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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-07-06 - Orange Coast PilotSurprlsel Lost ring found ~~~ A $7,fKM> weddinc Ji1'S lolt two weelra 1111> In Irvine hM turned up • m,.e.loully • It .. ~id rtnc-with llx halt~t d1alnonda -Wiii preeented to Irvine police late lMt week by • lawyer from Northern California, who told lnwstipt.on he repreeented m MOnJ'IDO'MI client. The lawyer flew down from hilcirffke In N•pa strictly to return the rinl, tnV.UC.tan Mid. The rtna WM reported mi8linC by a 38-year-old woman who Mid ahe wu dancina at a loc.l night apot when she auddenly diacovered her THI DRANGI COAST WE~NESOAY, JULY 8, 1983 Social services funds allocated By ROBERT BARKER on..-... ........ Huntington Beach officials ap- proved an $80,000 allocation in federal money Tuesday night to help agencies which lend a hand to down-and-out local residents. The aing1e ~t amount - $30,000 -went to the Orange County Legal Aid Society, a ·non-profit corporation that provided free legal services to indigent residents. The organiza- tion served 1,384 residents last year -57 percent of whom were Hunti.n${ton Beach residents. went to the Huntington Beach Community Clinic and to Amparo. The clinic provided medical and paychological care to 18,352 people last year. Over half were residents of the city. Amparo, located in Garden Grove, is a counseling facility for runaway youths between the ages of 11and17. The Salvation Army, which provided lodging, transportation and food to 10,090 people laat year, received $7,000. · West Orange County Hotline, which offers crisis intervention by telephone from its base in Los Alamitos. received $3,000. Drive-in art store? Greg Pautsch thinks of himself as a surfboard artist. Page B ~. Girl, 11, proud owner of .$55, 000 Rolls-Royce , MlAMI(AP)-;-An 11-year-old&irlbHtoutabout60,000other entrants to win a drawma for a $55,000 Rolla-Royce, and ahe aaya the aleek automobile probably will help put her throuch coIJeae. Kimberly Shuler of Monroe, N.Y., WM viaftin« her Fandparenta In April when ahe put her name In the pot at the PlllCe For Steak l"e9taurant. She had to ~alt until Tueeday to hev the rea.alt of the drawina Monday, becau.e the family wu "out watching firewocb," M1CI her grandfather, Dr. Harry Weiaber1tt of Miami. ''She didn't want to believe It," he· uld. Kbnberly aa1d the isn't ILi.re what to do with the luxury automobile, a Rolla Silver Cloud ID .even years older than ahe la, but the dld uy it WM better than a Chevrolet. "lt'a nkler and btgger and it ooeta a lot more," ahe Mid. . . coum 1011111 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Mother of slain hoy sues By ne Asaoclaae.I Presa The mother of a 5-year-ald boy shot to death as he pointed a ioy gun at a policeman has aued the city of Stanton and Officer Anthony Sperl for $19 million. Newport Be.ch attorney Rich- ard Farnell blamed the ahootinc of Patr;ck Andrew Muon on Sperl'• lnexperienoe and the city'• fallure to train and supervUle lta officen properly. The WI'OllMf ul-<leath aa.it, filed Tueeday in Orange County Su- perior Court on behalf of Patricia Ridge, 29, 9eela $19 million in punitive dama&ea and unapecified compensatory damaaea· The second highest amount of $20,000 went to the Christian Temporary Housing Facility, which provides temporary hous- ing and food to homeless and joblesa penons who are attempt- ing to get back on their feet. Funds a.180 will go toward the purchase of a ahelter in Huntington Beach. The facility In Orange serves HuntinRton Beach residents. Allocations of $10,000 each The City Council followed the recommendations of the city'a Human Resources Board in al- locating the money received in the 1983-84 federal Housing and Community Development Block Grant program, despite the proteets of oouncil member Ron Pattinaon. No, this isn't how a frustrated motorist solved the parking problem in Costa Mesa. Reginald Hawley, 63, or Newport Beach hit the accelerator instead of the brake today in front of Aaron Brothers Art Mart, 1 714 Newport Blvd., and this was the result. The Ma.reh 3 ahootinc prompted an investigation by the Orange County grand jury, but no charaes were filed. "She ia trying to put her life back tosether, but it'• been real difficult," Farnell said of Ridae. (See MOTHER. Pace A!) Barbara Long Crime fi~hter honored. NB woman fights crime, wins award By STEVE MARBLE oni.a.., ......... Three years ago, Barbara Long was one of thOR Newport 'Beach residents who refused to believe the affluent beach city had a crime problem. Now, after helping police and neighbors battle what was a thriving burglary network in her Dover Shores neighborhood, she hu been singled out as one of the atate's top volunteer crime fighters. Police in Newport, who nomi- nated her for the California Peace otf~ra A.MOC'iation public service award, claim ahe has helped reduce crime by 13 percent in her neighborhood. (See AWARD, Pa1e A%) Mesa Freeway-: A high price for progress? AllGNMlHTS LCQt.,.0 • •01ont•••• 1tt1•••1tH\ •OO Cl ......... u_ ... ,. ..... , ...,, ........ , , • ' .O•••O--f• •t\\ A.lt••1tAflff "'" • • Map a hows three alternate routes for Cotta Mesa Freeway. Broken dashes indicate "preferred" easterly alignment. By JODI CADENHEAD on....., ........ City Council, Newport Beach City Council, Orange County Trana- When Jim Tice opened his , portatJon c.onunt.ion, the c.c.ta service station on Del Mar Avenue Mesa Chamber of Commerce and and Newport Boulevard 21 years local buainem interesta. ago, he waa told that the Such aupport has left aome long-awaited Costa Mesa Free-eaataide residents feeling that the way would come rolling through dedaion to build the freeway in hia property in five years. their neighborhood has already So when a reporter pulled up at been made. hia Church Avenue rental office "It IOWKla like this ia the one last week and asked how he felt that'a most preferred,'' said Patti about the pomibillty the st.ate Smith, owner of Child'• Place day might finally approve a aix-lane careandachoolat1941Church. "li freeway that would veer 200 feet th1a ia the route that will displace east of Newport Boulevard be-the least people, then I gue. It tween Bay and 20th streets, he should go in. I won't carry a just amlled. banner." "l feel it will probably never be Robert Caaain, project manager built," said Tice. "It would put me for the propoeed freeway known out of business and hurt me. But I as Route 55, said an alignment will can't do anythina about it." be choeen bued on traffic conca- Acrom the street, Harold and tion remedies, cost and the oom- Mary Elmer said they would be · munity'a desire. unhappy about giving up the "Their recommendation will tree-lined home they built 32 years ago and In which they nli8ed carry mott weight," aa1d Cuain, referring to civic and bumne9I support of the eMtttly route, "in terms \hat they all meem to be tosether on it. But no dedaion hu been made.'' 'The $93 million easterly route would displace 40 bustnemes and 85 homes, mostly on Church between Bay and 20th ltree1s. said Cua.in. U funding la approved. con- struction of the freeway could begin as aoon aa 1988 and be completed by 1992, ea.a.In said. Acquisition of properties could• begjn by 1985. The state Tranaportation Com- mim:ion, meeting in Secramento laat week. approved spendina $40.1 million to comtruct a 9eCtioo of Route 55 between Bri9to1 and Bay atreeta, where a weed-choked ditch now lid. ~AY,PqeA•) two daughters, now grown. "I don't care where it goes. It'a going to hurt IOmeOne, •• said Harold Elmer. "We don't want to give up our place. But the way~ see it, we don't have any choice." C~nstructlon schedule The so-alled easterly down- town bypua route ia one of eight alternatives c:Uacu..ed in a lengthy draft environmental statement releued by the Califomla Depart- ment of Transportation in April. A final deciaion on the route la not expected until July 1984 at the earliest, according to Caltrana officiala. Neverthelema, the easterly route hu received support from a number of civic and ~ gro\.apa. includin« the Costa M811 lllSIDE--------------------- Colorado flooding tops out Floodwalen along the bloated Colorado River will riae no higher, barring unexpected aumme r raia or a m i11ake, I ederal off ieiab 1ay, bu1 moaquiloe aad related heallh proble .... ha•e yet to hit their peak. Page E3. • i -' ' Angele Roel Carew and Freel Lynn wlU be•• Ille 1tard .. U...pforthe Amerieaa 1.-peat to- nlall•'• All-Starr.•• la ChJfflO• P ... c . Loa An1eln balladeer "Red RI.er,. Dan MeEnery ba1 paid tribute lo uaroaaul Sally Ride in hit latnt effort. Page AS. Let f....ta fnlaa and •et" etablee •ee•ler •tase ln uauaual MllllDer .. tadl aad delterta. See reelpee, bectnDlftl OB .... 01 • . .... . . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/W.c:lneeday, July 6, 1883 AWARD .•• From PageA1 Her work beglna and endl with the faml11'r Nelahborhood Wa\Ch program. launched in 19'0 in Newport Beach. "It was all a real eye..opener to me," she admits. "Burglars were ripping off hOWle8 right~ left and I'd been thin.king the city didn't have a crime problem. "I became concerned becau.e I want co live in a safe neigh- borhood. It's that simple," Long said. Police calculate Long has put in at leaat 1,200 hours with the Neighborhood Watch Program and has organized 150 neigh- borhood meetings, setting up a network of crime fighters with a representative on virtually every block on the west side of the Upper Newport Bay. By conservative ectimates, police say she has been in touch with at least 2,500 dty residents and has such a feel for the community's mood that police sometimes go to her for advice. "Initially. there's usually aome resistance," she says of the crime fighting program. "Some people think it sounds like a vigilante thing and others are busy and feel it's just one more thing to take up your time." From paper to twisted steel A truck carrying 15,000 pounds or bulk paper over- turned Tuesday afleT- noon on the transition road from the south- bound Orange Free- way to the westbound Garden Grove Free- way, blockii:ig traffic for about an hour and a half. The driver of the truck was ap- parently traveling at an unsale speed when he struck a steel guard rail and flipped over, blocking the road, authorities said. A seve.n-year resident of New- port and the wife of an emergency room physician, Long says unlik.e many of the Neighborhood Watch advocates, she has not been a crime victim. "But I was afraid I would be - that my home would be hit by burglars or aomething. My grand- father was a policeman 90 I had an idea what the Nks were," she said. Bonin accomplice wants to change his story The crime-fighting methods she and others in the program extol are simple enough: lock up, keep an eye out for strangen and learn to call the police. She says police, who typically attend neighborhood meetings. have been supportive of the program. By Tile Associated Presa A former co-defendant of con- victed Freeway Killer William Bonin has told an Orange County Superior Court judae he tied in previous teltimony and now wanes to retract his guilty plea. James Michael Munro, 22, of Port Huron, Mich., who pleaded guilty to avoid a death aent.ence in a Los Angeles murder for which Bonin is to be executed. said Tuesday he had lied about murdering St.even Wells on June 2, 1980. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Laeadjourned for the day, but the trial was to resume today. 1ri January 1982, Bonin, 36, was aentenced to death for the homoeexual torture-murders of Wells and nine other youths in Los Angeles County. Now he's on trial for four llimilar murders in Or- ange County. .QI> April "lJ, 1981, Munro MOTHER OF SLAIN BOY FILES SUIT ... From PageA1 who is now living in Chicago. Her 901'\ was shot in the bedroom of their apartment. He was home alone, watching tele- vision while his mother was at work. Sperl, 24, was dispatched to search the darkened apartment after a neighbor told police she hadn 'tRen the mother and 90fl for two weeks. Sperl, who had been with the department 15 months. said he entered with a pus key from the manager. heard a sound inside and Huntington Beach A 1974 ,_, 0-ollll U1¥pllCln.op ltuCll __,al 1 1,IOO -,__, llolen T-91 lrom Ille -al ,_ COMI ~ ond 9'0<*11urWC StreM- A........,_, ---,_,., .._., -.. 1172 .......... -..,.. .......... tM 700 blodt of Mlllend o.M. n. --_ .. aoo _.,__, 1111.ooo-r--11111 .. 111 h _...., al I -on II-. ee()O bioC* of Alo -°""" £nlry ~ _11\ede .. ougll • ---cloor Two-lnlhlll'"'•-....-0 ... -U-S. -0... In ............... llMdl II ST71 kicked open the door of the boy's room, which had been tied ahut. Sperl told investigators he fired a single shot when he saw a figure pointing a gun at him. The gun turned out to be a toy. Farnell claims the shooting was the culmination of several "mia- taken judgments" by Sperl and his superiors. Stanton rejected Ridge's claim for $20 milliOP in damaaea on May 10. The suit, claim.ing Sperl "fail- ed to diachar~ his duties as a W-A,. ._ -wtl-lirok., by .......... "'°"""9 __ U.helld9Y-end n .. .,..... __ .ci 11 uoo Irvine Polee M)I I ,,,.,, ~ldlng .. I F-~~ .. -"*' .. 1 fl'OM en ntM llqllOt --Moneley by ~ ........ C 0 D. end.._.,~""" Ir.,,.,....,.....-. ~~tr. pea ... ---or/If two bo4M of -n.. ~ P<lled ... -Irie* ebolA ·-"90 Ill• -..... A "°"*' louncl hlng llO<ie In e ltlecil In 1 lleld ,_ e..a P""""9y -lek., by a POiice olllolt to I ---ofllce In C-1 ,.__ Laguna Beach ......... enc1.-o-...i al 1 lotllallUOO ... 11-.T~lrom1-lnthe200blodt alG<-St police officer.'' also alleges he did not have probable cauae io enter the apartment. Farnell said Sperl's supervi8on were "deliberately indifferent" to Sperl'a reputation and hia alleged "proclivity toward aggressive and violent acta," Sperl, ton of fonner Los An· geles County Ma.nhal Timothy Sperl, has been unavailable for comment ainte the lhooting and reportedly under psychiatric care. Newport Beach An ...... _.. ....-:'1 C*lled ~In dM>ege lo • -In lhe lobby of 1111 po4lce ~· by ~ • llf'lll llol9 In. --· Costa Mesa A:i..yMMlk!C-_...., _ _..,on 9'iepidon a1 ..,.,,..., ,..,. -ir ru.M/ 1n ----.. -........... 200 .... al '"" "'-""'-' 0.-.. -~ • ,. _,,,,--. pollcl - . .. Hazy days continue Coastal Extended ,... _ _..,. ___ _ ....... _ .. _......_ .. __ ...,.ln ... lo._ .. .... -.-.. to ...... -"" lnlend ..... ~-MIO• Temperatures 11"9 ., . .,. t1 10 .., ... 14 II IO .. •• IO 14 " 1t .. . .... a .,. 11 II •• . ,. t1 11 ~ = .. .. .. " .. . ri ' : I o-ici • 12 ColuMllla.8.C. M n ec.-11 a ~WOtlll • • = 11 IO • 62 o..-'° II 0.0!9 71 M ~ .. " 8'9o .. 12 FlllW*1 12 12 =·· • 40 ti .. ~, ... .. 50 ......... " n ....,_. • *4 _..,.., 14 72 ...,._, ti 71 ...... O'. IO II ~.-,, .,, ~-12 71 "'-a 12 ~OllJ 12 ., Liii.,... 110 77 l.1191"-Clll • 11 ~ " 17 .. .. ~ • • -...... • ,, -., .. -11 .. ........ hwl 71 M .....,_ .. t i .... o.-.. r, 7it .... y .... 74 ........ • '° ...,._,..,.. N 41 ~°'Y • 14 OllllM a .. a.... t2 71 ""' .. , ... 12 71 Tides TOOAY .....,..., 11 11p.m to ..._.. t41pm U ~T ........ ~ 1 IHa.111 l.t 1!01 11.111. t. 1 ........ ''°P."" u .............. ''°' ""'~""' ~. ,, .. a.111 Md -111111 .. "''"' .....,._.._,, ... .20 ....... - ~·iot a 111 .,,. .. ..,_,. .. ,"' l 1 ,.._,.,, ~,. l'Of'aN.ON. ~ ~ ~ It.lo.ill 11 ...... T.,.,,.,. --~ .... __ 16 .. • 14 .. 41 " .. • 72 IO II .. . 11 • ~ u ': c • 71 .. ., lllf REPlll .. 14 • • 1 • 1·1 ·~ ,., ... ......_ ........ pleaded guilty in Los Angeles to perticlpating i.n WeU.' death after Los Angeles and Orange County proeecuton agreed not to eeek the death penalty. Munro had testified in Los Angeles that he held Wella' feet while Bonin strangled the 18-year-old Downey resident with his own T-shirt. But Tueeday, Munro llllid "In LA, ldidUe." Under examination by Deputy Alan Burns FV council OKs law on escort firms There are no escort bureau.a in Fountain Valley. But if any of them try to move in. the clty will be ready for them. Tueiday night. the City Council gave final approval to a new law regulating e900rt bureaus and introductory lef'Vicel. Justin cue. City Attorney Alan Bums, who laat month recommended the new law as a preventive measure. said other Orange County cities have adopted similar regulations clamping down on "adult" buai- neaes. When they are forced out of 90me ciUes. these busine91e9 tend to relocate to other cities where they will not be regulated, he said. The Fountain Valley ordinance will require the operators of eecort ter'Vicea to obtain a pennit from the city before opening their doon. Costa Mesa keeps its doughnut deal The Costa Mesa City Council voted Tueeday not to dunk a monthly coffee-and-doughnut klatch for lel\lon that had been cut out earlier from the city's budget. District Attorney Bryan Brown, Munro said, "I pled guilty to second-degree (murder) with no reaaon at all." Munro claimed he entered the plea becauae he feared for his life. He aaid his attorney had told him he would be placed among the general population of the Los Angeles County Jail if he didn't plead guilty. But during a jailhouse inter- view la.It week. Munro said he planned to withdraw his guilty plea becaUte the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office had not sent him to a federal penitentiary as he said he was promised. Munro al.lo said during the interview that he believes he is innocent because Bonin forced him to participate. During the interview, Munro said: "I decided when I was in prison. I was going to come back and totally ruin the case." HB woman dies in Sequoia park A 40-year-old Huntington Beach woman has drowned in icy and turbulP.Dl waters in Central ·California's Sequoia National Park . Dead is Janeen La Breck, whd°' slipped into a 25-foot-deep pool last Sunday while her children looked on. Her 20-year-old son, Mark Winthrop, had to be rescued from the waters made treacherous by record snow melt when he tried to save his mother. Her body was recovered from the bottom of the pool about five hours later by Tulare County sheriffs' divers. Abo present at the time of the drowning were daughters Darcy Winthrop, 14, and Bridget La Breck, 13. Mrs. La Breck's husband, Ernest. llllid Tuesday he wants to tell others about the water haz- anls of the park 10 they won't meet the same tragic fate. "li it would save just one penon, then something about this would be worthwhile," he said. La Breck. owner of We c.are Carpet Cleaners of Costa Mesa, said his wife and three children had gone for a walk after ahe picked flowers earlier in the day. He had remained at camp. It waa not known exactly how Mn. La Breck slipped into the rushing, turbulent waters . "One of the last things she aaid when she got to the water where she died was, 'I wish Ernie was here. it'• 10 beautiful.' " "The last thing I said to her was. 'I love you. I'll a1ee you when you get back to camp.• "Thank God we didn't ha* any harsh words." Funeral services are incomplete but are pending for Friday at Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. Irvine meetings set on tax vote, hospital Two key public meetings take place this week in Irvine, alarting tonight with a school board hear- ing to di8cusl a ballot measure seeking a special tax. The Irvine Unified School Dla- trict'a Boe.rd of F.d~tion meets at 7:30 p.m. at Lakeside Middle School, 3 Letnongrass, to consider asking voters to approve in No- vember a $50-per-pareel tax to raiae up to $1.4 million annually over three yews. Members of the public will have a chance to speak. Then on Thunday at 3 p.m ., a hearing continues in which two groups 1eekfnl to build a hospital in the city will vie for an endone- ment from the Revtewc.ommit1ee of the ~ O>unty HMlth P1annlng Counctl. The oornmJttee met over two nights late last month but post- poned ita point-by-point examin- ation of the applications until it had more time. The Review Committee al80 will meet at Lakeside MJddle School in a meeting which should last aeveral houn. No more public testimony is expected to be taken. Proponents from People for an Irvine Community Hospital are applying to build the Irvine Medi- cal Cent.er on land north of the San Diego Freeway at Sand Canyon Avenue . The HealthWest Foundation ia aeeking to build HealthOty at UC Irvine, just oU MacArthur Boulevard. That propoeal is at.ronal y t.cked by t!CI Offic:iala. Anaheim rejects gem fraud claim. · The Anaheim Clty Council has rejected a '3.7-mllllon clalm by the puenta of a Colt.a Mesa pm ~who haa been linked to an alleged $1.S bWJon intemaUona.I I'!"\ fraud. In their cla1m filed June l 0, Dtvtd and Rme Tan of Loa Anplee MJd Anaheim polke ln- Vt!ltlpton Joe Kama and W. W, "Bill" Lane unlawfully le'iled penonal bualnw ~ Ind jey.-elry from t.lwir Colt.a M.a mwdc l10re where their eon, RJchatd, WM ftllployed M man• .,er, and from thftr home, where their '°" WM Uvtnc. '"llM! polio. h.ed a IMl'Ch Wal'- rant for drup and stolen property • and nothing elae," .. td Howard Stunnan, the Taxe1' attorney. In March, Anaheim police raJded the Taxeti' bUalne. and home ln an lnvaatiptlon of al-1'1J'!d 1toJen property and drug deellnp lnvolvine ~ Taxe. They •Ued teVen pounda of halhllh, plus bulk and cut gertwtonel. . Police a.Id they allO took buai- nell recorda ahowlnc m1Wont of doUan in property had been purchMed ullnc 18Ntonee with certified appraila)a. PoUce in May called thelr ftnd "the larplt fnud CMI 1n c..uf omia hlltory. '' 'nwy aid the appnmab on the ,~ were tnflat.ed. Since • • . - Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 6, 1983 A8, NATION Governor asks new talks on budget , . Supermarket fire bombing claims third victim, girl, 4 By Ute A11oclated Pre11 TAMPA, Fla. -A 4-year-old girl whose mother w-.s killed in a supermarket firebombing has died of her bums, bringing the death toll from the attack to three. Fifteen people were injured. The child, Jennifer Vance, died shortly before noon Tuesday at Tampa General Hospital, said hospital spokeswoman Debbie Lozier. Her mother, Martha A. Vance, 23, and Leigh A. Carter, 20, were killed in Saturday's explosion and fire. Six people remained hospitalized Tuesday, four in critical condition and two stable. Meanwhile, prosecutors said a grand jury will meet July 13 to decide whether to return murder and arson charges against John William Ferry Jr .. accused of setting the (ire with gasoline. Two Honolulu wells contaminated HONOLULU -Two wells servink more than 50,000 people in several suburban areas of Honolulu were shut down after traces of pesticide were found during routine tests, officials said. Other wells were found to be free of the pesticide and have sufficient capacity to provide water for the area, said K.azu Hayashida, manager and chief engineer of the Honolulu Board of Water Supply. Air Canada victims asphyxiated BURLINGTON, Ky. -All 23 people who died in a fire aboard an Air Canada airplane last month had high levels of carbon-monoxide gas in their blood,~ County Coroner Donald W. Stith said Tuesday. "Th}s just backs tap the ~artier ruling that they all died of smoke inhalation," Stith said. STATE · Poll shows Cranston favored SAN FRANCISCO -Sen. Alan Cranston has overtaken former Vice President Walter Mondale as the favored choice among California Democr ats in the 1984 presidential race, a new California Poll shows. Cranston was favored by 36 percent of the 768 Democratic voters who were polled by The Field lnsutute, directed by pollster Mervin 0 . Field. Mondale, who had been the preference among Democrats in California. was favored by 27 percent of those polled. Alabama closes S an Diego campus SAN DI.EGO -AJabama A&M University has clO&ed its San Diego campus because academic deficiencies here threatened the accreditation of the overall institution, university attorney Roscoe Roberts says. An evaluation team from the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges made a spring visit to the San Diego campus and found that problems of a year earlier had not been solved, and so the campus was closed. Roberts said Tuesday. SS Catalina r emains anchored LOS ANGELES-The SS Catalina. known in its glory days of channel crossings as the G reat White Steamer, will remain anchored this summer despite plans for reactivation. its manager says.Apre-hearingconferenceon theship'sapplication for a Public Utilities Comm.is&on permit won't be held until Aug. 10, and it will be at least another month before the hearing takes place. An environmental assessment has been ordered, and a final ruling may not be mued unul late this year. Blaze ch ars Cowles Mountain area SACRAMENTO (AP)-Gov. George Deukmej&an b.u lnvtted Democrttic lawmaken to rt!llWDlf neaotia\lona on the It.ate'• budpl ~. but lt'• unclear whether Democrau will return to the bargalnln8 table without tele- vision cansu. In back-to-back televised speeches Tunday, the Republican governor tnvited Democratic leaders to reconvene suspended penonal meetinp today, and Democrats replied with a counter-proposal to open the negotiations to the public, press and television. The state has .been without authority to pay Its bills since last Friday. when the 1983-84 fiaca1 year .ata.rted with Democrats and Republicans -deadlocked over an unbalanced $27 .2 billion budget proposal. Democrats want to restrict Deu- krnejian's vetoes and link the budget to tax increa.'le'S to protect programs. while Republicans want to send the budget to Deukmejian with no strings at- tached so he can use his item-by-item veto authority to trim the $1.2 billion needed to bring it in balance. The stalemate has left the state without authority to pay em- ployee salaries, local government aid, welfare benefits and other state bills. But since checks were issued last Thursday to 220,000 state employees an~ l. 7 million welfare recipients, the only persons im- mediately affected are 390,000 peraons who would otherwise have received unemployment or disability checks since last Friday. If the budget deadlock con- tinues, the next groups affected would be nursing homes and hospitals, which are due to rett.ive $128 million in Medi-Cal pay- ments Thursday, and cities and counties, which expect $423 mlllion in at.ate aupport aubve~ tiona on Friday. Next week, another round of 1 J mUllon welfare checka are fu jeopardy. Tobleaa and dlaabled workers received "Dear Claimant" letters instead of checks Tue.day. and counties d id not receive money to pay for senior nutritio~&~ama and welfare workers' es. But state workers remained on their jobs, and most firms that sell thing) to the state continued to supply them on the falth they would eventually be paid. The back-to back speeches Tuesday, which were broadcast by 17 television and 31> radio ~tationa statewide, produced no new propoeals from either side, and no sign of a break ln the stalemate beyond Deukmejian's call for more per80nal nego- tiations. 1- , ., a ~ B 1 i J ., ## .......... Governor Deukmejian discusses budget charts 1 during televised address to Californians Tuesday night. I Fireworks kill on_e, injure 18 , , Nation counts casualties over Fourth of J1:1Iy weekend ~ By tbe A11oclated Pre11 Flying debris fro") an illegal firecracker explosion claimed the life of a New York City man, and other fireworks accidents injured at least 18 people around the nation over_ the Fourth of July weekend, authorities say. Joseph Giglio, 23, was "cut practically in half" after he put powerful M-80 f~rackers in a 55-gallon metal Cirum and set them off, said police Sgt. Peter Ruane. Ruane said Giglio, of the New York City borough of Staten Island, was 60 feet away when the drum blew up Monday. Also on Staten Island, six young people were burned when a firecracker thrown out the win- dow of their car blew back in and exploded inside the car. The Consumer Product Safety Commission had warned before the holiday that the number or people injured by fireworks an· nually has risen over the past decade, with an estimated 8,544 ~ injuries in 1982. / Eight people, including ,five · children . were injured in Holly-.1 wood, Fla .. when a rocket fell and1 exploded among spectators sit~, in a "safety wne" · ,. Supreme Court rules I shortens the life expectancy of 1 some 1,200 condemned murderers'' nationwide . ~ By tile A11oclated Pre11 ' In two major rulings today, the U.S . Supreme Court handed down major decisions affecting death penalty appeals and pensions. Federal appeals courts do not have to po6tpone the executions of all death row inmates pushing non-frivolous appeals, the court ruled today. The decision likely And, in a ruling that could force' sweeping changes in the insurance ' industry, the court ruled that it is"! illegal for pension plans to pay ' smaller monthly benefits to women than to men. Kids left in II I car trunk; parents held.- ., SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP)'. -Three children were locked in · the trunk of a car in a casino / parking lot, then left for 10 hours: in near-Creezing temperatures, before passersby heard their cries, ! police said. .. Their parents, Juan Blancas, M . ~ and Maria Blancas. 46, were being held on $15,000 bail each after being charged with willful abuse of children and child abandon-' ment, authorities said Tuesday. ' SAN DIEGO-Helicopters dropped water, bulldozers cleared brush to protect homes and firefighters chased uphill after an 80-acre fire that burned in the Cowles Mountain area of northeast San Diego on Tuesday. The fire broke out at 2:15 p.m . in Mission Gorge and headed uphill, then down again, pushing northeast toward the city of Santee. But by evening. as breezes died down, and the Dames slowed as they moved downhill, one unit of the 60 city firefighters was left to protect homes on the outskirts of Santee. lh-azos County Sheriff's deputies and fire inspectors survey the interior of the Friendship Baptist Church , one of .,..._.. six churc hes and a Masonic Hall in the county torched by an arsonist in a two day period. The children, ages 10, 8 and 6. 1 111.lrYived overnight temperatures as low u 38 degrees, sharing a blanket. They have been placed in foster homes. -' South Lake Tahoe Police Lt. David Solaro said the Blancas. from Sacramen to, arrived at Stateline, Nev., early Friday and 1 left their three children at an , arcade at Harrah's Hotel-Casino. ' WORLD . ·· Arsonist. hits six T ·exas churches Guerrillas extend death deadline NAIROBI, Kenya -Sudanese guerrillas threatening to kill five Western hostages unless ransom demands were met extended their deadline to Thursday. Sudan's ambassador to Kenya, Ibrahim Ayoub, reported after the original deadline passed today. "The five hostages are safe and talked to the mediators by radio in Juba," said Ayoub. The Westerners, including two Americans, a Dutchman and a West German. have been held more than 11 days at Boma. a remote area about 120 miles southeast oC Juba, a regional center. Shultz con£ ers on Syria withdraw] DAMASCUS. Syria -Secretary of State George P. Shultz conferred with President Hafez Assad for nearly five hours today in a fresh attempt t(> break the deadlock over the withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon. There was no immediate word on the outcome of the talks, but a Syrian official said earLie r his government would not compromise its position. Kohl hope ful on nuke agreement MOSCOW -West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl said today that "very comprehe nsive" talks with Soviet President Yuri V. Andropov left him hopeful an agreement could be reached by year's end on Umiting nuclear weapons in Europe. GAUSE. Texas (AP) -Who- ever torched six small churches and a Masonic Hall with Molotov cocktails in two days probably once lived in this part of central Texas, authorities say. Four of the fires were set Monday in Gause. beginning about 3 a.m. Three others were set in nearby communities Tuesday, ending at 6 a.m.. when the Friend.ship Baptist Church in Bryan was completely engulfed in flames. 3 falcon chicks put on high peak KlNGSCANYONNATIONAL PARK (AP) -Three peregrine falcon chicks have been placed on a high peak overlooking Kings Canyon National Park in an effort to reestablish the endangered species in the Sierra Nevada. The two males and one female, all 35 days old, were moved from an incubation center at Santa Cru:t. to a special "hacking box" on the mountain peak Monday. We're Listening ••• Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot" What don't you lib" Call the number at left and your message will be rerorded, transcribed and deli~ered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering service may be used lo record let· te•rs to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors m"'8l include their name and telephone number for veriflutlon No clrcul1tlon c<ills. please 642•6086 Tell us what's on your mind D~ .. ~.d MQ<10lly·J•..,er II V9'I <!O "0t h•v• fC'i'I' P•Ot ' Oy • JO p m (Ml O-lo<t 7 p m t nd """' (OOr ••ti 110 -...tel l 111>1a•1 eno 8u•O•y 11 yOU 00 ,,Ot ttC•*"• 11N1 copy ..., t • "' "'" o.!Ot• 10 • m ""° 1ovr t"llY "" 0..,.....,..., MOtl Clrcullttton T1l1ptMH ... 0.1ng11 Counly A,_ _ _, NOll- -"'11'0" e..oo. •w..-........ , ..... ~ ...... OAANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L 8chw•rtz HI Publlshe< Chazy Dowallbr Raymond Maclean Ed11or ano ~slatan Controller 10 the PublJther l~'·C•ltlO l'todutllO'\ "'~ Ofotl• A. II'-• Ooftelct L WllMle "'°'A' M..,,,.,.G C•Cl~l-'-''11 'II"' ... .,,...,.. Cle111ftM ectYlf111tftt 114/142-9171 All othlf depertfMfttl M2~1 MAIN Of''1CI 330 w .. 1 e., 61 • Co.la ,,. ... CA M•~ Acldr-Bo. 1680, Coot• ,,._ CA 9282t ()opy<IQlll I Dt:l Or•l'IQI Coat! llub!WWlg Comclenv NO n1we 1tot1t1. Ulu1tr1t1one editorial mitt•• 01 -~1,..,.,.,,lt ,,..,,,,, ""'1 Of UlptOCIUCtO wfll!Out ~ l\tlfmtWOO 111 capvrlQllt - VOL 11. NO. 117 "lt burn.ed plumb to the ground," said Bra.ws County Sheriff Bobby H . Yeager. "It could be one person or a group, or someone w ho got the idea from the earlier fires." Authorities have no suspects and don't know what the motive is. ''Nowadays. on some of theae crimes, it's hard to figure motives," said Milam County Sheriff Leroy Broadus. Moet of the congregation mem- Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Ctrtifi~ G1molo1i1t, AGS YOUR PEARLS . .. how to care for them Pear1a are bUlcalty a calctum carbonate, to they are rather eott and can be tcratched or Chipped rather -.Hy. After MCh weettno, they lhould' be wiped wtth • IOft ctoth or c::hamole to remow dfrt, S*"PlratJon, cotmeUal and pilf· fufMI that doud °' damage the pMr1 eurfece. V04J may aleo waeh them In • mlld de*gent IOlutlon, IUCh u lvoty llquld. Y04J ahould ,,..,., apray perfume on peerlt, or eY9f\ on a part of the body whloh wtll come Into contact wtth 'YO'lf l)Mftl. About onoe a year. It II I good Idea to ,.•trtno peert atrand• to avotd the poee1t>Je 1>re.k•no ot WMkened 1trand1. The knotl betWMn peerll ahould be oheckecl to male• IUN thet pewte do not Nb ~t MOtl other. Thi• aillO guanje llG8'ntt loM of lnd1Ytdu81 PMr11 If the •trand thOuld bretlk. 'the be9t W8Y to atON your.,..,,, bet'4•! ...,,nae II to place them In • "'*' boX. Do not put them In the Mme box wtth other Jewelry, beQuM they could get ecratohecl. YOU/ .,..ti .. "'faalee of the IM. Keep them lhlnY and CIMI\ and they .. IMt • ..am.. .. bers of the churches are black, but authorities said they don't believe the attacks have been racially motivated. A state arson in· vestigator will join the probe today, officials said. "Whoever It Is certainly had to have a real good knowledge of the area," Broadus said. "I don't think they're a resident of the county now, but they probably have been in the put and they have a lot of ties to the area." The children, who were given no food or money, were picked up by their parents late Friday and put into the trunk of Blanca's Ford Granada at about 11:30 p.m .. police said. Police said 10-year-old Odila told them that her parents ~ the trunk down with a Can belt, leaving a fi...-e--inch gap that gave 1 the c.hildren fresh air. Odila [ aha.red the trunk with her two I brothen, Juan Gutierrez, 8. and Juan Blancas, 6. The Ancients claimed 1hal 1he god Vishnu searched 1he depths of the sea for a pearl to adorn his daughter on her wedding day Since pearls were considered earners of love, happiness a(ld good fortune. this was indeed an appropriate gift 01 course, even w11hout magteal Powers. pearls are an excellent chotee for a bnde On th•& special day she wants to look her best. and nolh1ng is as -flattering es the pearl's unique glow MEMBER AMEAtCAH GEM eoc1m 1808 NEWPORT lt.~l~OITA MESA SINCE,...., 81nkAmet1c1rd-M1tler Cl'l•rg• PHONE 6'1-3401 ---------. - -.. T ___ ,,. 1...; 44 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July~. 1983 'Fair marli:et value' promised for homes iD: freeway's path Property owners whoee homes and ~ are taken by the at.ate to build the Coeta Mesa Freeway will be paid a "fair market value" for their property. C.altrana offidala al80 aaid : •Affected property owners will be contacted about a year follow· Ing approval of the Environmen· tal Impact Statement and notified of the app)'aisal. •Property owners will be able to participate in the appraisal and hire their own appraiaer. • The "fair market value" will be based on comparitive FREEWAY IN MESA ... (From Page A 1) Construction of a freeway in Colt.a Mesa haa .a>een diacuaaed aince UM5, when the Califomll:l Highway Comm.laion adopted ~te 55 u a freeway. The latest environmental st.udy to solve Newport Boulevard's traffic prolr lems began four years QRo. The altematives diaCussed in the Caltrana report include: •Donothing, but fill in the ditch between Bristol and Bay, at a cost of $7 million. •Widen Newport Boulevard at a cost $6 million. Widen Newport Boulevard with overpasaes to teparate highway traffic from c:rom·town traffic, $46 million. No hornet or buaineeaes bulldozed ·wt th either plan. •The ao-called "adopted" route, which swings west of Newport . Boulevard at Bay Street, rejoining Newport at Industrial Way, $167 million. Displaces 607 homes. l, 118 people and 156 businesses. •A raised freeway over New· port Boulevard that would cost $76 million and displace four homes, and seven businesses. •A depressed freeway down Newport Boulevard that would cost $81 million and displace 13 homes, 33 people and 18 busi· n.esses. •A raised freeway that swings east of Newport Boulevard, cost $99 million, and uproots 78 homes, 198 people and 66 businesses. •A depressed freeway along the easterly downtown bypass route that would cost $93 million and displace 85 homes, 219 people and 40 businesses. propertJes aold ln the area, cost to rebuild and income tn>m busi.ne9'. • The full amount of the appraisal will be offered during the first d18cualon with the property owner. • Rent.en and property owners , will receive relocation benefits. •Property owners who want to remain ln their homes and busi· neaes can rent the property from the state until constn.iction. • Homes and buaineaees can be relocated. • Renters unable to find com· parable properties are entitled to an equal reimbunement for 48 months. However, property owners liv· ing on land adjacent to the freeway will not be reimbursed. Those home and buaine9a owners who believe their property has been devalued by the freeway can fiJe a board of control claim with the state. Such claims are rare, said Cal trans officials. Harold and Mary Elmer would lose the home they've owned for 32 ................ years if easte rn route for Costa Mesa Freeway is chosen. LA Coun.ty st_ate prison search drawStObjections LOS ANGELE'S (AP) -A list of potential state prison sites in Los Angeles County has been drawn up, but there is no top choice and other sites may also be considered. The state plans to build a 20,000·inmate prison in the coun~ ty by 1990, ao asked s upervisors for suggestions on where to build it. . Every suggestion drew angry protests from residents in the propoeed areas and a deadlock among supervisors was broken only after a conditional plan, approved Tuesday on a 4·1 vote, was recommended by Superviaor Deane Dana. Supervisors refused to rank the sites according to preference, and asked the state to consider other, unlisted sites rea>mmended by board members or the state De- partment of Corrections. · The supervisors also aet up a cit.if.en advisory group to watch over final .election. r·········---·--········------------------------···-----Hawthorne Christian School1 1 "For the Right Start in Life" • • i FREE HAMBURGER • : wtth purchase of regular fries and : any large cola with this coupon. Expires 7·13·83 • • ! i l1•lturs1n • I Ch1l111turs1n 39c 49c Wheatleys hamburgers are made from 100$ pure lresh ground beef blended with our special meat sauce . • • SERVICE -QUALITY -VALUE WHEATLEYS Hamburgers Drlve-Thru 7480 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach 10:30AM • 9:00PM Dally (714) 141-4133 -·-------------------------------------------------------~ Join the Summer Fun at DAY CAMP!! GIVE MOM A VACATION • Field Trips • Crafts • Swimming • Picnics • Before-care and After-care Available JUNE 20th thru SEPT. 9th Enroll Now·Fall Semester Starts Sept. 12th Reasonable Tuition SUMMER SCHOOL JULY 5th thru JULY 29th "A Private School of Distinction Founded in 1942" IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11135 BROOK HURST ST. (714) 982-3312 We're llstenlng ... Look for the NEW Piiot TV Log Bank of Al 11erica reduces home-related loan fees by~- , : .... . I f ! : : ' i \ For a limited time Bank of America is reducing loan fees on five typeS of loans from 3% to 196~ That's two·thirds off on fees for home improvement loans, home equity loans and loans for mobilehomes and mobilchome/lot combinations. Fees arc also reduced on commercial improvement loans. . .,.,.bk " loetl Oflalft,ttiOft ~ •M""I ~ rei. •nd .,.,...,._an chen,r •ltrT thf loen It fMdt For example, suppose you were to obtain a $30,000 home equity Joan with a variable rate (3 month rate change frequency)!"* Based on an initial simple interest rate of 1096, the annual percentage rate would be 10.1396 with m 300 monthly payments at s2n.s t. The loan 1ec woulJ be $300.00. We've lent more money to Califor· nians than any other bank. And now, people who qualify can save a sub· stantia) amount on five of our popular ' loan categories. PEE REDUCTION ENDS AUGUST 15. So talk to Bank of America today. W~re Cali· fo mia's number one lender and, right now, we've got the money. BAN ff ON THE LEADER,. , • ! .. t ' i L I ~ • ~ • ! . j ' Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, July 6, 1983 4 1 A ------------------------------~-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bu·honic plague looming CARSON CITY (AP) -Thia •ummer could bring a major outbreak of bubonic plague to the northern Sierra and the nearby valleys of northwest Nevada, health offidala warn, but they say the dread diaeale can be avoided. The moet certain protection from the Black Death that claimed an estimated 25 million victims in • Europe and Asia aix centuries ago is to stay clear of the tiny fleas that carT)' the dileue. . Lake Tahoe campgrounds, sev- eral urban valleys north of Reno and the exclusive South Hills area 90Uth of town all have been posted u areas where plague has been found in animals or could be lurking. ,, ....... Growing . pains for 'Tokyo?' LOS ANGELES (AP) -In the put 13 yeara, Little Tokyo has been tranafonned from a near alum into new offices, apartments, hotel high -riles, ahope and cul- tural centers. Now the area needs room to grow. But expansion won't be easy becawie a lot of other groups alllO have plans for the areas surround- ing the city's famous Japanese aector. Since -dle Community Re- development Agency stepped in, baoked by publicsubaidiesand the power to uproot people, Little Tokyo has -been reshaped. Gone are the old rooming hOUBeS and seedy walkup hotels, cramped shops and questionable eate.ries. Pre-school slated for CdM beach Corona del Mar State Beach at the foot of Marguerite Avenue will be the place this summer for pre-achool through junior high youngsters to participate in Bible quizzes, Christian aonp, drama, object lessons and games. The Children's Sand and Surf Mission , an inter- denominational team of Christian h igh school, college and professional people, is sponsoring the hour-long program Mondays through Fridays on the beach . HB-Jap an student exch an ge eyed The Huntington Beach Sister City Committee ls looking for :;tudents who would like to participate in a student exchange program with Anjo, Japan. "You should remember that it's a natural disease in wild rodents. It's here every year," Joe Nebe of the state Health Division said Tuelday. "The thing to do is keep humans away from the disease, Astronaut Sally Ride au tographs a magazine cover in Houston after post-flight news confere nce. Investments worth $150 million have gone into or are planned in the nine square block area along downtown's East 1st Street. Students will be asked to pay for their own airfare and personal expenses that are estimated at $1,200 to $1 ,400. Students will be the guests of the City of Anjo and will be >laying with host families in J apan. • away from the rodents' environ- ment." Singer rides Sally's fame To the east is an old industrial area along the Los Angeles River. To the south is Skid Row. For more information, call Teri Hershberg a l 536-5578. College offers wedding worksh op s That is one reason for posting parka and campgrounds at Lake Tahoe, according to Don Lane, Aasiltant Recreation Officer for the Toiyabe National Forest at South Lake Tahoe. He said tests so far this year show "a very high indication of plague presence already." He said the long winter and the hot early 1prina were conducive to a high .urvtval rate among fleas. LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Red River" Dave McEnery's songs aren't so much new-wave as news-wave. His latest is "The Ballad of Sally Ride," com- memorating the first American woman in space. srnokin' rocket, about 10 stories tallYoung Sally Ride was blastin' off like a Wabash Cannon ball," it goes. . McEnery of North Hollywood says he isn't trying to write a million-seller to capitalize on Ride's ride -mostly he just performs at area parks. F.conomic studies have shown the area ripe for high technology industries which would require large parcels of land. Outspoken artists have made converted the area into a down- town colony, renovating a number of warehouses for studios and galleries. Two programs focusing on weddings will be given by Coastline Community College this month. Floral design techniques for the bride will be demonstrated Saturday and Sunday at the Orange County Fair by 30 students. The works will be displayed from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. in the Macres Building. A wedding workshop , which will address wedding planning, finances, ceremonies and working with caterers and other professionals, will be held from 7-10 p.m. Tuesdays, July 12 and 19 at the Peterson Learning Center in HuntinguJn Beach. "By the great Atlantic Ocean, down Cape Canaveral wayThe spacecrafl known as Challenger was ready one fine day.Atop a "Haven't even had time to put it on a recoro," he said. The fede ral government has suggested a prison be built nearby. Registration fee is $20. For more information, calr546-7600. TRANS PAC RACE RESULTS exciu!Nvely on KDCM tD!l.1 FMSIERED Dally 2:55 pm 6:55 pm Co-Sponsored by Boatswain 's Locker Newport Beach LIMITED TIME ONLY You can select from hundreds of new Cadillacs during our Sizzling Summer Sale, with complete confidence. We've priced every new Cadillac so low, we defy you to find a better deal from any one, anywhere. All with the courtesy and respect that Nabera i1 famous for. · So iJ you've been considering a new CadiDac, I.hit is the time. Our Sizzling Summer Sale means thouaand1 in savings and hundrtd1 of Cadillacs to choose from. And remember. Nabers "Low Price Protection" is your protection From high prices! . «n;-. Low Price • tl!I .. Protection !~ ...lyat NABERS CADILLAC (7141~9100or 1213) 587-8266 aonaf Ckoice The art of successful investing is a question of lance. Home federal's Moner llMket Certfflcates wltll g__..ed long-tenn rates ire ••11111 to 1 welt-1111811ced ln•1b111nt pl•. With all the excitement ahouc the healthy earn in~~ and everyday cash convenience offered hy Home Federal '~ l n~ured Mone,·Market Plan"', it \ impon ant to rememher your long-term goals mo -and guaranteed long-term intere'>t to help vou reach them. · w e·ve cJbcowrecJ that mam· of our mo~t ~ucce .... ..,ful custon1er.., u~ a halancecJ strategy -alway~ keeping enough (at least S2.500) in an ln~ured Mone\' Market Plan ' to earn the dail\' monev n1:Jrket rate. And .. enough in (>Ur guaranteed Money Market Cenificace~ to cake adv:Jnta~e of our very hi~hcsc nnes. The overall effect is w increa~e the average yidd of your investments. ow Maner Mlrtc1t Certificates ........ to stmcll •• lllglllat ndll fir 11 lllOllllll ta I ,..,..,..,.. With maturltie~ from 18 months up 10 10 year~. then~·~ a Money Market : ... f)r '"'~I' mid Jup.f<' Amr/nu. llancbo Jania Fr l''um lll" p m t tltltJne>r. pbllantbniplsts. a nd Uomt' Fl'<lt1ral l111't•st11n Cenific.ue ~uited w mn~c any goal. And, you can Ix· ~ure of reaching your goal hccau~c the ratc b ~uaranteed and your money •~ in~ure<l up 10 SI00.000 hy the F:S.L.l.C., an agency of the U.S. Government. A Personal Financial Represent~u ive can help you St:lect the Home Federal inve'\tments which keep your halances in halance with your indivitlual ~oals ... and even show how vou can hmrow a~ainst your H<)me Federal investments if you wish --~FEDEML c.11., ..._, ., ay for CMiNlndn. 1-800-922·1531 to ll-free. for dltallld ........... wlllcll cm 1111,= •lect tlll lllat ....., It Certlflatn for JO• .......... ..._ JO• ICCOmll llJ plla•, call ., llo•, ..,...,. 1-800-M2-os39 1oll-free. 1 ~ h,•11 \ 1 >\11 h.1l111u• l.111' 1-.·~ I\\ ·~ "'4" I '\tu ''•II """' tnh'f'"" .u "\••1 \. ASSnS 16 BILLION n OVlA 160 omcts $(1Mt1() CAlJf<lll* 0 HOM( r(OUW. SMINGSAl()\()AIUSSOCIAll()N LA.COUNTY ~ 660 w Huntington Or 445-3220 o ~/ ... a... 8607 Bevelly Bllld 652-8562 0 .._._ Hiiie 9720 Wiishire Blvd 274·6066 o Cenot11 "-' 6400 PtaH Ave 348·4141 O Oleftdale 275 W Broadway 240·9333 0 IA C...-555 Foothill Blvd 790·1111 0 IA T .... 6955 Le T11cn Blvd 67o.a626 0 L.A. Downtown 71& w Ftral SI 625.-2099 D l.MClhntOllC 250 N Lercl'lm0f'1t Blvd 462·6463 O ........ , 17100 Hawthorne Blvd 371 ~13 C LIMolft ~· 2201 N BroedWey 223-1164 0 ....... "9; 4601 Lincoln Bllld 823-4141 O Molttw1'19 18640 Oevonshtre SI 360-2328 0 ,.._ _... '1 $111191 !!P.tr Rd Suite 310 377-8eee O ,_. -...1GoN11t 0.W.~1244tPtlOI Verdes Ct Wett 977-<)3!5&0 ~ del "9' 8~5 W Mancne81er Blvd 622-290$ O Aldo.-.._.. 44 7 N F11nc1sc1 Ave 376·8966 O Tonenoe 22200 HawlhOme Blvd 378·1226 O WMt eo.lftll 14'0 W Covina Pkwy 962-3441 0 ..._._ .. ., 8750 S Sepulveda Blvd 776-0990 0 .. ...._ 10860 Wilshire Blvd 4 74.3503 O WD a 111• ... 6325 Topenoa Canyon Blvd 703.1221 77().7171 o LalUM ....,., 30131 Town Cenier Or Su11e 145 495-2880 0 ....._rt llMott 2340 E Coal! Hwy 640·1634 o Ian Juen Captltrano 31972 Camtno CePlstrano 493·0601 0 leru AM 1701 N Main St 66'7·2400 0 leru AMIL Melot 3600 S Bnllol SI 979-3600 O IHI llMott 1350 Pac11tc Coas1 Hwy 898·3481 0 TUltln ~ E F1111 St 730 6995 IUVaRSIH COUln'Y """9t 2465 W flOfide Ave 929 1040 V•NTURA COUNTY TtMM•nd 0... 1&4 W ~tlk:r 51 Or 497 9588 Q ..... vm 817 c TN!UUM Oak• 81110 498·9500 11.8 ua R m I ~) rit .Id lo , I • • I • I • ' . • ' . r • • I • I • ~ I • I ... _ - Aa Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, July 6, 1983 F'" ......... -....... MAILBOX ospital is unnecessary the Edit.or: Orange County Is no longer a ve. In addition to other steps ward a more cos~poUtan set- , our medical community has become relatively sophisticated. As a consequence of the climate, increasing population, business opportunities, areas oC protean attraction. we have attracted rela- tively large numbers of well trained physicians and surgeons oC various ages, The consequence of this has been an almost absolute over-supply of well qualified medical care providers. Unfortunately, there is distinct peril in this. Physicians and sur- geons are trained to treat patients, medically and surgically. It is, therefore, predictable that t!le number of such treatments will increase with the number of medical providers. We like to think that this does not involve unnecessary care. What is, however, evident is that a dilution of disease entitles results as a consequence of the increased numbers of physicians. Each doctor, therefore becomes relatively less experienced. There is only a certain mumber of brain tumors, aneurysms, congenital de- fects, cardiac operations and etc. If we continue to dilute the number of esoteric or difficult surgical and medical prec:edures and diagnostic dilemmas, each individual phys- ician will become lesser for the experience and his patient, there- fore will potentially suffer. A new hospital in Orange County is the last thing both medical providers and patients need. It is a vain, self-serving and counterproductive endeavor. It is perhaps the least cost-effective activity that the economically overbur<tened medical communi- ty can tolerate. If. indeed, the statement that in the early 1990's Orange County will require more hospital beds is accurate, it is also clear that they should be added to some ol the existing hospitals. TI\is will save millions of dollars, will allow Orange County to maintain its ever accelerating technology. and most important, prevent further dilution of its physicians' experience. There is absolutely no need to recreate the wheel. Amongst our currently excessive hospitals, there are no less than half a dozen that are fine medical institutions. They must maintain and increase their excellence. The creation of another hospital, unproven, will only deter and modify this re- quirement. The result will be a lesser quality for all hospitals and all patients in Orange County. AB large as Irvine is, and will become, it shajl always be be- tween 15 and 30 minutes away from one of these medical facili- ties. The child, adult or geriatric ~ient in any one of our cities, is no.W, similarly, between 15 and 30 minutes away from a fine hospital. Building one in Irvine is an act of selfishness. [t will, in no way, upgrade the medical care in that community. What it wiU do is increase the cost of medical care for the remainder of Orange County's population and jeop- ardize its quality:- MICHAEL H. SUKOFF, M.D. Santa Ana Grad night some thing sp ecial To the Editor; Grad Ni.ght. Newport Harbor High School style. for the 1'983 participants is now a picture on a bulletin board, a few souvenirs. and a program featuring a Roar- ing Twenties couple. But the memory lingers on in the minds of -a Jot of kids who knew something special was being done for them and responded to the outpouring of love with a love of their own. It took months of planning, weeks of physical effort and the same sort of fervor seen in an age gone by as neighbors gathered for a barn raising. People joining together for work toward a com- mon goal. People who had for- gotten their own creativity re-learning the joy of physical labor and the joy of being able to survey what their hands had built. People who work with their heads learning from people who work with their hands. Designer jeans spattered with paint and topped with that special Grad Night printed T-Shirt. A Rolls Royce parked beside a Pick-up. People relying on one another. People communicating. Fnendships developing. Laugh- ter and practical jokes. Contribu- tions by several hun~ parents building. sewing, making sand- wiches for workers, invitations. prize donations, working all night shifts. endless meetings. de- cis1ons-all building in secrecy to create the magic aura. Those special exciting moments durmg graduation when the parents tingled, knowing they had outdone themselves. The gradu- ation. a little more repectful than usual because the grads knew somethmg special was coming. The tears as the grads gave their pa.rents a st.anding ovation for something yet unseen. G rad Night did something for the parents and students at Harbor that has long been missing in our lives. Who of us captures that zest that this coutry had during WW II, when as a united country, we dropped our pred- judices and complaints and pulled wgether for one purpose. Grad Night was from the heart and it was infectious and it felt good. Best of all, all that Jove that was poured out was recieived and appreciated. And maybe this week parents and kids are just a Uttle closer and more loving to each other. SALLY WELSH Newport Beach l. I. BDJd /Smart thinking A sane man will never trust a woman who tells him he's hand- some, but wiU believe her absolutely when she says he's clever That has been our Love and War man's claun for many years. Client asks if a woman likewise rejects a complement about her looks. but accepts one about her intelligence. No, a woman is conditioned early to tense th.at the first call a man hears with her is not the call to culture. She thinks that. to him, "pretty" ts more important that "perspicacious." She may or may not want to be a sex object, but if the man talk.a that way, at least she's inclined to believe he means It. Q. How come that hairline comes to a point down the fore- head ls called a "widow's peak"? A. Dates back to the auper- slitloua time when mothers thought daughters born with the characteriaUc would be widowed early therefore. Q. What's the averqe suit size fora man? A. 40. And the average d.resa ab.e for a woman la 12. Look, you ORANGE COAST I _Daily Pilat \ I .__., ...... _ .. )J0!¥•ht•• ~-~""--"· ...... ,.., o.--.u- ·---- always wanted to be above aver- age, no'? Q What's the unused 90-per- cent of the human brain for? A. Nobody knows. All Ii t.erary types know well the name of the poet F.dn.a St. V~nt Millay. Not all know, however, that the St. Vincent part was not an old family surname, but rather the name of the hospital in which she was born, St. Vincent's in Rockford. Me. Her mother liked It there. Fri.son experta say the typical ja.ilhouse suicide hereabouts ia a finlt-Urne offender, booked on some minor charge, who hanga himself within three houn of arrest. This notice recently was boxed ln The Jerusalem Poet: "The 'Today' page will appear tomor- row." Q . What's the biggest llOrt of C3t'? A. The Siberian tJger. Grown maJee average 10 feet 4 Inches. T ,., Watt cuts friendly deals WASHINGTON When James Watt staffed the Interior Department with industry ex- ecutives, I promised to keep an eye out for any favoritism. Sad to say, my suspicions we re not un- founded. Individual Interior officials have scrupulously refrained from taking part in decisions involving their former employers. But the department has repeatedly cut deals with a select few companies that officials once worked for or invested in. My a.580clates Jock Hatfield and John Dillon dug up a few examples from the agency's files: -Montana Power and Light and Amax Coal were the principal beneficiaries of the now famous Powder River coal sales in Wyom- ing. The General Accounting Of- fice concluded that 1.6 billion tons of federally owned coal were sold for $100 million below fair market value As it happens, the two <,'Om- panies were generous contributors to the Mountain St.ates Legal Foundation. which Watt headed until he came to Washington. The secretary did not excuse himself from the Powder River decision that was so profit.able for his old foundation's benefactors. -Richard Mulberry. the In- terior Department's inspect.or general. used to work at the accounting firm of Fox and Co. He still has $250,000 due hun under the company's retirement plan. A few months after Mulberry joined Interior, Fox and Co. won a $387,525 contract from the inspec- - __ G., .111:111111111 ~- tor general's office. Mulberry excused himself from the contract selection process, but the responsibility for reviewing the contract proposals was del- egated to one of his subordinates -who must have known about his boss's connection with Fox. The accounting firm, which has been charged with fraudulent practices by the Securities and Exchange Co~ion, has seven more contract proposals pending with the department. -William Coldiron, the agen- cy's soUcltor, was director and vice chairman of the board at Montana Power and Light. When he came to Washington, the company paid him $108,881 in "severance, salary and vacation pay." Coldiron did excuse himseU from participation In the controversial "fire sale" of Powder River coal leues to his old company. -James R. Harris, director of the Office of Surface Mining, had financial ties to Amax, the other big winner in the Powder River sale. He was once an investor in land deals with Amax and the Peabody Coal Co. Harris said he knows "very Uttle" about Interior's coal leasing policy: hia office enforces strip mining regulations aft.er the leases are awarded and the companies start work. He said he has never had any dealings with Amax "except as a buyer of property." Footnote: The Interior Depart- ment "absolutely and unequivo- cally" denil!S any favoritism toward Montana Power, Amax or Fox and Co. BEER ON THE HOUSE: Beer money Ls flowing into con.: gressional campaign coffers. "SIXP AC" -the nickname of the National Beer Wholesalers As- sociation's political action commit- tee -has contributed generously to House members who will decide whether beer distributors should be allowed regional mono- polies for particular brands. Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Tex., has been the chief recipient of SlX- PAC's largesse -and is also the chief sponsor of the misnamed Malt Beverage lnterbrand Com- petition BiU. He's also a member of the Judiciary Committee that will pass on the l~gislation. Brooks got $5,000 in campaign contributions from SIXP AC, and donations from individual wholesalers. He also got a $1.000 fee and a trip for hunself and his wife to Las Vegas. where he made a speech to the association. If the beer biU passes, your beer . bill will go up. Bars and grocery stores would have to buy a partkulnr brand from the ex- clusive distributor of that brand in their area -at his price. of course. For many years. lndiana per- mitted such distributor mono- polies. Recently it alJowed re- tailers to buy from any wholesaler they wanted to, and the results were dramatic. Independent stud- ies by the Indianapolis Star and the state Alcoholic Beverage Com- mission showed that the retail pril'e of beer dropped by about 20 percent. POLITICAL POTPOURRI: Former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew is dead last in the polls among the six announced Demo- cratic presidential c.andidat.es. But he still has high hopes. despite such self-deprecating cracks as, "I am a true dark hone. The only paper covering my candidacy has been the Daily Racing Form." He contends that the opinion polls reflect only name recognition. Tho~h he has yet to open a Washington campaign head - quarters. Askew save !alS money is holding out in by st.ates. -Sen. Joh'l Glenn, D-Ohio, like any good astronaut or Boy Scout, is always prepared. He went to a recent tribute to Rep. Morris Udall, 0 -Ariz., with twice as many jokes as he could use in his speech -just in case a· previous speaker had been djpping into the same joke book. -Sheik Mohammed al-FaMi didn't mean to break the law, the Federal Election Commmion and the Justice Department decided. Last October the Saudi Arabian billionaire offered the town .of Midland, Pa .. $3 million if all 2,200 registered voters signed a pledge not to vote for President Reagan in 1984. No payment was made, and Jusuceofficials weren't even sure that Midland h.ad taken the ofter seriously. So the case against the sheik was dropped. Utilities on the line for service By THOMAS D. ELIAS Penalties for bad service have cost the much-maligned General Telephone Co. of California more than $6 million over the last 10 years. a lcm the finn has long felt was unfair. Customers. though, often had a different view. Now there's a good chance that California's big electric and gas companies will be subjected to the same 1<>rts of penalties and incen- tives that have plagued General. Tbe state's second-largest tele- phone company. which suffered its flrst service penalty 14 years ago. now admits the penalties haven't been all bad. They've taken the form of incentives in recent years, with the company losing money only If servive complaints topped standards set by the state Public Utilities Com- mission. "It has served as an Incentive,'' says General spokesman Thomas ClllllRlll IDCUI Leweck. "The oommisaion want- ed good service and that's what they're getting." General has paid no service penalties in the last two years because it has met the standards set by the PUC. Similar standards would be set for other types of utilities under a plan that has already pa&9ed the state As3embly. The proposal. sponsored by Democratic Asaemblyman Louis Papan of Millbrae, would require the PUC to consider performance ot power plants when deciding on rate Increase requesta. G11 ud dectr lc companies would have to submit regular reports on how power plants are meeting ttandarda. The utilities would a1ao pay penalt:iee-in the form of lower ratee-lf they're found to have mismanaged fuel purchases or use. Predict.ably, the gas and electric companies don't like the Papan proposal and its fate is uncertain, even though it's very likely to pass the state Senate. The plan would almost certainly have been en- dorsed by ex.Gov. Jerry Brown, but Gov. Deu\tmejian has been silent on it. Deukmejlan, however. has usually sided with business interests over consumen both as governor and while attorney gen- eral. so a veto ia quite likely if utilities fight for one. And they say they will. "Tblt meature i1 totally un- necessary," said Clyde Walthall. a Pacific Gas & Electric Co. lobbyist who once served as Ronald Re- agan 's gubernatorial preu eec- retary. "A lot o( legislation is passed off as benefiting con- sumers, but would actually cause raw increMeS." Walthall says the service pen- alty plan would deprive PG&E of the flexibility it needs to bargain for the lowest-priced natural gas and fuel oil. Southern California Edison will also fight the measure. "This attempts to concoct an inflexible recipe for business prudence,"aaid Edison executive RWllS Hawkes. "The PUC would impoee penalties for inferior performance, but there are no objective criteria for that." The utilities' oppoeit.ion, o( course, is predictable. They don't want to be 8Cl"Utini7.ed as c~fully as the PUC looks at General Telephone. But without such sc.ru tiny, who can say that electric and gas companies aren't per- fonnlng as badly as OeneraJ waa before the PUC set up the current Incentive system? That means this plan could be a reai benefit to hard-pn9ed con- sumers, while costing them almoet nothing. • Intelligence is a complex mental concept AU the learned arguments about what "tntelllgence" really i8, and whether it ia truly meaaured by Intelligence tests, spring from one mistake made at the beginning. Thia ls the Al!tUmp- tion that the thing we call "In- telligence" i. a single and ttimpJe element, Uke courase. when It is actually a compound. I do not. happen to believe there 1.a tueh • thina .. "lntelli~" Ln the 11,naular; there are only "ln- teUtpncea'' la the plural. And there la no adequate mff.N of "°"'~I them, any ~re than you can compare a .ere nver wlth a wrench or a wlrc·c:utler with 8 A8W. On~ would think that the IYllll l'W ~ ~ quality we call "judgment" ln a per.on la directly related to ln- telllgence ··~et t know lmmenaely intelllpnt people who are Wot-· fuJJy de(Jclent in judgment, and othen of sharply llmit.ed Ln- telllgence who have eound Juda· ment Ln pn.cticaJ and pm.onal matt.en. 1n fllCt, cv~ry aurvey hM•hown ttf1Tth@ff1Ut1! peopttrtnduded tin lfOUp, the lo~r the intelligence quotient of that group; but, con- venely, the more people you add. the finer and more predae la the magazine, put out by and for judgment of that group. If you aak members who are in the upper l two brilliant people to ettlmate percent of the lntelllpnce the height of a flagpole, you may bracket; but there ii ju9t aa much ,et wUdly disparate a.nawen; ask noNerwe published Ln thoee ~ a dozen dullardt and you get a u ln any other~ •• just u much more accurate average. much dbagreement, Ulock. pnju- Mlnds are of different thapet, dice and tpedal pletdln&. Nor la • well as different slU!S; and th the literary level diat.LnctJvely .o.called Lntelllgence test tends to higher than that of lhe •vertee focuaon the size rather than on the publlatJon. 1hape. Among modem American We ha~ to look beyond ln· pretld,n\I, Woodrow Wll.9on un· telJI~. uaatnlle•kmt:nt. for doubtedly had the largest atze of ltaderahlp ln our dllfuent any: but he was not tRerefore the ent«prltel. We need to ~ be9t prelliden~~·-tha&..wtui. a mlnhnuro oL .. _.L .J men\ was u deficient u hla lnt.ellipna! may a,. nee,_,,, l• la lnwU«tual powerw were vast. by no meana a l\lffldent Pl tooncli· 1 n!«'lvc monthly the M~ntM \ion of leadenhlp. ' ·-.... ~. ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 ~'J'. Bullet train 'derailment' rejected DAVIS-BROWN KITCHEN REMODELING SACRAMENTO (AP) -A San Diego la~r's attempt to sidetrack bond funding for the Los Angeles-to-San Diego "bullet train" waseoundly rejected Tuesday by a state Senate committee. A bill by Sen .. Jim Ellis, R-San Diego, that would prevent the state from authorizing uae of tax-exempt bonds for the high-speed trains failed to get a single aye vote in the Govenuneni,U OrganiZ.ation Committee. Four senators voted against it. A measure enacted into law last year allows a four-member state bond com- mission headed by Treasurer Jess Unruh to authorize up to $1.25 billion in industrial Tougher sentence illegal SACRAMENTO (AP) -A prior conviction is grounds for only one sentence increase in a new series of crimes, says a state appeals court. In its ruling, the 3rd District Court of Appeal ordered a 66-year sentence for a convicted child assault.er and rapist from Placer County re- duced to 53 years. The defendant, ~ Duane Carter, was con- victed of attempted murder, rape, forcible child molesting, forcible oral copulation and kid- napping of a 13-year-old , girl in Auburn. A three-member ap- peals court panel ruled unanimoUsly last week that Carter had been sentenced erroneously , by Placer County Su- perior Court Judge Rich- ard Sima, who lat.er was ,. appointed td the appeals court. Sims was not on the appellate panel. Carter had served a priaon term for a prior rape conviction, the court !laid. Prior convictions and prior prison t.emlS are grounds under state law for sentence in- creases in new felony convictions. Sims added three years to the attempted murder aent.ence for Carter's prior prison term, then added five years to each of the sex criJne convictions for Carter's prior rape con- viction. "While we empathiz.e with the trial court's desire to pwUah thia des- picable series of crimes as harshly as possible," Carter's sentence viol- a ated state laws against multiple punishments for the same act, the court said in an opinion by Justice Frances New- ell Carr. 1 Toxic spill , hits streets • inOakland OAKLAND (AP) - Workers were evacuated from several Oakland businesses and major streets were cloeed Tues- day following a spill of 23,600 gallons of toxic, flammable toluene from a rail car, fire officials I said. Firefighters were rl called to the scene at 5:42 II a.m. when a valve r 1 jammed on the bottom of the tanker car on the Union Oil Co. lot on High Street, said Fire Capt. 1 John Speakman. By the time the leak was halted at 6:51, 23,600 gallons of the industrial ,_ 90lvent had spilled, Speakman said. DOES YOUR AUTO POLICY IDDA TUii-UP? "Carl me. I can check ur auto out . yo to make -sure ~~~~e getting the t for your mos ,, ~ money. 9023 ............. . ....., 962-339f I • ,,_., ..... ,___ development bonds to help fund the $3 billion project. The project's developer, American High Speed Rail Corp., says the bonds will be paid off from profits generated by tbe ments and now a consultant for the City of Tustin. "It doee not flt Califomia'• needa. "People are not going to drive long di.stances to get a train that's expensive. They are goin& to drive all t,he way." CENTER JJ = ~ U YESI WE HAVE ALL THE APPUANCES YOU NEED TO HA VE THAT BEAUTIFUL NEW KITCttEN train system. • · But critics said the company la over- estimating ridership and underestimat'.irig comtruction costs. They warned that the state could be pressured into taking over operation of the system if .American High Speed Rail went bankrupt. "It's not in the public interest to have the system at all," said Jonathan Ric.hmond, a former transportation analyst for the Southern California Aaeociation of Govern- But several conunittee members said the state would have no obligation to repay the bonds and stresaed the project, would ~t get off the ground unlees bond investors felt it would succeed. "Thoee people in the e•tem bond market are tough people," said Sen. John Foran, D-San Franclaco. "If they don't like It, they are not going to put one penny into it." American • Chambers · Crown -Frigklalre -GE - HCHd wick -Jenn Aire •Maytag • Whirlpool DAVIS-BROWN , Since 1947 4 11 E. 17th St., Cotta Me1a Introducing Taste that delivers pack 646-1684 .. j I .. .'«! .. I i •' '· .. ·' , .i l} • ; JlllSIBIB "-' hi'teln ....... LIGHTS: 10 mg. "ta(. 0.9 mg. nicotine. FILTER: 16 mg. 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S.a...et·• ........ s.-.C.11•••mttC.....~ 'II a lllti • OI l1nwul l* 0~ $4 Biiiiott In Resources Sale since 1845 l~s!J -• • .... llllJ Plat WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1983 Ill £m Ill THI ClllTY PARTY WRAP TELEVISION WEDDINGS 82 85 86 Greg Pautsch (right) has been designing ~urfboards since he was a teeµ:-.-g~r. ~~~.-.~-s .~~~~,~~ .s~~boards for McCoy Surfboards in Costa Mesa since 1978. ,_ George Wendt, who is Norm the barfly in "Cheers," loves the wife jokes on the show. See Page BS. D 0 , J Urfboard artiSt •••. GreQ Pautsch's art gallery is the world's oceans J,!!~ ~~~NGSWORTH Greg Pautsch t~ of himself as an artist aking a aculpture with a moving object made of am and fiberglass. He uses the world's oceans for • art gallery. Pautsch has designed surfboards since he was teen-ager and has created surfboards for temationally-known McCoy Surfboards in llrta Mesa since 1978. "It's unreal when someone you respect tells >U that they are totally stoked with the board you ade them." Pautach said. While going to Corona del Mar High School in ,e early 1970's, Pautsch and his friends in Dover lOn!S made boards because it was inexpensive ad was BOmething to do. But he really wasn't seriously interested into making surfboards until he met Jeff McCoy. "Back in 1977, when J eff Hak:man and Bob McKnight (co-owners of Quick.ailvers) told me about Jeff McCoy's plans I said sure because I knew McCoy Surfboards had a good rep," Pautach said. McCoy Surfboards opened its only shop in America (there are others in Australia and Japan) in 1978. Pautsch said McCoy, who is from Australia, did not like the fast paced life in Southern California and Pautsch has been running the business ever since. Surfboard shops between Huntington Beach and San Clemente are as plentiful as grains of sand, but Pautsch said he thinks McCoy's reputation and concepts make a difference. "Jeff has been at the top of his field for 12 years and he has .worked with a lot of world-daa surfers, " Pautach said. ''Our boards are thicker .. · and every curve on our boards is necessary, and we really know how a surfboard works where most other shops don't. "A one-eighth of an inch change of a curve in a board is a major change, and that makes a difference between an intense, unreal board and a good one," Pautsch said. "Finding that consistency is tough and we t.rY to keep ref,ining our methods by varying curves." Surfers today have adopted the Austral- ian-style of surfing which emphasizes a more agressive, more manuverable approach to surfing. This has changed the length of the boards that used to be between 6-foot-4 and 6-foot-8 five years ago to a 5-foot-7 to a 5-foot-11 board today. No matter what the size of the board, slirfboards cost between $200 and $300, and Pautsch said the recent recessions have not hurt business at all. "The recession plays on everybody in the sporting goods busineaa, "Pautach said. "People aren't traveling as much and staying in Newport and they'll buy a new board to still have fun in the summer." While surfing was thought of as a fad in the 1960s, Pautsch said he thinb dads who surfed 20 years ago are influencing their children to surf and that's why surfers are getting better and better at a younger age. esert Shrimp ••• They are being successfully raised in Arizona hot spot E JJ!\,EW WILUAMSON ,....,.. YUMA, Ariz, -Only madmen and Englishmen would try to raise ll'imp in the Arizona desert. John C. Pixton, an Englishman, agrees. Pixton. general manager for Hyder Ranches Inc., raises shrimp- ~~ysian prawns to be exact-in the desert 110 miles east of Everyone, including his bola in Texas, thought he'd gone mad from ie Arizona sun six~ ago when he suggested using the area's tu.rally warm well water to ral.9eshrimp, Pixton says. • Recently, whenacrewof fiveyoungmenpulledanet full of prawns oinoneohixpondaontheranch,itwasevidenttherewasamethodto 'smadnea. Pixton said his imagination was challenged by a request from his tofindanadditionalcropforthe 1,000-'acreHyderRanch, which ,_,grows table grapes and dtrus. He ha<l read about commercial shrimp in Hawaii. 1 ''Ourconditionawereasgood if not better than theirs. Hawaii 't have as warm water u we do. They harvest in the summer and w:tically shutdown in the winter," he said. At his own expense, Pixton spent a vacation in Hawaii. "I left my wife on the beach and went off to look atahrimpfarms," Pixtonsaid. "We got a lot of advice fromaeveral universities, butitdidn't help much. We had to adapt the techniques to local conditions." The prawns-Macrobrachium roeenbergii-look likecrayfiah, but they have much larger tails, longer, narrower blue claws, and a barbed horn sticking out from their heads. They are railed in one-.acre ponds about 4 to 5 feet deep. The ponds are supplied from four wells that produce fresh, geothennallyheatedwater.Thetemperatureofwatercomingoutofthe wells ranges from 90 to 104 degrees Fahrenheit, Pixton uid. 'l"he temperature in thepondsiscontrolled tostayabout80degreesinthe winter and 87 degrees in the summer. The water from the ponds ia recycled to be uaed in the ranch's irrigation system, he Mid. The female Great Malaysian prawn can lay eggs in fresh water, but the male can fertillJe them only in salt water, Pixton explained. For that reason, tiny young prawns, called poet-larvae, are brought from saltwater hatcheries in Hawaii to be raiaed in the freshwater ponds in Hyder. The prawns feed on a type of algae, polyplankton, that iaadded to the pond water. Thealgaefeedonateermanure, whichabomustbe added to the water. The prawns al8o are fed a high-protein mix, Pixton said. After six to seven months, the tiny poet-larvae have grown biC enough to harvest.Nearly all of the shrimp ~uced on the Hyder Ranch are eaten in gourmet restaurants in fomia. They are not.old locally, Pixton said. • 82 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Tux and tennis shoes What better place to st.age GUtM;rt and Sullivan's "H.M.S. Pinafore" than on a ship? Some 100 were aboard the brig Pilgrim Friday evening in Dana Point Harbor to see the production by the Heritage Players. The occasion -a benefit with proceeds going to the Californian project, the full-scale re-creation of an 1840 U.S. Coast Guard Cutter. Attire-tuxs and tennis shoes. Tacky. you say, but, very necessary -the tennis shoes to protect the wood in the brig built in 1946 in Denmark. After a delightful performance under the stars (rm no mus.ic critic, but did spend a lot of time a t the Starlight Operettas in Dallas"so many years ago) the viewers had an oppo~unity to meet the cast that they had applauded so heartily at a champagne reception ill the Orange County Marine Institute. Tanked sea creatures around the partying area gave the fish eye to the. group munching on caviar and shrimp. H. Douglas Custance, the able seaman in the production (he gets the girl) is a caterer when he's on shore and his (and wife Linda's) company" Crystal Catering, provided the nibbles. Guests included Steve and Jula Christman, (he's director of the Nautical Heritage Museum), Howard and Gloria Seelye, Judy McPhaU and husband Rogue Hemley, Julie and Bill Froeberg, Di<.•k Dimmitt, Cyndee Irvine, the Earl Rippees and Architect Pat Allen. More performances are scheduled at Dana Point, but forget them, they a.resold out. However, all is not lost. The talented, enthusiastic Heritage Players will do H.M.S. Pinafore July 22 and 23 in Newport Beach. Bill Hamilton, Cannery owner, has offered his place. The operetta will be staged aboard the Sea Scout's Argus and there will be sealing on the Cannery deck for more than 300. The tickets will be $15 person and may be arranged by calling 661-1001. P\B.JC NOTICE SlDger~aterer Doaglu Custance, 'the captain'• daagbter' Debbie Ed-"" mondaon, a~ve, • and • other Heritage players mlDgled wltll the aa- dlence at the claampape reception f0Uowla1 ifflr performance. Right, Dick Dlmmitt wearlag tax ud temai1 1Hel 11 re.ady to go aboard &ff Pilgrim. Before the 1laip- boa rd performance, Coast Gaard Aaxil\arJ Capt. R. L. TUbar1 1bow1 off la.la knot tyla1 wltll Rope Hemley H • 1l1tlD1. YOU AM .. DEfAU\. T ..,...,_" A NOTICI M TM.llTD'8 MU • DUD Of TftU&T DATE> Aue•• LOM1No.1m1111 .. 11PttOPEn11a __________ §IIlE~ 2•. ,.., UNLESS YOU TMI AC· nar TION TO '9tOTfCT YOUfl ~ T.a. No.04N40 NdnCy A nn Vdn Wte ERTY, IT MAY llE SOLO AT A l'U9-UMrT C~ 0 UC SALE. IF YOU -.o AH U-T.O SERVICE COMPANY u duly Pte)tdt'nl u n I 1' m ,. t e d P\.ANATIOff C:W THE NATUM C:W ~nted Truet .. under the follow· 17141 75.2·6228 THE .... CX:HDtNO AQAJNST YOU, Ing deeerlbed deed of trutt WILL YOU IHOUL.D CONTACT A LAW· SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE YER. HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH NOTICE C:W TMISTlR'I IAU AND/OR THE CASHIERS OR T.S. NoA010I CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. tllet CIVIL CODE SECTION 292•11 (pay· on Wednetdey, July 20, 1983 et •l>le et Ille time ol Nie In lewful 10·00 am of seld dey, In the room money ol lhe United St.I•) elt right. w t eside tor conduc11ng Trutt .. ·1 title and lnt.,..I con~ to and S11fl. "'111\ln the olfleet of REAL ES-now held by It un!Mr Mid Deed of £1tu1<1tu" who .. cJ rt• .. iu1 C h1ld1t-n • H0tTll'' f'(ll' · llderty lr(pnw<l. ttonrlt•il Agr-n1 y • t..ill lor l11er.11u1r TATE SECURITIES SERVICE, Trwt In Ille l>foe>e!Y hetelnenw 0.- Ml.IC NOTICE IOUled II 2020 Not1h Broedwey, ~tbed. Suite 206. In Ille City of s.<111 Ana, TRUSTOR·PROPERTIES WEST, County ol Orange. st11e of Cell-INC. ----------tom11, BENEFICIAL MANAGEMENT BENEFICIARY: PACIFIC NA· CORPORATION CORPORATION OF TIONAL BANK AMERICA. 1 Oelewar•eotl>OflllOrl. RECORDED October 15, 1982 u YOU AM• Dm'AULT UMllJt A -as Outy appointed Trull .. un!Mrand Instr No. 82-364219 In Ille Offlcl9I MID C:W TMMT DATWD ....... YOU AM .. NPAULT UNDSJI A pursuant 10 the pow« of aa1e con-Record1lnllleofftceof1lleRecordef 77, 1m. ~H YOU TA.Kl AC-MID OP TMl8T DAftD ....... ferred In that certeln Deed of Trull of Orenoe County. 110N TO PIM>TWCT YOUR ~-.. , .. ~ .. YOU TAKI AC- executed by Pernell A Siiier, ,.. Mid deed of trutl dlecrlbel Ille l .. TY. rT MAY• 90lD AT A "'9-110N TO '9M>TWCT YOUR ~ corded August 31. 1981, In 8oo4t followlng:Lot27,ln81oc1133ofN9w· UC IA.LI.. YOU MUD .... IX-IRTY,rTMAY•aou>ATA"'9- 1420t or Otflall Records ol llld pot1 8Mcll, • pw 1n11P t'*9ol In JtlANA110N C:W Tl9 NA~ OP UC IAU. • YOU ..U AN D- County, et page 37', Recorder In-8ooll 3. Pege 28 of Mllcelleneoul THE ....OCUD..a AGAINeT YOU, ll'l.ANA110N M 1ltl NATWm OP 1trumenl No 39483. by r.uon of 14t M~. Aecord1 of Orenge County, YOU 1HOULD CONTACT A LAW· T .. ..-OCllOINO AGAINeT YOU. breach o1 default In p1yment of P«· c.lttornla. ftfl YOU IMOUl.O CONTACT A LAW- lorm1nce of Ille obllgltlOnl MCUted YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A NOTICI cw TMlaTWI'• aALa ftll lh6reby,lnciudlngtll1tb<NC11orci. DEED Of TRUST DATED Oc1ober T.a . ....... On July 27, 1983 II 10:00 A.M. fault, Notice ol which w .. r9CO<ded 14, 1983. UNLESS YOU TAl<E AC-NOTICE ts HEAEBV GIVEN, lhet SUNKIST SERVICE COMPANY .. Match 22, 1983 as Aecord9r'1 In-TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-on WedMldtlY July 27, 1983 11 Ille duly appointed Trutit .. under Slrumenl No. 83-121692. WILL SELL ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUB-10:00 1.m. of Mid dey, In Ille room end pur-nl to Deed of Truet Ae- AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE UC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA-Ml NlcM IOI' conducting Trull .. '• corded on Dec:. 7, 1982• Dooument HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, lew-NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE SllM. wttNn tM ofllQ9I of REAi. ES-no. 82-427954 of Offlcl9I Aecorde In ful money of Ille United Slit .. , OI' 1 PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU TATE SECURITIES SERVICE, the oflllQe of the Aecordw of 0r9"0' cast1141f"• cl'Mlclc drewn on & ltlle or SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. toceted 11 2020 North Bf09dw9)f, Cellfomle 61l6Qlted by: JAY II. n11ton1I ~nk. 1 91116 or lwderll "'(If 1 lfree! tdd<-or common &1111 20e. In the City of SM11 Anl, MANN, 111 unm9ffled 1n41Y WILL credit unton. or • ""' or ledlrll delignlllOrl of property " lhown County of Orenge, 11•16 of Cell-SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE tavlnga and IOan eaeoct.tlOrl dom4-abc>W, no warrenty le gl--. M to IUi lomle, REAL ESf ATE SECURITIES HIGHEST BIOOER FDf' CASH. (JMl'f- clled In lllls state. Ill paya.ble II Ille complet-or correct,_)." Tiie SERVICE. 1 Clltfornte corporation, Mlle 11 time of Nie In lewf\11 rnonll)'ol lime ol 111e. ell rlQll1. lltll and beneftcilry under Mid Deed of M duty appointed Truel .. undtt and the United St• ... ) II : 1n1er11t hetd by tt. u fruit ... In tllll TrUll. by,_ of • b•Metl or 0.-pureuent 10 tM poww of Nit con-The Nor1h front 9nlrence to IN real prOP9f!Y s11u1ted In Mid County leutt In the obllgtltlone MCUr9d terred In thet cwteln Deed of True1 county oourthou•. 700 CMc Center •nd State. OllCrlbed H foHowt; tll9rltly, 11«.tolore executed and exlCU1ed t>y Rote G. C-on and om. W•I. 99t1t1 Ana. Cellfornl9 lot 29 of Trec1 3853, City of Colle dellYered lo the undlnlgned e writ· Miry Ann C-on. 11\.ttband and 92701 all rlglll, llttt and Int.,_~ Mesi. County ol Orange, Stele of 19'1 Oec:11r1llon of 09fautt and 0.. wlf9 -ded AUQU91 31, 1811, In ~to and now held by It under c1m . u lhOwn on 1 Mep r-ded mand tors•. and wrftt9r1 notice of 800ll 14200 of Oflleltll R9corde of Deed of Trull In the property lltv- ln Boo11 134 Pegee 1. e. and 8, 10. bfMCfl and of e1ect1on to c... IM Mid County, at pege 1eae Re-1ted 1n llld County, Clllfornla o. llnd t t of MllOllllrl80U• ,.._,., r• underlign9d to 1111 Mid property to cord«"• 1ne1.-1 No. 39100, by tefll>lng the land ttweln: S.. •t- COfdl of Orenge Counry. Ctllifomla. Ntltfy Mid obllgetlona, end ther• r~ of 1 tr.ac.'\ or ~ In 119)'• tac:Md llO" delo1ptlon. ecribed as 1o11ow1· •lier the underligned C9UMd Mid ment or perlorm41nC8 of the obll-The ltrMI adOr.-. and otlllr Tiie street llddr-or other notice of brMCh and of 91ectlon to gallon• MWreo thereby. Including common 6-igNtlon, II 91'/'f, of the comon dnlgnatlOrl of the rMI prop-be recorded M•Ch 24, 1983 •Instr. 111•1 brMCh or defeutt. Notice of rMI ptopeny d91cflbed IOcMI II trty 11erelnabove dHc;rlbed 11 No. 83·125703 of Offlelel Record• In wtllch wu reoorded Mereh 30. 1983, purponed to be: 3702 S. Perton St., purported to be; 934 JunlP«O Drlw, tile otllc;e of the Record« of Orange 11 Record•7• ln1trument No. Sll'ltl Ana, Ca. 92707 Co•I• ,,. .... Celltoml• Tiie under· County; 83-134522. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC The underligned Trull .. dle- llgned llefeby dlaclalm• ... M•blltty Slid .... win be m.de, but without AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST 810-clllmt any llebtllty tor 91'/'f ""'°"9ct· for any lnciorrectnee. In llld 11ree4 ooYenlrll or w.,renty, expr-or Im-DER FOR CASH, law!\11 money of the ,_of the 1trM4 lddf-Ind OIMf eddreu °' otllet common dellO· plied, <6glrdlng '"" POlllHIC>n, Of United St••• or • eaaflllt'• Chedl common "91gnatlon, II My • .,_, netlon. enc::urntwwlcM, to PllY the r9lr'llinlng drewn on 11t111 or netlonal tlenlt, 1 Mteln. tt tile •trwl 9ddr9M or otlllr Slid Ull wtll be m9de without prlnclpel eum of the notl(•I MCUr.ci at1te or t.detll aedlt union, or• en. c:onwnon dMIONtlon of the property werrenty. 1xpr-or lmp4led, reoard-by Mid ~ of Truet. wltf'I inw.t or ledefll MVlngl llld loin ~ le not Indicated '*-'· dlr9Ctlonl to Ing 11111, ~. or ~ •In Mid note provided, ldv9nc99. If tlon domlGlled 1n thll 1111•, .it ~-thepfoperty mey be obt.lned trom bfllllOll, 10 Ntllty IM prfnC:IC>el 1191-wny, under the '""" of Mid Deed of etlle •• the time of Nie. ell rlgtlt. tltle the ~ herein nerned to • 1nce ot the Not• OI' other obllgtltton truet, '-· ch41rgee, llld 0.1*1-of and lnllfMI held by 11 ... T""' .. • tn written r9q\IMI wbmltted Jo Mid ..wred by Mid OMd ot Truet, with Ille TrutlM and of Ille 1ru111 crNt9d thll reel ptoperty lltu•t• In Mid bentlflol9ry within t9'1 dtlYI ffom the lntw .. t and otllet eum1 u provided by llld Deed of Trull. County and 8t11e, deeorlbed • fol-first publlclltlon of thll notloe. therein: plul advancM. II any, under Slid .... wll be held on:Thuflday, lowl: BENEFICIARY: Siii• S8¥lngl and lhe '""" tt•eof end lntereet on .My 28, 1"3, al 2:00 p.m. •t IM Lot 3 of Trect No. 8871, u I* loen "99oci9tlon, 122 N. !I DofedO, 1UC1h lldv~. and p1u1 ,_, ~ ~ lr'trence 10 the ~-dedlnBook2ff.PlfOM4t 8tockton1 Ca. H202, PM>ne: cMrOH. and e11penM1 Of Ille Civic Centtr 9u11d1no, 300 bill Md 50 of~ In tM ofllo9 of IN (219)1Me-11tld ...,.,_ of tM Tl'lllf .. and of the tNMa crMI_, ~ ~ A'19.. 0rent9 Ca. County "9cord9r of lllld County. ""9ilet, .. IN t""9 Of Mid Deed of TNlt. The 1°'91 ""°""' Al tM UIM of IN lflftllll putll-Tiie .,... 90c1r9M or OOtMIOfl a.Id .... be INd9., but wlltlOUt of Mid obfl09llon, lndudlno r....on-oetlon of tNe notice, !M totll d9elQnltlon of the ,.., ~ com.IMt or ~ • ..-or 1bly 99\lmeted '-. ehlrgee and b • -.it of fN unp9ld .,...,_of the hertinabow d99Cnbed II ~ ~. ~ tlltt, p I I I I 111~1, peneee of the rru.1 ... II IM time ot obllQetton MOUr9d by IN 9bove o. to be: 5192 Aoyaie A-. IMM. or encum6rano., lnCIYcllnQ ..... lnttlel publlc:lllOrl of thll Nottoe, 11 tcttr.i ~of trwf and 99ttmlltecl Callfornle. oh9rgeeand~ofth6T""* 143.559.87 cott1. 91fP1f16M, Mel adWMM le TM und«llgned her9b'; clltlollllfM and of the t"'9t1 ~ ~ Mid BENEFICIAL MANAGEMENT t 1M,47t.25. .. !11*Y fOf eny lnoorreatMM In Deed of Trwt, to 1M1Y tM r9"lelnlna COAPORATION=lAICA TM lotAll lndeO..._. belflQ lri Mid It,_ 9d« ... Of other -pnnolpel-oftMno19(1)MCl#'.ct 1 Oel9wwe Ion .._.Of! ""6oti !M opening Did II mon dulg11etlon. ~. ~ o.ct 9' T'l'Ull to •: REAL ESTATE RITIU compvted !Mr 119 ~ bJ Cl.Ill-Seid .... Wiii M rNdt wttti0111 M .'915.CM With lnterwt tt.eon SERVICr, c.omi. 1ng(714)N7-oMllMct.vbtlottthe wwr.my, ..... 0rim911ed,,.._. frOlll FtO. 18, 1112 •tt.n "''* oorpon111011, tt1 Aoef'tt MNi. Ing tttl9, p 1111 lllon, Or enout11-ennwn provided In Mid notl(I) PIUI p. (SEAl.)D.J. MorfW Datecl: June 21, 1"'3. bf-. to MtWy tM ~ .... .. co.ea. °'*'IM Md fl't _, II "-PrlllkMnt Putlllfied Or-. C-c Delly 1rict of tM No4e OI' GI'* obllelUOn 9dvMoll M. 7ta » """ .......... 2020 NOr1h 8foedwtty, Piiot .My 8, ta. 20, 1"3 30e2.q MC\lfN by Mid Deed of Trwl. w1tt1 TM .,...-.,, undlr Mlilt Deed Suite 20e Int.,... Md other -• pr1M09d of TN91 MNIOfore.--.S lrid c»- 99t1t1 AN, Ce. 92708 "8JC MOT1C( t,_..,: pM ~. K .ny, "'If* llWt9d to IN ~-a wrftWI (714)853-te 10 tM tenne "*'°' Met lnt9f'Mt on DMllBtlon of d9f9ull' Md OMMnd Daffld• June 123. 1"3. '1CTmOUI ........ wcfl edvancte, encl plut ..... tot .... lrid • wrlt1eti No4lo9 of 0.. Publltlhed Or1r19e Coeet ~ ~ ITAT'lmlff cflaro-, and •11"'1 ... Of• the f9UIU11Clltectlol\to .... TM"'*'-Pllot June 29, IVt>/ I , 13. 1"3. The fOlowlng l*'90fl It doing Tniet .. Ind of tM tNeea ~ ~ IFlgned CeuMd Mid NollOt Of DltNt 2M 1-U ~ •: Mid Deed of TNlt. The tote! lll'nOUftt llld !>ectlon to W to 119 t900fdld In ----------~ DATA KINO, 1211 t t A..,i tit,_.. of Mid ~Ion, lllCludlng rwon-IN oountywMr9 tN,..., P'Ol*1Y II 8-A. El Toro, Cellf. 92930. -•ll!Mied ..... CIMl'gll llld •· loottN. Olk! JI-. 30.1..!...f!I . /111• McOulrt -Kt111. 284' I s--of .. T"'*9e. II .. tlrM of IUNl<llT llfMCI VVMPANY ~. U.U111 Hlllt. C9'1f. ltllt191 ~IOl'I Of ttlll Noltot. II a COIPotMIOI• '"63. .....761.k -.: Dettlllt lender, Thie~ le~ by en DtMCI: .My 1, 1"3. TN1191 .... Ofllo9r lllCIMdU9t. PutllllNd Or..... 0-.t Delly 114 Noftfl II DarMc> It. Tlill 11 .. tl'Ml'lt .,.. 1119C1 wlttl the Piiot .My t, 1', 201 1Ha aou.d P.O. Dr .... 0 ~otor.,.<:ouMyon ~.,,....,.,.. ~=1~e"'°' 0,.,,.. 0... Delly ............ ---.. Or-.. co.. -Pio\. June 15, 22, 2',.,,,.., I , tla. ..,_. ~ lfl h Piiot JWll I , 11, IO, tlU • Htt.83 • DM. Y M.OT ICM 141 • c rou1 HIA11H DR. PETER J . STEINCROHN DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: It aeems lilly to admit it, but I'm glad I had my uterus removed. 1 am 43 and waa having aevere bleeding due to fibroids. I put off the operation u long as I could, but at l.aat had a hysterectomy. I'm happy about it for two reasons. One, the bleeding stopped aft.er the operation arid my anemia cleared up. The second reuon? I was having hot flashes that almost diaabled me. They would suddenly break out and I'd perspire profusely. It got ao bad I had to give up many ordinary social eventa. Even viaiting a neighbor was a hardship I complained ao much that my doctor prescribed estrogen pill.I. I've been taking them for about four months. The penpiration, nervousness and hot flashes have practically diaappeared. The reason I feel safe taking estrogens la that my uterus is out. There's no danger of causing cancer of the uterus. Besides, I understand that taking estrogens keeps one young. I hope this explains why I'm happy I had my hysterectomy. I can keep on taking hormones without fear of serious complications. But my doctor is already suggesting he will reduce the doee or diacontinue them. What's he ICared about? Mrs. U. DEAR MRS. U.: During the past few years, doctors have been alerted against the danger of causing endometrial cancer in women who take estrogens. This is especially likely in thoee who take it over a Jong period of time and in large doses. For that reason, theee honnones are not routinely prescribed by doctors to treat menopausal discom- forts. But now there's another reason to consider. Some recent studies indicate that women who take estrogens for several years increase the risk of CDICOD COl~ICTIOI . .. cl.aaic apparel JOU -·t beU-th. pri-' c!:! ~ ~-4136 . RUFFELL'S UPHOl.SfHY, INC . ............ -4 .... 1922 HAllOll •YD. COSTA MISA -541-t156 USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST IESULT" SHVICE DllECTOl'f For Result Service Ca11 642-5671 bt.JU 'l • breut cancer. Perhaps the reason lor your doctor's sudden conservat.ilm, is that he realizes this cS&naer. He's not ".c.ared" -just ta.king sensible precautions not to invite trouble, Mrs. U. FOR MRS. E.: "Giving honey to your infant as baby food may be asaociated with infant botulism -this ia a fonn of food poiaoning caused by a neurotoxin from the bacterium, c. botulinwn. It can produce severe muscle weakness and even death." I have just received this News Release from the American Academy of Pediatrics. It suggests that honey should not be given to infants younger than six montN. However, llCientista att still gathering data. Therefore, better rely on your own pediatrician's judgment before deciding whether or not to give honey to your own infant. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I 3.J'll a healthy 27-year-old female who for the past six months has suffered from stomach ''distress." I get recurring attacks of diarrhea and collections of large amounts of gas. Some days I feel fine. My doctor has given me extensive tests: upper GI, gallbladder X-rays, slgmoidoscopic ex.am, stool ex.ams. Nevertheless, all these tests were negative. But I'm still suffering. What else can be done'! Please help! I'm miserable! Miss D. DEAR MISS D.: Ask your doctor if you migh • be suffering from lactoee intolerance. This is ' sometimes overlooked. U this is your problem, eliminating milk Crom your diet may be the welcome solution. Dr. Steincrohn welcomes questions from readers. He cannot answer aJ1 individually but will include those of general interest in his CQlumn. Send your questions to him, in CAre of the Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Watch for our South Coast Plaza Village Sunflower & Bear Orano-Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 . New openings ••• 'La Mancha' and 'Androles· ~eadyto bow BY TOM TITUS on..,..,_ ..... lf you're one of lhe many theatergoers who could see "Man of La Mancha" aaaJn and again, you can really pig out th.I.a weekend. Two productions of lhe "lmpouible ])ream" musicaJ will be o.n lhe board.a juat a few miles apart -in Mission Viejo and San Clemente. The Saddleback Company Theater will be winding up ita engagement while Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse opens another version Friday for a nine-week run. "Man of La Mancha" is one of two summer shows bowing in this weekend. Also opening Friday'is George Bernard Shaw's comedy "Andro- cles and lhe Lion," which will take up a five-weekend residence at the Westminster Com- munity Theater. At Sebastian's, Kent Johnson will be mount- ing his third producti~n as artistic director of the San Clemente dinner tlouse and will showcase Ron Scarlata as Cervantes/Don Quixote, Adrienne Hatcher as AJdonzo and Peter Quesada as Sancho. Others in the cast are Clark Bunion, Tim Nebon, Intermission At Sebastian's, Kent Johnson will be mounting his third production as artistic director of the San Clemente dinner house and will showcase Ron Scarlata as Cervantes/Don Quixote, Adrienne Hatcher as Aldonzo and Peter Quesada as Sancho. John Moreno and Mark Rydzynaki "Man of La Mancha" will be performed Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at l and 7 p.m. at Sebastian's West, 140 This pirate movie •••. Yellowbeard' fulfills his boyhood dream ly BOB THOMAS ................. HOLLYWOOD -The movie, Yellowbeard," started because fonty Python member Graham l\apman was thunderstruck as a hild when he saw Burt Lancaster washbuckle his way through the 95.2 adventure, ''The Crimson 'iri1e.'' 'l'he English schoolboy fell in >Ve with pirate movies. Years 'ter" he decided to write one for 'le:l.ate Keith Moon, drummer for ,e·rock group, The Who. costly. Even when the project was budgeted at $5 million on New Zealand locations, there were no takers. Then Hemdale Leisure Group, an English financing company, agreed to come on board. This month, Orion Pictures is releasing "Yellowbeard" with a cast headed by Chapman and fellow Pythonians Eric Idle and John Cleese, plus James Mason, Madeline Kahn, Cheech and Chong, the late Marty Feldman, Peter Cook and Peter Boyle. Chapman hi.m9elf plays the title role. "It was like a boyhood dream," he said. "Imagine biting people's throats and slicing them to pieces with a sword. De- Ave. Pico, San Oemente and will run through Sept. 11. Call 492-99~ tor Ucket lnfonnation. Charles Taylor ia d1rec1ing the WestmJ.nater production of "Androcles" with Mitchell Nwm, Jane Young, Michael Aquila, Tim Blough and Woody Jonea feetured in the cut. <i:'ompletJ.na the company are Kim Fit.qerald, Chuck O'Connor, Rod Cart.er, Gabrielle Avedlan, Don Barrett, Manny Stegall, Ken Saxton, Steve Grodt, Larry Blake, Roma Tuay, CoriMOlater, Bryan Johnson, Darwin Swalve, Deanna Blackwell and Chriatina Juqe Abbott. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Aug. 6 at the theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. Re&e.rva.tiona are taken at 995-4113. Meanwhile, back at Saddleback College, the first "Man of La Mancha" resumes Tuesday and continues through a cloalng performance Sunday. David Holliday and Adria Firestone star as Quixote and Aldonza, while director Rudy Tron to and Carl Nellon alternate in the role of Sancho. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday with matinees at 2 p.m. Saturday and 3 -STA&WARr- RETlJRNQf 1HE JEDI "A BRILLIANT IMAGINATIVE PIECE OF MOVIEMAKING" -TIME "Keith struck me as a second .c>bert Newton (who ~layed Long oHn Silver in Disney s 'Treasure Uand')," Chapman said. "Keith '81 rather piratic.al, always livi.ng n the edge and doing things that lOlt of ua would avoid. "After 'The Life of Brian,' I was >ntemplating what to do next, nd I thought of the pirate movie >r Moon. I wroi.e a five-page (tlOpsis, but when I tried to resent it to Keith, he was having :ie d .t.'s and in no fit state to Jntemplate anything. He died >Oil afterward." lightful!" . liiii~lii;i Graham Chapman was here to 1111111iB help launch "Yellowbeard," and • Graham Chapman He's ~Yellowbeard' he bears no resemblance to the rapacious buccaneer. Instead of wild beard and flowing hair, he has a smooth face and thinning, sandy hair. The face is long and angular, with a large Roman noee. Monty Python members don't ive up, and Chapman began •orking on a script with Bernard lcKenna, who wrote all lhoee Doctor" comedies. They were lined by Peter Cook. Dudley loore's former partnel' of "Beyond the Fringe." At one point, Chapman enlisted Burt Lancaster to play the pirate chief. "Yellowbeard" was filmed in England and Mexico within ita $8-milllon budget, with the Boun- ty from the 1961 Marlon Brando movie doubling aa the pirate ship. Shootlng went smoothly until the end, when Feldman suffered a Film companies wouldn't buy the project. "We like your script, but...," the movie boaes said. The "but" was that nobody was mak- ing pirate movies anymore. Besides, sea movies were too heart attack and dled. Bl.RT REYNOLDS NOW PLAYING ....,_ CllllTA-.U WiWiMIMCll ..... .,_,, '"-'-~ ~ -...o.-""Clll'-171..... ,~ .. ••• U.OJN IJ4Jtll _ .. _ ..._ .... --- -•L""""'°""'"' ~--~-"'-'-~-'" 121 -010 uo u o1 •tt tno .,. 1110 -TA-.U -IA-(-0-.. C-tlt •H t MIC a... -UI 0)00 -, .... S-t ..., __ "'°'°"""'-' llJ.491.U "Movie Magic!" -usA rooAY 1~ •f&•t,I .......... . ,., ~ ''llE fUtfEST Art'IRICAN PtlJVE COMEDY OF 1lE YEAR:' =--.,..~ DAI IYllDYD EDDIE MUIPIY ~ .. ~~~~ .. ....,._"~ . ---NOW PLAYING --- 11:41 21111100 7140 101U ~-U 1IO ""l'j 0 litO _llftll 1111111•1 •• 11 4'Al1 1100 • 101'9 -HO ll'lt,._ Ho Ccono,.,,. l<flURNOFlliF SHUJtt JED I ·--··· Mu a.. .. 11 aehorM CNI .., ..., . .,, mNOlDS ~ ...................... -.:·~· ~·TIM SOM II NI ,, .. ,. .......... , Orl••l11t0 .. 11t1HW ... 111tlU•/JtltWMlt .... ........ ...,12frtt .......... , .,... :::a.--:r Ooi1r IJO,HS,I~ 111. lt>O Find money.savin1 recipes ln Wednesday's ) ""...,_ .,_ ICI"' (N) Ooi1r 11 >O. 1 >O. C II ua. a >0. 1t>0 ..... __ ,.., Dolt 11 CS. l 10 CIS 6JO.IO. 100 [Mt..., --ft.Klrlll) Ooilr I IS, l 11. UO llS, ltJO ..,...,,r ..."""' 100. t 00, IOtS .,.._..ell ... "' uo. ltcl) ~rlll> ... n.uo '""'..,_ "1-ICI"' CN) Dolt 1 I\. rn, HO. 100 too. 100 ...=. .... .. , .. , ... !1 p.m. Sunday in the main theater on the Mialion Viejocampua. Call 831-4656 for ticket infonnat.lon. Two other muaicala continue thm respective engagementa at local theat.era -"West Side Story" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhou8e and "Carousel" at the Huntington Beach Playhoulle. ' Keith Rice and Cuaandara MoMOUr head lhe cast of "West Side Story," which plays nightly except Mondays through Sept. 11 at the Harle- quin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., just north of ea.ta Mesa. Ticket information la available at 979-5511. Rodgers and Hamment.ein'a "Carouael" will be performed Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through July 9 at the Hunt.ington Beach Play- house, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue in the Seacliff Village shopping center. Reeervationa are taken at 847-0465. CALLBOARD-The San Clemente Can- munity Theater has called auditions for lhe Roaring Twenties muaicaJ ''The Boy Friend" for Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Ave. Cabrlllo, San Clemente. •BARGAIN llATINaES • Mond1y thrv leturday All P9'formancH belora S:OO l'M (~ ,,... £111111•11•• -......,., "OCTOPUUY",... ----- "TMIMNG PLACll" 1111 .. ftUOw.AN>",... -----------·--... __ _ ............... r,... l"'MTUl9t OP n9 __.,... ---------- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi< IN ~ .. -·------- '"FU9ftl>ANCP"' ------ LAKlWOOD C lNTlll SOUTH wa.-'" ... MGAm•"------ , .. ,, ANAHEIM OQIVI IN --"--" 119-MIO l oc11tfy 01 Col\Cl .. •OOd 21J/5l1·tMO ~TOPUUY",.. ·-------........... ~911§~-­~~ ... --- .._AHA.I",.. ----- "90NCY'81: ,...mXTDAY"1111 ------ .. ~:::.. "OCTOPUeeY"-~=:-..,:;"'..t' "PORCm wr.'1auecr.,. Cllll·ll-Cllll·ll----- I '• " • ~ I BUl NA PARK ,,.,, '" ~-,---llM070 ' •' LINC OLN [JIJIVI ,,.. l--... -... -12M070 •,II.., FOUNTAIN VALLEY DlllV I IN -~·""· .. ....._~, ~ ... --...... ROAD TO ct91A• - Ml·l•I Cltll " -- "ftLL.an...,..._ ...-.woa.11.auur .. m.11- LA HAH~A , , ~ IJMMI "' 1USBWMr- ..... ~a.A•.,. ---- ORANGE , ' ., " VvA kNlk' . •. .. -. _ . ......., ____ _ •' , . . • , $ ' , l .. ' • . I ! • • • • • . • • M Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, July 6, 1983 fiOROO c.; \H•·H :l .D ~.' 1NC' I FEEL A.N '""'WJ.t~-i ,,,1,:;:F/1t 'IN~:., \N ,V)/tl~/,';4,1 4;:.i.'E/IJCIN~f • THE •'A'91L\' CIRCl'S by 8 11 Keane "Terry's lucky. His house is so small that he and his brother hove bunk beds." '9.\R.'9 \Dl'kt: . . I ~.'}1. ~ ~'Ti; ~1~1"'1 "- by Brad Anderson I 'I/\ "~(''I ~ Tlr.\, . •; . ' • :J ""' r1r ~I~ • ., I'• 1' •' • , 1 '/:;.,.\ (1 11.,}Ji!,'f. '"'" ' ·' •II I r..Y111. "'' 1/1 , .. I• r lr,11, "";" ( t 1"· 7 " . l // • t 1//'/ ! " I I 1 • I' "I get a turn with Marmaduke next!" A MAN WEC' Tc1 4 CROW CESEC:VES A LARI<. N<IW ANC' THEN.' f!t/:t:'V .:..."\:'C', .::wt-·' 11/l I( IL!.H A 81T L'HllLIVIN - l~TI<' f . by Gus Arriola 1 AM e 111 Tl/£ V<\'AL IAk·l~(IMENT C>t= ELEME.NTA 1.-n,:, 1 n(..:., P/IPf • by Jim Davis by Virg il Partch (VIP) "Actu1lly I'm Swedish." tll i1f l1 E WEREPlAYl~J°HIDE AND .. AN G£rs l.O~fWHENHf' eur JOEY GETS S(M£J) THE 5£EKER . £N HE~ THE HIDfR •.. ~:-:tHHt' .'9 l I.I.I's by Ferd & Tom Johnson • k SIMMER.TIME ... Hx. LORD PLUS'HBoTTOM : --AND NoroNLY MY... IS Go1NG To Be so N~w PANc~ING FoJ< .J~.ALous OF You .. MY PANTRYt BUT NEW -~--~,~~ LINOLS:UM Fol< MY i'ITCMEN ... II · by Charles M Schul z LUCV ! MOW COOLD YOU MISS TMAT BALL?! IT CAME Rl6m TO VOU! HOW COVLD VOCI MISS IT ?~! 7r;::;r: by Tom K. Ryan Ot4ftX>H. I WAS HOP1~1t> CONSt:fM:M/ eM::PBV • • Norlh South vuln1:r11bl10. Soulh 1frak NORTll + KJ 97S /AS 0 K 10 42 • 83 Wt-:ST t:AS'I' +6 +0 ~KJI0943 'V 872 OJS OQ876 •QJI02 •97 54 SOUTH +AQIOl!2 ~ Q6 0 A 93 • A K 6 The· t11ddin.:. South Wu t North t~111t I + 2 3 Pas1 S + P11111 6 Pan 6 + f'•N~ l'•n P188 Op1•0tnK lt .. ul: Qu1·1·n of • suo•: r ~ \Hl.E ~STILL ~l_~T 1llE !Jf Klt , . -' • ~. -~ DR.\BBI.•: ~ORMAN, 00 'i()J ~~>JE. AN~ ~~\( 600KS ~ , GOIEN ON BllDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF lh•rc·\ u h11nd to lt•ict your h'rhn1111w Cun South t'laim ' h1io slam rel( a rd IC~\ or lht• minor suit di,lribution. 1f we assumr thnt W1:i;1 has lh1• ktnK of hearts for his oVl'r call'! North South hid woll to their i;lam. Norlh had lllllt• tu 8pllrt' for hi~ l'Ul' hid ofll•r Wl'St 's ov1•rt·a ll. Never lhl'it·S~. hi' dulifully CUC hid his a1·t• of ht•arls :dl1•r Soul h show1•d h1· was 10lt•rt•st11d in h1•arl Mnlrol for a slum. Soulh Wl!>l'ly tl1•1·1dt•tl lo sl'I Ill· for 11 ,m,111 ,l:Jm W t•'! lt·tl I ho• tjllt't'll t•f 1•h1lh, 1.1 lo.1·n 111 I h1· t•lo.i·d han'I I lo\\ "011111 vou prn It \\'t••I h,1, tho• kinK ul 1 ~ve. 10 w~Mf. A RE.~~ oN 't~E. 1'16E.U.N i~K fOR 5uMM£f< ~ !>C~OOt..1. h1•a rt~. you t'.ln d.11111 lh1• ,1um. Ahn w1nn1ni.; th1· hr111 lril'k, draw trump,, ra:.h you r r1·m:1in1nw dub honor und rurr" l'luh on th•· 1ahlt· Now tash thl· klnl( of diamonds nnd l1•11d ti low dm inond toward your hnnd. If East produrcs an honor. y1111 win 11nd rl•lurn lht• niO(' Of diamonds, nnd dummy'~ kn or diamonds is l(Ckirl for ti hc·arl discard. If Ens I follows w 11 h .1 low diamond. pl11y your n1nto. As the· Cllrds hi'. W\•St w1m. t ht• Joll'K, bul hl· i:. l'nd 11la.vl'd. Ii i· mu~t ('ii ht•r rl'lurn a ht•art Jway from h" king 11r l'l'c' pl.iv a rluh :llld KIYl' \'OU :t ruff slur!. llow1•v1•r, v1111 .tho m.1kt• tht• ,1,1m 1f w;.,, ha· lhn•t• ur i Ootff f.VEN K~OW W~M· " ~Al( LOOKS t..\ KE.~ mt1n· ritamond:.. Jn lh.11 l'OI .... ht• r.111 r1•lurn .1 d1.11nond. I h1· h,1, 1hn·1· tl1.11nonlh , lht Ionic thamund 1n dumm.v s1•1 up for .1 h,•nrl p11c•h. JI h1' hu four or mun· d1a rnonds. ru all your w1nn1•r• nncl. at th tnd, Wt·sl will bt• s4u1•1:.Z(' bl'IW11l•n 1h1· k11)1t i1l-h1•art nnd his Ion!{ d1a~ond. Try ii. Have you bt1en runnln1 ID· to doublr l~ Lrt Charle• Goren h,lp you rt.cl your wa y through tht mau or uoueu:s for prnaltlrs and for takro11t. For 1 topy of his OOllBLt:S booklet, Hnd SJ.115 to "'Gorrn·Doublu ," Clrl' or this new11paprr, J'.O. Boa 259. Sorwoocl, S .J . V16-tH. Ma.kt rhl'ck~ p1yablr lo 'twwp1prrbook~. by Kevin Fagan lJU.\., ~ov ~e.~ 1~17 v1c1~ oF ouR All>IT "ICOA .. ?~ ) HEQ f LET'S 60 ~ICK 5'WD IN 1ME FACE Of 1HAT 5KINN4 KID WfTM 'THE W~ES A~D STEA L Hl5 GIRLFRIEND ! FOOlED THEM ! I OON'T ~ A GlfitLFRJEND ! DR. S~OCK FENTOI\ ~ii~~~!} · Jl IH;t: P.\RKt:R SO ;! JLJS i" RE:C R Uti"eP A Few MOR.e FOR YA·' by 'h'.~~. 1ll Ntt~DRSS£D at~~ ~VER '1a.L$ ~1 llJE. PITCMER W1nror ~I~ W..9'~ .• by Harold le Dou! '! Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, Juty 8, 1983 U CHANNEL LISTINGS Trip into fantasy land • KNXT 1CBS1 lo .. Angell.'~ D KNBC 1NBC1 Los Angele'\ • KTLA tlnd l LO!> Angeles 0 KABC-TV tABCI Lo:. Ancwle!> ()) i...FMB ICBSI San Diego ABC's Severino wears rose colored glasses U Sidney Pohler. Tony Cunis ~~ i TWlJOHT ZONE ~ P.M. MAOAZJHf 4 U~OIA/lgell"(1957)Qllt ~ Gable, Sidney Poitier . • THE GINA IAQWS IHT9'NA T10HAI.. PIANO COMPmT10H £'IENING -&.'GO- • NEWS WOHOEll WOMAN IJ/l080 S.W.A.T. HAWAI~ OYEREMY NlfE1!lt;AH GOYERtMHT CISNEWS *NEWSO VAHISHED: lilSSING 04l.DAEH Cl)MOYIE t * * "Popeye" ( 1980) Robin W~· bins, Shelley Duvall. DMOVIE ** "SI• Pack" (1982) KeMy Rog· ers, Diane Lane. -6.'06- • ORANGE COUNTY TOOAY -8:30- 1'** CAVETT (R) IJNDEfm AHOINiG HUMAH BEHAVIOR • NEWS BARNEY MIUER FELONY SQUAD OH SPORTSWEEX -7:00- C8SNEWS KUNG FU ~~ NEWS TIRE'S COMPANY JOKER'S Wl..D 8U8IEl8 AEPORT MAOC Of ANMAl PAINTING P.M.MAQAZJHE ENTEATAIMHT TONIGHT DMOHET MOYIE * * "Greue 2" ( 1982) Maxwell Caulfield, Mieflele Pfeiffer (Q)MOYIE • "Tenen, The Ape Man" p981) Richwd Harns. Bo Oerell. -7:30- 12 ON THE TOWN ™ATS HOU.YWOOO ONE DAY AT A TIME (I) TIC TAC OOUGH MAael. I~ REPORT THE GINA 8Aat4UER INT!MAT10HAI.. PIANO COtlllPETTTIOH I~ ASl<ED f()A IT **Vt "Deported" (1951) Jeff Chan- dler, M1r1a Toren. Cl)MOYIE • • "Hey1.. Good loolun' " (1982) Mimlled Utrected by Ralpfl Bakslli. -8:00- 1 (I) ARCHIE BUNKER'S PLACE ALl.sT AA GOU>: AfTY YEARS ON THE DIAMOND .MOYIE ••• "Psycho" ( 1960) Anlhony Pew· kins. Janel leiott • (II TME FALL OA!f QIMOYIE • • * "K~'s Heroes" (1970) Cllnl Eastwood, T etty Savalas {.t1MOYIE ***'II "Halls Ot Monlezum1" ( 1951) R1cflard Widmark, Jack Palenc:t Cl)MOYIE t t •.; "Rocky Ill" (1982) Sylvester $1111ont, Cat1 Weath«a. DMOYIE t t 'h "Mommle Oures1" (19811 Faye Dunaway, Diani Scanwid. --:30-ICllGLOAIA VICTOfl AWA/OJ ~·sANGELS ALL IN ntE FAMILY -l:00- 11 Cll MOYIE h 111 ''ReunlOO" (1 980) Kevin Dob- son, Joanna Cassidy, 8 9 TAUS Of M GOlD MOHl<EY 1= ** * "Eye QI The Needle" (1981) Donald Suthetlalld. Kate Neliglvl CIDMOYIE t t "Twice A Woman" ( 1980) Bibi Andetssoo, Anthony Pefl(ln$. CZ)MOVIE U \lt "Aocily Ill" (1982) Sy!Yester Stallone, Cart Weatllers. -t:30- (!)MOYIE ** Vt "Play Dirty" ( 1969) Michael Caine, NiOll Olwnport. Gi) If f&llENCE: TME EMERSON STIINO OUAATET 6D THE VlflONAN -10:00- 1 FAIAYFBJO ••• NEWS If.=: THE EMERSON STAINO OUAATET ~MOYIE t *'II "An Eye F<>< An Eye" (1981) Chucll NO<ns. ChriS1opller Lee. Cl)MOYIE • • "Foreplay" ( 1975) Zsto Mostel. Estelle Persons. -10:15- DMOYIE •'II "Super Fuzz" (1981) Tereooe Hi•. Ernest Borgnine -10:30- • ~ HETWOAK NEWS a.;l MATTERS Of UfE AND DEATH (nlAOCKOHTV -10:45- (%) CHAAl..ES CHAMPUH ON TME FILM SCENE -11:00- 1• (1)9 QINEWS SA TUADAY HIGHT lfSEAACHOF ... M .JtfftMONS G KHJ TV (Ind ) Los Angulo•<.. di KCST 1ABC1 San Diego . I KTIV1tnd I LO~ An9ellh KCOP TV (Ind I Los Angt>ll!'S 8:) KCE T TV tPBSl Lo:. Angcl11s G!> KOCE-TV (PBSI Hunltnglon Beach I IBllV tlU. * *'h "The Slcul" (1"5) Peler ==r()f~ I~,.=;~ J'CIOClUI ~ 9COTT MOVIE MOVIE * "Hwnongout" (1982).lanet Min, •• "Honky Tonk Frt1W1y" (1981) Otvld Wallace. Willilm DMnl. ~ D' Angelo. <.a)MOYIE h 'h "Student Bodlee" (1981) Kris--la- ttn Ri1er. Mltttiew Goldsby. D 8 NBC NEWS 0WJMGHT (l) MOYIE -1:40-**Vt "Stardust" (1975) David ~MOYIE Euex. LMry Htgman t * * "The Frencfl L*ltenanrs 1130 Woman" (1981) Meryl Streep, Jer9- UE°!n. lrrry;c:as~.GnwATCH OU AS1<ED fOA IT TOM COTTl.E: UP CLOSE 000 COUPlE INSIDE OH HAARY-0 MOYIE COMTfMPORARY HEALTH * * "II You Could See Whit I Hear" ( 1982) M#c Singer. R.H Tllomton. Cl) IKlNllE D MOYIE -11:45-** "Six Paclc" (t982) Kenny Rog-ers, Dilwle lane. ~MOYIE * * * "Cutter's Wr," (198 t) JOhn Heard, Jefl Bridges. -12:00-1 ='AINMENT TONIGHT •*Vt ''Blacill>Mtd, The Pirate" (1952) Robert Newlon, Linda Darnell. Cf) N>EP£NDEHT NE1WOAK NEWS .MOYIE ****"A Len• To Three Wives" ~~<:fain, Linda Dlmel. * '* "Popeye" I 1980) Robin Wi-llms, Sfleley Ouvll. DMOVIE • * "let's Do " Agaiii" (1975) Sid-M/1 Pohier, Bill Colby. -12:30-• 8 lATE HIGHT wrTH DAVID lETTEAMAN dlONEONONE ICOUPl.E.8 TOM COTTlE: UP CLOSE MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN l~COUNTYT~Y "A Girl's Best Friend" ( 1981) Juliet Anderson, Ron Jtfemy -12:40-CB)MOYIE tt\lt "The Soldier" (1982) Ken Wlhl, William Prince. -1:00- 9MOYIE ** "The HanQed Man" (1965) Edmond O'Bnen, Vera Mites. •MOW ** 'h "Splnoul" ( 1966) EM1 Presley, Sllelley Fa bares. (!)MOYIE * * * "Wtt And Peace" (Ptl1 2) (1958) AAldt., ~n. Herwy Foo- da. •MOW -2:10- CB)MOVIE **"Aldus" (1980) M Benedict. Unda Blair -2:30- •• NEWS cm~WWY,M.O. ** "TWioe A Woman" (1980) Bibi Andemon, Anlhony Petlclns. -a:OO-eMOW h \lt "&cape To !Mme" (19S5) Barwa Stenwyek. Robert Ryan. ;:-mETCH • * * "The Hurnln Comedy'' ( 1943) ~~Ac>oney. Jamee Crlig, .. • "Solithetn Cornfott" ( 1981) Klltfl Carradine. Powers Boothe. -3:30- (!) FAITH20 -3:40- .MOYIE * * "Penltentlar( ( 1980) Leon Isaac Kennedy. Thommy Pollard. -3:46- (l)MOVIE **'II "Roclly Ill" (1982) Syi-ter Stlllont. Carl Weethers. -4:00- ~=TMEMONIHG *** "Cluh OI The Tltant" (19811 Harry Hamin, Laurence Ohler -4:.IO- (f) u..LWllG..E BY FftED ROTHENBERG ~ ........... NEW YORK-Aak John Severino, pn!Sident of ABC Televiaion, to point to the eta. and quality in teries prosrammJ.ng on ABC's fall IChedule, and he bob9 and weaves u lf he'• been blindfolded and foroed to play Pin the Tall on the Donkey. Every at.ab he takee millea the mark. "I think we preeent a fairly wide ranse in lnformation and enter\ainment prosrarm," be uid at a recent pre.a conference with TV writ.en in Loe Angeles. "There are sporting eventa in prime time, which the others don't have, and the Olympics. which the others certainly don't have." Without mentioning aeries programming, Severino turned to last year's special programmi.ng- "The Winda of War" and ''The Thom Birds." A little dizzy now, he apun around and cited upcoming made-for-TV movies: "The Day Alter," about the aftermath of a nuclear bomb hitting Kanaaa City, and "Something about Amelia," about incest. True enough, ABC's movies and miniseries have done the network proud, but what about the series programs. the staples of prime-time television? Where are the reality-based dramas, the serious-minded oomedies, the F.rnmy awards for distinguished regular programming? "It's in prograriuning like 'Dynasty,' 'Hart to Hart,' "l'hree'sCompany.' 'Happy Daya.' I could goon and on," he said. So could we. Where's the uniqueness, the innovation in your regularly scheduled lineup? Is there a "Hill Street Blues" on your achedule, a "Cheers" or even aomething prom.i&ing like "After MASH"? "I think 'Police Squad' and 'No Soap, Radio' were program.a that were different. and unique. Unfortunately, they didn't make it.'' Severino said. "Police Squad" was zany, but it didn't have any aocial relevance. It also was canceled by ABC after three episodes. "No Soap, Radio" was a joke -on ABC. By the way, thoee programs were broadcast during the 1981-82 aeaaon. Anything current that could be construed as aophisticated or' quail~ programming? "I think 'Webeter' isa program that is going to be very unique and different in a quality nature this year," he said. "Webster" is about a black kid adopted by white parenta. But NBC's "Diffrent Strokes" went that route first. Severino wi8ely ignored ABC's other new programs. most of which were previewed at the recent TV critics press tour in Loe A!\8eles. Not only wasn't the~ anything outatanding, there was nothing that even stood out. Still, Severino prewd on . "We had our best development ae980n in many, many a year." Evidently, Severino and the network's program- mers have been spending too much time on "Fantasy bland," which, in a bold programming touch, i.a supposed to get more realistic this aeaaon. Let's face it, any network that turns over seven of its 22 prime-time hours to producer Aaron Spelling can't have a tight grip on reality. Spelling's newest program. "Hotel," i.a from the same Shangri-la and How's this for a good answer: money. Read our newspaper, and cash in on advertised values, discount coupons, food news and consumer reports that can save you money every single week. We also save you time. Which is important for busy women managing a home, children and many other responsibilities. In the market for fun? We cover weekend enter- tainment and special events aro.und town . TV and movies. Recreation, sports, hobbies, a whole package of interesting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever you have the time. So if you've been feeling a little shopworn lately, get some help. Get the paper. What'• In It tor you? Th• •newer eppe•r• on every P•G• of • II 642·'321 • "The Fall Guy," one of the few new shows that was successful this past season, will lead off ABC's blockbuster Wednesday night pro- gramming. It will be followed by the -popular prime-time soap opera, "Dynasty," and a new show called "Hotel." have an obligation to provide a little brainier aeries fare, too? Speeki.Kg Qf networic responsibility, Severino said ABC ia trying to aooommodate Hi.apanic viewers tonight by offering a radio simulcast in Spanish of "The Fall Guy." Why this program? "The 'Fall Guy' i.a rather a macho show," Severino said. eacapist mentality as his "Love Boat," "Hart to Hart," "Dynasty.'' "T .J . Hooker," "Matt Houston" and "Fantasy l.aland." 1be world outside might be crumbling, but Spelling still wishes upon a star - and he's ahameie. about it. In the pilot for "Hotel," the King of Portugal winds up inviting back to his castle a flighty, hard-luck -but, of cou.ne, golden-hearted - waitrea. "Hot.el" ia certain to be a hit this seuon, since it follows highly rated "Dynasty" and ''The Fall Guy" on Wedneeday, which ia bound to be ABC's most successful night. Actually. there's nothing wrong with a ma. medium .eeking large audiences with tugar-<l08t.ed acUon shows and sudsy lerials. But doesn't ABC abo --. .. II Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Juty 6, 1983 .................... llrldes lobin Simmons •ilnmons-Mackie Robin Mackie of Hunt- 1 ~n Beach and Robert · . .immons of Garden ;>,..we exchanged wed- i.ng vows on June 11 in :i.. Columban's Catholic ~1urch, Garden Grove . Their parents are Rob- rt aJ)d Norma Mackie of luntington Beach and lelvyn and Maria Sim- 1ons of Dana Point. The bride is a graduate f Marina High School, l~tington Beach, and ti.ended Orange Coast ;oUege, Costa Mesa. She 1 employed by Mont- omery Ward. Her husband gradu- ted from Rancho High c~hool in Garden Grove nd UC Irvine. He is rnployed by the Bur- oughs Corp. Following a honey- 1oon in Puerto Vallarta, t.e newlyweds will live 1 Stanton. ~Uen Sandler ~;andler-Mitchell Harold Stuart Sandler 11 Huntington Beach and i.s bride, the former ~ len Sandra Mitchell of ; '6ta Mesa, will reside in i :mtin gton Beach fol- c wing a wedding trip to rl awaii. They were mar- ;~ July 3 in Temple 3eth David , West- T inst.er. The bride is the i tughter of Arnold and Ertelle Mitchell of Costa ~ esa. She graduated fJ om Costa Mesa High S ~hool and Cal State San C: iego, and is employed at GTE Sprint Communica- li Jl'll. Her husband gradu- a· ed from Los Alamito H igh School and UC Berkeley where he was n uned to Phi Beta 8 appa. He is employed b f Fluor Corp. Eoyle- Frederiksen '• L o r i Dawn F rederiben and Brian Cean Boyle were mar- riedJune 25 in the New- p n Christian Campus Chfpel, Newport Beach. Their parent.I are Rkfm'd and Mickey F rederiben of Newport Biiich. Jeannie LortJ of C ninte and Dan Boyle of 'Il.lilin. 1)e bride ia a (Vlduate 0 I~ Harbor High s =liiol and the Floret'K'e Siea School o f • . Una· A profe91ional n I. lhe ai.o ii em- P ~ at the Main St. I mpc>rium, Balboe. If. hUlband gi.du- a .t. from Univenity f.:s,b School, Irvine, and (J'aAle Cout College, CCJB\I Mesa. He ii a 6)otractor and also vldrka foe the Main St. Import um. Aft.et' honeymooning ., llaw. the newlyweda •illf 11ve ln Costa Meu. LUXURIOUS BATH TOWELS 00 IF PERFECT 5.99 TO 7.99 EACH FOR Soltd\ S!rtpe\ Print\ or Jocqvord\ with the fvll bodied qvol1ty of Connon trod1t1on ot o lroct1on of the co\I St19h1 1mperlect•on\ m no woy a ffect v\ob1l1ty (~~ ,, ,,,, ,, ,, ,, r ' -. 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II be WdltW II lllt Ult lll•U ........, ,,,,,_It l'llt\ den tr:i1 ., 10 <lt••t w elm wt utts 11 10 \OK••' pi1W\ft •t eoM•ltn •e 11«nY11ty '"'"'" 1t 11o0 ,.,.,_ '""' Good Wednesdoy, July 6th, Thru Tut1dGy, Jvly 12th. Some Items At Regulor '""'· MATCHING CRYSTAL GLASSWARE JER&EllS 4-aAR LOTION MILD SOAP PACI< •• ~. ~ r HGUUI PIKI Buy two Jer9<'n. USS MR'S MA•·lfl C Soop ' aruu ON rwo 50 Poe~, ond 4.U (ll ... 1.00 ta 9e1 SI ()() Mfr\r~ 19 lvnd St'<' YOUt flHAl C ••ore 101 \.. COST• IA . ....i de•o•I\ t 6 or Sl1ted Peocho Peor Hol•e• 01 f•u•• Cockto1I While Ste><k• lou1 l•m•t 6 FUJI FILM 110 01135-100 ASA 99 :s,:~r ='-=~~' Ol'I COIMN atllUIK IE G. GUI tllTUIOOU Of ,. ... ,. ...... 2 • 5 9 tul Kl STOii IOI Ml•t 24 exp o\ure rolh SIUI lllCI OYEN IAIED IEANS SUPll PllCI 16 Ot wtltle $1vch lo\f limit• DEllATRIM X -STRENGTH CAPSULES 99 REG . 4.39 20 Regvlor or Colleonc f•e._. 01 l 6 Pfv\ Vo1om1n, DAI< DANISH ·1-LB. 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See stor y, page C3. l 1 And now, f oothall --Hoboken style Raymondo Guiseppi Giovanni Baptiste Malavasi, plodding through life as a professional football scientist, now pauses on that delightful journey as adviser to something entitled the International Football League. To free himself of encumberances to enter this nation, Malavasi settled with the Rams who were paying him not to coach their team. Inasmuch as paychecks from the Rams are a trifle more solid than pwe gold, you wonder if in this case, the adviser was in need of advice. However, Ray swears up and down he is dedicated to the proposition what this country needs is a good $5 cigar and another football league. '•Even with the National and United States leagues," Malavasi says, "there are still not enough SPORTS CQ..UMNIST BUD TUCKER places for all the kids who are ~ented enough to play pro football, so another league is needed." Whereupon, the IFL announces that it would be receptive to merger overtures from the USFL, presumably figuring it is not unlikely to hear from the NFL. In fact, Malavasi says a merger is a distinct possibility which would tend to blow away this "another league is needed" theory, but it is far too early to quibble over paltry details. The IFL will p\ay its games in the spring and summer, me.aning it will be in directCQmpetitlon with the USFL. The alternative wa5 go operate in the summer and fall, combating the NFL. If the advice to choose the USFL as the opponent came from Ray !dalavasi. he earned his advisory fee at the very outset. Franchises will be scattered which, in part, accounts for the name of the league. Names mentioned include Southern California, Hawaii, Canton, Ohio, Memphis, San Jose, Australia and Japan. Travel arrangements will require study but this is of no concern this early in the the life of the IFL. One of the organiz.ers is Dennis Murphy, the Orange County resident who was involved with the American Basketball Amociation. World Hockey Asaociation and World Team Tennis. It is Murphy's .law that in the caae of a prospective franchise investor, you read about him in the following order: (a) his financial statement, and (b) the location of his propoaed franchise. As Malavasi says, there are plenty of players to go around, and God knows, there is never a shortage of unemployed coaches. One wonders, however, if it will be possible to recruit the necessary army of capable publicity and promotion people. For instance, a guy is beating the tambourine in behalf of a contest in Sidney, Australia with the (See TUCKER, Pa1e C%) , . , ' Can AL top National League's best pitcher? J \:Tonight's lft · starting I~' ·lineups NadoaaJ Leape ·i;. Su, Dod1en, Zb 2. Raines, Montreal, lf 3'. Dawson, Montreal, cf 4. Oliver. Montreal, lb 5. Murphy, Atlanta , rf 81 Schmidt, Philadelphia, 3b 7. Carter, Montreal, c 8. 0 . Smith, St. Louis, im 9. Soto, Cincinnati, p .. American League l-Carew, AD1el1, lb 2. Yount, Milwaukee, ss 3.. Lyu, Angels, cf f . Rice, Boston, lf s: Brett. Kansas Oty, 3b 6. Simmons, Milwaukee, c 7. Winfield, New York. rf 8. Trillo,Cleveland,2b Reds' Soto to start tonight; Carew, L y nn are s tarters CHICAGO (AP) -Mario Soto of Cincinnati and Dave Stieb of Toronto were named on Tuesday to start baseball's 50th an- niversary All-Star game in America's oldest major league baseball park. Tonight's All-Star game at 73-year-old Comiskey Park will mark an historic milestone for baseball's showcase of its best players, and Soto comes into the game with a sense of history as the National League tries to make it 12 victories in a row. "There was a great pitcher from my country, Juan Marichal, and I hope I can do it," Soto, a native of the Dominiean Republic, said of his countryman, who enters the Hall of Fame this year. On T l' t•nl6•t C••nnel4 a t S Stieb, 10-7 and loser of his last three, is making his third All-Star appearance, first as a starter. Stieb pitched on Sunday, but said he felt strong enough to work a couple of innings. Henog also announced his bat- ting order Tuesday. Second baseman Steve Sax of the Los Angeles Dodgers will lead off, followed by left fielder Tim Raines, Montreal; center fielder Andre Dawson, Montreal; first baseman A1 Oliver, Montreal; right fielder Dale Murphy, Atlan- .. ta; third baseman Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia; catcher Gary Carter, Montreal, and shortstop 8 Ozzie Smith, St. Louil. ~· 9. Stieb, Toronto, p Ex-Nationa l Leaguers (fro m left) Willie Mays, Lou Brock and Monte Irvin recall the good o l' days. Soto is 9-7 this year for the Reds with 124 strikeouts and is called by St. Louis Cardinals skipper Whitey Herzog, who will manage the Nationals, "the best pitcher in the National League." Soto, in his second straight All-Star game, will pitch with th ree· days' rest, having started for the Reds on Saturday. American League Manager ~ Harvey Kuenn of the Milwaukee ~· Brewers announced a batting order of first ba9eman Rod Carew, of the Angela; ahori.top Robin Yount, Milwaukee; center fielder Fred Lynn, of the Angels; Flashes of old before present at CoHJiskey ClilCAGO (AP) -There was lilly Williams, slamming a ¥tball out of the park. And Har- lOll Killebrew, complaining that -ie Chicago wind had robbed him f a home run. And Ernie Banks, 1aoting to play on. Scenes from the past were rec- !ated in every comer of Com- b y Park Tuesday, as 88 fonner layers and baseball officials athered for an Old-Timers ame. It was held as part of ueball's celebration of the 50th nniversary of the All-Star game, ) be played tonight. Willia.ms, who starred as a slug- ing outfielder for the crosstown hicago Cubs, hit a a -than-fastball from Hoyt Tilhelm off the facade of the pper deck in right field for a vo-run homer to key the Na- onaJ League alumni to a 6-5 dory over the American eague. WLLIAMS Another former Cub, Don Kess- inger, got the game-winning RBI in the top of the third and final inning with a two-out double, driving in Bobby Thomaon, who alao doubled. Wil.lla.rM was named Most Valuable Player of the game. "I just find it kind of ironic that I had to wait until I was 45 yea.rs old to get an MVP award," said Williams, who finished 18 major-league seasons with a .290 batting average and 426 homers. "After all these years, it's still a thrill to hJt one, especially in the upper deck in front of all these guys.'' The wind was blowing hard from left field, and Killebrew, who hit 573 home runs for Wash- ington and Minneso1a, swore it cost him another. Rams could lose Oickerson to USFL HOUSTON (AP) -Eric ickel"90n. the aecond choice in te National Football League -aft, says several United States :>e>tball League teama have ade him off en competitive with I08e of the Rama. Dickenon, Interviewed by tele- 'lOne at hia home in Sealy, told oUston radio station KlKK '.anday he haa had "some pretty rabbar, Bulls • neet1ng s~t free -cent center Kareem bdul-Jabbar wUJ meet with hlcaao Bulla chief operating of- »r Jonathan Kovler and pn- aJ manacer Rod Thom Sunday, cordlnC to Jabbar's qent, Tom jllna. Colllna added he hu no C'\.U'ftl\t .a for meeting apin with Ileen owner Dr. Jf!ft')' &-. • however, in a t.elevWon lerView Tue.day nJcht, sakl he ould talk to C01linl by phone me t1ine nitxt week. I I handsome offers" from the USFL. Dickef90n said he would consider not reporting to the Rams' training camp July 16 if no contract has been approved. He declined to aay •~Y what USFL teams had made him offers or how much money wu involved. Dickenon said he haa talked with the Los Angelee Ex- pr'81, the Arlz.ona Wranglen and the Denver Gold. He said no offer had come from Arizona. The Southern Methodist All-America tailt>Kk Mid the Rama~thenwelvs in a comer ~ running t>Kk Wendell T)'ler to Jl'ranci8co. ''They really don't have a run .. nina t.ck that could really pt the jolt done,'' Dlckenon .ud. ''The would have to pt a runninl •' from eomewbere. ~Y don'l have many tailbllcb at all." Dlcktnon takl he conllldered .. "a bluff" NmOC'I \hat the Rama mWtt tnde bim to another Na· Uonal FootbUJ 1..-.ue \Mm, f>ut ha ~ he would be willlnl to play for another club ln \hat 1-cue or for a USFL team. ... Transpac leader sailing in a class of its own ,!t.1111:~ Heat winner Marybeth Linsmeier of Million Viejo wi ns h"' 800-meter f reettyle heat •I World Univenity Gem' Tuetday in Edmonton . 11 I ' left fielder Jim Rice, Boston; third baseman George Brett, Kansas aty; catcher Ted Simmons. Mil- waukee; right fielder Dave Win- field, New York, and second base man Manny Trillo, Cleveland. There have been 53 All-Star games, with none played in 1945 , and two apiece played in 1959, '60, '61 and '62. Is Bullet speeding to record? The 65-foot catamaran Double Bullet logged her second straight 300 mile-plus day Tuesday and reported a position 940 miles from Loe Angeles after three days of sailing in an attempt to break the elapeed time record from Los An- geles to Honolulu. Her 24-hour runs since the start have been 2~5. 346 and 310 miles. Skipper Bob Hanel said Double Bullet was sailing in northeast trade winds of 12-14 knota and that the boat speed wu about the same. His position placed him more than 200 miles ahead of the lead yachts in the Transpec. Hanel said the crew wu en- gaged in a aewtna bee aa the boat has bJoWn out three mains and two spinnakers. There have been no other mishaps since leaving ~ Angeles lhrbor last Satur- day. lf Double Bullet can average 300 miles a day over the COW"9e ahe would arrive at Diamond Head in approximately 7~ days. The elapeed time record, held by the monobull Merlin, is 8 days, 11 houn. Martin may need surgery NEW YORK (AP) -New ., . .<I ' t '· , ' t ... J . u.J fl .~J York YanUea ~ Billy Martin underwent testa at a Minneaota hospital Tue.day, but .,., •.: i the nM1Ult1 were not Immediately !•l ,1 I avallable, h1a .pnt told The A.-r, :; llOC!Uat.ed Preis. l'(J ') J udp Eddie Saplr Mkl by te1e-n J phone from hla home in New 1._.., OrlM.N that a dedlaon on .-nl whet.her Manin would undereo • IW'l'ttY would be mede toct.y. The 66-Y"f-old manacer haa ~u:~ been aulfertnc from rec:ta1 bleed-ln& from eome time. He Oew to Mln.nelo1a and en-.ct the holpt· tal followq Mom.ta a&rne aaalnat the Bollon Red Sox. ~ \ --~----... -.. -, .......... -----·---.. -·-------~-~-------------------------....... ...----------------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 All-Canada Series? Toronto vs. Montreal? From AP cliapalcbea The Toronto Blue Jays in first m pl.ace? The Texas Rangers? • t Could this be the year of the first all-Canadian World Series? Or perhaps the first all-southern one? As baseball pauses for i,ts annual All-Star game -the earliest since 1942 -both the Blue Jays and the Rangers are in first place in the American League. In the National, the leaders are the Montreal Expos and the Atlanta Braves, trying to show that last year was no Duke. If those standings hold up, consifter the frigid possibilities of a Mont.real-Toronto World Series or a nice, wann Texas-Atlanta encounter. Meanwhile, the first half of the season has seen Rod Carew chase .400 and Steve Carlton and Nolan Ryan chase each other. Elsewhere, Carl Yastrzemski and Johnny Bench are going, while Mark Fidrych, George Bamberger and Rene Lachemann are already gone. And. Dave Righetti of the New York Yankees wrapped up the first half on July 4 with the first no-hitter in the major leagues since 1981 when he set down Boston 4-0. Renegades await national tourney The Westminster Ren- egades, an Amateur Softball Association team of women, ages 18-23, have advanced to t he ASA 's National Championships Aug. 25-28 in Hayward after winning the Southern Cali.forni.a title Monday. Coach Clementine Rorke's team went 5-0 in the double-elimination Southern piliforn.ia re- gional tournament last weekend, capping its perfonnance w ith a 1-0 win over the Hunti~n Amritraj tops tennis foe NEWPORT, R.l. (AP) -Vijay Amritraj over- came Derrick Rostagno, 7-6, 7-6 Md advanced to the second round of the Hall of Fame Cham- pionships. ln other matches John Fitzgerald beat South African Danie Visser, 7-5, 7-6; Tom Gullikson eliminated Ro berto Saad, 7-5, 6-4; and Matt Mitchell ousted Craig Miller, 7-6, 6-2. Beach Rowdies Monday at Dolphin Park in Canon. The Renegades will be one of 32 fast-pitch teams from across the country competing in the na- tional tournament. GOLF LESSONS ' Swine Analysis um, Laree Screen Television Former Head Pro BIG CANYON C. C. HI IDLLICA'I IDLF SCl88L 17751 Sltypat C.de lnN, CA. 11•·211-1011 In the cool white bottle. Aak (or It at your favorite store or restaurant. Available through Straub OUtrlbutlng Co., Inc. (7l4) 898-0758 (714)7~75 (7U) 637-7333 ~---------------------------------------------------------------------.,. ---------------------· ' Quote or the day Tony LaRuaaa, the 38-year-old man- ager of lhe Chicago White Sox: "The toughest thing for me as a young manager ia that a lot of my players saw me play. They know how bad I was." P e rry acquired by R oyals KANSAS CITY -Gaylord Ill Perry, the oldest pitcher in the major Leagues, was acquired on a walver claim Tuesday by the Kansas City Royals. Perry, 44, had been designated for assignment 10 days earlier by the Seattle Mariners. The Mariners fifed Manager Rene Lachemann and released shortstop Todd Cruz the same day. Perry, w ho is 22 days older than Jim Kaat of the St. Louis Cardinals, was 3-10 with a 4.94 earned run average with Seattle. Perry was to arrive in Kansas City Thursday and take part in a workout. He was to. be in uniform Friday when Kansas City meets the New York Yankees at Royals Stadium. E x-4 9 er Dyke ma signs pact SEATTLE-Craig Dykema, a 6-8 m guard who sat out the 1982-83 National Basketball Association season after being injured, has signed with the Seattle SuperSonics. Dykema was drafted in the third round out of Long Beach State by Phoenix in 1981 and had an average of 1.3 points in 32 gAmes with the Sum in 1981-82. T he following summer, however, he broke his left arm in a pickup basketball game and sat out the following season. Dykema was signed as a free agent and tenna were not disclosed. wee won't r ecognize fight MEX.JOO CITY -Larry Holmes' • propoeed fight against Marvia Frazier will not be recognJzed as a defenae of hia World Boxing Council heavyweight tJtle, says Ja.e Sulalman, WBC president, who repeated hia warning that Holmes faces 1098 ot hia champlonahip. The organization is insisting that Holmes fight top-ranked challenger Greg Page. Sulaiman conceded that Holmes' failure to agree last month to a definite date for a figh t with Page had been overlooked, but be indicated Tuesday his patience was wearing thin. Shots fired at Tito Fuentes . Former major-lea~e bueball Ill player Rl1obeno "Tllo' F uentes and hisaon were ahot at when they tried to retrieve a bueball from a yard in rural Poker Bar, near Redding Tuesday. Fuentes and his 11-year-old eon Ellu rao, and a friend, Edward nomu, 14, were playing baseball in the street when the ball rolled into the yard of William Pm , ~3. who tint talked to the boys, then "walked around to the poreh and fired a couple" of shota toward them, said Trinity County S heriff GU Brown ... Pitcher Scott Saaclersoa will be lost to the Montreal Expos for at least 12 weeks because of tom ligaments in his right thumb ... Investor Tbomaa lt. Scallea has abandoned plans to obtain a United States Football League franchise for the Minneapolis-St. Paul area by 1984 . T ele visio n, radio TV: Baseball -The 50th anniversary All-Star game at. Comiskey Park in Chicago, 5:15 p.m., Channel 4. RADIO: Baseball -All-Star game, 5:30 p.m., KNX (1070). I TUCKER... t From Page C 1 I vtsiUng teem the dreaded entry from Omaha, Nebraska. It will take • hiehly imaginative flack to create a suitable demand for ticketa to 1ee thia one. J Geez, mijht we expect aome colollal halft.ime ahowa? Still, ll wu Denn.la Murphy who cli8ooYere4 Edmonton which hu become one of the culturar centers of the sporta universe and it was this tradition I which gives Sukatoon enough guta to ask for a National Hockey League Lranchi.e. Of course, Murphy la always long-depart.J before the first franchise goes belly up. Simil.arly, 1 Ray Malavaai will have eecured hla fee as league adviser and will stand to loee only his revenue .. coach of the Southern California entry. The point being It may be that the profit Ls in the organization of these things and the othen who profit are in need of tax shelters and dodges. It takes considerable imagination to e nvision a ~ stretch!n« from Hoboken to H.iro8hima being an- attractive investment to a man iQtelllgent enough to be of substance. Of coune, the organizer aod adviser will remain I undaunted. Dennis Murphy once said hockey would flourish in New Orleans and Ray Malavasi once said 1 Wendell Tyler could be taught to hold onto a football. Japan tops U.S. 1 TOKYO (AP) -Japan won the 12th U.S.-Japa.n '1 collegiate all-star baseball championship series today, defeating the United States, 3-1 in the seventh and I deciding game before 3,000 spectators at Tokyo's l J inju Stadium. • The U.S . team returns home to play a collegiate : team from Mexico Thursday night at Anaheim !' Stadium. Japan broke the 1-1 tie in the sixth inning on a 1 triple and a single and clinched the game and the 1 series w ith a solo homer in the eighth inning. ; ..--~.,....-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . Whatever you want, for less. ' I i ! Sebastiani Mt. Vin Rose', Mt. Bur~nJy, Mt. Petitl' C hablis or Mt. C hablis 4 Ltr. ~~~.~!.~ Vinho B•anco 750 ml $ 2 5 ~s~ Stanto n 's Gin ... , "''"' T a nque ray 1 •• n,v-. ,., ... , Boord's (.,. .. .._, 1· .... . Bois Genever 1 •• n Crown Royal Canadia n llOp"•" MacNaughton Canad ian ,.., ,., ...• W a lker 's Canadian ,.,,r,. •. , Clan MacGregor Scotch ..,, r •.•.• Cu tty Sark ,, .... h."" ro .... , Jo hnnie Walker Rc-J1 • .._~, .... ,h • ..,,r ..... White Horse , ..... h."" ,., .••• Bisquit V .S. <;ogn ac Marc Roger ~ .. -n.h a •• n.11 San Giorgio Amaretto Cremaretto Carolans Irish Cream .~;:~~~ ~~~~!~:5 Lite~ 5 9 8 ~~~.~~~~~~e $ 2 99 ?Hutt~ H erfo rder Pils ~ 1 ..... , Henninger Export \ L"'" EKU Pila \ L., •• Sapporo Draft '1. ..... Budwei8er Lowenbrau 1121 su,.rtor Awt., Ctstl-11 Pllont: 145·1108 25171 MllrtlMI, ..... v.,. PMM: 151·1431 10132 Wntn..attf, Gdn 8mt PltlM: 131·4U5 $795 s999 S'tQ99 S6 99 1Qw, ol th 1(1"' -Geyser Peak · Soft J.~~~.~~:r:.. !:~:: .. ~.981 $J 6 6 w~u &fin~d R~slinl( • h•racltr in IR u w JnnklRK lm•·akohol ••1·lr. C rnt ummtr ipprr 750 ml 1983 Orange County Fair Award Winning Wines! ~ Sa~ ~!~!~~ .. .u ;~·-1 s179s Beringer 1 .. 1 ''•"'"" ~h , .. ~ '•I $9 95 .... . ... s79s 0 Guenoc ~~r~~~f.?:~.,IJ .~·-1 S699 , ... tJ 1. Lohr ,, '-"'..,.,. .. '"~ .... ..i S2 99 .... , 51549 ~.?.ben Mondavi :~. S89S ~,h~~~.~an Brothe~ ... 5599 Buena Vista 1v;u "'' .. '"""'''•in , .. .aJ ~ ~~~ ~-?~~ Mon~~~i s491 S.~appeUet ··:. s599 GemeUo ;-.. 5559 , .. ;; 1."-1 ~uts., M. Ma~'!,i SJ 7 9 ~~~zer ·•·· ___ , SJ91. ~!~nger ••· ... ~· 5 2 98 Sa1ttl(~ I ~!!,r~!~K Vineyar~! .... $9 88 Z'l4ce ~~r.'.:ood; ..... 55~9. ~~1£reek ..... 1 $7 94 t!P~.~h t.. ~~~1 $5~~ ~~r~111cci ...... 1 $ J99 q~~~ch·Bundsc~~ ... , $7 95 I ~~~~.~L~a~~j s4so ~,ef!le B~~;. s4 99 ~ Vincelli ~ 111~ 1(/11u4 "L111uur Barn pr.•udh ft'a tu•<'' an r~du•IH '" 5"u1lwm California. Furl\ ~rrtnt 1•f \11n. rlli W1nr:. ~ntrrcJ In thr fair,. .. , .. A¥11rdcJ mC'dak" Cabernet Sauvignon :'..:: :'"..i s49s . Chardonnay ...... _ , .... , ;-.·.., s399 • Zinfandel ,.,., •.. ,.............. ;"'"" S279 E&JGallo 1'4JU'dA'4- .. The lar1C~•• "'inny In th<' ¥1 1•rlJ H"ll"'"J nl'Atl\ <'•l'rv1•n<' h\ Jominatlni( thC' A\OatJ, fM th<' '""'""'"" I ~h" rrk" .-at<'K<•ri•·'· Fnr ""' r, qu1lh1 ,·1•m1·• .-ht•r·" l Gewurztraminer ...,.,'\':'.;!.,. ..... SJ29. Rose' ( . .u ~ ... \'...... , .... S29i Chenin Blanc , . ...,.N,.,,..,,.. 1.H .. S29 NowealaleatAllU aeraara1J·. 6 .... s36~ $ l 6· ft. 3 l .. ~ . . ... . MAJOa L•AGUE STANDINGS AmericM L•.ue . Tuel ...... Chieffo lten..1 Cllv Oeltlend Mlnnnol• S..111e Toron10 Ulfmor• o.rroll ......, York Mllwe1.11<" lot ton c .. vtlelld W•ST OIVISIC>tl W L 44 M •1 36 40 37 37 36 37 (I JJ .. JO Sl •AST DIVtite>Nl (I 33 •2 3' o JS .. 35 >e 37 J9 31 3' .. TuetdeY't ~ NO O.met KM<hi141<1 • T......-1~ ""· .s.4 531 .St9 .S07 .463 ,407 .370 .S66 .553 .539 .539 .S07 S06 &36 GI Al·S1er o.me el Coml11<ev Perk. Clll· ~.lnl Allenle ~ Sen Dleoo Hout Ion N1ttenll LM9Ue WUT DIVISION W Lm .. ct. GI ., 31 .6\J 47 31 .603 I 0 31 .519 7'h 40 40 .500 9 Sen Frencltco Clnclnnetl 39 40 .494 911', ,. '7 .420 IS'l'J •AST DIVISIC* 41 36 Je 36 40 J9 31 .. 3' ., JO so .532 .514 S06 .4'1 447 • 37S ,..., 2 4 6V, 12'1) T_.¥'t0-No_.,.~ T ........ t~ Al·Sler oeme et Comltkev Perk. (Ill· ceeo. lnl MAJOft LEAGUE LEADERS Amwk.ln LHtue I ATTING (llO el beltl·C.,..., .,.._., .412; l rell, ICen .. , Cllv, .364; IOOG•, lotlOll, .JS6. Grlffe\', New York, .333, ThornlOll, C!evetend, .l2'- "UNS· Younl, Milweu11 ... 56; O.Event. lotlOft, 53; W.WllM>n, 1Cen1.u Cllv, 53, ltll*tft, e.nlmore, S2; Wero, Mlr1Mt01e. SJ. 1'81·Rlce, lotion, SI; Kiii ... Cllluoo, S6, c-. Mltweukft, 54, Wero, Mlnnesote. S2; Frenco, Cleveland, .,; L.N.Perr~ll, Detroll, '9. HITS-~. Botton, 101; Werd, Minne· IOI•, '7; Wllll•U•·, O.troll. 97; Cef'ew, ......... 92; Ric•. lollon, 92; WWllton, Kenya Cllv, 92; YOlinl. "'"w•uk ... 92. DOUILES·McRM, 1tensa1 Cllv, 2', lotln, Botton, 23; Hrbelt, Mlnnetote, 23. L.N.Perrltll, Oelroll, 2J; Berl'ezerd. s .. t· lie, 21. TRIPLES-Griffin, Toronto, 6; 1 ere tied with S. HOME RUNS·Rlce, lotlon, 2'2; Armet. loelon, II, Kiii... Clllcffo, II; Coooer, Mllweull•, 16; 4 ere li.d wflll IS STOLEN IASES·R.HencMnon, O.~· llnd, 0 ; J.Cr\.IJ, Chic.oc>, 40; WWMson, It.,,.., Clly, 1'; R.Lew. Clllceeo, 32, 1errw11e. re.... 2s. Netteftll LMtue BATTING (llO el behH~lcl<, SI, LOlilt, .347; Knl1111t. Hout Ion, .:136. E1tler, Pln&t>uroll, 333; M1.1rl)fly, Allente, 324; Dewton. MonlrHI, .321. Medlocl'., Pll· ltblirtll, 321. RUNS·MLtrPhV, Allenle, 76; Gtrvev, Sin Olello. ";Reines, MonlrNI. 60, Event , Sen Fra11Clt<:o, 57; Wiison, ~w York, '9. RBl•Dewaon, Monlrt... 6S; Hendrick. St.LOii~, SI; """'llflv, Al .. nte, SI; Over· rwe, ~. S.; Evens. Sen Frenclsco, f'I; Gervev, San Diego, 4f, T.lttnnt<IV. Sin 01-.'9. HITS·OawM>n, MonlrNI, 99. TllOn. Houtlon, 99, Otlver, Monlttef, tt; Gervev, San Oleoo, fl; He<ldfk ll. !>l.LOlilt, '3, M1.1rl)fly, Al .. nl1, 93. OOUILES·Knlollt, Ho1.1t1on, 21, 81i<:k· net, Chlcego, 20; Oewson, Monlr•"· 20, J Rev. PllltOlirOll, 20; Ollver, Monlrffl, 20 TRIPU:'S·l1.tller, All•nle. I; Mo<-. HOlitlon, I; Oewaon, Monlreel, 6, Reines, MonlrHI, 6; S ere tied wllll S. HOME RU.NS·Even1, Sen Frt nCls<o, 19; Murphv. All1n11, 19; Oewson, Monlreel, 17; G......_., Oedter•, 17, Schmid!. Ptilledel· Ohle, IS. STOLEN 8ASES·Relnet. Monlrtel, 3', Wll•on, New York, JO, L•Mttler, San Frencltco, 27; s.sex, ~ 27, Mor-. HOlitlon, 26. PITCHING 17 cltclslons)·Felc-, Allen· le, 7· 1, 2.SI; MonlelliSCO. Sin Oleoo. 7· I, 4.:>e; Rven, Hou1ton, 7·1, l.94; P.P..-er, Allenla. 10-1. 1.Je; RQ99rt, MonlrH I, 12·3, 2 77. STRllCEOUTS·Carllon, PlllledelPllle, 135, Solo, Clncfnnart. 12•; McWllll1m1, PlllM>liroh, 100; lerenvl, Clnclnnell, 17, Rovers MonlrHI, IS. SA~ES·RNrclon, Monlreel, 13; Levtlle, , Sin Francisco, 11; Bedrollen, Allenle, 10; Le.Smith, Chlceeo, 10; LIJCet, !'Min OlffO •• ALL-STAR R0$TERI American LM.-.. STUTIHG LIH•UI" C -Ted SI~. Mnwe1.1k" II -ltM C-W, ..,_. 21 -Mennv Trlllo, Clev ... nd 3B -G.or!M lrell, lten .. , Cllv S.S -Rc»!n YO\lftl, MllWe1.tkff LF -Jim Rice, Boston CF-l'ML-.Melb RF -Deve Wlnfleld, New Yorlt P -OaYe Sitto, Toronto °"*" Cllchen: ._ a-, ~. Le nee Parrltll IDelrolll. Pl1che<'1 -Rkk Honevcull IToetl. Rick S1.1lcllH• CCttvelend), Mell Yo1.1no <Seelllel, Tippy Marllnez (9elllmorel. A1.1relk> LOPel (Oerrol!), Dan Quisenberry (KenHt Cllvl, lob Sllnlev (Bollonl. lnfi.tden -Delle 0.Clrlees ,.,.._.,_ Cecll Cooper (Mllwauk"l. Eddie Murrev llelllmortl. Cert Yeilrzemtlll Clotlonl. Cal Rlpken Jr. (8elllmorel. Outflelcle< I -· Wlllle WlltOn ( ltentat Cllvl. Rlckev Henderson (Oeklend), Ron ltlllle (Clllcaool. GeN Werd IMlnnetolal, een Ovllvle (Mllwa1.1kH), Lou Wlllleker COetroltl. Natteftll LHtue STAltTING LINl!U .. c -Gerv C1rter. MonlrH I 18 -Al Olive<, Montreel 18 -Stew Su, ~ 38 -Mike Scllmldl, Pllli.delPllll SS -Onl• Smllll, St. LOlilt LF -Tim Reines, Montre1I CF -Andre Oewton, MonlrHI RF -Dale M1.trPIW, All•nl• P -Merlo Solo, Clnclnnell ~ CalCNft. Jor.nnv B•ncll IClnclnnalll, Bruce lenedkl IAlfanlal, Te<rv Kenneov (San Dleool Pllcllers: '•rn•n•• Y11eaa11el• (~) • .IHMI OrOKO (New York). II• 0 1wle• (HOlitlonl, Oava Oreve<;t.y ($an Oleool. AllM Hemmaker ($an FrencJw:ol. Petevet P9ru (Attenlel, "" $mlth (Cllf• ,_,, Sieve "°"" (MonlrH ll. Garv Lev•le (Sen Frell(lstol . lnll .. O.n -....... Guerrera (~I. 81H MadlOct. (Pllhburthl, Oerrell Evant CS.n FrellClteol. Dickie Thon (HOUslonl. 0 .. nn Hli~rd (Allenlal Oulllelelen -Georoe H•ndrlek ($1. LOlilsl, Leon 01.1rhat'l'1 (ChlCallOI, Wlllte McG .. (St LOlilsl AltMl IWtl .. , aATTIHG •• " H Hit ... ""1. 8ur1eton 17 > • 0 1 .m Cerew m JS ,, 7 ,. '°' DeClnce1 140 40 75 IS '6 .>U GrlCll 226 ll ., • l3 174 lenlqi.;ez IM 2' so 2 IS .271 FOii 2SO 2S •s 2 76 .760 Lvnn 231 34 '° 14 •3 .2S9 Boone 240 22 '° 3 2' .2SI v11enlln• 120 17 JO • 23 ,250 Sconlero "' 27 41 1 32 .2U Clerk 154 II 37 2 12 .740 Ro. Jecll son ''° 21 ll 4 12 231 Oownlno Ill 30 31 s IS .12J Re. J1C111on 201 ,. (I 17 33 214 Adams 1' " " 1 • 211 Wiii-41 s • I 6 ltS O'krv 14 1 2 0 0 .1'3 Fe<ouaon 21 3 2 0 2 07• Tolelt l,716 315 ,,, .. 361 265 ' ll'tTCHIMG II" H II SO W·LIRA C1.1rtl• 2~ 14 9 13 1·0 2 lt zenn 131,1) 13 12 3S S·3 l .1• KIM>n 72'1'l 73 2t SS 7·2 3.21 Fors<ll 11611'1 112 21 44 1·4 3.33 McLel.llllllln 2911) JO I 24 1·1 3.31 Sanchez 60'1'1 s. n 29 I· J 3.43 Jolln 109l'> 134 18 71 6·S 4.27 Wiii ~ ~ 31 36 •·S 4.37 Trtve" 36 4S 17 73 0·1 5.2S HeuMtr ll'h 22 1 9 0·3 S . ., GollJ '3h II 37 27 O·• 6 22 Brown 12 13 4 3 l·I 6 7S To1a11 70lh 737 7JO 334 41·37 4 03 Saves: Wiii 4, Se11Che1 "'3. Heuler I. Cur1l1 I CW9tb1Mbll ,,,,, U.S..·JA .. AN ALL·STAJt SERIES (et TMIHI Jepen 3, Unlled Stele• 1 (Jepan win• tlftl·of· .. ven "''"· •·3) (Note; Jeoen net now won tour clltm· PlontlllPI lo lh• Unlltd Slelel' elOlll, PllCl\ef Jolin Hoover. a l1.1nlor al Frttno s111e. won II,. llohllno tplrll eward; ttw leedln11 better wit cetche<' V111.1nerl Vo1hlmur1 of Jepen 11 .•12 -Mor·l7,) Uttle L .. tue TOUllNAIMHT 0, CHAMl"IONS Dlstnct 62 <•• H~ v•v LLI TueMIY't Scert W .. lmlntl ... S, lolH 0 TM1111f'1Gerne S:JO -Founlaln Vellev North vs O<et n View N11iona1 TIMlncll¥'t Gemt S;JO -Slenlon vt. ROblnwOOd S.llW•Y'• 0-10 1.m. -Founleln Vellev So1.1111 vt Ocean View Amtrl<:•n 1 p,m. -H1.1nllnglon Valin vt, S.evlew 4 o.m. -Wetlmlntltr vs. Founlaln Vallev Norlll·OcH n View Nallont l wlnner !NOTE: Tournev Conllnut• lhro1.111h Tllurldev, J1.1lv 141. LITTLE LEAGUE ALL·5TARS 14·1S·YMr·Ms DISTRICT U T'OURNAM .. IT ... -~ .. ett. """'91 S.tw•¥'• ,.,.., ....... G- 9 •.m -El Toro Vt. Leount IMch Noon -S.cldlebeck VI Min ion !>oulh 3 o.m. -Vlelo vs. lrvlne 5oulh • ' o.m. -L•k• For .. 1 Vi Min ion HINI 54Mldl¥'t 0- 10 e.m. -North Irvine v&. El Toro·.L191.1ne 8eecn wlnlle' I p,m. -Min ion Nor111 vt. Sadd .. • oack•Mlulon Soulh wlnne< 4 P.m. -El Toro·Le111.1ne 8Hch loser vs. S.Odletlatk·Mlu lon South loser 7 P.m -Vlelo·Soulh lrvlne lo-vt L,•k• For .. l·Mlu lon HIN• lo- CNOTE: TOlirnev conllnlilt 111row11 Jutv •• with lhe chemplontlllP o.me el 10 • m Woodbrldee Petti It IOCllt<I al Cutv..-an<t Allon slr,•I• In 1,..,,lnel Four boys earn medals tlrea youths shine at TAC national track meet RUNNING Congratulations are in order for four boys who )llSt week earned medals at the TAC Youth National (hampionships for Track and Field at Welcome ~tadium in DaylOn. Ohio. Eddie Lavelle of Fountain Valley took a pair of mu ln the l l-12·year-old division, winning the ;,500 meters in 4:36.6 and the 3,000·meter run in ::54.31. DENNIS BROSTERHOUS 1 In the 13·14-year·old class, Huntington Beach's !ohn Soto was victorious in the 3,000 meters with a ~time of 9:11.0. : A pair of other Huntington Beach boys earned ~by placing third in DaylOn. Peter Lugo, 10, zaa third ln the 1,500 and the 800, and Haissam Sabra f.-:> picked up a medal with a third-place finish. 1 All four boys compete for the Orange County ~Angels, roached by Frank Duarte, a 5 and lOk ~ locally himself. ~ The meet, held in humid conditions, attracted =young athletes ranging Crom the 10-and-under . to 18·year-olds. It is sponsored by The Athletic I ~ and to reach the national meet, the boys had ~qualify through a state meet. I . • • • t PLANS ARE UNDERWAY for the Pro Comfort b'and Prix, a series of six road races, sponsored by If. Scholl shoes. t The regional races. scheduled from August ~h November from coast to roast, will lead up to ~-~event in Los Angeles on Nov. 12. They will ~beldin Denver, Aug. 13;Chicago. Aug. 21; Eugene, t'e·· Sept. 2-4; Boston, Sept. 25; Houston, Oct. 2; and !tlanl ta, Oct. 15. ~ The top three men and women open division ftnnen i.n each regional race will be flown, all ll>ew-. paid, to Loe Angeles for the finals. That race be8in and end at Marineland Aquatic Park on the Verdes Penin.Nla. Runners ln regional races will be competing in open diviaion, where point.I will be awarded, or ln lfOUP categories, which carry merchandise . Los Angeles area runners may compete in age WMllOl'111 or ln the finals alone, but open division ton must enter one regional event plus the ' A total of tl00,000 in finandal awards will be t at the {inala among 25 athletes in the open who have earned the moat point.I. Both male female flnt·place winners ln the open division will receive $20,000 each; teeond-place tln- ishers will get $8,000; and third place, $5,000. The top three men and women in each category in each race will receive merchandise prizes. Participants will also be mailed detailed com- puter printouts of their performances after each race. Among other statistics. runners will learn their time and place by age and sex, the percentile in which they ranked and their average pace per mile. Under the Grand Prix system, points will be awarded to the top 10 places in the open division al regional events. Points won at the regional level will be added to points won at the finals. The highest combined total (one regional and the finals) will win the Pro Comfort Run. In case of a tie, the place of Cinish at the finals detennines the financial award_ Men and women in the open division need only compete in one event plus the finals. Runners may compe1e In more, but only their best finish plus the finals will be totaled. Runners in the age division may participate in any one of the seven races. For further information on the series. phone John Griffin at (213) 546·2481. 9'unnlrte scMcMe SATUltDAY A""*"1 .... Llelll °'* ltUll Fer ,Ull, s ..... IOll-Bffln• •• m F .. 1' SI wllh ~It.Or tnel u wltllOlil wllh ll lele f" 1"41 dev of the rece SPtclel emPlletlt on courM clftltn tor bllnd, llendlcal>Ped end wheelcllelr 1ntrent1. For more lllformtllon, -SlnCIV Tnome1 el 9'1·23" or 921-ISM SAT\MDAY, JULY 1• II"' LA a-a.itlnt f 1.m. et Cel Slate LOI Anoett• F" It U end '"°"'°'" tw AllCO. For mot• lnlormtllon, PllOne IM LOI •noele• Allllellc CluO 11 12m QS-2211. T-. HeWlllM la C:-,,......,.. ttuit--eeolnt I em. In Plave Cit! llrt. F" 11 t 10 wllll T ·11\lrt end l5 wltllOlit with n .. ,. '" S-tQred bv IM lnternelloftel •uoclatlon of Cenctf' Vlellmi. For more lnformellon, DfloM 1tlll J06-t7 .. or 12131 m -5031 . ~--"-~· S IM 1• lt---.01111 1 • m el Pnelen, Sen Cebtlel MountelM F• It te.50 with T ·111111 end W wllllOlil. Tllf .. Wiier 1100t, toOd courM m.rklnet •nd veteren rece ctew, For more lntorm111on, PllOne the Moull .. lnMr·PrOlll'eH ntwUllHr al 2 .. ·J74S, • W•DttHDAY, JULY JI Mll•llildllrw. .._ ~ ~ Sll-Ql>en IO IU~·llme em~ Of CMPOl'•llOnl, 11\Klneun •ncl nnencl•• lnt1l1u11on1. FM more lnlormtllon, write lllt Mll!UIKtuA<t CorPO<elt Cllellenoe, PO loK ml3. Lot Al!OttK, fOIMf. IUMDAY, JULY M SWtll C..tt S-au.le S IM 1•-l111ln11:.>o e.m. tor Ille Sii end I" IS • m. tor Ille 1-.. Certlfi.d tourM. Award• •nd ooor flfllt• FOf more lnfotmtllon, llflOM lht $0utll Cotti 11"""9ft AllOCllllon el '46·:MS1 endragon a sluggish winner John h wu one of \M alowcst raa!9 ln the 16-year hiatory of the event. The race started at 11 a.m. Satur- day from Marina del Rey and the flnt yacht to flni.th the l lO·mile c.ourw wu the 84·foot aloop Chrlatine, owned and akippered by Fred Pm. of Padfic Mariner11 Yacht Club. U5FL ll'IHALI ... ftlk w L T .. ct. PllUeclelpf\le ,, ~ 0 Ill 80.1on II 1 0 611 N•wJtrteV • 12 0 m Watl\lno1on 4 14 0 m Cenlnl Mk l\loan ., • 0 617 Cnlceoo 17 6 0 647 Temoe B•v 11 1 0 611 81rmnohm ' 9 0 soo l"aclfl< Oa~lend 9 9 0 -SOC> Lot Anoettt • 10 0 .'44 Otnv•r I II 0 .ll9 Ar Ilona 4 14 0 m ~y ...... lrlNt S.llHIMY Cl\lcaoo e1 PhlladelPf'lla ~v 0.ltla~d 11 MlclllOen Sunday, JIJllV 11 USFL c11amPlonshlP 11 Oenve< Men'• toul'l\l~t let NeW-1 R.l.l , .. ,1 119Uf1CI s+ntle• .. , ... )1'9 704 m »A ]14 d 7 ,,, ..., 4SI )31 •St 271 3a:J 311 363 326 319 317 296 370 214 )O<I 261 .. , Vllav Amrlrra1 (lndlel oet Oe<rlck Rostegno CU S.). 7·6. 7·6, Jonn Flllotrekl (Auttrallel def Danie Vluer (Soulh Africa), 7·S. 7·6, Tom Glifflc"'°" IU S 1 def ROberlo SHd (Argentine), 7·S, 6·4; Mall Mllchd IU S l def Cralo Miiter CU SJ, 7·6, 6-2, Mike Leech (US I clel S<oll McCain CU.S.I, 6·l. 6-2, Pe1.11 Annacone (U.S) del Mo<rlt Slrode (U S.l, 6·4. l·6. 7·6. Chrl1 John\lone (Au\lrtllel <let. nm Wllklton CU.S.l. 7·6, 6·0. 7-6 Swlu Open (et GttHd) Men's Finl lteufld Slngtet M#JI P1.1rcell (US.) clef 0.vld Ctrler IU.S I, 6· I. 6·2. BIN S<enlon def. Sa\hl Menon (lndlel, •·4, 6·4, Stndv Meyer (U.S I Clef Manu .. Orenltt ISPelnl, 6·4, S·7. 6·2; Sammy Glemmelva (U.S.I def Sergio Ce .. 1 CSoeln), 6·2, 6·7, •·O, Wolletl FltMik (Polalldl def Eric Fromm. 6·1. 6·2 • GlveldO 8eroou IS01lnl def Rk~v Mev..- IU.S ). 6· 1. 7·6, JOH Hloueru (SPalnl a.I Jorge Loreno (Me•kOI, 6·•. •-•; Jalro Vtles<o IColumblel dtl. Jlrl Granai CC1ec110•lovekla), 6·0. 6·1. Bernie Mitton (Souln Alrlce l del C11uolo Meueorl (SWllHrlat1dl. 7·6. 6-7 PGA lffden SCOAING AVERAGE I ltev Flovd, 70.74, 7 Lannv Wedklnt, 10 13. 3 Calvin Peete. 7019. 4 8tn Crtn•haw, 71 0. GREENS IN REGULATION I. JOllnnv Miiier. 723. 1 Calvln Peele. 707. 1 Lerrv NtlM>n, .69S, 4. Wevne Levi, 693. 5 Hal S1.111on. 69 I DttlYING Olt1e11Ce I Jolln McComhn. 277 l . 2 Curl Byr1.1m, 713 0, l Tom Purlztr. 171.6. • Tom Wel•t.oOI 271 4. 5 Dan Pohl, 110 I Percenlaoe In talrwev I Cetvln Pfftt . 157. 7 LH Trevino, 754. l Jee" Aennur, 749. • Tim Norrl1. 745, S 0 1vld Edward\. 131 Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Cl Misc. Uni~ Gemtl (et•~ ..... , IWIMMIHG 400 lrff -I vi.e11m1r Selnlkov IUURI, 3M». 1 Bruce He•H (Unlled $ttlts) 3 5' t3 IASl(l!TIALL """ Unl1ao S1e1t' 100, Autlralle 52 Cube 107. lvorv Coetl l'l (NOii Unll•d Sletea "'"'' C1.11Mi IOlllQhl 80111 ere •·Ol. T•AC:K AND fll•LD ,,,.,. 10,000 milers ~ I. Sh1.1IGlll Yoneallloe lJeoenl. H.55 37, AgaPlu• Amo (Tanrenlo>. 110 llm• L•s AlamltM TU•SDAY'S RESULTS ($6111 .. t2·ftltlht -~ .....-.> fll"ST ltAC:E. 400 verds Poacllart Te (Zutell) 26.00 1060 S.IO Mr 8111 Wiii CChovezl 6.20 3.SO Jollnn .. LHI ShOI (Creeoer) 9.IO Alto raced. Perlecl .. ,., Herl•v Humble, Lion In Winter. Retie• Aoc~et. Socle1 MHlln11, Melinde• Men, Go Go Pen. Time 20.91 l2 E XACTA (10·1) Ptld S76 00 s•COND RACE. 400 varo .. Amelancer CZ1iltl1I 37.60 u o S10 Merit Of Monev (Clleve1I 300 UO Sudden Sleoe (Mvll•I 4 IO ••to ••t•d Olal A Rl.IDV. Au1.1reme YOlilOveme, S~ln S1.1nttl, Min Surnmll MOnn. MX Mlu lle. Mil\ Milo Sers, KfPI Prince Tlmt 20.73 n EXACTA (7-SI Paid S99 00 THl•D RACE. 350 verdt. P11.1l1 Orphan (Gerclel •.40 3.60 2.40 Wirt Line CPllk1n1onl UO 3.40 Riv..-Wiich (Harri l.70 Alto raced Roering Pau , soo1111n11 Moon. Cltnlc Prlnceu. Coilt lOll• Time· ,ll.16 FOUltTH ltACI!. 400 vardt Outlv Oue>e (Creegerl 1.00 S 20 3.IO Mighty Merc1.11 (Plllcenlon) 19 40 11 20 Im Comlno UP ITreaturel 7,60 "'to raced Me•h. F1.1u ln Flohler. Un· llmlled Barred, Pelvet Pe\llon, lt•llv Gwen, T aurut Reo, Oue>e De Lu Time. 20 SJ n EXACTA (S·61 oalo S129.IO 1'9'TH RACE. 400 yard•. won Wev Jose CCreagerl 1.00 4.60 1 20 Roolle Tool Tool (8rookt) S.20 1.IO Cuhcan tHerll 1.20 Alto raced. Wfll•i>« Paint. Walch Him Tr1.1ck, Easv Lem TlrM 2014 n EXACTA (6·Sl paid Sl7.20. SIXTH ltACE. 350 vard• E attm (Ade Ir l 9 40 S 40 3.IO Mearlv A Sltltr (Cha ve1) 7 20 • 20 Fo•I• HO•I (Creaoe<I , IO Alto reel<! s11eria1101:1emlne. FINI N lime, Ovnamle Ovne, Be<larottt. Wrenol· Ing POllCY, Nice To 8t, Wrengltr Golen 8ov Time· llOS ., EXACTA 14·101 Paid stMO. SEVINTH RACE. 400 vard>. Palrlarcll (Tre .. ure) II 00 7 60 3 IO Ave Otr• (Creager) 9 40 S.00 Sheved Diet IAOalrl e.OO Al\o raced Oltllncllvel• Callmellnv, Sgl P•PP41' FHILtre, J1.1mb0 Pacific Time· 20,12 n IXACTA (7·Sl Paid S6160 llGHTH RACI. 440 Vtrd> Men1.1t Merk (Clerltsel 16 20 10.60 l.60 Per1flCI Rt<IOett (Giii) 14 40 4 60 Tu Tvn JOl\n (Bard) 3 00 Alto rauo ••Dido •oe11e1. T rlPOI BO<lll•, Selnl Or $Inn«, ilrMl<lno Werr '9r Time. n ,1t. n •XACTA 11·•1 .. to •fl 70 t1 l"tCt< SIX U S••+7·1) Ptid Sl.634:10 wlrn 1i winning llc.-l<ets Ulvt "°" .. · 111tr• were no al• winners> Cerrv OvlW Poot Of 121,70 3' NINTH ttACE, 400 veros Lone Hiiier (CtM(ltrl ,,00 • 20 MO Reconnolt..-ILACktvl 1M uo Gone a. Pror>e< IP•Uf~/ 7.60 Alto reced Doct~ Slntrl. llEO $MM· waoon, ArmaC>tl, Pt1>8 NW&lc, Adee Ooo, T eDle Timer. MOI,,., ltll\Cla lut Time 20.1. i1 UtACT A C Ml Pllct s.M 40 All...O.nce• S.lll 0.... '" ""*"' ""T'S LANDING (New.wt SMOI - 65 anoltr1. 102 mecktrtl, llO beu, la berrecude. 3 bOntro, 40 rlcll 11t h. I vtlf?w· 1•11 DAVKY'S LOCICElt (Newewt IMdl - llS enoiers. ?7 vettowtah, 17 berrK\ida, 1 _ oonllo. "' Hnd oau. II a.1tco beu, 925 meeker el, 1 hlllbUI, 10 r ocll 11111. DANA WH,a.R, -11t enole" 401 be'" 9 oarrecuda. 11 llellbvt, 602 meclt..-.. IELMONT "IElt I'"-... di) -Ill t nolerl. llO oerrecuda. I bonllo, 360 .. n0 beu, 36 ceuco beu, JOO meCkerel, 13 vet1ow1ell. eer .. -6S anvlert. 2 .. nd b•n. l hellbut, 650 mec11.ere1. ~l!IN'S WHAllll, C~ ... di) -161 angle". 10 vellowlall, m oerrec1.1d•, 131 oonllo, 274 c.111co oen. 621 tand oau. 250 "?<" fhh. Tue1daV'1 trenYcften& 9AHIALL . Am«tcell ~ KANSAS CITY ROVAL!>-Slgned GevlOrO Perrv. Pitcher. Senl R1.1u Step· llen•. ce1c11er. 10 Omeht Of Ille American Auoclellon. D•KLANO A THLE TICS.-Reeutoneo Pele Whltenent. menaOI'. of "~n\' of in. Eu llrn League. N1me<1 Kellh Llepi>men menaoer Ne-~ MONTREAL EXPO~ Scoll Senderton, pllcl>tr, on IM 71 ·deV dlM~ • lltl RKellt<I Tom Wi.cJhll.ll, Ct lehet, from Wichita ot tM Amerka11 Anoclellon • ST LOUIS CAROINALS.-ACqlilrtd De va Rucker. Pilcn.r. from tM Oelroll Tloert as Perl of 1"41 Cardlnelt tredt ol Oo1.1g Bair 10 Oe1roll on June 22. IA51CETIALL Ntllonll lellreftlel A1ateleMn ATLANTA HAWKS-N•med lob Re· 1n11er1 an aultlent coecl\. DETROIT PISTONS-Slvnt<I Tonv Brown, ouerd·lorwtrd, lo • mulll·veer con1r1c1. GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5-Hlmt<I 8oo Zuffelalo an enl11enl coed! SEATTLE SUPERSONIC!>-Sl11ned Cr1lo Dvkema, 01.1ero. 10 • "" •oenl COl\lrlCI HOCt<IY Neltelwl Hec:ai.., ~ CALGARY FLAMES-ACOUlrt<I Mlcuv Volain, defenttrnan, lrQm lllt Her'fford Wntler• In u cnenoe fol Rlclll• Dunn end Joel Quennevllle, clelen~ DETROIT RED WINGS-Slpneo lerrv Mtfrosa, defenttm1n. 10 • mulll·vter conlreCI. MONTREAL CANAOIENS-Nemed J1caue1 Plente ooelltndtr coecl\ sroneo Rv1n Willer. lell wino, and Ken! Cerlaon, dtlenHmen, 10 111ree·v11r con1rac1t. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-AO<Md In prlnclPle to sell tM Melne Merine<• Of Ille Amerlcen Hocr..ev L-ue IO IM New Je<Hv 0.vlls. COLLIE GE UNIVERSITY OF' WASHINGTOH-N1rnt0 Jove. S.I<• women'• beslletlleM coeC1 AT YOUR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER COUGAR LEAPS AHEAD. •• Monuklrr11Mr\ Sflila•sr.d R9tu1l l'r1c~ •fl<lvd11'{1 dtslt'lOl•on chorg•• 01td t •tl1id1110 hile ond ICPt• WE'RE OUT TO MAKE COUGAR THE NO. 1 CAR IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. SEE YOUR LINCOLN-MERCURY ~EALER FOR HIS PRICE. . . • . ... C4 Orang~ Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Medical tower takes over title of HB's tallest It hasn't been a battle of heroic dimensions like that between Chicago's Sears Towers and the World Trade Center in New York. But there's been some keen but low-key competition to be the tallest structure in Huntington Beach. Until recently, the 13-story WycHHe Gardens senior citizen apartment complex has held the tall title. But apparently there's a new champion in town. It's t.he Pacifica Medical Towers building located virtually next door to Wycliffe at Delaware and Main streets. It's only 11 stories tall. but the stories in the office-professional building are farther apart than the Wyclif- fe apartments. City officials don't have the infonnation readily available on the Huntington Beach high-risers, which to the untrained eye look about the same height. But Bob Zinngrabe, chairman of Delma Corp., owner oC the $6.4-million, 68,000-equare-foot building, claims it's the tallest, but not by much. He said Wycliffe is 126-feet high, but is perched on g:row\d eight-feet higher than the medical tower building. But the new building is 140-feet high an d emerges triumphant, by about six feet overall despite the handic.ap of being built on lower ground, he declared. Officials and workers held "topping off' ceremonies recently when the last 27-foot-long iron beam was put in place, with a T each ers to get Christmastreeon oneendandthe American flag on the othe.r. The computer trainin g tree indicated that the company was buying the celebratory Syllabus, I.Qc., opera~r of Ac-drinks, said a spokeswoman, celerated Computer Training in while the flag was viewed as a Irvine, has announced plans to good touch because it reportedly provide computer training for once flew over the U.S. Capitol. teachers in the Newport Mesa The medical tower is adjacent to School District. Pacifica Hospital and the first two Through a speci~ arrangement. floors will serve as administrative up to 50 Newport Mesa teachers offices and a new entrance to the will receive instruction in com -hospital. puter fundamentals at the Irvine The interior space is on sale to •P:• 4 "' .... p " . ,. Big pork surplus promotes • price cut WASHINGTON (AP) -The . Agriculture DeparUnent aay. ; larger pork 1uppliea wUJ mean lower market prlcel tor all meat and poultry. "'The larger pork supplies will have a negative impact on all livestock and poultry prices. with ,those for pork well below a year earlier," a department analyst said . "Ret.urna to pork producers • are likely to tum negative, u was the c.aae from mid-1979 through early 1982." Hog prices, which averaged better than 55 cents a pound through 1982 and the first three months of this year, could fall below 40 centa before year's end and average between 46 and 48 cents a pound for the year overall, the analyst& predicted. Wayne Walter, president of the National Pork Producen Council. said the problem i.s the result of tanners not responding to signals from the market late laat year to reduce their berda. But the Agriculture Depart- ment analysis forecast pork pro- duction this summer to run 10 percent ahead of what it was at the same time laat year and to spiral to 15 percent more than a year earlier this fall and winter. school. physicians and affiliated pro. Seats are limited to the first 50 f~ions while Delma will occupy · Topping o ff ceremonies were he ld teachers who apply. Those the 10th and 11th floors. Saffell & recently at t he I I -stor y Pac ific Medi- interested should contact Wendy McAdam of Irvine is constructing I T D l say it will be the t allest b uilding in Hun tington Beach. Cell 642-5671. Put a few word• to work for ou. Romagnino at 660~0455. the steel and concrete building. ca owers. eve o pers o{ the p roject ~--"'----------~-----------~-------=-----~ rta.IC fl>TICE P\8.IC fl>TICI: OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS UPS AND DOWNS NOTICI CW APPUCATION POR AUTNONTY !'ta.IC ll>TICE NILIC NOTICE F1CTIT10U8 9U ... U fltCTmOUI 9U ... U N.u. 8TATlmNT MAm aTATIMDIT The lollowlng '*"°" I• doing The followltlg peflontl .,. doing ~ 11: WATER RAGS. 11231 bullnMIU: Young Rivet Ave. Fountain Valley, CHEYENNE CATTLE co, CALI· C.. 92708 FORNIA HOLDINGS 18134 Fir• Jodi Jacobi Fleming, 25082 Monte 1tone C1 •• Fountain Valley. CA 92708 Verde, t..guna ~. C.. 92817 BOS CHAPMAN 18134 FlrMtone Thie bullnesa It conduc1ed by an Ct .. Founllln Vllley, CA 92708 lndMdual. ANITA CHAPMAN 18134 Fir• II Jodi Jacobi Fleming llOM Ct .. Fountain Valley. CA 92708 This 1111-1 w11 nted with the Tiiis bullnesa 11 conducted by 1 County Clerk o l Orenge Count}' on o-•l pannerll\lp. June 1. 1983. Bob Chepman f'217N2 Tiiis Sllltmenl WIS ftled with Ille Publllhed or.,..oe Coul Dally County Clerk 01 Orange County on Plk>I June 15, 22, 29. July 6. 1983 June 10. 1983 2747-83 ,,, ... Ftemoua9USINIU Publllhed Orenge Coast Diiiy Pilot June 15. 22, 29. J uly a. 1983 21174-83 ..,.,_ 8TAT'lmNT .. _II' Mnnl'C The IOllowing O«SQn II dOfng __ _....;r~~~;..."";.;.;;..;.;.;;..11W.~-- bulln41U u : I(_, BKC & Co • P.O Bo11 1812e, Irvine. fltCTITIOU8 _.. •• CL 921'15. 4831 Bruce Cr91C*lt, NAMI 8TATWmNT Newport a..c11, ca .. 92ee3. Tiie followlng persona er• d oing 'Brian Kalth Chanell«. P.O. Bo.11 butln-u : 18128, l"'ln, Ca .. 92715. 4831 Bruce JUOV'S JEWELRY. 335' E. Yorb• Cretcant. N-por1 B .. cll. Ca., Lindt Blvd, Fullerton. Ce. 9M31 92&e3 JEWELS BY EBBE a Clllf corp ThlJ buliMll It conducted by an 16654 Bu91'1erd, Fou~tlln Valle)',Ca. lndMdull 92708 Brian K. Cllandler Thll bullMM 11 conducted by· a Tiii• 11a1emen1 WU flied will\ Ille corporlllon County Clerk of Orenge County on J EWELS BY EBBE. a Calif corp. June i7. 1983 Bruce L Cunis n1eao En1 eun11 Publ•lhed OrlnOI Coul Diiiy E<hwwd D Lotta Polot June 22. 29. July 8, 13, 1983. Bnog.t M. Lol1t 28-411 Publlthed Orange Cout Deity ------------• Piiot June 29. July 8, 13, 20. 1983 298~ !'ta.IC fl>TICE K.-... FICTITOUS llU ... H NA• aTATl•NT The lollowlng pel'90rla "are doing bullMM U : VIDEO GALAXY. 10912 Cllapman Ave,. G1tden Grove, C... 92640. H.,_,.,Ma D. Dothl. 1 150 GnibstaU O<. Diamond Bar, Ca .• 917115. JyOll V V.o.c:t\a, 2 t803 Paint Bru91'1 ~. Diamond Bar, C... 917115 Tht. ~ Is conduc1ed by en ltldMdual. SX Harshlla D. Doehl Jyou v. v.o.cna Tiiis 5111-1 WM llled wtlh Ille County Clerk of Orenge County on June Ill, 1983. 1"1111t1 Nl.IC fl>TICE FICTITIOU8 IMlllNIU NAMI aTATIMINT The followlng penon la doing bullnetl 11: GERMAN CAR REPAIR 119 Santa IMbll, Cotti ~. CA 92626 THOMAS D. WELLES 122-C 9111 SI • Huntington 8-:1\, CA 92&48 Thi• bu.r-. II conducled bV an lndlvldull ThornMD.WellM Thlt 1111-t WU filed with the County Cieri! of Or1ng9 County on June 10, 1983. n1allll Publllhed Orenge Coul Dally Pllol June 1!5, 22, 29. July 8. 1983. 2786-83 Publi.n.d 0r9nge eo.t Delly ------------POOi June 22, 29, July 8. 13, 1983. rta.IC NOTICE 2847-83 ___ _.. .............................. __ _ '1CnnoutM.I .... NI.IC NOna NAm aTATIMINT Thi fOllowtng ~ .. doing ACTTnOUa .,._.. bu*-M : ,.._ ITATDmlfT EXCEL PRODUCTS 133-41 Ger- The fOllOwlng par.on 11 dOlng den Orove Blvd .• Garden Grove, CA butlnMt ... 92643 AM8ASSAOOR POOl..S & SOLAR WINDELL. WELLS JONES 1en t30 4!5tll St Newport a.cti CA Swan Cir., Cotti MeM, CA 92828 ,.......,,, · ' Thll ~ la oondUC1ed by an 'we""" lndMdull DAVIO L VAN FOEJ<EN 130 46111 . Wlndell w Jonee St .• Newport ~. CA 92ee3 Thll stllemenl wit filed with 1119 T"'8 buel-11 conduc1ed by .,.. Counlrc C .... k ot Or1nge County on lndlvldull. .. Dlllld L. Van Foellen June o. 1.183. F21la01 Tiiie stat-I WM flted With the Publllhed Or1111Qe Coul Diiiy County Clerk of Orllll09 Count}' on Piie» June 1!5, 22, 29. July 8. 1983 June 10. 1983. ,,,.. 2782-83 Publlshed Orano-CO.I Diiiy Pt1o1 JuM 15. 22. 29, July 8, 1993 2785-83 PlClTTIOU• ._ .. "8.IC fl)TIC[ NAMm ITATIMINT The followlnO ~ lfe doing ACTITIOU8 llU8emU t>ueri-..: MAm STATS....,. K l L CREATIVE SERVICE. One The followlnO ~ It doing SeMceoe Of!W, Newport e..cm. c.. butlntM -t2te3 ALA/KART OAIOIHALS 1211 KELLY DAVIS, One Seelcepe Loget't Awe .. Unit c. Coet• Meet. CA DrtW. Newport a..ctl, ca. t29l3 t2tM LAUREL. 8TllCl!Y, ete WMt ANKICA JO\IAHOVIC 310 Vlete mount OflYe, LO. Angeltl. c.llf. S.ya. co.ta Mete, CA 92127 tooet Thie ~ II conduCted bV 111'1 Thia bue1n.a 11 condUcteO bV I lndMdull. general ptll1nenlllp. Al*ICI Joyenolllc Thia etel-1 wM llled with tM Thll etel«Mf!I .... flled .rtll the COunty ()Wk of Orange c-rty on County a.II of Oranot County on JvM 1, 1083 ~10,1"3 ~ ,._ ""'~ 0ranoe COMt Dally PuOlllhld Or9nlll COiet Dally Ptlo1 _,_ t•. 22. 21, .My •• tN3 Piiot June 1&. 22. 2t. Nfof •• tM3 2t4M-«I 278t.a3 TO ADCM'T INTMaTATI ACCIH CHARCM T~8 SU~t11nllll Cf\lfigea In Ille telecommunlcetl0n1 lndullry wlll occur on Januery 1. 1984. tM dat• now M1 lof' MC*lllng Pec;lflc T~ ("Pacfflc .. ) from 1 nationwide corporatlOn. After eepw1110n. PllCfflc: wlll no tonger be allowed to prcwtde llleptlc>M ~ outlicM of 10 geogr8"hlc ~ 11-In c.llfornla. tnetNd, ,,_ c4llle bet--. Ille 10 geogr8"hlc Mt1liol .,_ wtll be provided bV competl~ car~. 11'°'1 • MCI, A"*1ean Telephone 111'1<1 Telegraph Company ( 'AT&l"), SOuthern Pacific Communlcallone ComPMY (''SPCC"). and other•, Another big Change due to P1elllc t>eoomlng .,.. Independent. 11eno-llk>nl company I• tlllt all telepl\One equip"'*'' on cu11omerw• premlMI -1~. dlalef1. key 1ywtem1. 11c. -will be tranlf.,rect from Pacific to A 'r& T. To prepw• for theM cnangee, Pacific hu llled an appllcallOn wltll the Callfornle Publtc Utllttlea Commlllion ("CPUC") to ln<:f-IUbtenb« ratM and to Mtllbl191'1 ac;oet1 cnwges tor cornl)9tlng e«rlers prOYtdlng Mt11io1 ~ pllClflc·1 10 geographic ~ .,_ Tiiis notice ts In reaponae to an order of the CPUC 11\111 the eppljcellon lor .coMI cNwgM be filed by June 30, 1983 11 part of Peclflc·1 gene.II rale caM Thi ~ea.al Communication• CommlealOn (''FCC") ,_,ny niled tlla1 lnt9r111te -c:hwgae thOUld bl llt•blllhed to charge the competing carrier. tor originating or tenntnellng celt9 ~ stat .. In eddltlon. lhe FCC order'ed lhlt MCil IOcal telephone eubecrlblt lhould pay 1 net monthly charge fOf lnter11•1• ~ TIM tnt.,....t• ~ Cit\¥ge will bl • rnltllfNlm of 12.00 par mc>ftth for MCfl ~tine and •minimum °' 14.00 par month for MOh bu91n.e Nne. In addition 10 the mon1111y ra t .. for 10ca1 ~ M1 by Ille CPUC. Th11 applica1ton will be flied let• In 1983 wttll the FCC. Cont111en1 with Ihle FCC rullnQ. on Jwiuary 1. 1984 Pactflc pr~ to Ml•blt.h. tor MtYlce wllhln Cliltornl•. aoc;-. c:Mrget for competing carrier• and ICOlll line ch11g11 applicable to IOcal I~ eu.blcrlblrS. Ttll• r11tructurlng °' chltgee doee not Iner-PICiflc'1 Hmlngs; !low· -· Pacific'• propoul will chenge the amount cu1tomer1 wll1 pay for monthly Mn/ICe. . _....,., .. ,., . ., .... ._.... •11•1 tr1 •~ChetaM Paclflc'1 pr()90Md r8* MIOCYted with~ ctllfQM. we~ dent on •numb« of taciOf'I at, under reiMw bV the ~cc. H-. 8Ufllcllnl tnformellOn la llV8ilable o mete• • r~ lltimetl ot 1~ ra-. F1n11 tnlrMtate -chargll wlll bl ci.termlned bV IM CPUC after public: hMflnga. A MC*'lle notice wlll bl prOYlded et 1 i.ter ~· •1ebll9hlng the dllll end tocetton. of ,._ publlc '-lngl. Under Pacific·• oropoul the ICOMI chltqet for competing C811' ....... 9UCh .. MCI, AT&T, end SPCC. for originating and l•mlna11ng celle bet--. the 10 geograc>tilc ~ .,_ repr_,t moet or the ,_ tmpect_ • Tolll ............ ...._ ....... ._.. ... w1t11 ~ ciw.ea . ""' ...... .J:::J ........ , ...... , 11,00t 171 11!5 2 11.289 ............ (PCC) .......... ~· ~) 11.780 278 118 3 1.2,217 • n-dollar amounl9 m1y change llgnlf\clnlly due to poulbM modlflc1tton1 by the FCC. Amounta lhOwn In thl• COiumn are for lnform1tl0n only. 8ued upon CUl'rent lnformetlOn, Ille ICOMI tine cnwge retM (1111bject to flnal apptoYal by the CPUC lor lntrM'lete and the FCC for lnterstmte) appllcable to~. rMldenltel (•11.~ Uletlne) If" C4lntre.11 oustomerw .,. .. followe: a.w. AMl<lenu.t ACCMI Une Charge BullMM ACCMI Une Cllerge Centre• Line Cllwge 12.10 14.25 1.24-,53 12.00 14.00 1.22-.60 • Tl\eM er• minimum Chlll'OM end mey chlngt dut 10 PoUlble modlllcetlOnt by the FCC. Amount• lhOwn •n llllt column .,. for lnformetlOn only. TheM -tine C:hltQlll .,. In lddltlon 10 Iha aNlrget for loc:al telephone MMoa 11t by the CPUC. Alt of Iha lft\OUrtta lhOwll lbcMt r9'lect lt11m11ed ln'IC)ICta, The flnll 111nCM11• l)fQ90Md bV P·9Cftlc tor "' lntrMWe ICOMlf CfWOe tarlffl -dependent upon fuflMr FCC IC11on. tn eddllton, all ftnel r ... ci.termtne- llOnt ~ to ll'ltrll'.,. eoo.. ctwgee wltl bl rnlCll by the CPUC .n ... '-1ngl .,. held. The c~uc may grant r•t• dlfltnllt frOf'l'I ftlOM requee1.0, lll'ld the 1'91• eMnOM 9"thofll9d mey bl In dlftlf9nt ~of Mrvtoa and/Of hltlMI' for thole 0..... Of Mlvloe leled above. " you would llk• to pt111tcj~ In an onQOillQ way end nMCI ectvtce on l'IOW lO 00 IO, Wflte to Ille Publlc: "4Maof1 ~ UtlllttM COMmlllllon, 360 M<:AllMtet 81 ...... Ian Franoleoo, CA t4 tot. A copy ot the Appll09tlon tor eutflortty 10 aclOClt lnltMt•• -=tarlttt Ind IUPl)Otttng •ldllblt• mey bl ulrlllMcl at Pecltlo'• pvblc omc. Of et the offloel of Ille CPUC _. IOf1tl l*ow. end commetlll r•ttw 10 1"11 rMtter, lndudlnQ ,..._ .. 10 nlOlllW notice of dal•. ttm. end plac9 of any '-lngl., ~ k ~ to Ille CPUO ~et; Cellfomlll Pvblla UtlllUM ComrnMlelOn 350 McAllllt.r 8tr-len Ftlll'ICl'8oo, CA 94102 NEW YOtlK (API ConPao «IV. .. •Ullfv NASOAO -lellont C:ordlt 10th Ill ~7~ '1MIWl"1J "'-'1 bids c-sr 61\lo '3 OllCI IOwhl ollers 11v CrooTr 27 11\lo KelVer ....,,. .. meur1 es o1 CuttFd t Jl(o 314 K•tneft • P m Pr left do nol DteO. • 10 ~ K ..... Sv 1ftducM rtr•H rner•uo OevlM J1'• JI Kl-rnerlldowft or comm· 09-1 13-161111 Kl"91ftl ·lsU... for Tuhdev. 0.lllA I~''' KIOOfG Sl9dl a1111 AM DetCenT 10-\lo llY> Knepel/ j\£L Ind )f ltV. DeW9V > ll'h 12:\0o Krelot t\F AProt 37"" )911) o .. crv• 491'> SI Kulcllt ' t\VM Co l \lo t Y> Dl1nCru )61t. 31 L..•nc• j\Cadlftl 2' 2'\lo Doc~ll lS\t, 3~ L•ndllH :~ru.ew ,~r-.... ,1.,.. ~%'8 • J21t. ).) Le,,.C ' 27.,., ,. Lllnv1 4'AMton 6YJ ,,.. Drlefeft J4Uo :14-., Llnllrd 1 ""'"' -211.t. o ...... o • 2l"-24 ~lrft "llcolnc .. II> ,. Ourlr°" 14Uo "·"' ..... . "ma<• h 7Uo 2'141 EelftVnc ,, ., ""GFOll "Furn t>u. Ill'> Eeo11Lll :ztY> 2'' l\MOIGE 4Grtl ' n" 24 EIPH 13" lJ:W. =I Pt 41nGD 1 ...... ., E-a. 'lo IO'llt I 'IHllM 1'\11 1'111 Elet4"'1 11-. II Ion t\Quev '" 711) EIMocl 1 "~ 10 ILP ""HM n l'I• 1 .. EMCo•W llllO ., •"' t\N<llle 11111 1111. EtvMel ,.._ 2111 ""°' 4"9SA 21 21i... E11l1• H~ s rm ""8AGd 111 I 1'\l'J E11twtsll o·~. 11~ F•rl 4'...C 41 41'A EolOil 11"" 11'-""° ::=p ·~:: ·~ ~= )f ,, ... J4\lll 3414 kluW 4'llG1l l 1111) It F19Uv Sl SJl.t. •P Allerlll 1 )f Jt'" FIEmpS lJ"' ,H,~ ... t\vnl... 2' 2'Uo F1W11Fln Ilk 11100 1 4S 4S" F=l k 1'"" JO UIPr lelrdCp 12'At 12'141 F J > n"' nloo WMVIO la"9HE 13111 14Uo FleN I :UY> JS I I laulF 1 S2 s2v, Frurocb " 14'• OI lavllMll IS'" ••• ,. Forh lO 2S is11; 0 ........ II'~ 1111> FrenllCP 1414 ISAi "" lelrLO lA"• 341'°' FrtlMEI ...... " nn llbllCo t7''t 221'> FrM$G 4S 0 1-t tClll ' ll<dSoll 11.. 11 It F ,.,,.,., llY> lt"-l lrlellt 111t 1-. FUllH9 J311) l3"' l lYYOOt 15"" 16 ~tell ' .... 4tllo ...,_, 5-1o 6 GMutm 1~ I• l<wTom 1111 f G11Deola JV. JY, a....... 61\ot 6214 O..RIEtl 13'" IS ~.: ~ :: r.-:~ ...... 20 n .. ni.. :PT 74"' 1.-. G,...Ad• IOS 117 ::erwt$Y " IOI;) Gtftftlll 10 10'" :..W..iH 011 S'Ai G,,..OOVn , .... , .. ~f;., ~~tit = Ull 71't IS\l'J .. CeoAlr )\lo 3YI HMdWk 1-. 1-. :: ... .co 1 7' JI -.r~ow .. II) If Cetus 16-\4 ""' Har!'(>P )A )4'11. CWltlv 41"" Q V.. =I ~37 Ulll nv. ~~~ ' ~ r,... H«wiiF 1 .. 4tll> ::twnLM If llY> _,., 2 .... 2-. ~mll ~" !. m: =· 2111 )\lo :~ 1 n. IMSlf\t 2'Y> , ... ::11SGa IJ IJ'Ai rK 1~ Ullo Cl1U A t JI Jlllll lftfl'•I"" ll l)Y> ::11U I I 7S"" zt l11ttt ' 3''AI )611) Ciel'\ 1 JI~ n y, lllfrcEl\r '"' , .. CIOWCP loYt !1!11 ........ ' .. "' ,, .... COlrTi. "ll 1.-, rmm1G1 ,, .... lSlll CoioG.1 )-I " IMIWtll 11"' 17\io ComCIH O 66'1> lw.SOUI J31;;, "" CMIS/v IJ .... 14 JMMllY 71 711'> CmwT.. ,.,,. t6 Jerlc:o • ""' ""' MUTUAL FUND ~ ... p,_,, . .... ·-recumP ICN ICN\ot HEW YOIUt (API -TlW ._.""' lltl 11-.. n 11. Pl>S•NC 14 .. 1011 TelcmA ~--Ille ()¥« • ,,,. -,_ ltl<o 71 Pur1hn • .... T-~211'> llOClll -W9" ..... !NI lie .. -.. 2~ 211) ~''" 2'11) JOY) florery 1 ~ ,...,,_,_ -Ille..._, -... .i•Jo '1\fo ·-21\fo 21lll fomlOll \lo IJ-1' -'*" ol dW'l9 tor T-• 41 ., ll•vmnd ,, ... ll Tt'tOI• tlll IM No ....,"'" ~ .,.... u .. ltOO 37 l71>'J "-· 1' \6\(o rn~~~ 2 IS-IU .,_ .... ~ Sl4 6'AI lloedS ...... 641'> J) »I'> .... --C*I!-0-... Ille 17 4114 llOCll>MV 14 IS ~rr,.,· 1111> 12~ ,....,.._ -n.. .,...,...... UOOINI 1''1> JOIA ~OUM ~~ "" ~ llld wk» Md -r• i.11 Diel ~ 121'> 13114 S.cller sv. • USSur n-. 11 "" 21 771.1o S.I~ s..... 5'>4 US Trek 1011 IS -L.e.i + ''T.. Pel. ,..,., 2' StHllGd 41\to ,,,,., UVel1 I 24111 U'Ai I loecll wl >'-UP Jll S SI'> SIP•ul (>5111 .. UIWEft " • 41,lt 2 lnlDte )~ + ... Uo M.I St\11 60 krlpH 2S\ll 26'1'> UP...,,P 11\l'J It J (epEft 211) + I ... UP IH )111) JI"" Seeol• ' 111'> 11" VNlll 1211'> 1n11. • Hwt. wlf7 6Y> .. ttJ, Up "" 73 .,.,,_ I J1 ])II) veoo11; n """ s To.Trou ,_ + .. UP n1 16•t. "~ S•Me< ' 70ho 21 venl>\n IJ\fo 1414 ' -ft 17loo + )''" Up n.• .,-.,. ''"' Svcm11 & 41\(o •• ,,. V~o 7'11. 2''1l 7 ~I ll:W. + , UP 20 s IU. 1'.t. Sii,.,,.., • 391'>,... Vlclr.SI ..... 11\0 • =-~wt S'" + "' Up JU ltl;, 191,., S/lwmul JIY> 31\11 VicleoCP 11R11 10-. I , s + "" Uo 11.6 J .. 3tll si.r•1t• 34141 u V•HI"' ,. ... -10 lnlOle ,,..., + t Up 17A , ... 1-. sn1con1 ).lllO JSY> tlVerftEI ''"' n 11 F-311> + .... UP 14.7 2\lo , .. \CelWlr i~W" NS/IE ft ~._~~ 11 McOoln , + ·~ UP IU 41 " SwEIS• n 'IOI NO-13 """9ldl I + I UP IU trl.lt """ SlendVn l6 J6\lo ,y.-SI SIY, 14 ""'°'" '"' + "' UD ll.J 1 1Uo Stel.Ylcro 36" """ fo/rnorC Z21'> Z2loo IS loecll ... + \o Ult U.J ll"· l3\ot StdR" , ll 34 ""'"'. If\<) ""' " E...,ol 2 J-16 + .,., Up 12.t .. 16' Sl•Mme ., .. foll-<! n 22\l'J 11 UMC EI .... +I Up :11 14~ IS SlrewCI " 1011) ""°"'"'"' 11-. IJ.-. 11 ....,.,,, IJloo + ..... Uo ~,.. ·~ Sueleru ff'" '° Nome! 11 2lV. It MoMle'r , .... + "' Uo ~ 21"" SUperEI 1 IU. llY> foloodl.ol 5' "'" IO _,LI , .. + It. UD 12l• 17" SYkn , ... 10 NrltllllW 11-. 11111 ll ltdTC ' ""' +II'> Utl ~1)·16 TIME OC "" Ill) lloltUI )O'IOo 31\lo n .... I~ + I" U• lJll)«I ramo1 '°"' ~ "-•·-"°' NOllcMlt. l) 5"1110 .... + .. UP tA ... 3'1.1o Ttnci.m 1'\l 1'"' u ~· JU. + .... UP l.7 11 7111> ts T'lvfc un It + Ill> Uo u S9Y> '° DOWNS ...... I~ Herne l.el l _,,. Pei. tl\l'J 11"" I PalTc WI , .. Oii 21 4 11 l3 .. 2 ~~ )Vo -.. Oii IU 211" ""' l l'Ai -IV, Oii :11 ....... ""' • Thund wl Ill. -1\'o Oii )I """ s CutCr wt 6\'i -I ()fl I . 41Y> so • Go.-ln )II. -.... Oii Ill n""""' 7 ·-10-. -..... ()fl IU lllll ll .... I ......, 7 .... -I ()fl lt. I ' ,.,. ' ECM .,._, 14\'i -2 Oii It. I 5"' Sl't IO eomi.s >'IOI -.... Off 111 Jll4 Jt II ·-71'4 _,,... Oii r~ JI 311r, 12 ....,,,,, .. U'llt -·"" Off u 11-. 17Y> NASDAQ SUMMARY I) H-1 -.... Oii 1.1 1S ISY> " ,,..._ W\'I -•l'l Off 0 7 12:\0o ll ,,.,. 17'141 I! ,.,...,.,. 4 .... -l't Oii 1u )ti;)~"" NASOA$~y Comtecll 11'4 _,,... ()fl t.O NEW YOltK IA ) -I KtlYt o-· 17 c_.ic S'\fo -... Oii ... 11 I VI ·1-COUftlttr 1lock1 luPPli9d 11Y NASO. II Ctl.ev 16"' -'"" Oii •.J S711> st N•me Volume &lcl Al'<t41 Cllf. " lftfodel •• -1\'t Oii ,,, S2 S2Uo Oii t .7 S1.1t 51/l ~~~. ···~~ t~ ''i~~ -.!•:: 10 Wk.el "'"' _, .. ""' nv. 11 Rot>Vtn 141.1o -ll't Off ... ' t 'A APP4eC >6"300 47 4711. -214 n $Al"" U ·I• -7·16 Oii 9.S n"' 1> lnl .. • 34S, 100 )6V. 3'\'I -1-. D IWdAPel 3 -S-1' ()fl ••• 'Ao .. Jerlo> ' JlS-'00 1"' ""' -"' 14 AIH 2\'i "' Oii " .... ul'> Phj!Gt *"°° 11-. 1 n. -,.. lS ClllM 2Y, -.. Oii 12 13 Nlcal 252.300 1'14 1'1'> -1 .. 17 .. lll't CNChl 2.Jt,JOO ll"' )ol -Ill 251'> ,~ fendotl • 117,700 ll Jlllo -!YI Q u .... S.991•. 234.fOO 11\'i "" -l'A . .. ,. .... 10 .... IOI'> "' 17 ,. 26'4 .. I 14\'t IS~ ~ .. -- I ' - Cl Heublein selling seven labels SAN FRAHCI.SCX> -A Fremo-bued gnpe ,,.aw~ cooperative IUd 1\.-day that lt ia buying Italian Swill Colony and llx other wine labela from Heublein SplrU:a and Wine Co. Tenm of the ale to Allied Grape Growers weren't d~loeed, but an informed 10WU who Mked not to be identified said the pnce WU about~ million. Investors sue in Penn bank flap OKLAHOMA CITY -More than 160 inve9ton in 19 stat.ea have loctaed a federal laWIUit claimin8 they were bilked out of 1DOl'e than $14.5 million tn.an.aIJeaed compincy involving the defunct Penn Square Bank and othera. 'The inveP>n claim the bank'• holding company and board of di.red.on; the national accounting finn of Coopers & Lybnmd: and eight oil and gas drilling ventures headed by former Penn Square Bank Director Carl W. Swan were part of the oonapiracy, according to court recorda releued Tueeday. Dollar climbs to record high NEW YORK -'Ille dollar lia,ed a broad advance on wOC"ld currency exchanges Tue9day, climbing to a record high aca.Uwt the Spmi&h pemeta, aa traders were preoccupied with the oou.ne of Federal Reserve Board policy and feara of increues in U.S. interest rat.ea. Gold t>rla!s drifted lower in quiet tradina, winding up at $f13.25 an ounce u of the 1 p.m. Pbr closing bid at Republic NaUonal Bank in New York.. off $4.90 from the late W Friday. Interest rates have climbed about 1 percentage potnt in the put two months in the United States, and fean of a further rille haw grown foJ.lowin8 a Fed announcement late in the trading day Friday of an unexpected $600 million jump In the bulc money 1upply, known u Ml. DOW JONlS AVERAGES Nt!W YOltlt CAP) l<llwl 0.W•JtflM -IWT~.Jul.S. nvac.s ....... I NIM9dCMe t w.Moco ,,...... c. • MllrJrl ' Sltt-6 NllFCo 7~1Alr1 wt s~ ... II lt-'C• II T ...... i..-12~• IJ ......... ' M.._., 0- 15 Mc*mlll• w1 """" ...... -------------~11a.-...i. :s=~U-tc. 1t lt..Com ti -ti Uflirfto:' "'A JJ~ ,. " -------------~ 2S KA k COLO QUOTATIONS SYMBOLS O·-yMtl\l IOw ... -~ly "'Oii ~CM--nol90 ,., .. Cl( 4Wt0en0t .,. ~·~-It ""9d IHI -1911 ~"'"'tly 01 Hlftl•eftn .. t l dKlatallOll Spe( ... or a•tt•.,,,,,..,. or ~ts"°' °"'91'lla0 .. ,..,.., ... ........, "' - IOl!OwlnO lool- a·AllO ••tr• or ••l•M ~ ·-..,. &ICM:-01••cl•llO C•l.1 .... 1clehftt 01•'411\d o.cw.o or p..o "' ~ 12 .-1111 .,0ec; .. ..c1 01 PM ..... tlOCil dMcl9nCI or 11)111 "p t·Peid IM lfMt. OMOenO OlftlMCI. dlfltrecl Ot l\O K1i0fl tellell et IMI CIMderlcl ..... 111\0 ••DK!Wecl Ot !'411C1 lllie lfMt. WI --111··--"'""'~"' ...... ... --•·<>«•weo or Peocl"' ~ 12 "'0"1111 plut atoc.ll dMdeftCI t·Peoct WI _,,,.,.......,~ ......... ..,- alllll ....... Oii ••·~ 01 •• .....,.IOI\ .... •·b..-.ot or.,..,..,., ,..1 .......... ""-"'1\111 t·S-11111111 ~·C-wG·~ dfll'*111d --...... o ••·W•lll werre111t ••·llWllllOwt .,.,,.,.,. ·-l•4'elnMoon P ( t1llO Tiie ptiee Of e tloc;il M a _.llCll' Of Pl'• ...... _,,.,.._...., D~ """'"'II Ille W•t 12·fft0fllll _....,,.. ftVl;r• lnlO IM I .... ll'!Qe ' • classif led ads phone 642-5678 Q Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Consumer confidence surge boosts economy Steel tariffs announced WASKIN'GTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan announced a com- bination of t.ari(fs and import quotas Tuesday designed to help U.S. steelmakers meet foreign competition, citing "the pervasive nawre of unfair trading practkes In specialty steel" as reason for the program. "give the lndU1try sufficient time to complete lnveatment Jrojecta, improve productivity an restore profit.ability." NEW YORK (AP) -Consumers are It.a Buying Plans Index surged 18 polnts to growing more confident about the econ-103.6. omy and are showing a new interest In buying ca.rs and other "big ticket" items, a It was the sixth consecutive monthly rlse in the confidence index, which is a survey said Tuesday composite of consumer attitudes about the The Conference Board, a private present economic condition plua expecta- by business lions for the coming six month.a, as reaeareh firm supported interest.a, said its Consumer Confidence measured by a survey of 5,000 howieholds lndexroaeto84.9 inJunefrom84.0in May nationwide. Host an Exchange Student Families are needed for European students who amve in August to spend a school year m your community. Please open your home and heart. • Share a wonderful family expeflence ·Build lasting tr1encfsh1ps •Show Amerrca at its best • Promote mternatronal uncferstandmg You can select your student now. MAX WILSON JOHN BATIEY Please call 559_1972 731-0479 or collect: (805) 963-0553 Educational Foundation FOi' FOl'elgn Study a non-profit organ1za1ton Ml.IC NOTICE Plll.IC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF IC093~TITIOUa ......... LETHA L. MILLER N ... ITATl•NT AND OF PETITION TO The foltowlng 1>«aon1 are doing ADMINISTER EST ATE bullnet1 u : _ No All.857 JOHNSTOWN PROPERTIES OF .' . . CALIFORNIA. Suite t20, 110 0o¥e To all hean, bene(lcaanes, s1r .. t, Newpoft S..Ch. CalH. 112llllO creditors and contingent Sheron S . l(noth. 2 tUll creditors of Letha L. Miller ~=.,.og• L-. El T0<0,c1111 and pel"90nll who ma)' be JoMatown Anwlcan Compantea otherwise int.eresled in the a M...achuMttt IMlll,_ trutt.: will and/or estate: 5775-A PMchtr .. Dunwoody Road. A petition has been filed Suite 300. At1en11, a--g1a 30342 ,. . . •Johnstown Ameflcan Companler by Diana Peca ln the Su-11 the dellg,,.tlon of tlle Tru11-for perior Court of Orange Coun-tile time being under the Third ly requesting that Diana Peca Amended 1nd Aeltaated Oeclar· ted na1 111on or Trust dlled J1nuary 111. be appoln as perso rep-11180 u amended All peraona deal· reeentative to administer the Ing .rit11 Joonatown Amerlc:an Com· estate of Letha L. Miller panler must look .olel)' to the true! (lmder the Independent Ad-P'°'*1Y fOf tlle enforc~t or 1ny . claim• agalntt Johnstown Ametlcan miniatratlon of !At.at.es Act). Comp1nles, u no Trustee. Otflcet, The petition is &el for hearing Maneger, Agent or Shertlhold.,., at· in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic ~met any perton1l llabMlty lor obit-,._._ Or West San•• Ana g1t1on1 ent.,.ed Into l>y or on behalf v1::n..,r ·• • -• or Johnatown American CompanieS. CA 92701 on July 20. 1983 at Sefton Stallard, Clo Jeney Mort· 9:30 A.M. gege Company, 430 Woodfleld AYe. IF YOU Osnx:T to the Ellal>eill. N,J. 01201 . . Robert G G'*"Pli· clo Jerte)' granun, of the petiuon, you MOf1gege Comp1n'J, 430 Woodlleld should either appear al the AY9., Ellzabetll. N. 01201 heuing and state you objec-John Lle-Nle!Nn. Sult• 300, · fil . b. 5775-A F'Mc:tltree OunWOOdy Road, uons or e written o Jee-At11nt1, Oeorgl• 30342 tions with the coun before George H. Li ne, 111. 1ddreas samt the Maring. Your appear-u at>ove a.nee may be in person or by w 1111am B H1mllton, addrua 5amea11b0ve your al~y. D1Yld v JOhn, eoor ... same 11 IF YOU ARE A CREDI-at>ove TOR or a contingent creditor Arthur Byrnes. cio S.5 M1dlson Of the ..&.......---' you must file Avenue, 8th Floo<. o.ttec. New Vorll, U01..:~, N-Vorit 10022 your c1a.i.m with the court or This bualness 11 conducted by· pre9l!lll It to the perlOnal rep-S!Qned· Sharon S l(noth re.entative appointed by the Tl'llt 1111emen1 wu hied With the , thi f hs County Cle<1< of Ort nge County on court w1 n our mont F21tat from the date of fint IBSWU'lCe F'ul>llshed Orange Co.st Dally of le1t.en u provided in Sec-Piiot June 29. July 6. 13. 20. 1983 tion 700 o( the Probate Code 2967-83 ol California. The time for PlB.IC NOTICE filina claims will not expire YOU A.ftf ... Dl,AULT UNO«R A prioc to four months from the OHO °' TRUIT DAnD ...,.__ date of the hearing noticed a. 1•. 1112. UNLall YOU TAICI above. ACTION TO 'ROTICT YOUR You MAY ""' .. ..,.lNE the "'°"M'Y, fT MAY U IOLD AT A L.Al\.JYI "'8LIC IA&i. If YOU N!EO AN file kept by the court. lf you EXPLANATION 0# ~ NATUM we lnt.eresied in the estate, °' ~ '910CllDtNG AGAINST YOU, \'OU IHOUlO CONT ACT A you may aerve upon the ex-LAWYER. ecutor or administrator, or NOTICE°' TRUITl!E'I IAU upon the attorney for the ex-T.I . No. 4oo. ecutor or administrator, and NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. 11111 f,,_ with the_ .. _ with proof on July 27. 19113 •t 10.00 a.m of Hid ..., ....,.... • d1y. In the room Ml aside for ol 9el"Vice, a written request ducting Trust•'• Salee, Wllllln t ltating that you desire sped.al OlflOll of REAL ESTATE SECURI- --··-of thefiling of an in-TIES SERVICE. IOCltld II 2020 """"'"' NOf111 Broadw1y. Sull• 208, In the wnt.ory and apprailement of City ot Sant• Ana. Courtly of Or111ge, .iate ametl or of the peti-atat• or Cafff0<nta. Jimmy B. eroo111 · ned Ind Rebecca A. Brooks. hutbend tiona or aooounts menuo 111\d wife, u duly 9'll>Olnted Trwf .. in ~ 1200 and 1200.5 of unci.r and purau1nt to the ~ or the C&llfornia Probate Code. aale confetred In 11111 Oltllln OMd JAMES G. BARKER of Trust Peculed by Jimmy B. ,...., Srootct end Aebeccl A. Broollt, 115 ToW"a Cetlkr Dr. lvvv huabandandwtfe.recordedOecem· Cetta Mesa, Ca. 1%121 bet 21. 1982. In the omoe of the (7lf)H7-177l County Recorder of aald County, u Published Orange Coast Recorder's lnatrument No. 82-«11929, l>y reason of 1 breach of Daily Pilot June 29, 30, July def11.11t In peyment ol perlorm1nce 8, 1983 or 1111 01>llg1tlont secured 111er11>y, 2955-83 Including 111111>rMCt1 or del11.1". No- tte. or which was rtlCOfded Match ------------1 1t. t1183 .. Aecotder'1 ln1trvmenl ftlll.IC N0TIC£ No. 83-tOll937 WILL SELL AT PUB- LIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ao.. BIDDER FOR CASH, lawful money of '9CTITIOU9 .,..... lhe United Stllet. or 1 clthler'I ...-l'TAnmNT Qhed< dr1W11on1111t• °' n1t1on11 The following Plt*>fll ere Oolng bank, a tllll 0t federll etedll union. ~ •: Of 1 111te or lllderll aavtnga Ind IOln (A~NSTOWN PROPERTIES. utOcilllon domlclled In thll lllle. =INSTANT HOME. 1109 Dolle Ill P•Y•ble II the time ol ..... Ill • Ste. 120, Newpoft BMch, C1. right. 11111 end lnt.,.nt held by It, u Tru11 ... In that real property tltutte .IOfW*OWn American Cornpanle, • In aald County and St lie. delctlbed -~, bullneel 1rv11 1-ufollowl.Lot11 810d133orNewpoft b9IOW). Sult• 300, 5775-A PMChtr• 8HCh ... anown on I Map recorded DIA'MOOdy Roed. Atlante. Ga. 30342 1n 8oOll 3, page 2e of Mltcelllneout I Aw~ -below. Mepa of Orenge County. CalHomla Tlllt ~ ll c:onducted by: • Tiie 11reet 1ddre11 or other ~ 11'\111. comon detlgn1tlon of the r"I prop-Georvl H. Lane Ill, Pr11. erty h1r•ln11>ov1 dHcrlb•d 11 ~OWN AMERICAN COM-putpo<led to be.33t4 w .. 1 Ooeen ~ANEI. Front Newf)or1 Beach, Clllfoml1. A ~t• llu9lneM trust. Tile undertlQMCI hereby dlldalma JOtw.-,.11 American Companlett 111 ll1blf1ty IOt any Incorrect,_ In 19N deelgnatlon ol the T ru'1-for aald street lddreaa or other com-• um. being un4er the Third mon designation. Alnended end A..tated Oec11r111on Seid aale will be m•de w1111ov1 olTNIC deled ~ ti. tNO, • vr11r111ty,upreaaorlrnt>fled.regetd-llMl*'d All ,__ dMllnQ with Ing title. polMMlon, or encum· ..... .--i AINtlcan Comtlanlll btlr\CM. to Mllafy lhe Pf.,... bel- ... loclll IOlefy to the ttuM prop«ty lt\09 of u. Not• or otllef OOllDatton .., 1M •lfoloernent of eTf'f OllllN MCUfld by a.Id Deed of TNll', with ...,,.. Johnltown AIMrlo8n COm-Inter ... Ind Ollltl' ~,,,. M prOVldecl .... •no T~. Qfflc9r, MM-therein: plUI advMott. It My, und« ...,, Afllllor~ .,.._ the 19fmt tr.....eof and tnter•t on .., perlOflll llallllly t0t of)llga1Jon1 IUGfl ldVlllOe9, tnd plu• feee, ....,. ""° by« on bet"'9 oi Jiotw1. Ctllf9"• Ind expen-of t~ __. AIMftoM COmc>enlel. Trv11" ind Of the tn.111• creetld b)' PlalC NOTICE NOTICE 0# DffAUU AND 11.aC· TION TO MLL P\"'8UAMT TO a.CURATION 0# COVIMAHTI, CONDt'TtONI & RHTNCTioNI PARI I .. IMPORT ANT NOTICE .. IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN- FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENTS, IT MAY BE SOLO WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, and you may llave the legal rigtlt to bring you -.nt In good ltendlng by apylg ... of your put due ~· plut pemiltted C0911 and ·~ within three (3) months from the date this Notice of Oefeult w .. recorded. Thll wnount l1$1,3oe.8'711ofM11ch 1, Ul831111d will Iner-until your aeeount ~ comes cum1nt You may not lla¥e to pay the entire unpeld portion of your eccount • ....., tll<>ugh full payment -demended. but you mull pay the amount 1ta1ed atlo¥e · Alt.,. tnr .. monthe from the date of recordalton of t11la document (wlllch date of rtlCOfdatlon ~ h«eonl. un .... the obl!Datlon l>elnO fO<ecloMd UPOn permltt a longer period. you have only !tie legal "Ft to atop the f0<1Cloaure by~ Ole entire lmOUnl dlmended by your etedltor. To find out tlM amount you must pay, °' to arrange fOt pa~t.1 to stop the forecloeure, Of It your Pf oe>- etty 11 In forecioeut• f0< any other r~. contact: Jamn F Robef1t. All0tney tor Beneficiary, 9115 Town Center ~Ive. Solle 800, Cotti Meta, OA 112928 (71•)~1-3232 II you 11ave any queattona. you atlould contect 1 lawy9< or the gov- ernment IQ90CY wtllcll may lla¥e In- sured your loen. REMEMBER, YOU MAY LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU 00 NOT TAl(E PROMPT ACTION. PART II NOTICE OF OEFAUL T ANO ELEC- TION TO SELL UNDER DEED OF TRUST. NotQ la ,.,.,eby Given 11\et JAMES F ROBERTS, It Sobltltuted Trustee und.,. 1 deed ot trvll dated Ju"8 25, tll8 I recorded Feb. 28111, t983 In Instrument No. 83~11 t08 of Official Records In the Office of the Rec0<der of Or1nge County. Cal~ f0tnla t>ei:-: , Craig Allen Boyer '"""n called Trust0t. and Wiiiard JtmM HamMton and S1ndr1 J-Hamilton ll«eln- 111.,. called t>eneflclerlM Rlr the pul'J)OM of MCUrlng oer1.itl obll- glllont Including one no1e lor Pflnd- :tll 11¢11 S~m~~ 1ng 1amhllefe1n •. PARCEL t: Unlt ~3 .. llhOwn end delcrlbed In the Condominium Plen recorded on May 31, 11178. In l>ooll 126117. pagea 700 to 117 1 lnc:lutl\le. of Offlclll Aecordl of Mid County. PARCEL 2: An undMded one fllty-flrat (115111) lnt ... eet .. a tenant In common In the lea lnt.,.•t In and to the Common A,... of Lot 4 of Trect 85112 u per map flled In b006c 422. Pegel 1 to 7 lnclullYe. of M• oellaneout Mllj)S, rlCXlfdt of Mid County u tuell ,.,.m II defined In the Artlcll entitled .. Deftnltlont .. of the o.c11r1tlon of Covenant•, Con- ditions Ind Aettrlctl<>NJ ecotded In boo!< 1211117. pege 3115 ol Offlctll ,.._ cords (the Oeclat1t10n) end lnY amendments thereto. PARCEL 3: ~ti 11 Ml r0f1h In the S.CtlOn enlltled "Certlln Eaaemenll for Ownert" and "Sup.. port. settlement 1nd Encroech· ment" of the Mlcle Entitled "Eue- mentt" of the Deci11111on. Tim 1 l>rMCll of and del1u1t In the obllgatlonl IOf which IUCh dead II MCUrlty llu oc;curred In ttllt PIY· ment h11 not bMtl m.O. or: The aum of s1,3<1e_17 wtllch ,. llecll put Pflnclpal and lnllt•t peymenll and pul Ille Clla<Qte N or March t , tllll3 end 111 tublequent 1n11a11men11 of Ptlncipal Ind tter•t Ind lny rMI end !>«_,.. l)fop«ly 11x., wtilch "' delinquent Ind whloh Wiii t>ecome delinquent. Tll•t by re1aon tri.r.of, the under· llgned. pr_,t ~lty undef soc:h deed, hN eJUICUttd Ind ct.- U~lld 10 aald Trull .. 1 written dee- lar1tl0n of Def1u1t Ind Otrnend tor S111. and hit depotltted with Mid Truat" tuch deed and Ill docu· ment1 eYldenclng ot11101tlon1 ... cured tller'1by, end II• daclared Ind does llerel>y declat• .. tuml ... cured thereby lmtnedlallly due Ind p1yable Ind hit elecled and dOee llefeby elect to CIUM the trvtt prop- erty to be eold to aatltf)t the obll- g1t1on1 MCured thereby OATEO. 3117183 JAMES F. R08ERTS Tnm• LA'# °"1Cll 0# -'AMII ,, fl08. ""' ::n=..-::..:i:: .. , ... -C-.MIM.OA ... (1M)M14111 Publllhed Orll'ge CoM1 o.lty Piiot June 15. 22. 29. July I , tlll3 2780·113 '.'tAlllMI Mid Deed Of Trust. TIMltotel~t ltalletd, ,_, Hin Ortw. or Nici obl19111on, 1no1uc11t19 ~ 1------------ ..,.., H.J. 0711711 1bly tlllmlled r-. Clhllget end·~-P\llllC NOTICE 0. ~. 11 Ectoewood .,.... ... of the Trull .. , It the time Of 1------------......_., H.J. 07'40 inltlal publication of this Notte.. II K- ;,i 011 n d e -Nlelun, 81 25 S27,1229t:Junel0, tte3. ACTITIOU9-U ~ W1-. Aoed, Atlanta, Publllhed Or.no-eo.tt Diiiy NAMa ITATRMIWT ~ I033' 2 Piiot July 8, t3. ~. tll8330eM13 The roll<>wlng pereone .,. doing ~ H. L-. Ill, 6 8lecllland -----------bualnetl N . ...... .A"llMl1, 0-11113030e PWUC NOTICE MARKETING DEVELOPMENT w...i •• Hamiton. t770 Ihnen -----------SERVICES. 1036 No. Mein 81,.... V..., Drtlllt. Aoewell, 0-de 300711 ftCTTTOUe .,_... Orange, Clllf t2M5 0...-v. Jottn. lot& Ml P9tan ..... STAT'R...,,. JOHN D HU£01N, 307 Teton Clf- ..... MllM.~OeorOllE303,J.7h S The followlng penlOnl -doing cte. ,,._Ill. Calff. """"" ,,., f4 . '""' treel, t>ullnwt.. MARIAN HUEOIN. 307 T .. on Clf- .... Y9'tt, ,V. 10021 COSTA MESA AUTO SUPPLY Cle, Pftie1t1tl1, Oollf. ~ ~ ~ ~htyt:: ~9.521"'"bor Blvd .. Cot•• Mela, CA.: Tiii• bullnelt II conouc:tecl by. Jww f: ..,_,. "' ""-..,... "" lndlvldutlt (Hutblnd & W ... I ""'8 7, 1M3 nW41 DYNAMIC TWINS. INC , 5742 81gMd·J()riN D HUEOIH -..~ ~ Coel1 ~ 9P~.!'"' Pf-. yorba Lindt, Ca., Thlt 1t1temem WM llltd wlttt Vie ~ _, ~....... County C*1I ol °' .. Coun~ ,.... J.#t t., 13, 20, 2. tte3 Tlllt ~ 11 conducted by I r 3051-tte3 C()tpoftllon PutMltfltd Oronge COM! ~ ()ynatnle Twtn•. Inc. Pll01 JuM It. Juty •• 13, IO, ,.., ( hleHaill..on..S.C. ......., Tltll ltetement ... Ned wlttt ... ~-----------1 c-ty ~ of Or-. ooun~ on JUN 17, tt13 f'l1m1 ~ Oforp c:... Olll't PllOC ,,,,.. ta. 19, My I, 11, teel. - 2141 •"- The buying index, which is figured from a 1969-70 base of 100, stood at 79 in July 1981, when the recent recession began, before spiraling to a low of 50 last October. Fabian Linden, executive director of the boud'a Conawner Research C.enter, said consumen appear more willing tn make major purehases. He said the four-year relief program. to start in 15 days, 'will Reagan's program wu one propo6ed by U.S. Trade Repreeen- t.ative Bill Brock, and It wu chosen over sever&) other options, including three years or across-the-board quotas rec- ommended by the U.S. Int.er- erialS Tomorrow A 6rst that also works as a second . A new house <.l<x.-sn'l rurn inw a honw overnight. It takes a link work and more than a liule money to rcfini~h ii with all I ht• t•xcra~ you like. Thar's why lmJ>l'rial c rcaccd lht· Tomorrow Mo rtgage'". So you c'an (1uallfy tmlay And thc:n borrow again tomorrow at the prevailing To morrow Mon gagc'-.. rate. This a<.ldilionaJ advance feature is goo<.I ror anylhing from a · vacation to a patio. Our fealutts check out better . The: Tomorrow MortgaRe"' ~t1u.:k' up lo the comJ>l'titlon in every way. In fact. C0"1Pllre u:o. to the others and )'Ou'll M.'<' lhat our fl'aturl':o. :-.rand out in a crowd. • AddltionaJ advam:n . • Up to 40 year amo rtization • Interest cap over the life of ch<· loan. • Assumable. • No prepayment J>l'O•lh)'. • Competitive rare. Pkk your payment plan. Our Tomorrow MortRage',. sivc:-you a <:hoin· of two payment plans. <.:hoo~· th<· o nt· that tx::-11 nts your ncc:ds. • ONE YllAll ADJUSTABLE PIAN. 11 % • lnterat rate. 11.28"•• annual pet'cenugc rate: . lnteresc me cap ovc:r the: lllc of the loan- Qualify today.. -Borrowaga•n tomorro~ • FIVE YEAR ADJUSTABLE PLAN- 12% • intc:rc:st rate:. 12. 30s•• annual percentage rate. Your rate will only change o nce: In over 9 years. , .. r Interest rate cap over rhe life of your loan. In addJtlon, we ~Ive you ftte Interest ch c-ck.lng. When you 4ualify for che Tomorrow Mort~age' .. , you ~so quallfy for a frt•t• Check in~ l'lu:-lntcrc:-t Account. • No minimum halan<:e and no m1>nthly scrvkt• l:harge~. • A frt·c ATM l':trd allows you to access your monc:y from a network ot lmJ>l'rla.l Convc:n k nn· Centc~'" throughout California An open Un~ on loans- CaU 1-800-C.H.E.K.N.O.W. (1-800-243-5669) Phone 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monda)' rhrough Friday ;md ask our finandal rc:prt-.~c:ntativn ahout o ur loan k :uurc::-and how and where you ,·an apply for cht· Tomorrow Mortgage'"· Also don't fo rl(ct to ask ahout our varic:ty of savings plans. When you're rt·ady to huy your new home, think 11bout all those extra!\ you'll wmt tomorrow. And then give lmpt·rial a <:;all, Toda)'. •·ll~d on• 1 ypk~I 111111 0 lmJ?S!i!!~LoenAssoceb ........... "' Whe1r! Tamonuw Begins Today. L.O.vl .OION~: Clan,_..t f;Mt81ty w~··1t,"1'1rc("I H1r-•r..t.(A94\41 l 41\)Ml-11<;(11 lllC.-nuo Prano 400 Nonh l."'11.tn 11111 lllv..t c:t.ttmom <.A 11r •11 ("14.)bll \'/% s...o .. ., l.\~) l'lftl't A.Ynl"'. ""f>k11t1. ('A, 9lt01 (fllll) I \I 8H4 I H'I Fa.1 ~bin ''rt.'<"' H (min" C A Qll<H (Mii) \'\l ... l tO l t '10 1\llAtt '4rttt f'ttMO, C.A 11\'lt ( l<W )4 "6 lt\I II s.n 'f'OIM'*° 11111 < l(-11~n1 '4tt«·t ~~r~·l~11,I A94111t ( 4111 .'ll~ OOQO 9-ta~ \1168 :.CAt4· '1,.-('I ~nt~ tlar1\llra. C"A Q \10, ( llU,) Cltl.t·• .. \4 -. .. ._ 90 SMU ttu .. A¥t"t11.W ~ .. "'-(.A 94't04 t '.111-) Hb 1160 ( ,. Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1983 CONSUMER NEWS SLIM GOURMET MEAD ON WINE Korean cuisine to take over culinary scene lb CAROL MOORE Ol ... o.llp .......... A summer barbecue is a good place to discover how colorful, refreshing llnd healthy K orean cooking can be. "This neglected or forgotten food category will be the next new cuisine," predicts Susan Slack, who will prepare an elegant Asian picnic during a culinary demonstration at 3:30 Friday, July 15, at the Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa. "Koreans use meat sparingly but often combine fish and beef in thesarneentree," she said. ''They are experts at marinating vegetables, such as kim chee. It's traditionally prepared in the fall after the pepper harvest and buried in crocks in the ground. The fermented cabbage or cucumber . provides vitamin C for their menus during the long winter. "Kimchee is served with soup for breakfast, with rice for lunch and as a side dish at dinner." I ' Special kirn chee pots can be purchased in Asian markets here or, she said, air-tight plasticwarecan be used-if the container ls used only for kirn chee everafter-because the pungency usually results in ''Clorets for everyone." Slack explained the heat of other spicy dishes can be adjusted from "two-alarm to four-alarm." Originally from Tennessee, she has studied cooking for three yean in the Orient while her pilot-husband, Richard, new commanding officer of HMH 363, Marine Corps Air Station, Tustin, was on duty overseas. She was tutored in vegetable sculpture and swing noodles during her most recent stay. "You get so spoiled by the spectacular produce over there. They have the most gorgeous, lavender eggplant, elephant head garlic and the daikon (radishes) are the size of watennelons!" And, like other Orientals, the Koreanaareadeptat the artistic, yet uniform chopping of ~h produce that adds to the visual appeal of their meals. The Pear Salad that follows is a confetti-like bw:st of colors when all the vegetables are cut in same-Size strips. It's also a new use for jicama if pear apples are not available at Oriental markets or by order from ranch markets. Both the salad and Bulgogi beef feature generous sprinklings of sesame seeds that are another staple of Korean cooking. "Since the Koreans don't have much meat, the seeds add protein and vitamins to the diet. Plus when they are toasted and crushed, they add such a fragrance to foods." The barbecue menu could be completed with homemade or sto~bought kim chee and Orien~ rice. Iced tea, barley tea or cold beer are recommended as appropriate beverages. For th08e who want to go beyond the beef, rice and cabbage basics of Korean cooking, Slack has deecribed the authe.ntic preparation of kim chee. roll-your-own hors d'oeuvres, a sushi-and-smoked salmon birthday cake and other specialties from China, Japan. Thailand and Korea in her book "Flavors of Asia," to be published socn by~ Publications. (See KOREAN FOODS, Page DZ) ... 03 OS 06 Video cookies are the latest thing. Page D4. Summertime is for salads Let fresh fruits and vegetables take center stage In easy-to-prepare summer salads that are attractive and a change of pace in flavor and texture. and topped with sliced fresh ftult. one sure way fo bring down the temperature Is by serving Nectarine Ice on Fruit Salad. Pear and plum wedges and chunks of avocado are decoratively arra~ over crunchy lettuce slices. The tc)pping Is scoops of super cold nectarine ice. Instead of the usual chef's salad. please guests with a quick-to-fix Calypso Salad. A tuna mixture fills pear and avocado halves that are arranged around a mound of lettuce If you are crazy· about Mexican fo6d and are ready for a new twist, try fruity Tostada Salad. Crispy tortillas are topped wtth shredded lettuce. cooked chicken. slices of • juicy peaches and a dollop of avocado dressing. All of the recipes are easy ,.and dellclous. so take a vacation from the hot stove and enjoy summertime salads. Light and refreshing desserts are a must for hot days and nights, and 4 ftour tortlll• (I-Inch dlemet•) Vegetableofl 2 cup• ahredded cooked chicken 1 can (15 ounc:ft) tometo puree 2 te•poon• or.gano 1 heed Iceberg lettuce, ahredded 2 frMh peechM. allced Awocedo DreHlng (recipe foffow•) tourcreem Teco uuce, optional Diced green chllee. op- tloMI Fry tortillas. one at a time, in hot oll (about 11 .. -inch deep) a few seconds on each side. until crisp and golden. Drain on paper towels. Combine shredded chicken: tomato puree and oregano In a saucepan. Simmer 3 minutes to heat chicken through. Place each tortilla on a serving plate. Top with lettuce. chicken mixture. peach slices and Avocado Dressing. Dollop each with sour cream. Drizzle toaco sauce and sprinkle diced green chlles over each salad, If desired. Serves 4. Avocado Dressing:) Peel, seed and mash 1 large ripe avocado. (Should yield 1 cup puree.) Stir In Y1 cup dairy sour cream, 1h cup milk, 11 .. cup diced green chlles, 3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice, V. teaspoon cayenne and V. teaspoon salt. Continue to stir until smooth. NECTARINE ICE ON FRUIT SALAD 1 heed loMMrg lettuce, out Into rMte (OfOM .... allcM) endhetwed 2.,.... 9ertlett,..,., cut Into wed111 2 rtpe 8"DMM, Hided, pHlld end out Into ohuntla a,,.........., out 1nto ••di•• .............. (reolpefallDW8) Place lettuce slices In a large shellow bQwl; arrange pears, avocadoe and plums over lettuce. Top with Nectarine Ice end MMt. Serves 4. J 2 can• (7 ouncea MCh) tuna, drained end flaked 'h cup delry aour cream 'h te•poon thyme 1 t.bleepoon lemon Juice 2 """ ....... peen, Mtwed and cored Combine tuna, sour cream. thyme end lemon juice. Fiii pe~r and avocado halves with tuna salad mixture. Line a plattet' with outer lettuce leaves. Shred enough lettuce to measure 2 quarts: mound onto lettuce leaves. Perch filled pear and avocado helves in a ring around lettuce. small ends facing center. Arrange plum and peach wedges over the top forming a radiating pattern. Garnish salad with minced parsley and twisted limes slices. If desired. Serve with Plum Dressings. Serves 4. --Plum Dressing: Slice 3 fresh plums or enough to measure 1 '.4 cups. Place slices In blender jar: whirl until smooth. (Should yleld 1 cup puree.) Stir In 2 teaspoons sugar and 2 teaspoons red wine vinegar: mix thoroughly. 1 taa1poon plain ........ 2 cupe ..... ,..., dMded 2 oupe ohclpped .,.... ...... (ebout 4 .... ~) 1oup .... Soften gelatin in '4 cup orange Juice; set ~-Comb!M nectarines. augar and V. cup orenge Jufoe In sauce pan; bring to bolt. Cook over medium heat, stirring occallonalty, •bout 3 minutes or until nectarines are 1<>tt. Blend gelatin Into necterlne mfxture, stirring untlt dileolved. Pour Into blender jar; whirl until smooth. Stir In remaining 1 ¥l cupe orange Juice. Pour mixture Into a lhanow pan: freeie untll flrm. Cut Ice Into chunl<s and tum Into a m(xer boWI; beat until amooth. Return Ice to frMl8r and freeze untH firm. Maktt 1 ~ <fUarts. > ' ' I _, ~· H Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 ... Enter recipes for cook series · If you've been enjoying our Cook-of-the-Week .eries and would like to join in, the Daily Pilot wants to bear from you. Send ua aevenl of your favorite recipes ., we can pick a couple to share with our readers. The leries ai.o includes • photo and abort profile of our apecial cook each week. Send your rectpea to the Food Editor, c/o the 'Daily Pilot, P . 0. Box 1560, Cc.ta Meea, c.alif. 92626, and be aure to include your name, add.rem and phone number. Souffle, salmon easy on the budget Elegailt entreea fit foe company and apecial ~ usually ttqUire extra effort on the part of thechef .. .and acme extra output from the family food budget. But that'• not true of Souffle.. Topped Salmon Steaks. Thia delicioua diab ia simplicity it.elf to pare, and once you've pun:hll9ed the aalmon : your ~ are reelly under control. All you need to apruce up the ateab are a few kitchen buiat you probably haw on hand right now and about 20 minutea of your time. SOUFPLE TOPPPED SALMON STEAKS W cup margarine, melted 2 tablespoona dry white wine 6 (2 pounda) aa1mon steaks, 1 inch thick 3egwhitea ~ cup mayonnai.ae 2 tablespoona green onion alices t.eupoon dry mustard Combine margarine and wine. Place fish on graaed rack of broiler pan. Broil 6 to 8 minutes on each side until fish flakes euily with fork, brushing frequently with margarine mixture. &:et egg whites until atiff peaks fonn; fold in mayonnai9e, onion and muatard. Spoon onto fish; broil until lightly browned. Serw.6. Variation: Halibut steaks can be substituted for salmon. KOREAN FOODS (From Pace Dl) PEAR SALAD SANG CHAE 2 or 3 medium carrots, scraped and al.iced thinly into diagonal coi.na, thell cut in stripe 2 Japaneee cucumbers (or 1 European cucumber) • cut in 2-inch 1engtha and sliced into julienne stripe 1 peer apple (or very firm Anjou peer or similar amount of jicama) peeled. sliced and cut julienne 1 bunch cleaned green Cll1iona, smaahed flat with a cleaver then cut into thin shreda 1 small red or green bell pepper, seeded and cut julienne 1 teaspoon shile kochu or ~ teaspoon dried red crushed chills 1 heaping tablespoon sesame aeeds 3 or 4 red leaf or Boston lettuce leaves, rinlled, dried and shredded 3 tablespoons lemon juice 2 t.ablespoons sugar (or more to taste) ~ teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons sesame seeds Grated 7.eSt of 1 lemon In a large bowl combine the first eight ingredients. In a mnalJ bowl, blend the lemon juice and ..t, sugar, salt and aesame aeeda. Add dressing to the mixed ingredients and toss the salad together. Chill until serving ti.me. Mound on a lettuce-lined, chilled platter. Serveti 6. BULGOGI 2 pounds thinly sliced rlb eye steak 5 tablmpoona «1'J sauce 3 tablespoons tugar 4 deaned. thinly shredded green onions 3 clovee finely minced garlic: (or more to taste) o.ll of black pepper 2 tabJelpoona dry white wine 1 heephlg tablespoon toeated eeeame aeeda (Few tableapoona bfief atock if dry) 1 tabJelpOOO ~ aeed oil Preferably order the beef aliced at an Oriental muiart or butcher. Otherwt.e, ~it until finn enou8h to alke W-lnch thick. Pl8Cle beef in a large bowl and add remaining ~ta. except for aesame aeed oil. Martnate for 30 mlnutea to 1 hour. Add aeeame oil and mix in. ArranBe meat on a platter f« cooking then cook OWi' a cbarooal pill. in a hot akillet or under a broiler. 'Ibemeatcookaqu.ickly; tum sl.icetafter a minute and .pin.• nee -ry. Servel 6. BuJcolj can be aerwd in .,.my shell bMketa for an elepnt preeentadon. Make them from aprtna roll aldm trimmed into ~ then pre•elt between apeda1, double wire a..keta and deep-fried. C.arefu.l- ly remove the ahella from the wt.re baaketa. Save valu;.ible gasoline hy plan nlng shopping lripti to local stores ad· ver\ising in the lllJ Piii I) I I I It's the dressings that make a salad Your salad can be artistically oompoeed or w.ed with abandon. But either way, it'• the dreming that aparka the flavon and draws the salad t.ocether. A lively aurpriae in the salad dreMinp ~ here la canned or chilled papefrult juice. More nutritious than vtnesu' or wine. grapefruit juke adda a delk::iow, .-ty ffaYOI" that me.. up the mast ordlnarY lngredienW. In fact, by. ulllng more juice than oil you can lower the calorie content of your ctre.ing. . A coJd platter of bolled shrimp, canned or cbll1ed grapefruit 9l!ICtiona. cottage cheeee, romaine, chicol'y or led lettuce ahines u a low-alorie health aupper. Served with an unusual Sara80ta S e·rlde Drwlng, it ~gourmet fare. SARASOTA SEASIDE DRESSING ~ cup mayonname 2 tablespoons drained India pickle rellah 1 tab1e9poon canned grapefruit 3 ~to«Uffed p-eeri olivea, chopped 1 t.eMpoon grated onion ~ tMlpOOO hot pepper •uce In amall bowl combine all ingredients; mix well. Yield: ~cup~ \ ISLANDS FRENCH DRESSING ~cupwater 2 teaspoons oornatareh ·. ~ cup canned grapefruit juice 2 tablftpoona salad oil ~ t ... poon aalt ~ teeapoon paprika ~ t.eMpoon dry muatard W teMpoon hot pepper sauce W cupcataup 1 garlic clove, peeled LB. In a small saucepan blend water and cornstarch; cook, stirring constantly until mixture boils and thickens. Remove from heat; add grapefruit juice, salad oil, salt. paprika, dry mustard, hot pepper sauce and cataup. Beat until smooth. Add clove of garlic. Allow to stand aeveral hours. Remove garlic clove and shake well before uaing. Yield: 1 ~ cupe dressing. CITR'us PUNCH • 64 oz. BOTTLE SUNNY DELIGHT 48 OUNCE BOTTLE MAZOLA CORN OIL GALLO • 1.5 LITER BOTTLE PANADA or TYROLIA WINE GATORADE .• 46 OZ. BOTTLE LEMON-LIME DRINK FROZDI • IHll.WOt:O lll!!F hfCtll.ADA 11 0t • ClllSPY FRIED llURRITO 11 6 0 1 • CHUSE ENC!illADA .; ""'4CHEllO I 1.1$ 01 •CHICKEN EHCHll..AOA 11 0 1 • IUF TAQUTOS I 0 1 • IUF TOSTADA SUPlllDIE I 6 o• VAN tie KAMP'S •CLASSIC MEXICAN ENTREES KRAFT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE SWEET A JUICY NECTARINES i • I J i ! • I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 DI 1 Bargains , coupons help consumers fight rising prices . !tl LOP..J!!t _£20K Today's supermarket shoppers are las worried about inflation than they u.eed to be, but they still ._y it ii harder to make ends meet and they are not letting up on the fight against riaing prices. Tboee are among the findings of the latest ln a aeries of studies conducted for the Food Marketing Inatitute, a trade organization, by Louis Harris and Associates Inc. The studies, which were started in 1974, are designed to measure conawners' attitudes toward the economy in general and the food industry in· particular. They also look at the ways people use to save money. The latest poll, based on tele- hone interviews with a national NEWS sample of 1,001 men and womenln January, ahowed that the public believes unemployment ii a much more aerioua problem today than ln!lation . Seventy-three percent of thoee questioned-illmoet three people in four-said unemployment wu worried about Inflation. The Consumer Price Index, the moat commonly U8ld aoveminent ineUure of inflation. lhowed that pricee dwing the f.lnt five moot.ha of 1983 roee at an annual rate of only 3 peroent--Je. than Jut year's 3.9 percent and well below A majority of t hose questioned sa id it ia harder to make ends meet now that it was a year ago. more aerious and only 16 percent said inflation was more aerioua. (The rest of the people said they did not know.) Last year, ln a similar survey, 63 percent said unemployment was more aerious, while about 25 percent were more the double-digit boosts of a few years ago. · A aubetantial minority of the public does not aeem to believe that the rate of l.n.flation ii declin-ma. but the nwnber of doubters ia shrinking. Twenty-eight percent from all over Califor nia is rounded up each day · of the people surveyed ln the 1983 Harris poll said prices today were rising faster than they were a year ago. In 1982, 45 percent said prices were rising fut.et' than they were a year earlier. in the Daily Pilot A majority of thoee question- ' WHOLE NEW YORK STRIP 2~~ a ~ T -BONE STEAKS 245 ;__-=::~I KJ:f l};;!J~· ~~::::=:::::============ •REGULAR • ORIP • EJ..£CTRA MA TIC •UMrT 2L8S PER CUSTOMER ed-~ percent-uJd It la harder to make enda meet now than It wu a year ago. Six percent u.1d it wu euier and 39 percent Mid lt\ere wu no clw\ae. In 1982, 60 percent of thme questioned aid it wu harder to make endl meet, 6 percent u.1d It WM euler and 34 percent u.1d there wu no change. Contumera generally do not expect their pel"IOnal financial altuation to Improve. Al.most half-48 percent-aald they the>Ulht thinp would remain about the aame: 26 percent looked for an lm{>">venMmt: 23 percent predicted th.ll\gll would get WOl'9e; and the 1'8t were not sure. The people questioned by the Harria l'e9eU'Chers indicated that conawnera are continuing to. economiJ.e ln moat areu. About aeven out of 10 aald they stocked up when they found a barpln, u.eed coupons more than they u.eed to, choee store and lower-price brands more often and bou8ht products on apecial even if they hadn't par1icularly planned to purchue thoee items at the time. There wu little chanae from pNYioua ye.n ln the number of people making uae of the prtce-aavtna atrategies. More th.an half of thole aurveyed-52 percent-Mid they looked ln the newspaper for ada for arooerY apedala a1mmt all the time. An additional l~ percent said they checked the paper fairly often. The study also looked at shop- pers' attitudes toward the prod- ucts they buy in supermarket.a. Amona the findinga: Sixty-four percent are very concerned and 28 percent are 8()0")eWhat concerned about the nutritional content of what they eat. The specific con- cerna moat often mentioned were chemical additivea, vitamin and ~ content, no, preeerv_-tlvea, and aupr and aalt content. Nlnety-eeven percent of thoae questioned said they ch~ked the packaging of the food they choee very or 10mewhat cloeely to make aure it wu in good condition; 91 percent said they checked the date on dated foods. SUPER i MAR~ET ......... tM ........ . Lt-• •ny ..... , m. .... tt..~-""' . ..., ... .. ,....., .... .. \ Fresh cherries spark festi ve fruit salad "Keep it fresh" and "keep it simple" are popular ~ phrues theee days when it comes to the fooda we enjoy. And, what couJd be aimpler-<>r fresher-than a sparkling salad of fresh sweet cherries and other! aeaaonaI fruita? I Cherry Luhcheon Platter combi.nea Juacious · f:reah cherriea, apricots and melon with a cottage cheeae al.ad. Attractive and very easy to put tosether, this makes a cool and refreshing summer, lucheon entree OC"-preceded by a chilled aoup-a delightful., light aupper entree. Crunchy walnuts, grated orange peel and juice, atirred Into the cottage cheese, give it a pleeaant texture and subtle citrus flavor, a ni<:e complement to the juicy f:reah fruit. A tangy Citrus Dre9li.ng is puaed aeparately. 160UNCECAN YUBAN COFFEE 490UNCEBOX TIDE DETERGENT CHERRY LUNCHEON PLATTER 1 pint cream-style cottage cheese 2 tablespoons chopped walnuts 1 tablespoon sugar 1 teaspoon grated orange peel 1 tablespoon orange juice Lettuce 10.3 O UNCE • FROZEN T OTINO'S PARTY PIZZA TROPICAL TllEA T MANGOES • ~ ·==~ '\!!:) LAllfl. DOWNY • 64 O Z. BOlTLE FABRIC SOFTENER 1 pound !resh, sweet cherries Apricota, halved and seeded Cantaloupe wedges Ci t.rua Dressing Combine cottage cheese, walnuts, sugar, orange peel and juice. Spoon onto lettuce-lined salad plates. Surround with cherries. apricots and cantaloupe. Pass Citrua Dre9sing. Makes 4 1ervings. Citnaa Dre11ta1 c.ombine ~ cup oil. l tablespoon each oran&e, juke and lemon juice, 1 teaspoon honey, ~ teupoon Mlt and~ teupoon dry mustard; mix well Makea1 about~ cup. Cuaed Claerry Vartatloa One can (16 to 17 ounces) light or dark sweet cherriea, well-drained, can be subetituted for rreah cherries . Cookout success Whether it'• beef burgers or beef sleek you are cookln8 on the charooa1 grill, a p>d fire ii a key to NCCeel. To atart the ti.re, pile brtqueta In a pyramid and tcnlte with the aid of an electric atarter, Uquid Nl1ilr or kJndlina. The number of brique111 needld wW depend on the Ille of your pill and the amount ol food to be oookecl. The fire la reedy when thecoalaare COW!Nd with a P"aY -.h and alowina in the center. At We pcUrt. apre9Cl the ooU ln a layer ., that they are just touch1nl Ott up to an Inch apart. lt'a lmponant when ariWna beef to malnWn a lowtomodente~perature~t t.becookin8 period. Tmnperature can be controlled by .cl~ the IJ'ld, ~. add1"I Ott remavinC caai.. llCIJustine dampen or draft doon and ulinc wlnd- breab. 642-5678 I Put a few words to work for you in the llily Piii ' ., IM Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Juty 6, 1983 Hearty salads ideal summer fare Maln..cllah Mlada of .-.is or chicken are an amllent way to•• your protein and enjoy oooJ.tna meals th1a aummer. Both of the following aaladlcan be 11.te in the IDal'nina or preferably tbe day before, with an increcUent or two stirred In ,;.t before let'Vina· ' S.YOI')' Beef and Qr. ance Salad is a refresh· inc combination of flavors. The beef marinata in a tangy ctre.ina ovem.lgbt. For cob' and added tute9, stir in ltrtpa of red pep- pei:. 8eCtkloed orange and diced cucumber just before terving. Summe..-Chicke n Salad has a mus· tard·vinaigrette dreaslnc tou c hed w i \h Worcestenhire and tar· ncm. Cut·Up chicken and ~ pepper are marinated in this, then cubed fresh tomato is added at 9eJ"Ving time. SAVORY BEEF AND ORANGE SALAD ~ cup Ol'8Jll'I! juice l t.eupoon vegetable oil l teaspoon Worcestenhire aauce ~ te.poon around Pnaes-~ te upooo grated fresh orange peel w teupoon garlic powder 12 ounces flank steak or boneleu beef rOund. cooked and thinly aliced (2 cupa) 1 ~ leedecl, peeled, diced cucumber 1 cup &e.b orange 8eCdona 1 cup red pepper strips In a medium bowl :~cookies .reflect • :pastime America'• latest craze haa the family lined up in lront of the \eleviaion a:fte!l waiting for their I . --;chance to repel the ghost· ·ly Blinkies. Pinkies and "Clyds from chomping up the lovable hero. I Outwitting them baa be. come a passion for milliona. In the heat of battle, it'• wi.e to have emerg. mcy rationa available and a aupply of Video C40kie9 ahould do the trick. VIDF.O COOUF.S a~ cup• unsifted all·pw'JJOR flour M cupaapr w 'eMpOOO aalt l W cupa butt.er« mar- prine ~ cup plus 3 tablapoona fromm Cll'an&e juice OOl'l· oentrate, thawed, un· diluted, divided 6 tablespoom confec- tklnen' aapr Colored IUPI' c.andy coated chocolates In w. bowl mix : flour, ..... and ult. Uline a pMtry blender cut in butt.er until mix· ture ,...,,Nee ooene rDM1. Stir in in cup concentrated orange juice and mix to form a douah; p191 into a ball. Wrap, chill 30 minuta. On a llchtly floured baud. we a floured roll· inc pm to roll dougtl in inch thick. Cut into lhaa-that re8emble vkleo pme charact.en. Place on ungreued cookie abeeta. Bake in a 400 decree oven 8 mlnuta or until Uchtly browned . Cool tborouchly on wire ndm. In ..U bowl combine canfecUonen' ...,. and ,., .... a W:hllPO'Dl"I er-. JI.dee CICIDl.WDtrate. Ssir-1 --OD coolcie9. Sprinkle the female ~·bow wt1hcol· ond ..... u. candy coated chocolata for .,... .... 3 dmen mm. ..., .... 642-5618 plac:e ocan,e juice. oil, Worcestenhlre aauce, lln8tt. orange peel and garlic powder; mix well. Add beef; tom to coat completely. Cover and refrigerate at least 2 hours or overnight. • Bring salad to room temperature; stir in cucwnber, orange and red pepper. Serve on lettuce leaves if d~. Servea4. CHICKEN SALAD ~ cup vegetable oil 2 tablespoona red . wine vinegar 1 tea1p oo n Worcestenhire sauce 1 eu yolk l teaspoon onion pow· der \4 teaapoon garlic powder ~ teaspoon powdered mustard ~ teaspoon tarragon leaves, crushed, 2 cups cooked chlcken cut into ~·inch cubea ~ cup coanely grated . carrot In a medium bowl place oil, vtneaar, Worcest.enhlre sauce, eu yolk, onion powder. garlic powder, mustard and tarrap'l; mix well. Add chicken, ,reen pep- per and carrot; tom to coat completely. Cover and refriaerat.e at least 2 hours or ovemtaht. Bring salad to room temperature before ter· ving. Add ~ cup cherry tomatoes, if desired. Ser· ves4. Ra-lphs.Double Coupons New Low Meat Prices plus 6 Double Coupons fW;y3 Double Coupon ,. ... n• ttw coupon eaaonio wuh <Lnf otW Ma:n~ur•tt ~centt Oft coupon ;:*CC.~.~'°=°'-,.~~= 'letou.r "" ~oceJy pwc'hele "°""°"" .,..._ OI-I'-' OM dOUal oe n ONd tM •oh•°' ttw •• __ .__,,_~ pr<>Cl\Odt LlllUt OM "9m r.. MaDWoc· flUea' Coupoo c:md Umll 6 Doll!lle CCNPOQa ... CWtoiDN. .aectiH Jv.l 7 lllN ...,, fl(!fti*& Double Coupon ,. ... M trut coupon CllOnQ wun an' on• Mon\dOC:t'wen C9nll olr c;oupon ones e>eit OOWU• lh• Mn1nep. ti'Mt\ YCk.1 pwC'hoM the 1i.m Hot 10 &nClucM ft40\l•t bH Q10C.tf pwchO .. ~poN coupon.. O'f~•• than one dOUCD Of H c.ed lM •oh.-ot ln. Hem lmci\old.M ~ tococ<=O ONI dou f PC>Cl- Ll.mll a-ri.m ,.., ManuJac· twen' Coupon cmd Lt.mil 6 Oo\&.ble CCNPOQa '9f C\latomer COVll09 9a.ctl .. J\IJy 7 GIN Italy U. 1913 Ralphs lowers meat prices up to 40¢ per lb .... Here's Proof!°· USDA.:;4oldeD Premium .... C\at·pet lb. J09 Chuck Steak USDA IDlp..Qokl•D Premium ..., awa.per lb. J29 7-Bone Roast USDA !Dlp.4old•D Premium ..., Cbuck·per lb. I" Cross RlbRoast Dairy/Deli Jlal~·Ptom nor1do l4S Orange Juice ": Trop6ocma·Ftom Flonda 99 Grapefruit Juice •.: • Ball Park Franks ~ 169 ldpbt-familt.~ 139 Potato ::>C11ad :: • l\a9rMI Comldo-Prfth 2 49 Monterey Jack ": • ~~\lanJ= ·.:3/11 ' ~Sgartne = .99 Liquor Values USDA Dulp • .Qolden rr.mlwll LC11V9 UeatJ DMl·per DI. 239 Beef Rib steak USDA IDlp.~ PremiWD .... Lom-pec lb. 289 T·Bone Steak 01DA Dup.-Clold9D Premium .... LolD-pec lb . 219 Top Sirloin Steak Grncery Values ·.:149 snack crackers ~109 ~ ~ T\illa·ln OG °' W<Mf Tl l;mcaen of the Sea ·~ • fOfnato Juice -.: .69 Gr99n~Salt i..:.49 cral~d'e ·: .99 s\in Drinks ..: 2.39 ._...Date ..... Of~/~ 149 Fruit 8c Fiber Cereal~ lu~wetser aeer ...: 4.58 mi.t'qUid .. .: 3.29 Cil.ampacine "°= l 98 P18Ctnle~oit~ -l 98 USDA IDlp.4o&d• Prem.IWll leef ao.md·per DI. I" Boneless Round Steak f'anDelJO~r !*lb. J19 Pork Roast Swut UJ": Butterball · 99 Turkeys • Frozen Food !GS~ Pr•mlum 1ce~ream Mk:bel'1 ramoU1 Quiche Lorraine ce1 ... Cheese Pizza rteat.tlmm. '-"'.&'' JU!cT Fried l;mcken "\: 2.29 '= 199 ':= 2.49 = 2.79 ::: 2.89 Bakery Values B:arcaws lal~ot Apple :>trudel C-try~.cte Baguene Bread lr'aWauan Rolls ~129 ~L59 '.::. .79 =.89 switch 8r saveMmore than a buck a bag* cd Price• effective July 7 thru July 13, 1983 . ··...,.,... relate to preYjou• ...ti'• price or lnfttel price rHuotloft. = .. ,..,._.__,c;_,..,......_ ._._ .. ,.. _________ _ --·--.......... ----~-___ .,... __ _ _., ___ .... _,.... _____ ...._.__ ...-.... ""_....,. ________ ...._ ___ _ ...• _ .. ._._..._ ... ..,. ....... . • QoldeD Premium per lb. .59 Fryer Wings caold9D Pl'emium·f'rT•r per lb . J09 Drumsticks or Thighs Qold•D Pr9mium per lb . J39 Fryer Breast Produce/Floral Sweet·Ju.lc:y Nectarines PlWllP Ripe • Cherry Tomatoes l'rMb OMip Cucumbers Freeh SoUd-GrMn Cabbage Freeh·~ Cucumbers Appetite Shoppe · · · ~Own Cole Slaw ... ~··--kind :>wla Cheese ..r: .49 ...r. 2.79 ' I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, July 6, 1983 Da a Cook yourself slim wi_th /ealthf ul c~ttage cheese I For too many dieters. coti.ae clleele exiata only to fill ln the •P'tt on the hambur&er plate where the french fries are sup- pc.ed to go. Actually, thia health- ful low-al food la in- credlbly wrsatile as a Slim Gourmet ingre- dient. Here's a more im- aatnative way to com- bine hamburger with oottqe cheeae: lTALIANPOT CREF3E MEATLOAF 8~unce can tomatoes. undrained • 2 pounds fat-trimmed ground beef round (or 1 pound veal and 1 pound beef) 1 onion, chopped 1 carrot, shredded l rib celery. minced 2 eggs (or 4 egg whites, or equivalent substitute) 2 teaspoons dried or- egano (or mixed Ital- ian herbs), divided Garlic salt, pepper to tute ~ cup Ital - ian-seasoned bread crumbs, divided 12 ounces dry curd uncreamed low-fat cottage cheeee (pot cheeae) 2 tablespoons minced freah parsley Drain tomatoes and reeerve juice. Combine tomtoes with ground meat, onion, carrot, celery, 1 of the eggs (or 2 egg whites, or half the equivalent substitute), 1 teMpoon Ol'epllO. garlic salt, pepper and most of the breed crumbs (re- serve 2 table.poona breed aumba for top- llina). Mix topther. · Place pert of the -meatloaf in a loo pan and make a well in the meatloaf mixture. Mix cottaae chee.e, panley. remaining egg and remaining oregano topther and spoon into the well Cover cottage ~ mixture with re- maining meat mixture. Pre. meatloaf into the loU pan to ahape, then lnvert the pan onto a nonttick baking tray. Re- move the pen. Sprinkle with remaining breed ~· crumbs. Bake the II meatloaf in a preheated " 350-degree oven. buti.ng F often with re.erved tomato juice, for 1 hour and 15 minutes. Makel 10 eervinp, ap- proximately 200 calories eecll; 10 calories leas per lef'Ving with egg whites or substitute. Here are more ways to cook younelf allm with ~ cottage cbeeee: t ~ MACARONI AND 11 MUSHROOMS ' ROMANOFF p 8 ounces uncooked r elbow macaroni c 4-ounce can muah- rooma (aUced, or stems ~ and piece9) i l cup low-tat cottage • I , Cucumbers r : relished • I May be 9et'Ved at once f~ or lt.On!d ovemlgh tin the ' Nfrlaerator. CVCUMBER RELISH p 1 large (9-ounce) cucumber, pared and eUced thin ' ' J ~ I I I i 1 small (3-ounce) onion. aUced thin 1 ~ teaspoonl sugar 1 •eb'eepoon cider vtnepr ~ cup p1ein yogurt !A teMpoon alt Pepper to tellte ~ mint. ooanely chopped In a medium bowl. to•• to1ether cucumber, onion, 1u1ar , vlne1ar. JOl'U1, salt and pep- per. Tum Into a eer- vtnl bow~ t:tll/tt and d\il1. At leMni time pmUlh with frelh mint. Mabaabout 1 '4 cu ... Hev• J::.. reed toelay·1 CIH~ A.dt? If not, ,.,.,. ,......... .. .,... .._..,..,.. cheeee 3 tablespoons chopped scallions (or panley) Optional: 1 small clove garlic, minced divided 2 tablespoons plain bread crumbs Cook macaroni in boU-inl water (salted, if de- sired) until tender. with the bread crumbs; each; or 12 lide-diah ser- vings, 105 calories eech. . STRAW B E RRY CHEESECAKE PARFAITS ~ l cup ice cubes 2 cu.. tlioed fresh atrawberriee Optional: additional sugar substitute, to tute 11DOOth. m 2 teaspoon s Worcestershire sauce Pinch of red cayenne pepper Meanwhile, drain mual\rooma and reeerve liquid. Combine mush- room liquid with cottage cheeee, acalliona, garlic, Worcest.erahire, cayen- ne, salt and pew if using, and wine. -oce98 smooth in blender or food proce980t, using the at.eel blask. Drain mecaroni and to. Uchtly with cottaae mee.e mixture, drained muahrooma and 4 table- spoona Parmeun. Spoon macaroni into a ahallow non.stick baking dish. • sprinkle over the top. 1 envelope plain gelatin Sprinkle gelatin on cold water in mnall saucepan. Wait 1 minute, then heat gently until gelatin melts. Mean- while, combine cottage cheeee, sweetener, van- illa and lemon juice in blender; cover and blend Add gelatin mixture; '° blend until smooth. With iq blender runntna. add lee m cubes through anaU opening, 1 at a time, until 114 \horoughly diMolved. m Refrigerate mixture ~ 15 to 20 minutes, until ~ partlally .et. Layer with ru berries (swee1ened, if de- sired) in parfait glules ~ nd chill until .erving I'll time. l) Optional: salt and pepper, to taste ~ cup oold water 1 ounce low-fat cot- tage cheese Substitute to equal 4 tablespoons sugar 3 tablespoons dry white w ine (or substitute skim milk) 6 tablespoons grated Parmesan c h eese. Combine remaining 2 tableepoom of Panneun Bake uncovered in a preheated 350-degree oven 30 minutes, until crumb topplna la lightly browned and macaroni ia heated throuch . Makes 4 main~ Ervings, 310 calories 2 teaspoons vanilla ex - tract 2 teaspoons lemon Makes 4 .ervinp, 110 : calories each. VONS LOW PRICES·+ DOUBLE COUPONS SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS fRESH-USDACHOICE-7·80NE OR LB BLADE CUT IROUND BONE CHOl>S I 69 LB I COUNTRYHEARTH89 !~~~!!iE~ES • I ~·l8 lOAf "219 COKE, DIET COKE TABOR SPRITE !2-PACI< 12·0UNCE CANS-LIMIT 2 LARGE PEA OR RED PLUMS \AEATY L8 SWEET I JUICY FOSTER OR ZACKY CALIFORNIA GROWN LIMIT 4 PLUMP & JUICY GREAT ANYTIME LIMIT 6-LBS. DETERGENT 49-0UNCE 8011 iNCS 25 OFF-llMIT 2 I LETTUCE SALAD l'AVOAITE TYLENOL 2'' ~~~Tf!i~GTH IO-COUNT tA89 r~17"~ ~ ~1~'-"'7. i1":9~ :-; ~ ~~,971'7: :~ I H >l BI I ~ 1~ < Ol PO'"' ~ r-----------------11 1·,, "''·111 '>1. 111 .. \\I \Ill \\1111 I :~ l>Ol Bl I· ~ I~ < Ol P0''-1 -;;: C> r-----------------' ('''I'• 111'.I. 111 .. \\I '"' 1\11 11 I :~ I H >l BI I ~ I ~ < Ol PO'"' ~ 0 SUNNY DELIGHT 89 CITRUS PUNCH S.-OUHCE • eon LE JUICE 46 OUNCE CAN IS GOING TO SA VE YOU "'"CH IPHCTtve THUlll. THllU WIO., JULY, YMllU JUU 11, , .... CAll llU)......., '°" LOO•T'°" cw eTOM ...-n YOU,"°' AU fT'llilll AND MCll ... TMll AO ..... Cflft AT .... "" w. MO eLVD., "" •• "'" "~ L~ ...... 1. ....... ott1eo. PMSNO, UI VIOAt ANO TUl.Alll COUNTY, ••u• ... IWfAIL OUAWTIT198 O~T. MOIT "°"'' o•••, ... ,0 11 .... 'DA'8 A Wiii!. CHICKEN OFTHF. J59 SEA SOLID WHITE TUNA CARNATION COFFEE- MATE 1-0l IN WATlll •• oi MT*lfON MAOM ................ OOIU•IA ,. I. tnll ...... eM 0.-.. AN. 184 CLEANSER COMET .47 BORATE EM .-RIGO THF BOROX STRING IJt.EAC'tfU CHEESE 40 01 139 4·0~ PKO. .63 '°"'"Me YALUY _. ............ CM'tlTMllO IUCM ..,~,.. ........... EQUAL LO CAL SWEETENER to-00\.ltlf '· }89 ) l l t< 1\ le b-cr ::> •LI 0 >'!) m l') n 10 ~ 2 b ao IO • .Q :I >I )I af ) a 'o ,. .. " n I ~ " " !r c ~ II Jt ,. s I ,. :l !O .. ., J f Orange Coaa' DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 California wines get • • some. compet1t1on The Eldorado Hotel in Reno recently sponsored a judging of wines from all over the western United States, which !"Geans that California wines had some competi- tion from wines produced in Washington, Oregon and Ida.ho. The concept i.s• a good one, becauae the wines of the Northwest are too often overlooked. That wine industry is newer than California's and production far more lim- ited. Since most of the nation's best wines are produced in Califomja, most of the credible judg - ings are staged here, and are usually restricted to California entries. If you're wondering why it falls on a hotel in Nevada to sponsor such an event, the answer is simple. One of the own- ers, Don Carano, is a wine lover who is getting more involved in wine in every way. His dedication to the grape is most obvious by the staging of wine com- petitions and by the superb wine list at the hotel's Vintage Res- taurant, which features a broad selection of hard-to-find wines at unbelievably reasonable prices. His interest in wine goes even further. though, and will be dem- onstrated in a year or so when the first wines from Carano Vineyards will see release. Even after hearing the warn- ings that "the way to make a small fortune in the wine industry is to start with a large for- tune," Carano went ahead with a major in- vestment in Sonoma C.ounty vineyards land and in the wine cellar that will eventually pro- cess the grapes. More than 100 wine- ries submitted their wines for judging. and were evaluated by a panel of judges that in- cluded "yours truly," several other writers in- cluding Richard Paul Hinkle, Tom Stockley (Seattle Times) and Gerald Boyd. Also rep- resented were Dr. Carlos Mueller of UC Fresno, Margaret Smith of Sunset magazine, and several members of the wholesale and retail trade. There were a total of 10 judges divided into two panels of five. 'The judging was or- ganized and conducted by Rich Thomas of"Santa Rosa, who has consider- able experience, being the fellow who chairs the annual Sonoma Harvest Fair judging and who conducted the 1982 Cen- tral Coast Wine C.ompeti- tion. ...-......, All the wines were tasted blind with medals awarded by majority vote of the five panelists. Al the end of two days tasting. and before any winners were an- nowlCed, both panels convened to taste all the gold medalists in an at- tem pt to detennine a Sweepstakes winner, or best of show wine. ~it turned out, there were two Sweepstakes winners, becaw.e the judges split right down the middle in their votes, and the tie could not be broken after several tries. The two Sweepstakes winnen were Silver Oak Cellars 1978 Cabernet Sauvlgnon, a 5-year-old Quick tips • When preparing fresh bull aalad, Ule comblnatJoru of all melona, .uch u oan- taloupe, honeydew and watermelon. And ulina a melon ball cutter, 8dd bells bun an avocado for a delectable and but.- tery-ll'OOOth Oavor. • The IOOneJ' you \.lie fresh corn. the sweeter It will be. And for a new e ffect -add fr e1h panley to the melted butter. • Fr-eeh pe.che.. like many other fru.ita, are Wl'tlatlle. Sliced pmic.hee can be added to any maJ.n d1ah, euch M pork or poultry. f« a Oavonome and lpl!da1 pretientadon. red wine of both power and finesae, a wlne I had previously called ''the twice as much. It is a well-balanced Pinot that can be enjoyed now, but Mead on wine By JERRY D. MEAD winnery's best ever," and Mill Creek 1980 Pinot Noir, a wine that sells for a modest $6.50 and held its own with wines selling for over that will improve for at least five years. Other gold medalists, and therefor e Sweepstakes con - tenders, included from the Cabernet Sauvignon class: Cloe du Val 1980; Clos du Bois 1979; Field- stone 1979; Guenoc 1980, and Chateau Ste. Michelle 1978 Re!erve. The Ste. Michelle is a Washington 'wine, and my personal favorite of all the Cabernets. It is not expensive at $16.50, but it has the structw;e of a classy young Bordeaux and should age marvelously. Only one other Pinot won a gold, an Oregon wine, Amity Vineyard 1980, a super, lntenae, deeply-colored Plnot that waa m<»t im- preeslve, showing both power and finel&e. A silver medalist that was a sing.le vote aw•y from a gold turned out to be an abeolute "best buy," the 1979 Pedroncelli-by the cue at $4.50 a bottle or less. A aingle Zi.n!andel earned a gold and was th~ last wine to be ellmlnated from the Sweepstakes competi- tion, Rafanelli 1980 which eells for less than $6, and is the klnd of claasy claret style that is restrained, not too high in alcohol and shows no sign of overripeness. The Sauvignon (Fume) Blanc claaa had aeveral gold medal win- ners and gave another Northwest wine a chance to shine. Sokol-Rlosser 1982, which will be re- leased shortly. Other golds went to Chateau St. Jean 1982, Preston 1982 and Franciscan 1981. The Franci8can also earned a gold at Orange County. The judging panel that evaluated Chardonnay and Gewuntraminer was extremely stingy, not giving a single gofd med<\l in either category. §rKeyBuys Key Buy1 meMi ext,.. uwtn91. Key BuY1.111e oems proced below tneir eve1y0ay dtSCoont puce~ as a 1-esult 01 manutacturot~ 111"1po<aty ptOmOl•~I allo-nces 0< oceptoOt\111 pu•cnA~S You II fond hundreds of Key Buy items e"'"'Y 1tme you snop GUARANTEED MEATS BONELESS ROUND STEAK FU" CVt 9DnOtO llfff l0169 WHOLE BODY 52 FRYING CHICKEN SO..metn CflClt A lO • SIRLOIN TIP STEAK llO~• '°"°'° 8"1 lloun<I BONELESS RUMP ROAST S"1on CUI llonttC!O llftt lloun<I l0 199 l0 169 BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST .... 87 IOJrrQ:DIU• ~o~~~CUTCHUCKROAST"' 1 .19 RIB EYE STEAK It 2 .99 FRESH CROUND BEEF It 1 .19 It 1.69 ... 1 .29 .. 1 .98 It.a\ Ol'fllO't OOl\..Or flOfO ~'If QUARTER PORK LOIN oauon ,. ,.., eu.oc .\IC> w.,,.. '"°" WHOl£ BEEF BRISKET ~\l\llKIC>t.Ottf• '~ ll' ,.,_, ""'' CROSS RIB ROAST -10 \tocl{OIUICNUC• ~!~0ER JOHN SAUS~?,E_1 1 .19 ~,PY LEE BACON , '" .. , 1 . 3 9 ~.~:.~"T"'~~~Y, .~RE AST,, 1 . 99 ~~.~.ENO RIB ROAST ,, 1 . 99 SLICED BEEF LIVER ...... LEAN GROUND BEEF OOU"OT U CUO '°"" Mf TURKEY ROAST ~9Qlllllflf\\ AOltfllll 14/fft•IA\'IO TURKEY BREAST ... 79 .. 1 .S9 .. 1.69 'l!IU\•ICM COC.-10 \~fOCVOl-CA\t•O C:.110 4°""•0•et"'4WWC\O-~TCf't I.I\ .. ll 3.19 FISH & SEAFOOD SOCl<EVE SALMON CHERRYSTONe CLAMS ll 2 .99 ... 99 ... v. ~T OF DOVER SOlE "' 2.49 ~~T OF BUTTERFISH 11 1 . 79 "1.99 Fu.ET OF LINC COO - Shoppera prove savings! Jeannie McClain SAVED 9.61 . Tn• Lue~y r o1a1 74 It Tl'I• IQlal •I "'• Olll•r super mar••• on lht t•m• o• comp1< at>I• lttr11• 113 1 I faef••r I >~• •n ''" ...... ., ...... .,.-·~ NEW LIQUOR PRICES ~~CRAM'~ 15"' a11 999 ~t~EY'S 11s.1• a11 899 ;~rDA 1 ""All 199 DOS EOUIS XX 329 BEER&P•O Uqflt 17 01 NOn ~turn BU\ or ON' ~S2,RESBY SCOT~'~""" 10.99 ~'!,~ES 1 ""'on 10. 99 ~~LER BOURB~"'" 10.79 ~e_N~GE "'"" 1n 11.49 JACK DANIEL'S ...C'lAllrl~ ..,_ . .... ~ 11.49 ~DER'S SCOT~~ ...... 10.99 ~SEAL VODKA,"'" ,,1 6 .S9 ~~El BRANDY ''"'" '" 6 . 79 !!'.;,.Hf2!ER ... ,, •••• 10.99 LORD CALVERT .•••• , 7 .19 ~~R~OOAO . .,.,,, 8 .69 ~e2~~·s 7 CR~~~" 11.29 CEUA LAMBRUSCO WINE 2 89 .-,o-.. '" • 1~ off pre·mmrked llem1. Our D•1Coun1 P11c1ng Potocy apphes to "10SI •lems ,,, our store 11>11means1ne P<OCtts vou see on gree11no ca1os magu•nes pape•bitks and otl'le• pre-p11ceo •tems ate au1omatoc111y c:h1Counteo 11 tne cnec~slin<I DAIRY & FROZEN rlMPERtAL 59 ~!'RCAR~~~cc,, • r ~~~~;~~~ZAF-OR~!eo.1 .29 r ~~~,!,JEMIMA WAFRE~01800 .69 !PET RITZ PIE SHELLS "' .. ~ .69 (;; r ;<l~~,~?._N'S ~~. 1. 99 f~) r ~~~ LEE SPINAD;!,., -• 6 9 !HARVEST DAV VECETABLES 79 CvfC~ c.tfftt"f6\ Ot._•EOwlGf""" 1001 u r •• r ~~~~2.~TKES :•01 '"'1 . 29 r~ .~~~~<!PINC '°'..,., 79 r~.~~ERRIES •iN , .. 1.87 ~~OGENIZEO MILK t.<• "' 1.9S LOW FAT MILK !2£.·N·SOFT GENERIC YOCURT •IUYOK ~·" 1.91 IOl~,33 HOUSEHOLD & PET rFRISKIES 31 ~,l!!if ET 6 ~ Ot CMI • •v.,_ No llmll1 to ext,.. uvlng1. Ratrier lhan llm11ed ·specials tnilt hm•I yOur savings we pince no lrn111s on ine numbf't 111 items you can ouy So Wiien ~011 we Key Buy 11<!!ms ollert'<I at hlra 5a•1ngs you c;an stcxk uo CANNED & PACKAGED rBISOUICK 139 MIX A• Purpow ooor eo~ r~;;os""'"' 159 rFRUIT STAND 87 ~~~~~-B 01 am • r M J.B. TEA BAGS . <icr "°' 1. 89 r~.~~~~~N~~~~lll t\OtcM .83 r ~~~~ •• S,L,~,STE~~.1 ec.1.49 r KRAFT B.B.O. SAUCE 79 "-A.._ a-oerr-c.• •• Ol t'\ • r~~~T PICKLE RELIS~1"' ••• .89 r~K & BEANS 1101 t•• .69 r ~~T·s KETCHUP ,,.1 ... 1 •1 s r~~y LEE RAISINS •• , ,.u .89 !~!~!S~.~C..K!Rs .. 01 eo· 1.27 r ~~Ol.A TE CHIPS rKOOl·AIO 9'Yf•KA •-•\f ~wtf tf,..0 '" .. v(W1 UOll•C .89 JOt ,.., .1 4 rKOOl·AIO DRINK MIXES 2 69 H f'1•0 ffJrlfO ',a1109\ 1001 tw. • r~ .. L!9,~ MACARONI 101 oo• .29 !~.!~ ... ~ICE MIXES . '°''°'.SS GENERIC SAVINGS §(Discount Prices Everydey dlacounl pric:n. Instead ot a re., weekly specials 1uon int 00010 10 .. ptocrn<J t an reouce (Ou• o..eral• tOOd Otll low or.c es s10<ew•dt' aoo ull 10 a 10-r lotat at 1ne cntc~s11no T"a1 ~ w"f!•I!' me $1v1ngs count' QUALITY PRODUCE SEEDLESS .,.69 CRAPES rnomoson us '"° • WHOLE lD .12 WATERMELON llfO 1111)4! !Cul It\ ,., BELL ~.69 PEPPERS "'~attn YELLOW l~.49 PEACHES IOl<VS-t BAKERY ITEMS rHEARTHFARMS 89 ~~!~or 1• 01 loaf • '«>MY ,., 0.1 \ CENERIC 39 ~edHITE BR~~~ar • DELI DELIGHTS rCREAM 69 ~~l~ESE e 01 ~9 • LADY LEE CHEESES •ONOO•tO-lll()llltttt• .-.<" ·~wtC:.-l .. c;, .. 2 .S9 •101 .. , 2.49 r ~!~Y LEE SALAMI •• 01 o.co 1. 99 r LADY LEE KNOCKWURST 1 69 Ot c..Alru( UlAAf"" •e 01 ,., • (ti;;;\ Pure LINE SODIUM UTE 1 69 Film Developing and Printing r M.O. BATHROOM TISSUE 97 A\SOl'ffO IN('t 11'\i f ,_, • r~!~WNY TOWELS .... og,, .66 ~i c-.. n1MOoutt 101 .--c. • ~Y!~ces,.., ..• 75 ~~~~~~: :: ~:;~ Diec: 15 Expo1ur• 24 Expoture ---'-* 349 499 Our ,."' "o'"''°" "'*, Ot.trfortfttti"\ '"""' .,,.-n to• ff~ttvf' ~·· ~·· 'mrv f.....O•l' Ah 0 ••t r ~PY LEE TISSUE ..... IOI • s 3 I~WNCLEAN·UP~~g~.,,. 2 .49 r~~~ARSOAP .,.oi ..... 39 !~";'ET CLEANSER . 1001 c•-.45 •IOI IO•• 78 GENERIC BBO SAUCE ttOl lll .98 PORK & BEANS •tOI ,.,, .37. Cl ..... GENERIC CATSUP 11or 1n • 79 tOIUtO CENERIC MUSTARO l.t\Ol 1 ... 6S ,., .. ,..,o, GENERIC MAVONNAI~~ .... 1 .09 !~.~<;R_!EO POPS 1010 00.1 .39 The Discount Supermarket I r!!!'o~te1IA0N SALAMI 1 79 --'°'""' . r ~~. & PEPPERONI l~~ .-c 1. 99 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS !!:;~~~~."' 10/ 2.29 r !o~NSON'S SWABS cm 2. 29 £~~~TABLETS -ocn 3.97 P SUPERBOOY SHAMPOO '-·-.1<-·-· 2 47 IQ'°9AQll'tlA,.. ,.Of • r TOPAL TOOTH POl.ISH -2 ~:7 ~ ... "'-V090 Pot ~-I I !e'!~~~OSOl '°' 2 .39 IAA~I FACIAL SCRLe Jot 2 .59 ~!~.~oss STICK L-1.99 MAYBELLINE LIPSTICK • .,,.1. 99 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1983 D11 i Basting is unnecessary e Chicken parta are alway• ~ular at oookouta, Ule they a.re inexpensive and simple to prepare. With thia recipe, the pieoee don't need butina while cooking becawie the flavorinp a.re com- bined in a paste which ia apre4lld under the akin before gtilllng. Tum the chicken frequently while cooking and you'll oome up with a _tasty, tender treat. TARRAGON-LEMON BARBECUED ClllCKEN 6 ch.iclten legs with Copycat • improves original By CEaI. Y BBOWNSl'ONE ., 3 3 ..... ,..,, ..... Copycatting a product marketed in a food specialty shop ia worth- while when you can bet- ter it and make it econ- omically. Thia is exactly what happened recently. A friend of ou.n pa.id $4.50 for about a half-pint· of Berry Sauce. When she copycatted the recipe, her sauce was immenaely better in flavor, color and texture than the orig- inal-and the cost was about $2.25 for a half-pint. Her recipe makes four half-pint jars that may be given as gifts or 11erved to guests in your own home. Here ia the recipe for this homemade delight .• We recommend it un- equivocally. It's de- lightful aa a topping for ice cream, baked custard, creamy rice or bread pudding. COPYCAT BERRY SAUCE ·1 pint fully ripe atraw- berrles 2 10-ounce packages frozen red raspberries in syrup, thawed ~ cup light com syrup ~cup sugar ~ cup creme de cassis 2 tablespoons lemon le: and hull atraw- berriea; finely chop; measure 1 ~ cups. Lightly crush raapber- riea in their syrup. In a 5 -quart non~ve aaucepot stir together atraw- berriea, rupberriea, com syrup. sugar. ca&lis and lemon jujoe. Over me- dium heat, stirring con- stantly, bring to a boil; boil gently. stirring oc- c.aDonall y. until mixture thickena slightly-30 mlnutea. Pour a am.all amount of the boiling mixture onto a small cold plate. Place in the freezer for a few mlnutea. Mixture ahou1d have a topping-like con- aiatency-if it does, re- move from heat; if not, continue cooking until it does. Ladle into clean hot ~-pint jan leaving ~-inch heeda.-ce. Wipe top edge of jan with a damp towel. Seal .acord- inC to jar manufacturer'• directiona. Proce98 in a boWnf water bath for 5 minutea. Cool jan on wire ncb or folded towel. Store in a cool plllce. U unprooewd, atore in ~tor and l.e within 2 weeka. Mak.es about four ~-pmtjan. USITHI DAILY PILOT ..,.,, llSULT .. SllYICI DtllCTOIY For Result Service Call 642·1671 ht.JU thighs attached or chicken leg quarters 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, IOften- ed 1 teaspoon garlic pow- der 1 teaspoon parsley flakee 2 teaspoons tarragon leaves 1 ~ teaspoons grated lemon rind Half lemon Rhue chicken and dry with paper toweling. In small bowl, combine re- rna.lning tnare<ilenta ex- cept half lemon. Rai8e the akin of Neb leg and apread chicken flesh with about ~ teupoon of butter mhc ture. Squeeze half lemon over chicken akin and aeMOll to lalt.e with aalt and pepper. Place chicken on greued grill 6 inchea above prepared charcoal bed. Broil, turning often, until meat near bone ia no longer pink, 45 to 60 minutes. Serves 6. Farmer Jahn Reg. or Beef SMOKED SAUSAGE ................ ta 1.69 Fredi DOVER SOLE FILLETS La 2.89 BEEF CHUCK 7-BONE ROAIT .......... _....._ .......... -. 1.29 BONELESS CLOD ROAST c~~~I( La.1.89 GENUINE AMERICAN LAMB 79 LB .. lo•e Coo~ lokt Clom\ EASTERN MUSSELS l B 1.29 FREIH GROUND LAMB La .• 99 10·01 Auorted Flavors LITTLE JUAN BURRITOS ... ... EA .69 LAMB SHOULDER ROAll A~::~:N L8.1 • 3 9 KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP COTTAGE CHEESE 32-0Z JAR $139 100.Caunt EQUAL SWEETENER ............... .' 3.79 _, .. HANSEN'S NA TUR AL ~SODAS ~i ;:~4~ !f~!: 1.89 fre.h Slicing SALAD CUCUMBERS . .. . . EA .25 DILICA TISSIN t•IA TS ,-~ BUDDIG ~ _ ... CHIPPED MIA TS L .0 I A~S~~:ED 39 ·-__J \IAlllETIES e 6 0 1 Kraft ...,.;e,,tan or Monterey Jae~ CHEESE FOOD • 99 Random Wt Natural & Ko\ller .La 2.99 STRING CHEESE . :-?~-~--~ Ill~. . ~~· 12·0Z CANS 12-PACK PIPSI COLA • NPSI COlA ..................... 3.39 • DtlT NPSI ............ ,,,,,,, .... 3.39 • NPSI FREE ...................... 3.39 • NPSI FREE SUGAR FRIE ...... 3.39 c Twin Pack Auorted Del Monte 16-oz . Corn, Pea• or C•een Reon\ 8.7S·or. Auo rted Varietiet PRING LESPOTATOCHIPS ... 1.39 NOSALT VEGETABLES .• 53 HAMBURGER HELPER . EA .• 99 WEIGHT WATCHERS ... . 1 .MARGARINE ~,5 780Z CUPS 79 ~· REDUCED ,. ' CALORIES • Fre•h BOSTON OR REDLEAF lITTUCE EA .29 14.2·0UNCE PACKAGE I DELMONTE LITE FRUIT !~~~D .65 c LB. freth Tender BROCCOLI La .39 12-PACll • SHASTA COLA 12-0 Z 2 49 REG 011 -t -DIET • 8·ounce Package GOURMET MUSHROOMS. EA .79 FRESH HINODE TOFU .EA .49 NON.fOODS lllVEA LOTION 10.0UNZf 1 74 Wei Poe Muwbo Noro 10 Shul Pkg DRIED SEAWEED Sapporo 633 Ml Bottle DRAFT BEER .95 1.29 ~~reftee -·. frH;s~·· _ FRUIT/CIRIAL '-'° , WEEK'S . • • ••• o, Yl·L·LOWL 12 9 s · · ~~ATU~E !' SI ZE e · 6·0l NIVEA CREAM JAR 2.29 1.19 7 '] 01 •·•''' ••••n NIVEA CREAM TUBE 3· ~·ter I obi• JIM BIAM BOURBON I 7!1-LITEll 9 99 aOTTlE e GALLO WINES -4.S9 I S·l oter Vontooe lablt w.".' RObERT MONDAVI 3.99 ... SMIRNOFF VODKA · aOPROOF 8 99 I 7, LITER e . . Pepsi·Colo and Hughe~ present Ninth Annual Festival of Asian Cultural Evenh (Doy ef the lotus) July 9 • 10 • Echo Porlc lo Ice Oon<tt• Eahtb•h • Entertotnmtnt• food • Art l A. Ci., Otpt ot Rt<rtOllOn & Pori., ,,,_ __ F•OZIN FOODS l•ICIALS--~~=~ir---, TOTINO'I PARTY PlllA 10 I 10 BS OZ 1 29 ASSOllTEO e Oregon Farm•. 17 S·or 2.09 CARROT CAKE Stokely I &·or Anorttd Varo•t•ei COMBINATION VE GET ABLES 1. 19 MINUTIMAID O•ANGI IUICI 6-0Z CAN .59 LOWD YOU• IOTAL fOOD •ILLI •• -.................... u ................. , __ ._...._ .... -..-..... &.....-.•-·---- I (OwPO>t co"'b'~"O•• whl(h .. c...i ...... l;,e ti tlit ·-11V•ChO•_.•.,.t .er~ ' h,1...i ICWPG•t •o• O«Ollr-.i ) (e•ll-ty , ........... , ..... tr .. .,t pvnllo .. ,...,.... oel O<COlli.4 4 ~ .,.o ... tec>v10f I cow ... •t el t I 00 or .... ,.., M •lll>lod S Mt-It •I r-t ... -~ wtec•v•••' c•"t>O" ptohibn.4 '-t fiow 6 Vetw of f•m• w ", ... ..,., c~' de..,~ \p tvt _... ..... _.... ... _. .. ...--~-•"'*" Ofltf 1 ff-. tf•,.... \toe\"'',....,._ .,..,f•iHf •" , ........ , (~ ... •tH w'H .. N .. M ._.._..._-:r.ar.:=.~.::::s.:.1lill'._ ... , ,,_ .,t .................... ,..,.. tff«t•' ""' .. ~ ..... ....., • ~I .......... OllO\ D"•'Yd "" -h r-10 Ol!o< -4 Mr 1 ..... Mp I), lttl TlllltLI O• ..UlllTID DOUmUCOUltON OmlllNOTACC..T• NICH ffPICTIYI 7 DAVI, I A.M. THUU,, MY 7 TH•U WID., JUl Y U, tt8' J l y :) n y 1 b l • •a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Salads please the eye and palate Chic me&n.1 thin and healthy theee days, and Mlada provide a wallop of nutrition with no wut.ed calorie8. When the ingredients are thoughtfully chmen and care is taken with the arnnaementa on the plates, the dish will pleue the eye u well aa the palate. Dre.mng ii important, too, and often an opportunity foe originality in blending flavors. Tuna and Beet Salad with Orange yogurt Dreeling features succulent orange aJ.ice9 with beeta, water-pecked tuna and red onions, topped with a delightful tart-sweet orange yogurt dre911ng. Grapefruit makes the difference in Shrimp Salad. Shrimp, celery, oniona, grapefruit aectiona and gr1!en pepper are marinated in a delicious grapefruit vinaicrette. Grapefruit juice adds r.est to the simple mayonnai8e dre91ing. TUNA AND BEET SALAD Oru1e Yoprt Dre111Dg 1 cup (8 ounces) plain yogurt ~ cup frozen concentrated orange juice thawed, undiluted l tablespoon honey Mix yogurt, concentrated oragne juice and honey in small bowl. Chill. Makes 1 ~ cups. Salad 3 oranges. peeled and sectioned l can (8 ounces) sliced beets, drained l small red onion, sliced SHRIMP SALAD 2 pounds .ruirnp, cooked and ahelled 2 cups grapefruit leC'tiona, drained M cup diced green pepper 1 cup al.Iced celery 1 tablespoon m1nced onion 1A teaspoon paprika ~ teaspoon aalt ~ teaapoon sugar ~ teaapoon dry mustard 6 tablespoona frozen concentrated grapefruit juloe, thawed, undiluted ~ cup salad oil IA teaspoon hot pepper sauce In larp bowl pntly tom ahrimp, erapefruit sections, greoen pepper, celery and onion. Mix paprika, salt, a&pr, dry mustard. Stir in concentrated grapefruit juice, oU and hot pepper sauce and beat or shake until' blended. Pour over grapefruit-shrimp mixture and chill aeveral hours or overnight. Drain well and aerve in grapefruit aheU. or lettuce cups with Grapefruit Mayonnaise Dresaing. Makes 6 to 8 aervinga. Grapefralt Mayoualae Dres11D1 Blend 2 tablesPoon.s fror.en concentrated grapefruit juice, undiluted, with~ cup mayonnaiae. Makes 2 cups. 2 cans (3~ ounces each) tuna, drained Salad greena To section oranges, cut slice from top, then cut off peel in strips from top to bottom, cutting deep enough to remove white membrane, then cut slice from bottom. Or cut off peel round and round, spiral fashion. Go over fruit again, removing any remaining membrane. Cut along side of each dividing mem- brane from outside to middle of core. Remove aection by aection. FINEST MEAT Al-D FRESHEST PRODUCE I • Arrange orange sections, beets, onion slices and tuna on salad greena on two serving plates. Top each serving with 2 tablespoons Orange Yogurt Dressing. Makes 2 servings. Transform pizza into fruity treat Pizza for desaert? The anawer is "Anytime!" when the "pi..z:r.a" is a 9CJ"W1lptious combination of sugar cookies, frozen whipped topping and ever-eo-fresh summer fruits. Cut in handy wedges, the Fruity Pizza makes a great and easy-to-aerve treat at a "come for desaert" party, for patio entertaining and foe teen get-togethers. FRUITYPIZZA ~ l 17-ounce thawed whipped topping 1 cup 80Ur cream Aa8orted fresh fruit, sliced Cut cookie dough into ~-inch slices. Arrange dough al.ices, alightly ove.rlapping, on foil-lined 14-inch pizza pan or 15 x 10 x 1-inch jelly roll pan; prem edges to aeal. Bake at 375 degrees. 10 to 12 minutes or until golden brown. C.001; remove from foil onto 11erving plate. Fold whipped toppin& into 90W' cream; spread over crust. Arraage fruit on whipped topping mixture; chill. Cut into wedge.. Key daily nutrition to variety of foods "No single food provides all the nutrient.a your body needs." says Barbara Gilmartin, M .S., R.D .• a conlUlting nutritionist. "So it's important the homemaker aelects a variety of foods from the four food groupe-milk, meet, vegetables and fruits, and breads and cerea19-to provide her family with the nutrients they need." Foe optimal health, dietiu.an, recommend adults eat at 1eMt the minimum number of eervingl each day from the four food grou.-: two from the m1lk. two from the meat, four from vegetable8 and fruits, and four from breeds and oereel8. Children lhould eat three lel"V1nCll and teen-agers and presnant women should eat four eervinp from the milk group. When •Una from the four food srou.-. remember the concept of variety. Irwte.d of eeting four applies to atisfy four .ervtncs from the veaetabie-fnlit poup, GOmarUn reconvnenda •ti.na ..now foodl within the poup: an apple, «ange, brooooll, and. to.eel green ..iad. 'nleR fooda Alpply vitlmlDI A and C to the diet. ' A cup of mUk or YOIW'\and • aUoe of cheele meet the adult mlnlmum requlnment for the milk group that aapplia caldum. protein and riboflavin. Have your c:hllann and teen-qen drtnk another ,._ of milk or eat a cup of pudd1ns or 1 ~ cups of a cream to meet their daily ttqui.rement. IDlteed of eervt.nc a 5--ounoe steak for dinner fNerJ Ncht to IDMt your family'• requirement fOI' the meet l"O"P·• OUmu1bl ~a ecrambled ea for ~. pemwt biutMr' (2 lmbWpoona) andwich for lunch. and two tow-~ of belted chicken for dinner. ~t poup foodl aapply protein. n1acin. and Lrcn to the diitt. ''Two .UC. of whole lf81n breed. a cup of ..-dy-to-4atoerml. m:ad. hall-cup of cooked pMta « rice provtde '°""dally NqUlrement from the breads -Cllft9lt l"O"P... •ya Gflnwtln. • • • Fresh Ground Beef Regulor, 5-lb. 'kt. or lor9er Freah ond Flovorful A Mutt for your ftkni<I c Round Steak .......... Safeway 11.~JH Q11ollry ._, a.n.i ... Chuck Roast s:=r~~:0~i~ ,.,,99c Rib Steak s.fewoi o .. 0111y ..... Lare• Incl , ... s1" Sliced IHI Liver ~ .. r.. ~.89c Turbot Fiiiets OrHnloncl, ~~~-: . .*199 met Apple Juice Mett·· ':;:,t. s 1•• mm) Peanut Butter ,., .. ,on ·~:·.s 129 Parkay Kroft Moreorln• Cvl!>.1 -59 ...... ,., ... a.111. Corren M Brawny , .... r '•w-'• M Treesweet °";=it mm> Corn : Cob Sc~:~!"Y· mm> Pac Man o.c;.-.:.~111• ScOICll Sliced Bologna Birt l.\~ 99' H1IW..t f.wms Sausage Smolltd Po11111 ID 11" Fir-JOM POfk Chops 4'SerloClloon ID 11" lilOHtll Braunschwerger a.... IO 79' Beef Roast~~~ 11> •1>• ='°'"' COfned Beef ~· ID 11" rye rs Whe'91o4ot frylne 55" Chic~en • .... --Bread ... »'=''2t:i 59' II> Colombo ::? •:: 99• -Rolls ~ :12 79• Town ....... • ,.,.,h Cec~toil 2~·1 Con1 I ,,_..,.._....,.....,...., ,,_,..._......,..-,.._..,....,_ I ........ ....,..,.. •. , ....... .,.,.. .... ~~. ·~ . .. WI 11•• ....,..,., "teMt ,,,,. I __ ................ __ ·---... ~........... ....... ........ -.... ........ I -,...,.... ......... -...... .. ..... ,...,.. ........... ..__..... ......,...,_ .... _ ...... ............................ ::::: .......................... :::::..· ..................... -~ I :L"": z Z::.. ., :: :;:-:. :" ::-:... "':: :;:-:: :::; ::-:... ":: I _ ......... ,.._,,.__ I __ ..,._,..__ II -......... .._,..._._ I I _,.,,......_ """---,... I ......,,._ u....--,... I ....,~h u....--,... -~-....... r.-1 1 -llMll __ ,_ I~.---,.. I I ·-G.e4 Mr, ....... , •. I ,_ .._Mr,..,, IOU"' I I ·--,,.., , .••. '""'' I I S! .:"~ ~ .,..= 11 t:!;;' ,:-.,.:;_~-:,:;:. I I ~ .:-...:. -::-...,:::. I I I C.-....1. C--.1 AMT ··~ I I ""''· ,.._ I I AMf ___ , • ._ I L----•••••·-... ----------j~·-••••••••~ • , ... .,.... Dr .. N••pcHt...... • .,. No. Coeet Hleft••Y· Leeun• ...... . .., ................... ' •• , 1 resh, Head Lettuce Critp, Untrimmed For Solodt & Sondwichet A Gr-t luyl c MCucumbers.! ~1.:~ • 4 Fe.$100 DO Pineapple Ft~' lb 39• DO Cole Slaweon!. .... :...~ 69' MRusset Potatoes ~~~i JJ.1 00 DO Bean Sprouts ~ lb 39' MKlwl Fruit ~r~. loch 39c 1iZl!I> Juices 0wy Ft1111 ()""'1 '131 -Fresh Lim;s MOnlons w~ Walto 2 ... J9c SF0t 1100 Im) Roses F<esn °" , 0ot 12• 16-~. Averoe• -*199 toch Buttermilk luct<ne Sour Cream L"'""' Lucerne Yogurt ::mm>star-Klst Tuna~:.k•~:·79' bi •1" Dm>Tortllla Chips ~._ ~: 69' Jehn•rOfl't, l'tea•n Cr .. -t. l .. 1tlor ., Diet C-.f\re 2~·3 S.·~·99$ 10 ~ *179 , ... Cont LOW, LOW PRICES ON LIQUOR, WINE & BEER -~~~ ...... .. Mtn. Castle WINI .. Crown Russe ~v.a .. ......... l:'8" .. ~~~W.~.~e ... 4 u• '2" .. ~,:sby Sco,ch l:! •7.. .. ~·s Gin :_: 'B" Taylor Wine • c.r........ •• .:!'.=. mm> '499 • lurwuftdy •Vita .... l -Llt•r lottl• • I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /W9dneeday, July 8, 1983 •• utrition misinformation may be harmful to your health To·avoid theee pitfalls, earn to spot nutrition nonsense." Listen, earn, and ask: Does the diet or food ~mil· M? a cure for sev- ,raJ diseues? U BO, th.is be nutrition misin- tion. A.re peraonal testa- ts or stories the only owce of evidence of a 's benefit? Anec- otes and stories, which ft.en seem very convinc- ' are not acientifically trolled studies. They amlOt be Wied as proof teat.ing a specific food helpful. Is a claim made that food supply has lost 11 nutrienta? Thia is . The nutrient supp- from foods is at an U-time high. • Is it claimed that foods :.~led ••natural" are ealthier and safer? · ften food labeled tural" contains the ingedienta as a food 80 labeled. A bal- ' varied diet does have to consist of labelled ''natural'' be nutritious. Do thoee gjvi.ng the onnation claim the :overnment oracienti.sta no persecuting them? Yhen such a claim is BAde, look into it and aak 1uestions. Such a claim is •tten emotional and trlthout a caWle. Does information in an ~~t ~ foodn~~~r ~ t on the label? Be pidoua if it does. Are well-known. reg- market or grocery re foods attacked 1vhile a single food or line 1f special foods is ,romoted? Determine fVhether someone is try- bg to get you to buy mnething. 1 A.re vitamin or mineral '-psules and protein sup- >lementa claimed to be :>etter sources of l~trienta than fooda? Pf1en they a.re a waste of noney and unnecessary 'ct a healthy penon who •ta a varied diet bated )n the bask food groups. ' la a claim made that ~y people are IUffer- 111 from a new di8eue :bat can be "treated" with a s~ food or upplement? If you think '°" may be suffering !nlln • di8eMe, • phys. clan can determine whether thi.9 la true. If ;.eded. a doctor 19 the ~who la bat able to ~be a cure. Self nedicaUon can be hann- !ul. d!rore you accept this of information, Mluaie lt. Be akep-_.-uk for proof. Clleck whether the IUlhor la qualified to give idormadon. J'lnd out If the infal'. e .. com1na from • hie eourae. If ln clou.blecheck with , ..... fled penon IUCb • rePtered dietitian, • abllc health nutri- or a nutrition -..tor at an accndiWd ..._.or unlwrmty. 1'emember. ~ •A bUance of procetn, carbohydrates, fats, min- erals, vitamins and water i.a needed in every ade- quate diet. A diet that emh.aaW!s only one or two nutrients and limits the rest cannot be nutritious. •Weight loss takes time and effort. Inst.ant weight loss is seldom permanent._ •When in C:toubt about any nutrition infor. mation, nutrition claim or diet, check with one of the kno wledgeable people listed above. • • • QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED: ~We buy purified water from a dispenser at a supermarket and store it in half-gallon plastic bottles that originally contained purcnaaed water. I.a It safe to reUle these containers, or do they break down ln Ume and &ad harmful lngre- dienta to the water7 -A. It ii safe to reute the plastic water bottles i{ldefinitely. They do not break down over time and add anything harm- ful to the water. It would be a good ldea when washing them to add a few dropi of chlorine bleach to the rinle water and awtah it around thoroughly. Chlorine bleach is a good dialnfectant and will destroy any micro- organisms such aa mold spores or bacteria that might be introduced in the bottles during storage. • • • ~. A friend of mine takes a aeleniwn aupple- ment. I.a this a goe><Ndea? What foods are BOurces of aelenium? -A . In recent years, aeleniwn (a mineral ele· ment) has become a fad nutrient, and to\ally un- proven claims have been RICE-A· RONI made about lta ability to cure lllne..ee such u cancer and heart dlaeMee and to prevent IUCh thinp u .exual dys- function and aging. The recommended range of 1elen.lum in- takes can be obtained easily from a varied diet. The two richest eourcea are aeafooda and organ meats. Meat la a con- U\ently aood 80W'Cle, but graina ~ more variable, depe'lld1nc on the level of aelenlum ln the IOU where they're pown. Fruita and~ have little •len.lum. Se~um la toxic, a fact dilcovered when lf'Uln8 animala were ~ by •Una plan ta arown ln eoll having a hl1h telenium level. BEEF LAAGE-ENO l&F l.NIQf. ENO Prod1loe Speala•st RlbBOMt Tr!esweet S.._ 6 3 Juice .&e Macaroni U 33C Cheddar Rlb8t•k Vienna ~3c Sau~e ~ Gulden'~ 78C Mustard W .... 8WWI ftl $ I 811 •111 Grape• ... ....,SlllmflfMWtllm ........•.......•• iaa.' Coront.•t L.3 c Tov\:t•I' V .... r""'-.•5.99 Supt·r ~c Socco ~ . . . . : '' .. I -,1 -,, ll -11 -:• •• I r.--:'1nlJ ccmmm .. 1 i •1 n a I • " • ' .. .. £2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Making jams? Try freezer method Preparing quality homemade jama and jellies aometimes can test the patience and ability of even the moat experienced home canner; but there iB a simple, easy alt.emative to conventional home canning. Freet.er jams can be made in le9I than one hour, require abeolut.ely no cooking, and are practically failure proof. And, because the fruit iB not cooked, freezer jams look and taste more like fresh fruit than jam made the conventional method. Wash, peel, and pit peachee. Sl.Jce and finely &Jind. MeMure peach pulp and lemon juke into 4-quart kettle. Slowly pour in powdered pectin while s\irring vigor- ously. Set aside 30 minutes, 1tirring oocaaionally. Add 1 cup light oom syrup. Mix well. (Syrup keepe sugar crystals from form-, ing.) Measure augar into dry bowl.' Gradually stir sugar into fruit pulp. Warming to 100 degrees will huten sugar V. cup lemon jul'ce 2-ounce package powdered pectin 1 cup light oom 1yrup · 4 ~ cupe .ugar Wash, peel, plt and cruah or grind . firm, ripe nectartne.. Measure nec- tariNt pulp . and lemon -juice into 4-quart kettle. 11 ahort of fruit pulp, add water to equal exact amount. • Slowly pour in powdered pectin while stirring vigorously. Set aside 30 minutes, stirring oocaaionally. A Litt cash? Or a lot of caati? Then call CIUllfled. Tho .. thing\ taking up space In yo1Jr home, Item• you haven't uMd In agea, may be juat what &OfT*>ne elae needs. So give us a • TRANS PAC RACE RESULTS exelustvety on KDCM tDil.t FMSIERED 2:55 pm Dally 6:55 pm Co-Sponsored by PEACH F REEZER JAM diaaolving. No hotter, pleue! 3 V. cupe peach pulp (about 2 ~ pounds When .ugar la diaaolved, pour into Add lcupllghtcomsyrup. Mix well. Measure sugar into dry bowl Grad- ually stir sugar into fruit pulp. Wann- ing to 100 degrees will hllaten sugar diaaolving. call ... It'• eaay to use clasallled to get your hand• on somecuh. '!!~ Newport Imports Boatswain's Locker peaches) . containers and cover. Store in freezer. Newport Beach Newport Beach V. cup lemon juice PMMt.G-1611 NECTARINE F REEZER JAM 2-ounce package powdered pectin 1 cup l.\ght com syrup 4 YS cups sugar 3 ~ cupe nectarines, crushed (about 2 ~ pounds) · When sugar ii diaaolved, pour into containers and oover. Store in freezer. Use meat the rmometer Any time you cook a beef roast, be it on the outdoor rotisserie, in a conventional oven or a microwave oven, it's important to uae a roast meat thermometer to detennine exact degree of doneness. The meat thennomet.er will register 140 degrees for rare, 160 degrees for medium, and 170 degrees for well done. For easier carving, allow the roast to "stand" in a warm place 15 to 20 minutes after it has been removed from the oven. Since roasts usually oontinue to cook after removal from the oven, it is best to remove them when the thermometer registers about 5 degrees below the desired temperature. l ~c the h;mdy nightly T\' log and Sunda~ T\' WePk to guide ~·ou r ,. H''' 111g ~<:hl'dule Daily Pilat · ULTJIASONIC "!!':!;>!!!!! PEST CONTROL Electronically Eliminates: \ • Fbaches • Rats • Water Bugs • ~ I ----; _ _ r, t ' ~ l. ( . --. 1_ ---. t&f:ll • Reas • Ants • Spiders • 5q.Jirrets • Crickets • Ries • Mosqutos • Aro Many Others s 6 4 9 !I • ONE YEAll MANUFACl URER GUAllANTEE AGAINST DEFECTS IN MATERIAL OR WOlllCMANSHIP' ONL y REG $99 9~ • NO SPECIAL INSTALLATION REOUIREO - 1 '3 00 PostaQe.& Hw1dlirQ PlUGS INTO STANDARD ELECTRICAL OUTLET Order Tcx:Jay! Call or Mail This Coupon and Your Check To: Charge Orders -[I ii] {¥,oNNORS Call Now Toll Free -N.-S=.--.--- Na11u11111 1·800-824·7888 SATISFACTI ON GUARANTEED! 191109 4:/'i I e1urvl Park Hd Patent Pendlf'l\l ~rator 254 .. P 0 Bro• 72'J l u l aop•u•e~ £ P • •13•3 ix 01 .. Quality Products Since 1960 Lunci AecKh CA •x1>107 'l'HEBEST JUST GOT BEl.l'ER SAVE$120 Tt.xfay's the day to try Foster Farms. rurkcy produces, the best in the West. Best because they're high in protein, low in fat. a better nutritional value t.hnn most red me.ic counter- parts and they taste terrific. Now, when you use the coupons, they're an even bcner huy. FOsrER FARMS. You make -the difference. Find money-saving yet tast~· reripes in Wednesday's food pages . !'~.!!D~~!~ Way .• 1 Ormnge,Celffomle 92MI (714) 834-2252 unM;Hw.y nQlln of 0<an9e Count~ sovtn &WI A Public Service of The Daily Pilot Thanks to you, it works. ~ & The Advertising Council For all of us. Daily Pilat FRESH BROCCOLI UT/IA FAICY "ly" ,,, •• FRESH IREEll 0#/0#S ,. ••••• RAO/SI/ES FRESH Alaskan HALIBUT STEAKS *3'' LB. FRESH Alaskan SALMON STEAKS *4!? FRESH SEA BASS $499 FRESH PACIFIC RED SNAPPER $189 CHOICE EASTERN CHOICE EASTERN CHOICE EASTERN CORN FED AGED TO PERFECTION T-BONES $100 OFF PER LB. Limit 10 Lbe. FRESl:.I GREEN LEAF OR RED LEAF 'LETTUCE 3/'1°0 PARKING AYAILAaLE AT ltl AR OF ITORI REAL VALUES CORNFED AGED TO PERFECTION PORTERHOUSE s1oo OFF PER LB. Limit 10 Lba. FRESH -JUICY GREEN SEEDLESS GRAPES a•·~ P a cific Ranch Market 3347 E Coast Hwy Coron~ del Mar 673 -3510 ()pefl o., e .,. • 1 ""' • ....,_., t •.. r o"' CORNFED AGED TO PERFECTION TRI-TIP ROASTS $249 Llmll 10 Lbe . FRESH PICKED SPINACH 3/$100 on items f rom applesauce to zi ppers 1111111 .._. are adver tised ,very day in the ., r .. , ,. 7 • Orange Coast DAILY PrLOT /Wednesday, July 8, 1983 U ff icials: Colorado flooding has peaked ut mosquitos, health problems expected to po~e hazards I or remai11der of summer F!oodwaters along the oated Colorado River · rise no higher, bar- unexpected summer or a mistake. federal fficials say, but mos- declared federal disaster areas in six California and Arizona counties. Controlled flooding began last month to ease excessive snowmelt in the Rocky Mountains. The river surged into riverfront homes and businesses causing at least $1 2 rnilli,on damage in California and Ari- zona alone. -----Controlled Flooding ) Uitos and related health blems have yet to hit eir peak. Clark Germa nn, kesman for the U.S. reau of Reclamation Boulder City, Nev., ted Tuesday that of- ial predictions about lood levels ''were g" before. but he ·d experts believe run- In Arizona, health of- ficials prepared to battle millions of mosquitoes expected to infest flooded areas along the river. Lake Powell 90 o/o Capacity ~· CFS-Cubic Feet Per Second 1vl1 Dim 25,000 CFS Parker Dim 2 ,000 CFS f into Lake Powell, t north of Glen Ca- yon Dam on the tah-Arizona border, aked last week at Michael Wright, a microbiologist for the Ari:zona Department of Hejllth Services, said Tuesday officials fear an epidemic of encephalitis similar to a 1975 out-, break in Dallas when 400 cases were reported. Lake Mead 90 o/o Capacity 111500 cubic feet per • d -nearly 50 · ·on gallons a minute. ''Of course, we had me false peaks before here we thought we'd ached the peaks and ere wrong. But we are opeful it will continue lessen." he said. Flow at the lake de- to 96,000 cfs unday and 82,500 cfs onday, Germann said . Total flow Tu_esday at oover Dam was 40,000 s. and the bureau ex- to increase that to ,000 cfs by the end of · week. There were plans to rease the flow from arker Dam by 2.000 cfs, 40,000 cfs. butofficials ecided against it Tues- a y because Lake avasu still has more rageYlpacity. said bu- au engineer Harlan · er. Discharge levels at vis Dam was expected continue at 44,000 cfs. Lake Mead continued rise Tuesday behind oover Dam. Nevada Gov. Richard an calls the con- flooding a "mon- tal mistake" that d lead to lawsuits. The flooding has been to at least seven U1s in the United tates a'ld Mexico and 'dent Reagan has Encephalitis, a viral disease of the nervous system, can range in severity from mild flu-like symptoms to death, Wright said. He said the depart- ment plans to stock river water s w i th m os- quito-eating fish and spread oil that keeps larvae from breathing. Meanwhile, federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency disaster relief offices were open - ing in Blythe, Needles, and Palo Verde, Calif., and Bullhead Cit y, Parker and Yuma, Ariz. They will help flood victims obtain tempor- ary housing and low-interest loans and grants, said J eanette Hall, Arizona state pub· lie infonnation officer. Although reclamation officials say discharges from the Ari:zona and Nevada dams would be less than feared, Ger- mann said the river would remain at its pres- ent level through the sununer as officials drop reservoir levels to prepare for next year's rains. "Probably fall would be the earliest that we would see any signifi- F L 0 0 - AP cant reductions," Ger- mann said_ "Barring any excessive summer rain, it should stay the same." Germann said power from Hoover Darn prob- ably will cease entirely for three weeks begin- ning in late July or early August as Clow over the spillways increases, cut- ting water going to power-plant turbines. Southern California &tison Co. says a shut- down st)ould have little impact on its 3.3 million customers because it doesn't rely that heavily on Hoover Dam power. But a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power spokesman said Tuesday that its 1 million residential cus- tomers and 100,000 com- mercial and industrial customers could see hefty rate hikes if the dam shuts down for three or four weeks. 'Los Angeles police investigator examines the body of a woman killed in a car hit by at least 27 bullets in flollywood Tuesday. Four others were wounded. Vengeance shooting kills wonian; four wounded LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man eaped from a van and opened fire on a :ar in Hollywood Tuesday, killing one rtoman and wounding four other ~ in what may have been a -ewnge attack, police said. One of the wounded had been llT'ellied but later released for lack of Mdence after a shootout th.at left one ienon dead and aeven wounded last lfovember, officers aaid. '"Revente Is one of the motives that's ~pping up," said police rob· )ll')'·homJcide Lt. Ron Lewis. "lt ~ that 101ne of the9e playen (ln ru.cs.y•a ahootinp) may have been n\IOlwd in that (November) incident." Polic'e spokesman Dan Cooke ldent- f9d the dead woman aa Hamlic '9-Sarkiaian, 23. lier father-In-law, Arakel 'P·Sarkiatan, M. WU ln critical con- lldon at Cedara-Slnal Medical Center, I.Del her mother-in-law, Sha k e ~-Sarkisian, w• ln cnttcal amditJon a\ lfoUywood Prftbyterlan Hoepital, :ookeaaid. The at.her two people wounded ln the ~tinp were rele.ued after treatment •i Queen of ~ Hoeptal. Cook 1d t ntlfled the m u Sorkl • "8*..s..idatan, a "~-old male ntla· ~. and A.lekaan Khramandaryan, a 'Mle employee of the Ac--9.rldaian *"1ly'a jewelry buaineee. ~Pola tpokesrtpan Sttgto Dt.az l&id au five shooting victims were Armenians. Arakel Aga-Sarkisian and another man were booked for investigation of murder after last November's shootout killed one person and wounded aeven in the parking lot of Ron's supermarket in Hollywood, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner said. But the Los Angeles County district attorney's office "declined to prosecute af1er an investigation becaw.e of lack of evidence," said spokesman Al Alber- gaie. TuesdAly's five victims all were ln a 1980 Chevrolet aedan that had just pulled out of the driveway of on Taft Avenue near Franklin Avenue abou t 9 a.m. "when a van pulled up next to thelr cu and sprayed them with automatic weapon fire," Dlai said. Diaz said at least one peraon "and possibly more" were inside the van. The Los Angelet Times said a witness told police three men were ln-1de the red van, which .tped off after the ahootinp, leaving the five vkUmt sprawled in the bulleH'lddled !Jedan or on aidewalka nearby. "People were lying all over the aldew•lk," said Georse DiCaprio, 39, who arrived jult aft.er the ahootlngl. Cooke said the van, which had been reported stolen ln the Wi.llh~ dittrlct, was Itt.er found abandoned alx blocks Crom the shooting site by a cariier• crew from televialqn atation KTLA. I N 0 An average residential customer using 400 kilo- watts of power and pay- ing $23.39 a month could ' face a $9 increase, said David Mahoney. An industrial cus- tomer using 8,000 kilo- watts and paying $700 a month could get a bill $210 fatter in the worst-case scenario,· he said. Mahoney criticized the Bureau of Recla- mation, saying the DWP had urged the agency as early as January to in- crease releases from the dam. Along the brimming river, some businesses complained that news reports were scaring cus- tomers away. Laughlin, Nev., has 93 permanent residents but employs nearly 3,000 in its seven c4sinoo -and ''the whole local economy is af- fected," a casino spokes- man said. "We're in business. Unfortunately, the way the media has covered this has indicated we are not. It has hurt business this last weekend. We were ort 35 percent," said Clark Balch, direc- tor of casino marketing for Laughlin's Riverside Resort Hotel and Casino. Clark County com- missioners declared Laughlin a disaster area Tuesday, clearing the way for federal help in case of flood damage. No matter what you're doing, your hometown newspaper The Daily Pillt fits In. DEATH NITICll LaMARRE JUANITA LaMA.RRE. resi- dent of Costa Mesa. ca. Passed away on July 4, 1983. She is survived by her husband Lloyd, sons Shown and Chris LaMarre all of Cost.a Mesa1 Ca .. daughters Debbie LaMarre of Hunt- ington Beach, Ca. and McKala Lewia of Costa Mesa, Ca .• parents Mr_ and Mrs. Owen Tyler. brother Jean Tyler both of CalJ- fomia and 3 grandchildren. Graveside services will be held on Thursday, July 7. 1983 at l:OOPM at Harbor Lawn Memorial Park with Rev. Bruce Kurrie of the Presbyterlan Church of the Covenant officiating. Ser- vices under the direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary of Cost.a Mesa. ROBERTSON PAUL C. ROBERTSON. puled away on July 3, 1983, a resident of Irvine, Ca. Survived by his loving wife Karin Laura Robertaon, da1.1ghter Ann E. Robertaon. son John E. (Debbie) Rob- ert.eon, daughter Karin V. (Tony) Lekas, grandsons Mark and Erik Lekas, step-mother Estella Rob- l'rlSOn, brothers John Rob- ertson and Lee Robertson. Former resident of Pasadena, Ca. for 34 years, he was born· in Miaouri, graduated from South West Baptist College In Mi.saou.ri. He was a member of the YMCA In Pasadena, Ca., an elder at the Trinity Presby· terian Church, Pasadena, Ca., a member of the Junior Chamber of Pasadena, Ca. and a member of the Gar- den Grove Crystal Cathederal. Memorial ter- vices wiU be held on Thur. day, July 7, 1983 at 2:00PM at Pacific View Chapel with Rev. William Parry officiat- ing. Private interment. Pa- cific View Mortuary direco- tors. McCRACKEN MARINITA DAVIS McCRACKEN, resident of Corona del Mar, Ca. PUied away on July 4, 1983. Born July 30, 1905. She I• survived by nieces Judy A. Rockhill of Lake Oswego, Oregon, Laurie Davis of San Dt~o. Ca. and nephews Thomas A .. James and Rob- en Davi.a of San Diego, Ca. and a cousin Betty W. Ban· ner of Jacklon, Tennet8ee. ..------------She attended Occldenial College, Mills College and St.anford Unlvenity. Her McCOtlMICIC MOlTUAlllS Laguna Beac11 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San J:1an Capistrano 495·1776 HAllOtl L:;.:.MT. OLl'J Mortuary• Cemetery Crema 1ory 1625 G'sler Ave Costa Me~a 540·5554 ,.IHCI llOTHHS 1111.L llOAOWAY MOITUAlT 1 I 0 Broadway Cost11 Mesa 642·9150 IAL Tl IHOHOH SMltN & TUTHILL , WHTCUH CHANL 427 E 17th SI Costa Me'IA • 646·937 I PACIPtC YllW MIMOllALPAI• C1tnl•"t M ortuary Chap•l·Cr•matory 3500 Pac1f1c View 011110 Nvwport Beech 6'4·2700 • father founded the Army and Navy Academy for- merly of Pacific Beach now ot Carlsbad, Ca. Funeral eervices will be held on Thunday, July 7, 1983, graveside at Pacific View Memorial Park at l l :OOAM. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to ·the Army Navy Academy, PO Box 30()0, Carlsbad, Ca. 92008. Pacific .View Mortuary, Newport •ach directon. CAMERON ANN' MARIE CAMRERON. ·~ 65, a retldmt ot Hunt· lniton &Heh, C.. PUied away on Thunday, June 28, 1983. Mrs. Cameron wu a retired clerk for McDonneU DougJu. Beloved moth.er of W. Allen Cameron of Tor- rance. Ca.. beloved IJ'&nd- mother of Heather and Darin Cameron, alto 1urviv· lnl are 3 II.It.en Betty Bual\ of Willowbrook, Ohio, Ka\hryn Omahe n of Cleveland, OhJo and J..eurle l'4&'d.-oL_Flor1da.. 1\1.neral terv1ces and intemwnt wer. private. The family aua-w cxmuibulkml be in.ct.~ the McKinley Home for Boy., San Dlmu, Ca. Pierce Brothen Srn1~· Mort'U.try direoton. 6384tl9. , USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY 642-5678 ht. l22 NlllC NOTICE ITA'n•NTOf' A8ANDONlllNT Of' UU Of' FICTITIOUI 9U .... H NUW Tiie lollowl"G person• hive 1b1111- doned the UM ol the Flclllloua Bual· ness N1m e : CASSEY ENTERPRISES 11 17092 Lynn St. Apl. A. Huntington Beach. CA Tiie Flctlttoua BualneN Name re- . !erred to above WM !tied In Orange County on Seplembet' 20, 1982 DAVID ROBERT CASSONE 1135 W 210th St .. Torral!Qe, CA CURT RAMSEY 17092 Lynn St., Apt. A, Huntington Beach, CA This bu~ waa conoocted by• genl"al Partnerahlp Thia 111tement wu llled with the County Cler1< OI Or1nge County on JuM 17, 1983 Publlahed Or1nge Co111 OaMy Piiot June 22. 29, July 8, 13, 19e3 28«·83 Ml.IC NOTICE ITATl•NTOF AIANOONMINT Of' Ull OF FICTITIOUI 9U ... H ...._ The lollowt"G Corporallon 1111 •b•ndoned Ille UM of the Flctltloua B~ N-: INSTANT HOME. Suite 120. 1109 Dow Street. New· port Beech. Calltomla 92MO Tiie Flctlttoua 8,utlnw1 Name r .. !erred to above waa hied In Orange County on February 2, 1981 JOhnatown Flnanctal Corp., 5775·A, Suite 300, PeachlrM Dunwoody Rd., Atl111t1, Geo<gla 303-42 Thia bll•lnMI wa conducted by a Johnttown Flnanclal Corpe>fatlon. Thlt ttl tement w .. flied with the Couniy Clertc 01 OflnQe County on Ju"9 17. t983 Fiie No. F155035 Publllhed Orange Coatt Dally Piiot July 8. 13. 20, 27. 1983 3057-13 NlllC NOTICE '"~ NOT.Cl OF TMl9TU'8 &AL.a T.a.No.21t1 On July 13, 1983 at 10:00 e.m. CALIFORNIA LANO TITLE COM- PANY u duty appointed TruatM under and purauant to Deed ol TNlt ll(eQUted by LESLIE ORlfflN and JOLEE GRIFFIN, hulband Ind wfle u Tnistor tor the beMflt and MCIK-lty Of LAGUNA NATIONAL BANK AND TAUST COMPANY 11 Beneflc:lery, dated Mey 10, 1ee2. and r«:orded 11 1n11rument No. 82·184850 on May 13. 1982. of Of· ltclaf Aecordl In the Off\Qe of the County Aec«der ol Or1nge County, State of Caltlomla. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, CASHIER'S CHECK OR CEATIFIEO CHECK (pay1ble 11 time ol lale In llWfUI money of tilt United Stal") at: In IM 1001>)' ol Call'ornll Lind t1t1e ComP911y 1010 N. Main St .. Sant• Ana. Oellfornla 92701. YOU AM .. D9,AUL T UNDH A OHO Of' n.tUT GA MORTGAQI OATIOMAY 10, ._Ul&aM Y()U TAKI ACTION TO NOTSCT YOUR ,,.ONRTY, IT MAY II IOU) AT A flUILtC IAUI. •YOU •10 AN IQILAMA TION OF T'HI NA TUM OF THI~ AOMNIT YOU, YOU '"°"'-D CONTACT A LAWYIR. All right title and lnt-t con· \lllyM to and now held by It undlf 111d DMd of Tru11 In the property tltu1ted In Mid county and State ~lbecl11: Loi 13, El109Pt lht Nottherly 10 feet, and all of LOI 14, In lllOC* I of Balboe Tract, 11 lflOWn on • MIP rtc0tdtd In Book •. P• 11 of Mii-~ MaDa. In the ofllc. of tht County fllecor-der of Slid CountY, ,,.. atreet ecldNle and °''* commo cteetgnatlOn, If any, Of the reel r~ ci-lbed abcwe la JJYl'POfteCI to bet 710-71t I . 8e1boa llYd., ~t IMGh, CA THE UND£A81GNlO TRUSTEE DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY FOA IN• CORRECT INFORMATION FUAHl&HEO. Th•t Mid Mii It ~ wtthOut CO""*" Of WWYMt}I '9111rdln0 tltl•, pa11111lan °' enouml>I'-. or • to lneurat>lllty of t"le. file tot• amount of the unc>ald balance of Mid ot>llOltklM toglltllef with llCNanoet, ~ M\tinatecf OOlll and •I\~ If IM0.30UI. Thlt Notto. Of bfMCfl Of Mid obll- OlllOn end .-Ctlon to Mii Mid r.-1 prOf*y •• rcoreltd .. lnet""'*'t No. U·I03144 on M~ tO. tN31 of Offlc411 ~· ... tfla <>mo. Of tfll Coun1Y ~ of OftnQ9 Coutlty .... ,. Of Cellfomla. 0.19d: JvM , •• 1"3 ly; OALlflOANIA LANO 'TITLE COMPANY -nil! .. Don~ J, TllOIMI '°'·~ -1010 N, Main ltNtt,,1lie.400 9enta Ana, CA 1'2702 (11~111 Ha~i. at. ~ DIMiy 1'31..Q 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 -I l• CLASSlfll BUSINESS & FINANCIAL "lJ"lft'""''""'"" h11 ,,_,.., • }\1IWIMY OpfAJf'lt.llU1 ..... t'Ul>lfW~ \\,u1h'1 •10\ t'Uf~ fU C )J}f!l'lf l\,11\1("., ln\•"'1nM'lll \\ 1tlll••t •M•lfW\ to l..U.fl •M1.,h \ '°''"'"'"'' M,,,,~:•M•'" 'I I• EMPLOYMENT th 11 \\ .. ,.i. .. 1 .,.,, ... "·•flll<IJ I lt'I ~10) C1Pttvetlng "U" IMC>ed four bedrom, thr• bath h<>IM ... built erO\lnd a deUghttul custom pool. AIWALS MERCHANDISE 1\111 h~U~ "1•1111 .. li.• \\if .... " .. Uhl!{ M111tt1tt•I• t "'' .. , .... "' t.,.1111>.,.,. ,., l ..... , .. ,,. ' .. tt1• 111 ,, .. , >ur,11tv11 li.o.11it1· ..... ,t.~ ti·~"" 'l•••d (.tu h. J· .... ,, .. M""hu._,, M ..... 11 .. n ... ,., .. M, .. "''·•"""' Mu,tul ""'",.""' nLll t ......... '"'""'"" ~ ~"'llllfllllt'tlf t'1•ttil'll dfttfw-,..m ~t ., :~~,'~"~·· ~;.~·~· '·••11•r •• 1 ,, .. ,, :-'.111 BOATS :-. ...... 1 S\.1 M . .r1r1 t-.. •u•1• M t1t1\I "''···· ~11, ... ~ I"-' ~tlif1Ul:I ~uv•;lu-. "''"~ h1111 ~.11ll•1unl• TRANSPORTATION AUTOS, DOMESTIC /\Ml' l~IM k ...... 11 •• I \'twvr1•l1•t t'h""'''' ·~·•111· t 'nHt tm~• 110.I litt .. Hlt\ Mt<UlO\ ~''"''""""' tthnttioth t"tflOttt For Ad Actian Cll a DalJ Plot AD-VICI .5671 frltt\ ,,.,., '"'' ...11 Hugellvlng room lncludee cozy ftrepleee. TM decof I• In reettul muled tonee. Land lncluc*i ... you own It. $315,000. 111.llllT llYllllE&OI llULn 111· 7100 :::.1:::::::::::::::: Mf'~ ~:r llPUl/Fllll "ll Needs help! W•'ll prOl/lde ~~: the palntl Two 2 Bdrm .. : 1 unlt•I ln<:OtM opportuni- ty. Priced right •~ S 120,000. Cell 019-5370. open ttH e o'clodt pm. \ f >I/. I 11 /:'If .. , '• . •. •• ·: =· . 3 B• Oran e Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 ..... iiliiliil-..-19.__111 .. le,__~1·"""..,_-l!!__.lll_le ___ 1 .... ,...... ....... .....,..__...,. ..,....., ........ ..___ 1ftm I!! Ille ...... Uafual-.. Aprtw!t• ,_,.. ............ W 11 laf. ltt'I .-;;;;; ...... ..-&... ___ • __ ._,...... I ... IHI lull be 1• C..ta.... UM C..11.... • .. C..11.... 1114 1:!t:rrt::1::::.:•=·="=-n::.::H:r-~==="- ..... Ill.I llYRllT FUM.t L.aoan view from druMUc 3 bdrm. 4 blath pool home. $l,750,000 Fee. Open for •Pl>t· 8y Owr'9t ., lll'lbMtable i C&iS6 AN IC PCXZX CNp6u. "9deO a bet Oat c;r;:; 2'f 1ii.. pet1o OCfAHFROHT price. 8-lt. MW 2 BfonEJNIOueiTmFf/M'dtl 2br,2be,p.llO,a/e. tnod M60 i64Vle10fla Fuma.Mdlect*or,2tH ...-~.,... 09t,tlto.lde9itorrllllr;d L•O loll. monthly 21 /2 •• twnllm . •PMlt•llheocin.2~ pOOle,MC.gata.PIP. 21~697-7H7 Mins St. Ut.11pd.1 off -.; .... VI cpl, no P•ll HOO Juty•_.., .. ·10.. 1122,500. 8S3-t290. gar. 1137,500. Own« 118,500 """3e62 E t-* CM 2 81 Ir etrMI partclng epan. TIWW•I yrty,641-530f aaJa .. 71Met4 lleW1t ._.. I HI ~d ·•~Ill 1m'm:J 1375 mo. + eae. To ... .. ...... ter rtlll oi. 3 Bf 2 a.. trpte, patlO, I~ 811 "UIUL PT" I t ~1!:.1833-1323, call M5-te04. t Bdrm M30-M50 M&O/mo CplldrapH. m:2 a:_ , ......... r 1-IWI 1•• llJ ileK iXY 8dJt p;c, Ftplc, vault.ct <*!Ing•. 842-4387 ---.... ...,.,_ 111 •,. 111,. • gar rom 28f 125 000 OwMr will E'alde 2Br tba adutt com• I ..... -.1• dbl gar pool IP8 1,,,---,,,.-,,..--.,---,,-38R. 2 ~ NI Condo Lit• a bright In Ealtalde, 3 °*'1. tum. ~Id, "-"' "' LM. 0piiOn. ~m pool, p6eJ( w/pool, 11\dry, ovrd ut. --O&e w 18111 St EMt Blun IC*iOua 1 81. w/FP, PL. JAC, OAA. s~ ~l dpbc 2 br, 2 bla up; 2 br, Br, dbl gar. lrpk;. hlQhly ...... 976-0488. •• bc:ll, tllp poull*. , prkg, no pat• 14?8/mo. 81& aot. uld PCI. rm 842-4805 pool. plMWlt ..... no PT .. ., ctMn. outgoing. 2'ba dn. 2 ~U~ Red~ -$1600 000 upgraci.d w/rx;rr.m, pool + 18r 115 000 Birr 833-7880 M&-tM7 non-emkr, bMcll, pool•. I pate.1575 mo.644-4787 •thi.tle, •t•bi.. llnoi. · · ' ' ' a ~ Call now DIM• 5 81, 3 8a. -.>• ll<>tM, • • ' 1395 53&-lee4 ME8APINES21&0Harla MorF Mike (2 t3) .... It.A 11111 lllllfllll Capp•U31-1288, agt. Wfftcllft 12ea.ooo. Wiii IUll flllTUllU E/alde duple•. 2 er, 1 B•. . . UNIOUE8aeh$.425 •WftllllUT tee-8405 Dy. Jenny(714) OtMn & jettv Yi.ewe Marine room. 4 bdnn 3 L ...-. 5 B 3 Ba pool ll1ten lo offer•. &42-4858. New and uNd mot>lle '*led yd, gar, tel, lul & YOUR OWi BEAUTIFUL 1 Br 1525 Jutt mOY9d In. llQoell e..e-oc>ea Ev. Avt Now. OC) o1 • • o.-, ' hom ... Spaetaeuler eee.l600.831·8283, PRVpaUopoohpa condo In th• Cr11t.1.,,..--...,.....--=~--- blath, 37 eq.ft. Xtn parkina. $1,385,000. home, very p1lva11. M ••• vlewt. Xlnl flnanelng. Lr~ Condo In Canyon COUNTRY TOP qu,., no 1>9ta. Jacuul, pool. tenn11. Bet*9ett bay a the c>oeW\, Ull llLI E/1lda. $239,900 . M· ._ right acroaa the itreet, Newport BHetl. 4 Bdrm, 848-3557. OREATFORCHILDAENI Priced from 128.500 10 8 utta,3 Br. 2~ ea. ,_1y ESTATE llW OUPnll new cpl, ft••nt. 1375, lndry. evall lmmeo. o _ _._,ed 3 bdnn 2 blath + lar M5.500. decor, frplc, blHn• .,_ 860-2837 .neu.1UUC11 ., F rec. rm.1 IEU Yllll 3 Bdrm, 2 bath eu11om Llfeatyle 489•5748 MOO/mo. s..e.5588. Two bedroom. t bath, nic. 760· 1840, 2 rma avail· ~----.----beam ceillnp. fwnilhed, patioa. $420,000. 3 8 2 8 ,...,,.. 11 home on lovely qui.t BMulltul & patk Ilk• neighborhood by Cent• tbl•. Muet have lafnl·llve Femile to ah•r• cozy ,Hllllll ••-• llU,.... r, •. """"' n. alrMI. Brick flraplace, lllEllUlf PUI ONBLUFF·VIEW wlthtarrac.dpool. Meu golt eouru. eoelallllal "Co11age"lnCMS27250 • _.,.. '""" s1~~k ~11885 lhake roof, huge tend· ee.uulul Lancer horM. Nlee3bd,dblegar,lgyrd, •Prlv•l•P•lloa 15t0/mo.648·5805 + •n ulll• & deposit. New 4 br, '~ ba, CU81orn French Nonnandy Eltate 1.2 prime .ere hWIOp $1,250,000. OMIUllUflllfflllT r r • ecaped lot. 1210,000. , 20X40. 2 8R 1 ea. Light M85/mo, M2-7104 *Covef.ctParklng One &dr and Oen ,_,. 2 Br 2 81. N SO/mo. NOW! Olene 831-6400. 142-120Q lnlaflor1. Thi• le the t>MI •Specloue Apll South Coaat Plue. Avail 2 Br, ,_ ept1/dr=, 842·2999. ,_/W11111 lxly In town. $32,500. laat. ltacti 2140 :~:~nAc:ae1a July tat. 764-0588 bll·ln•. pool, M50 mo. "'F_1_0_111-,--.,-.__,n1ce,._.-=0u,.--p,_1e-x. Warm, totally d41c:Ofatad 3 540-5937, agt. YOUR SECURITY FILE •Horn.-llke Kllcllent 0 o w n I t a I r I H.B. pier arM. 1290 + Coronado la1and cust. blayfront lot. 85' boet beclrm with yatd and lllDlUI PUI DOES NOT PERMIT AC-t blk to Huntington & ~'],.v'.'.f."f.."'clllf arH. 1250 depotlt 960-021 t. deck. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/trade. lovely pool In • central F '".....,_v locatlon Only 1 122800 A Buutlful Trlple CESS TO THIS FUNC· rwye. •llllllffl M/F to lllr 2 t>r. 1'/t ba , .. I U. .... 631.1•M. · ' wlde-30x84 38r. 38ath TION Unnraded 3 Br 1'A> ITILITIES fllEE M """' home. Ideal loc:allon. Agt. .... ' Quiet 1 Br upttalr• elo• llWPllT IWll c •Pl. pool. Jae. 3 br 2 ba frplc ........ _ iu .... 2 "G P ""l"nl\M On 8• Condo. Pool. No pat1. 1 Bdrm. From 1580 b • .' II '1 Annual·28r apt, Im~. $277 50 +utile 75-4--0959 ' ' ........... ce ........... -,.... . 540-5937 By Appl. Avall. Augull 1'1. 28d F 1850 to e... rep a ce , C gn!enbelt. Comm. pool. $125.000. -WATI Ht MONT ti ' -1625/mo. + M25 de-' .. rQ~INTA HE~':'osA balcony, dlllwr, encl gar $=~:'2·1~4~. MnlonF ~~.!"krr,Newportpool. ,~ .. n~.· HUMI ~ ._ try -·· p 0 •• t. 9 e 2. 5 3 5 0 . '"" 1525/mo. 2183 Pacific. .... -· •• llllWIUI -. c~ IUS 18211 Parklid• Ln , blk CM Manager Jett apt 850--0919 prof. $385/mo. &46-1869 REAL ESTATE fllTUTll PlllE I . 847-8081 Uk for Carole. WEdl~h, 3 blk• s ol 17 .. Call 548-4530. • NEWPORT PIER AREA. or ~2-3850 Near new 4 bdnn. 4 bath. lake view. 3500 eq. 131-1400 1111,111 •PLO a IOtrn HarbOf lawn "W-' ft. $440,000. WW trade for a local lot. on Ille Balboa Penlnsula. Memoria l. $2250. lrriat U4f 141·1441 PARK BRISTOL =~·y!,~· s~-i:i::. ~~1.~2~•·+ ~~~1~: BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR IOU 38R In front 2 1 BA In 648-8367· Buutifui view with YOUR OWi 873-6840. •73.a717 •·-· p-1-t p-'v•~y 2 m·-~ ..... _ 1 br, pool, gym, sauna, nr v --... rMr. A money mal<aft LMvlng CIOl.ll'lry, mull tell " -· -·-"'· ._,, SC Pia. M85. M5-9'«2. ,...,----.,.------::~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Always rent.ctlCall !Of e grave 111 .. , Pacific: 2'h be, Petaft Turtlel'ock, OCEAN FRONT YEARLY. Nwpl exec: hM on Bay . .. u 2•-lurtllef lnf«mallon. View Memorial Parl1. 11450/mo 552·7038 COUNTRY YOUR SECURITY FILE 3 b<I, 2 ba, lowet Ul'll. 1 view Own bath. W/0 . '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. _, ... -12700 •1 I 11700 DOES NOT PERMIT AC-ear prll'g. Avail July MOO ulllt Incl. 850-8011 "' Choice Dana Point etreet, r-· v .. ue or G 0 r 0 • 0 u • P •I • r ' ESTATE S 1200/mo. agt 875-8 180 -------- ,'" •...,. .... -euh. 2131789·7028. Townllome on Park, CESS TO THIS FUNC-Promlntory 2BR. pref ,i, "'v· "' u, .. '·ti 1:i1~ ,.,101 existing 2 Bdrm home .,_ -·-TI 0 N s p ARK LING Pt llh p lhouta St di wtlh room for anolllef. lalll•tl-~tl~Ua~b 13l! 1paclou1 2 Br. prof Beautllul&parkllke CLE .. N • SP .. CIOUS. u en u o lndlv who t1aval1, .-•• I..,..,....,....,.""""~-"-,... d • e or, 2 p • t Io•. wtlh tafrac.d pool. " ca ,.. Apt. VerAlllM. $800/mo non-emk M/F 873~3S4 Close lo Marina and --------xax §8J:ry 1995/mo. 552•7038. *Pr1vatePallol Westtlde 1 Br, 1 Be, Call 545-1097. ' ' D o h • n Y P • r k · llll llllftllL owner Eul Sid• c M 3 I *Cover.d Parking newly painted, epte/dr~ Roommate Coordinator• Owner/builder cf.:tenllal. lllffDI BR (Up) 2 BR (~) OrangelrM terr-. 2 bd, *SpaclouaAplt dlhwr. range & relrlg. No L11111 btllat tor .... Just 1137,000t all today Keac> an eye on your In· 1240.000. Con elder 2 be condo. $800/m~ *Otnl ArM pet1. $.400. 552·9723. l30 looking '°'• place for video view or lnepec-veetmenl. Gr•t oondo IN/opt. wk d• 951·5283, ...... 551·8581. OWfler, W•l~nCloMll MO IO all accpllc:anl• tton. 640-1151. next 10 H09g Hoapltal. ev 648_9733 752-1589, agl. :Hom•llke Kllohen• 1 Br unlurnlah.ct apt, newly 558· 7077, 213·595-5334 Bank forec:loau,.., Heal· C:: p 1.351 IEITW 1 blk to Hunttnnton & decorated, •love & relrlQ. COUNTRY CLUB I IN 24 hr• lent nnane•~ and tafml. ._.. HJ . • 2188 Maple, CM. $4 f5 IN NEWPORT BEACH -1 lo 4 bdrm $700 • S 1200 f'!l,•: Slngles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· Roomm11e needed to shr ./ * HlllOR RlllE * • HERITAGE REALTORS Come visit the mo6t faboulous view new custom home in Newport. Nothing to compare with this 4 bdrm, fam nn, 5 bath, formal dining, 3 frplcs, 6 car garage. Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the gate and ask for 3 York.shire, 759-1931. -------178,500. C. I 780-8300. 2 ..,..In . . ITILITIEI FREE ~:· ;.:ece.':~P~S~~:: menll & TownhouMe. 2Br lurnltlled apt In C.M Olene. .... .. lleklrtl. 1 Bdrm. From $580 Goeaell Aptl. Some ere elegantly 1230 mo. no utll. Mark 2 bd, 1 tie: -Pnoed for Im· ~ 2 Bdrm. From $850 lurnlehed. S41-32e8. 548·86 l9 mediate 1a1a et 1345,000 Gr LA QUINTA HERMOSA YOUR SECURITY FILE From 1810 Studio P.,,lhM l'r beach, Wtlk:h 11 way below ap-lfy 18211 Parkelde Ln. 1 blk DOES NOT PERMIT AC· OnJamborMrd.el HB. Catalina view, pvt pral .. 1.Bkr.833-8182 W of8elich,3blk1S.of CESS TO THIS FUNC-SanJoaqulnHllltRd. bath & ant $325. EdlnQaf TION Ullle pd 5325. Quiet 144-1IOO 538..0794 IPll IAllY 1 ... ftutaia WD Vall~ 1034 HELEI •• DO FREE E8Uitv aBK 3Ga. IEILTOR, llC. 144-0134 ~18~f.rs1~ •2250• ea1i ~Macnab -Irvine UMllU Ideal toeatton on etrMt 10 438 C1r11tio1 IWITll·PLD 651•1177 1411441 1 bdrm,ectu1t1prel.Avan. ,.,---:--:=--..,--:---..,,...,~ • July 18. &44-8958 Su ci .. tatt 277' bata11 Wut .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~·~·~·~··~ ... ~c~ti~~~l~MgO 11raet 1o1. lrenc:h doore to = 10.ooo 64li0W maf1Cat. 3 Bd landac:aped pello. 4 Bdrm. 3 8a. + Oen with --------C.nu ••Illar 1022 2 Ba, trpl, $105,000. ma•tcanllleenlry.3 Wet Bar. Redwood N • • d 1 T L c . bedroom. 3 bath. Sauna + 2-two bdrm LIWUT ... 213-530-5159. L1•":R~·n unlll, 4 c:ar garage. Alk· I.----.,,.---,,--~~ Condo on F .. L.and, Up-nu. Ing '540.000. gracs.d. Cool and qulel 2 lniat 1144 Ill 1100 TRUST DEPT bd, 2 be, 2 ear g.,, lrpl, ORAll!E TREE • Dan Lewi• sun decll. pool and Spa. • Newport Height•. 2 Br 2 833-7822 • Onty 1209.ooo. TERRACE ea Condo. pool. Alklng 1--.,._...,•ainTiii'Y--...... ~~~~~.,. 1 1 .1~ ~. $ 145,000. Flexible nnanc:-'" ... ~()fla aa vnai 2 Bdrm, 2 be. Plan C. All Ing. Call Dave for Info. IUllllml1' '· •• 111 UI .~ .... ..L...., J:.. the amen11et Including 754-8801. Small to larger apts unl1a, Ba, $750/mo. 0 Fanced -.Aw. ·r.ur-•~ micro-wave and truh 1---------lnduetrlal commercial. yrd, kld1/pet1 K. Agl. 'ro':..lot0~~ur~;e:c'~ ~ ou.u. compactor. hMvy duty llWNll llllllTI Ow"9f direct °' brokaf No'"· 6'5-2000. beech, good io.ne u-67J ... ov'7Y washer & dl')'ef. Plu• the Lot value, 2 Br, 1 Ba, uNd protection. 10 yew1 ex-HOMES FOR RENT ble 1y 1285 000 * 1 "--~ .._ ,._. edded uaurance of•... brick. cute and comer lot, peri.nc.. Mlaslon Viejo 3 Bdrm. 3 auma 'on ' · 1 • ...._ ~, •• .._ curlty bulldlng. $108,000. alley llCC4IM. 1185,000. TSL Mgmt &42-t803 ea, 1750/mo. Fenced U~f2~ .• 7~-~~fi C.ta Ina IOH 548-8928. •Newport 8Meh ocean yard, kld1/pet1 welc:ome. .._,.,. • v ,,........,., WATDRMY front. duple)( & 1rtple11. Agent. no IM. 645-2000. ITULm 3000 sq. ft., 4 yeMI old, 4 Br 3 Ba. wet bar, lamll'( rm, bonut rm, RV acceea. Alklng only $199,000. 831·7370. TJUDI T 10\, \L RL\lT\ 1122,000 ~or Fromthelmpreaal1111eniry ~f3~f8\~~ularl P .P . I rt ltac~ Hit 4 Br. 2·~ B•. pool a 1ennl1, I lhrnunh Ille mannlttoenl f --· ..,. • llS 1 on o, ewport dbl garge, condo. Y & IPllCloUI ftoor plan lo la utrial Prtf l Knolla. Cpl/drpe, blllne, C/M..._ Call for the private. brfl petlo 8000..,, fl. SW Sant• Xne. lrplc. encl gar wflne ltnenelng.845-9181 651•1177 w/runnlr1g fountain, to XLNT Loe. Sell, exch, etorage rm, •lee dr op~r. ~~ P~:••t~~ d~~i Y~ leaM. Paul Franklin. Bkr, pool, Jae, rec rm, walk to / OPltl lllt\l';l RIAllY graclout uvtng. Actually 882-8910 bell. $725/mo. 111/IHt + h•• 3 MP•r11e llvlng tull· •••Ull ~.673-8112 e11 Friday & -..c~ DfWft es compoMd ol 4 huge -wkndt. bdrm1 lhal can provide Ollf I mll "'°2_B_r_1 ~B-a_,Co,__tt-age--w-/g-.,-. .... .. extreme prlvky IO< all Neat MW 3 unit condo, deckl. bflek walk w1y1. -.. llSPIU11 member• ol Ille lamlly. Iota! 7100 IQ ft .. lire yd Avalt 7-10. $785/mo. r-. Must Mil. Woodbridge, on Large "aubject to" 1at spmk-t2X12d00f9,good MS-8825 Kool & quiet 3 Bt, 2 Ba, praatlgloue Yale Loop 3 T.O. II you would a11joy parklng·tenold·prlde of..,__ ....... ______ _ ll1MI ftreplaoe, lhlke roof. RV er 2112 ea. central air. 2 $2,000,000 atmoephere owner.riip. Priced to NII. $350 bH eh bungalow Ptahuala IN? aecea. Owner Wiii carry llrepiaoee. tennle. IWlm· f()( 1785.000. -euggaat Chuck Spiller, agt bll·lns provided utile pd e;;:;ttful oceanfront fi01N 1s1 loen I 148,500 ming. lal<e rec. 80% toan you dial tor 8PPI lo view 831· 1288. 539-8190 BEST Rlty IM. on Balboa Penlnalla. 4 I ... ... ... .._ at 10.75%1nt. avail. Own· tlllt axceptlonal property. Hatala DtMt1 Blutta . 2 ttry. 3 bd, 2 'A ba. Br 4 Be. By Owner. tJ II• lllllTf .,, will carry 2nd. 1 1eK 759-1501 °' 752-7373. •---A' 14 •• lrpl, 2 ear gar, on Of_.. 1775,000. 3051581·5580. Mt-l1H moveeyouln. Aeduc:ed 10 -n -bit, nr pool. 11100/mo. 1t==-. ..... .., ltu~ St89,500 '°' quk:lt '*-WALKER Isl.EE RoK+AEKNcXL1FORNIX. Ava1111-1. 541-1390 days. -_.. 55&-7058, 2131807-2330. n--t m.. O Fall River Valley. BM&.11~ 644-7298 -======== Condo, E/llde cul-de-aae ··--.... ~ I IUI late. a r1ller tron1 BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE -- ..... n aerou lrorn Country -~llo--l•-llornea. Prlcea alert a1 3 Br. l 'A> be, 1900. Club. 3 yrs nu, Mly up-Ill... r::;T:T. 199,500. Xll'I. fly 119ftlng, 875-5et2 --m.111 grlded w/nu plulh ept. 2 YllU ~. Fall River Properti.., Box i--------ltw W. ·~ Br. den, 2'A> be. ltplc:, -I· Tired of looking al homes 878, Fall Rlvef Mltte, Calif. Dover ShorM, 1328 San· Dol'e oniY''ln ttlt---of ~:a' :~'°s1~::~k~ with ugly cerpel, re-WllllflMY 88028. 916/336-8481. llago Dr. Ell:ecvllw 4 BR tut• with the hlQllMt 780•1515·°'...e,.758& dtculou• wall eovafln~• G.<>.!'~~ 8dw1!:_~311d4ock8a. 091 tf ltatt ~'Z,.~,:1.~ 3": quallty matartale. A de---------·-and tacky "upgr.-7 ~-1""'.. """' p lSSO llghtlul 38R C1nyon "'" TMI Ther't try lhl• 1 Bt + ci.n. 2 Priced 10 ..... c. Spllter. rtrrtr gar. 3 flrepl~. 4000 IQ C I , "o ti" .ttvv, ...o.leh llU ..--. ~ ant 831· 1288. llll l• ft, S3000 IN or IM/c>pl. rae own UM w Near new condo wlloft. 2 -., .... ,,_, • ...--.. ••4 7424 B .. 11..... .....II I ~• 1tor...., 10 It• or"'ln•' (but ..., • · "r veu.., ._ ngs, orm .. etory, 2 Br, 2 8•. frple, """ "' .. Veeatlon In Str•t dining, family room, com· llcyllghtt, 2 ear gar. Lo. lo better) production •P· Keac> 111'1 eye on prloee the I • YOUR SECURITY FILE munlty pool, IP•. tennle dn, no qualifying, Wiii peeranee. Broker coop-"'Y IHY·be • regular ford-Avon tour Br 1~ DOES NOT PERMIT AC· Md much more. OwMr eonlldef trade fM dn .,.tlon. t152,000. Lve e taaelfled reeder · r,n.:c,:r~ i::.: by CESS TO THIS FUNC· 11a1 bought anotll« and pyrnt. Skip 839-7582 rMll 551·5018. &42-6878 owrilng VOUf own 18th TION HARBOR VIEW wants to NII now. Century ap(. For ~-HOMES 144-1111 call 714-493-4101 Exec 4 BR 2'A> BA on park, nr pool, vu, grdnr, 11'50 ll lu .... t 1111 mo. 48'·2023 /.Jn Nl(,[L OAILfY & A5'lUCIATlS •• ULl • TUii YOUR SECURITY FILE 3 bdrm + den hollM In DOES NOT PERMIT AC· Century City., .. of WMt CESS TO THIS FUNC- LA !Of houM of c:om· TION I IVI I l>Mulllul Mon· parable value In Nwpt or aco 3 er 2 Ba, Ind• oar· Huntington &eh area dener. water. tic. 1279,000. (213~ l tt50tmo. 844-8810 or llft. e:30pm °' wtinct.. 1_e_13-3 __ 11_4_. ----- &prt!!!b, Val. *a~.E~~E~2 :~25~ 2 er, $485. Y•rty. Pool. nr WAIT Tl LWI "~-· ... Jiu •tU N___.sv.-83" ... 97•. beach. bu•. No pell Unlum 2-38', 28• -• ..,...... ~ .. 498-e277 HM/Condo/ Apt In Npl 4.fuii. •1;~ f .. rets'i0o~ YILU CllllOYA Nr sc G•n•r•I Hoep. N':,"~1~':0~,:~~!n e 1 9 • 2 2 2 • e 7 8 e , Spacious E·elde Apte. 1paelou1 3Br. 28a, or petl 840-0582 81a.ne..o112. Enci gar. patio. dsllwlr & dtllwlhr, lrple, pello, MW ain ltr 1101111. Mo.I ulll• lrM. No cpl/drps, lg 1111. $550 mo. 2 Br 2 8a. lrplC. garage, pets. AYI July 25. 898-5974 ltat ztlJ privet• patio. $800/mo. 1 BR. 1 Pafsor1 M45 .,_ .. _"'~-~--873-8558. 1 BR. 2 Persons M55 Den• Pt. dbl°' alngi. gar- 3 bd. 2•..; be, super cJMn & 2323 Elden A1111., C.M. laata Aaa llH =~t~~~~~~· _. modern, 2 atory. lerge 5'&-7954 SpidOUt 2 Bl apt, nr SC 1,,,-...---.,,..-------=,- sundec:k. 11250/mo. bkr VILLAVISTAAPTS Plaza, no pell. $525. E.elde CottaM .. ,l'rt7th 760·1397. 873-7781 $575/mo. 2 Br 1112 Ba. 5'5·5388 St. $80/pr mo. Joyce Townhome. greenbelt, Waltte 831·1266. Agl Cetta •na 2124 llr, carport, balcony. 2078 Thurln 1 & 2 Br unfurn. pool, TSL Mgmt e.2. 1603 laundry lee. From M04. --------Ullla plld. 548-0338. Avail Aug 1, 2 Br. 1 Ba. frple. $850. Lou Supple e45·9t81 mle81iBllU 8Hulllully landeeaped garden apte. Pool & IP•· Furnllhed room In Cottma Mesa home. S2301mo. C1ll Chrll 1fter 4 pm. :rr.-:---;---:--;---r.;~ 1 Br. 1 Ba. Triple)(. nu Patloeldeckt. No pell. palnllcrpl. 1480/mo. ·2 Bdrm. 1'/o Ba. 1590 Furnished room In Coe11 1~~"'°;,;;.;;;;m;~P"'!!wl~4 M .. a home. $230/mo. Ce.II Chris aftaf 4 pm, M5·9181. 151 E. 2111. 548·24011. 645-2435 1 Br, upttalre w/gar. $400/mo. No pete. Rel• raq'd Avall 811. 352 Vie· tOfla. 845-e 1e 1. 2 Br 19111 Maple Ava. Upper. No pell 2 per- 1on1. $450. Sierra Mgmt. 84 1-1324. Westfield IPllTmm Beautllul garden aptt, patio•. deck•. spa. No pets. 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba. $805 398 w. Wltlon 83 I ·5583 YOUR SECURITY FILE •---------DOES NOT PERMIT AC· 4001 Blreh. N.B. CESS TO THIS FUNC-440 IQ It $450/mo TION Room S300 Private Agent S.f 1·5032 entranc., cooking, work· MLID .. -1 n g man, Lagun•. r- 494-4459 Har bOf Vl9w 5400 eq '1 Room I I "'It..... Iv avail. 0911 Mon·Frl, i --5. °' ren w," "''pr 642-4844 NMr bul & ll'lopl. Hunt· i--------~ 2 Br. 1 Ba. M45.+ S300 ----· -.-.. 1---.-aaR- dep. 22tl9 C Maple. No •n••'--•-lngton 8ch 982-7520 S.y1ronl Offices lrom 300 UM YI 11111. tq tt. Wkly renlala now avall 11 __ 1_1-_1_1N _____ _ pelt. 540-4484. IPll. 2 Br 1 Ba. garage, lnc:d paUO, 2183 B Pomon1. M50/mo. Drive by flrtt then call 846-7009. 2 Br 2 Ba. lrg llvlng rm. 21'd floor, blt·lne, lrplc, •Ingle gar. 1575/mo. &42·7803. 3 Br., 2 Ba. garage, upper. 1040 C Vatenela. No peta. ·~5. 645-7983. 2Br, garage, no pete, 1525. 841 Vic toria. 557-0975. Avall. now. YOUR SECURITY FILE DOES NOT PERMIT AC· CESS TO THIS FUNC· TION 28r, gatage, no pelt. $525. &4 t Vlc:torla. 1557-0975. Avail. now . 1325 tBr. t8a, 1 pereon non-ttn<*er only, W 17th neat Wlllttler, 648-3829 955 W. 19111. St. $460. 1 er. 1 ea. petlo. blHna. pool, spa, no peta. llL.... 141-1122 $128 & up. Color TV. ...... ....... Ptionft,ln room. 2274 .._,.. Newport 8 1vd, CM. 800 107 .. _,, tr 846-7445 • IQ " IV-om $1.25 1 bd unlurnlahed Apt • IHUll 11111. BASEMENT $1.00 IQ It. Newiy decorated and Wkly renlall now avall ~ 84,JM~al Mon-Fri eari>el9d. S101111 & fWrlQ, 1128 & up. Color TV. • 2 188 M • p I•. C. M. Phones In room. 2274 =-ex-ec-u1..,..1v.--1-ut,-1e-.-n-1e_•.,..IY $475/mo +Sec:. No Pete. Newport Blvd, CM. decoretad, 3 omc.a. prt- To '"· ealt &45-9804, &46-7445 vela r•trooma. 5 min. ~ttl•~;i = from O.C. Airport, lllort ~28~r-1-'h""'Ba_twn__,,h,_M-.,...trp"""kle,-t • r m I e • • • • v e II pailo. gar. no peti. sse5 r 2 , oodbt e• S580/mo. 2tl1-0404. mo. 278 Avocado St. llome, upgnded, apee. T s 546-7510 e-e pm meeter wJ,vt bath, •EXECUTIVESUI E 1t ------· __ n/wnlCr. pro . M/F, full Fun-w:i.. hlgfl quallty. EASTSIOE-Co1y Bach. pr1v. S526. 558-8118 lowpr~.~BIVO. lrplc:, 1320 mo. 875--&458 lat1t ..... HR Mary Brolter ,... . 714185()..1238. Dau Ptlat rJZI Raaldenllal ~d & Cera DELUXE OFFICE SUITES Cllarrnc;Q viC 1 Br. qliiet, •t It• BE.ST! Offere. NEW Bayfr0f11 bldg. 800-t 107 no pet•. 34097 Granada. way of lite with Sup«b sq It avail from St.25. M75. 873-3313. Quallty for the Die-BASEMENT 1 1.00 IQ ft . S ..... lo ..... 1 .... ~ 10 ......... u erlmlnatlng amb. a 2500 eq ft. Cell: Mon-Fri •• 10 t ... ,..,lo no .... ,, "'" _. ........ """' -non-amb. lefllOr d itz.rt 9·5. 842-4844 -"' ,.... • ...-· ulll pd. 1350/mo. Refrtg, dMll & bright. u 1 •142 Old Wond a.oanca & _,1_, __ _ 724-0 JatMa. 873-77&7. .... .... . converilent ioeatlon. In. _, 1r.w - Supet neat t er VIiia. court garden room a court yard 1000 IQ ft well INllnlalned Mist a WondefM Wond of Shopping, right at yo4M llnalrtloa ~ Dally Piiot' Claullled ~ To place your .ct. cell 642-S.78 and .... a -111ee1 M-Vleor ......, you. or ... v..., 7 ec •tale, br1dl TudOf home, fenoed P91tur• . poofl,bern, orchard a vtnywd. 1375.000. Tr-6a0f ... I. 7141875-7375eve. U U.. IPll yard. quiet. no peta. aatttng. Owned & aper-bldg on quiet atreet. tmmae. H.V. Cam*, 3 br. Ml·llll 1450. 813-3313. a tad t>y an R.N Alllgnedpaflung, ~~·;:"~. m_.5503 1 Br.rc a wet., ~aid, But. lw~ ff4i 1w2'°"°33t. garao:.~2~:.;.~°' ... al •-or---~..,.,. COLDWeLL BAN~eRO •lll'TlAi.,._~IOMCU lln ..... SMl,111 This home has everything. Low down • good financing -3 Br. . den · fam. nn. -din. nn. -3 frplcs • spa • 45 French wlndowa -brick ·oak floors -beamed cei.linga --·· and it's brand new!!! Near beach, park, shopping. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 One o r the ways homes a.re being b ought. and sold today ts w1t.h Second Kongaae A seco nd mart.gage Is a met.ho d ot financ ing whereby the buyer is provided wit.h &n addit.lo nal o r second mort.gage when t.here ls n ot. eno ugh cash to assume t.he existing mortgage. A s eco nd m o rtgage c &n also be t.&ken when the first. m o rtgage and t.he d o w n payment. f&ll short. at t.he sales price . A second m o rt.gage can be p roV1ded by eit.her the seller o r a lending lnst.ttut.to n . Payment.a &re made bot.h to the Beller o r lender o n t.he second mort.g~e and to t.he lendel" o r t.he underlying m o rtgage. Npt Hgt•. 3 Br. lwnll\I rm. ~r 9~3s-0i..'60. l>Q. voQK SECURITY Fit@ •a:-.... lttl NEWPORT CENTER Fun 2112 Ba. no pate laoo. YOUR SECURITY FILE DOES NOT PERMIT AC-~ becullve Sult• Agt. 873-8184. DOES NOT PERMIT AC· CESS TO THIS FUNC-a oa , en a egan 1675-S825. 840-5470 Spec;loue 4 8' 3 'h Ba CESS TO THIS FUNC-TION lBr, 1 Ba, cloea to home. garage, llMpa 8· Office tpllOl IOf ..... 747 ..... fuallW aapet•I• ~.rm, la~ TION 1435/mo, 28r, ~~00•ch, ~~r;.70ei .. n •l•P• 10 beech . tt.S8951mou111spd.A/C, I ...... -Imo . ....,... • ..., · 132H515. 848-8333. ~round llr 1055 El ..... .tJ!au 1111 rm, trple. pal..,., over· carport, laund7. no pet•. hang, nlc:lly lnd1cpd. 1 el'llld. 5 5·4529, •1450/tno. up, 1 l 2 Br. BALBOA ISLAND. 3 llR amino Or, Cotta Mela. A;:;I .... a Br. 2 Be. 11550/mo. 840·1327, 213/5118-1219. unturn a rum. pool, epa. Elegant ll<>tM. Gar. Slpa 3 Blk• E. of Fairview a MWty tum. Get.ct Met.Ir· 559-8188, ofo 720"'887 18892 Florlda. 842-2834. 8, atepa/ bch. $326-$800 Adltl'll. tty. prlv11e beaetl, tannta.18pack>U• 4er 3'h8a IMP ".:;~.~~10& N~ft:~~: 842-3172. wtcly. &41-8333 754-1040, Mr Tracy Huna. 115oo'f:'1Y or bonu• rme. lam rm. ;,pie, 724·8 Jamee 873-7787 Bachellor •f,t, newly ,.. a.1 111 furn 3br 1~ be a Prof. office toe. Colla MUonllly. ee1-712-patlot, oV«llang, nlc:ely modeled, not 11ove J 2br 1b•. cloM 10 wllw. MeM·•uble .... 2 oftlc:el lndtepd, 11550 mo. l495imo 2 Bi, 18••PI, r elrlg , 1385/rno . Wk ly or mo nthly . &recept.,lnet.lurn .. utll. ..... .......... &40-1327,!159-81H.Otc. anol patio, •mall pet OK. 980-1170. · 7141478-1237 & Janllorlal. S370/mo. n--al ._. 720-8897 carport, lndry rm. 545 7508 Oeve L --· .... 735 w 18th St Bac:h·tull kit. nr bctl. quiet Baylront 3 Br, 2 ea. • · · a I r 2 L CdM iiOO/mo "THE COVE" B•y•ld• TSL Mgmt 842-HI03 pereon, no pell , t1800/mo, 21 Balboa • $290/up, c arp ell. yrly ' Drive Elteoutlve Condo, 1515 Avall 711 non·~r;t· 1425/mo. Cove. 845-5135. drapes, ale, ,...trooma. SoeClal tuml'Mt renlale-1 IMM0< .. 111. 2 Br. Oen. 2 2 Br. apt wl petlo. 88()..() • CdM walk to bMcll, lovtlly 11301 Beacll BlvCI. Hunt· Br condo on bey, "' Ba. pool, privet• 8411-8103 Aft 8PM. CloM to beech. 2 Br. dleh· rm wl 8a. Wkly o r lngton BMcll. 842·2.834. =.:=, ~~:r.!· 0 ~ :.~ $675 lo S6401mo, 2 er. 1'A :~ •• ~·0v:·. ~r::•: monthly. 875--9581 • memn ""°. be twnh•, pool, lndry 1625/mo. ~837. .... ~..... With t~= ::. fVlt l1MJM111 YOUR SECURITY FILE ;,~· .:'.f:i~2: DELAWARE PINES ........ ~ ""'• Keep your ~=itflH DOES NOT PERMIT AC-I! 18th St. From $.475--1575 2 bdrm, fb. dtlW!a. MOO o~ low & pro.• CESS TO THIS FUNC-wti 3713 8euhor •• 1111 TION untum Condo 2 8', Tk Monn &42·1803 Frple, pool, gar. per · • leulONl l!Moel'lloh.-1 ltfl ..... ill"'P. .... ..-.. _."""I 2 ... T I prtvele patio Or .• e50-l571 OOvet Or. Me 14. New-Jlllf, 1~k frP1C, ~ -.. e«8C9 W OOMll DlluMT'WMae,pe1I0,2Br, No ... 2 •-7 .....,. .............. -1 •••1 yet, refit. MOO mo. IMue view. ~ bldg ,,_., t ·~. 09'. 1128 mo. I 1"" pet1 !.:,~St ON 1°,!i! ~ENNTDA ,...... • -... . ..., ._.... . DolpNn Rl1y 4N-5337 beech. c.11131~1· Of 2543 Orange. &42·2191. ....21 l--.-w . SUMM~n" L .. , ... 840-t&«> C1oeed Sunday. 3 Br i ... unit, wet bar, ...... _~ .... ·-,:..:---...... . cer... w au am · E.MUlde 2 •. 1 aa. patlO. tumlahed ...n.-drY9f _.,..,, -..... _ ... _. L 2 ~ Lata LI IBI newty deCOr. No -.. ......T-.. ~~~ lndd. ~. 'enclM ~I>!-· 842 • Mon-,rt, • Down paymenl ma.Y bt neaouat.ed lmlMc, nw pm, 2 _. a.. &'I iMt bfB 2 6&m 378 I!. ttth SI r.9... 2 a 3 Bf. ..,....,...,._ 11 garage. &802 Selal'lor• ..... • Ena blH pu.rohue or home with ~· 2 c ger. H1tw,1Vw00, l'lou•• 0111 4 detalle 1645/mo, ln.ote4. lrpk;.dlhwtr,lrgpat • Tll Mgmt. 842•1803 1•T.-A-1<'""e,....o"'v'"'EA,,.,,,.....,.l...,,8E:=--=._--1t. existing mort«_,. requiring large ,_,., no ptltl • NMlto BtST-.. ,_ •·--endadalngla office eulta, recently r:iown paymani 8'0-0e18. "''' -·-car09t1r:1nrHunt. ltl redec. N-. ~,.a. drpe • With ... u mptlon of 1xJat1ng 2 Bf, t Ba. trptc:, blt·lna, ..... Lli9il 1111 .....,,...... Harboufj ':J,585/mo. lntab lttf Sutt• ooneltlte of 4 lllry I 1 mort«6'• •• favorahl• lntarea\ rat.e la oar. no P•"· te50. mr10b0h'.ilt. \Ui 28'. Oltl, lf)iltte"91,dec:k. ~ . Laguna on o;; m . I it offlcH , ••• bar. t 11 ' r A IH poeitbl• 144-7809. -.. ..... .._.. • ... tlO lkytlght,frolo,oountry Nrbcll,2ttry.38r.2~ ... 1 •• ~ 4 Avllll ,-.11r00tn1, con•etene• 1 I I I' I I ... , -......., ,... aattlrig.1'26/mo 1I02lat din den 11 1178 -· • room 20>!20 and atorw -. . . . . -JmnAOt OD Hiler Cameo~38r +f9m-.,_ applanc.a avell. li . tm, ~· oa. . Augu•t. 3000/mo. room 201120, •Pc -lly 1m, pool,~~ tot. 1800/mo. 4H·2 IH, "::t.~"' Alt 5 pm .37r 7• 484-5857. t500 aq tt In .. oatpt I DAD J t , 1. • Smaller down p-.yment al\rl.0"8 more 12500. Ag1. 1 · -'98-6011 · llijaaa ... , IHI MAUI lnduatrlal ~. Mult ... I I I' I poWIMlal buyer• 8pyglu• 4l r 2 1/H• ........... ,........ !•aide t er. oory. prM•. . i 8areloot ret,...I. Lu11ury to ~at•. 1480 mo, I e Add1tlon1I rorl\ with Int.ere&\ frplet, oatdeMI. !OWiy -kltel'lenelle. t 400lmo. DI• 2 81' t la OoMn YU, condo on Nndy bMotl al 131-32". I I P family llOIM Vt ._ laa.. utlll Pd. tS1-364e. No. End. beiam celllna l<lhel ~ dteoounl umll -------- c MO FAY t To motl P900I•. m.-tllO recatvadon NQOnd mo~4'«0 S19001mo.i:i5-03o4t11. p-•-·-•· --R L018rMHt8ri6t5 lt00u1HlnCl<t.4M~i 0ec.'15.1714)An..23tt . l I' I I . 11'1111111• I•• lwman ~ll••Kt • Reoetvee toll funde If lt ndJng ........ -• Poot Patio fr 10· 'i ~b!m C•lllltlal ,---------........ ,1e ToCOt1G1t11,_,,w.. 1neu \uttn11 pro v1de1 eeeond mort.«ace Clita lllil 1114 Gv f iif~O:lt..,. lo Dlflwir. 657464 1 P · 1 ~ vacation u.chanae a.Illa nll I T I II H C S f .. ol -• § Gd f G:; :i n9W int \\\ ~. no ptltl -"""4: ~Mel ,.Ide •'<"Ollftt .v.litiilt The· re .... ea num ... ·r o r 11•u••1o n e • ml '10 ................. • ... d N26 Of N Wftftl, Large ' Ir. Ealde,,.. Pool and laoltlllH. ••NOCOSllt0mo11rHmbtltl trCIO~"·'MOf'lle·~ I' I' I I I e c_ ........ "'"''"' _... ""' uv ~ ... ~ """'· """' ,. • eJ&.t3t7 ~. 14351mo. 130 E. t e 7 5 /mo. 1111 ch • rd w111~ oi 0 11 '°' t_.... Ot' ltM>p, •IPf'ko. ..... .. -................... _.._._.._...._, __ :: :::i;. ::;;::1 ~ ln which Lhe seco nd mort.g&ge can :~201~;-' ~..:s.,uo · · 20th st. •D. Nt·M23. 2131930-2323 1r11or1N11ot111mH,..,.. 1101 ''· CM. t•oo. ; ~ .. i'~ji~r1 .. , f f fc f I' f ~ ~ Cac111t.at.e t.he purc haae or e&le o f a • 9vee CPnt tltl J!tr IQ Uf9e . 2 1a. . 2 I,. 1 h , Nu IH1'::~ ~ION 1_a.a._1_734 _____ _ = ~ -· • propert.y. Cont.act. y o ur real eat.ate Tiie faet•t dr-tn tM o.cotatOt'• TownftouM 'rplie. dtll oeraoe. large op111:e:g••. bit-In•. natANCA oue ........... , ....._ __._ ..... ~ • 11.nl Of • ""'· •• a D•llY ,not evellnowM6/mo,Com-lltOdVW1!. No.-.. PoQI, '"'°I dwnetfll. l'O b lllt ......., ,_,, ... ..._ __ -• ___ . _ _ _ exper t.t.ouatet.you. OlullsdM.CllT~ ptetely turn1at1act. t•.fk tltO Do¥9r/WMtalff •r••· ~., ..... 11CAtMO USA dbl11e.ttl&!.c.t~. -!'l!! ... !!!:·!!!-!.!!!!!!!!.!!~!!!!!!!!!!.!Y..!!J..=::-::::==::==:::::;===== ~ 11 .. -. A41tWMrctt1 M.ct0e. .,........_ I ts75 mo. 111-t100 .... Al•••• 0111•11111 Utl -· .. J 1 Or~ Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, July 6, 1983 lb ler 11111 llr1111111r Unr!J1la11a1.. ,.A• ... tt-.r•.m...._ ____ 1.c..,•...,.•...,•rz.._ ___ Ctralllt TU. 11ettra.11 1u•u1.. ...,,.,.. ...,.... ~:!·s,. _ _.....,_ Pl~ ·-=-==iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ..... lrltlqltnl Ref,)91r/eml fOb•· Fenoea, ltnttMTile... Et@effticiXN: Priced ............... IROHINOJOBSWANTED. TWOCOLL!.OEMEN 1i£1ii+ ... 1111 ....... $1 84 d Don't Pleet Freeana:Y911 1Mtve1, pan1t1on1. Lo Fr .. t. ouar. MS-3283 tight, free ea11mate on 939.5035 my home. Excellent Wiii Mow you. 8 yra e1q1. WATER HEATER 8pecNll t-Y•o""u·A-S•E•c·u·R·l·TY--F-ll-E , per av of your caM 0119r phone. ratea. Steve 731·8311 large or email fObl. lie. -------....-WOik. Rllel•ICel on r• VIM/MC 541·t107 Pool ._...f'ut!W D0£S NOT PERMIT AC. Tllal'• ALL you pay for I .... ,.,.., .. , le181 Remod/lacellft1, wood ?.!W Cart 3eee21· 873-0369 =~0:,:.~r~~N: queet. Phone M2-6470 ·~ It-'~ Draine dMtWI from 15 & CES8 TO THIS FUHC-• 30 day •d Big blllal Forecioauree~ -p It I 0 c v (.Id.ck • • Lovtng ctllld care In my ELECTRICIAN melnl ...w;. 640-8036 enytlme, • ._ • t& MY'llM Aepelts. TION W«d Prooeeelng In the Law 1u1t1? Judgementa? drywall. hm rpro By C.M. home. Fenced yrd, Gd ratH. FrM •t. Llo.1,__ __ • ------PVt1i!llO!M ;;;;Jng, g yr1 l5t-M04M&MM2-41033 & lener compoaltlon. DAILY ll)ll'JI ""' Wtrhtlt Randy 841~ mMll. 831-1938. • 1&«8 Wayne 831-7530 Mow, edae, CIMn-up, trim. ..... llttiu exp, ref•, F/PT (213) fleet. Prompt. 842..ao36 .: mo...... s I ,,,...,. ddttlo • ~ "--~ Free •f. R9u. ret ... Jim 441078, 3a7·8028 ... ~~lth:l'& !:,,Ptwnb#la, • dr Tit: •-pee I -.,, I nt • CNMCo<ltr•ct0<l Genttal _ '!' -r ___.;( 848-1858 LOYlnQ Cere, llOme/pett ,.._,, fl & dralila uw PILOT ,.EE -1.unH remodel. Llc'd, bonded. -· Cenlfled HouN Slttert , •• _ .. __ elMr . Uc. 84~3428 1--.T~"'1L•E"'tN"s .. T"'AL"'L•E1110--. Work tar. FrM Ht. I>' a.rep .. r, ope!'·..... llnce1818 831-1234 ... .._ Stitt It.Utt.. .... 2_ 15 .• ~'""' RemOdel/IGPalre, comm. 1tor1. See demon1tr1tlon p~• l::=:j•-·•-And ~ed. ll0-1142 c.,,.. ltmct . Int. For eel, 552·9142. Bl., CM. 842-3490 Pelntlng-Carpentry by Richard Sinor. Lie. IAllW&ll 111 'I REFS. JOHN 893.()487 SERVICE •1 "'' "" ·-· ... & reeld. Lk:'d, bonded, S..Coaat. 2488 Newport 5277 • LI=~ .. Plll!m -_...,.... Gullenteed. DIRECTORY .. ~I.ti -Gary PTL • Roto1•11no 280844 14 ...... of h-E I d a p ~ o.r,.ttq FrM pr•llm. New &. , .. Sprlno1-Hlnge1-0pener1. Sod lawn• Sprinkler• · ,,_ • ...,..,., xper enc• ro-frtt ltntll BabYttern:as 1-SyrOid .... 1 ___ 11 ••1·llll model. Elcp, llc'd and Repalra. Loweet ratetl ***HOME REPAIR Div. 042-4853 IOCal y=.·=ll~k ~-~~I ~youtl..,"""""'i[l"lo1t1w""RX""'f•E§lll""--OO IT NOWll to keep 3 yr old company. • --bonded. Wiil autat you to l ie. Tom 557-<4480 Elec-P1umb-Ca.,,.ntry &11 fll llllU E Side, CM. 548-9673 Sllampoo & ateam clean; obtain nnan. 549-1978. Lr•eaJiil Fencee. Keith 84M&72 r,'~:!!.R~~H~~:. .at• PAllMI =1c1~c'~t°:v:r,;:! T~~ •. &.5;.._~· All Yoor Dally Piiot TLCI Beach. park & lun<lh. color brli!hteoer1. Wht •• ,...,, ..... lt11f, IES Home Repalrl-Cerpenltry Me-0655; 642-3857 25 yrt. Lie. 403941. Ina. 5pm to 9 pm, II no ,. ~ , Serv1C41 Directory My Newpon llome, Ref's crpta ,. tO min. blelefl. New/remod Elcp'd Lie C1blnet1-Elec-Plumb no bonded. Aef1. Color ex-enawer PLEASE KEEP at Repreeentatlve evall. DeeAnn 650-6598 Hall, llv/dln. rms $15; avg bonded. lni. WIH heip yoo Toppedlremo'l9d. Clean Fencing. DON Me-01_.9 LllAL IDVICD per1. 983-0811 Richard TRYING... l~Xliii,._Cif"""'._.;;a...,·au'""Pb)8Ct...-.~, • • •1•4•2•-l•l•l•l•l•lf-, 1•2•2-llaliaHI ~= ::.-~~a~~~.1~i obtain the bnt llnanclng. up, new lawn1. 751-3476 FAIR PRICES ALWAYS! SEAVIEW PAINTING (114)411 .. lll S5 lo 115 hr. &42-9033 Stmct Odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrt Call now, 549-1878. Ctean-upi . landllC8$>lnO Painting, <*pentry, root-UllLIDllll & REDWOOD OECKS M&M 851·8e04 AC tia exp. Do work myself. R.J. HUFFMAN & SON Hauling. Tree Trim Ing, ~ardenl:1t, ate. Need an Attorney? Maybe TOM 673-2868 lt8MtU../letair Tij!!l llfriCt • CID I Exec aupport, top Reltl.554--0123 RemodlAdd. #306888 Free est. 642·9907 s ARR 5 8•4471 not. We can lhow you QUALITY WORK Fetr con&IOnl o;:: TUft.INt/W-dPr~·•nn Aceto for 1m1ll bull· sllllla-Word Proc. Prof 5 ..... • I Ila tlow to be yoor attorney & REAS RATES EXP'D ,,..... --··• nesaes: PR qtrlles .. sales re t s . Hr. o y . wk . FIRST CLASS-Quick dry 648-8 86 -..-944 Exp Gardener, Malnt, 11 l Hve money, time & · · lign. New remodel, plena, Oulctl euy revlalonl tax. FIS. (;ompl. set up & 497-6290 No agcy ree results. Free est. &. 111 SEQUOIA CONST -llc'd, ci.anupa, tree trim, trM bQbj!i Joes worry, So tall• Ttie Legal BRENT 048-2480 permlt1. Bond-ln1. Reuoriable 851· 1041 service. Reas. Fran, 1---------clua servlee. 750-9075 cuatomremodellng, p1t10 eat. Call P91e. 641·1098 & Small Moving Job9 E11fr•11 Route. Call tlAUTY Plllllll 401081. 851-3858. 540·5834atternoons .;~:;rriis~~~~~~dlv!~~:i: FIRST CLASS-Quick dry covrstdeck1. 966-2423 llf',HlllWlltt' MIKE648-1381 85 ·2252. 10%ol1wlad. Prompt, ri••t pro-lettla Wlattw Cltulat Acta1tical Hr/wk/mo 640--0888 result•. Free est. & 11' Brad Mowing EdaTno Twice I HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE -.-.-... -1------i felllonlll. 838-7149 L 1·t:1 them In" C iii claaa service. 750.9075 S! Gl11ala1 month'. s~o '10 $25. Furniture, Tr11h, TrMI w.Wiifllml'P""I____ Huber~ng-all typee SUNSHINE WINDOW • ;s• c11a1 .. 1 •ui•1 _ _ ""'3 "'415 NORM eRickW Rk: smill i()69. ••=• New·Aeoovw·Oec:tl• _ 'WE INSTALL CARPET' euy dogtl Grooming 546-9707 ..., • ., M Ue .. 411802 548-9734 CLEANING 842-1549 N-& ray. RemO<I .. *N~ cabinets, -blnet For S1 75 Sq Yd Cl Newpoft, Coate .... F•.. ~nt-lor n::t:n · " · t Lie #341012 ,,_ -· · · eohl, $10 any ll. Teectltlf 0-ll garden mllnt8fl· ltaH tUiH Refl 875-3176 .,, -......., WE WASH WINDOWS carpen ry. · . · lacing, bers &. lormlca Call Pete 772-1722. 2 • .,,1 exp. 546-2848 a~. Cleanupa, trM trim ROBIN'S CL NINO Irvine. · HANOI /STRIPPING Dennie Raymond Roofing Ablllty Bldrs 730•1900 countertops. 642-0881 '' ·-Muon Worl(: Block,brletl, VISA MC Scott 845-9325 New/Repelrt/RecOYWI Fut · Proleetlonll •-~Lall Ctatat "-acrttt Meuv dog11 Grooming tree est. Abe 548·8519· SERVICE: 1 thofoughty • Uc. 441488. 859-4102 Quality work gueranteea aa • C1binets & Carpentry -' concrete, etc. New/rpr cw.._. w-11-~rt"" In-Fr• •tlmate 848-7391 M Bl k achl. S10 anv az. Teecller Haullnn, c1•·n-up1, ltM ·••aft "-'·M. 540-0857 -k Lou --11 ~""' 1•1u ....._, _... ... "• ri-ay-Parklng Lot Small Jobs welcome Cement· uonry-oc 21 yrs e>Cp. S..e-28"8 1,1~;;;lng~ yd mal nt, ....,._, """ -~ · ...., ...... ...,.. 1tellallon. Reu. Conault· FIREPROOF ROOFING Repalrs-&Nllcoatlng Free est. 645-2003 W1ll1-Cust. work. Lie. lndacp Mike 648-6502 Elcperlenced HOUMkeeper • ant Alllgnmt. 581-8590 Clue A Flbergla11 -S&-=-S_A.,.ap,....,.,,hl_t _63_1-=-·4_1....,.99,-L_lc_ Cu=lry 1381057 Rob 547-2883 ~·ll . 'c ... 0-1 u:t.'l,_tMn2 Ing. Call triq FISH. #3e9713. •••••n _ .. a~ ~ UOVINd-Plutn/lttalr 842044 knoct11 often wtlefl you Dan Hallberg Grading Rem -repair. unique i Concrete, masonrye nat·vwXll fXPINd I lmmac=I ya;d, clran • Ouldl, Careful Service PUsfERPXtcAIRd UM reeult~lng Diiiy & Paving Co. Rel/comm Unusual work a specialty. work, loundttlona. lock. All Texturea & Acooltlc ups, • ~· r mm ng, Ouellty HooNkeeplng, •11• Lie. T138048 552.()410 a-t·~-. Int/ext. 30 y-. lteretulal Piiot Cleaallled Ad• to Lie. 3976804. 1142-1720 20 yrs lie. bonded. brick. Llc'd. 538-5013 Free est Kevin 673-1503 al1aplng. 4 4-0285 perlenoed, dependable. ..,... ---•• reecn ttie Orange Coat The laateat draw In the PalomboConat962-8314 Rod's concrete & muon· . Japaneu gardener. Pet 484--0280 •A·1 •YIM* Neat. Paul M5-29n __ .. _m... ________ 1 mer1cet. Welt ... a Dally Piiot ary, 9 years aame to-Trede your old atutt for Cleanup. maintenance, THE CLEAN MAKER Beat quality. 25 yr. exp. Homa, Apt1 &. Commercial Secr91arlll aentce: typing, Phone 842-5118 ClaeeilledAd.ClllTodey Slloe> et home. It'• -YI cation. Free eat. new goodlu with a aprlnklera. Free eat. 5yrt.a)Cp.Homelofllce Competftlverat•. Patchwork,llC'd&bond· copy, 91c. Fut .-vice. 842-5178. with clualfled 642-5678 714-840-1705 CIMllftecl Id. 842-5878 544-9038 refa IYlll 875-4853 lie. T-118,428 730-1353 ed. #140607. 838-9412. 875-4~51 780-8359 Litt I,,.., 30M ••2 t1 LN• f014 ltlt Wu... llM •11 ...... llM ltlt Wu ... 11111e1;w ..... llllltl1Wu ... Slll YOUR SECURITY FILE •HIT .. Lllll• OHlflllflll 11mAL lfflll Llql.t0t Clerk, lull time YOUR SECURITY FILE UiiPIWf DOES NOT PERMIT AC. No Credit Req1Jlred N-port area job alte Experlenc:e helpful. Good night1 lncld ~nd1. Apply DOES NOT PERMIT AC-wltele9"0ne eltpefi.noe. CESS TO THIS FUNC-738-05229-87dytbkr need 1 : exp • d typt~ablllty. Proficiency 1888 Placent11. C.M. CESS TO THIS FUHC-p.,menent FIT pot11Jon • HOIOSCOPE TION Foond amell older I I II wtth re1 10 k-"" Wkdyt AM. TlON OFFICE. Sllarp In downtown Laguna black m-•-"""'· 7•4, Vic ...... ,, , .... IDlll Pl nter wa paperer. u . _, w7 n.....A ........ -"""' 5Hll 5 $ 8 I " r . c u s T 0 • touch. XLNT Company ....... _, ___ • ..,, pereon -..,,,. Beectl. Appllcatlonl llC-BY SIDNEY OMARA Beecll/lndlanapolll & At· 11.af PHllEITI DIAN-mature only. P.,m. ~ •. lnform.i offloe. -11 --• numbera. MacGregor cepted 9-4 or cell Lyn Ian ta, H.B. 536·3188 No credit check PIT, own hrt. $400/mo. C.M. Call MIUle after 8 Earn $450 to l800 per Yecht Corp, 1831 P'-l· Burtce °' Mw.ha Vlcldor home. 893~541 •111 3ee. CaH Cllllornla 645-4411 am, 845-5800 ~ If you 118119 ••ta. tie. Coeta M..a. appt. Ttie Laguna Bank, Thursday, July 7 work. Clltlel, Bkr,Toll frM wegon or van and enloy Painter, experienced, 30~ Forell Avt ARIES (March 21-April 19): Emphasis on travel, YOUR SECURITY FILE 1·800-422·7375. MlllLTUTI llllUL lfflll ~l~r.wl~o~~!i ref'a. 850-8085 leave 494-9474. DOES NOT PERMIT AC. 83-400 needed Immediately Bkkp'g & typing, call 548-7058 btwn 11AM & ~· -····--MTiii-iiiiiiHii-.n;;r--long-range plans and important communications. CESS TO THIS FUNC. ~-------pert/time tor Prlnceu 979-1785 for appt. 5WU" -Youcancompleteassignmentwhichhasdirecteffect TIOM Found am111 yng •1rt111n, Hooae PrO<lucti. 1 Col-1"y""'o,.,.u=R,....,,S""e=c.,..,u=R=1TY,,..,.....=F1,.,.L=E _3_P_M_~ __ d_•_YI_· ___ PAIT/lmlYUl-t needed f« bU8y Newport long hair wilt le cat, Blul11 T .D.'i 4021 gate Palmot1 1119 company. DOES NOT PERMIT •c. -~UTOMOTIVE Wanted edult1 over 22 Beac:tl edvertlllng egen.. on your future. Highlight versatility, willingness to 868-385 " -i Send ~ 10 JN area. 714. 644-1271 LI. llmD CESS TO THIS FUNC· ..... who enjoy working wtlh cy. r : · · check source material. Favorable response will be FOUND-Sm green parrot ·~ It I Olll TION Groomer will train Import experience a youth. Muat be well Baker, 1te 540. 3857 received to inq11iM1. 711 v'-'nl~ T'" .. rln and -• • H. I In e)Cch• ...... for kennel ,,__.....,,Cell Darryl be-groomed, per.onabte, • Birch St, NB. 92660. -J "" "" s --I 1 &. 2 d Conveleacent 1101plt1 • -..... ·-·· """"H"'-mot"'·•t s·-.. TAURUS (April 20-May 20); New approach Hamilton, .M. 842-1295 peel non •t n Costa Mela. Fun of PIT. help. 20301 Riv.rtlde Or, tween 9AM-3PM at ,........,,.,... '" °'· -· RECEPTIONIST. Pref TD'11lnoe ;949 Good Salary and ben-SAH. Hrw 8~. UY IUYll ., 175 per week. Call Exper. Cllnlc Selling necessary-income potential is heightened if you YOUR SECURITY ALE R.E. Broker Bd Realtors efhs. Write Ad No 853. --------...... "IYll 2-Spm, 846-7021 (Uk for Buay Pllonea. Some stress originality. willingness to break from past, DOES NOT PERMIT AC-642-2171 545-0811 ........ -Sherron). E\191. Call Karen Thomp-od-~ s . ct• 'd··-" . . CESS TO THIS FUNC-Dally Piiot, P.O. BO)C Station IMM avallabte, ••• .... ton, 973-1727 outm ~vncepts. tress m lVl ws.ut.y, tnnovative TION Found, Young Fe Hll Cell u1 -AM FUNDING 1560, Cotta M .... CA own cilentele neoeuary. fllf lm material and willingness to pioneer a project. Leo is Germ Shep. BeeclltHell. RES. IMC, 952-9001. 92626--0560 Alk lor Judy 640-84-43. Medical Alllltant. flt. We ml/Wllllm RECEPT.IOllST involved. 847•3968 Autllortzed loan origin· ------,-.. --.. ---------.,,...--are loolclng '°' an ex-Malle 8111,. 11 helpl"" 11o'1or S & l 's. Banke. Help In Legune Beech perlenoed motivated per-... GEMrNI (May 21-June 20): Past planning, llyou'veloatorfoundapet Cornpetl119, low lnt.,•t Opening lor IUll time ex· Medleal Office. Prevtoua eonwtiolaneat.trlm&a youth cerriert promote C~NDLECORPOAATIOM. efforts are now due to pay dividends. lntuitlon is on cell Pet Hot I lne, rates& teea. 30yr1. Axed perlenced melntenenced Experience dHlrebly. non-vnot<er. Muat ha119 tllelr own "teblllhed and 1ntern1t1ona1 high l hi h d tak 1·800·824-7797 & ad"•stable 111. 2nd & peraon lor 2 Feahlon Call 494-1051 X·R-• v-lpuft~ture route1. Mature, OU1golng. technology company It target, eye e is g an circumstances e sudden ru R 11 s -, '" -· '"" ettrec11ve perentel type ....., .._ Lott: Sm/beige long hair 3rd. T.D.'1: Commerc!IJ 111and eta torH. Houtek t.mlle 5 certificate. W•tmlnater currently Mekp.,, • ,.,_ tum in your favor. You will be at right place at crucial Cat, altered M. Harbor R.E. 1oan1. 844-5070 EOE deys :-'we.. Newi>on Medical Group. Call Mrt. ~~.'\,..f':::_~02~•11 ~~~°"' S: moment. Stress confidence and knowledge of how to View Homes area. Gen-WIDOW HAS SSS lor Dentel Beach erea. 84&-0089. Tucker 893-1321. Peraonal Secretery to .............. . use material at hand. erou1 ·-•rd. 760·8e61. T.D'1, s10.ooo up. No IEOIFnllllT lnataller/Tralnee position• Medk:ll Prealdent of Laf.':! A• Reoeptlonl9t, you w111 CANCER {June 21-JuJy 22): Diversify, stress lOSTCAT credit check, no penalty. Full time Ull11ant to•• Avell. Penona wanted f111Tlff1IE Beach 8Ylln8ll p an-end dlrec1 Ill ln- hu.mor and get "in touch" with one associated with REW••1 Call Denison Auoc. ceptlonlit. Mature, Ex· with IOfM e6ectrlcal ex-lmmed. p/tlme po1lt1on call 497-4888 · coming celll, and greec an 673-7311. perlenoed, for bu9Y ot· 1 perlence for wortt on Fire ell for Pl tic S and dlrecit villtors. In ad-special interest group, organization. Toss aside BurmeM Mlle, Dark Brwn 1~1~1-1-,~.~ .. -... ---5~1-11~ no.. 545-4553 and Security System•. ::_,ed In• Hunt~~= ""Peat--=c,...on-trol-,-----i ditlon, you wtll provide shyness, refuse to let pride block progress. Gemini, w/golden eyee, wearing -DOOR PERSON-2 Yrl• Cel1Lorlat714-730-1472 Beech. POlltlon raqulrea ROUTE PERSON, wlll gentf'•I offloe IYPPOtl Sagittarius natives play sigru' ficant roles. blue collar w/lnltlal l.D. *ftltm FIAllD * experience In ell ph.... train, lpC>ly In penon: wllk:h lncludel oper'llng tag. Big Canyon. July 3. Productlonwortt. mul1 be ex.per preferred. Flexible J011nWeyneTennl1Clubll of front ottlcl, lncludlng 1240 Logan Ave .. C.M. mall. typing cor -LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on friends, hopes, 549-4368 veraatll• Aceuor Y hr1. Apply In pereon: E. accepting appllcet1on1 bllllnn and oollectloni. In· Unit I. reapondenoe, operating · h d h · h•A ed 1 bTt y '11 h Gads, 2l00 W. Ocean· for tile poaitlon of Club ··• ol1lcel mec:hlna 91c wui es an e1g ....,n sa es a 1 I y. OU smas Lott: Female Calico Cat Hooae. lrvtM. 986-1622. front, N.B. Secretary. Muat be ex-dlvldu91 choeen will be Photographer need• no-· · down barriers of restriction -people will look to you 8125. Minion VJo atea. * T e L E p H 0 N E YOUR SECURITY FILE perlenced and hall9 pro-detell oriented end hell9 ure model. C911 Mark Minimum requlrementi In·' as an innovator and one who overcame odds to s100 '-•rd. 859-4T38 WORK-Hou•••IYH or DOES NOT PERMIT AC-le11lon11 appearance. 101M knowledge 01 back 141·2411 lfl B:30PM elude 1 .,_ receptlonlat achieve goa.J. Popularity increases, you could receive Loet: F GrNt o-. bleck. 1tudent1 work pan-ume. cess TO THIS FUHC-Good typing lklll• r• olflol. 15 hra per ~; experience. accurate m1111ng 714, CdM. Look• yOUr home H50 wk. TION Electronk: 8eoch quired. Dictaphone ex· morning hrt. For more In· ~ _,,, typing of 50 wpm, and.-. special commendation. llke Lab. Call Jay, Artllur848-5887 Tech, Irvine b8MCI com-penencepreterred.Apply ~s~~~.n 7~_:~~ EARN UP TO , c.tlent communication VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Scenario highlights 873-8004or875--55~1. AIOlllTAIT F/O pany IMMlk• 1>enct1 tech In peraon, Frkl:'f· July 8, EOE. We ere not an $1•.0D per day , lkllla. change, travel, variety and boost in career and REWARD $100. Lott Po11tlon wttll Npt Bch w/2 Y'I e)Cper, trouble 9 am -2 pm. 1 71 Jam-egency. "'°"'""" _ _._. Candle otters an elloellent morale, Gain indkat.ed if you put thoughts on paper, female Calleo Cat In vie. Property Mgmt firm. Out 1110~~· 1d1~;' 1 & borM Roed, Npt Bell. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' -::'w '"'~f;t ii ' •tarting lalary, company if you exp~ feelings in frank, revealing manner. of eeooni. & 4tll Av.. standing career op-•n•..... rcu t 1 or L • • • I n g --1-• 1 paid medical end dental , Ge Sa CdM. Cell Tina 873-3858 portunlty -0 /l. AIP. AIR CRT's, printers & mod-Ag. n' IR. 0. p' I 0n11 I .-. rul-11. limelful line. I bel)efltl, tuition relm· mini, gittarius and another Virgo figure or M0-2700. wllll emplluls In flnand9i em• to component le\191, needed for large bull-Comp1nlon1, Jive Ina, 1 .. .,.1 burtement, end an 09-prominenlly. anll'ftl•, 11 you're bright Salary corT)menaurate neea lnduatrlal park •In eldee. L.V.N1, RN1. Now ·-.::,. 1 ponunlty for growth. For LIBRA Se 23 ~ 22 H __ , ... ill llEWllll c w/exper. Send reeume Or• ..... Co. Elc,_. In Interviewing 11 l.agune AU-W. _, conalderatlon, contact ( pt. -..J<:t. ): ome respou:w) 'ties with prior F/ •11• to ISi PO Box 18378 -..,.. ,._... Nuratng Service. 1 I « 1 1, 1 Loll Scarlet Macaw. Latge perlence, We'll llelp train : • IMllng & publk: reletlonl 7: • • • • • Bruce or Sandy. ;;a~~~C~~:'~aryhi~~la~~ l~~:i!e en~::! ~:: ... ~~ .. Big Canyon. ~= a:sv:=,~~ C!ii ~~~~.~~b~~: Attn: ~~~ka. pleaH call 714/494-272. I UtfTED~S (l14)llt•l1ll overrome-define ideas, make clear your intentions Pt11tul1 Dn _5_5_3-08_4_o_____ noa••···-Legel Model• I P.O. 8111941 ' EquaJ~tyEmp4oyet. and "be in touch" with those at a distance. Another AO .. m PAYUU tor busy Coeta ,_..... 01• ORANGE *lllELS Liii ~CA ml2 Libra plays key role. +flTl IATE+ Minimum 2 yraexperlenoa. f~. Salary+ bofMle. Call IHIEI* UOIPT/1TPllT SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll learn truth LARGl:ST & MOST RE· Dependable P.,eon, Pro-Tern. M-F, 5.48-2313 COAST --------Newport Beedl edvenl .. LIABLE OMI Oonatructlon loan . , MALE & FEMALE ii---------1 Ing egency needl atlarp, concerning fiscal responsibility of one who wants you 972-1000,24 houra D t"r. 10 IC'"" Expanding Credit Cerd WE NEED NEW Faces tor _ energetlcpenon for tront I . .. Pla di d rawa. , . -·· Co. located In Irvine, hel o•tY ... --- -desk. RequlrH good to 'stgn papers. y waiting game, 'g eep for A11r. yng lady e11111. tor twr 11 c· P. ~~:o 1 conectlon poaltlon n p1_,,.,,11nmo<1e11no CIN1V p11one penonlllty & ec-additional information and refuse to be cajoled into luncll, dinner eacon lor ng on o.. avellabl•. Applicant PILOT jobalnO.C.Clll: curate ipelllng. Mutt what you instinctively know is a "wrong" action. bullneaemen. l39-3060. Pullman, Cott• M.... lhoold haw minimum 11..-i • type 85wi>m. Call t>e- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Facts are on CIRCUS OF Malalttrttht ln't YI'• collec:tfon experience Hu an Immediate a,>enlng .. , .... !!'!.!'!!! ..,._, ._.. hra of 9-l2 to•. Your side des ite ob· ti. f h tte ts to Salary commenaurate with with good aldp tracing In tile Legel Ad119rtlllng .... , _, appt. 85 1-3066. p }eC ons 0 one w 0 a mp 1assa~E experience. 5.46-2030 eblllty. Bank Oard and Depll1ment lor. reliable, ... .... NEED TO EMH 291(. YAL'V Relief receptlonllt on buly cite legal precedents. Stand tall, adhere to principles, • CRT experience llao r• mature end reac><>ntlbte ,..,.....,.....,.------"Y'IN __, \191 front deel<, p1u1 p11 ..,.. have faith that law ultimately will justify your stand. 719 NO. HARBOR BLVD Apt. Manager Couple quired. Contect D. Rawl-petton wtth to4'M VDT Model• • --In outlet allop. Ex- Caprioom native helps you obtain necessarymaterial. FULLERTON ~:::-= :1,;o-1! l nJl'· 1180-4 143, or experience. Applicant * lllELS * FotourOINcill .... T-perlence nece1ury. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19): Focus on health, ll0·1112 bonua -t-apt, no Pel•. 6 0·4142· Mon-Fri. attould Ihle> he119 good * 111111 * W (11•) tl1 ..... _84_5_-33_59 ___ _ ... • H .al 842-4907 ~dyt. IS:30-4:30. phone pertOnlllty and MALE& FEMALE ---------Reeld M I wall ment. Aries, Libra individuals figure in scenario. MASSUSSES Banking perlenced. 50% com-u typing, t91'1 key and we NEED NEW FACES lor Printing: Proof Reader kept 18 unit ept comptek employment, ability to complete longstandint assign-l ATTRACTIVE Forwtgn oar mecneruc. ex· general omc. lkHla, auc11 ent eneger or Y 'll be ·----.. -• mtlllon. •~2.'"1"". .ork""" with tile public:. A pl-t In _......,I"" Production A11l1tant In pr1me HB erea. ~ ou rid of emotional burden, unnecessary TO SERVE YOU _...,_ -"'" " ~ ""' lld c 111 _..,,...,, ,.,.,.._ .. ,. • submit reemw to· PO expenses will also be ell·m; ... ,.t.ed. You "'·ow can get we .,. • premier per. , ... .-pay cller anltd va aF . JObllnO.C.Call: kno,wledge ol a.'YP•· Box 1313 Huntl~ton ..... " llCOITl/lllELS forming Independent .... ·-• cenM '**81(y. or Mii no. Piii• up cam-• . .• ready to "go places.'' Outcall ONLY 835-9199 bank IO<>lllng for an ao-PAIT·lm Wiii more Information call llW Y• WllT .,. 1 mutt. Dey lhlft, lull e..cn. ca. 921MT. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18); Focus on emo-counting clerk with 1 ';eet opportunltlH 1vell1bl• 842-5871. ext. 332. TILllT AllllY time. Laguna Hiiia. Aelteurent tio responses, willingness to get to heart of matters ttiere. Diii 7H/838·8126 count payable u -Tlmea Clrculatlon De-Pllet 141-1111 T.,..._ Hu lmmedi.fe a,>enlngl nal HEAVEN and llow to get acc:ountreoelvebleOfao-•hh the Loa Anglea lr~tlHlt 951-HOO. Aak for ...,.....,t4Fltai and intensified love relationship. Vigor makes fordlreotlona. perlenoe.Femlllarltywlth pertmenl I n our 330 .BaySt. omce PIT aendwlchattop,3hra tor e xperienced comeback, you feel capable of imprinting sytle and Pay zero Income taxH i. G.L. and EDP ayatem• door-to-dOOf newepeper Cott• Mele, CA 8282& General office 1klll1 -pr day, 18 yr• « older. preferred: delving deep· to obtain previously hidden inf or-gaily lnf0fl!\1tlon trte. and reconoltl1tlon1, UMt Nl8I Pfogram. Guaren· Equal ~ty Emptyr typing. Wing, blfflng, Bu<fl Subl. ·2030 Quell, Line Cook• ~ For recorded meuege, ind llabllhy experiance teed hourly wage plul .....,.,,,_.....,,.~,,....,...,,..,,.,,....,~.,,. p11onee. Sett motivated, olf Campua Or, NB. Egg1/Egga/Egg1 mation. pllone 873•6518. preferred. Outlet wtH In-comml11lon. Houra: 9 LEGAL SCTRY/OFC MGR 0.-5, 5 dayu w.tll. Start· --------Broiler Coolla PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Follow through on elude rapon preperatlon, AM·2 PM. « 4 PM • 9 TRAINEE Npt Bdl R.E. Ing 1a1ary reteted to good Ste Clllpper Wed-Sat. f t . . y . . will I i On •01• account balancing, poe-PM. Trllnlng It ptOY!ded. end Bui llllge11on fifm gen tr al office u -You don't need • oun to h ·6p, trs unpression. our U\Suncts prove accurate II ana. .. .. Ung. end O.L. lk:k•t• Potentlel to eern ssoo h 1 • op• n I n g Io r p • r 1 • n c • • c a 1 1 "drew fut" when you llOO Bayalde/Npt 8ch concerning territori.al rights, property values. Tell IATlllAUll IUTI preparation. May train on plu1 per week. For an In· motivated, energetic, •11· 71443-0953 for appt. ptaoe an ect In ttie Dally Equal ~tyEmptoyer · .. the"experts"togot.heirownway.You'llknowwhat Be your own bou. computorayetemlorai:-tervlew, Call (714) perlenced ltg1!1otry. PtlolWentAdllc.lnow•--------- to do, when to do it and how to communicate with Catemeran mfg mOlda, counting Input. 957•2391• ext 1~ ~~-= =no~~ ic.jij~i•l•llfllect•Ml•l14l~iiiiii1Mi/ll42iii~iMiii71.•lliiiiiii.iiiiwleil,l1 iedllil84a-lli17ii .. ilil71i11 proper authorities. over 100 hulla, 1 comp!. II you 111w theM qulllft· Ops>ty for edvenoement \ ---------------------;---------,_.:..bO.:.•:...:t_. teoo0:.:..:.:...:.·_1_-3:::...50_:_·8:...:5:...:6_11 1tlon1, pleeM Call Cindy F« Cl..ifted Ad f« qua!. lndlvtdull wt1o ~ C.-udal Liit a ,.... JOM ~I a ,.... HM I HOT l1£M I ?1:.&:J,.~~ ~. on.: A8:,.'°: ::=:'::: w:i::= KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZESI, lntal1 2111 I tt 4 Gitt .... I __ .,....,...__.--. orOW'lh, challenge 1nd Delv Piiot to teem. COnt.ct Mr. An-•,.,_A Bl,. Found· Gray M eel lllTIHPllflYlll tllotflent benefit• and AO.VISOA drue.~ Naw1>0ft Beecrl, approx •rtltoltnlntM .... t u., (Ruailen Blue or 11., .... 1tttr. oompeneatlon. 842-M71 • 4·* 1(1 It aatae ftOOt. Aree.S-anyoneplcklng &urmete),C.M.&45-2191 1101( lnve11manl. Call F~~"{011u,111w~ In Tvrn key fOf furniture. up• cat. plMM lfke 11c.1__________ ~ ,.._. Q-... - AntlQuM. ate. "2.800 per no. and contact Htwpon Found Luo AphlO, Vic 0.,,. •• f 47·11&22 mBD(JtADO I ·1 p·1 . A - mo. groaa. Pr•tlglou1 Beech Polloe. Capl11rano, Dene Point, .MOVING TO FLORIDAI DU .. ., II y I at ·· · ·''' • • '• · · · · · · ·" oent.,, emple parlllng. 494..()868. Clothing conalgnment i.. ., ~ ". With high tralllce. fNU\ ADS Found: M tan/blk Af hen, atiop, CdM ..... _. yr1. c.O.c , M/F : : 94e.ae79· uunu M gqld/Wht RetrYtvtr 975-M23 97wsao Beeufy Seton: Manager ... lltrlal IDE fRE£ mix. M blk L.ab 2 Cf'IOkt Sete, L .... , Preclllon me· Colmototiy:t. Muet l'laW 1111.Y Pl.IT lntala nll M r=t: =~t =1~"~1. -:=: :::=n1. ~:.~· 11' ... lll .. 1288 • 21& ~rt w. lrv1ne Cal: etot>Ped. M Gold«\ ~ we11 aqu•Pt>ed. oomp19te. YOUR SECURITY Fii.£ N thu11 u .., aree. lncldl omc., from trtever, gold. M l!lmlwht 7111..071e: DOES NOT PERMIT AO-OW aocep-..oe app.ucauODI 1640/mo. 1138-tO&e ........ ,. La Apeo, , Oo~ m111. ......... CESS TO THIS IJUNC-for District Manager to super-so Santa Ana· 5000 11f + bm. Numerous cat & kit• TION • IQ. !nod yatd n, 405 a 66 ten• avall. now. NB OJetult* 4111 IWI.,. VlSe newspaper carriers. trwy. Hvy pwr. Load dra, Found black female Anlmel8helter, tffMeea llSDGIATE w ~ Salary commensurate with NM 84&-7512 Coelc~. Ill Iba. Vlcx. Or, CM. 844-3856 PILL . • T1lbertl 8 rookhur11. found: Poodle mil(, b4IC ID AP ~. ~~· experience. Company ben-. •ins up. ms ft lndu..-ees.5592• • , • m ~ound.&~~ efitl plus bonua opportunity · ::,a1c:c:.·,\~~~n= Found blectt l•I> female, Megnolla/lndlanapot11, llYESTlllT 1~.Send~ Muat have V tat! ' · l!leach 142 2834 W1. Vic. t'elrvlew I HB. tee-3048. and talary ~ta an, I OD · " · :_1~~ grey collar. Found: Red cnow ,_ •Aepor1ecHflgufeinoome to J, Baker, ae&7 tlrOll w..,n or pick up with/lhell. Lett a ,.... JIM · Marlnett Sdlool. can to ...... ~. St, autt• 540, He, t2teo. Mileage allowance lncluded. : ro:;;;a. A a:r;;; ilil:P 'ound ~ Lab, grey la9ntlly. 641·1032 or •Canwnuptot10K1 A l · ._ ... _ Mix Turtle Roell itv t yr Collar. v~. Felr'Mw ' 845o03M>. month. c..... to Go-Carte PPJY 1n penon, weea.Wlya, AGO 11-14 EARN ... TO $75.00 PER WEIK 1 Wt llOW hlYt 15 optnlftii fO{ JOUni tliltf be1m1 lo S«Uft rtMitn IOr 'flit Or1111t Cont 0"'1 Piiot. Our crtwi ttlrt 1t 3;30 11>111. ml wor• w11ta 8:30 p,i., _,.ya. On S.tllrltly ... wot\ a 1.-. MOit hollrt. VOii will Wll llllllJ tri,s w pt1res, .._ wHtl eatflilW ,ow1 own .. money ... lhtrt Is llO dtl!Ytrlftt or colllcr.on •A ln.olwd. H '°" art lftl•tsttd. pltnt cal Ml, f ~ .... (714) 548-7051 ~ .-----~u ., \ I ' .. "• ~ ., J : • - 1-' . I ~ox. Ch orii.ln, · 11e1 w 11 '0 n 8 • 3 0 • 8 3 • FOUND: ~d pu&fl •"'911 =•1e1 "°" wt.I..., .. ,... : 3PM to &PM at 330 West Bay .~ant ::.ao .. 2~1 '~1~r:fM ~C:: rr;~:14 ~-=. .... 1 ::~="it~ :!£'-a5r ·. St., Co.ta Meea. l;--;i' --·· ..:::==========i==;;;;:;;--====~;.;.;.;,,.;=--------.J.;;:-======:;;;==:L.:=======-===::L-·~··~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~-·:.:.:·--;~··~··~--~ .. ~ .. ~ .. ~··~··~ .. ~ .. ~·J.1 ................................ 111&: ~ -' . . ' I ' . \ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WedneSday, July 6, 1983 .~~----~~=--~----~~~~--~~~--~--------,~--!""---~--...... ----------...... ---------- TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS t Grieved e Otlnk 10 Sallstv 14 Vlbfan1 15Threed US Yitai point 11 Stormed 18 Outlaw 20 Unit 21 Employs 23 Pain reflever 2C Coursed 26 Pacific Coast: 2 wds. 28 Barrow boy 30 Garment part 31 Puaages 32 Petting 36 Fashion lad 37 Makes pies 38 A Stooge 39 Forced' C2 Diminish 44 Elements 45 Mutiny 46 Requital 49 Track o"icial 50 Vote In 51 Display 52 Spread hay 55 lce~ream flavor 58 Avoid 60 Feminine ending 6 t Refatlve 62 Purview 63 Handy 64 Alcott girt 65 Velocity DOWN 1 Dear: II 2 Dog: Her 3 Bank • Tlmeol day 5 lnlers 6 Classified 1 Sculls 8 Favoring 9 Being 10 Scribbles 11 Originate 12 Condurts 13 Put forth 19 Gram d811y 22 As:an weight 25 Legal man abbr 26 Made out OK 27 Simulates PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 28 Lodging 29 Reputation 30 Onlano and Huron 32 Menu 33 Beg 34 Yuletide 35 Girl's nickname 37 Vlltage 40 Ghost 41 -Clara 42 Dispositions 43 -Marla 45 Border 46 Write again 47 Very best 48 Hearth deity 49 Bicuspid 51 Liquid measure 53 Up 54 Escrow paper 56 Truck area 57 Shade 59 Fold !n' k 1111 till J tilt ...... ....... Till ........... , ..... laprtt4 ...... .....,.. ·~;c ...,,._ a 0oor "°"tr.. '-'1 ,.....~.,, 11· aw uratt vo, 4 o;t. Putt Mll Iii 1111 .,111111 ... IHI ' llfl fernlly .. llOI. Mew. ..,. ooncl. t OMC. YH''. Trallt, DU Cftefry iillc'tr moior '- hH. V'/ duty ... 11.,1 **"enwWd '..,. xt,..., '5000.1•50 .............. dely, '111t E ~~~~ ... HOH cpe, 6'cyl ' Ort ,,.,.. Ofyw, Niii Jdnt, 1 111 .,.. °"*In -pot1 ~. S. INlflllgef. Camino for l*'t• only, 11000 """· '*"'°· ~50 obO~ .-'tt WI\, 1*24". tlque iewelry, pr ced llill LlJ flit rebn motot ,..._Meo & " 1 AlFR~TOA r ea1o n1ble. PP -,;;: ' ' '10 280C Mettlllo grwi .. 74 vw ,_ Llke new 2 dr ftOtl ~-213-3M-5234. fa' liltiOlt &e =· LITI IOOY WOfiik P.P. 17,000. llrtt & cMdl #It Oc,ncs. 111$ ' • ets -•U:;;tll •••• Monoh\11, Mein & Jib, Up to~ off~.... Saltt..strvtc.LaMlno 87M181. '4500 511-3l24. ' ----·-• trallt. M8$. 97Mt21 Pinttrtplng ... Ml-1221 wun.r,c11anwoni•c to"rnarm.-.i2&J. ,..cATAiliAAAM LiniOMwoiij( RJY'CARVER ·11 260 ... 11. 14soo. 14,....,..., 115. dr~-ON. C Hn Ukt ,_, 841 4312. 1978 SOI cat, XJn1 concf, Up 10 ~Off YoU' tat, fi""tll 1 '-' ~~ .r~ .c\A/ 912..()CMI 7,000 ml, IV lmm.c """1 work • good S 78. 20" COior TV AM/FM .._..., IONI --Trailer Ptn1trjplng ....... 1nt ""~".11\..t: lllVIH '75 280C. t ownr, loaded, ... to ~. 183111. S.8· ..... 85 ' ·-F ,._ ... ~ICJ'4\llllt<ll•ff•'" mint •8"00 pp 873-5082 213'.3M-Olt5 Radio, Sttteo "9cord wtUI M1100a end bOat .......... Pl ~·-•'"11.,.,..., • • • · ' IW1. laiftllll Al4 OllYercontOle.ACA.Per-COYW. Avtlll tor """9o-1--~ &4<>·1129 r.. vw TMno. pert.et -t.Gt ~. '300: CM9t of Uon In '°""lain V*t. '*" ln'imeCl or '78 •SOSL, GIMt1 2 '=· thrvout, 12800. M 1·2521 2 x 8 reet...ooes deck~I OraW91't, ,., .... s •·" 1 1aoo.eontac1J-.-r:~·domeetlo°'' 11 • ...... ,,. ex121s-.~52 • 55 per ftll Cal •· '" ·• 14 ........ • oy • .. .... "• . "F• •· dr-• 2 ~--top d-71<4-751-t111 ....... 1-......... 7.,,."''"•" ... 2""' '---------r ...... OOd '"'"t 1317 ·-' .,,_ .. · -•· -~ -...,.., ..... °' .... t .... 1. ' 4 VW W•tf·Ha P-~ -.. · -• 145; Eltetrlo Dfl/«, Ken· 1"'87 Colvmbl• 11· ... 1 •aa11T -..... c ...... I more, xlnt cond. •rs: ... 1 .. 000 _ .... 9-"7... • ... 11"""v1n· •• , 770 220 DleNI, IUtO, camper, abeOlvltly ' ~l t .. I. Redwood patio tat, "' .,.,., ........ ... OLUI 11t••1 mech'I xlnt. Beet offtt. mint cond tn & out. fllll ctialM, 2 chelrt. new 1880 LASER, Ilka new, Ml """ • ·75 2002: 4 ep0 .. air 640•1280. S3t50. 831·3011. 61;f0om equlpmanl: cuthlont. 1100: Weber rect, 2 .. 111, Harlcen Ill TllGll cond. (033NJL) '78 •50 IEL. Mini Con· '77 Dathtf. 38,000 ml , air. Omeg1 B&W enlarger, typt8ar·B-O\ll.S25.12• btock1, meny atrat • '79 320!; • epO., low dltlon, Orig Ownr, man tn/rf, CUI tepe Oreyt•b timer, treye. bot· ClatrbrOOk, Apt A. Cott• $15oo/obo. 87M764 Biil mu ... (5<40X1V). 119.800. 8'40-0838 dectl. S3995. 981-8509 tlet, tank•. etc. Rarely M.... • '79 7331· 4 apd loaded 1 t-,--------uMd. $150. 720-1820 • 27' Sall Boat. Mull NII. 1971U.XBI' " · 908.9 MB,tullyloaded,IO 78 Rabbit. mint, rad on 2 drttt feclct, 4 bet<er t $9,000. 873·&09e. • .... 320I.. ml, S38 000. 457-1557. rad, &el< ml, runt tuper· FOf tale: Lanter blk/wtlt rectct, flWelry cue & 4 <N • ~ ep0., eunroof. ' bl. 12950/obo. muet -· phologrephlc enlarger lhtll dlepley wltlght Sett '82 Colvmbta, ChtllenQer, ( 1ANV203) Alk •bout tile money -64M533 and othtt darkrm ec-Offer• e7~S3H(tci-e) with Newport moorTng. • '80 7331: euto., loldad. can tave you 11in1-'bur1---------CHtorle• )(Int cond · 24'. 114.800. Call WlllY (1BSf118) purcnaM&IM!Npltnt. '78Sdrocco,Whl/blk.~ Only uMd'3 Um.. s12s: 3" x 8 f1 hand made Chi-9"-1019. USED CARS A-TRUCKS • ;11 5281; tuto .. aunroof. • .. .... carro .... am/fm caae. Erte644·69951ft'5pm. neetwoolrvg.P9tfcond. •77 Endeavour 37. enu... COME tNORCALLFOR (1COB911) ••n exit cond, $4250. $3001 840-Maa. ,.,, __ • ·e 1 833ctl; 5 tpd., 875-7272 f'"teTn HU 78'K-OOhTac\Of cat H lllng. Peclfle N.W. r-llPUlllL toad9d.(1CLH374) 13010uat1S1r..i '79VWRabbl14dr 51pd CU1t kluene, I:;, Old. 114 k.lngtlz:t ....;.,., 11j ex: =~~ ::.~~f'no ";: COfml«·O.LHlo • '82 3201: euto .. tunrool. NEWPORT BEACH am/tm new r8dt"9. good lhotl. 77S-05e9. tru. E•l•t• u te . anchor wlndlw, dinghy 182~~vo. }1~~2NS:ffA.: auto .. low IH·IM cond. S2995. 4119-1"7 Fr• kitten•. 9 wlll Old, 9e3·1M15 1115PM. dtvltt. Mar lntllct HUNTINGTON BEACH mli.t (1EJA474) ..... • .......... '80 vw Pick Up. Olteel, 5 blk/wht. nHdt good AM IS H HANO MAO E propane cootllng tytlern, Nl .... li Mt·HI 1 • '82 7331: 5 ep0., loaded. 1970 220 Olteel, 4 dr, apd llr. am/Im, mint. ho mu. 8 7 5. 9 2 1 1, OUIL T: l<lng u .S•OO. VHF, OS. more. 179·500 (7355637) 11-tank, AM/FM cueetlt, S:W95/Flrm. 4119-1997. 548-5205 831-38e9 Owner. 20f..eee-8801' WI PAY lW llLW 111-1111 air cond. 21 ml P« gal. ------- YOUR SECURITY FILE .a•1y ··-n ·eo Cal 27• loedad w/xtrea, ,. .... .... 208 w. 111. Santa Ant $4750. 633-9588..., Ci> - -t>etttf than new. Reoe or c1~ .... s d ~ DOES NOT PERMIT AC. Tlctlettfonala.GOOd CNIMS37,000.54'4·2820 A&JIUllll -un ay Mldt ... '83500SEC,fulty ·~.~ CESS TO THIS FUNC· ...... Cllhy 5<49-2642. NITlll/llUll LARGE SELECTION OF Io Id t d , I 5 5 . 0 0 0 . TtON FrM Klll•n• & HOBIE 18, Great cond. ·i 4iOHerborBlvd. NEW &I D BMW'SI 675-2118. SiemeM Molhtr. SMI Embroldttad Pllc:hta of IHI, r11dy to 1111. Polnl.875--4275. fevorlt• mountelne and ltlr/I OCHI, 12000.1 COSTAMESA Mutltalll '83500SL.1Ulty F horlel. Send 25'. FOf 548-81<48 Ml-'100Ml•1411 IO Ide d · SU, 0 0 0 · ............. ret lovtng kltttnt, 1 M. 1 catllog. 9192 El Colo-Liii ID 675·2119. -• Ft, 8 wtct. 963.()()80 redo Av., F.V .. 82708, J24 Siii Baot. 24' •leap••. W&ITlll VOLUME SALES lli~ll-a .... Wl..,.......'1...----.l._,.l .... t7~1 SOUTH Fr .. to good home. Blnda lrvtnt country Club menl· :~~~c~:~~~:':!; GOOd, clean uted cert: SERVICE & LEASING QC ™ ovr new iOW 0011n Cocker Soan, Fa, 8 mo, bttsttlp for tale c.n...,.. cond. Only trtth wettf prtftf 1879-1983 Buld<t, 3670 N. Charry Ave. --+---4~-+----t lhote.882-2704/8:30 &wllfldt,213.434•1805 Mllad 116.500 or otler Jeguare, TR1t &. LONG BEACH l,lle.4&.P.1, VIUIWllll T good 3031e95.;875 day•' Porechal but 1ny modet (No.Chlrrye.dl·o405) Flnanc!dGAv9ll1ble On ~91t7t~531.1t1omt01h°'1. ·=.°!J'1~~ 1J~r~1nc;-:J~~~= 303-781-1 11eevee. • ~:'J,1~:r'c11J.0:, ~:~ l'l14)111-lll0 =0~~===1 "Wlftl.llT .. NAPLES SABOT, $300 M o tort 1 t ( 7 1 4 ) l'red•lnt Welcome II lllD*!" Wlrehelred Ttfrl« neectt P:'.:'; g~= i!:'J.~~j OBO. 875-2773 979-2500. 1974 2002 ~ttn automalkl V~ ~ S.W:. oood hm, 21/r Old male. 648-9115 New 16' Hobie with trailer trans .. new pllnt & Urn. 19711 Beach lflvd, ~5..eec>5 Bltupunlet 1tereo c .... 1. Ref9renct SPMk• Stt & xtrat. S3200. Raft with te. excenant condition Huntlf1i14?f19eaot'I hraltut All SH. GIUe ~onl Ster.O motor 1250· 87s.m5. throughout & only 32.000 (714) 142-2000 YoDR secORIW FILE Ceblntt. fl(lnt Cond. SABOT s.llboat wttnout mlle1 on ovemauted •n· .,::.::.:..::..:..:.~=:..:..:..=.:.;.;;.;..1'.=~=--==--:----::-'.: DOES NOT PERMIT AC-857·2457. talll. $120, 548-0910 glne. All eerviQe recordt. fta..L_tef fill •71 fW .....,, M CESS TO THIS FUMC-SC SANTANA20WITRLR Mull Mii. $5400. Prtveta '765lUWWW rn auto HM ••'" 4 "4t TIO~al2 mGetctllng lv'g RAM·Lm )(Jnl ooncs. $5,500. ~~2r-o'~38 Ca ll (7 14 I elr. tnlrf, 1tereo. P., pb: Htr't, •Ht 1111 rmcn r1, reen velvet. 831·2825 • '" · · pw. 315 mpg, ~ Nfere .W, I. 11411. s200 ... 1eo.ao15 ANSWERS IMts Dal••• 111'1 cond. $3850. 1131-301e NI ... .._._ 1 ~-+--+-..___.....~ 2Pc1otderttptne:5Dr-· Larynx -Jaded I~' a fti Tilt J!tfl 1681 810 W1got1, ~ Pmch 1117 1-Ml·MH I er c:httt, and ont d,_ Fotmy • SWltc:h -everything. XLNT cond, 189 612 C0U""' 4 ....,. .,._, with mirrored hutch, WAYot LIFE 21' 1y crvtH r. 454 t.9" $6300 obo. day1 , AM/FM. 1 c;;n.,, -;;; Veift ttfS ~~1~f'O.. ~g13r· Tmo11'"°'takttt PAOPte .. •' maklhumengn 9._tievy, .:..~ hfa.t _,,_eertcall/ Mlll•I 21~E·549--0718_05'5 St1t1on $7000. &42·7898 '17 U2! Wagon, clwl, .,.. ' .......... '-· grM1 ....... 22. vet 14 9.9297 110501080. 875-3205 er ... becl. ru11, head &. chlreetttllltc. To Cofl.. c:ond. 14985/0 BO. ON •71 Dettvn nM<lt work. '71811Ecpe~epd.tp«U · · nbrd. $350. &4&-8021. gr111m111. tt't 1 WAY of 645-3439. 'llP Q 'l S350/0BO. !311--489•. ...,,, good cond , no 'lie P1too. Semi reatored Couctl 1275, recliner chair LIFE. '82 Carrara 23' 01.y W W NII. $MOO. 831 .... 72t, cllllllc, mull .... beeuty, >---+--+---4 CNIMr 34 h 115 775. and '72 t20Cf ~· Gr11t Mt-4030. owner 1n111ou1. S520C> 1125. Santul tltreo tylo-ukaJ ••• 640-878e. n . ' ' ao••MILEI Economy, Reel Cleen, '74 914 1.8, t7K on rblt. Obo. 835--3742 dyt . ...,.. ttm S500, w11erbed112 11;;ng911R.,/cwi200. ...,. S1050. s•5·1097 Anze axhautt, Rivi.ti 873-4471 1 150· & mite. 5<48-&4M. Antique Bento 1175. ILllAt lp!J. fill ~·) •72 240Z. orig owner, elr, rim•, Concord tltfeo, IUllC--------.-1-7-7 Never Ultd (SUM In wrep-""" GI"--SG lt500 4"5 21'".. ( oast $3200 ...... ,.. 103 clean 15500 ..... .:...... t621PIWCllXrrow Touring plngs)S700v11111,wlll,Mll "" ......,, · dttllxt. · • • ""'· --' •-•o """ ...,.........,. Seden. r"lor9d, red, COUCH • Brand N9w ·1873-7570 Avon a man 111. relt. j ( ~_an~e ··:: IUIO, m•~·· cherry. tmOkad wlndowt very • tor 1500 obo. MUST SEE. $350. Pklt MXR 10-band BAfTISH SEAGULL OUT· 1m .-.i a.o cosu 1ua '77 01t111n 8·210, 4 1pd, '78 911SC Tt1g1, metalllc t>MYI. 815 mph. Staal et ---------------------_-_L_-_-_~_-_-_-_L._-_-_~_-_-_~_1 Cell efttf 5 pm or on ~lier, S100. Todd BOARD. 8.7 HP, long 111•1 ~t.1111 cll•l •0 1110 $2200, 657-6647 Biii. red, pollehtd ~· elr. 116,000, 87~t 00 wknde, (714) 864-15957 5809 =;~~. =-7~~9~,., f ... , Drl'" 16301·673-8029 •11 7pm. ~~~-8~&200. 64 2375, Come 1.n a ... Newport Dbl bid, 11lnt, complete Mull Mii beat, m· c:abl· 178 c;; 4ic4 icint cond 90 280ZX, t uto, T-Top, Blach I tlnett lllclctlon $100 973.7570 net & •xtrll. M 5 obo. N9w NAV101 ROF radio. am/Im eut, 13250/obo: btk/tan, 26K ml, 1 owner, '78 P,OtlChe SC Ter~a. AC, of pravloutly owned 1111 ...... UM Btll WHIM 5100 •·•1 ...... st ~eurent I011Y /lllOIPT. ea11uren1 THE RUSTY Dttl",;., wood well unit ~:~~.'!:~• 552-0384, Mu a I • e 11 S 2 2 5 , Wiii llnence &/or lake t rn m 1 c . P P . P-7 •. 38,000 m . lthr. Portohtt, Audi• end ., 1-835-.3729 trlde 642 2814 714/673-1107. llereo, bttullful Volktwagan1. Cruy Burro Dining Real Eellte exper helpful. PELIC AN , Newport Cettnt wit bt teklng ep-557-68 .. 7 Beech, I• hiring Broiler w/oupbrO Ind dttll. Bolh otii: r--lt I . . ' s 18,000 494. 7997 gin• & wood •d· ... t uu ut •mt./lenict 7020 Tracb 9 8t 280ZX2+2.a11opt1ons,. --1u1t1blHh•ll•. 1180, I nt 1121 -lo mt. min t cond. 79 929 5·1Pd. nu paint. 962-38 HI II Yll IR JM 1673 ChevrOlet half-ton S 10,500 64-4-4293 trim. 1t1n1, clutch. Lt hr, pdce1lon1 for all pollllont Persons end Food Ser· ttar11'l Set. July 9 lhru SECREATARY/GENERAL vers. Wiii be Interviewing -~uty 11. lnternttd OFC-Rehebllllatlon July 10. 8:30-10:30am. • .. repon In perton 1 egenoy In F V Gen olc • blk No. ol tht rttt1uren1 lkhls Incl bookkeeping, \•. 809 Adam• Ave, HB =· SH/1paedwrttlng Appllc1llon1 IYllllblt Wednesday • Friday. o I P B k I ond 1 br • ~ IUOllll IAY llAT1 truck. AM redlo. new bat· '92 280ZX T-t 5 li>d P/aeats, parf cono 455 E Coat Hwy t~~~seo:,c~~xtl~~ :.:;1~:c 3 Swtvel c:'!ir1: lfnot.-hawthlentMr. tery, n-paint 75,000 loaded Exteng!iservlc9 119,500 631-4721, Newi>onBeach · ~ 10AM GPM e11per preftfred. TOP SS$ Fiiii11 Good blneflll. ~421 FernaJn Prtl. Modtlt & Crtdtnle·l450, Cu1tom with IBM elec. typewr11tt, Duftleld Marini 645-6812 m I S 2 · 5 O O Ce 11 werr, new atlckar. Atklng &46-t030 873-0800 bl r·S250. &4•· 1307 '425 (without 13251. Ed ill I Did HU •97 •2803· S 11 800/obo must NII P•ntltt OlaaJt ~-~-----~ , •• -1Hu: OfGery.646-1731 "' I '70 FOfd Ranoa< XLT v.T. 15K 0 ml 499-2922 '811E 1971 Sll'ltr grey CMlllM J• "''--40''"illP for power Of Mil GO cond. 11~50/obO. ph Sharp .67 Datt eulo p/a 1983 rebutll engine Fuli TIE WIEST coucn. colteetablt. tampe. Big Sl\Mgl: .,. '" r• w/llne tit-down ma11. H2-8722 2 0 6 cy1 270 ·1695 ex1ru . Complete -v1ci1 Escorts (2 t3) 8ee-1884 ~r tor Chlldrent ... ret:fi/la1fttMt tty store. rtllll Rtal Es1111 nv .. 1men1 Co W~tr-/Wllttrl, OV9f .£ tXPtt req, mull IMkl dtl)erldlbte MC· t , wtuper. Apply In Pptr In mtl'Chl!l• retary with g_,al olfloe r 1768 Newport Bl. · pereonnll & In· 1kllls and 01et1phone e.11· M. =~=~=j·~ =~·~~no~~,J,.,= r11~ec;.-:s..~;=· '72 Chevy Luv Pickup. c.:h 968:6420eng re cord 760-8979 IELEm• cond. 2195 Mlntt, apt 2, !Urn. 281-0277. ng · Chrome mega. rtdlalt, • P/P/evn. of late model, low mllaega C B V,,._,.IUJ1 Boat UIP needed for u 11 AM/FM ceu, orig owner. Faal tlU a.U •-Ill C1dlll1e:t In Southern led Full lime Muet have valtO M. twn ....,...., " leon Ponablt Electric Rtmln· yacht In Nwpt Bey, ltlt1· good cono S 1700/btt F111 '74, 124 Spider ;;;;a, I ::zct Cetllomlal Sit u1 todeyl 389 E 171h St. CM, CA I ~1~ 1 Np 1 B ch 645-3583· ton TyPlwrlter w/c:aee, Ing of bolt postlblt. Call olr. 979-8138 m 0 1 0 r s 5oo 1 o Bo . IOlll • *110ty ~ rt1Umt °' pe rlt nce EJ1cetlent tllvtlWUTU latt• to Pa111e Mercnt. 1 a mutt. ver 82627 649-2~ ;::::,..:,~~~=d ! Gema llblt , 42" oc-extt c:ond, MIO. 840-0064 780-1813. '78 GMC 'h ton pickup, 648. 2-8859 or 546-9215 tfl ~CARVER OAllWO I •--r-.1ary hH......._t mull. Call Oatryt bl· l1gon1I -W /4 uwlvet YOUR SECURITY Fl';:_E Newpott Mtrtnt/tllp tlddef reckt. tool box, 3 l'L../l ~Ht/.._-.... p.,, llmt rtlall Nies exper ... '" ' '"" tween 9AM & 3PM 11 naugahydtetllln, paean, DOES NOT PERMIT Av-day weak month lpd 45 000 1 1 1 d B • flo"""'i f C ~ cvvv ""'"'TV 'l'9CI· P1test eell tor en Flntncltl Investment lirm llYOAlftl llkonew,1400.648-3128. CESS TO THIS FUMC-•649-055t S38' ' m,xn con · ti I I NJU-J.NJl~L COSTAMESA dappr11.Pnet,lt•Ms1rcthlo ,chelt·.1 ~o;P:~~~110~1e r~·;~~ lllUl-llYOI GE F/F rtfrlg, very good ~~~~ S~~~~ ~'. Slips Available. 25', 30', HorM50~:::y·.~11.1op, '73 ci111a, rec. for i2006 ~~-~·~ .. ~:-.:~~-&•0·1180 I c:ond $175 Lfg rodctt 0 11 •• worth of work: reblt ang, -.-n tw 114-642-47t4 n11/Admlnl1tr1t111e Ex· 1•.1·"' · • 497·5488 4 + vt·•boud. all p1n1, needl pelnt. brand new carb, rtbll cc It 1•1• II ., __ ete Ith -••• llkt nu 195. Chelte ..,2--4"•4 •• ,.,. ""2 81 • •"19 t • • I'---------ecu ve ~r ry w ~ /~ ·~~ """ .,.. llhr . ...vv . .,.. • 4.. trens, all Just broken In. iaMra Hif liiiiN----~---. N tor-Ml tlmt beck omc:al excellent typing 1nd .... ..... 'sou250nge, F~."PCr~~ .. w~ •• UI lttra! •oili Btnt frame & suap. $800 •• Camato, perfec1 cona. polltton In C0111 Mesa. 1hor1h1 no 1k111 a . IBM Dtaplty writer. mini· •MO • ..,.,, -· on•FuF( s OAlfYT 1 -UI or otter. for eng. & 1ran1. '79 DL Coupe, nu eng, new motor&. trant.. Mutt Cal I J 0. n s m I' h . Non-emoken pleue. mum 3 yr axperltnoe with 5•5-8362· DOES NOT PERMIT AC-SHp • I for laH-powtr, voOR SEcUFlitY FtlE r .. 1 of car tree 494-4247 ur ... 5 tpd, 30 mpg reg .... $5500/0BO. Tim at ilaltt , Call: 553·0940. grammar/editing IX· MOVING TO FLORIOAI CESS TO THIS FVNC· 38' under 12' belm, 8 DOES NOT PERMIT AC. .81 PRELUDE, xlnt C0'1d, g11. $1700. 4t9·5501 780-3895 lf18PM. r .2000/n ot•• llOlnUY pertenoe required. Com· Con1an11 ot 3 bdrm CdM TION Conn 642 T'-t" "'°' only, no axtantlon CESS TO THIS FUNC· AC, anr1, 5 ,pd, navy~"' .82 Suberu 2dr. lmmac. ·n Chevy Monte Cerio I ' F · I penMtlons to $24,000. houtt, In I out. 875-.3689 Organ w/a xt. Ltttlt. Ilka!)'. Mutt bl In xlnt TION '73 Ford Ven, new evterlor ... 8•9109 werr, loaded, onl" 4500 AM/FM et-to, AIC, vtnt S30 PR00-$25 PROFIT ut peoed conautt ng firm 644·5771 S 1700. 646-1•87 con d . Sorry no eng & paint, xtnl cond. A "" ' ... A ~Cal1Jack714·947·5522 need• en experienced Oek Gema Tibia 11,,._1.boafdt. 28th St. 1 175010fr.831•1747 rb------.... 1,.,1 .... 2=. ml, ttt•t• forcet lmmed cond.,$3900.545-314-4 I / .. d II I e Ol1pl1ywr1ter optretor J•~· Wut.. SlOS w/bumper pool a cue KlmbleCon.oit, txll cond, Marine. 673~ l ... I Ille. pdOvef 110,000. wtll '7" c . 0 Z28 t II •••" ver 1ng •· ...,,._ tdltl •"""II ti"'"•....__ u---' S1000obo "'••2022 t ltke $8900/obo, • •m•r• ' u !)«lane«! pref .. not ,. ' gremmtr We need ompen ant nur-• 1895. S e ll S700. KF,...._ c ·-p ....... l s...._. .. E Cl111ln _,, ., . _... • 842-3318, •mv can or ...,.... ng C I Ide "'" ,_.._ ..,,., new ·-..-•i let lttl Clft1 m 833•85,.1 ... ,._7.,33 power. $5800/0BO qvlrad. wtll trlln Quallty eomeone who want• 10 companion dr, atnt rtf•. 83t 592• ,.,.,... _,, ..,... .,...._, m ~---~-=---- MtgUlnt. tndtpendtnt be P•r1 ot 1 dynamic Perl/full time. 5<49-8877 • Plano 1750. 541·9418 2 't Bile .. 150 ... 168! b utting Con-Teyela 1111 '79 Et Camino SS, loaded. contrlClor. Commtlllon teem Compen11t1on to YOUR SECURITY FILE Queen Slll Wetw Bed, UprlQht Plano aood cond 720-0773 vet11blt. A«! with whltt ·7fc;;G, new p:int, Gd 37,000 ml. AM/FM CUI. only SCt~3 tnttf'llew 124.000 depending on DOES NOT PERMIT AC· c:r rr:·=.. ~-;.-,; $420. 120-<>i7~ taarn HJ4 lop. '"'°'ad 289 V8,1nO ' .. '"'· 1/c, tlereo, runt S5500/olr. 6411-9556 10 amlnd2pmdeliy. u:perltnot&capebllttes CESS TO THIS FUNC· $450 new. S275. Daw Wurlitzer Funmaktr II '81 Chev f.f P.0 ~.Ille trtntml111lon. g!5'.5'2'12S1500 /obo lllllfllm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil' Cotlln1 Ataoc:ltltt 567 TION Live In oomf)AnlOn, ......,.. 5 .. S_.__ Sen Nlcol11 Dr NB __ _., __ , b'" nd .... I ble 15~-Speclal. Digital, 1111• MW. w/cabovef cam!)«, ale. T..._.._...875-7773 Wt h-•r: __.__..__ -· .,..,........, .. gr ,r..,e • S'--•-'e.l t'""··,K""'..._ 11200, ... 2-0787 32Kml,$4000,559-8&97 ........ ~~ ••fllelflll'I '74Cotone.GoodConO .. of N.EW ...... --..-~' 01111lflt... 844-577t. d rive•. own o u . .....,...,, "" .. ,._,. '29ModalA 4 DoorTown Lo Mllet X1r11 $2000 -""""'. • llOln&aY 963-4322 or nH033. Mad botrd aolld wood lllltlil.... Ian Camper Shett for emtll Sad ' ed 19 t95 SOUTH 642-8572. 832-5"o otc . roe.tat , ••• ,.... ..... ............. Beach I tlto. ~· SSli 180. 551-05-41 vmECOMIW ~ Pie* Up, blUI on wtlltt , an, rttlOf . ' . The Clwlflad Advartltlng ·--,......, two ' "~ta... lll4 DOES NOT PERMIT AC-good cond. $235. ·411 Ford Woodle, nevy cou1n ·n Callee GT. orig lln • Daptrtmanl of the Diiiy eccurett typing etMnllal. Goloeo Rtvr•. pupe, -r.:ess TO TH 8 FUMC-IM2· 7358 evee. blut. rtttored 112.995. I pelnt. not • ntc, ecratch Piiot l\N.,, opening tor 1 tomt tepe trenlCTlblng Sm. 31, born 6/23, 8m/i;;g: 11;c;p;cj Iota I ~ I •~In/ P.P. 875-6181 I IZI or dent, lmmao Int. "'"' • ' rete>Qntlblt, enllwtlutte Prefer up to 2 yr• axper 842-7964, 845-4132. tovweat + and tabtel 1~0N ~ ... ,.. "WI ft1 •T tvperbfy, 5 epd, gt llrtt. CONP4HL CHEVRO LET .... ~•I, • ' f" I \ \t • pereon. Mu 11 h 1 ve c 111 648-2283 bet noon. 1200. ex10 catm rvg s50. -Olltllll l111t•n H 11 ·~.F1~: ~ :';'i ~~out. 12995 obo. 64M533 , prlYIOUt telephc>ne..,.. ttet••arv B!:~11~~,ts~~s1:,0~: ~ .. ~. ,2no. L"'Nr~.· r::'~.!'...!~ ~~~ tm Aona. xvc 10. u:a 875-3175 vo~~~ ·19 coRoLLA ~~ Hts ui>erllnee. typing end Smell Newport BHcll ..,., Z5. ...,. -·".. once. P9rfect condttlon. . -...-clean. 12800. 220-3384 or VDT. SalatY pl111 oom-m1negemen1ofllc4l11e1111 Phtrolh Hound•. AKC, 8 110.0..S1 .1 Rott-Engine ITIOUf'lltd on the leOO/OBO. 831·5e25 °' 80Clattio4dr,rUfltQd. 4 AndlAallng 588-15787 m , el pwr, Ot1Q rnlulon. 32 flourt 1 WMll. per1onebte H crelary wles. 3 remelts. 1200 up, tut blka '40. Bike pat1t. Power Sutter. 1495. Call 540--479e. Scott. new llr11 12000 '' It. I 187t1 e..ch Blvd. letth. gd home only 1895", !>U-1200 Excthnt compeny ~ with recepllonltt end 536-5850, 898· 7005, clothtt & mite. 2373 873-oee50 MOOD If I linl9h to per· Huntington Baach 'll llPU 55e-8000 Iv meg 'efltt, lndvdlng macllcal. genettl office 1klll1, In· 531·6317 S1rit1 Ant Aw. New Surfboard. 175. 2375 '78 Suzutcl GS750~. 8K ml, faction. &45· t295 (114) 142·2000 5 tpd, IOICMd, many •11· 'dentll, Ille ln•urence. eluding acc:uratt typing Sherry'• Poodle puppy Fri 8AM, Sat 8AM. 1919 Comtf1 Or. C.M. Set/Sun ~t~ 7~~~54~1111 nu. ·72 Citroen SM M~•ll J llH tr11.11lnt cond, Mutt tallt re,. Hll cndlt union, etc. ~I)' end dtc11phon1 tren· 111e, ttacup.toy mlneturt FtderaJ st. + bake Mle. 9·5. . · · 61pd, run pwr. air. tMlhlr. a1ur Wiii eac: S51SOO. 720·t820 '83 Felcon R1nch1ro, 1 S0r adVanoamant. C11t f0< tcrlpllon. Beginning 1250 up. 546-2"48 Church of Naurtna. Remington BOL .223 79 Honde, CX500. only V$, dual Ovefhead camt, 111f 1Hl 4'MllAllJ r.. good cond, rune good. ,IOPOl~~men2 •3'21f0Er ,1n211•1r· eal1ry, 1900fl Pto 11100, Shl"'·Tzu or LhlMt, ·-1, GrHt Sluff. Sat Ju"' 9 Varmlf S-'11 w/Super 1465 ml, Ilka r-. rltClc, lllV91' lecqlltf, collecior All model• & moat COior• l1300/0B0.548-3f470f i wltiw • .,.. -, X • plut btne t1. laeN cell 1• _.. '' .,_ 3":"' .. t wind terMn. $1800. A owned mini Provd to I t kl Call b IM&-3340. If~ 1tMt Dene 848-8904 homtbred, AKC chimp. only, 8:30 lo 4:30, 319 ...,ope x.x .. cru rec, STEALI 642·81..... thow, i ptetMirt 10 drivel n 1 1oc or atop Y DOES NOT PERMIT AC· •-.• -1--------• ~ pupa. Guer From $200. FtOWtt SI. 1450 Ed or Guy, Movt • mutt 1111 now CESS TO THIS FUNC-v Mvetang, xlnl cond. I 330 • B;St. s::.~~: .·~~ul~~· Fo~ 539-0925. MOVING OUT OF STATE 645'-'73 t '".!:.~Ti':OO~:i.Jt~ . I 1~500/ofter IAlll •Ttlll TION '78TR7.lo ml, AC. s ti r e 0 A M I F M • j:o9taMeaa.CA92826 moredtltllt. 730-3782. Springer Spenlel pup· MU9t Mii thll wetlland. Ulld diving gMt mtn't (819)224-0731/426,....921 2826HerborBlvd. AM/FM 11pe, 13100. $3500/0B0.875--MH. ,. 'E.quttOppl E tyr ple1-10 Wkt M/F Ill Furn .. planlt,applct.See lCtrl tm 3118" wet tult, '81 Yamah• so.. 750, COSTA MESA •97·5488,494-8364 ... Mutteng, 1 ownr car, • • y mp Sml engine mechanic '°' l hOll, wormed 1100. °'"'" • Una. 81t18vn flt• tC).125 tbt . 140. w/hHder. 14,000 ml, ·~311~~5~~29;vn• Ok. Ill-HOO ,..... llH 11250, 5d-t097 et: lendac:apt malntenence 546-2848 9.,., 255-4 Elden Av. Swtmmatter IPMI' gun 12000. 557-&H<4..,. Juel 2 mlnuttt eoulh of the ·-...... ,t~ 351 ~ co. Mlltlon VlejO. Pit call l40. Unvtlad dlpltl gueoe Stn Diego Frwy. , rllM • ""' ""' bl-I.. ' .-:--'' andSacur~t""'· btwen 8:30· 12 .00 htltHI 1111 lul...... IHI 120. 12lb M bell 17.00. BMW '77 Model R100A8. '50 FORD 2 OR r«>lt eng beet eff9t OVtt car. re eng ...... ~·' 11al. 855-3791. 1'52 Vteneea s1mn boVINdSXli::JUl;i.7.i HOOd$3.00.TeetaelllOt XlnlS39S0.840-1280. 112hpft11MadV8,3tpd, Lru .. tila llH seoo.Mi-t.21. 11800.5-46.0522 bl.Goof~c:l':any. Summer Job at eo11 Fae· v1o11n, exit cond. 12500, 8. Rattan group, l1allen ltO. 77.._tHI Lill .... 118 new tudl & rOll Int, Mw 'U M\191 ... I 17.0& ln· '98 8vQ greet oond Ml# •fa Mav9f'ICll. mint cond. ,-lory. CIWllng. phOnet, 840.00M mllbtetlle.QOtclV91nmlr· ft W1f crpt,,_IW...12500. vetted. tacrlflot ~too. palnt.l f400 648-·&M.. brand,_trw,tunau,>. Lor1a1 4-7»1•12 mite. Full or PI T ror ... c.te:r-2074 6 1 IUI '3'Am~.tlpl8,2 Mt-1221 98M393or831 . ' · · · bfMll . .,.._ltlOn ~ B•.• IHat/Hardware. Full 13.50/hr. Apply In per. 4 pteca iottd che rry 1n tent AC 1.5 KW oaneretor. M Bllg, N9w engine, e>om· 19"1 tlret a mvcfl more. Time. Cfown Herowart. '°" 2345e So l>olnt• Dr dr-. mirror & night· lnlM I -llXOTIFOL 21" Mel mle:tO-W9\19, Cl. etorage H .. _ lluM tltl *'9 new lnteriOr. New Mv9t Miit 1 car to many. 1 3107 Ea1t Cou1 Hwy, i..QuntHlllt,CA ' ~~5•29 1425. Doug G;909 iii:: iG ~ Cotor TV, 2 yr wmty podtol,~'UlrH ~r;,!.':"·toc:· 17iMUd1StaUonWagon .,..,_, bettery, teoe, MC. AaklngS1500 .... 2-oHO • . QdM. 8wttc:hboard operator IUll Rock famlli.t. 1t•1t ,, .... Fr9edall¥9ry.Opet:.I 13$. • lthr, MOO .... 2.e1.r"'' aood cond. 12,100: Showroom condition. ·n Ptmo Wagon, 1100. llfnt graYeyerd, ftO ' llC· SOfld OM Engtltll Aefreo-8*1• L~ • .My""· tttl. 8 "n. T v J 0 H N. 8 f11Dtd, 50.() 195 ~ otlo .......... t ••7-3374 .. na pert.nee neceuery, 1ory T.t>ie. Hx38, 38xM YOUR IECUAITY "LE 846-1798, llWtJ .. .. 1111 'to 828, 5 epd, 11'1\/fm '11 1119, good cond. '71 Couftet *' 1000.. _.., ...... _.... IM2·30t3 ~.;";,,:~·c~e~ 00£8 HOT P!AMIT AC-1 .. ll ... IJ fill BOiTflllLll ...,.Jf 11111111 c.•, pr ltl/rf, llr. l4000 ·.~.!.'.m:..!8~ tlret. M2·1S14 cW 7&a'..eaoo ..... • ' cua TO THIS FUHQ.. I .,:;;;;: .,... ..... -..., If( ml BIWttt or trade for van 4t9·5801 I .... _....... • PIT hrn. 2 pm°' 4 cl rce 1t00. 14 00, TION MEIOHIORHOOO 5t CINTUAY OllAV!N REMOVAIL! IACK o:'.,.o:· NcMdo ... ti, 't7 lvg ,.~ cond, •1.~500Tortno. H ,000 rn11ee.. c..;.:.pm wttf\ Ille LOI --9so.o344. ' OAAAO! SAL! In Clualc bey leunetll... $250 .... """"° ... 000 ..... -.-... • .. 1001•l_ t~ ... T ,.. ......... 1 •~ till" wltr9'1er '3000 pre. -1. . _........ -Oil', -... 2.2tts. ·1rn11 --•••r•ll Whitt tne mal 1tov1. Turtlefook Ridge, Irv. obo.'Muet ... thle .-. bit ltdea ... ... . ......, .10 '°="= ton Teem In t.ailipflone 1920'1 pert Cond ~-Hal~bOrt are pet11el· '10 -" IClnt cond, new automet ' l~iii::::!! ...... Earn an hovrty llT1DI thing 'working.· 1750. pel In the .... of 1111n-17f.1M3 IMll'Ol'fTANT pelnt. '*1ect Inter!«, rt>l1 eng, am .-.0 pf\11 oommlttlon. Exper. ntettMry Sun 831-1131. drt 1 of lltma of '12 17, 6411 J5flp 0/1 HOTICETOAIADIAS rblt t ng . 1 2150. caet,,_llree&br•-. .. provtdecl. For '"'°"°" Tl'lun. 5:30 PM fllmlture. Clotllee, a.,.. Voflvll w/tttr a tl(tr .. : ANO 531-7073. . NM ereat. 1 1100/090. more ritONT1allon call to 9:30 PM. Outr. hourly Anllutn Mil pllenoee & other "8tvff" 17900 141 ·807 ADVIATll!A8 •74 2002 Xlnt 1 ownr ...._1Ht, M0-030t p1u9 comm. Pivttl encl lrcu K JQ. FlF, 088: YOll won't be Mila to,... 75MIOS ' Th• P'10• of Item• 15500 a4e.o2•8 · 1·'"1~0-eug--r-blt-9119--.. -ln-t protenton11 working Oltl'twHll•r. 1v1c1do, tliet. Sat Nt'f t, lun JIAo/1 · advertlted by Yefllcle ' t ,~•: 111 f:I oond ' rvn• pirftot ~!ii~~;;J! llLD 'lllmll condttlont. L.aouna Hllll Stelnletl tttel lnteflor, 10, 10AM·51'M. Talc• U lay Party loat, ci..lttt In ttle wtllcle •71 IMW 3aOI, t>ufgundy, ..... T~lll 11ees: '4a .. Jt7• amr 1ta1e,.wtdt com-off1ot Scott, ~1-2777 1175 133.3411 Turtlerook Or. t o HOllMbOtlt ~. Pon· cla .. lfl•d adverUtlng IUl'lrf, em/tm oua, ale, -~·"l••IA metelal window covwrlng (Ml ' ' ' Oi .,,. WllkMtalt, than '°41ow 1oone. 35 HP tlllnr\iOI ~ do9I not lndllde auto traM, tlf< ml, Sac. , 111P ft I "70 VQ!llO, mint 09ftd., cont rector uek 1 FrttUr .1.,.,. TtMfl com· algM 10 tt1ei "MomlnG'' tn0'4or, Flollly «111111Ped. any ..,.etGtble teatt, MOOG, 942·'3t5, • 4-dt, "*>, AMlf'M, nu matlveled trainee w11h plClor 1126. Cm~ tt0"9 "reeta. lunny 752..... XI.NT _.,1ar1alnmant lio.nte, tran1,_ ,._, ·-HOI --~.~-"' Plllltl11ret/t,.,., •1250.1----,.,l:Z":l~~~--,1an rHdlno •-lllty T~ 8ollcllort a oven 180. 64e-5941 bo9i. 115,000 .... t .. 144 f'lnetlOe ctlergile, .._tor 1 ·· · . ..,.... ... new, -"' '46-0otN. t n d I o t d r t ft • &mmlll HARBOR AREA J~ llH a1' Wtiii9'1 1UnONiMr lllr pollvtlon OOntrol c»o ~· ale, tnt'f, llMllC. t•n•n.flta•MW. 1 1uper IMtte. NM 1111/W'dlftectvril tr.inlnQ Wt nnt good laltphona APPLIANCE SERVICE vm@eQ"jff ~Q Jrtra C11W1 10 1W1 OHF' •IOI cettlflcetlont or ltv'OO l3~ enytlme ..... *'I,....... ltOdy 1DrNewpot11Mc11omoe. r.-vetlonl.,110 MUP-wuen rece>nd., guar. DOH HOT l'l"MfT AO. attreo/tapt, t.C.ucect dHt.r doo11mentery :;J""laot • i Pk9. iii*' ....... ... IHI neec11eornewoi11.11100.9Jiii::JI! eOOd '* • ,,.,.., at.1· polne!Mllta. aj)pllanctt. 5<4M077 CHI TO THll 'UNO-pnoe•11<, ....... ,... =-=~~ w/Wt rf,U llC)CJ, alloyt.. 16 i6iJC B;iOfMt taf. In-Mii Ii ~ :-'~·= UUlf AtfflQ fi50. Wattrldf'/W = t..t at ~:~'Ai: by "'9 ... tllet. ::oor.:1Jr"· tMC)O compl. fH lOred, ftll , .,_, ,. Mrf .... ... aw~ 1111111• Sta& ... Otfwdtlr 118. ~'? '200 Wfl IU"9I llY•T .. iliif C · ~=· =.::.:· Int. lftlO. ii .-t ~ 1&'L. '*:~ = ...... e 648-&l<t8 . . . aeeoo ...... "" .. WHJTI ·==· '= :.,.Wd ...:-:. 1 11.0001010 or wni oelfMrt., tin w1'm 1--"IT.l~rn~- -. · "IT ~ WOfk Ill ... 1fMn01 ,_ wmi De11r ...., ""' nat J°" want In ._ • C ..... M ~~Ill l'9 trNI for boet w/tt1r. '°' IOll. OOocl oond. NICIO • .,,., 1 pm,15t--4223 Hot Want A.di, ultllllfted Adi ... l ·M71 De11r Not O•tff't ft Cet...._. DM.Y ... OT det ... oall ... 14921. 11i-ft7•. ~========:..b=========~=========- . -----·--------- .:.. 50 ~ar CeCe6ration » •-I Wil . ' ---·-· .. - I - 2ft -. P~;~n~ ot· the ·t,J~;ie;;i ~·" ~~~~l.iriQ s~~P'~-to' i~;i:>AiL{~·1LoT ,W~~~Y.1.J~W t'fN83~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---=- , Festival of Arts revels in Its Fifties The yee.r 1983 marks the eeconidof three yeara of c:elebratlnc 50th anniverurte. foe t.a,una's Festival of Ana. . Now that mJiht80UDd like feltival ofticialaare carrytnc the half-century celebrating a bit too far, but there really are three.,Wvenariea. In 1932, the artista in lAguna bung out their paintinp for public view on a dOwntownstreet for the very fi.nrt time. Th~ the feltivalcelebrat.ed ita 50th anniveruryof the exhibition. The followtna year, in 1933, the very first, albeit primitive, sideahow ~productiopa of great worbof art-Ulinelivemodela-waa born. Thus, thia year• mmvner fe.tivalc:elebratea the 50th anniwnaryof. the ''livinc picturel," DOW known M the Paa-at of the MMtenandsbowingnigbtly tbnJu8bout tbeawn-week-.i in the 2,662..._t Irvine Bowl on the t.tival grounds. And featival folb will milk yet another five-decade jubilee next summer tooommernorate the offidal fonnatian in 1934 of the Festival of Ar1a of lAguna Beach-the tint and oldest non-profit orpnlzation in Oranae C.otmty. 'nM festival la now a multi-faceted event, unique to the world. It baa been prelellt.ed annually exmpt for fouryeandwing World War II and ia heeded by a nine-member board of directon. And, tbia being the 50th annivenary of the first "living pict1.lr8a." the Paae-nt will be an extra 1pedalahow, teaturtnamany of the most popular worbof art displayed from pMt years. Sbowtime '88:30 p.m. nietltly'. prementatian feetwtnc the re-creation ol 11"e9t worbof art uanc livinlmodela Itilmapwilble bym 600 volunteercmtmembenand ~WCll'keft. A theatrical phenomenon. the Pageant ia a oomplete.ellout~ year. All ticketaaresold long before the leUOll belim· Once the festival opens, however, it la often pcmtble to obtain tickets that have been returned to the box offkle for raale. Prices ranae from" to $20 and box o(fkle houri are lOa.m. to 9 p.m. durtnc the run of the~. Returned Pqeant tick.eta FOO.ale at noon. Forinfonnatlon, call 494-1147. On the cover: Cardlnal's Portrait Yolanda Liaack adja1ta the head- piece of Briana Carran of MU.ion Viejo, who appean in "Children by the Sea," u photographcn and a fellow cast member w•tch the dress reheanal. • IN VI.LAGE FAIRE MALL On the eover of the Daily Pilot '1 Pageant of the Muten 1upplement i1 "The Cardinal's Portrait," a whi1111ical view u portrayed by Amerieaa arti1t Toby R01eJ1thal. It it re-ereatecl with living modela at the 50th anaaal P .. eant of the Maiten in Laguna Beaeh. Fiparel 1hown from left iaelude KITCHEN OCEAHV'IEW '• & ··PATIO DINING F ..... Ortlieb, lrriaei Alex Wean.el, LaP-na Beae• aad Lee BeW., Mileion Viejo. Open Dally From 8 A.M. 1-.o i..... of Free IWltinll with V.rlddon 1198 S. Cout H»ty. 497-1H7 Laguna Be.ch (Nat to Pottery "**> -----· --.::-=-=.-:__:.:.:.._ .. ---------,--~~---~-----.... Pageant of the MU1ersl:An Advertising SuppHNnerit to the DAILY PILOT~edneeday, July 6, 1983 - 3 Arts innovations noted in Time Laguna Beach a.rtiat John Hinchman had the notiClO beck in 1932 of displaying peintiJlill by the local talent on trees and fences near the Hotel Laguna. He figured motorist.a on the adja- cent dusty Coast Highway might pull over and take a look. Maybe buy a painting or two. He called it a "festival" -a word he aelected to contrast with the prevailing word of the day: "De- pression." For the early 19308 had brought hard times to the whole country, and Laguna Beach waa not left out of the nWlery. To help attract the tourista, the first festival included a Punch and Judy puppet show and strolling map:iana. 'The idea worked. People stopped. looked, made purchMes and told their friendS, who drove down and did the same thing. Another Festival of Ar1B followed the next year, and the organized arti.sta were bold enouah thia Q.me around to charge admiwion. One thin dime. But that 10-<enta entitled the customer to a free look at an innovation -a short Pf'0811Ull of living pictures, featuring k>cal people posing in cortwnes and positions that made them look a bit like characten depicted in well-known works of art. One of the first, for example , was offered as a re-<:reation of "Whistler's Mother," and showed a woman seated on a wooden chair with her feet resting on a footstool. That year's profit: A whopping $475. Visitors enjoyed the added attrac- tion, which grew through the years to become Laguna's world-famoua Pageant of the Masters. Time magazine even devoted two full pages to the Pageant in one of ita issues last summer. The Festival itself -the display of artwork by local artists and craftsmen -grew through the years with the Pageant, both in the number of artists participating, and the variety of Items . exhibl.ted. The festival moved from the short street near the Hotel Laguna to Ocean Avenue, then later Cliff Drive, then Third Street where Qty Hall ls Revenues enriching community Laguna'• Pageant of the MM- ten generates an lm.men.e grounds attendance, and en- riches everyone -not only the 1eholanhip recipients and othen enjo)'inl financial a.Id (including the City of lAluna ~ Beech, which recetw. 80IDe $280,000 annually for rent), but allo the commurdty and lta bulinemel. Paeeant revenue ai.o helpa ~ exhibiton, maklna it po-Ible for them to P9Y far Te. tNn the em.I OOlt ot IMAn· tainlnC the pertc.UJ&e .,... ln ~.,,., _.,.. 180 ol tblrn -dilplay and ..u their wans; located, and finally, in UMl, its permanent home at 650 Laguna Canyon Road -at the entrance to Laguna Beech. Along with the frequent moves came expansion. and viliton now aee not Only paintings, but ai.o ceramk::a, jewelry, woven itema, wood carvingl. 9C'Ulptuns, etcJUnaa, drawinca. aeri- grapha, handblown ~ stained g1-windows and leather aooda. furniture and model abipa. Since everyth1nc la for sale, the display~ constantly. It is a simple if 90IDeWhat auprisi.ng fact that the Festival grounds are never the same from one hour to the next, becau.e of sales and the bringing in of replacements for items taken from the grounds by the new Owneta. Other festival attractions include a restaurant, a cafeteria, ooncemiona run by charity lfOUpe, a pk:nic area, student art displays and roving musidana and mimes. John Hinchman and the other artists bllck a half century A80 gave Lacuna and the world the first Festival of Ar1B, an event that now runa 8eVell weeks MCh year. 'The festival gorunds will be open daily th.la year from July 9 to Aug. 28 from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. seven days a week. Admiaion ia $1 for adults and children under 12 are admitted free if accompanied by adults. 1. ftl c• _ __,=---, 2. rtld tht ,. 3 ... ,. p6lftts . 4. read tht 1111 ,.'-=--__, A UNIQUE FRENCH VILLAGE IN LAGUNA NIGUEL BY HOWARD MARK CIE. "There it is. awash in flowers. bathed in sunlight. all soft colors~ lt is Ville de Cerise. Slate-grey roofs. steeply pitched. Norman turrets. Oreil bays over- looking the street from second storeys. lt looks for all the world like a village in the countryside of France. But it's tucked away in the green and golden hills of Laguna Niguel, just north of the mis~ion village of San Juan Capistrano. Ville de Cerise. A cozy hamlet of 48 old country townhomes. A place of sunshine and flowers and quiet places. OLD COUNTRY TOWNHOMES •u~9.900-f1N.OOO. 801'1 A 10t4 LOANS -80 YLUl PIDD "'~ YBA88 1 ... 11.&4' YEARS a.so (7 14) 49&·3244 ft BRUC'E BLOMGREN * YICKIB BLOMORIN * BRAD WARDMAN • I L7" A.PR. MARXBT&D BY BLOMOR&N R&ALTY. • 4 -Pageant of the Masters/An Advertis1i'1g'Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Casting director shapes up the models By LINDA WOODS Of11oeO..,Note.- The behind-the-scenes work of Frances Mitchell, casting director of the Pageant of the Masters, never ends. "It's a year-round job beginning in January," said Mitchell. It's her job to select the people who appear in the living pictures. The entire process begins the second week of January when volunteers a.re sought. Posters are distributed to merchants and former cast members are cont.acted. Anyone is eligible from any location, provided they are willing to travel throughout the year for the weekly rehearsals. F.ach volunteer fills out a card containing personal statistics and a photograph is taken and kept with the application. The pageant director and his committee aelect the pa.in tings and works of art to be portrayed and determine the proper scale of the people in each scene. The requirements are then given to Mitchell She matches the files with the requirement& according to body types and facial characteristics. Winter rehearsals begin in January and are held once a week at night until dress rehearsals in June. Pictures are taken of the artworks to be re-created with volunteers during the winter rehearsals and the staff reviews them in order to (See CASTING, Page 11 ) After they were cast, the next stop wa1 costuming for Alison J.,ogan, Ja n Sener, Jillia n Locknecker and Briana Curra n who will appear in "Family," "Thanksgiving" and "Childre n by the Sea" in this year 's Pageant. EL LUlil\R CHAMPAGNE ·sUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. LUNCHEON lllBXICftn RBSTIWMllT 213 OCEAN AVE. LAGUNA BEACH DINNER COCKTAILS Dally from 11 A.M. All Major Credit Cards -Food To Go - Reservations Aroun4, ,,. olJm« "°"' ,,.. South coat ,.,...,., 494-9763 Use llnlwerAt/ ser~ice when placing your ad ... Women's Designer Resort Wear 67i-f469 ~ .... 2131 E. Coan Hwy., Corona de/ M•r 642-5678: ~ $/4t Pageant of the Masters/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 -5 ........................... It takes a whole year- Pageant Is a long process of difficult work Work on each year's production of the Papant of the Masten begins about a yeer before the first per- formance, when director Glen Eytclu.oo aelecta the program. In January, the media announces that anyone interested in posina:.ia invited to attend on a specified weekend and "sign in" -a procedure that includes being me.wed and photographed. No llCting ability is required, since no movement or speaking is involved. What counta ill physique and general appearance. Creation of the aeta begins at about the aame time. Once they have been built, two artists paint the back- grounds. worldnc from color' printa of the originala. while com.one and headpiece experts &et to work on theirt.Mks. All cloth1ng is made of either mualin or polyester, which is later painted by the background artists, who faithfully reproduce every fold and shadow appearing in the original work. Rehea.nala are held at night, aince the lilhtinl factor is of such immetl8e importance to the preaentation. Cast members have to hold their pc.es far lon,er at aach timm than durin8 the actual perlc:innarva, at which a typical ahowinl 1asta for about a minute and a half. coins for example; .tllp'a figureheads; etched g1aal, even jewelry. Their common denominator: the inclusion of human betnp. At first, 90IDe who aee the Laguna Beach production for the first time limply do not realize -or believe - that hwnan ~ in the works shown are real For this reaeon, as well as to add to the interest and enjoyment of the preeentation, they are shown bow it is done, one painting being a.embled with the stage curtain open. First, the aet is rolled into position; next, cast membera take their places; finally, posiJl8 experts make any tine-tuning adjuatmenta to COllUme9 or body positioDI that may be neceas- ary. All the1e preliminaries are done with buic workllght illumination and take perhaps a minute. Then the stage is completely darkened for a few leCOllds. Suddenly -pn!Sto! -the work appears with the carefully planned lilhting that makes it reeesnble the original. At performance afte.r performance, audiences at such mxnenta react - audibly -as if they have just wib'M9ed a trick. Alison Logan of San Juan Capistrano gets an usist from director Glen Eytchison. PalntinCI Moe by DO means the only itenw r-.<:reated in i...,una•a re- nowned .,...nt. Tapestry. statuary and bM relief works are al90 dupli- cated; 10 are t0me unexpected things: "How do they do it?" ia a question heard regularly, and tllOR who ask it Include highly akilled experta from the nearby televiaion and motion (See PRODUCl'ION won. Pqe 11) I ..,.. HOlMU' UNtQUI! IOUTIQUI 4M4377 LAGUNA~ 48148 UTL.lrl MT GALLUIU .... ,. WLCOXINIKINNELLY 414-1• °""Pl.Ac. 4t7-413S "CNl>~AAT" JIMfl ~JUNCTION IAITIWUT GAU.lfff 417~ 384 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach Over 26 quality shops of ... d LA COITA CHIU> CW LAGUNA 414-2120 Fine Fashions Smart Eye Wear Coffee Accessories Cosmetics, Gifts Leather, China Antiques, Imports Art Galleries IVE TQ IVE OfJTIQAL llOUTIQUI __ ,_ EUZALOE GAU.!M' INT£ANATIONAL 4t7~ ~-1-1"31 LOW LIAne. 4t?.U10 TWOTMUtMM• DOU.YIT<a .._.111 THI YAAN 90U1lOUI •7-llOO STUDIO GALLllW I 4N-M$3 KKY•A PASI 494-5021 MACitC wtNO 414-1314 CHAAMAHT IOUT10UI 414 ... llGIM 497-4457 PAW PNNOI """*' & C08Ml'TlCI ...... , A TOUCH Of LATIN .... rVY ~ MIJAUMNT ..... , COAIT MM. TY 494-1101 THI ITMY WHALI 48N111 TH9 COPPU Ne tM 1»4 P~AGAU.O .._170I 6 -Pageant of the Masters/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Production a ssistant, headdresses, Winifred Smith. Galleries 1984 Olrmpic G1m11 Posten Loe Angelee Olymptc Oamee TINI C_,,,.,. .. , Ol t:m.•n ,,_,.,."°"In ·~ Wblt1QaQ Gallerle1 Behind the scenes •• Narrator Thurl Ravenscroft. THI HAM SO GOOD WE IUIL T A ST.ORE AROUND IT. • Bolced anch m0.Ced up to 30 l"IOurs. . • SQll'al lliced arounc:Hhe b<>ne. ' • Cov«ed wtth ovt MC:fet ~·· •Best at room temperature to no heating ~sory. •.A.lit Cal, Ofdef and~ It up. WEDOCATERING•GIFTCERTIFICATES ~~~ PRE-oRDERS NOT NECESSAfW BUT APPAEC,ATEO I I• _,,. __ .. _........_ __ ..,...) Pageant of the Masters/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 -7 Costume director Skipper Skeoch. THE HACIENDA In Sanla Ana Nt"lalµic early California Clllll'lyanl ,.,:11ing 1 7~'\ (\1llcgc Ave. 7 I 4t55X-I 304 TIVOLI TERRACE In l.ap111a lkach I .uvd~ h1ll,iJe 'ellinµ on the 'I erracl' nf I he \\\1rlJ -1en1m ned l·c,ti\al 1)f Arh <1511 Laguna Can} 1111 Rd. 7 14/494-9650 r ~ "Winter Wedding Special" November thru March (exception: Valentine·s Weekend) 1 15.00 per person .... Wedding Cake -Champagne -Hor~ ~rocuvrc' ~ A Total Catering Concept Tivoli Terrace DINE WITH US ON THE LOVELY HILLSIDE SETTING OF THE WORLD RENOWNED . FESTIV ~L OF ARTS SERVING LUNCH & DINNER JULY & AUGUST rCall for Reservations----, L_ 497-3729 _J BEER* WINE* CHAMPAGNE Available at both SMck Bar and Rest•urant Levels June & Terry Neptune/Have Kitchen Will Travel. Enterprises r 8 -Pageant of the Masters/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, July 6, 1983 j ~10~ :J (.~ ~ t::-LAGUNA BEACH ~ i C::w Your Guide To Summer Fun And Activities ~~b J~t::=-• J\ \__.-..... :::l ~ \:"" ~ -. ~----_-_-_-_ -~------- z CID m )> 0 :.c 8ROADWAV 1. Aqua C1cmics Gallery 2. Allendale Gallery 3. Art·A·Fair 4'. Birkenstock$ 5. Chamber of Commerce 6. City Hall 7. El lugor Restaurant 8. Forest Ave. Mall 9. Hoggenmoker Galle:Y 10. Laguna Moulton Community fttayhouM 11 . loguno Museum of Art 12. lumber Yard Plaza 13. Main e.och 14. Pageant of the Masten 15. Poor Richards Restouront 16. Post Office 17. Pottery Shack 18. Sowdust Festival 19. Scandia Down 20. The Dance Centre 21 . TIYoli T erroce 22. Village Fair Moll -SHUTTLE ROUTE _j Pageant of the Muters/An A"dvertlsing Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 _ 9 Favorites from 50 pageants Since 1983 marks the 50th anniversary of Laguna's living pic(ures, a special program is being staged-the 24 items being selected from the most popular paintings, statues and other works featured through the years. Among them is "Tragic Muse," the famous oil painting by Sir J oshua Reynolds in which movie star Bette Davis posed some years ago. Other re-creations include a woodblock print by Torii Kiyonaga; a Scythian comb; the ornamental section ol a cer- emonial chair from King Tutankhamen's treasures; the Basel Cathedral antependium and Cellini's famous salt cellar, the original of which reposes in a Vienna museum. Scythian makeup As has become a tradition, the two-hour program ends with Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Sup- per.'' To see the original works, an audience member would have to travel over vast s1retches of the globe-a simple fact that prom pt- ed one pageant goer to describe the p~ntation as a magic~t journey through time and space. Makeup supervisor Pat Eck applies the finishing touches to Lee Williamson of Dana Point, who appears in "Scythian Comb." A~UA CLASSICS GALLE R .Y 332 Forest Ave., Suite 28 Laguna Beach, CA. 714-494-0138 Grand Opening Multi Media Investment Quality Art With An Aquatic Theme . Monique Crowley Owner The First Word For Comfortable Feet: Birkenstock Luke's Exclusfvefy Birkenstock footwear Shops &........... N••INWt8eecll 332 Forest Ave. M• I 77-H Riverside Or. 494-8768 631-2730 • C~l982 First Anniversary Sale July 15 • 16 •. 1 7 20-50% off all merchandise Designer DanceJfear Sportswear Swimwear 1550 So. Coast Highway Laguna Beach 497 -175 7 Host an Exchange Student Famfl/N are nHded for European students who arrive in August to spend a school year in your community. PleMe ~ y<XJr home and heart. • Sha,. a wonderful family HPf*r/fH?C9 • Build lasting friendship$ •Show ArNrlCI at Its ,,_,, • Promote lntematlonal understanding You can select your student oow . JOHN BATTEY MAX WILSON Please call 559-1172 731"'°479 or oolect: (805) 113-0553 •duolltlonel ~,,,,,,.,,.,, ~-~,,,..,,,,. .,.,,,, • ~ Of'ganl.tatton 10 -Paigeant of the Mast.-s/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 PRODUCTION WORK ... From Page 5 picture studios for which Southern California is noted. The answer is far from simple, even though techinical director Carl Callaway, who developed the refine- mentsof'set construction and lighting through the three decades he has served the pageant, insists that it is all basically straightforward, even though painfully challenging at times. What is especially impertant is that the re-creation of a work such as a painting must appear to feature only two dimensions; in other words, it positively must not look like human beings standing in front of a back- ground The pageant program is more than merely visual, however, each item being accompained by both narration and music that alao fill the brief tiJ:Be. slots while the stage crew does its work behind the closed stage curtain .. The oral element includes at- mospheric infonnation and comment touching on the original work and its creator; the musical factor includes material s peciallly selected -and even composed -to match the mood and setting of each item on the program. • Laguna's pageant involves the use of more than just one stage. An upper platform with its own curtain is used too; so is the roof of the stage buildings; so are niches at the sides of the proscenium arch. Even the amphitheater itself is featured, a hillside this year being the setting for a living re-creation of a ruin that for centuri~ has. faacinated visitors to Athens: The Pon:h of the Maidens (Caryatids) at the Acropolis. Of the more than 300cast members, some 150 appear at each performance. · Two complete casts alternate weekly during the seven week seaaon; in additon, many substitutes are avail- able -and reheanied -in caae of need. All serve without pay, happy to be part of the colorful Show and happy to feel they are helping to make possible the scholarships to students and grants to such cultural organ,i.za- tiona as a ballet company, an art museaum and a school of art that pageant revenue makes possible. The sea80ll this year runs from July 9 to August 28. Per~onaf C~oice -You Do Have A~-· PREGNANCY TERMINATION PflE9NANCV TESTIN8 & ~ NMAl.:.E STENUZATIOll -I ----------------~ ...... -----------------------.... Ushers get crowd seated, take care of all the trouble ~~~24W~DS Before the breathtaking beauty of the Pageant of the Masters can even begin, 60 uahera are requittd to help seat approximately 2, 700 people in less than 45 minutes. The 100 people who are hired for pennanent and substitute usher positions are carefully screened and trained by Marilyn Wood, usher manager for the pageant for the past 20years. She looks for people who are very reliable, neat in appearance, and who work well with the public. In March applications for ushers are accepted. An ad ia placed in the local papers which draw applicants from all over the aouthem Orange County area. High school-age people to senior citizens all work together in this position and according to Wood, "It's a real good experience for the different age groups to learn to work together ." Wood begins the personal inter - views in May and June. Wood is in charge of a nightly crew of 50 to 60 ushers besides peraonally handling the special needs that frequently arise. "Some people arrive in wheel- chairs with tickets for the top rows," said Wood. Members of the audience often have medical problems that need to be handled during the perfonna.nce. People come to her with lost, stolen. or destroyed tickets and she has to solve these problems nightly. At least once a seuon a bus load of people arrives on the wrong night and Wood handles these situations like a trooper. Special arrangements are also made for movie stars and other famous people who wish to view the pageant and remain unseen by the audience. Wood recalls that during the 1982 perfonnance, a family of skunks invaded the orchestra pit causing the show to temporarily halt. "They shooed them away without a disaster and the show continued." Dllllr .... Lee Williamson "Scythian Comb" Hilary Kyle "The Family" Jillian Locknecker _"Thanksgiving" Karen Lenker "The Family" CASTING QUALIFICATION: A MATTER QF PROPORTION FromPage4 confirm the selection of the people in the various roles. The 1983 cast is one of the largest ever. Attording to Mitchell, there never has been a problem in getting enough people to ligrl up and willing to put in the nece91ary time throughout the year to prepare for the performances. Occasionally, Mitchell will visit a gym or contact a dance instructor if there is a special need for a particular body type. She al80 gives out Sawdust '83 17th Annual Fine Arts '3? Crafts Festival July 9th thru August 28th 10 am to 11 pm Dally LQaaalle•c• 9S5 ,.. ... _ Canyon Rd. tl.50 Muha· Chlldtn Uader12Fne business cards to people she meets throughout the year who she thinks would be good cast members. There is no pay for volunteers, but "the loyalty of the volunteers is incredible," said Mitchell. "Entire families volunteer together year after year." Marriages have come aa a result of pageant participation. One model married a member of the stage crew and another cast member married a memberof"TheLutSupper." Once production is in full swing, each cast memberworkueven straight nigh ta and then is off seven nights. 1bere are two complete casts. "I love this job more than any other I've ever had. •• Mitchell said. Even though she haaonly one night off during the 49-night run of the i:-aeant. And whatdoesahedoonhernightoff?She goes out to dinner and attends the Pageant-this time aa a member of the audience . ..... ..,,. , .... , •• , ill ...__ •••• 372 N. Coat Highway, Laguna Beach · (714) 494r2875 • Open Dally 1CM • - I I I I I • I -I I t I I , I I I • I I I l I I . ,. I I . t I - I ' [ . ageant of the asters from the Da~l y . Pilot . I Surprlsel Lost ring found !Lor-~ A $7,000 weddina ling lolt two weekl aao In Irvine baa turned up aa myaterioualy • lt d.iaappeared. 1'he ;old ring-with al~ hall-carat diamondl -wu preeented w Irvine police late lut week by a la~r from Nocthem Califomia, wbo told ln\lelu,aton he repreeented an ancmymouacllent. The lawyer flew down t,om hJa office ln Napa 1trictly to return the ring, lnveetigaton aaid. The rtna wu reported m1'lina by . a S9-year.-old woman who said ahe WM dancing at a local n.llht apot when ahe auddenly di8covered her THI DRANGI COAST WEONESDA y I JUL y 6, 1983 1 i Edis~n raps h _earing on On of re plans By STEVE MITCHELL Of'lM 0.-, Not·- Laguna Beach council members have expressed anger over the refusal of Southern California &lison Co. officials to come to town next week to discuss safety at the utility's huge San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. letters to Edison Co. officials inviting them to participate in the forum. In addition to questioning the utility about emergency plans, the council wants to ask Edison of- ficials what they Intend to do with nuclear waste currently stored at the power plant. While utility officials will not meet the public, Frank said they have expressed a willingness to meet privately with the council. Drive-in art store? Greg Pautsoh thinks of himself as a surfboard artist. Page B 1. Costa Mesa's seniors keep their doughnuts The Calta Meu Oty Council voted Tuelday not to dunk a monthly coffee-.and-~'4la&ch for~ that-had-been t P'&t earlier from the city'• buqet. -· The cou.ndl voted 3-0, with Mayor Donn Hall and Councilwoman Nonna~ u.talnl.na. to continue the pl"08l'8m that cost the city $160 annually. Hall, who promiMd to pay for the douahnuta hinwelf if no funding w., approved, at.talned becau.e ol a pomibJe1finandal tlOnfUct of interest. Hertq Mid lhe believed the fundin& would aet a precedent. · The city began f~lnformal80dal Ptherinca lut year at the auggetrtion of the and c.ommuntty Development Conunittee, whJch wu by the Qty Council eerller thia ·year. COAST 1111101 . ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Mother - of slain boy sues By TM .bloda&M Preli The mother of a 5-year-old boy shot to death as he pointed a toy gun at a policeman hu sued the. city of Stanton and Officer Anthony Sperl for $19 million. Newport Beach a.ttomey Rich- ard Farnell blamed the ahooting of Patrick Andrew Muon on Sperl'• inexperience and the dty'1 failure to train and IUperville ita officers properly. The wrongful-deeth luit., filed Tueeday in <>nm,e County Su- . Court on behalf of Patricia ~. 29, aeeb $19 million in punitive damaga and unspecified compensatory damages. City Manager Ken Frank told council members Tuesday night that utility officials "are not willing to meet in a public forum and are not willing to meet to debate evacuation plans." Last month the council voted to set a public meeting July 12 to discuss e mergency evacuation I j plans for the nuclear plant, located about 16 miles south of Laguna Beach. Mayor Robert Gentry sent But council members Tuesday were adamant the meeting be public. Mayor Gentry said, "I think it~ irresponsible and unneighborly that they won't meet with us." Councilwoman Sally Bellerue (See ONOFRE, Page AZ) No, this isn't how a frustrated motorist solved t~e parking problem in Costa Mesa. Reginald Hawley, 63, of Newport Beach hit the accelerator instead of the brake today inf ront of Aaron Brothers Art Mart, 1714 Newport Blvd., and this was the result. The March 3 shooting prompted an investigation by the Orange County grand jury I but no charges were filed. "She is trying to put her life back tosether, but it'• been real difficult," Farnell laid of Ridae. (See MOTHER, Pqe A!) Mesa Freeway: A high price for progress? Barbara Long Crime fighter honored. NB woman ,1 i fights crime, I wins award I By STEVE MARBLE OfhD*Not...., Three years ago, Barbara Long was one of tha&e Newport Beach residents who refused to believe the affluent beach city had a crime problem. Now, after helping police and neighbors battle what was a thriving burglary network in her Dover Shores neighborhood, she has been singled out as one of the state's top volunteer crime fighters. Police in Newport, who nomi- nated her for the California Peace Officers .Association public service award, claim she has helped reduce crime by 13 percent in her neighborhood. (See A WARD, Pa1e AZ) ,, \ ·, AllG"MfNTS 1.cc.1-.0 ... •Ouuo•o •1•t••O""'' I OC Q . •tu••to •l•<l"'lolf11ot hh•"'•'•••, ~ 'OO•'lfft"' •• .... ,, 6\tf •11U1\llt ,. 111 • Map shows three alternate routes for Costa Mesa Freeway. Broken dashes indicate "pref erred" easterly alignment. BY JODI CADENHEAD Of .... .,.., ....... When Jim Tice opened his service station on Del Mar Ave.nue and Newport Boulevard 21 years ago, he was told truat. the long-awaited Costa Mesa Free- way would come rolling through his property l.n five years. So when a reporter pulled up at his Church Avenue rental office last week and asked how he felt about the pollibility the state might finally approve a six-lane freeway that would veer 200 feet east of Newport Boulevard be- tween Bay and 20th streets, he just smiled. "I feel it will probably never be built," said Tice. "It would put me out of business and hurt me. But I can't do anything about it." Acr06S the street, Harold and Mary Elmer said they would be unhappy about giving up the tree-lined home they built 32 years ago and in which they raised two daughters, now grown. "I don't care where it goes. It's going to hurt someone," said Harold Elmer. "We don't want to give up our place. But the way we see it, we don't have any choice." The so-called easterly down- town bypass route is one of eight alternatives di.lcu8Mld in a )engthy draft environmental statement released by the California Depart- ment of Transportation in April. A final decision on the route is not expected until July 1984 at the earliest, acoording to Caltrana officials. Nevertheless, the easterly route has received support from a number of civic and business groups, incluci.lnM the Costa Mesa City Council, Newport Beach City Council, Orange County Trans- portation Commi81don, the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and local buainees interest&. Such-support has left eome eastaide residents feeling that the decision to build the freeway in their neighborhood has already been made. "It 90unds like this is the one that's most preferred," said Patti Smith, owner of Child's Place day careand11ehoolat 1941 Church. "U this is the route that will displace the least people, then I guem it should go in. I won't carry a banner." Robert Casa.in, project manager for the propoeed freeway known as Route 55, said an alignment will be choeen based on traffic conga- tion remedies, cost and the com- munity's desire. "Their recommendation will carry more weight.'' said ea.am. referrlna to dvic and band...,... aupport Of the eeat.erly route, ''in terms that they all eem to be f.oCether on it. But no decmon baa been made .•• The $93 million easterly route would displace 40 busine9'el and 85 homes, mostly on ChW'Ch between Bay and 20th streets, said Cauin .. U funding ia approved, con- ltruction of the freeway could begin as IOOll • 1988 and be completed by 1992, ea.am u.id. Acquisition of properties could begin by 1985. 1'he state Transportation Com- mialion, meetiJl8 ln Sacramento Jut week, approved spending $40.1 million to construct. 9eCtion of Route 55 ~tween Bristol and Bay streets, where a weed-choked ditch now lies. (See l"REEWAY, Pqe A•) Construction. schedule The foltowlng la a 9Chedule for compe.tlon of the Coeta M-. Freeway (Route 55): • OCT. 1183: Canrana wlll Mlect one of eight Pfopoeed rout•. • JULY 1984: Envtronment8' Jmpect Statement flnilhed, route pubtlctnd and tnttlal funding ..,.,.-oved. • JULY 1984: Th,.._year englneer'ii1Q and planning phw beglna. •JULY 1986: Begin purchallng ~Identified for fr...ay route. • JULY 1987: Engln1arliig plane tlnllhed and flnel funding approved. • JUL:Y 1988: Conetuctlon contrac:1 ewarct.d and wortc on freeway bealna. • JUL V 1992: Conatructlon of frMway complet9d. INSIDE--------------------- Colorado flooding tops out Flooclwaten along the bloated Colorado River will rite no higher, barring unexpected summer rain or a mistake, federal olricial1 say, but moaquitot and related health problems have yet to hit their peak. Page E3. •• t ----- Angeli Rod Carew and Fred Lynn will be In the 1tardng lineup for the American League at to· ' nl1h•'• All-Star game in Chlca,o. Page CI . Los Angelet balladeer "Red River'"' Dave McEnery hu paid tribute to a1tronaut Sally Ride in hi1 latest elf ort. Page AS. Let f reth rnalta and veg- e&ablet take center 11a,e in unu1ual 1ammer Mlad1 and deuert1. See reelpe., beginning on pA1e DJ. ' . ·------• ., u * Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 6, 1983 AWARD ... Frpm PageA1 ... Her work begins and ends with the tamWar Neiahborhood Wacch procram, launched in 1080 ln Newport Beach. "It wu all a real eye-opener to me," she admits. "Burglan were ripping off h0Wle8 right and left and I'd been thinking the d ty didn't have a crime problem. "I became concemed because I want to live in a safe neigh- borhood. It's that simple," Long said. Police calculate Long has put in at least 1,200 hours with the Neighborhood Watch Program and has organiz.ed 150 neigh- borhood meetings, setting up a network of crime fighters with a representative on Vlrtually every block on the west side of the Upper Newport Bay. By conservative estimates, police say s he has been in touch with at least 2,500 city residents and has such a feel for the conununity's mood that police sometimes go to her for advice. "Initially, there's usually some resistance," she says of the crime fighting program. "Some people think it sounds like a vigilante thing and others are busy and feel it's just ooe more thing to take up your time~" - ~------...... ..--._.."=''5 From paper to twisted steel • A truck carrying 15,000 pound1of bulk paper over- turned Tuesday after- noon on the transition road from the south- bound Orange Free- way to the westbound Garden Grove Free- way, blocking traffic for about an hour and u It al(. The driver of the truck was a p- parently traveling at an unsafe speed when he struck a steel guard rail and (lipped over, blocking th_e road, authorities said. t , A seven-year resident of New- port and the wife of an emergency room physician, Long says unlike many of the Neighborhood Watch advocates, she has not been a crime victim. ''But I was afraid I would be - that my home would be hit by burglars or something. My grand- father was a policeman so I had an idea what the risks were," she said. Bonin accomplice wants to change his story The crime-fighting . methods she and others in the program extol are simple enough: lock up, keep an eye out for strangers and learn to c.all the police. She says police. who typically attend neighborhood meetings, have been supportive of the program. By Tile A11oclated Presa A fonner co-defendant of con- victed Freeway Killer William Bonin haa told an Orange County Superior Court judge he lied in previous testimony and now wants to retract his guilty plea. James Michael Munro, 22, of Port Huron, Mich., who pleaded guilty to avoid a death sentence in a Los Angeles murder for which Bonin is to be executed, said Tuesday he had lied about murdering Steven Wells on June 2, 1980. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Laeadjourned for the day, but the trial was to resume today. In January 1982. Bonin, 36, was sentenced to death for the homosexual torture-murders of Wellsandnineotheryouths\nLos Angeles County. Now he's on trial for four similar murders in Or- ange County. · On April 6, 1981 . Munro MOTHER OF SLAIN BOY FILES SUIT ... From Page A1 who is now living in Chicago. Her son was shot in the bedroom of their apartment. He was home alone, watching tele- vision while his mother· was at work. Sperl. 24. was dispatched to search the darkened apartment after a neighbor told police she hadn't seen the mother and son for two weeks. Sperl. who had been with the department 15 months, said he entered with a pass key from the ~ger, heard a sound inside and Huntington Beach A 1974nldC'--luvPIC*uptruell•-•I S1,IOO -r-14111 llOlen T.-ey rrom 1'141 -01 P9Cllllc CoMI HlthWrf ond llfOOllhunl $1,_ A l'ourtl\ OI Jvty-.-.d bu<glary OI I hOme on 1'141 9000 -OI .....n0td ~ , _ _, In Ille ,_,4111_ 0I_•_ .. '400. ~ -•·oo-sao1n~ Envy--en•tv .-1rvowg11 on ...-4111 ""-- kicked open the door of the boy's room, which had been tied shut. Sperl told investigators he fired · a single shot w hen he saw a figure pointing a gun at him. The gun turned out to be a toy. Farnell claims the shooting was the culmination of several "mis- taken judgments" by Sperl and his superiors. Stanton rejected Ridge's claim for $20 million in damages cin May 10. The suit, claiming Sperl '1fail- ed to discharge his duties as a W.,_ Aw Md ,,,... -· DtOll9n by ·-all llVOWlng rodla ~ 11\el>Oliday--TIMI d--waa •tlmolecl 11 $300 Irvine P-My I ....., -•ding aa I F-11 bpt-IHlliv.tymM conll9CI $4 I lrom .,. lrvt,.., llquOf lfOfl Mond•Y by dlll-1"!1 I pectcage C 0 0 -,,...,, INlllng with the rnof'IY bel0t1 -~ Ol...-.O 11\e Poellage Gonl•ln«I only two bolllea OI poo Thi "'-' pulled 1111 ...... lnclc l b0u1 I -1QO II • "1111 tllOP A women found 1111\ng llOnl In 111\i•c:• In a fllld -Bii<• Perkwey ..... 11•en by a pollca o~ to 1 IOdlll -olllca In C:O.to......, Thr• people .,,..,..,on ouOj)lclon OI t>urglor; Sotutday In INlnll -• 10 bl orr1J9ned tod1y In O<MQ11CountyH.,bo< Mun4otpa1Coun. Kalh- 8ofluta. "22, 04 Glt-Gfo..., ShMon M<>Gee. 24. OI c:o.11 -....s Aobef1 E>1<ry, 2e. f°'"""'"' of """"· ......... 111 In _,,_,Ion ""'" ,,,. t>urgtaryln1-onthl 17500111od<ofWayneln eui--. Victim&...., •• -· $17 000 In~ -~-........ Laguna Beach S-.,.. -qulltA......., It I IOlal Of '3.500 -•t1olenT~trom11\ouMtnth1200blocl< Ol<Jr-St. police officer." also alleges he did not have probable cause to enter the apartment. Farnell said Sperl's supervisors were "deliberately indifferent" to Sperl's reputation and his alleged "proclivity toward aggressive and violent acts." Sperl. son of former Los An- geles County Marshal Timothy Sperl, haa been unavailable for comment since the shooting and reportedly under psychiatric care. l\n .,.,.,.,.,,,.,.'*' 1moun1 OI _.ry ...... ,.,.... lrom I tlOfl •I 4 70 South Coeat Higl11•1y by ""'°""" """' ..,,.,.., "" --11\<ougfl • -ondllor,wlnd""' 8u<gl6'1tnt.,..,1 •oom 11 1111 Su<! Ind Send Holtl, tSS~ SouthCOHI Hogt>wey lllllnO 1 al.,IO Ml Md CIOINnQ lrom 1111 oecuponl Newport Beach An unknown 1u1pect cauMcl $40 In d~ to • cl\alr In 1111 IObl>V of 1111 POlic:. ~''*" by ripping• lltge hoM In••••~ A 1nlel b<Ol<eln101 loe-ec1cer-11ye POl'CI ot!lcat •"" 11ole • Pil'• IM• qym b1Q Damage 10 1111 c.er wH "llm•tecl et $ 100 encl .._ Jn P<-ty .... ""'II St, 140 A •encl•I DtOlo• Into en '"'""'''"eel -on 8Mr11< "-!Md pou<.., wOOd tllM on IM C8<Pll, c:auolnQ S •.000 In oam191 A Ourgt"' DIO'll lnlO In -eel Qllagl on 1111 800 bloclk or Ea•I 0.-lronl Ind 11o11 • $400 ttweo unit from • cat Co ta Mesa Au.,..,.-Coeta-,.,.,. •H .,, .. lld on 9U'91CIOn OI lllempt9d ,_ -ly T.-ey In connec:tt0n with en ... ou11elong11\e 200 """* ol teth Pleca AAmOfl <Ju11erru waa "''"'Id 11 "" neMby _, ........ pollca - Hazy days continue \ Extended ...,.. __ ,.,.,,. __ _ ...... ___ !-._ ..,_...,.111 .. 10e--....... ....., .. lomldl0e ln-.....,,._ o-Ngfll-.. kl .. Temperatures .. Le 7t 70 t7 70 17 ... ... " IO M .. .. IO 74 H 1'2 " .. ~ ., .. 10 1• ., .. .. .. 1t t7 7t " .. t• .. .. 42 N '° a • ,., . •1 41 11 .. a ., " 112 96 73 91 113 " at 71 eo 841 52 90 81 11 Sii &II 41 N 72 82 82 " tO 91 .. " 50 116 73 .. :M IM 72 ,, 71 IO ., 17 Te ., 72 53 52 12 113 110 11 .. 71 ., 17 IM .. .. • .. 72 •t 83 " " 11 55 ., 11 13 73 17 74 " IO 93 4• .. ... 13 .. t2 71 12 71 Tides TOOAY ~-12.ltp,M, 20 ..._f'tlOll~::P·lft. U mi tow :1'()f1m -0 I ""'f'tlOll t'H•'1' :u ._.,._ 101 p.m 2 1 '-"f'tlOll 11011m. U ..,_...,.._·~pm,,._ ~ ......... -............ e1>1 PAI -..i •• ioWy 1114.10 pm •• -~111aota.m .,.,-~· 1'2911.111 l 1 "-'l!I =='J.'r: ,Ml "°"*"'·°"' PrcMclefl<• =:t'Ctt, AMo --Ill-lltP_T_IJll • .,, "'*• 8MAlll- 103 79 71 1$ 11 .. 74 llf 94 n .. .. 11 53 111 87 17 73 •• .. H n 100 57 " 18 ..,, ONioo Senl't- 81 Ste Merle See!lle ::..~ .......... ,.,._ T~ ,_ TlllN w~ WllNI• 71 .. ..... " .. 71 N .. 12 IO H It M 11 .. 13 12 103 70 .... M 71 ... 12 SURF RIPDRT • pleaded guilty in Loe Angeles to participating in Wells' death after Los Angeles and Orange County prosecutors agreed not to aeek the death penalty. .Munro had testified in Los Angeles that he held Welll' feet while Bonin strangled the 18-year-old Downey resident with hiS own T-shirt. But Tuesday. Munro said "In LA. I did lJe." Under examination by Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown. Munro said, ''I pied guilty to second-degree (murder) with no reason at all." Munro claimed he entered the plea because he feared for h is life . He said his attorney had told him he would be placed among the general population of the Los Angeles County Jail if he didn't plead guilty, But during a jailhouse inter· view last week, Munro said he planned l.O withdraw his guilty plea becau.e the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office had not sent him to a federal penitentiary as he said he was promised. Munro aiso said during the interview that he believes he is innocent because Bonin foreed him to participate. Du.ring the interview. Munro said: "I decided when I was in prison, I was going to come back and totally ruin the case." Yachtsman cannon fodder Newport Beach boater F.ddle Eader has brought an end -in more ways than one -to his Fourth of July tradition of firing a cannon salute off Santa Catalina Island. Eader. 64, had the misfortune of blasting himself in the seat of his pants this year when he set off his small cannon aboard a yacht in Cherry Cove. "lt hurts pretty gOod," he said today from his Long Beach Mem- orial Hospital room. "I guess the fuse was too short. It was kind of windy also." SAN ONOFRE HEARING ... The can.non. packed onJy with gunpowder. put what Eader called "a pretty good sized hole" in his back side. He was flown by helicopter from Catalina to the Long Beach hospital where he underwent surgery. From PageA1 expresaed surprise. saying, "We had a forum a couple of years ago and they (Edi9on) participated. They weren't treated badly at all. I don't undentand their opposi- llon. "The utility is saying to us 'we know what's best -just do what you're told.'" But.. she added. "we haven't turned into the people they ex- pected in 1984." David Barron, a spokesman for Edison, said today the utility "did offer to sit down and talk to councilmen and individual (city) staff members." But, the spokesman added, "we are not interested in getting involved ln a public hearing or debate, primarily because we've already gone over all that." .Barron said "we spent four weeks in 1981 in public hearings over emergency planning. We are not going to get into any kind of debate situation." Councilman Dan Kenney said the utility has a responsibility to talk with the public. "We have legitimate concerns about the health and safety of this town," Kenney said. "I find it deplorable that a public utility won't meet with the public." • Councilwoman Bobbie Minkin said, "They just want us to come and pick up eome pamphlets on how safe It ls to lJve In Laguna Beach." referring to packets dis- tributed to Laguna residen ts on evacuation procedures. Barron said t.he utility ''does p.rovide written material, but suggested qu~tions regarding emergency evacuation should be addresaed to Orange County of- ficials or the state -not Ediaon. "Thoee are the agencies in- volved in off-site planniJ\8 for emergencies," he aaid. Regarding the concern over nuclear wastes stored at San Onofre, Barronaaid the utility hu a lice.Ne from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to store spent fuel. He said the storage pool at the plant has a capacity to hold 216 fuel assemblies, adding 94 of the spent assemblies are currently stored there. "We don't consider (storage) a problem," Barron said. "It's a relatively simple engineering task to store spent fuel at the plant." Eader, who said h e expects to be the butt of many jokes in his hometown, said he should be released from the hospital in several days. "I don't know if f'm going to do it next year of not," he said when asked about his Independence Day tradition. "I may just have the cannon gold-plated and put it on the mantle." Mesa tables action on alley assessIDent By JODI CADENHEAD Of'IN 0..,. -..... For the fourth time in a year. the Costa Mesa City Council has decided to postpone a decision to establish an aaeument district on Sterling A venue that could cost 44 property owners between $2,060 and $13,900 each for improve- ments. The Costa Mesa City Council voted Tuesday to continue the matter until Aug. 190cityofflclals can study the possiblJty of using federal Housing and C.ornmunity Development Block G rant funds to assist residents unable to afford roadway repairs. Mayor Donn Hall said he has learned that state gasoline tax funds could be used to fix the marred roadway. Such action would require the City Council to define the west side road as a priority item. "We'd have to prioritize it," said Hall. "It's not one of the top priorities as far as transportation in the community is concerned." In the past.. city staff contended that gas tax funds could only be uaed to pave Sterling if the City Council votN to designate the so-called alley a "street." Many of the affected homes border Ster- ling. Long-timecity hall watcher Sid Soffer disagreed and argued in favor of using tax funds to repair the alley. which is marred by potholes. dust and flooding in winter. Reaction from residents ap- peared mixed. "I don't use the alley and I resent having to pay for it," said Vincent La Fontaine. Al Bazar of Hollywood, who owns property on Pomona Av- enue that backs up to Sterling. said. "I'm definitely for it. We need it. I'd like to see it done." If the assessment district is approved, the city will contribute $99,790 in federal housing funds to offset some of the costs. The city's Redevelopment Agency owns several pa.reels in the area for a future family housing pro- ject. Figures released at the Tueeclay meeting show that the pro~t will cost individual property owners about 25 percent less than orig- inally estimated, ranging from $2.060 to $13,900. The ueemuent would be ba8ed on the value of each paree1 HB wo1nan drowns in Sequoia park A 40-year-old Huntington Beach woman haa drowned in Icy and turbulent waten In Central California'• Sequot• National Patk. Dead la Janeen La Breck. who aJipped lnto a 23-foot-deep pool last Sunday while her children looked on. Her 20-year-old 10n, Mark Winthrop. had to be re.cued from tho waters mllde U'NCheroUI by record mow melt whm he tried to save hit mother. Her body w .. recovered from the bottom of th~ pool about. five houri later by Tulare County ahertlft' dive~ A1lo pre.ent al the Ume ot the drowning were daughters Darcy Winthrop. 14, and Bridget La Breck. 13. Mra. La Breck'a husband, Emel\, said Tueeday he wants to tell others about the water has- ards of the pule 10 they won't meet the same trqk fate. "If it would save jult one penon, then aomethlna about t.hia would be worthwhile.'' he said . LA Breck, own« of We Catt Carpet C1ffnen of C.C.ta Mesa, aa.ld hll wife and th~ children had-Fl"9 -'°" .-w.al.k....a.LIM. picked nowen earlier In the d•y. He had rt!mained at camp. It was not known exactly how Mrs. La Breck slipped fnto the rushing. turbulent waten . "One of the lut things ahe said when ahe got to the water where she died wu, 'I with Ernie was here. It's., beautlfw.• .. "'11\e lut thll'\l I Mkt to ht'.'r WU, 'I love you. ru ~ you when you tet beck to camp.' '"nwlk Ood we dJdn 't have any harsh words." f\tneral ttrvk'ee a.re tna.nplete but a.re pendlnl for ~ at PJe.m&. .8rolhus. Bell Dre-sway. Mortuary tn Colla MtiM. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /WednMday, JUiy e. 1883 * a New openings ••• 'La Mancha' and'Androcles' readyto bow BvTOMTITUS Of .... ~ ......... If you're one of the many theatergoers who could see "Man of La Mancha" again and again. you can really pig out this weekend. Two productJons of the "lmpouible Dream" musical will be on the boar'Cia just a few miles apart -In Mission Viejo and San Clemente. The Saddleback Company Theater will be winding up its engagement while Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse opens another version Friday for a nine-week run. "Man of La Mancha" is one of two summer shows bowing In this weekend. Also opening Friday is George Bernard Shaw's comedy "Andro- cles and th e Lion ," which will take up a five-weekend residence at the Westminster Com- munity Theater. At Sebastian's, Kent Johnson will be mount- ing his th ird production as artistic director of the San Clemente dinner house and will showcase Ron Scarlata as Cervantes/Don Quixote, Adrienne Hatcher as AJdonzo and Pet.er Quesada as Sancho. Others in the cast are Clark Burson, Tim Nelson, Intermission At Sebastian's, Kent Johnson will be mounting his third production as artistic director of the San Clem ente dinner house and will showcase Ron Scarlata as Cervantes/Don Quixote, Adrienne Hatcher as Aldonzo and Peter Quesada as Sancho . .; John Moreno and Mark Rydzynaki. "Man of La Mancha" will be performed Wednetldays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 1 and 7 p.m . at Sebaatian's West, 140 This pirat~ movie ••• 'Yeffowbeard' fulfills his boyhood dream By BOB THOMAS .................. rtter HOLLYWOOD -The movie, "Yellowbeard," started because Monty Python member Graham Chapman was thunderstruck as a child when he saw Burt Lancaster swashbuckle his way through the 1952 adventure. "The Crimson Pirate." The English schoolboy feU in love with pirate movies. Ye~ lat.er, he decided to write one for the late Keith Moon, drununer for the rock group .. The Who. costly. Even when the project was budgeted at $5 million on New Zealand locations, there were no taken. , Then Hemdale Lei.sure Group, an English financing company, agreed to come on board. Thi.a month, Orion Pictures is releaslJll "YeUowbeard" with a cast headed by Chapman and fellow Pythoniana Eric Idle and John Cleeae, plus James Muon, Madeline Kahn, Cheech and Chong, the late Marty Feldman, Pet.er Cook and Pet.er Boyle. _ Ave. Pico, San Clemente and will nm through Sept. 11. Call 492-9950 for ticket lnfonnation. Charles Taylor i.a directing the Westminlt.er producUon of "Androclee" with Mitchell Nl.8'1ll, Jane Youna. Michael Aquil.A, Tim Blou1h and Woody Jones featured in the cut. Completina the company are Kim Fitzaerald, Ch uck O'Connor, Rod Carter, Gabrielle Avediani. Don Bart'ett, Manny Siegall, Ken Saxton, Steve Grodt, Larry Blake, Roma 'I\1ay, Corine 01.ater, Bryan Johmon, Darwin Swalve, Deanna Blackwell and Chriatina June A bbott. Curtain time ia 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Aug. 6 at the theater, 7272 Maple St .. Westminster. Reeervations are taken at 995-4113. Meanwhile, back at Saddleback College, the Hrst '"Man of La Mancha" resumes Tueeday and continues through a closing perforinance Sunday. David Holliday and Adria Firestone star as Quixote and Aldonza, while director Rudy Tronto and Carl Nelson alt.em.ate in the role of Sancho. Curtain time i.a 8 p.m. Tueeday through Saturday with matinees at 2 p.m. Saturday and 3 ~ ........ _ RETIJRNOF IBE JEDI ~ ........ 1N•-- •f---~ ... ..._ rw•·~---lw 1V\t• ''A BIULLIANT IMAGINATIVE PIECE OF MOVIEMAKJNG" -TIME ....... "Keith struck me as a second Robert Newton (who played Long John Silver in Disney's 'Treasure lsla.nd')," Chapman said. "Keith was rather piratical, always living ::>n the edge and doing things that most of us would avoid. "Aft.er 'The Life of Brian,' I was ::ont.emplating what to do next, and I thought of the plrat.e movie for Moon. I wro~ a five-page >ynopsis, but when I tried to present it to Keith, he was having the d.t.'s and in no fit state to ::ont.emplate anything. He died iOOn afterward." Chapman himaelf plays the title role. "It was like a boyhood dream." he said. "Imagine biting people's throats and slicing them to pieces with a sword. De- lightful!" Graham Chapman was here to ~iliii~i1111iillllllii help launch "Yellowbeard," and I Monty Python members don't give up. and Chapman began working on a script with Bernard McKenna. who wrote all th~ "Doctor" col'TM!•;Hes. They were joined by Pet.er Cook . Dudley Moore's former par tner of Graham Chapman He's 'Yellowbeard' "Beyond the Fringe." At one point. Chapman enlisted Burt Lancaster to play the pirat'e chief. Film companies wouldn't buy the project. "We like your script, but .. .," the movie bosses said. The "but" was that nobody waa mak- ing pirate movies anymore. Besides, sea movies were too he bears no resemblance to the rapacious buccaneer. Instead of wild beard and flowing hair, he haa a smooth faa? and thinning, sandy hair. The face i.a long and angular, with a large Roman noee. "Yellowbeard" wu filmed in England and Mexico within its $8-million budget, with the Boun- ty from the 1961 Marlon Brando movie doubling as the pirate ship. Shooting went smoothly until the end, when Feld.man suffered a heart au.ck and died. BURT REYNOLDS ''llE F\IREST AMERICAN MOVE COPtEJY Of nE YEAR~' . ~«». NOW PLAYING -·· CftfA ... lmT9IYll lllCll ..... .,_...,.,. !d'o1tlb 1-C-~ ........ ~ UA CllyC.-0 111 U•• /~t '1U UtO)ll IS. Jtll ..... ,&1111 --_.,... ..... :f."':0'1~,,_C>,,.., ~~~~_,~ =10-Y•lloll =r- COITl•U -IJ-ld'o111b C.-C.-! .. 91J '"I MIC~ .._Ill OJ40 llllt f-Sqult 'tO-ACCUT'IOOOll O.._,., 21}4910UJ "Movie Magic!" -usA rooAr '~ lo I,•::~,•,·.,:,'; .. A ~ -l la"i!fl! 1;;_a..,1.~1~1, 1, .~==::;::::...::====~--_.I ::•1W'99 IB]-. • ******************************* ADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE FOR Rfr'URt.o"F SU"~J11 ~ 1Jf • TiiE JEDI ~--_,.. AT ~~...,_,.· OUTLETS (lncludlnt Music Plus) ARCADE of GAMES• .' ..... -NoPHMP-No &conOlll)' •••llllt RCT RN OP lliE JEDI ..... ,.,.. ..... , Ofl••l-Oftl\-.1H'WMll1'1"1Uf7\llW•1Mt Cll"*tlWtrlZfrff llltltlllt• r ..... ~ :ia":'.I. ~(I) o.i, ltt.ltO.UO Iii, ttO, IMS ,_ ...... ,;= °"" 12'.JO. uo. ' JO. IJO. UO. ltJO is•• lrldO.., ---··-°"" I 15. 4·00. 1-flO te CNl ~~ --fl) °"!' II e. t;JO. 4 15 I JG.US.I0'5 ·-=.,..~· Dlil!l·O.UO,, .. llS.IU) ........ ....... ,., ... ,K 1• II• Find money·$• vi ne yet taaty reci~ in Wednesday's '-f llllt -p.m . Sunday in the main theater on the Million Viejocampua. Call 831-46!WI for ticketlnfonnaUon. Two other musical.a continue \heir re.pec1ive engagemenu at local theaters -"West Side Stoey" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhou.e and "Carouael" at the HunUngt.on Beach Playhou.ee. Keith Rice and Callandara MonlOW' head \he cut of "West Side Story," which plays nightly except Mondays throuah Sept. 11 at the Harle· quin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., juat north of C.O.ta Mesa. Ticket information I.a available at 979-5~ 11. Rod1en and Hammerstein'• "Carouael" wW be performed Friday• and SatW'day1 at 8:30 through July 9 at the. Huntington Beach Play- house, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue in the Seacliff Village ahoppin, cent.er. Reservations are taken at 847-0465. CALLBOARD-The San Clemente Com- munity Theater haa called auditions for the Roaring Twenties musical "The Boy Friend" for Monday and Tue9day at 7 p.m. at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Ave. C abrillo, San Clemente. I ... • 8ARQAIN MATINaaa * MMMtay tltru laturay All P9'for1Nncn before 5:00 PM (~l ..... ll1111•••1MW1yal '"OCTOPUUY".,.. · ----- "T'RAD9IG PLAC.8" • .. YB.I.Ow.AN>".,.. -----------·--... __ _ ..... lllllAN....... IMMTUMI °" TMI.,... .... ----------•m•1• 1i•1isi.ffi0 J "4MZ&L'Mr.,. '"OCTOPUUY"-·--·------------ MfLAaHDAMCF' .. ------ lAklWOOO C fHTEll SOUTH 1u ,. " ... AMA.a".,. ----- ... BU E NA PAl?K ,,,,, '" ............ -..A~ .. --- ... ARGAlml"------ "'POlllC"'l'8 I: THI NmXT DAY" .. ------ --·-·-llM070 -=~""""'"""""~~~~~~~~~~-~~- l IN c 0 l N I "'I. I 114 -, ___ ?Ill .. ·- llM070 ' .. FO UNTAIN VALl ~Y lJR \.11 ~• I ,\ H A h ~I :, -" THI ....... ~m •• , .. -...... _ 4M&AU1r.,. ..... __ , C191A~ .. --·~ •-c-.. .... , ... • ·~ •' ----~---~-...,....,...----- -Dilly Pi,at WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1983 * BUSINESS STOCKS C4 cs ·. Four a rea boys bring home m edals from T AC track meet . See stor y, page C3. '. . I • ,_.And now, football --Hoboken style I "another league ls needed" theory, but it is far too early to quibble over paltry details. One of the organizers is Denn.la Murphy, the Orange County resident who was involved with the American Basketball Association. World Hockey • • Raymondo Gu1seppi G iovanni Baptis te Ma1avasi, plodding through life as a professional football scientist, now pauses on that delightful journey as adviser to something entitled the International FootbaJJ League. SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER The IFL wiU play its games in the spring and i'llmmer, meaning it wiU be in direct competition with the USFL. The alternative was go operate in the summer and fall, combating the NFL. If the advice to choose the USFL as the opponent came from Ray Malavasi, he earned his advisory fee at the very outset. Association and World Team Tennis. \ It is Murphy's law that in t he case of a • prospective franchise investor, you read about him in the following order: (a) h~ financial statement, and To free himself of encumberances to enter this .at.ation, Ma1avasi settled with the Rams who were paying him not to roach their team. Inasmuch as paychecks from the Rams are a trifle more solid than pu.re gold, you wonder if in this case, the adviser was in need of advice. , However. Ray swears up and down he is dedicated to the proposition what this country needs is a good $5 cigar and another football league. "Even with the National and United States leagues." Malavasi says, ''there are still not enough places for all the kids who are talented enough to play pro football, so another league is needed." Whereupon. the IFL announces that it would be receptive to merger overtures from the USFL, presumably figuring it is not unlikely to hear from the NFL. ln fact, Malavasi says a merger is a distinct possibility which would tend to blow away this Franchises will be scattered which, in part, aceounts for the name of ·the league. Names mentioned include Southern California, Hawaii, Canton, Ohio, Memphis, San Jose, Australia and Japan. Travel arrangements will require study but this is of no concern this early in the the life of the IFL. (b) the location of his proposed franchise. As Ma1avas: says, there are plenty of players t.O go around, and God knows, there is never a shortage of un.employed coaches. One wonders, however, if it will be possible to recruit the necessary army o( capable publicity and promotion people. For instance, a guy is beating the tambourine in behalf of a contest in Sidney, Australia with the (See TUCKER, Page CZ) National League's 'best nitcher' starts tonig.ht ~Tonight's starting 'lineups National League f. Su, Dodgen, Zb 2. Raines, Montreal, lf 3. Dawson, Montreal. cf 4. Oliver. Montreal, lb '· Murphy, Atlanta , rf t . Schmidt, Philadelphia, 3b t Carter, Montreal, c 8. 0 . Smith, St. Louis. SS 9. Soto, Cincinnati, p Amerlcao League i. Carew, Angels, l b 2. Yount, Milwaukee. ss ~· i yan, Angels, cf 1· Rice, Boston, lf ~-Brett, Kansas City, 3b 6. Simmons, Milwaukee. c 7. Winfield, New York, rf 8. Trillo, Cleveland, 2b A~Wlf._...,o Reds' Mario Soto on mound; Carew, L ynn are starters CHICAGO (AP) -Mario Soto of Cincinnati and Dave Stieb of Toronto were named on Tuesday to start basebaJJ's 50th an· niversary All-Star game in America's oldest major league baseball park. Tonight's All-Star game at 73-year-old Comiskey Park wiU mark an historic milestone for baseball's showcase of its best players, and Soto comes into the game with a sense of history as the National League tries to make it 12 victories in a row. "There was a great pitcher from my country, Juan Marichal, and I hope I can do it," Soto, a native of the Dominican Republic, said of his countryman. who enters the Hall of Fame this year. On Tt' tenl.6t C6annel 4 at S Stieb, 10-7 and loser of }us last three, is making his third All-Star appearance, first as a start.er. Stieb pitched on Sunday, but said he felt strong enough to work a couple of innings. Henog also announced his bat- ting order Tuesday. Second baseman Steve Sax of the Los Angeles Dodgers will lead off, followed by left fielder Tim Raines, Montreal; center fielder Andre Dawson, Montreal; first baseman Al Oliver, Montreal; right fielder Dale Murphy, Atlan- ta; third baseman Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia; catcher Gary Carter, Montreal, and shortstop Oz.zie Smith, St. Louis. 9. Stieb, Toronto, p Ex-Nationa l Leaguers (from le h ) W illie Mays, Lo~Brock a nd Monte Irvin recall the goocf o l' days. Soto is 9-7 this year for the Reds with 124 strikeouts and is called by St. Louis Cardinals skipper Whitey Herzog, who will manage the· Nationals, "the best pitcher in the National League." Soto, in hi~ second straight All-Star game, wiU pitch with three days' rest, having started for the Reds on Saturday. American League Manager Harvey Kuenn of the Milwaukee Brewers announced a batting order of first baseman Rod Carew, of the Angels; shortstop Robin Yount. Milwaukee; center fielder Fred Lynn, of the Angels; left fielder Jim Rice, Boston; third baseman George Brett, Kansas City: catcher Ted Sinunons, Mil- waukee; right fielder Dave Win· field, New York, and second baseman Manny Trillo. Cleveland. Flashes of old before present at Comiskey CHICAGO (AP) -There was Billy Williams, slamming a fastbaJJ out of the park. And Har· mon Killebrew, complaining that the Chicago wind had robbed hlm ol a home run. And Ernie Banks, wanting to play on. Scenes from the past were rec- reated in every comer of Com- iskey Park Tuesday. as 88 former players and baseball officials gathered for an Old-Timers game. It was held as part of basebaJJ's celebration of the 50th anniversary of the All·Star game, to be played tonight. Williams, who starred as a slug- ging outfielder for the crosstown Ch icago Cubs , hit a less-than-fastball from Hoyt Wilhelm off the facade of the upper deck in right field for a two-run homer to key the Na- tional League alumni to a 6-5 victory over the American League. WILLIAIH Another Conner Cub, Don Kess- inger, got the game-winning RBI in the top of the third and final inning with a two-out double, driving in Bobby Thomson, who also doubled. ''I just find it kind of ironic that I had to wait until I was 45 years old to get an MVP award," said Williams, who finished 18 major-league seasons with a .290 batting average and 426 homers. "Aft.er all these years, it's still a thrill to hit one, especially in the upper deck in front o{ all these guys." The wind was blowing hard from left field, and KiUebrew, who hit 573 home runs for Wash- ington and Minnesota, swore it cost him another. "They were kidding me about hitting a home ru.n and I thought I had one," Killebrew said of a shot to left in the second inning. :ltaIDs could lose 11 Dickerson to USFL HOUSTON (AP) Eric Dickerson, the second choice in the National Football League draft, says several United States Football League teaIM have made him offers competitive with thoee of the Rams. Dickerson, interviewed by tele- phone at his home in Sealy, told Roust.on radio station KIKK. Monday he has had "eome pretty 1 Jabbar, Bulls • , meeting set l'ree agent center ~m Abdul-Jabbar will meet with Chicago Bulls chJef operating of- &er Jonathan Kovler and gen- eral manager Rod Thom Sunday, MO>rding to Jabba.r'a asent, Tom Colllna. CoWna added he has no current .,. for meeUng asaln with I.liken owner Dr. Jerry au... a.. bowever, ln a televiak>n Interview Tuelday nJght, u.ld he would talk to C.OUU. by phone 911fDe1trllf! nexi Wftk. handsome offers" from the USFL. Dicke rson said he would consider not reporting to the Rams' training camp July 15 II no contract has been approved. He dedined to say specifically what USFL teams had made him offers or how much money was involved. Dickerson said he has talked with the Los Angeles E¥- pre18, the Arizqna Wranglcn and the Denver Gold. He aaid no offer had come from A.riz.ona. • The Southern Methodist All·America tailback said the Rams put thernaelvee in a com er by trading running back Wendell Tyler to San~. "They really don't have a run- nJng back that could really pt the job done," Dtcker10n said. "They would have to pt a running back Crom eomewhere. They don't have many iallbacb at all.'' Dlckenon Mid he considered u "• bluff" rumon that the Rama miaht tnde h1m to another Na- tional Football~ \earn, t>ut he lakl he would be wllling to play for another club in that ~ ot f<>r a USFL teatn. ·Transpac leader sailing in a class of its own repurUnc wind from the nortb-northwt at 17 knota under OWl'CMl ... and with • four-tc>-fiw-foot foUowinl-. Several y8Cht. wen repoc1in8windl • hlCh • 23 lmota. ~ were no chancea in the ownU end dam atand1nal an handicap U!De. c1.. t.e.dera on handicap were Whiatlewind. a.. A; Jumpm Jack, a.. 8; Bravura. C.. C; and Celebrity, 0.. D. The 89Ye11 Santa Cruz 50a ln C.. A wen MWQc within lOnalleaof ~otba'withl'.wlol Mar and &.mural ......... the cl9m. 582 ma. out. Miii .... -ill, u.-.t 580, Oi:t.iwta 579, Raider &ft, mid Ka~ 574. H eat winne r ~--- Mar ybeth Linzmeier of Miuion Viejo wi ns her 8 00-meter freestyle heat at World University Games Tuesday in Edmo111on. --~ a -·- There have been 53 All-Star games, with none played in 1945 and two apiece played in 1959, '60, '61 and '62. Is Bullet speeding to record? . The 65-foot catamaran Double Bullet Jogged her second straight 300 mile-plus day Tuesday and reported a position 940 miles from Los Angeles aft.er three days of sailing in an attempt to break the elapeed time record from Los An- geles to Honolulu. Her 24-hour runs since the start have been 265, 345 and 310 miles. Skipper Bob Hanel said Double Bullet was sailing in northeast trade winds of 12-14 knota and that the boat speed waa about the same. His position placed him more than 200 miles ahead of the lead yachta in the Transpac. Hanel said the crew ~as en- gaged in a sewing bee as the boat has blown out three mains and two spinnakers. There have been no other mishaps since leaving Loe Angeles Harbor last Satur- day. U Double Bullet can average 300 miles a day over the course she would arrive at Diamond Head in approximately 7 \ii days, The e:lapeed time record, held by the monoh uU Merlin, is 8 days, 11 houn. Martin may need surgery NEW YORK (AP) -New York Yankees Manager BUly Martin underwent le9tl at a Mln.neeoia hoepltal Tueeday, but the retulta were not immediately available, h la agent told The Aa· toeiat.ed Prea. Judge Eddle Saplr said by tele--- phone from his home ln New · OrlMnl that a decision on '1 whether Martin would undeJ"F lurset)' would be made today . The 55-yeer-old ~ hM ~ been auffertna from rectal bJeed-lne from aome t.lme. He flew io Mlnneeota and entered the bo9pl- \al f oUowt~ Monc:t.y'• pme aaalnat the 'BOiton Red Sox. , ~=~------------~"_, ___ ..,.... __ ....,,.._ -,f r " Orange Co .. t DAIL V PILOT /Wedneaday, Julye. 1983 NB C5 NYSE ( ... OMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS QUOTATION' INCl..UDI f ••OU Olt '"' .. ,. 'rOIUl, MIDWl\T, .... ,.IOI(,"'"'· IOHON oruq" AND (INCIN~ATI HOC• t.llCNAllGll• ANO llll'O•TIO l'r f I NAtO ANO INHllU T Dow Jones Final Up 12.12 Cloalng 1,220.la H e ublein selling seven labels SAN FRANCISCO -A Fresno-based grape growers' cooperative said Tuesday that it is buying Italian Swiss Colony and six other wine labels from Heublein Spirits and Wine C.o. Terms of the sale to Allied Grape G rowers weren't disclosed, but an informed source who asked not to be identified said the price was about. $50 million. Investors su e in Penn bank flap OKLAHOMA CITY -More than 160 investors in 19 states have lodged a federal lawsuit claiming they were bilked out of more than $14.5 million Ln an alleged <.'Onspiracy involving thedefunctPenn Square Bank and others. The investors claim the bank's holding company and board of directors; the national accounting firm of Coopers & Lybrand; and eight oil and gas drilling ventures headed by former Penn Square Bank Director Carl W. Swan were part of the conspiracy, according to court records released Tuesday. Dollar climbs to record high NEW YORK -The dollar staged a broad advance on world currency exchanges Tuesday, climbing to a record high against the Spanish peseta, as traders were preoccupied with the course of Federal Reserve Board policy and fears of increases Ln t1.S. interest rates. Gold prices drifted lower in quiet trading, winding up at $413.25 an ounce as of the l p.m-PIYI' closing bid at Republic National Bank in New York, off $4.90 Crom the late bid .Friday. AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YORK IAPI· s.ln, • p,m Prlcll end nel c11anu of Ill• 1en moil acllve A ...... Jean SI-E •CM"9'1 ,,_ •ue \, tra dlno n1 llona ltv •• more 111 a n t i Imo C,...,, 1,.4'7,>00 Pl + YI Kl~VE•P :134.100 IOV. + i.. OomePtrl ,,.,200 • 1~ 16 ~ 112.300 t +I Revllnl wl 175,400 IS,_ + 11 .. Rhtllllt A 16UOO 50Y> ~, C0<1UA1r 111 1.o~soo 101-. + "' o...-IS · 11-lt +Ha CVPrUIC.p I .300 ),_ + HouOlfT r 1•.000 .,_, -Yt UPS AND DOWNS -... I EM'/Mel 1 "'9nOI> »-l V....C. 4 Eie<Au4 DY 5 Canad Fall 6 rilltrlc:llDla 7 .-CP I SS lntSv ' .... P\"k 10 e)oidll9ld Co 11 Elle.Ml !J S.n....,...Slr I) TownerPI l•~ac" 15 F,iWv~ ,, AlemcO " 17 81oc*E119 It tTK ln4 1• w .. 1Mrd 20 ...... 1nc1 ti WNl ... r Ctll ,, l:r;,~. R Verti.111 1S AmlMlt• SYMBOLS METALS HEW YORK fAP) • 8l)OI "°"*'OU. ,,..., .. .,.-1oc19r c...., . ~ '*'" • -us -C...., · 70 56 <*lit per -NY Como!c "'°' ~ CloMd r ... u.. -20-.23 <*Ill. -Die .~-."°"""·_.., Tiii -.. 7120 Moll• W-_.......,14 IC ......_.7g_,ll•-N Y ..._, -'2&6 00.~ 00 -TC IC ~ '-"°"' ,.._,, • .. 15 00-5'120 00 "°"'"'"' -110¥-.NY COLD QUOTATIONS SILVER -• .ti.~ I* lre>y -· HMOy I. Har9*I lonllt dejly qll04e I ._. aft •raper 1roy-. NT Com .. -'-'*-T.,. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT _,,, -1•. -1·~ -1'" -.. _., -' _,.. -1'-+ ..... +'It -~, -11• -1\o