a daily &.la.
Al.a in C«ona de1 Mar, The Ouia Center for older
lidulta, bu • 1pedal summer lportl J>l"OIX'&ID and • lecture aeries planned.
OOSTAMESA
The LeiM4re Services Depart:DMnt In Co.ta
Mesa will lpol*)I' a aummer day camp for children
ape 6 throulh 12. Be8innlba on June 27, then wW
be etabt weekly ..-IOna afTeWlnkle'Park. r.ch
week wW feature a speda1 escunion. includ!nc
trip• to Marlnelan«& Lion Country Safari, -
Uineylend. S-n..o ~ Umv--1 Studioe. WUd
AnlmU Park. Sea Vlodd and Knott'• Berry hrm.
Modeltna ta a new addition to couraea
planned ·for ihe summer .-on. ana there wW be a
~J.~~'b.:'b!'en'° :bci·~:·u!
8~ eventa for aenion, 00 J9U'I of ... and
older, who Join the Nelabborhood Community
Cent.er, wW ltarl off wttli a trtp to WlD Roaer9
State Memorial Park on May 21. Thia wllf be
followed by a Sacramento Delta Cru.1M to San Fn.nd8Do from ..,_y 28 to June 1; a trip to Reno
from June 7 to 10; and an "AJure S.. Weelr.-r.nd
C.-W." frcm July 22 to 2'.
TiZ~wo imrcbanta ant apomortaa teelDI 1n the ..-tioa. which w01
June wtth a c:me-:::-U ctinic at the tow~
~ ubder the dlloa:tloll of ptOt•onal coecbel.
J:nrolllbent of 2,400 playWI II ~--~ a18o wU1 be 200 ClOllCbee: A Olrll Softball ~ ~will besln on June 1 and nan for
aeven weekl, culminaUna with a f.amlly pkn1c in
A~ The 1983 Summer All-Comer Tnck and Field
meeta wW be held at btancla Hi&b School on July
7, 14, 21, 28, and Aue. 4, and wW be open to
amateun In u dlvWom.
. Fut-.re history • • •
time, that we could aolve our food
pl°ONln• But the t..ct wlnl that we Uw
with aD anma1 of total dlMndw ~ that wtD .wn~ be wed 1f .. dent ftnd
wa19 ol. ~ thl natlanal pme -the
warfare state."
Nuclear warfare could be prevented throucb clMrmammt, WOI'~ pwnmeftt, an ont•r •tablllhed by mwtlnatlonal
corporatto1u or a ~·tecbnolo1lcal
commWllty.. l'hl~h mana,.. to WNlt
control flWl ........ ta, be~
Another war?..
ID Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May 25, 1983
~· no matter what the ,._ •YL •Keep footprtnta, ftnaerprin111, dental NCOldl
and a recent pbot.osraph Ol y0ur c:hUd on band.
-obtaln Jep1 cu.tody lf you are 11pented and
carina for~ Chad. . tAlk an attarney abO\at 1Uperviled vllltatliall lf
~have 1enulne re .. on to fear parental
~'°°" .. your child ta old enouch to talk.
Ceech him hia name, add.rem and telephone number.
•Teach your chUd t.o U1e the tWephooe -at
, •
acht party ma.kes big splash
:-Copa de Oro oloaect oft. a section of the
.. urant_t.o amomlnoclate the ll'OU~ there~ help
the Od8t involved with an America s Cup meter/~ cam=\; ! The ~ (they Paid were U..ted th two
I ta~f the C09ta Meaa reataurant'a
l4nbn/-.food type hon d•oeuvne.
.ul... Video tape film ol. tbe two · 12-me-. 1fhich ~ winter trafn1na wblle beadq\llr'teNd at the
B'lboa Yacht Cfiab, 'Wu ahown continually
~the evenlnc· _: . ~ pem were Kevin Summenll of the ~I~ Group and Joen Dlebler of
Of interest t.o the 00.tiq enthualaata there
weft dilDlayed pen and ink drawings by artist Scott
Kennedy, one of which la now owned by
Summerell. Kennedy ... aboerd the Concordia
-T roa1 11wr11-
0R. PETER J. STEINCAOHN
DEAR DR. STJ:INCROHN: rm very worried
about my h\llbmd. He ta a h9J'd worker. He drtnJat
a lot. one·alx·peck per day. He ta a. very heavy
91DOk.er', dme to five pllCb a day with ooclllbW
dpn. too. What won._ me la that be hM a b9d
cowdl which bepn ~ yeen a,o when be atart.ed ~iftl. He COtJaba ., hard that he brino up
blood. A white handbrcb.lef wfJ1 be red witbfn the
hour. Bia throat la always .,,. and Inflamed.
Sometimes he throws up, he coughs IO hard.
It .._ me. He will not ao to a doctor. He saya
doctora c:mt money and he need. hia money for
clprettes and beer. AlthO\Wl only •~. he bu
alrelldy had one heart au.clt. He worb hard,
bau.lfnl and llfUn& c:rata of paint. Be la 5 feet ~ and wetatw 299 poundg Doctor, you mwt help
him. He rads your column eech day. He laQlba at
IOIDe of ~ repliee, but .ametimes talu!8 them
.nou.ly. PleMe print, but no name or addrel9.
.--. -MRS. x.
Dlu lln. x.: y_. t ......... *tab
.......... AnMy lia ........ ...,.. &Hid,
liie"I ..... N*Mlf, (1 ..... M .... "t ..... ne.
lte reMs IMI.) Be't ...-•= dew RteWe. I ~dmlcuW,..._ .. ~ al'•IUrete1rJ. ..,..... ..... ,.._. •:r: ... ...., d9MM ..
.,... ndler .._ ..-h ••• .,. ...... . u ....... ,... ... , ....... , ....... , ....
.................. ........ wUI ... , All cu
.. It ...... die fennri J1U1; It's lis j9' te na ..............
MJ!DICALJ:TTJ:S (Replies to and from
rwlen):
Dear Dr. Stelncrob.n: I am 23. Aaudlna to my
laat cbedwp, rm mmlftl alone fine. The dociol' ~ f bave ~ about a year..,. rve been taldJw meMd-and a low salt dlet wbSch
bu broupt aown my pnaure. SUll I have
oomplatma. rm at lwt u PoUDda 0'191"We18bt. J ;r:.of diulnw, 1aclt of concentration, ttncltnc In the bllDdl and &et. I al8o
depre•ed. Ia theft anythlna ei.e t.o do? -MRS. H. .
o.r Mn. B.: Yem ..... ~ m&J be ....... " ... ,.. eertllflalJ .. "t ......... Den, ....
Meter ._. .._, 1ev ft"'"8 1,.,ce.,? It
..... le me tMr'e an at -.i tw• .. ,. le p ............ ,...""'=. 8•1 .... .-.-...... .., ....
••tnnnl• A :t:.:r 91 •• ,_.,... • .,._ Wpl. .... ,.. ..... ___ ..., ... .,..,....e:llM_
hlltsa•e• faD ....... ,.. .... , U "9 ft ...... .,, ............... ..... , .. ..., ...... , ................ . ..... .. ,... .,,.., .... ,.... tt .... ..... , ........
and sketched Courageous and Defender durinl
tralniDI·
• • •
POT SHOD
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
9N 09'.DK"
TO aa ,_.A.OV
WMIEN NDDED,
VOU MUST
( UN"°"TUNAT&L. V)
ALSO
ar flCAOV
WMSN
NOT NICIEOCD.
ln•ex•pen•alve*
•(tn lk epen' slv) not high In price;
reasonable; ct.-fled advertlelng "'"°iUTBY, INC . . .............. .... ... 111111 · Cluaifled Advertlalng
--· "'·-642-ee78 •
1922 ttAliol &VD .
COSTA MISA -M-..11S.
' --------.,
Hawthorne Christian Schoolj
''For the Right Start in Life''
Join the Summer Fun
at DAY CAMP!/
GIVE MOM A VACATION ...
• Field Trips • Crafts • Swimming • Picnics
• BeforKare and After-care Available
Enron NoW-FaM 88tMeter
Startt Sept. 12th
Reasonable 1\Jltlon
JUNE 20th thru SEPT. 9th
.
SUMMER SCHOOL
JUL V 6th thnJ JULY 29th
.
OFFERING:
• OPEN 7 DA Y8 A WEEK
• CO-ED AEROBICS
• CHILO CARE AT ALL LOCATIONS
• INDOOR POOLS AT TUSTIN & ORANGE
•JACUZZI
•SAUNA
• STEAM ROOM AT TUSTIN
• EUCALYPTUS • FREE WEIGHTS
•NAUTILUS
• AACOUETBALL COURTS • BODY FAT TESTING • 8l000 PRESSURE • DIET & NUTRITIONAL COUNSELING
• EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION
Li~ .m Artist Scott .1-1.
Kennedy (~ tr
right) lhows off ,1~
one of hia clrawi.n.n
K . --'ff),
to eTID ;(.!
Summerell. .. ··
Attending "An n ..
Altemoon in ltaly'4~'
were (at left front;~
I. tor.) Nancy . 1G
Clark. Miehael i T
Seher, JoAnae ~
and Andrei-. ui,
who 'proTided the Ji
food od winee. ·ri!
'!l.tf
Deja vu
• time at
• niov1es
Bj 808 THOMAS ...................
LOS ANGELES
Lauah• and thrllla.
That'• the menu for ihe
aummer movle 1eaeon
tlat l'Nl)' have even the
mb.t rabid of film fana
muttering. "Tht1 i1
where I ~ tn."
•Do young people
think! The film
cd'npanies don't aeem to
believe they do. bec.uae
the summer fare ls aimed
directly at the viscera,
not the intellect. The
same companle1 also
btlieve that what works
o'ce will work again.
~again.
#fence the hot -
••ther movies (eature
tlte returns of James
BGnd, Superman, Luke ~ywalker, Norman
Bites, the Great White
Shark, Smoky and the
Bandit, Tony Manero
and thoee lovable alobe mm Porky'•· Talk about terminal
deja vu!
Non e th e l ess,
Hollywood insiders are
predicting the season's
4Q-plwi major releases
wUl break last year's $1.2
billion record.
"I thtnlt this summer
h .. the potential to be
the biggest in movie
hlltory ,•• says Tad Danz,
president of the Sterling
-ltecfeation Oi'ganizal!Oh,
a major W est Coast
theater chain.
Two thrill movies
jumped the gun and
made their debuts in
May to ~ results: "Blue
Thunder' and "Return
of the Jedf' -the third
of the ''Star Wars'
trilogy. It will be ln the
dieaters throuah Labor
Day and beyand. "Blue
Thunder," which drew a
atyliah $8 million, may
"9t last .. long.
Nor will ''na.hDance''
aqd "Breathleu," two
other early atarters. The
problem is bookings.
Theater ownera will
drop .,...., perfonnera to
Mqulre the tq 1U1W of
June. n., ... :
.. Oct•,•HJ," with Ro£er Moott atarring ln
the 13th and perhape the
last of the James Bood
aeries, except for the
S,an Connery "Never
S,y Never Again," due
next fall Star, producer
Q.abby Broccoli and
pbsaibly the public are
s(afferlng Crom Bond
~tigue.
:-"S•,erma• Ill," ~th Christopher Reeve
back In the cape and
Richard Pryor aa the
eeemy.
:-"War Gamet,"
apother adventure by
Jphn Badham ("Blue
'llumder") ·about a ~ ,
Mhooler who plup lila
ctmputer Into the U.S . df!teme system. · -"P11c•• 0," wtth 1fonn&n a.-. AntbmtJ
P.erkin•, out of the
loooybm 23 yean later.
Vera Mne. aim retwm.
~t not Janet Lelah ,
'1fbO remains in the
shower,
-"Twll•a•t Z••e," ~sequences from the
~-R~d Serllng TV ~ r'edone by young
, Plus thi1 ~uartet of
ca>medlea: • Trading
lflacea," Dan Aykroyd
and Eddie Murphy;
low beard," Monty
on memben, plus
ech and Chong,
J mes Maaon and the
l • Marty Feldman;
" he M an With Two
ain•." a nother
c llaboration of Steve
nmoirun and Cerl Rftntt;
Survtvon," Walter
aubau and Robin
Ora~ Co .. t OAILY PllOTIWedMtday, May 25. 1913
Katharine. Fajardo and Burt Goodman mull their
dilemma in "Goodbye Charlie" at the San Clemente
Community Theater.
'Charlie' in Clemente
By TOM TITUS
Of the 0.., fllot It.ft
File it under "poetic licenae" in the
Twilight Zone. A Hollywood playboy
who's bedded most of the females in
his social circle is shot by a jealous
husbana and comes back -as a
woman. ..,
Were playwneht George Axelrod
penning thls fluffy comedy today
rather than a quarter of a century ago,
he undoubtedly would take full
advantage o f the liberalized .
atmosphere of the modem theater. U
any play could use some judicious
updating, it would be "Goodbye
Charlie."
Yet for what it ls, "Charlie" ls an
enjoyable antique, and its production
at the San Clemente Community
Theater has some good moments
despite some questionable casting by
director Bill Bodner. The show lapaea
inlo occasional leth.ar.gy wh.ea
Axelrod's dialogue be<:omea more
preachy than provocative.
Goodman, a capable actor but a bit
long ln the tooth aa the object of
Charlie's affection. Goodman en.acts
the fruatration of his situation
believably but often ml11es the
inflection that would punctuate hls
lines with laughter.
Marian H olzman as Charlie's
onetime Inamorata tunw in a ahari>,
spicy performance ln her atock
character of a Hollywood golddigger.
Othen aboard briefly in the opening
memorial scene are John Parque,
Jonnie Mitchell, Darryl Howe and
Aahely Howe.
"Goodbye Charlie" may be little
more than a "cute" comedy, but it
doe1 Introduce the talents ol
Katharine Jt'ajardo to (.;aJifornia
audiences, for which appreciation is ln
order.
Performanc.-es continue this
weekend and next on Friday and
Saturday _eveninga at 8 ~lock.aUhe
Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Ave. Cabrillo,
San Clemente. Call 492 -0465 for ticket
information. • • • All of its flaws may be forgiven,
however , when balanced against the
scintillating performance of BACKSTAGE -The Orange
Katharine Fajardo in the title role of County Theater A11oclation has
the reincarnated roue. 1''ajardo ll a r elocated its meetings to the
Y orkin sells
Tandem share
I
LQS AN~ELES (AP) -Alan "Bud" Yorldn,
co-creator of .\11 tn the Family," plana to sell h1s
half-lntereat In Tandem Productions Inc.. which
made the TV 1how, to par\nera Norman Lear and
Jerry Perenchlo, a newapape~ aaya.
Yorkin, a movie direct.Or before "All In the
Family," rt;portedly plana to return to making
theatrical filma, the Los AJ\aeles Herald Examiner
said tfday.
Le.-, Yorkin and Perenchlo formed Tandem tn
1959, tumina out 1uoh rnoviee u "Come Blow Your
Horn" with Frank Sinatra ln 1962 and "Divorce
American Style" with Dick Van Dyke and Oebble
Reynolds in 1967. In most cues, \'orkln directed
and Lear .wrote.
But the aucceu of "All ln the Family,'' In
which Carroll O'Connor playa the bl1oted Archie
Bunker, led Tandem to devote more effort to TV.
"All ln the family." which waa renamed
"Archie Bunker's Place'' four yean ago, launched
such splnoffs as "Maude," "Good Times" and "The
Jeffel'llOns." Tandem also scored with "Sanford &
Son" and "Diff'rent Strokes."
After 13 years, Bunker has been canceled and
is ending his final aeuon, though Tandem will
receive income from worldwide ~runa of thia and
its other series for years to come.
A spokesman at Embasay Pict\.lres, which
manages Tandem'• affa.ln, told the paper Monday:
"I can confirm that negotiations are in progreas" for
the aale ~ shol,AJ4 cqntlnl!e fpr aome Ume.
A key issue la whether Yorkin will be paid for
his intereet ln syndication rights In a lump sum, or
m the increments lt.ruJll out over future yean, the
paper said.
· remarkably mobile actress. brimming Weatmlnater Community Theater,
with comedic h yperactivity, who la 7272 Maple St., W~. and Wm
immensely convincing as a person hold Its first meetin8 there Thurtday ~°'-"lj~iflM-!i11i1111E~ with a new-found gender. night . . . . the West.minlter theAter -••111••1! _,
Playing straight man to Charlie's alao will be the 1ite of the fourth
.~o_u_lraJ_....._eo_u_s~fl_ig~!h_ts~o_f~fa_n_c~y~is~B_u_r_t ~ann...;.;.;.,ualcx:I'Afestiv~al~in~A~u:.2.::~t~.~·~·~·.L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ClmH&Cllll W~m
AtrPl•n• II 1'11e S•t111•1 (PO)
*
~"' Strlpet I"> Aleo Valley Olrt Cllll)
or•••'"' Open 7141 Wknlt"t• / 7110 Wk•fl4•
Children UadtrlZ Frtt Ualt11 MltM
... -=-... .,. """"" . -·II-
----------
1 ,\fl ('i '
"DOCn'OR •-r • -----
....... ...,.,..,_ • .,., ':s' _. .. .. .. \.--·-8'&4-·• .. ._,I ,_.-. .. .._._ .. _..
. ..
114 Orange CoU1 DAILY PILOT/WednMday, May 25, 1883
BrnlBD~EftO ,.,, ......... .._.
NEW YORK -The SunahiM Cab Co. wu an
ironic ahintl• for the mlallta th "Taxi." 3'here
wasn't a ~ It.Gey in the bunch. ln five ~
none of the driven founcJ a road paved with
anyth!na more than hanh ..Uty and hard lmocka.
"It'• a lot lib lite," ~Ed W":'• ClG8 of
the creaton of the award-wlnnml meo>'• which
hu lta next-to-lalt Ol'fal.nal el!Mode cn NBC t.onJcht .
.. Nobody made it out." 11\e lat new 1how 11
acheduled for June 10.
Yet, to1ether, the characten foraed a
friendthlp and camaraderie that hadn't been li9et'l in
network comedlel linCle .. fl'he Mary Tyler Moore
Show." They were the kind of cabbtes who would
pick you up in a ralnltonn.
That warmth wa1 their aucceu, and the
arosram'1 cancellation by two networks in t\to
aeuona can't take lt away.
When the m'tter etop1 ticktna tontaht, the
program that won the bny tor be9t comedy three
years in a row will be ntplaced by "Bulfalo Bill."
about a eatOtisdcal talk..ahow ho9t on a televl.slon
atation ln Mfalo, N. Y .
Th.la time, the cio.tna notice will atick. NBC
Mlvaaed 'Taxi'' tram AJJc'1 acrapbeep after the
1981.82 8eUOn, but the producen now have~
off to different projecta. Weinber1er and hia
nartner, Stan Daniela, have cr.ted a new comedy, "Mi.~Snuth," about a taJ.kina onnptan. It will be
on NBC• tall IChedule on Friday night.
There WU quite a furor when ABC canceled
''Text" Jut W\, thua lollnc lta one ~~with JP'ft and pown~up wit. Tile fad 1hat it . qo RBC in three time alota wm aua.tanUafe, for .me,
ABC'• declalon. But ABC never ~me up with
anythlna better ln ratlnp. and c:ertalnly not ln
. quality.
"NBC did what lt had to do," 1aya Weinberger.
"I regret it, but I reapect lt. It wu a buainesa
decllion. ~Y. ~ted ua fairly and pve ua a lhot.
There'1 no ldck1n& or acreunina th.la time. We felt
at J.eut NBC re.pect.ed ua. At ABC, I didn't think it
mattered to them thaJ they were cancel1nc a quality
lhow." ·
Becau.e of the ftftb ~on NBC, '"Taxi" did
22 more 1how1 and went over the maatc
The characten of "Taxi" (orged a f riendahip and camaraderie not
seen in network comedies since ''The Mary Tyler Moore Show."
100-ept.ode mark. "You want over 100 epilodei
when you make your 1yndlcatlon deal," 1ay1
Weinbeqer.
. Even if "Taxi" lost eome fares . the ~ few
eeuona, it ltill produced programa th.at were funny
and touchina. Prec:l.ely, becau.e lite wu a aerie. of
fender-benders for the oddballl ln "Taxi," our lives
became, by comp&Non, a bit ~ter.
Thfi ii not to aay that "Taxi ' waa conailtently
brilliant. In the put two aeuona, the lhow took a wrohC tum wbenewr lt lhowcMed Latka (Andy
Kaufman), the fonl8n ..._monkey, and bJa alien
rituak. Thia violated the lhow'1 lplrlt of produdna
Identifiable and .-Hide human comedy.
But, ceneraDy, "Taxi" ct.crtbed the human
coodltion tl• • better, ln fact, than it de
ulne New York cabble1. Without a black OJ"
ln the fn>nt-line cmt,. 1'axi" W• more •• wnioll of • New y ork cab C!OmpMy. . on!1 character wbo really reeembled a
hack WM A.Jex Retaer (Judd Hinch), a aeen-it-all
type with a 1.alllez-laire attitude. He able> waa IQmt
content to belne a cabbte forever. Tony (Tony
Dama) wanted to be a boxer, Zlalne (Marilu
Hmner) ..,, benelt -a fMbkmable ct dealer and
Bobby (Jeff Conaway) wu a New York ect«.
Conaway left the eerlee midway but Olllde a
return vllit to the Praee -th.la time Bobby WM a
nrug11nc HO~ood actor. "An)'thiQI el8e would have wmed y," •ya Wetnbeqer. After all,
thi1 waa a 1 ow about potbole1, not p•ved
aaperhi&hwaya.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, M•Y 25, 1883 115
Japanese bring ~21-haur
commodity trading to u.s~
2',J~ ce~ 1~HONY
The world la JlO loncer the aimple place lt wu when the
futurea market meant
•peculation ln oata, wheat and
beana. Wheelin1 and dealing
today may Involve home
computera, lnt.aneible a.eta. and
a knowledae of world eventa.
At the New Otani hotel in Loa
An1ele1, economic con1ultant
. James E. Sinclair 1poke to an
audience or potential investors
about the sort of thlng1 they
ahould know before participating
in contracta to buy and sell assets.
For one thing. 80 percent of
those who part\cipate lose
money, says a brochure put out
by Ace American, a subsidiarv of
Ace Koek.i, a Japanese futures
network which is expanding
operations in the U.S . market -
Including the offering of 24 -hour
commodltles trading for the first
time. Thia may be a misleading
figure, however, si nee it
hiSh.ligbta the number of folks
who lose, not the quantities
changing hands, Ace American
addl.
To /revent losses, Investors
· shoul have a "glo~l view of
economics,'' Sinclair, acting as a
consultant to and spokesman for
Ace American, said. The market
for gold, for example, is highly
reflective of international events,
more ao than in the '708 whe.n
Sinclair wrot.e a book on the
topk:.
At that time, Sinclair obeerved,
"there was an erosion In the
value of financial assets as a
result '"bf hrf1atton-." This
encouraged golcf purchases.
"Erosion" implies "a long,
drawn-out movement in gold
prices," he added. Times change.
. -,....,...
James E. Sinelair
The market which once .. moved
up in a very dignified manner
now m oves up and down
violently."
The great upheavals in gold
purchaiiea, Sinclair says, stem
from "fear of a disruptive event
In the flnanclal world," an event
like the bankruptcy of a foreign
government. Gold buying today,
he conc:ludes, "la a product of
Thlrd World debt psychol<>IY."
Americans face more risk than
they lhould, S1ncla1r Leela. 'n\e
Japanne, ln aeneral, and Ace
KoekJ ln 'particular, are more
restrk:tlve in their credit poUdel
for f\nuret contract•, thu1
c:ontrlbuttna to a uhr
lnveetmeni cl.lmAte.
11 AJJe Ameflcan can brlq to
the U.S. market peater control
of rl1~· Sinclair .. ld. In the
Orient, lnveator• a1ree ln
advance on a POtnt when their
account. wJU be liquidated, a
point where no f\art.her ~can
occur, It'• called an ··.-4pon blow-out point," Sinclair added.
Perhaps aurpriaingly, financial analym done on hon\9 oomputen
increase:e the danger of heavy
l<mes, Slnclair said. Given that
there are only a few PfOIJ'ama
makin1 prediction•, computer
trading "will make marketa Co ln
a •tralaht direction." If everyone /
ls clamoring to sell u a retult of
this kind of financial advic!e,
those not uaing computera for
ad\rice will reep the advantages
of lower a.et prices. U everyone
ii buying, thua biddina up the
price of futures contracta, the
guy who sells comes out ahead.
The fad, says Sinclair, "won't
last." When people are hurt
enough, he adds, ''they'll throw
out their black boxes" ln favor of
other kindt of t..rad.ina advice.
One of the bluest miatakes
beginners can make, Sinclair
says, i.a "failing to 1pend time
trying to understand the market.
The lint Investment you should
make, he adds, "ii ln your own
knowledge."
-With ~4-how -tl'adinc-tleFVice---
now availab1e to the layman, a
aervice once only aC!Cellible to the
professional broker, the impact of
that knowledge is considerable.
·Trade
group
slates
lunch
California Secreury of
State Marcb Fon1 Eu
will cl*'-the state and
international trade at the
monthly meettna of the
World Trade Center
Auoclation of Orange
County at the Reptry
Hotel in Irvine.
IE8CAN TO TAMO£. The Ridge TallOe 1$ Lake TahOe's newest ano moll luxurlOUS putpose
bUll1 tmeshate •esort Locale<! hlgll 1n the mountatns on aoe of the most beeuttlul Mes "' the
etlltre Tahoe baSiO
The June 6
pre1entaton, titled
''Trade and Eu •• ls being
co-1pon1ored by the
International Marketing
Amoc:tation.
This p.ovale guard gated rt!SOfl lealures deeor,lltOf lurntshed lully equipped two bedroomllwo
bath maste< SUtle cond0mtn1ums hrepla<.es. ou15lde deeks and barbecues •
EnJOY the e•clus<ve and Pftv81t Ridge Club w•lh •nO<>nrloutdoor swtrnmong pool, sauna, spe,
1ennrs. rac:QUelbel. a!Q.ng Wllh a ltrst class <l•OtOg room and lounge The resort has Sid tn/uu wt
access to Heevenly Valley Sic• Resort
YOUR WEIEKIND '9M>NltfY IMSNCTIOM TMt INCLUOI&:
• Round TrlO Alff.,.· 0.11<"99 County AApo<HT11r.o. (AwCall
• 2 Oeys -' Nogt>t • O..n.ghl ~oornnlO(la11ons IMaumum 2 pet90<1SI • a. .... 1n1
• Gtound Ttanspona11on
fop ........ _.. ~-oe:io.~,_,,-~ -"'=""'""'"~000 C-""'Y Oft.,,. ~· to~ ~y A bf--' tJl~8fO'I .. bl requqo IU bC'O to.JI ,....,..,ettCJft'
CAI.I. (1114~5•6 6933
TAHOll HiONlt •• 4100 C...-°""9, ...._ 1-. Ne•JNW' a..ct., Ca. allO
Five reasons
There will be a $13
charae for the lWlCheon
to memben and S15 for non-membera. Rea-
ervatlona muat be
made before June 1. •Call
549-8151 for more
information.
Rely on financial
advice by
Sylvia Porler
in the..., ....
p~ople have. a lot of interest
10 our saVlllgs accounts:
MQOCy-Market Quiksaver • Certificata of
Account• Account• lreosury• T-em· Oepolit•.
Tenn I day 7--11 tbys 91 days 180 days 18 montM-
5 years
UplO 8·80" 9.0096 . g . .f6'6 8.97'6
Upro 9.20'6 9.•296
•
Kut E. ltlelleUMra hM jot,ned the ..i.. staff
at Jl'tm Amerkaa TIUe IMiaruce COl and wW
be -~ IClOOUnta ln Colt.a MeM and Bania Ana. Elchelbera, who Uves ln El Toro, waa
formerly tn the Navy where he eerved four yean
aboerd the alrcran carrier U.S.S. nan,.. . .. .
Tamar S. Brower of Newport SNch bu
jo1ned J~ ADe9 6 AIMdatet, IMne-bMed
rorpcnt.e pUblJc relaUona flnn. She ~ from
Cdrue cu.. ot Irvtne and Mo hM t.111 wtt,h ..... 1 6 Jueltt, AM latenau.ul and PIMr c.,.
• • •
EECO, i.e. b.u annOunced the aPPo(ntment
of WUUam E. LNdl to ~ poation o( dJrector of
markettna for IW'itch producta. Loech bu more
than 15 years ln elec:trorUc component marketlna
and ha• previoual~ been with AmpllHol -
SDeetn.Strlp, a .. n1, ~. and Conlaa Glue
Wort1. • • •
Holland A1tomatlo• has completed
~tlationa with three ,.ew distribution a,{entl
for HnU:u-11.l'• w~ ~ ~ IOftware. 1be new
dislributona are X-Mar• Corp. of Co.ta Mesa,
Ea1le Bu11De11.Sy1tem1 of El Toro and So1dtern
Mlcroeom,.ter of Hialeah, Jl1a. • • •
Dlmea1loa Cable, a .ervice of American
Cable TV, is beln& promoted throuahout the
Phoenix market ln a new high-impact
adverU.linl campalgn created by th~ Newport
Beach-hued adverUslna and-public relatlona
firm of Ba110 6 A11odata, lac. Theme of the
carnpaian ii ''Beyond Your Televtaion There's
Another Dimension." • • •
Pacific Ezpren Holdla1, lac., pa-rent
company of Pacific Expre11 Airlines, hat
announced a 410 pen:ent lncreue ln revenues
over first q~ 1982. In the first thee montha
of 1983, revenues were $9,343,000, compared
with $1,832,000 last yew, and the company'• net
l<>m wu $3,734,000, down from $3,948,000 ln
School Dl1trlct durln1 tbe put year. The
Community Service Award plaque WH
preeentad by Peter Schaefer, P1'81dent of $he
AllOdatlon of Tustin School Adm..bu.traton.
• • •
Albert Mardltlu E•a1Deer1D1, lac.. hu
leated a 43,052-equare-foot bUlld!na in CA1a
Mesa for the_purpo1~ of automobile
manufacturinJE. The t..raDMCtion was handled throuih Nerr&, Beat 6 Simplea, with JoM
M11e1'1r and CUrln\luilteMell • agenta.
C'Urlet "'ri•teuea u aaenta.
• • •
-Iutltattoul laveeton Tn1t, a real estate
trust headquartered ln New Yorlt. haa named
BUI Foote president and chief operating officer.
Foote, a re1ldent of Newport }Jeach, wa1
formerly president and manactng partner of
Cacllllac Fairview Romes WesL • • •
CompaterAatomalioll, lac., with ~Cioni
in Irvine, hu named Carl W. Jack aeneral
manager of the C.ocnmerdal Sretemt Dlvlalon.
Jack was fonnerly wtth Datapoint Corp. of San
Antonio, Texaa. • • •
1982.
Irvine-based MJere Five Corp. baa~
four new muter dilt.ributan for ita line i>f lml1l
bUlinell computer tyWtema. The new agenta are
Quda bteruttoule, Ltd., of Montreal. Canada;
• • • CoaaoUdated Compater Sy1tem1, lac., of
Kea O'Molluclro, founder and pre9ident of Norcrcm, Ga.; DeMen1tt Data SJttetu. l.c,.'of. lrviiii-~mptRer,naabeen horiored --IAmt.rd, m, and-Mkn-W.Uw, « Otat.wy ..
for hia community eervice to the Tustin Unified C.oo.n..
..
JA
i
•
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOfAflC*a lllfCl.UH HAO•to• , ....... vo••.••OWOT, PACI"(. Pew. eotTM . o•Y•Otf ••• (llffllf•Afl n~· aaCMA•Ma AllO ....... ,.. e't TMlf 19Af0 &•e 11taTI•• T,
..
United Farm Workers
vow new militance
By nt. Att0elat.M Pmt
SAN FRANCISCX> -TN Un!'-d Farm Worken.
anaered by non-union contnct.on caldJ\I the Joba of ite
~ Ml la~hed a boycott of I.nCJenook win..
Wllon PNlk'lent c.e.r Chavez bu ·announced.
''The only way th.la union hM been able t.o be
"~ful .. to pt the public bebind, u. and to let a
boycott.'' Chaves Mid 1\aeeday .. about eo pkkete
mlrebed in front of Heublein Wine Inc. headquarten
here.
The R.J . Reynoldl 1ubeldlary, wh!ch Pt'Oduce11
In81enook, 11 one of about a dozen Ca1lfomJa
cornpanle1 that have dumped union workent in favor
of non-union labor contract.on. Chavez aid.
Samba's outlets going phza
LOS ANGELES -Sambo'1 Restauransa Inc.,
reor1ani~in& under federal bankruptcy law, will
oanvert 112 of ita Se90nl res\auranta t.o Godfather'•
Pbza b'aochlMI, a Cl9ftlp&nY official •>'S·
Bob AdamowUt, executive vice president of the
cbaln, bated fn CaTpln\eria, Hid 112 SeatoM
Nll1allF8@.tf _ ia ~-bia. .~ ~ ftortda will b••MIG*IR•-met. under. plan •pproved by the U.S . Bank cy Court In Loa Anlel••·
Godfather'1 la h8idq\W'tered ln Omaha, Neb .
• Furor over low-price tares
NEWARK, N.J. -People Exp-eta. 1Ull wa11in4J
for Briu.h approval to bealn chqp \ram-Atlantic
fll1hta, 10ld more than one-fourth of lta summer
capacity on Monday -the flnt day It ~ccepted
raervatlocw, airline offidala aald.
"We're gom, cruy here," aa1d airline IJ)Okewnan
Ru..ett ~hetta. "We don't have enouch people to fill all the Gem.and ...
Marchetta laid the airline'• oaict bete boobd 5,-
-!08 pueenaen for 018bt1 from Newark to London'•
Gatwick Airport ana 3,392 for Gatwick-Newark
fllaht1 -or 8,800 of the 34.400 _.ti available both ways between Thunday and Sept. 13.
USA Today eyes expansion
ROCHESTER. N.Y. -The cha1rman of Gannett
Co .• Inc., says the company plans t.o expand the me
and color capacity of USA Today, tu national
newspaper, and may dlatribute It overeeaa in the future.
Allen H. Neuharth told shareholders Tueeday at
the company'• annual meeUna that Gannett plana to
Increase the newapaper'1 daily capacity beyond itl
current 40-paae Um.it and lncreue ita color cas-ity
beyond the preeent ellht Jlel'!9 of full cob-and four
J)aaett QI. apot eolor'.
Gannett llhareboiden. buoyed by the ~ ol
the newspaper, ai.o authortied dlttdon Tueltlay t.o
double the ccmpany'1 number of <>Uta1.Uldinc abaree to
200 million.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
... "l'OflC CN"I -.... 1'\la ... .. ............ ,... ..... = ..................... i--. ,, .. , ,.........,._ .... ,.
~ • 1,010, lGO »"' • "' ,,.,,_ 'f• T 1.m.JID 6'\.t • .. ,._. u 2>.-, • .., -"' ...... I 1'.tlUOI ,.... • lh .,.. ~ , ... ,. '" . "' ..,,...,.,,,, ··1 St\.> ~ ~·llclw!! .... <Qh • ..
I 5111 Ml • •t"' 14 -"' = -,, ..... ....
WamrQDm -... • ''°' ""'""*'ll I ~ · '"' ....,.._ a , ..... "' AICM , .,._ +,._
c;.WlijfflC ii. ""' ·~
WHAT NYSE DI>
HllW YOlllK CAP) l!My 1f """· 5 -~ 11 Jfj
MIAT AMEX DI> NeW YOltlC CAf'I Mey 14 Prw.
ff T .. a 1 m .a 1 •
;
DaHyPillt
WEDNESDAY. May 26, 1983
SLIM GOURMET 07
DOROTf!tY WENCK C8
MEAD ON WINE 03
~' .LOidae Coolc deal• WldJ tbe
"'6l'Owing coupon ladmtl'y m lier column OD Page D2.
Mccann doea all her own
bakina· A "chocohc>lic." the •YI her CTazy Cake teclpe,
dilcloYen!d ln the Bahame9. " a favorite. 0 lt'a ~and fudly,
and a areat buay day recipe, betna mbced mdrely ln the ~ lt'a bUed ln."
f
r
ca Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT /Wedneeday, May 26. 1983 -
'M.arinad~~ gre.at 'la~Or. ho~s
-Marinadeo.,.. • .,.., \he vln•a•r or lemon lrult •o•klall a,nd S pound• flank r•·;.;; 9. ~tall with snpefruJt
fla v or boo1ter for juice that is used In grapefruit jUk.'e. . •tnk, Lori4an broil, or ~INADE Jl'O& until amooth. Pour
summer arllllna. The typical mar!nadea. It The beef kabob bonelet1 leel pork FISH OR SHJUMP 1 ~ Pl lnto a bowl and
comblnatlona of liquid add• tan1y flavor marinade hu,rape&Wt In a bowl, mlx 1·1 can (30 ouucea) add de1lred flah .
and herba are almo•t. without acid aharpneas juice, IOY Muce, honey 1r•pefrU}t Juice, •<>Y th.alt cocktail, drained Marinate for 2 hows at
llmitleH. Some of the requiring less 1ugar or and lfn.ge err.. .,. aauct. hoNt)i, .-.Uc. aalt +-1 cup ar•pefruH room temperatUre. more unusual marlNde at.her sweetener. Be aa.re, MAJUNAI>a:. FOR and 8'Dlw· Cut be9f into Drain and •J>4tar on
baaea range from however, that the BEEFORPORK atrtpeorl-fnchcubetand ~cupmelttdbuter .UWenandbroll4to&
cranberry aauce to p-apef.rult jWce you Ute l'h C!Os»'~t place into 1rapefruJt ~ 3 pound• raw m.tnutee or until tt.h ls
grapefruit juice. I.a not too tart or tinny Julee •tu.re. Marinate for 2 rlmp, ab.tled while Uahtly browned,. and
For a company dlah, taatlftl. .. ~ cupJa~'9Y, hpur1 at .room r w .net ct.vetned or 8 flake1-eully . Heat
try a duck and liver Tbe neutral color of eauce ' ~ ~ature. Drain and unda bon-1"8 .tl•h1 ~ tn.dt ~
kabob that marinates ppefndt Juice makes It ~ cuP' ,hohe')' •pear on •kewert and lnned' and .cut into unU) ~6t>iy and JerVe
livers in a mixture of aooct fOtt ftih or ihellfiah. 1 c 1 o v e I a r 11 c :.~broil ~ to e. ~uiee or -inch cube1 ot. 2 \.i 9POOMd OV~ ftatl. 8erwia ~ sauce, vinegar A ahrhnp. tomato and mashed W>dl dnlred deiree ol .. ~ . e. and 1arlic. green pepper kabob has 1 teUflQon aalt aoneneaa. Remalnlna marlnade doublel DUCK AND LIVER
Grapefruit juice la an beeJl marinated in a 1 teupoon grourut marinade can be 1-ted in 1.19' 11 a marlnllde and KABOBS
excellent substitute for combination of pureed glnger • and 11erved u a uuce. a •auce. Puree fruit 1 duckllna, ...,t 4 r pounda, thawed U tiozen
LACE-COOKIE CUP-.HOLDS IC-E CREA·M, FRiJI~ .... ·.· ~!~'jf.U1ed
I f I • , Cranbury tauce • From Page c 1 · 1 t lfi ,cup barbecue
garnta~ with whipped frothy. Graduall)t acid ~arlho Until Well .. .,..
sheet. Heat in~~ In 2-quart saucepan c:rearo ~ 11trawben1es. :~r1 beating '\lntU . pt._ lllte tiOlt.am F oven 1 to 2 minu1es. sprinkle gelatin over Makes 4 11ervingl i. diaol ed Ac:M f ~ ~ Remove from foil. cne at water. Stir lD egg yolks, PEACH·BEltRY .SWIRL a ~ v . 0 t1~--=-'f. • 1 P 1 d 0-• .. RT •cream, cup corn .-~ . ..-...... a ~ me. ace over corn syrup an ~ d ·--111 •• "---• --....a_,_
d b ayrup an ·~~ -~ .,., ... , _...,.. •• inverte (5 -ounce) straw erry puree . 2 cupe aliced peeled until well blended. Beat Pl ce ~· plnJ. frHh..,
cuatard cup or muffin Stirring constantly, cook peaches 1n peach mixture until r • ~ p b • r r r • 1. o r ~ ~ ~ =tl~. ::~..-tl~o~ ~oer!~i~~eV~ syru: .:,:p light corn ;,:x2~~~~our lnto blu ";':~t.~
Remove. Cool oompletely dis so 1 v ed . about 5 2 __ eowr; freeze ,about 3 ~0 n , yr up •a~ 7-A"l
on wire rack covered minutes. Stir in food 1A cup a~ boura or untll flrm. tab eapoon augat ln
with paper towels. Store color. l cup WQt 8poon lnto chilled lal'ge b cpntainer; cover.
in ti g h t 1 y covered Turn into large bowl. 1 cup heavy cream ml,xet' bowl. With mixer' ,Ble on high apeec1 30
container. Fill with Ice Refrigerate, stirring ~ cup Ufht cotn ~t Jow s~, beat until or until anoQth.
cream or fresh fruit. occasionally, about 1 syrup imooth. t t melted I t J
Makee 6. hour or until mixture 1 teaspoon vaniDa Spoon lnto pre~ pan: r n ° · q u •rt
STRAW 8 ERR Y mounds slightly when Cru1t Mixture Freeze until slightly ng oocuionally,
CHIFFON PIE ·dropped from a spoon. In (reclpe·follo~ finn. With anall 9J)lltula,· a to boll over
1 c u p s 1 i c e d sm8ll bowl with 'mixer at B e r r Y S w i r 1 awirl Berry Mixture m um beat and boll
strawberries , hi1h •peed beat egg Mixture (recipe follows) throuah Jee cream for a ientljY lO"to 16 minutes
1 en v e 1 ope whites until eoft peab Place peachea and W mttbfed effect. Cover; or "'ntil mixture h
unflavored gelatin form. Graduallt beat in cup corn r y~ up in tr.. Wltil firm. Makes reduced by half. Turn
'-' cup cold water sugar until •tiff peab blender container; aM!l". about U ~· in'° Small bowl. Covet
3 egga, aepuated form · F o 1 d Into Blend on hiah 9peed 30 CrHt .mlshlre: In surf ce with waxed ~ cup light corn atra'#l>eif'y 1iilx.tUl'"'e. ~<irl.iillirliDOOUi. ainallaowritit "fojitliit pape or pwtlc wrap.
syrup Spoon into putry ahell. ~ W. bowl with mbcer 1 cup arabam cracker C o l t o r o o m
2 to 4 drops red food Refrigerate 4 hours or at medium speed ~at c:nonbs, W cup sup.rand tem erature. Make•
color (opUonal) until ffrm. If desired, egg1 untll light aftd W cu eoftened com oil about ~ cu
~cup 9UPl'
1 baked (9-inch)
pastry shell. cooled
Place strawberries in
blender container; cover.
mend on high speed 30
seconds or until smooth.
Balanced diet
essential to
healthy teeth
..... eatlnC !!M Quaker Helf•• l
~ Ha1fsies is one of the sweetest Wl)'I we know to
set your kid to cut down on supr. lt'1 the oma.I with onJy
haJi the aipr of molt other sugar<Oilted cauJs-one
teaspoon per serving-that's SO'll last
But n-m though we cut the
sugar we didn't cut the taste. Halfs.iea
ttill has a whole lot of ~ your
child's going to Jovel HolV did we do
jt1 With just a smidgen of
NutraSweet, • a new nutritive
.SWfttmer. Doesn't touch the
wte ... or the nutrition. Halfsift sfves
your child all the wholesomeness of
com and rite, plus 9 e.smtial
viwnins and minerals.
, New Quaker HaJfsla. You're go.
ins to low half the sugar.
And your kid'll love Mr)' bitel
·c 0. ScMie • Co ....... ol ......,._ CAP'-41
~ cup red
vf nepr
1 clove 1arllc,
muhed
l po1.tnd chicken
livers a zucchini, cut into
1A ·inch thick me.
2 rtavel qranae•,
peeled and cut tnto 8 weaee • 2 red peppen, cut
into 1 ·lnch lquat'el
Preheat oven to 360 d~lr_~•· F. Sprinkle due~ with .. it and ~ --~ f« l~
While duck la routlne.
ln a bowl mix together
c.ranberry aauce ..
batt>ecue ~uce. vinepr
and garlic, and marinate
liven. When duck la cool.
•'
cutOff~Wltb
akin, '-*"' bODlia. "!>rain liven. • rrrrw
marinade and heat.
Spear alterna ..... ,.__
of duckUn&1 auc:chtnl,
oran&•· peppen and Uwnon.....,..111-
bbobs oe p111 e mm.
abc.>v• 811a)' coal• and bruah whh reaerved
marJ nade •'1•ry & mtnu~e1. GrUl for 10
mtnu• on eecb mete. · Tout loq hero rolll
~~~~~
roll, remoY'9 skewer and
drlule with rema.ln1na
marinade. o.o.e ron ma
serve with mWl whole
ro.aated ea1plant1 and
armed plum tomatoes.
Serves 6.
J
____ _,..
£1 •
t -·
I
~...A
In The Parking Lot of .Most V: ons St pres
Prices Effective Thursday, May 2~Stlnday, May 29, 9 A.M.-9 P.M.
Here's something to celebrate-Vom' fantastic Memorial
Day Truckload Sale! It's a big week of extra special
sarings on a wide variety of items. Barbecue tlecess-
J ities like paper cups, plates and napkiDs. •• dwcoal
for the grill •.• plm an unbelievable as.wrtment of other
merchandise. All at specially reduced holiday prices.
Don't mm the exciting Memorial Day Truckload
Sale at· V om.
·PEPSI OR
DIET PEPSI 39
6-PACK
1 12-0UNCE CANS
HI-DRI
TOWELS
PAPER
125-COUNT
FRESH
CORN
BARBEQUE STYLE
TRIMMED .16 EA.
ICE
CHEST
1
30-QUART
SIZE
F
0
R
CASE PRICE 14.7Q
129 ROLL
BAGS
13-INCH
16-INCH-2.99 EA.
BEACH
BALLS
ASSORTED
COLORS EA.77 ROLL
BAGS
20-INCH
24-INCH-4.99 EA.
KI.;EENEX
·FAMILY
FACIAL
TISStJE e
280-COUNT BOX
ASSORTED COLORS
. '\
'
HI ORI
~
TISSUES
=--.,;;.;.....
199 . DIEFFEN-J99 BUNCH J99 BACHIAS DAISIES
6-INCH POT FRESH AND COLORFUL EA. LUSH GREEN PLANT EA. MIXED BOUOUETS-2.99 EA. EA.
3 99 HANGING 3 99 LARGE BELL JOO
EA
. • !:2!,~0S ~· !:,§~f E!1S 5 ~
LUSH GREEN PLANT ·t;;I"\, CRUNCHY
{ l
I 11
' I I
•
I
,,
\
' l
I ,
I I
I
I.
I
·I
I
C4 Orange Ccut DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 28. 1883
Cookln1 for family freezer. Makes two 8-or 1 tableepoon almond until nnn.
and sueeta needn•t run 9-lnch ptes. ext.net . To Nmove &;we cream
you raged If you make Tip: 11' to ~ teaspoon l au p ( \Ii pl n t ) from mu.Wn cu pa, Joc.n
your time ln the kit.chen peppermint extract can w h t p e I n I c re a m • Ude. and &'ftltly remove.
IO u far u pomlble. be aubltltuted for the whipped.. Ovniab wtth fneb fn.dti
Take homemade cremedementhe. 24 vanUla wafer chocolate aauce1 deuerta. If they keep •Note: Do not uae cookies preHrvea or 1>reparec1
well, doesn't It make non-dairy whipped In large bowl, beat ea pie Jlllln1. Ile turn
aenae to double tp' topping. yolka; atlr tn sweetened leftoveu to freeier.
quantity, then store half FRoZEN ALMOND c9nden11ed mll~. aour Makes 24 1ervi.nQ1.
for future uae? CREAM GEMS cream, water and Tip: To store, place
That'• the approach 2 egg yolks• extract. Fold in whipped gema in a wax paper-
t a ken with the 1 ( 14-ounce) can cream. Place vanilla lined pan; cover with
ICNlllptious desaerta that sweetened condensed wafers ln bouoma of aluminum toU.
follow, for there's milk (NOI' evaporated) W)8feased or l>Apel'·llned. •uae only Grade A
enough to go around 1 cup (8 ounces) sour mWftn cup. nn cookie-··clean. uncracked egga.
twice! One dessert's cream Uhedmufftncupa ~full; .. Do not UH non-
retldy for ea~ the day ,__2:...:ta::.:b::::les:::!:poo::::na::....::w:.:a:.:te::.:r_do=.:v.:.er:.:.·..:~~=....:4:...:.:.houra:.=.:...:o:.:.r _::dairy=.:!-.:w:.::hl:!p~ped=-=top::!:!plng~!.:· _ __.::!!!!:!:~~~~
~t.~:~:::::: VONS · IS GOING TO SAVE YOU
~~~?f~;~~:; WITH HOLIDAY FAVORITES
ingredients are needed to
~~~~ni:~=': VONS WILL BE OPEN ON MEMORIAL DAY-
~U::-Froum Almond MONDAY, MAY 30, 1983 FROM 8 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
Cream Gems, and you'll • ,
have 24 individual
eervings of ice cream -
each with its own cookie
base. Frozen in muffin
cups, this is ice cream
made the easy way,
because an ice cream
maker is not needed.
FROZEN CHOCOLATE
MINT PIF.S
2 (8 or 9-inch)
chocolate cookie crumb
crusts
~ cup chocolate flavore<tsyrup-.,.
1 ( 14-ounce) can
sweetened condensed
milk (NOI' evaporated)
~ cup white creme
de menthe
2 cups (1 pint)
whipping cream,
whipped.•
In large bowl, stir
together syrup,
sweetened condensed
milk and creme de
menthe. Fold in whipped
cream. Pour into cruata.
Cover. Freeze 6 houn or
until firm. If desired,
garnish with whipped
cream and chocolate
curls. Return left.overs to
Cobbler
American
favorite
When fre s h
strawberry supplies
peak. the thoughts of a
good many cooks tum to
one of the beat of
American deaaerta -
Strawberry Cobbler.
Here is a recipe for
Strawberry Cobbler that
is made in juat a little
different way from other
recipes of ita aort.
A very hot sugar
syrup I.a poured over the
berries (in a caaerole),
the topping ia added
while the syrup la atill
very hot and then the
cobbler is immediately
baked.
-' STR.A WBERRY COBBLER
1 cup aifted all-
purpoee flour
1 ~ teaapoona
baking powder
~ teupoon aalt
Sugar
4 table9pocm (\Ii of
a ~ pound stick) butter
1 pint strawberries
M cup water
\.i cup (abouO milk
Vanilla ice cram, if
desired
SAVE WITH GREAT
WEEKLY SPECIALS
-.
Fry bread
• recipe
works well
~NE
:.!..="-
' Last summer, when
m y friend Jonathan
l&"l'WJC:r told me he was
gotnC to s~ a couple
of months in •New MeJdco, I said, "Bring me
t.ck a recipe for Indian
fry bread that really
worlca." rm happy to say he
fulfilled the commiaaion.
Ria r ,cipe worked
beallti-full)' wh•Jl we
made it m my kitchen.
LYN ORTEGA'S
INDIAN FRY BREAD
Com oil
2 cups all-purpose
flour
~ cup non-fat dry
milk powder
2 teaspoons baking
powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon
shortening
" cup (about) wann water (105 to 115
~~nough oil to a
10 or 12-lnch electric
akillet to have it ~ full.
In a large bowl, stir
together.flour, dry milk,
baking powder and ealt. WI~ your flnaera, work
In abortenlna until lt la
not visible. With a fork.
gradually stir in enoueh
water to form a aoft
On a ll htly floured
th and springy -
about 5 minutes. Fonn
to a 6-incb roll. Let
rest uncovered for 4~ to
60 minutes . Slice
~into six 1-inch
~; form each into a
On a lightly floured
surface, with a floured
rol.lina pin, roll each ball
to a tliiO 6-inch round -
leas than "' -inch thick. Pick up a round of douah; holding it cloee to
the edge, start preealng
and rotating the rouna
between tllumbs and fina'en, keeping thumbs
mo\fSng clAl8e together.
Ftrat pr.e11 cloae to
edges of the dough; then
move thumbs down
slightly and continue
pre99ing to stretch and
rotate until round ia 7 or
8 inches in diamet« -
retutning to pre19 near
edg4!S if JM!OPWArf. 'The
round will have uneven
1pota of thickne11.
Repeet with remaining
~ Meanwhile, heat the
oil ln the skillet to 37~
~· Add one round;
wlth tonp puab down
often lnto oil to
submerge; fry, turnlna
once until P'-"fed ~
golden brown. Keep
warm in a low oven.
Repeat wtth rema1n1nc
roUndl. Makes 6 •
........ .....
BueiMU
Orange Cout OAIL v PILOT /Wedntlday, May 25, 1083 Cl
j •
SHOP.PiNG ·T .HE . .
. . .
.. .,,,. • • ' 4 ..
VONS Ail' .. ~:lf IS w ·EEK
.. ' ~ . ..
COULD SAVE YOU
OVER
. " We compared 'the prices of the features in this . .
week's Vons ad against other superm.arket*prices.
, Vons is going ··,~o ·save you more -t~an Sl8.00
' \
..
I .
I; J.
1:
SAVE~g'y .
Gooa HUntor~
lee Cream
orlc&~ Grocery Pick. -J
'tSbSO't OOH12
Pickup
TrcelOp.
Save2S-¢
on the: rqular price of any
Trtt Top rqular or natural
Appk Juice:.
1tllillllr:Coot""'"°'(orp .,,......, ... ,~"~''.... ..... of!!!!..~
,. ... ~.f1lll'O,..ufll,tfit\r;-t""'"''""Clllf'd•''•O'\ 1N •(I ~ ---""*""" """""" "'"''"' """'"""..,,, .,,,.,.. ..... \t"'' ,., ( ..... .....~ .......... ._.. ....... .., ... -.... ...,,~ ............ .,,,,..,._. """"'
""" "Otf Of lf'Dl~1d .,. .... \f•"''f'ld (¥)11111'! I ''""' .... .., •
-••• WI!> ,...,..1.10' '-' W '"'Of ,,.,..,d I .. _. .... •Guf" OUtlldf ~ ·--ffllf .,.,.'\ wftll M.i '"I 1114 illtf'9tllfh"\
of• "'lli'NtoM • .........,..,~~ "'''~In UllN'tf• ''"ill-"•• i.w
t ..... vi "M ••~'-itilt~tPl•.t••tcJ lu,.1"'''°''''• .it~ C:.. .... " VSA ,i. .,.,..,. ... )1111 p,..,, iv, 1., .,,.,._... f
,._.,,._"'4~-'""'·· (i..O HJ• C ·~ ,u.-
··!)9 II"'° !iM IM~"'"''" .. *'""-'•""' lol\o ...... '""""-""'*1•••""' ---··~ ........ .... ... JI. 1tU. u.11 -............
""..._,Tr ... T .. ~ • .n_.,_.....,.,..
... , ..... , ., .. -.Cftl .. piV''CTC""~ .....
t••UI •P•W. ,., .. .,..,,, '"" ~ttMU ~··•~•M'
l.liwftufNC .... -.hllf'l 111 ltn T'~t1i. ......... ul Tfft4A.,.,...lM'ufft.ltut.;t......,.,..._r ,,,.....-
M-t ... h(. ~1.,wtJ •If·~""' (-.\of ...... .... ,., ~' ""'""' , ............. ,, . ..,,....~ u..---\1 ""tMitrK •rd M I•• ,.,..._, t.lfth "' • 'A ( ........ 1/1\~ furr~.UOh•'h'ft' r._. M" PU Wiv• 1 .... « bnton ~ .. • \l .. \-4 ,,,,.Jd u.-k M tM ,..., ...... ,.. of Trn 11.., ,..,.,_...,
"' ft8I .,,.., .\.pPir }tll«' A"' !10\t"f V~ l t fft'M I
, ....... fnl.MI ...... •llfW ''""'""" ,,., 1.-.mh • ..., , .. , .... \fa)'' , __ _.
~~
100% Pure No Sugar Added.
I IT09'1 COUPON I H'-DATI: "'°'"I
7!iC OFF.JVVQ
This coupon ocMXT~·on ·the Purctwse o1 nm
boxes of Cooki&Crtsp' brand CEREAL any size/flavor.
,-=;~:;:::;;:::=
-·-
·--, --~· -.......... -.. . .
What this wqrld needs is more ~Humor: .. . ~
Many are J]icked
Few are chosen
~~
?Z
•
• j
ndelnthese , COl'8ll ,
It ., stare
~-these'
r pr•tq
'
On.Jy Jonny C&t offers the long-lasting odor con-
trol of Green Gard. This speolal formula: goes to work
when kitty goes to effectively ellmlnatie odors. So
your cat box St.au'8 fresh an(i clean. ror a long. long '
time. Jonny Cat. For long-lasting odor control.
When you send in for our $2.00 cash refund
offer. you could end up with a lot more than' $2.00.
That'~ bccawle CYCT} refunt.I ~with a "Road
to Rtchet' • game card chat could win you $1 .000-
A-YEAR FOR LIFE.
To ,et your S2.00 ca...tl refund and ·'Road to
Rietiel"' prne card. just send 10 "Roed to
SAVE ·25¢o~
1fnilt1t1uch•
Concentrated Fabric Softener
"Road to Ric~" game card giving you a chance
to double your ~fund or win SI ,CXX) 1 year for life.
Look for specially maRed packaga of Auroq
BathroOm Tis.\ue or GaJa Paper if owe ls for
~leee details. , . So start collecting ''Road to ~idle~ .. proofs-
of-purthase now. quantities• thnited. Ute the
coopom below co get yoµ lltal1ed. Yoo'll tnd up
witfl a S2. 00 cll.°'h ~fund and a game clitd 1hcit ,,
could put you on e•y ~reet.
orrer exptrta: September ao, 1963
so• otf m 10 lb. bags
or Q!l! 26. 30. or 80 lb.
bag of Jonny Cat .
41334 11b575
l~'t'[OE 't't'[t't
ct .JI ....
0
0 ,... .,
.JI ....
"' ::r
"
Orange co .. t DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May 2~. 1983 • • -
ocdeviledegs;milkand cataup; plain raw au1ar to I've been (fruit auaar), dext.roee, leu expenatve to bleach (the type yoo ... Q.1'41cefttlywhil9
produetamadewithmll.k ve1etabln (like carrot· r..dll'.\8 IJ\IN(llent llata 1tucote, aucl'ote produce. All of th .. e ordhur tly UH for JNklna 9'nwbltry·-.
o r cream 1 • u ch a a and celery atlclu); ha.rd on labell. I can teCOIJ'U• (~ white tqar)1 IW•tenera add calorie9 Jau.nderfna>. quickly and I foUna my red~ cAlW
puddlog, ana aoft cheae cooked e 11 a with SU8IU' when Jt'a l1't.ed u m • l t o • • , a n a and.little elle io the food. .Uect!veiy kUJ1 bederla u,, Uqukl pectin. c.ouJd J .l.'!.!!~! r.:;nic on your such u cou.,e or cr.m uncracked ahella; hard whhe auau. btotn dextromaltCIM. whh the exception of and MOJd that can cat.118 have u.d the poWderled ~ the Memorial cheeae; meat, fiah, or chee.; dry •UM8" aucb aupr, or raw aup.r. out Other fonnt of qar molaaaea, which doea everythlna frofb bad pectin I had on band
{>ay weekend? If ao, poultry -cooked or as aalami; and other what are aome other that are commonly \I.ad have atcnl&ant IUl)OWltl odors ln the prt.,e can lrwt-.d of nmntna to the I , I a a 1ood time to uncooked or made into fooda you nonnally don't kinda of aupr I ahou1d ln fQod1 are honey, o t l r on and other to Wnesa in human1. Pu& store for liquid pldin!
about food aafety aalad (examples, allced ref1igerate such aa bNMI, look for? mola .. ea, corn-1yrup, minerala. warm w a t • r a n d
uttona you ahould ham or lunch meats, hot cracken, cookie., cakea • · · · A. One method hip fructoM com syrup,' • • • detergent in YOW' truh · · · A. You'c.ul Ute
to be aure your dogs, chicken or' tuna ~d pies that don•t have "lor recogn1.lina ldentiflc auper·hJah t~ com , , . Q. What'• the best can and add about 1 cup el th er powdered or '
. J food.._will be aafe. aalad, ground beef for filllnp made with ew namee that rruaht be ayrup, and corn ayrup th1N to·...-to pt rid of of ble!lch. Let tt IOak for liquid pe<:tin for Jelllel W h Y t 0 e s Pe cl al hamburgen). or milk. uad on labell for aupr aollda. The aweeienera mola anC! aanltlze my a while before 8Cl'Ubbina and jams. 'One p.ck•p ~for p6cn.lc focxI.? Fooda you don't need • • • la to look for the word-made from com ayrup kitchen truh canT tt fth 1 handlea powder• d p ec t In ~a becauae picnic to worry about are atjd QUESTIONS WE ARE. ending ''oae""aa lt are becomin.i more-and ·~· . A. Use detergent ~h. 0: ~8outaide to di.olved in l cup water aliiei often are treated foods auch u fresh and ASKED: ··uauallylndicatesaaugar. mqre popular •a a to clean your truh can avoid breathing the canbe.W.UtutecUor" f~!.'!1! andfrom foodat canned fruit, picklea, . . . Q. I'm tryin1 io Thua, look for lactose aubstitute fat ordinary and chlorine bleach to bleach fUme:s. bottle UqUld pecUn and ~-..--tervea ro~l_l_v~e•_._~m~u~•~ta~r~d~a~n~d~b_u.:c,_f_oods__;._tha__;.t_'ha_;_ve __ laa~~<m~U~k-•_u~g-a_r)_._f_ro_c_t_os_e~a-u~g-ar~beca~-u-ae~th_e~y-ar~e~aa_n_l_t_lz_e~l\-._C_h_l_o_r_in_e~~~~...;...;;...;;..~~~~vice~-v-ena.~~~~~~ ' , I . I 'The moat important
difference la the amount
they may spend
safe keeping
tures -that ia,
between 60 and 120
~F.
"'l'hia temperature
,.... la unsafe becau.e it
allows bacteria to grow.
The moat unsafe
('em p e r a t u re i a
lUkewarm -90 to 11 O
4egreea F . At this
temperature, bacteria,
ihcluding the kind that
~u.e food polaonin&, can m ultiply unbelievably
t,ast.
The unhealthy result
CQuld be that picnickers
who ate the con -
taminated food would
come down with
u)ipleaaant aymptoma
1uch as diarrhea ,
iCmnach c:ramP*, nauaee,
vomiting, headaches and I tevu.
1
The timing of the
'"8et of ~ symptoms
-· "'--W'"oulel"'"Cfepena· onthe ...
1
. kind of food pooonlng
bacteria involved, the
I number ot them tnaested r which would depend 1 on how long the food
was held at an wuafe
semperat .. re and how
much of it was eat.en,
and the individual's
.-.pCibWty.
g Some types of food
poiaon!ng bacteria act
i-e I a t i v e 1 y f a s t .
Staphylococcua bacteria
(atap b), for example,
fonn a poi.aon in tke food
• they grow in it and
!' 1 this polion can affect a
· sumceptible penon in 3 to
8 hours. Usually the
symptoms last only 1 to 2
days.
I Other types of
bacteria, aucb aa
aalmonella, take longer
to affect you. Thia la
becaa .. the t.ct.eria first
must multiply in your
intestines, caualn1 an ~~b':'~m~to=.
aually omet i. within
38 boun. and the
1ata 2 to 7 days.
, Severe aalmonella
Wectiona can cau.e high • ! fever and may even
cauae death . Moat
auacepUble are penona
with low resistance -
for example, the elderly,
infant• and your
I i
1. I children. \ Thua, food poiaon.lna
can be t~mporarlly
diaabllrw, but lt a18o can
be deedly llerioua. How
to avoid it? Treat pk:IUc
fooda )mt -carefully .. you treat fooda to be
oanauned at home-; most
importantly, keep cold
fooda coJd and bot fooda
bot until they are •ten.
By all meam,:¥o an ice chest with Ice
io keep the cold ooda
cold durin1 the whole
pcnlc. Thia la apedally
important for all-day pcna. Keepina the ice
cbeet in a ati.dy place
end coverina it with a blamet will help keep it
cold. Avoid frequeDt
~t":'ut the cold
f()Ods out on the pknk
table until just before
eatin1 time. Put them
back in the ice cheat
)ll'Olhptly. Don't Jet them at oo the pknlc iaie tor
boun.
The faodl ~ need '° be pertlcularly
eonc•rned about are
OMJlll foods that = ~t.wtal t u cb a• potato and
...-an! tUad; ea ..i.t
USDA Clw>Ke llMf • .. A ~R-CUT O:fUCKSIEAK ~...,..,__
Fror•" 1 5·11'ound "!9 ARMOUR BEEF PATTIES EA 2 .69
BOlllU••
CLOD ROA•T
USDA c~J~ic 2 17 CHOICE La. e
25 ~Ft. Alumifwm foil REY OLDS WRAP. . ... . .................• 49
He1n1 1Hz. 4M1'd. Vorietlft
BARBECUE SAUCE .
CAl•U•
.. 78
'
Hlllll
l ·OUART I 19 BOTTLE •
PRICE EFftCTIVE 7 DAYS 8 A.M. THURS.
MAY 26 THRU WED. JUNE 1ST, 1983 ALL STORES OPEN MEMORIAL DAY
CALIFORNIA FRYERS
FOSTER FARMS OR ZACKY
FllSH FRYING CHICKIN ·c.
LB.
Ullll' •
,,Olen 2 79 A TLAllTIC HADDOCll RLLn•........................... .. l• •
S&W, lH1, 67 BAKED BEANS .............................. •
Schollt~'. 4-ol 69 GROUND 8LAC1C PEPPER ............ •
-SU•llY DIUGHt I , arau• ....CH
64-0Z. sin
' .89
GOLDIN DillCIOUS
Shonk ll'CHtl.clft fully Coobd •
SMOKED HAM-:::.................... .:19
Annow or loc*y .._....
TURKEY ROAST ...................... i.a. I .69
RUH
CUT.WntYa
~y·~~4 79 G«)WH OOl(Q N
&a ••
Son '-'ondo, 6-. Medlui.. .Plmo OlMS .......... :.. ................ • 99
6-PGd, 12~1. Cont I 89 •HANSEN'S NATURAL SODAS .. •
'
DI Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 26, 1983
Worcestershire enh8nces taste
U you've never tried a foll Into four 12 -x f o 11 and a er v e oranp rind
recipe ualna Wor-13-lnch pieces. In the Immediately, 1amlahed ~ cup plain dry
ceaterablre aauce aa a center of eech place " with lemon allcea and bread crwnt.
-..oninc fOC' fiah, you're c up rice and spread pa!~•Y., If deal red. Prehett oven to 4'0
in for a treat. A meMUre all1htly. Place 1 flab Se ... _{. dqreea F. Spri.nkle aalt
of Worceeterahitt hels-fillet over rice; top with ORANGE AND ove-fWeta. In a jelly roll
flah i..te utra uvory \.4 cup each carrot and WORCESl'ER8BIRED pan arranae fillets tn a
without overpowerlna lta tomato. Combine water, FISH PILLETS aln1le layer. Combine
delicate flavor. butter, Worceaterahire 4 flnn-fie.hed flah butter, lemon Julee,
A aim p 1 e way of sauce, lemon juice and fillets (6 ounces Neb) WOl"Oeltenhl.re aauce and
broiling or baking fiah ia salt. Iii teaapoon aalt oran&e find. Pour over
to marinate the fillets &iae all aides of foil 8 tableepoona butter fiah. Sprinkle top of each
briefiy in Worceeterah.lre and pour ~ cup of the or maraarine, melted fillet with bread crumbs.
sauce before cooking, or liquid into each packet. 2 'h tableapoona Bake until fish loeea
brush It on the fllleta Seal packets Ugh Uy. lemon juice · . tranaparency, 10 to 15
while cooking. Bake until fish loses 4 teaapoom ortginal ··mlnutea. Serve over
0 n 1 y a 1> i t mor e transparency, 10 to 15 Worcestershire sauce s~ rice, If deaired.
,
complicated ia a recipe minutes. Remove from 2 teaa na rated Serves 4.
for Bak ed Fis h and l...;.;.;;.;;.:;.;.;....;..;..;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiilili;m!imliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~---;~----=::::;;;:::;;:;r---li~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiliiiiiii7-.Uiii~ .. iiiii .... ""'l~iilii:'iiiii'iiiiUm.iii.-:iiiiii;-----Vegeta bles in Foil.
Contai n e d i n eac h
"packaJ(e" i.s a flounder
or aole lillet, rice and bits
of carrot and t omato
enticingly sauced with a
mi x ture o f butte r .
Woreestershire sauce and
l e m o n j uice In 10
m i nute s o r so th e
surprise pac kage is
ready.
Orange and
Worcestered Fish Fillets
is easily made. Here,
Worcestershire sauce,
orange rind, butter and
lemon juice are combined
and poYred over the
fillets . Then, bread
crumbs are. sprinkled on
top before baking.
Don't forget that as
flavorful as these recipes
are, they won't taste as
good if the fish is
overcooked. Cooking fish
''to a tum'' IDMN just to
the moment where it
loses its transpare ncy
_ and~ _o~~e.
BAKED FISH AND
VEGETABLES IN FOIL
2 ~ c ups qui c k
cooking rice (uncooked)
4 firm-fleshed fiah
fillets ( 4 to 6 ounces
each)
1 c ut> shredd e d
carrot
1 cup Weed tomato
2 'h cups water
4 tablespoons butter
or margarine, melted
4 tablespoons
or,iginal Worcestershire
sauce
4 teaspoons lemon
juice
2 teaspoons sa1 t
Preheat oven to 400
, degrees F. Cut aluminum
Garlic adds
spice to
• onion soup
French Onion Soup
may be delidous, but for
real flavor excitement,
try Spaniah Garlic Soup,
a zesty, garllc::-baaed
broth with cheesy garlic
tout lining the bottom of
the bowl.
Good Spaniah cooks
undentand how aarllc
makes all dlahea come
alive, with a fragrance
and flavor that aeta
moutba watering. So
while the cooking style.
in Spein may vary from
region to region. prUc or
ajo aa lt la called In
Spanish, ia conatatently
uaed and enjoyed
throughout the country.
"Speniah Garlic Soup"
knows no aeuon. With
aummer approachln1,
garlic aoup make• a
wonderful hot flrat
coune, to contnst with a
c::ool, criap, main dlah
aaJad featurinai aummer'a
beat ve1etablea In a
garlicky vinaigretie. Add
crmty roll• or French
breed and fresh fruit and
cheae to complete thla
light, refreahlng, hot-
weather menu.
SPANISll
GARUCSOUP
4 or more large
clovea freah garlic,
peeled
2 cam (10 ~ ounoe1
each) condenaed beef
broc.h
2 CUpl Water
l cup dry aheny
' small .UC. J'ftnch breed
~ cup butter,
IOftll!Ded
2 tab'11pOOm pied
Parr ad.-
Add 1arllc to beef broth. COwl' lad ......,,,.
U nalnutH, or unOl
1arllc ii eof t. Remove ~--llllde.Add watn •bd aberry to
broth. Heat '° •rvlna ................ ~ TOMt bread on one
sld• under broJler. aemove and 1pre•d
untoaeted 114 .. wl'b
butW ....... ~Md
1pr••d over bread.
Spf#lkl• wttb eh .....
-
until brVWia Md • ....ut~~
ace IOUtff breed
lllcl In wh a« • .mns
bowll. lA6t hot IOUp
owt .ad .w at ma . ......... ..,, .... ~ ... ~
.. _ Eti:i.:-·· -~"'~·--. ~-- -,... ~ -~ r:.jJ :~ ·.:r .... --::;-.
FOSTER FARM FRESH FRYERS
CALIFO"NIA WHOLE BODY CHICKENI
COKE, TAB • I J49 R!LAf r.Bt!~12-o~ CAN PAK .
YELLOW
PEACHES ewalT. AND ;.tUICY
LARGE
AA EGGS
elllTH'e, CUTON O' 1 DOZIN
BELL PE
LARGI llD
CRll,, CIRllN
-1
I
r------
'DZ Orange Coe.at DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 26. 1983
I Millions of consumers cut, save market CoU:poD.s . '•
By LOUISE COOK Some retailers have tried consumer act.Mau claim ''Pllttl, *' the pnces. ,Amona the rules coµ 1 d never I e e d a co u po n a . Kee p al l w i t h f r i e n d 1 a o d
•1111'111:11 ,._....., to change that aituation that overall prica would Soot1 ~... to follow: family on couponed coupons In one place and netghborl and swap for
The rate of 1nc:reaae ln 1n tteent years, however, be 1 owe t w l't ho u t. -.. Do not use a coupon ttem,11 only and could circle the expiration the ones you can me.
supermarket prices has by offering to double -coupons; they aay the to puy somethlne you prob a b I y eat we 11 da\ee so you don't mi&s What ia worthlem to one
eased, but the coupon and occasionally even coat of laaulng the don't need. lf you apend without any ltema that the deadline for aavinga. family may be valuable
industry continues to triple -the value of coupons -moat of 79 oenta 11\atead of 99 areco4poned,"1heaays. -Watch ovt for toanother.
&row aa millions of manufacturers' coupons. which are never cent.I to buy eornething -Make aure the strings attached to -Look for coupons
Americana regularly snip The USDA reaearchers redeemed -la aln;aply you wouldn't otherwise couponed brand la not coupon off era. Some that offer rebates aa well
and save, said such programs can pasi;ed on to shoppen, purchase, you haven't more expensive -even retailers req u.i re a as immediate saving•.
Figun• compiled by provide extra savings for Manufacturers counter saved 20 centa. You've with a discount. House minimum purchase In You may be able to get
A.C. Niellen C.O. lndicate consumers, but they also that if coupons were wasted 79 oent.1. branda or generlca may connection with coupons. 25 centa -off right now
m • n u f a c t u r e. r s noted th.at retailers may e 11 min ate d. other Josephine Swanson, a cost leu; unleta Ulere's a Make aure prices are and mail in the label for
distributed 119.5 billion increase the price of promotional tools would consumer educator at difference in quality, it competitive eo you don't an additional refund. Be
coupona ln 1982, up 17 non-couponed items to b e substituted; there Cornell University in doesn't make sense to wind up paying mQre careful not to throw out
pen:ent from 1981. That offset the cost of double would be no saving. . Ithaca, N.Y., says that buy the brand-name than you ordinarily proof-of-purchue seals
compared ~ith a 13 couponing. To get the most from·, most coupons are for item just to use the would for the non-when you unwrap
percent growth from Coupons are not coupons, you'll have to convenience or non-coupon. couponedltema. something; you may
1980 to 1981. without criticism. Some be selective and compare essential itema. "You Organize your -Compare coupons need them later. Nie~en estimates 4.6 ,~...;....;.;:..;._~~~.;.._~~~~~~~~~---~~~~::--~-:-~~~~~~~--........... ="-~---.--~~~----~~~~~~~---"~~~---~~~~~~~~~~
percent of the coupons
a.re redeemed. It says the
average face value of the
manufacturers' coupons
last year was 21.7 cents,
making the redeemed
1 coupons worth $1 . 2
billion.
The most popular
place for manufacturers'
coupons. according t o
Nielsen. is the Sunday
newspaper; one-third of
the cents-off offers last
year were found in
inserts in the Sunday
pa~te: The Nielsen
statistics don't count the
coupons issued by
individual retailers,
usually in daily
newspapers.
A study by the
Economic Research
Service of the U .S .
Department of
Agriculture showed a
variety of reasons for the
use of coupons by the
rA-food''in<kmry. Burtt· I ·found that mis -
redemption and
fraud add to the cost of
coupons and lessen their
effectiveness.
The study showed that
coupons no,t only help
manufacturers introduce
r new prodµcts and build
loyalty for established
brands, they also make it
easier for the companies
to make sure that a
discount is actually
passed on to the
consumer. Otherwise,
the USDA researchers
said, a retailer may
choose not to lower the
price on an item th.at the
manufacturer has put on
sale.
The Economic
I R.elleatth Service said i l
had not been able to
verify an estimate of
coupon fraud. But the
reaearchers noted that
industry studies show
between one-tenth and
one-ftfth of the value of
redeemed coupons was
obtained illegally. Since manufacturers'
, coupons can be redeemed
in any store, they do
little to attract customers
to a particular outlet.
Glaze
chicken
in skillet
GLAZED SK.ILLET
CBJCK.EN
Brown chkken pieces,
then baste with 2 parts orance Juite to 1 part 90Y
aauce aa chicken
continues cookin&
tender . Add whole
Chilean gra~ the last 5
minutes, just to heat and
h ly with the
uce.
NEWS
Tom whole or halved
Chilean 1rape1, crlap
bllcon, coaraely grated
provolone or Sw,iu
cheese, thinly diced
celery and peed onion
with ~lap greens and
your f.vortte berbed oil-
vinepr drelaing. &joy
with • andwich « bowl
of IOUp ..
SPICE UP BBBAU'AST
Cook link pork
aauaaae 1)owly until
1olde11 . .Remove and aep '"'"1. Add CbUeen
.... .,. to fNU". Saute •
few mJ1lute• until
beeted. Serve on crisp
wattlel with 18\.-p and
~INAat Arrance papet-thln
11lc•• Hlaml, amall
dmMnl ol chilled red ot
trMn Chllean frapet
and chunk• o J'et•
ch•et• on crhp watercr~pt. Serve .. iMdl or 6ppetblr Witb
~~ctM:bn:
, , ..
All Uquor Barns will ~ open Memon.l Day lor your shopping convenience.
We Will Meet Any Current Advertised Pri~e
/
MiMion Viejo, Loe Ancdn. Gudotn Gron, TotTMU, Plicoicna, Heiftet, Anaheina. Plllm Spriap, 'l)iou.a_. OaM, Pa&Mma, ~. Canop PM\,
1726 Superior, Costa Mesa
Phone: 645·1608
25876 Muirtands,
Mission Viejo
Phone: 855· 1437
10932 Westminster,
Garden Grove
Phone: 638·4145
263 Euclid Strei~ Anaheim
Phone: 991·6892
-· ~ H.illl, IUvenill, C.. Mela, 8-ncho ~ ~na. Downey, P.a... 0-..
R1eslmg
Now on Sale at
All Liquor Barns
Inglenook Navalle
French Colombard, $2 7 9
Chenin Blanc
}oh~nni~berg $ 3 9 9
750 ynl The Wine Spectator: Rith Full Body STORE
VISA AND
MASTER CARO
GLADLY
ACCEPTED
or Zinfandel 1.5 Ltr. ~JFJ Wine in a Box
Chablis, Rose' $3 99 or Burgundy Carlo Rossi $297 · Chablis, Vin Rose'
Burgundy or Rhine 3 Liter 4 Liter •
Pabst 1 z l'M:" -1 z .... c.n1S298
Old Milwaukee !Ti;. 1~!..'C: ... $298
Hamm' s !Ti;, 121!.~c~n1$2 98
Budweiser ~~ 1i! •. S899
Old Milwaukee ">~,s2200
Michelob "i.,:,s252s
Lowenbrau "> 8ornl s402s
Coon 1..an_.:ka L4 • I l 0&. *899
Miller ~ u .11 ... $899
Mario's iu.i... ... .1111,.. .... Y .. u~$288
Inglenook Navalle ~,; 1.s w. S299
Colony Rhineskellar .. iu. $4-59
Gallo Port•C-SMnv 1.su,.$259
C.K. Mondavi . !"'~ • 1.u, s499
HOURS:
Sunday -Thursday
10:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Friday & Saturday
9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.
Colo Cl---• Ci..Mi-"' ny liU!&IC ''" R<-R..t~°' Gallo CluMi> 8ltn.
Almaden M~ ~'::..~
J Wloiu II.-"' acare c.:,.,.<e>1 m-
Summit WiM in• Bo• Cocktails for Two Ft.°'!. 1~o m1$288
Dr P ~"' StS9 , epper s..., F"" 6 Pli -12 ot. Caru
RC, Diet Rite, RC 100126..!'. .. ~-S 1 39
BeH Brand T wi.. Piwi. au.-s •. 99e
lays or Ruffles e-. 99'
Cheesecom %8oa. $199 -~~~-
--~oda, lfoe & ~~f"~t'4~ti>--
Finlandia
Stolichnaya
Gordon's
Tanqueray
AO I'-" v.,.n.. "° Prool Vodh
llO Pl'OOI Gm
94-.6 """"' 1_..ici..
7S0mt$7 99
7SOml$899
Christie's 1= 1.nu ... Sl5 ..
Puerto Vallarta T=a,~ 750tals499
Jose Cuervo T::t.w u,~, S89S
Herradun Anejo ~-= 1;o.,s1499
-~~&Z'~-' ConlBay
Mt.Gay
LW. Harper
Platte Valley
'°"""" tt. ... .ii.. RuM
Etllpot """' 80"-'
86 .........
Bo...-..
Cono Whlal_,.
Canadian Oub 86 "°°'
Crown Royal r ':::
Peter Dawson 't:::' ,,, . Cutty Sark 86 .,_,,,Scotch
Jack Daniels ::,;: no.1*798
Seaaram's 7 Crown.:., 1.nu.,.•l~ eo1abrook 80Ptoof.Bltttd 1.nu..•7
Imperial IYmd. llO J>TOOf 1.15 1.ltn • t 188
~ &'1"'44-
De.wan 86 ..._,,~
Chivu Reial 'C:'
Powetl lrilh
· Waterford Irish Cream
t.St.u.$399
J. Lohr 19111•1 .. 2 750.1 $399 I...., ..,. "' lUotlltoe
Wente ... , 750•1 $]91 . ,.... ..... lUnllooi •
Monterey Viney.rct ~~ 1J0.,$298
Uords ud Elwood,~ .. 7501111$319
Whitehall Lane .... ~'l.-Heir 1so ., S J99
Panon'sCreek ... !!!111o ?So1111SS9J
Wente . 1990 1so.is499
Husch ' " ...:.:!... no.i$691
LambertBridge '*°''HI 1so...tS89S North Coast Cellan vt=.. uo S2
Charles Krua l'lfll no.1$JS9 ~Mooe
Sebutiahi 19111 no .. 1$298 O-la 111.-
Simi 1'80 "' 19111 7SO..t $4'8 0..Wl!la ...
Manheim Z.6" S<ll•••at• 7SChol $ 2 99
KarlLycu litbtrwMlkh no.1$179
'
Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday. May 2&. 1183 8S
Famous Yineyards a.,e winery's hr.and labels
Tbe Wine Dt..covery
label la one of two
projecta of the Belvedere
Wine Co. of Healdsburs,
Sonoma County, the
other belna a 11eries of
"Great Vineyards"
wtnea. Both project•
were conceived by Pet.er
Friedman, Belvedere
prealdent.
The great vineyards
program 11 really the
most lntereatin& concept.
and ia oeJ1alnly unique.
While there ls actually
a Belvedere Winery, the
all of that plus plenty of
round fruit flavors in the
pre1ence.
While not one ot the
1tate'1 1reat Char-
don.nays. keef ln mind
that it'• pr ced llke ~-~ Chenin Blanc. Stock up on thil one, too, u a very
claaay everyday white
wine for thia ltllnmer'•
cookouts and enter-
taining.
BIGGEST TASTING
-If you want to vilit
·. more wineries ln a llnale
m · i d d 1 e a n d a n 'afternoon than you coUld
u n d e r s t a t e d o a k see in weeka of driving
around wine country, ••••••••••••llli••••-plan now to attend th1I
year'• Summer Wine
Extravaaarur.a, June & at
the Dt1neyl1nd Hotel,
Mead on wine
By J erry D. Mead
Anaheim, from 4 to 8 ------------------p.m .
It will be the Jara-t
u.emblqe of CaUt.orn1a
wineries (plu1 a few
from the Northweat)
under a ainale roof for
public tuUna ln hiltory.
Between 173 and 200
different wtnerln will
be pourtna their beat,
and In many inatancea
wlll be repreaented by
either the winemaker or
owner.
The reaaon for all thia
celebrity preaence ii that
the Oranp County Fair
wine Jud1ln1 la
acheduled for the aame
weekend, ao many are
already In the area
servmg aa Juctaes. Fol.kl
like Brother ""lflmothy
from The Chrlatlan
Brothers, Tim Mondavt,
Dan Mlra11ou, Anaelo
Papagni, Micha~l
Martini, John Parducci
and too many more to
even begin to menUon.
It _may be the beat
one-day conmmer Wine
.ahow ln the naUOn, and
draw• att.endance from
all over the wHtern
United Stat.el. There'll
be food to nibble 00. loCI
of product and art
di1play1, and free
brochure• and
publk:atiom pb-e.
Ticketa can be ordel'ed
by callln1 or wdtlnr,
Wine Extniwcanza. P .O.
Box 3221, Oranae. CA
92665 538-5520. Tickets
are $20 by advance -W.
$25 at the door nameneverappearaasa .~~~~~~~~~~~~_,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
brand nai:ne on any of
the company's labels,
except on the address
line at the bottom.
Friedman has wisely
contracted with some of
the most famous
vineyardlsts in the state
to produce wine
exclusively from their
grapes, utilizing each
vineyard name aa the
brand designation.
The first wines.
released under this
program appeared last
year, are Bacigalupi
Pinot Noir and
Chardonnay. Both wines
were excellent, but the
Pinot Noir has received
the greatest critical
acclaim and has done
exceptionally well in
competitive tastings.
Several other labels
will appear in the next
two years. From Rene Di.
Rosa's Winery Lake
Vineyards there'll be
bQ.th .2.inot N.ok and.-
I Chardonnay, and from
York Creek Vineyards,
owned by Anchor Stearn
Brewery proprietor Friu
Maytag, will come a
Cabernet Sauvignon.
The Winery Lake wines
will be out later this
year, while York Creek
ls still a year or two
away from releue.
One ad<litional famous
vineyard is part of the
series, and the first wine
will be released in either
June or July of thia year.
Be forewarned there are
only 1,700 cues.
Ko ber& Yo••I
Vhteyard IHI Cabentel
SaavipH (abou"t $12).
From the vineyard made
famous by the Chateau
St. Jean Chardonnay,
comes a Cabernet that is
going to make Bob
Young (not the "Father
Knows Beat" Robert
Young) a viticultural
legend. The wine is one
of thoee lean on the one
hand, but lush on the
other, lighter bodied,
Bordeaux atyle reds,
with a good acid finish
that will cau.. it to age
marvelously.
Wines under the Wine
Dbcovery label are not
produced by Belvedere,
but are aelected from the
surplus 1tock1 of fine
producers throughout
the state, and bottled and
marketed by Belvedere.
The price• on almost
every selection are
unbelievably low, and
I've never tasted a wine
that was anything leu
than excel.lent under the
label.
Wine Discovery
"Moacerey" Caberaet
SHvipoll ($3.2~ or le98).
A goraeoua varietal
aroma combined with
nuances of oak, this ''best
buy" wine entera the
mouth with loads of fruit
that holds through the
middle taa\e, and then
fi.niahea with a Rhone-
like touch of spice and
the bareat hint of
peppercorns.
It 11 drlnuble now.
but will hold nicely in
your cella.r for at least
five yeara. It'• • non-
vtntage .election.. being a
blenc:f of pndomlnantly
1979 ancf 1980 wines,
with ju.It • touch from
the l IJS l vtnia,e. Bette!'
buy cues while yo.a can.
becauae the la.It Wine
Dl1covery Cabernet :!,S:-t.ed in a couple of
WIH Dt11nnrJ ltH •••••••cl••" Claar· ..... , ( ... ISO or 1-).
One do••n 't often
Und even mediocre
Chardoftna1i •WM In um ~ ,..,,., ana '° flnd one of thlt 1ood.
IO'iDd quail~ ta vlriUally ~ of, MendodftD
Coun?F!l• noted fol' prod whiie wtnee
wlth a lvely curu• qua»~ aod tt.a. one Ms
\.00
• no dealer sales
• llmtt rights reserved
rr'a table water
• onions
•• .17
It's potato salad tlme ... u.s. oo. 1 premium
white rose
potatoes •.• 29
I deli ~~~
nt
•. 1.89
ereebr1 · trf-tfp roast .. 4.59 1.19 .79 4l' oz.. box
ribs
lean ground beef
pattf 11 5 lb. box
,... .. 1.19 •• 1.19
(not to exceed 30% fat content)
thr11h1r •rk '
....... 1.
,... • I.ff ._ 7 .45 1111111AJ~~-...;.;.;;L~~-..:.:..:.-=-
lean country atyle
..,.toga naturally apar'ldlng
•llerel W1ter
24 oz. btl. .99
tiul,th valley boaton baked
NIM aalt or no aalt,
15 oz. can .99
helnke old fuhloned
..
vlenna all beef
hnu ~.79 •. i.98
talnN>•ulln
.. 2.69
.. 4.59
diet
•llllttrohNll .. t.S9
laurt CMMI · callfomlan
... ..... loz.
•
..
I j
I I
.
I ·{ f
I
0 4 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 26, '1983
Memorial Day outdoor cooking time
While b&rbecuina ls •
popular year-around
activlty for some, the
Memorial Day weekend
ls the traditional time
many switch thelr
entertaining ldeu to the
yard, patio or deck.
Outdoor cooking ~11
tiained manr avid fan.s
because o the easy
cooldng techniques.
'!be following r«ipea
offer something special
to serve at a cookout
durlng the Memorial
Da_y weekend.
MEAL-IN-ONE-CHUCK
ROAST
3-5 pounds beef
chuck roast
1 teaspoon aeaaoned
salt
1 large onion, sliced
6 medium potatoes.
quartered lengthwise
6 large carrot s,
peeled
~ cup cooking oil
1 cup ketchup
~cup water
In teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon dry
mustard
~ cup StOY sauce
2 tablespoons wine
vinegar
Brown the roast on a
Health ...
foods
sweet too
Candy lovers who
-think..-lhey.'...re giving
their teeth a break by
eating health food ban
and other so-called
"nutritional" snacks are
actually, in many cases.
doing themselves a
dental disservic e,
according to the
C.alif.otnia Dental
Assodation (CDA).
"Health food bars are
just as cavity-promoting,
or even more so, than
many traditional snacks
and can dy, but you
would never guess it by
reading the wrappers,
unless you carefully read
the ingredients." says
Calvin Lau , D .D .S .,
chairman of the CDA's
Council on Dental
Health. Ingredients are
required by law to be
lia1!d in the order ol the
most to the least amount
in the product.
Lau says many
consumers are lured into
buying health food bars
by the "all natural,"
"high protein," and
"energy" descriptions
that are 90 prevalent on
the labels. ln addition,
the bars often contain
carob, an lnWe<llent that
is generally considered
more "natural" than ita
counterpart. chocolate.
"Thia often gives the
ronawner the impression
he's eating a
nutritionally sound
snack that. doesn't poee
any threat to his well-
being, including his
dental health," he says .
.. Sweet fooda that are
sticky," Lau continued,
"can be especially
harmful to teeth because
sugar remains in the
mouth longer, triggering
the formation of
additional acids in the
mouth that attack tooth
enamel.''
According to a study
published in the Journal
of The American Dietetic j Auociation, one of
several health food
"candy'' ban on market
la fiw times u cariogeruc
(cavity~) as milk
chocolate.
"The lea.et carlogenic
and moat nutritious
1nack1, however, are
~oat found In
a candy count.er," says
Lau. "The best aw.de for
aele~:~nacka and maiq • balanced
dlet ls the four food
iroup 1y1t.em -milk,
meat, veaetable-fruit
and breed~"
By eatina a variety of foods daily from the lour
food 1rou1>9, you can
mab aare your body ii
getUna all the nutrienta
ft oeedl to maintain aood dent.al health md CJYel'all
well-~L& tlddl. Othei" ~
mllClal 1n the ADA
Jou.mal study lncluded
ppe clrlnk, dMamon
ioUI. c:arob-cioeted creme
mlrrta &ild toffee.
hot &rlll (hi&h 11eu.1ng on 1 c 1 o v e 1 • r ll c, 1 teupoon salt hours or overn11ht. a gu barbecue) for 15 cruahed \4 teupoon black· turnlnc several um ...
minutes on each aide. 1 teaspoon dry pepper I>w'f.nabarbeculngbrwh
Remove rout and place mustard · Shake in1redlenu each pl e c e w l th
It on a large sheet of ~ teupoon poultry together in • jar. Place marinade when tum.tna,
do u b 1 e -at re n gt h 11eaaonlng poultry In a pan and or every ~O minute for
aluminum foll. Place the ~ teaspoon celery pour mixture over poultry on a spit. Yield 1
al.iced onion on top and r..lmllol.L-------~po:...:..:ul:;:.try~:....· .::Le:.:..:....t .:;..aland=.::::....:for::.:......:4:.......;cu:.::1~· ---------1 the potatoes and carrots
around the roast.
Combine remaining
ingredients In a
~ucepan.
Heat slowly over the
grill until the mixture
comet1 to a boil, stirring
constantly. Do not boil.
Remove and pour over
the roast and vegetables.
Wrap the foil securely
around the roast, sealing
the edges well.
Place on the grill and
cook at low heat for 1 ~
hours. or until done.
Tum with tongs several
times while cooking.
Serves 6.
MARINADE FOR
STEAKS
2 tablespoons oil
~ cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons
Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon dry
mustard
~ teaspoon finely
ground pepper
'A cup wine vinegar
1 teaspoon chopped
fresh parsley
2 cloves garlic,
crushed (optional)
~ cup lemon juice
Combine all
ingredients and mix
well . Store in
refrigerator until ready
to use . Marinade
tenderttes and tlavor-11
steaks such as round
steak. Length of time
meat is left in marinade
will vary with size of cut
and individual taste.
Yields 1 ~ cups.
Poultry is generally
tender, so the following
marinade is to add flavor
only. It can be used on
chicken, turkey and
pheasants..
BASIC POULTRY
MARINADE
In cup olive oil or
cooking oil
~ c up dry white
wine
~ cup white wine
vinegar
\£.~ ~ME RICA'S
OUR
PRICES
ARE
FRESHEST ICE CREAM
'V DOWN!
The same high quallty et a new low
price. Visit your nearest Carvel• loe
Cream Store and take advantage of ~
these savings. r;------11'1':-------;i ,auv 1, GET 1 FREE, I ........... I
I /?~•Soft Cone I I (,,( <Smell> I
I Buy one small aoft cone I
Now any
flying Saucers• ............. ...•.. .. . ........• 554
Olde fashioned Sundaes ........ .... . .. 11.10
Toni's (crunch or sprinkle) ... 12.95/6 pk
Carveioese .. .... ... . ... ..... .... ..... ... .... ..... 11.25 I end get another one FREE. I
I c.. not 11e _........ .... ~ -OG.lpOrl I a Jl Q JJ I ,..,..,.,., .... '* ..... *Cir:::"':'.::: ....d 1n INUd I '-... 1-IJ L.:...a 11WM1yt1.t1a _J ~. Cf, /tlDlm-IUUUI ·----~--~----
HUNTINOTOH llACH HUNftHOfOH llACH UOUNA HILU STANTQ.N IAHTA ANA
·-· ,..,... l ...... ,..,,, .... c.-.... ·• ...... .._c..... lodfs s--c;.--c..it<t., loll __ .., -s--'--"' . mt St troa.1 111 w ..... ,
l6$1l .... ai.t. (II IW) I ....... lllt lll ._I ~I Alt<•,_,.,, I nit-... 7 51-4 771
840-137Q) 964-5553 IS9CAI:-~ •• !•~" ...... ,
-vv 894-4789
Look for our ~ "Buy one, Get one FREE" Specials
Amertca•a Freshest Ice Cream
A Proven Success Since 1934
Select your exclusive Carve,. al'ea In the city of your choice at prime
locations throughout Orange. Riverside, San Diego and San
Bernardino counties. For Information call:
(714) 545-1111
Ana.nclng Avallable on Appf'OY9d Credtt M-F 9:00-5:00 p.m.
Beginning now through August, our
outatandlng refund offer late you
c1,1m up to S10.00 In eavlf!Oa Juet for
buYlng your favorite Big • Cereals. · With the purchaH of any f Ive
Big • Cereals, you'll receive $1 In
cash; with ten purohasea, $1.~
cash plua S3 IA coupons; and with
20 purch•ee•. SS In cash plua is
In coupons.
To get •tarted, Just UM th• fW• coupons attt1eheci s..,. the ,.ruhd
certificate and follow thtl tn•truc-
tlona on It. Then watch tor other '
Big I Cereal coupbne ttweughout In caah plus $1.50 In coupon•;
with fifteen purchases, S3 In the eummer.
~-llilllillill"'
!'COMET i LIQUID
21 OZ.
1.37
!'COMET
&POWDER
170Z.
.67
f'COMET
&POWDER
21 oz.
-:62
!CHEER 709 ~~!~~~~!.
!'IVORY
&LIQUID
480Z. ltt.
2.83
!'IVORY
iBATHBARS
SPack
.83
!-IVORY
iBARS :as··--
The Discount Supermarket
O~ OoMt DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, MJY 24, 1883 DI
Turkey not li01ited as 11.olida~ fare
Barbecued Sweet 'N Spicy mmute:s. Whal a dellciou. way io O io 7 pound turkey tit.at.
Turkey accompanied by Stuffed enjoy turkey year 'round. . ~t
Mush room Ka b o b 1 I s a A perfect accompaniment la Blend 1weet, 1plcy Fren.ch
eemational and ele1ant way to Stuffed Muahroom Kabobs. The dre11lnJ with pre1ervea; Mt
pt your tutebuds waterlna for aavory stuffina mixture, accented aside.
savory barbecuing all 1ummer with lt.all,an dreaaina and wine, ll Grtll tW'key bftalta over tow lona held in \he muahroom c:apa by coat., covered or tented with
Grllled turkey breast provea skewering them two at a tJme heavy-duty aluminum foll,
that turkey 11 not limited to with stuffed aides faclna ~h turnlna occaslonally, 1 hour.
traditional holiday times and other. The same Italian drem.lna-Uncover and continue to arm.
oven roastJna -it's alao taaty wine mixture aerves as a butiJ\8 Dwina the 1ut 30 mlnutea of
when cooked outdoon. Simply sauoe. " cooking time, bruah with 11u2
cover or tent \he turkey du.rtna BARBECUED SWEET and continue w pill, tumlnK and
the first half of arWJ.ni t.o help 'N SPICY TURKEY ha.Ung frequently, until aone.
keep It juicy. Then bruah on a 1 cup (8 ounces) aweet, red ~about 10 aervlnp.
tangy glue of bottled sweet 'n French or Russian dressing , N o t e : G r 111 t u r k e y
spicy French dreaing and peach 1 jar ( 12 ounces) peach approximately 20 minutes per
preserves durina the last 30 preserves pound. ,~~~~-=---~~~~~~~~~---!...:...:.:...:..:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~__:_~~~~.:........:...:..._~~~~~~~~~~~
Baked
Polen ta
repeated
Repeated by request.
BAKED POLENTA
1 c up yellow
cornmeal
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup cold water
2 lh cups boiling
water
1 cup grat ed
cheddar cheese
Meat sauce, see
recipe
Mix cornmeal, salt and
cold water; gradually stir
in boiling water; cook,
stirring constantly, until
thickened; cover and
cook over low he at,
stirring occasionally,
until very thick -about
5 minutes more.
Off heat, stir in ~ cup
of the cheese.
Turn into a shallow
2-quart baking dish
(11~ by 7Y, by 1%
inches); cool. C.over and
chill until firm. Top with
meat sauce.
Bake in a preheated
350-degree oven about
25 minutes; top with
remaining cheeee; bake 5
minutes longer. Makes 6'
servings.
Meat Sauce: Skillet·
cook, crumbling with a
fork, 1 pound ground
beef; add a 15-ounce can
tomato sauce, lh cup
chopped onion, 1
teaspoon each salt, sugar,
celery salt and oregano~
simmer for 10 minutes.
Here is another
convenient recipe.
CHICKEN NUGGETS
2 chicken breasts,
each about 1 pound:
Y4 pound stick
butter, melted
2 tablespoons vodka
~cup dr ied
homemade bread crumbs
Y4 cup grated
Parmesan cheeee
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon crushed
dried bull
1 teaspoon paprika
'It teaspoon ground
thyme
Chutney D i p ,
homemade or prepared
Skin and bone
I chicken.; cut into I 1 YI-Inch squares. In a
small bowl stir together
1
butter and vodka. In a
shallow bowl, stir
together crumbs.
Parmesan, salt. basil.
paprika and thyme.
l>ip chicken into
butter mixture, then into
crumb mixture, covering
well. Arrange on a (oU-
llned cookie aheet.
Bake in a preheated
400-degree oven, turning
once midway, until
golden -12 to 1 5
minutes. Selve hot with
Chutney Dip. Makes
about 50.
Tomato
• • nutr1t1ous
snack
r.nJoy • fresh tomaio,
out Of hand, just • you
wo\&ld an apple. It's a
low calorie, nutritloua
IDldt.
Whole tomato cups
filled with favorite meat « .-food uJed mak.•
an attractive and
cMl'dow luncblon entree
In rd.Du•.
J'rnb tomaw •llced
anCS red onion rln1• ~ In an Ital.Lan 1~1ad dn11ln1 la a ~~Uww
.-..~iUd.
Cbopped tom a to ea,
Mlded to an1. 1tlr-fry
ciorilbmadaD dWiAC the
IMt manute of coc*tn1
... c:ill« Ind n.wr.
Whole kemel corn1 F tom9toee ana .... ...sin
9Jl and vtne1ar and
Jl&llan berbe. make • ·-~-~lt1f • .......-. r
GUARANTEED MEATS
FRYING
CHICKEN
.44~
PORK
SPARERIBS
FRESH 99 ~~~BEEFuie
Daft not nceld ~ ••
BLADECUT 99 CHUCK STEAK
IOndlcl lelf Lil •
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ---u.. .... LI 2.59
LI .99
~~s~~~1.99
~R<!E~-~~TEAK .. 2.19
.....
!,E!f~R~S .......... 88
WHOLE BEEF BRtSkET 9 ~ .......... 1.3
~'!~. ~!~~ .... 2.29
!!R~~~~-~-~~D! 1.19
!~..!...~~!~~ ....... 39
~~,!,~~ ..... 1.59
~-2.~2 ....... 2.49
~~_P~~ia5-4.28
~~r!~~~~NO 1.49
~~~M ..... 2.95
!!.~~~-~ ..... la .59
r ISH .W. SF AFOOO
!:!~.~~-~R .... 1.49
~~-~.~!. ....... 2.29
~~-~~~~1~.~.~ .... 1.69
~~-~ ... 111.99
CANNED & PACKAGED
l~!.~.~-1.39
l~~~~..?1.79
I~~.~!~.tHUll e 79
l~~"!-4~~ .. ··-1. 75
llf-LI DELIC~HTS I KRAFT SALAD 119 DRESSINGS
Cltllnl.'000 .... ,IOl.ld. I LADY LEE 35 "'09fty OIN'Nllr' MEATS l ~'T'ST DAY 29 :=, "''""'" • = •a.... r~ .. L!:.~--1.69
I VAN CAMP'S 69 PORK&BEANS Hoa.cane
r~~-~ ....... 1.19
r~~~~2.95
l!l.~.~~-2.29
r~~ ..... -3.99
l=~~ ........ 45
QUALITY PRODUCE.
~RMELON ui .19
!Cut, U> til
FRESH U>.79 NECTARINES
SW99t .-tel Mey
FRESH ~-14 CORN
Coadtllll'J ""9st
aartlKul brs
HASS
l«ft .29 AVOCADOS
Lm'll Sile
HOUSEHOLD & PET
IF"10~189
~~ ... -I ~s ,~Ct~ 119
r~~~2.29
l~ 59 l!.~~.---1.29
=ltl--~2:r-~· l!-:!D!.~ ~ ~0 -.59
I2!~.~.~~~-.. ".-2.49
l~~~ ~-z~ .. nCll-2.99
£~~~-~~~ .. IUOI~ 3.37
r~~-~·~·'"!-1.45
r~.~.~-~.~-1.75
I~~.~.~-1.15
l~.~~~····· ... n. .55
IP~.~ ...... ~.43
~.~.~ •" 1.95
l~~-~;tatf1tl .89
r~.~-.... .,..-1.49
l£22:=~ ••"8•79
t 11J1 J< 'H H 1 f 1< ' ,...., 1 r Jt
r~.~ • ., ... 3.49
r~~ ~p ... llal 1.49
I~SFORO e~ ... 1:.s_ 299
l~Al-~'!.oruoo 1.99
l~."!~~.~~4.39
l!!.~.~~.~:.~-4.49
l2'--~~~~-3.85
£~~-~:.~ .. u•-.32
C,fNERIC S AVINc-;s
~~~.~~-" .. "•75
DOG BtSCUITS 99 --~ ................... -.
~~~~------.57
CRAPE JEU.Y 1 Q1
-·············· ·······-. ~?4~~ ........ •n• 1.27
~.~.~ ......... !ffnM 1.79 •a8ow -.... ~ ........... 89
CINERtC MAYONNAISe 1 Q9 ···························-. 2..~~~-~.~~.53
..
~ .
. I
I
' \ I
I
De Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 25, 1983
Shrimp Mouss_e sa-utes occasion
When ahrlmp ill ottered, you
won'\ need a trumpet to
announce tha\ your party 11 a
apecial event. Gueata will
immediately reellze that they are beinl honored. Sbrlmp ·Mouaae ulutea the
ooculon but at the aame time it
al.lite the budget. The diatincUve
flavor of th1a ahell.flah favorite ii
ao extended in thia party
prWnaation that a mere pound
and a half of ahrimp expands to
feed a crowd.
The pleasantly smooth
oonaistency of the me>U99e amidst
the crunchy goodness of finely
chopped raw vegetables and
buttery crackers is the taste
tempting secret of this delightful
appetizer.
SHRIMP MOUSSE 1 ~ pol,lnda cooked, peeled,
deveined shrimp, fresh or frozen
1 can (10~ ounce)
condemed tomato soup
1 package (8 ounce) cream
cheese
2 tablespoons unflavored
gelatin
1 cup mayonnaile or salad
dreaing
~ cup finely chopped celery
~ cup finely chopped green
onion
~ cup finely chopped green
pepper
1 teaspoon Worcestenhire
sauce
1 teaspoon lemon juice
Rich buttery crackers
Tilaw shrimp if frozen. Chop
shrimp. Heat tomato 90Up and
cream cllee9e in the top of double
boiler until cream cheeee melts.
Cool alightly. Stir in gelatin; mix
well. Add shrimp, mayonnaise,
celery, green onion, green
pepper, Worcestenhlre sauce and
lemon jWce; mix well.
Pour into a w ell-greased
1 ~-quart mold. Cover and
refrigerate at least 8 houn. Serve
with cracker•. Makes
approximately ~O appetizer
se
PORK CHOPS
Merlnated
BEEF
BACK RIBS
Frnh Local
RuaM1
BAKING
POTATOES
New Crop
USITHI
DAILY PILOT
NJAST.
llSULT"
SllYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642·5671
~ ~. W.Jll
*2' Great For 88Q
...... •• •b. ........
·99~ USCA CHOICE *64! FILET MIGNON tb. Aged To Pert.ctlon Reg. 11.At lb. }
*7'! FrHh Al•k•n *49.! HALIBUT
STEAKS ...........
Freeh .
SPINACH
8IMI L.Nt, Tender
3/*100 '
.
•.
• ~ . 'DJscover ' how8P:WQla bars
were meant to taste.
Not too sweet. Crunchy. Natural.
Nature Valley Granola Bars.
100% natural
No addlttves, no preservatives. Some other granola
bars use them. Nature Valley won't.
Memorial DQ)A·Weekend Is
No matter which of our Sourdough breads you purchase,
traditional Roul)d, Rea4lar Loaf. Baguette or Rolls, you
know it's been baked right on the premises that very
day. SO oven fresh. In fact, it may still be warm!
l
j
I
1f you'd UQ to spend
le11 caab (H well aa
calorie•) on salad
dre11ln11. conalder t~~
veniom of commercial
'diet c:tre.inp u.. low-
calorie may~ .. a
baae and that aavea money.
Mott aalad dreulnp
are 90Jd In amall hlah-
p r l ced el1ht-ounce
bottlea. Low-calorie
mayonnaile COl1lell tn big
32-ounce jars . . . at a
minced onion
Optional: 2 to 3
pedceta tuear aubatltut.e
Stir ln\redients
to1ether. · t9re in a
covered Jar in the
refrl1erator. Makes 1
and one-third cups, 15
caloriee F tablespoon.
LIGHT AND w= DRESSING
~ cup "light
(low-calorle)mayonnalae
~ cup oold water
W teaapoon dried
garlic:
~ teaapoon dried
Italian herba (or orepno
and buil)
Stir ln\redlent1
tosether. tore ln a roted Parmeean cheeme;
covered jar In the calorie• per
refrlaerator. Make• 1 tablespoon.
cut;_ 20 cal~rlea ,per
tab poc>n. UGRT COLESLAW
EASY CHEESY Dl\EISING
ITALIA~ -Reduce ~·cur "lllbt" mayonna.lae to one-thlrd · ., (low<alorie mayonnaile
cup. Add 2 tableapoon.I ~ cup -plain ~t
water and 3 tablespoons YOIW't
·, Orange Coeet DAIL y PILOT /WedfM9day, May 25, 1983
f pvered Jar ln the Onion aalt or YOIW't efr11etator. Male•• 1 powder, and pepper, to 3 tablespooeua water
cut;_ 20 calorlet per tali. 2 teHPOODI cldet ..
tab poon. S Ur ln\redlenta ~eHpoon1 drtedu to1etber. tore in a
RESTAVRANT-8TYLE covered jar In t'he onion
LIGHT FRENCH refrleefator. Makes 1 W cup c:rurabled
~ cup pineapple (or DRESSING cu~, U calories per Roquefori (or any blue
apple) juke , ~ cup (6 ounce.) tabespoon. cheeee)
1 tablespoon elder ~n or spicy tomato) Salt and pepper, to
vtne,ar UGHTAND taste
teaspoon prepared '-' ()Uf "llCht" ·a:iEAMY Gently •Ur LnaredJenta
muatard , (low-calorie mayonnailie R UEFORT toaether. Store ln a •
Optional; 2 to 3 2 tat;»leapooru elder DRESSING covered jar 11,1 the
plieketa •uaar aubat:itute or wine vlnepr ~ cuf "H1ht" refrigerator. Makes 1
St Ir In \red l en ti 1 teupoon prepered (low-calorie mayonnalle and one-quarter cups. 20
together. tore in a mu.stard ~ cup plain lowtat ca1ariee per tablmpoon. ~ cup dder vinegar
much lower price per ----------------------------------------------------------~------------~----------------------------------------------~
' ounce. By combini ng
mayonnaise with other
inexpensive ingredients
and your own herbs and
seasonings,. you can
quickly c r eate diet
dressings for only a
fraction of ..the price.
Not only do these
home -mixed combi-
nations have custom
flav or , the calorie
count can be lower than
• commercial diet
d.ressinga. Did you know
that many "calorie
reduced'' salad dressings
contain large amounts of
sugar?·
Our recipes omit sugar
or replace it with sugar
substitute, 80 you create
a diet dreasing that's
even allnuner than the
expensive store-bought kind. .
LIGHT THOUSAND
ISLAND SALAD
DRESSING
% cup (6 ounces)
tomato juice
~ cup ''light"
(low-calorie) mayonnaise
~ cup dill pickle
relish
1 tablespoon vinegar
2 teaspoons dried (or
2 tableapoona fresh)
Orange
flavors
cake
One of the be8t of ita
kind.
ORANGE COFFEE
CAKE
1 ~cups fork-stirred
all-purpoee Oour
2 teaspoons baking
I powder
~ teaspoon salt
~cup butter
~cup eugu
Grated rind of 1
medium orange (about ·l
tablespoon)
2 large eggs
1 tablespon orange
juice
~cup milk
~ cup sugar mixed
with ~ teasp oo n
dnnaman
2 tablespoona butter,
melted
Stir together flour,
beJdna powder and aalt.
In the large bowl of an
electric mixer, cream ~
cup butter with ~ cup
sugar and the orange
rind; beat ln eggs well,
one at a time, then
orange juke.
Add flour In 3
addlUona alternately
with milk, beating just
unW smooth. Tun\ into a
buttered 9 by 9 by
1 ~-inch baking pan.
Sprinkle with augat"-
cinnamon; dribble with
melted butlm'. . a.ke ln a preheated
37~ oven Wl$11 a cake _.. ln.leiud in
the center colQW out
dMJl -30 mlbuta Cut
ln equarea h) pan and
\~wann.
I
I I
I
' l
ha Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT /Wedneadey, Ma~ 25, 1083
.... Whether you Joi, julierct8e, swim Oil' Ju8t keep
~ with your )'OWlllten this llW'Dmltr, you need llient)' of enercY· Aa a result of atrenuoua exerciae,
~ nutrlenta are needed in sr-ter amounta.
L:!:::~~ ~ 'f:C.towf: = ~.:~ Ai&be.uilful chilled salad, served with a dr9aina
dC artichoke, logurt and Parmesan chee.e. The ~flavor o YCJ8W't complements the rich, mild
te of artichokes.
Uae fresh articbokee lf you are a purl.at, or uae a6nned artichokee for a more atreamJlned venion.
,._ a diah of Artichoke Cream Dreainl. to dollop
A the salad -a meJanae of prawns, stripa of aheae and steamed zuochini.
, PASTA SALAD WITH
~,, ARTICBOU CREAM DR~ING
~ pound zucchinl, sliced
12 ounc.:es bwen toctellini or 6 ounces dry
ailell paata
2 quarta boiling ulted water
Artichoke Cream Dressing
Frilly lettuce
2 medium tomatoes, cut into wedpe
~ pound medium prawns, cooked and
lhelled or 2 cups cooked chlcken
ti 4 ounces Monterey Jack or Mozzarella
dlee.e. cut into strips
Fruits, vegetables
'-i~ budget, waist ·
P 1 an n in g me a 1 s be more abundant by
around fresh fruits and the first week in June
}l'egetables th.la Memorial and prices wW be coming
Day weekend will reap down then.
StHm nicchini in ateemer buket over a ama11 ~t of water in cover'9d •UC9PM for 2 to a
minute. or Wltil 1ender-c:rlilp. Chill Drop tortell1ni
into ~ water. Return to botl. Reduce heat and
almmer 20 to ~ minute., « until tender. (U Ulin8
shell s-ia. cook u ~ direc:ta.) Drain. aun.
When ready to aerve, tom chllled tortellin1 with
1 cup chilled Artichoke Cream nr-tna. Tum into
lettuce.lined i1owl. ~~ succhinf. tomatoes,
prawna and cheeee atrlpa .on puta. Serve with
rema1nin8 Artichoke Cream nre.ma.
Artidoke Cream Drnalas: Trim at.ems and
outer leavea of 4 lar~lcliokes• (about 3 ~
l)OWlda). Steam over 2 water in Iarae pot for
35 to 46 minutes or until tendet' when teated with a
knife. Drain.
Remove leaves and aooop QUt choke with a
small spoon. C.ombine trimmed articholut bou.omt in
electric blender 'with 1 ~ cupa plain yOIUfl, 2
tablespoon, fresh lemon ).dee. ~ ~ minced
garlic, 2 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan
cheese, 1 teupoon bull and 2 tabte.poon, chopped
parsley. Blend smooth. Add ult and pepper to taste. If desiied. Makes 2~ cups.
•Note: 1 can (14 ounces) artichoke hearts.
drained may be .W:.Ututed for the frelh, trimmed
artichoke bi>ttoma.
rewards in the budget New Zealand Granny
a'nd waistline. Summer Smith apples are in the
fruits are starting to stores this week.
snow up in greater However, Golden
variety and volume. Delicious apples will
However, because of. this repreeent the beat value
spring'• wet weather, in this department.
.... ..moat . .uopa .ba:vtt. beeR_ . -~~S9m-~-~-be9t ·~'-'~"· 4elayed about a week or buy in vegetablet1 UU.
two. week. Fresh from the
Tb ere are a om e Coachella Valley, sweet com baa anived an the California peaches scene at reacmable .-... at htah price8. ,.._...
volume and and great quality. prices lhould start Zucchini aquaah la
E
owing up by next becam1n& mare plentiful
eek. We're~ a week now with new c:.ntomia
way from,the firat district• opening up.
rietiet1 of nectarines Carrota continue to be and plums. Prices will extremely reaso~able
tlart out high and are and quality ii excellent. ~ to come down Cabbages al80 repreeent 1 . ks b a good value. ,.. vo ume pie up Y T he beat b u y l n ~~:i~·rnia straw-potatoes this week is the
berries are a great buy White &ee. The quality
this week. Quality ia is excellent and the
11 d 1 prices are coming down. exce ent an supp lea The Red Rcee potato,
are e~ to remain l l b b b .ito a good quallt~, la p1enti u t ro-.a t e priced allghtly higher.
fin\ of June. T h e n e w c r o p o f
Haaa avocadoea are Oettt.smlal R.-ta ia not
another good buy; expected to come off
quality ia excellent. The-Ubtil the eecxnl wk in
prices on pineapples are June. Until the freah
\hying ste•-~~nd crop atarta, consumers
quality ia outstanding. can ~ an off quality
Papaya prices are ruseet.
t,omi ng down, and Fl-eUl oniom from the
pther exotic fruit, the deeert are corning in at
.New Zealand ldwi.truit, good supplies ana even tip available, but costly. 6etter prices. Yellow
There are plenty of onions are top quality tDelona available for the a n d e x t r e m e 1 y
tiolldaya. Prlcea are reasonable. Both red
Jligber alnce they are rounds and whites are
ming from Mexico. a 1 a o f r e s h a n d
upplies are expected to reaaonable.
Meat Wieners Spareribs o....,.r-
:t;. ~159
.. •111
f bl d k Fresh Fryers ~~ •. 59•
ee a e stea Sllced Beef Liver ~ •. 89•
ood cookout '/Juy SHCed Bolony~a.: .... ~ 919•
e of the· best ~~placlail
kout buy. in the meat 2 tablespoom IUClU'
ia beef blade ateak.. 1 teMpOM onkJn salt
the le:9tea:=r ~= ~ ~~oona ~itcanbet.'Oiled crushed black
th tender resulia when peppercoms
marinated in a Combine brand)'_,
contaming an ac:id water, lemon juice, oil,
6'c>el aucb •lemon juice. aupr, onion ult and salt. ~negar or wine. For Place ateab in utility
~ It ia al8o bMt dlab or pi.tic t.t; add
the .-It Iii cooked jLmt mulnade, turntna to
rare er medium. coat. Cover diah and
A aourmet approach to marinate Jn refrigerator
-.rtna·ted baadii steak on 6 t o 8 h o u'r a ( o r ~ ia Peppery Beef overnight), turning at
'lbe ecooomkaJ stealm
1~=~ ateab from
e marlnaied ln a marinade and preH
andy4aoed mbrture, cruahed peppawrm into en cra•hed black surface of both •idea.
tppe!IUlrlDS aft pr-1 Place .-b Oft ofl1 owtr to~ lldes hebe the Mb-covered coa (pr on
aka are broiled to rack in broiler pan) ao aurface of meat ta 4 . PD'PDY inc.bea from beR BSD~ Broil at moderate
2 beef bl.de ....U. temperatuu 1 to 10
t M mch tblck mlnuie. on each alde1 ~ Wp bnndy dependJna deo-' OI w mp water donmall ~(rare Cl' w cup lilpnoD Juli!:9 medium). eJerwe e.
'·
Al SAAWAY'S · 0,. •••• .,, ......... ..,.
•Coke
•·Pepsi---
•7..Up•Dr Pepper
• ' •• Diet lite
. *3 6-fJocb
12-oz.
Cans
·•1111 Chips :.::
M Ketchlip .........
MBuns:::~~
1
::-79•
:.-:; s1n
2~ .,.
':: sin
Hcimm's
leer
A PQrty Mustl
·~\':'~ee--Wlfnll'U" ·':t:79'
MA1man:=o.~'5· •eoocWtttp ~ =. ..
'Low-salt diets
•• ,J
aot that bad
~eople talk about Cook 30 mlnutea,
lea salt ... but atirrlng occasionally. Add
caU8e9 them to muahrooma. 2reen
te u quickly aa pepper and cornstarch
1 the doctor taaues d l a a o l v e d l n 3
Umatwn. tableapoona water. Cook,
· µtually, the experi-atlrring, until aauce ia
'eDCe im't aa bad u '° thickened and vegetables many i.olagtne. Out of are tender. Serve over
.... -low-1odium diet beda of fluffy_ rice.
llliperimentfna can come Gamiah with -«tttional
Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, May aa. 1913 Bl
Choose from ~ight
_,.,, ~fl . .--~x-~·~ \i •:;_·~' ! ' \ I
'· ""'"·~··' .
'
;· ........ '_,'t'f
' . . ,
~ .-' • • . #
Watc~ luscious vanilla, chocolatey chocolate,
and neapolitan which has both o( these flavors plus
scintillating strawberry. There's even refreshingly
cool and cremey Alpine Mint.
Dessert is now being setVed at your supennarket .
r~·~~ 2s-<t"~~ -f~ --;
: of ~t ~hers-:
1 Haff Ga1ton Frozen Dessert ' I 0t-'!1• 5fnd this coupon-. rtdemption to <:Mn«to Foock. P.O. b I
1 172&. Elm Ol't\ N.C. 27898 lot~ al nc plus 7c hlld1,... 1 !n-«f' pro-Ing wKic~ ~ ol Wtitllt ~· H.tll Giiion flOZftl I OtWiM IOClM'I (~ prewnled mull hf thowl\ upon ll'qUrtl. F.MhM I to do so""ll llOl(f 111 COUflO'I'. <;ou9onu~ non-trlll!Mt lblt S.lft IM mull I br p.lid br ~ \bd ..._.... prchtbtttd .... _, °' l'filndld. cooo I
I ()'\jlVONWfX,HlWAl(H(llS' HAH<.;AUONfllOZINOtS~ll ANY OTHl•
W(()'o)fllUl"fllAUD C)fflUXl'IRfH lClOllR 11 , ... Offl.RUMlltDlO I
L ~l~~~!_PU~H~ -- - -- - - - -~1!.MJ..J every appealing new mushroom alice1, lf
e treat1,from t~e deaired. Makes 6 en . . . ettougb to aervings. 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
lmpre-:-_ e'::'~~~ ~~t-OBA.NOE REBBED
o wo examples: a O>und beef stew and an
Mrbed chicken with
~ange -both low-
,.Sium recipes, both
Wt)' as a result of such
i redienta as wine,
rba, fruits 'and
getablea. Carefully
nded, they provide
vor without the
tkloal salt.
EF AND &ICE ,,..... VENETO =-. 1 ~ pounds lean
around beef
1 ~ cup chopped
anions
. 2 cloves 1arl1c,
llflb:led 2 cans (6 ounces
•atcb) low 1od I um
~ vesetable ju.Jee
Cll' tomato juice
medium tomatoes.
peeled and chopped
2 teaspoom Italian
~ 2 t.wpoona sugar
2 teupoc:JllS red wine
vinegar
~ to ~ teaspoon
TabaKo pepper sauce
, Salt substitute to
*le, optional
1 cup sliced
~up chopped
""811 pepper I f 1 ~ tablespoons ir:;:• hot cooked
beef, onions and
llU'lic in a 4-quart Dutch
Wf'en until meat is no
IObger pink. Stir to
Cl"¥IDbJe meat. Pour off
-Add juice, tunatoes, eeaaonfng , sugar,
viDegar, Tabasco, and
.Ut substitute to beef
"dltture.
CBiaEN AND RICE
12 choice chicken
pieces (3 to 3 ~ pounds)
1 ~ c ups orange
juice
~ cup dry white
wine
2 teaspoons oregano
leaves
~ teaspoon garlic
powder I
~ teaapoon sage
leevee. crumbled
~ teaspoon
rosemary leaves,
crumbled
~ teaspoon thyme
leaves
~ teaspoon ground
black pepper
PaprtU
~ cup oran1 e
mamWrde
1 tableapoon
cornstarch
3 cups hot cooked
rice
Place chicken in
13x9-lnch baking diab,
akin side down. COmbine
juice, wine and
seasonings. Pour over
chicken. Sprinkle with
paprika. Cover and beke
at 350 degrees for 30
minutes.
'l\am chicken; sprinkle
with paprika. Bake,
uncovered, 30 to 40
minutes longer, or until
chicken is tender.
Pour pan juices in to
saucepan; skim fat. Add
marmalade and
oonwtarch dlmolved in 2
tablespoons water. Cook,
1tirrin1, until sauce is
clear and thickened.
Serve chicken and sauce
over beda of fluffy rice.
Garnish with orange
lilies, if desired. Mabe 6 aervtnsa-
una Cheese Logs
provide light 1neal
cup flnely
--------.... --... ......__..... .. _....__ -·------.... ·--·-----····
/
when yOu buy BOTH
e
I
I , ,
I I I
D Ortnge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, May 25, 19&3
·Marketing
costs on
• increase
Dressing
delectable
· RupberTy vtneaar ta
delectable when med In
a French ctre.inl for a
aalad. RASPBERRY
VINEGAR
1 ~ cups white wine
~cup French black
raspberry liqueur
In a 3 -c up non -
corrosive container with
a tight-fitting lid, shake
together vinegar and
liqueur. Let stand 24
hours to mellow. Store,
tightly covered, at room
temperature. Makes 1
pint.
Make a salad dressing
u s ing oil, raspberry
vinegar, salt and pepper
in the proportions you
pre~r. Serve with a
platter of lettuce,
avocado and aeatood.
Turn over
a ile_,i't'-:ttutcu--r
It slices well, baa great
flavor and anv left over
ii pxJ cold.
DIXIE LOAF
2 ~ to .2~ -pound
lean smoked. pork buti.
cooked and coar1eJy
ground (about 4 cups
firmly pecked) .
. ~ pound fairly lean
finely ground pork
l large egg
~cup milk
6 small scallions.
thinly aliced
~ c up ste mme d
panley sprigs, minced
Pepper to taste
. Sauce (see recipe)
In a large bowl ,
thoroughly mix tosether
pork butt, pork, esg.
milk. scallions, paraley
and pepper.
Rinle a 1oaf pan (8 by
4 by 3 inches) with cold
water; tightly pack poriC
mixture into it; tum out·
into a foil-lined ·t>ald.na
pan (11 by 7 b)' 1 ~
inches).
Bn.ash loaf lightly with
sauce ; bak e in a
preheated 350-degree'
oven for 46 mi nutes,
basting several tlmea
with aauce.
Syphon off fat. Cup
foil around loaf and pour
remalnlng aauce over
top; bake U minutes
more. Let 1tand 10
minutes before 8f!l'Vlnl.
Maka 8 to 10 eervtno.
Sa.ce: aUr to1ether
until blended '4 cup
firmly packed dark
broWn supr, 2 teeapoolll
dry mustard, ~ cup
~~::~8l;r~. 2
This salad
a tossup
B1 LOUl8E COOK .......... c,........,
lt coata more than two and
one-half Umee u much to pt~
food you buy from the farm to
your aroaerY cart thaA lt dOel to
produce the food In the firat
place, and aovernment fll\&NI
1how the marl(e~lna btll l1
ptttngblaer-. r:
The numbera allo 1bow,
h owever, that the rate of
lncreue in markettna Cotta -
proceaaina, tran1portatlon,
packaama. etc. -hu llowed
down after rillnc rapidly during
much of the lut decade.
The Economic Reaearch
S ervice of the De rtment of
8EEFQA.IQ(
7 ..... ··-·~~ ..
Aarlculture HY• Amertc1n1 ~t $297.6 bQllOn lalt year 1'or fOod produced on U.S. f~.
That lncludea food that waa eaten both at home and in
teltlW'Ulti. but It._ not COYW
.. imports di' fllb..
'1be amount paid to tarmen In
1982 waa tet.& billion; the
Q)IJ'ketlnc bill WM '214.1 bmkm.
What the aum,,_n mean la
that 28 centa of flYWY dollar you
apend on food ac-to the fanDel', while 72 centa aoea to pt the
food from the f.aftnel' to 10U.
Remember: Tboee ftaUr-are
averaaea. The altuation vartea
from ltem to item; the farm value
of meat, for exam le, ran ea
from 00 centa to 60 centa out of
every dollar, but acc:ounta for on"11' oanta when it com. to
bak.ery aoodl.
'IM USDA •xa the propordan of food expend.I ....... IDfnc for
market1n1 hH .,..n rl1tna
1teadily. ID 1172. fOf: •xample,
the fanD value ~ for &a centt out of every doUtr -a nickel GIOl'e than It did 1-yeu-.
From 1981 to 1982 alone, tho.
farm value dropped by a penny.
The bt11.e•t chunk of the markeUna lill ia direct labor COltt -the ... .,. and benefits paid tO
more than ..,,_, JGlllion wOrken,
includfna~ procemotll, ·warehouM
emplo~ ltoft clerb,
, ' ..
maatcuttera etc. Labor COIRI took
82 centt Ol the food dou&r in
1982, the ..... Jft 1981 -up two centa tram urn. .
The l~ononifc R•H•fch
Service •YI U. labor llbm'e of the food dollar bu 1ncr...ed.
"mainly becauee more workers
are em~ lh reataunnt food
lel'Yice arid becaUle Jll'Oductivtty
In the food~ JndUltry and
In _•Una..._ hai ~.
~ oom·are the NC.UMI
larpst item tn the~ bill. accoundn8 for about 8 centa of
the food clollar. The aoveminent •YI pack.,,, con roee aharply
during the 9701 becauae of both for production
Sweet
-..a.a~ -cur
~A, COACHELLA .... rn~~ ....
LIMIT 12 EARS PER CUSTOMER.
TRIMMED EA~ 14" EACH.
....._...__l'\RCDQ--~
Boaqdew8~---.. u49'
Grape&alt -L-=..s ....
~ --•..• ..•1•
.. ..• •1A1
Onl0118 u.ac1--.... UI ... 1-----M·-I •L99ua••at .•1.11 TM'tiiiiid..__ M_-s. ..
-M11I• -----Cll'S ..
·'
when you buy SCOPE one any size
-,..--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Orange Cout DAILV PILOT/Wtdneeday, M,.y H, 1ta
I.At Hamb"rget Helper anct Betty Crocker
Potatoes fix you up a fantastic feast.
To make your good meala
better -Reach for the apoon
and Betty Crocke,. Potatoes.
Hamburger Helpe,. helps
your hamburger make a great
meal.
]
b
~
~ ,..
JV
:V"I
•• po
a
.OJ
~·H
.Jrl
;&lJ
,i\J
iq
;.~
.(v.
~
!~ ·g
TIO
r
ro7>76----------·-~--TD07f------·--------, R
Save 20<:when you buy3.
Ok~ That~ the easy part.
n ai
3 j}
. ' q
-0
.d
•'II
~}
•1
.>J
m
m
M
j
I 1
' ' ' I I ~
!I
1,
'I
I
I .
I
Orange CoMt OAILV PILOT/Wedneedey, Mey 28, 11183
.
Wr E. SAUCE, BRO~~~~LIFLOWER OR 0 . nter Mlll .................... 9 : ... 10-oz 79
'ULAR OR CRINbCUT e renc . Fries ............ 9 ......... 32-0Z 89
JULIENNE SLICED , • . . 0 Green ,Beans ......... 9 ............ 18-0Z 7:9
CUT , • ~ 0
GreetJ. Beans ...... e .............. »OZ ~-·
WHOLE KERNEL , O Corn ......................... 9 .................... 8-0Z 39·
CHO'~~o -,
-.-ftl.ecoH. ~.: ...... -~~~-~-~~-.. ~:~. 20-0z
GORDO
G:\Rt'lt:l.D
WHV '1<:> GIRLS ~
. ALWAVS SMELL 50
GOOP, ARLENE?
THE
F"MIL\'
CIRCL'S
"You don't hear me practicin' because
I'm doin' it in my head."
. .
' ~o~
by Brad Anderson
"Since when does he need all his toys when
we go for a ride?"
woo~ Jll'LLI~~
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis
I <1£TTMI& .
FROM A!IEX
TMAT LIKE5
'fO TATTOO TMEM5ELV~6
by Virg il Partth (VIP)
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
KNOW·IT-AL.L ... ~---~..-------NAW·· L.ll<t=:
J...A~ WEEK
MYTE,ACHE~
SAl[)~E'D
BETI'D~
DoWN IN\
HIST~Y.
PUNl:T8
A B--o:>A c ...
.. ~
•• I
• • ·~\, ,
Nt!ther Wfft ...
NOITll
•AH OIJ OAQ ...... ,.
WIST IAl'I' ··~ .,,. OQfl C,All
0 ltlt OJTUI .
tQJIU +U
IOUTB .. ,. ...
~ltHU
Oltl .v ...
The bid41aa':
Well ~ EM s..&.111 , .... , .....
P .. 4NT r... a• ,.. .. , .. , .. ,_ ' O,.o.lnr lead: Queeo of •.
SHOE
i(OJtWT~M A IAf WLE 9ElalE I r.M.1> CNlf WEIJ(.
• ' .
.
GOlll 011 lllNI
BY 04AALl8 H. GOREN AHO OMAR IHAR"
Eclpr JCaplu, New York,
Noraaaa ~. ~u.delplda.
Rlelilard Pulleek. Ft.
Laltdtrdale and BUI Root.
8oea Ra&on. woo Lht Vaader-
blll Team Champloa1lllp,
pnmler event of the Spriar
North Amerieaa Chulplon·
•hlpt held recenU1 ID Hawaii.
8U.C. the1 bad won the
Board·A·Ma~h team eveat
at tbe Fall ChaD1plouhipa.
tbe1 wlil be Ntdtcl lthrougb
to the finala of the t.rtai. to
1tltct the 1984 United St.ate•
team Cor the World Ol7mplad
team champiouhipe.
In one ol tbe earl1 rouacb
of the Vanderbilt, tbe win·
ner1 met Trump Coup Tom·
my '• team. The1 found
themaelves lnill•r earl1 in
the match when Tomm1
anreuivel7 pl.llbed tc elam
.. tlilit a.ud. Tom•r'• two
dub epealq wu 1 wWaker
weak. a.ad lilt Mdaion Lo
clrf ve to llam after puutr'1
poeltlve mpoue allowed
either &.oue~r faith la 1111
partner'ui,,Uty or belief in a
Supreme Bridge Pla1er.
Wea led llle queen of
dube, taken ln dummy u
deetater dlaearded a heart.
Declarer cubed the ace·
queen of diamond•, tben
came tc hand with a dub rurl.
He dlleuded dumm1'1 jack
or heartl on the klnr of
diamond.a, then led a heart tc
the kins and Eut'• ~. E.ut
tbougbt it would be a good
id.. tc try to protect hil
queen or trumpa (or tlile .. ,.
tinf trick. IO be eonUnued
with a heart. Dumm1 niffed,
tad declarer dJleaftW~
Mart oa U.. kJai fl cfl*4 W~D Eu& ct.cllaed Lo na(~
I:)
Ded&Nr ruffed a dll'b wt#,!
tbe ten or tnmpe, • Iii~
1lghted pla1l Next °'""?: heart naff with &)e ae9 .,
trump1, '°'low9116y the 11iJM
of Lrump1 from du-1. 2a
Eut eoveNd, cledartr ·~ win and be left wltb not~
but hiJll tnampa, IO ~
pla7ed low. Bul tbaab to"~
earlier pla1, ded&rer .__
now able Lo remaiD lad~
by underp1-1iq Ole efP& !!
ttumpa. A dub from du ... $
DOW CIOlllpi.t.d llle ~ coup -whetllet Eut rufllfi'
bip or low, dec:la.rer wotdit·
make tlle 1ut two trieb bl.~
rullinr u clleaply h>
'ble 4 poal . -,Cl ...
by Jeff MacNe!'(~
r;m.13rf. lO:>
•• !: !01
>00
.~
2
"'1r :.a
~111 ~· ~
'"'I
•11C
......
->;l f
~· .c:1 ..
I
I
I ' I i .
I
I
. .
Orang9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, May 25, 1983
..
Newspapers.
Where readers
snip, snip ...
shOp, shop
In the past 90 days, 36% of readers clipped
ads from their newspaper• ... something they
felt was worth reading again, passing on,
shopping from. Or saving with: newspapers
carried 93 billion manufacturers' coupons••
last year, 78% of the total distributed. And
64% of adutts clipped coupons. Anyway you
slice It, that's Impressive. More Information?
Call Mac Morris, vice president, National
Sales, Ne\vspaper Advertising Bureau, (212)
557-1865. Or call your local nevJSpaper repe-
sentatlve. . Audits. Sof'vevs, 1962 ··Nietlen. 1982
I I
"
..
lllljPlal'
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1883 . C.llSSIFIED ·Fe
By JOHN SEV ANO OflMo.IJ .........
bloop fly to right waa caught, «end
then dropped by a divinS Gam6le M the
outfielder-rolled ove.r in the graaa.
quietly talked al>out hia strualee at the
plate; now badly he wanted to p~ h1a
teammates, the Anpla orpnlt.ation ~
the fan.: and the mental pnllW'ee and
angtriah be wu foing throuah in an
attempt to fulfill h1a qu.t.
bu been sreat. It'• been very relaxing
here. The plar.era talk to me and that'•
aomething I m not used to. That'• r:;;i~ly why I'm suffering ~ stage
aaw Valentine go O-fOl"-15 at Anaheim
Stadt um.
I l If ever a day belonsed to an
individual, Tuesday, ltt•Y 24, 1983
belonged to Elli.a Valen~.
Never mind that New York right
fielder Oscar Gamble lost Valentine's fly
ball in the lights with two on and two .
out in the 10th inning, which allowed
the Angela to tie the srore at 6-6.
No aiJ1 Nothing was about to tN'n1lb
Valentine's day. fie had waited too long
for it.
Valentine's ~ started long before
Tuesday night a ~. which the Angela
would eventually go on to win, 7-6 in 10
innings, before 41,042 hysterical fans at
Anaheim Stadium.
"I atill don't teel that aood at the
plat.e," he said tn aoft tqnes. "I'm not .
aa)'inl I'm tn a despetate alwnp. rve had
only 43 at bata (go4na into Tuesday'•
game). But I'°' pl"alin8 a little too much
' I would just like to pay them back, b~t I can' do it with one awing."
Initead, Valentine took three. •
In the fourth. he belted a ground rule
double to rtaht center to ~ two more,
and later that aame inning came home
him8elf to improve the Angela' leed to
4-1.
And never mind the fact second
baseman Bobby Grich brought home the
game-winner moments later when his
In the privacy of an empty stadium,
during extra batting practice, Valentine
. . . trylna to do too much. ·
"The way the Angell have treated me
In the second inning, the former New
York Met and Montreal Expo not only
singled to 1et up the Angela' fint run of
the game. more importantly the hit also
repreeented the end 'of a drought which
Finally, after ahorutop Rox Smalley
had put the Yankees in front, 6-5, with a
home run ln the top of the 10th inning,
relief pitcher Rudy May (0-2) 1et the
staae for Valentine a.rain by walking
(See ANGELS, Pqe J'S)
Corona del Mar,
'
Trojans, Artists
• • net ~asy . v1ctor1es _
Area prep tennis heavyweights The Sea Kings, Sea View
Corona del Mar, University .,,_d League champions, haven't met
Laguna Beach continued their Palos Verdes during this
r
march toward berths in the CIF unbeaten sea11on, but one
___ fin.fla Tu,!Sd_y.J _!)reezing_past comparison is CdM's 27-1 victory
quarterfinal foes withouta --OVerHiiVaro, a 1eiiifw1Uc1iterr-
hitch. by one point to Pal~ Verdes.
The Sea Kinga of Corona del University and Miraleste
Mar buried visiting Beverly finally collide. The two were to
Hills, 26-2, to advance to meet three week.a aso in a non-
!1 Thursday's semifinals match league duel, but Miraleate never
against Palos Verdes, a 16-12 showed for the match and has
winner over Santa Barbara. yet to offer an expiapation for
Also in 4-A competition, Sea the no-show. according to
View League runner-up University c.oac~ Gary Sisel.
Univenity rolled to a 19~-8~ George Paulaon led University
dedaioo at Rollinl Hilla to aet up by remaining unbeaten in singles
the Trojans with defending play during the playoffs, aa did
champion Miraleate in the lemis the doubles team of ChN Greer
on Thunday. and Eric Oliver.
The Artists of Laguna Beach, Univenity, 21-2, is operating
3-A defending champions, upped with two makeshift doubles
their overall record to 21-2 with a teams becauae of an ineligibility
20-8 decision over visiting La and a vlOlation of a rule, wblch
Canada, aending them into the cost the Trojans two of their top
8eDlis against Loe Alamitos.
Corona's Scott Brownsberl'er. ~ Brumfield and Ian
Brien Sullivan and David Propp Haworth, operating out of the ~ 1 all swept their singles pla.1 ~... No. 3 encl_. af.q)et berths for
the doubles team of Jeff Ewing Laguna Beach, took three out of
and John Washer did likewiae in four matches, as did Eric a match most noted by the Schantz, Laguna's No. 1 singles.
play of John Bendetti, who "The kids played a little tight
knocked off Beverly Hills' No. 1 today," said Laguna Beach Coach
singles entry. Art Wahl.
Angel catcher Bob Boone hanp on to geJ the Yankees' Steve
Kemp at the plate. Rkk Reed ( ri&ht) called hh:u out, teammate
Ken Griffey (33) and coach Don Zimmer '(left) w .. teh.
Edison softball team ousted from 4-A, 3-0
By ROBB MUNSON ~ the first six Cypre11 bitten .. but Takkinen. '1We mad~ aome physical Kori Gendron's aacrifice bunt put
......., .. ._ o.IJ.... Centurion catcher Cindy Andenon led miatakes that were co.tly." runn.en on aecond and third, but Stilea
'Ibe F.dt.oo High Charaers' attempt at off the third frame by hium,i a pop-up Carpenter hit the next batter to load put out the fire by gettlna a pop-up. ~ in their first CIF 4-A softball between third and short. the bales with none out, then proceeded came to a stop Tue.day against the The ball, however, wu misplayed into to retire two in a row. In fact, Stiles allowed only one
team that bu been there three of the a two-bue error. The next batter, Jo Bt1t Cypre11 pitcher April Stiles buerunner the rest of the the way, aa
las\ four years. Ann Buelna, dropped a bunt in front of promptly sent Carpenter'• next .Trubovitz singled in the sixth inning.
-.. '""-Cen ... ·-'~ th Em ire Carpenter. Carpenter and catcher Sue offering into center field for a two-run But it wu the Cypnill defeme that u.ie -.r ... ---..... ..,..., e P Trubovitz both attempted to field the _._....... shutdown the Char-""--~-... _. __ Lea1ue runner-up who had loat to ball, but ran into ---"' o•\.-. . .... ..,... •--.... ~., _.._.llUUlt thew T ~ .. ~ didn't commit an error while maldna Edi8on 5;-2 in arren oumament And with numen on first and third, "We made thin11 happen," aaid some 1parklln1 playa behind Stiles earller in the aeuon, scored three No. 9 hitter Kelly Mullin• placed eyp.... Coach Gordon Mullina. "Julie (l?-4).
uneafned ~.,Ji' .... ~ ~ft~ and3 0 another bunt perfectly between Carpenter ia the best pitcher In high we~ never. ~"6~ m ......... ,. a -' Carpenter and third baseman Debbie achool 80ftball, but we put pn!9IUl'e on Takkinen coached l!'4l9oll to lta bait
aemifinal Victory over the Charaers at Promer s:ivtna Cyprea (22-4) lta tint them with our bu.nta." record ewr, 24-6, and the Charaera will
Oak Knoll Park in Cypreaa. run. ' Edison'• only acorin& threat came in loee only ~ · playera to p-acluation.
Edison sophomore pitcher Julie "Wehadatotallackofcomrnunication the aeoond l.nnlna. when Kelli Winkler Carpenter, meanwhile, had 281
Carpenter started the game by retiring in that innin«." aaid F.dUlon c.o.ch Mark and Joyce Lyman hit one-out singles. strikeouta on the yeu and a 22·3 record.
Serrano's
4-run sixth
does it, 6-2
I
Six days in. Philly a big price
LOS ANGELES -In tbl area of
hernmina and hawing about the home court
advantage in profewonal basketball,
hlatoriana will record the moat clauic
example waa part of the NBA
championahip playoff 1eriea of the year Of
our landlord 1983.
It WU dUJ'IJif thia playoff period that the
L09 Ancelee liken Weft obJJaed to spend
aix daY,•. runnlna conaec:utively, in
Phlladelj>hia.
There c:omea to mind W.C. Field•' ~ for bla own epitaph: "All ln all, I
woWd just• IOOn be ln•Philadelphia.'' Or
that memorable llat of awatda for the
8Chlevement of extellence: first prif.e one
week ln Phliladelphia. Second prtze: ten
week.a in Philadelphia.
•
And Vin 8cully'a apprailal of Uw movie
Cleopetra, "I •w it fn Ph08delphia on a
.
PARIS (AP) -John McEnroe ·
1houted at llneamen, kicked a pre11 p~phet'a camera and t.oolc more
tban four houu to def•at Ben ~, ;s.e. e .. 11..e.2, ,.~ tn ttw fltlt rouna of the nencn cennla
• champiOnlhlpl ~)'. •
Afm ~ the fttlt aet, McEnroe
alrMd • ldck at a camera at the beck c1'
the «IW't. The photOll'ephtr wu lltt.fnl
In • pit below ,round Jewl.
There W'M no appennt ,,_ for Uw
Incident. The p)loto1rapher ,.,d
Mdnroe k.licMCI tht c.aa.. biaCk ln10 hll
,... but the ...... not btObri.
~ the tall. 2~~!0kt lift ..
tudMler ftoM Jtno1tvllle, Tehrt., •u
~yinK ~ ln ..... f« the """
SPORTS COl.UMNIBT
BUD
TUCKER
Sunda~ and it ,,... rab\lna. 1 ltill
didn't it,"
Little wonder that Pat Riley, tl"9 COllCh of
the Laken, w.. ther~ in '"Philadelphia
~bloody m""*· HJ.a team had finilbed ·a ..n. in &m ~tonio on a Friday
.nflh~ and WM 1'eCIUlrecf' to OIJICl <the final aert• .,.wt u.e 7&.n at tbe l:Jpectrum on Sunday. .
FoUowtna thil opener, the Laken were
then dlapc>Md to alt around l'fttll the '9llowlna Thunday ... tn PhilailW~
I y•t .
No dummy, coach Riley wu quick to
~ the culprit in all of thia. It wu
the vast wuteland, the evil box. the t\lbe. It
WU televlaion. .
Objected Riley, in effect, "aees, you
would think we are playing thia aeriea
ltrictly for TV."
Remu'kable ututenea on the part of th~
coach.
Of ooune. Riley waa, aqUlndertnc Ume.
He might just u well have IOIM down to
the hotel barber lhop and had bl.a duc:kWI
trimmed. MY erhiC!lrn of the ~ta
would fall on deaf ears, DU11cularlf' the.
of CBS, the networlt invo1~. '
You ... CBS la the AOOI' and ~bby
aitter of the net'Worlcl trpm a ltandpoblt of
aporta. CBS u fairly proinlnent du.rlna pro
football ~ but otl::iierw1.e la reduced to
IOIDI ao1f and tome Pole vaulttna end -.ne <'" TVCKBa, P~ n>
Dodgers:
4 shutouts
in a row?
PHILADELPIDA (AP) -The
laat time the Loa Angeles
Dodgen won four shutouts In
row waa in 1966. Los Angela
will attempt to equal that feat
tonight and they couJdn•t p6ck a
better team to do· it apinat than
the Philadelphia PbillieL
The Ooqera' Alejandro Fem
burled a four-hit ahutout over
the PhW1ea ~ nl&ht which
followed abui.outa by BOb Welch
on Sunday qainst the Meta, and
Fernando Valenzuela who four.
hit the Phillies on Monday niabt.
Tonl1ht Burt Hooton (1-2)
faces the Phillies' Marty Byatrom
(0-0).
Philadelphia baa now ~ "
•traliht inJ1lnp without acortna a
J'U.n, 13 short ow major~
record.
Pena, a 23-year-old rt1ht-
hander from the Domlnlc:an
Repoblic, waa ln cmnplei.eantrol
u he at.ruck out elaht. walked
three and allowed only one
Phillie runner to re.ch .cond
baae. It waa the flrat career
complete came for Pena, now
6-1.
"It will the beat I've ever
~tched in the~ ..... Pena.
'1 felt very aooct and wae
th(owlna the ball hard. I am~
happy a6out '°"" nine innlnlJ .•
Ria catcher, Steove Y ...... WM
very hllh on dM younc pttmer's
(SM DOOQDI, .... ft)
l
F2 Orange Cou~ DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 25, 1983 ...
College star finally
'I
getting education
CHICAGO (AF) -Kevi n
Rota, a 24-year-old former
college basketball player who
returned to arammar IChool last
fall IO he could learn 10 read, saya
he no tonaer la "doomed to be a
20th centurv Don Quixote."
"I knoW. ,f aaid &ea, who will
graduate from high school for
the aecond t.1me today. "I read
about Don Quixote."
When he entered Marva
Collhu' Westside Preparatory
S chool In September, Ross
couldn't read a restaurant menu. !: "My back was against the
wall," he recalled during an
interview Tuesday. "I didn't
know which way to go. But I
knew I couldn't conquer the
world in a pair of gym shoes."
Ross received his first
diploma from Wyandotte High
School in Kansas City, Kan.
There, the 6·9 basketball hero
was vigorously recruited by
several uniwnities. He enrolled
in Creighton University in
Omaha, which promised him
remedial help, be aaid.
Ro.a said he knew he wu W-
prepared for college, but
Creighton offlclala "told me all I
.
had to do wae attend clules ~
the degree WU guaranteed.
"But they didn't really care,"
&ea ...Sd. "They just pe...ed me
on through bec•uae of ml'
buketball aWlt)'. I did what l
was told . . . but I WU just W\
athlete, a piece of meat."
He left Creighton after four
years in 1982. He bad no degree,
and his reading and wrttin8 lk1lla
were abysmal
Were It not for a knee injury
that sidelined Ross for much of
his senior year, his lack of
education might have remained
his secreL He claimed Creighton
was trying to force him out by
takihg away his acholanhip and
offe ring to get him into a
vocatio n al school. a police
academy, or on a basketball team
overseas.
But he wanted education.
"I knew I couldn't go through
llle hiding behind a facade," he
said. "And I didn't want to go
play basketball in a foreign land,
and colne back a bigger dwnmy
than I wp before.:•
Creighton responded by
paying his tuition at Westside
Prep. a private school.
Forrest Smith of Irvine Cout Country Club waa the top bidder for a
mink ahawl at a celebrity golf tourney Monday benefiting Childhelp,
U.S.A. Model Carolyn Clark, a member of Childhelp, U •. S.A., shows it
off to (from left) Merlin 01.aen, Jeff. Rutledge, Carl Ekern and Rich
Saul. The lrVine Coast CC event raued nearly $35,000.
I
·Bas~ball today Celtics owner se,ling out Cal Poly Pomona '!ins title
BOSTON -Bo1ton Celtics m RIVERSIDE -Shortatop ~ IR 1937 -Mickey C.ochrane's career was owner Harry Mane: put his Scaletta had three hits and ICOM
ended prematurely by a beaebal.l thrown by ~ National. Buketball tion team , Jhlee rum .. C&l Poly Pomona, won
BuQ>p Hadley of the N:ew York Yankees, up for sale ~~Una •trained the NCAA Di~ a mll• bdrhD -...+----In bla ~revlous P.!a.ie_appearance, ..lhe -·+---..~.;.·, •. iUhrii wtth°"'U)e ownen ol tne-ilolfon Garden. --champion1hip with a 9 -7 victory over
-"Detroit Tigers' catcher and manager "I plan 00 selling the Bolton Celticl and the Jacbonville State ~t. ~_:_ Willie Mays elf the otants went main reuon ii that I don't want to be the penon Lefthanded-pttcher Bowen. the last 0-f~S -aainat the Philadelphia Phillies at \bat movee the Celtb out of Bolton," Mangw1an man included on the Pomona roster for the
Qwlle Mack Stadium in hla 'first major laid at a news conference. 4<>ur relationship with double elimination tournament.~ the win. and
t •• -
league game, which the Olanta won 8-5. '' the Garden people hu literally fallen apart." Steve Ziem got the save in hia appearance
Today's birthday•: San Diego pitcher ~ u1d ''nothing" would change his mind in four days.
John MontefU9CO is 33. Houston pitcher about bl• plan. to 1ell the club and added Denver Gold pi·cl--Morton Puck finally stops,
for Ronald Reagan
From AJ> dJ1,.teht
WASHINGTON -The Stanley ~ CUp champion New York lalanden of ,
the National Hockey League gave ·
President Ronald Rea1an a large
hockey stick Tuesday for use when he has
trouble with Congress.
"The puck st()ps here," the president joked
in a take-off on Harry Truman's desk plaque,
which read: "The buck stops here."
Reagan congratulated
the team on winning the
large. silver Stanley Cup.
which he admired in \he Rose
Garden. The c ylindric al
trophy is awarded each year
to the' winner of the NHL
playoffs. The I.slanders have
captured the cup four straight
seasons.
'fhe preslden t, citing
MAGAN affec1ion for the home team,
stopped abort of wishing the Islanders victory
next year.
Quote of the day
Bob Knepper la 29. 1 ~ "hopefUlly a ~ owner could cope with theae ae
-people, but I can't." Former Denver 'Broncos •
Cr · 1 ·r M 1 quarterback cmg Mortoa wu named omarhe I ts ontrea K h h ·rr t . head coach of the Denver Oold of the
Warren Cromartlf'1 one·oOt Iii eoug W I 81 two; ge S WID United States Football League
single ln the 13th Inning acored Bryn ~lnnin~ pitcher Man geea1b Iii Tuesday . . . Wayae Gretlky of Edmonton has
Little from 9e<.'Ond bale and carried worked out of a balel-loacled. one.out , been chosen National Hockey League Player of
Montreal to a 5-4 Natlo~ League jam in the top of the elg,hth by the Year by the Sportina News for the third
victory over San Diego Tuesday night. The striking out GormlD Tbomaa and straight year ... Athle~c ~ BW Fueo
Expos trailed 4'·1 before leDding nine men to the pinch bitter Roy Bowell and BUI AIQloa waa says the University of San Francm:o will wait
plate in the fifth inning to tie the game . . . · credited wfth a theft of home in the lower half of until June 10 to decide on whether to resume
Pitcher Dick Rutbven hit an RBI single in the eighth to provide Oakland with a wild, 8-7, Divialon I men'I basketball competition ...
Chka 0'1 two-run fifth lnnlna and won for the American Leasue victory over Milwaukee 82-year-oJd Leslie Combs 0 says '611 Spendthrift
first time since April 27 as Tue9Clay f\UJht. Keough, a product of Corona del Farm, one of the world'• foremost thoroughbnd
Houston dropped a 5-4 Mar High &hooJ, worked breeding operations. wlll become a public
declalon. Ruthven, acquired Ui four 1nn1naa of relief to gain corporation and 1ell up to $35 million in .stock to
a trade Sunday that aent hia first victory ln four ensure Its survival after he dies ... The Buffalo
rel i ef p i t c her Wiiiie decisions ..... Back BillssignedRooseveltLeabtoa l~NFLpect
Hernudea to Philadelphia. MartiDei drove in four runa ... Louiaville and Kentucky. two elite colJeae
raised thia record to 2-3. wtth a pair of doubles to lead basketball teams which. have not played e.ch
allowing lix hits and two runs Toronto to a 7-6 come-from-other in a regular-eeuon game since 1922. will
In 6 ~ Innings ... Mike behind victory over Detroit meet.Nov. 26 In the aeuon-opener for both"'tealm
Irakow pitched a seven-... Kanau City'• George ... The San Diego franchise of the United
hitter and Jack Clark and Brett and Bddy Bell of States Football League hu been den.led a ~ Clam OaYI• homered to lead Texas each rapped out two "lease agreement involving San Die"o-Jack
San Franclaco to a 6-2 victory over the New York uoum. hits before the aame was Murpb.y Stadium
Mets . . . Dave LaPolat pitched his first major called after five at 2-2. It'll have to be replayed
leas.ue complete aamf, an eiaht-hitter, and Aug.~-.. Roa Wadtqtoa drove ln three runs • Television, racpo
MJdleJ Riven. Texas outfielder, before
a game in Milwaukee played ln wtndy, 48
degree weather: "It'• ao cold out there, I
uw a ~ clulaing a cat and they were both
Geor1e Hendrick drove in a pair of runs to help aa Minnemtl downed Baltimore, 6-1 ... Ron
St. Louis snap a four-game loclng streak with a Kittle and JUTJ BalnSGa bit ~run homers
7·1 dedaon over Clncinnati ... Jason Tlaompsoa to pece the O\Jcaao White Sox pMt Boston, 12-4
and Lee Ma11llll drove ln two runa apiece and ••• Mike Barsrove'1 two-out. two-run llngle
Pittsburgh survived a five-nm Atlanta burst in keyed a four-run ninth-lnninl rally th.at gave
the eighth to take a 6-~ verdict. Cleveland a 6·4 win at Seattle.
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO : Bueball -Dodgers at
Phlladelpbla. •:" p.m.. KABC (790); New Yen
Yankees at Anaela. 7:25 p.m .. KMPC (710).
Fabi: He's
taking
it slow
Teo Fabi
mechanic Barry Green and his
crew are doing. "rm not that
involved. I don't have much to
do, j~t a lunch, a newa
confpence and thlnp like th.at."
Fabi has al8o been pla)'inl the
role of tourl1t, vl1l ttna the
Speedway Hall of Fame and
walklna throuah downtown
lnd.ianapolfa. •
"I went to the mwiewn ·to 1ee
the can," uld FabL
Scenic SK featured at CdM
I
Corona del Mar race set for June 4; Pancakes available, too
For thoee who enjoy beautiful 9CeDerY while
they run. the Corona del Mar Scenic 5k la juat the
ticket.
The race, set for June 4, will becin at 8 a.rD. on
Ocean Avenue above the Corona del Mar State
beach. The race featu.rel a scenic COW1le which
wind.I throuah the streets of old CorcN del Mar
and over a 5{).year-oJd narrow span footbridae.
The flniah of the nee will be alona Ocean
Boulevard above Corona de1 Mar .<ate beech with
views of the PacWc ai:..m aloaa the way.
Followina the race, the Kiwanl1 Club of
Corona del Mar will"be proYidina a free ~
break.tut to etlCh ~ nanner. Tickets foe the
breakfut wlU be available f« $2.50 if puttbaeed
eeparately.
The $11 reptration fee includes a T..tllrt. ~
pancake breakf.alt and refiebmenta. 'lbe nee will
be llmited to the first 1,500 runners 1o ~-
Last year'• lnaucur.al nice atitacted nearly l,·
400 runners and to accomodate anoiher larae
turnout. the c:oune tw been chanaed to allow more di1tance before runners crou the narrow foot bnctse. Aid 1taUonl, wilh water, will be pc"OVSded at
the halfway mark and at the~ A&o, trophlee
will be awarded for the top fi\.e ftnlablirt In Mdl
divUdon and numer'OUI priJl9 will be presertted the
day of the net.
Entry fonm are~ at most lcal ~
atone or at the Newpol"\ a..dl Parka. ...,.. Ma Reer.Uon Department (840-2271).
Ploceedt from \he race wW ao to ~ ~
I
RUNNING
DENNIS
BROSTERHOUS
del Mar Chamber of Commerce and Cfty of
Newport Beach Parka; Beaches and Recreation
Department.
Fullerton's
Wood gets
Pan-Am nod
COLORAOO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) -~~bomore atandou'8 Patrick of aeor,.town
~d Michael ordan of North
Carolina beaded a ll·••n
bMketball -.n aelected 1io ~
In the Pan American a--in
Vennuela.
The selection of the squ.d was
announced here Tueaday
lollowln1 the Pan Aaaerlcu .
' Buketball Trlala the prevlom
five days.
~ • • . . '"
M~ LUOU. 8TA.Nl>IM09
AIMf'tc8n L.Mmue nnDMetOa
W L !"at. 09
23 11 .6411
22 II .537
21 HI .US 17 11 .....
20 23 446
18 22 421
" 21 364 RAITDMelON T onln10 23 18 580
ao.ton 22 17 MM 8eltlmON 23 11 511 ~-20 18 521 New Y one 20 20 .soo ~ Ill 21 475
Detroit 17 22 4H ,....,.. ......
...... 7, New Yori! I (10 lnnlnQa)
Toronto 7, ~I M~ t , llell'"--1
2'h
3'Ar
4'Ar
8
Cl.ago 12, 8oe4ofl 4
T-2, ~City 2 (& ~ fliln) ~8.8-IUll4
Ollllllind 8. ...... * .. 7 ,...,..0-
.... Yori! (~ 6-3) at ...... (JOhn
i-21. n
Miiwaukee (Haaa I · 11 at Oakland
(Undenoood, 3-1) Ctevelend (Elchelberge< 1 ·2) at Seattle
(8Mltte 2·2)
Detroit ("91ry 3-21 at Toronto (Oott 1-3). n
MlnnelOta (Sdwom 2-0) II Belt.._,. (0
MW11ne13-7). n 8oeilon (Hint ~2) at CNceoo (lklml 1-2).
n T-(DrMn 3-3) M "'-Cl!) (Biiie*
o-o). n
Natlonel LMaue .,..,DM816M
--•-L Pot.._ -'ML.,._ 29 11 7f8 ~ AllMtll
SanF..-.00
Clnclnna11
28 14 650 2'h
20 20 600 8Y. 111 23 452 IOY.
$111 ()Iago HOUllon
17 23 425 111•
11 25 4111 12
UaTOMU>N
$1 LOUle 20 11 5541
MontrMI 20 17 ~1 ..,
~ 19 II 5211 I
Ptlt•bu<Of' I 5 20 4211 4 .,,
ChlCaQO 15 23 3116 6
New Yori< . 15 23 3116 6 ,.....,..._..
~a.......,.,..o
St LOUla 7. Clnannetl 1
P1tttllurgll 6. A11en1a 5 c~ a. Hou91on 4 Monl.relll 5, Sen Diego 4 ( 13 lnf*lgll) San F•ancbeo 8, New YOtll 2 ,..,..._..
~ (Hoo1on 1·21 at Plllledelpt11e
(&yslrom M). n Sen Olego (Hewkln1 3·21 el Monlreel
(~&-1).n
C"hlclQO (LellerU O· 11 at Hou11on
(Madden 2-0), n
St Louil (StuPe' 4-21 al Cincinnati (P.-1·,,
San FrandecO (~ 4·41 et -VOit (A...,2-4)
Pl111bwr911 (Sibby 1·41 al Atlante
(Mc:Muflry •11
.-.CAN LIAOU: ._..1.v.-... ...... CAU'OlllU ., .. _. .. , .. _.
Aanclolpll, 2b 5 0 1 0 c-. lb 5 0 1 0 Gnn9v. lb 4 t 2 0 Foll, • & 0 0 0 Wlnllllld, cl 3 0 0 0 "9.Jecbon.dtl5 0 0 0 Kame>. II 5 1 1 0 L)"VI. ct 2 3 t 1
Gamt>le, r1 4 1 3 3 Ao.'**-'.~ 2 1 0 a.,a.dlt 4100....,_pr 0100
......._ Sb 5 1 2 1 V161ntlne. ff 5 1 2 2
SnW!e¥.• 5111ondl,2b 3022
&p4no, e 5 0 3 1 ~ II 4 0 0 0 eoone. c 30 1 I
TOlall 40 I 1S t Tot• 311 e e
TWo out -~8COfwd. ._.._.,
New Yen 100 130 1-t
Celtfofnie 010 300 010 2-7
G-w-.a RBI -Ottcfl (3).
E -Wlntwcf. Fol. Gamble. ~ -New
YOltt 1, c.llomla 2. L08 -New YOtll I, ~7 28 -~.~.o.m.. Ao......_,, V....,._ Hfl -~ !').
Gamble (2), Lynn (I). Sfnalley (I ) SF -
Gnd\. .... Yeftl P H fllll•SO
Sl*ley 3'-' a 4 4 a 2
OMurnty ~ 4 1 1 O 2
Goeemee 2 00012 ~ 1 12010
FOtd 11\'o I 2 2 3 0 a.net. ~23310
Wiit (W.2-41 a a 1 1 1 2
D t/tulrflf pftdled IO -b11tW In 9tll SerlCl'l9 pltc:lled 10 trlr9I .,.,.,.. In 9th.
HBP -Ao.~ (by...,,. T -):22 A
-41,042
ew .. ....
23 .441
Foll II 306 o.c.-21 .304
L.,... 21 .292
llerllquS 7 .274
°""" 11 .272
Ao..,._. I .271
9conlen 17 .291
9oone 11 .2'4
Clerti 7 .244
OoM*'ll 7 .220 v.-.ur. 5 .1•
~ 11 .1IO
Wlfcw'O 3 .143
Ademe I 111
~
• ....
8endts 3S 2.41
blwl ~ 2.71
ltlllon ~ a.ti
~ Mi a.11
Fond! 13~ &71
Witt ~ •.21
John !O 4.60 ........ 10!\ 6.0I
~ 1 ,,_.
A'1 I..,_.,.. 7
MUWeuk• 110 320 000-7 1t I
Ollllland 140 020 Ob-I 14 4 Auguallne, Porler (21. Eul.,ty (8) end
Yoal. Conroy. Kec>Ui!h (5). Bak., (II) end KHrney w -Keoug111 1·3. L-l!a11efly,
0.1 S-Bak., (2). HAI-Oakland. LopM (5) MllwlUk•. Yoet (3) A-12, Ill,
National LM1111• c.....,.1,...-1
St LOUla 002 101 201-7 13 0
CN\Clnnall 000 100 000-I a 0
la'Olll' end Pon.,, Beten;i, ,UIOH (7).
Gile (Ill and 811arde41o W-LaPotnl, 3·1 L-Belen)". 3·5 A-12.955
<Matl1• •• MMe 2
Sen Fran<:la<;o 010 100 004-8 10 O
New York 000 100 001-2 7 2
Krukow ena 8ranly, Lynell, Silk (Ill,
OtOICO m ano Reynotd• W-Krt.lk-. 3·2
L-Lynch 2·2 HRa-San Francteco Clark
(41 Davia (Ill N•w Yoo .. Klngm1n 2 (91
A 11.511
~ .. ···-· Pfltabu1gh 100 003 200-1 11 I
Atlenll 000 000 050-5 11 0
McWHllMll. Tlkullle e ano Nloo!Ma, Camp.
Moo•• (71, Fo111er (81. Gerber (I) end
Benedict W-McWIHtam1. 6-3 L-Camp. 3 ... HR-Pllt1burgh, MuzJIH (Ill A-17,44'7
c.-.s.•-• Chicago 010 021 001-11 10 O
Houelon 000 000 202-4 e 3
Ru111-.. L• Smith (7). ~ (Ill and
DW1 Scott 0 Smllll (Ill. o..teo, (II ano PujOla, Aallby (I I W-Rut-24 l -
Scotl. 0·2 S-Cempl>tll (31 HR-ClllcaQO, ~ (51 A-8.8$1 , ........ ,....4
... Oleee-120.410 400-000-4-12-1 -
MonttMI 001 030 000 001-11 13 1
Loller, SoH (5). Luca1 (5). Monge (II),
Ok_, (I I) ano Kennedy; WllWI, llutl'll (2).
Smith (I), Scnelnder (10). Rewdon ( 111 and
Cart• W-Reerdon. 2·1 l-0.L_,, 0-3
HR-San ()Iago, GatVey (I) A-17,343
Top10
( ............... ,
AmNCAN L.aA0US 0 Ma H fllat. c:-....... 36 141 14 14 .441
er.tt, ~ Cllv a 1 11 32 .e .383 Booge. 8ol1on 311 151 21 M .351
Meflel, ~City J5 132 27 ... 341
Tllomton, Clewlllnd 40 141 22 48 .341
Ford. 11e1t1rnOr1 37 1se ao sa .l42
Yount, ~ 31 1115 27 113 342 s--. ........ 3e 147 11 411 333 ~.......... 311M Jl 45 .331
Mulll*a. Toronto 21 80 10 2e 325 . ..._ __
~ ......... 11; Brett,~ City,
10; CMtlno, Mw-ta. I ; Parrllll, T-. I .
Wlnfleld, New Yori!. I ; Klllle, Cl>lceoo. I ; ~':.':i.ot ........ a; RICI, Boeton, I , Watd, .... -.. ..........
Wll'd, ~ 36; 8'9t1. ~ City,
32; Klttte, Cllalgo, 31; Alce, lloe!on, 31,
T'llomlon. aw.Mnd. 21; ~ .......
-Hr!Ma Ml,,.,_,ta. 21; Winn.Id, New
Yottc.28. ...... , . .,......., ,.........._...Mt; ...........
1-1; SlalOfl, MllwaullM, f.1j •-ti.•, ,.,..... '-ti aoao, Toronto, •I; lutton,
.......... 4-1; WN!ehOuee. """'1eeota. 4-1
NATIONAL IAAOU9 OMAHM.
MllCllOCIL, Pit~ 2t 102 t 35 3-43
Henoflck. 81 L4Ule 32 111 17 311 3)1
Smtih St l.°"'8 3e 142 23 47 331
Oeetet Cincinnati 40 1112 11 50 3211
RIC:l\arde, San Diego 34 113 ,. 37 )27 h-. Sen Franoleco 3' 129 30 42 SM
HubllerG Atlanta 311 132 11 43 326 Hemltldez. a1 LOU1a 35 10 n 41 322 a.,_,, Sen o.eoo .a 1 M 32 llO 321
84lnoll, Cincinnati 31 1111 II 41 311 0.-. Mont.... 37 IM 17 41 318 ....... .._ M:::.: Atlante. 1 I; Gwnwo. ~ 111 .,......., ti e....,,., a.n Ftenciieoo.
v. u1,...y, S•" OleQO. 1. 1<1nom1n ,,._
Yo-ii I flwoe ........
Murpl>y, Attenta, 3e, 0.-.. Montteel,
21. ~. 61 Loute, 211, K--'Y, !1t1
019110 21, eroell, Dede•r•, a; lencll .
ClndnNIU, 27; Garner. Houelon. 27, o...te.
San Frend.aco. 25. ~. Ban l'renc4eco.
25. Gwwy, San ~. 2&. "'°*' (4 DMllMMM) .-... Oedfeta. ..., McMwtlry, At11111a,
8-1; RQO«•• Mon1,_., &-1, ,._, ~
•1; Per-. Allen-. 8-1, LaPotnt. SI LOute. ~ 1; Lee, --'· .. l; ~. HouMOI\, 3-1
....,_~....._a
Newpot1 ~ 000 200 0-2 5 2 S.•-001 104 ._. 5 2
Howetd MCI~; Thome, vw1111 <•I Met w-.. w-ven.y 112-01 L-~
CMi n-Holdet IS).
' cur ..mlflnel• ...
Collon 7' L.1111...ood 5
Mllllkan 10, Creep! 3
i.A
L.-. I . Ngrl9ttl 1 on 3, c.mtoe 2 •• Ctil*lt-v-, II, P9lm SorlftOe 4
...... 4.~3 l•A
aeldwln Pwtl 13, Saft Merino 4
~ 7' Cl\etnlnlde 2 .............. S...reno e, NewpOtt Clwlat1111 2 Ofanoe Llllheren 10, PrO'olkMnol ..
M'=A~TI ,..,..,~......,_ .. ....._,
l'IMT MCL 400 y.,O..
9wtl1•bo MM> 1.00 a JO uo
Clleroe CMI (Cl.wtlt) ti t0 1UO Mr~ Too (Ward) t 00
AIM rlc9d lar l<l"fdOM, J11tl "11111 INoe. W1tdlelol. Half lfulMla. H«• A Hclcllfta, My Monev ~ JM
flmi' ao " •IX.ACTA~ Plld tuuo.
OUt~m:~,::,=r.-IO •.40 UO
hay COltOe l;tlli ... 1on) D.40 UO ~llllen Wiii! IC4noral a.to A raoed: tH .. t111plea11h1t, °''"~ , More Abowl Acri, "9 ~ 910V, ~Rebel, ............. aOlld A-4 ""'*' .11.00. r.-~ 400 yarda. lllllMIP Ital (QlnMI) 21 40 l"to .. to
LOlll l!Y'f (Mllr1 4 20 8.00 Mhbr c~ c<:<....-1 e 40 Alto r~· Ml11 Flamlng lunnr, Flrtt Crutll, Moontl-Wln4't, Oonyu Dr..,..,
Lacie Spottt Girt, Rebe P•.;tty,
Tlm41.20.41.
'OURTM MCI. 360 yatd•. Ale Hwt (Ci.fall) 111 80 7 .IO II.to Alell Kil> (Adllr) I IO e 20 Tr1C>o4 ii.Una(~) 7 IO
Allo ~ Tom MohegM, s,...oy l'olcy,
Jell Vlllul, Ooh LI F-. Gel 'The Qo6d
Time llQ4 II UAC'fA ( 1·7) peld l 10t IO
'IP'TM MCJ. 350 -da Cour*Y Lew aono ceror• 1.00 4.oo S.'!> Nana Baby (Tr-•I • I 20 4 IO
MIM 8uM l>urm (Valdla) 7 20 Alto raced: Wl1Nn1 Elly, 8uttya Girl.
Trllhq P111, MIM ~· Time 1107
a&Xnt MCL 170 ywd1.
Monaleur La Alie (Crgr) 22.40 1..40 7 .20
GradOwa "90 (HWI) S.40 2 80
Noiloy "91> (.......,,.) I J 20
Aleo rec.I llrly Cwt• ._. llotllly Oii °"r~t":6 Mon.yed 0.-..
IZ UACTA (&-1) paid n100
UV.NTH llACI. 400 yatdl Johnny Cllatgw (Bard) 13.40 5 20 3.&0
Talk To Pappa (Cardon) l .20 2.eo
My Spicy Man (Adair) I 20
Aleo reoed Duck N Run, Ool Hil .,_.,
Empero< Mlh, Waylon Aw1r. lwdden
Sperti. VM1• Julll, Fiii F1erM rime 2001
II HACTA po-I) Paid Pl IO
UOH'nt Mc:a. 350 yerda
Roule La (HWI) 9 .0 4 00 2.80 Kid At "-! (Mylle) • 4.to S 40
~ o..Nelte IQwdoul S IO
Al•O raced Tim• To Shu, auew...,ry ~·· Time II 07
It HACTA (1·61Paid 121.to.
ta~ au& 11·1+6-10-1) peld '6,5I0.80 wllh ... wlnn«• (h ~k 12 Pick Ibo
conlOlallOn PelCI • 107 .20 wlltl 104 wlnnere
(low ~)
...-nt At.CL 350 yerde.
c:Mck1toul (C.Ooul 5.40 4 00 2.IO Bey F-(awMI) 4 80 3.20
111111-UI Aed (0.-1 J,IO
AllCI rao.d Gay Aetlel Too. Ula Neigh,
Sumtlltn Outck, Jet lndlgO, Plundltl lncllln,
Annll Fay, Staeh«
Time 1103
• lllACTA (4-10) peld I H.20 Alt....0--5,791
u ... -....111:~ (Al~tl " ) 143-Aon ~ (Noinil IWld> CCI. ... ra 145-Mlii• Krlflll (LCll ~I. 73-72
141-Corey '•¥111 (I.'-'-1. 71·74. MIU Ml ... (LOI Alemltot), 13·1S; 8t11n c-(Wee11111• Vllegl). N-70. L47-.i.ll 8ilOt1 (LIOl#M Hlll9), 7•71.
141-Efle lgy (8'00kllde). 71-11; TOM
Anton (Chap1r<ll) 74°74; Gr911 81w11man
(Hillc:tM1). 72-11; tom '-'nlel (l• Summit,
Mo.I. 7$-11
141-JI"' EITIH't IEMltaJ, 18-73: Wry
Collin• \Et Toro). 74·7&: Chuck Moran
(lndlol. 75-7 4
(s...t\ ~· llMI M 150. 8udel9n dMlll
today ror llve r..,.11n1,.. P'9Cll and •-
llt-te ~I ( ............. ,,.,..,
141-Mn C.W(~). ~11.
142-Jecll Spradlin Jr (St•d\1911. 72· 1U
144-0.Y9 Brownlee (Sift•• LI v .. ne).
72·72
145-fltcll PfMt• (llewpetl 8-11),
12-11: Lennie Green (l'untcwet1 Goll Clubl.
74-71 146-Teny Smelt (Fattbtoot>). 72·74; Tetry
Wlleoa (MIMIOn Hile). 74·12
147-fony Radick (Ster<IUlll. 7f.71, R1Ct>
F11eom1n (8prlno V1ll1rJ. 73-74, John
M.-(Slnofna Hiii), 72-75, Oe'ltd Emenc:a
(Sien• La V•neJ. 73-71. (qu.i1ttet1 advance to IWO round• CH
hOIH ) of .. cllonal qu1111y1n11 Jun• II el
PautnaV...,,. .;: .. _.l._• -· •
I
Orenge Ooat DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. M•Y 25. 1983
....,,.., ...... ., ........ ~
Yankees skipper Billy Martin geta a little
action, throwing to some of his players
before the game Tuesday.
ANGELS WIN
From Page F1
Fred Lynn and bitting Ron
Jacluon with a pitch, all after
two were out.
Valentine took hla cue and
lifted a Oy bell 10ward the pp ln
rtaht center that waa hooking
ever IO quickly ln the direction of
Gamble. Call It fate, but Gamble
nev« uw lt u the bell hit hi.a·
glow, which wu by hla waist.
and fell harmleuly to the
lfOW'd. Grich then added the final
touch to v a1ent1ne•1 party wt th
the bloop .....
''You know what I've been
IOina tb..rouah · .. lhil WU very
Import.ant to me," Valentine aid .
•'When the bell dropped in there
lt really pve me a lift. It made
me feel like a pert of the team. It
meant a lot."
Said Grich : "Any time
anybody atrugglea you know
how It ta becauae you've been
there. nm la a 1ood booet for him. and ua. becau.e It will give
him confidence."
Be1ide1 Valentin•'•
contrlbutiona, the pme ltaeli wu
a boolt for the Angela.
Two Yankee home runs -a
ao1o abot by Grall Nettles ln the
1eventh lnnlna. and a two-run
blast by Gamble in the eta}lth -
tied the IOOl'e at 4-4.
The YankeH then pushed
another run flCl'09 in the eilhth
to 10 ahNd. only to have 1'red
Lynn hit • home run in the
bottom of the lnnlng to tie tt
~· 8malley•1 homer in the 10th,
off Winning pitcher Mike Witt
• • •
(2-4), put the Yankees back In
front. but only for a little while.
"It WU 8 IJ'Ul pme to play in,
a great game to watch and a
great game 10 win," said Grich.
Valentine couldn't have agreed
more.
"The breaks have been png
my way lately." noied Valentine.
"It makes me feel good to set my
tint hit here. More importantly.
it really helps that we aot a ·w:
too ... ''
TUCKER'S COLUMN. • •
From Page F1
downhU1 lklin8· Tbe NBA la a vehicle the network comea to artJJS with~ a~-
lta rad.net dwina the i.n.tby l"fCUlu' .-.i of t.M NBA 1iave ....,_J'I left conslderable to be
d.trild. It la the conclusion of
DODGERS '. •
F• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 26, 1983
·Eating disorders
are corn1non
aDJong gymnasts
From AP clilpa&det
Eating dborden such u anorexia nerwu and
bulimia are common among 1ymna1t1, some
pertldpanta 1n the a port aay. and CA thy Ri.gby McCoy •YI ahe waa no exception.
McCoy, who led the American women'•
l)'mnMtlc team io ita best ahowfnl ever in the 1968
and 1972 Olymp6ca, said ahe fint became involved
with bulimia -~ eating followed by induced vomitina -while training foe the 1968 Olympics.
The 4-10 gymnast wetahed 92 pow\da And was
being weighed daily. When she gave in to
temptation one night and ate two piece. of pizza,
ahe panicked and took a teammate'• auggesuon that
ahe stick her finger down her throat.
"It WM the wont thin& I'd ever done," ahe
aald. "I felt tenible."
But aa McCoy, now 30, beaan maturing and
gaining weight. she went back to binge eating and
vomiting about twice a day.
"I didn't realiz.e how much it could tear down
your body," ahe aald. "I remember being up on the
balance beam and being dizzy .••
She said at one time almost every girl on the
~titive team with her was throwing up after
A.Jons the way, she was hospitalized twice for
d.isturbanom of electrolytes, or trace minerals. Both
bulimia and anorexia nervoea -nervous loea of
appetite -can be fatal; ~ Karen C&rp;enter
died after her heart waa weai[ened from anorexia.
It was only after leaving competitive gymnastics 1n 1972 that McCoy aradually wu
able lO improve her eating habita. Currently a
commentator for ABC Sporta, McCoy aay5 her
problem finally vanished three yean ago. She now
lives in Fullerton with her husband, actor~r
Tom McCoy, and three children.
"My OOIM:b told me to lme a couple pound&. like
two or three. and I kind of went overboard and lost
20," said Michelle O:oweJl, 18, who left gymnuticia
last year after llix years in the sport with Iler former
team, the Southern California Aero 'team.
"Everybody told me to alOp but I couldn't."
She dropped from 95 pounds to 78 and was
finally able lO force henelf lO start eating again. "I
decided to eet chocolate," she said.
"It's very common," UCLA women's
gymnastJcs coach Jerry Tomlinaon aaid.
Others say the problem is more with the
individual than with the sport.
Sharon LaK.amafeaux, a gymnast for 11 years
who al8o worked with the SCA'I's, was ordered by
her coach, Don Peters, lO gain weight, but "I
couldn't make my.elf eat," ahe said.
She overcame it aft.er psychiatric help.
"I don't think itjs aomethina. that's endemic to
gymnastics." said Peters, 1984 Olympic gymnastics
coech. "In 14 years and hundreda of kids, I've had
three kids that had eating diaorden. I honestly
don't thin~stica caused it. I think it's
endemic to t females."
Gauchos face Modesto nine
Saddleback College's
baaebalJ team will open
the state tournament
Thursday with a wild
card game against
Modesto at Golden West
College.
The game is aet foe 10
a.m.
Modesto la the Central
Valley Conference
l*CO.NICll MOITUAa•S
L-oun•8eKh
•9"-!M15
l.-ouna Hells
786-0933
Swi Ju.n Capistrano
C9!>-1n6
H•.O. L.AW.._MT. OUWI
Mortutty • C.me tetY c,.,,.,ory
1625 Giller Ave
Cott•U...
S40-S554
winner with a 27-9
record. Saddleback
captured the Pacific
Coast Conference and
had a season mark of
22-11-1.
The winner of the
morning contest will
return at 2 p .m. for
another game, also at
Golden WesL
NOUUOUI ..... MAmlTA~NT Tl'le toftoowtno l*'Of'l8 .,.. doing ~-. FISHEii & FOl'O. 127n Vali.y
v-. Sii 2e2. Gtroen Gr-. CA
1126-45
Anne Fllhef. 81111 Almondlne Ortve. Geroan Grow. CA 112645.
Paooy FOfd, 1131-73 PAQlceta
Clrcee. 'tutti!\. CA 112sao. Thia butl,_. 11 con<lueled by a
~ .. partnet9hlp
Anna Fllher
Thlt llat-1 W81 llled with the County Clerk ol Ofanga County on
Mey 13, 1983.
F21Mll
PubUshed Orenge Coe~t Dally
Pilot, M1y 18, 25, June 1, 8!.1~~-
P\JBUC NOTICE
'1CTfT10Ut M*NE .. NA•aTAn .. NT
Tl'le lollowlng per.one ere dolnQ
boslnMl 11
WEST BLUFF HILLS GENERAL
PARTNERSHIP, 805 A"•m• Avenue. Huntington Beach, C1.
926-48
Joe Cannone, 3031 Cadencia,
Cartebed, C1. 92008
Suaan Culton, 20021 Port
Clrcle, Huntington 8Hoh. Ca.
112$48
Caron K. Oaweon. 316
Coral1eaf Drtva • 13, Hunllngton BMdl, Ca. 82641
GntOOf'Y R. Hiaor.n. 15 ThuncMf
Tr ... Irvine, Ca. t2}14
Frenk J Mola. 422 Lome
BltMI. Hunllnglon Baach, C• 12641
"-NOider. 10178 Cardani!
Ave .. Founllln V'*'t. Ca. 92708 ~ iw.y, 1911 Swallow Lane.
Ca 92008 Jo .. pl'I Aommallangar. 821
18th Street. HuntlnQton BMdl. Ca
112..a Cllhy Smith, 18429 A•pen,
Founllln Vlli.y, C1. 82708
Peter E. von Ellan. 11792
Praelde<lte Or , Hunllngton Beac;h.
Ca 92Mll
J1mH Walth, 18113 Sw1llow
L-. Carlebad, Ca. 112008 Jol'ln Wllteo, 815 OcHnhlll
O.lve. Ca 92848
Thie bu*'-le being conducted
by • P811 '*"""> FRANK J MOLA.
~.,,,_
Tl'l11 1111-1 w .. flied with the
County Clerk or Orenge County on
M1y II. 1853
Nn.111 L won llL Tt:N
Attorner •I Law
IOIAdem1tlrMC
Huftltngtoft 8Hcfl. Ca. nMI
PubU1hed Orange Co111 01lly
Pllol Miry 11. 18, 25, June I. 1983
2152-83
Plll.IC NOTIC£
"8JC m11Cl • Ml.IC •ncE
~ ...... '10 ....... NTmOUe llU ... H ~MIMf NAMI .,_,..._.., MA.Ml eTATl•NT
T ...... --... ·-~ ~-~ ,,. ·-• ... ~.., n. r.....,,.,ng P9rlont.,.. The fOllOW!no PWMWi• .,.. c:lolnO ~ M l b\lalnMe II; bUelneM M:
Na WP 0 ft T D Iii I 0 0 IN 0 l'Af.01.AU'I 4LAl8 WOAl<8, COAIT 1.IMOUllNI, 2802 N.
COMPA"IY. 1IOO lnellnlei.et M ., 17H h lberl Avenue, Unit l . o.ootr. ltnta Ana, Ca. t27011 ~ IMah. OA t2MO HuntlnglOfl 8tectl. CA tte4e. Jolln H fll1ymond, 2102 N. Wllll•m LH Hl,,11. l 1SI 1 Alton 0 Conner, 1'17 IMn• o.oo.t, e.tlll AN, CL t270I
AntlOue ~. HYntfllOtoll ....,, o.-. Ofllltlo. CA.,,.,, Tooo M, .... nmllCMr, 1922
CA l2t4t ~ J. Connet, 1711 .,_.,, Clibtl009 AW., Of .... C. t2tl1 Ed~ln DHll Tlylor, 1HO Oewn, Oflt6ri0. CA tlHI. TNI ~ 11 ~by a
Contin.ttlll. Colee MeM. CA t2U'I' Tiiie r.lneae le ~tecl by o-nw• ciett'*""'P Thie ~ • ~ by I lndMcMllt (M~ & ~ JoM H "8ymond
geMral per1'*'9Np, Mon D conner Thie IU'*"'"I ... llltd wl4h Ille
Wfw I.. ...,... Tiiie ~I WM 111.o wtltl Ille Counb Cwt! of Otenge County Oii Thia .... ,._...., wHll 1111 County Cllrtl of Ofll\09 00unt)' Ofl W.., (, 11M
County Cieri. ot 0r-. 0eunty Oii May 13, 1983 P11lnl
Apf1I ... ~..,, ~ ~ Publlthlel Orenoe COHI Diiiy
PStMM Publlahed Ortnge COUI 01jJy Piiot May 11. 11. 25, .i-1, 1983 t'ubllll!M Or1ttoe COut Dilly Piiot, Mey 11, 25, ~ I, I. 1N3 21ff.43
PllOt. May"· 11, JI, 26, 11*' 2301143 -----------to7~ -----------PlB.IC NOTIC£ 'Aennoue.,_ .. 'IC1TTIOUI .,._.. ...-.. IT~....-wT
"..... ..... ITA.,......., Tiii lollowll\g petlOn II dotng '1CTJnOUe ...... Tiii followlno C*'tonl are dolnO ~ M : MAIMITA,.._., bualM18 M JUllllY'S MARINE FUlL
Th• !Ollo*lng petlOn II dol VILLA PARK SERVICES SEIWICl. 3333 W•I eo.rt Hlwly. ~ M: COMPANY, 15772 P1111c1An Dt1Ye. Newport 9-fl. CA 9:zte3.
HOUR OF FAUR!, 3013 s VIII• Peril, ClilfO<nl• 92881. Olfald A Mendeeon. 711 w.
Orange. &.nta Ana. CA 12707. Jldc NMleon. 15712 Patr1Clen e.Jbol 8l¥d . Belboa. CA 92ee1.
llllCHAN> J. F~ 11. 1S32 9 Ortve. Vllll Part!. C911fomla llffe7. Thia t>ue!MM la conducled by an
MllPM. Santa Ana. CA t2706. GwynMdd M Neelon. 111772 lndMdull Thie~ 19 condue1eel by P11tlcl1n Dtlva, VIiia Park, Oerlld A Mandelon
lndlvldual Cellfoffll 1211417 fflll llalttnanl Wll fNtd with IM
AIGllard J For• N ~ Thia buelnMt II conducted by • County Clerk OI Ot"'i)e County on
Till• 91•1amenl WU lllad with 1 general pllrtn«lhlp. Mey 12, 1983.
Coun1y OleR ol ()rmnoe Courny JIC!k Neelon. P1rtne< '21IMI
Aprll 4. 1983. • Thi• 111tamenl waa llled with tile Publlahed Orang• Co111 Delly
'211111' County Clerk ol OfanQe County on Piiot. M•v 18, 25, June 1, 8, 1153
Publl•h•d Orange Coa11 Dall May 13. 19113 . 2~3
Piiot, May 4, 11, II, 2&, f91$ ll'IOM 8M ........,. 2085-11n1 lnlM .,..._, wea 101 rtaJC ll)TlC(
'------------Tyatlft, CA la.o
NOnCaOI ~ Notto. It '**Y tMfl diet tM ~wit~" '-POl'l•-for any dlOlt Ot ll1blllt111
OOfllrlCted by ~ otlW "*' mplllf, Oii Of .,,., lll6t d*.
0.i.d lhlt 21td Ciao/ at ~ , .. Joe°"'*" f012 I L ltllilol No 102 • .,.. Ma. C&. 92707
l'ublltflecl OtlftOI COul Dall_.
PllOt, ...... 26, 21, Nw t ,..,
242$-G
M11huUe IUll•M ..... ITATIMINT ~ .... folowtl" "'""' .,. dOll1G ...
TRUMP CARO OttTIHCTION 1570 ll'OOkholow Dr .. 1114 a.nti Ana. CA 9210& '
H. and 0 , EnterptlM•. Inc ..
1510 8roolchollow Or .• 1114, Sen•• ~CA92705. Thia ~ .. oonduc:ted by •
ClOf'POr*lton.
H and O. Ent. Inc. 8Mrlor M. Gonlol\
~
Thia ltat-t .... fled wlltl the ~ Clertt of Ofanga Councy on
May 2, 1883. me.
"'bllahed Otano-County Delly PllOt, M9)' 4, 11, ta, 25, 1N3
20t1-83
T.a1'7• NOTICI OP TMl9Tlll'a aALi
T.LNo._.
NOTICE
YOU ARE IN OEFAUl T UNDER A
De.ED UF TRU:>T, DATED 6-23~1.
UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT
MAY BE SOLO AT A PiJBUC SALE.
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. On 11 ·01-83 at 10 AM .
CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE CO.
H duty appolnltd TruetM under
•nd pursuant lo D••d ol Trull
recorded 08/29111, .. lnat. No.
4 1159. In book 14118. page 1153. ol
Offlellll Atcorda In the offloe of Ille
County Aecotder of Or11n09 County,
Cllllfornla Will SELL Al PUBLIC
AUCTION TO HIGHEST 8100ER
FOA CASH (payable at time of ult
In lawful money ol the United
Stal•) el the north front entrance to the County c-tnouM, 700 Clvtc
Centw Orlw W•t, S#lta .Ane. CA 92701 all right, Ulle end lnterfft
conve~ to end now held by 11
unci.r a&ld Deed ol Truat In the
property .ituatlld In Hid County and State delcrlbed a :
lot 111 of Tract 5922, ea 111own
on • map recorded In Boo!! 218
P-V-28 through 33 lndualvtl of
Mlecellaneoua Mapa. record• ol
Oren9• County. California.
eKecuted by: WILLARD MUNO &
MARLENE MUNO, hu1b1nd and
wit. • joint tenenla.
Th• atrffl addre11 end other
COfftlnon cleelgNtlon. ti any, of tlle
real property deecrlbed above 11
purported to be: 25 Satinwood.
Way. lrvtne. CA 92715. The undefllgned dlsclalm• any
li.billly lor any ~ of the
1treet ~ and ott1er common
dealgnallon. If any. lllOwn '**'· Said HI• wlll be med•. but
without covenant or warranty. e~ or Implied. ~ding '"le. pa1111810n, or encumbrance.. to P., the remaining princlpal eum of
the note(•) MCUfed by Mid Deed of
Trust, with lntereat thereon, aa
prowlded In Mid note(•), edvanciet.
II -· under the IW'll'll of the Deed of Trust. I•••. charge• end e~ qt the Truat• and of Ille
tru1t1 created by "Id Dff<I ol
Truet. to-wit: 175.014.42 ("'9fOX).
The beneftel8tY under Mid Deed
ol TNtt '-91ofore executed ah<t
delivered to the underelgned a
wrttt9n Oeclaretlon of Oeteult and
o.mand IOI' Set•. and a written
Hatlee of Oelault and Election to
Sell. The ~led e.-.cl Mid NollCe ot OMr.uft and Ellctlon to W to be r9COr'Cled In the county
...... the ,... prop«ly la k>c:at9cl.
Heme. Street Addr••• and
Telephone Number of Trutt• or .,.,_ conduettng ... 11 CHICAGO
TITLE INSURM4CE CO •• 32$6
W!Wllre Blvd .. Loa AngaM. CA 900ft> 1213) ~. 0..: Ol/04191. CHICAGO tnU
INSURANCE CO ..
.. Trutt•.
Annand C. Seuoedo.
Asal. Secretery
Publtlhed Orange Cotut Olllly
Piiot, M.-y 11, 18, 26. 1983 2116-83
I
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
•
Ora'9 Coaet DAILV PlLOTIW.cfneedey, Mey 2&, 1988 Fl
ClASSlfllD The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 /
CLASSIFIED·
INDEX
1;;....,~;;:..:•.,=-=1a1= .. ;:.--l1nm ,., 1t1t ..... ... .. .. .... ,. 1111
=-iiiiiiiiiii ....... t•I ... a)
1
1 lf'!
1 JIM • .,.... ..... JM!
For T~~rough u111H •••• ........ dollertorn:::'or~~ Lllla'I
8aturd•Y publtc.Uont: -~ -•r• .. • w/zeto dn, flnanolno. llPI To Pfact Yu Ad. Cal
11:80 p.m. tn. pr•vlou• Ftnea.t Laaoon view from INllJ11fl~nt 4 IM-t6411or5'1-1MO ~ dwn.' ~ Hiii 642-5678
REAL ESTATE
(" "''"' "'"""''"' thll> a..i1 .... l•l.utt.I
A...lhl-.i ..... •rnru.ulu
t .ipulr .. ''"' At .. h c . ..-11n.• dd Ma.1
l't ... w M~ ......
tli1n .. t'1101t H ,,._ ..
~hUl\l.1+11 \ ;111.o '\.
llunw1;.:totot1 1•·..w.h
lluo• tt .. rh•u1
'''""' 1 ... ,,cun.1 Ht •• h
l .. 1f(f.Jti.1 lltlb
l .. ;l(u11.1 N1.i;u1 I
l ... k ••• ,,,.,.1
~""°"'"" Vw1• ""'"l••lt ~ •• It
!"o.ol' i hlO• Hll
'-111 lu.•U f •I''''' illf•
.... ,111 .• ''~· -....,•It. .1h
.... •Hlf1 1 ~·..:ou ..
.... , •• _' ,,. •• h
I •1~l1H
''·-111•111•11! ,, ..... ,. u ... , .. ,, ,, .... .
\p.11111 .. ,. ...
I\. l\l1t'''IJ'••h
lii;·.101..,. P•-•111
l 11111 II f\ t 1tl•
1 ·u1111HI t•1 I• 1
l 111l.t1!11fUUll!
U111°lt \I 'Ull•
111111,.., •ot,. f\111\•••
1111•11111 •·1 .. ,., ,,
l111lu .. 1n,1l t'"'I'' 1.111 ...... ~ •• i.
P.111t11h ... "" ...... ,k. ...
i\f,•uul.10\ lllt..,,r-1
'111111)!• \\.
t tu1 -•I l-•o\.OIH
C)r..,1 •ti .,_t..1h
lt.u,. h, .. t .. rn1• ~"""""') TllnPSharlrlc Rt~
RE W..,l<d
RENTALS
lliau-. ... Jo'urmioh1,t
H1ou•"' Unh1rnt'ihl1I
llol11 ...... t \.itnt .. t\t,j HI
I nlufOl"lhl"-J
\ 111wl .. turri
t utwfu Uul
lu.,.ol\ut.~-... tu1u
't11Vorth11o1J ...... \111~
t~t>I•'""" •·urn l>u~·u ... Unf
Ap.irtm.·ntat fu.rnu1ht\J
A.p..nmc-nb Unt
Apu. rvrn u.,. l·nf
111•""1 ...
K••"11 A U."'4ril Jf11lf'I-.. M••\d .. ,.u. ... 1 '""'~" ~1Jnl•lhf H1•11w1 ..
\', •• 111·"' Ku1&.1l• •u, 11\.1J.. '"Sh.Jr•
• u, n1...1 ... \.\ ""'~"'' l, .. ,,,.C,...,, f•1• K"n1
tWh" K. nt..1t ..
~t1••-H.1n1 .. t•
t. ··~nil K•·nwl,.
111.iu. ... i K1 nu.I,
..,,,1'f.oflf1
Mw. tt1n1 .. 1 ..
AHHOUHCEMENTS
,\111•iuth"'""' nb
t .... 1 ~ t'•IUI.,.
••• .--....... 1 ..... .,, .......
~ h1••h ~ 111 .. lrUt hul\ r,.-.. ,, I
~nii-.. .... 11•~1· ·~N,... UsJp•Mt.1nm .... ftu:M,,. .. "''·•"""' .,,l\l1fi'trt•'f't Opt .. .rtUNI .. ,
ltt"t""ll,.\inl w .. n1 .. t
·~1 ...... , b• L...i .. 1n
• Al1 •t'•'" '-' .. nhd
~1 ... 1111.·~~ I It ..
EMPlOYMENT
ti• ~I· \\.lfHl\t
• 1 ••• ,.. """"h"'
A•ALS
MERCHAfl>IS£
\111Mj1Jf.._
A11pl~o•'"'
''"''''""" Hl••K M111°•1 .. l• ( -.. ".,..,,,.. .. 6' .,..,\upn"4 nt
t · ... n.,_.,1 .. .-..
~'H '" '••U ~ IHllllU!I
•••• 1.111(1 ~.11 ....
ft•it• ... 'hi•W Vo••'"'
Jt 'th'"' M •• h11t•1"\ M,..,, ILu111"1'
M .... w .• nt11I
M...,.. 41 lt\Jtotrun'" ""'
I >II~,. ~·u11111u11 /4./
• .1..fUllWlat111 p,.,....,. I# Ut ,.i: '""' '°'"'""''"'" t; ... ,, TV tt...,t, .. ~1t,.11
BOATS
0h.1r1t-, H• 111
(·~'fl! I .1!
t '""-~ ' S.111 ..; ..... ..:t Slu
M .. nrt t:ou1p
M11mt S. r\M•
:-;11"""' 1~ ... k,
Sh.r • ..e-
~.,.,r .. , ln.INlll"#'
, ....... 111f,
TRANSPORTATION
A1ur ... ff
tt..,,i.~
\ tllill•"
""'"'" R.!k ..... • Mu11.n ""' ''""" Sn~J'• r'\ M .. 1.,, ll•in•"
UI •
r1.ut.-r... Tt.1\•I
1,.,11.-. L1tllt\
AUTOMOTIVE
d•Y· for 8und1y end bdrm, 4 bath pool hbme. •1.4!W>,OOO. on1y *'".000:...., Wlli btotler proteotto". 10
Mond•y publlcatton•: • • • p·a• -di t t " h ~ ...,..,. 12:00 noon S.t""'-Y. ., ... PUil IAYr•IT • -• ..... ,,:::'" 0
' ~.0:.· TIL Mgmt e4a-1eoa 2 •., 81-., 11ee.
Spectacular ~yfront dplx 2 bt, 2 be ~; 2 br, J\»l~u~-I m i l'81DE "°'*a~ a11t ... ,_,, I ....... ::: .=::. .... dn ..... •-Reducod-4•.aoo.ooo. r.:=-.~m1~ .:.J61tfj.=· :::11-nr.:; .. "· :::~~ KIMeandoorrectlonamey P.llllllU .. IOUllPlll'I tto and wood deckl=-____!•-•!!!!!! SA twlllt. ~2*Y aj;,m.., :::~ be made unttl 6:90 p.m. Ocean & jetty views. Marine room. f ~bcltm. 3 , tarve '°' end ~ .: mT Mli9f PW Cell~ 1 .w31"'4320 . dtlf ;r.; 1w/~ enat :::~~ ::, ~t~!!; bath, 37001q.tt. tUllI,386.llUOOO. ~t. ~:, .. o;:: ..::o,•:.: ~~·~i>"°'.,.... bnlrlDI ~u. i.~ •"~ '"~" Mond•Y publlcettont, m4M1f C1911, J4()-1111 • •llf mi 141.el71, ._ & ....
11.;: 12:00 noon Saturday. Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath+ larae rec nn Fortcloeur•: Reduced If~~ •e ofD or 960-02I' llM~ Pl•••• ••k tor • "klll ...___ 111 ...... f .. -1 ... .....t .. _ •..02() ooo' ., t100K to SHiii<. ••v-wtirehoule "** In .,.•---------;:~ numbff" when cancel-....,..,. ce._._. .,........,_,, pe ....... ..., • · front 3br, 2b,.a. 48' 'lllp. fMCly ~·IG w 2 lfll, 1 ba, Newport
""! ting YfNI ed. flllUlll UIOl llUTIP 97S-1~ around the alrPot1 .,. ~ ':l,~ 1'1'~ New 4 br, 4\1\ ba. custDfD French Normandy '111-ft.D oner th• moet. L• ... mo. e.u,.1192 ::~~ Ct1eck ~a11y enc1 Estate 1.2 pr1me ecJe hillt1Dp $1.260.000. l!at. Im' IMI UUM PBllllU ~ ~ 2 bdrm, 1 e.. gw. t.o
111·, report errort Immediate-....... OIYI IAYFlllT llMI -3 unite and .. good In-,.,.. pn>gram~T1'-mo. 910 c:.. 8t.
11'"' ly. Tiie DAILY PILOT .... Co nado Ia1and bayf ·-. • EM'/ welk eo bGtl 4 er 3 come producert: SBR, ftexl~ ttrme evWI. Thll 97&.tt21 ::::: aume1 ll•blllty for th• ro cust. ront wt. 8~ boat B 1 uvi ' 2BR and toe a.otlek>r. mtoht be your tat Cfl.. 3 bd 1'A be.. fnod yrct
11,.... firat Incorrect 1naertlon dock. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/tenna. ,.~,r:'~~~unda ~: Very hatd lo find. T~ ance to o::,.:.n:;:: occ, 1100 =®
:::'.'.', only· Piii LI• OllM' =i.'1~· •1 ·000· ::='°: =6~NI =.-..r::_..,.,.. w. ~dip.
: :·; ........ •-•-3 br, 2 ba, frplc, immaculate condo. On OOod .-.nable toen. wlll lltten to eny type &t...-. 3 bet, fmly rl'i\ 2
11
" _ -be! ,..__ 4 BR HOME -.... tred• '°' any produe1. be. Avt/J June 2. tNO.
117 .lnaal llU green t . ......,. ...... pool $125,000. 2~8a , 1129,500. callMormanat~ 540-3828 •-•• 1.-.... .,.. .... __ ....;m,;:,: 1 720-1143 °' 6"48-7405 PHI.• 1111.111 or Bob 1t 543-3117 tU -3...,, ... ~-COft-d_o_So--COMt--:~ ~ UM IT rm lnlM IM4 . 11M111 tPM, 7 d•Y• .... k ptaza .,...: s.i~;
I,-... • ....... -Oocfor wllt excflMGe 8en ptot9C1ect, pool, • petlo, :·~; Paymentt approx $700 •t ITI w Clement• Ull~"'ooo lllU• & tmlpeCaok.A¥111JuM , "" with 10% down. Santlego ,._ hom• for n..., •700 1 t7215/tno. Cell Keren ,.,. Cl"Mk •a 1 yr old com-Tr ... , swlnmlng, tr ... , ooo prtoe range, New~ lllTI 1111 9115-2033 work or
"'" munfty with 130 Modular r...--... llu ltl2 tennlt • ., .. ,. treH, port BHch '"ldence. .._ ,_, high callnot. 1-.1011 lwil om homea. 2 BA'*-family tm 11.wn .:r;::::: _ tr .. 1 Luxurloua outdoor Alent Aon Poulton fire eprtntcler, ~· Lt;,,:Meu Verde Ex ... 1:~_".• nnc"Lqprox
70
1300'"" ft. f.eilnOpervedeet.h .. ex 4 8 4800 4"'8 2•10 t -· ~
111
'79-llS ......, Th• much ~ht after .. --cepUonal Town Hom; -. • • " enced, 12X1 door, . 58R 3be, 2 aty, "" "Fran~l•can ' model Ou6et.convenllntcondo ~t. ldMJ loca-eve1. 2000·2100 6 8000 1.t. ternrm•/fp,dlr*lig--. 1~•: condo. Tllr .. 19ecfou• Deluxe lntld• & out. 2 tlon on thlll e1naM etory ml.Ill I YR Chuck 8pjler 931"1211 • ber. 3 '* J':· Gar· u• bedloome. Two llled pa. bdrm, 2 beth, flteplace, unit. Plt11ty o) guHt NWPT HOTS t389,500 diner Incl. o pet•.
•MK tloe and r: barbecUe. lrHh comp .. electrlc parking for vltltlng ,.. land/owner 842.e200 t 1300I"'° lie. M4-4221 :~ Showa II • • model. kitchen, 2 car garage, friend•. Tran1farred -•-=--------
111 trade Lake Arro-1218,000. cuetom wattcov•r=, own• r mu• t ••ti I ~
wtlMd home°' lot tn the lllLllllT dnlpee a~. , 759-1501or752-7373. By owner, l4110,000.1i;i;:.=:..::.-..ua
community of Hamlltalr ••y I lllll ooo •HAW 11E'DfctEE Old« duplex priced at•· for Newpor t Beach -.......... .__ ~ lot value. 840-7990 or
!J•• 1-home ___ . _11_4n_5_2._1a ... 1_ IDLn 111-llOO 111-MM u-.pe RealEltate 65M221
.HOO
Uot
;!·;. m1111..-.uw _ _ ..... ....,...,,, .. _ l•iiiiiiiiuiiiimiiiii.niiiiiiiiiiiil n-.-.,,
!~~ Need 5 bdrm hom•? .. -..,.,_ r=n: ~~~ With aaaumabte loane? ~In San aam.nt-BHt OCH rt view In L::,,A,;l;I. Beeuttfully cllooreted--1 --,-1-LL---•• -.-1-~
i:w LocMI no morel Huge lot ., 3 blks from pier, 3 Br 2 OrW10I CouNy, cwtom lewl unit. 2 br. 2 bl with ....
;"""' on wl-de-tac, Ideal for Ba, eundeck. Jutt re-new a.dtOrd. 36,000 eq large teft'eol, vtw. boat growing famlly or ln-Uiw duced to 11u,ooo. ft, 5 er. t736,000. w.. llU IMll YllW lllp evell. Pool. Wiik to UEIT
quertlt9. 11u,too Cell esi.7310, 114• a.1141 , Mme.tat ... 651-1234 Udo Li.Tii::On·ooo. ,..---,,...-....,..---~--· Rancho San Joequln end HARBOR VIEW HILLS unit, hlghly upgr•ded . ._ ... '
\ ( : ·I l I tl /:.If
. . " ·. ··.··. TIUDI T 10.\, \l. -....-RL\LT\
30 atepe to Bay. ai.nn-
lng older CdM r•d•ice. 1--..=:::;...;:;.;:=:;_.....;::~1
• bdrm spnt ,.,,.. wtth •-m•n• pat11al view of hatbO<. -ldHI for enter .. lnlng. Riiil1D fl 1525,000. v-v prtyate atreet. Bo. •-••a•n Uiguna. a.ut.lfl.ll 2.-v.
---3 8dtm. ~· ~u t---•-1_1-_1_1_1_f__ n-.11 Outatandlng fl· """ --• 11 nanclng -12% w/10%
101; •-Ill down. Bank own•d. ""' Beautlful Mete Verde Prtced to .it feat. Cell :::~ .,.._ ar.t family tlofne Marla Bercovltz . In move-In con<tltton. 844-1020
tllt.' -6411•
·Ullft
T..wutty ~ In• European flavor. Hae :r:...:::i.-1:: fOr
Lm11ULDTA11 ••...a KMp quiet •bout thl1
M•H Verd• fixer In pnme ..... 3 Bdtm 2 ea.
bit-In kltctien, flreptece.
acrub & •ave. Only
1138,860. 751-3191
•
QEO RQE ELKINS CO
"**"" 4... 2Ba, tam with Otlk plar*ed floors 111-1•
rm, t>eeuttful lg yd on end c:uetom n~ 21~~~~~~~~~1 approx ~ acre, lighted Bdnn, dll't:wlttl _.,....
B*lmlmon oourt, 2 pe-
ttoe ·~ nre pit. Owner ra:.133· ...,. By eppt. ........ ...... .. ..... A PETE
BARRE Tl
REALT Y from ttlle blMlttf\ll .,,,..
etory 4 BA. 3 be.. tormal ~~!!!!~~~ dlfq nn home. a.dud-:;;,;;
•d .P•tlo wJ=: pool .. prof. ywo. a PJtvate bMdlle
& cloH to •choolt & ftlCIWlrlo. .... 000 tnol .
land. Donna GOd•hall, ••••••
/JD."11Gfl
GAILEY /,.
A55U(1AflS
1111111
PlenD~t.4
-.... --~---'~ -
.... 1to4.,..._ ........
.-Otot1190
Auh• u ..... 1hM ~·1•t
COLDWCLL
BAN~C?R LJ
I l\\tht:.... f' "'"" j-'Ml• Hiii')
,\ul•• w ... 1tttd --•J1t ~.•'f't~ .... , K;.... '-•.!:\ • "''"1 I u,.,..... ...).jtll tn•k"' ,._,,..,
',,,,, •1J1t
\111t•jl ...... ' .......... , ~,~,
AUTOS IMPORTED
\Ir, t{ .... .,., HIH'\
\~h
1\l~Hll
11\I\\ ,.il,••h
l\11'>\IH
1 )I I ~,..,,,11
.. , ..... 1
~ ••• 1 ..........
''"'" '""'''" J.•n.,.,.,
t..,11ttl••1it\I01
1
1-f•f .. , •• t .. ~v
""'A' "'·•'•lfll Mt•n•"k"' 1' ,,,
Mu11Uh1"'9'\1 Mt,
llt•·•
j• .. nt.'f• ·~ .... ~ ....... .,.,
111-..11 '°""' ~'"""'' Kii\,.,
l!l..lh
l'u!W\I
Tu~•K.t
rnwm .... \'n4'it••...-n
\'utn•
M/ol
C~FOlt ·~ '9tOPUTlllt
Wm. Co~. Jlkr,
l&Ymn ....
One of Baycrelt'• best locaUona,
cul-de-aac, lra yard, Iott of
privacy. Thia wonderful 4 BR
home la in move-In cond.ltkm &
ready '° go. PriQki '° .U!
l l ,
11
I I
I
I
1 '
I
---· ~.-··...-----.. -----
Ft ~range Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedn .. day, May 25, 1983
I
THE
J»GICAL
CHOICE FOR ~ CARl!l!R ~IN ,
RESTAURANT
MANAGl!Ml!NT
Burger King It helping hard
wonting. amblttoua managwa like
Key BogMll• In an.tr ~t
()6 .... by providing··~~
going tntlnlnQ and ttle full-419ctg.c!
cr\9Utnget Of runnll'IQ a rnllllon
dollar bWl6tw1a.
HOIOSCOPf
v BY SIDNEY OMARA
I
J. r
I I
• I
Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Wednaaday, May 26, 1983
AC ROSS 51 Cloltkt s.. Ptedoet
1 Alt8n leader 68 St. Lo MUOn
6 Ukewtte eo Moon <Mlty:
8 Twtl1 fabric V.,.
1'4 PMI P.M. 81 Mutlc
15Ruler ~: isawy 2wda.
17 Ae9ot1 63 Stave of old
11 Statement• M tnttux piece
20 -epumante 65 Clcatrtx
21 However 86 Robert -
22 Vent 67 GMt pana
23 lnventoiy 68 Morays
25 Trtals 69 Loee water
27 P.epet unit
29 Female ruff DOWN
30 Final notice
34 Capuchin
monkey
3fl Wleeonsln
city
38 ArmadlAo
39 N.Amet.
battle site:
3wds.
42 Schlama
43 Oteate
-«Suffix
1 Indian coins
2 Visitor
3 Chroniclers •Garb
S Linger
6 Poaaesslon
7 o.gree:
3wda.
&lntlme
9 Paul's helper
10 "Step -
-I" '45 GYJ*Jm type
46Aodeoon: 11 Alcohol:
Abbr.
47 Kismet
49 Foundatk>n
Suffix
12 Unaspirate
13 Long ago
PuppliM. ... bf9ed. 2 111••··· 1 ........ .
I.) .... 171S ell 5PM .
.. Adotatlla kmsne. • -·
Dolll9, twn. an.cttol ..... fOOcl .,_...., ...... ..,f ..,.,... .. 7~
TUISDAY'a
PUZZU SOLVED
19 Ritual
24 lsworthy
26 French
legislature
28 Evil: pref.
30 WW-II agcy.
31 Bimini, e.g.:
2wds.
32 PMala,
up-dated
33 Unferal
34 Nlmble ·
35 To shelter
37 Odists
38 Mlaalle
..
l Tl
'40 Japanese
admiral
41 Garden area
46 Direction
48 Hardship
'49 Soup
50 Pinch
52 Bearcat
53 Be furtive
S.. Sk8*9r
55 Beverage
56 Comfor1
57 Diii herb
59 Sllpa
62 Put to work
B?!!!...iiifti! .. r8 1---~ . , .
U• --------1
·~
fONNHl
(.Hf \'ll(Jlf T
' I •
' . ~
~4b I 20C
'11 AM a ad ,_ Wiid. "bit '111 un et warr, xtn• oond'. I 1fOO.
Nn Paint. OtlO. llttr. ~.-. =1;r'-talOOlobo, '7t '*"zaad..,.,. 8urwoof, lolded. ... .,. 111111. mn .,, • ._,. ..... '73 vw. ~paint. ena. on whit•. r9d ... ,...,,
t11,loo, ~la •.ooe. , .. uea ur .. •Int, • t»uoarn '3380. 4Nn.P.
'11 llMW 200t, • oon&f '71 Mertlad,a 4I08l. Mt-fl700. 7ll-OlllO 'IO lldO 1Wr1C1 10,000 orlo "''· orl 1an e;;; -. .,,_, letw '72 vwt new Pillfit, aoK ml ...-... ....._ 9W""~ ""* ... , Inf. wn ....._. ~ -. on reolt eno. xtnt In & ~-=·~ .... N.OQO.MeMOa~ MtN.11~ 0111. Atklno 11100. a 1an. a.. cw. 111.
... ' tllf ... •WI mft 1314AO too,-· 41'1 W. -· -- -__, I ... 'IO a'"'~ooo 30 000 ml C.M. t4-2111** WI MY 'II 11111 t+I 13tAGO. 14 u.... ...Jt;'*9:ri: oonc1'. • .....
USED OAR8 I. TMKll<8 5 epd, hnrnao, fltllY .. Im 111M HUG. 71 -1141 or Orta ",,l bMU la Aufta
COM_E_ltf °!AA :o" eQ11lpped. 811,HCJ. lunrf, MW paint l Int, 16$.1104 well. t1100 080.
.. ....... t1M2t3 emoaaect. ltlNS .... '10 vw lkll. Wll'f clMn, 646--,,.. crm;o '72 oat111n 110 wagon. at 4'3 W. lay, C.M. 1800 motor. nu .,,_..,•------~~ t1200. JClnt oond. 14$-2113 .....,.._ Urn, 122001090. Q!;al!I pl!
i ~~ I
I ISIJ/lJ I
831-0* -• 19111 ·11 vw Ontl., waoon. W• ,..., a oood _... m .r~· fl:::-flon Of NEW & UHD MS-7t30 • · ' Ql9Wot1•t
'74 VW 412. Excellent
bOdy and tlrM. HMdl 1oma engine work.
81200 or b91t offer.
~1
CONNRL
--:~E•Rou· .. .
'
)4 t; ']!)IJ
1------.....,....,...-..,.. 'H vw Bua .• 1harp1 •71 a.w.tte 4 apd. IOK.
tit' 12260. '76 Buo. mini tilOO tlt!ft.· 7~ or
cond. S2980. Both look I MM1IO
Alll: aw our new iow NII ar-t. ue 1684. .
.. -I •.a. '7"' a.. ..It -"' '11 Qtation Ye, 4 cir, *• •• _. .. -•· w .. •on'-· auto, etereo, alnt. FtnanclnO AYllllable on 11111/fm GWMte, MlcM-14111/bet. 5N ~
8elaotlld 1Ma modml ""'·. Wlff'I dean. '1500. Cal NOW tor dMallll -~ '11 ....._. ClillllD. 4 cir,
~....i ( (1 r, T A 'M ) A
,..~! , .... l'h ,.
I
• ].'ti;~ .,, .. •e"· ;1 f I
Cllll ... 111•1-.m•
.. .__ ..__ ve. OtM, -..o. 1o ""
,._,... ·-tllOO. w -· POP ro:.r:-'n/35°°· .70 HCNA. ,.... ooncL.
--------• Orio owner, • cyl, 25 '64 vw luo. rblt •no. -"""' .. '° .....
good ...... or-t ....... -t1aoo. .ceM1• mu et ••If . t 1111.
541'3M.
441 E. Ccml Hiiiy 'IO F*"'°"l W.-. 8 c:,C. ~ IMl.ti xlnt 14100/be•t. ~ IUlllH -------:;i"',...h-.ilmt----·lii·-•-1, '71yw9UG 11'70 'Tl ......... YI. 4 ... '"'ilii----•-1-tl Uc. 11IOOT __. ......... 01fD -•----'15 TOY. OOAOUA .,-. M1'41f7(" --· llJt' CARVER ~~e:u.~-: ... ......,... .. OOftd, lll.lS-RJtCE Auto W 0308TC ~~H aterH . 6'°~1 QD '(Wlf.PC.INll• '11 FON> LTD 11770 ......... ::"::!:":°: Auto, w, p1.07tYND ·a ...... GT • .-acto-. ....................
'
,-· , llH 4 a a w a ay . c M Of ts•l!Mo.---. or ~-----..------1 146-atS PurottaM lot ••.coo. ·;,::e.r•· llaoll/blll, ...... liaidle Oaya, 714·711·•411 .. fMI, tPOt'9 ~· ----I v e t & W 91 " d a , OL t31Jlrno. 71MM1 1M IW 7,._.1"'817
'1t COf'olla, veicwr lrit, '72 AMC Q,..-nlln, nd4 ._.....,. Oo1Mrt. ""'"" --........ ....-.-.
..
BJ STEVE Ml'rCllBU,; or .. ..., ......
Menben ol the •• Jbertld 1'ay oommunity north ol ~Beech MY~ dlMppolnted with a ataf.* Oouta1 Commiaalon dedaloo\Tlalllday whtctt orders the ~-home Mtahborbood io openJU::bMch to the ~bUc.
Bu\ they ay thelt.t..tde to keep the Clcad community cJOi1Mi
la far from over.
"Jt•1 juat anoth* dlaapPoln\ina chdaion.'' aald Marjone
r..Gaye, an attorney and ....SClent ol thie ~vate ca:nmu.nity.
The oommildon. ~ In Santa sert.ra. ~ 10 to 2 to
reject. a land '--plan -put of Oranae County'• locel coutal ~{QC.'~ 8ay. . •---' . H.c1 the p1an beef\ ,approved. ~ aovernment -1n this
cate, the county -Would have been liven control of futw:e
development in Emerald Bay from the COMtal Commillion.
r But the comm•Mk>n majority aald no pmYislan....had been
~ tn the plan for publJc acceta to the community'• half-moon
(See BA'ITLE, Pqe Al)
Gideon, Pinoechi9 and Mickey Mouse coax Goofy into the "Daring
Journey" ill the newly reb1Jilt Fantasyland that opens Saturday.
\
. ClllT 11111111
By LORENZO BENET or .. .,.., .... ....,
Many of the moviegoen who 1urrounded the Edwardl
Newport Cinema at 7 thia morning bad been in line Jona ft>OU8b
to have wttnelRd the throno leavtna the midnJaht and 3 a.m.
lhowinp of "Retum of the 1ed.l ...
A llrOll around the theater after dawn meant .iepp.n, OYW
lleeptna bql. avoiding lawn chain and FNbees, and U.1eftlnl to
rac:.t.fu.1iJartna rock mUlic.
Except for the darkneH, the 1eene wu the ume late
Tue.day nJaht.
~t pl'eCilely 11:1~ p ,m., the doon swuna open. lettlna in the
firat torrent of Star Wan-crazed fanaUcl to vlew the Jona·
awaited premiere of George Lucu' ''Jedi.'' The crowd, {'l0911..Y in
lta 20., had camJ*I outafde the theater tor houra, even days,
giving the ICl'eelllna the aura of a once-in-a-lifetime rock concert.
They ware jeam and meaken and Jedi butt.om and T-tblrbl
(See 'JEDI' MARATHON, Pqe .U)
Fantasyland enters comput~r age
By JACKIE BYMAN •........• ~ ....
AttAHEIM -Plst. Wanna 1ee
a BhJe, Fairy vaniah rtaht before
your eyes? Wanna paH ttcht
thJ'oa,h • wawfall without
~ we\7 w~ lee an apple
tnmdOnned into deadly po~
~
and a queen turn into a withered
h.af i.tton to Disneyland will be
able to do alhthoae thina1. ~ this week. than1ca to
the woncfen of hololraphy and a
revamp job estimated at $3'
million that bu brouaht
UCI professor
gets Tyler award
89 GLENN SCOT!' °' .. ..._. .......
UC Irvine~ protw
F . Sherwood Ro•land •••
awarded the 1983 TyJet Prile in
ecoJoey and ~ today.,,.. hJI
pJoneertna ~arch aimed lh ~revendn1 tfeple\lon of tbe mu-th'•,~~,,,. ...... ,... Jlow~U will ehar• the
tneen. ae• •fHO,-PoO ... wtcb bQlla Mario ~.... bllra -leave ~tram. UCl .. llit Oetober to
work at \be .Jet Propulaton
Fantuyland into the ~puter
a,e.
"We're exdted aboui lt." sakl
.,,.r\t IPOkmrnan Jmeph Aculn'e· '1t·I tM lln&1e mas\ e~ ~ ever undel'talten at the
Althouah final ~ aren't
in )let, "the C09t ta more than
twice a1 much H the park
oria(nally co.t t.:k in 19~5. and
that WU $17 milUon." he aid,
~ that -million WU the e1t mued U1ure for the
·=~~PqeAJ)
~,... .... .., ..........
"Jedi" fans wait at 6:30 p.m. for
midnight show at Newport Cinema
Supervisors challenge American Airlines access ruli.ns
rulina Monday and 1eek an
emeraency order that effectively
would delay the airline'• planl to
ltart up letvlce.
0 DHplte the dllUict court'•
order. I CIOlltlnue to believe that
the board acted ~bly and
lawfull)' in • brief period
of time '*' whlc to 1tudy the ob¥toul111Cilida at the
·' I I
'----~--
I
Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wednelday, May 26, 1983
BATTEE NOT OVER----;~--• ....__-
.From Paoe A 1
~ ~. wtth rock buttre•ee thAt effectiwly keep the public from &he llmAll ltrand ot bftch.
Dmrald Bay nlkienta have Jona a.rJl\,led th.at the benefit of opehlq the bea~h would be outwelahed b>-the cost of lmln~ It and tM eccell r®te, llfecuards, and~!>°· They
U.O Usue that PIU'kinl 1a nonexistent oo the c.o.t HJchway emaance to the community.
But coutal comm1alion offic.tala ald keepina the comm.::ci doled woWd eet a precedent for about 10 other private
communities 1n o..an,. County.
The commi~1ton mijorlty, lncludin1 two of Gov.
DeukmeJan'• four MW appolntMe, lnaiated on P.-1blic aceeea. '
LeGaye ..id ahe will approach the oounty man effort to see
what 1teps the community 8hould next take to prevent ecc:em.
Ken Winter, chief of community planning for the oounty,
uJd be hu not formulated a recommendation tor county
aaj)lll'Vilon u yet, but aaid there are aeveral alternatives.
''The board can either elect to 800ept the conditions tmpoeed
by the cornm1alion, consider eamethina ln between, or suggeat aome other altern.Uw," he aald. .. One thlftl 1n the community'• favor, both Winter and
LeGeye apee: If Emerald Bay doe9 not build any community
structurea th.at require oommiaaion approval. they do not have to provide 8CClll& to the beach.
I .
And. •YI LeGaye, no new facililiea are planned for the
private enclave.
CAMEO SHORES OPEN? ..
From Page A1
rebuild a sin8}e--level home he purchased recently on Milftird
Drive.
Meek wanta to put In a two-.story structure with more than
9,000 1quare feet of living space, according to documents tned
with the Coaatal Commiaaton.
But Meek ia hftitant to move forward :with his plans beca~
of the aoceas condltiml and the g,owing outrage with his new
neJabbon, explaina Undon Bachelder, Meek's architect.
"It'• a very delicate situation," Bachelder said. "He's of a
mind not to accept the oondition, but then he's stuck with a piece
of property he can't really Ulle." .
The ai-chitect uya his client has a large, g,owing family and
aeeda more room than the hOU8e otters. A public hearing on the m. ia aet for late June, when coutal commissioners next meet.
· Though Cameo Shores l.s not a gated community, the
atafrway to the amall,~ beach la pted. The dty considera the
be9eb private even it can be reached by travendn.I the
ahonline from Corona Mar State BMch.
8-klenta fear that providing public ecoesa through Cameo
Shores will bring tourista. tn.ftic, noi8e and llUer. •-nus ia jult a aleepy little netahborbood here," saya resident
Lew Rimer. "If you open it up. tt11 be a roe-.
''The beech lsn't worth opening to the pubUc anyway," he.
adds. "lt'1 all rocb -you can't even swim there.''
Other residents point out the beach does not have llfeguards
and ~ maintained at community expeme.
Radioactive waste
transport delayed
A state plan to desioate over
which rout.es radioactlve wute
materials will be transported throuah Oranae County bu been
ltalled for at least lix months.
'!be State Att.omey General'•
office must flnt aettle a le1al
• qu .. uon raised dur~& the
coutlovtiay, California ffl&bway
Patrol C!!!l'ftdala uld 1\..sey.
1.-,_,., pubUc heuiqp on
the adoption of four major
freeway routes in Orange County
for shipping waste matter,
mainly from the San Onofre
Nuclear Generating Station, out
of the state raised opposition
from citizens groups and city
oound.ls.
The hearings also raised the
que1tion of whether
environmental atudiee needed to
be aJmplded bef°" the prOl>C*d
routes could be adopted.
A--.....-CST~etllleJ. c ............ ~Center. 1T11
,.,_ F."'9., on~ of :::'J a bell MCI ----et UI. TM ___
-~
. ,
Ollloar9 NlllOlld9d ID a~ dllU'*-ln Woodllrfdg• T11Hdar In wllloll a
........... oallid IO Mt,_ ....,_, -''lrW!a ID d -wftll a 91*-. •• He -gor18 "'*' lhe poloa arrMd.
'
Two teena,en hiked tor threct paramedic• and tn1ported to ~an from~' ~~WC::~be·~~ Mwlon Corn.n:aunlty Ho1pltal u' '$U --'""ll.I alWt he wu found with the jeep the Top of orld community tn Wooda C...Oyon in the Honda
in t.a,Una Beech TueedaY to aet Hills, Adami aaid. He 1a In fair help for a friend who wu condition.
injuredd. in the aQCidtmt. ottJdals_ The accident occurred late
aald. '1'uetc¥Y afternoon when Quam,
L a 8 u n a lJ ea ch po l l c e , the driver, wt th Jeff Lanaaton,
firefighters and ~ County 18, of Cotta Meaa, and Patritk
paramedk:a and llfeguarda were Rolfe1, 18, of Newport Beach,
all involved ln the tense, hour-were headed alor>a Alta Laguna
Iona search for Mlchael Quam, Drive into \he wilderne11 area.
19, of La1una Beach, aaid When the jeep overturned in Lasuna Fitt Chief Ron Ada.ma. . the canyon, Lanpton and Rolfes
Quam was treated by were only alightly lhaktn. but
Quam wu hurt too badly to
Police nab
• suspect 1n
NB slaying
A 25·year-old Newport Beach
man la deed and h1a s1.yeer--Olcl
friend in jail on ·~piclon of
manalaugbter today following an
early morning ahootlng epi8ode
at a Newport aputment complex,
police report.
Reyea Betancourt. a re9ident of
Salt Lake City, Utah, was
arrested at 2 a.m. on suap6don of
Involuntary manalaugbt.er aft.er
he alle1~dly ahot and killed
Tbomaa William Gale, a resident
of the Oakw-<>od Garden
Apartment&.
Gale WM ahot once tn the chest
and died an hour later at
Fountain Valley Com.mumty
Ho1pital trauR)a center,
authcJCiU. laid. ,
'nM! incklmt at tbt ·~ complex, 800 Irvine i\ve.,
reportedly bepn w._, CJUi and
an apartment aecwft)t auud,
Lyle Vernon Bort. tot ln11D an.
-,::,;t.allep Gale ... Ulted
the ,uard, hittina him --.. um. in the ,,..,., and tW tried
to cake the suard'• l\&IL .
The 1uard, oUicen Hid,
repined aontrol of dlll wmJ)OD
and waa pl-.clna Gale unCler
arreet for uaaun aad batier.y
when Betancourt arriwd CID die
IOene.
Betancourt, po1Jce reported,
intervened and tried to ..., the
gun from the eecurtty auatd.
Police u1d the IUD ~ ltrikinc Gale In ~ d)est. • PoUcie ..id Bort, the ea::urity
1uard, llf•• que,Jloned ... a
releaaed pendtna furthef
lnvesdpUon.. ·~··~~··=
mow. Adunt aaid.
So the two you~ bepn the
lone crek out of ihe ~ and back out to Alt.a µ,un. Drive,
where they phoned for help from
a bou8e.
"They tried to _, out Ule ume
way they bad come in," Adams
aald. But what the pair didn't
khow waa If ~Y h*I followed
trails out throU1h the bottom of
the canyon they would have
reached a major highway in
short time, he said.
TYLER ...
From Page A1
regulaUon of use of ,
chlorofluorocarbons in North
America and Europe.
Johnston drew at1endon l9 the
poaibilhy that nltropn oxide
09*ltamination, tueh .. tl\at &cm
supenonic aircraft, al.lo m1aht
t.breaien ~ ozone layer.
Ozone IU makea UI>_ On11 a
•mall part of the l!artb'a
a1masphere, yet it abaoctJI about
09 Percent of the 90lar ultraviolet
radiation which i1 conaidered
destructive to llvlna ~
From Page A1
oounty, American AtrllhH
apokeaman Al Becker aald hl1
eompany "hu every CD\flde'nce"
In its lepl polltion. He added the
judge'• .dechfon was
''unrn.istakabl' deer .••
Becker abc:> aid the Da1lu-
baaed airline 1' movlna · ah~d
with plAna to loauprate eervfce
to Dallaa·Fort Worth and
Chicago on June 9. "We'll pre.a · our ,..,~,. w .. • .. ,. """'P"'1fnf>d to
9erVe the aitpOl't. •• he .md.
The appeal .flnt will 10 to Juqe Hatter and. if Cleftled, on to
the 9th U .8. Circuit Court of
~la, couht)' attorney
Getlb explatnect. l
~
By JODI CADENllM,D· Of" .. ...., ........
Concerned her two children
would leave tcbool poaealng
about u mucp creatJvtty aa a
(?omputer terminal. ,Cathleen
CooJier let ·out last~ to snare a
1freatigious Cahiornia Arte
Council grant for Newport
Elementary School.
Althouih no IChool ln <>nn,e
Count)' had eYer received ~ •
p-ani. Cooper WU IUCCellful. to
the wne of $6,800. At 1 p.m. ni~ all 4~ llliieno in the
•ulde achool will stage an
._. ..................... I
..... IOI Nor9o OMii ....... ,..,_, T'l:e ,.......,... .......... ta ... ...... ,, ............ ..,. ..... ...... Parents 1nake appeal
A re1ldant In Ille UOO 1110011 of Moli .. 11°1 DIM~foloato,.._, .. .... or_._ .... ~.
Costa Mesa
A l-)W40 c:o.ta Ma. lloY II IMad In ~ concllllOft IOCMlrln Ille~ C8f9 ~ o1 ,_..... v~.:=-,: Ho11p11a1
Mid =.!': =:..oer..,.. ..,,:Q:
ovl In front el a \ltlllcM on Santli Ana
A,.._ -Knoll.
to keep school open
A 1tandina·room-only crowd
J)fleked the Newport-Mesa IChool
board meettna Tue.day nllht ln
an effort to CIOl\vlnce trustees not
to cl<>M Andenen Elementary
School 1n Corona del Mar.
Six p1sna now under review
for the ao-called Corona del Mar
aone recommend clo1ure of
~uff Elemen'-1')' School and
five recommend closure of
Andenen Elementary School.
About m parents lM.ns ln the
Harbor View homea near
Andersen 1i1ned a petition
urstn1 the board to keep the
nefahborhood IChool open.
A declllion wUl t. made at the
June 1.C meetlJ\c.
"U you doae Anderaen, our
1pirlt will dl11lpate," Hid
reeldent Suaan Hawley. ••we are
a commwllty whoee aplrlt I.I built
around our elementary IChool."
Projection1 show that if no
achooh are cloeed, enrollment
will drop by 1984 to 79 percent
ca~ty at Andenen, 19 perc;ent
at Eaatbluff, 61 ,percent' at
Harbor View Elementary, 38
percent at Lincoln Intenne<Uate
And 53 petQmt at Corona del Mar
Hiah School. Five of the option& ioecommend
lncludin1 1eventh and el1htb
IJ'iden on the Corona del Mar HicJt School campua. two call fot clolinc Harbor View and one for cloetnc Li.rK'Oln.
Parent. told trµateea it WU
unfair to consider cloein1
ADdenen, whicb baa the hi8hest enrollment c:apeclty ol the five
IChoo1a under aiudy.
I
ambldDua musical prosram called
''Wbae'1 the Matter With Kida
Todey?"'
Vader the d1rect1on of Dl8ne
Doyle. who developed they~
~ Theater for o..i
Mesa'• South eo.,t ~.
the ch11cWn belted out die .....,
during • ~nt ~.,_.'.Ulit~.'
little pnlll. ' ~le. w~ .waa hired M 1be
"artill in ~"at iM iahOol. ~the timid .-.a.s
unsure t.ao!s wbich lflelid lailif
tn ~ when ibe ~ Che
~though tbey watch
teleYlalon, they had no idea what
waa invotved Ill 1el1lng a Aor7 er
actlnl,'' aid Doya.. ''The older
they set the more auppreaed
they are.''
GraduallJ, through
pantomime an concentration
game1, the children began to
open up and t!Xprt!ll t.bemlelvea,
"Moat kld1 aren't goins to
become acton." laid Doyle. "But
It-&1vea them self-confidence.
They learn how to talk to people
and tbe.y find out they have an
Imagination of their own."
West New~rt unit
holds annual meet
~ parkina and the Fourth
of July will be topics of
d..ls:ullion loniaht when the West
Newport BMcli A9:>ckdon boJda
ita annual membership meetiJW.
The 7;30 p.m. aeneral maedQa
-open to all l'elidenta -will be
held at the Newport Shores
Clubhou1e.
Can 1RS··maKe retu~ns less .~a:xin§?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Internal Revenue Service la
conaldertnc tax-almpllflcatlon
plana that would allow mllllona
of people to abandon the camPllcat.ed 1040 form and still
ltiemile IOme major deductlona.
Another IRS project In the
wwb woWd aet acceptable llmita
fw certain deductfon.a that a
taxpayer could claim wtthout
mbltaDUaUan. Alre.dy the law
a1low9 auch a "ate barbel'" for
deduc:tinl atate and local aa.les
tax• Starting next January, the
abort Form 1040A will allow
filen in several teat areaa to
claim a credit for child-care
expemes and an exclualon for
money aet aside ln an Individual
ReUrement ~t.
Those benefit• now a re
avallable only to thoee who UR
the Iona form 1040. Their
Mesa school cited
or patriotism
Costa Mesa'• Carden Chriatian School has been awarded the
pre1t1alou1 Freedom Shrine
Award for lt• patriotic teachlno.
The exhibit on dilplay at the
1chool at 1025 Victoria St.
include• 28 reproduction• of
blatorically famous American
documents. .
abaence from the 1040A and
1040EZ app&rently wu the main
reuon that a m1ll1on more people
filed the Iona form thia year than
lut.
Another change beina tated
would permit 1040A fllera
limited Itemized deductlon1,
eapeclally the bll onea for
interest on a home mo11pp and
property \Dea. ''The· l'llUlt or the9e tetta will
help us determine lf the potent1al
OCC student
chosen for
turf parley
Orange CoHt College
horticulture atudent David
Oatis of Costa Mesa 19 one of
20 students from ·acrou the
nation choeen to partidpate
this week In the Jacob11en
College Student Turf
Seminar ln Racine. Wis.
The seminar 19 conducted
by Jacobeen Textron, one of
the nation's largest producers
of turf equipment.
Oatis, 26, will graduate
from OCC in June. He
already has been accepted at
Cal Poly Pomona.
ciJlldvantaa-Of a .u,htly JonaeJ'
1040A would outw•t1h tlui
advanta1" of havln1 fewer
taxpaW!l'll u. the more camplu
lM0,'1 lRs Comm111ioner ~
L. F.aer told a Senate Finance
aubcommlt• Jut week.
Slmpll&ation of cax fonna and
lnltructloN la • maJcr ao-1 of the
IRS becauae a almJ>ler form
meam ie. wWk tor ms end Jell
chance of error by the taxpayer.
The buic problem la that the
David Oatis
a1ency flnda lt difficult to
explain complicated law• In
11.mpJe wnw. ,,.. ms la c:lalm1na tucce11
with tta latest try at slmi)Uflcation
-Uw llncJe-pep, 10-llne Form
1040EZ for alnal• people that
Wll UMd by 1~ m1Won people
&bJ9 yM.f.
"The lt\Structloh.I for uatnc
:Form 1040EZ aay abtolut.ly
nothlna about whett,er yoµ
lhould u.e Form 1040A «even
Fonn 1040:• David L . Keatlni,
execuUve vice prealdent of the
Natlonal Taxpayere Union,
oampWned to the Senate panel.
41'he new lpluhy and llmplltied araDIUca do make the abort fonm e..fer to wwk wtth,'' he added. ·~But th,y don't do enou1h to
aleJ't 9eople to po11lble tax
refundt ol' mum of reductna
their tax."
For example, critic• note,
puenta who hire a baby litter to care for their children 110 they
can work qualify for a tax credlt
for part of the expeDll!_. but they
have to file the ~ J'orm 1040
to pt lt. Many people, unaware
of the (ftdlt ll they look only at
the llmpler Form 1040EZ, mt.
that tax benefit altopther.
However, Al Brook, who 19 ln
cbarae of Improving IRS forma,
Aid he hat yet to receive a llina1e
complaint from a 1040EZ ttler
who felt cheated by the new
form.
A Robr1S<Jr1s ScJe ·
1 0 0 Y ~ A I S 0 F $.T Y L E
The Orange County Unit of the American Cancer Society
(ACS) la orgintzing a a1ngles leasue that will meet on a
monthly mm for a variety of activttim.
The first mee,tlng will be held tonight from 6 to 8 o'clock
at the Patio Room of the Newport.er, 1107 Jamboree Road,
New)10rt Beach. A no.bolt bar will be available.
. Funds raiaed from activttJea wlli IUppart ACS re.earch,
education and service programs. Information 714-752-8600.
Talent search deadline Friday
Appllcationa are now being accepted foe young people
5-19 interested In entering the Orange County Fair Talent Search and Talent Sprout competitions. ·
Deadline is Friday. Top prize ii $500. Categories include
instrumental, vocal, dance, and other individual or group acts.
For more information call 751-3247.
Eye doctors set Laguna talk
Two eye doctora wlli addrels a general meeting of the
Senior Oti?.ens Club of Laguna Beach June 6, beginning at 1
p.m. at the Veterana MemoNl Community Center.
Dr. Edward Klm and Dr. Ro1er Olwaeslu will talk about
the latest Innovations ln eye care and will aJ\IWer specific
quest.Iona about eye problems. The center ia located at 384
Legion St.
MEMORIAL DAY SALE AND CL------
SIMMONS
MAXIPEDIC '"312"
Twin. each piece
Twin excra long each piece
Full each piece
Queen se1t
King sett
IEAUTYREST SUPERB
Twin.. each piece
Twin extra long each piece
Full each piece
Queen sett
King sett
IEAUTYAEST ELITE
Twin each piece
Twin eJCtra long each piece
Full each p.ece
Queen sett
King sett
BEAUTYREST ANNIVERSARY
Twin each piece
Twin e•tra l0t19 each piece
Full eacn p.ece
Queen sett
King self
SEALY
POSTUREPEDfC ROVALE
Twin each P•ece
Twin e•tra IOng each piece
Full. each piece
Queen sett
King sett
POSTUREPEDIC PREMIER
Twm each piece
Twin extra long each piece
Fun. eacn 1>4ece
Queen sett
King sett
SAVE 200/o·SO°/o
ON ALL OUR PREMIUM QUALITY MATTRESSES
AND WE'LL GIVE YOU IHE BED FRAME AS A BONUS.
5 DAYS ONLY
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL DECEMBER, 1983 •
We have the biggest, the best collection ol premium quality mattresses in Southern C.hfornia. To show off. we're having a
5 day sale on all these mattresses-24 slyles in all. Select Sealy Posturepedfcs, Simmons Beautyrests. Spring Air Ultimas and more We
feature just a few from our collection. And with. your set purchase. the bed frame Is our free gift to you.
Robinson's Sleep Shop,175. To order. call toll·free 1·800·345·8501.
•No payment until December. 1983. on all area rug. carpeting. electrqnics. furniture and
mattress purchases of $200 or more on your Robinson's charge (sub1ect to credit approval)
POSTUREPEDIC SECOND CENTURY
Reg Reg Sale Twin each piece S299 95 S19995 S99 Twin extra long each piece S32995 S259 95 1129 Full each piece $349 95 $299 95 1149 Queen sett S899 95 $699 95 1349 King seit $1 ,199 95 $999 95 1499 SEALY POSTUREPOISE, ULTRA FIRM
Twin. each piece $23995 $319 95 1229.95 Twin. exira tong each p.ece $299 95 $30 95 1254.95 Full each pu~ce S339 95 $379 95 1279.95 Queen selt $799.95 $879 95 $&49.95 King sett ...... ... , ....... $1,099.95
I I
Sale
1231.15
1251.15
1271.15 sen.ts
$899.95
1111
$148
s1•
1111
1541 $1 149 95 1849.95 SPRING AIR PREMIUrtn ULTIMA I.ACK SUPPO R $339 95 S249.95
$374 95 1274.95 ULTIMA I
$419 95 1299.95 Twin. each piece $219 95 $151.15
$949 95 $899.95 Twin. extra long. each piece $249 95 $181.15
$1.29995 S94U5 Gift with purchase Full. each piece $269 95 S20l.15
Queen sett $649 95 1411.15
S209 95 1149.95 King Hit S899 95 .......
$23995 1174.95 ULTIMA II
$269 95 S1H.t5 Twin each p.ece S25995 11•.IS
S619 95 1459.95 Twin, extra long. each piece $289 95 1221.95
$879 95 S85U5 Full. each piece . $30995 S24fM
Queen Hit $749.95 1611.95
King sett $1 .049 95 1711.15
ULTIMA IV $199 95 1149.95 Twin, sett $67990 $229 95 1119.95 TW1n. extra long, sett $739 90 S249 95 1199.95 Full, sett ... $799.90 $59995 1471.95 Queen sett $99995 $799 95 S83U5 ~
King sett . S1 ,191U5
EMPRESS It, SUPER FIRM $23995 Twin, e.cl'I piece $199 95 ''°' $269.95 Twin, extra 19fl0. each piece ... $25995 ••• $28995
S69995 Full, NCh piece .... . " $29995 1161
S959 95 Ouetn sett .• ................ $69905 U1t
King sett $99995 1141 ...
tSold es sets only OuMrl. 2i>C. King 3.opo . .
1.
I
:t
1 ..
2 f
I
j '
I
\
I
United Farm Workers
"v.ow new militance
By Tlte Atsodated Pres•
SAN FRANCISCO -The United Farm Worken,
.naered by l'lOJ'l·unlon con~ t&klnc the joba of iia
membent. hu launched a boycott of Inclenook wines,
union president Ceaar Chavez h.u annou.noed.
' '"the only way th.19 u.nion has been able to be
succeMful W to get the public behlnd U1 and to get a
boyeou,'' Ctlavez said Tue.day u about 60 pickets
marched in front of Heublein Wine lnc. beadquart.en ~.
The R.J. Reynolds subsidiary, which producea
Inclenoo'k, .la one of about a dozen California
compania that have dumped union workers in favor ot non-union labor t"Ontractors. Chava said.
Sambo's outlets soins pizza
LOS ANGELES -Sambo'• Restaurants Inc.,
reorganizing under federal bankruptcy law, will
oonvert 112 of ita Seuona restauranta to Godfather's
Ptu.a ft.nch.llea, a company offidal taya.
Bob Adamowski, executive vk:e president of the
chain, baaed in Carpinteria, said 112 Seasons
restaurants in California, Arliona and Florida will
become Godfather's outlets under a plan approved by
the U .S . Bankruptcy Court In Loa Angeles.
Godfather's is headquartered ln Omaha, Neb.
Newport firm in Europe deal
Newport Ph.annaceuUcals International Inc. has
announced the completion of a ma]or llcen~
agreement with a leading European phannaceu
product.a company ln Copenhagen, Denmark.
Leo Pharmaceutical Products will market
Newport's Immune ayatem 1timulatin1 a1ent,
Iaoprino8ine, in ~k. Finland, tlolland, Iceland,
Ireland, Norway, Sweden and the United J<in&dt:m.
AMERICAN LEADERS METALS